Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-10-27 - Orange Coast Pilot"' rrlon Con.,tete Odds for Tral at football 'big one' park Artists coverage haven't rullng 31-22 Inside changed tOday SPORTS/Bl SPORTS STATE/A4 COAST /A3 ' -,_ THE ORANGE COAST 2 SCENT S FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1989 er.en ·offers Laguna Canyon deal Hopina to brina Lquna Beach opponents of the planned Lquna Laurel development into "the real world," T he Irvine Co. has offered to sell a chunk of the ~jcct site in exchanae. for the city s support on the remainder of the project. In a face-to-face meetma Thurs- day between Laguna Beach and Irvine Co. officials, company chair- man Donald Bren offered to sell the· sites of a planned aolf course and an adjacent housing development totalliiag about 2SO acres. Plans for the housing site ~nnit between 2SO and SOO dwelling units. The price tag. subject to a ppraisal. '. would be a pp roximately $38 million. Irvine Co. officials said. Lasuna Beach Mayor Robert Gen- try, indicating he wanted a better deal. said he was treating the offer as a serious one. He pla nned to put the issue before the full council on Nov. 7. The Laauna Laurel project, which would be located northwest of the . Laguna Canyon Road and El Toro Road juncuon, already has been approved in concept by the county Board of Supervisors, although final approval pendina a review of en- vironmental documents isn't ex- pected until January. The 2, I SO-acre plan includes 3,200 homes. 80 acres of com- mercial development a nd more than a.._d. Jllw Shelton of National Airer.ti Parts and Sal•• of &.one ..... IMUlls the I..,... In preparetton for• predawn 1110¥e of the twln·•ft91n• Palrchlld Merltn 'IV to John w.,'!. Airport. Experts urge quake tests in OC " 8y IMILY ADAMS °'_.....,,..~ stu_dies a re conducted, according to newer. safer design than San Fran-stttute. lcf\ for the Bay Arca shonly · a team of UCI professors and cnai -cisco's and ~ould therefore fare bet-af\er the 7. I magnitude temblor hit ncers who spent a week in the Bay ter in the event of a similar quake. Oct. 17. The> eum1ned bu1ldrngs No one will know for sure just how canhquakc-proof Oranae Coun- ty's freeways and laraer structures are unless tedious and expen1ive Area stud yinJ earthquake damaac. the researchers aJso said. and frccwa)'s. scarchina for the However. most large buildinas The UCl team, part of the Earth-cracks that cost the area more than and freeways in this county are of q ua ke Engineering Research In-f Ple.se '" RISKS/ Alf C 0 \ I IC ' I 0 IC\ I IC \ '' 1'0 IC I \ I I 0' State-of ..:the-art amenities boarding new JWA terminal 8y JANET ZIMMlllMAH travel qcnts and others who ~ °' _ ..._ ,.. ...., pol~. she said. Straiaht ahead is the See's Candies . "One of the most clear examples shop and 10 the left you'll find an 1s that people wanted to tee amy of fut-food racawants, in-namebrand foods, they wanted to be cludina McDonald's and croiltants. ·.able to So anto a McDonalcb. ~ Or maybe, if you·g:e in lhe mood for know what .lhn' were 1Ctt1ftl. a little radina, you· can peruee tbe Rutherford uid. 1election at the newutand and lift And if one McDonald's rntaurant aboo. is &ood. two will be bet~. The Welcome to a tour of the new and secOod 32-tcat ea~ wiU be on the improved John Wayne Airport ter-other side of tbc b\laldina, complet- miDll. i .. die symmetry o( the 337.900- The 1310 million apentioo pro-1quare-f'ool lenlli.nal. ject, slated to open in April. bu been , In the IPirit of the uDlcale ter- toulld as a llalM>f'·tbHn flcility miDll, tbe ,_.urantl will be decor-.._. aa ....... tbe a.di ot the ated wida malt* and quaf'O' tile. ..... ........ Mcl>oMld°I prQjecled ftnt•yelf Tiie oounty win eun at leul S2.4 rwceip11 1re 12.2 million, with an ... .. •••• ., &om die COD-~-11*!.D• 10 die airport ol CllllOlll, lpGUiwomu Kathie 1260.0UO. alkm met. ••*• lwd .... n. ~ will lllM.,.. .......... eucdy -~ ... ill ,.,1•11 .... a llallllr Md ia-.... be or ~ ._.-,ialtl'710 ·-....... a~ m. =a--= ~~-1,;sx: =·=-~::.: -._ Yd PUL/All MORNING 1,200 acres of open space. Besides the price tag itself. The Irvine Co. offer comes wtth sttpu- lations some Laguna Laurel oppo- nents may find hard to swallow. The city of Lquna Beach - which has opposed the prOJcct almost as long as at has been on the drawing board - would be required to suppon a number of rq1onal improvements. including the planned San Joaquin Hills Trans- portauon Corndor. widenma of Laguna Canyon Road and an area management and lake runoff plan that Irvine Co. officials say would have. s1gn1ficant flood control ben- efits for Laguna Canyon residents. Gar) Hunt. Irvine Co. ell.ecutivc fPleate SH DE.~/All . Ferguson might be running for 2 seats at same time -. He could seek re-election and C.ampbell's post By PAUL. ARCHIPLEY Of -0..,, ,_ s.- Asscmblyman Gal Ferguson 1s consadenng a run for 1he 31st Senate Distnct scat being \acated by Wil- ham Campbell · Campbell. a former Senate .m1n- ont) leader. announced Thursday tha1 he's leaving the lc-g1sla1urc 10 becortre head of 1he CJlafomJa Manufacturers Assoc1a11on .. ··11 "as an o ffer I could not re- fuse,·· the Hacienda Heights Re- publican said at a Capitol press conference. "It was the best thing for me. and I hope for the association." Gov. DcukmeJ ian. required b> law to set a special election wathtn 180 days, asked Campbell not to resign until January so that he could scheduk the eJection at the same ttm e as the June pnmary. Campbell said he wasn't going to lea\'C unttl Janua') because he had unfinished legislatt"e business. That could provide Ferguson with the unique opportunity of running for t'A~O seats a1 the same ttme Bcause of a pccuhanty 1n Calt- fom1a elect1on law. he could seek re- election as the Repubhcan candidate Gli Per9uson for 1he 70th Assemhl) Distnct seat he no" holds and run in the spcetal clcct1o n for Campbell's seat at the same 11mc. \\ere he 1h wm both. he would resign the Assembly scat and JOtn the upper house. However. Ferguson said he had not \Ct talked · wnh pany offiaals and upponers about the situauon. ··1 have the only permanent precinct organ1zauon in the state. f~aM see RACE/All A purrrrf ect ending to caterwauling 8y -.S YOkOf °' -0..,, .... SUit A stray caJico cat that eluded ~pture for days after csc:apina m- trapment an a wall at Newpon Beech Ctty .Hall was finally c:a•t by city employ~s Thursday aftei'noop. An1mal control officers took the fn&htencd female feline to the city lheltcr at Newport Hamor Animal Hospiw. where she will be kept tar five days. ·If her owner does ROC d 11m her. the cat will be rdeued•to an anunal lo'--cn' poop tbat will try to find her a home. ArumaJ Control Officer Bill Lyons dctcribcd the cat as a white, blect and orante female domahc lhort- bair calico approximalldy 2 ,_,.. old. The anamal has DO fta colmr or ldentificatton Ulp. II in FQd lmlda ad nhibited normal bea.wior, LyoM aud. T1'ere weft uutial repona die cat a~ IQ be .,.....'-........ waift't the c:ne, ... ,.. ..... The fritty .feliM cM .. •1111 hendf' i•to ............. .._the b«1• MU II la a ..0 II City ltd. )-Nia-.... ne '* .S:.:~ ,.•_.,,.. rights advocates outpace foes in rais.ing campaign funds -PAUL~ ·---........ A poup opposed to repealina a ••sexual orientation•• clauK in Irvine's human ripts ordinance has railed nearly twice as much money as its ~nents. accordina to cam- paian di1elosure statei;nents filed this weelt. The sroup Irvine Citizens United -No On Measure N has raised more than S3S,000 for its c,mpaian. The aroup Citizens For Equal Jliahts, Yes On Measure N filed a campaian disclosure statement sbowina it had raised more than SIB,000 by the end of the filing period on Oct. 21 . However, the group submitted an DEAL From Al vice president, said the offer was the result of their attempt to satisfy some Laauna Beach concerns while continuing with the Laguna Laurel project. During a previous meeting, Lquna Beach officials listed the proposed golf course and adjacent residential com~nent as major con- cerns, Hunt ·said. "As we looked at the issue of the canyon and their desire to preserve as much as they could and our desire to allow the regional benefits, Donald made the decision that we would put on the table an offer for them to consider that would put more of the land into open space:· Hunt said. But because county approval of .._ _ _......_projccL.includcs. ICQuirements that The Irvine Co. provide land for the transportation corridor. widen Laguna Canyon Road and meet other conditions, Irvine Co. officials believe whoever purchases pan of the Laguna Laurel project site would also have to abide by those con- RISKS From Al 60 lives and hundreds of homes. With this data, rcS<.archers came home to put their new structural knowled4e to use. The b1gest errors in San Fran- cisco, the engineer said, were .. errors of om mission." New structural tech- niques were not always put to use. .. For instance. people persist in buildina chimneys. They fall down in an earthquake and then they're rebuilt . in the exact same way," -Shepard said. Instead, bui1ders should use new "seismic safety" techniques when rebuildillf, Shepard said. The prob- lem is, its j ust not econom1cally feasible to update existina structures "" with new enginecrin1 techniques ;without enormous costs. "The problem is, there's a t~me lag between what we know and what we tan do," said team leader, Or. Robin I addendum lhowina it received another $3,000 contribution on Wed~Jj· It is ·na the faaht to repeal the section of the city's human rifhts ordinance that prohibits dilCrimana- tion apinst people because of their sexual orientation. Propanents of Measure N on the Nov. 7 ballot araue the ordinance provides special protection • for homosexuals. while opponent• con- tend it simply protects all people from discrimination. Disclosure statements for the period from Sept. 24 to Oct. 21 .sbow Irvine Citizens United received cash contributions of S 17, 780, about half of the total the group bas so far ditions. Hunt said. ... An important condition is if they were desirous of this offer they would accept the conditions of the approved project." he said. The Irvine Co. has always sought community consensus in all of its projects. because planners believe the projects have benefits beyond their boundaries. Hunt said. .. We're dealing with an approved project here. We could go head-to- head with Laguna Beach. "But Donald is desirous of bring- ing Laguna Beach _into the real world.'' Hunt said ... So if they want to save areas beyond what we've already given. there's a price tag to 1h~1 "What's important is we're at- tempting to bring ·to reality ttlat there's no free lunch. and in this conte t we feel the company has bent over backward ... Whether the} have bent far enough to satisf} Laguna Beach resi- dents remains to be seen. Mavor Gentry said, "I have some concerns about it. What do we get for this? .. The question for Laguna Beach She~ard. It is j ust not economic.ally feasible to tear down all the existing structures and make them eanh- quake-safe, Shepard added. It's not easy. Shepard said, to persuade a pnvate homeowner or public officials to spend ~uge sums of money redoing structures for "the big one.. which. for most people. remains a far-away pos.sibility. Yet as the world saw from San Francisco's example. it is dan,erous to wait until a building faJll,,,~fore updating the structure. While the Nimiu Freeway was state-of-the-an for tbe 1950s. it was sorel} behind the times by today's standards. But how docs one know if his home or route to work is unsafe in an earthquake? Another problem with tryina to avoid damJle in a temblor, Shepard said, is identification of earthquake safety hazards. Analyzing a structure for safety or a land for liquefaction ~ RACE of my Mirine Corps experience, my . business baclcground: Republicans Prom A I c would rather vote for a family man. and I don't· want to do something grandfather typt;, so I know t ve aot µi&t would not Or, with my sup-the right qualifications," Ferguson porten," he said. • Without them. I said. railed. A tocal of 73 individuals made contribu~ from $100 to more than S l ,OOCJ. But the bulk of the funds -mbre than S 11,000 -came from individuals contributina less than S l 00. The aroup bas so far spent more than $30,0001 much -of it on mailinp and advenisana. '0urina the same period, Citizens for Equal lliahts raised $7,114, with 13 individuals donati~ amounts from S l 00 to $2,000. Of the total, S 1,240 was received from individ- uals donatina less than $100. . That aroup has spent about S l S,SOO so far. will be should we assess ourselves and spend $38 million? In return we have developmc.nt reduced up to .SOO dwelling units and open space inst~d df a golf~coursc." Suaaestina the favorable impact would be minimal if the city ac- cepted the offer, Gentry said .SOO homes would generate about .S.000 car trips per day on Laguna Canyon Road, while planners bad estimated the entire development would gener- ate more than 36.000 car trips per day. Gentry hopes after the council meets that he can return to Bren at their next scheduled meeting on Nov. 10 with a counter-offer. ··1 want to make sure we can continue our dialogue." he said. But he believes Laguna Beach residents should decide what course to take. .. The people of Laguna Beach might say let s fight this thing out in the hearing rooms and courts of law rather than listen to these offers." Gentry said. The city has 30 days to respond to The Irvine Co. offer. If they accept, escrow must close within o~e year. is a tedious and expensive process. Shepard said. While analyzing buildings and freeways could save lives. the fund- ing for such a project just hasn't been there. Shcpa~. "Chances are. you all~ forget this whole thing wi thin two months, and once again. we'll not get the funding we need ... Shepard said. Soil testing on landfill sites such as those in Newpon and Hunt- ington Beach -may be seen as vitall ) important to safety in light of the mass destruction found in San Francisco's Marina district--also- built on a fill site. Ironically. the Marina was built on the rubble of San Francisco's last disasterous quake in 1906. While UCI engineers called San Francisco a "success story" -con- sidering the fact that "maybe 99.99 percent of all structures remained mtact" -engineers arc cenain the SllCCess rate could be improved. sembly primary race would probably be an inside favorite with the state Republican Central Comm ittee, . which would choose the GOP nomi- nee for the November election. A cat relCUH frOlll lmlde • Newport a.11Ct1 City Hall wall Is In the good lland1 of Anllll•I Control Officer 8111 LJOftl and veterinarian Dr. Kevin C.Jlor• FELINE From Al adjacent to the lobby after apparent- ly faJling off the roof into a crevice. Her meows we" heard for two days before city employees on Tuesday figured out where she was. Building maintenance workers drilled a hole in the wall Tuesday to try to rescue the cat, but couldn't reach her and left the hole open in hopes she would find her wal out. City employees left a bowl o milk By the hole. Wednesday, employees spotted the cat in the bushes near the hole. However, the apparently still-fright- eried animal refused to budge from the bushes, despite coaxing from city employees and members of Feline and Canine Friends, an Anaheim animal lovers' group that came out to try to catch the feline and find her TERMINAL From Al All' the concessions will be placed past security check.points. except two snack bars and two newsstands. Other specialty sho ps ·will be added after the terminal opens. The concession s pots were awarded after an open bidding pro- cess. A seven-member commtttce chose a group of the best-qualified vendors and final selection was made by the-Board of Supervisors. ft E~Kt: l .ISTE'\ I '\G a new home. The cat continued to elude cap- ture Thursday as the Friends and animal control officers set up cages with food inside to try to nab her. City employees also covered the. hole and the crevice to prevent the cat from being entrapped again. About closing time. ~be cat sud- denly walked up as Lyons was show- ing Executive Secretary Marion Brockman the cage-trap in the bushes near the City Hall steps. "She was just ma~hinf along outside, up by the City Hal door.'' said Brockman, secretary for Assis- tant City Manager Ken Dclino. City employees ushered the cat into the lobby area. where Lyons was able to get a hold of her and took her to the animal hospital. where a vetemarian examined her. The Feline and Canine Friends will take the cat and try to find her a "Airpons are a very lucrative place for businesses. you have a captive audience and a lot of traffic that is steady," Rutherford said. Five car rental agencies -Avis. Budget. Dollar. Hem and National -won contracts for the'uirport and will return a percentage of their income to the county. Their counters will be located at the first floor entrance. near the biger-than- life statue of John Wayne. The rental companies that were not awarded contracts -Alamo. home if the owner can't be located in the next five days. The cat's plight drew an over- whelming amount of pub!ic atten- tion and concern. Following news reports about the cat. Brockman sai~ she received calls from a number of people wanting to adopt the animal and two calls on Thursday from individuals who thought the cat may be their Jost pet. However, one of the caJlers had lost a male cat, and the other was a woman who thought the calico was her pet that ran away from her Chino home recently. The wo~an said she had just moved to Chtno from Ohio and she thought the cat perhaps left in search of its old Ohio home, according to Brockman. "She seemed serious enough," Brockman said. "Two weclcs ago. (her cat) took a hike loolcing for Ohio. I guess." General, Thrifty and USA -will be located off-site. The bottom floor. for arrivals. also will include two hotel/motel advenising boards. specialty shop kiosks and storage space for the concessions. With the expansion, the maxi- mum number of pas.sengers per year will nearl¥ doubJe, from -4. 7 million to 8.4 million. The two-story ter- mmal is more than I 0 times the size of the existing facility. Just ca/1642-6086 ORANGE ~..., COAST .... ,~, DaffJPllot Dellvery What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your messaae will be recorded. transcribed and de- livered to the appropriate editor. .,.. The same 24-hour answering service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for verification. Tell us what's on your mind. VOL. 12, NO. 300 MAINO,flC• ))0 W ~ SI • (OSI• MrY. Cilltl MM ~IHI , 0 lolt I 560 (OJt• ~y CA •1621> Claudofil ac!J, 642·S678. luJltwU Ot!1<r1 Nf'W' ..,,., Spom 642-4121 N!et SJOpm Spo<u 642.4JJO.Nf'W',S40-1224 0< S40-l 22J Fii)( Numbt• 6Jl·S'X>2 (09Yf!Q!>t -NO newt "°'''" 11unr11.ions. rOllO<•"' mai1rt 0< acivrmu-nu M•r ln Ny. bt ~oouod ...tnou\ ~IM prrlNUIO<\ °' copy•lglll own.1 ~ono ~_ponagr p.tlO" Cosr• ~. C.r.!0<n11 (UPS 144-llCOf Suo1<11pcton I>)' <Mr.., SS 2S P«'I lour· -•k prr>OCI, by tnli4 l~prt lour·WHll prrlOcl TM ~ Co.JI O..ty P'tloC II pubHJNd I>)' ~ Of~ COillt l'ul>ltsning Co A ..... rfO'ONI ~ IS publlJIWC _,, nlOlninQt • ~ l~ ptln<lflM publlJINnll ~ " ai uo W k)o Sr . Cosr• ~"' ls Guaranteed 11 you ao no1 """' y0ut p-D) 6 a .,, l"'Dtl0<r 10 • m •"IO you• toPy >\.I Dt ~••rrtO Ow Cu• 1onwr ~f'r"1Ct (f'ntt' •\· ~n !tom 6 1 m 10 S p m wrrkd,.y• 10 <tU>U yOu Wtl " yOUf l•IC.UIAl10n n~f'O\ Clrculatlon Telephones Mo" ~.~ (OV"ty .. , ... .. ~N'91Jrf .... ... .can't gct elected." His AsseQ,lbly district is perhaps , The 3 lst Senate District and the the most Republican district in the 10th Assembly District overlap in nation. and Campbell's Senate seat the south county where some of is aJso st.ron&ly GOP, especially on FftJUIOn's stronacst support' is the Orange COunty side. Campbell, 54, a former school administrator, is leaving state poli- tics after nearly 24 years in office. He was elected to the Assembly in 1966, pve up bis seat in 1972 for an i"iiii======================================~ unsuccessful run for the Los Angeles found. Even though his Assembly seat is Campbell's district extends from safe, Fcrauson said he would like the &be Whittier-Hacienda Heiahts area opponunity to join the upper house. down the cast side ofOranae County Th Sc h 40 be to the south coun"'. indudin. .. e nate as mem rs •T -. while the Assembly has 80, and M.ission .Viejo, El Toro, lquna there's more opponunity to win and ~s, Leisure World and pan of aet things done." be said. 11}~ decides to run for the Senate ~ ~ run in both ~ he -with or without a tandem race for ex~ be ll ha~e Republican op- Cbe Auembly -ferpson thinu be pos1uon for bis Assembly seat, would have an inside track for the Ferauson wd. eeaL And 1f be were to win both l1ICCS, . 001 fit that district so well becau1e be said tbc runner-up in the As- IOllllC' Big winners in Laguna, Fullerton . and Riverside ~ ~· #1"9'1111•11• ...... n. ..... tom Soutbml Cali- .... • ilmt lbe 54.7 million ..-.: .... ill die California l.onery'1 .... ~ Lono 649 pme . . County Board of Supervisors and was re-elected to the Assembly in 1974. He won election to the Senate in 1976 and became Senate minority leader in 1978. OfficiaJs with the Manufacturers Association said they chose Campbell as the aroup's president becau1e they waritcd ''the most articulate, most pcnuaaive and in- fluential person we could set to repraent the manufacturer's of this State." The Stain-Resistant Carpet You'll Be Thankful For. '. i I j ~ 3 I\ ,, .. \IC u Halloween parties planned for all ages HaDowecD eventa for everyone are Oil tap thia weekend. H~ HOIPilal will bolt a .. Baby Booaie" party for little ones from 11 Lm. to I P:m· Sauardaf to celebrate Cbe eevealh annual reuruon of &be bolpilal'a SpeCiaJ Care Nunery .. Hundreds of ._biel and toddlen in Halloween eo11wnes ~ expec1ed to a11eDd &be party in &be bolpilal's cafeteria courtyanl, a lpOkanwl uid. Events include a COltUme contest, drawina for priia, ~ntina. clown~ balloona. balloon sculplure and olber children 1 entertainment. u well u luacb. The ~ BooPe is an annual event bolted by nunery pbysaciam and nuna. The hospital is at lOI Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. . . . ' The Lapana Art MUleWll Satellite at South Cout Plaza will offer a children's worbhop in mask makina from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday. Coat ofS3 per child includes mat¢als and reservations are required at 662-3366. ' The propan1 includes a discussion and a haods-on workshop explorina some of the motifs and traditions of Halloween. "' • • • Costumed chancten of all manner will set sail on a Halloween Harbor Costume Cruise from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday. The event is sponsored by the Golden West Colleae Chapter of Alpha Gamma Siama honon society. A costume contest and dancina to the top 40 tunes is expected to raise spirits durina the cruise of Lona Beach Harbor and Alameda Bay. Guests arc encourl8Cd to dftSS in Halloween attire. Door , prizn will be awarded for those who attend in costume. Batty buffalo winp and devilish deli &J>petizen will be served. · Tickets arc on sale at the campus bookstore. Cost is S20 for GWC students W1lh Oub West cards, S22.SO for students without the card and $2S for the public. For information, calJ 89S-824S. H~l~ss Issues Mscrlb«J The Orange Coast Democratic Club will bear talks by Scott Mather, chairman of the . Orange County Homeless Issues Task Force. and Sylvia Easton. chairwoman of the lrvine Task Force on the Homeless, at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Western Federal Savinp Buildina. 4 Corporate Plaza. New- port Beach. Both spcaken participated in the Housing Now march on Washin11on earlier this month. Club founder Clara Ax tater will be honored in recopitfon of her 98th birthday. -For information, call SS2-1424. AUdubon fl~ld trip South Coast Audubon Society will have a field trip to Turtlerock Nature Center at 8 a.m. Satur- day. The Irvine park borders Bomber Canyon and has a 180-degree view of undeveloped land. Vis- iton may even sight burrowing owfs. The park is at l Sunny Hill Drive, Irvine. Visiton arc advised to bring a picnic lunch. Fun run, walk, and blk~ rid~ The annual Heart and Sole Classic to benefit the American Heart Association is scheduled for an early start Saturday. The event includes a SK fun run/walk. a lOK run and a 2SK bicycle ride. All will bqin at the Irvine Hilton and Towers/Jamboree Center. For information or to register. call the Orange County Chapter of the American Hean Associa- tion at 8S6-3SSS. C~renc~ for Hispanics The Orange County Chapter of lhe Mexican- American Women's National Association will hold its second annual Hispanic Women's Conference, :·Leadership in Motio n," from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at the Southwest Senior Center. 2201 W. Mcfadden Ave. in Santa Ana. The conference, designed for Hispanic women to develop their leackrship skills. features work· shops in education, cultural transition. leadcnhip roles in the community, nontraditional business careers. self-esteem and motivation. Keynote speaken include County Supervisor Gaddi V~uez and Mission Viejo City Coun- cilwoman Victoria Jaffe. Doors open for rqistration at 8:30 a.m. RCJistration fee is S3S. $20 for students. The fee includes all workshops. speakers, continental breakfast and lunch. Workshops begin at 9:30 a.m. and end at 3:30 p.m. For information, call Martha Galleaos at 6'47~SS7 or the MANA hotline at 6'47-7S81. Science fiction fantasy Those who want to set alien.ated can take off to the Uni-Con Science Fiction Convention from JO a.m. to 4 p.m . Saturday at the Irvine Youth Services Center, 14301 Yale Ave. The event is billed as an independent inter- stdlar tradina vcstCl with ports of call at Middle Earth, Darkover, the Sun Worlds and most of the Federation and the Imperial Klineon Empire. Activities include videos. costume contest. ~a Uivia contest, an auction and displays and sale. For information, call Claude Ervin at S59-0464. C \11,U\H _Frlda1, Oe1. a7 • No mectinp ICbeduled.. Or .... COMt DAILY PfLOT/,,_, OdoMr 27, -M ..., ..... ,.._.., '-...,.. The l'lores , .... ~,Rafael, Joeb, Nanq, Sar• with Chlcllan and C.HJrto with Jed. Public warned about phony fund-raisers 9y HtfS YOKOf '· Of-0., .... ...., A Newport Beach polict .lieutenant WM amona four pcop&e who received tele- phone calls this week from soliciton claimina to be PGlice officers raisilll money for local £aw enforcement ...,_ cics. Lt. Tim Newman said he received a call on his unlisted home phone from a person tryinJ to sellina tickeu to a beoefit show to raise money for police in La Habra. The olhen. all Corona dcl Mar resi- dents. reported receivina calls from a man claiming to be a representative of the Corona dcl Mar Police Association. Th~re is no such association, acc:ordi.na to police. . The calls prompted the Ncwpon Beech Police Department to apin advise att.a residents to be cautious when dea.lina with telephone solicitors. Newman said he and the othen were the latest victims of phone soliciton who falsely claim they are raising funds for police departments. The thrco Corona del Mar residents received calls between 7 and 9 .p.m . Wednesday from mco who said they were members of the Corona dcl Mar Polict Association. Newman said. Tbe caUers JtJdge 's ru· 11·ng on tra1·1er park ~~i! ~ffi~~a~~~ f~rt~~\~em~~~u~: and said someone would come by their homes to pick up their money. Newman r.ecc1ved a call early Monday reno at ·ans prom1·sed ta~,.f ~¥-from a man saying he wassclhngtickels V I · llJ.CI--~~u~ rx;;,itce~~~~t ;~Y 1:pec~~~.~ mauon about .the show. By 8011 VAN EYKEN Of -D~ ,_ SUlff A municipal coun j udge said Thursday that he would rule today on whether court-ordered renovations at Costa Mesa's run-down Aloha Palms trailer park were going quickly enough. for nearly two )Cars. the 16th Streel park has been the target of a renters' strike over what lcnants say are squalid, unhealthful conditions. The issue gained some new urgency last Fnday when the trailer of rent striker Cahxto Flores was scverly damaged by a fire Flores said was due lo an old and improperly maintained refrigerator. . An anomey for the park's owners said the lire was not the result of neglected' maintenance. A Costa Mesa Fire Depart- ment report indicated only thatthe fire staned with the refn&crator. Flores and his family arc staying-in a Costa Mesa motel but in a court declar- ation Thursda). Flores said he could not afford to keep his fam1l} there much longer. Rubidoull Partnership. which owns the trailer park, has submitted a rehabili- tation plan for the propcny. Representatives of the owners say they have always intended to renovate the propeny but have been .thwarted by the rent stnJce and then legal maneuverings of the ~kers· anorney, Richard Spix. Spix told Harbor Municipal Court. Judge Selim S. Franklin on Thursday thbt renovations at Aloha Palms were not being done as promised by the property owner. "No ne" or refurbished trailers have been pro' ided." Sp ix said. "There has been in my opinion very little work done~.. · He said the owners had agreed. foJlow- ing an interim inspection by Franklin on Sept. 19. to have the first new trailers read} for families to move into by Sept. 2~ . Rubidoull's attorney. Donald D1Bella. said no such commitment had been made. "Mr. Spix's charactenzat1on 1s not en- tirely accurate:· he said. He said tRc owners had only agreed to try to have some of the usable trailers moved 10 new locations in the park within two weeks. DiBella said his clients were re- furbishing a trailer for Flores and has famil). e'en though they were not re· quired to do so. "There 1s nothing in the lease that requires the owners to compensate Mr. Flores in any way far lire qamage." he said. '"The) were doing It out of the goodness of their hearts." Flores said an has declaration Thursday that the trailer bemg refurbished was not fit for hab1tat1on. D1Bella said Flon.·s and Sp1x had not given the owners a chance 10 complete the renovation. "We were more than a little dismayed that we were dragged mto coun and told there were defects in the unit before we were even finished working on 1t:· he .said. "I think this was a fnvolous motton. He's l ust tl)1ng to slow the process down.· Link to Thompson and A vi/a slayings no surprise to police By City News Setvke A sheriffs lieutenant said an attempted murder suspect's testimony that the man he shot may have been involved in the unsolved slaying of racing promoter M_ick~y Thompson was "not a revel- auon. lo his testimony. Joseph Grosso sua- acsted that Willjam Carroll -the chief financier of the now-defunct Mustang topless nightclub in Santa Ana -ordered the deaths of Thompson. Newport Beach restaurateur Joe Avila and Horace Joseph McKenna, owner of several topless clubs, amona others. Grosso, 46, told a n Orange County SuperiorCounjury that Carroll informed him he was being investipted for a dozen slayinp. Grosso also fingered reputed mobster Michael Rizzitello. 62. as the triggerman "ho fired three bulle\s into the back of Carroll's head. and said he was driving the men but did not know the shooting "ould occur. The April 30. 1987. attack m Costa Mesa permanently blinded Carroll. who testified last week an Grosso's tnal. Prosecutors allege R1zzitello shot Car- roll because he wanted to take control of the Mustang Club and the financier had not bef', cooper:ltave. K1u11ello. who faces trial next month and has denied involvement in the shoot· ing, is an underboss in the Milano or· gaoized crime family in Los Angeles. prosecutors said. Los Angeles County Sheriffs Lt. Frank Merriman, who oversees two homicide bureau investigators working full-time on the March I 6, I 988, murders of Thomp- son and his wife Trudy. said Grosso's testimony came as no surprise. "This gentleman's (Grosso) rt'velataon ycsterda) "as not a rt'velauon. other than maybe to the pubhc." Memman said. "All I can reall) tell you 1s this: We were aware of the information that he gave out on the stand. .. h's stLll an open 1nvcst1P,1IOn. and that's reall> all I can tell you: Mcmman added. R1 zze1ello's attorney. Anthony Brooklter. could not be reached for com- ment. Thompson and his wife were gunned down an the dnveway of their Bradbury home at dawn as the)' were leaving for their ~nahe1m offi ce. Two men on bikes were Sttn fl~tn& the scene. Grosso testified Wednesday that Car- roll also told him he Qrdc~ the killing of Grosso·s fnend. former Mustang Oub bouncer Goo~c Yudzevich. who was shot to death 1n Irvine. Newman caJlcd the . La Habra police and learned there was no such benefit show. These calls arc the latest in a series of false fund-ra1sing efforts in Ncwpon Beach 1n recent months. accordina to pohcc investigators. Man) public agencies.. 1ncludina police and fire departments. use private solici- tation companies to raise funds for cbari· table events. However. Newport Beach police do not deal with such companies and do not solicit over the phone, New· man said. Robbery suspects arrested By llOll VAN EYKEN Of -0..,, ,,_ SUfl' Three robbery suspects WCtt arrested Thursday after lhe) walked away wilh beer and c1garcttcs in their third aJJcpd a11empt an the same ntght to rob a Costa Mesa convenience store. Mario Fernandez, 22. Fernando Po~. 20. and Jesu Godinez. 20, all from Costa Mesa. "ere being held on SS0.000 bail each at the Costa Mesa city jail on suspicion of robbery. burglary and theft following their arrest at 3:4S a.m .. Costa Mesa police LL <\I Kent said. The arrests were made as the three suspects walked away from the 7-1 I foOd store at 2 I 50 Placentia A vc. with stolen beer and c1gare11es, accordina to police. The tno had already made two earlier attcmpt.s. one of them sUCQCSSful, to steal beer and cigarettes from the Pomona A venue Circle K store, Costa Mesa poli~ officer JeffTey McCollam said. The first attempt occurred at I :22 a.m. McCollam said he saw one of the suspects outside Circle K and penuaded him to go back in and pa)' for atJeaedly stolen merchandise. But the three went beck to the Circk K store at 2:26 a.m. and this time one of them braodisbed a knife while the trio made off'Witb an unditcloled quantity of beer and ciprcttes, McCollarri said. INS cites Mesa job center as a model ,,... Slaff Md wire lmmiaration officials. upset with a plan in Los Anaeles to open a job center to both lqal and UAdocument aliens. said the meuopolitan area should take a tip from Costa Mesa and its n\Ott restrictive jOb center prosram. work on the streets and instead checks their documents at a city-run hiring hall. Under a si.x-monlh test project in Los Angeles. the first of seven city-sponsored centers opens today to match laborcn with employers. --. C ity offic.iats hope the centers will help lmmiaration authorities. watchin& war- ily. wam that contractors and other em- ploycn will have no assurances the workers are lcpl. and risk fines under the 1986 lmmiaratton Reform and Control Act. which pcnahzcs employcn who knowinaJy hire unauthOrized workers. "Jn Los An&cles they are not 90ina to check to sec i( they arc authormd aliens. they simply arc aoinJ to matdl them up with potenual employers." said Davi- dian. Border Patrol 1&enU to sweep~ the h.irina balls on a daily bui1.·· be aid. But Oavidian added: .. They may cauae potential employen to be misled into lhinkin& they're Fttina WOfken wlto bah. ~e a .fOvmament sta~P, ~approval fOr mna. lmm11nnts-ri1hts activists were pleased with the prosnm. ~min G. Davidian, western rc- sional commissioner of the lmmi~tion and Naturalization Service, said he would have preferred to lft Los Aiweles lldcJpl a propam like tbat in COSta Mesa. .._ ______________ ...,._. whidl u. banned laborcn &om teetina keep undocumented immip'ants ft'om beina ripped off, at the same time quiet- ina complaints of merchants and resi- dents near the city's many established unoffkial ptherina plaQts for day labor- ers. ·rm DOI IOIDI to tend a ohalanx of The City Council ..,id on a unani- mous I S-0 v01e in Febnary to allocate $90,000 to the pilot project. f'l!f 11 I I Of. cman" and its aooe..ary ..-Rn Beta marUt. 21431 Brookbunt St., ~ taken from a llJ'llt in tbc 200 for al'-dly ll}ina to steal SIO block of 48th Street. wonh of did pills. • • • Som 1 DDt ICt fire to two fi~ .... ...a uatla am ia die mea·s illd WIHll°I NmOOM .... to tl~:.:n·• •6'0""1Mi•of ApmUllalt&. . • • • s for m ~or quake unchan LOI ANGELES (AP) -An earthquake man cleldh than last week's m-.jor jolt lS SO peltllDt likefy with.in 30 years near San Francisco, lad ICiealistl uy 1 cawtrophic ''bi& one" is at leal 60 pmient probable in Southern caJifornia by the year 2018. The next m1111itude-7 ..;or e will be much more devas&atina than recent jolt w~ by lelepboDe &om Mealo Pllt. p h ft ts .. llunlet ror • Haynnt Paull nupiiuc1e-1 l•ne aashes Into ouse, re erup Overall odds for such quakes, which could kill tbouunds of people, were listed in a 1988 U.S. Geolosical Survey study. They remain un- • cbanild by the Oct. 17 upheaval that claimed at least 63 lives in the Sln Francisco Bay Aiu, said lJSGS ppbysicist Jim Dieterich, the report's lead author. because it will ~ located close to the city on either the San Andreas or yward faults, Dieterich and othen -.id. .. The chance of another tructive or more destructive earthquake in the Bay area is stiU high. and the chances in Southern California are even hi&her," Sieh laid. • • The study listed overall 30-year probabilities of SO percent for a mqnitude-7 quake in the 0:-" Area, and 60 percent to perhaps 70 percent earthquake would be comparable to a pat ~uab occuni_111 alona the San Andrea Fauh aa 9outbem c.lifornia. Tbe HaY*'d run1 riabt ~ Otklanct, Berkeley and the rest of the &It Bly... . . A 1980 l-eport by the Federal ~ Manqement "8ency •mated 1 mapiaudo-7.4 quake on the KayMnl Fault could kill 3,000 to 7,000 J>COl>le, holpitalix 13,&QO IO 27,000 and cause S44 billion in damaee· 1 nere is DO estimate LOS ANGELES -A prototype airplane on I demoDltntioa fliabt crashed into two homes Thursday, ICrioualy fnjurin&_ • 1'U'!_~t ~:~ considerint buyina the craft. and ipitioa a hou11 llre, au..-.ues --. The ~t and a woman in one of the boulCI etCaped the S:2S p.m. crash without iqjury, said city Fire Department s~ Jim .Well~. The sanaJe-enaine Wheeler Express, a plane develoPed an 011 ~arbor, Wuh., wu comina in for a landina at San&a Monica Alrport ~ at we!'t down in the West Side neipborhood, 1112· miles north of the 11rport, Uld .-,.ndrew Saldibar of airport security. Tbe report predicted a 30 percent chance by 2018 for a mapitude-6.S quake on the segment oftbe San Andreas that cau5ed last week's quake. The joh measured 7.1 · on the Richter scale, ·~ina the forecast was c.onscrvative. that the "bia one" measurina 7.S to 8.3 on the Richter scaJe will rupture the San Andreas Fault in Southern California. Last week's quake raised the chance of an eanhquake on the San Andreas Fault between Lo~ Gatos and OaJy City, closer to San Francisco. It slightly lowered the chance of 1 quake on the segment south of Los Gatos. which as where last week's quake .w.as cente~. · · for a mapitude-7 quake. · caaaJ:p.:n'!uTrnui~~t~tbe~~ s3.1 mllllon seized at supects~ homes hospitalaze 12,000 to 44,000 and Clute S3a LOS ANGELES _ Authorities have ~ized more than SJ. I million in ~ilhon in dam~. ~n 8.3-m~tude "bia one" cash from the nonhern Mexico homes of two men arrested in connection m Southern ~1.fomaa could k.ill 3,000 to'l4,000 with the seizure of 21.4 tons of cocaine in a Syhnar warehouse last month. Tbe earthquake "makes one realize these forecasts are scnous and reliable," said California lnlfitute of Technology geologist Kerry Sieh, one. of 12 co-authors of the study, which ~presented a scientifac consensus. peos>k: •. hos1;>1tahzt 12,000 to ss.ooo and cause The money was discovered by U.S. and Mexican narcotica aeents It the I S 17 billion lD dama&e. • • homes of Carlos Enrique Tapia Ponce, 68 , and his son, Hector Tapia But the overall odds for a magnitude-7 quake in the Bay Area remain SO-.SO by 2018, Dieterich calculated .• "Everybody who lives in California should Anchondo, 38, said Mexican attornt)' aencral's si>okesman Rene Hernandez. be ready for an earthquake at any time, and that "A larae part of this money is from the sale of the cocaine that was -The report said a repeat of San Francisco's mqnitude-8.3 great earthquake. of ~1906 is less A magnitude-7 earthquake on 'either the San Andreas or the Hayward faults croser to San · Francisco "would be much more devastating than last week's earthquake," Dieterich said means tomorrow," wd Don Anderion, director . found in Los An&elcs,'' Hernandez said Wednesday~ . of Caltech's seismololical .laboratory·. "Just be- cause someqne says· tiiere as a .30 percent prob- ability of a b'4 earthquake in the next 30 yean doesn't mean at won't happen tomorrow." ·than 10 pere'ent within 30 years. The 1906 quake · ruptured the San Andreas Fault and killed at least 2,SOO people, according to recent studies. DEA cracl<S down on pot growers WASHINGTON (AP) -In doz-close to-the investieation. tivation apparatus and give advice sin. ens of raids nationwide Thursday. · A marijuana legaltzation advocate about its use for the cultivation of Dou• Mc Vay of the National Or-dnlf qents seized 14 stores that sell said the raids we re just "a publicity marijuana," Shults said. ''They pnizat1on for the Reform of Mari- eqwpment allegedly used to grow stunt:· openly do it." Juana Laws. said the raids on stores manjuana indoors, confiscated 46 A law enforcement source, who The DEA used u11dercover agent.s were "a publicity_ stunt, a largely sU<:h indoor operations and arrested spoke on condition of anonymity, . in every store to determine whether ineffective one," and "silly, really 91 people, the Drug Enforcement said earlier in the day that federal the owners krtew the equipment -silly." Administration said. agents expected-to make 100 arrests such as lighting. irrigation and ven-.. I can understand the DEA's frus- Tbe seizures and arrests were con-Thursday. In the previous month. tilation apparatus -was being used tration," McVay said. "It's true; tinuing into the evening, said DEA 11 2 people had been arrested in for indoor marijuana cultivation, some of this equipment is being spokesman Frank Shults. who connection with the same investiga-the source said. used for (indoor marijuana) cul- provided the fieures as of late after-tion. The stores were located in AJaska. tivation. On' the other hand, dirt is Zsa ZSa husband Says DA.exploited her· . . BEVERLY HILLS -Zsa Zsa Gabor's husband said Thursday that after her arrest, District Attorney Ira Reiner begged to pose for a photo with her and said, "Sweetheart, don't worry,'' when she recounted her slap fiaht with a Beverly Hills police officer. A spokeswQ111an for Reiner acknowledged the photo was taken at a Beverly Hills dinner party aftCT Gabor was arrested for striking Officer Paul Kramer, but denied Reiner requested the photo or that the misdemeanor case was discussed. Freeway concern excluded 1-880 SACRAMENTO -State officials in August had enough concefc about the seismic weaknesses of three Bay Area elevated-freeways to seek expedited repairs. But the almost identical 1-880 freeway next door. which collapsed in last week's quake, was not mentioned, an internal memorandum shows. State engineers have said several times sil')ce the collapse that they firmly believed 1-880 would not fall down in a quake. noon for the ra1ds, code-named Op-The stores raided "range from Arizona. Ca1ifornia, Colorado. used for indoor cultivation. I don"t eration Green Me_rchant. mom-and-pop to something Georgia. Illinois, Kentucky, Massa-think we're goin' to stop people M t LA h . ti occ r on streets • Thursday's raids involved 65 equivalent to a K-man ... said the chusetts. Michigan, Minnesota, Mis-from selling dirt.' • OS s 00 ngs u . commercial businesses in 22 states source. souri, New York. Nonh Carolina. An increasing number of U.S. CHICAGO -The number of motorists who shot or waved ·guns at as well as more than I 00 indoor ··we have established through the Ohio, Oklahoma. Or~on, Penn-marijuana growers have been ·mov-each other in Los Angeles County quadrupled from 1985 to · 1987, but cultivation locations in 46 states, advertising and other means that sylvania. South Carolina, Texas. ing th~ir plants indoors because of t t J ber f t h It occ rrcd on street rather than said a federal enforcement official • these stores do sell the indoor cul-Virgi~ia. Washington and Wi~on-exten_$ive aerial surveillance. ~~~~~is ~r~F;h!~ys. 1~e5e~~~h:~c sa~~Th~rsda~. s ---------------------------~----------------------~ lnnurly ~ft~ca~-4Spe~nt-v~imssa~theyhadoo confrontation with the gunman before the shooting or gun-brandishing. said the researchers from the national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta: - .. ·Sunday, October ·29, 1989 • 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. _, For all new and expectant mothers, join us to find · out why PREGNAGYM is the right ·choice for a L healthier pr~~cy and post-pregnancy. PREGNAGYM is the only medically supervised conditioning program in Irvine using special Nautilus and Fitron equipment designed for new and expectant mothers. · GRAND OPENING HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE: • Equipment demonstrations. • Maternity fashion show courtesy of A Pea In The Pod (South Coast Plaza). • Learn how to start your personal fitness program at PREGNAGYM. • 'first 100 guests receive a Womens Choice tote bag, sports bottle. and more. • Light refreshments served. For more information, please call Karen Kredel, (714) 857-6500, ext 6W. WIN A ROMANTIC WEEKEND GETAWAY COURTESY OF PREGNAGYMI .. Attend the PREGNAGYM grand opening celebra- tion and you could win a romantic weekend getaway for two at the luxurious Marriott Desert Springs Resort in Palm Dnert. This great weekend package includes two nights accommodations along with dinner at the Chart HOUR in PAim Spring& 441'2 Barranca~• Sult llO • 11'\'W. CA 9Z114 '\ ·\TIO'\AI, BHlt:t ·s , Remains of 2 servicemen retum WASHINGTON -The remains of two U.S. servicemen repatriated by the government of Vietnam will be flown to California toda'y. the Pentagon announced. _ The remains were identified as Air Force Col. Samuel C. Maxell of Omaha. Neb .. and Marine Maj. David B. WilJiams of Lafayette, La .. the Pentagon said in a statement. The rentains will depan Hickam Air Force Base in Hawaii with a full military honors ceremony and travel to Travis Air Force Base, the statement said. · Hugo damage may top SS bllllon WASHINGTON -When it's all counted up, the damage from Hurricane Hugo may exceed SS billion. the director of the NationaJ Hurricane Center said Thursday. Robert Sheets told a Senate committee that damage from the September storm could climb to the $8 billi on to $10 billion level, in his opinion. The insurance industry is currently estimating its losses at $4 bHllon. Sheets said. · . 'Pooh Pooh Choo Choo' sent back NAPOLEONVILLE~ La~ -LOcal officials rused a stink about it, so a waste disposal company decided against accepting a train loaded with smelly sewage sludge ·from Baltimore and sent 1t back. , ''They took the 'poob pooh choo-choo' where it belongs.-They took it out of this parish," said Jim Simmons, president of the Police Jury. the governing body of Assumption Parish. GSX Land Treatment Inc. had subcontracted with an engineering firm to take the nonhazardous sewer sludge from a failed Baltimore composting firm that bought the 12.000 tons of.sludge from the.city of Baltimore. That city is under a state order t? djspose of 200,000 tons of sludge by the end of November. 7 corporations avoid federal tax W ASHlNGTON -Seven bqe profitable corporations were able legally to avoid payi ng federal income tax last year - a decline from SO becau~. of the 1986 tax .overhaul. a private study concluded Thursday. Cn1zens for Tax Justacc, a labor-financed research orpniz.ation, said the average tax rate paid by the nation's 2.SO biggest moneymaking corilpanies rose last year to 26.S percent. compared with 14.3 percent in 1981 through 198S. . . . . Forty-five corporations still pajd less than I O~pe«:ent of their: profits tn income taxes. fewer than half the number reported a year earlier. The study found the new law is shiftina a areater share of the tax burden to corporations. as it was intended to do. ffOHl .D HHll 'I·~ Jet aashes In Taiwan, 54 fe•red dead . , ·TAIPEI, Tmwan -A China Airlines Boeina 737 crashed into 1 bamboo-covered moun&a.in TbundaJnc"';:uta after aakina otr from &be eastern city or Hualico, and airtine o · said all S4 people aboard were feared dead. . Racuen found 21 bodies and the wrecble in 1 moun&a.in valley early today after the teareh resumed at fim liaht. airline officials aDd radio reports laid. . Tbe offkial Bf09dcallina Corp. of China said there wu no lip of survivors. VHS Video Recorder wHh Cable Ready Tuner and 16 Station Sherwood 25 Watt* Receiver with Surround Sound & 24 Presets Presets $167 ONLY S20/MONTW0 -13" REMOTE COLOR TV s1&&· ONl Y S20/MONTM .. =:::;;;;miiiiiiiii1111 .. ~~~ .. cno.-~ -. 13" Retn0t4t Color TV wnn1os Ch•nnell A E•rphpne/Heedphone .... D•••• A .... 1'11 i Dar•• Weell f"9 _ _... ............... _ .... .,_._Ym __ .. I I ... ::&::.--........ -...... -.. '"° ......-., .... ""-..... . •1=:'o.t0.,Cllll9tC.. ...._.._..__.. MTV-t ................... , ~ ................................. .,....c.... Technlcs High Performance Bass Reflex 3-Way Home Speaker with 12" Woofer 568E.ch Sanyo AM/FM Cassette Player with Lightweight Stereo Headphones Goldstar Telephone Answering M•chlne with Remote Pl•yback/Erase s 39 UMH One ....,.,...., Excellence 13.5 Cu .. Ft. Cycle Defrost 2-0oor Refrigerator with Separate Freezer Compartments 5 299 ONLT S20/MONTW • Portland Compact-Sized Microwave Oven with .a Full 500 W•tts Cooking Power s59 l lmttOne p.,,....., Pric• EftecttM Fridlly, October 27, 1-Onlfl --Co-ollr ""8 I .; I $4,00G ~· CtiCllt Avalalll•) ITORI llON-"" SATUtltOAY ...... , ~I> HOURI UAM • WM 1~M • 1N .... • .. ..-.r-tt ·-• .__ I ~y I ov.--o.....a- 1:509 0.9 Lo 1:10. S.J II Z:Dp 0.1 Lo l :Ztp 4.4 •• Z:14e 1.Z Lo 1:211 S.4 II J:02p 0.4 Lo 9:05p 4.J II I ..... '"' IUNDAY IStMdudTlllle• Z:J6e 1.5 Lo 1:411 '·' ., J:Dp O.Z Lo 9s42p 4, 1 II I Ext~nded forecast ~~ ~·%slly wi'ny dlly1 -,~.., nlfjtlt1, ~ PM<-"Y lllOr"'"!I IOg .tlong llW Ca.st. W,,,,_, ~ H•gns In I~~ 60s to ~ 80l lows on ~ Ul>P'f 40s lO io-t 60s MOUNTAIN ~ -Mostly <~a< SIC .. I. Wtll'I IOU! gusry f'llltf'•ly Wff'ldl °"" ,,., -l)llSSft hSOtl lllgtu 1n rtw io-1 SOs ca iow.. 60s lows 1n tlW JOs llflO 40s D9Uft' ABAI -Mo~ <If'« skl•s. """" Joni gusty nonfl wlncl1 0-ns V*Y hlgru 1n trw UllPf" 50s 10 ml<t-60s lows In thf' JOs Uppf'r a.wn t119t1s on !hf' 60s Lows In tlW mid· J0s 10 """·40s l OW.t ~" l'ligl'll In lhf' _, 70s 10 lowf't 80s Lows tn tlW ~· 40s 10 mld·SOs Calif. temps H•QIU ¥1d ovrrn1gt11 rows to S p m POI l\Jamt'dll llM<en tlf'IO hritow lraumont 66 S1 68 4 1 69 40 71 35 119•• ~ ~rw c ....... Concoro CUIVt'f City fUt.U • Fr•mont ~""'" Uncat .. Uwflnor• l onQIHtll Lot~ L A Altpon Maryt"'* MonrOllla Mont~ Motu<•y "'"*' ,.nadeN ,..w..,... helaAI hdwoodC1ty . ....,.,,,. S.Cr-o satrw S.wllWNrdlno S.wl G.ltwiet s..o~ ~Fr..-c:IKO SF Airport ~Jaw SM) l Ul1 ()C); "JIO S.wl ltalltel SM1«11AN ~t.thtt>.tra S..,,t• Crur S.tnta M.trl.t ~llt Monio Santa ltou Stotk1on Ta~VaMy Tom•nc:•' l.l.S. temps ·- SJ 10 60 11 •16 .. 6S SI .. 41 72 52 St S4 70 4S 66 41 64 M ' 66 u 7S 4t 74 SJ 72 54 64 U 78 4) 76 4S 62 41 74 so 74 46 68 )7 60 4 1 67 46 74 42 67 4l 67 4l 74 44 77 44 70 SS 66 St 64 49 66 4' 10 . 44 64 47 76 SI 71 40 64 3' 72 40 68. S4 6J 4) 66 41 s 1 " • 7S 48 Hogt>s -OVf'mlgt\I tows 10 5 p m. POT Abti.nt'.Tf'aas Atron C;1nton Afbany,N Y ~·quf' Al!f'nrown 80 S9 12 48 71 )7 61 46 76 J9 IMilrlot• .. ...,,..,.. ~ a-cti IOl!e lo•on ltldOePM· .._ ...... lulfll!lo ~on.VI Ctne-l Ctewllnd Colof Mo iclOI C~.S{ c.--.a. c-...Ohto Concoro.N.H Corpw Chtttll o...-111·F1 W0t1n O.tytOf\ 0 .t}'tON k.U. 0-er Dff~I Of'trOlt Dult.4tn Elf'uo Ellnns Ertr Eugrnt EvM'tw lllr Fa<ro.nlts Fllf'go Fl.J9st.ttl Fltnt Fort Smltl'I Fort Wayr>f' GoocllMlO Gr.tnd Junction Gr and llapl<IJ GrHt , ... , Hounon Hunuv11k!.~ lnof~I Jac:uon.Mtu Jac:•sonv•lf JunrltU IC.ans.1C11y ICno•vlk LM!f' Ctl.lt~J l~""!j Las VrQiU Lea1ngtori Llnc;oln 16 .. 79 IO SI 41 71 .. 72 4J 54 JI ., 47 11 45 . 8' '1 70 .. " . 3' 7S 4t 7l .. St IO n n 16 45 16 .. 72 JI 86 67 81 57 7J 46 76 66 60 SI 77 S7 72 46 75 SS 7t 57 76 JO; 68 .. SS SO 79 .. I J II 7' 65 S6 lS 7S 47 81 53 7) 45 11 sa 57 41 75 S2 Sl 37 12 sa 76 45 74 .. 80 40 69 S7 41 27 77 62 76 38 82 Sl 74 46 68 46 77 46 18 63 76 71 ID n 75 SI ,. ,.. ., 72 79 71 11 ID 71 71 ID 80 74 76 n 7J .. 6) Sl 1l 67 74 60 S6 74 8 1 IS . " . S8 75 75 SI 1' 75 74 71 7' 13 74 78 7) 7' 78 es 7S 82 77 81 SJ • • 41 IO 45 .. .. se $) 5' 4t 41 41 ... 6J 6J .. SI 44 SS 42 JS l9 4t 41 sd 43 u 22 4S 62 67 76 4t .. SS 47 so so n 41 .. 60 42 61 .. st 44 62 .. .. 61 SS Wlllln · .. •• W11r'nH191on.Ori .... ,,,.. Youngstown YIMN Smog report " J8 76 ., n :t 77 SJ Surf /Sun/Moon _....,. ,_, poor 1-2 poor 1·2 poor ,.. poor ,_, ..., 1·2 poor ,.. poor rrw sun r1M1 coo.y • 7:06 uft. - HU M 6 04 p "' • II rbn Saturday • 7-07 .t tn an0 HU Ill 6•03 p,tn. rrw moon l4'lS todly • t·SJ p.m - 11.ses • 6 It 1 m Saturellt)I. k MtS • S.20 pm Coast Guard Seamu Afpradce Destry C. WlttlaaH, son of Destry C. Witthaus of Hunting1on Beach paduatcd from Coasi Guard Train- mg Center, Cape May, NJ . T. Yoalllno, son of'Kenji Yoshino of Laguna Niguel. Programs hef.p make college a reality • • • Completing Army basic trammg at Fon Dix, N.J. were Pvt. Lance E. Carr, son of Franny Carr of Hunt- ington Beach; Pvt. David C. BoUa, son of Joyce and David Bolin, Mission' Viejo; NationaJ Guard Pvt. Tuya L Maaelek, daughter of RQ1Cr Maselck of Fountain Valley; Reserve Pvt. Myug 8 . Cb, son of Yona Suh of Fountain Valley. At Fort Jackson, S.C., Pvt. Heatlter It. 8 ....... daughter of Karla Narsesian and stepdaughter of Mark Narsesian of Huntington Beach; Pvt. A1bty P. e ..... , son of Donna Horan of Huntington Beach; Pvt. noma1 om, son of Julie and Stanley Ock of. Laauna Niguel; Pvt. Bridget E. Lallreck, daughter of Ernest Wreck· of Costa Mesa. At Fort Leonard Wood, Pvt. Mooa Sylt °'· son of Hangyu l and Daeyul Ob of Cotta Mesa; Pvt. IAtlter D. MUcllell, son of John Mitchell of Costa Mesa and at Fort Sill, O kla. Pvt. Rould • • • Navy Petty Officer tad Cla11 Craig A. Maljala, son of Donald and June Maijala of Huntington Beach, has been promoted to his present rank while serving at Naval Air Station. Fallon, Nev. • • • Marine 1st Lt. Mark D. Grootbub, son of John G roothuis of Balboa Island, was designated a Naval Aviator. Presention of the "Wings of Gola" marked culmination of 18 months of flight tranining. • • • Marine Cpl. Mlcbael A. Spence, son of Cleo Spence of Laguna Niguel, has been promoted to his present rank while serving with 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Corps Afr Station. Yuma. Ariz. • • • • Army Capt. Edward J. Ramirez, son of lreneo and Fumiko Ramirez of Mission Viejo, has arrived for duty at Fort lrwfn, Calif. · "'· ua lJNIVDSITY a.ua . I IS6-64()0 ·. Perfect few 1 Weddinp, Banquets, ' ~Iona Located oa caft1Nll at UC bvinc OYCr lootift& the campw pert. ~a t!npo 'la'rn ..._ .ler .M heino 723-0838 Steve Velez Celil& VW-T...-Aftliloblo .. But more funding needed for them to ~urvive re~0lit~for;b~::y~~~Bc:~~ei~ · · parents, not just a dream," Castruita By EMILY ADAMS Of -D.tlly ,_ Staff The buzz words among today's top Orange County education ad- ministrators are cooperation and ac- cessibility. With cooperation among schools. they say, college is becom- ing more accessible to the average student. T~is was the emphasis of Thurs- day morning's "State of Orange County Education" breakfast spon- sored by ua and led by the univer- sity's chancellor, Jack Peltason. Programs like Step and Articula- tion, both in the Santa Ana Unified School District. are he1pin~ students make the leap from the city's high schools into community colleges and universities, administrators said. · That'~ the gOod news. The bad news is, Peltason said, local secondary and post-secondary schools are still badly in need of Unified School District, Rudy said. funding to expand and survive and, Castruita, was equally pleased with ' In the meantime, local colleges arc of course, UCI still stands for his district's Articulation Program, working on attracting more students "under construction indefinitely." which guarantees s1udents will not to the teaching profession in order to During brealcfast presentations, redo course work as they .hop from · instruct those upcomina youngsters, Pcltason said little 1lbout the state of one institution to the next and en-said Jewel Plummer Cobb, president Irvine's university, beyond that stu-courages their progress aJong the of Ca~ State, Fullerton. dent dormitories arc overcrowded way. . "We arc dedicated to providing and the ·::ampus is strugHng to Originally, the program was de-more teachers,'' Cobb said, "and retain a degree of normalcy under signed for srudents pursuin3 more enlarging the educated pool from the thick dust of construction. traditional course work, but, which we will pull our leaden for the Instead, conversation centered on Castruita said, "It's been so doggone next quarter-century." programs _that encolfraJe uudents to · successful, we've .branched out into But none of these programs will p~rs~e h.agher education -f~m -areas like counseling and the per· survive, unless -more funds are dastnct high schools to community forming ans." provided· ·to meet the needs of an colleges and beyond. Other programs piloted in Santa mcrras.ih&ly educated population, These are programs the adminis-Ana include a curriculum that en-leaders of the North Oranae County, trators are proud of. ''Grade point courages parents to learn new math 8,ancho Santiago and Saddleback averages show our transfer stude!1ts skills along with their children, and community college dislricu warned. do as well or better than natave sending sixth-graders and their Funding can bC expected to be students of schools such as UCLA," parents to visit college campuses. even tighter next year, Fernandez said Alfred Fernandez. chancellor of Many of those parents have never warned, bccausc._of the e&t>ital fi.lnds Coast C,ommunity College District. seen a college campus before, drain from the San Francisco carth- Supenntendent of the Santa Ana Cauruita said. quake. m111R rux .. stJOP Why ,., More? Choose S. CalifOfnla's Leader in Selection. Service. Quality. & Price. • Save 50% off the father of the Bride's Tux Rental 140." -•so... · • Groom's Tux Rental is always FREE w I 6 paid Rentals For Ollr enrire collectlOn of TuxtldoS. ~tom=•--.. The Bride ~U:.:'Lnta Re~ .... Rates Lynn Marie 133-8147 Adu••••Al-Y81111 Clmtefl ~-........ A...,, Look to the Wedding 9howcw for local m1116cl .... catel•a. ~ ..... end morel M 1'11 ti I IH ,,,,_,.., I\., ........... ~ --~)-- a.rm.. ......... W....._ c.lles • ..,.,.. OIJ. F_,,_ Way" 2950 Gr_.. Lii. C.M. t.a for lnlo ....... -7 A) AM.._ TM llJUl tha1 quelity is · e1~ve B) Udl Year · C) 9feelaHM• in perfection D) + VWM I) Plu ... for Portrait Gifts. o.-. ..... Ml·llll. B•hdwwt1111/8-hll• P-*9 ....................... . <!Mii Padftc COMt Hwy. (213) ----(714) Mlt33t lkau1il•I POf*l.,. a O...k.i fflU'pltf•• Enh•n(e Yo•r "ecWi•g. Receplioa or S.l!,(i.J Ounioa. 951-5081 111, •• , ''·~· . .. ,.,, .. ,,.,, j/1t1••llt B.B.'a C.t.riftv 882-1988 ............. eo.,.... ............... ... ~~~· S4l-9e09 Plan the perfect Wedding • and help brides and grooms , t with their Special Day. t • COMPLIT! WIDDING,ACllAGl8 ' • SPICIAL IOOll Dl81GN • • VIDIO Yotra 8P1C1AL MOMENT 41 ' • PllOTOGaAPllY • PLOIAL ADAJllGllllNT8 ' • Rl1'I LACI WflN • GAZllO iiW"i IONS ~ • INTllTAOODNT a..... ' (714) 643-~319 900 W. First St. • T\»Un, 41, mila tram John Wayne Airport 56 Fwy-4th St. Exit . H '9 FLOOR MODELS ·: • WEARING · APPAREL = · . . -.. • -.. -~ . P\l'\ll\//I Thousands celebrate _Fashion Island'~ reo • en1ng 8y KAmN M neo those European towns," he said, his way through ·\he crowd. (Kang's °' • ..._ ,... .;,,,, explaining The Irvine Co.'s effort to popular and trendy restaurant re- . Truh cans were beino slluffled develop a similar synergy combinina cently opened in Fashion Island.) • shoiJping, dining. playmg -and · Steel drum bands and mariachis around, painten were quickly clean-"people watching.'' , ' filled the. air with music to ~lne by, ina up evidence of their labOr, ~nd Indeed, if people watchina was the followed later on the. main staaina a maintenance worker was mopping ~oal Wednesday night, everyone aot area with a performance by "Kids the floor u DeuN Brea, chairman · fil di 3 ()()(). 1 M · • · Le of The Irvine Co., held court with 1s 1 I, as reporte y , p us rev-are us1c' and danc1'1f to s memben of the press J·ust prior to clers wedged into the shopping "av-Br~n and his Band of enown. . . enun" of the new wma that · Riaht now, they (The Irvine Co.) the c:>fficial aran~ reopening eel-stretches from Bullocks Willhire to are treating JQO kids at a separate ebrauon for Fashion Island. New-the counyard outside Atrium Coun. pany." explained honorary commit- pon. Ce~ter. . And everyone had an opportunity tee member Mltal T ... 1 (early in the •1 m JUI! pleased .to be wttb all. of to actually .. see .. Donald Bren, as evening) of the Boy Scouts who you here t~y." said Bren st.anding • the normally reclusive business wo uld participate in a parade of 1n whai wdl eventually be a second leader-stayed for the entire event, in lights. It was all part of The Irvine level food court (part of th~ latest full public display (but never far Co.'s salute to children. and chil- &>hase in the transformation of from his protective entourage). dren's propams in the county were f:'ashion Island.) "It's been an effort Thymes CaterinJ had .a challenge beneficiaries of the $75 per person that's been over five years long to manning the JTluluple food stations event. ' brina the downtown .. : to· Newport holding Mediterranean inspired dis-· Proceeds in uccss of $260,000 Beach." hes from antipasto and pastas. to were divided among Cflildhelp It was Bren's vision to create the grilled seafood and pizzas. USA. the Irvine Children's Fund. Mediterranean ambiance at the ex-"Best food I've ever had," said the lrvi11e Theatre Children's Pro- pansivc outdoor shopping mall. "It's Five Feet Too owner Mldlael Kaq, grams. the Mardan Center for a wonderful enel'IY that grows out of with a wicked little arin. as he wove Educational Therapy, Orange Coun- ty Bar Foundation's Shortstop Pro- gram. and the Orange County Philharmonic Society's Youth P10- grams. .._ ............... ~ Judtl• Jiaclllh llJ•n, retired, •ntl Uuglller Courtn•J •ccept check for ch._ frOlll DorYld aren l•t l•ftl; Cesar •~•ro •ntl Ann• JeHr•r•· Bren sweetened the pol by donat- ing an additional $25,000 to each charity's take -above anct beyond the community effort -which, of ,-......_-------------------,~-:-------.:-;-:----------:::::::; course. thrilled the recipients. T-_... ~ Nlelsen, C.01 Wllllen. VI llONITON "I think it's just a phenomenal pany." said Dick Sim, of The Irvine Co .. as the crowd swept him along. "We're just glad that so many people could come and share in five years of work!" · A fe w party revelers spotted in the crowd included Gary Hut (who was never very far from-bo55""" Bren), celebrities Cesar Romero and Aaae Jeffreys, DomlDlc and Barbara Rep- polo, Evelyn Hart, Gail and Peter Ocll1s, Elon and Mary Ann WeU1, Noddle and Bill Weimer, Sandy and Gerry Brodie, Mary Lou and Scett Hornsby, Marcia and Haak Adler, Ridge and Tltelma Friedel, Carol and Larry Hoffman, Linda and Jay Oxford, June Donovan, Joyce Reaume, Doug Rukln, Walter Gerken, Carol and Kent Wilken, 0.. and Dolly Karclter, Zee Allred, Tiu SclaafnJt1, Tom and Marilyn Nellsea, Joan and Lew Huson, Jue a nd Riclaard Martla, Joyce and David Owidt, and Bill Lane -just to name a few. .. Jo1c• Gwldt. Mlbl TOINll, C.ol Hofflaml _... n.e-. l'rledel •t cel•br•tlon. .. ~ft ....... --. RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY nee. ... ,_ .... CMrs llrt! 1122 -••~ CISTl IDl..-541-1156 Herpes victims Say counseling a must --l•n••MU ... ow .... ,... 9"1 .. -·sri• ....... C.. 1-77'3 HIRE rhrouf'h classified DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I read the letter from "Typhoid Mary" who got herpes ("the git\ that keeps giving") I knew I had to write. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiij~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Eight years ago I. too. got herpes and became det:ply depressed. I felt • Fridays at 6:00 pm Rogers C&blesystems Channel30 SADDLE BACK TV ashamed and dirty, afraid that no decent man would ever want to have anything to do with me. How lucky I was to have found a doctor who insisted that I get counseling and join a support group. Herpes is no picnic, but it need not ruin anyone's life. Within a year I met a man who was able to see the person I truly was. He gave me back the self-esteem I had lost when I became infected. I learned that stress is a big factor in outbreaks ·-==========::;========:;::;:=:;:==::::;;;:::;-1 and the calmer I was the less fre-,. EKING FUN 1 ouent the attacks. SENIORS SE · I want to say to every herpes '• person who reads thjs -it's not the end of the world. A positive attitude OPENING SOON can be your best weapon against Look 00 further than South Cout Senior lcttina this virus get you down. VWMI Our spectoa. new unita include Millions of nice people have it and ..m 1uxurtea..: most of them arc livina 09rmal lives. A.0.K. IN NEW _,... ........ C11llM111,CA~ ,- (714) 148 ~ ENG LANG DEAR NEW ENGLAND: Tlauk1 fer u ...... I le'tt«. I was MllPIM dial HMnlll ef retlllen wreae te ... ., ..... ....., ..... , .. HHIUf,I ........ 10 .. otltera. Please· read oa: DEAR ANN LANDERS: Believe me. I can relate to "Typhoid Mary" in Amarillo. For me the worst thing about getting herpes was the anger. I felt betrayed by my steady. who had picked it up fro m Lord knows who, and I was furious because he didn't have the decency to tell me he had it. I'm sure my resentment interfered with the healing. After I went into counseling. the eruptions became much less severe and less frequent. Now l believe that there is a positive side to every negative ex- perience. For me it was learning. through aettina herpes, that the mind can play a m~or role in hcalina the body and keepina it well. -SAN LUIS OBISPO DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 44. an attractive mother of three beautiful children. I am a leader in the community and active in church work. PT A and local politics. I have had herpes for fi ve years. When my husband brought this virus home 10 me I was shattered. If ii hadn't been for counseling. I would have gone to pieces. Actually. herpes turned out to be a blessing in disguise. My husband went into counseling also and it saved our marriage. We are closer now than we have been in years and I can truthfully say I love him more than ever. -INDIANAPOLIS DETROIT: l got herpes from the prom quee.n. She was 18. talented and beautiful, had a gorgeous sm ile and a peaches-and-cream complex- ion, the last person in the world you would suspect of having a venereal disease. That was three years ago. I am now engaged to marry a wonder- llOHO'C 01"1 ful }OUO& woman who understands the problem and together we work around it. Her unconditional sup- pon has rebuih m y shattered ego and I now know that love can be bigger than any \ irus. PROVIDENCE: l am one of the unlucky ones. l have frequent out- breaks and oflen the) arc extre mely painful. At first I 1hough1 I would never have sex again. I felt dirty. used and branded for life. The fel- lowship I found in m} suppon group saved me. Anyone who has herpes should write 10: Herpes Re- source Center. P.O. Box l 3827L. Research Triangle Pa rk. N.C. 27709. (Please enclose a long. self- addressed. stamped en elope with 45 cent return postage.) You can also call the herpes hot line (919) 361-2120. Monda} through Friday from 6 a.m. until 3 p.m. l. Frw.1, oea. n . . AftlES (March 21-April 19): Moon moves to area of chart relatinJ to public affai~ lqal qreements. marriaae. You'll be asked questions conccmina property, home, basic intentions. Love relationship results in added responsibility. • TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Keep options open regarding work methods, employment. Someone is seriously considering transfer. Spotlight on money. versatility, changing conditions. You'll be complimented on wardrobe. . GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Lunar position accents style; creativity, sensuality. Some miaht comment ... -----------. "You've been under-playing your own capabilities!" People who previously were indifferent now sit up and ta1te notice. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You·~ in your element. People consult you, questions arc asked conccmina property, insurance, interest rates. You'll be offered money for written opinions. Flirtation lends spice. Virgo involved. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): You miaht want to be far away but duty calls. Relative says, "Please be hofM ~uee. I want to visit!" Stress di~omacy, plcue yourself without ofJendina olhen. Yes, you will be walkina ughtrope! VJaOO (AUf. 23-Sept. 22): Delay ~un in connection with payments. royalties. financial tranSKtions. Temporary postponement should not be !Jmled with failure. Terms will be reviewed and you'll benefit as result. Pitea reprtlnlted. LllHlA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Thote who thouaht you were mild-n\annered, shy will be swtJed. Cycle points to responsibifity, authority, abiHty to take chlfll of,oar own desliny. Relationship pows ~ Capricorn in picture. IOOllPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. ll): Lona·ran,e possibilities command at\eft-don. Individual wbo kepi IOCl'CI will now lake y0u into confidence. Y ou11 bow wlw Md been doae. Future intentions W'lll be darifted. Aries ftaures ~· UllJI (Nov. 22-Dec. ~SU.. iladcpeadnt'c, confidence. real6ae you .. ..,..,.., ~ are f'ulllled. You11 be •)'inl. ··Now I know what I have beq mlllias!" SpotUpt on *9dline. O-ymenta, PQINlll'i~ (Dec. 22-Jan. 19~ You'I be lllred IO do 101De clivilioe. lnvohel dMlic:a ........, ,_. .. •*""'• ot ......_ ~ ,....,,...,. ............... -.-.. cw.r • ~ ... CoMt DAILY PILOT /Frldey. October 27, 1989 by 811 Keane COUJllT&R CUL TUR& by Maratta & Maratta \ PEAJnJTtl by Ch.,. M. Sd"*~ 8llT I TALKED IT CNEI. WITM M'Y 006, ANO HE SEEMED TO TMINK IT'S -You've got another pound to love, Mommy!" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson ' .... .,_,.. .. •N4Wit• ·~-·IN: ·~ '\ . . J.:.f ':>, #f~ NANCY ' .. t r 1 j I I • • ArrLiANCE Of 1'HE l'tO'S: 1HE LAPTof TO'-~TE~ DEKIUS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcha~ by Jerry Scott ARLO AND JANIS by Jimmy Johnson ~D GJ.Vf, /1-i,A I~GtOtOO 10 ~ GR£>.T I~ FOR A DIRTY, ~y UIPPY' UAU.OW£W! "E5. IAAAM .. 1've oec1DEO TO G¥)1T SC~ .. l'LL PIOIAILV NEVER AMOUNT 10 ANm41N6 Atf{WI«... • IM 60IN6 TO DEVOTE TME REST OF NH LIFE TO MAKING M"< 006 MAPPV .. NO.~,l MAYEN1T DISCUSSED nus 'f'ET WITM Ml( MOTMER GARFIELD FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE JUDGE PARKER I'!"\ ~.OIR.THE. 8E.3f I Cf\N t::x:> \$ f\ SlUOtO W11H FOLD·OJf ~ 6l)f. I REG1SlEft:o ~~PGOll ~l(~fPM 71 I(()() ~'T ~E >. U?MPvi~~ ~f. FUNKY WINKERBEAN ANO FATMER ... 50R~ I BO'f 40_) ~"f ~EMOUE -me BA~D 600SfER5' ~ION BCXYfH ~RDM ~E END I'VE r:1 L.£0 F¥\P€R5 ID HAVE 11 DE.5t6NA1ED AS A HISTORIC. 5fiE .' ZONE ! ' ,...-----rr-=:Jl"S1nm1 t \Jli&..~rr~ , ~..&.\\\l'~~ ..... ~ /RWJP,.,., I D001'ESBURY M4Y mt CITY/ M4Y JA.1Y CITY! MK. 5MOOTH IS HAV/"6 A ~ ~ Ol/TllMI . c:::::::;;. /. "" ~ l ' ~A"rsso ~l'O"'TORIC A8)(}T" rr ~ 10 (J by Garry Trudeau A 6'tEAT IDEA .. by Jim Davis by Lynn Johnston by Jett.MacNeUy by Harold Le Ooux by Tom Batiuk rrs -rnE FIRS! GOAL. - klNE STAND IN IHE H ISfORQ OF 1fi£ 50-KX)L.. .1 M Ol ... COlll DAILY PILOT/ Friday, October 27, .. ~~ ..... '7 ... ·_ ''\l'\ll\//1 Thousands celebrate Fashion.Island's reo • en1ng 9' ICMSN M. ftlD °' ............ · Tnab cans were beina shuffled around, painters were quickly dean- ina up evidence of tbear labor, and a nwntenance worker W.s mopping the flQor u DeuN Brea, chairman of The Irvine Co .. held court with memben of the press just prior to the officiaJ arand reopening cel- ebration for Fashion Jsland. New- port Center. .. rm jus~ pleased 10 be with all. of you hett tOday," said Bren standing 1n what will eventually be a second level food court (pan pf the latest phase in the transformation of l=ashioo Island.) ·:1t•s been an effort that's been over five years long to brina the downtown ... to Newport Beach." It was Bren's vision to create the Mediterranean ambiance at the ex- pansive outdoor shopping mall. "It's a wonderful enef'IY that grows out of those E.!opean towns," he said, cxplainini The Irvine Co.'s effort to develop a similar synergy combinina shoiJping. dining, playing -and "people watching.:• Indeed, if people watchina was tbe goal Wednesday night, everyone got his fill, as reportedly 3.000-plus rev- elers wedged into the shopping "av- enues" of the new wing that stretches from Bulloclis Wilshire to the courtyard outside Atrium Court. And everyone had an opportunity to actually "see" Donald Bren. as the normally reclusive business leader stayed for the entire cveRt, in f uJI pubhc di$play (but never far from his protective entourage). Thym es CaterinJ bad a challenge manning the multtplc food statioDs holding Mediterranean inspired dis~ bes from antipasto and 'pastas. to grilled seafood and pizzas. "Best food I've ever hlld." said Five Feet Too owner MidMlel Kug, with a wicked little grin, as he wove his way through the crowd. (Kang's popular and trendy restaurant re- cently opened in Fashion Island.) , Steer drum bands and mariachis filled the air with music· to dine by. followed later on the main stagi~ area with a performance by "Kids are Music" and dancing to Les Brown and his Band of Renown. "Right now, they (The Irvine Co.) arc trcatina 300 kids at a separate pany," explained honorary commit- tee member Mital Teaai (early in the evening) of the Boy Scouts who would participate in a parade of lights. It was all part of The Irvine Co.'s salute to children. and chil- dren's programs in the county were beneficiaries of the $75 per person event. Proceeds in excess-of $260,000 were divided among Childhelp USA. the Irvine Children's Fund; the Irvine Theatre Children's Pro-· grams. the Mardan Center for Educationa l Therapy, Orange Coun- ty Bar Foundation's Shortstop Pro- gram. and the Orange .County Philharmonic Society's Youth Plo- grams. .._ .... ,...... ............. Judge JUdlth llJan,. retired, and au;luler Courtn•J accept check for cha~ front Donald aren fat l•ftl: Cesar ll0111ero and Anne Jeffr•J•· Bren sweetened the pot by donat- ing an additional $25.000 to each charity's take -above and beyond the community effort -which, of .-------~--------..,---,-~-.,....----.,....-,----------:::::;; course, thrilled the recipients. TOlll .,... ~n Nlelsen, c.rol Wiiken. "I think it's just a phenomenal party.'' said Dick Sim, of The Irvine Co .. as the crowd swept him along. "We're j ust glad that so mahy people could come and share in five years of worl!" A few party revelers spon cd in the crowd included Gary11DT(Wtf0Wa5 never very far from boss Bren), celebrities Cesar Romero and Aue Jeffreys, Domialc and Barbara Rop- polo, E velyn Hart, Gall and Peter Ocl11, Elon and Mary Au Wells, Noddle and Bill Weltaer, Sandy aod Gerry BrOdle, Mary Lou and Scott Horniby, Marcia and Hank Adler, Ridge and Tbelma Friedel,· Carol and Larry Hoffman, Linda and Jay Oxford, June Donovan, Joyce Reaume, Doag Rankin, Walter Gerken, Carol and Kent Wilken, Doll and Dolly Karc•er, Zee Allred, Tiu Scbafnltt, Tom and Marilyn Neilsea, Joan and Lew Hanson, Jane a nd Richard Martin, Joyce and David Gwldt, and Bill Lane -just to name a few. · Jo~c• Gwldt,. Mitzi Tonal, Carol Hoff an and Thelllua Prledel at celebratlon. RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. ... ,_ .... CMrs""' IW -••~ CISTl •SA-541·115' Herpes victims ·say counseling a ·must -HIRE 1hrouf'h cl~ssified DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I read the letter from "Typhoid Mal) .. who got herpes ("the gift that keeps giving'') I knew I had to write. ijiiiiijiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~,iiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 Eight years ago I. too. got herpes and became dec:ply depressed. I felt Fridays at 6:00 pm RQgers C8blesystems Channel30 ashamed and dirty. afraid that no decent man would ever want to have anything to do with me. How lucky l was to have found a doctor who insisted that I get counseling and join a support group. Herpes is no picnic. but it .need not ruin anyone's-life. Within a year I met a man who was able to see the person I truly was. He gave me back SADDLE BACK TV the self-esteem I had lost when I became infected. I learned that ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ stress is a big factor in outbreaks SENIORS SEEKING FUN! ·:; and the calmer I was the less fre· quent the attacks. OPENING SOON Look DO further than South Cout Senior VUlMI Our ......,..., new unita include --h.mlriem - I want to say to every herpes person who reads this - it's not the end of the world. A positive attitude can be your best weapon against lettina this virus get you down. Millions of oicc people have it and most of them are living normal lives. -A.O.K . IN NEW ENG LANG DEAR NEW ENGLAND: naM9 , fer u .,.._, leltu. I was llella'&e4 U.t lhHnll• ef l'Ullen wnse lo effer .,..... •f e11e9Ua1em•& lo HICllH11I others. Please read oa: D EAR ANN LANDERS: Believe me. I can relate to "T yphoid Mary" in Amanllo. For me the-woFSt thing about getting herpes was the anger. I felt betrayed by my steady. who had picked it up from Lord knows who, and I was furious because he didn't have the decency to tell me he had it. I'm sure my resentment interfered with the healing. Afler I went into counseling, the eruptions became much l~ss severe and less frequent. Now I believe that there is a positive side to every negative ex- perience. For me it was learning. through gcttina herpes, that the mind can play a m-.jor role in hcalina the body and keepina it well. -SAN LUIS OBISPO DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 44. an att~ctivc mother of three beautiful children. I am a leader in the community and active in church worR. PT A and local politics. I have had herpes for five years. When m) husband bro ught this virus home to me I was shattered. If it hadn"t been for counselin&. I would have gone to pieces. Actually, herpes turned o ut to be a blessing in disg~ise My husband went into counseling also and it saved our marriage. We are closer now than we have been in years and I can truthfully say I love him more than e.ver. -INDIANAPOLIS DETROIT: I got herpes from the prom queen. She was 18. tale nted a nd beautiful, had a gorgeous smile and a peaches-and-ere.am complex- ion, the last person in the world you would suspect of having a venereal disease. That was three years ago. I am now engaged to marry a wonder- llOHO'C OPI ful young woman who understands the problem and together we work around it. Her unconditional sup- port has rebuilt my shattered ego and I now know that love can be bigger than an) 'irus. PROVIDENCE: I am one of the unluck} ones. I have frequent out· breaks and often they arc extremely painful. At first I thought 1 ·would never have se~ again. I fel t diny. used and branded for life. The fel- lowship I found in m ) suppon group sa,•ed me. Anvonc "ho has herpes should write to: Herpes Re- source Center. P.O. Box I 3817L. Research Triangle Pa rk. N.C. 27709. (Please enclose a long. self- addressed. stamped envelope with 45 cents return postate.) You can also call the herpes hot line (919) 361-2 120. Monda) through Friday from 6 a.m . until 3 p.m . F rWay Od. !'7 ARliS (March 21·April 19): Moon moves to area of chart relatinJ to public aJrain, lepl qreemcnts. marriage. You'll be asked questions conccrnina property, home, basic intentions. Love relationship results in added responsibility. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Keep options open regarding work. methods, etT\'ployrncnt. Someone is seriously considering transfer. Spotlight on money, versatility. changing conditions. You'll be complimented on wardrobe. . ·GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20): Lunar position accents style, creativity. sensuality. Some might comment. ,_ __________ 11111 "You've been under·playing your own capabilities!" People who previously wnc indifferent now sit up and take notice. CANCER (June l 1-July 22): You'cc in your clement. People consult you, questions IN asked conccmina property, in$urance. interest rates. You·n be-offered money for written opinions. Aination lends spice. Virgo involved. • LEO (July 2)..Aui 22): You miJht want to be far away but duty calls. Relative says, "Please be home because I want to visit!" Stress di~omacy. please yourself without ofliendina olben. Yes, you will be walkina ti.ah trope! VJaOO (AUf. 23-Scpt. 22): Delay occun an connection with 1'9ymcnts, royalties. financial transactionL Temporary postponement should not bC !J•led with failure. Terms will be reviewed and you·n benefit as result. PilCCI repftleftted. UBllA (Sept. 2l-Oct. 22): Thote who tbouaht you were mild-mannered. shy will be startled. Cycle points to responsibifity. authority, ability to take ch.,.e of~ own destiny. Relationship pows 11~ Capricc)in in picture. ICOllPIO (Oct. 2)..Nov. 21): Lona-ranee poesibilities command aneo- tion. lndividul wbo kepi llCl'el·wiU now take you in&o confidence. You'll lkaow wlla& bid been done. Fuhlre ineentions will be clari&ed. Aries flpm ~mua (Nov. ~Dec. 21>: SU.. indeDendlDce. conftdeace. ?;::.':: .=r::e =-~~~=.!no:-~== popujlri\J. CAPilcmN (Die. DJ•. 19~ You'D be 11111111 to do 10me divilioe. lavohll .... madl•l1ic:I, pallible ........ al •tlit L ~ .... ., ,.., ,.., ............. -diliial. a.e.1- ~i!=··L.:~:~= . = .... ii ... ;v;..-s.;;: :r. ..... = •-:, t. by Bii Keane "You've got another pound to love, Mommy!" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson NANCY ARLO AND JANIS DllABBLE .. COUJlfTBa CUL TUil& 1>y M•atta & Maratta :: t ' l J · 1 I • ArrLiANCE Of THE "'°'s : 111E LAPTof TOMtE~ DENNIS Tlllt MENACE by Hank Ketcha'!' by Jerry Scott by Jimmy Johnson Otenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Frldey. Oe1ober 27, 1989 A8 \{£S. MAM .. 11Vf. PECIDEO TO ~IT 5C~ .. l'LL raotA8l. '( NEVER AMOUNT 10 ANm41N6 A~WI«... M c:;;:;:;;•l _...J GARFIELD . I , . ' IM 6oeN6 TO DEVOTE TME REST Of M( LIFE TO MAKIN6 M'< 006 MAPPV .. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SIGN IN roR Ml:~U VOJ. DON? I U. GO lb 1~fft:Ni · DESK ANO c:a:.1F I CPN GEfARCOM~ ) TONI~!) v \ ·~1 ·--· SHOE I'!"~. OIR.IHE. ee.sT I CAN co IS A STIJOIO W 11T-I FOLD-Olf a:u::H. ' ' . ~ w~~ ~f?TNo . MY . 91'~16M l~WWN. JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBEAN N0,~,1 M~N1T DISCUSSED TMIS ~T WITH M'< MOTMER A~D FATHER ... 8UT I TALKEO IT OVEl WITM M'< 006, ANO HE SEEMED TO TMl~K IT 'S A ~EAT IDEA .. by Jim Davis by Lynn Johnston by ,Jett MacNelly by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batiuk I'VE Fl L.ED FJ\P€R5 TO HAVE Ii DE.516NAIED A5 A HISTORIC. 511E ! I 1-----. ~ rrs TfiE FIR5f ~­ '-.INE STAND fN IHE Hl51"0Rc..> OF 1fi£ SCHOOL...' DOONltSBURY by Garry Trudeau WOl#J._ ..a ....... f/fJ#¥I I ·=~ .!7' ~ ~ ,.,. ........ ... ................ ---............... ..... I . [ "" y I [ I :r::,:s:.-:: ". ..... ...... -~ 111'11' l Ale 0 ... 0... DM.Y fl'UIJ/ "'9111r, 06U•1r 17, - Quake prepard Employers worried about. quake-safe offices Pew ;_.,,, cowrm ....,., 111 leaks ... die--= ....... an A••Mim ftrm a ¥9he ._,..Cuc+•,... Tbe 1tre11 level in the office rockell to an all-time biab· Com· puten are 1oine full-1peed. Dead- lines loom. · i Suddenly the computer you are workina on lurches toward you. Boob tumble from a nearby shelf: Tbe coffee machine crashes to the floor. Eanbquake. Tbe bulineu world, which seemed 10 impor\IJlt momenll before, takes a t.ck seat to this real-life mover and shaker. Put temblon prompted a focus on preparedness in our homes, schools and corporations. Recently, the need for an earth- quake preparedness prosram in small companies bas been re- C<>f!ized U well. 'Thouah most adults spend nearly · ciaht houn a day at their work place, few small bulincua ~ quake ready ... said Cape. Roy Pendleton of the Newport BQcb Fire Depan- menL "The only wa~ that felb will have peace of mind an th.is quake-prone area is throuah tnowledae and prep-aration. .. With that pl in mind, fire de- partments are workina with local cbamben of commerce to teach small business owners about earth- quake safety. Demand bas skyrocketed for cartbQuake preparedness businesses that &elp that -eft'ort. Their focus includes prequake plannin1. survival durina the temblor and actions to take afterward. Kathy Gannon, owner of Emera- ency Lifeline in Santa Ana, says her buslDCSI incnased 3 000 percent after the Whittier quake. The fastest seament of her busi- ness is from small companies. A kit ~ for ofBce -coo-lains proviuons for I 0 people for a 72-bour period. It includes medical supplia. food. blaftketa. sanitation supplies, ftauliahll. radio and in-structions. . Roben Andenon, of the Launa Hills 18fety CODIUJtins firm Worlt- Safe, dnips an.bquake prepared- ness propam_s for his clienll. "We iaels the needs of each individual company. Then we create a manual for that partjaaJar con-cern .. Andcnon said. The manual describes mu.st be done to the ofrK:e to make it safe, what to do durina an earthquake and assips postquake jobs to em- ployees. Aadenon said. The firm also makes follow-up visits. "Because of emple>yee turn- over and other company shifts, it is necessary to keep a current earth- quake plan in operation," he said. Other" firms are focusina on speci- fic earthquake-aencrated problems. lbat automatically .... • build- ........ wpply when die lbaki .. ti::!t..cr firm, Velcro USA, baa developed a product IO llCUl'e delk equipmenL .. Many of tbe il\iuria duriat an -rthnuake are due 10 airboraC ob-J«U;' desip eaaineer Bill Hopkim said. Hopkins helped develop tbc v den> USA line, toutins it .. COii· eft'ec:tive, leCUl'e ud easy 10 inllall' hcifac Bell and NASA were unona the ftnt to incorporate die fastenen inlO their wort pl8ca. Fol- lowina suit were Fint lntentate's Los Aftldes Operations Center, General Telephone and Huabes Air- craft. '"When you have S 12,000 worth of · eq .. ipment per work station, an in- vestment in a restraint system is certainly wise, .. HODkins laid. Sia/I ,,,,,., Pul Ant.,,,. e.-,,..,,., ...... ,...,.,. lnsUrers don't see quake rates eruption Dr. John A new ....... tecfl tollet. lllown M • floul1• '*In T~. ls"lnl••11nren•• ....................... ...., •• llcll -..... Tiie ......... ., •••••• -..... J ....... SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Sinc.e sunrise the day after the big earth- quake, ,Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. has had claims adjusters on the streets handina out chec:ks for col- lapsed or burned homes. It was i ust like old times for t.he Novato, Calif.-based company. ·•we made our reputauon in the f---..,.---.nuake of 1906 when every other San rancisco-based insurer went under," says spokesman John Kozero. "Our headquarters was de· stroyed and we had no records. But we paid eyeryone, half cash and half stock, which in a few years was worth more.'' : There's no problem for insurers in comina up Wlth cash to pay for the destruction of the Oct. 11 quake, and this time none are expected to succumb to claims that could cost the industry $2 billion to $l...hilli~here won't be any major chanaes. for Bear, Steams It Co. in New Most insuren are scramblift(l~ ., ''There should be no impact on York. "The industry does have the keep clienu and win new ones by personal home owners and earth-capital to pay out these. enormous responding quickly to claims, takina quake insurance," Kozera said. losses and the risk is spread around out ads in news~pcrs and broad· "The rates were based on a pattern the world." casting commercials on radio. of what happened in the past. and The insurance companies also State Farm Insurance Co. new in the quake was part of what was were buffered by 10 to IS percent 2SO claim handlers from around the expected." deductibles on the e.xpensive carth- country to join 600 others workina If there is a rate hike, the com--quake riders that make up for the out of eight offices and eiaht t.railen. panics said, it wiJI more likely affect exclusion of quakes from home Despite-more e.xpensive costs and commercial policies, which have owners' policies. Because of that, a year of caJamities from coa.st to benefited from a price war. only about 20 percent of home own- coast, the insurers said Thursday Much of the estimated $4 billion ers carry earthquake insurance, they're not expecting soarinJ ~lCS as for Hurrican Huao and the billions which by law m&ist be offered in anucipated by Wall Street investors for the quake will be coUected back California. who bid up their st.ocks after the big from dozens of reinsuren in Europe, Insurers say there has been a small earthquake and Hurricane Hugo. Asia and the United States who increase demand for earthquake in- Instead. the insuranc.c companies assume part of the liability of pri-surance since last week, just as there said home owner rates and earth-mary insurers. was after a quake in Southern Cali- qua.kc riders in some damage-prone The quake is oot going to fomia a few yean 110. But interest areas miaht go up a little next year, bankrupt any insurance company, typically dies down as memories of others might go down and overall said Gloria Vogel, industry analyst quakes fade. = ....... , ..................... , .. ··-.... .......... --..... ,,::·~ .... , ............... .... Tiie --CM .... ··-IN .................... ~ -.... ,.... ....... , ............................. .... ...................... All ....................... .. however. Ila¥• ,. ...... to tlo wtdl .... ea•.r1 real fwlc· ...... Economy up 2.5 percen.t WASH.INGTON (AP) -The U.S. economy sbruged oft' Hqrricane Hugo and the poorest trade performance in lix ~ to pow at a moderate 2.5 percent. annual rate frOm July throulh September, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. The department said that the increue in the l"OIS national produ~ the country's total output of aoods and services, was accompanied by a dramatic slowina of the inftation rate. A price inde.x tied to the GNP rose at an annual rate of 2. 9 percent. the slowest in three yean, u both enel'J)' and food costs moderated. · NEW vOR~A~ -l,. ~ "'' ,, ~AL crni; ...... ~ ork tock x~ 1 QllU t 1tockl wwr=• tNt ha~ UP 1J Vestr& '~ ·-~ v. UP Up I .me . 1 , -3 'h -'h .ij ~:!a~:~> p::~oc~s.r~~oad loss Compromise sought on minimum wage :r:: ~ most be on percent 1 ~,. =-:.~ ,. ~ .,. . below 12 "' 1000 I A fg ~ "'~'~~are JM ~ prev ctoslne r Id ~. :JO o.m. pro. ~ d ~ Teterete f'ct, rp r ~ a u~ ffJ H: tt i ehlnc nv 1 y. -Uo 1£ l~ Up i~·~ Up ~ UP "' UP ren o" 1 .,, \ 'u uo" '' 10~1 ~~ tl UP :J Up 14'1• ~ UP Ww ~ UP It~ = UP .. UP .. 1 "' 'h Up •• 16l't ~ UP •• t 2 UP ij l't Up ~ Up Up v. UP 2 Uo •• DOWNS ~--1 Ult a. ,. 2tt:=2~ H UP' IU UP Up UP Up ~ uo Hi ·6'~-~ r:m=. 100 - '1h --~~r: 1 -'I• -JV. ~~ 'I• -1,4 'h -v. =YCV Ye -~ m-r: 1 -l't -V• 1 -w. OlonlnHllnc -'h WstFln i~ = ll! :f: ~~ ~-..... v .. -v. mlnsl 11. -~ i~Mc • -'I• ...--1 h market sustained a 'broad loss There were also worries about 7.l Thursday in ~lling attributed to coi:porate profits, which were in-'·7 increasina concern over the outlook tcnsificd by a series of disappointing for corporate eaminas. reports from individual companies The Dow Jona avcraac of 30 in recent weeks. industrials fell 39.SS to 2.613. 73, A tally of the latest quarterly brinpna its drop over the last four reports from some 430 companies sessions to 75.41 points. by Prudential-Bache Securities Declining issues outnumbered ad-throuah the end of last week led the vances by about 11 to 4 in na-firm to conclude that "so far we're tionwide tradina of New York Stock looking at a very disappointina E.xchangc-listed stocks, with 406 up, quaner. l,141 down and 410 unchanaed. "Almost twice as many com- Volume on the noor of the Big panics have reported nepuve sur- Board came to 17S.24 million prises as positive surpnses .. said 7. shares, apinst.I SS.6S million in the Melissa Brown, a Prudential-Bache previous session. Nationwide, con-analysL . -solidated volume In NYSE-lined iJ-C.on1paq Computer fell 8~ to I 00. 'sues, includina trades in those stocks Late Wednesday ,the company re- on rqional e.xchanaes and in the ported a third-quarter earnings pin over-the~ounter market. totaled that came up short of expectations, 204.16 million 1bares. and anlysts also cited uncenainty .Before the openina Che Commerce over the company's founh-quartcr DctJll.nment reported that the sross prospccu. ~ national product pew at a 2.S per-· Anheuser Busch lost Vi to 38 on cent annual rate, after adjustment top of a 4~point drop Wednesday, for inflation, in-the third quarter. --when the company posted a smaller- Tbat matched the increale posted than-expected profit increue for the for the second _q_uartcr and was in third quancr and a.id it was plan- line with, or sliptly SUODFf' than, Dina a pricc<uttiQt st.ratqy for its advance estimates 10 the financial bcn1. world. Philip Morris, whole Miller Brew- But obtervep allO said the report ina operation competes with Busch, showed a buildup of inventories that dropped 11' to 41 ~ betokened conunued problems for The NYSFs composite indn of tbe manufacturi111 leCtOr of the all iu listed common stocks dropped economy, which bu been IU'Ulllinl 2.30 to 187.22. \\11\1 ,,,, ••••• H II \ I \ ll I '-It I U '\'I 11 \l'l H'-' \ ll I '-= I \ It I IC ' WASHINGTON (AP) -House Republicans and conservative Democrats who sustained Prnident Bush's veto in June of a minimum waac increase struglcd Thursday t.o find a compromite that would avoid another showdown next week. But the White House, in a meetina with leaden of the two ~ies, re- fused to budte on Bush s demand for a six-month subminimum train- ing w• and labor leaders balked at acccptana anythin1 less than a S4.2S minamum wqe by January 1991. Whether a compromise is reached or not, Dcmdcratic leaders plan to brina to the House floor next Wednesday a scaled-back S4.2S ver- sion of the bill that ltush vetoed, which would\ have 9Ct a $4.SS-an- hour minimum ~ with a 60-day subminimum trairuna wqe. Key playen in both parties and lobbyisll for business and labor poups said the White Houte bas been wndina sipals since late last week that Bush wanted to avoid a showdown and was open to neeo- tiati!'I a deal. "There is a lot. of nervousnesa on the par\ of the White Houte that they could look like a mean old oare here fi&btina day and niabt to ,et a ?~tal pins tu break while also filb~ equally bard ~ raisina the minimum 'Qle';' · said Rep. Timothy J. Penny, D-Mi:nn. Brady asks for. SEC powers· to control market tl•ll4•Hl\I 1Rating system needed for the . . . ~ . livability raters . . Orange County residents who put faith in the .. who's ~o and wha(s bcit" publications are puffed up with pride this wee~. The aood news from left field is Orange County moved anto the top JO ranking in Prentice-Hall's latest edition of .. Places Rated Almanac." • Th~ ~ccomplisbmcnt, if you can call it that, is a dramatic improvement over 198S's ranking, which listed Oranac County as the 48th best place to live in the U nited S\atcs. It also leaves some of us wondering what happened to warrant this new s~tus. Orange County has some ·obvious attributes, like good weather, ~e~reation, a high standard of living and ample job opponunaues, but those things haven't significantlr im- proved since 1985. In fact, many local residents recently told pollsters they arc pessimistic about what they perceive as a decline in the quality of life here. When the 1985 edition of Places Rated was printed, Orange County's crime rate, transportation problems and high cost of housing were singled as bun ing our livability rating. Mayt>c those factors arc less important in the new edition. bec.ause our transportation problems arc worse and housing costs arc higher than they were four years ago. Other factors Places Rated used to determine livability were health care and education and ans. We can think of some pluses for each category, but not enou~ to warrant a 40-step increase to eighth place on the livability stairway. Prentice Hall's new rating also contradicts an August sur:vey by Money Magazine that said Orange County's livability declined from eighth place last year to 23rd place this year. Maybe we need more surveys to serve as tie breakers, or a n argument could be made that the lists arc a lot like a tri via question - momentarily interesting, but not very important. Even if this latest best places list doesn't mean anything. there's a word in Places Rated that wi ll surely raise the dander of many Orange County residents. The list is a ranking of livability in "urban" areas. "Urban" is a fightmg word to many Orange County residents. They do n't see their communities that way· and will argue against that classific-atioo until they're blue an the face. "Suburban " is the name bf the local· measure of li vability. Many local residents think urba n is a five-letter word with a four-letter meaning. They interpret it as a sure sign that Orange County is evolving into another Los Angeles. The best way to take Places Rated is with a grain of salt. But only a grain -too much salt is bad fo r you. 0 I Ill.IC \ 01c ·1:' Congress juggling. books lf a _private company cooked its books the way Congress fiddles the federal budget. somebody would go to jail. ·. Financial finagling in the congressional budgeting process is nothing new, of course. but late1y it has grown rampant. This is so mainly because Congress -and the administration, too -persist in playing games with the G ramm-Rudman Act. They .honor the letter of the deficit- reduction law but violate Its spirit at nearly every tum . Congress adopted the Gramm-Rudman law in 1985 in a sudden fit of fi scal virtue in 1985 -and has been fudging on it ever since. The orijinal act set a series of declining annual deficit targets for Congress to meet in order to reduce the deficit to zero by 1990. If Congress failed to meet the deficit target by Oct. 15 of each year, across-the-board budget cuts - called sequestration -would take place. U ncom fo~ble with so much budgetary discipline. Congress in 1987 revised the defi cit targets and delayed the zero-deficit goal to 1993. If you can't hit the target, move it. The result: Instead of falling, the deficit actually increased in fiscal years 1988 and 1989. Sooner or later this bud&ctary flim-flam will collapse. Getting the deficit to zero by f993 can:t be done with smoke and mirrors. Congress and the president will either have to abandon _Gramm-Rudman altogether - a devastating admission of failure -or find the courage to start ·making the tough budget choices G ramm-Rudman was supposed to force. fte (T•com•, W•d.) Montbt6 News Trlbflff L ORANGE COAST llily_. P_i_la_t ___ _ • ~ --, .. ft!IMI, HO 'EMAR\' CHLRCHMA~ -Pl BLI HER TO'I TAIT Ed,,_ 00\ r E"LE\' \uoc-lat" Editor TOM C \I:\ e•• Editor • TEVE MARBLE CJ11 Editor ROGER BU)()\t t'e•turH Editor ROGER CARI.SO:\' Sp.rte Editor TOM lltJDO <'Jre. ...... Dlrwter TDIPUPO Omllell• ......... M•e.., "-~:_ ............ . C•I Bl S.W... MFR 1e JA:\ ~ REICHE:\ BERG Ret•il S.ln -..... u CHERI FREE\tA 'i a ... Jf. "-"~tr Jl DY OETTl~G IAt•I Ad,ertltln~ \lanagtr . PATRICIA A. GABU: Sptt&al Sfft'°91 E41itor BECKY 5. H£NO£ASON Art OW.C.. MARVCAITD A4S."'"9Mea .. er , l6t !111 llfl -- Page from librit~book of etiquette: shhhhhhl To the Editor: I am prepanng to sit for the C.P.A. exam in ovember and have been stud)1 ng at my local library for the last month. I have lived in this area all m) life. attended Mariners, Ensign and Harbor. but had not been 1n Manners Lrbrar) for several years. It ~ems to ha'c undergone quJte a transformauon. ~mazingly the same pleasant face still work there as when I attended Manners-in the earl~ '7CK I espcC.all~ remember the red-haired '-'Oman who read stories to our das~ when we v1stted the hbrar). She "as alwa)'s telling us to quiet dow~, or lower our voices because we must not disturb other people tn the library. - Toda) 1h1ngs arc d1rr(rent around Manners Library. It 1s obviously a much smaller fac1lit> than the area needs tud} tables total less than I 0 and there are e'actl) four c~bicks. What surprised me most was the number of clemenL3f) school chil- d ren that de end upon the hbrat). It 1 becoming a da)care facility. Please don't misunderstand-rfle. I think children should be encouraged to u e the lihrar). and It is a good place to do their homework. Hut man} of the children are there past 5 p.m .. until one of their parents picks them up. I don·t know many elementaf) age children who ha ve three hours of homework each week- da). Nor can the) find enough in the libraf) to k(·ep them interested for that long. My frustra11on 1s that most of the time. some of the children are doing no1hing more than talking. laughing and pla)tng around. While this is to be expected. I think the library is no pla\e for aftcrschool fun with fncnds. More often than not I have had to .leave the library and go home b) 3 p.m. because the children's behavior. is distracting and some- times qullc anno)-1ng. , , I know that 15 )Cars ago. o~e of the libranans would have been on top of me nghl a"av. insisting I quiet do"n or lea,e. But this prob- lem caonot be blamed solely on the libranans C<iuall) there are onl) three or four people work1n'° The) keep 'ef) bus) JUSt answcnng the phone. checking out books and '-'Orking the reference desk. The' rarel) ha' c a free moment to walk through the hbra11 qu1cltng down children. I ha'e asked some children ·to quiet 'down on several occasions Most of the lime thC) laugh or make a face -the\ don't have a whole lot of resi>ect for a stranger. e'en though I'm an adult. What happened to teaching children to respect and obc) an adult? I think parents who ha' e their cl'uldren go to the library after school need to have a talk wuh their lods. The' should let them know tha1 othe·r people need the library to · be a quiet place and certain behavior 1s expected of them. They can 'take a break and go outside if ~he) want to be silly. The) also need to tell their children to be respectful of the other people using the library. I also wish the hbranans would make a small cffon to as~ the ch1 l· dren to qu1e1 down when tht') get sill). If e'ef1one -parents. h- branan.s and libra11 goers -makes an dTon to teach chtldren how to bcha'e in the hbral). 1t can be a quiet place to stud) and read. as :.i.ell as a good place for kids to go after school MELI .\ H ERWOOD Se" pon Beach Frequent Opinion contributor attempted to 'Steele' 'A' grade To the Editor; ~s far as Mr. Steele's eight points, In his letter printed on Sept. 29. I didn't realize that his spellinJ. TQm teele seems to be grasping at compos1t1on. and the fact that his educational traws 1n a futile effon assignment (letter'!) was turned 10 on · to extricate himself from a series of time (mailed'?) were pan of the inaccurate and generally misleading issues bemg discus ed. statements made in this newspaper The issue (apparent I)) is how dun fig the past few months. much of a teachrr's assoc1at1on dues He. hke man) of m) own stu-arc spent on "poht1cal action." Mr. dents. "ould 1lkc to be able to assign Steele 1ni11all> stated that 0 to 90 himself a high ··grade" based on percent of dues were o spent. In his personal opinion. nfonunately. a most recent leter. the figure "as "79- more object•' e method must be plus perC'cnt." and to pro\t' his used to evaluate performance. Mr. point. hc cited a M1ch1gan tale Steele has not done his ho mework. Supreme Coun dec1S1on. I hasten to and thus his "grade·· 1s found want-point out that "'e arc not living in ing. the state of M1ch1gan. and I do not M r. Steele has only o ne issue that know "hat past prat llce has been. I he passionately cares about. Unions. do knO'-'. hO'-'C\Cr. that 11 1s against He is a~inst them. He finds it California state la" to use dues difficulL 1f not impossible, to believe funds fc r direct pohucal acuon. that a schoolteacher who belongs to Pan c•f Mr. teele's confusion on a local teachers associatjon, or this po1'll ma)' stem from . the fact "union." ntt'S-about ehtldrcn-&nd-that 104'al lcachel'$ ha'e lhc.option of educati o n as muc h as a joinin~ he Cahfom1a Trachers As· schoolteacher who docs not belong sociauor as well as the National to such an association. This is an Educauc nal Association in addition insult to the vast rnajority of 10 their 1°wn local associations. Each teachers who belong 10 local associa-of these organ1zat1Qns requires lhc tlons. and the public knows that pa) mcnt of dues. a small percentqe tcachrrs who are members care. of which ma) be u~ to support Such sniping from the s1delines. pr<reducation legislation. If any with no concrete, workable aJtema-reader of the Daily Pilot n seriously t1vc proposals. is futile and only interested in the breakdown of dues serves to distract attention from the pa) ments. I can be contacted 'at our real needs of educauon. associauon office. 842-7736. and '-'Ould be happ) to answer quesuons and provide information on this IOPll'. Finally. Mr. Steele's denial that he sought the endorsement of she DI~ tnct Ed\Jc~tor·s Assoc1auon for the upcoming school board 1s false. The final sentence in the lt'tter I scn1 to him informing him of the endorse- ment procedure read: .. hould )OU desire to Sttk our e ndorsement. please give me a call at the above telephone number. and we'll sched- ule an appointment." He called. we scheduled an interv1c~. the mter- ' 1e" took place. and the Representa- ll\ e Council of the D.E .\ decided to endorse the three incumbents rather than Mr. tcele When Tom teclc 1mpuins the 1ntegnty of teachers assoc1auons. he hke'-'•SC impugns the tntegrlty of the professionals "'ho belong to these aSSOC131.IOns. Tcac.but&-as one._ of the.. most altruistic of proies.sions rcqu1 r- 1 ng extensive preparation. pauencc and empathy. If my primary con· cem were salary a nd fnnge benefits. as Mr. tetle sueaests. then I certain- ly "".Ould be dotng something other than teaching. If you have quesnons about the statc of education today. don't ask Tom tC'Cle. Ask a teacher. DAN SKEP RD Huntinaton Beach ·Auto insurarice must be · regulated To the Editor. In response to Doll Fenley's auto ins~ wars column on Oct. 9, reprd1ng insurance reforms and the ·eved crecpina rqulatory nature of the California stature toward fa ir and reasonable profits: h teems t lost on Mr. Fenley that California has a mandatory insurance law. We are required by law to purchue a 1CFVice from a non-t0vemmcnt enterprite. This situ- ation requires some form or ft.IVlation. Nowl\ere is it stated that we must ponns a credit card by law, at 20 pm-ent interest. We arc not required by law.~ hire an ~Jlpensive lawyer. In fact. tbe state .-ill provide a public ddender if MUStary. WlU the state . provide pubhc insurcrt? Tiie hifll of fair profits on private IOoda benweln privall pan.in is unthinkable. People will alwlys .a at IM hflMat price the marbt will .... Too .......... no sale. We arc not ~uired by law to buy consumabks that arc priced ou"t of Ii~. The insurance induslJ) 1s not an .. o~ to be JOred. .. It 1s unreasonable to expect the consumer to obey the letter of th~ law and purchase auto insuran<:e from an unrqulatcd private industry. The nsk of abuse 11 too areat. If the state requires auto inturancr by la•, and it docs. then the atatc mutt alto a•ume the burden of rcaulauna the industry to ensure that tbe terVicle 11 provid~ at a fair price. ·. W oukJ a ncwspeper subec:ription still be Int than five dollars a monthJ f every houwbold were reqwrat b) law to have •t delivered to tbem? I wonder. BRYAN KEITH HOUCHEN H-'11•aw. Fndey, Octooer 77, .. All Center ~s . look major turnabout The ne'-' Fashion Island shoppina center 1s fun' It is ad,en1urou~. It 1s pla)'fUI. It 1s colorful. It has fun places to walk. It has fun places to meet. It has. fun places to eat. It has fun placr-s to enJO~ mo' 1es . .\nd It has fun places to shop. This 1s a m~or departure from the ongjnal Fa hion Island which open- ed 22 }car ago -1t was not really 'iupposed to be fun. Its concept was ... upscale serious. Its several malls '-"ere formal. When a top-notch delicatessen in- quired about localing 1n the original fa)hton Island. the ansv.er from The Irvine ( o of the m1d-l 960s was ":--..o. ~c don't want people walking around Fashion I land carT)lng big bro" n bags st u ITed "1th bread and corned beef" .\nd so Kaplan's Deli-, cates~n went to South Coast Plaza. .\nd that 1!> a maJor change frQfll toda) 's Fashion Island. where people '-'lll enJO) walking aTound the _ . man eaung hamburgers and frozen :rogun . Fashion Island is Sttn b) Irvine Co. owner Donald Bren as a down- to~ n for Newpon Beach and for commun1ues beyond. and Bren has . personal!} taken a ma1or mterest in llS planning and des1gn. Preparing for Fashion Island's reopening this . '-'CCk, Bren was on the mall on a regular basis. appro' 1ng of some details, d i recti ng last-minute changes in others. A maJor question. of course, is ··will all of this sell" .. Howc"er. unhke most other shop- ping center developers. the questJon of sales ii. not all-consuming for The In inc Co. E'en though the new fa'lh1on Island represents an mvest- mcnt 1n e\ccss of S 100 m1lhon over 'the past se'eral ~ears. Bren talks about amb1tnce. street scenes. gathering places and dining op- ponunillC'> rather 1han about dollar return. When asked '-"hcther the new Fa h1on Island will be profitable as "ell as a troph)-11k~ centC'fl)iece for the communities on the Irvine Ranch. Bren answers in tht' af- firmall' e . Donahue hnber. she firm that has the responsibilit) for the re- ne'-'al. management and leasing of Fashion I land. has d one a n out 1and1ni JOb in a very shon ume. Bob Domin. general manager of Fashion Island for Do na hue hnber 1s exc11ed about the future and about thr optimism of lhc merchants 1n the center. And the· merchants to whom I have spoken -even longtime retail guru and shoe store owner Richard Marowitz -arc looking forward 10 an upsurge in sales. mce lls 1ncept1on. Fashion Island ha had to work. hard to draw shop- pers from tnland areas. Much dis-- cussed is the center's m~1ficcnt locauon on the coa t -whacb pves the center fabulou views but no marl>.et to the ~e t .\nd also well discussed is the fact that the two freewa' that were to serve Fashion Island · and intcrs«t at MacArthur and Paetfic Coast Highway -the Pacific Coast Freewa> and the Cor- ona del Mar Freewa} -did not matcnahzc. Sut there 1s yet a no tbn dimension. and that is Fashion Island's seclusion withm the wall of office buildings. ·hotels and medical buildings that nng Newport Center. Fashion Island must be one of the onl> ma1or rqional malls in the nauon that cannot be seen from the sum>und1ng arterial roads. Whether the ncw Fashion bland wtll attract from inland Oranee County and sum>undin1 counties rcmaHJ to be seen. The center baa many one-of ~-lnnd shops ud _,.. are breathtakina. But the major de- p&flment stores will have 10 wort haflkr as Robinson·s. once leCGlld 1n sales only to its Beverly Hill sister store. now ~plus off a poniaa of its ~le to us South Ccma Pima sister. a nd as BuUock's WitlWe t. comes a n l. Mqnin. a stttcr to I. Maanin 1n South Coast. · Reprdlcss. Fash ion l1laad·1 coastal marketplace will •• llf dunna the comi"J years. In lddililll to some ~ \n NfWPOI' ..... HuntJntton Beach to the D018 ii p1n1Q1 more u.,..ak raidntill • • velopment all tht way to ~ 1ncion Harbor. includial .... Landmatt•s ciom1111 lcJlla Cllll homn. And developminll • IOUth nlends from dae Nf:wpon/lmee COMI wida .homes. ...... _ ... 10 ... !M ...... .. '1t ;.. 1111i111111i.. .... ".~w..Mlfijiiiii ..... Ot.-• ... r We've MQved •.•• We're now conveniently located on 17th Street in Costa Mesa Come .on in today to reserve your 1990 Model. 427 E. 17th COSTA MESA., CA "In~~~ Music Shopping CM«er" 17141548-4141 "A quiet environment for you and your cat .. \ . . . C~tCliniC A COMPLETE VETERINARY AND BOARDING FACILITY EXCLUSIVELY FOR CATS 369 EAST I 7TH STHET, COST A MESA 1«J09 "°"' ..._. ---TUldll ~ S-. AMI • Pluse Qll tor an Appointment 631-1454 Diane Steinbeq. DVM 650-2447 64H114 131·1$ 111-1152 131-4741 1414141 . INSTALLATION & SERVICES AVAILABLE 369 E. 17th COSTA MESA1•1, '"'-ti~ (714) 631-·6152 . -~_J[] *"''• Sett.tf ~•"'f H,1110\·:i ·t >11 f ,.., I. , , JI I 11 -• r tll'\/ l rl'")t J • LINGERIE- A COMPLETE LINE • GARTER BEL TS • MERRY WIDOW CORSETS • -STOCKINGS Br ,,.,~ h.s ld 1 .. ~J· &F ·e~G ... LT NOVEL TIES COSTA MESA ........ _ ... 11111 ... , ... ,... ...... , ,.....,. "'•1 .... n~ ameritone . paint center· . 11111· TIBBETTS ·~ A II T 8 Over 1850 w.nr.o.r bOoka to ctlOOM from . . ALL WALLPAP.D 30~. OFF IYIRYOAY : C n '1 ~I '\ fl \ f O I I I f. I I 00 I II \I I GOiden. West'sjOb dqesn't get any easier . . Rustlers ·entertain·high-powered Rancho Santiago tonight sktJled athletes on otlensc -their quarterback. their two wide re· ceivers and their ta ilbac k.'' Shackkford said ... All of them are 10 the top of the conference st.at1st1cs and they're better than anybody 1n JC football. 9y ltlCHAltD DUNN O-.NMCwas+cau• The Dons' five-pme winnina streak to start the season came to a The road to a possible post-season scrcccruna halt in a 34-24 setbeck to appearance is not gettinJ any easier the Tigers (6-0), but in perhaps the for the Golden West Collqe football tou&best conferepce in the st.ate, team, which tackles another ruged Gofden West will have to act used to opponent at 7 o'clock toniaht in the idea of playina aood football Central Division action at LeBard teams. Stadium. "J wish th~ was somebody we Before losina its first aamc last could point to and say we can (and week apinst Riverside. Rancho need) to win that pme," said GWC Santiago Collcac was the hi&hest Coach Ray Shackl~ford. whose Ru• 1eorina team in the Misaion Con-tiers are 3-3 overall, 3-2 in con- ference, averqi.._ 39.8 points a . fcrencc and 0-1 in the Qntral aamc (199 points ID five pmd).. Division. . "But, unfortunately. that's not the cast. It's like playing Notre Dame one week, then playinaMichipn the next week and Miami (Aa.) the week after that. .. Herc. we play teams like El Camino (6-0 and ranked No. I in the st.ate). Rancho Santiago (5· I) and Rivmjdc -all .extremely touah teams and they're bia pmcs. ·~ Rcprdless of how good Rancho Santiaao is. the Rustlers have at least one thina aoina . for · them. "We're undefeated in Friday niaht aames... said Shackleford.' whose club upsct'Pasadcna CC.:. 19-1 5. and pounded Southwestern. J2-9, on Fri- day niahts this fall. "You don't play many of them. thouah. "h should be a heck of a game Friday n1pu. and both teams have $0 little time to prepare ·by missing a day. But at this point in the season. you really don't need much time." It'll be anothcr•tcst for the Rus- tlers' defense 10 facing the high- powered Rancho Santiago offense, a aroup which hasn't been held under 24 points this season .• ''The main thina is to stop their "If we can't stop them, they're going to score some points. R1ver- s1de obv1ousl) did a good JOb against them." Dons quarterback Scott Wood r;lnks as one· or the lOp throwers ID tbe. conference and tailback Estrus Cra) ton a'erages -.-.ell over 100 )ards per contest. Wide receivers Ro)al Wilbon and Paul Peters ac· count ,.for nearly half of Wood.'$ complfa1ons. \XI arriors regain Winning form again~t Laguna Woo<Jbridge earns first PCL victory of season, 31-22 Sped., to the o.-y Piiot Gene Noji, Woodbridge Hiah's football coach, said it was the first time he had felt 'ood in a long time. Had he been 111? You bet. Sick to his stomach over what had happened to his team during the past month. A perennial winner. Noji had suffered through one or the worst•_dry spells in his career -fi ve straight losses and just two wins ID his first seven games (and one or those wins was by forfeit). So afier the Warriors beat La~uria Beach. 31-22, Thursday night to a Pacific Coast League game at Irvine Hi~h Stadium, Noji had reason to smile. "This is the first time in a long time that we controlled a game," he said. "I don't have a lot to say riJht ROW, but I will tell the fUYS lO Cl'\JOY the win. At least they'I have a long three-day weekend to enjoy it." Indeed, and at least Woodbrid'-e (2-5 overall, 1-2 in league) can still entertain thou$hts of a CIF playoff benh -albeit their chances are slim. The Warriors got off to slow start even in this one. trailing. 7-0. in the second quancr. But they erupted for 24 points 1n the second quarter and held on from there despite a valiant comeback efTo n b) Laguna Beach (0-7 overall. 0-3 in league). Woodbndgc quanerback G ary Fishel passed for 178 yards on 13 of 27 passes and one touchdown but Laauna Beach quarterback Eric Scheid was even better. passing for 215 yards on 13 of. 25 passes and a touchdown. Woodbridge made up the dif- ference in rushing where the War- riors gamed 215 yards. led by tailback Scott Seymour's I 16 yards on 18 carries. Laguna Beach was held to just 109 yards rushing and Scan Mallet was the leadin~ ru he r with 60 yards on seven cames. ueuna Beach wide receiver arlc P' .. aus puffs In a Aaron Scheid pa11 to set up an ta-yard second quarter fleld goal .. ··o verall I was pleased with our performance because we had a lot or new guxs tonight who were filling in." NoJi said. "They stepped 1n and ga'e some staners a rest. "We don't want to look back at this point and think about the negatives. We want to accentuate the positives from now o n. I think · tonight was a good stan... ) Laguna Beach surprised Wood- bridge when the An1sts scored late- in the first quarter on a 46--yard touchdown run by Mallet. The score was set up afier Laguna's Alex Kaf1 recovered a blocked field goal at- tempt. Woodbridge drove to the Laguna ...,P-. ....... a.,LH ~~ by kicker Eric Spraker. Woodbrldge·s Juf .. n Johnson de- fend~. Th• Warriors won th• bait, ...... J1 -Z2. 23-yard line on 11s first po session but Mallet suddenly turned around the comple,ion of the game on his touchdown S\\CCp run. But Woodbndg~ responded by dm ing 64 }::mis for a touchdown capped b} a 7-\-ard pass from F1sh<'I to light end Gan Gibso n for the core wnh 10:5:? lef\ in the second quarter. Woodbndge came nght back on ll!> nt·xt possession a Seymour re· turned a punt )b }ards 10 set up a 39-\ard run b\ Jake Jacobs to makt• -~t (4-7 v. ith 1:23 left 10 the half. • The ensu1og kt koff "'ai. fumbled b~ Laguna Beach and reco"ered b} f Pteaw Sff \110008RIDGE/IJJ \HI.\ HOt 'Ul I' UCI favored in .cross couOtry The Daly Plot The UCI women·s cross country team. ranked 10th in the nation. and the Anteaters' men's team arc heavy fa onles to regam the Big West Conference cross ·country till~ which Fresno Slate captured ia 1988. Fo r the v.omen. It will be an effort to stan a new streak after last )car's second place fimsh ended a stnn& of fiH~ straight Big West mies. while the men hav~ won four titles in the past. The two teams will run in the • Big West Conference Cham- p1onsh1ps aturday at BaJboa Park's Morie~ Field ID San Diego. The 8.000-meter men's competition bc'- gms at 9 a.m . and the women's compernion at 10 a.m. The Cl wom<'n att led by de· fending Big West champ scnioc Bngid llrhng. 1987 coorercncc champ Junior Buff) Rabbitt and top n ewcom <'r fresh man Rayna Cervantes. The remainder of the UCI lineup incJ udes iumors Kem u"1s and Am) ·f>abu . sophomore Caroline Ph<'r and freshman Laune Lucas. The m<'n's lineup for Saturda) is led b) Junior Aaron Mascorro and includes seruon 'Steve Imlay and Sc~t Laforce. sophomores Ben A)ers and David Hesseltine and freshman Dao Galindo. In gJrls' high school cross country on Thursday: · • Edi5on's Shelley 'raylor finish~ in 18:24 to pact> the Chargers to a 20-50 wm over Manna in the dual meet and a 5-0 finish for first place ID th<' unset League. Marina (2-3) had Andrea Talbott fimsh second in 19::?0. •Ocean View's Chnsue Engesser completed the 3-m1le course at Cen- tral Park in 18:24 to wtD easily over second-place Natalie Adam ofHunt- 1ng1on Beach and boost the Sca- ha" ks (4-1) 10 a :!2-35 win and second place 1n the Sunset. Hunt- 10gton (3-2> took third. ~ • Kirsten McFarland and Johan- na \\ alhn finished 1-2 with times of 19 30 as Corona dcl Mar defeated addleback. 1·54 7. in a Sea View Leagut> meet at Mason· P.lrk m In toe ...i1 .. • phomott TanJa Bru of Un1- ' ers1t) v.on th<' .race 10 18:34, but Tusun (4-1) recorded a 20-43 Sea View "'In over lhe Trojans (2-3) behind second-place fi nisher Donna l\11 lls ( 19:47). • phomore Am) Robles. one of three ~xcellent Woodbridge runners. v.on her first race of the season in 18:36. beating Denisha Bcndz of Costa Mesa_ the defending Pacific oast League champtol'I. as the War-· nors defeated the Must.angs. 23-3CS. to fi ni h 5-0 10 league meets. " • Laeuna ~ach's Ke ndra Carter. f Pteaw see AftA/Mf Another long night for Mesa ly RUSSELL BANKS Pass combination keys Barons first league win o...,,_c ...... -. Paul Minor. Orange High's 6- foot-I , 225-pound fullback. had just scored his second touchdown with 7: 16 remaining in the first half apinst Costa Mesa. givin1 the Pan- thers a 21-0 lead, when a faint voice from the Mustangs' crowd said, "Is it halftime yetr' tt•s been going that way for Costa Mesa this football season .. and it didn't act any better Thursday night as the Must.anas lost their eighth straiaht pmc. 35-20 to Oranae in Plciflc Coast uaguc play at New- port Harbor Hiah. How overwhelm ins was it? 1Well, you don't have to be a math acnius to know that tbinf. didn't add up for the Musunp (0-. 0-3). , First quarter. Orange had I 0 I total yardS 10 Costa Mesa's I. The Pmltben alt0 tcOttd two touch· downs in the quarter. Tite 1CCOnd n4ttt11• '' 1<11 · .. This Setfes already has Its goat 1y REID McCLA TCHEY 0.-Y ...,., Co•n--V Both Fountain Valle> and Wcst- m10stcr highs had more than enough motnauon to "'" headmg into Thursda) night's game. .\bout three v.10s and It losses wonh of motivation in all. Last season's first and third place fin· 1shcrs in the Sunset League were clashing in v.cck eight wtth conten- tion for a pla)ofT benh and respect- ab1ltt) at slake. The Barons. v.bo have aonc 5-0 IO league the past t""o seasons. needed a victor) to keep from falhna to 0-3 ID league. They spotted The Lions a 14-0 lead but stormed back behind the pa.sslDg comb1Dat1on of Willy Puga to Ooua Weaver for a 31-14 victor). "We just came out 10 the second half and did what we nttded to." Weaver said. ··we arc definitely a lot bet&a than our record shows. HopefUUy. we can come t.ct and play th ts well agam for the rest of the season.·· Puga to Weaver has been a suc- cessful combmauon all season, but 1n their most important efTon to date. the duo led to the Barons to their 1nit1al league win . Wea ver. who entered the game tied for first 1n the county with 31 catches. caught eiaht passes for 163 yard and three touchdowns. Puo, seventh 1n the county with 1.1)3 )'ards pa 10g, completed IS of 22 passes for 209 yards and thrq toucb- do" ns. "Will> and Weaver tuive been the t\\'l> mo t consistent and productivr pla)ers on our teart) this ')'al'," FountalD Valle) Coach Mike Milner said. "I can't say enouab aooct th1np about them. I believe w~~ II the besl wide receiver ID the county IO far th1 )ear." Westminster came after the Barons earl) wtth a n~huddlc ol- fcnsc. a rush-oriented, balkloauol .......... llMONI,.. Reus~hel t o miss Game. 4 I ' OJAl-ltwa~ daywida...,... ._. the wtaia IGPI .,.,. ....... * .,accwne. . ODe of' thole days \bat i>Uowl an euty rain tbe Di&bt hebe -not too coo( ,et ,,..._dy lem ..... t.be w avid~ to participMe i• a roundol= Oili V Inn and Country club ill \f•wra ty will boll tbe GTE West OmiC Senion aolflOUr-ument Nov. 26 ~Dec. 2 in a lettiq tbM befits a kina. It will mark ttie ftnal PGA Senion Tour event in wllicb Lee Trevtno is un- able to putic:ipate. Trevino will turn 50 on Dec. l. too late to compete in die fint round of the tournament, a S4-bole eveat that bcains on Thun- dait Nov. 30. From all accounts, Lee is chafina at the bit awaitiq a chaace to compete on the Senion Tour. He deflliitely will be on hand for the on k 0 ppti °"*at I wine, Maui. Ha...U die loUowim9 .... °'81111 CoualY .... Who date t.ct to me late 60"i anc1 ear1y 70's in this ua will remember stip, Whittet when be wu tbe PGA pro at Founwn Valley Mile Sauare pf course. Whittet went from lleft to Oakmont_Counuy Oub in Glendale before tak.ina over u tournament direaor for *GTE West Clauic. Ojai Valley CC WU established in 1921 and bu been in operation ever since. It will be a aood test of aolffor the senion and ifibe weatherman coopera~ it will be played under ideal conditions on a course that is reponedly one of lhe most Jeaendary in the world today. Defendina champion Harold Hen- nina (he won at Wood Ranch last year) was on hand this week for a media day conference. Asked about the l~nath of 6,200 yards, he said: "I look forward to seeina some Owners' stalemate ?ft:ltls: Tagliabue new NFL commissioner ''°"' The Auedaled "'"' "\!(EVELAND -Paul Tqliabu.#< a Wuhinaion lawyer and one of 'fte - Rozelle's top advisors, was elected NA. commissioner Thursday, endina a four- mqnth deadlock and altOwina Rozelle to r.de into retirement Talliabue, the candidate of the insuracnts who bad bloctecf Jim Finks' election in July, was elected by a vote that Rozelle said was slightly less than unanimous After a five-member committee aareed unanimously to recommend him. The committee .worked nearly all ni&ht to resolve the differences between the so-<:alled ••okf-suant" own- ers who supponed Finks and the insuraents, mostly newer owners and those who had been left out of the decision-makina proceesa. They supported the 48-year- old Tqliabue even thoup be has been a leque office insider for nearly two decades. OlOll 01 1111 U\\ .. I IJ ~· • 631wl641 durilll die IOUIWt bere. ne p1a,.. .. ......._. tour mi vuy _... ... with billl!.,..... wl more tour· aamen11. Fonunetely, Lee Trevino doao't play bere'tbil ... Henruaa it one or= a dozn .eoion who u.e the elonpted put- ter . .. The theory behind this puner is that you swina it like tbe pendulum of a pandfltber clock. You bold tbe upper pan apin11 your body with your left hand and swina throuab the ball with your riaht hand. Amold Palmer was even fiddlina with it after a Md puttina round recently." Concemana Trevino: .. He can't wait to aet out here. He'll play bis usual number of tournaments .. Jack Nick.Jaus isn't far behind Trevino in qe. He will turn 50 on Jan. 21 but Henniq doesn't expect him to play more lbn tix tour- naments on the Senior Tour next .. c.111 ....... profemonal tolfer, on aoina home to WilliamsbwL Va. to relax with his wife and two tons: ••• '° nome fQr vacation; you ao awal for vacation. You play 1olf. I 10 home and Penguins tie In flnal seco_nd don t play aolf." · Hammond leads elite fleld Upstart Donnie Hammond, displaying the honest hand in the ~· moved two * strokes in &ont of an elite field in Hilton Head Island, S.C. Thllnday in the openina round of the ultra-rich event that serves as a climax to the PGA Tow season. · lo other spons news Thursday: •A drua teSt on Patrick VaJeozuela revealed tracn of cocaine in bis system and the penalty for the jockey is scheduled to be revealed today, it was announced. Oitciplinary action could result in the need for a subltitute J_OC~ for Slllnday Silence, who won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Sta.kn last sprina and is tcbeduled co run in the S3 miUion Breeders' Cup CJUlic on Nov. 4. · • Danell Gwynn repstered his 13th four-"SCCOnd run of tbc ICUOll, IOod eeouah for the No. I spot in Top Fuel in tbe openina round of qualify.!oa for the Wimloe Finals at Pomou. Other top qualifiers for the Slll,550 event, the tealOG finale in the 19-race, Sl8- mi.Uiea NHRA-Willltoo Drll Racina Series. were Don Prudbomme in Fwmy Car and Bob Otidden in Pro Stock. •Mike Tomczak will continue as the startina J~-...-ck for the Cbic:alo Bean when they face the SUDda ~ Mike Ditb said. •A wl 1nc1 inefkti~ Jim McMahon has been reP'.-•the S... Di9> Cbarsn IWtina quartert.ck by rookie 9illy Joe Tolliver, wlao will mate bis debut ~·= Kinp lilned top draft pick Pervis Ellitoa and veteran foiward Wayman Ti!dale in de.a. .. , teDOrtedlY will btjns the pla}Cn about S 11 mm;c. wb-over the Bat m ,an. Phil Bourque's power-play aoal with ~ one second rcmainina in reautation time Thursday night tiffed the Pittsburah • • Penguins to a 3-3 tic with the Red Winp in Detroit. With time expiring. Mario Lctnieux backhanded a pass in front of the Detroit net and Bourque jabbed a shot past aoaltender Tim Cheveldac from close range. Elsewhere 1n the NHL Thursday: •Jody Hull scored twice and Brad Shaw had four assists for Hartford in a 7-3 victory over New Jersey at East Rutherford. • Bob-Sweeney and Andy Brickley scored power- play ioaJs as Boston spoiled the debut of Soviet ~lie Sergei Mylnikov with a 4-2 victory over v11itfo1 Quebec. • Steve Thomas scored twice as Chicqo ended a 12-gamc winless streak against Montreal with a S-3 victory over the. visitiJ\I Canadiens. • Paul Maclean had two goals as St Lows notched a 4-1 win at home qainst Minnesota. 11II\1'10,-IC \UIO ft~ 1 P.m. -OOLP: ~A~ from Hlllon Heed, S.C .. ESPN. S o.m. -HIOM SCHOOL POOTaALL: arvent et Hot Sor11191, 5-'ttClleflnel (,_,, ., 10 p.m,). S:JO PJ\'I. -aAMMLL: Wor1d S.-ln-Oelllend ., Seti Frenclsco, CtlenMI 7. s:JO o.m. -NM•U •ACMe: er..-. Crown 5ertes "'*' from flomHno a.di. Fla., EseH. 7:30 o.m. -NOltl9 •Aa..: Seflt• Alllle ,_...,., ClleMel 1t <SoortsChennel, t-.JO o.m.I. f p.m. -MOCK•Y: Kllltl el W'""'"8 (dlle'l9d), Prime TicUt. l?:JO e.rn. -NOltl8 llACIMk LOI AlemllM ,.....,., ~ Tldlel. ~ S:JO II.IT\. -aAMaA&.L: World ~1111111 et Sen FrMC!tco, KNX ("191. 5:30 o.m. -NOOC•Y: Kines " Wlnnl"9, KLAC (5111). 7:30 o.m. -PllO aAsec9T1aALL: Exhltllt~ Stele et °'"9rs, KlnH (,.). would be any different from an)' other time -is Joee CanteCO. He wu cut off after Game 2 in tbe midst of an O-for-24 ICries slump that stretches t.ck to a panel llam in tbe fint pme last year. Yet, CanteCO bas talked fi'eety most of lat week and much of this one about bow difficult it would be to coac:entnte on playina apin. .. Yeah," said La Rum. apparent- ly UDCOOCCt ned. .. but if you think Joee'11101toinl10 be~ for bis at-bat Friday, IMa he's b>led you." Maybe IO. Tbe man whole mark for World Series futility Cameco i1 ~ iD Oii cenainly booa IO. .. MOre~to IUm." bmer Detroit M8rv Owen. owner of an O-i>r-3 lel'in IU'elCb, told The New Yoct Times in a receat iDW-~ ... , mw-bl ... bit lll'.lllY ........... ~." ..... ,.,.. 1'eb ... 'p1olwb-*lw ...................... (two days. Tuelclay wl Wednnday at Oiai Valley CC). I ICt to meet a lot ol people and bave a chuce to cxpand .. rJ~ oltbil coun-try by wi1b diae people." Hennina ~ one flnal word of wisdom. •"If Orville Moody can five a club'to tbe President olthe Umted States, then I miabt be able to eve the Iona putter to Dao OuaYle. Incidentally, the GTE"West Clasaic will have 17 of the top 20 money winners on the Senior Tour competina. The coune will be re- vened for tbe tounwneot to live ESPN a better location for cameras on the back nine. The pune will be $350,000 with the winner pick:ina up a check for SS2,SOO. a Memben of the aovemina SS2 O ub that sponson the Newport llll\1,10"\ ClallkE ........... Nt•port a.dl <». lllw c'n rit tblir ... IO u.J6..S27. .. WelDldelM-.wilbout belitalion. .. •YI fonnlr cMlrman Jake Robrer, DOW '1C>Chlirmlll of -a .... --a. --Wt lft DOW :;.;o;;rc PbOiiii'O. tbe POA Tour and a week abeld ottbe ATAT at Pebble Beach and tbe :::.:.:& Hopo Tour event in Id. The oriainal data were Jan. 12 and 1 ) whiclt WU really too mty." The same format of ID amateur player with a profeuional partner for a two-day ptO-IJD event will be followed once itpio. From 72 to 74 . . will be in the field and paannp . spoDJOn are happy with the new dates. They fiaure the youna players who don't make the field in Phoenix and thole who are lookina to ICt the cobwebs out from a winter awar. from aolffor the Hopn tour, wdl ·be SportsChannel to shbw UCI UCJ's buketbell team will appear at least five times this season durina SportsChannel Los Anaetes' 1989-90 coHeae basketball schedule. The Anteaten are scheduled to be shown on the cable network Dec. 21 (vs. Loyola of Chicqo), Jan. 4 (vs. San Jose State), Jan. 11 (vs. Lona Beach State), Jan. 2S (at Cal State Fullenon), and Feb. 22 (vs. Nevada-1..aJ Veps). Amona the other teams to be shown on S~rtsChannel OD a rea- ular besis will be UNLV, Notre Dame and Loyola Marymount The schedule includes 90 rqular-season game and four post-season con- ference tournaments. Much of the focus of the packqe will be on Diger Phel~· Notre Dame squad. which will appear 20 times, includina a Dec. 17 clash with UCLA from South Bend. Paul Westhead's Loyola M~­ mount team will employ its hi&b- powered offense ei&ht times, beain- nina Nov. 2S vs. Nevada-Reno and includina a Feb. 17 clash at Pc~ perdine. · ·sportsCbannet's schedule includes Bi& West and West Coast Athletic Conference action, as well as Atlan- tic 10. Missouri Valley, Midwestern Colleaeiate and Sun Belt Conference Games of the Weck. sponscaster Scon St. James, who has been at the station for 7''1 years. The move is effective Nov. 6 and St. James will be replaced by Joe Fowler.Nov. 6 will also be the day Jerry Dunphy makes his debut as news anchor for the station. Before coming to KHJ, SL James was the host of a sports talk show on KMPCradio Fowler appeared u a substitute a for Fred Rogin and Bret Lewis SportsCbannel will also televise • recently on KNBCChannel 4. live 28 Lm An&eles OilJl?CR home. , .. Fowler also bas been employed by pmes durina the upcomana sea.son. ESPN as a rcponer. The schedule bqins next Friday . O . when the Oippen face the Houston The baacst pme Sunday in the Rockets, led by Akecm 0'-.juwon. NFL? a ' How about ESPN's Dream Bowl, For the second time this season, the finish to the eight-week fantasy Saturday's 3:30 p.m. USC football .. Dream Season," which pitted great pme has been moved from KNX to NFL teams from different eras KDA Y radio becauee ofa conflict against each other. · with the World Series. The championship pme will be The sipal of KDAY (1 S80) is played between.the J 97.2 Miami quite weak in some areas of Oranae Dolphins and lhe '78 Pittsburah County. However since the Trojans Steelers. face Stanford on SAturday, the pme for the Dream Season, NFL ~n be heard on XTRA (690), a San Films computerized statistics for 20 I>ieao station which broldc:asts of the puteSt professional teams Cardinal pmes this sea.son, usina ever. NA. Films spent more than the Stanford feed. XTRA can be two months editioa films. picked up cleary in· Oranae County. 0-... lllWte,.,,._" • o.JIT . a ,,,,., writer ..... ~~ KHJ-TV Channel 9 hu replaced eYny rrllla7. • I p.m. -CQU.EGE FOOTBALL: U>na ~h State at Orqon, KORG (1190) .. TEµ;VISION 9 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Indiana at. 3:30 p.m. -COu.EGE Jl'OOTBALL: Stanford at use, K.DA y ( 1 S80), XTRA (690). Michigan, Channel 7. 9 a.th. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Princeton at Harvard, ESPN. 4 p.m. -COLLEGE FOoTaALL: Pidsburah at Notre Dame (delayed), KORO (l 190). S:2S p.m. -BASt!!BALL: World Series Ga'tle 4 - Oakland at San Francisco. KNX (1070). 9 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Tulane at Virginia Tech, SportsChannel. · 10 a.m'. -COILEGE FOOTBAU.: Tennessee at SUJJdaT LSU, TBS. 11 :30 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Alabama at TELEVISION Penn State, Channel 2. 10 a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Rams at Chicaao. Noon -GOLF: PGA tournament from Hilton Channel 2. Head, S.C., ESPN. 10 a.m. -EQUESTRIAN: Grand Prix de Penn Noon -COILEGE FOOTBALL: West Virginia at National from Harrisb~ Pa. (tape), ESPN. Boston Collcac, Prime Ticket. 11 a.m. -GOLF: PGA tournament from Hilton 12:30 p.m. -COu.EGE FOOTBAU:.W.ashinaton Head, S.C.. ESPN. at UCLA, Channel 7. Noon -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Colorado State I p.m. -SPORTSWORLD: Breeders' Cup Steeple-at Utah (tape). Prime Ticket. chase (delayed); Western States 100 endurance run Noon -!OOGER: Wimbledon v1. Liverpool in (tape), Channel 4. English Lcquc competition (tape), SportsChannel. 1:30 p.m. -BOXING: Frank.ic Mitchell vs. I p.m. -PRO FOOTBAU.: San Dicao at Seattle, Anthony Boyle, junior-lightweights, from Philadelphia Channel 4. (tape), SportsChannel. 2 p.m. -BICYa.JNG: NEC World Championship 2 p.m. -OOLLBGB POOTLU.L: PitubwJb at &om Chamberry.:.f~ (tape), ESPN. Notre Dune, ESPN (SporuCbannel. 9 p.m.). 3 J>.m.--BIUllOl"l.Ald RACING: Budweiser 2:30 p.m. -AU10 BACINO: CART Monterey 300 Gold Cup from Sao Dieao (tape), ESPN. (tape), Channel 34. 4 J>.m. -llOCKEY: Edmonton at Montreal. 3 p.m. -BOWLING: PBA Rochester (N.Y.) Open SportsChanncl (repeats at 10 p.m.). (delayed), Channel 4. S p.m. -ROCKEY: Kinas at Winnipea. Prime 3:30 p.m. -COILBGE FOOTBAU..: Stanford at Ticket USC, Prime Ticket S:2S p.m . -BASEBAU..: World Series Game S - 4:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Eastern Oakland at Sao francilCO (if~). Cba.nnd 7. Michipn at Central .Michipo (delayed), Sports-7:30 p.m. -llOUE RACING: Santa Anita replays, Channel. Channel 18 (Spor\1Cbaone1.J2!._t;~:>· S p.m. -COLI.BOB POOTLU.L: Miami, Fla. at 9 p.m. -COLI.BOB l'VUTD • Wultiqton at Aorida State, ESPN. UCLA (tape), Prime Ticket.. S:2S p.m. -8AIEBAU..: World Series Game 4 -I Lm. -lloasB L\aNG: lm Alamitos replays Oakland at San Fnacitco~ Channel 7. from Saturday night, Prime Ticket. 7 p.m . -COLLmlli POOTLU.L: Nevada-Lu L\DIO . V~ at Fresno State, Prime Ticbl. 10 a.m . -PllO FOOTllAU.: Rams at Chicqo, 7:30 p.m. -llOlllS uaNG: Suata Ani~.replays. KMPC (710). Channel 18 (SporttClwmel. __ I_! ~m.). l p.m. -PllO FOOTBALL: Wuhinston at 7;3S p.m. -U.S. OLYMPIC GOLD: Pu-Pacific Raiden, KF1 (640). . Swimmi111 Cbampiontbipa f'rom Tokyo (tape), Tm. • I p.m. -PRO FOOTllALL: San Diqo at Seattle, 10:30 p.m. -m11.sos fOOftALL: BYU at XTRA (690). Hawaii (delayed), Prime Ticket. I p.m. -PRO FOOTllALL: Philadelphia at Deo- MDIO ver, KNX (1070). · 11:30 Lm. -OOll,MS POOTLU.L: Iowa State S p.m. -llOCKSY: Kinp at Winnipet. IC.LAC at~ KMNY tl600). (S70). 12:30 p.m. -cw>aoa fOOl'aAu.c W1Mi'lllO" ""1:2' p.m. -8AIBllALL: World Series Oame S -at UCLA, KMJIC (710). <Wdend It Sa francilco (if neceuuy), KNX (1070) . 0 · P I M V.... JI, -· £ It M , ...... v-. • • 7 ...-..al Wwli&iMC .... ._. .. Wlft .... -:=:-.. , •• WM l•:l•a JI -fNM -(lcett lUdl), .. "" ._,,. II -fNM ,._. ~ NI),,. ---"" ._, .. 11 -.._ ._. OM llllk>. ~, .. ~-.u:',p='la. ns fl\' --" ·-............ 111111*), M7. ;\II J • • tsa T •• -'· .... ....... Cllfl II s.n Franclte0 • ..... NewOrteans Atlanta Minnesota Chlcaoo GrMn8ay Tam1»e8av Detroit .... W L T ' 1 0 5 2 0 J • 0 2 5 0 c.er .. 5 2 • 3 J • J • 1 6 ... , 0 0 0 0 0 ftct. ~p ~A .IS7 1'2 13.5 .714 la 165 .m 175 lJO ·* 1211'3 .71• 146 113 .571 "' 163 .•29 112 111 .•29 , ... )52 .1'3 91 170 6 1 .0 .157 175 lot 5 2 0 .11• 162 ,., ' 3 0 .571 116 "' 3 • 0 .•29 137 163 N.Y. Glanls Phlladelphla Weshlnelol\ Phoenix Dalles 0 7 0 .000 96 213 Amerk.M c. ...... teit Denver Kansas City Raiders Sealllt San Diego Cincinnati • Houston Cleveland Plttsburoh Buffalo lndlanaPOlls Miami • New Eooland • N.Y Jets West 6 1 3 • 3 • 3 ' 2 5 c.mr .. ' 3 ' 3 ' 3 3 • EHt 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .157 160 105 .•29 137 1S9 .•29 1•1 124 .•29 '133 , ... .216 125 1'6 .m 1 .. 111 .571 19' 170 .571 163 95 .429 93 169 5 2 0 •. 71• 190 163 • 3 0 .571 l:U 120 ' 3 • 0 .571 l~ 159 2 5 0 .216 lOI 169 1 6 0 . lC 122 192 SUMeY's GMW\ R•rfll at Chlc•oo ICM nnet 2 at 10 a m l WHhingtOll •I Raiden, 1 Pm Atlant• at New 0r ... n,, 10 a m Detroit v~ GrMn Bev •' MllweukH, 10 • m Hou,ton •t C .. vet•nd. 10 • m t<an'H Citv at P1tt,1>urgh, 10 • m Miami at 8uffelo, 10 a m. New England at lndi1nel>Ol1'. 10 a.m Pnoe11111 •• Delles 10 e.m Tamo• Bev II ClncllltWlll. 10 1 m San Francisco •• NV Jeh, I P m. Ph»•detonla at 0.,,ver, I o m San Diego at s .. ttle (Channel 4 11 1 p,m ) Mendlv's Game Minnuota et NV Giants (Channel 7 at 6 Pm l CMWMnltV c ..... ......."--....... W L T l ltfloo Amel 1 0 0 Safvltt 1 O O ~Del l l 0 SIPaut 0 l 0 .""'"" Monl~y 0 t • T ......... 0- Maltr Del ., •t"'°° Mon!'°"""' ~·--" Paul vs S«vlte a t GIOver Field .,..... W L T • 3 • . , . ' . . 3 • 0 , • 0 81"-Amel al LYnwood (-IMeue) OTHI• <MIA .... COUlffY KH•DUl.11 ~ ....... .,,_.. ... ~ S.nte Ana ll, canwn tl T ........ s 9-C7:JI) El MoOeNI (l·l) vs VIiia Perk (l·U ti Et Moden• Footl'lill (1·0) ..... s,.. Vallev c 1-l) ., SA BoWI IMt*eL....,_ ~slcer9' Esoerani• 2t, Cvl»fns 3 t<•l.O. 21. Et Dorado 7 Lo• Atamllos 16, Lo.r• 14 ,,_av LMtUe TeflllM'l GMMI 17:l0) Trov (I· 11 at 8ueN Perk ll· 11 SUMV Hiiis 11·0) at Fullerton ll-11 Sonora (0·2) al Le Habra (l·ll ~ ...... T...._.lG-. Western (7·01 vs. Anal\elm (0·21 et L9 Palma Me11nol11 (0·21 a t Valencia (1·0-l) Savanna ( 1·0· 11 11 8rH ·Ollno. ll· l) Gwclllft Gr-LMWe TllwldllY'l Scerft . . Pecmca 20~ 80lw Gr•nde 16 • Ranct>o ,lilamllos 19, G•r~ Grove 1 'r9'111M's GMMt 17:l0l Santiago (l·l) vs La Quint• 17·71 et Bolsa Grano. l<t11nedv (1·21 vs. Los Amigos ( 1·3) et Garden Grove HOt kl\ ·~. , NHL11Md111111 C~alLL GON,lltlNCI SmvtM DMllell w L T ~G,GA Caloarv 6 2 3 IS S3 JI l<llles s 5 0 10 41 43 Vtincouvtr s s 0 10 36 JI Edmonton 3 • 3 9 36 l~ Shark ~arnlng ll!Mcia 15, T~ 1 ~ Biren CEI def Devitt, 6·0 def Tafove, 6-0, del IC:•m 6·0 Currtn tE) won, 6·3, •·1. 6·1. Ra nev CEI IOSt 3 6 4·6 won 6·1 0.-. Cotons·Romm IE ) def Do-Vu 6·3 def CMv· Stone 6·0, def .Bektr·Vtnn, 6·0, Jovner-snooe CEI won 6-0 6·0, 6·0, Noh·t<rtlsi. IEI lost, •·6 .. on. 6·3 6· 1 SUNS£T LEAGUE leliMrt 11, *""" s ~ Crllell tMt Clef f'lemlno, 6-1, oef Wllla~r. 6·7 def NeumaM 6-0 Ferr IM) IOSI 1·6. 3·6, won 6•2, Sebe« M• IOSI 0·6 0-6. 0-6 Oeu9les Cao·GrallH u tM> ios• 10 Turner·Oleiotl. 2-6 IOst 10 8eero·L Tnie-i ~·• IO't to A Tl'liet· Helstrom. 2·6, Chao·Me<1st+I IM) IO". 0-6, 0-6, 0·6. Un1ala n·Cu1et ucd IM> '°''• 2·6 0-6. won, 6·3 H~ ... Ch 14, Ocean View 4 ~ Monroe HB' oel Kornoe"'' 6· 1 oef Rover 6·0 c:tet Cno 6 o Pn CH& won 6·3 6 1, 6·0 sie ... ar• HB won 6-) 6· I 6· l Deublel ~ooos Jo'lnlor' 1'48 Ot'f Scnwt•M"9ef· An" e 6·1 oe1 Scrt<oenoerg·Rust r 6· I def Noo•o,,·Da1f 6 0 NooH·R •enou• IHB11ost, 5·1 won 6·3 6· I Ntv e·Su!'u HBJ IOst S-7, 3·6 s 1 Fountalft Valtv 12, wntmtnu ... • s.n.' HO<" Fii def Gu••H 6 1 dtl V1rn 6·3 o~• Ass o 0 Ouren Fv• 1011 6·7 l·6 3-6 Berendt FV 0\1 6· 7 6 1 won 6·2 Doutllt' JC ATHLETIC aUREAU STATE ~LL A'*· C .... , CMNr~ 'II !tee. Ut · 1. El Camino, Mlu lon North 6·0 1 1 Riverside, Miu lon Central •·O 3 l Dlablo Val .. v. Golden Gate 6·0 7 • Taft. Coesl Vali.v •·0-1 S Wlnnlpeg • s 0 Nerrls OMileft Chicoeo 1 • I Mlnne1ote 6 ) I Ott roll • s 2 St Lout' • s 0 S Hartnell, Co.ti 6·0 6 6 Vef'ture, We\lern St No 6·0 7 1. Collage of tne Se<1uolas. Cool VaUev 6· 1 e 9 LA Southwut, We1tern St No S·O· I 9 Toronto ' 6 0 WALES CONFEltENC£ Patrick Dlvlileft NV Ranger\ 1 1 2 • ll 11 15 ., «I 13 36 33 10 3' .. • 36 JS • •1 SS 16 «I 30 Greg Nonwan, •"'l'he Shark'' from Austr•ll•, wtll b• at Newport Beach Country Club Nov. ZO for • nine-hole exhibition. He'll dom onstrat• his slct111 on the driving range wltft a 45-mlnute cllnk •t 9 a.111., followed by nine holes of goff. Sponsored by Reebok · Golf, the net proceeds ar..e being dona ted to Assessment and Treatment Cent er and the Southern C•llfornla PGA Junior Golf A11oclatloo. Tickets are US per person and can be obtained at the club 19 a.m.-5 p .m .J, located at 1600 E. Coast H ighway. C "aro·Fos•t• f'V oel l'•ttcner·Tran . 7·S. Oef Bo..,-..an TO<" 6·2 Ciel Canton·Z.CMne 6-2. Oev•>es·Haroema" ,FV won 6 1 6·3 6·0 W••n·G aOd "II F V '°'' 1·6 woo 6·3 6· 1 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Ct\te Mesa 12, Or•-• s.n.s Lu•...,.,an" CM Clef DUCK>9 6·0 oei Ptrei 6 0 oe• Le 6 0 Ro.CO" CMI woo. 6·2 lost. 3 6 7·6 Drense• cM won 6· 1 6· I 6 2 Double$ 9 Belltotleld , we111rn SI •·0·2 11 10 Sola no. Bav v111tv 6·0 10 11 Rencno Santiago Min ion Central S· I • l2 Sacramento, Ca mino Nortt 6· 1 11 13 Orange COHI Min ion Cen 5· 1 14 14 American River. Camino Notte 6· 1 1 S l S Butte GOiden Valev 6·1 16 HIGH SCHOOL Sunwt Lu"" Hunt1r191on Beach OcH n View Edison Fount•ln \lellev Wtstmlnsttr Merine LM9" W L T 2 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 7 0 1 7 0 0 7 0 T1'uncl9Y's k.,. Fountain Valley 31, Wntmlnller 14 ()yw .. W L T 6 I 0 s 2 0 • ) 0 ) f 0 1 1 0 2 s 0 T ........ s~(7:l0) Edison vs Marl,.. l •I WHltyllruter) Ocean View al Hu•lllnclton Bt•ch s .. vi.w LH9Ue Esten<•• Corona dtl Mar Newport HerbOr ~ddlaback Tu"ln LM9W W L T 2 0 0 I ' 0 I 0 1 0 I 0 Unlvers Iv 0 1 0 Tenlttll'' Ge~ (7:l01 Coron. del Mar et Tustin Ovwal W L T 1 0 0 5 1 0 s 2 0 3 ' 0 ' 3 0 2 s 0 NewPOrl Harbor o E\lancle Cat NewPOtt Harbor) SaO<lteti.cll "' Un1ver\ltv (el Irvine) Pacific CNSt LHtiUe LeHUe W L T 0ra('941 l O O Laguna Hills 2 0 0 Traouco Hills 2 o O Wooelbrldoe 1 2 0 Co$1a Meu O 3 O Laguna Beech 0 3 0 Tlw"48V'' k wes Woodbridlle 31. Laguna Beach 72 Oran~ JS, Co$1a M.sa 20 O¥wal W L T 6 1 1 • 3 0 6 I 0 3 s 0 • 0 I 0 0 • 0 S.turclllV's COMM U sun. I Laguna Hills .,, TrabuCo Hit~ (at Mission VlelO) Souttl CNSt LMew LfftlU8 W L T Ce0t$1rano VafS.v 2 0 0 Et Toro 1 O O lrvl"I 1 1 0 Mission V•eio I 1 O Oaf\a Hiiis 0 1 0 San Ci.mente 0 2 0 Tenlttlf's GMW\ 17:>0) o-al W L T 1 0 0 7 0 0 3 ' 0 6 1 0 s ? 0 1 s 0 Mission Y1etO '" El Toro (al MIU IOn v .. IO) San Clemente et Dana HiHs S.tvrdl'('s CO.me CaPlstrano Venev at Irvine New Jtruv s ' 1 11 3' 37 NV l\lenders 3 ' 2 • lS lS P•ttsourgh 3 5 2 • 3' ... Washlnoton 3 s 1 • 37 4l PtlileQelPfl1a 7 6 1 s 21 33 Adam' Division Montreal 6 " 0 17 lS ~ Bo" on s ' 1 11 )1 31 8uHalO s ' I 11 l3 71 Hartloro s 6 I II 60 41 Que!>« ) 6 1 1 39 60 Thursoav•, Scwes 8o"on '· o...t>ec 2 P•tlll>ufllf\ l , Detroit l Hartforcf7, N-Jet'WV 3 Chicaoo S, MontrHI 3 SI Louis •. Minne'°'' 1 T .. V'IG-l<lnet et Winnipeg, s..JS om Toronto al Buffalo, 4:35 Pm NV Islanders at NV Ranoen. ~ p.m V•ncouver et C•loerv. 6"l5 om. • \ 01.1.•:l R.\1.1. .> '..• c .......... GOLDEN STATE ATHLITtC CON,EltENCE Westmont def SoCel C:olteoe. IS-S. 1S·1. 1S·7 Communltv c ..... women .STATE TOP 10 l Cerrito, (JI llS. 2 De Ania (2), 13•. l Cue"'< ll 171. ' Seouole\ IOI, S GOiden West, 105 6 Santa Row a.t, 1 Groumoni (1), 11, 8 Fresno 9 D••blo Vel~v SI 10 Et Camino 4 11 11 el LA Pierce ano Pawoene. 38. ll San Di~o Mna, 1q 14 ~ta, II, IS. A,,,.,tca.n River 13 16 111•1 Long Beecl'I, Napa, Moor· par• R'venide. Saddtet>ack ano Santa Monka, 11 Hklh school tirf' SEA VIEW LEAGUE Corono <let Mar def Newport HarDOr IS·? IS 10 IS-8 Est1n<ta Clef Tustin. 9· IS IS· 13. 11· 15 17· 15 U"i•t•s••v ~ S.<1<1.eoaclf. IS-S IS·ll IS·• SUNSET LEAGUE Edoson <let Marina , 1S·9, IS·?. IS·I OcH n View def HunllnotOf\ BeaC/1, IS· 11, IS-7, 1S·11 ANGELUS LEAGUE Meter De• oel 8•5"°9 Montgomery, 16-14 I IS 16·14 IS 10 ·Junklr V•riltv Ed"on def Marina, 15•1l, 2·1 S, 15·13 Blst>oo Montoomerv eel Mater Del 1 IS. 1S·9 IS·IO F'"""'81' M•r•M cwt Ed•lOn 1·0 81,l'IOP Montoomtrv dff Malt r Del, IS· 11, 15·9 Sf'HJ:OI I .•' Teday WATElt ~LO Communltv co"19e -Oranoe Coast at San Diego Mtsa, l IS Hli>n KhOOI -lrvtne al Mll'efftle 3 IS. Marine •• MJM•lf.an (al Belmont Piere>. l. Fountain V•lltY " El Toro. 1 30 Woodbtld9t ., E\!ancla, 3 IS, Harvard vs Meter Del (•I Sant• Ana Vettev). • Corona ~ Mer, Newoort H1rbor. Un1vtr1llv at Al·Cet Tournement lat Stanford) SOCCElt Colle9e women -S.f\ Jose Sl•le at ucr. 3 . Community cot•ege men -Golden WHI at Cvoreu. 3 Orange Coe" at FultertOf\, 3 Communltv coti.ve worMn -Oxnard el G-West. l Ora nge Co.'! II Palofner. 7 30 VOLLEYaALL Cof\eoe ..,_n -UCI et Hawaii 1 30 Cal State San Be<nerd1no a t Cl'lr•s• COiiege Irvine. 7 30 . Communitv ColtellO women -GOloen We\I at O·•~~ Cou 1. 1 High SChOo4 II•''' -Coste Mesa ., Laou,.. Hill' 3 Trat>uco Hills el Woodbrldoe 3 Laou"-BHcn 01 Orange 3 ClltOSS COUNTRY H1gn SCl'IOOI boYS ands Olrl' -South Coast L11111ue Fln•'IS at Irvine Perk 1 om SWIMMING COiiege men -use "'· \JCI" Htr11a11e Perk 1 om 0 \I \.IO IC' . _.. Wertd Serttl SAN P:"ANCISGO VS.. OAKLAND SalUf'dav, Oct la-()akland S. San Francisco Sund•v. Oct lr-Oallland S. San Francisco I (Oalltano teadl itf'lts 2·01 Tuesdav, Oct 17 111rouol'I Thursday, Oct 26-0akland at Sen Fra.ncl1co, POd . H rlhQuettt Fndev-Oalf.le n<I <S•-art, 1·01..-7 1·91 at San Frenc1sco (Gaut411, 0-1 1'·SI, S zw o m Saturdav-Oekla nd (MOore 1·0. 19·111 •' San Francisco tReuscnet. 0-1 17·1), S 71 om Sundav-Oolll•n<I <WelCn 0·0, 17·1) e l San Francisco !Roolnson O·O 1?·11 > S21 pm (If neceu arv> TUU<lav-San f'ranc1sco at Oakland, S 71 pm Clf nteeswrvl Wtdnesdav-San Francisco at Daktano S 28 pm (If necMwrv) Lopez knocks out Baeza at Irvine Marriott From The Auodat~d Pr~u Benny Loi>Cz knocked out Armando Baeza in 2:27 of the second round rn 3 scheduled l~round hghtweigh1 fight Thursda} night al the Irvine Marriott Hotel. Bac.-za. of Upland. floored Lopez. of Norwalk. w11h a lcf\ hook JU 1 before the end of the first round Lopez, however. landed a barrage of punches tha1 sen1 Baeza rttling around the nng 1n the second round. Kris Lister. and a sohd left hook put Bac1a Oat on h1~ back. Baeza got up at the rnunt of eight. Both fighters "ere staggered after an e~changc of hooks. Bui Lopez backed Baeza into a comer. "here he lan~ed a sohd nght tha1 put Baeza out on his feet. Rcteree Pai Russell stopped the bout. Lopez. 131 '' pounds, improved to 14-6 wllh IO knockouts. Baeza. I 331 i. fell 10 1 3-5~ I, four by knock- out. MESA From It quarter wasn't much better for Costa Mesa. The Mustangs tned 10 get back in It on their next possession. On a founh-and-9 at the Orange 3:?. Dub) 0 prno faked a punt. but his pass was over the head of Mike Webs1er. Orange scored twice more. leading 28-0 al halftime . .\nd 1he statis1ical edge was completed dominated by the Panthers (6-1-1. 3-0). Tbe Panthers outru hcd Costa ~esa 1n the first half. 126 to a minus-2. They had more passing yards. 135 to 7 and eventually OU'Pincd the Mustanp. 261 to S. For the aame. it didn't improve m uch for Costa Mesa. Orange ac- cumulated 427 yards to the Mus· uanss' 198. OranJt scored on 1ts first four possessions in the first half, with the Panthers openina the p mc wnh a ~yard drive in I 0 plays. Minor had 17 yards n1shina durina the drive. Brian Rummel. who finished' with 62 yards on 20 carrin. contributed 19 more. Chris Thompaoa alto hit Gfql Campbell wilb ID I I-yard pua. Rummel aot lbe ~ on a 3-yard run widl David. Knorr kicki111 lbe tint of'bis four PATs. Widl 7:16 'rft in die h qw1cr. ~ led. 7-0. After Costa Maa coulilll't move on its Ana ........ tM Pantben ... Oii ... -a OftCt ~ Tb6I ~~C*.. °':'lr..=:.: ..... 1:\2:; ................. . aew.-.•1uadll ea.._ .... .,.. ..... ~ I ..... .... 0 CM 12 22-111 -s-,.., • ,_..._. "' ,.. .., t-n ,.. TE'\'\IS ~ Be<ac1c·C•J1 CM IOs• to Henl\e ·Hovork• ' 6 os• •c Ren er l.. ,... 7-6 Ciel Wemoolt· F sner o· 1 Cna., Ng .. ven Boria ICM I IOl l 3-6 ... ()<'I 6·3 6·• T Ng<;vtn c Ni>uven ICM) IOst 2 6 W()f\ 6·2 O·• JuN« Versltv 1..agune Buen 17 Traouco HIUs 1 C ..... women NON·CONFEltENCE ,S.n 0-.. St•le 1, UCI O San Diego Stele scoring Manzer I Saves Fori.er 3 Men's '-"mamtnt -' (at Antwet"P, 9e6llum) S.C:enCI lltoufld ~ M1tos1a.-Mecir. C:1ecnosJOvai\i11 cwt Aaron K••cli.ite·" Crone Po;nte, M•ch S-7 7 6 6·0 Ivan Leno! C1acnosiovek1a oel Ancir" Che,llOl<ov Soviet u"'°" 7·S H 6-1 JO"" McEnroe Cove NK .. N Y oef He<1r1 LK onte Fr11111ct 6· I 3·6. 1·6. M•cnael Chano Plact nfla def Andres Gomez Ecuador. 6· 1 6· 3 \\ \ I I H l'O I O ~ UCI WIVH Tall I, M;J,tr 1 Halflimr San D ego Statt, 1·0 """ SCftMI SOUTH COAST LEAGUE '""'"*' V1ekl 1. ll'VIN 1 MtH•On VletO 2 1 1 ,..... DEEP SE.\ • Men's tourNment l•v ne I 3 0 J.-1 tat FrllMIWI, W tst Germeftv) Third A_... Slnlln J\l\•S~Ot' Vtt -0 KO< "II Petrucci S M(Me.he)ft 7 Da••' 1 SavH Jonrso,. 6 ir~·ne Kor "9 C•rff'~a '· \lllio<w I, G1enn Lavenoacl\er, Porto!• vanev oef 1<.ellv Evernden Ntw zuiano 6 ' 3-6 6·7 Kevin Curren Au\I 'I Te•u Ciel ~•al'oer An· 10" IKti AuSlr a ' 6 6 ' 1 6 Tom N1 uen Nl'"'Prfa rta\ OPI P•w An"•COf\~ .B••Og.,..moto" NV 1 6 6 ) 7·6 Er< "Je'en West Germanv oel Man'"' Zoeclte Wes• Grrmanv l ·6 6·l 6·1 Ton•ov•Cfl I 1<.osm•n I Saves Hucli.aDv e DAVEYIS LOCl<Elt (Newpert ... di) -' 00.ts, S3 anoler' h bonito 36 cOd 9 cahco oau • Wnd oan 107 macAt1'et. 5 caoezon •S scu o.n 1 11no cOd NEWPORT LANDING -7 bOa ls ),) anoi." ' '•no Dan 24 roe~ flsn. 3 1>or1110 JS scu101" 1 calico Dan I wnlte fl1h "--"· Oc-v-,. 1 Uut« H8 16 n : ._.,,.,."' OV f. )7 I Pa .. O<)ff 1HI t6 H • ...... ><8 ''" !t ~f't ~Plet M8 1 16SO 6 ~ ... •'-'O Hll 16 SJ 7 Ct<at>oO OV 11 II. t 6.f,...\lt~ 0V 11 1J 4 ' .... '-,. M9 1141 '0 ~'••t • O'V 1 '4 JV ._..rt"' ""O'O"t 84.c-. O• i:W'"'a.,,., ~ M""''of'f'Ol~ &NCf'I ~ ff F tO'V! H~t·"O'Of' •••<" ! s '° E ...... n.-.....>t I Mc(....,. Ml ls.JI 1 l••o-E t• " J MC,..~-""'Ot" e -. ·• • c. ........ IM 1671 I So•e E lt1' t "'CC."«• E ••~1 1 Ge t te-f"I £ t\.I I Mw"'enon M 1t U t M ,,...,, E 6")e tO 0 flour•• IMI tt ~ HA VllW 1..IEAGUE ~ n. r,. • ..,,,. t Sr.,-nat T t• tf 7 ;t....,oet"' U 16 )J ) M ... U It... • T PO•"" U ft !! S (...., U 1tS7 •"'•'I" f It~ 7 C••t U• ft~ I Wn<or·•-T ltS7 t AC•tr.....,,, Tt lt51 10 h f •1 71 ~ >O.C-•-r ?t I S. "Wll S Ull 1 C•..._ COM U St l P.<(t S f• U • .... "° .. IS GOl.t· PGA '9Umament lal H-HMd ""'-SC I ' O<lr•1 Hammon0 Jl 11-9' ~,, 0 ~•'• JS n-.1 G•H .....,,... .. ~ l' D-t7 1<rt0C-,.,.._.. c .... ,, .. _ n-,.,...K.,• J\--t P .. na ,,..,.,., n JI- ""' S\1110'! ,. _,. M i.t C)otle >o )A -It 11 .. .,. Mc<• ,.... n >rlt OIW"td S"ro,~ )6 U---1' _.. CiK•-C~. lJ 11-111 IS ti~ S s.,, ... , •"O CeM •U S ' 'N'-o (d"' II 7• I YJo•• Cc, ... ~ )0 • o.: ..... \ 'J • ~ ••• d ... \ U 10 G \ ·~ l\ .... _, "-ll, £\1-. .. C1 Grt~-6"' N H 1t .a) } (,,\IQ~~ N-1 1& '-' "'If'* '•"' 'ltH ,,. ~· I Ca Nw '01"' pt..,. ,_,.,. 'Ot t i/l;"'t'f' ~,.. 1 J • C _,,, l • 4 I .... ,.:-•• f Pl• t Q •f'f'• J"l l'\4 Q P• _. \iM t \C \ 'l,.e.-.00'' ,..,.°"' .. D<t Of"• t J' • "-•• Or..t" i>'41r-oor Dv cwt a ... l'A("IC COAJf 1..IAGUI W~ IS. C:-to ,...... It v .. •~· .,., \'jO 1 r ... "'11 "-1•0" a ...... ,. .,, .. e ..... , ,. • l• ...... ~ " .• •' ••• '9fl'f' "' ,. ~ 1 .. ,.,...,,. "" ,, 0 • ,.. Noor•- '"" It .. • W N >ono• CM llat 10 T,..~ CY.• '111 Lo--It, L--11 &~·.-, l 8 ,,, 'L•"""' lH , ~ 1 • • a· ..o-c.. ... a .~ IJ Cl'lf:• i.. e ·• n ~ a~ ... .. e • J~ 1: .... . LB •'• ' ... t",,4' l " '1:"1 I ... ao~ lM H~l ~ l ff i.M "\~ fQ '.\"'Q•'Y' LM ,, .. 4" ~•"-"",. a~. .. .. ~ ~.-La9~• &•a,:." 1l l' r• v · H ... .,...,. C• ,_... ANGEi.US l lAGUl _ ... °" u. s.rv ... 0 ~·'"""'°' ¥0 '~ \\ c"\,l~w 'f< " ... 1 .\l\C(• •• i¥D '• ... ) •~ .YO .,,. • ~···--· YO 11' 5 8 1"C•!91 MD 1 i i • r"'*'t~ ~ " M """··~l.., C-a eS•- C" o 9tc"-\<.ou Hoel" P4.r Al.._,. -·-0•··-~l &oo '••• s··-•~ TooS<~.r1 ...... lltd .... c. ....... .. ¥·~ ... ~· • c;,.,."" ,. Jl-11 )j _,, )!-71 a-11 le JJ-11 ~ 11-n )7 )\,--~ .. _,., I' 11-11 a 11-n •·-n 1•-n -lo Jl-1) II -Ja M1dwa} through 1hc fourth quar- ter. Lagunn Beach dro'e 0 }ards in eight pla)s for a 1ouchdo~n. with Malle1 sconng on a J-)nrd ru n. Scheid hit Ferg.mus for 20 )ards on fourth-and-:? to keep the dn' e ah' e. Then. hc1d hit Fergraus for a 35-)'ard touchdown ~ss with 2:46 left in the game. 0 SUNSET LE AGUE J_,..., v •1"11'¥ Y A· .... I FO<;!'ljl.n Vo iev • ~· .,.a• no 1 Founta in Va"ev 6 Ft'fllvnan Manna 11 Fountain Vallev ' 1 "'"" ..._, ) tr \' I G•r<• l~t ti '9 • "~•· s 10n io c -s nn H klh 'ctloclt. q1y1, W NHT 1..EAGUE ,..,,,,_ V-v IS, w .. _,_ ti ""a""f' .'1f 10!ti0 1 W~1r:v "°SI ~ Y.ov• r,:-.. :t t~ • ,..,...,,....... '" Sl '•~•d r-v :ZGJ • ~·.-'"' 1t1t • • ,_ r:v n 11 •Sor~ r . n ., • \~"' -N n • 10 . , .... .,. . ' . £ ...... --so • ev'°' £ 114 1 T • 0 '•' M t:"C l ar•.ot-."• E ''l 4 t..efw'O"t t •OS S Pa_... l. 10 t t ._. ~ .., :01• 1 ,,.-0,. f 10» • ..,.~ .. f :illJ f A"'Or Vt ._. 11:') 10 ..,.~ •••" E 1 i. 0cNfl vi.-11. H-tMCil' lS r ~~_., 0 -1 ~I 2• 1 &0.-H! ."" ·~ h ,, ,. .. 4 ~ ~ .... :-= • rl"•:QA Ow 1 • • "'• o. ~· :• • A'f'.O""• • 11 ~ a M41'e HB J l._ • Jot""~#'! Ov :1 '3 lO Weti." n, 11 n SEA VIEW t..IEAGUI c .. _ ... _ fl s-o o Y<~•· •~ Co¥ tt JI l ""'• .,,,. ,:Y l•)C t 8••• 'O.M ·•Jt 4 "1.P (d-.Y. 10 u ' ~._.O<~ CoM 10 n • ~ ... ro.... 10 Jt r Gom.1 s1 l'Otl. 11 ·~ s '°"". v-C4MI ':''6' • \.._.,., s !:'11 JV ~orra M ..... IS S-• 10 , \ , ... _.,.. -1• s_.. n ""' • """""""'..,.. l»" ............ (';#~ "'"""'~ J6"'"' ~f\IJWe¥ Maslen '9Umamtnt , .. _._,...,., ~ Yt.a-•. O.•t•be l~ ~· S."O• l..•• >s·Jr7' Il l'\ N :.O'-"'t m D~.»-11 ltO"'I•"'·..-~·· ... ~,, ... w 1 ..... _.. u ~ • _,, "'•• ~"" v s u-n-n • ..... ,oc..-JS »-17 ~---cl T~•-.. .._......... U I I • U II .l' ? ., .. ( T) 1.-u l c "' ...,...,. • ,. 16 • --f I•'~ ~ 0..i•• • ''56 • Mau¥~ T 1'C Ot ' aau•" T 101' I ..-.~. 1 '° u • ,._ ... 11 11 10 ""~ •u 11 ~· ......... .-... h-• I , • JIOO-P'°" ,_.,.. ~ NH ~~•• N .. o 'CI .... ,._ ,_,., 70-45 S 11 • .-E :1 ' • G•-"'" 71.ll 7 ,...,. \ NM 11 •\ I ¥.rc.-s ( t 12'Cl t l"G ... , ,.,., n" t0 c;.-1c1. nv F f!ffWIO"' .... ,.bot' l• •7 l'ACttolC COAST 1..U~ ... __ n. c .... Mow l6 tf '>O~\ -.. 11 l6 7 a-. CMI •• •' , ca. ' w ft g • ...,.,.,. ''*"~ II So 5 ,en....,. C .... I 1..-i • EUOI (., '9 I C) ......... 1Wt If It I ¥~• W f n t Pwr> WI lt•,lS to ...... .,,. •9)1 L--lo.~-Jf r.,..~ LI ''11 i C......,.tt LH ~.,. Dt':h a 10JO • < ..... l..H 70) \ •<>"9* L'1 70ll • -·..-.. 1.H 70 •S ""°'er" 1..8 1 '' It I 8' •"" L9 1) IJ I • 0.w'-ILH' MIO ..>•• .. : 1" a~..ra ._. J Ol' C)f't t ANGIELU1 1..EAGUll _,.. 0.. It Sf -•0 f..,,.,.' ... 0 r>·Sf 1 c-i. MO 7071 I I('°'"' MDI. n tt • S<~ ...... MO 71 •7 s p ........ tSJI ?1'16 t Wa'""' ... DI JI.cl 1 _,.. MOI 11 S2 I C-• N>D n ll t ....... ~!$.ii n t\ " r ... ., SJ nn ~·v.... ........ , ....... 0 c-.)< '-"" ·o..-...-•-Y• Eo....eroo llt~·c C·•·9 P~"r" Pa Cv· e -... ~ Pr~ Sr-IOI' "-'"""'""'" ... ••1'"0( AT'" ~·­'"••" '160f"•or It<• ... ~•"'" "'r'"'"' " ..... ....... •cllt S1nlce ' j .... ~(­' ,.,, .. ,., .-:;. ,,.1. ~ >: M 'f:C"! • ...,!> c. •• # , .. ... . ,. '""' ,.,., . ..... ~ , '. ..... ,, . ,,,, b•t• ,,,., ~ . : ' .: • ... i . -.J r ' .. __ ., (. . ._ .... t tt I .. ,.7 'UUI -..... .... \ ..... ~ .............. leidft outkicbl' ·L Hill' • •' "'-81 Chrit L)'Ddl to wia 9'y r 9CODdl in . wbo IOM OGly ODCI durinl lhe PCl. 15:33. ' lllid Ge Olllfl IO I 14-4 ..... ~ over 0.... View at Hunt· . -.. Teo.a. w-·s Jellic8 Lurmana and ~t Drnla' .... lwepC 1beir ICU at Jlfo. I and l lillllet mpec- tively u &be Mumnp (I-II, M) downed Oraaee. 12-6, in a Pacific Cout Lape match. UCf swim teams to open sea on d...a.meet --, fiDilMd fint in • Woodbf'idee flnjthed nanaer-uo 19:27, but it wu ... uu Hills which in the PCL at 4-1 wit.b a IS.50 emtf'ICd with a Sall vic:tory at victory over Cotta Mna u llle bolt Lpuna Niauel Reaional Park. Wanion took the top .even spots •Senior Kelly Aalhen bad a per-behind winner Nima Ghaderi • sonal best 19:51 on the Mater Del (1':50). : ' course at Irvine Park to lead the •Senior Jeff Mauumoto aet a narchs to a 16-47 ~lus Mater Dei course record at Irvine ue victory over St. Josephs. Park, clocltina a 15:55 to lead the boys' high school cross country: Monarchs to a l S-.5 victory over •Senior Rich Lockwood re-Servile. Matsumoto broke Mike corded a blisterin• 15:40 time for Nielttn's mark of 15:59 set las& year. undefeated Fountain Valley to win In high school girls tennis: easily as the Barons (~-0) won a •The No. 2 doubles team of Sunset League meet, 21-36. at West-Samantha 'Joyoer and.Jeanne Shobe minster. • and No. I singles player Dina Birch •Marina's Brian McCaffery ran a each swept their foes without losi.N 15:38 to win comfortably over a pme as Estancia downed T~ Edison's Dave Baker ( 16: 19) at I S-3, to keep the Eaales tied for Marina High, bllt the Chargers cap-second placc1n the Sea "View Leaaue tured the Sunset meet, 23-34, a nd . with University. In biab ICbool water polo: • NiCk Petruoci, who ICOf'Cd a pme-hiah five pis for Mission Viejo. netted the~ pl with, I :46 &eft in the ttiard quarter to put the Diab&os in front, S-4, u Millaoh Viejo won a South Coast l..eque contest, 8-7, at Irvine (12-10, 0-4 ). In women's CQllqe soccer: . •Jul~ Manzer teored the only aoa1 of the match 3:40 into the first half to ad San Dieao State (4-3) to a 1-0 non-oonfcrc~ victory over UCl (5-1()..3) on the Anteaters' field finished 3-i in league. •Junior Cqurtn,~y Strauss ran her • Huntingto'n Beach finished 4-1 record to 43-5 with a sweep in No. SERIES in the Sunset. good for second place. 1 singles and teammate Christie after downing Ocean View at Ccn-McClintock. who plays No. 2 From II tral Park, l 9-39r as Scott Umer took singles, didn't aJlow a point in her 2, was taged in the ri&ht shoulder first in 16:22. sweep as Corona del Mar trounced by a line drive in t.ttina practiCt' •Seniors David Redpath (16:33)~ Newport Harbor. 17-1. in a Sea Tuesday. , Mark Miller (16:49). Donald Tip-View match at CdM. Don Robinson, one of several San ~ing ( 16:51) and j unior Victor Chen •Senior Remit Hom , playing No. Francisco pitchers hurt this seawn. 16:52) finished second through fifth 1 singles for Fountain Valley, swept . ·will take R~uKhel's place. Robinson or Uni versity (2-3) in a 21-34 See all three of her sets as the Barons has not started since Sept. 2S be- View win at Tustin. (8'-1) won a Sunset League match at cause of a bad knee and has pitched •Junior Eddie Salinas won in Westminster. just 13'1> innings since Sept. 3. 14:38 to lead undefeated Saddleback •Edison continued on its way to "If things keep aoing on like this, to a Sea View victory 9ver Corona a probable co-championshjp with Dave Dravccky and Mike KruJtow del Mar (4-1) for the first time in its Fountai n Valley by downin' will be our starters," Robinson saiJ. history at Mason Park in Irvine. Marina. 13-5. The Chargers (8-1) Scott Garrclls will oppose Oak- • Newport Ha rbo r's Dr ew won eight of nine points in doubles, land ace Dave Stewart tonight in a Graham ran his best race of the year. as the No. 2 team paired Katjc rematch of Game 1 starters. ending finishing first in 16:43. to lead a Beard with freshman Lynne Thiel the series-record I l ·day layoff Sailors' sweep of the top ~ix s~ts en and they resJ?Onde~ by sweeping the caused by an ~~rthquake. Mi~e route to a 15-47 Sea View victory three sets. including.. two by 6-0 Moore. a winner an Game 2. will over Estancia. scores. start for the Athletics on Saturday •Laguna Beach wrapped up an • Sophomore Tasha Monroe, evening. unbeaten Pa ific Coast League dual-Huntington Beach's No. 1 singles Clear skies. light wi nds and meet season with a 19-37 victory player, and juniors Hang Phi and temperatures in the low 60s arc over Laguna Hills at Laguna Niguel Heather Stewart swept in singles to forecast for the Games 3 a.nd 4. n. D9ly,... The UCI mea'1 and women'• swim teams, under the direction of Charlie Schober, open the 1989-90 season thi1 weekend. The men host USC today at Heri&11e Park in Irvine 11 I p.m., and the women welcome Peppcrdinc on Saturday at noon in Hcritaee Park. The men's team i1 led by aenior breasutroke s~ialist Brian ~. a product of Masaion Viejo Hiah who w11 selected the 1981-89 Bia West Conference Scholar-Athlete of the Year. He earned NCAA All-America honors while competina in the I 00 and 200 breaststroke events., finish- There is a chance of rain for' Game 5. if one is played. If the series ~ back to Oakland, the weather miaht be a problem. The Rolling Stones, however. wiU not be. The Athletics. the Oaklan<t Col- iseum a nd the rock group worked out a compromise that will allow the World Series to continue as planned despite a scl\edule conflicl. The Rolling Stones have sold 120.000 tickets for concerts at the Coliseum on Nov. 4-S, and their contract aJlows them to move into the stadium five days earlier to set up their massive stage. Should the World Series go back to Oakland. that would've been a problem. Concert promoter Bill Graham said Thursday that the Rolling Stones agreed to move back their concerts a day if the World Series needs G ame 7 on Nov. I. lfso. the Jf'OUp, the Athletics and the Col- iseum will together absorb the over- time construction costs. ina 10th in 1bt 100 to become UCI'• fint Division I swimmina All· American. ~ wu part of the reason the UCI men's team recently earned All- Academic team recopation by the Co~ Swimming COKhcs Auocla- tion of America for 1918-89. The men held the top GPA of all Division I swimmi.na prosrams last fall at 2.95 and w1s fourth in the sprin, at 2.93. The Anteater women were 0th in the faJI at 2.83 and I 2th durina the sprina at 2.82. Backing. ~er on the men's team are Fountain Valley High product Brian Judd. who was the conference runner-up in the 500 freestyle as I "Under the circumstances, yes, I'm satisfied. The overall picture, no," Graham said. "It doesn't seem rit.ht to me to hear that the facility l fla ve a contract for is not a vailable. , But in tight of the earthquake and everything else, I think it's fair." While the Giants practiced at sunny Candlestick an(j the Athletics stayed at their spring-training site in Phoenix and played in hot weather against their instruction•! league team, the earthquake remained fore- most in baseball's mind. Commissioner Fay Vincent said $1 .4 million would be donated to the earthquake relief effort. The G iants and Athletics contributed $1 00.000 each and the other major- leaftue teams gave S.S0.000 apiece. • We want to assist the recovery to demonstrate our appreciation for the cooperation we have received while guests here and to emphasize o ur support for the people who have suffered.'' Vincent said. iunior. ud Matt Cuny, a. junior from Sqinaw. Mich. who wu the Bia West champ in lhe 100 freesty&t. The women's 1quad is haded by sophomore transrer Debbie Babalhoff. a Fountain Valley Hiah product who spent her first. year at the Miami, Aa., Univenity, whett she qualified for the NCAA meet in the 200, 500 and 1,6.SO freestyle races. Other major contributors for the women fiaure to be seniors Lara Bialey (El Cajon Valhalla), the school record-holder in t.hc I 00 and 200 backstrokes and amona the top fi ve in the SO free, and Shannon Endsley (Redlands). The G iants and Athletics said the) would o tx:n next year's exhibition season with a benefit pme March I in Phoenix. Proceeds from tk ke1 sales, parking and concessions ·will go to earthquake victims. The Athletics collected $9,000 in donations from fans who attended a free \VOrko ut Wednesday in Phoenix. About 4,000 fans came to Thurs· day's practice game and saw the Athletics tee off against Mike G rimes. 21, a June draft pick and Jim Abbott's former roommate a1 the University of Michigan. Rickey Henderson led off the afternoon with a single and doubled in his next at-bat. Dave Henderson homered in-between. The Athletics planned to take takt· an evening flight back to the 8a) area. "We j ust had to get our work in. so we came here." Manager Tony La Russa said. EJ 642-5678' From North Orange County From South Orange County 540. 1220 496-~ CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 PROM NORTif ORANGE CO. 540-1211 FROM SOUTH ORANGE CO. -UDO THm DALY PILOT ClASSll'IEO Of'ACE HOURS TeleptlOfte S...-Mon.Fn 7 30em-5 30pm Sal 8-00eln-11.30am au..-Countet M·F 8 00-·5 ()()pm OI~-· CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY ,,..0.... ................. .......,_,... --..... ., .............. ~ ......... . .._,.,, ............ ...._...., ..... ... ........ <"""-'..., .. .,,.. • ....,., .... ..,. ..........,..,. • .., .,. ,. ... o.-.. .._ 4"C.C~ fllllt .......... .,,... ffF~., .-"" ................. ..,__... ... ·~·-~ ....... u .. .., """-< .. , .. .... _.. • ... t\llllh tlf.C' ......... -. ..... c, .... , .. ................. ,.._.. .... "'~ Of_&O\.dlt( ...... ........,. .......... --.... , t\ \411 ., •• ,., • ....,,., ............ , .......... ~-,...... , . .., ............ ( ........ ~ .. ,.,., ... ,.,.... , ........................... ,..._. .. c.....-.... .... , .... ._, '""" ........ ,......... ....,-...,.-, ..... ,.._,, ,. __ ,,. , ..... "-' ........ Exquisite new 4BR. 31h BA home located In the private community of Monarch Point with outstanding views from most rooms. Beautiful marble entry, v1utted ceilings, MC. syst.. & European cabinetry. Recreation facllf. ties. $925il°Yfi 111.L m !'--1---m AT -UIT -...., ..... ,_ -• B.UI, ..... ..... NEW LISTING IN BIG CANYON!! 12 RUE CHANTILL V OPEN ~AT /SUN 1-5 Fantastic view of dty, &olf course and mountains; this Dover model has been extensively remodeled. $749,000 For your private ehowl .. call:' CAROL ALLISON 759.-6600. 6"-7362 .''} 'I ' 1 t\ . ~ ... , • No room left In the .. , ... forthec.' Acalto ... ffled ......... 131-1811 w.aamun. 11.llll Remodeled 3 .. Bedroom + den home with pool & spa on a q~let street. ~ ......... .. ··---..... ~ . . ·---~. ·-.. •1L 1•1TmT 1umnu.Y Decorated custom 3 Bedroom Home. Family room, country kitchen, air con- ditioned, separate laun- dry rm & much more. 1111,111 S New Luxury T ownhomes l Bedrooms, 2 Yi S.ths ~ny Nice U~,r~ded I Amen11i~ From 289,000 ~ OPEN SAT/SUN 11-4 S 245 PALMER S1. COSTA,.. Owner 722-3501, 636·08 • F,_ Ool Cert. 38A ~ Beth• Dir*'G 2 ~ Patio with 8pe + meny ,..,,_, AJeo 28A Apettment wtth J,J Dede. 1125.000 a.. •1-1 I ~·· .... -j 11 ... ..... ,., tSERVICESt they're all In .. CL~SIFIED Read the classified pages and you will find someonE to handle your needs. IN.IOY IP,mCTACUL' CATALINA IUNIETS 1IO° OCON VllWI UgM & lllry 3 BR + extra room , BA. 2000 "'· open ~:.· c ...,,...,, executive . 2 = .... -....ry, front & ........ -19. cectul din. ·-fO ... ,.., petk• & ~· llYOWI CllllfWL•IOI •••••••••••••••••••• GARAGE S~t 8-A bm. ~xt ~gt I t :on- l-:'l>l'l1 •ht.....a. - - - IA 111••1• ~g=~~~n ...... ••chg tor 11h1re ot own. OWNER ~ .... ,I Lut •snip. You mike the aale of aamet P w11 mthly pymts & we snare $330,000. Thls 1mmac. 3 apprec You receive BR home la In betlef' IOc 100% tu t>eoehts Must I Condt EJlc.llenl Vlk.le, hive clean Credit Agt RMdV lo move lnlo & 239-4335 Oya. Ev. Wknds enjoy. ...... TURN THEM INTO . MONEY Call 641-5678 through the Cleulfledtl RECYCLE through the. DAILY PILOT Classified Pages Turn unwanted items Into money today! Cell 142·5178 Looking to seu 1225 R&'M*" ' . . R&'M~· moti ..... locaUon. '"' btodl "om 8'g Cotona ~ btra lat9I yerd, "Mhty paint.cl. Fr9"Ctl doofl hf~. oc..n View from front t•r.c.. cNO<en & peta .,. wel· come 12,800/mo In· ckldee owoener .. .,,.1-4 ••111 "':l:.rn:_1111••• .. L1 Liii.. ----Prime Meu V.,de 3BR ..... )BA 28A ~ Frp.;, 2BA. c ornplelety up-Beal Newl)Ol"t address gar, newly decorated I graded & updated In & 3Br. lg lot. Asking S.-75K I02 Avocado S 1445 Incl out Seller motivated, Owner/Bkr'760-8778 gaa & water 760·9020 1259·~ 1· ?:~ Jackie NEW'PORT HEIGHTS, lg Hilm!rm INCA~OIBLE HARBOR/ 2BR. 2BA. COt'net ol CllR -OCEAN VIEW Beaulllul - e I l St Andrews. New paint mJlilnd 2106 remodeled (SR 311BA 4 • & wpet. 2 ear gar. S 1850 new kitchen. h<J9e m11ter 972·0171, 744-1382 28~1 1BA vpper loll or suite~ pool turn /unlurn _ ----windows pvt 1undck Short term r en tal --IWPI ITl-llll "'1 Ir pie stove 111ge S70001mo 873·9387 trvtnl 1044 13,000-sq It IOI New 1 1000/rnonlh By IPPI CALL MORNINGS kitchen 3BR l'•BA only 213·273·3300 •• 9 B 3850 Adora~ 2BR 18A rear ....... * ... 3 K kr 642· BALBOA ISLAND duplex Fireplace gar· Ulliilfl llW•I• lliWfiiT lllllTI Fresh. bright 4BR lrple age patio $850/mo 514 ...................... A Sl .600 Jasmine Agl 875-49 12 ........,,...., rea• 3BR 2BA. p11vate spa lg WINTER RENTALS -• GAEA TL Y REDUCED TO yard Vaulted cellmgs 3 from 2BR 11 S 1 175 10 Charming newer 2BR 2BA $229.500 BY OWNEfl car garage RV aocess 3BR Baytro/ll 11 52 500 cottage-5tyle hse S ot Newly decorated 3Br Ani(IOUS setter! Wltlftr........... Bayside has everytn1ng1 2'•8a lorm din rm. kite/ ..... 900 • $1395/mo 964-3574 lam rm appro• 1650sl • ' • IULTm llMlll OPEN HOUSE DAILY -LUlll By App1 838· 1154 J •COBS RLTY ee1u111u1 2BR 'l\A gar-c oRoNA DEL MAR 3 " age new crpt trplc Bedroom.. 2 Ball\. used wshr/diyr t>eam cetlngs t>rtck !!replace bu11t-1ns 111-HlO $1200 yrty 673-53411 paho t close a' open gar· 1•1• •-UYFIMT 119e quiet Ava11 Novem· Must Sell Quality I Slory NEWPORT ISLAND • -•• t>er 5th S1500tmo By HOUSE on Sandia Ct S n 2500 sit 2BR & den 3BA Appt Sorry no dogs Now S299 900 Open Sun up er t>uy on 1 18 Upper unlurn Dup1 .. 1·5 Agl. Adr1an a t>~yfront 3 l:ldrm home Dockageava11 51850/mo BLUFFS ___ -- •99. 1678 or 494· 1177 with dock lovely l:lrtck vrlv 752·288 1 675·8835 widest green-.. patio & channel y1ews ' ' belt 3 Bedroom no Grea1 neighbor hood steps. patio on t>otn Newpen leach 1069 Short walk 10 ~ean Balboa sides new carpets. tL •••i •II PllP JUST REDUCED" Peninsula 2107 S 1800 mo By Appt YI-• 631-1400 $699950 OCE N 'I J 1/ 11 Santa Ana He1gh1S, New· SHORECLIFFS • Prime A vie~ custom f '>OU >IUI a« t. "Ol port Back Bay area 2 BR view lot o n canyon home, 3Br 2 181 ·den ~ ,J• 1 BA $470,000 852· 1003 Charming 2 l:ldrm cot· s5pa, sauna, 2·car gar •• lf.U!.> 1900/mo yrly Gd cred1I * IL•fl TWllll tage with great remodel 831• 13~ or 536-5J69 6.7] ~~91' Xlnt cond lowest price po1en11a1 10 ma1um1ze -f ' - 120.0114 492· 7940 7~~~~~875 000 Corona def Mar 2122 •7 t c...t ""'~ cai l!f'"! Hiits 1050 JAltW• W.-U8M Sir 2 WKS .,_~Lil 3llR •-;.r;;,11 tMI '"' QUMty decof l8A 2_..ory condO Flple, _, • MIOC pool/tnn19 81111211 bttca petlO, ow. PoOI PPrrca,.t1•a••1C1Dft.,.. .. 12100/mo•aec: 75,_,8021 11175 Cai1U7s..M21 38A. 2'..aA End UM l 9 28A 1BA. "'* ,,._ 38A 2&A, 1-.,,..-111-'Y-r-m-.-,,-pte-. •INCiuded courtyrd. crpta a Otpe a app1a So enerp a eteanl Ou* ~"° 1 P'!Wle ... CN-°' PCH gfndl I utlft Incl atrMI Nr SC Plaza, dren I S*I OK Sftcwt 01 St350/mo 75,_,90~ lltOO/mo •call Dave ::9c::= = NEWLY REMOOEl.ED. 5'0-ltSt Aol a1n5/MO I.~ I~ T•race home ...... _ -11 m.:'s=~~1~~9~;3 -111 Jlloll11•1• IHI --Mountain Mtllng sur-IEMK PANORAMIC OCEAN \IU , rounded by atreams & I Lu• Exec ho,,,. 3Br taut• tBR & 2BR condos ' • • 3Ba. fem rm, turn/unturn w/ga.rege w/opnr wl d ~mwf' t'f \ l f $3900/mo 640.2(µ5 hkup, woooburmng trl)IC RE~TOAS • Walk to beach, 81&1't micro $900 to $1100 MatlQOld 3BR. 2',BA, tat • dep<>all No pets gar, no pets $1350/mo CALL Velma 549-2447 __ 1_2~0·9218 Iv m.sg lllT mHH•H• Xlnt ~BR l'IOme • ol -E11t11de 2 Ouple• ufllll hoe/gue11 Steps to beh Ea<:h 2BR IBA Newly up- >Ctra lg tncd yd lrple gar graded & decorated • & grndr $2600 875-7284 1"1spa w/d & lots of patk· -·---lng & pr1vacy1 CANNERY RENTALS. JR MGMT Cosu Mesa 2124 675•4606 3BR 28A Condo 1845 CLEAN 3BR 2BA. pat•o A 0 1 ne 1 m A v 1 fenced yard gar $1065 $l lOO/mo Avail 11 15 mo includes grdnr/water Piease call alfer 6 Pm 577 Parll Dr 966-1521 541•6707 TRW reQ d no pe11 •1~-•L11ge patios & y•rdl • srn111 pe1 o4' •Carports wfStorage EASTSIDE 2BR houH $825 ................ IULtmU1·1• BLUFFS E.ec: Twnhm 38r 2'181, grnbell. patio, • comm pool, no pell $1500/mo 409 V1111 Roma Open S•t!Sun 2-4 -NEWPORT NORTH Prof decorated & land· ICaped 3BR. new, t>elYt S2.SOOlrno 644-1968 llZY.-TS 3BR 2BA 433 Tustin WOOd floors lrp!c 2 ca1 gar S 16001mo 6.45-3363 *81G BLUFFS END UNIT Lush g1eent>elt view pool FLEXIBLE TERMS . Rent or lease opttor Agt Bart> 67~51 t •POOis IUIMUllPTI 600W WILSON E.aec nm on Dcltller Snores EASTStOE Sharp & clean 5BR poo• $2 600 mo lg 2BR 11 >BA w1p1110 s 1 ooo sec 645-3000 t o w n h o u s e u n 1 I 5 8 9" 9 .a&. ... 2MI S825tmo Agt ~6-9950 days 4 • 04 eves 2BY':teA 1 car garage .u&. F• IH•11&m nt0e $750/mo Open Sun EASTSIDE 2BR house 12-4 2234 Rutgers C Quiet community gar· Call CHUCK JONES age encl backyard Pet ·631· 1266 or 646-5743 ok S825 646-4902 ......... Large patto pool Over· looking Newport Bay Avail It I I 675-4839 LIDO ISLE Furnished 2Br 2Ba nouse N-1u1chen LARGE EASTSIDE 2BR trpl dt>I garage Winter 18A new carpet pamt $ 1575 mo • 673-4170 t>llnds vard s1ng1e gar· LIDO ISLE REM ODELING ag e 18 5 Walnut s E 2BR 2BA 2·sty twnhse patio lncd yard pet ok 1971-0 Wallace ~S25tmo 361-5754 59501 675_8427 AL Lille new Kenmore mo d15hwasner & gas sell· MESA DEL MAR clea n r ang e /oven Sharp & clean 3BR tarn· iutchen cat>1nets sinks 1ty rm, 2 lrplcs nice decor 11ght h•tures SAT 8am * 3BR townnouse Newpt S t390tmo Agl 546-9950 t 12 Via Quito ino lurnl that extra junk st.acking up in the garage? Try 1he classifieds. What's 1un~ 10 you is o treasure to someone else. For 2nly $12.40 you get 4 lines for 7 days. Call today. *llUl/IAYYllW* BALBOA ISLAND·4t>drm 2BR 1811 hse trplc pvt llUT-lllTIL Brand new Sea Faire canallronl large studio t>each. gatdner gar "" d 3BR 2BA w frplc xtra Condo never occupied apt & tte-up for 2 18 hkup Non-smkr no pets nice w/d nkup Only Hgts trp1c. patto very __ n~ 322 Ogle St c New E side 2BR 2 ,eA LlmY..., $995 mo 647-7540 ToNnnouse wttrplc & enc 3BR 2BA on saNM>est 11t8ngnt & sunny twnnse• 2 gar age Avail 11 1 t>eacn Sec spa A C Huge patio pool spa t><>ats Lovely decor w1tn $1150/mo * 760·90t9 St500 mo Oe>en Sat & S425k 723-4290 =~~~.;;:~eile ~o::::i,~l:ll: *'MMAC Spacious & 1tgnl Sun t 1·6 604 Larkspur SELL throu~h cl.m1f1cd 642-5678 Dail y Pilot• Independent SPYGLASS HILL SPECIAL REDUCED TO $850,000 • l..argnt tnOtkl 3. 7()() s.l approx. • 6 ~room-. ·~ Bat.h6 • Forma.I Dlnl.ng Room • Large Family Room with Flnplace and Wet Bar • Spedou. Kltchen and Btwtkfast Alcove · • Pr#wt1te Master Suite • Custom 20th C.ntury Pool. Spa and O.Cklng • &tensive Oak Plank Flooring • Expan•lve Bonus Room / EntertalnnNnt Ara OW ER WANTS TO SELL NOW! CALL LARAI E FOR SHOWI NG APPOf~T\lF.~T , lront un11 or Appl Bay & mgl'lt hght views 3BR 3 lutl l:lalhs lrplc 2 w Raylene Miracle from upi'er deck pvl pa11os 2-car gar wtd S.3 1_ 12~ 673-6900 S995 000 hkuP Greal toe nr park $1700 Avt now 759·9194 ... w JASMINE PARK w New 3Br 3' 1Ba condo m1n1 view $2200/mo No pets * 720·3965 mstrs wit:>atns r t>atn S 1 095/mo 722-0582 dt>le gar_ S3500. 722-6460 2 car gar Piii PBllO trplc Rlf llT llmfl -NW ... trig "" o mocro P00t & 2BR IBA patl<T lndry & 1 Door to t>eaehl 52 t2·A spa-Gateo Quiet com· carp<><l $825 644-8586 Seashore Relurt>lshed plex S 1':!50 mo 8~ APPi only 545.397~ Lv Msg .. -..... 2BR 18A St 100 mo No l•EASTSIDE 2BR tBA front nouse ciean S8751mo se<: t 17 E 23rd St 213-654-4174 ••--pets -'32-7767 RemodeffMS & sunny 3BR 2BA ne# pamt carpel NEWPORT ISiand noo1e 01ind1 mirrored ward & 2Br tBa lrptc t>eaut arN appliances Dt>I garage on 39th St $1150•mo 1g fenced yard Great a111111 now 818-880-0700 nght>rnd1 675-8A27 •••llTTDUll Hunt. lel<h 2140 3BR 2' 1BA 2 Story, 1 c:ar garage new carpet Av! 2BR 2'1BA tux Twnhm, 2 now• $1200/mo Call car gar 1 450 so II • m1 Rusty 631· 12~ 10 t>ch gated comm spa $13001mo960·8018 3BR 2BA 2 car garage grdnr inc Mstr BR & BA • WA*X ~ ·~A,. »· • lg hv rm tam rm No pets SEA FAIRE lrg l:lfand ,_ 759-3990 536-?125 l BR l BA eondo trple BEACH AREA 3Br d•ll POOi vacant $950/mo rm hv rm etc Gated 650-94~ or 248-8686 poot & spa ctut:>hOose tennis crts on 1ake nr YILL& llLllA Ben PCH S 1500 mo 1se Outstanding v-great 756-2055 w 601-~904 H prtce Dout>le master suite cozy loreptace 48R HOUSE New p11n1 many extras S 1 450•mo cieal'I n 4 OUI Dout>le 675-2679 Agent Rennie gar 19e S 1000 mo Cati 714.55 t-9124 STEPS TO OCN 2BR "$1 100 1---------. VILLA BALBOA 2BR sec lrvtne 21 44 gate S 1 1SO ______ ..... ....,,.INWPT 2BR Twnnm trp!c • Orangetree lg alt new 2BR patio s 1 350 overlocits stream• $860 VERSAILLES 2BR Pnthse. Open F11 Sat Sun 1·5 ocn vu s 1 500 262-0801 2 t3-~5-0324 SEAVIEW Gu1red-g11ed 3BR llOl.lse $2.900 UQuN lel<h 21 48 LIDO AAEA Byfrnl dock furn 2BR ~ den $4 750 •mlMIUY• WINTER LEASE 38R. fabulous vu pvt t>ch OCEANFRONT 4BR_ gr1 & tennis $1900 721-8579 area, tennis & vua S 1 400 PENN-4t>r house $1 975 l!f'"! N!gu!! 2152 •.:.T.: =:: HARBOR VIEW HOMES -NEW LISTING $869,000 Four Bedrooms. Two FuU Baths Optional FonnaJ Dtntng Room 2BR 2BA gated comm • ocn vu every rm sec sys nl vpgrde<I wht Brllf CfPI S 1950 unlurn 496-2'&00. YEARLV2'B'f 18a hOUM wlyard 1 t>loek from t>eKh $'1025/mo ()pen house Sal/Sun 213 Newport leKtt 2169 32nd_S1 631~1_20 __ L 5 BR • 3 BA • Gorgeous New Exterior Dramatk: New Interior • Great Location • Remodeled Expanded • EXtensive upgrades ... LARAINE SHAW RES: (i l 0 760-5064 NEWPORT Bf.ACH OFFICE: (714) 6-W-9060 SIU 111¥111 PIT HllLET PIESEIT '{ IEIT IF TIE IEIT 11 ClllU IEL Ill This corner location, south of highway, offers two two-bedroom untta and hu been recently painted and landscaped. Walk to be1chel, shops and eateries. llM,111 South of highway, corner duplex. Lower 3 bedroom unit has beamed celllnga and hardwood floors. 2 ~room upper unit has private entry Md deck. A unique opportunity to enjoy the COM llf•tyte. ...... Located lD a areat .. Prlde-of-Ownenb.lp .. netcJaborbood, tlala lm· maca.late bome la ballt on an atra laJ1e corner lot wltla plentJ of room to entarae or add a pool or botb. • Gated front courtyard entrance • Adjoining family a rea wllh gla • Spacious formal living room with sliders openlne; to cu tom wood cov- br1c_k fi replace ered patio • Large country kitchen with wood • Many uAArade throu~out cabinets and ceramic tiled countt-rs • Cul-de-sac locallon one block from a nd breakfast bar park Presented by: Monika Scott 841-2124 ....... , ...... Only $425,000 Eech!! ""'°'8tiwe, un- usual desi&n carried out to eotnpletion by builders Chris Brown I Aaoc. Todd Schooler architect, used "'91 I • in 1fllllinative ways on this aw. lol 3 Bedrooms. tlll .. ..., idra. .. .,,.1-8 Your view, private beach. patio & deck when you purchase this neat Balboa Coves home! l Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Super living & dining: big 2-(ar garage plus hobby or storage rm. $650,000 firm. (By Appt Only ) LOVELY 1600 s I JBR YUILY...-TI 2BA 2 car gar sn.g.1 lam-AVL NOW! 4BR 3BA t1y nm S 1500/mo grndr Upper uM or Duple" 1nc1 Lv Mag l>'A· 1649 *lfrple huge melter bdrm 3 Locations to 1••WT1WITD En,oy breathtaking "*"' & IY'lM1S from lh1S 3BR 2BA beauty w teatures too numbefous to men· tion lmmed occpy poss· lb.. Chtldren & pets oi. Short or long term le•~ S2550tmo Call -·••n ... nrw 1...-.1••• REAW ~1 ~t~TWf ~·\~I I RE~TORS • ChooSe 10 from $1900 to $2200 mo •3BA 2BA w1hreplace & parking $1800/mo -WTl•Tll llMUI Santa Ana Helghu 2184 2BR 2BA 2 car garage. lndry Froritlblck yard AIC grndr Sp1c1ou1 $ 1300/mO 975· 12~ South Cout Metro 2186 •2 BLOCKS rrom t>eaci'I Steps to Plaza newly 2Br 2Ba tireplacie gar· pntd, 2BR 1BA Cot\00 age S 1100 mo 309 32nd gated patio dlw pool s t * * 650-0892 pe1oksns840-5774 •BLUFFS CONDO N-1"!" _______ _ drpa pnl crpl apple loiApll==-==ICI====: 3BR den lam rm 2 18A, 1!- l/p pool IK No pets lllbol s 1675 ... 549..0709 ...... 2606 •MIBH•• * lBR AIOI * SpactOUI 1BR l BA Mcur: $425/mo yHrly Call ~ty condo Day & ocean 875-855' or 67:l-9224 Y1eWS na patlO S 1000 Ask tor Jul;e or loekl Agt 675-4912 •RENTALS AVAILABLE • ....._ .. • • I 2fl)J .......... -Fti I I ~ar11 Agt 8.t2-7106 28R l~ ~ lrpte 2 •SHARP Lowaf DUPLEX dec:kS. gar • lnOry wOOO t)MrTI ceil. l:lMCfl blttl 35th & F1nl9y 38R 2BA S l 175 avl 1111 873..()431 trple , gl' S 1350/mo • __ _ 873-9201 ...... ar 1 .. 3BR 2Ba home, lncd yd, Unf\lm Gelrage teuo*y, dbl gar 47.t WntmlM19' Oilck S1000 mo + 0. Ave. Npt Hta S 1550fmo 35th St Avl 1"1 yrly 752·518 t e.54787 5'1-3727 38R 28a IO'#f'l~M 2-car Baytront Oupte1. ti p . trple, wallo. 10 Hoeg & 11300 38A ltlCIO I.a llW• Bay lltlenew S15001mo "'9tm&'9tm"'*·• .. ~ ~lty M0-5552 OW• wld, 531-127' --.. ... , &i""..._7°_.M •. ~ • 20 MC*. c...-.. 9MC :i: ~· ffldge •• , ,,,, ... ~...-=-~~" ,.~ 119-1111. -.n• ~--. ~ dec:Ot• ~ ... CA.-rfW ._., NWTAl.S JA MGMT ~ ~ .,...,. J lM• I.,.~ I-HM. , .............. J • t • ~~·••u•••• , ............ ..... lluR*y '°°"" ..... • 11111111491126/fftO ·-• 2011 Tilutln i.JNI-Tll MGMT 6'2 1803 .,.._irt ..... ,, --- -.. i-cet e-teoe -' Lmi191 beeul!My lndlCCld POOi, ... .... df w' E ...... 2 & 38R TwnnM c:wportt & lndry fee -f ; I Odii ....; Apta. Frptc, dl'll, ;wage. l Bdrm for tngl Adult S695 ......_ ,,_ ata-3612 .,atd/paUo, lndry rm 28dfm lownhome 1195 _ 1875-11050/mo Ind formal dining total of .... iiUilDan LMMpur. 2117 ORANGE AVE 1200• 1/f. TRW req'd W9ll • '91ch. dole to TSL MGMT 842· 1803 SOfry, No pets. ...... ' , ... ..,,.nit •Lg 5n8'p a c.aan 1BR 2M E. 16tn SI •"'-· * 4~2055 new c.rpet dtapes & CALL Curt 11631·1266 * IOI"' L.AMSPUA * paint Patio & garage, QUIET 2BR 28A down· 29r 199 ._.,., blt.Jn9. M151mo. 845·5511 11alr1. garage, palto & ....... ..,.., •YI 1ti1. •CINn, quiet ui>C* 2BR yard, g"age • 1 car ·~ * 47~2055 1BA. new appts, c1p1. parking. 5-46-8365 e A C H I L O A A P T , drpe, JJ/w Gar wi st or age Im • 111 PLmD llCIO/mo. Uvtng rm, O.n S730 NO PETS 640-2495 T k llke 18111...,., & k*'-'. 1g P9lk> w/d & ----_ op area, par • .... lndry rm CaM 'ui at •SHARP 2BR, hreplace, Beaulllully maintained. 723-151'i .Jeft 71().a333 lg pvt pt1llO, 9"CI garage. 1BA Apt wtgarage or amall pel ott $775/mo carport Vaulted celling, CMrmlng 28R, trg kJt. sep Avail now 780-8862 balcony. hreplaoe. pool, d/r, llp, dble,.,, 11rg. S -C---spa, BBO o f PCH. 1250mo * lean. qu 28R 2BA. S680 Up 1s1 Securlly 212·1111 0Mna/SUzanne gaskilch,d/w,wallpapet. No pets 549·2447 _ sml balcony. garage. ~ &..ge 18A -t garage .. S825 NO PETS 640-2495 Spacious. nice & bright ....... ~::: .... 111111 11111 ... io11, alnl cond 0 ..... . ltOOO/MO .......... 3581 01M11l9't dbl "'s1r tulta *'f'Jm * --cond o for ren t -P llACH """'on88di 11.y 0,., 1 1101N19n1. H 50tWk COMMUNITY , 8l*)i0ul, na, quiet 28r 12100tmo GOif. tennll • MV VIEW a..utltul 28A 2k cowd ptllng, comm n.elth aoa pc)Olt faG, 28A. Moo, di• !Ire-pool. 1195 769-5050 hotel etc A vl tor ~.gatage&en,oyour FURN t 2 & Bach Clean purehaM al S129.000 prV1 ~ S 11105. All ap•s 111• J~ •90 Steps JUNE DAVIS 723·0377 Or m.int~ incl 10 ocean SSOO·S750·S900 , 780-5000 ..... ~'*·* 53S-67Mor 675·8409 ·1 SORRV, PETS ... ..,... Roo1111111tt s \111nttd M, 25. por1 Ken.131~2 .a_ 111-1111 1Br yrly NO pets Avail 2724 S5351MO • 759-9231 SMALL tuMutloul office 1BR Conoo. 2nd lloor In Sl95mo 1.1tll pd 650-2256 •• -11.. ON POPPV. d•algner·s W/MCty New b'dO MW the V41ftallleS $895/mo --, -.,..... 2000 sit 3BA nM ltte & airport QOltcoufN View 300 Cagney lane Adrian ••• Rift• Ill Clea~ w/d pkg 5399 brttew/ocnvu Spectacu.· 11311i l1•·250-o4&4 Realty 845·8513 Wlntet renlel. FtMn•~' Xlnl Lisa 650• 7529 lar turn & art. Wall< to Lil· ----- 1 - 11-.-Clean Unit 842-3850 Bltr $400 Female Only Non-ti• CdM beh' Short or Cow rclM Property S kll 1 --;'BR' Oceanltont 3BR 2BA smkr u1111 .. s pa•d No tong tfH'm Female S750 2778 par ng c ean Frpfl: d /W, pa110. new pets 708-B Avocaoo J OavlS 723-0377 Stove & trig Incl. Pro· appls $l7001mo yrly Coronade1Mar673·7787 ... -. falllonal only. NO PETS · flllllT•f flmT -• N/smlcr prel'd $650/mo 642·3850 Bkr _ BALBOA Peninsula Point Penthouse lum. 28r 2Ba ••••I W yearly 615·9006 OCEANFRONT UPPER 3BR 2tlA 2 Prol M seeks view. lrpl Po<>f, tennis S/E corner W•tcllft [)("& 1 HOUSE TO BEACH! DUPLEX 2BR 1BA gar ~ama or F Ok S400/mo spa etc Pvt enl $650/mo IMna Ave High YISlbllllly, Furnished 2eR 2BA. d/w. 2 decks. tip. beamed 111tlas1 673-9359 Lv mag 873-3887 . trelflc, good slgnage. lrplc, garage avl now' celling GAEA T VIEW COM 2 rms avail now In OuMtt ot lem 3BR. 2'~BA 1,478 SO. FT $1000/mo Bkr 842-3850 Sl450/mo 675"4630 new 3Br condo nr beh H B ~wnhm nr ocean. 141-1111 2 BDRM 2 BA S1000 PElllSUU w/carptl lndry rm S4ooi Own BR & BA N·Smkr ****** AEwARD lo.t In t<·U 8't 11'1 at Countef •I Gold wed· F ~ ding ring w/dtamond .;.~Ing at l41gUN Beach chennel Mttl"O Lady Community Clin.IC. 4~ ::,~~== OcH n Ave. Lagun asked 842-1392 e.ach 494-0761 Celt I ttY appointments tor W..-' 1111 JW2 day ewninga and Satu iilii"!i!il!iiiiiiii.._ __ ..,.i!ii!i• days ............. ...... -....... ,.. I' Love vou, marry me & w.. · come to peradlee PNI Estab lotetgn tludent otg - ---- see6<s area coordinator 'SChDClll & Vou offer mgmt skills at your letSure In return tor lnlUucdon 3012 - outstaod1ng travel 1ncen· PRIVATE GOLF LESSONS llva/Sltpend program. Low nouny Rat.._ Cer1 E•p w/volunteer groupt Instr Call for A~I time & org1n1za1ions a ptu1 Gregory 432-8445 ...,.. Call 1·800·365·0555 ' Lost & Found 2925 leundry & frig, P,alio, new 2BR. 1BA encl garage. peint, '850/mo. CIOse lo lridry rm on 4-plu bMdl 723-0582 Mfe81iBllU $700/mo 968-8088 Frplc. laundry. pool avail· S450 720· I006 1~ msg S500 + '" U111 960-6378 able Near Fa~ll lbn YIAILI I W91'11 Chr1s11an lt'male ~eeki; 1 SHARE 28r 2Ba Irvine MAP 1111111 SSOO REWARD tor return ISiand No pets 640· 1911 8'11.1 O• 2 malure rmmrs to shr condo F non-smkr W/O, 170 • 252. 345 all-Arts. of diamond & gold Newty d ecora t ed " TllUIUI 2BR 2BA Newport S"ores Mft-llMlllllTSll! 3BR Mme Edison Pk 2.car gar $575/mo crafts, ottlce. storage? bracelet lost 10120 vie &l.liiCI 3018 " area 96'3-8004 lv Msg 854_0751 IA&lle message Gd E·•lde Costa Mesa lo-Prlce Club Call 960-1472(iiii~~~!'!!"'!!"!!"'""!"'....,_ TwMc>uM llPI. avail now AP•Tmllll 2BR wfnew decor. gar 211R. 1\IWSA, block 10 Tnese attractive Apts lea· bllins. l~d yd w/paho Duple11 1 bloc!\ from * t 10 4 Bedrooms !or Marton " cation. SCOtTI 548-2794 HOUSEKEEPER-Live In, oc;ean. garage w/cJ hk · *Furn shed & · Shr 2BR 2BA Apl 2 blks lo -------•-! drive. coott & take care ol ...._. 11, 100 675-8472 ture pool. spa, pnvate 636·4120 1PM-5PM up S975/mo 548·8190 •IJnlurn1sl\ed Coi;ta Me·..i I.A F sl\a1e Nwpt Hgls in . Costa ·lndustrW'--'!"""!---""'!2"!7"!88'!' 2 k1d1. &Ofi 6 & 9 Rets a • •CIOse 10 t:>eacn ·lBR IBA nice apl w d Mesa Garage poot sec FOUND •os must• 845-9334 >= u-. patios or decks. garage 2437 Orange G $755 ~ -2624 Of catport 1n a beaulllully *1•1HIO* •Freel1S1.CALLTODAY1 .$32.5 • u111111es • s41 5 elec 63 l -086l • 1200 SOFTw/lront olflce. • " F11g, dtshwasher. stove YIW REITILS 642·8657 * large rear drive-In dOOf. ARE FREE .nullfll/ .... f ••ll!IBonua..,_.llilili"""-•1•8•R"""'A""p•1•1 1 and sc aped s e 111 n g .,__._....._ --. BO Sorry, no pe1s -....~8118 ~ locl 8 & lndry 1 Bedroom $655 ~-u mcl No pets 545-~855 Want prol n smkr 10 shr S780tmo 629 Terminal ., ....... te ..... . .ll-4912 EIHI TIYE LIXI H 3BR 2BA par111111y Way, Costa Mesa ~ .. __._ .__._ .. rm. Patio. gar & cable 1vl 28drm 2ea twnhse $845 M35. No pe11. 631·8427 APtnmm •2mllS1M• 2400s! NowHouse uch fur n1sl\eC1 b e au11rur DAYS 540-9352 EVES Call• .,w..., ... -. F11g. dishwasher. stove 2srrMlo~rirvorespMI condo Close lo beach 646-0681 • 11 / ........... , S ~ 28d 121 BTD ltUIT partc ctean rm. COSTA MESA Sparkling clean large Garden apts Beaulllully landscaped grounds Pool & spa. pa11ostdecks, garage or carpo<t mcl No pets 545-4855 TIRED OF LIVING IN Nsmkr Don .t miss 11 your Great areo incl wld encl --142-1111 111-111-lUJ .. HOTELS All WEEK? Rent budget<= SS~ 536 0750 garage poot & spa $590 21111/f, 1111 •0I Ht.Ba. 150 All uttls pd. M2 lU• Frig. gar. S0try, no pets: • ******** flllllTllY furnished cozy IBR on ullls oncl maid s ser-Nwpt Bch M·1·A lone Newporl Bay Avrul Mon· F(lm 12~ 401n-smkr 10 shr vice Raylene 631·1266 Agent, 541·5032 1060 WALLACE A lrg 1BA 734·0 Shalimar 6'2· 1'24 842-4905 No Pels Section 8 wel· ... ... Fri $250/wk 963· 1053 un1quf' Balboa 2BR Lg •IMg Beauhful quiet 1BA col"(\e $550 mon1h Gr .. t E•talde locationl 642·3307 Of 631-8640 Lndry room. 880 Patio. BIG new, quiet 1BR triple~ oa<aoe. cable avail. $635 w/sundeck trees. w/d Sorry No pat•! 631-8427 hkup $750 650-4545 I Edd 1I W _day. 642-5393 after 7pm ""18 R. $550-$&50 • • UITllll ""28R, $&50-$750 1BR .$635 & 2BR S735 incl ""38R, S950 prvt garage gas & water G .. & waler paid! Pool, No Pets 2323 Elden garage. d1snwasherl 548· 7854 842-5073 * 650-6069 Wcatfleld EASTSIOE 2BR 1BA W/garage Close 10 every- t h Ing 1 A va il now S735/mo Agt 631-7370 APMlmll E'SIDE 1BR 1mmac -stove new w/w carpet ui>per Large attractive Aptt in a deck, parking No Pe1s beautiful garden selling 5595 Open Sat/Sun Pool/spa Gerege or 10.1 or call 15!> carport SOfry. no pets Rochester 675-2329 28drm 2Ba $800 __ 398 W. Wilson 631-5583 E'SIOE 1Br pool cable TV ---------& gas paid Reis reqCI No 1 Bedroom $665 pe1s $585 & S605 147 28drm 1Ba S775 Flower 645-8161 apptm 301 Avocado 842-9850 E'SIOE 2Br upstairs $835 1BR. bit-ins, carpets. con· Cable hk-ups lg close1s ~I loc Non·smkr. No pets Reis reqd 352 working woman pref Vietor1a 6'.45-8161 apptm $475 +MC. 494-4695 l /IWt hint, ...... 1 BR pden apt • beamed 2Br l''>Ba pa110 $825 celhng, patio. walk·ln 2548 Orange 642-2520 ctoset. garage. nr lrwys & Perform. Aris $625/mo fll'8ilM4 ltHlt + MCunly 641-3078 $525 gas/water pd nr Bachelor S590 1 Bedroom S660 2Bdrm 1 .ea $780 131 E 18th St 646-6818 Bachelor $590 I Bedroom $670 2Bd•m 1' •Ba $775 PIUTllE ******** •Free Cable including mov .. channels & Z lhru Nov 14 •Oversized lu11ury villas IPPEllEWPllTUY 1Br 1Ba nr NB Center/JIN $795 No pets 640-1364 VERSAILLE LATOUR 2BR 2BA lrplc quite toe S 12oormo lse no pets TRW Ag1 no lee 644· 1111 furnished or unfurnished -sTOLIFF 21, 211 •Spectacular ocean and .,., 2250 Vanguard 540-9626 Dana Point 2626 sunset views , Ou1e1, secure pool S8i'C. •All new health club anO 1128 Rutland 646-3679 •llllY ITllll 21 recrea11on center WESTCLIFF 2BR 2BA *Walk 10 Balboa Island Condo dlw w d frplc lmmac. tr!g_, 9.ar ~5i5mo 675· 1849 or 496·7 49 .&-n)o 1e.a.ses_.ava11A&21e .CMpot peo1 .$9~ *Pets welcome 955-6385 or 240-628 1 Hunt. k ach 2640 •LRG 0111 111-level. 2Br 2 lolls 2' >Ba cath ce11 sllylt(e. FPs Roman Ba wld hi\ up 2400 st nr Hunt Harbour S t4501mo (213) 860-9513 1BR $075 Beamed cerl· 1ngs br'lctst bar garden pauo. gar . $/Adams. W/Beach 969·225 1 ltMnt YHr Villa , ... , ... Start ,.., ....,. Uft ,, .. ,, .. PllllllTHY ""' (114)111-•J 200 Promon1ory Oreve West (Pecil1c CoaSI Htgh· way and Jamboree Road) 2BR 1BA. encl garage. REGIS MANAGEMENT patio No pels DISh· we manage 10 be the best washer & lndry rm ******** $725/mo. 843-0930 NEW plush 2Br 2Ba w/1011 ILIOI Tl IUCH gat marble entry lrplc 3BR 2BA upper unit gar· w/d llllup, sunken tub I age. OIW w 10 hk up ml to beach 846-9501 . s 12001mo 210 Luqama Misc. Rentals Rooms 27()6 * CORONA DEL MAR * Room 10 renl 1n 4BR house $550 968-7271 •IHNITll IY TIE SUIYPAll* 1988 24' Terry RVs lor rent by Ille monlh 1n t>ark 4'W/grea1 lac11tties Sec; dep • Isl mo 536·83 16 Laguna Bch turn room Pool pvt entrance Sru SA S350 N·Smlu 35 rers 494 0451 IBA 1n 1roplex. beam cetls stores 646-5330 Iv msg pv1 paho. garage, quiet -UUT LllATlll $660/mo Ortve by 117 1Br 1Ba upstrs lg patio ~broott Ln 675-3435 $625 2Br 2Ba spac1our. 1-------.... ~ TSL MGMT 6•2· 1603 Laf'"! IHch 2648 •BLUFFS 2Br 2Ba. !pie •LARGE IBR. OCE,AN poolt2carportslcotn w/d N B 1 bloc~ 10 bf'llCh Piii enlry no cnok1n g $4~/mo 631·!>5!.0 t've5o & wkends days 557 6.29'.: 2 BR. 1 BA encl pa11o $725 Pool gas. •elr.g carport, new drapes. no incl No pets SSOO sec pets. 5 min 1o bch. '750 845·5853 145 E 181h St 979~44 10, 549-7007 Large I BA .$575 • ulll· •BAV TIMBERS • 1hes. tat & IHI 1799 1BA, frplc, cable, pool, Newpo<t Blvd .Ap1 3 pallo. gar. No pets 399 846-2588 W Bay SI S&95. 650-6357 LG 3Br 2Ba downstrs Gar •EASTSIOI; 2BR 1BA• new carpets & drape$ Nr 1mmac .. pool, cable, ne1r OCC $795 · S650 sec lhop1_ No Pe11 S725/mo No pels 963· 1562 "6-5137, 11am-7pm LRG 2erw/enc1 gar side· *••-· yd Newly remodeled VIEW Near main beach S950 NO PETS 721-8011 1---------Util paid. $800/mo Evesi wi.endi; 722-8140 Hotels/Motels 2718 !._49-1211 or 497-4581 •WESTCUFF ARCA. SU Ull MnL COMMANDING VIEW of Newly relurb1sried 2BR Wkly rentals now avail coaSI Wall-wall glass 2BA lrplc, $950/mo s 147 oo wk & up 2274 Beach across stree1 720-1970 Nwpl Blvd CM 646-7445 lullw1ous Lorge hv rm Gourmet k•ICh. Pvt deck IBdrm $965 Lo deposit 494·2265 Of 499-1955 mlf/ ... lfSU 1BR. lrplc, gar No pets Nov-June (1141494-5184 * YlllL' • WllTll Ocnlrl 2BR S 1200 yrly Ocnfrl 2BA $1100 wntr Nr sand 2BR $1150 yrly BeS1 3BR S1500 yny Balboa hm 2BR $900 wnlr Low priced 3BR $950 yrly Vacation Rentals 2 7 2 2 •Allll SPEOIAL * HUNTINGTON BVTHE SEA RV PARK -·-2000 Anahetm Ave rC 3BR 1BA Cottage. W/O $800/mo 2131641-2153 ~--~-'!'-"'"'!!!~~I Nlup. Hu eatportt for 2 __ __ _ ••..nam llMIM Newport leach 2669 ttrty 2BR -1BA wl gar, Vacation by tho ocean great lac1hhes Book now while tew spaces remain Reservations, 536-8316 car•, No petl S&751mo MOtiTE SERENO AYI 11115. 722-&29-C Prntlglous ltvlng Ou1e1. •E'SIDE LG 3Br 2Ba. g;cs:2n ~~11~~101 ftp6c. e-. new etpl & pnt, Electric gates 10 cir pvt peuo No pets PoflS, cable T\/ & BBOs. 11195/mo. 720·1565 5 min 10 the beach No pell 842-3146 •EXCLUSIVE GUARD* Upper Unit al 215 32nd •GATED COMMUNITY• SI Avl now• $900/mo • -U1f11 OwnrtAgt 722·8520 2BR Apll w/,2 car garage. central AIC. wet bar. ltr•· place, micro washer & dryer hkups GOii course view All malnt incl Sorry. No pell 844·0509 SELL through classified All The Van ASPEN • CHRISTMAS RENT Al Lovely duple11 3 blocks 10 gondOla p,,. vale outdoor Jacun• sieam shower. Jacuu 1 t>ath perfect tor couple or two 1nd1v1duals S3501day. 10 day m1n1· mum Coll Paul 303.920. 1596 Your Lifestyle l>ema nds OVER60 VANS VAN CONVERSION CLOSE OUT SALE Ford *l,250 REBATE • Tow\ng •Tn,tllaC . •Vu POOUaC .,,..... .,..., ..... •rwtr9•s Ille • '' Dzdlr'I • •Y•C:.fW II ..... ~ ........ . •Tailcad.D• • Sdool Pucdotli • 8o&d1tg • S8ow Mobllln1 • deck ~·e,. w/d garnge Reis S550 dcp Avail Com~rdM 11 1 I Jtm 54 1 534 I R E s~1...;R 675°4450 ........ -~t Income Prapertx 2790 11llml PRICED TO SELL AT IOOK fEM RM~A TE WAN TEO Buslnus/Offlce Rent BELOW MAI Only 7 3 JI 22 29 '11Ct dPP64• Lo G R M l a k e 0 v. r rrnl on bP 1u1 Npt B.1yv1ew ________ 2_7_6_9 $2.800 000 1s1 at 9"• No 1n e~c.li 4 ho!.tt'SS1ng 1ew-WESTCLIFF lllLllll Ouahly1ng Perfect 1031 t>t•v pon l•''> 760· 78')8 upleg Big Cash Flow LG Br Pvt B·l T r.e l ·l~ ~ C...M Avl n ,.,. M F non- ~mkr Str<11gh1 $49~ u11I a s300 d•·p 540 7!>~e LIDO SLE Cozy Qu•H Cmr ol Weslcltll & lr111ne River.side CntyCall tor Nev.pori Beach setup 714-760-7292 Bllr i'utl Service-Gross ' 203 & 588 SQ II Oll1ce & Aerall A11a1lable 141-1101 ...... ~ ~-\. ' ' . ~.- 4Br "" .. l rq palto rir Dt:h ,..0 n M or F ,J.J9 SJ8'i ut•I 11t• SI. 721-1266 123·0400 m~g .11\ 17'WESTC11FF DRIVE lnvntment Nwpl Bch Ag1 541-50:J2 Opportun!tY 2908 M F 10 ;hr JBA 'l BA OM OFFICES 475sl & ENJOY 14-15"10 return on Twnht.e w 2 car gar w d 1200 st PCHI Fernieal Trusl Deeds $10,000 10 lrflc. no ~wt<. 720<1719 Good pr~nyls1gnage nu $1,000 000 Call Denison s •v mo Ul•I C•PI paint a c 673-4120 Assoc ,673-73 11 NOW• Do your buyin g and selling Voudon'1knowwt1atyou'r• . at the-classified m a rket. :::z: ~·tr.ad ~EJ $2.44 per day Thal < Al L you pay tor 4 l•nes. 30 c1rty minimum 1r rhe SERVICE DIRECTORY Fnt morr II torm,f11(\ll CALL TODAY' ISi FOR LOIS You• Service O.rec101 ·f Rep1esen1ntM> 142-4121 ht. 110 UICl-CmlT-STM STUCCO TILE-Reas Lie Bond Ins 537-1554 Bill Child Care n.,,,,, ,, 631-5272 -- ., 1 •• -~.... . . .. . ~ ;. CALL Ml FtASTI FM! !ST MA8 RATES No Job Too 9IQ Of Small "°"1n.-.e Emp!oymtnt 5 530 FOUND BLACK & TAN, u111m•ouu baby Pug dog wtcollar PIT or FIT for N B Penln· found on beach 1n N B sule ollice AIP AIR 673·20 18 data enlry collec:llon E)(· FOUND Dog mixed lem penence reqd Salary · black. whole ches1 20·30 t>enel111 Jessica 673-0760 lbs, n11r loss on tail & APT MOR·On·S11e. PT tor back 10125. v1c Nulm89 newer 16 Un11 comple• & Harbor, C M 549-598~ Rent reducllon offered FOUND matt> Kl TTEN 18" 'Call Pam Agl 546-5880 wtth brown mask Vic ART SALES Seell1ng 35th St Peninsula Ca1110 energe11c 1nC11111duals tor 1den1tty 675-0850 swap-meet art sales Sat FOUND YOUNG FEMALE & Sun Call 7 14-646-8603 CAT In F V 'f'lr Green Val· I •••• ley Tract 1SIJlt'r W.irdl AIT IE-IC · Soltd cream body Calico eusy Cos1a Mesa sriop ears ring 1a11 968·68 t 1 E11p pref will train Call T1r1 t1 Classlfi•~ 142-1118 ltOl'SUIUll Chuck 646· 773 1 am•au• Busy general repair shop on Santa Ana E.llp reci E11cellent working con· dtlions Top pay & ben· -ellls Call Ed 542-0327 Junt. to Dump 7 days .... un .... Costa Mrsa 540-3798 LOWEST LEGAL RATES STARVING SlUOENT ALL Snort Nouce OK T-124357 AMERICAN HAULING & 969.,..390 COURIER SERVICE 721·6814, Eric PRIV Nurse-ompan1on Cook Will work long hours L1ve-1n sep quar· 18fS Xlnt refs 675·8005 AIDES NURSES LIVE IN 24 hrs or by the hour Call FULL CARE SERVICES 895-6725 Pa1nt1ng •tua.m• Uft llAllT. TrH Tri• OllT• Plllfm Clean-up Spr1nkler repr & Excellenl Quoluy 111 reas install v 1en1tn 548-6109 pr1ees Reis Lied Full "9TREES9 T~ped/remove Cleanup nu lawn/aprinltlr 751-3476 GREEN LIFE blERIC Des1gn-1ns1all-Ma1n1 111-1111 11.nUAlll lPI ---lnstalllllon or Metnl Knowledgeable depen· dable E1tabl'91led, Local warr Gr89 642-0744 IEITillFlil SERVICES Removalt, clean up grading Demo St lte 542050 775·8805 . ' ' .. ' ' ' . refefences s .. 1. lieenM Floors-Countert·Show« •S-47875 & bonded 17 14) & F'rplct 12 yrs HP F 265.-0619 ask lor OLI est George, 847·9"2 -PALM REMOVAL Any slze·S65 ~o Incl 1tuml).ln"'red CHUCK 842·0322 TREE TRIM -SHAPE PALM·STUMP REMOVE CLEAM-uP A HAUl.INO 6'1.o612 Of 6'5--5751 C USTOM REMODEL Entry. KltcMrla. Baths. Comm·1 Raid I 11 yr ••P· localty 754·3tl0 TILE iMfalid & Aepelleci Prompt COUtteoue MrvlCe ,,.. ... & r .... 911Cee "°""· ..... .. Coast Comm COiieges 1370 Adams. Costa Mes.t 432-5()98 EOE/M /FIH ...... AllllTllT General clerlcal/fihng, PIT, to aullt editor Of moothl,Y trecM megaz1ne S7 00/f\r . IS hrSlw\ Call Pam 714,...911-4S91 betw 8-5 .... ,_, ... PIT, FIT. women excel Xlnt training. bonuses & benefits 780-0801 N1.-11& • Need«t for growing 1rv1ne law firm Catt Phytlts. 933:1500 GENERAL OFFICE Com· putet. typing. organlza- tlOnal lk1lls for trn, lrlend· ly gift wrap desig" Co Lv "'99 anytime 675-0•32 Gen ofc 11,..... ..... O.ta Entry. clerks. r.c.ptlonlst. C M area ""'SI an hOur Long & ltl«1 t•m. day or ...,,. nlf,ga. c.I NOf rell ~474-0972 NURSE S AIDES pet! time c:ooll & dishwasher for retirement home In Laguna Beech Call 494-94S8 Mlnam --------/llTIT •Dll FIT M·f 7·30em-4pm $6/H r Beneltts light typing tor computer Appfy in person, 8~s on Tape, 729 Farad St Cotta Mesa. S48-552S --1111111 ••cam .. Need9d fOf pnvale com- munity In L89UN Beach Ca.II 494·8S71 ~~19\,c; l1i1i12imimi~•i.,;iii-ii Flnandal. H.8 848-1299 ........... - UH 111•11 *ta.< PEA YEAR• •AVIATION FIAMI •FUN J081 •OMA T HOURS! •3 WEEKS VACATION AnlA 0N£ YEAR! c.I Fran Mon-Fri 8-5. 151·1393. ""• 8'>m cal 173-437!. FIND through classified WHllm'll Limited,·· Auto. A 1C good cond1t1on Less than 12 000 miles on new motor radltor mulfler d1Slnt:>utor carburator battery. aor snocks etc AMt FM casseue ·· ..nm.u ...... .... ,.,, TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZlE St ... ,.~ ....... - ~ so P«l.C0.1 51 F~t• S4 Upwwd ·0t .. SS Pan of lndle 10 It 12 13 ,, tt STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? T,,. LeQal 0.0.nl'l'\.etlt 11 Ille O• , P~1 .s • oteaseo 10 11n· nounc e • ,,.... -">Ge "°"' •" • · lt>le IO new DUS•,,.~ We will no.. SEARCH tr>e name tor ;ou at no e•1t• C"••Qe a"d H•e yo.I ,,,. hme and Ille ,, p 10 •ne Court HOUM ,,, s ... 11 ""• .,,.,., ot course •Ile< 111e warcr s comp .. "° ... ,.,.1 •~e .,c."• f·c.ti:rt0u-i o.,,s,nes1 n.at""lie s•11tt1MeN .... ,, .... Count~ c ... ~ P,.t>l•V• .:>"Ctt a -• l()t tou• w~aii.s ., re-Qutred ov , •• ana '"•" "'" ;Our P•OOI o• put>~ c.a• on . ..,,,,, tne County C1eo Nit.IC NC>TIC£ PleaM 1100 t>y to 1.ie vour •oe:MIOUS t>usineu st•,_,1 •• l"tt O••'Y PolQt l 99•1 0ec>Mt ment 330 West 8a) Cost• ~esa C1kl0tnt1 11 y0u c•n not SlOC> t>) p.ease CI JI US at 1' u 1 64:?.432 • E•tens•on 3•5 Ot 316 •no ""e ..,,,t rn11~• ar•a~tS IQ< V0U to 111"414' I"•• O<°'edu•• t>~ m• • you sl"IOulO "'•~• any lurtn.-q...,hons o-M c• 1 us .one we ...,, De rno<e '"•" Q'~ to au s1 yo.. G«>d111C• n '°"' new l>Ullnt!SI" NI.JC ll>TICE Puohsflt!O Orange Coas1 Oa11y P1IOI Octot>et 13 20 27 Novemoer 3 1989 f=§fj§ NOTICE TO CONTllACTOllS Sealed propoN11 frQt!I contractor• tlcef}MCI In eccordence wtth &icilon A, 17, Proposal Reqult.,,.,tt and CondlUons will be recei\lttd at the Office of the Clertt of the Bowd of SuptM1<>r1, Room 4'5, Hall of Admlnl11raUon, ol the County of Or#1Q9, Santa Ana, Ca11tornl1, on or belore Wedne.day the .ighth dey of'Nowmber, 1989 at two o'ciock, al wtlk:h lime they w+tl be publk:ly opened and read In Room 169, First FIOOf, Hall ot Adnttnlatratlon, 10 Ctvlc Center Pf.u:a, Santa Ana, C.titornla. fOf the followlng project to be admlnl1~ered by the Orange County Envtronmental Man~t Agency: ' ........ '· 2. (A)1. IA)2. (A)3. MILE'80UAJllE MGtONAL PAM -GllKMW l'ICNIC ... LTIJll ll'llOaCT NO ... Zl.l-1 -Mobilil.atlon Park DeYelopment a· Wood Picnk: Tabtes Concrete s.rvtng TabllM w/Slnk1 4' High Masonry 8loclt W ... w/St9Qe L.S. L.S. L.S. L.$. L.S. Reduced conslructlon plans, sp«iel Pfovlek>ns and other contrect documents are 11191'-tH tor e11wn6nat1on Wlttiout chatge Of may be MCUred UPon payment, lnciudlng atate..,.. tu, of: · 17.90 It picked 1.1p In J*90r1 . S 10.00 tt r9qUMl9d by n'1911 F>tans ~ ~Ion• requested by mlllt •• Mnl ~ U.P .S., 90 .,..._ lndude the strwt 9ddr .. to wNeh ,.,_. do<:ument1 m-r be dehet9d. A c:omplfte Mt of lull Ike construction pl.,,. wt6I be 9¥....,.. kw .. ~ion wtttlout ctwge or mey be MCUred upon payment, lnduding ..... t•x, ol the 9m0Unt Mown In tf'lll proper counn In tt. tab'e Msted ~- 'No. of Sheets 1·5 &-10 11:15 1&-20 21·25 Coe1 P• Set 13.70 7.40 11.10 14.IO 11.50 22.20 No. of ShMts 31-35' 41-45 51-55 125.90 ..... 33.30 37.00 40.70 44.40 Add 12.00 to ptQ ShoWr'I If ptartt •• r~ by mell. EMA s1endWd Ptw wfttl IPldllll prowt91onstcurNm .... , .. mo pen ot "* oontr11et. Cop6ers ot ,,... .. ~ p1w _.." eped.91 Pf~ .. mo ~et tt. oMoe ot EMA (ftoom 225) '°' "' 9ddltlon~ c:twge, tndudlng atete .._tu, ot: 111.50 w PIC*ed up In per.on s 12.75 If reqr, ••••d by,,... lrwllor••• .... ...,111•11e111 N/1ltl'tC; ---,..°"°' ..... ~···-· ... a..ceor.. ___ ... __ ..... AM. C So •lie tl70I • °'*9 ........ ,,..,,.,,., ...... , ........................ ....,. TMIMAM11ftllt...,e1111p1 a•11:r ... -· I '\ I I IC lll '"-Io '\ Two premieres and one Old standard Two county premieres ud a uilim' oldie arrive OD the loml dater circuit this weekend with South Coat Repertory ladias the way with die first SQuthcrn California production of .. ......_ ... C...." tbe true llOry of a war hero whOle homolexuality turned bis lAme to clilp1lce. Also openina this weekend are tbe 0:-.:=t ~==· ~:! ... ---------... Commuaity Tbater ud William IDIC'• well-tnveled teriocomedy .... ...,.. •t the San Clemente Commwuty neater. Jou•Mn McMurtry mates his foanll visit to SCR in the role ol mathematician Alan Tanna . in .. Brealrin9 the Code" under tbe direc- tion of ~ -DIL Allo in die cast are Hal I MMlge Jr., Jolm-DaWI Kelkr, Patricia Fraser, Dennis Roba11on. Sybil Lina, John K.. 1..imoa. Ja mes Nardini and David Poynter . .. Bteakina the Code" will be prelellted Tueedays tbroulb Fridays at I p.m .. Saturdays at 2:30 and S. Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 tantil Nov. JO ae the main slqe ofSCR, 6SS Town Center Drive, COl&I MelL Cd 9'7-40ll for ticket information . .. Bus~" will spotliabt Don Jobmloa ad Cyndlia Wallr.er u tbe Montana and the . be Aultin Pay dinctl a cast wMdl includes Terri ~I ~ Betly Heraudez. Ina flaailll, Rory Santos ud the landem of Tom Scou md Noun• Wayne, double Clll as Dr. Lyman. · The show will be performed WedneMlilJI 1lltouilt Saturdays at 1 p.m. until Nov. 18 with one Sunday matinee Nov:-12 at 2 p.m. at the CabriDo Playhouse, 202 Ave. Cabrillo, San Clemente. Raervaliou ue IUea 81 492-046S. Teus is the ecene of .. Daddy's l>Yia.' Wbo01 Oot tbe Will," ~ · directed by Peter Dolan. Tim 8-leY, ame Ceilley. Simi DeMieri, CJrt1 lzay, Cary Mclean, Jane Nunn,-Midml a. and llomom Simmw compri1e the cut. Curtain is 8 p.m. Fridays and SeaDdaJI duouD Nov. 18 c..,• Sunday matinee Nov.Sat 2:30) 81 tbe a... Orove Ccmunuaity • on St. Mm'k SUeet at C1tiapun AYeW, o.deD Orove. a-Waliw 897-Sl22. Curtaiat will be delcndi.. tbil • 1 rt eed -four loc8I ... ... d~=-="f..1 • M the 1niDe c.o...itJ 1'11111er, Twde loct c~~~ Pin.._,... 1.ue .. ,..... belt Ori"' 1m. (8'7-54M). clOll ............... aad S.1 ., •• p.m. • -111·mdielhldio1'Mlllfal~O-CcC I ,Com Meu (432-SllO), windina 11P toaiPI ..S I I day 81 I p.a. s.lidlJ • 4 p.m. .................... , ....... ......., Tbea1el' ol ..,.."'-* C~ • ..__ Vfilio (SQ.4656), ft..a Jnfl • ........ ad 111 dat at I p.m •• SmdwJ • J p.a · ..... D n 2 ... MdleWayCMI'.._._, "-t'a•1, I05IE. Fintll.. Sala Ma ('47..,.,, ~a.I ......... 3 .., ~ • ...... ...., =··~·-· ... -........ ~ 2 114r=:::."l.a:.r.:rr··~=a~~s..r. daJI :J.t.li":i !rl' .. ':·J.. ......... lli'J Miia iL, o.dla a.ow (636-7213). Wd1111du)'I dll'Ollllt SatwdaJI II I p.a. h•dulJI M eitlm 3 or 7:30 p.m . ..al NoY. 4. •"LJ•h• ........ Allli ........ , ... , ......... 1636 s. 0.- A.:a. !enta Am-CIM-7929). ~ ....... •1 rdl)I MI pa. S l~at 7 .Po& .. Jto¥. II. .... Dll'w CM &ft• M 1111 LP I LWllll'J .,.._. n.w, IJ7DO -i:-v-w\.nLllMllo,..n 1 ...,. Ii•• 1• 6.JOia.a.MJ41! . .-CU 2 • Ila aACLI I C. ..... 1'1111111r.M EiC...-.... .,.., ............... ,,..~ c.-.--·-· . CONTENTS , . 0,. TB& SOUL OP DXAS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 7 BJ JORN ROOS · A new band called Texas has come on the scene with an unusually mature brand of roots-oriented, contemporary blues. And where do you suppose these folks hail from? Why, Scotland, of course . ICl\lll\ TUCD OR YUCKY? ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 Our guest critics were widely split on the· current hit comedy "Look Who's Talking." Some found it loaded with laughs, others thought it unimaginative and dumb. f,I I\\\\\ PUllPIElll PICKlll' P AaADDIB ••••••••••••• 11 Bl DONNA AND RAY 01T It s that time of year .,Un and a number of local farm s . offer Southlanden a chance to pick their own pumpkins right of the yinc. Others offer as many apples as you can pthcr. · ( \I I '\I~ \ H WllA'MI , ? ••...••.••••••••••••..••. 13 From cool jazz at the Lido Cafe to bot comics at the hnprov, you QD find out all that's bappenina along the Ora;DF Coast this week in our Calendar. ., . "Jr's a dead man's parry. Who could ask for more) Everybodr's coming. Leave your bod)' ar the door ... -Oingo Bomgo "Ikad Man's Parry " II)' llOGElt lll.OOM 01-0-..-- D.anny Elf man. che aptly.named creac ive spiric of Oingo Boingo. loves this time o f year. Bue it's not bec;ause of che cooler cemperatures, which provide a welcome relief after five or si'x months of unrelenting sum· mer heat. And it 's certainlv not the changing of the !eave's -around here the leaves that are ~Oin!t to change at all revert directly to brown. and they do it in June. Elfman terms this week and next "the greatest time of the year" for a more unique reason. "It's all imagination,'' he said Monday. "You've ~ot Halloween and then a couple of days later there's Dia de los Muertos. a wonderfully 1maganativeo holiday in Mexico that actually goes on for a few ~s .. , And. as the)' ha ve for the last six years. Elfman and Oingo Bo· ingo will again be spending part of this fantHtical season in Qr. ange Co4my. for two sold.out Halloween shows. tonight and Saturday, at the Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre. Boingo bassist J ohn Avila said Tuesday that the band truly en. joys its annual so1ourn behinJ tht' Orange Curtain. "It seems like that's wht'rt' tl1t' magic is." Avila enchu seJ. "That\ the place." Neither Elfman nor Avila. how. ever, could put their fin~er on why the" quirky. often frent'tll. and always unilpn.w"" Om,.:o Bom~o is such a hot I lalloween t1cl..et m the count " "It JUSt started out one \ear and seems to have taken off from there," offered Avila. Elfman. showing h1 pr.i~mat1c side. noted. "we have our lu>-:hest concentration of fans in Or.rn~e County. I'm cold ... And for those fans. Elf man had a piece of good news to offer· the" band has just completed the rC'· cording sessions for a new album. The new work, Elfman said. hh the band "moving further alon>-: the directions we've been moving the last couple of years. explonn~ melody and texture more than in the early years ... Sn for release in February. 1t will be the first release for the ..band since the "Boingo Alive" 10· year rctrospecti~ album of late 1988. That doublt album featured renditions of many of Oingo Boingo's most popular songs. all dOM in "live" arrangements on a sound stage -succeufully cap· turing the infectious energy of Oingo Boingo's live show without the crowd noi~ and feedback distractions that plague "true" live albums. It is tlw longest interregnum bct.wttn albums in Boingo'.s his· ton . buc chen. Ellman·, been busy wu h Im St'ConJ lareer -corm~ mO\'le). In what 1s probahh che mosc rem;irk.ible demunscrat1un o( ca(. enc -,inJ )t.I m tn.t -hv a°' one in popul.tr music m cll1S JecaJc. 1::1 fman ha!> m tht' lal>t cwu \ t'Jrl> become one of I loll ·wooJ s hut· Ct'M 'mo\1e composers. reachin~ a pmn.tde in June wu h ra \l' re' 1ew' for 111'> work on tht· IOt').!Jhtc "Uac.man ... Bt:lore char triumph. he w.i' dlreaJ, wt'll known in unt·ma11<. urclci. tor h1i. i.turm).! o( "B,u k cu t h" u I . . ' Bet' t I e J u 1 t c .. " trtJO~nl. · hmh Pte Wee I lt'rnu n muv1n. and .. M1dn1).!hC Run. l\:ot concenc wu h chac .1m.t11n/.! Strlllf!. ht' h.i1, .al'o <.ompo.,t'J the cheme mnp lur .i half Ju1en TV ene~ t mduJmJ.! 'Slt'Jl!ellJmmer' · anJ 'T .alei. lrom che Cn pt' I, cort'J ome 1ndi' 1dual shuwi. .ti. wdl a Pet' Wees Pia\ htlU!.c. and cumpoi.eJ sm~le sonp for a whole 'ilew of recent tilms. from "fa t Times at R 1J~emont 111,:h (he wrote w d us1n).! tht'tnt'I Ill "Tempest I wh1Ch fe.it ureJ h1\ son~. "l.1ttlt' G1rli.") w 'Tex.i' .Cham aw Massacrt' l ' (' i\o ( >ne l.1ves forever"). "I do work real harJ.· Ellman alluwed. "I work Ion~ hours and it's no1 uncommon for me to f!O S<'ven da s a week ... He does much of h1 work al a tudio m his home in the anta Monica mouncams. where he lives (Pl~ see BOINGO/Page M I ollowm/.! 1s ..i lis1 on um:. J.t\ .t nJ on}-!om,.: I L1 llt1wt't'n t'\t'rlt' Jlon~ the Or.t n}-!e (,1.i'>t P'rtday KIDS' HALLOWEEN PART\' I o' l JhJlk1 °' \ u lk' h:ill < ,, m . n.1\lum. 1-1 ... 2 'Jn,ho,X·. I uun1:i1n \ Jlln ' to , pm fnr r h1ldn•n ..i 111 I 2. nwmtx·" .inJ ~u'''I' ah' 1n' 1trJ ( u'tunw u1n1,·,t. 'nJt ~'· g;:tnH'' Jnd fun R ~\'P 'i4fl.l('f,o n:t 2\t. nr 212 HALLOWEEN DANCE PARTY Nt" port Beal h M arnutl Hold . 1)(1() "'I'" POI I ( l'llll'f l>rtVl'. Nl'Wf)llrl lk:Jl'h . I! p Ill Iii_ I J m SPllO\Ofl'll h~ '\ t-" '\ o ung l'wcull\l' Singk' N"1"111 ~ lor s1ngk · prnk'l\10nals ag''' 2 'i I•• 4 'i \dn11.,.,1on 1<1 $I 'i JI thl• Jo,11 pn· 1la1J S 12 Hulfl·I. ll;im·· ·mg. ll1U'>1l < 11\lum,·o; .trl' up11onal 744· lllCIO Saturday llALLO"'EE1' llAPPE"l!l\G '89 9 .1 m 111 nuun JI ~•ulh < t>J'I Plata l Jrnu"'I ( ourt nt·ar lhl.' tk1\lol \tr,•1·1 ,·nlrJ nu· Jnd \l)(IOWrl'\.I h~ tht· ( II\ 11f ( l"IJ \k..;i Ch1ldrt'n I~ and unJl.'r , 11,1um1· 111011·,1 in 1hn'l' JlW CJll'&Ofll'\ ( amh Prill'\, gift l'l.'r1tlit.11,•, J nd 1·;iniuwl ride' lor all 1·h1ldrl.'n Ill Ul\IUOll' (all (>4 'i--l~R'i for more 1nl11rma111rn IGLESIA PARK HA l lNTED HOUSE I-or the "''''nth )l.!<tr th,· lgks1a Partt ('luhhou~. 24<>71 Via lgh:\13 1n Laguna 11111\. "'"be lrans- furm<:d 1n111 n haunlt•d hOUSl'. "1th tou~ offered tor 'iO l'l.'nls pc'r J>l.'r\On tx·"tl'l'll 7 and ICI pm. I 1m1t 1wo lour' ix·r JX'~On Ma) he loo M:al"} for )'oungstc~ under 6 year'> old. (all 8 '0-R,lll for infurma11on. Sanday C HILDREN'S HA UNTED HOUSE AT NEWLAND BARN The Huntington Beach Jr Woman's < lub p~nts a special treat for children 1 and older from 4 to Q p.m Sunda) and Monda 10 the Nev.land Barn. 19820 Beach Blvd .. Huntmaton Beach 1n 1~ ewland ( cn1cr Adm1 s1on 1s S2. HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL AT ANDERSEN SCllOOL E vcryon< l5 1nv11cd to cnJO)" lhc pmc booths. food and cn1cru1nmcnt 1n the Andersen School pmrking lot. 1900 Pon Scabournc Wa)' in Ncwpon Bt-8ch. from nOOft to 4 p.m. • ...... , CHILDREN 'S •AUNTSD HOUSE AT NEWLAND 8MIN The Huntinaton 8c¥h Jr. Woman's o.1y Piiot O.tebook/ Fridey, October 27, ,._ a . I ' "i'i 1 1 ~~-,i '< ... p;· 1·111·1 err~ .. I!~,! ~.. ~· . flff'I B ~c r:r I m i~~ •. . ~1~! . ·-~ ' 1.1 !tt1 l Li.Li i i i i i i'.J i HAUNTS ,,...~ .. , Club pttXnts a spttial tre-at for children 2 and okkr from 4 to 9 p.m. Sunday and Monday in the Newland Ram. 19820 Beach Blvd .. Huntington lk'ach 1n the Newland Center. Admission as S2. Ta.UJ NIGHT OF THE UVING DVNES Newpon Dunes Rcson and KWIZ FM Radio hvst the first annual HalloWttn celebration for)uests of all a~ I to 9 P:m. Festiviun btsin with a pumpkin carv1n1 contnt. Pumpkins and carvina knives will be provided. fo&Jowed by a Hal- loWttn c:ostu~ contest and a tour of the haunted houtr. Admission for the celebration is SS per car loed. N~ Dunes ltet0rt i$ located 1131 IKk Bly Drive in Newport Beach. For more information, call 729-DUNE. YMCA llAVNTED BOUSE 7262 Garfield Ave .. Huntinaton Btach. Chiktm. four to 12 years of aaie accompanied by an adult can attend a free haunted house from 7 to 9 p.m. at the YMCA. Children will receivt free treats (and a few tricks) while tounna the scary setup. For more information. call 847-9622. HALLOWEEN TIUClt OR TREAT ADVENTURE Huntinaton Beach Convalescent Hospital. 10011 Aorida St.. Huntiqton Beach. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Trick or treaters arc invited into the hospital to go room to room srrcting residents dressed in costume and rttieving candy. Haunted fun house. entertainment and balloons. WESTMINSTER MALL ANNUAL CELEBRATION The community 1s invited to the Hallowttn cclebrauon at Westm1nStcr Mall from 6 to 8 p.m. Trick or treating and fun booths. pmn. balloons scuplture giveaway and more. All booths wiU be open from 5 to 8 p.m. West- minster Mall 1s located off the San Diqo Freeway at Bolsa vc. and Golden West St. 898-2558. o.,m.,s ....... ANAllEDI FIUnGBTERS HAUNTED BOUSE at the Cor- ner of Harbor and Broadway in the Fint Interstate Bank parking suucturc. Spooks and their firc- f.Ptcr f ri~nds offer lots of sounds and spcciaJ effects with spooky surprises . Hot dop." t· shins and a photo with the &houl of your choice will be avulablc. Throup Oct. 31. Hours are S to "****" -\l~l\Jt 1.,,. C ..\\\/II \Ill\ \lfll( I .,DEUCIOUSI. Y FUNNY~ (M\1t ,..._ IHf \fl\ If.I«~ ''"'' 11 p.m. weekdays. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Saturday and I to 11 p.m. on Sunday. Kids Hours. with a less frightening tour. takes place 5 to 6:30 p.m. daily. Tickets arc $4. children under 10 pay S2 during Kids Hours only. and children under 3 arc free. For more information. call 776-7676. PEPPERS CHAMBER OF HORRORS Peppers Restaurant offers 21 rooms filled with blood and gore. mayhem and muck. at 1236J C hapman at Harbor. south of Disneyland in Garden Grove through Oct. 31 . Hours arc 7 p.m. to midnight Sunday throu&h Thursday: 7 p.m. to I a.m. l=riday and Saturday. Ad- mission is $4.SO for adults and SJ.SO for children 10 and under. Anyone bringing canned goods with a value of SI or more for the Food Distribution Center will Fl a SI discount off the price of admission. 740-1333. DIOTT'S SCARY FARM Hal- loween Haunt through Oct. 3 1. 8039 Beach Blvd .• Buena Park. AJl major rides arc re-themed for Halloween magic and Elvira. "Mistress of the Dark" headlines a shock arid rock revue. Hours are 7 p.m. to I a.m. Sunday through Thursday. 1 p.rn. to 2 a.m. Friday through Sunday. Tickets are S 19 advance purchase and $20 if available. at the park. Advanct purchase is recommended. Tickets are avail- able at Knott's or at Tickct- Master locations. Call 740-2000 for ticket purchases. 220-5200 for taped information. PUMPKIN CITY'S PUMPl.IN FARM Laguna Hills Mall. Inter- state 5 and El Toro Road. Pum~ kin farm open daily 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. in the Sears parking lot. I 0,000 pumpkins. pony rides. barnyard an1maJs, Indian teepees. Admission is free. Hal- loween costume contest and trick or treating in the mall on Tuesday. n.URD BURD'S FANTASY BOUSE next to Barker Brothen Furniture at the cast end of Huntinaton Center, 7777 Ed- inKCr Ave., Huntington Beach through Oct. 31 . Gypsy fonune teller, Pumpkin tree. Halloween treasure. 'famiJy fun and adven- tu{C anf fairy tale guides and surprisn. "OUl'DO~ DISNEY ... · A SP.rfACULAR OUTDOOR ADVENTURE. l'holt~l~'<l lo\ 1th hn•athtak111~ -kill" Hn_. •• \\ tltkmr."i 11 .. \\ t• t\ "ASTONISHING ... A ONCE IN A LIFETIME EXPERIENCE!" 1.•111•·• 1 ....... ,, •• "' ,.tit'\ II~' .. ONE OF THE MOST PERFrel' FILMS "IMAGINABLE FOR PARENTS TO SEE WITH THEIR CHILDREN: It''" af) aJ\41 fmrn~ 1•nou)!h 1111•n1t·rta111 .in~ 'Ill' off,pnn)!. amt ... uhrl1; anti un1in·1lwt.1hlt• 1•nou)!h 111 t ap11\;llo• a11\ '1t1• adult .. \I• 1 .... 1 ltu; l'\Ut:' "''. \I \o, \/l't "A MAGNIFICENT ACHIEVEMENT ... II "'111 hU\ ,. 11111\ ll')<!IM'IX Yl'.111\111•1'.ll\)! 1111\\ 1111 t'.a rt h 11111 I h1·\ 1111 1r•· •• I~•· 11.:. ...... , ,, .... ~ l•\I ~ .•• l'ltt: ...... . r "COULD BE TO THE '90's WHAT'E.T.' WAS TO THE 'tM)'s. llrw 11( t h1· "'"'' 1•111t•rt:111un)! 11111\11" \1111°ll 1•\11r '1'1° W•••-n 1 ..;,,.,. Tiit \I"\ It • II\' ,t·1 .. ONE OF THE BEST FILMS OF 1989. A ROUSING MUST-SEE ADVENTURE! \ "'11111lr11u' 1w111 mm,,. t h;it 111.n I~· Ilk• 11n•,111"1 Jth1•n11m· · film t'\ 1·r n~11l1· t.L '''""' 1.\,,tTT , • .,.,~II\~ I "ONE OF THE GREATEST OUTDOOR ADVENTU~ EVER FILMED. \\ h.11 .r ph-.r,un· 111 f111<l .11111111"u pu 1 un· I h.11 t.UI ho• n'l ttlllllll'llOl1~I "' 1·n1h11,1.L'l1n1ll} \1•1.itl \l"h"I ''t:Ai. l'llt \lt,YI ' STARTS TODAY ·-eGllAIUll •1\1-. ...,.. .... •UI .... • • .,., llj(ll •Sl- ~'~ t-C-,_~ l•~W!O'C-" ..... "" I ._., .. ._,"(._..,,, -....,..,. ....... 1- 9101191 ~llC ~·"" ... .,,. .-.1.oc .... """ "''"" .... ...... •M.Llll* ·-..... IMJll ·--Wl~fUI ---~ ,_,_c:-WC'-1 10"""""'·•• I • ., ... ~· . ... i ........... ... ""' ' M.11 . .., ~·~, .. •1141 lit qJl '-""~· ~ ............. .... ,..,, '°'I- .. MM!t, ---................ . ................. ,..-....... --· BOINGO Froin~ageJ with-his wife and 1wo daughters. ages Sand I 0, as well as an extensive collection of African and Indonesian musical instruments and a wide range of exotic momentos, including a number of anifacts associated with Indeed. barely controlled-chaos was how the band's early releases were widely \•iewed by cntics. who found this less appcalinJ than the fa ns d id. Still: d1scrim1natina re- .viewers noted Oingo· Boingo's tight- ly c-oilcd ar.raniements -often supcrimpasing intricately woven percussion and rhythm lines over the basic beat -and Elfman's scathing. iconoclastic lyrics ("What you see is what you fit/What the hell did you expcct./Pretty red r05':s?/Wet puppy· noscs?/Men with rubber hoses is more like it!"). Food .For Feet serves up spicy, ¥aried musical feast , Dia de los Muenos ("The house is filled with that." he said of the Mexican holiday, which features ef- figies of skeletons and spirits, candy skulls. and masks). Now. with ''Batman" behind him. Elfman is back lo Boingo. which he terms "m> primary career." "I love doing films. I wouldn't stop 11," he stated. ··but there's no wa~ I "ould quit O mgo Boingo for fil m .... O ingo &11ngo gets priority as fo r as scheduling and m y time 1s co ncerned." He 1s upbeat (a nd. in his rapid-lire H'rb31 deliver). uptcmpo as well) about thl' band's C\Olu11o n. and the operative "ord in his discussio n "of Oingo Boingo is "cclcc11c." ''The early stuff was fa ster. morl· lrcnl.'llC' ... Llfman !>a id of the band's first t"o albums. "Onl) a Lad" and "'-:othing to Fear:· "(The>) were not cdct·u c. ll\tcning to them now. Man) of the songs had that same hard. dm ing bca . " In the middle of the decade. ac- cording to Elfma n. "we said. 'Wait' Arc we going to forget why we got together 1n the first place?' .. ··w e have a real desire to ex pand a nd ch:ingc:· Elfman said. and his and the band's later works (Elfman put o ut a solo a lbu m. "So Lo," in 1984) n:ncct <1n expansion 0f crcat1 \ l' \ 1s1o n. Whether this broadening will make for a good album come Febru- ary "ts for the fans 10 dcc-1de:· Elfman said matter-of.factly. For himself. thou$h. thl· latest efTon 1s but o ne ::.tcp 1n a process: "I'm nc\l·r compktcl) happ):· he concl udl·d . ''I'm always trying to expand ·· 8y CHMSTCWHER TRELA Dllll)' ... c.n ....... Food For Fttt is: a) a trendy LA. ~taurant. b) a hip ~ shoe store. c) the name that a trio of musicians chose to rep~scnt their infectious brand of quirky. energetic-music. If you picked .. c... you' m if\ht be interested to know that their self- titlcd debut album has just been rdcascd on the Orange County- bascd Dr. Dream records. What you also may not foow is that Food For Feet's bass player. John Avila. and drummer. Johnny "Vatos.. Herna ndez. also pla>• in anotller local outfi t called Oingo Boingo. They've bee n moonlighting in Food For Feet with guitarist Mike Tovar since 1983. While all three music-1ans lend their individual st)les to the eclectic sound of Food For Feet. some of the songs on their album have a, decided Oingo Boingo tinge to them. -A.111.CAC099A,_Y "'DAD' llAs AIJJ THE IMPACT OF 'TERMS OF ENDEARMENT.' YOOU IMJGH AND YOU'U CRY. Jack law h shm' brilliance, Ted Danson ~ nntt been better and Olympia Dukakis outdoes her role in 'Moonsaruck:" _ .... --. ....... , "AIJ.ED WITH UFE AND JOY1 "DAD' IS A VERY RARE HIM.~~- A ........_ .. ,tMI. rw Jail,,,__ .. _ ..... ...._" 111t w1ut' "WINNDt, WINNER, WINNER! Jadi lw ,;.n * ,,..r..-rt .rlll\ lft. ·1w •ii ...u ,. ....... CT) ....... •WtlMr-~ II\ •l'fr..r ·---·· .. '()II( ....... IWd:" -'4~, ........ _,_ • .. TED DANSON IS SUPER" .... .,... ....... ~~.J ... 1.-... ~ Ill\ ..-MMr cwwr. 1;., llMW I ..... ll:Ul" lo llw hnill al llw ~'""Id rt... ... •rinllina OW llW'\ .. ......,:' -·-.-. .. '"'"'"" .. ""\I \4,\/1'1 ""A .. ·1w· e.. lw9m~mtant• al~ .. .,...., •illl.,,.... .. rit ... dirm~ _. ,..,r~ Tftl I,..._ h .... 1'111•.J.l•...-.. ..... ~ ....,,,.. •• 'i!M" -1.-.t.-,l>Wl ·I\ ... DAD' IS A JOV TO WATCll '.,rW...-... , ...... .... ~.._ ....... . ...................... .. ,.. .......... -••-·•.Alfllf'TI "·".,.'"._.. JACK LEMMON I TED DANSON flood l'w l'eetl lfrOIW I~ Joltn Awlla. Joltftny -Vatos·· H•nYnd••· and Mlctlael Tovar. "The sonp arc more me... said Avila recently about the differences between the two bands. "I was in- volved in the wnting on our ne\\ album. so there's a lot of my com· · pasing. But. there's the same energy -and the same rhythm section (as Boingo):· The story that Avila told about the formatio n of Food For Feet is as unusual as their musk. "Mike (Tovar) and I first talked about forming a.band when we were touring Eruopc in 1979 and ·so. We did some writing together and de- cided to work something up when we aot back to LA .... So when we aot back we stancd jamming with .., -IE • I d ifferent drummers. One night thl' drummer couldn't make It to a show. I knew J ohnny Vatos (Bo· inao's drummc() wasJ oing to bl· there because I'd invit him to thl' sho w. I asked him to fill in and hl' said ·sure'." Food Fo r Fttt soon becanH' Vatos' second musical hQme. Hl· later returned the fa vo r when Bo· inao was auditiomna bassists and Vatos invited Avila down to try out The ~ult is a Vatos/Avila rh)thm section that drives two bot L. .\ bands. One of the tbinp that Avila hkc., about Food For Feet is the musical freedo m the band ofTcn. ~Food For Feet was always under· ground. We played Monday night\ when almost nobody's there. Wl· ~ren't makina any money. On the other hand. whn thcK clubs hire you for no money. _you can pla~ whatever )'OU want. That's ~hat \\C' did. We were always trying out different stuff." AJtbouah Food For Feet bas been taaed an eclectic band. Avila thin~\ it's j u$1 bcacu~ they're different and blend a wide rantc of musical styles "When I listen to music. 1 don't j ust listen to rock or iau or latin. I tpl9-.. ,,,.,,, .. 7t ii-;_ • • • • Texas, fJy way_ of Scotland For whatevt"r reason. bands named after c111cs (Boston. Chi-caeo>. states (Kansas. Alabama) or continents (Europe) have made little impact on the pop music wor1d. But one new band out of G lasgow. Scotland -named Tcus. oddly enoupi -is a pleasant c•ccplio11. Wnh its roots--Oavored. contem- porary blues sound. Texas -includ-ma lead s1nacr-guitarist Sharleen Spiteri. Ind guitarist Ally McErlainc. bassist John McElhone. and drummtr Stuan Kerr -has crated si-wlina. heartfelt music that's emotionaUy fueled by the sing-i, of the 22-year-old Soitcri. nftuenttd by bl~ bcltcrs like Rohen Johnson. M~y Waters. and Elm<ft James, Spiecn combines a ~rnarbblc self-assuredness with htt thick contraJto tbro~out tbt" sroup's debut Mcrc\lry release. "Southside." Coupled with the Ry Coodcr-inspired acoustic slide auit.ar work of McErlainc. the two create a mood that seamlessly shifts from introspective and atmospheric ("Tell Mc Why," .. Prayer For You," "Southside") to hard-charaing rock 'n' roll ( .. I Don't Want A Lover," .. Fight 'The Fcclina." .. Everyday Now"). Produced b)' Tim Palmer (Roben Plant. the Mission. MiJhty Lemon Drops). "Southside" showcases the multi-dimensional taJcnts of a young band (all members arc in their early 20s) that's unusually well-focused for such an inc•pericnced poup. In a rccc1'1t phone inlerView from a tour stop in toronto, a soft-spoken but aniculatc Spiteri. p vc much or the credit for .. Southside" to Palmer. .. Tim's cuctlJ what a producer should be," she insisted. "1-tc creates a aood atmosphere m the studio by keeping everyone at ease. and most impon.antl y. (he's) always laklng into account the blnd's per- sonalities. He'll also be producina our next album." Thematically ... Soulhsidc's" lyri- FFF ''°"'P-.' listen to all kinds. Over the years I've worked on mastering all dif- ~nt styles. except classical.... That could come off as eclectic, but it's just doi• what we like to do." The llll songs on their a lbum make up a perfect example of Food For Feet's musical diversity. .. Rh)'1hm" is a fun, uptcmpo dance tune t.lwt is alto the first single off the album. "faith. Hopr" as what Ointo BoiOF would sound like as a punk band: Fu&. ~t. and bouncmg ll>Od Aan ... Retue cu bnt be <k- laibed a a '!pt....,. cal make-up shares ··a whole stof)' ot J)('rsonal 1hinp that have happened 10 us:· as o~ 10 focusing on social or political concerns. Does S~i1eri envision addressing these more universal themes in future Texas albums? -At this point. I don't want to preach to people.·· she responded. "I'm only 22. and I honestly don't feel polnlcally wise enough. That's not to say that we're not concerned about some current mues. like (Bnt- ish Prime Minister Marpret) Thatcher's brutal taxation pohcy in Scotland. And a song like "fight The Feeling" does address that prob- lem in a more general way. but our music 1s not a soapbox for express- ing our politcal views." Jn concen. Texas -who will play at the Coach Ho use on Sunday night -look forward to the C'hallengc and cxcitment of live performance. Past live sets have included an ecoustic interlude plus re"!'orkcd versions of G uns N' Roses· ··sWttt Child o' Mine." Stevie Wonder's "Living For The City:· and Elmore James· ··1t Huns Mc Too." One question that Spitcri must undoubtely answer many times - but that S('Cms inescapable -is: Wh) did a Scots band decide to name themselves after an Ameriqn state the} 've never been to? "The film ·Pans. Texas· was a big influence when the band first 101 together ... she C_!plamcd. "We were tf)'1ng to keep our music very open a nd sparse. We felt the word 'Texas' reaJI, con1urcs up that image.'' • • • POP PICKS ... Former Blondie Side two opens with the old pany favorite. "Tequila." Food For Feet play it as a ska number with a half- ttmpo lead hoc and scorching guitar solos. "Gonna Find My Way Home" is a funk/rock/blues tune that still has a touch of Bo1ngo in 11. "Cross CulturT" sounds lake a cross between Paul Simon a nd Culture O ub, but it works perfectly. and 1s auarantccd to have }'OU bopping along to tbc beat. Food For Feet can be seen at Cal State Sao Bemardtno on Oct. 31. C'al State Lona Beach on Nov. 6. and C'al State Fullcnon on No . 9. ROMANTIC CHAMPAGNE Balloon Flights •. Sunrise • Perris • Suneet • Del Mar CAU n>oAI' l'(M Sl'SCIAL RA n .• Mll.OM CllAllTm OP A~ 1(800)889-8701 front" om an IA·bor:ih Harry has 1us1 rt'ka~·d a linl' nl.'w LP. "Def. Dumb. &. Blondl'. ·· and shl' (X'rforms 1omor-'°" n1gh1 at thl' C'oach House ... PIL. frontl'l.I h} th(' b;irbtossing John I )Jun (aka. Johnn) Ron en) will pla» ll(T, Hn·n Cl·ntl.'r on Nov. 10. Oix·nang "111 bl· Al·sh Fo r Lulu ... Hun11ng1on &;ich's own guitar slangns. thr Clin1s. ride 1n10 Texas ts a n•w roon-n.vorect. cont••por-, ......_MIMI Bogan·i. 10 !'..ong lkach on NO\. 11. out of Gla190w. Scotland. 19191 .. 00...C...-t-..- CELEBRAT E NATIONAL PASlA MONTH AT THE OLM GARDEN, WHERE THE PASTAS MADE FRESH EVERY DAY - ,,.. / .. / , .. ,,,.,. ~-; / ;(" If anyone knows about pasta, ~ it's The Olive Gorden. Because we make ours fresh every day of the year, nght in front of your eyes, 1n every one .of our restaurants. So _go for o spin dunng Nahonal Posto M onth Go for fresh pasta at The Ohve Gorden WHERE A1 .1 . ThE BE<.,1~ OF l1A1 Y Is YouRS- • 16811 Beoch Blvd., Hunt1~ Beoch • lll~l E. 183rd St. (cxross from the Cemtos Moll) " • Brea Mofl Way. ocross from the May Compon~ I<\ 1-.H \HOD\·~ \ ( HI 1·1t Different jokes for dlff:erent folks Coale Sereua Sain A~mJahlntor Lapaa Bead! A cute. silly movie that allows the imagination to run wild! What if a baby's babbling and gurgling could become an in· 1ellible language? What if sperm ... 'Ould speak? Far •>ut? Yes. but the '>ab)' in "Look Who's Talking" 1s :.--.-..=-.l.....:l Jdorable and the Aaroa Vu Etten Medical Writer Sula Au Baby M1kev is the one who's -------.·;ilk ing (wi th ~r uce Will is' voice). and he gives us a running commentary on ois first year of life. His mom is \tollie (Kirs~ie .\llcy). a 33-year- old accountant whose biological 1...-_____ _, alarm clock just went 0 11. His father is Geroge Segal, a three-timing. self-centered. wealthy jerk. A cabbie, James (John Travolta), gets Mollie to the hospital barely in time. After Mollie gives birth, James fills in as baby-sitter and foil for Mikey. Mikey becomes "the m<>1t important thina" in Mollie's ljfe, so aettina him a Dad W11f1ti"' -This movie mav be a ''no-braincr... (re- ~uirement; not much mental cf· fort wbat-so- everl), but it will swr>bablY be the runneit t ime you'll have at lbe movies 10 far tbil ran ... 1.oot Wbo'• Taltiaa... llarrills --..a Kinlie Alley ud Job T,.voha, 11 ftaHat eneertain-iaa. lut die real ... ~tile movie is .,_ Willia -1M1 ii, Ilia voice! Dubbed ill witll --dalic t.by eclioM wt IW1ioD. Willis' oae--............ P.,.. tM OJI I . I ....... IO die =, 01 T 0 O!"*llila script adapted to fit the expression is good, so what the heck. Enjoy. Lau&h a little, it's only a movie. Molly (Kirstie Alley), an accoun- tant, is naive. She's having and affair with one of her major accounts. Alberts (George Segal). and believes he is going to leave his wife somedar. soon and marry her?! Get real.! Moll y's feisty and gets phrsical with the least provocation. She s a bundle of encrg)· and emotion acting out all over the place from becoming in- timate with the JOhn, 10 swingi ng at the cab driver (John Travolta) while in the throes of labor pains! Tra' olta 1s trying. Trying to help becomes pnonty number one. The whole thing is light and en· joyablc. but stunningly predictable as baby Mikey keeps telling us how much he like James as a Dad. It's quickly established that James is a knight-in-shining-armor. an all- around good guy, and only mildly flaky. Mollie setms to like James. or at least has no antipathy, so there's no force preventing her fro m eventually seeing the light. All the characters are stereotyped . espccialJy the 4uys Mollie dates (one of her dates 1s referred to in the credits as "'Anal G uy"). "Accoun· tant" is over-used as shorthand for "a dull and boring person." The exception to this, of counc, is Mollie bcnclf, who's sexy and intelli&ent, but a bit sca.tterbraincd. (Why is it that intelli&ent female leads never actually llCt top USC their in· telliaencc?) Most of the fun comes from final scene (even after the credi&s), direcior Amy Heckertins (wbo alto did .. Fat Timel at Rif:llemont Hilll") combines everday situations wiih ltitbtJy ofl'-<nlered people. mixes in some kids whole tbousb&s we cu hear, and the raults are expected. but preny dam funny. Alley ponnys Molly, a New York accountant who is in love with one of ber muried clienta, Albert (Oecqe 5ei11). In poruafina one of tile wOrtd'• .. slimiest" maJe1, Albert ii all Wk and no show. Wbea he aiets ......... " he promila die but delivers mo! Catch die drift When pusla c::omes to lbove. lilenlly, and .. it'• lime!," Molly Mils a travoha«ivea C8b to ~Mrtotbe...,....Jmnes (1' .... ~--ia the delivery, and ..., ii ...... Plot beias ....... bet1lr ...... for...,, Miller -Alber\, tile - [ .....-. his grandfather (Abe Vigoda) find a retirment home, trying to become a flight instructor, tryinf. to under- stand Molly's antics while becoming Mikey's best friend and possibly his daddy? Olympia DuJuoos. as Mikey's grandmother, it too talented to waste her time in a movie of this caliber and how could Bruce Willis lose using a datl· ing baby's mug to com munica t e great one liners?! Mikey's one-liners about his new world. And despite the fact that the roles hardly ..stretch their abilities. Alley and Travolta seem to have great fun together. Both have to dampen their considerable scrttn presences to fit into these smaller- than-life characters. The talents of Abe Vigoda and Olympia Dukakis arc wasted in minor roles. The kids in the matinee audience loved the movie; they didn't seem to get annoyed by stereo types, or mildl y sexist characterizations, or obvious sight gqs. The kids saw what Mikey saw: an absurd. unex- plored world full o f stranae and . . wonderful people and th1ncs-If that's what you sec, you'll enJOY it too. llimeball, or James, the broke c:ab- bie? Three auesscs. and the finl two don't count! But that's not the point, just 1tatct. the kid and listen to Willia. Tnvolta, finally in • 1'0le where the spolliabt isn'& entirely OD him, does a pretty sincere job playina tile beartwannint friend and baby-titter (althc>Qlh you may wonder how come fie bu so much fiee time. available between beinl • c:abbie, a ~t imtructor, and to bis pandfatber). Alley penoDa ~y c!~" her ••• c:raaky, moody, and wbiDcy. but ... does it to a lee and it worb bin. Eftll Mikcy•a amndln!Odaer (Olympia Dukakis) .... a .. ..., CIDCidY lllowills .... ~ acfult will-:.. to. to atenain a dWd. Abe Vilodl (tom .. ..., Miller") ii James• _... Mo•• parltlw ~I 18 en ..,••ntt• w••r wo111an loo1dn9 for .,.. pertea -,...._ ..,.. ll8r dllN IJason pudfatber, who pretty much is in the movie for one ICcnC involvina bit eyebrows! Mikey, well, is self- aplanatory -Heckertiaa c:apt.Uftd 101DC not-tCHare ba~ moments, bul combiMd with W1Uis's ... unan. alecky" remarks (you can just pic- ture 8nace Willis sayina tbac thinp, too!). we're talkina IOOd humor. You will walk away from "Look Wbos T1lkln1" = all your a& work about two thinp: Tbc kid nd some clever medical special eftiects that I can"\ really de- scribe here and bave to be seen to be fully ap-..... ~ ~ .. l9id. ..., die IU tJriaa 8 date, .... avoy (ud stay 'til die liabts. come oa.'). Be a critic Tired of no one listenina to you pronqwK'ltl'Mftts on the latest mov1 rekasn1 Then sip up to rcv1c' movies for our "Everybody's Critic" feature. That's ritbt. for eiaht weeks yo1 too can ID to see the best (an• sometimeswon&)oftbc new films Ill they open aJoaa the Oranac Coast And when the Gene Siskels an• Gary FnnkliM aivc their opinions you cu too. Just write to The Daily Pilot, PC Box I S60, Calta Mesa, CA 92627 attn: Dalebook cri~ or cal 642--tlll, alalliaa 367. in 'Talking' I e " a II j s .. :I ) Sc......,. .-J-•• po1w1 Tr••• ... II • uaale w11o drlv ....... lllew .. Ill-...... Wllo"• Y:•I + .. -C--. JOt f ...... -..i •7S·J510 a.... ....... , .• 1s -.-... =·~JOO~ C•nttr er-'444Pt0 I T'"9 ... ral I. 1. 9 1 0.. l"GI i. 1 Ja. IO 10...... jl'G-Uf6 IS.IJO, •O •s ·-.-...--.__., __ ,...... oon '"'"'~1111 I 111-.t ........ rat 6 JO. I JO, 10 JO l P-· --fl'G-IJI S 0 . IJO. 10 SO J,,.. ....... eiF.Jii s, 1 JO. 10 • a...11...,. 1 s. 1, •. 1o•s S a...11 ...,. I •• 1.. 10 & ..., ' I Jt • )t, I 4S. 10 U .7 -........ IJI S.11S.•JO ~)=--.....,, ..... ~ v..,. .._ ~ rc>-•JI s. 11s. t JO "OllT ~ 1tm f c-........... •1.).6lt0 T----7.•ll r.... ...... ~x ·~·--r--.... ,o , .. , '· ... J111e I. 1 Ja. 10 ·-" '°""' ~~ ~ '46--1111 I ..... l"G-IJ 6 IS. I JO, 10 JO 1 ~ ... Ullfit ..,~IJt S. 1 JO 10 J ....... flllSJ0.1.!fJO , -....... ~P'&AIA 1 .. 1 w ~-S4().()S'4 • I._....,..,...... jf'G-1)1SIS.1 JO, t J , l _..,, V -Ill! S IQ. > 1Q. t JO ) .... • , tpG-IJt S 4S. •JO Hunti111toa Beach -· ..... CllMT9 C8n9 7111 W-AW ... .0110 I ...... Ill S 4S. IJO. IOSO l hi -• u...., lf'0-1)1s.1 JO, 10 J ....... ~ .... 10 ..................... fl 1.•JO s .... ----. jl"G-l)j 6, S. IOJO ••'IW W-..TCNI T.-tlS4J ....., St ~~ I M9e ...... T-e 1111 S. 1 t, 10"4S , ___ rG-fJI s. 1 ••• 100 l"i• ftl9 .-uwwwn ~ u•s c-~ ., .... " I,_ e ..._ .., tr'G-lll S JO. I. 10 JO l ... __..l"(rlJ1161S.I JO. IO•S J .. ftle ..... IP'G-IJt S. 1 IS. t JO .,... ........ ..__..s 1JQ.10 S ...... .,0.1)1 S. ·1. t. IOSO ·-....... ro-111sJO,7 4S 10 wooe••eeee Ct•e•AI l•"""u ,..,,_.,fC._ o-t H l~IUS 1 W. ... rat6 11. llS, IOIS l Alll ....._ -1111 •JO ..... ._,.,. 6 IS, 10'40 • --...,. "°' s .,. 1 45. 10 )---~·•» , ........ 1.1 10 F_..aValley SI --_..., ._ .....,,.If..,.. ...... .... -.... JJG. 10 , ...... ._ .... 11-....--flll•· IO -,_ ---17161 _...,.. S4 .. ,.1., 1----jafl4S,JIS.. ....... lll S. , ..... , ___ !).IS,l .. 14S.. IOIO ·----........ ..... 4til I 8 1:a •••••• 10JD U ~<'l~E DO'\ The presence of Pleasance presages unpleasantness .. And it's one. two. three watch am I watching this for'! Don't ask me I don't give a damn, dropfX'<l thrt•c Qucks on a ~uel scam.·· Th.cad says: ··Michael lives. And this time the y're read)." Who be ready? Me? You? For what? Another rot1en sequd:' Another week's paycheck from the Pilot. blown? Sure as hell atn't reaily for Donald Pleasance again. Just saw him 1n th\! previo us week's worst movie o(the year. ~nd he' back now in this week's worst movie of the )Car: "I lallowccn 5, The Revenge of Michael M)ers:· If )OU remember Pan 4. which was worse than Pan J. "h1ch had nothing to do with Halloween. which was "orse than Pan 2. which was worse than the classic Pan I. )Ou'll remember ok Mike) at the t'nding being (cd more lead than a fishing shot manufacturer. Dead this time" Only the heads of those respon- sible for this slug. Pan 5 oix-ns with Mikey having the tomb Of his life. ot panicularl) diggmg is present locatio n. he cla" b1'i "'a~ ouua this grave. falls into a stream. and fas ter than >Ou can sa) .. What's up Dock?" shps up on this here pier Whoa. puns. And .i5 minutes into this thing we get our fi rst confirmed stiff. Numero uno ge ts the point with a cultivator. And your fa von te Unc (well. maybe not Madeleine G rcet's of N~·wpon. but we'll get 10 her later), his fa vorite Ro le\ that he's bought for a really, really good pri~ 1n TJ two weeks ago now on the blink. kept elbowing the fool on his left. For the time. Li~e a kid wondenng .. when are we aonna get there .. the nc just wanted to know how \ IDt:o close it was to 10 p.m. and the end of this dog. The next croakers are this couple horsing around in this barn on the hay. She·s ready to bale outta there but Mikey shows up pitchfork in hand. And finishes them off in no tine at all. This is a great movie ... for finding flaws. In one scene the dn,er of the car 1s o n the wrong side. Musta 1nsened the negative backwards when printmg. In another. a cop tum on his intenor light (it's dark) to sc~ outside. Cop cars are all different colors. some have blue hghts. some don"t. -\nd tn the film's finest moment. ps)'chologist Plcasance uses a 9-)ear-old gin as bait 10 lure Mike> 1n. Whatta man Whntta fhcl . \\ hatta buncha 1d1ots. What·s the \\Or'it thtng about this movie? The lack of na~cd "'1mmi.'n'' The few number of stills? The absencl· of an) con11nu1t) ., The po~s1h1ht> that psycho- pathll loon1l'' might use thl\ film a<> a --orucc.-of msp1ra11on ' \\or'4' 1han that Thl'rl· "111 be: .i Pan b • • • C'OMPI ·\I NT'\ .\t.idde1nl' Grt.'t.'l m last Sunday's paix-r called ml· among other then~: "arrogant" (thank )Ou). spouttng "trul) '11nolll· (big 'Aord. had to look 11 up) bill'.°' But 'hl· h11~ thl' nail on the hl·ad \\hen shl' a!>~S. "Can ~ou npla1n to ~our readl'r\ "h~ he is emplO)l'd h) \OUr paper·•·· fh:n·~ llne ol the gn·at unsl>ht'd m~stl·ne~ of thr universe. i\nd l'\Cn the lint· <:an·t answer that. 1Re- qu1res thought.) Mayhc you gU)S can. (Doubt 11. requirt's thought). Send onh ll'11cr'I o f support to the Pilot (PO Box 1560. Costa · Mt'sa. 1)1616) and 1f I think, in the 1mmona l "'ord11 of S;ill) Field. "You hke me'". there'll be a return che~:i.. en the mail Tru~t me. \\ ould I 111~ to )Ou'' A burning ·1 Lawrence 1 and a sparkling 1 Firecracker1 By DOLOftS aAKLAY ~-"""" .... Herc arc reviews of two films recently released on v1deocassette: "Lawraee ef AnMa" MCA Horne Vi~. VHS, $89.95. Raitt/ PG. When film students. critics. h.istorians and other buffs arc asked to list the best movies ever made1 "Lawrence: of A"'bia" a~rs with well«terved frequency. This blajestic epec is cinematic poetry . When the David Lean masterpiece, which in- troduced an unknown actor named Peter O'Toole, landed in New Yorton Dec. 17, 1962. it~ with a few lovely _touches includi,. a propam book com- plete with bibliopapllical and biopaphical material. Althouah called a "camel open" by t0me Wlp, and_ homoerotic by others became of its absenoe of women and f)orifiat1on of men with men. few could elude the movie's raptures. And the charms and cinematic seductions of "Lawrence of Arabia" still hold up on the small tcrem, despite the thick black frame that allows Cincmucope to be miuced. What's bcina otrm:d oa video is a new. satoted version of the fjlm, which .,.yed ~tricalJy earlier' this year. After a dcalde, 32 minuia of the movie lutd been cut and one print contained a complete revena1 (Lawrence's watch is twitcbed from bmd to bud). iherc were alto Ofisiul editi111 c:ula rude w1ml IM movie was fir1t Tdcttcd to trim h fOr Amelicu audXnces witb a lbort attention ...... Lema lllM r$Oftd some ol mo. tcene1. at times c:alli111 .,.. of hi1 anon (notably O'Toole) into a •udio IO record new dialope. I.Au .... added ...... whida l.awrelMlll Ndely brealls up a ........... at die omc..· chlb Md a h8ftm w n. ....... -llllln • ,..; • ..., (Joee Ferm> ii ... ...,-• ...._... Md 1 a 1 nm more strongly the sexual conno tations. The restoration by' Robert A. Harris and Anne Coates. who won an Academy Award for cditina the original movie, takes the film to a running time of 218 m inutes. The new version, with a.n added 20 minullCS, is still breathtaking but attempts to more deeply probe the elusive and eniJmatic Lawrence. T.E. Lawrence was an arropnt cartDp'&Pbcr in the British army who is sent to Arabia to assist Prince Feisal (Alce G uinness) in the 1917·18 Arab revolt apinst the Ottoman Empire. He quickly adapts lO the dcsen and the Bedouin way of life -he drinks water only when his 1utde does: he eats the same 1epid mil as they d o. He aJso becomes a mcssaan.ic wuricw whose stratqy and wisdom arc matched only by eeo and obsn.sion. . With his almost viflinal white robes. O'Toole. with eyes the= blue of the Meditcnanean and bair the color of n suaw, struts about not with the SWllFr of the Britilb ptleman but with the mace of a ~· Indeed, the exploits Robert Bolt to craftily chisels in his excellent screenplay peint l.Awreacc u a denuaod. Onlikt many of today·s filmmakcn wbo t* their aud~nces 'o be simpletons, Lean has a keen ~ for detail and stnves "5r' cultural IKlC\lracy. The COMUIDeS, props. blockiftl" all hold up today -.. l.a•taee ol Arabia" could have bftft m.te in the 19IOL The ,makeup, however, especia.IJy the shoe polish oe Guia-nns. is daled. ... • The perfonnaftClCS ~ a rash of stan wbo allO include Omar Shanf in h11 Wesient tcree11 clllMA 1811 Anlhoay Quinn, Aft excdlenl But the mcm.•1 ..a ii die delef1 with its smoukleriDI duaes aDd ,...., ol colon. -... Pllw11'111'" HllO HOtM va.o. VHS-•11. Sl9.'9 . ...., l'G-IJ. How •n cu one lilac-for ia lilr? Nat--.-. .,...._~,.... ... .. • VIDEOS From P-ae9 - fhat still ICavcs a lot of room. And as we learn in Thomas Schlammc's "Miss Firecracker," anythina is lcy's story drops enouah homil~ <.:am ellc 'Scott (Holly Hunter). a possible. • between the lines to stuff a plain link thing who cleans fish in The key is to just be oneself. and gooscfeather-filled quilt. But these a catfish factory. has spent her life in to honestly approach and embrace wise little nuggets arc drizzled with the shadow of her beautiful cousin. the opponunities in life. Beth Hen-spice and wit and charm. , · f:lain. a delicate but catty magnolia -----------------"-_ ___...__ ________________ __:. ____ blossom who won the Miss Fire·. cra~ker beauty contest in 1972. BIG NEw?"Pr ,_. l It r' ) P " ' l '1ri rt • t>-l~ 0 . ., THEllEAA (PG) 5 00 7 ;()() 9:00 DAD (PG) 5:00 7 30 10.00 Lc>0K Wtt0'$ TAU<MG (PG13) 600 8'00 1000 THE FABULOUS BAKER BOYS (A) 500 7 30 10.00 H'.,'T N .~NH<[ ..,. :. I i ~ t l.,A, l .Jf •.. : ~ '1t WORTH W1NNING (l;'G13) 6 00 8 15 10 15 12 IS NEXT Of KIN (A) 4•45 7.00 9 15 11 30 AN N«>CENT MAN(R) 445 715945 12 00 GROSS MATOllY(PG13) THX 5 45 8 00 10-15 12 IS ERIK THE YIKING(PG l 3) 6 30 8.45 11 :00 ,,. "'" CE'< .. FP > '•I ' GROSS AMTOll'I (PG 13) ( 12:00 2'00) 4'()() 6 15 8 30 10 30 TMEBEAR (PG13) 112.00 2 00) 4:00 6'00 8:00 10.00 MmML. BEHAVIOR( PG) THX 6 30 8 .30 10 30 FATllAN a UTTl.E BOY(PG13) THX 5 45 tpo 1o·so THE FMULOUS BAKER BOYS(R) THX 5:00 7:30 10 00 LO<* WHO'S TAUING(PGl3) TH)( 5007009001045 LOOK WHO'S TALKMG(PGl3) THX 6:00 8:00 1000 lll9IEOIA TE FAlaY(PGl3) THX 6"35 8:45 10'45 l'IOODBl<IDGE B· ~ .. ,, " ·' ' TMEllEM (PG) 6 15 8.15 10 15 MINNOCENT llAN(R) 830 IU OhOIMU 15 1040 NEXT OF KIN (R) 7'00 9.30 LOOK WHO'S TAUUNG(PGl 3) 545745 1000 FATllAH a UTTl.E BOY(PGl3) 500 7 30 10 00 WORTHWW-tG (PG13) 5·45 8:00 10·15 GROSS ANATOMY (PG13) 6'15 8:30 10.35 AN INNOCENT MAN(R) 5:30 8:00 10.15 THE BEAR (PG) 5:00 71JO 91!0 10 so NEXT OF KIN (R) 51)0 P.iOi'o:C>O FF !DIATE FAlaY(PG13) 111lt1Jll •»f:»UOll» FATllAN a UTTlE BOV(PG13) (121!0 2.30) 500 7~ tOOO TMEFMULOUI MKER 90YS(R) ('2:GD 2.1~ '30 7 00 930 LOGCWH0'9 T~t3> .......... ... Carnelle. who's kno~n in town as Miss Hot Tamale because of her lust)'. ~ays. has held onl) one dream in hfe: to win the pageant. So when she reachs the cutoff age. she dies her hair a brass~. fire-engine red, and enters. Her main 1s a young woman who 1s equally plain -an endearing seamstress with the im- probable name of Popeye (Alfrr Woodard). Elam (Mary Stecn- burgen) returns to Yazoo City for tile contest to give a speech ... My Life as a Bcautv:· Her wild brother. Dclmount (Tim Robbins). ,has just bl:cn rdcascd from an insane asylum afler (lain co mmitted him for what sht' sa~ as his anu-soc1al ways. It all comes t<>Jcthcr on the run- ~ a}. Sclfi hnt"SS 1s exposed like a n ugJy boil: lo)·ality, optimism and honesty glow. fJll\H\\ They plant 'em and you pick 'em By DONNA AND ltAY OTT o..,.,,,_,.,,. ... -•• The fall harvest suson in Southern California brings wi1h it some opponunities to pick your own pumpkin from the patch. or fill )O ur own basket of apples from 1he trees. Sure, you can 10 to one of the local stands or the comer super· markri instead. but it makes for a pleasurable family outing to travel 10 the lfO"'-ers' farms and orchards and enjoy some of the rural fall scene!) along . the way. .\ YERS PUMPKIN PATCH on Faulkner Farm (Brias &. Telqraph Roads), Santa Paula. has pumpkins and squash ready for picking. at a cos1 of SS per person for all you can cam. Also availablc arc vanous kinds of decorative gourds and or· namental com, plus country crafts and a book of recipes that arc based on the farm's ~u~. pedal activ11in for luds include free rides around the pumpkin fields on Grandpa Ayers' antique tractor. ndes on haywqons pulled b' Cl)desdalc horses ($I per ptrson l. and a crafts area for pumpkin patnt· mg and decorating. The farm's hours are 10 a.m. to S·30 p.m. From Hi&hwa) 101 m Ventura, take Hiahway 126 nonh- cast 10 Brias ROid. and continuc nonh to the entrance. THE PfNERY, on Via Rancho Parkway, Escondido. has a largt" patch of ripe pumpkins. plus com fields. a Christmas uu nursery. and other produce. A tractor-drawn ha)"wagon "111 deliver you out to the largt' pumpkin field, and will gi ve you a ride bark to the Optn-.air marketplace when you're read) to pay for >our sckc· tions. Before you make 1he return mp. take a few minutes for the self· guided tour through a section of thl' pumpkm patch. Big signs point thl· wa). and offer mforma11on about the various kinds of pumpL.1ns and how they arc gro"' n. Farm hoyrs arc 9 a.m. 10 p m . ndcs clo~ about .i:JO p m To reach the Ptnef). ~L.I.' Inter- state 15 south to Via Rancho Parkway, and folio"' It C2St to ~unsr1 Drive. You can't m1s.s th1: Grra1 Pumpkin (a large. inflated balloon). at the entran<!e. WANDERING WOOO F.\R\1. 1804 Whispenng Pi nes Orne. Juhan, is one of se't:rnl appk producers 10 nonheast San 01cgn Counry. The rarm·s apple \3f1Clle<> 1ndudr Red Delicious. Golden D<'11t:1ou\. Jonathon. Mcintosh. Winl·sar. and Rome Beauty. Somr Bo!.c p('ar\ arl' also available. P1rk -,our-own hours arc Q a.m. to 5 pm on WC1!kcnds. and WCCkda)S O~ appoint· ment. The farm 1~ t\\O m1 ks ca t of town. ofT H1ghwa) 78. MEYER ORCH.\RD . .i:wo HiJhway 78. Juhan. has Red De- licious and Rome Beaut) 'ane11es that >Ou can p1d. }'ourself. or ff'te.se see GETAWAY /P~ 161 4.99 Cass./9.99 CD IH( IC(NIUCKY HfAOHUNTf•S '·c \1"' 0" Ho,toi •• Ue . 1" ~* 6:99 Cass./10. 99 CD ,,,,,,, I (( f ltl(Jk(I 6. 99 Cass./11. 99 CD HEAVYD. an.eon BIG TVME 6.99 Cass./11.99 CD BIG DADDY KA NE It's A Big O~ddy Thing ............... ~ ......... " .. 6.99 Cass.111.99 CD 6.99 Cass./10.99 CD 6.99 Cass./11.99 CD MAZE 11 <\fl 1<1"1( .t I(/\'"" Ill \ 11<1' SILKY So L 6.99 Cass.nl.99 CD 1111-. UIAKl.lt l>A"t.l.S BA'<ill 'fr' '""''' \I ,, ....... _....,.........,. ..... .. •'-"'• . --~ ..... ,.. . ...._ .. ..,...._ . . ,._,., ................ _ . ....,.... 6. 99 Cass.Ill . 99 CD #'~·~' ~'("1\~j ,.ACTICE WHAT YOU PUACH •tt•\ rHOt<I MIA! 'IOU "LUii 6.99 Cass./11 .99 CD THE PRIMITIVES -~~ Pt.ttt ~IUln • M~ ""°'~ I Cl ~ tl../ -;A\ 6.99 Cass.nl.99 CD VISIT OUR NEW STOflES FesMoft l1leftd, ~ ._.. • The Plea Al W.St Comte. West Cowone PRICES 0000 AT All 75 SOUTHPN CAllFOflNIA LOCATIONS INClUOtNG GOODY GOT2 NEW STORES! Chee~ out our new locations ot Fashion Island in Newport Beach and The Plaza at West Covina. l ........ A fN '' ht I t'f I C•noq• P1~ C..ulo• Cotti Ill••• ' ,, '··-· "'°'' B···J ~ ... ~ Ht ... •t ... 91 .. 1 s.M•.... E '"" ... cv .... .. 0ow ... , H11ftll"tf0fl .. Kii Hllftl~~ll "'411nlf• UJC.6 tAJt<I Sl l.ol>.,..... 11:191 N~I ""'' 01•>1 S-e .... JO$ flr,~tol 51 lfLt<,Nr"'t•Jfl 8"tll -Nolly-110•1\lo•t<>t,81.,f ._ • ....__ IP5Ut(!St f')1! "'""''• ·~ 0...... Ill N t.,~t.r• A.. ~ '\21 Mwnli•!\ .... t 111~ L ••• w'W 1.,1 ... ,...,_ ll'l N l••• $1 .....,... 4010 l: M•"' St II-OT I C.'>~I< n IM I fl1--tf1A ,,.,, ~I -ii C...... W ~ Aot! $ IQlll A 4t•!T>'""' S......__ !'Ill W >ndSt -..~........ l'81tW1t-811rO tr • (' • 1~.., SI _,.. 1~ [ -Ill• Biiio _. TUfS.· Tl4URS.llt .. fNA•ON. llCMt M1lnM.S AYllUlAkl AT A90ft Sl0tt£ l.OCATICM& .,._Plat DM1boc*/ Frtdey, October 27, ~ 1 11 . . DCT s M T w T F s 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 4 15 16 ·17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 2 5 26 27 28 29 30 3 1 POP Friday COACH HOUSE 33157 Cam ino Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano, presents Concrete Blonde. 8 p.m. f or ticket sales and dinner reser- vations. call 496-8930. for concert information. call 496-8927. WESTIN SOUTH COAST PLAZA 666 Anton Blvd .. Costa Mesa pres- ents Confrey Phillips with modem rcnd111o ns of Broadway Music at the Piano Tuesday through Saturday. 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. and af\er theatre reprise hour. 540-2500. THE REVERE HOUSE 900 W. First St .. Tustin. Lee Ferrell Band "Let the Good Times Ro n:· Oldies and adult rock ·n· roll tonight and Saturdny. 9 p.m. 10 1:30 a.m.: Sun- da)'. Monda) and Tuesday 8:30 p.m. to i:u o a.m. 543-9319. VILLA NOVA 3131 W. Coast Highway. Newport Beach. Pianist David Banky 8:30 p.m. to I :30 a.m. 642-7880. CROWN HOUSE RESTAURANT 32802 South Pacific Coast Highway. South Laguna. presents "Encore .. for dancing and entenainment Thur!>· da~ thro ugh Satu rday. 9 p.m. to I :30 a.m. 496-5773 or 499-2626. THE CANNERY 3010 LaFa)ette ve .. Newport Beach. presents .. Rig . ) Picture," with top 40s music from 8:30 p.m. to I a.ml tonight ?nd Saturday. 675-5777. DUKE'S NOSTALGIA NIGHT- CLUB in the Ncwporter Resort. I I 07 Jamboree Road. Newport Beach presents the aolden • of rock ·n· roll 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. nightly except Sunday and Mondar.. No cover charge. Classic bands will per- form the era's greatest hits from ''Good Goll y. Miss ·Molly," to "I Want To Hold Your Hand." 644-1700. THE WHITE HOUSE Restaurant and Tavern. 340 South Coast HiJh- way. Laguna Beach. presents hvc entertainment and dancing nightly. 494-8088. SUNSET PUB 16655 Pacific Coast Highway. Sunset Beach. offers live entertainment seven niahts a week. Tonight ano Saturday. The Regular Guys 9:30 p.m. to I :30 a.m. SJ cover chargr. 592-1926. THE RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS HOP 18774 Brookhurst, Fountain Valley. The Hop prescnt.s: Friday. .. Let the Goode Times Roll" all night with D.J. Dennis B. Goode. $4 cover: Saturday, ·~Garden Party.'' a tribute to Ricky Nelson starring G:H) Shorellc. at 8 p.ro.(S4 cover): Sunda). "The Backseat Boys" live ·50s and '60s da nce band, 9 p.m. to midnight on Wednesday at 8 p.m. {S4 cover): Closed Monday: "Still Rock1n· ... Af\er All These Years" Tuesday at 8 p.m. ($4 cover cha~): Wed nesday. "The Backseat Boys. • 8 p.m. to midnight: Thursday. Crazy Contests with MC Dermis B. Goode. 963-2366. NIGHT MOVES 5902 Warner A' e.. H un11ngton Beach. Concert mfo hne: 840-0208. Saturday COACH HOUSE 33157 Camino C;ip1.,trano. San Juan Capistrano. ;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;---.i prl'!>l'nt!> Ocborah Harry. 8 p.m. •~ night For ticket sales and din~r re~·n ;i11on!>. call 496-8930. for con- It's Uncann y /•1 flt// Jl.1111t/t1 HI lbl..rJ .i,,.c..., i-.r ..... , uti.-1 "mr' .. .. tci:•"" l>ir iv ... ., l...!•n "' rnchcJ hvr 1cr/n1u-i.rJ m1•1ult', 11~ .. ~1 tn Nt'.1J '"'"'"' '"""J ...... ,,..~,, '""•l(Uf'I ""'' k-mun ptcl 11.J.c 11 17\ • N\C•flj! now a111J ....... .• ... """' ................. l'oft'..c ........ ~ .. .. bunt 'c'\ • Ruic-numt.<-r •-"'lwn ,.,,hr•11n,: kOUp ('uul.. ,.:t ntl\ hvt J.in I In d ...... V ljl•lf .. \I\ huohni: 111•'-o It• "'""" "IUf' anJ P"'" fl.1\tlf I( drop tuul.JC'\ •ptnd ""' mulh. m•l..r -Ult' )VU u.K'J """'!!" lluur C'"Titll J<NJ:h hc1<•l" h.ik1nj!, ti•il Nlo.lllj; •1'"1\ l'l'f-t.ltht'\. •nJ nuLt' w1r tilt' u•rn " •I ti... t1,:!. ll"mf"'r.Rurr A c!qiprd 1~ blmdnl w"h pUlfl k>w·liM •l.lf:Ult nMlo.C'\ .i Wf"'l ll'f'f""f! fof t.MJ 811.J ~If JWft( pul•Ult"t cen infomlation. call 496-8927. THINK TH l LESS FAT. MORE FLAVOR . . ..,....._....._ . ....., .... __ ... ---.-·-----·--..... --..... -.--_ ............. _,.._ ....... _"" _ ......... _, .... ---.,,.. .-.....-.. --· CALENDAR Sanday COACH HOUSE 33157 Camino Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano. presents Texas. 8 p.m. For ticket sales and dinner reservations. call 496-8930. for concert information. call 496-8927. CROWN HOUSE RESTAURANT 32802 S. Pacific Coast Highway, South Laguna. presents .. Two Voices"' 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. 496-5773 or 499-2626. SALVATORE'S 500 North Brookhurst, Anaheim, presents Paul and Oscar 8:30 p.m. with top 40s music. THE CANNERY 3010 LaFayette Ave.. Newport Be,ach, San Fran- cisco-style cabaret entertainment with Lcslye McCrac vocalist and Llo)d Noland on keyboard. 5:30 to 10 p.m. 675-5777. Vlu.A NOVA Richard Fauno's piano stylings Sunday tlffouah Wednesday. Open daily 5 p.m. to 2 a.m .. 31 31 W. Coast Highway. Ncw- pon Beach 642-7880 . SUNSET PUB 16655 Pac1tic oast Highway. Sunset Beach, ofTen live entcnai nment seven ni&hts 1 ~eek. Planet 10 -Rock.in' ftqpe 3 to 7 p.m. and then Dead Men Don't Surf. classic surf music from member~ of Dick Dale's ~Tones 8 p.m. to midnight. 592-1926. Monday RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS in con- cert at 7:30 p.m. at the Righteous Brothers Hop. 18774 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley. T ickets are $20. For mo re information. call 963-2366. BLUE BEET CAFE I 07 21st Pl., Ncwpon Beach. Nick PyLow Solo Monda) and Tuesday at g p.m. 675- BEET. SUNSET PUB 16655 Pacific Coast Highway, Sunset Beach. offers II\ e entertainment seven da)'1 a "'l'Ck 9 p.m. to I a.m. S92-1926. -· \11~ ..U.lr , ... , ..... ~of .A, .. Yogurt I I e9day SUNSET PUB 166SS Paciftc o•"t Highway. SunKt Beach. offers 'e tnterta1nmcnt seven nipns at ed .. Tonight Halloween Pany with c International Reaac All Stars.: l co' er charse. S92-1926. SALVATORE'S SOO North rookhurst. Anaheim. Purt Energy 1 ·JO p.m. nightly through Satur- 3) for hst~nina and dancing lcasurc. LAGUNA CANYON BAR 6 RILL 859 t..aauna Canyon Road. 11Tcl'\ 1he danc:abk music of \phrooite. with soloist Eliza Lorenz. h) thm1st Jerry Manin at t~ kcy- every Friday and S.turda) btgin- nina at 8 p.m. featuring Don Willeford. JUL viola and Bill Nolte.-. vocalist and gu11ans1 and vanous guest artists including Mark Turn- bull. Bo" H~wk1ns and Gary Hogan No cover charge. 497-5100. VILLA NOVA pianist Carlos Or- tega performs a ancty of ea\y hMening· sclccuons and occasional Latin-flavored favorites Thursda) through Saturda> from 8:30 p.m. to I :JO a.m .. Sunday t.hrough Wednes- day from 8:30 p.m. to I :30 a.m. Richard Fauno's Jazz and Broadwa)' styhngs on the piano 31 JI West Coast H1ghwa). Newpon Beach. 641-7880. . CAFE UDO, 501 30th St.. New- pon Bcach. 675-1968. prrsents entertainment night I). Ton) Guer- Tueeclay RON'S IN LAGUNA 1464 S. Coast High" a~. Laguna Bcach: "Charly." \\Ith Kl'' in Came) on piano and Don Jad;son on bass each Tuesday. \\ nJrw~a) .and Thursday evening t~:ganning 3t 7:30. 497-487 1. CAFE LIDO 501 30th St. Ncwpon &·Jrh. Entertainment nightly 8:30 p m 10 I a.m Ronnie-Brown on h ·' board \ and v1 bcs tonight. n75-l %!1. .' Wedneeday LE ' MERIDIEN HOTEL 4500 1ar~rthur Rh d. Nl·w world-class J:lll l-lrll\I\ \1X>ll1ghtl•d weekly in the four 1'.tol) ·\tnum of the Ca fl· Flcun . I or mon· 1nformat1o n. call ·flh-l OO I. i:x1ens1on 3113. nightly. Mauncc Miller Blun Band fr3tunng Harmonica Fats tonight 8:30 p.m. 10 I a.m. 67S-2968. Tbu.nday CAFE LIDO 501 30th S1.. Ncw- pon lkal·h. prl'S4'nts Barbara Mor- rison. Jal/ 'ocahst wnh th\' Wayne Way1w Band 1on1gh1 8:.\0 p.m. to I a.m. 6 75-!%8 or 6 H -50S6 JAZZ PACIFIC n no n-profit or- g;in1L.nt1on to preSl'rVl' and cn - l'nuragl' hH' Jal/ Ol l'l'IS l'Vl'ry Thurs-- d:t) at 1 p.m, and is open to Ja11 mus1l'1ans and j:iLL buffs. For more 1nform:111on. call Dr. Charles Ruthl·rford at 4 .. ll-5819 or Bill Sco11 :II 64~-764&.. ( I .''' I ( \I Friday ST. BONAVENTUllE CHOIR Senior Choir of St. Bonaventure's C"aJhohc Church, 16400 Springdak . lfon11ngton Beach. presents Faure's Rl'qUll'm 3t 7:30 p.m. A rttCption will folio" in the pansh hall and a fr\'l' will offering will be accepted. Ttw pubhc as In\ 1t<'d. 846-33S9. Saturday "DESSERT WITH MICAH LEVY" The condul'tor of the Or- angl· County Chamber Orchestra "ill speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Jewish \ommunitv n .•nter of Central Or- angi: Couni). I.:! 181 Buaro St .. Gar- dl'n Gro\ c. Dl.'SS(.'rl and com.-c wall be ~:rn·d and Le') will dcscnh<• and dl•monstratl' mu~1c to he pla~C'd dur- ing thl' coming ~.'a!io(m. R~rva1 1on~ -~m· rl'llUl'Sll'J Call 5 \4-80 11. Ctntl·r mcmh<'fli S 7. non-members. $I Cl :mls and Harold Todd on su- phonc and flute. "Cool 0.ncin" ~'gins at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday n•t?hts. 494-191 1 or 494-4310. rero Sextet 1on1ght 9 p.m. to 1:30 T-------------______________ ....._ __________ _ rhl' pubhr ·~ In\ lll'd. CAFE LIDO 501 30th SI.. New- port Beach. prc54'nts entenamment SUNSET PUB 166SS Pacific Coasr Highway. Sunset 8e8ch. offers h\C rntertatnmcnt seven nja,htS a ''eek 9 p.m. t_? I a.m. S92-1926. TbundaJ SUNSET PUB 166SS Pacific ( oa~t Highway, Suntet Beach, live cntcnainmcnt thl'OUlh Saturday. 9 p.m. to I a.m. S92-r926. J \// OYSTERS 2SIS E. Coast Hi&h· 14ay. Corona dcl Mar, Dr. An Davis ~ to 11 p.m . tonipt and Saturday. unday 2 to S p.m. and Thundays no to 10:30 p.m. 67S-741 I. SCOTT'S SEAPOOD OIULL A BAR 3300 Bris&ol at Anton, Costa \tesa. features fine jazz cnle:r\ain- rncnt Wednelday thf'OUlh Friday 14 llh Jon Ciat'Mr, jazz pianist. S:JO o 10 p.m. No minimum or cover charge. valet put.ias. Jazz lunch- eons W11b Joo Garner ·Jazz Trio unday. 12 noon to 4 p.m. Rcscr- 'allons sugesud. 979-2400. JUST LI&& PD&Y'li 27782 Vista dcl Laso. Miuion Viejo, con- temporary pop, ~ and jazz music nightly 8 p.m . to midnipt and noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. CI09ed on Monday. Dinner. For raer- vat1ons. call 472-4363. C'!'.ST LA VIE ...,.AUllANT. 373 Pacific Co..a Hitllway. L.aauna Beach. on the Main lada.1Jvc jazz a.m. SJ cover charge. Saturday CAFE UDO 50:! 30lh 1 • New- pon Beach. 675-1968. presents Barbara Morrison. 'ocahst. featur- ing the Metros tonight. 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. SaDclay Chicbn Fried Sttalt wch Clftmy country P"Y fwty,..,.,. -~ C-.. Mlf 673-<»10 GINO'S ON THE HILL 428 E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa. Jam session t"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil wit~. G ino's Jau Troupc. 3:30 10 7:30 p.m. Reservauons and infor- mation on live entcnainment 7 days a week, 650-1750. YOUNq AMERICANS DINNER THEATRE Peters Landing. 16400 Pacific Coast Highway. Ste. 120, Huntington Beach, Jazz cnSt'mblc Joyspring. performs thrte shows every Sunday 10:30 a.m .. 12: 15 p.m. and 2 p.m. Cost 1s Sll .95 with brunch or $7.50 for the concert a.lone. space permitting. _ Reser- vations arc sugcstcd. 840-SHOW. CANYON BAil AND GRILL 859 La1una Can)'on Road. Laguna Beach, Ben Milhken's Dme Jazz AllStars each Sunday from 4 to 1 p.m. 49+1911. CAFE UDO 501 30lh St .. New- port Beach. Wayne Wayne Band featuring Melvin Davis. Tom Zink .. Gary W1na and Bob Moore 8:30 p.m . to I a.m. 675·2968. lloadaJ CAFE UDO. 501 30lh St.. New- pon Bcach. Entertainment nightly 8:~0 p.m.·I a.m. Wayne Wayne Band with vocalist Barbara Mor- nson this cvcnin&. 67S-2968. ANNOUNCING •.. Now Serving SllllY m ... •UIFIST HUEVOS .................. '1JI :~~ROS ........... '1 41 ~~g':~gs .............. ' 149 MACHACA ............... $ 1 II ~~~f .................... •2·~ Served w/Tortillas. "9frled &Huls & Fruit ....... 1 .... 141-1 1712Pleoenlle COSTA•SA HOPE THAT YOU WILL JOIN US SOONI LUNCH* DINNER* MID-DAY BUFFET FULL BAA AVAILABLE* CHN1PANGE BRUNCH• TAKE-OUl cn1NA-W~SZ #2 I .. HARIOR BLVD (714)545-1311 COITAIESA Now Servan~ • 1'\t:"W ~ 1t ·1111 • (l;i,,,l. r .1\\ >rl{l". ( ')(. t·an-Pat1u D11l lll,C • JJpurn1,.: I ~n n.1111 ( li.11hl11u \'1:11111"'1,.:nt· preaenta •12 PRICE DINNERS Monday thru Thursday 4:30-6:30 Twilight Dinners incluCles entire Menu (except Shellfish) FILET MIGNON HALIBUT $17.95 $15.95 112 PRICE! •12 PRICE! All Twilight Dinners Fe.ture ReguYr Portions 675-0474 (\I I '\IJ\H C ft'\ 11'\I I It Sunday PACIFIC CHORALE under the direct~on of John Alexander. opens the 1989-90 Grand Experience season with Missa So lemnis by , Ekcthoven toniltht at 7:30 p.m. in 51.·gcrstrom Hall. Orange County Performing Ans Center. Single ticket prices arc $1 2.50 to $35. Call 5..i:!-1790. . CHRIST COLLEGE IRVINE CHOIR AND-CHORALE presents .. A Festival of Hymns.. in the CCI Center. Thomas H. Krause directs the choir and chorale. Admission is free and the public is invited. Reser- ' atio ns arc recommended and may be made b)• calling 854-8002. ex- tension 314. A free will offering .will be taken. Christ College Irvine is lcx:atcd at I 530 Concordia in the Turtle Rock area. - Weclne9Clay PACIFIC SYMPHONY OR· CHESTRA CLASSICS SERIES Kazimien Kord. conductor and Sondra Gelb. mezzo-soprano. lead thl' Pacific Symphony Orchestra to- night and Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Orange <?ount)' Performing Arts Center. A lecture will take place one hour before th'e concert. Prices range from S9 to S52. Tluanday FREE PUBLIC RECITAL Pianist Raymond Jones will be featured in a free public recital at Orange Coast College today. The recital begins at noon in OCC s Music Room 101. The recital will include works by ------------------------~~------------. Mozart. Bttthoven and Chopin. ' BAU.ET PACI.FICA bcains its 1989-90 children ·s series with a pro- gram highlighting the Halloween season today and Sunday with two performances at I :30 and 3:30 p.m. each day at the Festival Forum Thea'trc. 650 Laguna Canyo n Road. Laguna Beach. Free parkinJ is avail· able. ..Ghouls and Goblins.. and .. Puss in Boots .. will be performed. Tickets arr priced at $7 for adults, $5 for children. Holiday Spectacular • Broiled Lobster Tail with Baby Beef $ ~h~~~~ .................. 12.95 CALIFORNIA DINING AT ITS FINEST! ,,... .. ~n. .... ... ..... ....... .. ... ..... ......, .... ., ...... . .............................. NEWPORT BEACH 714144 .. 37 FASHION ISLAND , .................... , • Broiled Lobster Tail accompanied by our Broiled Chicken "SHORE & OFFSHORE t~~~~ Shnmp SJ4.I& Gar he Butter ........... . SPECIAL" Broiled Lobster Tail combined with a tender U.S. Choice' Rib $ J 2 95 Eye Steak. • DINNERS INCLUDE: oo~r pld Fri. 10/27 lhru 1112 Lctrge baked potato -served with chives, sour creom and butter. a<XlQITlp.snied by your choice of our famous cl4m chowder ot' saldd . .• TiiTLOia $ 95 U1:30am -2pm Only) . 5 Aleo IDCl ... I day.._. -Mn1Dg epeda1 tW 2 pm lnriled ......_ lall accawp11W t., lettadM la a crecmr cMcldar ~--. .. CGllWOie, AJ.o ate .. II.~ t., ..... ~ ........... cmd 'a OWD garlic 1nac1. ("In Gaelic/It's a Real Great lrisb Deal") .DelcmeF'• I G LOCATIONS: NEWPORT BEACH •DANA POINT • LAGUNA HILLS •RANCHO CALIFORNIA , •GARDEN GROVE daaad ..._.. oa11 0'\ STER BAR •ANAHEIM HILLS • AllAllfJN lctaM • a..._,,, U\'\( I Friday BELLA LEWITZKY DANCE COMPANY and the Master Chorale of Oranae County join forces to present Stravinsky·s Symphony of Psalms tonight at 8 p.m. at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. The Pacific Symphony Or· chestra also joins the Master Chorale for a second work. Orlfs Carmina Burana. Ticketss range in pnce from S 12.SO to S35. For ticket information. call the OCPAC box office. 556-ARTS. THE RESTAURANT AT CAMERON COURT · 2 Hutton Centre Dr .. Santa Ana presents mu· sical stylings of Silver Lining 7 p.m. to m idnight Tuesday throuah Satur· day. The group performs renditions of Top 40 oldies and soft wck for listening and dancing. 540-8615. Satarday LONDANCE/FRED AST AIRE STUDIOS 3625 W. MacArthur. Suite 308. Santa Ana. Dance for couples or singles. fir5t Saturday and third Sunday each mo nth. 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Admission SS. includes refresh· mcnts. Ballroom, Latin dancing. Call 850-0676 for more information. Sanday TURTLE ROCK COMMUNITY PARI I Sunnyhill. Irvine. Sunday afternoon dances 3 to 6 p.m. with High Society Dance Banet Free dance l~ns 2 10 3 p.m. by Mike Vaillancoun. Admission is S6 per person. For more information, call Mickie McClure, 546-3894. LAGUNA FotiDANCERS en· courage-all who are interested in prcscrvina our ethnic~ heritaac 10 join them twice weekly, Sunday at 7 p.m. and Wednesday at 8 p.m .. at Legion Hall Community Center. 384 Legion St. Laguna Beach. Pannen are not necessary. Casual dress with comfonablc shoes is sugested. Donation S2. 494-3302 or 533-8667. Newport's Finest Waterfront Dining! • Fresh Local & Hawaiian Seafood •Award Winn in~ Veal. Lamh & Prime Rih • Extensive Wine List & Cocktails R ESTAU R A "-1 503 E. Edgewater (adjacent to thr BalbcK1 Peninsula ferry landing) Reservations: 675-2373 \\\!·re happy to accommodate >'Our group. reception. banquet or meeting. * Cocka.lla * Troplc•I Drinks * (1J4J614Mla ...... c ............. ,. .... " (7J4J#•NN IJM .. C.... .... e I ES 2 ·-·· CIAZYHORSE STEAIBOUSE C'uuntry dining with cl ... ! Authen- llt \\l' tern decor rett•ur•nt and !llll11un, featuring prime rib, fresh ~eafood . and their famous p.n ~autf'ed steaks, Lunch: Mond•y- Fr1daL dinner reservations iu-ran· tet>d. Dancing and live music in the ,,.akw•n Dyer Roed E~it/Newport F"\ Santa Ana. 549-1512. TH P. CA~St;RY Thi~ htsturic waterfront landmark Ill Newpvrt 's Cannery Village h•uturing fresh local eufood and 1:a,tl'rn beef. CoruiltentJy good ser- \ u l', upen for lun,h, dinner. Sunday Hrunrh and Ctuampqne Harbor ('ru1~ei.. Entert.inment nightl1y. F nJ•"· the lounge food ga · !l:'r~ · superb clam chowder! 3010 l.JIJ) ette. 675-5777. \E\\ PORT LANDING '"\' 11..rt Landing Reti.uNnt on tlw Hnlh(\a PtninsuJa offers a ro· rnJnttl' '4 aterfrunl setting. Special- t tt'' rndude fresh swordfish. H ,1\1 utliln i.eafood favorites, prime rrh. 11h.1looe, lamb and veal. Garden tn·-h -•ilads, appetizers and sand - \1t1 hh. Extensive wine list, special- '\ 1frink.., and codctail11. Live enter- 1111nml:'nt. AE, MC, V. D.C. Located al .·,m K Edgewater (adjacent to H.tlhi•a Ferry). Reservations rec- 11mmended. 675-2373. Parking 111.11l.1hle. O\'STEIS fht• freshn t and moet innovative st>11tood and oak criJled 1peciaJty 1tc•mo; ran be found at Oysters in ( 'urona del Mar. QuicltJy becoming a h11 .11lv {>OPWar hot spot, Ovstert 11pened an March of 1989 Ucl fea- turt•, an O) ter bar, oak '"· ·u freah 'e11l1"1d & cocktaila. Lunch, di;.ner, h_app} hour. Loe.led at 2516 E. < 1111•1 Hwy. 675-7411 for reter· \dl111n Rf.l'RES E. LU rhe best ...rood in town it •till on the boet:Not jua. t for1lolidayrand ~periaJ OCCMiom. Reuben £. Lee serves delicious tteaU. IMfood Ir 1>«1alties every njpl ol the week. Lunch, brunch. diDDer. Buquet. for up LO 400. W•dclinp, ~ ret'eptiona, etc. In Newport e!:,. 151 E.Cout Hwy.,Newport . 6i5-5790. T u: 0.' THE WHALE E:1.1wnen« a step back into time to .i plal·e where you can dine al your ulln le1 ure. Enjo the romance of l•ld :\ewport with a p.noramic bay. view. Excite your senses with their sensational seafood and tradit111nal favorites. Breakfast 7:00 a.m Mon livery .lean, the mana1ter. will be happ>" Ill a~s1<.t you with your next meeting 11r ~roup catered event. Lo<a ted at 4 IO E. 17th St .. Costa Me,a, 646 -; I :ti). Open even days a week. Sun-Thur 11:30-12:00. Fri and Sat 11 ::m. I :00. CIOWN ROUSE day -Ji'riday, Dinner 4.00 11 no seven}light.s. Saturday and Sundav Brunch 7:00-4:00. Oyster R11r F'ri. day. Saturday and Sunday. Ha n quet facilities up lo 500. 400 Main Street. Balboa. 673-4633. CHINUE Thia. lovely Continental restaurant situated at the corner of PC H and Crown Valley Pkwy. has been a KC?Urm~t: favorite ~or 18 ye~rs nuw. Fme dmmg, rockta1ls. dancing, live erftertainment. uy ter bar. happy hour, banquet facilities, limo er. vice, exten ive wine list. 32802 Pa- cific Coas t Hwy., South Laguna Niguel. 499-2626. ZVBIES DANNY K'S Pure and simp le, just like mother's love! They serve 10 oi. lobster tails. (ilet mignon, prime rib, ribs and chicken at the moet reasonable pricee in Coata Mesa. These din· nen terved on special nighta·open 7 nifhta. Generously poured low priG-e drink.a. Our customers have been coming back since 1970. Located •t 1712 Placentia in Costa Mesa near 17th Street. Call ~8091or 631 -9803. Meet Danny Kuo. 8 year General Manager of COllta Meta's Mandarin Courment and 4 year Partner/General Manqer of China Town in Irvine. You ~ now enjoy Danny K'a ezciting and contemporary ChjoeM cuisine in an equally exciting and contempory set- ting in Corona del Mar! Danny K'a is open for lunch and dinner daily. ~r & wine list. Caterini. 3060 E. Coast Hwy. Call 721 -9000 for take out re.er- vationa or information. ' IJVIEIA ZUBIES GICOEO CAGE LOTUS Relax to l(raciuus servit:e in an elegant. intimate atmosphere. Ex- pertly prepared continental di hes by Chef Richard Bergner. since 1970. This award winning res· t•urant also offers an extensive wine list, and excels in tableside preparation and nambe . Open fo r lunch 11 :30 -3 p.m .. dinner from 5 ~.m. Excellent banquet facilities. Closed 'und-.y and holiday . 3333 S. Bristol, Costa Mesa. 5-10-3840. Right next d09r to Zuhtc•, All nttr pizza are lar11e 16", An\ wmh111.1 tion, aJI topping~. at :.;, !l;, tSt\ !J;, t.alle out I. Wide srret>n plu .. '\ T \", &amK & videos F'ull (\l('ktatl R11r Open 7 days. Lunrh & l>inner 1714 Placentia, (\~ta \te-.a ITAUAN Enter the Orient and e1perience the euellence of Mandarin and S7.t'<'hwan t'Ui ine. Authentic Chi- ne e di hes espttially prepared by a team of master t'hefs. Enjoy fine Chinese dining as well as excellent wine Ii t and full bar. Localed in the Harbor Center at Harbor & Wilson an Costa Me111. 545-3331. FRENCH LE MIDI llEITOLINO'S IESTAl'RANT Bertolino's, under the buritund\0 canopy in Fountain \'alley 1!! the best kept suret in Oranl(e Countv. Bertolino's . serves nld-tashioned style Italian dinner!I. Bertt1lino's has the best piua in Californ111, made with real chee.'le. olive oil and zesty sauce. BertCllino's is located at 18().& I M&Jnolia, Fountain Valley. reser vataons SUfitested. 963-2730. MANDA&JN GOURMET This is a true "sleeper .. Sume 58) it's avant icarde. other!! that it'~ cluaic. All agree that Swiss Chet Walter Ruttiman's cuis inr provencale is of an innovatjve and exquiaitely executed aut.hentirity An enrhanting countr)· French in terior and an Old World hospitiali ty rarely found these dayi. fulfill the expectations evoked by the outstanding cui ing. Open for din ner and cocktails seven nighti.. Catering available. 3421 Vie Lido, Newport Beach, 675-490-t \'ILLA NO \'A If you_ l\we ~~inese food, you're sure to enJO)' danang here as Mandarin Gourmet prom1~s truly authentic Chinese food . Mandarin Gourmet has been the recipient or the Gold Award of Excellence every year for the past nine consecutive years. As one of Coastal Orange County's most popular Chinese restaurant, reservatfons are suggeated. Open for LuM h. Dinner. Take Out, Catering, Cocktaila. Located at 1500 Harbor at Adams an Ccista Mesa. 540-1937. AMERICAN HOUGUE BAllMICHAEL'S A beautiful ba\• view creatr:-1 the romantir sett in~ that ha~ made the .Villa Nc1Va a "special krnd of plot'e .. for over 50 years. 'uperb ruisine from CeotraJ and :-.:orthe-rn ltah· 1Ved m ~ in restaurants that put you ID sleep and COit a small fortme? CONT'N•NTAL Well then jOin tile PARTY at Hope's • and e:qia ll!llCe a oat Saloon at- 808 RUINS ~where clnlig plla a lrnile on face. Owr 2 domi delicba food :ved m-Old-Wttrld ~rnr. &- ten ive wine hst. Omner n111ht I) Piano bar. Full menu ttl 1110 ii m :1 131 West Coast H11i?h"a'. :"t>ll · port Beach. 6-12· ";&!(I 111£.N·ED'S PIZZA Loc&Jl• owned and oJlt'rated, :'-1e·n· Ed'a Pizza Parlor ha~ been !-en an~ quaJity piua and fnencll:-~ernre for 27 vears. Our thm crust pin.a with six real cheeses and fresh top · pirtas i a pizza lover' deh!(ht. Me n•Ed's -also offers dellcioui. dt>li sandwiches. salad and . fr~ de· ineTn aliSOlute e e((aJl.t'e -at_l,...l __ z...._-.a·--... ~ ~~' ~:-m-and 8\\ard-winnin!( restaurail't. Famou.'i .. w.u ~--. ulb" dli tor 1nnovat1\e cuisi nl'. Starters in-our f.amous 11tlb. ~ are cl ud l' ov" t e ri-11 n t he ha If s he II. a"'900le. Daily lll'lch specials are a i.a h1mi ·a n'd 11ravlax. Fresh eafood real bona& Dimer lmtil 9 p.m. tbm ~ from around the wo rld. eastern fed l1l1l down tile tilbls am1 t\811 up the H~al. m.U"<'ovv duck breast and mllic for~ on OW' sawdult Door. ct>rt1l1ed prnne Angu beef. Holue's m'Wll tI.e fft!lt liqucr. *aft. Elahorale Wllll' 11 t. Open seven and"boWed beer at low prices. S.tellile da" a week. I.ate ni" ht piano bar. lV. dar1S, ~ Ii =..:u .. ---.. •' " u...-.. Qom 111'.-a.m . 0 ;"'112 Private din111~ rooms. Reservat il>n .._ weekmds. ·-Int rerommended. MC. \', AX. CB, D. p.m. Call ~3f78 fer °"" :n Fa hion I land. Ntwport Bearh. ~or~p"OUpparty.1976 7 14/&i4·2U:~u. .-. .. .-. lltYd., Oii Mela. J'/ I// c-t..•••I ... &0·111.N 14.76-N.96 M.60-110.60 "-SS.00 &.-GO-lcOO • ·~satJ:-4 111.111 '16..N N.00 110.IO e..w.•t .... • A-.rie .. ,_ .... ,_ .... t ll..M , ... 11.11 ·~•1:00 • • ... , ... llt.M·l19.M 14.NM.M t 11.7M14.Ta ........ • .... u ,,.. ... l.00 N ......... lhlW•1• ..... 1:00 s. ..... * r--. , ... 111.60 * • ...... r ...... 11 ~"-HelW•1• ~-,,_..,u ~llfJ .,., ... * Al•-1• A l•Hrt• ..... ,. ...... ... _ .... ..._ .. * ....... ............ ..... , .... * ...... "-"""• t L ...... N • ,_.ll. * * ......... ~ SAIL LOPT • ail Loft Bar & G"rill features ocean view dining with the emphasi on fresh seafood. Oyster bar. live entertainment nightly in the bar area. Open for dinner nightly from 5 p.m. Weekend hours from 10:30 a.m. Fabulous Sunday Brunch. Located at 400 P.C H. in La~una Be.ch. MEXICAN Ml CASA Their food i:. like a trip "' Mex1c11! Hospitality gues hand 10 hand wath their motto, "Mi Ca a es Su Casa," or my hou e is yc.iur house. Estab lished since 1972, it's "" ~ecrl't friends enjoy dining here. Open daily lrorn 11 a.m. for Lunch, Din· ner and Cocktails. Entertainment Wed.-·un. n ights an tht> Burro Room. ~ East I i 1h Street. Custa Mesa.. 645-7626. ONEOFAKJND GINO'S ON THE HILL Alm06t a Cosu Mesa landmark where friends and memories met't. Gino's isn't an Italian Restaurant, but a restaurant beini run by a local Italian. Gino's is a locally _popular pol for Hve ent.ertainment , nights a week. Lunch is served dailv from 11 :30 and breakfast is a pecial on Saturday and Sunday morning Din- ner is a definite treat at Gino's. where the menu boasts mam· !Lalian items as well as a wide \•anety of steaks. fresh seafoods, pasta di.s hes. Mexiran Specialties and Chers S~ials; and just as important is the friendly hospitality of thl' staff at Gino's making you fee l right at • home. Located at 428 E. 17th Street in Costa Mesa. Call 650-17[,() for reservations. directions or infor- mation. SPECIALTY CHJCAGO .JOE'S Rel.ax and enjoy an afternoon or evening in the turn-tif·the-centun etlicqo style atmoJJ)1fel'rlrt" Nii cago Joe's Restaurant. Whether you choose from their del('('table menu of entr~ of bttf. lamb. chicken. seafood. burgers, ~ta or salads. you'll enjoy an outslandmg meal "'ilh service beyond compare. Open for Lun ch 11 -:\ Mon-Fn. Dinner 4:30-10:00 Sun· T hur.., itnd 'till l 1 Fri & 'at Q, 1ers & cocktail bar mt>nu from ·11 da1h· "Meet me at Chic91to .J.oe" •. " l i N. Main a MacArthur an lrvinf'. 261 -JOES~ Re.en·at ion~ sug aeated. ..,I * ...... * * "''"*' • ., ..• * • • * u, .... * u ...... * --- Dllf PllCDU1•1a111 ..... ~.,. --•• • / · · GETAWAY . is open frOm 10 a.m. to S p.m. ffrom p-1 1 . In downtown Julian, y~u·u find and specialty items such as apple wine, apple blossom honey, and apple pasta noodles. I • there, take Hiahway 78 10 Julian. San GorJonio. At this orchard, you APPLE CllEEK ORCHARD. can pick your own Winesap apples. 1221 S Oak Glen Road, Yucais-. is and, if you want. you can also press located in the heart of the Oak Glen your own cider, or make your own apple district, on the slope of Mt. candy-coated apples. •• -.-several restaurantf offenna hot already-picked apples available at apple pie, and stores selling fresh the farm's roadside stand. The stand apple Juice, cider, jams and jellies To reach Julia~ drive south on Interstate S to uceanside. From Distinctive ~ ...... ~~ ...... \)11111y-1 & Conhnj!ntalP ~,.,_,A f'·"-~~~~f~ f ven~ng aut • Cqcktails In the ~ from 4 p.m. ! Oinilg Room from 5 p.m. • Feahwe I m,,j menJ in the lol.nge, patio& bar • Entertainment Ttu9day ttvu Saturday .. L ......... ..,. ............ ,. f'!IMK W.Hli'JOJlS DELIVERED PREEI •In °"" §mdal Electric Oven'!-· ,lZZA • fAN~ • SAl.AO • llf.ER • WINt. S.rvlllf QMli•v lot J7 y,.,. the cf}r1 cd i te rranea fl. 'Room A ,Ille oi-. hper-lclf LMndl. Ollw. Of~ ~-9rurlctl. CM tor,.._ w.eioM 11Hll33-2710 LUNCH SERVED 'TIL DINNER SERVED 'TIL 9:00 P.M . . 2:.10 P.M. I ' Teriyalti Flame Broiled Chklen *Steak* Fis" a O.ipa · *Awesome ~lb. U.eaehiiiwen -OVEll 2 IJOZEIV DELICIOf.IS FOOD ITEMS - Dinr. i11 • e"'-k S.,_,, ••....,,,.~re *Superior Libelion8 *Drafl alld Bottled .Heer *O.neing on our S•wda~I Floor *Group Partin *Satellite TV *Mond•y .... ·, Night Football Speeiala Open 11 :30 •·•· W.ekaya/2 p.m. Weekeftd1 1976 Newport Bl•d. Coata Mesa 645-3678 DOIATE11· ITALIAN ' I FAMILY RESTAURANT~ DINE IN OR TAKE OUT FEATURING: •-n. ........... T-" C\lJ. R>R TAKE OUT (714) 6314774 lla'V F..,.•C-.._ ...... ..... ..._. ............. <-... "' HOUIS: S..·n.n. II UL • It .... • Ftl..&ll. 11 UL • 11 ~ nls Year's Only Gold Award' Wlnnlq ladlu Restaarut -1-