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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-15 - Orange Coast Pilot~HURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1988 25 CENTS Fugitive r&pist found in ~-~rid&) Says he thought mistrial was declared In Mesa attack since batl was returned By JONATHAN VOLD.£ °' ........... Bruce. Maynard Everett had the aood life in Aorida .. He was married. He owned a condominium in the seaside com-munity of Deerfield Beach. He ran his Secretary of State George Shultz says the State Department would talk to Palestinian Libera- tion Organization./ M own businessdesianinaand installina custom stereo systems. He played in his Christian church band. At the aae of 31, hehad itall. But he had one other thina, one he a~ntly hid from his family and friends in Aorida. In 1982. he was convicted of an armed rape in Costa. • Mesa. Authorities say Everett fled the state before he wu'sentenced for the crime, in which he held a youna woman at aunpoint and tbreatc~ to kill her. He was free on SS0,000 bond when he was convicted in febuary 1982. But Everett reportedly told Costa Mesa authorities this week the bail money was returned to his parents, and he thought a mistrial was de· clared in his case. Everett's arraianment today in Superior Court in Newport Beach was postponed. His six-year fli&ht from justice ended in an unlikely way. Costa Mesa Police Detective Paul CappucciUi said. Cappuccilli said Everett's wife had some work done on her car, about $900 worth. But she was unhappy with the mechanic's work and bickered with him about the job. EventuaJly, Cappuccilli said, she ordered a.ato~payment on the check. ....................... .. which wu imprinted with her name and her husbend's. The mechanic turned the check over to the local police ~ment, and officen there invcsupted the names on the check -both names. Evei:ett was arresled on the outstandina warrant in September. He fou&bt extradiction but eventually was orclercd to return to Costa Mesa. When he did Tuesday niabt. he was escorted by Cappuccilli and Costa Mesa Detecuve Sam Zuorski. Cappuccilli said he did not for-.. mally interview Everett on the fliaht from Florida, but the detective said his pnsoner insisted it was au a m1sunderstandina. "He said be didn't think he did anythina wrona." Cappoccilli said.· "tfr said the bond was returned to his father and he thoqbt it was OK." lo addition to the sentence for tbe rape conviction. be faces additional .... charges of falling to appear in 1982. authorities said. And this time, he's beina held without bail. Cappuccilli said. Teen upbeat despite near loss of hand Surgery on hand shouldn't impair athletic pursuits recently purchased home in N~r\ Beach. The power miter saw he was = to cut a piece of door moldina sli and shced off the Hand from JUSt below the thumb to the bue joint of the httJe fmaer. By IRIS YOKOI He was airlifted to the medical · center in Onqe net underwtnt °' .. ...,,..... about 11 boun d microluf'ICf)' Talk to Jason Pinches for just a few conducted by a team of SWJIL'OM led minutes and you come to the con-by rcplantation pionttT Dr. Bruce clusion that "peat" and ··aocxt" are Achaucr. The doctors reattached all · his favorite adjectives. of Jason's hand ell.ocpt his t.dly The IS-year-old seems t~ bubble dam..,cl litlle fineer. The youth over with positive attitude. despi&e shoula reco~ 90 pen:ent uae after a the fact that just days aao the athletic year of therapy, ~predict. teen almost lost his left hand. "It's like a bit numb llDd, .. Jason "They did a great job," he saici _sai.d.:'UsenCW'd;it'sallwra"'*'ul> W~esday or the team of plastic I can•t feel anytbina except when 1t surgeons that reattached his severed itches, which is a good si&n." band. "I feel really &ood." Hesaidhedoesn'tremembermuch Jason is in such good shape about the accident. eiu:ept that his left mentally and physic.ally that he may hand "was there, and then it wun't be dischar&ed from UCI Medical there. Ccn&er by Friday, h11 family said. .. I still have thouptsabout lookina Juon Pl.Deb• ezplalu Ida band lnJmy to Illa coaatn. Bill lllller of Newport Beacb. The Irvine teen tevered his band at 1t when it wasn't there, but it's Saturday while helpina his fathCT do noth1n& l can't handle." he added. consltUCllon work at the family's (P'leue-TSU/ A2) 101hopping dlys to Chriltma Indez Bulletin Board Business Claaaifled Comics Croaaword Death notices EntertaJnment Opinion People A7 A9-10 86-8 HBsuperlntendent hltwlth boycott Public notices Sports Weather A12 87 86 85 A13 A11 a ... 6 81-4 A2 By ROBERT BARUR °' .............. Disgruntled teachers boycotted a meeting called this week by Super- intendent Diana Peters to smooth over bitter feelings that have boiled over in the Huntington Beach City School District. . Similar teacher boycotts also were reported at Dwyer and Kettler schools in the elementary school district Sheriff's liaison with press likes to keep in touch BJ BOB VAN EYKEN °' .............. Wh~ Dick Olson first took the plunge into law enforcement, he just wanted to work on the water. ••1t was 1968 and I was lookinaaround tryina to decide what I was aoina to do, and I bad a aood friend who sugested that I apply for the Harbor Patrol," said Of son, now a lieutenant in ctwwe o( public information for the Ora nee County Sheriffs Department. Olson, a Costa Mesa resident, was selected as one of six recruits ftomamona,.30applicantsand remained with the Harbor Patrol for the next 11 years. ID &he meantime, the Harbor Patrol was detached from the county's Harbon Be8ches and Parks District in 197' and joined with tbe Sberill'1 Oepatunent. So Olson became a Sheriffs deputy not so mucb bycboiceu by me.,. But Olson mWtt never hive stepped onto a Harbor Patrol cruiser in tbe first place if another venture Rlatcd to boatina had worked out better . .. WbenlJOtoutoftheAtmyin 19S9,a~ friend of mine, a buntinaand fflhina buddy, oflieied me ajob in Huntinaton Be8ch," aid Olton. "Hi1dlld wuan i::s;:ndmtoil producer and he h8d come down to take over the bulinaa. e were IMkiqa blended outboard motor fuel, and it wua ral IOC>d product. I wu 1n sales and procluction. It went Rally wen until the ~oil companies saw how MU it wu sellina. They aot into it and we were buic:ally bced out of bulinesa.'' After seven yean with the Harbor Patrol, Olson Wal promoted to ~t andfivencommand olO..,. Point Harbor. Tbat uupment, he said. ltill evokes fond memories. ••nat'1Dl'obablyoneofthe belt ...-nt'1joburound becaUle it'• such a divenifted operation, .. he said. .. You've IOC bodl-and land patrols, and you neveraet bored becaUle you never know what'•eoina to ~n. You could Kave a plane crash. a sinkina boat. or M>meOne talli•ofl'a diff." There wu also another~ of the job tbat parallels in IOIDe ways bis ~t ~ioa .. tbtSberift'• Depmunent'11Mia public liailOa. "EveryTWndn I wouldWllkarondudlCMIClt._.witlt~ oneoltbe aautaat the Mrbor." be said. "l'Mtdirect l*bticCOIM8CI ~reall£.mponan~ I felt. inpininatbecoopaatioDdlat if•critic:al aa llwea oemnL Al it tunedCMll. OlloD IUdeacareerolworti111directJJ willa =. Wbell lllleft tbewawia 1979, it was to tab .. .,..,_ rep.rd•• coali illrlllfy drier beat. witll lbe Sllelifl"1 Dljllnment'IP111Gaael ....__ (flnn -UAllm/M) • • All 22 Hawes School teachers, rankled by what they view as a miniscule pay raise and harboring anJCr over . the transfer of their pnncipal last year, vanished Tuesday before Peters showed up for the hoped-for conciliatory meeting in the teacher's lounge. Instead: the teachers scaled a letter and askco Principal Marie Smith to hand it to Peters when she arrived. Teachers. who didn't wish to be identified, said Petcn has not listened to their concerns and that they perhaps could aet their point across better in a wntten form of com- munication. "The climate in our district has· become oppressive under your lead- ership," the letter to Peters stated. "Some of us have worked together for close to 30 years. In the last three years we have undergone an un- precedented downward tttnd in our distnct, which we feel 1s a reflecuon of your leadership. · .. We have bctn very concerned · about your involvement in nego- tiations. You have put )OUr energies into win-lose strategies in a battle for power . .You have pitted parents and administrators against teachers by forcing each to choose sides." Peters declined to comment on the letter or the boycott. "My staff and I are tr') mg to work with everyone m the interest of the children, and we need to move on." she said. ··1 shouldn't make public comments." Teachers blame Peters and board members for receiving a 2 percent raise last year. the lowest in Orange County, they sa1d. About 9S pcrocnt of the teachers staged a one-day protest walkout last May. (Pl--eee BOTOOTT I A2) '• •. -,. 0rtnge C09M DAllY PILOT/ Thurlday. Deoeifnb« 15. 1111 Navy to re-evaluate pol icy for medical ref use disposal "tJ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Navy policies for offshore durnpins of medical waste$ are beina ie-evahaaced and a total ben on the ocean disposal of syrinaes, drup and other medical refuse is beina considered, the Navy •id. ., In a letter to Sen, Pete Wilson~j riCalif., Navy Secrefiry William L iJI said he shares the tenator's .~noem about medical waste washing ashore in Southern California. Strict ,,.olicie1 were implemented in Octo- Aler. he said. b1 .. This policy bans disposal of medical waste at sea except under ~ ., '"LIAISON ••• homA l "'• But Olson said he didn't find it dry ''all. "It's a totally intemting assign- , ment," he said. "There's probably nowhere you can go in a department iwhere you can IClrn more about the 'total operation. You're i-nvolved with 'jJI binng. recruiting. and also with all 'mtemal investigations." •·· Investigating possible misconduct 'bY one's colleagues and banding out ··disciplinary action mi&bt be a bit ouchy for some people. but Olson :s.id he was never bothered by it. · "A lot of people ask, 'What do you tllink when you have to discipline ·your own employees?' "he said. ''But "the reason it never bothered me is it's •basically a very fair system. I never Jfelt that anyone was dealt with i"qnfairly. And to this day, I've nev~r 'liad anyone tell me that I wasn't their friend any more because of some _ffisciolinary action." · While working in personnel, Olson ~Was _promoted to lieuteoanL He remained as head of the personnel bure1u until 1984, when Sheriff Brad pates asked him to take over the :Position of public information of- '1icer. -His new job, he said, reinforced for .him the importance of pcnon-to-·1~n contact. utenuatina c1rcumsta~" Ball said. "Medical wastes disooeed of at tea by surface ships must &e ~ pee~. sterilized ~and) re nepllvely buoyant .. .' Wilson said Wednesday that Inci- dents of medic-al w111.e wuhlna ashore in San Die&o and' Otanae counties were isoblted cues of care- lessnesa. "In one instance, it wasdetcnnined that a bottle of prescription dl}IP had been improperly disposed of an the aeneraJ truh. In another instance. a first aid baa fell overboard." The senator, in a statement from Wuhinston O.C.: praised the Navy decision to ~v1lua1e its policy for disposi111 of medical waste at tea. Jn Slnta Monaca on ·1 uetday, 1 Navy off'.cer conceded that penonnel could have violated military policy by dum_pina medical wuta at tea. 8 ut CmcJr. Ron Wildermuth, com· mander of the Sin Dieao N1val Bue, told a California State Landi Com· mission panel that Navy ships in peacetime routinely brina infeCtious medical wastes ashore for disposal. Other trash may be jettisoned 50 miles off shore in weiahted con· tainers. "When I first went into the job, I'd had no professionaJ training in media relations and the first few weeks were ~ ..., ........ • 'v.ery difficuJt,'' he recalled. '."lstarted Sheriff'• Lt. Dick Obion often condacm 'new. cOlifereDCe9 'right off .wttn some very important n cb u tbl9 one to ,in detalla of <>ranee Coanty arre9t8. cases, things that gathered a lot of press coveraae, and I was handi- eapped because I didn't know any- 'bo(fy -and I wasn't famiJiar with i,n4.ividuaJ reporters' needs." Since those early days. he said, he 'has made a point of keeping up as much personal contact as possible ~and trying wherever possible to ' accommodate the deadlines and 'other n~ of Orange County's large press corps. He said be likes the job and enjoys working with the prt$S. But he said he is aware of the limitations of his 'position. "It can be very rewardin~ but it can &c super-frustrating. too, • he said. '"There arc instances when there is information that l can't give out even •\hough I know it would make for better undentanding. I feel badly in those cases, but there arc often t'easons why we simply can't disclose certain information without jeop- ardizing an investigation ... Olson had no trouble coming up with hJs most memorable day of his law enforcement career. "It was Aug. 26, 1985. the day the Nijht Stalker hit us down there in Mission Viejo," he said. "I'll never forget that. It was a Sunday and I got called out at about 4:30 a.m. l had well over 100 phone calls that day. J was gettina calls from Japen and Austraha, from the news media over there.·· It was a piece of high tcchnoloSY detection by Orange County forensics specialists-using a new -fingerprint identification system that led to the arrest in Los Angeles several days later of Richard Ramirez. Ramirez is now. on trial for the so-caUed Night Stalker serial murders. That arrest was a proud moment for Olson, who attributes the coup, in part, to his department's progessive atutudc toward new technology. "I'm really interested in equip- ment, and we've been one of the departments that's been in the fore- front nationally. We were one of the first to have a laser system and one of the first to use Cal-1.D., the systelll that helped us identify the fingerprint that let to Ramirez's arrest.'' Olson, 53, will celebrate 20 years with the Sheritrs Department on Dec. 27. He said he mi&ht like to return to the Harbor Patrof as his final assignment. '"There's something to be said for startinJ and finishing in the same place,' he said. Working in law enforcement has raised a lot of questions about society and about humanity, but Olson said he has few ready answers. , "I have growing concern for things that I sec happcnin.f! ··he said. "There are things that don t make-sen!e, like the case where someone is sava,ely beaten during a robbery that involved only a negligible amount of money. The criminal with a propensity for violence is becoming the norm, rather than the exception. It just seems, where are the value$r' He said he saw drugs as one reason for the growing meanness of the criminal world, but he said law enforcement alone could not deal with the problem. "We've aot to have help from citizens, throu&h efforts like Neigh- borhood Watcfi ," he said. "Without that kind of citiz.cn cooperation and help, we can't get anywhere. Maybe we can't stop crime. But we can control it." When he is not on the job, Olson still enjoys boating. He also skis when he can, and walks regularly for excrci sc. He said he enjoys reading bio- graphies. Gen. Chuck Yeager, whose biography he just read, is one-o f the people Olson said be admires most. "I had a great deal of admiration for what he's done," Olson said. "I feel he accomplished some very important goals both for himself and for the country. And he likes to hunt and fish, liker do.'' Otion lives in Costa Mesa with his wife, Gini. He has a son and a daughter by a previous marriage 1nd tlm:e grandchildren. Hewas born and raised in San Jose and attended Sin Jose State University. TEEN UPBEAT OVER SAVING HAND ••• From A l "My family, they're reaJly helpina me aJong." "The ride over here on the belicop. ter was really nice," be said. ShOwers, shivers to contin u e U .s. Tempe. .-.-..... 11 u Calif. Tempe .. .... a 17 ....._ 31 ... .. Le ~Qtr .. n ... ":::;" ,. ....... ~.HY. 32 2t t:.VZ: .. .. =-=-M 33 11 • 14i.R ••a.111 ....... 41 M 13 .. MlrtdcClly 43 37 Aullill 72 50 ..,._. .. S7 ~ 34 14 ea •7 ..... 38 21 ilo9lorl 41 ,. MlllO 43 29 lurllftg!on, VI. 31 21 c...-31 CM ~.NC 59 ., =· 31 11 47 11 QnciMMj 5' 21 ~ 47 S1 CalumlM.S.C. 12 ,. ~Olllo 52 33 Concotd,N.H. " 32 DaPM-FI Wotlh 11 4$ Dayton S3 33 '*"'* 50 " Del~ •2 13 D*oil .. 21 Duillltt JO -10 11"-• • ,.._.. 21 03 :::~-:.,. 50 JO u 22 O....F• 34 11 GNMIOoro,N C 53 al H9ntorO .. 29 ...... ,.. 14 HOnolulu .. 11 HouMon .. 58 ...... _. ~ 53 2t L.-.. .. u =---........ .. .. .......... n • ,,.. ....... 41 1' =::r-.......... ,. ... 31 ..01 ...... " .. ............ ... o.... .. IO~ ... .,Ottl Qty 41 37 .......... Qtr a..t1le 43 S2 • Aeno 54 '-•••llO :.:=: ¥< .. 41 01 .... ---40 11 ::=.a Syt-,. T.,....StPlr909 11 30 .. ,,.. 51 IO...._. ,_.. ,. lone ..... T~ n , .. IO :~ w~.oc .. " 41 ....... Wlc:Ma ~ MOii ''' ..,...on,o... .. :=.r., ~e-t\ Smog Report Onlarl: .............. ,....... ....... ......, ..... ~.0.50 ,._...... ....... dl110 =..!,1· tCIO INdsMe; 10 .• -......... ,JCI0..2't*YUl 1m ilwl,300 ......... and ....,... '-f I • F1r9' ...,. II ..... c.w ,.,....... _. .......... ---.. .......... toclaf•Pll--=-· SentaflloNta ......... IO w.:Arttu ......... 17·60 TlfloeV~ lrWle. eden•* v~ ............ 33-41 ,_ ~ ..... ~~ .............. : ... 41 w.woocs LOa """"" AlrpOtt. ............ ---· 10-eG y--~ 11 ,. 12 13 51 ,. 11 ... • 50 • 33 u 42 71 ... 41 21 .. .. 11 37 " " .. IO 11 IO .. 47 IO N It • .. 37 11 47 70 ... It .. 75 45 61 S3 ff •1 71 •1 • .. IO ,. 51 41 70 50 5t 50 IO • 51 41 51 53 ao 13 11 ... 51 50 16 33 Surf Report Tides TOOAY ~low l:31pm 05 ,..., Flret hlgll 3:33 a.m. •.• flr91 low 1:51 a.m. u ~ hlgll 3112 p.m. '1 lec:Ol'd tow t'.2 l p "'· 1.0 lun .... ~ • 4:41 p.111.. ,... F~ at 1·60 a.m. and .... • 4:41 p.111. Moon-II 11:62p.m.~.,... .. 12:0la.m.fr~IN .... ~ .. I 1.52 p.m.; BOYCOTT HITS BB SUPERINTENDENT ••• Prom Al The Hawes teachers staonchly - but futilely -opposed the ou5ter of Principal Rita Jorgensen that Peters generated. . . . "We were very direct m expressing our concerns last spring when we became aware of the district's intent to reassign Rita Jorgensen," the Hawes teachers said in their letter. "Everyone on the staff wrote you 1 personal letter. We again wrote when we discovered that our first letters had not.been .shared with..the board. "We listened as parents spoke and watched them_ present a petition of more than 200 signatures to keep Mrs. Jorgensen at Hawes. "We observed for two.years as Rita continued to work as a dedica~ friend and professional, under- standing that she was not perfect. but more than aware that she got the job done and that our school was runnina DlaDa Peten Rain to continue through weekend From staff ud wire repom If you were dreaming of a wet Christmas., Mother Nature provided an early gift today by dumping some holiday rain on the Orange COast. The rain was expected to continue and intensify through Friday and may continue through the weekend. ac- cording to the National Weather Service. ~t rain and drizzle added to momina &riCSlock on local roadways but caused no serious accidents. blw enforcement officials reported. Temperatures were aJso expected to dip into the low 40s toniaht. Ind in places it may even ~cold enouah for an early white Chnstmas. "That w1y, Slnta Claus won't overheat when he comes down in th1t red suit of his," quipped fqJeeaster Bill Hoffer. Snow nurries'were repor1A:d on the floor of \he south Su Joequin Valley at Bakersfield, Taft and McFarland, the weather service said:'Travelers through the mountains of Kem County were warned of flurries and austy winds. Ad vasones were posted for the eastern Mojave Desert because of winds from 30 to 40 mph and occasional blowing dust. The storm was gcnerated by a.very cold, upper-level low over Nevada that was moving toward central Cati(omif, the weather service said. The low was expected to drift to the west on Friday, ptbcrina more moisture off the oentnl coast Dozens of can collided in numer- ous accidents throuabout Southern California, includina an accident in the Cajon Pass in wh ich two people were killed. Snow fell on the Southern California mountains, and winds ICOured tbc detert with 1usts up to 40 mph, authorities said. smoothly ~nd effectiv~ly .. Despite overwhelming support, Rita Jor- gensen was reassianed. We continue to believe this was an unjust decision that was carried out under your leadenhip. You didn't listen to us then, and we doubt that you will hear us now." The teacher also said that a recent spate of letters to the editor in the ., Daily Pilot and other newspapers indicated that Peters wasn't letting the contr0vcr1y die. - The teacher said that one of the letters was from Peters' neighbor and said-she believed that Peters re- quested the letters, which were hi&hly supponive of the superintendent. Peters said today she wasn't in-• volved in the letters, that they were the result of "private choices" and that her office is "totaJly indepen- dent" of the letter writers. 21.h-year-old girl ingests cocaine LOS ANGELF.S (AP) - A 21h· year-old girl was rushed to a hospital suffering from haJJucinations and seizures apparently caused by an overdose of cocaine, authorities said today. The child as taken to Cedars. Sinai Medical Center shortly 1fter 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, said police Set. K. Davis. A urinalysis revealed the child had ingested cocaine, said hospital spokeswoman Paula Correia. The toddlet was listed in good condition by mid-morninJand was cxpec.ted to leave the pediatric intensive-01~ unit, Ms. Correia Slid. "The parents are Slyi~they don't know bow it all happened," be said. "The mother said she dropped off the girl at her sister's, who t'ten dropped off the girl 1t a d1y care center." The 1>9rents, who weren't ident- ified. told police they noticed the child acting stranaely when they picked her up from lhe center. 'The day care center is in the mid- Wilshire distric:t. · "We're working on aJI the pluses:· said his father, John. rhe only negative aspect since the incident was a sli&ht allergic reaction Jason had Tuesday night to some medication, his f al.her said. But that brief setback faded quicldy into the bacqround u Jason talked about the upbeat conversations he's had with other patients who are recovering rapidly after being treated by Acbauer. He also talked of the visits and letters he hu received from his friends at University Hi&h School. "I'd like to fly," Jason said, discussina bis career plans. He said be is interested in pursuing 1nything in .------~======================== , "I spaced out and I had no control over my body," Jason said. ult wasn't ·very pleasant." Even his emef'ICJ\cy helicopter ride to the medical center was enjoyable, the youth said. ..f,. "'W inning lotto numbers ~1 TM Auedale-4 Prat · Herc are the winnina numben · ''picked Wednesday night for the ''California Lottery's twice-weekly "Lotto 6-49" pme: 16, 23, 30, 33, 34, 'and the bonus number, 15. '•1 ... , Playen who correctly silCtled all six numben will shire a prize pool of S 13.2 million, k>tttry spokeswoman Kathy Manzer said. ORANGE ... .... COAST .... , .... . MMtOF'PIC• ---at.CollaMlea.CA Players with five corTCCt number plus the bonus will share Sl.84 million and tboae with five numben will wre S948,000, lbc said. Playen with four comet numben will share a pool of$862,000. TMle of sill is worth an 1utomatic SS per winner. The numben ~ cholen by Lotto machine during a television broed- cut oriainatina in Sacramento. the aviation industry. "I misht be a mechanic, or enJi-necr," be SI.id. Jason has competed as a swimmer and Wlter polo pblyer at his hiJh school. Heplayedplieforlhejun1or vanity team this~ ind believes be can continue ttis involvement in the water spons with little difficulty . Achauer, in fact, has said 1thlet1e participation miaht be aood thera~. Jason is also a Bor ~ut worklnt bis way toWUd bis UCJC Scout, tbi hilhest level tJaat can be Khieved in the orpnization. He painted Itri~ on the ~iDJ lot It bil ch~ Univenaty United Methodist, •die community ~ject manda1ed in tM fale~•= nowbaaOllly a & merit to obtain. He auribu 1111 poeitive outlook to bis strona relisjous faith. .. That'1 how I was broupt up," he said. °.:-":' llGwMt11d ... ...._ ... 1MO,C:.•._.,CAl292e ~ ..... 2 ... 71, ..,..,_ • ~ ...... , Ju..tcaU 842-6086 ...,...,...,,.., . ,.., .. ........ ,..,, ll'illS .. ...... c.-..... ' .... _,..,,..,, .. .. ~ Ila. --lltorlel ..... "IO!W. '°"°""' .... ~ ................ _.,lie ,..,,~ ......... ..,,,..... .. ~- ~::t=-::.c.. ....... ~ "'" ., --tits .... ...... ., .... "._...... ..... 0....,. c.-~ ,.... .......... by .. .._.~Co f/#C...-...~ two .... -......... ...,..., _.,. ''*r A .............................. . .,,. ........................ .._. .. ..... ~a..--.c:A- YOL It, llO. • • ....... a.a 11•rn i1ta11••1111 .... °""llClllMr - • • Rights concerts motivate Irvine youth 8J JOB UL RVNO ........... _ ••••~aobcamumtou. ltudeal actavisim of'lbe 1 MOI. snan- benbip in billl ICbool .....,.. or Amnesty lnsenaatioml iloe tM_.rite. In &bes, tbe numblrofbilb ICbool -called adoptiOn lr°'IPI by ftllty hat«naliouJ -more than doubled ill t.be United Sea1a. Tbere are 413 web poupa. with 83 added julC .... ycu. Like their ailult c:oua~ t.be student lfOUPI ... leaer·wribftl ~per::: humM riahta vio&-atJom the worW:" Amnesty lntemationat.t.# esta~ lilhed in London in l~I\ Wll awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1911 after hclpina to win 1be re1eare of more than ro.ooo --a. Un- pr'iloned for their pol~liefi, race, relilion. sex or ethnic t.ck-arounds. . ~ ....... _ .......... t; • 0 r. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A .-C ~tor on Wednnday accUled TbC Travekn inSW'IDCe compmay of~ atJQI provisiom of ,... ·h....._ Proj>OIJllO!l 103 by ~Mp selling car insurance u1 • At. a Slate Senate belrilll. blrt. several consumen also complaidl:d that other insurers bad railed ~r rates excessively 10 the lu1 )iar. ·• At a state Senate hcarina here, Sen. Alan Robbins. .D-Van .Nuys. tO[I* ~ representative of the Hartford. Conn .. company that The Tra¥de9 is breaking the law by refulias to tell new policies or renew exillial ~. The senator threatened bodl lepl and lcgislative penalties, and p· tracted a promise from. State Tn· surancc Commissioner Ro•*"• 01llesp1e to lake administrative ¥.· tion against the compeny by Dec. / l The powiaa numben of~ members comes on the heels of the Human Rilbtl Now! concert caravan, wbicft toured in September. PerfonDcn such u Stiq. Peter Gabriel and Tt8CY CbaPmU smtici-pa&ed in tbe campaip. The number ()f new mcmben ii expecaed to rise becaUIC oltbe CDDCeftl, acciordina to Amnesty's lllioul mem~p di-~ foen~vm. AroaDd 100 Radelata,Jolned lD tbe Amneety lnteraadonal candleUPt YICIJ at lntne JUcb Scllool lut week. Proposnion 103, an initiattve meast1re approved in the Novemper election, orders that rates for fll4>St kinds of insurance be cut 20 ~ below their November 1917 · It alsomakesanumbefofchanlesin way the business is repalaled. lmQlll them, a prohibition on i~ carriers canceling policies euiept in cases of fraud or non.pa~ .. Aner th'! ConspirKY of Hope Tour in 1986, we incttated our membenhip by over 250,000. •• she said. "Tbrouah \be rock anale of it., I am sure that it has helped the adoption srou~." At Irvine Hilb School. the concerts have bad a direct effect on the poup's activitiea. lrvine, which boutlone of the bislt membenbipa in <>rans County, bu ICfVed u a role model fOr other hiab ICbool poops. .. , have always tnown about tbe causes that Amnesty lnte'rnltional fiahts for," said 17-year-old Mary W"ana. ''I thjnk 1 speak for a ~ority of the members when I say that the concerts have helped me become aware that I can get 1nvolved. It is not just for adults." Last Saturday, the Irvine High Amnesty aroup attracted more than 100 students and community mem- bers for a candleliaht vigil to re- member those held in captivity. After a three-mile much up the city's main street, the sroup finished the evening witb a rally in front of Woodbridae Lake. ••1 think that it is pitiful that we are out here tonight," Wang, a speaker at the rally, told the crowd. ''The fact that we have to march for basic human ri&hts just shows the state that the world is in. I think that it is horrible that it has come to the point where high school students have to do this, ~ut without change in the world, Female of fleer likes challenge By JOYCE BODLOVICH Of ... 0.., .... ·-On Janet Kirby's path to bccomin& a doctor, she made one or two sliaht detours. The fint tum led to the Fountain Valley PO\icc Department, where she was a dispatcher for three years, and the second jog resulted in an 18-week stint with the Oranae County Shcrifl's Department Academy. Kirby, 25, of Huntington Beach, graduated in November from the academy founh overall in a class of 28 men and fi ve women recruits. Now she joins officers Kathy Jones., Kim Brown. Leslie Roberts, Sara Lon& and Debbie McCammon as one of the six female officers in a departmenl with approximately 54 policemen. The path has come to a satisfying end for Kirby. we must." The cause of human rights is a much more personal one for 17-year- old Carolina Miranda, who_.is Amnes- ty's student leader at the halh school. "The cause here is much more personal to me because my uncle went through the same violation of his freedoms that many others are aoing through, .• she said. Her uncle is Erich Schinke, exiled Socialist Party senator from Chile, who returned to rus country for a mcctina in Santiago in l987. At theo meeting that was orpnized by oppo- nents of the military government of Chilean President AUfusto Pinochet. more than 100 forc1an lawmakers 0..,,... .... .,.,.. ....... "I have my degree from UCI in biological science,'' she said. ''My original plan was to go to med school. But then I retlized there was more to life than studying 24 hounaday." Kirby said her time spent asa dispatcher gave her the opportunity to observe first-hand the job of a police officer. Janet KirbJ with trainJq officer Al Dollar. "I was interested in the challenge," she said. "I knew I wouldn't have lO do the same things day after day, and I would meet peopl. e from different walks oflife." Kirby's cha11enges started in the academy. Though she aced the academic courses. the physical training was another story. "I think I finished dead last in physical training." she said lauahing. "l had never even done a guy's pushup before the academy. I think towards the end the most l did was 76. The other eroblem I had was, though I had been runnina on and otI Lhad chipped a bone in my heel playina volleyball so I stopped runnina until I entered the academy. "I wasn't in the greatest shape." she said. "At first when we would run in a class formation. l could keep up the fint half, then I'd fall behind. They rcaUX came down on me but it was fair, I deserved what I aot. • By graduation, Kirby had trimmed 20 pounds otThcr 5-foot 5-inch frame. Today she weighs in at 130 pounds, and can run and lift weights without difficulty. She said the ceremony was even more meaningful when her father pinned theaold badaie on her uniform. "I have always kinda been tbe tomboy of the family," she said. "But I didn't even tell them I was testing for Fountain Valley until l got hared. The}' were a little surprised. "My dad is a former Marine and he thought 1t was a good career choice. My mother 1s a teacher and at first she was worried. Now she tells all the leads. 'my daughter is a police oflicer. · " Kirby said gender did not play a pan in the academy. nor docs at in the department. "In the academy we were all intermi;(ed," she said. "You are Just one of the boys. The) don't set you apan - rude jokes and all -which is good. You have to be acc.cptcd as pan of the group because if one messes up, everyone does. Tcam~ork is "Cry 1mponant. "A lot of my closest friends art men," she said. "l don't have a problem wub friends or being a woman officer. l probably act the same here as l do at home." Kirby is currently an the department's three-month field training program. She patrols the city an a blac-k and white patrol c.ar with senior training officer Al Dollar. Once she meets the requirements. she will patrol alone. Eventually Kirby hopes to move up the pohce ranks. She also plans to obtain a master's degree in public administration. "It takes a long time to be a good street cop," she said. "I'll probably spend at least fi ve ye<irs on patrol." Kellr. said suspected drunken driv- ers will be arrested., but will be ~leued to their homes iftbey submit to blood or breath tests at the checkpoint and if they have someone IOW to drive them home. tinues to be a major concern for the communit> and thts depanment:' Kelly said. "Making the hl&hwa}' safer b)' combaung tbe dnnkmg driver is a top prionty throughout the year. "It 1s an even bagger problem during the holiday season with the increased traffic and festive panics." •:.We11 make one phone call for tbem to Id a ride." he said. Officers maki8' the stops also will hand out to IOberdrivera red ribbons donated by tbe Oranlt County Motkra A.pinst Dnail9en Driven ia tbetr "Tie One OD tbr =1y•• pr'Oll'am. Clieliintt ba-,e beeo established ID ...-.. ,_,. in Huotinston .... '*'Diver bcfoft .tmiaistef'cd .,, ...... Police. said Kdly. .. Drin• under the inftuence con- Kelly also uratd motorist to use the designated dmcr program or to call a taxi af thcy dnnk. The U.S. uprcme Coun ~Jtc\ed constitutional challenges to the sobriety checkpoints when 1t rett~tl) d~lincd to hear araumtnts qaunst the state uprcmc Coun·s approval of such practices. Kell) s.ad . called for free elections and de- nounced human ~ts abuses in the country. On tbe third and last day of the meetina, Scbanke and otbcn were arrested and sprayed with tear gas. Schaoke wu one of the few that was taken into military custody. "After beiDJ imprisoned by the government. they dumped him into the snowy Andes by order of the president He was left to fend for himself," she said. "An Araeotine border patrol eventually found him, and be now leads 'the fi&bt against human riahts violations in Chile. He is relatively safe because his story is well known." ~iranda believes that it does not take a personal event, like her own, to ~ students interested in Amnesty International. As the student leader of the group, she said that membenh1p and yan1cipation in events has jump- ed sinoe their first yeir. Saturday's viail not only attracted lrvincstudeota,l>ut their teachers and parents. Irvine Kiah Social Science teacher Jim Antenore, who is tbc poup's advitcr, believes that the night's turnout is an indicauon to the future of the United States. "It is incredible that these students will come out here to do this," be said. .. They arc very unselfish by pa:rtici- pa~ in the march, which could be a good indication of the future:· Job club to assist head injury victims C oastline Community CoUege wall soon provide an career program for adults who have suffered ~nous head injuries. - The college received a S 183,299 grant from the U.S. Depanment of Education to nan a·· Job Club" at the collesc's center an Costa Mesa. ac- cording to the program's instruc- tional coordinator. Cathy Wiese. The club. scheduled to open an April 1989. will focus on job search resources and career guidance an offer workshops and video tapes. The club will be an extension of Coastline's Traumatic Head Injury program. which has ~n ongoing for mort than eight years. ·'The program deals with memot). organ1ut1on, problem solving -up 1hrough levels of communat) 1ran- s1t1on. independent li,'1ngand the Job market,·· Wiese saad. "The JObClub will be a separate program to help our students return to the work world," she said. "It will tnvolvc pre-employment and Job seeking skills. defininijob ob1cctivcs. learning successful tntcrview tech- niques and job keeping sk1Us." Though Wiest said the club will work in conjuncuon Wl\h graduates of the THI pr~. at will be open to other head~inJured people who arc ·•job read} ... "When be.. -JOb club o~ for business. we will offer JOb club sen•acd for students who have gone to another community agency or college. We ~ould hke to expand our services 10 sen e students tt.ho are nol traumaucall) head-injured but have other d1sab1li11es that make the job market difficult." For 1nforma\1on. call 75 t-9776. -By Joytt Bodlovld . - The California Supreme Court bas postponed ·implementation of She rate cut pendina trial of an insurapce industry challenae to the ini~ meausurc. but the court allowed rest of Proposition l 03 ~ take in the interim. .!.! At the bearina. Travden "•CC ~dent Russell Press Jr. said~ company's lawyers believe it has ~e right to cancel or stop renewal of policteS that were in effect befiMe passqe of the initiative. , ··we have some conir.ctual rilhts here that should not be impmmtby SOFM ·retroactive lqjslation," Press told the committee. But Robbins. denounced what he called the company's "Alice in Won- derland" •. ··How can you say that ~r com.-ny follows the law when the Supreme Court clearly ~ ~ ncwal policies (of Proposition 103) lO I'> in&o cffca., .. RobbiDs sud.-- Asked what action the Aate 1n· surancc Oepanmcnt would '8kc apinst Travelers, Ms. Gi~ at first SPd w intended to terVe The Travelers with a notice of qcm· complWlClC with the law early in 1989. At the ursine of Robbins. ihe conferred witb her staff and rcturaed with a promise to file the notice by Dec. 31. Travclen. wb1cb has .OS pen::ient of tbt state's car insursnce mart.el._ or 25.000 cusaomen. ha ~"'cr.ld an earher decmon to withdraw fR>m homeowners, fire and other types of insurance in C..lifornja, Press sai~. After Prop0s1tion 103 was pasted several compe.ntd said they intended to stop selling car insurance in the state because the rollbacks woµld force them to lose money, but all except Travelers have rcvcncd tbosc deosions. 11:'. Action on smog plan delayed LOS ANGELES (AP) -Air quality officials have chosen to delay for three months a vote on a far- rcaching plan to clean up the rqjon·s smoggy sloes. sayina the proposal needs additional review to guard apjnst lawsuits. federal clean air standards in the huge Los ~ngeles Basin .\mong other things. 1L proposes mljor n~ restncuons on vehicles .and stationary sources of smoi. . "I am very disappoaotcd, but I can't go against mr. own district counsel and then wmd up tn a multi· million dollar lawsuit," said James Lents, e ecut1ve director of the South Coast Air Quahty Managcmcot District. "h's going to send a bad message to Co~s. The board was to vote on the plan Fnda}. but instead it would postpone the vote until March 10. said board Chairman Nonon Younglove. A pubhc hearing would pTocecd as scheduled Fnda~. Our two senators tDcmocrat Alan Cranston and Repubhcan Pele 'W alson) spcetficall~ requested that we move forward on this,·• sa1d Mark Abramowitz, 'ice pre 1dent of the env1ronmenual group Coalition for Clean -Ur. Th~dec1s1on ammedaately was cnllctzed by proponents of the plan, a 20-)ear strategy to meet Younglove. a Rn-ers1de County Supcrvtsor, sud staff counsel recommended the delay bccau~ a L naH~l'Sat) of Southern California economic analys1s cnucal of the plan was not dasmbutcd early enouah to allo~ for pubhc comment. and 3 p.m. Wednesday./ Ha.nu..,ton Beach A woman rcponed receavang a call from another woman who said that skinheads were on their wa) to her home with a sun. Oflictrs said the~ would maintain a oatrol check. . ' . A woman an the 2500 block. of Volga said she saw a man p«kmg through the peephole of her door at I 2:30 a.m. today. She was afraid to answer tM door. she said. Thieves l"q>Ol'.tedly pncd open a window to a 1985 Volkswqcn Jetta an the ttar parkina lo\ at Hununaton Humana Hospttal and stole a $40 purse. a $60 bnefcasc and a $2.000 stereo. Coeta ..... A crook Wlth very small hands stole $2. 768 cash from a van parked at the Orange County Fairgrounds. The th1ef reached through a 5-anch gap 1n the van's wmdow. Newpal1 Beacb '\ man and '*Oman t~m were set"n ~} several witnesses stealing a Santa Claus stat~ and 1~0 re"oh ing. musical Chnstnias trees from the C'hnstmas Guild store 1n <\tnum Coun at Fashion Island. The couple "ere last Sttn Occang the area on foot Loss was $475. • • • An answcnng machine and hot plate "ere stolen from a yacht bro~er's office at 3400 Vaa ()pono after the bura.tar broke open the Dutch door. loss was$ l 2S Harbor Patrol authont1ei probably ._.,._ Beacla take a lot more rt"pons of stok~ boat SomtoM broke into a home in the moton than Costa Mesa. but a man · 400 block of Poplar lr'tet on on lroedway reponcd hlS S UOO Wednaday afternoon and took a outboard was taken off a parked ho.a\ floor safe. TM vah.r of the safe 's • • • Smoke fill• top •tory ofbulldtna • contents was not dtsclosed./ Golf cqu1pment valued at Sl.9lS was rtponed m1ssin1 from a location an the 1200 block of Ocean Front on Wednesday. A deer and a car colhded on Laguna Canyon Road on Tuesday at appro~- 1matel) 7 p.m. The deer fled to the ht\ls after the accident. • • • Officers responded to a ttport of massing mail'" the 2800 block of Zdl On "eon Tuesday momang. The mail -."IS apparantly dcltvercd to the l"IC"t . door neighbor. Couple found: slain at home! 0nl!n9e CGelt DM.Y P9LOTI T..,,.._, Oeoemw 15, 1NI P~O delighted with new diplomatic statuS J 1 OENEVA (AP) -PLO officials were delishted today with the U.S. ' dec~on to bqjn diplomatic talks with the ortanizatfon, and PLO headauarters in Tunisia Sot ill first call<.fiom the U.S. envoy chosen to wort with them on seekina peacie with lsnltl. Uter today the U.N. General Assbnbly voted 138-2 for the conven-·~na f an international 1rliddle 'East conference an~ for te!f1porarily p na the lsraeh-occupted tern· tories under U.N. supervision. lpel and the \Jnated States voted aga_)l'st the action. • QJe vote closed out a three-day debate on Palestine which was held in Geaeva after the United States re-fU~ to arant PLO Chairman Vasser Araiat a visa to speak at the United 'Na.tons in New York. Tbe Ptlestinians credited their people's uprising in Israel's occupied lands for gaining their cause world- trifled by the U.S. an- stayina as they di1CUued the loaa- awailed development with reponen. PLO spokesman Abmed Abdel Rahman uid the U.S. decision meent ''a historic c~ in the slJ'Ullle in the Middle East. The White House's reversal came after Arafat told a news conference in Geneva on Wednesday that he re- nounced "all forms of terrorism" and recopized lsr.ers fishrto live in peace and security. Hou~ later,, President R~n.uid_ the United ;)tales would bqln a dialotue with the PLO. Secretary of State George P. Shultz said the PLO had finally met U.S. criteria for nesotiations. Indeed, the envoy authorized with initiatina contact wath the PLO made a brief phone call today to PLO hcadQuarters in Tunisia. A" spokes- man for the ambassador, Robert H. Pelletrcau Jr., had no further details. . Robert Pelletre.a Jr said was a workina visit, and met with East German Communist leader Erich Honecker. He later left for Bucharest, R~ania, the qency said. AON '\uoted Arafat as telling Honecker 'the PLO is strivina for a comprehensive settlement of the (Middle East) ·conflict that would suarantee to all those involved a life 10 dignity, freedom and peace." Palestinian u~ wbicb bemD Dec. .. 1917 lD .. occupied w .. Ink and Om SUiD ud lmclailMd the lives o( 321 Pllaaini1n1 and 13 lll'ldil. On Tuesday, ArafU told the U.N. Oeneral AJmnbly in Geneva tbal ... :=~•1:1= to eailt in ~and lllCUlitJ. and• I have menuoned indudina lhe u1e~ Palestine, lsnel and other neiab- bon." He also uid the PLO acceDICd U. N;-Jlet0lutiolll 242 and 338. wbicb recopize the riaht ofall Middle East nations to safe and secure borden. That Keeplance wu one of three conditions set by U.S. law b' dia~ with the "PLO. The Olhsn were a clear recoanition of Israel and renunciation or tenorism by tbe PLO. Jn Jerusalem, Foreip Mininer Shimon Peres said his country lhoWd launch a peaoe initiative of its own to counter the PLO's latest diplomatic achievements. He proposed leltina Palestinians in the occupit!d landl elect alternative leaders to neaotiate peace with Israel. Shultz said Wednesday nisht that the United States .. does not reciopize the declaration of an indeoelident ~pathy 1nd leadina to the end of .S. isolation. no ment, they laughed and em- b in the lobby Of the Geneva No date has been set for the talks, but a State Department official in Washington, speaking on condition of aoooymity, said: ·•we're sure the PLO wiil try to have them take place as soon as possible." Arafat was in East Berlin today for what the state-run AON news agency Israeli officials were shocked. They said Arafat's remarks were insufficient because the PLO did not rule out violence associated with the Palestinian state," made by the PLO PLO C .. _ .. ___ y---"-a-•-t p--) .--.. __...._ in Algeria last month, but \hat it ~ ~ .na--. lllllH --wa..- would be a subject of discussion. OermaaJ'I ..... coaact1 cllalrman &rlell Boaecker. ho el where their ~legation was • I . : Fog, numbing cold delays .· sea_rch for_quake surviy_ors_ ""I I Sf Ill YEREVAN. U.S.S.R. (AP) -Fog and numbing cold delayed foreian relief fliahts into Armenia and snarled supply lines Wednesday, costing rescuers vital time in the race to find and feed survivors of the earthquake. Spurred by the discovery of 60 people in the quake's ruins, Health Minister Yevgeny Chazov pledged not to stop thC search for survivors. But he aclcnowledaed their chances are dwindlina and survivors now risk infection from pneumonia and other illnesses. .. , insist that we~nound will not abandon the search 'Uritil we clear au the ruins and debris, because there might be people under them.'' Chazov told-a Moscow news con- ference. He said 60 people had been found alive in the past day but gave no details. tlm• wlao ba•e been lald oat ln a ctam.,ecl MCCer •tad.lam to 8pltak. Foreian rescue workers said they planned to keep combing . the crumbled buildings for signs oflife. % Annual Yield Current Rate* ON DE~srrs OF $I 0,000 to $99,999 FOR 180 DAYS IF YOU HAVE ANY QUF.STIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS WE WELCOME YOUR CALL. 1-800-247-7197•Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m .•Saturday 8 a.m. to noon •substantial penalties imposed for early withdrawals on tenn accoun&s. Annual yield hued on daily compounding when ~rat is left on deposit for one-yaar term. Rafe, yield and tilrla subject IO dlmn&e wilhout nolice . % "We contin.ue to look for people," said Dr. Georges d'Allemqne of the relief organization Doctors Without Borders. "We think there are chances for about another week to find a few peopJe." Soviet officials say the Dec. 7 quake killed H ,000 people in northwestern Armenia and left about ~.000 of the area's 700,000 people homeless. The official ·news qency Tass said Wednesday tbat 48 villages had been destroyed. Tass reported later Wednesday that 2 I, 75S bodies have been counted and identified so far. : Snowfall and hazardous road con- ditions in the mountainous region have complicated relief efforts, and the next few days are expected to bi:ina more snow and up to 45 mph winds. The International Red Cross. wamina of the worscnina weather, appealc'd Wednesday for heavy-duty tents. blankets and stoves for at least 20,000 Armenian families left home- less. Heavy fog delayed the arrival of relief niahts from Moscow, and rescue workers arriving by plane couJdn 't find eouah buses to take them to their destinations. "The airD<>rt in Yerevan is a tolal mess," d'Allemaane said. "There are planes and people all over the place, and nobody can find anybody else." Reliefflilbts have crowded Anne- nian skies and airports, and the increased traffic has been blamed for two fatal air crashes this week. _ Jn addition to tbe crash scenes, viewers saw an old woman crouched in front of a row of corpses covered with blankets and sheets, and the tearful appeal of a doctor for relatives to stay out of hospitals to reduce the risk of infection to the injured. Television also showed the a.rrivaJ of 1,000 women and children evacu- ated from Leninakan and Kirovakan to the Georaian l'C90rt town of Sochi . Cost estimate for bail out of S&:Ls is $112 billiOn WASHINGTON (AP) - A con- gressional study places the l~t government estimate yet on the pnce of bailing out the nation's failina savinp and loans and says the cost could soar even hi&her unless action is talcen quickly. The General Accountin1 Office says the Jovernment should spend S 112 biUaon to dose failed institu- tions and abandon its current stratesY of trying to keep the institutions alive throu&h assisted meracrs. GAO said the Federal Savinp and Loin Insurance Co,.P., or FSLJC, will need SSS billion over and above the $27 billion it expects to collect in fees · from S&Ls throu&h l 998. However, the cortp'CSSionaJ audit- ina and investiptive qency warned that the price will be even hither if interes& rates rise. Most economists ex~ rates to climb throuah the meddle of next year, but offer no firm pttdictions beyond thaL The investiptive qency, in a draft of a report to the House •= Committee, criticized the F Home to.a Bank Board. ~la tor of the nation's !,QOO SALi, for attempt- ina to racuc ~led SALi by providana moitey to pnva1e mater pennen. The repon aoled that the insurance fund spends on meraen about 90 percent of what it would cost to simply close insolvent institutions and pay off depositors. However, meraers do not always rc90lve the problem and, counting tax losses to the aovemment, may well be more costly, it said. "Reaulators and Co~ have resisted massive closinp of insolvent savinp and loans in the hope that the fonunes of these institutions would reverse themselves," it said. "This hope bas proven both futile and costly." 1t noted that industry losses totaled $9.4 billion in the first nine months of this year. Tiie GAO said failed S&Ls should be placed into receivenbip in the next year and mOlt of the S 112 billion should be spent in the next three yean. The bank board has avoided that approech, 111uina that mauive clol- inp could leave some areas ~the nation without servace from ID SAL I and that a flood of repca:1ud real r estate ftom failed inlbtuliom could deepen the rqionaJ m:ellion in the Southwest. 8natiaa down the s 112 billion the OAO II.id 177 billion will be uinct to clole iMOlvent -bul sdll ':e.- SALs, which numbered 434 at the end of September. ,, THE REX RESTAURANT ON THE OCEANFRONT / r >~ .. - World survey shows U.S. teens lead in abortions nuey aad abortion rates 11 ciies npr;neat &be latest fipres available foi' lliCb COUP~. .. UberaliJation of abortion .... does not .awa~ brina about aa inc:nae in abortion rates, .. the~ •ys. .. In Sweden. a liberalization ol die laws in 197S brouibt about only a amall increue in rates." '"The one outatandina chanlc- teriltic of tee~ · requatina abortion is that the ~ty of tben1 are unmarried, .. the report found. '"The option to carry a prepancy to term is becomina leu and - popular unona prcpant aeea •"'" U.C report •YL .. Tbe propor1IOD of ~that end in abortion has anciated aince the early I 970I." Ewn_ini• other 1e1ual trends, the rqM>n" found that cohabitation has 111nect oooularity amons European men ancl Women of all ~ .. In the ~t, couples frequently lived~ forsbon periods before maniaee. but such unions haVe become more and more common and may or may not result in marriqe." The survey covered Eas\em and Western Europe, the Soviet Union, the United States and Canada, Japan, Australia and New Zealand. San Jl'rancllco'• early -- ~~-~ ~':':.~J anolber one for wt.n archeolosist Cahfomia, .. Putroa laid of'hit llllelt Allen Putton. diacovery ... They will ~ 11111 ua ...,._ !.a Plstron, who speciali1Jel in San they. liv~ what they did aad ~ ~ fraacilCO'I put. Oft Tuetday an-relatioftll,Up "to other P9RI ol 11.:I ({ DOUDCed the diacovery of a Gold community. Rush. ruin huaid ... e1ent1 ~iterally Putton uid the dilcovery of lbcbinhplaceofC1una~. bottln, ~.coins aad even aa . ~ ~w. chief cura~ opiump1pebowl,indicatetbeti1e..., w of~ aty s Asian Art MUie\&~ Wei a store operated by Chinnt· jJ ~ ~teml ~~~ rept-elC'nt the !DO'\ merchants in llSO and 1851. rf• tt 111Da~t ~~ery. of Olinete After the diacovery of IOld ioo a•I rnalerial an Californaa 11nc;e the wreck California, Cbinete people came to! ,. of a . l 61h ~tury Spanish plleon San FrancilCO, then a lent city tbq-• carryina Mana . ~~ pottery cal~ Gum San or ··Bil City of tba .. 1 was ro.uDd at Point Reyes north of San Golden HiU." They Ii veil on a bloc\ Franc11CO .• few yean llO· . of Sacramento near Kearney, an arq.. • The 1111C.CU uneanbed while ex-that became the city's Cbina1own. cavalinl lbc sile at Sacramento and The contents of the ~ .; KeameY IU'eetS for a 20-story ~ ,eneral store are in remarkably hf will be ~yed It the muse~m. <;aty shape said Putton. r ·I law requua all new constructaon sates ' ' to be evaluated for their archeoloeical Pastron., of Berkeley, said the ilmlt' 1 vaJue. in the 8-foot-deep dia were froZCll inf s Two ~ aeo. Putron ditc0vered place by more than a oentury"kl remnanu ofa ICnef'I) store under the accumulation of mud. • .1 site of a new buildina in the finJDclaJ .. Historically, we knew Chi-.. J district.HisotherSanfrancitc0finds people were here from the Yef1<1'i include a 19th century Chinese fish-~nninaofSan Francisco," Pastro#· .> i"f_ villa,e and an Indian villllt. sasd, ··but arcbeolosi<:Uly, this is tlMit • I am bopina that these thinp will first chance we've had to study the.a' really be able to 8Cld a tanaib&e in this detail." Shop Home Express for the Best Gifts of the Season! .on ~ ffDME EXPRESS ~ G..,_tttt/ Qu/if7: It begin With name brand products backed by the manufac- lU~'S repulallon'and written warranty. At Home Express every product we sell must sell us first-on quality. style. va lue. and performance. · G,,.,.,,ttttl Ltlwat hitt: Our objective is 10 provide the lowest price and best value in the communuy. For every item we offer. we·11 be al or ~r 1n price 11\an the ~t price offered by any lejitimate, stocking retailer. lf you purchase from Home Express and find it advertised for less elsewhere within thiny day of date of purchase. we'll refund the difference. £.,.,.,Dey: It means our Guaranteed Quahty and Guaranteed Lowest Price applies EVERY DAY. We don't inflate a price so we can have a sale ... we cs1ablish lhe lowest price and maintain it. S•ti$/«tiM: If you don't like 11. bring it back. We will do everything we can so you will be fully satisfied. We want you as a long.time cu tomer. . . Bl.ACK & llacER IWIJY DtOPPER"' Chops and minces up to one cup of nuts, garlic, fresh herbs, mushrooms, olives and especially onions. Simple to use, easy to store with JY, n. cot.led cord. Dishwasher· safe bowl lids and blade. BLACK A DECKER HC2t. NEW STORE-----~ TUSnN ...... Martel ,.._(Nat 10 ST0R) Mon.-Fri. IOAM-9:JOPM. ~lOAM-IPM. Sun. IOAM-6:JOPM. (7M) 730-2100 'l*e 1-S (Sda An1 flwnr) to the MrfOldl ..... eak.Oo_on.....,.,...toEJ ~ .......... llft (nortll). • .. • Wfap )'OU~lf 10 a COZ) bl&l\ket throw lo li&hl those WIOICT chills Mlde of a hm1rt00sl> soft acr. he pile. the) arc machine washable and available an a ~r&c bSOftmtnl of coo temporal') designs. 60" ' 80~ · WESTBO ElfC11llC Wl*-FAST AJIJ EASY STl-FRY ~tbcncfs Electra~ \looL makt;S ~ > au the gn-.11. scared·an Oavors of fresh \'CgCtablcs and mtlb-•1lh0UI lhc llmt llnd mess o( sto-el~~ina. W11h S he111 ~nmg-. hc4\)~1gh1 aluminum con trucuon. notM.11d. anten<lf. temrura nacl. •nd reapc booll; Vt ~TIJE"llD. llllUNSSOI Tum• kttdtm 1010 an ltaban cotftt hou• -.,th lllytor A l\lt's 17·pc. 1SffU9011R 1e1 Tht profe 1ona1 electric~ and ~-mecbtne brews up IO 9 cups at a llmt • simpf). con- ¥eniencly and for pennies Comes •ath s1c.m1na .. tdwi.•carafc aftd 4 cs.-c ~4 cappuc1no cups wilh YUCeB. A.,_. lift! 1'AWLm a JllG. • BUENA PAltl 8.J'T 1..'i Palma Ave. directly Kr'OIS f mm the • Buena Park Mal. Mon.-,n. lOAM-IOPM. Sat. 10AM-10PM. Sun 11AM-IPM.. (114) 739-4663 AUTO Wk MASSMi8I Trc.at yoursdr to Claarors Easy Om-er t>.ct m&SMICf Plua 11 in10 your auiomobale ctp.rette h&htcr and )'OU'U cl\IO)l I grca1 massaic. with Of ,.11hou1 heal PJ'0\1cks e~llcn1 upper and lower blCt suppon Fea1urn fh-e·functJon rcmo<c con1tol CUlllOL. Thi J11(1Wnfu1 san&le· pttd blender 1 uper for Dips. sauces. sal)d ~mgs. bib' food.. sha~cs And codnaals. Cleans up an a snap Incl~ recipe llAL "'I ~ILlt. $59 fwOft'l lbe Ar-. """· (91). ....... Oil ............... Li ........ ... oeed • b10cb. ,.._ dll9liliil IWa ..,_,,CS). aM ... «.tlANim.&t 2 ''' lmll. ,.. Coast panel votes 12-0 against new oil leases SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Calilomia Coastal Commi11ion, say· ing off'ahore drilli~ would po1e "~ risks· voled unani- mously apinst a federal ~n for oiJ 1ndp1development ina 1.7 million- acre strip along the Nonhem Cali- fornia coast The vole Wednesday WIS the first ume all 12 commissioners have oooosed new oii leases since Gov. Oeo11t Deukmejian, w-ho appoints four members, took office in 1983. The commission also unanimously rejected a federal proposal to expand an offshore oil development pro,,ect near San Diqo. "This i1 the sinaJe most 1mPonant m~ that can be sent from California 10 Wuhinaton," said Dan Haifley of the environmental aroup Save Our Shores, which opposed the federal plans. The commission voted 12-0 to oppose l.eaJe Sale 199, which would allow offshore oil and ps devetop. ment of a I. 7 million acre parcel streichina from Mendocino County to Monterey County. The aovem- ment plans to sell development riahts Easy-to-Use Tandy® 1000 HX 49!'-~. ~:= 101itctw1tJ11n lheara 1n Match 1991. The commiuioa rejected the U.S. ~t of lnlCrior prOjec\ on a VOie of 11-1 when it WM~ IS pan ofa S.yar plu iD I ne panel alto YOled 12.() lllinst the Interior Deoanment's proPoeed addition of77 ,000 ecra IO a 1 million acre oftihort oil dcvc~t project stmchina from San Lu11 Obispo County IO San Dieao· Commiuionen cannot block proposed lease sales, but the com- million has the authority IO panl permilS.ion for e•plo11tion and drill· ana on tbe 1net1 once lhe lntmor Dgmtment tells the lealn. I be vote came at 1 public heari• in Maicb a ICOft of witllella. iadud- i,. ~ elected. ollcialt and •CP1acn1auves ol eavtfOllmental «· pnizationa. spoke •inst the pro-JCCl. Noone lalified mill favor. .. Were national plam for eftftlY conservation adooled. the oil savinp would far nceed any amoun1 that could be removed from California's continental lhelf," said Grace Osmer, a 17-year-old hilh tchool senior from Wauonville. Sava1nnnn •200 uaa~ Low .. 155 '-' Month. Capture special holiday ~ memories-just point and shoot-the-camera doeS the rest! Features Infrared auto-... focusing, 6-1 power zoom lens. auto cob'-balance and iris, variabte-speed shuttec With hardcase, shoulder strap, bat· tery pack. 116-801 System 100 By~ Digital-Ready 2-Way Speaker M Nova• -15 By Realistic HALF PRICE! Save '60 159'5 Reg. 211.15 Low Al S 15 P9r Month• Dubbing cassettes, AM/FM tuner, turntable. Reg. 3'1.95 matching 27~.'e"·high speakers. *13·1228 Low As 115 P9r Month• Easy remote on- screen programming of 14-day/6-event timef. HO system. VHS. 116-510 ~ blllter..s 1.11tr1 Feature-Packed Mobile CB -TRC-474 By Realistic ET-393 By Radio Shack Save '60 25tMt Off 39tt~ ~5 . 5915 ~,5 7995 1::\5 Big 8" woofer. 2''2" tweeter. Real walnut ve- neer. 19" high. #40-4034 Switches from solar to battery power In dim light. With case, battery. #65-563 Burn up the BaJal Soft rubber tires. Ni-Cd charging jack. 27 MHz 14" long. #60-4075 8et11<11S, Chllger IKtra An unbeatable buy at $20 oH! Tone/pulse' dialing. #43-544 Dual-Cassette Stereo System Personal Mini Phone Clarinette""·122 By Realistic ET·121 By Radio Shack Save '70 Cut 35~ ·129• ,::\s 1295 :15 Low Aa 115 Pet Month. Dubbing decks, phono, AM/FM tuner, 17" -hiQh speakers. *13-1226 "Hangs up" on any Hal surface. Pulse' dialing. White, #43-505. Brown, #43-506 The Interior Dqienmen1 ptOpOl9I also was :r.:.1 by the com· million'• .ta:Whicb Mid the olan poeed .. unacccpublc rilt• o( oil Spills. visual. recreadooal and air quality depadatioe, impects on marine resources. CODlictl witla the commercial fitbiq i~ and continued impec1onthestate1 vital tourism industry." The commiuion cited \hole riskl in votina 1Pin•t plans for both Northern and Southern California. In lddition, the rePo11 saad a modest nationaJ eneray conlel'Vation propam could more lhan oflMt any ~~ by the .,,.,. Tbe IDlerior ~I aaimalel that I Sl million barrels of oiL or approxiruldy Ii• uys wonh o1 IM nation's oil aupPry, could lte produad if the atnp were developed. ··rm not to•• 10 ~ ill friuerina away our relOUIWI ud punina our OOUllinc at risk wMll the Environmental Protect.ion ~ lowered the mile-per~ ltlidanl for American-made~" llid Com- miaioner Madelyn Glictleld. Minkow guilty; . loses Jast chance to ple<f ba,rgain LOS ANGELES (AP)-Convicted con man Barry M1nkow lost a lasJ- minute chance for a plea barpin when a jury returned and convicted him on all S7 .charges of securities, credit ca.rd and 'mail fraud in the UZZ Best scandal. Minkowl. 221 who was ~nee tou~ed IS a young DUSIDCSSmln Wlth a &enlUS for promoting his carpet cleanin& enterprise listened gnmly as the word .. guilty" echoed S7 tjmes in the packed federal courtroom on Wednesday. Only hours before, Minkow, hls auomey and prosecutors had met to iron out a proPosed plea qreement. With their decision, jurors rejected Minkow's claim that he was a frightened young boy forced by mobsters intd a life of crime. Minkow,, .apparently sensing that the jury would convict him, had agreed to plead guilty to about IS per cent of the charses.. his anomcy, David Kenner confirmed outside court. However, Assistant U.S. Attorney JIJ)les Aspcracr said no final aarec- ment was put together. Jurors made the barpin moot when they abruptly sent word they • had reached u.nanilllO.IU. vcrd.icts in. Mmkow's case. They had deliberated for five days after hearing four months of teslimony about the S2S million swindle that snared Wall Street brokerages. major banks and small investors. 'The panelists were resuming de- liberations today on five chal'JCS against Minkow's co-defendant, ac- countant Norman Rothberg, who is cbuaed with taking a bribe to cover up 'lZZZ Best's frauds. The Minl(ow verdicts were an- nounced so quickly thal the de(en- dant's family and fiancee did not set to court in time to hear them. During the 40 minutes it took to read the verdicts, Minkow fidaeted oocas~onally and once reached over and claSped Kenner's hand. "I was just a front man for the mob," he had insisted on the witness stand. " .. .I was just a puppet.'' Jurors instead aocepted the pros- ecution porirait of Minkow as a shrewd, connivina con man with a thjrst for power, wealth and fame. The defense attorney said his client was remorseful and regretted what had happened. "I think he's learned lessons from this," Kenner said ofMinkow. "Barry never wanted anything more Ulan to build ZZ2Z Best into the General Motors of carpet cleanfoa. ... He clear-ly was involved with a company that was infilt11ced by orpnized crime.'' Kenner, saying he will appeal lhe convictfons, noted t~t U.S. District Judfe Dickran Tevrizian severely limited evidence ~nted to juron on Minkow'1 claim of mob pressure. The youthful defendant told of oons.-tant bcatinp and threats from Barry lllnkow mobsters, loan sharks and thup, but there was little corroboratin& evidence. "A duress defense is difficult to establish" Kenner acknowlec:taed. "because i'h~ts by tl'!eir v~ nature arc communicated pnvately. He also acknowled&ed that juron ap~rcntly disliked Minkow. 'If the Jury liked Sany more than I perceived they liked him, would that have made a difference? Possibly." Minkow, who testified for two weeks, admitted defrauding numer- ou.s investors as well as talk show hosts who haHed him as a teen-ace genius of the.finance world. He also admitted makfog '°"antic overtures to a woman banller to obtain her approval on a loan; she testified that she lost her job because of him. He told of bouncing checks1 issuing false credit card charaes ano amngJng investor toun of rcs10- ration projects which didn't exist Do7.cns ofvictims who lost money in Minkow's frauds came forward to testify. Minlcow's business odyssey bc&an when he started ZZZ.Z Best in h is parents' aaraae 11 the aae of 16. Su.bsequently, he claimed the firm was makina a fortune restorina fire and water-damaaed buildinp when no such jobs were done. .. He sold investors on a buliness that for the most part did not exist," Aspcraer told jurors. Soon he was a familiar face in TV advertisements and on tallc shows such as Oprah Winfrey. He wrote a book about his success and look Wall Street by storm when ZZ2Z Best went public in 1986. ' But the company quickly collapsed in scandal. Minkow claimed its demise was caused by mobsters including the late Jack Callin who turned the business into a swindle. 4 men accused of fixing Senate race LOS ANGELES (AP) -Four busincstmen bave been indicted for violatina federal election laws by allceedJy IOlicitina funds to aid the campaip of California Sen. Alan Cranston bY funneli~ money to an opponent othii chiefnval. The five-count federal indictment contend1 that S l 20,000 wu uled for an advertilina campaian in suppon of American lridependmt Pany can- didate Ed V alien, who ran apinst ~blica.a Rep. Ed Zlchau and Cranltoll in 1be 1916 u .s. Senate cam,-.ip in California. lrMtided wcrc Michael R. Ooland. 4 l, of Bevertv Hills· Lyle R. Weitman, 31, ofBeverty Milla; Sand- ate Habalow, 45, ofloa~;and Midulel 8. Altman, 42, of Los AlllClea. "'Wt wrc DOI involved in uy way, even iDdincdy," c.......t' man Murray Flilnden llid 1dfte. uy in Wlllii~ D.C. In I news eonference. ~ U.S. A~ Clary ,_ oudinod the alie114 r.tYN in ...... 4Weft.. duta were llid to•~ IOHc:iled 10mC '5 contributon to wri• cMckl to ==rJ·~.=:-a ...... nc.. ""* daec*I ........ ........... .,, die ~wllic:b ran tom Sl,000 to He clealiDld to •Y ........, wbo '"'°" ... cllldll a.. ...., --...... ... ....... .. n. ilMMYi ... 111 Wiie told ctif. ... tllilllt ., diflil• ........ Feeusaid. Feess indicated that Ooland was the movina force in the alleled tebeme and he . w1S cha,.ect with conspiring wit.h Weisman and ttat.iow. Altrna~Abarwed with aidinc and abetti allepd con-~b0n1 by ftl U I conduit lht'Oulh which nds were palled to the media company. Ooland, eccordi• to tbe Fedefal Election (l)mmitaion, alto PoVed more diu SI million into a c:mnpeT ·-former See. Cbartcs Percy. I -In., in 1914. Percy lost IO Sen. Paul ~~~1 D-IU. hr"CY said Ooland wunea hjm to io. became the buline11m1n didn't think be was ardent ellOUlb in hil auppon oflnel. "'Oollnd r.u one itlue be it rabid on, .. Percy laid after his 1914 deht. '"Heddllb1 ...... ., .. ~ ........ Duri!ll '9le 1916 mm~ ia wtlidl Zi:Ma ---::-by 0..0.. Zachau't.W. Oii IUPDQl'l for ..... We1W ... ioeed. UDr.c,,,....Mail......,I ...,-.:-.~~ CrwlOll Dew ..................... rolei• ""10• ... il. ,..... __ _ :r.: .=-..:r· -a-•••••.• .,,, .... ......., -twidwe MS1111wa.....-.... . ........... --. .... n ... ... ................. 11 -•·•·-·•:m ... .... Ol••••=dd• Kan BOICIEI Senior at SC a busy student Talk about a Newpon resident who gets involved. Lin Bopotlu was elected third vice president oft he Alpha Chi Omega sorority at USC. As such, she is in charge of the chapter's education, alumni rela- tions and pledse guidanpc. A. senior maJoring in En'gJish, she 1s also a member of the Greek Advisory Council and the parking securities commission. And she panicipated in a production for Sonafest, the largest collegiate talentshowin the nation. Off campus, Boghosian was a teacher's aide for a 12th grade summer school class at Wilson High School in Long Beach, not to mention a Sunday school teacher at the United Armenian Con- greptional Church. · After,&raduation next May, Boghosian plans to go to ~duate school and cam a master s degree in business admiJtistration. And the proud parents are Malcom and J oyce Bopo1lan. • • • Looks as if we have some outstanding men in the Harbor Area. Alfred W. Painter of the Costa Mesa.Nonh Kiwanis Club, Dould ff. Granetof the Costa Mesa Rotary Cf u and Scott -Rldaalt WflU o(the Orange Coast Exchange Club have been named by the Newpon-Mesa YMCA as the 1988 recipients of the Y's service club honor. Each man was presented with a plaque honoring his outstanding c6mmunity involvements. Last year's recipients included Jack Boper of Costa Mesa, W. Rldlard Sml~ of Corona del Mar, PHJ Ryckoff of Newport Beach, Keu etll Fowler of Costa Mesa, and A. Vlaceat Jor1easea and He~ Sweaenoa of Newport Beac . . The Newport-Mesa YMCA has been presenting the Hall of Fame plaques since 1984. The YMCA'soffice manager, Sana Aplcz, coordinated the event. • • • And while we're on the subject of the Newpon-Mesa YMCA. .. Don't forget: They are co llect- ing canned joods and other non-perishable items fo r the Costa Mesa-based organization Share OurSelves. · r:>uring this month, all fitness class partici pants are being asked to bring two cans of equal weight to be used in lieu of the traditional band weights. The YMCA has placed a bo~ in its front lobby and gladly accepts donations on behalf of SOS. SOS is a non-profi t organiza- tion that helps the homeless and needy of Orange County. For information, call Diana Powell at 642-9990. • • • All you profess ional writers look out! Looks as if we have some stiff competition in the near future. Harbor Day School graduate Amy Bron of Balboa has been named one of the 2 I California state winners of the prestigious eighth-grade Promising Young WriiersAward, ~resented by the National Council Teachen of (Pleue ... TOUJlfO/ A8) DAILV PILOT/Thut9day, December 11, 1111 't A.7 Window greetings a sign of the times ............. ..,..., ...... fatlaer-lD-law, Walter Stneaa; wife Joelle, laoldlal 7.oe, 2 moatlaa, aad Pbllllp, 4 . By liTY BOUCHER ............... If someone asked Joe Gerard 10 yeanaao what he'd bedoillj today, he cenatnly wouldn't have said peintina sips However, Gerard says he's not your averaae sian painter. In fact, he believes bis services 1n Orantt Coun- ty can't be matched by anyone else - espectally during the hohday season when be paints more than 70 aut<>'" mobile dealerships• win"dows with "Season's Greetinp." Gerard. 34, ofNewport Beach is the owner of Joe Gerard Saans and Graphics in Costa Mesa. a family business that includes his father-in- law, Walter Stevens. wife, Joelle, and offiet manqer Deanna Foumell. "What sets us a apert from the othen is our large illustrations in the windows," he said. ··we're ~uippcd with If.rat scatToldrnJ that enables us to do profcuaonal illustration on a very large scale. · "For example, our average cartoon 1s e1&ht f~t high," he said ... Most people can't do that because they work on a much smaller scale." Gerard pointed out the advantage of these larac wateTcolor cartoons. ··When you·rc dnving past a place you only have four seconds to communicate a visual message to that driver;· he said ... You might have a 6().foot showroom, but to a driver n might look like a an 8-by-J I piece of paper." A dnvc down Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa reveals many of Guard's ctt.at1ons -some that an: trad1t1onal and some that are, as Gerard put it, "a little more fun." "We have a ptcturc ofSan11 Claus an one window where he's facina the · showroom," he said. "So all the ecoplc on the street see is his beck. The slopn 'Santa's Back' 1~ boldly painted beside him. In addition to the traditiooaJ t•Season's Grecunp" a.lid "Happy Hobdays," there's "Jolly . Kollr. Days" and "Have a Cool Yule ' window that features a window of Peanuts characters playina an snow. . So how did this EnaJish major ,et into such a busmess? "( majored in En&lish and aotf at UCJ," ~rard joked: ··1 took no an classes and went to work for Walter Stevens in 1978. It was a family business; you ~· I married Steveas dau&hter. -• "ft 's a craft or trade that can be taught like anythina else -and I bad a good teacher," be added. Hov.-ever, Stevens remembered when umes were tough. , "We started Otis business w11h 3~ cents on the kJtcben table." Stevens said. ··1 ~m pro~ to say in the JO years we ve been in business. we've had no litipuons or probleml. It's JUSl a "Whole family effort." •· Gerard satd althou&h he's partners (Pl--eee PADITING/ A8) Take a tour of Hawaii via seminar on its art, culture .............. ..,..., ........ Garlan Wetsel playa Santa for Newport pl'OIJ'Ul. Playing Santa Claus makes liolidays jolly By UTY BOUCHER OtllleDl!lr ......... When Garlan Wetzel inherited his father-in-law's Santa Claus suit 35 years ago, he promised he'd ne ver let 1t go unused -even 1f meant filling the suit himself. Wetzel, a 66-year-old Costa Mesa resident, is a full-time Rent-A-Sa nta Claus for the Newpon Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreatio n Department. and loves it. "I played Santa Claus for all my nieces and nephews years 1101" he said. 'Tve only been mamed for ~ years andMJY wife and I are waitina to see if it works before we have any children of own,·· he joked. This is Wetzel's second year as a "Rent-A-Santa," and said a lot hu chan~ from the I 9SOs. when the requests from children were simpler. "Most of these kids arc from more affluent homes and ask for thinp like computers. One kid asked for Ninten- do," he said, referring to the popular electronic game system. ··1 was surpnsed no one asked for an electric train," he said. "Electric trains used to be big when I first started playina Santa. They were so creative, as were erector sets and Lincoln Lop." And he didn't foraet little girl's requests of the 'SOs either. "I remember when the first Barbie doll came out," he said. "Every little &irt wanted one. Alona. with 'Chalty Cathy' and "Betsy Wctsy'." However. he doesn't just show up at panics for little folks. (Pleue ... Ul'fT I A.8) By JOYCE BODLOVICH Of ... .,..,,... ..... Joyce Nugent-Ro~nthal'squest 1s to bnng the nch history ofHawauan art and culture to the shores of Southern California. Rosenthal, who has a master's degree in Pacafic and Oriental an from the Univers1tyofHawa1l, will follow her quest Jan. 27 when she leadsa senunaron the subject at Orange Coast College. Sponsored by the Community Services Depan- menl, the class 1s from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Fine Ans area of the school. .. Pacific an is imponant," she said. "It is just nowgainana interest because of the Pacific Rim. There arc no courses offered on the culturcor its sacred art.h is very heh m pnmiuve art. I am hoping It will gaan a following.." The Newport Beach resident said the class will focus on lhe pre-con tac I era before 1778. when En1hsh ex- plorer James Cook landed on the Island. Cook'sexplorauon brought thefLrstcontact the Hawauan·peoplc had with the European world. "The culture changed dramattcally after Cook landed, .. she said. "The Europeans and Amcncans traded nails from the ship for food and water from the Hawaiians. With the nails Hawai ians made knifes. Capt Cook. who was first considered a god, wou Id laterd1e from a knife wound." She said history tells us the in- vasion of outsiders also brought to the islands vcneral disease. cholera. meas~ bubonic plague and lepros~. At the time of Cook's landinJ there were approximately 300.000people in the virtually disease-free popu- lation. The diseases led to the demise of many native people. ........ ,....., ............... J oyce Nqent-Roeentlaal wttla book OD Bawaliaa ecalptue. "It also allowed the powerful King Kamehameha to move up in the thtc ranks because it broke down the social system." The Hawaiians were sk1Ued fisher- men and farmers 'llt'ho follov.ed a stnct system oflaws ~t down b~ their chiefs and pncsts. They worshiped and fearedavoupofaods not unlike the ancient Greek de1ties of Olympia. "They made larae wooden sculpt um of their gods. .. she said. "'There were probablv about four or -(PleueeeeAllT/A8) Easterner, OCC in harmony It seems strange that Victor SolototT had to travel 3.000 miles to arow as a music educator. A graduate of Manhattan's legend· ary Performing Arts High School. the bHJS of the movie and TV scnes "fame," the 43-)ear-old Brookl)n resident possesses a bachelor's and master's d~ 1n upnght bass and music education from the Manhattan School of Music. He has completed courses toward a doctorate 1n music education from New York Univemty and has done additional graduate study at Hofstra and Long Island univers1ucs. "-prolcss1onal mus1c1an for 26 years. SolototT has performed with tbc Hudson Valle} S)'mphon)'. the Trenton Symphony and the cw Jersey S)mphony Orchestra. 4Jso a J3Z2 and rock mus1caan, he has pla) ed wnh w and Larry Elgard and the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Band. l\nd he has been a conductor at CamcgJc Hall alona Y..1th performing W1th show bands backing up Me lba Moore. Robe.rt Goulet and e1I Sedaka. So why travel 3.000 miles to attend music ~lasses at Oranac Coast Col- lege? "I love teaching.·· he sa1d. "It's my calling in hfe. I've found my niche and there'sabsolutely nothing else I'd rather be doing. "I want to learn and grow as a music educator and I want to take fresh ms1&hts back with me to Dcwe)'.'' fie said. "l requested a sabbatical a year aao in order to e'plorc new musical honzons. and was arantcd the sabbatical this year." Solotoff has tau_.,t music classes at John Dcwc}' High School. near Brookl)'n·s Cone)' Island. since the school first opened ns doors in 1969. (Pleue .ee llV8JCIAL/ A8) A.a Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thursday, December 15, 1988 "( . Merchant donates supplies to mark her firm's expansion By KATY BOUCHER °' .. ..., .... ...., If there is one thing Stella Chavos' friends will attest to, she doesn't have a aelfish bone in her body. for the last 23 years she's run Newport Center Onbopcdic Medical &. Suflical Supply Inc. and tried to give her personal attention to every customer. And Chavos, 66, hasn't stopped. Last week, she celebrated the expansion of her business by th row- ina a bash for more than 4SO people and donating a state-of-the-art wheel- chair and adiustable walker to the Oasis Senior Center. "We're the oldest surgical supply company in Orange County that has everything a patient needs," Chavos said. "If we don't have that product, we'll get it the next day." thopedic prescriptions and under· standing the nature of orthopedic fittings -especially about the foot," said Frank Chavos. 34, who works at the store with his mother. "I bet my mom has seen more than half million feet." Chavos studied in the Midwest where she met her her late husband James Chavos. They married and had two children. Jim was in surgical sales. · Eventually 1hey relocated to Or- ange County. Jim found an office in a new industrial complex in the Fashion Island area of Newport ~ch - before the sh opping center existed. "He needed help in the store for about three months and I ended up staying for 23 years," she said. "If the phone rang once a day we thought it was great. We had crutches, back braces and always had the shoes." goin&. . 'd "At that lime we d1 n't have the houses and pop,ulation we do now," Chavos said. "There was only one medical buildina here, and the or- thopedic doctors would refer all their patients to me. • "A lot ofour patients take a certain amount of time and we take the time to gi ve them our personal attentfon," she added. "I couldn't stop when Jim died. I know he would have wan1cd me to make his business grow." And indeed it has -from 500 square-feet to 2,000 square feet, with all the latest equiP.ment. The business s success hasn't changed Chavos' ('aring nature one bit. ' She carries products for everything from sports injuries to sore feet . "It means understandina or- Nine years into the business, Jim rhiwn~ cfil"d. but Stella Chavos kept it "She treats me more like a mom than just another employee," said Druann Greer, assistant to Chavos. "I don't have any family left out here. It's so cute. When l go out on a date after work. she's either fixing my hair or tying my bows. Stella Cbane (left) wltll •n hank and Draann Greer, an uelataat. MUSICAL TRANSPLANT ••. FromA8 "Dewey is a flagship expenmentaJ school for music education," he said. "People from across 1he coun1ry. and around the world. visit our campus to see how we present our broad music curriculum.' Six music instructors are employed by the school. SolotofT started an orchestral string and guitar program in 1969. Several years later. he began a rock history program. In 1980. he started a rock ensemble. The school also has a jazz band, and more than a dozen public concerts are performed on campus each year. Solotoff. who has family and friends in Southern California. said he searched for a college at the forelront of commercial music educa- tion. He chose Orange Coast College. So!9tofT is taking a class 1hat exammes computers in music. The class focuses on the leading edge of music and computer technology, Musical lnstrumenfDigital Interface (MIDI). "MIDI is absolutely outrageous; it's the wave of the future," he said. 'T m pl nning to take this newly acquired er expertise back wi th me 10 r yn." H 1s enrolled in a new music class on recording techniques. The course is designed primarily for performers and technicians. PAINTING ••• FromA7 with Stevens, Gerard does the paint- ing with staff members. "We do everything from gold leaf. to watercolor, to sandblasted signs," Gerard said. "We did a 22-karat gold leaf sign for the Alfred Dunhill store in South Coast Plaza. Also we carve signs with sandblasting on redwood." Display signs range anywhere from $200 to S l ,SOO, depending on the she of the job. .. The biggett job this year was SI .SOC>," he said ... We did a series of windows from the cashier's office to the lounae and receptionist area." And Gerard said he wouldn't do it if he didn't enjoy bis work. II S/1_11........__ti....;__a~# __ Ir/end on the SZS,O V11t11tl ol 11 til-t/•11; The people at K·OCEAN I 0 ~ tM. Hickory Cal Mart Travel. American Airlines and Royal Cruise Lines want to make this holiday truly unforgettable for you and a special friend. Just call K-OCEAN' s "Fantasy vacation Line" -721-WINS -anytime, day or night, and tell us what friend you'd like to give this vacation to, and why. Or, fill out the form below and mail it to K-OCEAN . Then llsten to K·OCEAN for flnallsts. Prize will be awarded December 22, '88 by random drawing. ~ 1 0 3 . 1 F II A AD I 0 Royal WCruise L1ne A~ American Airlines * 14 Day Fantasy vacation for two includes "Great capitals of Europe cruise" and first class transatlantic airfare. • RENT A SANTA ..• FromA7 "I do adult panics as well as children's," he saitl. "Women sit on my lap and tell me they want Mercedes or BMW's forChristmas- or that diamonds arc a girl's best friend. "I even get the men to sit on my lap who tell me they want the money to help pay for these thfogs," he added. laughing. And with his .. ho ho ho's" wettel can brighten up anyone's day. "He works so well with so many different age groups," said Kim Gomez, a recreation coordinator. "He's always bubbly and turns any situation into a positive one." · Though-Wct.zel enjoys retirement the other 11 months of the year, he said he loved what he used to do for a living. "I used to be with the NewP,Ort- Mesa Unified School District, • he said. "I taught for 22 years and was principal for more than seven years at Bayview School ....... a school thcv tore down to build new homes." Until Dec. 23, anyone may rent a Santa Claus through the Newport Beach recreation department. Santa services can be obtained for $30 for a half-hour visit. The fee includes one candy cane per person with a 24 candy cane maximum. For groups larger than 24, there is an additional charge. Santa is avail- able between I 0 a.m. and I 0 p.m. and reservations must be made 24 hours in ac!vancc. And for Wetzel, the busier the better. "I enjoy being around the inno- cence of the little ones the most," he said. "When it's Christmas, you're the 'King' and the kids are so recepti ve to the Christmas mcssqe. "I )ust love beinf Santa in Decem-ber,' he added. " t's very seasonal work. The rest of the year they'd put me in jail for dressing like this. But at this time of the year, no one can be mad at Santa Claus." YOUNG WRITER.:. FromA7 Enilish and co:s'Ponsored by the D.C. Heath Co. The recognition was based on work she did as an eighth-gad er at Harbor Day School in Corona delMar. The Promising Young Writers Award is designed not only to stimulate and recognize the writ- ing talents of students, bu ta I so emphasize the imponanceof writing skills among all students, according to the council. Amy competed for this honor -with hundreds ofotherei&hth· grade students nominated by their schools. She submitted both an exposi- tory writing essay on George Orwell's" Animal Farm" as a sample of her best writing at Harbor Day and an impromptu pie~ written in a 75 minute time limit. . Amr now attends the Cate · Schoo in Carpinteria and is the daughter of Dr. ud Mn. Job Brown of Balboa. ART EXAMINED ••. FromA7 fi ve important gods. Many ofthe sculptures can 6e found in t)le Bishop Museum in Honolulu. "The scuJptures were found in the temples where only the Alli, (!heeli1e) could worship. The temples were open stone temples where the eli tc gave offerings, such as food." Nugent-Rosenthal will lead her class assisted by slides along with printsbyartistJobn Weber, who accompanied Capt. Cook to Hawaii. Students will learn about the unique handmade wooden bowls, feather- works and petroglyphics representa- tive of the culuture. "The wooden bowls were made wi th inlayed teeth from the dead rulers of of other districts," she said. "Hawaii was set up like a futile system with each district bavins its Melt AWfl8 Mints 2 tJaet... ' *".00 IUe .. , own king. The districts would fight one another and the victor would make the bowl with the teeth." The feathered cloaks were worn by all the elite, Nuacnt-Rosenthal said. But it was King Kamehameha whose cloak tells a slory of power and wealth. "Thecloalc'sstatuswasdetermined by how bi&and how many fcathen. - SOme cloaks were made from chicken feathers," she said. "King Kamehameha's was made from a bird with a small yellow tuft. The W. cloalcis valuedatSI millionandon display in the Bishop Museum." Nugent-Rosenthal said Hawaiian art ana culture are imponant in United States history. HI l' I' . ''I I I ' ' : QwBds • Loge JO Arw 2 ... $'7.00 ' ••·••I WDTCLIFF PLAIA .. ..,. Ol'BllDAILT I ... • Orenge Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Thureday, December 15, 1988 All NEC, Peat Marwick merge training, information tech National Education Corp. and KPMO Peat Marwick have formed a IU'I• alliance to market and 1diver information tecJu~>loSY train- iJll. IUalelY developmellt, and re- lated implementation servicn, the two ~tion1 announced in Irvine on Wednetday. 1 ~1n.10 It ..., 7.17 It 4'1 s. 1t «US~~ 1A1.N 1111111 !Mt Jt.!! .. ufi.11 The ~ment brinas.totether the reaoun::ea of NECs Applied Leamina unit and Peat Marwiclc's information tecbnoloSY consultina capabilities, .vbicb include Nolan, Nonon cl Co. The allia~ will Jive clients a total solution to their 1nfonnation tcch- nolotY trainina and education need• -from identifytna needs and anaJyz.- ina requirements, to plannina and implementina complete propeams for supponina business straieay with information tehcnolotY and related train.in&. accordina to William A. Hasler, vice chairman of manqe- ment consulting of Peat Marwick, and H. Da vid Bri&ht. chairman and chief executive officer of NEC. "This is funhcr proof of our commitment to the principle that information technoloSY can belp tranform orpntzations into 21st century corporations;" uid Hasler. "We are takina a Ions-term strateay approach," said Briant. "The new alliance will suppon clients with consultative services from the first needs assessment in desian and development phases, thto.ugh im- plementation and manqemcnt of the training program." OCcompany, Belgium'sBIM form Doelz Inc. Doclz Inc .. a newly formed Dela· ·ware corporation. has purchased the business operations of Doelz Networks Inc .• oflrvine. Doclz Inc. is the result of the panneringofDoclz Networks' found- 101 management headed by M.L. Doelzanda European conson1um led by BIM, a Bel&ian systems intepator. Under the terms of the purcbue, which becomes effective immedi- ately. Doclz Inc. bas purchased Doclz Networks' current products, patents and products in development and will assume suppon for products installed at customer locations. Michel Vanden Bossohe-Marquet- teA..the president ofBIM, said. "Doclz oners the industry's most advanced wide-area network technology. The unique Doclz approach offers total openness., optimum cost and supenor service availability, which bnnp tomorrow's solutions into today s networks: Doclz Inc. was founded to solve datacommunications networking problems simply and cost effectively. Based 1n Naperville. Ill.. Apphed Lcammg bas 1,600 professionals and 49 offict1 tn North Amenca and 22 offices overseas. Apphed Lcam1na 1s a whoUy . owned subsidiary of Na- tional Education Corp. in Irvine. wh ic.b is Listed on the New York Stock Exchanac. A8plied Leaming con- ducts some 2 ,000 hours of trainina per year in the areas of information technology training, industrial tram- mg. inaoaatment development. and literacy_ KPMG Peat Marwick provides accounting and auditing. Jax. and manqement consuhm& services t~ Wlde variety of buslncues, orpn1 - uons, 1nst1tut1ons and mdivadi.aals. t bas I JS offices tn the United Statet and 1s a member ofK.PMG (Klyn veld Peat Marwick. Oocrdeler), an 1nter- nat1onal association of member firms operating in 11 S count1rHand hav1na revenues of$3.9 b1lhon. • NEC 1s the world's lcad1na provider of educauon and tramma to busmc:u, industry and aovem~t with 1988 annua( revenues antic~ pated to exceed S4SO million. I • APW A chapter elects Nelson '89 president Carl R. Nellea. P .E., 1s the 1989 president of the Southern • c.atifomia chapter of the Amencan Pubhc Works Association. A member of APW A for 14 years, Nelson began h1s career with the County of Ora.nae in 1960. ln April 1975 he was promoted to director of public works where be manaacd all of the surveyin~ design. construction and operations of the coun ty's public works faC1liues. He was most recently honored by APWA as one of the nation's Top 10 Public Works Leaders of the Year. Last month Nelson joined The Keith Cos. an Costa Mesa where he 1s respops1ble for all projects in the public works div1s1on. • • • When Dtstrict 12 of the Cahfom1a Mille Advisory Board met 1n Ontario. Case Vu Der Eyt Sr., of Laguna &ach ~as re-elected a state director. District 12 serves dairymen m Orange. Los Angeles. Riverside. San Bemardmo and Ventura counties. • ••• IJoyd Lee McCollam, owner/panner of Mesa Travel Aceac)'_m Costa Mesa. recently earned the professional dcs1gnauon of CTC (Cen1fied. Trave Counselor) from the national Institute of Certified Travel Agents. based m Wellesley, Mau. The Costa Mesa resjdentJOtnS more t~n 10.000 travel professionals across the counU') who have earned this dJsttnction. · • • • Joa.a D. McCar'Gy has been named to establish a Southern California sales office for btetn&e4 Clrcelcs b e., a Wash ingtoo state-- based power convener and hybrid microcircuit manufacturer. He; will hire and train a Costa Mesa-based resionaJ sales team. Merchant b~nking reportedly dr0pped f roffi bailout strategy STOCKTON (AP) -Plans to allow American Savinp to eQlllC in merchant banking under the Roben M. Bassaroupaftera federal bailoutoflhe thrift have been scaled beck 10 a compromise to ease objections to the rescue plan, accordina to recent reports. · The merchant b&nk, which would invest in such deals as corporate acquisitions and junk bonds, has drawn objecuons of California thrift reaulators and somt in Convcss. delayina a bailout of the troubled thrift by the Fcdcral Home Loan Bank Board. The bank board and the Bass rnvestment group of Fon Wonh. Texas. have agrtcd to reduce the amount of money put into merchant banking to 2 percent to 3 percent of American Savings' a.ssets from 10 percent. accordina to reports Tuesday in the Wall Street JoumaJ and the Los Anaclcs Times. A bank board spokesman didn't immediately respond to a rcque5t for comment on the reports. Stockton-based American fell into 1nsolvenC) through a combinauon of aggressl\'e, rapid growth and soured real estate loans. The bank board has agreed to tum the thrift over 10 the Bass group, wluch wiIJ tnJCCl SS)() mtlhon in ne\f capital. The govemment. through the Federal SavUlgJ and Loan Lnsurancc Corp .. wtll put up S2 b1ll1on in cas~ and notes to prop up the mst1tut1on. The bank board 1s press mg to close the deal b) the end of the ~car to reap tax ~nefits .... h1ch the board will shart with Bass. Tbe onginal ba1lou~ plan called for the ne .... ~menca• Savings to ha' e a CalJforrua state ch.aner But the satt sa' mgs and loan c"'mm1ss1oner ObJeCted 10 tht' mt>rchan.l bank plan. and the present plan I\ to gl\ e the C'Ompan) a modified federa l chancr. Some tn Congress and 1n 1he thnft mdust11 ha't obJ~tcd to the merchant banl.. on grounds 11 Y.Ould allo .... more of the n le) investments that got .\mencan into trouble in the first place. -l•Hi•i"iHI•---___;.------------~ In t 989. you are likely to be one ot millions or Americans over o4 years old who will pay a surtax under the Medicare Catastophrc Coverage Act How will the ne~ Medicare supplemental premium affect }Our pocketbook,, Can )'OU afford a Federal surta up to SI 000 more than your e~pected ta' bill'> Get the answers now 1n Shearson Lehman Hutton's Special Report,· Catastrophic Health Care A Catastrophic Ta-c Increase">" Find out SHFARSON LEHMAN HUI10N how the new urta' affects ou ~nd what you can do to min1m1ze I( b1t~ To rece1\le your free copy call or return the coupon • I 10 • Pe<>•• .. 0. 10 Petr ~ 41' 4'°' P.or .. 1' • 26~ Pou.\• 1'.'\ •• Po-1oa. 0 ") P.-09"1> 11 • 11 l'DS .. C )7.,, » .. I ""' . a..-)6 l6 • Ov•clo JO , JI • OA•C~ /23'-n~ 'R•oel' 10 • 10 , Rtvmo U • 24 ., st.alCr 2j't n I 11_..tn 2 .,. : 11-.·~ ' ,., •o ll<*!Sv 1 • 1 ., Roo'lllvr 76~ 1'\o ltou .. JO lO • s.cr .. •••A n~ S.IKo >• , 71-Stfo!IGa ,, • '7'-IS•Pa .. ··~ 1•'-k~ 2S • 75'• i Ser &>H lS • lS 1 SN0.1t 10 10 • SEEO ., ... s. • .-. ' ... s~ si., si. si-•v..ci t 10 S•••"'' S6 • S1 • s I(•• llOSINESS PRON£ ROM£ PfiONt QI'"..,.:., 1 '' Ol~~l4l~~Mtm Ctif"-1 AlO * Or1nge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thurlday. DeeefTI~ 15. 1988 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ~-. THUR8DAY'8 CLOSING PRICll Market loss modest NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market pos1ed a modest loss today in an a1mospbe~ of caution approaching Friday's "1riple witching houT." The last trading will occur Friday in a series of expjrjna stock index futu~s. index options and options "" individual stocks. WHAT AMEX DID : WHAT NYSE Dio NEW YORK CAP> Dec. 15 ~. NEW YORK (AP) Dec. 15 ~-1'dv~~ ~~,=' New ttlohs New low' , Cl AMEX LEADER S Go Lo Quon s Due to tr.asmlssk>n problems In New 'tork, today'• fisting wtll not appear In the Oalty Piiot. META LS QuoTEs : NYSE LfAOER S . , Dow JoNf s AvER Acr s NASDAQ SuMM AR • NYSE UPS & DOWNS I 0 Tc u p s & D 0 ~ ~ :; ' .• Happy Hoof ers entertain Arts Center patroiis' party ~ Je Sw-'1 Happy Hoofcn entertained memben of Cannell Cbapler, Onnee County PafOnnina Ans Center, when they P-tbered at the Newpon Bach home of 'hm and a.aa... Wun. for a holiday .. uons luncheon. Tbe dancen (most of whom are SO olus in ijF) en~nained wTth "Chonis Line," .. Boosie Wcqie Bulle Bo .. and Christmas numben in the :ff. bour propam of lap and jazz. The bOs1els is a member of the dancina lfC>Up and the performance was in her tint floor ''studio." Earlier ·the 4S 1uests dined upstairs on homemade food brouaht by mem- bers. The party WU anansd Vy J...U. a.... and PrleUla GardL PaUODI aacndina included lldrleJ ...... C.CMrtlle llarmMJ, ... ..... ~. Am Kiimer, Jeu ..... and CIMee ....... Al lbe women socialized (there are male .. trons. but none attended), ·they enjoyed the Warrens' view on the clear day. Check.ina out Catalina were Carmen chairwoman Jeane PleeMr, Mary AM KDHI, J.._.e Baaer, L,.. Lee, GeMvteve Ray_, lleUJ ....... &.e vma, Bela S--•, JeAm C..... and Temlke Pearee. Happy Booten tappm, oat a tane. Since this set toaether was primar- ily a holiday social, business was kept to a minimum. However, there was talk of an upcomina fund-raiser. A Pearce 1s chairwoman of the benefit "Japanese Fantasy" din· and is arranging more dances. ner/dancc/auction is planned for Feb. Japanese dancers will provide enter- 1 I at the Sheraton Newport Beach. tainment. Jeuette Butoa. (left)wltla La Rene Warrea and Prl8cllla Guda. At rt.pt are Chapter cbalnromaa Jean Plocller and Dorotlay Jo Swamon. -Vidal Sassoon at' boat parade party kcording to the American Medical ~tion, the American As.5ociation of Blood Ban~ and the National Institutes of Health, the safest blood you can receive during surgery is your own. By receiving your own blood during surgery, yoo can virtually eliminate the p<Sibility of contract- ing a serious infection from a transfusion, including Hepatitis and AIDS. That's because your own blood i the only perfect match for your bodr Even if you're not anticipating sur- gery, our specialized technology allows us to store your blood for future use. In fact, the Federal Food and Drug Administration has recentlv extended the storage time for blood to ten J~at!. For more information on storing your blood, ask your physician , or call us today. ~ Aiitology center Medb1 Aw 11 Newp<rt r.eneer. MOl .-ado .-U. Suite 211, ~ Beach. calibn1a 92660 .. (7~) 546-0631 ~------ .. ltNs hrmil• ..... HDlyW'tl .... S..N .. • Sell ..... ~lktl 0y..., FMilf JeMw'• Sone TIA Titt Coercing woiilan tci have their son's baby is selfish -=====:=~=~~~~---Wtren ml!C!iCil seience:-in a its Ali I.MIDS wonder. is able to arranae it so that a male can become preanant and 11ve binh. then men should have some- th1ngtosayaboutaboruon. Until that time, they should just be quiet. - l.V., EL PASO. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I dated a girl for rwo years.. Due to the problems resulung from livina in What nght does this selfish woman different cities. we were never able to have to depnve us of a grandchild? spend enough time together and find -CLEVELAND. out 1f we were truly compatible. She DEAR CLEVE: ne lawyer pn wanted to act mamcd. I wasn't ready you llubuMI Nrrttt ialormadea. for the commitment. Finally 5M MeuwWle, Mme w..W say dlat Y" became t~ of my "foot-dragging," are tile OM •lie is selfl_. a.t as she called n, and we went our l8coa1iderale. fte HX• letter H· separate Wl)'S. presses u '8teresdq poi8t •f view. Since that time she has written me DEAR ANN LANOERS: I am a several letters ask.ma that I return the male. 70 years old, and have seen a gifts she had given to me. includina g~ bat of this world. I am ryot the h.andmade thtnp she had wntmg about a problem. but hke "poured her hean into:· In her last "'!any others 1n your rca~ing au-letter she included SI 0 "for posuae." d1ence.-J want to speak.my pic~cc. --. Wh1l1in'ouropmion?-BITIER----• I have never seen a pregnant man HERBS. nor have I ever heard of a man who DEAR HERBS: SM .W.'t p-.e Y" became a mother. Therefore 1t seems a BMW er die Bepe ••·--· .W lk'! to me that men ought to keep their s. pn Met die arple .ms _.. mouths shut when the subJCCt of ceuls swea&er. IMC ...... AM retva abonion 1s raised. die Slt, tee. By CBARLD GOREN ud OMAR SHARIF Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH • 9 5 Q Q 10 7 0 "7. + A J 10 6 3 WEST •Kl 6•3 Q A 9 I EAST • 10 7 2 Q 6 5' 2 0 13 2 • 5' 0 Q 10 9 6 + K 1 SOUTH +A Q 8 Q K J 3 0 A I 5 • Q 9. 2 The bidding: S-lll West North F.ast INT.._ JNT Paa .... ... ()penina lead: Four of • FrNaJ,Det.ll BJ SYDNEY OIU.IU\ Most declarers have a natural ten- dency to go after their long suit first. That's fine and dandy if it yields enouJh tricks to make your contract. If not, other consider- ations could apply. The auction was a matter of siin· pie arithmetic. With a balanced hand, a fair five~d minor and no slam interest, North was quite cor- rect in raisins to three no trump tnstead of responding three clubs. West led his fourth-best spade, and East's ten was taken by the queen. Declarer tried the club fi. nesse. In with the kin&. East re-- turned a spade. Declarer held up one round, but his ace wu forced out on the next round. Declarer had onJy eight tricks. When he tried to set up a heart uick, West arabbcd the ace and cashed two more spade tricks for a one-trick set. AIUD~March 21 -April 19): What had been a source of cona:m w1 II be el"ld 1catcd. You ·11 set proverb1aJ second chance and this apphes 1n personal and career a~as. Hiahhabt inat1ative. TAVlltJI (Apnl 20-May 20): You can wm mone). you'll also locate article that had bttn lost. m1ss1111 or 1tolen. Family reunion takes ~l could future aourmct dini~~.!c awearancc proves oeneficiaJ. GDllNI (May 21-June 20): Olvmify, make 1n- quif'lCSt ~~ .. with travel etpert. You'll add to IPP9;f"I, DODUJarity zooms u..-ttts. Individual you admire will iay, "You've'°' 1t.r.--- CANCD (JuM 21;.Jwy 22): What appean a roedbloclr will be nndbi med mto actual 11eppinptane. ~~=~~~ communteattOn. LSD (July ll-A .. 22): It~ check tqhtmt day, you'I learn more aboUt ~-ancl ineemc rates. Focus on wnhna, travel ... .nous ftinalion." lmpnnt style. Med contel ~dole relative. VlllGO (AUi-l).Sepc. 22): Family member 1eys. "I am willilll to wait Mid a ." FocUI on ~ domalic a-.;UIUMIM. receipt oluaiq..e pft. C:o~me1· lenlllll Iii• iojlu11d if~ lft pcninnL u-.A(Sept. ll-Oct. 22~ ltniope11--.. ... ••i .... but~ bei• plhble. · 1nctiviclull IMiped to ..... ~ Had declarer realized that he would not bavcenouJh tricks for his contract were the club finesse to "fail, he miJht have found the win· nina li ne. He mUSt first attack the entry to the danacr hand-in this case, West. Sup~ tbat, at trict two, declarer were to lead the kina of hearts. Should West hold up the ace, declarer can score two spade tricks. two diamonds and a heart, so he will need only four club tricks. He can then take the club finesse with impunity. Best defense is for West to grab his ace of hearts and continue with spades. Now declarer must hold up the ace of spades for one round. When he then lotes a club to East, either that defender would be out of spades or else the suit would be sputtina ~. Either way. the con- tract would be secure. • A19 OtMge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thut9day, Oec:«nbet 15, 1818 by Bii Keane COU1'TBR CUL TUR& by Maratta & Maratta "How can Santa see us all the way from the North Pole?" "By satelrite." · · MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Is it possible that Christmas is coming?" PEANUTS '(ES. MAAM . WELL 006lNAL ':( I CAME IN WITH MY 006 TO 6ET HIM A LICENSE ... GARFIELD B't' MISTAKE I GUESS 1-tE 60T A TEMPORAR'< DRIVER'S PERMIT .. AH,'i'E.~.THE.RE IT IS. THAT0Lt7 CHRl~TNIA~ 5PIRrT I!> IN THE AIR ONCE ACfAIN TUMBLEWEEDS R08&18R08& t c.~·r 001~T. ~ \ et:.5'0£.'>, \'M .... ~ r l J I I • A L L -T E~~A i N STROLLE~ · .. DENNIS THE MENACE ~Y Hank Ketcham ~ • ) .. by Jim Davis AMP A c.AR,A PON~ ANP A VIUA IN THE SOCJTM OF F"ANCl.! by Tom K. Ryan ~- by Pat Brady FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE . JUDGE PARKER MARIGENE WIL L 6 E HERE WHEN YOU COME FOR DINNER, SAM! SHE WANTS TO KNOW WHY YOU'RE INTERESTED IN THE GIVEN NAMES OF HER FOSTER PARENTS I FUNKY WDmSRBEAK ACfUA~<.>.rP& NOT~ FOR SOMBJNE IN ~R. PROF€5&10N 70 E'1.PERlel:E A HEARING &...0$. ru.~;. ·57~ DOOKE8BURY by Garry Trudeau by Lynn Johnston IF~U\JE.ON~~ ~~,'P) 10~ 511\....,m uP! by Jeff MacNelly by Tom Batluk fill....., •• ..,_..., C:afl ,... '°" -· .OOUl __,.... --'°"' ,..., -ID - :.a.·~---.. ...... ---------·• ..... IW· -•MO-..... ------~._ ••••ma ' Helmet law . The trqic _motorcycle accident suffered by actor Gary Busey has revived debate on whether riders should be requll'ed to wear helme~1 for their safety. If Busey, a vocal opponent of such a requirement, had been wearing a helmet be mi&h.t not ~ facina the long ordeal of recovery from a 1-111--11--~nm1111~hcad tnJUry as welt as-a possiblcthreano his car . , Ironically, he has made a P.tSC for a helmet law ... Under pressure from celebrities liker Busey, Sylvester Stallone, Mickey Rourke, Arnold Scbwarzeneger Fred Dryer a~ Jay Leno, Gov. Deukmejian vetoed a mandatory beff!ld ball that had been passed overwhefminaJy by the Lqislature. . Despite polls showing 75 percent ofCalifotniaps believe the law is needed, the .aovernor apparently was swayed by a small ~up of ~lebnty motorcycle riders on the last day before his deadlme to act on the bill ... ....9'1)eu_kmejian claimed the~ was insufficient evidence that ~ inordan.tt~ a!"ount of pubhc money goes to pay for riders with head tnJUnes, and that most of those who have accidents are young, inexperienced riden. Busey, an experienced C)'clist atase 44, has demonstrated thatageand skill count little m the 4es•ans of fate ... Motorcycle riders die at 16 times. the rate of car OCC!-lpan~s, per person-mile traveled, according to the Cahfornaa Highway Patrol. Those who are hospitalized end up cos~ng tt~e pubhc ~oney. For example, a study prepared at the Unavenlly of Cahfom1a, Davis Medical Center showed that 74 percent of the cost for bike riders is paid by the state a~ anot~er l S percent is paid by counties. The remainder is paid by nders themselves and their insurance companies. A m~f!datory helm~t law CO!Jld save California taxpayers S 100 m1lhon a year m medical costs to uninsured or underinsured motorcyclists, according to the Davis study ... Assem.bly~an R.i~hard Aoyd, D-Gardena, has rcin- tr~u~ has ball requmna helmets for all motoTCycle riders. This tame, the governor should listen to common sense instead of 0celebrity experts," and sign the bill. ' Bdenllelll Call.lonJu Gloud of Steel .. . Los Angeles' answer to the Statue of Libcny -the $45 million .. CJoud of Steel" -belongs right where much of its construction material will come from: the scrap heap. Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and has West Coast Gateway Committee apparently believe the City of Angels has an identity problem. Since the city doesn't have a highly recognizable symbol tucll as the Statue of liberty in New Vork,-thc.Hollywood sign and the Gatew~y Arch in St. Louis, Los Angelenos are missing out on somethmg. The Prayina Mantis-like monstrosity, designed by two New York architects, would vault l , 700 feet over the Hollywood Freeway, just where it becomes tbe Santa Ana Freeway, near the downtown Civic Center. It would stretch parallel ~o the freeway from Broadway to Alameda Street, and link Chinatown, El Pueblo de Los Angeles Park and Little Tokyo. It would include two huge aquariums, to be known as the A~lanti~ Ocean ~nd the Pacific Ocean museums, a pair of IO- story-h1gh movie screens, an enormous panel of open-air video displays, bridge top parks, restaurants and cultural exhibits. . ·~This i~ the project t!t~t's going lo lead Los Angeles. at least an archnccturc and v1s1on, to be a true world-class city,·· said committee chainnan Nick Patsaouras. We could be cynical and suggest that the region's smog and traffic dilemmas and frequent earthquakes are enough S)'.mbols, but we won't. · --Instead, if the mayor and his cohorts arc that desperate to attach their names to another plaque and be visionary. we ~uggest they seek similar corporate generosity for housing and feeding-the homeless. Copley Los A111ele$ ftWl/M~N Release ski report What's John Van de Kamp trying to hide? That's a question on Mo Orwig's mind after the refusal of the state attorney generaJ's office to release a rcpon on which Van de Kamp largely based his environmental appeal of the ML Shasta Ski Arca plan. Orwig. a Redding resident involved with the organiza- tion Save Our Skiing, asked for a copy of the rcpon. which he learned the attorney seneral's office had commissioned. The document analyzes (nit picks is the term Orwig .uses) the Forest Service's environmental impact statement on the ski area's proposed development. Clifford Rechtschaffen, a deputy attorney general. told Orwig he can't have a copy of the study. despite the fact it was paid for with California tax dollars. Orwig, as a ta"payer who helped pay for the report, ought to be able to seek has own answers. • What's John Van de Kamp trying to hide? Reddl•I Record SurdJJ1t1 ... Palitical canip~igns As the echoes of blistering invectives from the campaign continue ~ fade. President-elect George Bush has made a widc-1"'"nai'* efTon at mendina fences, indicating he may really olall to be president of all the people. J(hi1 round of conciliatory post-election meetings is a harbi"f!D" of his behavior after Inauguration Day, the Bush adminasuation could brina some welcome surprises .... It's easy to be .,.acious in victory, and Bush should not think that his program of outreach will entirely erase the memory of his biuer attacks on his oppol'lents durint the ill- tempered campai~. But if he can follow the symbolic .meetings he bas had with substantive action, perhaps a kinder and gentler administration will take root in Washington after all. •• ...., Clllrdlun Publesher St. LMI• P.t·Dl.,,.td ,.,. ("'Of D11r-., ~* l•tor ,.am. ~l­ s... ..... ~(- ....... ......... Olltctof . .._ ~ ............ ...... Asst ..... Siiia ... ........ ca..... .............. ......... c... ...... ~~dlrotlM.,.., .. PO W -II 0.-..._ CA Mclr-a 1• 11 • • ... '* C...• -.. ..... .... c.... Sfllb(• ........ , ..... u. CMI-......(..., ~-­... , .... ........... - Thur.cjay, December 15, 1918 AIS Toll roads are no more than a tax increase To the Ed1t0r Manin Brower alwa s amazes me with his a61hty to wrap anaCElronTsm with enigma. I refer to his Dec. 2 column on California's need for toll roads. His notion 1s enigmatic because it obscures the real nature of toU roads in Orange County -sh1ftina more taxes to the publtc fo r the purpose of hnang the pockets ofa few landJoc~ed land barons. This 1s an anachronism because 1t as the of1 retold h1s1ory of land and water de,elopment in California . Scare the public with scenarios of drought and gndlock then apply old soluuons -more taxation (call 1t revenue enhancement 1f you prefer). The nch few rob the many of their clean air. health and money in the na me of a "dynamic urban area" or, "free" enterprise. ifhe reality is a county economy heavily subsidized by Pentagon spending-the payback for 1tsconservauvc political ma1ority. Office space for freshmen .depends on luck of the draw There as some consolation m knowi ng that Brower's ideas serve to remand me that what ~lifornia really needs 1s not more excise Wtcs (or roads}. but less obfuscation. TERRY TlMMINS Laguna Beach Irvine company h~lps education Durin&m ycampa1gn for Congress. I often referred tongue-in<heek 10 the fact that whoever won the seat would be relegated to some dark. dank, God- forsaken cubbyhole on the fifth floor of the Cannon House Office Buildin_& - never to be heard from againl 1f Jim Wnllht had his wav. · While Wright is unlikely to succeed in silencing me. it's true that offi'cc accommodations for freshmen con- gressmen leave much to be desired. In fact. they're downright abysmat Members of Congress of any rank arc 1.enccally not well-fl:l(ed-foroffices in Washington. Even senior members often must stuff five, six or even more of their legislati ve stafTinto one room 9f a standard three-room suite. Working conditi ons for staffers probably violate OSHA regulations, but Congress exempts itself from OSHA rcgulahons. as well as most other rules 1t imposes on the rest of Amenca. The newest members of Congress receive the least serviceable quaners of all. T his is because offic~ are assigned by a lottery. in which senior members draw first. For example. members of the 85th Congress - those first elected 32 years ago - have their own drawing and pi.ck the best offices. Next. members of the 86th Congress draw, and so on up to the l 0 I st Congress, those first elected this year. Tuesday was office lottery day for the freshman class. There are euctly 32 vacant offices, one for each new member -16 Republicans. 16 Democrats, The tension is palpable. Drawing number 32. for example, can mean only one thing. The unlucky congressman will have the worst office on Capital H 111. Last year. that ignominious disti ncuon went to Joe Kennedy -Bobby's son, who spent S 1.5 m1llton to wan the Demo- crauc pnmary alone. There arc some things. even in Washington. that money can't buy. Kennedy ended up on the seventh floor oftbc Longwonh House Office Buildjng. wath no air conditioning - a real treat during the swcltenog Washington summers -and only one-haJf of the normal three-room su11e. The balance of his staff space was several floors away. Naturally. Kenned~ decided to panicipate 1n this year sdrawing to improve his lot. Thcdrawingitsclfwasscheduled to begin at 9 a.m. in Room 8-341 of the Rayburn House Office,_ Building. That, tsy the way. is in the basement. The si te was probably chosen to put new members in a frame of mmd suitable to the fate about to befall them. h is conducted under the su~rvision of the superintendent of buildings, Bob Miley. Curiously. Miley's post -hke all House offices -is an elcc1ed one. its occupant determined by the vo1e of the full House. Not so cunousl). Miley -ltke all House officers -as openly and notonously a Democrat. I am not sure whether to be womed about this aflihation or not. but 1he fact that last year's boob) pme winner was a Massachusetts hberal gives me some comfon. T h e draw i ng p roc eeds alphabetically. Being near the front of the alphabet -whatever you may think you know about probab1luy theory -is a defimte plus. Consider: my odds of selcc11ng number "I" arc far better when number " I" 1s still in the fishbowl. Nonetheless, bad luck could still control my destiny for the next two years. If the fifth fl oor of Cannon is my fate. there's a unique feat ure awaiting me: the ··cages ... Literally. a portion of the office space on 1he top floor of Cannon consists of wu'C-mesh cages across the hall fro m the office suites. This was dcsi_gned as storage space. but lade of sufficient quaners for staff has led Congressmen to put desks and tele- phones and photocopiers into the eqcs-wi~ooxes orsurplus copy paper and stationerysupphes. Another nifty feature of the fifth floor of Cannon is several of the elevators don'1 go there. The} only make it to the founh floor. requinnga tnp up the stairs or a walk across the building to another elevator. Since members of Congress must run back and forth between their offices and the house floor for quorum calls and votes. this amounts to a manor form ofton urc. By the ti me \'OU read this. rll knov. just how bad things arc going to be through 1991. No matter v. hat the outcome. those of you prepanng to tra vel to Washmgton. D.C. should make the 40th"s new congressional office a must-see stop dunng )'Our visit. After all, humble though at ma) be, 11 still belongs to the people of Orange Counl). In many respects, u may even be an advantage that we won·t be opcra ung out of sumptuous quarters. Spartan surroundings would help remind your congressman that a comer office. a hefty salary, and the pcr- quisiles of the executive su11e were not the reasons he ran in the first place. And they wall engender a ltttle hum1lny. always good for an) public servant. On the 01hcr hand. 1f things tum out as bad as the)' might. ma\-be ru try to file a complamt with 0 HA Clfrls Cox h lff COflP"•mu- dttf for me 411i ~leul Dl1trict. Policy makers only nlbble at the edge of growth problems SACRAMENTO -It's easy 10 • catal~ the negative side effects of California's immense boom in popu- latio!'J.,,. whi ch is growing by nearly 700.uuu a year . They include increased traffic con- JCStion, crowded schools, deteriorat- ing air quality. and overburdened sewage-treatment and trash-Oisposal systems. h's eq_ually easy to punch holes in the state s anu-growth or slow-growth pohttcal movement. It tends toward social cht1sm. it puu upward pressure on already high housana pri~ it attempts to achieve mutually exclusive goals.. aod it simply shifts growth impacts from community to community rather than dcalin& wtth them directly. Both 1nti-crowth and anti-ant1- powth araumcnu were fully aired Tuesday during a state Senate heanna 1t the Capitor. and each side suc- ceeded in sconng points on the other. The only qrccment was that the ~nt situation -high rates of arowth coupled with parocbiaJ. over- rapping and largely ineffective local aovemmcnt -1s unacceptable. and that more rca1onal approaches to ~wth-rclatcd issues arc nccdcd. That conC'lus1on. comin& from env1ronmental1sts. devtlopen ind thole am)-ed somewh"'t 1n the mlddlc. natl)' dovetails ~•th ~n . Manan Baston's &>lens to 1ntroduet letlslat1on tMl would cncou,..c etta· uon of more po~ ~onal en· tittn to ovcnec tr1nsponauon. \and '*· powtb and rclalld policy issues. Be11tto11 chain the-Smite Local GoYCmmea\ Comm1nee and a IDICaal commanee on powth iaues -·~*'-" ... All ~diet ii fine a 1 marpnal arvmpt to bn• tome Ofdef to wiat •• now a chaptic and self-defeattng system. But curiously absent and con- spicuous by that absence. was a willingness to acknowledge and ad- dress the powerful economic and social forces that arc at the root of the issue. Bill Haven of the Siem O ub. for example. alluded to the "rap1d1ty and sheer mainitude of growth." bul scarcely touched the causes of 1t and 1anorcd completely the maJ_or pohq changes ll would take to affect tb~ causes. The· straiahtcst talk came from Tony Quinn. the s&ate DrP'lnmcnt of Commerce's director of research. He reminded the legislators that Cahfomia 1s powinJ because at has become the destination of choice for economic and politacal rcfuaecs from Latin Amenca and As11. Full" half of the cumnt FOwth comes from 1mm1- cra11on and much of the remainder rcprncnts hiah binh rates among recent imm1annt aroups. Califomaa. Quinn said. 1s feeling the soc11l 1ml)IC1 ohuch events as the colla~ of the Mexican 011 economy and the fonhcomu" takeover of Hong Kona by mainland CIHM· The state 11 left. an ~. with t_.o chotces: e1thtt adopt tOmC draconian pohcta that mtaht lamu the inflow of 1mmllJ'ln&s into c.li~nu.a. or deal With tht effccu of srowth· Cumntly, the s&aae .,\-~rMnt ­ the aovemor and tht upsaatu" -a" dot"I Mtthcr The Kiiie It not evm handlll'I its powth.rda~ rnponsabttitin. such as lf'lnspor-'8llon. voycffectivdy. It hasthunttd mponbdlt} for alw tfl'ens of arowth on\o local ~IMftU. and tM\r dcmoatUallil 1nablt11y eo ~ bas .. \'ft mt IO Uti-powtb t.cklath DAN WALTERS that manifests itself in emouonal. parochial and shon -stghtcd anu- gro\li1h ballot mcasuf'CS. Defeat of man) of tho~ mcasu~s m this )ear's elections doesn't male the problems. or their causes, go a~a~. The adoption of some streamlined governmental m«han· 1Sm$. as Beraesoo and man" wit· nesses at the bunn1 advocated. m1&?tt make 1he1r m1t1pt1on a b11 easter. but the improvement ~•II be marginal at best No matter how effccttvcl) the cff«ts of~wth arc m1t1pted -and there's mfin1te room for improve- ment -the root causes remain untoucbtd. Do ~ want to continue to add 700.000 or more people to Cah· fom1a's population every )C.r" Can W"C adopt pot~ to affect that .ar<>wth that won't doda~ tOC'l\:tl nptsor eHttrblfc 1ntcr~thn1c tt'nMons" Should Cahfomaa be le~flll"I the federal JOVUIUDfOl on spch mancn as 1mm'lf&bOI\ polt()' Thole att the lunds o( questions that should bt uked. and answriid. But t~'s a chron1e unW11hnpns arnona pobtteal pohcy-ma"" to a<> to \be core. Even tholt ~th the bnt ()( 1nta1hOM •~ conttn• to nibble at tttc edFI. IO deal ~th dfem f'llher than QUIC'L ........... .,..,. .. nl '• To the Editor: Excellence an our public schools as the result of hard work and commit- ment by many individuals. It in· eludes quahty classroom instruction, strong public support and an active pannersh1p with California's busi- ness commuruty. This dynamic combination is once again being illustrated in our Cali- fom la Teacher of the Year program. Tcadlcrs-Managcmenlalfd· 1nvcsr- ment (TMl) 1s an active business rel>resentauve an our recognition of excellence an tcachi~ For the second year tn a row. TMI granted cash awards to our honorees. This y_e~ awards will total more than $30.000. - Last year. Teacher of the Year Loma Mac agata of Alhambra received the fi rst-ever cash award in the history of this program -S 15.000 The three other finahsts each rcec1 vcd $5.000. TMI this year r-cwa.rds not only the Teacher of the Year and the three finalists bu1 also the four scm1- finaltsts. TMl1sawarctha11hefu1uregrowth ... and success of Cahforma business and 1ndustr) 1sd1rectJy related to how well today's studen1s arc prepared. A co mmitment to eJtcellencc m teach- ing ensures tha1 those goals arc achieved. We art grateful for their en1hus1asuc suppon . . BILL HONIG · Superintendent of Public Instruction TODAY IN HISTOR Y Today IS Thursda~. Dec. Is. the 350th da) of 1988 There arc 16 da)'s lefl m the )tar. Toda)"s b1ghhght 1n history: In 1791 .thefirst IOamendmcntsto the U.S. Constnuuon -t~ Bill of R1gt1ts -went into effect following rauficat1on b) V1rgima. On this date· In I 90. S1ou" Indian Ch1cfSlll1ng Bull was killed an a fracas in Grand R1,er .. D .. as Indian pohcc. working for the L government. tncd to arrest him In 1916. the French defeated the · Germans in the World War I Battle of Verdun. In 1939. the mouon picture ··Gone Wnh 1he Wind·· premiered at Locw"s Grand Theater in l\tlanta. In I 944. a plane carrying band leader Glenn Maller disappeared dunng a flight over the Enghsh Channel. In 1961. former az1 offic1aJ >\dotr Eichmann was sentenced to dc.ath 1n Jeru!>alcm In 1976. a tah D1stnct Coun Judge set Jan I . 1977, as the C\«'Ullon date for Gary Gal more. 1he con"1cted murderer who wd he -A"an\cd to die f1\e )ears ago The last 80 US. combat soldiers 10 Grenada withdrew. c1aht days ahead of the final pullout schedule. some seven weeks after the U. -led invasion of the Canbbean island By 1k A....n.lal P,.... Comments weleome fhe Dail) P\lot welcomes your op1n1ons on matters of pubhc interest . Lcttcl"\ 1nJ lonter anadn of COCl'l· mental) mu t be t•ancd· They shouad b( tH>cd or clearly •·ntttn aftd tent IO LEiTEflS to t.hc EDJTOlt. Oiily P\lot. P 0 8o• IS60.Cosaa Mesa.CA 91bl b_ Pk-ate indudr YoUr add1e• _. tc~ numbtf t0 that we IMJ vent} 1u1bonh1p. If ~ Pftft' '° Make 1 *t111 statement. )'CMI rna~ our W£'1tl LISTENING tck H••• - 64l-60l6 -lild leave a NltrtLll mc1111:. Plealr keep dlele a britf'. - f Al4 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Thurtday, December 15, 1988 1 Mutant Ninja· Turtles invaCie toy stores r BJ c.AllOL YN LUMSDEN Eastmanaot by makinasandwkhes at wtth a taste for p<Zza and for doina mom1na TV. """' that have spruna up in the Jut • ' , , ,._...., • a restaurant. battle with the Shredder, leader of the Even avid fan Tom Selleck was five ~n. which have opened a NORTHAMPTON, MISS._ Four "We had been watchina a bunch of most feared assassins in Japen. filmed readina a turtles comic in the market for the offbeat. turtles · ld'na N ' ·a eapo the horrible TV and we started drawin~ Valentine considers the turtles the farewell episode of"Mqnum, P.I." ··everybody says, 'You auys must brainchildre~ of 11~ndwich '!:laker and throwing the stuff at each other, natural descendants of the tin soldier "It aocs way beyond luck,:'. East-be iillionairn now: Far from 1t," 11id and a self-described hick cartoonist, Eastman said. "We found we had this with appealinaly distasteful roots in man said of their IUCC'ell. "we had Eastman. He said, howev~r. that lbe are tbreatenina to move into the top Jittle beastie that we really fell in love rad1oact1vc sunk. one of the best black-and-white collaboraton' annual income is in the 10 of the Christmas to)' market with." "Kids arc into slime," he said. comics around. We worked hard to six fiaures and they now have eifht "TN-v are _just flyina off the The beast soon had three brothers, "Anythina to aross out their little aet it to the point where Mark anists workina on the comic stnps shel~<· said David Valentine, a toy alJ named afler Renaissance painters, sisters." Freedman picked up on it." and other ventures. industry analyst for Standard &. and a weird history involving a pool Their creators scraped t<>&ether Freedman, a New York liccnsina The tunles have Iona since moved p of goo in a New York sewer and a rat S 1,200 and printed 3,000 copies oft he qcnt, manaaed to entice a California their comic book haunts from the ~!!·naae Mutfnt Nir\ia Turtles with the powers ofa Ninja master. first Teenage Mutant NinJa Turtles compeny. Playmates, into investina New York City sewers to the town have hit No. 11 in the Toy&. Hobby As the story goes, the turtles were comic book. The comics sold out in S2.S midion an an animated tele· where their creaton have settled. World charts of best sellers just four covered b¥ the muck throu&h a three weeks and Leonardo, visionshowandlaunchinaalineoflO "They can still pt into the city years afler they were conceived by random senes of odd accidents. ihey Donatello, Michaclanaelo and fiaurines. easil y from here,' Eastman said. Peter Laird and Kevin Eastman mutated and grew up under the rat's Raphael were propelled to fame on T-The turtles were helped by the "And we c.an use people we know for durin& a late-evening sketchina duel. tutelage, evolving into supenurtles shirts, cereal boxes and ~turday phenomenon ohpecialty comic book characters." Stores report they can't keep up with demand for the goofy turtles with their slice-and-dice ann action and their silly one-liners ("One good turtle deserves another"). "It's insane " said Eastman, 26. "Pete and) really had no idea what we were unleashing. We were just two wild-eyed kids who just wanted to do comic books." They keep shop in a run-down building on a back street of this college town. Eastman, then an occasional stu- dent at the University of Massachu- setts, said he tracked down Laird, who scraped out a living by drawing illustrations for local newspapers, in 1982 because their cartoons looked alike. They became fast friends, Joined' by a love for Marvel Comics illustrator Jack Kirby. The turtles were created afler what Eastman called a heavy dose of "T.J. Hooker" and "Love Boat" at an apartment the two men shared while Laird's fiancee finished her studies at the Universitr of New Hamsphirc. Laird was stil free-lancing cartoons. Thieves prefer women's clothing CHICAGO (AP) -The nation's retailers lost S 1.8 billion last year to theft and errors, including shopli fte1 ~. whose top light-finger item was ladies' designer apparel. according to a survey. "An Ounce of Prevention," the I 0th annual survey of U.S. retailers by the Arthur Young & Co. account- ing firm. sajd that jewelry, shoes and men's clothing were at the bottom of the list. · "Our survey shows that many of the nation's retailers have been bit hard by theft and other losses," said Gerald Smith, head of Arthur Young's retail group in Chicago, a management consultant for the retajJ industry. The survey found comP-Bnics lost S 1.8 billion through shophfting, theft by employees or vendors and errors in paperwork in 19871 compared with S 1.5 billion in losses m 1986. The survey covered 119 retail companies operating in 47.000 lo- cations around the country with combined total sales of $1 27.5 billion, Smith said. The research was conducted last spring and summer. Companies participating in the survey included discount stores. de- partment stores and specialty stores. ' The names of the firms were withheld. Discount stores were hit hardest last year, losing S 1.2 billion worth of merchandise; ~partment stores Jost $364 million and specialty shops lost $233 million worth of goods, the survey said. For the fi ve years from 1982 through 1987, the survey found the following increases in shoplifting losses as a percentage of total sales: -Discount stores: from 1.5 per- cent to 2. I percent. -Specialty stores: from I. 7 per- cent to 2.2 percent. -Department stores: from 2 per- cent to 2.1 percent. The survey showed that 86 percent of department stores ranked ladies' apparel as the first or second areas hardest hit by shoplifters. "There was a time when calculators were the hot items for shoplifters, then 1t went to designer Jeans. now it's designer lingerie," said Lewis Shealy, vice president of loss prevention for Marshall Field's department stores. "Ifs the highest thefl department in t~e com~ny," ~e sai~. ·~w~n pumna des•gner hngene m the dC<- partment about two years ago and this year most of the merchandise is desiancr." Since then, inventory loss in the lingerie department nearly tripled, Shealy said, declinina to provide specific fitures. "We have suede bras and panties costina more than $400," he said. "Tbe9e desipr items are 'aotta have but can't afford' thinas and it's easy for a shoplifter to put a dozen bras or penties in a ~ bandbq, "It's a combination of the desianer label md the price that excites them," he said. THEAMERICAN HEART Ass<DATION MEMORIAL~· ~ R";HTN; K:R'O..RISE tAn*1can "9art HIQ ,.-,., n...,.,.,......, •• ~--- Top Brand VCRs.~.At Guaranteed ·low Prices! No Payments Untll March The lntelllienf Cholcel ·--Cllf-- CONVINllNT HOLIDAY HOU,.I: llOf&. • ,... UT\MOAY IUMOAY , ... • flNI tM# • .... HAM· 1N Oef1¥ery Avall•bf• 7 Oap A Week. A• ..... IO.,. lft 1.-11h1& M Daiy ......,,. OuerM ...... Coteutl City woff g&adl11 gov. 'l'OU a lull refund. w111·11n JO day• of your purc:hH•. ti you are not Ul•tl!M tor any rHton We nll lf\llC you retum ma mercl)ancl•M on new condtl!Otl w11n yOUf ..... teee•PI carton and acc:-nes a..tt Cllw Lew,,.... ......... _ If. w11f11t1 )0 daY9 of your lllWCl'IHe ac Ctrc:utl City, ,ou ltnel me UMe I'-I~ '"'ti any IOcal MO,.. •ncludlfte-.. we·11 relUllCI IM 4111......._ • plut lCM of "'- Ott--. Ttw °"" ......... c.c.u. C.ey °""' .... OVIR 1• LOCATIONI IN l!l!Aftl Prk:ee ....... Tlvu .I ....,Deo ... 1i!i1• ~~CIC BAKIRl"ILD 42:tcl Calltomla Awe (IO$) 327·ff77 INLAND IMfttRI --..... , ... Maeno!••"" (7141 8"-2000 ..,....._..,, 1 s ~r Streec 11141 NS·S5S5 LOI ANCULll AREA c ....... tlOI. ~ ... (213) I0:).1700 ............ "'" ........ (213) ll:M033 "-a.a,. ..... 111t. Lac..,... .. lltlt ...... ............. , .. "" (2131 ..... •••••••• ... 1 ~ ..... (113) ~ NOW OPIN IN NOtlWALICI 11751 Flr•tone Blvd. ..... p...._. 31 N "°99-.d (lllt ,.......... Y• ..... 13830 vtc:Dy II. (ltlt TU-ml T..-tlQ20HawtflOme II. (21313~ • ..._. W. LM__..3115Sepul~ (2131391·3144 .... 4!'4JaYkleory• (111) ... 1212 ORANQI COUNTY SAN OABRllL VAL.UY ...._ Parll 200 H 8Mcn ll'fd (7141 UC>-tOOO He rr1l1A ..._ 7771 Edinger Ave 1114) ...... UllMe ... 13141 Calle 0. U LoulN (7'4)M6-t• or-.. '407 ~" (71 4) 834·11313 • .._ Ma a... I llri9'04 • a lftilal "°""' of So Coaal ..._. (71'114f.1IOO IAN PIRNANDO YALLIY ......... 17m7 o..Gfttftlf'e (lllt .. ,.... ••::11111 5tl0,... Lii (7'4) la-Ml W ... C.....,.N.,...Ave (11•-.aes IANTAaAMaAllA ' 371, ...... , ........ OUTLIT CINTU 5"1L~""'··~°' co ... ,...,ce cau, .,....., ===-·--·--- A synonym for coach:·-. ·~ui:e ·Davis Hts old-f ashtoned principles always wonders Finl o(two pans. BJ JON FERGUSON .... ..., ......... If you spot that Stetson rabbit fur fedora on an aging 82-year-old legend in the stands at almost any kind of , . youth spor1iftl event m the Newp o rt- Mesa area, chances are it 's Costa M esa's greatest coach and fan. Or is it fan a nd coach? It's the latter anymore, although Luke Davis says peo{>le re-_._ 97 cognize him o..,,. .. (1 3 ) . by his hat and call him by a ti tle that doesn't fade with the years. 1 "I have so many good memories," Davis said.. , And so many ofhis,aood memories also formed lasting impressions on ,those who felt his impacL "The other day I was at a game and l saw Mike Shaughnessey, 1he coach at Golden West (football assist.ant), and tie said, 'My God, I've got a picture of you coaching me when J was a kid,• " Davis said. .. , see them (former players) all the time, but l don't recognize most of them. They all know me by my hat. l was at a game at Newport, and ll halftime-I was on the Newpon side and this guy was on the Huntinaion Beach side, and the guy saw me by my bat." Just how far back does the tal~ of this hat go. It's one more memory of a man with more than he could hope to tell fou in a short sitting. " even wore this hat when J was a kid," he said, pointing to the brown calling card that caP.s the files of the century. Well, it's hke the original at ·least. "I even wore a hat when I was a kid," Davis said. "l have a picture at I 0 years old, when I belonged to a pig club. Here I was, scrubbing this pig, and I had a hat on just like this one. "Ycaht I did," he confirmed with his favonte line for those that are too youni to know and listen with appreciative interest for the ex- perience that only a man like Davis can bring into pictures of the past. He's watched the area's youth play ball for over SO years. He coached baseball for Stb-8th graders in the youth leagues of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa fo r 30 years. He coaches the coaches, and he coached their sons. "You know what amuses me." Davis said, his eyes opening a little wider, "is coaches address me as coach. I'm no coach, but they address me as coach," he added. laugh ing. "I coached their kids, but that amazes me that they do that.'' • 0.-, ..... ,,...._, ........ Area coachtna le1end Lake Da'ria proudly dlaplaya bueball etgnecl by tbe 1970 champion CardtJlala. Well, he's earned the nght to the title. . It was probably the only time he didn't wear the now famous bnm, instead exchangin$ it for what is without doubt his second most favorite· hat, one with a bill -a red baseball cap with a Cardinals logo. Of the JS teams he coached in the area. "I made a study on how to win. We won 18 firsts. six seconds and the rest of the time \\e bit the dust:'_ "That first team won a second place trophy," he said, holding up his haod with his fingers in pinching pos11ion, the thumb and forefinger about 21h- mches apart to symbolize the size of the trophy. "It was probabl) the next )'ear. that we \\-On one (a title)." Sometimes he wonders 1f he's needed again. "I hated to give up coaching. because l feel I'm missed. They need a (Pleue. ... LOOIWI0/84) UCI faces unenviable task tonight nteaters Jllµst ace UNL V team that ts still smarting from d ef eat to Arizona One of the best lines o(the week came from Jerry Reynolds, the basketball coach of the Sacramento Kings. which have won only four games this season. Reynolds said at the end ofhis radio show. "I'm Jerry Reynolds and aren't you glad you arc not me?" That'sexactlytheway l feel as we take on theRebelsofUNLV tonight at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas. They have had ft ve days to prepare for usand they are really ..... smarting a ftcr their loss to Arizona last Saturday. Lastyear, we went in thereafter UC Santa Barbara had defeated the Rebels. From now on, I would prefer ~hey had a win streak before we went 10 there. 0 Wcarealwaysbraaiingabouthow tou&h our conference 1s and look what has "happened to us. We have lost to two teams from the WCAC, con- sidered an inferior conference to ours. Other conference showings recently: Cal State Fullenon strua&Jes most of its game with Sonoma State, a Division JI school. Arizona 86, UNLV 7S;Stanford 89. San Jose State 39 (we pla_y Stanford next year): Utah 1S, UtahState64: LaSalle96, long Beach State 63. 0 Dots and Dashes on college basket-~11: The school newspaper at Ken- tucky published an editorial calling for Coach Eddie Sattoa and his entire staffto step do" n at the end of the season because of the "alleged" cheatJngscandaJ 1n the program ... JerryTarllanlanand L•te Olsoa are not the best offnends and their game last Saturday was a war. Olson is still upset with Tark. because after Olson replaced him al Long Beach St.ate, the program was placed on probation by the NCAA. Olson claims that l:ark told him that the program was dean.' A few years ago. Tom Tolbert orally committed to UNLVand then at the last minute, opted for Arizona. Olson is now dubbed "Midnight Olson" by Tarkanian ... Ken.ay Anderson, considered the nauon 's top prospect. Irvin e 's ,~iilliMlili Oden wins Ocean View moves MVP honor into tourney semis Irvine High's Bev Oden, who has been the focal point of consecutive state championships in girts vol- leybelJ, has been named the Most Valuable Player on the All-ClF S·A Division teams as chosen by an unbeaten followin win over Monarchs advisory committee for the ClF T.he Ocean View High girls basket- Southem Section. ball team moved into the cham- Oden heads a cast of first· and pionship semifinals of the Savanna ~nd-team choices which renect a Tournament, staying unbeaten in the imo's who for Oran1e Coast area · process,.1,,. ~th a Sl-39 victory over voleyball with teammates Melinda Mater uca Wednesday. . . Norton and Jenny Fu joining her on The Scahawks (S-0) will play Fn- the fi,. team. day niJht a~ 7 for a benh in the Also p ining first-team honors in championship game. Division >A are Corona del Mar's "I thought we played an excellent Laurie Sawin, Newport Harbor's game dcfe.nsivcly~" ~id Ocean View Sienna Curci ud Lquna Bcach'a Coach Ollie Martin. We wcrcable to Summer Sica. stop Kelly O'~nen by punjng Heidi Fint-team honort on the 4-A level {Hasemann} m front and Jenny were won by Edison's Aimee Achcn-{Sullivan) in back of. her." 'The mch, Huntinston Btach's Kriatie strateay worke<:f as O'Bnen was held Ryan and Manna's Yrsa TSllneyoshi. to onl y four points. The Scahawks stretched a one-Al·CI~ S·A poin! lead after one quart~r to five al ,Int TtlM halftime. then used a th1rd-quaner Melfnde N«IOll 11rv1ne1. Sr.; Laurie S.wltl spurt to pull away. Leadin& 21-1 6 at <Corone c1e1 ~1• Sr.; MeMe Curd <NIWNfl the break Ocean View ellended the ...,..,). Sr .. Jullt ~ (Seftt• ..,..,. ' Ir.; JIMv Fu 1irv1nt1. Sr.; lllMr HeM (Mir• advantqc to 37-26 at the end of the =· :,~~.:.~.hedl>. Sr.; third quancr. and the ~awks ,.._. ,,_· wercn 't threatened thereafter in drop- NeteW WVtlk c0ot ~>. x .. fMt1e pin& the hiahly-rcprdcd Monarchs. ttlcMnl <Sen!• lerMrel, Sr&:;.ecv Tr~ Huemann who finished with a (LeluM IMdll, Sr.1 ~ me (WOOd h'•., I :L • had I · .,....,, Jr,; Jolt ,...,.., <Mei.t o.11. Sr.: pme-.... / points. I an the -""* <c:..lllr.,.. VellYI. Jr.; IMIUe decisive third period. ~ !HutNmel,lr.;"""' !IOI (Mir• Cott•>. In the founh quaner, QcQn View -.. " ..... ~ putthepmeaway, mostly at the free- .., o.i llrMll. throw hne. Alli Tu1do, who finished ~~.,:;,.• with 12 points. was 4 for S from the ~ Adld9dl <1-...1. Sr.~= lineinthdounhquarterand8for9in AM1rto11 <E..,.IMel. Ir • Alff¥ C ~ Oil•>· Jr; ..... 0... (Merv• ..... &l.i~ Mlltdl (Newtlury ...,.,, Ir . ,..,,_ (..,..,..,...,, Sr : It.... ltY911 (~ leeefl), Sr, YrM ~ IMerllle), Sr .... '-~If-(1-.oft), lr.t_~• 0-(l.OI .....,..,, Sr.. Mary Miii G.ereleM e·'· Jf.. ..... """" (TMuMftd • Ir. ~ ...,... lltmlllClel. It. ...,.... 11911 O*lell. Ir.; CeNll ~ (LAiii ll9cfl Wlleft), Sr.. v ... V'Wr• ( ......... Yell¥). It _,,..........,... Mee """" (Olflr) .. ..., .... """"*' tO.). Oranee Coast Collelt ~k Gunnar Wolfe ha silfted a letter of intent 10 111end Ulah leele . Wolft. a -..~ ll8rttr with the "l'ltel, in1e1c<f:: ftYe .,._. this 1<UOn 10 Ind t teem and mumcd one for a touchdown in Coast's .. . the game. Cosette Sm11h finished wi th 11 points for Ocean View, while Cor) Manin was the lone Mater De1 pla~er 1n double fisurc "1th 11. In other girl games: Estaada 78, Palisades IS: The Eagles qualified for a shot at the Palos Verdes Tournament title on Friday at 5:30 against Nonh Torrance by winning the fa 1-paced game. Senior hannon uzuk1 tallied a career-high 2 points. which included 14 free throws. he also led Estancia (3-1) in rebounding with 15 and scored 12 of her points in the third quarter. Patrice Lumpkin had 14 points (I I tn tlte first quarter) and nine re- bounds. while i\ngehca Sunoto con- tnbuted nine assists. Sparking the Eagles off the bench were Robin Cordrey. Zonia Gomez. Debbie Keyes and Julie Southwick. who combined for 19 points. Costa Mesa n . Banett 4t: The: Mustangs earned a benh m the consolation semifinals of the Brea- Olinda Tournament against Tustin today With lh<.' eas) victor) Maureen Moore led three pla)"'S in double figure "1th 14 points. wh il( Kim Good added I 3 and Trana N&u)en 12 Leading by two at the end of the first quaner. the Musian~ (J..3) began to pad their lead in the second and took a 10-poi nt lead at halftime. Basset! manaaed to tnm the margin tq fi..,e m the third quancr at 36-3 I. ' (Pl .... lee OIU.8/BS) opener "l&•nst Rio Hondo. · Wolfe. 6-foot. 19~ ~nd~ was lk 1986 Otfmsavt Bee:\ of the Vear ll Edaton H.p. He was alto a ba,.year lettmnaa an trKk and pll)'ed be•tt· bell one seaon for tM Ch.iaflt"'. signed with Georgia Tech over Nonh Carolina. Hesa1dthatheturned down onh Carolina because Dean Smitll made robots out ofhis pla~ers and h1ndered-the1rdcvelopment. Anderson isapomtguard-a)ear ago. KeuySmltlt,out oftheTarheel program and also a point guard. signed wtth Sacramento as the o ? player in the NBA draft and is no~ a m1lhonaire. There are many more North Carolina players in the NB.\ than from Georgia Tech . One oflhem }OU mayha,eheardof1s Mictaael Jonlu. It almost seems as if there was another reason for the decision rather than the "robot story ... Anderson also said he was realh interested m Georgetown. but that Jou n ompSOD did not recru1_1 him hard enough. It almost seems as 1fMr. l\nderson has a few problems. THURSDAY.DECEMBER 15, 1988 CdM dominates CIF polo squad Oeding selected Player of Year; Varga~ top co_a__,ch,_ __ Corona del Mar H1gh's CJF 4-A water polo champ1onsh1p season has been capped with a sweeping dom1- nauon of the all-CIF selections as Chns Oed1ng was chosen Player of the Year aod John Vargas Coach of the,Year Hagen Grantham and Gunnar Gustafson were also first-team choices from Corona del Mar. which placed t~o others on the second and third teams. Gustafson 1s the only junior chosen on the first team . The first team also includes Steve Moore of ewport Harbor and Bnan Ballard of University. The teams: * ALL-CIF t -A First Team Hagen Grantham (Corona del Mar). Sr.; Gunnar Gustafson (Corona del Mar). Jr.; Jose Santiago (Sunny Hills). r.; Jason Klmgsberg _(Sunn y Hills), St.: Steve Moore (~ewport Harbor), Sr., Chad Barker (Villa Park). Sr.; Chi Kredell (Long Beach Wdson). Sr.: Bnan Costanza (Foot- hill ). r .. Jay Warren {Tusun). Sr.: Ivan As1c (Long Beach MillkflJl ), Sr .. Bnan Ballard (University). Sr. Seeoltd Team Danny De La Cruz (Sunny Hills). Sr .. David Johnson (Villa Park). Sr., Morgan Coun ne" (Fullerton). Sr .. Snow Bell CEI Dorado). Sr.: Josh Speyer (Corona del Mar). Sr.; Joe Ba1Tey (Long Beach Wilson), Sr.; Kun Edler ( ewpon Harbor), Sr:. A.dam Smith (Sunny Hills). Sr.; .\dam Musch (Footh1ll). Sr .. Matt Madcar (El Dorado). Jr .. Grant Bixby (Long Beach Wilson). Sr ; Pete Schuler (Foothill), Sr. Tlalrd Tum Jason Pb1ll,ps lNewporr ffarbor). BILL MULLIGAN CoLLIGE BAsKITBAu 0 A)earago. Tenn~was gomgto fire head coach Doe De Voe, but ga~e him a reprieve at the last minute. He now has one of the top 20-ranked teams m the nauon ft 1s a~mg that Duke continues to be a national contender) ear m and ~ear out 'A'ith their h1Jh academic standards. Stan- ford. with a very fine coach in Mike Molllgomery, 1s making the same stndes 1n basketball with similar standards. Take a look at most of the other schools m the top 20 and sec ho\\ fe\\ ha\e tough academic stan- (Plea.e eee MULLIGAN {84) Sr.: Brandon Howald (Corona de) Mar) Jr.; Scott Jordan (University), Sr .. Craig Stuart (footh1U) Sr.; Mike Carter (Tustin), Sr.; Kyle Utsemi (El Dorado), So .. Mark Kuhn (Sunny H1Us),. Sr.; Rand~ baw (F~llerton), Sr.; Enck Lynch Los Alamitos). Sr., Scott Fairchild (E Dorado), Sr.· Grq Allen (Villa Park), Sr.; Kevin 'Ryan (Long Beach P2ly), Sr.; Jon Ludwig (Sunny Hills), Sr. Player of Ge Year Chns Oed1ng (Corona del Mar). Sr. Coac• of die Year John Vargas (Corona del Mar). ALL-CIFJ-A Fln&'l'eam . Bill Coffman (El Toro). Sr.; Dan Moreno (El Toro), Sr.; Sam Allevato ~San Clemente), Sr.: Paul Felton Capistrano Valley), Jr.; Brent Warde Edison), Sr.; Jeff Montana (San Bemardmo). Sr.; Steve Kunst (Costa Mesa), Sr.; Torey Culbertson (Muir). Sr : George Belcher (Fontana), Sr., Jason Cox (Marina), Jr.; Kevin Perkins (San Clemente). Sr.; Mike RaJI (R1vers1de Poly), Sr. Sffolld Team Ken Nickel {El Toro). Sr.; Steve Robinson (Royal), Sr.: .Heath Baker !Riverside Poly), Jr.; Mike Ankrom San Oemente), Sr.: Nick Petrucci Mission Viejo). Jr.; Kevin McCalley Capistrano Valley), Jr.: Chris Powell (Rowland), Sr.; GeoffKa&v (Marina). Sr.: Beau McCraney (Edison), Sr.: Rick Spooner (El Toro). Sr.; Scott Taylor (Costa Mesa). Sr. ninlTeam Jess Madison (El Toro). Sr.; Bryan Frieden (Fountain Valley), Sr.; Kevin ~ert (Capistrano Valley), Sr.; Scott Gndlcy (R1vers1de Poly), Sr.: Man: Doalson (El Toro), Sr.; An Quiroz ~San Bernardino), Sr.; Devin Hurst Royal), Jr.: Ja~k Kap~ (Ct:rritos). r., Tom Wo1wade (Crespi}, Sr.; Aaron Anderson (Opistrano Valley), Sr.: Paul L1nnebach (San Clemente), Sr .. Greg Haynes (lrvme). Sr. Player of Ck Year Matt Teeple (El Toro), Sr. Coad! of die Year -TIOn Stoll (El Torol. UCitries its luck • • • in Vegas By JON FERGUSON or .. o.-,,...._. If there was one year not to move the Big West Conference opener against evada-Las Vegas up thrtt weeks, this was probabl} iL But the strogg)ing UCJ men's basketball team must contend with a talented Rebels squad and Tarlc's Sharie Tank tomgbt at 6 p.m. at the Thomas & Mack Center. The conference opener was sched· uled m December because of Vegas· commitments to pla) four nat1onall ) televised games m January and February. UCI cames a 2-4 record into the game. which will be televised on the US.\ cable network (dela~ed at 9 o'clock ). \\bile the Rebels. ranked 13th 10 the nauon. check 1n at 2-2 with the two losses coming at tht bands of No. 7 Oklahoma and No. 9 Arizona. It wtll be the first game for Vegas since Monday's Supreme Court rul- ing. which stated the NC AA had the nght to order that NL V suspend Coach Jeoy Tarlcanian for two years when the Rebels were placed on two )'ears probation 1n 1977 for a senes of recruiting v1olauons. On the surface. the Rebels may appear 1nexpenenccd 't'1th two JUn- 1ors.. t"o sophomores and a frcshm•n in the starting lineup, But that's decept1\e On the front hnc arc Junior coUcge transfers Da' 1d Butler and George .\d.les. a pair of 6-lO pla~ers who anchor the ms1de. and sophomore returning stan er t.aCC) o\ugmon. "ho pla}ed for the U . Olympic team in the fall. In the backcoun arc red-shirt sophomorcGrqAnthon . a nauveof ' (Pleue ... UCl/83) Shannon takes back statement By ROOEll CAR~N °' ...... ""' ... Woodbndae H1ah chool basketball coach Btll Shannon has astced for a rctracuon of ltia statement 1n TUC9day's edition fl( the 0..1) P\lot when he ~ spondcd to the dcc1S1on of 1e11aor P.A Emerson who has declined lo play basketball thi1 1eat0n. Said Shannon Monday nllbt ··1 attnbute 1t (the dcauon) to selfishnns."' Wedfteldly, Shannon atUd that htS remarks be stncken. 1Ut1na. .. , made a masaake ol emotion:' refem~IO the re11oes for Emenoa not )iftl thit ,.r. .. ._ Im IOI' I HI ClDI ud I ................. .·.c-w~~: .......of Milla '-II. ....................... -..-.. ..... ar .. ..... . ...., ____ ....... _ ... -t· a:: Or.no-Coalt DAILY PILOT/ Thurlday, December 15, 1988 Ellard first Rani receiver to 01ake Pro Bowl since '77 Jt took 80 catches and a league-leading l,340 receiving yards, but Rams wide receiver Henry Ellard has broken a Iona :-drought. : Ellard, one of five Rams selected Wednesday to ".~play in the Pro Bowl, is the first Ram wide receiver to ::earn the honor in l I years. Harold Jackson last did it in :; 1977. "ls that riaht? I didn't kn ow that," Ellard said. "Hopefully. this will be the stan -of something nrw." Other thi ngs have not changed for the Rams. Thr~ members of the Rams' perennially strong offensi ve line were selected. Tackle Jackie Slater and center' Doug Smith each were selected for the fifth time, while guard third-year pro Tom Newberry wa s selected for the first time. &Dani "lt says a lot about what your peers think." Slater said. "I'm as excited as I was the first time." In addition, cornerback Jerry Gray was honored for the third year in a row. Meanwhile, rookie Tim Brown was the only Los Angeles Raider sclecte<! to play in the Pro Bowl, gi ving the franchise its fewest representatives ever in an all· Star P,ffiC. 'I only-found out 10 minutes ago." the 1987 f:leisman Trophy winner said. "J rea lly haven'1 had 11me to react. There arc a lot of~reat athletes. to do it as a rookie makes me very happy. • Brown was selected as the AFC's return specialist. He leads the AFC in kickofTretums with a 27.7-yard average on 34 returns and is eighth in the conference in punt returns with a 9.1-yard average on an AFC-leading 49 returns. Quote of the day Larry Himes, general manaJer of the Chicago White Sox, on his frequent JOSS through the Llncoln Park Zoo: .. I stop at the Gorilla House once in a while to see if they've got any new guys who can hit:' Georgeson to transfer to Waves MALIBU -Mark Georgeson. a m freshman center at the Universjty of Arizona who attended Marina High. has announced his intention to transfer and will enroll at Pepperdine. Coach Tom Asbury announced Wednesday. Georgeson. a 6-foot· 1 I. 250-pounder. will begin clas5es at Peppcrdine on Jan. 4 and practice with the team on a regular basis, it was announced. He will become eli~ble to play for 1he Waves in January of 1990 and will be a sophomore in terms of eligibility at that ume. Georgeson redsh1ned at Anzona last season after averaging 17.2 points and 11.0 rebounds a year earlier as a senior at Manna. Georgeson played a total of six minutes in Arizona's first three aames this season and did not appear in the Wildcats' win over Nevada-Las Vegas last Saturday. yJ t IN THE BLEACHERS Roger Is embarrassed on the very flrat day of class In Fencing 101. Heat nlpe.Cllppen for flrat win The expansion Miami Heat won its m first NBA p.rne ever, endin& a record l 7- same losina slreak WedneSday niaht by beating the Los Anaeles Oippcrs, 89=-88, at the LA Spons Arena behind Pat CuunlQI and J• Su4vold. Sundvold scored 14 points and Cumminp 15, the bulk of them in the second half u the Heat built a 12-point lead, then held off the Clippers in the final two minutes. Grut Leq and BWy ,..._,... also scored 15 points for the Reat, whose S1h·week losing strcaJc began at the hands of the Clippers on Nov. S. The 17-pme drought was the longest in leaaue history from the stan of me season ... In East Rutherford, NJ., rookie Qrl1 Moma' 3-point shot with three 1CCOnds to go sent the game into overtime where New Jency's defense gave the Neu a 118-113 victory over the Los Angeles Laken. The Lakers twice turned the bell over in tbe overtime on 24-second violations. The Neu, who trailed through most of the p.rne, were led by Re1 111a .. •, 31 points and Biid! Wllliaml' 22 pointl and I 3 rebounds. Trailina 110-108 in overtime, the Neu took the lead when Hinson sank two free throws and J• Balkf bit a IS-foot jum~r. After Jamet Wora7 bit one o two free throws with 1 :4 l remainina, Wilhams tipped in a missed shotto aive the Nets a 114-111 lead. Kin•• beaten wltboat Gretzky Marte IAmieu ICOC'ed IWO ,&oels and (ii had IWO auilll IO lead lhe Pillsburp ' Penauins ao a S--4 victory over the Wape GretaJ-lea Loa ~ Kinp Wednet- day nipl al home. Gretzky m1aed the same to attend his i!indmotber's f'1neral earlier Wednesday_ in Brantford, Ontario. Gmzky, LemicUA and Kinp center "'* N6eMllt all entered the pme wilh 72 points. IOP' in the NHL Nicholl• bad one poin1, a aoal with one second to play ... Elsew~ in lhe NHL, lart &.rt bad two IOel• and fOur assists u vilitina Edmonaon rouaecf Toronto, 8-2, extendina the Maple Leafs' winless streak to ei&ht pma. Kurri now has l l poin11 in his laS1 two pmes ... Jm ~ and Bria Mllllell MX>red loals 32 seconds apart in the second period as the New York Ranaen beat the New York Islanders at Madjson Square Garden, 2-1, handina the slumpina Islanders their 11th strai&ht loss ... In Ch~o. Wape ~·· second aoaf of tbe . aarne, a 2S-foot wrist shot from the left (aceoff cirde early in the final j)triod, pve the Blackhawks a 4-3 victory over Hanford ... AMrew Me .... soored with one second left in l"f.IUlation time IO live Winnipea a 4-3 victory ovet visitina Buffalo. McBain banked the puck off Buffalo winaer Seetl Andel at the a.ide of the net and past phender J..-a..uer. • San Joee IJ'OUP wan ta NHL team SAN JOSE -A local JTOUP launched (ii a drive Wednesday to land an NHL , expansion franchise. eontendina that hockey prospects have improved dramati-· cally in \he San Francisco Bay Area. NHL Hockey San Jose Inc. said a downtown arena scheduled 10 open in 1992 and the Bay Area's popuJation of 5.5 million people make it a sarona contender. ,"The Bay Area is the laraest market in the United · States without a hockey team. and we want to correct that," said attorney James H~sident of the group of hockey fans ind busineu . The California Golden s. who played in bo.th Oakland and San Francisco folded following the I 97S-76 season due to heavy l05ICS caused by lack of support. The Seals lost between $2 miUion and S3 m1Uion in their tinaJ season, when they had 2 SOO season ticket-holders and averaged a franchise-high 6.9PQ fans a pme. Texas bluta 49en, 11 7-86 AMa Bega scored 31 points and m Tnvtl Ma-11 added 26 lo lead Teas 10 a 117-86 viaory over Lona Beech State in a non-conference buketball pme Wednes- day niaht al the Lo~ Beach Arena. Luee Blab ~ 20 poinll and 'oeJ Wrllltl added 17 for the , / LoQShorns, who are now 7-1 andnave won six straight. Cummings lead. Bue'-& to -.10 ... ~. U was the third h~t point total ever for Texas and & w a . marked the fourth time the Lol\lhoms have scored I 00 . or more points in a pme this year. The 49crs, 2-6, were T.t"Y. C1unmblp scored scv~n of his m led by Bria J_.. with 2S ~tnts, 19 in lhe second half l 9 pomts in the final. 4:04 and Mtl~aukcc ... Jn aames invoJvina lop 20 teams: Maft Ree tied bis co~wert~ 22 De~ll turnovers u~to 17 . team record with si.x 3-point baskets and scored 24 • points 10 defeaung the host Pistons, . poi!1ts as No. 3 Syracuse (9-0) lhrashed U.S. Jnter- 119-110. A ~sket by Bill. ~beer gave Dctron a national, 135-93 ... B.J. Ann1troq scored 24 points 98-97 lead with 6:45 .rcma1ni~ But Jay 8111111*rift, and Rey Marble added 20 to lead No. 4 Iowa to a I 02-68 who led the Bucks with 21 , hit .• basket .. Jack Slkma romp over Central Aorida. lowa improved.its record to sa~k two free throws and <;umm1nas convened a three-8-0 while Central Florida dropped to 0-4 ... c.artes po ant play for a I 04-98 Milwaukee lead. The Bucks led Smln and Jara JacbM each scored 23 points and No. the rest of the yvay ... In other NBA games. Duay Ala&e S Gcoraetown withstandina a second-half rally beat score~ ~2 points and Robert Paris .. added 21 while Oral Robcns.9 t-7S, the Titans' sixth strailht losS. The g~bbang 15 rebounds to lead Boston to a 112-104 Hoyas arc 5-0 .... Geor1e McClolHI scored 3l> points and victory over Utah at the Boston Ga~den . : . ~n T~y 1>9w ... added 2.5 for 12th-ranked Aorida State, Charlotte. Kelly Tripacka scored 28 of htS 40 points in which had to rally in the last four minutes to beat South t~e second half1 leading the Hornets to a 11 S-106 Alabama, 87-82, to improve to 5.Q. •.. Toey w.tae v1~tory over Indiana ... Domlaiq9e WIW.1 scored 30 scored21 point1,Jay8.,...20andJereyPrndl l8u points as Atlanta snapped a two-pme homecourt No. 14 Ohio State broke open a close pme late in the losing streak with a 103-96 victory over Ph iladelphia. first half to defeat Nebruk.a, 102-76. .... '8a•ball netw6rk rlCJat8 toC88 NEW YORK -CBS, a r.ilure lal • month in its bid for the 81rc:e1oaa Ol~pics, shocked badlall ud &be .._ viUOD induatry Wedne:=t ~ bceti1t1 OUI NBC and winnina net npu for SI billion over four yean. NBC, which has ~ iuelf aa the .. bueball network'' since I ~7 \said it wu outbid~ 11ubstantial mlflin ud acc.aled ab rival of inapon11bility. The new contraet i1 the la,.est ever awarded one network for spom. It aivea CBS the World Seriea in 1990 alona with both lea&uc playoffi, the All-Scar Game and a 12-pme ~ka&e aunna the aeuon. Brent MusbU,.er', wbo bolu CBS'1 covefllC of major events, was tieamina. .. Today was like havina an early Christmas and a dream come true," said Mulburter. wbo umpired in the Midwest Leque in 1959. "I've worked for CBS for 20 years and it's the one sport we never covered. Never in my wildest dreams did I think we'd aet it all." Baseball will award a contract for cable rishts next month and expects to earn an additional $75 milJion to SI 00 million a year. · NBC and ABC, who have shared beseblll since 1975, will televise pmes next season for $240 million under the final yeu of the current six-year, S 1.1 bitrion pact, • Dooley quits as Georgia coach va.ce Doolef resigned as foolball • coach at the University of Gcoraia on •mt Wednesday after a quaner century spent transformina the school from also-ran to 1raditional power. "It is certainly no seC'ret that I have considered for the past ~ f'Cveral yean a chanae in careen," Dooley said. He ~:wered speculation aboul a political career by sayina: 1'1 have several possibilities which interesl me, includina opponunities in bulinesa as well as a long-standina interest in the polilic:s oftrus state." DooJey said he would not decide his future until after the Bulldop' Jan. J Galor Bowl pme apinst Michipn State ... Bob Shill, who brouaht Teus-EI Paso from I 0 losses to a bowl appearance in three seasons, was hired Wednesday to pull Missouri from a s1nna of five strai&ht losina seasons. Stull, 43, was awarded a five-year contract at a base salary ofS8S,000 a _year after coachin& UTEP to its best record ever at 10-2. He said he would return to El Paso to OOllCh bis team in practice today in continued warmups for the Dec. 23 Independence Bowl pme apinst Southern Mississippi. Televlalon, radio • ,..L.VISION .4:30 o.m . .:.... ~·•.OAT RACING: UJHA Fefl Natlonlll from Ca1telc, Calf. OeN), ESPN. 5:30 P.m. ~ COLL•G• •AIKITaALL: Southwett Mluourl State at Wlchlte State, l!SPN. 7:30 P.m. -DllAG llACl*I: IHRA Hunt Pro Stodl Shootout from lrl1tol, Tenn. O•sae>, ESPN. 1:30 o~m. -COLLIG• IAIK•TaAU.: UC Santi e.rbera at PellNrdlne, Prime Tkket. I o.m. -HOllSI RACING: Holtvwood Park reo4evs. Chennet 5' (Prime Ticket, 10-.30 o.m.). 9 o.m. -COLL•G• •ASKIT9ALL: UCI et Nevlda-Las Veee1 Cdell1ed>, USA. 9 o.m. -OPtr-ROAD RACING: eai. \000 (t1oe). ESPN. 10 o.m. -90DY9UILQIHG: Women'1 Natlonll Cl\amplonshfPI from New York Cteoe), ESPN. Mldnlthl -COLLIGI •ASKIT9ALL: Nebr1~1 It Ohio St1te (11oe), ESPN. RADIO 6 o.m. -COLL.GI •ASKIT9ALL: UCI al ~Vida-Las Veees, KPZE (1190). PltlOA Y ,..LIYIMON 11 1.m. -GOL': Ml11ed-tHm tournemenl from Dorado, Puerto Rico. ESPN. 2 o.m. -GOLi': Kirin Cup from K•Nluli, Hawaii, ESPN. Pate to begin year in TofC He'll try to defend title in PGA tour 1987 it was 26th and 30th. This year 11 was 12th in money and a bout the same in puttina. .. Does that tell you amateur golfers opener at Carlsbad ... l1! i '),\.--. H11111 · .. , anything? · He had seven top l 0 fin ishes lbis year, 17inthetop2Sandmade money in 25 ofh1J 30 tournaments. He nearly matched his previous three-year money total ofS60 l, l 87 as hejoined the millionaire's club with .. ... -· .• I bu·~:: . "-~L . . 'i·~ ~:. . Gto-e. o Lit&e c&istwtos .. • TO A NEEDY CHILD WHO HAS SO MUCH LESS THAN YOU Bring new toys, games, clothing or other suitable items for children from tots to teens Give yourself a lift by knowing that your gift will be appreciated • by someone who would otherwise receive no Christmas Gift. Please do not wrap your gift. Daily Pilot Holiday Gift Collection Now thru Fri. Dec . 23, Mon ·Fri 8am -5pm 330 W. B~y St. Costa Mesa 642-4321 . . . ... CARLSBAD-Steve Pate winner of the MONY Tournament of Cham- pi9ns here in January and 12th on the PGA Tour official money list with $582,473,played in the Newpon Classictw1cc-in 1986andapin in 1987. While Pate is not expected to return in 1989 for the two-<lay even tat Newpon Beach Country Oub that benefits Hoaa Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, he will be on hand for the T of C IO~· the new year started atlaCostaCChcreJan. S-8. Pate isjustoneofthe many pros on lhe tour who pined an insiant into the professional pme with panici- pataon in the Newport Oassic, for- merly lhe Crosby Southern. When he playedherethefirsl time, he was just startina his second year on the tour. He won two toumamentl this year althoulh he wasamona the also-rans in the RewponClassiceac_!t year he played at Newport Beach CC. While the MONY T of C sets the PGA tour underway in 1989, the Newport Classic comes on Jan. 20-21 , a Friday and Saturday event With the Super Bowl scheduled for Sunday, G(1l; Jan. 22, there is little reason for buckina the major footbe.11 attraction of the year. "I worked on many of the same things as I did in college but I djdn't chanse a thin&." Pa~ said recently about his 1988fUCCeSldurinaa v1sit to La Costa CC. "J refined my swing a little and I'm leamina to think more on the course. I don't let the bad lhinp bother me as much as I used to." Wheq be won in January, it was the first time the T of C bad been shonencd by rain in its 36-year history. "I'm not ~ina to he to you and tell you I was disappointed that the last round was cancelled. A win is a win. Youtakeitanywayyoucanaet it:' He recalls his early days on the 1our. "In my rookie year, I wasabout 90th on the money list and 9Sth in puttina. Thenextseason(l986)1 was 50th in money and S 1st in puttana,. In $1 ,183,659, I 0 The Newport Classic Pro-Am will have a new look this year. The Los Anaeles ()pen has purchased new scoreboards and the Ncwpon Classic has the old ones which will be erected on the course near the 18th peen and the confasuration near the 11th p-een. Scores will be updated by computer every two holes lhrouahout the two days of the tournament. Bob Mihalko isincbaraeoflhecomputeroper- ation. Purse money has been revised for the 1989 event with the winner picki_na upS7,000compared to $4 .SOOlas1January. When the Newport Classic was started as the Crosby Southern back in 1974, it was a satellite event for the majortour. Rumonarefloatinanow that a second tour will be started by the PGA as early u 1990. This wouJd chaqc the en lire operation for the Newpon Oassic. But that's another story. Smyth 's bobby turns prontable Al• 34, Randy Smyth of Hunt- inaton lteach ha• spenl nearly as miacb time on the water 11 he has on land. And even on land, he bas turned his favorite spon and hobby into a vocation. Al a aailmaker (Sails by Smyth), he i1 usually cna.d in buifdina saill for Other uffon (some of1hem compctiton)u weU aa him1elf. When not 11 the helm of a cawnann. be can usually be found surfl~ rowi"I. and bite ridina -an)'tlaa• to keep in top phytical condition. SmY.t11°11alll~c:alftrP1ld oft'in more U.... trop_bfa thiuear. Hejuat returned trom Miami, Fla. this week, SIS.OOOric:ber for lhe )al. Ya. Smyih ..._, prodlis year. Utt weekend he steered his 40-foot cawnaran ~perl.ube to hia third ~'win an the SllmlPro.!Ail Scrill. mlki .. ,,. delft sweep with prnioua Yicl0riel11 Newport, R. I. And Su francitco. new. rros.il .ne. nenec1 him S4S,OOO. Add lhe S401000be won It the ftric and only American IO win .... LlcuKY has also added to his prestile by lkipperina orcrewina on .. llow" monohuJl1-incl&Mlina day-racina and distance racinJ-luch as the Tranape_c and lhe Southern Ocean Racina Conference in Florida. Since l980,Smythlwwon2S national champicmsbi'-and lbree world championship mies. In I 9Mt be tooka tilver med8J at the Olympta in the Tomldo catam1r1n dul. WinninttheSllcm ProSeilevenl in Miami wun'tcasy. It ..ua.even t1ce tcries-four oa Saturday and five on Sunday. Got• ildO &be . leCOlld f'ICIOll Sunday. Smvtb WU an I tbree-way lie. -:....1 ..., .... clowllwiad """ .. -Smyth. •uct we were bebind. ~JJf~.:Z.T:C.. •• (api•--J:.'==-== them~ Dllfllt,IOll,._ial die ~ ................... ... Wia. I . --SO ...... _..,. ~·-so Mki11llill. .... _..9ntyda . F (JR : H f R f (, 0 R [J ... A STA .... S W .... C11l1 Ice hdlc DMaa. Lalltn Portland Ptloenht S..ttle Golden Slate °"'"" Sacra mento Mldwftt W L 16 5 12 ' 10 9 10 9 I 11 7 1• • 1• DM1iM ~. .762 .571 .526 .526 .•21 .333 .222 GB ' s 5 7 9 lO'h Denver Dalla' 1• 7 .667 12 7 .632 I 1 Utah 13 I .619 1 Hou''°" San Antonio 12 9 .~71 2 6 12 .333 6'h M ia mi 1 17 .056 ll'h ... tern C.••tee New York PtilledelPhla Boston New Jersey Cherlollt WashlnGIOI\ Alelltk DMt6eft Centrlf 1• 6 12 10 10 11 9 14 6 13 5 1• DMU. 16 5 13 5 1• I 11 I 10 10 .700 .5'5 .A76 .391 .316 :263 5 15 w.-....,..~ New J«sty 111, Ullen 113 (OI) Detroit Clevtla ncs Atla nta Mllwau«M Chlc.90 lndlana .762 .722 .636 .579 .500 .250 4» Miami 19, ~ • Bo\ton 112, Utan ICM Cllarlottt 11S. Indiana 106 Atlanta 103, PhllacltlPh1• 96 MitwaullM 119, Detroit 110 T•v'• G-Utah at New York, •:30 P.m. Detroit at Cleveland, •:30 P.mi Golden Stalt at Hou1ton, 6:30 P.m. San Antonio •t S..ttle, 7 P.m. Miami at Stcram.nto, 7:30 P.m. ,,...,., ~ L.Men at Boston, s P.rn. D9flyer al Cllloln, ]•)O P.m. Philadtlc>tlla •• New JtrMY. •·30 P.m Dallas al Cllarlottt, •:30 P.m. MltwaullM at Atlante, •:30 P.m Indiana at Chlc.oo, 5:30 o m. Portland at Pllotnlx. 6:)0 P.tn. Nets 111, Lallen 113 11h 2'h ' S1h 10'11 LAK .. IS (11Jl -Worthy 1MS •·S 26, Green S· 10 0-0 11, Abdul· Jal>C>ar H 3·• S, Camotltll 2·S 2·• 6, JoMMM 13·20 9· 11 3S, • Coooer S·9 1·2 I•. Woolrld9t 3·5 2·6 I, ThomPMM 3·1 2·3 •• Lamp 0-0 O·O 0 Tol•ls. 43·19 23·35 113. NIW JllUIY (111) -Hinson ,.,, 13·1S 31, 8. Wl•lams 10-13 2·3 22, Carr~ 7·10 1·2 1S, Conner •·1• M 9, McGM 2·7 0-0 '· Mo<rl1 7· 14 2·2 17, HOOIOll 3·6 4·• 10, Bagley 4· 10 2·2 10. Totals: 4'··fl 2S·l0 111 Sc-"" ftwteds Laktn 29 30 22 25 7-ll3 New Jersay 27 27 2S 27 12-111 Three·POlnt ooals~oootr 3, Green, ~rls Fouled out-None. Reoounds-Laken 49 (GrMn 101. New Jtr...,. S9 (Cerrolt 19) · A.s· slsts-Ltkers 22 (Jonnson 9), New Jarsay 22 <Conn« 10). Total lout1-Laktr1 20, New JtrMV 25. TKMica._...ew Jt•ltY Tlle9•1 Cle· i.nsa. Alltndanc-20,CM9. HMt n , Ql.,.,..-s II MANN (19) -Lono 3-1 9-12 IS, Grav 2·S O·O 4, Cummings 7-12 M 1i ~s -6· 17 O·O 1--1------· 5Hf'row--2-.t' 0·0-4. lhOmPson 7·1 1·2 15.. SUnd'vOld 7· 10 0-0 14, Stlkalv 1·4 2·4 4, Htsllnos 2·4 0·0 4, Wl\fflfr 1·2 O·O 2. Toltls· 3'·79 13·20 19. CL~RS (•> -Manning 11·1' 1·4 23, Norman 6· 11 3·• IS. l(ltt 0-2 O·O o. OtileY 6· 19 9· 10 21, Gren! S· 10 0-1 10, WIMi1m1 0-3 0·0 0 Nixon 1·6 1·2 3, Benttmln 3·5 6·6 12, Wolf 2·2 0-0 4, Gonore1lck 0· I 0-0 0, GtrrKk 0-2 0-0 O. To1111 3'·7S 20•27 .. Sew. b't Ovtrtw1 MW'nl 23 30 19 17-19 CllPHrl 25 19 11 26-11 Fouled out-N-Rttlounds-Miacnl 4S (Lono I), Chl>Ptn 51 IB1<11am;n 91 As· ,1s11-Mlaml 22 (SParrow 91. CllPDtn 13-<Man· nine, Nh1on Sl Tot11 fouls-Miami 22, Cliooen II. A"tl'ldtnc-7.703 C ..... scorn WIST ·ROCKIES Tt111s 117, Lono Bttch St 16 Stnl• Clare 12, Neveda·Reno 71 Mofltena 16. Mont1n1 Tech S3 wvomlno 11. ColoradO 61 SOUTHWEST Hou$1on 7S, Toledo SI MIDWIST lndl1n1 10S, "Ark.·Lllllt Rock 17 lowe e 102, Cent Fjlorlda 61 Ol'llo St. 103, Ntor11ka 76 Wl1con1ln 19, o.nver 39 O.Ptul 120, American U IS E Michigan 90, Cltvtl•nd St 61 SOUTH Florid• SI. "· Soutll Alabama 12 V1nderbi1t 93. Auburn n MtrslltM 1CM, Ofllo U 93 Coooln St. 7S. Md ·B11tlm<ll't Countv 61 EAST Svracusa 13S. U,$ lnl•nthONI 93 Georgetown '1, Orel ROC>trll 7S La Stilt 71. St Ptttr'I 14 Otllwtrt St , Weal Clltlltr 49 Falrltlllh Olcklnaon 7S, Cent Connec11cut Sr 14 Mt1sechustlls ... Lowell 60 UCI .•. From B l las Vegas who averaged I 5.8 points, 4.3 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 1.9 steals per game 1n earning first-team All· West Coast Athletic Conference and Freshman of the Year honors two years ago at Ponland. and freshman Anderson Hunt, who was ineligible last season afier earning Detroit City Player of the Year in 1986-87. All but Ackles average between I 0 and 13 points per game with Anthony leadina the way at 13.5. While the Rebels are line tuning a squad which figures to win the Big West once more, the Anteaters. the most successful of any 811 West team apinst Nevada-las Vegas, are build· ing for the future. UCI, which earned its first win an nearly three wctks Tuesday in a 112-101 decision over Eastern Wash- ington, may break from 8111 Mulligan's pact with the run-and· press pme for a night or it could get . ugly fast. Mulliaan said earlier that he thouaht the Anteaters could run with anyone with the possible exception of Veps. They'll have to run, but won't have to press to act the Rebels to play their style. \ ' GIRLS ••• W....8 1 bur lhe MuslanlS pulled away apin u Good ICored nine of her points in lhe final penod. Cql hW Vlllley II. .._.. tt: The Coupn' aandem of 6-foot·2 ltoll1 Alidenon and 6-0 SMiiey Zierllut combined for 'I points u ~ handed the smallu Vikinp their first m after five victona. The CO!llUI are 6-1 . Oilrd Meli11 SonillO led Marina witb 24JMMnta. which included an l- b-I ellbrt from the he·W-0-line, but the Vilunp coukln 't ovemMM a )8.20 ttbouncJina di11eh1nU19t. \ • ...... lcNel tceNI TOU.NAMmlfT CW CMAMPIOMI , .. 0-""" .... , C-. A I 5 II W.l<NIMf 81, Bolco Tedi Jf Mor,..._ D , MmrrlfNc 0 0..11 ... sec-.. ..... Caoktr-v ...... JI, Domtntue1 jt LA QUINTA TOUllNAMllNT C1 1 UAll: S........ Weal Torrance 7S, Torrence S7 a...... ... IMllllllll La Quinta 12. Katellt 74 HIGH SCHOOL G•LS Oceen View S 1, Metier Del l9 cs.--. T___.) oc-V1tw Mtftt Del Ha-Smith SU Ill van Nunez Taklclo Wolfe Coll Ins Nevarro Brun ........ .. ...... e 1 I 17 McDonald 0 0 3 0 S 1 2 11 Arl>Oll 1 0 0 2 30S6~rlo 0000 I 0 3 2 Martin • 3 2 l 1 2 I O 12 McCarlhv 1 ' I I 1012Motlltr 200 4 O O O O Au,tln 1 o 2 2 Tl T O'Br~ 2 0 4 4 0 0 2 0 Tllomt>IOll 2 0 2 4 Burkllalltr 2 o O • Totels 20 11 IS SI Totell IS ' 1' 39 Scare bV °'*""" <>c.an Vltw Miier Del I 13 16 1,..:-.S1 1 ' 10 13-39 ThrM·P01n1 DOtll None T Khnlcall None • Cos.. M9s. SS, S.ssett 40 llnt·Ol!Mt T_._._..) Ceata Mftt .. ..... Good ~e Scofield NCIUYtn Sum"Oll Bryant Morris Austin Totall """'"' ....... . 6 1 2 13 Castro I O O 2 7 0 2 14 Casta~ 2 2 1 6 1 0 2 2 Caotna 1 0 2 1 S 1 2 12 Florea 0 0 0 0 I 4 l 6 Htrlslitld I 0 0 2 0 0 S 0 Dufr•v I 1 4 3 I I 1 3 Valtnclt 3 2 2 10 2 1 4 S Wtmblt 7 1 • IS 23 8 21 SS Totals 16 6 13 40 klll"t bY 0utr1en Costa Mesa 1S 19 9 12-SS Benell 13 11 7 9-40 Tl\fH-POlnl ooals Cosla Mest-NDUYtn I, 811satt-V1lencl1 2 • Ttchnl~l1; None. Es .. nci. 71, Paliudes '5 (~ Hlh Tevmamtflt) Plllltdn Es•nclt Oloos Ba Ille AON Howarc:J Kuwabtrt Allen Pow tit fl ft of ID """'"' o o 3 o Earle 2 2 S 6 5 l 3 11 Collini 2 I 3 5 13 7 2 J3 Soutl'IWlck 0 2 2 2 • l 3 9 Keyes 4 1 1 9 3 O 1 6 Lumt>llln 6 2 4 14 3 0 3 6 Gomez 2 0 3 • 0 0 0 0 SUzUlll 1 14 4 2t SUnoto 3 O 3 6 Cordrtv 2 o O • Tolall 28 9 IS 65 Tolt ll 2t 22 25 ,. Pallsa~ Esiancia Sc•t bV Olltr1en 9 30 IS 15-6S 18 22 21 17-71 TllrH-PO•nl ooals NOl'lt Ttcnn-als None C1plstrano Veley 63, Marina 40 Been Orosco Soarks Sortino Kreuw Vorkt ono "-WYtrS Totets Y.erina (Mn.·'"""') MtrlM .. " pf "' 3 0 1' 6 I 0 0 2 0 1 3 1 I 8 I 24 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 ca" v...., Anderson Zl11rhut Soenct Rlv•s Ferr Baker Stlvetierre .. " .... 16' 1 • ,, 11 0 I 22 3 0 s 6 I 0 I 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 • 0 I 0 0 2 14 12 6 40 Totels 31 1 IS 63 S<Oft bY ~r1en 1 I IS I 9-40 ' 1 12 2• 13 14-63 Nont NHL STANDINGS. ~ c ........ C•leerv K ..... Edmonton Winnipeg V•nc;ouver Detroit 51. Louis Toronto M innesota Chlc.oo Smvtlle DMlllll WLTP'tl 21 5 s '7 20 11 1 •1 11 11 3 39 13 10 5 31 12 lS S 29 Nwrts DMlllll .., 17 9 ' 31 12 4'3 "' 21 11 II 2 2• 9 ~6 5 23 I 19 ' 20 Walts C........_. ... trldc DMUen P ittsburgh 17 11 2 36 'NY Ra1191f'S 16 '12 4 36 Washington 15 12 ' ~ Ptilledef Phla 1• 17 2 30 New JtrMY 11 1• 5 27 NY l~lendtrs 7 21 I 2 16 AM.ns DMUen Gfl GA 136 13 170 130 1S4 121 122 119 lot 106 127 11• " 99 100 133 " 11• 12S 152 1•1 1 131 127 119 1• 106 126 121 101 120 " 127 Montreal Boston Hertford Buffalo Quebec 19 9 6 " 131 12 12 I 32 103 l<M 95 102 132 1•9 13 15 1 27 107 12 ,17 2 26 107 10 20 2 22 111 W"""41av's kens Pittsburllh S, Kinel 4 NY R1noer1 2. NY ''lanotrs Edmonton I, Toron10 2 Clllc•DO 4, Hertford , Wlll()iotO 4, Buff•lo 3 T•v's ~ WHlllneton ,, PllilldtlOllil , 4:3S 0 m. Edmonton •I Boston, 4:3S p,m. MontrH I a t Quebac, 4:35 o.m Toronto at New Jerwv, 4;0 o.m. PlttU>uroll " NV lll•ndtrl. S:OS P.m Harlforc:J ti St. Louis, S:lS P ni. Buffalo at Mlnneaota, S:lS P.m. Vancouver at Calotrv. 6:3S o.m. ,rldliv'I ~ KMel a t Detroit, 4:3S P.m. Calotrv at Vancouver. 7:3S o.m. LOI Angeles PlllU>uroh 2 0 Finl..... I I 4 1-4 1-s I LOI Anotltl, Ovoun 4 (OtGrtv. AHison), 3·00. 2 LOI A11oeles, Alltson 1 (Oucl\flnt, Duoutv), 7 47 Ptn11tv-<:offev, Pit (t\Oldlngl. 1112 S.Cefld~ l Pltt1burD11, Ltm~• 29 tErrevl. I 10 (Shi, • P11111>urvn. Errev 10 !Lemieux), 12:17, S. Pill11>Uroh, CIJllMYWorlh 16 (Quinn. HHlltr) 12.Q, 6 LoGrav S IAnlaon), 16:31, 7 Pillsburon. 8ouroue 10 (Ht nnan, Lemieux), 19•41 Penal· tlea-8ourdue, Pil (t\Olding), ;39, ZelaosJll, PH (t\Oldlno), uo. Hamel. LA llloldino), 1;3S. CoW.v, Pot (holding), 10-16, Hierence), 13.21, &aumgartner. LA IM1n·1tldtlnol. 16·16, Lonev, Pil (hloll·stlckino), 16·16, Ht nnan, Pit (crou· chtcl11ng), 1,.49 Tlllrd ...,.. I P1111burgh, Lemieux 30 t8ouroue), 19.30 (tn), 9. t..os Anoelft, Nlctlons 34 (Tonelli. Robilt illt), 19·5' (oo). Shots on ooal I0-14·1S-39 Plttsourgn 7·13·S-2S. Power·ot•v OPOQrtunillea-t.os Anoties I of 7, Pltt5t>uroh o of 3. Goelles.-Los An11tltl, Fitzpatrick, •·2· 1 (2• 'h0ts·20 saves> Pittstrur;n, !ttrreuo, 8· 10-2 (39-35). Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 15. 1988 Elusive ball Mate r Del'• Kelly O'Brien (left) •traglee for looeea ball With Heidi Huemann of Ocean View da..rlna Saft.DD& Toamamen game Wednaday. lteabawka won, 51-39 lhctl\lwa lllacefven Martin, N 0 J Smnn. Pilot Elard. Rams Ktt Jldt$0n, PM Cfl o. S.F -~ NO Ydl Avt II ICM? 12 9 11 951 11 . IO 1340 1U 1• m 10 5 73 S02 " '° .,...,.~ LG TO NO Yds Alie '° 7 Toon. JtlS 19 1011 IU 29 5 Cltvton. Ml• 90 107S 13.4 61 9 Hill, Hou • f1 10l2 16 1 • 1 S Snu•tr Jt11 65 765 I U 22 I R~~tt ~ W~ J~ -4-V Jvnn-::1)en:-----...w-.. 9A3. :aPi1trano Vallev Tllree· PO int ooal• TecMIC•I\ ... None Altend•~l6,01S" Rtler-Terrv Greoson. Lln•~'Pll • Oaouno, Laon Sllcklt .• Carter M 1tU'• Sanc:Jers WtU- Se••e Al 61 ' .. 17' ., 1028 15;3 67 SSI n ., 6 Pa•oe IC. c S6 815 14 6 SS 11 G v•ns 1-tou S. IS7 ISt 27 1 8v"tr Cit• S4 S4S 10 I SOCCER Hltth JChoet be';s NON·LEAGUI ,. .... o.c-•Mtr o Corona del Mar OO.l•t savea Conntllv 10 E~ S, Hetre Dame Academy J Esrancia scorine: Vat-l 2, ESPlnot• 2, <eltl'I 1. Goellt saves.: M9ndot• 4. Notre Dame Academy SCOflne: Femandt1 ?, .\\tltew I. Goelle st"ft: 8Ufna 21. Halftime: Estancia, 3· 1. Hltth scMel "'1s NON·LEAGUI ..._..,, Hattlw J, Trtlluce H .. 2 Ntwoorl Harbor scoring Webb 2 · Goalie ltYH: Huffman 2. ValdM• 3. TrtbucO HIMS scorlno: GandtN 2 Hattllme Newoort Hert>or, 2· I Deep SM fl"*'t DAVEY'S LOCKIR !...._,, leedll -3 boats, 2l anglaj'~ 36 celoco «iau, • land bass 12 ·mecktret. 33 blue oercn, 1 Shftos"-td This wMll's trout IUnts otlANGE -LtGuM N•ouet P•rk Like RIVERSIDE -Evani Ltke, Htmtl Ltke VENTURA -Cts•lts Lake SANTA IARllAlllA -Ctchume Ltllt Wldnesdav's trans.cftons IASlaALL ~LMeut 80STON Rf!o SOX~ L-~n. ~·' m•n•Der. to • tour·vear CO"lrtcl txltnllOll tHt<hve Fto 1 AIWnec:J Zecn Crouch. JO/In Tr.utwe•n, Dan Gat>nete Jolln Leister 1nc:J Josits Manzan•rto. 1>1t~ oi.tr gnt to P1wtuckt1 of 1114! 1ntern111ona1 Leaou. Natlentl LtffUt CHICAGO CU8S-AgrHCt to 1erms W•lll Domingo Remos 1nf1e•c:1ec. to a ont·n ar con· lrtCI HOUSTON ASTROS-Seonl Ttrrv Werts PllC.her. Bert Hun111r, outtlelc:Jer, Mike S•mms, lir11 oas.man. anc:J Ctmeron Drew, outt1e1oer. outrlOlll 10 Tuoon of 1114! Pecitlc Coa11 Leaoue Siontd Crelo Smao11r1a. '"fielder. 1nc:1 PM Outllellt, c11e11er, to minor leaoue c0<1trac1s wltll TUCM>n ...._ Ytnl·Pem LM_. HAMILTON RE081R05-Named Joe Curi· nlnonam Ill coaell. IASKETaALL Nt!MNI llaslr .... Auedttlen CHICAGO 8ULLS-Tradec:J Ed-Nealv, for· werc:J, 1 unennounced draft oiclt and a u11· soecot~ 1moun1 of cash to the Pr!Oenlx SUn1 lor Crat0 HodOH, ouarc:J GOLDEN STATE WARRIOR5-"W11vta Snelton Jone1, forward ,OOTIALL fMtlMI ....... LNeW CLEVELAND BROWNS-Sloned Steve ~vden. ouarterblck Pieced Cllarles Buchan· en defensive tnd. on nru<ed rfte!"Ve NEW ORLEANS SAINTs-4"ttced Tonv El· 10011, no1t t•ckle on niured rewrve St0!lec:J Jon Oum«>eulc:J deft<lllYe 11neman UCI at Nevada-Las Vegas at Thomas a Mack Center, 6 p.m. TV: USA (cable, delayed. 9 p.m.) . Radio: KPZE ( 1 1 90) SERIES: tMn•-us v ... s lffcts. 15·6' GAME NOTES: While Coach A Mullemn hes lhe mosl wins ot anv Big West Conference coech ag•lnsl the Runnln' Rebels wllh 1 five. this vear's game could be a true m a tchuP of David 1nd GOiiath. Devld Is an Inexperienced UCI SQUa d end Goliath lhe tall, talented Rebels . . . If env incentive is necessarv, consider II wH the Anteaters who knocked the Rebels from lhe fina l Pacific Cont Athletlc Association (chetl98d to ll"te Big West last spring) POSl·seeson lourNment In tarlv March with e 7•·70 stunner et The Forum ••• After hitting " percent for Iha first five gemea. UCI PtJlled 0\11 of the shooting doldrums on TUfldaY egelnst Eutem Weshington, blistering the nets from tono renoa 10 shoot 61 percent ('° of 66) on the evening In e 112·101 win. Thal lnduded 9 of 12 from three-POint range w ith lted PlfrfW hitting ' of 6, J.tf H«*Nn 3 of 3 and Mir• Dek1eruvti 2 of 3 •.• UNL V has h•d Its own share of trouble findino the basket, hittlno onlv •2.1 percent for the season. Anteaten (2 -4 ) Probable atarten ........ F 3 F J3 c 42 G 21 G n fMme, Ht+tM, Gr.- Miit Labat, 6-S, Jr. Miii• Dmtwcnll, 6·9, Sr. E• It ...... 6·6, fir. lted ~--. •·J. Jr. Kl'llft fl'9¥d, 6-S, Sr. Key lt9Mr'W1 "" 11.J lU 6.0 19.7 ls.7 RIO J.7 6.3 2.4 2.0 J.O 11 Jeff HtrdrNn, 6·6, So IU , 2.0>, 20 Justin Anderson, 6·5, So. (U , 0.1), 23 Troy Whlleto, 6·2. Jr (0.1, 2.2); 25 Brian MeClcUey, 6·7, Fr: (7.1, 3.:11, Sl ltldty Butter, 6·7, So. (2.S, 3.S). Ceedl Bill Mullloen (ninth yew ., UCI, 137·101, vs. Flofd Rannln' Rebel• (2-2) ......... etarten Ntv"8·Las v ... ,, 10-S) ....... F D F 44 c • • 12 • • ............... Gr ... Macey ~ •·7, s.. ..... Adllll. ,_ , .. Jr. D9wM ....,, •• ,., Jr. Ao ,.,... .._, 6• 1, fir. ... ~ ..... ... KW It...,,.. "" 10.S 7.1 lU lU ll.S •• 7.0 u ... 1.S M S St.c.v Cvl~. 6·3, Jr lJ o. 0 Ol, 22 Cllftt ltwaufn ... 2 • Sr cu. 1 J>; H Kt1111 umes •·5. Sr (U, 1 7); J) a.rry Yount, 6•7, So (1U , 0 ), lt ..... ~ ••.•• Jr. (10. 35); lS MoMI Sc:Urrv ... 7. Jr. (7~ U ). c.ca ~ T.-.-<*" ...,. et Nevede•LM v ..... •-t1; .,_,_ .....,11; "": UC1, 11-SI ' NFL lndlVldual stattstks NATIONAL CONFEllllNCE AMERICA N CO..FlltENCIE Jt~st" M•t S3 Sl7 111 Ollt""111Cln ~as W Ion M •Pllt Everett, Rama LOrrltx,Pnoe Monrana SF s .... m, G an1S Heot<t. N 0 Pe uer Oa '"""'•"Olla!"'. Pl\ 0 W .ems !Nesn (Mo ~r /U Att Cam Yeh TO Int lCM 119 2512 ll • 47' ll9 3763 v 17 410 240 3223 20 1 311 713 2110 " 10 «6 245 3129 !I 11 &S3 167 Jin• 19 1& t09 23S 3010 17 16 sn n JS70 n lo 3SI 196 2m 13 11 l7• 1~0 1077 •• ,, Es &$.On C•n ~ tiOu Kosa• C~v ~r "Cl M • e .. B ... ~ 0 8r·f'I Jt•a Oe&Yo I( c E .. av Ot., Cranc.e' --o 8-1iNI. AatCMo Aft Cam Ya TO i..t 369 213 l31S 26 14 259 140 2040 ,, • tS9 156 '"° 10 7 S1S l37 &23f 28 21 •?3 252 317• 1l 17 m no nSJ l 1 37t 207 ,, .. 1S " .. 1 2 ,..., , • m 12s '5'7 • 12 DI IOS 1 .. J I 7 NFL edds SAT\MOAY •c n<:•l'lnt' 7 ovv wunu-olon •Df"v..-l ov..-lffw Eno!tnd SuMitv ·s. .. Fra'l(•KO • ov..-!tams 'R•llMn 3 Ovt< S.aHlt •p n~ro ., O•e< ,..,,.,, lllulhtn u~ •Hew 0-'tl"S 1 Olftf' Al •"'a ':'ll"'OI 8tf' 3 -~ro• ~lltQf\O I 2 'O\itf" HOUSfO" p.,~ .• .Jo .... ·oa 1 Aft Yeh AVt LGTO "" Yeh Avt LG TO C•• o SF 79• We tr 01 l3a lel,Rama 1'7 Morr 1. G enrs 217 A"CltnOf'I Cri ,,, Sellle At 211 F '''"' Phot 191 H• ero, N O 179 S Y111c1te Pnoe 1S2 Mavea,N O 169 Holvwood Plrll Wll*ISOA't'I H WLTS •S US1 11?4 916 "' fSI "° "' 651 621 12'"' .i ~·4"Y _...,..,..-I ,MIST •ACE 6 IJ•ON\ •o•• e .... ,-.,. 1110 110 .. o l•-oa , kt• Ma• Grv-u o llG s ............ so.... • .. ! .... 10 SECOMD •ACE l>r.... ... K..ll Olla• °"' ... ,,,. c;. ...... A To..c• ()t l"•M •••• .,. ,.... • 1111 U OAIL 't OOUILE f ' O•• I .... U CDNSOl.illTION OAIL't OOUtl.E fl .. ., t •S .. nt•O •111C1; lt.K' ' S•M~ I«' ~lf"ll\e' llO V•rllol't4' fh ftOYI ~. 0t-4to.\'--•t T,.,,. 1 •S• U U tACTA • N-G I • ilO 'OUll™ ••CE • ,...., R• .... ~("°\. 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OC-f ...... --•<•ft ' • -0-"'1. o.a O S'°"tP ~ 4.! * ~ •c~t•t J •• ltOr'lf'\ JIGHTH UCI .... ~.:t t f .,..,-c Pliiic:t $:0 l:C : .. ~""' ~-'° !.; o-a.-· .... •.O •-t )U U IUCTA • o ~°" U DAILY Tlt~l.E I • l N'4 , ... " N•NTH ••CE ,.. fl It• '°""' •-oec., SO> • .0 '10 Ut ,s...,, T ... o-~ .... ~ I.ct .xi o.t"'o a.... •• ... -· ~ J U Ill.ACTA • J N-G \IAQO l PICIC N•NE ; T ' II ~ li;t J • N<Oh '"°""" • 'if•'"'' "'9 fK:tiit' """9'" ,..,... ... , N .. \f • S") "(" 1 * ""!'\t Iii(,. \ ' ' ~'-"" .,. . ~·f" .. ..-O'tf'I' DOOo itSI JO • • '~r"llC•"<• ' \Sil ....... , "•~· "'~"' )52 •• ,.., 103' 2So 100. 2•1 9'S 9Sl ., )~ lt ., S 1 ' u r. 3 19 10 n 0 S6 15 NV G a~11 • , O•et' ·NV n•s Buff• 3 OYt< •1nc1 .. 111PO' l ·~ • ' .,..,.,. """" 8tv ·s.n 0 eoo 7 ovt< r<a.,~11 C Iv !IS 17S '19 Sl SI • Mende\' '91 901 0 101 ... &) 85-l &3 3' 19 )7 , s , ·M "'IHO'• 6 O•tr Cn<a90 ·~e'IO'"' .,_ •tam 191 11' 114 u J2 1 Fram Mtl"f'•lt'I ·-ltl<la & Los Alamitos WEOHISDAY'S •ISUL. TS ,, ...... .,....,.._,_I ,..ST ••Cl • A• -•ao. • on,.... Jf'• .... tOll l't • 11 -• ,.. D.0 1000 0.•4' 0-,.,,. G,~.,. t• . -· . \ U EXACTA 1 t UIO \I ~- U:CONO HCI _,.~\ ~ kit' t Cr.;,"'A "" " ~ ....... ,, 1i..00t>l -.._ •t T..,~ ~.,_ .. -· zo:: U EXloCU •J .. .: \ .., ...... • l .O • .:n, 10 '"o o>o.)U l'll'Tio llACI. ..... c ... -.. "' .. ~-, .. ...... """ '"' T""'• 201 I n EXACT• S·l O•O ,, .. ao U T•ll'LE I ·• S No U SlOllO SEYIENTH •ACE ""t NC• 1 a Cl'....O.C• Sf1<..,...0 I II 41C Sc~""t· ,., v ..... '4"9 ... lf"I": •• .. ,.... • £•.,..,. Oftiiij.,.....-r..,. 112 n IXACTA • • N.C ~n10 EIGHTH •AC£ ,..,, • •·o• Co.. i;1' -• G""'• ~ :eo t" ~.,.. ·-soo u • c .. , ....... £ ........ 1..0~--7 .. • "!'If ''l U ll(ACTA : .. ., \U .0 NINTH •ACE --. t ... a " ........ __. 1 •ta ) .. """' ,.,._ Gt""' J , .. $> .. ~O M I.OD -·· 164 ·.-7Q U EXACTA I .. ;e I ot U DAIL. V TIUl"l.E t I 00<1 111 ilQ 4".-w:!•"'C• "" Y. y -UOl U. ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ii cJVewport 8urj c& 8port I ,,. CHRISTMAS STARTING 8 DAYS BEFORE CHRISTMAS SAT. DEC. 17 TO SUN. JAN. 8 -IUIDI llB I: .. ..... ., • .. 10% TO 50% OFF flllllY •tm P I -----.. ..... ___ .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I ThurSday, 0.0.mber 15, 19a& LOOKING BACK •.• )'Ou don't look too wrU today.' The coach said. 'Why don't you sit out this game?' He was down the rest of the day. and they beat> us. I could acnerally teach them. but I couldn't tuch him today. It was kind of fun when the other teams won. Prom Bl disciplin.tnan nowadays." we•rc not talking John J. McGraw he re. There was no raised voice. no intimidation fac tor. No, Davis had his own special way of earning n:spcct. Davis had three signals for hand- Ii ng kids. Standing up across the room in an enclosed patio seperated from hi s house -there's another story - where plants hang and some of his pictures and plaques adorn the walls, he demonstrates what it took. Davis extends his arms straight out at a 45-degree angle towa rd the floor. his hands perpendicular to the ground he broke 59 years ago, palms turned down, and waves them ever so gingerly left and right. _ . "That meant listen and keep your mouth shut "When J was talking to them, I would always have them in a stra ight line, on one knee. That way, you have control of them." Discipline. That's what was im- portant. ··1 had battin~ helmets with holes drilled in them, Davis said. "I went tive years, and nobody ever set them in the dirt. They all knew. "Yeah, they did. "Mothers used to say. 'How do you do it?' I said, 'It's easy. It's all respect.'" And there was the matter of appearance. "The first thing was getting a haircut. I paid for a lot of their hai rcuts. They had to have their hair cut regular. No Ion~ hair, none of these styled hairdos.' he said, enough to make someone listening run their hand· slowly down the backside of their shin collar. Davis was a self-made coach. Heck, ·when he first started, he thought just like he talks today-'Tm no coach. "They were always needing coaches. I was afraid to take it, because I thought I'd lose my job. I thought . 'They'll never ask me back.· Then they called me back th e next year." And again, and again, and again. He attended many clinic$ and camps to learn how to teach funda· mcntals. Johnny LindeJI. who pitch- ed fo r the Yankees in 1942 and for Philadelphia and Pittsburgh in 1953 taught ham what to do on the mound at one camp. He learned a few things from Andy Carey, who s~nl nine ~cars as a Yankee and fii;nshed as a Dodger. But among all the parts of the game. his staple was bunting. "Everyone in Costa Mesa thinks I can teach bunting. Maybe I should teach the Dodgers. They can't bunt. We won a lot 9ftitles on buntjng. We worked on that aJI day. They can all bunt, even the fat ones." Speaking of which, one of Davis' fonder memories involves the fat kid and the skinny kid and an eventual bunt. "One time, I had a big fat kid on thfrd and a speed burner down on first ·· Davis said. "The only problem arose in trying to bunt the heavy-set one home. It'd sure be nice if Speedy was on third. No problem. · "They both stole second at the same time. got mixed up. and the fat guy went to first and the s~edy guy to third, and no one ever noticed. ''Yeah, they did. "The um ps weren't always as good then. Then we could do the suicide bun t. You can't squeeze a slow guy. "The little guy still comes around that made the switch. Yeah. old Speedy still comes by." Then there was the time that Davis helped a player from another te-am. Or at least he tried lo help. "This one coach couldn't beat me. He had one kid on the team who couldn't catch.1 worked him out for a week, tried to \each him to catch the ball. "Then the game came that week· end. and (the other coach) said. 'Kid. "I used to work the other kids out on the other teams. But if my kids would sec me . it scorched them." But knowina Luke Pavis, no one could stay upset with him for long. Next Tbuf!d,ay: A look 11 Luke Davisand theeArlyyears asan athlete and his thousbts on the world. MULLIGAN ••• From Bl dards.Justg_oes toRrovethat it can be done. o · Notre Dame graduates most ofiis basketball and football players. which isto their credit. However, Notre Dame is not an academic pow< rho use as the Irish like to label themselves. JoJo Buchanan. who transferred to UClfrom Notre Dame several years ago. had a 2.2 GPA out ofhigh school and was admitted to the Irish pro- gram. Maybe the fact that he was a McDonald's All-America helped. 0 There are some great freshmen playing throughout the nation. and if you get a chance to watch any of them. doso. Billy.OwensatSyracuseand Alonzo Mourning at Georgetown are two of them. Some people think that maybe LaPhonSQ Ellis of Notre Dame is . even better than they are. I really like Jerrod M ustaf. the 6-10 frosh out of Maryland, when they played in our tournament in November. 0 Players at all levels just get better and better each year. It continues to amaze me. Someday, we may see wider courts, especially in the NBA. There is currentJya lot ofb.ulk squeezed in to a very limited area.· Area has strong teams in 'overlooked' sports ~appears to e class of Sea View in soccer this year By STAN GRANCH 0.-,,._.C~I Wh ile girls basketball may be the glamour spo~ oft he three winter spQrts. the Orange Coast area has strong teams in both soccer and field hockey. Forthenext two weeks, this c.olumn will coverthese 1woofien . overloolced spans, starting with girls soccer. Corona del Mar High is coming off a successful 13-6-6 season, which saw the Sea J<jngs advance to the Cl F quarterfinals losing to Mission Viejo, the eventual champion. CdM has 13 leuermen, eight of which were starters and 1 Oseniors returning from last year's Sea View Leaguechampionshipsquad. Thus. it is no wonder 'fhY Coach John Nguyen is confident that the Sea Kings will repeat. "We have an outstanding shot at winning thele'\SUe." Nfuyen said. "We are the only schoo in the district with a year-round program, where the girls play on club teams and stay in shape." However the Sea Kings have not gotten ofTto the start the Nguyen had hoped for even though they arc 4-2 and they fi nished second1n tne Irvine Tournament "Injuries and illness have really hurt us," Nguyen reJated. "We bad to caJI up four players from the j unior varsity. Right now we have eight players out." While playing in a weak league may sound Ii~ tile place to be, Nguyen disagrees saying," A weak league does not help prepare you for CJF. You need to have players play under p~ssureandknowwhatit takes to -win. Jn a wealcteague, you lose your competitive ed&e, that is why no Sea View uagueteam has ever gotten past the q uancrfi nals. •• Corona del Mar has several outstanding players includinJ senior Katie Geib. second team all-District last year and a co-captian; senior Julie Smith; lheotherc-0-captainandan all-district performer; Kristen Borland, an all-league performer who transferred from Arcadia High; Erinn Aley, a transfer from Newport Harbor. and Tracy Boatman. who Nguye n calls the best forward on the team. Things may be cut and dry in the Sea View League, but the Sunset uague is a different story where parity has set in. Every coach agrees that anyone could win the Litle, and that on any given day anyone could win. A factor that could decide the tit.le is injuries. Since none of the teams have that much depth,i injuries will be critical. l..astyeartheunalgame determined theorderoffinish for the. league and th.is.y_car promises to be even more exciting. Despite openingthis ycarwitha 2-3 record, Huntington Beach was the pick for the top $pot. The Oilers return four alf-Jeague performers and ba ve three--quarters oflast year's squad back that finished lied for second with Marina. Huntinaton Beach is led by senior all-league p_crformers Kerry Kelter (center halfback), Lisa Licker (sweeper). Tricia Wood (fullback) and Marrianne Tip0h (fullback). The 1980s have been the decade of the Edison Chargers. as they have won eight straight league titles, but the Chargers were picked for the No. 2 SPot thi$ year. With 14 players lost to graduation and with four freshmen starting. the streak ma y be jeopardy. Senior Amy Lund may be out for the year with a brok'Cn foot and goalkeeper Nikki T umer twisted an ankle and· she is expected to be out for at least six weeks. Thus taldnJ over the role of on the field leader 1s senior midfielder Kerry .McGrath. Leading the way for the Barons this year are seniors Deena Hauver and Michele Trejo. Hauver, a forward, helps set the tempo of the ga me, while Trejo, a middle fielder, helps provide some leadership. ScobeU calls the pair his coaches on the field. Marina's defense only allowed three goals last yea1 in league. and they set a CJ F 4-A mark with the fewest goals allowed in a season. Anchoring the defense are senior al I• league performer$ sweeper Sandra Ross, who Vikings Coach Larry Frakes says is the key to the defense. , and middle fielder M~lanie Frakes. the coach'sdau.ghter. 'Minding the net is sophomore goalkeeper Cristin Rossman. Pl&IC NOTICE Pt.8l.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE P\IJllC NOTICE l Pl&IC NOTICE Pl&.IC NOTICE P\B.IC NOTICE Pllll.IC NOTICE . fltlll.IC NOTICE l'tB.IC ll>TICE ORDtNANCE" said uoc11 Street: tne"ce NO.F204383 listed above on 1983 K 4'581 92704 OFFICIAL High School who was killed ducted by: a cOfporauon K..- NO. 2t7J9 eest 373.62 feet along said James A Moore, 21633 Jettrey A. Brill, Viee Presl-NOTICI CW DEATH Marla Cristina Guerrero, ~EECMNGS OF In 1 trattlc acelent. The registrant com-FICTITIOUI au .... 11 AN ORDINANCE OF THE parallel line to the centerline Ocean Vista Dr , South dent AND Of NTITION t805 W. Carriage •4. Santa THE 90ARO Of' (SEAL) inenc:ed to transact busl· NAME .TATEllENT CITY OF HUNTINGTON ol said Lake Avenue: thence Laguna. Calif. 92677 ThlS statement was ~led TO aDMINllTER Ana. CA 92?0<1 IUPERYleORI Of LINDA O. ROB.EATS, nets under the t1ctllous fhe folloWtng persons are BEACH AMENQING SEC· 10\lth 696.00 feet along said Oran £. Breeland. 1631 with the County Clerk ol Or· IEITATI Of Th11 buslnes\ is con· ORANGe COUNTY, Cleft( of the Board of SUf)ef~ busln"1 name or names doing bu1lqeu 11: TION 9061 OF THE HUNT-centerline of Lake Avenue· to Peacock Lane. Fullerton, ange County on December tFRED LEE RATTERREE, ducted by: cp P'ttnets CAUl'qllNIA llllOfl ' n11ed above on NIA M.R,T.H. PROPERTIES. a ING TON BEACH OROI-the ;:>otnt of beginning. Calif 92633 9, 1988 . ._. k-n.. The re~1strant com. leMa AN, OFFICIAL PAOCeEO· ~ttmed Sedehl, Secretary Callfornla general partnet· NANCE CODE TO PROVIDE Containing 11.021 acres. This business was con-,..... FRID L RATTERREE menced to transact bU.SI-C...... INGS OF THE BOARD Ot 'l'hla t lltement was llled lhlp, 3-184-F AllWl'f Ave., FOR CHANGE OF ZONING more or less d~ted by a general partner-Publllhed Orange Coast C.. ~ nest undef the ·ficUtous SUPERVISORS OF OR· with the C~nty Clerk of Or· Costa M"'· Calif 92826 FROM LOW DENSITY RESI-SECTION 2 The Director ship Dally Pilot December t5, 22, A·1..0U business name or names A regulat tnMllng ot the ANGE COUNTY, CALI-ange Ct>unty on November M.R. Lolra Holdlng1 Re- DENTIAL COMBINED WITH of Ct>mmunily Develop~! Thlt statement was llled 29, 1988, January 5. t989 To 111 heirs. beneflc1arle1. fisted above on October 27, Board of SuperMof's of Or· llORNIA Senta Ana, Call· 23. 1988 tlre(nent Trusl. c/o Oevld OIL (DESIGNATED COM-ia hereby directed to amend with the County Clerk ol Or-Th· 168 creditClfl . contingent credl-1988 ange County, Calllornla, fOf'nla '"'°" Hlrson, Eaq.. One Park MUNITY FACILITIES-CIVlC) Section 9061. Olstrlal Map 2 ange County on Oeoember •-.,. lilftTJC[ t0t1, and persons wtlo ma_y Lynn M. Esparo 8llo sitting u the Governing A regular ,,_ting of the Published Orange CoaSI Plaza, St• 580. lrv'lne, Callf. AND LOW DENSITY RESI· (Sectional District Map 8. 1981 l"-..n. """ l>eolhetWlse lntented In the This atatement was !tied Bofd '?' the Olatricts and Boero of Supervlaor1 ot Or-Ollly Piiot December 1, I . 92714 DENTIAL COMBINED WITH 2-6-1 t) reflect Zone Change Publl5hed Orange Coast K.._ wlll or •tate, or both. ol with the County Clerk of Or-Aulhortlles Governed by the ange County, C1lllornl1. 15, 22. 1988 Roth"• Orlglnal Artworks OIL TO O\JALIFIEO OLD-No 81-13. ducttbed In Sec· Dally Piiot Oeoember' t 5. 22. FICTITIOUI 9USINEl,J FRED LEE RATTERREE, ange County on OCtol>er 27, Board ol Superl/ttorl w11 allo-tlnlng u the governing Tn-lA 1 of Albert• ~nment Trull, TOWN SPECIFIC PLAN DIS· lion 1 hereof. Coples ot said 29. 1918. January 5, t989 ., ...... "'"9l'~T alaoknown as FRED L. RAT· J 988 -held on Oecemt>er ~988. eo.td of the Olstrlcts and c/o David Hlraon, Esq., One TRICT 2 CIVIC DISTRICT ON dlstilct maps. 8S amenOed Th· 17<1 -~ . 1'EARE£ FMU0 9:30 a.m . The following Authorities Goverf\90 by the •-JC 111nylC[ park Ptua Ste 580 Irvine REAL PROPERTY GENER· llereby. are available for.in.-The following_ ~aons are A eeJITION h9J been filed Published Orange Coast rMmt>er• being pr_,t. Har· Boerd or Supervtsora was ,.._ """ Callf. 92714 ' · ' A LLY LOCATED ON spect1on In the Offlce ol the P\B.IC N()TJC[ d~~R~t~;::~ESS lOt3 b'f Sandra G. Long In Ille Dally Pilot November.24, De-rlelt Mr Wled9r, ~•lrman; held' of o.c:.ml>ef 7. 1988. K...a Wholesale W1tehouslng ELEVEN ACRES WEST OF City Clerk ' Superior Coun ot Calltornll, cember 1. 8. tS, 1988 Rog« R. Stanton, Gaddl H. 9·30 a m The tollowlng FICTITIOUI 9UllNlll of Alberta ~l1ement Trull LAKE AVENUE SOUTH OF SECTION 3 This ordt· FICTITIOUI 8UIMl9 W lSth Street. Costa Mesa. County of Orange request· Tht34 Vasq1.19Z; Don R. Roth: and membe~I being preaent: NAME STATE•NT Tenebaum, c/o David CIVIC CENTER. NORTH OF nance shall take effect thirty NAME STATEMENT . Calif. 92627 Ing that Sandra G Long be Thomll F. Flley. A rN.P-Harriett M. Wieder. Chair· The fotlowt llOnl are Hlr1on. Esq.. One Park UTICA (ZONE CHANGE NO (30) days alter tts adoption. The following persons are John A. Burnt, 3o4 appoinltld as personal rep-fltllllC NOTICE polntment to the Orange man• Roger R Stanton· d 1 bUtl,_: per Plaza Ste 580 !Nine Calif 88-13) PASSED AND ADOPTED doing business as· Avenlda Cumbre. N-port resent1tlve to1dministerlhe . County Waste Management Geddl H Vasq~z· Don R' oN~RTHWOO~ CHINA 927 1. ' ' . WHEREAS. pursuant to by the City Ct>uncil of the KEMPEN ASSOCIATES, Be~h, Caltf. 92660 Hllte of the deeectent. K....... Commlnlon was approved. Roth; and Thomas' F. Riiey: GARDEN RESTAURANT Hefb Joy Enterprl-Re· the State Planning and Zon-City ot Huntington Beaach, 3 lOO Airway Ave. "102• Atek E. Popovlts. 272~2 THE PETITION requests FICTITIOUI BUllNE.JS An appointment to the Meo· RHOlullon No · 88-1623 wu 4790 1r111ne Blvd • 106. tlrement Trust cl o David 1ng Law. the Huntington California. at 1 regular meet-Costa Mesa. Calll . 92626 Jer~lnes. Mission Vie1o. authority to administer the NAME ITATEMENT tal Health Advisory Boar°, adopted. 1uthor121ng the lrvlne. Calif. 927 14 · ' Hlrson, Esq.,' One Park Beac;h Planning Commission Ing thereof held on the 7th Bernie Johannes Kempen. Cal f . "tate under the lndepen· The following per90ns are we• approved. C«laln Com condemnation of property Tai Sun T"'"""' 2 Led• plaza Ste 580 Irvine Calif and Huntington Beach City dsy ol November. 1988 24242 Santi Clara 1 21• Thts b~smess Is con-dent Administration of Es· d0<ng bUsineas as; . mendallons were made. 1oc11ed In a n unl n-1 1 c Ill 92fl'4 ' 92714 · ' ' Council have he!d aeparate EXHIBIT "A" Dana Point. Calif 9262~ • ducted by 1 generel part-tates Act. (This authClfity al-AIDES IN ACT.ON NUAS-Agr""*1ts with the follow· corporated area of the rvF':de'F · Yun y T Thi• bu11n .. 1 la con- pubhc hearings relative to Cond lt•ons o f Zone This business Is con-nershlp low• the personal reprneo-ES REGISTRY OF ORANGE Ing W«e approved: Art•lel County In te Fifth Super· 2 L.CSa irvt8::: Calif "92'r,'i' duct.CS by: a general part- Zone Change .No 88· t3 Change No 88-13 (Ord1-ducted by· an ind!Vldual The registrant com· tatlve to take many actions COUNTY. 3420 S. Bristol Highway Ananclng Program llltorlal 011triet extending Thia ' busl~ell '1a con· nershlp wherein t>oth bodies have nance P2973BI' The registrant com-menced to tra.naact bus.· wlth0\11 obtaining court' IP-ir310 Costa M .... Callf Project Admlnlltratlon 804.lthMaterty from Crown 0 I.CS by h lb nd d If The reglatrant eom- carelully considered all In· a. All lots shall be mini-menced to transact t>vsl-ness unclef the fictitious provll. BelClf• faking eertaln 92626 · • Agr""*1t No. t227 with Valley Pattiwey, an approx-~h• r~ ~11,'1nt911c:m~ ~ to transact butl- lonnallon preMnted at said mum 40 feet Width: neh under tne fictitious bu.Sine.. name or names actions. howeve<. the per· Excel HealthServt~ Inc .. th• ch., Of Garden 1m1te dlatanoe ot 200 twt. menc:ed t: tranl8C1 bull· neaa unclef the llctltloua hearings. and aher due con-b Minimum SJde yard set· bUslness name or names listed above on November 1• aonel representative Is re-a Callfornla corporation. Grove-Chapman Avenue Retofullon No. 18· 1824 was neat under the fictitious buslneM name Of namea llder'atlon of tne fTnd1ngs baekl shall be 5 feet. listed at>ove on November 8. 1988 quired to give nolloe to 2 t28 Smokewood, Full-from E~cild Street to Ninth edopted as amended, ap. bullness narM Of namea listed above on November <1, and recommendations of c. Maximum density shall 1988 John R. Burns lnter .. ted P«son• unless erton Cafll 92631 Streat, Acceptance of proving the O.V.lopment lilted at>ove on NIA 19411 trie Planning Commission be one dwelling unit per lot Bernie J. Kempen This •tatement wu filed they ha'le waived notice or Thlt bui lneu ta con-Amended Standatd Ag,... Monitoring Program· and Tai Su f LMry T~IM.lm TNll" and all 8\1\dene. pr_,ted Ord. No. 2l1U Ttua statement was filed with the County Clerk of Or· consented to· the propc>Md ducted b'f: a corporation ment lor Aadlologlcal HMlth directed County Admlnla-Thlt •~•t=t was filed Thia ataternent :_u flied lo the City Council, lhe Ctty STATE OF CALIFORNIA) with tne County Clerk ol Or· ange County on December ICtlon.) The Independent The reglstraot com-ServlcH, Fl1011 Year tr1t1veonic.1tatf to pr_,t With the County Clerk of Or-with the County Clerk of Or· Councll tlndt that such zone COUNTY OF ORANGEl ange County on November 7· 1988 F400I admln11tr1tlon authority will menced to 1ran11C1 bull· 1911-19: Agreement No. the DMP, VoturM Report to eoge County on November ange County on December cha'1ge Is pr~. and con-CITY OF HUNTINGTON 8. l 988 . C 10 be granled unlan an nest under tha 1Jct11ou1 088·214 with FCPP, Inc .. the Orange County Grand 21 1911 2. t988 slstent with the General BEACH} F•'7tl0 Publlthed Orange, oaat lnternted perton flle9 an business name Of namea and. P11son1 Brinkerhoff Jvry ao th•t the Gr•nd • F"9Z22 ,_ ?Ii.=.-I, CONNIE BROCKWAY, Published Orange coast OallyPlloto.c.tnber l5.22• Objectlonto thl1pelltlon 1nd llstedaboveon NfA Oua<M and Douglas. Inc.; Jurors•r•-at•oflt1eOPM Pvb4tthed Or• Cout Pul)jlshed Orange~., "<OW. THEREFORE, BE IT tn. duly appointed. qualified Dally Piiot December I . l 5, 29• t988· January 5• 1989 lhowl good C9UM wtly the Ahmed Sedehl, Secretary and l.MN with OCPC. lid .• In content• and Ill pufl>OM. Dally Piiot o.c.m'& 8 15 Dally Pilo. I Oeoembet 8, 15. RESOLVED the City Council City Clefk ol the City ol Hunt-22. 29, l988 Tl\-11a court should not grant the This llatement W8$ fifed f()( a.neral Servlc.e Agen· Boerd edjourMd II 9:50 22. 29, 1988 . • 22, 29, 1988 01 the City of Huntington lngton Beach and ex-olf1c10 'Th-160 •-JC lilftTJC( authority. wlth the County Clerk of Or-Cy/Data Sy1tem1 (GA 1,m. Th-t53 Tll-155 Beach does ordain es 101-Clerk 01 the City Council of nt-IC MnJICE r-. """ A HEARING on the petl-ange County on November 1239-24), C«taln con1uuc-(SEAL) tows tn. said City do hereb'f ,..~ nu FICTITIOUl•U..,.18 tlonwtllbeheld onJ1nu1ry23,t911 tlon contracts wer e JERIL.STATE.LY,Asala-•-ICNOTIC( SECTION t The looow1ng cer tify that the wh.ole K4M01 NAMI IT~TEllENT 5, 1919 at 1:4S P.M In Oept F-_.rded. contract change tent Clerk ol the Board of Ml.JC ll)TIC[ , __ ,.._-. _____ _ described real property. number ol members I the FtCTITIOUI BUllNEll The follow! l*'IOOI are No. 3 localed at 700 Civic Published Orange Coast orders approved and pro-Superlllaors K .... generally located on eleven City Council of the City of NAME ITATEllENT dol busin.': u · Center C>tlve Weat. Santa Dally Piiot December 1, e. Ject• ~ed 81 complete. Publlehed Oran~Cout ec...-FtCTITIOUl IU ... U acrn _.t of Lake Avenue. Huntington Beacn Is seven; The IOllowlng pertons are .A'lLuS FOR AWNINGS Ana, C1lllOl'nl1 92702. 15, 22. 1988 A P•sonnel matter wu IP-Delly Piiot o.c.mber 15, ITATEmtlT Of NAME llATE•NY• sooth ot Civic Center. north that the foregoing ordinance dol buelness 81. 220 Venlee •2 Huntlngt~ IF YOU 08J,fCT to the Th -140 prowct. Certain purch811ng 19U MANDOl••NT Of The f~ persona are ol u11e1 Is hereby Changed w1.1 read to said City Council c'?uFORNIA REAL ES-Beach Cellf 92·8<11 granting of the petition, you matter•-• 8')9roved. C«-Th 178 Ull OP PICTITIOUB doing 1>ua1neu as· rrom Low Density Realden-at a regular meeung thereof • · atlould eltn.tf appear at the •-.,. llftTll'r taln l[IClfparcel map mat· ..-u um 08 Ro t,.. tlel Combined with Oil (Des· held on the 24th day ol Oc· TATE GUIDE. 28<15 Mesa SO\lth Shore lndu1trles, tlMrlng and lllle 'fOUr ob-n.an. nu1~ tera ..,e approved. A Re-__ .,. lilnTIC( The fOll~ p•r1on1 p PERTt .. ..,. 3100 1..11.i~1ed Com lty F 111. tober 1988 and was again Verde °'· •5• Costa M918. Loulllana a-.1on1 or Ille written ob,_· 1eaM of Mortgage for FIOl'•t· ..._ nu have 1b9nd the UM of Br'lstot St ' Sult• 290. Colla v•.. mun ac 'c C 1 Calll , 112628 Thia bu1lne11 la con-,....... •-K.-1 1 St 81 ved A Meu, Calif. 92828 ~-lln ·Clvlc) and Low Density raad to said tty ounc I at a Guy Rob«! Torelli 2845 ducted by· a COfporallon tlons with the court before ITA~NT Of I .,.,,... appro · n ACT1TIOUI .,._,, th• Fictitious Bu1ln111 De-Ad L Quilling 3100 Ruldentlel Comt>lned with regular meeting therol held Mesa Verde Or •6 . Cotta The rtgl1tr 1nt eom · I.he helrln.g. YO\lr ,iappear-dlUIDOl .. NT Of ~81 r:f':t of replen· um ITA~NT Na.me: LUSK HOMES • Brlttol,St .Sutt• 2ecf Coate Otl to Quattfled _Oldtown on the 7th day ol Novembef. Meta, Cali! 92626 · mencecl 10 transact l>usl· anoe may be ln person or by uM Of ACTITIOUS llhmant CMt1 dlffefence The followfng persons are OONOORO, 17550 OHlett• Meea. c .iif. 92e28 • Specific Plan DistriC1 2 Ctvlc 1988• and was passed and This bualneu Is con-nets under the llctltous 'fOU' lllorney .,._.,NAME lundl and cah ltlor'tagee doing buelneaa 8t: A~. lrvfne. C•lll. 92714 Victor H. Boyd, 3100 Olstrlc:1. sub)ec1 to the con-adopted by the affirmative ducted by: an indlVldual business name or names IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR The tollowlng persona wu er'owct. I Elt1bll1h-EUROPEAN AUTO RE· The Fk:tltlou1 Bu1lnes1 Brlatot Street, Sult• 280, dltlons Ml forth on Exh1b1t !vote of at least a majority ol The registrant c om-listed above on November or 1 contingent eredltOf of have ab~ the UM of "*'' o *PPfop< •t:on~ and PAIR, 520 W. Oyet-Rd .• NarM referr.CS to •bove wu Ct>ita Meaa c.llf 112929 A . attached hereto and In·, •II the members of said City ~ to tran11ct bull· 15 1918 the d«lMMd, you mull file the Fictitious Bus1ne11 eetl~t;c'a:..i-:U-Ole Of let~-8-nll Ana, Calif. 92707 "'9d In Orange County on This t>ualne11" 11 con- coroorated l>y this releren-Council ness under the fictitious Curtl1R pllz President )'OUr claimwlththecourtand Neme· LUSK HOMES • munl7 5tY .. h trS • Eduardo Cllnefoa, t672 May 10, ttl5 FI LE due1ed by· I general part· ce AYES Councilmembers Th · • ll,_,. mall a copy to tile pe(aonal PLEASANTON 17 550 • '""· nine o Int• N9W H•ml1phere Costa NO F27815e ....,., • Tnoee portion• ol Bloc:k Kelly. Green. Finley. Erskine. bUllMU name or names 11 statem.nt was ""' repr.antatlve IC>90inted l>y ' Matgwlta, -approved. A Meu, Callf. 92928' .iOhn D. Lusk & Son, '*-.... 1901, t902 and 1903 as Mays, Winchell, B1nn111er 1~': above on December 1 • :::;.t'C~~Ynt~ c:~~ the C4>Urt within four months ~~!• Avenue, lrvtne. Calif. ~ mettef _. 9PPfoved. Thanh T. Vu. 401 w. 17550 Giiiette Avem,,., Call· ~ r~:':r~ c.:,~: anown on Map ol Tract No NOES· Counolmemt:>ers. Guy Torelli 17 t9ee trom IN dlt• of first i. The Fk:lltlous Buslne11 Oenlal ol ~ fOI' tlloeM uw11 II 195, Orange, Calif. torl\la. IMM. Claif. 927 t<I ,,... under the llc:lltlOU• 12 Recorded In Book 9. None Thia etatemenl wu ltled ' ,,.... IY9llCl8 of lettera 81 provided Name ret.fred to at>ove waa tu ..,. pr.......,1 wu con-928M Security 'Pacific State bualneee ~rM or nem. Page 13 of Mlseellaneoua A BS E N T Co u n . with the County Clerk ot Or· Publllhed Orlllg8 Coast In aectlon 9100 of the Call· flied In Orange County on tinued to Januery 10, 1919, Thll bualneH la con· Bank. 14222 Culver Ot!Wt, Meted above on A II t 5, Mapa, Aecotda ol Orange cllmembers None ange County on December Delly Pllot o.c.mber 1 1 tornla Probet• Code. The Ml'f tO 1915 l"ILE ~hlld °T lmpr~ta ducted by: 1 general pan->C1llfornl1, lrvlne, Calif. 1977 ugu Cou'11'f. Calllornla. more Connie llfoellwar. City 7 1911 15 22 t988 · · time tor f111no claims will not NO F278157 rogtam tatua ,._...., W8I nerttMp 9271• VICtOf H 8o)'d pertlcularlydelcrlbed as IOl-Clefll .ct H-offtde Clefk ' F400a0t ' ' Th·l 47 expire pr'1or to four mOtlll\t J°'1n D. Lull!. & Son, roved M recommeuded, The regl11rant com-Thlt bull,_ waa con-Thia ataiemant WIS !tied tows: of "':.City ~M :!!~ Published Orange Coast from the date of the heating 175!50 Gllletle Avenue, Call-~I ~lit 1':c,~ ... ~= manoed to tranMCI bull· oucted by I general partner· with lhe ~nl'f Clerk of Or· Bag I n n I n g a t t h e City H11n ... ._t0fl • Dally Piiot December 15 22 •-.,. llftTJC[ notloed ebove. lomla INIM Cellf 927 t 4 n n eys. ,,... under th9 lk:111oua thlP ange County on December-• centerline lnter..ctlon ot Calltomla 29 1911 January 5 t9e9 • ,.._ nu YOU MAY EXAMINE lhe s.e'urlty 'Pacific State Woril1 Project• lnfonn811on bulinMI name or namea Thia atatement wu filed 2. 19ee Lake Avenue. 90 feet Wide, ...... eMd °' .... Coa1t . ' ' Th-t71 FfC.nTIOUe ..,._11 Ille kept by the court. If you Bank 14222 CUiver Ottve Sten Progr1m Wll •P· liated above on NI A Wiiii the Count}' Cltrll ot Or· ' """7 wtth Utlel Street. 60 feet D•lty ~ Deoembef 14, NAllE l'TATEMENT ere 1 pereon lntereeted ltt C•llfornla lrvl"e can( ~.Authorization to uee Thanh T. Vu ange County on December f>ublleMO Or•nge Cout wide. aslhownon said Tract 1-thnll PUBLIC NOTICE The fotlowlng pwaons are the eatat•. you may Ille with 127t• ' ' ' the reYIMcl rat• to raccwet Tllia etatem«lt w .. flied t2, 1988 Deify Piiot December 1 15 No 12 then<:e west 8<10 00 doing bu911)91• ... the eour1 1 lofmal Req""' Thia butlneaa w•• cOf\· cost• Incurred by the Tr.,,._ with the County Clerk of Or· Publllhed Orange Coat 22. 29 1918 · • , .. , along H id centerline ol K..a GOLD COAST .WINDOW '°' Speclal Notic. of the flt. dueled by I general partner-~·lonsr.'nternat Setvlce ange Count'/ on November Delly Pilot Oecembet 15, 22. ' • Th-158 Utica Str .. t: thence north PUBUC NOTICE FICTfTIOUI au .... 11 CLEANING t 915 Church St Ing of an l,,_,t°'Y end ap-.nip flHld (I '1 wee approved. 11, 1988 29. 19ee. JMuaiy 5. 1989 358.00 fMt on a line parallel NAMI ITATl•NT Ste B CoStl MHI Calif• praleement of •late.._, fhl8 statement w .. filed A..ol\ltlon wu adopted, 1'111172 Th·178 --------- to the oenterltne ot nld Lake K._. The lotlowlng persons ere 928·27 • . • • Of of =~lllon Of account wtth the Count}' Clerk of 0r .. auF thOttltna acceptl ,.._ ance of Publllhed Orange Coaat Nl.JC NOTIC( Avenue. thence nortn ITATE•NT Of' doing bullnesa u · D E u pr In MCtlon 1250 Count December edefal Ant • .,..ug At>uM Deity Pilot o.c.mw 1, I , 45°00'00" eut 24.04 leet to MA~NT °' NATIONAL EDUCATION avid Howard aston Jr., of the Caltornla PrOtlate.,.. ... on AIDS (Acquire d '"'· 15, ~2. 1988 "8JC ll)TJC( "..,. 1 line parallel with and UHOPflCTITIOUI CENTER. 18400 Von 6:~a~ci.~:9:~;·7 B. Code.~AeQueltlorSpec:lel 12P-!~ Orange COlll1 munocteflaeoc~ S'fl'ldrome) Th·l4<1 ---------1 ITATDmWTOP ~hefty 375.00 feet lrorn •UIMU um Karman Avenue, Irvine, Tl'lll buaineas' la con· Notice'°'"' 119Vallable from Oelly P{lot Oecembet 15 22 fUnd8 from the I t_.• eep.rt. •-.,. ...... MANDDHlmrT OP the centerline 01 .. Id u11e1 The tollowlng persona C.Uf 927t5 the CIOUft ~. 21 1.., ~ 5 1"9 · ment of AIOotlol end Drug ~ ll)TJC( PICTIT10U8 MIWll UM OP PICmlOUI Street: thenc9 M9t 167. t2 have abandoned the UM of Natlonal Educ ation ducted by an lndMdUel AltorMV tor Petition«: ' • ' ary • •1 1 l'rograme fOr Flecal YMt llAm 8TA~ .,... .. MMll feet etong 111d parallel ltne the Fictitious Bu1lne11 Center, Inc .. C1llfornl1 cor· ~ '~:':,'~~t c.:,~: MARY BOUGHEN OAR, Th 1 t ....... l\llMln-IN!ne MecM-~1 The fo110w1nO peraona are TM fotlOwlfltl peraona to the centenlne of 17th NarM: CONTINENTAL IN-p oratlon , 18400 Von 2'181 El Toro Aoed. FOUrttl r 1:.1 Group, tnc., llil90ted • PICnnoul ..,..... cloiNl ~ • !lave~ IN'* Of Street. 70 f .. t wide, 11 VESTMENTS AND PROP· Karman Avenue, Irvine, =neee~.n:.he or fie~= Floof, El Toro, CallfOfnle "8JC N011C( prcMcler to conduct P'9-llAm ITA,.._NT Tl1E BOMBAY COM · lhe Fletltlou1 Bu1lnH1 attown on Mid rTl8P ot Tract ERTY MANAGEMENT. 2011 Calif 92715 Publlafled Or#lg9 COM! • pleal"*'t encl penodlO llP-Tiie fOllowlng pereon• •• PANY, 3333 Bflltol StrMI Hime; LUSI< HOMES · SAN No. 12: thence north Bull,_, Centef Ot. •180, Thia bu1lneu 11 con-= ebo11e on o.otnlber 2• D9lly Pilot o.c.ml>ef 14, 15. K.-~end~ PflY9I-Clolnl bualr..a •: .. #2081, Coet• Meea, c.itt. JOIE, 17MO Ollelte Av- 41• 1t 'OO" .... 427.39 feet lrVlne. Callf. 92715 ducted by: I corporation 21, 1988 . PtCTinOUI ...... UI ·~tlfl MfVlc"· PQtHy FLIP 2 •• Ca,11-t2t2t .iue, lmne, c.itt. t271• "'°"9 Mid centerline of t1ld The Fletltloua Bual,_• Tiie reOl•tr ant co"'· ~~~~~on t w'8 flied WTllHO NMll 8TA~ Autl'lortldon to traneter un• fomle General P8'1nertNp, Tandy BfMCI•. Inc,.. Dela-Tiie ActttlOul 8ualnMI t1tll etl'Mt to I Hne parallel N8rM refel'red to at>Ove waa menoecl to tr8nMC1 bual· with t't..' c:'f Clerk Of Or 1'he folOwlnt l*90M We clllin*9 ~ 10 IM Coun-20 lluff Vift, !Nine, Celll. ware Dornmflc, 950 8-.y Name,...,.,. to abOVii ... with and nor1her'IY 198.00 llled lh Or#'Ot County on neee unw the fl(ltltlout Cou • "8JC ll)TIC( . dOlflO ~ •~ IY °' 0,.,..,. 81)!)roved. 92716 A~ Sult• MO. 'ori Ned tn 0r.,.. County on twt from the oantettlne of January I , 1913 FILE bu81neae name °' Mm111 rreee nty on o.otmt>er PAOlO'I All'JOAANTE, Orclloancelfo.,3743,enOr· H.ian MM:OGMIO. 430 Worth, tex .. 71107 M1y 10, 1tU f!ILE . ""'°1 PICTmOUI ....... tt07-tH#tlor, Colt• Meu. dlef'Oe Of the eo.td Of WhltlnO WOOO• Aced. Gl9n· TN• bualMH It con. NO.ft2781M • -MAmlTA,,_NT Cellf.t2121 1upeMMtaoftt1eCountyof dell,c.iff.11208 cluct9Cl by':•corw81ton JoM o. lUlk a eon. STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? ~Publ~~:. ~t . The'°'°""" perlOnl.,. Tanye H. oo.n. 14t11 <>renee. Cellfornle. M*ld-TMe l>u .. Mn It COf'I• Tll• ,.,,,,,.,,t com· 17NO Ollelte Awnue, Call· • • clolnO ~ ... aowllno GrHn. WHI• lflgtn.OrwlgeCountyC.-cluCted by': • oen-r., pen. mMC*I to tr.nMCt bull-forMl, IMne, CMt. t2714 2 ' ' 1988 AMIR AUTO SERVICE, Mlnat•. Cellf. 12113 pelfrl IWofm Ordlneoce to ,_. '*' llflder 1M ftctltloul ~l~y Peclflc ltete.. T11•1H 3011!.PCH.Newe>ortBMcfl. Dono.oo.n. 1q111ow1-lldJu9tti.ernonnt1•~ Tiie reo111ret11 com-....,_ Mme °' ,.,... ..,., t41H Cuf¥lr Drt¥e, ••---.---.,.-------Callf Hte3 lflO Or.-n. W•tmtnstw, "'9N1n to r911eCt l11or11111 mancecl to tranaac1 bUef.. llated lllo'le on NoveMl>er Cellfornla. trvln•. Calif. ,.._nut~ Amir A. llltllan, 1 A9efe, c.111. t2la In the ooet of Mf'IO tMI 00-MM Yndef the fletltlou8 IS. 1111 1271• lfvlne, C•.12714 o.ntl H. NfUYWt, t•t11 curred dllr"'8 Aict' y_, tMlnaal Mme Of !WI* Cereon R. lhompaon, TNI ~ .... ~ I I(.... Thie l>utlMll ,, con· lowllno Gt!!.!!.:.. WHt• 1117-ttM ... lldoptecl 11119dlllo'leonN/A P•llldelll dUctedby•..,..,..~-• PICTmOUt .._.. duCMd .,.,. en lndMduel lftlMMf. Cellf ~ Klml•r·HOtll llld At· ,.. MMDoneld Tiiie .. ......,., -llled 1'11111 I ~ITAW Tfle retlttrant com-DuH.Ho9ng,t .. 1Uow1· ........ Ille., ....... -TNI.....,,.,. .... llled wtfltheCounlyClerilofOr· n. .............. Med clolnG=,__,..,. tNnOeCI 10 trltlMCt bl.9· Int GfMn, w..1~. ~ ~ , .... M-wtet1•Countya.rtiofOr·.,,.. eouney on No•'"''* WIWl"'9COUfteyCllrkof0r- ' "'GI! Nev:+ .. Av IL :,..."'*' ~ °' ~= c.:. ~ Nguywt. , .. ., =::.it~ n-... COulley Ol'I Decaml>er II, 1• ....., ~,·~ Ol'I Dm ,..,., =: g=.T~.2 ~: -=.~:,,.1u1yn, 1112 :::;~C.::=e, Wett· ~'=.-'==:..."':: "*"'*' 0r.,.. ": ~~':':, ~ ~.!:: ,r;:, l !MM, c.itf.12714 TIM lletemenl -llled ....,_ TN Tran, 1 .. 1, ptO--•f (Cat91GtY .,. ~"'°' DIHMer 11, u . ~-1111 ... , .... .-...yt, - 1 -~~ti;:; ::;. ~~c:-= =--=~ea:~=~ W•ll· =:. :·..:::::·~'L'. It, ltll, ,-..YI. ;en ~1U n.-111 tt700.IMM.Cellt.t2713 IO !NI ' TNI t1u8WteM 18 eott• ~ llllCtld •....,__------.::!!:~ti:================:. Tiiie b\I .. ""' It cC>t\< ' ,_.. ducted' by' e ..,_ .. pen-_., ...... ~ fOf "8JC tlD1a dllCted b1 • ~Ion ~ 0r-.. Cami ....... .,,, .... 1 ., ,,.,.,,, ---iiiiiiiiliiiliioiil&.iiiiiilil--11 Tiie r•glllrattt COll'I· Oell'f Piiot Oecembel' t • Th• t•tl•tr•n• COlft• ....... .. ..... ......... : .._ IMflced 10 ~ .,_.. 11. t2 19" ' 'IMllOlld to ttwwt ~ .. ,...,.. Gou••••tt Mlh.-· JI "*' MnClet "" llctltlDul9 ' ' Til-1 ... ,_ _,., "'9 "8lftteue ,,...._M 1f40.11 . .,._ .... ftA11Utif ...._ tllfN fK MIMI ..,._ Ml'M or ,.,_ ......... 111111111 M.,.. ,... .............. .. lllecl abOVil Ol'I NIA ~ llJllll .... 8'0we on NIA -r. CllllP DNmir ... Mw ..._. -Kw A. °""I, ,.,_,....,. _ Olflll H • ._,,.. ....... (CDMt. ........ • MDII W Mn01 ""° Tiiie '!..~~ ~ MHI ... .,__ lNI ............ llld _.,..Al.,111111 ... IOIMLlllMCllC.• wtltl1M__.n:r_......... MmlTA~ wt11t"'9co-e,a.-.-0r-....... ~ ........ MM OOUNT\', ._I. .,.-County on Noi191fl1Mf TM ....... ,.,..,. .. 11'11 CeuMJ on Dn11*ef A 111 7W'll T• f8WAT) ...... •I• Cllll ..... II, ttll ... ...._. 7, ,_ ,..... ... ....., ._,._ Cell-- ,_. CINTlllt ITMH WllT, ,_ -~ L.lftdlm. .... ._..._....,_ .... , ,....... Or-. C.. 1IGIW.C...Dt ...... ~ e>r.,.. COlll 1111 _. M 1:41 .... In a CdSJ rtlB ........... . o.w "'°' DIHMer •• ''· AM, CA tlfCM-Diii> "'°'Dua .. )!,,_•. ~ ·~ T..... ..... 1111 ........... , .... . II.II,,.. L""' ..... -..,0, 1111 It. ,_,.IMuBryl, -..... °""18 .............. c..-, ~~~~~~~~·~-~~~~=========~===~------~n...=.!t~IM~Dt!! .. !!!•~4:.• !..,_!'_AM. CA Til-11' ,.,,,. WM.._,.,.. Tlllll tu11..-II.,,... 'AmarlcanH1art. ' AllOClallan ENTERTAINMENT . DAILY PILOT/Thurld•y, December 15, 1988 - ~4U-~ "Toast of the Town!" "WICKEDLY FUNNY! A SUAVE, SMOOTH SOPHISTICATED GOMEDY." Jeffrey l.111m SNEAK PREVIEWS il'O----__ ,.... __ ---..---. -·-·-.......... ,,,.,. .. ----... -,.,, .... ..... ·-I.ill'~.... ... wt-,. ..... p... COi•• .... n..»w"• ... """ ...... ....... ~ "O"I ,... ~-..... NOW PLAYING •con• .... .... '-, .... •""'-MTOOt ... . .. ·---..., ·-----.. _ -Ul(.:01' ... -. B"• ... -.... .-..... .._.(D' __ • . ...,, ...... -..-c---... .,.,°" ............ .._. ··~ ·---.... ""- Year of the Toriy, (This JS rhe second in a series of seven columns reviewing rhe year 1988 in Oranse County cheater) For the last two years -and, hopefully, for many more seasons to come -Cos~ Mesa has offered theatergoers a o ne-two punch from the nei&hbors on Town Center Ori ve: South Coast Repertory and the Or- ange County Performing Arts Center. As theater goes. this is about as good as 1t gets. At the Arts Center; you can sec the big, splashy musicals hkc "Cats," while a stone's throw away SC R is celebrating ns 25th an- niversary season as one of America's most renowned regional theater com- panies. Toi Tnus culminated earlier this year at the Ton) Awards ceremonies when com· pan)' co-founders and anistic direc- tors David Emmes and Martin Benson accepted a special Ton)' for regJonaJ theaters on nauonal tele- vision . duct1o ns in th first quarter century. Benson's stag.m' of Arthur Miller s "The Crucible. ' It wa~ a clear ind1cauon that this ex.traordinary troupe hasn't mello,,..,ed wuh age. Another superb revival was hendan·s "The School for Scandal," which laced an l8tb century comedy with 1980s saurical bite and came up with an eminently watchable concoc- tion. These two plays were clearly first and second on the SCR quality hst for 1988. kw-• "DlfllTY "OTTEN sc~£LS -lll'lt a •• .--Q f7t.ftlM °"'1 ~"' The Horatio Alger story that began ~======;:============:5~====== during 1964-65, when SCR was "DIERE' S MMJJC IN IT. headquartered in a station wagon, Then. having perhaps attracted the attention of so me pkl)'gocrs who weren't aware of the com pan) 's stature. SCR launched Its current season with one of tts finest pro- Th1Id pos1uon belongs to o ne of sc"eralworld premieres developed by the Costa Mesa company -Jam Leonard's .. V and V Onl)." a strange- ly 11tled. yet n chl) rcwarchng slice of hfe 1n !'!cw York's Lillie Ital) bcauu- full)' duttted by Marshall W Mason The drama of Olympic hopefuls and their sacnficcs. ·•Golden Girls." staged by David Chambers. was a solid fourth choice. W~PUNNY wl'IOUCHING. Cnlile'1prin11weis "A SIDE·SPLfITING COMEDY SMASH. .. o. Acdng~~tbe year by Hoffa ... :• A PAIITYYOU oowr WANf TO END." Fifth place, at least 10 this column's per'ccpuon. 1s a toss-up betw~n t~o other newcomers. Mark Stein's "At Long Last Leo" and Craig Lucas' "Prelude to a Km ." Both sk11lfully "Oneoftbe YEA.R'S BFSTI u~ toucldm •.. DUlda Aotrm.a·. petfonnwe may ... , •lib )'OU tbe ... of your life.'' -=~u~ • ., ''lbelDOll ORIGINAi.Md COMPl!LLING American*-lklce 'One Fin Over TbeCuckoo'• Nat.'" _ ... ,,.....,, "Dasain..,,,,.... .. UNPORGEITABL£. lbmCnillill lERlllFIC! A limply BE.AUTIFUL ~ ... " --.......... UCIADIO ~ r"'" r1 • ~ •1 '11.~11"' B I L L emp,loyed comedy to underscore the ' ' U ~ respect1'e realtty or fantas) of their K R A Y snuauons and both went down ex-M ceedingly well. ~. [. R. 0 0. G. E. ll ............ · L1featSCRwasn'tallroscs1n 1988. ho""ever. The troupe took a chance on the supposedly controversial "Aunt Dan and Lemon" and merel) .~. bored their audiences to tears. while A IMWlUT ~Cliff {llP/.~} the ~ne "In Perpetuity Throughout ·· --· --.-:...-:-::...---=-· t the Unrvcrsc"· was stmply a bad 1-.---.---.-... -.. -.-.. --... -,.,...----..-v---.,,.--_._----.. -. .,,....;. .... .;;;;..;:;;;;;..~-...;.....;.._, dream after a heavy dinner. .... : -· ,.·:-. ·"'-";--"Aunt Dan" might ha'e been a • .._.,_ • ......... ._...._ ....... • .. ·--.. lemon. but Anni Long's performance ~ ... ~ ---.-~":"::::. in1t certamlvwasn't SheandBarbara . .--. .... -D-=-...... -· Tarbuck r·Colden Girts'') were the 1-------------------------------i most 1mpres51ve actresses of the )Car atSCR The best actor awards, were they ours to give, would go to James Sartonous an a leading ro&e and Richard Doyle in supp<?rt. both for the magnifi cent "Crucible." Ano\hef' contender would be Dick Boccelli for "V and V Only ·• At the Performing Ans Center, the top sho~ or the season rromooffi a cnucal and (obv1ousl~) an audacoce standpoint -wai, "C.ats. • so successful ll returned for a September encore after 1ts onginal v1s1t m May. The lustrous dance numbers and robust scott of the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical surely brou&ht a smile from the great be)ond trom its onginal sour~ T .S Ehot The near-operatic grandeur-of "Kismet" and the rolhck.ing comedy of "Me and M) Girt'' also gave the Arts Center somethinJ to shout about. h's a pity these tourina musicals only spend a week io Costa Mesa. however. Perhaps when the fac1ht) beeomes more prominent on a nauonal scale. an add1tionaJ week's run (csp«1ally on a show of the quality of "Cats") may be obuuned. Professional theater is growing by leaps and bounds in Orange County, and Fnday's third increment of this )'ear-end senes wtll examllle the other pro houses -the Gem Theater. the Alternative Re penory Theater and the quanet of dinner theaters within our borders. Next wcclcthe achievements of the count) 's community theaters will be recognized 1n a sencs of three columns And on Christmas Day we'll unveil the Daill Pilot's 1988 man and woman o the year in theater. l) l l s f 0 -HOFF~IAl '''lWINS' DELIVERS!'' 'Twins' leads parade . fl""' \11hU '\•"'"ft91, \1\1,\/l'f HOLLYWOOD 1.\P) -The hol- tda)' box-office sweepstakes 1s proving jucrau ,.c for comedies. as the new spoof"Twins.'' debuted at No. I at the nauon 's movie theaters O'\ er the weekend. collected S4. 7 million. -SCllWlllZEllElllEll llllTO The mood~ drama "Tequila Sunnsc," sta.mng Mel Gibson and Michelle Pfc1ffer. claimed founh place wtth receipts of $4 million. It was followed 1n fifth by the aniinatcd '"Oliver & Company," an Oliver TwtSl·tnsp1red story abou~ a home- less kmen. wtuch collected S2.5 m1lhon. \ M'Tlh ~J!'N.T'! o .. "'"' ,<Jl111l'PF'ITllSC'TNP'l'"T ..,• .. •"' ,ir~a11'1 W1".'91l'n,.,_ l'll"5Tl'IQ"'A.l~._ TQt.tr•"l"f" •u,.,.,, \4t.llll~r...iu"IO ,.. .. Olt'•'"lN\IVll ,....,.,.,_, ... ._..,,"'u'''°"' a. .. .......,. llf,,.,, .. ..__,..,;.,n-..~~•.r ... ,,., m ... -. .•• <Uu.J'l.~ ,,,.,,.,,_, ll'rttUl•"VJt....,.....,l't'IUb •1·•• •~kln'\KtiUt'""' .-.. ... _l>IA'' '""".., ... _,. -ov·~~ll1iJCll~ ,.,, ...... 11.\Kln lt.\t_.... ~ "' STARTS TOMORROW G.«Jt "'Twins. stamng Danny OtV1to and .\.mold Schwarzenegger as brothers separated at birth. grossed $1 1. 2 nulhon, topping two other comedlcs. according to figures re- leased by Exh1b1tor Relauons Co. ...... -··....,. S1' $339 eu.T~ ·-fNoo--*<>"•.-c;,_.,. *STIJfTOtl (-V--C.- lt1.oM7 NOW PLAYING •U-lfT• 4Jll:• I ··The Naked Gun: From the F1lcs of Poh~ Squad!." a send-up of lav. enforccmcnL fimshed an second lace v.1th ticket sales ofS6. I m1lhon do~ n sharpl)' from its strong opening the .. Oliver & Company" appears to'be ~inning the sea.son's animauon battle. as its chief anunatcd rival, .. The Land Before T tme." fcU to suth place with saJes o fS2. I 4 million. l .. _l '4119 Sii~ Ut 5 ·~ ta-_c;..-.... AJUMl[;lil • ~ • _,. •COllOMA l-0..-11 l1t llM en TOI'<> !4'9-5-> Sil •LA-ltOA ~"C tLllt"1111 1tO 7•00 ·~Ylf..ol) 53"·a53 o~ sr-11"-I'! llf-1~ 9t'·ll3$ 1,;11.Vi.•P.- •cosu•s,<1 ~ Clolrlt c.-,., 4141 •cotT'l-SA ~ .... c:.-""'~1711 * l'UU.llUO.C ~"'Cl t 112 tclllC (....... -Joi C•ZO eSAlfT• AN• ~ .. c... Mlntl ,. .. COCOON: THE RETURN (PG) 5:30 8:00 10·20 ._...;.; . .;..M.;..A.;.D_A_M_E...--- (70mm & lraclt Dolby) S0USATZKA(PG-13) TEQUILA SUNRISE (R) 7:00 9·30 ' 5·15 7·30 9:45 COCOON: THE RETURN t-~S~C~R~OOG~~E~D~-t.~..:::::.::.::..:;::::.~-1 (PG) t""'lll 1969 (R) 71511'00 5.15 7:4510:00 ,.... A CRY IN THE DARK 5'00 7 15 9:30 (PGll 5:00 9"00 TWINS IPGI MY STEPMOTHER IS MY STEPMOTHER IS 5 15 7 JO 9 45 AN ALIEN (PG131 AN AUEJj (PGl3~ SCROOGED s 45 8 15 10•30 5.15 7 JO 9-45 (PG13) OfRTY ROTI'EN 6.15130 10·30 SCOUHDRELS{PG) TEOUILA SUNRISE 5:JO 8:00 t0:t5 (R) THE NAKED GUN 5 301-00 10 20 IPG131 6:151·15 10:30 COOIOH• e Cl. TOl'IO . .,. .. ~ .. . . •COlfA.-SA . I • I •eosta .. U ._ .. THE NAKED GUN (PG13) 5:00 7:00 9:00 10·45 MY STEPMOTHER IS AN ALIEN (PG l31 5'1 5 7'30 9-45 TWINS !PG) 6·15 I 30 10 40 OLNEA & COMPANY CHILD'S PLAY IGI (R) 11 :U 1 ·tS 3:00 5:00 7:00 I.JO 6 45 1:45 10·35 ._.....,... ·--""-"° . ·-t .... -•I TAJITO- 01..10 ··-•L& tit"•40A •-M•Ot " ... --"""'"-... ~ . ... '"°"""KACH ·-previous ~eek. The hohda~ mo' 1e season con- unucs this week wtth "Dirty Ronco Scoundrels'' and "Torch· Song Tnlog).. ope~ng Wednesday and "Ram Man · o pening Fndav In 1h1rd v.as ··Scrooged." 8111 Murra) ·s COJl\JC rcv.orking of the Dickens Chnstmas classic. v.tuch ICllWAllZHHHll OIYITO • MY STEPMOTHER IS TWtMS (PG) •• Al ALIU ("·U) UIUIU411•tll -Ullllt4Ml1ttJI • •u 11•• 11111r 11-.L • 1C10.£2_0N. Tiit Rtturn TfQUILLA SUNRISE (A) ·-IR) n • z n • • 1 ,. ,... u "z ,. s u 1 M " u LUlll •ti.IOI SCROOGED IPGl THE lllAKEO GUN (R) fl 4UMS"I UIH * CHILD'S PLAY (RI 11 1111 ~.. • .. ... .. THE LAID IEFOIU TIME IG) """flt• 8-O•t-. 1'81 THE NAKED GUiii (R) · C....,.Tt-1111 OLIVER & COMPANY (GI ,.,,. ..... _," 1 CBS axes Moore , ~Van Dyke s~ries By BOB WISEHART l lkClllUf J .... ..,_ The vaunted return of MaJ') T yler Moore and Dick • Van D)ke to netwo rk telev1s1on came to a sudden and hum1hatmg cod thts week when CHILD'S 'LAY IRI CBS announced that both comcdacs :=~It= ha' e been c~ncelcd. TEQUILA "Annie McGuire." Moore's sencs 1UNRISE (RI about a nev.I> rcma.mcd career """no .... .._ c11> v.oman. v.111 ha"e its last broadcast EIUUST SAVES Dec ~ "The Van D)ke Show ... CHRISTMAS (,GI v.h1ch starred Van Dyke as a show ""'-.... " business 'eteran \It ho JOins tus son to -o•ovr• ... •· run a small regional theaier. was gone .:::.a-;::.':. .!:'1~~.'0::~ before an) one knew 1L CBS said the !~~~~!~~~~~~;::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sho~ 's final broadc.ast was Dec. Pla'ed back 10 back tarting at 8 p.m Wedncsda)S, neither scncs was able to generate even a bump on the ratings graph. though 1t v.-as thought LAKEWOOD CENTER &...-,..., '°''' ~ l a~ UIUl-.NM t1l1Stt>UH nil NMIO ~ A09MAUS Of POtlCI iOIMO , ... , >1 I 141 l .. ) t t i •·t.t I JO 1 .. U OOlH Sl'Ulo.a.l "''*-' iCIQ05ID I ... I )I ,, ,., • .,, u 1M1•10 DOlfl SlNOIW&U _,. S OU'l8 I CWMn ,., 11l9J»HISSM1JJ•• oou f S1'lltO CllU1 ""' , •• ,,,., ......... u 1•u *'"'~ Mil_ .. ____ .. - TIOUIU-1-i ,, .............. ,. _ .. _ •!Ill .... WI Ha ~ ...... 11.sut~ ~= -:.. M IWlO GIM. ftOMM"ll Ofl'OUCl~ ,,..,, .,., •• " ..... .,,~JO ~ -OOUf JTRIO ... -.-, ~_., 11 u , It , 2J 1 ... , .... mw~OOM­ COCOON: 1"111 ll1UIM ~ r:,~' ,. ' u 1 ,, ... ,. ""11n nm• SAit! ,.'" i CIT II ftl OAllC ,..,JI 1•>u s•• u 1•• POUT J"90'Wlll 1 ~., OtMI I C096NT IOI 1t>e l1t ••uo1 >0•• Mf·d ·t"€}' u.. _ .. _ • .,... •tll C'lll~ 1\11911 ... lt ·---..... ..,. _______ _ --· ma-• .-..... CICICmll-•--.,., .. , .... -··-·---MALI ..... ,...UI .. -,..., . GA Tf WI\¥ ,...., ........ 1W/lf)>"" '°'" Slt.1111() J•&lltDtMGttO. .;no TWWIS 1tO ll>O>•>•••··· OOUf J""° -&T'UOTM•~ •l~ISallauet ,...,, 1.U JU S ISJU ltU -998 ... ,J ,, ... 4j ••• weT ltlWI <*WMS ~ .. ~ ... , , ... , th.at CBS might mo"e Moore to a more favorable time instead1ng of dumping 1t outnght. Other cancellauons b) CBS mcludc the "eteran dctectt,'e scnes" imon It Simon" and the nev. scncs "Rats1ng Mir-anda," both as of Dec. 31. .\nothcr ne~ scncs. "Dtrt) Dane· ang," loosel) based on the hit movie. wtll conunue unnl J an. 14. when CBS will put It "on hiatus." tele"1s1on slang m~n1ng that 11 might or m1.ght not return and cas1 members should update their rt'Sumcs. RU Ff ELL'S ~ UPHOLSillY llC. ... ,_ .... '*"' 9-t l lU -aw_ CISTI 11»-Ml-llM Tl - -------0... --.,.... ._.._ .... ·- .. .. Orange Cout DAILY PJLOT I Thurlday, Oeciemb9( 16, 1988 CALL 642-56l8 FROM NORTH ORANGE FROM SOUTH ORANGE 54().1220 496-6800 r.[::::::::;c;;LAmss;i;;F=tE=D~i:;:N;;D:;E;;X:;6:;:'2~-56=1s==~,., ...... ...,.,. ... 1• e •• ...,..... c..a ..... , 1111 lnlM 1144 ......... 1111 c..... ... ... MU _c._ .. _ .. _ .. ___ .. _ ,.. NOflTM OMNQI co. -...1no ......... 1117 .... llllU, • IUI HAA vu HILLS, 48A. fem •• ........ LIDO ISLE. •Br 38• home ....... ,. 1U. •BAY TIMBERS• --.... ..-- --• w rm, grnbelt, View. 13,000 Over aooo a/f Obi gar Lg gar •• pvt patio. FURN. 1 ~ blodla trom 009an fBR. trplc, cable, ~· r-90UTH OIU.W CO. • IUD r-• _.... + wmw NEW 38R or 2 & d9'\ St550 "et 673'·5354 ' Winter S2500/mo. Biii Furn opt. 1975. 673-5337 patio, gar. No pett . .._ THE D"llY -oT CHECK you• '"'O Ult/28a upper 38R 28A + c;t'tarming Companion Crypt 'h price. cOndo. Fab. WI Harbor, Grundy Rltr. 875-e 181 W Bay St 1886. 650~51 ,. ~ ".. •38r/28a lower mothe<·ln-l1w quart••· * 819·411·3734 * ~n. clty llghtl Yrly or Lllaat k 141 •VefY tt'tarp 1Brt d9n for CLAS$ll'IEO or,l()E HOURS THE f'IRIT DAY Slff,000 LO lot w/epa. Wet btl, .. mo to mo 13,500 3l'ft LIDO SANDS furnl•t't•d 1 mature adult 404 'n .... ~ -T~ sr;;;~::·F ,,,. 0• ........ ·~ ... ... ........... GE ' bonut partclng. t .... w.i.rtr~....... 1'nBA, pool, fantmle l)OUM. 2Br, den, gar~. lrla. $925/rno. s.. to •P· 18R w/loft, 28A. Frpte,h- SakHd•y 8 00 AM·l1 )()AM -o. "'oc' HO-.,,••-•• II I tnUll .... JrlfCltJ 1111 aa-ae • = "':re;:w,:, tn~ln yard, pvt comm., $1 OJ) prKlllt. 723-0977 the<fral c.ilft\9I, Ill~. 91:::~~-;.~" :::.e:= ... "::':...~.::; eti.!ic'J°on.c:~.1~! =tlim;;'ILUl,AaweJI ·--1•1• nVOl);,..,..M 3..12S3 •· rno.(wtnterzk&-5994 &EACH con"ae_2er g__ara~e . apa, ~re:- ou0t.•NH ...... •-.. , .. , ......_.,"' 6"6-5743 2.1 ac:rea, MW 2BR t'torM C..la lltll 1114 ._ __ L I I NEWPORT oHORES 2BR 1ea, lrplc, g1rag9. S 1050 decoral9d. 1995 No I "U9<.oc••-O£•o••"E ... 1 '",. , .. o. ·--.·-"' with panoramic vlewe. ~ 9-. 28A. 2 atory t'touse, cor-all utll. pafd. Gardening 2151 Pac:lflc;831-e1 -· "'' "iu... ,.::.~: .. ""...::;. :''.::.";'.:.:;::.:. private, with palm• & m 1~... 1fHEWPORT HEkiHts* '* lot, gar, quilt area dlacount 644-1088 ·-......... ~=~.. ,": :::: :::: .. :".:.:-:.: .. ::;::, C.... .. l llu llU tropical flowers for farm •LargepatlcM&yard1 28< 28' lg ~ard, 11275. s1qoomo 675-4912Agt LARGE 38R. 2BA. fir• 28R 2BA 1000 a/f MW ,.,...,_, ..... u • .... • ......... _... .. ,,. ..,. ,,,., f!.~72~.,;20S2•5K/OBO •Small pet ok NEWPORT PACIFIC NPT HTS. •BR (or 3+ den). place, laundry, d.c:k. 2 d«:or PM patio.·~ ··-· ....... u• .... --COM 28R 1 IX AoOsE. ---------....,....., -· .•carpcrta w/atorag9 Dave, M5-3M3 lrg yd, "Mw, S2500/mo car g.,age. .$1500/mo, age Pafk•Mttlng. 'CfilJa :::;-• ~ .~::: ... ...._, ............ ,. .. ,, frplc, w/d, waltt to bMCh, -~--,-.,.--,---Pool •HARBOR VIEW HOMES A.Qt. Kathy 654-2235 Avail nowl 759-0745 oll. FromS950 FrMU.-R. t'~s,.~~~~':;i c.it ..,..; UH ~fts~ 3Br 38a+lott, f/p, up-J . Coomb9 F*lty Large, prv 18R. new paint, 21st Pacific es1-e1Qf "~• .. •~-I •.a aa1 • •---grad.cl, dbl gat., gardnr, crpti blind•. & llghllng. • ... --~ -.. w .,. --. _.._ comm. pool, pane, lg yd m Tll maD Frplc porch. m/w, 4 S2t00/mo. 647-7526 agt Enjoy breathtaking view or cloMis Avell 675-8611 28A 28A· No pett. AM •lllmfTlftlllU llr.,:>llC9, lrg yard. •EXCLUSIVE GUARD• tall piM tr .. 1 & grMn 1n • . Agt 54~5880 Call p n. W/llUT LllATlll tr .. & views. Hunt flth gar .. MW carpet/paint. •GATED..COMMUNITY• this ~acious, Mc:lud9d •n • .-s ALL NEW 3BR. 2 eat 0-· Just dOOfl from Pinkley Marby, 675-l887 E'lld9. $1250. 6"6-06"5 •• UIYll 3BR 2.,.,BA b91YtY1 Fee· 28R 1Y,BA, close to age, large fence Ytfd. Park. Approx 180011. ''Riii ... -· 3BR 1.,.,BA HOUSE nMr BEAUTIFUL 28R 28A ur .. Incl: Formel llvlng baach, 1950/mo. 900 825 Plume<. ue>ttalrl · 3Br 2.58a w/3 car pat1t.· ... lala South Cout Plua avail-w/golf courae VIEW Also rm, dining rm, catl\4Klral Saa L.aM. 644-2811 S 1050. Barbara 673-511l Ing. NEW ON MARKET at mu Ulll LIT I . >R • celllngs & mcuh morel • $205,000. Call 6"4-7211 Baautltul 3BR 28A, IQ FR, E~ able now New pant, new lB avail. Frplc, wet bar, lmmed occupany short Upper 2 BR 2 BA ..-ofc 1Ynny & brlte $475,000 --*1• carpet, big yard, kids ok. micro, W/D hkups, 2 car or long term IM p0sslble. Avail Dae t6. 310'~ Iris. ........~-... lllfm-L • S1100. Call 557-5747 gar w/xtra storage, cen· Children & pet• ok S 1300/Mo Yrly. Call ~ u~~ •. "1n NILfl iJAILl Y & A~~OCIATE'i . •BY OWNER. OPEN SAT/SUN 12·5. E/alde twnhse nr Back Bay, 3Br 2Ba, F/P, huge Piiio, 2· car atlch. gar. $187,500. 361 RAVELLO LANE 646-9896 or 631-7437 M-91CitJloul •BR 2aA, lam-3BR 2BA Houae, pro dee· 38R 2~BA 2-aty CONDO. tfll alr All malnt. Incl. $2400/mo. Call DOUG 1-876-2238 or 673·6149. 11y rm, 1 blk to achool, orated, Iota of wood & dbl garage, lrg patio. Sorry, no pets. 644-o509 HERBST 'T20-3G80 or IPAITMlllTI • comm pool grnblt Need tlle, lrplc, gar, mlcro. Back Bay locetlon. 1~ ILIS Tl TIE Ulll 760-5000 Ctltl J1tN Zl24 Beautifully landaclpia, , .. , aalel M75,oo0. Sub-$1700/mo * 873-5348 S1295/mo 557-5784• YrlyS1375-Veryclean3BR IV~ •Chrlatmas sw1a1ss quiet. large. clean Mll•· mlt. Call JULIA LIAO RENTALS AVAILABLE •••••a •.a YUi 2BA. frplc, dfw. micro, ./ ...-v Pool & spa, patloor d.Ck. -·---Great Ea1t11d• locl Prime location. 760-5000 or 759-5506 Short term & winter Fireplace, dl1hwuher, 2 w/d hkupa, 2 car garage. \t'V'I ..,,. ltj'" ., , 1 & 2Bdrma. Gar. cable 1 Bedroom seecr M ~ MA..V 1850 to $1400 car garage, S1250fmo. Agt 722-8520/875·•606 y.. ~ " •vi Grnblt w/BBO. lndry 28drm w.a. seos ..,. ~--.J W=~:; ~~~nc CALL 546-9164 DOS VESOA Shores 3br pool REALTORS ' rm. No peta 631-8427 2211 fllll• Wff ~·t'V1'*....,...,r· 1u:1u ·11 ·-·--38R 2BA, •Ingle garage. 17 . Versaille 1Br furn/ ..... Aaa 1110 COSTA MESA .: •• UILlllYI \ \\' ~ 'h.. JI \. ~ new paint, new carpet, uni S690. 'Pentrldge Cove H .. Ulnll REALTORS(ll Ptaiuala 2107 new drapes. s10001mo 2ers1000 Agt6•2-7706 LllllllUOllM M'e9t:rleld Ml-II - Ch1rmlng 38R, 3BA. lg llT • 11111111 3RM 18X. STEPS TO plua deposll . 646-6273 Ill •112 I Tims OLR IUITlfa arnm country kit w/ built-In Cuatom 2-Story w/lush BEACH 1855/rno rt •WTSa• 1 ... • • 1BR 1BA, SC Metro are1. IPUTllEm 2 Townhoule, gar., ffp, d4ISk & wor11 llland, new landacaplng & prvt ~··I tel & iaSt. $e()O ~It~· W/yard & Slngle car gar-~NINS1U8': Y~L~BA ! 6 5 ~~m :,_2•97~j if t Sp1rkllng claan large lndry r~.;.50pa1tlo, Cloe!«> appliances. Oak floors, )'Mrl old. 3BR 2'hBA, Ref.renon 6l5-69l5 age, $775/mo. Deposit & • ..... uxe -+ • rope s Aptl Pool & epa. Shop-school -mo. ~; air, R.V. ace.as, much formal & br..atlut din-. good credit req'd CALL lower Duplex. Patio, gar-lt•tk Ctllt ••trt ping & neighborhood 231" SANTA ANA mor•! Pnnclpa11 only, Ing, family rm tool Askl"9 C.... ..... , 1112 CURT 11631-1266 age. lndry. Close to Z II park MXt door. No pets. TSL MGMT 642-1603 A.gt. Elsa 545-2119 only $475 000 EX· t>Mch. S925/mo. I 28drm 1V•Ba $785 CLUSIVE oOnald. Pfaff •Spacious & bright 1BR t BRIGHTON SPRINGS 2BR •Cute 2BR 18A corner 2BR tBA upstaJrs condo 28drm 28a 1800 IWlOI •--•la f •-J 1_2 PRIME EASTSIDE 3BR, 631•1266 ' conv den. What a vlewll t•~BA trl-level, secluded housa. lg patio. pet ok •taW -•-Spacloua 2BR ADJ.I . _, Utt II -t leatfaJ -1'hBA. large corner lot. $1900/mo Incl utile wooda & 11ream1 Bue-Stlare laundry No park-nr SC Plua A/C, d/W, • • •-Beaullful pool arM, rw .. ---------1 pool, S285k, 722-9901 e,()peo & llte 2BR 2.BA ment gar w/opnr & Ing. $900/mo-balcony. pool. $695/mo COSTA MESA rec. room & laundry leuea/ M AllOHIEll~nE ' owner**** w/lrplc. View of hills & carpon W/D hkupa, •3BR 2BA lower duplex. 971•7611 or 751-2787 111-llU room. ONLY M40-M50 GMii{ fM HMS ANMQALNETWON( RETIRED LOCAL winll to close to bc;h. S1200/mo. micro, woodburn frplCi, garage. frplc. patio, 2BR 2BA upstairs condo In mo. ---... -.• '"""!r""s___ buy CM/NB h0m4t. Pref• -.... -5•7150BR1m'°'o 6"7q3u14t53t 5~A'°"gt " poolV&EL•MP~ 5SJ,.5021 ... "J,o7 + acrosa PCH. S 1275 gated C<!'"cmunltyl D/W, 18R, t1rep11ce, walk-In ALA llAU IPTS,... fixer. Can 1rade Npt. _. ,_ • .. MC. ,.. ..... .... YILU REITILS =onl" .:,:• ~:~~~~'. closet. encl garage. A.vi IH W ...... llUnf 10110 Crett condo. 646-6473 11118 .. A l&LI FURN OR UNFURN HOME ...-nl&l IPEIWJJI 960_6610 or 751_2787 ~g.~~~1 S0~56~:~2~tty TIL ~ •·•: ...... LJYEL IM lln l::aat lilll I If iln• . 2 matr Br. 28a F/P, $1495/ 11 ... ·-·· BALBOA PENNISULA ta• FRESHLY p1lnted wllh Expect the be, st." l•~~.,.....,. .... .,..PWll ... ,... Save over 154 000 on this mo .. 11111a1t S300 dep. _.., Lo. 2BD 1BA h.ouselfplc, Aee•ntt •OCEAN VU deluxe 2BR ·121·1111 tr Ml•~ new carpe1. new pllotless * ; UPGRADED 31R VIiia Balboa iulC.!Jry con-Marlgold St. M i.6290 I •Elam Balboa at 30th, yrly -t Y, bath, frplCi, deck, gar. ..,,., le ..i ... atove & oven, new Ille. 2BA2-CarAttachedGar-domlnlumhorne Pienta· •Tlnyqu14tt tBAconage, 2BR 1'~BA.cul-de-saclo-sqoomo + sec. 2218 E. Pacific apt B. --------- counter topa, llxlures & llLLIE UIL IAIU age, Skylight, S 154,900. tlon. thuttera 1·nclud9d. burned oelllnga, yard. cation 1 car garage. 675·4045 or Illa.. llOI $890/mo. See 1st. Call OITTAll nPI '" mirrored clotet doors Silt toO agt 493-5340 Call Immediately. JOYCE Near lhOps & beach. Large ya1d With green-leave mess-"6fl.S·SOZ5.. 759·1104/E 8""·8722/D E-'-llde .2BR, gar •• i.g11 Air conditioned plus air ONE . ~ I •---L Ill BARNES $2&5 11" Sl.95 NO...Pe:rS 722-801 l hOUM.. $86$/mo BAYVIEW CT 2BR 28A 18R 1 full BA. lrg unlt, yard with patio wst'tf•t*-electrlCi ctean.r and ... acre wit panoram c ...... -• l , OlrtJ • .,... condo COMPLETELY newly painled, semi-turn, 2BR, t BA, 1 car gara.ge. up $795/mo. • . view •nd zoned for -3 FIREPLACE TRI-LEVEL • good closell. $800/mo. groundtloor. patio. all 25•6 ORANGE • curlty1ystem.Spactoua& horses! 4 BR custom 1~ .... ITlllAll 3Br28a,0/Wmlcro,w/d U1·UU FURN w/1varyth1ngl Available now. 759-7185 new pllnt & carpeting. TSLMGMT k 2•le03 private patio overlooking home with cobbles1one •NEWPORT SHORES• hk-up, t car gar .. oar· $1450 mo. Unfurn $1250 S650/mo 548·7729 Agt greenbelt & pool Very drive and Tudor design 2BR + deo. 2BA houae, dener, S1625. 760-1~3 mo 2 c1r garage Beuy CUTE small 28R 1BA year-COZV liOUSE 18F("' conveni.nt location ·walk decorated In warm earttl spa, $285,000. 541·666" 730..0162 Oeys/997-5869 ly. Nice Piiio. 2 car park-2BR 1BA Duplex, half Refrigerator. private~. to Eastblutt shopping tones and constructed or 549-0112 Merit J. N.-.r 3BR, 2BA. Mxt to Ing, $895 Incl utll block from bus sto~. no pets, 2118 M.,.. J. center. COM high IChool. with quality. DO pafk. F/P. O.Ck, huge gar ILlffS... 673-3039 Yard, garage Refs, avail $625 650-8252 _ churches. tennis & park a.a.a•-"' ************ LI $1500 Linda 721-0116 Endunlt.3BR.2Y,BA.lo..,._ now S795. lirat. last plus ~ Ttils property is In mint _....., Versalll4ts S.ach Condo AREA With European em-Grubb & Ellis E'SIDE lg 2BR 2Ba custom ty greenbelt. just redone. GARAGE Apt for rent S200 sac 631-6559 Delu11e 3BR 2BA ealii'Cle condition & ready ror you .-_,-L---------$128,000 furn. 850-7853 blana. In a prime lo-5 18001 6"0-858 B1lboa Island 28r 18•. w/frplc patiO d/w oov- to move Into Price in· .... ~ l * * * * * * * * * * * * cation Aetreal to a prl-CHANNEL REEF 2BR. houM, frplc, new carpet, mo. 1 stove, ref no . garbage 2BR 1BA. slove, refrlg, 2 ered parking.' lndrY '"' cludet the 1800 Reduced taaaH 1 1007 va11. sophisticated world waterfront, rab 111ews. 1•1nce150b6ac3k1 l!!,d7, g1rage ILIFFS Tl .. I• d1ap., dlh wehr 675-8678 cir gar . yard, laundry S995 No pets 6"2-9479 to s267.300 •IWl•l.1.111• lnthit2bdrmcondow1th 673-6900 $2000 S """' 38 21/tBA xlnt loc on I JL p i 1 tac West Costa Mesa 1----------• llt-1100 F&lllm WE Versailles 1BR Full secur· den. Udoct'tannel & night ..................... Executive townhom9:" 2 g:nbelt s16so 640-7000 I ••• • •••••• $740 No Pets. 756-0732 UST.. -•m lty. Great loc. 8:44-7211 llghl views and dock lor a IUl.TllS ma11er 1u11es. 2•.i.eA. 2'07 28 R 2eA new carpet d/w 280 18A ga.r. lfg yd. C l l >RC ,f I I KJ'-.'-... rr= I l I\ II'"' 11.21 Ht \I lllR"• GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1, Delinquent tu Prop•rtles and Fore- cloeur ... 714-991 -2297 Ocean views from units. very large yactlt Large den, small, quiet com· VILLA BALBOA 28 r , ..... .,, 1 g p ~ 110 • 1 n dry : vacant & 111all now • • One house to sand. Stun-sunny terrace Is per1ect DELUXE 2BR 1'nBA 2 pi.x 960-3405 1.5Ba. $1, 100 1111n.aa x•rlparklng $800 $800mo 650-0443 ~ nlng 38R 28A w/fl~ to for • n I a rt a I n I ng. stnrv, ..... .,_, w/d tikup PEN PT. 2Br House. S 1300/mo no pet• 2 37 E'.. 760.,., 136 11111 ""' $925.000 Oc~aMtd;y of PCH •WNIT MlllTS St.175. ..,en. ..., Wtlm ~ , =:1~.n~-r,::·1=~~~ 3BR 28A, $1595 Walk to 831-1400 S1250 Aot 675-4912 2BR 1BA DuPleX. patio. no BALBOA •Br, Ip $1500 ........... * 1395/mo. No IOtcilen. 0.- 1 m.'ln ....... pets. $800/mo. 642-4011 BAYFRONT Condo 28r " amall q·J.at ,..,.,..plex posit & good cc.edft. GrHt Income, $695,000 nla. 250 Colton, NB \\>\ltHIHO'il 2aR f & )9U SHARP EHtslde 3BR IBALBOACo 28 d StudloS550& 1Brw/frpl, url • ~"" Call BAR.BARA 722-9730 or 722-7251 itoa..1" ltK. vtft =hi~'eR t 'ABX 2BA, completely re-frplc, IP&. d~-= ,;3o:i· ~ackyd, patio S650 m~. ~100 OFF 1ST M<?NTH. Huge lot w/ex1ra park ng ti.acti. assoc pool/ ten-----· s 1650 " • .....,. ""'" · CALL c 11 631 1-.: CHAMBERS & GIGI REAL TORS remocs.led Muter l•c modeled P1t ok. $995 SEAVIEW l"Etr 2 sea -Like new & very pvt . E SIDE i Sty. 28r 1~81 1111 MWI PAmlT1 THOMAS 11111 If llWHIT tub, lg ~ytlghta, rrplc, mo. Avt now 646·•~-Houae. comm iXiot & ten-A.!.!_~!;.C .. T l~~r F2_!ryR ~IN~;ei;~?49~:l.; :PErnclva10t~f!lgl'!~~" W 'II Ive outhedownln 11&11.-UfftlW -YllW $1750/mo. 214 Femleal. SPACIOUS 2BR 2BA 2 nla $2750 "'-"'""' ,,_ "" ..., --..- • axe.! forya share of own-F 2 2 .... • .. 11t• NEWPORT CREST D I S.._,i 67" .... 27 B y'FR0° t · c d 28 Garage, patio, lndry. Great atmoapt'tere~ No . .., rom your -..r • b ,,_ ,, .,..,.. atory 1ownhome. Garage, A N on ~ r, s 1050 yrly. 673-4866 *ILIAI* pell. S790. 6"6-9039'_ ershlp. You make lhe h0m4t. 3Br 3Ba w/mald't aharp, prof d.c:or, 3BR Lovely Jaamlna Creek amill yard, fireplace, wet den, dock for 80 boat. 28R w/pl/I garage .iec mthty pymts & ~ 1h1re quarters. S 1. 750,000 3BA. Comm pool, spa, guard-gated community. bar. Sm ill pet ok. Yearly. $4750 BAY FRONTAGE. pier & dlshwllh« 1 stove die-EXTRA LARGE ROOMS apprec You receive OPEN Sat/Sun 12·5 tennla. $21191<. 642-3850 28R den 28A tennis $1025/mo Agt875-4912 LINDA ISLE 2 story 5Br, pr'kg.Utllapd.2BRS1100 ...,....1 cab'-ead 'poo1 Upper 3BR 28A, gar .... 100% tu benefits Mu1tr========='! 2362 Mesa Drive, N.B. PROPERTY HSE RLTRS ' ' ' ' boat dock. $10,000 t8R $700 Furn. 303 E ,......_ • ,., r 'Y· • (1034-C Valene; .. ) have ct.an credit. Agt Anothertumm«·and 650-e534Agt.272·3780 W .. TCH BO .. T PA"'•DE pools, spa, vac enl, lot...... 14 • ..............__... 1M E.--ater 171-2886 ape, BBQ & lndry lac. 1875 No,...tt545-79•3 " ,... ""' $2200/rno leaM. Call col· ....-n.... ... • -....~ Good location In quiet _ _,__......., ...... ____ .,...,__...,.11.......,..,_ 957·8002Dys.Ev.Wknd• ·=~~t7n~~he FIDI ,,_. _ From •lther Nwpt Hgts I.ct 619-345-1830 or 38R2BA,2car gar,lgllv llALTllSll1·14IO --n••a•1 •11 Mlghbort'tood Easy ac-t<IDS REOUIRE"O!ll E'1el'Ck f • lo<*lngl job r v-, .. ~ t ._ .. ,r._.. Bluff hm-3BR w/in-law 619-341-2149 rm,famrmwlfrpt.Nopeta ••U"• -,,.50~• c.-. to trwysl 177 E 280 1BA Yard &"glr. ~Ml,..::oryc)u. withaclaaaifiedadandt>uy Bring your palntbrulh & unit, $775,000 OR Fan-Newp1lnt1carpet1,grdnr Gated 2BR 2BA condo "!'gta7r22Yrly776•0 mo 22nd St 831 ·7376 S750mo. $500J'4fP. -----..----'--+-80f.-._m....;ie;..;.1__.-......;01J~d0;..;;...need""='--1 your Imagination. 38R tulle Penlnaula Pt 536-2725 or 759-3990 w/d, dbl garage, view. all 7 .. g1 75•51:E •V-8:46-4631 2BA family home nettled ocaanfront w/pagged WALi Tl ...al amenities. S 1275/mo 80· 1 venlnga -~ Merrill Lynch Realty In Newport Back Bay. A hrdWdftrs,3Jactuba&so Enjoy COM at Its b4tat In ......... Tll 786-5180 rtu ..... I 2 •MTE.U• LARGE 18< 18aS5651rno, Httle .. tate 11tuat9d on an much mor•ll Pro-perty Ihle ~ac:lous & 1u11urlous Im I MlllWALI LARGE al 28 3Br 28a. g.,aga, W/D hk $400 security. Available overllzed lot for arM Houae Rltrs. 642-3850 3BR 2>nBA bea41ty. Short Pl 1 __,.... 18 n• ,..._ & ..__ 28 m2?'1y' newdble r. 2BR 1BA townhOUM apt. up, large yard, new Now. C111 tor a-..1 . .setlert NY Mii Reduced Ste or i---term 118. lmmed .~ . .r:::: .. · ~~ 'p'!f~"1 & ...,,, •. s • gar. New c;arpetlng. swim carpet & drapea $950/mo 631-1879 . price. Call GREG or lk at """" ............. ._ ,.. .. 1d ""'"'""" ......... ., lrplc, micro. 1Ynny patio min,.. pool. $900 P•r 364~ E. 18th St. MICHAEL for more lntor-.. ...__ laaa occ:py ,,..._.,.... vni ren c1rpet1. t•t.&A. 2BR l t585/mo * 721·8508 monih 111~790-9921 TSL MGMT 642-1603 LARGE 18R, DIW, ca!!'19 _... -& pet• ok $2800/mo $1750/mo, 1st, last ·~ mo · TV hk-up. No pe11t·Aita NIMOCOHDO ' lo1t1ld• Cotto Meeo. lore• door• ond 2 car ottoched 9aro90. 2a1, 2aA., 2 1torlo1. $115,000. rnatlon,$344,900. ....... C.itOOUGHERBST dep 847-6041 M-F SELL r9quir.d.S550/mo.-l'9ll ... E r20-aNO or 1eo-sooo 98:4-6988 91/M & wtcnda Can't seem to get to all tho e 2213 MIMr •B. 645-e.fll 1 tBR lBA, "°gate, tennia, rllllr 111.•v / Unf\lrn 4 BR. 2 BA. New repair jobs around the house? Let MESA VERDE. 2eR 19.t.. Poo11. exercise & KE'l"'lrlnll' ·· ktch, bllnda. crpt & paint 1hrou~h classified the classified service directory upper. ouie. eul ct..c. 759-6600 dubhouM. Only $69.500. \t\X'l "'fl' I~~\. 'I I 2cat gw7.St460/Mo. Call help you find reliable help. $695~. 2M7 Hickory PUlJC NOT1CE ~Cou.tT OI' CALif'O.....A, COUWTY Of Oft.ANOE 1n the Matt., ol tti. Appllcallon of ERNEST STUART. ON BEHALF OF BAON GAY (A MINOR) IOI Change or Name No A A145822 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME ERNEST STUART , ON BEHALF OF BRON GAY IA MINOR) hat llled I pe1illon In this court lor en order al- IOWt"Q petitioner to change hla/hef name from BAON GAY to 8ROH STUART Call now. 646-4380 A.gt REALTORS• 536-390~ 142•1171 491-1936, 751·94ee PUlJC NOTICE PUlJC NOTICE NI.JC ll>TIC£ NlJC NOllCE NlJC NOllCE MUC NOTICE NlJC NOTIC( PtaJC NOTIC£ PtalC NOTia .£ 11' IS HEREBY ORDERED countyat leut once• wMlc menced to iransact bull· 220 Venice, Huntington 924191 lftelldedea l•t•I•• ship nerehlp 94574 that all perton1 1nter .. ted in la< four conMCutlve week• ""8 under the llctltous Beach, Calif. 92648 Brian Appel. G50 First St , .,,1,11•• el •ted ....,_ The regletrant com-The registrant com-Myglo Corporation. a Call· the matter aforesaid appear prior to the day of said hear· bualneaa name or namea Thie bu~• wH con-Hermoaa Beach, Calll .... II -W ~ au menced to transact bull· menc.o to transact buS•· 10rnll ce><poretlon (General before this court tn Depart-Ing 119ted 1bove on NIA due1ed by a.n lndlvldval 9026• caeo. neaa under the l1ctltou1 ""' under the flclltlous Pattner) 3800 Eut Coast ment No 3 at 700 ClvlC Dated November 17, t988 Wayne J Welnb9rg Thie etatement was filed This bv1tneu was con-It ...... M iw-ta au busiMM name or narnet bu9',_. name Or names Hlghwey Corona del Mar Cetlt., Drive West, Santa ..IAMla L. aMfTH Thia 1t1le1J19nt was tiled with the County Clerk ol Or· ducted by co-partMrl ,.....,.... a '-*""• ,_. lltted above on November !lated above on OCtobef 5, eallf. 92925 • Ana. Calllorn11, on Oecem· Judge ol lhe with lh9 County Clerk of Or-ange County on November Thia 1t11ement waa Ille<! ,_...,el NM, J ie.......,. 18, t"8 1"8 This business ii con· tier 27, 1988, at 2 o'clock Superior Court anga County on Noveml>er 17, 1H8 with the County Clerk of Or· .,.._ eu ....,.., eu dMMo Gorden McKontle, Pres!-Brue. E. Nott dueled by: a general part· PM . anc:I lhen and there l"NlaT ITUA,.T, ao te. 1988 Publllhed Orange co .. 1 •no• Counly on Novemb9r r otrH coHa "de au dent Thia statemant (.,as 11111<1 Mrshlp 1howc1use.1f any they have. CAGNEY L.ANI ,_..,.. Delly Piiot December 1, 8, 9, 11188 . pr1,11••• elft .,,... eel-Thi• statement was !tied wtlh lhe County C~k of Or· The regillranl .com· why .. 10 petition for change 214, Nl~T MACH, Publllhed Orenge Coast t5, 22. 1988 Publllhe<I Ora1'09 Coast c-.e '°',_..•le oorte. with the County Clerk or Or-ange County on December menced 10 transact bull· of name sllould not be CA neu Delly Pllol Deoember 1. II, Th·1"9 Delly Piiot o.c.m1>er 8, t5, llllltetl otree ,......._ ange County on November 1, 1Hll ,,.., unde! the fictitious granted Pubtllhed Orange Coa1t t6, 22, 191111 22 29, 1998 Th.162 ........ ,.... ... ll9'9d 22. 1988 '*'" buelness name °' dlarMa IT IS FURTHER ordered Deity P1101 Oaoemt>ef t, 8. Th· 146 fltalC NOTIC£ .,._,,......, • Ull-..... F*'7S Publlshlld Orange Coast llsted abOve on Novem)er thal •copy of lhta order 10 15. 22, 1988 1111-"' 111\Tll't "8.IC NOTICE llN111 ... tM11•.al •-· Publllhed Orange Cout Dally Piiot Deoembef 8, t5. 15, l9811 ~ show cause oe publllhed In Th-139 ... ._... "" ~ aTATEmlfT cw eoe a .,, ••••••·::::. Dally Pttot o-m1>er 1, a. 22. 29.·t9H JarMt M ll'Vlne, p:i= the 0range CoHt1Da1ty P1tot1. 11111-IC MftllC[ PUklC NOTICI AaANOOllMINT Of 84.0mlCMtl ~· .. -~. ref• 15. ~2. t9H Th 1~2 Th-157 This statement wa. ~ newspaoer .01 gen••• ... -. "" lifVTT1NO ..,. UM°' l'ICTITIOUa (CrTACK>M AICMCIAL) --IC... .. . . . .. With the Counl)I ca.ti b(.Qr- ClrcuJatlon. pub111hed in tl\11 NOTICE IS HEREBY llUIMal NAME NOTICE TO DEFENDANT UM..._ .. .,......... 1111-"" ..,..llC( NlJC NOllC( ange County on Deoontt>w FtCTTTIOU• llU..... GIVEN th t the c ... of New-The following person• (Alllte> • Acu..00) OUALI-c... *"'°"° ••. .--"" 9. 19'11 ,., • NAMI aTATl•NT 1 t., have abandoned the UM of FIED ESCROW COMPANY ~). u.I ,_, The fOllowlng persons.,. =:.o ~.i. == 1: 1119 FtclltlOUI Buel nus INC . LOAI SCHNAUFER: c-.... ~ ~~·=· l'ICTIT'tOUe ....... PublT'lhed Oranci-Coa.st dotng txdlneu as NltM: MURAD & MURAD DONALD SCHN.AUFEA The name and addr ... of um aTATl•NT Delly Pilot December 15 22 STEVENS CARPETS, 451 c~tt I~~ INSURANCE SERVICES, WINDJAMMER INVESTORS the Cour1 It (El nombA Y TN ~are The~ pertoM are 29, tt88, Janu.y 5. tMt ' DEATH NOTICES MAJUSCAL JOSEPH FRANCIS MARISCAL, age 89, a ~Ume residentof ~ACIFIC VIEW -...oftlAL lllARK Cernelery • MO<'tuary Dlaoel • Crematory 3500 l>aclflc View Drive Nowi>ort Beach ~4·2700 HAMC>ft LAWN· MT.Ollft Mor1uary • Cema1erv Cramatory t825 0191er Ave Coate Mesa 540-655<1 Nltel INtOT~"I KLllNtOAOWAY Mortllfar, • C~ 110 lroedWay CoataMeN ... 2·9150 .. ...., .• , ... .,. 2983 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. CA ..... , .. Balbola Ia1and puaed Fair Dr • 108, Cos1a M98, ~ ~ 9aecJ't CA 2005 W 8alboe 8l\ld Ste 1171-2. A LIMITED PART· dlreccion de la corte .. ). U INS'URANCE doing butlneM as Tt't·18t Cellf 92828 · • 217, Newport Beech Clelf N£ASHIP ET AL AMralo. ~ r S£AEHGETl. e RMI Ea-away December 12th, Steven John Hynes, 451 92M3, untA the nour of 4.00 92M3 ' YOU AAE BEING SUED 4050 Main Str~.O. SEAVICES, 27M5 FOftie. 1eta Mlrllettn9 Design t---------- 1988. He WU a retired Fair Dr • 108, Coat• Mola. ~~~~!day of De-The ~tltlou• Buslneaa 8Y PLAINTIFF (A Ud .... t. 431, ,.._.,., • 2 Aoed, ~· 9~;7 Laguna Group, 17550 OIMetl• Ave .• ___ rmuc ___ ..,_._~-- chief of oonatruct10n Celif 92828 ~Fie' PO CE TO Neme refwred to above wu derNndendo) CHARLES E The neiN. • and Niguel. c; lrvlne. Callf 9211" .... This buelnesa la con-..,,.. IAL LI w flied in Orange County on TAOIA NO MARYROSE ~ number of pleln-°""' M MUfld, 25947 Lutk lntwton, Inc .• Call-for the Los ~lea ducted by •n lndillldual TRUCKSEAVICESFORA2· October 7, tH7 FILE TOMeo:i t"''• attorney, Of Plalntlff 91MGOa,MlaelonVlejo.Caltf fornla. t7650 Oltlotte AY9 , l'ICTmOUe=~· Dept of Water & The regl1trant com-YEAA PEAIOO NO.Fa57511 'fM "8we IO CAL.aNDAll wtttlOut an lttomey, It: (El 92991 !NIM, C&llf, 9271" um 8TA·-• • ' Power • veteran of meneed IO transact butl· NOTICE IS HEREBY o .. ". Mured 26941 DA'fl .... ... nomore, le dWeCCifon yel nu-Thia bu1lne11 II con-Thia bu•INH II con-TN followtng por90ft8 .. ' ness under the t1ct1tou1 FURTHER GIVEN that• 11\11>-8leacol Minion vi.lo Cellf _... ....... mero de t1lefono Oat OUC1ed by' '" lndMduel ductM by: a oorporetlOfl dOlnQ ~ ae. WW I & WW ll, and a buSIMN name or na.m. Ne i-rlng wlft be held at the tHtt ' ' le MnM "' ,_ ..... a abo08dO Oel ~te 0 The regletrant com• The regletrant com-Sf"OCKDAlf PAO P/41ff· retired LCDR , listed 1t>ove on November hourof7·30pm ,Otllhettll Dina Murad 3752 =-=.,. ...._... .. at Oel oemandaMe Que ~o meneed to lrantllCt bull· menoed 10 trwac:t ~NEAS. 2925 louttt lrMol USNR. He. la survtved te, 19811 dey of J~. ltff, 1" the Olenfldoe, Shefmtn Ollka, A...._,· ,._.. ..... tlence abOOado. •). ElllOlt '*' under !fie fletlllOua neea ~ Iha flct1tlou1 Strwot, Coata Mela, 'a.it, b bia RJ hard f St~ J H)'I* i:JoHlll Council Ct'tembera, Cellf t f423 ., Luctla LUCHS & MIHELICH bU1ineea name °' namea butinee1 neme Of !'ornM tH2t T~ cFl .3 This 11aiemen1 was l11ed ..___~ ~~· This bullneet was con· ::.C:-::r.-:..f:'.!l': INC .. '7344 Mlgl'IOlia Av~ lletedabo¥eonNcMl'nbat9. llttecl lbo¥9 on December, ~"'~t~ s=. ~= • Ml a with th9 County Cler'k of Or· ,___.' • • dueted by co-pettner1 "' ......... ._,... " en11e. Sull9 250, Atveralde, '"' 19'2 • ,...,. & 4 ll"andchildren, ange County on NOYember '°' aw.ding Nld contract; Thlt etatemer1t wet flied :: .._ ,.. CA t25CM (714) 111-7400. Dion• Mur9d Nancy K. Luell. Pf'ee'dent Mela. Callt. t2t2t • S cotti Matthew 18, 19811 and lnter•ted petlOl'lt may with tneCountyCierk of Or. WOftt ..,. .. ....,,.. DATE· 111:edle> NOV 04 lflla 1t9'ernen1"' "*" Th+I at1twnem wu fllod Peter J. Koetting, •25 M ,. __ • & ,.. __ k d' , __ ac>oear and be heard I'*• ange County on ~ovember -:'' • M4 fie 1MI wMtl the County Clerll of Or· wi.tl Iha County Clerll of Of· loutl'I lltleeOI 8trwl, Qoeta e.--•an PublllMCI Orange Cont on t t"8 ,.. ,.. ...... CoMftr ce.rti, ange County on NOlll!l'IMr ange Count'y °" Oecernber Meea. C&llf. t2tH by hia 90r1 Daniel of DaHy PllOt Deoamt>er 1, I , WANDAl.MOQIO,cnY 'PubfleMd Orange Coaat ,...,._.,......,,_...., ., .. -..... ~ t , ,... . 1, lMI ~ K. Mild:' at Sherman OU. and 2 15. ~2. 1981 CUM, Ctn °' .... OeilY Piiot Oecernt>w' ti ..... -. .... ,.. ~ Oranie Coaa1 ,.,.. ,_ T"*MundorDeolar...,.of andchildren $ Ttl-t45 PORT •ACM 22. 29 11181 ' ' ...... ......, aMI-= o.11Y Piiot o.carnw I 15 PuOtilnad Orenge COlll l'VblWled Orange COOlt TrulC __, lept ........ ta. II' ' utan Put>llatled Orange Cont • • Th-1t1 8ftr "'°' M....... It. 2't 1... ' • Dolly P"°' o.ci.mber I, 11, Delly PtlOt Doaember 15 II ttU. 2125 '°""' Miio! & G~. Memorial .... .,. 111\TIH' Delly fl'llOt o.c.rftbar 15, ......, --.. hM... · · Thtt3 H ,h , '"' -1.., .___,, 1tit · """'· eo.ta .....,:..,, .--.... ""'~ 1... _.,, Th 1SI '"'• ·--r ' t2tM • Sttvioel will be held __ .._.._ ..... .._.._ __ 1 ThtTt ftaJC NOTIC( n.o .. ...,....,,. · Tl\·111 Tilll ..,11,_. le ~ at llAM on Saturday, ,ICTmout ....... ..... 11111&: T•....... MJC llDTIC[ ftaJC llJllC( duc:toel by. • ..,..., ~ Dlcemeber l 7t.b at NAMa ITATlmWf P1taJC NOT1C( ..... -....., ...... NrlNP ,, Plldfic View Mem The tQllowlng paraona •• ...,. • ,_ •......... .._ Th• , .. 11tra111 -"'· • d0fn9 but1neet M. 8TAW Oii • .....,,,__,.... PICfiliOUa • 11 llM rMrlC8d to tnflWt tM!-orial Park.. 3$00 Pa-C•)WAY..eHA,.,.LYNHU .. ,..ar ''"°" ...... ._ ......,.....,.. ............ ITAW ..... n,.w n Ntn•ue•111M ,.. Yftdef "'° 11ctttou1 cH6c View Dr, New-~!=~~~~~~8 1 C bl~. "::'.':'=9 ~-=.:':: ;. ..... .., .......... n.=:.---TM=:-"'.,. r::::::':J:.,. =:-.,.,.'*': :..= port a.ch, followed SOCIATE.S. 3U2 A A..-. TIM ,......,_ potaot'I tll9 'lct1t10111 lutlft... .r;i·.·~·z.:, .. .., -::!J:TON COYI oa-":!cRAMINTO A81 ....,..._. 30 1t1t by a prtvat.e lntet· Vllt-oe W'f . lanta Ane, Miit .............. f'9 11M of ....... WOO\., PAI( ENGi-"-.... .... VILOPUem. llO' ~ IOCIATll, It .. ,,...,,, A.. llCICUTIVI INVllT • ~ T ........ ment. In Heu of Cellf 92704 1119 'ICtltloua lu1ln•11 NllNNO, 2001 W 1M1oa ......... --= ... ~""9IOO.IMM. enue. Ufllt J. CoMa 'MaM. MINT OftOUlll, HUI~ -flower1, don.atlon• WfY"' J W.-iborg. 3t72 Name· A·PU.11 '°"AWN· ll\lct ... 217 • ....,.,, ...... a•H•' Cllf .,,. Cell••• .. '9 Peaeo .. Alda. ..... 2IO. Ttm 1tall e••m may t>. made to A Aepon WllDI Wy .• Santa INOe, no v.. •t. Hum· ...,., Calf. nta •:=•• H••••• ••• MeMllten Co•• -'•· _,.. 1. ....., ,, .. Air· .....,._..._Cell.~ _. .. Courier Qefli • Ma. Cellf 92104 .,....,. ...._ Cllf nM1 TM P'tcWCM .,..,_ .... e ~ ........ lllMod ,.,._. _, A---. UNI J, co.ea W.... T. Wlllte, • .-... ... County Ofl Frltnda of 0Hf1 Lynna M w~o. M71 l"8 ,....... • 11 .... ...,.. "'8rf9d to.,.,._ •.......... .... a ~,... leNted uw. Celli ••• •1'9 eral lllartMr). H1lnH n . ,.. -- Memorial P'und, PO A A9"'\ V-... Wy ...... NllM,....,.. '° 190W ..... If( Or ... County Oft U. .... e -...... r · 1201 Dufoflt , .. .,..,.,_ TN91, tto ,.,,,._, IC ....... , H.... ,_ Box 829 Corona Del Ane.c.iet 12104 ... lft ~ CeuMY Oft ... ...,..._,, ltl7 ,IU 11 f I •It.._ ...... ---.Call ....... C-Drtwe..._. M1_, ~Or-.~ ,.. __ CA·-Thie bV11t1W la COit· Manfl tt, ttl1 ,Ill NO,_.. _ _; lllJll 11 • J J 11117' ........ C.. llllO ........ I Oll11u• ~ .,_.,_ D-4c\,\,;.f. _., ·--· dueled Or llutOendand .... NO.,.... "9wel.Mw•,24111Vla _.. • .._....... TNa ..,....... 111 oon-Thte llue6noea 1e con-••'""'°'" M "'*-4 tt. b . tMI ' ._ __ __j. Tiii re llltlflt C•lft· ~ ~ McCer'I~. ~,llllllonVlltO.Calf ... • ..... f9r• ...... ., ........... ...,,.,. ~ "J I 9"*111*1· ~It Hei9M. C_aett_..._ _____ _....,.~ • Dancing Doll Orenge CoMc DAILY PILOT/Tnur.dey, o.cen-tber 15, 1981 • Ser~ 59 Feests &1 IJl•n•ng .ea 62 a.net 63 Ra~ 64 lnstr\IC1~ SS PtgeOrl·- 66 Neer•t 67 Gott9Yeflta DOWN 5J Summit 5~ l'\IH"1e - ~ l"a""4'1d SCllOol 5-Beetles 13 • :. ... ~ ' c. r., ... ... r., - 118 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Thuraday, December 15, 1988 ._U.111a1 MIS J ... ar,1r .. 1/Art cu.............. ...,,, .. ,,.,.... Aa~, ..._ .. ,..... 11• a.e.Jpldll 11• Alltll 11 n th .. \124 El;illfi water cOlor MU eARistQX§ 860Tl6Utif PNifttt SXIL16Xt ev:U CllNltt IMI II!' &al u.--~ -Ttie Marlt.., PtaC9 Rten· Pal Lm1I m PU Ceramics a otMf goodi.et * HEWP<>f'T HAA80A 1iii PXebiiJ 0rar. aec "" XlrlC cond 6 menuai. POW* .. mond, Y0<1'ah1fe .. St500 1 old 10 $1200 S2 &. Up 220 Pelm«, BOAT PARADE, 2 deys CONVERTIBU LOOka Deelltltul $33.000 dOOf loc:ll rAd1als. powe< 4 ~ .... ncler, ,_,.., dOOf (714) 535-5695 ~ • 111e Cost• Meaa SAT 10·8 SIMI patty 175·84e0 ForrMr snow cw a 11 000 120· 1411 , ... ,.ng powe1 br9'1ea. lock. recllelt. ~rutM, ~dtrlp plane tickets ~~ 945•5905 -- -fell .. tt f It 080 844·7211• M«Cedel 1911. 5aO SEL. c.asM11e. AIC (H-547) poMI ateertnQ AM/JM to Sun Valley, Idaho PH .Mlln ... fll Qa19e kin m oo;; foroet .... Of -• M0.000. mt"ll cond1t1on. 14ll1l85l•TM -•-A/C, tllt (l-4 11i ...... ' Leave Dec. 24 LAX, re-Mll.lll·llll "---.. ) ... •1U 25' SAILBOAT, good &a• ...... II• 7.000 m11M . ..iver witn ••• -=-JI !!!!!!!'~ turn Dec 31 $258/ea -.,..... • condillon many extras• ..m"; navy, 901d paekage. _,__ _, .... bargaln 673-9560 _ •ac~ia~ 1145 U ovlnQ to Hawaii, Velue SJOoo. Will con-.... mz ltlMPtllln ... t c0Yer1, M2-IU1 Ml-1111 A TIMELESS GIFT for RAOlAL %Aw for .. 1.. clothing. am antiques, ~trade or reesonable AU .:\'Models available for .... -mm tinted window•. cu ---- musle Jovers. I wlll crea1e Craftsman 10"/12" on misc Sal Only 9am 304 offer! Oya 548·1255 immedlatedeltvefyl ...... ~ phone. 548·l800 Mon· .. ,.. 9W an or1g1nat design 1n steel table Exe cond Marguerite · In alley Evea/Wnkda 720-0lte • 0 DOWN PLANS ___ ,, da~·Fr1day. 'IT alll music on high quality $250 .Call Mike 873-1263 -Ill-1...__L-/I• • Einended ?2 Mo leue un • MERCEDES SL 450 1874 _ -• aut,,_•t'-. • _._.._, c111111e Recorded elec· p & •-i 1-11.a.it C..t1 .... 1114 fl _.. lfl pfans very ctean, both tops, C.-.C Cotwert1bl8 1982. .. .,.,_.... .. "F"'- tronlcally In state-01-tlle· ttl. -.. I ~ m n TIU • Unique 8• Mo purchase A flW u.t.n or hieing 117.0,00 l)(IYale while, wttl' ~blue PoW8f dOOf lock, redl .... art recording studio lor ---u ••••-I 1AL1J plans Olll Nl-e.D.. party, work 645·•579 top. OrlQlnat owner -••II cruise, Pow.f at881'1ng, youoraomeoneyoulove --• SAT 12117, 10am-3pm. •lllT .. * l'lom8673·4335 720-9841 evening, •.-Pow.f bfak ... AM/f'M. Call THE COMPOSER puppies mai.Jlem. Choe· Monticello Townhomes. Balboa Co~ M ILlllll 84 319' •toio..t l_.,..n387 ITTtoE 1ev (4~ 8 3 • • 190 O days Mini cond11ton Under IVC, hit (7-3371111,"5 543·0558 olate. lots ol wrinkles. 132 Lexington Ln. ~Fair-850·4712 •111'1 ~ 13St 14110 ._..,,ININl67 78 3000 $7,400 (809 .. ) (2NCCHU) 3000 rnilel (25KH468) l•Wfll W -----$1800 lo S2500 terms vie~, south of air). Your Aut"'~tzed M-A--'es 88 73~1 111to.1Nded.&t2•3' s R I •0111 -S"O """5 CONFISCA.T e.o 76 0604 8467318 " Ml ' 9 ..:-""' ...,......, 8030050 I to m ( .. ---~-i ... •-•f 6 •'"' --cars, 1· or • Furniture. kltel\en & ...... 11a1,.r 1 .. a dNi8< Sales -Service ) -_...._ _,,..,. ICIWSTER _,..,.. trucks, vans. jewelry .. Golden Retriever Puppies. hsehld items, etc /~ 1301 Quail St Parts _ Lutlf'.lg ~~ =~~~~J~~4(8027) Loaded w11il extras Mint Ml-1111 mu<:hmo<esetzed1ndr'!" lull-bred, 5 wks old, -_ f .... llri" Newl)O<tBeach 131·•111 -·-•-• ••-cs201n.~lon (815882) ClllWC --..,..--- +cmner11ds Up1090V. SI00-$150 Call Marsha, 8 t It ~ 1140 0 U"LI•-• r---• ..... *** ott 7t4-991·2297, ext 493·3861 •• • IC r -1500 A t Matl D NISSON '87 111.000 m1181. lllLLISTEI 11•/-• -- J.t5 • I ---p --Xmas Craha & "fem gar 1965 INTERNATIONAL ***** U O r. red, tinted windows, lull'/ 2111...--l•l ll-11 OLllllllLE - -- -HIMALAYAN vrebreds sate misc furn fr'g SCOUT Needs • little ------Santa Ana ClllWC . Greal gifts for Chrlstmll~I CFA reg kittens. Blue & 12/15-12117 '86~2 work s5oo. 646-2332 '78 Porsche 924. lllver. 55 ~·at EdlnnAr loaded, al e. auto. $7200. GT •n LTlanm.IW Stylish VINTAGE men s Choe. points $300 ea In . t cond al ne stereo w-· 545-7521 FORD 1989 Probe WRISTWATCHES From time for Xmas 759-3257 Jardtnet (Edwfd/Sltr) CHEROKEE LOREDO re: 0 0 0 pt 0 8 0 " 7 DAYS ......... .,, 11'/ ...... H turbo Black/Grey OP· One owner, eutomatlc. IUll the ·40's• 759-1877 POODLE PUPPY SA.LE lmH 1144 1~t!~·n~ =.:.rr.z.o~f: 213·470·0016 Service Hrs. Mon-Fri. TllU-IU _ 211/141·1111 ~~~rf~r~07~.~~1f~nal ~~it~~t~lc :..=: MUST SELL: lridlan Agate f . Cup. Toy, Mine, $250· MOVING SALEH 2 twin engine. 33,000 miles, .a• IAllfT 7:00 am to 9:00 pm 49,000 mllel. Take over White '88 Cadillac Sedan _ _ (:924SFE) Runs ex<*· Necklaces S5 00. $750 Hand raised Many beds couch chair coffee $15,800. Cellular pt\orle ·-leise (3 ,..., years), Deville. to miles. orig FORD 82 Escort, 4 spd, tent & Lootca good! Ch1neH Coin Sets $9 00 co1ors. 751·3465 & enci tables. w10: lots of goat with 10< +$1000 •l'WDTllLI 1 = 1 K J R 7 o o) o y 1 owner Weekdays eve 62,000 miles. red, 2 door. Call640·6688 •• -IT t --, misc goodies. 32 714·364·2758 xlntcond.tomltes.custom HONDA •85-ACCOfi>LX 83l·8835 Eves/Wl<nds 675-5438, weefldays $1250,646-9906 MUST BE SOLD THIS Newporl6'88ch Tennis ' a11c1 as raata I Dragonfly, Sat 8:30-3:00 -·11p•••al-lllll-ll wheels, $795010 .BO 4dr eulo, loeded, 32,000 945.15113 days 1eo.e2 1s WEEKENOll . 1155 • -2 13 ·653 ·9600 or I p_._.. .__, ... So 11n1-flub ,ram~r membf'shipj ....... lffc• 1119 39.000 miles, $10,000 714·673·2792. ,(}..11f'"""~·~;r-oiter tlll11•11 WTerMI CHEVY '85 SPRINT ...... rans era e. sacnice a I IUITill-41-(•1KJ R 700) Days · u 7_.329 ·Tape deck. good con· Amlfm air, very good Flll&Llf .. $200 plus transfer lee $2000 w/cese' Excellent Bu51ness furniture & other 631·8835 Eves/Wknds AUii "" __ dltlon. 840· 846 Eve-cond. 91,000 m1 50m1 IALL I LY 721 -5751 condition 675.9553 misc Items! SA TUR DAY 646· 1593 '86 GL 10 Turbo Wagon, 4· _. 'II 111111 Lii n I n gs I W e e II • n d • per gallt>n, 1 owner •1• llZ ••o 131-111.411 ---ED --~· --8AM-4PM. 30H Clay SI. · wh/drlve, alt, loaded to Automatic 4 cylnder (= 1MFS977) $2500. 963-4250/Home & && • OuAs~d BU~l~t B con~~~~'~ Pi1at1 & OrtHI u59 Newport Heights Trac•• 9035 maximum, 14K miles powef' doOr lock. radials'. Volvo 1983, DL. 4-door, (213) 741-3446/Work 4 OR Sedan automatic, S 195. 5 Anuque beach -'II T.,.ea ... Excel cond, garaged. cruise power steering power steering & brakes --------.. --stralgl'll 6 • Air condition· -------- b•kes S50·85 Good cond Winter console piano, Traa1reit1ti1a plCkup.5-apeed, Sl0,500.646•7641 Pp _ power' brakes. AM/FM: automatic, air $6,789: ~~l ~~n~~ ingg~=~l~~d~~~~~~lar OLDSMOBILECutlalSu- 6 .. 6·764 t French Prov1nc1al, good Ptwtr -....11 fifz suspension llft, low miles, ... 'II .... S cassette, A/C 'Extra 962·0740 (1HBS190) OWef doOr lock radials' 12IOO M Herl preme 1978, air, crulae Sale Rein g. dryer.: conditi on $700. I excettentcond,$5000 4.C'Jlinder 5 speed man· sharp Like new! (2366) V.W 68 Van. Body-fair, ~ulse wer s eerln . ., ••• control. Jensen Ste<eo, aquartum. TV's. desks. 1 645·2205 21' llY /Plln llAT 080. Cindy 646-9600. uat. pMr door lock, s 11•475. motor.excellent, needs PoWI'. ~kes. ~M/F~.t xtnt. 11500 95&-2657 bamboo and oak sheu.11. -1- , IMO Sea1s 12.bim1nl,tables. eve969·5701 radials, cruise. power llflllllN brake work$1200obo casaette, A/C, lilt. Ul-1114 141·1112 --•1t'lllllm- wlcker trunk, bunk beds. l~ U I 351OMC110, $4200. ll&ZIA 'll Ptll IP steering, power brakes. U1·11ll 650·4545 (10-484) 19 995 GOVERNMENT SEIZED n- rocker t rec11ner, L·1B1kF.fr· balloon ttre, 5. 963-5272 Automatic, 4 cylinder, AM/FM. cauene. AIC. --vw ·77 DASHER. amlfm. ••T•t'••••AI VEHICLES LOW AS Loaded with extras. shaped sot a, chest. speed Schwinn Cruiser 32· PACEMAKER (2358) $8,750, •II 'II .-al LI atr excellent condlt1onl -S t o o B M w s , Sunrool extra clean. tables/chairs 661·8456 1 Suprer:net Extras' Nr new Sportflsher, ca1erputar en· ~~:::':s. ~:m~: c~;i~ llPlllll YW Automatic. cytln~er , sf 9 5 & 4 2 . 6 o 2 8 •n&.11 CADILLACS. CHEVYS. (383777) s1o.99S5TEI FrH 1,-,.. 6022 condition $250 Va~~·· gine (Newport mooring te. A.IC. R.2200 with ltl·llll power door lock. red1.ala, ("649SFZ> M! .. 11 FORDS. MERCEDES. ICIW Burmese klthes. 2 beautl-SSell l~r s:~_!45"6:-5 8Y8lllb~;J.92~~2 .soo . toool box. Mags. (2367) =· :::. 'l:I~~: vw Rabbit Olesef. 1978, •YILll '11.. ;~u~~~H!~o ~;~SS ClllWC 1v1 pur~bred females Tol ,.rtaa1-1 ._ I 56·650· 81W SPECIALS cassette, AIC. Hurry on looks good, runs ?.rNI. fllm AMAZING RECORDED loving h o me o nly G reatXmas Gittsil 37 Foot Trawler, lime· SIPlllllYW thlsonel(2382)S12,395. S850·646•8331 <28 VAY) Automatic, V6 cyltnder, MESSAGE REVEALS lit/ ....... 720-0719, 631·1030 Win 12ga 1400Auto$250 share in exchange for slip U1·Hll 'II l!lh. ... -IH ... I ..-nr &a•........ 311 poWftf door locll, radials. DETAILS 7141531-62'1 111/M1·a111 F-----Rem 12ga pump $175 in Newport Beach. (88668) n1 1111 cn11ae PoW8f steering EXT 105 ree, beautiful female Some Jewelry 650-4545 631-4384 lllSAI 'II Piii IP ... 12h-Ul,lll • _ 'II ... lllllT power brakes, AM/FM: --"""' ........ ..... C~ltco cat.I about 18 mos 1 BRANO new 13· 5" deluxe 4 cylinder, 5 speed man-(88783) Automatic Honda CRX 1986. 1.5, 2dr, 4·sc>, am/fm cua, AIC tlft ( 11 ·562)1 .. '1'tl"'~M~ ~9~. 70~: 1(m~s~~!j at IUllE OIHn 1111 Whaler. $2450. Also 1988 ual. radials, power steer-'11 IHb. ....... Ul,111 white. 5-speed, warranty, good cond, S2200/0BO. s 14,995 __ __ OIUIOTHS•W 30HP Njssan outboard ing. power brakes. (86309) Excellen t condition . 830-1865 llll•TMllAll Jtwtlry/fan/Art OEC.17&18 9A~SPM Sf60°0.Suzuki2HP,$200 AM/FM, cassette, A/C. 'lll•a.t.. •-,Ill S•900 . 760-3813 ---- Auto trans Mint condition. Loaded Low mllea.· (2HMS248) $8,995 6025 Orange Count y Fair· 675·4~ Mags. side tires. (2354) •-....... _. (2TUR310) laLL••llYILLI rw I grounds Costa Mesa I $5,275 s. spot (272729) Loaded. Extra clean aa-1111 ICILUSTER CIDIWC 11'/H• ... 211/141--1111 -P-er-lec_1 _g_1ft_l_W_h-1te_m_1-nk I (Enter off Arlington St ) FCISHING BObAI T 27d' BAf~Ah. SIHllH"' .......... _ ... sa,na IADI '11 IH Gold/Ivory. (28 SA740) ---- ---.-ustom ca n, re er. •S II l llll Exec. ci.mo (88664) Automatic. 4 cylinder, S 15.995 --., 1ack~t S~~ ~500. sell· TV SttrM, £ltcll•acs finder. diesel engine 500 • STEIUll power doOr tock, cruise, ICILLISTEI ing or · •ze small· / 11.110 mile range, fish bait tank, y--.-0 power steenng,, power medium 832-9404 I . • trailer. equipped tor tl\e 181 m brakes, AM/FM, casset-C Shop the real estate pages , BETA MOVIES tn orig serious lisherm ari . 77 00dge.Spor1sman ?fn· llW ta. A/C (2348) $6.250. IDIWC 01 crasslfled tor tne vacation boxes. $7 95 each. 1000 Widow. must sell. BEST dow van. Clean, lo miles, , ... ,.llD llU ........ YW l 1'/ ...... H propenyyouveoeenwani-mo vi es ava ll. Cal l OFFER 642·9732 or $ 2 7 5 0 0 B 0 • I 4 "' llll •ll/l4l llll 546· 1200 Fl ND Had a hvmdrum day? Claut-lled ts lull of exciting lnl~· ma lion rng 562·28 \4 65()...4209 673·5032/673·0219 I--M-• Ill • CHEVROLET" AND Home of the Serengeti Blazer 4R/t:M•IUI Cal our lriend1,-salesmen for de1a1ls 5 79-5100 1-800-228· 7240 1707 1 E Imperial Hwy· Yorba Linda. Calrforn!& THE BEST BUYS IN ORANGE COUNTY ARE ON THIS PAGE CALL ONE NOW! SADDLEBACK Sales Leasing \. 0 Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200 2828 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa UMVERSITY 6'~ I GMC:TF~UCK "THE SMART STOP" 285~HAABOR BLvo':'-cosTA MESA Jr Mercedes-Benz 1301 Quell St. Newport .. ech 0 S•let • Leasing Parts • ServiC• 133-9300 ( J "1 AC URA 1001 Quell St. Newport .. ech 75-ACURA 752·2172 "Call Your Prot.••lon•I•" $ SA~BlYI18.G $ NEW LOCATION! 1500 Auto Mell Dr., Sente An• 835-3171 Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger .,Sales Dept open 7 days Service Hours: Mon.-Fri 7am· 10pm I BUENA PARK ST ANTON GARO NC.ROVE PACIFIC OCEAN H ONDA 'OA..+MQE COUNTV!8 OUl!'f l!AO!,. Oft TH! fMPOATS" ( ,4 54 2860 HARBOR BLVD.• COSTA MESA Hunr1ngfon Bea ch Chr~1sJer -Plymou th DAI HATS J SALES -LEASING SERVICE -PARTS 1•1 RACH &VD. 842 0631 HUNTINGTON llACH • Advertise on This Page C1ll for D1t1i11 - CALL ONE OF THESE DEALERS FOR THE BEST BUY \: DANA ~/~ POINT ~_, "'\\:: f;..IU TtN TON raeACH ACURA o. • .,., a-.,.~ cw.,, ' it.., .. , .-..,,,., • "'' # SEE MOTOR TRENDS CAR THE YEAR ,.. °SERVICE OUT. OPEN MONDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. ., . ., ....... , ltacft .. I Glfdlft O.OW. Fwy ......... l/Jtw{ --~ ' through classified ALLEN m/582 -0800 SAN DIEGO FWY ·AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL We are a HIGH VOWl.IE. LOW PROFIT Oeai.ttllll> Our Goal ls to Be Number One J 546-0220 Mercedes-Benz 6862 Manchester Boulevard Buena Park A y .. , M ·F 7a-6p 213 or 714 /MERCEDES 8a 6 • M·F · p Where 1·5 afid l-9lmccl. Sat. Sa·lp 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster t Cuto•tr S.tislartlon • Salt Ow 111 hforllJ' • Service 541 I023 • Leulng 2524 Harbor Blv d . • Costa Me1a 18835 hoch loul.vord (714) 142·7711 Hun~ 19och (2U) S'2·1~ SALES -LE ASING SERVICE -PARTS 16800 S..ch Bl•d. H\lntinqton S..Ch, CA 92847 ~ l HONDA DSALSa IR OllAJIGS CO. Sain • Service • Part.a Laallll All Mllkn 963-1959 192.12 lttec'h flhod ............... 8Ntfl, c.wemte ... .. GIFT GUIDE II/An Adve.f1lsing Supp~t to the DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December \5, 1988 Newport Hills Center stores remember Christmas niceties What happened the last llme you asked for a gift bo:1 at a department store? Were you given directions to a pa.rt of the store you'd never heard of, only to sta.nd in line for half an hour for some pieces of flimsy cardboard to try to m.Ue into a bo:1 at home? The merchants at Newport Hills Center remember what personal service is all about. This holiday season, the'll help you select perfect qifts from a selection as varied and special as everyone on your list. And, they'll qift wrap your pacltaqes at no ertra charqe. Step inside Newport Hills Drug Store and you are im- mediately surrounded by the sights and smells of Christmas. You'll find Spode china in the C bnstmas tree pattern, sim- menng potpourie, ornaments a.nd a selection of paper goods and party supplie.. To add sparkle to any niqht, try on a pair of Nina Ribci ea.rrinqs, add a sp lash of Maqie Noire, and put a holiday bow in your hair, all fr om NeWpc>rt Hills Drug Store. A few doors down is Kid's Stuff with toys and party sup- plies to captuie the imaqina- tion of children f..rom infants to 12 yea.rs old. There's even a pink ballerina costume for your favorite little dancer. Stop by That's Entertainment Video Store and rent a Disney Classic for the family to enjoy. It's never too early to start hinting about eleqant Patek Phillipe, Ebel and Cartier watches from Traditional Jew- elers. With three expert jew- elers on the premises to assist you, drea.mJ come true in brilliant diamond earrings and tennis bracelets, fine Boehm porcelain and precious stones from the estate jewelry collection. Traditional Jew- elers bas been selected to be the first independent Cartier boutique on the West Coast, carrying les must de Cartier to inspire Santa. Let Gable's of Newporl pamper you or someone special with its many salon Mrvices. Bring the holidays into your home with a poiuettia, bloom- ing plant, floral centerpiece or fresh wreath from Newport Hills Florist. Now would be a q_oocl time to call Sparkling Cleaners for expert drapery cleaning. Newport Hills Shoe Repair will have yow holiday shoes and accessori,_s in top con- dition for the season. Holiday mea~ come alive with the help of the friendly people at Ralph's market. They'll m.Ue sure you find everything on yow grocery list, from cranberries to fresh turkeys, from eqqnoq to fine wines and spirits. With all the cooking you do at this time of year, treat yowseU to somethinq dif- ferent. Lunch or dinner at Thai Touch's award-winning res- taurant is an introduction to the delicate spices and season- in91 that m.Ue this oriqinal cuisine memorable. If you're in the middle of wrappinq packages or if you're havinq IOJDe friends over, call What's Cooking to order a complete Italian Renaissance meal cater.d. Newport Hills Center is located at San Miquel and Ford in Newport Beach. A gift that goes ... Rooten's Lu9ga9e offen qift ideu to make this hol1ddy Mason special. From travel itema to tint claa necess1t1ec: Rooten's Luggage par ezcellence ia refl«ted in the sk.~e located on the MCond level of Carouael Court in So;ith Coast Plua. for more information, call (714) 54()..311 0 Forever Friends puts shoppers in the holiday spirit If you aren't e:1cited yet about Christmas, a tnp to Forever Fnends, Country Gifts & Collectibles 1s sure to g~t you in the holiday spirit. Forever Friends, which re- cently moved to 1720 Santa Ana Ave. (Just off 17th Street, across from Mi Casa), reflects owner )a.net Fryer's love of handcrafted items. Not only does fryer and her dauqhter m.Ue many of the items, but the shop includes top quality, locally made ha.ridicrafts. fryer bas carefully •lec::ted her qift line, ooncentratinq on well-made and e•en one-of-a- kind items. Emphasis is on the Country and Vidoria-look and in- cludes "a little of everything" from prints, lace, baskets, wreaths, frames and ceramics to pillows and magui.ne racks. The currently popular ducks, pigs, cows and bunnies can be found in wood, ceramic and cloth. The shop takes cuatom or- ders for Country-look, 1114tchiJlq pmow., buk.e. ud maqui.De recb and for thoee with otber decors, l'OJWNJ Friench allo provides custom •rvice. "If someone walked in and really liked a certain b.uket, wreath or centerpiece but wanted it in a different color, we could make it for them," Fryer aid. "We aho do a lot of the wood piece1 ounelves and they too can be ip8Cial ordered." Special orden extend to forever f riench' Christmu line. Wreaths, baskets and Cb.rilbnu decoratift items cu atill be special-ordered. ln 1'9C181lt mOlltht the shop ha.I ap&llded its collectible doll line. The newest is from Jan Haqua and includes doll.a, limited-edition porcelain•, plates, prints and tin.a. Bobin woods' hand-painted, nnyl dolls are al10 now in stock u a.re hand-painted, cloth dolla by Pauline and Lee Middl.- ton'1 doll1. Other collectibl .. include the Raike1 Bear1 line. l'ONYer friench bu been fortun.ate to receiTe ei9ht of the 11 Raib. piecea n-lMled lhil YMl aad ii OH of a ftry few .... in Oran99 County to e&rry the line. Add.itioul cou.ctib1ee include Hoa. of Tilly s bP,us uad bmm11 u well ~"' 'he V-lll.Qe Uqbts cotta9e sPll "gs by Jolm Hopkin•. Tbe "little of every1h1 •. g " iDcl.-. a new-born g111 de- partmeDt which featu res ~~·· matchinq apph-q119111 hihe, puati" and hMd- ecl t.tll toWels. Added chtl- clna'a aiftl an to be four.d in tb9 ltalW animal and ch1l- c1Nin'a book eection1. ID the ChrUtmas sl'.'chon 8ft 6 tlae Holly band-made bean. bamaiel, ornaments aDd tr.. ..,.._. rie for atteo------------------------------------------------""'---ticmwitlatrMitioDa.l, Victorian aDd eo.u.try-look ornaments aDd decoratlau. CoHedihl• include Carol- iDCJ nc11 aDd om of the w oods Kida. Aclcled treats are Cltrialau _plush (stuffed) ani .. le· Cllrlltmas cards, hand-a~ wreaths, waU aDd decoralift table items, MdriNJI ud tree Wrts TM Mop ia open from 10 a.a . lo 5:30 p .m. Tuesday ~ Tlnanday a.nd Satur· daJ. rriday hoa.n are 10 a rn. lo 8 p .a . rm aor'8 information call (714) 690-5535. -By Jua8*1a•W9 ' LOehmann' s Five Points: a Christmas tradition Since its rehabilitation in throu9hout the · center, HMM, Loehmann'1 Five Pqints Loehmann1 Five Points Plaza Plua bu continued its tra-offers convenient pa.rltin9 and dition of o~erin9 hi9h qu~ty ezpanded hours for the hol- merchandi• at the best poa-idays u well u a friendly ible pric~•· "That .i• what our atm~here. specialty 11 -havinq a center · Some of the stores at Five with stores that offer quality Points include: merchanclile at better-than-• Loehmann' s -quality retail prices/' Sandy Kinq, ready-to-wear and desi9ner property manaqer, said. . selections for women and jun- With 155,000 square feet ot iors. . , stores and •rvices, Five Points •Sutter Place -a San offers visitors a comf.lete shop-Francisco-based desi9ner pin9 experience. 'There are known for her romantic day very few needs that can't be d re11es, suits and eve- filled here," Kinq said. And ninqwear. that seems to be true with the •Trader Joes the 19lection of shops, including .qourmet store offers. qreat sav- r..taurant1.--morie theatre,-ings-on wine__p_u.r.chues plus_ bank and bar and qrill. bulk food items like pine nuts, "We've tried to create · a crab claws, jumbo shrimp, tenant miz here so that shop-specialty food lines, dairy and pert can make one stop and some fresh fruit ·and veq-Frteadly mercbaata, coaTelllent ~ make Loehmenn'• n.-Polata Plua aa 9et everything they need -etables. d 1 prl fi --11 including lunch, dinner or •Contem~ Casuals Outlet an cnrer cm or .. _..ty mere dl.e acellent cbolce for bollday ........... entertaimnent," she said. -Great savuu~s on separates, wicker and rattan, plus luxur- With the term "Di1eovery dr~• ~d swts. iously woven rugs, tapestries, •Home Stores -feature and more. Calico Corners, a home fabric Center" uted to describe this . •Tilly 8 -trendy ac-mats, pillows, glasswear and (and other) strip centers by the tivewear.for teens, younq men d.innerwear. same company, Kin9 says and women .. Known-fot-•Women's Shops -in: shoppers can dilCover -a var-skate~dequipm~nt and ac-elude The Competition; iety of unique gift ideas and ~nes •. sport videos and Susie's Deals; Lingerie for special savin9s at the 36 shops clothin9 lines. Less; Flo's Klothes; Perfumes in the center. •Pier One Imports -con-for Less; and QUality Beauty store; and b&b Bed, Bath & Stop by a n d visit Beyond. __ Loehmann.'..sfue..P_oin_t.s_ flAZA, __ located at 18593 Main St. (off Beach Blvd.) in Huntington Beach, and di5co¥er the con: venience and tremendous sav- . With Chrisfmas · music temporary casual furniture in Supplies. It's Time to ·shopping : Make A Real ~overy Unique style, exciting stores ... all at exceptional prices! Loehmann's Five Points Plaza is the rage among Orange County shoppers in the know -with 36 stores, services and restaurants it just might be the best place you could ever go. Come discover for yourself. I . I \ . •Other Great Stores - include Party World·; The Arden Gallery; D 'n J Bears and Dolls; Jack's Jewelers; The Robe Co.; Dell's; Earrings Plus ings for the holida.ys and year- around. -By Patricia Gable LOEHMA ·NN 'S z 36 Stores to Serve :You Adler Shoes Arden Gallery Jack·s J ewele rs "'4 b&b Bed. Bath & Beyond La Petite Boulangerle Lingerie For Less Bank of America Beach Deli Calico Corners Coast Hair Design o n tempo Casuals CVS Drugs D ·n J Bears ·n Dolls I;)ell's Clothing Earrings Plus Five Points Bar & Grill Five Points Cleaners Five Points Liquor Five Points Shoe Repair Flo·s Klothes ~ Dr. Louis Haselfeld Huntington Cinema __ _;:__..'Y"'h man n · s Marto·s Mexican Restaurant Mead Travel Pars Party World Perfumes For Less Pier 1 Imports p ·zAZZ Clothing Quality Beauty Suste·s Deals Sutter Place Tilly's The Robe Company Trader Joe· s Ma nagement Office 841-0036 ON 11A1N ST. JUST OFF BEACH BLVD llUl'fTl1'0TON BEACH . From f.ashioils to photos Bayside. Center has it all For the kids ... Stride Rite Children's shoes, located in the South Coast Plaza between Sears and Carousel Codrt, displays a colorful array of holiday and year-a.round shoe styles and accessories for c hildren. Stride Rite features high quality products for reasonable prices. For more information, contact the store at (714) 540-3430. GIFT OF THI YEAR Hot Spring Spa "Classic" America's Favorite Portable Spa Only $49.50 Down & $84 mo. OCA FREE Pr~hristmas Installation (only 11 available on thi1 offer) \ ''GOLD DI.AUil AWAllD .. • LAIGIST SPA DIAi.ii iN U.S.A. • SllYING 0¥117,000 CUITOMllS IN CAUi. • LAIQIJT DISllllUTION NITWOIK • WlllT INYINTOIY OI POllAIU SPAS • 1owu1nas °'ANY COMPAIAIU SPAS • lll8lllST QUAUTY.ftATIONAL MAND SPAS 4 -GIFT GUIDE ti/An~ ~rt to tt'9 DAILY PILOT/Thur8dlly, Deolrnbef 15, 1t11 TWJ J~ ~ Cf!~ . ~El -INVENTORY LIQUIDATION SALE 1·03 f .o 5-03 OFF most items!! • FREE GIFT WRAP• UPS AVAILABLE • GIFT CERTIFICATES • ENGRA YING I REPAIR -WE CARRY: WATERFORD• LLADRO • BACCARAT• LAUQUE • HUMMEL• MIKASA• SWAROVSKI • NACHTMANN I MUCH MOREi Crtlbll ..... ... At l!CIP' W11111's. ........ Sl60 ea. 111 & .. -.. -1- At Lacuna Crystal ....... $145 e~ . Laree selection of Waterford Stemware, ciflware and Christmas items avalable. lJ9D( pattern Sllad Stt priced •· (£1 .... ; pedn{a1 salt & P'PPff only ••• SlU5) Newest from Wa~ shown the Droeheda pattern from $29.50. SWMOISIJ Ctysbllun Larie .••........• $70 ............. .so. 5"'111 .•....•....• $25 F .. hie of SWMOYSlll , Ll.AnRO ...... Crystal RttMeef........ . SJ 1.95 CfJSUI f>Qrschf ..... .• -·· $39.95 S" TenNS Paper ~t $18.95 (Golltf lfso ••IUlill!) .. "-.... ...., -..al .... 11us' PUS Crystal Globe 7" Tall Rea Sl9 95 D U9.95 ~ cMlt hlldlrs SmJll ··-_$1295 WuRI -. . $19 95 larlf --·· S29 95 235 OCEAI AVEIUE, LICUllA BEACH Holiday Hour$: 10am-9pm -Daily. (714) 417-9191 ......... II GIFT GUIDE II/An AcMrtlelng ~to the DAILY PILOT!Thundlly, DecemMr 15. 1111 -5 seer ~r i~m9:>90 yRbaiu:1T\, "'JIO v JIAO ertr ..,J .,. m QQL.2 ~s,,9.,()... A .• _au~ I 1;, -a. Eastbluff Village is a one-stop shopping center There's a quiet corner full of holiday deli9hts at Eastbluff Village Center at Ea.sibluff and Vista del Sol. Talte a stroll through the shops and ser- vices, and you can accomplish nearly everything on your Christmas list without stand- 1n9 in long lines or fi9htin9 for a parking place. Holid~y menus are extra special with the wide selection of fresh produce, meats, dairy and bakery 9oods at Hu9hes market. Too tired to cook toni9ht? ~r. Sweet tooth Y oqurt/Piua Andiamo will deliver a r,iua to your door. And, aren t you lucky to live just minutes away from Show- ley-Wrightson, Oran9e Coun- ty's award-winnin9 restaurant with a 9ourmet menu. Come for lunch or dinner. Showley- Wrighlson features a full takeout menu and expert caterin9. You'll shine in a holida)l wardrobe coordinated by A'Ma.ree's. Offerin9 fuhion with .. a personal touch, A'Maree's has this season's jeweled sweater . cre&.tion1, leather wear in bold colors and the deti911ers you love. r or the perfect accent, talte a look at Shu Shu's collection of cus- tom-desi9ned band ba9s and imported shoes. The· Dutch master jewelers at Van- derlaan' s can assist you in selectin9 fine gems and jew- elry items that your loved ones will cherish forevGf. Create your own' Christmas sweatshirt this year with the -help of Carole'• Calico Cor- ner. Applique and fabric paintin9 classes are offered every week. At Caro'le's you'll find the decorator fabrics you love and helpful advice. Plan- nin9 on sprucin9 up the house ne.t year? Carole'• new d~c­ orator Mrrice will come to your home for a free consul- tation to help you select cus- tom draperiet, upholstery and linen• that reflect your own oood tut•. Holiclay qift wraps, ribbons. carda, canc:flet, placemats and napkins area few tteps away at Eutbluff Pharmacy. It's an old-fuhioned dru9 ttore with a Mlection of ttuffed animals, --;====================:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=::===========:::::;;-1 small CJift•, pidure frames, fine cosmetica, imported perfumes and penoul produds. Or, you can CJi•• a CJift cerlif icate for a new holiclat_ hairstyle and m&Dicure &cm lattbluff Hair Deli911 for men and women • ILLS CENTER . $ -~ ~o~~ o"-~ 0... ol l#lwport • ti-* ol Amwa • J. P. ~ 0.0. • ICldtfult • ~Ung. O.D.8. • ll!Wapart Hl#I An1trw1 Hoeplftl/ • Nlilt(llorl Ha Dn1o9 • """"°" ,_ EJotW. #ewpolf HI# Shoe,.._.• ,...... • ~ !k:/wMn,. D.0.8. • _.,..,. Cllla•• • TMf Touch CUlliltne • 1Jw'1 ~ ... • Tradllll •Jr 1'1 • • ~ 1' • UrWrM1 ...... • ...... Cootaw ._ ___ II San Miguel Drive at Ford Rold, Nlwpcwt l11cll, CA Traftl pl.au for next year 1bould be made now, accord- inq to the traftl con.Wtants at Anoci&ted Traftl. They have an itinerary of dUcounted cruiw a•ailabJe iD 1989 . . Other eerTicee ill Eattbluff Vill&CJe Center include Beach SaYhHJ•; Cole9wortby & Co Real l1tate; Ea1tbl u f I Cleuen; Security Pacific Bank; and UDOC&l 76. Bring cable TV home this season Thia holiday season Copley /Coloay Cableviston want. to help 9et you in the holiday .prit. That'• why we're mAlrilMJ you thil special boliclay ofter. . To qet tllil special oiler, 1usl pick up the phone and order cable tet.orimioD and we'll g ive you free cable iutallation with your toy doaatic-. Plus, you cu al.lo qet Slaowtim• or The Disney Channel added to your 1ervice for $4.95 per month tbrotaah the end of r ebruary. Wull cable tel..Won, you can •joy npanded viewing from around the country, like 1port1 ud news pr09rams, entertainment, IDOY'i• chan- n.U and all eortl oi H eiting proqrama DGt a•ailable on replutelMWoa. But iememher, there's a c:M:h. We do uk that you doaate a tortlu...uon to Toys foe Tola. "Tlilt worthwhile pro-J!:' b1•1lll1 d.. ..dy cbil- ol _fOU coaunUllity. So Qiw a 9111 ucl qet a qift this 6olida i_ _ 1ea100 fr orn Copley /ColoDJ Cablevi1ion ~C!OliAMeea . Piclc •D ... Dlaone and call (714) 549-3900 t°f.!ac• your order lor tr.. iutall Uon. · . .,., • <. .... ~ 1 I .I CIC l SIPllll Rita f Q Sii• 640-8480 St1icle Rite• Scuff Tuff• Shoes And Sneaken Are Hard To Beat! OUr Scuff Tuff shoes and sneoken keep their good looks and bright colors. Crafted of scuff- resistant split leather, they're durable, flexible and surprisingly lightweight. And we build Stride Rite quality into every pairl Stride Hite® Tiie Best Rt •Tiie lost fun"' Costa Mesa Florist Offers personalized service To g1ve a , gift th at has "lasting impressions" visit Costa Mesa Florist, where personalized service miles any home, business or individ- ual special. Specializing in c ustom on- site work, Gregg and Susan Switzer, owners of the flower shop, have several years of experience. "Gregg was the former manager of Clark-ien-· nedy in Costa Mesa -he left more than a year ago and we started our own business," Susan Switzer said. "Our sh op is geared towards commercial business, but we also do home decorat- ing, as well.as weddinqs and theme parties," she said. Of- fering more of a trend-setting type of arrange ment, Costa Mesa Florist experts will go on-site to work with customers. "We offer c ustomer-oriented service with our business," she said . Featuring a selection of exotic and tropical flowers - t he floris t can make centerpieces and decorations for the holiday season. "We The Very Thing You're Looking For During The Holidays is at Bayside Center ... are currently makinc;i up cus- tom gourmet bciskets with food, flowers and candy -just about whatever the customer wants -for the holidays," Switzer said . Costa Mesa Florist is located at 117 Broadway (off NeWJ>Orl Boulevard). A delivery service is available, as well as wire service for delivery out-of- state and overseas. For more information, or to order ar- ra ngeme nts, call ( 71 4) 548-6071 . • By Patricia Gable Stracci 721-n 10 •Carole Russo 720-0410 •The Silver Rattle 720-3882 The Clinging Vine 760-0810 •Bayside Card N' Party 760-0111 Contessa Hair Fashions 760-0521 • Bayside Cleaners 760-0550 Bayside Pharmacy 760-0111 •California First Bank 760-1081 The Photo Lab 759-8057 •Gladstone's 4 Fish 760-0971 La Petite Boulangerie 760-6886 Pavilions Place 760-0975 l 1or11t•r 1•1 f\,11 •t<k' Omt• k ~1mt\>rt\' K1,i.I '''" r"rt l~.i.·n C.1ltt1•m1.1 8 -GIFT GUIDE 111-jP Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOt rlhursd ay, o.Cembe;"1~. 1(>S8 and the giving. Our extensive sdet.1ion Of exqu~ire colored gems and quality d iamonds <.-an be composed inro lhe ultirnare gift Magic needs time ... see us now! ......, ~ T~ ·Fr1 10-5 30 Sal 10-5 S.,n '2·5 Clothestime Five Points Plaza says small is better Biq isn't always better. A perfect example of that is. Clotbestime Five Points Plua, a nei9hborbood shoppin9 center fe4turin9 just 21 stores. But in thote 21 stores is an array of reasonably priced merbandise selected to satisfy the most discriminatin9 ilol- iday shopper. Oriqinally, the concept of a shoppinq center was a Je~ stores all within parking and easy walltin9 distance -away from traffic and crowded streets. k the centers qrew, some of them to immense size, the idea was lost until some of the buqe malls of today are crowded, ineonftllient--and leave even the most de- Staff Parties, Bu1IDn1 MeetlBll termined shopper befuddled. At Clotbestime Five Points Plaza, loeated on Beach Boulevard at Main Street, in Huntinqton Beach, a leisurely stroll throu9h the conveniently desiqned center will reveal a variety of shops offerin9 every- thin9 from clothing and shoes, exercise outfits, boob, video equipment, computer soft- ware, flowers, makeup and boxes for packin9 these items. There are even a couple of places to stop for a relui nq moment to enjoy burgers or yogurt. Clotbestime Fi9e Points Plaza'• deaiqn for one-stop shopping is not biq but it really is better. A ftrletJ of allopa aad •nlcee ~ ~ center lor th.la NUOD'• llollday Clotla.ttme P'l.e Polata Plaza an escellent aboPPlni· Nothin_.G._ Makes a More Enjoy~ble, Appreciated Gift Than a GIFT CERTIFICATE. Available at These Fine Establishments. A Gift Certificate is a last minule thought ... but ours will leave a lasting impression! 675-4904 SEAFOOD • STEAKS ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY Lucheoe 6 Dia .... Offke ParUa S.llday Chaap11M Brwh ud Dtaaer 3421 Via Lido, Newport Beach (714) 675-5777 Wddl Bl Evat8. etc. • • S.rring Late lti9ht Menu 'til 1:30 a..m. ENTERTAlf•ENT ........ OPEN7DAYS TLL2 All DINNER • LUNCHEON nNEWINES CoronedelMer mtE.COMtHwy. 640-7440 Continental Cuisine Since 196 7 0.. awaetl-wi1111Ul9 eukule1111t .Jct,#W ltNI /« llui•eM fMMc~JU 1111tf tfiitM~, I t«e/ltiDIU, 1111tl J#IWIU JNUUe.t. o uth Coast Plaza. Co~ta Mesa (714) 540-3 40 GIFT GUIDE 11/An Advertising Supp'9rnent to 1he DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 15 1988 -9 .. , Chiropractor expands, adds medical doctors . ' . J• was JUii a little r.JV~t a year "'J'' ft,.,, Dr Marr Kennedy '.1~ned h11 n f:W Kennedy <:h1rr.1pM' 11<: ~nter in Costa MP$., The 1e~r h.u been " 'J'h<l r.1n'1 frH the ~enter as 11 "' .l V/..1t• b-: i:xpttnd 1n9 1t 1 '.1ff 1'."1S ''"' reflect 1t1 increased V::t'llC.~ Th11 ':Xp<H.U'..1n htt• alv.1 been marked with a n•w name, Kennedy Ch1roprac-- t1c+Med1cal. as patients now have a one-11op medical ia- c d at y whi c h 1nclude1 -1;h1ro pract1c ~d1u1t ment1, medical ttftenfloo .inp phy11- cal therapy . We have a ttafl of two medical .dociors, two phy11cal therap1st1 and two ch1ropr&etor1," Kenn.dy aaad in9 toqether is a rel4tjvely new "One of the main rea.son1 for one, Kennedy sud. But by the add1hon 1.1 becaute I qot providjn9 th ... NrYIC" the tared of loolun9 an the phone center can foetU on all of the book to refer people to medical community' 1 need• inclucLn9 doctors Now they can come wellness, prevenhon and re- here !or whatever thesr prob-hah1htaUon Ke~y 14ld ti. lem• are " · hu hired the top speciah.t• 10 The concept of med1catdoo-theu fieldt, ancludanq Dr ton and chuopractou work-MA -Shah, M 0 and Shern -j Peteuon, reqister.d phy•icaJ therap11i Shah, who ll a famuy pr~oner 1peciAli%ioq -~~ LO female probt.m1 &Dd ~. INTERNATI Indoor Swap Meet RKETPLACE 1• currently ace9'pt109 12ew pahent1 Kennedy, a nahve Costa Meun, hold• a bachelor'• in psychob1oloqy from the Unive111ty of Utah and followan9 qraduation 10 1986 from the Lot Anql" ColJeqe of Cruroprachc, prac- of Stanton 10401 BEACH BLVD. STANTON, CA IOllO HOURS FOR THE MONTH OF DECEMBER ,. ,..,,, 1l , ~ r . " ; M O '·' RAii')'" ~ticed in Buena Park Kennedy Charoprac- tic+Med1cal as now offenn9 comprehen1ive pby11c a l euminahOIU at DO COit With 1nsure.n.c. accepted ., f u 11 ~ymnt. The 1Md1cal f-!· cibty's tervices alto include str•H t"hn9, blood test•, un- nalytit, £1CG, lung testing, abdoJDinal ultra1ound1, ecbocarclioqram1 and mam- moqraphy. TIM phy1i.cal therapy room ii the JDOlt up-to-d.ete and a nrMty of proba.1111 ca11 be treated. Pataeot1 are o.v•r too 'IOUJlll to rec9iH chiropractac treatment, Kennedy 1aid He and bi9 ueoci.a ... are also certified in pedaetric care K•nnedy Chiropra c- tic+w.dacal l.l locat.d at 3011 Harbor 11\ld. &erOle horn r edco. Hourt ate 7 a. m to 7 p.m. MODday thro&19h frad.ty and 8 a m to 2 p .JD S.turd.tya For more 6.atorJution, call (714)-545-5558. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 12 _ .... 11mu111c11 1w U T·• 11 Ul.ll lP.M. 4 1,000 SQUARE FT MARKET PLACE ,JI ., " ,. 'J * ~"""' Muffins and service are marvelous at cafe 200 SPACES -JNOEP£NOENT OPE.AAlORS • Clottt.s • Sports • Furnhure • Skin Care • Jewelry • Auto Accessories • Electric Appllencee • Food • and Lot• Moret , ... ._If WTI WlllTIE•m .. IAIW Enjoy you(&elf buy1ng under a convenient atmosphere ADMISSION $1.00 1714) 627-1284 ·FREE PARKING Perfect for bre&kid, luch o a ..uck,. the. frindly et-- m0tpher• -and Mom& of frffhly bak.d muffiJl.I end brewioq coffee -nuke Muvelou1 M umna the place to beq1n or end RY day. Locat.d an the Albert.on'• CAnter in HuntlnQton S..Ch, the cal• MTY" a l.rqe M&.c- Uoo of •uJfiu, u w.ll u, coolues, cino•JDOD rollt, quiche, 10ur er... coft.. caket, bUeoYert and • .. ~ lion of iDt.rutioNJ coif ... , fr"h sqUMll9CI juio.t and natural IOd&t. Aloe9 with the ntftl1•• .. i.ctton of baked 900dt, .... frindly atmolpUre ia wlYI .w.. thla thop lped&I. .... try , .. u., bud to .. ,.... .... at .......... c.na, Rieb, meneqer taid. ··w • ...._ .,,. tJau ~ different Hr'-tW. of mufflu," Rieb Mid. AddbMJ that tlw mufflm are nw:t. with only the fi....t inqrec&att and cosat&ia DO preMrY•ti•"· "Our muf-ff nt are a lol beaJtb.ief McaUM tt...y are hi9h lo fiber aAd lower ba 1119ar and t.I thaA ID<* muffla1." W."elou Muffiu .... white flour .. w.11 ••, whole whMt, oet bru, wlaNt bran and corn to .. b mwfba1 more Dutrttioaal. "W •• •• bAcl • autrtaoul ... tylit ol ou1 a.t- fiu ud th.y are JDUCh M&Jth- ief" ... tald. ..... ~-cloetD't tab ' . . awar lrom the taile. All the •affine are bebd tr.h daily aad e&a tie ordered to 90 or may be heeled eod eaten oo the premi .... Ot!Mtr IJ)eCUIU.. of the shop laclude cookMe "made with almOlt all Rtter," 1uch aa chocoYte ucl aall, peanut butter, oatilMI raiMn and more; ciDNIDOD rolla -platn or with r&Wu; Oaiche .act. &m daily; and bait· ecwen -puff ,...,., f1l led witla IYa Ucl oMIH, turkey ......, .. , lluiap ud HQ-eeUle, ...._. ud veq- ee.riu. Witlt Ille Mliclayt .... ap. pr~ Man.&ou Muffin• 11·~tdtbMbt1and MAW., MM -"we oaly DMd two .,. llOtioe, tometiJMt .._to4J91orclenreedy," Ricke Mid. C.tertDf ud 1pect.l orct.11 for bolicl.ay and office putt.I are a•ailable with more than jut JDuffba1 or cook1" .. W • 90 beyoa.d wbat we have, and can make up llcllt and cold appetian, c-.. board.I and other lfuff," .... Mid. Mar•elo•• Mutfla1 it locelecl a 10171 Adami A•e-. (corwol •ooklaant)la Hunt· ~ IMch. TM hour1 are. MODdAy tluouth Saturct.y 1:30 •·•· to I p.JD ; end Sudey 8 •·•· to II p.m. for ..... ~ call (714) 112-2721. -· 8, Patricia GUle ,. . Hickory Farms has holiday gifts for everyone Hne you searched and Muched and still not found the perlect Chrutmu qifu? Try loolunq at the new HlCkory Farm1 Chnstma• location• 10 South Cout Plaza. Th11 old fnend · w11J 1urpn1e you with 10me of la new 9ourmet food. and dMiqu.r packa9ed 9ift1 "Hic kory f arm11• not JUst meat and chee1e1," Michael N11bet, owner, said. "We have our own wine label and there are 9ounnet items from all over the world, bom Bel91um chocolalff to W1scon11n cbeddu1 " A new Chrastmas gourmet item is smoked salmon, 91ftwrapped 10 a reuseable oa,k chest Imported teas, Jams, J•llaff, nut1 and a fern picnic hamper are now p&cka9ed in decorator col- 011 and like all Hic kory farms 9ift1maybe1happed anywhere JD the U S OM of the farst Hackory Fanns stores to create 91ft ba.sket1, the two H1ckory Farms locahons 10 South Cout Pla.z.a have many Christmas qift· b.ukets and several one-of-.a-kind cus- tom baskets. With pncet ranginq from SS to $200, the basket. make excellent bu1ines1, corpoute or 1nd1- v1dual q1ft1. The baskets too have a new look and now include added touchH hke Clui.ltmu chocolates, pet.it fours or Cbriltma1 mints alonq with the trad1honal meats and cheeses Of course Hickory farms still has its "famous sausages, cheese logs and cheese balls," N11bet w1d 'And ~4t are -.till a happy, fnendly place to shop where you can count on serv1oe, quality and quaran- tee " for those who have been 1earch1nq for Hickory Farms 1n South Coast Plaza duran9 the past 11s month1, a bnef explanahon 11 necess- ary The store, which bad operated for 21 years Ul the Plaza's Caron.el Court, was elated ta.t July "It was a aad day for owner, staff, customers; malJ employees and mall management The realities of the 10creas1q cost of mall space and our very large, 3,000-square-foot store 1ust cauqht up with us " Ntsbet, who beqan his association w1th the store in 1976, purc hasing the . f ranch1se from h11 uncle, Wilham Thompson, •n 1985, said "The 9ood news 11 that we are discussing with mall management plans for a new ltore des1qn am:! - merc handising concept which would fit into a much smaller area," N 1sbet added The two Hic kory farms Chnstmas locahons are on Sears' lower level near the c ustomer MrvtCe area, and on the thud level o f the rnatn mall 1ust outside Nordstom's 1n the new Chnstmu Lane Hlekory Farm prodacta ue a ,ooc1 cbotce for any bollday or •peclal e.eot. The two locahons will be open during mall hours unhl Jan l H1dr.ory Farms also maintains a warehouse nearby and throughout the year customers may order by calling (714) 540..6991 By Jann Re1chenbe1g Denny's Resta ur antS are part of-American-tradition Mom's Apple pae, basebalJ and Denny 1 Restaurants are all part of the Ameracan tra- dition and the Denny's Restaurant 1n Hunhnqton Beach upholds that tradition with its fraendly service and rea10nably priced, whole- some food With a slogan of "our per- sonal best for every quest," Gary Lauchl4Jl, manager, saad customers can expect pro- f ess1onal and efhc1eot 1erv1ce at the restaurant "We recently have had 10me cban9e11n the management staff, and have about 90 percent new em- ployees, so customera can expect better service," be aa1d for the holidays, Denny's has a large selection of pies "15 vanehes," that may be ordered 10 advance and pick- ed up at any hme Peop le should pre-order their pies as soon as possible for the ho l- 1day1," Lauchlan said The restaurant wi ll be closed this Christmas day, "the farst hme ever "Lauchlan said Denny's Restaurant 1s localed at 10136 Adams Ave al lhe corner of Brookhur"St 10 lhe Albertson's Center for more info rma tion "' lo 6rder pies, ca II ( 7 J 4) 963-888 J By Patrac1a Gable Lone Star State portions offered at Texas Loosey.' s Texas Loosey's Chili Parlor and Saloon, with franchise locations in Torrance, Long Beach and Fullerton, has brought its Lone Star State-big portions, style and fnnge- c happed waitresses to Hunt- ington Beac h. The Texas Looaey's at I 0 142 Adams Ave. will introduce beach city residents to its a ward-winning fate of Tex- Mex specialties, green and red chilis (t1ie TexcU kind -all meat, no beans), 11 special half-pound burgers, deep- fried catfish, salads and des- serts like Amaietto swirl. In additi9n, Geor9e Palum- bo, the restaurant's assistant, said "we'll soon be adding something new to the menu we've never had before - smoked grilled ribs, chicken and fish ." Texas Loosey's also provides f uU baI service and a complete children'• menu - with an added bonus. "Childten under 1 O," says Palumbo, "eat free -with one paying adult." Palumbo, "it'• reelly a very friendly atma.phere ... I 9ue1t that's why people who do come keep coming baclc, again and aqain." "I think everyone 1hould For more information, call comeoutand qive us a try here (714) 963-7829. -By Cheryl at Texas Lootey'a," adds Walker Mail Boxes Et9 . is convenient for holid'ay shipping It is that time of year again - hme to shop, wrap, box and ship At Mail Boxes Etc . in Hunting1on Beach, the hassle and problems of boxing and shipping are made easy for the holidays or any hme f eaturing a variety of ser- vices, the post off ice alterna- tive off ers the convenience of not waiting in long lines UPS. Western Union, Airborne, qual ~ty ... Lo f 1 nd t.hq. • ;rz, r y bu, t, quoht-y in ~1ft,5 fr,,r Jn.GU) I v I '51 t., d t, <ZO SIZ . OUK Lre Ca~r 1H:rn112d «dit.i.on brac:JtS of 1CO% ~ilk ant th«. f1~t, c.oll.cz.ctLOn of brd~ I 0 thz '\M'.)T" \d. toddy>. '.vi.th }IUlthczr lit~ ~ 2't )ct g>ld-or ~uvu f lndi~. OnothtlT i&z.e m~t bl a bell t from tr.,f a19'r, ~ from Vb< f in1t flt lc.o thcz.r from oround t.hz. world-. ~ v it>il,, OUT &tonz Emery, FAX, Telex, office supplies, P.O . box rentals, pac kaging and shippinq at~ only a few of the several services and produda offered at Matl Boxes Etc. Jn the same location for three years, Nick Kline, man- ager recommends people who have to 1ship gifts start plan- 0109 early since the holidays are very busy and shipping 6000 .snd. iat.12. t.htdiff4Z~ ~~~~~~I~ time is usually a few daya over the usual schedule. Mail Boxes Etc . ia a franchised busineas with more than 80 ollicea throu9hout the United States. The stores are desiqned to offer all aspects of a post office and more in a more convenient setting. At the Hunting1on Beach facility, c ustomers have 24-hour ac- cess to post bo:a:es. niwport bzoch. • !>79 nzwpcrt. ccz.ntAtr dT • ?l'f:/759-7919 posedtz.no · ~29 eouth take~ • 818/-'0'*·93'3 W~&twood villagz.· 1001 wizet,wood blvd• 213/208-3270 mampl4'c11./eonteone · 2800 north mein at,• 71't/5"i~·12~ 12 -GIFT OUtOE lllAn Advwt181ng S.~t to the DAILY Ptt:.OTIT~. December 15, 1918 .. The store is located at 10044 Sunday. for the holidays, the Adams Ave. in th~ Albertlon'a Monday tbrou9b Friday hours Center at Brookhurtt and will be eztended until 6 p.m., Ada.mJ. Hours are Monday Kline said. For more infor- throuqh Friday 8:30 a.m. to mation, caU (714) 968-3778. 5:30 p.m.; Saturday 9:30 a.m. B P r-L•-to 3 p.m.; and cla.ed on -Y atriciA ~ Flower Mill has gifts The flower Mill in Hunt- ing1on Beach not only 1pecial- izes in sinqle and bunchet of flowers, hut ca.rriet a luqe selection of one-of~ kind merchandiae such u jewelry, clolhinq and novelty qift items. A luqe selection of Chriltmaa product• are cuneotly on dia- play, u well u floral arranqe- ment1. Custom dHicpled flower ar- ruqemen .. are a•ail&ble for the holid&y1, parties, wed- di1191 ud uy special oc- casion. The 1hop b part of the Te1eflora, ITO ud AFS aer- vicet. To.k?.e Me ~OMe tJoll tRe ~o~da~ Country Fumlshlngs "'114 WlrW Al Spr:. 11 fl w....,-o.1e ..... ••= .._.171•• .,.,., ,,. Opet9 7.,.. · ·-.... CUltOln aft Wrmpplnc Avlllble .. .... ' I OP COPLEY-COLONY CHANNEL 61 IN COSTA MESA , . ·tf\ll~of P'l~· 11¢~~~ . ~ • Gift boxes and bows •Custom packaging •UPS ·,. I I.' L • Emery/Fed Express • Hassle_,..f ree shipping ~···o J •an11 Pick-Up • Furniture sized items S.IUn.a Boartore Cloth•T•"'"• S P0&cnU1 Pl&&a ~ OPElllC & Delivery 18565 8-ch Blwd IBMeh & M.in ) Hunun~on BMeh. CA 921648 (714) 848-4889 ....,....· ~ 1 •: '~ . " ~ Gto-e o Lttte.e CkistMos . • • • . TO A NEEDY CHILD WHO HAS SO MUCH LESS THAN YOU , - Bring new toys, games, clothing ~or other suitable items for children from tots to teens Give yourself a lift by knowing . that your gift will be appreciated by someone w,,!}o would otherwise receive n6 Christmas Gift. Please do not wrap your till. Dally Pilot Holiday Gift Collection Now thru Fri. Dec. 23, Mon-Fri 8am-5pm 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa 642-4321 GIFT GUIDE IVAn Achertlelng ~111ent to tt. DAILY PILOT/Thur9d9y, o.c.ma.r 15, 1911 -13 At the tips ... Larry'i. Nails. a complete nail care salon for men and wr.J men, guarantees sat1sfact10n W 1th more than six years of expenence, Larry spec1alize1 111 ac rylic, sculptured and silk wrap nculs, as well as pe<Lcures, ( . . I manic ures and au brush des19n. Larry's Na1!J is located at 3023 Suite B, Harbor Blvd 1n Costa Mesa For more information, or to schedule an appointment, call (714} 540-9693. We deliver the Great Taste rh1~ year c,end the great taste of Hon~y8aked I Ho,,.,, brand hams It c, sure to bring holiday cheers and •s 1~111. •It•; 6 ~ If •• ,. ',,,, ,. w rtrr-i up rhe winter This k1na o t quality e1<penence 0"'YI 0111y th ,,,, .,,., 1011,,, ano rA rf' r ~n be found only at your Honey6 aked 110, store Order Porly lo 1nc,ure prompt delivery ~ ., • Helf 0t Whote Honey8eked ... btand h9ms • Party Treye • NetionwkM ~'9 • • • Futty Coc*ed 88fbecue Ribs • Freeh Oven Aonted end Smoked Turileye • Gift Ceftlficet .. ,_ .... ," .... , ........ , . .,. ,, MAMIM ll fOltO l•u• '/111'9" '"n''' /41,01 R•tmono Way •7 t777 So llloo-llul\t 18ell lo.wet Pl"• '17804 11181111111•01 llQ1111 1t fl loiri Ao•d) '11b30 P!il)nfi' I fl4) 61~ /41,1 llllrinfl' I 114) 831 31177 COtM*A Dll .. _. NIHffMfGJO. IUat )/00 ( l OHI Hwy 9767'1 lfl009 8t.etll 81vd 97648 Piion, I 114) 613 9000 "4ul lo A1l.pht Mt1tff 11 Ci11held) Pllont 1m1848 8~1~ LA~ Syc.MllOle Pltu 2421 W WMllet Blvd 90tlll (I llQM w ot 8ur.11 l tvd l Pll1111t 1713) &9.4 '114 ..... 141!1 N f11,t111 (II Uttlll) 11166/ Phone ( 114) 997 9960 ,.,.,. 13111 Newpott A•t •13 (luitJfl 1'1.111) 92UO PMne '714\ 731 1616 • Normandy R.efinishers keeps keeps.akes clean With the holiday Nason upon us ... once a9ain it'• time to put poli1b to the family silver. . But ¥Phat if tbote pricele11 keep14ke1 need a little more th.an just polish? r or more than three 9ener- ations Norman.cty Metal He- fini1hen have been 1pecial- izin9 in polisbin9, repajrin9 and platinq of decorative metal from teapots to tin men. Whether 1t'1 a family heir- loom or a favorite bra11 candJe stick, "if it' 1 worth k"pin9 it'• wo rth re1torin9," ScoH Sa.rkman, owner aafd. The value of collectablet it "•t qrowi n9. "It rubeCJOOd NDM to keep them at their be9f u a matter of 9ood invMment." With skilled silver1mith1 on the premi.MI Normandy offers quality rntor atiOD of almOlf any decorative piece of silver, bra11, copper, tin or 9old at well as lamp and crystal re- pair. Normandy Metal Jte- fin11hen i• located at 1603 Superior Ave. in Co.ta Mesa. r or more information, call (714)675-3132. ••••• • • • /DANCE ST\DOS • ••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • GRAND OPENING ....• . • 650-: • 3048: :650 .-------------, : 304-s 15 PRIV ATE s251 : I LE SON. I • C,\/ L I I C4LL : : TODA y L-~~2-E~-~~~~-J TODA y: : Ci lFf ( ERTI FICATES V IL BL : : ( 11 vt the gilt \hat la~1-. a l1fe11mc' I\'\ pan) trrnc don'\ m1'>!> out on • • the fun. Learn or bru\h-up on all 1hc popular dance-. : • • : BALLROOM -SOCIAL · NIGHT CLUB SURVIVAL : : *WALTZ * FOX TROT * TANGO* : : *RUMBA *CHA HA *SWING * : • * AND MANY MANY MORE * • • • • • • • ut the world's #I dance instructors make you an • : expert dancer and poised mixer. Let the fun people • • seek. you out for a change! Come to the fabulous : : school that gets you up on your feet and into • • someone's arms! : • • : PHONE 650-3048 TODAY : • • e Of SloP by ll ·: 2488 Ncwpon Blvd. : • Nonh between Sanla lubela A Fair • : In the Sea Coast Village : • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• f4 -GIFT OUIOE Yf/An A~la'IWg ~f 'tb the O~t(.V'l't(t:rr/~, .. ~ .. fS. 1Nf herish is happy ending o a Christmas f air~ale Once upon a time there is a very 1pecial ud most unique store named Cberi1h Country f urnbhiDqa where you can giYe full rel4JD to your creativi- ty ~d iDduloe your .. u in the ambiuce of Chrt.tmu. Cheri1h is tucked away m the cornet of a small center 10 HuntiD91on S..Ch -known u the W amer-DaJe Square. Once in the center it would be difficult to mi• -the h9bt1 are li9bted, the air is perfumed with 9lorioua aromas and the mood t. u merry as Santa's woruhop. Upon entering the store's doort you'll di1eover a wide HIOrtment of Christmas orna- ment•, virtually everything to please the most d1scriminatin9 shopper. Ranging from roman- tic to whimsical, novelty to traditional and eleqallt to country, the store baa a variety of mercband1se. Gloria Orendorff, owner of I Chensh, bas put more than merchandise 10 her store She tiles pnde in choo11n9 and d11playing the uruque 1tem1 such as Baroque costume 1ew- elry, band.carved goose 99g1 and several other one-of-a- kind gift ideas Cherish Country Furnishings is located at 6074 Warner Ave. at Springdale in Huntington Beach For more information, c all (714) 8-43-1154 Gi.>t. t ~ C' 1 rt! 041.J The Perfect Christm as Gi ft for Family & Friends • Client & Co-workers CERTIFICATES la Deao•iaa&ioDI of S25 or more. \· CRUISES from H75 HAWAII from UM w .. kend w&away from fl 10 al ,.._,,,..,,., ,..,. .... • .,... ~· ..,. ,._..wt,. •h 'I Genie 1MI Waraer Ave .. Suite G 1a ... a.r..r c..&n ., a.acia Bl•'-~ Travel ....... T•J -··• ... lHrHt Hue...._ ..... • (114) M3-t827 Keeping warm at the Island is easy with at- ease' 1 lar9e selechoa of quahty sweaters At- ease/ Al's Garage bas a large •lechon of Great Neighborhood Holidays ft»f "1"' Hd.cily lflK•~ °"1 SUlll'I M li~ f~ Ctnct1 ''"" UfllC!U' ~lid 11»1101\M p o io P""f' ~ fut"'4111 r.-~ Ctnt,, h11 ~~'°"ti ~0tf1 ~rid lll'tl(ti ,~, f!lffl 'flNt hohdlr ~-.di ptt!GNI ltM(f (Oil~ ""'' ~ .,»iy 111t1<11Mdt11 frem our •~et ce 'flNt horilf dtWMt CitUI Nft~ Holiday\ -! , ; ,. . ' , ( " ' . I I , ......... .,,,_ .......... ~ ..... Introduce lburself To Great Neighborhood Shopping quality clothing for the family Located at fashion Island 1n Ne wport Beach, the store may be contacted at (714) 644-5070 n1s:-:r GUJOE Jl!An ~dvier.t, ... no._ S,~t to ~ QAll y PILOTJT1'ur:&d•v~ a--..-~ 15. 1.98e -1~ ~t.(~ " • .,, ... , .... P-...,-llfl .• -..rr .• "~,..,.... ·.f'!T ,,r;'1'1.,., r-T'"r~~-., ~' ~ Med center offers TLC A quick meal ... "Nobody delivers better," says Domino'-s Pizza located at 3015 Hubor Blvd. in Costa Mesa (in the Harbor-Baker Center). And they have set out to prove it by offerinq guaranteed delivery in 30 minutes, or customera receive $3 off the purchue of a pi.Da. To place your order, WI (714) 556-3030. Domino' 1 houn are 11 a.m. to midni9bt Sunday throuqb Thunday; ud 11 a.m .. to 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday. Bued on what its initial• imply -Tender Lorin9 Care -TLC Medical Group oU.n old-fashioned per80nal health care and the benefit• of mod- ern technoloqy. Founded by Dr. Francie Foo M.D., the first nc Medical Center was opened in Foun- tain Valley in 1983. The center offers a traditional family prac- tice with emerqency care, dia9nostic facilitie1 and physical therapy. Tbi1 year a second oHice wu opened in Huntington Beach -eq>and- i119 both centers' trained per- sonnel and care f4jCililin. One of the p~· re.uons the medical cen en are 80 popular i1 that ey believe that people do not haft in- juriel or Uln11111 c:IMicJnecl to suit "doctor'• boun " tbe fa- cilitiee areciempecl b CODYe- nieDCe to ~liMal TM officee are It with qu.ali- fied per8011Del from 8 a.m. to 8 p .m. (9 e.m. in rv) ~onday throu9h Friday; 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday; and lOa.m. to4 p.m. Sunday (Fountain Valley only). Equipped with z-ray, phy1i- cal therapy and electronic heart monitoring equipment, the officee are dniqned to handle eme19ency problems, outpatient 1ut9ery and ~qen­ eral medical problems. With leu overhMd of a larger hospital nc keeps medical costs within patient's means. The addr.... of the two locations are: 10188 Adami Ave. (near Brookhunt) in Huntitiqton BNch; 11900 Bronkbunf Sl (wr Talbert) in Fountain Valley. For more information or to .chedule u ~ppointment, call (714) 968-3266 HB or (714) 963-7'196 FV. -By Patricia Gable Little Professor strives for customer satisfaction Looking for the local book- store that offers friendly ser- vice and a willingness to find the book you've been seuch- ing years for? Well, stop in at Little Professor Book Center in Westminster. Penny a.nd Dick Campanaro, owners of the store, believe customer ser- vice is important. "We are successful because we olle~ ezcellent customer service -we will do thinqs that other stores will not do - to make our customers happy," Penny Campanaro said . The family bookstore offer• a larqe eelection of boob, ma9uinn and calendars for childrenandadulb. "We have more than 12,000 till•," ebe said. A children' 1 book eeotioll hu a 1mall table ad chain for kidl to rMd boob. Other benefitl for childND include a readinq hour every month; Birthday club; and an award certificate pIOCJiam for .cbonl1 -"We belle" children 1bould be encouraged to read," she Mid. .. Other proqram1 that set this bookstore apart from othe11 include: qift wrapping at no , f==:::::=:::::=:::::=:::::=::=::=::=::=::=::==::=::=::=::=::~~~:i"f-------------------.-------------------,charve; pbooe orde11; book mailin9 anywhere; the will- lnqn-to fiad ad order hard- ~tiad tttJ.; ad authorli911- in91 (Dean l:oonta ii 1ehed- uled for Jan. 1 S). I Decorative Metal Rcfinishcrs Quality since 1930 • SILVFRSMITH • DEc..'OllATIVE r'l.ATJNC • POUSHrNGI RESTOAATIOllO • MAIUNE A<"CESS<JflY RESTORATION • I.AMP REPAIR WIJUN(i • l.ACQUElt FINISHING •CRYSTAL REPAIR We will make your holidays shiite! BR A<:;c; •COPPER • GOLD • SILVER• TIN IN' 1 "upc1 i.•r Ave., Costa Mesa, CA 92627 (714) 675-3132 '>TOP In Ol•R SHOP le SHOWROOM FOR FRF.E ESTIMATE COUNTRY GUTS & COLLBCTIBUS Looking for thatttrtain .. something special" to brighten your holiday season ... stoe in & choose from our unique collectaon of gifts & d ecorations. • Christmas ... ornaments, wreaths, table decor, candles, & potpourri • Dolls, bears, books, & rubber stamps • Village Li&hts by John Hopkins • Country handcrafts, prints ... and much, much more! 650-5538 Open ~y thru Saturday 1720 Santa Ana Av~. Costa Mesa (Just off J 7th St. Across from Ml CssaJ A Q)9Cial Mnice, beuefical to bolida11 or bilthdaJI, ii Little Profeaor'1 9i11 li9tl. A penon cu come ill ad write what boob th., are interested in and a relative or friend may come in and. _Purch.. that book for a gift, Campanaro la.id. "We take an interest in our cUltomen -and want them to be comfortable comin9 to our store.'' Little Profeaor Book Center ii located at 16444 Beech Blvd. in the Pavilion Shoppln9 Center: 1 or more information, call (714) 848-2808. -By Patricia Gable I"'""-o~ ... " .. ' BAUoon R.lctc Bi.ft CarUf \cAtCe .... ~~- (714) 546-RIDE Santa makes an early delivery at Winstons Santa bu dropped off his qiJts early at Winston's Jew- elers in Co.ta M .... The shop has recently received· S l million in Inventory for the holidays, primarily in diamonch, a 1p<>kesperson said. In the same location for 20 years, the jewelry store offers quality merchandiM at reatonable prices. Winston's -a wholesale jewelry store -specializes in offerinq unusual pieces. The store's Lar9e Mlection of diamond enqaqement rings qives couples a variety of custom styles to choose from this holiday season. Prices ranqe from the ineJ[pensive to the more expensive jewelry - dependinq on the diamond and rinq desi<JD . perts and offeT penonalUed and professional service to And, what better way to c ustomers. A metal 9ate at the brin<J in this holiday season entry provides a feelin<J of than with a gift with meaning security for customers who are that lasts a lifetime. And to viewing the extensive selec- help make this possible, tion of diamond and estate Winston's will be offering jewelry, silver and other col- special sale prices on lectahle items throughout the merchandise for the holidays. store. The stall are diamond ex-. Custo~ piece~ ~re desig~ed · 10 a classic traditional design, ~.,....,-"'"!"'"~-----------:-----:--:----, with 18 karat gold used in most settings, as well as heart cut diamonds in some of the pieces. 1 Winston's offers jewelry ap- praisals and does purchase some estate jewelry -"de- pending on the quality." r - Loose stones are available, but appointments must be made in advance, as the stones are not .kept on the premises. Extellded holiday hours for the store are: Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Saturday 11:30 to 5 p .m.; the store is closed Sunday. The week before Christmas W 1nston' s will remam open seven days a weelc. Gift certificates and Christmas layaways are'.ilso available, as well as gift wrapped hoses. Winston's Jewelry is located at 1761 Newport Blvd in Costa Mesa. For more 1nformahon, call (114) 645-5595 --By Patricia Gable Give to Toys for Tots and Enter ~ .. Jewelry elu.,pen cua upect to find blab Jewelry, u well u collector'• ltema at qaalltJd'9•oadaudcaatom-dee1&ned1old 'lrlutOn'• Jewelen lD Coeta lleea. ~ 'f~ 1a'Al T).el:£TCP,Mo0$W~ AND ~.\riN6-Sbl5. Si"t.E.19'° . ()lsz,. 200 piMNE.l<\NA-la: ftt..t Tt£J0J!:>-rt>~m;E~ , . ~MID NAt'E-5 MID .M]U:rAiN RacES ·~NM•RWJa<e.E -~st.C£v5V4L • FU.TWA~·1.t8le. li~·~.-WA~..: • ~RsNWA~ • ~iCS • V~-:£.~ ·ti~~~ • c.t FT5 • ~"'°"''" rrTZ .net P"'LOVD iM II tr ... •s."'90 'I , -. JohmOn 8'othef$ l'Olt I \It I It 10' ~'\."\: . ..., ~15(00 ~ lfl.01 S YMEIS T NANCY CALHOUN -l'fALl/C.IWI • llAJn'S'l'OHEC \i1~11~.\l\..l1 n11«0 HEATH l>i\"l\t... . .. 11>. II·-r 1.t .i.t.n ( h ,., t ••"IMI'' ~l)t~ I \ r Drop olT aw~ and t.tl..t• a f'ham-.• '"ur l..11l n111141 "ma tn•a-.un• ( fw-.t or to~" "orth lhHU'itrl<b or fiol(,1" I.Ht-. ttf nrn1Wr·Ufl jlrl/.t..,le1111 Watch USA K1dsClubfordt'lct1I<> Glvt'a llttle You mtitht ~<'l <11011 GET INTO THE.HOLIDAY ~PIRIT. Whether you have cable or nOl. l~eno's us~· no better lime 10 plac<' an order Fo r •-•~ ..... a limited time curttnl subsc:-nbt'rs C'an ~t frtt Installation of Showtlmt' or •W• The ,Dlsn<'y Channel and pa} only $4.95 a month through lhC"endoff'ebruary And new subscribers can ~et free cabl<' In tallallon plu~ the spttlal Showllme or 01 n<'y offt>r · Ptck up tht> phone and call today. ThC"n It baC'k and N"ally C"OJOY the holidays. Have a happy and healthy holldav from · Copley/Colony Cablevtslon of Cos1a Mesa and Toys For TOI!> CALL: 549-3500 NOW FOR FREE INSTALLATION. ~ ~ Copley/Colony Cablevision ~ of Costa Mesa 200 Pliullr1no ~ C°"8 Mesa. CA 92626 GtFT O\JIOE IVAn AdYertl*'ng Supptemenf to the CAIL Y PllOT /Thursday. December t5, 1988 -17 G0nie Travel: small envelope could off er years of memories How would you like to qive a gift so big that it couldn't fit u nder the Christmas tree? Genie Travel has just such a gift -a vacation -and luckily they have gift certificates which can be eas- ily giftwrapped. The qift certificates may be purchased for a dollar value or a trip value a ccording to Genie Ladd, CTC, c<>-0wner of the 12 year-old Huntington Beach travel agency. They are popu- lar with corporations as em- ployee Christmas bonuses. "From a safari in Africa to Club Med and sltiinq trips, we can plan a lot of fun vacations for our clients," Ladd said. The "fun vacations" can be individualiled for each client and ran9e from a weekend to several weeks. Genie Travel plans local trips, too. "A very unique thing to do is- to go hot air ballooninq," Ladd said. "We can book travel, accommodations and a balloo~ fl~9ht at the balloon races m Albuquerque or we could plan a day trip to Julian (the restored ~d mine town northeut of Dieqo) fol- lowed by hot air balloonino in Escondido.'' Group tours are also popu- lar and Genie Travel ia now schedulin9 snow skiino groups while accommodations are still available on several cruises next year. "We offer some oJ the hiqhest diacounts on cruises," Ladd aaid. Add- in9 that "Club Med ia Aho an excellent value for your money, u all 'J)Orta and lessons are included in one price." Genie Travel is a full-ser- vice travel a9ency which em- ployees 11 travel oonsullanta, with experience from 6 to 39 years. Several of the travel conaultant. offer speciali.Md servioea as varied u ethnic qroup tours to corporate travel. Co-owner Barbara Ladd, C .T.C. {certified travel con- sultant) apecia.lis.. in cnme qToupa while dauqhter, Genie's, speciality ia akiinq and divinq qroupa .. Genie Travel ia located in the Clwtre Center-at 7862 Warner, Suite Gin Huntinqton Beach. For more information, c&n 800-843-0988. -By Jann Reichen.berq NB's Le Midi restaurant offers it all with gOod food, service and decor There are restaurants that have a lovely decor, others offer i.m pecca.ble service and a chosen few even have outstanding food. Le Midi, the little hidden treasure of New- port Beach is that rare one which combines all these qualities. And, because it's operated by the owners it ia also known for a warm and caring hospi- tality rarely found thMe days. In the front, owner and hostess Marica Hefti takes pride in the service and attention to detail, while in the hack chef Walter Ruttimann is kitchen according to the hiqh- est of first clus European standards. • There isn't an item on the menu that wasn't prepared from tcratch . As a matter of fact Le Midi i1 the only independent restaurant in Or- an9e County and beyond, accredited by the American Culinary Federation to train chef apprentices under the Orange Coast Colleqe pro- gram where chef Ruttimann also serves on the Culinary Arts/ Apprentice Advisory committee and u a t84cher. For chef Ruttimann cookinq ia an a.rt, one that never stand.a still and the menu of Le Midi reflect• hia total dedication. From duck breut ill black olive/porl wine sauce to seasonal specialti81 lilte auckl- inq piq marinated in wine and herbs and roasted to per- fection. Celebrate Chriatmu ne with a Christmu CJOOM ill rasberry vine9ar sauce, chestnut-truffle stuffin9 and homemade spable. . Le Midi ia located at 3421 Via Lido in Newporl Beach. For more information or r._r- vations, call (714) 675-4904. _Z_A_K_H_A_R __ A4' g~ fl~~l!Jlll INC. (h)uarantee "' , .. ,."'" Inf and .. belly ... c ...... tHI bJ Z•hlr We W,. lilc. 1w lie .......... ,.. "'wilt! .... ,.,... ... ltlM --..... Ult. .. ,.,..,. ,,...,,, .... )'&. _,_ ,. ...... ~ mum 966-1800 27•- Where HC>n99ty & Quality Comee Am -11111 AM a Discount• on M8jor C<*lak>n Repeira W OPEN Sat 8:30-1:00, Mon-Fn.'1:'~1°"' & H8'bor) .... 18 -GIFT GUIDE II/An Advwt191ng Supptement to the DAILY PILOT/Thur9day, December 15, 1918 Raul expands firm to the retail m&-ICet Raul'• De.iGll bu --paneled ita whOleeale oper- ation of fine ceramica, wall deem, centmplecel ud DOft1ty itema toa 1'91ail.,.. to CJiw tM public a chADce to purcU. th .. unique tt.ma. "Our mercM.ndi9e ia 11Jlique bec&ue of oar tech- . ue a luropeaD tee our product.," Ba , owner of Raul'a D.iCJD in Hunt- iDCJfcm Beach, Mid. Oriqinaton of the country feanoe paiDtin9 tecluaique, Baul'• DNiCJD carri81 ••-•al animal fi(J1iriw nch .. rablMta, ..... t.on., ,.... ud --alher9 .. coUectan. ··-... people con.ct di8-at en-of •nimals -.. only m&ke a limited number of iteml before .. chu9e the line -tw.•an. P.. limited editicma," GUcia Niel curra11,, t11e -.. .. f~ a 1arve Mlection of Chrillmu -.. Oraa- .......... c ...... ud :!t:a.~~ look to JOU? home thia •uon. S.C.ue Garcia'1 lllAllU-facturiJaCJ plat l8 located iD the .... bulJcliDcJ u tM retail .tore, price9 ..,. bpt re&IODable. Holiday hours are: Moa.da7 throo9h Satur- daJ 10 a.m. to S p.m.; ud noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday. Cuh ~d check are accep- table paymenta. Bul'1 °''1:.!' located at 9712 Mera ill Hunt- illqtcm BMcla. for more wormation, call (714) 894-6105. -87 Patricia Gable ..,. ...... lal•ll 111,111I11•1c1-9 Dr.M111laltl .... ...., Wlltl you •..• v.,,,,,.,, ~ .-• ,,,, ..... 1'-1 WEARE OPEN: IAT7-. .. (Doctor by~t) TUES-THUM 1.........,. ~WEl).fRI 1....e: ..... -1.c....-..c...•-...... . 11ua1ea. ... ~e(~lhDt!Jll'Oll ......... tnhled.,, fteld• to paell bona ·-· ......... frleDdly 8enic:e. Slae pnlwloDallJ. Experience sets Bekins stores apart Gift packacpn9 and 1hip- 1 C1~ ii offer.cl by S.kina ore1, a chain of pack- ACJincJ ud ahippino storet in OraACJe and Lo. Anqelet countiee. To ha•e oift ite1111 ship- ped, the customer just drops them off at any of the storet. The D....t store it located in Huntbafllon Beach in the Clothelti.me S Points Plaza. The storea pro'licle qiJt boaea and bows, then pack-•o-the iteJU and ships them '1ia IUCb e&rrier1 u WE HAVE EVERYTHING YOU NEEDI f OR YOUR CHRISTMAS PARTY UPS, Emery Worldwide and the freiqht dirision of the Bekins Co., of which it is ·a subsidiary. What difJerentiates the "Bekins Bozstore from other p&rcel shipping stores i1 its anociation with The Bekins Co., which has 97 years ol moving, storage and, ship- pinq experience; the array of caniere1 they uee; and the friendly, service-orien- ted stall. The stores al80 eell 1hippin9/movin9 bozea and packaqinq material. Pickup and delivery ser- vices are available. In addition to the Hunt- inqton Beach store, there are 10 other storft includ- ing one in Lonq Beach. In early 1989, new stores will be located in Costa Mesa, ·Fullerton, Buena Park, Mission Viejo and Laquna Hills. The Huntinqton Beach store i1 located at 18565 Beach Blvd. at Main St. for more information, call (714) 84S-488S. PAPER & PlASTIC PlATES • CUPS• NAPKlfCS • TABlE COVERS • iu.tVES • fOMS • SflOONS • TISSUE. DECOAATIONS STMAMERS • HATS • BALLOONS • PINATAS • PARTY FAVORS • GIFT WRAP • Rl880N • BOWS • BOXES DECORATIONS • CUSTOM INVITATIONS • PUNCH MIX • AOllEO TICl(El$ • WEOOMIG. SHOWlR & 81RM>AY SUflf'\JES CHRISTMAS. llllW YEAR & ~IAl OCCASK* SUPPllES WE llENT H£UUM TMICS AM> MUCH lllOM.1 IPE• 7 IAYI • Ml .. ·IAT.1:9-5:31- IU .. 12:9-l:IG- ............. ., •••..• 111 ...... .. Ytc1ery ll'fcl UIG C1111m1 ................ Ill• 1111111 .................. ••. ....._, .......... 111• Ml-M4 .... ........ ---•• • •.•••• (1141 , .. , .. &..-... I mt Point Cenll!f •....,-. ......... 1m1 lft.l111 ....., ...... Souttl ·-....... r-.,.... . .. ...... , _.""'of, ..... ) n ren1Ma IJM..._._. ..... , .-.. Ml ....,.._ I ,..,. Olll CllllM '~ 8111 c:.-111111 ... • ••• --··~ eo.-........ , .....,. _ ...................... --, ............. ~ .... .. _... 111119...... . . tr111.,_ I ._.f.alltf...., waaau•-. .... ....,........., ... 1111n11• _.. ... c.. * 11 ................. ,_ * Indoor swapmeet offers all-weather shopping International Market Place presents the indoor swapm'eet of Stanton. Armenian born, Ard Kevilian, chairman and chief ezecutive officer came to the United States with $130 - and now he has realized h is American dream with the openinq last month of the first indoor swapmeet in Oranqe County. The swapmeet will be open eeven days a week from noon to 8 p.m. for Christmas abop- pinq. After Christmas it will be open Friday noon to 8 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday from 10 -a.m . to 6 p .m. The one-stop shoppinq area bas more than 200 shops and thout&Dd.a of different prod- ucts to cbooee from, Kevilian said. Admiasion for the swapmeet is Sl on Saturdays and Sundays, Friday's are free, as i1 parking. With ite1111 such as jewelry, auto supplies, shoes, sunglasses, patio furniture, chiiia, water 90ftener1 and much more, shoppers will be able to find qifts for everyone on their list. Shoppers will fee1 the inter- national atmosphere as there are 33 different countries rep- resented. Each country has its own flag lo distinguish it from other areas. Around the clock security quards protect merc hants and customers. Ezpect to buy for less, each merchant is inde- r,endenl and very willing to 'wheel and deal," he said. The ideal .new shoppinq spot in Oran~ County, where barqain hunters younq and old can qet the most for their money, is located at 10.Wl Beach Blvd. al Cerritos in Stanton. Merc hants who are interested in rentin9 a unit may call (714) ~27-1234 for more information. · -By Natasha Cun.niliqham. nique Hohda~ Gifts and clothing for celebraung a trad1tiona l Chnstmas. I 069 Fashion Island • 72 1 -88~9 OIFT ou10E'n1An AdwrUelng ~to the DAILY PtLOTIThurld8Y, Oec:ember 15. 1911 -19 ~'!~I ~t ",.,,. ·•O .;b~ a.rfT T ""' Y t' ti " t ,, •~'\"'•'·..,··· o r'.-' .. I•·'\ • \ ••' I ~.~1' 1.:"» ~,,, , '· . Spa Saving Centers come to Orallge County It may be a hOt water jungle for spa dealers in heavily competitive metropolitan areas of California, but Don Luke seems to thrive on the challenqe. In just two years Luke has opened eiqht Spa Saving Center showrooms and has established the company as his supplier's largest U.S. dealer in terms of stores and sales. Luke has accomplished this feat by tackling two metro markets that are generally viewed a s the toughest any- where. His first fi ve stores opened near the company's base in the Sacramento area. Most recently he t09k his show on the road and went south to tlie competitive Orange Coun- ty marketplace. There, he's establishing three Spa Savinc;r Center showrooms in Irvine (set to OJ>8D in March), Anaheim Hills and on the famed Beach Boulevard, known as Spa Row. "When I visited Orange County, before decidin9 on any location, I went to Beach Boulevard," Luke said. "Of all the places in Orange County I could have selec1ed for a location, I felt one of them bad to be Beach Boulevard -and the store had to be an upper- class store that would be fonnally decorated with a THE ART OF FRENCH AND ENGLISH COUNTRY PERFECTED AT RAUL DESIGNS Exclusive Gifts for Your Holiday Season 5772 McFadden Ave., Hu.atiacton Beach, CA 92649 HOUIS: Monday thru Saturday 10.m-Spm (714) 894-6106 large eelection of 1J>U that were filled with water in beautiful Nttin91 -and of- fered to the pUblic by rHpeet- able aal•people." • "It' 1 upecale cuatomen that Spa Sarino Center atriv .. for and aquir .. ," Luke said. "it' 1 the ima9e we project -an image that the quality cu1- tQmer identifin with himeelf, which is style, featur81, con- struction, durability and price. The average Spa Saving Center showroom Ii» ia 2,500 tqUUe f.... with die 3, 700- iquare-f oot W estminstet showroom bein9 the lanJeat. All nine modela ill hia major line and at leut two modeI. from 18C01ldary lUa• are dis- played iD full operation. It' 1 this attention to cutomer needs and constant ltrw on p.rof ... ion&lilm that's r•pon- sible for Spa Savinq Center' 1 quick 1UCC»11 and pr ... nt 35 percent refertal NI~ fi'JUNI, Luke aid. "I'd rMilJ like to 11"1~ th• induatry," he addMI. "Sometimes I'm really emhu-. raaed to be in it. I really think we lhould addrea UP91&dinq our imaq98 10 we're on the same I...I u other hiqb-leftl applianCM, such u larGe ecreen telniaions. We lhoald be at tliat le•el. We should be pro1!!·ona11. We're not •ll- iDCJ S Yacuum oleanen - we're llinq IPU·" Dom Raciti store in Costa M~sa has flle p0rf ect eH:ristmas gift Christmat is a wonderlul time to give jewelry to that special someone. Jewelry qift- givers can be over-whelmed when it comes to aelectinq a jewelery store, however, and many think that chain or mall stores will offer the best ser- vice, selection and price. Not true, says Carolyn Raciti ol Dom Raciti Jewelers. "With my father-in-Jaw, the customer always comn first. We try to pleue our customets at any cost," Raciti said. Her father-in-law ii Dom Raciti, who has been a jeweler for 51 years, 30 of it at 1836 Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa. To please its customen the jewelry store not only streuea service but offers custom-de- aigned and custom-made jew- elry at wholesale pric81. Said one long-time cue- tomer, "Raciti'sarea tradition. They not only qive you e~cel­ lent Mrvice, but theil' lton• are quality and their price1 are qyeat. They want you to tell them if you can get a better price somewhere elee and if they can't match it, they'll find out·why." • Just how "great" Raciti'• wholesale price1 are wu evidenced by another cus- tomer who had recently mar- ried and while havinc;r her rings re-ai»d at Raciti'• 'was shocked to find a larqer, hiqher-quality diamond wu n~y be.If the .price her husband had paid for her engagement ring. Raciti says the family-oper- ated buaiD ... , which also in- cludes her husband, Robert, and will one day include their son, Rob, does a healthy bu.ai- nea in wholesale diamonds. "My fath•r-iD-1-w bu been in the jewelry buainea IO long, that he know1 where to get the best prices. We can make a cu.tom riD9 equal to or below the whol•ale jewelrJ mart," she Mid. "W• U99 peopw to compare u1 then let us be their la.at stop." " On cutom deaion•, we listen to our cu.atom•n and do what they want and we try to have it ready within 10 days to · two weeb," Raciti Mid. "U a atone need9 ..tor a riD9 a.ct, we allO try to do it ricJ)lt away. Raciti'• in-hou.. diamond Mtter and qold1mith i1 French-Canadian, Nel1on Hethrington. CutiD99 are alao done locall1. A poputi.r cu. tom qi~ idea is teDDis braceleb, which can be made in any liae, and are made with hiqh quality, 1mall diamonds, l'hey can allO be ready in approsim.ately one week. Dom Raciti Jeweler1' will be open ... ry Sunday ill Decem- bel' from noon to S p.m. They will allO be open by appoint- ment. Beqular houn are l 0 a .m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday throuqh Saturday. for more information, call (714) 650-3111. 20 -GIFT GUIDE II/An AdYwt~ ~ to the DAILY PILOT ITilurldlty Decembet' 15 1• ; ~ -aaer .c!t l&dma:>90 vco~wrt 'roJ q 'r JIAO enr or tnern&lqqua gnlalhevbA nA\11 301uri r-ttO • ...:.· ='• . Zakhar AutoBodYoffers to put you in driver's seat The busy ChrUtma1 and cuatomen· can call for a free New Year' 1 holidaya ue defi-couultation followinq an acci- nitely not the time of year to dent. Service al90 eztends to have a 'fender-bender'. Un-i.nlu.rance claim• with Zakhar fortunately collisiom u1ually Auto Body even handling strike at the me>M inopportune· thOM detaib. momment1, u Rick Zakbar, Tbecompa.nymottoi1 "Cua- co-owner of Zakhar Auto Body tomer 1ati.faction i1n't every- realile1. "We know it is in-thinq, it ii the only thinq at convenient not to have a car Zakhar Auto Body" and from throuqh the holiday•, so its modern, profenionally throuqhout the holiday aeaaon decorated waitinq room and we ue ofieri.nq a-fr• loan cu-offices to its atate-of-the=.art while your cu ii beinq re-rep&ir shop; the Zakhar family paired at Zakhar Auto Body," iJ strivi.nq to live up to that he Mid. motto. The colu.ion, body and Zakhar Auto Body was es- paint buinea ii al.a offerin9 tablished in 1964 in Chicaqo, free detailiDQ (wuh, poliah, where Zakhar began cleaning wu, interior and trunk 1ha.m-up at aqe nine and went on to poo, and enQine ateun clean-learn every aspect of the auto inq) with all cu repairs and rep&ir business. Today, he and To see for ever .... wife Pam; co-owner and brother, Jim and his wife, Cheryl; and brothel, Ron; ue uaiatecl by eiqht employ ... at their new Santa Ana location. r our months aqo the collision repair bulin ... moved to the 11,000-square-foot facility to better serve Santa Ana, Foun- tain Valley and Costa Mesa residents. The facility can •rvice up to three d?....!.£U!. and is one of the larqest atate- of-the-art body uops in south Oranqe County, he said. "W • have a atate-of-the-art frame and unibody ltrai9ht- enin9 machine that ltrai9hf- en1 and me.uures to preciae meuurement1,'' Zakhu said. "We allO han trained e~rts (Pleue ... ZAIDIAJt/22) Scope City, located at 3033 S. Bristol, offers a will last that special person a lifetime. For more wide variety of telncopes and binoculars. A information, contact the store at (714) qreat cpft for the holiday• and year-around that 957-6900. ~()W§IKMimlM :•• • ~- • •• • • • • • I • • • • • • • • WDRO • JAN HAGARA RON LEE • BENCINI • • • • ............................. n • •• (D.ITAmNt I 911Ml llRCIS CO..C--IY .. -... .... . ...,.... ..... ...... ., .................. ... .......... .......,. 1 f uoc.tt._.. 8 '19' ...._ "-c'!:!:':.'=. _, -~., .... ~ .......... '9tttt ........ leett ............. t Ell & ...... ... ......... ., ...... -,,.. ••••rtw"' ........ ~..,.,... .................. ,,...,,, ....... W WAINa A VI. (ot IHdtJ In tltt CHAl1D a11111 ._.... ,_ ,.. .... ~ 1 DAn-·e11 •'"a s.e 'II t,.. (71., ea.ma Deborall Goldmaa (left). and JlDa Key9 (ri&bt). are re9c1J for tM Clan.tmu naab. Christmas mailing rusn no problem for service Deborah G oldm an, Baker Center); California owner of California Mailinq Mailinq Service is open 9 Service, and her aasistanb t-C! .,n M -d a.m. v--'1!-~p.m. o.. ay are the answer to a throuqh Friday and 9 to 12 Christmas s h opper's a.m. Saturday. Additional prayers. Their all-in-one, services include oext day penonalized service in-air mail; UPS and Federal eludes wrapping, packing Express; ma.ilin9 supplies; and shipping presents. P.O . boxes with 24 how Christmas stamps are also access; mail forwardi nq; available and Goldman is and message, notary ctnd "urging people to mail FAX services: f or more early." Located at 3021-B information, call (71 4) Harbor Blvd. (Harbor-556-9370. . -This Christmas there are two great things coming to SourH CoAsT Pc~ZA I HICKORY FARMS Sears Inside Sears Lower Level Cust Svc. Area Christmas Lane Main Mall GIFT GUIDE II/All AdWrt•iog Supplement to the OAllY PtLOT/Thunlday, December 15. 1988 -21 .. • lHICl1'YCBllB ,__c...,.....,.,_ -(714) t1M10I GRAND OPENING! 848-4885 • Custom Packaglngand ShippingServlces • Domestic and International Shipping • UPS. Emery. Bekins Freight Division • Pickup and Delivery Services • Full line of boxes & packaging material s • Easy to assemble storage racks ZAJDIAR ••• .......... 1 ill color matchinCJ ud paint preparation 10 the car1 haft the 'jut mundactured look' after they come o.at of our ltat• of-the-art spray booth and hi9h temperatwe oven.'' "We belie" ill hoM9ty ud !:ality." Became of tlU. khar says hi1 comp&nJ "CJi"' a written CJUU&Dtee on any and all body work for the lifetime· of the car with no uceptiom other than normal wear, and UM." Zakhar Auto Body repain all automobile makft and models ud i1 open from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 pm. Monday throu9h Friday and 8:30 a.m. to 1 -:E.m. Satur~y. They are Toeat at 2700 Shannon ( cron streets are Seqerstrom and Harbor). For more infor- mation, call (714) 966-1800. -By Jann Reicbenber9 ~--...rt­~d • Cut Flowers • SUk Arrangments • Stuffed Animals We Wire All OYer The U.S. (714) 848-8296 A Variety of TWenty Stores to Serve You Alpharraphica Bee Bop Burgers Bekint Bo1 Store Clothettime Crown Book• Cumminfa Flowers Errhead Software I Eye Care U.S.A F athion Factory FuhionGal Fitweu Muqueracle Music Plua 1 Hour Photo P Art I Craphia Patrini Shoes Pa,leu Shoe Source Penpina Y OfU'I Put.lie lmare PunS...t ----. ---· - " Unique gifts set store a part Dilc::over Chrdtmu at the Island with Sportin9 Lile's unique •lection of qifta for special friends or family members. Located at Fashion Island in Newport Beach the ltore carrie1 needlepoint ltockin91 and ~illow1, dry flower wreaths, Chriltma1 necklace• and a variety of other merchan- dise. Althou9h primarily a clothinq 1tore, Terri Guichet, owner of Sporting Life, feel1 the variety of on.: of-a-kind qifts and ac- ce1eorie1 qive the ltore a different flair. "Gifts don't have to qo throu9h the telt of what people will like and size, eo they are easier to buy for eomeone," 1he Mid. Umqae lift lteme ue a•ailable for that ..,eclal penon at Sportln& Life. The ltore' 1 reuon&ble priC81 for clothinq ii also reflected on the qift1. A varied price ra.n9e meets everyone'• budqet when shoppinq for qifta such a1 pereonaliaed cottaqe plates to children'• painted wicker chain. Other 1peeialty items in- clude CluUbna1 necklaces, hand-made quilt1, picture framet and belt., oriqinal Tracy Taylor painting• and jewelry and ceram.icl -all make excellent gift items for the holidays. Winter and holiday fashion~ are currently on display at the store. Brands such as Silver Fern, Corbin, Gorden and Dennis Gold- smith are popular among shoppers, Guichet said. Novelty sweaters, quilted jackets, leather purses and hand-painted jewelry will add that extra touch · to holiday outfits this year_. Customers are invited to use the layaway program for the holidays, or a special Passport proqram gives shoppers a $50 gift certificate for every $500 purchase. Gift certificates are also available as qift ideas, she said. Holiday hours are Mon- day through Friday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and Sunday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sporting Life is located at 1069 Newport Center Dr. in Fashion Island. For more infor- m a..t-i.o n , c a 11 ( 7 1 4 ) 721-8829. -By Patricia Gable Above All: for the 'difficult' people It i1 that time of year aqain and alonq with the miltletoe and IUi~lums come1 the claslic ChrUtmu criai1: What to buy for thoee "difficult" people on your Chriltmu list? You know who they are; friends, family, cuatomer1 and -collea9U91 who alrMdy have everythinq, who have very particular tutet, or require aomethinq r..Uy different or special. Enter Above All Balloon Chuten, prcmduac1 hot air balloon fliqhts out of Perris Valley, Del Mar and "Pal~ Springs. The film m~lcets q1ft certificates for hot au balloon rides those gentle qiants that provide a fliqht ~xperie~~e that is as safe and silent as it is spectacul~. Prices ranqe from $75 per person, for a 30-minute sunrise fliqht which includes a champaqne brunch and fir~ fliqht certificate over Perna Valley to a spectacular aun•t fliqht 'over l>el Mar which includes a 45-minute to an hour length flic;rht, champaqne toalt, cloiaonne ba.Uon pin, fint flic;rbt certificate and din- ner (excludinq alcohol) for S 175 per pereon. The aircrafts, o-r Aerostats u they are known, u..d by Above All Balloon Charters blends a 200-year tradition with state-of-the-art tech- noloqy. For additional information or to order Above All Balloon Charters' qift certificate, call (714) s.6-RIDE. HOLIDAY SALE! 20o/() OFF ENTIRE STOCK (Exrt'ption : merchlndate 1ltt1dy on 11le and ~c11I orders.) Somethin1 Special feminine fashions · \I. e s~~hie In fffhtont tor I~ INHY ~ silfl •·I 8, liso pellles I 250 E. 17th Costa Mesa.• Hllcren Square• 645-5711 Windy ll•dcnn Cottaa'9 are a an1qae lift Idea from Blae llooa. Blue Moon Gifts features collectibles for Christmas The excitement and charm of Chriltmu past can still be found at Blue Moon Gifts in Huntinqton Beach. Every price range and taste is included in one of the finest qroupings of unusual and unique gifts. A void the crowds this season and shop at the store that offers courtesy gift wrapping and free parkinq in ftont of the store. One of the two more popular collectibles this season is the band-made American Cot- taqes hom Windy Meadows. The other is the wiards, draqons 'ana Other mystical inhabitants of Krystonia. Haqd 'painted in England, the por~elain figurines are certain to brighton anyones holiday. A book, "The Chroni- cles of Krystonia" is also available at a special price with the purchase of a charac- ter. Blue Moon Gifts is located at 7862-D Warner in the Charter Centre (off Beach Blvd.) in Huntinqton Beach. The store is open daily from noon until 7 p.m.; Friday and Saturday until 9 p.m. For more infor- mation, call (714) 842-2082. DIAMOND BACK ... THE RIGHT BIKE FOR CHRISTMAS DIAMOND BACK llKES COME IN AU SIZES FOR AU TERRAIN TO A COMl'LETE UNE OF YOUTH lllKESI ALL 88 MODELS ON SALEI 4 =As Low As s99 3•~ S~~E ~ 20· $149 ON ~ ~ = AsLowAs ~~SALE rx~ 2!;':!.,W:: $1 99 and ON \tf ':. ~ = As'low As up SALE USE YOUR -OR ~AND I LAYAWAY TODAY Allr'IAYE; lapaa Beac• Cyclery 240 TUia St.. Ugunl llldt JM·•· IUJ• lM·SU· n• ·-----·~------..·-'-- • 8ll'T GUIDE WM Al!Mrtillng a,pp1wnw. -QAU.V Bff-QT~ DIQe1 .. ·~· ~ ~13 • • KENNEDY new C!lutomee S pecial CHIRO + MEDICAL IN COSTA MESA'S HARBOR/BAKER CENTER IMMEDIATE RELIEF OF • • Headaches • Whiplash • Painful Joints • Low Back Pain • Back & Neck Pain • Muscle Spasms • Sciatica • Auto Injuries .. • Physical Therapy Available DA. MARK KENNEDY INSI 'RA,CE ACCEPTED • l'f~lltD JRUTWNTS • SP£CJAlll!D Jw.r«; • PR{ Y( lfHV( 1(41. IH CAI!( '() l 11 \R I.~ 10 mri'1 pJlirn1' ,.,,h '"nrl. 1niunt ' or autn acc1J1nt\ • Crnup ln,urdnrr • l n1<1n • \\nrk Cnm p • l'rr-.nnal lnjuun • \lrd1Cd rt • Special Treatment for Sports Injuries OFFICE OPEN MON -SAT EVENING APPOINTMENTS 24 Hour Emergency S.rvlc• 545-5556 t 405 N ----3011 @1 ~ F-EOC~Oj -a: 0 BAKER al -~ X ADAMS 3011 HARBOR BLVD., COST A MESA (ACROSS FROM FEDCO) KINNB>Y Ot..c>PIACTIC • MIDICAl ~IAaoN DOMINO'S PIZZA PllME CUT AIC DISCOUNT PllNTING DOMINO' .PIZZA DELIVER FREE . Let us help you. through the holidays 556-3030 3015 Harbor Blvd. Perfect Stocking Stutters! ~--------------r--------------1 New NOID Toys Qf f ! Receive a free set of NOIO $1.00 off any plua One coupon per piua Expires: 1-5-n ., Feet, ,,.. Oeh9fy"' 3015 Harbor B!Yd. C-'I: SM-3030 miniature dolls with the purchase of • 18'' pizza. One coupon per piua Expires: 12·2._.. , ... , ,,.. 0.1tvetrnt 3015 Harbor 81\td. Cati: ... 3030 PteMe meneion coupon L ...., Otderlng. ---~----------~--------------~ T.Q. AUTO FASHION - SHOl .. All THI SPOIT SHOP 24 -GIFT GUIDE II/An AdvertlSing Supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 15, 1988