HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-23 - Orange Coast Pilot•
• •
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1988 25 CENTS
Spirit of giv-ing envelops students
Officials cite reater social awareness
as reason or their increasedgenerosity
lected money for Project Love Tide.
And the advanced placement
chemistry class also collected money
and food for SOS .
.... seems we had more aroups of
students participating this year than
in previous years."
Donation goals met for agencies
By BOB VAN EYUN ..............
Local hi~ schools are havin1
record yean for student participation
in holida_J charity projects, and
school offacials say the ,enerosity
reflects a trend toward pat.er social
A mid-air exploeion is the
Hkely cau1e of Wednes-
day's Boeing 747 crash
that killed more than 278
people./ Al
Callfomla
A letter to Santa Claus
asking for a wheelchair
has brought Christmas
cheer to many people.I AS
President Reagan says
homel81S people sleep on
grates near the White
House of "their own
choice." IM
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consciousness amona students. ··1 think they've done more this
year," said Steve Pavich, assistant ~ncipel at Costa Mesa Hi&h School.
·The Associated Student "Body col-
lected canned food and delivered it to
SOS (Share Our Selves). Another
group from the student council col-
Pavich said students in the late
1980s seemed 10 be rcvcrsins the
trend of a decade aao. in which youn1
people came to be known as the "me
,eneration."
"I think kids are more awarer the9e
Pleue Me STUDENTS/ A2)
BJ JONATHAN VOLZKE °' .. ...., .........
• we're comparable to last year" said Jean Forbeih, wbo
runs the Share Our Selves shelter in Cosia Mell ... We're
doina fine."
While analysts and statistioans debate whether
Orange Coast residents pve as much to charity this
holiday season as in ~revious years. tfle front-line soldiers
say they haven't noticed any difference.
"At first we tbousht we would be hurting. but now
Forbath spoke from an audilorium CTowdecl wilh DCOOle and sift baskets as she and an army of voluateen
worked to provide a merry Christmas for more than
12,000 families.
(Pleue ... AGSllCT /A2)
Mil.llpolli:o · . -Review
duty neve.r boring asked on
Three Mesa officers
find something new.
challenging daily
ByJONATBANVOLZltE °' .. .., .........
·South Coast Plaza is a shoJ>pcr's
delisht, but there's one part of the
Costa Mesa mall most would rather
avoid.
Nestled next to the May Co. and
connected to the briJbt interior of
the plaza by a scnes of narrow
hallways is the Costa Mesa Police
Substation.
The substation is a small room.
smaller than any of store's its
officers protect. Five desks virtually
fill the beige office, which is the
o rations center for three police
A bicycle leans against one wall.
Officers use it to patrol the parking
lot in an effort to catch car theives
and burglars.
In another comer of the room is a
holdin1 cell. because some of the
thousands who flock to South Coast
Plaza don't always pay for what Lhey
take.
Under the supervision of Sat.
Richard Defrancisco, two officen
staff the substation everyday be-
tween 11 a.m. and 10 p.m.
"Our role is beins visible so
patrons and merchants know law
enforcement is available if they
need it," Defrancisco said.
A shaft at the substation is busy.
Defrancisco said. During the hol-
. idays, it's busier.
"We probably arrest I 2S people
between ThanksgivinJ and
Christmas:· the serseant said ... Any
..
........... ..,-..i._
Olllcen .JeJTJ a.nowa, (left) and AuoD mlllate C...._.. 81lap' ne at Soatla
Tlaomu watdl 09el' the crowd of Jut-Cout Plaa.
other time, we'd arrest 20 or 2S."
Thursday nisht was all Defran-
cisco promised. Officer Aaron
Thomas. and Detective Jerry
Holloway-back in uniform to fill
in for an injured officer-dealt with
an assault .• allqcd shoplifters. a
stolen car and a $9.000 theft. ··tt never gets boring to me:·
Thomas said. "Every day is dif-
fcrent, and I 1ct to meet new people
everyday.··
Thomas admits a larac part of his
job is public relations. patrolling the
crowded mall and making shoppers
feel good because he's there.
"Some people are afraid of police
officers. I'm trying to show that
police officers arc people, too,"
Thomas said. "I want to get across
to them tha1 we ·re there as a mend."
Thomas. who still walks with the
wrcstler·s jaunt ht picked up while
competing in college. seemed to set
his point across Thursday.
A woman visiting from Sweden
wanted to take a picture.of the police
officers. Look tou&h. she said. as
lhey broke into smiles.
(Pleue ... llALL/ A2)
Valueof r
Irvine Co.
,.,.. ...,,~wire .......
An attorney for heiress Joan Irvine
Smith asked Tbunday that ajudee set •
the value of The Irvine Co. at slishtly
less than $3 billion - a fiaure the
company's chairman believes is three
times the actual value.
Howard Friedman said that some
appraisals of the Newport Beacb-
based firm placie its value u hiP u
$3.6 billion but conceded that olhen
placed its value at less than SI billion.
A jud&e hearina the cue in Mich-
ipn, wftae... Tbe 1~ Co. WU
incorporated. will render a decision
in the hotly contested stock battle
sometime this sprina.
Smith. a desc:lendent of the pioneer
Irvine family, qr'CCd to sell her stock
in the com1J9Dy in 1983 but balked at
the $200,000-per-share ofter ad-
vanced by Don Bren, chairman of
The Irvine Co .
Smith bu asked that Brea pay her
about SSOO million for her stoek. lken
in1t111ly offered SI 10 million.
In a surprise move this week.
auomq'S repttSCntina Bren and The
Lrvinc Co. requested that the judee
actually decrease the offer to Smith to
S88 million.
The trial has now dnaed on for 17
months and, according to rcpons, has
cost an estimated SJO million in lepl
fees and other expenses.
Smith has not attended the
proceedings while Bren 8'(i 1everal of
his associates have attended much of
the trial.
Police on lookout for· drunks this weekend
By BOB VAN EYKEN
Of .................
Drunken drivers in Orange Coast
cities stand a &ood chance of befog
pulled over before they have a chance
of doin1 much damage this holiday
season.
In an effort to deter drunken
drivina and catch those who take to
the streets under the influence of
alcohol, police departments in area
cities will be setting up checkpoints at
various undisclosed locations on
holiday evenings.
"We're going to have some during
the holidays. but we're not saying
when " said Officer Brian Davidson.
a traffic investigator with the Hunt-
ington Beach Police Department.
Davidson said a four-hour check-
point on Dec. 16 f.roved highly
successful, screening .600 motonsts
and netting about a dozen suspected
drunken drivers.
"We ran it very well: the CHP was
very impressed at how professionally
it was conducted." he said. ··we had
Breathalyzers and blood test equip-
ment on the scene. so we could
basically do everything we needed to
do ri$)lt there."
Drivers who showed no signs of
being intoxicated were detained for
an average of only 20 seconds.
Davidson said. and most who were
stopped reacted favorably to the
pohcc effort.
'Td sa y 95 percent of the public
reacted very positively," he said.
"They knew It was for their own good
and m the interest of the community.
I was there the whole night and lhere
were only two who reacted in a way
that suwsted they resented being
stopped.
Sobnet) checkpoints have also
been used m Laguna Beach. and
pohce officials say they have been an
effcctvie deterrent.
"We feel thetre hiahly successful,
even 1f we don t arrest anyone." said
Pohcc Sgt. Linda Parter. "Word
travels very quickly in this town, so
on nights we've had them people have
gone around to all the bars sayina.
'he). there's a sobrietycbedtpoint out
there. don't dnve dnank."'
Parker said there would be at least
(Pleue ... 80BaJSTT I A2)
Red Cross has
·blood shortage
dUring.holidays
So far,
county
spared
from flu ., 'ne-'-da ... Prell
Red Cnm officials say the shortaee
of blood supplies in Orln,e and Los
Ansles counties will be critical unre. 3,000 people donate blood
within the nut three weeks.
The Armenian-American com-
munity in suburban Olmdale bcaan a blood drive 10 help alleviate the local ~ •• anaure of .antitudc to
Soutbern CalitOrnians rot auistina Armenia since the Dec. 7 earthquake.
.. Tbe AnMnian Relief Society
wanll IO ••tend a bia thanks to =:.::·" Red Cron B1rt.ra Wilks said.
Local oflic:ia1a donated blood at a reai_onal donor center IO Ill the drive, under _,, and Mayor Tom 8nldle)'
ud COU1J SupervltOI' Eel E*fman
iMlded lbefr MIPPOl1 widl ~II for
Beac .
healthy citizens 10 take time to give ·
blood.
The holiday season is a tra-
ditionally slow time for blood collec-
tion •t usually lasts only two wctks.
But dlis year it will be slow for three
weeks becau1e of two four-day work
weeks in addition to the week before
Christmas, said Dr. Carroll Spurtina.
executive director of Red Cross blood
services.
.. This holiday is the most difficult
we've ever keel." Spurtina said . .. We're bielinni111 the holiday
leMOft witll 1'ia O¥Ct half the blood
supplJ we bid on Mad at this same
time last year. We ..-1 at least 3.000
more voluateer blood donon in the
not few wecb or we will have the
most critical IMr1llt al blood that
...... --.000/ A2)
QWDa .... a ..... ..,....atr1aclaooat.
lajlllllefteltM,.111.,...·1 .......
lion probably back at sea
..
N,B family has roots in Locker hie
1, aoam BAa&D ............ _
Wednesday niaht'.s Pan Am di11s--
ter hit close \o home for an Orante
Coast father and son, even thoush the
crash occurred across lhe Atlantic
Ocean in the little vil118t of Lock-
erbie, Scotland. (See stones on Paae
A6.)
The town of about J ,SOQ is the
home of the anceston of Almon Loeb bey, a boatina columnist for the
Daily Pilot since 19S9, and his son,
Lopn, a fonner Newport Beach
marine safety lieutenant and now a
consultant in ocean rescue.
SUtion for immiaranta, 11id Lotan
Locltabey, who's spent the last few
years researchina the family tree.
He received several calls at his
Costa Mesa home by friends struck by
the similarity in nal1le$. he said.
The younaet Locltabey visaed
Lockerbie churches and pavcyards
in a aenealoaical search five yean qo.
And ahhoup he was unable to find
relatjvcs, he made several friends in
the little viflqe, located on~ train line
from London to Gla110w.
He said the air crash -the worst in
En&Jish history -'"reaJly hit me."
''lhcrt's nothing that's been like it.
I'll call over there when things quiet
down and try to find out more about
it."
Bull -in the linle town. The pcol)k were friendry and helpful and he ha.I
fears for their well-bei na follow ina the
crash that killed 2S8 peuenaers Ind II least 22 pcopk on the ground in
Lockcrbie.
The tiny town isoff lht beaten track
and the train to Glutow stops but
once a day, he 11id.
Just across the border from Ena-
l&nd, il's oiainly known for aaricul-
turc and sheep famaina. be said.
-
louthlm c .. or*"' oen _...,.to...,,, Of 1 white
~ .............. lnl ..... Ofllorml=ICled todrM ............. to , ........... 1111111 • llilley.
n.-. ..... ~Qw··-...... ·ioc:.r:···• io llnta a..· treclllCMlll lnMI., -.... ._,. ~
lnOW lCrOll mountain rMget end rain lloftg the ooelt end In the
lnllncl ~ lheNdonll w.u. .... llld ~. ~'"°""· Whlchcoulct...,.., on Into ChiltmM Dey. 11-C-:: to be 9W9ft etronger, torec.terl llld.
II ~ to hit the doe9tal -., 8aturdew afternoon. Tiie hlat'9 .. be In the mkMOt to low IOI. with
OV'lf'Ngbt IOwl In h rnld-30e to rnld-409. ~ II expected to 1..-on aw....._ motnlng ....... Sunday'• high t....,.,eeur.
ranging from 54 to 51.
From Point Conception to the Mexk:9n Border -Over inn.
wet .. a amall craft ~ SoutMtty wtnda 10 knot9 with 1 toot .... tonight and Satur morning. lnc:rMling to 15 to 20
knots with 3 toot .... by Saturday afternoon. SW9lf w.t 5 feet. In fact, the Lockabey name is taken
from the name of the little town where
the clan oriiinated. Someone
chan&ed the family name, perhaps by
accident at the Ellis Island receiving
Locltabey sa.id there's only one
auest house and one pub-The Black
Loun Locltabey said he traced bis
famify tree to two brothers in Lock-
erbie who came to America and
settled in Texas in the mid-I 800s.
One of the brothers, John, was killed
fiahtina in the Civil . War. he said.
Almon Lockabey, a residena of New-
port Beach, was reared in Texas. r, : Calif. Temps.
42 30
'4 IM SC 30 7t 13 .. 27
12 43 43 M ,. 12
•S JI .. ,.
Extended
STUDENTS' GENEROSITY INCREASING •••
Prom Al
days of the needs of others in their "We had fewer saudents on campus students arc trying to bridge ahe gap
own communities.," 1o1id p'avich. ah is year, and yea we collected a lot beawccn haves and have-noas in
··A I a f th· ha · · more food and money for lhe famil-Orange Coun1. 0 0 mas are Pl!Cnmg '" · " ·d 0e1· .. h w· h I Scvenah an e1"•hth 9nllders at the th ld ·th th b'l't f 1es, saa 1.,.1 1sennan. a sc oo .,. ..-e wor • wt e possi " Y 0 h d · · II k school held a aalent show and u·-"" ahc · nuclear disannament, and glasnost, secretary w o tra 1t1ona y wor s xu
and the chance of peace in the Middle with the students on the projCCt. proceeds to buy presents for patients
East. so that kids arc saaning 10 think Wiserman said 40 classes at New-at the Lona Beach Veterans Hospital, · t bo ha th d H rbo k-"" ~ fl ·1· accordina to Allan Waterman, dircc-senous Y a ut w I ey can o to port a r as. II.OU ior am1 acs to tor of sau<tcnt affairs aa the school. help make the wor'd better." adopt.
Students are better informed ahese "Then we went to SOS and asked 1 other students 11 the school col-l~~ toys and canned (QOd for two days about ahe problems of poverty for 40 families we could help," she abUsed children's homes:And several
and hunger than they were five or 10 said. "The food wenl out today. We classes adopted families for the
years ago. Pavich said. Part of that had two aruckloads of food and two holidays Waterman said.
greater awareness, he said, is due to vanloads of toys. The kids bought Like other school officials, Water-
morc covergc of social problems in Christmas trus.i gifts for the chiJdrcn, man said this year's eft'on seemed to
ahc news media. everything the 1amilics needed." involve more students and raise more
"And iulsotakesa few special kids Not all of the classes chose to results than in previous years.
to step up and take leadership roles in become directly involved With famil-The increasms social awareness
these kmds of projects," he said. ies, Wiserman said. But even those among saudcnts as pan of a national
"This year, we've got them." who didn't found other ways of trend, Waterman said.
Students aa Newport Harbor High helpina the needy, she said. ..In general, for all the faults of our
40 11
40 It St 43 ,.. ?I
7t !M II 10
•2 :n 31 15
UH IO a '4 H 13 ~ 1$ ,,
45 '3
Smog Report
Tl des
TOOAY ~ IOw 1:53 p.111. u s-io.. fft33 p.111.. 3..1
IATu.AY 2 ..... 111 2.1 ~ .. ,
4:30p.111. I.I 8-ld hlgfl 11:11p.111. a.a
81111 .... lodty .. 4:41 p.ni ......
S-dey ... 54 • "'· Md ........... p.ni •
..... ,... ... , .............. 1 ••
........... ,... ..... ii.II\.
School repeated a project ahey have "One class didn't want the d irect society, we arc becominl more aware
done in previous years, in which contaet with a family, bul they raised of the needs of others, he said. "I
classes adopt needy families and $2SO in cash, which we pve 10 SOS think particularly on this side of the
provideforallofthe•rholidaynccds. andtoldthemtousetohelpgetsome bay.asthedemographicsofthisarea ~F\:lCk expl0s1· Oil k1· 1· ls f1·ve;. An adviser to the project said the homeless person off the strtel." she have chanaed. there is an awareness
students did more ahis year than in said. that we have thinp, while others do
any previous year. At Corona del Mar High School, 001." ~~~~~~~~~~~-ftreballen~l~ho~es,cars
AGENCY GOALS FOR DONATIONS MET •••
From Al
"We give a complete Christmas dinner and aoys
specifically boughl for the children," Forbath said. Last
year, she saidJ..11,036 families received Christmas cheer
through the cnort.
Each child gea.s three gifts. _
Forbath said the effon is supported by more ahan
1,000 donors.
At the Salvation Army Christmas Cenaer in
Anaheim. Capt. Joseph Huttenlocker CC'hocd Forbath·s
comments.
"Things seemed to pick up the last couple of days and
our distribuaion is starting to look up ... H uttenlockcr said.
"Initially. ia was slow. but lhc last couple of days people
have responded."
Huttcnlocker said ahe Salvauon Army provides gifis.
clothina and food for about 1,000 families and hundreds
of individuals who appeared at the army's distribution
center aoday.
But Costa Mesa Senior Police Officer Dennis Jefcoat.
who organizes a gift and food giveaway by the city's
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - A
tanker truck exploded on an intcr-
police, fire and City Hall employees, said he did notice a state highway in downtown Memphis
drop in the donations. • early tOday, s~wing a 700.foot-wide
Last year. Jefcoat said, the effon garnered $1 2,000, fireball that killed at least five people
this yeat,JUSI $8,300 was collected. and cnJYlfed_gvtcalhomes~*a .
But at the same ri~ ..\Ulhor:itfn-idenrified ftwcr--aut onucs said.
arn11ics in the ciay who needed help, so the fund-raising The explosion threw the tanker 125
goal ~as met. . . ,. . yards onto a house, said Fire Depart-It was down, but 1t wa.sdown proportionately. said ment Deputy Director Frank Baker.
Jefcoat, a:member.o(ahe !?<>8rd of direcaors of ahe .~osta The fireball burned at least five ·
Mesa Pohce ~tat1on. We met ~II of our goals. houses on both sides of lntersaaac 240
. Jefcoat said he could n.01 exp!am t~e decreases. but and three or four other vehicles. said the suppon the effort did receive this year seemed to . . come from a wider base than in the past. The a~nker, which was believed to
involved in a traffic accident, said fire
Capt. Benny McDow.
"There was a guy on fire rolling on
the road and there was a another JUSl
lyin on th~around.whcre..somebody
must hive pul him. He was still
smokina." said Jed Tennison. who
runs a nearby business and wianessed
the accident.
At least five dc.aahs were con-
finned, but there probably will be
several more, McDow said. R~scuc
workers predicaed "numerous cas-
ualties." he said. The identities of the
victims were not known. "Instead of lhe $500 donations, we were Jelling a be carrying propane. apparently was
whole bunch of$2S and $50 donations," the officer said. --------------------------"There was much more comm unit,)' involvement."
All in all, Jefcoat said this year s Christmas giveaway
was the besa since the program beg.an ahree years ago.
"It felt more successfuJ this year because we got out to
the people who reaJly needed it most." he said. "II was
fantastic."
BLOOD SHORTAGE •••
From Al
this community has ever ex-Panicular!Y short at that lime was
pericnced.'' the supply ofGro~p 0 blood. Almost
MALL POLICE DUTY NEVER BORING •••
Spurling said ahc blood supply. half the ~P.ulatton has Group 0
never fully recovered from a shonage -blood and ~t 1s a~e most needed arid
at the end of summer. which is also a used. Spurhna said 0 blood supplies
slow time. arc now lower than at summer's end. Prom Al
security guard lcadina four boys to the
Rescue vehicles, private can and
helicopters were used to transpon the
injured to hospitals, but the number
o~.\!'~~red was noa yet knowl\, he said. -Eirc-Dcpartmen&-was cal·~,--•
about the explosion at 10:10 a.m. he
said.
.. We do not know the exact cause at
this time," Mc Dow said. "Our orig-
inal call came in as awo houses
exploded. We responded and found ...
ahe interstate ... fire."
Poltmu ieeJM maJl
PENSACOLA, Aa. (AP)-A letter
carrier accused of hoardina fi ve tons
of mostly junk mail at his home (aics
up to 10 years in prison . -
William E. Ryan of Milton, a IS-
year postal employee, pleaded auilty
Wednesday 10 two counts of obstruct-
ing mail delivery. Prosecutors drop-
ped eight other counts in exchanar.
The ct\arges aJso carry fines of up to
SS00.000.
Another woman. with a child in her
arms and three more in tow. gave
Thomas an exasperated look as she
struu.led past him.
assault. Nordstrom security also
turned over an alleged shoplifter. su!Kaation. They wert c.augha ahrow-
ing pennies into ahc plaza fountain
from the second floor. SOBRIETY CHECKPOINTS PLANNED •••
FnmAl • "Which one do you want:· she
asked. managing a smile. Thomas
took ahem all.
Thomas. meanwhile, was dis--
patched to the Broadway department
saore to pick up another alleged
shoplifter.
Thomas said he has a good rela-
tionship worki"B with lhc mall's
uniformed sccunty force and those
who prowl ahe major depertmena
stores undercover in search of shop-
lifters.
One of ahc coins struck a woman,
leading 10 a complain t. one checkpoint set up in Laguna checkpoints during the holidays. De-the police tactic after he was stopped
Beach during ahe holidays. partmcnt officials say ahey believe early New Year's Day. A state appeals Reaching mao his wallet. he re-
moved four paper badies and made
1hech1ldren "JuniorCnme Fighters."
After admonishing them to be good
to their mother. he sent his young
deputies on thi:ir way -first washing
them all a melT)' Chnstrnas.
"The stickers gi ve us a litale belier
rapport with the kids." Thomas said.
"The kids are re"3.lly receptive 10 it."
But ia wasn 't long before the kids
were forgotten. lost in the squawk of
the ponablc radios on the officers'
belts.
Security guards at Nordstrom dc-
panmcnt store reported an assault in
their parking garage. Leaving the
store and entering the prage,
Holloway approached the allcacd
victim white Thomas talked with the
man she said assaulted her.
The woman told Holloway she was
waiting for a parking stall. but
another motorist zipped ahead of her
and took the spot.
The woman pulled her Mercedes
away and found a prime spot -near
the store's entrance -but an argu-
ment erupted when she crossed paths
with ahe other motorist.
The argument ended when the
other motorisa. a JO.year-old Costa
Mesa doctor. allegedly spit on the
woman.
A petly act. but enou&h to allow the
woman to arrest him for assault and
baatery. a serious crime.
Holloway said officers must accept
a citizen's arrest, ahe same {>'"OCedurc
used when a store secunty auard
caaches a suspected shopli~r.
In fact, by ahe time Holloway
finished the paperwork on the al~
ORANGE .......
COAST --· rm.I
llMI Off'IC«
llO ..,_ '-51 , C.• M9M, CA
"They're like another set of eyes
out there for us," Defrancisco said.
Holloway's alleged shoplifter, a 21-
ycar-old woman, was accused of
droeping $28 worth of jewelry into
her Jacket pocket.
She admiued doing ia, telling
Holloway she thougha it would be
easy.
But she had S30 in her purse.
something Holloway said is not
unusual.
"I would say 90 percent of the
people arrested for shoplifting have
enough money with them or another
way 10 pay for what ahey·ve taken."
Holloway said.
"I truJy believe the m~oritr of
people don'l know why they did ti."
Afterrunningrecontschecltson the
allcsed shoplifters and the doctor1 ahc
ahree were released with citat1ons
they signed promisina to appear in
court.
As they left, a couple 1®0mpanied
by a maJI security J_uard entered.
Their car, a Nissan 200SX, bad been
11o1en from the park.inc 1o1. Thomas took the repon. and of.
ficus tbrouahout the county were
look.ins for the Ni•n before the
couok left t.be substation.
Hollowly, meanwhile. WM on his
way to a camera shoo. A day's
deposits, $9,000, had been stolen
frOm a filint cabinet in the store's
beck room. On the way to the store.. he paned a
At the camera shop. Holloway In Irvine, a sobricay checkpoint at spcciaJ enforcement petrols aimed at coun ruled that lhc Anaheim Police
questioned the saore manascrcloscly. University Avenue and Campus catching drunken drivers are more Deputmcna had acted unlawfully in
The manager reaumcd with him to Drive on Thursday resulted in six effective than checkpoints. stoppina the man, but earlier this
the substation, bringing any scrap of arrests. A police spokeswoman said Sobriety checkpoints arc also noa month the California Supreme Court
informationhehadonhisemployees. today ahat another check would used in Newport Beach or Fountain rcvenedtherulingandrcaffimaedthe
The manager refused to believe 1t. probably be sea up around New Valley. right of police dcpertments to set up
bul one of his employees probably Year's. 'Sobriety checkpoints came under the random checks. The U.S. Su-
toolc the cash. Costa Mesa police officials also say court scrutiny this year when an preme Court has refused to review the At 9 ~m.ifour hou~intohisshift. ~~-c_y~d_o~no_t~pl-•_n~t-o~~-t~u-p~a_n_y~A_n_a_h_c_im~m~•-n_fi_1l_ed~s-u_it_c_ha~llc_n_1_i_na~-s-ta_~~co_u_n_'_s_N_l_in_a_.~~~~~~
Holloway a ready had enough paper
wor'k 10 keep him busy for the rest of
ahe night Thomas was already on
overtime.
But the extra hours in the plaza,
overllowina with frantic, last-minute
Christmas shoppers, don't bother
him.
"This is where I work," Thomas
said. "And I love my job."
FLU •••
From Al
Many cases of flu 10 wnreported. Peck said. The health care llftlCY is menerally onty aler1ed when &litre ire
ftu outbreaks It inltitutiODI tudl •
convalescent bomes. where the dis.-case can be a serious health duat
lnflurna-1 bu ~n reponed. in tevenl other Mta SUICI Thubsiv-
illl. and its .,_,.nee huprompced
I wmnina tMt YGUDI children wi\h ftv-like symp1om1 should avoid apirin boc:aw of'an increned rilk of Reyc•s IYftdroftle. nere· it no flu epidemic reooncd In~ in California. state ·public
health officials uy.
SOmethlng
beautiful Is about
to happen ..•
.... ...,_ ... IMO, C:O.. ..._,CA tMM ~ -.. .. , ... ,. . ._.,,... a .,.._, ....... Ja.tcall 642-8086 ........... ,,... .. "l'OlldO ...................... ., ........... .._.? . .... ~__, ..... ......,
It wiU Hem 1pont1neou1 ...
Unpl1nn.d ... Impromptu.
But It will be tot1Dy by
dnign. By WFO. YH,
something ~1ut1ful is about
to h1~n in your home with
the 11tlltance of a t1lent.d
WFD Oe1igner ... cre1tion.
Wh1tever the •tyle, be1uttful
room1 at competitive pricft •
h1ppen ~~ry clay wtth the
h~lp of WFD. Let th• MXt
OM be youn. Call or 1top &y
~ .................. -. ...... ....., ., ...... ,., ...... ~. 1911f""°911 ...... .-............ ~-.......,..,....,. .. ............... ._ ..,-,1 ............. ................. .......
Oii .....
i1I ti I ti
tocl.y.
W D·AN
OrMge CoMt DAtl Y PILOT /Friday, Oecenllber 23, 1111
Dance workshop
startsatOCCJan. 2
Dispute shouldn't stall Lincolns le
A one-week in1ermed1ate dance ~orkshop will ~held al Orange Coas1 College during 1he firs& ~ed.
1n January.
Larry Clark. a choreographer and former
dancer w11h &he Viola Farber Dance Compan). "''"
conduc1 1he workshop which as scheduled Jan. 2-6.
10:30 a.m. 10 12:30 p.m.
Reaistration for individual classes is $8 and S35
for the en1ire week. Call \432-5506 for more
information. ·
Chapter supports senlors
Seniors With Amazing Talent 1s forming a new
chapter in Orange County.
Seniors with management skills in business.
who are disenchanted with retirement or have
difficulty finding executive placement in .t~t" work
force can obtain more 1nformat1on b> calling J.B.
Moms at 552-0803.
Women's group to meet
A support groupcalkd Women Who Lo'e Too
Much will meet twice -wcekl)' in Ne"pon Beach.
Meetings will bc: held from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Tucsda)s and Thursda}S at 4029 Westcrl} Place.
Funhcr an formauon may be obtained b> calling
838-6298.
Exchange students sought
The Sister Ci ty Association of Huntington
Beach 1s seeking students for its annual youth
exchange with Anjo. Japan.
Any st udent an the 8th through 11 grades who
either resides in or attends school in Huntington
Beach is eligible for the 2-weck reciprocal exchange.
Applications may be at City Hall or b} calling
Pat Dapkusat 536-5579. Deadline for applications is
Jan. 15.
OCC reglstration
Open registration for Orange C'oast College's
spring semester 1s Jan. 5-7 1n the college adminis-
tration office. Hours arc Jan. 5. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Jan.
6. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.: and Jan. 7. 9 a.m. to I p.m.
From staff u411 wtre reflerl•
In-inc-based Lincoln Savanas & Loan
Assoc1at1on. which has fouJht a thrtC-)ear
battle with federal reaulators over its
a11ress1ve investment strategies. on
Thursday disputed the findinas ofa special
examination that found the thnfi failed to
meet minimum capital requirements.
Lincoln's parent, Phocnua.-bastd Ameri-
can Con11nental Corp .. predicted its dif-
ferences with the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board \\-Ouldn't delay a planned sale
of the thrift. It 5'\ld an a news release the
finding that Lincoln failed to meet capital
requirements was a result of errors 1n
calculations and a m1sinterpretat1on of the
law.
The head of an investor group that
lgl'ttd this week 10 buy Lincoln Savmas
said he intends to do awa) with the non-
trad1t1onaJ investment policies that ha"e
put tht Irvine thnft at odds with the bank
board.
Investor Spencer Scotl. former chair-
man of fidelity Federal Savings&. Loan in
Glendale. said he intends to run Lincoln as
a trad1uonal thrift. concentrating on home
loans. Scott heads a group that agreed to
buy Lineoln in a stock-swap deal "alutd at
S288.8 milhon.
Under the d1rccuon of American Con-
tinental Chairman Charles Keattng. Lin-
coln has depaned from the 1rad111onal
activities of the thrift business to engage in
real estate development and 10 invest in.
junk bonds and other relauvel) risky
areas.
Those strategies brought frequent
clashn between Keating. a real estate
developtr. and sa' ings and loan cum-
1nns from 1he bank board's 11th D1w1ct
1n San Francisco ..\ special e>.am1na11on
was scheduled 10 end the disputes. said
Karl Ho) le. spokesman lor the bank board 1n Washington.
That special exam1na11on. conducted b~
officials from bank board districts across
the countr.. was delt .. cred 10 the com pan}
Dec. 20. Tfle bank board wouldn't disclose
the findings. but Amentan Continental
rerealed u found Lincoln failed to meet
man1mum capital requirements
"Lincoln behe,es that this 1 a funda-
mental mistake and has al read) pre~nted
arguments ... that the report contaans
\1molt errors in calcula11on wichoaa which
thcrt ~ould be: no capital inadequac)." tht
compan) \a1d.
Ho\ le ~1d tht> board stands b) the
finding!> ot the e>.aminers.
.:\mencan also rc,ealed that the eum-
aners directed Lt ncol n to cease f unher non-
trad1uonal thrift act1' 1t1t>s. 1ncludina in-
'es1men1s an equ1t} secunues.Junk bonds.
commod111es. foreign currency. some
commercial loans and un1mpro'ed real
estate
Lincoln e~ecutt\es plan to meet with
bank board ot'lic1als to discuss their
differences and don't c>.pect the dispute to
dela\ sale oft ht thri ft, e,\pected to close in
Januar. said American Continental
spokes\\oman Pa tricia Johnson.
l:he spring semester begins Jan. 9. and late
registration will be allo-wed through Jan. 20.
Registration fees arc SS per un11 10 a ma:<-imum of
$50 per semester. Financial aid 1s a\ailablc.
Detective Paaf Cappuccllll u Santa arrlvee at Marlon Panon School. At rlCbt. be holdSean Mattbe1", 8.
Registration informatio n 1s a'ailable b~ calli ng
432-5678.
Victorlan era art exhlblt Visit brings joy to students aild San ta
An exhibition of the fine and applied ans 0 Lope 15
produced during the Victorian era goes on displa) !~~~~e.?L VICH So ~llh. a loud round of .. ho. ho. ho's."
Jan. 18 at Golden West Collc$C. Prints. paintin_gs. Detective Paul Cappuccilli. decked an the
photographs. furniture. clothing and decorati ve Santa Claus landed on the pla)'1ng field red velvet suit and fu ll while beard and
objects will on display thr~ugh Feb. 3. The gallet; is at ~anon Parsons chool to personally flanked by his helpers. led the laugh mg
open Monday-through-Friday-I Olr.m:1ur 8 p.m. nm1---dctivera bagful of ~otorfullr wmppcd--grcrop-otst1.1<rentr.parcnts-and ta-ff an to
Tuesday and Wcdncsda> C\Cn1ngs 6-8 p.m. <;hnstmas presents. . . the school's auditorium for the gift
Additional ,information is a'·allablc by calling The Costa Mesa school 1s for hand1-exchange.
895-8783. Admission 1s free. capped students who range an age from 3 to "This is the one school t really enJO Y
22 }ears. doing. Ifs easily m} fa vorite of all of them Resolve to glve blood In '89
The Orange County Chapter of the American
Red Cross will ha'c bloodmobiles in thccommun11\
on Jan. 23. It "111 be at t. Andre"'s Prcsb\lerian
Church. 600 St. .\ndrc'"'s Road. Ne"pon ·Beach.
3-7:45 p.m.: call 631 -2880 for an appointment. ..\
bloodmobile \\tll also be at Mesa Verde l 'n11l·d
Methodist Church. 170 I \v . Bah·r 1.. Co ta ~ksa.
2:45-7:30 p.m .. call 64 1-198~ for an appointment.
Computer repair workshop
A 1-da' wo rkshop that ofTas hands-on \'\·
QCrience 1n repairing com_putcrs \\Ill be offered b~
Orange Coast College· Commu11~ Serice Office.
The workshop 1s scheduled . aturda). Jan.:? I . 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. tn Room 101 ofOCC's computer center.
Attendees will learn how to {'hangc and test
chips and mon1tors. locali1e problems. check for and
condense space a"ailab1ht) on hard disks. lind lost
or damaged clusters. create a visual picture of files.
and speed up and check drives.
Participants arc asked 10 bring seH·ral blani..
floppy disks. -
Additional informauon as available calling
432-5880.
Frlday, Dec. 23
No meetings scheduled
Monday, Dec. 26
No meeting scheduled
, PoucE Lo e
And the 46 students wh o e~c1tedl> that we do:· said Cappucc1lh, '"'ho tradt>s
greeted the.Jolly old fcllo" cared not that Santa shifts with Sgt. Bill Bechtel. .. You
he Ile" 1n lrom the Nonh Pole 1n a Costa reall} get into pla} 1ng Santa: 11 is a "'hole Mesa Police Depanment helicopter. lot of fun ...
"How's Mrs. Santa?" aske~ 15-year-old Once inside. Sean Matthews. 8. moved T1~ Jo!'es. .. to Santa's side to rece"e his present. Santa
Shes doing JUSl fine. responded put bis ample arm around the bo~. the\ Sa.~ta.. ~ .. posed for a picture and Scan walked back He s a b1gchubb) iU). I hkc him. said to his chair. Hed1d not attempt to open the
Jones. fest 1' e package. Instead he sat qu1ctl) 1n ··.\II righ t. n1a!" shouted Nadia his chair and hu~cd the large bo\ to his
Parties can't agree
in 'Fatal Vision' suit
From staff and wire reports
.\ttorncvs for .. Fatal V1s1o n" killer
Jcffrc) MacDonald and his mother-in-law
have failed to reach a settlement in her
$405.000 la"su11 against the man con·
'1ctcd of killing her daughter and l\\O
granddaughters.
The battle O'er $325.000 that Mac-
Donald. a fo rmer H unungton Harbour
resident. recel\ ed in a settlement ofh1 su11
agaanst ··Fatal V1s1on" author Joe McG1n-
niss and about S 0.000 he "as reponedl~
paid fo r talking with the wmer \I.Ill be
decided 1n a trial scheduled to began Jan .i
MacDonald's former mo1h er-1n-La".
Mildred Kassab. filed the su11 contending
the conv1ctt'd ki ller , .. ould profit from his
crimes 1f allo\,ed to pend the monc~.
attornc} Douglas Post said Thursda).
Kassab om:red 10 Clllc b) dona11ng thi:
mone) to charity 1n the vicums· names.
Post said.
Sf"eral meetings "1th Superior Coun
Judge R. Williams ~ to produce a
settlement. he said. o funher sc s1ons
\\Cre planned. ,..
MacDonald's la ycr. Gaa; Bost" 1ci...
declined comment on the failed settlement
meetings.
MacDonald. 45. was con' 1c1ed in 1979
of the 1970 sla} angs of his wife and
daughters and sentenced to three li fe
terms. The former .\rm} doctor contended
drug-crazed h1pp1es massacred his fam1l~
as he "atched hclplessl}.
He sued McGinmss after "Fatal V1s1on"
"as published. cla1m1ng the author
breached their contract by wnung a book
that challenged MacDonald's professed
annocenct'.
chest.
The Police Dcpanment·sponsorcc.l
an ta' 1S1ts ha' e been an annual c' ent tor
the last 12 'ears. Santa usuall' arrn es an a
helicopter · at all the public· elemental")
schook-and-A~)-$Chools-1n. La~
Mesa.
But the students at Manon Parsons
School rccehed more than ga1l~·\\rapped
gifts this ~ear. Detective Jem Hollo\l.a~.
president of the Costa Mesa Police
.\ssoc1a11on, handed Pnnc1 pal D1ci.. \\alt a
check for SJ.100. The check \\Ill go
to"ards purchase ofa 'an for the school
"We like to help out \I. hene' er "e can .. Hollowa~ said.
The association has a special rda-
t1onsh1p \\llh this school. Last ~ear ll
formal!} adopted the school in con_1unc-
t1on \\llh adopt-a-school program. \\h1Ch
unites a busmes aoo a school
"Thanls ro our PT A and the police
assoc1at1on. \\.C ha'e ordered a new Ford
n1ne--passengcr 'an:· he said. "And thanks
to one of our parents "e will have air
cond111on1ng tn 11:·
The old. ~A ~tage "an stilL
occupies a sole spot in the schoors park mg
lot \\au said the d1stncfs transponauon
depanment had done an admirable JOb in
keepi ng the··a1most clasm·· auto running.
"The 'an gets the classes to commumt~
act1' 111es for learn mg e penences like shopping and bo"l1 ng.·· he said. "It has
been a long dream of the school to ha' e-a
nev. dependablt" 'an ..
The fund to bu' the 'eh1clc was named
in honor of former pnnc1 pal Gerome
hannon \I.ho died last )Car of cancer.
hannon "as the adopted on of the
schoors namesake \1anon Parsons.
Local lotto winner
.has 'not claimed prize
By JOYCE BODLOVICH
Ol llM Oillly lllh4 Ii.fl
The person \\ho purcha ed a '' innm~ lotto 11d.ct in Fountain \ alle~ "onh
nearl} S~.7 mil lion had not claimed the carh ( hmtmas g,1ft a~ of Fnda~ morning.
·· ome-umes "tnncr "atl a da~ -though moc,1 come fol"\\ard the ne\t da~:·
said lotte~ repreSt·ntall\ e hem \1offcn
The Fountain \ alle' "'inner C<lm"C th ~h.'l·ll·c.l all"' numbers 1n tht> mtd\\cek
dra" 1ng He or \he" 111 phi the ncarh ' J m1lho11 U('kpot "tth a 11d.et holder from
Sa n Bernardino lntten 01lic1als said
People \\Ith "'inning t1ckt>ts hJ'\: ~:1~\ Ill claim the pnzt'. but there ha .. e
been numerou~ 1n tances \\ere peopk h.i'~ ta1•l·d 1l' claim "Inning tickets. The
late t \I. as 1.>n De I~ "hen a 11d .. c1 "onh · ' J m hon "'as l'-1rfc11cd. ~ednc~a~·s "inner \\1llca'-h rcH ''-~~Ja annu:ilpa~ments oH·r :?O ~ears.
le feder.ll anu>me ta\" 1thhold1ng
SeH·n pl:i~er "ho corrC'Ctl~ cho"'C ti'C' num~r-. rlu\ the Ninus number \\111
~ath gets~ •() 4~(.l.
The se'en \\toning tickets \\ere pul\:h;i''-d tr<. hula\ 1 ta. La CreSCt•nta. Los
..\ngeles. ) orba Linda. an Franc1~0 and \ lll'J ., '-vlJno ( ount'
Woman accused of killing
her 83-year-old mother
them off and either put them in a
makeup bag or nc'l to her bed before ~01ng out. The next morning. the'
were gone.
ol Burnie' • • • \ rec;1Jcnt 1n the :? 1000 hlcx·k ot
Rri:ton rcque tcd a -ciost dJ' and
night" p.11rol chccl because soml'l1n ..
hJd ~l1.llc Chn tmas hght • .md a -''
\\htll' C hr1 tma \\rcath front her
r<'\IJenu.~
hrol.1•n n11'~ lU t lap and bruised ribs
.1lll .. 'J kngini two men at
\\ I h\'ll '\ n f>l,lu~nllJ .\\CnUC. . . .
By Tiie Aaedate4 Pre11
A S4-year-old Tustin woman with a
history of mental illness has been
jailed for investiption ofbeaung her
83-year-okt mother to death with a
hammer.
Beny Hahn was arrested af\er her
husband returned home Wednesday
and found his mother-in-law, Helen
Gretz. bludae<>ned to death inside
their suburban Orange County house.
said Lt. Frank Semelsbcracr.
No motive was kn own for the
attack. he said.
Poaatala Valley
Someone used a 88 gun late Thu~y to sha11er the rear window
ofa 1984 recreation vehtdt' perked 1n
Che 9000 block of Puffin C'irclc.
O.mqe was ~11mated II S400. • • • The Fountain Valley Rca1onal
HO$ptlll lt 17100 Euchd St. rcttt "'~d
1nerat calls from someone who )I.ad.
.. then:'s bombs planted all o"er )Our
hospital."
.. Tttere were onl~ l"-O peo ple home
when the elderl) \\Oman \\as k1lkd.
and the onl} one" ho 1 1111 :ii" c isn't
talking ... Scmelsbergcr aid
Hahn had been undergoingp ~cho
logical treatment. incl uding drut!
therapy. for dcpre ~ion and
agoraphobia. or a strong tear of open
places, the lieutenant ..aid
.. She has been offic1a lh cla 1ticd
as agoraphobic. wh ich nw:i n<; <;h('
stays home most of th e 11me ·'" .1
virtual recluse," he said. 1
The victim, from La \lirada. wa~
visi1ing her daughter and on-in-la\\.
and the room ransal>.ccd. It ·~ un·
known af an~ propcn ) \\-3 tJl t:n • • • Golf cl ubs. cam and shoes 'alued
at $795 -were stolen from a 1'11:? \'\\
parked 1n the 1600 block of 1 alhl·rt
Avenue early Wednesda) mornin .
Newport Beacla
The manattr of the Foraotten
Woman store at ~I Nc•pon Center
Dme notlCN four Kqu1Md df\"''4.'"·
wonh S4.S20. m1u.ne from d1spll\
f'ICkS. • • • A woman w9'o Md bce9 wttWnl•·
lftl money ft9lll 8'fr ....... b I
Kenneth. for the holid<" s "hen she
died. Scmclsbc:rger said.·
The blood' hammer behe' l.'d to
ha'c been uScd to l 11l the ddcrl~
"'Oman "as found near her tiod~. he
said
''The suspect didn't nin. didn't
make an) a11empt to hide thl' murder
\\-Capon or the'"' 11m. but she "oo't
hcd an~ hght on "'h) 11 happt•ned ..
Scmel\tlergcr said.
H.ihn was booked for tn\l''ugation
ofmurdercarl) Th ur.-.da~ and hdc.l on
$250.000 "311
Europe tnp and h1d1ng 1t 1n her Par~
Ncwpon townhou.se dunng the last
t"o months found the currcnc) and
tra,elcr's ch«ks aont' th1~ "eek .\
Role\ ~atch and aold eamngs "ere al~ rn1s'1na. for a total loss o f
$10.600. • • • .\ C'orona dcl Mar man rcpont-J
that ht a<>t 1n an&1·~nm1c mcuaac.
nam1n1 htm tpe'("1ficall~ un h1
tek'ph<)nt ..._..."~ • • • .\ onhem C"ahfom1~ "oman
'1 1un1 htr percnt1 on Harbor l~nd
Ome ft")St thn.'<'dtamond nnp. worth
S 10 oon 't"· rt'l'\•r1,<tt 1lult * tfKll
.,
Irvine
.\ resident of Fa1rs1de Dm c "as
Scrooged by a thief-ho -stoic SI.'' l'ral
Chnstmas PttSCnlS from the man·
car bet"ttn 10 p.m. Wedncsda~ anc.l
6 a.m. Thursda). • • • Someone stoic a lfl\ 19 3 Dat\un
2 OZX from the 10 bfock of RooSt'·
'ch treet someume bc:t"rcn I 0 p m
Wednesday and 6 a .m. Thursda~ • • • unglasscs. cand) and a blanket
"'ere stolen from a 'chicle parked an
the :?O block of Fa1rs1de somellml·
Thursda) momanl. • • '\ 1985 To"oti •X4 \\as \tolcn
from a construc11on site 1n the 1 s.ro
block of Bamnca Park"a' bet\\l'en
noon and I p.m. Wedncsda~
Hantinitoa Beacla
.\" emDloyec at the Broad"a'
store. 777'1 Ed1naer "'"<'. said th.lt
someone stole her pu~ from a
counter Thunda) 1f\cmoon he 5>11d
someone asked her ford11ttt1on~ Jnd
that while her head "IS &urned
another pcrwn took her punt ~he
~t1matcd the loss 11 $30 • • • ThlC\CHUt ofh kx\ IOI pfumbin•
rompan~ at I 7J6.? (io1hard S1. and
stule run truc11on tool1 '''~ 11 S<>S • • • • .\ ~ralar ttolc 1 .l-b)·.l fooc
•1ndo• 'alUC'd 11 S~O that M prit'd
NII 1'1 t'\'4.1Jtnct 1n the I QOOC"I hkliCk
r
• • •
oml'<)ne dm ing a darl blul
Tc\\ota or Datsun pickup tole ~~'
"on h ol< bri tmas d«orat1o n lrom
J n 1dcnC\' 1n the I :?00 blocl of
Huntan21on ·1rcet • • • ..\ \\ oma n \aid she l~ft a l e\ "tth a
plumh1ng Jnd he:itang colT_li>;:in' t1,_1
r<'pJirh,·rh:ithroom 1n th~ OOO hlod
ofQuJ1H.1n-1c -\llcrbcinga".?} from
honw J "'-~k. she returned to h nd thJt
'<'ml.'one had tcllcn ht'r S lOO \ ( R
and 51)() <.tcrl.'O
Costa Mesa
ff\ NJ ~('e (\\ 0 men thrO\~ tn&3 \.hair
through the "1nd o" of a doughnut
hop. lea\ e lhc-m alone ~ .W.\car-old
'-e"pon Beach man ,uften'J a
\ -,.,l'.IMlld in.in and his 75-~ear
''kl ""'' \H'rl h•:id1ng their car for a
1r1p to P :ll\'f\ die The man ho1 ted a
,Utll3\ mill th\ truni.. of has car and
\\l'nt 1n,1d.:-ll' to ~ct .-inolh~r load.
"hen hl' rrturnl•d. the ti~t uttcasc "J' Cl nl' It hl.'ld 1.000 "onh of
cl .. ,1hing . . .
-\ "'-'man ''" -\rnold ..\\Cnuc rl J'(l (l•,t , ' ) h \l et caused $300
dJm, I;\ ''' thl' T-hip ol her Dat\Un
:' 1\ . . .
\\lnll'ttnl\.'' fl\'(1pk hit a ma1lbo\
"1th lhl.'H c.tr On l 3'\t 10th ~trcet. \11mc~11.h Mil' 3 mJ11t~o\ out of thC'
(l.rnunJ ai1.i hll a ,·ar "11 h 1t. • • • ..\ cmol '-' apcJ "1th S ... ~O "onh of 'll~r~o l~u1pmcnt lrom a 'u1uk1 ~mu 11. but he torgot h1 knife. It "as
found 1n the can'as top
Body found in surf ID'd
.\ bl\J, dl\(ll\Crcd tlo:a11n in th'-'
urt oil ttunt1nt1on \1a1c lk3'h
earhl·r tht" \\Cck h.1.\ bl-en kknt1ficd
as that ol a 13·\Clr·okl ltedlanJs
man. coroner\ otf101k said t<tda).
Wilham lla,1d PrathcT"-dbttft in
the •'atcr lor appro\tm1tt'I one
month anJ •'I\ bedl\ d«'Ompo.rd. hlm~!'J ic.knt1t~ation tfb1 c:or-
oM'r \ off~ial~ ,,.id
Tht bod~. ~ '" • je(Mt.
Court rule bolsters
free speech of aliens
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
tov~t may not deport alien1 for
~· anti-American beliefs, a
federal jUds ruled in a decision that bolsterCd me speech riahts of immi-
pants and auued key sections of a
Mee.rt.by era law.
to a l987 law that recopized fret
speech rights in ckportation proceed-
inp for all immiarants except mem-
bers of the Palestine Liberation
Orunization.
Officials say arrest breaks
international smuggling ring
U.S. Dittrict Judae Stephen V.
Wilton on Thursday struck down
four proviaions of the 1952 McCar-
ran-Walter Act which allowed the
aovemment to deport aliens who
advocated or were associated with
v.oups that espoused anti-American
ideolQlies includin1 communism.
He 111d the sections of the law
passed durina a time when Sen.
)otepb McCarthy, R-Wis., w.s whip-
pina up Cold War fean qainst
communism violated the First
Amendment protection of free
speech.
Wilton also threw out an exception
Wilson acknowledacd world con-cern over terrorist threats but uid his
decision would not interfere wi th
Congress' ability to enforce a panoply
of laws already in place to deal with
terrorists.
.. Our dccision ... today will not
significantly deplete the aovem-
ment's arsenal in combating ter-
rorism.·· he said.
"Under the coun's rulings today.
both resident alien plaintiffs and non-
immigrant alient plaintiffs who are
members of the PLO have First
Amendment rights throuah which to
attack the McCarran-Walter Act." the
jud&t said Thursday.
The government said the decision
would be appealed.
Sweet relief
-llJenoa. former ..U. America, ... aqaltted bJ •
Federal Cout ID New York,
w1t1a •• 1mr ear1 eapu90. and llOlteue Gabel, die for-
mer JaclC• llJelWOD wu ac-cuei if · biiblq, of all
claaq•.
· 3 polygamists Cadillac Santa lavishes gallty1nld11lng
money, cheer on Skid Row coAL.VILLE.utah(AP)-Threc
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A mys-
terious self-styled Santa· in a Cadillac
made another of his Skid Row
appearances. lavishing Christmas
cheer on the homeless and down-and-
outers in the form of crisp SlO bills.
As he has done every year for the
last seven years, a middle-aacd. ·gray-
haired man arrived unannounced
Thursday to the Midnight Mission in
a brand new Cadillac to hand out the
cash to everyone in siaht.
mQre than S30;ooo. The man's name
and occupation are not known, but
his new Cadillac always has dealer
plates.
"I figure he owns a dealership. So I
say to him, 'Wh y don't you go public
with this?'" said lmislund. "He just
says1 'I'll tell you what. lfl publicized
this n would help my company, but it
would keep me from havana the
pleasure of doing something I want to
do.'" "It's really verx touching. He gives
everyone a S 10 ball and a warm smile. The Midnight Mission. which ser-
and JS minutes later he's throu&h -ves 1,650 meals a day to homeless
with $6,000 left behind," said CTanc=-r · men and -in increasins numbers
lmisJund, spokesman for the Mid-lately -women and children. be·
ni&ht Mission. · i:omesa popular spot this time of year
Over the years, lmislund figures as people await the arrival of the
the C.adillac Santa has gi ven away Cadillac Santa.
polypmast clan members wept and
hugCd their families after a jury
convicted them on reduced homicide
c-barges in the shooting death of a law
officer killed durina a 13-day siege.
Oan patriarch Ad~am Swapp, 27 ..
and his brother-an-law, fohn
Timothy SinJer. 22, were convicted
of manslaughter Thursday in the
death of state Corrections Lt. Fred
House. Swapp's brother. Jonathan
Swapp, 21. was convicted ofnegligcnt
homicide.
House was killed during a Jan. 28
shootout that ended tilt clan's armed
standoff with police at their Marion
farm. The impasse had begun 13 days
earlier when Addam Swapp. who said
he was guided by a divi ne revelation.
bombed a nearby Mormon chapel.
The three had been charged with
sccond-dcgrcc m_urder.
MIAMI tAP)-A hiah·t«h smu1-alint rina 1nvolvin1 dozens of com-
pin1es and 10 countries was left in
diumy b)' the arrest of a man chal)ed wuh trying to ' sneak a
computer to the Soviet bloc, the U.S.
Customs Service said.
Eddy Gorandu1 Haak's arrest and
the seizure of the SI. I million VAX
computer last wttk culminated an
eiaht-month investigation. said
Patrick O'Brien, special aacnt in
charae of Customs in Miami.
The Olptal Equipment Corp. VAX
8800 mainframe comruter seized at
Miami lntemationa Airport is
caP1ble of upsradina and controllina
systems that launch and auide
ballistic missiles. operate radar or run
a mass transit system. ·
It is on a federal list that regulates
the exponaaion of technoloaallY
ad\<anced produclt and likely would
have beea uted by the Soviet defense
system, O'Brien aid.
.. Byteninaoneofthesecomputers.
they have aved thnntelvn 10 yean
and hundred• of millions of dollar1 in
research and development.'' said
Michael Sheehan, another Customs
spokesman.
"These countries are walkina from
the Stone As into the 21st century in
one step at ihc expense of the U nated
States. and they re usina this tech-
nology for interests contrary to Unit-
ed States interests."
O'Brien said the Soviet defense
system bepn convertina to VAX
compuJers carlia in the '80s.
"But they cannot build their own.
Reagan: Sleeping on
grales their choice
WASHINGTON (APl - President Reagan is hcadina off for
C!lristmas in his lush new s;alifomia home after uyina i11 a television
mterview that homeless people sleep on grates near the White House of .. their ow11 choice."
The president and first lady Nancy Reagan were flying West today
to ~in a two-week California vacation at the Bel Air home and at the
palallal estate of multimillionaire publisher Walter Annenberg in
Rancho Mirqe, near Palm Springs.
In an interview ~st Thursday niaht, veteran ABC.television
journalist David Brinkley noted that some laomeless sleep on grates or
on the pass in Lafayette Park, across Pennsylvania Avenue from the
White House.
Reagan replied, "Yes, but, David. doesn't that go bac -that
I here arc always going to be people -they make it their own choice for
staying out there."
"There arc shelters in vinually every city and shelters here and
those people still prefer out there on the grates or the lawn to going into
one of those shelters," the president said.
The only way thty ~n met .it i1 th.ro~
the United States. O'Brien.aid. If
we can deny 1hem from wuna ours,
they have to build the factoiies. It comes oul of their def en~ budeet and
really slows them down.
Customs officials •id ~he in·
vestiption includes companies. bro-
kers and 1hipper1 in Boston, Chicaao.
New York, Newark. N.J., Houlton.
Grand Rapids. Mich.;, and Bulpria,
Yuaoslavia. Romania. Hunaary.
Bclaium, Austria. Libya, Iran and
Iraq.
At least one arrest was expected in
Chicaao and Boston., and othen were
possible. Sheehan said. . "We need to determine wheiher
these companies that tran~rted 1;nd
modified the aooc:ts ~ involving
knowinal y," Sheehan said.
Mice now
used in
~reSearch
of AIDS
WASHINGTON (AP) -Re-
searchers have infected mice with the
AIDS virus for the first time, moving
the lowly rodent to the front lines of
the battle against the fatal disease.
Mice have Iona been a staple of
biomedical research, but until scien-
tists in California were able to
develop mice with human immune
systems -and then ,et the AIDS
virus to spread in them -the animals
had been largely useless in AIDS
rc:search.
----------------------------------------------------.........__;.__ _______ ___, The main btcakthrouah -setting
a human immune system to function
in mice -has had scientists excited
since the work was reported in
Science mapzine in September. ·
j • .
J
l
Proposition 99 passed. Raising taxes
on cigarettes 250%. Adding over
$600,000,000 in new taxes to what
California smokers are already paying.
What can you do about it? We pro-
pose you try DORAL. It's one of the .
Top 10 best-selling brands in America.
And the only one with a low price.
Get Top 10 taste and save money,
too. That's our proposition. Can you
afford to refuse?
Available in all your favorite styla.
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide .
.
ULTRA LIGHTS W's: 7 "'I· • ..,.. . 0 S mg. naei1t. U8ffTS, UGHTS M9fTHOl: fl mg ....... 0.7 me. ....... U6HTS or.,
LIGHTS MOOHOl Ws: 1'l mg V. 0.1 mg. .... All RMOR me: M ......... 0.1 "'I· ......
-· --FW RAIOR MmHOl, FW RAt40A MENTHOl Sa: I Mt :"W', U ........ Rll RM01t f11111-"W', lO t11f. ...., ....... -.m,....,
The current i5$ue oflhe mapzine,
out tooay,contiinnn-updated repon--
from the same Stanford University
researchers confirming their assump-
tion that they would be able to ,et the
AIDS virus -HIV -to "take" in
the ir special mice.
Mace with standard immune sys-
tems arc impervious to the AIDS
virus.
In another rcpon in Science, scien-
tists at the National Institutes of
Health provided additional infor-
mation on their previously reported
success in producing mitt that carry
the genetic code for the AIDS virus in
every cell of their bodies.
Four defense
contractors
investigated
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Pen-
tqon official who told Congress ei&ht
major defense contractors wett under
investiption for possible illcpl
tradina of classified documents was
mistalten, a Pentaaon spokesman
said.
The spokesman. Dan Howard, said
Thursday that only four of the
companies are beina investipted.
Howard uid John F. Donnelly,
director of the Defense lnvestiptive
Service, "made a mistake" when he
told the Joint Economic Committee
on Wednetdly that Litton Systems
Inc., McDonnell Ooualas Corp.
Nonhrop Corp.. and TRW Inc.
remain part of the Pentaaon's in-
vestiption of allqed traffickin"' of
ckpartment secrets amona defense contractors.
lnvestiptions of these companies
were cloeed in 1986, Howard said .
.Jaflle•pol011doea 't •weue,.T•ctln.t.
PALLAS (AP)-An apolQIY from a Jl,ldae who said be p~ a Killer a
lenient 1entence becaute the victims
were "queers" did liule to cue the
demands of py ~ts activists and
odam wbo want bim rcmo• &om tbebench .
.. He bu cast I reaonable doubt
into the minds of oeoDle Im* this
nation about O.OU ]Ultice," aid
William WaJboum, president of the
Dalla Gay Alliance.
. ..~~ ha railed the q~ion of his
f udicial Rtne11 and 1bih1y to be
1mpanial. This question cannot be
answered with a 11mple aooloD."
Saaae District Juctee Jae\ Hampton aoololized on Thutsday for a •poor choice" of wordt. ..
A bleak Christmas in Bethl hem
BETHLEHEM. Occupeed West
luk -Vendors in the souvenir ...U. around the Church of the ~tivity aft keepina their Christmas ilhtt and ornaments in peckina
>Oxes this year.
In honor of the Palestinian upris.. .na. city oftkial1 aft refusina to '~ holiday celebrations in the
>irthpllce of Christ. •
lsneli toldim ltOOd auard Tues-
!ay 11 lsneli civilians employed by
:M army built a platform for a choir
:onc:ert to entenain the hundreds of
lilarim1 who offtcial1 hope will come
:o worship in Bethlehem on :briatmu Eve.
But Alaboftkials in this West Bank ~ty have decreed that there will be no -.unicioal decorations this year and
10 trad'itional holiday reception for il~mats or Boy Scouts on parade.
It is a protest for those killed,
qjured and detained." said the
.own·1 Palestinian Christian mayor, Elias Freij ... The people are not an a
"Dood to celebrate or rejoice."
More than 330 Palestinians have died in clasbn with the Israeli army
lincc they launched their .. in-
tefadeb, ''or uprilina, ap.inst lsnel's
21-yar occupation of the West Bank
and Gaza Strip.
Thinecn Israelis also have died in
the 12 months of unrest.
The unctnaround leadenhip of the
uprisina haS declared today ··a
national da)'. of mournina.•• callina a
general strike to close shops and
restaurants on the normally busy
holiday eve.
For its pen, Israel's Tourism Min-
istry bas tried to maintain some
semblance of Christmases ~st.
"Nothina has chanacd an the in-
trinsic meanina of Christmas in
lkthlehem," it said in a statement.
"No secular municipal action will
either dampen the reliJious fervor of
pilgrims or mar their freedom of
worship in Bethlehem."
To this end, the min::C':lc is spon-
sorina Christmas Eve ormances
by choirs from Switzerland, Spain
and the Shiloh Baptist Church in
Washinaton, D.C.
Roman Catholics, Anglicans and ,
ode Christian denominations have
put out~ publicizina even.ts l'Ulilll froai lbe Catbolic: patrian:l's
procllllioa this aftemoOn tomMS-
nilht Mlllel in Bethlehem chapels. lust how many pillrims will travel
to Bethlehem for c.1iristmas rites is
uocel1ain. Touritm fOT the year ii
down 14 percent, and lvael admits
many potential visitors have been
frialnened away by the daily reports
of clashes.
Peace and joy were not pan of the
mood Tuesday on Manser Square
outside the Church of the Nativity,
which covers the arono where the
Bible says Christ was born. .
Iv.eh soldien lounaina near the
undecorated municipal tree were
pelted with stones by Palestinian
youths, who then ned up a narrow
street in the Arab market. Strttt
hawkers complained oft.cf business.
The holiday sadness extends deep
into the Palestinian community. in-
chadina amona its Christians.
There are an estimated JS,000
Christian Arabs in the occupied
territories and about 100,000 within
Israeli borders. according to Gellies S.
Kboury, direaor of the Al-Liqa
Center f'or Rehaious Scud~ and
chairman of the reha.aon prop'am at
Bethlehem Unaversaty.
Khoury, a Gmk Catholic, says
there will be no Christmas prnents
for his wife and four children. no
festive dinner at h11 home.
"The only present I would lake to
,;ve them is the story of the suffmna
of my people," Khoury said.
NicholuCanavati.owneroraaa..
Bethlehem 10uvenir store, said 6e
and other bulinessmen were called in
by Israeli oftkials this week for what
he dctcribed as "a &entlemanly talk ...
He said the officials asked if it
wouldn't be better for business if
stores aot out their decorations.
"I said yes," Canavati says. "But I
told them there arc more 1mponant ....
thinp than business." •
. Has store remains unadorned, and t1t••
he is unconvinced nashina liatus and t--"---.....-. ..
colored ornaments would be a lure.
"Why should anyone come to
Bethlehem when the town is full of
arms and soldiers rather than peace, ~-------....:
which ii the symbol after all of the
man born here," Canavui said. AD Arab wa1b pa9t a 90kUer la llanCer Sqaare.
Boy, in validmether find good will over-whelming
.... BJ SUE MANNING ...............
LOS ANGELES -A letter to
Santa Claus from a l 0-year-old boy
who wanted a wheelchair for his
mother has provided a Merry
Christmas for a lot of people besides
the disabled younpter and his mom.
"The Christmas spirit is in-
credible," Denise Reusche, a cleric at
the U.S. POSlll Service in Palm
Sprinas, said in a telephone inter·
VlCW.
The Postal Service in the desert
resort annually processes about 1,000
letters to Santa each year. Normally,
workers send a letter an return.
But when Reusche saw John F.
Wongoun's letter from Bannina this
year, she decided to do something
more.
the gifts on Monday.
Stories about John's letter were
distributed worldwide by The As-
sociated Press.
Rcuschc said in addition to the
newspaper stories, the postal workers
were featu.rcd on several television
and radio interviews. ·
"We had a call from New Zealand
for a radio interview. A Sunnyvale
man is sending a letter of encourage-
ment, a train set and a aift for the
mom because he had the same
backarouod. A lady in Connecticut
said a group of women was setting
to,ether to do some.thin~ for John
after Christmas was over.· she said.
She said there bad been no fund
established for John because .. this has
mushroomed so much. it's really
thrown me off." ·
She said Coslett was concerned that
any money she might receive would
be deducted from her d1sab1hty
checks. Reuschc urged people. to
reach out to those close 'lo home
during the holidays.
the reaction to her son's letter.
''I couldn't speak. All I could do
was sit there and cry. He's done so
many things. for me and for the kids
out here {in their apartment com-
plex). If he earns money here and
there, he'll go out and buy a toy for
one of the kids. He's never selfish."
she said. •
.. Nothing has changed. He's float-
ing on a cloud. He's happy the
wheelchair is coming (today) and I
can be out there and watch him play."
she said.
John and his mother have invited a
nci&hbor woman and her son over on
Chnstmas Da> to share the food the
postal ~orkers dcbvercd.
~y '11.111 celebrate around an
ar11fic1al tree that Coslett has had in
her apanment laving room for three
)tars. "John did a good job of
decorating it this year. We have some
ornaments and a lot oficicles to cover
it up good. Next year we will buy a few
more nems .
• ..
•
His letter read: "The only ~ft I
would like is an elecric wheelchair for
my mom. She can't walk and her
hands are too ~ak for the one welfai r
(sic) pve her 2 ycan qo. I would love
to see her outside without help and
watch m~y. Can you help me with
mywisb. --. --
"There arc people in our own back
yards. You don't have to go far. h
ocsn't-talte-much-,..SO many of-us-ar
blessed." she said.
.. I don't take it down. We leave it in
the comer so we have some greenery · n..the room;'-5he.-said. __ __:...· --~...;......,.,
Al'S..1 , ••••
Reuschc and her fellow workers
contacted Fortress Scientific Co .. a
wheelchair manufacturer, and at
donated a three-wheeled, motorized
wheelchair for John's mother. Vic-
toria Coslett. 39.
Coslett and John were injured in a
1981 traffic accident. She waa left
with ruptured spinal discs. John was
panially brain damaged and suffers
recurring seizures and memory
lapses. He also has juvenile anhritis.
Everyone knows about John's
Christmas wish. But what about bis
mom?
Victoria Coalett recet•ee a &ift certificate
for a powered wbeelcbali from Santa
Claue wlalle lier ecna. Jobn woaaoaa.
laolda otbel' ..... they recel...S.
Then the workers bouaht a bunch
of aif\s for John, food for Christmas
dinner and established a wheelchair
maintenance fund. They delivered
Coslctt.\n.,,J tcl~phone interview
from a neiJhbor's apartment
Wednesday, said she was shocked by
.. ,fl could ask Santa, I'd ask for a
trust fund for John·s cducauon so he
can go to college and get a car and
have a good stan on his future
because he is disabled. Thars what
I've been worried about ever since the
a uto arocknt." she said.
AP L.11 I 1• 111
One the 1ortlla• at the Loe Antela Zoo enJo19 the
Clart8tmU party thrown for prlmatee thl• wee"k.
Gorillas celebrate
early Christmas
LOSANGELES(AP)-A
daylon1 Christmas ~rty
spawnCd1 little1onlla warfare.
buttherewereplcntyofpopcom
balls. cranbemesand hibiscus
blossoms laced 1n the banana
treestoaoaround when the Los Aftleles Zoo held a holiday part}
to toast their a~. It was definitely an ad uh party.
tho\ch, said zoo spokeswoman
Loni 1.aMarca. "They were not
quick to share with theirchil-
dren1 .. she 111d of the adult
pil as.
Tlaezoostqed the party for its
12 pillas-who ranae in aac
from 18 months to 26 years and weiah in at anywhere from 40
pounds to 4SO pou~ds. .
Thepilla fam1hn, housed in
two exhibit• at the zoo. were also
tllowcred with aifts. includin1
lmalhaolfirt hote. heavy duty tubl. r111dolls and burlap sacks.
Law.ca said. The most popular holiday
.-ks were the popcorn balls
widt peanut buner or Jim.
Olitof'thceJ1hibn's main. Tarbo.16. '"was probably the
.. lllf'"llVC," LIMarcl said. ~ttijuii Mood thcrt II fint.
fimlly. he went up and ana
running sweep knocked over his
banana tree. Then he grabbed it
by the stall and dragged 11 all over
the exhibit."
The most touching moment
came when Lina. a 15-,ear-old
female. slarted playing ~1th a rag
doll. La Marca said.
"She hasn't gotten pregnant
yet. If she would slow down long
enough. she'd have a aood cha nee
of acttingprqnant because
Tzambo isctnainly willing.·· he
said.
"She is the one who picked up
the rag doll. She'd tuck it an her
arm and throw it on her beck. l t
wouldn'tstay.ofcount. But
when it would fall off. she'd p1cl 11
up. shake it and stan over ... she
said.
The holiday celebrluon for •he apes wasa firstat the zoo. but ll
was so su«cSsful. a pany v.-ill
probably be stqed next )tar for
the oranautansand the ynr afttt
for the ctumpan~. La Marca
said.
About I 00 pcoptc were on t.lld
when the party saarted TUC1111a1 morni.,._ b.-tttcpllllwellil
pla)'tftl witlt t~r ftC'W ao,tMll' ita
1hC'day.shcsaid.
Third World crafts: Gifts give twice
AKRON. Pa. (AP) -At this been flooded and ifs real hard to sew pan of the Anabaptist movement.
season of gjving, a Mennonite-run baas. There are snakes all over." Lake the Amish. Mennonites favor
sroup is offering handmade beads, For some. the JObs mean the plain. peaceful living and oppose
baubles. baskets and other Third "difference between eating and not military service and the taking of
Wortd crafts not with profits in mind eating. h's as simple as that ... said oaths. Lifestyles vary a mong the
but a chance for the poorest of the Dirks. world's approxim~tcly 740.000 Men-~r to help themselves. For others, the work is a handhold nonites.'however. ranging from those
They arc gifts that give twice. to a new life. who wear black and ride an horsc-
"Gencrally. if;ou're trying to make "We're tryin1 to give them jobs so drawn buggies to the majority who
a business out o this. you're going to they can cam their own money and enjoy modem clothes and amenities.
10 and find somebody who already they can spend it o n a roof or including cars.
knows how to do this as efficiently as medicine or schoolbooks or educa-Mennomte m1ss1onarics often arc
possible," said Doug Dirks. market-tion for themselves. rather than Sclfhelp's lank to the downtrodden in
1ng director for Selfhelp Crans. "You sittinJ under a tree watting for the cconomicall) developing nations.
buy from them. That's what makes relief truck to come rolling by ... Dale} V1rtuall) all ofSelfhelp's artisans h'c
sense. Our o bjective is a little bit said. far from the tounst track and ha,•c no
different." Sclfhelp's mostly volunteer statl local market for their goods. crafted
"We don't care so much about what reaches out to its needier neighbors wnh centuncs-old skill.
Nonh American customers want to from its Akron headquarters and Sclfhelp Crafts was begun in 1946
buy." agreed Sclfhelp·s Doris Dakr. warehouse in eastern Pennsylvania's b)' Edna e~ lcr. a Mennonite woman
"We care more about fi nding this Lancaster County. The affiliated Self-from Lancaster Count) who had
poor man in the slum of Calcutta and help Crafts Canada. for which Dale} traveled to Puerto Rico with her
thinking, 'Well. ma) be we can sell his serves as education coordinator. is husband to , a sit Mennonite Central
wallets or help him along.'.. based 1n New Hamburg. Ontano. Committee , olunt('Crs. She was so
Patients at a leprosy rehabilitation Both gro ups •~ run b) the Men-impressed 'I!. Ith local women's
center in Thailand who carve teak nonitc Central Committee. a de-needle~ork that she took several
elephants. widows in Guatemala who velopment and disaster relief or-items home to sell for them.
Within sax years, she had added cross-
stitched tablecloths made by Palesti-
~1an refugees and hand-carved Hai-
tian woodcnware.
.. She would go to the bank or post
office and people w.ould wave her
down and say. 'Oh. Mrs. Byler. what
have YOU Sot ID the trunk Of your Car
today"':" Dale)' said ... We say that our
first cash register was the pocket of
Mrs. Bylcrs apron ...
8~ operated the project out of
the ment of her home until the
the Mennonite Central Committee
took over in 1962 and expanded at to
10 countncs under the name of the
Overseas Nccdlc'l!.ork and Crafts
PrOJCC't. 8 ) lcr rcurcd in 1969. and the
name of the group was changed to
Sclfhclp Crafts the following year.
The first Selfhclp store opened in
Altona. Mannoba. in 1972. Two years
later. the first U.S. shop o pened in
Bluffton. Ohio.
Thcrt currently art 72 Selfhelp
shops 1n the Unned States and about
40 m Canada, run by a staff of 7.000
'olunteers.
weave scarves and belts. t1nd Hait ian ganization of the Mennonite and Unprepared for the demand. Byler
refuaees in the Dominican Republic Brethren in Christ churches. both placed more orders to Pucno Rico.
who desian greeting cards from 1---=~===:--:-::-=----r.=========================:; ~:a~;~~i~~~e1y t~o~oooc ~0°;i~ RUFFELL'S rwo CANDLELIGHT EavrcEs TO eE HELD
makina Sclfhelp Crans. 7 p.rn. and 11 p.m.
The tasks are taken very seriously. UPllLSTEIY llC. MeditJJ tion to be presented by
said Daley. citm& a letter from ... ,.. ........ 9"9! TheRe\'trtndOonaldW K11u.StnlOf M1n11tr
Ba Id h ha I d w • AM.tbyThelW\'tttnd LonJ Soudtr,AM0<'111tM1nis~r n,a es t l expaane · .. ere 1uz-•a.C1ST1--S4l·llM andTheR.e\'et'tnd DrR~rt E.C'm•ford.AdJun<'t ~1n1sttr
tryina really hard to make the order. 1---------------but please understand that we·re a
month or two late because our
women arc wadina around in water
up to their knttS. The houses have all
NEW YEAR'S EVE
GALA
OrafJfe Coast
Sirtfles
~10Publ ...
Costa Mesa
•
Country Club
-01 £ Coll c~ 0r •
-0.nc~to CorfPOUS...., "n.1nt1m.tes'
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Childmn fM children four and und~r ar ; p m lttl1ce
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A8 Or8ft89Co.t DAILY PILOT/ Friday, Oeoember 23, 1988
Cockpit recorder
offers no clues
to cause of crash
LOCKERBIE. Scotland (AP) -
The cockpit recordina of Pan Am
Flight I 03's last minutes ended
abruptly after a faint noise, and
conversations among the crew gave
flo clues about what caused the plane
to crash, officials said today.
"There is nothing in the conversa-
tions (of the flight crew) to indicate
anything was wrong." said Paul
McK.ie, Department of Transport
spokesman.
.. There is a faint noise at the end
which needs a bit more a nalysis.
There is no indication what that no~se
is. It would be quite wrona to jump to
an)' conclusions." he said.
The cockpit rccordinJ and. fl ight
data tapes from the Boemg 747 were
being analyzed by the department's
Air Accident lnves_tigation Branch.
The noise is heard on the recorder
that preserves the last 30 minutes of
conversation in the 'cockpit. The
other recorder monitors flight data.
McK.ie told The Associated Press
there was nothing abnormal on the
tapes up to the moment they cut ofT.
Although U.S. embassies m Europe
had received warnings that a Pan Am
plane would be bombed. the chief
British investigator at Lockerbie. the
Scottish village where the ·plane
crashed, said no evidence of a bomb
had been found yet.
Mick Charles of the Air Accident
Investigation Branch told a news
conference: "We have no evidence
whatsoever of sabo&aac," but added
this did not mean sabota&e was ruled
out.
He said the spread of debris over
many miles was "not unusual." since
the plane was six miles high and
winds were 115 knots.
In Israel. Forcian Minister Moshe
Arens today linked the crash to
Palestinian factions. An Israeli news-
paper and terror experts blamed
Syrian-backed radical groups op-
posed to the U.S.-PLO talks.
Arens said that "based on our
assumptions. and those of our ex-
perts. this is an operation of inter-
national terror. aeparcntly Arab in-
ternational terror. •
The Israeli newspaper The Nation
quoted unidentified Western in-
telligence sources as saying the Syr-
ian-backed Ahmed Jibril sroup was
responsible. It said invest1ptors be-
lieve at least one person aboard could
be identified as belonginJ to Jibril's
Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine-General Command group.
Four Americans on board the plane
were State Department employees.
. ~
--~~ The body of a pU.enaer •till •trapped to an airline aeat l•
lowered by a re11eae worker from the roof of balldln& In
Lockerble, 8cotland.
Some signs point
to explosion on
Pan Am Flight 103
WASHINGTON (AP) -If 1
terrorist bomb brouaht down Pan Am
Flipu 103, a 2S-minute delay of the
jet s departure from London may
provide invea&ip&on wia h &heir bit-
pt advantqe. It kept the w~ka&e
on land. instead of fallina into tfie
ocean.
The cause of Wednesday's cruh
that killed all 258 people on board
and more than 20 on the around has
yet to be determined. bua thett wett
signs today pointina to an explosion.
Witnesses saw a flash of h&ht hiah
in the sky as the jet plummeted
toward the ground: there was no
communication from the cockpit as
would have been expected if the pilots
encountered fliaht control problems.
and the wrccka&c was stttwn over
miles ofScollish countryside with the
cockpit section found more than
three miles from other large parts of
the aircraft.
Bua none of that is conclusive
evidence-that a bomb detonated
aboard the jetliner.
President Reagan said tod;f that a
public warning about the fli t after
an anonymous tcltphone ca I to the
U.S. Embassy in Helsinki would
..literally have closed down air traffic
in the world." The president said he
believes .. all precautions" were taken
in the warnin_a which went to the
airline and U.S. embassies.
Reapn. speakina in the rain
outside the White House as he
dcpaned for California where he will
spend the holidays, offered con-
dolences to the families of the
victims. calli na for Christmas prayers
for their loss.
U.S. officials said the caller to t~e
embassy in Finland on Dec. S 111d
ahat 1 bomb would be planted aboard
a Pan Am flight from Frankfurt. West
Germany to the United States within
two weeks. Flight 103 bcpn in
Frankfun on a Bocina 121. then
chaft&ed planes to a Boein& 747 in
L.oncfon.
Fliaht I 03 had been airborne S4
minutes when it disap~red from
radar screens while cru1smg at 31,000
feel over Scotland. It was about to
head west over the Atlantic when
lraaedY struck. Another half hour and
the plane would have been well over
water.
"You would have had another Air
India situation," said Frank Taylor,
an aviation safety consultant.
To many investigators. the Pan Am
traaedy appears to resemble the 1985
crash of an Air India Boeing 747 off
the Irish coast. That jumbo jct also
plummeted from the sky from 31 ,000
feet without a hint of trouble from the
pilots.
But the wreckage landed in the
ocean and satvaae crews struagled for
four months to gather pieces, includ-
ing the "black box" recorders, that
would provide clues. An analysis of
the final split second of the voice
recorder was key to Indian officials
concluding thafa bomb had exploded
aboard the aircraft.
The authorities probina the Pan
Am crash clearly will have more to
work with. They already have found
the "black box" recorders-one that
monitors cockpit conversation and
noises and another that records
aircraft performance.
-We!ve stil-l-g-0t-
the hot toys!
Investigators will pay close atten-
tion to how parts of the aircraft arc
bent. t.angled and sinaed and whether
aherc arc sips of residue from 1n
explosion. They also will search for
fraamen s that might have been used ·
as a detonator and dosely-euminc
lugpgc and parts of lugage-for
residue from an explosive.
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Nlnt•ndo ••••••••••••• 2t.ll RAD RACER ................. .
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Hasbro
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cannon, tank treads, missile launcher. Ages 5-up.
CFivu-9ald MPe~
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3-P11ek of ooll«tible cars, 111 MCh wtttt opening j)llrtsl
Agee 4-up.
Matt fl/
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Do ~r own cua1om paint jobel With spin
dryer and launcher.
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1111
America
,~rievin~
forcrasb
victims
By Tiie A11oclate4 Press
Syracuse. N. Y .. turned off
Chnstmas lights in memory of 35
students as Americans nationwide
grieved for the Pan Am jet crash
victims, including a cabin attendant
who'd planned to retire after Flight
103 landed.
The Boeing 747 crashed into a
Scottish hamlet Wednesday nipt.
The dead included a top U.S. aovern-
ment Nazi hunter. a New York
investment bank director. and stu-
dents. military personnel and others
comina home for the Christmas
holidays.
Many expressed shock and anaer at
reporu thal terrorism mar_ have been
involved and that U.S. officials kept
quiet-tibout warnings it received two
weeks • that a terrorist attack on a
Pan Am flight was planned.
Those who for one reason or
another had not boarded Fli&ht I 03
from London to New York expressed
ttlicf. Amons the lucky ones was The
Four Tops smaing group, which was
delayed by a British Broadcastina Co.
TV taping. ·
Lead smger Levi Stubbs, who
landed in Detroit on Thursday with
his three collcques. said the aroup
had just finished the TV show and
arrived 11 aheir hotel when he called
his wife to tell her he'd missed Fli&ht
103.
"And she was cryin~ and carrying
on, and I asked, 'What s the matter?'
And she tokhnc what happened. ..
One of the places hardest hit by the
trqedy was Syracuse Univenity.
where JS of the dead~ enrolled 1n
1n international studies propam.
Mayor Tom Young ordered the
city's Christmas liahU turned off
Thursday niaha and asked residents
to do likewise. New York Gov. Mario
Cuomo ordered flap flown 11 half-
staffthrouah S.turday.
Two memorial services were held
Thursday_ at Hendricks Memorial Cha_pel. Many paniciP1nU hid red. puny e~ and nearly all huaed each
Other afterward.
••wt.en one ~n dies we are all
diminished. la 11 like when 1 fi!'Pr is
tevmd, the whole body hunl.. .. the
Rev. Pauli Kowalewlki. die IChool"s
Prolaalnt m.plaita, IOld about 400 ~ 1u.li_111 one tcrVice ... You
CID tll ClOlllOled bee.a.. Oriti is ~ witll UL Chrilc pws, IOO-"
TM llDivenilY tried IO lake a
lwil Ill • J IPllliwla ad ft•
t11a•ft811cwodl11ota.aiMtiont ..... ••s 1 ...... a ... week hatidlJ ...... U~e;lit)a.c.llor ................. Inlay
......... t0 Ii~ ftMI -IO di ........... ..,w...,werc
p;epllWd '° ... diem.
iC ---s-------------_.,,_ _______ .... _~_..-· . ..._ _______________ ..-....!~------~-
Spyglass Hill Garden Club
harvests gifts.for children
By VIDA DEAN
Of ..... Nlt ....
• Members of the Spyalass H,ill
Garden Club are beina .. anaels" this
)'ear; they came with aifts for others
when they pthered at The Riu for
1their annual holiday luncheon.
Gifts, most of which were stuffed
toys, were for clients at the Fairview
.DCvelopment Center in response to a
wish list from children and adults.
Hospitality chairwoman Peay
MorrilM played Santa and delivered
the rifts after the luncheon.
" still have dolls that I received
·when I wasachild. I brou&ht them out
for my daughter," said Morrison.
"My favorite Christmas doll was an
1Alice in Wonderland. She was about
three feet tall and taller than I was.
,She's up in the allic now, because I
:had two boys and no girls." com-
mented Claire War•.
··1 remember gelling a red-haired
Sonja Henie doll I received one
Chnstmas. My mother had red hair. l
loved it and I s&ill have it," said PIDla ·Bu~. first president of the club
formccl 13 years a10.
"The last doll I received was when I
was 12 -a blonde bridal doll and I
1 was at the Roosevelt Hotel in New
Orleans with my family," said Emy
Lue. Daughter lta .. y Lue recalled
her fa~orite Christmas gift was not a
,doll, but roller skates. "I was in the
,fifth grade and I knew I was gelling
skatesi but pretended I was sur-
prised."
"I remember a Christmas gift I
didn't gel. I was in the fourth grade
and wanted a bike. but my parents
didn't give ~me one because we lived
on such a busy street I cried on
Christmas day. The next year we had
moved and I got my bike," said Jou
Brady.
DllllfNlt ....... a.._
Paala ButlaunM (abon left) and 11arJ Bodaee cbeck oat
recipe.. Below, Sharon Pence and Penny llom.on with caddl:r,ut..
"One year my grandmother was
going to give me a live monkey ... I
had to settle for a stuffed toy
monkey," recalled Au Tester, who said Bastiaanse.
still has the animal. The name of the group "garden" L.M. BOY D
Orenge Coat DAILY PILOT /Fridey, December 23, 1111 A7
l \~ -', '
I
Complete tetevlslon Hating• In .....,.. TV Plot
Don't worr)r about failure; Others at the luncheon sharing club is a little misleading. Oc-
IR>liday plans incbulcd_~ident casionally there might be a talk on
Slaaroa Peace, Jlldy 0.ke, oaue-prdening, &ut-programs could be
MeMalloa, AD• Tester, Gloria anything that interests the-00-mem-
McOJ8&ock, Dottle Frlbo•r1, Sltetla bers -Jewelry, fashion, decorations
eo.Jter, Betty Jo ltalckerbocker, etc. "We garden Newpon Beach
Diua Easley, CarollM Bassett, style," joked Erny Lane. "That is. you
Sudie Fl1 u4 Catlly Scllreeder. go to the nursery select a plant and
GrancJm ~Wo1cy about missed_cha
According to club tradition, mem-then tell the gardener where to plant
bers shared favorite reci~ A packet it."
of recipes tied with red nbbons was at There is a waiting list of women
each place as when the cucumber wanting to get in to the fun voup. The
salad. sauteed chicken breast with only requirement for getting on the
wild mushrooms and creme brulec list is that the woman must live in
were served. Spyglass ... Sometimes we have events
"Our club is an old-fashioned and invite everybody who's waiting."
community group." said Morrison. said Ward.
"'It was started when Spyglass Hill Schroeder, 760-868. has further
was new. Most of us had young kids membership and waiting list infor-
and we all watched them grow up." mation.
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COME CELEBIA TE
didn'thang
her clothes
Weren't any clothes hangers when
~our v.eat grandmother was young.
She either hung dres~ and suits on
pegs or folded them nat in drawers.
Angelfish marry for life.
Nothing draws a crowd like
nature's wonders. it's said. Foremos\
among these, evidently. is the human
craving to win money. Today's top
tourist destination in the· United
States is Atlantic City, N.J.
Q. Aren't mice the most widely
distributed m ammals on earth?
A. Except for humans, that's right
One curiosity about the great
American playwright Eugene O'Neill:
As he aged. his handwnting kept
getting smaller. Toward the end. a
reader nteded a magn 1 fyingglass. The
whole script of'"Thc Emp_eror Jones .. was written on both sides of only
three sheets of ordinary t) ping paper.
Say your dog is an unneutered 4-
year-old male with reasonable free-
dom. Odds are that someplace out
there he has 173 grapdpups.
Anglo-Saxons of old did not ex-
ecute a murderer. The) fined him.
Heavily. Relatives on his father's side
paid two-thirds. On his mother's side.
one third.
Q. Only two U.S. cities were
specifically designed to be capitals.
Washington. D.C .. is one. Name the
other.
A. Milledgeville. Ga. Wasn'-t un11I
1868 that Georgia's capital was
moved to Atlanta.
To his file labeled '"Trite But
True." our Love and War man adds
this observation of Robert Louis
Stevenson: "Mamaae is hke life -a
field of battle. not a bed of roses."
Q. When you want to order blue
jeans at a clothing store in France.
what do you ask for'?
A. Bl~ jeans. Liktwisc. 1n Japan.
tMSov1et U nion and Italy.Just a bout
everywhere.
S...,._J,Dee.H
IJ SYDNEY OMARR
AIUD (March 21-April 19): R~c
onciHat1on takes place, family mcm-
~ .eneers in•o. holida)' spirit. Ncgo-
1 .. t1ons reprd1n1 propcny are com-
l*ted. F«us on disun«. lanaua~. CIKilion ftl8rdi .. romantt. Libra
i•volved.
TAuatJI (April 20..Ma) .10)· Ve>u111 ptrlOll •ys. "I o"c almost
twrydatftllOf'MIAnd I apprcc1a1c It."
ACClllil oa i..,:mdtncr. crt>au' 11\. ••DtilAll IJISMKI Reunion w1ih
IO¥flt -ii ~ Leo fiaurts ~(May 21-JUM W): Dis-~ 1
......, citdt 11 tt1tk'd. ~ri:~:-=~ 111CD tDIO ~l. You.11 bt O\'Cf•
*lmcd tty 1bundan« of 11f\s.
DEAR ANI LANDERS: faery
now and ther>ou publish a bit of
philosophy tht helps put things in
perspective. l m across this message
published 1n It Wall Street Journal
by United Teaiologies Corp. I hope
you will make-oom in )Our column
to pnnt it. Tc message ga"e me
couraae whcn.1y spinls were at IO\I.
tide. I believe lis message had a great
deal to do i th m> "rcco,cr;."
Thanks. Ann -RIDING THE
CREST IN MA NE.
DEAR ~E: It's a lloney.
'hub for ltllal It my way.
OON.T BE•.FR.AID TO FAIL
You've faed many times.
althqugh you cln't remember.
You fell do\n the first 11me you
tried to walk.
You almost ,owned the first time
you tried to swn.
Did you h!t~e ball the first ti me
you swung a bar
HeaV)' hittenthe ones who hit the
most home run also stnke out a lot.
R.H. Macy failed seven 11mes
before his stortn New York caught
o n.
English nove11 John Crease~ got
753 rejection slls before he publish-
ed 564 books. ltbe Ruth struck out
llY CHA,.LD ti.ta
AND OMA,. .IF
Neither =ble. South deals.
• A i
'V Q i 3
0 A ' 10 6
• Q ' 61
WF.sT
•QI
'V A9742
0 9 5 3
EAST
• 7 41
'V I 6
0 1742
•• 7' ••• 9 5 3
SOUB
• Kt9163 \l K . 10
0 Kt
•A '.
The biddina:
So•111 W~· Nortla East
I• hie lNT P ..
3• hill 4• hll
6. Pul ·-Put Opmina lad:Acc of "
Oh how rip Alexander Pope
<\quanan involv
CANCER (Jue 21 -July 11):
Scenario h11hhJIS humor. com-
munication. 11fb repre~nt1n1 ad-
d1t1ons to warchbt About diet,
you'll probabl)' a). "I'll start 1t
tomorrow." F1n~c1al picture tak~
on rosy h&1e. ~
LllO (Jul) 2 22): Dialopl(
wllh ont dote you 1n,·olvn
restlK'tions. strio1 plans ttaard•na
fulUtt. Spothaht 4' hudict. e\CDIS
thlt """ntl) eicumd "bdund J«nn:· Okkr id1vidual ~uirn
sptt:tal attention
VIRGO l 'i;:~J-pt. ~1>: EmphHll on c un1catton. ~
1blf JOUt"M). With C~
rriat1\C, PM 1t.em.tttr or \Jltef.
Gain 1ndica1N~ rt"aJina. wnl· ins Mild fnc p v.111 tw trant-
formfd into mean gf ul rt'lat1on\h1p.
1.330 ti mes but he also hit 714 home
runs.
Don't won-y~bout failure.
Worry about the chances )OU miss
when you don•t even try.
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Over the
years I'm sure you have heard a g.reat
many stones about the odd things
wo men do to hold on to their men.
I'm enclosing a clipping that beats
them all. Too bad it has such a tragic
ending.
The Da)tOn Daily News reponcd
that James Campbell "as sentenced
to serve six to 25 years in pnson for
killing Scott G rqg. an acquaintance.
Campbell's wife. Antela. admitted
that she had wntten a note fabncat1 ng
a romance between her and Gregg.
She said she JUSt wanted to make her
was when be warned about the dan-
gers of a little lcamina. Consider the
Nonh~South spade ho&dina. If you
cash the ace and Wm drops one of
the missing honors, East is almost a
3-to-1 favorite to hold the other
honor. This is governed by what is
known as the Rule of Restricted
Choice. Unfortunately, South knew
all about that rule.
The bidding is not without inter-
est. North's two no trump promised
a balanced 13-IS points and South's
spade rebid guaranteed a six-card
suit. When Nonh raised to the
spade game with his doubleton acc.
South made the value jump to reach
a slam that had httle play becaute of
the duplication in the minor swts-
the same duplicatioo that would
have made six no trump laydown.
Against six spades West led the
ace of hcans and continued with the
suit. Declarer took his kina and led
a spade to the ace, fetchina the jack
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct .. 22): Rcccnt
domestic ad1ustmcnt pro' es
beneficial -family member rtet1vcs
nCYrS of pro motion. Emphasis on
i•f\s. music. flo~rs. tokens of afT«-
tton. Lona d11Lanct call rdatn to
JOUmC)'. __ _
ICOBPIO (Oc\.13-No~. 21 ~ Stud>
Libra me me~ for ,,.._.. IMat. Emphasis oa .,_.. ....._ mOf.
uuons. rapproche•• -'da ••at> mcm'9cr.
'1AGm'dRJl(N0¥. ll-Dec:. 21~
Whal Md ......... '9ecolMt
husband Jealous. He flew into a rqe
when he teamed of the .. affair" via the
phony note and vowed to get even.
Campbell invited Greg to his
home. waited in ambush for him to
amve and then hit him over the head
with a lead pipe. killin~ him.
This 1s a tragic incident that
underscores the terrible _P!ice that
some people pay for duplicity. Who
would have 1mqjned that an ill-
conceived. duphettous ploy would
have ended in the death ofone young
man and a pnson term for another'?
No charges were filed again51 Mrs.
Campbell. but you can be sure that
she did not act off easily. Her
punishment will be ongoing for the
rest of her lift. -N. IN
BEA VERBROOK. O HIO.
DEAR OHIO: nub fer a '*r· las mnsa1e. Wlaat a terrtWe price a.
pay, fer a mu's Jea)emy u4 a ••mu'• ..,alctty. fte falDilJ ef dte vtcUm Im., lleefel• .,... .. y. • • • DEAR READERS: Alter I ,...te4
WW R.etlen' MfialU. el ...... ey I reeetvei ..._ ~. 'hie 11i1est:
~lt aew., ... ew .... t.e Mb ..... a •aJ daat ... , 1-t
,~ ...... dte trip.
from West. Applying the Rule of
Restricted Choice, declarer next fi -
nessed and the slam went the way of
all flesh in a hurry .
We have often warned about con-
sidering a suit combination in isola-
tion. While the finesse might be the
right play if you consider the spade
suit alone, it was certainly wrong on
this hand.
)f West did indeed have a sinak-
ton honor. I hat would mean that
East held four trumps. A finesse in
itself would not be enough to pick
up the trumps~declarer would need
a trump coup as Yrell. To acc,om-
pltsh that. he would have to rcdutt
his trumps 10 the same length as
Ea.st 's. So he would need two entries
to the dummy for ruffs., and OM. for
the trump coup. Thett just waa't
enouah dummy entries, so declarer
should have aonc up with the kin&
of spades in the hope of rt.ndina
West with the Q-J bart.
Ae Or-.CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Friday, December 23, 1818
Cockpit recorder
offers no clues
to cause of crash
Fisher-Price
FUN WITH FOOD
CREA TE-A-CAKE I 99 Complete kit with decora-
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..... ' ................. .
i(_
Hasbro
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Three-in-one action toy with center-mounted
cannon. tank treads, missile launcher. Ages 5-up. CF'llU* told ...,.,~
Galoot>
MICRO MACHINES DELUXE
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3-P11ek of collectible ca~. 1• eech with opening perts!
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HOT WHEELS COLOR
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Do yowr own cuttom pmnt jobel With apln
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Aaet 5-up. CClrw ....... ~ 2411
Some stgnS pbint
to explosion on
Pan Am Flight 103
-1111
CHARGE IT!
¥llA
llAITIWllO ••9C• ••n•• WW
•
America
~rievin~
forcrasb
victims
By Tlte A11oclated Presa
Syracuse. N.Y .. turned off
Chnstmas lights in memory of 35 students as Americans nationwide
arieved for the Pan Am jet crash
victims, including a cabin attendant
who'd planned to retire after Aiaht
t03 landed.
The Boeing 747 crashed into a
Scottish hamlet Wednesday niaht.
The dead included a top U.S. aovem-
ment Nazi hunter, a New York
investment bank. director, and stu-dents. military personnel and others
comina home for the Christmas
holidays.
Many expressed shock and anaer at
reP<>{tl that terrorism ma~ have been
involved and that U.S. officials kept
quiet about warnings it rcc:eived two
weeks aao that a terrorist attack on a
Pan Am fliaht wa5flanned.
Those who for one reason or
another had not boarded Aiaht I 03
from London to New York. expressed
relief. Amons the lucky ones was The
Four Tops singing group, which was
delayed by a Bntish Broadcastina Co.
TV taping.
I.tad sanacr Levi Stubbs. who
landed in Detroit on Thursday with
his three colla&ues. said the aroup
had just finished the TV show and
arrived at their hotel when he called
his wife to tell her he'd missed Aiaht
103.
"And she was cryi!'J and carryinJ
on. and I asked, 'What s the matter?'
And she told me what happened.••
One of the places hardest hit by the
tf'llC(I)' was Syracuse Univenity,
where JS of the dead were enrolled in
an international studies propam.
Mayor Tom Youns ordered the
city's Christmas liahts turned off
Thunday niaht and asked residents
to do likewise. New Y orlt Gov. Mario
Cuomo ordered flqs flown at half-
staff throuah Saturday.
Two memorial scrvacn were held
Thunday at Hendricks Memorial C.I. Many panici~nts had red, puny eyn, and nearly ill b.,.ed eec:h
other afterward.
''When one ~n dia we are 111
diminished. It 11 like when a fi~ is
eevered, the whole body b11111t .. the
Rev. Pauli ~the IChool'• Prolellant m.plaia, told .. 400 .,..,.. ...._ one .met ... You
cu be ClOlllolei ....._ Qrist is
cqiM wi ... Ill. Cbrila Jrjna. too ...
Tili ftiWnlty vied IO like I ...... 11...r ........ lild ftn-llllllltlllilNO~er-·r lioM ~a='tt. .. •== =..rr:~~ tlln .,:J.:_.,.,;:;~
PhJ rill 11 lllre ......
PAPARAu,
~pyglass Hill Garden Club
harvests gifts for children
By VIDA DEAN
OfhO..,,.. ....
Members of the SpyJlass Hill
Garden Club are beina .. anaels" t11i1
year: they came with aifts for others
when they p thered at The Ritz for
their annual holiday luncheon.
Gifts. most of which were stuffed
toys, were for clients at the Fairview
Development Center in response to a
wish list from children and adults.
Hospitality chairwoman Peuy
Morrl ... played Santa and delivered
the gifts after the luncheon.
"I still have dolls that I received
when I wasachild. I brouaht them out
for my daughter," said Morrison. ·•My favorite Christmas doll was an
Alice in Wonderland. She was about
three feet tall and taller than I was.
,She's up in the attic now, because I
.had two boys and net girls." com-
mented Claire War4.
"I remember getting a, red-haired
Sonja Henie doll 1 received one
Chnstmas. My mother had red hair. I
loved hand I still have it," said P11la
Bas.._, first president of the club
.... .....................
Paala Butlauue (abcne left) and Mary Hoda• clleck oat ==· Below, Sbaroa Pence and Penny llorr18on wltla
formed 13 years aao.
"The last doll I received was when I
was 12 -a blonde bridal doll and I ;was at the Roosevelt Hotel in New
Orleans with m y family," said Emy
Lue. Daughter boy Lue recalled
her fnorite Christmas gin was not a
doll, but roller skates. •·1 was in the ~fifth grade and I knew I was getting
skates, but pretended I was sur-
prised."
"I remember a Christmu gift I
didn't get. I was in the fourth grade
and wanted a bike, but my parents
djdn't &ive me one because we lived
on such a busy street. I cried on
, C hristmas day. The next year we had
moved and I got my bike," said Jou
Bndy.
,..,...
"One year my grandmother was
going to give me a live monkey ... I
had to settle for a stuffed' toy
monkey," recalled Au Tester, who said Bastiaansc.
still has the animal. The name of the group .. garden"
Others at the luncheon sharing club is a little misleading. Oc-
holiday plans included president casionally there might be a talk on
Slaaroa Peace, JHy Dake, Joaue gardening. but programs could be
•
L.M. Baro
Or1nge CoMt DAILY PILOT/F~. December 23, ,_ AT
Complete tetntalon llatlnga In ...,.,.. TV PIOt
Don't worry abOut fail ur .
McMa~oa. AH Tester, Gloria anythins that inte~ts the 60 m.em~, r~n A _Tn_!a _McQla~ D!ttde Frlboera, SHlla=--"O!...,, -J dryJashion, dccorauon -:rCl -ltl ,J ,J • ---w
CHlter, Beuy Jo ltalckerflocker, etc. "We garden Newport Beach :g1ry-mISsed chances
Dlau Easley, C•roliae Busett, style," joked Emy Lane. "That is. you d •d 't h
Sudie Fil &M Caoy Sdroeder. go to the nursery select a plant and 1 n ang
According to club tradition, mem-t1.th.~n tell the gardener where to plant
bers shared favorite reci~. A packet
of recipes tied wilh red nbbons was •t There is a waiting list of worn.en her cloth es each place as when the cucumber wanting t~get in to the fun sroup. The
salad. sauteed chicken breast with only requirement for getting on the
wild mushrooms and creme brulee list is that the woman must live in
were served. Spy.iass ... Sometimes we have events
.. Our club is a n old-fashioned and anviteeverybody who's waiting. ..
community group, .. said Morrison. said Ward.
·"It was started when Spyglas$ Hill Schroeder. 7~868. has further
Weren't any clothes hangers when
~our JJ:eat arandmother was young.
She either hung dresses and suits on
pegs or foldc:d them nat In drawers.
was new. Most of us had young kids me~bership and waiting list infor··
and we all watched them grow up," mat1on. Angelfish marry for life.
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NEWPORT HARBOR LUTHERAN CHURC H
798 Dover Drive
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(714) 548-3631
PASTORS: Roger J. Berg and Kim Eifert Krogstad
COME CELEBRATE '
We11 aina praiee unto the Lord in a setting or •A(ID candlelight and
brilliant. poinMtliu. Everyone it welcome on Chrialmu Eve (or
Mrvicea at 5 P.M., 7 P.M. and 11 P.M. Holy Communion will be
celebrated at the 11 P.M. eervice only. Putor Krop&ed wiU preach on
"A-.y in 0.. M....-r" at the 6 P.M. aervice which ia •pedally for
10Ulll people and their putlcipation in the •~ol Chriatm-.
Favorite Chrialmal carola will be •Ill· P•tor S.,. l)N9Ch on .. the Oil\ o1 Love" at the 7 P.M. and the 11 P.M. . Mn. Diane "*-.W ..... tor the hearil'll impaired at the 6 P.M. terVice.
Bebytittins will be available at 6 P.M. and 7 P.M.
Ani¥9 l& minu&.a Mrly and enjoy l11&Jq Yu.I.tide nauelr leet.uriftl
&bl NHLC choir and IOtilta with apedal ioat.rwMntal m-'e e& &he 7
P.M. and ll P.M. 111wicel. AU ttrvieee will include, sloftoua caw.... caroll IDd ll*ial muaic ttlectionl. Pa... join "'._ dUa •••inlful ...W, in hoaor ol &he Chriet Child! \
an.tm. Day Sena will be 1t't A.M. ChriltmM D.y, wltlll_.a ..... .
Nothing draws a crowd like
nature's wonders. it's said. Foremost
among these. evidently. is-the human
craving to wan money. Today's top
tourist dcsunation an the United
States is Atlantic City. N.J.
Q. Aren't mice the most widely
distributed mammals on earth?
A. Except for humans. that's nght.
One curiosity about the great
American playwright Eugene O'Neill:
As he aged. his handwnting kept
getting smaller. Toward the e nd. a
reader needed a magnifying glass. The
whole script of .. The Em~ror Jones ..
was written on both sides of onl)'
three sheets of ordinary typing paper.
Say your ·dog is an unneutered 4-
year-old male with reasonable free-
dom. Odds are that someplace out
there he has 173 grandpups.
Anglo-Saxons of old did not ex·
ecute a murderer. The) fined him.
Heavily. Relatives on his father's side
paid two-thirds. On his mother's side ..
one third.
Q. Only two U.S. c1t1cs "'ere
specifically designed to be cap11als.
Washington. D.C. is o ne. Name the
other.
A. Milledgeville. Ga. Wasn't until
1868 that Georgia's capttal "'as
moved to Atlanta.
To his file labeled "Trite But
True." our Love and War man adds
this observation of Roben Louis
Stevenson: "Marriage is like life -a
field of battle. not a bed or roses."
Q. When you want to o rder blue
jeans at a clothing slore in France.
what do you ask for'?
A. Blue jeans. L1kew1se. in Japan.
the Soviet Union and Italy. Just about
everywhere.
..... ,.0..14
BJ SYDNEY OMARll
AIUBS (March 21-April 19): Rcc-
onaliltion takes pl,att. famil)' mem-~ .ftlten into hollday spint. Ncio-
tlltKJfts ~rd•na property are com· ·~· Focus ~ dist.incc, tanau•· aeriStOn retard•nt romantt. Libra involved.
TAuaUI (Apnl 20.Ma) 20):
Youna pcnon •ys. "I owe almost
evt'rytluna to JOU and I appttt1ate 1t. •·
Aettat Oft ~ ..... Adcntt. Cttltl" 1t)'.
emocioMI 1np n• Reunion -.ch lov~ Oftt ii ....... Leo fip;n
promi~.
OSMINI (~ 21.Jme lO~ Dit-
IUW ~in ...., ~ .. tlrd.
Emplmia oa ll'l~lll . ~-
liaJon, 1bili1Y to ~ ,....
pttU into f'oaas. You.'11 br OY('IY
whttmed by abundMt'e ol 11ft$.
DEAR ANI LANDERS: Eve11
now and 1heryou pubhsh a bit of
philosophy lht helps put things tn
pcrspc_clive. I an across this message
Cubhshed in It Wall Slrccl Journal
y United Tecnologics Corp. I hope
you will makcwm an your colum,n
to pnnt it. Te message gave me
courage when l)' spints were at lo"
Lide. I believe is message had a great
deal to do ;1h my ··recoHI).''
Thanks. Ann -RIDING THE
CREST IN MANE.
DEAR M•E: 11'1 • ltoaey.
TUUI for Mlllai it my way.
OONI BElfRAID TO F.\IL
You've f1ed many times.
although you 4n·t remember.
You fell do'1 the first time }Ou
tried to walk.
You alm0$trowned the first 11me
you tried to SW,fl.
Did you h!t~e ball the first tame
you swung a De
Heavy hitternhe ones who hit the
most home run also slnke out a lot.
R.H. Macy failed seven times
before his stortn Ne" York caught
on.
English novesl John Creasey got
753 rejection sl1S before he publish·
ed 564 books.. labe Ruth struck out
IY CHARLES fiiREN
AND OMAR llaRIF
Neither vubable. South deals.
WEST
NOltff + Ai
<:;I Q i 3
0 A ' 10 6
• Q 61
EAST
• Q ..
Q A9742
0 9 5 J
•• 7'
• 7' 2
Q l6
0 • 7' 2
• 10953
SOU'H
• &19163
<:;I K It
0 K t •A :
The biddiq:
Soetll Wat Nortll Eut t• hie 2NT P ..
J ...... , ......
6• Pus .........
Openina ie.d:Au of '°'
Oh bow ri&h Alexander Pope
a..
I.MIDS
1.330 umes but he also hit 714 home
runs.
Don't worry about failure.
Won) about the chances you m1SS
when )OU don·1 even ti).
••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: Over lhe
years I'm sure you have heard a great
many stones about the odd 1h1ngs
women do to hold on to their men.
I'm enclosina a clipping that beats
them all. Too bad it ha.s such a tragJc
ending.
The Dayton Daily News reported
1hat James Campbell was sentenced
to sen-e six to :?5 )ears in prison for
k1lhng Scott G reg. an acquaintance.
Campbelrs Wife. An,rla, admmed
that she had wntten a note fabricating
a romance between her and Gregg.
She said she JUSt wanted lo make her
was when he warned about the dan-
gers of a littJe leamina. Consider the
Nonh-Soutb spade holdina. If you
cash lhe ace and West drops one of
the mjssing honors, East is almost a
3-to-I favorire to bold the 01her
honor. Tbjs is govcmed by whar i
known as the Rule of Restricted
Choice. Unfortunately. South kne~·
all about that rule.
The biddfog is not without inter-
est. North's two no trump promised
a balanced IJ-1.S points and South'
spade rebid auaranteed a six-card
suit. When Nonh raised to 1he
spade aame with his doubleton acc.
Soulh made the value jump to reach
a slam that had little play because of
the duplication in the minor suits-
the same duplication that would
have made six no trump laydown.
Against six spades West ltd the
ace of hearts and continued with the
suit. Declarer took his kina and led
a spade to the ace, fetching the jack
,
husband jealous. He flew into a rate
when he learned of the .. affair" via the
phony note and vowed to act even.
Campbe{l invited Greg to his
home, wai ed in ambush for him to
arrive •nd then hit him over the head
with a lead pipe. killing him.
This is a tragic incident that
underscores the terrible J>!ice that
SOft'lc people pay for duphcity. Who
would have 1mqined that an Ill·
conceived. duplicatous ploy would
have ended 1n the death of one young
man and a pnson term for another'?
No charges were filed apinst Mrs.
Campbell. but you can be sure that
she did not act off easily. Her
punishment win be onaoing for lhe
rest of 'her life. - N. IN
BEA VER BROOK.. OHIO.
DEAR OHIO: Tlaub fer a MMr-
.......... WUI a &errlMe price .. ,., , ... a ............. , .... a
...... , ..,udtJ. fte family el 1M
victim Ml my .... 1,....dty. • • • DEAR READERS: After I ..-w
wwa..en'.n.IU.ef~KJI receivM ._._. ..... a.est:
~11..W.C-e•e ...... lleb la .. a WIJ Uaat CMJ )eek
fM"Wml .. Ute crtf.
from West. Applyiq the Rule of
Restricted Choice, dcclaTcr next fi.
oessed and the slam went tbe way of
all flesh in a hurry.
We have often warned about con-
sidering a suit combination in isola-
tion. While the finesse mi&ht be the
right play if you consider the 51*1e
.iujt alone, il was certainly wrona on
this hand.
)f West did indeed have• sinsle-
ton honor. that would mean that
East held four trumps. A fineue in
itself wo uld not be cnouah to pick
up the trumps-declarer would need
a trump coup u well. To accom-
pH h that. he wou.ld have to redace
his trumps to the same leqth as
East's.So he wouJcl need two entries
to Lhe dummy for ruffs, and one for
the trump coup. There just ~·t
cnouah dummy entries. so cledMer
should have aone up with the Id ..
of spades in the hope or flndina
West with the Q-J bare.
I
•
A8 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT I Friday, Oeeember 23. 1988
by Bii Keane COUNTER CULTURE
"Here he is! The star
of Bethlehem!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Anything else you want besides
maid service?"
it II
i
1
J
I
I •
\Ht GRiNCH TH AT Sro
M~. BLENDER.
~
DENKI& THE MENACE
by Hank
)
ARLO AND JAMS
'WHIL£ Yoo'llE CUT DWVERIN' STUF.F. ~ 1
'[R)P1l(ISOFf-Al ft\¥~~,. !-1-_.1_ ~-~t-
PEANUTS
AMOTMER CMRISTMAS PLA1( AND
I MAVE TO Sf A S~EEP A6AIN ..
I ~ATE BEING A SHEEP !
DµBBLE
R08Sl8Roe&
rT *'""" A IMP PRIAM, f\\(~ ...
_____ __,. __ IJ
J1
NO PART IN A PLAV IS SMALL.
SIR, IF IT BRIN65 JOI(
TO T~E AUDIENCE ...
,,
~
JUDGE PARKER
ff) IH05E EARPl065 IHE
(X)C FIX.ED ~ UP WlfH I
L.E.I qQ(J CONoocr "THE ' BAND wrrHO<Jr PH< ,
PF<OBU:JV\ I HOH~
DOOJUSBURY
AGED PAGE
by Garry Trudeau
,
..
'
.
by Jimmy Johnson
PUT'TY IW ~~
by Lynn Johnston
T~s CHR1srMAS Kt
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
MlD 'Jt-tEQ'RE NOT' BAD
R)R ~FF MEE1lNG5 £11HE~ !
··--i....,, cl .... ,..,. ............ -· ... ia.. 'O IOI"' '-_ .. -d•
II I ••tu-••=
(
Yes, Virginia
... he lives and
he lives forever
To the Editor of the New York Sun: Dear Editor.
I am ei&ht years old. Some of my little friends say there is
no Santa Cfaus. Papa says. "If you see it in the Sun. it's so."
Please tell me the truth. is there a Santa Claus'? VIRGINIA
O'HANLON
"Virginia. your little friends are wrong. They have been
affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not
believe except what they sec. They think that nothing can be
which is not comprehensible by little minds. All minds.
Virginia. whether they be mcn'sorchildren's. are little. In this
sreat universe of ours man is a mere insect, an ant. in his
intellect. as compared with the boundless world about him. as
measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of
truth and knowledge .. f '-:Yes, Virgina. there is a Santa Claus. He exists as
certainly as love and generosity and devotion exists. and you
know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty
and joy. Alas! How dreary would be the world if there were no
Snata Claus'? It would be as dreary as if there were no
Virginias. There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry.
no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have
no enjoyment except in sense and sight. The eternal light with
which childhood fills the world would be extinguish~.
· Not believe in Santa Claus'? You might as well not believe
in friends! You might get your papa to hire men to watch all
thechim neyson Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus. but even
if they did not sec Santa Claus coming down. what would that
prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus. but that is no sign that there
Deukmejian will propose a
bullet-biting state budget
1s no Santa Claus. •
Wordspreads through Sacramento to
expect hiring freezes_, spending caps
"The most real things in the world are those that neither SACRAMENTO _ Throughout points m a $40-plus billion budget.
childt:ren nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the state bureaucracy. the word is But it's big enough to hun because 11
the lawn'? Of course not. but that's no proof that they are not already filtering down; Next )ear will exists on the margin. where meshing
there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders that be tight and agencies can expect income and outgo ts the most dtf·
DAN
WALTERS
are unseen and unseeable in the world. hiring. freezes and other -lids on ficult. Most of the state's budget. like
.. You tear apart the baby's rattle to see what makes the spending. that of the federal government. 1s bills are paid, cames over into the
noise inside. but there is a veil covering the.. unseen world fixed and all but untouchable. driven current fiscal )ear.
wh1'ch not the strongest man. not even the united strength of George Deukm~·ian is in the midst by how man) welfare rec1p1en1s. sick Of th a I b t · · ·1 1 people. prison inmates and The current )'ear's s1tuat1on. 1n
all the strongest men that ever lived. could tear ap .. a .. '.~n~.~O~n~l:dYL--J-~an~d~e~nci.I. nf.u_a~~ut. ~g~e~-~w~n~ti~n~g~r~i~u~ay·;~ootciittdren arc a sor .;.m-t""'o=-=t~e=--rn'....-.-..-oeing -worsened . ausc
faith, poetry, love. romance can push aside that c;u1ain an process. it suddenly_ has become programs that serve them. voters, in their 1ntin1te, if 11log1cal.
view an pic.turc.thc.supcm&turatt>emyano gory beyond. ls muc'1.. much more difficult. wisdom, decreed that the schools are 1-~.-~t a real'! Ah . Virginia. in all this world there· is nothing e.lse That billion dollars that Deu-to get a larger share of the state budget
real and abiding. Califomia-justayearaOergi ving kmCJ1an was so anxious to return to b; enacung the educational com-
"No Santa Claus'? Thank God. he lives and he li ves taxpayers a billion-dollar rebate -is taxpayers last )ear would have cov-~~n1ty's pet m111all\e. Propos111on
forever. A thousan(i years from now. Virginia. nay IO times IO facing the worst fiscal crunch since it e2()..rc<120thh1endssh~onhtfa. ~tntheaettly1m. eb.ubot t1hhatht'es thousand years from now. he will continue to glad the heart of nined with near-bankruptcy in the -. childhood." early 1980s. governor an most leiislators wanted
. FRANCIS CHURCH to demonstrate tidelll) 10 the Gann
Sept. 21 . 1897 The governor's much-cherished Limit on state spend ing b) sending
I
' OTHER VOICES
~-------
Double-celling
If prison-rights advocates want to promote basic human
digni!)'. they should drop their appeal to end double-celling at
San ~uentin and get behind Gov. George Deukmejian·s
initiative to expand prison industries.
A state appeals coun has reversed a 1983 ruling that the
practice of putting two prisoners in some of the 9-foot-by-5-
foot maximum-security cells at San Quentin is cruel and
unusual punishment.
Any othe~court decision could ha ve set a precedent both
expensive and wrong-headed. Double-celling is common at
California·s 18 prisons as the state tries to cope with an inmate
population that has reached 75.000. more than three times the
number incarcerated a decade ago.
Instead of taking their double-celling case to the state
Supreme Court. the Prison Law Project and other acti vists ...
should turn their.emphasis from how inmates sleep to what
they do durins waking hours.
emergency reserve has bttn wiped the money back. Chances are. had the
out. the t 987-88 fiscal )ear ended money not been returned to ta:<pa)ers · h II ti · Ii it would have been spent on some-wit a sma de icll. the current iscal thing and thus e'<acerbated. rather
year 1s headed 1n the same dtrectton. than relieved. the ensuing re"enue and there's not enough mone) to cover even an ordinary cost-of-11\ ing crunch. b) enlarging the e\pend11ure
increase for the 1989-<Xl fiscal }Car. base.
The crunch of 1987-. '' h1ch It adds up to an Excedrin-size became evident in spring. "as
headache that DeukmeJ1an has onl) a hand I~ b> tapping the resen e and
few weeks to resolve before pres-imposinganadmm1str:all\cclampon enting his proposed budget to the spending.. The governor 1n111all) had
legislarure. proposed some re,enuc-1ncrea mg
steps. but qu1ckl) abandoned them In a sense it's an anomaly. since the after they were tabekd ta>. increases st.ate's economy is pumping along in the media. nicely. The upward spiral ma y have
slowed a bit and inOation ma\ ha ve That not only undercu t Dcu-
increased a bit, but overall. California kmeJian·s own nO-ne'"·ta'<es posture is still enjoyi ng the fru11s of a \Cars-but y,,ould have embarrassed his
long boom. · · pres1dent1al candidate. George Bush.
who "'anted to ponra) h1i. Demo-The squeeze. for the most pan. crauc opeonent. Michael Dut..ak1s. as results from an unanttc1pated re'· being a biJl ta>.er and pendcr. enue dtp caused b) changes tn state
and federal tax la"' and some e>.pen-Ult1matel). the budget massage
d11ures that "'em be)ond e>.pecta-that DeukmeJ tan adopted in ltcu of t1ons. new re} enues fell a b11 shon -S 13.:'
In proponionate terms. the gap 1s
not a large one. I or 2 percentage
mtllton b) the most recent accounttng
-of covenng the gap. That defi cit.
which may grow as all the lcflo, er
Since there's no emergcnc. reserve
left. the extra mone) for the schools
-S200 million-plus this )ear. more
than a half-btlhon dollars ne7-t \ear-
has 10 come from ot her spending
categories. The current es11mate of
the legislature's budget adviser is
that the current )ear Y.111 end. at best,
at the break.-e\ en point. but without a
calT)o' er reserve
It's this senes of e'ents. all occur-
nng "tthm a fey, months. that create
DeukmeJian·s budget heada he
He might be able to CO\('r all of the
mandatOf! spending and caseload
increases that natural!\ re ult from
having a fast-gro"ing p0pulat1on. but it's unlikely he can do that and simultaneous!> recreate the cmerg-
enc) resef"\ie that he proudl) and
correct!} has 1ns1s1ed on maintaining.
"11hout lindtnll some new re' enue .
It's not a comfonable pos111on for a
man "ho ha~ prided himself on his
hard-headed approach to go' ern-
ment finance . .\nd 11 C\platn Y.h)
DeukmeJian 1s urging an O\erhaul or
the mcreas1ngl) ng1d state budget
process
Dan K'alters is • syodlcatt>d
~/11mais1. Deukmej1an announced last week that he will revive his
call for requiring prison inmates to do productive work and
get paid for their keep. Details of the governor·s proposal will
be sent to the Legislature in January. but the basic need to
improve on the Pri son Industries Authority's sad record is
clear.
Inmates don't need their .. space:· the pop ps~chology
term for pri acy. nearly as much as they need jobs.
Coatra Costa Times
Baltimore Club members like
toreminisce, butOCishome
UC weapons research
For more than a decade. the University of California has
been promising to strengthen its oversight of the nucelar
weapons labs at Livermore and Los Alamos. But the scandals
ofadecade-thecoverupsofdruguse, thcdumpingoftoxics.
the deliberate misinformation of Star Wars weapons
conveyed to the White House. the punishment of wh1stle-
blowers -make it clear that the university has functioned
more as a fig leaf of academic respectability than as an
overseer The university is SU{>posed to be managing the labs
for the '1ovemment. What tt does in fact is to sell the
aovemment its reputation and academic integrity. There is a
word for that. and it isn't nice ....
It's been obvious for years that classified aovemment
weapons work does not mix with t~e t~itions o~ open
research and teaching of. a .areat umvcrs~ty. UC: tned to
rationalize that contrad1c11on away w11h claims that
university oversight would bring academic intearity and a
humanizma influence to the labs. but the record has SUIJIClled
almost precisely the reverse. The labs have made the
university look like a liar and a fraud ...
ORANGE COAST ..., ....
,......_.,..,. .... ,.., .. uo
....... c.-.... CA~ ~l ........ , ... c:.. ---
, ....
[41to! .. ,.., .... ,.,.,
'-Clllll ... [Mir ......... ""r.. =-= ........ ..... ( ..... ...... ........
M) good friend Arn old Schapiro of
Corona del Mar. who professes to be
an avid reader of this col umn. asked
me two weeks. ago. "Wh) do }OU always have to wnte about the
airpon? Why don't )OU wnte about
something interesting once 1n a while
-whr, not wnte about the Balttmore
Club? · he laughed. • So. thi s being the season of
goodwill among men. I feel a special
warmth toward my friend <\mold.
and will tnd~ Y..nte about a "arm and fuzzy group called the Balttmore
Club. I wtll do this even though Arnold
sold his )8Cht. which he kept docked
at the Balboa Bay Club. and therefore
will not be able to treat me to an)
more yachuna panics (where )Ou
stuff yourself first on the Bay Club's
Sunday brunch). I will do 1h1s because Amqld hit me
at a sof\ moment. as I was en JO) mg a
&lass of champa1ne 1n the Quancr
Dfck Room of the Ba) Club dunna a
warm and fuzz_y Sunday brunch
mtt•ina 9f the Baltimore Club ar-
ran&fd for by Arnold and his lo\cly w1lc. Irene.
Wha• 1n the world 1s the Bah1mott C1ub. you ask? And why mention n 1n
a column dedicated 10 Oranac Coun-
ty arowth 1uun? ~ Balumorc Club 1s an informal
111hmna_ 1ieveral umn each )Cir of a
lfOUP of8a1Umort naU\C5 and ncar-
na•iva who no• h\e 1n Southern
('altfonua -•1th a la'lf ~n•
hvu• 1n Oranar County. nd '" a .way. IU1tswhatOranarCoun•> 1ull
about. To.-IM rmx'CI Sin~ ftom the
•nat .. I uw "°' ftooti llhlllk1l'f. ttawewr. alt ... I .. born and railld ill s.-. c.lifllnia. m WiftT-didhem MilMR~
her parents for several )ear . and JU't
last September we visited Balltmorc
together -so Y..C feel close to the
Baltimore nallvcs.
But . m' fnend .\mold 1s from Balt1mori. and he chcn hei. h1~
memones of that Cit). e' cnhclcs!I
he chenshes Orange ount~ C' en
more.
He came here wnh h1 brtd~ '1a San
Bernardino. Y..hcrc he sought and
made his fonu nc 1n fast food Ju~t as
dozens of people from Jn
Bernardino have done. he first had a
'acat1on home on the Orange oa t.
then he mo' cd hert permanent!\ -
commuting to the Inland Empi re
Leon and Joan Schwan.1 of . eY.-
pon Beach came to Orange Count)
because ('I asked Leon to become
us '1cc chancellor 1n charge: of
adm1n1stra11on. Leon, 100. ha" fond
memones of Baltimore. "here he starred 1n football at Fore t Par~ High
School and Johns Hopt..1n L'n" er·
sit). Bui now his home 1s OrJngc
County.
The samt for 1mon and Ph' lh" Ehrhch ofHunt1n1ton Beach. St came
to Southern Caltforn1a 10 build on his
alread) established carter as a C'om-
mcrt'aal h&ht1ng C\~n. and the
Ehrhchs dtt1ded that Hunt1naton
Harbour .-'Is the pla\'C for them. C\ tn thouth :lilts hat •o rommutc into
HOllyw to follow her pmf~\IOn
H an attm But ~ Count) 11
home. Wha• happen 1t 8alt1mort
Club mttunas7 E~t'T)OM talks about
lhc old dl)s 1n 8alt1morl' of th(
dotmns of th( communt1). of t~ ~::.?' tchools whtt:h •t"rt n•m ratlttf· than namnl. of
FOl'ftl Part H~ School 1...t C°tt)
~~ (I .... khcJbt .. IC llt =. .... 01 ..... ~·· CwnM
MARTIN
BROWER
The) also enJo~ tal~1ng fbout the
lo" pnces of the home 1n Baltimore
l'ompared to Orange-Count\ -large fam1h homes on a half.acre~ for
SI 50.' . maen1ticcnt '-' tales on
multiple al'TCS tor S .000
'Would 1hc\ go b:l t.. \ilo l go bact..
to '1 11 famtf\. relat1'~ and friend
Some came io Southern Caltfom1a
dunng \\ orld War II a sen icemen.
decided to \Cttlc 1n . 11thcm Cah-
forma a ~n a~ the ":ir wa O\ er. and ne,er Y.\'nt b3~k to 8alt1morc
agam.
.\nd neart} C' cryonc talll.s about
the d1fTertnce tn thC' Y.C:tthcr Th e arg~ O\ er whether Balttmore·s "in-
ters "-ert mere I> rold or 'ery cold.
had on!\ some ~no"' or~ lot of sno1o1o.
8ut the 3f1\1ment th•~ l1m~ took
placc-in t:>c«mbcr at the Aalboa ea, t'lub o'erloolung C\\pon 8a) Th(
sk> "as dear. the 'i.un "a' "'ann. the
boa" ~ert Y1hna. the )khts ~
t'rUIS"tnl and the b1rd' ~ fl~l"l-
1• mtlht be 11roup from Balumort Off rom ('ht(go, from~antn en~ o(
from °'n' ("t. frOm tos ""idn or from San lemarchno -the 11llt n •hr
ymc. T~ "'-wr a warm fttlu'I fot •heir root~ but h~ M'lrf) eH'f)Oftt'
C'tw tn Orantt ( ount' 11tc' ~'8rM llMft
from ~·hctt ~he: nJ no• tint n
bc>mc. ........ .,.,,.ti I .......
........ ,. ..... ~ .. di a-...-·
Friday, o.c.nt>er 23. 1118
Lr ; · r j
Planned
Parenthood
morally
bankrupt
To the Editor:
-
What is Planned Parenthood? Is it simply abenian '"professional service
qency" that is "responsible" and
··hclpana." as one person bas dc-
scnbed 1t? That characterization is as far from the truth as one can act.
The Planned Parenthood Feder-
ation of America was founded in
1942. hsph1losophy stems from the influence of feminist socialist Margaret Sanger. whose slogan in
1914 was "No gods. no masters!''
Sanger. was a drug addict and a
Communist agitator. She was in-
volved in the occutt and believed that
through sex, humanity may attain the
"great spiritual illumination" leading
to an earthly paradise.
As a result of Sanger's influence,
PPFA is still dedicated to "universal
reproductive freedom .'' as well as to
"abolishing the arbitrary and out-
moded restncuons apmst sexual
behavior."
This message is being com-
muntcated to young people in the
public schools. A Planned Parent-
hood book.let written for teens en-courages them to "Accept sex for
what It 1s, for whatever pleasure it
gives you." The "old mythology" of
saving sex for marriaar is described as .. tine for some. as long as they don't
hassle those who want somethina
else:··
It shouldn't surpnse us that in the
wake of Planned Parenthood's cam-
pa1j.n of sexual freedom. over
600.000 Amencan tcen..a,ers become
unwed mothers each year. This figure
docs not take into account the
incidence of abonion. which is some-
thing th.at ePF~ins is eve
girl's right. PPFA is the nation s
leading provider and promoter of
abon1on.
PPFA is deeply involved in a wcll-
funded attack against any and all pro-
ltfe legislation at the st.ate and federal
levels.
Responsible parents and tcachcn
are realmng that Planned Parent-hood's propagation oftbc -sarc sex"
myth 1s a ticket •o disaster. Public
schools arc getting the messaac that
instructional programs should
promote abstinence. marital commit-
ment and social responsibili•y. Favorable rnults<>f such an approach
include a htahtr self~tecm nd a
vcater respect for others. as well as a
drop tn the rates of pregnancy and
seituall )·transmmcd d1scasd.
Planned Parenthood's morally
bankrupt approach to human scxu-
ahty has turned out to bC a colossal
failure. The.ir advice is neither .. re.
spons1blc .. nor "helpful."
DUANE AND"
DAWN WIPPERMAN
Costa Mesa
Gay speakers at
CdMgetsupport
To the Editor:
In response to recent protests
against ga) s~ker at Corona dcl Mar
H 1&h School· Since the beginning of man there
have bttn homosexuals. I feel that 1t
1s not only unethical but racist for
parents to protest a P)' speaker.
~Ir. Manno·s intention ofbavtng a
gay spea,ker 1s not meant to advocate
the ga) ltfcstylc. but to inform the
students about homosexuality.
If the-parents do not want their
children to hear this controversial
tO{>IC, they ha\C the nght to pull their
child out of that class.
Parents have no right to tell othe.r
parents' children what their .morals
should be.
To the Editor:
DAVID BIRNBAUM
Corona del Mar
• • •
When reading the an1cle about
parents protesting a homosc>.ual
speaker al Corona del Mar High
School. I was appalled.
t couldn't believe that some people
could be so narrov.-mtnded. If high
school students arc old enouah to
ha' e ~' educatton. the) arc rudy to
•learn about homosc'<uaht).
Hom~'\ual1t) ts a ruhty and
C'(nsonng the d1scuss1on would not
make 1t go av.a). I'm Jlad that Corona
dcl Mar H1lh hool 1s tt'ach1ngabout
homos.nuaht) not as an al•crnative
)Cl as a d10erent .... ay of hfe.
RIN" YANO Newpon Beach
• • • To the Editor .\s an .. 1mprcss1onablc" youth at
CdM. I find 11 morally reprehensible
for parents toron11nuc to shchcr tttn-
11ers from the l't'll worid.
The rccm• .aproer over homolca·
ual speakers at CdM teemt to ep•onurcover-~1ve parental
cart. In '"'•of equality. I -=--c .-ndm&ud Wlty -c .. , ...
IN>tnoln ...... :Ii ... ., ...
.... COMlll•lilJlllJ•• •ii.
Tiit ...... m..::; I R •}ts
lft "°' "Yi• • -• ramer 10 1 • a 111 •a· ~., ... ....,._., 11111 n'
don .. -~~._. ... _
tlw ctom ~ -..,. • Ir 11 -==:i==---~······ ....
"
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Marina ..
rallies,
then falls·
Vikings denied
rth in final of
tourney, 52-50
After staginJ a furious comeback to
overturn a big deficit. the Marina Hiah Jirls basketball team yielded the
final six points of the game and
dropped a 52-SO decision to MiHion
VieJO in the championship semifinals
of the Cypress Tournament Thursday
nighL
The Vikings, now 8-2. will play in
the third-place game at S o'clock
today.
Trailina by 10 points entering the
final quarter, Marina scored the first
14 points of the fourth period to take a ~ lead in the waning moments.
Sparking the raJly was a number of
steals from Christa Yorke. who finished with eight in the game.
However. after hitting a free throw.
the Diablos crept to within one on a
Tina Ranker jumper and took the
lead as Jennifer Rohria hit a short
bank shot with under a minute to
play. Rohrig added a free throw for
the finaJ margin.
The Vikinas hurt themselves early
with j)OOr shootins. connecting on
only 25 percent from the field in the
first half.
Melisa Sortino had 21 points to
lead Marina, while the Diablos were
peced by Rohrig with 25.
Jn another pme at the Cypress
Tournament:
Oea. View SI, FoedlHI al: The
Seahawks shook off a slow start and
advanced to a mcetins with Wood-~ for fifth place today.
OC:an View managed to score just
two points in the first quarter. but at
the same time held the Kni&hts to
onJ} five and pulled even by halftime.
The Seahawks. 8-2, took a 26-24 ~ into the fourth quarter when
:.Jenny Sullivan scored etaht of her 12
looint1 to help them pull away.
!Sullivan alto had 13 rebounds. while
•Fabiola Nunez led the Scahawks with
14and1uard Maria Collins came off
the bench to collect 5even.
At the Tournament of Champions
in Santa BartMra:
,.,.._,II, F .. tata Valley 51: 5'acY Hisaka's five 3-point pis was
tM tlilhliPt 1n the Barons' loss on the ftnal clay Of the tournanwnt. Hiub ltit two ofthe 3-point shots
in the fira quaner when she sromt
eWt1ofllerpme-h1&h 23 points. Julie
Workman ldded I 0 for the Blrons. wbo fell to S.5 overall.
In a non-leaaut •me: ..,..... ft, U.. fl: The
Q1111m (2·.5) could not overcome a
llow ...,, in wltd they tCOttd just blr ~ti an aJw fint quarter and
:l•ly fbur rebounds in the
Moonnan lt'Ol'ed 12
Md Debbie Fitch« 11 to PICC
FRIDAY. DECEMBER 23. 1988 m.
Curtis moons
Warriors with
6-for-6 effort
n.., ...................
His 32 points pace
Ea les' 79-9wln;
Irvine splits a pair
By ROGER CARUON or .. n..,..., ....
Estancia High's Eaalcs arc 8-0 u
they await the I ~team Coast
Christmas Classic next week in their
gym and if anyone is wonderina how
they've managed to remain unbeaten
through two-thirds of December they
need to look no further than senior
guard Mike Cunis.
Curtis put on a display Thursday
ni&ht in the Eagles' final tuneup
beTorc the tournament with a su-
perior performance qainst visiting
Woodbridge as the latter fell victim
by a 79-59 margin in non-league
basketball play.
All Curtis did was drop in six
rainbows from 3-point range en route
to a 32-point outburst.
H is left-handed moonshots went
down without a miss, and four of
them came in the first q_uarter as the'
Eaa)es jumoed on heiahtlcss a-nd
f:a'dt.hful vi oodbridgc (or a 21-1 7
Eetanda took control of Thanclay • 79-59 Ylctory a.er . .tmtiaa .Woodbrtqe u Tim Kjar (top left) palla In a pue
aaaluf tile defeme of Romalla Tarlor (30), and Aaaaatin
H"eredla (15) and Paal llcl>aniel (2 ) preuure Joey Cohen.
Aboft, Taylor rebounda lnaide ltataJlcla :• Andy Seholee.
Additionally Curtis, an All-Sea
¥iew ~uc choice as a junior, came
up with six steals as Estancia's press
took its toll to the extent that
Woodbridge was down by a 41-30
count at haJft1me.
"He'sjust a kid who's ready to play
every time out." said Curtis' coach.
Tim O'Brien, ··more than anyone I've
coached in my seven years.·
Noise cou1d1imitRanis 'options
Offense may be hindered
by crowd in Metrodome
From ne Associated Press
The Rams can expect to be stripped ofa major
offensive weapon -changing plays at the line of
scrimmaac -when they play Minnesota Monday
in the Vikings' noisy Mctrodome.
• ··1 think it (a dome) takes you out of
audibilizing and takes away any communication
within your offense after it breaks the huddle."
Rams Coach John Robinson said as his team
prepared for the wild-c,ard match up.
"The hard part is to practice it. The big trouble
with the indoor stadium is the type of game we're
P!aYin& in ~e NFL now. Audibilizing is huac now,
btgCr than tt was five years ago.
"Today ifa quanerback can sec that if you run
certain plays," Robinson said, "they arc going to
fail unless _you act out ofthcm."
. T~e Chicaao Bears found out last Monday
night JUSt how loud 62,000 screaming fans at the
Metrodome, most waving white handkerchiefs.
can be.
After Bears quarterback Mike Tomczak
couldn't make his teammates bear hira over the
djn late in the first half, Coach Mjlce Diw finaJly
gave up on ~ing to run a play near the Vikings'
goal line and instead kiclced a fierct goal.
The Bears wound up losing, 28-27.
Rams quarterback Jim Everett said he and his
teammates simply have to adjust.
"We've played in (noisy stadiums) before." he sai~ "N~ Orleans was fairly loud and so was
Ph1ladelph1a when we ~re trying to score late in
that game. I'm sure we'll ha'e some plays where
the guys will have to look to me for a checkoff. ..
.The Rams split the games Everett referred to.
beating New Orleans indoors. 12-10. and lo~ing to
the Eagles outdoors. J0.24.
"You don't want to run a play like the Bean
did the other niaht and not have 11 work becausr
the place was too loud," Everett said.
"You prepere for it. You don't overprcpare
and you don't want it to become a burden. You just
deal with it. ..
In addition to audibilizing beinJ • problem in
noisy stadjums. it'salso frequently difficult to hear t.hc quartert.clc c.aJI out a snap cadence.
The Rams. like othtr NFL teams. practie% a
silent cadence when preparing for games in loud
stadiums.
Robinson considers the bomeficld advant.aar.
more obvious tn some stadiums than others. part
of the game.
"I don't think you ever want to take them
away." he said.
.. ft'sa big deal to be an the Metrodome waving
your handkerchief and drownina out the other
team ... To get Mike Ditka ... That's good. that's
good theater. lt'sJUSt bad for the guy on the road."
It was the fifth time Curtis has
scored in the 30s in his last seven
starts and he raised his overall
average to 25.1.
From 3-point ranJe, he's now
connecting at a rate of73 percent ( 19
of 26 ), and with three other team-
mates in double fiaures (Andy
Schol~ at 12. Augustin Heredia at l l
and Tim Kjar at 1 l ), the Eagles had
little trouble' with the Warriors.
Woodbri~ Coach Bill Shannon,
with guard Fred Schweer missina
because of a football recrwtment visit
to Oregon State, started just one
senior and had freshman Matt
Murphy in the startina lineup .
The Warrion, who have si~
freshmen playing above their class
(four with the sophomores and
(Pleue eee PRSPS/M)
Ditka won't engage
in game of politics
Bau:&oa'• Bliek Joluleon landa on the noor -lae ...... with Benoit 8eajamlD
of the Cllppen for looee ball d~ Than-
day'• iame won by Rockets. 1U:l09.
refuses to name
No . 1 quarterback
LAKE FOREST. Ill. (AP) -Poh-
llcs? \\hat politics? Mike Ditka says
he isn't one to play politics. though
some ofh1s Chicago &.vs have been
late}).
First. defensive tackle Dan
Hampton blasted quarterback Jim
McMahon. who fired back and hu
trainer Fred Cano 10 boot.
Then there's the quntion of who·s
at the helm of the offense. McMahon.
mended from tnJuncs but a spectator
at the Bears' 28-27 loss Monday niJ.ht
to the Minnesota Vikings.. or Mike
Tomczak. who tossed a last-minute
in tcrctpt1on as the Bears were making
a late dnve to take the lead.
On that subJCCl. the coach who
doesn't pla) polmcs. had this to say
Thursda\:
"I do n't consider we rcall) have a
No. I quarterback. and probably in
th1scasc."'eha,et"o o. ls."
Contraf) to what ''}ou hear from
the experts." Datka said. "There 1s no
poht1cs m' olvcd. l'm not o ne for
pohllcs.
''I'm trying to do what's in the best
interests of the team no matter what
you mil'?t hear from some of the
experts. he added.
Datka said that at as amponant to
have two No. I quanerbacks.
"Whe'n people said to me. ·Mike.
wh\ don't .)OU go it and pack up a
veteran.' l asked. 'Who is therc?'
That's why we drafted Jim
Harbaugh ... Datka said.
D1tk.a satd Tomczak -who has
started sin~ McMahon was injured
against cw England in October -
has done well throwing deep this year.
except for the final two games. But he
said the Bears needed to do more of
that an the pla}ofTs and. he added that
Tomczak needs a softer touch.
.. But. he's been throwing the ball
too hard. and he knows his weak-
nesses... D1tka said. "But. he also
knows. he'll overcome 1t."
So. Sllll tV.O No. 1 quarterbach?
Ma} be.
"I think at this point. Mike is
capable of handling the load. and
handling the responsib1ht1cs we have
&wen to him." Duka eitplained. ~1f
for some reason he can't handle 1L
someone else will be handed the
reins."
lloltz's temper has spurred Irish to 11-0 record
SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP) -R<'spcct
often includes a tenerous element of fear. And
to the extent it does, Nolf'C Dame Coach Lou
Holu is h1ply rnpec1td by his football JM)'CT'S.
Holtz manaers to combine a volatile
temper, the aw-shucks humor of 1 comy
amateur ma,ician and a perfectionist's zeal. He
has u~ tht mix to tcare, ~olc and dri"e has
playen into deliverina victory after victory this
teaton.
After an 11-0 fall, he's potltd to tend his
teem apinst Wnt V11Jinia 1n the Finla Bowl
in quac of Notre Dame's eiahlh n1tional
cham.JMOll.slaip.
Despite his much~umined SUC'ttts in
three leUOfts with the Irish. Holu vohanteen
few insiabts into whal makn him tklt.
.. , don't think I can dacribt mytdf'.
bcca...e I'm a "er) complu incfividulll ... he
said ftC'Cfttly. "PeoPle don't rally know me:· ·
Even some of his star pupils. including 1\11·
America hncbacker Michael Stonebreaker. arc
reluctant to analy1c their coach.
"l don't know him well enough:· said
Stonebreaker. "l don't wanl to touch that o ne."
Holu's outbursts on the practict tidd have
become ~ndary. at least 1mong the' ict1ms of
his temper. ~tand1na about 5-fcct-6 inches.
wc1gtuna barel} 150 pounds and shouuns wnh
a hsp. ~ nevcnhelcss 1nt1mtdatcs p(a}ers twic-e
h1S SIZC
He· onc-e tackled quanerbKk Ton) Rice
follow1na • fatkd P''""' and arabbcd the
factmask of Ttm Grunhard. a 6-foot-l-1nch. 280-~ndef. af\tr the 1uard maued • blod:.
'He pulled me down and I'm th1nk1n~
'Why am I lettana this piY do this to nw.' •
Gnanhud rcc&lled. "Hts such a httlt charac-
ter."
~----·
Early on. ~nior tatlback Marie Grttn
found Holu too 1nttm1dat1n.ge"cn to approach
d urina practact.
"I could not stand to talk to him.'' Otten
says. "lfl hadaquntion. l'df>upafterpncttCC
and tallt to lum one-on-one.
When he chooses to be CIS)-tOlng. Holtz
can be dttarm1na and affabk.
C~ Todd Lnht remembcn Holtz
pnfom\1ft1 a m-..c tnd durin& 1 recnnuna
vts.t -cutt•"I a ncwsptper 10 shrtds. then
puttana at b9d tQl'ther.
.. rt'1 jat eo break tht ecc." Lypt saad.
.. He'SJllll ~ti .. h1mtdf as• ,ood py.-
lillt HOlu doftn't ca" to bt rememWrect asa~py.
I'd lilDr IO bt mMm~ as the hl(klCSt
COKt. ae NoeN llil.-ner '° -•n a <'®l)tc of
na&IOMI ~Htlapl. .. he UY'·
82 Or90g9 Cout DAILY PILOT/ Friday, December 23. 1988
'NCAA showing no mercy to cheaters WestTexasS
putonprobatJ
CANVON.=HM AP)-Te1a1 Saa1e'1 I "It aeem1 like we're to•r and ~·re
wieldina more authontr than we used to wield.
but we ~bly don't,' said enforcement chief
David t who was promoted this year to
NCAA auociate executive director.
cues are not necnurily rdltctive of what's
aoina on in colletc athletics today ...
Bent sounds the 11me theme -althouah
he also admits to a healthy skepticism.
Okiahoma, one of the winninecst footbell
prOlflm• in the country. was pven a two-year
boWl ban and a one-year aelevision ban alona
witb scholarship reductions and rttru1tina restrictjons.
was put on a t rft-)'tar
by the NCAA Thunday
violations involvina monc
airline tickets whilt Gary
was head COKh.
oma
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) -Schools
caupt cheatina by the NCAA can expect no
mercy these days, be they Marist Collete or
Oklahoma University.
Ber11 and NCAA executive dirtttor Dick
Schultz point to the special rneetina in June
198S as a watershed event in the efl'on to ~litt
00Ut1t spons. Spurred by a new pres1dents
commiu1on, NCAA schools voted almott
unanimously to revamp the penalty structure
and create the "death penalty." which subse-
quently forced repeat ,offender Southern Methodist to shut down ns football program
entirely for 1987 and 1988.
"Even thouah you're readina more about
penalties riaht now. we're hearina more from
coaches in the field that there is less cheatina
than in the put ... Bent said. "I don't know if
that'• true , but that's what they're sayina to us.
"Maybe they're just hidina more because
of the increaled penalty structure. But what
they're 11yina is the cheatina is not so bad.
Houston, the sixth foott.ll pt'Olrlm to be sentenced in the sc.andal-ridden Southwest
Conference, wasalsot.nned from television in
1989 and t.rred from bowls for the next two
years.
And thou&h Mon is now i
tceond year at Sam Hou
State, the penalties also
follow him.
The aovemina body of college athletics has
declared war on those who break the rules. and
its victims include some of the most pl'CStigious
names in sports, with others in the dock.
. ~hat's more. the NCAA says it already is winning. SOme NCAA leaders say it is workinf.
"II seems to me it will take at least a )'.Cir to
determine if it's true. h's the first time in mx
experience that we've had comments like that. •
That isn't what they're sayina at Okla-
homa Hou1&on or Kansas thrtt of the 12
sch00i1 disciplined this year bY the six-member
committee on infractions. The last six schools
to be penalized each drew three-year proba-
tions. which used to be a rarity.
Kansas was hit with a three-year probation
in November for violations durina a I 0-day
period in 1987 involvina an athlete who never
played for the Jayhawks. In addition to
scholarship reductions and recNitina restric-
tions. Kansas suffered the humiliation of be~
the only basketball champions ever ba
from defeadina their title.
West Texas was barred ~tseason play after this ind from provicli'1a any 1
uve men's balketbill pla,et
an expense-pajct rcc:ruiuna
durina the 1989-90
Cenainly, the enforcement arm of the'
rulina body of colleee spon1 has never been
stronaer. Its current ~t ofS l. 748 million is
an all-time hiah, and so 11 its complement of IS
full-time invcsllptors.
"I think we have turned the comer: said
Schultz, who replae«t Walter Byers in 1987.
"There is sttona interest in compliance and
operatina within the rulC1. But what you're
seeing now and what you'll sec in the next few
Si1nnis' criticism.
of 49ers receives
little response
From Th Astodatecl Prest
SANTA CLARA -The San Fran-EE
cisco 49crs didn't get all that upset. it f II•
seems, about New York Giants quar-
terback Phil Simms' comment that they
"lay down like dogs" in being routed by the Rams.
The 38-16 defeat Sunday allowed the Rams to
claim the final NFC wild-card playoffbenh instead of
the Giants.
Several 49crs. along with Coach Bill Walsh.
IN THE BLEACHERS
ref used to respond to the remark
or shrugged it off as they prepare for a playoff game on Dec. 31
against Philadelphia or Jan. I
against Minnesota. .-One player did ha ve a snappy .-.,...___
comeback, however. and ap-
propriately enough it was of-
fensive guard Bruce Collie.
"At least we're still in the
kennel,'' Collie said. "Simms got
turned out."
lllame The quote is likely to get
elcnty more attention next fall when the 49crs host the USC women to play in Fullerton
Giants at Candlestick Park.
Scheduling problems that have re-m suited in the USC women's basketball team Quote of the day playing their home slate in four different
venues puts the Trojans at Cal State
Robert Reid, an I I-year National Basketball Fullcnon next Wednesday night. 7:30, against the
Association veteran now with the Charlotte Texas Longhorns. -
Hof!1Cts, com~ring his s t on thc_g_l)ansi'on._J.--...:·:;.i· """•l~le1'lrt10o.nn"'!scttems IOCc a ong way to go to play a
ml(j'1jting in outer space: ' ou know what home game. but hopefully it will give the Trojan fans in
Captain Kirk always used to say ... 'To go where Orange County an opportunity to sec us play." said
no man has ever gone before.' Well. now I know USC head coach Linda Sharp. a Fullcnon alumnus.
what that dude was talking about all those years.·· The Lad y Lon&horns were
Flyers win sixth straight game
a. S.tter scored twice and de-~ fcnseman Jeff Cllydlru added his first '
NHL goal as the Philadelphia Ayers beat
the New York Islanders in Uniondale, 4-2,
Thursday niaht for their sixth straight victory. It was the
Islanders' 14th loss in thcirlast15 games and fifth in six
games since Al ArbHr replaced Terry Slmpsoa as
coach. The Ayers arc 9-1-1 in their last J 1 games ... In
other NHL games: Bobby SmlQ and CIHde Lemieu
scored power-play goals as Montreal continued its
dominance in the Adams Division with a 4-2 victory
over host Boston. Beaten only once in the last 14 games
and twice in the last 20. the Canadicns improved their
season record against Boston to 4-0-l while increasing
their Adams Division lead to IS pointsovcrthc sccond-
placc Bruins ... In St. Louis, Steve Y1ermu had two
aoals and two assists} extending his scoring streak to 23 pmes, as Detroit ra lied from a two-aoal deficit to tic
the Blues. 4-4. Yzcrman's power-play goal at 12:05 of
the third period, his 34th of the season, beat St. Louis
1oaltcnder Vbtcftt Rinde .. to tic the score ... In off-
the-icc news. Toronto forward Jeb ltordlc was
suspended for 10 games by the NHL Thursday as 'the
result of a major penalty for high-sticking Edmonton's
ltelQ Act.N in a game on Dec. 14 ... Sylvela Tar1eoa,
hampered by injuries for much of his six-year career
with Hartford, underwent surgery on a separated lcf\
shoulder Thursday and will be sidelined for three
months. team officiaJs said ... Former Quebec Coach a.. Lapetate probably will remain in the intensivc-
carc ward through Christmas weekend but surgery
Wednesday to remove a cancerous kidney was termed a
success Thursday by Pierre Bea•demla, the Nor-
diqucs' team's doctor.
Lions give Fontes contract
PONTIAC. Mich. -Wayne Fontes. EE who put some spark into the Detroit Lions c II t
durins a five-week interim ooaching stint.
was gi ven a three-year contract Thursday
by the NFL club.
Contract terms weren't announced. But Fontes, an
NFL assistant coach for 13 seasons. is expected to earn
about S2SO.OOO per year.
Fontes. 48, was aivcn the interim job after Darryl
Rogtnand offensive coordinator Bob Baker were tired.
He guided the club to a 2-3 rrcord, bcatinf the Green
Bay Packers twice. The Lions finished the 988 season
4-12 and out of the playoffs for a tif\h straight year.
Viking pair plead innocent
Minnesota Vikings players A.DtMay EE
Carter and Carl Lee and Lee's wife, Dona, •II t
on Thursday pleaded innocent to disorder-
ly _conduct charses in connectjon with 1
skirmjsh outside a niptclub. A third playCT arrested in
the Dec. 13 incident. 0.nJI Hanis, was not formal~
charpd at the bcari~ His attorney, Mldlael Celid,
said the city attorney s office had not ~t dcacrmincd
whether to charae him ... Judie ReMr1 Pan., the first
fUJJ-time president in the 69-ycar history of the Green
Bay Packen. 11id Thunday he will retire in June.
Parin1i 70, said he had an undentandifll and
commitment with the Packer Corp .. that he would stay on u pnident until he would normally retire as ajud,c
• . . The N~ E.,.-nd Patriots. whole passina and
ICOrins problem• iepC them out of the playoffs. h~ve
clecideit not to renew the contrKtS of offensive
coonfutator.., •-11111 and puairw pm~ coordi-auor L11 ll1dl .. Bocb joined the NFL team for the
1915 ..... ..,._. llerrJ'• fina full season as head
cmcb. This 1eaton 1t the lua on their con1111ct1 •.. The
Oevelaad Brown• have liped free aemt defensive end • n • ... ind pl8ced defensive end .. .,... '-on tbe injured raerve list. Nelto41, 21. will be ~= b die AFC wild card 11me apint1 the .. Oilen Oft S.&urclQ, the .. .,... •id nu,. ..,. lollll 1111 been holDilllized this week bcclate of a :"&::.. b9ct suffered la Suaday's ll-2l viclory over
ranked in the top live in prc-
season polls. but have slip{>ed as
they have struggled early in. the
season. They arc led by Street &
Smith's pre-season Player of the
Year. Clarissa Davis. who is
expected to play a vital role in the
Texas attack this season.
The Trojans arc led by an All-
Amcrica candidatcofthcirown as
.... _ Cherie Nelson has been piling up
-r impressive numbers. Nelson won
Pacific-I 0 Player of the Weck honors the first week of
the season for her performances against Nonh Carolina
(33 points, 17 rebounds) and Illinois State (23 points, 7
rebounds).
Three Gator players suepended
Three Uni versity of Florida players •.
will miss next week's All-American Bowl
while serving one-game suspensions for
violating athletic dcpartmc;nt rulC1 con-
cerning classroom attendance. Coach Gala Ball 111d
Thursday. Reserves .U.. S.Wvaa, T191 lleCeJ and
WW WMte will not make the trip to Bimunaham. Ala .•
for the Gators· Dec. 29 pmc against Illinois. l:M the
suspensions will not affect future eliaibility of the
players, Hall said. Sullivan isa fmhman wide receiver,
White 1s a first-year defensive back and McCoy is a
5ophomore defensive tackle ... Syracuse runnina back
MJdael Owea1 has been suspended for a "repeated
breach of team guidelines" and will not play for the
Orangcmcn in the Hall of Fame Bowl in Tampa, Fla ..
on Jan. 2. the team announced . . . Saa 81"'8•·
avcraJing 13.8 points per pme for the University of
Michigan, was suspended for three pmes because he
broke team trainma rules. Wolverines Coach Bill
FriMer said Thursday. The suspension will keep
Higins out of action for Michigan's appearance in the
Utah Clasic Dec. 28-29 in Salt Lake City and the
Wolverines' Bia Ten opener on Jan. 7 qainst
Northwestern. The sophomore forward could rejoin
the team for a Jan. 12 game apinst Minnesota ... The
Toronto Blue Jays announced Thunday that the
contract of designated hitter-first baseman Cecil
FteNer has been sold to the Hanshin Tilers of Japan's
Central Leuue for an undisclosed amount. Fielder
played in 7' games for the Blue Jays this year. but
slumped after the All-Star break ... Phoenix Suns
rookie JUlrd Du Majerle has contracted mono-
nucleosis and will be sidelined for the 11nl two to four
weeks, the NBA team said Thursday. Majerlc, a fint-
round pick of the Suns' last April and the No. 14 overall
selection in the college draft, missed Tuesday niMt's
game against San Antonio with flu symptoms.
Televielon, radio
T•L•VlllOll s P.m. -NO HOCK•Y: New York Reneen ••
Washlnoton, WOR.
S."OS p.m. -NO aASK•TaALLl Chlceec> at
CNrlolle, TBS. 7 o.m. -COLL•G• aASICaTaALLt DePaul VI.
~yolli Mervmount 111 Old SM• Clnlk et R0tem0nt,
~~. -.....0 MOCIC•Y: Kl"" et VMCOUllW, Prl Tic et,
.m. COLL••• ll'OOTULLI Texas-El PelO n . n MIHll .. In lnclllllndlllCI lowt (di·
levecl), CMnnel 11.
I o.rn. -HOllsm •ACING: HottVwood Perk rep6evs, CMMll 5' (Prime Ticket 1 a.m.>.
l'.30 p,m. -COLL•Ga Ull(mTULLi Sleflford et
UCLA, ESPN. 9:30 p,rn.. -COLL8H aASKllTaALLl Nevede-
Ln v ... 1 In ltlblt It.,,.._,,,...., C ...... t.
10-.30 p,rn, -MDOOa IOCC8ll: LA Lellrl el
Tecome (dlllvecl>, Mme Tic:Mt. aADIO
5:30 o.m. -'9IO U9CSTaALLi C..._• et Sift
Antonio, KRTH ('31), 7:30 p,m, -"'° MllC•TaALLI Secremento· ,, Leun, KLAC (510».
7:31 P.m. -~ MOCX8Y: IUn• •• VencoultW, KPZI (1190).
I ''"· -COLU• MacnaALLI Celtomle et USC KNX ("'9). ... ,,rn.. -COi.UM ~ .......... .,
UCLA, KMllC (711).
•
The NCAA says all this activity reflects the
will of the member schools.
~r. Also, its basketball IC
ibips for the 1989-90 and I
teUOnS were cul to the equiv
o( I 0 full athletic pantt-an ·
PleiJ.tyof football Jan.
This season, seven
games to be shown
in 11-hour period
For the past few years. there have
been four New Year's bowl pmes.
Now, there are seven in 11 hours. ls
it too much. even for the most fanatic
football follower'?
"As a fan. it can be a frustrating
day," Michael Weisman. the ex-
ecutive producer ofN BC Spons told
the Associated Press. "There's a lot of
attractive games on, but it's hard to
watch them all." Len Deluca, director of propam-
mingat CBSSpons. said having so
many games on one day "takC1 a little
bit of the luster off. I think sometimes
you can have too much of a good
thing."
NBC'sJan. 2 lineup starts with the
Hall off a me Bowl between Louisi-
ana State and Syracuse. the Fiesta
Bowl between No. I Notre Dame and
No. 3 West Vif'linia and the Orange
Bowl between No. 2 Miami and No. 6
Nebraska.NBC will televise the
national champion, no matter what.
The same can't be said for ABC,
which this year took the Rose Bowl
from NBC.
ABC's first Rose telecast will be
opposite the Fiesta. USC-Michigan is
n~epme.~pcciaUy-locaJI •
butitdocsn't comparcwithagamc
between the only two unbeaten
teams.
Thedream Fiesta matchupwas
assured when Notre Dame beat USC.
27-10.
Rose Bowl ratings have plum-
meted in recent years, and may reach
a new low Jan. 2 because of the Fiesta
competjtion.
Both ABC and NBC will televise
triplcheadersJan. 2, while CBS will
show the Cotton Bowl (Arkansas vs.
UCLA). ABC has the Citrus
(Clemson vs. Oklahoma). Rose and
Sugai' (Florida State vs. Auburn):
NBC counters with the Hall off amc,
Fiesta and Oranae.
Toaetajumpon the competition. NBCflasmoved the Fiesta kickoff up
to I :45 p.m. That's l 5 minutes before
the Rose Bowl is scheduled to stan.
0
NBC Spons sianed an agreement
Thursday with Cablevision Systems
CorPoration to put the Olympics on
U.S. cable TV forthc first time in a
poolinaoftclevision re10urccs wonh
an estjmated $300 million.
The aareemcnt could create
I S0-200hours of pay-per-view cov-
craae from the 1992 Barcelona Sum-
mer Games in addition to N BC's
planned 160 hours over the com-
mercial air wavC1.
Althouah neitherthc network nor
Cablevision would release tinancia~
details. it was reported earlier this
month that NBC was trying to lay off
on cable television about $75 million
ofits $401 million total payment for
the Barcelona Games.
In itsannounccmcnt, NBC and
Cablevision placed the value of the
re10urces involved "in excess ofSJOO
million."
Although the format for the cable
Olympic covcraac has not been
outlined in detail, it is likely to be
desianed to allow for more live
coverage, especially of special interest
sports such as equestrian or soccer.
which aet relat i vcl y Jinlc. network
~VCrljC.
NBC also broadcast the Seoul
Olympics, and al thou~ the network
would not release details. it made
money. In planning its record Barce-
lona bid, NBC counted on cable TV
money to turn a profit again.
0
Rams fans were assured of seci n,g
their team play on Monday(l 1:30
a.m .. Channel 2)whcn the Vikings
defeated the Bears last Monday. A
Chicaao victory would ha ve meant
that the Rams would have hosted the
wild-card pmc. and there would
have been the possibility of a blackout
locally.
0
The Houston Oilenevidcntly
didn't gct cnouah dot biscuits an
snowballs thrown at them Sunda
they'll be back at Cleveland Stadi
on Saturday for the AFC wild-ca
etayoffgamc-10:30a.m. on
Channcl4.
0
The networks didn't like it one
Sunday when the Giants lost tot
Jets last Sunday.
That means. there wi II be no N
York teams in the NFL playoffs.
which means the No. I media ma
in thecountrywon't be represent
0
"Fred Rogin'sSponsBowl '8
K.NBC-TV special hiahliahtina
outstanding achievement and foi
in athletics and hosted by Chann
sponscastcr Fred Rogsin. will rct
toKNBC'sschedule11rinaChrist
Day at 11:15 p.m.
The half-hour special will be re
broadcast Monday, Jan. ht 9 .
The s~ial will present "Roa.i Heroes, ·featuring some of the lU4
ics people of the year. as well as th
1988 "Hall ofSharnc" awards. A
ditional segments will hiahliaht
best athlete danccsofthc year.
0
Coll~ football bowl games co
tinuc this weekend with the cove
of the Independence Bowl tonigh (Channel 11 at 8) and the Sun Bo
Saturday morning (Channel 2 at 9
a.m.).
In the Sun Bowl. Army will m
Alabama in El Paso1 Tnas,as Ve
Lundquist. Pat Haacn and John
Dockery call the action.
Sports on TV for weeken
Saturday game -Houston at Cleveland, KN>. ttu70).
TELEVISION
9 a.m. -COILEGE FOOTBALL: Army vs. TELEVISION Alambarna in Sun Bowl from El Paso. Texas. Channel 2.
9 a.m. -TENNIS: Federation Cup from Melbourne.
Australia (tape), ESPN.
9 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Blue·Gray Cl
from Montaomcry, Ala. Channel 7.
9 a.m. -TENNIS: bavis Cup World Group tin
West Germany at Sweden (taoe). ESPN. 10 a.m. -TIUATHLON: Competition from Nice.
France (tape). ESPN.
10:)() a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: AFC Wild Card
game -Houston at Cleveland, Channel 4.
Noon -OOLP: Women's World Wide Cham-
pionship from Kauai, Hawaii (tape), ESPN.
I p.m. -GOLF: National Lona Driving Cham-
pionship (tape), ESPN.
10 a.m. -BASKETBAil.: Cedar Rapids at To
in Continental Basketball Association pme, ESPN.
l l a.m. -SPORTS SUNDAY: Scaments on wi
spons from Alben ville, France (tape). Channtl 2.
12:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at U
Channel 2.
2 _p.m. -AUTO RACING: NASCAR All-Pro 300
from Charlone. N.C. (tape), Channel 7.
, 12:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Housto
Washinaton State in Aloha Bowl from Honol
Channel 7. 2 p.m. -WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL: NCAA
Division I semifinal from Minneapolis (tape). ESPN.
6:30 p.m. -FIGURE S&A'ftNG: Pro World Cup
championship from Ottawa. Canada Ctaoeli.~PN. 7:30 p.m. -WOMEN'S BASKEfti · Nevada-
1...as Yeps at USC (tape) Prime Ticket.
3 p.m. -COu.EGE FOOTBALL: Review of I
season and preview of upcoming bowl pmcs, Chann
3 p.m. -SUING: Alpine World Cup_ do
competition from St. Anton, Austria (ta~). ESPN.
4 p.m. -YEAR IN SPORTS: l-4iphpts or y
major sponina events. Channel 2. 8 p.m. -HORSE RACING: Hollywood Park replays,
Channel S6 (Prime Ticket, 10:30 p.m.).
11 :30 p.m. -FIGURE RATING: U.S. Pro
Championships pairs competition from Orlando, Fla.
(tape), ESPN.
4 p.m. -SK.ONG: Hifblipts of World
competition from Madonna d1 Campiglio, Italy (ti
Channel 7.
4 p.m . -PRO BAS&.ETBALL: Washingto
3 a.m. -FIGURE SKATING:. U.S. Pro Cham-
pionshiJ>.' women's competition from Orlando, Fla.
(tape), ESPN.
Philadelphia, TBS.
10 p.m. -RALLY RACING: RAC Rally of G
Britain from London (taoe). ESPN.
kADIO
RADIO
10:30 a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: AFC Wild Card
12:30 8.m. -PRO BAS&.ETBAU.: Lake rs at U
KLAC(S7 ).
PRO BASKETBAl l
Rockets put Clippers awa
Houston loses big
lead,butrecovers
for 125-109 wtn
From fte A1Nelale4 Preis
Akeem Olajuwon ICored eiah\ of
his 20 points in the flnt 21/J minulel of
the fourth quaner u the HOUllOn
Roclttu won their founJI =t pme by beatina ahe Lot ~~aahomc, 12S-109, Tbunday
~ Rocketl Wll1ed I 19-poin1 teCOnd-Quaner lmd and Md to come
from t.hind to leld by leYell after
three qUll'lerl. ~11won'1 eilht
pointl dlln poMtlll a I 0-0 n1n tMt 11" H09Mlt a 9MI leld. Tiii a--. _. 1-ll on &be
...... .... , ........ " poilltl lbe .. of'*'_, .. 111t RocUtl won b ............... ~ ktM•oallllla~24 poilltl .,, ... lloGlrett.. folOwlid by
•
Mike Woodson with 21. ~uwon
anibbed 18 rebounds.
Danny Mannina led the Oippers
with 21 points. followed by Gary
Grant with 20, Quintin Dailey with
II and Benoit Benjamin wtth 14
points and IS rebounds. Los Aftltles took its first lead at
62-60 after a basket by Mannina with
9:S I left in the thi~ quarter and
exlended its lad IO 7().65 witb 7:22 left in the third.
Housaon repined the lead 74-72
and led 11-81 IOina into the fourth
~uaner.
El•wberc in the NBA:
l.mleb •· Ptall• II: Mart Jack-
10n'1 drivi111 a.yup with 32 teeondl left I.Ht NeW York the a.d and the Knieb woa lbeir abnh coawutive home~ witb an IM5 victory
ovwDitro6t.
Tiie ll*b. now 12· l II Mlldison SaMN °"*8. won dnpi1e IL'Orina 32 polala adlr &heir avenee per
"Cao.. delpite nritlina 11°'23 **ill dlepme. 11w dwltaicban
86-U advanaaee when he drove
middle and banked the ball in.
Adrian Cantley, held to e·
poinu, then misled an 18-fooler
the Knicks rebounded before
Wilkins was fouled with six ICCO
remainina. He made both free th and Isiah Thomas milled a 3-
attempt 11 the buuer.
Jacklon led the Kntekl wtth
poin&s. and Charles 0.kJcy had
points and 11 rebounds. Vin
Johnton peced Dwoit witb
points.
............... Ill:
Hornacet ICOred l4 poin&s. 10
them in the decisive fourth q
Phoeni• broke I l().pme 1u.k in Denver .
The Sunt had not '¥OD McNicholl Atala Ii nee April I. 19
I' II I 111, ........ .
Dralir ..... 31 J'Oi• .... ~ Pwtei'ared lloBillSia ...
qUllW • PonllM ........ °'' IQiDt .11111 bdn oudalli~
SCale •• OUllnd.
's
k-
ssic
at
I i I _
j Col 'f' l P.~ ' .. 1 I U -I ',IJ\ '. lJ ·•. ~
l
I
Oflnge Cout DAILY PILOT/Frldey, D«.ember 23, 1911 -
''1
I
Fullerton can't hold lead, . I
loses to Weber State
itans squan er 13-point advantage
in 88-77 e eat: Arizona State romps
· From ne A1Nelated Pre11
Rico Washington scored 26 points
and Mike Ostlund had 21, including
two crucial 3-point shots in a second-
half comeback, as Weber Stale beat
Cal State f ullcnon, 88-77. Thursday
ni,atu in a collqc basketball game at
Titan Gym.
Chris Metke and Paxton Cobb
added 10 points apiece for the
Wildcats, 6-2.
Junior forward Cedric Ceballos
scored a career-hiah 32 points for 1hc
T itans. He had previously scored 29
points on three occasions. Derek
Jones added I I for the Titans. 5-2.
Cal State Fullerton led 31-18 mid-
way through the first half and 49-39 at
halftime.
The Wildcats, though. used a 15-3
run midway thro ugh the second half
to catch up.
Ostlund hit a 3-point shot with 9:50
left to cut the Titans' lead to 67-60.
Fred Rollins' hit another 3-pointer 40
seconds later to make it 69-63.
Loyola Marymount 9', Austin Peay
t3: Enoch Simmons' sank a jumper
from the side with five seconds ten to
give Loyola Marymount the victory
in the opening round of the Old Style
Oassic at the Rosemont Horizon.
The Lions, 2-3. will play DcPaul in
the final of the holiday touroament
tonight, while the Governors will
meet North Carolina A&T in the
consolation game.
In Thursday night's first game,
Terence Greene scored I 6 points to
go over I .000 points in his college
career and lead DePaul to a 73-52
triumph over North Carolina A&T.
JUlDois 1%7, LSU 100: Kendall Gill
scored 27 points and Lowell Hamil-
ton added 24 to lead fifth-ranked
Illinois.
Illinois improved its record to 9-0.
its best start since 1983. and posted its
third win of the year over
Southeastern Conference teams. LSU
fell to 4-3.
Oklahoma :iIS, Arkansas-Little
Rock 96: T yron .. )Joncs m~dc. 7 of9 3-
point sh01sand Stacey Kina added 3 I
points to pace No. 7 Oklahoma.
Oklahoma. 8-1. broke open a close
game midway through the second half
with a 25-7 spurt that was highlighted
by four 3-~inters from Jones. who
finished wtth 28 points.
Nortll Carollu lH, Tow10D State
7•: Jeff Lebo. playing near his
hometown, started Nonh Carolina's
decisive first-half run with two )-
pointers and finished with I 9 points
and the eighth-ranked Tar Heels
romped at the Hersheypark Arena in
Hershey. Pa.
Lebo from Carlisle. Pa., scored I 4
first-hair points for the Tar .Heels.
10-1, who broke from a 2 1-2 1 tie with
a I 7-3 run that the senior guard
started with the two long jumpers.
They went on 10 a 48-30 halftime lead
and the easy victory.
OM. State tz, Kut State '7: Grady
Mateen scored all I I of his points 1n
the second half and four other Ohio
S1a1e players scored in double figures t~ key the 12th-ranked Buckeyes'
VICIOry.
Ohio State improved to 7-2. while
Kent State fell to 4-4. Jay Burson Jed
the Buckeyes with 18 points. while
Jerry Francis scored IS. Jamaal
Brown I 3 and T tea Lee I 0.
Sea. Hall H , Prtacet• 41: Ralllon
Ramos scored six ofh1s nine points in
a 13-3 run which spanned the first and
second halves and I 5th-ranked and
undefeated Seton Hall rolled to its
I 0th straight victory.
The victory was a sweet one for the
Pirates. who were coasting along with
an 8-I mark last season when tt.e
Tigers surpnsed them just before
Christmas and threw them into a
tailspin that lasted until February.
Nortll Carollaa State IM, Coppia
State 17: Rodney Monroe score<r24
points and Chns Corchiani added 16
to lead No. I 7 Nonh Carolina State.
The Wolf pack, 4-1,jumped out to a
12-2 lead behind Corchiani and
C hucky Brown, who each scored four
points 1n the spurt. Monroe and Brian
Howard fueled a 17-2 run midway
through the first half as the Wolf pack
extended its lead to 35-13. 'Monroe sc~red eight points. including two 3-
pointers, and Howard added fi ve
points in the run.
Pacific 108, UC Sa• D1e10 85:
Guard Reggie Ricks led seven players
in double figures wi th 17 points 10
pace Pacific. 4-4 to the victory. · Washington scored inside with
7:06 lcft to pull the Wildcats to 70-67.
then Ostlund tied it with another 3-
point shot.
The Wildcats went a head for good.
72-70, as Washington scored on an
inside bank shot with 5:45 left College basketball sco~es
In other games:
Arisou State ·lU, Waslllagton ·
S&ete It: Alex Austin scored 18 ofhiS"
carccr-hi&h 27 points in the second
half as Arizona State captured· the
Pacific-10 Conference game in
Tempe.
The Sun Devils' point total set an
arena record for the Activity Center.
which opened in 1974. The previous
Arizona State mark was I I S in a win
over Portland Stale here Jan. 4. 1977.
The Sun Devils are now 6-2 overall
and 1-1 in league play. Washington is 3-4. 0-2.
-Defenses
gear up
rorgame
UTEP, Southern
Mississippi match
potent offenses
SHREVEPORT. La. (AP) -The ~ Southern Mississippi and Texas.El
Paso defenses ran through a dizzying
variety of fronts one last time Thurs-
On TV tonight
Ch•nMI 11 •t B
day, all designed to stop what prom-
ises to be a high-scoring Indepen-
dence Bowl .
.. We won't do anything we haven't
done before," UTEP defensive coor-
dinator Mike Church said. "We're
just 'oina to do a lot more of it."
U EP. 10-2, meets Southern M is-
sissippi. 9-2, tonight in the I 3th
annual Independence Bowl.
The pme pits two offenses which
scored often this year and two
defenses which gave lards freely.
UTEP scored 49 o SO times inside
the 2S-yard line and has averaged
35.S points per game. Quarterback
Pat Hepny threw for 2.529 yards and
17 touchdowns and leads an offense
that has averaged 413.3 yards per
pme .
.. The kc>' is we have to vary our
a pproach,' Southern Missitsippi de-
fensive coordinator Ellis Johnson
said .
... don't think we'regood enough to
dojustone thina. We've got to do a lot
of different thinp and not let them
know when we're 1oing to do them."
The UTEP defense, meanwhile.
allowed an average of 420. 5 yards per
pmc, but kept opponents to an
av~ of 19.8 points per game.
Southern Mississipl!i quarterback Brett Favre leads a Golden Eagles
offense that averaged 187.3 yards
rushina and 209 yards passing per
pme. Favre threw fof 2.271 yards
and 16 touchdowns.
The Golden EaaJcs defense was
victimized the most throu&h the air.
allowint an averqe of f 66 yards
rushina. but 243.3 yards per game
.. passina.
.. Our defensi ve auys have always :r risen to the occasion when faced with
aaoodoffcnseand we hope this is one
'· of those occasions." Southern M issis-
, si1'9i COICh Curley Hallman said.
' I don't know how ma ny points ifs
aoins to take to win. I hope our
kick1n1 pmc is aood and our defense
tums the ball over to us several
; times."
... UTEP's offense will be hampered
by the loss of leadin1 rusher John
Harvey. one of two MiMn who dtd
not make the trip from El Paso. r-Hervey, UTEP's all-iimc lcadin1
lr nasher, rulhed for 7S I yards and 10
i:• touchdowns this year. despite naa-·~nldc and kntt injuries.
. ~ UTEP sports information director
1 Eddie Mullens utd Hervey didn't
J Rlllte the tne bccauae or an anklt
:•' .,,. An El Puo television station.
bOwcvcr, ~ed this Wttk that ,, ~ ••led an NC'AA drua tnl. -~ lJT1P•1ct1ediMtor~ Hov1ous
r. ._...._. tamment °" w ftPO".
UTIPD11,en1llO uw Md 10 dNI tllil wwi with llw unm1a1n1y su,...
....... the UTEP co9china Jitat-lliall. Mu.en ('Old lob Shill.,.,
..... \'Wta .. pqlitie9
WEST ·ROCICIES Air Force 91, Porll•nd 66
ArirOllll St 121, Washington 90
Atusa Pacific IOS, Spring Arbor ..
Gr•nd Canvcln 119 C•t Polv P~ 93
Mllster's ~. H•11ward St S7 Montana 90, W Wasn1ngton 6J
Pacmc IOI, \JC San 01'90 as
St. Mllrv's 9S, New Hame>sl'lirt S6
Weber St 18, CS F'ulterton 71
SOUTHWEST
B•Vfor 17, S Ut•n 70 Houston 112, Aleorn St 7•
Lamar n. Rice 6'
Okl•N>m• llS, ArlvLltlle Rock 96
Texas·S.n Antont0 71, Texas·Arllngton 66
Tulsa '7, MoUJUil>Cll "' . MIDWEST
Cincinnati 12, NC ·Wilmington 63
Crti9hlon 7S, Montane St '', (ot)
ICanws St. 67. Mo.·St l.ouis 61 Mkll~n St. 91, E. Mlcni~n 16
Olllo St 92, ICtnJ St. 67
S 1Hino1s 71, SW Missouri St. 6'
SOUTH <>-o~ 65, A...,_,. '°
IN1no.s 127, LSU 100
J ames Madison 12. Ve. Commonwe.tth 71
Mc~ St. 67, GremOling SI. 6J
Middle Tenn 93, ArkansH SI 92 (2 Of)
Nor!h Caroll"-St 100, CCH>Oin St. 67
New Orleant SS, Ol<latiom. SI. S4
Plll~rOll 90, Ftorlchi a7
SOUlll Alabama IOI, Sttontn F Austin 69
Vandtrl>Ht 92, Dartmouth 67
W. ICtntudlv as. Pr•irie View n
West Vlfolnla '2. N.C. C"-rlOltt 73 IOI)
Winlam & Mllrv '6, CnriJIOPher Newoort 6J
WinttlrOP '2, c.tlt. Florida IO (Oii
EAST
Otlewart '5, NIOUnt SI Marv's, MO. 75
Le Salt 7'. V1ti.nov• 74 IOI) Lltfe\lelte '1, O•vidson 50 Navy SI, Hofstr• S3 ~th C•rOllM ICI?, Towson SI 74 .-.nn~s1 "· Juniata " Providence 7', Hott Crou 61
SW Loulsl•ne '9, Hwttofd '6
Seton Hal ... Prlnc-'on 46
St Pe~'• 75. Fain.19h OldtlnMln 69
TOUltNAMllNTS
lfi.tl) . G.-..~
a.ti St n. ,.ortllwtslt!'n 71 <lln t>
Redford IOS, Fla. lnlt!'"-lloNI 96 lthlrd) (~Int R-..)
Giii """ 0.Peul 13, Nortn C.rolln. A& T 52 Lov~ "'-rvmount ,., Ainlin Ptev 93
LSU fa.Ud Venael Slnaleton drlbblee aroand fonranla
llarcu Liberty (30) and 'kenny Battle of llllnola Thanday.
I
I I
[
1M Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT I Friday, December 23. 1988
L•llen
Porll•nd
Pl'loeolx
Seellle
Golden St•te a.en
Sacr•mento MJdwest
Dallas
Houston
Denver
Utah
S•n Anlonlo
Miami
EHtem Con••• enc.
New York
Phlladelpnia
Boston
New Jersev
Was11l119ton
Charlotte
Cleveland
Del roil
Allan la
Chicago
Milwaukee
Ind lane
At&llntk DMMen
18 7
14 11
12 12
11 IS
6 16
6 17
Ctntral Dfvlsien
17 s
11 7
16 9
13 10
13 10
5 ll
Tlwnd9V'• Scerei Houston 12S. ~ 109
New Y0<k M, Oetroll IS
Pfloenlx 126. Denver 111 Porll•nd 117, GolOln Stele 109
lltct.
.667 "°° .565
.565
.~5
.320
.227
.652
.640
.600
.560
.J<M
.CMS
.720
.560 .soo
.423
.273
.261
. 773
.720
.~
.56S
.56S
.217
T.-Y's GMws
S.Cretnef'llO et LMIW'I, 7;30 P.m ~· et S.n Ant0t1lo, S:JO Pm Uteh el M'4tml, 4:JO P.m.
lncllene et Atlante, 4:JO P.m.
Seellle el Clevele(ld, 4:.30 P.m. Chi<•oo et CllarlOtte, 5 P.m. Delles et MllweullM, 6 P.m.
Denver 11 Phoenix, 6:JO p.m.
Goldtf1 St•i. 11 Portia~, 1:30 P.m
Aeckets 125, Qippers 109
GB
l'h
l'h
l'h
5'h
91;,
10
1
2 • 131h
4
511'1
71h
10'1'2
l1
cu...-1as not> -~nning a-i. •-• 21. N0<m1n 3-7 4-4 10, 8anl1mln 5-7 4-9 14, DelMIY a-IS 2-2 11, Grent 1-11 •-• 20. Smltn •-13 0-0
I, Kite 1-2 0-0 2, Gerrell 1-3 2-2 •. Willlems 3-10 0-0 6, Gonchtidl 1-2 2-2 •. Wolf 1-3 0-0
2. Totals. '3-f4 22·27 lot.
HOUSTON 025) -I . .JonnM>n 1-12 7-9 24, Thorpe 6-f 4·5 16, Ollluwon 7-19 6-9 20, Floyd
2-S 0-0 4, Wooctson 1-15 4-4 21, McC0<mldl 3-5
6·6 12. Chlevous 3-7 0-0 6, F. Johnson 5-9 4-4 14, Short 4-9 0-0 I . Nevllt 0-2 0-0 o. L11vell 0-1 0-0 O, Tnomc>son 0-0 0-0 0. To1111· 46·'3
31-37 12S
SC.. bY oi-tws Cllppers 24 32 2S 21-109
Houston 36 21 31 37-125
3·POlnt ooa1s-Mannl1111, WOOdM>n, B. JoM-son. FOUied out-None. ltfll<>vnds-<llpptrs 51
(Slnllmln ISJ, Houlton SI (Olll\lwon 111 Auists-<ll-i. 24 <Grant I ), Houston 18 (B. JOMtoon, F. JoMM>n 6). Total fouts-<11-i. 26,
Houston 22.
Alllnd1nc-16,6 l I.
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
Es!MN 79, WMdbrldee Sf
lrvtM fl, Mlilelc•l. Haw.a 41
(~T--..-> ..... ..... ..
Trout J..Mollt
It.Molle
Allrld
DunrntYer
9elns 8uloM
D.Llltlor
M.Lllllor
Miiier
Tot1b
..... .. .....
5 I 2 11 ll ... w I 0 0 t
762 20 Kllllnu 311 1
6 2 O 14 o.vi. 4 1 4 17 6 0 0 12 ,...,.,, 3 0 2 7
2 0 2 4 VOllOIHll 1 0 2 t
3036 llWll91 2 04 5
3 0 1 •
1 0 1 > 5 1 0 \1
2 0 I 4
40 10 13 ti TOfM 14 I 13 41
ic.-ll't ~ lnine \6 20 24 31-tl Mololl1I 10 16 4 ll-41 3-oolnl 90111. lrvi-D. Lltti.r 1;
Molollli-K•lllnu '· Devil 2. Paoalln '· Mlhl1I I.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS Frement 63, feuntalft V...., 5'
IT__,,.. el CM11cl )
........... VlllV ,.,.,....
""pf" .. ftpftp Hlslk1 9 0 2 23 Smith 5 2 2 14 WorllrNn 3 4 1 10 Ftem1119 ·7 2 l 16
l.lmbl'9r 3 0 l 6 ThclmlJ 4 l 2 11
Bkll« 1 0 4 2 Adlms ' 2 1 u Slrlow I 1 3 3 McGet 3 0 • 1 6
Fok l ? 0 6 8111 I 0 0 2
KUYklnd•H I 0 0 2 Tol1ls 21 9 11 56 Tot1l1 26 9 11 63
Score bY. OU.rten
Foun•eln Vallev II t 12 17-56 Fremont u 17 11 15-43 l-POint ooals Founteln V11tev-Hl~k• s.
Fremont-Smith 2 .
Lvnwood 62, EdtMft 46
(Nn·IMeuel
Edl1111 L\lftW9M
.. " pf "' Moorman 3 6 3 12 Wat.on .. ft pf "' I 4 2 23
Fischer 3 5 2 II B•rfiel<I 3 0 • 6 Ch1nd,_r 3 I 2 1 lt09er1 s 0 4 10
lwem1se 0 2 0 2 Adlm1 2 0 3 • Miiier 1 3 2 s Welts 3 0 s 6 Vlnch 2 s 2 9 Slndtr\ 3 I 3 7 Colbert I 0 1 2 Fields 0 0 2 0 JonnM>n 0 0 I 0 Mor91n 2 0 4 4
Totals 12 n II 46 to111s ?7 s 29 62
S<or• bv Oual19n Edison • 16 I I._.,.
Lynwooo ?3 19 I 1~2 )•POint 00111 Lvnwood-Wetson 3.
OCNn view 31, F ..... Jl
(CV1nt1 T---"'I
...... OCMll..,....
""pf"' ....... ,.. Steinle 1 0 0 2 Smith 2 0 0 4 HIP~k 1 I 0 3 Sulllv1n S 2 2 12
Walker 0 0 I 0 N~l ' 2 1 14
Mllclllll 3 3 I 9 TlklOO 2 0 2 4
Resmun1n 3 2 I I Wolfe 2 0 2 4 Allen 0 0 2 0 Collln1 0 0 1 0
Fo>et • 1 I 9 Foronda 0 0 I 0 NIVll'rO 0 0 0 0
l run O O I o
Totals 12 7 6 31 Totel1 17 • 10 31
Score by Oulrttn
Foolnill OCHn View
5 9 10 7-31 2 12 12 12-31
3·POinl ooals. None Tldlnlcal\: Hone
Mlsskln Vieio Sl, Marini SO
(~IT_.._,,..,,)
Mlsslen Vlele Mllrtftl
lt1nker
Mo<oon
Olr.Ul'I
........ flftllfl'P 2 2 0 6 811n I 0 0 2
'2 0 3 4 ~OSCO 2 4 2 I
3 O 4 6 Solrks I 3 3 S ,_..._.)
WllA"ldle Es'-le Ronrl9 N1ut1
17 I 1 2S Sortino 9 3 l 21
S I S 11 Kr!\J!t S &--'YTO
A"1ken1ZY
Moniflv T1y10r
Corllen cori.n
NIVI McLemore
Shanklin
Solllv1n
Blucclo Rev
.. It pf .. 3 0 1 6
? 11-U s
• 0 3 • 6 ] 2 17
7 4 l II
1 1 0 l
I 0 I 2
0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
Heredia cums -
Ki¥ Mc01n1et
ScflOles
W1"on Bunker
HHS.
" ft pf "' Bunker J ~~#--e-ul'I ~ 0-0-~"· 0 2 • 2 0000 Ono 0000
3 • l 11
2 0 1 •
6. 0 2 12
0 1 l ' I 0 0 2
3 0 I 6
Mevers o 7 1 2
Totels 74 • 13 S2 Total\ II 14 14 SO
Minton Manne
Score b'i OU.rten V1elo 13 15 11 6--52 10 17 14 14-SO
3-ooint ooat': None TKMicl l. Renker (MV)
Totals 2• I 17 S'1 Tot1ts 31 17 16 19
Score bv OU1rten
Woodbr1d9e 17 ll 16 13-59
Ei.11ncle 21 20 n 16-79
3-POint ooats WOOdt>rid~orke11 7,
Murpny I Est1ncie-<urri1 6, K11r 1
Ma•n 5', MarN 49
(_ . ..._,.,
MarN MM1n fl ft pf "' fl ft pf l'P NHL STANDINGS
P1rk1
Cal"M!'on Tll.N9UYell c..rreon
Flelch
Nr#fleld
SMtor
Tu.H9uven H1Sllri9 Tol1!5
I 1 I 17 Jensen • 0 I • C.mobtl COllfet enc• 0 1 S I Meddred 3 S 2 11 Stn~ DfYlsien
1 1 3 3 Mavnand 4 I 2 9 W L T lltts
6 O • 12 GvlleY • 3 l 17 CalOerv 23 6 S S l 1 1 3 3 Hltllard S • 2 U Kln9s 23 12 1 O
1 1 2 3 n1acu< ~ ~ ~ ~ Edmonlon 19 13 4 42 ~ ~ ~ : wi.ntnvton Vancouver 14 17 5 33
o o o o Winnipeg 13 12 6 32
21 s 19 49 Totals 21 13 13 56 Norrl1 OiYfMOft
\OJ G~
193 1'6
167 141
119 llS
131 lJS
Sew. lllY Oulrten Detroit 18 11 S 41 1~ 130 ~r1111 16 13 s IS-•9 St. Louis 13 15 6 32 113 116
Miiiikan IS 1J 1 l3-56 Toronto 12 21 2 26 109 lSS 3·oolnt ooa1s· Martn-Tu Nouyen 2 M111i-Mlnne sola· 10 11 6 26 106 131
ll•n-Gu1tev 1 Chicago 8 22 4 20 131 16S
CorON dl4 Mar 61, Cost• ~sa 26 w.-.s Cenferenc•
<nen-tefflMl P•trlcll Divtsien
C•ta Mtsl c-• Mir P ltt,bur"h 21 11 2 4' 163 139 ""~"' "" .. "' • 4 Vu T N9UYln
cnan9 Sarnfl
Hlfdifl9
LH hV
H N9UVell
1 o 1 2 Cwlertnie J 1 • 1 Pt'tll•detPhia 18 17 2 31 1"6 ll6
5 0 4 10 Herrington I 1 o 11 NV R•noers 17 1' 4 31 13S 131
2 1 o s Jackson I o J 2 Washington 17 1' 4 31 120 119
1 o 1 2 SC1<111 3 o 1 6 New Jersev 13 15 6 32 119 136
1 o J 2 W1.Jonnson 2 1 1 s · NV lst.nders I 24 2 11 101 1"6 2 o o Mlther 2 o o 4 Ademt DMsien 10 lenne< 1002 0 Pline l 2 1 a Montru l 23 10 ~ S2 lS3 120
Fredericks 3 O 2 6 Boston 14 14 9 37 ll7 11 l
Flint 4 o 2 9 Buffalo 13 17 4 30 119 141
we Jonnson 1 O O 2 Hartford 13 11 2 21 116 115
Klein 0 0 0 0 Quebec 12 21 3 27 127 163
l2 l IO 26 To11!5 31 • IS 61 'TIM1n4111V's Scerft
Seen bY QIJl'1WI Monlreal 4, Boston 2
Coste Mft• I 7 10 1-26 Pllil1dctlplll1 4, NY lill lldef'S 2
Coron• dctf Mar 22 11 13 15-61 Oelroil 4, St Louis • J-oolnl ooats CdM-Herrlnoton I. Flint I TICllY's ~
-Aadferd, How•ll 6', lrvtM '1 =or~ :ie~~;.s l;J'; p,m (~ T__.....l T0<onto 11 Buffalo. •:JS o.m.
lrV1M ..... , Pilhbul'9'1 •• Hew Jersey. •:•S p,m.
" n pf " ft ft .. t113 NY ltengers 11 W1S11in9ton, 5:05 P.m.
Trout
J.Molle
"..Molle Allred
DunmeYI<
Bulone 81ins
D.Llttler
M.Lll!I ...
Totet•
7 1 1 s Coooer I 0 3 Queoec et Winni.,_, 5:35 p.m.
11 4 l 77 Parham 2 7 2 11 Oetrolt 11 Chicleo, S:JS o.m.
1 o • 1• ~So1!11n s3 27 2 1•9 C11Mrv 11 Eomonton. 6:35 o.m. 4 0 4 11 ~" I ~1 ..,,_ I I s • Curry 0 I I 1 No oan.s ICfleOulld 1 o 2 2 Di vis 6 2 2 1• ,_....1 a...
o o 2 o Smlln J • 2 10 No 91n.s scfledUlld O 0 ] 0 Bu<nlev I I 0 J MIMIV"I G8'MI
o o o o Ntw Jersey et NV fltenoer1. 10'.:JS 1.m. 26 6 21 63 To1111 20 24 12 69 Botton 11 euffalo. 4:35 o.m.
Sc.,. ..., °'*"" Plttsbur9'1 11 Hertford, •:35 un. tr vine I 16 11 >-63 NV llllndW• 1t Toronto, 4:35 Pm
1t1df0<d 10 13 1' 27-.9 St. Loui. et Chieffo. S:35 o.m. l-POtnt ooats· 1rvl-Allr9d 3. J. Molle 1, WIMIP99 II Mlnnnot1, S:35 P.m.
Dunm1Ytr I; ltedloro-McCov 1, McMllll1n I. C11Mrv 11 Vancouver, 7:05 o.m.
Kosar's status
still questionable
Schottenhelmer says
he· s encouraged with
progress of Brpwn QB
Dr. John Beraf'eld today to S« if he's
healthy. "~ie doesn't need to uake a lot of
repetitions in practice. He's been
tbrouah it all. He took some rep.
etitions today, more than yestttday. I'm encour19ed,.. Schonen.heimcr
BEREA. Ohio (AP) -Coach aaid.
Many Scbottenheimcr said he was Don Strock, Kour'a rrpl8cement, tDCOWsd by \k play of injured completed 25 of 42 ,._. for 326
aer'Dic Kam in practice ThUflday, ~ ead two touchdown• last Sun. ~ Koear mnaim ionable day~-Houaton and would st.an
for S.1.ntay'1 AFC w;~':'n., pme •in if Kolar cannot. ~the HOU9IOll OiJen. M8Ck tw milled all or pans of IO
· I.Giit, will91 apraiaed kw. i1onc ~ includiftf the lut two f'WI '#I .._ w no miMed lhe pmn.. with vanous i.Uurin. He ii ....,._. Jl.23 victory cmr Houacon c:urmnJy bamoered by 1 aore knee
1111....., becau. Of uuury. ind DUlfed ca1rmmc1e.
• Ftalllld Kevin Mec:t and cor-''Kevin did some thinp the last aetbKk Hanford Di•on also sat out couple days. He's not 100 percent, but :the ..,ne. we're eacou,..ed by bis prosret1, ..
UM Kolar, Mack is listed u Scbot1Cnlaeimer uid.
quettioMble, while Dixon, 1 Pro "We're opeinrittic Wt Hanford
Bowl ldeetion, ia probebk with a will be able to ~t we J1111 don't
pulled lhiab 11utc~ 1ut1ained in a • llnow for ture, • te*imer ..W.
Jl-31 Jolt to lftt Miami Dolphin• on "He did a lntle ·more todly tban Dec. 12. He was to be namined by ~. Y• know ltow 111Uldt
Nf L ... vefft
A,C Wt&.D CARO
SltwaY'I 0Mw Hou\ton 11 CtevNnd. t0-30 1.m.
N,C ~D CARO
M9M9Y'• GelM •-11 Mlnnetot1, 11:30 1.m.
1' MINNHOTA WINS 51tw9y, OK. )1
Plli11oe11>1111 11 Clllceoo. uo e.m.
Stettlt 1t Clncin111tl, I o.m.
SwldlY, Jlft. I
Cleveland 0< Houston 1t Butt11o. 9:30 • m
Mlnnesot1 •' S.n Fr1nctsco. I P.m
1' RAMS WIN Slturdly, Die. ll
CM1ve11nd 0< Houston el Buft110, 9:30 1 m. PhllldelP,,11 11 San Fr1ncl1co, I 1>.m
SUflCllV I Jlf\. 1
••"'" 11 C"lceoo. 9'30 1 m. Seellle 1t Ctncinnall, 1 o m.
COH~l!fltENCIE CHAMl"tONSHIP'S
Sundlv. Jan. I -
AFC Clllmt>lon,lllP, TBA NFC chamolonsnlp, TBA
SUP'ER BOWL
SuftdlY I Jaf\. 21 (It JM ._.. Stadium, iw.tnl)
AFC Ch111'1J)1on vs NFC Chlmofoo, 2 Pm.
NFL lnlurv ,..,.,.
Tile N11ion11 Footblli LH9ut lnlurv reoort
IO< lht NFC •nd AFC Wild Card 91mlS H
providtd llY tne 1t19ue
SltwdlY HOUSTON AT CLEVELAND -Oilers P Gr" Montoomery (h1ms1rl1111l Is doubtlul, RB Mike Rozier (ribs) Is questlon1ble; JI Dean
Sltlnkunter (1l110wJ. WR Erne\! GMru <ribs). c Jev Pennison (foot), LB Roti.rl Lvlft (enklel,
NT Ricnard Byrd (kneel. lt8 Alonro Hl9hsmiln
(hiPl •"• oro111111e. Browns DE Marlon J-s (DIC'lll Is <loulltfut; QB Bernie Koser (knff), RB
Kevin Mack (k11ff) ere Qutstion1b4e; CB Hen-
ford Ot1ton (QuedrlceP), L8 Mike Jonnson
l•nklel, S Brian Wnnl1111ton _(elbow·neck), RB Hermen FOf'ltnot (snoulders·klllll are P<Ob·
•*· Mof'8Y
RAMS AT MtNNESOT A -Rams: WR Ron Brown (enklel. Ji. Que,lion1bt1, ltB Rot>e<t
OelPlno (loel IJ prob•CMlte. Vlkln11i.: LB Jeule SolOmOn (knff>. RB Darrin Nel\on (,,1mwln9),
OT Tim Newton lklllll ere Que,tlonable; RB O.J Oozier (concussion>. NT H•nry Tnom11
(rlDsl. RB Derryt Harris (knM) i re oroDlllll
eowt s~
CALIFORNIA 90WL (OK. 10 ., ,,.._)
Fresno St••• JS, Wellern Mldli91n 30
INOl!P'ENDENCE BOWL
ITINtitlt 11 Slllweoert. LI.I Sootnern M1ssls11P1>t (9-2-01 vs Texei.-EI Peso (10-2-0), S P.m. (Mlz~ul
SUN IOWL
(Slturdlv ., El ,. .... TOH)
Atablme (1-3-0) "" Armv 19-2-0), 10 • m.
'
0.ANG• llOWL
1'911. 2 ot MIMN) Netl(11ka tll·l·Ol VI, M6emi. Fil 110-1-0),
U O om (NICI JUU llOWL
(JIA. .... y ........ '9Mftl
TIA (ESPNI
•AIT·W.IT IHll .... CLAIS.C:
(JM. IS .. .......,.>
Noon IA8CI NUU IOWl. 1-. Mot ....... )
I om. (N9(1
~ . . . ..
IAS•IALL
S6tNd,,.. ........
The S'l rNlor ill9Ue Pl•vers wno filed 10<
frH 1'"ncy with the Mllor Le19ue l1Slblll Pl111er1 Association af1d llave ,191\1d, wilh
lormer club It different; • AMERICAN LIAOUI! I OSTON (2)-lte-slclned Del!nls L•mo, p, to 1 one·v11r contract. Mike Smithson. p, ac-
CIC>llCI Slllfv 1rbltr1tlon. CHICAGO (1)-Sl9ned Ron Kittle, dn
(ClevNnd>. to 1 1wo-v11r con1r1ct.
CLEVELAND C31-Sl9nld Jene ~osco. o (Los Al\09llll. 10 1 two·ye1r c;onlract; ,Jgllld Luis A9UIVO, Inf (New York. V1nt<MS), to 1 one-vear contract, l'l·llened l ud l llck, P, to
1 one·vMr contract. DETROIT (2)-tte-s'9nld Dave l er9"'\lfl, lb-of, to 1 one-yHr contract, Ind Ted Power,
1>. to 1 mln0<-1H9ue contfl(t. KANSAS CITY (l)-R•·•l9nff Bill Buckner.
lb-dh, to • one-yHr contract. MILWAUKEE (2)-Re·ll9ned Jim Gantner,
lb, IO I IWO·Ytlt' contract. and Odell .loflff,
p, 10 • mlnor-1t111ue c;on1ract. MINNESOTA (l)-R1-sl9ne<1 R1ndV l usn, of, end Tim l.ludner, c,to 1wo-y11r con1rac11.
and Jim Dwyer, ol·dh, to 1 one•v11r contract.
N6W YORK (S)-Sl91\1d /l..flOY Hawkins, p (Sin 0il9o). Dave L1Polnl, 0 (Pi1111ur9,,). Ind
Steve Six, 2b IL<t• All9elesl to thr..-'(HI'
conlract,, I nd J1mlt Quirk, c, to 1 one-veer con1r1ct, re-sloned W1vne Tollllon, Inf, 10 •
1wo-yt1r contract. OAKLAND (31-Sl9ned Mike Moore. 0
(5e11tlel. to 1 1hrM·YHr confracl; re·si9ned D1111 HtndlrM>n, of, 10 1 111ree-v11r contract, and Rick Aonevcu11. p, to 1 one-vt1r contract.
SEATTLE C?>-Sl9ned Jeffrey Leonard, or (Mitw1ukMI. Ind Tom Nledlnfuer. p (Beltl-
morel. 10 two-year contracts. TEXAS (3)-Sie111d No11n Ryan. p (Hou1-
1on) to 1 one·ve1r contract; re-1l91\1d Stoll FMllCl\lr, SS, to I lhl'M·Y••r contract. I nd Ed V1n<11 Btr9. p, 10 1 one-ve1r contr1C1
NATIONAL Ll!AGUIE
AT LA NT A ( 1 )-R1-s'9necl Brue• Benedict.
c. to 1 one-year c;ontract. CHICAGO (2)-Sl9neo Domingo lt1mos, lnf
!Cl1vel1ndl. 10 a one-vH r contract; r""'l1mtd
Scott Sllldef'son, p, 10 • one·YHr «>ntract.
CIHCINNA Tl <S>-Sklllld ltk k Malller. P IAt11nt1) to • two-veer contract; Mlnnv TrlllO. lrit <Cl'llcl90). and Joet YOUfl9blOOd, of (Sen Frenclscol. to one·year contracts.; re·,191'«1
Ron Otster, .it>. to • two·yn r C011tr1c1, end Di ve Collins . of, to 1 one·yn r COf'trect.
HOUSTON 13l-Si9ned 8ob Forsch. 0 , end
Alex Trevino, c. to one-y11r contracts, Cr1i9
socc•• Miu. ........
W L P'ct.
t 2 .111
Ga
Beltlmore
Dllla1 Wlc.11111
Tacoma SanDlt9o
La&W'S K1n1es Cllv
I 5 .'1S 2
S S SOD >''> 6 7 462 • s 7 417 4' >
S I .31S S
4 I .J33 S"J
Tllllrld.V'S SC.,.
San Dict90 •• L• .. n 3 (OI)
r.-v-s o-uun 11 Tacoma, 7.JS Pm Wlclllle 11 K1n~l Cllv. S.35 Pm
llfW*Y'• 0-No Htnft KllldUled
luftlllV'• Gemes NO Olmll sclllctuled Mel*Y's 0--WICllll• I I L.a1er1, 7:3S I> m Tl(OITll 11 Sin Dll90, 6'05 om.
Hklh scMol bevt SOUTH TO.RANCE TC>oaNAMENT
• Simi ..,...., '· Mll'IN 0 Simi V1ltev scorl1111. Ruiz I
Marini ooalll saves K,.ln •.
H1"t1me-0-0
MllttM .. Dam6lft 0 MlriN KOrin9· ROdrtouez S. Martin I.
G<Mtlil WVH: Klein 4
H11fllmt: Marina, 3-0.
Hklh ldtMI 9''11
MON·LEAGUE
lr'VtM J, .... ..,, HI~ 1
Irvine sc0<i1111. Cisco I. ConnOltv l , Franko!
NeWPOl'I Hlrbor scorln9. ThomH l. GOllll
saves: Huffman 3, V•ldlzla 2
Misc.
NCAA lfll ..... tteM
The sch0o4• otaee<I on proCMtllon b'f the NCAA In 1911, with the cn1r'"s. 9rMll~ C""8: OM vear orooalion In
oasketblM -c1111nellt aid violation•. utre Dtnefits, lmor-1renuior1111ott, lmprooe< enter11inmlflt ol recruits, 11c11: of institutional
control.
PRE'PS ...
1'rom81
another with the Junior vanity), tel
the price w ith their fifth loss in si
starts.
Estancia sizzled fro m the: floo
nailing 8 of 9 in the second quarte
and 24 of 38 (63. I pcrc.ent) throu
the fint three periods.
In o ther games:
Ra.,onl, HawaJI H, lrvlM
lrviee tl, Molokai, HawaJI U : Th
Vaqueros split the first two pmes !->
the Kamehameha Tournament 1
Hawaii, losing on Wednesday bcfo
rebounding for the brg victory o
Thursday.
Apinst Radford. the Vaquero
(8-1) led b y one point at halftime "bu
had a bad third quarter.·· according t
Irvin e Coach Steve K e ith.
"Radford is the No. I team i
Hawaii and I hoped and thought w
mlMI&: n,, veers In foolb11J -.euri 0111"-10 could beat them," said Keith. "Bu 1 orosPtCI. lmorooer contacts wiln orospecls, lmP'Clt* e111er111nment of prosPtCts. my past eitpcriencc tells m e that
Mlrilt c-.r. Two veers Ill bl•k~tblll -team loses about 2S percent effic ienc
Eatr1 oeneflls for 11nletH, lmoroper ll'1n,PO<· in itS first game Ofa trip like this.
1111on. IOf)9 dl111nc1 tt1eo11one c111i.; tmorOPfr "But o Adrord i's a pretty athleti rtcruitln9; lmOf'OPlr emPIO'fment of ethletti. 11 1'Y1 11 ·
\urntTI« c1mos; pre-1eason and oul·of-senon and good team."
Of'actkes; imprpper rtcruJll1'19 Jo hn M o lle scored 27 ~ints
,. ....... , Two YHfl. bls-tlblft -ElhlCl l brother Raphael added 14, an Bria
condvet v .. tlon1. Cer!lf'allon of comPU1nc1. Allred hit three 3-pointers in finishin ALOHA .OWL Revnol<li.. "· I CCIOled sellrv erbllr1llon ISundlY et HIMMul LOS ANGELES 14)-fte-lklned M.lke
(CBS)
wu111r1111on s1. <1-3-0> vs. Hou\lon (9-2-01, Ml""•"· lb-or. to 1 thrM-vH r conlract. 12:30 p.m. (AICI Alfredo Griffin, "· Ind Altilnclr·O Pw111, P, to
tmOf'-fl111nci.1 11<1 to studlnl·1lhletes, Im-• B h V orooer use of comoumen11rv 1lcll11s; ex1r1 with 11 for Irvine. ut l c aquero
aLUl!-GRAY ALL-STAR CLASSIC two-vH r contracts. and Marlo SOio, Pitcher, to (SulldlY 11 Mei•....,.., y, ~) • mlnor·leH UI conlract.
blnlfils fOf' 11udtnt·1thtetes; lmorooer tran\POr-o nly went to the free-throw line I 111~ en1er11lnme~ of recruits. Jimes._as 9P~-.l0 37 for Radford.
9 1.m. IAIC> PHILADfil.P al--lt.tlloMd .T-UHRTY~.:~~y;;;j----:~·J::• 10 • IWO•YH r tontrlCI, Ind Mike T9US MM: WO Ytlfl, tootDIA -. .o Of'" .. W e aot 'Hawa11anca a 1ttle bl
• (W...,....,_..~MlmiMs. T-.) SCllmklt, lb. end Gr" Harri,, o. to one-v11r
-lftdl1!11""!7-l ·tl n . Soulll Caroline 11-3-0), S con;.;~~BURGH (21-Ri -i'9necl lotl Welk, p,
tnef'll\, t1nk 11 conouct, lme>roPlf fln1nciat aid, I "' , •• 1Mtl1u11on11 contr04. t"'"-recruttl119 •!lduc•· sa'd ve1th rcr.em·~ to the officiatin
lmor<>Hf en1er111nmen1 of ProM1tcts: e1ttr1 Everyone play and scored fo
P.m. <R•v~T'~ AMl!RICAN .OWL to • lllrM·VHr contract, Ind Gery RCldu\, ol,
IOI<. 29 1t ~. AIL) to 1 two-vHr con1rac1.
be!Wflll tor •ludent·11nietu; lmPrOPer con1ecl\ Irvine in its lo~ided victo?e ove
with Pr01PKt1, M I k · J h 11 · eel h Ans-s•tr. Two """· men's Ind o o ~I. o n . o e again t FIOrldl (6-S-01 VL IMlnols (6·4· 11. S p,m ST. LOUIS (1)-Sl9ned Frank DIPlno, P IESPN) (Chlca90 Cul>s). IO • one-vH r contract women'• 1ract1 -1mor-11nanc11111d, en1er-way with 20 points as five Vaquero
f<REl!OOM 90WL (Dec. 1' ., .,....,,.,)
Brl9nam YOUllO <1+0) vs Coloreoo (l -l-0).
6 P.m. IMirlOul HOLIOA Y BOWL
(Die. lO et Sin °'"8)
Wyomi1111 (11-1-'0> "' OkiallOma S111e (9-2·01, S Pm IESPN) P'EACH BOWL
I Die.. lO 11 A lllMa)
Iowa (6-3-3) "" Norrn C1rotln1 State (7-J-ll, 10 a m (Mlzlou) GATOR IOWL
(Jen. 1 ., .llctr...wtll. Fie.)
Geor911 (1-3-0) vs. MlchlHn Stet• 16-4-1).
S P.m. IESPN) HALL OF FAME BOWL
(Jin. 2 1t TemN. I'll.)
Loui,l1n1 State (8-3-0l vs Svr1cust (9-2-0l,
10 e.m. !NBC> CITRUS aowL
(Jan. 2 et OftlMI, Fii.)
Clemson 19-2-0l 111. Okl1110m1 (9-2-01, 10-30
1 m (A8 Cl COTTON 90WL
(Jin. 2 It DalH)
Arkenses 110-1-0I 111. UCLA 19-2-0). IO•JO
e m. ICBS)
FIESTA 90WL
(Jan. 2 11 T..,.., AN.)
Notre Di me 111-0-0) vs West Vlr11lnl1 (11-0-0), '2 pm (NBC)
ROSS IOWL (Jin. l .......... ,
Mlcnl91n (8-2-tl vs. Sootnern Cet 110-l·Ol.
2 P.m (ABC)
SUGAR IOWL
(Jan. l ...... °"8MI)
Ftorldl SI. 110-1-0) vs. Auburn (10-1·0), 5.30
p.m. (ABCI
HtlVWood Perk
TltUIUOAY'S RI~ TS lno.I .. M·•v -..1u1* M ......... ,
,.ST •AtL 1 milt.
Cl\erv 1'0Y U>om•-•l lHO IUO llumDo $Ht tSle._I •ID c-u ·-, .... , nme. 1401 MOOMO llACa. 6 M IOftet Flt A Fel< Pcllt (Vt111I) 400 J 00 ~ ~ CS.lo-I t10 p~·· -!Soll\) nm. 11H SJ DAIL y DOUaLa t~51 .. ., ......
TMMO llACI. • 1...-A $1\eoe Fe"tr IVlftlll I) 00 •OO ) 10
Wfflf\er E YI 0...-I P1ocev I 1,ID '4 00 Attoat 1s1 ... enu 1M Ttnw. t IJ 1 U l lCACTA U·ll Hid Ml 10
P'OURTlt • ACI . 6 lurtoftlt Mlt .... 1'61-•l ,.. 11• SlllV Cl\eti.r (V-luetal Ut TIH (l>i<tce¥) Time, 1" 11 IJIACTA (MO) oold 11'.60 U OAIL Y TIUP'll (5·5-7) Hid 12".tO "'™ IACI. 6 ~ 110 91111 let 1$1-•I 1010 S• JID COOi ,_ Weter IC•••-1 ... • ..
T .. lie! (~l•I U0
T>me 11) 7
SJ lllA(TA 11·•1 OllO MiM SIXTH llACI. 6 > lu-.1
SAN DIEGO (2)-SIOM<I Bruce Hurst. p (Boston), to 1 thrtt-ye1r contract, re-si9ned
G1rrv Temoltton, "· to • one·ve1r contrect SAN FRANCISCO (1)--.e-slened L1rv
So<enson, p, to 1 mln0<·te111ut contract, JAP'AN P'AC1'1C Ll!AGUK
DAIEI HAWKS (1)-Slclned Willie Upsn1w,
lb (Clevtllndl. to 1 1wo-yH r con1rec1
Aom.lnlne he aeents
The 2S rNlor te19ue P11vers whO flllCI for
lrM 191ncy wllh the Mllor L•HUI l1MDlll ~ ... .,, Auoci1tlorl. and ire still unsigned (x·
reltcltd •ll•rv 11bltr1t\otl and mav ne901l11t
wlln their fOf'mtr '"'"' thf009ll Jan I ) AAURICAN LEAGUE CALIFORNIA (2)-Tn1d Bosley, of, Geor'"
Hendrick, of. CLEVELAND (2)-Terry Ft1nc0111. Inf; lton
W11.hl119ton. inf.
DETROIT l2l-Q_1rrell Evens, lb·dn, L1rrv
Herndon, of. MINNE$0T A (2)-x·Ctllrll9 LH , P, Dan
Scllllteotr. p NEW YORK (11-Nell Allen, P. OAKLAND Ill-Don 81'flor, of·dll.
TEXAS C2>-x·CKlllo Guinle, P. x-Jlm
Solldb«9. c. TORONTO (?l-lt-Mike Fla11191n. P, ltiCk
Ltldl, Inf. NATIONAL LIEAGUI! ATLANTA 14>-x-Jlm Aektr, P, Jim Mor-rison, lb; Jerry ltonler, of; Oute Vlr91I, t .
HOUSTON (2)-JOIQUln And1.1l1r, o, Harry
SPiiman, Int.
MONTREAL I l>-Gr1i9 Ntllift, Inf
PHILADELPHIA I J>-Gr19 GtOH, of. ST LOUIS 11)-Urrv McWlltilm•. p,
SAN FllANCISCO (2)-Ron D1vl1, p, Plllt
Garner, Inf.
111nmen1 1no 1r1nsoon111on tor PrCKOeet• end reached double figures in scoring.
Sludenl·llNettt. F1tsiticlllon of recorch. Befiore headin~home Irvine WIS t Ol¥elMlll Stlltr. Thl'M Yelfl, bl\ketblH -. • .
tmorCIHI' lr1nsPOrllllon, tnltfllltltnef'll of re· meet Warren 1gh of Downey '
cruils; tme>rOPlr recru1ti119 lnductmtnts, Im· today's consolation final. orooer flnanclll eld; iack of insltlutlonal control.
CMdl!Mtl: TllfH v11rs In footba• end
D11kt1Dlll -tmOf'ooet t1nan<lel enl111nct,
ltnPl'OO« recruihll9 lnd\Jcemtnl$ I nd en1trte1n·
tnef'll fOf' oroSHCtS, uceulve lin•nelal aid. K ... ., ThrH VHf$, buketblll -lmOf'OPlf 1r111W1Grt•llon for • Of'OsPtCt; tmOf'oi:ier
flnenclat essist•nct; Exira 1>tnefl1&,
.,....._ TllrM y11ri., foolDlll, utr1 Dtneliti.
-tmpr-fl111nc:l1I 1nbl1n<e. O•h9me: T11ree vei n . footDlll, utr• btn·
tllls -lrne>r-fl111nc111 essls11nce.
... , TexH S•te; TnrH YHr\, Dlsll.tlbell.
utr1 belleflls -lmor-tl111ncl11 11st'11nce
lo \lu<lenl •lllllles Ind PfOMltclS.
°'" ... llNnl DAVEY'S LOCKH (....._, ... dll -3
boll1, 31 1t191er1, 30 cod, 1 c1tlco bin. IS ~nd
bl11, 71 scUlllln, 25 red 11\aHer, 1 cow cod. DANA WHAR~ -2 tio.t•, Sl 1!!9ltn 30
bau, 1 hlttbuti 66 roell llsl'I, •I ITllCker11, 13 '~Mid, 11 blue Pe<Cll. I d119 COd, 2 c;1blron.
Corou del Mar II, Costa Mesa H .
Matt H erringto n led the Sea Kings
(5-3) with 17 points as visit ing Costa
Mesa fell behind quickly and never
threatened.
Timmy N guyen of Mesa was th
only o ther player to score in d o ubl
figures. netting 10 points as Cosu
M esa fell to 2-5.
MUUku $1, Maria 4t: In ~ ncar-
carbon copy of their tournament
victory over Marina last week, the
host Rams dro pped Marina to 6-S .
C herokee Parks led Marina with 17
i><>ints aod 15 rebounds and Francis
Carreon dropped in 12 points in the
non-league game.
Rodriguez net
five for Marin
Los~ THUlllOAY~ RIMA.TS
Tlmt HU. sl IXACTA (M l MIG SIUO 11 OAILY Tit•LI l•·l ·ll H '<I Mt•
Ricky Rodriguez scored five aoal
as the Marina Hiah boys soccer tea
claimed a 6-0 victory over Dlmie
Thursday in the South Tomn
Tournament. In an earlier pme, th
Vikings fell to Simi Valley, l-0. f .... .,.._ ___ ,
P'•IT OA<L I,,_ trot Slllnt RACI. I ,,.... Met
~ ..... -(l>t.mrl uo •ID l20 ltdllew•• H9n<v IHlltlYI UO HO UO a-Jtm G ll'lenOI UO 210
Marina took a 3-0 halftime lea
against Simi Valley as Rodrigue
scored twice and Kevin Martin ha
Ir ... NII\ .... (Melerl OID l•M Merci\ lo\' I~•) JOO Krutie COHr...col JOO Time 2•2 Time H 41
11 IXACTA U·5J Nici SlfSOO
MCOMO llACL I ,.,.. Hee L __ _., Ob ... 1Crt11n1 JI ID t ..
9-tlM $11ir1t !Dtfrl'ICOI 4 2t w.,., "-(Slwr9111 hne. HU U IXACTA 17-11 H.0 tthO
T.-0 llACI. I ft'llle MCI Cr~ IK-1 JID >40 Litllt 0...o IV_ICllt..,....,I 640 Fr.iv .,_ IW..l Tffnt HU
" I XACT" lt•ll ...., an •
P'OIMTlt RACm. I m11t trot Svt-. ......... 11'1111 • 00 UO
Sllener ~-IDIW'M!r) 2 60 w...,.~t~l
Ti"" Ht2
U IXACTA IH) -111 N
P'~ llACL I ,,,,_ NCI c;...,. Cer-tCr.....,,J 4 .. •• LOOh Liii• TrOUllle (P9frvl .,.
Time To ltl•et IV-ldl""*°")
11 IXACTA !Ml H IO 11'.00
MYIMTM Rt.Cl. t mile OICI •• ~ 0 C--Clllrl lOJO 51D J40 JID SMIM IT-l fJO 110 UO I H C--"' tWlllllntoftl SM
Time· HLI II lllACTA (Ml Hid 120.0
llCNfTlt •ACI. t mite Hee J ID L....i. UlN (~..,I tOO HO J10 t.00 c;.. G.e J.-t"-'ol ) ID 1 40 ) 00 t( .. r; ,.._, 4 JO
T-74U I! IX.ACTA 41·)) Hid '11 JO
... TM llACI, I milt Hee
UO frhle Nlr1ell ICllllJ llAO 14 40 IOI
t • Tar"'"*' Tier• t'"9<rtnl UO 6 OI • 00 ,..._, LMV COutltrl 1 ID T;me Htt
12 lllACTA 1 ... 1 H'd l lS.0 ..
U OAILT 11l!P\A U·f.11 -140 ,, .. , ..
U1 A~ 1,m
t '° Mutuet ,_.. un.n•
th e other goal.
Rodriguez scored three m ore in th
second half as Marina improved t
6-2 overall.
In a girls match: lrvlff 3, Newport Ha"-l : Th V~ucros upped their rte0rd to S-2
with the non-leque victory at New
port. Jenny Cisco, Heather Connolly
and Jenny Frankot scored for Irvine.
Newport's goal. which came in the
first half. was sut>J>licd by_ Julie
Thomas with an ass11t from Heathe
Webb. The Sailors dropped to 2-J.1
with the decision.
Ryan disputes one NFL theo
Eagles coach claims team with
playoff experience has no edge
He also uid he sensed his players were as confident
IS pouible . .. And that's the way it has to be. I think they kno
that they can win, .. he 11id.
Ryan •id his players have 49en.
.. ThcY know they can beat the 49en. And after t loot 1t films of the Bean. they'll know they can but them,·• Ryan said.
He i-..ed his playtn believe playoff' pma are no
different tom reaular«ason con1e1u.
"When I telflhem sometbina. they believe it," Rfll! laid ... , tel11Mm aomethina ofl'tltc cutr. they believe 1L I
tell daem lMy'rt playi .. IOQd. they believe It.
.. I tell tMm lhey're playi .. '*I. they believe it. I tell
1Mm ~can beat anytiody, they believe it. "You 1111 tomebOdy aomethina often mo•. tM)' beline i ft tie laid. ~went thl'OUlh dwir R•l pr.icbce of'1be __. . ~·re off' until Monday. wW Ibey
a.velor ys of pnctice ln Phoeniut the C.rdiMh' ~ .... ...... we land. we'U know who we~. ud w11
put it-~ ...... ~ .be~=r'~=·~-= Viki•lllddll..._lf... wia.dle'-wtl til .... ...Slf'IMblllwilla.;illla:HH•Wll•
... 10 •w P11111h PA16ir tit . •
Orenge Coat DAILY PILOT/fttdey, Oeclmber 23. 1111 --
Phone industry disputes report of.short-changing
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Con-
sumer Federation or America report
concludina residential telephone
S!-!bscribers have been short-changed
since the Bell System breakup was
branded inaccurate and misleading
by the phone industry and its regu-lators.
The regional Bell ~hone companies
and the Federal Communications
Commission rejected the report's
findin15 that phone rates have
ballooned si nce the AT&T
divestiture while the spin-off com-
panics cam excessive profits.
"Service has never been better. The
percentage of homes with a phone has
never been hig~er," said BellSouth,
one of seven regional Bell companies
spun off from American Telephone &
Telegraph Co. in the breakup fi ve years ago.
The federation's annual report on
ph_one service, relt:ased Wednesday, said telephone service is no lonaer the
consumer bargain it once was.
Overall phone rates. which rose at
less than one-third the rate of general
inflation in the 50 years before
divestiture, have been nsang as fast as
inflation since then, the report says.
Local rates followed the sarne prt-
divestiture tre nd as overall rates. but
after the breakup, local rates have climbed twice as fast as inflation. the
study saad. Much of the increase
resulted from a charge imposed by
federal regulators that now costs each residential subscriber $3.20 per
month. h was intended to reduce long~istance subsidies of the local
phone network.
Inflation-adjusted local ratcsare up
2S to JS percent. while long-distance
rates have dropped 43 percent. the
report said. However. most Amcn-
cans make 100 few 1n1erstate calls to
offset the higher local rates. accordin1
to the federation.
"Segments of the telephone indus-
try used the Bell breakup as a Trojan
horse to conceal their assault on one
of the best consumer bargains of
modem tames." said Gene K.im-
melman. author of the report from
the Washington-based federation.
which claims to be the nauon 's laracst
consumer advocacy aroup. ..Had we preserved traditional
regulation. consumers would bt pay-
ing about S4 per month less for local
service, and ratepayers would bt
saving SI (b1lhon) to $2 billion
dollars each year." he said.
BellSouth said the report "lumps
out-of-date statistics an an attempt to
plant inaccuracies an the minds of
customers" and charged Kim;
melman with .. Juggling the figures."
Gerald Brock. the FCC's top tele-
P.hone official. s1&1d the repon wu ·antentaonally misleadana_ ... it 1s an
attempt 10 pul toacther fipares I.bat
have no relevance to each other IO
show a trend that doesn·t e.Usi:· o..J
He saad a "substantial portion" ot.
the local rate increases vanted by lkt
states to Bell companies after lMJJ
were spun off from AT & T rcsuJaecJ:> from the com panies writina off~
equipment and faciluics. He said tha'o
caused an 1 ncrease in prices, ••but thalH
was going to happen at some time... u
I
Companies' volunteers collect gifts for elderly, needy
At 8Wooa 8Y8tema, Katluyn ValaftDla, May Hop, Marton Trt.Jd Snyder and Eric Herrera count toya and &lfta collected
Preda8)' and"llary Gilmore peck 150 atft bozee for aenJon. by Leaeoa Po.meroy AMocJatee fo r .. Santa'• Clinic:•
0 VE R T H f C ci '.J ~ • f R
~ ~ -
It I ll• U 10 lO • 10 • 10., •• 4., ,."',, . . .. 1~10-. '7.,. ... ft" )1 ' • • , 1 "" ,. It'• ,. ' na;-:
-
88 * Or8ftQ9 CoM1 DAILY PlLOT I frld•y, Oec9mber ~3. 1988
NYSE CoMPOSITl TRANSACTIONS
FRIDA~I CLOllNG PRICll
Market gain modest
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market eked
out a modest gain today in liaht pre-Christmas
trading.
Wall Streeters were cxpcctin1 a quiet day as
many investors opted to 1et an early stan on the
long holiday weekend.
Brokers also said money manaaers at invest-
ing institutions had pretty much finished their
maneuvcrin1 for the year.
However, stocks did attract a few nibbles from
buyers as the market opened. There has been a lot
of talk lately of accumulatina stocks before New
Year's to try to benefit from the so-called January
effect.
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Dio
1 NEW YORK (AP) 0.:-lD
~dv1nc:e<r - -Declined '¥~.~,= ' NIW high, ? New lows 6
AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADER S
;
W YORK {AP) -S.ln, 4 P.m. ~EW YORK (AP) -S.lft, ~o.m. Fr v prlQ 1nd I ch• of the 10 mo'' Fr v !Ct nd ti en. of !tit I mos t K t Amerlc111 '?1oc« 'f:"'8n.oe lu .ues, ac ~ ~w ~ork"!tock Tx~ ues, '''1'~1111 "-llon111v f) more '"t~ f '· '''1'!~ netlon1llv more 'tic,/ 1. ~:R'~ '· . •\?. ~ Amfr.nd, '{ It
111Yrod m· 14 + •• ~l~co I,
. tleSPhert , 2~ -+ ~ Ulef" l, , gmfCppr 11• Y• umm Eng t, ~~ uonics I .; 2 3-16 -1-16 uene.11 'l!l:xaa n ', 10'11 Comw Edl1
ngvSvc u· ? t Ye L~kneed omeSl"IOO 1 , 4h If• M Powtr WI LabB 1 , l 'h Ye rlR n
Am"·111t prm 1 • 36 -V. ~vi~ J ~c P 'I $e nh ~,. Q GoLo Quoa s
Dow JoNf s Avf R.1GES
METALS QuoTE s NASDAQ SUMMARY
OTC UP s & DowNs NYSE UP~ ~ Do~Ns
. ,.
FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220
FROM SOUTH ORANGE 496-8800
0 0 0
.
--4 lines 7 days -• I 0 80
Prtvate pwty only. No ....,
Estate, ~. Auto-
• motive Bolitlng, °' Help
Wanted
11111-==iiiiiiiiiimriiiiiir~I..., 111 • 11• .... 1144 •••• c.... ••'" c.e.... 1111 c..e.... 1111 ...... ... .. •< •1-. ....... 1 ,.... _ ........ o:.,•Jtw.,¥·~·· Jt• ·---... ,.... SS ·~--... an LOST iA8'( Mrtmn Ck9Y
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....... ,. lieir ~.,-,,,,ti'! M ....,.,,,_.. mitn4,.,. •'*"'. ~y .. ,~
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.. ' ... , ., .... ..,.... NioMC• ..
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lnjoy COM .. 1t1 beet In 11550Agt17l-5354 gar, 2:.~=~~~c:ongo,.: 28Alo28A. MW deco<, pvt 28A wlgar. Carpell, 3BA, 2'MIA on IN bay. lllfl•I mfl ml Parrot. lrl Cor0M ... ""'epecicM• a tuxurtoue bi ~'"'-"''' • pet 18A w/lott. 28.A drapes, bll-lne. Fenced cioe. to ~ng & din Oflloee Mar. Pleue ctll SM ii8li bWlty. Short Lilw ~ ~I= alcony. C6oee to lndry, Flt~. cathedral eeil-yerd wl pello. Wet• paid Ing. 81Q dedl-Super vi.. ... ......... .,_. from 1170. 720-t2t0, MWAAOIH ot long -.m IM lrnmed Wflf pool & ape. IJOO/mo. Inga View. pertc-Nttlng, 136-4120 Cell 1-sPM Yr lee 12250 mo 3331 -tocaltOn l off atr ... ~..,...... ______ _
__........ ~ MA. • ' eat ~10 or 751-2717 gerege, ~.new aecor. 1417 Vic:Cona 'H',. 1720 Via Udo 175-1211 pttlng Scotti 541-2301 L08T CAT8l.09llrlaree0f
occpy --· oce9ft vi.. vi. of in.in No pell From $950 ----·• £. 17ttl 8"d ln4na 1et l t:• Gel. 12800/mo. beeef'I. 11175: ltO Ca-48R 28A TwntloUM, P"' NOH-SMKAS -$300 OFF WAL.LACE WOODS ..,.... .. ........,,17th at. BLOG. DomeMIC lhor1 heir.~ 120-3ttO~:=T nyon vi.w.143-1253 ~k:J. c:,:.· = SECI 2151 Paclfle ........ •au•t-1111 :r1~;r 1~27~t~i 8nd wNte,,.. ...... .. II~ clubhM 11275 H7-14t3 l31-e101or145-0302 a.so Off 1ST MO. AENT .-...... 2 2nd, ....,,,.. mix, derk ~ .. .., . Spac:ioua 28' 28e 1810 ""1• '1 brown n'9le .. ...,,..,, .. ~ .. / bnfUrn• CONDO 3&A 1~8A dbte ALL NEW 38Ft 2 car gar-'*Quiet comp6ex mo EXCLUSIVE BEACH tlm•tHW f"""9 REW.A.ROI Uoo Coeta ~twrwJ' rf/( 11 new 28R 28A. 2 car gar-garege: petlo, w/d,' awll :rs· ~n:. =r:ard. •Cloee to Freeway Hu =~Nl1~ Apt )nt Meta Animal ~al
' · • •· patio, dedl, frplc, now. St50/mo plus MC. 11050. Barbata '73-Snt •s Min. from bwh wlBAY VIEWI Lg petlo, s.a-3194
REALTORS A/C, upgradea. pool, ten-13t-t2tl Phlt/Jactde or •Calt•al ceMlng8 trplc dlhwstl mlCr ~/WT AEWAAD 1oe1 bll mDled F Cllil... llM nit. Ht trwy. Oulet. Avt 754-0878 Tern lllfl.lll ElllL •Wdt-ln doMI gar. Pvt bdl 11r350 moo. APPtoa 2,000 alt. 90 11 dog w 'Scrufty' 1oe1 1n
nowt •75/mo, n0-1150 Spacious 28R Apts. '*Cebte TV ........ '*-* rn..-apen. Many win· We.tddt/Dowr _,..
•Large pe1to1 & ywda rw rec. room & laundry • ' perttlng. AQt 14M2M -1Mll-= ;M= ~·= l!F" 8Nutlfut poo1 ., ... large •Jacum, BBQ SOARY.llO PETS dOwa, AC. r•rm. ample 145 1130 ·
•Smell P9I oec ~ H M room. ONLY $140-$850 SOUNDS NICE? IT ISi IAU J ... 11 C _._1 ... 11111 a.I
'• •C.port• w/atorege 38' 31e+loft, tip, up· ...... .. mo. Call ChuC:tt or Tanya la Cilmlall llfi 1-INM 0 HOiy st. JUa: W
•Pool ~~·;: ~~d;~ tcAAMUINd CAPE coo ILi llMI Am 548-5025 faEXN JOU. m Jn!..... mt end ~. aN-1n w-al-. ana 121ooimo. '47-7526 agt FURN. 28R. NO PETS. .. •• ..... w~ 21R Apt. patio. In .. 1:fNor~ = IR8lll': ew+iR ind. Pfit. tu. end ridl ln mlreclea. IOO W. WILSON 675-7708 Thurs-Sal. 111. ~ lndry IC, 2 prkng spaces. C Gar & COMM. PROP. l1-4mll. ,_. klMmen of .-,. 11LJ. ...... •EXCLUSIVE GUARD* (611) 795-2165 &in-Tues l"'"'-lll411 ••• l••• New paint. stove & crpt. ~d .. ~;5~ ,. .. 7 ~1 COSTA MESA VlCINITY Chrlat, falOtful lnter-
-__,,...,...,,,......,,...,..-__,,...._--1 '*GATED COMMUNITY* •• ••-· -S750fmo 731~ yar ... mo--pp.IEHREHSl4&-5565 ~of al wftO lrM*e •BACKBAY VIEW• & • lllYll BAYFRONT & VIEW year-1errJ. htsl Oen w IOIC 38A ~W .d your epedal petrooege In
38R. flreplace, ltg yard, BEAUTIFUL 28R 2BA ly. RernocsMd. • new kit, lat. .... twnhM Bale frp4c gw' ·-., I n.... time of need. To ~. I
get .. new carpet/paint, w/golf COUrM VIEW Also aundeck, lg 1BR, $1100/ ea.ta.Capri Apia 7332 m Apt 6 lndry amt tnCd yd 'wali ii I ha¥9 ~ from U'9
E'lide. 11250. "'6-0645 19A avail. Frplc, wei bar. mo I~ utua. 675-e565 1211 lete-a. lwlt 2BD 28.A, tear gar 10 t>eh $1250. 492:1111n••• depth of my '-' Ind
38R 1'ABA HOUSE near mlcro,W/Ohkupa,2car CUTEamall2BR 1BAyear-Bach. 1·2BR. lrplo. pool, Pets OK . S725mo. Waiki beaeh vl9w \ti IMtiel ... humblybegtownamOod
South Coat Plua, avail-gar wlxtre storege. e.n-ly. Nloe patio. 2 car park-uunalapa, gar. From 525-43t0 2BR re.A or fi<~ le¥9I ha given auct'I grMt
ab6e now. New paint. new tral air. All malnt. Incl. Ing, 1895 Incl. utll. 1535/mo =..... i14i 2BR H~BA .,:' ~ no 111111 • • :::: come to my ...
carpet, btQ ywd, kldl ok. Sorry. no pels.144-0509 673-3039 •PITS. pets 2231225 La PalOma Dry OW.. end leundfy-~t ·.;:1P me "' "'Y
1875. Cell 557-5747 • 1BR atmo11 oceanfront -Call 641-66 72 lrom 18A APTS, 811 (7141137-7918 Setlefa wlll au111 In Uon In,... ~o::=;
38A 2'h8A 2-aty CONDO. at 11'11 Sauhore. Sl9S l1l•11 Ptalanla tam-lpm ~~~-:: ;~~i llile laatalt financing for quid( 1a1e1 to 'mall• ~r neme
dbl gerege, frg patio. •2BR 28.A, 2 cat gar at MIT llTTAll TYPI Ot 497_.581 • Inventory, equipment known Ind ca.a~ to
Back Bay locatlon. 320 CMal. $1050/mo. E'llde 2BR garage large ....... ifA and ..... lnduded In IN ba Invoked.
11295/mo 557.5714'* DOCKSIDE AE 722-9730 ... IPf Mll• yard with patiO qhr hk· • .,.. ..... iiit iiMfAA'r Nie. Cell Mary Ellen
i 3BR 2BA. llngl! garege, Ill Jll 12 ~t1~:~· ~6o~ 1':'' up s~:~m3R... • GE DMoM 2& 1L. F/P, private ";:'l· ~ ~o 1
142
"
5200
Atty Wonc1-N
9 ~ ~ ~
1 new paint, MW carpet, -. N 2 car gar. modern. beeut beach . 8 o O I mo -•-.itt•Hll be IMd It Jude . new drapee, 11000/mo. PENINSULA YEARLY ATTRACT IV E 2BR TSLMGMT 642-1603 vi.ws12001mo. 1805W. 673-7133. llilii sw:ua Md .. Who
I plua depollt. 14&-6273. ~=·~~ +p~· ~:~ ~'::' .. pa'::' I~~~: Deluxe 3BR 2BA Eulalde Bay Ave•A. 873-37n ..... nil ,... ... ~ your aid. Amen. '
48A EXECUTIVE home I d 'C ' . S1050 ;1y 6~ Wlfrpfc. patio, d/W, GOV· 2BR 1BA PenlnlUla Tiiie ~ i... ,..., Wlmbodon VIiiage, bu!lt: ~ 1.;~imolo1a to y eted parl(lng, lndry rm. Stove, RetrlG. Utlts. paid, •IN FURNISHED* beert known 10 .... I Md
In cabinets and sun -.Old4W but ciMn 2BR BAY FRONTAGE. pier & $995 No pets 642-1479 large yerd. 211 32nd s1• ea.ta Meta tlome. fnlM\ ADS my~ gnnted.
room. 1BR downstairs 1BA up~ In 4-Plex. Nr prk~. Utllt pd. 2BR S1100 EASTSIDE 28R. gar, lndty, 1950/mo 675-t643 Kitehen Pffv::c· UUl1U MCP
I with shower. 3-car gar· Bch. No prkng $775/mo 18 1700 Fum. 303 E xlnt cond, quiet .,... •WS/mo. •14 2'35 IDr FREE PMYE .. to1NHotylplrtt.
... ._._11 ,. •·•· II .. f ege, 11700/tno. Call Kay •38R 28A uppet Of lower Edgewal9'. 87 1•28M SI 10; 666-"40 l9 days, -. Jll..,,.., IN beelltlrg home nr SC Ml. Hoty lpWil ~ ~ ---•-1 ua1 141-2092 .A.gt , d •-G f ·~"2426 , ...... d pool, aduttt-StoO Plaza F-... ...t.. • •-IS"S . up ... x. arage, rp1c. C.... ._. llu 2122 ~ ..., ...... .,.. s. • 131-0211 '* . ... ...... r .,. "· c..1·. make me .. waittNne • 11e1cm. _.... ' efllTW ,.... patio, S1350u. EAST SIDE 3BR 2'hBA w/d, pool. Jacuut. • and Who lftow me the liliiiJ IM 200 ACRE RANCH §IT@. Wlyerd & alngle car gar-YIW REITILS Latge. prv 18R, new paint. Condo Style,. Gar i. •W It•• S375/mo+dep 556-1737 IG-llll wey to rwtt "'1 ~ "iiirif:=-:=:==::OI Northwett9'n Arizona, ege, S7751mo. Deposit & crpt, blinds. & fighting. carport, Newly re-Frig. dlshwaahef, stove L0\19tf room wlllldlng gts You Who gl¥I me the --Nl•U 1250/acre on WV t•rr:i•· good credit req'd. CALL BIG CANYON 2BR 28.A F[J:i ~or~~·,/;.~·11 4 furnished, shown by Ind. No pets 545-4155 door to paOo. pvt be.. nice dMfte gift to fofghe and
1
.. ,glw~ttledown ln Tr ... and Vlewl With CURTll63t-12M c;ondo,tennla.pool,frplc. c .. v appt. $900 +Deposit WIC.M.condo$600.11t/ ~,,. ~--.. ~for• lhare of own-good wat9' tat>te. Hunt 2 patios. S 1600/mo .. • _. 557~520 * 1-... lut S 100dep 142-11M Found ~t. Chocolate done to me Md ou wtto
.ahlp. You malle the and 11th near by Beautitut 38R, 28.A, tam 714-720-3793 2BR 1'nBA I I Frig, dllhwaaMr, stove ...... !11:6:1: Dll S4ameaa. WMk of 12112 ... In al tM ........ of .wy pymlt l we ahar• 675-1887 rm, gar. Grdnr & Wiier • C OH o UITW ~ Incl. No petl 54S-.855 ~ vtc; Elden a Del Mar c M my llte wtltl me. I, In ..
IPPrac. You receive a.•-•· pd. LHM 11350/mo. No PEN. PT. 2Br House. bHch, $950/mo. 900 $395/mo. No kttchen. De-Ill Ull-546-2114 • · • llhoft dl9logl'9 ..W to
t00%taxbeneflt1.Mu1t -pets.Agtl46-2389 $1 ,175. SaaLane.64-4-2611 poall & good credit. •UYNW• -·-thenk~for91191ft'*l9
heW c:'8an credit .A.gt ----_ .. 111 BALBOA 4Br. fp $1475 ctita.... lifi CALL Curt 1163t·1266 BEAUT 2Br 28a, 'h blOcit Wkly rantala now 911811. FOUND Otder tan t.ma6e ~ conflnn1 --~to~ 1~ nu. Ev Wltnda -·-_..._ BAYFRONT Condo 28r to bay, 2 c. gar .. wl d tlk 1147.00 wk & up 2274 lrilf'I 5-n• In Huntington .. _ ,__, --.. ._ CY:""'~·· . 11•• $1-475 •ci:rlSimu s;;:ct:at $100 OFF 1ST MONTH up, open beam Ceil-Nwpt BIYd. CM 14&-7445 8eectl ... 1-..113 ...,..aed from Yoiw..119 ---H ........... , I 8~BOACoYe978i i7en. Gr..n~ -E'StOE-2-Str.fBr t~S. Ing~ mo -----men. how .... IM-
-.
-llllll LIT RENTALS AVAIUBte ~It IW trptc, spa, docil. S23oo · 1 l 28drma. Gar. cable •Private patio. pool ' 425 i BAY IHt1l1 ti la&11 FOUND 1ma11 WHITE _.. ..,_ ~ be. 1
••••• , Short t•m l wlnlw 2BR 1 ~. c:uf-de.sac lo-SEA.VIEW 3Br, 2.5Ba avi Grnblt w/880, lndry • Encic>Md garege TSL MGMT 142-1803 lfll BUNNY. Vic Hemltlon & -"to be Wiltt You and •a•• $850 to S1400 cation. 1 car garage. HOUM comm pool & ten-rm No peta l31-1427 GrHt atmospherel No Harbor, C091a ...... my lowed ones In YfNI
THIS cameo Hlghland1 Waterfront Hornet, Inc. = 1::5/wllh green-nl1.S2°,750. . petl.,790.646-9039 ·-"--* C~lg~~R·~·=to 850-3733,142-1903 ~ r;Jtoty. Tttenk
hOmeheHCCMato3prl· Realtof'l673·6900 • mo BAYFRONT Condo 28r. 1••umi.•ana EXTRA LARGE ROOMS S2000FFl smkr v9'arl~ pr:t GIRLS YEUOW MOUN-YoufotYourl.ove1owerd
beeehea. New roof, lllilM ..., W-4 clef!, doetl for 80' t>oat. Furn. l unfum SS25 & up. Upper 38R 2BA,' garage. 3BR 2Ba, encl gar .. w/d ..aa'+ 'Mltlt 14e-oe99 TAIN BIKE taken from me alncl ff'1J ~ OMS. new carpet, hard-111·12G Yearly. a.150 No pets. Eutalde C.M ( 1~-c Valencia) hook up, new carpet Bel 11. garage . .._.... Amel'!
floors, French ......... lift LINDA ISLE 2 story 5Br. 541-4M8 I 1815 No pet• 545-7983 $1t25/mo PROFI F ... Ing same to on r ...... Supra Per90nl may pre, ...
doora&wlndowl.Dec:or· 2aR 10 HOUSE FrPIC t>oatdOcit.110,000 . tBR carPOll smallfencecl 208Lugonla&210Grant lhare2Mstr&l11eHome model. xrnu Pf'Wf\t. Pf•Y9f ~ conwuttve
etor wallcoverlnga & washer & d~ ,~block W•rtr ........ IM. ~ard 2522• Sahta Ana .. , .... AUS TSL MGMT 142-t803 In CdM N-tmltr, no pet&. REWARD. 67~1 ~.After ttle "*d •·
CfOWn moldlnQ9. A true • • - -1675/mo 721-9&68 your ....., .. ba .,__, 1191ue. is35.000 to bay, $9 /mo yearly, 1111.Tm U1· 1• Ave., $530/mo.146-3192 ·~ -• e •11111 lln• REWARD LOST 8ladl & no,..._ how dlflcUI it Jll-11• 642-1267 Of 675-2437 Cozy Can Twnhm 1BR furnish. studio. UM of .... ...... all Ifft SCREEN writer Mells F In wNte amall M/cat, Sa1. may be. Then proml9I to
2BR 18a houM, lrplc, DUPLEX RENTAL-2BR 2BR ~A ... ~ 1700sf pool & pets OK. uhl 1n-A small. quiet complex. VERV ATTRACTIVE. tnearaj:n1c:'~~ Dec 17. Vic Hartx>rHiQh· ~ thia ~ • GF~E El.KJN micro, all bit-Ins, ocean t BA. 1 car garage. Aval! Ip,' bar. 2 patios: ctud, $550/mo. 5 min to StudioS550& 1Brw/frpt, QUIET 2Br 2Ba, new =· 675-2,.76 Martln lands. N.B 131-1715/H eoon • 'J04lf f.wr hea
I!!! Ct~m\.'i\ v1-+ studio apt, 2 car Jan 1st. $800/mo. Call St-450/mo 760-1-468 Bkr airport. 754-5721 ~ackyd, patio $650 ~· carpet, washer dryer hk-• 757-8014/W ~ f'M'ed. MCft
liiiill Rl'~LTOR<.• gar. Will rent all for Pfaff Propi 142-9797 LIDO s•NOS lurnls"ed •OCEAN VU deluxe 28R Like new & very pvt up, garage. $850/mo. UCI Town Center, fem, n-;;;=======:.!;;;;=======:; · • $1800/mo yrly. Or wlll " 11 , · POOi, spa, lndry. 1st + E-Z MOVE IN NOW! smkr, furn 2BR hm,
rent 2Br house $1100/ llUIAY IPIOIAU house. 2Br. den. garage. ;:,~·~· 1~~it~eck.,ga~. sec. NO PETS 54$-207 "4101 HILARIA 111.BA, w/CI, $.425 -'Mlt•I. lalllta 1mo. Studio •Pt S7001mo . •FREE RENT• yard. Pvt comm., $1500 S890l mo See ts~ Call KIDS REQUIREO•ll El sJde TSL MGMT 642-1603 avail 111189 854-0015 f haluala lOQJjBalboa Bl/30th. 665-5075 B~IGHTON $PRINGS2BR mo. (wihter). 646-599"4 759•110,/E 644_872210 280 tBA Yard & gar or 548-4166 al1• 5·30
..... 2122 ~ t&rl~, secBluded Luxury 2BR 28.A high-rise 2BR B• $750mo $500Clep 'lltSHARP 4BR 28.A ateps C....CW -fmr --.0 ....,.,.,, • reams. as. condo on Lido Peninsula. • 1 "· 1 car garage. IMl-•631 to beactl Ger w l LL •·'-2t Ulr/28a ~ •5™ I brigfi1 1BR + ment gar w/opnr & Bay & ocean views groundltoor. patio. all 0 k S 1350 win~· -•38f/28a lower conv den. Whal a view!! carport. W/D hkups. S2200l mo incl utds. Boat new paint & carpeting. LARGE tBr 18a S5651mo, sf&OO .__..., l3M';22"' 1•a;rn---, ...... -... -·tl
1115000 S1900/mo lnclulils. mcro, woodburn frplc, slip extra. Joyce Spiller, S6501mo546-7729Agt $400 seamty. Available r-·r· -it
' •Open & lite 2BR 2BA pool & spa. $950/mo • Re/Max 5-48-5681 2BR lBA Kids welcome Now. Call for appl WALK TO BCH NR HOAG l""!!!~!"!!!!!!~~~~·~·~I
wlfrpfc. VleW of hllla & sec. VELMA 549-2-4-47 near sch.ool & shops, no ~1-1879 • Lg 18R, gu pd. F/P ...,.., llU•I
cloee to beh. $1200/mo. ..,., •lllTS FUI 1.11111111 pall WestslCla CM LARGE tBR OIW cable S72S • LG 2BR 2Ba FULL SERVICE
• t8R for "quiet person" 2BR BA Ou le I Be• ch••. Ba YI r on t S760i l7701mo 645-2999 TV hk-up No pet~I Reis TwnhM S925. Pool. spa, Westcilft & IMne Npt 8cl'I 1750/rno 673-5354 .A.gt 1 P x, pat o, no w/docil-Ouie.t Fam hmes required $550/mo cov prltg 1-401 Superiof ' pets. S8001mo 142-4011 NO FEEi' Agl 549.9..-9 2BR 2BA. Enclosed gar-2273 MlrW6 B. l4H1l1 Ave. M6-e838 Slgn ~ avi on Westdlff
......... lib e!~~:~~BA •••llTlllllTS NPTHTS.4BR(or3 ... den). =d~::'~:::=: MESA VERDE. 28R 1BA, ........... ....
111
w/sunMt, surf & Jetty 2BR. yard, no pelt $750. lrg yd, VieW, $2500/mo. No Pell 71"4-250-4220 upper Quiet cul de sac CLEAN 28R. lg !Iv rm. 1111. UL•. n
U.HOUSElnCdM,28R.2 view. Lg mstr. lkyllghl, Availablenow.650-2256 A.gt Kathyl45-2235 . S695-.2867Hlckory parlong. Ulll• Incl No 11_1.Hl/es'fbUffDAIVE
-.ctlM, new carpeting, Jae tub 11750/mo Drive SPACIOUS 2BR 2BA 2 J. Coombe Realty 2 BR wlgar. carpets. Call "498-1936, 751-9463 pets. $1175 723-1292 Nwpt Bcti, Ag1541-5032
llardwood floors . b 214 ;: le f.75·8427 S .. 636-4120 t-5pm. · l 1t50/mo. 673•7133 Y ern I "' -story townhome. Gar&Qe, H .. RP 2Br 2Ba condo llp t57 t Orange 'B'. .. $695 NEWPORT ACROSS THE .... ,_ 11111 U1 --fllT ~ ii::: lt'u FURN OR UNFURN HOME small yard. fireplace. wet pool, new palntlcrpt. nr STREET. 28R lrplc, gar-CLEAN tBR SJOO/mo 3975 .... B~ Airdl S650l mo .._........ .,. 2 mitr Br 2a. FI P 51,.951 b1r. Small pet ok. 17thllrvlne. $850/mo •BAY TIMBERS• ageS8251mo 1685 lrvlne P k Ii d N · Nwpt Ben .A.gt 541 5032 lllllllll~ll!!iii'!'IPl'!"!!'•!'!'!'IL.,;D.-, mo 1sviut S30o esep. S1025/mo. ~gt 675A912 1214 Rulland.146-8816 1:~io.lrp!~· ~~~ts.~i •2, 720-9422 ~ •. i~3-~~~ '" 0
· •
4111' 28.A, btg lamlty rm, Marigold St. 142-5290 lat. INcla l _, 1'1111 UITIL w Bay ~t $685. 650-6357 ..,. ••y _.. .,./ 1• WT trotc 2 car narage ,.._._....., F ,.. __ ,. -_.._ Executive 'Townhouse 2no floor Pnvate street
ilssociated i ... . ~ '~
-
COLDWell
BAN~eR l1 ----
144-9111
II.I ..... -1111.-
, GORGEOUS VIEW OF BAY &
OCEAN FROM BOTH UNITS OF
THIS VERY SPECIAL DUPLEX .
OWNER'S UNIT RECENTL V RE-
MODELED. VERY LAG. LOT. TER-
RIFIC LOCATION! 1211:000. P+eed• quick *LITS If L.aJ * ... NW• Jll °&4";:.5';3 Hm':~21~oo~ 'lltOtRISTMAS SPECIAL 11• Ifft 3BR. 2BA 2 car gar. level entrance nur Lido _.....Donald 631•1266 or 4BR. 38A, new C<PI. d/W, ...... II.I * $100 REBATE '* 2BR 1BA. dlshwaSher, on 0 C E A N V I E W Plaza St501mo yr 1M ._---------------•
'91-t7tJ Re/Max Rltrl lndry, 11575 494--4262 Plus pool aaunu gym & VERSAILLES 1Br, 18a 2Brduple• hkeahOuM,lrg The Bluffs, ocean view. 818-446-8993 ~Via Lido 175-9281 1----------------.;..._
•Tiny qule1 tBR cottage, ctubhOUM New 'paint & PenthouH. Securi ty yard, pets ok, garage 1acuz:z1, $785/mo. 2201 !!iwe' ..... H•t bffmed ceilings, yard. carpets, t '!.BA. 2BR pool. gym, etc. llOO/mo. A.vi ii now $795-dep. Pacific. TSL Manage-\' ~ -. llfM. $1561. Walk 10 Near snops & t>eac::h. 11750/mo. 111.181n.\ mo Sandi, 673-2749 631-6559 or 642-0164 ment. 642-1603
beeef'I. UIOC. pool/ ten-S795 NO PETS 722-8011 dep. 84 7 -604 1 M -F ftllll lD -*cm ... .. Secluded & spacious 2BA
mt, 250 Colton. NB Newer 3BR, 2BA. next to 964-6916 eves & wknds 28R w/upgrds. Pool, spa 3Br 2Ba. garage. W/O hk 1BA & 3B~ 2BA A.9t1 °" :_~;. Merrill Lynch Realty ·
'722-9730 0t 722-725t park, F/P, deck, l)uge gar lut. ,.... 141 619-n3-3510 $1050 up, large yard, new the E&stslde. GrMt io-... llllllT $1500 Unde 721-0118 carpet & drepes S950/mo cation! Comptetety ,.
-
Grubb & Eiits lRG lux 2Br 2~Ba twn"-. lull Au 2111 3M'h E 16th St. rnodeted: New DIW, end + f/p, aitch gar, pool, spa, TSL MGMT 642-1603 patloa & encl garegea.
3aR 2BA + charming COM 28 R 1 BA HOUSE. c10M to bch. $1250. AVI Ulllll•-fireplace. CloH to.
mothef4n-law quartwa. frpfc, w/d, wait! to t>Meh, now.1"40-61121140-1712 --•••-* UIU * tchOOll & lhOPPlng. Cell =lol w/19a. Wet bar, Qd cond, S 1000/mo. Call I~... E'SIOE 2BA DUPLEX 540-38M 0t l&0-50M ~ bonul parking. Mark 545-3210 dlyt L°'8=~ll!Oc*I~ tBR tBA, SC Metro araa. Fenced yd. covd parking &
a ti a mull IH, CHANNEL REEF 2BR. r.:lfled. Wlll~your S 6 5 0 I mo . Pfaff lndry. Sm pet OK S800. ;='~,::=,::;to IHI.too. Call Liz & waterfront. lab views ltemeactwr111ed? Propett ... 142-9797 146-4902 nMd9.
Ctludl Jonea 131-1288 or IJ3-6900. S2000
14&-5743 ............ .._ ....
IUl.Tm
HAR VU HILLS. 4BR. lam
rm, grnbelt, view S3,000
LWE ON LIDO ISLE, NEW 3BR or 2 & den
~n or unfvrn, 38A condo. Fab. vu1. H1rbor. D8A. new crpt, patio. ocean. city llght1. Yrly or
t50 Agt. 873-1323 mo. 10 mo SS,500
LIDO AREA Wlllffr• .........
CtJIFIED •teeance, • IULllll U1· 1• pr..-toceUon & a dock _________ _.,...__...,.
tor I 80' Y8(lht plus a DELUXE 2BR 1 IABA 2
*'ming, spacious 2 story, garage. wl d hkup. 1'drm COndO wtlh den, Oceanside of PCH.
11'9rb6e fp l lalge "'nny St250 Agt 675-4912
•race Only 4 units In LG HOUSE In CdM, 2BR, 2
oomplex. Slept to eYel'Y· atudlft. new carpeting, "'6n0· 1125,000 hardwood floors , 131"1400 11950/mo. 673-7833
~All HI H()'llf lln't11tlmelOIMIOfMOM
HOMI ~ IM. .... .... tlha yerd wcw11?
REAL TOAS 11'1 no IWMt to hire a heip9'
ltlrougft cle9effted
let Ut ..... Y•
Sell y.. ,,.,.,.,,
e. ........
IOUTHCOAIT
MnlO COllDOI
2 ledroom, 1 lath upttoin _..
near South C:.O.t P'la1a. Air cen-
ditten"'11 dithwashet, balcony, &
peel. $695/Month
971-7611 .or 751-2717
llllTlllTll PACIFIC R ........ ~ .... 111-• ·-Ill" PLUS Pool. uun•. gym &
dubhcMe. .._ S)illftt I ClllPlk
llUllY SPElllLll
• FIEE IEIT • 0
••W,,111 •
A small quiet come*•. STUIOO
$550/mo & 1 BEDROOM w/ft~
backy1td. p1t10. $650/mo. "Like new
& Vf1tY private." Pool, spa. l.undry. 1at
& security. NO PETS. 549-2447. ..... ,,, ,,.,., .
2 Bdrm, 1 '~ 8ath TAf.LEV£l In 1
MCtuded wood• & .,,..,... loclltlont
Ba1ment gar1ge w/opener & carport.
waaher/dtyer lkje.by~ hoc*~.
mkrow~. woodburntnQ ..,..,..,.,
poot & epa. $950/mo + MC. 541-2447
uum..N1-1'41
Sllllll LIKE llOTCAlll
A walk to the beach from H.8 . Two
master bdrms. 3 bath, townhou9e wtth
cozy corner fireplace. Airy feel. lagoon
location. $229,000.
75•-6600
Mt-S671
for information
& surprisingly
low coat •
2 8EOAOOM 1'Jl BATH I 11IOIMO
Fnt. IMt + 'A Mo. MC. dip.
...... 1 Good job1. reliable Mrvtcea •
lnlernt1n1 th la .. to buy -11· 1 •II
then every ct.y In cl•Hlftecl.
..
~CIUlld
c4d~.tM
1111 "" ill cflu,i/ktl
.... 842-5818
Illy Plat
.. ,
.. Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Friday, December 23. 1988 --•
~ORANGE COAST
0
"
ILOT
(• ·. ~
r 990 Plymouth [aser c6nsid8red cream of the crop for sports coupe&,.
let's slt1p 1989. The 1990
P~th loser is so for oheod of its
titbe it mokes the current crop of sport
coupes seem obsolete. _by_Tom __ Keane ________ _
SPECIFICATIONS
mechon1col features of the suspension
system, such os the lower control orm
ond stabilizer bors, odd to the loser's
stob1l1ty. It hos o !lot turn, ond doesn't
dip under hard broking. v The Plymouth loser, and its
counterpart, the Mitsubishi Eclipse.
ore manufactured by Chrysler Corp.
ond Mitsubishi Motors at Diamond ·
Stor Motors Corp. m Normal. Ill. This
cor is the result of two monufocturers
using the best technology eoch
cSnpony hos to off er. , f The loser began os o sketch on
Chrysler's drowmg boord 1n· August
l ~84. Eventually f ibergloss models
...Jere shipped to Mitsubishi in Jopon,
~ere it wos ref 1ned. Abaot o yeor
lcfer, ofter input from designers of
~th companies. ,the f1nol design wos
VEHICLE TYPE ............... .
However, speed con be a prob-
sports coupe.
BASE PRICE .................. .
2 lem. I hod o tendency to go too lost. It
hos o 16-volve, DOHC 2 -liter
tu(bochorged engine that produces its
highest torque at moderate rpm' s, ond
the turbo kicks 1n quickly. Accelero-
tion 1s 1mmed1ote regardless of how
lost you're going.
$ 15,000 lestimotedl.
ENGINE iYPE.................. 4 ·
cylinder, 16-volve DOHC, ·rurbo·
charged.
DISPLACEMENT................. 2-
r~y.
Meantime, the joint venture of
D;omond-Stor Motors wos under
woy. This $650 million assembly plont
uses high technology, with more than t robots doing the stomping,
sties, body, point ond final os-
bly. The operation 1s so odvonced
tKot oll components f 11 with precision
and there ore absolutely no shims used
in assembly. That soys o lot obout
quality control.
liter.
HORSEPOWER lnetl........... 190
ot 6,000 rpm.
TORQUE llb·hl ............. 203 OI
5,boo rpm.
TRANSMISSION.. .............. 5.
speed monuol.
WHEELBASE.................... 97.2
1n.
TRACK front /rear ........... 57.7 /
57.1 1n.
TURNING DIAMETER ............ .
34 ft.
OVERALL LENGTH .............. .
170.5 in.
OVERALL WIDTH ................ 66.5
in.
HEIGHT ....................... 49.8 1n.
CURB WEIGHT ................. .
2,660 lbs.
FUEL CAPACITY ................ 15.8
gols.
EPA MILEAGE RATING .......... .
23 city, 37 highway lest.I
The Chrysler people know this cor
will blow owoy the competition.
Thot's why they hod other monufoc-
turers' products ovo1loble ot a
preview in Arizona. I wos able to
ctive o Toyoto Cel1co GT, Ford
Probe GT, Mozdo MX-6 ond Nisson
240 SX around o 16-mile trock 1ust to
re-fomilionze myself with those cors. 1990 Plymouth loser RS is roted
Then I drove o loser RS. There's no four wheels.
comparison. It's in o d oss of its own.
The other sport coupes hove o firm--_!four wheels 1~ •••• STRONG FEATURE .............. Ac-
ride due to o beefed-up suspension
systems. It enables these vehicles to
mointoin troct1on in hard, tight turns.
However, the loser hos o pleosont,
comfortable ride, yet 1t mo1nto1ns the
some traction -ot higher speeds. clereotion/hondling
The RS hos 16-inch tires tho t ore WEAK FEATURE .............. Ac-
des1gned for this cor, plus o wide celerollon/ self control
stance of 57 inches. Other unique
On the· highway, I found the loser
RS running owoy with me. The worst
port 1s thot I didn't wont to control
myself, I wonted to see how lost I
could go.
Fortunately, 1he loser is ovoiloble
with o couple other engines thot
aren't os exciting -o I .8-liter, ond
2 -liter engine. While driving these
vehicles I monoged to control my urge
to drive lost and en joy the other
pleasures of the cor. .J
The controls in the loser coupe ore
well thought out. Everything is w1th1n
eosy reach including the shifter. The
RS model 1s only available with o
monuol tronsm1ss1on, but you wouldn't
wont it ony other woy becouse 1t' s o
delight to shift.
The bucket seats of this 2 plus 2
sport coupe ore very comfortable.
The "2' meons it con carry two
people in the reor seot -in o pinch.
It's the legs that get pinched.
However, unlike other sport
coupes. the roof line is high enough to
ollow people in the reor to sit upright.
Also, the trunk hos sufficient spoce for
ot least four pieces of luggage.
-U o soond system i$-your..Jhing, the_
loser offers o powerful AM/ FM
stereo cassette ond compact disc
player system thot will knock your
sods off.
Prices aren't firm. but the RS model
is es11moted to cost $I 5,000. If that's
the price, grab 11. This loser will put
you l1ght-yeors oheod of anything on
the rood.
NABERS BUICK .
~ Priced to sell~ ~$ 1-{o{Ufay specials ~ ~
~ ~ ~
'89 Reatta
~
(t
$24,887 or lease for s391 mo
& 99e plus tax ; 60 monlhl doled end lease;~°' PIY'Mf*: '24,930.88; total on de~very $3,880.51;
includes $2,500 cap rlduction; on IAJlcwtd cnclt; option., pwdllll 11 end of lease aerm.(902339)
$13,947 Plus
$500 CASH BACK FROM BUICK
Alt, a4c , Ct4c, • nta-. cm.,_ lftd men. ( 431235 >
2800 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
San Dic10 Fwy., at Harbor,
one mile south.
Tel. '714-540 9100
0 Saturdays for service.
Tbe 1990 PIJIDoath Luer la the re8alt of the tecluaol~. Tiie car off en a oomfortallli
Cbryaler Corp.'• and llltnblabl llotor'• ride and iDlqae f•tuee oa t1ae Interior.:;:.
SPARE PARTS clocks and electronic voltage regu-oerodynom1cs because 11 improves.
ELECTRONIC PROGRESS: Citing lotors II 97 41. Also, during the eorly fuel economy, _handling ond Rt'·
electronic 1nnovottOM improving the 1970s o major step in the expons1on formonce. Air resistance, or dro~
outomob1le, Ford Motor Co. lists: of electronic tecMolog'f occurred -measured by o numerical volue co!td
Tronsistor rodio 11 9601; intermittent ·the flrst micre>J>rocessor. "coefficient of drog." The loMrt
w ipers with vorioble speeds and number 1s more efficient and pr9.;.' IT'S A FACT: Single vehicle f o 30 electronic speed control 119621; duction cors ronge rom . up::JD, crashes hove higher deoth rotes thon 0 5o F · ..... olternotors replacing the generators the . s. or comparison, ~ muhivehicle crashes. f ~ It 9631; electronic outomotic oirplone wing hos o drog coef icieo1.
temperature control 119651; solid INTELLECTUAL DRAG-Auto-of 0.05. o sphere 0. I 0, and· ci
stole ignition ( 19731; elect'ronic motive engineers ond designers study porochute I .35. . . ., ...
4NE'RE Fl9iTt1~.-H-JhJ-----1
'O.JR LIFE
American Heart ot ~ ·
Association -
• .
HOIJIDAY SAI;E! . .
'19 LINCOLN VERSAIUES
s4,995
(659545) lela 1h.n 17,000 milM
'88 MERCURY COUGAR
$15,895
(2HMU740) steel grayla"'9r INther ... full power
'87STBRUNG
•1& 895
(2ESD775) blue wt1»1ue &:; IMlher ... moonroof
'89 Sedan de VIiie
(Yin# 201807)
'85 ELDORADO BIARRTTZ
$16,795
-.
. .. ,.
. . . . . . . .
. • ----
(1 LRA083) Laredo tan, budllkin IMther ... full power
'86 T-BIRD BLAN
'9,295
( 1 NMX312) lhw W/tl., IHlher ... lollded
'86 UNCOLN T(JWN CAR
'17,495
• •
(2CYF711) 2-tone ...... ~ doelkln leather•
'11 CAMAllO Sl'O•T COVPB
•&,995
....., ........ lnllflar
.. ...
fl
1
0rMge COMt DAILY PILOT/Ftldey, Declmber 23, 1111 ...
.. lg'; •• !!'1' -.. .. 11111 I • ii£1a !.._!1!!,1-!!L...!!!!
..... We ~ .._ 8ft -~/HOTEL T ...... r .... ._ 9or
A11111Mll 111 ... L.ee9I o.. ...-. 9or a Cullofw .......... lmmedkHP•~!''Ja'°'., ~ aapendtnt tradltlonal pai11Mnl. Mull'-' 40 ..,,,_"9p. torourC.M. ,.... .-.._.. ....... _. In N.8 ..,.. won ... wttti cattle T v office ._ ... conrtJJ'Dn APOtr 2080 NewpOft 119,..1/2Jlll, ~
......... ~ .. 11 ... llUd..,._JflOIAd ~-Tllft9/Ful-TlmePl9'1. llwd.0..(71'tM2,2111 & ........ tn. CoMec1
Olloe 111111 tot c:91· .._,MO • tor No~'* rrry. ier;Q li.tiOn Attandanf n.-119-1171 ~~=.: ~. :..w:.·.: =i==-PllT, Of FIT,~ In per-1111 I .......... ;y-' c";r',WY'O.tunca at tt ... •New office locet6on• ::ior ~ ~~~r ~ FIT ,._ In IMw. good L.:.__J4••t , ,_ ~a..4321,......,3·,. ~~ ~:: ·A= e.2'°"° banaftta.CMMa-0411
!!...... ~=~~'"Pa~~ I ••111111 pflow. Attn to C . Btwn 10AM-2PM alHH• v::~~. u dly '"L "',"r•..uwoooerenw ........ A ... IOlaem Autoaxp. (714)755-1155 ·-•111m• S7.a IV ,._ (714) .. W a. ·~Npa1r1 Cuallom Oatel. Ouelltv &Jiffj anaao:p:m 112/Hr +MATERIALS Wen with greet paop6e In halpM. Pl8l'fl IM-1IOO 1 ... , per • ...., r-Odors ..._-.,.. W• Conac.llMuttfV tM-IOIO M.in lerv ~lmona.I .._ ..... IOll. e75-400I • comfort_.. environ-mf.ull T-lhlrt Printer naedt 2 644-2121 CS., a~ r
3...:. ~: ..=..::, *-· hollc Co 7'1-4331 WOOD Fene!t:G. Si*-1 tim9. ,,.;. .... 241-1640 PAINTING & WALLPAPER mant. The Or-. Coaat 1:=•:.:.r~ AH poeitioM .... lhiflt Ex-~::i1":",::l c:: in... =QC.I! lalllt-Cuetom C~try. TREE Trim. Top. Sllepe. REMOVAL. RELIABLE! ~."'°~ "; Im-cer. M.~ IW. ~119 perlancle preferred, no curacy a must g50,922e ••••••••
-VICE -:=: ---Uc/bond. Eric M S:9077 St Pelml CIMnuOI 20 'I'! In ., ... M2-5t37 e ---"" or • uparianc:e nac:.eury ...... n .. .. ~12 MM&9146-51H RAINBOW CIRCLE Malftt Jtrong typilt "' the RMI LlllL ~-' APPL y IN PERSON EARN I ...... EY •. No job too Jmall. ,.,. INT /EST QUALITY . Eatata/Automotlva de-Friandlr--&ct\allang-MON-fRI 10-1PM ONLY W
.CTORY ,.._ M6ck9'/, 538-0553 iii(ff Cirue 1188 cord LAWN MAINT. T,.. f nm & PAINTING. EXP. 136--1751 par1"':::.ta~ p pay, Ing generel practice firm New Aaataurant Opening $400·$1000 /WK Loe.I Offlc.a or "9tion9I In,
llAICKICONCRETE WOttc Euc:. 1170 +dal. oak Avt. Ciaen-vp. Rau .. FrM TOP QUALITY PAINTING C,.: f ~y In Hunttn09on &.ach 11 INTERNATIONAL HOUS"E YantOf'Y aarvlca _.. lJQ
Prof. ,.....,.., , .. , r.a. 4M-el5<4 Of 493-e741 ..... Ya6anUn ~109 Prompt-~..... mant to:..:.. appoint-looking '°' • capabta OF PANCAKES •&AM 12 Noon ~ wtlO .,. ·~
IM:IMAllYOURAIACH ,..EeJtM1-32131AN FIAEWOOO.QUALITYMla ~tlal & lndultrial 18yr0.C 831-18M . IG-aai ~Ing~='~: ~2ot~'!":'.n. •NoN
2
1Qhll/Wknd1 n'ing~":;.~~=~
ta IN OUR IMPROVED Cllimle flll =~e:e ~t !!5 ~· T=~~~ VESCO PAINTING ANO diW M 1 up C.ary D.O E EQUel ()ppof1unity Empl I •17IHA" .. comm/tr1Jnlng pit bUis Our W0ttc tall• ===--·-i&JitiW&:ent::Cf; · · 1 ' WALLPAPERING.Quality (71•)147-t041 lm'llm& ..... 11 Ill to• vanety of ratu .. llflfJ Cuetom Tile a Brick Wort! AAEWOOO. 1ml work. Fr• Est. ~9 Mlf11111... ,, 1 fllm'll.... .... I.& la• 11• ltorH In the 0 C..
,_ (PAT) lfMNE CONST. Euc:. °'::?: wd, fr• dallv ToPPaCS/remowe C6Ml'lup p 1..... le .. b II •• I •• IJO'/d Paet Control Co CS •.... arN. ~act on ":I
....,. II~ Xlnt Aefl. 843-~ M2-t21 Of 146-3177 nu lawn/iprlntclr 751-347& ~MAim INTEMOAS lllH fl F~t~ .:~:u~ n"d• termite rapa1~ l .. 1111 •HI·1• lnwn~ ;;
P-CAL .. L '~~ cww Clll fllll IMillbilm LAND8CAPtNG-CEMENT HANGING/STNPPING ~ gfoMng deity and helpful. Salary eom-!~;..:::r': TRUCK DRIVER Part t ma 17610 8aadl •54 ~ .... WWWNI. Sync; Lii-ll!pla 'NOAK. Weekly malnt & VISA2MC 173-1512 weakly ,,...pepara he\19 menaur ... w/a~ hev.gooddrMng~aeofd 1 1 ton boll trudc ~ H~1~1:::1 ::0
. YOMI '*'·>Ont rara. Fairview i lamll"'I\' SAND@Mi dwHapl. aso.3818 .. _ _,___ openings'°' Reel &tat• A~Y .. TSL MGMT, We train E O.E Cati dri111ng record. ~t ·~Of Full Oetalle
;:;;;;mg._,.._._Dllectoi'I & Beker C.M. 241-9319 Caremlc Tlle-Herdwood = r ...-.. end TarritOfY ..... ~ 181 E. l7ttl SI tta 1'A., C~ AM 979-«>21 lntarl0f1 81 &73-2860 -~ M.,.,._,VI 1 all Ion -~ lni ICtplMt:rtn; hlona. PrlOf edvert19ing eo.ta MaN. M2·1603 I--------'\!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.-.
-TAKE ADVANTAGE OF end,,,.,,.. n'fl7;:_~~· NONR. m Of lrg c:U.tom tutut1ng qualltj e11parsent• preferred NOW HIAtHG Full Of plift2 I -. -4111 ... 111 XMAS SHOPPING. Al9o . fObJ. N.l /C.M /H.B. WOttc. Problafna.,No Prob-Sand resume In eon-t ime, C:Hhlar/park•ng .. -------•I FIT Of PIT. 0-5. M0-8811 ~ . .,.._ Eat. Aefl &75-3175 lamtl •321864 55'-7131 fldanoe to Paogy Blevlne, bootf'I attendentl aal•"" _ TheDeity P11ot,330Waa1 • -, M t R t ... ... Cl=:!'M~ ™· p:&;1, STUCCO & Stucco Aapair. •1-w., Bay St., Cott• M .... CA s-.::5/:'~':: i~;~. 0 I r 0 u . s n.. C8111 ~ Utllltlel ';1l:Or ~E a.ta rafurbilhlnG, c.rpentry No Job TOO 8fG or TOO -92t21.
ComnMtiilon. REQUIRES 7 dyJ wtc. 1 ·vr· Hp. rar: drywall ate. aarye.5,5277 Small.131-23'5 l~~~:p~~:'Jl ·--------Nin-IP ll11IT ~ al uead, housatlold Uc, Ina. "42,5053* *HANDYMAN• ~ , REMODEL• UC 541178 CASHIER/CLERK WILL TRAIN. Sllla-<>l·t~ ~ rnovera, print lhalf *HOUSECLEANING• Bia & tml Jot>t--Work guet . Airport gltt shop, deparl, ert aquipmant. 5 dys/wtc me. Cel T ~mbar, CUSTOM (the rlQht way) Call Bruce S.7-0780 . * 1 mlftll* DRAINS CLEAR from 111. wtll trJln, FIT, PIT, apply lnetud:t Set. Typing & I~~~ rn'l:J W1tly/bl-mo rats 556-04&. 5 FENCES-GATES Tr .. trim CLJ:>a1:X~ERT D':::oe:t:~:;:I:. Tun,Frl AM, 152·918e r. .. :ant~rf,~~d~~p~tl~
!MmentJ. If '/OU LORI'S CLEANING. E11p. Ou1n9runs.C.M./NB. UC.CelT,151142 ·~ CASHIER. FIT, fOf tut moaptwa. Apply Pan,
a ~tlon about prof. Holldey Spaclllt ., ... Jim Whyte, M2-720& ~ · food r"taurant. Elle.I-nyaawr 1eeo Placentia ~ or • "'°'*· 846-9157 Of 557-35M . 1•ANDY ANDY Elecirieal ... , ....ruv dOINUNs :: f aal~ry, :::~· Ave .• cOet• .......
Ullc ~·c~~I~ ctmtrlltln ~~::in~c. ~·;~~~~ry: CLJ:>&1~ERT ::.~~~: l:~ ...,.;,= .. .;.... 1111. Dflft
1910ft. 714-551-4151 Xll PA4d OF CONST. Uc. Cal T, 151142 .._Wit Front, Office, enthullaatlc ... 111 I
RamodalloD-"-P•lra ate. la* ....,. and c:hearful good otf1ca LJmlted ~ 10 Join Com!Mfclal-Aa1lden1111 AM W• Low c:o.t. HIQtl quallty. 1111119 eomp9.111ve salary netlonal real a.tat• mar, ....... Ce!U. 22 'I'! WM, lie. Ml-35M L LING SERVICE •111· ._. ,,. 24 HOUR A06F REPAIRS FIT inc:tud1ng Set. Con~ katlng l'/Sfatn with un-1 ~ ;'11%1'Rfto =~ Gal/Yd Clnupe, Tr... ... Local refl. 722-0441 tact Carol at &31-581-& llml'9d aamlngt. FOf If);
Orywel-Patdling-Textura Jon MS-3192 Hometown Mover. T •---t~ formation, call J ack I
Llc#311793 8.48-7203 tinge '°' Phone Est Lie: c.a.. T13804& ·~ RITIR ILDI ltNT A,. ... , SELECT .::::r::= dad(1, balconlel, stairs. DOCK'S HAULING mAL1 -DPllTI •tJmMMo fE( cit(§ FIT PIT Pacific: View BETTEA HOMES &
---Quality WOttc. 722-17&9 7-Days C.M. 540-3791 You ean't oet •lower,... S195/mo. 152-6070 24hr MamoNI Pn . ...,2700 GARDENS
........ ~ .... IMMEDIATESEAVICE lic:T-1 1115elnl.M5,37s0 S•AganttWanted llll lB .. AEALESTATE75125000 ~TFlm ib66A SPiaxtiSti HIUllng. CIMn Up ...... Till FIT, PIT, uper Of will train Aacec>tlonl9t
A!Gl.AZINO. Hot tubt• Comm'I & Aelld'I custom Call JoM, l50-l&2I -XMAS mtsi PfO fl; In dry cleaning plant In -SO.••• Repair ehlp1 a 10 track No._ 100 i,w, Of . 111 Yaan of Happy N.B. & Hardwood lnltall 12 Yrs N.B Good P9)'1 M4-0932 RECEPTIONIST wanted
crecu•Changa Colors · ""' """ .... -~;; ;ta Cut1omars. Alc:t\ard S1n0< · b'/ Century 21 The RMI M!Ct\aal M S.5-933.2 too tmall. Rob S.5-2110 ~ (Lie:. Int. Aefa) .. ~78011 In oc. Fr• Mt. "9-7774 II I n• Ettatars •t their Costa °''ow •IUXdEi ~ tAS T .___.__ ..,.._ u MaN office A11t tOf man-= a.tdlal HOMEIMPROVEMENT& PAINTERNEEDSWOAK I'll ~ .... eger.CellMe-7171.
j; REMODELING MASON, Int/Ext, c:.ltlngt. rafln C:.b * 1 • --·-Full time IOf C.M. rantelr--------------------,.--.. I Home Of omc:.. Electrical AAY 780-7333 25 'tf .. •P Aefl. 984-3437 T -·-..... "'~" 110fa. A~ 1930 New? RECEPTIONIST-ENTRY IM.rior/E.aterlO<, work It I low C<Mlt, grNt . rlrn-'9tn0Ya ate --~1 ·port Blvd. Costa Mau LEVEL BOOKKEEPER.
'8 ~ aicp. &31-4048 wOfk. •Bob 541-5199• ...... ttlat HI RE ~ ~ ~ FOf Glue Co. in eo.11 -~ ~ mTIUll lln m MaN e.2-00M Ooors-Repalr-Alleratlona Y~r apring radeeorating Bullnw wom.n needs to o~4Cfll * Wonderful Co CAT ••P --------C1blnat1-Penal2Lock1-ate 11art1 with• ltlopplng trfp relocate In Ihle area. . . Belboa'J Original Window helpful. 2 Yfl ·all(p pref'd. He¥a a garage Nia without
l'Syr• exp. J•ry M~,05&7 through claulfied. Many rm (811)434-0237 through class1f 1ed WUhlng Sarvtc:e&SO-e202 P9rsonnal 549-0e78 I~ -Mii your Items
Need
.-.aantt
in ldtlng
your garden -lo avow? ---Go lo the --caa.ifled ----service ---directory ---tor all ---of your · --landscaping ---needs. -----..., ..... ----142-1111 ------SELL ~hroullh class if 1ed --142-1111 ---..
itch en
Helpers
73a3: Bright new
holderl for hot
dishes. GfNt gift for
bride. Oirectionl.
\
\
AP.OWE T
·"
available in
Westminster
Huntingion Beach
Fountain Vallar
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -·
Must have dependable car
and proof of in,surance.
C1ll 842-1444
Ask for Joanne Craney
ITION
pattern peoee for
mppliql•. Edge With
blndW1g ()yell 8x 11 ••
915 PLUS $1.25 PIH
FOR EACH MTTEAN
ORDERED
OfffA GOOO lHAOUGH
Sales • Leasing • Service
Parts • All Makes & Models
HOUSE OF IMPORTS HOUSE OF IMPORTS
JMt 11, 1989 =: ....... ............ Ce. ... _ .. ..,, ...... ..., ... -. ....... ................
... f' • -
6862 Manchester Blvd. Buena Park, CA 90621
Santa Ana (1-5) and Rlverllde (1-91) Freeways
DIAL 213n14 •RCIDe8
Your Castle of Customer Commitment
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.,....... -·--4 -. _....:. ____ --·-;1111:: 21 and Dec 24 ,_... ___ ,_ 1IOAIT~........... --· -----II --... duced X-m.. prlcHI l 'I'', "9Gll ....,... pwr brllla. Ver Clll9fl .. ~ • ..d • .. ,
Petegonle. lpeiwy. -.C· 1112 modlH.. All.,.. -(ITMJll) cond. I 11,IOO Cell AutOMal.:CW :C.. Cf'=· ....
tfonlca, belet• end mYdl lnlnnlD st•cond Alli· 7...... .,..., . , . ~·
rnote!WeetMatNPfod-1ng kw llPPP'__,-. ---fliL• =· .= ~ A ,__ IM9tlnl of ... lwd of "'"'vleof'I of Qr-. Coulh.
o.iiiilip... ______ _..4 :•·.:o:s.-<;m' HIOfl-ofS12.500 °''*'ofter. ta.000 ...._ ..ci.~I AJC. Ill ~t()ry Wat; Clllfonia.*>lfftlnll•INOcMnMeloerdoflMDllll'°IHllcfAulMetlili
• '=":':'~~~M.:.ir.·:'.::...~ ... -= ~·.. • .;.;:....... . :~~: .. :.~r·· ·a:;.;:.;;:: ::-T:"::.:::::.:.:-:..:.~..:::.:"..'.., . .:;i ~':!,'~t~C::h Pmlmll-r.oi==:r°'Ni: one :.:.:.io:::::.•· -111tlll•U .... =-R·::=::-!r:-:::.Dolt~':,:':-.:. .
e ... and bow 1150 New •mos, blk/wht. 646-416' "*'.• ten IPM<f, one latll ~,,11~ II• Telle ov.r ..... CMt 3 Ml-1111 boerde/~oommnt••· ~ CclmfMndet.._ .,. . ~~""'WNr.,,..,--lpool--lm_l*_la_I, flile 11tlog banjo In box Ask for C>aV90tPM'I "*'' ~ Botll Ilk• ·---·-~ .. , •t 1211.0tlmo. --·-Aeeolutlonweclopted.~U.dlleoMlottoftheC,..111r-=
.___, du~...__.rlc d~, S 125. Wood clarlnet FDEE To "OU 1-a1e ~ new. C.il 722.eSM °' · 21 800 m11ea oreet con· -·--•-~ A~·'--,..___ ---.._ ... .-.. "'·-fOt ttae lnfmtl/Yi .._"7 -· " ' • ..,,_ """ S.9-3371 ·--.... , d1tion. 6'5-e7A • cytindet, PGW9' doOt u•-1 """'"'""•· ........,_--"•\at•" 'l'llauiet "· Mlcrl lee completely re-padded Engllstl Slleep Dog 1 -;csza _ Ioele, radial•. eruiH . c O..elopmenl Cena. In Fullefton operated ~.::.J..MCA=r;d Nor1h •f&Ot OBO. Almond wi t h e~u $125. year old, loves peof>ie lltttrtain AH'llModelUWllotMfOI -'llMllMU ,.,.,._ 11..,1n'1, power 0r--Countyweaepproved.A.,.hOttutlonfOtEIWir
COior 720-1722 Gloellentpiel with cover Call 6'40·7Mt 1 ' ... • lmmediete~I -----..-MAO of ~ ..._ ..... t-___...__-.....,.. 1 · · and atrlkers St15. Trom-• 0 DOWN PLANS Automatic, c1llnder, brall .. , A/C, ti t (9·411) Agency 40 pr9pere a_, ... ......,...._. ... ,,.,,,. ,_ ,,. """--
(l ITEEL deek '40. Blllft bOne 175. &41$-7909. FREE TO YOU FOR XMAS. Want:d· '•e rm IV pie· • Extended 72 Mo ...... power door Ioctl, radiatl, St.915. IOU1'ldwell Mona with l-805 Frewy edj.cent to ... A...,.._ .. mlMllOOtWll
121.c....-oao e11.1 • .,..,._,.,... ,,....:..,..,. Alro , ,.... "''''" -_.,., JIUWIW----.~-lonta-•--~·••!.,.~111-... """1! TW.. 14l>I•. Computer Needacnimney twMP?Or washer. 152 Ramona, VHSVCA Call&46-l525 •Unique&4Mopurett ... power blak•, AMffM, mllLll forc:onstructlontoAIWOOdChennef(I04)ffomKellogg0rtveto 1 l50. Printer $50. Silla a tnaw lllowler? How about Laguna 8eeeh •97 ·1566 after 1oMi Programl/OAC ea ... ne, AIC. Hurry on ty 700 feet nOf1hettY wu IPPt0¥9d. ~Ill wtth tM _.
t25. Waterbed S•O. l0m80netotuneyourp1ano J •-/r /a... ••'"Ill th11 onel(23e2)112.~5. la-1111 epprowd:8teteofCe11'°""9Flnw191AleistMCe(Su1Mntlon •for .=,orcyde S30. Al la. Oftwtlyouhowloplaylt? ...... ,. UI .,, Tt~ -·•• •mlllW the County Vetrw 8enlk:e Offtoe operatlonS: St9"Clerd Mo. ~; 5015
' =~~., ll2S lll""il.'1iiiii1 fill Vour Au='a.cede$ •1-1111 ~:~~":e~~~';~:"'1:::.-'~~ No. 087-1~ ~ ~~~ taSb71e5 fM°'a!'.: FIU Lm1I -fll 11' ?AOAUNNER 1....1! ~ MBZ '71 450SL. d-...c ~ ......... .-.. .a-eement No. 087-19 hwtth c.ftrw fOt c:onstructlon MMlna of "9 ·-.... ,..,.,_ . -s ELL t YN' old • ..,. 10 AO " '111·-v-1301 °'*'St. l"'hl bfue convertlble, ~-._. ..... ~::1 l dining table with lour 51200 Call &4S.Sto6 axle boet trailer. Excel-Newport Beach ,;;. upholstery lne con-Santa Ana RNer Bridae It Peclftc; Coeet Hlghw9Y and the 1..ac ....
Cftair1 UO. King .U. box ' tent cond, 1550 OBO ·--d 1 1 I ' I 0 0 0 546-1200 Channel Bridae et p8ciftc COMI Hlghwy. Multipurpe* e.llOr tptlng1 m•llfHI S25 Great Xmu Gift! Bfush 17M2t9 --t o n . 1 • · 1111.....,•C.UMna Progtem (MSSP) Vendor Agt'...-nt wtttl c...t-Home; ~
" Dual 1Uf'ntable S25. Vic· th rOul(h classified FoxFurStroller.~Sm-***** (•2Het751s50-5719 tr.ct with Thompeon ConeUltMta lltterMttollll, Inc. (TCI) tot COllCJ ... 1
' ~c:tlalf $20.Alfoon-... 2-llll Med,Was S1700,wlUNll ...... _ MBZ 'l5500SEL ------.ctJonatJohnWeyneAirport;AQr...-ntr81dngtoextMllOnoftlflCIO dltloner. Call &46·1~ 1 ~ t0t S800 6<4S.71S32 --• 139,000 .. ·•-11 form a Community Fedlltlea D18trlct (CFO) with C2H2 u.Need, O. Jt11
------------------•ideal HOiiday GI" Beautl· Hlftllal Creme ••Ill Palomino, Propeftlea and 8t9nda'd Peclftc L.P.; Inmate Voc:atlonlll EdllClllon Al!P-Gct some vacation cash by selling those lul Designer Slllef Fox x1n1 cond, lomlles,cu11om •t.000 ml MINT COND. Automatic, 6 cylinder. rnenta with A8ncho Sentlego Community Colleae Dlltrlct and 1nc11•1
n. h h r. 'I . sol 1 .,11eei.. S795010BO. Gold s>Kk~ Centra POWBJdoorlock,radiaJs, ~ -·--In..._ lr1evocableOllwtoConVllYE-.t ems t at t e iam1 y s o utgrown . -tr l8r aeket. size 8 laU...... 7011 2 13.85 3 . 9 e o o or wtteel•. lheep•ldA COY· cru1M, power tteerlng, to.,..._., , ... pr9em; em enta with • with a quick·acti ng classified ad. worn 1 time. pales S 1800• 71•·&73-2792. er age & car pllone. power bralles, AM/FM, 111 Roed right-of-~y: ~ SeMcee Agt'wnenta JCM..-.in
sell S500 call 8S.-3559 New Wlnd1urfer. Surf '86 SUZUKI S"'MUA'"I 546·1600 A/C, tilt. I 11 -532) Ahdoubt, M.0.; Kenneth J. cnang, M.D.: Crea P. Miranda. Jr .. M.D.; and.a.ck Offf fualtut partner. Lie. by Mistrial .. " $13 995 A. Palmer, M.D .. for corr«:tlonel med6cal WYICea; Flrat AmenclfMnl•to .. ...,. ... Wu... fualtan 1114 ct 12ft complete $295.00 C0!'1181't1ble. Good con-MERCEDES SL 450 1974 ll,IT•T• IUU' Agr..,,,.,.t with A.S. Foundatton/OrMQe County, for Acqund ~
Ss•s I ~ai~I 1147 875--8299 dll1on .. $5100 Or best very ei .. n, both t~. cMlncy Syndrom (AIDS) cue manegemerit and reeldel"'91 ..-..;
• NEW DAYBED WHITE & offer 650-1558 asking $17,000 private mYILll Amendment ·to A-eemen• with 'fuatlf\.lrvtne Medlcel Group, inc .. 'lor §•91fQ""bElfWPN"'f,._M:i(-,-,oo-m·a., BRASS. With mauresses E ~ E UT 1 DES K U,./....._•1/ ltrlft t k 845· •579 ••• -• 1 r ......,. ....._...._ board for Ille hou•---ork & trundle complete w1thm1hogany llnl1h, --par y, 1111or ---pr<Mslon of phya6caj examination ..w..; Agi'...,...t No. Ql2.....,. -u• u-
--· 4 · good cond. H "x34", 7122 l•W SPECIALS home 873·•335 Rancin Company-·AeleaM of Security; AgrMment No. Dll-180-U. ~
111-1112 s2•5. •9•5• 293* $300. Four leetherene * -·T .. -* -•1111. 11• ... 87 190E 11Sv (••68) fLDIWHl '11 Up 87-81Z-Surety Bond: Lew with the Roman Cathotic B6lhop al Or .. New matching sofa and wood armchairs, -_. -•1111111 ..,_ 77 •SOSL Blkl (8214) llW for Environmental Menegemerit Agenc;y/Houli~~ Dev1lopment "Jlenuuiat w/hldeaway bed & love-St2S. Call 631·34••· Betboa Coves (18661) 87 5eOSL lo ml (1$705) Mint condition. Under Housing Retiabllltatlon Program, GA 1244-42: L IM with Roiand J. Melfhot
"it:C::: _Ult seat aet HOO, Singer PAl&l•ll 650-4712 'II Uh, ... _ 111,111 15 3IOSE 42k ml (6007) 3000 miles. (25KH468) for Orange County Central CourthouM Lobby Co11t111lon, PM 401 ..... 7P20;
.-... --sewing maeh., Athena ----raaa-tatie (88783) Automatfo 17 300$0 Blackl (~501) $20,995. Quitclaim lngrw/E'~...,,,.....t Deed for Salt Creek Chennel; UcfnM
-·-2000 w/cablnet $250. ..... • r-• • 'II 121hr 111,111 fUlll 414-MH ICIWSTER No. HA556-30 with Dunea Partnership-Upper Newport~;
1 t B'"·d CM Singer Model 2808 FP-1520, enlargement & •••trl/Triiltll (N309) "-tt'--t ..... ...,,.,..t for ~ ounee ~pment· '" • w/eablnet $100, World reduction. mulll copies, 2 MH '11111-•-... 1915 PEUGEOT 505 STI OIDIWC Agr~ts ~th The Irvine ·~~y and eaitrw, Ar~ed-. 50 SelectOealer1 BookChlldCra"set$100 It trays low ,.,..,.e like ... ,.. au1omatle.burgundy,t1n A t ,.._ ••270 d••211wlthLSA'"---'-o-'--En -..
New arrivals daily! I obo 759-9153 new. s1:000. CanM0n-Frl I' ENCLOSED UTIUTv (18725) leathet Interior. 11.1nroo1, 114/........ 'greemeru ,_,...... In ..... ~·-n..... ....n ... w
-
ov=tt QUEEN SIZE M '"TTAESS 724-9952 ask for Hal TRAILER. $'410 FIRM '111-1 ......... 141,111 48,000 mi. Xnlt eond. tel Impact Reports (EIR'I ) for Laguna Canyon Aoed ~ Lagune Laurel., .. -" ex demo , ......... ~.) $3500 E 1c 537 733'4 211/Ml·ll 11 P\an: Offer of Euementfor South Laguna Beaches; Acceptance of e.....t 1 t Btvd, CM & BOX. OUIL TEO! • Aaiaal • RIDING LAWNMOWER ec:. .....,_ r -Deedsffor Capistrano Beach; Acoeptanc. of Offer of Dedication '°' Poft_ola
50 Select Dealers BRAND NEW! I t ss. tlll S290. 6'2-361-4 STEIUll SUBARU 83 GL Hatch-•• 'U lllT• Oft HIHs; Acceptance of oner to Purchale RNt Property-The Orange CoWtty
t New arrivals daityl CALL • 846-'4293 * 3 Yr old Harlequin GREAT In/ lft pack,• wheel drive, AIC, Aulomatle. power steer-DeYek>pment Agency PurchaM AllUrance Progrem, Prefect No. :.i>m •-•u Hll -is DANE/M . ..,., clipped, le IO I luggage reek Ing. power brakes. 1701-3-01; Acceptance of Offer to PurchaM Reel Property-Orange CoUftty
: ...,. llftl •u -have papers Well taken Mtlll 1 1141 ll•lm UUT 111 UI AM/FM. A/C. ( t0-503) Dev4lopment Agency--PurchaM Aautance Program: Allocation of OrllOOe Wlmlll •YIU orl gln11 Lltho care 01 Must sell S300 doiNd TO EUROPE ... private party '2600 $2,995. Countv Unified TranlPOfl•tlon Trust (OCUTI) Grant funds from Or..nge
• l*'f«;I condition. 1 yr "Jungle Humine" Stgned OBO 97•·99•5 aftr Spm MUST SELL. I• HU 152·9792 ' UIUl•TN.. CountY Transporlatlon Comml..iort (OCTC) for road rehablttatlon ~:
I guarani ••. delu xe &numberedS295. OlllllllUl-Pll YAMAHA AZ 350. 1YA vw '72 TRANSPORT •nua Acceptanceof State()epartrMOtofHealthServtceaGrandAaistanCIFUiids
models rebullt re-1824 English weter COior ""'N'\IA4l mai./fem ehoc: OLD. Very low miles BUS Operetlng ~in· ••• -•1 from California Health FeclHtln s:lfta....VV. Authortlty; ~ i --~
--.. y k•.. $1500 "' -... dowa. new wn. s 1950 Regional P11k-Acxleptance of Deed. Certain c:onstr:uctlon c:ontrKta 0"9fy. One priee onlyl """""· °' .... ire · o ·-~2500 t~• w--•....a --Fiii '12.... f Id .. .-... ,..,.......... ...__ ~-....o---" ...i-. _._
,,
flnlshedilkenew. FrMde-"The Markel Place .•. Rici\. ":.,....ate·-.-lots 01 ~rink'_:. 12000 (213) 735-1952 & -_._. · ~·~~·-. ' ......--
Your choice, s185 ellcil. (714)53S-559S ---761 ,..,,,:;f:-10r •• ,,73v18 .. ·~ ... --ftl69 OBO 6'46-1041 orb ,awar ....... ,contr1Ctv,_,.....or....,.appr.,,,_, • ..,pr..,,.....1ecDC;MtJ• """"~ ~----,... ~~ted. Authol'luUon to pay • portion of the ree.rttlon tundaJ:-'d for the. --In business 25 yHrs. 3 PC WEDDING GOWN. .. .. P'fT PARTY NEEDS re-vw ·eo $CIROCCO. wtrlte. ... -...,.,~Ion f H ...... c rt Ph 2 c I lion p ~No 01u.....~ 126-0810 Ivory Moray 11ze 8. $175. Give Wrinkles for liable. ofder transpor-.utomatk:, air conclillon· 4 door. lots ol power com,..... O .,...,.,. OU aM on• rue • r..,,_.., · ·~ Headpiece 130. Christ mes! Chlnu e tatlon car, well-eared f0t. Ing . am/Im, s26oo. equipment Low miles. wu approved. Authol'ltallon for sofk:ltatlon of Pfopouls for four Mn·
Sewing Machine tor sate; TEAK DANISH Modern Sher-Pel Pupplu. Black 980-1047. CREVIER 497-•030 (1WACtt3)S4,995 cession1forJohnW1yneAirport panengertermlnalwuepproved.c.aaln
Adler. with zigzag. like dining .table & 4 chairs MIF. Musi see, under .. -.. I "-1 /J Personnel matters were approved. Certain purchallng matters ..,...ap-new . St 20 OBO St80 645•89 13 $5001720-3939 EvM -w •• .. llJl'tft .... A•lel ..... Ile t proved. Certain trect/peroet map matters were approved. Authorization to
722·6564 or 549-3378 · •LOOKING f c H31 'lh Ill IUEI Buick, skyhawk 1612 tranafef' monin between verlou• funds, u Included and approved ln'1he
ualtut II 4 B!~:~~e~:.~~.u$~.C~ nlon?t we h°:v! ,.:;'/~: FORD BRONCO ·2' 1Ua. 'II CLlll llT" excel conct. Auto, air, 1988·89 Flacal Budget wu approved. AB 8 Determination for the C"' of
Plus transf'"'• ._ Call tu1 loving dogs & cats 2 Inch Litt Oversized gauE • tuntool etc. •8,000ml. _ _ MISllon Viejo Annexation of Community Servlce·Area No. 12 wu appre>Wd. ANTIQUE TIP TOP table: 642_5392 ---i"""· available for adopUon. Ures. Brown. •lwhl/dr A'I bftt offer over $3300.00 A reqoe.t to eateblllh appropriation• and .. tlmeted revenue for Communfty
leather top, brass ridge. · Must go 1o rnponslble 60 OOO/mlles sa300 A FEW EIWUS Of 844·21271675·8500 Faclll11es District No. 87·2, Portola Hiiis wu approved. Aeaolutlon Y.aa
ITALIAN DESK, worm-BOBCAT AUG, $395; Ute-owner. Come & see, we ' a..g.6219 ' Ill• ua 'U Fii IAUI e<SoPled, approvl~ the reorganization of the Yorba LlndaSchool Diatrtctlnd wood and leether top ttq_eheasant S8S· bOth might have the perteet 0.. PllE-Oml> mMs - -... the Plecentla Unified School otatrlct with lmpllrMOtatlOi) on July 1, 1~. ~· 59'~30~~818 1arge.-P. ec 'eon ' Cil ryocnlt=1 Ef1'H.-W-: ~~~ ~ut~ 1Mf>f'561 _ Wiii_ -••---• 1987-88 Community Development Agency Annual Report wu ~ __ 6-4•-S~~ · • . or 963-2357 POODLE PUPPY SALE 6 cylinder, speed manual, • u • I oaded With e.xtraa. Exlrt a •19& tel:t:"OrengrCoonty1>rogrea "9poft,-VOfaml 25, 19m91iii r~~ _ CENT EA CLUB private T-Cup. Toy, Mini, S200· power 1teerlng, power 88 73St auto.mded.642434 clean Mint condition. 4 DA Sedsn automatic, flied. 1988 Annual Report on the activity of the County'• Leatsiattw A~
BLACK LAO 7 piece membership, s7,500. Call STOO Hand ralae<I. Many brakes, AM/FM, eaaaet-Sales -Service Under 5.000 mllH. 11ra1ght 6 -Air condition-Program during the State and Congrwlonal Leol•tlve S111lon1 ,. .. bedroom se1 (QuHn) 642•5392. colors. 751.J<465 te, AIC Call for low prlee. Parts -Leasi')g (50'4C>e 1) S 14,995 ing, rad111s, uses regular received and flied. A report regerdng lhe status of County Crtmfnal Julllce
Almost n-MOVING Lo•ded 2 to choose 131-3111 ICIWSTER gas -midnight blue facilities financing wu approved u recommended; and County Admiftis..
$600 OBO. Jim 673-5014 N.;! :~1o ••alw lu1r .. nt1 from.~~""* ... 500 Auto •u•all Dr. ClllWC 121M., Met etterl trat1ve Offlce directed 10 explot• the poMlblllty of contracting with a prilillte
a a I ---1155 _._ '" 1 m provider to provide crtmln&I justice factlltlee and to provide tM eo.d""" an 11&11 uu.e.1 I 2 to 10 rooms. 962-2069 n11111 Santa Ana 11•1•• MM Ml-1114 141·1112 evatuation not later then eo days from this date. Accllptance of a"~ Footboard with ralls, IAIT1d M1 • ---Foundation donation for balance of AICll Year 1987-$1 Otb of Protocol
qUMn size S 195 846-•293 1111 llWL-2 Wets w 1cue1 Excellent cond. F 1 ND 55 ~~ ... at Edinger 211/M1all 11 GOVERNMENT SEIZED operating costs wu approved. Ad Hoc Committee Report on SoutMtn
DUNCAN PH YFE couch SEC 6 row, 55. S200 88· make offer 675-9883 OPEN 1 DAYS VEHICLES LOW AS Califorma Aasoc:lation of Governmel'lll (SCAG) reglohal Plana"'~ to
Gate L--t1ble. Wlndso; 248•7486 8181355-4509 ., ___ ,,....Hrs. Mon-Fri. jCadiKae 1978• Blue Sev-S 1 O 0 B M W S • the.City-County Coordination Committee wM received~ filed. ~ -· --------a.ttothebuic:ABC's· ~·-Ille, clean. S37SO, C'"OILL·cs CHEV.VS ._..... chair. c1a.,m1 f~;, ;~7e7rrs & c1ua1tled'1agr•tpteceto 1u1e,.,_,.,..,1,lnde1oset . throug h classified 7:00em10 9:00 pm 7 2 3 • 1 5 0 0 • 0 r FORDS~ M.ERCEDEs: Infrastructure Anance Program con1Ultant panels and a reY!Md PrOOflwn
more. .,...,...,.. eovertlM 111en"" aome cash 213-943-3337 l0469814) 0 Rs c s Statement and Appllcltlon lnformetlon packege were apptO'Nd. ~RUCKS H !No ~;~SS Authorlu tlon to distribute Request for Qualifications for consuttant ~ UIU LAI 'U llYIUI AMAZING RECORDED In oonnec:Uon with the annual Mttlng of apeclal tax•~ 111111,,,...ts for
Loaded with exlru . Mint MESSAGE REVEALS Mello-Roos end Auesament Olltrlcll Wll approved. AuthorlUtlori':tor
condition. (81 56821 DETAILS. 71 4/531-6211 payment for tpeelal eounMI MMcel for development agreement~-SUPERI VOLKSWAGEN
ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST
VOLKSWAGEN DEALER
SKI
•• ' • WITH PURCHASE 011' ANY: NEW /USED
AUTOMOBILE IN STOCKI
LIMITED TIME ONL YI
191914&91141
$21,995. EXT 105 tatlon wu approved. Resolution wu adopted, approvfng Meriel Hlgt\!ny ICIWSTER Financing Program Agreement No. 1201 with lhe City of Fountain VelleV~for reconstruction of W11ner Avenue from W11d Street to Euclid Street. Aaport ClllWC on e>tpendltur• for lnaldn park and recreation faclllllet wu recalvedo•and
filed. Resolution wu edop1ed, approving • Publlc Property Permit for UM of 114/H4 •• Old County CourthouM by Benyard Inn of the Court. Cl1y Of lrYlne '9qUllt to
111/M1·1111 Initiate cooperative study tor propoled amendment to County Maitt• PIM of __ 'I• Arterial Highways w•• approved. TreHlc Committee Mlnut .. of the No¥erriber
-·-• • 18, 1988, meeting were approved. Comments submitted by Environmental ll'IM WI Management Agency on the Draft Buellne Program of Orange County
vt8 eytlnd«. 5 speed man-Tranaportetlon Commllllon'• (OCTC) 20 Year Muter PIM of Tran.portatton
ual. power door lock. LlncOln Continental 1982, Improvement• were approved. Stetu• Report on Lek• Forest/El Toro Nol ..
power steering, Power mini has, everything Study was received and flted. Relolutlon wu adopted • recommended,
brekff. AM/FM. CISMI· SI 000 6•• 7220 . ~ovtng • report updating the John Wayne Airport Muter P\an Budget.
••.Alt;. (11·551) SA,995. · • • or &"""-lion of a i...int 't9ftture ~t of County·-owned land to "'oduce 11.,.T.-·-754-7781 ,,_... ,.,,. ,__. ... ....o:ll.-.o
••• -liiiiiifiiiiiiiiii~rA9veflUe:::,a: for construction of the Forenlk: ~ 0.-w apptuwwo. --.a 1•llllY 'II Ion wu adopted. c.rtlflcatlng the reau1t1 of the llectlon fOt gener• Ml.a 4 door, 1011 ot Power member to the Board of Retirement end deciaring Mary Abbott, the
1 ______ 1 ___ equipment. (2BOT701) candtdate rec.Nlng the moat vot•. Aeaofutlon w• adopt9d, ..,.,_~
m..uJ 1111111 $5915 continuance of the Anlmel Shetter Advt90fy Baird (ASAB) through o-nt>er aAlll 31, 1990, ~ecommenc:let.lonlmede by Gr~ Jury~ q~
2-wt!MI drive, loaded, new may be taken the Boerd In reaponae to lhoee ~.
1r1n1mlu lon. clean. Relolutlon WU ed, ecc:eptlng Stete General Fundl authortnd by A8 s 1 o o o ob o. E v •, 1903 for the purpoee for treetlng lntrevenoua drug .,.... who .. et~ of
e73.o319 contracting or spreading Humen ~ Vlrul (HIV) lldlcflon.
CHEVY '80 MALIBU * * * Power & Air. Runt ••<*· .... llllLI 'll lent. Need• pelnt. S 1200. -M5·5075 LN I ... ,....._
CHEVY NOVA 7-1--One owner, automatic, full power, eleclrlc sunroof, 2 Door, btue, nin• good, new benery & new ur ...
't9tY ctean. call S.f..&80• (•924SFE) Auna ex<*·
-
- -'Rm lent & Looka good I S 1095 ,_. OBOlll Call & Lv Mtg
• Automa~ cyUnder, U1 ....
power doer lock, radlal•. PlmlT .... m =· :C:: ~:;~~· Loaded with Htru . Clllltte A/C till (9 ... 37; Sunroof extra clean . . 11411 · · · 1393777) s 10,915.
ul21•1• 1U1U ICIWITU ..,... llllWC
... , 1141111 ••
...... ..,.. 111/M1-1111
1111•,_ AutOIMtlc, 4 cyMncter. PL•UI 'U mlllT
power door IOdl. ,.... -CNIM, POW9 "91ring, ~utomatlc. • cyltndet. power l:W..... AWFM, radlalt. power .-tno.
AIC.M.(7-117)111."5. power brllk•. AMIFM, z=:-::~t•renty. (1 1·504) .... , ... ==-
......... ,.... MMll1 -Awtomllc. I cyllnder. PlNlllU~'ll
power door lodt, radial•, 11111111 ..
on.Ill, power lte8rlng, 4 c:ylndlr, I epeed man-'°"" brlll•. AMIF~. ual, Pel"' door loci(,
A/C, tllt. (11-HS) r-.... power steerlna.
114,.. power bf-. AM/FM, I ......... CMMtte, AJC. (11-S.7)
....... ttl . .., • ., •ss--;;...•niw••IUIJ .. ,
Change In pubffcatlon of Synopels of Baird of 8upel vteoi • meetll 191 to the
Orenge Ctty Newt for JertuafY ~ February, 1911 waa approved. AilolaHton
WU adopted, epprovtng partlelpatlon In the State' a Pubtlc 8etety DllpMctllf
Progrem. Allolutlon wu adopted, requeetlng that the U.S. Dlpertmlla of
HOU9ing and Urben o.v.lopment and the tJ.S. Congrw take MCllHty
actions to avoid a premlture reduction In thf Section 8 Exlatlng "-'tel
Aalatence Program. Reaolutlon wa adopted, approving e propoeed Chlt-
dren'• Group Home C>evetopment Advlaory Boerd. A ~ by the Otanae
County Superior Court to become eubject to the prOYl96onl of the St• Trfel
Court Funding Program wu continued to January 3. 1ta. County~
tretlve Oftloe Report ~ the Fllcal Yw 1.....,. .,_.. •wu
approved. A reQueat for of agreement• with coneultantl fOt the
Foothill Clrcutatlon PNil'na Plen ~d W llPCWOll'ef • f'ICOflWMllded. A ftnandal leem tor the O...lopmen(')nd
"-vatton Progrem wa 11l1cMd, hevlng the followtng tlrml: utDeln
F~. Inc .. M primary Redev91oprnent Coneultant; ...,._IOW ~
Gtoup Inc .. • alternate: Slone and Younat>era. • 1~ Ad~; Caine, Gr ..... Mldgl9y Stater, lne. ii alternate; 8 Ye.ca.
Careon and A8uth, u primary; Orrick. Herrington ~ Sutcllffe, • •
C.D.C. Engineering, Inc., and Church Englntllt'oog, Inc. 11l1ctec1 ........
Ing ftrma for Foothill Clrcutetlon Pheelng Plan and A11111nw1t DtlMol Protacts. Gery Vogt, MAI, L90U!'a Ntgull, lltacted • Pf'"'*f: G1orf1
Hlmllton "°'*· MAI, Newport Beech, llllC1ed • ..._,_. ..... utate
appt..._ to eppraiM rlght-of-w.y within the City of Newport~,.._.
for the Mdlnlna of C8mpua Drive from MacArthur Boul9wrd to Matot
Street. Boerd ed')oumed at 10:56 1.m. =, . . D. R1ll 1rte. Ce.tr of ..... of l .. 1"11on •
..
"
<>r.,... C09lll DAILY Pl&.OT,,,.._, 0.1mtl1 II. _. 811
!!M... fWJC.. ...c""' -' ..,.!Wlg:;;;;jil..._ ...... ....__l ____ ... mmil~-------1----
........ .... ... •m1M1T• .._ C ... fOfnMI Cor•o'a"on. llCtmD•an M .... ... COuMy on No.,,_... ,_ .._... it _.. ............ OA-.t.. ... ftAW• AW'19DRll 'FIC8 naw• 11•-.e A•. IMN. ....nAW ..cnr ____ 17, tNI ....... ., .......... ,.. ... 1 ••• , .... .._ ... _ ,'J!.!a.!pWC. ~ .. ,,........ ••U-ffC. celf.lt7'4 TM......,...,.._ .... ftAW ,_,. Tit• r .. lalraftt co•· ................ . _ _.. ftllDUI uled to lie In U farce end .,__.Min.. Tiiie ..,....... la GOft· ~-TN..._.....,... are ~ Or.,._ C... ~ to .,.,._. ..,.._ , ... ,..._.,., • O..•• Im • 111111.... ..... ... frolllt .. edop-• .. ...... dwcleclit,:aoorpoi..._ MIJWl,IM, OO!rlg..__a ~Hot DID ..... 2. t , w W.-... ~ __. • tlW
-T.&:-. • 111 u Tite .. =._ '*'°"' 11on Oii Dn•"*" ''· 1111. TN y=-. "'tone T... r .. 111rant co"'· eu c.•-· eo.. ...... LUii< HOMIS/WtCLAN 11. n. 1tu --... ,.... • ...... w ....., .. ~ARE • D1FNJL ,_. ____,.._ i.a of end W ......... it, tlte .... 1WWe ....,___..,.,. .... .e of INftOM to wt ....... celf ~. ,76IOCllllMA...e, F·Nt Mllad --Oii l•ts ,.., ...._ ,_. •
UNDER A DlaD OF UM 'letltlOue luell\••• ._... roll cell -.: COUN-the 'le°''°"• Sue1n .. 1 "'88 ~ t1te lctilloul 0.-. ~ ll'nOe. M WW.. c..lf •714 ttl7 ....0..,. _. , II
DATIDOCTClll -..... IOUTHUHO ~ CIL MIMll"I AVIS: N•"'• O'OONNILL. ---,.... OI ,.... ce..r.tOOli. lrww C8'if TM u.11 Compeny, A M.IC.. I ~ l . CCllller .... kt ....... UNL.Eal:'n•{ ·CAM. ,. WN1161r Aw· luffe, HornlMH:kle, ~· l"ICIHAM I 'A"T· llMecl allOw9 on...,......., •114 CaUlornla Corpor•t1on. ,_ lllUFT1811l w Ned '1.-IUflt•t
-nst'!'rt .... lulldlne A-t. ea.ta Dur~, Genii. Glaegow. NIMllOUTHI,_.. Ill, 3IOI 20, 1t72 Tiiie IN9IMM le con• 17MO QICl9tte Awe., lrWle, K.-Wllfl IM c-nty C*etk of Or• wMll ... CoufttY ~
EAOnON-!2., w IT ...... c.t. 11127 NOH; Non•. AISINT· Cadillac Avenue, lu11• Nc:Nfd T DelN, See· ~it, an lftcll"et191 C• H7 t4 PM:ftliOUI • 11 IM .,.._ C0uMy on D1a1WW ... CGuMr an Nol .... • -~I., ___ Ttw Aclitioue ....,_Nona C).,,0, C:... ...... cell tel*Y lite t•tlttr•nt com· Ttlle ~ le con· llMmftATW t, 1NI ,. 1W ~ ......, A, A .._ NefN,...,._IOaDoll9 ... OrdlNl'ICa ~21 IMcta ltat Thia .. ...,,_,. -llacl ~to tranaect tlull· ~it, 1 ........ 1*1Mr• TttetolcMlnl"'90ftl_.. ,_
" • ~ NEED ... In 0,.,... COuMy on ~XIX of T"'8 10 of tlte TM Flettelout ....,_ _....IN~ ()er1t ol Or· nett ~ tM flctltlOu• "'40 Ck1ift1 ~ M ' ~ Orllft9' CoMt ~ Or-. ~ .. Eno.. Of Mar 17, 1111 ,llE City•~ Code ,.. ...,,.......,,_.tollbo"'9WM-. County on o.o.nw ~ ,_ or ~ fht reo111r1nt com• lANESIO,.·o AS· o.ilY "°' OeotmOar t , 1e. DlllV"°90n1...., • :r\N OF ntl N0.'11C1142 .. ding lolldl•IOll °' .,.,.. ..... In 0r-. County on 14, 1MI ...... allOw9 on 1M3 ~ to tranaact ~ SOCIATEI. 17160 GlllitWl n . 30, 11M 30 ,..., ...,.., I '!~ .... .,. DewW J . LMlulate. 10 ~. llualnw. or con-AUfUlt 22. 1914 ~11 .. E Hit• 0.-. M ,,_ ,.. .,,..,, ... ktltlOUa Awe lrMe Cellf 12114 F·IM "'YOU. YOU Thunder Aun, Unit 17•D. 1tlbutlon1 from putllc N0'25SIM ~ Orlft08 COMC TNI lllU'Tl«lt -fled.....-,_ or """" T'h9 1,.-' eompeny. c ... --------~1---::=.::-:==:t'1'"'
........ ACTALAW'flll lrWle,c.11.•1'4 .. ,_,..,~ Joltn D. O'Oonn•ll, OallyPtlotOecemberH,30, wtlt'lthaCountyClericOfOr· Mtt.ed IOoW on '*-Y 3, lotnla. 17660 G111etM A...e , --~~~~~~-.j-:::=====~~ ::.:.... Cll TtuLlle'a ... TNI ~ WM con· The lull tu1 Of iha ordl· T"*9a Of tlle J. end P. , .... ~ 8. 1S, tW """ County on Decam• ,.... IMN CeM 92714
"-:U..D1911Cllnu£1 ducteclit,aninc1Md"91 nence ~De,..., Ir! IN O'OoMlll ~ Truec f.oot 7, ,... Alidlatd T DelN. lee-TNi Dull.WI II COl'I· llCftliOUSMIH•M UlmlTAW ""'°' Tiiie 9'M1..-.11 .. fled City ~ e onlce, T7 F• ...i OelOllet 20. 1912, W '9taty OUC.S by. 1limlted1*1Mf· 11Mm ftATW T --
' ..._ .. .._ .,_. """ .,.. County c... Of °'· onwe, Coet• Meta. seoe Cadlllac A..-. 1u11e PmUC llJTIC( PutllWled °'""" COMt Thlt ... *'*'' w .. 111ec1 ..., Tiie followinO C*I0"9 .,. ,. -.. ~ "flil MAL. IEITATS lft08 County on December IK.1111 •. ltttlllNIY, ().,,0, Coet• Meta. Cellf o.itv Piiot o.c:.nber 11, 13, wltlt tlte County C1attc Of Or· the reglllrenl com· dolna .,_,.,_ • Clolno *"'8::~!8 Vt', .. ".""'9TEE IERYICll. INC., 14, 1MI crne&.IM IM2t 30, 1Ml.Januatyl, 1Mt .. COUftty on DecamtlW tNnCaC1 10 tranUC1 ........ T~X HElP. 1154 1 P6tH ~ .....,.. "•'~ ~ ~ °'""" COl8l ~ ~ CoMi W"'. llalr Arm1trong, F-170 14. ttll ,_. under tha flc:tltlOUe GcMNrdlt Stt.207A,Hunt· APARTMENT.!...... '71
: ........ or NC I I I' Daly"'°' December 23, 30, Daly Piiot December 23, TNMae ol ...... ""' c ..,... na,,_y ,...,. ~ ~ or "..,,.. lftgton IMdl. Cellf. 12647 G ...... Alie., ...... _. ~It •' aw .,..._ 1 .... January 8, 13, 1... 1... Arrnalrong ~-Truat The tOl!owfno pereona.,. Ml.IC .,TICE Publiahed Oranoe COMI ..._. ~ on Oec:ember. Merta '· Can&M. 11311 tap~ F 2._ • .,....,.. to .. Dl9d F-424 FIM Uted Auguat ZS, 1913, 3505 doing ~ •· Deoly Pile>• Decemller 23, 30, 1t12 lido l an•. Huntington ,_ ornace, -,. •\lull _.... 11¥ STEVEN Clcllllac A11er1ue. Suite lU$< HOMEl/PAlM DE· PICTrnOUI .,_.. 1tlt, ~ I, 13, 1... Aic:NrO T Deihl, See-leecfl. CeM 92147 ~i:.el .:~· San
.,tL LUCIA N1fO llMM.Y'N PmLJC llJ1lC( PmlJC ll)TIC( 0-110, Cotta llllela. Calif. SERT, 17150 Glllel1a AY9., ..,... ITAftmlt'T F-•7 re4ary Fred N cantM. 17371 1 T -~ L•ArLll HUSllAND t2t2t IMnt, Cellf. 92714 The tollowlng pereons at• Thie etatement wM ftled lido l•n•. Huntington T~ J,.~ 11 " -~ NO'nC8 Oii MOTIC9 Oii lriQNm ftmlly Pwtnert, Tlla lUlll Company, A Clolno ~ • P1'aJC ll)TIC( W1tt1 the County c;..,. of Or· laed\, Oellf 12147 -·-·:r· :;;#ID~ OCT08ER 30 ~ MIAWQ "*-JC HmAW • CaJtomlt llmt'9d par1net· Ctlllornla Corporation, M'M IMPOAT/EXPO,.T, anoe County on OammDer TNI b"""911 11 con· ~· A...e .• IMne,
-:,.;.:_ ' NOTICE IS HEREBY Noticel9'*90yc;-itt1at lfllp, 3505 Cadiltec A---. 17550 GlllMle AY9., lrwlnt, 131 St Cleit. Coe1• ....... ~ 14, 1tee ducteelby!~anclwite
''-'• ..._ No.17.elll10I GIVEN 111a1 •public hearing the Planning Commlaelon ot Suite 0-110. Coet• Meta. Calif. 92714 Celit 92tH ..cnnoua ..,...., ,.,. The reglttrent com· u!..~ "'omecas!ut 'E"9oell'dl In .. ~ w\11 be held by tlte Cotta the Chy of Newport IMdl Calif. t2t28 This blnlntet I• con· Lealie MIC:Nal Devis. 131 MAim ITA~ Publlshect °'""" CoeM fMN*I to tranMC1 l>Ulli· ...,_,., ., • .. CounlV Aloalillaf °' ...... City Counclt Oft Jar» wilt hOld • public ~on .... R Watlling, 3505 OUCtect by! • corporation St CIW. CoMa ....... Ceilf The ~ '*"°"' .,. OMy Pilot Damm• 23, 30, ,_ under the tletlliOUI Ceilf 12113 -_..i. Cour"V. ~ ary 3, 1 ... , et 1:30 p.m , or the app11catiOft of The of Cadillac Avanut, Suitt Thi r1gl1tr1nt com· tH2t C1o1no bUa1MM u . ltlt. Jtnuary a. 13, 1Ht ~ name °' nanwe T.:r~= ~~» ~:'I'd ........ ID .. ~ • 900f\ IMrtaftar as prtc· Newport 8Mcfl of AME 0-0-,,0, Cotta Meu, Ctlff. rnenc.d to tranuct bull· MICflele Margu«tte Davit, LUSK IM IR A MES A, F.012 liaWd abo¥e on ~-Gillett A ~ ··.ti .,.... Md EledlOfl ID tlc1ble, In tnt Council MENT NO. 873 on tne OC*\ t2t2t ,_. under Iha fictltl«Mle 131 St Clair. Coet• Meea. 17S50 Gillett• Ave.. lr,Ane, 14 1tlt 1271.. 119 ' ' "''lel ........, f9COl'Wd Ohanlber'1 of Clb' Hall. 77 .-. ., .. north of Fifth Av-Donald S. Grant. 3505 bullMM name or nemae c.111 92626 Calrf t2714 •-111 -Mene P CanlM ..... Pia.A I. 1W, lnll Fek Or~. Coell Meta. on enue, eoutn of San Joaquin C•dlll•c Avenue, Suite listed lbo...e on o.c:.nber Thi• bulinff• •• con-The Lusk ~. A ~ ""'~ Tnes ... ..,.,_,, wtt flied Tllil busl~ '1 c • ...._. • •••21 Cf mo the to4low4flg 11ama: HMll "'*!, and ... , of tlte 0-110, Coell Mela, Celit, 20, 1978 ducted by· lluebanel and wife Calltornlt Corporetton, NOTIC9 with tlte County Clerk ot Or· ducteO by. •n Ulll
.,.,._ RlcOrdl, _.a.. on ORDINANCE emending d1v1lop•d portion• of tHH ,Rldlard T, Dtinl. Sec· The reg111ren1 com· 175SO Gllletll ,. .... Irvine, IN"fT91G W .,. Cour1fY on Oecember ~,:o~•:.n::~•t• n • :./llM4JNlf'f 1S. , ... l'".46 Title 13 of the Coet• ...... Harbor View H .... Thie It • Harold Bartl. Truet .. of 1e1ary menced 10 trMuc: bull· Callf 92714 Sealed bid• mey be ,... 1 1tee T I I 0 ::... :r THE MAIN MOATH Munlcioel Code reeetding ,~, 10 conllcler trnaftd· lha L..-. AM O'Doftntlt Tl11e Mat~I wee filed ,_ undet the hc11t10U• Th11 busln .. • 11 con-'** at tne otfioe of lhl ' ,_,. 111 reg Siren ° ·
... ~ TO THE srnall·lot, ~fll'l'llty a. Ing Dlltrlcttng mape No. 51 1171 Truet. 1eoo Dove With Iha County Cler'k of Or· buSlneA name or nemes ducted Dy· a 11rn11eo penn.,. Clly Cieri\. 3300 Newoort PubliaMO Out199 Cout men<:ed ~ ·~~ti~i.u•
llOUNlY COURTHOUSE ~11. lnvifonmenttl 11,,c1 S2 .o u to rec:lualfy a Str .... SUlte 215, Newport enga County on December lleted at>o .... Oft September shtp , eoui.vard, po. Box 1788, Delly Piiot Decemt>et 9, 18, :::._. name or ,-..
·•• CfVIC determtnatlon. Exempt. portion of "Buell Gully" from a..ctl, Callf. IHeO 14, 1188 17. tt81 The registrant com· Newport Beech CA 23, 30 ltel ed o.c:.nt>er
.,.IJ)CAT£0 AT 700 AESOLUTIONconcernlno lheR-1·8Dlstrlet01tha0-S Harold Bartl. Truee .. of ,.,. leslleMIChMIO.VIS rMnCed 10 1ransact bull· 9H5t-8915un111 11:0oLm F-tsl ~ lbO...e on •w~A DflVE WEST, Iha -'Y to acquire the (P) District. the Jol'ln Oellld O'Donnell. Publlsned Or111g1 Coalt Th11 sletement was hied oeM under lhe flClll lO\IS on lhe 1211! day of january, 1 h ·k · :~A NIA. CA 11 pubic 8arrer•IS.i1n11 property 11 Thlt proi.ct hH been , .. Jr. 1978 Truet. 1800 Dove Delly Pilot December 23, 30, w.th the County Clerk ot Or· bUSineu n-01 nemes IHI 11 wtlldl time ll&dl PlaJC ll)TIC( Alctlard T Del 1·
.. .adon, to trw NSl'*ll t30 Vlclorla StrHt by aml· viewed, ll'ld 11 has bHrl de-Sir .... Suit• 215, Newport 1988, Janull)' e, t3. 1... anga County on Oec«nber listed tbOVe on Feoruary 1, bid• 111a11 be oper'9d and rel~ t __..1 WM tilect
.. ~ b ceaft ~ II nent domain, In connection tarmlned 1n1t It ls c:atl90ri-8Mctl. Calif. t2t28 F-0 to I , 1tM 1914 rNd for ACTIT10U9 ..,...., • • C ot Or Of ... In ....,. lftOMV with the Victor•• StrHt Ulty examot uftdlr the ,... Harold Bartl, Trutt .. of f4IOln Richard T 0.hl, Sec· Title ol Pfotect FINLEY NAiii ITAT'lmJIT with tha County lark.. •
.. .. Unlad -) .. Wi0enlfta(Paroll20). qulrtrM!lteoftheC-'ifornla '"' Dou,lu Dwyer MlJC ll)TIC( PublllMO Orenge Coatt rettry , TAAC--T STR'£EoT RE· ThetoliOwlngperSOMare anoe County on~
•:;: ... Md ....... FIRE ~ROTECTION SYS· Environmental Ouallty Act. O'Donnell 1 71 Trust, 1800 Daily Pilot Oeoember 18, 23, TNe et•t~1 wa tiled CONSTRUCTION OOirlQ bu-• 14• ltM ·"'~'90 ID Md now Med TEM IMPACT FEE STUDY: Notice le hereby lut1tler' Dove StrMI. Suite 215, K44M7 30, 1tM. January I. 1"9 wiltl thl County Ctent of Or· Contrtct No 2462 THE INSIDER TRANS· Publlthect 0r.,._ ~ :~ -.., In.. (•) Aevlew °'City °'.Coet• oi-ltlM Mid publlc: '-· Newoort BHctl, Call!. t2MO 'ICTIT10U9 ._.. F·MI .. County on Oeoemoar Engineer'• Eetlmat•: ACTIONS REPORT, 271M Deily Pilot~~: ft ..... In M6d Meta Flrt Pf01tctlon Sys-Ing wt11 be held on 1he 5th Tiiie bulilr1'88. WM con. MAM1 aTATIMIWT 14. 1tM '500.000 ' Lonowood Cl . Coet.1 MMe, ttee '*-Y t ,3 1lit '
.. v .... .... end tam lmptcl F" Slud'f. Thie Oay °"January. 1189, •• the cM:ted by. "8'* .. partMJ· Tha toltoWlftg petlOftS are ftRIC ll)TIC( ,.1 ApOrcwed by Iha City Cell[ 12626 • • . '"" t ' ,,. .....__. study documents lhe lmpect 110Ut of 7:30 p.m. In lhe ltliP cSo;na bUail'le8a aa: PuOllehect Orange Cout Could tNt 12th ~ of 0... Merle S~ i.., 271M
_,.... -of <*'!tin new ~elopmenl Council CNtnblfS ot the Thie .... ~. w•. filed FIAST COMMERCIAL. 'ICTITIOUa .,..... Delly Plfol December 23. 30, eember 1tM Longwoocl Ct.. Coeta Mela, 1----------·~~~~ .JI~~ NO()f. on lhl Clfy't llft protection Newport Beach City Hall. with the County Cl«1t of Or· 2900 BrlltOI, Sulla J. tOS, MAMI ITA,.._NT 1 .... Jenuary 6, 13, 1989 Wanda E 'Raggio. City C..if. t21H -,._.... "":-.:!'"'cou""NTY' T Of tyWtem. ldentlfie9 elation S300 Newport BoYleYard, .,. COUnty on Novemt>et Coeta Mele. Callt. 82626 The fOllc>Wlftg persorit ar• F·"8 ca.rte ThtS buelftfft is con· ·~....,..,A.-;~ end equipment neadl to Newport t>Hch, Calitomla, 22. 1tM Coalt Flneric:lal 1r1ve.t· doing buslnaM • ProeoectlYe t>odder'I may oucteO Dy an~ 0•~ STAT£ Of meet •ha aclditlonel Oe· M wtllcfl time end piece MY Pub611hed °'""" Coatt manta, Inc .. Cllrfomia, 2900 TAANZ PlANTS. IN· MlJC ll)TIC( · obtaif1 one Ml of of docu-The reglllrtnt com· ""~ AS PER MAP mends, end kMntlflM ""' end .. persont lntarll1ed Olity Piiot o.c:.nber 2, 8, 8rletOI, Slllte J-105, Coeta TERIOR OESlG~. MAIN• IMl"llUI no c:ott at the office 1MnC*1 to traneact bull-GllJ.E'rl' .. ;eECOADED IN BOOK tee, tlontndequlpmentntecteto may~ end be Mwd 18,23, 1"9 ' M .... calff.9H2t TENANCE ANO l~SING, 'ICTITIOUa.,...H otthePublkWOt'll•Oaoatl· ,_. under lhl tlc:tilloue JOHN ALANSON ,;.~41 THAU 50 maat the eddlllon11 d•· thereon lty<>uCflallengethis "' F·928 Thi• buelnns It con· 32•t2 Outtigger W•~· MAMI ITA~NT ment, 330 Newoprt ~ ~ or namat GILLETT pa911ed ~~XfE Offi: ~n.': ~t~"::,S:~ :,.o:,',~=.r'only"':c!: MUCll>TICE ~ .. h~%:1:"~m-~l'=~:;.9::.5 ~=:""'•.,. ~:'~i P~ •• 9:~.17~ ':.';'*-on Januery, away Deoe'.mber 17 .
.. ~ RECOADER Of egeln•t new ~ .. iMUM you OI eomeone.... mtnCld 10 trar1uc:t buel· Wanigan. LeQU"• Niguel, HANAlEI HOMES, 19019 12858-8915 Marti L• 1988 in La1YP• '" DCOUNTY craatlng the lrnpec:ts. rtlMd 11 the pubflC Mwlf\9 .... nn:,...a..,...., nesa uftdlr tha tlctltl«MI• Calif 8H77 Skyparll Clrc:ie. Sun• E. For further lflfonnatlon, This .......,.,,, -fllecl Beach Born 1n '" • (b) Ari ordlnarlce amend-O.C:rlbed Irr thl9 no~ or In r-°'*Mii name or narnee Heidi Rennert. 32412 IMnt, Calif 12714 cell Gilbert Wong/Pro,act _..h tha Couftty Oer1I Of Or· ~ T ()e.. ,,,._~ tflW11#n~ 11 mg till• 13 of IN Municipal wrttten corr~ de-T~~.,. lleted at>oYe Oft August 23. Outr19g1r Wey, legunt Frink~ E de Luna. an~~ Manager at 644-3311 Mga Coumy on.~ber ~ 13 l~ H ·--...-~ · Code 10 utabllU111wreOtotheCltyat.orprior ,_...,.___ 194' NIQuel,Ctllt.tH77 OMduat,·tlOtt~ ...... Publiahect Or-oe Coa1t 2t.1HI __.. • ..,.,. e ~=-~~--~~ ~ procedur• for requiring fir• 10. the put>llC haatlng. For ~:&.TAAIO JOMPh G.Nanwald. JJ.:JcA. tblL ~ •• con-cle. IMilte E. lnline, Cellf. Deity Piiot December 23, 24, W WM a we•....,, of --,.;; ... protection ayetem Impact torm•tlon ca·11 (714) • Prlliderlt ducted t>y: • general l>W1· 92714 1tee Publilhad <>r.,. CoMi an old ~ T-ew TM 1111111 amount Of the f... EnvlronrT*\tal De· 844·3225. 17550 Gllene Ave.. IMnl, This stat~• w• filed MJll\ip Jonn F WM!an, an 1nat-Fl91 Dally Pilot December 9. 16, --.... ~ .,_.. d the 1armlnatlon: Exempt. Gtty De Seno. Secre4tty, Calif. 12714 with the Counly Cler'k of Of. Tht reglstrtnt com· Yidual, 18019 ~ Cir· 23, 30, 1tM family. Mt. Gillett
•11'tMgllk!n MCUred bV the (c) A reeotutton •••1>1111\· Planning Comm1ae1on. City ™ lutll ceomp"'ri A enga County on Oec.mber menced 10 traritact bull· cte. Suit• E. 1n11nt, c.i1f ·-.,. -F·9'9 ope...s the tint S....
.. ~ 90 lie ldd end mg 1 fir• pr01tctlon ay1tem of Newport 8Hch. Ctllfornla orpore ~n . 14. 1tee neee under the llc1111ous 927t• ~ ""'~ & Jloeb\.lck Sio.re :a 1 •Ill* ... ,Mltld COiia. ~•foe>ment 1mpect taa for Published Orange Coae1 ~:01~• Ave · lrvtne, f41121t t>uslneM n-or namM Th•• DusineH " con-PM:TITIOUa .,_.. Ml.IC ll)TIC( ouUllkte the ClDlltinen·
......... end ~ 11 oerttln O.Utlopments within Dally Pilot Oecember 13, Th.It b el 11 le con· Put>llehed Oranoe Coaet listed tbove on NIA ducted by • D9"'fal Part· ..,._ ITAftlmJIT 'ICTIT10U8 WH •-• U-••.....1 StA* in ..,.,.. Ima Of b 1n1t1111 lhe City of Cotti MeM. 19't u ne Dally Piiot December 23, 30, OeOt R~ nershlp The ~ par-. are ... --"' ~ ol b ..-. of NOTICE IS FURTHER Fll92 OUCted by: I corporation 1tM, January 8, 13, 1989 Tht• statement .., .. hied The reg11tr1nt com,-dolrlO ~ •. NAm ITATlmWf Mexico Oty, ~
........... 16,180.12. GIVENthaUUeidtlmeand m!::csr~t~~~ c=: F-421 w'1hlheCountyCl«1tof0r· mencect to "~1=-UNlllNK TRADING co .. ~=~.,. in1939.He-&lllli·
• In~ to cah. .. piece 111 lnt•Mted s-son• "8.IC ll)TIC( nesa under Iha flctltlou• ;i;~ounty on OecernOer =-unde<' ~ha or oama! te541 Gothard St• 20114. .EAUWAY~· ~Bllai ~~jNllM • accept ~ :!Y ~c:!c~ ":'dt~ • T ,. T 1 11 1 " T 0 , bulll,_ neme or ""'*' Ml.IC MOTICE • '4001af 11 ted .,,._on 9294~-e..c:n-. ca' · PRESS. 17• JoAnn St • lince 1958 and ,,,..
.... ~ CMtlllf'• d**8 aforementioned ftam• wt'TMORAWA&. "-led above on Oecember fJC~.,..... ~.,,geeo..1 Ften1111n e de Luna Freo N can1 .. , -..-eo.11 MeM. Cell! t2t27 owner ol. GWea An~ .. ~ tir.! ... or Fedaf9I IF AN y ...Q.f FaOMPMl'•H•• 1-18ll . ..,... ITATDmNT Delly Pilo.I Decetnber 18. 23, Thi• st•tament WU filed Caolu 17371 Lido Lani "°"" ~ Poweltl&, 874 tiq PCH. l --,..,~ Aro"RE~ENTIONEO AC· OPlflATltllO ........ Ale.hard T. Deihl. See· The tollOwlftg pereons are 30. 1t81, Januery 6, 1989 witn the County Clettt of Or· HunMglon Beach Cellt' ~ ..=· Coete Mesa. ~on a.ch. ~ ., .. ......, -~ s:-: TIONS ARE CHAllENGEO "CTITIOUa •UalNlaa ret:,z. ttatement w• flltd OOlng bu-•: F-987 ~~nly on Nowmber 12947 , Fa1tn AnnBrenn•g•n rm-.
-----IN COURT, the ctlallenge .. ,... he County Clattc t °' 0 U 8 A • 0 U 8 A • ,_.. EduarOo CanlH 7921 5301 Udo Sandi Or ..._· ~ W• a very
::.,....,.. In ....... NA may be llmtted.IO only lhOM I The following peraon l\ae ::;: County on o.c!n• ENTERPRISES, 25611 For· Ml.IC ll)TIC( Pubhehed Or Cout MOOfl ~eoow ~2: Hunt· port 8Hctl Cellf 9*3 • well known re9p&'led
.. ~ ,_.. lllUll I» c:urreney ..,_ sorMOf'l9 rtlMe at the wl,nctr_, ••a genertl l>W1· 14 1988 dllam Or .. C~• Mae. Calif. Daily Plot Daeem~ 9 18 ington BelCh. Callt 92647 ThlS builnff• I• con· antique and an ap-'Mlad. In b 4IWf1I "'*' putMlc hearing O..Crlbed In ,,., trom 1he j)artMJlhlp op-' f40UM 9H28 ftCTITIOUa .,...,, 1 • · This bu•m-I• eon· duc1ect by • ~ti per1· and f .... ,..,'*' cm11 • ~. lhll notice or ln -111en cor· ••ting under the tlctltloul Published Otange Coast John Duba & Betty J ..,... ITA~NT 23. 30. l981 F-9SO cNcted by • genetal l>W1· ~ prai9er. a aaner
..... Trullae "Wf ~ reaponclerlce OellWred to ~ t\atM of SOUTH Delly Piiot December 23 30 Duba, 25" Fordham Or . The tollOW!ng s-son• tr• nersn.p The reg1ttrant com· tlder at the ~ ............. db~ .. lhe City Counclt at. or prior COAST VISA'S ANO ltM January 6 13 19at ' Coste Meta. Caht. 92626 d0tng bu..,_. H . 1 .. .,8• __ .,. lllftTIC( Thi registrant com-menc:ed 10 ttansac1 bus>-ee.cb Pfeebyt4t\an
·-:1a1ec1 unlll Mm l»cOfM lo. the public =~~i;i· PASSPORT SERVICE •• . • . F-008 Thfl buslneH I• con· SUPER CIRCUITS. -..._ "" menoed to transact buslc MM under the flctrllOUS ch r ch He ' 11 ,;::: .... , .,.. to .. PllY'M or llLllN '· V, City 10014 Broolchurst, Hunt· Oucted by nust>Md and wl .. C E Cllatnut Ave . Sant• It._ ,_. undar IN llc:llltOUe ~ name or namea u_ ......... by. .._..._ -..:.• ea.rti noton8Hch Calif. The res:lstrant com· Ana.Caltt.92701 bulintM nerne or nerMS lstedaoov.onOtc41mberS aarvt~ na -u_e
.. .....-... • • mlltaf °' Put>l•ehed Orenga Cout The r.cm10us busrnen NI.IC ll>TICE mencect 10 tranw1 bUSi· S1ar11no Robert H91Qht, 'ICTITIOUa .,...., htted 1t>ove on No..-it>er ;981 • Rena; son, John ... lllhl,;..... Deily Piiot December 23. name stttementfOt the part· ""' under the flCllllOUI 27041 l• Pa11 LaM. M1U1on TN~ ITATI...,,. 1• 1t81 J s Powetaon Gillett Jr . grand-_,,,~· _, .... wtl be made. 1988 neraNp w• filed on July 23. 'ICTITIOUI .,..... butl,,_ nam. or n.ames Vee10. C•llf 9269 t he ollowlnll persons ate Marte Canlas Tht• statement w .. hied • • " -~ cownana Of F995 l9M In lhe County of Or· .. ,... ITATl•NT lilted above on January. Th•• bus1n1H is con-doongc ~~OD VIL Thd statement w• med With Iha County Cleric°' ()f. children La11ce ft ....... or lmptlaO ... FllE NO F31495e Tha fOllowlng ~· .,. 1183 OUcied by an lndlVldUll COUN • with the County Cler1I. ol Or· Cou"t Oec.mber Gillett and Sheryl
, .. ,.(WMl.IQ ... poe11ulon, --... NOTICE ~un Name and Addr ... of Oolng l)ueineu.. Jonn Duba Th• regle1rant com· lAGE.c17~2~··~·· ,. ...... County on Oecamt>er rr... y on Gillett Cauc:tan.r. 3 x ~ to lllWV r-.n. the P1<10n Wlthdrtwing: SKX ASSOCIATES. ~11 This lla,letnenl ..... filed meric.i to tranMC1 bull· Irvine, .., I t. ,... . ·--J"#iU......, '"!6. lndtlMOl1811 MCUNd 'tcTITIOUa ..... II Heidi AMM POYIMn. 33•8 Corttwood Le"•· lrv1n1, with the Cbunty Cler'k oC Or· ness undef lhe lk11llOUI Thi lullt Company, Sue· FSlllM · Or Coeet .sr-t .. __.. -:• •v'J;I/ mo DMd, ~ NA• ITATDmNT 111 St. •O, long 8Hch, Caht 9271S enga County°" Oec«nber bUSlneu name or ".,_. CftSOf Dy Merger witn Whit· Publlstwld Orange eo..1 ~Oeoem-= 18 23 Jonathan, J~1n
.. ......._,,.., .,.,.... • The loltowino pereon• .,. Ctllf. s st••• 'kJ f c;~:o!! 7, 1988 1111ed ebove on NIA \~ ~:: A~eli~~';! Dally Pilot o-noar 9. 1e. ~., ... J.-,,y 1, ttie ' Gillett, and X· f~.~ ..,..,., end h doingbu•iMt .. a! ~~ovtseneoa.1 L=.~~.Olit 92715 Published 0rano!= ~~~.~h!u ttleG Callf 92714 . .. '23,30, ttee F.952 · ' F-172 ender Cauda a
... ~ Pflnclpml °' .. note ELIM~ATORl TOW~NG: Deity Pilot o.c.m"i!r 2. 9, Thi• bu•IMU I• ~· Deily Piiot Oecember 16, 23, .... ,n the County Clertt of Or· Tnr• Du11neu ,. con-"8JC ll>11C( Memorial urv " ~ ~-~ 't'i:7~: e.!:~b c::t.2,,:'. 7 t 11 23 ,... ducted bV! .,, individual 30. t988. January 6. 19" -. county on o.c.moer ~ed by. • 1omneci l>W1net· ·-.,. --were held at the 1:=
''"·--·--· ..-~ • ·" .. 3 • ' F-938 Th• registrant com· f.973 7 1t88 ""'"P ~ ""'~ AC'T1T10Ua .,..... b...-... Church : .. AMildNotl. hlhp H. Antnony, 1 .. 22 menced to tranMCt bull-· F400ll7 The regietrent com· ,._._. .
.:: :.: 0..0: 0€CEM8ER 14, Jertllyn ln., Huntington Mt.JC ll)TIC( ,,... under the llctitlous •-111 lllft~ Publtll\ed Orange Coast mer>c:ed to tranwt bull· ~,.=:,n ~ ~~ _. cember 21 and tMiial
'"' 1-Beaell. Cal!t. 926'98 •552 buslnell name or ntmet ...._ ""'-. Daily P1lol o.c.mt>er 11 23 ,_. under Ille flclllk>u$ T..._ ~ --·-OOI"" tM.tslnea9 •: at Pacific V~ Mlim-_.. ... UT•r. TRUSTD Todd 8ol1nd1r. v ftcTITIOUa ..,..... 1 led t>ow on Oec:ember "88 6 .. 8·9 • oullinesl name or nemea .... ,,...,.....,. ...... ~-~· ..... orial. n..._._ ... ,..._ .. Kirlllund Circle, Huntington NAMI ITATl•NT 19 • ' flCTITIOUa _,..... 30, 1., • J9"U8ry • 1• listed lbove on May 22, 001ft9 OU-at. All TEC SECU"ITY SYS· ~::;:::=c-=-=-===I~ ....... ~.INC. e.acn Ctlll 92847 lll88 ..... ITAn•JIT F-•11 78 l•IRC&M (b)ROSOFF TEMS. tNOO Mtc.At111Ur .
15780 ....... Bocfa'lllltd Thi .. t>uilneu i• con-The tOlloWlng persons tr• Steven K. Steinberg ... ._.. The IOllowing person•.,. 19Alchaitd T °""" Sec· CONSTRUCTION ' MAN· 8MS Suite 500. IMM. Calif ........ 12e a• A .. OOlrlll buttneta.. Thlt •t•tement w ................ no bu9inen n -·-.,. ~ . · ,0t .. ENT 103 u :.a .. 11 ........... 2715 ~ c:;,.,.. ouct:' Dy: • gener .. p.... TH( MCOOOOlE COM· With the County et.• of Or· ""'MOVING OCCASIONS ~ ""'~ retary ,. r::... • '" "" ..... .
.,,.,. p PA.NY 18103 Sky perk arlQ9 County on Oloember 10?30 A I Cl Cle H , · Thia •t•temenl WU ''*' Newpor1 &Mdl. Cellf 92883 ~ o.n. ~. • .. n.. (91') 501·71m ~~ r~:'~r·~~t c=: Soutn ·Suit• o. Irvine, Caht. 5, 1988 lnQton ee':h. ~f g~ · 'IC~.,.... with 1111 County Clettl of~ v:!::.:-.::!:°" ~ Margarite'. Calif t2e81 •
, .. "' By Lafndl S. Ta#I ""' under 11\e tk:tltous 92714 . ,..-. lsther C. Tortlll. 10230 NA• ITAftlmNT ~ County on Oecem Calif 92M3 Kati Gery l(amper Jr
........ T.S. OlfkM bu91nett neme or namet Scott l... Mc~. 2~ Published Orenga Coast AICot Circi., Hu"tlngton The fOllowlng persons are • 981 ,_..180 Thi• butlnell •• con· 2713 CeHe Collma. WMt -.,..,,..i £,,,,,. TIUalN SeMciet listed et>ove on Novemoar 1, Briarwood, lrv1n1, •II • Daily PllOI Oecernber 11. 23, 8Hch. C.i1f g2$<t8 doing bueinels a . Or Coast OUC:ted by an llldMOual Covma Calf! 91792
c137f1'11 l"'"t 12114 30, lt81, JlflUtllY 8· 1989F ,.,,.,. This buslne .. Is con· lUSK HOMES 17S50 0.~~......__~ .... 30 The reg111r1n1 com· This bue;neas ts con· -·~· 1 .. n..-~,,.... ..., Thi• l)uJln .. a 11 con· .,.,..,. . ,_............. • -, ... ...,. ..,.._ ........ '~· · Ii _, ~ ... A~• ~--,-• '/"" Phil AnlhOny oucted by "'lnCIMdull oucted by .,, ....... ~ .... _. Gt11et•• AY9.. Irvine, Calrf 1988. January 1, t3, 1989 menced 10 tranMCt bu9I-ducted by • mrt--·'*·
"'""' 01 Thtl statement wH hied The regletr•nt com · •-IC ll>TICE The registrant 1 cbuom1• 92714 f..002 neu under Iha nc111rou• shlo with the County Clerk ot Or· bU9i-,--. menced to trenuc s • 5-NM:e Mort~ Com-bU11nesa neme or "*"" The registrant com· '"'"' ftRIC ll)TIC( arlQ9 County on Novemt>et menceo n:. 1'~~titout 'ICTIT10U8 ..,..... ~ under Ille tlcllliou• pan)'. Calltornl1: 17550 __ .,. lllft-listed ebove on Oc:lotier I menceo 10 tr9nMCI bueo·
'0 ' 18. 11188 ~ name or nam. ..,._ ITAT'lmMT bueinetl name or names Gillett• Aw , IMM. Calrt. ..--""'-. 1988 ,,... u"der the llctillou•
... •wJl'ICTIT10U8 ..,..... fWIM7 111 Id 00... on November 1 The toltowlflg '*'°"'a.re hlled ll:>O'te on November 1, 927 t4 .,...,. W•lllam J Roeoff buelnele name 0t namea !!.•. , ..,... STATl•NT Put>liehed Oreoge Coast 1~ a ' doing~ as· 1988 Thie buslneH Is con· 'IC~:A,._NT Thia ellltmant •• tiled llatld et>ow on NIA
"' ,.., lite follOWlng pefeonl at• Delly Pilot Decamber 2. 8, Scott l McOougtl CA I.A 1 R1 0 G ( p AR I( Esther C T01elli ducted by 1 c:orporetion Tha tollowmg persons .,.. with the County CWtl ol Or· Lane. Gene O.vtdson """°::l~s~~ PART· II. 23, 1t81 F-933 Thi•"""'*'' ... tried APARTMENTS , 17550 •• ::~~·~=~;. .. ot~ ~ r~t~:~~. c~r:: dOt"9 bu9tnete ea: ~itei°""'Y on o.c:.nber wi::~·~ri=ot ~ ... "t*AS. lTO., • Calltornl• with the County Cleril °'Of'· Giiiett• Ave ' lrtlnt, Celit. Inge County on Oecernber n4ISI under the lictttlou• D E R • ,_ .,. County on Decetnber
•IVOl'fmlt•d Ptrlntrthlp. 5 arlQ9 County on NOYembef 9271• s, 1981 buMMM neml or n-. WIENERSCHNITZEL 1951 Publ!Shed Orange Coal 7 1918 :..~"'9nttrn Bey Oflve Den• rtaJC ll)TIC( 18. 1tee . The lutlt Cornc>any. A ,_ liettd tt>ove on December Herbor 8utevero Cosll Delly Polot Ototmber 9, ll, ,_ ·~ ~ Cellt. OHH ' ,_.. Ct llfornle Corporttlon. Put>llShad Orange Coat 20 1177 Mesa, c:.iltt"Jm'7 23 30 ttee Publ!IMCI Orenge .CO..t ~···Ed'.wer d Vincent. 5 ftcTITIOUS .,..... Put>litned Oraoge Coeet 17550 Gillett• Ave .. IMM, Deity Piiot December II. 23, R1ehard T O.hl See· TM Sung Moon. 24941 • F-951 Daily Pilot o.c.mw 16, 23.
• ~lem Bey ()five Dane NAMI aTATWlllNT Delly Pilot Oecamber 2, I, Calif 92714 30 l988 JatlUary 6 1989 ret ' ' Sare Ln lagune Hiiis C.ht 30 1gee Jan\>a'Y 8 1988
•Ml -Callf. 9H2t • The tollOWlng peflOna tr• ti, 23 1t81 ThlS butlMU I• con· • . ' F 988 .,.,. 92853 F Mt .... 11r::·· . 240 II OOlng ~ -• F·~ dUcted by • corporttk>n • Tl'MS •••tement -ftled Chang Soo Moon 249• t Ml.IC MmC( $ ...... ...;:a ...!c:i~ca11t. I=' 24 HOUR EOO. 20082 ·-.,. lllftTM"r Th• registrant com· •-.,. lllftTM"r wfth 1~ ~~C~~ Sar•. Ln Legun• Hiil•. C.hf __ --• •-.,. -~ •-•· Thie blJ 1 11 11 con Kiin• Or . S1nt1 An• ,._ nu1-. men<:ed 10 tranMCt bUtl· ,._ nu1-. 'ange °" 92653 'ICn•--,._ ""'~ ";:.~.,.:~led pattner: Helgtltl. 0-'lf 92707 -under the tlc:lillou• 14· ,... ...,,,. Thll bu•tneSS I• con-..,... ITATW FtCTITIOU8 .,... ..
••"'lfllp . EdWtrO Al:ar Ell. 20082 'ICTTTIOUa ...... bullnea name or nlltTIM .... p t>llll\ed Orenga Coalt dUcltO by eon end l•tller The ~ S*90n9 .,.. NAMI ITA~
..01 1Tne regl11tanl com· =ts~iilf ::7"o't An• ~~1:1!: art= t t>ove on Augull, ,~~.~· omPllOt oec.mber 23. 30. m!:::~ r~t~:~~::c. c~: cso;.~N~S~EENING, The tOlloWlng persons are .... :.ioed un:, •r:.~~.~~~ C'hr11i1neJotnn Ell,20082 dolna bUslnesl ... FUc:hard T. Deihl. Sec· Tha fOilowlng persons.,. 1 • Jtnuary •• 13· '~14 -under 1111 hC:hlOUS 19381 Br~huf•t '"c170, ~ bu.-l AWN .. SERVICE :.,,.;t:;: l(lfne Or .. S•nll Ana JAY OE COHSTAUCTlON r9'trY doong buSlneN 11 Ou.in.a name 01 names Huntington 8eec:h ahl M8 -:: ~ ~o:.rarr:: Heights. Calif 12707 co . 312S Mc:Kln~ Way. Thll 1111emen• WU tiled LAllNGS HU88Y. 88 Fair llsted M>O-.. on JIJM ' 1t83 926.te . 17881 Polle.roe l~~.7"'··
,._.. on · This butlne11 11 con· Cotta~. Calif. II~ with the County Clark ot Or· Drive, Co111 Meta. Calll y ft I t T .. Sung Moon Ronald L eo.o.y. 19381 ongton 8ellCfl A""""' ,.. !"' VI G el dueted by: a general part· Jerry Duane E._,.Mlh. ange County on December Charles I.A. S81'no1 12111 OUF r8 pe t Tin statement wu flied Broo&l\urel ~ 170, Hunt· Matti lOU•s Bennington, ,., Edward ncent. ener ner.nlp 3125 McKinley Way. eo.11 14, ltM Flret>raM SlrMI. Gerd9" ..,.1h the County Clerlt ol Or· 1ng1on 9Hch. Caflf t264e 17881 POlterd Ln Hunt·
",.,.,.,,., ltd Th• rtglstrent com· M--. Clllt mat ,.,,. Gro-.., Callf 12640 JOUF ftr81 Job
,,;.,., TNe •ctatemen6;:' f"o, menoect 1o tranMCt bull-Thi• buMnesl 11 con· Publls~ Orenga COM1 Thi• buslnes• " con· '
HAMC)ftLA.,._•
MT.OLM
Monuery • c.m.-.
Crematory 162$~A,..
Coeta..._. 54()..55$4
... ., .. *
2983 Harbor Bltd
Costa Mesa, ct
MN1M '
• .,.wlttl the Ollf'ty 0 • "'" undef the flctlhous ducted by· en lndlVldual Delly Piiot Oecembar 23. 30, ducted by an Individual ft I ::!,.lir9 Ji"ty on November bUllMM "-or n.,_ Th• regletrant com· 1tee, January 8. t3, 1981 Th• reg111ren1 com· JOUF r8 C8r, ,ft,lf. 1 ~ lllted •t>o .... on Nowember 1. merw:ec1 10 trlftltc:t t>uel· F..()04 menceo to trtnMCt bu• ;•••s-.. * K sooo 1"9 ""' uftdef the flcUtlous nesa under the 11c1111ous JOUF ftr8t home --·· • r•y, EdWarO N.ar Ell bu9lntll name or nemes "9LIC ll)TIC( bue+neN name or n-
,..,.,cll SQ~:.~ Thia statement wu filed listed •t>ove on October H . Heted 1boveon Oecamber '·
..,,.,.._port ' ' wfth the County Ctartl of Or-1"3 it.-1tee clneltlecr•
yourftr8t
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS? •.
PubtilMd OratlQe COISt ..,,,. Counly on o.c:.nber Jarry D E~n 'ICTIT10UI .._.. Chat!M M Serno ~ "'°' Oac«nber 2 , t , 1'1fll Tnis statement w•• hied MAim ITATamlfT Thia •l•tament w11 filed
' 3, ,... F i '32 . ,.... with the County Cletll of Or· The ·~ '*'°"9 .,. Wltn the County Clerk ol Or·
• 11 Put>liefltd Orange Coaet anoe County on ~-doing ~ •· anoe County on Oecamt>et
---------Oeoty P14ot Deoamber 9, 1&. 1. 1181 LUSK INDUSTRIAl, 14 •. ttlt PWlJC ll)TIC( 23. 30, ltM ,_.,. 17SSO Gffle«• Aye . l1Vlne. ,., ...
------------F-157 Publilhed Orange Coaet Clllf 927 14 Pubtl.W Orenge Coul ,! .. w ~ Dally PllOI o.c:.nt>er t . 18, ~ Mongage C4fn· Delly NOi December 23. 30.
:" .. lllCnnoul .,_.. lllft'IV'r 23. 30. ttlt peny. C•lltornl•, 17550 t .... Jenutty 8, 13. tlet
choh:e.
lllLYPIUT
... 11 .. ·u tUm ftATIMIWT "9LJC '""~ F·l53 Gillette A~ .. lrvtne. Celll. F.OU ••Mm TM~ ~· are ,tcTITIOUS ........ PmLJC .,TIC( 1271• .... -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-. ...... -..-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.1.-.-.-.-;.11 "'°'~ lluliMal et; IT ~ Tiiie ~-le con-C 0 M T " A N S ..,.._ A PICnnoul .._.. dueled by a corpor••lon
:'L.t.:'l"TIES. 1531~ ™=:.on•119 NAmlTAW The reglstrtnt com· :~: "'9'."~~,1ng csor"a M INVESTMENT TM fOfloWlnO peraone.,. ~ unJ:, t=-:11:
""' r Comlr .. ltd 1 Cali· COM,ANV, 1500 Adltnl dOlnCI bUelMel • ,,... ,.,_ CCW90ttti0ri Hunt• A...e S\11 .. 315 Coelt llllela. P:A._ WHT MANAOI· bullr'8ll '*"" ; ': "" 1aeC11 Cellf 't214t Ctllf tHH . MINT. 374 loulfl Tuattft, lla1ed 1boYe on ~·~ ••~....,_ '1ne • 1 Cell-Mark Sork 1500 1500 Or ... Celtf ntMNAOI" 20, 1977 .. i .. s· eotpor•t.o., 1700 AO•m• Ave . Sult~ 315. Candice Joi/ Tacker, t2 llllehard T DllN. Sec· :!~ W~ .,..,... ()'9lf Colt• Mae, Caltl 1212t PIHdCM&fl .. , ....,.,.._ C8ltf rel~ t wat ,_. ''!• 1I ' ' l~ T Sortt, 1500 12114 ·~Ctent of Or-,,,_ Tiiie lllUelMll 11 COft· AC11m1 Ave Suite 315. Tami Jiii Taedter, 40 Saa Wltll ~ty 't, 0eotm0ar
.............. by! 1 ,.,_ .. l>W1• Cowee Meaa. Cellf t2tH ~ ~ ~ leecfl ~ ... ~ Tllil lllUll"ffS II con· ...._. -• ,.,.
: •Tit• ra9l11'tl'll oom· CIUCted it, • genertl 1*1· ~~,.:,,.con• Pub611hed °''"" c.... ..... ~ 10 ttanNCI blJllo nartlltP ,....ft Dally Pilot 0eotm0ar f3 30 ·~ .,,..,, IN ktltloul Tht r1g1e1nnt ·com• Tit• , .. lttraftf com· 1.... 1 13 ltil ·
... .....,_ name or '*"* IMflQld to trenteef ~ rMnl*I • lt.-ct llluelo 1 "*""""" · ' F-41' ~---a110w9 Ofl Noyernber I. MM ~ tha flc:hllOua "819 undlr "'8 flcftlto9t1 ---------~ .. ~ ~ n-"'9 or nltMI OUtlrttal Nl'l9 °' nafMa••
_, -M Cuttle. Pr•• 111tec1 tbOve on 1113 llMed W.... °" (not .,.., P!llJC !J!!j( •· ~..,-·-Marl! Sortt ~ J T...._ .._ t~ :~-c::-:~-:-of~ w1tt1"':."c::t.;_• Of"::. 111111tn.:."c::;"'O: .. ~ llCTmOUI ... I Ill
........... County on OecerftMf lftOI eouniy on o.cemoer 81'18 Countt °" O.Cel11t* ltMm ITAW 1'. 1111 a 1ttl t, tt11 TM ....... ....,. .. ,..,.. ,..,, .... --=:,::a· Or Coaat "''""" Or9I ~ Coee4 ~ 0r-. 0.. , ~ ,,...
FUN
AFTER SCHOOL
WORK
11 Year• & Older
Work E"nlnqa I Saturday
YOU CASij!OER VIEU
ORM
PHONE: 411-3311
The legal Oepartl'l*\t at the
Daily Pilot is pleased to an-
nounce a new service now avall·
able to new bustnesses
We wtll now SEARCH the
name for you at no extra charge.
and save you the time and lhe
trip to the Court House tn Sanla
Ana Then. of course. after the
search •s compi.ted _. Wtll f1 ..
your l1ct1t1ous bualneu name
s11temen1 with the County Ct«k,
pubhSh onee a ...-for tour
w.etts as required by law and
1hen hie your proof of puOU·
cation with the County Clerk.
Please stop by 10 hie your
f1ct1t1ous business slatement at
the Daily P1tot legal Depart·
me.nt 330 West Bay, Cost•
Mesa. California. If yoo can not
stop by. pleaM call us ,
at (714) 642·4321. E.~teoSIOO
315 or 3 16 and w. will make
arrangements tor you 10 handle
this procedure by m .. I
If you soould have any turtt'9f
Quet11ons, pleate call us and we
will be more than glad to nell1
you
Good lvek. 1n your
new business"
... ~111-..i••:.••~,.lltdMlo.ce:: tt 30 ~ P1IOt O..:.oDer 11, l3 uaitr Ptt9t Den...., I ... 0... Alie, IMN.. C.. l ~ ..,.,.,., I. 1S. 1tit '130 1"' . ..,,.,_.,I 1
"',-.. d , '° 1
"' , ....
111
,: ~-Ciiia -A -..~~~~i!!l!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!l!!l•••ll.~~~~~!!!!!!!~~~~"""!!!~~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~~!!!!!!'!!!!!IB,• .. "'"""'· _ ' F..017t ._... -~ ·--· ·•• !!
t "'
~ ....... ~~-------
••• Orenoe CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Ftlday, Oecetnber 23. 1918
MUC llrla MllC mna MUC llJllC( ... .. NUC.. ......mllJIBL_ ---~
menoed 10 tfW.CI ~ K ._ MOTICI fW .,.. .__ 1 jM1b11C ...... lft ~61t 1hl tlctlloua MOnC9 TO NM.IC .. AMII 1,. ~ ~ • .._ a.-Mmtl• =· p Calltouue Corpo,.uon, T 111 r .. 111r1111 co111• .,.. COwllw • Diii,..
Mml °' ,,.,.,. CMDITORlfW INCIM..... Hul'lll"flOft ltNCh CMc PICTinOUl .. llllM ..... a.-in UNO Gllll'9 Ave • ....,...,~ IO., .......... '·,... =lbOl!eon~3. MAa·p ,_y c.w. tGOO MM\..,... --ITAW T ................... c;., an• MM Wider .... "°'"°"' t -,_. (110. .... , Hunlln t l o n •••oft ., .......... ,......,....._..._._ 11119 a.1·raewt··11 COii· ~ MIM OI MINI "t.17*' Or ... COlll ~~ • ..,,... .. .._ 11~ ~.. '",,:.:,• ~---=• *':f.~o-; MAU.. ~~.C: ..... _ • .._.,__,. ~,.:0-on ,..,....., ~~111-. t , ti,
witft IN Couflty 0..k °'Of. t r-41tofl of thl wltllll\ .... Ml .. -· ,....,. mrtet ~ .. lfllO o.tte Awe ' IMM, =' .... «flt9AI com· ................ ,...,. , •• 11191 Col.lnty on~ MIMd lteMNIOt(I} tllat 1 NOTICl II tlllltl•V ......... of .. l*toM c.M 91?'4 Gl-.arYHlill,l ffQlftDr.. ...... ~ IM*' TMI ..... ,,.,. ... ..,1--.--~ ..... "!"""----
NotiGe II...,_~ by 22. 1... bl* tl'eNW II Moue IO DI OIVIN !Mt Ille ""'*"'°" who .W-'° bl ~ ,..._ T"9 L'* ~. A ~Celt '"61 .... '1M lctltlOul .-IN~ CWtl of Or·
tlle DIP•-•I fl Com· ,_,,....on pet90t\el ptopeny llMdl~C:O.UW•Unla 1 tNe to Ole ~llCltlD'I d9-C7•~!!!'!~ Co~por~ ... .-.. ~ ~__,_.. ...... __ ..... or ""'* "'89 CW'ity °"No .....
munlty -..,l lDO"*''· 11'1-Pubtl9Nct Oranoe CoMt '*liMner dela!Md w11t 11o1c1 o pWlc ....... In ICfiMct 0110W 1 ~-_,,. lie • • ....,., -llr· 811 ..,..._ W. ......... 'Mn*Y· II. , .. Ylf°""**' ~ Sec· Delly Nol o.c.moer 2, 8, Tiii neme(I) Md ~ Ille Councll CM1ftt1er at IN DA ft/TIMI: WM; 11 ..... Clill 91714 Tlte re911tranl COM• ttfl ,_
Hon of IN City of Hunlifto'on ti, h , 1NI lddfW of Ille trWferOf(I) ~t1n91on 8H ch CMc Jenuety 4 1• NJ/H'M > Tllll tlullneet le COii· ~ IO treMeet ..,.._ NIMr'f T. Dtlhl, S.C· ~ Or11191 CWt 8MCfl "'91 "'9 IOltOwlng F-930 ., .. 2131 s.,, ~ Hiiia Oentor 2000 Melfl ltteet APPllCATION NuMM"· duet-4 by 1 corporat10n ..... uftdet tN llcttt..,. ~ Deity Piiot Oecember 2. 9. T"" .....,.....,. ,..
Dfefl........,. Olc:l#aeion Ad , Newport BMch, Cl. Hunii noton l e ac": Concll ... oll lll.-n(v~ Tiie ra911tr.,1t COM·.....,_ nlfN Ot n.... lllll .._......,wee llled 11.h . 1... .........,... •. r~I "-Mel\ pr..,_, "9liC llOTIC( 82et0 Callornla,onlMIMtHnclat ancetNo....... menced 10 lrMAOI bUll-lllecl _.....on~ wM*Cowity ClertlofOf· F·'35 Cilia NAUTICO, S171
end wil ........... to IN The locetl«I In Cllffomi. ""IN ltldlcaled below IO APPLICANT: '•Citic "911 undlf tlll lctltlOut ti, 1• .... Cclun1' Oii Oacamoar PulltNn ., • ...,. ,,.,
City ZOftlllg ~trator T... IOMIMO ADMMM•· ot the cfllet 1)19Ql1ive ottioe r9CeWI .ncs _.,., tt'9 COM& ...,_ lluelNM name °' nan.a Otegoty "911 IA. JIM ., " ftlUC .. Cott• ..... Cell. taUt
lor 1'111 ~at!Of' on TUTOR°'.,.. CfTY °' or prlflCip.i IMI ....... office •• .,.,,.,,. of .. P9'00M LOCATION. 1900btocll of lloted ucwe on ~. Tiiie llatefMnt ... tllecl ..,. Mvenl\nM. Inc., ~
Jltl\*y •• , .... The °''" COSTA ... WILL. • of 1ne ,,.,,,,.,°' II: llf .. ..,,.. Who wlln to be hMICI ,.... LIU, .... Ind P.t .,,.... 1N3 with ..... County Cietll of Or· ~ °'.... ~ "°"""" .._.. war• ~le negathledecteretlon w11 be COllllDSMIO TMe 'Ol.· H•bOW",aoatat•.}NfM live 10 lhl ~lion O.. betw .. n Yorktown ind Alellard T Deltll. S.C· "'91 County on Novemtaef Dellw,,_.~21.IO. MAmtTAW TN• bullMM II con. 1'4111M6e lot public ,.._._ LO ... Allfl\.ICATtOM: All Olhef buMnMI MIMI tcfibed bek>w, UllCI AlllnUM, '9tlty It, lNI ..... .Jenwty I , l3, 1111 Tiie folOwill9 pertone are Cluc:ted by• I eotPCl'816on -
Ind COIMM!flt tor ten (101 1. IONUtG ACTION and a.Cldr"'" UMC1 by tlle OATEITIME Wednelday, ZOHf: (Q}OTSP·2 (Quall· T"'9 lt•tl!Mnl WU Iii.cl ,_ '.OOt Ooint bulll'9l9 M . The r19lllrlnl CO"'• days ~ o.c.m. ZA..._11,0ll A11i1A1' NATH Int~ tral'llferor wtthll'I Jenuary 4, tttl, 7·00 PM fled-Odlown Specilflc: Plan· with 1111 Countv C!eA of Of. Publilllld Oflr'OI COlll OLGA FOA KIDS, 34 11 A menceC1 to tteneect bu91-
ber 22, , ... , VANIA '°" AN Ml•H thr .. ~Ifs le11 pu1 10 fM APPLICATION NUMBIEA: Dilttlct I} "'91 Cwnty on D90ember Deily PUot o.c.mber 2. I . .-IC •• \111 lido. Newport e.ech. MM unelef 1ha lctllloul
Draft Negative Oeclar· TllATIVI AD.IU8TlllNT u known the Ille tr1nafer .. Sciec111 Sign PernVI No. 91.7 AIOUl8T. To permit two 14• ,... t8, 23. IHI Calif. t2083 bu..,_. name Of ftllMI
1tlon No. P -40 IAdmlnlt· '°"A NCllL4N CW NOT 1r1: (If "none". IO 1tate.I APPLIC~T: Deen Fronk, (2) '*"'",_...!I,:'' pet 11411'11 f'·t3e flClftDM-U J1c:qu11 & 0191 Cle 119tlld ab0\11 on Ocloe. .t. 1r11111e ,....... No 18·23, MOM THAN ~ cw THI none McC>onnell-Oougiao ..._ ~ 1r1 lieu PuDlltlad Ortnoe Coelt llAm ITA'IWT Qulllierl, 2221 Santi Ana, 1... •
DMlgn ,....,,, 8oard No. -~o MM YARD T"' neme(ltand bullnell LOCATION: !301 Bolu of , ... OOCll IMflOelecl OM Delly ...... Oeoember 23, 30, P\a.JC llOllCl Thi ..... ~ M• Cooll Meea. Cllll. 82127 .._.,d MllOvany, lee·
91. 1?) It I r~ to con-NPTM .. COIUUNCnoN lddrffl 01 the tran1terM(1) All9nue 111 "-llflO uNt per dwellng. IHt, Jenuaty 8, 13. ltlt OOinD Dullnela 19: T"ll bualnHI 11 Con• retery
Slruc t In appro11lm1tefy WITH A ..W AnAC .. D 1re: ~atk Jomee Igoe,~ ZOHE: Mt·A (Aeltrleted E NVI RONMEN T A L F-oo3 u.'1 CHOICES ... HAIA I Y OUCteclby'hliob#leltnd wifl Tl'llt ttetement ... Iii.cl
70,000 lnduttrlal compleJI GAllAOI "91MOMD '°" Del Petl1110, Irvine, ca. Menulactur~ STATUS: Cat~ 911• 'ic:TmOUe •H•ll STEPHANI!. 1•1 f'ullerton Thi regl1tront com· wittl the County Cleft! of Of·
comPONd ol 5 builOlno•· AM IJCl8TIMQ •111>eMCI 92714 MOUEST· lo lnatOll a tme>t putWt to Section "8.IC ll)TIC( NAMI ITATWNT Ave., c:o.te ..... Calif. menc:-4 10 trenuct bull· "'91 CC)ynty on Decen*ll'
Tl'le approxltl'lattfY 3 5 ac:re LOCATSD AT t7t OAK Tllal the ptoperty pertf.. metn ldenll tion tt0n of 15304, C1au 5 of t11e Call--Tiie lolloWlrlg PlflO'll.,.. 8H2f NII under 1M flc:tltloul 1e. 1 ...
site It locat«t on the eaetetn •TMIT It AM 911 ZONE. nent t1ere10 ts delcf•becl In 214 aquare feet 110nQ the lornie E!Wlfonmentll au.ii,y IC...a dolnO bulll'9l9 •: StlltWlie Helen ,....,,, bUllnell '*"' "' nall'IH ,.,..., tide of Gottlard Stl'eet op. INVlf'ONllllMTAL DI· generol u : All of the BollO Str ... trontage Incl 8 Act. ftCTmOUa ..,_.. MARBLEHEAD, 17!50 11·12' 8'IMow Pllm Of. lilted lboVI on (not Y9') ~ Or11191 Coeot
pro11lmatety JOO feet north TS .... ATK>N: IUWT. furnllu~e and ti,.,ur ... equip-d lfecllon .. 1l9 n1 ot 32 <>fol FILE; A copy CIC 1M NAMI ITArn.NT 0.11 Ave,. !MM, Calif. :N , llldlo, C.. 92201 Jecquei de Oulllerl OellY Piiot Decerrlblr H . 30. ol h lbert Avenue. The alte I' YOU W 18 H TO ,,_,, ac:eounls, contract aquare fMt eect1 on the pet· propoeed r~ ii on lie in The lollowlnQ per90n0 •• 82714 Thie lllu""9ea It con-Thil atetement w11 flied t8M. January e. 13, 1• :.:u~:.~~.1-i~1c: L~ ==-~-:= ~::~c:e..~ = ~ :.~ <~: ~ ~::'~ .. 'i;;O ~ .. ~-;-O:Ks, 17550 Tiie LUlk COfl'IPll'ly, A dueled by: ar'l indMdual wlttl '"'County Cletlc of Or· ,..,
trlct. Incl II dea19nated 11 MA"°'4. P\.IAM CAll vent proceeck o1 the aeme mowct ) M1ln Street. Huntlnoton Giiiette A-. !MM. Calif '9JC mflC[ -If Mll8 '9JC llmC( ftaJC llmC(
General ~ In .... nm ,u.111•111 DIYl9K)N °' lln\!lilt ,,,,. IMtreintf\or EN v I A 0 NM ENT A L 8eactl CalitOtnia 92141. '°' 1271• ~
Clty'I GeMfll Ptan. The AT (714) 7'M-SMS. acquired by the debtor STATUS: Cltegorlc:ally ex· lnapectlon by t11e publi(;, A ffle Luu CoMpany, Call·
propoeed .. I• In con-......... hM Or...-C-t loc:.1-4 If\ the premlMI etnPI ~W$. to Section copy ot ..... llaff tepcwt wlll 10fn4a. 17S60 G*"t• All·
rormanG9 wlOI both the CU<· o.MJ Not Duur*9f n.. preeenlly known as Newport 15311, Clul 11 of 111e Call· be avalleble to interee1ed enue, !Mne, Calif. 92714
QMlllWtCI NO ....
rent i°'*'I trlCI oenetll plan 1• Centet Printing Co. Inc lomi. Enlllronmental Qualjty partln ft City Hall °' tfle Thia butlneu 11 con·
dftignatlotl tor the property. AIO located at 2131 Sar; Joaquin Act. Main City Llbtwy (7I11 ducted by• corpor•tlon A oopyofther~tlt on HIHI Ad, ~t 8"clh. ON FILE A copy of It'll Tllbet't A"911Ue) .,,., 0.. Th• r19 l1tr1nt com.
Ille with the CltL<;:"· City "8JC NOllC( county ol Orange, S tll• of propoNCI requeat 11 on file In cembel' 30. ,.... rnenced to tranuc:t bull·
of HunllngtOfl . 2000 CMtornla. the [)epenrnent ot Com· ALL INTEAESTfD PER· Mii under the tlctlt~
Main Str .. 1, Huntington THI ZONING ADMINll· The bUllMll nome UNd munlty OeYelopmenl, 2000 SONS we Invited to attend buliMH name °' namet
Beec:h, Callfotnlo. An"J Pl'· TUTOll tw-Tim CITY °' by the aald 1ran11etor(a) at Mein Sir•. Huntlnoton Mid heWlng 11nC1 ..... Meted above on September,
eon wflh!"li to comment of COSTA ••A WILL K said location 11: Newport 8"ch, C11Uom18 92148. tor oplnioM 0t tubmlt IYldence 1988 lhe requeat may do ao within COMalDllllMG THI 'Ot.· Center Printing Co.. Inc. ~(Ion by the public. A lor Of 11Qainl1 tfle tpplicatlon R1e"ard T. Deihl, Sec·
10 deya of the notice by LOWIMG APPl.ICATIOM: That salCI bulk tran1let la In-copy of the 1111f rep()rt Will .. outllnlld above. If ,....,.. retaty pro11\Cllng Wfl\len commenll 1. ZONtNQ ACTION \ended 10 be consumf'l\ated be 1111iloble to lnle(Ul«I .,. •ny lurtller quaatlon1 Thia etotement w•• llllCI
to the [)epert,...,.,.,t of Com-ZA ..... 11 '°" ILIA L " ..... office ot: ,,., ...... City Hall °' the ~ call Thomu Aoaer•. with the County Clerk of Or·
munlty ~~ant, En· WONG, AUTHOlllZIO Burrow ewow Co. 501 Mein City LlbrlfY 17 111 Adrnjl'llltrotllle Aide IT et lnOI COunty on December
.-ironmental re11 Sec· AOINT 'Oil .IAM18 OHIN P.,kc1n1ar Of., Santa Ana. Talbert Avenue) ofter De· 536-5271. 14. 1Me
tlon. P.O Box 190. liUnt· '0" A MIMOll COM· Cllltornia. 92705 on or alter cernt>er 30, 1991. •• M8IM. ........... ..,. ••11•
rngton BMdl. CA. 821148. OfTIOMA~ .a NMllT January 12, 1988. ALL INTfAESTED PER· IHClt ,.lannlnt Co111· Pub4iltled Orange Coaat
Commenta will by C'On-'°" aMAMD Accau .. Thia bull! trantfer is sut>-SONS ore fltllit.ct to attend ,......... I.. OallY Pilot oec:.mt>er 23. 30.
llldered by the decl1lon· COM.IUNCTIOM WITH A ject to C1hforn11 Unllorm u ld hNrln9 end express Publllhec:I Orange Cout teel. Jenuary 8, 13, 18"
making b<>dy in Its delibera-PAllC& MAI' :ro ..,... Commercial Cooe S.Ctlon opinion• or eut>mlt eYldence Diiiy PllOI Oeoemb« 23. F·007
!Ion ot Whittler . an En· otvtDE A l.12 ACM 9fTI 8 106 tor or 11110ln1t U'l9 opplicetlon 196& ..Wonmental Imp.ct Report INTO TWO PMteaU (U7 The name arid address of 11 outlined above. II that• F98a PtaJC ll)TIC(
sftoulCI be preparlld for the AC•I AND 1.11 AC••). the per1on with whom we any further qunllon• ---------
project. lOCAHD AT 1400 a.E. c:111ms may ~ hied 11 &Ir· pleUe call Jeff Abf'arnowltz. "8JC ll)TIC( IC..a
PublllMCI Or9n09 Coast MdT~ 8TMIT •A C1 row Escrow Co 50 1 Allll\l nl P lanne r at f'ICTITIOU9.,_ ..
Delly Piiot o-nw 23. ZONI. INVlftONMINTAL Perltcentor Or Stnll Ana. S3t·5271. ~ U.1 MAim ITA~
1988 DITlf'MINATION! IX· Ca .. 92705, Escrow •5718?· ... MeMe, """*"'°" ,teTmoue.,_.. TN:::,,:: 1*9CJM -________ F_e_85;.1•....,.. JB 8"CI 111e last day tor tlllng ••eclt .-1en1tf.., Co"'· um 8TA~ ~0 ...
" YOU WIS H TO c..ims by 11\y erecMor lhall ....... TM'°'"""' C*90M-MAS TE MPOA· ... ll)T1C( PltOY~ COllMENTS OR be January 11. 1889. whlcti Publllhecl Or11191 Coalt dOirlo ~..: AAIES, tel32 A-4 Hiii,
GeTAtM ""'"""' •Ofl· .. Iha blltlnal day before Dalty Piiot Oeoember 23. PARKSIDE AT STAN· Irvine, Calif 92714 ~~"~NTll MATK>N. PLUM CALL 1h1 consumm111on date 1N8 FOAO RANCH, 17550 G*t· Vencap, lncorportted.
-.. Tltl flt.ANNMO DtvtMOM ~fled above FN& ,. Ave IMne Celif 827 14 Cellfomla , 1M32 Red Hill,
The f~ peraons we AT (7M) 714-U41.. Dated December 16, 1888 The . Lulk . ComPony. A lrvlne, Cehl 82714
doing butlNUC u . ~ •M1twd Of ... c ... t Mer11.,._...... •-ti'~ C11ffornio Corporation Thtl buelnHt 11 c:on·
l A 0 L 1 N A 0.-, Not ~ber 23 Publlthed Orange Coe.at ~ ""'-17550 Glllettt Ave lr11ne' ducted t>y· a COfpotatlon PAOPEATl~S: 17632 Irvine ,. ' Do11v Pilot Decemt>er 23. NOTICa °' Cllit. 92714 ., ' Th• regl1tr1nt com· 8tvd., Ste. 0 . lfullln. Calit. F• l98J ___ .... -Tl'I b sl 1 1 ~ to trtnuct bull-82NO F025 ~ -II u M • • . c:on· ,,... undel" '"' flc11tlou•
Lw ry & Joan O'TOOle, CONDfTIONM. U8I clUctecl by.• corporation bualnlol name °' "°'""
•307 VI• Vorde Cypr .. s rta.IC NOTICE P8JC NOTICE ....., Ttt. reo•llr8'1t com· 1111.0 above J 1 Callt. 80630 · ' NO.... rnenced to tronuct. bUll· 1980 on tnuary ·
Kloller l:ioldinQ Inc. In· K...u K...-0 • (C:.••lleftoel ""' under the flctltiou. Scott W l.....,,I V P corpor.-CS In C111to~nla FICTITIOUS..,._.. FICTITIOUI ....... L ........ , bu9ineta llllM or names Admln . -· on, ..
17632 lrvlne Blvd . St• ·o-: NA• ITAnmNT NA• ITAT .. NT NOTICE IS HEREBY 10.ted l bOYe on Augult, T""' ll•tement w .. flied T~tln, Ctllf. 92680 Th• following persons are The lottowing pereont are GIVEN that thl Huntlngtoo 1~ . with tlll COl.lnty Clerk of Or·
Thll bu1lne11 11 COO· doing bualneuos· doing blleineu9a: BeechP1ann1"9ComfT\IMlon Aic:hatd T. Deihl. Sec· 1nQ9 County on Oecemb«
ducted by: a n unln· PAISM PLACE PART. C A V INVESTMENT will hold I publlc l!Ntlng In retary 15 1981
corporoted euoc111 1on NEAS, One Lo1te lron1. COMPANY, 245 Fisct!er Av· tM Counell Chamber •t ll'IO Thie 111tement wu lllld ' ,_,121
other then 1 ptrtnerlhlp Irvine. C.iit. t 27 H enue Ste D· 1. Cosio MIU, Huntlnglon Beech Chile with the County Clerlt of Or· Publilhecl Orange Coalt
The regl1t ran1 com· fllh1b1lree Inc .. A Call· Calli, 92626 Center, 2000 Mein Str .. t, 9"09 County on December o..ty Piiot December 23 30 ~ 10 1r111e.c:1 bUll· lorn11 corpor1t1on. 9700 Gary L D1Yldson, 2•5 Fit · H u n 11n11 I O n 8 •I C h • 14• l918 19M , Januery I t3 1tit '
neu under the t1chtous TOiedo Way. 11111ne. Ca11t. chet Avenue SI•. 0-1, Coll• C•lfornl1. oo the di~ and et '•n• ' ' F.()18 bt.illMH name or nemM 927t.8 Mesa. Cahl. 92626 the tll'M Indicated~ to PublllMd Orange Cout1 ________ _
listed above on N~ 8. 0.Vtd Scott Kubly. One -:JQN\A. 8001'9, ~S-Fls-recel11e and conlide< the 08ttyJ>..iio~3·~'*"-_.._ ----1978 l 1ketront. Irvine. Ca ll! cher Avenue Ste 0.1. Colla llelemenl• of all petlOnl 1MI. Jtnuary 6. 13, 1889 1--.:..::=:..::"":.:.:'-.=.--
Larry D'100le 92714 Mesa. C1l\I 92626 who witll lo be t!Mtd rela· F.005 IC ...
Thts 1101emen1 wu Med Stll6Mn G Simpton. 8 Tony Rote. 2•5 FlscMI" tlYO to the appliealtOn de-'ICTITIOU8 9U8Mll
with ll'le County Clef\! of Or· Goodwin Place Laguna Avenue SI• D· 1. Costa scrDibldT beto/T "'E rta.JC llOTJC( NAMI ITAftmNT •noe County on November Niguel C11t1 92677 Mesa Call! 92626 A E tM Wednesday. The tolb# Pl'IOn 16. IN& Monte D D1mmare11. 30 JONI S J1ton. 245 Fis· January 4, 1888, 1 00 PM K ... 1 doing bu~ M. 'are
F1IQ57 Seren11y Laguna Niguel char A11t1nue Ste D· 1, Coste APPLICATION NUMBER FtCTITIOUa 9USIME.. AOMANDIEL INVEST.
SECTION 1.
WHEREAS, at the ~ber 8, 1988, munlclpal efectlon, the voters of the City
of eo.ta Mesa approved Meuure G, a "'unlclpal Initiative requiring that development~· maJntaJn and achieve certain minimum level• of service for
traffic flow, control, police, fire, ,and paramedic response times, or
otherwtle mlttgate thetr adverM Impacts on the community; and
WHEREAS. Meuure G requlrea that the City prepare and approve a "Project
and Traffic Monttortng Report" to provide the buellne Information required to
enable the City to determine whether proposed development projects comply
with Meuure G requirements; and
WHEREAS, pursuant to Electlona Code Section ..013, Measure G becom9I
effective on December 16, 1988; and
WHEREAS, until the "Project and Traffic Monitoring Report" la prepared and
approved and other Implementation procedures have been establlehed, the City
will be unable to .V._t• whether the cumulatlve Impact• of development
appHcatk>na would exceed Measure G standards and tlf ao, what mitigation,
measures may be required to uaure compliance: and
WHEREAS, proJecta which are exempt pursuant to Section 111.N. can continue
to be processed becaUM they are not required to comply with the standard•
enacted by the Initiative; and
WHEREAS, the City Council finds and determines that this Ordinance le
necessary to protect the public safety, health and welfare In that, unless this
Ordinance ls adopted, the City wtll llkety receive numerous additional develop.
ment appllcatk>na before the Project and Traffic Monitoring Report Is completed---..
and adopted and ott. Implementing pr.ocedur• are estabnsnea, and that Pfecerriiil approval Of IUCt\ development appllcatlona prior to completion of a
comprehensive analy9ia of the cumulative effect of all development In the City on
the adequate kwet1 of aervtce mandated by Measure G would result In confusion,
lncon9'stency, and Improper planning, and would potentially result In the
postponement of the objectives of the voters who adopted Measure G;
Publlstlld Orange C01t1 C1hl 92677 Mesa, Cahf 92626 Condttoonol VM Pl!"mrt No NA• ITAn.NT MENTS 17550 Gllhltte Ave
Doily Piiot December 2. 9. Tn1s Ous1ness rs con· Tn1s business IS con· aa.55 The tolloWlng '*'°"' •• Irvine, Calif 927t4 • ACCORDINGLY, the City Council of the City of Costa Mesa hereby ordains ..
\6, 23 1988 dueled by • genetal part· ducted by • ~ .. P•rl· APPLICANT Judy Young, OOlnO OUtlneN u : The Lutk Company. A follows·. F-837 nernsop netsll1P Agent • Mooammad Al· S i5ECT AA tNSTRU· Ca lltornie Corporation --------~ Tne reg11tran1 com· The reg1s1r1nt com· N1jem MENTS, 18 Technology t75SO Gfflettt Ave Irvine' rtaJC NOTICE meneed to transact IM!st· menceo 10 trans.ct but•· LOCATION 17330 Beach Duve. Bu.ld1ng 13~. IMne. c.i.t 827t4 .. ·
neu under the r1ct111ous nus undet Ille lict111oua Boulellard (north of S18tor Calif 92718 John D Lu1k 17550
"1CTTTlOUS ., ... ,. Outlnfls name 0< names bu11ness n•me Of names Av-Spectram111, lne . Penn-GIMetl• AYO 1,,,M. Calif
NAm STAnmNT htled above on November 1, ltsle<I 1bo11t1 on Octot>« 24, ZONE C4 (Highway Com-1yt111n1•. 18 Technology 927t4 ·· '
The IO!towlng peraons are 1988 1983 merciall Drive, Building 134. Irvine. Wilkatn o lulll. 175SO
CIOlng bullnell.. Jonn Sct>umacllet. Preti· G1ry L DAvldson. Min· REQUEST To establith I Cehf 92711 Gillette Ave Irv!~ Calif SOLAR WINDOW CL.EAN· denl aging P1r1ner convenience m.,1111/liquor Thia buslne1s II con· 92714 .• ' .
ING. 4901 Kona Orl11t1 Un11 Th11 stolemenl wag hied This 1t1temeflt was t;llCI •tore In • tulle of en exlltlng duet«t by. • corporation T"ll bu1ln111 11 con·
C. Huntlnglon a..ch, Ce!lf 'Min Ille Coun1y Clerk ol Or· will\ tile County Clerk ol Qr. retell comple11. The r19111ran1 c om · ducted by. 1 llmlted partner·
92649 •no• County on Oeeemt>e< ange Coun1y on O.C.mt>« E N V I R 0 N M E N T A L rnenc«t to trantaet bull· lflj
Joon ~nan, •901 Kon• 16. t988 14. 1888 STATVS: Cllegork:ally ell· ,,... unW 1111 llc1itlou1 if'"• regl1trant c:om·
Drive Unit C. Hunltngton F401454 F4011M empt pureuent to S.Ctlon bullness nll'M or names menced to trenuct IMllll·
S.ac:ll. Calif 928'49 Pubh5"0d Orange Coast Published Orange CoHt 15303. Cl•N 3 of IM Call· Mated 1bove on Oeoember ne11 under thl llctltlout
Thia busoneu ts con· Daily P11o1 December 23, 30. Delly Pllo1 December 23, 30. lornl• Envlroomenl•I Quality 17. 1887 IM!liness name or names
dl>cied t>y. an indlvlduat 1988. January 6. 13. 1989 1988. January 6. t3. 1989 Act. C~ Mldeen. Vice Prell· Hated above on M1rch tt83
-==T=h=•=r=a=g=1'='r='="=t=c=om=·========F=·0=18========F-=0:;231 ON FILE· A COPY o1 the dent AlcharCI T. Deihl,. S.C·
1
propoMd requeal IS on me In Thi• 1t1tement wu tiled rellry
Iha Oep1nmen1 ot Com· wilh Ille Counly Clefk ot Or· , Thia 1111ement w .. Iii.cl
munily Oellelopment, 2000 ange County oo Oeoelnbet with the County Cllrll of Or· TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 House Sp
5 Sclatcti
9 Towet Cll)
14 C"Cle"S ~1n
15 Swmdle
16 Compoltble
17 Ollburden
18 Roch llllle s
10f1e
20 Removed guns
tr om
22 Pronounces
23 Cunnmg
24 lnGreue.
2S View
26 Tn1ng law
27 Al soon as 28 Agt
31 Set1ous
34 Sm1rks
35 Wrath
36 Body parl
37 Flash
38 Bulle'a kin
39 Cuckoo
40 Boll
4 1 Hea~
42 Bender
0 Add 9')1!•ls
10 44 ShevtW
4S Type llZ•
47 In whal way
•8 Pronoun
51 BlbliQI
danc.t
53 Unfes1enee1
5S Novy 11essels
S7 "Auld -
Syne··
S8 Emll'llled
59 E11ciVde 60 VOlll Ion
61 Stouoned
62 Procur ..
63 Husk,.. low
DOWN
t Studei"lts
2 Ad11antage
3 C"41eity
4 Alheno"s
lltle
5 Apes
6 Otsables
7 Aapec1ous
8 Soggy
9 Grows let
10 Hindu e g
t I Shoe sto•es
12 Nine comb
IOfm 13 Smeller
amounl
19 Climb
2 t Grieved
25 Irr achal•
26 Comage
27 Inscribe
29 At one ume
30 Vegetoblel
3 1 Flag91one.
•g 32 F1at1
33 "Gent..,.,,.,,
Prefer
•s lo4 I T PAL E l BRA V O
L A NE ABA S R U B O N
AN TA c o N S T I TU T E
I TE s0 u G •EA S TE R
N A R es s u
-c LOT •A G A; ES C A P A
F I E •R OUG E •AUD I O
U N DE R O NE S B RE A T H
L E ER Y •I BE A M • p TO
L E DA P T A • DE FT-
S E ERS DR AM A
S E L E CT • R E B I T
P REDEST I NE N I
A G A I N IN E S S GO
TO R TE TRE T E N
Blondes
•ulhOf
34 -Bay. Nova
Scoll• 37 Abtades
38 T1m41 of ~r
40 F .. tened
47 Sc.I
48 Mollualc
•9 Away
50 Bordered
51 Puncture
52 "Egad!'" Ir
S3 Fru<t
54 Tr-
E M
TA
ES
O S
.. 1 Mill< IOUreet
«Promotes
48 Canada -56 Farm animal
9 10 11 12 13
16
Main SlrM l. Huntington 12.. 1988 ar;ge County 00 December
BMch, Cllllornl1 92.848, for '-77 14 1981
lnapectl«' t>y Ille publlc:. A PubhlMd Or1n91 Coalt . ,401141
c:opy ol Ille '''" report wilt Dally P;lol Oeeemblr 23, 30. PuOlllMd Orange CO..t
be 1Ya1loble to Interested 1888. January s. 13, 1889 Deity Piiot Oeoemblf 2.3 30 partlel II City Haff or the F.()15 .... .. 3 • • Main City Library (711 t 1 ...... January v , 1 · 1889
Talb«l Avenue) af\• 0.-"8JC ll)TIC( F-Ht
cember 30, 1"8. •-II' llftftl'C
ALL INTERESTED PEA· ICA4112 ..._ ""'-
SONS .,. lnYlted to lltend ,ic:nnoua ..,.,.... ....
la.Id '-ino and •llP'... NAM1 ITATlmNT fllCTITIOUe .,_ ...
oplnlor'll or IUbmll IYldlnce The lollowing peraon• .... --8TATWNT
IOI °' eglinlt the IPPllCatlon doing businesa u · Tiie fOllOwlng perlOnl we
.. outlined Obolll If thlre W ES T FU L l E RT 0 N doing bua1n1o1 ...
II'• "'Y l\lrl'* QUe1tlon1 SHOPPING CENTER 17550 SANS I ASSOCIATES r.=,c::::,.i-:,~~~:i Gilletle Ave.. IMM: Calif INC., 2tOO •111ol St. H205: 827 14 Coot• ...... Calif. t2t2I 536-5271. Inter Finance Corpor-111on. Sana a ~-. Inc •.
-.ie MMM. """"""'°" C11iforn11. 17550 Gi"-111 Callfomla. 2900 8rltnol St :::::.. .. len1tln9 Cam· A111 . lrvlne. Call! 82714 H205. cOot1 MeM. Ca!it'.
Publillled Or nge COUI Th•• bUSIMH I• con· 92121
Deily PMot o.:.mw 23 ducted by· • corpot1tlon Th11 bu11nea1 I• con-'''* • The re9l1tront eom· dUct-4 by. 1 COfl)Ofellon
FH 7 meneeel to trenaact bull-T"• t1gl1tranl c:om·
-
________
1
neu under the tic11tloul nwnoeCI to trlnUClt llUll·
bullnflt nol'M Of 11ame1 na11 vndlr thl flctltlou1 _ _..NltC ...... ...,,._,11>.;,;;,,;tlC(,;.;.;;.__1 hlted at>ove on Febfuary, t>u9lnlll name or nal\'IH 188'4 Noted above on N/A _ _!O_rc-.. ~ A1eharel T. C>llhl. Sec· Sandri G. Kent, Vice
.---retary President CONINTIONAL Thll tlotement wu filed TIQ etat.,,_,I WN lileCI
UCIPTNMI JYt,-Attel) with the COUl'lty Clerk of Or· wllh the County Cieri! of Or·
(T __!2· ... ____ anoe County on December .,. County on December
• ,......~ ·~ .. ,. 14, 1988 1e 19H ....... ,., ....... , .... .., ,.,117 . ,..,...
....... ) Publllhld OrMOI C... Pubtllhecl Oflr'OI Coelt NOTICE 18 HEAEIV Dally Piiot D901mber H 30 Delly P1tot Dece1nb« 23 30
OIVfN ttla1 the H\ln'tlngton 1tl8, Jenuery 8, 13, ,... ' 1 .... Jenuary •• 13. ,.. •
9eecfl ~' F~ F.018
CLASSIFIED ADJ'EBTISIN6
SALES
We are ADDING to our &ales staff.
H you can type at least 45 wpm and have
great telecommunication 1killt -We can
off er you a base salary + commiaeion AND
a t;-1 place to work.
l'rlH l'I•• • hrl n .. A .,.,,.,,,e.
Do yOllU'leU • fa•or -Call as.
P etlY B levl• er ti I• Ve••••
842-4321 .,
llOWeet..,81.
SECTION 2.
A. For all devek>pment projects subject to Measure G, the followtng
procedures shall apply from the effective date of Measure G, I.e., December 18.
1988, until the earlier of (I) the date that thle Ordinance expires pursuant to
Government Code Section 85858, or (II) the date the City Council of the City of
Costa Mesa adopts the First "Project and Traffic Monitoring Report"pursuant to
Section 111.E. of Measure G:
1. The City shall not accept tor fllln9, and processing. nor shall It approve or
lnue, and application for any "project ' as defined In Section VII. w. of Measure
G unless:
a. The project is exempt pursuant ot Section 111.N., or
b. The applicant has a vested right to proceed with the project pursuant to a
development agreement, a vetting tentative map, or other State law, or Measure
G Is not applicable to the project due to any other State law.
2. lmmedlatety after the adoption of this Ordlnance, the Development Servicee
Department shall prepare a report for the City Council showing what projects, If
any, could be processed and approved without having any of the adverM effect•
that neceaitate thia mof'atortum and the method to be used In Implementing
Measure G. This Ordinance can then be modified If appropriate.
8 . This Ordinance Is an urgency Interim ordinance enacted under the Clty of
Coata Mela'• general police power and the provlelona of Callfornla Government
Code Section 65858 and shall take effect Immediately upon adoption. The City
Council find• that there II a current and lmmeda.te threat to the public health,
safety, of welfare, and that the approval of addHlonal aubdlvtatone, UM permit•,
varlanoee, and other applicable entitlement• for UM which are eub)ect to
Meaaure G In Yk>latlon of this Ordinance would result In a threat to public health,
safety, or welfare. The facta constituting the urgency and the threat to the public
health, safety, or welfare are aa stated In the Recital• to thl• Ordinance.
. C. This Ordinance shall terminate and be of no further force or effect upon the
eartler of (I) lt1 expiration purauant to Government Code Section 85858, or (H) the
City Counct1'1 adoption of the first "Project and Traffic Monitoring Report"
required pureuant to Meaeure G .
SECTION 3.
Thia Ordlnmice lh8ll t9k• .nect and be In full force lmmed19tety from and aftet
the ptillege thereof, Md prtor to the expiration of ftttMn (15) dayl from lta pa11999, lhell be publtlhed ~In the ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT, a
,........, of gensal clrculatlon, printed and publl8hed In the City of eo.ta
Mele, together with the MIM9 of the memberl of the City Councll voting tor and
agalnlt the ume.
PASSED AND ADOPTED thll 19th day of DECEMBER, 1988.
ATTEST: Mary T. Elliott, Deputy City Clerk of the City of Coata Mesa.
,.._ 8ulla, ...,_ ol tM Cltf ol Coete .....
STATE OF CALIFORNIA) COUNTY OF ORANGE ) CITY OF COSTA MESA ) 11
I EILEEN P. PHINNEY, City Clerk and ex-officio Clerk of the Ctty Coundl of tht
City Of Coeta ..... "9reby certify ,,. the lbcM and foreaolna Ordlnenoe Nd.
U-20, A9v. A WM lnlrOduced Ind coneldered aectlOn by-Metlon at a ,.......,
rne.tlna of llld Cly CounGI held on the 11th day of oecEMBEA, 1 .. , Md
......., Pl 11111 Md edooled •• whole at • regular ,,... .... of ..... Council
Mid on .. , ...... of orcw ... 1111, by ... followlng rol Cll vote: •
AYR: COUNCIL MEMlllAI: lufla. Hombudde, Amburge,, Genii. Qt11gow.
NOD: COUNCIL ....... : none
AWNT: COUNCIL MIMllAI: none · ~
llWITNlll WHERIM-"._. __ ,,., ._...Ind 8'ftxecl "'9Mill Of ...
Qlr ol COll8 .._ 9'11 _,of DICEMBER. 1W. • '· ...... re-Cllr' • -..... Clllll .... car c .... ,, .......... ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J~!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!m!!!!!!l._. .... ~ .... lllll!llll .. !L!~~A~l~•~.,~OrMl9 __ _!!!!_Pllol __ o.. ___ m_..,.,~ __ n __ ._, .. ~ ~ ---~ Coelll CA
= ...
.. ·----... ---
DH:. 23,1988 ()\Ill' Pll.DT ENfERTAINMENf GUIDE ~/N0.52
I I
FmeArts
Irvine and culture:
Friends at last?
The Irvine Theatre. A real theater. Finally. No fooling..
Last week. in a move that surprised this writer, the Irvine City Council
unanimously voted to kick in an
extra S 1.8 million -the city's
share of SS.4 million in hi&her-
than-cxpccted construction bids.
Chancellor Jack Peltason and UO
took the lead in offering to cover
their share of the shonfall and were
quickly followed by Thomas
Nielsen and the Irvine Theatre
MICHAEL
Rnms11
· Opcratina company's board of
trustees.
On Wednesday, a press conference was held at UO's University O ub
to officially launch this Iona-overdue project and proclaim Irvine's
commitment to cuJ1uraJ dcvelopmenL
"The mnc catrcWl actasaTOCaTpOfnTfori?icCity-t>fll'Vi~-,.·
Richard Sim. chairman of the Irvine Thea&re board of directors. "AJI three
panners of &his project" -Irvine, UCI and the Theatre Operating
Company. represented by the City Council. Peltason and Nielsen.
respectively -··are to be applauded. We're reall y tickled about this. It's a
real fun thing to do today."
Sim and all oflrvinc should feel elated. And relieved. It's taken Irvine
more than 14-count 'cm. 14!-years 1ogct this far. That's 14 years from
the overwhclmin& passaac of a bond issue thal created bike lanes and
reserved the paltry sum ors 1.2 million fora 1.()()0.scat civic thcattt. to &his
press conference announcin& the &04hcad for the S 17.6 million. 7SO-sea1
theater 10 be shared by city, university and community.
Everyone at the conference -led t:iy Sim. trustee chairman Nielsen.
chief architect Larry Cannon and lrvine Theatre Genetal Man.eer DouaJas
Rankin -was elated. ''I think this ,.,.aerr•IJ is a very unique relationship
you can'tfind anywhere else in the Uniled Staaes." Sim boasted. "The proof
that it works is. when we were in a bind, everybody stepped up."
That's all fine and aood. But I'll believe it when I sec it. and I'm not
even from Missouri.
While the Irvine Theatre concept chl.llF4 alona for years. sometimes
on the brink of annihilation, Irvine officials wavered in their devotion to
the project. Some even had the nerve to claim that the city should use the
reserved money for more at.bletic fidds.
That's Irvine's commitment IO cultural devdopmcnL
During that same period of time-1974-88 -Irvine pined and lost
a symphony oreheslra, a chamber orchestra, an early-music cntemblc and
a music store: lost a masier cbOrale (which moved and became the hcific
Chorale): saw its music ()C)ftlen'alOry built, pow and •rink; and lost
consideration (&hanks to bickerina by UCI. which is obviUOlly tryina IO
make up for that now) as a possible site for the theft.named Oranae County
Music Center, which became the Performina Arts Center in C01U Mesa.
That's Irvine's commitment IO cultural devdopment
The city's thea&erpoupstill perb ms out of an inadequate community
center in Turtle Rock; iu musical thcaaa COtnJl9:RY has a choice of cilber
University ~iah School's hole-iD-lhc wall Little Theatre or its multi-
purpose room. ucrs biaest Lhcaten" arc &Ymnasiums and a community church •
mile from campus. &cepcjnJ lbote at UCJ. there arc no dance, ethnic or
folk grou~ ohny kind withm city limits.
That s Irvine's commitment IO cuhural dcvelopmenL
Ground breaks next month and constructioa is expecied to be
completed in 1imc for the 1990-91 tealOO. Let's hope this time is the.real
time. And let's hope Irvine's ans poups will use the theater as the vebtcle
they've needed IO grow.
Edilor. Tom Tail
O.rdx>ot Editor. Sun Blllc~ll
Cmrrive Setvica: Diane Hmdricb, s.m SlridJad
Produc'fion DiJeefor. Ali.-Tadloct
" v -.c.1 \.ltVVUClllOU IVll., '(lfbU
S Omty PMot o.tebookl Frld8y, December 23, 1111
.. ' .
!L. . . ,.,~ ~
• • • •rnawoo
BEST ACTMG •••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••.. 15
By TOM TITUS
In a year marked by far more than the usual number of
superlative community theater productions, it stands to
reason that those actors and actresses who rise to the top of
the heap have rendered performances of particularly high
quality. Among them was the ~ormancc by Susan Adams.
left, in '"Monday After the Miracle." 1
A LOVABLE •RAl!f llAl'I' •••••••••••••..••..... 10
Dustin Hoffman portrays Raymond Babbitt, an autistic
savant, and Tom Cruise 11 his on-the-make brother Charlie
in the movie .. Rain Man." With a f'ew exceptions, our critics
found much to love in this movie about brotherly affection.
Next week it's Mclanic Griftith, Harrison Ford and
Siaoumey Weaver in .. Workina Girl"
UndeDon
GREAT EXPECT A TIO~ •••••••••••••••••••••.. 12 .
ByUN~DON
Uncle Don wuz a kid met in the days of old, ... knights
were bold. and South Coast Plaza bid CJl!ly $ean, May Co.
and Woolworth. He knew when the Cbriatmal 1e&SOn,'
which finally ends Sunday, ..Ur bean. The Christmas
season didn't automaticallY saart ifter Halloween, or on the
day afterTban~viq. It bepn not with a date but with the
receipt of a pubbcation -the Sears Wish Book.
PIZZfA GA.WU ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 1 7
BJ JUDY CllAllBBBLAIN
I could have sworn I wa ia· the Beverly Center as a slee k
escalator depoaited me at die entruce of California Pizza
Kitchen, in the Bul1oCt•1 Willbile will& of Fubioa Island.
CPKe~aaaeaterie toattnlctoftiCeworken, babies in atrollen aild ~, .• in time b tbe last-minute
CluistQlu rulb.
I ..
~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ii-
~lt() ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 11
OALl-S81!;8 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 12
By GREG KLERKX
Of the Daily Pilot Staff
Millions of people from Milan, Italy,
to Mission Viejo will gather in gabled
cathedrals Saturday night for Mid·
night Mass. Others will meet under
the roofs of Presbyterian, Methodist,
Baptist, Congregational and the
churches of countless other de-
nominations. In most of the Western
world, life slows to a crawl for one day
of prayer' reflection and celebration.
Kah,ena Viale will be spending
Christmas with her family Sunday. For
her, the event embodies the close-
ness of family and friends. There will
be a Christmas tree and presents,
good food and holiday conversation.
But Viale celebrated her own,
personal Christmas-or the closest
thing to it -on Wednesday. She did
not tK>nor lesus Christ, nor the God of
Christianity, ludaism or the Muslim
faith.
She praised the winter solstice.
"Some of us, for various reasons,
have decided to honor the seasons,"
Viale said, describing one of the many
tenets of her religion .
Viale is a Papn. Her Cods live in the
Earth itself, In the water and air and
sky. They exist in rocks, in trees, in
deer and in virtually everything else
that is organic on this planet.
Her gOdsare many and they are
very, veryold. TheyareJupiterand
1.eus, Hera and Venus and others-
the gods of lecend. the Cods born of
the earth and of humanity.
Papnism is one of the more
unusual alternatives to trldltlonal
Western faiths, but it is not the only
one. The Orange Coast Is home to
Buddhists. KriShnas and others for
whom the Christmas seaton Isa
curiosity and, perhaps, a time to join
in the many other reliP>M and
beliefs.
What binds them toeether with
Catholics, Protestants, Jews and other
more popular Western faiths is the
common belief in rebirth-the ·
underlyinc, more universal theme of
Christmas.
''The ide" of celebratinc the birth
of a sacred individual is symbolic of .
the rebirth of awareness," said James
Swain, who lectures on religious
symbolism and metaphysics at the
Helix Center in El Toro. "Each year,
you are trying to become aware of
that divine presence apin.
"The concept of a virgin birth, one
not of a physical nature, is not unique
to Christianity," Swain said.
On the cover: IHustratJon by S.m Strickland.
This paie, Fr. ~ie Steplaanides of St Paul's
Greek Orthodox Church, whk:h~ates the
12 days of Christmas, with a Byuntinte nativity
sane. Phota,aphyby LttPayne.
were longer and, therefore, warmer.
With warmth came the thaw of the
land, reemergence of vqetation and
the realization that the world was still
alive.
Viale and her group will also take
time to make resolutions to lead more
positive, fulfilling lives-not unlike
the New Year's resolutions that many
people make and, often, break. But
there is a difference.
"Instead of 'I will not drink any·
more' we mieht say 'I resolve to live a
cleaner and purer life'," she said. "We
affirm the positive thinp in the world
as well as acknowledce those things
faith somehow get into the Christmas
spirit, at least in the United States.
"If nothing else, you have per·
mission to be nice to people," he said.
"Culturally, it's a time when your
attention is dwelling along those
lines: It's about opening yourself up to
other people. People will let you hug
them or say something nice to them
without having them growl or what·
ever."
Swain, who also adheres to New
Age philosophy, said the Christmas
season is an important spiritual event
for New Age believers.
'The idea of celebrating the birth of a sacred individual
· is symbolic of the rebirth of awareness.'
"It brings many questions. ls it
IChristmasJ just a concept or abstrac·
tion orcan I be Christ-like?" Swain
said. "There is a Christ quality and a
Herod quality in everyone, that is an
aspiration to higher goals and a need
to maintain physical control." For Viale and other Pagans, the
winter solstice is symbolic of a rebirth
of the land as well as the soul.
"We are the caretakers of the
Earth. but we don't lord our abilities
over the earth," said Viale, who also
works at Visions and Dreams in Costa
Mesa, a shop specializing in New Ate
l>hboohY. "We believe that the
earth, air, fire and water have an
eneflY~ ~olthetrown.''
A hlndful of Plpnspthered at
Ylslonsand Drams for a prayer
w•towelcometheSun Kfn&.
Thesolltke-the shortest day of the
year-.. a wltennart for the
andenCs, a sip thlt all days to come
which need improvement."
Pagans are usually misrepresented
and misunderstood, Viale said,
iareefy through incorrect inter·
pretationsoftheBible. Paganism is
simply a belief that the world and man
are one, she said. There are no animal
or human sac:rl8ces.
"I run into people whoSiy 'Oh,
you're a devf[ woishtpper' or 'Does
that mean you're an athiest?"' she
said. "You aet used to It. Our beliefs
are very llfHffinninc, tied closely to ecolocY and environmental con-
cerns."
Swain said it is not surprising to
discovet that adherents to most any
Viale is also a New Age follower
Md views the Christmas season as a
chlnce for Christians to "open up to
the Christ spirit within."
''Tl'lditional Christians often think
of themselYes as little nothings who
are loc*insup to this awesome
beiftl," she Slid. "From a
metaphysblpointofview, we're all
part of God."
ForSastlll a~ttatt Krishna.Ch-~ everyday.
"Weacceptlll~of
God, induding Jesusa.rtst and
Mohammed,'' said SIStti ~
(~see5PIRIT~9J
Olllty Piiot Dateb<>c*/ Friday, December 23, 1988 a
sser .cs ~l"fl9,)0() tto.., .. ; a ot·G , a ~
I
Calendar
DEC
,SM TW T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7' 8 .9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
252627 28293031
EiC.
Lewis St., Garden Grove. 92640.
Tickets can also be purchased
through Ticketmastcr oullcts.
BRENTANO'S South Coast Plaza
holds a book sipina by local author
Stella Fabian and her toy do& Socks
from I to 4 p.m. today. The author
will give away toy prizes as they lian
their book. "It. Ha..ndful ofMq>c."
AGE OF CBIVALllY SOCIETY
meets on the second Saturday of each
month from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
HerilllC Park in Irvine. The public is
invited to briQ& a lunch and enjoy
pmes, music and costumes from the
prevailina culture in Wes1en1 Europe
between 1000 and 1600 A.O. For
more information, call S..7-2093 or
write 100 N. ROIS. Ste. 360, Santa .Ana. 92701. . LAGUNA ~ETS meet each Fri. It
8 p.m. at the Laauna Beach public
library, ·363 Glcnneyre, Lquna oada
Beach. Tonight, Whitmanll ---"-
McGowan, .San Francisco per-SNOW SLEDDING AT ~O'IT'S
formance poet. Everyone is welcome. Knott'• "Merry Farm" Winter Won-
CaJI 494-9550 or 494-8375. derland features sledding down a
mountain of real snow today through SatUrda• Jan. 2, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Knott's
---~ providesthesledsandplent ofsnow.
Frida ORANGE @ _UNTY SW AP MEE'J--24--hout Knott's-. . . Y presc~by Tel-Phil Enterprises Knott's Berry Farm is located 1t 8039
NEWPORT CHRISTMAS BOAT each Saturday and Sunday in the Beach BouJevard in Buena Part.
PARADEendstoni&ht. 8cginsa16:30 main parking lot of the Orange
b) Collins Island and continuing County Fair Grounds 7 am. to 4 p.m.
around the Harbor to end at Collins Admission is fifty cents for walk-ins. Tae9clay
Island around 8 p.m. with over 200 Orange Coun1y Fairgrounds infor-JOIN THE IUIUIOll llNGDS A
boats panic1pating. For grandstand mation phone number is 751-3247. non-profit group of women UfllC'S
~ating at the Sea Scout Base and whoi>erformeverythinafrom Bech to special parking with shuttle SttVicc. GOLDENWESTCOLLEGESWAP -1. 1ooa.: fi bers. call 644-6 70 I. Grandstand seating MEET 8 am. to 3 p.m. with free r""" are •un& or new mem
pnccs arc S6 ge~I adroission. SS admission and free parking today and ~,f¥~e;~vcnina at 7 p.m. at
for seniors and (J'OUps of more than tomorrow. ~ fee is SI 0 on the Presbyterian Church of the Cove-
25 and S4 for children undef' age 12. Saturdays and Sundays or two SPKCS nant at Fairview and Adams 1t.reet in
GLORY OF aousntAS 8th an-for SlO on Sunday, with proceeds Cosca Mesa. Performances are alto
nual Christmas spcctaCUlar at the from the swap meet goina to campus available. For more information. call
Crystal Ca1hedraJ, 12141 Lewis St, clubs and orpnizations, scholarships Dee Cox at 962-1680 or Vi Green at
Top
Garden Grove, ends toni&ht with and community service projects. For 89 -0 87 . ----'--""·
h -"-4 30 6 30 nd additional information, call 1 5 evcninpand ~IU'l. Wednesday of every month at the t rec pc ...... rmances · : ' : a 89°2389 The · held · r-·-M C Cl b 21 8:30 p.m. Ticke1 prices are S 14, 18 o-· · swap meet is in _,... esa ountry u . Ages
and S25 and can be purchased by the parking lot located atthc entrance and over. For more
creditcardbycall ing714-S4-0LORY of the colJcgc at the Golden West Wed.aeeday _ information.~l~-8686.
or by sending check or money order Street traffic li&ht between Edinger THE ORANGE COUNTY S&I SCRABBLE is played Wednesdays
to: The Glory of C hristmas. 12141 and Mcfadden "Streets. CLUB meets the first and third at 6:30 p.m. in the upper-level
=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio..iiiio-----------•-..-iiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_,.iiiiilllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.-,,_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii---..-community room of Glendale Fedcr-r al Savinp. 24221 Calle de la Louisa.
i.atuna Hills. Call 586-2378 for
further information.
TO CAPTURE THE mOTHEl1S HEART,
TAKE THE CHILD'S HAND.
f~Yf KL~US ffifH~J~
DUN~W~Y BR~ND+1UtR
BU~NJNG
SfCRfT
NOW SHOWING
EDWARDS TOWN CENTER
COSTA MESA 751-4114
AMC MAINPLACE I
SANTA ANA 972-llOO
CIUBBAGI!: is played on the sec-
ond and fourth Wednesday of C11Ch
month at 7 p.m. at the Oasis Center.
Room VI. 5th SL and Maraucri1e in
Corona dcl Mar. Call ~ 138 for
additional information. LEAD8 a.UB Costa Mesa chapter.
a p-oup for women in business. meets
every Wcdncsda)' momina at the
Countryside Inn 1n Costa Mesa at
the comer of Redhill and Bristol.
Mcctinas arc from 7: 1 S to 8:30 a.m.
For more information and reser-
vations. call Jenelle Pemul1 at
538-6612 or Jeanette Thompson at
892-5930.
Tbanday
AD CLUB OF ORANGE COUNTY
holds a weekly social event bqinnina
at 5:30 p.m. al Maxie's. The Red Uon
Inn, 3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Free hon d'ocuvrcs, fun and
networkin&. 731-3525.
&-I IPU& TOAITllASTEU
meet each Thunday at 7:30 p.m. at
!cKlift'VillllS,
2134 Main s.reet. Hwuiopon Baich. ._....,. wdcome. For more infor-mtion. call 142-2016 or 141-8149. IC!ll•-• is played every Ttwr. d9y II 6:l0 p.m. at the Home Savinp
buildina, Main Street at Yorktown
A venue, Huntinaton Beach. Call
960-2729 for details. PARllDI MARKET sponsored
bythean.County farm Bureau is
held every Thunday in the main
perkina lot of the Oranac County Fa~unds from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. Call 751-3247 for more infor·
mation.
"A ClllLD'I ClllUITMAS IN
WALES" at the Gem Theater. 12852
Main St., Garden Grove (636-7213).
closina perfomaancc toni1tn at 8 o.m.
"A ClllUITllAI CilOL" on 1he
main state ofSouth Coest Repcnory. 655 Town Center Drive. Costa Mesa
(957-403}), final" performance 10-
niaht at 7:30. "GUYS AND oou.r a1
the HarlcQuin Dinner Playhouse.
3503 S. H'arbor Blvd., Santa Ana
(979-SSI I), nilblly except Mondays
at varyinacurtain times through Jan.
22.
"~ MB. UTE" at the Grand
Dinner Theater, 7 Freedman Way.
Anaheim (772-7710), ni&htly except Monda~ at varyina curta1n times
thrcMWa Feb. ~
"'II\' PADl. LADY" at Elizabc1h
Howard's Curtain Call Dinner
Tbea&er, 690 El Camino Real, Tustin
(838-1540). niahtly except Mondays
at varyina curtain times throuah Feb.
5.
P.LJ.a.T. Christma Carol sing-
.,_.adGift ~in a private llomC. Coll is S4 or S8 empty hands. Call 647-1621 for dNils and lo-
c:atioa.
.... DBGaaD llNGLICS
MW -.. ~Ped in OrallF Coan Y llfti 8dditioMI members JO .2. _,: who bave colk:le
!:tee:1c,'::'..:. ~::~
mutuaJ interests. Interested persons and over, meet new friends in a warm may call Harry Cook at 646-SS78 to supportive atmosphere every
•rranJC future meetina times and
locations. No chaqc.
PARENTS WftHOUT PART· NERS Orange Coast Chapter 26.
(custody not required) Make reser-
vations now for the New Year's Eve
Gala with open dance, live music,
buffet, at Cost.a Mesa Country Oub.
For reservations/tickets: 559-0730.
'Tickets at the door, S25; less with
advance reservations. 847-1600 or 546-5788 for more information about
the organization.
PARENTS WITHOUT PART·
NERS Huntington Beach Chapter
595 hosts a free orientation for sinak
_Qlrcnts. Call chapter phone 898-7915
• for meetinJ ocation and additional
membenh1p information.
Membership in Parents Without
Partners is open to divorced. separ-
ated. widowed or never married parents ofliving children. Custody of
the children 1s not a factor. A non-
profit. non-sectarian. educational or-
ganization, PWP -provides a pro-
gram of social acuv1tics. discussions
and study groups for single parcnas
and their families.
LET'S TEE IT UP A cluo for single
golfers between the aacs of 30 and 55 who want to play socially and meet
other single golfers. Dues arc S2S
annually. Play various local and
regional courses. Membership dircc·
tory._ For more information. call
854-0690 or write 10: Let's Tct It Up,
31 Rainbow Ridge. Irvine. 9271 S.
Saturday
F.Ll.R.T. meets at noon for a last
minute Christmas shoppina spree at
South Coast Plaza. Meet at Carl's Jr.
ground floor, north end of mall.
647-1628.
Sa.aday
F .Ll.R.T. Open houses available
for dinner. No program. Call the info
line. 647-1628 for details. Next Sun·
day prQlf'lmS begin at 7 p.m. in fhe
Scacliff Village Shopping Center,
2205 Main Street, Suite 20. Hunt·
ington Beach. Donation is S3 and frtt
child arc isavailable. Free dancing at
Huntington Beach Inn follows at 9
p.m. Call 647-1628 for more infor-
mation and to leave mcssaaes.
Taeeday
SWING AND BAU.ROOM DANCE a..ua Learn west coast swins, fox-
trot, waltz. samba. tango and all
ballroom dances at the Irvine Hilton
Zot Room at 8 p.m. S6 or S 19 per
month. Dance at 9 p.m. For more
information. call •94-0593.
Wedneeday
CALU'OllNIA SINGLES Happy
Hour and Mixer Dancina. each
Wednesday, S to 9 p.m. at the Zot ~· Irvine Hilton and Towers, 17900 Jamboree Blvd., Irvine. Frtt
buffet. Fee is SS. 830-101-0.
PllDIE OF LIPE SINGLES meet
for dinner at Panda. Panda Chinese Restaurant. 12309 Seal Beach Blvd .•
Seal Bach. 11 7 p.m. Call 836-8744
for information and raervations.
NEWPORT B&ACll SAILING
SINOLDa dub for sinak sailon with or without a boat, qe 21 and older for
saili., panies and IOciatizina. Meets
the first and third Wednaday of C8Ch
month at the Newponer Raon. I 107
Jamboree, Newport Beach 6:JOIOCial
hour. Medina beains at 8. ends
around 10 p.m. follOwed by danci•
witb a live band until l a.m. Valet
partina is he for thole havina 1
codnaal in the Dukes Lou nae ~fter the meeti• COit is $6. Call 969-8 l I I for NCDnkid info about club activities.
UPB ON YOUll OWN siftlla SS
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,
Wednesday 3 to 4:30 p.m. for a vaned restaurants and a monthly pot luck. (Sth and Maraucntc) Corona del Mar.
procram including dinner at local Oasis Senior Center, 800 Marguerite 644-3245. '
-~I 1 f R ~I T.
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l:ll ~:JS.IHI
1
"Wann, funny and absolutely
channing! See 'IWins' twice!"
-.,_, ~1. GOOO MOllM!'IC AMEJaCA
"Two thumbs
up!"
-'!Nt.D a Llf al
"Double the
pleasure!"
-m.: lilAGAZD'a
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..,._ •CClll'T• _... *ll. TO-O ..... ._,. Wll.IO •IT..,,. -·-·---c------c.-----........ t~ ~ trt 4Ut \II ~ 1161.. *-4110 ... ....., .... •COit••... ......,..,.~ ~~ • ....,-.AC»t ...,_"" WI~""'~ '"~'-'-~0..0... '-'c•~ ......... ,._..,, ..... ,. ut.,. •\ ,.,.,. .. , •1' tn "'" in..-~ .,., mt ......... ,.,. c........ ...... ~-....::. ·~ ... ._,,..... w.,... ..... , ... c---............. ~--r... ~ U' ... 0-...
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"On Ducky! On Cera! On Petrie!
. On Spike! On Littlefoot!" • • .
•
• • •
•
• ~~~ f0'1711JO··~=~l.\DClof A ~ .. '!E! IGLoi. ..................
• Oalty Piiot Datebc>ok/ Frld8Y. Oeeemb« 23. 1988
...., .... --.......
Calendar
_c:.
Tlaanday
SINGLES SUPPORT GROUP
sponsored t_>y l.quna Beach United
Methodist Churdi's Wesley Counscl-
ina Center from 6 to 7 p.m. a1 the
church. 21632 Wesley Drive, South.
La&una. There will bt a donation of
$10 per ~n per evening. Group leader wtll be Marilyn Boyd. MFCC
intern. t:or more information, call the
church office at 499-3088.
TANGO, DISCO AND BALLROOM
DANCE a.VB Meets every Jllurs.-
day at 8 p.m. at 738 W. 17th St., three
blocks south of Newport Blvd. in
Costa Mesa. S 19 month fees. Learn the latest dances followed by a dance
or other activities e~h week. For
more information call 494-0593.
Mesa. For more information. caJI Party comedy COftCa1S. Thursday S4S-S669. lhroup Saaurday, dulic rock and
roll and cop 40 mlllic with The Ticket.
For information. c:all 14&-2662.
NIGBTllOVP.I S902 Warner Ave. =r Be8ch. conttrt info line:
S&tarday ~"T c u;a-POSTNUCLEAll 7 SS
AMBERS AT AMBROSIA 695 Laaun.Canyon Road. Laguna Beach
Town Center Drive, Costa Mes.a ~nts Information Society (New
presents Confrey Phillips Trio with Edae Music), Fashion show with
modem renditions from Broadway Yoshiko and Maui cl Sons. Bo~
and the movies Wednesdays through office: 497-6532'-Recorded in for-
Frida)'S, 8 p.m. until late, and Satur-mation line: 497-,881.
days. 9 p.m. to I a.m. 432-75S9. Saada•
REUBEN E. LEE Newpon Beach, 1
presents the Mighty Flyers tonight COURTHOUSE ~AURANT. 2
and Saturday. Hutton Cent~ Drive. Sar:ita Ana. --f>tJH.'S NOS'fALGlA._ GBT· presentsTheNewlnltSpotsanthebar
a.UB in the Newponer Resort. I ror-a~n with 2 show9.at 8 and~
Jamboree Road, Newpon Beach p.m. The Courthouse 1s k>catcd one
presents the golden age of rock ·n· roll block off the SS f~y. West on
7 p.m.to 2a.m.ni&htlycxcep1Sunday MacArthur Blvd. 1n the Hutton
and Monday. f'lo cover charac. Cen1re. For information. call
C assie bands will ocrform the era's ~8615. Friday
COSTA M~/FRED ASTAIRE
DANCE STUDIO 2488 Ncwpon
Blvd .. 2-C. Costa Mesa. Friday Night
Dances open to the general public
with a one hour dance class preceding
the public da nce bcginninJ at 8 p.m.
Dance 9 p. m. unttl midniJlll. Cost for
dance class and dance as $7.50 per
person. Music by records and tapes
with d.J. Soft dnnks available fo r purchase. For more information or
rt:servations. call Blair 0 . Wood at
650-3048. LE MERIDIEN HOTEL 4500
MacAnhur Blvd. Newport Beach.
"An Evening of Motown" each
Friday with the Stonebridge Band
from 7 to 11p.m.476-2001 .extension
311 3.
S&barday
LE MERIDIEN HOTEL 4500
MacAnhur Blvd.. Ncwpon Beach.
"Dancinf. in
Newpo.n ' Stoncbridgc Band with .a
variety of btg b9nd and Broadway from 7 lo 11 p.m. each Saturday. For
information. call 476-2001. extension
3113. LONDANCE/FRED ASTAlltE
STlJDIOS 3625 W. MacArthur. Suite
308, Santa Ana. Dance for couples or
sin&lcs. I st Saturday and 3rd Sunday
cacli month. 8:30 to 11 :30
p.m. Admission SS. includes refresh.
ments. Ballroom. Latin dancing. ull
8S0-0676 for more information.
Sanday
TEA DANCING Red Lion Inn.
30SO Bristol Street. Costa Mesa
prcacnts Barney Olson and his 20
piece orchestra every Sunday after-noon from 2
to 6 p.m. Admission is SS per person.
Free valet parting. Tickets may be purchased in advance at the hotel gift
shop. For more information. call Elda
Barry at (2 13)592-2137.
Monday
MARTIN 6 TONI'S Swing Dance
O ub meets at several Orange County
locations. Dances. dance coniests.
dance trips. play outings. beach parties are some
of the activities. Dance !es.sons arc
offered bqinning to advanced. ballroom to swin&-For times and
locations. call 84().JS 18.
Tlnanday -
COSTA MESA QlJICUTEPPEBS
a tcnior citizen square ~ tJOUP
seek ex~enced square dance cou-
ples to JOin them. Tbc OuicblcDDers
meet rcplarty every 1'hutlday; 10 a.m. to noon at the down&own
community center,
Anaheim and Cnttt Sta. in COiia
greatest hits from "Ciood Golly Miss VILLA NOVA Richard Fauno's
Molly •• to "I Want To Hold ' Your piano styli~ Sunday through Hand.'" 644-1700. Wednesday. n daily S p.m. to 1
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL 690 a.m .. 3131 W. oast Highway. Ncv.-
Newpon Center Drive, Newport pon Beach 642-7880.
Beach presents Marlene Arden's THE WRITE BOUSE Restaurant
song.sand music an the Conservatory and Tavern, 340 South Coast Ha&)l-
Lou"IC Monday th rough Friday 5 to way. lagun. Beach. presents hvr
8 p.m. and.Saturda. 1y. 6 to 8 p.m. . entertainment and dancing nigh ti>
THE WHITE HOUSE Restaurant 494-8088
and Tavern. 340 South Coast Hifh-SUNSET PUB 16655 Pacific Coast
way. Laguna Beach, presents hve Hi&h~Y. Sunset Bcac.h. offers hvc
entertainment and dancing nightly. entcrtamment seven naghu at week.
494-8088. Debbie Davies of the Coco Montoya
SUNSET PUB 16655 Pacific Coast Band from 3 to 7 p.m.: Casual Sax I! Highway. Sunset Beach. offers li ve p.m. to midnjV.t 592-1926.
entertainment seven niahts at week. BLACKTHORN A trio playing
TonightandSaturday, The Fairlanes. tradition.I Irish and Scottish music.
9:30 p.m. to I :30 a.m. S3 cover each Sunday at the Old Dana Point
chltJe. S92-l 926. Cafe,;..&t the corner of Golden l.Antcrn
COVRTBOVSE RaTAURANT. 2 and uel Prado Streets in Dana Potnl
Hutton Centre Drive. Santa AM. No cover charge. ~~ ~.!:t.;1i1e~~~~t1~~:; ll~y -
Saturday. 8:30 p.m. to I a.m. and THE COUATJIOUSE RES· J.c?bn Allen durin& lunch in tbc TAURANT pments the Show Case
Library/Garden Room Monday Sinp. One block off the SS Frte-
througb Friday. The Counhousc is way. west on MacArthur Blvd. in
located one block ofTthe SS freeway, Hutton Cent~. For informauon. call
West on MacArthur Blvd. in the 540-8615. Hutton Cen~. For information, call
S-40-8615.
Km, THE Q.UB 228S Newpon
Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Aashang h&hts.
mirrors and a huac dance floor. Rot-
shins or sbons. Tickets are SS for all
shows. Doors open at 8 p.m. Call
8)}.J 160.
TllE RIGHTEOUS BROTHEU' BOP prfttnlS the coolest "Hoppy ..
Hour an town S· 7 9.m. Friday.·· Blast
to the Past .. with O.J. Mann)' Pachc<lo
ofKRLA. S4covcrchargc: Saturday.
"Hot Auaust Niahts" stamng Tony
Rossini, a tribute to Neil Diamond at
7:30 p.m. and Dance! Dance! Dance! "Blast 10 the Past" with O.J. Dennis
8. Goode. $4 cover cha~; Su_nday.
"The Bl<:klcat Boys .. hve .50s-60s
dance band at 8 p.m. $4 cover, Closed
Monday; "Rock Around the O ock,"
a hist9f)' of rock and roll Tues. at 8
p.m.($4 cover cha~).; Contest niaht on Wcdnctday. caJI for details. Thurs-day ... Rock Around B11 &en·· lhc
Britjsh invas.on with S4covercharar.
11774 Brookhvrst, Fountain Valley.
963-2366.
.ID&lllAB'S lll!ITAURANT •
8901 Wamcr Ave.at Mttnoha in Hund~ Beach present hventer-
tainmcnt Monday thf'CMCh Saturdar.
1:30 p.m. lo l a.m. in J~miab s
Lounte. Livt j,u:l happy hour Tue.
day 1b~ F~Y.i._~:lO to 7 p.m. COmptimta~ UUl1ft. no cover or miatmum. NeW outdoor petio cMAOe
floor. 21 nd owr. ~r Nilllt FGOlllll ud Jrd annual Kille Ann
1'1uow-oft' OO•IHll, T..-y, """ Oea -........ dllUc roct ..... folk ..,.._ W"....-y. Mid H11w Tea
T1leedaJ
THE Warn: BOUSE Restaurant
and Tavern, 3.-o South Coast High-
way Luun. Beach. present$ Luke
and the Locomotives at ~30 p~~: S2 admission, 21 and ovtt. 494-IOU.
COVll'l'llOUSE USTAllllANT. 2
Hutton Centre Drive, Santa Ana.
pramts pianist Irene Castle in the Libra~r/Garden Room Tuesday thro Saturday belinnina at 6 p.m.
The urthousc is located one block
ofT the SS freeway. West on
MacArthur Blvd. in the Hutton
Centre. For information. call
S40-361S. SUNSET PUB I 66SS Pacific Coast
Hiahway, Sunset Beach offers live
entertainment seven nilhu at week Toniaht The Milts 9 p.m. to I a m. $2
cover chatJt. S92-I 926.
PACES NITECLUB 18S82 Beach
Blvd. in H11ntinston Buch. Blues
Ni&ht. Show tirM is 10 p.m. 21 and over. Admiuion at the door 1s $4.
Call 964-2211 for information.
W'ed.a•daJ
IUNIBT PUB t66SS P9carac Coasl
HiPway, Suntct Beach, offers lave
entcrWnmctH seven nichu a wctk. Judah Star 9 p.m. to l a.m. Sl cover chafJt. 592-1926. nm...,
~PUB l66SS Pllclfic Ca&st Hilbway, Suntet Bmch. offcn live
etderWIUDCDt teven niltlts a week.
Toailtlt Tbc ltelular 0"11. S3 cover c1uar1e. ~1926'.
Calendar
FrldaJ
AMBERS AT AMBROSIA 69S
Town Center Dr., Costa Mesa, Cis--
sandra'sjazz stylina 6to9 p.m. Friday
and Saturday, S:JO to 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday and Thursday. 432· 7559.
BISTANGO 19100 Von Karman.
Irvine. pianisJJon Gamer fuses jazz. ~pular standards and old time rock
n' roll niah,ly/5 to 10 p.m. Sunday
throuah lhursday; 6 to 11 p.m. Fri~~ Saturday. 752-5222. D OOD LOUNGE 21462 Pa-
cific Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach presents the Swinaers Trio
with sonp from the 30s and 40s
Friday and Saturday. 8 p.m. to
midniaht. and Sunday 2 to 6 v.m.
----~llM.flt -.for DQftwood l.DUDF
VILLA NOVA pianist Stan
Brcckenri• performs a variety of
jazz and ero.dway favori1e1 Thurs.-
day throup Saturday from 8:30 p.m.
to I :30 a.m.. Sunday throuah
Wednesday from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30
a.m. Richard Fauno's easy listening
pino stylina. 3 I 3 I Wtst Coast High-
way. Newpon Beach. 642-7880.
CAFE UDO. SOI 30th St .. Newpon
Beach, 675-2968. ~nts entenain-
ment niahtly. Tonight and Saturday,
Tony Guerrero Sextet from 8:30 p.m.
to I a.m. SJ cover charge.
SahardaJ
HOLIDAY JAZZ MARATHON
KSBR 88.5 FM sets aside its regular
contemporary jazz proaramming
today at S a.m and Christmas Day
until 5 p.m. to present .. Jazz Sounds
of the Season: classical ~ inter-
pretations of h<?liday favor.ites
without commcraal interruption.
KSBR is Saddlcbeck Collqc's stu-
dent operated, statT supervised radio
station and features a contemporary
jazz format CAFE UDO SOI 30th Street.
Newpon BeaM. 675-2968. Entertain-
ment nightly featurinJ Jony Guer-
rm> Sextet tonight 8:30 p.m. 10 I a.m. __ ,
CANYON BAR AND GRILL 859
Lquna Canyon Road. Laauna Beach. Ben Milliken's Dixie Jazz AllStars
each Sunday from 4 to 7 p.m.
494-1911. RUM RUNNER 1600 Pacific Coast
Hiahwa_y, Seal Beach. presents The
Sons or the Beach. one of Sou them
California's most popular dixieland ~bands from 6 to 10 p.m. eacl)
Sunday. No cover c harac.
(213)596-1624.
CAFE UDO 501 30th St.. Newpon
Beach. Entertainment nightly 8:30
p.m. to I a.m toniaht with the Wayne
Wayne Band. 675-2968.
lloDdaJ CAR UDO, SOI 30tb St..Ncwpon
Beach. Enter11inment niahtly 8:30
p.m.-1 a.m. Wayne Wayne &.nd this
evenina. 675-~. ...... , ,
CAR UDO 501 30th SL Newport
Balch. Eatenainmcat niPllY 8:30
p.m. IO I a.m. DiaDa OtUi and Wayne Wa~ witb .. ,.~ .. toniahL
67S:-2961. ........ ,
LE llDIDIEN llOTEL 4500
MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach.
''Le Jazz Oub" featurina worid class j_azz anisu spotJiahted weekly int~
Tour story Atrium of tht Cafe fleun.
For more information. call 476-2001.
extension 311 3. CAR UDO 501 30th St., Newpon
-
Balch, pramts entertainment niaht-
ly, witb5ocaJists with the Douf Webb toniaht 8:30 p.m. to
a.m. 67 2968.
TlaandaJ
CAFE UDO SO I 30th St., Newpon
Beach, presents Sal Mar9uez with
.. Birdland Revisited"toni&ht 8:30
p.m. to I a.m. 675-2968 or 673-5056.
JAZZ PACIFIC a non-profit or-
ganization to preserve and encouraae
live jazz n:icets every .Thursday !lt 7
p.m. and 1s open to Jazz mus.1c11ns
andjazzbutTs. For more information,
call Dr. Charles Rutherford at
432-5819 or Bill Scott at 642-7648.
reservations, call 854-5455.
TaeedaJ
IUTCH SHYDNEA OF "Let-
terman" and "Tonight Show" fame
appears at the lmprov through Jan. I .
THE IMPROV presents three side-
solitting acts each night Tuesday
through Sunday. Showtimes and
admission prices art 8 p.m. Monday
($3); Sunday.
tuesday ~hrougti Thursday. ($6); 8:30
and 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
($8), doors open at 6 p.m. Dinner is
served nightly.
Wedneeday
JEREMIAH'S RESTAURANT
8901 Warner Ave.. Huntington
Beach, Mad Hatter Tea Pany Com-
edy Conccn every Wednesday in the
downstairs night club. Thrtt top
comics appear at 9 p.m. Cover.charge
is SJ.
SO attract1ons 1n seven themed lands. "Snoopy's Antmal Fnends Show:·
including 'Star Tours" and "Captain Admission prices arc SI 7.95 for EO." PVk hours are 9 a.m to adults and SI 3.95 for children 3-11.
midnight Monday tbrouah Friday. 9 senior otizens S 12.95. For addmonal
a.m.to I a.m.Saturday and 9 a.m. to informauon call the 24-hour Knon·s
midnipt Sunday. Disneyland infor-Linc at 220.5200.
mation: 999-4565. LOS ANGELES CHJLDREN'S
INTERNATIONAL SURF MU· MUSEUM 310 onh Mam Street.
SEUM 31 2 Walnut. Huntington Los Angeles. Open Wednesday and
Beach. Surf memorabilia and Thursday, 2 to 4 p.m. and Sa1urda)•
an1facts (dating as far back "' 1he and Sunday. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m early 20s) commemorate the colorful "Hands-on· panic1patory env1ron-
heritage of this popular Californian ment in which children ages two 10
spon . Open daily noon to 6 p.m.: twelve. learn by doing. Eighteen
admission is free. Located one block permanent e~h1b11s. Monthly pro-
inland from pier and one-half block gramming includes a vanety of an
east of Main Street in Hunt1ngtQn exhibits, performances and work-
Beach. 536-0155. shops. Admission: $4 per person, ~'S BERRY FARM, 8039 infants undertwo free. Adult5frce on
Beach Blvd.. Buena Park. Third Wednesday an<I Thursday aftcr-
annual Chnstmas Craf\s Festival 1n noons. Groups must regas1er 1n ad-
Ghost Town is free to the pubhc. vancc. For 24 hour informauon. call
featuring a v1s1t with Sant.a in his (213)687-8800. ...,. workshop, holiday entertainment. MOVIELAND WAX MUSEUM,
talented anisans demoostratin& their 77 11 Beach Blvd.. Buena Park. 11\e -------------=cn=1n'-'s.~"'=o1fs 1s e naliOns mos~ newes1 ctpbcu-
popular independent family theme among the already elaborate collec·
park with 165 wild ndcs. shows and t1on of movie and telev1s1on
attractions. All shows are incl uded an memorabilia 1nclud1ng hfe-like
the admission price. Other en ten.a in-replicas of more than 200 renowned
PAULA POUNDITONE appears at
the lmprov throtWI Saturday. Also
appeanna will be Tony Edwards.
THE DIPllOV prncnts three side-
sr>fittina acts eactr 11i&bt Tuesday
through Sunday at 4155 Campus
Drive, Suite I 38, Irvine. Showtimes
and admission prices are 8 p.m.
Monday ($3); Sunday, Tuesday
through Thursday, ($6); 8:30 and
10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. ($8),
doors open at 6 p.m. Dinner is served
nightly. Patio dinin& is now available
for late shows Friday and Saturday.
llODdaJ
DUKE'S ENTERTAINMENT
LOUNGE at the Newportcr Rcson
presents a s~laJ
Monday Night Showcase with com-
edians from throughout the Sou them
California area s)crformins, tqin-
ni~ at 8:30 p.m. Duke's Monday
Ni&Jtt Showcase has no rpvercharae. The N(WpOf'ter Rcson 1s located at
1107 Jamboree Rd.just east of Pacific
Coast Hiahway in Newport Beach.
6".1700,:UL-.57.S..
THE DIPllOV features three of
LA's best known comedians every
Monday nipt. Doon open at 6:30
p.m. For information and dinner
AMUSEMENT'S
0..,olDC Eftllta
DISCOVERY MUSEUM of Orange
County. 3101 West Harvard St..
Santa Ana is prescntinl .. Garlands
and Gingerbread." a loo at bow the
holidays were celebrated at the tum of
the century. A Victorian Christmas
tree, old fash ioned decorations and
holiday music entertain vistors who
can penicipate in special crafts, try on
period costumts and shop for-unique
books and old-fashioned gifts. Open
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday through
Friday. Closed on Mondays,
Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
Admission is SI for adults and SO
cents for children. Nominal craf\
particil19tio_n fee. For information.
call 540-0404. DISNEYLAND, 13 l 3 Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim. Celebrate the
Chnstmas ~n with the ~very
M~ Christmas Parade' • Togcr
Rabbit's Christmas villaac and
special holiday shows daily through
Jan. 2. Disneyland offers more than
"A SIDE-SPLITimJ aJdEIJi &\IASILAPARTY
DJ ~WANf 10 ENn..YULE W/E IT."
ft1n bll\ PfU'll \t. llt \ZN
BILL MURRAY
S·C·R·O·O·G·E·Il o.
----,,.... --... _ .,_ ---·· Vt tl ..
-·----,,._..l .. --_ .. _ ··-•&---·-__..._.. wsuu:ulMDt ------""'4141 Mt•19
-__ ... _ ----------... , • *.4Dt .,. ....... ',..._, ......
--~ .... w ..... ... ·----r....---•tt-.. al ltU 01' -·--~~-·=:=..• _...,._~ .... •Ut_, --.,_
,.
ment ll)dudes tht Wild West Stunt stars. Daily 10 a.m.-8 p.m. wnh Fn.-
Shows.. can can shows. old ume Sal open until 9 p.m. 522-1155.
melodramas and a visit with Snoopy. MUSEUM OF NATURAL llJS.
Knon's Pacific Pavilion features two TORY ANDSCIENCE 2627 Vista <kl
extraordinary aquatic attractions Oro. Newpon Beach. Open Tuesda)
-·Splashdance '87." a dolphin/sea throuah Sa1urday. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
lion show and "Snoopy's diving and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m
ciogits,"a first ume anywhere per-Adm1SS1on is S2 for adults, and SI for
formancc. Knoll's has four themed children over s1A. Members are fret.
areas including Camp Soopy, a six-Museum exhibits include a wide
acre wonckrland themed to the Ca. array of marine mammal fossils..
High Sierra and featuring lhe all new Nat1ve American displays, an insect
L•...._. 11111-... lilll ..... .:. ': --· .. ~..\! ... -... ,_,, .. _.,, ..... ------..... . ...... , .. -... , $ -""" ---c.-mr-• '"' ,_,,.,_ ... _ --··,,.-...:.. --·-:.i:-.:.:: --... -.-.---,------------------IUS -----.·-~ --lt'.a-•.a .....
...... -,..,. Cl llO&ICI-.... ,. .... ,.. ............ -l bell:»., ........... . -"'~~ -"i'?iliiii·iei
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88
--·~-· te.-,. •• ,,.,.u __ _ __ _.. __
ax:oca•-... ,_,...,.,
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_,_.,~ -·-... ~ __ _,,,""""1N1"""" .. ~·~·-J --..S~1M-........ ~ ~1 aa..
=--'~ ·--· ..... .:= ------·-1Mlll1·•" --~ -----... c:a11-__.,.,. ..... . .... -
----c..9 ...--·· ..... -----..... __ ,
.-..... --·--·· IJ.IJPl ?lllln--QM_, ---··
?W91Jla ----
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Calendar Continued
zoo and photo gallery. mineral and
~hell displays. buuerfly collect1ons
and children's hands on exhibits.
Also educational programs. docent
tours. knures. festivals. a library and
!tpcc1al act1vit1es._,,For more infor-
matton about r"x hmits. programs and
membership. call the museum Tues-
da} through Sunda} at 640-7120.
OLD WORLD VILLAGE, 7561
(enter ·h e.. Huntington Beach.
Spec1aJt, shops are located an this
'1llage ihat fcature"S the charm of
quaint European 'illages with cob-
bl,·d streets. lantern lights. and 70
murals of European scenes painted
on ex tenor walls by European amsts.
H~IS-5 111.
ORANGE C0'7JNTY PER-
FORMlj\o;G ARTS CENTER 600
1 own ( l'nter Drive. Costa Mesa.
Docent tours of the fac1ltl\ are ofTcrcu
free \'1onda~ and WednCsda} at JO.
JO:JO. 11 and 11·30 aw . ~cc.k.b.
Beginning 1n Janual). tours will alSP
be held at 10 and 10:30 a.m. the first
Saturda' of each month. The tour
takrs '1°S110r!> to manv areas of the
theatre rarel} seen b> the pubhc 1nrlud1ng dressing rooms. the
ba<·kstagc area and The Center
Room. 556-2121 . extension 256.
QUEEN MARY, Long Beach
Harbor at the end of the Long Beach
Freewa}. Exhibits include special
ctTect sound and light shows an the
Engine Room and Wheelhouse re-
enacting a ncar<ollts1on at sea. and
an CAtenSl\e World War II d1spla)
dcp1 ct1ng the-"Queen ·s·· acuvc role as
a troopship. Dail> JO a.m.-6 p.m.
(2 131435-)S 1 l.
RAGING WATERS 111 Raging
Waters Dnve. San Dimas. Enjoy 44
acres of fun. sun and exciting water
rides. 592-6453. SANTA ANA ZOO located at Pren-
tice Park. 1801 East Chestnut Ave ..
Santa Ana. Hours arc 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. with last tickets sold at 4 p.m.
Admission is $2 for adults; 75 cents
for children. ages 3 lO 12 and senior
c1ttzens. Children under 3 and handi-
capped arc admitted free. 953-8555.
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
MISSION, 31882 Camino
Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano.
Features Serra Chapel. California's
oldest building. the ruins oflhe Great
Stone Church. soldiers barracks.
bcaullful ~rdens. and two museum
rooms with artifacts from Native
American and early Spanish culture.
Daily 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m. 493-1424.
SEA WORLD 17 20 South Shores
Road. M1ss1on Ba>. San DiefO. n ngs
in the holidays with the ltghttng of
SQu1h.w~ k)',lo-wer. S_pcc:1al C1\\'
Streets Show n1ghtl). All visitors 10
the month of December receive a fr~
killer whale and calf poster. Sea
World features seven major shows
and dozens of fascinating marine life
exhibits. Sea World's star killer
whales perform in the larJCSt whale
facility an the world. dolphins.trained
seals and sea lions. otters and a walrus
also perfonn at special shows. There
arc four aquariums fcatunng ltve
sharks. sea life and freshwater fish
from all overthe world. Thirty special
educational exhibits arc also avail-
able to Sea World guests. One pnce
admission include"S all shows and
cxh1b11S. Free parking. Guided tours
and ndes arc extra. Group rates and
12 month pass information. call
(619)226-3901 or 826-7213 or
a Delly Pltot Datebook/ Friday, December 23, 1988
( 602 )83S-0600.
SSER.MAN LIBRARY AND GAR-
DENS, 2647 Pacific Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. Roses, cactus,
annual gardens. an orchid con-
servatory. k'oi ponds and a gift shop.
Dajly 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
SIX FLAGS MAGIC MOUNTAIN,
Magic Mountain Parkway exit ofT
Interstate S, Valencia. More than-100
rides. shows and attractions including
an 1800s style craf\.s village and a
Roaring Rapids white water adven-
ture arc offered (818) 992-0884.
SPRUCE GOOSE, Long Beach
Harbor at the end of the Long Beach
Freeway. Howard Hughes' all-wood.
200-ton flying boat majestically
berths for visitors to view the inside
of the world's largest clear-span
alu minum dome. A variety of dis-
plays including modules that show
close-up details offascinaaing areas of th~lane such as the cockpit. flight
dcc-Yan"ff wi ng 1merior arc-festu
See the Queen Mary lisung for more
informauon. JO a.m.-6 p.m. (213)
435-3511. UNIVERSAL STUDIOS, I 00 Uni-
versal City Pl.. Universal City. A
guided tram tour of Univcrsal's
famed 420-acrc back lot and the
Entenainment Center. which fea-
tures five hve shows. is offered.
Admission prices arc · S 17.95 with
children ages 3-1 I at $1 2.95. Senior
admission S 12.50. (8 18) 508-9600.
WILD RJVERS 8800 Irvine Center
Dri ve adjacent to Irvine Meadows
Amphitheatre offers over 40 exciting
water rides and attractions.Groups of
20 or more can ~kc advantage of
Wild Rivers new group admission
rates. 768-6014.
ADVANCE
NEW COUPLES GROUP The Jew-
ish Community Center of South
Orange County. 298 Broadway.
Laguna bch. 1s organizing a new
social couples club. Ages 4S-60. and new residents are welcome for this
social group meeting onct a month.
First meeting will be a coffee and
dessert on Jan. 15 at 7:30 p.m. in a
private home in Laguna Niguel. For
more information on the group. call
the Center at 497-2070.
MARCEL MARCEAU returns to
the Orange County PerformmJ Arts
Center for a night of silent magic Jan.
24. at 7:30 p.m. Tickets arc now
available through TicketMaster and
The Center Box Office. To charge
tickets by phone. call 740-2000 or
(213>480-3232. For additional infor-
mauon. call 556-ARTS.
Dul Ballew, .Jen.:z:0nmaw... Beldl n ...... 11r1u....,. and W-t.mln L tmaD appear la ••n.e llallcal Waad of Baledl-;y---
'Magical Wand' a night
of good entertainment
ByBONNIEJ.FEVERGEON
o.llr .... Ccill ; f I
An entertaining blend of children.
music and make-believe is "The
Magical Wand of Baledi ... currently
on stage at Newpon Theatre Ans
Center.
Directed by the book's author.
Linda BaJlew, ·a mystical story de-
velops around a good-guy m~cian.
an evil wizard and four dcl.iabtful
children -all desirous of the powers
of one mqjcal wand. Enhancing
music and 1¥"cs arc t>rovided by the
productions musical director.
Terence Alaric.
Taking place in an Upper East Side
New Yorlc apartment. the one act play
encourages audience participation as
youn& viewers arc challenged to
applaud. boo and hiss a villain and
cheer on their hero.
Daniell Shaeffer is Alexander. a
handsome. aspiring magician whose
quest for success takes a back seat to
chivalry as he·puts himself m JCOP-
ardy to save four children and their
mother from the clutches of his evil
counterpan. Maldctto, interpreted by
Ron Samson.
Shaeffer and Samson render effec-
tive animation and charisma -
impc:tus for the entire cast. OfTeriflJ a
highlipl is ShacfTcr's "rap." "The
legend of Baltdi," accompanied
rhythmically by the children. It's a
piece in which everyone "ICfs down"
and has a good time.
Brothers and sisttn of the Banks
family -Charlie, David, Pqay Ann
and Jana -are played rcspect1'lely
by BerUamin LicbtmM, Briu Kiter,
Jenny Grumbles and Heidi Tormen.
All are talented youna acton and
actresses delivering a fine evening's
entertainment.
Katy Grumbles provides the voice
of Rabbit, Alexander's faithful friend
and chetrlcader.
Dani Balkw's well do~ charac-
terization of GCOflC/Ckor11na sup-
plies a .-=ntlc seasomng of humor and
rompeSSJon.
The mother of the Banks brood 1s
rendered by Linda Chapin. In sup-
poning roles arc Toussaint Dubois
and DOrothy Gribben.
THIS YF.iAS GIVE MOVIES ........ -..... -.,.,, * Rabbit ultimately prcsen1s the
essence of real ma&ic 1n life as he
concludes, "The real magic is in you .
h's in au of you:· .,...,_ .... ____ ___
.... -... ~l
T(QUILLA SU•lllll UU
ll:•t:• .. J:•te:•
* SCROOGED CPIU
COCOff.neA ..... (llT/"" ----·· OLIVER liCOWAIV IGI ............... 1
AAHlllAll (A) ,.::nr
AJood time for children of all ages.
the final performance of"The M•$•·
cal Wand of Balcdi" is toniaht at 7 in
the Nc~rt TheJtrc Arts Center.
2501 C\iffDrive. Newport Beach. for
tickets and information. call
631-0288.
ntE AMf.JtJCAN Hf.ART
ASSCl:IATION
MEMORIAL JllQ;RAM • ,,_ -,, .. , -, -. ,-:-·'' .... ... --
ABC's 'News From Earth' aimedatalienaudience
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC has pel, in an aside to (cllow Eanhhnp
fiaured out a WI,} around those low who are ~obably more fascinated
N"tdlm ratirws for news specials -and horrified by the absence of
produce one fora potentially vast new "Monday Night Football," .. but what
audience in outer ..-cc. if someday, a thousand light-years
No kiddina. ''The Koppel Rcpon; from now, som~ alien intelliacncc
News From Eanh;' beamed by ABC decoded the signa)?"
on Monda)'. is a year-in-review by In case they do, Koppel and aues1s
Eanhlinas for any alien intclliacnce address themselves to extraterrestrial
out there that miaht tune in. demo-viewers: "So what do we tell you, out
graphics unknown. there in the far reaches of space. about
It mi&ht seem 1 silly notion. but it is us and our planet? Well, for one thing.
an offen enli&)ltenina ·and oc-by the time you see this we'll all be
casionally amusina hour of self-lon1 dead." Koppel informs them
examination that. who knows? miaht cheerily.
be the first interplanetary news-"During this )'car just past. we took
mapzine. And what better Eanhli~ detailed note of a great many things
to repraent us than Ted Koppel. that were so imponant to us. and
Unless Mean Joe Greene. Or perhaps must seem so irrelevant to you." says
Pat Sajak and Vanna While. Koppel. explaining the concept of the
--See...whik newso.epen_pik ~-in-'-a_,,_,car-end wrapup. No doubt many corner and tum yellow. a tc1Cvls1on on Einn rouna sue news si~ travels into space at 186.000 nugets as the resip\ation of U.S.
main per second. "The thouaht may Attorney General Ed M~ just as
fascinate or horrify you:· says Kop-relevant as Vcnutians will.
But if our next-solaM_ystcm neiah-chance to wk to their nci&)lbors on introducina a segment on eanhly
bors, pick up "News from Ean&," other ~ts. "lfthere·s anybody out fascination with UFOs illustrated q.cy 11 hear. amona others.. Surgeon there,· aialcs one hamed woman with clips of sci-ti moVJcs. from "War
General C. Everett Koop on AIDS, "come p!t me." A man who can tum of the Worlds" to "E.T., The Extra-
environmcn talist Jean-Michel his hands upsadc~own on his head Terrestrial."
Cousteau on pollution. fast-talking and encrrcle his eyes instructs the But he docs offer in conclusion "a
comedian John Moschitta on stress. aliens to disrcaard all others. he is the confession:" "'This program was de·
South African Archbishop Desmond true leader o(thc planet. A segment signed much more for us on Eart1f
Tutu on racism. Billy Graham on on narcissism is illustrated by a than for you/' he says.
God. Vladimir Pozner on no-God. montage ofTV commercials: "f~ikc "Sending messages out to the
and Richard Nixon on U.S.-Soviet to get nd ofth1sgray. but I don"tWant fanhcst reaches of the universe. or ~lations. a total dye job and look ndiculoos." even to generations yet unbom here
Th I · h on Eanh. is ... a function of faith. It eon y prominent women on t c Koppel and company cover JUSt program are the United Nations about cverythin• The only apparent presumes that life goes on, either here -pr ta · fi Ba...._.. Da · · .. or somewhere. and that you will feel ... csen uve rom 1u.uos. me overs!ght is no~ ta~ing the opponu~i-
N111 Barrow, who talks about hunger ty to issue an mv1tat1on to the Miss some kinship to us and what was
in the Third World, and UniversePqeant. . importanttous. Wchavcagreatnccd
anthrop0logist Jane Goodall. who to feel that this is so.-
discusses endanacred species. A Half-way through the program. Nor does Koppel warn.our nc1gh-
IMSSllC to ahcns: the sexual balance Kop~I . 11vcs an updat~ on those bors light-years away that 1f they do
of the program notwithstanding. traveltn TV s1paJ~ns..Miwuh:s.1..achli.nhCJe:tcsfuu:c_-_JrE.lccelOlivi.:~::..· 11thice:µsru1gna4t.S01 0fo~r~"S\He.;.~eEs~fr~ro11mro-----""1 females aR-nOt on-the-endangcrcd m~rcsan: "well.,. .
list. -nnnutcs from Jupiter and half-way to a strange and uncontrollab c forces
Saturn." from our planet -A.C. Nielsen Co.
Passers-by in person-on-the-street ··we think about you all the ume:· rcptt$Cntauvcs loolong to wire them
mostly act silly when offered the KoppeJ tells outcrspacc audiences. up. ·
SPIRIT OF REBIRTH AND LOVE CEL EDRA TED IN MANY WAYS ••• r......,.s
_,..,... ... •••••••flll•11H• •··-mm11••·-·-·· 1m111•1,11 c:::s .. ;:: _;-~. p ...... __ •• , .;.... ..... _8_ .,_ __ . ......, --.... --......... -=-· ..,...
"T'M>BIG
THUMBS UP. ..
htlO superior -··· -~•f..,.
0 l '
Christmas, from Ott. 25 through Jan.
S. For ccntunes. gifts were given on
New Year's Day in conjunction with
the Feast of St. Basil. who gave gifts to
the poor. and the Epiphany. .
It was not until the Sth century.
with the advent of the Feast of St.
Nicholas, lhat gift-giving was moved
to Christmas. Stephan1dcs sajd.
"The Eastern church and Western
church moved closer together. But
still there arc djfferenccs... Stcp-
hanides said.
"But it 1s still the season of charity
and giving for all." he said. "That 1s
its esscntt and its JOY.··
I 'ntll \UI'"" .. _,
......
~'llG1'0UR
DE-FORCE PER-
FORMANCF.S by
Tom Cl'llilt and
Dustin Hol'flnan.''
-a..-_47 "41:-IU
0 \I
CRl.ISE
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••
..
Hoff man cruises in' Rain Man'
Apes McG•rr
Registered Nuse
Haatillgtoa Bucb
··Rain Man.. 1s a wonderfully
1ouchin~ and funny film . Like .. Twins· 11 1s a stol) of two brothtrs
who find each other and set out across
the country by car. They get 10 know
and understand each other. Unlike
.. Twins" it is a more reahs11c concepl
and one tha1 1s eAccuted "ell.
The role" of Charlie and Raymond
Babbi tt are rhalleng1ng ones
for Tom Cruise
,1nd D~un Hoff·
man. Hollman is
Raymond. the
old er . aut1st1c
brother taken from
his protected cn-vi ronmen1 and un-
able.-to deal w11h
ha' 1ng hi'> stnrt
rvuunc disrupted. He meets this
dcting challenge "1th a bl'lll'' abk
pcrformanlc. Ht'> portra)al 1s
'>l'nSl\1\1.' and s1ron~
Hollman·, and \ Jlcnc Golm1·s
'cene in the ch."' a1or 1s Jn c\amplc of
the au11st1c '1c11rn~· capac1t~ to l..ccp
allect1on and ernouon~ corncrl·d and
an e\amplc of ho" "ell Hollman 1s able to carry 11 off. HofTman·s
fX•rformance should not be missed
and 1s cena1n to be considered for an
Oscar nomination.
Cruise is tht' fret>-wht>eling Charlie.
aliena ted from his
father since his
teen-age years and
ignorant of the ex-
istence of an in-
s t it u 110naI1 zed
brother. Hts per-
formance 1s ade-
quate but disap-
P<>inting. This is
true especially in the early part of the
picture when Charlie is trying to
reason with an unapproachable Ray-
mond.
The musical score by Hans Zim-
mer supports the mood of the: film
well. Don't mass the closing credits.
They give you an opportunity to
rehve the tnp across the country
through Raymond's ,Photographs as
well as acknowledging ttJose who
work with autistic people and were
advisors on the movie.
BriuFiue•u
Martetiq CommllllicaUODS
SaataA.u
I expect that there will be an
overabundance of praise directed a1
"Rain Man" over the next few weeks.
Professional critics will cite the
performances of Dustin Hoffman
and Tom Cruise as outstanding. the
direction by Barrv Levinson as mov-
ing. and many wail even go so far as to
recommend the film as Best Picture
caliber come Oscar tame. I simply
don't see it. Although Hoffman's performance
-----~ is indeed a master-
piece. ari<f the sup::
porting work by
Cruise is equally
capable. the rest of
the film 1s lost in tedium. In all
honest~. this pic-
ture "ould ha'e
been bener scr,ed
on the small __ ..., screen. as lls con-
tent and message seem much more
appropnate for tcle' 1s1on than for theatncal release.
"Rain Man" is the story of two
brothers. one a disinherited. monev-
hungry hustler named Charlie Bab-
bitt (Cruise). and the other a sheltered
autasuc sava~t named Raymond
(Hoffman) who. despite a brilliance
for calculating numerical equations. displays few other recognizable
human emotions.
The film centers around the greed
of Charlie ts he and Raymond move
westward from Cincinnati to Los
Angeles, where Charlie will attempt
to gaan custody of Raymond. now the
sole beneficiary of their deceased
father's fortune. Alona the way. the
cwo encounter numerous adventures
and throU&h the course of their journey. grow closer, forcing Charlie
to re-evaluate his life.
On those rare occasions when
"Rai n Man"
works, it succeeds
very well. h 's
humor and pathos
at times tjng true.
Overall, the film is
slow and long-
wi nded. failing to
pull you into its
story and its
characters' lives
completelv.
Carel Rossi
c.m,.ier c.u.Jtut
LapuNlpel
I expected a lot from "Ra in Man." I
saw a lot of Dustin Hoffman. This is
good. The film as engrossing. mostly
because Hoffman and Tom Cruise
give such wonderful performances.
Upon reflection though. I realized
there are some thing.s about the movie
I don't like.
HofTman·s~etailed por:irayal of the
aut 1st ac savant
Raymond Babbitt
is impeccable. His
~hildlike curiosit
·o.ve8*ner u... ..._ SdlMI sa.Aeat B•.,._Be9dl
Last Saturday I saw "Rain Man"
starring Dustin Hoffman and Tom
Cruise.
The movie begins with the death of r--~----.Tom Cruise's
• character's father.
He travc:ls to Cin-
ci nnati for the
reading of the will
and discovers that
he was left nothing
but a car. The bulk
of the estate. he ~ ll1> ~ w i t •i---t--..,
brilliant
capab1hties ( uch
as computer-speed
mult1plica11on)
provides a
fascinating look
cams.js.to.go 10.-+-------.-.....--.... brother he had not ---.J even known about,
t;.._a.;;:,;:;.s,i into 1 he "'orld of
auusm.
Cruise has perfected the role of tht'
cock) }'Dung man. His smooth·
talk1ng Charhe Babbitt tsarrORant but
s11ll l1lable. But there some thtngs about the
film 1hat troubled me. We find out
why Charhc had a falling out wtth his
father and we discover wh> Raymond
is 1nstatulionahzed. We are never
told, though1 the reason for their
father's irrauonal behavior toward
Charlie. . I was also bothered by the simi-
larity in storyline to -believe it or
not-tllecomcdy"T~ns." At times
I felt like I was watch in& the same film· Both have brothers meeting as
adullS under uo-
u s ua I circum-
stances. neither
having known of
1he Olb8. Botb-
havc a conoivina
brother ancmptin&
to use the naive
•one. Both inchadea
C1'oss<ountry auto
trip where the
brothers establish
a rappon and become friends. In both
films. the wortdl~ brother te.chcs his sibling to dance in preparation for a
date. Both films show the bfothen
dressing alike.
If these movid bad been released
more than one wcrk apart. I'd be
convinced that 50me ptaotocopyina
had occurred.
an autistic man named Raymond.
played by Dustin Hoffman.
As the estate as wonh about S3
million dollars. he kidnaps Raymond
so that he can get the money he feels
should be his.
The two travel from Ohio to Los
Angeles br way of Las Vegas. whc~
Rarmond s astonishing mathemat-
ica abahtygets the attention of the pit
bosses. At first. Cruise 1s a complete
jerk and only uses Raymond. but as
the time goes on he finds that he has
strong feelings for this man. and
wants to go tocoun to keep Ravmond
at home. I will not divulge how the
movie turns out. ·
To me the movie Sttmcd to go on forever and ever. It was very touching
.and sincere despite the way Tom
Cruise character acted toward Ray-
mond. and how he vainly tried to use him. I found mys.elf gcuing very
anarY at his characttt.
If you want to sec a comedy movie
about two opposite broth ~rs , sec .. Twins.·· But if
you waitt to ~ a
more serious movie about
anothtt pair of
brothcn who arc
opposite. sec .. Rain Man." It is a
very true-to-life
movie about
someone who is autistic and yet has
abilities that compensate for his handicaps.
Overall I felt it was a aood.
worthwhile movie even thoulh 1t
seemed to ao on for a Iona. Ions tirM.
o.tla Boftme• playa Ra ••tlMlc •ftllt wbo hH
Films like ''Rain Man" don't com &'°"I '!er/ of\en.. This antelhge
story of two brothers is so com pell 1 n
wel~~uc::cd and brilliantly am
that n ii datined to become a clas~1
First, there 1s th
maanificent pe
forman ce o
Dustin HolTma
who plays Ra>
mood. a m1ddl llCd autistic sa
vant whose ordcrl and safe world 1 an institution 1
disnal*d whe n h1
~·r brother
by Tom Cruise
Everything works bi movblg •
The autistic savant syndrome has
been utcd to dncribe "a spectacular
skill or talent that occurs in an autistic
or retarded child ... It might seem a
likely subject for a d1sea~f-the·
month television movie. Instead. it is
the theme of a motion picture. "Ra.in
Man." ~bich is t~ most ori&inal and
compclhnt Amcncan drama since
"One F1cW Over the Cuckoo ·s Nest."
Yes. it's a di'ama. thouah, as in
.. Cuckoo," there are hea11y laups.
Euentially it's the up of two Iona·
loll. brotbm ~ins • reconciliation
1p1n11 heavy odds.
Cruite is • rlPICiOUI wheeler-~ .lryiftl lo rnak~ I bundle by 1mporona spons cars 1n Los Aneetn.
His najordeal is intCtTUptcd by nrws
that bis father, from Whom he was Ions ~. has died an Cillcin-
nat1. Cruite attends the funttal and learns he has been disinherited. His father's $3 million estate has been
piaced in trust.
But for whom? Cruise is astouaded
to leam that he has an older brodter.
Hoffman who has been inllitu-
tion&lii".ed most or his life. Cruitc
decides to vinually kidnap the
brother and fllht the will in C11t-fomia.
Hoffman may seem like an 1..aomaton. but he hll 1 superhuman
WI)' with numbers. Thia PQI off II the blackjldl lablc in Las v...._ That
~ameliorate Crui1e•11'9e. and h bellnt ao unden&and and ~ope ' 111 bis bn>&hcr. No IDOd to pvc away all the plot
Saflict IO uy dial the inspired scrip ~ Ronald Bau and Barry Morro
(tilled an Morrow's SlOf')') offers wmhl9 of surpritn. botb comedic an
dnmatic.
Blrry Levinton (MTin Mrn. '"Good" Momi ... Vietnam") direct
in IMllaful style. ft is his best cffo
in whit pn>mllCS to be a d1 ti~ career. He maintains beMldftal b9Jance between the hard drivt._ ~ Cnaite and the child Hire......_ Hofrw••• pertOnnancc 1s a
Video/
New: 'Big Top Pee-wee, '
'Sex?, ' 'StormyMonday'
"Bl1 Tep Pee-wee" (Paramout Home Vld.eo: VHS-
Beta, Ht.t5-SZU5; Rated G> AIDS scare.
So the)' talk about having sex for the fun of tt (Stacy
recalls the lime when she'd ~y to a lover. "Wow. that felt
Pee-wee Herman had a farm, e-i-e-i-o. great. What's your name again?"). But what they really
And on this farm he had a talking pig named Vance. search for ts romance and true love.
a pony who could make pancakes and an entire circusful At the "Oasis Spa," Melissa and Stacy ha,·e the
of strange but good-heancd performers. requisite number of run-ins with awful. wrong men before
Herc is Pee-wee practicing animal husbandry and true love strikes with the men they both had overlooked.
agricultural science with smashin success but fa iling J_ackson bas•n-endearlng deadpan delivery. and she
miserably at making fnends with fol'-._;..--a-nd Thompson htt 11 off as pals. Andrew Dice Cla> brings
. --~~+=--=----r·tt'ri.ch..okcFtificchOu w o clearly would ltke to comic rehef playing an oafish pickup anist with a hean of
.!.. strini up our hero by his red bowt1e. gold.
ond llebllltt. u wllllee, ud Tom Cnd8e oortra,.
lnlaerltled $3 brotMr ClaarUe ID ""Rain Ila.a • .-. -
kidnaps him.
Their cross.<OUnlry journey in
their father'sQld car is really the hcan
offhe film. Cruisc's daaractcr cha nan
from a pecdy. ldfish ~ who only
t kidnapped bis brother for his SJ
million inbcri1ance to a com-
passionate penoa who wants to ta.kc care of the brother he never knew he bad.
r The l'DOll powerful tcene comes
midway tbroulll when Cnaise dis-
covcn dlat the Rain Man, an im-
qinary bai friend he would talk lO
and Ii• witlt durina bis lonely and
embittered da1ldhood, was actually
coniured up &om bis early memories
of RaymOnd. This COl\nection is
imponut bec:aUIC it seems to make
them real brothers. not stranacrs.
Ourina the counc of the film
ainMan.'
toundina. He 1tts msidc the skin of
Raymond Bebbiu and never allows
him to become monotonous or
pniable.Cruile,dashina in his .. Risky
BueiDell" shedes. carries a heavy
load. talki111 It a fast clip as the car
dealer and M the Cxaspttated brother
struali111 to communicate with Ray-
moticl Cruite haemerJCd as a superb
actor as well as iem-aee hcanthrob.
VaJcrim Golino is excellent as
Crui1e'1 undcntandina airtfriend.
Jmy Molen inj(cts humanity into his
role u Raymond's pardian.
Martt Johmon produced the Unit-
ed Artists ftlm which is ra1ed R,
mostly b Cruite's explcdws.
Cruise lcarN how
to care for Ray· o~ci mood. He teacbcs_
him how to dance, o
bow to tell jokes,
and bow to win big
i!' V~ And even thoulh he's never
reaJly able to break
throuah to Ray-
mond's world,
some son of con-
nection is made and it's beautifuJ.
Hoffman ought to be woR.ing on
his acceptance speech because come
April he'll be walking off with his
second Academy Award for Best
Actor. In fatt, I'd say he's a shoo-in.
No other performance this year can
touch what he does in this film. He's
fascinating 10 watch.
Our ratings
*~ ~ WAITP'Oa '
1'llE VIDllO
,
UGLY
::_._)I
The one exception 1s Winnie. the local school ma rm. Directed by Gencv1e'c Ro' en. ··casual ScA ?" does
who seems truly sm11tcn "ith the andr<>g)nous Pec-v.ee. try to deal wnh the sc'\ual mores of the 19 Os and v.nh
Something 1s wrong. though: her blond tresses snarl AIDS in a mature and humorous manner. It is probably
pamfull) under Pcc-wee·s caress. and she persists 1n an admirable effon -but onl) occas1onall) a successful making him detestable egg-salad sandw1 ches for their one.
lunch dates. -By Muy MacVeao, Associated Press Writer
The problem becomes clear v.hen the circus. led b)
Kns Knstofferson. drops in hts yard a la Oz. after a storm "St.ormy Monda)'" Paramo1111t Home Video: \'HS..
Herc 1s the girl of his dreams: Gina the trapeze an 1st. Beta, $81.95-$%9.95; Rated R
pla}',ed by the comel}' llahan actress Valena Gollno. Pee-
wee s in love.
Pee-wee. who 1s already a man-tumed-bo). doe\n·t
e>.ac1ly 1um back into a man in this picture. but he does
seem to be growing up. Whereas ''Pee-wee's Big
Adventure" saw him curling a painted lip at the prospe t
of a date wtth the local bike-shop bimbo ... Big Top" find!;
him asa full-blov.n romantic leading man. with lots ofg1rl
trouble, a real make-out scene and even -gasp! -se>.,
represented in a discreet yet cornball way.
The story of how he wins over the poopy townspeople
and helps the circus put on the best show ever is classic
Pee-wee. as wnuen. produced and performed by his alter
ego, Paul Reubens. Full of all the fun stuff that makes his
sa1urday morn1n1 show so enchanting. the mcuagc here
is that its OK 10 t)e d1ffcre1u ... Big Top" will make kids of
all ages feel good about themselves..
-By Liu Lnltt Ryebaaa, AP Natieul Writer
'"Cueal So?" (MCA ~y~ \'BS, Sit.ti;
Ra&HR)
"Casual ~x?" was an OK idea for~ movie. Two sinaJc women -one fri&htened of sex because of AIDS.
her friend just plain friahtencd of sex -go off to a spa for
a vacation offfte-whceling manbunting.
But "C'asual S«x? .. is not an OK movie. It's silly.
predtctable and rarely funny.
Melissa (Victoria Jack.son) and Stacy (lea Thomp-
son) ~ir offind1n1 men with whom they can develop
mcaninsful relationships. Melissa nearly married the
wrona man. but otherwise has avoided much experience
with men. Stacy counts ofTher former boyfriends. thou&h
her SCAual exploits came to a 9Cf'CCChing halt with tlte
la's .\mcnca \\ed .. in Nev.castle and all thal's tad.)
and d1 tastetul about the L nitro tates hil) i.:ome 10
persuade this Englt~h industnal ctt) to t'mbraC'C the·
tn\'aStOn.
.\ cle,er sc111ng for a romanuc 1hnller and "Storm'
Mo nday" often tS cle\er. as v.cll as suhl) and st~hsh. But
11 also can be too elusl\e and 100 ''olent -there arc
beatings. shootings. bombings.
Cosmo (Tomm) Lee Jones) leads the .\mencans.
while Finney (Sling) is determined not to be pushro
around and ha brought the Krakow Jazz Enscmble 10
mark America Weck at the nightclub he owns and the
Amencans want to buy.
The musicians and the Americans all end up at the
same hotel, as do the movie's love int.ettsts. Brendan
(Scan Ban), who works for Finney. and Katie (Melanie
Griffith). who had been involved with and seems to work
for Cosmo.
Much of the goinp on arc shadier than the shad~
cbaracterl. Why docs Cosmo want control of~.
Al one point. he explains; "We can't be shootina people
around here. We arc supposed 10 improve the quaJ11y of
life. provide jObs and make a lot of money." Yes. but ...
Much of the cleverness involves the Polish mu-
SICtans. When the Amencans art about to bold a "-s-
wav1ng reccp11on. Cosmo learns his band 1sa no-show.So.
the E&St Bloc band performs a Jimi Hendrix-like "Star
Spanalcd Banner." ~riter-d1rcctor Mike F1ggis gets impressive per-
formances from his actors but makes too much of the
v1olen<:c and too little of the motives for the knock-down,
drag-out fiaht over Newcastle.
-By Mary MaeVeaa. AsMCia&H Prtts Wrttu
'Til Tuesday's broken-hearted
Aimee Mann 'cqunting to forever'
EVERYTHING'S DIFFERENT NOW
'TtlT--.y
Epk
"No one wants to be happier more than I do." l\1mtt Mann sinp on "Everything's Different Now ... the third
album by her band. ·T1l Tuesday.
lt'sanawful thing tosa1.. but music fanshavca vested
interest in scting she docsn t ge~ her wish. Mann has built
a JJ"ttY good carur on romantic torment
She reccntJy broke up with boyfriend Jules Shear.
himtelf a sonpritcr with the band Reckless. Sleepers.
providina her with a mother~ of new ~tcnal: Side I 11 a five-song suite that bqins with the
cautious optimism of the 11tJc tune, co-written with Shear.
and ends with the ansry Mann adding an expletive to the
line .. life could be areat" that concludes "(Believed You
Were) Lucky ... The natural temptation .is to run in s-nic when you
hear ooe of the songs 1s lilied "J for Jul~" and features a
frcnch horn. Somehow. she makes 11 v.orl. Mann 1s an
imaginative wnter. able to g.ive a new twist to an old
5Ubjcct. and her mournful "01~ 1s bnghtened b)" strona
pop melodies
"I was counttna to rorevennd ne\.CT even got 10 Io:·
shcs1npatonc point. "When v.e found a npm hea,en, we
should haH'JUSt asttnded then."
Side 2 stra)'s shahtly from the dominant theme.
.. L1m1ts 10 Love" is about a troubled gJri who doesn't
respond to the love of her fnends. On "The Olhcr End (Of
the T elcscopc)." Mann ducts with anotheT noted
wordsm1th. Elvis Costello.
If you think Mann has a t~ life. consadtt Shear
whose ba!'d ~~ its debut album •. few_ months .,: ~ot only 11 ~II h!s dany &.undry bc~na a.ired 1n public. but
his ex11rtfricnd s rttOrd far outtlunn his.
-., .,. ......... Amed8 ......... •rtter-
•
II
Gallery openinis
on ·OC this wee1'
THE AMERICAN H£ART
ASSOCIATION MEMORIALPRCERAM•
N~'~E ~l\...Hll!l.G F'""O
.<"\Jf) ti F f
American Heart &•a
Association ~
BC SPACE GALLERY 235 Forest
Ave .. Laguna Beach. a special interim
exhibit of two bodies of work by Mark
Chamberlain. on display through
Jan. 28. During the holidays the
gallery will be on a partial schedule. so
call head. 497-1880.
GALLERIA CAPISTRANO 31681
Camino Capistrano. San J uan
Capistrano. offers hu ndreds of hand-
M USIC and Lynes
By
COLE PORTER
• NEWPORT CUISINE
Join Us New Year's Eve
From the Family of Award winning &
Critically Acclaimed French Restaurants
In San Francisco, Santa Monica, Santa
Barbara & Palo Alto Comes This Newest
Jewe l ... Chez Pauline, The Latesf Link in
the Chain ... Set In The heart of Corona
del Mar with breathtaking ocean views.
3901 E. Coast Hwy • Corona del Mar
721-9502
Ample Parllin9 • Bancru-t Fadlitiee ~or Hollda,. Partiee
LUNCH • DINRER
11 Ody Piiot Datebook/ Friday, Dacember 23, 1988
~, .
CALIFORNIA DINING
AT ITS FINEST!
,,... ................ ... ...................... ··= .... ., ...... ; .................
NEWPORT BEACH
7148U20IO
37 FASHION ISLAND
~ ............ ,
...... , .... ht .....,.._Ultr-f•
lllllill•o.ilcTt n.~S.-Of
'Oawy Triyllr Tril'
'--~~ -~--
AT
eA'!!!!!:f:,"
~1' (' " ; ' ~~ , • , .
NEW YEAR'S EVE
PARTY!
Seating from 8:45
• Gourmet 5 Course Dinner
• Gypsy Fortune Teller
• Musical Trio
• Danclnc
195 per person
Regular Menu Served
5:45pm -8:00pm
SOUTH COAST VILLAGE
Rnenatloae 751-7153
UncleDon·
Wish Book
was Santa's
big helper
'Las Posadas' nightly re-enacts Jes us' birth
By DONNA AND RAY 01T din ins room and an open-air patio. In taurant serves a buffet lunch and French.dip style beef. lamb. and pork (800 North Alameda SL. Los -'n-
addit1on to the standard iacos. dinner as well. You can also take a sandwiches since 1908. CofTtt 1s still a,clcs). and be within sbon walking
If vou have never seen "Las tostadas, enchiladas and bumtos. the self-guided tour of the wine7 and 10 cents a cup. autance of the El Pueblo.
o.1y ""°' C:.o 111 0 ,
Posadas." a ccnturies-okl Mexican menu includes house specialty dishes sample free wine tastings o their Besides the actual restaurants.
Christmas pa-Jllnt, you can throuah of fajita preparations and seafood award-winning Chardonnays and thett arc the many .. puestos·· (liule Un1onfStat1on is also a good place
th1s wcekendin El Pueblo de Los entrees. Z1nfandels. stands) along Olvera Street that sell w~r~r:.:;ut~u~~:.0~1c~aF~~~~~nJ
Angeles State Historical Park. Los •San Antonio Winery. near the •Ptulippc·s Original Sandwich Mexican fingerfoodsofall vanet1es. to 101 to the Alameda St. exit. Tum
Angeles. Pueblo at 737 ~mar St.. has a tree-Shop. 1001 Nonh Alameda St.. GE'ITING THERE right (nonh) on Alameda. Olvera 1.
"Las Posadas" (the inns or lodg-shaded park avaiiable for picnic located halfway between Ol vera St. You can take Amtrak from the is on the left. directly across from 1ngs) 1s a traditional re-enactment of lunches or dinners. and their res-and Chinatown. has been serving Sania Ana depot to Union Station Union Station.
the biblical story of Joseph and Mary ..---------------------------..---------------------------seeking shelter·beforc the blnh of -.............................................. ,
Jesus. I rtr '-'JI Many communities and neiah-I . \l.l.tOwnc1"ou1e I
borhoods throu&hout the Southwest I SPECIAL NEW YEAR'S MENU P'ROll 4Pll TO 7Pll I
and Mexico perform "Las Posadas" I BAKED RED SNAPPER BELLE MEUNIERE every ~ember. for nine evenings CORNISH CAME HEN
before Christmas. ™~li~---_!!B~R~:!~~~~~G<-. I .-\1 El Pueblo in Los Aflldcs. i PRIME RIB OF BEEF I
. geant ta es place alona Olvera VEAL PICCATE I
1rcet. where spectators watch the I PORX CHOPS APRICOT procmion of Mary. Joseph and the I NEW YORK PEPPER STEAK I
chorus going from mn to inn. Olvera I ~.f.:'~':.-~ng' ~~~~~=: 5::' I
Street merchants enact the roles and or Oolkd ~rsk)...ct Poc~co '" .1a~1ttt I
sing all of the dialoaue in S~nish. At •• Make Re°'servations For Final I the end of "us Posadas.' children
are 1n,1ted to participate in the I Seating fro-9pm 'til 1989! I breaking of a p1nata. There is no ..., I
charge for ,viewina the st~t event or I lncludina Cbampaene • llaslc • Dancing • I
pan1c1pating in the p1nata festivities. • •• Hats• Nobe Makers• Etc ! ! ! I
.\goodday tripitinerary is to arrive I (tl bt
9
Pll llEww' I m 1hc afternoon. have time to take a nu
\\alking tour of the historic Pueblo •, ro n . Cornish Game Hen w/wlld I area (considered Los An&eles' ~ b1nhplace), and then have a pre-ou4e Rice Stuffln~. New York I
pageant Mexican dinner in one of the I ~ » S teak • Pr1me~lb of Beef Au I
neighborhood restaurants. I Jus • Baked Halibut
The best place to bc&in a walking I 32802 So. Coast Highway Bearnaise I tour 1s the Plaza (Nortfi Main Street (At Crown Valley Parkway) .,. __ ,..,,with F"nch Onion Soup or I I ~~~~ ~~ Ca and Pasco de la Plaza), a frequent South i.aguna Mixed Grttn Salad with esar I
gathering place for fiestas and open-I Re.nations Dressing. Steamed Rice or Pars/1,ed a1r concens. I 496-5773 • 499_2626 PotatoeandStrtnglkans AJmon lne I
Al one comer of the Plaza is Fire "•••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~ House Number One ( 134 Pasco de la L----------------------------1 Plaza). the city's oldest fire station.
sen 1ng from 1884 lo 1897. Here you
can '1cw the firemen's livina quar-
ters. and one offirst fire en&ines Used
in Los "ngclcs. as well as helmets.
unilorms and other memorabilia.
i.\lso faci s.!1 the main square is The
Old Plaza Church (S3S Nonh Ma in
Street), established as a chapel for Los
.i.\ngeles' first settlers who arrived in
I 1l'l I Originally ontr 18 by 24 feet.
th e rhu rch was rebuilt in 1822 wit h
proceeds from the sale of seven
barre ls of brandr from Mission Sa n
Gabriel. You wil notict that the front
has been rebuilt with brick; this stems
from the heavy rains in t 860 which
damaged the original adobe walls. The hell tower has also been rebuilt in
more recent times.
The block-long. brick-paved
Oh era Street is the main auraction in
El Pueblo. Reprded as the Wcsrs
first pedestrian shoppina mall. this
colorful street is lined with shops
filled w11h a variety of handcrafted
gOOds such as kather baas and
accessones, silver jewelry, ceramics.
sift items, and Mexican candies
(includina the unusual confections of
fresh diced cactus candies and can-died squash).
At various shops alona the street.
you can watch cnf\smcn at work as they make pottery, pinatas. aJassware
!'nd candles, and shape WfOUaht iron
into myriad CTations. This is the place to buy a c:ustomizcd. madc-10-
order pinaaa ror your next peny. or
home acccssorin at aood pnces.
At 10 Olvera Street you will find
A vita Adobe, the oldest dwellina in Los Aftldes. which dlltes to about
1818; today, it ii a mu.eum that ~howcues the California lifestyle
uom the e8rtielt da11-
All&A Ul'l'AUUNTI
I •La Goloadri-. 17 Olvera St. is
ocated ia Ille lri.aoric Pelanconi
Houte, an 1 l50I home with a larlC
Fw a #lot titrle in #ewptNt BellCh on
New r .. ~ ff/8, join os at Petken'
Seafood Grill.
Upstairs. in our view lounge, the Dexters
Wiii be playing all tvenmg. Yoll'll get free
appetizers, noise makers and party hats,
and we'll all toast the New Year With cham·
pagne. AH for only a $10 cover charge.
Enjoy mesquite grilled fresh seafood and
beef along wrth our chef's specials-all
served unal midnight m our bayview dinmg
rooms. Dinner guests enjoy our lounge
ft'ents free of charge. See.aw,_ 111111 vali1111-
1IU1J..»lf.
Start the New Year
off with a bang.
s199·~~
Celebr.ne the New br in style at the new~ SuitCS-
hold in Irvine with a new year's pac~ to rcmcmber.
lbur two-room suite awaits. When you check in any
time 2ftcr 3 p.m., you on relax iri the luxury of your
two-room suite, complete with priv.ne bedroom, ~te
~room, wet bar with refrigerator and rwo color
t~.
A compllmcaary man;aacr's recepdoo. Stut your
evening off right with a complimcntuy two-hour nuruiger's
rcccpdon.i-
'lbalt the new year. With a full course dinner for rwo, live
cnten2inmcnt, party f.wors, 2nd dancing into the ni8ht.~'ll
also~ a complimcnwy dwnpagnc tor.Nat midnight.
Brunch on the bou9c. Your paclclge also includes a~
brunch on New )br's day, served from 9 a.m. to noon. And
late chcck-OUt is av.Wable.
So join ~for the new ye21: Call now for reserv:uion.s. And
Ill2kc 1989 a ye:u-to rci 1 icmbtt
EMBASSY
5ui\-E5 HOTE[
You don't h2vc to be a flt Cill to enjoy The uite Life•
l&VINB,CA
2120 Main Street
(714) 553-8331
t-80CMIJ8-1882
• Price ii pa SUit< pt'T coup6c 12 t 198 only and--b( purt::h»td 35 ~ ~t PKkAF
-Svbf«t 10 .. t and k>al ~
D9My Plot O.tet>ook/ Friday, December 23, 1988 1a
1 / •
______ _.. ____ -
?lewpoet
lJeac' 9.i
Ope11 '7"e
CHRISTMAS EVE
1Patee/ec~t
'i!JIM/Jt9 wltl
8t1au/ip 7'aUIM9 '7eal#eilt9
TRADITIONAL ROAST TIMKEY ONO --·--·--·--
OutOnTheTown
OF T HE WEEK
By DORll POLLEY
When Richard Nixon made his historic trip to China
In 1972, he. not only opened up that country to dlplomecy
with the West but he also dllCOYered the pleuurea of
Szechllan cuisine.
. .
According to William Wang, co-ownef and hoat of ·
Costa Mesa's Golden Dragon restaurant, when the
president was entertained on the trip he WIS delighted
with the spicy, fragrwit dishes of the North. He wu
accompanied by a large entourege of polftlciens, CW T--Der •:\:'-...__wife"' .,.. diplomata, adviscn and jcu"MMsts Md, upon their --...,
rn..to th8_un~JatM~U.Amlf'k:iiana..W. .. i.io1c-fO---i)jlu--Cid) •uc •••
..... ~spr=eed the word about thll wonderful and largely emootlaly at tbe Golda J>niloa,
--·--·--·--unknown style of cooking. Prevk>usly. ChlMM r... Barbor 819d., Coeta ......
--taurants In this country featured Cantoneee style food,
Also Serving
Our Regular Menu ·--·--·
delicately tailored to AmericM taste. s~dl of frelhnesa and quality. When they
Wang says that this ewnt made It pollible for many needed, Wiiiem'• lister and brotheta, Penny. John
fine Chlnele cooks to come here Md Introduce Herry, help out.
Mandarln-SzechuM food to the Western world. And. Mke Golden Dr..aon la a delghtful piece for femlly dining
mlsaionarles, their deYot... continue to spread the The tablle and booths.,. i.ge and comfot1able and
word. menu 11 IO ui.natve It would be lmpOllible to not
· Wang's own famlty left Taiwan about that time for IOmethlng to IUit 9Very0M'• telte. With some humor.
Southern C.llfornla. In Los Angelet, they owned and ewn found a dlth cahd ChlneM Kentucky o.Aght,
operated the Cafe de Chin for MYeral YM'I· Hit father, fried ch6cken dllh.
Yuan-Der Wang, built a reputation as one of the most Among lhe long Hsta of epedalt• from the kitchen
eccompflahed Mandarin-Snc:huen chefs In the U.S. we counted 21-.'ood entrw, 11be91,11 foul, 10
The then 14'k-YMf-okt Wiiiiam, etde9t of four and a VM1 .r9'1 of app9tlzwt. eoupe. noodlea, egg
children, entered the Loe Angeles IChool system wttft a ~==rice--. language hMdicap. HOW9\lef', four montha of lntenliw dtnner1 .. ofl9red. And the hoe
Enali9h study prepared him for the ec:tucatlon which wu says that tf you don't find the dllh you'w..., looklnO
tp foffow. Atl of his hard wort( and study ~ In a on the menu, lhe cMf haa been known to crMt• one
degr• In economics from UCLA. you.
Undoubtedly, Wiiiiam Wang would be doing~ Golden Or9g0n'a i.ge dlNna ... II IUbt
thing elM now If It were not for his atroog..,.. Gt family. decorated In toft colon wtth an occailonal ~of red While he waa completing his education, hie s--tta At the entrm ii a ,_ .... lizled wooden of
opened a smell Gotden Oregon restaurant on Hatbor w.men. The tablM .. round In the CNnw
Boulevatd In 1975. With his father running the k"c:hen and lhe dllW'8 cMlrl .. C8r¥ad roau ood wtth
and his mother. ''Mama Chi'' as the II aftK1kMietely bfOC8de CU1NOna. n.. .. M¥are1 ......... -.n.i -----------------------! knOwnbythelrcustomera,taklngcateofthedlf*'I--. and .... One Dalntina .. of nine carp ·-rull)l the bullllell gr.w. Wlfllam'a help, his~ acumen ....,,.,...., • depk;t9d In a lamow CNnw poem.
Join us this Thursday. Friday, Saturday and Sunday
for outstanding lw entertainment wfth a fabu/ou$ bay
vitlwl Outside on our watmide dect ... or insitM ... the
musics hot/
.... n-21 ..,... 1rtph,.•d"...,. .,._ 1.
.................. ",.... ..... 1
and his youth were needed. The,....._. II open M¥ar\ cMyi a welll fClf
In 1985, the resteurant wa expMded Into the muc:h anddhwfroM 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. A.,... UUlllJ19IAI lar98f. beautifully appointed establi9hment that ft • lundt 11 on.red Mond8'1 dWougtl FriMy. tt.. dlnlnQ ro
today. hald9 120 ...... and ttw9 .......... ---t Again the strong..,.. of f8mlty prw .... ...,_Chi accanna d1t1 up to IO. Thse'• IPW lor trnall ~
Is there most ~ ~ling. ar..cing ~ and too. Tiwe 11 lllo. cockt.al .......
welcOfning tome of them with an affilctionate hug. Father TheGolden Oraaon ~ Mandr.n Reetaurant
Wang..,_. hie time In the kitchen, ...,.,tltlllig and ioa.ted el 2023 ftarbor Blvd., Com Meea. F
cooking and making.,,. that w:h d'9tt meets his h6Qtt Information Ot nn vatlonl. phone 642-7112 . .
J
OF THE WEEK ................ 1'49_ ..... ,_
1YI 1•111, llR _, -
" 1111,llR elll ........ , ... ....
211119111D1 ........ . • ··;:1·: ...... . 1¥1 Tu .. ....
11111,llRHH•lel
A9rnowe ..... from the green and red peppers.
~and cut 1ntoeer¥1ng ._(..,.me •c:Nc*en).
Heel pen Ind add ol. Heet ol to 300 dagrw. Add the
c:Ncteri placeland ldrwlltl aepetula to pr...nt Mk:klng.
Fry °"" medium .... tor about 30 leCOIMta Ot untll c:Ndceri dWl:c cdOt and II almoal cooked; remowe.
Drain .. but a•••poow•of °'"°"' ... .,.,.and ,...t until ¥ary hot. Add the pie and atir-fry untll ~t
Add the red and .... peppers and stir-fry '°' $()
eeconde. Add the rice wine, dllldlert and mixture. Taea ....._to mbl and IPflnkla ...... WllM ol. Tw again
llitd tWUMHe. T .. l*dl PoUftd of bon .. W dildlen
brelllt...,beM11 ..... b~llga.(8 at...8 ---
1'Al 1•111m.tsrm1 .. ., .. ,~ .....
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On The Town
DATE NIGHT
ATPERo·s
SA TUROA Y EVENtNGS 5:30-10:00
COMPLETE DINNER
I FOR TWO
Baby R.ack or Lamb-
~o::" ::": REG. 134.00 =· ~ .. ~-:.· an• ::;. W:ou':"': FOR 2
~
2221 North M•ln • Huntington Beach. CA • Seacilff VIiiage
_PI:Q@'6 960-7784
(Editor's note: This is the sixth in• ner-up: Corbett BarkJie for "How to thiscolumn'shighcsthonor. This will
aeries of columns reviewiq abe ,ar Say Goodbye," StoJ>-(iap drama be bestowed Sunday when the curtain
1988 in Oran,e County Theater) therapy group. . , . rises on the Daily Pilot's 1988 man
Honorable mention -Sheri and woman of the year in Orange
In a year marked by fannorc than Savage:, "Who's Afraid of VirJinia County theater.
.. ,..
the usual number of superlative Woolf?" Garden Grove Community r-------------
community theater productions. it Theater; Joyce Ericksen, "The Gin
stands to reason that those actors and Game," Huntinaton Beach Pia -(
actinse? who rise t~o~t~h~u~o.p~o~fttb~cfVho~1~1sc~~awn~d~K~a~1cc~-'!sf:orh:~·-A· ~~t f?i======~=====~-------t heapnave rendered performances of Watch," Newpon Theater Ans
particularly high quality. Center.
Orange County produced many
such individual accomplishments in BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR -1988, and winnowing the list of Tony Vatsula for "P.S. Your Cat is
impressive ponrayals to five in each Dead." Garden Grove Community cat~ory was, no easy task. Yet Theater. RunneT-up: Mark Cook for tradition demands that four pcop~ be .. Playina Doctor," Hunungton Beach
singled out for special honors. and P1ayhousc.
this year the tnbute carries special Honorable mention -Dtmun importance due to the excellence of Christy, .. Night Watch," Newpon
the field. Theater Arts Center; John Hunt·
Eliminating. as we must. those ington. ''How to Suecttd in Business
l)Crformanccs mounted at the Irvine Without Really Try1ng." Laguna
Community Theater because of this Playhouse, and John L Marino, "The
columnist's involvment with that White Arrow," Newpon Theater Ans
group, herc is the cream of an Center.
especially glowing crop -the Daily
Pilot's award winners in community
theater for 1988:
BEST ACTOR -Ashley Carr for "Who's Aftaid of Virginia Woolf?" at
the Garden Grove Community
Theater. Runner-up: DOuglas Rowe
for "The Lion in Winter." Laguna
Playhouse.
Honorable mention -Marc Wh it-more, "Monday After the Miracle.··
Costa Mesa Civk Playhouse: Mike Moon. "P.S. Your Cat is Dead.''
Garden Grove CommunitJ Theater.
and Joshua Kaye. "The Gin Game.."
Huntinaton Beach Playhouse.
BEST ACTRESS -Susan Adams
for .. Monday After the Miracle."
Costa Mesa Civic PlayhouK. Run-
BEST SUPPORTING ACT RESS -Deanna Pampcna for "Monday
After the Miracle," Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse. Runner-up: Emilie
Cheryll for"Who's Afraid ofVif)inia Woolf!" at the Garden Grove Com·
munity Theater.
Honorable menuon -Debbie Grattan, "The Lion in Winter." Laauna Pl.tyhouse; Renata Flori n.
••ffow to Say Goodb}e. •• Stop-Gap.
and Harriet Whitmycr, -Harvey."
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse.
These are the stars who shone
brightest on the local level durina a vinlalC year in community theater.
And two individuals 9rhO dis-
tinguished themselves above a.nd
beyond the call durina the year-and in several prca.ding sea.sons -await
SHRIMP
COCKTAIL
1.95
TUREEN OF
CLAM
CHOWDER
1.95.
Gala
NEW YEAR'S PARTY
Reserve Now
lrY1HISU
O.eoNm1 • lunct\ • ~ ~·e Port.es 'lo ;xy--
ton Oeoc> ~ 714 ~ 2555 ~
STUFFED
MUSHROOMS
1.95·
Visit Our Fine Restaurants
feat urinK Fine Seafood and Oyster Bar
ANAHOM
tO!I W IAU IOAO
1710"1·.U.
ANAHIH• HILU
SIC! ( S-AN C-r-IW
(7141 '1•·SI•
DANA l'OINT KAHOtl
1910...onw
11141• .... 1'5
LAGUNA HILLS
2tCl.\S fl. rotlO llOAO c1f\1 l'JO· .....
"',
-1---
Out On The Town
Go figure the city that killed the Golden Bear
Looking at the people and events March and construction is slated to
that helped shape the )Car in rock ·n· last a yearlo 18 months.
roll. th ere was plenty to cheer about. ..We don't really have any
But despite a mult11ude of inspira-preconceptions about what type of
11onal happenings. such as Amnesty venue 1t will be." said Stephen
lnternauonars .. Human Right s Kohler. the project's principal re-
Now' .. tour. 1988 had its share of development Sl;>CCialist ... We just
disappointments. embarrassments want 1t to lit in nicely with the overall
and other odd occurrences. mu.··
One oft he years strangest concepts So after leveling the.htstoric-6ol<t-
'""olvcs lhe..-.C-11~ of HummgTon en Bear -as well as forcing the
Beach and its downtown redevelop-closure of two alternative music
ment proiect known as Pier Colony. nightclubs (Safari Sam·s and Spatz).
Can )OU imagine 130 condominium the City o( Huntington Beach now
un11s. a six-cinema complex and an wants an upscale but harmless night
assonment of commercial and office spot to attract more tourist-generated
space on the cast side of Main Street revenue. Apparently such things as
at Pacific Coast Hi~way? supponing the local music scene and
This aesthetic n1ghtmare""11ll also respecting and preserving history
include a 3.000-square-foot .. enter-mean little to the city•s planners.
tamment complex · (commonly re-Another puzzling situation con-
ferred to as nightclub). Ground is cerns the activity. or more ap-
ex cted to be broken in February or ro riatel the inacti vit . of UCr s
•============================================•
'I Red Lion is
the last place
got
You're invited to a New Year's Eve Party featurin g
the 50s and 60s sound of Jeri and the Jets.
PARTY PACKAGE.
Gourmet dinner for two.
Unlimited cocktails.
Complimentary
champagne toast.
Live music and dancing.
Hats, noisernakm & confetti.
Deluxe guest room fur two.
Late check-out New Year 's Day.
$249 per couple.
lncludes tax & gratuity.
ror reservations, please call:
(714) 540-7CXX>, ext. 345.
(e!!PJ!9DJ
3050 Briscol Smict. Costa Mesa
88er .c~ ledm~ ,'(&bn=t \JIOOdstsO torA '(I o
Deity Pilot Dateboc*/ Fridey, December 23, 1911 ·•·
JOHN
Roos ~ that often bypass the county during
their tours?
"The competition is touah. particu-
larly in the summertime," responded
Steve Neal. Bren's director of oper-
ations. 0 8ut we definitely have hopes
of getting more shows (only about six
were presented for all of 1988). I've •••lll!!!!!~~!l!l!ll•••L_bbad~ -L-Aum~-Of convCAMions within the last week and a half with at
least three promoters in this market.
We're seriously considerina datci for
upcoming tours."
multi-million dollar Bren Events
Center. The mid-size. multi-purpose
facility docs get extensive use as the
home court for ucrs basketball
team. but it has been greatly under-
used as a concert facility.
The 5.700-<:apacity Bren Center
could be Orange County"s answer to
the 6.200-<:apacity Universal Am-
pitheater. Wny not book rock acts -
like Terrence Trent D'Arby. Keith
Richards, Bryan Ferry. and Siouxsie
and the Banshees. amon others -
Other forgettable moments of
1988:
THE MOUTH THAT ROARED ...
h's discourqjng that some obscrvcn
art comparing Sam Kinison with the
late comic Lenny Bruce. Pnor to his
drug and alcohol addiction. Bruce
was a challenging, insi~tful com-
municator and social critic. Kinison,
whose .. Have You Seen Mc Late '!"
STARTING DECEMBER 26th
• Poec:hed
11eses • Fresh
nw ...... Plano
South Coast Crystal Court• 33}3 Beer StNet • C.-. Meu
LP is a tiresome assault on the sen
may have. Bruce's bite but none of
style orwn.
PART-TIME LOVER OR P
FORMER ... While th~·s no de
ina the talent of Stevie Wonder.
gifted performer nonetheless ante
many of his fans durina his Octo
:oncef1 ...... ~~
The cause? For starters. Won
began his concert nearty an hour la
But he added more fuel to the fire
ending the show abruptly a
awkwardly as he mumbled: "I'd lo
to play more for you. but ifs curfi
and they're (the amphitheater) pu
ing Ole l>iua on me."
TillN' CAllE OF BUSINESS
Pcrbal)s the year's most mlslead1
tour involved BTO. a group front
by Tim BKhman and several clon
trying to impersonate ·the origi
Bachman-Turner Overdrive.
Now Serving ••• ,
-11-llFllT
~~~ROS ......... 11•
=~~.~.~~ ....... ,.
MACHACA ............... •1•
~~~ ..................... '1"
SwY9d w/Tortllla.
RMr#ld s.n. & Fruit
....... 1 .....
14191
1712PIMIRlle
COSTA..U
The
Art
OfFlawH-
Good Indian
Food ls Nol
Just Curries
A/II/ Heavy
Spices ...
c
w
I·
OutOnTheTown
V"ariety is th€ Sf>iee. ef Galif ornia Pizza ·Kitchen
I could have swom I was in the a.i_ry •. with cathedral-style windows
Beverly Center u a sleek escalator of1erina bits of an ocean view, high
deposited me at the entrance of ceilings and a graphic, contemporary
California Pizza Kitchen, in the kind of decor that's bound to breathe
Bullock's Wilshire wina of Fashion new life into this end of Fashion
Island. Island.
Donald Bren has been carving The pizzas arc supposed to be
Fashion Island UJ> for so Iona that it's individually-sized but they're big
a pleasure to find there's been a enough for two pco~e. especially if ~hod to the madness of tli those twoupcople also share a salad.
shopping center's re<:<?nstruction: na the SiladS, oddly cnol:Jlh, arc the---_
CPK emeries as an catenc to attract rcaJ stars here. pizza, which incoreoratcs Pieces o
office worktr$, babies in strollers and One of these, with romaine. water-chicken breast mannated in a won-
shoppcrs, just in time for the last-cress, aorpnzola and walnuts, is a dcrful, spicy peanut/singer/sesame
minute Christmas rush. stunner dressed in a delectable bath of sauce, crccn onions. bean sprouts.
Thecrazeforthin-c:rusted,dcsianer balsamic basil vinaigrette ($5.95, or julienned carrots. cilantro and
pizza isn't new; Wolfian& Puck has $3.50 for a half-salad). Mixed leaf roasted peanuts ($7.95).
been scrvirt1 pies like these for years salad with prtic croutons. shaved The cheese docs. however. need to
at Spago. But it's a pleasure to find romano cheese and cacsar drcssin& is be in place on the roasted prtic pizza
pizza with creative toppinas without another winner (also $5.95 or $3.50). -made with your choice of chicken
havingtododtcthcpaparazzi in West A terrific shrimp Louis costs or shrimp and Maui onion (very
Hollywood or drive up to Beverly $8.95/$4.95. sweet). chopped parsley and shallot
Hills or Los An,eles to one of the lcantakcorleavc thcspicychickcn buttcr.AtS7.95forthcarilledchickcn
other locations Of CPK. of which pasta salad ($6.50), which is best aodS8.95fortheshrimp, this is one of
there arc now six in California and ordered as pen of a triumvcrate of the best pizus on the menu.
three in other sca\CS. salads (mixed leaf and tuna come Pckina duck pizza -with duck
The Newport Beach CPK is one of with the chicken. in this case, for tm;ast, season~. mushrooms, arcc.n
thcchain'slaf'FSllU>rcS. lt'sli&htand $7.50). onions and ho1s1n sauce, $8.95 -1s
I Pizzas arc made in a wood-fired another rcaJly Sood marriqe of
oven. Mozzarella cheese is a given. in Oavors. Where. oh where. however. hi_ ~ , addition to other cheeses specified on did they come up with the mushy '#'elf' 'llU I the menu: If you like, you can ask melange of bana.na chutney.
them to hold the mozzarella, which parmcsan. green onions red and
isn't a bad idea if you're having yellow peppers. smoked pork loin and ew something like the Thai chicken blackened shrimp they serve on the
at
"' 'NNl.t,lc &11e11ill1
ill " Mtt1111 "'
111/N¥19 .. Ill«
""" /IUI elllN """' a11ti ~ tl«Wce
< 675-4904 >
Lundi • a.nn. • Sundey
llt\lftdl • Coalltmlll • ~
3421 Via Udo
N9wpor1~
Put Inter win Its ...
GcaMlwlie .... M1 Tl ••Board
Caribbean shrimp pizza(S8.95)?This cilantro in a tequila li mcandJalapeno
one would make the fellow who sings pepptt cream sauce ($8.95) -
.. Don't Worry, Be Happy .. croon an elcvatcsfoodFromMarstoahighan
entirely diffcttnt tune. form of grocery-list frivolity.
Pizza toppinp arc purely subjcc· Grilled items may be ordered to
tive, of coune. and one woman's accompany any pasta. Grilled duck
favorite will be another's nightmare. sau,.with the spicy flavorofcumm
CPK has plenty of choices. and if costs $3.95 on the side: chicken
they're not aJI perfect, at least they're sausage ($3.95) and gnlled breast of
interesting. ctuckcn ($4.50) arc also available.
Do try the moo shu chicken cal2onc Dcsscns arcn 't listed on the regular ($8.~ucrybettcrthan the-frozfl}-men~andJ.hey] bnn&_iQu a pepperoni calzonc you'll find on selection of cheesecakes. some Wh:~tt~e-------11
supermarket shelves. Calzone, little chocolate chip ice cream or -m)
known in SoCal. is a staple in New fa vonte -a slice of chocolate pecan
York. it's sold on every street comer pie. An ice cream sundae is topped
and eaten ou(-of-hand while strolling with luscious hot fudge sauce. then
down the bou&cvard. given a dusung of peanuts. Kul)g pao
And the bric chccsc calzonc ($8. 95) ice cream? Yuck. Whatever happened
is filled .with spinach, garlic. onions to wet walnuts.. another New York
and delicious bric, seasoned with an invention?
exciting, spicy mixture of cayenne Overall. California Pizza Kitchen
and cumin. Not for the timid, this iswonhacoupleoftripsa weckupo n
one, it's •uaranteed to give your the cscalator. Two can dine glut-
chceks a rucc. ruddy. seasonal glow. tonously for under $25. with plent, of
Pastas and pilled sausagtS arc up-tempo. inv1gora11ng ambiance
homemade, but I find the pastas to be thrown in for Jood measure.
a bit gummy. Purist ltaJian chefs CaUhnda Piua ~Idea. Newpert
often use dried rather than fresh Cater U• die a.Tied'• Wu.Mtt
pasta, and they especially don't like to wile>· Ut-iitl. l.-cll m .._., -
mix seafood or creamy sauces with m aU ,... .. 18 M&wea -..Uy.
the non-dried variety of noodle. Majer C'l'eMt eara. $11-$15 max, per
Chicken-tequila fettuccine -flat penea. Majw cre4Al cans. Part
spinach noodles wi th chicken. tri-..,. El 1ert.. Grill; &de lite
colored peppers. red onion and fresh eema.cer ., .. die resaa ... 1.
DINE! DANCE! CELEBRATE!
with The Confrey Phjllips Trio * Hot & Cold Buffets * C hampagne *
* Lave Entcnainmcnt * Dancing *
* Party Hats* Pany Favors *
. tlimited Seating For Supper
t Reservations Requested
tS60 Per Person -· eludes bottle of champagne
tS25 Per Person illr bu/fe'
{flJ )
o.ly Plot DMebookl FricMy. December 23. 1918 11
aaer cs ~m<' o ~,,.. \lloode o' ,q -.t
,.
-Special advertising review --------------------------..;._-----------------------l
Restaurant Spotlight ...
Meyur Culelne of tndle Bhuna (lamb cooked with veg-
A perfect place to have an early etables); Palaka Paneer (creamed
New Year's dlnn« bef0<e going on to spinach cooked dellcatety with
a midnight cefebratlon Is the lovely, cheese cubes): Ralta (cultured
charming Mayur Cuisine of India yogurt with potatoes, cucumbers
Restaurant. 2931 E. Coast Highway, and onions): Mayur Salad; M11ngo
Corona del Mar. The first seating will Chutney; Naen Leaverwd Breed; and
be at 6 p.m.; second seating at 8 p.m. Rice. The dessert la Rasmalal (home-
Seating is limited so make your made style cheese In a sweet creamy
reservations early at 675-6622. Your sauce) and a delicious hot cup of
mood will be lifted with festive cappuccino.
decorations and flowing cham-~
pagne. All for $35 per person. Antonello Rtatoren ..
The fixed menu will begin with The best way to start a New Vear is
Mulligatawny Soup (a delicately to feast upon a gourmet dinner In the
spiced lentil soup garnished with rice award-winning, elegant old·w0<ld
and chicken). Followed by Chicken AntonellO Rlstorante.
Pak or a (drumsticks dipped in mildly Owner Antonio Is giving you plenty
spiced batter and then deep fried); of room to kick up your heels for
Chicken Tlkka Masala (boneleSS dancing to a live band until 1:30 a.m.
Tand00<I ~ken cooited ln-a480--T~-prht ftxe dilnter me.iu
sauce, onions and spices); Lamb will begin with Carpaocio with Trutne
"With
Brandon's
New
Holid~ Buffet
Your
Christmas will
never be the same! "
O\LY Sl-t.l}:; per pt>rl>on
t:tuldrrn under I! 5'1 l.l'i
T1qht':-t':l\ltn11f~1) '11~1\f'~11udan11I) a ~1hth<') li'.i\llr \
1rad1t11Kul Chrbtrm.' buff rt a1 Brandon '
Brandon's Tradi1ional Chris1mas Buff~
Tweivl· EkgJOI SalJJ\
FJncy RoJ\I T urkey w11h Apple Almond "i uffin,.:
Prime Rib of Red
Honey c;IJted H.1m
SeJsonJI Vegcc,1bft·,
CrlJLcd Y.im'
Whipped PcHJltlt'~ Jnd C1blc·1 (1r,1vy
fresh C..r.1nberry Relish
Dcl1~hcful Dc-s err~
Pumpkin Pie
Holiday Buffet I lam to 8pm
Make Your Reservations Early
The Bevecly Heritage Hotel
I ROO B.arbcr Lanc Milpnas 108-·H2·M 11
\\'IOAvcnucof thcArrs,Cosra Mesa 7 14·n i·l~O~
Rescrvar1uns recommended
Ad1Jccn1 to 1he Bt'vcrly Hcriragc Horcl
OU (wafer thin al6cea of r• Net
marinated In truffle otl). Then you wt•
be aer"9d Rotetli Al Maacarpone
(large thin pasta rolled Md stuffed
with rnozurellacheeleMd pr<>Kiut-
to topped with maac:erpone d'9IM sauce).. The third coune 11 tnulata di
Gi.tdlno (a mixture of lt.,lan garden
lettuce, mache, arugola, Md rad-
lcchlo toaed Mghtly with virgin otive
<Ml Md Parmeaen ctteeee).
Theentree(fourth coune) la Vitello
AUa Nec:ct (reek of veal with porclnl
mulhrooms and trutne sauce).
The great dinner la about to come
to an end, but first you must sample
the Creme 8nJIM with Fr99h Berries
and Cream.
You'" tow your eventng. For
r9181'V8tlons caM 751-7153. The price ta '95 pei peiecM. Seating le HnWted
ao make your relefVattona Mrly. For
the late celebration party, reeer-
vationl wtll begin •t 1:45 p.m.
For 81'1 early dinner, you may dine
from the a lac.rte "*Ml from 5:45 to e p.m. -3800 s. Plaza Or .• South CoMt Vllage, Santa Ana.
Glennl'• With the tlntding keys of the red
baby grMd piano, babbling wat•
foun.--to c:t-.r you and the lnest
of ltallen food, you•a be glad you
came to Gianni'• to cetebrat• tht
coming MW year that wHI bring
prosperity, health, WNlth and happi-
neu to our patrone.
The Champegne Pre Axed dinner,
at $80 per couple, wtl be MMtd from
I p.m. For reeervatlon1 c:;atl
S40-3385, Cryet• Court, 3333 Bear
St..Coet• ....
Dinner wtll begin with Antipasti
Eat Like Crazy. Try Opuo's
famous favorites as hi• beef
sate, an__gel winp, rout duckl·
ing or Thai RolJ&. He'U make
your lut meal of 1988 a
memorable one!
Act Like Crazy. You'll be in
a (eative mood when you Me
the gaily decorated dining room afloet. with balloons and
confetti. Celebrate with a
tout of champqrie, good
cheer and party favon. i~ HURRY! 0a1r A Few
Seats ~ft
... bo9 Thal cate. JM'h p ...... ..,
............. IV •••• ...,.,. 675-0161
GUllIVER'
Chrisanas
ts every
December !Ay
at Gulliver's
ltlllleno, foloHd by PMta. c.ne ("'991 ,..,..); Sal
LHHtO Con Verdure (
ulmon with~ .....
V9d with =blel) or Arroeto Vltello (r ¥M1). Fonneaal
lano (ltalan chHHI) lnd-f:,
Freec:a (freltl fruh). For dellert,
will haw the Gianni frethly ba
putrtea, Dok:e Mignon.
am au
111UUI monos
M213
DAN
SEALS
DI
all
OlitOnTheTown
ST EAK & W...ODOD REUBEN'S OF NEWPORT -----------~!"'!-Th~ .is-th~ ~riginaJ JUJd bu been_ serv!ng"Newporf Beacnfor 25 yeu s.
BOBBY McGEE'S
l>ur huust: specialty ii maki"f
t-\ r-ry meal a ..-ciaJ occasion!
'1111 'II want a front""' eeat for the
luud and fun at Bobby McGee,
1• hne the mt'nu features favorites
l1kt• prime rib of beef au jua, only
the finest available fresh r11h
l:-.D1\ choice ateab, tob.ter and
w m henation dinners. Every e~tree
mdudes oven·freah Me.cl, fresh
1 t'l(l'ta ble, and a trip to our award.
l.\trfneng salad bar .. .and aft.er din·
Their specialty is seafood and
steaJu. Chefs special selections daily an~ famoue for their broasted
chicken, too! A beautiful waterfront
view of Newport Bay enhances the
atmosp~~re. Perfect for business
entertaining and romantic dining.
Located at 251 E. Coast Hwy., New-
port. Reservations accepted. Phone
673-1505
nt'r. )vu.can dance and romance in THE REX RE STA URA1NT ~~~-1~~~~t~h~e~\~V~e~st~Coest~~·1~moet~~~eacili~-~·~na'-~:.i.~ 119 ni1thtclu . or a 1111 on r:own l -0eat_ed__.Q_n the ~anfront across
or anytime. make it apeciaJ writh from the Newport Beach peer. l'he
of so
1~~ magic. Jn Newport Beach, 3S3 Rex is the Orange Coast'~ most
E.i'l Coa" Hiihway. For reser-exclusive seafood restaurant Well
'"lion& call tii4) 673·~. known for fresh Hawaiian
gour met fi h st>lecteons ·and
specializing in Sl.\'Pet Channel
T HE CANNUY
This historic waterfront landmark
en Newport's Cannery Village fea· tur~ fresh local seafood and East-
ern beef. Consistently sood ser:
Vll'e, open for Lunch, Dinner, Sun.
Brunch and t:hampagne Harbor
Cnn\ff. Entertainment nightly
and Sun. afternoons. Enjoy the
lounge food gallery-superb clam
t howder! 3010 LaFayeue.
lii5·57ii.
CRAZYHOR8£
STEAKHOUSE
lsla.nd abalone. tPnder veal and
prime meats. The Rex Re5taurant
is the choice of locals as well ai.
visito!'1. Recipient of the pres-
tigious T ravel-Holiday award.
Casual/elegant attire Sunda)
Brunch, dinner. Call 675·:?566 for
reservations. Valet parkenl(.
SAIL LOFT
Sail L.t1f1 Bar & c:rill t1'11turei-
ottan "'1ew dinin)! with the
emphasis vn fresh ~eafo~od Oyi.ter
bar. li"'e entertainment ni11h tlv en
the bar area. Open fur dinner
ni1thtly from 5 p.m. Weekend
houl'll from 10::10 a m Fahulou~
Sunday Brunr h. L.onted al 4(1()
P.C.H. in l..111runa Beach
m11nce uf •Jld l\ewport with a pan-
_ununic hay "'iew. Excite your
-.t'tN•,; \\ith rheirsensational ~·
food 11nd traditional favorities.
Breakfo,t i a m. !'.fon.-Fri , Lunch
11 ·I !'.1un -f'ri.. Dinner 4-11 ~tun .. Sat. Sat. and Sun. Brunch
-:' ·4. Ovl<tt'r Bor Fri .. Sat. & Sun.
B.inquel fat·11i11es up lo l'iOO 400
Main SL. Balboa. fii:l 4633.
TREES
Nestled in the forest behind the
Port. Theatre on Pacific Coast
Highway in Corona del Mar i1
T rees restaurant. Seduded u it ia
on a side s treet, thoee who have
discovered it. have found Orange
County's . most charmfog and
unique Ame rican c uisi ne.
Shrouded in a soft pa.at.el decor,
matching table settings, candJea.
fresh flowers -and glowi~ rare-
places set the scene. The intimate
dining rooms, piano lounge and
fulJ bar surround a natural atrium
with living trees. The modem
American cuisine is prepared by
creative C hef Russell Armstrong.
' His h>Vely wife, Abbey, is the host-
ess. Trees menu i.1 a limited but
interesting variety of international
flavors with choices from home-
made pa.at.a. fr•h ,rilled r .. h and
steaks. vea.I. lamb, Orienul
chicken and salads to abeolutely
exotic deseerts. Orea ia caaw..'. but.
dressy.
R l',er,at11111s recommended· (71•)
673-0910. Open seven days a WMk.
Lounge open 5 p.m. to midnight.
440 Heliotrope, Corona del Mar.
ITALIAN
u,-ing no p reservatives, sail, sugar.
or excess fat~. Owned bv Vinnie
C-olan<iru _of ,,8~1.kh'.n Pizza
Works. famous (or havmir 'fhe
Be~l Pina 1n Orange County by
The Great Rizza Hunt. 270 F.. I ith
' S11 in Cos'S' ~~a. 722-9264.
Mahi is served in a pt'llsant sauce.
Tri·color fettuccini and cream is a
real fa,·uri~e. )·:njvy dinner and a
play tonight~-Grand Dinner
THeater located within the Grand
Hotel in Anaht'im al I Hotel Way.
C'all ii2-ii 10.
HARLEQUIN
VILLA NOVA D I NNER THEATER
A beautiful bay view creates the £,·ery customer can be exJ)ected to
romatic-eett.ins that has made the he treated like a celebritv The
Villa Nova a "apecial kind of theater uffers ~rrumpt1ous· meals
place .. '°' CYVet 50 )'Mil'. Superb l'ith lop prudurtluns in an ele1t1nl
cuisine from Central and North-atmu~phere. The scrumptuous
em lt.aly eerved in Old World buffett includei. roast baron of
charm. Extensive wine llaL Din-lieef. r hicken and fish d1sht!'<,
ner nightly. Piano bar. Full menu pastas. salads. vegetables, and sin-
til 1:00 °Lm. 3131 Wtt1t Co..t Cul .dbSCrU. The SaL "wy~N~T-7880r.~~~~b~r~uJn~r~h~i~n~cl~u~d~esD.~a...:>ivaur~ie~'1twywo~f~~n._~~~~~~..l.-~-I
'MEXICAN
Ml CASA
Their food is like a trip w Mexico!
Ho.pit.ality coes hand in hand
with their motto. "Mic-• Su
• Cua," or my bou8e it your bouM.
F...tablilhed aince 1972. it'• no
secret friends enjoy dininc here.
Open daily from 11 a.ID. ·(or
Lunch. Dinner and <'oclnails.
Entertainment Wed .. Sun. nishta
in the Burro Room. 29fl E. 17th
St., Coeta M .... 645· 7626.
dii.hei;. The Celebrity Terrace i~
available fur pri\ate denml(. The ·
mcli\'iduall) decorated private
bakony room~ ovtrlook the 4fi0·
M.>at hor~h11e 'haped main rot1m
The Harlequin i ltlC'aled at :150!l
S.:. t:!!~b<·r in Santa Ana. Call 9.9. ,,,.;o
GINO'S ON THE HILL
Country dinin1 with class!
Authentic Wfttem decor res-
ta~rant and saloon, featurinic
pr11:ne rib. fresh eeafoods, and
their famoua pan uuwed steaks.
Lun<'h: Mon-Fri Dinner reser-
".ations ruaranteed. Dancin& and hv~ music in the saloon. Oyer Rd.
Exn/Newpon Fwy. Santa An1.
{iJ4) 549-1512.
TALE OF THE WHALE
Experience a step back into time
to a place where \'OU <'In dine at
your own leisure Enjoy the ro-
VINNIE'S
GR ANO DINNER THEATER
lmpressiv.e dininic and pro-
fessional productions are sure w
please each time you visit. The
extraordinary buffet offers roest
barvn of beef. glned ham with a
fruit sauce, Georgia cllicken with
peachei. and glue artd the Mahi
Afm.w.t a Cvsla Mt>,,a landmark
where friendi. and memone« meet.
Gin_o's i o't an llahan Restaurant.
but a re .. taurant !>ting run ·by a
tlucall Italian. Even though they
i.er,·e many Italian 11ems, they al~o
offer a lariie \'ariety of other nem_
on their menu. Known for
"Hunest food and friendly ser·
vke:· Gino·~ features a varied
menu with e mphas is on quality
and rell!>unablt> pri<'t'S. Cocktail
huur w1lh i11teresung notions al
.t::lO p.m. and live entertainment
Mun. thru Sat. from :30 p.m.
Saturday & Sunda\• breakfast
from 9 a.m. Located at 438 K I ith
Strttt. Costa Mesa Call 6:,0· I iM!
for reser..,atiul\$, directions or
whate,·er.
•
NtwJIL ContJl~nuil
lf'll S8 75·11!195 lnnd S,-,•llln
Americ•n from 14 !I:!
• HelW•J I• American S69:1·112.15
Sfffood l1295-fl9"
Li~ 1995-$16.~
fftnch from 110
l1.1ha11 from .. 11:1
Mt'MM.•n A 1 .. t,:artl1
& l'imtlo
~~ M ~St49~
Amt•ncc•n $1~ 11195
.r=:. trom Slo.95
The he~t Italian food prepared
from the freshest engredient.S
14.7s.t.9$ 1650-110 50
IUO·ll0.50 .. 50-11050
from 139' Jll.15
13.~J?.OO ... 15
... ~119$ 111.75-114 ~
1395-19.16
tnim•uo trom•1uo
from $.145
t.~
... 9'-114 15
12 ..... ., .. ~ ... :!~ ....... ...... IOst ....... .......
trom 13 00 . fi.11 • • * lo-800 • •
from 12 75 4:30-7 •• * •
'2.00-$$.00 4-7 * • u&:,:;•
4"'41:30 • • up 1o • 5
Holldays 5-7 • • * •
rv,r,.t
5; • .rv:... Ull.,To
• ••1• • u~lo •
U0.7:et * 'Ta:
88er .,,. 'l••P w flflt .,. •• .... , ... ••
,..
How underwear helped ·Hoffman play 'Rain Man'
NEW YORK (AP) -Dustin ever done .... I said, 'I can't do ia."' rescan:bcd autism so intensively he temperature. over 100 de&rees. was b'ever," Hoftinan a Levinson Hoffman shuddered. i he screening Defeated, the Academy Award-win-was buried in documenas and matched by the humidity. fn a sweat-told him ... And I suddenly ralUed
room projector flickered with ningactor suggesaed ahe producers try videocassettes, Hoffman, 51. had 10 laced improvisation, Hoffman that yes, this cbanc1cr is in the now, ··rushes' of his first day·s work in Richard Dreyfuss insacad. dump his notes and observaaions in s~ talkina about how much and he is no~ if he's no& in the
.. Rain Man." Fighting off nausea. Hoffman . whose past triumphs his dressing room and. well, act. No Raymond misled his Hanes under-now.... ·
Hoffman knew his ponrayal of an include playing a woman in plot contrivances offered sheller. wear. And he just wouldn't stop. ..And I suddenly realized that I wu
autistic man stank. "Tootsie:'wassaumpedbythcpanof Then. three weeks into filming, With those cotton briefs, Hoffman playina off myself bec:au1e J know
··1t was dcaah." Hoffman recalled Raymond Babbitt. a middle-aged Hoffman and co-star Tom Cruise figured it all out. somethina about obleaioa and I'm
in an inacrview wilh The Associated auusticlav.aot were ~riving down a bleak hi&hway "It looked lite tome thnyou could comfortable beiJlloblellive. Tbe rai
.... Pr:=e=ss=·-··..:.1t::...was=:...l~h:::.c...:w~o::.:.rs~t....:w;:..:o::.:.r.:..k ..:.l..:;h:•=.d _ .... I:.:.t'..::.s_;;.no:..:1__:_a_n__;_ca..-s.:...y....::..pa..-n_._..;_H;..;.a_v .... in.::g__:n:..:ca==..r -=..t 1:.::· n:.J.y_C:::.O::::Jl1:•:..:.r!.., __:::0:..:k:.:.:la:.:.._T:....:h:.:..:e:_~h~a:.:v~e~taJ~ked~..!!a~bou~t, you=r-=unde=;;..rwea--.'"""r_o_f_it .... jUll __ took __ can __ of_itlC_lf._. "---
Ii Distin.etive Dining •
Purchase 18flY entree at reg·
ul•r price •nd reoetve a sec·
ond Qj ume or lesser value
for FREEi
~FER VAUO • pm 10 6 pm
MOH ™"" AAi -expires 12-31-88
NEW PORT OYSTER BAR & GRILL
£h t
C" ·M t tf Jt r ' r an r en /
Room
A Flne Om1ng Exl)efienoe lor
Lunch, Dtrine< or Suriday
C1'Ml~ne Brurich.
C... for ~•lions
(7 14)833-2770
-AIR.PORTER INN...
-=HOTEL=-
18700 MK Arthur Blvd.
!MM.CA
THE SAIL LOFT
BAii GllLL
ff&CUU(,,... Stafoo4
u40,tterhr
<>oe.a """ Dlllillll Sunset Dinner Specials from
$7.95
Mon-FTi 5-7 pm
Live Enurtainment Ni1htly U)pa 12:30dl S...·T'hun f'n.t:' '-
Cuacin.t l1.1J 1,l 111t
& C1n1tnen111I
• HAPPY HOUR._. P-M·
•Fine l'lot'I d'oeuw• •House Wine &
Dflnk•lrom the Well. $1.75
• SPECIAL PAST A. ............ $1.00
Sun.,Mon .• Tu.. In the B•r & Lounge
• ENTERTAINMENT
• SERVING I p.M ..........
• GOLD AWARD WINNER
-Gold Aw•d liiiic Chef Clian at Sztchwm lill -
. LUNCH lf»ECIALI SUI· SU0
.., . fri*y 11:30 -. 3:00 plll
Compfete Lunch Includes Soup, Fried Rice, Appetizer & Entree
(A) $3.95 Per Person (8) SU0 ,_ Person
Beef, Chicken, Pork
and Vegetable Entrees
(12) • •
(8) s..tood Ent,....
ONLY $7.95 per pereon Now m>Ar
CHAMPAGNE
BRUNCH!
MANDARIN A SZBCHWAN CUISINE
• WleCll • ...... nru. aA&
• ~ • TA&IOCIT• ~y lllrnT -IAIMa IOlJLIYAD • CllTA lllSA MMlll
c FE. LIDO
"'auk It• teur;1n1 S. J 111 ( lull
"One o( the top ten
night spots in
Orange C.Ounty •.• " -•rrr IC.,,_w
• II "I'""' Id•.,,,,... l11r I'm.,,. 1'.m .. ~
• l'l•n) uur llol,l,I\ 1'.r•~ \o,. '.
0 1\\lll :'t.\~\ \IGlll '
714/67S-2961 t 714/67l-$0S6
511 30lio s.,.., New.-. ....
For Advertising
in
Dl•tlnctive Dlala9
call .lanlc• er ..
6'2-4321.
Eat. 272