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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-17 - Orange Coast Pilot., alANGE ~T -· CE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1988 25CE T I Teachei. f~ces molestation ~barge Students' note intercepted, shows they agreed to make accusation to oust him ~ By PAUL ARCRJPLEY °' ... ...., ........ A ~ewport Beach elemen\ary school teacher faces four counts of misdemeanor child annoyance ahd molestation after four of his students charged hc touched them in a lewd Dorothea Puente, suspected of killing elder- ly tenants to collect their Social Security, says she was Innocent./ A4 Nation President-elect George Bush gets a vote of con- fidence from British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher./ Al lndez BuUetln Board Busfness Classified Com tea Crossword Death notices Entertainment Opinion People 81 A7-8 C6-8 85 cs C8 83 86 84 A3 manner. A trial is slated to begin Nov. 29 for Frank Tozzolina Ir., an 18-year veteran of teaching. Four girls I n his fifth grade class at Manners Elementary SC0091. where. Tozzolina has taupt for eiaht years. told-invaligaton he toucl\ed their ch~ts a~d ,butt<>c~s an the classroom guys because .he will get fired. and we threat," ~It said. . touched the gJ rls durina cla~ when dunng 1nc1dcnts 1n September ind won't have ham anymore. Cn'Clc yes "The note ts the talc of the tape,' he they were at their desks wotking. October, said defeDse attorney John or no." said. "They were sophisticated and lnvesuptors felt the girls' charges Barnett. . Barnc~t said another girl responded sinister enou&h to write down and were scnous enough to take to tnal. Tozzohna pleaded innocent to the on the shpofpaper: "I wa.nt him fir:cd p~c! suppof1 for t~1r ~up. "We feel he is enoU&h of a threat to charses Oct. 26. now. I agree with you. Let s1oac1 him It ss~nna. In 1tss1mplcst form the com munity that fie shouldn't be According to Barnett, T ozzolina now." , it is nothing but t~ycar-olds taking teaching." MacEachern said. intei:cepted a n~te th~girls had been . Barne1t sa1dthei:ioteshowsthegJrls ovcrthesch~I." "It's not the stron1est case we've passmg around in whtch t. hey agreed an tended to fabncate the charges Bamen said they succeeded an their e'er had " she said. "but it's wonh to make the accosations apinst him. because they didn't want Tozzolina, plo•to get rid ofTozzohna, too. Hc 1s pursuing.' . Tozzohna showed the note to his who IS a stnct teacher. • ~ on leave pending tbe o utcome of bas "The wttncsscs arc credible and we principal Once Tozzohna had obtained the tn a.I. have independent corroboration." The note said: "I'm going to tell my note, the girls were compelled 10 Depu1y D1stnct Attorney Kell) R:tmeu saad Tozzohna. who 1s mom that Mr. T molested me-and you follow through. to .. make good on the MacE.achcnHaid Tozzolina ~l~lr (PleeM Me T&ACBBR/A2) Residents get police action on RB street Chief presses for safe conditions on Commodore Circle By ROBERT BARKER °' ... ...., .......... Law-abid ing residents of Com- modore Circle met wnb Hunungton Beach Police Chief Bill Payne late Wednesday, seeking to take control of 1heir street from drug dealers and lawbreakers. • · Telling of threats on their lives and the lives of their children by armed narcotics salesmen, the residents - speaking through translators -said they'll stan a petition drive for a voluntary 10 p.m. curfew in an effort to separate criminals from law- ab1ding residents. They wanted to make 1t a man- datory curfew. but were told that would be unconstitutional. Payne announced that an officer will begm daily foot patrols Fnda) on Commodore Circle. Payne was the only top city offinal to show at the mecnng. The ctt) 's seven council members v.ert invited. but none came. But it v.on't be enough to ma.kc the area safe around the clock because the cil) 1s big and can't afford a 24-ho ur patrol in qne area. Payne said. ··what we need is for you to call police nght away Y(hen you sec a cnme. We're going to do everything we can to rid your community of the people selling narcoucs:· Payne said. Pollce Clllef 8Ul Piyne chambers. An estimated 480 to SOO people hve tn the Commodott Circle a pan men ts. lit husband and wafc. wbo wilhbeki thctr names Tor fear of retailation, told reporters thcy bad received threats before partic1pat1!'1 In a simi lar mttttna wath city offiCtals two weeks ago. They described condations as bad. but getting better. They placed aJI the woes on the hands of the drug dealers. Danielle Madison. an adm.injs- trative aide with the city, 1old resi- dents tha1 they'll wan "if they act as a ream with the city and push the drug dealers out.·· Police log Publlc Notices Sports TV listing Weather C4, 8 C1-5 84 A2 One of life's early pleuuree l'flcll l'fonaaad.l.n of Raacbo BaD .. ~art ta tak• a 2-year-old'• deUCJat ba a late After- noon~ at llala Beach lD LafaDa Beach u father, 'fom, and brother, Brtan, watch. ··w e arc off to a good. good begmning to make 1t a hnle more safe for your families.'" Payne. aJso speaking throuah a 1ranslator, rettlVcd applause from about 70 Latinos who were provided with a bus to come to City Council Madison said today that even tho u.ah residents have been afraid to act. tney realized they'll have 10 work w11h police to clean up conditions or 1he1r oc,&hborhood won't survive. (Pleue eee STREET I A2) Tragedy-recalled a~ -· -Navy- one-wayalleyOK'd admits Speed deterrent due near peninsula site where a mother was killed by car By GREG IU.ERltX Of .. ...., ......... It's been nearly three months since 1he tragic dca1h of Debbie Killelea in the narrow alley behind her Balboa home and life 1s bc&in- nina 10 return to normal. The legal process 1s Jr!nding on. The man accused of dnving the car that killed Killelea has been ordered to stand trial for murder. The mourning has lessened, although it will certainly never disappear. But residents of the peninsula have not let up in their fiaht to make their neighborhood safe f'rom sptcd· ingdrivers,and to preventany more deaths Ql'l the streets along the tip of the Balboa Peninsula. They won a victory Monday niaht when the Newport Beach City CounciJ voted to make the alley behind East Ocean Front a one-way street. • "We're very pleased with 1t and that the city has responded as quickly as it has," said Darna Petti I, president of the Balboa Peninsula Point Association, a aroup of home- owners that lobbied for the one-way ~·time will tell if it works." she said. The alley will be one way between M Street and Channel Road. Also approved were the posting of signs 10 warn moton sts that Chan- nel Road 1s a dead-end. red curbs at .several antcrstettons to increase driver visibility and limited parking at the end of Channel to provide room for drivers to turn around. The story of what happened 10 Killelea on the afternoon of Sept. I is, by now. a fa miliar one to many Orange Coast residents. The 37-year-old homemaker was taking a walk down the alley with her two sons. ages 6 and I 0, when a 1984 Nissan 200SX came barreling toward them. The boys managed to jump 10 safety as the car came toward them, but Killelea was pinned against a brick wall and then thrown about 50 feel She died in surgery a short time later. ~ The dnver of the car, 19-yc.ar-old Dann) O melasof Huntmgton Park. fled the acc1den1 scene but was chased down and arrested on the beach b) police a short time later Tests 1nd1cated he had blood al- cohol content of 18, nearly tv.1cc the level at which a motonst 1s presumed too drunk to dnve Ornelas reponedl) told police that he and two fnends had been drinking at the Wedge. a popular body surfing area onh a fev. blocks fTom the alley wheri Killelea v.as s1ruck. He has been held 1n Orange County Jail sin~ his amst and will stand trial for murder Feb. I 5. Prosecutors allege that Ornelas tn· tent1onall y swerved to hit Killelea. Her death prompted city officials to pay closer attention to com- olaants residents -1ncludmg k.Jllclca -had voiced for ~cars about speeding or drunken dnvcn 1n the area. There are lhose. hov.e' er. "'ho claim the one-wa) alle) ~111 not deter spccchng dnvers. JUSt as K.illelea's death has not slowed down the people who continue to use the alley as a m1n1-ra~way. "It think 11 (one-way) 1s a good idea. but tt won '1 make much of a difference." said Del Wingerd, a resident of East Ocean Fro nt. "The best thing they could do 1s lower the speed limit on the whole penin- sula:· Pe1t1t said she would like to Stt stop signs plated alon1 East Ocean Front, w hich currently has none There were stop signs at one ume. but .. restdcnttal pressure" caused their removal Pettit said. lo•'tted speed ltm1ts and more stop s1ans art among the deterrents sugcstcd by Balboa residents. (Pl--... ALI.ST I A.2) HBstudent attacked on campus Narrow wfnners breathe easier Police off'tcials today are inveaipt- ina rePQN that a 1tUdent at Hunt· inaton 8eKb Hiah School WU at• .Cked by a num""'ber of other hjp tchool studcnts who made tcntcha Oft hit chat and face with 1 knift while he lay on_ the around stunned. The 1ttack al1ete41y ocaaned u the victim, a llftior who entered Hunt· i"l'Oft Batch Hilh School in SqMem· bcf, wu waOOna off' the campus to lunch at •*t noon Wedftaday. ·· TM fO!th, who repQniedly was not ICftO:UlllY. i~ured. was anacied by an unt.nOWn ••bcf of students near me ....... 6etd in the far.ad of the ,., ... -nvaarr/Aa) Counting o a en tee ballots fails to alter the results o any ocal elections IJ 808 VAN EY&.£N ............. h'• almost final. Wit.h the completion of abtentcc t.llot countina by the county Rq11- trar of Voters ear1y Wednnday afttmoon. the chm can now tett~ on tevaal tilht ()ranee Cout caty coun- cil races. "buryin1 I.he hopes of three cha.Uenem who Md hoped t.hc: final results would be different from thote rdcucd after the Nov. I election. Altboulh tbere ~ mOft than 12.000 abilmtce ballou ~ counted tlus Wttk. the tall)' did not took subltantiatly different from last week's verdict. with three council wiMetS in Costa Mna. Huntinaton Belch and Fountain Valley hol<hn& onto the shm leads they had pmeted in Tunda)'s ttaular vot1na. In Hunt1naion Btadt. abtent« billOti"I ttimincd Don MacAtJ~s lead over Oen Onaa for the third vacaftt Clty Couna1 at. but left MacAlhster,in the Winner's rucle by just over 200 voe. C>nep. who tan 1 c:ampeiaf\ bated on sloW arowth. 18id afttt learn•• of the lblcnlCle count that she was d111ppoin~ but woWd not tcd • rcrount. "That's not how I want to spend my ome:• Slid Onqa. before luv1na for what she said would be a thrtt-Wtttt vacation. Me.asurt J. a slow-arowth 1n- 1t1111vc. also failed to better its posmo n ufficaenll)' in Huntington Beech absentee ballouna.. Re1cctcd b> I, 130 votes 1n TUC$day's ttaular bellot, the mea urc pined suppon from ablcnte( ~otcn. but ull fin-· ishcd fa1k'd by so~ 600 vot COSIA MHA lf0"1h~trol ed· vacate Jay Humphrty 1lt0 had his hopes of a City Counal potltt0n dashed an the final tall)'. · 8ut Humphrey satd Wednnday that he was suit happy •ith last Mdt's d«taon results. "I th1nt COICI Maa f'CSICknts tent t a definite me5!11C "1th the approval of Measure G and the defeat of measures Hand I," he said. Measure G. a s~pina growth and traffic control an1t1at1ve. won ap. provat by a narrow maflin 1n last Tunday's vot1na, and increased its marain of approval sh&htly 1n the final tally. winn1na by 117 votts. Measures Hand I were dcvelopcr- Sl)Onsorcd ~that wou'd have ucd the expanJion of the rom compe.ny's Home ltanch proJCCt 1n nonh Cosia Maa. Both fi11ed " ow we need co mate sore the city tays on tbe coune tbat has bttft aP9"'0Vcd by the voern.'4 laid Humphrey ... Thcre'a not I cMfttt rn be droPIMna from siaht :• (11'.1•• -LOCAi./ d) 4 losing vials By JONATHAN VOLZKE °' .. °"" "-' ..... The U.S. Nav~ accepted rcspons1- b1ht> Wednesda) for at leas1 some of the 70 vials of ant1sepucs and medi- cines that washed up on the 0ra"IC Coast but m1llW) offi c1aJs S&Jd ID)' illegal dumping occurttd on the pan of defense contractors. not ser- vicemen "We thin._ tt's m1ht.ary." Navy Commander Ron Wildermuth said from the San Diego Naval Base. "We've bcen in touch wath oftkials from lhe Oranic County Health Otpanment, and anyth 11'\g lhat looks m ahtan "e'rc 101na to peck up and d1sJK)SC of." But Wildermuth satd the Navy's 1nvesupt10n an a Stm1lar San Oaeeo 1nc1dcnt is focus10J on private oon- tractors and. althouah no hnk has been found bctWttn the two inci- dent he u pccts the same focus 1n Ora.ntt County. A Na vy po)jcy enacted Nov. I re;_quarcs that medical waste dispoted of 1n the open Ka must be weilhled 1f dumped and then cannot be thrown o"crboetd less than SO miles &om 1nhab1tcd land. W11dmnutll said . An~ mcdacal suoobes dumped must be l(9d on tt.e sbap. be said. but dumpen1 the matmah band ita Orarwt County Wllft't ~ t,_; cau1t me quantiua wett _. cftCMlllh to mum them to lboft aild pgpet'ty dilPQllC of tbetL JllC vials. some et1e1 1111C1 Willll lllMt .. ClO'tred ..... g "'°"'Y Weft ...... ... wt.nt ftMa. I nd w~uuce.ttw...-••a;r" lfl•••-ll&ft/ MOTi~. NowlftMr 17, 1MI ~ge rejects both offers for assets of PTL ministry COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP} -A U.S. ~Judie rejectccf oom~ o&n fn>m two Canadian ~ nessmen for the assets of PTL today and ordered biddina to .. st.art from scratch.'' JuctJc Rufus Reynolds 11id the offers did not meet the financial corwUtions he set down Wednesday. He directed PTL bankruptcy trustee M.C. "Red" Benton to dnft auide-- lines for prospective buyus along the lines of those conditions. Tbe a\IC'lion today between the two businessmen was expected to close the boob on the evangelical empire built by Jim and Tammy Baller before a sex-and-money scandal forced it seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorpnization in 1987: Reynolds scheduled another auc- tion for Dec. 12 and wd he would approve a buxcr the next day, warning that tf the case is not eoncluded by t,hen, "J will not put up with this cate any loneer under ~~!"Pt.et) JI. I will move it to Chapeer Chapter 7 involves the hquidation of all USCtl. Under Chapter 11 , tM company develops a olan to put iu fin&nce$ in order. PTL's ieorpnizl- tion includechcllina off' undeveloped Ind. a hot.el theme pert and shop.- Pina mall at Fon Milf. S.C. Reynolds said be preferred Chapter 11 because Chapter 7 "doesn't brinl the most money to the most people. Vancouver real estate mqnate Peter Thomas opened the biddlna today with a S70 million cash offer that allowed him to hick out or the deal within a certain timeaftercJosjng -a provision Re)'nolds objected to. Canadian businessman Stephen Memick bid Sl IS million today with a SSO million initial payment, but Reynolds qbjected tbJt there ~ inadequate assurances t~t Merruck would pay the rcmaining$6S million. R~ aid be h*i clodded to •'turft all of t.bem ~ and IO start from ICf'llCh." Last summer. the television miniJ.. try was sP'it off as a non...prpfit orpai.ratioo known as Heritlle Min-. . wbicb bu 00 uaets. ~ rema.inina for-profit~ tio~ inCJudina the lbeme JWt. botcl and shoppin1 maJf at the Herifllle USA complex at Fon MilJ and I, 700 undeveloped acres nearby, have been under the bankruptcy courfs oonttol pendins its sale. ~ Proceeds will .So toward 11tismna the ministry's debts, estimated u • hi&h as St 30 million includina about S)S million claimed by the lntemal Revenue Service. Bakker's own S 172 million bid for the ministry fell throoah in Sep\em- ber when be was unable to raise a Sl miUioo down payment Tbe Bakken now are tryina to raise money for a new TV m1niatry. ' Jail snitch 's cushy life revealed LOS ANGELES (AP) -An otl- uscd jail informant -a kidnapper, robber and drug addict -:-enjoyed a privileged lifestyle that included an unautbonzed New Year's Eve furlough, authorities acknowledged. Longtime infonnant Leslie Vernon White created a stir earlier this year with disclosures that in'fonnants fTc- quently fabricate confessions using information obtained while in custody. White received at least two scven- day furloughs whtle serving a 12· month jail term for violating parole, records show. New Year's Eve of 1986 feU dunng one of those furloughs. On at least two occasions, pros- ecutors had White transferred from the county jail to less crowded. more comfortable suburban jails. wtth pnv1leges mcludmg stereo-equipped 1ail cells., offtciaJs said. The transfer procedures, con- sidered highly irregular, were authorized by Assistant District At· tom~ Curt Livesay, the depart- ment s third in command, according to Deputy District Attorney Andy Diamond, who arranged at least two of the transfers. Livesay was out of town and unavailable for comment. Diamond said he was merely act mg at the ~uest of law enforcement agencies. 1 just moved his (White's) body around to facilitate other police officers to get to him. Obviously he was a very active informant and manY. people wanted to talk to him," he said. During White's stay in the Glen- dale jail an December 1986, ccU amenitie1 included a radio1 a tape deck. coffee, blankets aoo quilts, White has said. State perole agent Nina Milam. who monitored White for several months durins 1986 and .1987, said 1he District Attorney's Office did not have the authority torcleue WlU&eoa furloUlhs. White was on a ••parole hold." which requires permission from the Board of Prison Tcnns befo~ a furlouah can be granted. Jn addition, Milam said White was paid by la:W enforcement qencies for his snncbing. White has claimed he received S 1,800 from a witness protection fund. Services Sunday for longtime CdM resident A. Hale Dinsmoor The possibility of bulldozina arose last month when City CounciJ mem- bers took action that could apparently lead to acquisition the 20 foutplcll b~!ldings ~ rue ~hem for a senior ClUZCn hous1n1 projCCl A memorial service will be held Sunday for A. Hale Dinsmoor. long- time resident of Corona del Mar, who died Monday. He was 84. Dinsmoor was born J une 22. 1904, m Minnesota. He established his law practice in Pasadena after graduating from Stanford University. After living in Pasadena for 50 years, he and his wife. Kathryn, moved to Coronadcl Mar where they have lived for the past 20 years. He continued to maintain his law prac- tice in Pasadena while taking on clients locally as well. Dinsmoor also was a lay leader at the Community Church Congrcga- t1onal in Corona del Mar, where he served on numerouscommitteesover the years. Besides his wife, Dinsmoor is survived by a son, Keith, who hvod in Newpon Beach 20 years bcfo~ moving to Napa Valley three years ago; a dau&hter. Ann Case of Boston. Mass.; and four ~ndch1ldrcn. Scrvittt wilt be held at l 1:30 a.m. Sunday at the Community Church ConarcgatJonal. 611 Heliotrope Ave. The family asks that donations be made to the Hale Dinsmoor Mem- orial Fund at the church. But officials at the same time mapped out other • programs and cn(orcement activities that that they hope will work. Police have made numerous sweeps in efforts to stop drua deals being made brazenly in broad day- li~t. by police a~unts. They made their la'IC'Jt haul in July when they arrested 19 alleaed deaJcn and seized &ix. vehicles. -Police.. &r· ~ted two SUS~ qain Friday. Madisoa llid mat there arc llbout six resident d_rva dealers wbo live in two o( the fourcomple1 buiJdin,a. The majority or dealers ~ from out of town, she said. Payne ackowledaed that thcT'e's a shonaac of Spanish-spdk.ina police . officen but uracd residents to call police and leave messages. For emergen~ he urged them to call the 911 telephone number bc- moti vcs are known. The incident cause police computcn f!!!?vidc the remains under invcstiption. he 5aid. home addresses, he said. •we11 work STUDENT ATTACKED •.. From Al campus near Golden West Strttt and Y orlctown A venue. After the attack he ~nt to t~e Teen Assjstancc Center and was taken to the hospital with "minimal" injuries, accordmg to SJl. 8111 Peterson. Peterson said the v1ctJm apparently was .. blindsided" by his assailants who knocked him to the ground with their fists. He said the attack is not related to png activity and that no The victim was reported to be on this problem to ~ 1 Soanisb- wh1te. speakjna person (to field calls)," he Huntington Beach 1s a closed said. campus. a school official said, and Payne 11id he also intends to work students arc p~h1bitod from lcavmg with the lmmi~tion and NaturaJ- thc school dunng lunch llour. ization Sevice to concentrate their The school official said that school efforts on violators in the area but "to authoritics planned to meet with the lighten up" on the honest, hard- student and his parents today. · workina people. ALLEY CHANGED FOR SAFETY ••• From Al There was talk of placing speed bumps in the alley, but city offic1aJs determined that speed bYmps were not legal on public streets. Modified versions. known as a speed humps. arc still being considered. solve the problem ofbeachgoers using the alley as a sboncut to Balboa Boulevard -the main artery of the peninsula. Motorists goiOJ. from the Wedge down t~ alley will now be subJect to fincsand possible arrest, he said. anYlhinJ. else would have prevented Killelea ' death. "I don't think anythi~ would have prevented that. It was Just a freak tnaedy,'' be said. Sunny but cold along the Coast Ari '& ..... ._ ..... ,, •cwt a ,..._I:• 10111=-M .... 0..& fllS• ........ IUW lo .. 1111 ....... -·· ..... ...., .. , ......... c......_ .............................. . ............................ -=~··· AIOfll N ONlllt "Celll I.... ... wlnd1 ..................... ~~-·-..,.,,. .......... ~ .... ...,...Coollt' ..... .._ ......... u.-._......_.,to ... """--~··---::r: ... ••"-,,..,..CClll 1••· .... ,,_,...,_o.w __ ................. , ... ,.. Cea="' ... 0.. Point. W.lndnoe1111............ ........._ lonlgMtnd ,._.,. W1M1 ~--loltlllf. ...,_~..,.. --~of~tonlgM.becolwMQ~....,.F....,, U.S. Tempe. .. ... :;:~<:t • :i Calif. Tempe. -..... .. • • ;o\J ...... ., • Olllllle • " MllMe 14 .. 0...... • • :t:' ... 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Peuikin main-a blentee ballot count i na \lined the lead of about 200 votes be procedures. .. won in last week's reauJar balloL Results of tbe absentee ballot count ReaistrarofVoters l>onald Tanney had been expected Tuesday after. expresled Rliefat the vinual comple-noon burwere delayed until Wcdnes- tion of the bigm election tally of bis daX afternoon. career. •1 think we've learned bow to .. It's almost over," be said. "I think better ~ for the volume of the system performed fairly well, ballots, be said. .. This was the first considerina t&e size of the ballot" time we'd had anywheR near this Tanney said he and bis sWf' bad volumeofballousinceournewbtilot learned a few thincs that they would countina machines ftnt into oper- have to ~t.ain for use in the neat 1tion." There are still a rew hundred ballot cards that need to be recounted, either becaute they were dumled or be- caute there hid been tome question as \0 their validity, ROulyn Lever,· assistant Rqist.rar of V oten. said. "But there are not enouah to ~ the results of any race." she said. Eich voter filled out an averaee of five cards for all of the nation.Its. local and state races. So only some 01 the cards will pertain to local clec> tions." Lever said the final count would be ~leased Monday. .. And., God willina. we'll certify the election Tuetday," she said. NA VYLINKEDTOYIALSON.BEACHES • ._. -proji l materilll, ec::cordina 10 John HiDs. a propam mANlll"f with Oruaie Coun- ty Environment.al Health. Hills said the vials contained alcohol solutions, cubol.ic ICid. tetracycline and common eeasictneu pills. The seasickness pills were in small1 metal containers with ICRW- on lios. , Some of the solutions were for neut.ralizina chemical wea~ on the skin while otben were 11mply anti- borics. Hills said. This week's storm brouaht about 70 ISIOrted vials and amJ>U)cs 10 the shoreline from Crystal Cove State. Beach to Seal Beac6, and more have been found in the Jut few days. Hills said. Additional vials were found Wednesday in San Clemente, bu\ Hills said they'd yet to be ex.amtncd. Hills said the vials were identified after they were sbown on a television newscast. The drua manufacturer who he refused to name, identified the ampules as products made for the military, he saia. Also found with the ampu)es were a flashlia.ht that Hills said is iuued with a Navy flotation vest, aeveral ex- pended flare cani1ters and a nlltina aerosol can marted "Oeanina Com- pound., Aircraft Surface .. that had Navymamnp. A handful of standard pacripcion boules, many still boldint pills, also werefound lD the debris, and the names of the doctors. pbarmaciesand even patients still were leaible. Une pharmacy WU in San Pedro, the other in Lone Beach. Both cities are home to Navy bues. Hills said au.empca to um down the names on the bOttles were stymied becaux the pharmacies refuted to reJeue the addJalel. of the men,. wbo weR not lis1ed in loc8l phone directories. Hills said the Oranee County district attorney is tMtcbiOJ the investiptioo for possible cnminal pro.teCUtion, altbouah several ad- ditional leads must be followed before any consideration is aiven to fili cbaflCS. !ft peDalty for dumpina in the ocean as S2S,OOO per Vlolation. be said. At the same time in San Diqso. usoned medical debris also 6as washed ashore. but authorities said it is too early \0 link the 9ra-. Coa.lt debris with that found fanhef IOUth. ••There may_ be a oommoo ~ but it•s a different type of waste, Hills said. .. ~·ve aot medical waste; we've basically aot unused medical supplies. .. In Sen Die,o Cou~ roll or camouft.-d puze ba . . which was t.r'llCeCt to a 1984 purctiue by the Defense Dcp&nment. wu found tn the latest 6atch of waste washed ashore there, officials said. The bandqes are wnsidered the most solid clue to the pollible oriain o( at least some of the waste that bu been washina up on Sao Pieao beaches since October, said ·aary S&epbany, director of the county's Deoertment of Health Services. fncluded amona the potentially huardous materials were a vial of blood, a syriqe with an attacbed needle and "1ree bqs uJed for in1r1venous fecdina. In that batch, however, Wildermuth said an empty acid bottle was found with a aovernment identification number. Naval authorities determined the only Pa- cific fleet ship that UICI that spccifi.C acid is the USS Millowi, but the Miuouri bas not been oft' the Cali-fornia cout recently. . The label ~ma.ined OD the acid bottle. meanina it. lite the Onuwe Cout wuae, was not in the water fOr' more than a couple of weeks. .. We've Nied out the Miaouri. and we•ve turned our investiptioo toward defense contncton, VA bof.- pitals and anybody cite who cniabt have a contract to handle t.bc ma-terials fortbe military, .. Wildermuth said. But most qrcc that v1nually nothing will eliminate the {>'Oblem completely, and they say 11 1s 1ust a pan of hfe on the congested pcnm· sula. "Theoretically. it should eliminate that problem.·· Brahler said. ··eut whether II will work. wclJ, we'll see. h's sort ofon the honor system." Even Pettit. who is still lobbyina for speed humps 1n the alley. aar'fled that there are no-easy $OIUUOftJ to traffic .-------------------=---------------------- problems near the Wcdec. Jim Brahler, associate traffic engi- neer for the c1ty of Newpon Beach. said the one-way alley should help like many Balboa residents, Brahler said he doubts that a one-way alley, stop signs. speed bumps or "We're always goina to have thcte problems: kids partyina. tourists tak- ing detours. Those sorts of thinas are unavoidable in this area.•• Pettit said. .. But I think in liaht of what happened. we all have to compromise a bit for the benefit of everybody." Two to share $6 million lotto prize TEACHER ••• By Tk AslOdated Preti Two ticketholders will spht the S6. I million jackpot in the California Lottery's twice-weekly "Lotto 6-49 pmc." Tiit winning numbers picked Wednesday niabt arc: I, 4, 2 I. 2S, 3S, 49 and the bonus number, 19. All those who picked fi ve numben plus the bonus number will divide ORANGE Daily ..... COAST r•I MAJNOF,ICE • w..t 9e1 SI Coe1a ...... C"' .... ....,_ eo~ 1wo Ceei• ~ c"' .,.,. CIMeMlld .. .., ... ,. -• _,.,.,, ... MJ~1 among themselves a prize pool ofS 1.6 million; fi ve of sill will share $829,000. four of sill will share $75-t,000. Three of six 11 worth an automatic U per winner. The numbeis were cb<>1Cn by totto machine durint, a television broad- cast orig.inatina 1n Sacramento. The aaJes from Saturday niaht to Wednesday's drawing were Sl.S miUion. homAl married. is takin&. it bard. .. It's very difficult for a career t.eacbet who is dedicated to bis oftllioa,.. Barnett laid. ..He ii f:'labJY mpect.ed." And he is confident T oao&iu will be cleated. ••1t's fonunatt thi1 "'ot.e was foUDd."' he said. ••Olhcrwite. it would be bis word .,.;011 four ams' ... ~ II OuerMIHd Just call 642-6086 ._.,._., •~oo "°' ...... "°"' ...... .., •• '"" ,_ ....... > .JOl. .... ,_,,., .. .. ~!tu N0-•0t• ...,..,.,_ edl•or•e1 _,_ OI ......... , ..... ,_..,....-,IM --- ...._. _,.., ~<Tiii I of ~OQl!t - . ~ What do you like about the Daily pjJot? What don't you like? CAD the number above and your meaqe will be recorded. tranacribcd and de- liveml 10 the ar.!opriaae edhor. ........ ......, ........ . Tbc ame 4-fM>ut antwcriQI terVice may bl uted \() NCOrd teum to tbe edit« OQ anr '°'*' Contributors 1e·oor 1.citen column mUI& tDdudc their name and telephone number for vcrifkalioft . Tell us wbat't on yc;>ur mind .... • J ,... .. ,... ....... ~ .., .. , ..... .... ......... .,.,.., .. .. ........ Q11••11t , ... , ...... .... :=-~ ..... &..-. ..... -- . WINGTIPS from The correct compenion for your beet luita 111 '*'•lllt • t•• WW ••m • IUIMCD WP_._•,. ... • ' ~ Encroaching trees may be trimmed, not toppled· .,GUGD.DU .............. A tiit of pnmina and some creative CODlll'UcUon may be combined so ave tbree eucalyptus uees iD C.orou del Mar that bave bnodled iDIO 1rdc and caused city officials a loliam of problems. ~ti expresaed relief over a city propou1 to wort al'ouDd, rather tlaU Ull'C*. tbe three old tna at 30S and 309 Poppy St. and 3728 Ocean Blvd., located at the comer of Po~y. Accord.in& to public works officials. tbe trees o~the street at a beipt of about 12 low enouah to came a bazanl to true and vans. City Attorney Robert Burnham requested that the trees be removed after tbe city received two claims &om people who.have hit at least one or tbe trees. OM claim, filed teVeraJ years aao. cost the city S26,000, Burnham said. In addition, city en~ said side1walb and curb1 aJoa& Poppy Street are b9dly U. need of retonst.ruc- tiou, which would libly mean re- moving a t ·least one of'the trees. However, rnidenta .~n't about IO let tbe trees 10 down without a fiabL They said tanovina the trees would detract from the beauty of' their oei&hborbood and the value of their homes. City officials first promised to replace the eucalyptus tries with younger, smaller trees, but the resi- dents were not Satisfied. In a meeting between both sides Wednesday morning. city officials came back with some ~ prorvr•s, including a few that appe.ren y satisfied. resi- dcnu.. "(The prooosals} seemed to be very well accepted, • said David Niederhaus., director of grneral aer- vicn. "They realized we're tl')'.ina to look out for city liability while sutJ tryina to save trees.·• • • Two of the more obtrusive trees will be trimmed or pruned, Niederhaus said. Sidewalk and curb replacements will be specially fitted over swface roots in oTdeT to allow growth, be said. ..Everybody was really pleased with the way this is working out," resident Patty McDonald said. .. It looks like we'll be able to save the trees." Niederhaus said his department could p~n ta formal proposal to the Newport Bea~b City Council as early as Nov. 28 .. Reputed crime boss to stand trial for shooting businessman in Mesa BJ JONATHAN VOLZXE Of .............. A reputed captain in a Southern California orpnized crime family was ordered Wednesday to stand trial for a 1984 Costa Mesa shootina that blinded a ni&htclub owner. He testified he was attacked when be dravcthe two to the empty parkina prqe, where they purportedJy left their car. Carroll testified during the preliminary hearina for Grosso that he initially refused to cooperat( with authorities, but changed his mind because of continued threats on his life. in a now~efunct Mustang topless club in Santa Ana. refused to let Rizzitello and Grosso in on a lucra- tive and illegal money-skimming operation at the club. Beach balls NB witness -inMinkow trial tells of threats LOS ANGELES (AP) -A~­ port Bcacb man uwokcd. the Fifth .~ment and refused to testify aa lbe Barry Minkow securities fraud trial Wednesday. sayiaa be wu tlua.lencd in the cowtbotde ballway. Donald Johnson, a scock broter wbo was called by tbe deferue, :omplained that Maurice Rind, a key ~ in the~ threatened him as be was ent~ t.be courtroom. U.S. Dlstnct JudgC> Dickran Tevrman had Rind brought before . him and asked wha( had happened. Rind. a former assc>ciate of John- son and anolba ~pective ddmte - wnoess. told theJud&c what he aid to Johnson and bis lawyer was: "Our busincssisn·a finished. We'll have our day in court." He wd he didn't mean it to be threatenina. Tevrizaan ordered Rlnd to ~ve the courthouse until it's his tum to testify Thursday afternoon. Rind, 49 of Encino WU twice convicted of stock fraud in tbe 1970s. He has been named by Minkow u on~ of the underworld fiaura who manipulated the Z:Z:Z:Z. ~carpet cleanmi company in a mu.ltimillion- dollar fiaud. Minkow. 22. who started ZZZ:Z. William C. Carroll, permanently blinded by the attack in a South Coast Plaza parking garage. testified in the three-hour hearing that Michael Anthony Rizz~tello snarled "This is for not letting us eat." before pump- ing three buJlets into Carroll's head. Carroll reportedly had gone to dinner with Rizz1tello, 61 , and hisco- defendant, Joseph Grosso, before the shooting. Grosso already has been ordered to stand trial in connection with the shooting. Rizzi teUo' s arraignment was set for Dec. 23. Evanssaidhebopcsto trythe men during a sin&le trial. Prosecutors allege the shooting occurred because carron, an investor Rizzitelloand Carroll allegedly met in prison and were reunited by George "Fat Bobby" Paduano. who awaits tnal on nearly 70 racketecnng charges alleging he directed a team of thugs in an attempt to take over the Newport Beach cocaine market. The Mustang's owner, Jimmy Casino. was killed execution-style when masked men burst into his Buena Park home in 1987. Casino was shot and his girlfriend raped. ComtractiOD worken mm baoJ• a1oDa B-~ Beacla nortb of Golden Weet Street ba ~~of Ooitilla a aew plpellne oat to 11ea. T1ae -:tr: wu WeMel"a AJ"i.c. 19 Intended to replace two pl=• wttla. •"4! 12-lncb Mltwater •PP1Y line to ..ft WeMenl•• Pl&tf_.. Emmy. The wori"fa apectea to be completeltbf"dae eDd of 'No.ember. Best an bis paten?' ..,. when he was 161 is Cba!JCO with S7 oounts of secuntJeS, credit card and mm! &aud. He maintains he wn fol'ced to swindle investor5 out of millions by mobsters who took control of' bis company. But t.be s<>vcrnment has po11rayed Minkow u a shrewd. ~ con man who ocedcd DO piduce in tbe art of swindlinc. Minkow ~_k:Fi, that tbe FBI=-_..-..,,. knew he was a puppet nwu iiif1'j mobsttn but did notbia& to help him. Hoag has first frozen-sperl!J. birth BJ LaUE EARNEST placed in the fallopean tubes for °' .. ...,,........ fertilization. In the Browns' case. an additional Hoag Memorial Hospital is her-egg had been fertilized outside the aiding the birth of a baby born from womb and frozen. When the initial an qg fertilized outside the mother. procedure proved unsuccessful. the frozen for four months and then additional cg. froze•n for four implanted in the mother's uterus. months, was thawed and placed in Hospital officials said it was the Brown's uterus in February. fint time such a J>rocedurc bad been AJthouah the pregnancy was un- carried out in Orange County and eventful and the baby's health prog- that the birth of Garrett Holderness nosis normal, Werlin · said the Brown-on Oct. 3+-wu only the-:34th cryop1 eservation technique-shoulct- birth of its kind in the nation. be used as a last resort by couples Babies conceived through the having difficulty with conception. frozen pre~mbryo procedure have ··These arc not prottdurcs that ~ttviously been born in Orange shouJd be done as a first step.•• Werlin County. but the procedure was car-said. "h should be done as a final ried out elsewhere. they said. step." The infant, who weighed 8 pounds.. Couples might consider the 10 ounces at birth. made his first procedure if there 1s irreparable public appearance at a press co~-damage to the fallopcan tubes or if fercnct Wednesday, flanked by his their infertility is unexplained and ~nts, Ann a nd Jeff Brown of they have tried aJI other available Ulf~na Beach. '-options. Werlin said. Currently, there 'We're vcryexc1tcd1 as rm sure the arc 33 frozen prc~mbryos from 12 Browns are about this event." said couples at Hoag, Werlin said. Lawrence Werlin, director of the As their new infant. dressed in a hospital's fertility services. white terry cloth jumpsuit, squinted The pr o c e d.u re. c a 11 e d under the cameras glare Wednesday, cryoprcservation, involves surgicaUy the Browns said that they had come removing an egg from the mothC1", close to &iving up on haVJng a baby. fertilizina the cg with the father's The procedure represented .. kind sperm and then freezing the pre-ofourlast hurrah." said Ann Brown. a embryo at 321 degrees below zero. 41 -year-old Laguna Beach counseling The p~mbrvo is later thawed and intern. implanted in the mother's womb. "We were very interested in at In studies of animals. fertilized eggs because we raJly have tried every- have been successfuJly frozen for 12 thing." she said. "Emotionally. it's ~rs., Werlin said. like a roller coaster every mon1h. ·· The Browns, who have been under-Jeff Brown. a pediatric dentist. 1oin1 fertility treatments for four prai$Cd his wife for her perseverance years, includmg two years at Hoag. and said the past nine months were became candidates for cryopreserva-the happiest in their marriage. tjon after the more common For the new mother, the realiay 1s procedun failed. stiU sink1n' in. In the common procedure, four "Even With him in hand.1st ill can't surJicaJly removed eggs arc mixed believe we have this little guy:· she with the husband's sperm and then said. Dlillr ........... Lw ....... Dr. J eff and Ann Brown bold little Garrett u BO&C'• Dr. Lawrence Werlln loob on. Rolls destroyed in ~agun• house fire Chaunce) Alexander reported the theft of an $800 desk from the Democratic headquarters, 302 Slh St Burxlars apparently entered tnrough the Front door. .. . .. Someone entered a residence in the 400 block -0f 8th Street throUlh a bathroom window and stole $400 in jewelry and $300 in computer equip- ment. Parkwa} ~edncsda) The th~ft oc- curred between noon and 8 p.m • • • A young man dropped his pants in front ofan 18-year-old "oman at the back pte of a rcs1dcnual complex in the first block of .\lban) Drive Wednesda)'. The incident occurred shortly after 6: 15 p.m • • • A Lquna Beach house ftrc de· lll'Oyed two can, includina a Rolls- Royce and cautcd an estimated SJJ0.000 in damaae Wednesday afternoon. The fire took about 20 minutes to control and no one was inju~. fire offaciats said. It broke out at 4:35 p.m. at the sinsle-famity home of Gerald Payne on the 300 block of Lcdroit Street. Fireftabters arrived at the ICene to find a fiUF fire under way in the P'1IF .and on the roof of the home. J:trmptiD& was ditficuJ\ became ol the saze or the blaze and became \. flames blocked the entrance to the boux. Firefiehten eventually made their way into the prage and found the blaze bad already destroyed two can. Althouah most of the fire was confined to the prage. the house suffered beat and other damaae because of the fire's intensity. O.maae wu estimated at s I 6S,OOO to the property and SI 6S,000 to the contents of tbe home. The Llsuna 8eacb Fire °'1>art- ment was asaiaeed by fimJlbt,c:n hen the Oranee County Fire Dcpatment. • • • In another incident the same niaht ou&side PaQ's. another man was stabbed in the tono followint an aipment Wtitb a peuoa. The victim. wbo WllD't iclaHified. rtpOnedly ftlaed down a paliat police u.nit at abOUt l ~05 Lm. and wu taken to a hospital deft he r~y is re-co~erina. SM>!lioe said. . . . - Buqlan encered an unlocbd pr- qe in the 200 block of Lincoln and stoic a wallet. Sony Walkman. black leather llova. a N<iielco decVic ruor andacbectbook hma ~ ••• ' .. A woman said that she received two obscene calls Tuesday from a mao wbo said he knew where she lived and that he was going to come over and rape her. The woman said she had placed two ads 1n trade mqazanes but d1dn•t know 1f they were related to the incidents. • • • A IU!dcnt came home 1n the 16000 Three male JU' cniles rcporetcdJy threatened a woman wtlh a knife 1n Deerfield Park \\. cdnesda)' JU$l before 4 p.m. One JU'en1lc was arrested and released to his parents. • • • • A wh1te Dlamondback mountain btcyde valued at S.300 v. as wen from Sierra Vista Middk School Wednes- day bct..un 8 a.m a nd 4 pm. P'omatala Valley block of Craia Lane and found a door unlocked and a $400 stereo mis&na. In a vain attempt to btta.k into OuJCks Video at 9113 Garfield A\·t . Wed.nesda) niabt. someo~ d15"0fl· &YlDe n«tcd the telephone and clectri<:al EQuipmcnt valued at more than scrva before auempt1n& to pry open $400 was taken from an 1ndustnal tbcreardoor. 0.m totbedoorwas bui&d1nc at 2722 Michelson Drwe esuma~ at $650 W~y bet:e:n.IOand 11 p.m. A Sl.SOO parki;. iot lt&)\l. not yet A wallet was stolen from a pune in installed at Coastline BUSJMSS Part the Pric:aavers dJtcOUntstore. I 65SS 1110 l Ne'wphopc t.. "'IS taken &om Von Kannan Ave.. Wcdnaday be-the COMtrUCtlOn sit~ Wcdnada)' twcaa I Ud 9 p.m. TM wallet and ncht. • • • COD1Cftts lft va1!"1 ~· S I SO. SomcoM pt!nctun:d four lira oo a Someoftc took a waltct cont.aini"8 l 986 Ford Taurus PAtkt!d in an calla Md c:n.dat Q(ds vakaed .. more aeenman carpon on &be 17000 block tbanS400hma...,.~atthe , of n Maito Sln'Ct Wcdladay Ralpll"a supc:nnarke\. l Culver n1Jht. Drive Tuaday ~.-:en I and 9 p.m. Someone c~t;~ Taco &en f 1ve eold watet.cl val.ed at $4,000 • th'°"lh an um«Uttd door c:alty wa-t ,.,.-"*8 &om 9M Snaila Wtdftada) monune. mno~ .i>OCl lefttry 9'0f'&. llOO larrnca &om the ftftm. me. led •~lllla • NB Judge denies· giving excessive political funds BJ JONATIL\N VOUU!: Cat'tef" saad. .. I( the Commission OD °' .. ...,,... ..., Jud.iaal PaformaDoe detern)ines I -was wrons. then I was wrona. i . An emb9tt.led Newport Beach C.ampa ditclosure st.awnents J~~na~ Wednesday that .be alsosbow~tludeeCalvinSchmidt. Yl udicw canons by donaung -40e-o( c.a.aas QOUeaaucs at the too i;n money to Jocarpol1iicaf Newport Beach CourilM>use. u.tCif" candidates. c&mp&llD funds lO SU~ 10 000-Harbor Municipal Co.un Judge ·udlCaa.I candidateS. incJudina a B~~ Carter reportedJy VJolatcd the S 10.000 contribution to Catpeot.er. iudicial code in 1986 by mak.lng a Schmidt couJd not be reached for S2SO donauon to former state Sen. commcnL Paul C,arpcntcr and a $200 donauon Carter and Schmidt bavo been to state Sen. Manan BctJeson. R-under investip tion by the judicial Newport Beach. comm1ss1on on other alleptions. But Carter denied the do~oons includin& aJl~tions they offerechwo fror:n bJ.Scampat&Jl war chest VJolated prosututes favorable treatment m Judicial. canons. . exchante for sex. The Judge said the JUdJciaJ. ethics The Judicial commiSSlon, which code . tS vague as . It pretaaru to operates in secrecy, announoed it wilJ dona~ons and that the mon9 m hold a hearing for Carter on aJlep-q~esuon was spent for ~hucaJ lions the lud&c helped fix a prosti- dmncrs-not out.nght contnbunons to tute's traffic ticket in exchal\11; for any candidates. sex # ":J:bey were u!kets I t>c:>u~t to Caner's name was alleged.Ir,. found political dinners. Carter said. And in a prostitute's -trick book · when no one bas examined whether Canon the woman was arrntcd by Fullerton 7 ~lies to campaign ~~ds. police several years qo. Its a large gra) area. The prostitute 1rutialJy worked In any case. fie Sl!1d. he 1s aJlowcd to with investiptors from Newport dedu~t the cost ol the dinners from Beach and FuUerton police depart- the t1~et pnoe, wb1cb may pull the ments and the distnct attorney's donaoons below the lepJ hm1L Until office. lnvestiptors reportcdJy tape last year.Judges v.ere proh1b1ted from recorded a tckpbonc call between the ~ntributing more than SI 00 to a -..'Oman and Carter. • sangle, non-Jud1cLal candidate in a Though the ~ordini-indicated ~ ~r more than S500 to all non· Caner planned to set tOFther' with Judicial candidates a )tar. the woman. no s~ mcctina took Carter said he v.a.s aware of the place. accordana to published ac- canon when he bought the uckeu. but counts. did not behe\'e he was violating the ethical code. fte A.-dalH ~ c.~IM ..Of ,;,ursc. htnds1ght is 20-10 ·· to ~ retJ'Kf. tood on the counter Coetallcaa Three men Jumped out ofa car and assaulted a woman as she -.-alked down Monrovia A'enue. The) pulled her hair, struck her in the fact and knocked her to the ground btfore flceina. She W.S treated and relea~ at Haq cmona.I Hospital. • • • A Ha)'Wa.l'd woman staytng at the Bevcrl) lferitatc Hotel. 3350 .~venue of the Arts: reported the theft from her room of a djamond MCklact valued at S 1.680. • • • A woman reported a scnes of anonymous phone calls 1n which the caller sometimes mo.ned without speak.ins. other times threatened her scAually or threatened to kill her. • • • A man walkinchisdolaftcrdark in Manna Part. was ... ultcd by three mm wbo beat him aboUt the bead and kicbd b1m. He "*' not robbed. ••• A 23-)'eer-<*i woman rttW"Md to her So.th Coui Dn\'e home to find a man •'""' on ber floor, ..,.,.,.entty d1tc00~her telephone. The man. a bufslar. fled when w lt'ft!alDCld. mg reporu of an cxplos1 ve there. Tbc deVJcc. however. turned out to be a tO) hand grenade. • • • .\ sus ed hJt.,and·nin driver was stop by pohoe Wednctday near SUttt and South C.oast~· • wa1. and thorouahJy couuded officers. Althouah the car he dtd not sustaJn any dafnalC, the dn,·er was told not to leave-the .::ene of an accidcnL • • • K,im Launne'Odom. 22, of 1...,.na Beach was arrested Monda)' on susp1c1on offorter)'. Odom wn,Uled in heu of S I 0.000 ba1l NewponB1•c• The owner of 1 SS.foot PaKoct fistuna boat told pohce TYelday tMla vandal bad appettody pawed llM into tbe od spout oltbc boet Wbile it wasdocUd at Ddeney'son Lido Put Dnve. The damllf waJ estima.S • $500. • • • A TV, a VCJl. a ~ 'lflt p&ayer and JeWdry ~ ..... * items AolaiMoeday froli a.._._ Oahha Dnve an C.oroM clll ,._1 dllil \l1Ct1ftl sold pobce. Tbc --GI .. itemsatokawacllimalect•..._ S4,I'°-. . . .. A nwnan at ,.....,.., ,_.. Cnlllt two ........ fll.,.... llell a PoncM 9l0 T..-• ..., .... .............. _. ne .. •l*'l~•IUa.w•:lf > au~._. •• a r-·--~1-.w111t...-.w..._ ..... •111111• ... -~ ... ,, .. ., ..... bicfaft II J S Y N.OT/ ~. Novtimbef 17, 1188 Sus~ct • 1nseven slayings arrested· La nd lady admits cashing checks, denies murders SACRAMENTO (AP) -A land- lady suspected of killing elderly tenants to collect their Social Security checks declared she was innoocnt toCtay in a television interview a few hours after her arrest for investigation of seven murders . .. I have not kiUed anyone. I told you that. I have not killed anyone. The checks I cashed, yes," Dorothea Montalvo Puente told a KCRA-TV news team in a brief interview while flying in police custody back to Slcrarnento from Los Angeles, where she was recognized in a bar and arrested late Wednesday. The matronly 59-ycar-old ex-con- vict was wearing the same pink dress and b~t red coat that she was last seen in five days earlier, when she walked away from her boarding house after officers had unearthed only the first of seven bodies buried in the yard. At that time, police said they didn't have sufficient evidence to detain her. But after the other bodies were discovered, a murder warrant was issued for Puente and a massive search launched focusing on Cali- fornia, Nevada and Mexico. Puente was taken into custody by Los Angeles police Wednesday night after a television station tipped them that a viewer called to report that he had met her in a downtown bar earlier in the evening. She had given the man the name and room number of the motel where she was staying. and police arrested her there a few minutes later. ''She was real cool, real calm. It looked like she almost expected it," Sgt. Paul Von. Lutzow said of the arrest. Los Angeles authorities said they didn't question her, but only turned her over to Sacramento detectives, who immediately flew her back to Sacramento on an executive jct chartered for them by KCRA-TV, which also put a reporter and cam- eraman on the fli&ht. Puente ignored the questions of crowds of news rtportcrs at both the Los A~lcs and Sacramento ends of the flight, but she granted a brief intcrVicw during the flight to KCRA reporter Mike Boyd. Boyd said he wasn't a.llowed to ask specific questions about the murders. but that he talked with Puente about general subject.s. The station aired brief scpncnts of that conversation in which Puente made the uneJtplained remark about cashing checks and declared she hadn't killed anyone. In other unexplained segments aired b)' the station, Puente said at one point, "I used to be a very good person at one time," and at another point said presumably to friends in Sacramento. "Thanks for believing in me." Boyd described Puente as "very, very charmina to talk to. very nice," and "not in the least" emotional or upset during the flight Sacramento authorities declined immediate comment and took Puente directly to an intcrroption room. It was not immediately known when she would be arraigned or if the charges against her would be amended. The arrest warrant charges her only with the murder of 52-year-old Alvaro Montoya, a tenant missing from her boarding house. but Sacra- mento Police S,t. Bob Bums earlier described Puente as a suspect in the killing of aJI seven bodies found buried in her yard. Health firm v fined over S F r ej ections SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A health maintenance organization charged in court with rejecting all San Francisco applications to avoid costly AIDS cases will pay the city $250,000 to settle the case. · The settlement announced Wednesday ends what participants believe is the fint case ofits kind, HcalthAmerica Corp. of California and iu parent company routinely rejected all San Francisco applicants to its individual enrollment prosram, acxordina to a suit filed in Superior Court Tuesday. .. Individuals in San f rancilCO were bei~ discriminated qainst and arbi- trarily denied coverqe .... on the the- ory AIDS was prevalent in Sin Francitco,.. said District Attorney Ario Snuth, who announced the ldtkment. Henry Loube\, executive director of Loi A,nFJet.bued Mui<:are, which acqllirid HeaJtbAmerica two ~ .,, uid the eettJement is no 8dmilll01l of dilCriminatioa. Tbe eenlemalt "wu the best, most ......... daina 10 do." 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Lebanese police uid Peter Winkler, 30, was pabbed by three gunmen from bi1 official car on Sidon's Hisbeh Square. There wa1 no immediate claim of responsibility. . · A police spokesman said there were reports Winkler was taken to the Palestinian rtfu&ee camp of .£in el- H il weh on Sidon's southern outskirts, "but we haven't been able to verify this." The kidnappers, drivina a BMW, intercepted Wankler's white Peuaeot. grabbed him, pushed him into their car and sped away. the p<>lice spok~ man said on condition of anonymity. At Red Cross heaquaners in Gen- eva, officials confirmed the abduc- tion and said Winkler'• Lebanese driver was released shortly afterward. Winkler took up his duties in Sidon, 25 miles south of Beirut, about a month aso. said the police spokes- man. He wd an emeracncy meetina was under way between Palestinian auer- 'rilla ~en and the com mand of the Popular Nuserite Orpniz.ation mili- tia in Sidon to try to determine Winkler's whereabouts. The orpniz.ation is a leftist Sunni Moslem militia that bas been aovern-in& Sidon since the l 97S outbreak of Lebanon's civil war. Ben•dr Bllatto Bhutto wins in Pakistan, riiaybePM ISLAMABAD Pakistan (AP) - Populist leader BCnaztr Bhutto de- feated her right-win& opponents in Pakistan's first free national elections in 11 years and called on the president today to let her form the new governmenL In Wednesday's balloting. the voters gave "a mandate for democ- f'KY, dipity ... Justice and tech- nolOI)'," the 3S-year-old politician told reporters at her family villa in southern Sind province. The U.S.-educated Bhutto would be the first woman to lead a Moslem nauon if she is chosen to form the government. Pakistan was run by m11i~ strongman Gen. Moham- mad Zia ul-Haq until his death Aug. 17 lD 8 plane crash. Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party captured 92 seats in the National Assembly with all but three of 20S contested scats decided. The rcsu.lts assured her of a plurality in the 237- member chamber. but not a ~ority. Her main nval. the riaht-wina Islamic Democratic Alhance. won S3 seats and the remainina S7 went to independents and minor~ Two of the Allian~·s three rnajOr filUra, jn_cludina former Prime Minister Mohammad Khan Junejo, were de- feated by People's Party candidates. Thatcher praise& Bush, economy; ends official visit WASHINGTON (AP) -British Prime Ministef M~t Thatcher said today she hal "not the sli~test shadow of doubt" ~l Pres1dent- elcct Georae Bush will deal respon- sibly with the U.S. deficit. ~tmer repeate4 similar ex- press1ons of confidence in Bush and the U.S. economy in th.Re network. television interviews prior to rneetina with the vice president for breakfast. The meeting followed an evening of remi~na at a state dinner with President Reapn, whom she de- scribed as ''a marvelous president." "I have not the sliahtest shadow of doubt that in 1ood time the deficit will be considered in a responsible Wlfi. •• Thatcher said in an interview on CBS This MominJ.." .. I don't share concerns about 9eorae Bush's ability to deal with fundamental problems," she said on ABC-TV's "Good Morning Ameri- ca." "I think he wiU deal with them in bis own time and in his own way and VCf"J responsibly indeed." On NBC-TV's "Today" show, Thatcher said Bush and his advisers will need time to come up with policies for dealing with the deficit. "I don't think we should hurry them," she said. When Thatcher arrived at the vice president's residence for her meeting with Bush, be greeted her as "the star of'Good MominJ Ametjca'." The prime minister said in the interviews, all broadcast live from Blair House, that she and Bush were talking about the world economy. the Middle East and East-West ties. Thatchet, who was ending her two- day state vtsit this afternoon after a news conference, said Wednesday that the Western alliance is "very fortunate" to have Bush as Reagan's successor. "For the first time we wjll have continuity of ~licies, streicbip, ~ver a second presidency. And that brin&s enormous stability and confidence to the feefins of the world," she told reporters as she sat next to Reapn during an Oval Office photo session. Thatcher also has said of Bush. "We know rum as a friend, we admire him as a man of unrivaled experience and we respect him because he stands for all that is best in America." After a private meeting between Reagan and Thatcher, Bush joined a subseQuent meeting attended by top officials of both governments. Like most others in the room, Bush said little, deferrin.g to the president and the prime minister, who met in their respective capacities for the last time. Despite signs that Bush and Thatcher will be able to work well .. , $,II Brltlab Prime lllnlater ~aret Tbatdaer and Pnmlcleat Reacan dance at tbe final atate cllnner of Ida prmtdeacy. together, Bush will have a difficult time matchillJ the partnership Re- &glln forged with the British leader. The White House arrival ceremony for Thatcher on Wednesday was filled with expressions of mutual admira- tion. "Together our nations have faced the challenges of our time, and have not flinched. We forged ahead with strengthening the peace, spre_ading prosperity and safeguarding libeny," Thatcher said. Reagan lauded Thatcher for her "extraordinary role in the revitaliza- tion of freedom," and said she has contributed to a "remarkable chanse" in her country through policies that encourage individual creativity. Smokeout backers; urge U.S. puff ert? tosil.y, 'Enough!" ... 8yfteA111daa.IPrell ~ericans bopina·to live tobMlco-frec were det.emtlned to butt out of unokina today in the 12th annual . Great Amencan Smokeout as celebrities strelled the maaer: You're a fool if you think smokina Is cool. "I staned smok.iDJ at 14' because I tboqbt it WU cbiC," said actress Cclelle Holm, who with other stan at New Yark City'• Lincoln Ccnlef on Wedneadly urpd partici.,_tion in the unokeo41L , "J didn't know i1 would k.iU you. Now we know better." Anti-smokers around the country prepared for tbe bi& snuffsOUt, which attempts to cou puffen to 11y, ..Enou0!" -at leut for a day. ln Nebraska. a sheriff 11id he wanted to "arrest smoking,•• newborn babies in Seattle and Council Bluffs. Iowa, were adorned with anti-smok· ina T ..shirts and the operator of the trans-Alaska oil pipeline tried to convince people that it's no joke to smoke. "The Great, American Smokout proves that you have freedom of choice to start smokin1 but you don't have freedom of choice to stop smoking and by people trying to qwt for 24 hours. they realize that they are addicted to a very danam>us drua." . • Suraeop General C. Everett ~ • 11id today ~ "CBS This MCJl"Dinl. : ''They realize that they are .tdK1ed ' to a very daftlm.>US ~ and 1bey know it's not a dirty habit that they can kick and they need some ~ feuionafbelp." New to the smokeout this year is the ''Back a Quitter" prop:am. Backen act u budaies to the smoken for the day. By solicitina EJledles from co-worken (or every bout they IO without a cipretteJ~ the smoken ~ will raise fUndl for the Amenc:ao Cancer'~. The American c.ncer Socjety whicK sponsors the event. &timated nearly 40 percent of the natioo 's '° million smoken participated Lut year. · .. Here's our answer to a peck-a-day -a ~yderm!" shouted ri~ Paut Binder in New Y 6rt as one of two ci~tte-smashing elephants $tomped a Styrofoam butt to promote the smokeout at New York's "Bia Apple Circus." "I bet if you could show people wbo don't smote have a much better sex life, most people would quit today," said Dr. Ruth Westhcimer, the 1ex therapist who manaecct a smi.le ~ spite the elephant frunb SW1J11U11 over her. "So let's pretend that's true." Secret shuttle's launch due Dec. 1 CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. (AP)- NASA pronounced the space shuttle Atlantis "ready to fly" and set Dec. I as its, launch date, but the space agency isn't div~lging the liftoff time or lefl&lh of t'ltc secret Defense Department mission. World's oldest pe_~son turns 114 on.Friday PALATKA, Aa. (AP)-Carrie White, a tobacco-chewing woman who has been been instillonalizcd since 1909, will be ccnified by the Guinness Book ofWorld Records ast~e world's oldest li ving pel"SOn on 'Fathers' ofbombsdisagree over space-based def~nses Rear Adm. Richard Truly, NASA's associate administrator for space fliaht, made the announcement W-ednesday following a two-day flight readiness review of the mission, which will carry five military astronauts and a spy satellite. The launch wlll be the second for the shuttle program since the Challenger explosion that killed seven astronauts in January 1986. Following a 32-month period of major modifications, the program resumed Sept. 29 with the successful launch of Discovery and a five-man crew. her I 14th birthday Friday. · White, who was born m 1874 during the second tenn of President Ulysses S. Grant and two years before Custer's last stand at Little Big Hom, will celebrate her binhday with a cake decorated with 114 candles and receive her formal world record cenificate from Guinness. Officials at the Putnam Memorial NursinJ Center. where White lives, know very little about her. She has no hving relatives and has been under bost>ital care for 79 years. Marjorie Allen, White's guard1an since 1984, said she teamed four years ago that White was at Aorida State Hospital in Chattahoochee and had been there since Nov. 19, 1909, the day afterher3Sth birthday. White was d iagnosed when she was admitted to the hospital as suffering from post-typhoid ~ychosis. thou4b Allen has no clear record of an outbrealc of typhoid fever at that time. The 1989 Guinness Book of World Records. already published. lists Birdie May Vogt, 112, of Miami as the oldest person. Others have claimed the title. but Guinness requires "adequate authentication." OFFERS. •• % WA~INGTON (AP) -An un- precedented joint appearance by two men frequently described as the respective "fathers" of the Soviet and · American hydrogen bombs featured sharp disagreement on whether space-based defenses would bring ,. world harmony or nuclear war. Andrei Sakharov, the Soviet scien- tist who has become his nation's foremost human rights activist, said deploying such a defense sxstem would "destabilize the world and could trigger nuclear war between the superpowers. Edward Teller, one of the principal American advocates of deployinJ the Star Wars defense system, t81d it could lead to a "world neiahborhood" of cooperation and peace. ... • Current Rate* Annual Yield ' PREM CHECKING •FUNDS FSLIC INSURED R)R SAFETY • F.ARN A PREMIUM RATE WITH COMPLETE LIQUIDrIY -AT AN)<. TIME •A MINIMUM BALANCE OP ONLY $10,000-Al'ID YOU MAY DEPOSIT AS MUCH AS $99,999 •PREMIUM CHF.CKJNG AVAILABLE AT MORE TilAN ias LOCATIONS 1HROUGHOtlf CALIFORNIA •NO PENALTY FOR FARLY WITHDRAWAL! YOUR FUNDS ARE AVAD.ABLE WHEN YOU NEED TIIEM IF YOU HAVE ANY QtIBSTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS WE WELCOME YOUR CAIL. 1-800-247-7197 • Monday -Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.•Satut4ay 8 a.m. to noon r .. .. ' I The two scientists aired their views Wednesday evening at 'I banquet honoring Teller as a pioneer in the field of nuclear physics and for ltis advocacy of the Stratqjc Defense Initiative, SDJ. It was sponsored by the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a conservative research group. Sakharov, 67, winner of the Nobel and Albert Einstein peace prizes, attended the dinner as part of his first trip outside his native land. He and Teller held a private 20-minute conversation, the first time the two had met. In a speech at the beginnina of the banquet, Sakharov praised Teller as a man of principle and conviction but said deployina"the Strateaic Defense Initiative, as the Star Wan plan i~ formally known, would be "a great error." He cited the "enormous cost" involved in pa_yina for the deploy- ment of a defense system by the United States and for the Soviet Union to field new offensive weapons to defeat it. "If such systems are deployed ... there would be a temptation to destroy them" before ·they were armed, Sakharov said. "And this in itself could triger a nuclear war." Short of actual war, Sakharov said, SDI is an obsUlclc to better re.lations between the two superpowers. "SDI is one of the problems that stands in the way of achievin& really dc;ep and profound arms control," he Slld. Housing-starts soar 7 .2%"; sharpest rise in 8 months By Tlte Aaedatr Pren WASHINGTON -Housing construction soared 7 .2 percent in October. the sharpest increase in eiaht months, with all rqions of the nation posting gains e.xcept the Nortbeast, the aovernment said todaf. The Commerce Department said new homes and apartments were built at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of I.SS million units last month, up from a l.'45 million rate in September. The bi& pin foOowed a revised 0.8 percent decline in September and a 1.1 percent drop iD' Auaust. Previously, the ~ent said housing starts increased I .S percent in September and fell :J. I percent in August. The October jump, the bigestsincea 9.9percentincreasein February, surprised analysts who were expectina a decline of about I pcn::enl The housing start statistic is historically very volatile and early estimates are often sharply revised as the aovemment collects more data. The increase last month can &e explained. at least in part. by mor1p&e interest ntes, wltich fell steadily from mid-August to early November, but have since started to creep higher. Glveu •aa iy.Oa for libel, $12611 NEW YORK -Mike Tyson's ~ts continued to take place outside the ring as Robin Givens, bis cstranaed wtfe, filed a SI 2S million libel suit apinst tbebeavyweiabtcbampion. In the laMuit filed Wednesday in federal court. die 23-year-okl actress. who appears in the TV show "Head oftbe Class," accUled Tyson ofholding her up "to public contempt, ridicule, embarrassment dispace and prejudice" for remarks ne made that were quoted by the New York Post. Last month, Givens bad announced that she would not seek or accept any money in her divorce from Tyson. Take the flnan~lal worry tut of bel111...1lck with a Penonal Prudent 1SUJer Plan"l'rom . RIM Cross of CallfornlL CA' Jf PBNJA INSURANCE MABmlJNG 3E8Y'CP§ can show you bow to ae,J ~~prebenslve coverage at alrohlable n~ • \ I.OS ANGELES 1AP) -Tht aetOSl*C indulll')' in Southern CalJ .... fonua is f'Acina an un~nted threat or compa1ues mOVl!.l( out of It.ate to cut costs, but officials are oPt1m1st1c that other strcflllhs will help keep much of the tndusuy here, General Dynamics Corp. is build~ . ans an assembly plant ror pudcd l missile pans and production work at · 1 Nav~o reservauon in New Mexico · where workers wilL~ paid SS.SO an 1 '.t hour. The company must _pa>: S9 an 1 i hour to union workers in Caltfomia . NYSE UPs & DowNs .. Labor costs in this area ~ s1gn1ficanlly h!lher than elsewhere," GCncraJ Dynamics Corporate Vice President Sterling Starr said "In the last two )cars. we have come under • heavy compeutivc cost pressure." -- AcrQSPaCC activity and employ- ment in Southern California, how- ever. appear strong. owing to growth dunng the Reagan administration and large o rders for commercial JClhners. But as Pentagon budgets continue. aerospace activity~ and employment here may drop. officiaJs indicate. The b1gcst reason for departure is provided by the military services' efTon to c ut weapons costs by step- p1na up compet1t1on. The county had 301,800 aerospace JObs. as defined by the U.S. Depart- ment of Labor. in September. up from 228,000 a decade ago. Some officials arc counting on Southcro California's dominance of the luJb-tecbnology end of the field to keep it stro ng, however. EMPIRE OF AMERICA 0>~ TO ~~ 'IllE L.A. 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IJ ti. ..... ~ """'ipal .inJ 1nt.tl\"\t ml$ rvma1n ''° ~i"t a hall ~ at tht IQk\I ~t Rat ~~ 11•1 ,11,, i..> mm1mum J<'T'C t ) Ink~ IS comrciu!"Kk-d U.Uf\ ~h\WltYI ~y "If ~Arly ll'lthJfiwral COSTA Mts\ BRANCH HOURS M~ ~ n.~ 9:00 a.m.-HIO p.m ~ 9:00 a.m.-6 00 p.m. Elnplte al AnJfJflca F«ltlnJI ~ 81n11 ~ FSl,. Bri.W>I Sbul. COIG Mes.A. CA 92626 , NYS E CnMPns1H TRANSACTIONS ow.,.. ~usJ Olt $ylf ~'. Ei; !•141 ~ -II . jft 14 \2 -"' tt 141 I ·~ Ya -1 ·1 i +i Ya ' ·~ -~ ~ j THURIDA Y'S CLOSING PRICES Market closes mixed NEW YORK (AP) -The stocf market turned mixed today after an early rally faltered. WH AT AM EX Drn W HAT NYSE D1 0 NEW YORK (AP) Nov. 17 l sf AME X LEADE RS NYSE LE~OER S Go Lo Quon s Dov. JoNES AVERAGES 1 METALS Quons NASDAQ SUMMARY Bush aides scramble to stabilize markets WASHINGTO N CAP) -The spokeswoman for Oeorac Bush's prajdentiaJ transition team today annmm uminp from the chair- man of the Federal Rnerve Board about the defJCit by sayina that ··economists never ll"ee on any- tbin&." Stieila T1teabo .Mt in 1 television interview that Praident-dect Bush's first aPPoiatmeftts to bis economic team haveemt a .. very clear sipar• to investors I.bat .. ~ and lartr helped calm I.be mancu .• Bush aides have been tctamblina IO ease fears about I.be deficit. Ind QODClmll about the vice praident'1 Pledee not to railC w.a, which have 1mt i1oc;b tumblina at home• pu1 tbe lirady-weU dollar into I funhet tailspin in iDIMMltioaal marteu. The dollar feU IOdly CO a I S-yiear low._ thr J1P1ne• ~ deipite ~~ual buk l•tennlioe la T~ ne Dow fell more 111u 31 Points wec1..-y Md W drDDDied allDOll 90 poiatl to. 2~* '°" ........... dettioL Fedlell a HI we Ol1i,_. AIU CFI Sll•8dilld&M11raz 2 "*-"' ~ IO a.II fat aaioe cm dllcil. ~ • •lioMI ~ w ....... , ... red .. ......, ... .._.ao• .... Y••••*'"-or-ow ..,.._IC .. ...._ Allll IM MICllOdllllWhbhlt__. .... more Uf'llCRI." Greenspan, who was appointed to the Federal ReterVe post by President R~. addra.ted questions of • &>Olllble 1U increate by sayi~ bow the defiat ii reduced 4s far less relevant than that it is done ... Asked on ABC· TV's~ Morn-ins ArMrica" about his wamina. Tate said: .. Economists Dt'Vel' lll'ee on any- thi ns. For every economist you cite we can trot out one Who is diametrically ia ODDOlition." 1 AKcd whether. 9'a1h Al president w09ld be at odds witb Greenspan, Tatellid: .. 11'1 Stlditional economists limpt don't ..,ee wi1b _. Giber. A~ thfre'I I lot of jocbyi119 ..... Ol'I rilht now. We jua Mve 10 wmt and lee .... Praidea&..-.. ... dicida IOdo. .. T'Mre'I I lot of d 8°" IWittift& .,.. ... ddd1, ...... lliid. ... daial .. ~.__ol(T11••1 S.0.-.....,l Nidl1l11 ~ ..,_ a ~ dmlilillll. tD • lDMfaf afp'p' .......... IOlllw .. llliM "' ................. __ ~ .. .J-:.-=--.:r.=1-:-:.-:= lild ••ml~ ... ID l!lfOlll. c:m.-lllillll •• •••af ...... 971if1-... -.· ·. \. I NaWPCIRT BllACH. CCJi iCINA c I MAR RHOOD From SURF to OCEAN - solind move for Coast DJ .Anew life· for old· frat ' . atILSC- Congratulations to Gas B•nt ofNewport Beach. Hunt was elected ~resident of the Siama Alpha Epsilon national fraternity at USC lastspringand led his chapter in a successful bid to be re .. recognized by the univer· ~ty. For 18 months the Gamma chapter of SAE has been banned from the USC campus after it .violatedthe univenity's alcohol poli~. Since its return to campus, the fraternity completed fall rush pled&ing 21 new men. . BJ L\TY BOUCHER tured the same ~ton the FM daal-°' .. ...,........ 103.1-ai K.SVRF. Beca'*ohhe Richard Lyons of N~n Beach station '1 3,000 watu of power, one remembers what it was hke to be a station is able to cover the Los teen·aaer. ~ Anaeles· area and tbe other Ora.nit Maybe that's because Lyons wasn't County Without interl'erina with each · I other. And because . of the beach a typJc:a teen. • . locale, ·they renamed their sister At 16 yearf old, Lyons interests station K-OCEAN and hired Lyons went. beyond the usuaJ football .. . . · gam~.,airts or:'grldes. · . Actual~y tb1s m<!n°?. 11 my a~ SlS'he went to work doi~ what he nave~ry. Lyons said. K-SURF 1s lovc'ci: playinarecofdsasadascjocke. y ·the sister station to K-9CEAN. They ·ror a top 40 radio sfation in Burbank. , promo~ed m~ and bas1~ly pve me "You have to have tenacity in this ~e ~~~Htat\On to do what J.wanted business." said Lyons. '""You hive to Wlth it .. sti~k.. with jt-becau~-nothin& works So Lyons moved his family of four better." to Newport Beach and bepn working Lyons. 43, has come a long way in on new programs and formats to help his 27·year career. He is now ~neral make the_.station a success. manager for ~n~ County s FM And morning disc jockey Rob radio station, K-OCEAN. Conrad said the music on K-OCEAN "I was born in Burbank," he said. "'is described as "Yesterday's .. I started selling radio time after I got memories and tomorrow's bits." outofschoolandworkedmyselfupto "It's an interseting mix;• said someofLosAngelcs' leadina stations. Conrad," We don't play all oldies "I've worked with such areats as because people tend to think they're Emperor Hudson and Bill Ballance," in a \ime warp when they don't hear he added. anything new. Lyons said after working at many "Ifs also adult-<:ontemporary big stations in the Los Angeles area, music," Conrad added. "One of the he got involved in programming and current popular sonp is Barbra sales and worked his way up to the Stresiand and Don Johnson's 'UntilJ position of sales and station manager Loved You.' When the listenen heard for K-SURF in Santa Monica. that, they went nuts." · His drive and talent was re-Conrad also explained he brings his cognized Last November new own· emotions and feel in9:1 to listeners so ers purchased KOCM. which fea-they feel like he's a fiiend rather than jusi a voice. Aftdbecauseofthisteam LyoDJhas coordinated -consistina of di1e ~'oc:keys Cindy Davis, Jay Lawrence, ichael Woods, Rich Taylor. 'Rich atson and Conrad -tbe station has cli mbed to the top of the Oranee :Count)' Arbitron ratinp. · And Lyons said they coukl9't let their ratings ~ unnoticed watbou\ celebrating wt.th a SS0,000 promo- tion. . "It's an interesting promotion," Lyons said. "We feature an .,-tist of the day and an artisJ of the eve- ning. "Whenever you hear a son& by the artist, if you're the fim caller, you qualify for a key to open a brand-new 1989 Jeep Chief Cherokee Laredo from Gary Gray:s Orange Coast Jcep/Ea&le. We're'gi vina away 500 keys -&ut only 30 will fit. "Out of those 30 keys, one key will start the engine to an "Arrowglass Fun Boat" from Harold's Marine in Costa Mesa,·• he added. "The key that starts this 140-horsepgwer engine boat wins itaU." .... Lyons said the contest will be held Sunday at Harold's Marine, and he invites everyone to join in the fun . "We did this last July and gave away a $35.000 Corvette," Lyons said. "We bad between 1,000 and 1,500 people show up. We're prepared fo~ this year. Th~re·n be lots offun. music and entertaanment. ............ .., ....... , K-OCBAK mtlon ••naaer·Rlcbard LJW (top) wltb c1t.c Jocb1a Jay Lawrence (left) and.Rob COara4. Hunt is a junior this fall, and bcpn his one year term by renovating his chapter's bylaws and risk management, comm uni· ty service and schloanhip pro- gramH ~· b . . . l e1sa uslllC$Sma.Jorspccia - iring in real estate finance, and has made the ~n's List Dog's life worth $2,000 for Coast video stair A~uate ofNe~rt Harbor Higli Sch09~ Hurst is the son of Gu Rant 01 Orange and Celette Hant of San Fernando. • • • General and Mn. William Lyon ofNcwport Beach have sure been busy volunteering-and their efforts haven't gone unnoticed. Recently they were honored at theRitz Carlton in Laguna Niguel with the annual Giving is Living A ward, for outstanding leader- ship in volunteerism. 1be Giving is Living A ward is Pf.'CSCDtcdey the Volunter Center of Orange County-Central South, one of t.Drce volunteers in the county and nearly 400 centers .nationwide. · By KATY BOUCHER !ng canine dtdn't work a!one. He °' ._ ..,,... ...,. mcorpora.ted the help of his owner, . Jennifer Ogle Wilde. Lepky hardly leads thehfeot:a.dog. -Her film was entitled "Fairyta)cs In fact, the 5-year-old husky.wolf Can Come True," and after watching has just returned from New York this pooch drive a roadster and a where he picked up the "Poocby" motorboat, 10 for a ride in a award and S2,000 for best canine in a limousine and fly his own private comedy. plane, the title couldn't be more The award was received from the a!priate. Come 'n Get It Canine Film Festival, e Wilde, 33, of Corona del Mar held at Radio City Music Hall in New tau ed as she talked about her dog's York. extraordinary success. The film festival culminated the .. I was driving home from a Come 'n Get It Famous Contest, a doctor's appointment and I wasn't first-of-its-kind home video/film doing anything at the time," Wjldc contest for dog owners that drew 400 said. "I was sort of at a crossroads in entries nationwide. my life. I heard the commercial over However, this suave smooth·talk-the radio. They advertised prizes for --tyon serves u cllairman ofme- boafd and CEO of the William Lyon Company, the nation's seventh largest residential build- ing fi,rm headquarted in Newport Beach. Lyon and his wife, Willa Deu, vigorously support a variety of Orange County charitable or- ganizations, serve on numerous boards of directors, and host many special events at their home in Cota•Caza. The evening sold out with more than 630 guests. • • • Congratulations to water- colorist GJ. Broekl ofHupt- ington Beach, who will proudly exhibit her work at the Newtk>rt City Hall Gallery throu&h Dec. 7. The ga!lery is open Monday throuabFridayfrom8a.m. toS p.m. • • • And how about Tltomaa TethDU of Corona del Mar? Testman, 1Jla!l81ing partner for theaccountingfirm Ernst& Whinney oflrvine, has been' ~pointed president of the UCI's Chancellor's Club for 1988-89. He is one of seven officers appointed this year. the best five-minute video in which your dog was the star. I thought to myself, 'l can do that!' " So Ogle Wilde got busy. ··1t was so much fun,' she said. "I got to play producer, writer and director. I've worked in the film industry for many years, but this i.s the first ti me I've ever done every- thin2 myself -from beginning to end."' The film opens with Lei:>ky dream-· .ing in his bathtub, while Frank Sinatra sings "fairy tales can come true ... " from-the song "Young at HCUL" Lepky envisions himself driving a roadster and picks up his girlfriend, Fifi, a French poodle. Fifi is draging a basket 1mpnnted with "Come ·n oile Wilde said makina the film Get It" Next, the two of them are opened a new door in her life and speeding in a motor boat -with inspired her to turn her creativity l.epk.y:~t \he wheel. toward a new J>roject.. After they enjoy a picnic on the .. At the awanls I met this fucinat- bcach, Lepky is greeted by a limou-ing lady," she said. "ln fact she has sine. As he enters he tells the driver, inspired me to produce my first who is none other than his master, feature film for a very -worthwbile- Oale Wilde. "Afrport. babe." cause. She's instituted a program •• lie is then whisked away to fly his prisons to have inmates train dop to private airplane. , help the handicapped., abused cbil· Throughout the video, songs by the dren and the elderly." · Beatles and the Beach Boys 'were She said tbe9e doll can <19 almost carefully selected to lO alona with everytbina for bartaicaDPed oeoolt .Lepky's curious activities. who don'thavc full useo(theirlimbL. AJ...lbe end of the film he's sh.owo · Ahd tJx beoefus it produces for the. ·waking up to his favorite dog food. as children are well worth it. he tells v1ewers they, too. can make "These abused children are an"6 fairytales come true. (9ee DOG/Ill) P11otog's people really stand out By~UTY BOUCHER Ot .. Dllllr ......... If a picture paints a thousand words, then Steve Krupnick is crcat-ina quite a conversation piece. Krupnick is owner of a franchise called "SeegerPeople .. in Newpon Beach - a whole new idea in photography. And while he is a phot~pher. the customer gets more than JUSt a 5-by-7 aJossy. Instead, imagine a photo that has been turned into a 3-0 sculpture mo\ttlted on a base of acrylic. The end result could be descn'bcd as a high- leeb paper doll. Or better yet. for a sllablc invest- ment, you can order a life-sized 3-0 photo-sculpture and be, well. beside yourself. "My daughter was the one who eve me this idea ... Krupnick said. She had it done 10 Maui. They bad only two stores at the time -now there's nine. When she sent us the 1eulpturc, I loved it I had to meet the man who thought of this wonderful idea:" K.rupnick learned that head- quarters for "ScegerPeople" was iD Scottsdale, Ariz.. so he decided tO travel to Arizona with his assistant. Michele Burton. After a Iona con- versation with "the creator. Dick Seeger, he told him he ouaht to franchise this new . idea, and to K.rupnick's delight he agreed. K.rupnick wasted no time. ~ opened a store in the Glendale Gallcna and one in Fashion Island. ··After we returned from Seo~ tsdale, we sat down •nd f11ured OU1 what 'tC needed to do.'' Krupnict said. "We managed to build two stores and have franchise raies for the entire state:· Bunon and KJ:upnick sat in thf Newport Beach store surrounded by these photo-sculptures oae recent momin&, as people curiously breezed in to find out just cuctly what SeegerPeople are. After &U. it isn't every day you see someone YoU !mow in a store "Mndow holdina a .,_ ol ~ a life.sized sculpture o( tbe 'kid next door" or your f'rieDcfl enjoyins a pme of tennis. The club is composed of parents, alumni and community memben who support research, education, scholanhips and fel· (Pleue ... OCl/82) Ste•e Krapnlck and uelatant lllcbelle Burton with their .. &eecerPeople." It was about this umc K.rupnick sold his accounting firm and was looking for a new hnc of work to get into. 'It's JUSt a lot of fun," Krupnidt said "We ask ~pie to brina iD • many chanfcs of clothes u they want. We tell them to brina in any ""°" (Pleue eee PBOPLS/81) _J B ULLETIN B OARD ~ . -- Forum on JFK assassination set at Saddle back College I • .. JFK Assauination: 25 Yean of Controversy," a Saddlebeck Cones forum, will be presented in two 1q1nents this weekend in commemontion of the 25th anniversary of the assassination of President Kennedy. Steven Frope, an instructor with the Division of SociaJ and Beh&vionl Sciences at the Million Viejo eol~, will explore the controveniel in liabt of three official inves1iptions. plus numerous books and movia. The fonam will meet Friday from 7 tQ. 10 p.m. and S.turday from 9 a.m. to 4 ~.m. in the CQllele's Butinal/Genen.l Studies Center, Room 321 . The feet are SS for friday~s 1e11011 J!! for ttudentt) and SIO for S.turdl1'1 (SI fOr It 11). Call Joyce Hanna at Sl2A650 for mote informltioft. " ... c ' (. Wasbinaton D.C., will spealc on "Truth in Media" at a luncheon hosted br the Oranae County chapter of the freedoms Foundation at Valley Forae Friday m Newpon Betlch. . Tbe propam is ICbeduled for 11 a.m. at the Newport Betlcb COuntry Oub, 1600 E. Cout Hjpway. The public is invited and may raerve tickets by callina 968.aS95. ~tlve reception plaaaed FedenL ltale and county leaislators and elec1ed oftklaJa will:9.J. · local business leaden for an o~n reception f · from 6:JO to 8:30 p.m. at the L.tauna Hilla Holiday nn on La Pu ROid It the San Diet<> Freeway. ne ....... ~. held for tbe dilCUSSion of i.uesof~ interest. is~ by~ Slddlebclt ~Clllllnberof'Commen:e. Tbeevent i•OllCD 10 the ,Ma ~nd he ol cbatle. with f\anbcr information available at 137·3000. . Hand~ah boutique J..n ~· The Jewish Community Center of South Oranac County will bold a Hanukkah boutique Friday from 10 L m. to 2 p.m. at the center, 298 Broedway, Lapna Beach. Hand-painted clothes and ICXlCS10ries. jewelry children's wear arid &ift shop items will be available. Cati Sherry Leiter at 497-2070 for details. . Senion 1et free na neclae Tbt TLC Medical Group in OOf\iuncdon ~th ~ Ora,. County Health Care ~ will ~vidc ftec flu V11Ccine innoculations for oeOole 1n biah risk health calelOI ia and anyone over .S' Ye&n of• this wittkend and nat week. Vaccinations are SC'hedulcd friday ft-om 8 Lm. to 8 p.m. and Saturday from 8 Lm. to 4 p.m. at 10111 Adams Ave., HunbftllOG Beach, and Tuaiday and Wednead&y from 8 Lm. to 8 p.m. at 17900 ~ ......... ~/ fountain Valley. CalJ the medical pwp at 96J.lne: fbr more i1lf0nftation. .... Jan. 5 at IOa.m .. Ja.n. 26and Feb. 9at I p.m .• Feb. 23 at 10 a.m. and March 9 and 23 at I p.m. Watercolon oa dUpJ•r Ja lfB Hawaiian and Tahitian landtaapcs hiablilllt the watercolon by Terry McDonald cum:ntly on~• the Newpon Center lnncb of the N~ 8eecb hblil Library. • The artwork will be on ~Y throup Decmt~ the library, 956 San Clemente Drive. Teea• nn.t tor lfan:IJ Ot DJmei A giant Twister tournament will be hdd SM_., • Goklen West C.ollete tbr teen~.~ Wt6 · l,)fOCCeds IO•n& to tbe Marth or ·~ l&tla ·Dllklil Foundation. · A minimum donlbOa of SlO win acbnit ~ twttim wbo may be_ IJ)ClGIOl'ld bJ ...ai ........ ~ who railes SlS.or more Will .-w .. Tw1tter T-Min. Call s.Ddi Mm 816.ll~ ...... - -• . . . .. :.. .. .. . ... -.. -. . . . . . . ,.. .. . ... -,, ... .. ... ;. -: -.,. : ... .. .. .. .. .. .. , . :--: ... .. .. ; . . .. ~ . . .. " . • . . . . . --. -. -. . . . . . . -. . -. -. . . . -. . . . . -. --. . ---. . . . . -. -. .. . . . -. -. .. . .. . . --" . .. • • -~ .. .. ~ .... ... ALL NEW NEWPORT! Our totally remodeled Fashion Island store Premieres Friday at 10:00 a.m .. Join-us for special events all week We're giving away ten 100.00 grand re·openihg shopping sprees! Register in the Credit Office. Drawings will be held Friday, November 18 at 1 I a.m., l p.m., 3 p .m., 5 p.m., 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.; Sarur<lay, November 19 at l 1 a.m., l p.m., 3 p.m . and 5 p.m. Winners need not be present to win, but you must re-register after each drawing. 0 Open your new Buffums charge account and receive a free 15% gift credit on all purchases made Friday. November 18 and Saturday, November 19 . •Excludes Cosmetics. 0 Free Umjted Edjtion shopping baS" with any purchase. FRIDAY,NOVEMBER18 'Visit our Fine Jewelry Department and register to win a 500.00 fine" jewelry gift certificate . Enter by Sunday. November 20. See our special collection of fine jewelry at 50% off Meet ou r representative from Napier 11 :30 a.m.·3:30 p.m.. and enter our dnwing for free Napier Jewelry. 0 Receive one-line free imprint with your purcha~ of boxed ·Christmas cards _, 0 Sneak preview our new spring line of exquisite knit drcs.sing from Park Avenue De~iWts. All designs are handloom cd and embellished with feather.., 5<'.quins, leathers and more. M~et our representative and ~)in u..; for informal modeling. 11 a.m. -3 p.m . Refreshments will be served. 0 ... St.-e the latcM dc~igns in our Anne Klein jewelry collection and meet our rt prcse.ntative. I I :;\O a.m.·3:30 p.m . 0 Take home a gift with any Goldenthreads eel skin ttandbag purcha-.e. Meet representative Susan Jakobowski, I 0 a.m.·2 p.rn. 0 F rec e ngraving while·you·wait on any Cross pen or desk set purchase. noon·4 p.m. .0 In Cosmetics: Fragrance modeling featuring Elizabeth Taylor's ~-.ion and SamM (Also Saturday. November 19). l'M secrets cl Swi~ nailcarc. free, at our one-on-one Mava.la Nail Clinics and meet Richard Nelson, ~ldcnt of Mavala of Swiae:rland, noon- 2 p.m. See a demonstration of the flC'W cordl~ Epibdy h2lr • . tcmQYCr, 11 :30 a.m.·3;30 p.m. . Pamper yourself with consultations from Esttt lauder, l.ancome and Cliruquc. 0 Meet our expert bra 6tter Carri Baughman, Buy 2 l>rM at regular prirc and get a 3rd at 50% oft'. (Also on Satutday, Nov. 19th) 0 Try on any women's lsotoncr slipper and recd~ a frtt gill I 1 a.m.·4 p.m. whi~ quantities laM 0 Get a frtt rose sock bootk and bib wtth ~Infant purchMc . (Abo Saturday and Sunday, Nomnbcr, 19th and 20th) 0 Recd~ a 3·paJr ~Cl biJdn undcrMlr wtdl my fUilkJr ~cepwar purdmc tom ~Dall 3. (Abo Saturday sand Sundily, N<Mmbrt 19111 11111 20dl) I , , Meet Big Buffy in our Children's Department, both Friday, November .l 8 and Saturday, November 19. Buffy is yours for only 19.50 witlr ~y purchase; 1.00 will be donated to the Make-A-Wish Foundation.41 Receive a free scented satin hanger with any regular priced gown purchased (Also Saturday·ancrsunday, oWn1C>er l9tll and70'th) 0 Visit our Beauty Salon and receive a free gift with our Sebastian makeover special. 0 Purchase an 8 oz. or 16 oz. Forever New fabric wash and receive a 4 oz. travel·sized gift! (Also Saturday and Sunday. November 19th and 20th) 0 You'U receive a free handbag with any special occa'lion dress purchased from Oeparunent 48 and 46. (Also Saturday and Sunday, November 19th and 20th) 0 Meet Buffums furrier Gary Bush and save up to-50% o n a specially selected assortment of furs just for this grand re-opening. (Also on Saturday. November 19th) SA1URDAY,NOVEMBER19 Meet Hddi.MHler-insplrational speaker. author, health expert and yogurt entrepencur-when she demonstrat~ the ~ of bOdy sculpting with the new Hardbody Fitness Bar, 2 .m.-4 .m. ln Westminste 11 a.m.· l .in . Meet bmous N~ Beach perfume designer Anne Plisk2 and discover her spirited Anne Pliska fragrance. 11 a.m.·2 p.m. See the latest from Givenchy at our Bi;oux trunk show, noon-~ p.m. 0 Meet Bueno of California handbag representative Robert Doyle and take home a free gift with any Bueno handbag purchase . 10 a.m.·2 p.m. 0 Join us for our Pirenze Leather trunk show. in coats, 11 a.m.·3 p.m . 0 Ffa8WlcC modeling featuring Lou l.ou! . 0 " .J Enter our Cinderella contest and win a pair of free shoes! Our own Prince Owming will wander tht storr 1n search for the-woman who will fit into his gorgeous new shoes. If you're our lucky Cinderella, the shoes arc }'OUJ'S. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21 join us for a London fog trunk show i>t women featuring reprcxntad~ Ron Lowe, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. in our coat department. Register to win a free London Fog coal. nJFSDAY, NOVEMBER 22 Meet reprt5ientatl~ Dennis Brando from Laliquc. and 5ee his video presentation on the hiscory of the tunou,, French crystal rompany • I 1 a.m.·3 p.m. ' FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2S Ff'llll'IU'tt modeU• fearurt,. CanJcr, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; Uz Claibornt and lll..wian Aujltd. (Abo on S.Ntd8y, N~ 261h) ---:r-· 0 Learn all.,_. rr.nncc. onc-orH>nC, at our &tt F,..-.llK'C l.a)'mf1l Clinic from ShlftnW:-haw to apply It, ~ to mpply It and how 10 11,u" b ~-... .u dly war. You11 tttttw an m'fXY Gw.'fbln .._,_ a1m: 1t co 111e ..... '" aJU1Ur 1nc1 "M'll en 11 a 1rtt :and W9dl JOU CKlfdmw you'~ -.,S wanfcd ftt knoW. I I .. Heavy cleanup job Joe Brown appeua to be 8WeepiDC tbe fllln&• from a blaer- tbaa-llfe fellow worker u lie cleau ap oatalde tbe Wllalalre. a 27~ tower ander coutnactlon la Loe ~el•. Tbe 70-foot maral •'Tbe Amerlcan Craftaman" adciru tbe barricade. 'Child's Play' not for the squeamish By JOE BALTAJtE lllJCI I ........... Orenge COMt OAH..Y PILOTIThur9day, Nowmber 17, tt11 - Wil~, wacky farce on the 'Ru~' Once upon 1 time there was 1 poiee and an admirable sente of tbe anarchistic intruder, .-bile Rieb· diRICtOr named Ron AJbetueo. who timinJ -not to mention 1 pair of ant Fllber makes a properly oflic:ious wu known u the "Mel Brooks of sinptarly exprellive eyes. Kent PhiJ. police terpnl Qtanee County community theater." T hpa plays bet American serviceman But the real ~tt in the deck ia the His pi'oductions were distinpisbable 01 friencli a former CXM\11 from bet role of the ti mad little clera:ymao-Rev. for their wild. wacky pbysica) com· theatrical days, and delivers a fme, Hum{>lu'ey, who comes to take the edy, and their attendant demandso TITIS enefFtic porUayal, whieb iDdudts montm1serviceand finds bimtelfaap the acton!.enerajes. divtlll under.fw:niture periodically at to his reddened face in what must Tbouah Alberuen is stiJJ around. a moment's nooce. · seem 1 madhouse. Daryl Mendelton and directing occasionally, be ~ Tbe sbow-tlalin& roles of Ida, the enacts this put-upon cbancter beauti· ably would have to surrender his Tbe show it.telf takes playwriabt Cockney maid, ancfMi• Skillon, the fully -including one bit of Cohen. Brooklian desianation to Orea PbiliplGng'alCl'jpt-aboutt6ecri:ry musty ·pillar of the cbwc~ arc induced slapstick: that will have you c.oben, who's beCome the exponent prp-on at the home of a stockY anacbcf PeefuUy by Elana Sifry and laUlbing the rest of the cveninc. of the si&;ht 111 in his ptoduct.aona at Enalisb vicar _ and amplifies t& Sheri Sa~. rapect_ively. The dif· When a play tbat'a been around IS the Hunbnau>n Belch Playboute and silffness by tumina each cbancter's ference iD their me is employed to much as "See How They Run" can •the Westminster Community comic potential upa bil hall adds up ~ e&ctiveaaa u the tiny Sifry still elicit continuous howls oflauab- Tbeater. to a riotous romp that should be the anempts io transport the tipsy, un~ ter,it'sa tributetodirectoriali.Qlellui· Cohen's recent work includes a funniest community theater pro-CODICIOUI form of the fomudable ty and acton' stamina -both of Huntington Beach staaina of .. A duction you'lhee all teUOD. with the Savaee around the --.. which are present in abunduQe at Midsummer Night's Dream .. that c:astaethn&hiabmi....._outofKing's Mart MacDicken nicely under-Westminster. h's only.a shame that bore • more than passina re-alib quips, such ....-ir0oo't bicUr, plays the proper ~t who spends Cohen's creativity doesn't extend to semblance to "Happy Days\' or vicar" and' "It can'1 amount to much of the show an bis underwear, the ultra-brief Qlrtain call. .. Grease .. and 1 Westnunster version tantamount to slaUlbter." and Tony Grande lends a fine touch The show continues Fridays and of "Dracula;. The Musical'r' which Katbryii Byrd S"teinhaus, IS the of outrqe as the bishop who arrives Saturdays at S:30 ~ Dec. 3 at elaborated on playwri&bt Jack vicar's wife who'~ in the eye of the to visit his niece (Steinhaus) durina the theater, 7272 Ma SL, with Sharkey's inherent wackiness.. And comedic storm. dispJays splendid the turmoil. Tom Meehan isa kick as reservations taken at S...113. now he's on the l<>Ole api:n, turnina niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'"-tbe Enalish farce "See How They Run" upside down on the W.est- minsters •. You reahze you're in forsometHing 1 little different when you enter the theater to find a bare stage. The cast sets up the furniture in a Laurel and Hardy-style drill (cborqraphed by Cohen's wife, Kysa) that inclUdes a rubber chicken and a beach ball. No, they don't come into play in the actual production. they're jus1 there because they're funny. RU Ff ELL'S· UPHOLSTERY INC. · ... , ..... c.... .... lt22 -llll .. CISTI 11.11-SU-1!51. Exclusive~ Now Playlttg EDWARDS TOWN CENTER CISTA •SA c-• Pllllllltlfl•1' 1m 1 m~'" _., ~ s.11MJ1.lfJS WE'RE FIGHTil\G Fm 'OJR LIFE ftAmericon Heart V Association LOB!iTER DINNER • 8 Oz. Broiled Lobster tail ·1~.95 7 Days a week • 8 Oz. Baby beef teriyaki short ribs • 14 ·oz. Baked potato served with chives, sour cream and butter, accompanied by your choice of our famous clam chowder or salad . ........ * Ask -about our Lunch Specials Mon-Sat 13.95 LOC8tlone: Newport Beacn Gatden Grove Oana Point Aneheiln L.agona H•s ANihetm Hills Rancho Caltfoma "Child's Play," an amoral and truly nasty little. thriller, is one of those "k.iUer doll" movies (or you can substitute "ventriloquist's du{llmy" or "marionette," if you like) ~hose makers exploit the innate creepiness of an inanimate object that bas been ajven human features and qualities. named Chuckie (short for Charles Lee Ray, the name of the psycho), tells little Alex that he wants to stay up to watch the 9 o'clock news, presumably for the report about the toy-store ~ooW~~w~nAJ~~ba~~~l -~Th~s~~~~~~~~u~a~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~;;;~;~~;;~~!!!!!~~ (Dinah Manofl) says no, she is t- promPl]y pushed out a window (but u This idea alone -seeing a little humanoid with lifelike eyes and sometimes even a voice -provides half the chills and suspense. The other llalfcomes from ltle evil ways thest little people invariably embody the darker side of the human race -the hate, the need for revenge, the tasle for blood. We know tbe story; all that malters from variation to variation is eAecu· tioo. Director and co-writer Tom Holland keeps matters economical in this variation, dealing with only five or six characters and tryi~ bis level best to make them all credible. Even his special effects, all handsomely done, are kept to a minimum. But the only thing that all of his caution succeeds in doing is to underline the familiarity of his theme and, again, its grating nastiness. You'll have fun for a while keeping up· with the plot as cop Chris Sarandon guns down psycho.crimi- nal Brad DOurif who, before he dies in a toy store, recites a voodoo chant and "wills" his departing soul into a kid- sizt talkinadoll called the Good Guy. not before beina gashed in the head with a hammer). The police -headed by Sarandon, natch -think Alex did it. and he's taken into custody bY. the police psycbiatrisL Meanwhale, Cbuckie continues tO'run amokj not only that, burht runnmok; as H1cbdiscovcrs, without benefit of batteries. When she learns this, Chuckie bites her in the arm and runs off to take revenge on anyone wbo gave Charles Lee Ray a bad time in life -and that includes Chris Sarandon. If you're one step ahead of me - and fve a hunch you arc -you know that in order for Chuckie to remain alive, he bas to pass his soul on to a human, the first one to whom he revealed himself. That means little Alex. "Child's Play" moves at a furious pace, benefiting laraely from the editing of Edward Warschilka and Roy E. Peterson and complemented by the sincere_performanccs, particu· larly that of Catherine Hich, a nioe mom if there ever was one. The movie gets the job done. I guess, but it works you over. There's something essentially joyless about its im:vcrent. parodistic wit It's like 1 "Road Runner'' cartoon, only not quite as effective, in its utter point· lessness and lack of established. clear petterns. ..., The doll somehow finds its way into the hands of a hobo who. in turn, sells it to widow Catherine Hicks. whose beloved 6-year-old son Alex Vincent wants a Good Guy more than anything. Matters keep moving as the doll, It just MOVES, draaging us along and. frankly, I didn't enJOY being treated so shabbily. r---:;!~;:;;~~;;;;;;;~;;;~;ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiii --------------------------~-----'War' fourth i~rati·ngs NEW YORK (AP) -ABCs huge miniseries "War and Remembrance" fared only fourth in its baptism offire in 1be ratinp, while the top-rated show of the week wu a one-hour episode of NBC's "The Cosby Show" fcaturin& a newborn family member. The debut of Oiff and Claire Hux table's fint arandcbild had a 30.3 ratin1 and a •1. shanahate, the hiahest· rated "Cosby" since last March. The first installment in the first I I hours of "War and Remembrance" placed fouit.b in tbe-...ek.Jy ratinp from the A.C Nielsen Co., with a ratina of 21.8 and 1 31 share. The rest of the 32-bour miniseries will air next . ~ ..,.._ I• • , I '-., Y~e miniseries is a seq~el to 'The Winds of War," which opened in 1983 with a rating of 39.l and a SJ share. The difference is to some extent statistical because network ratinp are senerally lower due to 1 new Nielsen measurement system and inroads by cable and videocassettes. The 1 O top-rated shows of the week were: "The Cosby Show •• "Cheers" and "Golden OirfS:' ~BC· "War and Remembrance "ABC· 0 6d Minutes, .. CBS; "Grow'ina Pains," ABC· "Empty .Nest.'' "LA. Law" and "Dear John," all NBC. • ··- .• !!b'""";• ... ~ 11~~1U5't uuu S11llO SM DKISIOMS ~ 1n1 no •·>0 ... •·» uus i.ftCTILlltK~ _.,' U2:1ATTUAHDIMl (N-111 , ... J•U l!JI 1:JO I- lll'IMnatO MAl.Lllawu.., I~ 1-te 4tU .. IS •U lltU •.. ,, .• .... n"lt 1111 ..., Sl90 OIU'SNT Pl) lt:Jlt:»•·•1<•~1•• -ll&AfOM MIOOO-(t) U;U Jill~ "'° ~ --....... l• .... -7'4'"4 2• .. uuu lllllOl0111$ -.rn, .. 10MW1U•1 ... "" ,.. , •• ,IM 10.11 OIU'SNT 119 ''" ''" .... ,,.. ... '"" IOUf ....0 -.au-. E mw MITIOln .u..-.. ~ It:» J..S S1U.., .... ...QA .. •toat-1111 •.• .,.. .... Utll-4t ~ ....... ··-·~·-'"' 114/ttt .. ,. ..... ~ .... .......... ....... CllCIU&. _.,. L IW .............. --... --·~ -~ NTIM111t 12'4J t 41 ... ,..S1'41 IMJ IOU'f mllO ~~-c-...n WIQff A ClUI '"' I UJ»J •t•1•U --·~ ···-.n.-. ... , te•n• 714ittt•t> CIU'SMT Ill ... ... • n WIU 1l11Mf't VIII CHILD'S 'UY CRI I • J • S It I \I t n • u .2 mi. ... ('8 1ll 1 l lJ ltl111 zttlt • 'UNCH LINE (RI 12•2 •1 •1 •1•• • IODtf •osu• THE ACC USED (ffl 11•2•1•1•11• ALIU UTIOI (R) • 2 1u~111•1 11 Ill lit .. •" 6 lt '¥.IO'> OUlllCf ._,.,.., .. ,,.,.o, 0! llWIS T "'• CIT v \fltOOO•"t (•"*•• 't •• -· .. . • ••• l ... H •ESTSAVU CHIHSTllAI CPI) -... ,.,._ .. , THlY LIVE UU ..... t. .... ......... , .. A FISH CALLED WUDA (R) ..... ( ...... Ill U-2 "•rdl I H-('8-1 l) .............. ,,.. ALIEN .. ATION CR) 'lllS Oil MUD C•t ·D•"'f MISM•· .. IUS t M 'Wlf•• t • V .. O U f.•lf MllU •On -- M OnngeCoelt OAtLY PtlOT/ Thunday. Nowmber 17. 1888 I TV L ; .:1 ' I Taking chances for children BJ l.AAEN M. ll&ED ........ Cu 0 °, . . There's somethtna to be said for the po~r ofa few. And it wujust a few dedicated women who pulled tc,.ether Saturday niaht's .. Casino RoyaJcJ." a. benefit for the Children's Home ;,ocicty. A six-year old group, the Night- ~ Auxiliary of the Children's Home Society is made up of a mere 20 members-and these 20 pooled their talent and time to orchestrate a dinner. dance and casino at the Four Seasons Hotel in Ncwpo11 Beach. "This is the first time we've done an event of this kindJ.." explained poup ~dent Alu oayer ... Our· annual event bas traditionally been the Holly Ball featuring an auction- type forma~ so we wanted to try tomcthingdiffcrent this year.·· A crowd of some 250 paid $75 apiece to attend the black tic optional Illa and first pthcred in the &allroo~'s foyer for cocktails and relaxinJ conversation. A featured attraction was the golden retriever puppy donated for the prize packages l>Y Deu1s and Adriene AaL Ticktocker volunteer Lurte ,.,_ was the puppy's chaperone. . A fine dinner of peppered bow tic pasta with sauce a)fredo, baked fillet of Pacific salmon with caviar. and chocolate walnut terrine with raspberry couJis followed in the grand ballroom. It was then "commentator" Roa Bayer took the mike to explain the prosram for the rest of the evenin&- -wagering" at gaming tables which come in a variety of shapes and forms. including "a wheel of fortune, minus Vanna White." "Tbe bigest winner toni&ht will be the person who bas the most rotten luck,.. said Bayer "because that person bas made the greatest dona- tion ... Onoc the pmina was complete, guests had the .opportunity to trade their .. winnings' 10 on chances on •ny of the 14 prize pack.a&cs ran&ing frOm a Hawaiian Island$ vacation (including airfare) to "Restaurant Rcpettoirc" featuring meals at a dozen fine restaurants around the county. And, of course, there was the puppy ... Complete televlelon !'-tinge tn Sunder'• TY Piiot Funds raised from the event will benefit the programs offered by Oilld.ren's Home Society induding foster and adoptive pa.rent programs, Don't put happiness on hold familydaycarc,andexpectantparent DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am counseling. writing to warn others of a mistake The small (but mi&hty) group that my husband and I made. orpnwna the event focluded chair-When ·•Larry" and 1 tttircd seven woman Tent NIMwkk, Jeu Bill-years ago, we started to elan some mu. Vera Udle, Etaa Gl)'M. Dine wonderful trips we Couldn t afford in Meiee, Beverly Me&luey, Julee our younger years. Three weeks after AMet a..n. a1.-. .. -..1 Gleav we taJked to our travel agent. Larry's .._. .. _ '1 9().dear-old mother suffered a stroke Bralle, c.me C.JM, hJlt.Doru, •• IM1us wt th two dattcrent guys, which makes me feet lousy about myself. I know my ret>Utation is bad and the guys say some pretty rough things behind my ' back.....but I just can't seem to help mysdT. I need to know how IQ control my hormones or wh1tevc11 it is that makes me fall into bed so fast I don't know who else to tum lo for help. I need advice. -HORNY IN BAL Tl-a...... Eau. ButNlra Eat..,.., an had to be put in a nursing home. Pam r...r1, ·JealleUe Farr, Ju We are the onJy relatives who live in Cbalnroman Terri Nledwick (center) with Verda Veb.le McNeW. Dine O..cerlJ:q, , ... Pia-this city, although his brothers and (left) and Diana McKee. MW,~ RetUn and C.Wy Sk.,f, sisters come to visit at least once a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--. year. authonty on this sub,JCCt who will be -TRA VELJNG ALONE FROM OMAHA. DEAR OMAHA.: Tllen'1 a tea of ..... MYke la JMO' letter. No way cu l ..,....e • It, .. I wW Jnt leeeM lite ..... IM .. , tU.u for &M.W.... MORE. I DEAR BALTIMORE: v .. r ...... Ian a..•t llerm...t. It'• bdavleral. v .. llee4I ......... ceateliq ... flM 04lt wlly JM &MM M Utile el yMntll &Mt y .. are wlWq .. stve awaJ tM wt.le 1tere ..a a few NJDpJel w....-M HiilMte-:-PUBLIC NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY Final Environmental Impact Statement Approved for Interstate 5 (Santa Ana Freeway) WHAT'S BEING PLANNED? CAL TRANS (California Department of WHY THIS AO? WHAT'S AVAILABLE? WHERE YOU COME IN: CONTACT: Transportation) is proposing to widen Interstate 5 and construct. in the median. a ~ lane transitway between State Route 55 and State Route 2 in the cities of Sant a Ana, and Tustin including interchanges with those State Routes. The Federal Highway Administration and CAL TRANS have approved the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS). The FEIS which describes the project Is now available to the public. It Is bfing distributed to those who made sut:>stantive comments on the Draft EIS and Supplemental EIS or request a copy. A Notice of Determination per CEOA and Record or Decision per NEPA will soon be flied. , You can look at or buy the statement at the CAL TRANS District Office 2501 Pullman Street, Santa Ana, on weekdays 7:30 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. There are copies available to read In the following locations in the study corridor: Santa An• Public Library 2e Civic Center Plaza Santa Ann sa,,t• An• Publlo library Mc,add•n lranoh 2e21 w. Mc,adden Ave. Santa A"a Tu•tln City Hall 300 C.ntennlal Wey Tue tin . Tuetln llbrery 345 EHt Main Tuatln For more lnfonnauon concerning this project, P'elM contact : Ronald Ko"nlkl· ChHtf Environmental Planning Branch (714) 724·20&2 · Our long-<ireamcd-o( trips were postponed until ·•Mother was ,1one." Larry spent part of every da)' w1th her. I was not"resentfut. in fact I was proud that he was such • devoted son. last March my darling Larry died ofa heart attack. He was 67. Mother. at 97, is still alive in the nursing home. Soon I will be makini those trips by mysel~ and they won't be half as much run. So tell your readers, Ann. not to put their lives on hold, waiting for an elderly relative to die. A lot can happen that you don't expect. I am IJl ,' HoRoscoPl L ---..., ............. 11 SYDNEY OllAIUl • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS; I am a 17-ycar-old Jirl, average ellOCpt for one thina: I have a tendency to have sex with suys after going out with them only once or twice. I have never been in love with any of them,, but I like the fun and excitement 01 sex. I even slept with one guy bec:ause he was bonna and it was too hard to carry on a conversation. In the pas~ two weeks I have h.td sex 1. up le",. .. take aw. ... ice Hr1ealJ re JM wW ., la a materaJt)' ward. er a Mder'1 •ffice be'91 treate4 fer I YeMreU ....,H, or-wene yet u AIDS Yktlm. Cronword puzzle In Cl•••llled, CB methods, health, nutrition. diet Individual previously indifferent will now show marked interest ARJBS (~b 21-April 19): Obstacles are trans- formed into ltepplna stones, bri&ht youna pcnoo becomes valuable ally. Factual infonflation verities views. Family mcmberiuys, "J>)ease let us tet toeether." SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You recently com· plained of beina neglected -now it mi&ht appear the phone won't stop rinaiDf. Assen needs, ex.amine possibility of publish.in& pro,Jeet,joumey. SAGmAJUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Older family member confides .. ICCret." Property or inheritance could be involved. L9n1-ranae prospects come into sharp, olear focus. Stress •ndependence. courage of convictions. TAUllUS (April ~May_ 20): Popularity is such that some people compete in etron to wine and dine you. Emphasis on humor, sense of fitness, communication. You'll receive lift which adds to wardrobe. GDllNI (May 21-June 20): Puz2le is solved, answers arc obWfted, door is open to production. promotion, publicity. Health report~~ relative is favorable. Romance combines with · t dinner. . CAPIUCOllN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Gather information, brina source material ur.-to date, be aware of safety measures and alert to 'plumbina problem." Special success indicated in dealing with public. AQVAAIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Divenify, rulize recent investment as due to pay dividends. What had been lost will be recovered. A Saaittarian is in your cheerins section. Lona-<iistanoc call involves social activit.y. CANCEll (June 21-JuJy 22): Many people arc intemtecl in your views, some will cooperate in obiainina ••new aa::ounts." Focus oa writina, creative endeavors, reunion with loved ooe. Tra.vd pouibility is very 1trOQi1. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): focus on voice, music, alamor, major domestic adjustmenL Serious diSC\ISSion with family member concerns P.05siblc acqu.isition of luxury item, art object. Taurus, Libra fiaure prominently PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20):. It is time to revise, review, refurbish. Get rid of outmoded machinery, techniques.. Many arc now willina to listen, to heed your declarations. Scorpio native says. ••1 intend to do your bidding." VlllGO (AUJ. 23-Sept. 22): Define terms, realize that lepl "manipulations" are part of scenario. Keep 1uard up, defend riabts and permissions. Marital status continues in spot.liahL Pisces. another ViJ'IO play dominant roles. IP NOVEMBER II IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current cycle emphasizes fresh start, romance, creativity. style. Travel indicated this month. aJODJ with pa\cr awareness of body imqe, fashion, accelerated toeial activity. Holiday season will be J)(Oductivc, pr0vide satisfaction and an emotional lit\. Aries. Libra ~ play important roles in yo'1f life. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on power, authority, intensity. Attention ceoten around work <' ., CllAllLD GOllBN .. OfllAll•••• Ndtbcr wlaerable. North deals. NORTH • AQ I 4 Q A Q.J ¢ s 3 • KJ l l EAST • VoN WEST •Kiil Q t 15 ¢A&. I• 2 • 64 Q '') 2 ¢ Qtt916 •ti 5 l 80VTH • 197652 Q . ". <> I •AOM '1119 M•''z•:~ .. -............ , .... ,. J • ,_ 4NT IQ .._ , • .. ... ·-... .. .... Openina Jcad: Kina of o Bridle ii a Josk:al pmc. If )'OU know what the ~ la, mote than likely you caJl •ork out the rilb& ...... Whm Nonb could jump rai.le .... Soutb ftll in'°" with hia bud. Hit dlne bonon in partner's ,... ... ec1 a double n1, anc1 wilh nr. °'~control of eY- f/l/'f lklt 11111, be kMW that there ... 110 two ,_ .... ID MJ tult . He ..nw , ........... when he --Ul act .......... . w.. m.a.I tlM klq of clia .. ..... and (Oiklwed widl U.. ace, nalfed bJ dedarir. AD bdt W to do10.U1hll ............. .. tbt tnmp ................. and ......... 10 air-. .. tM suit tlal ~ plaJ WU IO take a ..... ' • It ~&ht seem, therefore. that de- .darer can lead any card from hand and finesse the queen. MOS( of the time that would be adequate. How- eYer, if the cards are cUvided as above, dec;larcr will atlU have to con- cede .a tnamp trick. A trump ranaee is only put of the solution. Declarer alto Jhou)d pro- vkk for tbt J)OllibWty the& all the aaiAia1 lpedcs will be in tbe Wat ":'f!· c:aaer 10 lhll. dicllil• tbould leed IM)ld 0( ... IO die dlird ... ., w ... ~ low, declarer ,.... lhejack aacl,..,... tM no... to pick up an the tnmp1. If W• cown, d..._.,., ace wtu and de- danr ..,. ... the )..() ... ..... Eal&dtarda.ltlsa..,.. ...... '°' dedlarir lo,...,. to..._. • a .... iilt -.......... ~ •. tut.a U..-ked ftDilill of ... ...... -11 •• , ....... . • > • l ) ' ~ ' • I t t .. t . I I TD PAMIJ,Y cmcua .. •Grandma says Sam is takkLa catnap. Can a dog do that?" '{OU GOT AN'/ 3'5? ~ ( ~ . #;) .. llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE llENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ 11-n 1 I 1 I "Some of the things he brings home aren't • entirely useless!" MEX'f TIME "Qt RltE ON~ ~,lR'<lO KEEP 'aJR ltSQJT ~ HIS fQ)(ffS.• PltAl'fUTS GARFIELD ANP MERE'~ A PMO'fO OF YOO Wl'fM 'fME f'ICJS ON MY fOL~ FA~M LA!>T 50MME.R ~iw . ,·~· ~idl1!lioli~1t-=:_:_:.:.:..::..,:.::!::::] . ' '> p ~~ • DllABBLE aoa&maoes by Charles M . Schulz SORR'(, MA1AM ! JUST A LITTLE PAMIC "™ERE .. by Jim Davis by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady ARLO AND JANIS SHOE ,, ' FUNKY WINKERBEAN DOONESBURY by Jimmy Johnson by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelty by Harold Le Ooux by Tom Batluk 1l!IS HAS 1'0 Bt 1"Hf tr'OS'f MISERASU: AND DEPRE.551~ NtGf.tf l.'VE £V€R SPeJ1 IN~ LIFE ... by Garry Trudeau QCAY. so >al a.£AH IT IP AMTRRST. \._........_ ... ·-----....... ._ .......... _.._ OM,..._..._.._... • ...... ..._._ __ . ~-... ,..,-....... .... .------..., ... _., ......... _. I t Jrl i' j/ 1 I I E"VAI I .' I I I I . l I U "tEl 1: . I I' I I . · l ..................... -..._ .... .._ .. --~--~-............. .. ..,. ____ ..... ___ __ It 'I I I p ' I ·1 I L t,. Plastic foam ban inJ~B City Hall helps fight litter Laguna Beach bas joined ranks with a small but arowina move~ent to ban tile use of St~foam beverage and food conta.tners. Tuesday niaht the City Council decided plastic f~ containen would be banned.in City Hall to send a messqe to the community that some sacrifices are needed to preserve the environment. . Styrofoam and other plastic foam materials have replaced many paper products, especially in the fast-food industry, because foam containers are cheaper, easier to use and they keep hot foods warmer and cold drinks cooler. But what's good for the fast-food industry and convenient for consumers is not always good for the environment. Research has shown that plastic foam materials - mo lded from a chemical compound known as chlorofluorocarbons (CFC) -contribute to the so-called greenhouse effect that is causing the warming and increasing humidity oftbe earth's atmosphere. Then there's the problem of a foam product's per- manence. The greatest benefit of plastics which include foam products, is permanence and durability. But those two qualities create a big environmental problem because a material that lasts forever is being used for products designed to be thrown away. The problem is compounded by the reality that aarba&e landfills arc rapidly reaching their capacity and there's limitid land space for new dumps. When Mayor Dan Kenney made bis case to ban foam products at City HaJll be said bits and pieces of discarded foam containers have ocen seen for years along the beach and on city streets. Those little chunks of foam litter will continue to be a problem since they arc not biodegradable. Experts say incineration of foam products is not a disposal solution because air emissions from burning plastics are tbouaht to include dioxins and furans, which arc among the deadliest substances known. . Recycling is a possibility, but little of the plastic used is recycled. The bottom1ine is plastics and foam products arc a curse to officials lookinJ for alternatives to garbage landfills that arc rapidly approachmg capacity. These realities have resulted in actions like the decision made in Laguna Beach this week. Fast-food plastics and Styrofoam are tbe immediate focus in a three-phase program sugested by Californians Against Waste. "The first phase is to restrict the use, then ban the sale of CFC-produced foam products. Then push replacement of all plastic and foam products with biodegradable paper at fast- food outlets, tackling at the same time a maJor source of pennanent litter. Finally, provide alternatives to the disposal of any plastics ... l.agllna Beach-may not be following the Californians Against Waste's program by the Jetter, but the city's ban on foam products is a step in the right direction to banning disposable plastic pr00ucts, leaving.plastics to do what they do best -last forever in a use that benefits rathef than threatens mankind. · Ballot blues Californians were asked to do a lot in this month's electio~1 and on the 29 ballot propositions the results were a miA born of wisdom and surrender to temptation. ... Gov. Dcukmejian was bitter about some of the ways the people had spoken. But he should blame himself -and the LcgJslature -before he blames others. The fact is that in a vacuum caused by a lack oflcadership the people will speak to their leaders in ways that are not always comfortable. For example, because the raising of taxes is now political taboo, more and more bond issues arc required if important projects arc to get d one. Faced with this reality, the voters proved~~ble of just saying no to bond issues. All nine of them , and now the state will go out to borrow nearly ' $3.3 billion. • While Californians made several wise choices -for example, rejecting the unhelpful testing for AIDS set out in Proposition l 02, and refusing to set up a bureaucracy for the homeless funded illogically by fines on restaurants and other businesses -getting the Legislature to address a concern like insurance wo uld really be an achievement. MOll~ny B~rald Replace negativity George Bush attained the pinnacle of his ~litical career with a sweeping victory over Michael Dukak.is last Tuesday night. ending the lenathiest and ooe of the most bitter presidential campaigns in American history. All citizens now must hope that the new Republican president-elect will succeed in fulfillina his campaign promise$, to seek a "kinder, gentler nation., and to build upon the best clements of the Reqan yean. That task will not be easyThe negativity of the campaign must be replaced by p6-s1ti ve commitments' to~se (be bopet Ind oppc>ttun1tie1 or- those who have vay little of either. As Du.kakis put it in bis aracious concession speech, every citizen must become ... Ml shareholder of the American dream." S..ru.P•t·la~ OAANGE COAST ,., .. ..._. llilJPilat (drtOf ........ --.. ,.., ....... ~c. ... ~ ...... • ,_ Clllfll ...... .... '* Mll ... S. ...... .......,, Cluctnn ...... :=:·. Pubfisher c.tr c... a..w ... .... c.... ......... s.ta ca. c.Rllr ~~*""'IN,.,ec »O ........ ...... W .... It, C.. ...... CA 4dclrwe r...,.Ytw c-11111 ........ ... t I ..... to 90ll IMO, eo.ia c... ... _,.... -.c:.-.... .... .... ,....... .... '. . ·-- L! 11 ff.' I -- W hy not show ID · at_p oils? To the Editor: Thousdds of viewen saw an investiaative reporter from 1 Jocal TV channel use different nama ud he voted at four different precincu. One name was eve1\ a female name. Defensively, the Los ADFlcs reai• trar of voien district ma~t brushed the obvious neafieence 111de with the·threat that he was aoina to file cha,.es apinst the reponer. The reporter used no ID to pin access to the voter booths. Historically, after many electfont there are reports of stuffing the ~lot box. There a~ also frequent stones of the illcaal use of social security cardt, driver's licenseund so forth by iUepl aliens and/or df'UI pusben. Comes now a story of uniformed guards wamina voters at a few Oranae County polls. that individuals must be registered to vote. Baker's service· sentence ultimately r~ght decision Immediately the critics shouted "Nazi·lilte •ction." The press an-nounced that Richard Martinez. ex-ecutive director southwest voter registration1 quickly reacted, saying a decision wi I be made .. within a da~ or two" of whether to file a lawsuil against the party hirina the auards. Let's pull this to&ether. A reporter is threatened with a lawsuit because be used methods available to anyone to expose illepl voting. (It appeared to me that the ~inct worken were fearful or dtdn t think of alkina for ID. I never have been asked in my votina life for an JD.) He should have gone to jail. political future, hjs Woodbri4ge Tblt was my firit impression and home, his savinp -1one. · probablf my second one too. · Baker was eventually charged with By all appearances it seemed that forgery -a felony. He faced three David Baker, the onetime political yean 10 prison, which may not seem wunderk.ind of Irvine, had manaacd like much to your prden variety to sidestep a nasty little situation tliat criminaJ but to a man who'd been would have landed the averaae per· mayor of Irvine, it must have been a son in jail. t.rOublin1 prospect. Bakerl in the midst of a rouab~nd· But when Baker was sentenced tumble oattle to win the Republican MondayJ... there was no mention of nomination for the con~ionaJ prison. vr jail. Or even the James district seat occupied by retiring Rep. Musick Honor Farm in El Toro. No, Robert Bad.ham, tossed common Baker was sentenced to perform sense to the winds in the waning days community service and the cnme was ofhiscampaian and forJed a check for reduced to a misdemeanor. $48,000. Baker was asked to select the The check, drawn from an account orpniz.ations he would like to do for a non-profit aroup, required two volunteer work. The list included sipatures and Baker, by bis own Meals on Wheels, the American Kids admission, provided them both. He Sports Association and an athletic signed his name and that of a Superior Pf'0818m for disabled students at COurt j~ wbo, like Baker, was an Wamn High School. Baker's alma officer for the non-profit JfOUp. mater. Baker apparently needed the So while Christopher Cox jets money for a final campa.ian blitz and between Newport Beach and Wasb-was having trouble setting cash ington D.C. making hi&b-powcrcd throu&b more conventional means. decisions, Saker will be toolina Pemaps rca.lizina what an in· around Irvine deliverin1 meals to credibly damn.ins -noi to mention senioi.ci tizens. l'U leavc.-n ~you to stupid -thing he'd done, Baker fi&Ure out which is a honorable chore. stopped payment on the check. And Baker's sentence may seem fiaht to that r::Jiood thina or else he miaht some observers. and it did to me at have theft chaJ'aes too. first 'blush. Would the averaae worlc- The cbect ICandal did not become ing stiff who fol'JCS a S-48,000 check public until after the election, which aet-off delivering meals and teaching Baker lost -thouah not by much -kids to shoot hoops? I bet not to former White Houte staffer But David Baker is not an averaae Christopher Cox. ·working stiff. and maybe that's the And while Cox was toutina his point aood fonunes, Balcer secluded Our lcu.l sys~m is built on himself and watched as his world · p~ision 6ut it 1s, thankfully, not so unraveled. Everything be stood for -rigid that wecan'utoptoeumine the and at ~foot-9 be stood for a Jot -person, the punishment and what it was dasbe(hO a matter of hours. His really is we hope to pin throuah this career, bis reputation, bis honor, his exercise. STEVE MARBLE J get an enormous chill to think of all of the votes that .are prot.bly flowi.na into the system illep.lly. NoalleptiOfis have been made that the guards even implied tbat leplly • reaistered voters could not vote nor did they ask for an ID. Baker's life was service. He was a Marunez says, "This has a chillina city councilman. He worked With effect on voters ... " Is this a ploy to charities. He wasactive in his church. have a recount, I wonder? He was involved with UCJ the school 1 would hope that it would ha ve a where he was a star basketball player. chilling effect on "illepl" voters. In And be was almost a conpessman. fact, so chilling that they wouldn't His crime cost him evefythini. His vote. Certainly almostaJJ are proud of rising star was shot out of the sky. His the fact that they are qualified to vote reputation was shredded. His very in this. the greatest country on earth. sanity was tested. He was so tormen· Havin1 a luard around precincts ted by his actions and the people be shouldn't intimidate leaitimate had let down that be literally Oed ci tizens. Irvine, the town he bad served in so We should demand an investip- many ways. tion into what miaht be a widespread I suspected that when Baker walked cover-up of illepl voting. Perhaps a into Department Sat Ora.nae County guard to aid the volunteen at all Superior Court Monday, Ju• polJing .. places should be hired bl't~e Myron Brown looked down at him rtgJStrar to ask for the voter's ID ID and-.realized ~what be..aw wu.a... .sp\te-of the-fad that many lDs miaJu man who'd ahiady been punished. be counterfeit. All Brown had to do was to decide I personally would be only too what price to exact from Baker. happy and proud to comply because I His choice was• fairly 11. ·mple: Do see n as an honor anCI privilcae to you send Baker off to play softball at bave"the riaht to vote. the James Mus.ick Honor Farm or do Our rjpt ti> vote as Jqitirnate you have him do somethina 'useful, citizens must be protCGted if we are tp somethi~ he's &OOd at. continue to have our P.teeious · fri» And I think, t6ouah I wasn't so sure dom. Just as irresponsible woukl be at first, that the judJe made the riJh1 for the' United States to conveniently decision. set up our poll ing bQths within the . If we ~·t extract some aood out of more than 30 countries that supply a person like David Baker then we're the hordes of illepl aliens that cross all in a prctt)'. sorry state. our border daily. SleveM•n~llllJeo.n,PUO.tdty JAY BURCHETT "'1r.r. Newport Beach (; Brown ret u rJ?.s a s s peaker _ of a contentiou s Assembly· SPONwins slea ze award To the Editor: Now that the election has taken . place and some sanity bqins fo return to our community, one key point has come into clear view. The PAC for the aroup that calls itself SPON represents the JoWclt form of "din" in politics. I also now 1.1nder· Democrat favored to win his fifth term, but there won't be any margin for error SACRAMENTO -Well, it looks as if we'll have Willie Brown to kick around aaain. Brown, who has served a record eiaht years as speaker of the state Assembly, a~ to have. by the proverbial skin of his teeth, nailed down enough votes to secure re- election to a fifth term when the Leaislati.are reconvenes in December. One must say "appears" because he has little or no. wriule room, and there are stm a couPTe of unsettled · aspects to the situation. One Los Anaeles County Assembly contest is still uniesolved, with only a few votes aeparatina Republican in- cumbent Wayne Onsham and Democritic chaUenaer Robert Epple with absentees still beina ta.flied. If Grisham, currcntlY. ahead by 1 few votes., survives it wdf re.ult in •s Democratic members for the fint day, one Democ:radc seat bein& vacant bec:lute of the death of Aaemblyman Cunis Tucker. Re-movifll the "Gana of Five .. rebel DemoCrats from the bloc laves Brown with, .ecnllftlly, -iO loyaliat votes. • The SOtaker hit a nalina tom the Auembfy's chief c9ert that beet.ate of the vrancy,;'1Z: ~are needed to eJcct a , nlher lbla the DSUal4l. lut if 8rOwft reJiea oe U-.1 inter-pret8Uon, I tedlnicality of tk ftM Order~·· .. lellt tbe oipponnity fOra c:NI ....... A8d daerc UI IO be 11 ._ 10tM beat oa oae or two ~ '91.lve Dnnoaall -~---w .... -to ·~ ....._.IO W mme ...._ 1,500 ..-f/l::r t1I I ie lllil b661 a•~ 6'rict " southeast of Sacramento, and his challenaer had hit hard on Waten' ties to Speaker Brown. Brown's situation, in brief. leaves no marain for error. One could say that if he does win a fifth term as s~ker, it will be as much the result of fate's fickle finser as anything he did. Brown and the Democrats bcn· efitted from a bi1 voter turnout effort finaMCd ~ presidential candidate Michlel Dukalcis. Indeed, some Democratic insidcn believe that is what saved Brown's ~idc this year. And he ~ncfhed from mi~un by the @e~bhcan oppotition, jutt as the OOP picked up three AMembly seats in I 986 lartelY due to Democratic errors. In statewide terms, Democrats have little to bout about in Aaembly reca. Tbey cdlCd the Republian1 only narro_w!Yl 4.S million to 4.2 million, in ww ~bly v<>1e. . R~blican lalder Pat Nolan, the ~ of 1986'1 cimams\lnen, has IOlt h11 laldenhip l>Otition after lotina teats this year, latenlina the job to ROii Johnton. AU oftblt notwit.h1i.ndina. Brown is likely to continue 11 epeaker. .,, what kind of a spe:Uenbip will ii be? The Amntbly conlimaes to teethe witla dilcoa•• Ud feelioml iaflelt .. i .. Then .. It ..... I~-dlltiect ~and ........ . tllld dran•--Ill" !f!Y8..S laim ..... l ·-~I 111111* .. ... . .. ...... •... ........., :a:r-... .. :-:-=ee,-; ........., ~lilt IO .... I """ I I c "Ir n. .......... the DAN WALTERS -stand f.ihat the letters of SPON stand for. "Sleazy Politics Offensi.ve to Ne"'1>0rters ... " This election camp1ign has been an all-time low ~int for our wonderful community. How sad! Assembly has contributed mlahtily to the collapse of pohcymaJt1na. While Brown's counterpart in the Senate, Pmident Pro Tem David Roberti, has pursued a policy •nda· the Assembly has been consumed with its internal affairs. The mutt has been a dearth of decision makins in Sacramento \hit. atn()QI other thanp, bas Jiven rise to the ellplosion of inltiauvn on the ballot. CaJifom.ia voten not only see few m~ policy decisions bcina made, bul' are treated to reaullt revelations of c:orrupcion in the Capitol. A fedtral s;rand J\&ry it liUh. lo produce f ndictments of .even! lclilllton and staff aides ~ OUl of an FBI .. ,tins" invatipuon before 1be end oftht year. Brown'• million. if be ~ it. will be to demonstnae ao Californians that their Lcaillat.arc i1 not the ~n=-~c;:'°~ 'He will be ClOlnpt to make at least tome counetic dwss in the way the Allembty does buih1e11 that m\&\C dac C-,:. ol u imperial .......... ID t power.-ariae. he mUIC 111'.0D* botll retbnn ....S a .... •••re• ao • llide 1111111111 --'° ........ IOlne &l~~k'lll,. 21 mllUoa '11111'1 I 1111 Oftllr, ad ID ... ..... ............. '° ...... °"" ........ "' .... ~··· ""'-i•lt...... Weit -.........& ......... ... .. . .,. . .,,, t 0 'E t TOM BAY Corona dcl Mar TODAY IN His TORY Today is Thunda_y, Nov. 17, the 322nd day of 1988. There are 44 days left in the year. Today's hishliaht in hiatoJ'Y: Twenty yean aao. on Nov. 17, :SC~~\ '~~~~id/oo~~ fartS jammed NBC switcbboe.rdt aft« the network cut away from the 8MI minuta of a llrDe between the New Y Oft Jets ucf thcOeklted Raklen in order to bcein a TV adapeation .of ••ffeidi" on icbedule. VteMn in the .-m United Scalet were prevented ftoom •na Oakland c:onte "'°"' bebiDd to belt the Jets. O·ll. On thia dale: Jn USI, EHzabeth I ucetMled die Entiiah throne uPon the dealh of QD«DMary. In 1 IOQ1• CoftlTCll bcld its Int lellion ia wllbi= in the panWfy co;: .. f:MSua ~~ ba ~~-M1di•r llYllld ~ ~=~c.= IMda • • i.ooa.-. -1r1tt11 0.." §~!~,,~'¥. .... ·-· ·-~------ I THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 17, 11188 l!I • ' !fewport Beac.~·· Al lnrln. over die yean ••• ' . ' Al _lrwiD: N eWport' s 111an· for all seasons From player to coach, he's touched many area athletes "My father founded a town outside of Fresn·o named Irwin," Al said. "He and my mother were up there on business at the time I was born and I missed being born in Newpon but returned two weeks later and have called NewPQn my home ever since." looked to others for guidance from.a father's standpoinL .. E.l. Moore had a soda stand here in Newport." AJ recalls. "He used to take care of me when I would get into fights. I think my mother collaborated with him on that. But we alt used to meet at his confectionary store." "In 1948, the jobat Newpon Harbor opened up and I took over as head football coach, B and C basketbaJJ coach and I started the swimmin& proaram. We bad no pool at the tJme but Lois and I loaded the kids in our station wagon and went to the indoor salt water pool in HuntJngton Beach to work out." By BOWARD L. HANDY ..,,...c.iu ¢1 •1r1 This is your life, Alben M. Irwin. You have touched many over the years that you have spent as a player and in coaching the youth of this area on ~I levels~ your duties as a lifquard have brouaht you 1n contact Wlth many more. But the one thina that stands out more than any other is your dedication to duty and your innate desire to excel in whatever sport you arc involved with at the time. Of course, Irwin spent time in other-areas including a scholarship at the College of Pacific in Stockton, four years in the Navy du~ World War II and as a coach at Antioch and Valencia high schools before retumfag to his alma mater. But Newpon bas been and is his home. When he was an undergraduate at Newpon Harbor Hi&h, he was an &JI-around athlete playing football, bauetbaU and baaebalJ &Jong with sW1mmin4-His exploits were extolJed and bis play was rewarded Wlth aJl- league and team honors. He also bad a footbaU scholanbip to the University of Southern California. Irwin also gives Ralph Reed a great deal of credit for helping him in his early years. Then it was his college football coach, Amos Alonzo Stag. the Grand Old Man of foot~ll. who lived to be I 02 and corresponded with Irwin ri$ht up to the time of his death. lrwtn's time at Pacific and during World War II will be accounted for in next Thursday's Loolrina Back feature. Following his tenure in the Navy, ht returned to the Pacific Coast and too'k a job as an assistant footbaJI coach and swimming instructor at Antioch High in theStockton History records that he sctyed for ei&ht years ts head football coach at Ne".VP<>n Harbor High· but. league championships eluded him. Fullerton and Oare Van Hoorebeke at Anabeim seemed to hold a jinx. over Irwin and the Tan in those days .. Hi s record at Newport showed 37 wins. 32 losses and two lies. lo 1956, the head ooachina job at <>ranee Coast Colleac opened 'Up when Ray Rosso resi&ned to devote more ume to outside duties at a farrtily-owned business at Your bacqround has brought you to this level throuab countless boun of devotion to duty and you have been 6lessed with skills in spons as well as a knack for teac:bina those skills to others. In hi~ hi&h School and coUeac playing days, players were requuec:f to go both ways and there were 48-and 60- mi~ute players who perfon1)ed wetJ, albeit tired, for an enurcpme. area where he went to collqe. · After one year at Antioch, a job opened up at Valencia High in and he returned to Orange County for good. . . Lake Tahoe. - "When I signed my contract irl'thesprinaof'S6, I was -the head footbl.ll and swimminJ coach. Jim Stanaland who was at Downey High at the time, and Bill Poore were my assistants. If Al Irwin has one rcpet about the past, it is an area he had no control over at the time. His family lived in Newport Beach and aJI of the clan was born in tha1 city. Al is the exception. On more than one oc:casion at Newport Harbor HiJ)l, he would play fullback and cany the baU, then switch to guard and run interf~nce for another player. Al's father died when he was five years·old and he ... That was a haj)py year at Valencia." be said. and wife Lois concurs ... There were about I .SO students and I coached football. B basketball, swimming and the JV basebalJ team. I also tau&ht five classes. "We used to meet six ru,bu a week and io the afternoon on Sunday.nght lhrouah the entire football (Pleue eee taW'Df/C2) BuntY RtCAIDO PRO FOOTBALL Best laid plans can _go_awcy The best laid plans arc not always foolproof. You can think the plan tbrouah step by_step, b~t in th~ end the outcome offers no paarantees. Herc are some examples of plans :thatwentawry. ·,Aburalarywascommittedin 1968 by Mr. J.Eaaley in Detroit. Mr. Easley escaped from the scene of the crime, .but ended upleavinahisdoathere. When the police got \,here-and saw the -dot~naaroundth~yshoutedat • thedoa' GOhomebo)". °D'epolicc followed the dot back to the.buraiar's house and arrived there seconds after the buraJ,ar &<>t.there. Man• s best mend is his dot? Asayounahard throwinaquar- terbeck witJi the Oakland Raiders, ~ny Stabler, also known as :·The Snake," was hot on the traiJ of some • youna ladies in Santa Rosa. This was durina trainina camp when the cur:feWwauetat 11 o'clock.. failµre to a~wasaSI OOOfine. The amount oftb~nedoubledeachtimethe offender repeated the act. The Snake decided to inq_uire and borrow on the experience of some of the wite old veterans on the team! Tbe au~ waa: How do you beat the bed check? Prisoners have escaped from maximum security ~sons, . ,surely playen could escape from the bedtheck. Coachescometoeach player's room,knock.edontbedoor turned on the liabt and said "'GOOCi niaht tent1eman." A raponte from the j>layer was not nec:aaary or required. So bOw do you beat q.e bed check? The veterampve Stabler their foolproof system. They iosuucted S&ablertofintput hislboesin front of the bed, pt.her the towels from the blthroot'n and stuft'tbem under the blankets to form the lower half of~ body. The upper half would be made up by the lamp and this would be covered by the bed abeeu. · '1be Snake" followed the instruc- tioatand sureson tbe bed WU a fiauR ti.tdefini membleda human body in bed. omOR ha~na to 1Cnmble to met beck in time fot the (fl ...... 8S8T/c:9) 'Jacbo1111ewr UaJ lMuetlMU co.idl · -Antecifers .have :proven one thing . Seeking final• Top 111~ lmne ~. f•~bawna lllc••rts (3) and 8Ua Locll • meeta Lapa& Beacll ba tile CD' 5-A at Team can score poil)tsas s 0.w:n - in two-exhibttioris Welt. we proved that we can score. We played Athletes in Actton and the Czech National T cam last week and scored 252 points, an averagt of I 26 -----'=='-------t-~a1:':1 opomts higher than the NCAA record for one season. The only problem is that our opponents aJsoscored 252 points and we ended up with a win and a loss. Now; we have to prove that we can defend. Woodbrl~ll!Ch. while &418on tta•el• to Centto. la for a 4-A Mlll;ll a&aln•t No. l eeed Gabr. th matcll• 9tari"" at 7 :30. WC<experimented a lot in the two games, using I 2 different players m the AIA game and I 4 apinst the Czechs. Five of them arc fresh men anctconsidering that the avenl&C • of our two opponents was about 26. we are pleased after 20 days of praclicc. Kevin Aoyd. Mike Labat. Jeff Herdman, Mike Doktorczyk and Justin Anderson arc the only e~· perienced players on our rosttr We have onJy two seniors and fou r juniors, so as you can sec, we arc reallyyouna,. Five ofour players arc from0ran&eCount)-C...batand Ricky Butler from Ocean View, Btttt ~tt from Los Alamitos, Herdman from Mission Vie1oand Bnan McO~k:ey from Sunny Hills. McClosk.ey is going to be a great playerforusandcourd stan m four years. Ben McDonald 1s the only other player wt have had who staned all four years.. Tod Murphy and '!Vayne Engelstad stantd a lot as ~men, but not every pme. One of our freshmen was not able \o play in the AIA pme. but played Saturday against the Czechsand · scored 17 pointsin JO minutes.. That's not a misprinL His name ts Etop Udo-Ema. he 1s from Phoen1~ and he is a scorer. His father is from Nigena. lhopetoplayabout IO&uysin everypme. wnh some playm_a more thanothers.. We openaweekfrom Thursday n1&ht against GcOl"Jll State Btu MuWCA11 COLLEGE BASKETBALL in-the-Freedom BowfOassicatthe---- Bren Center. l will prObabl ystan Rod Palmer.a jun1orwho played at UCLA for two yean, at point 1uard and Aoyd, who· will st.an for the third ftraight year, at the other guard. He 1s a senior this year. We will st.an McCloskey, a fies.hman,atcenter. The forwards will be Labat. ~unior, and Herdman, a sophomore. Thtec startC'n'from OrangeCou~t in that&J'OUJ>-maybc we o t to get atJ of our players from ere. 0 We had three scholarships to offer for ne• t season and signed three high school sen ion to the grants: Mater Dca's.Dylan Rts<fon, wbois~Jand can play point oroff~ El Toro's Khan Johnson, wbo1s6-6andcan E>la)' small forward. and JeffV on Lutzow, who 1s ~81h and can play ht& forward or center. Jeffis from Cbarter Oat H~ in CoVlna. All thrcccan run andJWDP, Rtsdonand Von Lutzowarepat shooters. and Johnson will set better and be ti.Cr. All three arc class kids and we UCJUSt thrilled to have them 101 ninaourprosram next fall. Our assistant coaches did a pat JOb m convincih& them to come to UCl andourstyfeofplay wtsa bi& factor 1n attracting them. 0 An anicle in one of the local papen last week mentioned all of the pat players we have had and the fact that nmeofthcmarcm the pros-either 1n the NBA, as three of them ue, or overseas. wberes1xofthemplay. I would like to point out that most (PleueeeeUCl/CS) Start of bB.sketball season looms on Sunset pair. horizon· eliminated Universit~ Wood rid~ appear to teams to at IJ STAN GRANCR ........ Cczo J *I Staninaon Occ.11, tbewinterteaSOnsporu action $Wtl, includinaairls basketball. The followinaila brieftearn-by·-.n look at theaia tchoolsift the Sa View and hdficCout ~· Witb f'ourretumi111scanen the Univenaty trojannrt the= tbe coecha to finish on top o(\k Sea View • Led by Sbdley Divis_ who ila ~tJme fint team aJl-leeae ldec:tion, and by Sendy Job~ wbo watalloa frrst •m alt-lc.tpe Pict. &be Tf'OJUll heve plenty otexperince. Ollvis, umior, a>1~d 13 pounund Dine ~-year. wt.ileJO.ntadded nieepcMntl apme.Coedl~~leell!Mtreyfbra Mc•ftll ,.rilddelilc. .. Weaeed to play fOOd del• iaOrdlrlO ... " 1111 llid. .. We bl~ ~owrlM.,..._,_...._.wcneedto .. . . . -" w .. _ °"Ow'MIE _. .... _,~ e-" ftve....U..mioft.Md&M...,.ila , hardworking. cohesive unit." laslyearthe Troiansfinished with a 12-10 mark. and were 7-3 in leaaue. · Estancia COICh Usa McNamee has Six retuminaJeucrmenudapair of returninastaners tocontinuetobuildona I 9· 7campaip ofa year qo. Senior Shannon Suzuki and sophomore Patrice Lumpkin.a peirofS-9 ~ts, lead the way. Suzuki averlFd 12 points and nine rebounds apme,andLumptin, whostanedasa freshman. a vented rune points and Ii• rebouads. Another sophomore, S-foot-8 paard Melody Earte filures prominently in the Elsln' ho~ .:We're not really that bia this year," satd McNamee. "We have to concentnte on rebound- incand tbe runninapme. We"'veeota k>tof qUickncsaand J ha~ a k>t or~uml!'l playns. a lot ci(tldl wbo undetatand the pqram. TbeSe(.idlct.tk ROldnanen&aitbed lut ... wi•• 11.jmmt.andM•e•a* aieCMi'~ IMao.dna.._... IOAniM ...._ .. Cod Rolllin Robbi• bieplan.s .... .,... .......... •weD11YalOlllb ma.to-mudeMtr,ud .. I .... wftilcoan."IMl¢U' I ·we c=..aw11otottuno..-....S1Maloto( Wew\11 be~toUih-"' r Pacin&Seddiebeck is Mdody Mayfield. who was the team's ae.d.ioa tcorer at 19 po1nu a pme alona with 12 rebounds. Mayfield. a 1eiuor. wu fint-1Qm all~~and Olird teamall-county last year. ., Melodyw1 11 have a famtliarflce by her side as her sister, Antelia, a junior, plays ccnter. Antdia.. who at S-10 is three inches talln' than bers1ster, 11 ~pe.cted to be the team's leadina rebounder,, Newpon Harboriscomina off a sta10n 1n which it split 22pmes. Withonlythrcere\urnrna starten. most of the roaches tee thisas a rebu1ld1n1 year for the Sailors.. wbowere~kcd to finish fifth. J union St.aeey Oiem and AJi lrumita arc . e1pected to be Newport Harbof''s adi"f ICOf"ers.. ()Ver the sum ma, Gw:m ncr19ed >l points. while l1Umi1a av~ 11 . Abo. Jenn Ryan 11 e•'*11d to clan the bollrdlas Coech Dlv1d a.rele feeta lhe can •VCflle 1 l rebouDdni..-,; .. Wearcnota~Clll-L.IO~MWIO e&iY• IOUlh zonectetiwc:." laid mraa. .. If wcc:aa do Ibis welt. wr can win. .. I paa lhil11tonota rdMalkb .. ,.r. Weare a Yo.lllWI Md wcareUJillltolllll'aperince 9Dd b9ildcoafideece. Slil-we•ve-r · ~udwcwillMPlile-.-. Con>Mdel Mer11cuaii•oft'1Msn oiatitia (Pl• ·-~· fromCIF 'Keith Baker ICOC'ed"i• fow1h pl of the pme earlY tn sudden-death overtime to aive IUvenide Paly Hilb an t-7 vJC:tory over v;litilll Marina Wednesday 1n a quanerfiftal round pme of the OF l-A p&a}'Of& Tbe Vikinp (17-f3) Md blated b9ck in the fOUnh quaner tom a ,_3 dcflat, t}'•"I the pme on .oeaa bY Mlk~•th•nd~a·*· a mi~ute apart. After ftllilled the laid at 6-S, Ka&Y • • • .... up sitlaa1ioD wida n .,.-,., ... ina to bee me VfftW. •Jn 1M h an 1111'-. • = IOOlt -liiiid .. Jiiaiil Col ..... 171Wlfl .. . ..... folQ!d ................ . pmwa'°•_..._ 1 • .--M.-.: .. a.111,..._ • ..,._ .... .,, ..... c ., ... ... -.......... .. ~'=·'~i~ ..... ' No blarney: U.S. football coDles to~1 Dublin Saturday From n. MMciaee4 has DUBLIN, Ireland -Like so many Eil ideas hereabouts. this one was born as • II • blarney in a pub. Why not, tbouaht Jim O'Brien of Boston as he drank in the Brian Boru, brina a first-dass American collqe foott.JI pme to Ireland"? Thanks to a bunch ofeothusiatic Dubliners and the financial back.ins of U.S. television and sponsonhip, O'Brien's beery dream becomes reality Saturday in a SJ)Of1ina celebration of a magnitude rivaling St. htrick'"s Day. Bos\on College, O'Brien's alma mater, plays bowl- bound Army before an expected 5Cllout crowd at Lansdowne Road rugby stadium. ... We are aperoacbang the whole game as if it were the Super Bowl,' said Tony Andrea, managing director of PeOple and .Prooenies. the Connecticut-based company promoung the game. • On pa~r, the game between the two East Coast independenfs 1s a mismatch. Army, the home tcam1 is h•ving one of its best seasons in many years. taking an 8-1 record into the game and expcctin.a an invitation to play Alabama in the Sun Bowl later in the day. Boston College, looking to return to the &Jory days of Doug Autie and Mike Ruth in the early 1980s, is 2-7. For the Ea'gJes, the pme dubbed the Emerald Isle Classic by organizers as the only hope for glory. The differences in season records have not detracted from the interest, though. The two teams. which arrived Wednesday, wen: bringing at least 6.000 fans with them, and orpnizers said that number could be matched by Americans traveling on their own to Dublin for a football Saturday, Gaehc style. "I would imagine that nearly I l,000 Americans will come to see the game,·· Andrea said. Hotels in Dublin long have been booked solid for the weekend. A crowd of better than 50,000 is expected at Lansdowne Road, one of the best-known rugby fields in the world. This won't be the first time a regular-season college football game has been played in Europe. That honor ~nt to the University of Richmond and Boston U niversity, who met in a Yankee .Conference game in London last month. Quote of the day Scott Brooks, a Philadelphia 76crs rookie who started his college career at Teus Christian University and finished at UCI: "I'm probably the only person in the history of the world to have been both a Homed Frog and an Anteater." Clippers keep Kings winless Boolt Beajambt scored 25 points and m bad nine rebounds as the Los Angeles Oippers beat the winless Sacramento J<jnp. 112-101. in an NBA game Wednes- day night at the Sports Arena. The K.ing.s feU to(). 7. the wont start in franchise history. Sacramento, the second-lowest scoring ream in the NBA, made just l4of 43 shots an the first half. Rookies· Claarles SmJQ and Gary Grant sparked a 14-3 burst at the start of the 1CCOnd quaner that put Los Angeles ahead, 42-22. Meanwhile, the Oippers placed Joe Wolf on injured ~rve and re-signed &aard-Tem Gantck and fo1 wan1 Dave P~tiy!ii cut last Saturday to make room forDaUy Mauia1 and his SI 0. 5 million contract ... In other NBA games. Detua11 Job100 made a three-point jumper with one second left,liftingBoston toa 107-104 comeback victory over Golden State. With aih ng Larry Bird watching from the bench the entire game. the Celtics beat the Warriors for the I J th consecutive time 10 Boston Garden since 1978 ... Claarkl Bartley had 42 eoints and 16 rebounds, overcoming 52 points by Chicago's Mtclulel Jordan. and PhiladCfphia beat the Bulls at the Spec1rum, 123-110 ... Jn San Antonio, Joe Dtunan scored 20 points. includin.& l 0 in the fourth quarte~ !lfid unbeaten Detroit won ats seventh straight game, ~88. o ver the Spurs ... In Phoenix, Arlnoa Gilliam had a career-high 28 points and Tom Cbmben scored eight of ha s 20 in the first seven minute$ of the founh quarter as Phoenix raJlied 10 beat winless Indiana (0.7). 123-104. Winnipeg edges Oilers in OT Pat EJyalllk'1 second goal of the game ~ 46 seconds into ovenimc gave the Wan-' nipcg Jets a 2-1 NHL wm over the host Edmonton Oilers Wednesday night. Elynu1k finished a 2-on_. I break with 'l'Mmas Stea after Edmonton dcfenseman Kevta Lowe got caught near the blue hne ... Elsewhere in the NHL. Gerard Gallut scored twtcc and had one assist as Detroit won it.s fifth straight game. 4-3 1n Hartford ... In Toronto, Du Daout, Ed Olnyk and AJ Iafrate scored short- handed goaJs as the Maple Leafs ended a six-game losing streak with an 8-5 win over Pittsburgh ... Mata Nulud'1 goaJ I :06 in10 overtime gave Montreal a 5-4 victory over the v1sitinf New York Islanders ... In Chicago, Dirk Granm 1 12-foot short-handed shot dunng a fi ve-mmutc Buffalo power play broke a 2-2 tie and the Blackhawks went on to beat the Sabres, 3-2. IN THE BLBACDRS . Glasson takt!B first-round lead KAPALUA, Hawaii -Bill Glasson. !I winner of two of bis last three starts, continued his hot shooting witb an 8- under-par 64 Wednesday to take the first- round lead at the K.apalua International golf tour- nament. John Mahaffey and Bob Gilder, who shot 6Ss, shared second place in the chase for a $I 50.000 first prize. Lazer& beaten in overtime, 6-5 INGLEWOOD -Gr~ Ion's over-m time goal lifted the Kansas City Comets to a 6-5 win apinst the Los Angeles Lazcrs Wednesday night at the Forum. The Laurs took an early 2-0 lead with goals from Michael CoUins and Ben Collins, who aren't related. Michael Collins scored his first of two JOiis on a header past Comets' goalkeeper Ed Geneme1er at the 5:57 in the first quaner. Report: Olympic drugs common At least half of the 9,000 athletes who • competed at the Seoul Olympics used - performance-enhancing drup during their training and as many as 20 athletes who tested postive were not expelled from the Olympics, according to a published repon .. Canadian sprinter Ba Jobsoa and nine other athletes were suspended during during the games for using anabolic steriods. Johnson was stripped of his gold medal and his world record in the 100.meter dash. The New York Times, in today's editions. said the five-member subcommittee of the International Olympic Committee McdicaJ Com- mission refused to pass several cases alo~ to the full 33- member committte ... Kansas Cit)' Chiefs defensive end Mike BelJ was reinstated by NFL Commissioner Pete Renelle Wednesday, ending his suspension for violation of the league's substance abuse policy. Bell, a I ().year veteran, is expected to play this week against the Seattle Seahawks. He was sus~ded Oct. 20 after testjnu>osi~c4&att1fdom tesf:~e-,.y.o.'.-b - po. stponed heavywei&ht championship title defense against Britain's Fruk Bruo will not take place place Jan. 14, and may be put off until it least March, accordmg to a published re~rt. The New York Dail~ News, 1n Wednesday's editions. reported that neither Tyson's promoter, Doe K.lq, nor his manager, BUI Caytoa -who arc battling over future fight plans - showed up for a meetinJ Tu~y in New York. Th~ latest development left HBO aecutives believing the fight will not go on as scheduled Jan. 14. The cable network has the rights to the fight ... Jervis Cole led a balanced scoring attack with 14 points as Fresno State defeated the Czechoslovakian national team. 74-70. in an exhibition game in Fresno. TeleV'lsion1 radio TILEVJSION 6 P.m. -AUTO RACING: IHRA Chief N•llonals from Oellas (lape), -ESPN. 7 p,m. -PRO aASKETBALL: LeAars al Sffllle, Channel 9. 7:30 P.m. -PRO HOCKEY: New York Ranoers al Kings, Prime Tlckel (WOR, 1:30 o.m. ~yed). I P.m. -HOllSE RACING: HOllVwood Pw. reotavs, Channel 56 (Prime Ticket, 10-.JO p.m.). 9 p.m. -OFF-ROAD RACING: The NeYede 500 from Las Veps (tape), ESPN. 9 11.m. -BOXING: USA. RADIO 7 P.m. -PRO 8ASKIT8ALL: Lakers el Seattle, l(,l.AC C570). 7:30 P.m. -f'tlO HOCKEY: New Yortt Reno-rs al Kings. KPZE ( 1190). fRtOAY TELEY15ION 6 a.m. -AUTO RACING: Formute OM Au1tr-'1en Grand Prix from Adl4ald9, Australia (taoe), ESPN. 10-.30 e.m. -GOLF: Senion lcxmienwnt flnt round from Kev Blscevne, Fie., ESPN. 1 P.m. -GOU': Kas>elu. lnt.rnetlonel lhlrd round from ~ul, Hew•ll, ESPN. Transpacrriakestwochanges or ' , Honolulu race a dds class, new headquarters A f\er 83 years something has been added to the 2.225-mile Honolulu race. more familiarly known as the Transpac. ALMON Locuan BOATING Twonewth~asa matteroffact. ~ First. the Trar;tspa~fic Yacht Oub. "Wearejusuryir,.totet some very ~n!C)rof the biennial nac:e across the aood boats back 1n the race that ~c. has annou~ the 1919 race Perhaps b.lve not beco treated too wall have an lnternauonaJ Measure-favorabl>: under the IOR rating mentSy1tem(JMS)cta~added to system,' be said. supplement the l11tcmallonal Off. . shore Rute(IOR)1Y1tcm ofhandi-Asanexampje, Murray menuoncd ~ppini. someoftheclus yacbts that JMS Second, the mainland head· wou.Jd appeal to are .the Swanund quanenoftheraoewillbeatLon& BaJuc:s -:heaVJ~rdi~ment Belch in1ie.d oftbe traditional Los yachts with fuU uuen0'1. Anle~ Yacht 9ub. . ForiM&anc:e, lhe IOR ultta·llpt IMS 11 a ~tJvely n~ handicap dlsplaoe.ment bolts weip about one- system, espeaaUy on the West Coest. thirdumud>u1hecru1sift1type It 11 ,enerally considered to be a more bolts. ltps without•yiftl tMI tbe favorable system f'ot boets that have IMS ratinp would.be racina ua f\IU in&trionandaredaipedfortbt repannecJusandnot..,um thelOR m<* i-.nucrairer-ncmuOlltlOICd ~en. totheflatoutracen(doWnwindlleds) VetaanTranspecracenwholaled &hat 1~ JOR ~bu ipaW'DCd. to be 1M aci&i• y.cltu to ftnilb ate Phal M~ olLoM ee.cb YICht sucbdalic:su Jtimo.11 Oub, wbois,etaeralcfiainMno(ta.t Ticonderop;Mltam11 kamiiii. i~':~====8;ti:':: Cbut-.coUd~. ~~ M~~~-~-b~ o I pre-race feillvitiesand the start of the race, both TPY C officials and the Cit¥ of Long Beach is haiJing the decision to make Long Beach the headquarters. At a recent pressconfere~ at LBYC the mayor and cit}' oouncil of Lona Beach joined TPYC Com- modore Grant Baldwin and other ~officialsinanouncinapllnsfor crew parties_ berthi n1 of"bc:)a ts and otherconveniencesat LBYCand the Lona Beach Marina. Jn inviou1 ~the raclnayacbts were crowded into Fish HatbOf, home of the Los A•lcs Yacht Oub which bas limi led facilities for entcr-t.ainina the mocnand enc scorea of spectator boats which usually ptber to watch tben start of'tbe l'llCC. Allbouab the TraopecwiU be ,, cclcbratina iu 83rd )Ul'1 there have been only J4 r1CCS bdd ourina t.bc interval. As mentioned, its a biennial race, hdd oo odd-numbm:d ~ but races tWa"C c:anoeleddwi111 the war yeanofWodd War 1 ud Worid WatlJ. T1ae finish of'tbe rllCe bas .... ,. been oft'OiamoOd HMd on die Waid olOllMa. After &M fi~ die )'ICllu ~allbtnbed11All W• Yldat Harborwbidl i1atwa71-.. crwerby \be ~comminleoldle T==MlllC'lib. Tliel ......... .., JwJO ,. .. W ... °' Ute lM~ ........ , At 37, Hall p~tttng her best foot forward sec runner rea y to compete in NAIA meet on Saturday 81 &EVIN DOYLE Olllr .... C.o $ 0 11 · Sherri HalJ is Southern California Coljqe's top competitor in womet1's cross country, not so unusual until one considers that thas 37-year-old re- entry student and mother of' two, bas never competed before this year. With a personal best of l 7:48 in a Oat Sk recorded eadier this month, her coach, Bryan Wilk.ins, thinks HaJJ bas a good chance of finishing in the top 2S at the NAJA nationals ihis Saturdar in Wisconsin. This is Wilkins first season coaching and Hall is the first SCC runner ever to go to the nationals. 8llen1Ball HaJI said. .. And the otba' fit11 on the lam are very su~~ Sbe has menially conditioned henelf to no looter allow cnntal b.rricn to limit her ~ mx>enizina that Jucb DOtiou can KiualJy undermine ~onnuce. Hall recei vcd I bit boolt ia con-fidence recently. when she comDCled with tM SCC &cam (an NAJA dlool) in the Cal Poly Pomona lnvitatiooal. attended by. such NCAA tcbools .. UCLA~ UCJ and Air forte. Sbc placed seventh out of70 Nn.nert wi\b a time of 18:02 in<tbc St. Her new coach Silt she's come a remarkable distance for suclt a abort time traini~ it usually takei mote thanjusu few years to build up to bet level of proficiency. Hall trains one to two hours per day Ilona with 'a meet every Saturday. Hall has a son1 IS, and 1 daup1e:r. 9. The little sin aometimes aocom· panies her mom to the track, and may run a run a short distance wi\b her. but HaU doesn't want to push her fol fear of taking away the desire to "Sherri has a dcvelooed a really positive mindset; she's (earned a lol and she's really committed," said Wilkins. Hall started aerobics at age 31, and ~n running with her husband soon after. Her husband quit runninJ with her after she placed second an tbe women's class in her first I Ok race. She began training with a running club headed by John Loeschhom, a running enthusiast who operates ''Locschhom's for Runners." Under his direction, she worked up to S0-60 miles per week. After se..veral years of Loesch horn's coaching, HaJI enrolled in sec on an athletic scholaship as a sophomore to pursue a degree in counseling at the Christian college. emphasizing speed conditioning in- stead of jµst endurance. When she s~rted training with Wilkins, her best mile was S:34 minutes and her best Sk was J 8: 18. Her mile time currently down to S: 16 and she's reduced her 5k by 30 seconds to t 7:48. continue. . "But I can see that she's got it in her," Hall said. Hall said sh~s never been involved in a"ny competitive sports. "I liked to swim and horseback ride but 1 never did well with 'balf SJ)Orts. I lacked tbe patience to )cam, .. she said, notin1 that they didn't have much for Jirls back when she was in high school anyway. "I'm doins so well here because I've been traaning year-round," Hall said, explaining that most of the other team members train intensively only in the months before the I ().week season. Under Locschhom's coaching, Hall had emphasized speed and endurance. "John wanted to make me a marathon runner." she said. Her first marathon time was 3 hours, 1 minute and 3 hours even the second time. The Olympic qualifying time however, for the women's marathon was 2 houn, SO minutes. "I was 31 and hJd two kids when I started getting out of shape, so I started doing aerobics." After she started running with her husband. he once asked, "How come you run so fast?" HalJ and her coach are both optimistic about this Saturday's meet. Wilk.ins said the count record in Wisconsin was broken last year withatimeofl6:59. Hesaidtherewill probably be lot.s of people .in the 17- minute area if conditions hold. and he thinks Han will be one of them. Training with the SCC coach since September, Hall dropped down to 30-40 miles per wrck. and staned It was important for Hall to switch from distance and endurance training techniques to s~ techniques be- cau5C of the quicker pace of the 5k race, Wilk.ins said. "The most imponant thing bas been reworking my mental attitude." IRWIN: MAN FOR ALL SEASONS ••• From Cl scason. lnJanuaryofl 957, Stang.land took the job as head coach at Long Beach City College and Poore went with him. · "This got to me and I spent some time in the hospital with a nervous breakdown. Lois told me to quit the footbaJI job and Dr. Basil Peterson (president of OCC at the time) came to see me every night. He talked to the doctor and they urecd 1 shouldn't be coaching football anymore, but he offered me the swimming and water polo jobs. • "On the doctor's advise with encouragement from Lois and Dr. Peterson. I gave it up and enjoyed the water sports.·· -Durint his onc--year-reign-u..head football coach. Orange Coast won the Eastern Conference and played in the .Potato Bowl game at Bakersfield -a highlight in the Orange Coast football picture over the years. Irwin, alwaysa devoted teacheras wctJ as a dedicated coach, s_pcnt many hours at the OCC pool instructing in swimming and water polo. He stayed there for nine years and won the swimmmg championship every campaign along with winning lhe water polo championship the last three~. ~ UCI was opening in the fall of l 96S but Irwin was perfectly content to stay with the job at OCC for the remainder of his career. "I used to see this man come in and sii in the bleachers when I was teachina a class or coaching swimming," Al recall~ "I didn't know b.im and be never introduced himself. This went on for about a month and finally one day, be came down and introdoocd himself. Jt was Dr. Wayne Crawford who had been appointed as Athletic Director at UCJ. "He asked me if I would be interested in starting the swimming and water polo prosram at UCI and as an assistant athJetic dinlctor. "At 48, I didn't think I would be malUng another move and I didn't think they would match my salary. I told him I didn't think he could match the salary. l was very happy at Oranpe Coast and felt I had been very fonunte every place had been." Crawford pursued the situation and came back to Irwin. "I've watched you hen: and everyone tells me you arc the one for the JOb at UCI," Crawford told Irwin. "Furthermore, I'm 48 and the chanClCIJor (Daniel Aldrich) is 48 and tbere is no reason why you can't make a move.•• ''They offered me a salary J couldn't refu5C," Irwin says. The UCJ _pool was pnctically fini•ed when school started, but for two weeks the Antcaten traveled to Corona det Mar Hip for workouts. FA Newland was water polo coach there at the time. He ~ replaced Irwin at Newpon Harbor Hilb as aquatics coach in 1956 when AJ moved to OCC. The second year oflrwin's tenure at UCl, Crawford wanted him to beoome more involved with academics and suanted they bring in a seoond aquatics coach. NeWllnd was the Jogic:aJ cboiClC and was bind. He is still the school's water P<>lo coech an4 bas bro~t the echooJ its only Division I NCAA championship in the spon with Irwin's assistance. "We were co-coaches of swimmin1 and water polo for five years;· Irwin recalls. Newland then became bead water polo coach and Irwin directed the swim team that won Division II championships four straiaht yean -196~72. Irwin remained u swim COICh for 1973 then moved to the job as assistant athletic director full-time in I 974 until bis retirement in 1979. "We had someputathletesdurina tbat time," Jrwin recalls. .. In 1967 ~ finished second in the NCAA At 14, lrwinjoined lifeguard brigade Don'tevertrytogetajobasa lifeguard if you are under-age because there's a man who knows all the. angles andean detect your rnisgivinas in a momenL He·s had that kind of experien~. 1 The man an question is AHnlrilr, a tong-ume _residentofNewpon Beach who joined the lifealWd brigade at the tender age of 14 and two years later, when his age was discovered. he was almost fired from the job. He started in 1932 and remained with the job for 4 7 years. "I was bif enoulh in those days to pass as a 16- ycar-old and could" swim well enough to pass the tests." Irwin wd. "But I don't recommend it to anyone else." Irwin 5Crved as a Hfeguard au during his bjlh school and college playing career when be was home for the summer. After a four-year hiatus with the Navy during World War 1~2 he returned to the beach he dearly loves to rejoin tne ranks of the lifeguard continaent in 1946. When the rigors of manning a lifeguard station wtre catching up with him and the chance for advancement was presented. he tooJc a job as a lieutenant on the lifeguard squad in 1947 and patroUcd the beach in a jeep until his retirement in 1979. Durin1 that time. he not only made sure the lifeguards were on patrol and in position to help anyone needina assistance in the water or out but he also trained new personnel and tested them before they became lifeglWds. Hii familiar f 1.Jure along the beaches on the Newport peninsula 1s no longer there in a jeep, but he and wife Lois both enjoy a dip in the Pacific Ocean during the hot summer months. And be couJd still pass the physical tests for such a job, weighing less than be did as a colleae f ootbe.11 pll~r. He tipped the scales at 21 • as a player and wei&hs I 8S10day. Division II champ1onships and third in l 968. .. Mike Martin t.bcn came along and spearhead.ed the four cba.mpionshi~ seasons. He won the I ,6~yud frcntylc four straight yea.rs and in all, had 10 NCAA champ_ionsbips dunng bis time at UCI. "We also had Ferdy Massimin<!i_ Bill Leach. Bob Nealy, Randy Howatt, Pat G~ow, 1 om BouabcY and Jim Kruse in that era. Bob WilllUte was our diver and he won the NCAA 3-meter championship for three ycan. "Massimino was the catalyst for the NCAA championship waler polo team in 1970. He was an outstandina athlete and was student body president for one year, t.UiQI time off from bfs penicipation ln the water SJ>Of\S proarams. He only swam became be wuted to play water polo and knew he couldn't do it wit.bout swunmina for train.ins. "NeWland was pat fot wci.gbt trainina and I t.bjnk Bouahcy benefitted the mOS1 in those days from these worfouts." said Irwin. In l~na beck. Irwin said bemitlcd football a peat deal the rmt year he was out of it. ..) didn't know •• to do with myselft' he says in recallina the situation. ··1 sw1ed ti.mint the nome pmcs (Pleue .. mWDffCS> 1. .. • .. AikIDanputsh P ::s for Heis1nan aside rui n s quarter a c ocus tng on Rose Bowl eel er vs. USC LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA quatterteclr Tr~y Aikman uys winnina the Heiaman TrophSi would be OK.. but what-he really wants is urplay in the .k09C Bowl. Aikman plays bis final rqular-seuon pme Saturday when UCLA faces crosstown rival USCwtthabetth in the Rose Bowl pme awaitina the winner. "I'm not in this for any individual honor5,·· said Aikman. a pure drop.back passer who figures to be the No. t selectJOD lJl the 1989 NFL <traft. "It would be nice to win the award and all that, but it's not something rvc tbo~t a lot about. · If we JO out the~ and win the ballgame, if I don't win t.l)e Heaslllan, that's fine. I want to go to the Rose Bowl. We've played all season to act ourselves in this posjtion. We ~on the last two games, no matter how ugly nwas. ..we·vcgot an opportunity to achieve the goals we set for ourselves." If the sixth-ranked Bruins beat the second-ranked Trojans. UC LA. plays in the Rose Bowl game 'Pinst 12th-ranked Michigan on Jan. 2 while USC meets eapnb· ranked Auburn or 11th-ranked Lou1s1ana State in the SuwBowl. . • ifthe Trojans win or tic, they play 1n the Rose Bowl game and the Bruins meet I 0th-ranked Arkansas in lhc Cotton Bowl in Dallas on Jan. 2. yards an the 6nt eaaht "We've been Slnla&hn&. but the bottom lane it. we won." Aikman saidofUCLA's 16-6 and 27-17 victories over Oreaon and Stanford the last two weeks. "Statistics don't mean an)'tllial- "We've been llnltlling for whatever reasons. Tboee things are done. I don't think Ifs anytbina we aua't correct. We realize we have to play better lO beat USC. .. While Aikman and the Bruins have Slnl8lkd. another k>ca1 candidate, USC 9uatterback Rodney Peeie. bas thrown for666 yards m 3S:3 and SO-O Tro;.n W\OS to thrust bimselffirmfy info the Heisman race. Thus, Aikman bu completed 177 of 279 passes for 2,282 yards and 21 toucbdoWJls with seven interceptions in 10 sames wl\ilc Peete is 169 of266 for 2,240 yards and 17 \ouchdowns with ea&bt interoeptions in nine ~mes. Aikman wLll be mlling his 23rd start for UCLA on Saturday. Surely has poorest. and most disappointi_na performance as-a Brum came il\ last ye¥'s UCLA-USC pme. ' • . After be'tng intercepted only three tm'les 1n UCLA's first 101/J games, Aikman was intercepted three times in the second half, helping USC rally from a 13-0 deficit for a 17-13 xktory. Aikman finished the game with I I completions in 26 auempts for 171 yards. Meanwhile, Peete came on strona in the second half and finished with 23 completions in 3S auemrts for 304 yards and two touchdowns. •· don •t behtve n ever re.ally left, to ~ honest, .. UCLA Coach Terry Donabae confen with qauterback TroJ Allr•an clarln& workoat this week. Al••aa la ta.Dina ap for abow- clown with USC Satarday at Dae JlOM Bowl. • Aikman has been considered a leading Heisman Trophy candidate aU season. but he has passed for only 249 yards in UCLA's last two games after averaging 254 Aikman said when asked how long It took him to put last year's game behind him. "Certainly. losill& last year to USC and not go1 ng to the Rose Bowl was touch on me and the team. ·Tm fortunate 1 h~ve another opportunjty." UCI ••• Proa Cl of them were not highly recruited and became better players while at UCI: • Bob Thornton, Philadelphia 76ers: Recruited out ofSaddleback JC by UCI and an NAIA school in Texas. • Kevin Mqcc Israel: Recruited by everyone, bUt' had an .. in" -he was like my son at Saddleback. • Ben McDonald, Israel: Recruit- ed by UCI. Colorado State and Long Beach State. • John R<>gers, Spain: Left Stan-ford lo come with us because he thought it would help him to become a pro. · • TodMurphy,Spain:CIFPlaycr of the Year at Lakewood High, but notbi&hlyrccrujted. Hisdecision cameoown to UCI, UC Santa Barban and use. Trojans' Peete may not play Saturday S t ricken with measles, QB questionable for game LOS ANGELES (AP)-Quarterback Rodney Peete has the measles and may not play in second- ranked USCs Rose Bowl showdown with No. 6 UCLA Saturday for the Pacific-I 0 title and Rose Bowl berth. .. I'm not sure on Rodney's availability for the UCLA game," Trojans Coach Larry Smith said Wednesdar in a statement released by USC. "Wc·1 go ahead with the basic game plan that we've ~paled. This is something that we have to be good enough as a team to overcome. "We're a team first, although Rodney is a very valuable component of our team. If it means we have to play Rodney•s backup, Pat O'Hara, we have a lot of confidence in bim." Peete. a senior-who ranks among the nation's passing leaders this ~ason and has been the heart and soul of the Trojans' offense, first felt side last week. He still had one of his finest games ever in last Saturday's 50-0 rout of Anzona State. but has been unable to practice this week. He had been suffcnng fro m flu-hke symp. toms. but his illness was diagnosed as measles on Wednesday. Although measles is extremely infectious. none of the other USC players appear to have ca!J&ht the disease. a spokeswoman for the school said: · Saturday's game, in addition to being for the conference championship and spot in the Rose Bowl, also figured to be a showcase for the two quarterbacks., each of whom is considered a leading candjdate for the HeJSman Trophy. Peete has guided the Trojans to a 9-0 record and ranks seventh nationall>' m· pass mg efficiency with a 149.3 ratio&-UCLA s Troy Aikman. who has helped lhe Drums to a 9-1 marlc. is fourth with - a rating of I S2.0. Peete apparently was exposed to the measles (rubeola) last week. A number of cases had been reported among USC students, and the rest of the T rojan players were inoculated against measles on Tu~y n1gbt. Rubcqla normally lasts about a week, and the symptoms include fever, watery eyes and dry cou&h m addition to spomng OI) the skm. The sufferer also 1s physically weakened. If P~te is unable to plar, Saturdar agiunst the Bruins at the Rose Bowl, 0 Hara wil get bis first extensive playin.J time. A red-shin sophomore. he has appeared an j ust three games this year, compleung ti veof seveo passes for 61 yards. with one antercepuon. Peete apparently began f~ling the effects of the measles last Friday, but be still threw for a carcff ·high 361 yards and three touchdowns an the victory over Arizona State a day later. • Scott Brooks. Philadelphia 76ers: RecruitedoutofSanJoaqujn DeltaJCt>y UCI and no one else. ,. • ;~e Efl&dstad, Dcnver~u gets: lyrecruitedand hisde- ··Sa~de-Fs-making-Heisman-presenee-f-elt cision came down to between UCI, Arizona ancf Pcpperd.i ne. •Jerome lee, Australia: Recruited outofSan BemardinoJCby UCI and a Division II school. • Frank Woods, Ecuador: Recruit- ed out of a JC in Kansas by UCI and Ongon. Alongthesamelines,ourcurrcnt frosh group was hardly recruited by anyone, but we saw things in them thatotheuchoolsdid not. Probably the best example is McCloskcy, who will start for us and was recruited by no o ne other than UCI. 0 I hope your Than~ving week getsofftoagreatstart, and try to fit ourtounuunentnextweckendinto your holiday plans. Canseco na111edMVP froil1 AL NEW YORK (AP) -Wbile there have been various debates over lbe definition of what makes a Most Valuable Player, Jose Canseco more than qualified on all counts in 1988. Cariseco, the first major leaguer to bit 40 bomen and steal 40 bases in one season, was selected unani- mously as the Am erican League MVP OD Wednesday. "II takes a lot ofthe sting out of the World Series loss, .. Canseco, who went 1-for-19 in the defeat by Los • Anaeles. said from bis honeymoon in Hawaii. "1 was rcaUy surprised it was unanimous. Ifs really exciting.•• Tbe muscular Oakland riaht fielder received 28 lint-place votes and 392 points from a panel of 28 sports- writers. two from each AL city. CaMeco is the 1evcotb AL player to be voted the MVP umnimously. and the fint in l S years. Hank Green beta (1935). Al Roeen (19S3)t.. Mickey Mandt (1956). Frank Kobimon 0 966). Denny McLain (1968) and kfllP.e Jacbon ( 1973) ~the other unanimous 1C1ections. 8oeloa left fielder Mite Greenwell, 1rith 242 P:Oinn. was nan~up to Camalo. followed by Minnaota center ftdder Kny Puctctt with 2 t9 poinu. New Yott riah• fielder Dave Winfield Wffh 16' Pofnu and Oak- By HERSCHEL NlSSENSON .,~ ..... On the cover of the 1988 USC football gurde. surrounded by memorabilia from u ses 100 years of athletic excellence, is a picture of "Quanerback Rodney Peete, Heisman Trophy Candidate." Barry Sanders. the Cowboys' record-breaking tailback. Earlier pages show quanerback Mike Gundy. nose guard Marcus Jones. linebacker Sim Dram. defensive tackle David Baile). split end ·Hart Lee.Dykes and comerback Melvin Gilliam. the voice of UCLA SID Marc Dell ins when he says, ..We've certainly ~n watching Barry Sanders' statistics the last few weeks." Despite some early heroics by Sanders. who rushed for 304 yards apinat Tulsa in the third game of the season. Delhns and Tim Tcssalone. his USC counterpart. monopohzcd most of lhe ~ptember-October publicny. Among the items J?ictured arc the Heisman Trophies won ~y Mike Garrett (1965). OJ. Simpson (1968). Charles Wh1te (l979)and Marcus Allen (I 981 ). Rose Bowl rings and watches. even a photo of John Wayne1 who was known by his r~al name of Marion Mom son when he played for USC in the 1920s. .. Pat and I sat down dunng the summer and discussed just wbar we wahted to do WJth the cover," said Okfahoma State sports mfonnauon director Steve Bui:z.ard. "We have three g_rcat ski ll position players in Sanders, Gundy and Dykes. "Truthful!)', 1f any of the three warranted preseason hype 1\ was Dykes. But we decided 1t wouldn't be fair to the other two to put Just one of them on the cover so we decided to show Pat and Oklahoma State's growins football trad1uo n ... Sanders rushed for 320 yards apinst Kans.as St.ate on Oct. 29. 1he first player sn history to have two JOO.yard games in a career. much less the same season. On the cover of the 1988 UCLA football guide. looking downfield for an open receiver and about to cock his arm. is "Quarterbac k Troy Aikman. Heisman Trophy Candidate." On the cover of the I 988 Oklahoma State footbaU guide, ~n~li.ns amidst four trophies, two Jerseys and a helmet 1s ... Coach Pat Jones'? In case you missed at, the He1sman Trophy race 1s no longer a two-man race between the Hollywood hotshots. Barry Sanders. all 5-foot-8 and 197 pounds of him. has galloped off 1he Oklahoma praine squarely int-0 the Heisman picture. You can almost detect the note of sadness in Last Wttk. he tacked on 31 2 against Kansas. plus·fi vc touchdowns. giving him a smgl~scason NCAA record of31 TDs -he has at least two m every game -and putting him ahead of Allen's 1981 pace when he rushed fora record 2.34! }ards (Sanders tras 2,003 wtth two pmcs rcma1n1n~). Only Allen and Nebraska's Malec Roz1er (2.148 in 1983) have rushed for 2.000 yards in a season. Not until page 22 do you find a picturt of Elliott, King, Ferry head team Macon. Douglas, Reid round out_ AP preseason All-America squad 'By JIM O'CONNELL .,.. , ..... .... Scan Elliott of Arizona. Stacey Kang of Oklahoma and Danny; Ferr) of Duke -three players who were instrumental in their team's Final Four appearances last season -were the top votc~aencn in The Associated Press' preseason All-Amenca team announced Wednes- day. -" Joining the thrtt senior forwards on the sn -man team were sophomore guard Mark Macon of Tcmpk. senior guard Sherman Dou&las of Syracuse and Junior forward J.R. Reid of North Carolina. Douglas and Reid tied for the final spot in the voting of the 65-member panel Joee Canaeco which selects the weekly Top Twenty. land reliever Dennis Eckersley with EU1ott and Reid were AU-Americans last season. 1 S6 points in the votinJ by the while Ferry and M~n were cho~n for the second team. Baseball Writers' Association of The 6-foot-8 Elhott was the top vote-t~tter. having America been named on 56 ballots, two more than King and three · . ' more than Ferry. Canseco hit .307 with ~2 hom~n Macon was named on 30 ballots. while Douglas and and 12"4 n:ans batted an whale leadana Reid each appeared on 23. lhe Alhlebcs to the AL pennant and a Kina is the leading returning scorer or the gJ'oup. 104-58 record. havina averaged 22.3 1ast season while grabbing . 8.S The AL chans · 17 different of-rcboundsand blocking 2.6 shots per game. The 6-10 Kang fensive catcaories and Canseco ranked in the top IO in 12 of them. is considered the top center an college basketball and mant-feel Km g will be playing the season feeling be hu to prove his being cut from the Olympic team was a ma stake. Elhott didn·t-make the Olympic team either despite his being considered a versaule pla}er so neccssaf) 1n that situation. He. too. will be on a team hurt by graduation as Elhou and '\nthony Cook arc the onl} starters returning fro m the Wildcat team which held the No. I spot for s1:c weeks last season. Elliott averaged J 9.6 points and S.8 rebounds last season while shooting 57 percent from the field. 4'7 perttnt from J...po1nt range ~m 1s lookm1 for his third Final Four tnp in a stoned career at Duke, the No. I team in the preseason poll. The 6-10 son of the Washington Bullets general manaJer was named Atlantic-Coast Conference Player of the )'car last season after averaging 19 I points, 7.6 rebounds and 4.0 assists.. . ' Macon was named to even all-freshman t~m last season and his 20.6 points and· 5 1 rebounds per game were mort than enough crcdenuals. The 6-5 native of Saginaw. Mich. wdJ have to take m ore of the ballhandhng responstbLliues this season following the paduauon of point auard Howard Evans. Reid 1s the only 01ymp_ian on the p~ason All· .\men ca team. The 6-9. 2SO-.pounder suffered a foot inJury an Seoul and massed three games there.. Ht' broke a bone in his other toot dunna practi~ at North Carolina last month. unde~m SWJCl'Y and is not e-~pec'ted to rcJOtn the Tar Heels until conference pla~ begins afkr the first of the year. OfCantee0's mltjor·lcaaue IQdina "42bomers, 27 eilher tied the score or put the Athktics in the lead. Oakland also won 29 of the 37 prDe$ in which CanJCCO stoic a base. He led the ~L with 76 ~t.ra base hits and was leCOftd Rustlers seek·anothe r s hot a t Long Beach in ru.ns scored with 120. • z.ctte was .honor.ble menuon All· "mtnea. GWC clblchee volleyball title ' IRJ;S-.-.--rro.c1 year. Last season, the Sea ~ finished (}.10 in league, but Co.ch Tom Out~ vowi the Sea Kinp will not be pushovers this Y.cat. "We may be prcted for last. but we are not 101ng to fulish there. .. said Duttune . DuttJnc., who JUSt took over the program, says that CdM will be a running team this year in contrast lO past seasons. Lcadin& the break should be senior ICelJ y Cohen. sophomore Denise Mahoney and ~nior Barbara La Point. In the Pacific Coast Leaau.c. Wood- bndgc (2 S-7 last year) 1s once again the team to beat The Wamors are looking to cap. turc their sixth slraiJht league aown and with six retummg players from last year's CIF C1wnp1onship run- ner-up team. the prospect seems very likely. The Wamors arc led by ~naor Lisa Webrcn and Junio r Lcshe Rathbum. Wehrcn LS starting her fourth season on varstty, wlule Rathbum 1s playins her second. In all. Woodbridge returns three starters from last year•s squad and Coach Enc Bangs feels confident about his cha~. '"We arc loolong first at the league tatle, but also toward the ClF play· offs." said Bangs. Ocsp11t fi1ush1ng with a 6-17 mark last season. Costa Mesa Coach James Weeks feels his team will be a l.OQlb outfit to deal wtth. ··1 have ntne quality playcn that I have confidence in. and they all could start." wd Weeks. "We have five returning lettermen and the playien are starung to play the man·to-man full court pressure defense much better. "Also. if we can shoot rcspectabt)' thts year we have a chance. lAst yeer. we shot tenibly •• The top two scorers for the Mu-. tangs att senior guard Maureen Moore and senior point auard Kim Good. Rustlers crush East LA. 96-77 MONTEREY PARK -Corona del Mar Hiib product M.m Muller-Stach poumS in 30 poimuad t_uard Elben Davts added 16 a ...e OoldeA West C~1* men's bukd- bal1 am camed a 96-77 RO&- conftrtncc vlC10fY at East Los An· lit'" Wedne'4iay ni&)\~ Muller.Staci> convened 13 or 20 from the field. 1ndud•na 2 ot •from tb~1nt ranee.'° hdpthe Rust.lai ""o iheir leC.Ond pme tn tbftlC outnip. Golden Weit budta S~lS balftune cushion and expended it to 74-Sl bcfort turooven llleloed tlli ..,..._ cut tt to I 2 at 7~. &.at tht R-'tta ~vtttd iod bftaid tt.e wae otme ""'Y· ' ' •L ITWllllS ...._Clthw Chk:Mo =,. lev Detroit Gr99tlev .... 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San Anlonlo Colllo9 Pwllm 0.-1 1'·41 11 Arrovo (t-21 Moullleln Vltw (7·31 al C.lon (7-31 ~ (J-6-1) vs. C.nYOfl Sllf'ltlllS (t-1) •I #Mr-v..., ~VI Loi Amllol (4-S-1) ,, l/lllndl (t-0-1) llllfloWll II-fl ~. Svnnv Hiii 11·2) •I 9'*'9 Ptrk • ..... (7-2·1) "'· Kennedy (7·2·11 11 w .. ,.," Fulllr10fl IS-M) 11 LA Mlradl (7-l> Trov (6-J-11vs..C.....•MM(l-t-1)11 ~ Hwbor Arte1J1 (1·1-1) YS. Aftl/ltfm (I I GIOvtr SIN!um) SI 99 'tm (J4-1) •I La !Ubr• (1•1-11 w....,n (4 .. l vs. Pldflc,t 11-1·11 11 9olM GrMd9 DNlllON VM SCMJtll PtlldlM (S-5) •I Santi Merle (f-1) Noni! T orrlftCll ( 7 • 31 •I Cll9mlnlde ( 7 • 3) H«v.rd (7-ll at s.tn C6-3) ll.oondo CS-SI al Tlfl'IN City (I+ 1) l..OmPOC CH> al Noire Dame, Sht<men OKs (1-2) Big obstacle St. llrrwd CS-S) n. MomlneSldl 17·21 11 Stadium of IN Sl•n VlftM'n Del (7-31 11 s.n Ulls Olllsoo CS·Sl SCMJlll Torr•nc. <S-S> al San MlrlnO (1-0-1) DIVISION V. Boelml'• Damay ~e decldee to,... u be approacbee tbe towertna flpJ'e of Golden State'• 7-foot-7 llanate Bol. S.n11 Yn11 16-4) •I Al•tcadlf'o ( 10-0) c:.-t1 M119 (S-4• 1) •I ltoominlllOfl C'91) Yue.IN (4·S-1) n. Trllluco Hiii (t-21, at Miulon Vlllo, TllundlY. Sent• PIUll 11-21 vs. SI. Mofllc:a (f-11 al PtllMdft HIOll . Aeour-(6-J-I) at El Seeundo (10-0) Paso Robles 17-l> •I Notre o.me, Riv. 7-3 ~ Cabrllo (6-41 VI. Wu a _, If· 1> al lrvlne Merv Sltf (6-4) va. Slnla Clen ( ICHll •I O.rwd HIOll DfVISION IX ~ f I ·.. ' .. CSOR 14·S> •' V...., Cllrlsl .. n tt-11 . BASEBALL Tttllellli>I 11·21 11 lorOll IS-41 Amertc.M ~ MVP "41ft9. SfrrjlllO Ct-2) '' Kern v.ii.v 11·2) Llldlne vote-ttttto IO' ,._ 1911 American o.k P•rtl (t-I) V\. Monlmlr Pr• (6-41 " LHOUI Moil Vllulbll Pia""' Awtfd, wllll Pierce Collet C Is ,__ (I .. , flltl· / MConct· Ind llllr0·"4eee YOlft end totll MlrVlll 17·31 11 Wllllller "' r_. • ., Polnls Oft a 1•-t-1·7·6·S·4·3·2·1 ~sit: OeMr1 (f-11 et LAftlnl!Well Clvlstlen (4·6) ,..._ lit JN. ,,. T .... Trone 1•·4· 1) 11 819 ... r (7-2-II C.enMCO, O.k JI 3'1 Soull'lern Clllforn.. Clltltllen C7·2) v1. Cari>lnl.,11 (1·2> 11 Cari>lnterll Junior Hloll GrMnw.,., 8os 10 6 242 Pudltll, Min 7 13 21f •IGHT-MAM laM'MIAU WlnflttO, NY I 3 1'4 Ut'9I oewtellll Edl.niev, 0.. • IS6 F•llh &aPtlsr IH I II PeMOtfla Polv lf-01 8°"' &os 107 arenhrood 11-11 •• a 1o HoftOo Prep 16·31 Tr~. 0.1 2 ~ • 11N1 ~ ~ , __Mo!Uot.,, MIL -50 St. Maroeret'• (5•4) i t Coast Chrl11lan lt·OI ~--0: Evans, 8o$ 4f ~I Life (10-01 el 910omln11ton Cllrls· \lloll, Min 3f tlen t 10-01 Yount, Mii 34 NHL STANDtNGS ~ C.••ice C•IOerv °"' Edmonton Winnipeg Vancouv..- Detroit Toronto SI. Loul1 Chicago Mlnneaola ~ DMlleft W L T "' 12 • 3 27 12 ' 0 2• 11 ' 2 2• 7 6 3 17 7 10 3 17 Nerrll DMSleft 9 s • 22 9 9 l 19 7 6 3 17 6 10 • 16 3 12 3 9 Wllel C""9t•ic. P'1"1clr DMI*\ NY Rangen 9 6 3 21 Pltt1buroh 10 9 o 20 Hewwwv 1 1 3 19 Phfladelohl1 I 10 l 17 Weshlnvton 6 9 2 1• NY Islanders 6 10 2 I• Boston Montreal BuffalO Hartford Quebec Adllm1 Dtvt"9n 9 • s 23 9 I 3 21 I 10 2 11 7 10 1 IS ' 12 2 ,. WMlllM:tv'I Sar'ft Detroit 4, ~ertford 3 N\onlrffl 5, NY 1$11ndtrt • loll T Ol'OfllO I, Plllsburllh S CllicHO >. luffalo 2 W1ml"9 1, EdmOnton I (Oil TMIY't ca- NY ""'"'' et IOllll. 7:lS P.m MonlrHI ., &ollOn, 4:35 P.m. C.lolrv 111 New Jenev. 4:45 11.m St. Loult 11 Ptlllldl4Phl1. 4:lS Pm VlfW3NV9' II ~I. S-.lS Pm ,,..,., 8- SO.IOn 11 Oeffolt, 4:lS i>.m Hartfotd •t W1sM1111I011, S.~ 11.m T OfOfllO 11 Wlmltlee. S:lS P.m. • ~·'\.• a ren, KC 1' 0. Hender_., Oak 21 Hurst, Bos IS O.Jonts,Cle 11 Rnrdon, Min 11 McGrlff, Tor ' -It Hender\Oft, NY I McGwlre.0.-6 C1r1«,C1e S L Smilll, 8os 4 GHlll, Min 3 . Plnac,Mll l St•w•rl, 0.k 3 Fr1nco, Cle 1 Fernendez. Tor I GF GA .. ., •mertce• Leetue MVh l,.._J_ C1ntaeo, 0.tr.llnel; l"7~11t &ell. Toronto; l,.._.oeer CllmeM. 8olt0fl; ltts.--Don Mllllnlllv, ~ York; 1,.._w11111 H9rnenele1, Detroit; 191>-<91 Rlllll911. laltl· mo<e; 1,.,_.obln Yount, Mllw_...; '"~Olllt Finlltrl. MlhrlukM; l~llt Intl, KMMt City. 97 77 79 72 66 66 61 S9 70 71 S9 .. 52 7S 19 ~ 7• 60 Sl 71 n 69 63 70 6S' 1'79--0on &avtor, Callfornle; 1'7t-Jlm 71 Ria. 8otton; 1m-.oc1 cer-. Mlnneaot•; 1'76--Tllurmen Muni.on, New York; 1'7s--Fr9d ~ L vnn, 8otton, 1'7..-Jeff IUl'rOUlltll, Te .. s; ,. 1f'1>-it1911Je JICkion, 0.kllnd; tfn-Olck 77 Allen, Clllcatlo, 1'71-Vldtl Blu9, Oelli.nd; 1'70-eooll Powtll, a.ttlmore. 60 90 67 73 63 69 Sl 74 .. 69 '2 IM._..arinon Klllbr-. Mltlnetot1; I~ McL•ln. Detroit; 1M7~r1 Y•sln.mlkl, 8otl0fl; l~rtnk lloblnlon, 8attlmore; IMS-Zollo V_,.., MIMMol1; 1~ooa1 ROlllMon, 1111imor.; ~lston ~trd. New Yortl; IMt-MidleY Menftl, New YM. IH~oelf ~Is. New Yclftl; IMO-«OllW Meris, New Yotk. 1~ Fo•. ClllcaeO; 1'9t-Jedtll JenMn, 8osl0fl; ltS7-MldllV Mlnltl, New York; 1'56-Mktr.tv Mlnlll, New Yorll; IJSs-Yoel ..,rt, New Yortt; l~Yotl ... r., New Yot11, ltS>-AJ ROMll, Clrleilf'od, 1~ 5'19ntz, ~; 1'51-Y091 e.rr., New York; 1'51>-A111 Rluuto, New York. t,,.,_T9d Wlll .. ms. Botton; 1~ BoudrMU, 0.VNnd; 1'47-Jol Ol/Mt8IO, New York; ,,.._T9d Wlli.ms. llollOft; I~ NewllouMr, 0etro11, lt~ Nnma...-. De-rrolt; lto-SPuc:I Clllldlr, New York; 1Nl-JM Gordon, N-York; 1'4l-Jo9 OIM1o91o. New York, l,._..lftk Greeno.re. Detroit. 1,._Joe OiM141eiO, New Yortl; lt»-JlmmY Fon, Plllledllllbfa, 1m-<Mr11V GeflrlnW, Detroit. lf'lt--Lou Geflrlt.1.. ~ York; 1ns-ttlftk Grllllbert. l11froll; ln.--Mk:keY Cocllr1111, Detroit: !~Jimmy Fo,x~1 Pllll.olllllllll; 1'32-Jlmmv Fou, Pllff9-_, 1'31-t.eftY Grovt. Pllllldllilltlll. .._...... LMtlue MVh IHl-Klrll Gll>son, LOI Ans:tlH; 1"7-Andre Dawson. Cll!Qe01 1~1 Sdlmldt, ,.,......., l"S-Wllllt McGet, St. Louis; 191+-llvnt S.ndl>tf'1, ClllC:ffOI 19':>-0all MAllt/lllY, AllWllll 1M-Oale YOLLa.,.ALL ~alMe ..... °".,... 1MPtaa cown•..c• Go6dlll Wttl def. Ful«ton, 15-7, IS-1, 15·17, MAK!ltw AtlMI•; 1 .. 1-Mlke Sdlmldl, ,,,.._. PHI; IM Mlle, Sdwl'tldt. ,.,. ••• I ... 1f'79---W91 St•.... Pllhllurlfl, lltd • Ktltfl H41rMftdlJ, St. L.oull (llt)I ~ PwUr, PtthDurtfl; ~ FCIMr, C_....111 1'76--Jol Mlreln, Clndnnllll lf7t--Jol Molf/1111, ClndllMtl; 1'7..-Stew GetwY, LAI AllNltt; 1~•11 ROM, CIMlllMll, 1'1t-..19fW!V e-:ti, ClrlcJllMtll lf71-... lS-10. Or_,.. Cout def. 110•1tledl, IH, t-IS. 1s-u . ,.._ "· 1s-1i. TWNMIS WemeR'I tewwMnf (et .... Ylrlr) ...,.. ..... ..... Htltnl Sutr.ove (Cl~llkllll dtf. line Garrllon (U.S.), 2-6, 6-J, 6-J; Cllrls E-1 (lJ.S I def. lartler• Pottw (U..$.), '"'· 6-2, 6-4; Getwlelll s.Mllnl CArlleftllNl def. K1terlnl MllMv• (lultlr .. ,, 6-2, kl. HoR sE RACING \ :at ~::11:: ..... "" .. .. ~ • ' -.......... • , ~·~ ......... • I ·~ ........ , , .. 2 &.... , J ! 2 , • 1\.\ • 1 5~ ....... ....... Utetl J 2 ... Delllii • ' .171 o.nwr • ' .111 "°"''°" • , .571 IMAntoftlo 2 • .m 1~ Miami • 5 .000 3 ...... Calk Cll Allllllc ...... New Vora s I .714 NewJfrW'f 4 3 '.511 1 ...........,.. 4 1 .511 l .... , .419 2 Wnhll•ton 1 • .200 -3 ~ 1 s .161 3~ Detroit • ~ DMllM 1 0 l.000 ~ 4 1 .IOO 2 MlwtllAll• 3 1 .150 2lh An.nte s 2 .714 2 CNc8tO • • .500 2~ lndleM 0 1 .000 1 ·1 A sec 1_o11 lalJcfralaer 1he SouJbem. Calif~mia Collete men's ~ team IS hold1na I fundraitcr &Olf •tournament ~onday, Dec. S, at Los Coyotes Country Oub an Fullenon. The tam scramble fonnat will bqin with a lhotaun stan at 11 :30 a.m. Entry is SIOO, tu deductible, and included cart.. lunch. New Yortc steak dinntt, prize drawu'a. team awards and aolft.lls .. for m0tt information, call SCC Albletic Dinctor Ron Prettyman II SS6-3610. exL 279. Whiter ~etball 1-.Ue .~ FC?unta.in .Valley ~~munity Service$ Diva11on 1s acccptana apphcatJons for its Winter S-Man Baskett.JI 1.Qauc. Fees~S2SO per team a!'<f aoceptedon a fllSt· come basis at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center. The leaauc will be divided into three clivis.ions; playina on Tucsda¥. Thursday or Sunday/Mon~y ~i&hts, bq.innana Jan. 8. Rosten arc hmned to 12 players, all 18 years or oldet. For more information. call 839-8611. eBBCHEVROLET' Home of the Serengeti Blazer •uMW Call our friendly salesmen for details 579~5100 1-800-228-7240 17071 E. Imperial Hwy.· Yorba Linda. California .IJo•p•re Our O S1rrio1 I S1/1oti1• THEO~ ROBINS THE9P>~TORE 2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 842-0010 o SADDLEBACK Sales Leasing Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-33n 714-380-1200 2llO HARBOR Bl VO. COSTA MESA 8 JIM S~EMONS IMPORTS Merced• Benz ,., ...... . New.1rt•1119' @ ..... •Ll9lln0 PW1t •~ .... ACUAA 1001a....••· ............. ...... L.eellflO ..... Petta Jl..ACUU 7INl72 UC .. t'oW l'rMttlan•" . ' • ,,.,... ¥ ... , lfudoCt Suta AU'• Toam (Tommy) ~ wiU J>UI his Caldomia I~ title OD the lane. whe1' he *Pl ia I.be !illl for a 12.f'OUftd bout apinsc Toby Flores olS.OCkloe 08 TblU'ldav, Dee. I, at the frvine Marrion Hoed. ' Johnny (Tap Tap) Tapia of.New Mnico opens tbc. !!P.t in the -i-main event tpinst Mexico City s Simon Conteru. Ta~ UL a ~lime utionaJ Golden Glove charripion uutamWeiOt from Albuquerque lw woe bis &att five lilhta by knockout and holds • 6-0-1 reconl. Cootreru eaten I.be eiabt-round event with a mark of 14-4-2. . . ~ --toal'll . ·Amy Alcott will becon:a fora third title when the 1919 Nabi1eo Dinah Shore Golf Tournament comes to Mi111on Hills Counll).' Oub in Rancho Minee. March 27 throup ApnL. ~ . Alcon·s 1988 victory, hi&hli&hted by her pluqe jnto the lake at the I fth fiole, broke 17 yean of tournament records and her penonal ~rd. With her win from that tournament, she went over the S2 million mark In career eaminp - only the third Ladies Professional Golf Assoc:ia· tion Member to do so. Major beneficiaries of the tournament are Oesen Hospital United Way of the Desm and Boys' and Girl1s Oub of Palm Sprinp. The seven-&y event wilJ feature practice on Mon- day, Pro/Arn on Tuesday and Wednesday and the najor championltup on Thunday thru Sunday. Spectator prices wilJ be SI 0 for pounds admission on an¥ day, with a special SS price for students and tcn1on. Admiuion for pounds and clubhouse will be S l S. A "IQlfer's ,ctaway club" i.ck.ate will live further uvinp. Details on this and other event information may be obtained by calllna (619) 324-4S46. $ SA~~Y.IL~B.G 0 NEW LOCATION! SANl'.A-ANA AUTO MiAt:t:--- 1500 Auto Mell-OJ., Senta Ana 135-3171 Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger .,5ales Dept. open 7 days SeMce Houts: Mon.·Frl 7em-10pm BUENA PARK STANTON GARO N GRO\E PACIFIC OCEAN ' -.... ,~ "--. t-t-.. ". . HONDA -1e.·e.~ "Ofl+.W ~ aumT LEADER OF THE IM~TS" • (714) 540-0713 2llO HARBOR BLVD. • COSTA MESA • AU-Illar water polo •t TMdJI OnQlt County's lop wat.tr sdo .,a.yen wiU pertiapele in an a1kw pme °" Dec. 10 at Tusun Hitl!School. Tbe dividana lane KPUaUDJ the lu&b tchools will be Chapman A venue 1n Gardea Grove and Oruwe. tx~ that FooUulJ will be on lbe north Side, I Uch'teUI will be It~ by IM coeches with a limit of three olayers from any onucboQ,i...u:~-t Ehrlich from Villa Partc and Rob K.nilht from Fullenon will be coech and uaaltant coech for the Noni\. Don S~l of EJ Toro ahd Matt Campbell from Un1veni1y will be coech and UStstant for the South. The playen will tc~ after the conclusion of the CIFfina.ls, wluch art Nov. I. Tustin HiJb as located at 1171 EJ Camino Real, in T usun. Ticket prices are S2 for idults and SI for hiah school studenu and all others. Further information may be obtained by callina John KuJisidt at 639-9144. . ' . Cnre.. 5k nuJ/tnD l>tc-f'C&IStration for a SK run/walk scheduled for Feb. 2S in Cypress arc beina accepted now throuah Feb. 't 3 at PacifiCare HcaJth Systems in Cypress. The ~ is being held in an1ic1pa11on of the Los Antcln Marathon scheduled for March S. by Paciteare. one of the marathon's sponsors. Proc:ceds from race rqistration will benefit a teen alcohol and drua abuse ptO&ram. The race will be held on a level course and is scheduled to bqin 11 8 a.m. on race day. Trophies will be prnented to the top three male and female finishers. Pf'c..rqistration cost 11 S 12 for the race and a commemorative T-shirt. and S9 for th~ raoe only. Rqistralion on the day of the race will be SI~ for the race and a T -shin and S9 for the raoe only. Free parlcina will be available for spcctaton and l'\Ulntn at PacifiCare, located on P!aza Drive ofTValley View Blvd. between K.atcllaand Cerritos in Cypress. More information may be obtained by callina Teri Davis n9S2-l l21. ldYlrtill II Tllil P-ce C1ll for hflil1 842-4321 _____ ... _ • CALL ONE OF THESE DEALERS FOR THE BEST BUY • It FWY. HUNTINGTON B EACH ACURA B LONGPRE PONT~C Otnp a • ~ CW..t ' .e ... " Ama'rr e ll t/ SEE MOTOR 11t~NDS CAR THE YEAR ,,,.. MRYICE DEPT. OPEN MONDAY lJ1ltTIL 9 :00 P. M • C71•Jen.Mll . INcft IW ·~Graw~ WW••Wf IRWDt PROFILE ••• w...cs and went 00 SOUi!~ lriDI .. 1WD ,.n before I WU weaned away &om 1t In IWDIDi• up hit career, Ir.ha •Yt: .. Nobody c:OulCt bave bel9 anymott fonuMtc tbu I wu ~my career. We wae extmMty bappy at VUencia · wllieft we Jived 1n an okl. CCH'dcmaed 1Cboo1 . I left there reluctantly and ~ bocb Newport HarW Hilb and Oranee Coast with the same feel! .. ro wbida wife Lois adds: ..We lived riP! next to the kinderpnai d 2 amaa and plaYll'OWldl. Out' two youna ~ten could DllY there when tcbool was out and I could watch them tom our kitchen window." . • She W»-.O active in the Monday Moralas Quarter\lec;lc club at the school that she alJDOlt p the top award of the year: But at that time, they woukln'tpve the award to a woman. ... think Al learned sometruna ~that stayed with him a1J the mt of bis career -don't let the ~yen call you Al Make them call you Coach or Mr. Irwin 1s one of the bi& thanp that came out of our stay at Valencia and it really "helped later on.'' Lois says. Irwin didJi't find time lo learn to play aolf. .. I tried to devote all of my free time to my family when I waan•t coachina." he says. "I helf. run the Ralph Recd aolf tounwnent each F but 've only played a couple of rounds in my life. • · . For three ycan.he bas returned to nearby Newport Harbor High to help coach the &iris' swim team as a volunteer coach. "My youna aranddauabter, Carrie Maze, 1s on the team and 1s a seaior this year. ru be beck iftbet ll have me, to help coach this year. Carrie bas been captain of the frosh-sopb team her fint year, the varsity her sophomore season and is a song and cheerleader u well ." Al says proudly. Has grandson Casey Maze figured to be a water polo player -right? Wrong. He is one of the top frosb-sopb runners on the Newpon Harbor cross country team and finilhcd eighth in the recent Oranae County meet. .. We're spending a lot of time at cross country meets these days. .. Al said of he and wife Lois._• If you walk by their home on •the beach along the peninsula, you can look in the front window and tee some outstandtng wood carvinp of birds and mammals on display. "I use an ex.acto knife to do all myc:arvinp, .. Al 11ys. "Lois paints them and we will ICU them =M wants them. I also use them to return favors to who have been nice to.us." Other than traveling to all parts of the world (their favorite is Hawaii where they spend leVeral weeks each year) and watchina their ~ildren perform, the lrwins relu in the confinei of their beach-front bome alona the peninsula and k>ok forward CllCf'fy to their next trip. ~have found the ideal way to retire. relax and enjoy life to its fullest. , • OLDSM091LE • CADILLAC • GMCTRUCKS n•/512-0800 SAN DIEGO FWY • AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL W•..,. a HIGH VOUNE LO'N ~ ~ Our Goal Is to Be Numt?er One ~~"~-="-546-0220 -:~,,... -..: ,, < ... >.[, ........ -• • 0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. Mercedes-Benz 6862 Manchester Boulevard Buena Parlt A __,,,. SER~Sf 213 or 714 /MERCEDES M·F 8a "'p '1-r& ? ""' Where 1·5 and l-9 lmcct. Sat.. 8a·2p Superior &n VOLKSWAGEN@ ~ IN WESTMINSTER~ 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster (714)891-9378 (213)430-28'3 G G~ Gw~s Orange Coast Jeep Eagle c.r..wr S.O.Acdoll • Sales 0v "1 hfw'lrr • Stnice 549 I023 • Leulac 2524 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Meaa ., C CAMP8el I f N ISSAN /~~ ff..~ • low p,.<h • No G1mm1clu • Greol Sel•<l10I\ • Frrendly People • E •<ellenl Sen,•<• 18835 leoctl '°"'9"'0fd C714) 142-7711 LINCOLN ~URY 8 BEACH --"" SALES -LEASING SERVICE -PARTS H\ :ff 41 l H01'DA D&AID IR oaA1IG& CO. .. Sales • 9en1Ce • PUU Leu&"I All MUes 96~1969. '~BeMh~. -.....c ............ • • .. ' • CALL 642-5678 . Private S*"tY odtf, No Reel Ettate. C4mtnerclat, Automol ve, Boating ot Mete> Wanted. i=-=:~-il THI DAILY N.Of c CLA$St1;1ED ~f"ICf HOUM •ca \'OUR AD r.i..,n-a.,.,_ M.f ntl ""9T DAY • 00 A ... 6 30 PM ,.,. 0..-.. -.,._ "' _ _.. 8e11Kd41~ • 00 AM· 1 \ 30 AM -_,.,...,. --°"u-....,_ Co.Int• M.f .,,..., • °""' ....... ,.,.. -I OO AM·600PM _ .. lot _...,. __ _ ......... .._.._.,, .. ,_ •tO -fl•O ____ _ ot:•O<.i .. t Mt ti ,. 4.M -··-,_ u•- ....... .., .... .,,.,.,. __ ............ ....,....,..._.."'W.., .. ,.........,... ••H• llF Mt tMI ef "W 1iMC1t -~~ ....... ,.,c,.- ••twt.... 1• c.ea... 11M ••e•.... 1111 c-... • .. c....... aat ...... ..... ... Cl•••• 1111 '"''" •EASTllDE LO H.. AT WWW 1M+ o.n .•• -..... WWW&,. __ : __ Wall '° '9Wlt\ 2 BR 1241 .. ..... .. 21.1\IA, 2~. pr. fl-PC, ... .. .. l8A •lleb wtew, 1111 dadl A :.,ra ....... """ OOMf\ ._. utl 1UA, ' 'ltllft-IP"'l~·~~~ • • •11 • •llll'll _. patio, ldry fillup.•8'111 pet lnao, ~ ... frptc dbl.., l1IOD 213' ... ~ & Jt-j. H1cf pWtt1ng f. indry ... end gw, no piU, WANTl!U, 1 OI 2 CM ... -... ., .. , ct(, 11250. 17Mt12 Aet t..,,... from tfiee S8A tat-1W 114ll71-nl4 -18rwrn..,, ..,,,·to bot!. -....0 a VIP• wHlmo 221 La PaiotM ega tor 9'«aoa ot _.. ~~r/!':vR£ •MY .... •Nl9 tBA "-"Y ·~ cozv 28A 11A troac ~~ = ;.: • 491.:.u1 · ~:131-1!11 ==:-~:"'" « <>Mee 973-4400 2-11'/conclo:D.ctton"*" too nurn.-OU9 to "*'-lnd'Y· 9•ra9e. •14 Pool • ..,.. lndtY. 1.-+ ...... ~= = .... llatllt · Aelld91ice e.ce..eno t., bdnn, dbee gar, 1rg =·~WI ~pc:e-Matguerlte. No pet•. w . NO PETS. '41-2~7 iro m itli WANTED 2 CM oar• In patio E'lld9 8-* 8-Y lo-• _.. "'"' StT5/mo • 541-2628 on • one C.M./H.8 .... for auto ..... , ual ~Uo~ No pat• LM S2e50lmo. Doug H«bet ·-IN* ~ "°"' Wtd, 2 c. ;W1D1A; •«•·....,.. hlM own .... lstl 11295imo * 557-57"4 720-3MOor 790-5000 'GORQEOUS> Com« Unit. a.an 28A w/JM garage, ...,age. w1nt« rental. Coeta ....._home. lock l .24 hf .-... ~ ~ 38f 28a. w/d, plantatton dlehWa•h•r. dlepoHI. 17257mo. CaM MlcMlle ~ ~-M1.o332d, 845-47Sle 1eo AC~ l'Wlttl ll'le. AW 3BR 1BA h«JUM, lg*'* KEll'Flla .. / 8'1Utter1. Fr. en. dee*, "1 NedV •ce1>1e, pool. epa. 416-4321 •1325mo. · 845-}435* ==--~~-=~..:, r!.r'~~~· ~t·w1....,,....,.-Yl· 1~·"11 ydt1eoo1rno. 720-.... =t.!n~~ecio~ w1~~...!.~BEACH. 28f $400. Ind. G• • ....,, =0Rh"BUY,lla 1·..!'~ -··--·-· ut-'" ··--'"" ........ ~ t,._ & vtewl. Hunt 11000/mo * t42·20°5e-. \\ '\.. ~ A.\.. ... ·-~ tn E. 22nd S~ ..,. -·· 2 cer ~ elec. 3 hou... from ._,.. • ,_ OMI a...., ne.rby. 8754549 3BR 1'" ... ·-'--._ AEALT~ 2BR 1'itBA. cloH to •a1-1311• =5par1l/rnoJna( 1' ,.,...) IW carpet3 IEACHI With pflV•t• trewlparlc ~.: ":!~ -...-.., -,,_,..,. .. -.. °" --·-· nu ** ..... -** beeeh. $950/mo. 900 -.12 ..., ~3 entry. Tiit ba & titting rm actoia _,.. ft'om ~, ~.:.:: =: ~ ~~1:.'1:l:.:;,.~· L.cwety ombtt w . New a.a LM'9. 844-Htt •n I P-m.'" YEA~ Y Nnia1. 1 Bit to ~::""·pat~~=· 1ngton State Beach: ., '''., .. _ --•• S975mo titl&Mt873--7353 apt9T & pelnt. Nr N.B. VERY n1c:a ~ 2 Bdrm~~~& ... ~ lbead\d. 28rf18'1 P's!f'!· *7~ttrttrt.d·ll't'I· Montl\ly rent •. 525. <-•.,.. ........ ..,. ... .,, .. -- :=..: = := -~ -~ I _,,.CUI & "'°PPl"9· wt'*' erld prage. ..,._, .,..,.. of · ..._..-a~ rp c, ~15. SM-e318 from M ll'a"'!iPiiiiii~i!P-riil~•~1 s1eo eut• 2er r.. or~' s1t001rno 1 vr·Ho Ptll&-1875 mo.' 415~ p~~ ~~ ~ facll-u an. tom. 1N beau'! trg tiome nr sc C ... 1 · ont wnt stwtt.,., wood""· &MATZEN~ 759-1234 , ... 241-8282 ..... /Mo. 938-0552. • ,.~ Plaza. Fem, IN beth, •••• I . WfTH DOC . Par11alty new cptlbllnda. • ~ ttnl •HAR80fl VIEW HOME telia... Bli ..... I llllf* On the Mnd W Newport w/d, pool, Jacuul. U. lalllfl!t furnlehed. 3000/mo. yard. 2218-& tie.. 38r 3a.+ton, f/p, up-29R"28A. No pets. "50. 11375/mo. iskr'842-38$0 $375/mo+dep 55&-1737 lul• / W::: AY911 now. 722·7022 No pat•. 845-25M graded. dbt pr., gardnr. •or:t mlOCf Agt 54e 5llO Call PAM TEMPORARY ( 1 ·3 .W =--.. .,, .,, 1 90/Sfudy 2 BA BACK BAY E'SIOE comm. pool, pettl, lg yd 1 l 2 8dnn apt1 9'ar1 2BR 2BA duplex neat monthl) Room fe>< rent In .. remodeled a new earpata. 3Br, t~, lrg yard, 12100/mo. 847·752t agt M15. Gar, cable avt. bHcl\. Frptc, gar, 2BR,• 2 BA apt. neat -------- CtoM to town S950mo garage, tuet rernocfaled. Omblt w/880, lndf'I rm. meati&JIU ~·Avail now. Vw· News> 8IVd Md w. Bay.St *Ptal111l11ll ... * 873--518&.,. .,.· · St29!5/mo * S4e-064S 11Ml12 Sorry, No pet• 831..,.27 ty, 5/mo 731-1230 In CM. Poot. )acuzzl, It 1 .......... .... L.AG BEAUT fAMILY HM BRIGHTON SPRINGS 1BR PENINSULA YEARLY 11...-n *W ,,.* =~ ~ ~P'1':t .. mlf 11 ... 1 1at time rental. 5BR 3BA, Condo. Seduded woodt trCUt• 1BR 18A upper meatiBJl8 Sparkling cl.•an, large Fftg, dllttwaeher, •tow & dep. Avail O.C. 111.'ca11 ~251"': ~ ~...;,. 2-car gar, w/d. Available & atreame. Ground floor duplu, _..,., nlc;e In· Garden apta. Beautlfully Incl. No'*' 545-4155 Juay 842.,..321, ••t. 318 entry t -n"'W' 1211. V..,ty, $2400; Win-i.vet. Wtnr/Oryr ttaek t•tor. le75/rno. landscaped gJounda. ... 2Bf\ 2BA FIRE· d*ts or 548-1917 ...,.... ~ ~ patk~. ter,11900.121·1198 tic;<*•up,rntcro.trptc,gar '*~ut• 28R 1BA toww IPllWTI Pootl~.petlolldeclc1, PLACE. 'POOL.' adulta nlnge lm=~=-93-47 ••. w opnr + carport. ~ ~. new crptlbllndl, BHutl1ully landscaped. garage°" carl)Ot1. $950/mo 844·4402 ==-~-=::--=---.r=.,..,..1 • __ ... ., ... pool, spa. $750 + lhar• laundry. No part<. quiet. large. ~ Apt•. 8achetor S600 831..()211 • .;;.; .... iiiolo!i~ ..... 1 ........ ....., ......... 11 .... 1 ... •1 -.. --,.-.... --.-.-u--.-.- 2BR 28A HOUSE dep. VELMA 54~2447 Ing. $850/mo. Poot & apa patlO 0t declc 1 Bedroom $6eO --.,--..,...--.,..----- -8Mn\ cei11r9, bfick lrplc, ---•3ltR 28A, 9"agt. frl>tC. Prime IOc:etlon. . 28drm w.Ba sa1s '**LIDO BAYFRONT UAL* 91111. FULL SERVICE farnlly rm. patio .... ,._.m11A patloldedl. UoOer Unh 1Bedroomle70 t61E18thSt 842-0S56 Speelou•1BR,lndryrm Wkly ,..,..tall now avall. 8W!"~~·~·Bchcllff 11200/Mo Call NATALIE Y~,gar,,...pnt&c:arpt. l13500l'iower.$1275 28dnn 1'48al805 --------•S950tmo• 1147.00 wt( I up. 2274 'Vn~--~on 1 _. 54M5" °' 759-eEIOO 5tmo * 84fr.0845 YIW IEITIU IJllYllll•WAY 28drm w.ea 1770 435 Soud, Bob 723-0350 Nwpt Blvd. CM 84&-7445 .---11 MerrlU Lynch Retlty &mm -11& COSTA MESA 28drrn 2Ba twnh.. 1865 *"' ... Ht ala ti ~Ill 1M. .... 1 .. M" RENTALS AVAILABLE H1199 yd, new paint & erpt Attr 3BR. O~BA l\m, Ml-IUI &25 Center St 642-1424 BEAUT. 28r 28a, ~ blodt ftlf 18-1TWES\"Cl.lf'f OAfVE Shott twm a winter S950/mo 982-8539 wood9Y. frplc. gar. no 8echelOf lmmac:u4ate lg to bay 2 ear gar w/d hie Nwpt 8ch Aet 541-5032 l850 to S1400 '*" gard/weter pd, IM 1BR. 1BA, .undlc, enc gar. Bath yWd IMmdry etc up Open beam cell 1 BlK FROM ecH. M/prOf =~_,..·_..,.._.,.,.--- Waw1font Horne9, inc. &mm• n& S1.500/mo. 548-13M w/d Ncup, etoae to So ss50 Incl ut11 it1a~ tng',baleony. S1t9S/mo • 1trgt1t, Nemk No dNOL 900 eq. n. of office IP8Ce RMttott 873-fiOO W/remtty rm 10c on lovely BLUFFS Cou1 Plat.a, M75/mo. 842-3112 425 E BAY ISOO/mo No dep'~ut. avellable tor rent In ·-·--ttreat.1yrlM. S1400mo. 3BR 2'MlA. A~ lmmecl 540-0117, Of 982·9804 TSL MGMT . 842-1803 8alt>oe Penn 675--40n COSTA MESA -~~~---...... ---...;;,;.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:J ..._. Ann, Agt 751•5000 2'h rno IM, S1000/mo « 1BR Apt. Carpet, drapee, BACHELORlll S.Cluded ••FEMALE wanted to Call &4 2 -09 18 -----~---c.tl ... lat r.illnJa 1117 E'SIDE 38r 2Bll 2car atteh S1200/rno fum 7eo-8384 tt~. lg fenc;e petlo, =-~II ~denrMt~ * ... fl.... IN w/F. 38R 2BA t>eaut. BALBOA ISLAND offlee, /WJili Glge Q fiOme 38R 1 gar .. 2 eundeeb. patlO. BLUffS ALL NEW & dOM to ah<>pplng, avall woftdnd womaf\ n/91'1'1kr 3BR 28a, encl. gar., w/d CdM mme. frl>tC, OIW Manne A¥e .. upper . .-TU11m Loft. Famlly rm, all •mall yard, all new PROF .... DECORATED. now,850-7244 1550mo. lncie. um: ;~m~mon•w carpet. W/Oetc.1470.720-tSM 10.15.$300/mo. _______ 1•......,.,Thll oory MR 28A home amenttJaa-dou~ gar· c::::· a ~~c:'~· .. Avail. lmmed. 2900IQ ft, 1BR+ Bonut rm. Tr"-'Plelt. 848-9240 208 LUGONIA •NEWPORT BEACH ON 67 5-817TID & 7 5- 7 008/E ...... llJ JI tadcWtObotl\achOOla& :Y:-4~8'1 · ... , 11250 ~7015 AYI 1211· 480 2'itBA 2 car Gar .. carpets, 1575/mo. BEAUTIFUL 2BR 1BA ln TSLMGMT 842·1fl03 THEWATEA,BACKBAY. CORONA DELMAR ...,_ lhOpplng. Hwrywfttlyour r · gar.$2700mo. 831-0680 Avall 1211. East 18th St. ~complex. Poot • Eaatblutl. Share 3Br 425a/f privet• ofllcl with ....,..... -·~·-CW..MI ... 11u ·--™-WESTNWP18R.-...... ,,_ ......... TV,·=· * 1.un* ,_,,,.,,,,..,..,. =~·= T"'8 CMM9' .. reedy ,0 :;eeaO:': •• °"'Yo;:. ltll;HAt:w/19 =;";'1~=-:r~Rllt_..fUE E'SIDE1Br~alra.cabte earJ)9t/pelnt.•ALLUTIL-11•1m 1310/M0,28flnNewport /rr.o. 9 '"°" to 811bmtt all ot ' . now.-yard dbt gar 111500 Dy9 l40-2•2t E !Wknd BALBOA 48' tp $1500 TV htcup\ ... In ao.t. fTIES P~D* a..ut. 2-38r ale:, 98'·· w/d Beec:h, v«'i Mfe ~ ..,,_ mTl ml .... 8MrP deal\ & ... • ........... , 0pen' & .... 2BR ·2BA v BAYFAOHT •Condo 2Br ...... req'o. ':m 1675 $725/Mo. CALL 722-1132 hk-4AC>, ,.._carpet, tradt bOftloOd. Fem non-.mkf, One room o.fc w/prvt fordabte 3 bdrm. 2'Ai.~ 111 1111 • ..... nl w/frpk:. V'9w ol Nb & Lu11 eondO nr betl, 28R, 11e50 352 Vlctorte 181 1111'11'11. IM'fW llgtlta, cell fan, nr Ho.g vwy reapon. 842·1578 entry. New ~ & ~ pnvat• patio REAS · doaetobctl.11200/mo. 21ABA, 2 tty, trptc, PfV 18ALBOACoWl28f,den, .... .,1 .. -aBA t~T----Hoep.4'850101 Htou!_.!~50/mo. ...,.._._ palrlt. All utltt . Aleo Wlttl ~ now.. & I 1Bdrm tor ''quiet pet· patio, w/d hlrup, db get ttp1c: dodt $2300 .. --•• ""'""-·gar., _.. - - -other tllltl av S170 & ..a-ta. Euy 11 .-.. In " eon.". 873--5354 AGT wtopnr S 1025 521-&400 BAYF~T ,.....:.. ... 0 2Br 2BREAS!!1DE DUPLEX f/p, lndry m118• patio, dOM TSL MGMT 842-1803 2BR 1BA on t>ay, 1425/mo ~-Sc:ottl sq.23o1 ,..._. '""' ''t\V.rrY"rYT' i-u· v ~I I ..,.,...., • • 1..-. patio, gar. nu to~ 50/mo. non-eml(r Bob 875-3807 tie.ltltul ~ 8eec:h , ~ • W • "-.t...' 1 J _.. \. 2BR 18a hM w/Dfjl. New LUXURY 28' 28a condo. den, dock t0t 80' boat. peln\/etptfapp4nea, w/d 2314 SANTA ANA. WALi< TO BCH HR HOAG . _N_EW __ OF __ F_IO_E_S-17_ttl_at-.- & ecfl'*l6ant to ... Wall REALTORS carpet. mini bllnda, Dbl gar, lrplo, pool. V~. 14750 .. hkup 1&25/mo 250-8002 ISL MGM.I _M2· 1r • La 1BR gat pd. F/P COM, lrg rm In me. 3Br C.M. Full Serv. Rental to communtty pool, East· -• ttnoMum, tub enetoture, 1995/Mo. 1•t I laat LINOA ISlE 2 ttory 58f, or 650-5114 ~ ... "'TSIDE Du"'--"1750. • La 28A 28a hOUM lln bClft ~ PCH. ApptOIC 200-400•Qlft blufl ~ c.n1.... --ftm..flll wtd s12751mo 720-1244 +l300. 842·5290 boat dock. 110,000 ~ !"'-• nr • twnhN 1925 .. Poot. ape, Yno prof non...-mkr pref 84M330 tennla, churchea, Outttandlng Bucolla . NEWPORT ................ S2500FF2ndMO'SRENT ' ange I 20th. 1BR. utlla cov. pt'lcg. 1401 Superior 1425+ dap 723-0818 1.,..--------IChc>IM, a patka At· 48drm pool epa.tamt1y38R. 2BA. waaher/dl')'9f, HEIGHTS, -• E'SIDE1BRCottage,frplc, pd. Stow. gar.ge. no A\'9.846-&838 . ~St«e(clotl\lng&?). fordable prtce lndudet rm and roimal dlNno-patio, dec:lc. FIP. tiuoe 2.BR. 1B .... patio, avail IULtm .. t·1• encl patio. 187 E. 2111t, pate. S515/mo + $350 CDM·Momldaughterwtll 1200 eqft, S1.25/tf, 171 theland.1269,000 1399 000 SELECT 'ar $1595 Linch 11/15,MOO/mo,nopeg, SEAWIHO CONDO Quiet St. SNS + 1785 MO. aec.544-2140 ACROSSFftBEACHll tlV3BR1'itBA.Frpt,w/d. "A" E. 17th S10-t:' ., .... ,. BHIG.751·Sooo . 21-4118 Gn1bb & Elli• 842-4011 locetlon. 28R 1 ~BA 845-7234 * NO PETSI EEASTSIDE 3BD 28A. 5.: ~ooc!!/;:;. =1~~ -~~c 17th) 548-5030 1 "fr..or"'l: l:( .KJ N . NEW PAINT FABULOUS New eontarn-"'L..m m Ill townhoUM tfyte. Frptc:, 2BD 1 112BA dlahwUher. 178 Cd Pl. owner• unit In 844-4780/846-3189 WANTED: Small oliki. \ ' ·Vf't..''· r 2BA. 2BA. 2 car gar frplc porwy. 2BR 3BA condo, Gar, fncd yd. WS. 1971 0 pool, lpe, encl garege mirrored c:loMta. q&Mt Trtple>l, trp4, patio. C.M. M °' F non tmttr, 8adt Bay.,.., tumllhed P.!:tO'\ll'\.\;'i IQywdS155.oooAOt.Pai Panoramle:vlewaooean& Wallac..545-5032 w/opnr. Wthf/Oryr lnc:I. newty deco<eted, petlo, 1•r. lndry h /upa . 111111,_... i:tr bdrm/pvt be. lhar• «unfumlahed.548 9800 liiiil Rl\LTOR~ f22.m6 790-1755...,.. harbor.831·1400$3,500 SEE 1954 'A' & 1950 8 Nopetal1150/mo. yard & gar. dr. opener. 995/mo.831-7955. • ......... Bl w duple•. S375/mo OIM&-7512 • Walatfr• ..... IM. Meyer. 28r 18a. $725:.: 875-174e Of 87S-ee08 1ro~ S800mo E/SIDE 1BD Moble Horne, 28A 28A+ DEN. . utll. 722-4374 c-.....i ~ ,..__,.OFll* ' ... L ~ 1141 'IULtm No Peta. Securtty $700. NEWPORT ISLAND 2BR 545-3229/~279 . 1575 mo. gee/Water pd ..... ~. gataC1t W/O C.M. new twMM 2 aty. 2 WMS MMCaAL _.._.. 64~ 1'h9A. quiet ngtlbf'hdl Ho \ Mutt P.,.. new carpet N!up, y#d. Next to paril. ear. nd 2 rmmta, quiet. _ .. m LITI CHANNEL REEF 2BR. peta. s 1100/mo. Avail 2BD/2 1/28A + den. 2 al 759-5690 or 67~nl? . t1075fmo. Namkr. w/d., WS... lttillJ:tl8A2i:A'J:l!SirftR 48R 28A, RV acceu. .,tterlront, fab vlewa SHARP 3BR Vacant I 1211. ~749 end unit. att. 2/car oar. , 4409 RIVER !Mt, all utll pd 831-a&23 Foe ..... XJnt tocatJon COLDWeLL BANl(eRO 12 1 9,IOO Bkr ~n 873-al00. l2000 Aeedyf Pvt yatd & dbl •t· •If MT..._ w/d hlcupa.Avall lmmed E SIDE 2BR 1'ABA. 2 TSL MGMT 842-1803 llllM • ••• ~ble rent L~ ................. IKhedgaragaS1300rno .. , -~· St50mo 831 2093 · story, pallo, garage. =•••--,__ ·--72 · •• ..... tiii . Margie. Agt 97M280 . 2BR. 21,i8A, Highly up. . -pool .. great atmo9C>her•. ,.......... Prof tam n-emkf to"*• ____ ._ .. _,,_._,~ ___ _ • ., lll•I IUL!m SHARP E-efde SBR 2BA gr.a.cs, 1eeee Of ..... 1BR upatra, pool, cabte TV no pata, 1790. 846-.9039 CLEAN 2BR. 10 11Y rm, grMt 38A 31,i8A duplex. ~/WJ 28A•+ or R mf _. completely remodeled: option S1800 497·9918 ~ P'?· ~!~·No pets. E·tlda2BR 1BA.gar. lrp4C, parillng. utllt Ind. No 1~!563 APPfOll 2,000 -'1. 90 tt 2BA. 2":t gar3:8F.P~ Sendcaat1e'1 nlcHt 2 Pet Ok. I 1000/mo. Avail NEWPORT TERRACE. -can ~W 94~o;1'..:. beam Oii. S740-S750 + petj. 1 1175 · 72 3"-tm CUTE CORONA DEL MAR frM-IP!,!'· Mally wtn· comm pool a. tennis t'h Bedroom. 2 Bath, aome now 846-<4902 •2Br 2B• eeelUded end tit + $500 aec. 2 par-••1BR, wtyerd M75 utll HOUSE 280 18A with dowe, ,_, ~. aimpa bltl• to be9Ctl. 1215:000 vt.w. lkyltghtt, bullt·lna, SHARP trio-level d unit on greenbelt 1950. OCEAN VU IMtux• 28A aoM. No~·· &50-1199 pd, bike to t>Mcn. c:;aoae trpl,wutlef/dr'Y9f, gar, periling. Agt 845-e2t8 Incl the land. 548 8684 0t 2 otr garage, pool & tpa. Eut .,_ 3BR 2:J:' aJo. •28r 2'..iBa lrg 2 ltory wtth 1Y, bath, frptc, • gar. EASTSIDE large condo to thopa. small pet <*. 3bl1 to bch. Preler1iUj 1=· !!?;!F!!!-~!·~r~t;!S!'eft!!!laJ!!_ 64t-0112 ae1c for Mark J. Avt Dec.. 1at lt4qc>lmo nice crp' t /peint 'wtrd, ocean V'lew $1075. Small ~..!! E. Padflc B. ..... 28R 1'~BA. t>Uitt-~• av.it now 845-1188 n/emtcr tem.1475mo. ca111111 ' *****"* · pat otl. 499-1801 --1rno. See· 1tj. CaM .,.... ' · ' 873-4911 ....... 2 BLOCKS TO BEACH llllM ••• ·-hkupe, d/w, 3 eat gar. no 75~1104/E 644--&J22/D gar •. patio. 1795/mo Executive TownhouH I __ 1 _.... . 2 ·nory, 381 « . -~ dog• NWPT HGTS 4BR 3BA. _ 142·9795 or 845-8227 38R, 2BA. 2 car gar, Fem ahr lg 2 BR CM1.;-~llliillft ... ;;;"";o;;_...&;F 2 8r/den upgraded riu OCean vtew. fulfylurnlshed l lllT llE pool, 2400a/I, dean a i. 2BR, 1~BA. patl~. lk• lurntehed atudlO 1495mo O C E A N v 1 E w twnhM. Brand new OJPt,11 M crpt, comm pool/~. 3 ~oom. famlty. Pool, S1350/mo845-7S7G S 1800/rno. or re-plac:ia, dllhw:-ta quiet hHt & water paid: &18-44&-8"3 S*lo. 1375 + 1225 dep. -~!mW Ownr 1349 1<. For Appt. q ntoe,3~to? turblahedS1800m0.Al9o complex, e ok, 846-5330~meta. M 1oehooMfrom 2 & y., ... attSpmee2-7264 FASTANDCOMPLETE 646-0271. Open Set-Sun '~ouma dJ f(a ~ Yl.Ull 11111-380 2BA S 1275mo. 1745/mo 548-3-r,..,rooma Great lo-M/F n-amlcr pr0f9Nlonal ~ & Aec*t 12-':30. 332 Cotton St. CiA.I>~~ .1· F•m.alaed 2B0/28A 850-5143, 845-9465 LAROE 18f 1Ba $W1nio. L:~~~~· teun, cation. St.artlng at to ihar.3BRhMln CdM, ll00-38 7 ·5&99 ml ... PAYmlT1 I .aTD -.-&..,u "1"·n u>J 1;~ with tt. 2 U~ 4BR 1V.BA. 2 car l400 MCUrtty. AValabte $575/mo + $350 ':: 1850/mo. 875-4e08 1450/mo 780-0909 e¥et ...., f1.... BH ~·!!':r~.!~ ~~ Light open kl\dlen wtttl ~ 673-81'.'Jlj gar . .:ict·~ S .C.aPlu:-' ~~t ~~.,:· .!L2 Now. c:\.l:'n apptm. evall now 942-1401 Newly remodeled 28R 751 " 2017 ~ 1'1166W kU M -.,, -Wiik-in pantry: pvt patk>. days: 2t1-9151 · ,. .. ,. ..-18A, DIW, patio. and M/F IN 4BR CdM Apt. I« TDal S10.000/up No ~ Vou malt• the 2·~ea. Pride of own-J4t7 LCM...., .. C4M ~ 542-8415 AYI now. 213--597-'704 •EASTSIDE 2BA..1BA* ·-NWW111 Dfjlage. No ••. Quiet Me1r BR w/BA a hi beam ered ..... /f)O pen. Cal 0.. :'~~.~~ & we "'f9 trthlp, Immaculate DELUXE 28R 1'ABA 2 L l ..... Lllw 1111 pool, no pats. $700/mo + ...... nghbrhd 1925 87M80e etlla evt. Nr ~I Avt nl90nA9'00.S73--7311 • 1~ IU OU rec. ve home. S170.500. Agt Ed ltory, garage. w/d hkup. .. MCIWlty. 142-aea "9cMcoret.d 2BR 2BA. ttrttrt.d S450 780-13'3 =·.... = heV9 dWl-:".!:i_ M~ Key, 841""4004 98()...4842 Oceaneld• of PCH. ON UkE PARK 2er 2L'. 2~ ~:"~~ N9Wpot\ ~Realty 19R w/1oft·3fd. From •• Tll UY• NEWPORT HEIGHTSl•.Willfl•Wii~--• 957-eoo20ya,Ev,Wknda ..... Tmfl* S1250Agt97M912 trpo. 2 cw gata11t I~ paid. 31..._. 2nd A.¥9. 2BR1BATRt-PLEX l950.Hopata831...S107 ~2:~--= FemaM kw iowty tum. • 2N6 WXff'. FIXER UPPEJ\28R 1'hBA. ml IM•lllBJI = ~=-~ $8.50/mo. &1 ........ 2253 Sundlclt, •Id In encl 9W· MESA VEADE. 28R 1BA. Big dedl. Yrtae 12250Mo r~ \ltlt lnd.1325fmo. ~ ';r ~ .__, __ ,_ 1-~__, your ~bootl 2BR. oc..n. ""1 & 'jetty Alk tor~ .. ~,::;;~~ =t = ::.· .-c. ~Vie Lick> 175-1281 • . 722-7814 I 54% LTV. Cell Denlaon ~-.. , .. .c:t lllta G9I to ...... 1 vtew trom tNa 28A 1'i\8A • • •ory NwptfBcti rmmte to lflafe Aatoc. 8n-7'11 NOW1 .... -Exdualv9 llltlnD. $2t9K. remodeled Malt• jac S1275, 4BR. 28A, lam rm, 2BR 28A diet\ wethr IQ 4N-1t:M, 75l-9483 SIR 2BA ~ houM ...----"'="""...--~ .... ,.h; _.. NEWPOffT PACtl'IC .... .... "' "''"""" -· -........... "'... -· .............. ' .n-··---....... ""'·...., + u1I ••·re., ... Bii •satt 2 eatow. ContactManny.645-3113 s19501mo. 214 F.,,,...t. 8~2 ~:~'22c irc•• lllaM ... ~;!"9 •Pr• uoo. ., .. .,.,... *r;J~~:il~.f oewn831-1ee1 .,_..,.._ 1795,000 ... UY .. man s~ 975-8437 118-576-0573 28R \IAX. &;;; rrn. s . Elden. to-0131 28A 28A. f/p, MW~. COMMUNITY Prof. F/M to .... ntoe lrg ., ~ 2.2 Acree, 38R 38A + GREAT DEALlll 1 BO ,... 7 ,.. On utH pd. gar. d/w, w/d. 2BR 2BA. OW1IO'• new and. 09'., all bft_.,., near Haa beeutlful 1BR 18A on Nwpt. ~-280. hee. V' • mtld't quartere. hout1.1BI FR BCH. -"' the bead\ 28R FWrigoptlonal.l1200mo earpetldt..._leUndry lh0pl,Mt$fmo. the BAYI 1100 eq. ft. Pvt. entry, gar. & den. $1,750,000 W..,_/t>fy9r a Cable. 1~BA. pool, W91Qht rm, yrty + MC. 12t Agate. ltclllty. No pete. 110 CEHTER W--/Df"/« hook-up, lOOlclnQ tor cooeldetata V ..... _, ,\p9t. Agt/71~ 875-1876 2 ~~~~:5 OR 675-6527 0( 780-9028 29G-4220 Of 754-19M TBL MGMT 842· 1803 flreplace. microwave, n/emtcr, ~ OK. AVlllM. ., ~ Lft BAYSHORES. 24 Hour JASMINE CREEK. 38r 2eR tea yrty w/eundeck 2eR 2BA UPSTAIRS. NEWPORT ACROSS THE ~IW~r1,~IOY our Vi2.?tit14=:o.,a.;_:::, + ., PUTPllTHB•I associated --------guarded eommuntty. Prl-2'A8a. 2 9tory, CIA, 24 hf FREE RENTI New bMeh-~. 4 dr• to bay. $800/mo, 9600 aec:urtty STREET, 2BR trptc, Dfjl• .... /mo. . ., ... "' PENINSULA POINT vate bellehel 4aR 3BA a • c . I 2 4 0 0 I mo . front condO, 2BR 2'ABA, AYI now. 1850 + $50 utll. dep. No pet•. Avail now. age 1&25/mo 1~5 IMM •eo.t ~Extra• SHA 28R 18A fn CdM. llfD 5BR 4BA. 2400 ~ft. 3. car Move-In cond 0wn« 850-1150/D after 7pm, frp4C, W/d, full MCUrlty, NO PETS. * 873-4220 Call for appt, 754-5440 #2, 720-9422 Sorry. no pett, ~.prof. non tmkt. No * ... t• * ;,, \.. .. .. ... .... ~ . •'• t\ It .... , • ~.,., garage. 2145 E. ao.an trat*erred 253,VISTA. 640-1474 oceenvt.wlrom2petloe. 111.L .,...11 pet• t•oo+ utll A BtYd. BY OWNER (7141 831:1595. (714) MATURE SINGLE OR "'4·7MIO/d, 148-218&/t IAftllWLJttle...... ******** SPAC~SWOOOHAVEN 844-7313 790-1el7/E . -• -IB•ll (714)873-0129 84M219(811)79M856 4 ~u,:L~~c:r111 H=:noi:.i:.-:cr.c::', 2~~:.~+p::!i= Yllltm•UI-=-~~~ :::; Wiim-im ~Nwptlk:h, n~~to ililim BB IWPY mfl.IMM fl . .,...., pan-' · Yearly I 1100 873-el71 ~ ~· mgmt 5 .... Im.... .,...1. Metr BR wlltA. Gat- Ctnu MJ ... ltl2 ~ ~9'1P'X31001f. r~1.2B~:~::h + g°::: =t/~~~·2~ CUTEamat128A1BAyeet· -~~-mlnto~831-722i EXCLUINEBEACH :89.:.4°°~4~ 1 9t,1Mt I ... ... + • 2"'8a. lfg I 1200mo lt1. call 11750/mo, 1tt, l•t 'Mno ty. Nice patio, 2 cer patll-19 Mfmll COMMUHrTY 4·Ple.11 wtth panoramic ,:; ~amiC ~~count• 873--1734 ... 0nly pareont Me dep. 8'7..eQ41 M.F Ing, 1925 Incl. utll. Rent en Apanment clUrlng 2BR •.lger. Cetpett H• bMUtltUI 18R Apt ~8TCUff 48" Home vtewa. 28dtml with fir.-• "• metr wltt'I ad-with good ref. n .. d 994-9981 evee a wMda 673-3039 the montht of...__.._ ~ Dn-N fenced w/BAY VIEW! La patto • ......,., frS*:, w/d, ~. 2 placea and baloOnlea ~ •ere:. rm S59SK. ~II ....,......,,_ ' · dtilt••..._. micro, gar. lo petk>t, c:•.._, pvt 1975000 30% Down. OWMr/Brtcr842·1359 NATHEOCEAM-3BR28A. I l~ p I l oro.c.ma-&rece!Wa ~w/pati0.Watarpa6d. age PvtbWtl 9"0/rno ptione .,.. PfOf M/F o.mQn .Agt 863-lsoO OPEN DAILY 15 PM NEW CUSTOM HOME. engftty,appro.112000a/f, I II IF H• I OlftwttflcMitforavac. _.. ..... 120,C.~..f>PM * ... ~&-..· n/....,. ~. tlofne 0y9. 84 2 4342 M1*. .... , ..,. ... ftlll!:u- 1 ue •• on 4BR. 3'ABA. panoramle: tam rm, frmC ctn rm, Ill! ilon for 2 et the FLAM· -· V1ctcwta H' .... 720 ..,_..., '=s• .... 10tl/752-4511 wtc __,....,..~,_.,LA oceari & .. ..._ lg gmdf, 11800 +tee. No !NGO HtLTOH In L• W...... 28R Apt. -"'"" ...s;• • .,.......,....,....._.--~,,_,,..,...._, F•ADS AREFIEE Cal: ....... Ii Cysirea9&BllyA~ ....... ,tundaek.lgtam pata Av\12115940--3102 ~~~~~ VeQM Of the HYATI ~2prtcnop· .... ,..... - 0 h .... ltll JAeMINE CM.._ IW ., I L9'f rm -~ 3 '* gar, SHARP 1BA 1BA. many A~ a.-. toc8aof'I LAKE TAHOE (Kldl .. NMw paint. etO¥a erpt. NWPT HOTS CMrmlng n Yr Old WWW ™'i LOWEST PNCE 2 _,a •NEW• 2 bed, 2~ beth l3!500/mo 173-TN2 e.11traa. M50/mo-Utllt ~ _, Beu~~. ,,_ wtttl parentet) t750/~. 731"'488 1BA ~ -'· ....... W rooM lft Y'lft ..._ ~~~~~~~~ ta'Tf.nn2'Al8a~.-e condoe..~.._to._ otPCH,290'1U pd. tnoo~.'lfO -~,,,._ ... ,,,.. ...... -. ......... .,. IOUNO a..u.IM 1-1 1429.IOO. "1-1702 Aet ~-~2 ont beedlea. 1-c;er ~. w/d hoolc· pate Maureen 940-2128 A u1r a olive bHtlelof ~~ U..:: Cen!-~ (2131....,_ ..._ pioudls.., .. Ho9Q "'°""' otd MACK I.AS. ~w ·-mrgarage,iow.ty ~ tfpl.11215 .. HpU•t• lcltctlen, --to__.,F &iXA OU: 9'MC. moa ............................ T ........... .,... ... 1.-tie & eerpet. 83M400. 7 ... 7u2-Ht 1675Jmo.lnd""'8.~ for your vacation redec:i!111f ........ __ .• .,.... •• piO'ClfJf f117)......,a W111Dlft .. ll1-MOS From 1335,000 _.... n/emokar 873-5580 .. ,...._ · ... -,. • y 1 • __ -__....._· -----1-,..-------- IJY OWNEJUll WATERFRONT HOMES Cllil... 11-LEASE 2.8R 28A. ,.. -·-MN .• ., ••••. '"' 0 "' SE ;OUND osw-... ..... OPEHHOURSUN.,._5 ttiee..REALTOM • -condolnW..,..W/D, BACHELOR AP'f nr IMHO NEW APAl"l· ..... erD1-1234 •751mo.lkrM14llO LL doll and.._ - El .. twnt.. 280 2~ • 1MIA W oaMrll elf. Ind gar + beadl. S550+ Ult. 1 .. & MINT8 WtU. M AVAt&.-19i:.... .. SHOAT TIAM, 811,.,._ 11n wtc.,..,. A..,.._ ~ ~ In VILLA BAl.BOA ....... padot a yerdl carport snotmo. Con-l89t. 8lnglll ~r. APE IN PHAM .. '°"' "'"'· ocieafl "°"' -. ...... Au Hot•. F.A. ,rp1, n.w c:erpete • 2 BOAM pro• .... ~ • ..,.. .-• tact AnM McCMlencl ,..,., "°-· an.6411 MC>Ye-Wf °" ~ ~ f~ i W: G W: IM...,. 2 ,,.,. NM?M th,ou.h c~ssif 1ed • •• mo:~ ~.=· d90CM'ated J*'thou• •Cerpot19 w/ttorage 751-4330or7.Y..t202 BACHELOR "Cute & ... 18T NfO ""'1 :l.I07 o,... Ill ....... -tjBUizitiWiiMiilC•-ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiii.:..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ___ iiiiiim 142..,.0. ' ...,._,,_,..._...., •l'Oot Untv.Ptc. 3 BA. 2.,. IA. 2 ColY'' on the ,._*•t*I MOHTH'IMNTMOYU .... M .-... dadt & flbuba •I IB IPl'I ear gar ttl50 eq ft Po01 HOO/mo lnol 11111• YOU IHI '_,.._ • •1 _.. 1W. "'· *' CIClfld Cf.AllSlftD Ut'BllTl§llf~ .-C:~~ry =-~~ llU.eoow,.•WtL.SON•• ~a,~&o;!o:ytt·..!::r!!: Ma.-.... . ....._,,.u ... Ans •=vw.:rr•. •1000, "'°m.-~.. .§ALB§ Kitd.n. 1241~ A9t 831•''°°. .. 1.844-7l20•714-mt' .. ,.... AYAILAILl !MME.DI· C~ 0.. or-. TV).. ..;.:-tu.1;;;-;, NCGM>'15-<1V13 1311.000 21fl.1BAE:a11111,,,..,.. ; W.~fflOlmo ATILY... .....,.., .. "'...,., 11,_.,0lr'PO't • WeareADDINGteowealeuaaff. HI•••~-""'""'"c>Nl _.,... lnldl, dlll!M. IO ·-~-A191'12· no.17Me ·•vow...,..,"""' be ... .., .......... ..,... • 1•1•aeo..nM1 H,...eaa1ype .. -..4Sw,;...ta...e .... ~... HCJMl .. tiec •........ yd.~. 1\\ IW .... lrllhetltvafC.. ... ,...'404414 t;.. 4M, .... a.oooatt..... AEALESTATE tl1S.tu4l>t Yrtyl1S1 v.y... ,..... 71115ililliiic .. a...... 1111 ---·u• .............. _,,uu °""_.IOI, IMt,000 21",modlm,wtew,poou 2M. frplc. dlw. -.o. .... L4 ""'-1.,,,,,._ nDIM. tw..,. .., ... ,.. • ._..._,+ u-llliaaAND ...... Al'..,..._ MM.TOM mo-11t' .... l1IOO +tee. w/d~lw ........... wr. ~9¥111. llWfW ~ete OK. 1721mo. •GOftd.t1GIOIN+ • .~_.__ ....... ,,.,,,,.. 121'.. t11 Arbor. Alt~ tnn...1111...._ •• I ,...tO 1 110 ••o d•P · ..-.--CM.'"' ......,.7 z+lll' .., "'"' JUIT ~tn 21Cii"Mcit • -...,._ ... illllldll to • 1111·~1no ,.,,,._. ,_.TlilitA• • tl1 .. .. . Me rr 111 Ly n ch Rf! a It y llllD •llD llCTllEM \'Jew home wtth po? ..... IS*kM kitchen and 111g1· eioUttyard •••. allO 3 car 98'. and _. -"'· $996,000. "'1111 .. *"" zBA. "'llP•9C•. UITB> OClil ,,., __ ,.,.ilk,...,... dJw .,, •• 1t• ="'•'=."" :,,.· .. a a ~ .,..,._.,..._w .. w:.:~A~· w/ .. _..ff ..... -=,............ •A•a~ ;r1 .. 1•1129r •-• ...... w4'•\'11FllS .. NO..-Tam.;;'; t1100 .... 111 .. ui • --. Mlilt ******* ~· "*'· "111. • ._.., "i iiiiiiiii"iLiiii"i--l9't-... ---1111 * 71,..,_ NICa Al'f T°"' fl•-... -. 831.-. ..... _ ...... mJ MM• _._.___. -.OCUWiiitii •IMTW & "' ._,._ ,.,. -... ~ .-::+ ... IWl&.-..1 t~,0:1:-::-11-: ........... 11"· "" ••~'•1"'• .,.,,,:w..r;; _. ·=-DIW~::t :r.r:·.__..,.,. . ..-,,.,_. .. + ......_-WfO lftd + ::::::. ..... -----Mlllll."11~ ... -w:11 ............ -~--· + ,.., __ ...,,. ~ ' •!1!££..'l llWWteiUdt ~ • !!.!!!!..9"• Wiil • '11 ~ 5;:.=-.=.11:.~ • ~r-= .... •fl ~m:: =.. ~----= ~-==-Aft .. . --. . ... ...... .,... --- ., '\ ) .... -, ' ' •• ~ 4 • .. ... .._ ... $2.66 per day That'a All you pay for 3 llnee, 30 day minimum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY INCREASE YOUR RE-'CH GET IN OUR IMPROVED n-• .. ..... ......, TILLIWHlll F<1' m0re Information CALL TOOAYll lllfMLlll • UM $400-$1000/WK ·-----~ ~~~ .. ' ' - ·- -. , Classff\ed MM!rtlslog taus yOOf meueoe into a lol or ~-without you -~ving 10...,.. yours. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Lou<! sound 6 Crust 10 P11>9 tum• 14~11()t\ 15 Ml>1tvre 16 Cet1Yu Item 17 F rlenOSNC> 111 Story 20~ 2 t M"*-1 comp 23Wom 24 Herd lat 25 Crv!H 26 A9c:Uly the graduations of 30 Dolt• 34 Aan oH 35 O.na pett1 3 7 Detonator 38 AntatcttC -)9~n 41 Roman atal-"an 42 Compau Pl t3 G"88tty 4' smog coet 46 T~ahot 48 Hlll'0"'9 so --Ohlna 52 Fine - 53 Tray 5e Unite 57 Tr .. 60 -..:... pur)dl 62 AM or FM 2 3 17 20 eo .. ' &4 Alaslt&I\ VIP 85 Men Friday 66 Peeoe deity 6 7 Kind o4 hog 68 0'9ordet &9 Rllttana DOWN 1 Garbed 2 P900le o4 Ga.ti 3 Agog 4 Adjusl 5 Clfcua c:.11 6 Composition 7~aud 6 Song 9 Ple<'oer 10 Pr_,ta 11 Plec«J 12 In pe<IOn 13~ 19 Opwa high 9PO'• 22 St..ep lender 24 r ..... 25 Aa4fl he<d n~nure 27~ 28 Forlei'let 29 Subject 31 ~,. 32 ErOOed 33 Gembler 38 MCHWy· grubbers 5 "° 8MCfl resor1 4 1~ '3 0-0.-plaam ~·· 45 lnt .. 1!091 •7 Bon - 49 Aeaiplt .. 51,...., .. 53 Scatter }4SMweed 57 All8n gull 5a Without Lat 59 Gerd91'1 too1a 81 VenWI 63~ • .. ' JOYCE BoDLOVICI Rose Parade float to salute education J , • I .Luck rides with a . '• WJDDer Sure it's true, most ee<>Ple would be thrilled to wm a substantial amount of money in the lottery. It for one, would be content to wm -well-any little thing. But possibly just as excited -maybemore-1slucky 11- year-old Irvine resident S.uue Sdaweikle, who won a horse valued at S3t.S.OO in a benefit raffle at the Costa Mesa-based Petplex/Bircbwood Saddlery. Suzanne's raffle p_urcbase help- ed raise more S 1,000 for the Arthritis Foundation. She will receive eight free lessons from trainer Dero~y Bayllt of Ortega Equestrian Center 1n San Juan Capistrano. • • • SMIT)' Baam,a membet"ofthe ., JOYCE 90Dl.OVJCB .... .._ .... _ . .... TlleF-imav*~­endivisionofBu., · Corp. wil tribute IO educatioll . l:'&nt float in tbc 1989 := T CMnamellt of Rems Parade. Tbe saduatioa tbeme. .. Educatioa is me SOiution., .. repfetenl$ tbc com- puyl loac-time support of ~ boe in I variety of rqional IDd nabooal P"9'ams under the corpot-ne .. Ed-Enriches Everyone•' umbrella. The bt, crcaled by Qarisma Fats of AJt.deaa, will be SS feet lodl and 26 feet wide and wilt be ~ ~ted by an animated •S-foot tall dinolaur. The intricate lllimatioca and structu.raJ . . C tbe dinoaur to ao::a~ and neck IO accept I special treat from .. Merlin." who stands before an elevated lectern. After the dinosaur receives his reward for achievement, diploma in band, be will roll bis tail, return to bis fuU beicbt and look from side lo s.ide at the admirina crowd. The mechan- ical ~ will repeat every 40 leCOnds tbroqbout tbc five-mile parade. Atcordina to company spokesman Bill Kolt>erj. three students will be seleculd for the ftoet &om amona an estimated 6 milUoD middle ldM>ol. . jwlior and lmior bilb ICbool COD~ tants in a 17-ltate CODtell spomored ...., the waaern division. Tbe students ~ 1be drc:ued in tnlditioaa1 padu- ation ceremony C8PI and IDWDI and ride near the front of the float's medieval castle. . Board ofTrustces of Coast Com- munity College District,. was among more than 100 volunteers honored recently at a special Volunteer Recognition Luncheon at the Holiday Jnn in Huntinglon Beach. ID ltll flnt eatry la ae ..... PU.de oa Rew Yeu'• 0.7. Bmter IUJll wl.11 mate edacadoa. · '-.• ' ' .. "We OODducted a sweepslaka throulbout the ICbooh ~ the students picbd the 1DOlt impor\Ult event in the 100 ye.an of American history,.. be said. -rbey then de- scribed t.be evnt in 25 words oc ie. (PllHl_.IWt/llS) . . Sherry ,..a resident of Seal Beach, has a long history of community work. She was honored for her · work with the Community Festi-val, an annual event that draws local non-profit organizations to Golden Wefl College campus in Huntington Beach to display their wares, distribute li{erature and raise funds. lastspring the festi- val drew more than 25,000 . DiSabilities'can 't defeat secretary people. . -~R~eosti eSi bas added several new faces to its staff.•Dr. Robert J ..... medi-cat director of psychiatric ser- vices; Dr. Daa Martta. program dirutor of adolescent psychiatric services; and Dr. Geerge 'hcker, program director of adult psy- chiatric services. Pageant winner now a director By JOYCE BODLOVICB °' .. ...., ....... IJ JOYCE IODLOVICB °' .. ..., ...... Jane. Angel refuses to be dis- courqed by physical ptoblcms that woWcS di.sbearten most people. ln 1969 Anacl was diagnoJed with otoscltrosis. a condition in the inner ....ar-&bal-CanUardeafnesi Sttrgeyin the left ear Ilona with the use of a bearinaaid rt$lorecl JO percent of her beari~ The riabt ear appeared to bC stable. Then in 1981, "Yhile employed IS executive secrcwy for the city manaaer of Costa Mesa. tbc ~ struckacain. "One day I couldn •t hear on the phone," she said. .. It happened very suddenly. By the time I got to the doctor the nerves were too damaged for surgery." . · . Ansel was put on an e~perimeotal drua to try to reverse the'~­ However, the medicine appeared to be ineffective, and the side effects. were so severe she was forced to leave.. employment with the city-J.f\er ,25 years ofin various positions. ln 1981, she was runner-up for the California Secretary of the Year. · But Aqel didn't give up. Though completely deaf in the riabt ear, and without hearing in her left~ if she does not wear a bearina aid. she put her secretarial skills lo wort in 1982 and 'opened An&el's Executive Stt- vice in Costa ~ea To compensate for ber bearina km. she used an amplifier on the phone. Soon her two- -client enterpnse thrived into. a busi- ness of around 100 diepts. Her scrV1ces aDaUdiil ~~~pri~oc:essa~~na.~+-~---:-::::::~:=~--~....-;-~~~~--...;...;.; specifications. proposals, manuals, - lerm pepen, thesis resumes. finuciaJ · statements. an answmna le'Nice, billina services, newslettcn and medical uanscribina. At first An&el admancd she was somewhat self ~nsaous about her heanna l'f'Obkm. .. The first few years, I was a little embarrassed to say ·1 can't bear,'" . she said. ··1 ended up in some embanass111g situations so I decided this was no way to go. ~finally said if you move to my left sade or if we giet in this .comer I can bear you. I tell them up front and people undemand. ·• Then mo~ than a year aao. another ...,,....,... • ._.._.., physical problerh threatened to de-Jane Aneel ID ~er oftlc:e tlaat ~ laM Mt ap la Mr t.ame. . stroy her burgeonina business.. "f stanecl to ~ve severe Mck problems f°T9m sittina. "at the com- puter for such 1ona periods of time,·· ·*said. "I went lbroqb a lot-of tests and learned there was nothing struc- turally wrong. at was a mutcle problem. I bad to change my life-lc .. sty~ap.in.didootai.vcup. When her dOctor sugest.ed SW1mm1na as a way to st.rencthen the mmcles, sht hired a c:mcb to teach her to rwim.. She oombined that with an c:xen:iJe prosram. Then sht made anocher (Pleue-~llHO/M) . College Hospital is a 99-bcd facility offering medical, surgical, critical care, outpatient surgerr clinic, medical detoxification ser- vice, pain management program and affordable indust.rial medi- cine. Italsosponsoncommunity services like Helpline, a free. assessment and referral service for those seeking professional treatment for mental health prob- lems· Crisis Response Unit, whicb ~vides free on-sitcpsy- choSOCtal evaluations upon re- quests from hospitals and busi- nesses; and Youth Response Unit, which provides free mental health services to youth, their families and agencies serving youth. It didn•t .take much for the enthusiastic Elda Barry to com""'' in the Ms. Senior America df eali'fOOu. pqeanl And with her becqround in modeling. it was a snap for the attractive Huntington Beach resident to win the title in 1986. New restrooms installed at Scout cai:np • • • Cal State Fullerton President Jewel Plammer Coltb honored 31 mihority students for academic achievement in the arts. The students received the honor at a reception in tbeCcnterOubof the Orange County Perfonning Arts Center. Among those honor- ed: Vkteria Newllq ... lteueda ProcofHuntington lkach. • • • G>sta Mesa busineuman IUd- (Pleueeee POOJO>A TIOll/82) .. . BULLETIN B OARD Thouab Barry did not snaa the nationaf title o(Ms. Senior America when she traveled to Atlantic City two years aao. she did wow the crowd with her belly dancina talent numbet'. ••When I decided what talent I wanted 'to do ... even thouah J badn 'l taken belly dancina in years, I found a teacher, took two lessons andjt came beck right away," she said. .. We were a1 the Resorts Inter- national Hotel. Super Star Theater (PleaM ... PAGSAllT{ll2) After five ~ of bard wort - "Camp Latrine" ls completed. Thanks to the effons of the Costa Mesa-based EPAC Development. Boy Scouts now have 24 new restrooms at the Lost Valley Camp. pounds in-San Dieao County. "Orange, San Diqo and Riverside county scout troops have been usrna the Lost Valley camptJ"Ounds since 1964," said Rick Doremus. president of the company. ''When we dis- covered the restroom facilities had deteriorated to the point that the scoutsdadn'tevcn want to camp there anymore. we decided to do somcthina about it•• Doremus says his interest an the scoutina procrams stems from bis days IS a Boy Scout. In a sense, Doremus says. it is a J)llyback for the valuable lessons he learned from the ~ization. •Tbrouah the Boy Soout program. I learned concern fOr the community should be applied to everyone's personal and profcuional life," he said ... To this day. I am reaping the ~ from my numtrous ex- periences as a Boy ScouL .. . EPAC Development has been hoocmd by the housinc industry with numerous awards for its well-planned rcs'idential communities featurina uP9C1lc. yet affordable bousina. "The Boy Scouts provide you.na- sten with an opportunity to become ir.ctively involved with ot.bcn' their own •. on worthwhile and fun projects that teach tb,em they have· ~1ponsibilities to their cotri~ mooities," Doremus said. "Tbe con- oept ,:!£,vq beck to the community bas a d1ffcrence in my la ft and is reflected in my wort." EPAC etnployees bcpn the~ by obcalniDI materials It cost from local companies. Don Y ort. direcu>r of support terVices for the Boy Scouu.. is still n:dlna from the 1Cnerosity of the companies. ·•we are overwhelmed at tlae tn:mendous perosity displayed by EPAC and the peniciP11tiD1 vaMlort in \heir efl'on to provide adequate tesuoom r,cilitiesat Lost Valley. lbc uppadina of th.is campsite will mean many more yea.rs of en.ioyment fbr Boy Scouts in Soutbcm Califomia....-... -•r J•rtt •••.W Fbrutn on J ·FK assassinatiOn set at Saddleback Colleg~ ••JFK Assassination: 2' Years of ControvCQy," a Saddlebect Colle8e forum, will be J)fe9enled in ~ lelfDCDIS this wettend in commemoration of the 2Sth anniversary of tbe 111111ination of President Kennedy. Steven F~ an inatructor with the Division of SOcial ~ Behavioral Sciences at the Mission Viejo col~. ~Ii explore the conuovenies in liabt or three official investiptions, plut numerous books and movies. The forum will meet Friday from 7 to lO p.m. and Saturday from ~ Lm. 10 .. e.m. in the colle,e•s Businctl/Oeneral Studiet Center, lloom 321 . The fees arc S' tor 'Friday's ...,.. (S3 for acudmts) and SlO for S.turda_t11 ($8 for atudents). Call Joya Hanna at Sll-46~ fot more information. • Wasbinaton o.c.L~ speak. on "Truth in Media" at a Ba.aatbb boatlnne bJ F _...._ ... luncheon hosted r71 the Oraqe County chapter of the 'S---. -- Freedoms Foundauon at Valle)' forae Friday an Newport • The Jewish Communal}' Center of South 0raqc Beach. · County will hold I Hanukkah boutique Friday from f 0 The prosram is scheduled for 11 Lm. at tbc Newport Lm. to 2 p.m. at the center. 298 Broedway, l.apna Beach. Beach Country Oub, 1600 E. Cout Hilbway. The public Hand·peinted clothes and ~ jewe!ry. is invited and may retef'Vc tickets by caUina ~859S. children's wear and &if\ shop'items will be available.~· Sherry Leitet at ,97-2070 for details. LelUJatlve reCeptloa pJamJed FedefaL state and county leliala&on ~ elected officials will> join locaJ businesa laden for an open ~ Friday from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Lapna HilJS Holiday lnn on La Pu Roed at the San Dieao freeway. · Tbe annual teee1'Cion. held for the dixussion of i!IUCS of~ interaa. is IPOlllOf'ed by tbe Saddlebct Reaional ChlmbcrofCommcrce. The ewnt is open 10 the pulibc and free of chatte. with fwtber intbnnation availlWe It 117-lOOO. .. i . Senion get free na ncclae The TLC Medical Group in conjunc1ioa with the Ora• County Health Ca" AaeftCY wall P.Ovack fru flu vaccine 1nnoculauons for DtOole in hiP mt· heah.h , ca~ and anyone O\'er 3S )Un of• this weekend not week. • V11CC1nauons '"' tehedulcd Friday ftom I Lm. 10 I p.m. and Saturday from a a.m. '° • p.~t 101aa Adams A've., Hu.at1"1'9ft ~ and T..aday and Wed1111 "1y &om. LIL IO I p.m. at 17900 8'ootl9uni S\.. FoulaiD V~. Call the 1Mdlc:aJ p'OUP It 96&-3266 b 1llOft inforinltion. . . . Jan. Sat 10Lm .. Jan. 26and Feb. 9at l p.m .. Feb. 23at lO a.m. and March 9 and 23 at 1 p.m. 1Fatercolon OJI ctt.pla7 bl 1fB Hawaiian and Tahiu.an land1mpe1 bilblillat • watercolors by Tmy McDonUd cu.rmnly on exlUbit at u,e Newport ~nter branch of the Newport 8-:ll P\lblii: Li~ an.:o~ wall be on display thr'QUlb December~ • the library, 9S6 San Oetnente Drive. ' TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS I Loud M>Un<S • Cnlst 10 Pope IUf~ 14 Aecec>l ion 15 Mr•li.te 16 C..vas ftem t7 Fnenc:lshfC) 18 Stety 20 Acc:ompll9Nd 21 M~COf'nP 23 W0tn 24 H.,d let 25 C<ulM 2e Rectify ,,,. orectv•tiona of 30 Doll• 34 Ren ott 3S o.-perta 37 o.tOt1et0< 3a Anl.,CllC - 39 ~ 41 Roman •'•'~-" 42 Comp ... pt 43 Gllattv 4" Stzing coet 46 T enNll lhot '8 HengMQ 50 --Chine 52 ,,._ - 53 Trey st Unit• 57 Tr• 80 - -puncil 12 AM 0t F. 2 3 ,. 17 eo 4 J 84 Ala.ken VIP 15 Men Frldey ee ,,_deity 8 7 l(incJ "' hOQ 88 Dla«def 89Aett- DOWN 1 0¥bed 2 People ot GllUI 3 Agog 4 Ad,..st 5 CifCU9 c.il 8 Comc>oslt!of\ 7~ 8 Song 9 Piercer 10 Pr-ta 11 Plecied 12 In per90n • 13 8eltv~ 19 Opet. lllgfl mpota 22 Sheec> tender 24 T•t• 25 Rain n.td 28 Agriculture 21 r=-~ 28 Fort.n ... 29 Sut>leC' 31 ..._,,. 32 ErOded 33 Gtmb19< 3eMc>My· grubl>erS 5 40 Beedlr-t 41 Bovnders 43~ eletnentt 45 lnteetlNI 47 8on - 49 Aeepl\• 51~ 53 Scalt• 54 SMwMd 55 Regen'• dad stCuatOCM 57 Aaian g&M st Wllttou1 l.81 5t G1<den t0ol1 81 Venllh 83 ~ - • ' ... ) • JOYCE -· BODLOVICI Rose Parade float to salute education .Luck rides With· a . Winner Sure it's true, most ecople would be thrilled to wm a substantial amount of money in the lottery. It for one, would be content to wm -well-any little thing. But possibly just as excited -maybe more-is lucky 11- year-old Irvine resident S.IDDe Scltwelkle, who won a horse valued at $3t.5.PO in a benefit raffle at the Costa Mesa-based Petplex/Birchwood Saddlery. Suzanne's ram~ p_urchase help- ed raise more $1,000 for the Arthritis Foundation. She will receive eight free lessons from trainer Doro~y Baylis of Ortega Equestrian Centeno San Juan Capistrano. • • • SllenyBaam,a member of the I ., .IOYCB IQDLOVJCB ............ ' 11le Foa1t1ain v~~ -en divit.ioo of lka1Jef · c.or,. will PllY tribute IO ed'-Dtioa ancrinl hi first ftoet in the 1919 DtmJlial Tomume:nt of Roles Parade. Tbc araduation theme, .. Educ:atioe ii dlle Solution, .. rcpraenu the com- puy'1 k>na-Ume support of educ. tioa in a variety of resionaJ and national pr<lpU!I under tbe corpor-ate .. EducabOn Enriches Everyone•• umbrella. · The float. created by Cblrisma Aoau of AJtadena, Will be ss feet Ions and 26 feet wide and 'Will ~-b~­l!Jbled bf an animated 4~foot WI dinotaur. Tbe intricate animation S}'ltem and Structural enaineerina allows the dino111ur IO lower bis bead and neck IO accept a special trat from "Merlin," who stands before an dcvated Aeclem. After the dinosaur receives bis reward for 1ebievemcnt, diploma in band, be will roU bis tail. mum ao bis full beiibt and look from side to si4e at the lldmirina crowd. The mechan- ical sequence will rcpeat every '40 seconds throuahout the five-mile parade. Accord.ins to c::ompan~ Bill Kol~ three at ts will be sdected for the ftoat from amona ID estimaled 6 million middle IChool. junior and senior hiP school conta- tanu in a I 7""8te contest sponlOf'ed by tbe wes1ern division. Tbe students will be dresled in traditional p'lldu- ation ceremony caps and toWDS and ride near the front of tbe Ooat's medieval cut.le. Board ofTrustees of Coast Com- munity College District, was among more than 100 volunteers honored recently at a special Volunteer Recognition Luncheon at the Holiday Inn in Huntington Beach. ID It. flnt eatrY ID t1ae aoee Parade oa l'few Year'• Day, &araer m.., will mate edacatlOD. ..We conducted a sweepsiaka throuab<>ut the 9Cbools where the students picked the most imporunt event in the I 00 yean of American · history... be said. 1'bey then de- scribed the event in 2S words or lell (Pl•• -WWW/82) Sherry, a resident of Seal Beach, has a long history of community work. She was honored for her work with the Community Festi- val, an annual event that draws locaJ non-profit organizations to Golden West College campus in Huntington Beach to display their wares. distribute literature and raise funds. Last spring the festi- val drew more than 25,000 Disabilities can 't defeat secretary people. • • • CoUege Hospital in Costa Mesa has added several new faces to its staff. Dr. Robert JoMloa, medi- cal director of psychiatric ser- vices; Dr. Dan Martla, program director of adolescent psychiatric services; and Dr. Geor1e Twcker, program director of adult psy- chiatric services. BaniettP'uandBlclaBury. Pageant winner now a director. By JOYCE BODLOVICH Of .. O., ........ BJ JOYCE BODLOVJCB .,. .. ..., ......... Jane Angel refuses to be dis- couraaed by physical problems that woukf dishearten most people. In 1969 Ansel was diagnosed with otosclerosis, a condition m the inner earthatcancausedea~Surgcry in the left ear 'along with the use of a bearina aid l'C$tored 30 percent of her hearina. The riaht car appeared to be stable. Then in 1981, while employed as executive secretary for the Clty manqcr of Costa Mesa. the disease struck: apjn. r one day I couldn't hear on the phone," she said. "It hafpened very suddenly. By the time got to the doctor the nerves were loo damaged for surgery." Angel was put on an experimental drug to try to reverse the damage. However, the medicine appeared to be ineffective, and tbe side effects were so severe she was forced to leave employment with the city after 2S yean ofin various positions. In 1981 , she was runner-up for the California Secretary of the Year. But Anael didn't give up. Though completely deaf in the right ear, and without hearing in her left ear tf she docs not wear a hcarina aid, she put her secretarial skills to work in 1982 and opened Angel's Executive Ser- vice in Costa Mesa. To compensate for her hearing loss. she used an amplifier on the phone. Soon her two- client enterprise thrived into a busi- ness of around I 00 clients. Her services included word prooessiria; specifications: P_roposals, man~sf ~ term papers, tncs1s resumes. tinaneta statemenu, an answering service billing services. newsletters and medical transcri b · At first Angel ~mitted she was somewhat self-conscious about her hearing emblem. "The first few years. I was a little embarrassed to say 'I can't hear.'" she said.· "I ended up in some embarrassmg situations so I decided this was no way to go. I finally said if you move to my left side or if we get in this comer I can hear you. l tell them up front and people understand." Then more than a year ago, another ...,,...,_..,..., ... ._ physical problem threatened to de--Jane Aneel lD ber om ce tbat alae ... aet •P ID ber ....... . stroy her burgeoning busiocs.s. "I staned to have severe back problems from sittina at the com- puter for such long periods of time." she said. "I went ttirough a lot of tests and learned there was nothing struc- turally wrona. 1t was a muscle problem. I had' to change my life- style." An&el. apin. did not ai.ve up. When her doctor sugested SWtmmu\g as a way to strcncthcn the muscles, she bim1 a coecb to teach her to swim. She combined that with ID excrcilc propam. Then sbe made another (PleMe w llSS I 11'Gf89) College Hospital is a 99-bed facility offering medical, surgical, critical care, outpatient surgery clinic, medical detoxification ser- vice, ~in management program and affordable industrial medi- cine. It also sponsors community services like HelpLine, a free assessment and referral service for those seeking professional treatment for mental health pro~ lems· Crisis Response Unit, which l?rovides free on-sitepsy- choSOCtal evaluations upon re- quests from hospitals and busi- nesses; and Youth Response Unit, which provides free mental health services to youth, their families and agencies serving It didn't take much for the enthusiastic Elda Barry to comP._Cte in the Ms. Senior America dfCahfomia pageant And with her bacqround in modclina. it was a snap for the attractive Huntinaton Beach resident to win the title in 1986. New restrooms installed at Scout camp· youth. • • • Cal State FuUerton President Jewel P l am mer Cobb honored 31 minority students for academic achievement in the arts. The students received the honor at a reception in theCenterClubof the Orange County Performina Arts Center. Among those honor- ed: Victoria Nowlla~ lteuetb Proc of Huntington ch. · • • • Costa Mesa businessman Rlc~- (Pleue Me FOUJQ)A'n011f/B2) Bu LLETIN BoARD Th~up Barry did not snaa the natio~~tle o(Ms. Senior America when she traveled to Atlantic City two yean aao, she did wow the crowd with her belly dancina talent number. "When I decided what talent I wanted to do ... even thouah I hadn't taken be Uy dancina in years, I found a teacher, took two lessons and it came back right a~y," she said. .. We were at the Resons Inter- national Hotel. Super Star Theater (Pleue eee PAOSANT/B2) --~ After five years of hard work - "Camp Latrine" is completed. Thanks to the effons of the Costa Mesa-based EPAC Development. Boy Scouts now have 24 new restrooms at the Lost Valley Camp- grounds in San Diego County. "Orange, San Diego and Riverside county scout troops have been usina the Lost Valley camPlfOunds since 1964," said Rick Doremus. president of the company. "When we dis- covered the restroom facilities had 4eteriorated to the point that the scouts didn't even want to camp there anymore, we decided todosomethina about it." Doremus says his interest 1n the scouting programs stems from bts days as a Boy Scout. In a sense, Doremus says. it is a payback for the valuable lessons he learned from the oreniz.ation. 'Through the Boy Scout program, I learned concern for the community should be applied to everyone's personal and professional life." be said. "To this day. I am reapma the rewards from my numerous ell- pcrienc:es as a Boy Scout.·· EPAC Development has been bonottd by the hous1na industry with numerous awards for its wclli>lanned residential communities featurina upscale. yet affordable housing. .. The Boy Scouts provide young- sters with an opportunity to become actively involved with others their own aee on worthwhile and fun projects that teach them they have responsibilities to their com- munities," Doremus sa1d. "The con- cept of sivi~ back to the community bas made a difference in my ltfe and is reflcc:tc:d in my work.'' . EPAC employees bepn tbe project by obtainina materials at cost &om local c:omparues. Don York, direcu>r of s~ppon terVices for the Boy Scou~ is still ~lint from the tenerosityof the companies. "We a.re overwhelmed at tM tremendous generosity displayed by EPAC and tbe s-rticipatina VCDdon in their effort to provide adequate restroom facilities at Lost Valley. Tbc u PIJ1ldina of this campsite will meaa man}' more years of er\ioymeat Aw Boy Scouts in Southern CalOOmia.;". -llr hrtt •• •• ,,.. forum on JFK assassination set at Saddle back College "JFK. Assassination: 2S Years of Controversy," a Saddlcbllck Collcae fonam, will be presented in two scgmenu this weeaend in commemoration of the 2Sth anniversary of the asaassination of President Kennedy. Steven Frosue. an instructor with the Division of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the Mission Viejo col .. , will ellplore the controvmies in liaht of thftle official investiptions. plus numerous book• and movies. The forum wiU meet Friday from 7 to 10 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the coll•'• Businea/OeneraJStudiaCenter, Room 321. Thefeesare SS for Friday~s --:uZ! for students) and SIO for Saturdats (S8 for ts). Call Joyce Hanft• at Sl2-46SO for more information. Bdl.aa lll6b cboru to perform The Edison Hiah Schoot C'hoNs. under tbe direction of Richard Otey wm praent a propam ofholida~ IOftlS and familiar mckMtiel for the Huntinaton Bellch TLC 11 senior~up Friday at IO:IS a.m. Ttie l~manber chorus will perform in the fellow· lhip ball of thew.,.._ Avenue Baptist Cburch at Warner A vc1u10 and Ooabant Street. Rueli..,.. leech. A luncheon will follow tht concien. and itie cost is Sl.25. Call 142-4211 for rae'rvatioM. • CoJpmafet la •JJ ll~ od media ADu c. lrOWftMd. a ledn ad cOtumnilt ft'Otil , Washinaton D.C.L~IJ speak on "Truth in Media" at a luncheon hosted u 1 the Oranae County chapter of the Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge Friday in Newport Beach. The procram is scheduled for 11 Lm. at the Newport Beach Country Club, 1600 E. Coast Hiahway. The public is invited and may merve tickets by callina 96&.8S9S. LfWl•l•tlve receptloa pJanaed Federal s&ate and county temislatora and eleded offte&als wil\. join local business lddm for an open reception Frlda_y from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Laauna Hills Holiday Inn on La Pu ROid at the San Dtc:ao Freeway. · The annu.I reception, bekt for the ditc\luion of isaues of~ interest, is sponsored by tbe Saddlcbck Reaional Chamber of Com mace. The event is open to tht pu6tic and free of cbaflC, with funhef information avaia.ble at 137-3000. j . HaaakkalJ bou tique fa £a6mi• The Jewish Community Center of South Oranae County will bold a Hanuldc.ab boutique Friday from f O Lm. to 2 p.m. at the center. 298 Broedway, l.asuna Be8ch. Hand-painted clothes and accestOries. jewelry children's wear and &ift shop items will be available. caii Sheny Leiter at 497-2070 for details. Sealon .et free nu ncdae The TLC Medical Group in conjunction with the Ora• County Health C~ AaenC')' will ~vide free flu vaccine innoculatJons for oeook in bieb risk beahh cateeoncs and anyone over SS Ye&rs of aee this ~end and ne•t week. Vaccinations are K'hedukd Friday fTom I Lm. ao I p.m. andS.turday ftom 8 Lm. to4 p.m. at 10111 ~ Avt .. Huntinston Bcadl. and Tuaday and Wedn 4 1 from 8 Lm. ao 8 p.m. at 17900 Brookknt 5'., ~talD Valtey. Call the mc!chcal poup at 968-3266 * lnOft information. Jan. Sat I 0 Lrn .. Jan. 26and Feb. 9 at I p.m .. Feb. 23 at 10 Lm. and March 9 and 23 at I p.m. Watercolon 011 dl•pla7 bl 1fB Hawaiian and Tahitian landtcapa hilb._t C-.. watercolors by Terry McDonaJd C'UITC'fttly Oil allibit at ~Newport Cen~r branch of the Newpon ~ Pu-.. ~ anwort will be on display thl'OUllb December-at the library. 9S6 San Clemenet Drive. --- ' 82 N Orange COllM DAILY PtLOT/ Thureday, Nowmber 17, 1988 PAGEANT DIRECTOR ••• ...... 1 · on \be Board~k.. h is the same ''Our perticipanll have tap da~ all die bja a&an -like Tom shown paintln11 and desians, done • ones and Frank Sinatra-play. This monok>&ues and played t.he piano,•• was SOmethiQl l always wanted lo do. she aaic[ "The winner has her way l bad the time of my life." peid to Atlantic City for the national llEETINGC™LENGE .•• hea81 . decilion. much more rdlud &bu the ol&cc:" .,."I~ a di~nt work environ-And Aasl bll 9dded a new .emoe mcnt, one I could control.·• abe said. to bet butfnca '1"\.-~··· a aa; experience was so positive. Barty, 7~ toot the job u California said working with J>llCant pageant director. for t.he last two contestants is aratifying. "So I moved my buaineu to my .. , now hive delk top pubtithina.~· Tustin home. I can work my own she llid. .. , bad a bursWY beb'c I left hours and stop when Deeded for the COl&a Mesa oflk:C1 and they took physical therapy. The flexibility in evefytbi..,. Wheft the utnnnc:e com-my li~ allows me to wort the bows I pen~ ... oft', I ~ a state-of-the- can handle and yet still meet my art desk top publiahin& computer. I clients' deadlines. can do ~letten and brochures 4 ' - .... .. years. Barry bu orpnized the local "I am having my dream fulfilled paseant open to women 60 years and wort.ina with seniors from all over older. Last year, the eveat wu held at C.lifomia. The J)lleant&ives them so the Grand Hotel in <>ranie County m~ 1elf..estccm &pd they end up with about 2S competitors. Costa dQtftl tha~ they ~ver dreamed Mesa resident Harriett Fox, 7S, was J>Ol!!l>le. ~ same thing happend to ... t hive crea1ed a staff of boute-~~ics. My clients AR de- ;.in~~~ .=t'"bu~ Al=,Aneel is ltiU fillltina her \he winner and she then went o n to ~1. ~ Mid: . • •• ._ _. ·-.,..,. beck ms, Ind doc1on bave •id mailina for me. J have a room rtt up they •t know if she will eventually ~nt Ciiifom.ia in the Atlantic · wo,rkina with the paacant ts part of' Caty-based Ms. Senior America com-Sam's formula fc:>r the youna. with compusm... lose the last ofhet limited beariQ&. she Antel said hercJienta have adjusted remains optimistic about the fut~. petition. · · "The. answer ·~ to alwa1s .~ave "J' -L.: • h tb ... someth1na to be interested an. she Funding Sa)eclal Olymplca _ wen to the new work plaQe. "I have alwa" been a pc_)lltive "Most of my Costa Mesa cHents person," she said. ••1 Jove life and followed me," she said. "Thinp are people. I look around and 1ee what workin, out just fine. In f~ my other tbinas could happen, like the clients ove it here, they say this is loss of a limb or sil)t. 1ove.wo~~ng wtt e ~nt, said. "You should always keep leam- Berry wd. The competataon was inJ. ... w. ~ enjoy people, keep up started about 10 years qo. Today we with eve ina cuncnt be able to have 30 states rep~nted. ad~st an exercise.·· ' "The first year I organized the The paaeant will be held Jan. l l-13 pageant we bad a 92-year old New-next year. •' port Beach woman who tap dan~. The registration deadline is Dec. last year the oldest was 81 , and th as 11. For added information, call (2 I 3} year we have some up there too." 592-2137. Aa Cbamber of Cc-•..,. Pnetcleat Arlene ecu(er Joob OD, Coeta 11W Director of LelRre 8entm9 Keltll Vaa Bolt pl'e9ellt8 a $2,IOO claecll to B. Koelaler, dlnctlDI of t1ae Palniew Dewel=tal Ceater. Tile city ral8ed tlMt moa.,. for tile center'•l 017.aDlce atblete. dlll1DC aa aaaaal foll toanwaeat. Nat J9U tlae nent wW be 9POUOred by the city'• Chamber of Com•erce. FIRST FLOAT ENTRY ••• . .. homBl FOUNDATION OFFICERS ... em ors. Engel, a 196 7 graduate of the college, is president of Power- plant Specialities Inc. laformatloll oa commlllllty lraap- Delllaa1. SeM .. die Daily PUet, P. 0. Bos 15 .. , Cotta Meu tHH. Man a. die attemdee el Joyce Bodlovlda. afl'1 turned it in at a Burier King restaurant. A drawing will be Cbn- ducted and the three students, along with their rcs~tive social studies tcachen, will nde on the float." Prom Bl ard Eqel has been named to serve a six-year term on the Oklahoma State University Foundation's Board of Gov-We 1.Dvite yoa to 1eDd •• The float designers will create the ALL NEW NEWPORT! Our totally remodeled Fashion Island store Premieres Friday.at 10:00 a.m. Join us for special events all week \X-'e're ghing away ten 100.00 grand rt:-opening shopping sprees! Registt:'r in the Credit Office. Drawings will he held Friday, November 18 at I l a.m .. I p.m .. j p.m .. '5 p.m .. .., p.m and 9 p.m~ Sarur<lay, November 19 at l I a.m .. I p.m .. 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. Winners need not he pre~ent to win. but you must re·regiscer after each <.lrawing. 0 Open your nC"'· Buffum~ charg(' account and receive a free 15% gift credit on all purchases made Friday. November 18 and Saturday, November 19 . *Excludes Cosmetic~. 0 Free: Limited Edition ~hoppin~ h<1~' with <1nr purcha-.c: FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 18 r \'i,it our Fin<: Jewelry fkpartment and rqtjMer to win a 500.00 fine"" ,C:\\'dr) gift certlfkate Enll'r hy Sunday. No"emhcr 20 ~c our ~pt:da.I collel·tion of fine jewelry at 50<\. otr Meer our rc·prt"Cntatiw from "apier 11 :30 a.m.·.~·~0 p.m .. and t·ntc:r our dra\\in~ for fret: Napier .Jewelry. 0 r -., ~kl'I Bi~ Buffy in our Children's Department. !)<.>th Friday, November IM and Saturday. Nowmbcr 19. Buffr i~ your!\ for onlr 19. SO with any purchase; t .00 '"ill be '-donated w the Make·A·Wh1h Foundation. .J Ren:ive a free M:ented ~tin Nllger with-any regular pricro gown purc.;ha.-.cd. (AJ..,o Sarurda)' and Sunday, November 19th and 20th) 0 \'l<,it our Bl."aUf)' ~Ion and rc:ceh't.'. a free gift with our Sebastian • ... t> makco\'er special. 0 Purcha"t' an 8 oz. or 16 oz. forcvl'r New fubric w.!Sh and receive a i oz travel·o;ized gjft1 ( ~aturdar and Sunday. November 19th and' 20th) J 0 . You'll receive a free handbag with any speciaJ occasion dress pur<.:ha.o,ed from Depanment 48 and 46. (Al!'!<> l\arur<by and , unday. November 19th and 20th) 0 Meet Buffum.'\ furrier c;ary ou .. h and sa'~ up to ~ on a specially selecte<l a.'-.ortment of fur.-ju~t for this grand re-opening. (Also on ~aturday. November 19th) SA1l.JRDAY,NOVEMBER19 floet's ~iat Jook by USll\I a com- bination of fresh flowers and assorted dry materials. The lemon leaf, yellow, pink and orante carnations, yellow 1nd oranae ,erberas and a vanety of orchids will cover the massive dinosaur. -. Meet Heidi Miller-in.,p\rational speaker. author. health expt:tt ;1nd )'Og\lrt cntrepeneur-when she demonstrates the art of body sculptin~ with the new Hardbody Fitr>eS.'I Bar. -. .... = -.. - --- -.. . .. --. ----. -;:. -<". -.. -· ~: =· : ---.. -- -- --. -... ---- ·"' • Rnl'in: onl'·linr>frt'l" imprint with rour purcha.-.e of boxed ChriM m~L'i card' 0 ">nc:.tk pre:\ kw our nt'\\' 'Prin~ line: of cxqui~itc knit dre~'ing from l>:trk An:nuc: lk"''W'' All dc:"Wl' are handl(X>mc:d and emhelli~d w1th fe,\lher. -<quin'. k-atht·f" .md more. Meel our reprc:senratlve jnd 1oin ll' for mfom1al modeling, I I am ·.-\ p.m Refn:,hmc:m~ '"ill he served 0 X 'l' lhl· )j((.-..1 c.JL..,ign' in our Anne Klein jewelry collection and mnl our n:prt:-<ntarlvt·. I I :.~O a.m.· .~:~O p .m 0 lake.· h o ml· .1 wft \\i th any (~oldenthrcads ed 'ikln hanllhag purd1,1't:" Mt·l't rc:prl·M:ntarivc: Susan Jakobow~k.i. I 0 a.m.· 2 p.m 0 hlT l'fl~'T,nin)t whill'·you·w,Jit on any C.:ro~' pen or dt.''ik ~t purcha...e, noon·-. p.m 0 In C<l'mct1<.:~: Fragranct: modeliag featuring Elizabeth Taylor's P:L,'iion an<l ~amba (Al'iO Saturday. November 1-9). The scc~L'i of Swis.'i naHc;1re. free. al our one·on·ohe Mavala Nail Clinics and meet Richard '.'lelson. Pre-i<knt of Mavala of witzerland, noon· l p.m ~e a demon.1>tration of Lhc new cordlc:ss Epilady hair rcm<J\.'Cf, I I :30 a.m.·k\O p.m Pamper youn.elf with <:on.'iultation.«> from Estee Lauder. Lancome and Clinique. 0 Mt•et our (Xpert bra fitter <.arrl Baughman. Buy 2 br:l.'I at regular prirt and gc1 a .\rt.I at Sm. off. (Al~ on Saturday. O\' 19th) 0 Try on any women\ lsotoner ~liPJXr a.nc.I rel'ci~-e a fret' gU\. 11 a.m ·4 p.m. while C,JUantill~ la.41& 0 Get a frtt ~ sock hoodc and bib with n-cry Inf.mt pure.ha! (Also Sanm.by and Sunday, Novcmht'r 19th and 20th) 0 Recd\.~ a .i·palr ~ ofbil*J ~with any ~nJor at ~ pur<:hMc from Ocputment ~. (Abo ~rut;day and Su~ • .NoYrmt>er 19th and 20th) ' I . . . A r 2 .m. -f .m ln \t'C.>Stmin'i"ter 11 a.m. ·I .m. Meet famou~ t'Wp<>rt Beach perfume doigner Anne Pliska an<l di!i<.."O\'Ct' her 'Piritl•d Anne Pliska fragrance. I I a.m.-2 p.m. ~e lht· latt~l from (iin:nt·hr at our Bijoux trunk ~how. n<xm·4 p.m 0 . ~kct Buc:no of California handhag rcprt~taf-e Robert Doyle and take homt· a free ~ft with anr Bueno haridbag purcha.-.e. 10 a.m.·2 p.m. 0 Join u~ for our Firc:nze Lt-atht·r trunk show. ip coat~. 11 a.m.·:\ p.m. 0 Fr.tgrancc: modelin~ femuring l.ou Lou• 0 F.nter our Cinderella comest and win a pair of free shoes! Our own Prince Channing will wander the ~tore in search for the wom2n who will fit into hi 8orgeous new ~hoes. If }'nu' re our lucky Cinderella. the shoes arc yuurs. • 1 MONDAY, NOVEMBEJl 21 Join us for a London Fog trunk show fOr women bruring rq>re11Cntative Ron I.owe, I I a.m. ·3 p.m. in our coat <kpanmeot. R~stcr to win 41 frc.-e London Fog coat. TUESDAY,NOVEMBER22 Mttt ~tatf\."C Oc:nnis Bt'.ll'KJo from l.aliquc., and stt his vk.lro pr~ntadon on the hl~tory of the Wtw>U'I f mich cty.'1(2J company . 11 a.m.·.i pm FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25 P~ncc m<.xtd~ bturiOM Cartltt. I I a.m.·2 p.m.; Uz 0~ and Ovt~i~n Auj:ard ( AJ~o on Sarunlay. Novembtt 26th) 0 l.c::am a.II about tfagntn«. ~ln·ont, ar our frtt F,.....ant.~ IJl)i-rintc Clink from Shallmar-hcrfl to apply It,~ to appf)· It :anti hl1"' co 13)'CT It for kJftl llMI,._ all day wear You'll reccift an l"lftplY <;.a-ttan vtaJ-jmt '*It to thr rr.ant.~ counltt llld we'll In h b ft-ft and tnctl )'lJU ~ >'*·~ ~ Wlnlcd m know. , I ~ , S THURSDAY. NOVENllER n . 1~ I: J l£st1E · EAllEST Tijuana Long Bar duplicated in Irvine Food drive . :·· .. to·help .. _needy While aluminum Christmas trees arc old ha1t not many people have seen a Chnstmas tree made of aluminum cans. But the Irvine Board of Realtors has decided to change all that. The board has pledged to build a °Christmas Can Tree" while raising more than 25,000 pounds offood during a siJt-weck drive that ends Dec. l 0. Residents are invjted to bring canned food or cash donations to 4850 Barranca Parkway, Suite 203 or to any real estate office displaying the Christmas Can- Trec logo. All donations will go to Irvine Temporary Housing. And mark Dec. lOon your calendars. That's the fooddrivc's final day when residents can have pictures talcen with Santa and can participate in ... what else ... a can stacking contest. For more information1 call the Christmas Can Tree hotline at 726-4735. • • • And I have a couple notes from UCI. Laurette Beeson, a Santa Ana resident who graduated from UCI in 1986, has been appointed director of the college's AIDS program. And Newport Beach resident Vert Mooney has been named professor in residence of orthopedic surgery and chief of orthopedic research at the UCI College ofMedicine. • • • And several items from the Art lnstitutcofSouthem California in La&una Beach, which has bad a coupfedosesof good financial news lately. First, the Van Camp Foundation has pledged $450,000 to the college: one of the largest private donations in the school's 26-=year history. The money will be used to fund scholarships. Gilbert Vu Camp, who died Oct. 8, and his widow, Alice, were credited with setting the wheels in motion to create the A ISC slide.. library. But that's not all. Another $450,000 has been received from the Harrr ud Grace Steele ·Foundation. Currently, a matching funds drive 1s under way. · Tia Ju.aa•• Loac Bu llalcaa Cafe Delazrin 1"lne bout9 one of the lonceet ban In Ora.nee Coa..nty. Comedian Juon Staart . Humor used to teach self-worth By LF.SUE EARNEST Ot-.o.., ......... When scbooheacher Holl y Feldt met comedian Jason Stuart at a party a few years ago, she didn't realize 1t would end up being such fun for her students. But dunng their conversation. when Stuan. wlro has appeared in movies, plays and on tele v1S1on. discovered Feldt was a teacher, he asked 1fhe could v1s1t her students. Feldt said she was surpnsed that the up.and-coming performer would be interested in malong an appearance an a classroom, but Stuan was insistent .. He said, 'Please let me come.· .. Feldt recalled Now, three yea~ later. Stuart has continued to show an interest in the students. said Feldt. In fact. last .... eek. tbe..comic....who.J.Lvcs..in...Lo~ Angtlcs.. drove to Laguna Niguel and stayed through threc.hou~ of drama classes at Niguel Hills Junior High. enten.a1ning students wnh .... hat amounts to a sort of comic self-est~m les on Wnh an outlandish haJr st)Jc and outrageous clothes. Stuart is a blg hu with the kids.. Feldt said. ''1,Jnmcdiately. he gets their attention ·• Feldt said "He says. 'All of us at one time 1n our II\ es arc dorks ··· Feldt added. His message.: according to Feldt. 1s simple· "Be proud of being yoursch. You're special You're 1mpon.ant. ~o matter what other people think. )Ou have something to give." Ask Stuart why he makes return appearances 10 junior high and high school campuses and he ·11 return to the subject of giving.. s. • "I feel it's really 1mponant that I take the time and (Pleue see BUMOR/B2) Program to improve health BJ LESLIE EARNEST ... ..., ...... After being transformed from a lima bean storage aru into a Mexican restaurant, a section of a 93-year~ warehouse being renovated i·n east Irvine opened 1u doors 'Monda~ u Tia Juana's Lonit Bar Mexican Cafe Delwre . The opening of the restaurant. which features a 7~foot-lona bar. marfls the conclusion of an under- takina tbat bepn five years qo . "The projcft is one of the most s~cular Cinderella jobs we've . ~mpleted," said Hoppy Cun- runpam, vice prnJdent of con~ tJon at J. Ray Construction. "It bas turned an imponant part of Orange County's history into a family enter- tainment and food center." The restaurant, which will feature authentic Mexican dishes and enter- tainment, was named after The Lona Bar. a Tijuana establishment that once attracted Hollywood stan, ac- cording to Dan Neyenhws, president of Tia Juana Management Inc., owner of the restaurant. However, he added, the new eatery -with its different spelling -is expected to attract customers of aJI ~- "We aren't going to try tozerom on one given type or age group.'' be said. "I think the food is goina to be a big draw and the atmosphere is fabulous." Special care bas been taken to preserve the warehouse where the 9,800-square-foot restaurant is ,..__..,.LONG/a) And one more thing. The Art Institute will be holding a Holiday Event and Art Sale Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p. m. at the Laguna Can yon cam pus. Shoppers can choose from paintings, sculptures, ceramics, jewelry. prints or photographs while chil- dren can participate in two threc- hour art workshops. In an effort to unde~tand and reverse a surprising trend toward rising cholesterol levels in ch1Jdrcn as young as 9, the Irvine Health Foundation has donated $41.280 for a health education program. The funds will be used by UCI to conduct a three.year project on cholesterol-related health risks in children. rescarche~ testtngabout 400 If'. me founh-graders 10 locate youngsters with nsk~ chole terol levels As part of the program. researchers "'1'1 interview and test students' families. someume' recommending gu1dehnes '"'oh 1ng diet and C\-crcisc. Follow-up studies will be done after a )Car Punchy the robot deU•era antl-ctrac m__,ee. The children's workshops will run from 9 a.m. to I p.m. and will cost S 15 per child. For more information, call 497-3309. According to UCI studies of the Westm inster School District, up to 15 percent of 9-to I ~year-olds have elevated cholesterol levels. The initial focus of the current study will be youngsters in the Irvine Unified District. "This 1s a unique opponunu~ v.h1ch combine the expertise of the facult> and staff of the L (I ·College of Medicine with educators and health specialists m the Irvine Unified School DtstnCl to improve health for young people ... said u~nor Court Judge David Sills. chairman of the foundauon "Other school distncts will be able to acces the findings to improve their own health cum<:ulum a well." Robot punches up anti-drug message • • • More good news from Saddlc- By LESLCE EARNEST or..,. o.-,,.. *'-" back Community College in Mission Viejo. TheSaddleback District Forensics Team snagged the sweepstakes at the Lancer Invitational in Pasadena. "The Irvine Health Foundation recognizes the impon.ance of preventive health behaviors." said Dennis Davidson. associate professor of cardiology and director of the project. "Its foresight truly reflects the community's health interests." Davidson, who took part in a UCI study that found cholesterol levels were reduced when oat bran muffins were added to tbe diet. will work with other The foundation, which gi ves approximate!\ SI million each year to health-related projects and programs in the area. 1s one of the largest pm ate contributors to the un1versit). -By us/I~ eara~t Some11mcs.. e'en ~hen the 'IUhJC'\'l matter wears thi n. the nght teacher can sull pack a powerful pun~h \ case tn pomt. Punch> -a hot pm~ and blue robot who's been rl)lh ng through south Orange Count~ ~•th an electronic ant1'9ru@. mc~sage Punchy. who bas been sbowina up at elementary schools in the SeddJo. back Unified School District this week. Wlll make ap~rances at Mission VaeJO MaJJ Fndayat 7 p.m. and Saturday at 11 a.m. and l p.m. With his broom-top head and boxma-g)oved hands extend.ins from (Pleue eee PU!fCBY /82) (Pleue tee WINlfBRS/82) .. Forum on JFK assassination set at Saddle back College .. JFK Assassination: 25 Years of Controversy." a Saddleblack Collete forum, will be presented in two tepnenU this weelcend in commemoration of the 25th anniversary oft.he assassination of President Kennedy. Steven Frosue, an instructor with the Division of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the Mission Viejo co~. will expkn the controversies in light of three official invcstiptions, plus numerous books and movies. The forum will meet Friday from 7 to 10 p.m. and Saturday from 9 Lm. to • p.m. in the collqc's Business/General Studies Cent.er. Room 321 . The fees arc SS for Friday's ICSIOll ($3 ror mldents) and SlO for Saturda_fs ($8 for students). Call Joyce Hanna at ~82-4650 for more information. • Washinaton D.C. will speak on "Truth in Media" at a luncheon hosted by the Orange County chapter of the Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge Friday in Newport Beach. The prosram is scheduled for 11 a.m. at the Newport Beach Country Cl ub. 1600 E. Coast Hi&hway. The pubhc is invited and may reserve ticket~ by calling 96s...859S. Leg'Ulatlve receptlon planned Federal, state and county leaislators and elected officials will_ join local business leaden for an open reception Friday from 6:30 to 8:30/.m. at the Laauna Hills Holaday rnn on La Pu Roa at the San Diego freeway. The annual rcttption, held for lht djscUSSton of issues of personal interest. is sponlOttd by the Saddlcbck Reai<>nal Chamber of Commerce. The event as open to the publl~ and free of cfwle, with further 1nformatton ava•labk at 837-3000. Hanukkah boutique ID Laguna The Jewish Community Center of South Orangr County will hold a Hanukkah bouuque Fnday from I 0 a.m. &O 2p.m.111he center. 29 Broadwa). Laguna Beach Hand-painted clothes and accessone JCWelry. ch1ld~n·s wear and g.ift shop uems will be available. Call Sherry Leiter at 49"-~070 for detail . Senion get free nu vaccine The TLC Med1caJ Group an conJ uncuon wnh the Oranae County Htahh Care A&enc) Wtll pm\.adc frtt nu vaccine innoculauons for people 1n h1&h nsk health catcaoncs and an one ovtr SS )tars of aac th1 wttkend and nnt ~eek. Vacc1nat1on art scheduled Fnd&y from a.m to 8 p.m. and Saturday from 8 Lm. to 4 p.m at 101 8 dams Ave., Hunttf\llon Be h. and TU~) a.nd W~ from 8 a.m. to 8 pm. at 17900 8rookhul"lt St., fount.a.in Valk). Call the meda~I voup at 96 3266 for roore •nfonnauon Jan. 5 at I 0 am .. Jan 26 and Feb. 9 at I p.m .. Feb. 23 at 10 a.m and \farch 9 and 23 at I p.m. Watercolors OD dl•play bJ 1fB Hav.a11an and Tahitian landscapes hitblilbt tbe watercolors b) Terry McDonald currently on euibit at the ewport Center branch of the Newport Beacb P\lblic L1bran Tht art~ ork will be on display tbrouah Ur.umber ll the hbra~. 956 n Clemente Drive. Teen• hrl•t for lfa.rc.ll olDba• A aiant Twi'lter toumam~will be beld SMW'Clay II Golckn West Collcae for 1 ~~1', .~ PtOC.'ttds '°"" to the Maida of mes linlll DIAl:I Foundauon. ~ muumum donauon of SIO wit·lldmk m twtnm who may be~ by IC"'9I cloMn. Dla)'tt who taJICI S2 ~-Will reclli~ • tw111tt T·stun. Call Sudi Anta at 631-l100 .. ...a -. . .. ~ . . . . . . . --. . --. . . ! --.. ------: . ---. .. .. -4 ,._ --.. --.. -. : -! :. ~ .. --. .. .. -.. -• : , -. :: -. ~ -. ------------::. .. ---.. ---------... • 8 0rMge 0.... DAtl.V Pel.OT/ Thuraday, Novwnber 17, 1988 We'relooklng LONGBAR ••• forgoodsl'Vlrfs hoa•1 PUNCHY llE88AOB ••• 'Y"· ~ ~iga to Neyenhuis, an Tbe ~ Not wanu to report the Irvme residenL For example, before 1 ~el.plaits o( you and your l~footmwaJtbatc:oven~faceof -;rbOn. three walls could be p&inted, 1 }OW' recralioa ae.ue team pro~ive pl~ coverina was finilNd oa top, if you led mes-ck in applied to the or111n1I wood. a IO:K naa. your neilbbor landed a The restaurant. located at the Sand martin or your lpOUIC won 1 tennis Canyon off ramp and the Santa Ana 10W'Dlment. let us know. Fruway, is one of a number of Send us a brief ICCOunt of the ra\ovation projects beina conducted aporUDI ICCOIDptishmeat and a by the Sand C&nyon Histon'cal Part- pbotopapb if you have one. Address nenin~nareaoflnioe knownuOki Cooct~ to Nei~-Town. Other projects include the Focus in care of the Daily transformation of a four-stol)' con- Pilot. P.O. Box IS60, Costa M~ crete bean silo into the La Quinta 92626. Hotel ~·1 ~arm' Pu~y·1 youna audience .ant to think be'• eome-tbina special. But ill not bis own body that ~nc:hy calla ltteftUoa to when the you~ ptbet around. The real million dollar machine it the human body, Punchy says. .. Oh no the million dollar machine is much better than I am," Punchy says. "It pws biger, stroneer and smarter every day. It can operate on the surface oftbe moon or the bottom of the ocean. h even ~n it1elf. . "I hive pat news, Punchy con- tinues. "You ~ the million dollar machine.'' Acc:ordi111. 10 L--Maaallua. ~ c1Uectot 'fOi' tbe ~ Viejo Mall that ~ the anu- dnlil prapua. die ioboC bu a MY. of maiilll I very oenonaJ CODlllCt wtth the younpten 6e visits in elemcnW")' IChoob. "He'• really a veryunusual rotJot,'' Mawlana said. '6Tbe relauonship that be developt with thoee children at the 111tmblies ia fantastic." P\incby and his propam, which is cSeUanecl =ouoasten who have not been ex to drup, will travel to nearly 1ehools nat10Dwide. -'. HUMOR INJECTED ••• - J r . . . . ... " ~ • .. J'rom81 live," Stuart said ... It realty isn't ao much pvina, I set so much ti.ck." His commitment to Feldt and her students WU impGnant enouah that Stuan kept his date at NiJuel Hills last week in spite of the fact that a friend of bis was killed in a motor- cycle accident tl)e day btfore, he 11id. ··1 just fl.cured, there were all these ki~ and I JUSt couldn't 11y no," he said. For some reason, the 29-year-old Stuart. who will be perfonnina at the ALL NEW N EWPO.RT! Our totally remodeled Fashion Island store Premieres Friday at 10:00 a.m. Join us for special events all week We're giving away ten I 00.00 grand re:opening shopping sprees! RegiMer in the Credit Office . Drawings will be held Friday. No\'ember 18 at 11 a.m .. 1 p.m .. 3 p.m .. 5 p.m .. ...., p.m. and 9 p .m.; Saturday. November 19 at 11 a.m .. I p.m .. 3 p.m . and 5 p.m. Winners need not be present to win. but you must re-register after each draw ing. 0 Open your new Buffum~ charge account and receive a free I 5% gift credit on all purchases made Friday. November 18 and Saturday. November 19. •Exclude~ Cosmetks. 0 Free Limited Edition !'-hoppin~ ha~.., with anr purcha...,e. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18 \'isit our Fine j<."wdry Depanmc:nt and r<.·ghter lO \\in a 500.00 fine ~rdry gift n :rtifkale F.nter hy Sunda~. ;\;ovemher .20 'ee our "-pedal <:ollection of fine jt-v.·dry at ~()'\, off . \1ee1 our rt.>pre-.(.'n!ali\'l' from \lapie r I I '\O a m.· .-\:.-\0 p.m .. and enter our drJ\\-in~ for free Napier .Jewelry. 0 Rt't:d\'t' one·hnt: frt-e 1mpnn1 "-ith rour purl·ha-,e of boxed <.hrhtma..., lClrd' r ~ Meet Bi~ Buffy in our Childn :n's Department. both Friday . Nowmber 18 and Saturday. Ncwembcr 19 . Ruff)· b yours for only 19.50 with any purchase: 1.00 will be " donated to the Make-A·Wish Foundation. .) Recdve a free ~nted -.atin hanger with any regular priced gown purcha.-<d (Abo Saturday and • undar. Nm-ember 19th and 20th) 0 \'i~it our Beauty Salon and receh-c a free gift with our Sebastian makeover special. 0 Purcha.-< an 8 oz. or 16 oz. Forever New fabric wash and receiw a 4 oz.,travel·sized gift! (Also • aturday and Sunda)'. November 19th and 20th) ·D You'll n:cdvc a free handhag with any special oc<.-a.,ion drc.·ss purcha.-<d from Depanment 48 and ·t6. ( Al!-tO ~aturdar and ~unday. Nowmber 19th and 20th) 0 Meet Buffum, furrier (,ary Bush and save up ro 50% on a speciall} ~lected a.~>ctment of furs just for this grand re-opening (Abo on Saturday. November 19th) SA11JRDAY,NOVEMBER19 Meet Heidi Miller-in.,pirational speaker. author. health expert and rogurt entrepeneur-when she demoll.')trate. the art of body sculpting wi th the new li'ardbody Fitness Bar. l .m.4 .m. In Westmjnster 11 a.m.· I .m. Laff Stop in CJaremont this weekend and is a reawar at The Comedy Store in HollywOod, said he tends to meet many teachers, "lt's/'ust my karma, I auess." Stuart said. " run into a lot of people who teach. .. . "To 'me, teachers are the most imp<>rtant people." Stuart said. ••ee- cause they form the minds of the future." So the comedian who describes himself as "a very serious person," helps out in bis own way. • ~ 1 0 • "nt-ak pre\il'W our nt''-' ... pnng line of exqui:o.ite knit dres..,ing from P..trk An:nul· Dt.·..,i~n' All llt"tj(n" are handloomed and embc:llhhed ( \.. Meet famous Newport Beach perfume designer Anne Pliska and discover her spirited Anne Pliska ~grance. 11 a.m.·2 p.m. J \\ith fl"'.tther.. °'(:quin .... k-athc..·r. and more. Meet our representative: and 1oin u' for intonnal modelinl(. I I am.·.-\ p.m. ~ Rdrc.·..,hment.., will he !>erved ~l' the late~t from Glwnchy at. ou~ Ri~>~x t~nk !>how, noon."4 p.m. 0 0 "'<.·c.· the latl"I dt"i~n.., m our Anne.· Klt'in jc:wdry c:olkction and met'l our rcprc."<.·nuttl\'c.', 11 :.-\0 a.m :j :}O pm. Meet Bueno of C:tlifornia handhag repre-.entative Rohen Doyk and take home a free ~ft with any Bueno handbag purcha.'ie. 10 a.m.·2 p.m. 0 0 • • Take..· home a wft with any <.oldenth.read' ed !>kin handbag pur'l'ha°'(· \1 t'et repre!'-<.'nta tive ~..,.n jakohow~ki. I 0 a.m.·2 p.l'n. join u' for our. Firenze l.<.-ather trunk show. in coat1', I I a.m.·:\ p.m. o· 0 Frawaoce modt:lin~ featuring tou Lou' 0 1-ree t'nwav;n~ while·you·wai t on any Cro~~ pen or desk 5el purcha.-.e. noon··• pm 0 Enter our Cinde rella contest and win a pair of free shoe~! Our own Prince C.harmjng 'Will wandc:r th store In search for the woman who In <...cismeticl'>· f ragranct"' modelinR fcaturin~ EUzabeth Tuylor's will fit into hi~ gorgeous news~. If you're our lucky Cindcttlla, the Pa. ... -.ion and Samba ( Al"io Saturday. No'"'etnber 19 ). The secrelS of shoes are you_rs._ Swis.., na:ilcare. free, at our one-on-one MavaJa Na.ii CUnJcs and MONDAY, NO~ER 21 · meet Richard Nelson. Prcsldenr of Mavala Qf Switzerland. noon· • .2 p.rn. See :t demonstration of the nc:W cordJess Epilady haJr: Join us fur a London Fog trunk show fo r women feat4ring • I 20 2 30 re presentative Ron Lowe, I.I a.m . .'3 p.m. In our coat dcp;artmcm remover. :.-, a.m.·.1: p.m. . Pamper yourself 'With con'>uhations from E.,~e l.auder. l.ancome Register W win a free Lont:km Fog coat. and Cllnique TIJESDAY, NOVEMBER 22 D Meet rcp~ntative OmrUs Brando from LaUquc, and stt his vi.de<> Meet our expert bra fitter Carri Baughman, BUy 2 hras at regular presentation 00 the hi~tclr}' of the famous French c l)'5taJ company • price and ~et a _,rd :n ~(>",of[ (Al~ <>n·Saturda)1• Nov. 19th) 11 a.m.~ p.m.. .. 0 .... Try on any w~n·s tsoconcr UptXr and receive a ftte gift. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2' I I a.m.·4 p.m. whik quantities I~ Frasran« modcUng bturtng Canlcr. 11 a.m.·2 p.m.; Uz Claiborne 0 and QuiM.lan Auprd. (~50 on Sal\lrday, N~btt 26<h) Get a free ~ sock bood~ and bib with C'YCfY in&nt pu~. • O , (Also Saturday and Sunday. Nm~~r 19lt! and 20th) tam aU abouC ~. OM'-On-<>ne, at our free f,.,...am:~ l.o11:ti~ 0 , .. Clink tom Shallmar-hcJW to apply it. where to apply It ;tnd htM' co Recd~ a 3·pair pKbge ,)fbUdn1 ~ wtc.h my tumor layer It ror long laMi,.. all day wear. You'll rc«tvc: :.m t-mp«y Ci\k·rt.dn 5lttpwar ~from Oepaninmt 3. ~-----Yl~ill ...... -_..;..~~'*= It ro t.M ~ C'OUnlcr and we'll ftll It A>r fttt :tnJ (Al!<> Saturday Ind !undrY. ~ 19th and 20th) tnctl ~ ~ you·YC a~ wantn.I h1 kncJW. I . r .. ... . .