HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-07-23 - Orange Coast Pilot..:::: .:.: .~-= ., .... , ...... _,
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SURF
lOCATION
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LApneludl l·l
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TIDES
TOOAY
Flnt low l :SJ a.m. -0.l
RnC Midi ,:,. ...... J.7
s.c-41-t:U a.m. 1.7
s.-d hJglt 7:5' p.m. S., WEONUOAY
Flnt low l :ll a.m. -o.3
Ant ~ ':St a.m. J.&
~ 2:13 ,.,... 2..S
s.c-f his" 1:36 ,_,... 6. I
QUOTfS Of TltE DAY
·• It wtu nt'\'t'r cvntt'mpliltt'd that
IM fronlogt 11t q11es11on should~
ava"4blt' for ti~ mt'~ purpou of
ut.cOmt' IUlll prnat~ mdu.s1nal
~mtopnsa."
James Irvine, in a Jetter ducd
June 20, 1938, on the land he
deeded that eventually became the
Balboa Bd:V Cluh (Al >
· Hurorv u nmhmg but a pack of
tn</u '"'' plav upon the dead ..
Voha1rc
COMMUNITY EVENTS
• Ntwport II arbor Art Muw um
unveil\ m ncwl''ll e'th1b11. "Different
Stonci.. h\c: \'1ew-.""nf the
Collection." 101.fav l he mu,eum 1'i
open lrom 111 a m 111 'i p m Call
759-1 122
• Tht Rtd Uon lnn, m50 South
Bnstol. Co ta Me~a. features big
band dancing '" the Maxi Loungt
wnh John Hc:nder'inn and TraC'\I
Well' Jnd their Big Band<.
altemaung on Tuesda~ $6 per
penon include" hor' d 'oeuvres .rnd
free parlung h >r more 1nforma11on,
call Bud ~mm a1 'i'i2-080\
• Oub Sin.It( Ci) and o-.cr meet
eve~ Wednc,da~ ' h' 4 "\O pm fnr a
vaned program JI Oa~I\ en1or
Center. ROO M.irgucrite (5th anJ
Marguerite). Corona dcl Mar Call
b44-324S
• ~rtndlplty, St Andrew's
Smgle"i, meet\ Wedne«lay at St.
Andre~\ Pre,bytenan Church, 600
St Andre~-; RoaJ. Newport Beach,
at -Y \0 p m S2 Jun1\11on for more
infonnat1nn. \.'all fohn R Goodale at
6.31 2AA'i
• Ca ft Udo, 50 I 30th St. Newport
Beach. present' Pancho Sanchez
Latin 1au Crom 9 pm to I am.
tonight and Wet.lnc"iday There as a
S..'i cove r (h.trge Call 675 -:!968.
JUST Off FACTS
• Who wa' rhc fir;r celebnty ro
b<-t'Om<" .1 Y("ar·n.>und resident of
Nev.pon lkat·h?
8061 u1 pu11 f .(rg l uo .>\noq v
1q!noq O\fM •m1~:)fflt'W PU.Jl"I I •
• ....,... ""• ,.,·~· 6t•• ............ A t.ac;t-~ t..~~ ' ... -0 .... ._ ....... Jltl ...... --.. •H \'II
INDEX
Bndac/B5
8us1ne\~ 4
0~ 1f1cd BJ
Cmnmumtv f<1rnm I I
Om~ont'85
Entertammcn A7
HorclK'Of'C/1.5
uga~
~ty(A.1
~· ...... .,u ...
Copyriaht l~l
~-IA pan an r•qdcd ,.
The theme
of this ~r's
C h arac ter
.,.. hnck
w•s "N~
port Go H
Hollywood."
Sunday's IN-
rad e f e a-
t u r e d 26
b o ats, 1n-
dudift1 the
125-foot lu.-
~ a c h t
Newport c .. cil rejects
Bay Club expansion plan
Public opposition
blamed in rejection
By Ins Y<*oi
Siii! Wits
NEWPORT BEACH -In a close 4-3
vote, the City C.ouncil rejected the Balboa
Ba) Club's p roposed S50-mlllton
expansion plan Monday night, nwng the
club's request for a conu.nuance and
send10g the controvers1aJ pro1ect back to
the drawmg b<1ard .
.. The phone call l\c reccr~ed 1nd1cc11e
OH rv.helm1ng disagreement 1n the
cm almost \JOlcnt opposition to the:
pro1ect, · ~1d Ml)or Phil Sansone, who
w11h council memtxrs Evelvn Hart. Jean
Watt and Ruthelvn Plummer voted "'
re1c:ct the expansion plans.
"Thi\ proJCd IS not going 10 fl\
fhe\ ·re going 111 have to do dra'>llc..
revisions."
The counClJ's action drew applau'c:
from the small audience Of several dOLCn,
a marked difference from the standing
room-onlv crowd of citizens who flowed
out of the counctl chamtxrs during the
llr<.1 public heanng two weeks ago fhe
1.kaeasc an numbers was apparentlv due
ltl word about Bay O ub officials' rc:quc\t
fM a conunuance. which man:r expected
w,1uld be granted.
Bill Ray. Ba) Cluh chamnan of the
~\jrd, and Tom Deemer, club prc:<..1den1
didn't e'en attend the meeting
Their a11n rne\. Dennis 0 r-.e ll e'prc~ed d1~ppn1n1ment -.uh the rnunul
vote and declined further c11mmen1
\aytng. "I need 10 d1o,cu'' v.1th m' client'
what our option' arc ·
o·Ne1l had asked the l••unul 111
continue the puhllc.. hc:c1nng 1•n tht
c:\pan'"'n unul Aue I: w ~l\C the , hJI'
1938 letter from
Irvine criticized
bayside project
The follm~mg letter was wnrren
mon· than foe: decade.\ ago by James
In.me in revxmsc to a propo~al ro
hUild on the Janel no\4 tx·cup1ed b)' the
Ba/f°H)J Ba~ Club
J unt 20, 1938
I wa' rathc.. r 'urpn,ed 10
under~tand thJt al J re1..ent meeting of
the ( 11y Council. there w-as a
la ~elahood that a ma1onf) of the Board
were (~1c) con1empla11ng and probably
walling to turn the pon1on of the
front age of th(' north side of Newport
Bav which they own becwe~n the
Ranch's subd1v1s1on of Bay Shore
\lrC'> .ind the Arche.;;
I he land wc1' g1,en h\ the Irvine
( •lmpany free t'f anv 'ilr mgs or
1>hhg.111nm for the henefic1al public
u-.e of Newport al-J ciry -;hould they
need 11 fur dtx-k..tgc purpo~s. but 11
lo\a\ nt·,er cnntcmplated that the
lnintage 1n 4ue,11o ns ~hould be
J\a1lahlc for the mere purpo">c of
mnm1c and private tndu-.tnal
nonJc:~npt cntcrpn'-c'
See LETTER'1111:11 ,_
11mt· ,,, mt•c t further "llh l\1mmun1t\
i,!r1•ur' .ind "' (•l w11r\.. •IUI .iO aC~l ptahlc:
pr1•1cd
< luh 11thd 1\, '11d ahcatt\ tncll mectm2
1w1~e c\\('f the IJ\I l"'' Wt:Ck' with
See BAY CLUB/Ila,_
....
Airport officials say safety criticisms won't fly
Spokeswoman says
telev ision report is
short on hard facts
By Russ Loar
~wi.
J ohn Wa)TIC Airport off1c1a" are
~mg producer' of the :'.II 20 ..
tckvmon s~ of 'bctu;il
inaccuracies .. and scare tact1c<i in the
wake of a report 1elC"LSCd natKlO\o\lde
~rurda) in ,., h1ch p1lot'i , ... , fohn \\ ;n nc:
Airport as one of the 11\c m1"1 d.in~ewu'
Jlrp<>rt.s m the L'nated St.ah:'
.. ~'hat 1s m~I unfortun:ttc '' 1h.11
pc.opk who \aw the: '\th\w. ~111 ~
unnecc~anl\ fn~hten.,;J. <. l•J .11rprnt
spokes""oman ( ourtnn \\it ll'll..: h J h1-.
1s parachute Jf!Umah'm \irp< in
management did not C\Cn k.mm the'
( .. 20 ~O" rcptirtcr') were 1 >n .mp; •rt
propc:ny"
Au contnurc U\\ ARC pnlJUll'r Philip
lkrgman. p roJuccr ol th(' "~O ~O"
~gmcnt
.. , do n't blame them for re,ponding
that way They're responding the lo\3) thJI
.in~ airport re.;;pond<i that \,\ant~ lCl keep
al<; hccno;e," said Bergman. a former
'l'.nim producer for ABC .. \\ orld New'
Tonight ·· We are reporting a 'ilOf'\ tllld
w U5 ~ pilot<. '' c're nClt making th1<.
c;tuff up If I were an airport manager at
John Y.a:-'lle . I guc""' I'd be u~t al'-<'
Pilots cited 1hc ~teep takeoff requireJ
at JWA. and the requirement \I' lU\
pov.er at an Jlt1tude t'f c;oo feet .\1~HI
otfiC'lals "111 he meeting \\ edne<-0.i' m
Y.a hmgt1>n with Jn I .-\.A aJ\N1r. tzn•ur
that '' rcn,mmending ra1'>10'! thl' f'l.'~t.'r
cutllact rcqu1rcmen1 tn ~J tn·t 1n
.ilt1tudc:
\olore than 2110 p1h1t\ rC\fl''nllc:J IP the
·que'it1\1n 11t tht.' m.1n1h' pla(cd 1n J
pthit" ma~.i.1inc h\ th(' 'h~ ·, pr.iducl·r'.
.t\king p1ln1' 111 n,1mc the nath•n'
mo.,t-Jangcrnu' a1rpc1rt<. Other J1rfl<•ll'
cited b) ptlnt' we re I o<. .\n~c le'
City bracing for invasion
of Guns N' Roses crowd
W elcome 10 the 1un~lc ..,
Wlule a new trJ tf1c pl.in
sufVl'VCd a cnncen ~ Gkma
Estcfan Fn<U) C"en1ng. 11 lo\1ll tx .a \"\Slt
h\ the notorious Guns " Rt~ later th•~ ~ck that 1111111 reall\ ~ the tc't
More than l .OCX> h,ud·h'ld: film arc
u~clcd to swarm to Paoftc
Amph1thc~ on Thursday m~ht. whteh
will al'iO be one of the hu,1c't da~ for the
udjaccnt OranJC ( ounty f .llr. oft.aab
say. •-I' ~See 'Odar's eGtonanlt
,..ho had a hard " c\e VlCW o( the traflic
\ltuatlOO from .i Ci:i6ta Mesa polttt
hehc:optcr .. H.id ""'C handled t.has a a
usual fau da) and a usual amphitheater
dav. we ""-ould h.i'e !:le-en m b11t trouble ..
lt''i prohahl\ °'' ro1m.'ldcncc that on
C'\'CI)' dey o( the fair so far u~pt Fnday.
an ancodanc-c record has been $Cl, fair
spo kc1W01Dan J ill Lloyd said l-11r
attendance
Fnday ~aked
at 45 ,9 4Q
compared to
~ l,4S3 dunng
the same dav
la t yur Matt
t h •t1 I S,000
people came
out for t he
Es l ~f t n
conttrt
'Had we
handled this as a
usual fair day
and a usual
amphitheater day .
we would have
been in big
trouble.• __ .....
~ manlQtf
.. P eople
WC rt I lfe (ff
the concen.··
~ said. wtth
m.•n\ u~n, ~huttk ~N'lces and sctt•n to
'he fan ~fort 6 r m ··we -were &Kd
We're noc he~ to ~re•~ re
da) ..
ln1crn.1111•nJI .\lrf"•rl I inclhcrgh I it Id 111
'°IJn D1q!11. I .1<.1u.ud1.1 ·\1 rpnrt 1n "t:"
't Prl .ind ....,,t11nn.tl .\irp!>rl 1n
'This 1s parachute
1oumalism
Airport
management did
not even know
they were on
airport property '
-CW bWJ "'*' :M •
A1roort spol(eswol"1an
·\ 'ro~c .. nun
l11r I ht:
OJllOnJI
\1rl10t" P1h•I<.
.\'<otx1.1t111n
'ud ht
lh<>ll£hl thl:
'h''" 14 1, .1n
ac .. ur H<.
rc:pre,C'nt .1I1• •11
,, p1h1t,
cnn~nn' h11
he hc,11 111:d h\
l,tll .tm 111 the
11 rpon
J0'Jll' It I'
-----------1mp;1r1 1nt 11•
note th.11 n•inc ''' tht airJ"'r" mc.-nt11>ncd
'"that fCf"'ll "un,,1re •If danl!C'f•'U'
'Jld p1l1>1' ,1,"'l:1a1 111n 'r"'lc,mJn h•hn
Mawr
I hl rr " nP '11' Ii thin..: '' 1 peril, r
11rp1•11 \1.11111 '11d \dmc. ''' tho:m
'uc.h ,1, J11hn V. ""'-.ire. ".:II kn11"n
llTI•Hll! r""'' ., h.t\ lfll! "'rill Pl'• ul1.ir
rn1t>km'
Jnhn \\ I\ nc , 1ll 1u.1 I' -..1, the ,11, '""
t.11kd IP t:rnph.l'llt' th.II l.l~C1lll
rn,nhuc' were.· dl'\lio!llC:d b\ pal111' 111d
11r ir r' tn1I :ippn1,cd d'> \.lfr "' the
I \ \ I ...... ,,1.i 111ui:1nc ""e ma\ -.end tht·
',.tu, ' I k_llt I .ind 'll~C''I tht 'h''"'
h '' 1f.10l.' .1 ,11"CI' l•l" II> II'\ CWc:'f'
\\ ll r l ..... r '·"d
Hui \lit •••nt.:1111' 1h.11 the "runt ••I
thu r po 1 :Th; re. h 11lu'1rate' .... hat ptl,11\
h 1\l t'ic.t·n '·''lnl! pr1,a1C'I\ hir a h;n~ lm1t·
\.I. h.11 11 .1m1111nt' h• '' the ( >rani.!t'
< "'11 \\ 11 Tf'l 'rl h." , l r t.11n no '"C'
'" 11l ml nl pr•\\:t·,l11rc' 1h.11 ,,,me ptl1•1'
Pt>ttd '" V. hc.n rhn l.i \..c •II .11 ,u,h 1
''l'l'f 1n~h. thl: p1h11 .11hl the '" p1l,11
l•lnnnt 'l'l' nut the ''" k.ptl "' nd1•w
Hn)o!m.in 'J11I If 1h1' "'rn'·' ., d 'urpr1'l
h• .111por1 11lf1u.1), thrn thn 1n-rhtl 1n
"'"'h \\Ith tht•11 P"""
NeVlllOrt entrepreneur sentenced
ii series or bank fraud schemes
By Tony Cox
s tcllor
'I,( \\PORI IH ~l II - \ ,., , 111•ld
...,CWJl'lrl & i.h de1I m 1h·r wh1• -tllq:c,lh
in\llg;atc:J 1lnl· 1lf ,\ 'CJIC\ ,,, "·'"k lr,1ud
..chl"mc:' w ,, -cntt·n,ul \1c>11,IJ\ t» thrl"l'
\C'U\ 10 lcdi:r 11 prl\1ln
\ etcr.m rcil C'\l,llc .1~l·nt J1>hn I.id;.'
( l1U(th lan \r pk.Hied io!Ulh\ Ill '-l1l\ l'lll"C•
"' a1dmj? .1nd 1h<.·11in~ m.ul lrJ11d .ind
.... Ht (uud H1' ,u,tcncin~ "",,, dclAH·d
for eight m11nth' \' l.iw.\Cr' f11r hl1th 'ldt:'
'ut>m111cd 111 hHl!o!c. \\\ phcn \\ ""'"
hundrcJ~ 1•1 P·l!o!C' 1lf 1nl1>rm.1t1Pn
mtcrrrctini: lht l•\mplil 1IC'.l inudcn1' 111
qut'(tltln
C uughlan .md h1' 'II"'· J11hn l •'•11thl.111
Jr nl Belmont ShMc' .ind f r111I
C11u1thl 1n 11( Mah"u were ,Jappt'd "11 h .1
I"' HlUnl ll1rn l fraud md1dmc:nt .1 H •11
A~l In l 'I D1,lnct ( 1111rl IO l .tl'i 4\npcln
(he ( ,1ughl.m "'°"' al~1 pica f\ar&tuncd,
plcadin~ iu1lt) tn m.i1I fraud, wire fraud
nd flhng • fal~ loan &pphcatt<'n
l he Coughlan' were accused or
haudulcntl\ obtauung mo~ than SR
m1lhnn an k'an' from financial an t1tut1<ln'I
around the rountf). cntaang knc:kr\ 'Wlth
fina"'-111 suarantce bond that were lacer
discow:f'(J to he uncollatcr•hz.c4 Tbcy
borrowed the monf')' <Ktcnsibly to fund
a· ti c<.1.1ll' P'"I''' '' hut U\('d tht lun.t'
11>1 lhl'll 11\~0 l'lllf'•"l' pfll\Cl'Ul••r<,
1lk~1 I
l\.•tl l ••ucl I ir1 ,, "' were <.t:ntcmt•d
\1.md1\ ,,, ,,,11,1u1,·n1 thrc:t' .ind 1"11
H.U pri,1111 l\'lffi' 1nd h~c their l.tlhll
W('rC' ~1\l'll fl\t' \Clf' pnlh.i!HlO 11n lnt
l harf.!C I he ( •'ll)!hl 10' "II hc.:111 'C'r.tni.t
lhC'lr proh 111110, tiler lhC\ l!CI PUI "'
f'rl\\Hl
I he l 1•111o1hl:ln' .111 ,1,\..cd th.11 the\ ht:
1"1f.!nnl 111 1 m1n1mum 'c' unt' pn"in
"hen 1ht•11 1c.·rm' he~in 11n \cpt :'O If
1h111 1c411nt' .ire ~ran1cd. the~ would
hlo..t h llr 'C'nl In Huwn I t•dcrJl Pn<.<1n 111
1-..crn ( 1111nl\ rhc .11\ctn'lll\'(' wnuld hkt'f\
"' I nmpcl\ I cilcr 11 Pr"''"· a medium
,c, ""'' facil11' m \ant a Barham Ctlunt\
I he l1nn' th.11 madC' the deal'I an
11uc,111•n I ,1~k Bund" and Cal ractfa<:
< c1n,1ruc1111n ""ne 1,wned hv the
Coughl:rn ~n' \til~ Jack Coughlan wa\
ctpcded to 11c:1 a 1<l crner c:ntentt than
h1' 'l<ln'> hccnu~c he had J pnnr ronvict1on
fnr a1d1n& ;and 1~ttang mutual fund fraud
and ~llU c he wa\ vte~d by pros«utoM
a 1n '"'"lator 1n the late« ca..c
"There'• alwa~ an cx:pcctation (of a
to u1h \entencc) after you sec 1he
ma,.mtudc of the case." Q\-ertoom \aid
S..FRAUD,.. ....
·R·~-------------
Jeny Anderson, the director of golf at the Newport Beach
C.OUUtry Oub and the president of the Southern California
Section of the PGA, which bas over 1400 members. Anderson, a
Monarch Bay resident, has been with the Newport Beach
Country Oub for about five years.
.-r •IHI 11E lD~-----------'
Anderson, a Southern California native, began playin3 golf at
the age of 13. His Pasadena home was across the street from the
AJtadena Golf Course, and young Jerry could often be seen
working on his swing after school. He continued to pl.ay
competitively at John Muir High School and at Pasadena City
College, and almost joined the professional tour.
''I tried to become a tour player, but it didn't quite work o ut to
my expectations," Tho mpson said. ,_aw•••.,_ _________ _
For 24 years, Anderson was the bead professional and General
Manager of the Olevy Clase Country Club in Glendale. "The
biggest challenge in managing a club is in pleasing all people,"
Thompson said. "Some like social activities and others arc strictly
golfers. You try to create a way of life for those people who
utilize the club. It is basically their whole social life," he said.
ml. Wf.AllBI, 11&---------
Aftcr hi.s stint at Chevy Clase, Anderson moved to what he
considers his best assignment so far, Newport Beach.
"h's the finest location in Orange County for a golf course,"
Thompson said. "h 's always cool and it isn't windy. I think you
kind of get poiled living down here."
By Tom Spciss
K athcrine Bell was sttll deba1ing whelher to tell her editor
about the previous night's excitement when lhe telephone
rang.
She caught it on the second ring.
"Katherine, it's Hector Castel. Coroner's office.··
Katherine was surprised. The county coroner never called.
Never.
''Hey. we finally got aJl the tox tests back on your cousin.
Thought you might be interested."
As usual, the laboratory tests had taken
weeks and Kathenne had all but given
up on finding out how Thelma Jean
died. The stock answer that she'd been
htcrally scared 10 death just didn't wash
"Well ll might comfort you lo know
that the tests were clean. Katherine.
Nothing. Nothing at all. No drugs, no 0...-COAST alcohol, no nothing."
"So what now"'" asked Katherine.
sliding a ye llow legal tablet m front of
her and grabbing a pen.
by Sh#sl L.s.u "What now? Well, that's it. It's over.
Cause of death goes down as naiural.
Case is closed in my book.··
"Whaddaya mean it's closed? rhelma Jean was 28 years old. A
28-ycar-old doesn't no rmally turn up floating face down in the
Rhi.1e Channel, especially when she's supposed to be back home
in Galveston. You guys oughta do belier than that."
The phone was silent Castel, who'd been the county's coroner
for two decades, didn't take kindly to criticism. Never had.
''I'm going to pretend you didn't say that, Katherine. Your
cousin's dead. l'nt sorry about that. But she died of natural
causes and if you think we're overlooking something then you
figure it out." The hne went dead. -r .__ . _ _, , o ()'IC' rontinucu ...
m mNT .w1 • com WA
PilDL
.......... ................
~-:-=as.. _ ....... .... _ ....... ...,.....,
c--.ca-
•••111
......... ,,.__........, ......... ............. =r.:: -== z.:
How to reach us at
The Pilot
c:.irmWioft
Oranp County 642~333
""'-.....
Omfied 642-5678
Dilplay 642~ 321
~
News 540-1224
Sports 642 .. 310 News. tpott1 fax 64~ 110
MIM<ait
...... OMcJt 642~)2l
lwina fa 6J1-St02
CGSta Mesa OOys
Ch<>rus. dedicated
to singing craft _ ... ...... ....... .. ....
F: Nib II apple pio and U
uiotic u Old Glory = the AU-American .,,. a.on. bu tbe appeal of
boda.
With 40-~ bannoay. the boJt
preaeal a bit of Amedc:aDa -
tried wl tnae mOtilel from tbe
~tt":.::11 c:=· ii
currently performina twice a day at
tbc 0ranae County Pair. Their
30-minute concerts feature a
number of IOQp from their vut
repertoire including Broedw8l_ _
favorites, standards from tbe Bil
Band era, a patriotic tnl>utc to
John Phi.lip Sousa aad a telection
of Dixieland and rqtime tunes.
Acxordina to
the Rev. Richard
Coughlin. ..... ...... 'They're
like
sponges
founder and
director of the
chorus, the boys
don't have a set
routine and wait
for him to
introduce each
song.
Re¥. lk:hard <:oughlln, abaft, clredl lhe ~ loyt choir, now perfonNn& II dte <>r-.
County Fair. Below, nlne-yur"'Old chorus ntember Springer Browne~ a note worthy perfont1.w .
if they
weren 't so
young
maybe they
wouldn 't be
able to do
what they
do.'
"They have to
learn 40 pieces,"
he said of the
boys. "They're
like sponges -if
they weren't so
young maybe they
-Ill. c g woduldp'ht be hablc
Chorus director to 0 w at t ey
do."
Each member
of the chorus must go through a
rigorous audition and training
program before becoming a true
member of the chorus.
The audition session lasts
ro ughly three months. Then they
take a "traumatic test," although
Coughlin said he tries to make it
easy. After the test, boys go
through another six to 12 months
of training, taking voice lessons
and learning routines.
Chorus members rehearse
Monday through Thursday
evenings and Saturday mornings.
But despite their rigid schedule,
Coughlin said chorus membership
doesn't interfere with the boys'
schoolwork. In fact, he said their
devotion a nd new sense of
conccntra1ion improves their
grades.
In all, Coughlin said there are
aboul 135 affiliated with the
group. Some arc still in the
audition or training process, he
said .
"I llltc to sinf and it's a great
experience," said 6 112-year chorus
veteran Marco Serrano of Costa
Mesa. Before joining the chorus,
Serrano said his only singing
experience was in the shower at
ho me.
Within the general membership
of the boys chorus is the Touring
Chorus, which travels each
summer throughout the West.
Canada and other locations. Stops
in the choir's 20-year history have
included Russia, Washington, D.C.
and the East Coast, and the group
has perfonned with celebrities
such as Bob Hope, Rich Little,
Della Reese, Steve Allen and
Henry Winkler.
Colin Browne of Newport
Beach, who has also been a
member for 6 1/2 years. said he
was introduced to the chorus by an
older brother who was a member.
Although he was reluctant to join.
he said once he did he really
enjoyed it.
"My frie nds used to make fun of
me," he said of his classmates.
"But after the father came in and
eq>laincd (what the chorus was
about). they said it was 'neat' and
stopped teasing me."
"I love to sing and would always
perform for my friends," said Ben
Engelke of Corona del Mar, who
I == . Real Estate
o Rec:c:nl real c:si.1c: sales u re·
ported by the CoetJDailal Lawy«n
Tltk Co., Santa Ana.
Cllll ...
o 94' MaseJJ9n St. $230,000, 3 bed-
room, 2 bath to James E. Innis.
o 347 NassH Roed, S2A2,000, 3 bed-
room. 2 bath to Jamie: L Mann.
Did You Know?
o 2J6l Cofptt Dr .. $210,000. 3 bed-
room, 2 b•lh to Patrictc J Shanley
o JIN Plattt Dr., S2S2.000. 4 bed-
room, 2 bath to William Golift.
n Ill S..tJ._o Roed, S2«.500, 4
bedroom. 2 b•th 10 Donald J. lam•r
n "'4 MJicdlaa SC.. Sl «,000. 4 bed·
room, 2 balh lo Karen Jocham.
u Newport Btedl: In 1926, between l l1t and 23rd St. on
Central Ave .• now Newport Boulevard, Bea ~ik 1 aawtootb
daip boltboute and nudline lhop foT Ben Better Bo&u,
Inc:.. It wu taken OYU by South eo.t Bolt Bu Compury,
builders of aleek ocean raccn, SnowbVdl. Stat dea and Rhoda
dau bolta. Durina World War U and the k.onaa War. South
Cout built mineswe.cpcn, IUb cUlen aod alrcnft reecuo boats
and .J11 awarded the Navy .. 8" f111 tor 111 pro_..... record aad
blab ltandarda.
bur bAah 1t1ndardl and ~ ,._. .,. -.in.._.
when JOU tend 10Uf hiltorbl fMtl •OM Y• a... Tbe P1oc.
P.O. 8ol 15'0, C.O.U. W... ,_.. Ct 1· ,.,Alm~
•
has been a member for the put
three yean.
EqelU, lib Browne and fellow
chorus memben Alan Gillett and
AalOil Camp. Mid performing on
staae ii one of the best parts of
membcnhip In the All-American
Boys Chorus.
''The concerts make 10 many
people happy;• said Serrano.
Jn addition to singing while on
staac, the boys bounce, sway,
march ud salute to the rhythm of
the music.
Coughlin has as much energy as
the boys, who range in age
between 9 and 15. He aJso
bounces and dances on stage
throuabout their performances -
all wblJc directing the chorus. H e
even takes time to invite the
audience to clap and sing along. In
between, he manages "° squeeze in
a few winks to friendly faces
watching the boys sing or gently
reminding one of "his" boys to
smile.
There's a definite rappon and
"fatherly" affection between
Coughlin and chorus members.
Coughlin started the chorus in
1970 as a parish youth project
while he was at St. Anthony's
church in Anaheim. The
10-membcr group soon grew and
attracted boys from throughout the
county. l'wo years after
establishing the group, Coughlin
...... -0 Ul7 OdiDrd Lue. S410.<XXI. 3 bed-room, 2 bath to Bruce Hanlford.
o 1807 S.HlllwM4 LMN. S69S,OOO, S
bedroom, 4 b81b to Tbomu Buctin1·
ham.
a 1134 c-moc1on lloed. S560.ooo.
' bedroom, 3 bath to Pam Yoder.
Costa Mesa
was trans( erred to St. John the
Baptist Cbu.rch in Coeta Mesa,
bringing the chorus with him. By
1974, the chorus had taken oo its
new naQlc, moved to its
fairgrounds home and become a
non~profit organization.
Any young boy, preferably 9 or
10 years old, who i.s interested may
join the chorus. It is not affiliated
with any church, sc~I, .a>mpaoy
or government organa.aoon.--For
more information call the office at
533-7600.
0 ... s-e-.. ~ .. S650.000. 3 bed·
room, 3 b•tb to Rich•rd Doney.
o 415 Nwtlt Star laM, Sl.485,<XXI, S
bedroom. 3 bath to Edwin M. Her·
&hey.
o 1'11 .........,... &..IN, SS31.,._000, 4
bedroom, 2 bath 10 Steven J. uwie.
Someone: rnc:d to pus• phon~,a~lbe Arro Gas SuUOn. 799 19tb St. A sh~d derk ref\i.sed thi bill ud lbc: potential customer f1U'I oft . • A Newport Beacht'U>si. Men Piloc mac:blnc feU Vtetlm lo tbinet who may
have been stc:alln1 quartc:.n from KVCnl maduncs In the ateL Tbe wspecu
10ld about $7 worth of quarten 10 an employee ot Sir Ouirles µquor etorc.
2981 Bristol AYC., then attacbd the ~per ¥endina IDldUM outdde. rnakina off with the mtire chaoac bes and abOUt SlO in quartc:ra. • Two can parked In the COYered ~ at.ructurc: ol the 8cftJ1y ~
Hotel, 3350 Avenue ol the Alu. were broicll Into MoncS.y, ~ la a 1ci1
of about S7,900. The fmt car yielded DOthJna. but the leCODd car coaWned
cxpenaivc: oomputer drcuit boeida. wlrida were atolela. • A c:qc o( milt.Un idnlJty ~ rcalllted in a ltabblQa near l9tb
Stre&t Md McJmori• A.._. A -old ... rqiortcd Chet ""he ._ lol-
low'ld from ~·a Cada lllO roril Aw .• bf • man wllo caUcd Mm "0.W," then plu!WDd a tmfii ~ b'8 kft •l'llL An ofticu rehlm ... to
the ecenc, ~. loud DO blood °' ~1'CIC ol a crilD&.
•
GuestS thrive on
the OkobOji plan
T ............ .. ff·----~ . .,,.., al 7'11 ,..., ................. ID • IT• lllllt dlillill
,... ~ --:-.! • t"..::t. -.... -I I ... IM _ ., ......................... nm. ..
pli"'6 •••• , .. ~ .._ --Iii-.... but ........ lti~I-.
WIMll dllil • ......_ _.. ~-a..t eway.11 men
............ -.. -ol ..... ..,... locall. ....
-• 1 1 ol 1111111• plln a Ell! ..,... ....... ' w ..... f.rieedl wbo live a. Lab ~ •
•11 JlfW IP':llt blCbd eway iD tbo MNlb""*'11
w al Ion. You~ bow tk piece:
)Ill 80lda al SpeDCer wS wwblt west al
~,.... --Anlokf'• Part. 1'1lley an u.e oaJy people we bouse2 pea with
bcome thef DC¥et pey ...,. anentioa to --.. n.e, do thdr buDal daiQc. we amuse
ouncha ud we Ill ~ c:omcnc come the
bolpiaality bum.
raiaiu hire. It teem.a to be lbc perfect way
to ~ and be. home gucau. But if JOU want
t.bia ..... poticy to 1'0ft. JOU wilJ D£od I aoocS 11101tment of tourist broc:hwu. You can
pt a bia wad ol them 1t u.y of the loc.al hotels.
While tbue ii DO promodonaJ folder available
On the
Coast
----• for tbe bigest Ulmist attrac:boa of than all -
the Plclfk Ocean -just lbout ~ elte in Southern
California ii well cowered.
One thiDI you diac:o¥a NfllDYlini throuah all these pampb)ets
it the stuff ,ire lab few granted that tou.ri.!ts can do right hen.
They can abip-out Qn a cruise of Newport HaJbor and ICC bow
the other half -make that tbe other l/7598tb -tiYcs. This can
be done any number of ways: Your basic rubberneck cruise, your
lk.ipper-it-yourselr, pun-putt cruise, your luncheon, cocktail or
dinner cruise.
Prices range from a few buds Cot the shon-form harbor cruise
up to much more than a few for the food-and-fun affairs. The
Hornblower people -sort or the General Moto~ of the
harbor-auise industry -bas luocbeon and din11 ... · dance cruises
which arc said to be fun, festive and not cheap.
V isiting the dory 1lec1 at the
Newport Pier is plenty cheap.
even if your guests pick up
something freshly caught for
dinner, as well they should.
Tell them they shou ld luvc
the house very early and have
breakfast down by the pier. tell
them it's a local tradition.
Then sleep in.
'Tell them they should
leave the house very
ear1y and have breakfast
down by the pier: tell
them it's a local
tradition. Then sleep in.' Be sure you h<tve a folder for
the Or1lngc County Fair m your
tourist Library. The fair runs through Sunday and there's plent) of
great stuff on the schedule.
Certainly, they won't want to miss the Husband and Wife
~Contest. That goes off tonight at 6. If they feel qualified
and W1Sh to participate, the "Ho ney Where Are You?"
compctitK>n i5 opco to .. Any fairgoer who has had experience
calling a spouse." The rules no te tha t, "Contestants mu't refrain
from use of profanity " Shucks.
Friday at 3 p.m. there's the Piloc's "Where Could She Bee"
competition. Thi! is prob9bty best for luds. t>ut there 1s no age
limit. But you do have to put your face into a plate of whip
cream and pick up little things with your mouth.
Thursday afternoon at 3 there's a ballroom dancing
competition for folks 55 and over with cash prues in se,en
categories; Fnday at 1 p.m. there's an any-age
bubble-gum-blowmg contest; and Saturday at 1 p.m. there ·s a
(reek.Jes contest, also with no age discrimination.
And thai's only a part of it but. alas. the Bee Hive hairdo
contest 1s ha.story.
But what if none o f tha.s works? If your guesu just murter.
"Gee. that sounds, ah, interesting" or their kids JUSt grumble .
"Borrrr-ang." here's a tourist attraction The Fred Column has
d&OVCrcd for exactly tha.s kind of bard c.ase :
The legendary Frcdcnd.'s of Holl~·ood L&ngcne Mus.cum and
Celebnty L&ngcne Hall of Fame.
Sec Cybil Shcpud's Nighhe! Mac West's kimono' Cher's
und1e.s! Su the bras of Z.S. Zsa Gabor. A'a Gardner. Jud)
Garland and Belinda Carh.slc! Sec it a.II, plus "a rctrospectl\C
exhibiuon of vintage Frcdcnclt's undcrfa.shions ..
Wait'll they tell the folks back home about that'
COSTA MES A -There wasn't
any sleet or snow. but somehow
hundreds of notice~ about a Costa
Me sa P lanning Commission
meeting were lost an the mail,
causing officials to postpone most
of the scheduled public hearings
Monday naght
Of the 14 public hea"!ngs
sch eduled for the mectrng,
planners postponed I I because of
the mail mixup. Pnncipal Planner
Perry Valantine u td
Public heu1ng notices arc sent
to all residents and busmcs.sa
within 300 fec:t of any property in
question ticforc the c:ommmt0n.
Valantane said About 1.400 of
those no tices for the: Monday
public hcanngs were postmarked
Juty 10. 1n time to give residents at
least a I 0-dav no ttee of the
hcannp But 'onty a rc-w had
amvcd by Juty 18
"It's hke 1,300 of them dJdn't
get where they were going." he ---------------t
New Car
Season
Is Here!
\nrr ~•>u hat -our ~'
u r ~•I. ca ll us tor •
quote on that MW e111r! ,,_.. __ ... ~ .......... ,
131·17• 4'4lOldNrN&t.WfCllllWllt'\IM ~
Ntwpona.. ~
(NcsHotc) -·---
said . "A l tho ugh v.e could
tcchn.cally say we m<.t the legal
requirements. we thought at would
be a little unfa.ar to continue ..
The pubh c hearings were
postponed until the Aug. l 2
mcctfog.
lt
~~c.n..Ot
f~Mfti
IV 7W IN.l
•
KLOS radio jocks
draw enthusiastic
following at Fair
--~ ... _
0 . lind .......... weary
=-~~~ tM clowatroddea wS b8dcled
m wn
ney walled la liDc Ader a bot ... rowma <.-.. llftenooo
bldtop .. the Or-.e O>uty
Fair cm ~ -lfl 10 obUin
the ...... ol moralna r.ctio'•
bottet1 jesters, Martt ud Brian.
.. Just being cao.e lO the radio
wkn they're on ... 90mCtbina ~cs like ao 1ura. It males
~r day," said 4'0-year-old junior
....., ICbool teacbcr Jan Miller of
Orqe.
The line snaking away from the
KLOS-FM booth, wbeTC Mark
Tbomplon and Bria1l Pbdps were
liping au~ could be seen
u a teatuleot to the ~s
~.In the lucntive,
competib\le world of Loi
~morning radio,
they're ranted numbe:r one in
their time slot. Thcy"vc even had a
street named lfter them (of
course. it'• a dead-end alley and
they asked for it).
Bulletin board
Y Daycamps
HEWPORT BEACH -The Newport· Cow Mesa YMCA is l&kin& rcptratk:>n
fOT a variety ot surnmer prosrams indud·
in1 Y-Daycamp for aaes S-10, Y·
AdYcnturc Camp for qa 11-13. Miah Si·
crr1 Camp for qes 12·151 Catalina 't:an-van for qes tl-14 ana Sunshine Co.
Otildc:are for qes S-11.
t-or more inforrn.allOn reavdinl. dates
and CCM>ts. oontaci the Y).lCA al 642·
9990.
Student exchange
The Amcncan lntercultura.I Student ~ still has many toriqn studcnu
who bnc appbcd to visi1 the Umtcd
States •ho are run amiqus.-y W&Jti~ for
I family lO .a:iepf tbc.m IDlO their borne
If ~ uc interested in bostina a student
trcim E&irope, South Amenca. Australia
or J~pan contact Belinda Grull at
( lO))<J87-0700.
Impotents Anonymous
COSTA MESA -Impotents Anony-
mous meetings arc held the third
Wcdnesdav of each month an the board
room of ..roag Hosp111I from 7 JO pm to
9)() pm
lmpotcnu Anonymous LS 1 non-profit
org1niu11on founded to diJcuss the d1ag·
llO$IS and trcatmcnu of unpotencc Boin
pannen arc enooura.,cd to attend. For more anfOTIJlltion, plcuc call t-80(}-«S.
1101
Baseball exhibit
COST A MESA -Gary Caner ol the
Los Angeles Dodgen wtO be 1ppeann1
11 Crysul CDUrt an South Coast Plau on
Saturday. July n. from t I I m to I p m
C111er Wlll appear a.s I h1ghhght or the LA Oodccr Blue ~bat that Mii be in
the center ooun uca from Julv 25-28
for more mfonn1t10n. plea.\C call 4J5. 11 ()()
Sailing club
NEWl'ORT BEACH -The Balboa
Sa1hn1 Assooat'°'1 holds 11~· mec1tngs on
the first and third Tucsd1 of each
month 11 the Amencan l..t1tt0n Yach1
Oub. TM club ~ located It r1 ~ I ~th 51
an Newpon Buch Meetings N-gan ,.,
6 lO pm For more anfonna11on. uall ~).\I.I~~
ORT brunch
COSTA ME:SA The Org1n1u11"n
fnr RcJ1d throudi Tramma IORTl ne•h
9-<wNot!IMI ........
Three-year-old Katie Carcia of Diamond Bar hams it up with morning radio celebrities Brian Phels-,
left, and Mme Thompson ~ the Oruge County fair on Monday.
"They kcc.p me smiling. They
have aome sort of charisma I can't
define," said Deanne Smith while
she fended off her two young
daughtcn -obviously bored with
the idea or meeting more adulu.
Few adults were impatient with
the line, however. AJI waited
patiently for that brief moment
formed Orange County chapter wall hold
11'5 fint wmmun1ry event brunch on Sun·
day, July 28, 11 10 '\O a m al the Wcstm
South Coa.1t Plau in C'o\ta Meu
For more tnform.ellon about ORT and
the commumry event. call 1-800-743-4671!
Art talk
NEWl'ORT Bl-.ACH Five an1sts
1od 1 representative from Gcm1n1 G E L
will be leading anfonnal talu 1t the New-
pon Harbor Art MuM:um during the
montbs of July ind Augusi
For mort 1nfonnatt0n. call the mu·
'ICum's cducallOn department al '759-
11:!2.
Class of '81 reunion
Nl-WPORT Bf AOI loron1 dc:I
'-br H1_gh School's Cius uf IQ I Wlll be
havan~ au 10-ycar reun10n Saturday. Aug
'· at the Aul)Orter Inn an l"cwport
Bc1ch The rcun10n uaru at 6 p m and
g<le\ unul midnight and will offer 1 buf·
k t dmncr. music and lols of remtDdCU21
Ticket\ arc SSO per pcnon All dus
mcmbc~ arc 1n,1ted
h1r m<Hc: informalmn call Mike: Fell .tr ~x,., '\~"II) or S.·011 ~1un at 'i'il-4342
Horse Show
COST ·\ M ... SA lhc \ccund annual
!"CHA ~h.1wJl)W11 h1ghhghts I busy
-.chedule nr equestrian events dunng th<:
Wth .innual Orange County Fair The
Show<.Juwn 1s a "'~1crn horse ihcrw llated
fur Juh .=6-28 during the f11r's 12-<hy
run The .:ompcl1t1on will include both
JUntt•r (.igc 17 1nJ under), and amateur
11~ anJ ••ldcr) df\mons
F1.ir mnrl" anfl)tmauon. pie-a~ call 1~ I·
'~41
ailing ingle
'~'-'PORT Bf \l'll '1c""P,'n S1il·
an~ l,in1tln Plu' J 'l(Xtal club for \1n~lc n.•n·•mt•~inii .. dull\ "'IW en)O)' w•h •<-·
11,1t1c• •u,h I ) u ll1 ng sw1mm1ng.
\Cl R \ ~nJ lan<\C "" meet\ C:VCN"thc:r ~cdnnJ.i, di ( '"''' .ll'l-P "1acAnhur Ill\,! °"ie•l"•rt Bc.•~h
The fun •tart• JI ~ f m I nr m.•re 1n !urmat on ,;ill r.' I llll~,
Assault preventio n
l ,>mmun11v \cf'\1<c Pr<lgremi' xrual 1
A.uuJlt Victim 'le" l{C\. Prcv<'nllon Pru-
11um~ •nd I.JI"" f-nfur1..Cment A3$1\tancl
prngr11m Wiii again ~ conducting "' free h11nnu1I vuluntccr t111nm1 semmar\
The Law 1-nforlemcnt u. ... ~tancc Pro-
when they could finally gaz.c upon
the faces behind their ravon te
voices. Many tried out a favorite
joke on the duo, perhaps hoping
to somehow etch themselves into
Thompson and Phelps' memories
Angela Anderson of Cos1a Mesa
found a way to do just that,
without words. When she finally
uam provides anmec:hate cruu 1Dlc~n
fioo lO vlctims at the tcenc of the: crime
and follow-up support teMCCS The Sex·
ual Assault Vic:tun Scrvicu/Prcvcnt10n
Procram provides cnsu hotline counsel·
1ng, usists victims dunng ho,p1t .. I eom1
n111ons and with follow-up ~uppurt 'er
VICC$.
Volunteers arc needed fhc trc:e 1r.11n
mg sem1n1n will be held 1n 01.ing,c
C:Ounry beginning Sep! 4 lhro~h ('kt _
Call Barbara West at 7'il'l-lifl~ .-11h .in'
qucstlOfU or Lf you want 111 re (tl\lcr
Head start
COSTA MESA -Thr <hinge Count\
Head Stan ~am 1s now ai:ccptina en·
rollmc:nl a~UOIU for the f.111 proenm
whicb be&JDS Sept 10 The .read Stan program Will be enter
mg lnlO lls nth )'CU and l\ well known
for 1ls unique prosram which fOC\IX\ 1)n
the self esteem of the di1ld ind involve
mcn1 of the !am1tv
Cluldrcn must be 4 ycu" ol "lte "' Dec 2. 1~1 ind mllll be from ltw.
income families Welfare fam11ici and
children from fQ'lter h<>me' ;arc ehg1t>le lo
stood before the DJs. Anderson
pulled down the top or her sun
dress and suggested they sign her
breasts. Thomps?n and Phelps
happily complied.
After that, introducing Donny
Osmond on Arhngton Stage that
night probably seemed
ant1 -<:hmaC11c
•!tend the tree prasram. U uk!rn wut
h•nd1appang c:ond1oons are a.ho~ for the pr am ind ATC enc:ou Le
•pply Fami~s must provide proo of 10.
come and ammuniu1t0n) must be up 10
dale ror 1hc child
The Head Start progT&111 otfen a ~
ctv of learning 1nJ soc11Liution actMUCI
during the ) I "2 houn the childTcft ••
tend cla»e' A snack and hoc 111.DCb art
prOVldcd for each di1ld Mtb tuoda b
mcah prl.Mded by the: c..iiforoia St.ate
Child Cuc: Food Program.
llcad Stan clanu uc held in C:0.U
Mcia
C.ill """:-~920 !or an application
Book bags
'Jl-~PORT BF.AOi -De~r-sryit
t>..•11lt b.-p. a p1lol pTO)CCt of I.be Or.ria
l uunry Public l.tbrarv. uc available tar
hcck-0\lt al CO!>ta Meu hbranc:s
The turqurnsc.. canvu blip future t~
hbr•n·~ logo repeated acrou 1t 111 b\ack.
Do ""' MOT •• fW• tMf .....
krT':' Ir .o. Had Jt , ... """'.....,. .ot
~ a., SL. C..u ""--nli.11.
Mtmber Of
Amtrfcan Gem Sodtt)'
Accttdlttd ~m Lab
&EM WISE
5"Jt out • profeaJo nal for
~city littVtca . A gloeaary of
t~ Is In order to help you
know who you BTe doling
with when you think o f
purchastng ~onn
Ge•olo••••· A genulc.
uncontrolled tltle that can ht>
UMd by anyone with • desire
to MC up shop and ~I Jewei.
By ttMtf, lt say. little about
the penon · • comp«tenc• or
ethics.
Gracl••t• Ge•olo•l•t.
This dlplorNI Is •warded by
the Gemologt~I lratttute of
Amnica to lndlvlduals who
haw completed var1ou• t~i.
of ~ologt<:AJ tTillnlng. While
their courses •~ a cellent
th ere are n o ye a rly
requallflcatlon requirements
wtth thac diplo mas Most
Amulcan Gem So c iety
jewclen recttwd th«tr Initial
tr.anlftf from the GIA. ....... ,94 ........... Th ..
title 11 conferred by the
American Gem Society on
lndl vlduels wh o ha v e
gcmol09lcal knowl~ and
who adhere to AGS '• rtstd
.thkal code. Thi. tttl• .. good
tor one ~ ontv and mult be
reMW.t MCh Yffr b-...d on
contlnu"-8 eduaatlon and on
Hatalned ethical bu1lne11
practka.
c.~un.4 G•••••••••·
T1'1• more advanced title
ott.ed by the Amatc.n G«m
Society require• additional
ttudy In dlamond1 a nd
Mary Barr
Cen1f1ed Gemo10Q1s1 Appraiser
colortd iienutona u well M
the mutnv of aophlstkait~
t~lng procedures Thlll ttti.
must al.t0 be ~-.amed each
y~
Certlfle41 Ge•olo1l•t
~raa.-. Th&a. the apprUaal
title lh.t the ~ Gem
Soddy awards. requlra atill
more advanced tnUnlnt and
np«T'~nce In <ktcrmlnlng the
value o f gemstone• and
Jewelry It. too, mu• b.
re--eamed by mutmlnatton ud\
year
We have three Cmtn.d
G«mologbil ~ on our
•elf. We are proud to h9w
qualtfted bv our ~ Md
~ l'tMa to be dected
to memberehlp In the
Amerion G«m Soct.ty
N .. '-c9tl1a t• Wm MOr. N.,.,.., ._.
(114) 6G-Dll
,
Doryman's owner
changing that one
booking at a time
By Tony Cox
.... Nllllr
J ust one more room a night is all Michael D .
PaJitz asks.
The 28-year-old C.OSta Mesa stockbroker
tut month acquired Doryman's Inn, a toney,
Victorian-style bed and breakfast near Newport
Pier that consistently is booked up on weekends,
but is usually about half empty on weekdays.
Palitz's first-year goal is to book. on average, one
more room per weekday in his 1 (}.room inn. It may
seem like a modC$t goal, but the 10 percent
increase in weekday occupancy would make the
difference between mediocrity and success for
Palitz's first business venture.
With an average room price of $200 a night, the
slight increase in occupancy would mean an extra
S5 2,000 a year in income for Doryman's Inn,
money that Palitz hopes would snowball into
further improvements.
"Then next year, 1 can put that money into ads,
then improve another 10 percent. until finally, I
have a waiting list every day," Palitz reasoned.
Toward that end, 'I f II · I i+h Palitz bas spent the last e tn ove W1u I several weeks sprucing up it the first time I the property, spending -1 You 've got s5o.ooo on enemat and saw I . internal refurbishing the beach , you've work. He's also tried to
got class, you've instill a more
got Victorian se_rvicc_-0ricnted attitude
wtth his staff.
grandeur and . "What we want it to luxury . And we Wiil 1ook lilcc every morning is boost our like the WTapping was
Occupancy during just peeled _off, .!ike ~ . . . brand new ann , Palitz the week If It klllS said. "We want to create me., an air of nothing but
-1 Ql I. NUlZ class.··
Ooryman Inn owner Doryman's service
repertoire features
business a111re for staffers; free champagne and
roses for speciaJ guests. such as honeymooners; and
help in planning and arranging guests' itinerane~
"I stress complete service," Palitz said. "The
people who work for me are people who perform. I
pay them better than other hotels. and they either
perform or they're out."
The other cleme nt of Palitz's business plan 1s a
marketing campaign. He said he hired a woman to
call travel agents. offering 20 percent commissions
on weekday bookings and a free room night for
agents who produce JO weekday bookings.
Doryman's staff is also se nding out glossy photo"
and brochures to promote the property.
Palitz has done some more marketing on his
own. scclung referral relauonships with businessc"
in the Newport Pier area. He said he already ha\
referral relationships wit h Lhree other small
waterfront hotels in Newport -Little Inn on the
Ba,. Balboa Jnn and Portofino Beach Hotel -"'h~reby the hoteliers refer customers to the other
properties when their own rooms arc full
P ahtz bought Doryman's from his former
employer. Newport Beach real estate mveswr
Richard L Lawrence. Lawrence built the inn in
1983. He spent $2.5 million creating Doryman's in
the gutted second floor of a century-old building.
Dan CarnH has Joined Sheldon Good & Cn a~
YlCC president of business development in the real
estate auction company's newly established Newport
Buch re&'onal office
0
Jay HulMrts ha~ hcen named art director at
Lenac. Warford. Stone Inc.. an advertising and
public rela11ons agency m Newport Beach. Huibert5
is a We.,tm1mter resident
0
BUI Oupn has been promoted to vice president
in the Newport Beach office of C B Commercial
Mortgage Banking.
0
lee,.,......,.
Doryman's Inn owner
Michael 0 . P~itz
(above) shows off a
room he is trying to fill
on weekdays. With
weekend bookings
holding steady at the
10-room inn (right),
P~itz believes he'll be
successful if he gets
one more occupancy on
weekdays. He Is trying
to boost business by
attracting high-quality
personnel, offering
incentives to travel
agents who book guests
and 6Changing
referrals with other
hotels.
located across Ocean Front street from the historic
Dory Fishing Fleet
Below the inn arc the Newport Oyster Bar &
Grill and the 21 Oceanfront restaurant. There's a
private stairway directly from the inn 10 21
Oceanfront, and the upscale restaurant offers room
service for Doryman's Inn guests.
E ach of the rooms offer different floor plans
and decorating touches. The rooms feature
fireplaces, marble sunken tubs and brass beds.
Lawrence decorated the rooms with antique
lurn11ure and artwork that he acquired during
'rCaro; of traveling around the world. The f urmshings and materials throughout the inn arc
lllp of the hne.
"No hotel would think 10 pu t stuff like this in,"
I' j lltL said.
Palltl said he's fortunate in that Lawrence
C\labh.,hed a goo<l reputation for Doryman's.
l.Jwrcncc was willing to sell the business and lease
the building because he was moving to New
/.ealand, Pahu 'aid.
Do ryman's Inn will also benefit from the city's
recently completed $2 million renovation of
Mcl·adden Square. near Newport Pier.
R.k banl H.W. ~nnetl has joined Lange Financial
Corp. in Newport Beach as senior vice president of
finance.
0
Shirley Garcia, a chiropractor. acupuncturist and
nurse anesthetist in Newport Beach, has been
named presldent of the Orange County Chiropractic
Society. Garcia has practices in Newport Beach and
in Lo<> Angele<.
0
Rober1 E. Maples, formerly an award-winning
investor relations officer with Costa Mesa-based
Archive Corp., bu been named a vice president in
the Newport office of Hill and Knowlton USA
START
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0 n the other hand, Palitz is entering the hotel
business at a time when occupancy and room
rates have dipped at Orange County hotel5, and
-;mall waterfront properties like Doryman's have
not been spared.
Christine Luetto, manager of the 15-room
Portofino Beach Hotel, said Portofino's occupancy
rate this year is about 5 10 10 percent below
normal levels, comparable to declines experienced
oy other hotels in the area.
Still, Palitz remains an unabashed optimist.
While his one-room credo seems like a
con,.erva11ve short-term goal, Palitz is more
aggre,sive in charting his long·tcnn objectives. He
sau.J that within 10 years, he wants to operate five
or s1it small hotels in the area. He runs Doryman's
through a company called Seaside Management,
.inJ he hopes to build Seaside into a major hotel
operator.
Hut for now, Palitz 1s concentrating o n having
fun with his new passion and building his business
one <;tep at a time:
"I fell in love with it the first lime I saw 11.
You've got the beach, you've got class, you've got
V1c1onan grandeur and luxury. And we will boost
our occupancy during the week if 1t kills me."
BrT•C. ........
T be Relol\ldon Tnllt
0orp. m•t rweaUac
...... "'cwtidlltea
fer .... top poll in its --------Calibnia hoadquarten in
Cotta ...... but rat
a.wed. the llCDCY that
acbn1niatratea failed S4tLa
ian't k>otfna for another
bwcaucnL
"For the director job,
we want a private-indultJy
guy who'• influential in
the local community,''said
Lamar Kelly, auet
division dlrcctor with the
RTC in Wuhington, D.C.
The polition, expected
to be filled within the
next two weeb, bu other
key requiremenu: real
estate and secondary
marketing experience, tics
with local governments
and strong management
skills. RTC obsenien have
sr ·culated that the agency
will tap someone from the
thrift industry for the job.
"With those credentials,
you don't ftnd people like
raindrops, but we're
looking at some strong
candidates from the
outside," Kelly said.
The person who acts
the job will be the fourth
director in the two-year
history of the rapidly
expanding, 380-cmployee
office, inheriting what bas
become a hot scat within
the embattled agency.
Citing the~
responslbihtics of the
Costa Mesa office, the
RTC is upgrading the
director position,
effectively oustirtg cunent
boa J. Michael Berry.
whose application for the
elevated position was
rejected.
The Costa Mesa office
has been crilicized for
Regulators
sell 2 thrifts
COSTA MBM -
The Relolution Trust
Corp. baa told two
failed thrifts, Colla
Mesa-based Malibu
Savings Bank and
Fountain Valley-based
Beach Savings Bank.
to commercial banb
in Los Angeles
County.
Brentwood Bank of
Los Angeles acquired
t h c th re c ·b ranch
Malibu Savings. paying
a $500,000 premium
for Ma libu's $30
million in co re
deposits. Brentwood
also agreed to
purchaae $112 .4
million of the failed
institution 's assets,
$103.8 million arc
subject to liberal put-
back options.
Long Beach-based
Queen City Bank
bo¥gbt Beach Savinp,
paying a StJS,000
premium for Beach's
$39,7 million in core
deposits. Queen Oty
purchased $24 .9
million of Beach's
assets. $7.8 million of
which can easily be
returned to the
government.
Both thrifts
reopened M o nday
under their
ownership.
-By Tbt Pilot
being slow to dispose of 8$SCtS. The office currently
manages and is trying to sell S 11 billion in assets
from 42 failed thrifts in California and will
eventually assume another $24 billion in assets from
12 failed S&u stiJI in operation.
To handle the increasing worlcload, the local
office will expand to 600 employees by next spring
and is scheduled to relocate in November to larger
quarters in Koll Center Newport.
T he new-look office will have a new No. 2 man
as well. Frederick C. Doug.las Jr., a 15-year
ve teran of the Federal Deposit lnsurancc Corp.
who has worked the last two years as Kelly's speClal
assistant in Washington. began work July 15 as
deputy director in the C.OSu Mesa office. Douglas is
rcplacmg AJbcrt Porterfield, who will return to the
RTC's Denver regional headquarters after a
tem.porary assignment as acting deputy director in
C~ta Mesa.
Douglas had been rumored to have the inside
track to replace Berry. but RTC officials made clear
that they want a heavy-bitter from the pnvate sector
at the top. complemented by Doug.las' public-sector
experience in the No. 2 slot.
"Fred will help the new guy with g~rnmcnt
rules,'' Kelly said.
D ouglas said he believes the new leadership
could help the Costa Mesa office shake its
reputation as a slow-moving liquidator. He said that
by training employees how to work more efficiently
within the RTC's policies and procedures, the local
management team will step up the pace of asset
sales.
"When they understand the policies and
procedures, I think you're going to sec assets move
out the door," Doug.las said.
Still, Douglas said the C.OSta Mesa office's poor
reputation wu not entirely deserved:
"The reason why this office has appeared 10 be
slow is, rapid growth kills you . Work keeps coming
at you, and you never have time to stop a nd
breathe."
Berry, fonnerly a managing agent for the RTC at
failed Santa Barbara Savings. was considered a
permanent director when he joined the Costa Mesa
office elaht months ago. Both of his predece550n
luted oo1y about three months in the position.
Berry may be offered another pocition within the
ascnc:y. He has declined to discuss bis future with
the RTC.
FlleNet settles suit
COSTA MESA FilcNet
Corp. haa reached an out-of-<:OUrt
Jettlement with ahareholdcr
Michael Friedman, who sued lbe
COIDJ>&ft1 lut fall for ~ cbMns up the price of it1
throuah misleadina financial
statements.
The C.O.ta Me.sa-bucd company,
a maker of imqe ud data
proceulna computer 1ya1em1,
aareed t o pay 19',000 to
Friedman.
IUFFELL'S
•llLITDI •· ..--.~ ...
Secoad: Now that ~ child ii
a certifiect add, «» la the cut-oft
date for maternal advice and
Mart·to-beart talb. Your
tnditiouJ pri¥ilep ..
abnlpt'1 withdrawn. It's quite an
adjuttaieat to llt at a family
dhme~ llYina nothing -and meen•,. Il -
Third: Parents
• •• ""' mUlt finally lmlnn'V coa.front the fact ages tbat.Jwtior,thc
fc
arents Haq-Teo-Terror
th of the IU.rf aster an boards, ii now a
their baby portJy
boomer's middle-aged man
with ten strands 401h or hair in a birthday. shining expanse
----of scalp.
Altlilllon lanlors
WE NEED YOU!
To flH your Seniors Page with news and. information on
acttvtties an<i events on Senior me in our community.
Please send in stories on activities and scheduled
events ~ birthday notices (for seniors 90 or better) to:
T.J.Hmdd• ...
Saden hp editor
TIM Pilot
330 W. Bay St.
Coaa Mesa, CA '2627
or older. l
met one of
thele 1adiel
at• party; a
lively woman
ia ber
midcDe
ninetiea with
W.up~r
W1i) is 1S.
MJa.
Whhenpoon
explained
tbe division
of powen
between an
elderly parent and child.
"lf you live long enough," she
sighed, "Your child becomes the
bOss, no matter bow capable you
arc. It's one or those unwritten
laws like being seated above or
below the salt." She went on to
say that her granddaughter was
waiting in the wings to take
charge of her 75 year old mother
one day. "When will that
happen?" I gasped. "When my
daughter forgets her keys and
almost breaks her neck climbing
Al-'by .. ~
in the bathroom window."
"Enjoy your freedom as long
as you can, "Mn . Witherspoon
warned. "Geriatric kiddies arc
very bouy. They think they're
smarter than you,"abe winked,
"but they have the same fajlings.
My dauS)\ter tells me 1he same
joke OYCr Ud OYCr again."
"One good thing," she added,
"We get a family rate with our
gcroatok>pt."
N-.q Mdatyn u • rulde11t
"'u,p.. /llpJ.
FREE ADMISSION ...................
REVOCABLE LIVING TRUSTS ...... ...,., ....
16025 Brooldlurst. Fountain Valley
Wednesday, August 7 1 :00 & 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, August 29. 1 :00 & 7:00 p.m.
••11•••1111111 -
RESERVATIONS 848 -6499
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~ -.ooo. not M00.000
·~~doeaftOl9"*
proe.e Ind '*' ,..,. In ..
.,.,.,_,. of Iii W« I I I I 'I lncQm9 1U
Senior Activities ·
OASll aNIOR C£NTEll ,.. °"" ..... a..., ........ ., -.... .. ,. a.-., Mir. ,,,,,
J.lonwloa ... = adMtMI wl hnedo-, , '•a 3UJJI(
.......... J:Js
9: a.a. -Wedicu'e CoeueU.1; Snr,· ...
t'.30 .... -...... oerd
lO:GO L& -Cud ...... Sewt.a
0..-V.Ta.bleT_. lp.a.-1, ,,.,......
2.:Up.a.-~J-w 0 ,,,,,..,.
l:lO a.a. -""*81 T ........
10 UL -Wortd Oeop...,
l&.JO a.a -Oolf
llp.a. ->helclltGk
12.:lO p.a.. -A8oChcr ,....
1 p.m. -B1ood Praaure; Mab kma
2 p.m. -Water Elerdle; Tnail; Sailiaa
3 p.m. -0111i1 SinaJu; Polk Duce
7 p.m. -Cribbep ,,....,, JlllJ 25
8 a.m. -Wood Camas Newsletter
~:30 .... _........,
10 a..& -l!aft:ia&; Bnmo Pn-:r-
ll:lO p.a. -latti1 1 •n t& s.,..wa
lp.a -T.WCT.-..~&.
MUllc; Phocopapby
:J:JO p.a. -I.Jae Oaoaas
'*-'· ,..., J6
8:30 ui. -Pbylical TraioJn&
9 Liil. -Walkers; HiJLorical ~hliabll
JO a.m. -Freads; Duplicate Brif:!ac
lO:lO Liil. -Gott
1 p.m. -MU Jong
l:lO p.m. -Duce._ I.Me Bud
2 p.m. -Water &cn:ilr, Tca.o.is ......,.J._,D
8 a.m -Yap tor Semon
&:30 a.m. -Art Worbhop
9 un. -Pottcty
9-.JO a.m. -Ukelelc
I 0 Lal. -Vim .t V iaor Eztrciae
12:30 p.m. -Chair Exercise
I p.m. -Coin .t Stamp Collcc:ting
Newsletter, Mah Jong Leaom
2 p.m. -Water &creases; Tennis Team
• Deluxe suites. private and semt-private studios
• Transportation to doctors and recreational activities
• Warm and caring environment
• 24-hour security and staff
• Assistance ~ith medications and bath1fli
• Walk to shoppif\i areas
•We offer care for your loved one while you "acation
Af/.;;J..JL, Q..t1r e.,.
The Hunlinp;. Senior Residence
1115lfl.n.lnaAw ... H 11 ..... (714)842-7788
• Liye Remote Bru;tJ\..-.1~t an u tree prrzt:~ from
KEZY Saturday. J uly 27 11 :30 a.m.-2:30 p.m
only
• ' l I ' ~ ' I \\ ~ .
• Free Cooler Tote Bag~ (from the tabk in trn11t ut
Sylvan Learnin g Center while ~u ppl ie la ·t )
• Free Pizza und Foccocci ~1 fro m ~b rco Pulo l tali~rn
Eatl.!rv
• Free FooJ Sample from thl.'. D t.:11 ,tl Champ;1gnl'"
tvl a rk et
It's thl' ki nd of sulc you can really ~ink your teeth into-the "-md with free foot.I . hot
deals nnd cool gi fts (cooler tote h<1gs to he \.!Xact-whik upplics last).
•
It 's oil happening nt Ne" port North Center where there :uc lots of hops, so there'
lots of hopping and &hi-. "cckcnd only, )t'U can save up 10 50% at many of them!
NEWPORT NORTH CENTER
. •
' \
0 ne of tbc ... llcw .... ~of acrdle b...,..
~ii,... ........... to..,. 1bk ii tM
time wbelt body ,.. clDllla't teem to drop. StrelllD ... ,
seem to inc:reale. And' IMpe cloem't eoem to be hoMbl la the
direction you want a r.t • JOU would lite. .
You were veiy happy when body fat was
dropplna. llleqtb wu increuina and abape wa
a~~~ .. =-:. . I
We need tbeac ·~tickina pointa." Thil ii the
time when tho body ii pbysiologically adjusting
to a new pcnnarv:ot state of dccreucd body fat, streftllb increuo, and body shape chanp.
When you work out, chanaea take place. Not
all of these cb.utaa are immediately aeen. Fint
there is the internal chanae· The body has to
change physioloaically internally before external
P I changes oC:cur. Cut Weck we talked about the F~rsona basic iotemal cbanps that take place. Next. the rtness external or reoopizable cbanacs become
apparent. However, after a certain amount or
change is completed, the body stabilizes at thOIC cha.naes and
spends time permanently solidifying the progress'° you won't
u~mediately lose the changes should you have to stop exetcisc for
awhile.
If plateaus did not occur, for ex.ample. and you dropped your
body fat from 35 percent to 17 percent without any stabilizing at
different stages, as soon as you stopped exercise, your body fat
would go back up to 3S percent or higher (crash diets are an
example of this.)
However, when you drop your body fat and stabilize at
different levels along the way, if you stop exercising. your body
fa t will onJy increase to the last plateau. For instance, if you
started out at 35 percent body fat and dropped to levels of 31
percent, then 26 percent, then 21 perccnt,-then 17 percent, with a
plateau at each level, your body would stabilize at the last level
or 17 percent.
In hke manner, if you started with a bench press of 135 pounds
and moved up to a 350 pound bench press without a plateau, as
soon as yo u stopped exercise your strength level would return to
135 pounds. With su ength increases having plateaus in the
ro utine it is a different story. If you start at 135 pounds and move
up to 350 pounds with plateaus, the last plateau being 335
pounds. when you stop exercising your stren$th drops only to 335
pounds, not 135 pounds without those "sticking points".
So be thankful fo r the times you feel you arc not making
progress. Your body is just physiologically adjusting to a new
level. And. more progress is just around the comer.
Leoa Stele Is a proleu«" of plryllaal edualloa at O~
Coast Coll• and OW'Dtr of ~a Shk'1 H~all.b Club for Woatat
Jn N~ &•~b and Cal/tom/a Coast Club Fitnes.s C~at~r In
lmne.
•
I bard a rilllt ._.,a.. Mi
idea Ol pld l.....W ,... .....
would be IO ltawe llled up Ml
moaey .., the time be ...
. l'd ... tMt
. ...ltm ... ,.
Family
Counseling
tbillMaWM QUGefttina • bit
IO IDlkc bill point
tbat cbildRn -even adult
children -call
be "Qippled" by
a Luse
inheritance.
I'd heard
another man,
who I would
guess was even
richer, say that
be thoqbt that
this idea was
nonsense. A million dollan or two,
used properly, could provide
comfortable ho using, good
educatio n and freedom to make
other kinds of choices which arc
not based solely on need.
This man pointed to several
friends who had benefited from
large family trusts and who had
gone on to live particularly
-uccessful lives. Money, he
insisted, had bought them the
ability to also be generous and
charitable to worthwhile causes.
The first man argued that
mo ney can kill self-esteem when
you haven't done anything to earn
it yourself. He said he would be
very happy to provide his children
with all the c!ducation they could
handle as a means toward
providing for themselves. But
that's alJ.
I spoke io a third guy. a
self-made man, who had risen to
his economic and political positio n
rn spite of many obstacles. His kids
know all about the proverbial JO
mile walks through the snow to
school a nd about how he worked
after school at some factory to
cam a few bucks.
His kids, he insists, having been
raised in Newport Beach. know
nothing about the "real world."
So therefore he feels he has an
W bicb one of tbcae ... ii
right?.
None of them and all of tbea
When it comes to pasaina oa
legacies and bequeathiq ~
there as no one universal ript or
wrong. What is clear is that moeey
is not the only thing we pc to our
children. In fact, how rich we
choose to leave them after we die
may not even be the crucial
question at au.
Co~ider bow you feel about
other important legacies.
For starters, think about what
values you'd like to instill in your
heirs while you are still alive.
Make sure your kids not only bear
about your value system, but that
they sec evidence of personal
effort which backs up your words.
Teach your children to set
personal goals and provitic them
with acc:css to the tools thcy'U
need to survive and feel good
about them1etves. (I'm talking
about tools lite education,
encouragement and the time to
pursue personal dreams.)
Teach them good health habits
which they in turn can teach to
the ir children.
Regardless of your wealth, or
their potential wealth, teach them
about the vaJue of money by
encouraging them to work for it.
For example, allow them the joy
-and I do mean joy -of
earning at least part of the money
needed for a first automobile. O r
at lea.st have them participate in
financing the car insurance or
gasoline. Or all of the above.
lf you 'vc done a good job all
alona. they wo n't worry much
about how much money )'OU'll
leave them when you die because
they won't really ne ed it anyway.
A wise woman once said that
the more child ren concentrate on
.......... covam FOR A RAINY DAY -Should pAftftb who hwe diewd
WNJth in their lifetimes INw it few ~r childttnl
how much their inheritance will
provide lhem. the: less they dcscf"'e
1t, the: worse cholCCS they'll make
with it. and the more potential
harm 1t may cause.
Dr. U.ada AlpD Is • ...m.,ir
-4 tuaUy cwasdor ... ollJtt 111
COrr"Ma dd Mar.
Inside Medicine
Tanned, healthy look may hide deadly· skin cancer
~Y Dr John T Chiu
Soeciai ID Ille Plto!
The sun is the sustenance for
nearly all lives Yet too much of it
ma) create 'crious h ealth
problem' for us eart h bound
humans. A tanned look symbolizes
good health, but evidence suggests
otherwise.
Melanoma. a potenualty deadly
form or sk:in cancer derived from
the pigment-producing cells called
mclanocytes, is expected to afflict
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lladlelev ....... .,.
1lllndt s...,,
u,... Mtdiall Can uree.o
V11C1118r SWJff1
P'w ~ I i .... ...,...,.... ....... 6 ..... een1cMt call
756-9000
(
o ne: in 75 Americans by the year products with leSI than a SPF Through cp1demiologic studies,
200 al nothrng is done abotrt it. It (sunburn protective factor) 6 they linked the rising 1nodcocc of
will claim 6.500 lives this year, rating wort onty slightly better maligna nt melanomas to the
more than 36 times the toll than any plain body lotion. widespread use or sunscreen ~mce
inc urred in Operation Desert Using a suntan oil without any the 19605. The Garland brothers
Storm sun blocking activity at all is eve n suspect su n.screens actually may
Yet another 2.000 deaths arc worse, since 11 only dulls your cause some of the increase in
expected this year from two other perception of burning until it a.s malignant melanomas by alJowlng
less-malignant forms ol skin cancer too late. Even a high SPF rating more U VA pcnctrahon to the
known as basal a nd squamous cell docs not ncces.urily guarantee you skin.
carcinomas. The grim picture is safety Ou r current ratin& system Add i t io n a 11 y. by us 1 n g
that more than 600,000 new wn considers only UVB (UV light sunscreens, people arc aMe to stay
cancers wiU be found this year with wave lengths between 290 and in the sun longer and thus become
along. and the number is rising. 320 nm) protection. exposed to even more UV A
All or these skin cancen arc We had neglected the effects o f damages. Moreover, they suspect
linked to cumulative lifetime sun UVA rating until now since this that the vitamin b production
exposure. iight spectrum was oomidcred induced by UVB, but not UV A.
It is obvious, then, that althouah relatively harmle~. Thus a market exposure in the skin may help
a moderate amo unt of sunlight is for tanning parlors with lamps protect the skin against the
des\fablc, excessive exposure providing mainly EVA rays is damagers caused by sunlight.
causes is nothing but harm. or created. That an easy tan is not The Garlands' views, however,
course, some of you may counter without cost is bigbli&btcd by are not aencrally shared by other
that "but I use sunscrec:n all the Cedric a nd Frank Oarland's dcrmatololilts. althou~ mos1 or
time." H o wever, aunscrccn c:ootrovenial findings. them aaree that previous severe 1-----------------------------. sunburns and cum u I at iv c
"I Help Wo men Get Rid of The Blues"
... those unwanted vane on their legs and other ams.
W• arr ded1CLJted & commltt«J to '"* non ~rg#QJ trutnwnt ol tltoM ul\Slgh~
~ Mtd s:p«J.r wins. w. us. tlw
/Mat su.t. of th. lJr1 low rulf off1a c.,..
Call for a FR.EE ....,_kiaa CH1111t11U..
(714) 9634456
VEIN CARE INSTITUTE
VEIN CARE
WILLIAM KANDEL, M.D.
lllll M..,..U. Slrtd (...,. T.a.rt)
'"..._ v_.,, CA '2"M
prolc-.ed sun exposures may be
more important in causing
maJipant melanoma.
There ue yet more prices to pay
for a nice tan. If you don't use a
good sunscreen. you may get
earlier wridJcs and skin cancen.
.BYCD if you do USC &OOd
sansuecns, you may become
acmitized to various inafcdients,
such as ABA (parb-aminobcnmtc
ec:id). contained in these products.
An even moR clear and present danacr ii tbc UIC ~ tannina pOla
containin1 cant~aaantbin. ID
addidoa to caasm, a ~ form
ol ucmia caUed plaldc anemia.
tanmng pills have been .linked to
allergic skln reactions, hepatitis
and blurred night vision -a price
mo re than anyone can afford.
The: solution to these problc~
appears to be simple. Yet with our
soacty equating good health to a
nice tan. these problems likely will
stay wtth us for ycan to c:omc. Fo r
now. your health may depend oo
observing the c precautions:
•A vo id u nne c essary su n
e~urc, e~pcc:ially between 10
a m. and 3 p.m.
•Cover up wi th as muc h
clothmg as possible. Wur broad·
rimmed hats a nd U K-rated
sunglas3C s with large-size lenses.
•Use a sunscreen trith a SPF of
15 o r higher. prefer.bl)' one
providing both U VB a nd EV A
protection. Note. however.that
suMCrecns with SPF abcwc IS may
not be any more effective..
mA.void tanning from artiftciaJ
lamps.
We a t the Medical Pina
Assoaation at Newport Center
wish you a healthy and bum-fru
summer.
(This co lumn de.ls w11b
common meda l topics Md buhh
wuu OucJtiom are aaswered by
medical Md dental ~ in ~ •ppropriate &kl of ~·
Pb# forward (JUC$tiom to the
Medtt:.I Plaza Auod•tion of
Newpon Cc.nter, ch the Haith
Bduarion Found.a.lion., J60 Saa
Mpl, Suite• Ncwpon BeM:ll
92660.)
cmct ltaHonerr 760-0111
BAY~CBNTBR
ech
'
Theaters take a look at life
of, dclys gone ·by and today
......... .. _
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BJ ::--· dm 6' aapt b lce-T, •bo . =-ID ,.._. It his a.. waldl in tho a1w.-. •
J.JJ' I 1IDOSa _. hi wrJ thtoup Orup
eo.11 Swlliy lot tho ... of three abowl. wt
the ...._. -ClClGlplete with Cajun food, a
....., ... ud the bldelt IOUDd tyltcm known
tO IUD -... dm lfved up IO tho advance ~It-~
Ed =:nee, with tbe mption of
Jw'a ~ luted about •s minutes. and
aU of tho blDda appeared pumped to be on-= ~·· abow was the third for the fieata, bepa oa llnanday in Phoenix, and
coaU.w today and Wedneaday at Irvine Meat:,.. Allilpllhheatre.
Rollim Bud opened the abow in icaJ
Heary RoltiM' ~le -loud -and enderwith
Jw'1 Addkdoa'1 Perry Farrell urging the
capecitJ crowd to rqiater to vote and lead
IOCiety rather than watchina otben control iL
But iD between. there wu plenty of music. lce-
T, the leJI~ .. ~ Ganpter," continued
to bridle tbe pp -if there ii still one left -
between rap and rock. His biah-energy presence
ad pqamatic lyrics, wbicb included references
to unrealiltic teJevWon ~ such IS "The
Colby Sbow" and ''Ozzie and Harriet," urged
llateaen to realize the nature of their
IUrroundinp and "do 10mething about It."
lc:e-T hu appointed himself as society's
pm.bu, and the roU seems to fit. He is
promoting a positive message almost
wbliminally, calling for an end to segregation -
between police and the public and between black
and white. His band not only rapped a good
pmc, but played one as well. Instead of starting
and finishing his &bow with an electronic sampler
behind him, Ice-T rapped to live music from his
three-man badt·up band.
And it came acroa well.
Nine Inch Nails managed to simultaneously
sboct, scare and electrify. The band appeared
with a sreenish cast to its color -members dyed
themselves slightly with a murky green
raonance. At ooc point durin3 the act, lead
singer Trent Rcmor jumped up and onto the
keyboards while they were being played -
almost k:noc:.kiJll himself and the instrument from
its wobbly stand and into the "pit" of slam-
danc:ers which had formed only moments before,
sending on-k>okers into a frenzy.
But Remor never noticed.
Where Nine Inch gathered steam from its
fusjon of music., Siouxie cl The Banshees
~ ....... ,._
Siouxie of ·Siouxie and The Banshea belts out
a tvne Sunday at the Lollapalooza concert at
lmne 'Meadows Amphithotre.
appeared to rely more on their environment for
performance energy. The "Rocky Horror Picture
Show" was brought back from the doldrums of
movie oblivion when The Banshees took the
stage with their eccentric costumes and
suggestive lyrica. Siowcie danced her way through
the ethereal set with a mixture of grace,
acrobatics and color. Her abiJity make and
entrance and lead came through as a love potion
was cast over Irvine for slightly less than one
hour.
Then the curtains were drawn.
Minutes later, a.s iC to end the festival with a
bang, out stopped three members of the 1985
graduating class of Van Nuys Hjgh School and a
31-year-old from Brooklyn, sometimes referred
to as Jane's Addiction.
And they're definite hometown favorites. Seats
weren't needed as Jane's played tracu from all
three of their albums, spanning their six years as
a group. Rumors of their break-up aside, they
managed to play as flawlessly and as one unit -
and with a certain amount of flare . The band
never stood still as Farrell belted out one tune
after another as the band presen1ed itself as a
product -complete with dancing girls and a
video saeam fca1uring hallucinogenic images and
old surfing clips.
Jane's Addiction, true to its image, did manage
a slight amount of rancor by 001 playing ils most
well-known song, "Jane Says" -which was
written before Farrell became a part of the
group.
Farrell, who writes most of the band's songs.
had never wanted to record the song and docs
not like to perform it live.
Otherwise. LollapalooLa was everything 1t wa~
supposed to be -and more.
For info rmation about today ·~ and
Wednesday's concerts call 740-2000.
A-.., ....... cealuria .
aid ..S aD06er COD~
tM'**....aideloftoday'a
wortd •• J rilll the aew urMll on tt.e ml tbeater calendar tbil
w1e•nd
~c:.:: "Mwuns for~--.
Prid8J•tM
.... ofteriaa "' tbe OrO¥e Shakapeare
Peatm.I.
Meanwhile. the
Colla Maa avic
P1ayboule will
present -rbe
Brict and the
Rose," a drama
of inner-city
suivival. for a
,_
11111
two-weekend run, Backstage
beginning
Thursday.
Jules Aaron -who's holding
the reigns at the Grove
temporarily foUowing the
departure of artist.ic director
Thomas Bradac -is directing
"Measure for ~ca.sure," which
will feature Kamella Tate, Daniel
Bryan Cartmell, Ron Campbell,
Richard Hoyt Miller, David
Anthony Smith and Carl
Reggiardo.
Perfonnances will be given
Thursdays through Sundays at 8:30
p.m. until Aug. 24 at the FestivaJ
Amphitheater, 12852 Main St.,
Garden Grove. Call 636-7213 for
ticket information.
"The Brick and the Rose" is a
project of the Cost11 Mesa
playhouse's community outreach
program and is being offered free:
of charge. Howard Shangraw
directs the drama by Lewis John
Carlino, and a panel discussion
will follow each performance.
The show will run Thursdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and
Sundays at 2 p.m. until Aug. 4 at
the playhouse, 611 Hamilton St.,
Costa Mc a. Call 650-5269 for
additional information.
T wo other local shows nng ~
down their curtains this
weekend, bo1h adapted from the
same novel -Mark Twain's "Tom
Sawyer."
Orange Coast College 's version
will give its final performances
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at the Plot Booth at the Ora.1811 ~ Fair.
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Tbunday throup Sunday in the
Robert B. Moore Auctitorilllll at
vuyinc cu.nain dmca. with ticket
informatioD and racnatiom
IVailable at •3Z-S880. The (nine
Valley Collqe ThcaterfaiR for
Oilldren bu three more atqi.np
ICbeduJed, Thunday throup
Saturday at 8 p.m. in the outdoor
I VC Courtyard. and reactVations
a.re taken at SS9-3333.
0 Singin' in the Rain,'" an
exceUent stage vcnion of the
c1aaic Gene Kelly movie. winds up
this weekend at Saddleback
College. Pe.rformanocs are
Thursday throu&h Saturday at 8
p.m., Sunday at 3 p.m., with
reservations taken •t 582-4656.
Meanwhile, these other IOca.I
productions arc on the boards and
continuing:
•"Deathtrap" at the Backstage
Theater, 1599 Superior Ave.,
Costa Mesa (646-0333), Fridays ,
and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays
at 2:30 th.rough Aug. 24.
• "The Butler Did It" at the
Newport Theater Arts Center,
2501 Oiff Drive, Newpon Beach
(631-0288), Thursdays through
Sarurdays at 8 p.m .. Sundays at
2:30 until Aug. 11.
•"The Robber Bridegroom" at
the Huntington Beach Playhouse,
21141 Strathmoor Lane,
Huntington Beach (832-1405).
Fridays and Saturda~ at p m.,
JI 1' : .. -& •>P\4 .... ,.,. . ., ... '• ...
The Platters,
The Dixie <•ps &
Brian Hyland
II " .... -..\ •lf>\1
Gary Morris
ll I' :1 ,\ •11'\I
The Jets
II n : · ' ~ . P\1
The Co••oclores
II l\ .!1' ' (\ -p\I
Air Supply
" "1'9• "'' ...
r 1't1-~---
0
0
Oull smoking.
matinees July 28 and Aq.. • at 2
p.m., through Aua. lA.
• ''l'bc Pirates ol Pcnzaooc" a.t
the Weumi~r Communi1y
Tbeat.er, im Maple SL,
Westminster (527-3463), Fridays
and Saturdays at 8:30 throqb
Aua. 10 .
· £1sewbere, .. Blame It on tbe
MOYies" and uy OU 're a Good
Man.' Oiartie Brown" continue
through Aug. 11 at Saddleback
C.OUCge (582-4656), "Veronica'•
Room" runs untiJ Aug. 3 at the
Garden GroYC Community
Theater (897-5122) and "Annie"
continues to charm audiences at
the Grand Dinner Theater
(m· n IO) througb Sept. 4. • BACKSTAGE -The Forum
Theater on Laguna Beach's
Festival of Arts grounds will
present a new production of an
updated version of "Little Red
Riding Hood" on weekdays only
from July 31 through Aug. 16 at 3
p m. The unusual production will
be staged by the Laguna Playhouse
Youth Theater at no extra charge
to Festival of Arts grounds visitors.
The modern ~rs10n of the fairy
talc was written from ideas and
unpr0V1.Sations from students of
the Youth Theater's summer
production workshop and relics
heavily on their creativity. CaU
494-8021 for ~er details.
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AIMltcan 111aal
Al 1 ockllon
Special dates, .art
to accent ·calendar
A "&sl._r'. <aloadar Uluotnted will! Ille ..-ol
Alzheimer's polienlt II I key ele....,t in the "Memories In Ille
Matiltl" fllad.!lisioa -~ lllOUlltod_br Ille Alzbe ... r's
Auociltion of ~ County. Volunteers h""" betull ..W,.
advcniliq bl the calendar one day at a time. Beadet trldltioaaJ
ads. advcrtilen oc individuals may purcbuc one or more data
from amona 14 months (tVJt-12./92) in the publication.
Occasiotis sucb u birihdays or anniversaries can be claimed by
individuals for a pun::hase price of $100 per date. Commercial
advertlsen can call a1tcntion to speciaJ events by advertisin1 on
1hose dales. A dcfllrtmenl store may advertise a white sale, a
book store a signing patty and an automobile dealcnhip the
dates of the new model showing. Possibilities arc almost
unlimited.
The calendar features reproductions of painlings and drawinp
done by Alzheimer's patients. The beauty of the work. is that it's
done in a nurturing environment rather than in an art therapy
class. Alzheimer's patients don't require therapy, as such, to
regain old skills. As their memories fade in the progression of the
devastating disease, they often cvotvc to a place where they
forget how 10 speak or use eating utensils. Through their
poignant art, they communicate something from their pasts.
Each year in Octobe r, the Chapter stages an exhibit of the art
in the Guggenheim Gallery at Chapman College. The art is
beautifully framed though the courtesy of members of the Orange
Coast Chapter of the Professional Picture Framers Associa1ton.
On Oct. 20, a special "Preview" brunch will be held at Mr. Stox
Restaurant, Anaheim, to showcase and auclion the paintings.
Funds collected arc channeled in to the projects established by
the Chapter lo service the needs of caregivers working with
Alzheimer's patients.
For information on adve nising in the cale ndar contact !he
Alzheimer's Association of Orange County at 283-1111.
.
Ballet Pacifica
Introduces new
daRC8-1>f'Ogfam-
I t -"""""t flcm .. ou-of ThwldlJ ........ ...,.,..,.
.. Ille ClonJDI Itel -"'-
of -ud~l,.... .....
this -_...., .. ill -Well, -oftlJe ...... ..,...,.
Tbo. Gfl 5 .. WM all lbou.t Ballet ,__...__ __ _
ud the .,.,,,. ""' • welcome for
the
cborco1rapher1
uddaaocnwbo
were ready to
.. make it· happen.
Titled Pacifica
Cbore&rapbic
-~.left.-and .,.,.,.. cloector Molly lynch
. ....._. Die Project 1991• the the comfy living room couc.hcs.
....,.. presentation will they confessed that the auditions
J •• 11 showcase the -worts o f four were challenging, but great fun.
Soc · ty exciting young Overseeing the evenings ---•le•"'• dance makers. impressive edibles was Creative
The public will Cuisine's Karen Isley who would
gel to peck Aug. at South Coast acfmit to no theme but "lots or
Repcno ry Theatre. carbos for the dancers.·· like
Explained Ballet Pacifica board aspa ragus n ico is~. confetti
president Scott ~. 'lhis is potatoes and spinach fe tticini.
a first step in improving the Everyone WIS hn ving loo much fun
quality of, and broadenin~ the to notice there was brain as well,
recognition for the company 1n the in the shape of olJ ki ng salmon
community." (16 cucumber sca1~d pounds of '==========================., According to Ballet Pacifica's in-hUn) daring eaters to remove him geniously clad artistic director, from his place of honor on the
The Only Hotel on the Water
in Newport Beach
Experience the quiet charm
of a NeM.• England Seacoast Inn -
Amenities include:
Continental Break.fast • Bay Cruise • Bicycle~
• H o rs d'ocuvres & Refreshments •
• Milk & Cookies after Dinner •
\71-l!ti7 l -!'IKU() .~t;r:·*/t' fll 1 I 1d 11 l'.ul !)n\c
fKOU)-llK--l-lht.tt.,\l 'c1,1.pu11 li.:.u.·h
jl'UM)J)lK--1-ltlti /l '<i\J •
1
///, ort '~ ( \lJ.:'f,(,l
t 7 14) 671-1 ~fl() t t· ·\ \.) = m I , ..... ,.:~~!".~~·~·........ <IR;
German Home Bakery
\\ C(ld1ng Lakes I ht• Olcl
Ja<;h1011 ~~a) !"'10 l~racc Ln
C M Call tor inlci 540-028 1
Costa Mtta f"oriJa~s f<N -ddiltl rte<tpll<HU
Chri.fl!'f'laJ Part~-bu.tina1 mtttiltp
ran acrQtrtOdrur up UJ 2YJ
Ml/ cafrNWJ'ba' ,,.,.,Jronv
, •• 551·'7134
On The Bay at Newport
Elegant Saturday
Receptions 11 am · ~ pm
Complete Ca tering &
Full Service Bar
Contact Maril
6SO-S112 ................ -.. .,
: You r ad can If
: be see n here I
: Ca ll Candy j
: al 642-4321 ·
• ext. 310 : '~·····~·••.U·'
Molly Lynch, the choccographers spark.ling glass table.
were free to be as creative as they Eliubeth and John Stahr were
liked, bu rdened with only minimal there to help underwrite the two-
parameters. "We sec this as a real week workshop leading up to the
learning experience -after the performance. On hand too were
performance of the works in Joyce Jus~, BeYttty and One
progress the choreographers will Carmichael, John and Sally Joan Nnille, far &eft, meets with dancer
1atk aboul their pieces with the Richardson, Anne Nutt, ktsy dM>reographtt WiUiam Soleau and Janine Pavhen
audience, they'll be free 10 express Moore, Joan N•ville, DaYid . ~---
1n .,.,,ords what they've expressed i.n Emmes and Tom and M.-riltyn
mO\·ement." Sutton.
Guest director Diane Coburn N aturaUy !here WIS wallzing.
wilt oversee the efforts of the NatunUy there was dining.
dynamic foursome (whose works Dinner commenced with lobster
will ra nge rrom classical point bisque en croute basking in cream
work to the avant garde) James and a:>gnac. Then came shrimp de
~II. Colin ConMr, Lnlte Jane jonghc and pctit filets and for •
Prssemier and William Sole.au.· fina le !here was chocolatey i.cc
S oleau conceded, "1 was a cream laced with cherry sauce.
dancer. but I could hardly , Putting traditton aside, picking
wail until I would s1op dancing. It ·up his baton. Barry Cole and the
was the craft I was after -the Sounds of Music reminded the
craft that leads to the creation." gathering there Wt're other ways to
(Charmingly, Soleau offered lhat have fun~
two women dancers 50 suited his Among the celebrants were Or.
work at the auditions, he decided and Mn. S.muel Mayeda, )Ames
lo re ·work hi s offering to fit lhc Middlem•s, ~ Sherwood,
reality~) Mr. and Mrs. James Mean, Mr.
Two of the 14 from the Balle! and Mrs. Sheldon fottnuin,Mr.
Pacifica 1roup .,.,·ho got to show off and Mrs. Robert Harris, Mr. and.
their stuff were J.;1mn Ymeron Mrs . Jim Arnold, Jeffrey
and Janine P.;1ufsen. Relaxing on Schroeder, and Mrs. Duyl Arnold.
Video
171 41 843-9231
~ Pholc:'!'Jllphy
CAKES BY APRIL
All occasions.
reasonable prices
631-6543
Romantic Weddlnp at Su
,-,....,.~,-_......,v.-
•o..~c~
~lat..i~~lo
fot VOUI' tludpl
(714) 675-4704
Venetian Gondola Getaway z ;. • en..-, .... ~ l_ l c;;. •Ct..~~ ft J
• U. C1P<tt•f~ .oil'\ • l Cliart•n """""' ....... (7t41 675-4704
7WI ni.J-i· llllt1mda
~ ................ "-......... __ ..., ••r-•• ~ «11'61 I.... ,_..... ....
r..m.1 •,... tlll c.e.-
. 714 494-9650 714 SSS.ll04 --
Remodelin& • General Coo
Specializing in
Custom Cabinets
<i /GtcMn Refac ·
587-5191
Uc. # 591611
Tovoew..r, ......
Alc•IMcC.-11 I 1t'I o.-..c.i-.u. ..n .. ,.,.-,,
' •
H is upbeat humor wu contagious. The presence of Cal
Schmidt could brighten any assemblage. He loved funny Aoriea. and could tell them with puckish delight.
More often than not, the yams were on himself. In a recent
C8ble television interview with Barf)an VeMSSa. he told o f a
q.&Mring lass anected on a theft charge involving "33 C."
'The jurist wu perplc:xcd. Why would a gill be brought into
court, be demanded to know, for stealing 33 cents?
An otficc:r explained that it was a shoplifting charge, and what
&be had purloined was a brassiere. Cal said be gave her a
Allpended sentence.
One of Hiz.zoner's best buddies, working together in many a
faaod..raJler, was the Villa Nova's Jim Dale. When Cal learned
Ir Cllll °" ..... ...... _, .
T--~~ ....... ---~t I .. S1tudaJ alatit tla97
pni-..S ~'::t.:'--.... tlliD •> _.. .....
~ .. ~"==
Foqpdptkw ._ wUllllias 11P b a
weebDd ol f\dl at tbe .... a.y
Oub. Tbe SIOO ticbt ~ ._
the .., ·to pt the ball rollial for
the weekcod'a lo¥c Affair, a
round-robin tennis tournament
wkh priza in the Sl,000 ranee.
Accorcfin& to committee membe. r
Helen Guliiun, "We wanted to
borrow a little of Merlin's~ to
fmd a cure for cystic fibrosis."
Fortunately, the ~p may only
have to pinch a bttle sorcery -
breakthroughs in the field of
genetic engineering have put
researchers within reach of their
goal in curing the fatal affliction.
Southern California CF chapter
president Paul Motft!ko was happy
w1th the turnout of more than j(j(j.
"In the _past three years this event
has really come o ( age." Nobody
bad to go t& the net to predjct that
the weekend's activities wouJd get
the foundation profits of $45,000.
Tournament directors John
CrAig and Irv Stumer saw to it
that if you ever had an inkling to
own your own sporu team you got
your chance. Beside the pull of the
many silent auction items. they
conjured up a OOYCI Im auction. It
allowed bidden to vie for the
competing pro-am tennis teams.
The allure? All t.eam owners were
guaranteed to win one of lbe many
fabulous prizes such as trips to
Australia and New York.
The evening didn't just happen
by prestidigitation, the bard work
and effort wu obvious. The wizard
behind it all was chairman Dan
O'Connor. He was modest about
bis part in the alchemy, "My job
was easy, I got everyone else to
work bard." (Not true. It was
whispered that O'Connor even
helped w1th the table decorations.)
Barbua Hiller supplied the
magic hatted topiaries full of regal
purple freesia flanked by gilded,
blossom crammed tennis shoes.
Legerdemain finished the
supper menu of poached salmon,
pasta and haricots almandine
when waiters produced ice cream
Jim Oliver, le~ Tom and Joyce UFT and Dan O 'Connor
all dressed up in magicians' top
hats. Then it was on w1th the
show!
Ready for more magic were Sue
and cnw Hoolc. ~ty Johnson,
Brynn ICJimbact.. Ste-ve and Ursie
Fisher, Ron and Gloria Osbrink,
N~ and Dr Michael Rangel,
Nancy and CJiw Friederich and
Jt-rry Tarbniiln
. The wheels of justice
may be grinding slowly
J• elsewhere, but the
white-haired Jurist usually
managed, with wit and
wisdom, to enliven the pace.
that Jim is fluent in
Japanese. he pressed him
into occasional service as an
unpaid interpreter -once
to translate for a girl nailed
on a hit-and-run charge. She
spoke no English. appeared
in court without legal
representation, and was
sured out of her sushi.
Bachelors wllh •w1 dates
to assist March or Dimes
HOST FAMILIES NEEDED NOW!
E'I""'< 1<1tH l.1m1h
'" .1n .. 1h. r , ultur.-
\\t>1 •dtt''h J .!lfl'
.inJ "'"' .1io!<'' 1 ·, It•
I" • J'' IJ :r .. fT
'" 1 .. J r .1' .i
~IJ!ll lnl"l.1•)\
fl,,I '.inJ 11.ih .inJ
~.nt.?l.1J1J n, cJ 1.1m1
ii(, "111111~ I•• h1"I
th1·n• '"' th. ,nm
tn~ ..... h ... \t •. H
So how did the case come
out?
"I must've told her story pretty well," Dale recalls. "At least
she wasn't given the ::leath sentence."
1 E vcryonc in PiJotland seems to have a favorite Cal Schmidt
story, ranging from bis humor to his humanituianism. He
iMpircd many of the yama, encouraged othen, 8ftd thOT'oughly
enjoyed them au.
In kccpin' w1th tradition. the
March of Dunes, Orange County
Chapter, will hold 115 Sixth Annual
Bid for Bachelors event on
Saturday, Oct . 19, from 8 p.m. to
12 a.m. at the Parker Hannifin
business compleJt in Irvine.
The trad1t1onal bachelor auction
will be the highlight of the
evening. In addition. the schedule
o f activities has been expanded for
a wider audience, including single
men and couples. Plans for the
Grand Gala event now call for a
magic and comedy show. casino,
bachelor prov1dmg his own date
package.
The March of Dimes, with It~
partnership of profc ssionaJs and
volunteers, 1s working to reduce
the incidence of birth defects and
low birthwe1ght. Through its
Campaign for Healthier Babies,
the March o f Dimes funds
re se arc h . education and
community sc rv ice programs
throughout Orange County.
Ticket prices arc SSO per
person. For more mfonnation call
the March of Dimes at 631-8700.
Pierre from France Christina from Sweden
Natalie Bu.sift at 71-'183 1-6608
'.\t lchelle at 1-800'733-AS E 1 277~1
rull\ ln,urcd •ASSE C Own pcndrn~
\fnnc.-\ EUen Wllcox, who shared high office with Schmidt in the USC
Student Senate, recalls his compassio n, his constant concern for
others. As co-<:hair of the Trojan Chest, Cal initiated off-campus
campaigns to aid the area's under-privileged kids.
, Tom Deemer, president o( the Balboa Bay Oub, prefers to 1lcnt auction. hve Big Band mus ic ,__ ____________ _.... _________________________ _
• dwell on the fun-loving side. His tales of CaJ's involvement w1th
championship chili cookoffs are the stuff of leJends.
Atty. B. Rk•ant Gou.Id looked forward to hLS appearances in
Cal's courtroom, rarely a dull moment. The wheels of justice may
be grinding slowlr elsewhere, but the white-haired jurist usually
managed, w1th Wlt and wisdom, to enliven the pace.
and dancing. Local trendy
rclttaurants will provide exotic food
from all parts of the world.
I
If there's a Calvin P. Schmidt Memorial Library. veteran
broadcaster Pat Michaels couJd qualify as its curator. In add111on
to hi.s own abundance of romck.ing stories. he has film footage
that he·u unreel at the drop of a gavel -on the bench or dais. I
hope Pat filmed Monday's culog1e~.
In a farewell tribute lo colleague Tu Anry, famed animatClr
Chud. Jones quoted the opening lines o f "Scaramouchc," to wit ·
"He was born with a gift of laughter and a bclld that the world
was mad."
Cal Scbm1dt didn't believe the world was mad, necessarily, but
he thought it could use some tempering. So. with a warm heart,
and a twinkling eye, he did what he could to lighten our load.
And we're all the bcller for that
"Our theme this year -Grand
Gala Bid for Bac helors
exemplifies the additions we 've
made to the program to attract a
~ 1dcr audience ," said John
Clement. commlltee chairman.
"Our goal is to create the mo5t
eJtc1ting and memorable event in
Orange County that will help raisc
the much-needed funds to support
the March of Dimes' programs."
A reduced count of 15 lucky
bachelors selected hy the event
comm1ttce, wdl reflect the highest
quahry men from Orange County.
The format of the auction will
continue as in years past with each
* T-Shirts
llfMr ~
~ \ ' Thursday-Saturday
II
1111
* Custom Knits * Walk Shorts
* Volley Shorts
*Button-Downs * Denim Pants * Denim Shorts
•
July 25-27
8:30 AM to 5:00 PM
28" DISCa.J
OFF W__. PRICES
!
Announcing Our Grand Opzning
. . . . •
..
Yfbbondan ~a
•
•
"'
• · .. · . • . • . . '
., . . .
• • -';; . . -.
' • ~ Frc~fr' .'Pasta~ q1lll · . . .
\cil'/OQtf· 'Rc .. s.ta u i·a 1ri ·-. •' • •••
•.
• •
\
• • .
•
•
. ,
..
• •
•
•
•
•
. . .. .. . . . . . . . . ~
' . ......
. ~ .. ' .
. , .
' '
. ;, .
... . . •.
Dine in Casual Elegance
Pree Deaaa1 With DID.nu
Offer expires 8/1/91
Lunch 11 :30-2:30 T~. thru Sat Dtnnti 5:00 to l 0:00 Tua. thru Sun.
IV Anni Cekota .......
COSTA MESA -Anenducc
records keep fallina at tbe 99tb
Annual Orange County Fair, with
the bigest day ever recbrded on
Saturday, fair offtcials said.
Starting with openins-<iay lut
Wednesday, an attendance record
hu been set o n every day except
Friday, fair spokeswoman Jill
Uoyd said.
On Saturday, 76,992 people
attended the fair for such events
as the beehive hairdo contest, the
junior livestoclc auction and a per-
formance by the Little River Band.
The previous all-time high for fair
attendance occurred on July 22 in
1989 when 74,891 people attended
the fair.
Sunday was another busy day at
the fair, with a record 69,843
pcopfe attending Jazz Night and
other events.
While attendance has been up
this year, arrests arc down to 28 a.s
of Monday morning, compared to
74 during the same period last
year, Lloyd said. Most of the:
arrests involved juveniles and
alcohol
Themed "How Sweet It Is" in
honor of the bee and honey
industry. the 12·day fair, $20
million fair may surpass rhe ma ny
records set last year, including a
overall attendance figu re: of
560.189
Parking and admission profi ts
also hit an all-time high of $2.1
million lasr year. an increase over
the 19~9 revenue: mark of SI 7
m1lhon. according to fair reports.
The fair cont1nues through July
28.
ANTIQUES
& COLLECTIONS
D1v1s1on ANTIQUES (ADULT)
C1us C'l OTIU NG (ADULT) H. M Andrew Coen, Costa Mesa • tla~ QUILTS
I Mal]onc M. PylelJCosta Mesi
C.lass OTIIER NOT STED
H '-'f Andrew Coen, Costa Mesa • Orvuuon G EN. COLWADUL T
Class ANIMALS, OTHER ~ KMrcn 1 Schaeffer "'-Costa Mesa
l Nancv C Bolhngcr, 1..mca Mc~ • l 1ao;s R .. AR5
11 M /\nJrcw Coen, Co~ld Mesa • ( 1.~, Hl no-..;c; BADGI-'> Pl"'S
: AnJrcw C.ten C:n"a "lt:\J
11 M R.l\monJ l11 ace ( 1,.,1.1 'vic"' • < '·"' ( II RI'\ l'"IA~ I \ndr " < ••en < •"l.1 \k, J •
CIJ,,lll\,~)
I l11rrtmv J I .tlhC'r ('n~IJ Mc~., •
1 " ''\I< 11Hnoi..r11\ r R'>
i R,l\'Tfl"nJ <or llC ( ,,.,Id \k\a • ''J" \11 ...,IAl!'RI'> ~ •\nJrn~ <. ncn ( 11\ld 'k'.i • (I\\ \l(C.'t \<;Jl-J"'\
I 1-rt'd \.1 B.i ulc ( 1•r11nd Dd "1.ir
;: •\ndrr"' ( ucn <"''a Me\a •
(It" f'C>\ re \R J)') <·RI:~ 11'<· c \RI>\
II '-1 \ndrcv. < 1>en ( .,.,1,. "1c'a • C'l.1 ... , \'I I & Pl-PPF R SFT'>
1 Jn.to \I l>un\:an ( 1><;1 1 \lc\a
I I 'I k 10 Burn' C o<>ld \k\il • CJ,m 1 1 ,, ro rs
I '\nilrC'v. Coen. ( 11\la Mc'a •
I I "' (I Tl II· R '" lT I I!) n-()
I Shilrvn A "1om~. C05ta Mc'a ~ ( 1nJy I Sm11h. C11~1a M C\d
II M <;hJTnn G <iullon. C.osta Mesa •
WEDNKSIM Y, JULY J.4
Open: Noon fO midnjpt
12:.Jt •··· •Pin the Stinaer on the Bee -Carnation KJ<b' Stage
I p.a.
• How to Dea>rate a Hat by Berry Coruoh -Craft and Cook's
Gallery
4:.10 .....
• Hula Hoop Contest -Budwc~r Heritage Stage
'p.a.
• Mustache Contest -Budweiser Hcn11ge S11gc
7 altd t p.a.
• Memonc of Rock ·n· Roll -Arlington Theater
TituRSDAY. JUL\ 25
Open 10 • m ro midn11ht
l:JO p.m.
•Senion Golden Wedding Ceremony -Buch>el.3.cr Heritage Stage
• p.m.
• Junior BrcedinJl Swine Sll<ra
7 p.a.
• Making HomcmaJe Beer by Blll Gnder and Van Ludwig -Craft
anJ Cook's G allery
7 and 9 p.m.
• Garv Moms -Arlington Theater
7:JO p.m.
•All Amencan Boys Cbo1r -Budweiser Hcn11gc Stage
Drvmon GEN COLLECTlON/JR Ous ANIM C ERAMIC I Brenna M Duncan, Costa Mesa • Ous. DINOSAU RS I Cohn T Duncan, C~t<i Mc"" • O rn FNTERTAl'1MEVT
I Jcremv D Dalpe. C°'t<i Mc\a • Cid~~ OTHER NOT l ISTFD
I Rvan C Gough. Co'ita M C\.l
I Brcll Hellmich. Costa Mcu • DM)1on lllST Ml-.MO RABILIA
Class llOL'SEHOLD ITEMS
H.'M AnJrcw Coen. Costa Mesa • C1a-.s OTHl:.R NOT I ISTED. SPEClf)
H M And~ Coen. Costa Mesa
-4-H STJLL EXHIBITS
D1"1\1on Sl:.WING CfX)RDINA TED
Clus BEGINNING· IST 1 YR.
:! T1 rfanv Dalpe Co,ta "lc\d • D"mon RFCYC L FD ITT "IS
<. 135$ 01-Gll'NING · IST :! YR
I T irranv Dalpe. Co,ta \.fc,a • l1M~1<•n HOME FUR!'
Cius Bf:GINNINC,-IST :! YR!) ~ Tlffany Dalpe. Co\la Mna • D1"1'Kln VFT SC If NC. f C1u, llORSE •
l AJlt~on AJutu~ .... (~Iii Mc'.i
Dl\ISl(ln AEROS K C.X.10 T
Cla's MADI:. 1-'RO\.f A KJ T
I Ph1hp Hover ( '"''" Mc~ :! Juhct M Hn~cr. Costa MC''4
3 Ph1 hp Hnvcr ( 011a McY
1 Stephen J L~ecc. Costa Mcu • Cla.~ Bl:.ST OF DIVISION
I Ph1hp Hf'\cr. Cocta Mcu • D!Vl\IOn BEG-ARTSICRAFTS
Cius DOUGHJCERAMICSICl..A Y
I Julie1 M Hover, ~11 McSil
' Juliet M H~r, C01ta Mesa
;: Juliet M Hover, Cmt1 Mesa
' Juhet M. Hover, Costa Mcu
1 Ph1hp HOYCr. C~t1 Mesa
2 Philip HOYCr. C,os11 Mua
2 Ph1hp Hover. Costa Mesa
2 Ph1hp Hover, Costa Mna
3 Juhet M. Hover, Costa Mesa
1 Juhct M Hovcr. Costa Mesa
3 Juhcr M. Hovcr. Costa Mesa
3 Jul1c1 M Hover. Costa Mesa • nm G LASS/WOODfMET AL
I v1n C Goldmann, Cosca Mesa
I AnH C Goldmann, ~ti Mesa • Clils.\ KJT. KIT CONVERSION
I Tvwn Hcllmach. Costa Mesa • C1au MISC. PLEASE SPECIFY
I Jenica Fairbam. Costa Mesa
3 Aviva C Goldmann. Costa Mesa • <. lai.s THREAD'YARN'FABRIC
I Tiffany llilpc, Costa Mes.a
I ,•\\Iva C Goldmann, Cona Mesa 2 l'N>n Hcllmach. Costa Mesa
Jc,..,ica Fa1rbilrn, C<>5ta Mesa
' Jc\,Kil Fa1rbam Costa Mesa • DM\lt>n l~T-ARTSCRAFTS
na~ DOUGf LCl:.RAMICS Cl.A y
I Sc1lll P Ci1dd1ng.s. C~11 Mesa
:: <;.,,,11 P G1dJanp. Custa Mcu
.". c;c,,11 P Giddinp. Costa Me\I
:' x1'11 P G1dd1ngs, C01ra Mc'A • na ... , GI.ASS W OOD MFTAL
I -....Ne P G1dJ 1ngs. Co<>ta Mna •
C1.i'>\ Ml C., PLEASE SPECIFY
l Sc•'ll P Giddings. ~ta Mes.a • Cl~""' n tREAD )'ARN 1-ABRIC
I Scott P Gidd1np. Costa Mesa
2 Sc()(1 P Giddings. Costa Mesa
2 X--011 P Giddings. Cos11 Mesa
2 Scott P G1dJinp. Coi.11 Mc\I • Drvmon U:.ATilf:.R,lNTI:.RMEDIATI-
OaM MADE t-ROM A KIT
:! Scllll P Giddings. Co~ta Men • DIVl~K>n MISC PROJECTS
Cla..u PROJ f MPll PERF U..ARNl"'l<,
I Tiffany Dalpe, Cmta Meu
' Scou P G1ddinp. Costa Mcu • Orvm<ln '-il'JJ Mf:'1Bt:R PROJl'nS
Cla'"' AR TS & ( RAFTS
I Oavtd G 011'-'movcr. Ccxta Me'a
I l..<1vonne l llu\oer. C05t1 Meu
I l.AV\lnnc I llovcr. Costa Mcu
I Am)' C I eecc, Cos11 Mesa
I Amy c L~ccc (~II '1eui
I Amy C l.cc'-c. ("05ta Me\I • Clau MISCEll..ANEOUS
I Um>nnc L ffOYCr. Costa Mcu
I l...aYonne L HOYCr. U.ta Meu
A NEW LIBRARY
FOR NEWPORT BEACH
The City~ Newpor1 Beach is commincd ao build.ins 1 new
Central Llbrsy ror the entire community. which wiU benefit
rcsldcnu with i&s expended letVices, addiOonaJ rd'ercnc:e
capibilities. llMI p&enty ol ne-v REAIM1 room
to enjoy the increatcd 1elec:tion ol library ~.,,..cu
boob. Your support is vicaJ for dais new :-
raource c:en1a for Newport Beach. ~
Te IUIAD • .._. 11. ...... w call:
,. .... fJi .... s... CoCWn
Nswpan ......... UllnrJ f 1 I
1 GF
P.O S.1"39.Nww,....._ C\916'9
(714) Sd-3U 1cw(714)M4-311'7
it
IQ .,.
,... ,._...~ .....
JRJSR.HOME
ARTSAWDS
c.11ss STOCKING, !'IEEDLEPOINT
2 I nra D. Frost, Costa Mes.a • Cla~ WREATH
I Ot'borah L G raves, Costa Men • Dl'-uK>n GLASS.Pu.srtc.ACRY
C1AM ()lliER GLASS. NAMED
1 I yn M. Metheny. Newport Beach • D1vmon JEWELRY
C1im BtADWORK ~ Michelle F Mims. Costa Mcu • l1a" OTI~ER NAMED I Victor D lgle"as. NewpClrt Beach
2 Carol S Venard, Costa Mesa • C l.;1,, IH·.sr OF DIVISION
I Vl('lo r D. lgle.s1as, Newport Bca1h • 01\l\IOO LEATHER
(la" BAG O R PURSF
l "'allaC'C V llolderby. ('os1a "1c •il • Cla~ OUT
I \I. .tllacc \' Holderbv. Coo;la Mc•a • li<l'>' BILLI-OLD
I Wallace V lloldcrby, Costa Meu • CJ .. ,~ OTIIE R LEATHER NAMl:D
I Willlacc V Holderby, Cosra Mc'a • 11M'lon MIN IA nJRES
Cl.H'l O TH ER M IN I ATURfS.
l\IAMFD
:! O msunc D Dabbs. <Asta Mcu • Drvuion PAPER ART
Oan CALLIGRAPHY
l Jack N . Hargrave. Costa Mesa • Ous COLu.GE I Linda Chan Rapp, Costa Mes.a • Oass: OTHER NAMED
2 Kathleen P Rumph. Costa Mesa • DMJt0n. PLASTERCRAFT
Clasa· FJGURFJANIMAL 12" & OVR.
t Unda Jane Monon, Costa Mesa • Clan: OTHER PLASTERCRAFT,
NAMED
l . Karen G. DK:bon, Costa Meaa
HIM. Deborah L Graves, Costa Mesa • OMYOO. RECYCLED MATERIALS
Class FABRIC. YARN/THREAD
2 Carol L Raya. C.0.ta Mesa
• Class : O THER RE C Y CLE D
MATEJUALS 2. Pamela J. Brody, C.O.ta Meaa • DTVision: WOOD CARVtNO
Oass: ANIMAL-AMATEUR
I V1etor D. laJesias. Newport Beach • Cl1~ FISH OR REPTILE/AMATEUR
I Victo r D . Iglesias. Newport Beach • Clu 1 O TH A MATEUR W OOD
CARVING 2 Victor D lglcs1u .. Newport Beach •
Drv11t0n WOOD • OENl!RAL
Cl 1u OTHER GE N E RAL
WOOD.NAMED
I Marvin D. Waldrop, Costa Men
2 David S. Zutt. Costa Meu • Clrn BEST OF DIVISION
I Marvin D Waldrop, Costa Mua • Drvmon: MISC.HANOCRAFT/ADUL T
C1m BASKETRY. DEC ., ANY ITEM
ll'M Deborah L Gravca, Costa Mc» •
Orn EGGSl p EC. OR UNUSUAL
I Jeanine M Bau, Costa Mes.a
) Ruth Kriet. Newport Beach • Class SHELLS. ANY ITEM
HIM. Thelma 0 Madtcnz1c, Newpon
Beach • Cius OTH M ISC H NDCR AFTI
FAB ECT 2 Lon Ann Denman, Cmta Meu •
Class. OTH MISC H NDCRAFT/
NON-FAD
2 Marilyn L Wammack, Costa Mesa
J. Mar)')ane Lafferty, Costa Meaa • DMsion: TABLE SElTINGS/ADULT
Cl1u· LUNCHEON TABLE. ANY IBEME
I Gail L Glaser-khu az.ia. Costa Mesa •
JR. & SR.
PHOTOGRAPHY
• DMSion: MO NOCHROME: NOVICE
O au: PEOPLE
J Anaela Raj Kumar, C.0.11 Mesa • DMaion: MO NOCHROME: ll"fTERM
Jn t'\\'nt~ "' tcnms at Tht• .Vewpm1 Reach R·nnis Cluh
Sunday, July 28, 1991 4 p.m.
Featuring
Stefan Edberg
and other Tu nnis Greats
Hosted by
Vic Braden
Tht> ~ Buch 1mn i Club Is lonWd Al
2«11 F.Mtbtu« (>mt
I \ NCWl)Ot't lk.:h. C..-l.ilom1.1
c.Mral AdlllAllion '°' tMlt.hu j 25 (4-7-00 p.m.)
SJUO for cWldrm under 12 }'Un ol •~by an lldull
~ ~ ... tint and llhutU. Mrvb from parkina lot.
~. avaJlabl.
•
Boa S.ata and l>tnMT $100 (4-t:OO p.ni.)
lndud .. hon d'owwu, VIP parkJf1ll and Silent Auction. '°' rtaenatlone call the NP'Wr. (71') 31J.tll l
Cius: PEOPLE
1. Michael J. Ray. Cos11 Mesa • O us: BEST IN DIVISJON AWDS
1. Mk:bael J. Ray. Costa Mesa
Div 1s1 on
ADVANCED
O as... PEOPLE
• M ONO C H R O M E.
I. Caroline E Randolph. Newport
Beach • • Class: GENERAL.SPECEFf'ECTS/EC"P
2. Michael G. Sage, Costa Mesa • • Clau: BEST IN DIVISIO N AWDS
2. Mich1el G Sage.I. Costa Me\a
3. Caroline E tu ndolph, Newpcwt
Beach
• Division: COLOR PRINT. INTERM.
Ous: GENERAL.SPEC EFf'ECT'S'EC1'
I Ecbon Munek.ata, Cost• Mesa • Class. BEST IN DIVISION A WDS
2 Ed10n Muneka ta, U.1st1 Mesa • DMSIOn COLOR PRINT ADV ANC6
Oau PEOPLE JIJM Carohne F R.inJlllph, Newport
Beach
• Ou.' PL.ACES
3 C..rolmc ... R•ndolph. Newpoi&
Beach • Oas.<1 GENERAL.SPEC l t-FFCTS,'fCf .
I Carohnc E Randolph. Newport
Beach • Ous· BEST OF SHOW
I Cuolinc F Rando lph. NcwpMt ~h \
• Division: COLOR PRINTtCOMM NQ'y',
O au : Pl.ACES l Knit H Owcn5, Costa Mesa
2. Ruth M. Alwyn, Costa Mesa
J. Betty Lou Borl1nd. Balboa lsl1nd
O ass: BEST IN Dl:ISION A WDS \
2. K.Jrlc H. Owens, Cos ta Mesa • Dm sion: COLOR PRll1ff/COMM.INTB O aa PLACES
2. Bob A. G1mi&liano,,_ C:0.11 Mesa
HIM Joao M Gou. Costa Mesa • Oua. Pl.ANTS & ANIMALS
1. Jeu lc A. Webb, U»ta Mesa • II O us. BEST IN DIVISION A WDS
I Jcuie A. Webb, C.0.11 Mesa e I
OM.slOn: COLOR PRINT/COMM.AD~
O au: PLACES I. David A Smid, Costa Mua
J Ol'Vid A Smid, Costa Meu
3 OIVld A Smid, Catt1 Mcu • Q ua· PLANTS A ANI MAi-~
I Elly-chmu Mckeever. 'lcwpor
8cadl • O.u . BEST IN DIVISION A WOS I. Elly-christa Mcltccvr1 , Ncwpor
Beach
2 DIY\d A Smid. Co.ta Meaa •
OMl1oa: OPEN PRINTS Oaa: SPECIAi l!FPECTS .l KAthy Harre'->n, C.O.ta Mcu • a .. : BEST IN DIVISION AWOS
l . Kathv Harrelton. C.O.t1 Mua . .
DMlion: COLOR PRINTICOMM PRC Ou& OENE RAl.
HIM. Scan M Mou. C"'ta Meu •
Dlv111u1 PROF f'ILM/VIDLO FF.ST
C la11 · EOU C"AT I O N AI
IN TllUCT10NAL 1. u u .... Ncwpor1 Bead\ • 0.-: E.NTERTAINMBNT 2. *lioddy Parbr • M.Jbem Fi 0.aMaa ::=~ci.:: •
Dtrilbl: AMAT.PILMIVIOFO F8ST
Cl111: BNTl!llTAINMS.NTIOllOU P'llOO. HIM. Ju• 0.-.0. Nftopott 8eadl
~ r' I { f • r"'f j. 4 I \ ! • ,) I I v I
_._.__,._.__._.___. __ --
~ I . I '
I .~--~ .......... ol .O lldlc jlllill. ,1~ofdle--~ ~ ~ ......... COICa .... -ti ... in
~ Wtl. lt41da't ~ 'l1le dneded CCMdlict beta I ID tbe a.-~ Pm -s t11e kma •••tec1 concen return o1 Obti:l 1311 ... ~ tbe ~ Cl'alh of can. but the .,., rhs tnlllc OCDldcm De¥ef Red.
fl -"l\r WIYl a little ~ and a little C001dinatioa cm do. Alld t11a1, the city, the aate, the police aad -yea
---tbe Pldlc ~ illCJI deacne credlt. a.cern .... ti'dlC crue••tkla ... railed carlilr this year .... tl9e •mpbitbeatct mmoanced daat it planned tD boot e..::= the ~nm ol the co.mtJ fair. Paepc for CJl!9 dMb betWeen a Beacb Bojs' CODCUt and tbe r. leWrrll ,_,. .,, the amphitheater had awided booting
Kii durlaa tbo Juij fair.
Bat this ,ear. it teemed, the aSor.a came off. The
amobitbeater not oaJy booked &tefan (last Friday) but signed
up loe Coctcr (this ~Ding) and Guns )r ROICS (Thunday
ew~uwell. ~ proteata, the amphitheater stuck to its ~
acMama the city and the state that it would 1C1Ub the concert on!l if fully compensated for the shows.
1'be concem. of course. wu that the thouunda headed to
the amphitheater would collide with the thousands beaded to
tbe faii, creating a niabtmarisb traffic marl.
Happily. the police were able to bring order out of chaos
Fridliy niabt when nea~ 46,000 people flocked to the fair and ~ 3,000 jammed mto the ampltitheatcr.
Tbc1r chore.. no doubt. was made easier by the pre-fair
planning done by the city, the amphitheater, Caltrans and fair
officials.
Still, before we pass along a full dose of praise it is worth DOtina that the true acid test is still ahead. Guns 1N' Roses,
the ~t bad ~ o~ ~ who have managed to help ignite one not already tn their still-young concert tour, &rm-e
Thunday.·
We can only hope.
letters
Hey, (Editor) Bill (LobdeU), jwt
read yow column on Pilot bashing
-bow the Times is the big bad
wolf be.ting up on the little pigs
acroa town. Y ow memory is both
5'ort and selective. The hypocrisy
-embarruaing.
Remember the race between
Agran and Sheridan? You guys
put my early election returns story
on your front P'ae with the
headline "Dewey Beats Truman
Again," although the story was
fuUy qualified. Then you failed to
mention our stories in later
editions which said Sheridan was
ahead. ~arcntJy you wanted to
make a bag deal out of something
you thought was a major mistake
in an effort to pat yoursetvcs on
the back for your election
covengc. You didn't even caU us
for commenL Pretty shoddy. So my
qu~tion to you is why all this
rightcow indignation over our Al
1111 of the Hatllne
Editors note: The folJowilv are
samples of Tbe Pilol reMkn'
gommeats and crilicWm. While
Pik>t editors welcome ud rud all
com.meats, we frill only publish
rapoma from calkrs who leave •
name (pluse spell it out). city and
phone number (for verif'lat..ioa).
You can get involved by callmg
the Editor's Hotline •t 642-6086.
Thank you/
0
BIJIMClll
The ongoing fuss about the
Balboa Bay Oub (BBC) project
sounds very much like the Mad
Hatter's Tea Party -nothing
makes sense. The thousands of
tupayina people of Newport
Beach have an offer to have their
"Ncwswatch" item about a major
~ew up by . the RcgisteT? What is
thas setf-1emng twaddle about how
you would never do such a thing?
You cut the tint stone long
before the Ttmcs or the Register
wrote stories about the Pilot or
any other locaJ media. I doubt you
will even print this. See ya.
DAN WEIKEL
Los Angeles Times
Editor'$ DOie: Don 'r t:Yer doubt
the Pilot, D•n.
I was a rcstdent of Corona del
Mar for 35 ycan, now I IM in
Irvine but I still shop in Corona
del Mar and I have been receiving
your paper.
I want to tell you bow much we
like the new Pik>t. It coven the
loca.I news. activities. and business
advertisements better than any
other newspaper.
DOROTHY SYLVESTER
property upgraded to the tune or
$50 million at absolutely no cost to
them and a few disgruntled people
in Bayshores whose property
values will definitety go up are
objecting to this pr<>Jeci
It wiU improve the entire area
vastty. Wake up. Ncwpon Beach.
Let's get on with this too-good-to-
be-true five star project.
DON FLEMING
Newport Beach
0
Thank you for the opponunity
to voice my opinion. I have lived
in this community f01 26 ycan and
on quite a rcw oocasK>ns I have
been at the Balboa Bay Oub
usu•lty for a working opportunity
and political cvenll.
Each time I haYe been there I
David fights back
Democrat throws stones at Fuentes interview
I read your July 4th interview of
Republican spokesman Thomas Fuentes
(chair of the Republican Party of
Orange County) by William Lobdell with a
great deal of consternation.
Was Fuentes re ponding to your editor's
queries with his tongue firmly an check?
How could he o therwise have
straight-faccdly asserted the future
presidency of Dan Quayle just as if the man
hadn't been spoofed to death for the last
two years?
Further, was it bis idea or high camp to
lionize the figure of ell-president Reagan as
if the blizzard of recent revelations
concerning his term of office have no
meaning whatJOcver? Bcwildcrin& was his
description of Sununu (the only thing he
ever did wrong was be a conservative in a
liberal town hke W~on. D.C.).
More dismaying was bis glib dismissal of
the poU guard Oap regarding the illegal
incide.nt at a Santa Ana voting center. The
incident speaks for itself. Uniformed
"Security Guards'' were present. People
By Francis X. Campbell
were intimidated. Period.
What's the defense? Fuentes seemed to
1mpty that the scene was simply much ado
about nothing. No blame No guilt. No
apalogy. Just once again "Democrats," tha1
p1t1ful and pathetic minority. fishing for an
issue.
As bad as the an1emcw was. the preface
troubled me more Mr. Lobdell introduced
Mr. Fuentes as a succcs~ story. crowing tha1
the Republican party of Orange County h~
increased its rcgislration ewer Dcmocral\
from 80.000 to 230.000 as 1f Fuente ""ere
somehow responsible
This phenomenon 1s strictly a matter of
demographic changes Drive through In me
and in10 the south county. Look at 1he
ciq>losion of communities: houses. condos
and expensive rentals Whom do you thank
as moving into 1hesc areas. Democrats"
I notice that Mr Lobdell didn't aJl udc to
the 1988 presidential vote an Orange
County. That was a success story -for
Democrats. The Republican plurality was
cxpee!:d to yield a 400.000 minimum gain
for the Bush·Ouayle tacket in the state or
California (which was oonsidcrcd extremely
crucial at the time).
The small. grass roots Democrauc
workers llteralty went door to door in
droves as unpaid volunteers. and the final
tally cut the margin to about 300.000.
clearly a mo ral victory. Where did the
effectiveness of Mr Fuen1es come into
play'.'
Obv1ousl)'. Mr Fuentes const1 tucnC)
re,1des at the top of the pyramid an Orange
Counry fat-cat Repubhc-ans. land
de,elopcrs, military and Defense b1gwJgs
~come J<>aners to .. ne twork," pass ou1
tiu\ine\\ carc1s. meet lhc oppos11e sex rf
the' ·re ~angle (and maybe even 1( the)
.tren'tl. grncralh try to hatch a ride on the
grav~ train of front-runners here an 1h1s
..:ount). ~nd in that capacity 1he~ wall find a
gcn1dl 1( '-Omewhat andfect1ve ~poke~man a'
Mr l-uentc\
l-ranc1' \ C .1mpflcoll 1 a Costa Mes.t
rc\/Jent
have atways had the idea that the
public is being mistreated 1otally.
The BaJboa Bay Q ub staffing is
atways very snooty and snotty
toward people. and I think it is a
total ~re.
I would love to sec the place
JUSt totally removed from sight and
also that attitude too would be
removed too.
I am responding to Bay Cluh
controversy and letters of July It>
Misinformed Sondra Scott and
knowledgeable Joe Grolhus and
concerned Donald Olson. please
JOtn me m a more knowledgeable
understanding of what the hell 1~
going on by «ading my pa1d·for
letter, page S. Juty 18.
lct1cr !Juh IC>) fro m a $(.mdra
~u,tt pf CN ona dcl Mar I
Jl\.tgrcc -..1th her emphallcdlh
ticcau~e I don'1 bcltcH ~he
unJerstoo<l the 1 sue
~he claim' that no one .... a~ hir
1he BJ\ Cluh I .ll the Cit) (',,un~ Ii
meeting). .ind I would hkc 11 1
inform her that I heard fl\C
different pctiple "peak for the Ba'
Cluti i\nd even one of her
JrgumenL' ti.i'<'d on Mr Grrcn
Jnd <.l1ffiia,cn .rnd Ra~hnre' v.a'
total!\ rdu1cd Jnd that the ouncal
v. as al""''luteh nght m cha\llsing
them
LJ I am iu•t inlcrc\tcd in gettinti:
the v.md to the c11, Council thJt I
"l"h the\ ~hould approve the
rede"dopment plan of the Balboa
Ba' C1 uh We need something hke
th1' in ihe C'\.'mmunif). and they've
l:"leen a wonderful cluh for 'ltJ mam
vcar .... dnd I want them to be that
llH man\ \ear' tn ~o
ALBERT ROYY
Costa Mes.a
0
I do feel that the ~lrOJect should
be able to go through and that 11
benefits the community ~ a whole
as opposed to special interest
groups.
G RETCHEN DALE
Newport Beach
0
Four days ago the same self.
serving pleadings delivered word
for word hy both communal)
a'SC>Ciat1o ns as though 1t was
1nd1v1du ally pre pared
unbelievable! Read my lips on
Page 5 Thursday July 18
CHARLES R. rnOMPSON
Newport BcaC'h
0
I have lrvcd here for so many
years and I am re ponding to a
I ""ould hl c her to plca~c ~tud'\
lhc ''"uc~ ~fore "he make~ 'uch
,,1mment( ag.11n<.t the Bay Cluh
\ON DRAC.rt'.
(. orona del Mar
ANN CROSln
C nrona del M.u
I h" " .thciu1 the Balhcld H.n
C luh I thin~ 11 " 11 d1<.graC<' th.u
puhhc land " N:mg u ... ed for
pnvatc 1n1ere~1' I !hank the BR<.
'hnuld lo'e thr lc.i'e and lhc Ian.I
~o hack to public "'c
JANI-\\IL ~O"'°
Corona del Mar
How to contact your legislators
GOVBaNOR
Pet• WUN•, ( R ), State Capitol,
Sacramento, 95814. (916)445-2841
U.S. SENATORS
A.IN QuMee (0), f5757 W. Century
BMI •• S.Utc SIS. Loi Aqclca.. 9004S.
(213) l15-lll6.
.W. S.,.•• (R). 2AOO £. KMdla
A~ •• Suite 1068. Anaheim. 92806.. 6)4-
2331.
Al•il .., .-be •dd.res#d to
U.S.Senato. Wuhlltfton. D.C 10510.
1 u.LllOllu or ll.IPlta&NTATIVD
a.ti C.. ( R), _. Oi9t-. 4000
MecArdNr &Ml.,"-Towu, Ncwpon
~ 9lMO. m.2244. ~ .. partl
ol COiia W... Ne•~ Bid, • •rs a ....................... ) .,.. a, a1-.~•w Dill.. n:u ... Oilrll ..... 306.
J Tarr11ee, '°'OS. 21') u.aau.
I o
T .. M..,. (R). 58th Dist., 4510 East
Pacmc Coast Hi,ttway. Ste. SSO. Lona
Beach , 9080<4 . (2 13) <493 -H J.C
(Represen13 pan of HuntinatOll Beach.)
ORANGE CO\JNI'\' 80AllD or SUPSAVISO&S
Hall of Adminilltnt:ioo, 10 CMc: Center
p\aza. Santa Ana. 92701
n-t r. 1t81J Sth Dist. (a.ta Mesa.
Newport Buda.. Sula Aaa Heiahts.. am...:. Lapna Buch) 834-3550
COUHTY IOAaD or &DUCA110N
200 K•leys ~ ea.a ~ P.O. Boa
~ 921628-'°'6. MMOOO. J..-. ~. vice ~nt/lelt.
l'rwstee ARa l (FounlMt·V.-.,) -.... ...,_..member,,.._.. Area 2
(Fwnt• Vally. Ha:• .... ._.)
P t1• D • ......,, m hr, i-na.ee
Arca 5 (Colla Maa. Nc:wpon 8ucta.
lMne. Lapaa Bed.)
CITY GOVERNMENT
C.U Mu a: Caty Hall. n Fair Dmc.
7.54-S22l Mary Hornbuckle , mayor.
andra Gcni,, VlCC mayor; Peter Buffa.
and Jay llump~rcy. council members
t"oet•tala Vallq. City Hall, 102(X> Slater
Ave.. %6--« 1 q Ocorre, Scott. Mayor.
James Petnkin. mayor pro &em, Uiuranne
Cc>ok, John Collins, Ouy Carrauo couiml
membe"
H-<llfH Buell&: O ty t lall, 2<XXl
M1in St . S'\f>.~511. Mayor. Peter Green.
Mayor Pro te m. Jim Silva ; Don
MacAlisttr. G race Winc hell, Lindi
Moulto n-Pattcrw n. Jack Kelty, Earl
Robhallle ~ncal memben
N.....,.rt luc9': Chy Hall. 3100
Newport Blvd .. biM-3309. M~r. Phil
StMODc, Mayor pro tcm, Carel"«
1'1.rnu, John Cox. EYCilyn Hart, John
Hcclles. Ruthelyn P1ummer, Jean Watt
COHCiJ memben
An lndf'pendent Newspaper
Published by
Page Group Publishing, Inc
Etlklt Stein, ,, .
chitrman
wm.. s. loWll
editor & vtce pesidetlt
Sllw~
maMging editof
w .... , .....
1901-1989
foundtnl publlher
. -
,
•
Gushing water could
flave co~apsed road,
city officials feared
By lt1s Yokol
MW...
NEWPORT BEAOI -A
large underground bole created
by a broken water line that
released a n estimated 1,000
gallons of water per minute for
at least seven hours prompted
the city to close a portion of
northbound Jamboree Road on
Monday.
City worke~ filled the bole,
which was about eight feet deep
and stretc hed across two lanes,
with 60 cubic yards of cement
and had the northbound stretch
of Jamboree between San
Joaquin Hills and Fords roads
re-opened by late Monday night.
Obituaries
But the repair of the 18-incb
water line, which is 18 feet deep
1n tile grouiKl. will be don""'e fltcr,
after city officials decide
whether it should be fixed or
replaced, Newport Beach
utilities director Robert Dixon
said. ·
Dixon said he didn't know
what caused the water line to
break. Still, be speculated that
deterioration due to age could
have been the reason.
Tiu: line was installed in 1966
and roughly 15 years ago. it
broke al another point about
1,000 fee t north of the location,
undermining the road, Dixon
said.
The city was first aJerted to
this recent break on Sunday
morning when a resident in the
Big Canyon area reported a
large amount of water around
the culvert there. Utilities crews
retpOnded wl ... • ....
water line, but were DOI ...,.
of the tuU damt&O until MolidlJ.
when public worb crews bmd
the bole.
The cavity WU not yid)le
from the surfa~ but WU tarae
enoup that city oftidlb feared
the roadway would collmpec and
possibly trap can ua~lina on lt.
City crews blocked off the
road aro und 3:30 p.m. Monday,
tore up the street and were able
to fill the bole by around 9 p.m .
Dixon said he was unsun: bow
much water flowed out before
the line was shut off, but he
knew water had spewed for at
least seven hours, at a n
estimated rate of 1,000 gallons
per minute at the wont.
Water service to residents,
however. was not intenupted,
Di.xo n said.
"In any system. you're going
to have a break," Dixon said.
MlftMll ......
Newport Beach utilities worker Paul Varin, right, receiwt a sand bag from fellow worker Adam Wal
u they fill in a hole created by a broken water ..Wn on Jambotte Road.
BAY llJm
From A1
Creety dedicated his Ille to love of llOokl representatives of the Bayshorc.s
and Oiflhavcn communities, the
two most vocal opposition g.roups,
to negotiate a compromise on the
size o f the project. But the
meetings ended in a stalemate
after club officials said they could
not scale back the proposed threc-
story, 300-room hotel as much as
residents wanted.
1ood oeiahbor and always
provided public access through the
many community group gatherings
hosted there.
But the rcat of the CfUncil
disagreed, saying public oplJ>Sltion
to the proposed hotel's si:ie,
potential bay view blockage,
increased traffic and noise and use
ef public land has grown and
surpassed the votC$ of support.
expressed doubt that the club
could satisfy the opposition forces
wit.bout completely redeaJgning the
project.
"h 's not just Bayshores and
C liffhaven (opposed )," said
Councilwoman Hart. "And when
we talk about redesign, we're not
talking about just ta.king some
rooms off.
COST A MESA -After 84
yea~ of a life dedicated to book
stores and ltbraries. Bunstcr
C r ccly di ed last w ee k of
pneumonia ..
A resident of Costa Mesa for
more than four decades, Crecly
wa., the founding manager of
Orange Coast College's bookstore
jnJ one·t1me owner of Balboa's
Bookstore of the Island in the
i l).io ....
Born in Oakland the )Car of the
Great San Francisco Earthquake.
Crcely was raised in Piedmont
""here he was a cheerleader at the
locdl h1gt\ school.
In the early 1920s, he marneJ
Virginia Wellendorf, inheriting a
trad1t1o n of book sclllng.
C rcelv moved to Pasadena in
t ht-'JOs. opening the Abbe)
Hooke.tore on West 6th Street.
then known as booksellerc; row.
A little more than 10 yeM'
Bunster Creety
ra,c;eJ hdorc Creel) mo .. ed h"
family to Newport Beach. then
into Cmta Mesa.
In IQ4Q he was J<,kcd to give up
his Balboa Island shop and organ-
ize OCCs first booksto re. He
eventually passed that job o n to
his son, Christopher Culpeper
Creely, who holds the position
still.
Afte r retiring from OCC, Crcely
took over management or the Lido
Is le Community Association.
Unable to leave behind the life of
a hookscller entirely, be eventually
served as consulting partner to the
Crcely's Bookstore in Costa Mesa.
He is survived by his wife of 63
yeao. Virginia ; his son ,
Christopher. 62; daughter, Ccrini
Crecly Bess, 54, plus seven
gra ndchildren and two great·
grandchildren.
The family asks that. in lieu of
flowers. contributions be made in
Bun!>tcr Creely' name to "The
Friends of the Orange County
Library."
-B~ Emily _.dams
Hundreds attend services lor Judge Calvin Sctn11ldt
NEW P O R T BE AC H
Mcrnondl '-Cl"'-ICC'i for long-time
Orange Coun t~ J udge C:ihin P
\chm1Jt "'ere held at the Newport
lkJl.'.h Countn Cluh on Monda"
Atiout ~00 ·people Jllcnded the
'l'I" llC'. \I, hi( h included t•ulog1e'
h' f\Hmn \tatc \cn . Paul
c'.ir p c n t n . 0 r J n g t' C n u n t y
\urcr111r (nu rt Judi.tt' W1l11am
r
I
J
J
'
Sheffield. Har~H ( ourt Judge
\chm I ranklin jnd Schmidt-.;
ddughtcr I racey
A video mterv1c"' that had hccn
produced two ,·c ar' Jgo h) the
USA Net'tl.M k ,ind "''ngc; ,ung t"i)
wloi~t Shern Mct,gcr punctuated
the rnam anecdntc' recalled h'
the speaker\
"There "'J' .i n 1n u cd1till'
outpouring of love,'' said Phyllis
G reen, his long-time companion.
on Thursday. "It was an Orange
County tribute to a man whose
legacy will influence how O range
County will take care of its own."
Schmu.lt. fll. w,t., found 'iitting
up 1n hcd around 2 a.m. last
rhur<;dav
-By Th~ Pilot
Over the weekend, Bay Qub
officials decided to ask for a
continuance, since there was
"growing community concern
about the project -a lot of that
due to a certain amount o f
misinformation," O'Neil said.
Counci l me mbers Clarence
Turner. John Cox and John
Hedges supported as much as a
90-day co ntinuance, saying the
club had already offered several
changes from its ori~nal plans a nd
thus dc:scrved further time to work
out a compromise.
Turner said phone calls and
letters he received indicated a 50~
50 split in public opinion on the
club's expansion plans. Indeed, a
good many residents support the
plans. a rguing the club has been a
fllAll)
From A1
"T he fact that he's 7b years old
ma' have worked in his favor."
Neither Jack Coughlan nor his
lawyer, Dwight B. Moore, could be
reached Monday for reaction to
the sentencing.
The cider Coughlan could have
heen sentenced to as much as I 0
yea" in prison, and his sons fa ced
a maximum term of 12 years.
Overtoom said restitution was not
o rdered because the Coughlans
settled out of court with more
ccraRTI
From A1
A small audience <.>f ahout 4.400
l'I expected for Joe Cocker',
Puc1fic Amph11hc:ater performance
tonight. but a capacity crowd of
18.788 1s expected for Guns N'
Rmcs.
"Thursday night of the fair
\hould be our busiest of the fair ."
,aid Co ta Mesa Pohce Lt. AJan
Kent. who helped develop the
These coun ci l members
LEI IHI
From A1
"As one administration
s ucceeds a no ther, t hese
obligations arc often forgotten
or there seem& to develop a
line of thought that those on
the scene at the immediate
time sho uld not be controlled
by a ny obligations or promises
made by their predecessors. Of
course, the principle cannot be
carried out in private bu iness
at all, but it docs indicate that
any property deeded as gift
should be protected by certain
written conditions embodied in
the deed.
"To lcaie this property in
than a dozen companies that sued
them in civil actions. and because
Wilson decided to give them more
time to settle two civil cases that
arc still pcndin&.
Pro ecutors said the Coughlan
case was one in a series of
overlapping bank·fraud incidents
1n O r a n ge Cou nt y. the
1mes11ga tion of which was dubbed
Operation Orange Peel. Dozens of
O p e r at i on Orange Pe e l
defendants. i ncluding the
Coughlans, were accused of using
the California real estate market's
pohcc traffic plan
Traffic officers will be out in
force for the Cocker concert a nd
hope to work out most of the
kinks by the time Guns N' Roses
gets into town, Kent said.
As R~der put 11: "Expc:ncnce
counts for a lot in doing these
things."
Amphitheater officials arc also
hoping extra parking spaces will
again keep traffic moving for the
G uns N' Roses concert. said
''There's no open space going
through that property at all."
the way proJ>05Cd, J feel would
be a breach of faith to say
no thing of the probable
detriment it would prove to the
adjoining land and bigh<Jass
development we arc trying to
put in, having in view the
general welfare of Ncwpon
Bay.
"I hope the City Counctl will
give serious heed before
creating a situation ol this
kind. We want to feel th at we
can have continued business
relations with the City in the
security that what is done will
he for the best intert5ts of all.
Yours truly.
(signed} James Irvine"
hot reputation in the m1d· I 980s to
... windle out-of-town lender~.
The schemes were considered
overlapping because several
individuals and companies popped
up in more than one case. One
such individual was Fred Parrish.
who wrote about $167 million in
financial guarantee bonds o n
contract with the Coughlans' Eagle
Bonds. He was Indicted in another
O peration Orange Peel case and is
scrvmg a 2()..yca r pri!<>n term on
an extortion conviction in an
unrelated case.
Gcc_nc .ral Manager Susan
Rosenbluth. About 600 spaces in a
1,000-spacc Irvine lot were filled
for the Estcfan concert, helping to
case the crunch at the fairgrounds.
she said.
For Guns N' Roses. a Quick·
Park Shuttle will be available for
th~c who park at the John Wayne
Airport North Parkmg Facili ty at
1512 West Main St. The lo t opens
at 4 p.m. Parking is free, and the
IO.minute shuttle ride costs SI per
pc non. •
And officials warn that concert
goers better get an early start for
the 6 p.m. show.
Traffic wo n't be the only
concern with the Guns N' Roses
concert Thursday.
Extn law enforcement officcn
will be on duty at the fairgrounds
since fair officials expect IC>me
<Mlrflow into the fair once the
concert end . Security in the
parkinJ lots will also be beefed up.
Inside the amphitheater,
Rosenbluth said she is quite
satisfied with the security plan, put
toacthcr well before the celebrated
Ouna N' Ro1c1 rlot at the
Rlverport Amphitheater in
Maryland Hctpts. Mo. earlier this
month.
About 3,000 ol lbe S.S,400 fans
al the Rfverport Amphitheater
went wild alter lead atnacr Alli
Roee jumped off the ata,c and
fOUJht wtth 1 ran with • camera •
wtUCh are banned at the "¥Cnuc.
Fus ~ the band uprooted
ah~ 1t tbe outdoof tbea.rcr,
Mt Upt po111 ab&ue, kicbd CMt
c baln4ink (IACH, lflbbtd ........ wt ton .,... ...
ripped two ol * baecra bli Wile
ICl'9tlll *8 tM bad lltf J Id
tbt lhoW. acCordl"I to prem
repona.
• •
.. I
Surfing
C.olliu aid be ii
especially kJo'ina f~tothis
year'• Op Pro due
to IOIDe penoaal
and contnctual
reuom, and is
ready for a big
resuft.
Last year,
Collins lost on a
controYcnial close
decision (less than
a point) to
Austnlian Luke
Egan, who went o n
to give Tom
Cuneo a run for his money in the
main event but lost out to finish
ninth overall.
Collins bas since made the finals
twice in ASP events, placing second
to Tom Cuneo in both the ·
Quicbilver Lacanau Pro and Japan's
Maurui Pro in 1990.
Collins came close to reaching the
fmals apin at Bells Beach Australia.
but an mtcrfercnce call ~inst •
Damien Hardman kept him ouL
Nevertheless. at this year's Op
Pro. Collins will be ranked higher
than he's ever been coming into the
event.
Known for coming on strongly
durinf the middle part of the tour,
especially m Europe, Collins is
ahead of his own schedule, and a big
result this week could put him in the
top five and title conte ntion going
into his fa"°ritc part of the tour,
France.
Qlnat pro 11.Udout ...., ... ..
H89.
Mlchldo, Hwat~ .._..,, Jeff
~ Jibawa Suetail ... ~
Oyadotaari a dvanced lO Saaday'a
tcmffla•ll by elimiaaaias die odler 44
junior competiton on MoedaJ duriaa
tM ftnt bar rounds.
Pdert. a recent Newport Hamor ffi&b IJ'Mluate, wu aurpriled to be here
in the fint place. After aclhls tbe
NSSA (National Schol.UC SUrfin&
Allociation) '-Open series ra&cd ftft.b in
tbe men's division. Eckert band out the IOod news. He wu a tittle mournful,
~r. after Monday's cn11peaiboa.
'1'he tint two beall were fllD bec:aue
I caught a couple of let WIMS and I did
a few oft·the·lips," saJd Edw1. wbo won
a Cbrfatiaa Board·riden S"n1111
A.uoclation (C8SA) eveat In
Hatinaton Beacb .... tbl ..,.
-You just ao a1 far a1 yoo c:an IO· I
WU COllliateet iJI dlle fina two beau, but
that last beat I jlllt felt territ>Je. 1 just
watched everybody else catch waves and
I got caught in a bole. I was in tbc
wrong pot. I just couldn't get the waves.
I was out of poe.itioo all the time and I
couldn't ftnd a rhythm."
Deffenbaugh, meanwhile, is Y.king
his second consecutive journey to the
Op Juniors semifinals, losing to Danny
Melhado last 1ear after advancing to the
quanerfmals in 1989. He hopes to face
Machado in the finals.
After spendini the put two weeks
observing Op build the lf&Ddstands off
Lab Street j\w IOUtb o( the pa,
Dcffenbeuab'• momentum ildlated.
"It pve me a little mon: . push to
think about winnina.'' Deffenbauab raid.
"I bad to ut myself. 'Do I want to
make it? Do I want to be the one in
fro nt? And I do. I'm stoked right now.
·• l felt more confident I think became
I've been 1urfinf the last rwo weeks out
here and just tbintil\g about 1t. I started
concentnting more on what I needed to
do to make it -watching the wave and
watching other guys."
Deffenbaugh. 18. wiU be a senior in
September ll Huntmgton Beach Hip.
where he's the surf team captain. On
Monday, be rmishcd first m all four or
his heats, including an 1mpre ivc
showing in the quarterfmaJs
"l usually do well there, so I guess
it's one of my favorite places. but I
could do without the plane night,"
Collins said. Comns added that he
just wants to stay focused on the
competition at hand, and not get too
caught up in all the media's part of
it. He wants to concentrate on his
surfing. and stay away from the
event, except when he bas to surf.
Newport Beaich's Troy Eckert ~tn an urly-round wave in the Op Pro juniors competition Monday, but he failed to adnnce to Saturday's semifi~ls round.
It's the mellow-factor that does it
Collins is a hard person to put a
prediction on, but I think that if he
doesn't get knocked out early, he has
a good chance of winning. Simpty
put, Collins will either make it or
break it, no "all right" showing for
Collins this year.
Newport Harbor product Gill
has truly found the high wave
Either way, with CUrnn's absence
on this year's ASP tour the World
Title is up for grabs, and Collins will
be there fighting for it at the end.
Look for him to make the top five in
the 1991 world rankings with no
problem. pogsibly top three, and a
chaocc at the title. You can bet that
it will come down to the wire!
Todd Miller of Newport Beach,
eighth on the 1990 PSAA circuit, is
having a bit of a rough go at it this
year. Miller started co~ting on the
ASP tour this season, sacrificing bis
PSAA top 32 seeding position, and
has yet to make a main event.
leaving him in somewhat of a limbo
state at the moment.
A good result at the Op Pro could
change all that. Miller certainly surfs
and competes well enough; he just
needs to establish exactly what his
goal5 arc and take it from there.
Otherwise, he'll end up floating
around bad. and fonh between tbe
ASP and the PSAA, not reaching his
See COWNS•
Sh e's simple
now. down-to-
earth and
detached from the
fast pace of
Newport Beac h .
where she grew up
and was schooled in
surfing.
Tncia Gill, who
advanced to the
trials second round 1n the women's Op
Pro Surfing Championships on Monday.
1s "more mellow now ... lives in a hipPie
town and has discovered her love ID a
different way.
She chooses to avoid the chic logos on
surfboards.. he no longer surfs for
ratings or wages ond she certainly
doesn't need to sneak around behind
her mother's back anymore.
When Gill was a tcenaacr. she
invented her own surfing hours, even if
it meant sacriflcing school and cutting a
few comcn around the howc.
Price, South win the gold!
WESTCHESTER -Relepted to a ruervc spot at San Dieao State thfou&b two yean of frustntlOl'I, Corona deJ Mar Hip product Ty Price
made the mo.i ol an opportunity this pa.st wee.k -aeadina bis South
teammates to lbe pd medal at the U.S. Olympic FcstivlJ ~ball
competidoD.
With U,7 uaistJ dwina the compctit.ion. Price re-established himlelf u
the blue chip proipCCt wbich he wu after le.dint Corona dcl Mar Hi&h
to the OP .. A championship in his senior scuon.
Tbc Olympk Festival is ohen the 1eenc of a newcomer buntifta upon the scene. For
PrD. it wu a fC*bwlt u be made a moctciy ol his atanas at San Dteao State. &Mna
rill to die '1*9lation ho will be tranaferrift& out of tbc Aztecs' prosram for one where
IM will be more approc:iated. · Ptb. ...,_ with another Sllrprise, Prioccton's Marin Gjaja. '¥ho dominated at the
DCt otf Prioo~ sets, the South captured the p>kt medal pme before 3,200'"at Loyola
M.,,.ount with a IS-9, IS-13. t(). U, 10-U , IS· 11 trhnnph. Price was credited with 108
..... bl .... 2~--, match. wbile Ojaja had S6 tOla in n attempt for a .sen --=-=· .. tM FatMI! • 0... ....... ._.. DMIO wu a bronze medalist in the women~ •hot pvt with a
pu!olSM~ '' •Ania M*k ol COlta Maa teamed witb Jun Butkr of-Iowa Oty to capture a 21·
ll, J4..l1.._, lor ta. Non.h La a 6-4 win°"' the West in fint rou.ad tam tnall . a.PNCUI
\ ...
For a while it worked. but later, after
four years of competing profc~1onally.
the fun vanished.
"I surf more now than ever." Gill
said "For as much as I am surfing now.
I should make 11 out of my heat\ It 's
fun to free surf. but I till get nervous
-I always J1d in competitions Now.
I'm having fun and I also sw1m 1 1.~ miles
five days a week ...
Gill. 25, lives in Leucadia, a quaint
beach town in San Diego County She's
content. no longer needing to operate
on the rigorous women's pro tour o r
ditch classes at Newport Harbor High
(where she graduated in 1983) to catch
a few waves
"I was a brat when I was younger. and
I'll be the first to admit that," Gill said
"When I was on my own and traveling
(on the tour), I JUSl mellowed out, bul I
did some pretty tcrnble things ID school.
I ditched all the time and I JUSt hated
school. I d1dn 't want to be bothered by
1t. My mom took my surfboard away
from me for months because of (missed
classes). ......__
·-
"But I had two boards and she didn't
COlllMQ THURSDAY
•Op Pro atarta
separating the men from
the boys at Huntington
Beach.
• Tiie Duke a
entertain New Jersey,
seeking their first vtctory
before the home crowd.
• Cll•rll• •r•ntl•
returns with an updat8 off
hi• t-lghty aucceuful run
at the U.S. Olympic
Feattval.
Op Pro schedule
Tu11••1
7 ii m -Mer,.s Tnills. Round 1 ). 1 4-0 pm -Men s Tnats Rouno 2 ....... .,
7 am -Mens Tna!s Round 3. 10.20 Im -Mens Main. ROUNl 1
n...deJ 7 I m -Womens TNIS Round 2. 8 20 am Men s Ma I" R '1..,C = 3
p m -Women s repectiaoe
ffrtdeJ
7 ii m -womens Mar Round 1 10 20 a m -SelUT\' PiQl'M!! '· :o a...,
-Men s Main Round 3 .....,
8 a m -Men s Quanertinals 9 40 a m Beauty oaoeart 'l'l Jt a ~
Womtn s Ouartel'fiNls
hftdef 8 a m -Womf'f'I s Sem 'ln.llS 9 am -Juniors ~ "lals · i) a .-"'" s ...... ~ •tra 5 • • a ~
Women s Finals 1 ' 4 5 a m JUntOrS Finals 12 JO p m Mesi ~ 111a1s • , " ri .,.. .\~ires
lnov. 11 I v..1' nn th1. w.1m lC'dm rnJ I J
come h11me "'i:t 1-ut 'he d1dn t kn11v.
v.hert' I v.a' I C:\t'.'ntu .tlh tllld her all
that time I v.a' 'urf1ng
Gill. who v.r.1ppcJ ur '1.~1'"d rl.1u.: in
heat one of the trta" f1r,1 round ,. irh
Monda\ morn mg ti) 11h a nee 111 the
compc11111m. Jdcariniz \n\!cl.1 l .1f"1l11f"•
.1nd up,clling J11rp Sm11h .1lnni: thi: "'·"
in 1hc h1ur-v.nml'n heJt. cn111\' th1.· l,11J
t'tack nalurt' of I cul·aJ1a
"lllcrc·, n11 \U rt h\pc there .... 11J
(;111, v.h\l f1nt4'hcd t-chtnd J..\hC \\d•l-10
her heat "You JU'it ,urf and n11 nnc h,,,
a b1lht1n logo' 11n their tioarJ It ·, JU" ,,
different en,1rnnmcnt v.ht're I h'c "''"'
II' 1 httlc "11r111 '''" r 1n ' I , ~ccr:
there 1l1r hHlf \\II' It' f "' • ri1v.J1.I ur
here .tnJ \llU ('J O t tinJ I r.1rl..1ng plJlC'
·r 1u, there .ir1. "' m 1m e:P•xi p1J1:(''
I•• 'urf d11v.n thC'fl' Ir , r 111\ rrPlcdcd
v.11h h1a;: d1ff., e\l·rv~hcrl· I \tn rt II'
v.1nd\ Pn the h1•rt:.•r ', , tlf\ i:1'<l<J
,h1v.n 1hcn: ~ .. 1 "c rh Itri' c:q• 'ht·
v.1nd 11ut
'-o 'and '' he1n11 tih•~n in her c'e'
ni '"' "' the v. ind 1 ir "' l he: rt '1 le'"
dem.ind l•I "''"ll 11ut, I 1 'u 1 ....... c
'If, ntll J rctl r.iu: on\m••rC' 'he
'Jld I'll rr11hahh he lh1. re !he rC'I 111
mv life unit:'" I m1"c II• "'m' t''\••t1..:
See GILLWI
Old folks show 'em how it's done,
Wharton & Co. take Errion crown
By 1"n Meyer ----E ven thoup IChool lS out for the 41ummer. all was not qu1t'l
at Corona dcl Mar High School th1 past Saturday.
The '00.ndt of bas.ketbaJI could he heard pounding off
the wood aymnasium floor for nearly l~ houn while 125 former
members of the school's basketball team5 competed in lhe third
ann~al Jtcl Emon 0 ic.
A team comprised of memben from both lhc IQ73 and 1976
graduatlna class of Coroaa dd Mar H11h defeated a ftdd filled
-Mth younger players from 16 ttam.s to -'" th.as car'' nent. Tbc
~nior Citizens of the to urnament ovcrca~ a tctltduk that had
them playi.na ix JO..m1nutc sames before wmmna the nttc contut
over a 1913 team which loat in the ft.nab fof the thud time U\ three ycan.
The sruellJ\I format WQU,kj to ft\'Of thcU' f . t oe tbis
day the 1973 and "76 t (combined) was eblc to tva beck tM dock ud m:laim
tome put atory. Jeff Wl\anon. a tm CdM pad\aatc later went a. eo °'*II .
baU at ~ MarytnOUnl. made a pmc ' ).pomt .. ol llw fi pmc
ud a fttt throw ift ove.rtune to win lbe t tie •
.. It f ccl ~cct to be )6 ye.an aid nd Nat a tHm l • l
• • ' ; • •
,
(
From 81 tooth !mocked out.
exhausted Wharton.
Th~ alumni games matched graduating classes
from the past 18 years against each other in an
elimination style tournament. Teams from 1973 to
1991 were present to compete in this unique
tournament, which created the situation where 18
)Car-old young men could square off against those
tWK:e their age.
The tournament was the brainchild of Mike
Hess who was part of the class of 1983 team and
later went on to play for UCL
This is a fun tournament which allows the guys
to come out and play with former teammates for
the first time in years. The event which benefits
the school's athletic fund is expected to double
the $500 raised last year. What was designed to be a day of fun
competition resulted in some close physical
contests by players only thinking about winning.
By the end of the day. there were bruises, pulled
muscles. one player (Adam Aconc) even had a
The tournament has been such a success, Hess
and co-organizer Mark Spinn have been contacted
by other people from aJJ over who arc interested
in duplicating the event at their schools.
Sill ails """""1 Op
From 8 1
island. It's such a change for me
here. Everyone there 1s so mellow
and now I have such a different
outlook on life. I really enjoy
surfing a lot more. When I quit, 1t
was because 11 W1lsn't fun for me
"So to surf with mv friends and
ha'e a good time. that's the
ultimate thrill There's nobody ·
a round."
Not lo ng ago. Gall, who's
prepanng to surf an France next
month and compete 10 two
contec;ts. <.teppcd away from the
v.aves. ··i:-or a while, Iv.as
swimming more and I wasn't
~urfin!? much." -;he c;aid "( was
v.orned about 11 11 1u~1 ~ee med
hl e v.hen I v.ent c;urfi ng. 11 was
OP Jun6or9
~' CT..,._..__ .. ._.....,.,
,..L ' ! Oat! $olarftan i Tl'O'\' ( cn<1 3 ~ RGllO
,,.....,.~
... Jt • ~()I" ... ~ ; °"' Orltrriy 3 ~ ..,.... • 9'w Pac"K•
'"r.a l ' ~ llllndlf 7 ~ S.-3 ~ Ca-
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lilom'lm • .... QOl'ry
.._. ~ · £,. 8"nan 2 /I.Ml'< Set<on J 8ofc• ""'*'f
• A.1117 ,....,
... • • ~ ::ltlrc'I i JISOI" .CZ ] si-l-1 .. ·-.... e • q,., ....,,...,,. 2 • .,. 0oonr 1 C11.c1 "'Oii ..,. • '°'". 'MW""o ... , 9 • ~ ,..,, : .... llvecr.. ] Cot'I
~ . ..,,,~
-•• '1>11~ 2 ~1.1 -.. .. ) JOlllVnq,,r t
~·ooos
... • • • 1 r"11 Slrt1flel : ·~ 8r°""*'G J BMry Of!.
~.-Jann .... ·2 • !WI ~ nr.... •ooc ' .._ ~ •
""''~ MMMD I
CT..,._..._.,.~a1
>ot• ' ' llt>e IQcJlldo 2 si... s.on ) Doti Sell> ..... b~
-1-I ''Vol (Der\ 1 C1w9 D¥m>y ) p._ ...... • 0.-...0
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-• t ea. ~ 1 -,..,, S.-0.. l Daul Dlfilrc'y • ,.,. SeloOtl • =.s,~ ..-..~ 2 ,...,._ 1 Ina.,_.,.
-·-' c-~ 2 Glct9Mo¥M 3. ~ '"""~
I
terrible. It just seemed so hard, so
I got out o f it. But I had to get
back into it because I felt I was
missing something ...
Or maybe the waves were
missing her.
She launched her professional
career after her best frie nd and
current roommate, Karen
W1ll1ams, enticed her to do so.
"She suggested I surf in
competitions," Gill said. "But I get
really nervous in competitions.
Sometime" I psych myself out.
·-rm no t a h1pp1e now, but I've
me llowed o ut a billion times. It's
so busy here in Newport Beach
and Huntington Beach. It 's 1ust a
rat race ..
"°""° 4 (T .............. ,
-, -, Rall w.ci.oo. 2 c-. ~ l Clwt• D¥m>r
Hd 2-1 -~ 2 ~Wlorl l Ryll\
Sitt-.
MWY'8 • 1 llltL8 StmllllW 1 -1\00 ..,., ... c. Oyldonwt ~ 2 .lflll ~Ind si-. 5-rl
Ott ......... ~
T1llM..8 ...,_,_ 1
(T ........................ ,
HUI I l Kyte W. 2 Tritle Gm 3 .. S.... t M
O'll~
.... 2-1 ,. ~ 2 ........ l..-a J Jolt
Mollntt
.... ) -, JN Miio 2 ICM1ft .....,.. • 3 '°"' ~ .....
.... • I COIWI -.,,.i.-, 2 C'-11 Groll 3 l ..
YNI ' ""1tll loon Hla S -;ara AillOO'I 2 ~ Holrw l Alu
Sc.....,,., • l(lm ~fllllt
"811 s -1 Roc"'4ll ~ 2 .... ,... J Al-Ow --,_, ... 5mll 2 """ --l ~ 80' IQClo. 0::: 8-, ~ .....,., 2 l ir,tw .. ..,. l l ino•
TNUMIOAY'8 T1llM..8 ~ I
._ l Kyte WWCIO Nit ~ Karlll illlolllf Cht ,. Gron
HM ? -f l'dl G.I MdrM LOOM. Jlflll Malo. COMle -..r»-
... 3--Moor! l\OCll9ll ~ ........ """..,., Hd •-MN-GMle "'-W *' ,.,., Jain ~ lllll'r..__
Price, South
Win the gold
From 81
competition, and finished out with
a bronze medaJ wiMi.ng effort
apinst Weat whh a 21 -18, 1~21,
21·1• triumph.
•Coal a Mesa's C arolyn
Ulandcr wu eiahth and Julia
Norman of Newport beach ninth
in European dlnpiea at the
yacbtin1 venue.
•Newport Beach's Mike Rall
stood out defenaively in the net for
the: South in a I ~ JO lie with lhe
Wcat in men's w1ter polo fint
round play.
•Costa Mesa's Hoa"4 Ly fell in
tlM thild round of badmanton play
k>lin1 I •bot II I bid for • IMCI~
at a result of a 15·1, J.S~ lou to
Tom Reidy of Vallcywtrcam, N.Y
Collins has
that look
of a winner
From 81
full potential in either.
I think that Miller's chances an
this year's Op Pro hinge on a
number of factors -how well his
equipment is wo rking, bow much if
any extra pressure he's under from
his sponsors, and, simply, if he's
on a good streak or not.
Miller is also coming off a fool
in1ury he sustained at the last
CBSA Pro/Am event earlier this
month. which could be a factor if
it isn't oompletely healed.
The bottom line on Miller's
chances thts year will probably
come down 10 which heats he
draw!>, the easy ones or the
stacked one Ir he can get
thro ugh the tnals. which arc o nly
three rounds thi!> year. he is
almost certain to knock some
seeded surfers out of the main
eve nt, and go on to a big result.
The ques11on 1s, will he get out o(
the trials.,
Another Newporl Beach surfer.
David Giddings, is also entered in
this year's Op Pro. Like Miller.
Giddings has been on the tour,
and made main events .
Gidding.1 has been surfing well
in the CBSA Pro/ Ams and the
Quic.ksilver summer events, and
has received fair results on t his
years PSAA circuit.
Giddings surfs very well, it's just
his competition surfing. namely hia
prowess at getting the right wav~.
that reduces his chances at making
the main event.
At this point, I'd still consider
Giddinp as a lonphot but a
danacrous surfer nonetheless. If
he can make it out of the triah, he
could easily knock off some big
oamCJ, he juat needs to have aood
heatl and he'll be all right.
Some aood Newpon surfers arc
mysteriously off the heat 1heeu of
the competition, namely Joey
Zintel ud Darren Brillhart, both
PSAA competitors. I'm not sure if
they didn't qualify, or a<>t their
entries in late, or didn't enter for
other reasons.
Riii COtllt
0 Low net oYer-the-ficld W1.D0Cn of the rcc:eot "h's 1
Small World .. women's two-day member/guest aolf
towaament at the Santa Ana Country Cub were
Laura Hunter (Santa Ana CC) and Carol Frobish.
Fant flight low gross champions were Nicole
Ronald (SACC) and Carol Warburton (Wilshi:re)
while low net booon went to Liz David (SACC) ad
Owtenc lmmell (Bia Canyon).
In the tccond flight, low groa laurels went to
Janice Blanton (SACC) and J°'-_CC Batcheller (Bia
Canyon) while Mavis Eahoff (SACC) and Unda
Johnson (Imperial) teamed to win low net accolades
ln ~t No. 3 .action, Rene Moore (SAC'C) and
Joan Hill (Glendon) woo &ow gross while Gail
Conley (SACC) and Geri Doubletrce (Mesa Verde)
took low net medals.
Costa Mesa girls earn cage finals berth
Behind a quartet of big inside players, the Costa
Mesa High girls basketball team roUcd into the final
of their own summer leaaue tournament with a 57-31
pasting of Edison Mo nday.
The Must1np were led by the performances of ~
foot-2 junior April Van Sweden and ~foot senior
Angela Tonavanik. Van Sweden. projected to stan at
center for Coach Jim Weeks' squad, led aJI scorers
with 12 ooints and added nine rebounds and five
blocked mots. Tonavan.ik put in 11 points and All-
<;JF forward Olivia DiCamilli added eight, atong witll
SIX boards.
The win sets up a rem.atch with Ocean View io
Wednesday's 9 p.m. final. The Scahawk.s urlier
handed Costa Mesa its only lo.ss in the Mustana
summer league.
Couch potato corner
•••rt•• Ln111 ...........
.............
• 56 .. .. • 47 ..
43
• 915 a .. • .,
17
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·'Got enottMw one I··
I
t
0 This weekend bu two major
events on the ICheduJe. The
Newport Harbor Otamber of
c.omme.rce•a .. Plight of the Luers"
will be this Sundar, and the South
Shore Y acbt O ut? 1 Crew of Two
Around Catalina b land race will
start Saturday.
The SSth running of the
NHACC race originated as the
646-3102. a.., .,.... .. .,
llliJ I 'It ... ,.....,, .. al 2$27
W• Oilil ll'Wt .,. Newpon ......
W. Yadl& &.. just °'*"••d ... "66'' Series tut •• d••d wttb aknolt perfect wtod'
coedidcMll for the nee to .Lcaa
Point. Al usual, BYC threw one of
tbe be.a buc:b paniea around at
lta Whitel Cove (acilita after the
rMC Oft Setwd8y. Whoever ii
aellina the ncptiva of the niaht,
call mel
Saturday's winners in Clus A
were Brian Mock-'• Defender,
Newport Harbor Yacht Oub, fint;
Jeff Parwelra Cursor, NHYC,
second. and Jay Linderman's
Raider, BYC. ta.king third.
Ill one of the doscst finishes
ever, separating first and fourth by
21 seconds. the class B leader was
Ed Carpenter's Matangi, BYC;
followed lS ~nds later by Dick
Hayden's Rascal, Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Oub; then two seconds
tater by Dennis Roscne·s Sorcerer,
SSYCJBCYC; Paul and Laura
Sharp's Skidoo, BCYC. trailed by
four seconds.
LJ
PblJ RJcbardson's boating col••• •P~•n la the Ntwpart
&adl/Cosl• MeJ11 Pilot ntty
n.ud•y.
•,
A lfr I ........ ID ...ti .., .... tlw *8 .._. ol die .....,...._ .. ....,. .......... O'M~•b
0.. ......... ~ --of~~ .... a.. .. .,e. ,._. .... ud -... dmado were ~ decMd bf aapn
Wq 130 mi.la. 160 depeet &cm ~ Lw. nil area ii lS-10 milcl .... ol S. Martin llLud olf Bala-Bait
Md water conditb. were .->Ct witla anc bo.ttl c.lo•i'C mer 100 ac-c ICbooll of 6lb ahoWd be mowiDa up tbia week witb the
cbanp in t.be IDOOG. One and I half day trlpt dlou.Jd put aqkn
into the ftshin& grounds.
Resuhs
.....
! I , ,
1
12 ,. • 4 • I
II ,.
I)
" ,.
1$ ,. ,, ,.
20
11 n
ZJ
l• n
lt
11
21
• ,, a • • a u . ., • • v JI ~ . n ,.
Bl JI JO •
a:I • 1$ 40 u 41
14 4' ,. CJ " .. I) 41$
IJ • ,,
12 .,
•spert ....... YMllla... CNM.,,_,alH I• I .....
,..,....~-...llf'l'll:MCM ..,,_
1 "" ,.. .....,.,, ..,__ c.....,.. Clla -• ~ ........ c..... .,.,. Cllt , ,. ., ... ,.. Md.-. s.o . • 4 .,.,. a. .. -...
&.-,._. 0-. ca.. .,.. a. , °"*
;ew.IWIOI ..,._. C.....,.,. CM
From North Or~ Cowtty
From South Or~ Cowtty
540-1220
496-6800
642-5678
CLASSIFI ED INDEX "2·5678
MOii WTH OMW CO. "'°" 80UTM ~co . S.-129
•1111 ... _
PWUC:AnoN OUOl M ,..., ....... ... ,....._ .... ~,..
C.-cll •OUlt AD , .. N9T DA•
........ ---.c-. ........ _ .. ......,_ ....... ...._ $ .... ___ ..._ ....
_?":' .... -................... ---• -.. ~ ........ ~c-......... .............. __ ...... =··-· __ .....,...__, ______ __, ------a.._.., ................ -,,,,,,,_ ................. ,._ .......... ... ..,,.., ........ .._.,...._..,.. .. , ,m .. .. i..-...._ ___ ......,.. ____ _
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I • I • .1 j ' ~
~T ... IGHT8
29' 1 Be duplex. Patio,
Wlrfrne condo-30' doc9'. carpc>f1. No peta. $125
grt vul me1n cnen. AveM now. eu l6M
~ · 28D12 BA VERSAILLES • 1 bd MIWl90llT •IGlfTI
• ll~. condo · S850 Sherp a ap•cloua
•ICCAILI
SBA , 211A houae. "fl*:. pMlo, 2 c. ga-,.., ,,..~.
aaeoc pool. Near
eh ope. achoola &
IP Mt lt*l. °'*" loca-
tion 1249,900 720-
-· OPE'N llUN 12· 5 , 17291 Qervn, irven..
, • I ' '()
MIOWTI
ITUIJ ........ -.u
lleautlful 311r 2B• ~ w/formal Otn
Am a f'M"'Y Am w,1fg
Po"' r-d on .....-. _,. ...... A .......
wrt,IOO W~I ... ~
N1'9'C1li-tr11:=:.
•
NWP TOWERS • 2 bd. 28R 1 ~e. twnhm•
bey "'"' • s 1 100 wtttl w /0. sM petlo, PENINSULA • 4 bd poot, c-i><>rt a tndry
upp9f • I Ul60 f9c. Sony, No Peta
NEWPORT TWNHM • M16 Curt 11 7~5000 3 bd, dock • 1 1860
UDO ISLE • 3 bd Nk:9 29R 1 ~BA. 2~
hcM-. • 12100 condo W/gel' fl p,
UDO HIOHRlSE • 2 petlo 11100. P ..
bd ~_. bey vua • V-. Rentala 87~912
$2700 ~ Hgta 29f 1 Ba. W/
d, dlw, gar. gmdr, lg
SUMMER/WINT£R yet, all utlt&. No p«f
RENTALS AVA.ll.ABLE S1290/mo ~7078
•••r ~t N/9mkr.
I
Cove red c a rport, _,., pd. No .,...
1111&1mo. MC>6324
L.rg 28R ept. tum, no .,..... I 1100(mo ytty Ot
S750fwet cutng Aug. ·~
p~ V\ew T/Hm 3
hug• BR. 2"' BA.
ffpk. yard. gar. mfle
to beech. S 1150/rno
842-0t14
SPACIOU8 a modem
28R, 1 BA home, w/\g
yard a PQOt. garage
N ice carpet/bllnda.
Weet of Hetbor. V-.
......... 7 ..... 1•
Spacloue 2BR 211A
~ Quiet E.utatde
neighborhood! Encl
'"rd, IDUL ~°" 00 I 'TD leOO.'
mo. c.1 ••• HM
FREEMAN ELECTRIC
Quelty lob. Low pnce . /0rlveweye-pello.. Fr .. eet 24fw.l #tl:l111
patha 9'c. No jDO IOO •(714) ~~
I/Niii ....._ u... .... ro oo•o"'•"'•"• L••"•
M._.. .,_ .....,,.,. KMS Electrk:. 220\', """*"'~ 751-341'6 ....., ~ room ~ ... ~
ORTIZ CONSTRUCTION Ing lw, Mghb, ptugf. *ci:!'! T,.:a:n:!
Muonry-Concrete P• pat'9I uporadee. FY99 n*'Q • 9ptdlr/Uuf*"'O
83 tto.Ortvewby1t Paint. eatlmat•• 457.e101 Rpre 0 Seed/Sod
c.. ~ ....._ S46-309e UC #802W/b0nd9d Sir-=-t973 (4731 .. ) ~TllG t ptW I Ou•llty concret•block Bob ••• 8298. 1 .. u 117t M1......_
& ~lek w<wk. reason-uo. ~ ·--$1 50 Raf llne •ble pric••. " .. eat .....,.. "-......._ ----"-----• r-Call 751-8635 Monthly/Wlll'y ~ 1 Gert>age Oiac> lneCa'9ed per day. PU•c•a4AltTd·~~ lme. ,,__2'1·1940 =~=.:.:;
Th•I'• ALL you pay. -~-owo.nino. .._, -· 11s LAw 121-1110 c.. ........... ClilMtl.. vtc:•. ~. trim --------8...o on 4
..... Jim ~ 842-7208 --a _...._ ,.,_ Plumber's. ~ ,,,.,, 13....... ·-..-
In fie CU8TOll Tlte, giau &al. ~ 98t 5218 nNldy to wort-. FrQm
SERVICE ~ ~: t;'==' °t!':::=:nn=:. ~ ~ ~== DIRECTORY 1c~etl doen•·' ~,, .·111
1 aod-mOW.Oge..clnup. ~; ~~ ::. _ ,_...... I ............ ll&-271• .,,...._ a..al .. .,.11 UC.(3279&8) 758-a564 ___... b i de .t.11 'YP•• or V.. ~ Harctwood nr. Mno.. ~ ~'V .__ .___... ._
••--·----TILE Sub dren,. c._.,... "'°"" Ext 310 --"' -· cenimlc. ~ I Sp+ I • ta: SS 50 s-repeh
• MAA8LE INST.t.U "'rpr UC. 8*-2821 A•-~ w/coo wet .......... ~ "°"'
"'91.IC NOTICE
,-,,. Callt Pubfie U11h-
t ... Commtuk>t't RE-1 QUIRES thfl 1111 u~.
houaehold g ood•
mover•. print their
P U.C. C•I T number.
11mo·s & chauffeur'•
prim IMtlr T C P num-
~ In a11 .ov.rtlM-
m«lta If you hew a
QUeStlOn abOUI the ...
gettty of • moY'ef'. limo
or cheutteur. Call
Publk: UttlttM Com-
INMlon. 714-568-4151
... . '
t. I'
~·. ,. ,,, .. __ ..
• AEPAJR .t.11 type-a .t.11 ~ ~ S99" 5 Y' wen
of p~ WuNng & ~ ~ Comp l•1• COPP •• s...ng. 487-68&5 Pl ••l~I • wlthh' rep•~• from 1895
---W.&I W-' Ila I tJ FrM ea:1 We btO fl.et 1 "119 ~ •-.ert RI ~7505; C27~ pnc. on eny c>fumblnO DIM .. TU llAM Stripping, c uetoml Oii'• L fl r 1 WOt1l Min. 1 'fT ~
leelly ahowera-Acld ~ metchlng & lnstal a Maine. A.-e ntee Your d i •
w .. h A regrout ,.._I ~ ... 1038. Com Eatab fr91tabte I p.-c'-. John .t.mte
& R9PbK Bethn:>Om• I Loc•I refa Uc a Smlltt Plumblng 1 cell
S,,ow.r doon 'l<Jtc. 9ond9d 296-0819 -.23'2•. Ftoora·Plumblng Lie a
2synoc e7:M065 •••~ s:;. ~ ,_ ~
TI'9 a M wble Install & Cuatom ~ Bee · apnnlil ror. ~.
repelr Prompl aer· Cerpentry-~ • Uc: bonded.1'51-1015
~. frM M1 No job Fences K.-. -._, 118
too am•ll Fran k .,........,.pAfM ..._.,.
Tum9<. 9$7·1953 .. ...._. ~ERTIES
TILE lnslftled'Repelred 1 Peint-CatJ)9fl9'y ~.-
~ ~ s-c. Orfwe" o.~
Ff .. Eat & Aef••IC99 *U&MftVM&M,.. John & 5"9ltly e<te-e 1 78 IVV'IU "f _,.,...
~:-.~~
0 1 ... ~ ...
............. 5-»0I
• ~AWTN) a.-y ~ loclil ...... ,.,, P'tc9 "'8ft.--·
.. ., . ~ .. .
~· . -
...... " ...
• Aepelra. Ucer.e a
"-25 1" eq> FrM
Etlll ...... evt. S7&-!I089
,....,,...,,_ ...,,., ·-= .._..... ---· $ ,1 ... .. ,......,.,~ ......... _, ... ....
... ,
,.
QOODLOOIDllQ RULIUll APAaY DC9NIULLY LOCUllNI 10Uf• W:.T.":°n:=" ':.':::S..:."..::
F'"N.I WAITIDI WWW t•.. IWmta• Al ATTllCTM 11.C OfllpNc ....,. of~ 1..00 ....oATI .. •
-
~· .
33, ..-. gencteman Blue-eyed blonde, 41, 42. ne. pt'of. _.,."' T ... -..cl. lllender, .om Happy, fun-4ovlng, aual urradvertlHd _,._,_...,_._•-~.,.. .. __
40 + only. Oayttm• aaaka SWM, 40+, fOf NB youth aporta, lovtng, oweft-. en-8wtr 989 21..a... 1 am ..,,_ of humot, en-aduH PfOOF9ma. 1· LM 1 on fTM.X
~ .1 • I \
phone oeae.. Ontv 8«1-laattng ralatlonahlp. Meka echc•d i.cty, ..,..... ... ~ .,. a SWM, 989 a, ..,.. joya huge, walu, ._.....,. •• ......., fMl'mt ~
oua. #2900. Lov. thaetre, dlnnera, good ••teem, •~ thenllc, CIOfNftUnlca. ..... ._ -... -•-er.-, dlnrMW, c:tano-.. _,.._ ... 11111 .,,._
etc. RU ..-V., gen-flKilol-., to ahat9 & ""'9 ~ ~ gen-;;;rd -90~;:: ~·· .... ,_ .... ~ 10 ft'llrl"' GRID mo erou•. a1ncere • .,,..._ build tap111w. #1w. 9amM •.wry ·.-y .._......., '°"8 bUb-• honMt 1.0..-1 ~ ...-1 °", t1111 ~~·.h~fob~ ILOllD llg!nt? C.itl #2905. AllAll and romanttc, with bl• bath• together ~few "'91ideHp 8f1CI 1JIOO llO 1111 t• tit •II Wanted: outgoing ,... I ._.,.1 12.ooo mo. Of'lfltf In-encl mldll'ltght ..em. taaung re&attonahlp. 12.~ w/10 min ....,.... 10 ...,_ ~~7~ ~· ~ 1at1onahlp oriented WF .. 5ft GODDlll come and lteach !!!Inf. #1I02. --------#1.... "*"'"""'·
Teddy Bur type. SWM, 35~0. over RICH WAllTID ....,,,.,. --. ~ --.--1-1----1 -.-.. -U-T_l'UL ___ ~Qla~IU~:'."""911 M'..AI -•UU
lonely, lovH klda. 5•9··. by SWF wtltl her HANDIOllE SWM, 29, 5'11", 170 friend/morel 8h•'• • RIAIWTO • ~II FIT Ill• 1 aC1 together. 8mokw. awM'I, YWY pretty, -__ .._. • ..._ _....._. ..., __ 11"' high moral va uaa, •llm, falthful men. &g9 lbs., athletic, btond -.ncter, compatltMe ..vw ...,...,,... ., ... _... _ ...... --
crav .. att.ctlon, mov· Enjoys Mrty Rock-N· 40-63. MU91 be emo-wttt\ ~ ayee, gr.-~ emo41otimty ~ SWM, 29, 5'7", 186 Praf111IC1¥llt awM, M , A~,..... _!!00_,!!I.!!~
lee, no drugs. 4'2808. Rot!, Suahl bar!. mov· tlonally etabla and cs.. aenee of humor, abeel ~Gob lbe., good looking, ad-.,..... eomeol .. to go 1191 .,_ ~ 5.,~ • ......._ ...... ••E YOU 1••. 9tc. 412782· void of problem• con-8MU Aalan Fox to •11 #1717. ~. cartng. Loot!· place• In Orang• Bu&Mll• glfta IYe E"9DY 24 ,.. .,........_ #1 . _, HAPPY C9mlng ex-wtvee. old rock hie WOl1d. #1821. --------Ing tor• lady,~-Cowley. I a. to dine 12.SO/mln./ 10 min ------....---1 llY IOULMAm -..-..-81r1tr1end• and tMm----1-IQ--"-'"' ___ , HWOlll ab1V okMt wttn flnw1. out. mcMaa. .....,., m1n 1!900-W w1 CALL ..... ....,.,,... R1J11 If -
OWF, 53 at1rae11ve, 5ftl5ftUSI~ boe. No fat bafUed, WVJ ITAIJM de/ .-urtly and~ dMoea, ...,.... and · -EIMIR 1~ =~1~!! ~~odhu1~~~: Widow·~~~ =ic.'::9~~~; e!~ S::Y.~~ .. !: AmRICM -;&T:liva: .._ twtt. 411801
. -~ ~ IJlel ,:!,~ 31
' t&I 1 Ill CUI 18
muelc, an, rHdlng, all~at• 50·1 In ~ you have what It atonal who lraV9l9 Tu-inv..lof, 308. I' SWMI 181( 1/'IOO 5411 s.n I See oar_. 14* OftctOl'Y
ttahlng on a mountain port Beectl. Lov. 10 IM•. you .,.. mMlt Thu to SF area; uny, REAOY TO RTT\.E IUMllMQ YOU'LL.. S1Q(Oill ,b._......,. ...... , ..._ ... .., ..
lake, bHch walka. walk, nature. beech, your match. #2902. etweys laughlng, YWY OOWNI SMtta amatt, cw ~. com--
You too? #2804. dining-and ahare your e•preaalve. s .. klng lllender lady under 35 ~llcalNe, .. 71sgeitt, .... .....,_ UM, '2,
aTT'RACTIVI ,nt.,..... 100. #2821. ~_...... ~·::, :=-= =-~~'*C:: fufMovtng rie.man :=d::ip~ •• ::
.,..,_,,.., 6 doeen't ta61• llfe eo w/a•n•• o humor voice meaaane & eo • SWF. 5'5", 130 W'•-V9f9811on, tun. #1842. • .. k• trtend, MLM • Iba . young, acttve,... ,..,..., aerloualy. Children .,.,,.,_, ... ..,...ieur. phOne. Wtl.,.... al
cure, non-amokar. At1ractlve Southern more then OKI #1803. HAllDIOlll type, adventuroua, ce11a. 4'1947.
Neb canng gemi. lady. happy, aptrtluail, IROWll lftl TRiii rnm1ure. hOneet. C8rtnQ
man fOf outing•. poe-educated dealrea --i.oy. #1I08. Mimi
albla reletlonehlp kJnCI, loving huaband, 11110R •n-
#2903. age 45-69, SWM/ 5'10", 174 !be .• clean n k. n/1, M . quaMy, .. /11IOUQHT UlmlMTJlmllQ
CULTUBll!'I\ OWM. 8', 180 pound&, penon, truthf\A, HI• good dr....,, ed~ OWM, m6d !50'•.... FR .. nav healthy, attractive, pelWC peec.nt, ~ ca'-d, ftnancM and eoulm8'la to 48, tof SAM 315, IT', 140 lb., APPSCTIOllATE hlgtt moral V9fuee, ~ hel'9 locally all my ltte, emoetcMia A-1. You: 50 laatlng ral•tlonahlp. looldng tof c.tng, un-
ATTRACTIVI ~· .. ~ 1~••;.!!!!; ..-. UnceN lady to ~~~-tr1m ~~· Have cl~~h.• demanding, wondty ..,._. "'-T-· ~.,....T• 37 yrs..~ 1199. #1809. .......... _.. • ,.,.._, ~ nw-• tD ..,.nd t1fne Graphic artist. 5'2", ___ L_E_QQY____ no -amok Ing. no--llbaral, heel•. allk now ..,,. time wfttl peraon · • ~I~~~~· ~~:S. ~~'i LOVING drinking. no-druge. .CllAZY ~· jeans,h wee Tj you, ....,.. the RoeM, ~~
mualc. •.nd theater.I "2901· HlMOUROUI ~~~ and umor ~ .,. & trwel. y.e ll:lll•lgent & ldtrec·
•Mk• good ~lured, LOYAL VIRY HIDIM ~ R•• -41-1-829-· .,.,,_ _____ UYeU. ;";t1 .. ;M1ii· M~-
emotlonally stable, n/ Flt, tun, •Inc.,.•. n/1, LOVING F" and tr1m, 46, 5·9··, ~ llO lllTlllDTAL
•. o-ntttaman. 48-84, OWF, ... king °'*"· A ~. very cl ... y, 155 Iba .. Meks com-ROllAllTIC HAllQ.UPI POITIC
for lutlng relatlon-honest, ac11ve, roman-cultured, edv9nturou• panlon . dancing, Tai, dettc and hand-SWM, 50l9h, 1IO Iba.. -·-
ship. ~2820 Uc man 3S-50 who I• 5.8 .. brunette wtttl nu-ahowe. travel, open-.oma SWM. 45, ~ ~Inv tof allm, ro-~ 1 "' DON'T QO ~mot~lly :~.:=:::: m eroue lntereat• m inded, alncer•. SWF, 30-40 for can-mantic, home loving a1. ~ flt, ao-TO IARI °' a ng. u •Mk• attrecttve, sue-frlandahlp elw•y•. dtellght dlnnera, ~-woman 4t> • who ttvie, Ntt, DWM. 5'9". relatlonahlp. 412822. CM11\JI man, 44 to eo. _11_1_1_&5_. ______ 1 Ing and compenk>n-went.• Mnalttve, bt\le 170 Iba.., wwm. II·
SWF. 40"•. 5'3", •I· PRETTY to iov. •~ I'm DW 40 •hip. ComptlMlonat•. eyed, 8 ' challenge. fectlon•t•. marriage
tractJve widow looking Pll!'9rTE playful and am a lot of Intimate, tun toYtng. . # 1711. m~. E11fOY denc-
fOf athletlc gentleman, ~ • tun to be wtth. You SINCERE 11 HM8. --------Ing, 1tleat•, travel,
non-emoker. I love to PROFESSIONAL w lll b• glad yo u Flnanclally ••cure. l'M IO lll*'VI llO llAllCMIPI epom, aaaka lady 40-
nah, play tennl• orl DWF, 38. 5"3", alngle _c._1_1ad_._t1_2_1eo_. ___ ... king OWF Of SWF -SWM. 65, 190. 5'tt". eo torr~ and .
stay home to cook mom who enJoya llfa. WJMMllll.l'l fOf an honeet, ,..._ed, I COULD IMF •••k• Lady 40-50, ti 1808
#2781. •-le• o~. elncere, """" laatlng relatlonehlp. Flttyl•h breakdan<:ar non•moklng, drlnll· --... --T-AllTIAL ___ _ DREAMY playful, relatlonahlp COllllNATIONll EnJoya m<Me•, Mach. with 1MMge llbldo Ing, dnJOa. Must be CUTll PERSON wtth handeome, confl-OWF, 5'8", 40·8 , Good qule1 dinner• and wan11 ••n• beach ftM to roem Mzona.
dent profHalonal 3&-Looking, loY9a llfe and _m_u_Mc:_. _11_1_7ee_. ___ 1 bunny to drtve crazy. Celtf., Neveda. "'807 OWM, 5·9··. 175 Iba.,
DWF, 5'2", 140 lb•., 45. NS, no drinking all " hH to otter. Youth, beauty, pa· llO ITIUllGI college educ ated,
look 40. Chrletlan, N • w p 0 r t e •a ch Lootclng for a tun loY-GOOD LOOIOllO nach• and ~ ATT•~ woni. at wrytng ftt ln-
clusy, Euro~an. bru-1 2807. Ing. 8table. IOvMble, ll\IPOllT llACH eHentlal. Newport -aide & out. adwntut·
nene, cultured Entoy
1
--------·1 eln c ere Genll•man. If you love 1enn11. 111804. Handaoma. aecure. ex., mounw6na to the
concert•, trav•I. etc . IHAZAll 112764. anow aiding • ..,.._, energetic. clean, ..., Ilk• good muetc,
Seeking over 50, IEllOINQ manage. dance, MllNll youthful WM, 39, trlenda. 1augt11er.
good·IOOlclng gentle-tnvel end your.ett, ROlllllTIC 14 •••le• afternoon or il1824.
m an , non1molclng, CAPT. lllMVIL cell .John. #11411. evening ••capadea ---.. ;Ri;;;---
habltuel drinker or fOf" fun & excftlnQ ad-He I• handaom•. wtth at1TecttYe, com· TIDD'f ~"1 E .._...., vent·~ee ~ ..... moon-MMJI•--MmhMlied •ec:ucfve. mltted or married ••&a OV9fW-v • x,,,_ung ""' ""'·--· ·-acn-•mv ~·.,._ adven1uroua, 8 '2", -compatible. 112781 . llt• walk• on the ,.-r nnw. ,y --•'TD ....._ 0....-.SW . ..,,_ wom9n wtth ..,_ of
GIDGET beech. Must be apon-IWIET ~ _.., ...,,_... ..,... adwneure. ~ SWM, 999 :te. 8'7"",
tan•ou e. humoroua. Marri age-minded . ..,_ ~~. f9ml-... ured 4'HM3 230 Iba .• looking tor -E romantic SWM, ~. SWM, ,,._ married. SWM, 5'9", use. tat. nine, &<Mah. ftexlble ----·---·--my pretty women. You 1 •r 8'. 170 Iba., ..akJng _,a •rnotionllltv _._ ... ___ .. _ --11-...... •--..-a SWf --.-
Petite, tan, athletlc, ~'.!~ .. " ~m~':, ~ an ••otlc t.dy wtlh b:.. '..iMnlwted, ;;;. t;;--'..M;;O, ~~ --=.= ~ ~.&r:
chic, g ood cook "" .. -brown •kin and brown teealon.l wrtter-4dltor, ~. ctlarlelee. cv~ ,.._ 5'9", 120 to 136 Iba..,
... ka older m•rrUto• nett• looklng fOf • ,.., bedroom eyH tor an new to Callfornla iur.t, ~ actM-PWlll low aperldlng cleY9 Ill
minded (47-67), con-datell 112808· exc!Ung monogamoua Llkee welka, good UM. SM *'-Ad be SWM, 33, vwy good the beactl 8f1CI romwl-
aldarate, •tfec:Uonate. IOlllOllE IPICIAL retdonshlp. tit 846. c o n v • r • • t I o n . c aring, compatlble, looklnQ, 8'3", 215 !be., tic walk.a on the beect\
romantic gentleman LI_..._ BeathoYen and boc)l(e tree to ahare Na ltf9. muac:der, wW'I curty a1 night-, drinking
wtttl graa1 wtt. 112783. ra 1 •-Lot• ol 1tuden1t IOOll tor Seek• affectionate. 1117U broWn hetr, ~ Ill· champagne by.._ "'9
Roome mpvtmenta ~ Ar• you • man -llC*lrnent ~ In good-nllk#'9d, anr.<:· tr9CtlYe ....._,, woman and _.. loYe me. M"9t
. Cleeellled cen MH"Y 43, 5 ·10··7 Cell me. clMelftecl Wiil ttwy find tlYe, nl•, SWF, 26-35. ~ ll8ld pelntlne? °** who Ilk•• mualc. llve In Huntington rour houalnV ,_,. Thank you. #2780. '°"' ltef"8 ecMrUled? ., 112&. _.. ~ liDr M:lp. "1822. Beech. •1794.
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CfTY: swt: ZP. ----~ ..... Mia-·$ ....... _....,.c.,..... .............
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lndcal:a g:and:ar pi•••• 1Ce ouace. Witt a.tggt:lt
tt'CJf adl ~ camaln 0 ... <Nac"lp4Dt, age
'°"Ge•~. and CMJCO!b•. Adi OOM*V
-s*::lt -a aro1ot1ea 1:arqJag:9 we not be
ocx~. the ,_ pcff beocf\, CGJto M:aao Plait
~ Iha ~ lo llllt:lci Ol"f Odliel....,,. •.
~adl~be~tof ~·~ b¥...,,... ll Y'80' of age or Old9r. No adl we be
~~ ...... ~lhcltage
09a··· The ~-pcwt liod't • ~ M:aao Not mNNe no
latllll'y tof Iha oonNnt 0t ~ lo Ol"f PM01 o
~t•lt. lhe~~OOlt ....
l:a:bllfy flor ... ooM9nt "'and al .... to~
~··"and b Ol"f daWa modtt agalNI ...
...... part l9oct\ Oaato .... Plot and"' .........
hanft:lill lllamal OCiiia, ...,.._ ~
teaaordll:ll °"'°"*" ....,, ~and duil09"
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parl. S•oo + ~tll. A.a-.w ...... nao
Hit hdQlM, aee/mo Incl '*'· ~ ~ ..... 1all & ..... req.
L.owel, -· ••• Ha nr bch. Shr 38t hiM,
pool, eptl, full atner\, ..,. .,.._...,..now.
M/f'.t40() . .....U
Ude • a a.y l'me. Loe 291' taA apt. To ehr
wlth.M. e. feM . All ....... In,.-. ... It
naedeleyou.714-
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DILIVDY
TMUR8DAY8
O•LY. Newapaper
rout•• avaKabte In c ............. •••~•rt ••••h 5:00 A..M. to 10.
A.M. Up to teo.00 .,_
day. Car and in..
a nee requll'ed. can
842~.
FOUND: r.n-. y_.
.... ,. Tentw. vtc:
.,..,,... oppey. Wll
lrWn. (!1!} 4»-74'¥7
MourO'lria a t 7th St..
C.M.~70 All9WllRHeca8YC OflmMlTOR
Onrwywd eNft, FT/
PT. Muat type 38
wpm. ,,.,.. ......... C09ta
Mee&. ~t7T7
,OUNO: love b ird.
Bade Bey .,... nMI'
Y.M.C.A. ,...._ call
8'1·2294 UP TO
Looking to sell
that edra Jank
•tacking ap In
the garage?
$600
PER MONTH
* Ill Cl1B1m *
Try our garage sale ads. What's
junk to you is a treasure to
someone else. For only S8 .52 you 191------~~~--,
Early morning motor
routes available. Deliver
Tuesday, Thursday &
Saturday. Must have
dependable transportation
and liabiUty insurance. "'====:;:~get 4 lines for 2 days. Call today. CALL 842-4333
,.....,,,..,13
S-. T-..: Scorpio wbo ii no
11ran1er to utrol<>11: J onatben
Winters. C.pricom wbo p1'0Yed that
not 111 "old men .. ~ ~pit:
Oeorae Foreman. Gemini who
cxemplinu qualities ol his alp via
talenta dlspla~d in •Cllna. pa.Inti"-:
Tony Cur1is. Leo wbo oombined
s h rewd n e11 . inte lliaence.
ahowmanahip In acbimnt mator
V1Clory: Nonnan Scbwantopf. Arie•
wtio.e derrlna-do will not IOOfl be
foraoucn: Houdini. Virao whole
concert perfonnanees appear a.Mys
fresh, oriainal: Michael Jacbon. Do
~ a,ue?
AJUES (Mardi 21·April 19). What
had been far sway is now within
reach. Focus on creativity, atyle,
"hl1her mind " Spiritual valua
surface. news concemin& journey,
d11pl111 ol lalcnl dorn1natu. Ltl>r'I
plays rok:.
TAUaUS (April 20-May 20)-Bauc
facu 1emponrlly obfuscated.
Clariflcatlon comes durina late
ahemoon houn. Attention ~
around tcCOUnflna. nnaodaJ statm of
one who would be partner. Pilca
fipru In 1C1.n1rlo.
G&MINI (May 21 -Junc 20).
6mpbula on power, authority.
dMdllne. O¥Crdue .,-ymenta Accept
ciMU.op, prow that ,c>u can aur*e
.,..... ctWa. Matltal atltlll .,..,.
1l1•lncae1 role. Y0ta'll emer ..
---la lepJ cmtrowf'IJ.
C~NC&a (hH l(.Jvty 22): ....... ~-Loe*~ tho
.................. t..ukliuM llO
....,....,.~ ......... ...
..... ,_ .w.4 ...... ..
PHdl•J.. •••• •••ll•bt• tor «~~·n~e..-o. Oifst n"CJ,.....,
ol ...... .. J'Ollf Oft
capn"lll._, taa. rtllll:a to prow~ ......................
..... drwdc <«i••••cL ........
W.00 (A-., n.s.. ll~ l.olt-...... ~---~., ule or p•rc•aae of P'Ofle'fJ·
642-5678
UUA (Sept. ll-Oct. 22): Ched
Aric1 IMlllJe Focus Oii ftnatilHy,
humor, abilily to 1n1CUlate feelinp
in eotenalnlfta manner You'll "star ..
11 social hlnction Locate ~111
docwncnt.s. 1oclud1n1 paupon. blnh
ccrtlr1Cate.
SCORPIO ;oc1 2l·NO¥. 21).
Another Sa>rpio helps you overcome
odch. adlleve pl. F1nandal reward
provicka 1nccnt1YC to revtYe donnanl
pro)Cct Read between hnes. cMck
rcoorcb. past performances Key is to
be lhorouJh.
SAGnTAIUUS (Nov. 21·0« 21):
Scenario httblJ&bll Initiative, stytc,
"deliciouJ" romanlte interlude. FOC\aS
on creative endeavor,
eapcnmcntallOO, 1ain as result ol
rudlfta m11enal £\lentJ tranaptrt in
,c>ur fnor
CAftJCOllN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Surpri.te planMd, couJd relate to
appcanoce of lMna quancrs.. You act Unolt anytblna ,c>u ... n1 II
diplomatic.. You lole 1f ,c>u llleJnJ>I
10 b'CI iMue1 01n rq>rucntJ toten
ol afroction
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fcb. II):
Ckcl I.Ao rnusqe. Define tenna,
CMttllne boundarks,, find out aactly
what t. upected trom you Answen
an tound behind t«nct Foray mto
untnmm tenitoty proveJ rcwardiQS.
Daro lo drum I
PISC&S (Feb 19·Much 20):
Thoec who 1bouaht ,ou twld OCM
handle pnalcal p~ trill be 1• b
rude 1w1k1nl•1 Pocu oa
admlnlatratloo. reapoHlblllty,
deadllH. Relatlcna1hlp l11t1n1c,
uonny, p1cbd with dnma. tay wiU\ .. ,
,.,.. II), J.ty 14 Dilcard ~ routine ~rrun1
Slau Yee A1b4I: California will fil'are prominutly
~mon seem to bne an atruuly UNA (Sepe. 23-0ct 22)· C'hc'Clt
for Hlroloc. Goodwin Kn1pt. dunb1h1y of aood• ... llcn11on
Sa11111n1iS. kept a ftJe ol horoacopes r~ around warnnU«. cktAJI\.
1n his otria:. on penom who played MMll pnnt tbet m1ati1 be OYCrlookcJ
important roles ln bis political Ide. Whal had bun con\ldercd
Ronald Rcaaan. Aquarius. made no .. impou1blc" could 1ia1n be •lrve
sec+et of his intereat in atrok>l.J, and k:.lct.lq. l~t1111e1
and the prcu made it bis news. Pete !ilCOlPIO (Oct 21.Nov 111
Wilaon, Virao, la the cvrreot Chee.Ii Libn mes..~ Rcfuw tl'
Califom11 ~mor. Hia birtll.,-tb accept wperfic&al uplanation Do
(Aua. 23. 1933) is numbe' 11 . ~ penouJ det~ ..,..n Shon
auoaatcd with Uranus, k1'0W'O as trip 1nvotvc1 rcla11vc Wr11tcn
lhe planet ol utrokJo. ONJd It be m1tcri.1l helps rcaoh-c dilemma
that W~ IS followin& prtciedeDt of J\nswcn bind toruthl
at least two prcv;ous Califom11 SAGflTUJUS (Nov 22-Dtt 21 )
~mon" Don ·1 ao too f11 from home bax
Aatl'.S (March 21 -Apnl 19) Famdy mcm.ber tend.I ..-ial .. You're
DcculOft is fortbcomtna conttm"'I needed herel" An.tnca Um>lwd,
• moMy pteh1re Ukes on opc:anustic career. pruttp>w ~DI m hue. Prom• will be f\atfillcd wtthm commurury pro,ect fltld out e:uctty
what II expected Define terms, rwo Wftb. Tavnas tuna.red
out hne l'ooundane\ Love re latl0Mb1p CAnJCoaN (Dec 22-J an 19)·
undef)OU lest Get rid of 11Uperf1QOU1 matcnal,
Jtru.mlme teduuq..es C)dc hip.
TAURUS (Af"' 20-May 20) 1ud1mcftl and U\lu1llon prove
Lunar, numenca upects hiahllaht accurate Mate penon.al appcarucc.,
power stn.igk, 1ntc~ rcJatbi.th.-r. delineate ricwl Pnvate meetina
protpccu tor 1ouruy. Older prodlKln fireworb.
1ndrv1du1l '"'rb m your behalf AQUAJUVS (Jan 20-Fcb 18)
beh1nJ tcell«. YO\l'U mtcl deadl.tne. £mpba111 on power, uthorny. ""viw crdJ1 V.ctory! deadlme. cb.tnce to h11 fmandal
GEMINI (May 21 ·Junc 20) 11ckJ<>1 You'll be involved 111
Mo~y will be rcleucd, klrlt·dmanca clandut1nc arrao1~1nent that
commun.ca1ion ~nr1a VW-WMt tnebdea Capncom WM Mamtain
lflPlrcntly ••~ loat will be retluwd, 009trol wi'tb:Ollt bciat domlMCn"f.
lod11d1na tcaal d:ocum<nt focus on " u (Feb. , .. M ardi 20):
romanee. tra.-eJ, upan•t01' of Sceauto tutu,. ...... .nt. alMlitJ
llor~ to •I• rr11ncb alld leOucacc
C ANC&a (Jvoe 21.July 22) llftportnt t,:;:'• Prulou
AncntlC!ft rC'¥0twa aroued credtbW~. racrlcdc• ao "_.,,., -J'OU"re
lea•I nalltt. ,.btk ~·ra.eoe.. ,,.. '° •• .,_. 099 ,...,.. sdicJ
mant.J .t•t. You'U ~ ,._. a.... NWt ·~ 1fY011f.
.. J\JLY D II n>t1ll -~ 11.art aed ~ W1,., ""'-• ..... w """ ---=--•y C.n .. t _.,, 91t..9111 •• ,, tr:..,..• 6_,, -•vvw •-'
-1-•• -. .. re.wk. B:qlla poeidae i. .,...... Yo. ..... -81 ~ -o# Yartety, crulM'J, .uita.I ... ,., co....,.....,. .-., i1ff1 d ... art,~.,. 90 ...,_ l:dditto. '° ....,. Yu.'I.. UO (J_., D-A., 11): t.billhia ..,...., 110 a..:ry _. ~ ,_
oa ..,... ll>Md C90Cioaal-laudal la11llect worh "o•Hthile." ....... ..._.. IOQ:lll ft ,...,_ IJin.
1ro••4 I• A•a•"· Yo.a '''" Ufton.~ proaa:due p,tl ,le" ._ Scar'6o ,..._ are .... ID -~·· ~:_r,ou ---=..~ .... Fon.r .. ~ becic•• ....... F-iwm llMlicallld. , , • ..,. • ....... Jll*t-._..._, alty. Mane.I 11.-l 14 C'ftlVJ ._, ciob, ...... nu.a .vs s ._
.......... wwd OaliN. \'&,.a. la l .. ab .. Cwcr. Aq:aarM ,.._ Yo. ,..._ Ltwa a 'If, .. ~ pmo9 AN .... IO ,.0.. ,.., rob. C..-el .......... M
Ae'latlotlM P ... ,... tut In VllGO (A•a.. lJ~t. 11): fi'OdllCt, ...._, 0.... tydn ._... s.,...~,. trOJ ••A'i.. N•Jof ea,·• om ~ • .,e.. ~. ._...tk ._....... Uiat co.w
........ ......... In Odo6icr ~. Id ........ Ou•••.... ..... ac.t..r dlailel el I I ,., .....
................ ............... _ ...................
9y CHAllUS GOftN
wtth OMAa SHAJttF
~ TANN AH HNtSCH
SOQU.
2•
4 NT
~ NT
8 •
Weet
P .. p._
P ...
P ...
tuna&.ely. South cboM to ao for 12
tnck.a m apedn rat.her than ctube.
Wnt led t.M Jack of diamooda.
removing anv WOrnft dec:la.rer
m11ht havr had about that suit. It
m11ht 1ttm that rverythmc hil\pd
o n I 2 2 club bruk, but dec:lattr
found a wav tn improve the odds
<'Oru1derablv
Aft#r captunnit the Inna of cha·
monch wll h the ~. dttlarer le'at.ed
trum~ bv cHhinit thf' IK"e \\'hen
both ~fenders followed. decla.l"f'r
nnl went aft.er thf hurt suit Aft.er
plaVlnJ off thf acf ond k mi. dia
r anhn• a dub on the !attn declarer
rufffd a hurt m hand. and lhf 4·3
phi m that !'Ult meant declarer no
lonJf'r n~ tlw b~1nro nf 01me
f nrtunf' 1n club'\
Dttlarrr i"nle~ dumm' nM
m<•rt llmt tJ, ruffmi the «°'xf QUHn
1£ diamond ... thf'n 'W'l up • lone
!wan 11o1th a riiff Aft.r drewm1
trumps. II • •' 1 '1mplf mallfr for
dfclarrr tn r ro ' w dumm\ , ICf' of
clut>. ll• cuh thf' lon11 ~art In all
cifclal"f'r 'fill"f'd 'ti trump tnclu m
hand and a dutm1tnd ruN m dummv .
thrtt !wan tnck~ and the mmor
11u11 ICf'<i fnr a tnta l nf l 2 tnch
Sot~ that dttl•f'fr had tn draw
f'1u1cth• onf round o f trumps. to
chttk nn the hf'fak wh1lf' lnv1n1 a
trump un thf' ublt .._,an tot~· vta 1
dwnond rufr Wtll pla\ed'
TODAY 'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
18'1ofldy
• "-' Mrd 10~
14 ·n. -
Mutiny
15 ......
~ 1ec;, ... ~
17 Modify
111 T OOCf\ oet1
111 ·woe -•·
20 0--
wellPO'W no-i-
24 "olklliol 2tl Oii .,,.,.
27 ~IOQOer
311(~
32 ~ k.
33 LOClll.9
35 ~pet
le Door pwl
lt~ .....
40 g::,,,
• , 8'ICkty
42 -°"' ~
'3Slr~
U Le Coq -
45 ~
47~
51~
5.2 °'*•·•-iv S4 8rUN:I\ fOOd
5a Type of P91m
S4t Solklllucle
'I 8""'*'
&2 Stor,
&3~
,,~.
&4 Eapunve
850-lf',
.. FO'wdied
17 a..vs .,,
DOWN
,~
2 ColoneM
3 Moreno
40!~
8"°" to mo.. s SOfM
Ev~
• Mocca9M'\
7 Aaac>ot*bllrt',
• No4 lftOIM'l.cl
9~
10~
II~
, 2 Pt-oeectlOtl
13 Loo*e
-CNl'V'Y 21 c...., n .. ~
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