HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-09-10 - Orange Coast PilotTODAY
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QUOTfS OF TltE DAY
"Thue's no one profile for Johns.
They're every race., every age, every
~ligion. Wt 've gotten school teachers,
attorneys, you na~ it."
Costa Mesa police Sgt. Tom
Boylan, commenting on the ceccnt
prostitution sweep in Costa Mesa,
, which netted 18 m~ of various
backgrounds for allegedly soliciting
sex from an undercover police
officer. (Al).
"/ can enjoy hu when she's kind,
But when she doncu in tht wind, And
shalcu tht wings and will not stay, 1
puff tht prostilutt away .. "
John Dryden.
COMMUNITY EVENTS
• Dinner and Opera A prc-
performancc supper will precede
Wednesday's Opera Pacific offering
of "Cavillcria Rusticana" and "I
Pagliacci" at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center. Supper is at
5:30 and the perf ounance is at 8
p.m. Tickets range from $20 to $75.
For information, contact Myril
Krcudcr at 631-1249.
•Jan at Cafe Udo. Newport's
premier jazz spot features Wayne
Wayne, with Yve Evans, Gary Wing,
Peggy Duquesne! and Ernie Ninoz
tonight from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. and
Tony Guerero's all-star jazz jam, •
featuring Ron Mullins on piano,
Brian Bromberg on bass and Dave
Jlooper on drums Wednesday from 9
p.m. to 1 a.m. Call 675-2968 for
information.
• Brunch at 111'fn1'• Art in
Jewelry will be the luncheon topic at
11:30 a.m. at tho Four Seasons
Hotel, sponsored by the Museum
Council of the Newport Harbor Art
Museum. Contact Muine Gaiber,
759-1122
• Soutb Coat Repertory presents
George Bernard Shaw's "Heartbreak
House". Tickets range from $23 to
$32. Call the theater at 957-4033 for
ticket information and reservations.
.JUST TltE FACTS
• What /$ another name for Uttlo
Corona &.tcb?
·~~nno ~ona
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)191 .... "'9!il .. '44·5717.
INDEX
8ridgc/86 ffealtll/AS Buaioiii/.U _ _.... __ ~
Ouaifted/IM l..epl ~
Community Forum/M SonJon/AI
~ Sodll)iM
Eiltertllnmeat/AI Sportdl •-•era• OJ;;afllll& 1991 • ........................
Publis"" Tuudays, Thursdays & Salurdays
'Jlhhs' target ol prostitution Sting .
--_,,;~---.;._--~~;~--~~~~-* By t.onAm 8asheda technician and a high level employee with
the state depanment of AJcoho~ Beverage
Control who was in Costa Mesa on
business.
I
State official held
in police action
By loMm 8astteda
Stlllf WJtw
COST A MESA Police have
arrcated a high ranking official with
the state Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control for soliciting an
officer who was posing as a
prostitute during a.n undercover
operation. .
Donald Decio'Us, 52, of
Sacramento, was in Costa Mesa on
business when police said he drove
up to the officer in a rented Dodge
Dynasty and offered to pay for sex.
See ARREST/Id Piii
5'111 Wltllr
COSTA MESA -Sbc wu standing on
a comer at Harbor Boulevard for lea
than one minute when the fant customer
pulled up.
Qad only in short shorts, hi&h heels
and a low-cut polka dot top,. the
undercover police woman told the man it
would cost him $50 for "the works." The
price was too high, though, and he drove
away.
But there were more.
For four hours Thursday night dozens
of men in an endless stream of cars that
included a Mercedes, a Corvette and a
utility truck flocked to this woman for sex
-unaware that undercover police
officers had the scene surrounded.
Some, sensing she was a cop, drove off.
Others left because, they said, the price
wasn't right. Several men asked her to
wait so they could get money from a
'There's no one profile for
Johns. They're every race,
every age, every religion .'
-llJ. •mnM
·Costa Mesa police
nearby automatic bank machine. And
then there were those who drove away,
only to pass by her post minutes later to
renegotiate the price.
In the cod, police arrested 18 men,
ages 18 to 63, for soliciting prostitution.
And for every one arrested, there were
two who approached the undercover
officer to negotiate a price or sec her
wares.
There was an electrician, a nurse, a lab
They came to Harbor Boulevard from
Sacramento, Westminister, Fountain
Valley, Huntington Beach, Santa Ana and
Costa Mesa.
They were married and single. Young
and old. Dark and white. Drunk and
sober.
And they ended up spending their
evening being booked behind a dark
office building off Harbor Boulevard.
There police bad set up a command post
to hold the "Johns," handcuffed, until the
operation was over at midnight.
Then the men were taken to the Costa
Mesa police department where they were
processed and released.
· The penalty for soliciting a prostitute is
typically a court date and a small fine.
See PROSTITUTION!lll* ,_
Interchange
---crowds onto
'top ten' list
55, 405 freeways combine
to jam state highways list
By Matt Coker
S1altW~ ,
COST A MESA -A local freeway
interchange won the dubious distinction
Monday of cracking a list of the 10
busiest interchanges in the United States
in 1990.
The interchange of the Costa Mesa
(55) and San Diego ( 405) freeways was
the 10th busiest in the nation last year,
according to a report released by
Caltrans. The other nine in the top 10 arc
also in Orange or Los Angeles counties.
Although some interchanges swapped
order from the previous year, the 55-405
interchange was the onJy newcomer to the
list, bumping the spot where routes 80,
580, and 880 merge at the eastern end of
the Bay Bridge in Alameda County. A
section of Interstate 880 near the Bay
Bridge · in western Oakland collapsed
during the October 1989 Loma Pricta
eanhquake.
To crack the list, the 55-405
interchange carried an average of 435,000
vehicles a day in 1990, up from 400,500
the previous year, according to Caltrans.
Here is the complete list:
MMe Mlltilt ~
Going to lunch, the Zamow family rides their six-wheel Teryl, David, who designed and built bike out of square
"HeXacyde." From left are family members Zach, Noah, • aluminum tubing and spare bike parts, and Rachel:
1) The East Los Angeles interchange,
which connects the Golden State (5),
Santa Monica (10), Pomona (60) and '
Hollywood (101) freeways. Topping the
list for the third straight year, the
interchange carried an average of 563,000
vehicles a day last ye.,..
2) The Santa Modica (JO) and Harbor
See FREEWAYS/Id ...
T he U.S. Naval Academy may have the
nation's t sailing team, but Orange Coast
College's ~ffshorc Sailing Program was
chosen over the academy to rcoc~o an SS00,000
racing yacbtl college officials announced Monday.
The 70..foot custom aluminum sloop ~
"Oblession° -wu donated to the school by ............ lllil...... Connecticut
oommunications
executive SteYC
Nichols, who had
narrowed bis choice
between Oranp Cout
C.OUege and iM U.S.
Nava.I Academy.
College omctala say
the reputation of
'This will give our
students the
opportunity to go
to sea In one of
the woi1d's great
sailing vessels.• . Oranae Cout'• aallina • • •
prosram and tbo fact The Or~ Coatt Col111 Oflahore WMns
that the.Iii\ woukl IQ ProirMi WM the ~ ~ ol
to a ~b!:d:.tion "06tessioft," an $800,000 ~ yadlt.
deddlQ& faicion. 11M QDlloF~ and Marine
PrOpam 11 tbe oety oo0 ot ha kind ia tbia UDMcl
Staa-. Coinftcdaa.umual ~ to tbe SOUtll PedflC. HaWI.~ Alub and ·eanada.
impteaied me u the one mat ooWct handle a bia.
J>O"rfut bOat like~"~ Mld.
The c:Ollqe compete11replarty with the Nmt
Academy ln MWna lftd "'"" -end b lee YACHT .....
More cremated remains
found ·on · Newport shore
By Russ loar
.Stlllf w.
NE)YPORT BEACH -A
third plastic bag of human ashes
turned up Sunday at a local
beach.
The discovery came in the
wake of two similar findings last
week in two .<fiff crent Newport
Beach locations... ·
'We've come across
strange items of
property here, but to find
three sets of human
remains in a week is
very unusual.' ---Newport Beach police
Sunday bcachgocrs discovered
a bag of cremated ashes,
partiall buried in the sand,
containin nc fragments and ··-----------
teeth. Unlike vious finds, the
bag contained a metal tag
imprinted with the name of a
Sacrame~to cemetery where
officials Monday gave the
"cremains" a 1986 date of
origin.
"In 1986 WC had 1,200
cremations and we're ~~J through-~I tbOIC filea," ·
Raphael Pazo, funual director
of Sacramento Memorial Lawn.
The .... dilcoYcred in the Ni ii
Used for '~in-bOUle tnc:kina" and
cannot be automatically linked
to records of tho deODated
individual, 1ccoutu.a to Puo.
"It's not that euy," be Mid.
The flitt ot Newport'• threo
eerie discoveries came at about
2 p.m. Wednctday, aa:ordiDf to
police, wheo .a cigar-boil-sized
container of ashes was found on
a public scale at the Balboe
Pavilion. 1Wo houn later, •
Santa Ana woman diac:overed a
small pine box filled with Uhel on East Bay Avenue. The,... __ ...,
~ WU abcjijt half ttii .. of
the fint container, and lllhel la
both feceptM ... WV& ...... Ja
plutic. ~ '° ..... set-A'lt6J OClft& Althouah police .., ... .....
diacoverfea are a ftr,e llr
Ne~ IMy Ml 90tar1 lllh I ............
Pilot People
--TIEYlll''--------------
n.c owners of AJcxandcr-Bamctt Communications, a Costa
Mesa oompany that began offering 1-900-WEDDING, a 900
number for wedding plannj.ng. in May._ Alexander.Barnett
Communications is a subsidiary of Alcxandcr-Bamctt Events,
which the Barnclts founded four years ago to offer planning for
.corporate panics and m'cCtings.
All EVIi.Viii •Rll'ID•IDED~--------
Thc Bamctts.; bHth 27 and residents of Costa Mesa, went to
high school together in Anaheim and married four years ago.
Both .,.·ere involved in event planning at their~._ Not being
fond of v.·ork.ing "for other people, they decided to go into
business for themselves. As an offshoot of their corporate
planning services,. they bogan planning weddings. They then
recognized a great need for information among anxious bridcs-to-
b<.
.ml CAllllECO IT'l lllT--------
A11hough concerned about rthe unseemly reputation of 900
services, the Bametts decided it was the only way they could
rea~~ a national audie_nce with. their product. ~or Sl.95 ~min~te,
ind1,1d uals can get mformat1on on everything from ~cddmg
budgeting secrets to how 10 wrest control of yoor wedding plans
from yqur mother. The calls average three 10 five minutes. StCYC
Barnett would no t say hO\\' many calls the line reccM:s, but Said
the service is paying for itself. "It's the type of thing that
hopefully is a once-in-a-lifetime event," he said. "A woman
places a lot of imponancc on this day in her life, and she finds
herself in an industry that's unfamiliar.:·
EllPANllMPlAfll:~-~-~------~-
The Bametts plan to expand their service at the end of this
month with the introduction of a national merchant referral
service. Callers to the 900 line will be able to leave their number
and a message as to what kind of merchant they're looking for.
AJcxandcr-Barnett Communica1ions will then call back and offer
the perron a pre-screened merchant in his or her area. Merchants
will pay a $350 annual fee to be pan of the referral network.
-campihd by Ton~ Co.r
R ogue Roe, the veteran photograp~er at The Helm, had
stationed himself in the rear parking area of Harbor
Municipal Coun, hoping to get a photo of aa:used serial
killer Al Bundy.
Roe, who'd been with 1he Helm for 26 years, was the most
respected police photographer in Orange County, a man who
went 10 sleep C\'Cf)' night with the police scanner snapping and
crackling on the nightstand next to his bed. He prided himself on
getting the action shots that lesser photojoumahslS slept through.
61QL\L
Having been tipped by the cops that
Bundy -no doubt in cuffs and leg ironS
-would be escorted through the rear
entrance, Roe was ready for action. He got
down behind a clump of bushes and
waited. Before Jong. a white van pulled up
, and first one, and then two. and then
three heavily anncd officcn wearing bright
hot pink jumpsuits and turquoise berets
leaped from the van. SkJwly, Bundy was
led from the back of the van by two other
officers.
by Slwll L.a.u Roe ripped off a series of photos. letring
his motor drive do the work for him. He
inched forward as Bundy was led around the side of the van.
Suddenly, a group of men wearing business suits strutted
around the comer. Lawyers? Roe backed up, wondering what was
going on.
Before the officers esconipg Bundy could rcaca, the men in
business suits -nine in all -dropped their briefcases., pulled
out handguns and opened fire, peppering the van. .
At first Roe assumed that thF armed strangers were trying to
liberate Bundy. That is. until he saw the prisoner face-down on
1he ground ... dead. -
To be continued ...
PiiiL
·----...._'::":'ms -·-.... -. ...... ----
...... ".
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-~ .. ;r *•
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lMOIW
News S..0.1224
Spo<'5 642::4ll0
--, .. 646::4110 -Ollb '
--Oll'ica 642::4)21
-(,.. 6l1-S902
'
. -
NEWPORT
• --
.... _
T.U thlpo'...., on lmportonl pvt of"" festivol, Lut year'1 feltivol .
faiurM • visit by the Pilgrim II•• ttplico of Rlchord ltenty l>ana'1
.euel,
Annual festival opens· Friday
•
By Hall Haml
Plal: &•'-'•Nilt Edb
T he best or N~rt Beach -
on land, sea~Or in the air -
will be showtascd in the
coming weeks during Newport
Seafest
The celebration, set tO open this
Friday and run through Sept. 22,
will feature 11 events ranging from
the ncr-popular Taste of Newport
at Fashion Island to fishing
contests. In between there will be
bicycle races. windsurfing contests,
displays on health and docy
fishermen, sand castle building, a
chowder coot~ff. water polo
tournament, kite Oyinf and much
mon:.
...........
The purpose or the event is to
draw attentK?n ~o l~-~iquc
aspects of fhc etty,-saiifRiChard
l.Alehrs, president 0£ the Newpon
Harbor Arca Clamber of
Commerce.-This wilJ be the third
annual Scafest, though many of
-the annual events date back much
farther.
The biggest event and a sure
crowd-pleaser is the Taste or
Newport, scheduled for Sept.
20-22. Forty of the area's•1op
restaurants will offer samplu of
their cuisine at moderate prices
and premium wine and beer will
be available for tasting. • -
Entertainment for the three-day
celebration will include Buffalo
Springfield Again, Juice Newton
and Billy Vera &. the Beaters as
well as local talents.
For those who would rather
prepare· their own delicacies,
Pavilions is hosting a O>owder
C.OOk-off Sept·. 15. Contestants will
vie for three cash.prizes of SSOO,
trophies and the title of "Best
Chowder in Newpon." A classic
long board and "Woody" display
will be held in .conjunction' with
the cook-off.
For spans cnthusiasis, there will
be a water polo tournllmennt
UCI starting Friday; pier swim,
windsurfing competition, ftShing
tourney and sailing regatta on
Saturday; bicycle race and health
and fitness exposition on Sunday,
and electric boat races and kite
festival on Sept. 21.
· In addition, festival planners arc
keeping ecological concerns in the
forefront. Clean Harbor Day II
has been scheduled for Sept. 21
and volunteers arc being sought
for the clean-up effort.
Proceeds from the festivities will
benefit the chamber as well as the
sponsors of individual events.
More details about ScaFest will
Greg Some" gels h;s face po;nted by Hugger McGee the down u the 1990 Seofest. Children's
Ktivities are a major part of the ~nual Newport Bnich festival.
· appear in this week's "Weekend"
section. Other details can be
obtained by calling the chamber at
644-8211.
i. NtwpM -In Stptcmbet of 1981, the citbem ol Newpan Beocb and Corona dcl Mar duced on the new Upper Newport
• Illy Bridge duriag ill gala lfl•d opening. The bridl<, the )lllrd
buill 10 COii the bay, """' •he locatioa . ol Ncwi>c>rt'• lint scnlemeo~ McFadden'• l..andin& and was dodiaucd "tO join the'
east .side and west side of the conununily 1CJ1Cthu fo< thc ,can
to a:>me.''
' &It side, _, llde, ""' r.te •middle of U.. ,.,ad •tlifude ~"
..., 1111 '"'"historical ram. Send them,,, Did You ~.noo
l'iloc, P.O. llolt lS«J. a.ia IW-92li2ll.
-c ,, ·11r---
Police log
Costa Mesa
Emolovus 11 Un~ For Lea discovered one of their 11Je sigifi ~-· from fhcir Newport 8oWcYard storefront S11urd1y night
The SUD sign rc1d: Panty Raid -99 cc:nis . • Two buncn adw:rtilina pre-school were stolen from the Prince 0( Peace Lutheran Clnud1 11 Meu Verde Eut and Bater Wedneadly Aq 2&.
P.:>Uoc 11id it was the third time 1 banner had been 1tokn In tli1t aru over the past few wee.ts.
1k Monlcuori H1rbor-Me .. school wu 1nother vicli.m. • A rnofel IUC&I. reported his moacy stolen while he slept ~ 01kforcst, 1 1r1velin1_ 11ksm1n from Illinois · taid 1 breeze woke
him ab0u1 4 1.m. Aua. 29 11 lhe Best Western Motel on Newport Bov.lcvud.
Oatron:si Chen aaw lhal his window wu open and lhe ICr'CCa wu IJin& out·
side oa the pound. And on further inspcc:tion he dilcaw:red muddy foot-Pfi!'ts on !be carpel in bis room. '
Oakforetl ~h~n realized his S50 watch and about SIJO, which" was in his trallc~ wu mw1na, ~ arc imatiplin1 1imil1r thefts th1t have occurred at other arc.a mo-tels 1n recent ~cb: • • A Cost.I Mesa wom1n caught a m1n'11c1lin1 lhinp from her ptqe on the
1900 bkd.: of Pomona Avenue luc Monday. ·
The woman ~ in her house when 1bc heard 1 noise in lhc prqe.
Sbe ~ police that her roommate went out to invutipte arid foQpd • man colkd:iftl ilema.
Her ruanm11e reportedly ch11ed lhe min, but loll him.
• • •
·"
Their hOme Wlifonna arc virtually identical to
what the bi& guys at Figueroa Tech wear: gold
pants, cardinal jeneys with JOld ann stripes and
numben, cardinal belmeu with the little gold
Trojan hats blazoned on the sides.
There ii a d ifference in aizea, however. While
the othfr Trojans wear XXXXXXL jeneys, the
Newport·Meaa guys arc XXXS. Still, these guys
won tbeir fint pme of the season, vanquishing
the dreaded Canon Outlaws 41-0 Saturday
afternoon at Bonita Creek Park.
Tbc Newport·Mesa Trojaru arc one of more
than 100 teum that compete in Orange C.Ounty
Junior All American Football, whicll has teams
from Los An&clea to South Orange C.Ounty.
Tho playcn are divided by age and wejght
Briefly -........... -....... ...
-:--"-"·~vi a state"'Widc' effort to interest bJah IChool dropouu in relW'lliftl · to the duaroom, Dma Adult School in C.O.ta Mcu will ~ate la the 7th annual Drop-la Day thil Thunday.
Diploma counteliq will be prOYided to dropout.I on a walk·in no
ap pointment. b11i1. Eacb participant •ill receive s~ifac
rCCOOUJ?Cndations on how they can earn their diploma. In many
~ job ~rience and certain other activhJcs count toward
diploma crecht.
The QOunaeling tessions will nm from 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Ouses offered at Davis, located at 1050 Arlington Dr., will be
offered Monday through Thunday from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Instructors,
ef!'ployed by the Ncwport·MC$! Unified School District, work closely
with Orange C.Oast C.Ollcgc. ·
lliRll A-MPlc -.r C11111 -..11111
NEWPORT BBACH -Moto"ts may experience congestion in t~ Dover Sborcs-~cstcliff area for the next couple of months as
lmnc Avenue and its feeder streets arc widened and repaved.
. The massive reconstruction project, whiC:h includes widening the
mtcrsection at Irvine and Santiago Drive, should be completed by
.Nov. 15, according to Uoyd Dalton, design engineer for the city of
~cwport Beach. Meanwhile, motorists will run irtto lane closures and
otber slowdowns, officials warned.
The $632,000 project includes widening and reconstructing the intc~ction of Irvine, widening an.d rchabnitating frvinc from Sa~t1ago to 16th Street, as well as other pavement rcconstl'.Uction and
storm dnin improvement •
. The cities of N~port Beach and Costa Mesa arc sharing the costs,
wtth Newport paytng about '70 percent since most of the work is ln
that city, Dalton said. State funds arc also being used.
......
.. -ill ,... IOI' ·-.. Cllll
NEWPORT BEACH -At least two Newport Beach residents
were likely among the hundreds of women and children victimized by
sexually exp~cit telephone calls orchestrated by a man dubbed the
"'Alphabet Caller," according to investigators.
Steven Lane lmJcr, a 3~ycar-old former telephone sales manager,
was sentenced to six years m state prison for terrorizing women and
children by phone in Ventura C.Ounty.
Investigators say Imler was probably responsible for at least 500
calls throughout Orange, Ventura, Los Angeles and San Bernardino
C?untics, typically tcllin~ his victims that their husbands would be
killed unless they gave him money and committed lewd acts.
"And those are just the reports we collected," salti Temple City
police detective Craig Sinclair, who worked for 10 months to help
break the case.
Imler pleaded guilty in July to nine felony counts of terrorism and
one count of attempted child molestation in connection with one of
the calls.
Imler got his name of the "Alphabet Caller" by his self-Ocscribed
prac~ice of scanning the phone books for potential victims and calling
in alphabetical order until someone responded to his threats
investigators said. '
into six diviaiotu, ranging from Junior Oinic
teams of seven-and clabt·year-olds to the mighty Midget division
of ii. to 14-year.oida. 11ie Trojans uc in Pee Wee, which has
ldds from 10.12 yean who weigh from 95 up to 120 pounds ..
Acknowlcdglnf thatlittle guys become big guys-very quickly,
the system penmts ~ pla~r to increase half a pound a week.
. Even tbat wu tough for Garrett Nuzum, one of the Trojan
quartcrbackS. He dfdn't cat or drink a morsel or a drop for a day
before the pre-game .weigh iD, his folks told me.
Chocoholics can chow down, then work it oft
The Newport-Mesa Trojana arrived at the stadium an hour
befor~ g~e time. They had to weigh-in wi~ the league's weight
comm1ss1oner, then undergo a safety check, including proving that
they wore a jock strap. This is tack.le football and OCJAAF is
unyielding on safety. The equipment these kids wear is better
than what we ha~ when I was in college.
Some of the Troj~ had more than the usual pre-game jitters
Saturday. They bad heard that some of the Carson players were
gang kids, and that they were huge. Then the Outlaws got off
their bus. No sweat. These were tykes, but they were gamers.
·They had come to play, as It were.
As kickoff time neared and tension built, the Trojan
cheerleaders -all 25 of them! -took the field -to build the
f crvor of the croWd of the excited fans. They looked like the USC
cheerleaders, well almost. but certainly matched them in
precision cheering and dancing.
Trojan head coach Vince Cestra was tense, too. He had lost to
Carson for the last three years, won only two games last year, and
he wanted a win. At USC, coaches who Jose only have to put up
with al.umni. In the Newpol't-Mcsa Pee Wee league, they have to
deal wtth parents!
------------My eye was on offensive 'S coordinator Matt Hurray, who ome of the Trojans had acrua11y did play for the other more than the USUal Trojans. My eye is on him a
T o remedy a choco-holic
a~tack sec Evcylyn Simmons.
She's the assistant manager
at See's Candies in Crystal C.Ourt ...
CiNI
DllJlllll
She loves to
give samples ...
She'll probably
try to push
Califj?mia Brittle
(her favorite) but
just shmoo:zc
her ... she's a
sweetie and she'll
let you try
anything. r
Evcylyn says
their 2.5 ounce -Best milk chocolate bar is part of a Buys promotion right
-----· now and, at $1, it's a pretty fair deal.
0 For my money, the best bet
around in health clubs right now is
Leon Skeic's over on Quail. You
pay $100 to join and they want $45
per month in membership dues ...
The girls' Gym is cheaper by SIO a
month (more to join) but Skcie
has extras like towels and
whirlpools and facials ...
Karla Foster (who works there)
. reminded me the bonus is that the
staff at Skeic's is all sports
medicine trained ...
You won't accidentally kill
yourself trying to get healthy ... o
Attention Julia Roberts
wanna-bes. There's a knock-off
edition of that red lace, choke
collared "Pretty Woman" dress at
B. Magness in Newport North for
$125 ...
Barbara M. showed me nifty
little garters to help keep your
sleeves at the perfect 3/4
lcngth ... So, that's how they do it...
cool.
They're $6 ... $12 at otber places.
0 If you wanted to go to the sale
at Newport Ski Company, but
haven't found the time, call Chris
Jones ... she'll arrange for you to
come in any time, even if the
store 's not open.
Ski sales trc going on
everywhere right now, but the Ski
Company bas lots of Nils, Kaelin
and even Bogner on sale right now
for 50 percent off (Reusch gloves,
regular $80, now $39.99) ...
Upstairs, Mike Roche can show
you a full range of Fisher RC4s
with that state of the art single top
sheet design for half off at S 179 ...
Not a whole lot of bindings
though ... too bad.
0
Steve White, owner of Kitchens
dcl Mar says hc·s selling things
right down to the walls at his
move-in sale. He's not kidding ...
Steve and his wife Teri are
celebrating the re-opening of their
new store in Corona del Mar. So
they're selling their snazzy displays
of Snaidero and Allmilmo
contemporary European cabinets
(and traditional Rutt cabinets,
too) ...
They're selling em' virtually at
cost. .. For instance, a bathroom
full of Allmilmo, normally
$14,000 ... you can get it for S7,000.
Steve says he needs the room ....
E~ra cabinets you might need to
complete your job can be had for
20 percent off ...
I know they're inlo good
follow·up i.crvicc too ... I've used
them for two kitchens. If you
check it out at the party on
September 12th. you 'II also get
hors d'oeuvres and a cooking
demonstration b} Miele.
0
U you'tte come across aa1
bargains or unusual items, or if
)'OU know of a ttUiler wbo
provides ex~ptional services or
quality be sure to let me lcnow.
You caa reacb me at 479-9873. Or
send a fax to 6.Jl-5902. •. lot. He and No. 2 daughter arc pre-game Jitters Saturday. what the fossip columnists They had heard that some would cal an ltem. of the Carson players . The plays Matt broµght with
soner eyes support group I == Real Estate . hl.Dl from USC worked Were gang ktdS, and that perfectly and the Trojans they were huge , scored at 5:56 of the first
• • quarter. By halftime it was 22-0
------------and coach Cestra did have a
slight, momentary grin on his face.
During the second half, most of the fans were pulling for
Outlaws to score at least a touchdown, but it was not to be. It
was a rout, but at the end, both sides lined up to shake hands.
"Something like this that brings two such different communities
like these together is really good," one of the spectators told me.
Afterward, the Trojans gathered at Lamppost Pizza on 17th; as
do all the Newport-Mesa teams. They inhaled pizza, and they
watched a video of the game -complete with play-by-play
announcer.
Said one kid: "This is fun! We're actually good.'' They arc
indeed. Next Saturday, you can catch the Trojans vs. the
Paramount Warriors at 1 p.m.
Might be a better game than the other Trojans 'vs. Penn State.
Around Town
Job seekers workshop
IRVINE -The Women 's
Oppe>rtunities Center of UCI ExtcDJion offen an intensive four-week worbh<>P.
"Job Seeken' Olnic for women,'1
providing 1 •tron1 support system and valuable training ror thOse undertakina •
fUll-timo iob aeai'ch.
Tbe' 14 meetin.11. 9-1 PJll· dally, arc from Monday to Sept. 13, then Mondays,
Wcdncadays and "Fridays from Sept.
16-20, and Tueadrn. Tbutsdty1 anct
Fridays from Sept. 2A tO Oct. 4.
The fee is nzs. The clliUc is located In
Room 3~ National University, 8 ExecutiV'e urcle, Irvine.
USA. 1 proactive child abUJC prevention
agency, will benefit from the Oampions
for Cluldrcn auction/brunch. At noon on Sacurday1 items such as
Ml.kc Tylon's aut~pned red boxing glOYCa, and Maaic Jobn1on'1 Laker memorabilia will 0c auctioned at the
Four Seasons Hotel, 690 Newport Center
Dr.
A $3S donation per p erson is
requested. For more infonnahon, contact
Parent Help USA 1t 890-.SSOl.
Women's health lecture
By Anna Cekola
Siii! W"9r
COSTA MESA -He's been
vocal for years about his own
pcoperty rights, now Sid Soffer
says he's toying with the idea of
forming a group with other
homeowners who arc concerned
about their rights.
Famous for his 14-ycar dispute
with the city over his rusting
collection of vintage cars on the
driveway of his Arbor Street home,
Soffer said he hopes the group
would represent the views of what
he terms a "silent majority" in
town, especially on the west side.
"They arc getting a linlc bit
tired o f th e government
infringement of. property rights,"
For more information. call 846-5950.
Humor as pain killer
NEWPORT BEACH -"Humor, the World's Greatest Paln Klller1" will be the
focus of a discussion led by Lynda Towle Moss, a clinical psycbolo2ist and stand·up
comic, at noon looay at ~ewport Center
Library, 856 San Oemenfe Dr.. in
Ne""J)Ort Beach.
Tl:lc program is free and no pre-registntlOn is nec:es&ary. Everyone is invited and 11tendccs may bring a brown
bat lunch 10 the protram.
For more informafion, call 644-3191.
For re&!str11lon information, call
856-5414. For murte and mcmbenhlp
lnfonnatJon. call 856-7128.
NEWPORT BEACH -Sci! help in
issues of women'• health will be 1be Child ca~ achievement 1ubJect of a lecture bJ Lorraine
Rothman, M.S.1 health achvist, author, The Orange C.Ounry O\lldren's Forum,
he said.
"The city just hears the
complaints of a few, they never·
hear the silent majority. I just
realized something has to be done
so the city could bear another
side."
Soffer said he thinks the group
will spark the interest of plenty of
people in his Freedom Homes
neighborhood in West C.Osta Mesa,
the city's oldest subdivision, where
ho me prices range between
$180,000 and $360,000.
About seven people have
already told Soffer they might be
interested in joining the group,
including Sam Gregory, whose
home on the end of Arbor Street
is literally his castle.
individuals for out.standing support for
children's issues in Orange Counry. The
deadline for nominations is Sept. 30. For
infonnation, call 537-1920.
Costa Rican natural history
r.. Rcc::cnl rcaJ estace sales u re·
ported by the Contlneotal La~n
Title Co •• Sa.nla Ana. Newport 8eech
06104 W. Ocu11 Front, Sl,100,000. I
bedroom, 1 balb to BUI Scbonlau
1005 W. Bay A•., $680,000, 4 bed·
room, 2 bath to Jeffrey S. Bodwin
1200 E. Balboa Bl., $1,590,000, 4
bedroom. 4 bath to Sidney E. Tusler
430 RJvrrslde Av., $495,000, 4 bed·
room. 3 bath to Robert S. Owen
421 San Bemardloo1 $637.000, 3
bedroom. 2 balh to John J. Bertrand
3016 Clift' Dr .. S870,000, to Charles
A. Klobe
2602 Circle Dr., $900.000, to T1mocby
Weiss
407 Signal Rd., $793,000. :l bcdtOOJTI,
I bath 10 V.R. Bcncd1k1
1408 Dolphin Tr., $675,000, 2 bed·
room, 2 bach lo Richard N. Christie
1645 Bayside Dr., Sl,750,000, 3 bed·
room, 4 bath co Rcscar Irish
701 Baysjde Dr., SJ ,425,000. 4 bed·
room. 3 bath to Ben J NovaJc
214 Poppy Av., $52,000, 3 bedroom, 3
bach 10 Rogu Glazer
2103 Bayside Dr .• $2,000,000. 3 bed·
room, 3 barb 10 Kosukc Inoue
1507 Mariners Dr .• SJQJ,000, 4 bed-
room, 2 bach co Roscmane McOune
lOJO l«ward Ln., $700.000. 4 bed-
room. 2 bath 10 John ~. Miller
1805 Glenwood Ln., $545,000, 5 bed·
room 3 bath to Paul Dolka.s
I 050 SantJap Dr., $800,000. 4 bed-
room, 4 bach co Hanel! F. Kloke
2326 Tustin A.-., $460,000, 4 bed-
room, 2 bath 10 Scott M. Turner
111 Via Udo Soud., $2.200,000, 3
bedroom, 2 bath lo First lncentate
Bank
117 Via Ometo, Sl00,000, 3 bed·
room, 2 bath to M.A. Richley
ll5 Via MntoH, $782.500. 3 bed·
room. 2 bath 10 Dennis R. Frau
227 Via Onido, $785,000, 4 bed-
room. 2 barb co Mary M. Munday
ltS Via Waz.kn, $770.000. 4 bed·
room. 3 ba1h 10 Robert G. Haskell
3608 MartllS A.Y., S.57.S.000. 2 bed·
room, :l bath to Ronald Grey
407 f1acshlp Rd., $190,000, 3 bed·
room, 2 bach to Jim E. Gabriel
2l00 Art>utu St.. ~530.000, 5 bed-
room. 3 bath to Daniel Quon
907 A.Jeppo St., $490,000. 3 bedroom.
:l bath to R.M. Ruiz 2J6 Via Eboll.
$525,000, 3 bedroom. 2 bath 10 WiJ.
ham Maxwell
117 Via Eboll, $56,000. 2 bedroom, 1
bath 10 Alan Schneider
2615 Bladttbom St.. $585,000. 5 bed·
room. 3-bath lo Maynard Johnson
COSTA MESA -Orange Coast r;========================:::; College biology professor Nonnan H.
C.Olc will give a preview Wednesday of a
natural bis1ory lour he's leading to Costa
Rica in Januuy. The preview wdl be held
from 6:30 10 8 p.m. in tlic colleae's student lounge. P&rtlcipants In tho tour
will di.acovcr C.O.ta Rlca'a windswept
volcank summits, IUIUl'ious rainforests,
alistenil'la beacbca and ~ waten.
The coat is $2,150, whic.b induda
transportation aboard ihe ~naer liner Temptress, hotel accornmOdaHons most
mears and other fees. For delalis, call 432-5880.
LAW OFFICES
Expertenced Attomey since 1972
P&RSONAL IN.JURY • Auto and motorcycle acddenta.
wrongtuff death.
WORKERS COMPllNUTION -On ttte job Injury.
FREE CONSULTATIOll ·No recovery, no tee.
800-698-8569 d l M _ _. educator and tccturer, at the monthly in affiliation with the Orange C.Ounty Joves Dg D CA.1CO meetin& of the BaWicw OlaJ>ICr of the Aslociatioo for the Education of Youn& NM~~ ~n~~ ~ ~~n oo Q~rc~~hoo~tmChMQrcfi~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ NEWPORT BEACH -"The Mexican Sept. 16. Adllcvement Awards Luncheon Oct. 17
Market: Economic Outlook and Anyone lntercated ii Invited to attend at th• R.Ed Uon Inn. Maraaret ~sch, Jnvc1tmen1 ()pportu11lllta" II the topic of the monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. ln the Maldedt of lhe Fox Broadcasting C.O.'s
a free aemfnar hosted by SbCanon Recreation Room of Western Federal CbUdreo•s Network, Jnc. will be the peat
Lehman Brothen oo Saturday at 10 a.m. SaVin.P.. 4 Corporate P1ua. In Newport •akcr. The .wnt la beld ~ tWQ In their PentbouJo Conference Cen~r at Bcacli. yean to honor ortanllations Hilt l9000MacArthur81¥d. ,--~~~------~~--:---!.--...;;. ____ ~..:;_-~~-~
For raervaUona, wbJch are rcqulre4,
caU Diaa Ho at 9SS-7502 or Alea Oardi
at 'nl-6644.
Champion's Aucdon
518.35 per md Alld ma 8.375 (A.P.R. 10.IJ)
&.GW9 R'fOM "'-""° R1lf Nf'f l#EMIJll MB Off 11 WM 7Blk NO KLOQW M"81S (GA.CJ
NOTIC• OP WOllKlllOPJPUllLIC COFllDDT AllD
WIC HUJllllGI UQANMNQ WATllll llAftS
.. u COllSOUDATllD WATD DISTRICT
••nd.,,Saptellllaerte,t .. 1 .....
Tu1111.,, ........... , :17, t•t
-7.00 IMI'• -, ................................... , ..... ···""& "••• •••• C••••,.••• 1ller Dlabtot . 1-'f11111lle ..... . c ......... c ... .....
..... ca ........ W .. IMtct ln¥lla the community to .-nd h Worbhop with PUb1C
· Comment Plftod ~ 1•)1 ~IM Pubftc Hwlttg (8ep(ember 11'th) regeidteg:
w .......
By Tony Cox • "
..... Bib
NEWPORT BEACH
Fletcher "Ted" Jones Jr., who
together "1th his father owns
nearly a dohn car dealenhii>s in
California and Nevada, is
attempting to add another high-
profile franchise to his empire by
buying Jim Slemons Imports out of
bankruptcy.
~ RllnoM pllOCO
Julia Marino (left) and Kevin Weeda, who is Marino's
fiancee, scan a brochure for Pelican Point as Rodeo Realty
director Gayle Amato leads ~e couple on a tour of the
luxury homesites on Saturday. The Irvine Co. recently
reported the sale of 18 custom lots since the Newport Coast
homesites, which range in price from the high six figures to
more than $3 million, became available Aug. 5 -Which is
well ahead of projections. The lots are located between
Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach.
OFFICES
Get Mt for scenic seaside cycling at
this spectacular S.pt.mber Seafest
r1entl Whether you're looking for
family fun or fitne11 challenge, the
place to be is Cycle Seafest.
Dote:
Sunday, September 15, 1991
location:
Newport Dunes Aquatic Pork
Jamboree Rood at Bock Boy Drive,
Newport Beach
• The Pilot on Thunday will
add another ~ fe&tme to
its busineu IOCtioe witb die
introduction of Tbe Piiot
Economic IAda.
ORANGE COUNTY
& 95.9KEZY
present
NEWPORT
Slemons Imports' primary
financier, Toka1 Credit Corp.,
revealed Monday that Jones has
cleared aJJ but one hurdle in his
acquisition of the Mercedes-Benz
· deaJership. The deaJ still must be ,.... •11 ....
NEWPORT BEACH -Bob
'feller·, owner of
the Orange County
Marketplace, will
be guest host when
the Dolf bin
Division o the
Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of
Commerce bolds Bob Teller
its 7th annual Business Bonanza
on Oct. 16 at the Hyatt
Newportcr.
Teller, an entrepreneur wtto has
transformed his company from a
small-time swap-meet operator
into a $14.4 milhon (annual s"lcs)
enterprise, will s hare his
knowledge and experience with
those in attendance.
Up to 100 local businesses will
be allowed to display their
products ar the event. Entry forms
are now being accepted to reserve
booth spaces, which cost $125 for
Chamber mem~rs and $195 for
non-membe(s. Additio n a l
information may be obtained from
the Chamber.
Newpott Coune:
This route dHigned for family fun
circles Newport's scenic Bock Boy.
You'll enl<>y a leisurely morning's ride
with o distance of approximately 11
miles. Start lime: 8:30 o.m
Seafest CourM:
Challenge your abilities while wheeling
through historic Newport Beach, Irvine
and Tustin. A sprinkling of hills offer
visible rewords-views of Orange
County's forms and a<onge grovH.
Approximately 35 miles. Start time.
7:45 o.m.
For Your Safety:
Hord-shell helmets ore required!
Registration:
Send a self-addressed, stomped enve·
lope along with your entry below for
directions, course mop and route sheet
to be sent S.ptember 1st.
NEWPORT HEALTH
& SPORTS EXPO
Fecrtures: Sf a t •Event T-shirt f es Don't miss this festive expo complete
•Custom bib numbers • , with food and entertainment. learn
•On-course refreshments more about sports and fitneu. Toke
•Well-marked course free health tests for blood Pfessure,
• f inish-'ine food and • cholesterol, posture, body-fat percent·
beverages • age and more. Enjoy displays and
• Staggered starts based demonstrations of sporting goods and
on entry dote • • •quipment. Sunday, September 15th,
•Support wagon for 9 o.m. • 3 p.m. ot the Newport Dunes
technical difficulties Aquatic Pork.
'--Won. atlan: Coll Poolic Spotll Mooog1me1111714) 841.2062 or !he Newport Harbor Area Chomber of~ (714) 64'-8211
ENTll FOIM: Molte c:hech payable lo !he Newporl Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce (NHACCI and moil to 1470 Jamboree Rood,
N-por• Beach, CA 92660 Include o self-odd,.ued, atomped .nvelope for confirmollon
NAME
ADDRESS PHONE
CITY STATE ZIP
J.SHIRT SIZE s M l Xl
QUANTITY
--N-porl Course ( 11 mile1) __ S.Ofelt <jovtM (35 miles)
ENTRY FEE: --$25 for indivtdvol1 WIN A RH llfP POI TWO
--PO fOr fomilie1 (Add $10 per per50n for mof'e than 1 fomlly
memben) •
_Add SS ofter September 5th
fot o chance IO wfn o r; .. tr p for rwo to Borcefono, Spoln for the
1992 Sumlnel' Olym~ including olrfore & hotel occommodo·
bt. pa.a .. ONW9f lhe following (Yov mull be 18 Of older):
Annual Fomlly Income:
__unct. $25,000 _$25,001-34,999 _$35,000·39,999
I OAf'!! to reod, lijrl ond return the roce waiver which _.$40,000·54, 999 _$55,000-74, 999 _$75,000 +
wtll be Nflt lo IM ff'°' lo the llort of !he race Marital Statua: ~ ~
~ Dote SI~ Morrled_ w ~
SPONSORED BY c 0 NRA D tOllGfll:IMTAI. PA~NS :n:;~nt v1ooT~.;,::·"'' N'Y"Jllh
ll•Nf'I .. -~........... "'~UAA. .. Mil§,
C•ll the New,.rt Herbor ArH1 ChoMber ef Ce•••rce t7U) 6U·l211 f•r •ere
~Ml"l.rM-910.llMWllllA
' •
-
approved by the U.S. Banknaptc,y
Coun in Santa Ana. A hearing lS
e•cted in about 10 days.
Proceeds from the transaction
are not e~ted to be sufficient to
pay off Slemons Imports' creditors
m fuJl. The dealership med for
Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection
from creditors on ·Aug. 9, listing
assets of Sl 7 million and debts of
$22 million. But Conrad Noriega.
senior vice president with Tokai
Credit, said his company will urge
the court to approve the sale
anyway.
"We're going to tell the coun
that the best thing for everybody
would be to epprove the sale and
argue over the money the nm few
months," Noriega said. "It we
argue over the money fint, we may
jeopardiz.o the deal."
Noriega said Tobi agreed to let
Jones assume its $10.S million loan
to Slemons Imports. He said that
at the upcoming bankruptcy
hearing, tbe court witt hear
arguments against the transaction,
as well as allow other potential
bidders to make an offer, but
because Tokai will let only Jones
assume its loan, a competing buyer
would have to come up with a cash
offer.
"That'• ~· ~ not Utely,"
Noriega said.
Noriega saJd Mercedes-Benz
North America apptoYeS of Jones
as a franchisee. Mercedes officials
could not be reached for
oonfmnation.
Jones, who according to Noriega
bas a home in Newport Beach,
owns Ted Jones Ford iD Buena
Park. He and his fa~er alto own
seven dealerships in Lu Vegas,
two dealerships tn Reno, Nev., and
a Chevrolet deaJenhip in Whittier.
One of the Las Vegas dealenhips
is a Mercedes-Benz franchise.
.Downey Savi-ngs n_ames CEO .
NEWPORT BEACH
Commercial banker Robert L
Kemper, a 27-year veteran of
Wells Fargo Bank, has been
named chief executive officer of
Downey Savings, a thrift based
here that has gone without a
CEO since the July retirement
of one of its co-founders.
While the seasoned Kemper
will fill the void at the top of
·$4.l billion (in assets) Downey,
joining chairman and• co-founder
Maurice L. McAJister, he docs
not resolve questions over the
thrift's long-term leadership. He
is 62 years old. McAJister is 65,
five years younger than retired
Entrepreneurs
Who: Richard and Laurie
O 'Brien, a Newport Beach
couple who founded Catalina
Foods Corp. in 1989. Richard
O 'Brien, 38, is formerly an
executive with mutual-fund giant
Fidelity Investments, while 36-
year-old Laurie O'Brien used to
man age a Los Angeles
depanment store.
What: Catalin a Foods
produces the Sonora brand of
thin, uncooked tortillas. The
tortillas come in zip-lock bags
that extend the shelf life and
refrigerator life of the product.
When: The O 'Briens started
developing their product in
1987, after tasting a friend's
homemade tortilla. After making
several adaptions to the friend's
.recipe, they began test
production in 1989, and after
getting a surprise commitment -
from Vons to sell Sonora in all
328 of its Southern California
grocery stores, they went into
mass production in early 1990.
Wbttt: The O'Briens' office is
in their Newport Heights Home,
and their 15-employee, leased
factory is at 2615 S. Hickory St.
in Santa Ana. Building on the
Vons account, Sonora has
expanded into several other
supermarkets in Southern
California and Nevada, and
Catalina struck a deal last
month with a chain of stores
based in Chicago. The tonillas
are also sold to area restaurants.
Why: Weary of being a
traveling executive, and having
been laid off in 1987 by a
retrenching Fidelity, Richard
O'Brien decided he wanted to
start his own entrepreneurial
venture. Laurie O'Brien was at
home taking care of the first of
the couple's two children, and
she was a ready and able
Complete ••moe•nd Repelr.
SpeclallzJng In
MBZ end BMW ...... ...,
Routine mllntenance
pefformld here for
IHI st WIU not void
your manufacturers
warranty.
Prof111loael
The onty Cet1tfted
MBZ mechanic
In the ~oplex.
375 Bristol #85
Costa Mesa
co -f o u n d e r G c r a I d H .
McQuarric.
Kemper is, on the other hand,
a good fit in other ways. Downey
is reshaping its operations to be
more like those of a commercial
bank, and Kemper worked his
way up to, vice chairman and a
scat on S!ln Francisco-based
Wells' executive committee. He
oversaw a wide range of
activities at Wells, including
retail banking, strategic planning
and government relations.
McAJistcr will continue as
chairman and president o f
Downey, while McQuarrie will
remain involved as vice
chairman. McAlister will also
continue to spearhead Downey's
efforts} to liquidate much of its
commercial re~ estate portfolio.
The profitable and well
capitalized Downey had been i
successful developer of shopping
centers, but was forced by 1989's
thrift-reform legislation to begin
unloading its investment
portfolio.
At the time of McQuarrie's
retirement, Downey officials said
they weren't actively Joolcing for
a replacement and they would
leave the position open
indcfin i tely.
Shauna Horllelc pt.-
Laurie and Richard O 'Brien, founders of Catalina Foods.
business partner. The O'Briens
believe their product has
tremendous up-side potential in
the $1.6 billion U.S. tortilla
market because of Sonora's
quality and uniqueness. "Going
head to head with the big boys
would be like sleeping between
two elephants," Richard O'Brien
said. "Sooner or later, one's
going to roll over on you."
How: Catalina is doing well so
far, as it is on pace to post 1991
sales of $500,000, up from
$200,000 in 1990. The O 'Briens
plan to expand Sonora's product
line, be~mning with different
types of tonillas. They're also
stressing other applications of
their tortilla dough, which can
be used to make such things as
pizzas, dessens and chips. The
O'Briens invested all their
savings in getting started, and
they plan to obtain financing,
probably in mid-1992, to expand
the company. With the new
capital, the O'Briens plan to
expand their manufacturing
capabilities, do more advertiaing
and, at some point, buy their
own manufactunng facility.
-Compiled by Tony Cox
Appointment Calender
Todty
Marilyn E. Undlcy, associate director
of the European orrice of Trade and
lnveatmcnt in Frankfurt, providel inalJ}lt
on "Europe in the 1990&: Protpcctl for
California Business" from 7:30-9:30 a.m.
at World Tra~ Center Altociation of
Orange County'• brealdut at lhc Pacific
Cub, 4110 MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach
0
Up The Ladder
Siie.iie McDole,
form¥rly of
Honeywell, has
Joined Costa
Mesa·based
Encra.y Dcalgn
ConsultantS H
reponal aoobunt
manacer for the Shetle McOole
company'• buildina controla
divilion. McDolo will 1uperviM
Bner&Y De.lian Consultants'
salca OJ)C!ation1 and cwtomer
..
"The Power of the Individual to Eftcct
Owiae" II the ~of MJdp eo.wm,
former presidential IJliatant to Jimmy
Carter, al the monthly meet.Ina ol South
Coast Buaincu and Profellioul Women
at 11:30 a.m. at the Bl Toriso OriD IA
Costa Mesa. wac1...-, .
Cbsta Meaa'a Lead1 chapter, a
women'• networltina povp, meeta tor
breakfast from 7:15-1:30 a.ill. Nn
members aro bcina aoqbt.
uafltance. for a llltWOrt ol real
estate clients in Oranp C.OUOtJ.
0
Ertc u•1~ foi1Deity a
plant man~ for HudlQG
R.C.I., tiia bMD auDeCI plUt
muqer tor c.oilta Mela HIM
CIMCX> Iac.'1 ~ .. <:Grona. A.nderlon to
CJMCO more thu J8 yean ot
pl11tlca manuf acturina
experience.
l ,.
'
Senior EditOr TJ Hutdaint0n ••• 540-1224, ext 366
trirrie to rummage ..
through your closet
lax attar 8oclM lecurlty'I You bet
TllEASURES AND MllGAINS,
OM A TO Z -will be for sale
a the ailantic two-day rummage
on the weekend of Sept. 21-
22.
A special section hu been
added thil year where computes,
exercise equipment, typewriters,
radios, cameras will be di5playcd
If you have a treasure you wish
tQ dotaate, you may bring it to the
Ot\SIS Center from 10 a.m. to 1
R.m. Wednesday through Saturday
from now until Sunday Sept. 15.
All donations are tu deductible.
The sale will be held' from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and from 9
a.m. to 12 p.m. Sunday. • ORIGAMI AT OASIS
by calling 369-969,S . For
information regarding the Senior
Day Care meeting, telephone
Balt>ara Krueger at (619) 474$.
8246. • FEW MINUTES OF YOUR
TIME -The Board of DircdOrs
of the Senior Citiz.ens Corporation
is looking for a volunteer to take
the minutes of its monthly
meeting. The v.>Juntccr seaetary
would be tesponsible for typing
the minutes and mailing them to
board memben. Call 645-2356. • TIME TO GET SOCIAL
D earNaac,.,
~ doll't JOU write a colaaD OD
.alor MS ucl WI It De lt 111 I'm 82 ... r • .uu .auUy 1pry.11aa-.e •
bojfalend 7' Hd we coalda't be happier.
Yoaqer men bave atnya appealed to me.
YOUNG IN HEART • This letter inspired me to
look into a subject long
clouded by innuendo and
speculation. For years
people have wondered
whether there was sex after
Social Security. If lust
could survive flannel
pajamas and bed socks.
Fret no more. The word
is out. According to reliable
-----surveys, the majority of •
59 d men and women from 50 to an 93 still enjoy active sex Holding lives. The surveys didn't
...----indicate, however, whether
breathing (J hard on the
body. The only rules in
mature love mating: No
chin straps, baJr curlers,
or granola ban in bed.
After ninety, many
coup es merely bold
bands and squeeze each
other with tbair eyes .
(ConJact lenses should
be removed before
attempting this.)
Affectionate nuzzling is
· a popular alternative to
the rig,ors of the
Missionary Position,
especially for those with
hip replacements.
Security chcclt by tying
the knot.
Her ex-liberated
daughter, Sue, regularly
lectures her mother on
her independent lifestyle
-using the aamc script
her Mom used on her.
"What will the neighbors
think?'' she cries. "How
can I face my Yoga
group?"
Monica is spared one
classic rebuke, "You'll
realize one day this was
only sex, not love." Her
daughter can't imagine
that a woman in her late
sixties is still interested
in the bees and the
buttercu ps.
O(igami, the Japanese art of paper
fQlding, will introduce basic folding
t.cbniqucs ·in the four-week
~orkabop sponsored by th.c
f')lewport Beach Arts Commission.
OiKover how to recycle everything
from magazines to newspapers.
Origami is a fun and relaxing
activity to share with family and
f1jcnds, says Barbara Pearl,
workshop teacher.
Several events in September
promise 'to be fun for seniors at
the Golden Timers center in Costa
Mesa, including an ()pen House,
Sept. 21; the Monthly Bridge
Party, Sept. 12 and 26; the Ice
Cream Party, Sept. 17; and a Pot
Luck on Sept. 27.
this meant once a month or
once a year. While there's no evidence that
sex lowers your cholesterol, it definitely
enhances your morale and well-being, thus
increasing longevity.
Now that the Baby
Boomcrs arc on the
home stretch to 50, they
must ruefully remember
when they regarded
their parents as sCXlially
kaput at forty. Ironically,
the generation who gave
My friend wouldn't
dream of telling her
daughter the facts of
life. "In another twenty
llluSIHllan by B•H Mctnl)',. fin c years she'll d out ior
the world Recreational Sex. frequently
disapprove of their single parents'
meaningful relationships.
herself," twinkJes Monica.
Not everyone over 65 has a twinkle in
their eye. Many low-keyed ladies are
delighted to swap sex for bingo. They
haven't made love for so long they think
forcpl;ty is a golf term. For more information, call the
center at 642-2275. • GET 'EM WHILE THEY'RE
HOT -The Costa Mesa Senior
Center is selling a personalized
cookbook with all p~fits going to
the center.
These findings should put to rest, once
and for all, the common myth that sexual
. desire vanishes with age. While the flames of
passion no longer t;urn as brightly, cozy sex
1s less exhausting than consu9"ing passion.
AJI that frolicking abd'Ut and heavy
A case in point is a friend of mine,
Monica, a 68-year old youthful widow
who lives with a 74$.year old retired banker .
In spirit they're more married than any
couple I know, but like many women,
Monica doesn't want to lose her Social
Nancy Mclntyn Js a res/deal of Laguna
Niguel.
~
The workshop is open to seniors
and there is no charge. Pearl, a
math teacher, exhibits and teaches
Origami at museums, libraries and
schools. Presently her Origami
qhibit is 'on display at the Hoag
Hospital Medical Library through
The spiral bound cookbook
f eaturcs recipes from local
residents in 10 different full c.olor
sections. The books will be sold by
members of the center and in local
businesses. To purchases a copy
for $7.95, telephone the Center at
645-2356.
Wedding March brings <;ouple to dance contest
Npvember. ·
•
. In tow11 for wedding,
pair eaf st place
in ballroom contest
By Saskla Bernhard
S1Jft Wri!er
be the Senior Amateur
championship at Newport Beach's
Red Lion lnn op Labor Day
Weekend. -The Origami workshop at Oasis
will be held on Mondays, 10:30 to
11:30 a.m. from Oct. 7 to Oct. 28.
To Register, call Oasis at 644·
3244. Space is limited. For more
information, contact Barbara Pearl
~ 721-0633.
READ ALL ABOUT IT -The T hey actually came to
Newport Beach to celebrate
their son's wedding.
Twenty-six·year-old Australian
John Thomas, an aerial
photographer, who is training to
be a helicopter pilot, married
Jinjer Thinn of Newport Beach on
the clifCs of Dover Shore on Aug.
24.
"It was a coincidence that the
timing of the wedding and the
timing of the competition were
within one week, " Ron said.
Representing Australian's
Senior Ballroom Dancers on
Sunday, Sept. 1, Ron and Jenny
contributed an International Style
of British Ballroom Waltz, Fox
Trot and Tango, which earned
them first place.
• SENIOR DAY CARE -The
Seniors Housing Council of the
Building Industry Association of
;,.Southern California will discuss ~nor day care as a solution to the
problematic senior living issues at
Costa Mesa Senior Center is
planning a newsletter, and they
need ideas, as well as readers.
the Sept. 19 breakfast meetJna.
The meetings arc echechaled the
third Thursday of the month at
7:30 a.m. at the Irvine Marriott.
Nonmembers and walk-ins arc
welcome. Reservations are
recommended and should be made
This will help the senior center
~ct the news out to local residents,
including local activities and
service. An exercise and fitness
column by Tag Taggart is also in
the works. If ynu arc interested,
telephone 645-23.56. • U you bue o ltaa of latuat
for Sallor Ulatylu, mall tb~ to
7'be Pilot, Sealon Pqit, 330 W.
But for Ron and Jenny Thomas,
Australian's senior ballroom
dancing champions, traveling just
for fun would have been very
unusual.
The Australian couple started
their ballroom passion 30 years
ago, in the same year they got
married. They did not dance
competitively until 1986, when "a
friend encouraged us to go a little
more serious," said Ron.
M canwhilc, the Thomas' have
been holding the title for the
Australian New Vogue Senior
· S., SL, Cost.a Mua, CA 91627. Luckily, during their
two-week-stay, there happened to
Self-esteem sacrificed to modern technology?
C hanccs arc when you were a kid, you
learned to tic your shoelaces by
making a loop on one side, winding
around the opposite lace and pulling it
through to form the second loop. This
method is now obsolete.
DP. 111111
Ail d
Today's children (when
they finally get shoes
without velcro fasteners)
learn to make two loops to
tie together all in one
operation. So what?
"When something as
elemental as the way
shoelaces are tied changes
in your own lifetime, you're
up against a really galloping
form of obsolescence," says
one consumer affairs
writer. Famlly
Counseling Surely some change is a
good thing. But too much
change, too fut, in any
area can be confusing and/or uncomfortable.
Take the FAX machine. Quick
transmission of documents is a new business
convenience. But each FAX somehow
implies an emergency which in tum requires
an immediate answer and/or some action.
Admit it, Mr. or Ms. Businessperson: don't
you ever m~ the sweet "lag tune" once
created by the imposed delay of the postal
system?
And the family television set. Remote
contro l is now a common luxury, cable
systems provide access to all sorts of
wonderful programrnin' and VCR 's expand
home-viewmg possibilitJes even further. Yet
· since most televisions now have -egads -"'
two or three remote devices and each has a
different function. there arc times I miss
being able to simply press and "on" button.
The cover story on August's Atlantic
Monthly, is called "Waiting for the
Weekend, The Invention of a Modern
Institution." The story is about change as it
applies to our modem idea of recreation and
leisure.
Author Witold Rybcznslli says, "Once,
c.ompctencc was shown on the job -
holidays were for messing around.'' What~hc
means is that there used to be more
opportunity for creative expression through
work, so that is was OK to "waste" weekend
or holiday time.
In the article as well as in his book
(Waiting for the Weekend, Viking $18.95),
the author says technology bu removed craft
from most occupations.
"This is true In ~mbly line jobs, where
almost n<> training or experience, hence no
still, is rcciuited," he says.
"But it 11 ala<> true in akill-depcndcnt work
as house construction, \\'here the majority of
parts come ready-make from the factory and
the carpenter merely assembles them.
"Nor is the reduction of skills limited to
manual work. Memory, once the prerequisite
skill of the white collar worker, has been
rend~red superfl~ous by compute~; teachers
who once t\ecdcd dramatic skills, now
depend on mechanical aids."
l think this is somewhat overstated and
unfair in some cases, but because so few of
us arc able to find sufficient meaning in our
jobs, the end result, the author suggests, is
that we have now come to value the "work"
we do on weekends more than ever before.
Today's weekend "work has to do with the
new serious business of "working out," or
working on our golf or tennis swing. What
once may have been viewed as an
opportunity for casual play has bcc6me a
"Job" in the truest sense.
How well we play our games has become a
direct measure of our own personal success
and value. This change in how we perceive
our so-called leisure means that we are in
effect "working" seven days a week. And
that's not good. for our health -physical or
mental.
More next week.
Dr. U11d• .4J6azl /J a C!'flllSelor wltb A/JUI FaalJJ' COfUUt'lllJI hi Corou ftl
Mar.
,~--~~~--~---:---i~~~~~~~~~~
Oasis offers exercise class for seniors m LAW OFFICES
' NBWPORT BEACH -A fun certified fitnca specialist.
and flexible exercise class that The next class begins Sept. 16
incorporate• everything from and meets for an hour and a half
•retching to modified aerobics on Mondays and Thundaya ror
accompanied by marth muak: is eiaht weeks. Cost la $35 for tho
off ercd at tho Oasla Senior Ccntor e fa h t w e e ks . F o r m o re lr\ Corona del Mar. Information, call the Oasis Center
Seniors of varying fitne11 at 644•3244·
conditions can erUo1 °Vlm and
V'aor." which ~ taught by local
fitness 1pcciallst Brenda Colgate.
In addition to modified traditional
aerobics. Colpto teaches such
different and croatiVo exercises u
atrctchina with ecarves for full
ranae of motion and chair
CMrciscs while holdina aoup cans
fOJ upper-body strenath.
Bia Band, win& and march
tunes provide a cheery bacqround
forthoaerq,ea.
"lt'I lf .. l fun," laid Colpte, a
exp,rtenced, ....... attorney
llMIOIUP.TCY -stop~ ~ r.poe1111lon.
PAMILY LAW -Dl9eolutlone, ohAd CUltOdy
.... 9llTIAL eotmUL TAT10ll
800498aW8
Ballroom championship for four
years. They were the first
Australians to win the Asian
Pacific Senior title in Taiwan last
year. In addition, they won the
Seniors competition as well as the
Opening Event at a b.alJroom
tournams:nt in San Francisco at
the beginning of the year.
"When we were younger we
played a lot of tennis together,"
Ron exclaimed. "Now we're
dancing together.
"Sharing a hobby together helps
a relationship, because you can
talk about the things you arc doing
afterward. You've got a
performance to improve and
you're doing it together.''
With their competitive dancing,
Ron and Jenny have been 10
various places in the world
including the States, which they
"love.'' After their first visit in the
beginning of the year, they "came
home feeling unsettled because we
enjoyed it so much. But our son is
going to give us more reasons to
come back. ''T he good thing about the
U.S. is that it's closer to
Europe. The dancing world evolves
around London. Australia is so far
from everywhere. We're very
seriously thinking of moving to
America and becoming dance
teachers. II would be a very nice
possibility.''
Now home in Australia, where
Ron is running a little business
repairing video equipment and
cameras, there are a lot of things
the couple has to think about,
most imponantly how long they
arc planhing to keep on dancing
competitively before they arc
ready to actually settle down and
become dance teachers. "But at
the moment we're enjoying what
we're doing.''
Senior Day Care events planned
The South Coast Institute for
Applied Gerontology is planning
events for local residents including
educational programs and Open
Houses as part of National Adult
Day Care Weck, Sept. 15-21.
A free c.ommunity presentation
about the Health Assessment
Program for Seniors wiU be
offered Tuesday, Sept 17 at the
Harbor Arca Adult Day Care
Center from 10 to 11 a.m. The
Center is located in the Rea
Community Center, 661 W.
Hamilton, Building 800, Costa
Mesa. This program is unique in
Orange County and offers
consultant scrviocs to elderly
patients, their families and
physicians by providing in-depth
health assessments and
recommendations for trcatmcnL
The workshop wiU be presented
by Marilyn Milligan, LCSW, Chief
Geriatric Case Manager. For more
info~ation, telephone 548-9331 .
I
A program about Medicare and
other insurances for seniors will be
o ffered Wednesday, Sept. 18 from
10 to 11 a.m. at the Huntington
Valley Ccnt~r at 18685 Santa Ynez
in Fountain Valley. For more
information, telephone 964-4832.
Both centers will host Open
Houses during the week with the
first planned for Tuesday, Sept. 17
at the Harbor Arca Center in
Costa Mesa, and Wednesday, Sept.
18 at the 1-luntington Valley
Center. The events arc scheduled
from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. for
more information, telephone 548·
9331.
11111 IEWI flllM fllli&U -c.~>' If you're a good drtver and ... ~ ~
your car is equipped with Rlll•m IMlnnCI ~
antllock brakes or airbags... 441 Old Newpon Blvd. au. • D1·7'• Newpon Beach (Near Hota Holp.)
Do you know someone suffering from
" tomee>ne you know hu ·~ a loa of 1ne11eotum
abff ... , IUCh u memory, judgement or abetl1lct thought.
our reeeard\ study may help.
Our orgMlutlon hu been awarded • grant to eva-. • new medtoation for MEMORY LOSS. ~ pmnlolpelD.
who .. at teMt 50 YMf9 of tige, wt1 recelV9 EKG'a. a CT-
Soan. lab tMta, brtef phY9k* ---. rnecSctlllcan Ind --.
with a profl11lonal, All FREE OF CHARGE. ~Rt .al II
medlcal i. rMultl wm be p;iMded to pwtlcfJ** or tMll'
doctor, upon requeet.
n41111-m1
OBODY HERE BUT US SISTERS -While we're waiting N for the Newport Beach Sister City Association to establish
a relationship with my distant kinsfolk in Riga, Latvia
(free at last!), there's much happening in our family of
communities.
Pacific Bell's Pat Krone, who's always been a
sister to me, advises that all sons of gala
preparations arc being made to welcome official
delegations this month from Cabo San Lucas
and Okazaki. Both are Newport's sister cities.
(So is Antibes, but the French won't be here.)
Cabo's Comitc de Ciudades Hermanas will be
welcomed Thursday with a reception at the
Balboa Bay Club, followed by fiestas extending
through the weeke11d. The Japanese a.re ·
scheduled for a September 24 greeting at
Barbacoa -followed, presumably, by an
inspection tour of real estate investment
------opportunities. • · • Local As Bob Hope says, when asked why he makes Scene so many appearances in "Washington, I'm.here ---lllllil-• to visit my money." 0
'
Jeanette Segerstrom and
Nancy Miller are entertained
by a mime at the opening <
night dinner. DOES THE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION KNOW ABOtJ'r
THIS? -In the mailbag is a press release announcing
Metropolitan Opera auditions in Orangeshirc.
It's from Jennifer Jacobs and Lorraine Uppold, who arc
seeking to audition sopranos, mezzos, contraltos, tenors,
baritones and basses. Opira Pacilic 1 mixes pleasure With cQlblr
Their address in Costa Mesa, would you believe, is on Quiet
Bay Lane. · .
From an over-the-shoulder reader: "What's their Aria Code?"
0
WHERE'S THE ENERGIZER RABBIT WHEN HE'S
NEEDED? -In the same mail pouch was an invitation to the
Orangewood Children's Foundation dinner, scheduled Monday at
Dia's As Is restaurant.
It lists the "dynamic duos" who'll be serving as waiters for the
$250-per·plate benefit happening. . . .
With faltering fingers, I handed tKe mvttatton to my
wheelchair-bound wife.
It was great for morale-building purposes, because KJtty and
Jerry Kobrin were among the eight couples listed as dynamic
duo~. Her private-duty nurses were very impressed.
0
PLANNING AHEAD -l'lle Dutch Treat Club/West, an
as!>cmblage of journalistic jetsam washed upon our shores, i~
lining up speakers for its fall-winter luncheons. One suggcsuon
was Larry Agran ex-mayor of Irvine, running for President of the
U.S. of A. It was' tabled "until after his inauguration."
0
A MATTER OF PRIORITIES -Several columns ago, I
reported the two acceptance speeches at the Newport Ha.rbor
Exchange Club. The first was Warren (W. C.) Fox a~pt1~g the
club's presidency, the second was Julle Brown accepting his
marriage proposal. .
Fox showed the item to his bride-to-be, who barely scanned 1t.
She was far more interested in another spread on the same page.
It was a grouping of advertising bargains, under the heading of
"Wedding Showcase."
•
0 pera, it's said, celebrates
life on a grand scale.
And grand opera? Well...
there's the passion.
Opera Pacific was ready to
ce l ebrate
Saturday night as
it blended the
opening · of the
social season with
a bit of culture as
well. The
melange was a
delight.
First came a
,._. poolside cocktail
.,.... receptio n a nd 1111 Jllm dinner at the
-----·Westi n South
Society Coast Plaza
Hotel where 200
sampled the tasty
dinner. The curtain rose on
.Sonoma Chevre, peppered with.
raspberry Vi'na igrette, which
topped the lettuce salad. The
second act was roasted sirloin.
Chocolate walnut torte was the
finale.
Opera Pacific paired the classic
and gutsy operas Pagliacci and
Cavalleria Rusticana and provided
Wiii Swill
Business
Journalist,
Columnist
WllU• LIMlll
Editor Of Thfl
Pilot And
Independent
... Hewitt
Attorney. KFI
Talk Show Host,
Columnist
Dr. JI Ell• Illa
President of
Eagle Forum,
Columnist
er Buna Bashing?
·i s I The Pollce ·
lea Covar Up ?
Here's Where To watch
Tiie l.oJldell Group .. ,
M,T,Tli,F 7:30Jxn 61
Newport Beo<h
(Comm. Coble) W 7:3~ 39
first nighters with the stuff that
real life is made of, but first they
sent in .the clowns. Cleverly
clothed mimes entertained guests
as they entered the Performing
Arts Center for the performance.
Tho evening drew to-a close as
members of Opera Pacific's
Impresario Circle and production
underwriters attended an after
theater reception at the Center
C!ub. E laborating on the evening's
<heme of passion (opera buffs
received samplers of the Elizabeth
Taylor scent Passion, ~arlier in the
evening) The after party reveler.;
were introduced to Taylor's new
fragrance White Diamonds.
Zee Allred, who underwrote
Pagliacci was celebrating her
birthday (so were Bill Roberts and
Margaret Price). Cast members
saluted her with a rendition of
happy birthday with truly operatic
proportions!
In a drawing for a vial of
Passion, dinner chairwoman Laila
Conlin thought she had it made
when husband William produced
the wi nning ticket. But her Passion
disappeared when he confessed he
was holding the ticket for another.
Volunteer Directory
w PlclllCI
The Ballet Pacifica Guild, a 110lunteer
support group for Ballet Pacifica, needs
volunteen to serve as ushers, sell T ·shirts,
sell juice and cookies at events, conduct
fund·raising events, help with costume and
scenery repairs. Volunteers who prefer not
to join the guild are welcome and they
may help as little or much as desired. For
information, call Molly Lynch at
642-9275.
lnlerllllll .......
The Interfaith Shelter is the la~
family shelter in the county, housing,
feeding and counseling 20 families daily. lt
needs people to work with children for
story hour, to take children on field trips,
phone help for incoming calls on
three·hour shifts and those with special
skills to teach a 1-2-hour clinic or
wos~!ri~ed skills for clinics on writing or
budgeting can be a vast help, or to act as
tutors onc.e or twice a week for an hour to
work with children.
The shelter also needs people to run a
canned·food drive one time or on an
ongoing basis. The group always needs
disposable diapers.
All AllK. .,,... Cllllty
The Amyotrophic Llteral Sclerosis (ALS)
Association Orange County Chapter has
need for many volunteers. For
information, call Bobbie Green at
921·8503 secretary Martha Haber at
436·4872. • " rou ha.-e Vt lt~m of lnt~rnt '"' th~ VoluntHn Dlr«fOty, mall It to Jon
~'°"' Volu111Hn EdlttN, JJO W. lay SI., Colt.~ 92627.
Richard and Kathy Wagner, Marianna Christos and Jay Lesenger.
Service Clubs
The recent California-Hawaii Elk's Association Annual
Convention marked the conclusion of a big year of fund-raising for
the Newport Harbor Elks Lodge No. 1767.
Bob Monzingo, the exalted ruler for the local lod~e, was on
hand to present a check for $21,000 for the Elks Ma1or Project,
Inc., which administers the non-profit charitable corporation. The
money was raised by members of the 1767 in various fundraisers
during the course of the year.
"We are pleased and proud that members of our lodge were so
generous with thair dollars and time in this important
undertaking," Monzingo said.
Over the past 41 years, the 175,000 members from throughout
California and Hawaii have turned over more that $42 million to
the Elks Major Project, Inc. All of the funds are devoted solely to
providing hospital and medical services, vision screening and
therapy ttcatmcnt to children with a broad range of physical
disabilities. Wi thout the Elks supported donations, many of these
children would not receive such treatment.
The year-Jong fund raising campaign is capped by an impressive
ceremony at the annual E lks convention when representatives
from lodges throughout California and Hawaii present their
donations to project and Elks Association leaders.
The raising of fu nds to aid disabled children is just one of the
many philanthropic and patriOtrc projects which mark the Elks'
contribution to our community. O
The Newport Harbor Elks Lodge No. 1767 holds its weekly
meetings at 8 p.m. ~ach Thursday at the lodge, which is located at
3456 Vio Oporto, Lido Marina Village in Newport Beach. For
information, call the lodge office at 673-6110.
0
The Newport Beach Kiwanis will feature Jim Warren of
Thousand Oaks speaking on "How to Remain in Business and Stay
Alive" at its weekly luncheon meeting at noon today at Oiarley
Brown's (formerly the Reuben E. Lee). Lunch is SlO for non-
members.
~ LOSE
lt~t~dr~~.9.\!!
foods, our comprehensive weight
manapment program an help you. We offer
tht medical end psychological services
~ to resol\te the undettying Issues.
• ComptN Phyllall Wotk-up
' • NutridonlHutttl Educadon ·~~ • Weekly Support Ctoupt
Ouf" ltllff Include a boef'd C9ftlfled phylk:ian,
l~enMd dlnlcal ~ c:ertHled nur1e
)..., ~ _, llcilnlld nuiw. We *CC1pt molt
Bridgec:reek Health and MedlCal Oink
11770 Warner Avenue, Suite 121 • For More Info Call
Fountain Valley 668-9 778
'
Gabriella ·Forte Henry and Renee ·Segerstrom
Armani Boutique opening
dou·bles as benefit gala
By Maiy Lou Hopldns ... -' 'H ave you ever seen anything more spectacular than lhis?," asked a proud Henry Segerstrom at. the gala
-7"7~_opcning of Emporio-Annani-Bojltique Saturday
evening in South Coast Plaza benefiting Newport Harbor Art
M~um. Orangewood and Special Olympics.
SCgerstrom, Managing Partner C. J. Segerstrom &. Sons, who
built the mall from a small ~ing center into ont: of the
world's most pruligious c.mponums.,was referring to the Italian
Square constructed especially for' th.is evening by Robert Isabel,
(&m®.t New York party-designer.
Isabel created the Italian atmosphere with a/ainted.facade of
It alian street scenes that covered the stores an walls around the
courtyard. Tables for four were tucked among masses of vivid
colored flowers in large pots clustered beneath tall graceful trees.
All roads in the ltalia":n Square led directly to the doors.of
Emporia Annani Boutique. Bringing Armani's store to Costa
Mesa was a real plum because it is the Italian designer's fmt
boutique in California.
Although Armani is noted especially for his finely tailored
men's suits the boutique also shows a selection of exclusive
sportswear for men, women and children.
T he exterior of 1he 10,000-squarc foot store ..consists of 170 feet
of curved glass frontage and limestone facing. The
7,500-square-fool re1ail interior is filled with elegant cabinets
made in Milan.
The 2.500 space will be the Emporia Armani Express
Restaurant, scheduled to open in October. The restaurant will
offer lunch and early supper. A popular establishment in South
Coast Village, Antcncllo Ristorantc, will operate the restaurant.
When Renee (attired in an Armani suit) and Henry
Scgerstrom toured the store he pointed out a circular marble
area with an eagle emblem and below it the initials A.M., which
he described as being like a fine watch.
"I don't think there is anyone more creative than Armani,"
Scgcntrom said. "When he visited SCP he carefully inspected the
mall, then he selected the corner on the first level for his store.
We had to move six stores to make room for the boutique,"
Scgerstrom added. ·
"The transaction for the boutique was made in Paris in June,
1990 in just three days," Segcrstrom S$id.
''When the Scgcrstroms saw Annani's store in Paris, he told
. 1 mutual friend, Drcda Mcie, that he was interested in
having Armani open a store in SCP," said Gabriella Forte,
Annani's vice president. "I flew here and that was that," Forte
said with a laugh. "This is a smooth environment, it is clean and
well kept and it has a hard working staff. 1 leave tomorrow
(Sunday), but I wiltbc back in two or three ~nth~" she said.
Higtrtashiol'f gear for busy days was shown 1n an unusual show
beginning with a parade of 'U:rfen, f~lpwc~ by tcen-ag~n o~
skateboards, then swimmen, JOucn, cyclists and ending with ·
models on motorcycles. -
Jn the crowd of about 800 were fo er Los Angeles Laken
ooach Pat Riley, Carol and Dennis Carpenter, frtlne and Forest
Carn~ Mary Dell Barlrouras, 61oria and Howvd Hassett, E.G.
Chamberlain, Margarita and David Steinmetz, Barbara and Tom
Pedtenpaugh, Alllson and Oscar Frenzel,Hedda and Steve
Morotl, actress Jill SL John and MarJie SchKlcfo<d, NHAM
development director.
Back To School·
'Blow Out Bargains
,Save an-EXTRA--29%-on-aY
Sale Items!!!
Bidwell's Bidtique
Via Lido Plaza
3467 Via Lido • 673-4510
(next to Lido Cinema)
f'
...... '
leba and Cary Kramer visit
with Carol Horowitz at the
· Great Catalogue Caper at
Neiman Marcus.
lienelit gllests ExPect · the UnexpecteJI
''You can't a/Ways get what}'o6
want
But if you try sometimes
You just might find
You get Wh:at you need ... "
Mick Jagger
W onder if Mick was thinking
about the Great Catalogue
Caper when he wrote
those lyrics 1
Cil'll
1111 J1111
Society
He could have
been, because
C hairw oman
Catherine Thyen
and her
committee of 60,
pr e tty well
figured out haw
to make sure
loads of people
got loads of
things they might
have needed, and
contribute · to a
great cause loo.
The American
D ia betes
Association benefited from the
Saturday night extravaganza
(which netted $85,000) at Fashion
Island's Neiman Marcus. Around
460 black tied and glitter garbed
party people clutched at clues.
They ran around and up and down
for fun and the chance to win a
prize at the seventh annual caper.
Prize chairwoman leba Kramer
did a bang-up job. S he
·accumulated the 165 prizes for
grabs at the caper. "Really, 1 just
want to give a tremendous amount
of credit ta Neiman Marcus ... oh,
and the band we have tonight,
Rodea, it's a knock-out!" she
confided.
Wi1h the enthusiasm of
commillee members like Kramer,
Michele Pennington, Adrienne
Thomas, Barbara Goodman,
Diana Bramiley (infamous for her
T shirts). Mary Jean Simpkins, Nui
Gurtner, and Penny Saltzman,
success was expected. With
expertise from NM's Carol
Horowitzand Billur WallerK:h they
couldn "1 miss.
But, this year's theme was
Expect the Unexpected (Hey, who
• LR~
Michele Pennington, Catherine Thyen and Tina Schna.fitz enjoy the extravaganza at Neiman Marcus.
would have · expected the fire
caters anyway?) .
The Thyen gang decided they
could use more room ...
Ncima n's obliged. Voila ... there
was a tent in the F.I. parking lot.
It came replete with color c:lothcd
tables flowing in frccsia and
daisies.
The Newport Beach Faur
Seasons Hotel provided the
players with delicious dinners
(served this year with white gloved
elegance) commencing with gravlax
in Dijon vinaigretle. Featured as
well were trufficd veal chops and
risotto -chocolate obsession was
the just dessert.
Then on to 1he serious business
of drawing for prizes like a
1ransatlantic crossing for two on
the OEll, a romantic four nights
in St. Kitt, a Bcrtolucci stainless
watch and a $10,000 NM shopping
spree.
.... .,._
Jim Edwards and Mary Jean Simpkins and Nui and Thomas Gurtner.
packed 1hc dance Ooar. It certainly
looked -like eve ryone fell like a
winner ... maybe jusl cause they
were there.
As promi sed, Rodea Drive
Dori and Jack deKruif were, and
so wCre Dot Clock, Marilyn and
Tom Neilsen, DanJ and Lynn
Dowers, 'Mark Hart and Donna
Harrigan, Jim and Harriet Selna,
Ca~ Wilken, Deeann Baldwin,
Linda and Ray Gomberg and
Danny and Susie Hernandez.
•
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(714) 675-4704
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---•
SCH graclm lmt DI .... ,..
Entertainir:ig cast
does Shaw proud
in spirited show
T he dark clouds of war
gathered over E ngland
during the period from 1913
to 1916 as George Bernard Shaw
was composing "Heartbreak
J-fouse," his ironic, melaphorical
comedy railing at the outside
~vents !hat threatened to crumble
his utopian vision or world peace.
,.
1la
Theater
Critic
That Shaw was
able to vent his
spleen al what he
perceived as an
idiotic society
racing headlong
toward
destruction and
yet create a
bitingly funny,
highly
entertaining play
on the subject is
the beauty of
''Heartbreak
House," South
Coast Repertory'$
Hal Landon Jr., Patricia Fraser and Frances Conroy try to rouse Richard Doyle in "Heartbreak House."
pociftlc -.. I -1
loclely wllicll -beOI'"' -........... -. cootilttaO lhrouP Oct. 6 with 'i:wtaiA Tueodoya tbroqll Fndaya
at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2:.30 ud 8,
SUDdayl at 2:30 and 7:30 at South
C.O.t Repmory, 65$ Town Center
Prive, C.... M .... Call 957-4033
(or dctet infonnadon. • Two new _f""!uctlom bow In
this weet. with Orange C.out
College offerinf, the 1960s comedy
"Moonchildrcn ' and the
Westminster Community Theater
staging the musical-beds farce
"Oieate11."
"Moonchildrcn" plays this
week.end only, Thursday and
'Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 5 and
8:30 and Sunday at 3 p.m. in
OCC's Drama Lab Theater. C.,11
432-5880 (or ticket information.
''Cheaters" arrives (or a
five-weekend run-under the
direction of Beth Tiius, with
Marcia Bertholf, Tony Grande,
Donna Taylor, Bob Goff, Karla
Abrams and Eric Chandler
comprising the cast. Performances
arc Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30
through Oct. 6 at the theater, 7272
Maple St., W-cstminstcr. _ '
Reservations 527-8463.
.... .......
ByJackR-..,_
I t's common enouah for~'
.young opeJ• companiet
10 stick with the buic
-repertoire to build 1-./'
foundation for arti1tic and
financial success.
But timeworn operu need
imaginative staginp tO revive
their original ,JK!WCr.
Opening its Sixth season in
the Orange County
Its opening scene , for
example,
lacked any
-of the
intended
Performing
J\iU Center
on
Saturday,
Opera
Pacific
adly failed
Jo remind
~why
.. Cava1lcria
!'
1Rusticana" eerie
beauty.• ""·-.and .!..'1 L
Pagliaoci"
have flourished for 100 years.
Opening gambit of the 1991-92
season. The play, like Europe in
that period, wends its way from
foolishness to chaos as it s cast
members arliculate the mas1cr's · h.l shooting Shavian opm1ons from · daughter, acting out a marriage to vo~u min~~s g. 1 osodphby. M . the hiC and even physically a self-involved fop (artic1rla1ely
down (as does Doyle's late in the
third act), the others hardly take
notice. They arc all too busy
playing mind games with one
another to indulge their visceral
natures.
The curtain descends on two
other shows this weekend -"The
Belle of Amherst" at Costa Mesa's
BackstaB:e Theater (646--0333) and
"Crimes of the Heart" at Laguna
Nigu.el's Design Center South
The two one-act operas,
traditionally played on the
same bill, arc much alike?
Both arc late-19th century
_Italian vcrismo tragedies by
men whose other works are
foriottcn. Both fc-aturc uper Y •recte Y artin resem 1,·ng the wh•'te-bearded · d b J v· ) B h r II .. d 1nterprcte y ohn 1ckery . ) , -~-e nson, w o 1tera y wa1te~'---~GuB.S.....lhe--ccntral-figure-o(-t-h1<e>---=~ niusic that lacks the
character and genius or
Verdi or Puccini but is
nevertheless pleasan1 and
''listcnablc".
r-quarter-or-a-centmy lrom the . · . h Q thers in the cast havC some
pl ay's originally announced young visitor w 0 exchanges two well-fashioned individual
d . d (1966) romantic attachments for a most p .. F i
( 495-1525).
pro uctiop ate to mouht improbable third is beautifully moments -atr1c1a rasc;r as
it, "Heartbreak House" depicts a rendered by Devon Raymond. Shotover's nurse, Hal La~~oo Jr. Admirabl)' amplifying the SCR
Production are John Jacovclli's
Remaining on stage are "On the
Town" at the Laguna Playhouse
(494-8021), through Sept. 29;
"Rom·ance, Relationships and
ship of fools steered by a The most highly realized as Raymand's weak-willed father,
doddering, besotted captain, rf f h . Dan Kern as Chappell's , panoramic, detailed settings of
both the inside and outside of the
Shotover "vessel." Paulie Jenkins'
lighting is outs1anding, while
Michael Roth's musical backing
and Shigcru Yaji's elaborate
costuming also enrich the overall
e[fort.
Although they arc equally
well known -the melody of
Canio's anguished aria
"Vcsti la giubba" must'i>c
familiar from the North Pole
to the heart of Mongolia -
"Pagliacci" is by far the
heading for the rocks of re· ality. Its pc onnances 0 1 e evening arc · · ·fi I b th · I d delivered by Kandis Chappell as 1ns1gn1 1can ro er-1n-aw an
climactic scene is a stunning dose Shotover's haughty daughter, who Jeffrey Allan Chandler.as a
~ Reality" al the Costa Mesa Civic
Play house (65().5269),_through
of tonic forced down its returns after 23 years only 10 find burglar who turns out to be an old
characters' resis1ing throats. herself unremembered, and comrade of the captain's, fallen
· Sept. 29; "Cyrano -the Musical"
at the Newport Theater Arts
Center (631--0288), through Oct. 6,
and "The Taming of the Shrew" at
the Grove Shakespeare Festival
(636-7213), through Sept. 21.
Paxton Whitehead splendidly Richard Doyle as a captain of from grace.
enacts the 88-year-old Captain industry strikingly reduced in As in most Shaw plays, intellect more lively and interesting of
the two. Shotover, who presides erratically stature during his visit. Frances overrides emotion to the point that
over his ship-shaped house, Conroy excels as Shotovcr's Other when one or the charac1ers breaks
"Heartbreak House" is Shaw at
his most Quixotic, a fervent Both libretti promin~ntly
feature jealousy, adultery
and violent death. But
Why do our guests keep
coming back to the Little
Inn on the Bay? ·
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OCC guitar teachers strum their stttff--~~;e~~~~~o/;a;,11~: . w1th1n a play w1th1n a play,
G u itar syn thesis ts John guitar synthesizer in a classical MacAJester College in St. Paul, offering weleome interest to
McEnary and Joe Poshek will guitar recital. Minn., and bachelor's and master's a plot thaf otherwise would
perform Sept. 21, at Orange Coast A graduate of the University of degrees in guitar from the hardly be worth
College. The concert begins at 8 Minnesota, McEnary has taught Manhattan School of Music. Jn remembering.
p.m. in OCC's Robert B. Moore guitar classes at that institution addition to teaching OCC classes, Although the two young
Theatre.· · and a1 UC San Diego. He he's also a composer and arranger. casts included neither stars
McEnary and Poshck are both regularly performs throughout The concert will feature works or brilliant newcomers,
OCC faculty members. They'll Southern California. by McEnary, Poshek and a host of several singers offered quite
perform music composed and Poshek teaches guitar and other composers. mu~ical perfonnances.
arranged for guitar synthesizers, computer music classes at OCC. Advance tickets for the concert, Santone R\>bcrt McFarland,
using s1a1e-of-the-ar1 technology. and has performed throughout the priced at $6.50, arc on sale in the who played prominent roles
The duo is able to create exciting United States and Europe. He has OCC ticket orficc, located in the in both, was especially
t extures and sounds, while appeared at Carnegie Recital Hall, student ccn1er building. The office notable.
retaining traditional melodies and Lake George Opera, Riverside is open Monday through Thursday Tenor Ermanno Mauro,
harmoni~,. Shakespeare Company and Actors from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday from playing the tormented clown
McEnary , is head of OCC's Outlet in New York, a nd 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from Canio in "Pagli acci," was
g uitar and computer music Berks hir.e Ccnier for the 8 a.m. to noon. powerful but uneven. His
programs, and co-chair of the Performing Arts in Massachusetts. · Tickets will be sold at the door penchant for singing below
music department. He's one of the Poshck has a bachelor's in for $9. the correct pitch seemed lo
first performers ever to use a musical composition from F~r information phone 432-5880. infectlhose around him,
occasionally hurting
intonation for soprano
MIWIB liltlngs
Newpart Bach
-...UC.. CIN&MA 70f E. llc>lboo 81.d. 675·3570
M~oolT__.lff~l,9,15
IDWAIOI NIWPOIT CINEMA JOO ~ ......... C•nl•r °""" 6••·0760 1. hftl....., ~ 12:30, 2,•5. s. 1 JO. 10 2. n.. c.... • .,,..,..11 .. ~ 12·•5. 3, s 30. 8, 10:30
3. n.. c.-1•1n,..,1S (t) 2, "130. 1·30. 9.•S
IDW.tJIOI lllAHD QNIMA f.,.h;o.. hloncl. ~
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2. f-'-2 ltt) I,•. 7, 10
" 5. Hot SIMb l!'G-13) 12.15, 2.lS, •:lS, 615,
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6 City ........ (PG.J31 12.30, 3, 5 30, 8, 10.30
7 lt ......... ~(P'G-1 3)1215,230.5.115.
"' UDO QNWA ~ 81.d. "'Nwwpor! v.q. 1,o1~. "" . fheO.C....(PG-13)5, 7:30.10
l'OIT THU.fn 2905 f. C-Kgh-,. 67J.6260
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........... (l'G·ll) 1. 3, 5, 7, 9
IOUTH c:o.uT 111.AlA ~ 5•6-2711
1. f1.,.,._.., 2 (R) 2:30, 5tl5, 8
2. o..dApln !Ill 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10
-Marianna Christos, as his
wife Nedda, and McFarland
as well.
A more fundamental
problem was the stolid and
pcdcst~an staging or both
works. Crowd scenes in both
works were static and
uninspired. ·
"Cavalleria Rusticana,"
without a more interesting
libretto to make up for this
deficiency, particularly
suffered.
Delivery-Disposal of Old Mattress
(in local area) 3. D9c He!.,..,.... !PG-131 12 •5. 3. 515, 7:30,
9·•S
•.~......_!l'G·IJ! !.3·15, S.30. 7·•5.
luckl• ur for Love
I. Dooko .... • 11:) •:•S, 7, •:ts. 11 :15
2. o.c...,.,__ ~lll 5:•s. e. 10:15
3 ............ [PG· 13) 5:30, 7:30. 9:30
' ............. ll'G·ll\, a., ....... (!'0·131 • •S. 9.40
IDW.UOS QNIMA Hol'bot tl.d./"6onlo /w, 5•6·
'"' c-.p.n, "'9ol-. (l'Q-13J 6:1S, 8:30, 10,30
MAHOlt TWIN C9'laMI l1o<toor .....,./(. W._,
Sti..41631·3501
3 or,-lhcken ll"G· 1 JI 2. •:30. 1, 9:30
IOVrH CCMlf VtUAOa ~ 01 ..... 5•0-
M9'
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ll'G·ll) 7.1~.
2. ~ ~5,15, 7:309:45
3. "9N II ........ {NA! 6, I, 10
Its opening scene, for
example, Jacked any of the
intended eerie beauty.
Searching for her lover
Turiddu, Santuzza wanden J uncertainly and withbut
apparent purpose about the
stage. Only later do we
undentand that it was
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617 LUo PM• DriYe, Ncwpcwt ~ CA nMJ. (714) 67].. ...
~ CIMIMAI ~ '°""""'~
I., ....... """"' 2 ~ 7, 10
2 ..... ...._ (l'G..1~ 6:30, 1:30, 10;20
:lo ............. 2\.11 P'Gl l, S:45, 9:30 •••~1• ....... '"90 """'lfO·l:I) ~,.5, 7;)0
4, ...... f'GI 7:30 """W. ,a!S:30.10
5. 111• .. ,, • ~l3l 6W1.....,1 ~ 1.
10
Modeing Portollos. Executive
Portraits & Wedolngs
~ H 0 T 0 • ~ A ~ H y
014) 262-7910
anguish, not confusion, that
possessed her.
On the positive side,
conductor Anton Coppola .-
uncle or the movie mogul -
Jed the orchC3tra in skillful
and thoroughfy musical
pcrfonnances or both scores.
Good enough, in fact, to
make it worthwhile to close
, your eyes and just listen
when the action on 11age
failed to captivate. ·
RU Ff ELL'S
UPlllLSTllY lie;--_,_ __ _
1m-1111.,*"'m! .-11•
•
•
•
Editor WillL1m l.obdell •.. 642-4321, ext. 351
rnitor1a! Letters
-·· ...... Plml: ....... the llliller str•
W e urg~ the N~rt Beach and Costa Mesa city.
councils to qutcklY approve a crouwalk·and
aooom;r,nying flashing lights on Irvine Avenue and
18th Street a Jaccnt to Marinen Elementary School.
A child,a I' may be at stde.
•
The Costa Mesa Transportation Commission last week
rcoommcndcd the improvements, which boosted efforts by a
group of parenta hoping to make it safer for their children to
cross the busy street to get to 1hc grade school.
Their efforts were stepped up last June when a 7-ycar-old h?>' was seriously injl!red ·while trying to cross the street on
his way to school.
Since Irvine Boulevard borders Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach, final approval of the warning lights and crosswalk
would real with the city Council in both cities. The project
would cost appro~mately $70,000.
At the current time, since there are no signals or
crosswalks at .18th Street, children must use crossing e,uards
at 19th Street or cross at 17th Street -three blocks 1n each
direction, which might ~-well by three mftcs to yohng, ""
impatient children.
Traffic officials estimate that 28,000'vehiclcs pass by the
school every day and signal lights have been ruled out at
18th Street because of grade differences on Irvine Avenue.
Our city leaden should move swiftly to get this essential
crosswalk and flashing lidtts in place p&ithaste. In the
upcoming months, The Jfilot would'loVe to ru.n a front-pagC'
story on the new ·crosswalk opening instead of an another
article on a child who was hurt.
Best 01 the Hotline
&Jjtor's note: The following
are samples of Pilot readers'
rommcnts and criticisms. The
Pilot runs these responses on a
regular basis. However, only
callers who /eave their name
(spelled out), city and phone
numbe.r (for verification) will be
published. Get involved bf
calling the Readers' Hotline at
642-6086.
611111 l'llPDildl
T hi s is Vice Mayor Sandy
Genis and I am calling
because I found your editorial
of Aug. 31 to be rather
•
peculiar. On two occasions, I
was contacted by a Pilot
reporter and asked my opinions
of certain events involving Mary
Hornbuckle. Inasmuch as I have
long been on record as an
advocate of open government,
my response should have been
no surprise to anyone. I would
like to emphasize here that I
did not initiate these contacts,
but merely answered the
reporter's direct question.
I have three choices in reply:
to give an honest answer, to lie
or refuse to respond. I chose to
respond frankly.
Now, after either permitting
or possibly even directing the
reporter to contact me, not
once but twice and devoting
substan1ial print to the story,
you r paper condemns me for
making noise. In retrospect,
perhaps it was politically naive
for me to answer a Pilot
reporter's questions in the
manner that was not supportive
of Ms. Hornbuckle since she is
on the Pilot's Board or
Advisers.
However, it is my policy 10 be
straightforward with reporters
and also to be straightforward
with the public in general. In
any case, since you obviously do
not approve of individuals
giviqg honest answers to your
own reporter's questions, in the
future, do you suggest
interviewees lie to reporters or
just refuse to respond to -1
inquiries? l really do not think
Vtee Mayor Sandy Genis
1hat this has been handled in a
manner that was fair.
SANDY GENIS
Vice Mayor
1111111'1 11111 111111
I have a question that I think
might be of interest to the
rest of the citizens of
Cali£omia. We continually hear
about the shortage of funds for
the educational system that we
have, the schools and the
colleges .. I am wondering
whatever happened to all the
money that we were supposed
to get from the Lotto for this
purpose?
I think 1hc time has come for
a complete accounting of the
money that comes in from the
Lotto so we can sec where the
money is going. Whether it is
goi ng for management or
whatever. I think this would be
a good idea and a good •
contribution to the citizens of
the state of California.
RALPH BERKE
"Newport Beach
0 n two recent occuions. 1bc
Pilot has. reported and
editorialized that the West
Newport Bcaoh Aaociation bu
approved Hoag'• prOposed
Muter Plan. , ..
These rePorts arc simpfy not
true, The West "Newport Beach
ANociation has not approved the
Master Plan. The Association did
vote to .approve the '° building
heights on the lower campus as
presented· by Hoag. The
Asoociation has yet to aperovc
the other aspects or the building
plan, including the bulk, density,
trafQc, fate of the wetlands, fate
of the bluff, the proposed
building envelope for t}\c 1owcr
zone on the upper campus, etc.
The West Newport Beach
Just ll)liii no to
local tol roads
T h e Public's increasing
awareness of the few parcels
of open space remaining in
Orange ~"County arc being
replaced with rnorc~dcvelopmcnt
and highways, and the people
arc going to fight to preserve
those diminishing parcels, It is
reasonable to believe the feud
between opponents and county
officials long supporters of the
San Joaquin Hills toll road has
reached its boiling point -a
lawsuit is currently pending.
·rhe pay -as-you-go corridor
idea on Irvine l~nd was the
county's last resort. Incidentally,
it starts from nowhere and goes
nowhere. The public is fully
aware that lawmakers .have
shown favoriti sm toward special
interest groups.
It was frustrating to learn that
Congressman Ch ris Cox who is a
member of the House Public
Work s Ca.\nmi1 tcc on
Tr~nsportation is an adamanl
supporter of the proposed San
Joaquin Hills Corridor. In a
recent news article he staled,
"The Corridor can blaze a trail
and set a precedent for future
toll roads in Califor.nia."
Unfortunately, the general
public docs not share the
ideologies and aspirations of
Congressman Chris Cox and
Senator John Seymour's
determination to achieve that
goal. Highway interests have an
almost unholy grip on too many
legislators in this country. ·On
May 8, Senators John Seymour
and Alan Cranston wrote a letter
asking .the Senate Committee on
Transp o rtation to exempt
Orange County from the 4-F
Rule which prohibits using
federal funds for private toll
roads through public park.lands.
The exemption requested by
the Irvine Company and
Transportation Corridor Agency
was not approved by the
Association's vote was very
narrowly limited tO building
heights as they TcfatC to the
proposed linear park.
By the way, Hoag has not.
really gone a long way to satisfy
community concerns. The park
was chitngcd to allow a 20-foot
rather than a 10-foot linear park
ncn to the bicycle path, but the
consolidated view park at the
western end was correspondingly
reduced in size so that the
ovcra11 park size remained the
same at .8 acres. The building
heights were reduced by about 2
feet. Plans rcmaih to excavate
the bluff back by about I 00 feet,
destroying all wetlands, and the
coastal bluff above the wetlands.
It should also be noted that
building. medical buildings with
sensitive medical equipment into
a wetlands .with the water
constantly wanting to seep into
the buildings is not a very bright
idea. Hoag has had trouble with
' water seeping into tho new
Cancer Center, potentially
jeopardizing medical equipment
worth millions 9f dollars. To
repeat this experien~ all along
the lower campus would seem' to
be a folly. The water is coming
out of the middle of the bluff
along an aqµifcr. They won't be
able to simply fill up the
wetlands and build over it. They
will always have to deal wilh an
eternal water problem. '
Maybe· nature is , trying to
teach Hoag something. Maybe its .
·• rile pNlfo
Congres~man Chris Co~ supports toll roads in Orange County. ) . ..
commillcc -but could be added specifically was southern Orange
as 8.n amendment to the bill:-If County selected to become _ the
approved the toll road will be viclim o( a S2 billion toll road
the biggest bbmb to ever hit headache? The ~er is simple,
Orange County. it is essential to the Irvine Co. It
Let's look at the pros and cons provides access to their major
o f the co nfli cting issue dcve l9pmcnt on Pelican Hills
realistically. (1) Who· stands lo Road.
benefit highly ? Powerful The scenario becomes more
developers and auto insurance complex. If land developers have
companies. It helps open up new unanimously agreed to pay the
developments. (2) Who pays the road fee to suppo rt their
bill? The public. It wil~ cost the projects, why arc they passing
southland commuter $1,080 the cost of new roads on to the
annually plus the hefty gas tax. consumer homcbuycr/rcntcr?
The frightening facl is Iha May we remind o ur
Angeles is one of most Washington representatives,
polluted and traffi congested rcssman Cox and Senator
cities in the United talcs. It has Seym ur, that the only function
been established at ribbons of of pu · servants is to protect
concrete have definitely not lhc rights and welfare of its
solved L.A.'s traffic gridlock. We citizens and the people arc not
have witnessed the deterioration to be sacrificed to powerful
o{ our air. Shall we continue to developers wilh financial and
pave vast prime acreages (Public poli1ical superiority
Parklands) fo r unne eded
highways? Money grabbers are
destroying the coun try for
profits. The highway lobby has
b l ocked good urb an
trarisportation in California .
The real question is -why
Air pollution has risen
tremendously since 1970 and
hangs dange rously ove r our
cities.
IDA Z. WILLIAMS
NcWport Beach
For u.atron• movie 11111 hlllllY ._
~
E ditor's note: The following received a phone call the next
was addressed to Jim evening that my wallet had been
Edwards of Edwards theatre. found by Hanns Todd, I came to
Dear Mr. Edwards, the theatre and found that to my
This letter is to praise a Jreat surprise, everything
number of your personnel at 1he including SIOO cash was still in
Mesa Theatre. On a recent the walleL I never expected to
Tuesday night, 1 attended a film sec the wallet again and would
festival at the above theatre with like to commend you for
my three grown children. After employing such fine and honest
watching about half the movie I young men. ~cy· arc John Hull,
realized my wallet was missing Chad Faaborg, Garret Prott, Ben
from my jacket. After the movie Fine and Hanns Todd.
was over we searched in vain. 1 My kids and I will continue to
spoke with the theatre manager be your loyal customers.
John Hull and advised him of
what happened.
To my great surprise
PAT FREEMAN
Newport 'Bc;ach
For this avid golfer, it's simply a love-hate relationship
round ball with an overpriced club the morning. 'The numbing feeling of Smee then, I've gone back once a week, l can discover that small fundamental Oaw
best to leave the wetlands alone,
preserving the bluff, preserving
the views from the bluff line as
they exist today, making the
oommunity happier, growing in a
responsible manner on the upper
campus and off site, and
satisfying the needs of Hoag· and
the medical community.
In fact, Hoag's sm"-rtcs\ move
has been its exPansion into
Irvine and HunlingtOn Beach
witH' the Hoag Health Centers.
This is the right Rx for growth.
Hoag is a good medical
organizatio n, and putting the
facilities where the people are
makes good sense.
JAN D. VANDERSLOOT, M .D.
Newport Beach
A look back at
the good ol' days
I walked a little further south
to day, checking our the
erogress of the new freeway. Just
nort h of 19th Street, where a
little yellow bungalow stood
there is now a car wash. That
liltle bungalow had been a
familiar place to me.
It had been the office of De.
Phillip Timberlake and his wife~
They had a very active practiCe
at about the lime of Costa
Mesa's incorporation. They could
do anything that the modern
outpatient clin ic can do. The
living room was the wa iling
room, the kitchen was the lab.
. Office ca lls were three dollars,
and house calls were fi ve dolJarS.
My mother and fa1her were
o ld and that was befo~
Medicare. My mother often paLd
the doctor by sitting with his
children and my dad often paid
by fixing his lawn mower.
The Doc did love to hunt, so
you might as well not get sick on
the first day of hunting season. ~·
One of his ~aughtcrs ~TOtc a
le11er to the Daily Pilot as a ·
sch ool project once. She
complained it was hard to get
across !he comer at 22nd and ·
Irvine . A light was installed on
that corner, right away.
I used to walk down by the
Doc's house a few years back. I
often saw him and his wi fe
~orking in the ga rden or he
would be stripped to the wai st,
cutting wood with a buck saw. I
always got the impression that
the ~ would have rather been
a farmer than a doctor. Richard
Nixon v.·as his cousin, and he and
his family were Oown to the
Presidential inauguration.
The Doc and Mrs. Timberlake
arc still great friends and great
people, and I was a little sad,
when I saw that the little yellow
bungalow was tom down.
JIM BOLDING
Costa Mesa
W hat is ii about hitting a little getting me out of bed In the wee boura of e~ough 10 tease me into .being hooked. some day. Maybe within the nen 23 years
that is so relaxing, thrilling, catching one in the sweet spot -or, as and usually go to the driving range on that's holdin' me back from greatness,
maddening and addictina? my new idol, John Daly says, "rippin' it" weekends. and I'll quahfy for the senior tour. Or
0
\ An Independent Nevrspaper
J hate golf. It's the -silences everything around me, from 1 talk aoU conatutly Wt1h friends and maybe it will be a good business
tn06l atupia, ~stratina. th~ blrds to the wind to the worries that co-worke1' who shire my affliction. 1 find schmootif\I. tool, out at Pebble Beach PubUshed by
lame sport ever 1nven~cd. mse my blood pressure. myself in aponing ,oods stores, or go)f '°?.'e day with D?n•ld ~,..~ or J~ Sony. . Page Group Publishing, Inc.
I hate to ~ve~ call 1t a 1 started playing •a•in 1 month or '° sbpps, browsing 11 aolf gadgets and dubs t , Hey Don, nice dnvc, , I might . $8.y.
apart consuScnna that a aao 1 played a few times cNrlna GI)' youth c:ovld· never afford. One fellow aolfina 'That was a,. peach. But you re 1tance is a Blktt Stein, Jr.
world-class athlete could aft~r bcin& Introduced to the pine by ~ clep:nerate even IOI me staned shadow little too n•i:ow~ and you'll get more loft chairman
practice forever and uncle who ·once broke par, but I've. aolftna _ at random time& of the .,, ~th )'OUf driver if ~u line up your 11a .. ncc
never be a llnt·rate wi.ied...i for-tbe--' part .._..... praotici1lg.lll)' aw1q wldioul_., d.il>-itt-niy-WllhJ.hoJ>all. ... n.with.you£.fn>llt..!ooi."'---l-·l---Jlm'Gr•11l.,...-
lll.,O, lte-a-~t 1.,., alwayw known that the....,. had m,; hands. It'• oalier lO believe rm nria&iaa ''Thanks lor the eo!nten Tom," 11e•d · publisher
30 percent body at can . power to addict me, and I didn't want 10 well when thCIR.'I no dub. no bd ucf nO ~Y· "~~ l don't thin~. I'll ever gel the
be I pro. AJ one my golf get c:auah• up In oomethln& that made me n:1ult to ~ me. 11'1 Pftlbably ku~d of d11tan« you do., WlliMI S. lAJWell
p1ttnet1 11 fond of wane 10 break thinp. U1tfU1 tO YiAWD a pd twin&. but it can Actually, lhe _name 1~ Tony, but. I can editor & yi(:e president
oaylna. "It .. the perfecl ·be cmbarrusina 10 he walldaa throuP the lcplly change It or you ~me that job we -_.,..
way &o apoU 1 nice walk.'' But lut mon1b1 • couple frlendl otr.oe. or oomenill •• 1 Pl'9 .ad were t•Hti.na about.." -mlNllf ec:h:M' •
On Ille other hand, I •u-tcd we I" -• roud. and I dilo<Mlr thll )OU'n -ano ..... ,. 1 Every JOl(er_ Ill• these ridicodou1 re •·
10.. JOI!. Nol •!•"" n,.red l.'d be safe with ..,. .....,.,. on baClr. ·-,.,.., -ia ..-wldl tbal fanlllia. It's what keepo us "°"""' bade W ., .. , 4•
Cbri11m11 moro1011 tho ffnb. ......._ ·•-perfOCI hip mcadoa ,_w -........ for_. p11nlohmcnt. 1901·1989 duriRI my childhood b9I .J1l ncYef ._ ...... ~ """ A ft aood , n. 0.-• &tt ,._,., tu 1tu tts ..... -.a.aw.
there -_..... IO _. et --me • lMI• °' a<M -~ jllst ~ .U t1t11 d I
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I
PAVILI ON S CHOWDER COOKOFF
' A. N D K E Z Y P R E S E N T
NE.WPORT 95.9KEzv ..
F Rf~ l\[)Ml'-.SION
V/INE & HEER t,Af./DlN
LIVE Bf ACH MU5.1(
TASTING KITS$)
COMPETE FOR
PAVIUONS CHOWDER COOK-OFF
atV~UkP~
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1991
$500 BEST CHOWDER -Individual/Amateur .
$500 BEST CHOWDER -Restaurant
$500 BEST CHOWDER -People's Choice
COMPETE Wl1H ORANGE COUNIY"S
FINF.ST CHOWDER MAICEBS
INDIVIDUAi/TEAM DMSION COMPE11TORS
Security Pacific Grubb & Ellis
Balboa Island Marching Fritz Duda Complny
& Chowder Society Edible Art
ENTRY FEE:
$100 -Individuals/Clubs
$200 -Restaurants/Hotels
MaU elllry form &
cbecll paylJbk to:
RESTAURANT DMSION COMPEM ORS:
Ancient Mariner Village Fanner
Dune's Back Bay Cafe Rusty Pelican
Delaney's Parker's Seafood
McConnick & Schmick's Cabo C.oast
Newport Sea Shack The Warehouse
Ruby's jaguar Diner The Chart House
Newport Harbor Area
Chamber Of Commerce
Pavilion's Chowder Cookoff
1470 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach, CA 9266o
(714) 644-8211 Rumplestiltskins 21-2 Cafe
Cannery Restaurant Alta COffee
Pavillions Place
r----------------------~ MAIL YOUI ENTIY TODAYI
Na.me ---------------
Address ------------------
acy ------------------
Swc -------lJp --------'-..-..
Pbooc( >--~~~~~--L----------------------~
SPONSO RED BY
Mila Bwh lot lild ...... ID be I
cerllln ... IO Ibey ma .... lk ••ec.. ... dty ollcilll llld ......... (ftn
the partmta lot to the tide ~ la too far
for driJdma. no matter Wbial ... to walk
and that the city can~ ~ bulel off
public streets nor block acceu to the
pubUc boacb.
ID otbor "-•-. 1M COUDd1 tppnMd •POIOPril~ $25,000 for 1-d ippnilals ot:tlle '.Caatiways and Newport.er North
propert*' two of tbe larpit ~ Pecea ~Irvine Co.: lud left ID tbe:dly; -
Councilman Oarence Turner clarfled
that the action was not an authorization
10 1pend the money.
By lrts Yof(ol
Ml Wrtllf
Representatives of the cable companies said they
agreed with Delino's proposal.
Council members expressed concern that the 1 agreement provides no protection against rate
increases. "If the customers had a choice between S4
channels and holding down the monthly rate, I think
they'd choose holding the rate," said Mayor Phil 1
Sansone. "The cost escalation... is the mijOr subject
of the complaints I've gotten."
NEWPORT BEACH -A request to extend the
two local cable companies' franch~ for 20 years
triggered complaint• by City Council members about
customer rates and frustration that the city can not
regulate these prices. .
City officials have until January to11ash out a new
agreement with Community Cablevision and Comcast
Cablevision, but Assistant City Manager Ken belino
oni Monday afternoon brought to the council a
proposal to extend the franchises for 20 years.
The cable companies contend they need 20-year
terms to pay off the million dollars' worth of
upgrades they have recently installed to improve their
systems.
Federal deregulation of cable television in 1984
prohibits cities from controlling rates, but Delino 1
hoted proposals for1 re-regulation and increased I
competition are presently being discussed.
The city's enabling ordinance provides the city with j
enou~ flexibility to make changes in the cable
television franchises, including allowiJ\g other
companies into the city, if cities are ever granted
more 1'egulatory power, Delino satd. Delino told t.he council he supported such 20-year
franchises if the cable companies agree to increase
their number of channels to 54 and dedicate one to
the fire department for broadcasting training videos
and communications between fire stations.
Councilman John Hedges also expressed fear about
committing to 20 years without review of the
companies' financial figures .
-S ince Jan\4ary, the Costa Mesa
police ha'v,c conducted several
John stings, arresting some
80 men for offering to pay an
undJ:IC.over officer money for sex.
ARREST-: ()fffeia.1 on ·business trip
~d Sgt. Tom Boylan said the
numbers indicate a growing
prostitution problem in Costa
Mesa.
By reducing demand, police
hope to stem the supply. But they
admit the problem won't go away
unless the prostitutes do. And,
Boylan said, the battle is getting
harder and harder to fight.
From A1 (
A s~orn peace offi(\.er,
Deciot&S · is an ABC district
administrator and the ·ABC's
chief of business practices for
all of California.
ABC Deputy Dircctot
Manuel Espinoza would not
comment on the arrest, but said
his office is conducting an
internal investigation to decide
whether he will be placed on Most of the women arc not from
thiu rea ~n .said'"' They hail
from places like Seattle and Tens. border. ,
Police caJ!_ th5a "~qr.a_it _Rrls" because t11y1 travel frOn!"' Cify fo "And the only proble°:l is that
city along -.West Coatt: _ _ Harbor Boulevard ends m Costa · ." . Mesa, so we've got no where to . Consequently, the m91onty. of push them to" Boylan said. them have left town by the time • their court date comes up. ~onscquently , Costa .Mesa
And those h d h . pohce went from arresting a w o o s ow up m h dful f . court get nothing more than a slap an . o prosllt!-ltes a year to
00 the wrist, police say. booking about 150 m 1989.
Deputy District Attorney Dan ''We thought we'd never get
Hess said the county tries to put rid of them," Boylan said.
prostitutes behind bars for at least So they dedicated an entire
five days for a first arrest, but the month during 1990 to prostitution
jail is often too· crowded. busts.
"They'll keep coming back and It paid off: that year the entire
coming back until the county department arrested no more than
requires them to do jail time," 40 prostitutes.
Boylan said. "And they can't do "We thought we had gotten rid
that because of the overcrowding." of the girls in '90," Boylan said.
In the meantime, Boylan fears But they hadn't. •
this segment of Harbor Boulevard This year they're back and the
will remain a haven for hookers. problem's worse than ever.
Sin c e January, Boylan's Every day at least several
detectives have arrested 86 hookers work Harbor Boulevard
, s uspec ted pros titutes in near the Santa Ana border,
u n d c r cove r o p e r a t i o n s . according to Boylan. There arc
D e p a r t m e n t -w id e , B 0 y1 a n afternoon hookers for the lunch
estimates they've arrested about crowd, evening bookers for men
120 since the r;-ar began. getting off work and late night
But it wasn t always that bad. , prostitutes.
Boylan said the prostitutes used And. Boylan said there are a
to work primuily on Harbor new breed of prostitu,te working
Boulevard in Anaheim. But Costa Mesa's streets.
eventually Anaheim police pushed "We've got a Jot more 'he-shes'
the women into Garden Grove, and a lot more of the drug
forcing the Garden Grove police prostitutes," he said. ''And both of
to chase them into Santa Ana. those classes bring crime into the
It wasn't until 1989 that Santa city."
Ana police succeeded in running "He-shes" is a term given to
the prostitutes over Costa Mesa's men who put on dresses and bras
I IHWAYS: Ratad 1 • llulJ rn 8tll8
From A1
(110) interchange, with a daily
volume of 561,500 vehicles.
3) Santa Monica ( 10) and San
Diego ( 405) interchange, with
561,000 vehicle. daily.
4) Ventura (101) and San Diego
(40$) interchanae, with 520,500
vehicles daily.
S) Santa Ana (5~, Garden Grove
(22) and Oranp 57) i'!tercbanp, with 492,SOO veh cles a day (\IP
from 484,500 the previoua year).
6) Artesia (91) and San Gabriel
River (605) freeways interchange,
with 478,000 vehicles daily.
7) Harbor (110) and San Diego
(405) interchange, with 467,000
vehiclea daily.
8) Orange (57) and Rivenido
(91) interchange,· with 443,000
vehicles daily (up from 434,500 in
1989).
9) Ooldcn State (5) and Long
Beach (710) interchange, with
437.SOO vehicles daily. .
10) Coeta Mesa (SS) and San
Diego (405) intcrchanae. '--= ...... 111111 Cll111Clll1J111t Aun A1
betWeen them. ••Jt'• juit 1 very
~ Coincidence," OODJa said.
.. W•'ve come ecro. ru.,... Him1
ot property bete, but to find tlmo
seta ot human mnaim in a week it
very unusual."
Funeral diiector Puo and pOliCe
theoriie 1he bq of..._ wuhed
up on the bcacb Sunday miy haw
been rcc:cndy releUed into local
waterw. "Wo think the remain•
were re tu~ to • the family and
the acatterln~ done b7 the'
•
family,·• Paz.o said. With help from
outside aacncles and lndividuals,
Pazo said he hopct to determine
the ~name of the d«eaacd by the
end of tbe week.
Meanwhile, Newport poUco aay
the first two bap· 1 of uhes
contained no ldeaitifiaition and
they are ~lyiq on the public to
provide · additiOnaJ dues. If tho
remaiu are not idadfied within
90 days. police will tun them over
to the county coroaet b dl.poial.
"
administrative leave.
Espinoza did confirm,
however, that Decioµs was in
town on business for several
da}-s. .
As chief of business practice~
Espinoza said Dedous is
responsible for coordinating all
investigations into trade
practice violations between
wholesalers and retailers
statewide.
stuffed with cotton in an attempt
to pass themselves off as female
prostitutes.
Boylan said "he-shes" first hit
this segment of Harbor Boulevard
less than a month ago. Costa Mesa
officers have arrested two since
then and chased a handful of
others off.
Boylan said "he-shes" are
known for robbing their customers.
But while police can at least
identify and categorize a
prostitute, they'll tell you the men
who patronize them are all but
impossible to pick out.
"There's no one profile for
Johns," Boylan said. "They're
every race, every age, every
religion."
T hursd,rs operation netted men
with well-groomed gray hair,
pin striped shirts and pens in
pocket one minute, and teens with
fraternity shirts and basketball
shoes the next.
"We've gotten school teachers,
attorneys, you name it," Boylan
said, adding that between 10 and
15 . percent of the Johns they've
arrested arc foreigners.
And while Thursday was a
bountiful night for police, it left
Boylan with mixc~ feelings.
"It's a good night as far as
arrests go," he said. "But it's a
bad night because it's telling us
the problem is still out there."
Ym: '111•11111'
1111111 .. occ
From A1
donations. "We've lost a lot '»I gifts to the NavaJ
Academy," '8id Brad Avery,_
director of marine programs
at Orange Coast College.
"tho academy is tough
competition."
Nichols made his decision
after inspecting the nuts and
bolti of Orange Coast
College's sailina prosram in
July. "Anytime we can beat
the Naval Academy out of
1<>melhinc. we're pleUed,"
said colleae Pte1ident Davtd
Grant.
__:'Thia will give our
students the opportunity to ao to sea in one ol the
oWOrld's areal sailing yeuc~"
said Orant, who doUblel 11
rowina coad\ at the schOol.
Collep oftldala laJ tbe
Y•cht '9 the 1D01t ap1crhe lfnale lift ever dolia1'd IO
the colfcee-
War<Jrup . . captures
Jordan .·
Classic
·• By Bf Howard L. Handy --1 t may be a good thing for all
ooacemed that !ohn Wardrup of
Corona del Mar is turning golf pro in
a week and a .half or•they may ·be forced ·
to rc•namc tltc City of Costa Mesa Will
Jordali Golf Cauic in his honor.
Wardrup, for the third straight year,
was in ·a playoff to determine a winner of
the 19th annual event that concluded
Sunday over the Los Lagos course at
Costa Mesa Golf & Country Oub.
Wardrup finished rcgu1ation play at 6-
undcr-par l36 to tie with Conner Sea
View League foe Bob Jacobson of
Newport Beach. and Mark Vuksich of
Stanton.
The sun had already set in ~c west
when \\)_rdrup won the playoff on the·
scoond extra hole with a birdic-4. ·
Vuksich was clminatcd on the first . ·
citra hole as Wardrup: and Jacobson each
posted birdies.
On the second playoff hole, another S-
par of 531-yarcb, Jacobson hit his tee shot
ID ll bunker and J\ad a bad lie. His third·
1hot went in another bunker to the left of
the green and he two-putted for a bogcy-
6.
Wardrup, mcanwhile,.was on the green
in regulation and one-putted for a birdie
after Jacobson had finished.
The win gave Wardrup successive
victories in the tournament, the only
player to accomplish the feat. Only Rich
Greenwood (1985 and 1988). ha5 two
victories in the event. Wardrup is the only
player to participate in three successive
playoffs. He lost to a Conner USC Trojan
teammate John Gillies in 1989, then
defeated Robctl.....Swnmers of Newport
Beach on the second extra hole last year.
When he lost, it was on the fint extra
hole.
"I've waited a long time to get this one
from Bob," Wardrup said. "He beat me
in the Sea VieW League finals six ycan
ago when he was playing for Univcnity
High and I was at CdM High. He sank a
40-foot putt to win that one and I haven't
forgotten."
T urning to Sunday's round, Wardrup
said he felt Jacobson was hitting the
ball better than he was most of the day.
"I niisSed four greens today and had six
birdies .and four bogeys. When he parred
15 and I bogeyed, he had a 2-shot lead. I
was two down with three to play. After
we both parred 16, I was down 2 with two
to go."
Wardrup birdied 17, a 183-yard 3-par
with a 12-foot putt from the right side.
Jacobson had a par and Vuksich was in
the clubhouse at 6-undcr·par awaiting the
outcome. Jacobson was a 6-under and
Wardrup at 5-undcr going to 18.
Jacobson was on the green in two but
had a long 45-foot putt uphill. He c:amc
within three feet of the pin and a good
putt' would have given him the title. After
Wardrup chipped beyond the pin about
12 feet, he made the comeback putt to go
6-under. Jacobson mi~d the 3-footcr
and a playoff resulted with the three
players at 6-undcr-par 136 for the tw.o
days.
"I'll play in the Ventura Open in a
week and a half," the USC Graduate said
after winning Sunday .. "Then I'll play in
the Nonhem California ··9J>en and go t
either Asia or South Afnca this fall . I
don't intend to try for my POA Tour card
until a year from now," Wardrup added.
Jacobson is a graduate of Univcnity
High and Saddleback C.Ollegc, but now
See JOROAN,a
five TD · passes
gave Mater Dei
an easy victory, .
By RlctlWd lluln • --The teenario couldn't have been more
deairable for Mater Dei Hiah, wbic&
opcned its football season in Jilawaii •last
Friday with a 34-20 non-league victory
over •olani at Aloha Stadium.
"This ls where the camp atmosphere
paid off for us," said Mater Del Coach
Bruc:e Rollin10n, whose squid took a 20-0
halftime leld before clearin the bench ·
,hell06}jld11il .
"We ·~ the daytime, but we had
aa:ea to a liah~ld In tbe .... tna, 10
... didn't hive 10 _,, about tldo aeu1n1
ridel -and wllat time to aet olf the
lllld. It -a aorpou1 sett! ... the ltldl
dlllad -Jm Jn and we had llu<e
_. pn<tlcol betore the ...... • •
•1 iull)' belle.e that -by tbe llme
JOUW -thne -a. ..... willl
...... ltlld -r -h -1111 lood to FINlandhlt~olae.l .... , ... MONAllCHMI
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Sepllmber 10, 1991 '--1 The Newpolt BeaclVCosta Mesa Piiot
Spona Editor ._ eam-.... 64~30 ext. 387
Pit Rlchnlori-bll ·-Blllllsh tourney/82 •
No SCOl'CI uo lnoWn?
Then look' doJrmfield,
There in the twilight 3ky
The numbers run and blink
And total up the years;
Our so~ this day are grown.
-RAY BRADBURY
'All Flesh is One: What Matter Scores?'
By Doo Cantrell
Spedal D Ille Plot
I f one .measures success by golden yardsticks
of grace, ho~r and nobility, then Ray Rosso
is still sitting,on top of the world.
AJ:!d if critics surfaced to gauge the merits of
achievement at ground level, fumbling with
age~ld scores and statistics, Rosso's regal
position and stature still flutten with a royal
b~nner.
-H; can look down the greensward of
yesteryear and recall when he was named an
All-City guard at Univenity High in Oak.land in
1934 and '35. Old clips clearly list his marks at
Cat-Berkeley undei the· noted Stub Allison; Cal's
adventurous trip to the Rose Bowl in 1~7, and
Rosso being voted to one All-Coast squt'd at
guard in 1939.
••-.Don Cantrell relums to the Pilot for
the Sept. 12 football tab with a special section o ...
the Orange Coast College teams of 1948 ·and · 49,
the original Pirates.
And Rosso was firmly camped on top o{ the
junior college football world 1n 1947. Treasured
words of his accomplishments were woven into a
See RDSS0/14
ClassifiecW4
' ..
The
and •
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Corona del Mar High qua rterback Todd Kehrli !left) a nd his Sea Kings
teammates are waiting fo r Friday's opener as the 1991 high school
football season ki cks off. Kehrli and his teammates, as well as the rest
of the Pilot's best, preview in Thursday's Football '91 -don't miss it!
. --Newport Harbor's M.ttt Panons Joonls u a major obstacle lo< Sallon' foes In Willer polo as die1991 ••"'°"gets under Wily. The Sailors host OOWiiey Sepl. 17.
Pilot people are polo-powerhou·s~s . ...
By Kk1c Wolcott --T his year, two of the beat bo)'ls prep .,.
water polo races in Oraqe County
arc expecled to shape up rilJtl
here In our backyard pool. •
In the Sea View, Leque, Corona del
Mar and """L polo hive .
practlcally--11nonymou1. However,
Newport Harllor bU upobly the -four._ -in tho ltate (II not the
country) UlCI a _., that -a •hlna or __ ,.._..
--. the top --Jn the Padllc Coul Lo-ladder sliould be
Inhabited by -I -as well. Eatanda, bappa,-,,_Ill Seo View ~ bllop -...... to tlrit
,_.., PCL ~· 8tll don' -Colla
-to "'IJnqulsb k's n.e.,_. hold '"'
•
the league crown without a llnlgglc.
In the Anp:lus Le~ Mater Del v h b' • k ;~~~ :::.,,~ -'':."':ii;J.~: a. rgas as a 1 g ta. s.
into a five~chool race for. CIF
distinction. . By -l-• Here'• a toam-by-rcam k>ot. at area _....,
IChoollforl99 .. l~:...-Tbii'iiJii'OOnilii1UiP-l-;,,,.~~c~~~~~ I-I • c· 6iOiii ... nity water polo cooch John Varps -there -ao ·= :i their 'bid to .... ~-·t.: auann-in the CIF 4-A diYision of his sport, evon If all the -do ,_,_ -to pobil at the s.. Kinp. CIP 4-A ~ 11111 70ar, the Seo Kinp Not Olli)' bu CdM _, nine CIF polo championships In the -·1 J0.,ear
... 11111 the early ....... fm>rllel in the history, the -Ital .... r had bocl<·IO-bact -without a polo
Seo View~· cMmpiom11ip in the Varps en. Add to that 0.. nhlr1llos starten and_,,,.
But donl -to -..,.. team potential all-Olwdy -Ions and CdM -to be looded. that -26-5 lat 70ar -·at leaot not Yet, Varpo Uu1sta the Soa IClnp hoYo the,. -cut out ror them. He
In llyla of play. belieYea bis squod llM -... -.. -that -be -.. We11 '11 '° pcOIDOIC tcain effon Fin• otr, the teun hu been blvotved ln ....nJ altercatioal AIMI M1t 1 r • ot """"this-.· llaltl ..... ,.... coadl -----...... .._. -of --..... -Jolla V-wllo wiU be-the Varpswunot,,_1. --of Ryu Walr, ID all--'VAllCMIM
-POL0/8
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L ast weekend's • 552 Cfub
Billfish T<>umament was a
success both on and off the
water.
On the water, angler Bob Gregg
of San Juan Capistrano got a lift
from Newport Beach's Ken Canon
and lifted a tournament-winning
136-pound "button" fish out of the
ocean.
Off the water, anglers and their
guests -more than 300 attendees
all told -helped raise $23,000.
"Every dollar we raise goes
directly to Hoag Hospital to help
fund health care projects to
benefit the community," said Bill
von Henkle, co-<:hainnan of this
year's event.
"We arc very proud of our
event," he added, "which
continues to grow each year."
The t ournament began
Thursday, with a Bon Voyage
party at the ·.Newport Beach
Country Oub. and ended Sunday
evening with an awuds ~r at
the same location.
In between, 65 anglers on 27
boats took to the waters between
Newport Beach and Avalon to try
their luck and fishing skill Gregg
had the best of it. landing the
prize catch on 20-pound dacron
with live mackerel while trolling to
Avalon.
Gregg made the catch on_
Carsoh's El Jelle, a 58-foot
Bertram berthed at the Balboa
Bay Oub in Newport Beach.
·Anglers paid $552 per thrcc-
man boat to participate. Th~ funds
will be used to benefit Hoag
H~spital through the purchasing of
c•pital e quipment, the
u9derwriting of capital projects
aod the funding of medical
r~arch, education and patient
a$slstance. •
'The 1991 Billfish Tournament
.,,,.
was held in honor of the late
CaMn Sdun.ldt. who aerved on the
SS2 Oub board of directon from
1987-90 and wu a member of the
Billfish Committee.
During tbc awards dinner,
current 552 Oub president Jim
Dale saluted the honoree.. "The
Honorable Calvin Schmidt is with
us tonight as we celebrate," be
said.
The 552 Club is a community
support group of more than 3.000
members of the Hoag Hospital
Foundation, which serves Hoag
Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, a
417-bed acute care non-profit
community hospital. Satellite
services are available to residents
in Irvine, Newport Center and
Huntington Beach.
Among the participants:
From Corona del Mar-Lisa
Figueroa, David Cousyn, Kevin F.
Priestley, Robert M. Syrene.
" "' • • • I 1 . , r
Prom Balboe llland-Jay L
Recd, R . F. "Gene" Saum.
From Balboa-Eric and Bill
Wren, Jr ..
From Newport Beach-Jamie
Reilly, Frank Tunney, Richard
Holmes, John Magner. Julie
Francis, Kevin Gorman. Kriatilyn
Hevckorat. Julie Haruers, Joy Dee
Anthony, James M. Greenfield,
Michael D . Stephens, Peter and
Kathryn Canavier, Steve Berlinger,
Robert C. Lamer. David Rogers,
David Eggleston, Dean Plant,
Tony Baratto, Tom Riley. Andrew
L . Youngquis t. Douglas C .
Woodard, Todd T. Rawlcigh, Bill
von Henkle. R. Bruce Hezlep,
Paul B. Bender.
Prom Costa Mesa -Garnet
Thomp_son, Robert McDaniel,
James E. Henwood, Delia T.
Sauceda, Donald D . Christy,
Dilanc Walker, Doug C. Woodard
Jr., Kelty Bozza, Jo Ann M. Bozza.
-~~Pilot
Lyle Galloway Classic Series going down
to th r wire ·with tonight's final eompetition
By Kirk Wolcott ~
SPOllS Writer
W ith one race to go, the
Lyle Galloway Classic
Series has shaped up to be
one classic finish.
Over the course of the summer,
all three classes of wooden-hulled
and fiberglass boats sailing in
Newport Harbor have developed
neck·and-neck races. Tonight,
three of those necks will be
extended in victory, while the rest
are cut off in defeat.
"We've been doing this race for
eight years now and usually it's no
big deal," said John Sturgess,
winner of the series a couple years
ago. "This year, it's been real
exciting all the way."
The excitement comes to a head
th.is evening when five boats from
Oass B and three each from Class
A and C put in the water off Josh
Slocums at 6 p.m. for a seven-mile
run to decide who gets trophies
and bragging rights until next
summer.
In Oass A. for the largest boats,
skipper Mike Mathews of Newport
Beach leads the pack with 52
points in Stella Man·s. Nipping his
heels with 50 points is Madness,
skippered by Gavin Herbert of
Newpcrt Harbor Yacht Club,
followed by Jack Baillie of Balboa
Yacht Club in Newsboy with 43.
Skipper Ron Wood and Quick
Quack have been quicker than the
rest of the Class B entries, but
only. barely. Wood has 51 points.
trailed closely by Bill Dunlap in
Gata with 50, Gcrrit Smouse in
Zephyr with 49, Alura with 48 and
Mariposa with 47.
In Oass C, for fiberglass boats,
Jim Van Vlcek enjoys the most
comfortable lead. In Astra he has
tallied 37 points this season, while
Trader Jim, skippered by Owen
Minney, has 28 points and Sea
Elation has 27. ...
Sturgess said the Galloway
Classic, which is held every
Tuesday night throughout the
summer, is similar to other
summer evening races in the area,
such as the popular Bcercan Series
at Balboa Yacht Club or the
Hibachi Series at South Shore
Yacht Club.
Tonight is the 14th race in the
1991 Galloway Classic Series.
. which only makes the closeness of
the point standings that much
more remarkable.
"Any. one of these races could
go right down to the wire,"
Sturgess said. "This is what makes
sajJing fun."
U.S. potoists finish filth at Junior C._...ips
While it was hardly a
consolation for the medal-hungry
Americans, Team USA won its
final game at the VI Junior Water
Polo World Championships to
finish fifth in the prestigious
tournament.
del Mar High product Chris
Oeding was one of three players to
score two goals in the Americans'
final effort.
In the bronze medal game,
Hungary beat Yugoslavia, 9-6.
Hungary trailed 2-1 a fter one
period, but a strong defensive
effort allowed the Hungarians to
go up 7-2 heading into the final
period of play.
Puerto Rico and Canada.
The niile-day tournament, Aug.
31-Sept. 8, featured the top men's
junior water polo teams in the
world playing in four Southern
California locations: Newport
Harbor High, Corona del Mar
High, Heritage Park in Irvine and
Long Beach State.
Playing in Saturday's consolation
game at Newport Harbor High,
the U.S. built an 8-2 lead and held
off Czechoslovakia, 8-6, to finish
the tournament 5-1-1.
U.S. team captain and Corona
Sunday's championship match
went down to the wire, with Spain
holding off Cuba, 11-10, to capture
the gold medal.
The lead changed hands seven
times, with Cuban star Ivan Perez,
the tournament MVP, scoring four
goals, despite settling for a silver
medal. ,
Bulgaria finished sixth, with
Czechoslovakia seventh and Japan
eighth. Rounding out the bottom
half of the 16-team field were, in
order: Italy, Brazil, Australia,
China, Mexico, New Zealand,
Ulls was the first Junior World
Championship in which an entire
16-team field was filled.
-By The Pilot
Booth earns $20 ~000 with Surfabout title
J. cff Booth of Laguna Beach won his
second Body Glove Surfabout title along
with $20,000 at Lower Trestles in San
mente last weekend, defeating Todd ·
Chesser of Hawaii, Vince De La Pena of
Laguna Niguel and Santa Barara's Chris
Brown in the finals.
"l knew there would be a
lot of money in this contest ,--~----..,
so I wanted to surf in it,"
s.aid Booth. "I'm sure that
the majority of the PSAA
guys arc hating me right
now, it's like I came into
their territory and took all
their money -I
Robin-Hooded them," said
Booth laughing.
Although it was Booth's
second victory in the Bud
Pro Tour this year, it isn't
always easy for the World
Tour competitors to clean
up when they compete in
the PSAA.
Surfing
Brad Gerlach, who is the world's
second-rated sur{cr, lost to Matt Archbold
and Steve Pugh, finishing up in the first
round of the Main Event in 33rd.
Derek Ho (ASP runner-up '89) lost in the
quarterfinals to Booth and Chris Frohoff for
a ninth place finish.
Kelly Slater lost in the second round of the
Main Event to Josh Mulcoy and Chris Brown
for a 17th place showing.
. Marty Thomas (ASP top 10) placed last in
his first round heat of the Mam Event, losing
to Rob Machado, Pocho Abina, and Kirk
Tice for a 49th.
Booth himself lost in the third round of the
trials earlier this year at Imperial Beach San
Di.ego.
The level of surfing and competition on the
Bud Pro Tour is at least somewhat
comparable to the World Tour and it's
picking up momentum.
In the contest, Booth was the only
backsider to reach the finals. Other goofyfoot
surfers that fared well were Chris Frohoff
and Derek H o in ninth, Rob Machado in
13th, and Hawaii's Pacho Ahina in 17th. The
rest of the tour's goofyfooters failed to
adv;mce past the first round of the Main
Event.
I had a feeling that it might be a bad
weekend for Orange County Bud Pro Tour
competitors and I was right.
Not a single surfer from Huntington Beach,
Newport or Costa Mesa reached the
quarterfinals. and only Mark Austin and
Noah Budroc made it past the first round
Main Event (both plactng 2Sth.)
To everyone's surprise, favored San
Oemcnte natives failed to reached the fmals
or even advance to the semis. as their big
names lost out in the quarters, with Shane
Beschen losing-out earlier in round two of
the Main Event.
The next sto~ on the Bud Pro T~ur takes
place at Atlantic City, New Jersey Sept.
25-29, and from there the tour goes to
Sebastian Inlet, Fla. Oct. 2-6.
TheTe will definitely be some big surprises
and major uFts on the Ea.st Coast, which
will make things very interesting down the
stretch on the points races.
The final event of the year will be at
Ocean Beach, San Francisco in mid-October
and the contest will carry double points, so
the year-end ratings will shufne around a bit
after this one's over. O
To some people, the biggest surfing contest
of the year is about to take place this
weekend at the Huntington Beach Pier.
The 21st Annual H.B. Summer Surf
Contest will feature Boys (14 and under)
Juniors (15·17}, Men's (18-24), Masters '
(2.5-34). Senion (35-44) Grand Masters (45
and over) and Women (all ages)
Masters is the biggest and most oompetitive
division in this year's contest, with Scott
Waring. Henry Noppenburger, Scott
Banuelos, PhU Lockman and 50 other
competitors dueling it out for next year's
braging rights.
Llo!d 1b 11 • Nnrport .BeadJ/Com Mtu
Piiot tOrre1poodent "11o#e nrll111 columo
•ppan ne11 Tuesda}'.
0 • a grey aun-le11 morning. like being inside a f.rolted filb
bowl and tryial to look out, the Newport Ocean Sailina
AMOCiadon lellt five clU1a of tailing enthusiuts drifti.na
past the start line with a destination in the Los Angeles Harbor.
AJ the fleet settled in for the long beat to the LA-Ugbthou1e,
thoughtJ of what sailing ii really about danced throuab the
concentrating minds of these water warriors ... "Sailing ... long
tedious hours of extreme boredom, interrupted briefly by moments
of sheer terror."
Well. ther~ would be no terror on this day.
Unlike the events of Lut year when the 33-foot
yacht Monarch was dismastcd by the howJlng
winds as she ~ the finish line. this year
would be a "piece of cake ...
The strategy challenge on the way up was to
guess if the wind would stay light and point high
and go directly for the lighthouse, or would the
wind rear up in a bowling attack, forcing the
sk.ippen to drop inside of the breakwall to find a
little protection and chanse to smaJler heads.1tils.
• Then they would pop back <>\It at the Long
Beach entrances and slog out the short tacks up
the wall to the LA. Entrance. Hindsight being a
great thing, the direct route was the correct call.
The happy event of the race was around two
o'clock when ole' man Mr. Sun decided to join
the party and made his appearance. Most of the sailors were
unfamiliar andawcd with the surprise guest, not having seen much
of him this summer.
The new venue of the Travel Lodge as the end destination was a
· tremendous success. The boats tied up in front of the grassy knolls
of the inn with the Queen Mary making the perfect backdrop. A
social gathering on the lawn drew the Argonauts together for good
times and sailors' stories, followed by dinner and trophies upstairs.
Sunday the grey sides returned (unfortunately as usual this year)
as the hardy. but quiet and pensive sailors (probably recuperating
from the night's festivities) started from Freeman Island inside the
harbor. Rounding out the brcakwall at the Long Beach entrance.
the Ocet sailed outside of oil platform Eva and headed home to
the finish line off the Newport Pier.
Spinnakers started appearing by Seal Beach and the pleasant
ride home had aJJ the boats finishing before three o'clock.
Sunday's trophies will be handed out at the annual NOSA meeting
Oct. 13.
Results: SATURDAY-~l~ss A: 1. Defender, Brian Mock, NHYC; ·2.
Newsboy, Jack Bailltc, BYC; 3. Free Enterprise, Charles Brcwcrk.
LIYC.
Oass B: 1. Sirena, Ed & David Quesada, SSYC; 2. Uckety Split.
Joe Degenhardt. BCYC; 3. Ecstasy, John Donahue, BCYC.
Oass C: 1. Amorous, Chuck Holland. BCYC; 2. Wee WiJlic
Angelo Peykoff, SSYC; 3. Michegaas, Joe Greenblatt, SSYC. '
Cl~ss D: 1. Squeezc-B1e, Phil Richardson, VYC; 2. Wind
Wamor, John Davis, BCYC; 3. Tres Gordo, Dave Price. BCYC.
Multi-hulls-1. Ima J_.oa, Vic Stem, SIBYC; 2. Bon Bon, Phil
Parker, ABYC; 3. Wee Tri, Bill Fell, SlBYC.
SUNDAY -Class A: I. Free Enterprise; 2. Defender; 3.
Nehushtan, Dan Prigmore, BCYC.
Oass B: 1. Sirena; 2. Jiffy Too, Rod Woods/Jim Kerrigan
BCYC; 3. Lickety Split. '
Class C: 1. Amorous; 2. Wee Willie; 3. Michegaas.
Oass D : 1. Tres G<:>rdo; 2. Wind Warrior; 3. Sqecze-Bye.
Multi-hulls: 1. Wee Tri; 2. Viva, Bowie Houghton, SSYC; 3. Bon
Bon.
PbJJ Rlchvdsoa's boating column appears /a the Newport
Bach/Costa Mesa Pilol every Tuesday.
Momrchs: n was a laugherl
From 81 hurried passes a nd added a·
want to take anything ~ay from quarterba~k sa~k. Linebackers
the Iolani football team, but they Jaso~ 1lues _(six solo tackles),
wc;ren't that good. We had a size David Knuff (stx solo tackles and a
advantage and (senjor quarterback deflected pass) and Parke! Gregg
Billy) Blanton was the difference." wer~ strong, according to
I Rollinson. B anton, ~ho comP,letcd 15. of Meter .,.. M 1.._. llO
19 passes wttb one mtcrceptaon, e-...,, ......._
had career-highs in passing .._ °" 1a 1 u o-,.
yardage (310) and touchdown ._. ..,.. ..._ 0 0 1 13
-
10
(fiv ) Th r h. . llO -..,,... .. pm tom .... (8IOldbllll lik*! 9:20 passes e . rec o 1s scoring MO-RUllR> 12 pass m 11n:1n • ..,,. Hi ·
tosses went to senior wide receiver ._... ._.. '
Roger Morante, who hauled in a ..,_..,,... 11 ~Q...,_ ....:---**), 1:30
46-yarder in the first quarter to ~-~ laUClldown31 ~ .... ~ • ---•• PISl•um--~lddi) 1:12. give Mater Del a 6-0 lead, then MO-Kiust tt '*' trom ~· **). 1'=-.
nabbed 11-and 31-yard touchdown td-~.,n'llNdrl#lttft,,_..
passes in the second and third 1a1-1t-.,n..,..::.
quarters, respectively. _._ '·C::::1Titnc9
"If you would've told me five • ..._.
months ago that Roger Morante =-~= ta-l: 10
would catch three touchdown ,..... 310 '';:
passes in the first game, I never ~· 1s-2~l 1w1;:
would've believed you," Rollinson SNb~ 1.-.. ,_.1,
said. "He was No. 12 out of 12 ~ 1: m
receivers last year. but be just =-=11111 M u
worked hard and it was areat to 1'111 o1 PGJ•• ~ J:-:
see him have that kind of success.". .., ~ ""'"9MO
Mater Dei's defensive front of ~~~": V..... N2: lfliM. i.t:
Jose Gonzalez, JOlh Cogi.ns and MO -lllflcj\, , .. 1 .. 1 '10: :t:::::"
Nicky Sualua created havoc for the. ......U.: WIMM
lolani offense Sualua caused two ... "..:.. ..,.1 -· .. es; ICIUI. Hr: """'°' 2.a. Seib. t· • ••; .,._ '"" ..lldl90ll. Mt. IClftl. 1-4
SCHEDULE
Tuesday
Soccer
DCC drops opener
The Orange Coast College
men's soccer team opened Its
campaign on a tour note Monday
afternoon, bowing to visiting Long ·
Beach City in a non-conference
match, 3-1.
SCC's Coley wins Challenge
Voyager ·~acht Club and
Newport eafcal arc now
accepting entries for the Chal~
Cup 1991 Harbor Olampiooalnp
Race.
Community college men -Onnge Coast at Sant.a Monia. ) p.m.
Tennlt
High school girls -Sunny Hills at Estancia, 3 p.m.
• Wednesday
Socclr
College men -Southern C.llfomla CqOege at The Muter'• College, Newhl1l~
3 p.m. T-..nlt
High school girts -Corona del Mat at Edifon, 3 p.m.
Thunday
Socar
Community college men -San Oleto Mesa at ~nge Coast, ) p.m. w•Poto
High JCt,oot bays -Corona del Mtf w. San Clement•, It~ Collett,
6 p.m.; Mlbtr Del at Valencia ToumltMf'lt, 3 p.m. Voll,W
Hf&h tc:hoot ;ttt -C.olta Mesa at lbndto Santlaf>, J:15. 4 . r....-. High d!Ool lltls -Huntington Bed •t Newport ~i'W. J p.m.: £1 Toro et
COltl MeN, 2:45 p.m.; Kac.11.l at Miter o.i, J p.m
Lona Beach took a 2-0 lead in
~ finl ball and peddcd it to 3--0
with· a goal shortly after
intermission before All
M0111degbJ answered (OI O<X·
about 30 minutes into the second
half. •
Dupite f alltna, OCC held a 22-8
ed&e in shots. indudin& 14-2 in the
aecond half.
The Pintea are In action aaain
today, visiting Santa Monica
boforc entcrtaini.na Stn Dieao
Mesa In a 3 p.m. match on
Thursday . ..
The Southern Callfomla Coileae crou country team enjoyed a
measure of 1ucce11 last Saturday at the seuon-opcnina Cal State
Fullerton Invitational at Carbon Canyon Park in Brea.
The sec women placed first in the team ataodin• of the amall
oolle.g~ division behind the victorious effort of Ambei Coley. who
toured t~ 3.1-milc COUl'IC in 19;'40. Coley'a ti.me wu about 1:10
faster than on the aame oourse last year at th.ii time, according to
her coach Bryan Wilkins.
The second Vanauard runner to finl•h wu Nancy Bird, a junior
coUeae transfer from Phoenix, who wu fifth cwerall in 20:44.
St8Cey Clbral of sec WU seventh in 20'.52. a pertonaJ belt Sk
d~ .
The sec men's aquad started with rive runners, but only four
finished because of art Injury. Ken Cabral WU ICCODd cweran in
tho small coueaa division with a limo ol 28:.56 mer the ft oounc.
a penoniJ belt at that diatance. _.,, "' """'
_ Entr)' forms muat be..RC$i¥ed by
Voyagen Yacht Oub at 444 N.
Newport Blvd. In Newport Belch
by 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 13.
Cost la SlO per entry with a late
fee of 11 S accepted by the nice
~Ince onfY.
Current IYRU rulea H
amended and adopted by U.
USYRU ahaU apply to tM1 JICll,
fOf more iafonnadon. c:aB Jliii
Oalrman Carol K.okol at (714)
723'°'64.
. ....al .. 6*, ....... --,......,.
I• •D• • • far dal .-10,... or eo. wen. 1o11erw baVe a lllF.J w1111adoaal ._. .. duir• ~Ibo milbt era,.
.... Butlaa. .,....... bJ .. dub..., m, c...-,. " umcd
... I World Wu I German caaooa. 1t•1 COOlidcrCd I • :W.:..dOauy drMr \hat ie IDOdemiziq me 1'81 pten ~ 4
.. It'• 1CMMtbin1 that'• fOlD& to be big in thil
country," Aid John Leon.ird. head pro at the
N~ BoaCh Oolf COune, which carrica the Bia Bertha timer.
Tbc blfatuation la an innovative deaign that ia
luaer. heavier and more forgivina than most dulie. Big Bertha'• jumbo dubbcad means a
luger sweet spot, so players don't bave to worry
u much about off-center bits (thank aoodncu).
Callaway also eliminated the bosel conpecting
the abaft to the clubhead and shifted the hosel's
weight into the bead itself -resulting in longer
ahotl.
Club gotf ~urtbermore •. at $250, the dub is more thaf!_
twice u expenstve as a common driver. Locar
golfers, however, are willing to pay the price.
~'It's probably 10-to-1 to anything else we sell,"
~ad ~nard, when asked for a total number of Big Bertha sells.
We ar~ ,sellif\8 ~hem a~e and beyond any other brand, and the
r~~ at s. catclung on as because people can hit it better.
. Its qwte popular not only here, but aU over the country. It
gives more accuracy and it'S' easier to hit, like 1hc -Prince tennis
rac~t and what it d,id. Golfers are always interested in improving
tbe11 game and that s why we sell them -because it bas caught
on with the public." ·
The eight-year-old Callaway Golf Co., based in Carlsbad, bas
catap~lted from a measly ~pccialty company selling mostly novelty
clubs anto !he fastcst-~ng g~ll club m;tker in the country.
Later this month. we II examme another })ot item in the local
pro shops: The zebra putter, which is making a comeback Crom the
mid-1970s.
Chip shots from around the c£11a Mesa Golf and Country Club,
where Corona del Mar's John Wardup, playing in perhaps his last
amateur golf tournament, became the first back-to-back winner of
the 19-year-otd WiJI Jordan Classic.
•Jim George, the tournament's first champion in 1973, and
Pete Bedoy are the only two golfers to play in all 19 classics.
Bedoy's brother, Rudy, has played in 18, miss. ing only one
1
because
of a broken arm. On Sunday, the Bcdoy brothers brought their
92-year-old mother along to watch.
• Wardup will attempt to become the third Will Jordan Classic
champion to make it on the PGA tour. Scott Simpson (1974) and
Mark O'Meara ('79) were the first two.
• A6cording to tournament chairman Joe Costello, more golfers
(125) were in the championship flight than the total number of
participants in the inaugural classic. "There was nobody playing
• golf 20 years ago," Costello said. "On either course (Los Lagos or
Mesa. Linda), yo'! could've shot a cannon off on a Saturday
mo~ng and nobody would've noticed. Golf isn't the same as it
was 20 years ago."
Rlcbud Dunn 11 • Newport Bacb/Costa Mesa Pilot Spol't$
Writer wbost club golf co/umo appnrs nery Tuesd•J'·
Couch potato corner
The maJcrs
AIMltoM Le..,. .... .,........ w 84
78 74
71 70 69
61 .... .,........
L U
54 -83 8~ 65 10~
65 12
91 m" SS 14~ 89 15~
W L U
79 00 -
73 64 5
12 65 8
65 71 12\o\
00 78 17\o\
51 81 22
44 93 34
Antlel• echedule
Diiie o,............ TY
-10-1'1111 jbDme), 7:3$ s,artla.nl 5-. 11-T .......... ). 7:35 SOortlQwnl
Sip&. 12-(Jbgo =· 7.35 --13-(Jbgo • 7;35 ~
Natlonell.Hgue
D1d11ra
.... .,........ w 78
77
70
66
83 57 .... .,......
L 08
60 -
60 ~
63 8
71 11~
74 14~
80 20'tt
W L Qll
82 55 -72 64 9~ SS 69 14
65 72 17 =:.. ~ ~ ~~~
Dod1ere echedule
r:,o-~1::'4~ CtwnA ~
5-11-• .... 5'.35 -5-II-• HDuml. 4'05 ,.._
Stpt.13-•--4:40 a-w 11, 11$
Tetevtslon, rldio
TUESDAY
TELEVISION
BatdMlll r
10:30 un.-Expos-Mcts, WOR.
4:30 p.m. -Dodicn·R~ Oi. 11. 4:30 p.m.-Red Soa-Ti,ers, ESPN.
4:35 p.m.-Olant1-B°""' TBS.
S p.m.-Piratca-Oibe. WON.
7:30 p.m.-Whltc Sm·A't, BSPN.
7:30 p.m.-Tcu .. Anacla, SC. w ... ••Golf
11:30 1.m.-Brltlah Open, ESPN.
. ..
Tum-ons
TUESDAY
•Dodgen-Reds, Ch. 11, 4:30
• Oiants·Braves, TBS, 4:35
WEDNESDAY
•Pirates-Cards, ESPN, 5:30
• Ranecrs-Angels, SC, 7:30
Water polo
Coasters
starting
with gusto!
By RiChlfd Otm
8porll ...
•
With one early·semcater ~t
already in the books, Don
Wauon•s Orange Cout College
water polo team appears inspired
for an even tougher exam this
weekend at the Cuesta
Tournament.
The Pirates, who won the San
Diego Mesa Toutnamcnt last
weekend with tt\ree straight
victories, face perennial state
power West ·Valley on Friday at
8:50 a.m. in the opening round of
the Cuesta Tournament
considered the m~ prestigious JC
event in California asid~ from the
state tournament.
After pool play on Friday -
OCC also plays College of t.he
Sequoias at 12:10 p .m. -teams
advanCf to a single elimination
round on Saturday with winner's
loser's and consolation brackets. '
"We always think we can beat
anybody," Watson said. "In the
last three 'br four years, nobody
has hammered us. Cuesta was the
best team. in the state last year and
we took them to sudden death (in
a match during the regular
season). Cuesta clearly has the
~st talent this year, as well."
Orange Coast, which saw its
strin$ of three consecutive Orange
Empire Conference championships
end last year, as well as a 47-
match conference winning streaJC,
defeated ~erence nemesis
Grossmont in the semifinals of the
San Diego Mesa Tournament, 10-
7, as goalie Eric Terwilliger
recorded 15 saves.
Ian Condon, one of three
proficient two-meter players
Watson shuttles in and out of the
lineup, had three goals in OCC's
11-7 win over San Diego Mesa in
the opener while Mark Campagna
and Rob Worthing (Newport
Harbor High) each had three goals
in the championship match as
OCC defeated Palomar, 15-5.
AEROBICS
WEDNESDAY
TELEVISION .....a
11:20 a.m.-Mcts·Cibs, WON.
5:30 p.m.-Piratea..cants. ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -Texas-Angels, SC.
Vollcybell
7 p.m. -Team Cup, PT. o
Hoc.Ur
10-.30 p.m.-Canad1 Olp semi, SC.
Golf
12:30 1.m. -Walter Oar BSPN. v .. ..,....
7 p.m.-Tum Cup. PT.
12:30 1.m.-OP of Italy, ESPN.
IAJ)J() ......u
" RADIO
11:30 p.m.-Cocd bucb tourney, PT.
9 p.m.-Wlthcn=~dter, VSA.
A ... lladlltl
4:JO p.m.-Dod~n.On., KABC (790).
5:30 p.m.-P1dre.,.HOu., JCFM19 (760).
7:30 p.m. -Tcus-ADaell. KMPC (710).
'VARGAS: Big task for. CdM..£~h
Rom 81 whon t60y h•ppened, Varps said.
Oli thil subject, V1rp1 hU been Another area of contontk>n for
1tral1btrorw1rd. ln1tead ol Varps las been tho lldt ol 1
di11uf1l•1 tho lnc1d•••• ae 1elldcr «>mini forth thus far.
ovtif'lowilll intensity, tbe SU ••fdealty. WO WOU)d like to have
Kf ~1•' coacb 1ddrcaH1 tit• two pys wo can 10ok to a ~bead OD. loaders." ho laid . .,SO far ft just
"We are not..., to bM U1J h ... , happened. Hc.,efully tome
l•ddent• thi• year. I would ot the MOion Will atep up.''
~ haw booted tboee ...,. ~ l4M "' • c.-'-' (tb•-· CdM pl11•n ln':::::J Met,.._, Mil• __, ~.,. fnl&Ut.ly,1• ii L bad been 1M ,.,,.,_ -.-·
........
4:30 p.m. -P1dru-Atl., k "MB (760). 5:30 p.m.-1.A-Houaton, 1 ~ (790).
7:30 p.m.-Tent-An&cls, MPC (71()),
From 81
ClP p&a)er ~ awimmin1 for Cal-
~· "Ryait wu our pto iuy, ••
Varpt aaid ... .._wet dyoemie and
did a lot of thlr1gs for u• -not
ju.st goat acoring but leadership as
well."
CdM will look to a number of
rctumina seniors as it tries to
forget its early dismissal a year ago
by Long Beach Wilson in the CIF
semifinals -only the second time
in the lut six ycan the Sea Kings
have not wom a crown.
While Vargas admits the Sea
Kin~ will be a target this season,
he's not sure where the arrows will
be fired Crom.
"I've been gone all summer with
the U.S. National Team," said
Vargas, a National Team player
and former OIYJDpic champion.
"Newport Harbor is always tough.
Bill Barnett was voted the best
water polo coach in the world at
the FINA Cup, so I guess I'll be
· coaching against the world's best."
Last year Corona del Mar,
Newport Harbor and University
tied for the league title. It was the
first time in six years, though, that
the Sea Kings did not reach the
C1F finals.
"It's become sort of a tradition
around here. l hear some of the
older players talking and they feel
like they disap~inted Corona
water polo," saad Vargas, who
added that the players arc ·putting
more pressure on themselves to
return to the final than he is.
"My goal is to make sure we get
to CIF -be one of the top three
teams in the league -get a good
seed in CIF and see where we can
take it from there," Vargas said.
"I've got a lot of little goals."
N ewport Harbor: While the
Sailo.rs may give up a lot more
little goats this season with the loss
of ~chard Ruffini, an all-CIF first
team defensive specialist, they
should still be good, if not great.
Newport coach Bill Barnett
called Ruffini's graduation a
tremendous loss. "We don't have
anyone of that caliber coming
back," he said.
But don't expect to hear too
many cries of sympathy from
Barnett's opposing coaches. After
all, the Sailors do have four
players who qualified for the boys
under-18 U.S. Junior Olympic
Team.
Seniors Oliver Fleener, Joe
Haxel, Ricky Krummins and Matt
Parsons will travel to Calgary in
late December to wage war with
top-rated junior teams around the
world. But first comes matters
closer to home.
Namely, figuring out a way to
stop Corona del Mar. "It's going
to take a perfect game to beat
them," Barnett said. "They're
great this year. It's going to be
very difficult.''
The task starts with Parsons, the
Sailors' goalie. Barnett said the
experience Parsons gained in front
of the net last year should help
offset the loss of Ruffini.
At the two-meter position,
Fleener takes over for Rob
Worthing, a third team all-CIF
selection during Newport's 2().. 7
campaigri. "Fleener shO\~ld do as
good a job or better than
Worthing," Barnett said.
Haxel and Krummins will start
at driver, with seniors Nate
Iverson and Tyler Geffney also
able to play those positions.
"We've got a good senior
nucleus, definitely stronget than
last year. We don't have a lot of
depth, though," Barnett said.
The Newport coach said his
goals this year would be the same
as always. "We always lJ)' to win
league, but I don't know if we can
beat Corona this year. Tustin
should be good and University is
always good," h~ said. "Our
league is so dam competitive."
C osta Mesa: Another tough
league is the PCL, where the
Mustangs will seek their sixth
straight title amid some bolstered
up competition.
Fish count
......
Mo<C:~
Newport Harbor polo standouts Rickey Krummins (left), Joe Haxel.
'
Co~ta Mesa went 20-10 last year,
reaching the Clf 2-A final, largely
on the skill of two-time PCL MVP
and CIF co-player of the year
Corey Delahunt.
The spotlight now falls on senior
Julian Popov, a first team all-CIF
two-meter man, with supporting
help from a pair of able-bodied
juniors and a surprising
sophomore in the goal.
"On paper we look a little
young," third-year coach }ason
Lynch admitted. "But I think our
talent and -team attitude will
override that."
Lynch, who said this group is
working harder and more like a
team than in 1990, will emphasize
defense in light of 11ctahunt's
departure. But don't forget Popov.
"He's powerful, talented and
can be a big offensive threat.
Other teams will have to shut him
down, .and that leaves someone
else open," Lynch said.
Primary tar3ets waiting to
benefit from Popov's passes
include juniors J .R. Porter and
Greg Felli, and sophomores Sam
Grayeli and J oh n Naigle.
Rounding out the squad is sepior
Joel Dema'rzo and juniors Jon
Goudrault and Cary Petersen.
Another sophomore expected_ to
open some eyes this season is
goalkeeper Chris Auitia. Up from
the freshman/ sophomore team,
Auitia also has experience as
Costa Mesa's soccer goalie.
"Compared to last year's
goalies, he's already better," Lynch
said.
So is the talent in the PCL,
though. Lynch said he expects to
. be challenged primarily by
Estancia. which puts an
experienced team in the pool.
Trabuco Hills should also be
improved, he said, but the league
title is ultimately Costa Mesa's to
win or lose.
"I'd giv~ the edge to us. We've
won five in a row now and
everyone will be out to beat us.
Thar mcan's we'll have to work a
little harder, have a good attitude
and hope our overall talent can
pull us through," Lynch said.
"We're a little younger and less
experienced than last year when
we had five seniors, but our
teamwork is definitely improved.
The atmosphere around here is
much more positive and that
should help us out when we get in
some tough situations."
E stancla: This season, the "E"
in Estancia stands for
experience, or perhaps elation
after returning to PCL from the
highly competitive Sea View
League.
The Eagles roster is top-heavy
with seniors -seven all told ~
who will try to improve on a third-
place finish a year ago.
"With all those seniors, we've
got as good a shot as anyone,"
said coach John Carpenter, whose
9-16 team lost in the first round of
the CIF 2-A playoffs.
"We plan to qualify for CJF
again and then take it a step
further -second round, third
round, fourth round. We hope to
make an impression."
If nothing else, the Eagles know
how one another play. Every
position in the pool could be filled
with a senior.
At goalie, Chad Cain will guard
the net. Oassmates Brian Batty•
Shlomi Ronco and Chun Pi ar~
the team's drivers. Peter Shinners
figures to be the hole man, with
Paul Hinkle as the ,llole set and
Ryan Bollenbach the defensive
hole specialist.
Top to bottom, seniors all, and
on top of it the Eagles leave Sea
View this year for a slightly
smoother ride in the PCL.
"They've been together for a
while and, in a new league, with
this many seniors and this much
experience, there's ,no reason not
to do well," Ca.rP.enter said.
"This is no retfuilding year."
Carpenter, entering his 12th
year of coaching, called this one of
the better teams he has ever· had.
They already beat Costa Mesa, last
year's PCL champ, in a summer
league game.
"In Sea View this is an average
team," he said. "In PCL, we could
win the league.''
Joining the seniors, Adam
Bollenbach should see plenty of
varsity time, Carpenter said. In
fact, no single player stands out on
a team .>-that will depend on
balanced play, a variety of
defenses and a multi-faceted
attack.
ll <ater Dei: While coach ll'J. Michael Ashe is new to the
Monarchs program, he is no
stranger to water polo, having
coached I 7 years at the college
and club level.
His task now is to get a high
~chool team into post-seaspn play,
and he intends to do it with
teamwork.
"I look for everyone to score
goall>:· said Ashe, whose previoul>
wh1stle·blowing experience
includes coaching at Southern
Oregon State College.
"Fortunately for me we have a
team. We have 14 individuals who
have come together for a common
cause and who get along well
together," he said.
Four of those players return
fro~ last year's team, including
senior and team captain Phil
~.ayer, who plays driver. Mayer is
JOined by two other senior drivers
Damien Esparza and Aaro~
Tanner, and junior two-meter man
Tom Broyles .
In goat, junior Jon Detterich
also returns. "He's been doing
well, having a good summer. He's
ready to play," Ashe said.
Also ready Jo make a
contribution arc newcomers Steve
Burkhalter and Michael Chicek,
both sophomores, and Robert
Andrade, a junior. "All three are
drivers and all three will make a
definite contribution this year "
Ashe said. '
The Mater Dei coach will need
contributions from everyone as the
Monarchs battle for one of three
CIF berths against last year's three
playoff teams, St. John Bosco,
Loyola and Servite, and up-and-
coming power Santa Margarita.
111f we can play well just in our
league, I'll be happy," Ashe said.
\
Flam 81
tboUtand lpOl1S cohmw KrOU
ttic counuy. .
lo ~ ye.an. 1947 and '47,
Roao'• Qaftey CoUeae Paatben
had. boldly captured two Eutem
ConfCJ'8A4» ebampiomhipe, and
those were bia flnt two yean in JC
balJ. Then, with a brilliant puaer named Bev Wallace ellginecrin& a
high scoring machine, tbe '47
Panthers leaped into the Junior
Rose Bowl and overwhelmed the
Cameron (Okla.) "8gics for the
national title. '
Envious rival coaches, writers
and fans foresaw nothing but more
glitter for the Ontario-based
institution. Recruiting would
become a piece of cake. And the
townspeople were endeared by
Rosso. Who could ask for more?
Ray Rosso.
His concept o( "more" was
bound up ~ new challenges and
new impressions.
Hence, one fair day in 1948, the
red carpet was unfurled for him to
become the new grid coach at a
new co~munity college, Orange
Coast, in Costa Mesa. And he
accepted the offer.
Looking back, Rosso said, "The
opportunity of starting a new
college was Number One,
something new, being fi rst. That
was exciting to me, particularly as
a whole new fresh start in
recnht•1• 1otda1 liY ....own 1itution IMd up. • .... ,....
(1948), tho Newpon area w"IWJ
very small bY compariioG to Santa
Ana. There were very few peop&o
anCS it wq atiU arC Ideal retort
area, IO it WIS double ra.ctnatk>n."
He said. "When .e toOI the
campus over (one bi& section of
the old WWl1 Santi 'Anr Army
Air Corp1 Bue), all the buildinp
were there ... We bad to build our
own fidds (reYamping two golf
courses for tootball practice and
baseball) ... Other structures
(includi.ng barracb) had to be
used, both for'married and single
students."
Rosso said, "At that time the
campus was out in Timbuktu. In
that group, too, there were
buildfnp they used for residences.
Other facilities people lived on
were on campus. In fact, the
president of the college (Dr. Basil
Peterson) lived on campus ... all
lived together in kind-of -like
apartments.
Did the dormitory (barracks)
situation help recruiting?
He replied, "It was necessary ...
It was the only thing·that we could
offer. We had our own food setup
and able to serve three meals a
day . . . Some were (WWII)
veterans, so t.hey paid for rental
and food. It was so inexpensive
then. (Two students could rent
one dorm room for $20 a month)."
Rosso said, "We bad good
teams, but the talent has got to be
there."
In regards to Chaffey, 1946-47,
he said, "There happened to be a
collection of good athletes that
played with each other. When you
get the nucleus and ability, you
have to be pretty bad to louse it'
up.
' "We bad a lot of veterans. Some
veterans played little football while
in the service ... So what they
really wanted to do was play
football ... They got out so cager.
It was one of those coaching
opportunities and experiences that
you dream about. The players
......... ..., ..... .
~ .................... ..
.... , ...,. .... Iii& MllMNI
daac. JIO'I cu't .... j\111 lib
(c:unnt cxx: arid Clllllla~ tiortman now. Jri • a 1ciler COllter up .and dOn.
ldUal relUlll are ~toilm;nuic
wbea atnp are tcillfi:.-SO aae ..
toina to bani in tbere ud learn lroal~."
Roao said, '"Recrultinl la a wry
aelective thing. You lM and cUc
with that.''
One of hit enjoymentl wu befna
able "to give an opportunity to IO
many young guy1 who really
wanted . to play and that they
would find themselves ... and I felt
roaching did that."
He loved to get them all into
ball games and be felt'football wu
also rewarding if It helped them
with their lifestyle and future.
Best OCC f.layers from 1948-49?
He said, ' It's hard td think of
them. there were so many. but you
mention Oiff Uvingston (out of
Montebello High). f think be WU
our only legitimate pro football
player. !
"He went to UCLA, then on to • _
the pros (New ·York Giants as a ' He ooacbed football at OCC
linebaclcer with Sam Huff). He from .194'8 tbro'ugh the season of
came from a football family. His 1955 when the new st1dium
brother. Howie, was a pro football opened and came to greet almost
player to begin with. He was big at · SOO gridders, many of whom still
195 pounds. That was huge, but feel enriched by his poised
just a drop tn the buclcet now." leadership, his caring and h~
As for his siz.e durin& playing giving.
From North Or.-.ge County
From South !Jf ange Ccutty
540-1220
496-6800
642-5678
CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE CO.
FROM 90\.ITH ORANGE CO.
TM• PILOT
Cl~
omc:EHOURS
Telephone 8er'ftoe
lotOM'lt ~:IOpfll
..,._~
"'""~
540-1220
UlllOO
Wed 3:00 PM
CHECK YCXM AO THE f ... ST DAY
•
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2400 aq. ft. Exec
condo. 2 MBA + den,
3 BA. Bay view. Sun
deck. 3 cw garage.
$2900/ mo. Cour1My
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873-2309.
( .li lll 11 I
: j I l()
..-cC>NVEYS CUSTOMS
CablnetaJFurnlture.
Flnl•hea/Rest0tatlon.
Allquallty.~75
t ~ • :
I 111 ' 't I 1+
Computer Coneuftlng:
IMC can helP you With
any problem• or
needa. IOO 114 82811"'
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Comm'I, Rea, etc.
rJ5N308. WllYM 54<>-
8042 Jflff 157-8447
r ~ 0 I I ' '
f 1• ·:' '! . 'tl1
,·...: J ,' .,, ' UClllLOR
DICK'S HAUUNO
Jumc to dUmp & gen. ~---w. eral haullng. Large ,..._ lnl/l!llt. HoulW
truck wtth Ifft gate. Apt. Qu1L job. "'9 ....
540-3798 St. lc# ... 78M-17'A
DUMP IHIN8 • .IUNK W.P YIUIQQUllT Furnltur9, truh, tr" '
t>rancMe, appllanOM. ,...C.i1111llr
Mike 7 dye ..,.._1391 Qualtty palnttng by
l ' ' :· ' '
I ( " ·. I: ..
profeaalonale .
Uc#IOaOll. ''*""· Free .... 141ao&'
........... ,_,,.., .... ma:· ........... -..&o•u•• .,_.,,,'91 __
'.---' LOOklllQ NEWPORT llACH CWE · .IUIT c_;,' • :
r .1. , i FOR OOllGIOUI THE A Lln'LE
IOUUIATI IUTTllFLY llOllEllT KINKY \' .' t "l • ' ·, " I I
T1RID OP DATINQT
•TOOi SWM, 28, 5'8", 155
Iba., happy, healthy,
l.Ollm.Yr
CALL NOW 1.80().903-1111
$15.00 per cal
TALK TOA
LIVll llODllLI
CALI. 1~737·1118
$25.00 per call A LITTLI ~. flt, ed&ICa-nMde • MXy ehoulder IEM:ll Tttl9 ywy hand.ome. Trim SWM, 52 looka CllAZY tor, blue-ey9d bru-to land on. Doean't ,,_.. td, tit, tntellgent. kW· 45, 8', 180 Iba., blond
HI, do J:'! hew .,.. =~. ~ ~ =:.· ::., ~ lllTIQRITY ~~~!: ~~arSw~ :rio:=aome °'-: wth, Meka one..,.. l.ullUry condo, ward-Energetic, athletlc, 30'• gentleman H9ka Sen" of humor a
athletic, outgoing, --------1
Meklng Ma. rtght. pr.-Clealfled'• got the ---* SF wtth the aame ror ~ next automob1a. aroma for ltfe. #1918.
mST8UIOUGIRL8
BY AREA CODE
1~
S31rrin. Mull be 11 Yl'9
TALK TO LIVll QIN.al
CALL 1-800-820-11 T1
$25.00 per call
..... Owr clal, alnCefe man to robe to Whb HOUM pNJfealonal SWM, 44, an effluent. geMrOU9 must. MOl/te, muak:,
aA ---1 --•h•r• llf•'• •dV•n-or ay hOme. eo·a, VW'/ l'MI, no pret9n-woman for tM moet fun companlonahlp, i!eiy~ .;,.,.,:·-· _,, "''"· #2910. blonde, 125 lbs., 5'15" tiona, ... ka attractive, excfUng, adWnturoua priwt• 1 On 1 love LOVE tall. #2922. flt, emollonalty av.II-and apec1a1 relatton-pan!M. #1984. AlllYOU llY llEJOIQ able woman, 25-40, to ahlp of our llf• ---LO .... •_OKl_IQ ___ 1
ICMl llAm TO 1_....... anar. ltr•'• Joys J:: ume .... oo It, calll FOR ~--;::;g atnc-SAIL W\.ft dev91op commltt ,.. #1912. '
uve. Wanted'. non-SWF, 30, attractlYe Ar· JOl•I lattonahlp. "1949• FUNNY llORE
amoker, lntelllgent chltect. Meka SWM SWF, 31, &'r, 120'• BLOND HAIR _1.-..v than a on• night
m11n under 70, OYer 3CMO, lntellgent, ec:lu-beauty, looking for ex-IWI ~ rn ~ • atand, but .... than
5'1 ". #2813. cated, fltn•H con-OClc. lnlemallonal ••-5 •5 • COMPAlllOllATE marriage? Attractive _ _._._ --... _ ~ ..... _ ...... ._...__ SWM, sv·. 140 lbta., SBM .... _ __.._ .... •-~ f_,...I ' .-·~.~,-. ... _u....,.., "'"at --1 loves to bike, swim SWM, 35, 8-1, 170#, • ..v, -. ..,.. '" 1 ..,........ uent gen •man, woman. lmui.t ng, Ilk __ ... __ ..._ ~SF. #1913.
~
QEllTLEIUN
OWM 41, 5'11", 175
Iba., D/S Bualnet•
man, hNtlhr· atabl•. avallabla. I you are
trim, kMng, nka out-
door a A • non-•moker, call. #1931.
Pt",,, )fl 11 I
Ser v11 •-"• JG05 aw committed retatlon-adv9ntufoua, athletic: and play aporta, " .,,...._, ,,...,..._, ...,...... ..w-1-....a....... ...,.lft a • ..-ed ,._ .. for ...ica SWF with aame comedy, beachH, MARRIAGE Au-a•....._"-.•
'
S?WlllOllllL _,,....,._,._... . ...,_... _..." · ......, • lntereata. Only thoae awap meeta, back· nvt ww. ._.. nvra---#2938. proapectlve datel b IY .. ~.-...·1 lrt ---~ .... ., .. ., who are Heklnn nu-ru a, monogamy. .....,u•u g •··--.,, _.., --· .-, LOVll #2912. ..• ..-king WF 2• .. ,. ,....11-•• 18Aft_A•"---9 8'4", 1ao ., ~ IUrlng relatlonahlp ~ • ...._..., \Inn . 1 w 1~
SWM or DWM 33-40, ft VERY •ho u Id r ••pond. cute, allm, atabl•. hu-la pQaafbla when • na-$2.60/mln, 10 mini min. c:,man good ~ lllDEPlllDENT #19tl5. moroua, lntalllgent, turlng, ·~· lady ABSOLUTE BEST __..• ____..... LAUGH · fun. '11914. In her 30 • finds her -... .__..., Romantlc, optimlatlc, .-.a1 'FORNIA LOVE a ROMANCE tn hie caNer, for laat• SWF, 20, 6'8 '', 1115 ""'°' ff.&MRaAAllE aplrltualty ewalce, ~ TONIGHT
111g relatlonahlp. 1be. Meka SWM. Must =ngtr,:~ AOllANTIC ~ tmoklng, aucc:.aa1ul. 1 .900-~2333
#2836. .b• active, have a 45-415, ..... gettc. hon-GUY EXOTIC m Id w •at v a I u • • REAL NAMES
CAIUAL = ~ ~--: eat. Are you rwty to OWM, 28, 8'1'', hand-GEllTLlllll =~~:d. H'::t,,,::: :-PHOHE ~ lllffM ..... l!Q!!!·!· llffN~#=l91~'-r-1-•i!,_.1_,ca1..,WWW11·•'•ztMrc-1e. __ I some, 170 Iba., loot!· :..50u'.! ~~ ow love alng. Stwtna ADULT-~· 9io•rr ----tlliii .w.:::.,.. :sadyros:..~~ 1n·1tte. Lootctng for... llf• I• th• anftter-. Dtll•CTowv
I' 111• ...,.....,. ' or • • tractive woman to #1948. o-..w.. ._._of unu-OWF, 41, wtltl two ROOTI A ...-. ........... 30· EnJoy dancing, •hare life'• laugh• auTURllT ._. .... .._..,. tota. A~ ~ 11...,.n.llonlll etyte, ac-.... ~1,. YW'f -1'• •ports. mov1" and ,... aual unadvertlaed
anoe ecaw 4tm01Jon. cuftured, edwntun>u• llkH to dine out. with. Let's exchange •••"H adult program•. 1·
ally enca ~.. ttv.DWF, 1eggy. m ;:cs:: 5'8" bNn9tt9 with nu-#1932. photoa. #1988. 951WLOVER 900-636-ue& 99t/mln
II ..iuaent. Seek looking m • ro u • I nte re at• --------u.a111Aafta1111! cure, 1'1tmv;.~ • apedlil man 3Mt, NI ... ka • ............._, auc-l)!MllOH ,_PUN__... &11 ••ERS Ing together, patient S for mut\Mlly nurtur· ..... _.... NWVli• SWM, 39, tall, hand-....
friend for my -.... 1 '-""-.. __ ceufut man, 44 to eo, WITH aome, lm.llfgent, ,...,, OP •••• lllAM..,.
.,.,JJ. ng, ....... ""'' open, '""'" to love forever. I'm 1 k for ...,.. wvm&n and me. i'2911. ••t commitment. If pla..,.·1--·-a lot of 'FOXES HOllD loo Ing acMntur· 1''" _ ... _,, • ftt oua, tall A ftt N/S bru-1400 ll00400 HIY you're emotlonally fun to ..... ........... You Tall N__.. ----p~ Hll I'm 8 , a • aenal-_ ... ....... _ __ ,._ ...... for ,_.. ... wtUt ·-..-· ... u. ·--tlve ~-M 38 ... n9tta &...-.-, ....... en-S.F. Pub Wrnk\ 11 yr YOU .,,_ • ...,,.ng wlll b•~•d you neur with fut te.t and • JJ-UO • • Joya aun, ••lllng, Alllilf'tl.MA ......
"
.. __ __, ~~t~.!• .. h11p. pl•••• called.# • slow handa,r m. witty, g1'!,!._!0 V!..._ an•d ~ travel & laughter. 1.---..7 ........ you.,. an .......... __ ...-_ ... ----·------1--....... YI· .. IRMT~----1 gr--~·-anct--'--·-.... u. ·-·1 .. 1...... ..,.__ ._ .. -..i ... -" __ ........ .....""'· cut•~,......., with• ........ man, -·JJ-"• ..... me. llllO-... ka .~ ............. ~~JJ -JJ ~ .-11~0 "*'
#2112. -CWIY ful ~ t,;_;;t; grHt hHrt. Calli IEEKJNG :=z·
I WANT ..... ATTRACTIVE ~~.~ ~1 .. 11 her _,_1_ee_~-· -•• THY---RIGHT IUUTIFUL..!_ °'11 RLI. YOU ....,. Phyalcally flt, adu-oet ............. • · niu. LADY ••llM ·
.. 1 t iii.... t. Warm, affectionate, cm.d, ftn.nc:tally and HAPPY SWM, auccauful, 1400141 1148 ~0'!__~ • .. ..-~ enfoY8 Skiing, danC-amo11onally •table, -'T u.a111DIOllll 8'1''. 190 lbs., good FOR EVERY DESIRE ,,..._ .. -..u .... , ng • Ing, travel, muatc:. Are morally wholeaome, """ rWV9 ,_ .. , ftt n/ 48 24 hr9 11.l!w'mW 10 llin one • one onty. LM'• you Mff-conftdent,.,. aenaltlve and humot· IE Reedy for your BEST wuuoung, • •• • ---------1
mHt soon to c... you-~? #2891. ---• .._tt_... IHY a LAST romance? Me: look ~. Heklng at-1e1ut1fu1 U.. ebr•t• each other. -'----"-~-.,.,.,,..,,_.--oua, _.,. •• ..... .,.. trac:tlv9 SWF 30-40 for joyia m., dMer9lfted tall, zntful, playful, J V ltt9d Wiid W°"*1 #2909. lot...... and taatH, You're 50+, at1rac:ttv9, •du c • t • d . 0 C!Jf'-an oyman comm 1.__740 ,.. .. LADY IAIY wtaMa to ,,,... wtU'I spunky, fun of~ mltabla, paaalotfer., reladonahlp/marrlaQ9. ,..,.,.. ~
.......,. 1 .&Ml ~ of atm1tar wtthy • paMlon for · gentle•plrlted, mid-_t11_19M __ • _____ 1 12.311mln 10 mWmln
wun .,_, beCkground for good ou want to ahat9 wHtern gentleman. llllQLE COLUQI GIRi.i
CUii ::' .:.-'r.m ~ -=i times and quallty =., "= :..C. ~ You: 35-49, edventur· llOll In 0..... c.untJ
Allnlc:tlwe, fllmly on. one c:a111ng me c = • n 1 0 n • h 1 P · talu and laughter, ':/:: ~~b.r":'. W'•M'Pll!ftl 1 ¥ft MftMM
anted, 6'4", 121 lbs. . have • ••n•• of -"-~· ~~---ceidelght. Juz and #1982 ,.. • -,_ ....,._., Meka alhCtlw WM, humofll Look 406ah, WALK ctuelce, ~ and ---· -----1 SOM, 47, 5'10", pro-PSM lno la/min 11+
eo·a fol oompan1on-,... n1naeun. 1112994. Ill THE cooking: rm 81, DJM, HELPI ,...,0oia1. reltable, ~ ... !!!!!.A-.•
ehlp. Pnif9r tall. corn-•AmW 5'11", 180 Iba., .. Thi• nice guy, (SWM, moroua. lllNetic. good wn-.u __ ...,. ~ ~ l~M PICKY• RAIN cure. wwtt111e, ener· 24, 8'3", 195> doesn't communicator. EntoY9 U••·-hear1. Wit! ,...,_JJ You don't mind for· getlc, humorous, edu-want '° ftnlah last. I'm klda, famlfy Ufa, moun-12.60/mln, tO min 24lfl ~ and ..,.. of Looking for men 60+ • algn accent? You are cated, romantic and loo«lng for someone talna, beach, 1ravel,
humor. #2905. 9• +, honeet, ~. a man 41-e4, hone9t? ~ ahy, fHend. who 18 educated, fun, m o v I• • , m u •I c . What'•~ tlonl9 _,,...
You dOft't know.._.~ fUll of energy, l'Mdy Let'• catch the train. I •h!f, conversation alncere, at1ract1Ve, ro-#183S· epadllty-Nteniaonl?
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.,. ,...,. • ~ twven't for some oraay. .. m11 thlnga.. am rwty for you, cailt. an companionship mantle and loves the CIMllllad wcwu -beyond Accounttno? Auto Alplilr? ~h·~ ~-~ -~~~~~i~and~-1~~.-1~ ·~d·~-~i~~~i~i~iii·~~--~~-~-~~-~-~~·······~~·
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GUIDELINE S
~ l9och. eo.ta..._, Plot lao~·-.
~~meet. Abbtcol!:JbcQ9S*tr•i.t• to
~ gmdcf pis••--otfQCe. Wit ._.,
lhatodt~cor**'o.,....., ~1.CIQl9
~ ...... ond <Ml c :.toi .. NJ&ooiMt'"
~.adardoMcat~--notbe ~= =~ lN .... ~aft beach. COiia ..... Not ._... .. .,.tD~""f~·-·· Q •aCSodltrOfbe&D'l'Mldb pMc._, •
.. ....... , • .,.. dCIQl9 otddar. No cllltw9 be
~ ~ ....... lordarthataga.
c.ci'sm n. t• po-t ~.Colla MalG Milt cm r•no ~b .. ~Ol._to,..,, .... d
~ .... lheoct .... _....0011¥' t
~b .. ~olandCll .........
~·••awtor,.,,«**N ,.,....~ .. •-~ c:ut l9ocrt\ OllrlrD Milll NDtand • •• p:a ,.. ~hmal~so _...,...
I di&al.W_, ..... , PF ..... , 5
.... flllfftororaWlbf .. pOt 4CJ ,._ .. .. ...... Of°"'.., to""' a.ch cm. ...... .
" •
c..w:auwat...,..
,,.,.. 1J' I ::.,."'....... I ........ In ' .... ??•~···· ............ .. ...,._aaoc4llaclatcinr.,....,.....:
I
FOR ,LEASE: Appfc)JC
1000 iaq ft unit, 2095
Pl•c•ntla, Unit 4,
Coata M .... 723-4883
Looking to se I
that e•tta Jank
stacking ap In
the garage?
Try our garage sale ads. What's
junk to you is a treasure to
,,._ _____ ,someone els e. For only $8.52 you
~===-=-r get 4 lines for 2 days. Coll today.
642-5678
...........
The .. ••&: :: Now """'9 Mtlon-•• Hh/'DH.. wtde, .. OOOllPlliON.
.... ~ hM a Detalt• 1 .. 00-41•
Pawn ~ "9Ncllel. ~ ln8lde ..... 0888' EXt .... t1.?Wll*I -TiiiiiiiCiiiii-1 No cMlt llmlt ~ 8Vlllable In OEN Of'O. ......,....,. T" "'IMll iM
8Mt Proartlfn In c.tff. the CSMeltled ~ HP r9q$Daltv ~ P90ple ~ 10 AUT'OPAWNJn.t-'* ·u..ng Depertment. .If ..... • rrr. ... ... MW Hot. •
•wtDOW HAa iei for you can bring ua TOf111a fllmle, • Ptr hour or • per ,,, •• , '20.000 up. No ..... ~. a Cal Linde order. Ho ~ ~ No penalty. c.ii ~ s>hoM voice, -o..--,..-,.,--Oftl--1ee-----n .. ded. c.11 Mtlce
OdoftM.-....NOWI : ~ lllllTAlllDi _W!l!y ....... ...._ .. _,.....__._ ___ ..___
._..., w. wt11 proytde you ..... UPIULI
Peraonal Loan• to wtth a friendty mmo. /S$00 •oo per_.. COM .... °"..,. fTom 111,000110,000 phef9, room to grow /8AM-1a Noon ..... Ant...,_ Debt ~ to and the training to
l80,000. eoo.8no677S make you auoceuful. CALLI
To join our t .. m, Mnd .IACK
r:""and~ out°' anCO:: Mt~0.11.'
plJc:atlon. ....1.., TWtln
~==hi ·~ PILOT IERVICI DllVIR ~30 w ... .._ aL Dellver · Newapa~/
c..t. .... , CA rout ... V9l1fV del!Wly, nea7 dellvar complalnta,
·-...... Attft• Cl••lfled etc. Tueeday, ~ ........,. ....... , day, Saturday 1:00 e 8-pt.18-0ct. 23. £-...... AM to 10~. MUil
Chrlat PrnbY1•rlan ~;.~;;-."' ... ._ .. .,.. be fleodble wtd ,,_,,. ctuch. CM 714/ _.....,....,_, dependMlfe ow llftd ECLeCTIC cal1Clllilltl1 ol
M8 •••o for tntorrn. we .,. cumN1tty loOk· ln9UrlnCe~ No . eJCPM-Heleey glw ware.
tlon & r9gllllrdon. Ing for eomeone to enc• needed. Call, Cell noon-l5pm
... 1st our ln9Jde and 142-4333. 75fM>7115
" . •. ' .. ,
~\ r , '
MatoldM 1818 IOOMo
ll5K Pwy. ,.,.... --oar, great prlce.
830.000. 720-3722.
llQ ,.,. ...,.
BrtUah Convertlbte
Cl•aalc. Moving ........ 11no oeo.IMICMM»M
LMWMnnge
out91tte ctaaalfl4Kf Ad-INIURAllCE CLERK me1e. !!~~Sept.12 10• OLAee10 i ••o ~=::;:==::::~ ver11alng ..... staff on H.B. Agency. Mon-Fri . _.._ --
L1 · · ·.
f (_\I:.! '11:1~) ··~·· --------------------------------------------------1FOUND. 81edcfem. kit· a dally baala. The 1-5. Phone•, fllea,' 23.I iaq ft. OE ~ 2·10' .__ alum. rolar Clwte __. •• "' Nlnan. 9'llnza 1990 >Cl! qualified lndMdual w111 , t Id b ..-Id """'"' .............. Mettcu-Auto, tow mlle1ge, anlat th• outside mtt type. EXP l'IQ'd. 17/H" or, 1 • Y • •· con"9)'1ra, ptue 3 ad-loualy rHtored by 18.IOO. deY9 By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
and T ANNAH HIRSCH
Neither vulnerable. South deals. NORTH
•AK o 4
•Q 8 7 6 3 2
tVoid
•KQ2 WEST EAST
• Q 10 2 • J 6 3
•AK 9 5
t J 8 7 4 •A 10 6 2
• A 7 6 3 • J 10 9 5 4 SOUTH
•987
• J 10 9 4
tKQ9 53
•8 The bidding:
South Weal PUI 1 NT
3 • 3 NT Pua Dbl Pau
Opening lead; King of ••
"Ghallenge the Champs" is one of
the most popular features of The
Br~ World magazine. Eight of
the most successful winners of this
bidding competition in the '80s were
invited to take part in a "Challenge
of the Decade," and the eventual
winnen were Brazilian world cham-
pions Marcelo Branco and Gabino
Cintra, who came from behind in
the final to defeat Bill and Roseanne
Pollack of Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
Branco and Cintra won the World
Open Pairs Championship in 1978.
On this deal trom that event,· they
bested their nea.reat challengers, Pe·
ter Nagy and Eric Kokiah of Cana·
da. West's opening bid of one no
trump was weak, North's two-clubs
was a takeout for the major suit.a
and East's bid of two hearts showed
shortness there. After South, Cin·
tra, bid a suit he actually had, West's
three no trump asked partner to
pick a minor. but with the big heart
fit revealed, wild horses could not
have stopped North from contract·
ing for game. West. looking al the
ace·king of trumps and a aide ace
opposite a partner who had shown
values. could not be faulted for
doubling.
The defenders did as well as they
could. but it was not good enough.
West led the king of hearts and
shifted to a spade. Declarer won in
dummy and, since there was no fast
entry to the closed hand to lead a
club toward dummy, led the king of
clubs
In with the ace. West cashed the
ace of trumps, t.hen reverted to a
spade, won on the board. A spade
was discarded on the queen of clubs
and luck smiled on declarer when
spades broke e.venly -a spade ruff
set up a long card in the suit. The
only loser that remained on the ta·
ble was a club, and declarer still had
a trump in hand lo take care of it.
Making four-odd. doubled.
ten. e mo. otd. Vic. of
Springdale & Hell.
l48-8500.
FOUND: Light belg•
male cat w/racoon tall. Vicinity of Harbor &
Victoria. 548-7281
LOST Cat, long haired
Calleo, whit• feet,
green eve•. "Angele•" REWARD. 722~.
Travf>I JO 14
PHOENIX FANTAIYI
LMve Friday, sept. 8 ,
8pm from JWA to
Phoenix. Arrive JWA
Monday, Sept. 9, lam.
$751 Tom C. 851-1848
or 844-8714.
TRAV.L 4 A LMNQI
Alr11nn, Caalnoa,
CrulHlln .. Hiring
Fun Wortt 497-3005 DI
wtth ed layout, proof M-...::aa Water • Ice In door. Juai.bl• atanohlona. 1hlpwrlght. Multlple 714-751-1544.
correctlona, •d copy NEED part Ume A/P 1300 OBO. excel 1150. 1444179 ewwd winner, the uttt-PmuooT •a ll098
plck·up, vacation rellef clerk. Job Jnc:ludea In-cond. 142.e735 Iv EXERC18E blcycle, Olig mate utlllty/ party Automatic, aunroot,
and other dutlea u ventory control, com-menage. 1289, Wll take SUl15; boat. $65,000. Ctwta lea1her im.tor gr.-
required. Thia person puter entry It eome 1talrcllmblng exe,.. Clawaon, 213-592· ahape, $2200' 080.
wilt ualat the lnald• apeclal profecta. 17/ claer, orig $381, wll 8880 ~ Oya 851~9 EYM
staff by handling the hr. Nancy 844 0050 •WE 8UY FUANmJRE take $115. 8oJett un-Q5.3931 {P74852) ~:=!. d.':.':iin~ ORDER DESK ~ ~ =~~':!::!'. TOYOTO 1en
aalH prof9ct9 and va· M·F $1.30/hr. Beneftta. en-ol48 . Oallt cotonlal dll*lQ 1M8 MARINER 31 ttber CmLICA GT
cation rellef. If you are 7:30am-4:00pm. Light Ht, 1 ctva, I taevee gl ... ketch. Rebuilt 5 •Pffd· Auna welt. a fut learner, ft•xlble, typing for computer. Beauttfut Sofa, lolreaeat, Ike new, '480. w Pertctna. Sell 118,500 New clutch and ~
reaponalble and have Book• on Tape, Inc., chair, ottom8(1. New DiAwww 714447•7129 or no cuh down par1· pump. $950 080. ~
a Hies apptltud•. Costa M .... Cd Wll-cond, oak trim. aactt-netahlp.144-7211 Matllyn, 87W118
come join our team. A 11•· 548-5525 for appt. nee $325.141-3488· FIND 22' COLUMBIA. 3 aall9. reliable car and proof Pat1 Time Cocktail table.glaH, Ma'!)' eirtru. 11200
of INurance la n~• VERIFIER 30x80 antique gold 080. 788-1821
aary. Send your ,.. Needed one morning wrot.lron beae. 17S, 22' S ta 1989 aume or come In and nar -k. Huntl..--x1nt cond. 84t-«>51. &I\ apartment an na, • OLl>SMOBILE 1911 n11 out an appltc:.tlon. ..-'"''""' •'--·-h J __.,._~ Loran, radio, head, "''--W ...___
N Blach/Fountain Valley Ethan Allen Table W/4 wuvwv c ·-.a Honda 7\.46 hp, wood ........ agon . ._.... en-ewport lleech/ arH. Good pay s>'ua laddef bactc chrs a .-., lntetlof. Udo Sllp avt glne, tlrH, brak .. , CostaPILO ..... T mlleage. Muat have bench $200. exerdM rml... 15,150. a31.-:J1. ec. ~ ...... ~:.~~ rlllabl• car & lnaur· bike '50. 769-1400. 35• Oarden ketch. Per· .,..,__, -·--
330 Weet 9ey St. •nee. Call 714-9'$--"klna 4/108 di.HI Loaded. $4,500.
Coeta ••-· CA 3030, uk for Rita. 9 (under 100 hra). Dou-545-<5138
f\ ~ ; • 1-J l...,
[)1)'111 ' (,:I \' '1
9St827 PHARMACY TECH UP I 0 b1• planked aeater. PUIUC llOTICI
YACHT Club member· Attn.i='!'ed -CL•RK FT/P'T. Must seoo ~A~~"\JI~~: PlotN1• ahlp, dlacounted, Npt have pharmacy retail ha-u o/b. 11,,.,_, • .it •--e .. ch area. Pvt party. ATTN Sparta minded experience. Cal ... """"" <llalrJ31t -Cell 714-24CMM31 lndlv, student., new Char1n 540-8919 Trllde. 827·2351 8tala•ant
realdent.. $150-$300/ The FdlowlrlO persona
wit. PfT/eve• & wltnda, PHOllEI PER MONTH .. doing~•: ' .... tt
Domestic he1p needed
to eare for 18 mo old
boy & cleaning houae.
Mon, Wed a Thura or
Fri, 20-215 hr wit. Reta
,.q. Barb, 841·1778
HOUSEKEEPER
flex achedule. ~1854 P/T Worlc from home. TMREE ,..,_ IMPORTS. 11717 8Mdl llWl. #211, •-rt __ ..__ .._111... Pleaaant telephone Hunt!..... .. __ _.. Clllf
.,. .....,,.-r • r• manner to Inform loCal llft Cll • 41 'I U' ILIPI 1294.;-•·on ......... · 1~~~. 1 bp~:'::.C:. 0~0a = * .., I H:Jm * AVllll9bte In f~ A. l«<Vwth ~ (RA)"-90h 71 ........ T~S mond), 1Me7 Viewpoint ••AUTY STYLIST Ing. 15/Hr -+-t>onue. .... LI\., Huntington Beach,
Station rental, muat CaJI 382~1 Mon, Early morning motor te 80' CIUalc Celt. 12947
aee. FrHh & MW. Sept 18th for detail•. Newport Beach loca· Jane OIMa ~. S20I
Very reasonable. PRE-~ routes available. Deliver lion. Live-aboard po .. Vermont Ava., Col1a Meaa. Great 1oc 842-4482 ~ .. c .. -T14;9a1.....0 Calif. 92827 ·· .... Tuesd. ay, Thursday & •AllTllD• s111e Ta. John JoHph eout.'. 1os •g:::.~-=:'~':2 548-1873 for 11 ft. lnbOard, pref· ~~· Cotta M .... Celt.
ESL Program. 3.0 MALllTA1TS.a1'1• Saturday. Must have etabty BalbOa I~. Thi• bu1lneu •• con-
houra per day, wanted •a,000~ ....... calf 873-1993 duct.cl by: a general P91t-
by Huntington Beach eo".,mm'n •• to 1,__ to'° dependabl~ transportation narah4>
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Uv9 In or out. Tuea
thru Sat. B1autlful
house In Yorba Unda.
Engllah •P••klng. Refa req. Call o-
Copeland, C/o Traklt,
213-928-3328.
LIVE·IN HouHkeepar
wanted. Pvt room,
bath, lV, aalary. Call
after 2pm, 984 4535
City School Olatrtct. ...,,. Th• registrant(•) com.
Salary $7,988 • $9,930 STARTI Advanced and liability insurance. menced to tramact bua6-
per hour. Must talc• Tmg -+-No dMk F"I neu under the Flctltloul
nd ltt FT/PT. Patrick CALL 642-4333 .,....__,LES euame .. Name(•) llltad 8 J!!•!, wi:... .. ~n1 GHl .. p+e 955-5824 _, '"-bove Auguet 1 1991 exam. ~p., at .. .,.... llATIOINlmm USA, lfto Bad Credll OK, 18'-81 • 1R It ~ • Cralmer l.Alne, H.B., model•, guaranteed Thia statement wu Med
964-8888. Deadline for Head ..,. stra money? COSTA MESA. NEWPORT BEACH approval No down with the County Oef1c of
ACROSS
1 Insults
6 Spin like --10 Ammunition
14 Doctrine
15 Monie parrot
16 Cut Clown
17 Spanish city
18 MMtgage
eo 19 Seaweed
product
20 C1ust1C
22 Football puses
24 Experts
26 Different
27 Counted
3 1 Nourished 32 Cameo shapes
33 British
C111n<Ues
35 -steak
38 Editor• word
39 Soft drn111s
40 Trick
41 Panake of
42 More logk:al
43 Theattr area
4 4 Big -. CA
45 Preciousness
47 Goll
tournament
51 Place
52 Pertinent
S4 Reflector
58 After
59 Ages
61 Onslaught
62 Ontario, e o
63 Talk madly 64 Inventor
Nikola -65 Snowmobile"s
kin
66 Disgorge 67 ChemlClll
C-Ompounel
DOWN
1 Altempt
2 Jacob·s son
3 Module
4 Trustworthy
5 Postures
6 Totally
7 Labor
8 Mountain
nymph
9 Popes
10 Exempted 11 Ishmael's
mother 12 Some 1es11
13 Suoc1nc1
21 Eur 11nguag1
23 Days· end•
25 - -lire 27 Protut>eranoe
28 Eye pan
29 Millc1hake
30 Dis1rlbuted
34 Cruise coats
35 Asqwit
36 Maladle9
37 Wax makers
applying : September Hew•onoe•-payment. 1 .. 00. Orange County on August
11, 1991. AcMtt111 ~ clMllllld. •a• l•M 24 Hra. 20, 1091 peoqg
Pub419Md Nlwpoft BMch-
Colta M... Piiot Auguat
21, Septemoer 3, 10, 17,
11181
T-432
.......... ......... .._ ..........
Tu••d•y, September 10, 1111 Wedneeday, September 11, 1111 The Foltowll 19 persona
are dOlna bullnMa •:
39 Cargo movers
40 Beverage p11n11
42 Proseou1es
43 Skilled perlOf'l
44 Pelted
46 Objective
47 Heavy
h8mrnefS
48 Horrify: vat.
49 Wheel par1
50 Watchband
53 Roof area
55 Take It ea1y
56 Give the eye
57 Bring up
eo Make clothes
Houdini and Conan Doyle: Sir LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22) You'll en-Since You A1hd: Colt Porter, late
Arthur Conan Doyle, Gemini author countt'r dynamic, creattve 1ndiv1Juals Gemini comp<IM'r, wu regardtd by
of "Sherlock Holmes," wu also a with tht'S(' letten. initials likely to be 1n meny ., elitist, whtrt his musfc and
medical doctor and champion long-their names· A. S, J Make fresh start, lyrln wttt con"mtd u well u hie
dl1tance •kier. Hl1 main lntetttt, emphasize independence, pionttrlng ptnonel tutn. That Colt Porter wu a
how•ver, was ptychic phenomena. spirit !..too plays rol• genius then I• no 1rgument. Com-
1piritual11m, efforts to prove that SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21 ). lntui· blntd with thet genius wis ultra·ao·
human ptnonallty survived bodily tion hits bull1·eye You'll e1otr1nte philticatlon. So-where alOftl tl\t
duth. Doyle wu charming. persua-yourself from family dispute concern· line Porter got reputation for being•
sive. Among hit best friends wu the ing credit. mont'y. ach1l'Vement. Secl't't 11\ob. Canon Kainh,, ~gUtarian play·
magician Harry Houdini, Arlet, who mming provides e~c1tement. httle elSt' wright. atked Porter, "Are you a
loudly broadc .. t hi• 1kepllci1m. This Maintain humor. proprr penp«tivt. 1nobr' Porter, the compoetr of an
did not crtate a rupture In their SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22·DK 21 ). array of hit aonga, laughed and
friendship. Few blosraphen mention What y<>u wett afriid 10 race turns out rtplltd, "I'm no anob, I ju1t want IJ\t
Doyle'• Intense lnterett In spiritual· 10 be "laughing matter." Focus on beat of everythlngr'
lam. Why? I I ARIES (M.irch 21 April 19 ) 11·~ all drHms that c~me true, ~pecu at on. ARIES (Marth 21 ·April 19). Sltua·
"locked up .. What h•d Ix-en loose. rrlv · popular;1y You II be l·onsc1ous ?.~ ~y hon that had lx't'n moribund romn to
olous 1s now on whd bast' Key ,~ or-image ml?,Ort•nt prrM>n uya, ou life. Spotlight lln publicity, Image, "'P·
gan11..111on. legal verilicallon. partner· my choice' utallon. ltg1I conclusions. Emphasis on
ship. marllill ~tillu\ ran.incial CAPRICORN (OK 22·Jan 19) Fo· 1ct1on, movt'ment, outlet for crutlve
aettlement f.ivor.. you hurus, SrorplO cus on structul't', dea1gn. 1e>l1d1ty. duril· enerw1n Cem1n1 plays kty role
involved ble goods Automobile ~ttery ttqui TAURUS (April 20·May 20)-Co
TAURUS Ch-king Grt't'n light rlashes for pro· · (April 20·Mily 20) u slow, emph.111" diplomacy. Family
Knowledge comf's through wri11en motion membtr. on edge due to ~nt flnand1I
..,......, __ .....,__,.._ .... ,word. Reference m"t'rial is m•de avail· AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Ftb 18): Em -tetbKk. nMds undenta,,.tlng. not crltl·
;able. Member of opposi te sex makes phasls on study, communication, rorre-clsm. H p.ttlent. you'll win In many ar·
-----~--•clear interest 1n you Is more than c.sual. spondence ttlaung to poteiblt overSN~ eu. Scenario highlighte domeatlc
Employment p1ctul't' subJ«t to change. journey Gi11n lndlcatrd through rtad· chang• •
~-+--+--+-~.._-+--+-·II lnvntlgate1 Ing, writing. 1pecl1I inve1tlg1tlon.
GEMINI (May 21-june 20) Scenar· Gemini, Vlr110. Saglttariua penon1 In· CEMINI (Mey 21·Junt 20): Protect
IO fNtures dts1gn. color. mut1c, reunion volvfd lfll In t>IYlollnnol cllnchft. Individual
with family member. Spotlight on CTH· who whl~ptfl •wttt nothlngt may Nlve
1 h PISCES (f-eb 19·March 20). What 1uat that lu oHer -nothln1. Obi1ln t vity. vanety, P Y•i<al attrKtlon Trav• had bttn dilemma will be l'flUlved clear d•flnltlon of t•rln. You'll t11vd• el urangemtnt d11eu.-d by rel111ve h low '" l.Jtm1. another Cemlnl fNtured wit out tmburt Ins Ont < lo you ptl'IUNI m1gnthtll\, It'll •ppNI lnvolvea a«urlhet, le1al document,
CANC£1t (June 21·July 22}. Don't tr•M(tr of fund Metor domtttl< .cl• CANCE• (Ji.nt 21-July 22): Eln·
permit "moods" to domlnttt logic ju•tmenl ,.atom harmony. Mtaic 10• ph .. t1 on powtr, aethorlty. '"'°"''· _ _.._...___,.___., 8roodina deten Pf'Oll'ttt Utllluability nll!ht! blllty, dr.cillM Focu• on dunbll'
to .da!ect t,.nde...cyct.1 Rom.mu will 800Cfl1 "'P'lruf pro,,.n , utumobll•
_....,_,..__,._~~-ti not long bt a 1tr1nl'tr Pr\olfttlllontl •p· IF SEPTEMISR 10 IS YOUR Fundlna will bt obt1ln\'d. Proptr furft\I
pralul reveel• proptny worth. IUlTHDAYr Y1"' 1rt lnde~ent, <,.· •v1ll1bl• -t htd1 with c1rw. tteault1t
LEO (J\rl~ t3·Aug, 22) Whit wot atlve, dynam1(', alut>born, Ml\1utl. Yuu LEO (July 23·Alfg 21): Clr(lllft•
Jot will lKt ft'COVtred -In drematlt ,,. an orl&ln•I thinker, lnnntlvr, In • etanc.t. prtvlouely out of L'Ontrol, tall•
l11hlon Ernpl\at1t no Intuition. p1ychlc novetlvt, f1th•r pc•IMy h.td mort In· •uddtn turn In yovr '""0' £m~p
1blh1y. Clandnllnt mfftlns rtl1tt to fhttna thin did lllOChtr LA<>. Aquenu• unlvtntlhy Lont·ct~ cocnmunl•
rom1nct. SX-lbi. pu1th• or proJl"rfY perton1 pl1y •l1nH1<1nt rol In your <etion r.Lll11 to .._.nor, trtwt. A'*
l'!!'--+-..... -+--t--ll Capncom pt.ys mlt Mt Currtnt cydt K<'fnt• populeruy. ,.1111v1 PfO"icMe ptn1nfllt lnfOririMtOil
VlllOO (Au~ lJ ·Stpt 22)1 M1!141on tMvrl,&rHttr1w1~otbody1m••· VllOO(Aug 23·S..pt.2l).Nc'wap·
-.+~+-~l-~--4 coinpleted You'rto nu lonarr "1mpr11· Plirinf Oct*'• you'll IOCAlhl "Ml111t1n1 pt"Oldl bnn Unan<laJ ... In. Focue .,.
oned" by fooh h .,bl ~tw,,, trldrtlon llnk " In Nov.rnber, ~M\ lnctlcttf'd •la lnltletlvt, 1ndl•ldu1flty. h•h at•n.
llP+....._+-~~-+--4 Mon~y ttlt.l.IC'd In your n•mt On • wrOt "wonl °""• Dtn'rilber, majOf What h.td b<Mn Iott wlll ti. M"O\OlrH In
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 22) SenSt" of ft~Y =~·
Jlrec:tlnn regalnfd. ronfidenC'e rt'flturl'd. ~. c.itf. 92990 ·•
Cycle high. wear 1hadH of blue, bmwn Yvonne 0 . Klrllandall,
and purple. Accent style. cttahv1ty. in · 24341·1 Santa Cllr9 A'M.,
nov1tlveness. AtlC'nti<>n rev<>lves ~ ~·~~ w.
around wcunty, marital status. cal't't'r ~Ave., NewpOrt 11eac:t1.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 211 Bur· w11iia':8~. Kllk•nctaJI,
den IHttd, travel indication 1s "for 2.4341·1 S.. a.. Ave.,
reel " An1wers ire found Hh1nd 0.. Point. Calf. 12121
acenes. Diversify, con1ider dHferent ~ ~u~n:,: 3
11 con-
mode of tr1n1port1tlon Sag111arlan rwnec:t ~ Ml C°'l:
helpt "gf't tht' money " ~'<'1al M'llv,lici. c:orp. aoon Md Wll .. be
lcrtM ~I n • · Th• regl1trant(1) oom-SAUlTT ARIUS (Nl•v 22·Dt>c. 21 ): mencec1 lo trtnMCt bua6-
RHtarch paya dlvidt'nd,. Cherk re-.,... under the ~
cords, pnl ptr!ormanc"': It will bt' n«· =: :;:<:~ ~
l'tMry to rtVlllf, rebuild Legit I mall' Yvonne D. IOilcandllll
ti."&'lln Is av1llable. You'll encnunter Thlt "*'*1t ... flltd
unorthodc». lndlvidu•I who shmul1tn, ~ County Ctettc of
inaplrn. • 27, 1111 County on AugulC
• CAPRICORN (OK 2l·Jan 191 Ar· ' WM
tlculate '"Ungs. Allies g11nt'd 1f you PublllNd Ntwport ~
art frank, willing to put reputation on ~ MeM Plot ~
tht lln•. Attention revolves il'found bet 3, 10, 17, M, 1111
public •PpHrantt. ('()()Jl"rative f'ffons T'411
C(llfttlona ~latlng to marital statu1.
AQUAalUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 1 fl> F9(us PUKIC IOTICI
on ttechlnt, paychology, 11trolna1• .... ••
ability to htlp lndlvlduaJ who 1tood by •-nl ....
Y°" durihl nant cri1h1. Major dolM!ltl 11111 PI At
ad1uetmff't t'Hturea harmony 11 home The flolo•• .,.,_.
Tawru• pla1' vital Nie 'A:ra::.:N~ -~LUI
PISCllll (Ffll 19·Merc:h 20) lnfor· IUC'TllC, 19 UNI I W.
mallon ga1nH rtl1tln~ 10 quellty of &: ..... 0.... .....
,ood• Find t>vt nactly wh11 le t~pta· .... ~ I -
id <At fl'O'l'I'" In writln1 S.. placYa. Goo•• a.wt ' ....,_. ~le • t~ •rt. not mertfy 1t Ji>\! ...,.. ~ ....
wl ti~ m rght be Vlrso Involved ""8 --II _. ...... llr.•1Nt1••
I F HnEMIER 11 IS YOUR Ttle realatf~~llg
llRTHDAY1 YO\I er. lntultlvt, fNt'I· "*'°':J:, ._
na1.ct by leachlnA, peythology, th C-....... 'I
lftantk a.-Yo. '" unonhodox C•n. lllCllW on:_, .1,:"'1
~r. C•p,korn, Aq"4rlus pt"raon• pl• ~ .., ....
alpffltant rolu In your mt. Yov'll :.: lt'~~~
trawl 1n e>nowr. ~Id t•ln 11 flflult a.... a..., _.. ~
wrtt6...,adwrtt11n1.Chtn<1r IM't'ting M. tltt ---;o7
Mi net dMe could*""'°' Into "'-"'na· .... •
ful rtlatlONhlp t>Um .. tlc ad1u•lm•nt 't 0
........... ~
In Nov•.,.t)fr mlaht lnch1d1 •ct C... ..._ ';"911 .......
fh&,_. of '"ki4'~. m•nttl 1111tw , M1, I?, ltJ1 ,.. I, 11. tt',., J'l" ltln•. ln•tttmentt. 1tqulaluon• domHlil' adJy•lmtnt rtl•ttl 10 ,..,. drllt\Jltlc f11hlon Unique collt<tlon
..,, w••h fulf1114'd In O.C.m~r 11'1 ~~~~=~~~~~~=~=~=~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!A~n~·lU~b~r!alP'!~~n~·~~~p~r~~n~~~--~d~e~~~·~·~~ffl~llM~ w~h~,.t~n~~d~~· ' ----~-:------"'!~ ....... ------........ ---L...~..;..;.......:......;....~~
STIRTill I IEW llsmss11
• lN ...... Ol$11E•AMI II -NIM II ............ ,....-. .,._......_._.,...,II ___ llMllCM ....... ..
...... , ... o.. C'·--ru ... ... ......... ,... .. ....... ....................... .. ,...._... ...........
--.... o.Mf OIMI. ,___ ... .., .... ..... ...... ., ............... ,. ...... •o...,a..
........ ., ...... ...... ...._ .......... ,.."-Ot•••=A. m -.. ... Qo9 ..... ~ ....... .. .. ............. fr'41~ ....... ,,, . ,,. ... --............. ,.. ..... ........... .., .... .,... ............. ................... .. _. ..............
:..:~
•
.. ...... . "' ·-···---__ .__ .. -... ......... ...._ ......