HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-09-24 - Orange Coast PilotIBCB • COSTA 118A
-UESDAY--
ept. 24, 1991
lOOAY
Finl low
finl hish $K'olldlow 4:13 p.m. o.A
Secood high 10,20 p.m. 4.9
WEDNESDAY
fil'lt low 4:05 a.m. 1.:11
fint hid! 10-:111.m. S.9 ~ 4,55 p.m. 0.3
Second high 11:03 p.m. 4.S
''/hope those predictions are tn1e.
ut only fools arid weathermeri pmfict
e weather."
Jeff Staneart, deputy utilities
·rector in Newport Beach. about
e chance of a wet winier. (A l ).
"It is difficult to free fools from 1he
ains they ~rr. ~·
Voltaire
• Th:e American Hn.rt;
soclatlon's Food FestiVal is
king this week at 200 sites
untywide, including several in the
sta Mesa and Newport Beach
ca. Activities include health food
e-aways as well as information
d demonstrations on healthy
ting. Locations include the Costa
esa Police Department, the Mesa
nsolidated Water Dist rict and the
range County Department of
ucation. For inforrr 'ion, contact
nnic Kerr at 856-3.) ... ..1 .
•Citizens ror .a Better Newport
II hos1 presentations by the
wport Conservancy, an
ganization dedicated to acquiring
d preserving local coastal land,
d the Newport Beach Library
1undation, which is· raising fu11d s
a new main library. The meeting
II take place today at 5:30 p.m. in
Balboa Bay C lub ballroom. For
ormati on, call 722-0824.
•South Coast Repertory continues
production of George Bernard
aw's "Heartbreak House," a
medy/drama about a girl whose
rch for a husband leads her to a
uscho1d full of free·thinkers and
uhists. Tuesdays through Fridays
8 p.m., Saturdays at 2:30 and 8
. and Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30
. tickets arc $23 to $32. For
onnation, call 957-4033.
Robert Mondavl Food and Wine
ntcr in Costa Mesa will hold a
e tasting session featuring
lifomia Chardonnays 1onight from
o 9 p.m. Admission is $20 per
Whal waters form Newport
ach's Back Bay?
·s-.pu
:>Y!Jlld ;iq1 pull 'l~;iJ:J oS;i!Q ues
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munity Forum/All
word/88
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Health/A?
Horoscope/Ill
Lea•I notices/Bf
Senion/A'
Society/Al
Spons/BI
... r11r:a•1.
1 1991 "
ln pttt on recycled ptptr.
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Council wants public lnpWA12
Published Tuesdays, Thursdays & Smurdays Circulmion 45 .000 25¢
Amburgey suing-Co-ta -MJ=sa -
Former councilman
alleges city officials
concocted charges
By Anna Cekola ,.,, _
COSTA MESA -Former Councilman
Orv Amburgey filed a lawsuit Monday
alleging city leaders concocted false
criminal charges against him 10 upset his
bid for rc--c:lcction last November.
While the lawsuit does not seek a
specific amount of damages, Amburgey
said he's willing to prove up to $3.8
million in tosses to his electrical business
and personal reputation because of
misdemeanor connict of interest charges
filed against him in April.
"1'o me, the most important thing is to
clear the family name and attempt to
right some or the wrongs that have
occurred," Amburgey said during a press
conference. ··There ne·e·ds to be some
See AMBURGEY,,_. Piii
Marc M.ttl..,.,.,lol
F'?:'mer councilman Orv Amburgey reacts during a news conference Monday.
Fall retlirns
with promise
or ,heat, smog
By Iris Yoko l
'"" "''" A fter a cool, gray summer, a
sudden, oppressive heat wave
greeted the first day of au1umn and
promises to keep the air warm and
unhealthful in the coming days.
Even he<1ch residents won't be
spared the fallout of the strange
post-summer weather. The Southern
California Air Quality Management
District has issued a health advisory
for both along the coast and inland
today.
A health advisory is issued when
lhc pollutant standard index is
fore cast to be 138 or higher, with
ozone the major pollutant. The
pollutant le,ef is expected to reach
163 along the coast today, even
See WEATHER,._ Piii
Btreet sailing
~~~~~~~~~~
Ex-judge missing alter
indicted in .drug case
Federal officials issue
arrest warrant for Plaia
By Russ Loar
NE\VPORl-BEACH -An arrest
warrant wa s issued Monday for Alan A.
Plaia, a former Corona de! Mar attorney
and Orange County Municipal Courl
judge v.•ho failed to surrender Monday to
federal authorities.
Plaia, 48. was indicted last week by a
federal grand jury for cocaine trafficking
after allegedly arranging large-scale
coca.inc !>:lies with undercover drug
agcnls. ___ _
Assistant .U.S.-Attorney BrenOaS3ili\Cs--
said Plaia did not surrender as pl;.1nned,
but she would not say whether Plaia was
attempting to nee from prosecution. "His
attorney anll I had worked out an
arrangement where he would self·
surrender," Sannes said . "\Ve just don·1
knuw "'he re he i~."
Plaia's allorncy, Rubert Perry. was 'also
unable to elabo rate on his client"s
whereabouts. "I have told the U.S.
attorney I do not know where he is,'"
Perry said, declining add111onal comment.
Plaia. a Central Orange County
.~t un ici ral Cuun judge from 1979 to 1983.
is charged along \Vith t\.\'O 01her men with
po!>~ess io n <t nd intention 10 sell
approx1n1a1cl) one kilogram of cocaine.
·rhcy Cl}uld be sentenced to 40 years in
prison if convicted on all 1hree counts of
the indictment.
"fhc cocaine firs1 changed hands on
Dec. 7, 1989, when 53-year·okt co·
defendant Grisha Moradian of Costa
Mesa passed a shopping bag containing
the cocaine to an undercover agent at
South Coast Plaza. Also charged in the
indictment is David Nicol of Surfside.
The indictment was filed in August but
unsealed last y,•eck when r>.1oradian was
arrested and arraigned. Nicol is currently
serving four years in federal prison on an
unrelated drug charge.
Plaia was arrested in September 1990
while allegedly auempting to buy one
kilogr11m of cocaine from undercover drug
agents in Kana. Hawaii. He was not
charged. howe ve r, and remained free
during an ongoing investigation.
The indictment revealed last week
charges that Plaia inlroduced Moradian
See MISSING,._ Piii
Intruder's assault on girls
alarms CdM neighborhood
""IC ~in pholw'Pllric
Paul Jordan sails across blacktop at 14th Street in Newport Beach 'Monday
afternoon under sunny skies. The high was 74 degrees near lhe beach.
By Iris Yokoi
S1al1 Writer
NE WPORT BEACH -Police believe
one man is responsible for two incidents
within the past four months in which an
intruder entered homes in the same
Corona de\ Mar neighborhood and
fondled young elementary school·age girls
while they slept.
The two girls, age 7 and 9, both
reported being molested by a thin whi1e
man in his 40s "'hO wore some type of
scarf tied around his head, Sgt. Andy
Ganis said Monday. Both victims live on
Sandcastle Drive and are s1udcnts at
Harbor View Elementary School. Neither
was injured. '
Since both incidents also occurred in
homes where a window had been left
open, Gonis advised parents in the area ,,
to double-check their home sccuritv at
night and keep a watchful eye on iheir
children. "It's always good advice . but
especially now:· he said.
Police h<1ve also notified officials at
nearby elementary sc hools and ""'iii supply
the schools with advi.s0rics to be sent
home -concealed in envelopes -with
s1udents.
l 'he latest incident occurred about 4
a.m. Monday in the 900 block of
Sandcastle. Gonis said. The 7-year-old girl
was asleep alone in her bedroom when
she awoke to find the suspc~t slanding
above her. The intruder fondled lhc girl
before leaving abruptly, possibly because
he heard a noise, Gonis said.
The girl immediately told her parents,
who were asleep in anbther room. The
See INTRUDER-Piii
Cheerleaders' antics prompt review of zero tolerance
School district says policy
needs to be more defined
ey Russ Loar ... _
NEWPORT BEACH The
misadventures of high school cheerlcaden
at summer cheerleading camp have
prompted a revision o( the Newpon-Mesa
Unified School District's tough "zero
tolerance'' substance abuse. policy,
School district administrators say the
revised policy will leave students wilh no
doubts aboul the Consequences or their
behavior. But district Deputy
Superintendent Carol Berg said revisions
are not complete and she would not
elaborate on how the policy may be
changed.
When Newport Harbor High School
cheerlc:aden were put on the bench this
·month as punishment for drinking at a
summer cheerlcading camp, they escaped
the stiff requirements of the districl'1 tcro
tolerance policy .. School officials Hid ttle
summer chccrlcading camp did not
qualify as a school-related activity. Under
the zero toler1nce polk:.'y, ltucknts are
automatically transferred to another
school on their first offense and expclte.d
on the seoond offense .
Some parents expressed outrage at
what they believe was lenient treatment
or the cheerleaders. Family members of a
popular Newport Harbor High School
athlete, transferred last year under the
zero 1olerancc policy, say they believe the
policy ill being applied unfairly. But hi~h
school Principal Dennis Evans said
without a11y school adviser 11 the camp,
the event could only be considered
"quasi .. tc.hoo1 related."
Cheerleaders from Costa Me11'1
Estancia High School also attended
summer chcerlcading camp, but with 1
school adviser. District offittals 11.y that.
,
unlike Newport Harbor' High, Estancia
cheerleaders have been told the summer
cheerleading camp is "school·rcla1ed" and
the zero tolerance policy applies.
After meeting with school principals
last week, district administrators drafted
IAnguage to clarify the definition of
Khool-rc\a\cd events. "We didn't know
we had s problem," seid Berg. "At
EJtancla. ii w:is told that it w1.s a school·
related activity. It 's not that clean at
(Newport) Harbor."
Berg said final rev1s1ons will be
approved by district administrtton tnd
will not come before school board
mcmbe~ for public comment or a.ppf'O\'a1 .
Pilot People
111Em1--~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A librarian with the Library of Congress for nearly a dozcan
years who was recently named acquisitions librarian for the
Norman E. Watson library at Orange Coast College.
CAPITAL START----------
Katsui's entry into the librarian's profession came early in her
adult life, after brief forays into the bureaucracy at two federal
government departments in Washington D.C.
"I worked at a clerical job in the Interior Department for a
year, then became a security clerk with the State Department,"
she said. "I stayed on as a security clerk for six months before
landing a cataloging position with the Library of Congress.''
BY 11IE BOOK------------
At Orange Coast College, Katsui, 35, has the daunting task of
ordering all library books.
"As a student at UC Santa Barbara, I worked on the
circulation desk in the campu!. library," she said. "The position at
the Library of Congress helped me to confirm my direction in
life."
-Compiled by Russ Loar
B y the time Katherine Bell came to, a crowd of people had
swarmed onto the dock, gathering around her as they
waited for the paramedics to arrive.
She looked up into the dark blue sky, noticing a huge white
cloud like a chunk of cauliflower suspended in front of her face.
She couldn't hear anything except a dull steady noise like wind
ripping around the corner of a building.
Katherine closed her eyes and then
opened them again, trying to clear her
head. Several faces stared back down at
her. Someone's mouth was open, asking
her a question, perhaps. But all she could
hear was the wind. She closed her eyes
f again and let go.
ORANGE COAST It was Corky Miles who pushed his way
to the front of the crowd when the
falllUJ&1L"a ramedics a rrived. : "She slipped on the top step and _fell
by ShM8I L•S.u back ... It was pretty nasty. Direct hit on
her head," Corky said to one of the
medics.
As three other paramedics gathered around Katherine, hooking
her up to a small battery of gizmos and directing a beam from a
small flashlight into her vacant eyes, another man approached the
medic.
"It looked like someone pushed her," the man said.
"Yeah, somebody shoved her or hit her or something," another
voice chimed in.
As the group argued back and forth over who was to blame for
Katherine's fall, a man dressed in a blue beret, a tweed coat, a
pair of tan slacks and saddle shoes walked slowly up the dock
and disappeared into the Bay Club.
Suddenly there was a mammoth explosion, burning chunks of
wood were vaulted into the air, shards of glass whizzed this way
and that like bullets and a body -just one -was tossed into
the bay where it floated face-down in the growing slick of diesel
fuel.
m mron IUCB • COSTA IE5A
iPilDL
VIL •, NO. !11
Readers' Hotline: 642-6086
• Y04H com-•bout The Pilol or -tJp wUI • • Ii. NCOtded and pn directly to Editor WlllJ.m
I Lobdell The lllM 2•·hour .,,,_nng lilMce
• may Ii. uted to re<Xltd ~ to ltM ldltor on
1 any topic. Contril>W>n to IM HotliM ...+lo want
1 to -~r coml'M!lts published must Include , their na-, clly and phone lll.lmb« (for ...inc...
1 lion). This Is your community MWlpAJ>f!r; WI'
, waM your ln\/Olwment.
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,d.lyU, call beb. 10 a m. and -·11 Jet It to )"OU
1 bv noon Quo UtstotMr SeMce Unlef, 642·
1dllLlt ~from 6 .tm. to S pm. T~
1 and TIIUl'lclayS, 1 a m. to 10 1 m on Situr~
1 end 8 a.m to S pm. Mond¥. w~ llld
1 f ridayl ID l9ilt )'OU wtdl )'OU' drcul.atlon nffdl
: To malce a correction
1 It .. The Pilot'• policy to promptly correct "" ef•
1 "°" ol aui.c.tnc.. To Npon en .nor or ctarlra.
1tJon, ,__ c.an 642·•l21, Ht 363. Think )"OU
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To be continued ...
The Newport BeacWCosu ~ Piloc IUPS
lH-800) is published Tuetdays, Thursdays
and Saturdays and subscnplloos ll~ avail.able
(or S0.66 per week by c;irrier In Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa, S0.99 per week by
mail and for sel«ttd other routes by Pagt!
Costa Mesa Publishing. Inc., 330 W Bay St.,
Cost.a Mesa, CA 92627. S«:ond·dw f>OSUI!'!
paid at Costa Mesa, CA. (Proces Include an
applicable statr and ~I wes I POSTMA.S-
TER St-net addres changrs to The Piloc, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa ~. CA 92626.
C~ight. No -stories, 1llustratlons, «Ii-
tonal mailer or adVf!rtisf!ments heff!ln m•y be
rt"produef!d without wrinrn pc!rmlnion ot
rnpyrigflt owner.
'''" Cl'a1tnpr Publisher
How to reach us at
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News 540-1224
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Main Office
Business Office ~2-4321
Business fax 631 -5902
·-
Litter legion leaves bay clean
Approximately 1,000 people collected 3,000 pounds of
recyclables and 30,000 pounds of trash from around
the Upper Newport Boy Saturday morning during the
statewide Coastal Cleanup Doy. The local effort was also
port of Seo Fest, Newport's annual maritime festival which
concluded lost weekend.
Volunteers included Boy Scouts from Troop 333 (above
and bottom left) as well as many others from oil over the
county.
Photos by Katsuya Rainone
Police log
Costa Mesa
A woman who lives al the 900 block of T1nana Place returned home
Wednesday afternoon to find her garage door open and her mountain bike,
radio, camcorder and jewelry stolen. Police believe the burglar broke in
through the woman's bathroom window. Total loss was estimated 11 $4,000 . • A woman and ber children were home sleeping "fhurtday njgbt when IOme·
one 1pparently burllariicd their home In the 3000 bloclc of Garfield Strccl.
The woman told police her son awoke to find the video cassette recorder and two television remote controls misslna. Other items were piled up on her
kitchen counter. F11mily members heard nothing. • Three cast Iron chairs worth SSOO were stolen from Mimi's Cafe at 1835
Newport Boulevard Sunday. •
Nearly $3,000-worth the tools were stolen from 1 garage in the 200 block or
S1ybrook Court Tuesday. • A $320 bike was stolen from a garage al the 400 block of Bernard some·
time lu1 week. • A l1wn mower w1s stolen from the front y1rd of a home in the 1900 block of Federal Avenue Friday or Saturday . • More thin SS 000-worth of jewelry was stolen from a house at the 3000
block of S1n11 Ciara last Sunday afler the owner left It open lo a rc1l cslalc
a1eot for tours. The woman returned home to find her weddin& ring, diamond rfng ind 1wo gold necklaces missing.
Newport Beach
A JO.foot "El Torito" neon sign, valued at $2,000, was stolen from the
Newport Beach restaurant sometime between Sept. 9 and Sept. 20, 1ccordina
to 1 restaur1n1 m1n11er who hid not noticed the alan wu missing until la I
Friday. • An S80,000 bl1ck Porsche Carrera convertible was stolen from the Mara-
kesh rCJ11ur1nt 11 1100 West Coast Hlahway between 10:30 and 11 :30 p.m.
Saturday. A valet hid parked lhe car -license number THNX-2SC -for Ir·
vine 1ttomey Mich1el J. Schroeder. But lhc car wu missing when he went to
retrieve 11. • Com__puter equipment worth $8,074 was stolen from Mariner Or1phie at
3920 lJirch Scree! sometime durinJ the weekend. Buralors pried open two
doors lo get 10 the equipment, causing $500 In d1m11ge to business. • M1mmoth Lakes reaidcnt Frank Crosby Hout, 67, loet a $600 cellular
phone at the Newport &ach Gulf Course S1turday. After makina 1 phone
call 11 7:4.S J> m., Hout pl1ccd the. phone in his a<>lrO.a, bul could not find It
about a h1lfhour laler. • A bur.in took $200 in cash from two cuh re1i ters 11 Mucho Munchic1 in
Corona &I Mu Friday ni&ht alter the rcstauranf doled, A timc-alamoed cash
reaister tape •hows the money WU taken at 11 :49 p.m. Friday. Police bclic¥C • key WIS UICd IO l'in enttancc to the rCJtturanl.
Did You Know?
In Costa Mesi: In 1979, Henry Segentrom and Music Center
president Elaine Redneld examine a model oC 1 proposed Music
Center on five acres on South Coast Plaza Town Center land
donated by Scgerstrom, ending a tug of war among Orange Cout
cities to host the center. Today, the Orange County Performing
Ans Cenlcr lCk'bratcs five years of excellenc;c on that plot of
Segerstrum lancJ.
We perform bcit when your contributions have • st1rring role.
Send them to to Did You Know, The Pilot, P.O. Box 156(), Cost1
Mesa, 92626. ..
•
Party takes whack ·
at a dread disease
E b: Polo jusi may be southun California's top party girl.
We went to one of her soiree• Friday evening al tbt
Newport Marriott and it was a blast. Hundreds of good
people haVfng a good time in support or a JOOd cause.
Liz is director of special events for the Southern California/
Southern Nevada Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and, with a network
of voluntcen, pulS on 72 events a year, ranging Crom bowling
tournaments to fancy balls.
Friday evening's affair was "Champagne Wishes
& Getaway Dreams," the-latter referring to the
dozens of hotel deals one could bid on in the
silent auction that opened the fes.tivities and the
definttely un-.sileot auction that-followed.
As we were driving to the hotel, it occurred to
me that I didn't really know what cystic fibro~is
really was. MY. wife explained. She ~s a teacher
and had a child with CF in her class some years
ago.
On the
Coast
It is a bad disease, the primary genetic killer
of children and young adults. It is always fatal.
A long life for a CF victim is mid-twenties. Most
die much younger.
CF creates mucus which clogs the child's
lungs. They have difficulty breathing and suffer
-----• repeated infections and lung damage. Eventually
they suffocate.
Cystic fibrosis kills more young people than multiple sclerosis,
muscular dystrophy and juvenile diabetes combined. CF kids arc
a lot worse off than Jerry's kids but their terrible disease doesn't
get the ink.
Paul Motenko·is president of the regional CF foundation. He
spends more time at that job than he should, but his little girl has
the disease. She is a lmost five .
"It is a disease whos<' time is coming to an end," Paul said.
Some great strides have been made in CF research in just the
past few years. Now there is at least hope that his daughter will
make it beyond the usual life expectancy of 5 to 8 years.
"l thank God she was not born 20 years ago," Paul said.
The big breakthrough in the' fight ~ainst CF cam~ last year
when researchers identified the gene and the defective protein it
produces. Then scientists discovered how to correct the cell in a
test tube. They arc getting very, very close to a solution.
~rhaps that's why the bucks were flowing Friday night ... A
lengthy cocktail hour/silent auction and the fast, funny anti classy
auctioneering of host Shawn Parr ~elped also.
After all, when was the last time you saw the auctioneer go
over and give a back rub to get a bidder to go up from $950 to
$1,000? Parr did, and it worked, but not until he egged h(ir on
with, "OK, I'll throw in a cocktail!"
Winning bidder on the week at the Kensington Hilton in
London was Karen Gressinger, wife of Pilot Publisher Jim.
Actually, he didn't know what Karen was up to. Jim had gone to
the gent's or somewhere when Karen got into the bidding war.
------------When he came back,
'Cystic fibrosis kills
young people than
multiple sclerosis,
muscular dystrophy and
juvenile diabetes
combined. CF kids are a
lot worse off than Jerry's
kids but their terrible
disease doesn 't get the
ink.•
Associate Publisher Tom more Johnson said,
"Congratulations, Jim!" "For
what?" Jim asked.'' "Maybe
you better ask Karen," Tom
said.
Two offbeat packages
encouraged fierce bidding by
M>me of the many beautiful
young women at the party.
Believe me, guys, the place
was loaded with lookers!
One was dinner for six w'ith
the firefighter hunks at the
Newport Beach firehouse.
That was a real battle that ended up raisi ng $800. Then came the
one the women were really waiting for:
Editorship of the PUot for a day! I thought about bidding on
that one myself, but it became too hectic and too rich. Up and up
it went in 50-buck increments untiJ only two bidders were left.
A gorgeous blonde in a black dress was bidding
against ... anothcr gorgeous blonde in a black dress. I felt relieved.
Whichever won, it would certainly be an improvement -at least
for a day (hey. just kidding, Bill!).
It was a wonderful evening, but the best CF party is yet to
come: the last one.
Ornelas trial is postponed
By Iris Yokol
si.n Wlllr
NEWPORT BEACH -Daniel
David Ornelas' second trial on
charges he fatally ran down Balt>oa
Peninsula resident Debbie Ann
Killelea has been postponed until
next Monday.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge J.-uis Cardenas on Monday
continued the jury trial until next
week to give attorneys additional
time to prepare for Ornelas' retrial
on charges of grossly negligent
vehicular manslaughter while
intoxicated.
The one-week postponement
also gives Ornelas time to find a
decent change or clothing. .
Ornelas's attorney Ralph
Bencangey reported to Cardenas
Monday that personnel at Orange
County Jail, where 2~ycar-old
Ornelas has-been held, somehow
lost two suits of clothes Ornelas'
family brought for him to wear in
court.
Dencangcy asked Cor the jud,e's
help in tracking down the clothing,
saying he didn't want his client to
have to sit through trial in the
bright orange jumpsuits worn by
county jail inmates.
Cardenas immediately got on
the phone to the jail, saying, "I
will try 10 get one or the sergeants
down· there to find out what
happened."
Ornelas was convicted in 1989 or
fatally running down Killelea in a
peninsula alley during a drunken
JOyride in September 1988 and
sentenced to the maximum 10
years in prison. But the conviction
was overturned on appeal earlier
this year after Bcncangcy argued
the jury wasn't told they could find
Ornelas guilty of yet a lesser
crime, vehicular manslaughter
while intoxicated without gross
negligence.
Man 1111111 In BrlllOI SbWt crllh
COSTA MESA -A 36-year-old man was kiJled Sunday after his
younger brother lost control of the car he was driving and smacked into
a telephone pole on Bristol Street just south of Bear Street.
Julian Marquei, 26, was arrested on suspic!on of drunken driving
before he was rushed by ambulance to UCl Medical Center.
Sgt. Dave Walker said Marquez, of Costa Mesa, smelled of alcohol
when he was pultc;d out of the car.
Witnesses said they aaw Marquez'• 280 ZX weaving In and °.ut of
lanes on Briltol at between 60 &f\d 70 mph moments before the accident .
Luis Marquez of Costa Mesa, apparently died on impact. Walker said
he had to be rc~oved from the crushed car with the Jaws of Life.
Police arc 1w1it1na blood tests to see whether his brother was under
the influence of alcohol when he lost control or the car.
If the tests are wsitivc, Walker said Marquez could be charaed with
manslau&hter.
The case is under inveatiaatlon.
THANK
YOU ..
Ml \$Mil 1J11NA II 0
01trJJt161'1 S!tff "°' 6. c.......,. c..... .....
CA•*21•(1t4)171 mt
~ .
San Francisco Ballet
to replace ·canceled
production by ABT
8; Hiit Hlfl'8tl
..,. WHlet
COSTA MESA -San Francisco
B:.llct will bring its production of
"Nutcracker" to Orange County
Perfonning Arts Center to replace
American BaUet Theatre's recently
canceled engagement, center
officials announced Mond .
San Francisco Ballet•s
"Nutcracker" will be presented for
12 performances Nov. 29 through
Dec. 8 on virtually the same
scheduled planned for the ABT
version, canceled because of the
troupe's financial difficulties.
The move will enable
subscribers to the Center's Cassie
Ballet Season to attend the holiday
production with their previously
issued tickets; the only change is
the elimination of one non-
subscription performance on
Sunday evening, Dec. 8.
ABT was forced to cancel its
"Nutcracker" engagements at the
Performing Arts Center,
Washington's Kennedy Center and
the Brooklyn Academy of Music
when the company's board of
trustees voted to postpone
mounting the new production for
one year. Instead, the board will
focus on reducing its substantial
operating deficit.
ta lllvl
0
l'holo (f)Urtf1~ (}I tn., S•n fr•nc1"'0 11.lJ~
"We arc genuinely delighted to
be able to offer San Francisco
Ballet's ''Nutcracker'," said
Thomas R. Kendrick, president of
Orange County Performing Arts
Center. "The fact that this highly
regarded company is performing
its "Nutcracker" in San Francisco
in mid·December, but was able to
make itself available to us on our
prcvrously-announccd dates is,
quite frankly, a bit of a miracle. It
re fl ects fortuitous timing and the
Center''> close relationship with
the company.··
Evelyn Cisneros and Anthony Randazzo in th.e San Francisco Ballet's production of the 'Nutcracker.'
Helgi Tomasson, artistic director
of San Francisco Ballet, expressed
similar enthusiasm. "Returning to
the Orange County Performing
Am Center is both exciting and
important for San Francisco
Ballet. 'Nutcracker' is a holiday
tradition here in the San Francisco
Bay Arca. We have revised our
current repenory rehearsal
schedule in order to share our
tradition of 'Nutcracker' with new
audience!. ...
San Francisco Ballet's
"Nu tcracker" is a glittering
spectacle with elaborate sets and
177 characters. It is the 58-year-
old company's fourth version of
the holiday favorite.
Subscriptions to the Center's
Cla!.sic Ballet Series, which
include~ "Nutcracker," are now
available. The series abo featureo;
The National Ballet of Canada,
"hich present\ "The Merry
Widm' .. and three one-acts Oct. 8-
13 , and American Ballet Theatre's
full length "Don Quixote" Feb. 4-
1)
Ind ividual tickets t o
"Nutcracker" go on sale Oct. 13.
For more information call 556-
ARTS.
How to nnesse a new set of tires for the -price of one
Here\ .the deal, you give
Nancy Sampson S39.95 and
she gives you a service
coupon, good at any Big 0 Tire
store, that's worth upwards of
$200 ...
Hmmmmm -sounded shaky,
but I checked it out with mechanic
Cliff Sherod at the Costa Mesa
Big 0 store on Harbor Boulevard.
It's a promotion and it's on the up
and up. But, there is a "but," it's
on a first come first serve basis ...
Still. like Nancy
savs, no matter
what the
economy is doing,
"Ya' need to
keep your car
going." Give her
a call at Sampson
Associates in
Newport Beach,
she'll give you the
scoop ...
0
The Broadway,
May Co. and
Nordstrom all
-----• have a sale going on Round the Clock hosiery for 20
percent off. If you buy si.x pairs at
Nordstrom, you'll get them for 25
percent off ...
0
For $195, Irvine Coast Charters
will provide you with a 2 in. hour
gondola ride complete with
gourmet dinner that includes
appetizers and champagne. They
also have a 2-hour harbor cruise
with just champagne for $165 ...
Why anyone would choose to
have the no-frills version since the
prices arc so similar?
Chris Kuhles, who works there,
says sometimes, for very special
occa!>1ons, people plan bigger
celebration' on land ...
Oh~
I never did reach the other
outfit that docs gondola!> aml gave
up trying ...
0
Cartier ha" a new location for
its South Coast Pia.la Boutique.
Go over and have manager Juliane
H iggitt show you the exhibition of
the Cartier museum collection of
art tlcco bauble!. they have on
display ...
It includes Gloria Swanson's
cryi.tal and diamond bracelet and
King Farouk's mystery clock. It's a
mystery becau!>e you can't sec the
mechanism in the transparent face.
Hmmmm ...
0
If )OU go to SouttiaCoast Plaza
today, don't m1!>s the chance to see
Paloma Picasso in the flesh. She'll
be at Bullock's previewing her fall
collection of handbags ...
0
I asked Mike Webster, who
works at the Radio Shack on
Coast Highway, a lot of questions.
Fortunately, he's very friendly ...
He say's he's new to the area
Lotvest fares!
... •. , ..... , 259.181*'. Mi Aid'* 9.375 (A.P.R. 11.36)
518.35 per"°*' Aid r9 9.375 (A.P.R. 10.M>) .
,OANS RtOM •ooo RJR AJtY REAS011 MStO ott 1s ~ m.. NO IAJ.LO<M PAMrm (O.A.C.)
Home I~ 24 (714) 891s4804 .. COneoMdetlo...,. • Hr p. BAOKER DR! 101104011 A H'Acoo: 1-(800)-479 4804
Mlllilmlla HI <Mlt•LOMt -~·,_ • .._.., .. .._..,w.ra... ~AVMAIL!t
I
--·-~~
and wants to meet people and
make friends ...
Victoria Street...
Other places are a bit cheaper,
but this gang ha~ been around for
yearl!. They're into learning by
doing. According to Jeff (who is a
black belt in~tructor). this
approach won't give you a false
sense of i.ccurity. For $19.50 you
can have three private introductory
lessons and make up your own
mind ...
He has me pretty well convinced
that the deal the Shack has right
now on their Tandy ISOOHD
Notc:book PC is a good one: It was
Sl.999 -you can get it on sale for
Sl.299 ...
0
There are various places around
town offering several types of
self-defense classes. But you know
you're talking with the right guy
when he meet Jeff Newton ... he
thinks karate is the greatest thing
since peanut butter. If you're
thinking about self-defemc cla.,~e<;.
call Jeff. You can reach him at
Bob White Karate Studio on
After that. 1t\ $65 a month.
0 If you've come across any
bargaim or unusual items, or if
\OU know of a retailer" ho
pro .. 1dco; except10nal sen ices or
quaht) he sure to let me know.
You l.'.an reach me at 497-9873 Or
end J fa.\ to 631-5902.
LAW OFFICES
Experienced Attorney sfnce 1972
PERSONAL INJURY -Auto and motorcycle accidents,
wrongful death.
JWORKDS COMPDUnON -On the Job Injury.
PRU CONIULTAnON -No recovery, no fee.
800-898-8569
/17)) ThulSllay, Odobtr 3. 1991 at 7:00 p.m. {_/~~ Qmcer c.tnter
i" cooperation witlt Circle I 000
prrsents an educational program on
Homrones, Menopause and Cancer
#tatu.ring Robert C. Young , MD
pmident of For Cltast Cancer Center,
~maolly of tlte Nati>nal Cancer Institute
1111d a "ationaUy rerogniI.ed speaker on
111ne"""91' canctr issues
at tlte Patty a"d Gto,,e Qmur Center
Mai11 Auditorium
~Hospital lowtr'4mpus
NtwpM Btd, Cali/ontill.
Rtc:tptjo" imnttdilttly followilff ltttllll
Smti111 is imittJ.
Plre all Uiflr Outlrwi&t at 760-5542
.. Odo6tr I lo mtM flOW' pbc.t
"'tlris trtlll"' tw"'"'·
HQ6G
CANcER '°' ~ ,, ......... aoa·v •
CENTER ......... ~CAUH .... IJ
•
Sports .trading card
co-IOlilldir tries to
make mark in books
Paul Surnncr 1s Peaching for tt1t
By Tony Cox
Business Eddor
P aul Sumner, who knows a thing or two
about suceessfully star\ing a company with
a fresh approach, is at it again.
One of the founders of Upper Deck Co.,
which 2 tn years ago took the sports trading card
business by storm, Sumner is now getting into the
book busines!>. His new Newport Beach-based firm,
Donovan Publishing, will make its international
debut next mo nth a t 1he Frankfurt Book Fair,
introducing its upscale, interactive books. . .
In an industry that produces more than 1 m1llton
books a year, Donovan will represent a small dent.
The company plans to produce 10 titles a year.
Sumner hopes to make his mark with quality and
innovation.
"We dill 001 set our 10 create books 10 sit on
coffee tables. but rather to create interactive books
that make readers feel and experience aspects of
human experience, to make them think in w_ays
they might not ordinarily think." Sumner said.
Donovan Publishing's slogan is "The Books that
Matter," summing up its philosophy of creating
books that help readers experience and participate
in new things.
'Now it's exciting.
... I love doing the
best of something.'
Donovan's books come
wi th cassettes that have
audio versions of the tcxl
and supplementary tapes
that have such
background sound as
-PAll.11..:R music, speeches, sound
Donovan Publishing effects and voices from
---------famous characters. The
publications also come with an instruction man.ual
and a journal that allows readers to record their
thoughts and observations during the time they're
reading the book'>.
One group of books, called the Donovan Library,
includes an analysis of war, a guide to classical
music, a book on better utilizing language, a
biography on Warner Brothers cartoonist Friz
Freleng and a guide to humanistic recovery from
alcoholism. Another series of books, the Donovan
Safari Serie!>. will provide manuals on adventure
travel in exotic place!> around the \\Orld. D
Do novan Publishing was actually born out of the
book for recovering alcoholics, "HARP:
Human1st1c Alcoholic Recovery Program," which
wa!> written by Sumner's now-deceased father,
Me rton Donovan Sumner. Paul Sumner and his
'>ister. Win Fiandaca, discussed trying to get their
father\ book publis hed after his death in 1981.
After the l>UCcess 9f Upper Deck, they decided
they could publi-.h the book in paperbacl<
1hcm~clvcs.
Sumner and Fiandaca then took the book to a
rchabilita1ion clinic in Arizona for an evaluation of
P:\Jt.\LE<; .. \L • LE<;.\L SECl~ET.\l~Y
Biomerica signs deal
for product in Japan
• 12 Course program • Affordable tuition NEWPORT BEACH
Bio mc rica Inc. has signed a
contract with the largest clinicaJ
laboratory in Japan to dev
diagnostic tests for assess1
muscular weakness and fatigue.
• Study only one subject at a lime
• Classes begin monthly
• Morningf Aftemoon/Evening Classes
Call Today-September Class Now Forming The developme nt of the
Newport Beach-based company's
product will be funded by Japan's
SRL Inc., which will obtain the
exclusive distr ibution rights of
technology in the Japanese
market. Biomerica will retain the
marketing rights in all other
markets.
Kensington College
5-t2-8086
2428 N. Grand Ave., Santa Ana, 92701
(2 Blks. So. or 22 Fwy.)
Grand Opening
Celebration!
Queen City Bank, one of California's
premier performing and A+ quality banks,•
is proud to announce the opening of two
new offices in Orange County. As part
of our grand opening festiv ities, we're
offering checking accounts for free.
You'll enjoy no monthly service charges,
no minimum balance requirements and
no per check charges for six full months.
You'IJ e ven get free checks an<t free
A TM service at literally thousands of
very convenient locations. But hurry, this
free checking offer won't last long. So
please stop by, open your free account and
join us In the celebration!
• Queen Oty Bank
EXPERIENCED • COMMITTED • INVOLVED
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
1A020 Brookhul"'lt St
Fountain Valll>y, CA 92708
( 714) 964.(16.16
EASTBLUFf
2523 £a5tbluff OT., Suite C
Newport Beach. CA 92660
(714) 644·i'17J
ME~BLIC FDIC
I tftlii.•1.lt.Ou 1.w.-.l..,. .. ,,,,11• l•••••ll!N.. '"(}( e, h .. 111.111 v.11c,. .. ..ir ... 1M•lf11«~ ....... 11 S1tl'll1>1-~ih~iftlllH1tlf••"'"f1edl"f•''""" Oll\ir_,,,.~mly1Pltwot....,
llt,...IOf (l"''lflJ _,_, •c,• ~!< ,,_,,., ..,..., 111\'f to+f14ol •• lll<lftl ... fM "'*'"' thfth tiM)' Ill.\•-"111'4 ,_ofl hi,......, "4•.dtllf"' IMf"" Wl>je.1 HHk'"""l tiy lhr llri
°"~" m""''"-.iilftlotllof< -r"l'I"• '"'-~ Tittr'"'"'r "l"P'"""""~""""''"'M•-11"' ,..~.1..-
Up the Ladder
Larry 0 . Young, formerly an
executive with Eaton Corp. in
ilwaukee, has been named
c ief operating officer of Costa
Mesa-based EPE Technologies
Inc.
0 Aki Sato, a project director in
the Nadel Partnership's Costa
Mesa office, has been named a
partner with the Los Angeles-
based architectural firm. Sato
has been with the firm for 12
years. Nadel Partnership also
named Jerry Doueal an associate
in Costa Mesa.
0 Pattie Feldhaus has been
named director of cruises for
Love To Travel, a travel agency
in Costa Mesa. Feldhaus has 12
years cf experience in the travel
in dustry and specializes in
cruises.
0
Costa Mesa financial planner
Llun Tarbox of Tarbox Equity
has been selected to serve on
the 28-member Item Writing
Committee of the International
Board of Standards and
Young
Although many fledgling companies don't
haYe the luxury of being we/~ ~pitalized, the)'_
can still borrow from strategies used by tho big
boys. Al Cosentino, president of man~gement
consulting firm MANA(JEX lntematJonal,
offers the following advice on setting a new
venture off the ground: .
1 Be certain that the new company as
•something you want to .oommit yourself
to. You should be prepared to spend long
hours working to make your venture
successful.
2 Develop a business plan that shows what
• you want to do and how you ~ill do it.
Such a plan is necessary not only 1f you want
to bring in outside investment or loans, but
also is needed as your own road map.
3 If you're trying to raise money to fund a
• venture, have a prototype that will allow
prospective investors or lenders to see and
understand your product.
4 Have reasonable expectations for y~ur
•business in its first few years. Don't
expect instant success.
5 Do homework ()n the business you're
• going into. Ensure that you have a
product or service people want a.nd do .
demographic research to determine potential
markets.
6 Try to line up enough capital to cury .
• your business for a couple years. Statast1cs
show that most busin~sses don't make money
until after their second or third year.
7 Seek professional help, to the degree
• possible. There arc different ways to form
a company, with varying tax and liability
implications. A lawyer or accountant can help
you form your business in a way that best
meets your needs.
8 Don't go out and buy everything
• first-class. It's easy to get bargains on
furniture, equipment and offices. "Sometimes
your ego dictates that you get nice stuff. You
i.hould save your money for revenue-producing
expenses."
9 Join networking organizations.
• Networking can be a low-cost alternative
to advertising in your early years. lo Above all, adopt a philosophy of
• quality. Whatever product or service
you have, be a leader in quality. There's a
tendency when you 're undercapitalizcd to cut
corners, but there are ways to save money
without sacrificing quality.
its validity. After getting a six-page evaluation that
said 1he book was not only vatid;-btrt-one-of-thc-
best of i~ kind, Sumner started thinking in larger
terms than a little paperback.
See SUMNER/Piii •
Sato
Practices for Certified Financial
Planners. S. Grttcben has been named
senior vice president, general
counsel and secretary for San
Francisco-based Quality Med
Inc., a health maintenance
organization. Gritche n 's
background includes a stint as
deputy district attorney in
Orange County and a vice
president position at ICN
Pharmaceuticals Jnc. in Costa
Mesa. '
0
Costa Mesa resident Donald
W. Yahn has joined Cushman &
Wakefield's Irvine office as an
industrial broker. Yahn,
formerly of Burke Commercial
Real Estate, has been a broker
in the area for four years.
0
Newport Beach resident Lyle
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 * 2:00 P.M . MUSlllD shop
mixes kitsch
With C11881c
PREVIEWS: SUND.\Y 9/22 and 9/29 • 12-5 P.M.
PUBLIC REAL ESrATE AUCTION
BUILDER UQUJDATION FORCFS SALE OF
Two One-Year New Custom Homes In
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Both L«.aW Mlnutll from the Bwh, Schoole Mel Shopplft9
Charmlat Cutom Dramatic Home
Family Home tftth Catallllll vs ..
....... "-""8-ch
0!1glnel ~ Piie. '525.000
Minimum Ski: •410,000
46S 'tit utat •• r, ....,_. lleidt
~ ~ Prb. '621,000
Mlnlmum8'd: '470,000 .
By Carol ~ Jones
Stiff W!1'lr
NEWPORT BEACH Bev
Diamond and Andi Mandel aro
putting the finishing touches on a
project Diamond bas had In mind
since she chaired the Newport
Harbor Art Museum's Sales and
Rental Council in 1990.
With the goal of creating a store
for the 90s, Diamond and
committee ex><hair Mandel are
going retail in November by
opening the Newpon Harbor Art
Museum's Arti$&Jll' Showcase.
The public will be invited to eco •
tho Council's new project, chock
1~~=~~~====:==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ out tho>merchandisc and mix With ~ I acvcral anista at a champtpe
•
NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION reception Nov. 7 from -4-7 p.m. at
MOO"~*""'si-.Nw.~oc 1001.,211111 the museum.
or call l-80CM32~. ~nak>n 668'. Mandel feels the new ~
SM MUSEUM/11111·•
Entrepre ne urs
Who• Dana Sparks, a 32-year-old Newport
• Beach resident whose home-based
company. Sparx Enterprises, produces and
markets the Major T's line or T-shirts for
students.
What• Major T's show the wearer's major
• field of study1 as well as a graphic
symbol identifying the maJOr. The shirts, which
retail for $11 to $12, come in 35 different majors,
including the ever-popular "undecided."
When• Sparks founded his company a
• year and a half ago, and stancd
test marketing Major T's in boolcstores on 11
California campuses a year ago.
Where• Working from his west Newport
• apartment, Sparks has expanded
his product into six out-of-state campuses in the
last year, including colleges in Georgia, Florida,
Wisconsin and Maryland. His goal is to have the
product sold on campuses nationwide by next
fall.
Why• At age 30, having been through three
• different majors and two different
colleges in the previous five years, Sparks feared
becoming a career student. He left Cal-State
Fullerton last year, and not wanting to work for
someone else, began workin$ full-time on Major
T 's. He's kept his part-time JOb as a limousine
driver to supplement his fledgling company's
income. He has other entrepreneurial ideas, but
based on his marketing research, decided Major
T's would provide the most near-term income: "I
look for this to develop my entrepreneurial skills,
and hopefully, use as a cash cow for other
projects."
How• Spane Enterprises had revenues of
• $10,000 in its first full year of
distributing Major T 's. Sparks projects $100,000
IC.lltfuy• btllOlle pl>ulv
Dana Sparks hopes to collar the college
crowd with his Major T's line of T-shirts .
in revenues for the second year. If he meets his
goals of nationwide distribution and 1 percent
penetration of his target market, he'll sell about
90,000 shirts a year, which would result in :.nnual
revenues of $500,000. He's trying to accomplish
that by convincing coll ege bookstores to stock the
shirts. His alternatives are to sell the shirts
through studcn1s or campus clubs.
Le I d • "It's easy to sson earne . come up with
the idea. but to ac1ually implement your plan,
lakes a lot of perseverance. It's a conslant
learning process."
-Compiled b1• Tony Cox
Appointment Calenda r'
Today
Alfred J. Gobar, Ph.D., one of
the most-respected economists
specializing in Southern California
real estate, updates current trends
in the economy and commercial
real estate in a 6 p.m. program
sponsored by Harris Realty
Advisors, con s u lting and
appraisals, and C u nningham-
Barisic Development Corp. A
buffet and no-host cocktails will be
available at the Irvine Hyatt
Regency Hotel, 17900 Jamboree
Road, Irvine.
Wednesday
Costa Mesa's Leads chapter, a
women's networking group, meets
from 7:15-8:30 a.m. Call Dr. Angie
Stafford, 474-2225, o r Rita
Sterl ing, 476-0228.
G My Personal Board of Directors
Meeting, featuring brainstorming,
support and planning sessions for
entrepreneurs, meets from 7-10
p.m. at Country Side Inn, Costa
Mesa. Contact Garry Gladstone,
248-1952.
D
"Effectively Increase Yo ur
Business with Public Relations" is
the topic for the Southern
California B/PAA (Business/
Professional Advertisi n g
Associa tio n) meeting. Ch ris
Laza ru s o f A .J. Lazarus
Associatel>. Irvine, il> the speaker
at the 11 :30 a.m. luncheon at the
Beverly Heritage Hote l, Costa
Mesa. fee is $35 at the door. Call
Anne Anderson el 965-0299.
0
"The M exica n M arket :
Economic Outlook and lnvestm~nl
Opponunities" is the topic of a
tree »cminar presented by
Shearson Lehman Brothers at 6
p.m. in its Penthouse Confere nce
Center, 19000 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. Speakers are
Robert Miller, fin ancial consultant
with Shearson , and Lucia de
Garcia, presi dent and CEO of
Elan Int ernat ional . For
reservations, which are required,
call Dina at 955-7502 or Alex
Garcia at 721-6644.
0
"The M LM Entrepreneur
Series," a complimentary series
sponsored by the law firm of
Jeffrey A. Babcner and Southern
Group/Legaline Publications and
co-hosted by Money Ma kers
Monthly, continues at Marriott
Suites in Costa Mesa. For
information. call Jeffrey A.
Babener at (503) 226-6600.
D
William E. Mitchell, vice
president of The Irvine Co., Chris
Taylor, an economist with the
Califo rnia Association of Realtors,
and Dennis J. Aigner, dean of
UCI's G raduate School of
Management, discuss "Real Estate
in the 1990s: The Outlook fur
Orange County" from 4:30-7 p.m.
at The Center Club, 650 Town
Center Dr.. Costa Me a. For
information. call Susan Kearne\ at
(212) 536-8714. -
D
Arthur Mazirow, partner tn the
Los Angeles law firm of Buchalter.
Nemer, Fields & Younger.
pre1>ents "Defensive Brokenng .. to
headline the fall seminar of the
Orange/South C.Ounties Chapter of
the Society of Industrial and
Office Realtors from 2-5:30 p.m .
at the Balboa Bay Club. Admission
i!. S65 for society members, $80 for
non-members. For informatio n,
call (800) 621-SIOR.
Thursday
"Resolving Problems at Their
Source Rather Than Fixing
Symptoms" is the topic of a
presentation being given by Dcnnt1>
McCue at 7:15 a.m. at the Balboa
Bay Club, 1221 W. Pacific Coast
Highway, Newpon Beach. McCue
is president of McCue Associates
in Newport Beach. The cost, with
prepaid reservations, is S 13 for
members and S16 for guests; for
tho~c paymg at the door. the cost
t) Sl6 for members and $21 for
guests. Price includes breakfast
For more information, call the
Newpon Harbor Area Chamber 01
Commerce at 644·8211. 0
To show companies how to meet
new requirements of the Worker:'!'
Compensation Reform Act, the
r evised American s With
Disabilities Act and Senate Bill
198, the UCI Graduate School of
Management present-. 11
Profc,1>1onal Series on Compliance
for managers and professional'
re'>ponsible for employment
human resource . safet) and
related isl>UC!i. Todav\ "SB I%
1:.mcrgenC) Update" ·kicks off thl
-.enc!. from 8:30 a.m.·-1 pm. at thl
Beckman Center ol the Na11on.1I
Acc1dem1es of Science anJ
l:.ng1neenng. Cost of tnd1,,.1du.1I
programs 1s $195 per person. Fm
more informa11on, call Jame'
Maynard at 856-8156.
~
SUMNER: Upper Deck co-founder's lather inspiP.ed book publishing idea
From A4
"Now it's exiting," Sumner
recalled thinking. "h 's not just
Dad's book, but the best of
something. I lo..-e do ing the best of
something."
Sumner then began a step-by-
step process - starting in August
1990, when he took a sabbatical
from Upper Deck that
transformed his dad's manuscript
into an aggressive new publishing
company. Along 1he way, Sumner
borrowed from his startup
experiences at Upper Deck. His
key steps at Donovan Publishing
were as follows:
•Analyzed his expcnl>es in
detail to determine how much he
would have left over from his
Upper Deck income to spend on
his new company. "I wanted to
create something where I had
enough of my own money that I
wouldn't have 10 bring in
stockholders, so I could maintain
control."
• Based on his available capital,
developed a business plan that
showed what he wanted to do and
how he would do it.
•After getting a professional
opinion on his firs! manuscript, he
discussed his plans with a dcl>ign
and marketing expert, Robert
Pelton, who latcf became director
MUSEUM: Store for '90s
From A4
will be hugely successful.
"The community needs it,"
Mandel said. "There arc so few
places in Orange County where
you can find items that are unique.
We plan to give the community a
spot where a person can count on
finding truly unusual things."
She acknowledges that the
gallery-like store should be a big
money maker for the museum, too.
The Artisans' Council is inviting
the participation of established
and emerging artists from all over
the U.S. to submit works to the
Artisans' showcase committee for
consideration. Organizers plan to
carry a variety of contemporary
works created from several media
like raper, glass, fiber, clay and
meta .
The assembled collection won't
be just images, but table top
objects and dinner wear, as well as
wearable art and jewelry.
"Selected artists are invited to
:
consign their pieces to the
museum," Diamond said. "The
works will be ava ilable for !.ale on
that basis."
The response from artistlt ha!.
been "unbelievable" so far,"
Diamond said.
"Actually, we'll be carrying the
creations of 15 artists for the firM
show and we'll feature completely
new merchandise every two weeks.
That way if you don't find
something that appeals to you -
come back and look again in eight
weeks."
Diamond plans on carrying
uptown pieces, and the store "ill
retain its extensive collection of
books a nd catalogues. But the
group wants to get the word
around town that they'll be
s toc king so m e th ing to fit
everybody's taste and budget.
"We plan on carrying ilcms
from kitsc h to classic and prices
will run from around $25 to
$1,000," Diamond said.
of international ma rketing for
Donova n.
•Called on people he knew
during his printing industry career.
developing a network of sales and
creative people. Brought in an
editor, former Air Force officer
Charles E. Bailcv. Based on ideas
from Pelton, Fiandaca, authors
·rnd other creative people, Sumner
dc\eloped the interactive book
concept.
of the company's 10 first-year
books arc ready for release. I
•Did market research on who
would buy Donovan books and
what topics people wanted to read
about. Researched what price(, \he
hooks would sell for.
issue of Puhlisha\ Wc:ekly.
Sumner isn't revealing hi) sales
projections for Donovan
Publishing, but he's clearly
optimistic. He hopes that within a
couple years, he'll be able to leave
the day-to-day operations ot
Donovan to someone else, as he
did with Upper Deck, and use ht"
winnings to fund another of hie
entrepreneurial ideas
LAW OFFICES
Experienced, aggressive attorney
• Developed a 'mall network of
companic' that "'II manufacture
Doml\an-., hook'>.
• Made contacts with thousands
of diMributor1>. Will make personal
followup contacts wi th several
di~tribu1ors at the 8,000-exhibitor
Frankfurt Book Fair. BANKRUPTCY -Stop creditors, foreclosures, repossession.
•Started an adverttstng and
marketing campaign thic; month.
Donovan's firc:.t ad. the kickoff of a
S 100,000-a-month campaign, was
on the back cover of the Sept. 20
FAMILY LAW -Dissolutions, child custody
FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION
• lkg1nn1ng 1n FdHUJr},
contr.1c1cd ,.,,ith writers for
Dunman\ first group of t itles. Six 800-698-8569
'' I ho t IBM in
'59, never sold my '65
M andnowl'm
my CD to
Anierica. ''
• mov1n
Banko
Some people know a good thing when they see it. Like a cash bonu
$10,000you invest in a special, personal CD. $100 ._ ... ,.. ..
for a 2-year CD and $200 for a 3-year CD, up to
$1,800. This deal is only for people who have a
PRIMA 111 Account. But if you don't, your $10.000
CD qualifies you for a free one, so that takes care of
that. And the PRIMA Account is great. You get interest-bearing checking. free
checks. a Gold VERSATELe VIP card, and lots more. Just hurry to your
IB nearest branch by November 12th. Don't ••*of Alwtcll you love it when you make a smart move?
. .
...
I
•
Streetwise
Interviews and photographs by Jason Pepper
Q . Wlllt lllVlce ..... ,. .... ti ,_ c 3'111
•111o1t ..... W1C1In111111' rllltlll1b(ll1T
(a~l..ed at the OASIS Senior Center in Corona del Mar)
Trowbridge Shannon
"Be nice to her. Take her to a
nice place for dinner. The hand
that rocks the cradle rules the
world."
Gwen Collins
"Honesty and integrity. Looks
will fade."
Pat Hagemeyer
"Don't forget how you treated
one another when you were first
dating. T rcat each other 11 0
percent."
Ruby Suikki
"A marriage is a 50/50
proposition. You should always
kiss before you go to sleep and
say good night."
FREE ADMISSION
llorall M. MomSOll apnb "'
REVOCABLE LIVING TRUSTS
lfAM TllE lAW DON'T lllY Ill MYT1tl
18i:*WN 111111 At
MARRIOTT COllllYARD
9950 Slater, Fountain Valley
Wednesday, October 9, 1 :00 & 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, October 24. 1 :00 & 7:00 p.m.
Ml !DIUIRTI 1118
'RESERVATIONS 848-6499
· Problle requlNd " Vlk.le ot Ntate
exceeds seo.ooo. not seoo,ooo
. Joint tlNl'IC:y doee not avoid
pl'Obete and C9rt reeult In the
peyment ot unneceuery Income tax
Min, •, cm IPml • 1111 Wl'lnlllll of Ille
I f a woman can go into combat, a man can
have a face lift. Thanks to Equal Rights.
• men no longer have to suffer their wattles
in silence. Or take their
wrinkles liKe a man. A new
sociaJ revolution is sweeping
the country giving males the
same rights as women to put
their best face forward.
centuries, from
primitive men to
the French Court.
However,
manufacturers
would be smart to
sell their products
as War Paint. With
the right advertising
campaign, they
could be marketed
for challenging
rituals like the
stand-up cocktail
party that qualifies
as a battle. Instead
Sushi Bar. Both
spouses arc lying on
their slant boards,
their f accs slathered
ln imported volcanic
mud packs from
Mars.
Plastic surgery is out of the
closet. The pursuit of youth is
off and running! Bankers do
it, truck drivers do it. Even
educated profs do it. Having
your jowls lifted is no more of
a dark secret than having
your cuffs turned up.
Environmentalists are
especially supportive of face
lifts since they demonstrate
of a husband ~
struggling to keep a ~
The husband
remarks to his wife,
"Honey, I've run
out of my Eternal
Youth Cell
Replacement
Cream. Can I
borrow some or
yours? I notice I'm
getting a mouth
wrinkle." "Oh, no!"
she gasps, visibly
shaken. "You'd
the success of recycling old material.
perpetual smile on
his face, he could
reach into his bag
of tricks and paint
on a grin.
For intellectual
gatherings (an even
worse plight), the
better call Dr.
Sparkle right away
and make an
lll11t1ratlon by 8111 Mcintyre appointment for a face peel. Staying
This radical movement is spear-headed by a
new generation of aging tigers who vow never
to grow old. If pumping iron can't do it,
rhey're not adverse to tying up any loose ends
with a little stitchery. Looking young is not
only vital for a prolonged career, they argue,
but essential for a hip image. Nothing ruins a
power rie like a waterfall of cascading chins.
When your hips are too fa t to wedge into the
bucket seat of a Ferrari sports car, your days
as a swinger are kaput.
correct eye makeup would provide a man with
a deep, soulful facade -while his thoughts
drifted off to who was going to win the
National Pennant.
young is a daily battle, Henry." she adds
firmly.
There's a long pause, and the voice from the
adjacent slant board mumbles, "Hon, we're
going to have to let ourselves age for a few
months because I haven't paid off your breast
enlargements or fanny tuck yet -as well as
my hair implants, nose job, and pectoral
Another dimension of the facial revolution is
rhe proliferation of men's rejuvenating gels
One day His and Hers face lifts, cosmetics
and hair tints will be as common as His and
Hers coffee mugs. Couples will charge their
face lifts and liposuctions on their gold
American Express cards. It's easy to envision a
typical well-preserved man and wife in their
sixties in their 21st century apartment
complete with gym, jacuzzi, sauna --and a
and lotions to plump up wrinkles. Male
cosmetics arc also stirring up a storm. Don't
groan. Guys have been painting their faces for
transplants." •
Nancy Mclatfre Is a resldtat of Laguna
Niguel.
Senior urestytes
CRAFf FAIR -The Fourth
annual Craft Fair at OASIS is in
the planning stages. The date has
been set for Oct. 26 from 9 to 2
p.m. All potential vendors should
now apply for space. The fee will
be $25 a table for OASIS
members and $30 a table for non-
members. Applications can be
picked up at the office at 800
Marguerire Sr. 1n Corona del Mar
and should be turned in by Ocr.
I I. For more information,
telephone Vicki at 644-3244.
•
LUNCH AND FELLOWSHIP -
The TLC Program at Rea
Community Center invites over-60
Service clubs
seniors to come and have lunch at
the center.
The suggested donation is $1.50
and 1he noon meal also offers
si ng-longl>. music, games and
fellowship every Monday rhrough
Friday al the center at 661
Hamilton in Costa Mesa. For more
informarion. telephone Clara at
631-8170. • WANNA DANCE? -Two six-
p a rt n o n ·C r e d i t e x e r c i s e
workshops, including on dance
class. will be offered thi fall by
Orange Coasr College 's
Community Service Office.
The clas'e~. de~igned especially
fpr seniors, wilT be taught by
Kathleen M. Yoakum, director of
Healing Arts, a health and
wellness company. She holds a
master's degree in dance and
thea ter arts, and teaches
therapeutic massage.
"Slow Stretch" is designed for
the beginning exerciser or anyone
who wants a relaxing form or
stretching and light to moderate
re.,istance exe rcise.
"Fun Dance" combines free
::.tylc dance with low impact
aerobics.
Both series will be held on
Fridays from Sepl. 27 through
NOY. aL OCCs Dance Foyer.
Slow Stretch is slated for 3 to 4
p.m. and "Dance Fun" is set from
4 to 5 p.m. Registration fee for
each series is $29.
Registration is underway now in
OCC's Community Service Office,
located in the college's Student
Center Building. The office is
open Monday througt\ Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from
8 a.m. to noon.
Participants may register by
phone, using Visa or Mast6feard.
For more information telephone
432-5880. \ If you have an Item of lattrest
for Stnior Uftstyles, mall tbtm to
Tbt Pilot, Seniors Page, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mtsa, CA 91627.
Club gives $15,000 for child abuse prevention
The Exchange Club of Newport
Harbor presented a check for
$15,000 10 Lois Wood and Bill
Culbcrtc;on for the Exchange Club
Child Abuse Prevention Center
with money garnered from the
club's Movie Premiere fundraiser
in August.
Newly installed president
Warren Fox said the event raised
Sl7.000. bur the club decided to go
ahead and present the $15,000
already collected at this juncture
''HEAD
TURNING''
•L.A. Times, 8/31/91
"Trend House is o heod tvrning ex~
cJ .....hot con be done With 11 di in the
hands ol some cJ the oreo'i. best known
1nlenor des.gien "
Pc:itndt MOfl
Sii IT NOWI
at its weekly meeting Thursday at
Charley Brown's in Newport
Beach.
The Movie Premier event
presented "Point Break" featuring
Patrick Swayze in a one-evening
event. Eight area restaurants
donated food and personnel and
20th Century Fox donated the
movie and 600 official movie T·
shirts for the guests who paid for
the evening's festivities.
Chairman Oill Darrington
directed numerous volunteers to
orchestrate rhc event, which had
over 500 in attendance. Newport
Beach's John Crean was the
honorary chairman.
0
The Exchange Club will attempt
to take its third straight "Y
Olympics" title this Thursday night
Lois Woods Cleft) and Bill Culbertson (right) of Child Abuse
Prevention Center accept a $15,000 donation from Exchange Club's
Bill Barrington (background) and President W.C. Fox.
at the Newport-Costa Mesa Family Beach will have Jon Ferguson of a renowned singer and dancer who
YMCA, 2300 University Dr., from the Newport Beach/Costa Mesa resides in Newport Beach.
4:30-9 p.m. Pilot speaking on Newspapers O
All service clubs in Newport Changing Trends as part of The Costa Mesa Downtown
-;;;;;m;;;m._._iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 TREND HOUSE '91 AT
Beach will be vying at horseshoes, National Newspaper Week at its Kiwanis Clu b will sponsor its
swimming, ping pong and other weekly meeting Oct. 1 at noon at annual high school cross country
events with all proceeds going to Charley Brown's (formerly Reuben invitational at TeWinkle Park Oct.
the YMCA. The cost is $15 per E. Lee). National Newspaper 5. The meet, hosted by Costa NO MORE
FLEAS
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DlllON aNna IOUTM
l • 1 • I II '
2 J31 I Al110 (rceL llood ~11<' 1 ~I
logvno Nogvel CA 92677
person. For information, call Week is Oct. 1-7. Lunch is $10 for Mesa High School, features 30
Diane Berry, YMCA Physical non-members. schools. 4 Director, at 642-9990. Harry Babbitt describes "Singing The Kiwanis Club ·provides the
0 Your Way Through Life" at manpower to administer the meet
Tel '!1 i 6.otJ 2929
iijiijiTih~eiiKii·jiwijaimi· siiCiluibiiiiiiiiiiiiitiodjayl'iis irlegu.lairiimiceitiiniiBiaibibiitit iisil and provides trophies. Money gained from each school's entry
fee goes to the Costa Mesa High
athletic program.
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IN ..
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s29~~ 1s50oFF 20o/o OFF ........... J: .. llJ:t:..----I.I· I ~an.,
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0
The Newport Harbor E lks
Lodge No. 1767 meets Thursday's
at 8 p.m. at its lodge at 3456 Via
Oporto in Lido Marina Village,
Newport Beach . For m ore
information. call the Lodge Office
at 673-6110.
&rvltt clubs In Nrwport Budl
and Costa Mtu with club newi to
rtport on ntw omttn, m~1Jq1 OI'
club fundralslnt projtd6 1boald
mall pre11 rc/Hltl to Jon
Ftrguson, Voluntttrs Editor,
Newport lkacb/Colq Mtn n1ot,
JJ0 W. Bay St., Co.t .. Meu, CA
9U21.
Pllol "'"' photo
These two teammates take time to recuperate and relax after competing in a strenuous cycling race.
·1ake some R-and-R
Remember, recuperation
is part of your workout
T his time of year can be particularly stressful for
many of us. It always seems that September
a~d October arc very busy months especially
for those Of us who· teach, go to school or have
children in sc hool. It is importarit to
take care of ourselves and when we
start to feel over-stressed to do
those things that will help us to
relax.
Leon
Skete
Exercise is a great way to actively
deal with minor anxiety. And not all
stress is bad. Sometimes being
mildly stres:.cd is what keeps us
progrcs!ling toward our goals, but
we each know when we arc reaching
our limits and we recognize those
unmistakable stress signals that tell
us it is time to rest and recuperate. Personal
Fitness Rest and recuperation play a key
role in the progress you will make
in any fitness program. It is
important that you understand the benefits of giving
your muscles regular periods of recuperation.
After vigorous weight-trai ning exercise, the mu scle
cells must have rest time and nourishment to afford
the fullest possible recuperation. This is why we do
not suggest working the same muscles two days in a
row. If you continually rework your muscles before
they have properly recovered from the previous
workout, then you will never make any noticeable
progress.
One observation about recuperation is that the
body is constantly learning how to do it better. The
longer you train the better you become.
An exhausted "morning after" feeling is not always
accompanied by sore or aching muscles. Mildly sore
muscles-usually indicate that the body is
recuperating, and that the healing process is taking
place. However, the old phrase, "no pain, no gain,"
is certainly false and if the soreness Is ext reme, you
have overdone it , and recuperation time will take
longer.
There is a fine line between stimulating your
muscles to change and overtraining whereby your
muscles don't have time to recuperate.
The answer to how we can speed op recuperation
is, of course, relaxation. When you rest, the body is
in an ideal state to mend itself quickly. You should
seek out the best ways to relax between your
workouts. Try to put your legs up at least once a day
and read a book, or watch television. There are
numerous hobbies that can help you relax. Do
whatever appeals to you most. Of course, you don't
actually have to do anything.
Excess stress is not beneficial to the body's
recuperation system . It drains you, and in extreme
cases can shut off adrenal gland production. If you've
ever experienced severe stress or strain, you do not
need to be told how debilitating it can be. When
there is a threat to our existence or well-being, our
digestive system shut!> down, the heart and breathing
rhythms falter, and adrenal ine and other hormones
surge throughout the body. Momentarily we are et a
peak for some type of phyliic~1l action (fight or flight),
but ultimately "'e become dcOated and exhausted. If
this happens regularly, then your training progress
will si mply not amount to much .
Fresh air and sunshine do contrihutc to your
body's recuperation abili ty. We hear so much about
the sun cau~ing skin cancer. but there would not be
one sped. of life on the Earth if it "cren't for the
sun. A prolonged lack of sunlight can cau'e rickcts
and contribute to othcr physical disorder~. In
moderation, fresh air and sunshine will help your
recuperation 100 percent.
Remember consistency in training is the key to
proper fit ness training. You should follow a regular
schedule. You don't want to become overly tired and
you need to allow yourself time to relax and
recuperate between workouts. This is the only sure
way that progress will be made.
Leon Slceie is professor of physical ooucat.ion at
Orange Coast College and owner of Leon Skeie's
Health Club for Women in Newport Beacb and
California Coast Club Sports Fitness Center in
lnlne.
The promises of angioplasty broken?
A ngioplasty, a therapy that
uses a balloon to open up
blocked arteries in both the
legs and the heart, has
Jlllln ......
Health
Update
experienced
explosive growth
over the last
decade. The
baJloon
angioplasty was
supposed to be
safe, less
expensive, and
more effective
than major
surgery 10 the
heart and legs,
and at the
beginning of the
last decade, it
was predicted to
reduce the need for these
surgeries and save hundreds of
millions of dollars.
Well folks, that did not happen!
In 1983, writing in The New
England Journal of Medicine, Dr.
Eugene Braunwald, chief of
cardiology at Harvard predi'tted
that the frequency of heart bypass
surgery would DECLINE because
of: 1, greater effectiveness of non
surgical techniques INCLUDING
the balloon angioplasty; 2, the
realization that the bypass
operation for heart disease did not
save lives; 3, increasing efforts to
cut cost, especially for procedures
like bypass surgery that have been
shown to be ineffective for the
majority who receive theJ11; and 4,
the decline in the incidence of
heart disease.
That year, ABOUT 180,000
bypass operations were performed
and only a handful of
angioplasties.
Las t year over 400,000 bypa!IS
operations were performed and
use of balloon angioplasty
exploded to over 300,000
procedures. Over the last five
yea rs, the growth of BOTH
procedures has accelerated, wi th
no end in sight.
In the New England Journal of
Medicine, 1984, Dr. P. Doubilat
predicted that more widespread
use of the balloon angioplasty for
blocked arteries in th e legs would
REDUCE the need for major
surgery in the legs, prevent over
5,000 amputations, and save $82
million a year.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins
recently checked up on this
prediction. They found that in the
state of Maryland, the use of
angioplasty had increased by 2,400
percent , but use of major vascular
surgery that was supposed to GO
DOWN, HAD DOUBLED. Both
procedures are still rapidly
expanding.
The monies spent for the
increase in these procedures
jumpcJ fnim S 14 million to S.30
million a ~car, ye t O\er that timi:
period, 1hc amputation ralc
ST A YEO THE SAMI::..
Men and women trust their
phyi.ic1ans to do what is best for
them, not the profession. Yet they
arc perpetually funneled into
therapies that have been
dic;provcn, and kill 1 out of .17
(heart bypass surgery) dt"l out of
50 (heart balloon angioplasty), and
inflict injury on everyone. These
therapies, though often debilitating
and useless for the patient, are
some of the most lucrative
procedures ever devised by the
medical profession. Only two
procedures, heart bypass surgery
and balloon angioplasty are a line
item for the American public of 26
billion, or about $71 MILLION
PER DAY. With this kind of
financia l force, are you going to sit
back and assume that the
physician at the receivi ng end of
this windfall is NOT BIAS. In
addition, these two procedures
ARE FATAL FOR ABOUT
29,000.
Julian Whllllker, M.D. o~ratcs
Wlllt.lin-Wellness Institute la
Newport Buch.
FREEDOM PROM PAIN
• ChJropnsctfc •a • Thuapeutlc Massa~ •6
• Physical Therapy •4
954 85~6 Leave rwn• & phone no. • ·I for your mum call
fl,
Tuesday, September 24. 1991 A7
Empathetic people walk many
miles in the shoes of others
M illions of people have
read books and taken
courses about how to
win friends, influence people,
DP. 1.11111
Alpzl
Family
Counseling
close a business
deal, or be a
great lover.
The object,
in a ll instances,
is the pursuit
of being a
better "people
person.'
"People
persons" are
those who
instinctively
understand the
concept of
empathy. No
one has to tell
these people wh<) the>.' are.
When asked to describe
themselves, they'll often use the
term itself as in, '1l'm a people
person."
These folks usually make
terrific lovers. If you ask those
who have known one, they'll tell
you that their lover's incredible
skill starlS with his or her ability
to understand and then 10 reach
out and embrace the needs of a
partner.
They abo make good friends,
doctors., nu r!>es and human
resource i.pecialiMs. Often in
hul>ine!>,, their management style
''held in high esteem. In a very
positive sense, "people persons ..
arc plca-.1ng kinds of people.
Evcrvonc 'ccms to like lo have
them around.
And ii -.ccm~. e\ en one wants
to become 11nc. or at·lc.1,t a
little hit more like one
An article in the New York
Times, written in 1988, stre~ed
the idea lhat empathy; like most
other skills, must be learned.
The fact that it can be learned
sounds like good news.
"To empathize with someone
is to understand what he is
feeling or, more properly, to
understand what you would feel
if you were in his situation.
"Children who are empathetic
lend to do better in school, in
social situations and in their
adult careers. The best teachers
of that skill, researchers in child
development say, are parents ...
Children lea rn about how
other people feel through
experience.
How their parents react when
their own child is cranky, upset
or frightened has more impact
than anything they could say.
Children learn empathy by
exa mple. Suppose, for example.
your pre-schooler points to a
handica'pped child and makes a
disparaging rem<1rk. If you
emba rrass your child by
reprimanding him publicly, you
will be doing more harm than
good. Instead, correct him
privately and ask him lo think
about a time when l>Omeone ~aid
'iomething which had made him
feel bad. This is appropriate
even if he's not yet old enough
to really understand.
Psychologists say th at a child
at age five is old enough to
discuss hypothetical problems
such as "How would vou feel if
someone took ""ay your to)?
How would your friend feel if
you took away his toy?''
The article discusses how the
development of empathy is
different for boys than for girls.
"In general, girls develop a
sense of empathy earlier, and
develop more of it 1han boys do.
There'!> a very high correlation
between a mother's empathy
and a daughter's empathy.
I he author sayl> that boys who
develop the highest level of
empathy have a combination of
empathic parent!> and a large
amount of !.trcs<; at home.
One empathic middle-aged
male .. people-person" agrees.
''My parents were empathic all
right -and they were divorced
when I was still a young child.
The onLy thing we had more of
than empathy, in either of my
homes, was stress."
"It seemed like the troubles
they had with each other
continue 10 dominate their
"hole 11\CS and mine -even
long after the) were no longer
married."
Painful memoricc; fo r him he
1mil>t\. But nonetheless, there
'>Ccm., to have been a payoff.
He has learned the empathic
skill'> <1'-'>0C1a1ed with
problem-solving.
Today. with a full adult
undcr!>landing that i.omeone
ebc's feeling may no1 be the
~ame a'> his own, he is free to be
gcnerou., and more lo' ing than
rnn'il men
.. fhanks. Mom ," he laughed a
bit ')arcal.t1callv.
Dr. Linda Algazi is a mental
health counselor with Algazi
family Counseling in Corona
de/ Mar.
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You can also get our "No Points''
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So come into any Bof A branch. )
Or call 1-800-Tiffi..BofA, Ext 62V
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m
... of Amerlcll
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•
MT~. ~ber 24, 1991
------------------------- ----------- ----------------
.Society
Lawyer doubles as
Red · Riding Hood
R EALLY, PHYLLIS, WE'VE GOTIA STOP EATING UKE
THIS -One of Sunday's get-well-wishers was Atty. Phyllis
L. Grttn. who said she couldn't talk long because she was
helping to jmlge that day's food festival, A Taste of Newport.
Thi' produced a rough male version of a wistful sigh.
"11lea-;c, could you bring me some samples?" I pleaded,
!>ali vat1ng tongue-in-cheek. ''I'm so tired of my own cooking I
rn11 kl throw-up."
End of whimper, right ? Not right.
In late aft ernoon she called again. She wanted directions to the
Kolmn compound . Like Little Red Riding Hood, she was
fe tching a basket of goodies - compliments of
th e Villa Nova's Gretchen and Jim Dale, and
Local
Scene
th e Newport Rib Company's owner Frank
Ursini and son John, who'd been manning the
booths.
No way, said I. Couldn't possibly accept.
' Besides, it would've been a 70-mile round trip.
So we compromised, meeting midway at the
main entrance of South Coast Medical Center.
She brought the food (Louisiana hot sausage
and baby back ribs from the Ursinis, exotic
spiced chicken with a pasta of penne frcm the
Dales). I brought the wine, Taittinger
champagne. And I was fantasizing about this
rom:1nt1c rendezvou!> with an attractive blonde,
wh ose delivery van was a Mercedes, when phe
------reminded me that the still-warm v+Hle~s "!!Ye for
the fom11\
8 111. ;ih. 11 wa' a love ly tryst, and the emergency rations were
\lmpl) \Crumpturn' In Kitty's words, "With warm and caring
fnenc.h like thc..,e, who needs Medicare?"
0
Ql"ICK, SOM£UODY, CALL MY BOOKIE -From West
Palm Beach, H a., sce ne of the Over-70 Slo-Pitch softball
champion,hip-.. comes a hot tip from good ol' Charlie Brown,
Co ron a dcl Mar\ ge riatric marvel.
-------
S«iety Eclltor vw. Deu ... 642 ... 321, ei&L 154
Paul Faus pauses for a moment with Denise Uncapher. Anna Taddei chats with Max Hoskins, event chairman.
111!1 team, the San Juan Capistrano Angels, is opening it s title
dcfcn~e today again\t the Warren Bankers of Michigan.
··You ca n hc t the fa rm on us," the 73-year-old slugger cackled.
"As you know, th is has been a lousy year for bankers."
D
Fantasy trips, lifestyle on auction block
THAT'LL HAPPEN WHEN AN EDITOR STRIKES AN IRV -
When I wrote the othe r day about County Supervisor Harriett
'N one of the kids
showed up. They all
sent th eir parents. 1
Wicdcr's impenl!ing annexati on
of Costa Mesa, I typed that <.he
wouldn't be designating part of
the city, a!> the Irvi ng Ranch.
It was an attempt at humor.
~cc? ln·ing is her husband's
nJmc. <>cc?
-JACK KING But 11 emerged in print a!>
truant officer the Irvine Ranch, thereby
------------causing so me wonderm ent over
.11 < 11r.11 Big Corporate Headquartt>rc; 1n Bre nsvijle. For which I
l·:tn 11nh otlcr many mum bles
D
WHO ARE ALL THESE OLD PEOPLE? -Jack King of
Balh11a Cn'c I!> a retired truant officer with Newport Harbor
ll1gh Sd1onl, where he was kn own as '"Bring-'Em-Back Jack."
·1 he other day he attended the 50th anniversary reunion of his
ch"' ;1t ,·\lh.in1hra I ligh School. It was a disappointment. "Non~
nt the J..1d-. ..,,,o.,.,cu up," he lamented. "They all sent th eir
pa rent'··
D
CATClll\G l 11' WITll CORRESPONDENCE -There arc
-.nm<: lunn) reoplc out there, as witness:
Benefit nets $40, 000
for Cystic Fibrosis
T he evening was rich with
possibi lit1e!> ... Extraordinary!
For a fc" hours Friday
night at Newport Beach Marriott,
everybody had the chance to share
the fantasy and make a bid on a
h11 of a life style like the rich and
famous.
The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
o f S o uthern
California was
out for fun and
pr o fit a t
Champagne
Wi s he s and
Getaway Dreams.
Sponsored in part
by The Pilot and
Newport Beach
Ma rrio tt, th e
depends. I have a friend who says
he'll go five."
The friend was Ed Postal (there
with Bonnie MacMillan, looking
sleek in a black cat suit studded
with gold.) Postal had just
returned from Thailand and had
put together some of his own
interesting auction packages for
the evening. "I may make an
offer" he said, "depends on what
else I end up with!'"
• I rom \-ick R. Knight: "Please advise our mutual friend!> in
l'il<1tl.mc.J. hnth of them, that I've entered th e political arena. I'm
..,cding clcct1on a<., a tru~tce of the Lake Elsinore Unified School
Dl\tmt. An) vote' you can get me from Newport Beach and
Clrol
Dee Jami evening netted
m o r e th a n
$40.000. The ( $50
per ticket) trave l
and
Attending the Cystic Fibrosis benefit were, from left, Kelly Johnson,
Mary Ann Marks and Emma Jane and Tom Riley.
The action really got going when
local DJ Shawn Parr took to the
stage to host the live auction .
Attorney Mary Fingal must have
let down her defense. Early in the
evening she stated her case, "I'm
looking for an adventure travel
package." But, in summation.
maybe she won her point. She
wound up with the winning bid on
a dinner guaranteed to light a few
fires - cooked by the firefighters
at Newport Beach Fire Station!
The trip to Hayman? Maybe it
was fate. Kathie Dunn made the
successful bid, seems she needed a
place to go on a honeymoon! C mta Mc"' \vould be much appreciated." Society
(Sure. and 1 hen you 'II forget us right after Election Day.) e n te rta inme nt
auction d rc\\ a cro"tl of 250
people and they were ready to roll. • horn Gloria Zigner: "On October 26, there will be a
I lallo.,.,een P ... ych1c Fair staged at Fashion Island. Can you Join us
thcre·1•• The evening began with a silent
auction, cockt ails a nd hors
d'oeuvre!.. Everybody was afte r
~omethi ng good.
(Can 1 Jotn you there? Good grief, Gloria, don't ask me; ask
I he: r'-YChiC\ )
..
Committee me mb e r Dawn
1ta Mua FaciliJiu for M"""8 reception.I
Chrlstma.1 Pattla-bwine.u m«~
can accomodate up to 250
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Venetian Gondola Getaway 1 ryfn I. <Aurmt'I 8,nlcrts l. ~ c. • Champagne ._ A!.'
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variety of color nks
760-8097
Burges was drawn to th e group in-
itially because of a childhood
friendship. Now she was delighted
with the people she had met.
What was she going to bid on?
"'I'm looking for something local
-like a weekend trip to La Jolla
or San Diego."
CF Chapter President Paul
r···········-···1 • Your ad can •
: be seen here £
: Call Candy J : at 642-4321
German Home Bakery
Weddlnc Cakes "The Old·
Fashion Way" 2950 Crace Ln.
C.M Call for Info 540-0281
• ext. 31Q , '······~·· ... ••·•Y
•
Montenko needed a getaway too.
Seems the Cal/Nev chapter's been
busy. They expect by the end of
the year to have raised more than
$1 million for CF. Said Montenko,
"We don't mess around."
Chairman Max Hoskins wanted
the big trip to Hayman Island. "I
might go six, (thousand) it
Some of those attending were
the Pilot's Karen and Jim
Gressinger, Martin Garrett, Susan
Jeske, Martin Meridith, Kelly
Johnson, Anna Taddei, Tom and
Emma Jane Riley, Phil Sansone
and Alejandra Aguilar.
Buckley concert, backstage
tour part of theater gala
Irvine Barclay Theatre will host
its annual Trustees Gala on Oct.
12, a date that also markc; the first
anniversary of its opening.
Titled "Backstage Revelry," the
black-tie-optional event will begin
with a champagne reception in the
theater's plaza at 7 p.m., followed
by a performante by Tony Award
winner Betty Buckley. In a reversal
of tradition, when the performance
ends the curtain goes up to beckon
the audience on stage for an
evening of revelry in a dramatic
setting.
Tickets are $150 per person With
proceeds benefiting the theater's
1991-92 season.
"The Trustees Gala is priced to
encourage as much community
participation as possible," said
Rudy Pollak, senior director of
services at Taco Bell Corporation.
"Our goal is to net $50,000 to
support our scoond season."
Donna Brownell, chairman of
the theater's annual giving
program and who chaired last
year's Tru tees Gala, said the
event "offers a great opportunity
to celebrate the 1ucce of the past
season and took forward to the
new year.
"We arc very arutious to have
Betty BuckJcy perform, and arc
deli&hted that we could gather all
of the theater's 1upporteu
together for this celebration,"
Brownell said.
A veteran of the Broadway
stage, television and film, Buckley
won a Tony Award for her
portrayal of Grizabella, the
Glamour cat, in Andrew Uoyd
Webber's "Cats," in which she
made famous the song "Memory."
She also has appeared on
Broadway in Webber's "Song &
Dance" and the musical "Carrie,"
for which she was nominated as
Best Actress in a Musical by the
Outer Critics' Circle. Her film
credits include "Carrie," "Tender
Mercies" and "Another Woman."
She is perhaps best known to
television viewers as Abby
Bradford in the series, "Ei~t is
Enough." Buckley recently
completed two eP,isodes as guest
star in "L.A. Law' and currently is
working on a stage production of
"A Little Night Music" in Texas.
Reservations for the Trustees
Gala arc being accepted. For
further information call 854-4607.
Irvine Barclay Theatre and its
756-scat Cheng Hall, which
opened in September 1990, i a
partnership project among the City
o( Irvine, University of California,
Irvine and the Irvine Barclay
Theatre Operating Company,
representing s upport h om
Individuals and buslneu
throuahout Oranae County. The
facility is dcslgned to
accommodate a complete variety
• of arts and entertainment, as well
H multi·culturul and conrercncc
activitic
'f
Henry Segerstom, left, talb with Ralph Destino of Cartier and Janice Johnson . •
•-rkllng grand opening
C artier moved up~tairs with
an upscale party the likes of
which arc seldom seen these
daY$. The Saturday evening gala at
South Coast Plaza featured
Cartier, caviar, champagne and a
Jot of Cl.ASS.
Jewel Court was transformed
into a sophisticated party setting
by custom fitted off-white .
------carpeting with white draperies
hanging from the
ceiling. Satin
covered chairs at
small tables
centered with red
roses in gold
lame vases ringed
~--,;,,;;;,-4-..:..J the room, and
the posh party
area was further
enhanced with
gold lame buffets
CEO Simon Critchell of New
York. "The collection will remain
hef"e for three weeks, and the
public is welcome to come and see
it... free." •
Society (holding enough
food for 800 from
caterer Along
Q&me Mary) and the music of
Ke"lth Edwards.
Chairman Ralph Destino, also
from New York for the party,
noted that Cartier had been in
South Coast Plaza since 1979.
"The original store was a boutique
with-lower priced items. This is
our first full line store in the
plaza.
Steven Wise escorts Barbara Mason into the Cartier s howroom.
The center gem of attraction
featured six dancing panthers -
sleek females in skin-tight black
attire with white feline masks -
wearing $15 million worth of
sparkling jewels.
Guests arriving between 7 and
10 p.m. were greeted by
red-uniformed pages who directed
them to the I ,900 square-foot •
store designed in the style of the
Parisian mother company with
green marble, polished mahogany,
brass and lacquered cases. (The
most expensive item in the store
cases is a $2.5 million 75 carat
canary diamond, and the least
expensive is a $25 container of
men's after shave.)
The office of manager Juliane
Higgitt has been temporarily set
up as a museum for a rare jewel
collection. "The collection is 60
pieces of unique items designed in
the art deco years of 1915 to
1940." said Cartier president and
"We had this party for three
reasons," said Destino. "We want
people to see the new store, see
the rare objects and to make it
obYious that we wilrbe active in
the community's civic and charity
events." (Sandpipers are there ·
today and will get a donation for
Hoag.)
Party people were presented
exquisite bottles of parf um de
toilette as they left. Seen were
Martha (new hairdo) and Mal
Green, designer Gigi, Renee and
Henry Segerstrom, Anton
Segerstrom, Andrea and David
Grant, Bubara Aune, JoAnn
Kenton, Barbara and Asa Mason,
Mary Lou and Scott Hornsby,
Karen and Vidor Hardin, Billur
Wallerich, Catherine Thyen,
Janice and Roger Johnson,
Madeline Blackwetl, Al and Lucille
Adams and Betty Moss.
0
ReddY to perform at l~rum
focusing on business women
Helen Reddy will perform Oct.
10 at the Radisson Hotel in
Newport Beach, appearing as a
celebrity guest at the Prominent
Women's Forum, an annual event
of Women in Business Orange
County.
The topic of this year's forum
will be "Women in Politics ...
Making a Difference." Featured
speakers will be Barbara Boxer,
U.S . congresswoman now
campaigning for a seat in • the
Senate, and Tricia Hunter,
California assemblywoman.
Reddy Is an internationally
renowned singer, songwriter and
recording artist who has
pcrfonncd on six continents in
such places as Carnegie Hall and
Uncoln Center in New York,
Royal Albert Hall and Palladium
in London and Opera House in
Sydney, Australia. Her television
specials have been seen in more
than 40 countries.
A longtime environmental
activist, Reddy served for three
years as a commissioner of parks
and recreation for lhc state of
California. She recently formed
her own record company so she
could release her new album,
"Feel So Young," in
e nvironmen tally sensitive
pacbgin3 (90 percent less plastic
and 70 percent lcs paper).
Conaresswoman Boxer has had
a high profile in the Southland
recently with her agareasive
l)\)litical campaian. Her primal)'
politi cal co n ce rn s are
environmental protection, frecdofl\
of choice, human rights, arms
con trot, budget priorities and
military procurement refonn.
Hunter, representing portions of
San Diego and Riverside counties,
was named of one the 90 people
to watch in the 1990s by a San
Diego magazine. She was elected
to fill the vacancy in the 76th
di strict after the death of Bill
Bradley.
Acting as master of ceremonies
for the evening will be former
assistant to the president, Midge
Costanza. Costanza is now a
partner in Martin and Costanza
Communication, professional
speakers and trainers.
Early registration is encouraged
as seatin& is limited. Tickets arc
$45 and include dinner, wine and
the program. For m o re
infonnation or to register call 731-
1077.
Martha Green admires jewels
Ofl the Cartier panthers.
MORE SOCIALIZING: Some
people left Cartier and headed
straight for Big Canyon where
Olivia Chami wa~ hosting the first
big party in her brand new home.
Open house for 125 friends was
done up Carihbean '\tyle with a
limbo dancer, fire eater and steel
drum band.
Chama and co-ho t Rob Sala
welcomed guests including Ben
and Barbara Harris, Lon and Mary
Ann Wells, Virginia and Paul
Bender, the Greens, the Masons,
Margaret Richardson, Jolene and
Dick Engel, Tajah and Jim
Slcmons. Adrienne and George
Brennan, Ann and Wolf Stern and
neighbors the Paul Muscos.
Delegation from
Newport's sister
ctty bellilS v1sn
NtWPORT BEACH A
group of delegates from Okazaki,
Japan. one of Newport Beach's
sister cities, arrived on Monday for
their annual visit.
The group visited the City
Council meeting and will be guests
this evening at a cocktail reception
hosted by the Newport Beach
Sister City Associat ion a t
Barbacoa re<;taurant, 3333 W.
Coast Highway. The public is
invited to the reception, which
begins at 5:30 p.m.
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A10 Tu.day, ~ ~. 1811
Ross brings
style(. p~azz .
to conce s
By Joyce Bodlovlch
Stllf~
For nearly four decades,
audiences have been captivated by
1he legendary talents of songstress
Diana Ross. Now Orange County
concertgoers will bask in that
magic of her musical stylings when
"Diana Roi.!>: Live, Here and
Now" explodes 8 p.m. Friday at
Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre.
Ross's na11onal tour has been
.,parked by the ummer release of
her 58th album, "The Force
Behind the Power." The new
sen<;ual song!> will be blended wilh
Ross' classic music that has
spirnned her eclectic career.
Historica lly, Ross has filled each
concert with glamour, sensuality
and audience contact. f'riday's
performance i.hould prow to be
just a!> daZJ.ltng.
'I wantid to do an
album of ~ aonas
with ~wemJI IWics .
that have a -certain
vltalltv in which I
coulcf voice the
strength of my
convictions.' ---~
Along the way she was nominated
for an Academy A.ward for "Lady
Sings the Blues" and starred in
"Mahogany" and "The Wiz."
SCH
By Tom Tilus
,,.. Them Olk
I r ;
S outh Coast Repertory hu
been the launching pad for
any number of superior
original plays over the years, so it
comes as no surprise that we are
experiencing yet another thought·
provoking, emotionally challenging
world premiere on the Costa Mesa
theater's Second Stage.
Dona ld Marguiles' "Sight
Unseen" focuses on Jonathan
Waxman, a renowned young artist
!>'triving both to deal with his
newfound fame and to recapture
the early fervor which ignited his
talent in the first place. The latter
requires a touching of bases with
the model who provided both
pr ofessional and personal
inspiration.
"I wanted to do an album of
great ~ongs with powerful lyric~
that have a certain vitality in which
I could \01ce the '>trength of my
com 1ctiom, .. :.aid the 47-ycar-old
Ross. 'The kind of song that you
can JUSt listen 10 o"er and over
because you relate to it a:. bt:ing
about something m your life."
And wit h that same intensity,
Ross has orchestrated a personal
life which consist of second
husband, Norwegian millionaire
husband Ame Naess, and fi ve
children ranging in ages from 2 10
19. Her new album seems to
renect her four-year marriage to
Naess
Complicating this mission is
Waxman's Jewish heritage, which
forced him to push his non-Jewish
lover out of his life 15 years
earlier. Marguiles threads his story
beautifu lly through intermittent
flashbacks which explain the
artist's cu rrent behavior, and
director Michael Bloom builds and
sustains the emotional climate with
a subtly skilled hand.
Capping this compe lling
Stephen Rowe, bndy Oglesby and Elizabeth Norment, from left, star in the world premiere of "Sight
Unseen" on South Coast Repertorys Second Stage.
The title song behind the new
album was written and produced
by Ross' longtime friend Stevie
Wonder.
"I was so thrilled that in the
midst of Stevie'!. work on a
soundtrack and h1i. own album, he
called 10 tell me abou~ this song,"
Ross said. "He said, 'I have an
idea for you and I want you to
have it cause I love vou.· "
Ross fir'it hit the Motown rnu.,ic
scene in 1961 as lead i.mger of the
Supremes. The trio, which
included Mary Wi h.on and
Florence Oallard. had 14 hit
record,. In 1970, Ro<,s went 'lOlo
weaving through a path of nurnt"ier
one hi1' and \\nrld'' 1dc concerh.
"I guess if there's a theme to
this whole album," Ross said, "it's
about all possible levels of
relationship between two people.
That would be from the almost
spiritual magic of deep love,
through the negotiation of
changing feelings to the
desperation of love totally
abandoned."
Tickets for Friday's concert
range from S25 to $I 00. For
information or order by phone call
740-2000
• exp e r i e.n c e i s a b-r i II i a n t
interpretation by Stephen Rowe,
who paints his complex character
gradually and meticulously. Rowe
feigns modest, self-effacing charm
in his visit to his onetime lover
and her husband in a starkly
empty English farmhouse, ·then
explodes in a venomous interview
with a German TV reporter in two
sharply drawn scenes which more
accurately depict his egocentric
personality and repressed anger.
Eli£abeth Norment performs
beautifully both as the young,
impressionable model and the
weary farm wife she becomes.
Norment, in the present-day
!lcenes. functions superbly as the
cs)encc of realism which has
become alien to Jonathan in his
pursuit of success. With just a
swift alteration•-0f hair styles, she
transforms herself to the
passionate young mode~ and just
as swiftly returns to the bare-bones
present where ro ma nce is
conspicuous only hy its absence.
Randy Oglesby is ou tstanding as
Norment's archeologist husband, a
painfully shy Briton who fuels
himself with enough liquid courage
. to challenge Jonathan':. artistic
perceptions. Sabina Weber strikes
some splendid emotional sparks as
the German newswoman who
peels away the artist's facade and,
perhaps. p r ecipilates his
del>truct1on in a taped interview.
Center adds free preViews to chamber series ---.. -
Pa1rom of the Cen lcr-., .. Mu.,ic in i·ounder<;
Hall" '>ertC.!I \\Ill be olfercd an extra perk thi!:>
year -free concert previews by noted music
critic Hcrhcrt Glas' llcld 1n lhe Center's 300-
l!Cal f·ou ndcrs Hall. the programs will provide
a relaxing. 1nforma11ve introduction to each of
1he scu~on \ four chamber music performances.
l'he first preview will he held at 7 p.m. on
Wcdne .. day, Oct 2, one hour before th e
Cavani String Quartet's performance.
With four 1ntcrna1ionally flavored string
quartet~ on the "Music in Founders Hall "
series roster. Glasll will highlight the history of
the string quartet and emphasize its role in
today\ music world, while offering intercsling
background on the artists and their musical
selectioni. He will al-.o take questions from 1he
audience
Glas\\ "On the Record" column and
concert review' have appeared in the Loi.
Angele<. Times -.ince 1972. His writing'> arc
also published in Performing Art~ magazine -
of "'hich he was editor-in-chief for 20 years -
Gramophone, Punch and other periodicals.
Glas11 hosts two popular Los Angeles radio
programs: "The Song Special," a long-running
W ith four internationally flavored
stri ng quartets on the "Music in
Founders Hall" series roster, Glass
will highlight the history of the
string quartet and emphasize its
role in today 's music world ...
favorite on KUSC-FM, and the annual "Herby
Awards," which have been broadcast for the
last six years on KUSC-FM, KFAC-FM and
KKGO-FM.
Gla~s 1s a charter member of the Classical
Grammys Nominating Committee. and was a
founder of the Lo~ Angeles Chamber
Orche'>tra. He al'o served as personal assistant
10 Sir Neville Marriner for the orchestra's first
<;even sea!.on ...
Praised for 11' versatility, the award-winning
Cavan1 String Quartet "succeeds like few
01hers in communicating the fun of music-
making, the sheer joy of balancing timbres and
weavi ng sound," wrote The Washington Post.
fhe ensemble has served as quartet-in-
residencc at the Cleveland Institute of Music
since 1988, where it offers a quartet
apprenticeship program, an an nual chamber
fest for adult amateurs, and an inner-city
school program.
The Cavani String Quartet's Founders Ha)l
program includes Haydn's "Quartet in Bb, Op.
76, No 4" ("Sunrise"); Dubussy's "Quartet in
G minor, Op. IO" and "Quartet No. 1 in C,
Op. 49" by Shostakovich.
Remaining previews for the "Music in
Founders Hall" series will be held at 3 p.m. on
Sunday, Nov. 3, for the Stamic Quartet from
Czechoslovakia; 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 11,
for Cuarteto Latinoamericano from Mexico;
and 3 p.m. on Sunday, March 8, for the
Endellion String Quartet from Great Britain.
All previews will be held in Founders Hall,
and are complimentary to ticketholders.
''Music in Founders H a ll " series
subscriptions arc on sale now for $72.
Individual tickets for the Cavani String Quartet
are $20 and are cu rrently on sale. To charge
tickets by phone call the Center at 556-ARTS,
ext.240.
Movie listings IDWAIOS ISLAND CINU.M fo1'-•"" l•lond N..,-1 C..-1er 64 0 12 t 8
I Oefenaeleu (R) I, 3 IS, 5 45, 8, 10 15
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Some home equity loans seem as if lhey couJd SM! }00 lots of
money. But unfonunately. there is a prK:e to pay. Because }00 could end
up plying thousands of OOllars m higher interest
But at Sanwa Bank CaJik>mia. rur home eqUJty loans ha~ no points
and no~ c~ Just a one-time set up ieeoi $300to~ex~
That way e c.an gM: )00 one of the b¥eSt interest rates m town. 'R> apply.
just caJl the tnnch I tSted beJo.v.
c..tL Sanvva Bank ~ Callfornla
4400 Mac Arth ur Blvd. 6881 Warner Avenue
Newport Beach. CA 92660 Huntington Beach, CA 92647
(11.f) 476-7000 (714) 842-7741
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Oiff Faulkner's multiple settings
are imaginatively designed, shifting
effortlessJy from one style and
time period to another. Tom
Ruzika's light and Ann Bruice's
costumes effectively set the mood,
while Michael Roth contributes
some engaging music and sound
effects reminiscent of last season's
"Search and Destroy."
"Sight Unseen" should be seen
and, perhaps, seen again. It stands
wi1h the earlier "Moonshadow" as
an emotionally mesmerizing and
thought-provoking drama unveiled
for the first time on the SCR
Second Stage.
Performances continue Tuesdays
through Fridays at 8:30, Saturdays
at 3 and 8:30, Sundays at 3 and 8
p.m. until Oct. 20 at South Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. Call 957-4033
for ticket information. • There's only one new arrival on
the local theater scene this
weekend -Te'Vlessee Williams'
"The Glass Menagerie" at the
Alternative Repertory Theater.
Sally Leonard, Ted Escobar,
Tracy Merrifield and Greg Izay
comprise the cast of Williams'
"memory play" from the 1940s.
Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m. and Sundays at 7 p.m. until •
Nov. 16 at ART, 1636 S. Grand
Ave., Santa Ana. Call 836-7929.
The award-winning Cavani String Quarte
Music in Founders Hall Series Oct. 2.
IDWAIDS aHIMA Horbot .8"-d/Adoms ""'-546
3102
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The swingingest way to get
to the third annual Santa
Barbara International Jazz
Festival is aboar-0 the 1990s
ve rsion of the Chattanooga
Choo Choo. Two "Blue Note"
express trains, each featuring
live jazz on board ate
scheduled -one from Orange
County and the other from Los
Angeles. Both will head for
sun and fun and will take fans
to enjoy a complete weekend
of jazz at the festival from Oct.
4 to 6.
The Oct. 4 "Blues in the
Night" train boogies out Friday
afternoon, from San Juan
Capistrano, Santa Ana and Los
Angeles, while the Oct. S
"Good Mornin' Baby" train
departs Saturday morning from
Los Angeles.
Santa Barbara International
Jazz Festival features more
t~an 20 hours of hot IOUnds,
headlined by such greats as Les
McCann, Poncho Sanchei, Cal
Tjadcr Band (Radcliffe) and
Zydeco Party Band.
The $93 price includes
round-trip trnnsponation, pest
artists, on-board entertainment
platters of snacks, and VIP
passes to the Jau. Fcttival. Jn
addition, overnight hotel
packages arc available.
For Jazz Train re1emtlon1
and schedules call CoUdiM'r
Ofncc of Community SeMcea 11.
at 241-6186. 1:i
Editor William Lol>Mll ... 642-4321, ext. 351
Editorial
Gavarnments.' bllllll woes printed on lat payChecks
W ith Ne'A'port Beach City Hall coming
under fire for whopping salary and
. . benefits increases for its top
ad~m1~trat<?rs• we ~ul~~·t help but notice.an
article m this week s edition of Business Week
with the headline "Fat paychecks got states and
cities deep in hock."
And that is having a direct effect on our
nation's state houses and municipalities, which
are wrestling with their worst fiscal crisis in at
least a decade, according to the economist,
Robert L. Marks of New York's SOM.
Economics Inc.
expenditures.
However, Marks traced average annual
increases in wages and benefits awarded to
state and local government workers throughout
the past decade and found they have
consistently outstripped those won by workers
in private industry.
at the start of the 1980s, and that the latter
group now enjoys premium pay and benefit
status.
What's interesting about the article is that
state and local employees often use an "apples
and oranges" argument to describe their wages
and .bc~efits as <:<>mpared to what they. could be
gettmg_ m the pnvate sector. This is true,
acoordlJ'!g to an economist cited in the Business
Week piece; state and local workers are now
earning more.
As a cesult, governors and city councils, even
locally, have been raising fees and taxes and
cutting 'ervices, which is having a direct effect
on the pocketbooks .and quality of lives of the
people they serve. These government officials
are quick to blame the recession cutting into
t~ revenues, cutbacks in federal support at a
time when local needs have been multiplying
and huge increases in federally mandated
When it comes to salaries and benefits, state
and local government employees often defend
their increases by pointing out they can earn
more in the private sector. But the Business
Week story cites Bureau of Labor Statistics
figures showing that total compensation per
full-time employee was about the same in the
private and state and local government sectors 11
Locally, the Newport Beach City Council
recently gave its retiring city manager a pay
raise that boosted his annual salary to $143,436
-the second-highest city manager salary in the
county -and his estimated annual retirement
salary to $83,000.
. Last July, the Newport council had already
g1Ven the manager and two other top officials
10-percent pay raises.
The council's argument: These top officials
would easily earn more in the private sector.
... t'ft1 .... NoT... Pc;AD. ..... ~ , ...... Pl1D1
\ -
Reactions mixed over
ban on the boardwalk
-
B y all accounts, the GOP
had a grand old time
(GOT) at their state
convention last weekend in
Anaheim. There were lots of
speeches, lots of eating and
~rinking, and of particular
interest to Democrats, lots of
bickering and squabbling. Only
the thought of Dan Quayle
running for president could make
a Democrat happier these days
than seeing the Republican Party
claw away at each other for
power and privilege in front of
th edia.
There wa~
something for
every one.
Supporters of the
"tax and spend''
governor had an
opportunity to
trade epithets
with the anti-tax,
anti-government,
anti-choice, and
anti-gay fringe
------coterie of the
Liberal
Politics
party who call
Orange County
home.
Senator
Seymour was singled out for
special treatm.c:nt by disgruntled
s upporters of Willi am
Dannemeyer who were ill-
mannered enough to walk out
during Seymour's keynote
address. While such behavior
may have left delegates from less
rancorous counties a triOe
embarrassed, Dannemeyer
supporters showed once again
why Wilson's appointment of
Seymour was such a smart
political move.
If Seymour can continue to
Where are the
Democrats?
distance himself from the luna1ic
right in such a theatrical fa!>hion.
his appeal to Reagan-Democrat\
will grow. as will his chance~ of
defeating Diane Feinstein in the
1992 general election.
The Republicans even felt lit
ea'ic displaying Richard Nixon,
who came west to welcome the
party elite to the southland's
newest tourist attraction in
Yorba Linda.
I n short, it was preci!>dy what
a good political convention
should be. Delegates will return
to their respective hamlets
around the state feeling good
about their contribution to the
party. the democratic procc,s,
and California's future.
A.;1u1c reader.; h:ivc probably
~enscd a tinge of perverse
admiration in my Democratic
descriptive. The Republican
Party's internecine struggle:, are
amusing, if not hopeful, to most
Democrats. But, there's also
much to admire about a party
confident enough in its popular
appeal 10 air its dirty laundry in
full view of the public.
There's nothing praiseworthy
or enviable about the likes of
Dannemeyer, Dornan or Nixon.
Still, warts and all, the California
Republican Party along with its
Orange County auxiliary is well-
organized. generously funded,
and highly \ 1siblc. Orange
County Dcmocral!t should have it
so good.
T hi\ led me to ask: Where are
the democrats? The
R cpuhl1cnn governor has
"Bushed" his conservative
con!>titucnto, on taxes, moderates
arc fighting conservatives for
con trol of the party, and GOP
fire fighter~ from Washington,
D.C.. have come west to hold
California together for Bush in
·92 The st:ite faces a multitude
uf crise~. from environmental
degradation and economic
decline to a decaying
infrastructure and the ruination
of California's public education
system.
Republican politics and
Cali fornia'!. crises cry out for
alternative policies and vigorous
palitical leadership. Yet, sadly,
mstead of a forceful response to
this challenge and opportunity.
the Democratic Party in Orange
County remains subdued and
resigned. if n ot completely
hidden from view.
I t's not easy, year after year,
doing battle against
Republicans who outnumber
Democrats two-to--one and have
an inestimable advantage when it
comes to financial backing from
the county's major industries,
entrepreneurs, and land
l ev iathans . The se
disadvantageous conditions make
any election a headache for
Democrats. Over time, it's not
s urpri:,ing that enthusiasm
wea~ens and ijOlitical paralysis
sets in . /
In Oranie County the
Democratic Party has long
played the role of inevitable
losl!r.
T he time 1s right for a new
leadership cohort to come
forward. revitalize p arty
leadership, and liberate the party
from its siege mentality.
Democrats in Orange County
need not remain the party
permanently out of power when
there are so many unregistered
voters, turnout at most elections
is so l ow, the county's
Republican leadership has
moved so far to the right of the
average Republican voter, and
California is on the cusp of
political and economic chaos.
Now is the time for all
commi1tcd Democrats to come to
the :ud of their party. After the
troops have been led out of their
battle-worn trenches by a new
leadership, the party should
focus its attention on
exacerbating the split withfo the
Republican Party; registering
new voters; building new local
o rganizations in the new
congressional districts; reaching
out to closet Democrats
throughout the county; and
providing distinctive and
thou$htf ul policy alternatives to
the tired Republican rhetoric.
Mark P. Petncca teaches
pollt/Clll 1den~ al UCI.
Editor's note: We asked
readers last week if bikes and
roller skates should be allowed
on Newport Beach's boardwalk
ns the city is considering a ban
following a lawsuit involving an
injured pedestrian.
The following arc samples of
Pilot readers' comments and
criticisms. Only caller who
lcnvc their names (spelled out).
cities and phone numbers (for
verification) will be pub/i.c;hed.
Get involved by calling the
Readers' Hotline at 642-6086.
I li\C on the ocean front m
Newport Beach and I am so
happy somebod)' 1.., fmall) uo1ng
~omething about banning the
hikes and roller <,kate!> on the
boardwalk. I am nght on the
boardwalk where I can sec what
happcn4lmol.t l!Vcryday and it
1s just a wonder that more
people have not been killed by
tho'e bikes and ~kater!>.
MRS. CLYDE GRETZINGER
Newport Beach
I thtnk the biq·clc ban "
ab~urd. l\e gro1An up 1n the
city. this is the hike path we're
tall..ing ahout! I dtin't even have
a car. I use 1he bike path to get
to work. If people were !.mart
enough to read the !.1gns. they'd
\CC that it i~ ~cparated, the
ocean side being for bikes, and
the other sides for pedestrians.
Pedestrians like to walk like
four in a row ne'<t to each other
which makes it hard fo r us
bikers I recommend all hikers
invest in a bell.
MIKE NELSON
Newport Beach
I think we should get rid of
roller skates and bikes on the
boardwalk. It's a dangerous
condition. It's been that way
ever since I've jogged on the
sidewalk, ifs very dangerous. So
I am for the ban.
TOM BARRIAN
Newport Beach
I 'm against the ban on the
boardwalk. I think it all boils
down to the consideration
between the pedestrians and
the hicyde riders and if they
show each other a little bit
more concern and respect I
don't think there should be a
problem.
RICK JOHN
Newport Beach
N o way should bicycles be
banned on the boardwalk.
Reporter decides ·story is for . the birds, not page one
E very onoe in a while, one of those
stories will <lOme along that seems
just too good to be troc. It's only
after chasing it around for a couple hours
-Clhlll
Reporter's
notebOok
that you start
remcmbcrina the old
saying: "If it seems too
good to be true, it
probably is."
Thal WIS the CA c last
week when t received an
impassioned phone call
from a man who claimed
his beloved parrot
"Tropicana' had been
"kJdnapped" 1md held for
••ransom" by a re ~cted
local vetcrlna~otpit1I,
which had b«n treatina
the bird 1t his rcque,t.
OtMouily ru'hed and
1g1tated1 the man went on to PY the '
hospital had told him back in June that
the bird had died following an illness.
"Now I find it's for sale in their
showroom," he continued. "My bird is
beautiful and alive and they told me he
was dead."
Better yet, he said he wa on his way
over to the vet h0$pit1l with a coun order
to sec the bird, which he claimed was
worth at least SS,000 and has a 200-word
vocabulary.
Whl\l 8 story.
Well, at least until I hcnrd the other
~idc.
From the vet ho pltal came an entirely
different talc -one that invulvcd a pile
of unpa1d bills and the abandonment or a
pet.
It wa\ only after spendina more than
three montht to nurse the bird back to
health and rq>eated reque,t!C for the
•
owner to pick up his animal that hospital
officinls say they took him to small claims
court to collect a S 1.354 bill.
"This is ridiculous," said one hospital
administrator, using slightly harsher terms
when denying that he or any other
cmpl?,Yce ever told ANYONE the bird
hnd <hed.
••All I want to do i get this man's bird
back to him and collect our fees." the
administrator said.
Under the state. pct abandonment law,
ho pital officials uy they could have 50ld
the bird long •So• but no one wu
interested in buyina what they described
01 an entirely averqe military macaw
with a history of chronic health problem .
Beside , at moat the bti'd wa worth only
$400, whiCh would nol have even CO¥Cred
the medical cxpen1e1. hotpital officiab
said.
As they put it: "This is a simple small
claims action."
Most of the news storie!I I cover
generally involve 50me sort of pcrsonul
cli pule, but this one wa different, nnd
definitely more biurre.
When il come down to it, the wild
allegation again l the hospit I thai come
along with thi penonal di pule are
probably be t left to a judge.
Me1mwhilc. the saga continue . A small
claim~ judge ruled that the birdman ha
lo pay most of the medico! bills. The
birdmnn i now vowina to liUC back for
allegation of emotional anguish and
m~lpractkc. ,
At la t word, the bird w s ~till hnngin
out at the hospital.
I wilh it well.
• Anna CelcOI• i • t•ff ""'"'~' ~ ·ri111 Cc~t• Me$11.
The city should make some
adjustments, maybe a!> far as
the width of the boardwalk or
more restriction.., as far as
pedestrians versus the bicycle.
There is no way there should be
a ban. Part about living here .It
the beach i'> riding your bicycle
along the oceanfront.
H:.1-F CHANDLER
Ne" pon Beach
Y es, I am for the ban. I have
lived here fur quite some
time and there are many
problem with the bikes. and the
roller skates. There has been a
number of times I have been on
the boardwalk and been almost
hit
SUSAN CLARK
!'le'A pon Beach
I think the ban I!> a terrible
idea. I think Newport Beach
would become pretty much a
ghost town . There are other
altern~tive~. Nobody ever
enforc~ \he separation down
on the boardwalk. there are
suppmed 10 be walkers on one
side, bikers on the other side lf
the~ "ere to enforce that.
perhap!> that \\Ould help.
BOB ROTHMAN
Newp0rt Beach
I f the c11v doesn't do
something to protect
pedestrian traffic than
pedestrian traffic won't go
there. and that "ill have an
adverse affect on our busine'iS.
We need 10 protect those
people.
MIKE EVANS
Newport Beach
I ju~t want to ~ay that there
arc some 'en~ible people
who want to ban all roller
ve hicles from the boardwalk
during peak times. It's an
accident waiting to happen and
after the $270,000 lawsuit, I
don't want to pay any more of
my tax money for the stupidity
of the city council.
JOHN TIIOMPSON
Newport Beach
I 'm a bike rider and also a
walker but I am opposed to
the bike riders racing down
there and 1 think there should
be a designated time. Maybe
before 10 o'clock for bike riders
and after that allow it just for
people to enjoy walking along
the beach.
..
CLARA GALLANES
Newport Beach
m \molt ll4CI • com 1a'
Pi
An Independent Newspaper
Published by
Page Group Publishing. Inc.
Elliot Stein, Jr.
chairman
Jim Gttsslnr
publisher
William S. Lobdell
editor & vice president
Steve Marble
managing editor
Waltef lunought
1901 ·1989
fouoding potM~,
'
Back Page
Water salesmen
alarm residents
District officials say
sales pitch all wet
By LortAnn Basheda
Stlfl Wl1lef
COSTA MESA Water
district officials are warning
residents to beware of sales
representatives who have been
using scare tactics to pressure
local homeowners into buying
bottled water.
Mar y Urashima,
spokeswoman for the Mesa
Consolidated Water District,
said three residents have
reported such a scam in the
past week.
According to these residents,
the door-to-door salesman tried
to kad them to believe the
local tap water is unsafe or
unhealthy.
One Irvine Avenue resident
told district officials that a
sa lesman told her the local tap
water was contaminated with
the hallucinogenic drug PCP.
Urashima said the district
immediately se nt a
representative to the customer's
home to show her a water
quality report on local tap
water.
While out there, the district
official confronted a man who
was in the process of walking
'We want customers to
know we continuously
sample water to insure
that it meets the federal
·standards .' -----district spokeswoman
from house to house.
"We tried to find out who he
was, but the representative
refused to give us a business
card or identify himself," she
sa id. "Perhaps we've
discouraged him, but there are
no guarantees he won't be back
in the area."
Urashima encourages anyone
who was approached recently by
a bottled water salesman should
call the district office at 631-
1205.
"We want customers to know
we continuously sample water
to insure that it meets the
federal standards."
The district referred the
residents' reports to the
California Bottled Water
Association in San Francisco
and the Pacific Water Quality
Association in Huntington
Beach.
our
• avmg
• 1
By Iris Yokol
Sllft Writer
NEWPORT BEACH -The City Council
on Monday nighJ postponed its decision on a
controversial proposal to ban rollerskatcs,
skateboards and bicycl n the oceanfront
boardwalk during weekends, holidays and the
summer months.
The council decided to wait indefinitely until
an ad hoc committee of citizens and council
members thoroughly reviews the idea and
takes public input. The council action was
cheered by bicycle and skating enthusiasts who
immediately began organizing a publicity
campaign to drum up further public opposition
to the proposed ban.
"So many people don't know about this,"
said Katie Penny, a 30th Street resident who
attended the council meeting with a "Yes -
Bicycles on Boardwalk" sign. Penny and the
half dozen other citizens who voiced their
opposition to the wheel ban gathered outside
the council chambers after the council decision
and quickly exchanged phone numbers.
Reacting to a recent court decision that
ordered the city to pay $270,000 to a man
injured by a bicycle on the beachfront pathway,
'The police are on bikes now -
are you going to take them off the
bike path too? And what about
baby strollers and wheelchairs?•
-um...w
30th Street resident
a panel of council members and Balboa
Peninsula residents suggested the wheel ban be
implemented on an interim basis while an ad
hoc committee discussed long-term solutions to
the problem of overcrowding on the popular,
heavily traveled boardwalk between the Balboa
and Newport piers.
Members of the recommending panel said
they saw no other alternative to protect the
public safety and reduce the city's liability.
A couple of citizens at the Monday council
meeting agreed, adding the argument that
bicyclists and skaters ride too fast and
recklessly on the pathway.
But other citizens disagreed with the ban,
llytJll It would 1bnply force more bicyde and
skate tratr1e onto BalbQe Boulevard. which is
already thick with automobile traffic, creating
an even more dan,erous condition.
Penny argued that the ak.ato and bi.kt ban
also leaves open the question of whether other
wheeled vehicles will also be prohibited. "1he
police are on bikes now -arc you going to
take them off the bike path too?" she asked.
"And what about baby strollers and
wheelchairs?"
"I think this is a very quick idea to cover the
city's behind," said David Underwood, a
Newport Beach resident and member of the
month-old Oranae County Bicycle Coalition, a
bicycle advocacy aroup.
The wheel-ban opponents suggested that a
better solution would be posting signs along
the boardwalk to warn of hazards, set speed
limits and perhaps even require walking of
bicycles and skateboards at certain times, as is
done in Huntington Beach.
"Ninety-nine percent of the people who use
the boardwalk arc responsible users," said
Councilman John Hedges, who made the
motion to postpone the decision and who
himself rides his bicycle to council meetings
from his Peninsula home.
WEATHER: Warm weatlier forecast to continue today
From A1
higher than the inland forecast of
150.
That's be~use an easterly flow
from the dese'1t is being blamed
for this unFxpected weather. A
combination of high and low
pressure has created the flow,
which traveled from the deserts,
over the mountains and warmed
argo.
up as it sank into Southern
California, according to the
National Weather Service.
While Newport Beach remained
a tolerable 73 degrees Monday,
temperatures in Orange Co\lnt)I hit
as high as 92 degrees in El Toro
and Anaheim. Although far from
breaking a record, downtown Los
Angeles reached 93 degrees, the
' ..
warmest day of this year.
The 90-degree temperatures will
continue at least through today,
according to fo re casts,
accompanied by patchy late-night
thrpu&t' mid-morning fog and low
clouds near the beaches. Some
areas may also sec thunderstorms
in the afternoon.
But one local water official
cautioned against taking to heart
predictions that a sixth year of
droug,ht is unlikely.
"I hope those predictions are
true," said J~ff Staneart, deputy
utilities director in Ncwpprt
Beach, where citizens are still
under orders to cut water use by
20 percent. "But only fools and
weathermen predict the weather."
AMBURGEY: Says ·omcia~,s
violated his civil rights
From A1
protection for civic persons who
dedicate their time to civic
service."
The criminal charges, which
were dropped in June, stemmed
from ~ 1987 council vote
Amburgey made involving Copley
Colony Cablevision. his sometime
employer at that time. Prosecutors
a~scrt ed Amburgey v.oted to
reduce the cable company's
obligation to viewers, but
Amburgey later found a recording
of the meeting indicating he voted
only to accept a report card on the
company.
The suit, filed in Superior Court
late Monday, named the City of
Costa Mesa. City Attorney
Thomas Kathe, City Manager
Allan Roeder and Mayor Mary
HombuckJe as defendants.
"It does not come as a
surprise," Mayor Mary Hornbuckle
said. declining further comment.
As a rule, city officials do not
comment on pending lawsuits.
In the lawsuit, Amburgey claims
his civil rights were violated and
he was the victim of slander, libel,
conspiracy and intentional an<t
negligent infliction of emotional
distress. Amburgey also accuses
Kathe of legal malpractice and
breach of trust because he did not
immediately inform him of the
criminaJ investigation.
"We feel there has been a
general plot or plan by all the
defendants named," said
Amburgey's lawyer, Lawrence K.
Harvey. "The conspiracy we feel
was to defeat Mr. Amburgey in
the November election.
Revelations of the criminal
investigation against Amburgey
were made public days before the
election, which the one-term
councilman eventually lost.
"I believe this was one of the
primary causes for the loss of the
election," Amburgey said.
Harvey said he thinks Amburgey
was a target of the alleged
conspiracy because his views on
such issues as growth and illegal
immigration were "diametrically
opposed" to those of some city
leaders.
The lawsuit also leaves open the
possibility of naming up to 100
other defendants in the future.
"We feel there's a lot beneath
the surface that hasn't come out
yet," Harvey said.
Since the city rejected his claim
for about $16,000 in legal fees in
July, Amburgey said he's been left
with no other choice but to file a
lawsuit.
Still, Amburgey said he's
troubled that taxpayers would be
footing the bill if he was awarded
any damages from the city. With
that in mind, Amburgey said he
would donate a portion of any
award he might win to the Costa
Mesa Youth Athletic Committee.
"In doing so, it would allow me
to put back in the community
some of the funds to help the
youth and the park system," he
said. "I-feel real good about being
able to do that."
The lawsuit comes about three
months after Amburgey filed a
$3.8 million claim against the city,
which was eventually rejected for
being filed too late.
In addition to the lawsuit,
Amburgey said he recently filed a
complaint against Kathe with the
state Bar Association.
INTRlllER: Pollc8 beleve cases relal8d
From A1
parents later discovered a screen
on an open kitchen window had
been replaced be~kwards and
appeared to have been pushed in
at the 'Corner, Gonis said.
a thin, short man with something
tied around his head had breathed
on her as she slept and then
touched her.
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A door: that had been locked
was also found unlocked, as if
someone had left the home, Gonis
said. No property was taken from
the home.
The 7-ycar-old girl. had
described her assailant as having
straight, black and gray hair that
hung below the cars and was tied
with some type of scarf. He also
was described as having a beard
but no mustache.
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Using bloodhounds, police
searched the neighborhood but
found nothing, Gonis said.
Detectives said the details nre
similar to a May 2 incidc;nt in the
1000 block of Sandcastle where a
9-ycar-old girl told her parents
that she thought she dreamed that
From A1
to a confidential informant who
was posing as a prospective
cocaine buyer. The defendants,
including Nicol, then allegedly
arranged mcetinas with the
confidential informont and 11n
undercover agent.
Plaia was appointed to the
C.cntral County coun by Oov.
Detectives arc investigating the
possibility that the suspect is
someone who might be loitering
around local schools or a transient
who lives in the bluff areas nearby.
"Our helicopter will be patrolling
the canyon area," Oonis said.
Jerry Brown in September 1979,
after practicina law for 10 yea..-in
Corona del Mar. He resigned from
the bench in 1983, resuming
private practice. He continued to
serve the Municipal Court on a
\IOlunteer bosis until 1989 when he
quit his law practice and opened a
Corona del Mar jewelry atore.
allegedly to launder money for
drug purchasc!I.
Estancia Coach John Uebengood
Eagles have
a~lowed just
three points
By R}chard Dunn
~·wr11t1
' F, eaturing five sacks and five
interceptions, Estancia High
maintained its defensive posture
Friday night, denying a touchdown for
the second straight game.
The flip side, however, maintains the
Eagles arc far from their potential on
offense.
Their 3-0 victory over La Quinta kept
them undefeated. Coach John
Liebcngood had two unforeseen players
become heroes and linebacker Aaron
Leffler (broken collarbone ) is
approaching his return: It has been good
for Estancia, and Liebengood will be the
first to telJJou.
"We ha two picks and two almost·
picks and a knockdown," said
Liebengood, whose squad also recorded
five sacks for a minus-21 yards. "Those
three knockdowns should've been
interceptions, so we had five picks."
The Eagles, who needed a 37-yard
. field goal from Mike Smith mid. w~y
through the fourth quarter to wm 1t,
received another sparkling performance
from sophomore tailback Christian
Gomez (124 yards on 23 carries).
"He's really a workhorse,"
Licbengood said. "We had to get a first
down (on the final drive), then we sat
on (the ball). Gomez popped one f<?r
about 12 or 13 yards to give us a big
first down. He really popped it and we
knew it was over then because there
wasn't enough time left on the clock (40
seconds).
"He's a great athlete, but we hadn't
had him until the week before the first
game because his ankle was hurt. He's
getting a lot of reps now though.
"Our two inside linebackers did a
See ESTANCIA/I!
Mustangs found
• out true meaning
of Murphy's law
I t was a bizarre game, when anything
that could've gone wrong for Costa
Mesa High on special teams went
wrong.
And, in a nutshell, it showed why the
statistics were terribly deceiving as the
Mustangs dropped their first of the year,
a 42·28 verdict at the hands of Rancho
Alamitos last Thursday.
0 A lot of things went wrong," Costa
Mesa Coach Tom Baldwin said. "It all
started off when we scored (in the
seoond quarter) and went ahead, 14·6.
We kicked off to the end zone and they
shc>uld've started at their own 20-yard
line -and we were realJy playing well
at dais point -but we a<>t called for off.
sides, so we had to kJck off again and
th~ returned it (90 yards) for a
to.achdown. Then they ran a two-point
pl! and aot it.
'That was the turning point In the
gaJnO and we were really doina well. We
kicked into their end zone and
cveryt.hlna, but they Mid we were off·
sideJ. Then we went all the way down to
thG_ ~ard line and tumbled, 10 we wero
still ayina well and we went in 14·14 at
halftme."
Rancho Alamitos scored 28
unanswered po(nt.t in the third quaner
on mostly unorthodox plays. puttlna an
SM COSTA MESMI
By KJr1t Wolcott
Spoits Wrtller
U nbeltnownst to many, high school
football has become a
seven-day-a-week activity that
most coaches would probably make eight
if that were an option.
Seemingly minutes after the final gun
sounds, the chalk board is wiped clean
and the machinery is cranked back into
motion again -especially when the
upcoming game pits intra-district rivals
like ~tancia and Corona dcl Mar.
To say this Friday's game, 7:30 p.m. at
Newport Harbor High, has less value to
the participants because it doesn't fi~rc
into league standings is crazy. Bragging
rights arc clearly on the line for this
one.
• f9ll W ma Niii: One of the best of prep f ootbaJI rivalries Is Estancia and Corona
del Mar. The Piiot takes a good look Into
the preparation on both sides of the ball. Thuncltlr. The fine tuning
Over the last quarter of a century
players from these two schools have
locked helmets with a vengeance -
CdM holding a 13-9-2 edge, including
victories in seven of 'he last nine
meetings -which ohly gets players and
coaches out of bed that much earlier in
preparation for game No. 25 in the
series.
"' Saturday: The fun began around 8:30
a.m. when the teams arrived at their
respective schools to view films from the
previous night's game. At Estancia,
spirits were high following a 3-0 win
over La Quinta, the Eagles' second
victory in as many games this youi:ig
season.
The screening room at Corona dcl
Mar was a little more subdued,
considering a 34-0 mashing by Marina.
However, these films were not meant to
remind players what they did wrong, but
to focus on what to do right in the
future.
"My job is to accentuate the positive
and make sure we don't make the same
mistakes again," said CdM head coach
Dave Holland, now in his 16th year of
lifting spirits after disheartening defeats.
Following the show, the players put in
a light workout of running and weights
See GAME PLAN,.
TuyerJtre~
Monarchs' Blanton
Mater Dei standout's
numbers approaching
ridiculous proportions
By Richard Dunn
Spoits Wiiier
H e evades the subject of
c. om paring quarterbacks,
keenly avoiding any
possible controversy.
Yet Bruce Rollinson admits he's
a luclcy man, having two Division
1-<:aliber quarterbacks to run his
offense in three seasons as Mater
Dei High's football coach.
Replacing Danny O'Neil with
Billy Blanton in the Mater Dei
lineup was like replacing Joe
DiMaggio with Mickey Mantle in
the Yankees outfield. Either way,
it works.
Blanton, the hero of today and
this week's Pilot Player of the
Week for his near-flawless per·
formancc against St. Paul, was
cultivated under O 'Neil two years
ago.
And while O'Neil is making his
existence felt in the Pacific 10
Conference this season as the
starting quarterback at Oregon as
a redshirt freshman, Blanton, a
resident of Costa Mesa, has been
posting figures worthy of prep All·
American consideration.
"I don't like to compare
quarterbacks, but I've been very
fortunate to have two great ones
in three years," Rollinson said. "I
inherited Danny O'Neil (from
Corona del Mar High) after his
sophomore year and r was pleased
with what he did. Billy. in, his
sophomore year, wu under DaMy
and l think (O'Neil's) winning
attitude and work ethic rubbed off
on him.
"Both are similar in that they
have just the right amount of
cockiness and a tremendous
a.mount of 1elf-confidence. Al a
COICh, you really don't have to do
much with lbo9o type of athletes.
Ml)'bo you'll point out 10me small,
subtle thlnp that come tcroa, bUt
b11ica1tr they're self-driven
athletes.'
11cn111
Oum-club golf/82
Rlchardson~Boating/84
ClassHied/86
Corona del Mar Coach Dave Holland
'D' is giving
Tars' game
major boost
By Richard Dunn
SPol1S Wmer
T he fundamentalists are at it again.
Precise blocking and tackling. a
Newport Harbor High custom
since the Jeff Brinkley e ra began in
1986, have the Sailors undefeated after
two games.
And while most Newport Harbor fans
are interested in discussing the offense,
particularly the running game since
opening-day quarterback Mike Ofer
went down with a broken collarbone,
Bnnkley 1s raving about the defense that
~hut out Ocean View last Friday, 34-0.
"Number o ne, we played great
defense," said Brinkley, 35-23 lifetime in
his Newport Harbor coaching career.
"In the st(\rt of the second half, (Ocean
View) ran one play on offense and then
our offense got the ball back. Obviously
we ran (the ball) very well, we got good
play out of our line and the backs ran
hard.
"I think each
week, though.
things are going
to get tougher.
We'll find out a
little more about
o ur football
team in the next
few weeks as we
prepare for
league. It's going
to be interesting.
The kids arc
playing hard
right now and
they believe in
the system and
all that. We'll
continue to work
hard and
'We're going
to get back to
fundamentals
-blocking and
tackling , which
has really been
the key for us
in the last
couple of
years.•
-M-.EY
Sailors Coach
hopefully we'll keep improving and get
ready for league."
The system is fairly elementary. "As
we go into the third game, we're going
to get back to fundamentals -blocking
and tackling, which has really been the
key for us in the last couple of years,''
Brinkley said.
"We haven't had many Division I
guys, but we've got guys with good work
ethics and they learn the basics. We're
pretty much fundamentalists and our
(coaching staff) doc:. a good job of
teaching fundamentals."
Since Ofer went on the shelf and
junior Greg Williams took over at
quarterback, tailback Brandon Finney
and fullback Tony Mancuso have shared
the ball-canying load in a hefty way.
In typical smashmouth fashion,
Newport Harbor rushed for 249 yards
on 47 carries against Ocean View.
Finney picked up 127 yards on 20
attempts while Mancuso had 73 on 15
runs. On defense, the Sailors recovered
a fumble, recorded two sacks for a
minus-10 yards and intercepted four
Ocean View passes.
"The great thing about our offense is
that it's fairly versatile," Brinkley said.
"We can run thl two-back offense. but
we can also finesse people when we
need to. We can pread it out and run
some things while throwing the ball -
we're capable of doing those things. So
when you weigh those factors, I think it
\ makes teams prepare their entire
packaae for us.
"We can throw the ball and play more
of a fineaO aamo. but we can allO ,et
doWn the two tipta, ~t down on tbe
ball and nan it. That s the pan tbat
See NEWPORT,-
)
flll 10 I
El TON
T he Coron• dcl Mar Hip sirl•
volleyball team, ranked sixth in ClP
S-A, met No. 5 El Toro for the
second time ir1 1hrcc days on Monday
night. ,
After a four-game setback to the
Chargers in the third-place match at tht
Orange County Cha1npionship1, CdM
extended host El Toro to five games thil
time before bowing, lS-10, 15-17, 12-15,
15-13, 15-11.
Despite the second consecutive loss to
the Chargers, c.dM Coach Mark Riva
refused to be totally downcast.
"Some good things happened to_nig.ht,~'
said Riva. "I was really happy With the
play of 10th grade middle blocker Megan
Smith, who was rcplacina Kim Smith
{who injured a knee last weekend in the
Orange County Championships).
"All my setters are doing a great job
setting. We've got a young team, but I
thin~ we've 'ot a lot of depth."
', ~~
Smith's injury, as well as the absence of
Kristin Coleman, put the load on outside
hitter Char.maync Conley, who responded
with 2f kills. Lori Newcomer chipped in
with 23 kills. -BJ Tilt: Pilot CdM's Caren McKin.ley (1) anticipates, backed up by Kim Coleman (14), Charmayne Conley (10)t At right, Coleman (14) and Jennifer Bowinlde (5) go·up.
' ESTANCIA: 'Eagles getting
" all ol it done , on defense ,
From Bl
great job Pete Baniaga and
Ricardo Aguilar, who arc both fine
football players -along with
Mike Smith (four tackles) and our
two down tackles (Carlos Cornejo
and Alberto Rojas). So there's five
fine people doing a great job.
•'On defense, there's quite an
improvement from last year to this
year, plus the secondary. Erik
Linares (corncrhack ), Cody
Charley (free safety) and Richard
• Clf 111¥-II Tm' 10: 1. Arroyo Grande (2-0l: 2. Temple City (2-0):
3. Laguna Hills (2-0); 4. St Francis
(2-0); 5. La Mirada (2-0); 6. Artesia
(2-0); 7. Torrance (1-1); 6. Sanla
Ynez (2-0); 9. Yucaipa (1-1); 10.
Wesl Torrance (1-1)
Buday (cornerback) arc there and
we feel 1ba1 we htive people back
there that can defend the pass. ·
·'They had La. Quinta covered
on all the screens and short
patterns -we were there to make
the hits, knocking the ball down
and picking it off. It has been
good for us."
Leffler appeared in his first
game against La Quinta as the
punter. averaging 38.9 yards on
five kicks. Ht: can return to the
defensive field on Sept. 30, but
probably won't starl unlil 1he
Eagle!'. open Pacific Coast League
action ag;1ins1 Century (Oct. 18).
Estancia Players ol the Week "1--ic's got. to get back into the
groove," Licbcngood said. "He
--------------------------. hasn't done anylhing. He hasn't hit
CH RISTIAN GOMEZ
A workhorse.
the5-foot-11 ,
185-pound
sophomore
carried 23
times for
124 yards to
s1abilize the
offense in a
3-0 victory for Estancia
over La Quinta 's Az1ecs .
MIKE SM ITH
A 5-foot-7,
175-pound
senior safety
and kicker,
he booted
the winning
field goal
from 37
yards out
and intercepted the
game-clinching pass .
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in today's c lassified section.
•
anybody."
Evc=n without Leffler and all-
1 c ag u c linebacker Brian
Obcrrcuter (heel injury), rhe
Eagles' defense has been good to
Liebcngood.
"It has kept us in the ball
game ."' Li cbcngood said.
"Actually. it's won ballgames for
us.
"Offense is where we've
struggled. We've replaced eight
out of 11 s1artcrs and they're
gelling better. We played against a
good football team the other night
and we fin~lly moved the ball a
little bit, so that was a big
improvement. "
i' " ' \
j~ PILOT
GRID
STATS •"~··
Estancia (2-0)
ll!ASON (INDMDUAl.J .. _ ... _ .......... .. _
"'"'" " '" '' 0 21
"'"" 15 " ... 1 " Olsnrt~kl " .. 4.7 0 " '"" ' 3 o.s 0 • ..... ' 1 3.S 0 ' , ... 1 • ••• 0 • ....... ·-•• '"3 ~ ~ .... Id -· " .214 0 ·-...... Po..,.. ..... ··--1 14 14.0 0 " ..... ' " 12.0 0 " """" ' ·2 ·2.0 0 ·•
Sm11!1 7, Joliner II.
a&UCMl(TUlll
Total lirsl OOMll °"';': ~
Rulhn-yardioe 47-15a 5'·320
AVlrlOt IUll'linv gM! 3.4 5.1 A'lflDCI rushlno ya.'CllQll n 1llO
local puskl; ywdaoe 157 24
AYlllQt push; Y1n1aOe 78 12
Pass comp, MlrrlJt, 1rt 11·31-3 3·14--0
Aw;, .. per PISS~· 13.1 8.0 A'fV, glin per pass_,.., 4.1 1.7
fie! rrun ytnilofl• 43· eo
local uclcs..yanllQe 5-mln-21 k*l-35
A'l'el'lgt lltkl, yardage 2.5·11 3-fm.18
Ke1 yan1lQe 337 379
Al'll'lllt All~ 169 1IO Pl.rib 12-31 11-36
f\lmllS·fl.mllu lot! 1-5 5-3 0 TOlll Unown I 3
A.,... ""'°"" 4.0 1.5 fllgS~ 1~100 20-140
·---,..... 1~70 Avg, T1rM Ol PlllMSlbl 24;'8 23:12
·Pi.n ~ ~ ........... Mnblt""""
Log, schedule
10 Los Amip 3
l l;11 Qulnl'i ! 01 Stpt. 27-Coroni de! Mar (it Nlt)
Oct. l -ic.telli ~I la Piilm.t Pai\)
Oct. 11 -Newport (•l Orange Coas()
Ott, 11-Cenfury• lat Omlge c:o.nu, 1
Oa.24-....... -· .. -•• N<N, 1-• frlbuco Hflll•.i..?_
f'bot. •--Cost.I Mel" (IC V'•• c:o..u. 1 "'°"· 15 -1..tSUN' Hllh' ""Milislofl Yle;OI. 1 'P.Kific: OlMl Lta3ue ~
For top-ranke~ Calvary . Chapel,·
a heavy dose of reality setting in
Reality has set in for Calvary
Chapel/Costa Mesa, ranked No.
I in the CIF Southern Seclion
Division X poll entering
Salurday's non-league game
againsl LA Baptist.
"We're back to the real world
now,"' ·said Calvary Coach Kris
Van Hcro k., whose Eagles
dropped a 36-13 decision to !he
Knights. "Being No. I doesn't
mean anything if you don't keep
winning. We knew all along that
our first two games y,•ould be
our toughest games.
"I don't think we should've
been ranked No. I to begin
with , but we should be in 1hc
lop 10."
Calvary, which defea1cd
Linficld, 20-15, in the season
opener. struggled against LA
Baptist 's option in the second
half Saturday at Westminster
High as Knights quarterback
Dane &rown (6-foot-4, 240
pounds) was nearly unstoppable.
"He was hard to bring down,"
Van Hook. said of Brown, who
rushed for three touchdowns
and passed for another.
·•wc·ve had only two penalties
in two games, so I'm pleased
with that, bu! maybe that means
,.,.c'rc not aggressive enough. We
knew (the Knights) ""'ere a good
team and they came out fast,
but even with that, we had a
chance.
"We scored right before 1hc
half and then right after the
start of the second half, so we
had two touchdowns within one
n1inu1c and that should've got us
flack in the bal/~an1e.
-By The Pilot
n
LA hpttd M~Mi" 11 ..........
LA Baptist 6 I 15 7-36
Cllval)' 0 7 6 0-13 ..... _
LAB-Romero 36 pm 1rurr1 11rnwn [Ml
f~iled), 4:50. --l.All-Browrl9 "'1 (Brown M). l:S2.
Cll-Neumanri 16 Piii Imm SMrUy (Sflwtlly
llick), 1.10. J .,,. .. _
Cll-Ke!IOOQ 81 klckoll return (Idell lllled),
11 ·~1.
LAB-BrOWll 4 Ml !BfC'Wll Ml), 1:12.
LAB-Brown 21 IUll {Wan:I ldck), 2:00. --LAB-Hemand&t 3 Ml (Wn Ide*), 1:23.
Attendne: 700 (eS*'111ed).
INDMDUAL MtaHHfO ta-KeloQQ, 10.29; Fla. 1 ... : Shaltcly, 2-3:
A.lrnl, 1·1,
INDIVIDUAL PM8UIG
Cll-Sl'llr\ly, 14·21-2. 141: Mir, 0.2--0.
lllDMDUAL RllCaMNQ
Cal-Guild, 3-45; Ecn.t, 2·36: Mula, 3·21 :
HNnlnn. 2·22: Ml. 1-17; Keloo9. 2.J:
Arrowood, t-lor-rills-4.
COSTA MESA: Mustangs trying
to regroup after Rancho di~aster
From B1
end lo the Mustangs' evening.
"They kicked off to us in the
second half, but then this guy
makes a grcal interception and
(the Vaqueros) go down and
score,'· Baldwin said.
•'Then they blocked ou r punt
and scorc=d on their (ensuing)
drive. The next time, they held us
again, but our cen1cr snapped it
over our punter's head to the 5-
yard line and (th e Vaqueros)
scored again.
'
0Then they had another punt
returned (63 yards) for a
touchdown, so they had four
touchdowns in the third quarter.
That's 28 point~ we gave up and
mostly on special teams.
"They had some fine athletes,
but statistically we dominated the
game. We had (344 net) yards
and they only had 179 yards
(combined passing and · rushing),
we had 16 first downs and they
seven first downs, and we held
the ball 31 minutes, 58 seconds to
their 16:02.
"So we really did a good job.
Our defense wasn't bad."
Senior fullback Fernando
Ospina, also Costa Mesa's starting
noseguard, gained 170 yards on 17
carries and eamed a regular
starting spot on offense. But
starling offensive guard Basel
Naiisar, an all ·lcague_player as a
junior last year, sprained his knee
in the second qu1trter and could
be lost for a while.
Baldwin said he'll know the
consequence of Nassar's injury
after a magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI), which is to be
performed by Tuesday.
''He's the only senior on the
offensive line, so that's kind of
imporlant to us," Baldwin said.
"He's our best offensive lineman
and he didn'1 play after the
middle of 1he second quarter, but
we still did well without hi1n.
"Rancho Alamitos (typically)
gets a lot of yardage, but we held
them to 179 total yards, so
defensively we didn't play poorly
and offensively we didn't play
poorly. Really, we fell apart on
special teams -you just can'1
make those mistakes."
Junior quarterback Matt
Harber was intercepted three
more times, but Baldwin isn't
worried.
"Of those three interceptions.
none were his fault," Baldwin
said. "He has had five picks in
two games, and t know it looks
like he's throwing to the other
team, but he's really not.
"One (interception against
Rancho Alamitos) bounced out of
our kids hands, ano1her time he
got hit just as he was releasing
the ball and the other was just a
great athletic e.Jay by their guy."
-By RlclJ•rd Dunn
Costa Mesa Players ol die Week
JOHNNY OSPINA
A 5-foot-6,
185-pound
senior tail-
back. he
gained 86
yards on 11
carries. He
also rushed
for two
touchdowns and caught
anqther lrom 7 yards out.
ADAM HERNAND EZ
A 5-foot-1 0,
190-pound
senior
defensive
end, he
played
extremely
solid and
executed all
of his assignments In Cokta
Mesa's 42-28 loss tu Rancho.
PILOT
GRID
STATS
Costa Mesa (1-1)
aUSON CI NDIVIDUALI -...... '·"""' '·"""' ..... ,.., -·-""""' ......
"""' --'·"""' ..,. .. -v.,. """• ,.., -
tolt "" ... 25 216 8.6
19 120 &.3
13 117 5.2
5 37 7.4
5 ·20 -4.0
1 1 1.0
1 .fl -8.0 ·-.... -... 11 36 ·1" 5
1 0 0 0
Rio ... ..,.
~"'ll?o
3 n 9.7
3 22 7.3
3 22 7.3
3 111 11.0
2 7 3.5
1 5 5.0 -
-: '"';! z 411
0 "
0 " 0 •
0 ' 0 ~
' .... Id .... " .000 •
":~
0 14' 0 .~
0 ·• 0 . '
0 •' 0 ;:
J. ()splN 24; F. 0spn 14: Tr.i I; .. ·
'-'·
...._!TUM! ---I
T• !hi dclMll °'3 --ii.
Rushff.)'ll'Gage Si-232 17-430
Al'lfl!ll Mf*lg Qlln 3.1 1.4 A'llrlClll\ldlhgyWlge 1111 211
TDCll P1S*41 yvOagt 37 1!3
Al'lrlllf ""*41 yn.g. 11 17 Pl8' ~ ...... It ).21·2 tN7-5
A'fV, O*I Pll' one «1f'111, 12.7 7.4
AYO. flln pll' PISS enp 1.8 3.11
... ,..,.,.~. " 114
Toe.t Sld<I~ 8-n*t-47 2.f'l'IM.15
A¥1111' ucb, yirdaof '""*"'24 1-mM Nit JlfOtQe 317 11112
~'IWIO'MtYWIOf 151 331
,.,... f.30 f·10 ~Iott H W
'""' .,,_, 1 , • A'l'ftlll Ul'llW«1 3.5 fl:.O ~ 15-115 ~ A't'ngt ftegl-}'ll'daOe 7.&.10I ·~·-"'" 1" . """"~II,-......,.,,. I
Log, schedule '
2 7 Twentynine Pal!'M O
28 lt.ncho Alamitos '41
Stpc, 26-los Mriios 1.tt NHJ, '1
Ott. 4 -"' Brea ·Olinda Oct. 11 -CdM IM: Nowpot!J, 7
Oct. 17 -laguna Hiiis• (411 MV), 7 I
Oa. 2S-Cen1ury• tat Ntwpon), ? UO!
Nc'w, 1-l•~ B«c+I• lat NRI, 7 I
Nov. 8 -EstAndi" (IC OCC), 1 111(
Nov. 15-Tnibuco Hllh' Lit OCC), 11
•P.1ielflc:. C.oatt ltafJe pme et
'
Or g County
Prep Football Top 1 O
(by the Pilot's sports staff)
1. 11111• • a. 111111:11
Olablos (2--0)
get by RMchO
Bttena Vista,
21·14; Third
non-Orange totny foe next
2. Miter 1111
Monarchs
(3--0) showing
earmarks
(passing) of
No. 1. sara
Ana (0.Z) nm.
(, . -' ~ r •• ~~ .: ~II J ll 1 -' l. L.. -• I -LJ l __!
Tlgn (2-0)
but up on 0-2 Sonora, 41-0;
El Dorado
could give
T1gefs a game.
7. Ell•• Chargers
( 1-1) waste an
opportunity;
Eldorado (LV)
coming to
OCC on Friday.
Aztecs (2-0)
breeze, 42-0.
St. John
Bosco may
offer better
\est this week.
Vanguards
(2-0) tur11~d
Sunny HOls
away, 24-0;
host Ocean
View Saturday. Mater Dei runners cluster together at the start of Woodbridge Invitational race Saturday, a meet which featured more than 5,000 runners.
4. Gapa ,...,
, Cougars
(H) Impress
with late
surge; Must
travel to 2--0
8. Los
Griffins (2-0)
pushed before
putting away
Fountain Val-
ley, 10-7; Villa
Part (1-1) next
CdM girls run well at ·woodbridge meet
-lustln Friday.
Vaqueros
(2-0) put away
Villa Park,
14-6. Sunny
HIHs (0-2) next
on Vaqs' slate.
10. Talil
Tillers (2·0~ 'I stlll unscored
upon; Arst real
test next :
Cap i strano
Valley Invades.
SALT and .PEPPER
Pilot Power Ratings
Orange County Prep Football
31 . Buena Park (1-1) ............ 65.2
School (record) Rating
1. Mission Viejo (2-0) ......... 94.8
32. Orange (0-1-1) ............... 64.5
33. Foothill (0-2) .................. 63.5
2. Mater Dei (3-0 ............... 94.6
3. Esperanza (2 -0) .............. 94 .1
34. Dana Hills {0-0·2) .......... 62.0
35. Trabuco Hills (0-1 -1) ...... 61 .9
4. Capistrano Valley (1 -1 ) ... 90.9
5. Irvine 12-0) ..................... 88.0
6. Valencia (2-0) ................ 8 7.7 36. El Dorado (2-0) .............. 60.8
7. Edison (1 -1) ................... 86.5 37. Savanna (1-1) ................. 60.6
8. El Modena (2-0) ............. 85.8 38. Estancia (2·0) ................. 60.5
9. Los Alamitos (2-0) .......... 85.7 39. Corona del Mar (1-1) ..... 60.3
40. Huntington Beach {0-2). 60.0
41 . Oceah View (1-1) .......... 59.2
10. Tustin (2-0) .................... 85.4
11 . Loara (2·0) ..................... 84.2
-12. Brea-Olinda (2-0) ........... 83.9 42. Saddleback (0-1·1) ......... 59.0
43. La Quinta (0·2) .............. 56.8
44. Costa Mesa (1-1) ............ 56.6
13. Newport Harbor (2-0) .... 83.3
14. El Toro (1-1) .................. 81.5
45. Katella (1·1) ................... 56.5
46. Anaheim (0-2) ................ 55.4
47. San Clemente {0-2) ........ 55.2
48. Troy (0·1-1) ................... 55.1
49. Cypress (1·1) .................. 55.0
SO. Centur'r'. (1·1 ). ................ 54 .8
51 . Magnolia (1-1) ............... 54.7
15. University (1-1) .............. 80.7
~6. Servlte (2-0) ................... 80.4
17. Laguna Hills (2·0) .......... 80.2
18. Woodbridge (2-0) .......... 79.5
19. Marina (1-1) ................... 77.3
20. Garden Grove (2·0) ....... 76.7
21 . La Habra (1-1) ............... 75.7
""t22. Villa Park (1-1) ............... 72.5 "23 . Santa Ana (0-2) .............. 71.5
52. Santiago {0-2) ................. 54.3
53. Canyon (1-1 ) .................. 54.1
54. Kennedy {1-1) ................ 54.0
55. Los Amigos (0·2) ............ 53.7
56. Western (0·2) ................. 52.9
( 24. Westminster (1-1) .......... 70. 9
25. Pacifica (1-1) .................. 70. 7
'26. Rancho Alamitos (1-0-1) 68.6
27. Sunny Hills (0-2) ............ 67.7
28. Santa Margarita (0-2) ..... 66.7
57. Laguna Beach (1·1) ........ 52.7
58. Bolsa Grande (0-2) ......... 51.8
59. Santa Ana Valley (0-2) ... 51 .5
60. Sonora (0-2) ................... 51.4
29. Fullerton (1-0-1) ............ 66.0
30. Fountain Valley (0-1-1) .. 65. 9
This week's sc;hedule
Foo1l1ill vs. M:aMa. It Wesmlinster Glenn vs. Pacifica. II lkllsl Grande
La Hltll1 It Los Altos
Las Vegas £ktcndo vs .. Edison at OCC
Laguna Beach 11 ~ X
l..lguN Hills II Garden Grove
La Semi ~. ~. 11 La Palma Pall<
La OulnCa at Western
L0111 vs. Clnyon, at El Moclenll
LB Wison vs. Rn. Vrk;, at Hin. Beach
MlllUn II Dana Hiiis
Slddleback at 8 Rancho Santa Ft 11 Buena Pllk
Sdago It San Olemenlt
Sunny .. $ at nine
WNllief CIV. vs. Sonor1. II La Hallfl
S a turd ay's Woo dbridge -~I
Invitational cross country meet -~-..
the second largest invitational in __,r....._ __
the state with more than 5,000 runners
competing -posed an early tes t for area
athletes.
On a tc~ level, the Corona del Mar girls
varsity (juniors and seniors} scored the highest
marks, finishing first for small schools with 11 7
points. The Sea Kings' frosh/soph team took
second to Newbury Park. ·
Individually, Costa Mesa senior Katy Eklof
and Newport Harbor junior Jared Overton
turned in the best grades.
"Jared got a poor start but used his strength
to work his way back into the race," said
Sailors Coach Bim Barry of Overton, who was
about 3Qth half-a-mile into the 3-mile race, but
finished fifth in the medium school juniors
division in 15 minutes, 49 seconds.
T he Newport H arbor junior boys team took
second to Saugus as Sky Pe terka finished ninth
in 16:20, Mike Peike rt g rabbed 13th in 16:31,
and Matt Eimers ran a personal best 16:47,
good for 25th place.
Eklof finished second among varsity runners
a t small schools with a time of 18:32. Other
top girls runners included Newport Harbor
senior Mary Crane (19:09) and sophomore
Gwen Twist (19:42), and Kirsten McFa rland,
who led the Sea Ki ngs to victory.
SCHEDULE
Tuesday
Water Polo
Community college -Orange
Coast vs. Lung Beach City College at
Belmont Plaza, Long Beach, 7 p.m.
High sehool -Riverside Poly at
Newport Harbor, 3 p.m.
SoccH
College women -Mt. St. Mary's
College at Southern California
College. 7:30 p.m.
Community college men -
Orange Coast at Moorpark, 3 p.m.
Community college women -
Moorpark at Orange ~. 3 p.m.
Voneyball
High school girls -Foothill at
Costil Mesa, 3:15 p.m.; Mater Dei
at Capistrano Valley, 3:15.
Tennis
High school girls -Laguna Beach
at Newport Harbor, 3; Tustin at
Cost.'! Mesa, 2:45; Connelly at
Mater Oei, 3 p.m.
Wednesday
Tennis
High school girls -Cost.'1 Mesa at
Orange, 2:45 p.m.; Los Alamitos at
Mater Dei, 3 p.m.
Soccer
College men -UC San Diego at
Southern California College, 3 p.m.
Cuyamaca at Orange Coast, 3
p.m.
SCC' s Coley seventh
Amber Coley was the top
finisher for Southern California
College Saturday at the Aztec
Invitational cross country meet at
Morley Field in San Diego.
Coley was seventh in a field of
73, completing the Sk course in
19:36.84. -'111 Jlle Pilot
. I . .
( ~ I t ter11 1'11,.,I ,,_,.,,
lilltll'll
~~(last week's plays of 30 yards or more)
6~ •49-CMI Rul*10 <"'*Del), TO I*' 1'om Bly Bllntcn.
c • 4 t -.Jafmy ()aplnt (Cotti Mnl), N'I.
• 19-Mln a.w., I= Dtl), purt ""'"'' ~ 38 -awtt ""'*'° ~). TDplU from 8lly Blllfmn, 37 _,.. Smllt ~). ftild pl.
e 133-ftmMdo Otiplrll (C. Mlsa}, nn 32-Wedl Tit (Nlwpoft Hnof).10uchdown nn
• 31 -tom Heu (eotona Oii Mlf), *lloff reun. •3t-..... OtPlnl (CO. Mesa), Ml
(Last week's offensive eye-openers)
I • ., WI l!IY ... -14 "' 18 for 29& ,.,.., .. .......... .,J.':9'°" .....,,.. CfrtMi Gomez -23 eentM. 124
• ._ Oll'1 M ~ -10UChdOwn tllChll Of 41 Ind
31-91. """ ......... ""· .......... ... Annly, 20 camea, 121 ylrdi. w.o
........ t
• COit.a Mesa's Femnlo Ospina. 17 Cll'l18$, 170 yanla. • Costa Mesa'a Jotmy Ospina. eouchdown MS of 1 t 9lld 5
yanls, 7 -ylld touchdown eaten.
O range Coast College got goals ---ii~-; from seven different players, but it
wasn't enough, as Golden West .... ~
won the Merced Tournament fina l,
8-7, on Saturday.
To reach the final, OCC stopped Cuesta, 9-
6, with Richard Ruffini and Bill Nickel scoring
two goals each for the Pirates.
In high school water polo:
• Coronado needed seven periods to upset
Newport H arbor, 9-8, in a non-league game
Saturday. Joe Haxel and Ricky Krummins
scored three goals apiece for the Sailors.
• Estancia's Adam and Ryan Bollenbach
combined fo r five goals, but Crescenta Valley
held on for a 7-6 overtime win in the Mill ikan
Tournament consolation game Saturday.
• Led by Julian Popov's six goals, CoMa
Mesa took third place in the R iverside Poly
Tournament with a 13-10 win over Southern
Pasadena on Saturday. An earlier 8-7 lo~s to
Santa Maria kept the Mustangs out of the
final.
llaoVBr lads ICC to victory
Krista Hoover's 21 kills led
Southe rn California College to a 3·
1 non-conference win over Point
Loma Nazarene in women's
volleyball Saturday.
• >'-·
Genevieve Wright and Leslie Lastrapes
added 11 and 10 kills, respectively, as the
Vanguards won by scores of 17-15, 12-15, 15-8,
15-8.
On the community college level:
• O range Coast reached the quarterfinals of
the Rancho Santiago Tournament Saturda)
before bowing to DeAnza, 15-6.
The Pirate' defeated Pasadena, split with
Chaffey and Hancock, and downed Merced to
finish ~econd in their pool. OCC then beat San
Diego Mesa. I 5-9, before being eliminated by
DeAnza.
Reiko Matsumoto ( 19 kills), Kit Spath ( 17
kill!>. 7 aces) and Stacy Bekemeycr (16 kills. 5
blocks) were among the standouts for Coa~t.
"We're really pleased with the progress of
this team," '>atJ OCC Coach Jane Hilgendorf.
"Hancock wa' an excellent team and DeAnza
is abo vef} good, '>O ·we have nothing to feel
bad ahout."
In high school volleyball:
•Corona del Mar settled for fourth place in
the Orange County Championships, losing to
ti Toro tn Saturday's third-place game, 13-15.
7-15. 15-12. 14-16. The Sea Kings fell. 3-1. to
Laguna Geach tn the semifinals.
• Newport Harbor came back from two
games down to top Santa Margarita, 3-15, 8-
15. 15-12, 15-12, 15·7 in the consolation
c hampionship of the O ra nge County
Championship.
-B)' 7br Pilot
Wiii Swaim
WortdTrade
Editor,
Columnist
Wllll1m l1~•1H
Editor Of The
Pilot And
Independent
H11• Hewitt
Attorney, KFI
Talk Show Host,
Columnist
Dr. JI Elln Alie•
President of
Eagle Forum,
Columnist
cm UY
aaeaus ·Salaries? (0S10 Mesa M,T,TH,F
Newport Beoch (Comm. Coble) w 7:39Jwyl 39
nlwalk Ban ((omcost Co~e) w 6:~ 3
-Hoottngton Beoch SUN 9:00pn 3
. hine w
11 Desan Stam?
Flllllll RllllWI
Tuning Into The Community
~
Thanks to its revived popularity,
local pro shops lately have had to
increase their inventory of the
rewlutionary zebra putter, which
initially hit the golf market in 1976
when Gene Uuler used it to win
the fonner Bing Crosby Open in
Pebble Beach.
"It's on the comeback," said
John Leonard, bead pro at the
Newport Beach Golf Course, which
carries the zebra putter. "We've
been restocking them again
because of the popularity. It's been Club golf a good, basiC' putter, but it left for
a while and came back."
The zebra putter, made by Ram, bas stripes on the
putter itself for easy alignment. The shaft is bent for
a gilt-edged touch while the design B:;llows for a
NEWPORT:
• Clf llUI Id VI r. 11: 1. Tustin
(2-0); 2. Valencia (2-0); 3. Brea-Olinda (2-0J; 4. N~rt Har-
bor (i-OJi 5. Sierra Vista (2-0); 6.
Garden Grove (2-0); 7. Woodbridge
(2-0); 8. Fullerton (1-0-1); 9. Pacifica
(1-1); 10. Buena Par1< (1-1).
From 81
helps us a little bit.
"We also played well on special
teams (last Friday) -it was an
overall effort by the kids who
were flying around down there."
Mancuso's 1-yard scoring jaunt
with 41 seconds left in the first
half essentially sewed matters up
for the Sailors.
"We felt pretty comfortable
after the last score in the first half
to go up 21-0," Brinkley said.
"Once we got that score, we felt
more comfortable. We had been
moving the ball we ll while
running it , and anytime you're 21
points up <1nd able to run the
football, you feel pretty
comfortable.
"Everyone on the line blocked
well, so it's hard to single out any
one player bccau~e it was a group
effort.''
Group blocking and tackling -
it's more than just a Sailors'
trademark.
"That's the only way we've got
a chance," Brinkley said. "We
either do it that way or we're
going to get beat. The kids realize
they have to play as a team, then
they've got a chance.
"We tea c h them the
fundamentals as freshmen and
develop them for the varsity. Our
senior group came in raw as
freshmen and I think they won
one game, maybe.
atni&bter lltoU. It ..., a.;ru.. b ..... ,.
coordiMlioa.
""Tea WallOn blil UIOd k fur,..,... .. Leounl uld.
•10..0. 9011111boc1y stana WiD;A1Dc 10mO wy witb It,
it takes off apin."
D Nineiy.ono playen turned out for tbe amWal
Senion Championship at tho Colta Meaa Oolf and
Counuy Cub (Sept. l•-15) for aolfen SO.,..n-old
and above.
Ben Vizcarra was the low grou winner at lSO
while three other champie>n• were crowned in low
net Oit.hts. •
In the Silver F1ight (SO-S9 aa-~.George
Harrison won at 136; in the Gold Flight (60-69). Bob
Wyatt won at llS; and in the Platinum Flight (70
and above). Laurie Shermoen won at 1'42.
0
Bob lhrke (Newport Beach) was a bonus winner
... Weebnd .... ~ ONldly Cub wtlh
Wcllad11 in boda die w•a dub' U4 1eaior'1 dub
..... hips.
In the four-round men's dub competition, Ihrke
fired 1 297 loW posa while O.nnj· Bibb (300) and
Warren CaYOI (303) ffnilhed tee0nd and third,
rcapectivcly.
Ihrke'• 222 topped the ~Id in the three-round
senior'• club championship. D~ Quisling (231) and
Peter Shea (232) were tee00d and third, reapectively.
The second annual Sea ~rde Auxiliary golf
tournament will be held at the Santa Ana Country
O ub on Oct. 7. Ruby Keeler. the popular movie star
in the musical-comedy era, ii the honorary
chairperson. ·
Proceeds of the tournament benefit the F1orencc
Crittenton Services of Orange County. Inc., which
pnMda c.re b ._,11, lbmlilan1• Md ;:t::.
ddldrea in a RCltlld) c1pe•M WitJ ill
Entsy fee is S200 per~.-indudll tee prif.ei. hancb Ind dbmor with I IOlat auctiOri IDd I
drawina for "oPPoftunity prizel."
Selman Oievrolct and laflniti HariM>r are doaatlng
can ror boles·in-one. Other ..,.. ~ illdude
IMne Community Development, ~ru,
TraditionaJ Jewcfers, Flnt American TNst. Evans
Designs, Super A Foodl and Edwards Theatres. Call
(714) 64•-7616 for more information. "
0
Mike Farnsworth of Newpprt Beach shot a 1
hole-in-one at Green River CC in Corona on tht
168-yard hole No. 2.
RJc/tard Duno Is • Nnrport Bacb/C#ta Mea
Pilot Spom Wrltu •bole club t:Oll colum11 •ppan
~'7 'l'ffsday.
PILOT.
GRID
STATS
Newport Harbor (2-0)
IUHll CIMDMDUAl.t
pa
22
10
1
........... .. "" ... 43 236 5.5
30 173 5.8
7 28 3.7
2 29 14.5
2 6 3.0
2 .3 ·1.5
1 .3 ·3.0
1 ·14 -14.0 .........
po ... pN
9 87 1
6 50 1
0 0 0
Reo•Ml:'I
po""' .... 7 87 u
3 27 9.0 3 16 .5.3
2 27 13.5
1 5 5.0 ..,....
NIGftt 3 19
2 15
0 9
0 32 0 4
0 0
0 .3
0 ·14
pat. td
409 1
.600 1
.000 0
"''°"' 0 31
1 11
1 8
0 19
0 5
Fmey 18. Mancuso 12. m 9. LJwson 6.
McKown 8. Kllser 2.
aUSON fl'UllJ
°" TOlll flBt doWn$ 17
Rushe,.yll'dage 44· 176
AYel1Cll rushing gain 4.0
AYel1QI l\ISl*'ll ywclage 88
T o111 pasmg yanllge 173
AYel1QI passing yrilge 87
Pass comp,~ Ir( 1'·3s.5
Avg. gain I* pass camp. 12.3
Avg. gain per pass 111mp 4.9 4.3
Net reun yll'dlge• 12 28
Newport Harbor Players of the Week Toal SICkl·yltdaQe 4·mfn.18 1-mlnt14
Avenge s.CkS, yatdage 2-ml-8 ..0.6-~ Net yNdagt 245
TONY MANCUSO
A 5-foot-10,
205-pound
senior full-
back, he
carried 15
times for 73
yards and
two 1-yard
touchdown
runs. He also blocked
exceptionally well.
ED AYMAMI
An outside
linebacker,
the 6-foot-4,
185-pound
senior had 6
unassisted
tackles,
three assists
and one
sack in the Sailors' 34-0
victory over Ocean View.
Avnoe nel van1ioe 123 31
P1111S 7 ·38 WI
fimlln-Mnblts los1 4-3 S-2
T Diii UTicMr1 8 f Awrage U'noYWs 4 0 2.0
Rags-yardloe 11·72 3-10
Avnoe naos·~ 5.5-38 1.5,5 Avg. Tn of Possession 20:25 27'35
1lur-. rn.ms, lrutcepllons, f\m>le "'1A'ns ''
Log, schedule
13 OrJnge 10
34 Ocean View 0
Sept 26 -at Huntington Beach
Oct. 4 -fl Modena (home)
Oct. 11 -fstancia (at Orange Coast)
Oct. 1 7 -Saddleback• (home)
Oct. 25-Corona del Mar• (at OCC)
Oct 31 -Unive:sity" (at Irvine)
N ov. 8-Tustin• (home)
"They went 5-5 or 4-6 as
sophomores, while still learning,
then last year obviously had a
chance to be a part of a good
football team (8 -4, C I F
quarterfinalists ). "
~R.a~lal
Newport Harbor's Mike Gear (left) closes in on Ocean View's Peter Ohm during Sailors' 34--0 rout of Seahawks last Friday night ..
Nov 14 -Woodbridge• (at Irvine)
•Sea View League game
Shakeup at CdM in store
PILOT
GRID
STATS
Corona de/ Mar (1-1 J
SEASON (INDMDUAL)
Player
Hess
KeM1
Slee Iberg
Rushing
tcb nn ft9
25 73 2 9
11 17 1 5
9 20 ·2 2
PaAfng
td tong
2 14
0 17
0 7
Player pa po rdl ltftl pot. td
Kehl11 45 17 210 1 377 0
Player
Hess
Weoeoer
Clari<
Turner
HOOWf
Clemons
Hess. 19
ft909fwtng
po nrg • ..,..
7 83 11.9
.. 60 15.0
3 32 10.6
1 25 250
1 s 50
1 5 50
•USONCTUMJ
td long
0 28
0 19
0 15
0 25
0 5
0 5
O,, ... K'"'9
Total l1fs1 doWns 31 17
Rushes-yanllge 80.,..92 41-137
Averaot rushing gain 6.2 3.3
Awnge Ml*lg y..Oaoe 248 69
Tolal Passlng ~ 175 210 Avenge passing yanlage 88 105
Pass comp, llllmpl, Int 10-21 ·3 17 .... 5-4
Avg. Olin per pass c~. 17 5 12 4
Avg. gain per pus ittmp 8.3 4. 7
Net lftllTl yanllge. 93 58
Totll ncks·YlrdlOe 2·mln-8 4-mln-27
Avnoe nclcJ. yatdage 1-mln-4 2-mln·14
Net ynage 752 378
AYSIOI net y~ 378 188 Pl#tl 4.37 9-30
~·ll#'nlllls lof1 s.s 4-2
T o1111 unMrl 8 8
AVlrlOI UncMrl 4.0 3 0
RIQt-ylrdagt 13-91 15-91
AYSIOI tlags-yardlge 8.5--45 7.5 ... 5.0
Avg. Time Of poSMtsloo 28:45 19!15
•Punl re1umS, ltlllrcepllone, f\lmble reM'M
Log, schedule
19 Huntington Beach 16
O Marina 34
Sept. 2 7 -Est.ind• (at Newport)
Oct. 3-Trabuco Hiib (at Newport)
Oct. 11 -CoSta Mesa (iat Newport)
Oct. 18 -Unlversi!}'• (at N~
Oct. 25 -Newport (1t Oran~ Coast)
Nov. 1 -Woodbndte• (It Irvine)
Nov. 7-s.ddlebad• (at Newpottl
No\!. 1S -•t Tustin •
•Sea View l eague llfM
S hakeups appea.r in store for Coro~a del Mar ~igh's footba!l team.
After ·suffering a 34-0 drubbing by Manna last Friday -
"possibility thinking" is about the only direction CdM Coach
Dave Holland is willing to take.
"I still feel that we're going to be a good football team," Holland
said, two days after his Sea Kings swallowed a capsizing defeat against
Marina to fall to 1-1.
"I really did think that we improved over the week before. I think
that there's still a lot of possibilities."
A shakeup in the starting defensive lineup will be first on the
itinerary for Holland.
"I'm disappointed, but not discouraged right now," Holland said.
"There were a lot of positive things l saw in the game, but we had
turnovers (one lost fumble and three interceptions) and we didn't play
well consistently on defense. There arc some things that look pretty
good, but we need to reevaluate our personnel . .
"And our line plays needs to improve somewhat. l really think -
and like I said, I'm not discouraged -some things came out of that
game that are pluses: (Fullback Ryan). Steelberg ran well, in fact ~ur
whole running game improved, and (tatlback Tom) Hess ran good with
about a 6-yard average (64 yards on 12 carries)."
"(Hess) is a receiver, a running back and an all-purpose back,"
Holland said. "We've got to utilize him more."
"Kehrli's protection was a little better on offense, but I really fe el
that we've got to get our defense together," Holland said.
Among the defensive adjustments: Outside linebacker Scott Borland
will switch to defensive end, strong safety Mau Evans will switch to
cornerback, Jeremy Goldstein will get a starting shot at outside
linebacker, Hess will play strong safety and Gordy Clemons, th~ tight
end, will take over one of the tack.le positions.
"We need to shake it up 1 little bit." Holland said. "In grading out
the film, we have a lot of guys making solo tackles, but we don't have a
lot of assists. In playing defense, it's not a big bang -it's bing, bing,
bing. It's not just one bang. You need a lot of guys on the hit."
-Br RJcb•rd Dunn
Corona del Mar Players of the Week
RYAN STEELBERG
A 6-foot-1,
195-pound
fullback, the
senior did a
significant
Job of block-
ing and
pass
protecting.
He also carried for 21
yards on seven attempts.
J.R. WALZ
A 5-foot-9,
170-pound
sophomore
outside
linebacker,
he had nine
unassisted
tackles and
graded out
high on the ttlm CoM's
34-0 setback to Marina.
. PILOT Monarchs did nothing '~1 GRID d . . :_~ · ~ STATS to amage reputation
Mater Oei (3-0)
auaoM CHIOMDUALJ
.. ..,.
R~
Solis
81.tnton
Vasquez
Sualu1 Kum
tiall
Uhl
Cassara
......... .. ..,. ...
18 128 7.1
12 S7 4.8 11 4 03
10 59 5.9
4 15 3.8
2 6 3.0
' 9 9.0 1 6 6.0
1 4 4.0 .........
pa po,... .....
58 42 892 4
2 0 0 0
llHl"""9 '"""' .... 12 184 16.3
9 294 32.8
9 229 25.4
3 30 10.0
2 39 19.5
2 37 18.5
2 35 175
1 10 10.0
1 2 2.0
auaot1 (TUllJ
........
1 11
0 11
0 1•
1 1•
0 5
0 4
0 9
0 8
0 4
pat. td
.724 12
000 0 ._...,.
0 41
4 72
8 85
0 18
0 25
0 22
0 19
0 10 II 2 _ .........
T OU1 first doWnt 40 4 7 Aushet-yanllgl 87·269 e&-384
AmlQI rusl*'o gain 3.1 ' 5.1 AYel1QI Mt*1g Y1f1S1g1 90 128 l::==. ffi =~ Pus comp,.,..,., 29-73-7 42 ....
Avg. gain I* pm camp, 18.7 21.2
AVG-Olin I* pus *'Cl 7.4 14.11 Net~ yc1o• 65 118
Tollll NCltS.yardegt ::::~ 4~ =. .. ywdlOI 792 1~
Awrage 1111 yanllge 261 451
PllU 12-34 7..-0
f1lmblll·Mnlllet lost 2· 1 M TolltMncMf1 I 5
A--MncMf1 2.8 U ~ 2'-158 27-212 Awrage-~ 7.8-52 1-94
AYO Timi of PoUffSlon 27:07 21:53
Log, schedule
34 lol•nl (Honolulu) 20
27 Gt~ Vafteoy 21
47 St. P•ul 9 Sept. 27-S.nta Ana (at SA Bowl)
Oct. 4-at Rlveflldt Poly Oct. 10-MISllon Viejo (at SA Bowl)
Oct. 18-St. John 8otco• (at SA Bowl)
Oct. 24 -~· (It oco
Nov. 2 -Loyola• cat Glendale HSI
Nov. 8-b)ie
Nov. tS -lt 8ahop AtNt•
• Anselus L~ 1i1rne
G etting away from the ba/.cs
appears to be mandatory this
season when playing the
Monarchs, who improved to 3-0 with
a convincing 47-9 victory over St.
Paul's Swordsmen last Friday.
In what was a hot-blooded
Angelus League rivalry, the
Monarchs .... ranked No. 2 in
• Clf 11111• I .,. 11: 1. Eisen-
hower (2-0); 2. Fontana (2-0);
3. • ••• , Del (3-0li 4.
Bishop Amat (2-0); 5. Loyola (1-
1 ); 6. Servite (2-0); 7. San Gor-
gonio (2-0); 8. Quartz hill c1 -1i:
9. Edison (1 k-1 ); 10. RedlandS
(2-1). '
Orange County and No. 5 in Southern Section Division I -turned c)ff
the steam in the third quarter and still overpowered St. Paul. ..L
"I was surprised because in the back of my mind, I thought may~
St. Paul was going to open up its offense after getting its first g~c
under their belt," Mater Dei Coach Bruce Rollinson said. "'They
showed a very conservative attack against Long Beach Wilson and
some of their formations lend themselves to opening up. I
"The thing that pleased me going over the game was the tact tJlat
our defense is playing so well. They caught a couple of basic pa ,
but other than that, we held them on third-and-short. We also h Id
them on a fourth-and-short, but a face mask penalty on w gave the a
first down, but by all rights we stopped them. They were three s
and out many times.
"We also had a areal interception by (linebacker) David KnuH a d
he scored (from 24 yards out) for us (in the third quarter to make it
34-9). I think that we're playing great defense. J
"(Quarterback) Billy (Blanton) deserves all the press he's gett' g,
but the quiet, unsung hero is that defense.''
Blanton completed 14 of 18 passea for 265 yards and four
touchdowns. "That's a tremendous completion rate.'' Rollinson added.
"That's tough to do throwing against air. The yardaJe is one thing, but
he puts the ball right there. Give credit to the recesven, too. We used
eight different tc:ceivers. -•T IUdMrd Du••
Mater Del Players of the Week
DAVID KNUFF
A 6-foot-3,
205-pound
senior, he
returned an
Interception
24 yards for
a score and
caught five
passes for
7 4 yards from his tlgnt ena
spot against St. Pauf.
JASON THIE$
A 6-foot-2.
210-pound
Inside
linebacker,
he had five
solo tackles
three
assists. one
sack and a
knocked down pass In
Mater Del's 47-9 victory.
Boating
Sloop
donated
toOCC
Chris.tmas came early for sailing
enthusiasts at Orange Coast
College, when the school was given
a state-of-the-art racing boat
valued at more than $800 ()()()
earlier this month. '
Playing Santa C l aus,
communications executive Steve
Nichols of Greenwich, Conn.,
donated • a 70-foot custom
aluminum sloop named Obsession
to the OCC Offshore Sailing
program.
"It was important to me that
Obsession go to a school that has
a ~lid. t.rack record of using and
maintaining big boats in its sailing
program," said Nichols, who also
considered donating the boat to
the U.S. Naval Academy.
"Orange Coast College's marine
program impressed me as the one
that could handle a big, ~werful
boat like Obsession. Im also
convinced that the boat will
provide some great experiences for
OCC students," he said.
The boat, a Sparkman and
Stephens-designed racing vessel
built in 1986 by the world-famous
Directors Shipyard of New York,
is the single largest gift the college
has ever received.
Holland
captures
crown
Skipper Chuck Holland sailed
Amorous to victory in the 1991
Harbor Championship, tallying 157
points throughout the course of
the summer.
The Harbor Championship
consists of 12 PHRF races, two
held at each of the five major
yacht clubs in the area -Newport
Harbor, Bahia Corinthian, Balboa,
Southshore and Voyagers -plus
Newpo rt Ocean Sailing
Association (NOSA).
Jeff Farwell's Cursor finished
secon~ with 139 points, edging
Dennis Rosene's Sorcerer with
138. More than 70 boats competed
this year.
0 1991 Harbor Champlonahlp
FINAL STAJIDINOI
P-. I~, Yecht Pta. 1. Cr-.itk Hobnd, Amorous 157
2 Jell Farwell. Cu™>i 139 3. Dennis R6sene. Sorcerer 138
4 Joe Degenhardt. Ucke!'f Split 135
5 WoodsJl(emgan. Jiffy 100 135
6 Boan Mock. Oe1ender 130
7 Ricllardson. Sueze-B~okol 116 8. Dick Hayden. Rascal 109
9. Pele Johnstone. Shadow 103 10. Jollo Su lay, Pussycat 102
11. P&L Stiarp, Slddoo 100
12 Jack Baillie. Newsboy 86
13 Dick Brown. Bulle! BS
14 Dave Pnce. T res (;o(do 68
15 Oiotl/U!de. Electnc PumplOn 60
16 Gerald Mie!igan, Kacl'llna 59
17. J.F. Albett. ~ Carat 54
18 Bii Apps. Obsess10n 52
19 Kevin Lyoo, Pnvate Idaho 46
20 BHI Fonvuie. Pmion 2 46
Along with the girt came a fu ll
inventory of gear, including 25
bags of sails, sophisticated
electronics and two large
containers -one for storage and
one to house a complete rigging
and machine shop.
-By Tbe Plloi
'Obsession,' a 70-foot custom aluminum sloop valued at
$800,000, has been donated to Orange Coast College's
Offshore Sailing Program. The state-of-the-art vessel was
donated by Steve Nichols of Greenwich, Conn. The boat is
currently berthed in Tampa, Fla. It will be sailed to Southerri
California this fall "via the Panama Canal.
21. John Donahue. Ec:Qsy 45
22 Dave Grlv. Pendragon 4 s 23 KeYln Wolle. Jezebelle 44
24 H¥dV. Mischief 41
25 Pit Scruoos. Wahoo 39
26 LasVMllllUCli., W111gs 39
27 Dan Prigmore. Nelllslllan 38 28 W1lhams. TenaclOOs 38
29 Judy G01$~1. Waler Moccasin 37
JO Angelo Peyl<oll Wee Wrn1e 37
In-the-water boat shows open • 1n Newport
The Newport In-the-Water Boat Shows open
this week at Lido Marina Village with more
than 300 new and used boats for all variety of
boaters.
The Used Power Boat Show will be held
Thursday, Sept. 26 through Saturday, Sept. 28.
The following week, Oct. 2-6, two shows run
concurrently. The Sailboat Show will offer the
best new and used vessels available on the
West Coast, while the New Power Boat Show
debuts many of the 1992 models.
This is the first time in 10 years the Duncan
Mcintosh Company will hold a separate show
just for sailing enthusiasts.
AJI of the sailing vessels will be grouped
together in one large display of pre-owned.
fully-rigged boal!>, as well as the latest new
models.
Along with the boats, there will be a number
of other exhibits related to boating.
These include a free skin care screening by
Irvine dermatologist Jeffrey Lauber (Sept. 28-
29), plus displays on the latest air conditioners,
engines, watermakers and more.
Show hours arc 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. weekdays,
10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Saturdays and 10 a.m.·6 p.m.
Couch potato corner
AfMrtc8n ....... .... .,........ • 90
.... .,........
82 79 78 78
76
76
L Ga
60 -sa e 71 11
71 11"" 74 14
74 14
74 14
W L U
83 68 -
81 69 1""
78 73 8
12 n o"" 84 85 18 53 87 19""
51 117 30""
..... eo11 .....
o.e. On111At.-.
IT 'S
WORKIN& ...
Sundays.
Admission is S6 for adult), $2.50 for children
ages 6-12 and no CO!>t for chiidren unde r 6.
Free parking 1s available with complimentary
shutrlc ~ervice from the lot at Tu<>tin and Avon
avenues in Newport Beach, or va let service
(S9) b provided at the Via Lido entrance.
B) "•.lier, boat!> up to 15 feet may tie up at
the 'mall boat dock for four hours at no
charge.
For more information, call the Duncan
Mclnllhh Company at (714) 757-5959.
-By Tire
Tuelday, Sept9mber 24, 1981 ..
Sllnmer~s •d brings
•Iman Series nnale
W ith the end of summer (Sunday bei~ the first day of
autumn) com~ll the ~nal.e of the major racing seriel> in
NcwP?rt. Bahia Connth1an Yacht Club capped its
Angelm~n Series with races seven astd eight.
In typical summer weather of 1991, the 11:30 starting cannon
echoed off the dense fog )hrouding the start line, signalling the
death knoll drums of )ummer'll demi!-e, R.l.P.
The .fleet tacked to over to a port weather leg (when a sailing
vessel 1s steered approximately 45 degrees off the true wind
direction, with the breeze coming from the left side of the boat)
and headed up to Long Beach.
Near the Huntington Beach Pier (still under construction), the
fleet 1.acked t? a starboard ~catb~r leg (same as above, but with
the wind comm~ from the right side of the y·acht) and headed out
to the double 011 platforms, Elly and Ellen, about nine miles
offshore.
At the twin platforms (fraternal I hclk\e, they
don't look anything alike), the fl eet cased 10
(another sailing term to let the sails out a!> the
wind moves further aft than 45 degrecc; off the
bow) and headed to the beginning of the rocky
Long Beach Breakwater. ·
Inside and slightly belo~ the break\\>ater, the
committee boat signaled 1hc end of the race and
the beginning of the fc!.llvitics a!. th e boats rafted
together off the Long Beach Yacht Club's mam
dock.
The start of Sunday's race off Chaffee l'>land
mu~t have been a harbinger of autumn 10 come.
Sunny hlue skies greeted 1he swarm of salty
sailor!. signalling the summation of the series.
Tbe liule ships started on a genoa reach (a
genoa is a large headc;ail) with their sails eased,
Phi
Rlchlrdlon
Boating
later surrendering to the multicolored spinnakers near lhe oil
platform Eva as the winds moved aft, gently pushin~ the flee t
ac ross the flat seas to an earlv fi nish.
I have oft wondered why the name., of 1he five oi l platform~ off
the Huntington Beach shoreline all '\tart with the leller "E"
(Emmy. Eva, l::.ureka, l:.lly·Ellen and Ed11h)? If anyone has an
answer, call me at the Pilot.
Angel man nvcr;ill re.,ult!> (unofficial pending prolcSt!> Wednc,da~
night):
Cla'" A: I. Cur ... or. Jeff I arN~ll. Newport Harhor YC: .!.
Phantom. Don .iml Annt: Becker. Capistrano Ba~ YC. 3
Pcn<lra~un. Da'c Gra~. South Shure YC: 4. Ne~1,bm. Jack Batlhe.
Balhoa 'a l. 5 (111:) Dl\cr'iion, J.11.:k Hamilton, '.'JH't~C. and Water
Mocca!>in, (ior ... k1 Fradkin. BYC.
Clas' B: I. Ra~cal , Dick Hayden. BCYC; 2 SkiJon. Paul and
Laur.1 ~harp. UCYC: J . L1ckct~ Split. Joe Degenhardt. DCYC: 4.
Sorcerer. Denni~ Ro,cnc. BCYL. 5. Tenac1oui.. Pat aml Ann
Wilham:-.
Cla<;., C: I Ammou.,, Chuck llolland. BCYC. 2. Shado", Pelc
John~tom·. 13 YC: J. P1oncirn. Bill aml Carole B) rnes. BC'YC: 4.
Sling,h111. Bill ~turr:. CPBYC: 5 Bullet. Dick BrO\\ll. BCYC
Cl.I'>'> D: I. Pu\\)Cctt. John Sula~. VYC. 2. lmi.,ible. Bill
Wor ham, BCYC: J Ob~c ion. Bill Apps. 4. Squee1e-U\e,
Richa rdson Kokol. Voyagers YC. 5. Andiamo II, Bob Sodaro BYC. '
Phil Richardson's boating column appears in the Newport
Bcach/Co.r•tn .l\tesa Pilot e'•ery· Tue da).
ltt P•11"41'Pllcll S.. 24-TOIOllD 0-l• 1 M S.. 2$-T°""*I °'°'1W , 1 '0S Steil 21-11 !(nu Cly, 5·35 S1CJ1 27 -II K.nal CllV. S·35
Corona del Mar's Todd Kehrli (left) had his way in Sea Kings' 15·9 triumph over Estancia a year ago.
Nattonall.Mgu• ............
a..tDtwtelen
• 87
85
77
71
S9
82
• 91
78
72
72
71
87
L Ga
84 -
65 1\.'l
74 10 79 IS\.'l 82 18 19 25
L U
59 -73 13""
11 """ 77 18"" ao 20"" 13 24
n Olwwwl 11
Televtllon, radio
TUESDAY
TELEVISION
a.Mball
"°"'
4:30 p.m.-Rcds-Bravcs, ESPN, TBS.
4:30 p.m. -Pintc5·Mcts, WOR.
.. S p~m.-Phillics-Olbl, WON.
7:30 p.m. -Dod.,ers-Padrcs, Ch. IJ.
7:30 p.m. -Royals-A'•• ESPN.
1
7:30 p.m. -Blue Jays-Anacls, SC.
Goar I' p.m -uncomc TToptty, PT.
I
n ..... ltadna
8:30 j).m. -Falrplex replays, Ch. 56.
12:30 a.m. -P.•ffl)kt repl•)", PT. ......
9 p.m.-From Hov'1on, USA.
A ... bdtil
12:30 a.m.-CART n>. F.SPN.
RADIO .... u
7.30 pm ~idacn-SD, KADC (790)
7.30 rm J yt·Angcl"• KMPC (710).
Turn-om
TUESDAY
• Cin.·Atl., ESPN, TBS. 4:30
•Dodgers-SO, Ot 11, 7:30
• Jays-Anaels. SC, 7:30
•Royall-A's, ESPN. 7:30
WEDNESDAY
• Philltes·C\lbs. WON, 11:20
• Reds-Braves, BSPN, 4:30
•Olympic aports. SC, 4:30
• Raoquetball, PT, 1~30
WEDNESDAY
Til.&VISION
laictletl
11:20 o m.-PhUhc~bs. WON .
--STAY
·'"--· BAck
'4:30 p.m. -Reds-Braves, ESPN.
..
U.S. Otympk s~ ...
'4:30 p.m. -Wrcstllna. volleybalJ, SC. ......
8 p.m. -Hlahliahts. PT.
Honeltadna
8:30 p.m.-Falrpla Npla)'I. Q , 56.
12:30 1 m.-Fairplu rop..,._ PT.
l a.m -Los AJamhoa rcplayl. PT.
...~ ..
1~30 p.m.-Junlor OampionshipJ, PT.
A .. eltKlftf
12:)0 a.m.-Ooody'a $00, ESPN.
lA.DIO ........
1 p m.-Jayi•Anacll. KMPC (710).
7 p.m -Oodccri-SD, KABC (796).
.._ Htdll7 (EdllblUta)
7:J0 p.m.-Pitt.•Klnp, XTAA (690).
-111 Dn•l1 ~I
GAME PLAN: Estancia, CdM
From 81
before lca\i1ng around noon. ~ for
lhe coaches, the day was just
beginning.
Having traded tapes with each
other, the Estancia staff followed
the flight s and fumbles of the Sea
Kings' first two games this season,
while the CdM coaches did the
same with the Eagles' reels.
"We use the film s to draw up
dummy cards to show the players
on Monday," Estancia Coach John
Liebengood said.
"First, we 're looking for wha1
are Corona's best plays. We also
see where they run the ball, at
what slot and out of what
formation. On offense we look at
their formations and sec what
blocking adjustments need to be
made."
The process is long and
painstakina. Each play is analyz_cd
anywhere from five to 20 times -
forward, backward, f reetc·framed
-while the coache chart the
movement' or every player on the
field, discuss strengths and
weakne and do their best to
• keep the session cntertainina.
Sunday: Players arc not allowed
to practice on this day, but the
coachc.s don't ~hare this Jwmry.
And, de phc six or more houn tn
the darkroom the previous day.
they were back at it ain ror ~1:<
more.
''At the end of toda) 's session,
we make up scou1ing reports that
give the name and weight of each
player. base plays on offense and
defense and things like that, .. said
Holland, who distributed these
reports to hi'I players Monday.
Ho lland ca lled the film s one of
the mo t important parts of
coaching, adding a stipulation:
"It's more important to watch your
own films (than tho c of the
oppo!>ing team), because you can't
do anything about the other team
if you don't solve your own
problems fil"!lt."
· Monday: A hot, cloudless
afternoon found the Eagles in
helmets and pads only, running
through a series. of drills. ''Thi 1s
a 'CdM week.•" barked
Liebcngood, hungry to add to his
lone victory in five attempts
against CdM, that coming in a 16-
3 romp two year ago.
After watching the Sea Kings on
celluloid all weekend, the coaching
staft can't strc enough the
dan~er of Todd Kchrll and CdM's
passtn~ attack.
"Their quarterback u
incredible," shouted defensive
coordinator Troy Seurer. "lie put
the ball on the money 60 yards
away. He' a~esome."
The Ea ~ )pent much of the
practice ~rkma on ~ to i;hort·
chanac the ·ca Kin~s· aennl
3ll!'tault. Liebcngood, Seurer and
offensive coordmator· econdaf)
00•1ch Rick Meyer walked and
t.ilked the Estancta defen!.ive
players through the plays they may
encounter this Friday.
"Kchrli likes to throw deep."
Me~cr emphasized. ''so we're
'"orking on that all this week "
Over at Corona del Mar, the
Sea Kings were working on it, too.
Dre:;sed in full pads. de pite the
scaring heat, Holland and his !.laff
ran the player'> through a vanety
of offensive plays, highlighting the
pass.
"Mondays after a loss arc always
hnrd;' the CdM coach sajd, "We
ti')' to correct any mistakes and
add any new plttys we might use
this week."
Toward this end, the Sea Kings'
off en c repeated c~ch _play as
many as five or tJt time
sometimes gain t a imulated
8 tancia defense and i;omctimes
by Jhcmselvcs -until the players
met the coaches' approval.
Altho ugh it w1ts Mill early in tbc
week. thii. practice wu all
tiusine!.~
"Hurry up, hurry up. We'v! ,ot
work to do." Holland yelled a
numher of times, drivina hi
playen a1a1ntt tho but Pd
oundina much like bia
C\'unterpan onl 1 few mil to the
v.c~t.
'
By the numbers : · · · · ~ __ _,, ... ,Del
1s burning up the aer.ial lanes •
CROSS COUNTRY • -~ From 81
It 's news
when Blanton
docs not pau
for over 300
ya rda these
days, but more
meaning! ul to
Rollin~on ih
the senior's
com pletion
quota. Blanton
Blanton (6-
Capi\truno Valley (317).
"He am1ues you.'' Rollinson
said. "This lime he w.. 14 of 18,
and that's a tremendous
oompletlon rate. That's tough to
do throwina aaainst air. The
yardage II ono thing, but he puts
the ball riaht there.
High echool
WOOoetllfDGa IWITA'T'IOte.U. .....................
VOLLEYBALL
foot·2, 195 pounds), a mobile
'luarterback with superb arm
strength and precise accuracy,
connected with Mater Dci
receivers on 77 percent of his
throws (14 of 18) last Friday in a
47·9 victory over St. Paul.
"I definitely think he's "
Division I quarterback, based on
hi arm trcngth and athletic
abi lity. He can really bring It. He
likes to stay in the pocket, but he's
just as dangerous when he gets out
of the pocket."
Blanton's fourth scoring pass
against St. Paul, a 38~yarder to
Chris Ruperto, was his last throw
of the game, coming with 4
minutes, 38 seconds still showing
on the third quarter clock.
13.::: .. , ....._.._.ao....,.
Tum 1 Y11ullll. 143, 2 ~ 1911, 1s2, a. C-
-.. -. 1 M. .,_..,.~ ........
Tum I l.MlccWlA, 142 2 f;Jpetw,a. 115. ' ......,.,., :,::_._ 4-dol!lftOOd 238, I • ....., IMI, 149' 8 Siddle-,,...,. ..._Sc-...
Tum I s.ugu, 99 2. ·~ ~. 11~ 3
San Clemente 130 • Aoourl. 1as. s s~ PuOUll 2•• &
l\hllly .., 261
lnClloildllll , ~ (°'Oourlt. u •s ? Nun (Sl'I
IS ?9 3 Lovt jl<.lldll. U 33. 4 A.lilt (AG). 16 44, f . OwertOft (NH , 11: ... ; & Rt"Yct (SA VIMty), 1S·S•
OtheN I 9 Sl!y PellWQ (NH). 16 20, 13 MM Pelt.en (NH). 16 JI 25 M1n Eimt11 (NH), 1& 47
Qlfte (S.OMIM) V-"w ....._ lc"°°'9
Ip""' 1 AQoull 3' 2 San ~al H Sm Vll>ey. 142
• ~I MillQMU 207, 5 CWtmOlll 219 I . Newport Hllf1lor, 211.
VaNlty llMll lchMla Tu'll t . ~Ml M•, 1171? ll Cll\601 3
~111 1 138 '"° lldllll 1 Aoarlcio (f9mo<e1 , ,.a 2. l!ldef (Coet• ••ul, tl::t21 3 Pengta ft.Cl ia •a
CLASSI FI ED INDEX 642·5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE CO.
FROM SOUTH ORANGE CO.
540-1220 .........
I
THI! PILOT
CLASSIFIED
OFFICE HOURS
DUDUMU
PUBUCA T10H DEADUHE
T elephOne S«\1Ce
~ a.m.6.30pm
TUMday Mon 5:30 PM
......... Col.w'tlar
M..f • 30a~:30pm F11 3~00 PM
CHECK YOUR AO THE FIRST DAY
lhe ~ e.ocn. ca.a Mier> "'°' .,._ tor ~and
accuacy ·-............ ~ -"° acc:u. ~ .....
-you ad ---and<f-* "°" od ~. lllpoll -_.., lo 6"0-661L !he...._. leoef\,COlla Mlila "'°'
ocQ9Clh no kCl9ly tor ,,.,,, -.., an CMtweollwl•• • IClr -I
ffOI be _....,,. ~ '°' ltw cOll al ... ipoce OtCtvdt
OQO.Cll9d bf ..,. .... ~ con orft be oec-d la ll'te lnl .__.
Nt(Qn0.l'frdp*l-l0da'l'ca~•11e.....,10.."
QA rd lnfled lo • ....,,_ d'lllfOM -'ad d I ltn d llW
~ b<*W'°9 -""""" all coleCftatl -and ,,,.., _.....~ ....
Houn t •
F o• St ie 1.•
' . . ... --,
'~·-ti ' 41
. ' •• ·11
e .• -~ .. , ~!S.
r ,.,,. • ~.I
• 4 11 • • LI
A • •·• ... i
, 4 i I 1 ,• i
s .... c. .9
Q1t~ ,,,, , ""'
'>u'• ')A
Houses/Condos
For Sale
General 1002
5% SOLUTION
Purchase the home of
your choice with only
5% down No ctoslng
costs needed Th11 Is
not 1 VA. FHA. or eq·
ully share. You re·
co Ive 100% ownership
& I 00% tax benoflta.
Must hove ctoan credit
ond atablo Income.
Coll Co·Equlty, Agt
239.4334
Balboa
Peninsula 1007
BV owner. Charming
bayfrnt 4Br 4Ba home,
or 2Br 2Ba dptx. Pvt
bch/pler. Onr may
carry up to St M w/
qual buyer. Full price
st ,850,000. 499·2068
Corona
del Mar 1022
f -; • •• t t
.. I' ......... r.
. . -
, ........ ~
I. ' I ........
• \11
"~"Hn.,u .....
0'9'('·'' -..
Jr.. , '•
Corona
del Mar 1022
MUST MOVE SALE!
$600.000 Harbor View
Hiiia, ocean view,
S 150,000 below mar·
kot, 4Br 2'hBa, 2 fr·
pica, Sandpiper mdl.
Prine only. 760-5422 182'1 aeACREST
DR
Irvine 1044
$5,000 DOWN!I
1 BA 1 BA townhome.
Orange Tree Ortgl·
nal owner, clean & ae·
rene. $11 2,000.
LIZ/CHUCK
JON•S '180·8000
or 840.S'l43
Rf{M~i\
ii • • • •
Newonrt
Bench 1069
•FAMILYHOMh
Remodeled 4BR, 3BA.
family rm, 11 .ooo 1.t.
lot, pool, t418,000.
Linda Oeth 121-0118
Orubb & Elll1 M<M1200 DUPLEX
CORONA DEL MAR
Ocean 1ld1 of PCH BAYSHOREI
TENNIS ctl•=--·· ..... ..... 1,0.... .... .,
CotllMtu t ' s ,_ 7 s.ro Miiia 1 3 1 t-• .. ~ ..... ~ "°"" $, ,. '· ftl9 1. s...... ....
NCMMl.*OW
DEEP SEA
c.r •••••• II ....... CortMdo 2 0 1 I g 1-I ~...,.. ''a' o-• llfWl*I IW1lar ~ ltllll I. """""'8 S, WIOll I, ~I ~ PlrlOll 11
Lloyd Tic~'•
s urfing
co luma ,
which
n orma lly
ap~11rs evrry
Tuesd.,-, will
k pub/Jsbtd
Thursday th/~
Wttk.
The Monarchs, ranked No. 2 in
Orange County, improved to 3..0
with the triumph while Blanton
increased his overall completion
ratio tu 72.4 percent ( 42 of 58).
Against St. Paul, Blanton passed
for 265 yards and four touchdowns
-he was intercertcd once -in
just 2'h quarters o action.
''I had all day to-throw," said
Blanton. "f was only sacked one
time in the last game. The line is
doing a great job and the receivers
made a lot of nice catches. I just
rea lly know the offense really good
and evcrythin~'s hitting."
In three games, he has 892
yards, 12 touchdowns and only
four interceptions, breaking the
30().yard barrier in Mater Dei's
season opene r against lolani'(3JO)
and in the second week against
A shortstop on the Mater Dei
baseball team (he hit .4 J 9 in
league last spring), Blanton also
attributes ome of his awareness to
his succeo;sor.
"I learned a lot from Danny,"
Blanton said.
Newport
Beach 1069
OUTSTANDING 4BR,
4BA home. Pool &
spa. Tropical land·
scaplng & wa1ortoll. In
Corona
del Mar 2122
•Exeo Charmer 2Br
1 'hBa, Jae tub, frplc,
ocn vul 'h blk water,
2 14 Fernleaf 675·8427 one of Newport'••---------
most dealrabte com· 2BR 2Ba hao, nice
munitles on Signal Rd. patio, 1 car garage.
Prine only. Call R.J. Close to shopa &
$849.000. 759-0680 beach!! 380·9492 Agt
Upgraded Hrbr Vu Hm1 3BR 2'hBA, 2 car gar.,
lg 5BR. Equity share w/d, 1850 s.f. beams,
(S200K) or AtTD asum skylts, patio, $1750/
S500K OMC. 644·9035 mo. Vat/646·1457.
642-5678
Costa Mesa 21 24
COSTAMESN
NEWPORT BEACH
GALLERIA
180 Cabrlllo St.
•2&3 Rdrm, 2'hBalh
•Townhouse Apts
•Subterranean
Gated Parking
e Oulet Garden
Setting
•EZ Access to O.C.
Airport
B;ithroom
1Rcf1111st1 3448
From North Orange County
From South Orange County
'c 1l'. m rnq Hauling 3720
Services 3548
540-1220
496-6800
Plaster
Repair :mt 1
Versallloa • Upgraded.
2BA, 2BA. Frplc,
patio, pool, 1ecurlty
bldg S 189,000. Great
flnanclngl 721·01 t6.
Grubb & Enis 844-6200
3BR 21hBa. 413 Gold·
enrod, oon 3 bike.
Frplc, gar, soc sys,
lndry. $1800. 675·4991
e ldoal for Airport
Personnel
SUBSTANTIAL
MOVE·IN ALLOWANCE
Service
Directory Protesalonal Pore•
laln & FlberglaH.
Tuba, Illa, alnk, Free
Eat. 859-9858.
HOUSECLEANING. 15
Vra Experience. Refer·
encea. Reasonable
ratea. Marla, 241·9553
Ttm•a Haullng. Haul·
Ing to the Dump. Move anything. Low· Int/Ext. patch platterint
est prlcea. 831_..983 Custom texturing, quality ccount1nq
Bookkeep1ng3406
· wortc. Problems·No Prob-
Houses/Condo
For Sale
Mobile
Homes 1100
(714' 848-4472
Jerine Kalaer
BEACHSIOE or Hwy.
qulol loc near park.
Charming 1Br Duplex INC A EASE
Front, w/d hk up, (714) 650.9164 "OUR gar. Lse $895. Leave Mr. Walter f'
message 203·226·3732 ~,.,..,,,...,,,.--___.-~--REACH E'SIDE trg 3Br 2Ba trl·
CHINA COVE 3Br 2Ba. plox. Quiet cul·do·sac. THROUGH
ocean view, nr beach, lrplc, lndry, stove, OUR NEW
2 lrplc, dblo garago. micro. d/W, fncd yd,
$2500 lease. 544·6130 grdnr. Sl275. 673-:JeOO IMPROVED
HUNTINGTON JASMINE PARK. 3BA, E/alde nice 3Br on quiet LOWER RATES
BEACH AREA 31/•BA. Ftplc. A/C, street. 2·car gar, huge
auto garage $2400/ yd, w/d hk upa. Grdnr/ ~ EJ ••S360/MO Incl ullt. mo 720 3965" wtr pd. 2638 Rlveralde ·.ea. Driftwood Park . · • Or. $1100. 548·8571 2Bdrm, 2Bt, IMMAC _L_O_V_E_L_V_3_B_R_, _2_'h_B_A
LESS THAN $40,000. home. 3 blks from EASTSIDE $1 50 Ii By Owner 714.373. beach W/gar & many 2BR. 1 'hBA. 1 car ga· • per ne
9211. Call for Appl. extras. 439 Ferniest. rage $950/mo 760-83&4 per day,
Houses/Condos
For Rent
General 2102
$2200/mo 673-4127 USTSIDE lg 3Br 2Ba
d I NI d/ Thara ALL you pay. Spacious 3Br 3Ba, FR, roar P x. ce yar Bised on 4 hnes,
OR, 2 frplcs, 2 balco· patio. 2 car parking. 1:1 Insertions
1 Fresh paint, new n es. 711 Heliotrope. blinds, avl Oct l tt. In the
$1800 Bkr 845·8289 $1200. Bkr 675-4912 SERVICE
WALK TO BEACH GREAT for roommateal DIRECTORY
BALBOA PALMS • 1 bd 3BR 2V~BAi f/p. ~n)to 3BR, 3lhBA condo. carpe o, op o no Yard, patio, gar, etc. For more Information
ponthouae vus • $850 blt·lns, P.ar, grdnr, 441 $1425/mo. All new. CALL TODAYll
SO COAST METRO • Ferntea . 640·0688. 2335 Elden. 842-3812 ASK FOR 2 bd. condo· $1 095 NEWPORT SHORES • MESA VERDE 4Br 2Ba, CAND" 3bd House S 1500 den, 2 fr pie, new car· I
OCEANFRONT • 3 bd pot. $1400/mo, grdnr Your furn, winter • s 1600 * E.Side. 2BR 1 BA. Incl. (805) 884-&545 Service Directory
NEWPORT HOTS • w/d, new appll., NO DEPOSIT OAC Representative
Boat
Services 3470
Boat Washlng/Detalllng.
Eiccellent, thorough,
depondable, free est,
Call today. Excellent
references. Jun or
Doug 650-8454.
Bus1nP.ss
Services 3488
WI! BUY
FULL OR PARTIAL
TRUST DEEDS
(71 4) 636-4577
Cabinets 3490
,.....CONVEYS CUSTOMS
Ca b in et 1/F ur nlture.
Flnl1he1/Re1torallon.
All quality. 548-5375
Carpentry 3510
Doon.Wtndowt-locks·
Panol·Cablneta·Slalrt
Sl""O-°'Ywll· ... Plllt•~. as ~ eap. J«rt 842-0567
Cement
Concrete 3526
WANTED
Dirty Houses & Busy
People. "Who Va
Gonna Catt?"
BUCH MAIDS
Uc. & Bonded.
10% Off. 962-8465
Computers 3555
COMPUTER HELP:
IMC can a11l11 you
with any problem• or
needa. 800·584·9291.
Contractors 3558
D.W. Baokatrom. Re-
model/Add on. French
Landsccipe &
Lawn Care 3808
Du1ty'1 Lawn M1lnt.
Monthly/Wkly or 1
time. FIN Hl 241·1&40
S.S.L Main!. & Land.
Ros./Com. new sod,
aprlnk rpr. Reliable,
Uc. bonded.751·7015.
THE GREEN SCENE
Uwn• Tr ... Shnlb-lns...i
Spllnkter tnatallatlon
Tree Trlmmlng/flemoval
Lawn Main!. & Cleanups
Rototllhng •432·8804*
St. Lio. #800025
Door• & lln. crpntry -.-T_R_E--Es-·-Uc. 804081. 842·7390. .,..
GENERAL COHTRACTOA ToppeOIR•111on l 1w111,
Cullom homH & re-19"1alra<111up 751-3478 modellng. Res & com·
merclal. Uc #627750.
873·5533 or 493·9796
Construction
Building 3560
Masonry 3828
BRICK, TtL•,
8 L 0 CK, C 0 N·
CRl!TI! Lie. & Ref1.
675-3852.
Music
Lessons 3835
Paul'• Conatruotlon.
driveway•, patio•.
room additions. aaw
cutllng, concrel e
remov. Uc. 254724. 838-1043 °' 638-3S2&. Plano le1aon1. All egH. Your home. Over 25
lem11 133864. 654-7831
S1ndbl11tlng
Reatucco, painting,
587-47<M. Uc. 298005.
Psychics 3902
•AMAZING PSYCHIC
35 year• exp. You wlll
be astounded and
amazed! 714-848-09la
Rcmodel1nq
& Add1t1ons 391 fi
Oc.an Ventur• Conatr.
Remodeling Proa,
Kltch/Balh Speclallatt.
Skytlght1, wlndo we,
Frnch doora, etc. Uc.
1627448. 850-03t9
Screen
Services J920
Meliculou1 MOf1on'•
Mobile Screen Service
Nobody beat• Mor·
ton'• prices Nobodyl
Our pr1cea ate 10 low
you have to look up to
aee the b ottom.
(714) 642-8595
Sprinklr>r
Repairs J~.) 1
3bd house. $1675 remod., gd atorage. 3BR, 2'hBA. Vaulted 842-4321 //Orlvewaya-patloa-
NWPRT CREST • 3 bd s995 + s7oo aec. No cells, decorator win· Ext 31 O =.• .. :~ci. ~c.totao: Electrical 3610 yra exp. Ref. avail.
714/608-0181 Liiy. SPRINKLERS are my
onty bu1lneu. T1mert.
valves, drip 1y1tem1.
lnataltatlon & Replllr.
722·7824 Charte1.
furn twnhm • S1875 pets. 646-l078. dow coverings & waft. ELECTRICIAN BALBOA ISLAND .•-.-3-B-R--1w_n_h_a_e_N_w_p_t paper. Formal dlnlng.,_ _______ -"'4.,,.........,M.,..l_ck...,e,.;;y-5_3_6_-0_5_S_3_ Uc,1597884
2bd baylronl • $2200 Huts, frplc, petlo, gar, rm w/wet bar. Famlly PUBLIC NOTICE D.A.Z . Conatruotlon (714) 848-4230 LIDO ISLE -3 bd, bay· very nice. 322 Ogle St. area. wood burning Cralt1man1hlp, con· 6111 Yrs of Heoor Locll front· S3000 s995 mo 847•7540 lrptc In atep·down The Calif. Public Utlll· crete & block. Free Qualltv M(nded
EMERALD BAY. 4 bd lvng rm. Slldlng door• ties Commlnlon, RE· eat.· Compe11tlve Cvtlomerl.RlcNrdSlnor
house· $3500 3BR 2Ba houae In quiet lead to patio. Light QUIRES that all uaed, prlcH. 751·8535. (l.Jc~•l$4W209 c~:vF~~~~s~d Eastslde nolghbor· and bright kitchen w/ ~~~::.~01:,1nfot~:,~ _O..:.R._T-IZ.....,c""o'""N_S_T_R_U_C.,..T"""t_O_N F·NC ..... AT•• *PAINTING
hood. New paint thru· greenhouH window. 2 P u C Cal T Maaonry-Conetete Pa· • ...., • 0 1 peJ 1
WINTER out. Light, airy & car attached ger w/ tlm. o··,· & chanuuffmebeur!e· tlo1·Drlveway1. Paint. !'~ ~?~!.:.., ~8 ufat tv nt,ng. Lolcal clean. Mini blinds. W/ laundry area. Extra lrg , ....... .,_ .,.... "'""8-3<>98 _ ...,... • .._ ...._,. re erences. air pr ce. RENTALS AVAILABLE D hkup. Lg encl back· itorage area In garage print their T.C.P. num· ... __... .,.. Jim Whyte 04Z·72ot AO!'. 950-8584
yard w/covered patio. could be converted to bar In all advertlae-Exf.lnt. Comm. R••·
Ideal lor working office or excerclae rm. manta. 11 you have a Quallty work. Rea•
Painting 3858
Waterfront Homea Inc.
T rce Serv1cf'<. 3929
Tr•• trim, 1hrub1.
stump remYI. clnupe,
1prntdr•. tod, comm.
mekl1. Mike 841.oa1a
111cl0w
Clc·,1rrnH1 !'I 1 1 Reallore
831-t 400, 780-3800 roommatH looking fOf S 1 3 5 O /m o • C • 11 quHtlon about lhe 1• I F R r a quiet place to llve. Buddy, AgVBrkr at gallty of a mover, llmo Pl' cea. rH Ht. • '· Mate'• Window Cteen-
$995/mo. 840.4002 548-2313. or chauffeur, Call: JACK Kl!NN•DY TILE 30 J,.. exp. 714/424-Ing. Oualtty cat• at 1--~,_...;.-...,....---1 Publlc Ulltflea Com· & MARBLE. INSTALL •xpert lnetaller• 3A or 213-498-7609 reu rat ... FrM ....
3BR 2BA, very cozy own"you2~.~.'!'-~11 ml11lon. 714·558-4151 + REPAIR. All "'PH Hardwood fir, lino., PAINTING PLUI Slllt11cr .. ne 54e..UM home, 1 ml to bch, .,,..,,_ ...,_,._. f '' ceramic, carpe11. Sub close to bike trall, 1 grNt pltlC8 to find 0 Paver•. Washing & fir rpr. Uo. 848-2821. Qu1llty-Afford1bl1 Maro'• Window C!Nn-
• N BAY waterfront. quiet nelghborhood,,.ofllce __ eq ... 11•1p!;..m_1811_t. ___ .,.1Peraonat Bookkeeping Seallng. 497·5M5 ...... 7•• Ing. Ouallty car• at
3BR, 2BA, gar, furn/ water & landacape Sentlce. I wltl wr(te W"V"V vv roH ratea. FrM nt.
u n furn. M 00r1 n g . malnt. pd. s 1,000/mo. 1 A your c hecks, make iillNiOW ClrG .. M•l'l'lt. Slnt11eteena 541-2144
S2400/mo Yrty 147213 11t laat & dep. No L..C:" ~:P··b~:f~.::"~.~~~ COST A MESA Moth., ** * REMODELING Pllnllng. lnt/bt. HouaW united Window Ctng.
3BR 1Ba hH,gar,frplc, Peta. TRW report req. ,,,,.,.M erranda. Wiii do more ha• opening• for Cuatom work Elec· Apt.Oual.lob.FrHnt. Ju9tWlndOWI
fronVrear pelloa, very 7:18-1750. v. ~ -W de1alled work If d• cNtdcare, 2 yeera and Car~ntry·Tli.:Plumb'.. 8t. llcl5"19J 13&-1708 =~ .. ..,~~=
CIHn & quiet, 11300 4Br 2Ba hm 2·car gar 1e6rv•'1 •Ired. Eicc .. refa. Over older lot l80 • w"k Fencn.Keltt1898-o3U 9 W.P. YOUNGQUIST PILOTCLAaSft'llD
Avl 11/1. 876-3883 frptc, lg fn~ed yd lnci 1JOtJ.I ~ 25 yr• exp. 873·2844. lull time and 140 part ........... PAIRS Home/ p Intl l'...a.. ... .J h'• the '"°"'" YoU
f'um 3Br 2Ba, frplc, grdnr. No~··· $1160. ·1 NIL Yu:;:· . .!~ 0,'~Y•· 01~ Rental PROPERTIES 0 I 1 nt ""t"' 1r _,or can count on to HI a
patio, BBQ, very nlcel 301 Hamilton 657·2289 ney movl• video•, Palnt.Car.,.ntry .. te.· uel fty pa,nt ng by myriad or IT*Ct\an-
9 mos IH tll 8/20/92. CLE m.ala a tnacke In· Drywall. Oeryf.4$-6277 Pio' 0 • • • 0 " • I • • dlH heme, becau ..
S1300/mo e.,._.383 AN 2Br duplex, enct *uaNDvuaN* L tlll0a008. tn•ured. ......~ column• comp .. _.... gar, new carpel & 642·5678 CIUded. Near Pomona "" '""' FrM "'· 94W305 q:allllod buyer• to WINTER RENTALS 4BR, paint. $700/mo. Call Addlllona/rerT)Od, Oen-and 191h. exp., ref. Illa a 111'11lo"-"911.,, ealll
2BA furn hH. Frple,hiaift~e~r~4~p~m~,~5~4~8~·3~t~3~5;._~iiiiiiiiii:=:=:=:i~ oral Repair• and available. Cell R•ne• Ctlt INca 147-oreo M•·••Ta lndry, d/w, garage. Handyman HrvlcH 548•7217. DIN'I Home/ButlneH ... .....
S1395/ mo. 8734 039 780-7805 •·Uc-.""'o'""a-y-C"'"a_r_e.-M,..,_y..,c'""o .... M lmprov.,,,.nt Drywall ... ~Galt -Heng Togelllr lomeone)'Ollknowtuf'*'I!
hm. Meal1 lnc:t. 15 yre car.,.ntry l . Painting' Total lnt41rlor Aemod-heat 11? ~ 11 a
••ok ••r auudera e>Cp. Call 7eo-t73e N-Bonded 54,_7822 ' .. Ing leN. Advtoe To .,....,._tobuyltllt
Fram• to nnlah. ca.an, tween OAM to 8PM. ' The Crary. 933-7172 ha..
l'aat, Ouallty work. LOVING GRANDMA wUI HANDY ANDY ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-:;.;==:;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;-'
Balboa
Island 2106
Bnlhci.i
Pen111·,11l.1 .' 1 o l jull a ahor1 walk 10 By owner. •Br 4Ba,
the ~ach. 3 bdrms, 2 famlly rm. 1885,000. bathe, ground floor ____ 84_w __ 5_75 ___ ••rfront Charming
unit with fire place & BayehorH. Turnkey r• :~:.:::.. ~;~ ~!:
privet• patio plus 2 rnod•I. 4BR 2BA, 3-No Pet• e1:1-e~aa bdrm•, 1 bath ap1. c a r g a r , 3 f/p ,
Uc.800544• 12a·T705. babyalt 1n her Co11a Etec·Plumt>-Palnt. Lt.
Mou home. Pl.... carpntry, 8'o 831-4043
call Marcel 548-1800 HANDYMAN ilRVICES. p1 d1.t1f(.
over the garage with $795,000. 848-4212. PENINSULA
private 1un<1eck & tiny ---------ocean view. Quiet 10-Blufla, Oe1lgnar'1 4BR, :SBA, ocean
cation on "no a thru home, 3BA 2\.tSA, Kol view. Avail Oct. S2.4tSO.
1tree1". tHS,000 pnd1. 3 palloa. F/p, Yrly. Agt. 848-tt38
Motivated H iier. S399,500. 840-0038. Winter furn 20r, 1 hH
111·•411 CftlMI DI LA CRIMI to bchl New crpl,
veraalllH L.aTour. Up. paint, eto. AVI now
gr•ded 2 malr ••• SH5/mo 723>-6483
condo. 300 Cagney WINTER. On th• f'olnt,
t112 10. S.tt 121~...i. or nr ocn. l'urn 48r 28a,
Lie 11300 831...,'11 frpto, d/w, w/d, gar.
HobbiHt Dream. e .,.._., lt..,244-Utl
car oar, w/IOft. Nwpt To pl•c• an ad In Hot• •Br 38•. 1g t•m T"9 Piiot c1a111fled,
rm, hrdwd fire, fg lot, Call M2·••1a.
18tt,OOO. 845·0721
let Ut lttlp Y ..
Sell Y ,., p,.,.,,fl
Cal Ciu..W,
642-5671
for information
& surprisingly
low cost. \
~l('IVll I i l.'11
fl 111!1•1 1111•·
I Jr 1ft11, 1 1. 1.'11
LOVINO moth•r wlll Wtntlew wa9hlne a
walcm your chlld, 0-5 heueeele•nlfte· Call
Y'9. old. I yrs elip. 71 ... 2-1274
A4tf1 • .Jod .. MN>712
I( , I 1 "It I fl" '
<lf 'IVl(1'. l',•111
tt.111 111111 i//()
.,..LT HAUUNQ lllMCI
°""'~ ........
CIHnlno·AHldentl•I-Jon t4N112
Commerclsl. IJCcel· DICK'S HAULING • ._ tt...-r, 20 yr1 lent, thorough, d• Juntc 10 dump l gen-
ewp. comp. plant , pendeble. l'rM "'·• eral heullno. Large
add./remod. OHlgn cal todeyl ~.c ... r•ft. truck wtth Ifft o ....
Olmentlona M3-0llO. Ballentlnff. l50-7041. 14o-37H When~·~ .. IOlnll*lg HOUl!CLIANINO by •o!'l'!onrg'l'ljS-.... o"""W ... l'""."""J ... O""'Nft'IC'1
......_ •........, ed JapaMH i.dy. Owf1 l'urnlttM•, tre1h, trH eon be 1 -... ff'lend. !! ..... n!p2o7rtallon. Cell brenche1, appMancee. ~~~~~~!:!!!~!:!!!~======:!!!!!.!~:.=..:.:.::=::.:::::_...J_!-:....,~e~:~~~~.L!M~lk~•~T~d~v~·~ ... ~·~13~·~' I!:::::::::~~!!:!!:!:~~~~~~
..
HUNT
sf'i ~ ,, S1·1·~ 1, ,, i ~>('I'~ 11 'I ; Personal
Men JUUJ Women .!U04 Women J004 Services JOO~
Per~.onz1l
Services 3005
USOO. Chwmlng 28'
28a bayfmt • aid• ti•
Main Chanl, pvt bch,
w/d, uUI pd. Clf~1751
•OCEANFRONT! Furn.
Winter 89S)t-May "82.
3BR, 2~BA. A-.ome view. Fp, deck. Cln,
qui.t & aata. $1500/
mo. 073-1943
PPrsorMI
erv1ces 3005
CTIVE URICH READY
AND YOUR FOR
A ·
REAL
MAN
DON'T SEEKING ABSOLUTE BEST Baautltul Mlstlaaa Diana LADIES of the Orange
BE LOVE & ROMANCE Spaakl Down boyl 1· Coast and their prl·
•TELLIGENT LIFE COMMITMENT
RIGHT TONIGHT 900-173-LAOY 1-0N·1. vale numbers. 1·900-
SHY Mala student, SWM. LADY 1·900-230-2333 18+ S2/min. 20 min 680-MEET ~Ext. 117
St ebl• and •c· DWF, 53, ara you In· DWF. 41 , H•k• hap.
comrll•h•d blond, 44, terestad, hon••t. plnau from steady
5'5" fit and happy, 1tralght forward, Hn· WM, with calm for·
Ilk•• th• outdoors, altlve, Independent wardly active look,
loo king for Qne man and willing lo Invest Eastern valuee, 5' 11 "
with humor and lnleg· yourself In a nurturing and up, truth, home,
rlty, Ilka• dinner al relationship? Call ma. 'caring, under1tandlng,
aaeka a lovable, axclt·
Ing real woman for
real chemistry b•·
tween us. He Is 6'2",
slim axecullva, 64, al·
tractive, lntereatod In
arts, sailing, charities,
health. She would be
feminine and free to
•hare hi• Ille. 13007.
You're 50-+' attractive, 32, looks 28, seeks SWM, aucc eaaful, REAL NAMES BEST D'TES 'V"WLE 18/ovaf $3/min. .punky. full Of energy I I I SWF 2c REAL PHONE HUM8ERS " " N G
wllh a passion tor me. ~~~·::1:~8on beac~ 6'1"· 190 lbs .. good Adun10nty s1.5i>Jm1n AUGIRLREVUE UVEDAZZUNG IRLS
You want to share movies, tennis, long :::•n~e. 11!'oo~f ~0 ~~'. AOUL T 900 LINE 1·900-24e-2444 1·900/88~900
Blue Jeans or Dressy talks. Down to earth, tractive SWF 3o.4o for DIRECTORY HOME #'s s2/mln $2.50/mln, 10 min 24Hll
Tlmea. long walks and open and honest, for enjoymont/commlllod Graphic llstlng of unu· ---------LOCAL GIRLS IN CA
talka and laughler. romance or just !uni relationship/marriage. sual unadvertised CALL Newport/Coate BY AREA CODE 8:00 or after, who'• Who you aro Is too giving. #4004.
wllllng to travel to great 1 not to aharo. 1---------
candlellghl, jazz and f/3000. .,1965. adult program•. t. Mes• women 1·900-1.90().820-3355 classics, travel and1_________ 900·535·8585 99e/min 903-MATE Ext 31. 18/ S3Jmin Must be 18 yrs
Newport Beach. 44· _fl_2_95_•_._____ TALL
60, N/S. 1 4006. LOVE ATTRACTIVE
cooking. I'm 61, DJM, HEAL THY •------------------• over. $3/mln.
5'11'', 190 lbs., ae-TALL AtwlYS Live I flclllnt HOT ALTERNATIVE Unwanted Street G1tl
ATIRACTIVE TO SUCCESSFUL ATHLETIC cura, sensitive, ener· HAPPY ATIRACTIVE 1·90°'847.._.84 MEN of Costa Mesa. Talk to me baby ... 1·
gotlc, humorous, edu· HANDSOME! GENTLEMAN Adults only St.SO.inuVtO m.n 1.900 S84·DATE ell1 40 900·903·t~GS 18 +
LATIN SAIL DWF. 49, looking for FUN LOVING
kl lt1 d 50 • N/S companion SWM, 58, 5'9", Hl5,
cated, romantic and BEAUTIFUL GIRLS 18 & ov-S3/m1n. S2.50/mln. 1b min 1omewhat •hy. friend· Ready for your BEST SWM. 41, 8'4", look· • ~
I i & LAST romance? Me: Ing for that special LIVE'" BUY •ff ng comm a re-SWF, 30, anractlva Ar· with almllar back· flt, lnlelllgenl, roman·
latlon1hlp with SWM, chl1ac1, H•k• SWM ground & lntar••t• tic, likes dining, danc· 3M1, good feelings 3o-40, Intelligent, adu-Ing beach kl na
and wall...ctucated. I cat•d, fltneas con-ranging from outdoor tur~. Saek~ :1m' and
•hp, conversat o n tall, zestful, playful, ••• W ...... chaMalloverlown to and companionship woman who wants a 1 90" •4e 5646 "' llratand then?#1963. educated , com· monogamous man. • v-v • t••adventageohalee?
am 38, 5'2". I Ilk• to actlvltfes to candl• FRIENDLY sclous, generous, af· light dinner• and 1o-awar•. un•mcum·
mllable, paulonate, Walking, travel. mov· FOR EVERY DESIRE The bast t>uys In marehan-tluo h la.if ed
gantla·aplrltad, mid· lea, music, fun. Non. 24 hrs Sl.95/mln/ 10 m.n d ... occurdallvlnc4aaaiflad ug c 1
danc•. movies, dine fluent g•ntlaman, clal commltmenta. bared, N/S femal•age ATHLETIC wellern gentleman. s mo k or and f It. ---------------------------
out. I kid. '14005, commltlad ralatlon· 14001. open. '13006. SINCERE You: 35-49, adventur· #3001.
AnRACTIVE ~~~~.arrl•g•. N/S/D.•----------------
ou1, lun·lovlng, trim, 1 ________ _
n/1, unencumbered.
,, 1962. LOVING
VERY BEACH SWM, 33, 5'10", 170,
TENNIS likes aerobics, wolght
PROFESSIONAL MIDWESTERN LOVING 11tt1ng. sports. moviee, •-------
ROOTS A pretty, vary c1a11y, INTEGRITY music. reading and HELP!
and cartng SAF, 35, I t ti l t I cultured, advanturou1 Energetic athletic more. Saaklng SWF Thia nlca guy, (SWM, 5'4", 130 Iba., Haklng n erna ona 1 Ya, ac· 5'6" brunette with nu-' ' with compatible Inter· 24, 8'3", 195) doesn't
SWM or DWM 33-40, tDlvwe,Fla,ggyk.I tit andr thtun maroua lntara1t1 vp•roryfesr•a'a°"1 alnoSWpMa't!!· aat1. #1980. want to finish last. I'm
good man. good b.. oo ng or at k ... • r ...... ---------••• I attraci1Ya, 8UC· II ... ttr I lookl f havlor and 1ucce11ful apaclal man 3M 9, NI cassful man, 44 to 80, 11°"'· ... tlon ... ~ly act v~~ FULL TIME who ~ e:Uc:i~;9funn~ In hie carfff', for last· S for mutually nurtur· to love forever. I'm t, amo a ava
1 1 t 1 h 1 Ing, loving, open, hon· able woman, 25-40, to ADVENTURER •Incera, attractive, ro-
n g r • 8 0 n 1 P · ••t commltm•nt. If playful and am • lot of 1har• lifa'a Jpya and SWM, 39, financially mantle and loves the 12935· you're emotionally fun 10 ba with. You develop comminad r•· secure aeeka SF, 25-outdoofl. #1947.
TRYING
SOMETHING
NEW
Shy SWM, 27 yrs.
young. 6', 185 lbs.,
blond. blue ayes,
loves beach Illa, cy·
cling. music, moun·
talna. Looking f or
companlon1hlp with
SWF wllh almllar Inter·
eats. #1981. BALDWIN available for a loving will be glad you lallonahlp. 11948. 35 travallng compan-1---------callad. #2920. JUST
BROTHERS relatlon1hlp, pla••• i---------Ion. From Alaakan wll· --------
call. t11H21 . VIBRANT BLOND HAIR derness fl1h1ng to ex· A LITILE VERY
LOOK·ALIKE R BLUE EYES plorlng ancient ruins. ROMANTIC
wanted, (Alec, William, RMIGH•T? CLASCSYI SWM, 5'10", 160, flt, Ma udstdab•, fit,la1t9t8ra2ctlve Trim swKMIN,KY52 looks WIDOWER or Danial), dark· ATIRA T VE attractive. Wall· __ n __ ,_n ... g_. ---·-haired, lc•blua eyes, SWF, 44 yra., 130 lb1., Phyalcally fit, edu-traveled, Intelligent, GENEROUS 45, 6', 160 lbs., blond Educated, fun loving,
tall and handsome, blond halt, green cated, financially and 31. To meet attractive EXECUTIVE blue eyoa. seeks trim one woman man. No
protaaslonal a plus, ayaa. Love early emotionally alabla, SF, dark hair, any cutalth SWF 35-45. children. Emotionally
by blonda beauty, Rock·N·Roll, amuae-morally wholesome, race, 21-31, for rala· Successful lnvestm•nt Sena• or humor a and financlally aecure.
SWF, 28. #4008. ment parka. board & sensitive and humor· llonshlp. 413002. Banker, 45, saaka • must. Movie, music, Seeking pretty lady 40
CULTURED
card games, movies, oua, semi retired, an-•---------trav•I companion, SF, fun companionship, to ~~· htl~h ~ood
plays & dancing. joys Illa, dlvlorsltl•d BRAIN for exotic, romantic prlvala 1 On 1 love mora el ca va ues.
PEARL Looking for SWM Interests and tastH, SEEKS tripe for bu1lne11 and partlH . #1964. 11977.
Prolasalonal, vagotar· under 60 yra .• over, withes to meet with pl•aaura. 5'8", 1801---------1---W-O-N-'T_B_E __ _
I 'ty SJF 38 5'8", 1moker1 .O.K. gentleman of slmllar BEAUTY Iba., open, dynamic, LARGE
an, pre • • • "'2953 b k f communicator, non· DISAPPONTED artlatlc, lntollectual _ ... __ .______ ac ground or good lnloraatlng, aucceaalul ME TOO
and from the East NEWPORT BEACH times and quallty SAM, 38, aeak1 amok!'· n,o ",head 33 SWM seeks large "Exceptionally Hand·
C t k c o m p a n I o n a h I p . younger glrl for friend· casH app Y P ease. · fl oa1 1eo • secure, GORGEOUS ,,1979. SWF to share good some', tall. 11. 30's oduceted genlloman "2923. •hip and fun. I am ---------limes and be 1 lrlond. gontleman; vory lov.
and kindred 1p1r11 for BUTTERFLY VIVACIOUS 5'9", 110 lbs., 111. HANDSOME ,,3oos. 1ng. caring. under·
moanlnglul relation· noeda a HXY ehoulder Please be pretty, open EXOTIC atandlng, playful. Intel·
•hip. 14003. to land on. Doesn't ZANY and trim. #3009. MARRIAGE llgent, slncero, au·
DECISION smoke. Sh• dances, ARTIST DOMESTIC GENTLEMAN thentlc. romantic and
swlm1, b•ach walks. Female, 48, 5.10 ... ac· Flt 50'1 Europoan en· BY sexy, with varied lntor·
TIME Luxury condo, ward· compllahad •triking TYPE joys tho simple things CHRISTMAS eats. Seoka: Very
ba Whit H I Ill L kl f I pretty, alander. 1wee1 I'm looking for fun, ro to • ousa blond. Eccentric, ere· GIRLS n e. oo ng or a • la posalbl• when a na· I h 60• 1 ti 1 and compatible girl adventure, famlly, or • •y oma. •. atlve, Intellectual, 10-appeal lo thla SWM, rac va woman ° turlng, attractive, lady frlond. (Balboa Pon·
lov•. iacurlty. I love blonde, 125 Iba., 5'5" clal, educated com· 6', t75 lb., dark hair. share life's laughs In her 30'• finds her nlnsula). #3008.
people, aun, ocean, _tai_1_1._11_2_9_2_2.____ munlcalor. PalnVdraw, I'm good looking but with. Let's exchange 1plrltually awake, non·1 ________ _
good hHllh, and me. PRETTY remodel, Real Estate. modest, llke to cook. _P_h_o_io_s_. -"-1_96_6_·___ smoking, successful,
I'm 1ophl1t1catad, SHAPELY Love belly laughal love children and the HANDSOME mtdwest val ue s beautlful, poaltlvo. Craatlva bonding water. I'm happy-no Prince. Humor and
Dancing under the BLONDE nffded nowll #4002. hang ups. Seeking FUN gratitude wlll make
alara on our wortd SWF, aucc•uful •x· SWF·DWF·atlractlva HONEST our love sing. Shartng
trav .. brHthlng clean •cullv•. humoroua, WANTED plaua, 30-38, prefer Hll I'm S'. 8 flt, Hn•I-Illa la Iha answer.
air would be heaven. PROFElllOu a 1 long dark hair bu1? f 1 411948.
WORK HARD
PLAY HARD
DWM, 37. &'7", enjoys
horses, 1kllng, music,
travel, 1aak1 fun. ad·
venture In SF. t113004. Pl•••• b• SW male, non-r•llgloua, lovaa .-.. .. 1,,.78• UV9, youth u 38, aaak· weak9nda llW&y, akJ.. uau .. • Ing lov• and no•---------1---------48-M, tall. 412952· Ing, taunhtM. Sffka ""'" gamaa with a vary NATURIST YOU/ME -· that knowa how to b• EUROPEAN MAN SWM 35-46, 8UCC9H• romanOc. I'm adv•n-cute loMly lady with • BUCH nc
WANTED! ~~~~='. ;'.%: turous, Ilka to play OR ~;~~. hHrt. Calli LOVER HAPPY
Uk• aporta, Perform-Committed relation-t•nnla, non·amokar. BRAZILIAN SWM, 38, tall, hand-Fun-1ovlng. HnH of
1 Atta dlnna In or hi I rrt #2950 I'm attractive •P•clal female aoughl by at· MEET aoma, lntalllgent, real, humor, anjoye hugs, ng • r • P ma •g•. · lady In my 40'a . out aax appaal ag• -tractive, educated, looking for adv9fltur· walk•. trav•I. dinner. s~7o. M•? 1·~ &7, #4007. and ttavalad SWM, 24, ou1, tall & flt N/S bru-dancing, 1unsets,
5'5" blonde blue ShoptharMl•etaPllQ89 for frlend1hlp, Ian· nett• 28-38, who an-aaok1 adventurous, • • of clMllfted fof the vacation y don't k whal ayaa, m•dlum build, ~....,,._..__t· ou now you guaga and culture I••· 10meone •pecial joy1 1un, aalllng, honest, 39·46 lady for
nice to be wllh. sound ,~ ....,.,_, --· are mllaing 11 you haven't aons. English fluency throunb clauified travel & laughter. frland•hlp and 18111ng
Good? 4'4000. • reed the claalfflad. not raqulr•d. #3010. ,, # t 948. relationship. #1978.
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no llOt>llltv tot the content or ntPtY to ony s:>«· eonol ~t. The ~IMf a~• comple.. llablltv for the content of and o• ...,..., to any odYettlMment ond fof any ck»I·
nu moo. 0901Nt the Newport leoch. Cotto
Meta Plot and ltl ~ Mrmleu fl'om oel COSfJ, expentel (Inc i'ealonOble at· totnev fMt), lloblfftlea ond domogel ,.suiting
trom or cauMd by the publlcotton ptoced by
the od\19rtller 0t any reply of any t\ICl'I ~
t11ement.
------------------------------------
---..~---------.__,_, .
-~-... ---STATE: - -ZIP:
Mall Ad To:
DATELINE
Newpolt Beecfl eo. Meta PICll
330 W. Bay St
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
Or
FAX 111 Im AT:
131:"1114
CANCELLATION OF PROMOTION
Adi not app.aMO~ em.. ~ ....
pear "' Md cwolilble pubkotloft -tor'D QI tM ~ moy be cor;c:1•d GI Ol'IY lrM ~~ ..
'
'
1,
DUPLEX 28118a, $85(), *O'lux 28R 28A. *INn, E'SIDI d upfotx. Ltg 28r
21731 Lu Paimaa. No q\Hl, a1or~ O/W, 18a. g41.r, w/d , yatd.
peta. Credit / & ral1 ~ ck>Ntt, var•· 304 QfOlldway. Avail req. ~13) 891-3138 ll50 No P4" Mo-249' NoY. 1, K.lth e31·t2M
Coron.1
dcl M .1r O:t)22
•Do you nffd lg clean a•a1oa Lrg 2Br, bal•
2br 'i ba7 a., •. iww cony, gar, ~ crpV
cpt, Dtw, a1orag•. pnt. au• 1760. 120
1750 No Pel 4'40-2495 E. 20th St. 842•90CIO
2 YRS NEWI 2BR,'28).,
2 balconlea. All amen.
hi••· 51400/mo. S.au-
lllull 873-7382
DUPLEX H uge 3BR,
2BA, frplc, paUo,
d.ck. l1SSO & S1750.
Ltnda 721.0118.
Grub b I Ellis 1144-6200
G AU T VALUE! 2BR,
2BA, dJ w, l/p, gar, 2
blk• 10 OCl'll Xlnt cond
$1025/ mo 544-0995.
Costa Mesa 262 4
By CHARLES GOREN
w lrh O M J\R SHARIF
and TANN AH HIRSCH
Nonh·South vulnerable.
deal~. NORTH
•AQ 63
9 J 7432
• Q 9 4 2
+Void
WEST EAST
•4 2 •9 5
•.-\.Q 86 9 10 95
t AK 7 •J 53
Nurth
•K Q75 +8843 2
SOL'T H
•K J 1087
•K
• 10 8 6
•A J 10 9
·rhe biddin);!.
North Easl South West
Dbl Pass Pass I +
Rdbl 2 • IJ bl
4 + PttsK Pass
Opening !rad. l"wn of +
Last week we featured e hand
demunstretini.: tht> exemplary dum-
mv t¥hnique of Italian Blue Teem
stilr .j~1"r~'l" llrl111d<111na. He 1-.
e1iuam• 11dr1it 1111 d .. fense. as th1~
deal fr11n1 a wtir!d rha1np111nship
matrh aio:a1nst thl' l'.:o'. bears· elu-
quent test1muny
Sitting South v.·11s Rnbert Ham·
man, the highl'st ranked American
player un the \\'nr!d Bridge Federa-
ti•Jn rnaster pt"nnl lisL A light third-
hand upeninio: hid prnp('lled Norlh-
South into a ~h11ky four·Bpade game
which might have cum(' hnme had
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
A.C ROS S
1 Commence
6 Reahty
10 Declined
14 less cOIOrh.11
!5 Fearsome one
16 Lynon
nero•ne
17 Famed
v1ol1n-maker
HI Twosome
19 8<0 wind
20 Wearaflle
6 1 Horse cloth
62 Play part. ,,
6J Go up
64 Following
65 -otf· angry
66 Beglnoer
67 Papet
quantities
DOWN
1 Hearth
lesDf\5
bf11nket
22 Sen1 back 2 Broken 1n
3 Having wings
4 Held Of'llO
Tuetdar, September 24, 1991
2<1 l my amou,,1
26 Abndgmenls
27 Norm
3 1 Aner 1a~es
32 Mercnand1~
33 Toolh
35 Ne•t to Tnurs
38 Sou• 39 Tempter
<10 Waathe< wora
41 Deily
42 Cove1s
43 Broel stop
44 Bowle1 '1
large!
45 Wrenched
47 Band group
51 Ooo1 parl
52 More
a11rac11ve
54 Tile design
58 Flufl
59 Ancient
""'"ry
' 3 ' ..
11
20
" ..
••
5 Camera starids
6 Dendy
7 Seaweed
Pfoduct
8 Squawlo.ed
9 Depot
10 -ring
11 Burdens
12 fjOld
13 Acts
21 Al•llrie abbr
23 Su!ll• !or
'""' 25 Fortified
27 Valance
28 Tampico lood
29 Unp1oducllve
30 Btrds
34 Speect> Ha'*'
35 Goal·legged
Ge1ly
36 Hill
37 lnlur!aled
s 7
citi;liilia ~~W~jl Hiddrn Sidt : J1nr1 J•cbon, ..rnw -~ 1ion1l Ta11n.1 singrr, d1nctt, song-
~~;'! ~~~~!ll!M writr r, o1ctrn., h<1' hlddtn 1idr IO htt Iii no1turt. H•r n11mbfr 7 k<'ynolt I May
P.<f~;P-'ftffiO!ifrli~ 16, 19661 rtVt1ls •hf' is 1pirilu.il, has
39 Shabbiest
40 Onlgned 10 ,..,..,
matlunc:llon 42 !ndlcale
,3 C.lllornla
""" '' full ol holes
46 Edoe
47 Chair part
• 9
7"=+tt-ir" an o1burid•ncr of l'itlr-ntory prrcrp-
'fti\!c~m~ tion, is lntrlgutd by possibillly lhal
==~=~ h111n•n pt'r"IOnality 1ur11ivC':I bodily
48 Momeni
49 Income· F1
50 fQrmltr Indian
•oldler
53 Yell
55 SQUltt! COiumn
56 Particular
57 11e111cles
60 Hit sign abbt
" " 13
!kith. Htr compltll' birth numlM"f
!month, d1y, yt1rl 1lao 101111 7.
whk h, In hun. rf'l•ln lo Nf'plunr. To
uy J•ntt J..ckson h" "soul" i1 mo~
than m•rt modtrn or hip t.rm.
Orttmbl'r will br hrr mOlll mt mo ra-
blt month of 1ct9L
ARI ES (M•tCh 21-Arr.1 llJ) You 'll
bl' rrntf't !iot<1gf'. • Sf'lf·sl•""' f1,...us un
unoVtl'5.il •pJl'f'•I. wider •ud1enet", pt'•·
wn1\i1y, M'~ appeal L.uve r ... ta11on~h1p
contrnvt'Ri<1I but Cilp;ibl<' of ~u tv1ving
d1..vn1ion E.o.p.n5oon'
TAURUS (April 20·M<lr 20) En -
lighltn mtnr ft'(r111f'd conc,.rn1nic cnn -
dillon of on<' d..-tu y<.>u, r.-ctntly cno -
finrd lo homf' or• osp•l•I You 'll h.iv•
rt•aon to bf pll'itS>Pd Scrn.1no fl'liluno.
ftf'lh sta", lndeP"ndrncr, crea1i .. 1ty.
GEMINI (Mty 21-11.1n .. 201 You'll
g1111 by httd1n11 "1nnrr vo1c,. ·· Fucu!
on in1uillvt lnttll«I, l••rninjl throu11;h
pnlCHt of ll'ol('hlntt Sf'nuus dis.:us.oioo
wilh Aquan1n involve>~ mantle ""~·
KitnC'f'S, Prrc•tvl' muriinR•·
CANCER (Junt 21 -lulr 221 o; .... r·
Slfy, l'llpl'rim•nr, ChKk dU~tiOn• Kttp
~nt Mtolutlon11 C'On(flrn·n~ d!f'l, nu·
lri1M>n Hi3htr•up ilfetftt, "I .1111 duly
impl"l'tlol'dr' You'll "i11r" at llOClll func•
hi)" r ... mlnl is reprfff'nto!'d
LEO (July 2l·Au11 22) Obst•d"' ·~
lr•nsformtd ontn ~teppins•tunc> o;~
pl•y ahowm1nsh1p. lnsl11I on bto!lpr
vll'w of 1o1lt111, product. l'ocu~ 1111 p~·
Hnt1tlon: dt1l1n. color combin"li'•n
T•urus, Srorplo Jl'l'DV"" In pielur"
VIRCO (Aug 2l·Sepl. 221. Ii wlll
l•~t AOme llm•. but "'(ulprll" wlll tun-
ff'M 10 1prt.t<lln1 c•n•rd You'll~ v1n ·
dlc<11f'd, 1f'glllmatl' ttffOn l'Al~I• 10 n-l•·
br11t 1onlgh1 Mnn'y M:•ntly wlthhtld
wlll be-madl' .. v11 illlb-l1'
LlllRA I Sept 2J·Ocl. 22) M1jo.lr do ·
m"t1l ad U'-ll'n•n• necH1o1 1f h1r111on
15 to bf'. rrs1ored Foc1.1s on music, d1n1n1
ou1. m•kintt •nlf'lligf'nt concf'J:sion 10
dl'~lff'5 t•I lovf'd onf'. Scf'nano .ilso fr~·
tuft.'!i mnnt'y, l~al 1grttmen1.
SCORPIO (Oc1 23 -Nov 21 ). O..fint·
trrms. oulhne boundarif'I, find oul ••·
roly what i1 t•J""'trd of you. Gtr rid ill
supt>rfluou5 m;i tl:'ri•I. put •rid to loslni;t
proposition, ~lation~hip Virgu nativl.'
M'tvtt ~.; chHring ~tion.
SAGITTARl~S (Nov. 22 -0..-C 21).
Stylr, crl.'alivity. prl"IOno1I m<1gneti1m
domin<1l1' r,ci1in1 SC"f'nario Ol!.tdlinl'
t••SIJ:. you·11 1uccesslully mttl thll·
ll'ngp. Display puiw, aplomb, p<inXh••
Can«r n•livl' fisu,.... promlnrntly.
CAPRICORN (~. 22·1<1n 191
F.mph<1ai~ on disl1nc<'. l•nsuagl'. rom-
mun1Caliun, info1tuation that wuld dl'·
vt>lup in10 ··1uml!'thin1t1 wriou• ·· PNjPct
th•1 hold bffn moribund will onrr <1g•1n
bl' ahYl' •nd kicking l ibr<1 will pl;iy
roll'
AQUARI US (Jan 20 -Frb. lRl
Chll'Ck Gf'mlni ml'5Mgt Your opon fon5,
vl .. ws will bor klURht by m•ny Sln'!i!i
indepl'ndl'ntr. cour1ge of convlct•t•n~
Yuw'll bor ··tnllcf'd" lo p.rticlp;itt' in i>•·
oneerins proittf /\nn1hf'r Aquarian in -
volvrd.
PISCES ffl'b 19-MatCh 201 Oppo-
nt'nl who counlrd yuu oul will bt din·
tntt un cruw to night Vigor rf'lurnl,
yo1.1'll m .. t uppi."J9Ulori with fl•lt,df'<l •
1lvt1wt1. FlnancUI nrw1rd fff!uA'd. In •
tuition on l•flt'!. ~ pl1y1 dyn1mk
mlr.
IF SEr Tl!Mll!R 24 IS YOUR
1111.THOA 'rt YtlU hlvl' unut\.l&I vol('IP.
ytlV llllO anr ch1n,..ing, "ubborn. wnto·
11, mmantlt and hlV1' d~p apptr'Ci1Uon
of mu1ic. Taurua, Libra, Scorpio per->na
play importanl min in t our IU1' You
cln bf NII ·1 1\dulg~I to point of h1vil\8
"t wf"'I tf)Ofh:' You ,,. genii•. pl'kt ·
lnvlng but Wiii not hf'tlt1111 10 llghl
whtri cautt it right. Currrnt rytlt
highllj1hll ,,,....,, promollori, tn•rltal
•l•tus, put•ibl• .ddltlon 10 f1mlly. In
Octobcor yow complelt' majOr prnl'""I
Novttnbtr ftalU!Tl 1r1vt'I mm<1nc1 .
If you're looldng tot• cer.
cla11lfled ha• n•w• tor •ou. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•
No·room
left In the
garage
for the car?
A call to
cla11lfled
can help.
RETAIL SALES
Fun anlmal l~am e
stora In Fash~ Is-
land seeks P{f p \as.
S&/hr. 854-5399 j
E11p~dE~~E,!~l.1ata
req'd to grow ln~o of-fice mgr p oi !Ion.
Phones, II book ••p·
'""· :rprng 6. W/P. C•I Mf , Qlll••PI• 9 55-8800 to send
rasume.
SECURITY'
OFFICERS
Unarme d SltCllrity of-
ficers n-ded, • Hun-
Ung1on Beach area.
Can JML Seculrlty.
2 13-748-7478
Tartor
E•p. taylor ne~9d F/
T for busy llfler•1lon1
shop . C•H 544-5528. Wedftffday, September 25, 1911 T RLf:MAR K f:TINO
O f All Things: Adolphr Mtnjow,
latt Aquari1n motion pi~urr 1l<1r,
1tron1 •dvoc•ll' of •1trolo1Y· Add
thn>e "fdtnd1 of <1slrology"; fr1nklln
and Thl'Odort Roosrvtll. N1ncy and
Ronilld Rta&<1n . Su11n Slra1brrg .
Grminl o1tlf'ftll, cl'1'dits •slrology with
much of ht:r 1uccnJ. Ans it' OlckinNn,
Libra movir ·lrlf'.,ision 1111. makl'!I II
cltar: "I don'I know wh<1t my lift
would "''""' bft" likt wl1hou1 aslfQI·
ogyr• Doc S.vtrlnM"n, Canctr mu1i·
clan·lrl•vision ~rson•lily, •HrrU,
"Astrology, likt 11111.sic, i• 1 uniVttNI
lal'IAUillJI'."
ARIES (MJr.•h 21 ·1\pril I Q ) All
slUPJ out! Emph.isi1 ... llng1n1lily, l•lo.l'
inlliolhVf', IOP •sidr JtdlUI quo Spot·
liShl l>n Cft'iltiv,ty, IM'll~u1loty , !ll'A <1p·
f"'ll M•k<' frl'!ih ~l1rt C11cums1ancn
l~kr Jr1m1t1c turn 1n \•Out favof
T AURUS !April 20-May 20). Sifl'tll
nrg1n1zatoon, JIPI houst• 1n ordPr. Focw•
on p.1rtnersh1p, public 1m1g•. mo1ril<1I
~t•lu~ f<1m1l y ml'm""r r.1nfklt"S !IO'Crw1.
K"Y " "ulmu~l oh!IC r~·hon •• Tuur of
homt', tw.spitsl will t><• ft•atu...-d-
GEMINI IM•y21·Junt 20):5cf'n1u-
iu hlRhllghts rrttdom. curioli1y. humur
alld «'ll'br .. 11on Soci~l ..c:1lvilin Mttl·
tt•h·. ropu\1r11y li)jlfl\,. upw11rd. You'll
boo arprt)ll(ho.J cunt·rrnlnJI pl'Jititll af-
fiho11ion Anvch"r r ... m,rii 1n .. olvl'd
CANCER (Jun.-21.JuJ y 22J r(l("u•
on promotion. prodlK!ICon. Cill'ttt. vln-
dlcttkt". Scroll ot unlqut notit-t fta·
luted in fMthwtlnl 11ttn.iriu. Rtttnl N'·
1tarth pi)'• di.,~fl'ldl'. T1uiv~. Sn1rpt0
pl'l'!IUt\' flAu"' prumlMnlly.
LEO (July L\•Aug. 22:) Sc"n•rio
highlltthl• publi•htn11. advtrtfJ1n11.
poHlbllity of jQurnl'y, ROft'lll'I('\', lo'mpt.•·
t.irlly 111111.d, 11 blc'k on triklt.. Oi!INrt'\
mutivrt, 111o1lyi1:• t ho1rn1rr Gemini,
Vl'"o pn11.1n• pl•y m.ijor ruin.
VIRGO IAujl 23-Sept, 22). Vt"1 rn11y
be' •~krd '" , ..... ··1p111udr IHI," F•mlly
mtmbflr ,.. • .,i,.. v1>C:1tion1I AWldanu.
Y"'u'll nottivp .-c'OUlll1n11 ln cunn«llvn
w•lh OV•tp;tymrnt. Pul'Cha"' or io.ill' nl
mmk al ln1trvn'lf'nt cun•ldl•ttd
l lBRA (Stpt 21-0ct 22). rlay wail· 37 yr old co. Eng/
ing samf' in conru•ctlon with lf'8<11 Spanish s paaklnE.. Sal ..-comm. Top c~Mng asr~mf'nl , partnrr1h1p lrid1 .. idual atHUly, 831-9281
dote to yuu, powibly mall', is (tub1ous .. I-======"'°"'""
~finf' ttrms. ~ad b.otwf'@n !in .... Pis· TELEMARKETfNQ
en. Virgo p!'non' figutt in k'tn1rio
SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21J. Focu Earn EXTRA MONEY
on organii<11ion. ronla,ct with .ilfluent ""orklng P•rt.:tlme.
1nJividu•l c•p.1blt ol "pulling i;tring•.' Good communication •nd phoM 9klb ,.. Employmrnt picturt" tr<1n1lorm<'J. quired IO •ell growing,
You"l1 h<1vr mo~ mpon1ibllity, ch<1ncr local Mwspaper.
10 inc~~ incomt . C<1pricorri lnvulvtd. 1,
SAGlnAll.IUS !Nuv. 22-Drc. 21): C1ll 842-4333
Highlight untvtrwl "PP"•I. ~fuw 10 br'I--,,,.,,-.,,,-,.~~.,_,~
bogsf'd dow n In ~itu.iliori involvlns U.S. MAIL J~
p!!Oplf' who IM"k v•lues Focua Ofl rom · 111.77 10 114. .95
1ru.1nicatlon, lf"<1 Vf'I. <IPPf'•I 10 wldf'r •u· IH. No... H~r
dirnc.. Arin play. dyn•mk role Arn. No b •
CAPRICORN (Oft:. 22-fan. 19): ~ NK••urt· 1 21 ...
dirrct. g~ to M in of m•Utl'!I. rrotH -1888 •ll1· 1835
1ion11 1ppr•l1o11I of 1 .. rsr houHh"'ldl--W-AJ_T_R_E_S~l-11~~'-R
prodwct, pmpsrty fr•hu?d. What had P/T Exp'ct for M . ..,
bren Jost can br located in your own Of S..5-1713
homr. Leo. Aqu•rius penon1 pl1y rall'f, Mt. .,
AQUA.RIUS (fa11. 20-ffob. 111) Srnw
o f dlrrttlon mtorrd. ll•pprochtm•nl D CHll('Sfll ', c: "><10
wilh f1mUy m1mbco1 brings joy Unor~ 0 ~
thodo' •fipro.xh •lt>vo11te Mindi ng.~-:":!:: 1~ mo ~
nlrki f•~""'" '"ming lhouAh ~ l clean hOuM IQ HB.
of trM"h1ng. Antw•r 11 Qn way. Mon, Wed a n-Mt• or
PISCES (Frb. 19·M11~h 20)? Em· ,.rl, 20 hr9/wk,-Aefa
pha1l1 on lnvtttm•nrs. dlvldf'nd1. uln ..-q. Barb, M1·1fr8
.ind purc:hawt Dtvf'niry. taprrimf'nl.
m1\l.t iwnin•nl inqulrift. You NYkl bt
trowdtd lonight by tdmlttf'I, Money
o(f,, It lealllm•lt . lie tettptl•r.
If SEPTEMBER 25 IS YOUI
llRTHOAY1 Yu(I ltt ~plrllu•I, cori•
ttantly ... 11 ~rftttlon. you art yout
own mOM ,....,.. tTIUc Yoo t\udr 1u1.f
of 1lamo11r. '1ntrl9ia, myatrry. Man y IP YOU ••ab Pf"°"' ln11l11 yuu '"" p1)'thk . Curwnt ClRUT PORT A
ty(i. rolncldn with cornplff~l)n ol prvj· Di9MWA9Ha,!':
ffl, Journl!)'. 11&i9nmen1 rtl•tins to don'i rnlnd ., .......
tomtnu nl<"•lic>ri. Lov• r•l•tlont hip ~no further, I.,....
ptC11111't dur•blf. Ourlns Oct0Mt yow • l~·t~MM: ....
rneke (f'elk .u.rt in new dirttflon 1nd KenMw., ....., ontv
3aln l'"'altr ind•p.ondiontt M1rito1l tta• ~~ ~,--~
tu• rmph1l'iiN In Nnvtmbl>r Dwn•m· ling board · loP,iolCo•t
..,,,. ,.,..,!Uf'Pll hohdll\' ~lt'bt.ilil•n S$00, Hll UOO/obO.
PIMM ce.D f4fl\t133
aft• &::IOpm. ot call
anytlm• a lit""9 IMO•
\
f \1 t''(' •.
( !I ' I I:' . • ' I >'I
1974 Ouflleld !tec:trlc eo.t. 20'. M,000. day
71-'1914.0ISOO, eve.
7141976-1711.
Baby Qrand, DUFFY 20 E1Kltfc Boat,
black, 1elnt, Ilk• new. Fully equipped. S 16,950.
UKE NEW, fttat ctua
ex.cutM and cWlcal =~~,..-----otnce. furniture. Large KIMBALL Upright W/
176-&0ee
M;1Jlflt' c-)1.~) I
0 (J L k S :, t' ! ~ .l '.)I' ,' 1J ,1 .'
ael~ ..,.....,._ at bench, 1225/obo.
1/3 of coat. OBO. Woocs mffrof, 8Jt4 tt,
Bo.,d room aocl r• $125/obo. ~570 ceptlon ate FOfWM 1350/MO. SIDE tie on
500 quaJJty. AttNottt. Main Channel. 9 tt
plantets. phanff, fax beam, up to 32 n
machine•, network long. Call 175-1751 :u'r:• d::!,:.'~ •ilDi Tit to is Ft.
Call Chatln 47s.eooc> w .. t Newport. ttl50/mo.
Oak Kln9 Sise 81SCMU45
11M CEU!BAITV
l!UAOSPOAT. AC, PS. Pa, AM/FM caaeette,
lo9died. "$3,NO. ~
tOM C!LE8NTY
EUAOSPOftT. AC, PS,
P8, AM/fM cauette, io.cs.o. 13,950.
54(M)900
1960 DODGE COLT·DL
White . AM /F M·
caaaelle. Orlglnal
owner. $2700.
17:M009
Fiat qo70
WaterMd w/plet a i---------1975 FIAT 124 COIW9ft· mirror dbl atack 3s..t0 FT. dock apace, Ible. Original ownet".
drwta. ChHt of drwra Gigantic No. Bayfront, Bal lal. S1100. 073-0009.
& dteaaer. Great Half Price Sale Sailboat pref. Avall
cond, •If S1000. Sept. 23 10 28 until July 1. 675-07n 780-3878
TRADE
through clanilied
Tlcktocker DOVIR iHORiS
Thrift Shop Three doeka at private 540 W • t 9th St. realdence: 25 +, 45 +,
Motorcycle, furn. mlac.
Sat/Sun 8AM. 1880
New Jeraey.
PUIUC llOTICI
50 +. Eaay acceas.
$10-$13/ft. Mra. Sheri-
dan 714-85"1·2234,
&42·7858 Of 8()().273-1441
PUBLIC NOTIC!
F or cl 9075
1911 Ford Crown
SqUfre Wagon. 44,000
mllH. Loaded. Excel-
lent condition! One
owner. 18,995 OBO.
832·1957
PUIUC NOTICE
r.~ .. ,1,"11_., ·J1Ju
M~11123000
Turbo, beautlflA car, 1 owner, excettent con-
dition. N.950.
(714) 541-0t73.
Mt•rcury ~ 1 J~
•'llVOLUWMOll
CUllCM..IT• ~ wtth whlCe 1op
(new) and at\Mla.
Pull out ateteo.
Alarm. 70K mllH. t7 .soo. can oes.
2191.
~1·~1( l11,•' ... ,
1Cl,i-,•,1r ·, i.">0
Plymouth 1te0 O.tuxe
Runa very amoolh,
brand ,_ bnkH, no
1979 MERCURY CAPRI. ru9t °' denta, '2850
AM/FM, air, 1 own.rt OBO. 722·7275.
TOQ9thef w/15' Snipe Tri hawk aport• c:ar.
.. flboat. Packag• Only 52 were bultt.
'2200.875-2115 Collector value
l.20,000 +. Beat otter
MG 9140
110 •79 MIDGET
Brltlah Convertible
Claaalc. Moving
Muat Selll $1750
OBO. 8504088
Leave M .. aage
Nissan 9150
1990 300 zx
5spd, red, 33K ml,
oxcel cond, car c:over,
full fac:. war. $20,900.
714/631·7550
PUBLIC NOTICE
or trade for Jeep
Cttelok ... 72 t -eeo&
utu P.ir !'. r-;
Rep.i1r ~260
AUTOMOBILES
Bad Credit OK. 88'·91 '
modela, guaranleed
approval No down
payment. 1-800.
233-8288 24 Hra.
BUY
a new car
throu,9h clu1ified
PUBLIC NOTICE
JAKE DICK RICHARD
The Johnson Boys say we're loaded with '91 Lincolns
and Mercurys. All must go. We will consider any and
all offers. Come down and pick one out.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Johnson 8r Son
I I ' < o I ' \ 11 IH l H \
L A./Orange County's Oldest Lincoln Mercury Dealer
2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
714/540-5630
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
1ow1na the DUbllcallon of required to give notlc:e to ctutlve, of the Callfomla California Uniform Com-thirty {3Q) days of this no-FSt174 ~ This statement wu filed This statement was filed This statement was !lied
IN• Plotlc:e, the title thereto lnl•m.d persona unleat Labol Code; the prevailing merclal Cod• Secllon lice by proVidlng written Flctltle>Ua with the County Cletk or with 1111 County Clerk ol with the County Ci«k of
PUIUC -nc• •hall vest In the find«. If they haw waived notlc:9 ot rate and ac:ale of wage• es-8106.2. comments to the 0.par1· lluslneH Nam• Orange County on August Orange County on Septem-Or'"'"• County on <>-tem-'"" ., lhete be one, Of In the City consented to the proposed tabllshed by the City of The name and ~drus ol ment of Community Devel-30. t991 be 6 99 _.,, ""'"">'
--T .. i-N-.-.-1-H-3-3--•of Coale Mffa, In which action.) The lnd999fldent Colla M ... which .,, on th• person with whom opment,1P1annlng Dfvlslon, Statem.nt ' r ·
1 1
ber
6
• l99l
JK)Ttca Off :.S: ~~ 11 ~ ~~'!".!f~.!:~h~~ :d ~~1y; the..J~h~~!r~ ~·~:;n~ ~~~ E~~O~ ~~h~~ ::S.e~untlnglon .,.~:i Fo:,:r~s ~~son Published N-~::!! Published New:!09S:!~. Pub11$hed N-=!2!
TRUSTlll!SULll time and date to be an-.sted peBOn Illa an ob-penalllea pretcrlb•d CORP. 11326 South Street Published Newport PSC 1EVELOPMEN Costa Mesa Pilot ~pttm· Costa Mesa P1to1 Septem-Costa Mesa Pilot Septem·
Leg.sl Nut1ce..:,
0'1 Odobef 15, 1991 al ~. )eclJof1 to the petl1lon and thertln fOf noncompliance Cenitos, CA 90701 and the Beach.COtla Meta Pilot COMPANY. 16292 Rascal tier 10, 17, 24, October 1. ber 11, 24, Oc1ot>er 1. 8, ~ 17. 24. October 1. 8,
11:00 ,.m. Rm Atnetlcan DATED: Seplember 11 , shows good cause why the of said Code. last day lot filing ctaJms by ~ptembef 24, 1991. Lane, Hunllngton Beach, 1991 1991 1991 ·
Trtl• lnturance Company, • 1991 Coult should not gtanl the The City Council of lh• any credltOf shall be Octo-T756 Calif. 92649 T-685 T 711 T 7 3
CalifOtlUa COtPorltlon U DAVID L. INOWDEN, authority. City of Costa Meta r• ber 9, 199t which Is lhe Peter S. Cooke, Presldenl, • •
1
Tru11•. or Succeuor CHIEF o' POLICE A HEARING on lhe pe11-aerves the riahl 10 reject business day before 1he PUBLIC NOTICE 2375 Monnor Drive, Park PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Trust• or Suballtuted Publlahed Newport tlon Wiii be held on OCTQ. any and/Of altbld1. anticipated sale date spec!-NOTICE OF City, Utah 84060 Trusl"' of that certain B h.C . BER 10. 1991 at 1:45 PM In EILEEN P. PHINNEY, fled above. Mark B. Cohen, Vice Presl FlctlUoua Flctltloua FlctJtloua
Deed crf Trust executed by tac osta Mell Pilot Oepl 3A loc:lled at 700 Cltr Clerk, Cltr of oaied: September 13, PUBLIC HEARING dtnl, 2235 E1s1 1030< Bualnffl Name Bu1lnH1 Nam• 8u1lnesa Nam•
MichMI Rnnlk and Qlng9f Seplembef 24, 1991 Civic Center Drive West. C t M 199t NOTICE IS HEREBY South, Sandy, Utah 84092 Statement Statement Statement Aesm and rtc0tded "?'II T750 P.O. Box 838, Santa Arla 0• a eaa. YEN HOANG GIVEN that • public he11· Helen Kessler. Sec:tetary1 The Following persons The Fo11owm11 persons The Following peBons
3. 1 It lnslrument No. PUBLIC NOTICE CA 92702. ' Publlehtd Newporl Pu bll s htd Newport Ing will be held by lhe Treasurer, 1107 Birch· are doing business as: are doing bu$iness as: are doing business as:
90·17 031 of Olllclal If you obJecl to the grant· 8each/Co111 MtH Piiot Btach-Costa Mesa Pilot Costa Mesa City Council brooke Circle, Midvale, HACIENDA OE MESA IMAGECRAFT, 3 Wild· COA Sf HARDWOODS.
AecOf@ ol Ofange County. 123tff Ing of the petition, you September 17, 24, 199t. Septembe< 24, 1991 , on Oclober 7, 199t, al 6:30 Utah 84047 APARTMENT, t60 w. w11. goose Court, Newport 4260 Cerritos Ave.. Los
Califon\la, and pursuant to NOTICE TO should appear 11 the hear· 1121 n54 p.m., Of is soon !hereafter This business is con· son, Costa Mesa, Calif. Beach. Cahf. 92663 Alamitos, cant 90720
11111 certain Notice of Ot-Ing and 1t1te your ob-as po11lble, In the Council ducted by: a corporation 92628 Robert C. Fo11 111. 3 Wild· Ronald M. Kaloust, 20442
t,utt tpereunde UKJOfded CREDITORS OF jec:lions or file written ob-PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Chambers of City Hall, n The reglstrant(s) colt!' 1n9 Wen Hwang, 5712 goose Court. Newport Drew Cir., Huntington
JanuarJ 11. 199t aa lnelru· BULK 8ALE 1ectlons with the court be· !=air Drtv•~ Costa Mesa. on menced to transact bust· Highgate Ter., Irvine, Calif. Beach, Cnfll. 92663 Beach, Calif. 92646
meflt No. 9t-014849 of Of· (81!CI. 91041 fore lhe hearing. Your ap-Cltr of 1 lhe fotloWlng Items: ness under the Fictitious 92715 Darby Douglas Switzer, Alan Thatcher, 20382 Elm-
flclal 11ecord1 of uld 8101 u.C.C.) pearance m1y be In person Newport Baach UPEAIOA COURT AN ORDl~ANCE adding Buslntss Name(s) fisted Wiison Ying, 2233 Harwich 1501 Lakeside Ln., Hun-crest Ave., Huntington Cou~wtll under and pur· l!acrow No. or by your attorney Notice of OF THE STATE Chapter IX to Tiiie t1 ol lhe i•bove on: August 1, 1991 Lane, Huntington Beach, llngton Beach, Calif. 92648 Beach, Calif. 92646
suant ~said Deed of Tru11 891003 If you art a creditor 0< a Publlo Hearing OF CALIFORNIA Cossa Mesa Municipal Mark B. Cohen, Vice Presl Calif. 92646 This business is con· This business Is con-
sen II public: auclk>n tor Nolle• Is hereby given 10 contingent credllOf of the 1991·99 FOR THE Cod~ pertalnlng to police denl This business is con· ducted by: a general part· ducted by: a general part· ca~h, lawfUI money of the creditors 01 tht within deceased, you must ftle C eh IM COUNTY OF ORANGE services al latge parties, This statemenl was filed ducted by: a general part-nershlp nership Unit~tatn of America, a names Miier !hat • bulk your clalm with the court ompr en CASE NO. A180059 gatherings, or events on with the County Clerk of nershlp Tho reglstrant(s) com· The registrant(s) com.
cashier• check payable to -. ia llboUI 10 be made of and mall a copy 10 the ptr· Houalng IN THE MATTER OF private property. Or~ County on August The reglstrant(s) com· menced to transact bus•· menced to transact busl-
sald TfUlfH drawn on • the UHll deicrlbtd so!"al representallve ap-Affordabllltf THE PETITION TO NOTICE IS FURTHER 27, 1 1 menced to transact buSI· ness under the Ficlluous ness under the Fic11tious state OI national bank, a below pointed by the court within ltrategr GIVEN that 11 said lime F505058 ness under the F1ct111ous BuStness Name(s) l1steo Bustness Name(s) ttSted
ch«k lrewn by a stale or The ~amet tnd business fOUf months from the date Notice Is llefeby given CHANGE THE NAME and place all lnter11ted Published N-port Beach> Business Name(s) hstad above on: September 1 t , above on: not y11
ltderat1credit union, or 1 addrentt of the seller are: of first luuance of letters that the City of Ntwporl OF Derek Scott McHale persons may appe11 and Costa Mesa Pilot Septem-above on: December 28. 1991 Ronald M. Kalousl
check drawn by a 1t1te of STEVE BERNRITTER as provided In section 9100 Beach hat prepared t pro-ORDER TO SHOW bl heard by tht City Coun-bet lO 17 24 Ociober 1 1984 Roben C Fo• Ill Th11 statement was filed
lederal aavlngs and loan SUSAN BERNRIITER 280j of the California Probate posed 1992·1998 Compr• CAUSE FOR ell on the alorementloned t 991 ' ' ' ' Ing Wen Hwang This statement wos f.led wtth the County Clerk ol
nsoe1,11on. or 11vlngs Hatbot Blvd Unit C 'eoata Code. The time IOf ftllng henslve Housing Attord· CHANGE OF NAME Items. This statement was filed with the County Cte1k ot Orange County on Septem-
baNI •peclfled In HCtlon Meta CA " ' claims wll not e11plre be-ability Strategy (CHAS) fOf Petitioner• Derek IF THE AFOREMEN· T~ with the County Clerk ot Orang• County on Septem-bet 6, 1991
5102 oC the Financial Code The location In Callfomlt loft our months lfom the aubmlulon to the U.S. 0.. S tt M H le h .,,_ TIONEO ACTIONS ARE Orange County on Septem· ber 13. 1991 F5C>e037
and ~horlzed 10 do bull-of the chief extcutlve office hearing dale notl~td partment of Housing and n::. c :.ti af ave CHALI.ENGED IN COURT, ber 13, 1991 FS00749 Published Newport Betel). ness this state 11 the of 1 .. _ 11 ..... above. Urt>an Development (HUD). • pe on or an the challeno-may be llm-p LI F"'0 .. 728 p bl h d N rt B .. . main ntrance to Flrtl ~ ,. er ••· ume " You may examine the fife This plan Nts annual hous-order to c:ha119e na,.,. lied to oniy those Issues UB C NOTICE . "" " u '' • -po eac ... Costa Mesa PtlOI Septem-
Amtiricao rw. lnswance Al nsted by the •elltl' all kept by the court. If you Ing assistance ooal fOf new from Derek Sc:ott someone r11ses at the pub-Publtshed Newport Beach· Costa Mesa Pilot Septem-ber 17. 24. Ociober 1, 8. Com~ located tt 114 Olhef buslneu names and are a person in1erested In contlructlon or attOfdlble Mc:Hale to Derek Scott lie hearing described In Flctltloua Costa Mesa Pilot Septem· ber 24, Octob11 1, 8, 15 1991
East Ft~ Sttffl.. Int~ city addrttut used by the ~ estate, you may file rental housing and lhelter RoaenMre this nolict ot In written cor· BualneH Name ber 24, October 1. 8, 15, 1991 T.703
ol Siii\& Ana. Callfornla alt Miler within thrH years ti.-wtth the court a fotmal R• fOf homele11 and "al risk", IT IS HERl!BY OR-rnpondence deflvered 10 Statement 1991 T·728 PUBLIC NOTICE
that riQM, tltle and 1ntere1t 'tote the date auch list was quut for Spec:lll Notice or and tor famille1 to bl at-DERl!D th tall the City Council al, or prior Th• Following persons T·745 PUBLIC NOTICE •---------conveyed to end now held Hnl Of delivered to the the filing of an lnvenlOfY slsttd by Section 8 Rental a per•ona to, Iha public hearing. are doinQ business as: ,-
by it under tald Deed of buv• 111. none and appralsal of ettate at-Altlstance Program. The Interested In thla a,. EILEEN P. PHINNEY, TEAM MOO, 3857 Birch PUBLIC NOTICE Flc:tltloua Flc:tltlou•
Trust h lh• property altu· The ~ .. and bullneH sets or ol any petition or CHAS requires a 6().day r• pear before thla cour1 City Clerk St. Suite 567. Newport Bualneas Name
ated la tald County and addrtllff of the buyer .,.e· aecounl 11 provided In vltw period and public In O.partment No. 3A Publlshed New ort Beach. Calif. 92660 Flc:tltlou1 BuilneH Name Statement State fMct1Md 1t: FAY~ KARIM ANNAR seetion 1250 of tht Cafilot· hearing prior to 1ub1• of the Orange County B h C M PPll Otrtk Herbert Furutani, Busln .. a Name Statement The Following persons LOT 2'3 OF TRACT NO. KARIM, 24451 Alicia Partt· nla Probate Code. A R• quent 1ubmltt1I to HUD. Superior Court at th• eac · osta esa 01 11~2 Luau Lane. Cypress. Statement The Followtng pe1sons are doing bustness as: t284. fAS SHOWN ON A way No 12 Mlsslon Viejo quest for Special Notice Thia plan lncorpor1t11 ape-dd hown b September 24. 1991 Caltf. 90630 The Following persons ere doing business 8': SIDELINE ENTERPRISES.
MAPRl:COADEDINBOOK CA 9269t • •form Is available from the clflc elements of an e1dst· a r•H • • ov• T751 Frederick Karl Hohwan II, aredoing businessas· EDUCATIONAL CUA· 503'h Gotderwod, COfONI
41, PM)ES 40 ANO 4t OF The ltltl• 10 be told ve court clerk. Ing Housing Aulalance on OCTOBER-22, 1981 PUBLIC NOTICE 637 Alta Vista Way, Laguna WESTERN INTERMOOAL RICULUM CONSULTANTS, del Mar, Calif. 92625 MISCELLANEOUS MAPS, described In oeneral as· Allorner for Petitioner· Plan (HAP) the 1980 and at 2:00 o'clock P.M., Beach, Calif. 92651 TRANSPORT 18544 Los 17782 Wlnterberry St. Christine Parker (F1ances
RECOAOS OF ORANGE Subway franc~se. 1815_: Gary K. Rosenzweig, Esq.: 1990 Cens'ustt. Because and then and there f59992 Mark Edward Pavidis, Leones. Fo~ntaln Valley, Fountain Valley. Calif. Christine Parker), 702'h Av-COU~N, CAUFOANIA. hold Interest IHHhold Im Clayson, Mann. Alend & of unavallable 1990 Census ahow cauae, If any Flc:tltloua 10t50 Slllbite ~ve .. Foun· Cali'-92708 92708 ocado Ave .. Corona del EXC TINO TMEREFROM provement~ tetephon~ Yaeger, 601 s.. Main St., data which HUD 11 to pro-ther have, whr the pa-Bualn•H Name taln Valley, Cahf. 92708 G 8 0 r g e And r 8 w Wiiiiam T. Hewett. 17782 Mar, Caul. 92625
ALL ATER RIGHTS. number furniture fhrtures P.O. Box 1<M7, Corona. CA vtdt tater, the ci,ta chatts tltlon for change of St t t This bu•lntss Is eon· COtometas, 18544 Los Leo-W1nterberrx St.. Fountatn Ross McPhall Townsend. CLAI OR TITLE TO and eqii!pment .~ good· 91718-1<M7 111• Incomplete. HUD rec· nam• ahould t b Th F ~1 •r•n ducted by: • general part· nes. Fountatn valley. Caltl. Valley, C11tt. 92708 503~ Gotdervod. COfona
WATE , WHETHER OR wlH and are located 11. Published Newporl ognlzes thal the CHAS will . no • •. 0 owng persons nershtp 92708 Mary K. Hewett. 17782 def Mar, catrf. 92625
NOT Jl.~ BY THE PUS. 2901 HarbOf Blvd Costa Beach.Cos•• Mesa Pilot be revised to Include up-granted. a~~~~"8:rinse:~;~ C Th• registrant(s) com· John Coghlan 19544 Los W1ntrberry S1. Fountain This business Is cor.-
LIC Rfa .. vnDS. MtH CA ·• September 11. 19, 24, 1991 dated dell. It I• fur1h•r ordered C 1 H menced lo ltansact bust· Leones, Fountatn Valley, Valley, Calif. 92708 ducted by: co-partnt1s
()() ~ lllMt addrns Of The· bualneH name used T702 Tht Pubhc: hit the op-that a copy of thla C ENTER0 ~00 ~twporl nets under the Act1tious Cahf 92708 This business 11 con. The regtstrant(s) eom-other common deslQnallon by the .. lier al lhal ioc. P.Orlunlty to review lhe order to show c:auH s!nt~r Cat f ~66o ewport Business Namt(s} listed This business IS con. ducted by: husband and menced to 11an1act busl-
ol said propeny: rs put· tJon Is' SUBWAY PUBLIC NOTICE Draft" CHAS. Coples ol be publlahed In the S acdi E ' . II 424 S above on: $ei)tember 1, ducted by: a general parl· wilt ness under the Flctilious ported to bl: 485 Co1ta The 'ant.1c1paled date of the CHAS are available lot Piiot a newspaper of P ~n A mmoH • Cal 1· t991 nenhip Th• reg1str1nt(s) com· BuS1ness Name(s) Nsted Mna Street Costa Mesa review In the Pl"'-""' o.. ' • m venue. emet. 1 · Derek Hetbert Furutani The reglstrant(s) com-menced 10 transact bus}. above on· nol appltcable
CA 92627. ' • \':~r~o~ ~~ INVl~~.Io'C•E partment of Clty-Hd"'3300 general clrculatlon 92343 Thi• statemenl was filed menced 10 transact busi· ness under lhe F1ct1t1ous Chflstine Parker
Said u19 wtn bl mad• Escrow
30110
Crown \'al-NOTICE
1
..__.!f!.,S Ntwporl Boulevard,' New-publlahed In thla Mk:htlte Flnaz.zo, 424 S. with the County Clerk ol ness under the Fictitious Bustness Name(s) hsted This statement was filed
'Mthout COV'9Mnl °' Wat , a ·-·~r given port BeKl'I, CA 92683. county, at .... , one• a Palm AV9nUe. Hemet. Calif. Orana• County onSeptem-Business Name(s) hsted above on: August 26. 1991 with the County Cle<ll of
ianty, exprMI °' Implied: lay Pattcway No. 107, La-that sealed propoaats IOf Nolle• I• heteby further ... k tor four conaeeu-92343 bet 17, 1991 above on· NIA Mary K. H-ett Orange Coumy on Septem-
u 10 title poueulon Of guna Niguel, CA mn furnishing all labor. mater!-given that the CH.4S Wiii be tlw ... 1ra prior to th• ;-o'g• R. Cahpin. 424 S. FS0705S George A. COfomelu This 1t1t9'Mnl we: filed bet t'f, 1991 tncumbr~ to aalltfy IOThl~ ~~ :::; ~ ;::;pot1a-lutlmitted to the ;J:r Coun-d., of tM .......... aim A--. Hemet. Calll. Published Ntwporl Beach-Thil tl&lemenl was filed with the County Ctertt of F507oe3 ~! '::3~°' ~anct .=r: merclal Code Section fl• 11 may be requhdr.c:! ell tof ttlelt apr on the DATll.D: .IUL 25 1n1 =sue Chapin 424 s Costa Mesa PiloC s.ptem-with the County Clertl or ~~1 County on "''11"'1 Publlshecl Newpon ~
•• SHIU. MODERNIZATION OF PAS-:~~ ::ytheo ::;:;; TUUV N. lft'llllOUR, Palm Avenue, HetMt. Calif'. lier 24, October 1, 8, 15, ~~1 County on Augus1 ' FSOSOZ• Costa Mna Pilot Septem-
by said Deed of Trust, to If IO IUbject the name SENG EA ELEVATORS p.rn. '1n the Coundl ctiMn. ComMIHlener •f .... 92343 t991 • Fsos .. -Publl1hed N--..t Beact.-btr 24, Octobtt I, I . 15, Wit: $40,142.19, ptut lh• end eddreH oi the person (TWO) w11 be rec:.lved by ben 8upertorCour1 Thia bu1lne11 11 con-T·733 .....,.. ... ,.,..... 199t lollowlng estimated coats, wtlh whom cftlimt may be the cii., 01 Coata Mesa at of the Newport 8eactl 0 M Hale 3806 Channel duc1ed by: a general part· Published Newport Beach-Costa Mtaa Pilot Septem-T.730 ••penMS and adYancn at filed II O.bbl Faber, CSEO lhe Offlc:e of the City Clerk City Hal. 3300 Newport . c • nershlp PUBLIC NOTICE Costa Mesa Pilot s.p1em-bet 3. 10. 17, 24. t99t the tlrM of the lnltltl publl· ~Nlguel Eacrow. 30110 n Fair Drive, Coal& ,,_.· Boul9Vard, Newport Beactl. Place, Nl'WPO't 8-ach. CA The reglstrenl(t) com-ber 24, Octobef 1, 8, 15, T-669 PUBLIC NOTICE cat~ of thlt Nollet of Crown Valley Parkway No. Calltomla. until the hour Oi CA. 11 which time Mel 92683 IMf'Ced to transact bull-Flctltloua 1 Sile. R.133.'2. 107, Laguna Nlgutl, CA 10:00 A.M., October 14 ~:.::rand all persona Publl1hed Newport ne11 under the Flctllloul Bualneu Neme 991 T·749 PUBLIC NOTICE Flctltloua
NOTICI TO 926n and lhe last dale lot 1991 at wtllch time 1tieY be helld ":i~c~ Beach-Costa Me11 Pilot Bu1ln111 Name(s) listed Statement Flctltlou• llu1ln•H Name
PROPERTY OWNllR filing elalmt ahall be Oeto-will b. cpened publlc:ty and menll may also be aubmlt· September 17, 24, Octobtf above on: not applicable The Following persons PUBLIC NOTICE BualnH• Name ltatement
YOU AA£ IN DEFAULT bet 9, 199t which Is the read aloud In tM COuflcll led to tht Planning o. 1, 1. 1991 Michelle Anauo are doing buslneH as: Statement The FollOWing persons UNDER A DEED 0 F 1>u1lne11 day belort lhe Chamber•. Sealed propoa. parlment by November 12 1723 This ttattment was filed EXCLUSIVELY YOURS RE· Flctltloua The Foltowlng persons 118 dolnt business as:
TRUSt, DATED (NONE HI• dal• apeelned above. • .. than bear Ille t111,·t~~ 1991. fot lurther lnlOfma: O'r'!'78;t~~ytyonC':ugk u~: ALTY. 18002 Irvine Blvd., llualn•H Nan,. are doing business as: (~))ru~ l~~~R ~~k~ANYSt SHO~) UNLESS YOU Daltd Stplembar 20, the work and name o , .. tlon, contact Craig Bluelf. PUBLIC NOTICE Tustin, Calif. 92680 Stat•"'9nt LA PERLE COURT. 2110 • . · TAKE ACnOH TO PAO. tn~AZ KARIM, ANNAR ~~::""~a:s~~ dlstln-Principal Planner, at (714) 20• 1 1 Yvonne D. Klrkendafl. The Following f)ef'son• Newpor1 Bflld. 11. Costa 1325• Costa Mesa, Cahl.
TECT YOUR PROPERTY. rr KARIM ~efter the act bid,. 844-3225. LEGAL FS04314 2~H Santa Clara Ave .• are dol'l buslness as: Mesa. Caltf. 92627
9!~26-44~
MAY BE SOLO AT A PUB-Publllhtd Newport clollng time lot the~~ Publl1hed Newport ADWRTISEMENT Publlthed Ntwporl 8-ach-Dana Point, Calif, 92629 (a)ACI ( )AWED COAPO. Donald R. Wild and Bar· Apj)~H Tr~lller~
UC SALE. IF YOU NEED Beach-Coate Meu PUcl of blda ahall be re~ fo Btaeh-Cotla MHa Pllol DEPARTMENT OF Costa Mtta Pilot Septem-Jamel M. Harvey, 504 W. RATE INVESTMENTS, 940 bata G. W11d, as TruslMs Calif 92669 • •
AN EXPLANATION OF TH! Septtmbef 24, 199t. blddet unopened. It than September 24, 1991 COMMUNITY ber 10. t7, 24. Octobef 1, Bay Ave., Newport Beach, South Cout Drtve •175, of Iha Donald R. Watd Leslie Rothetl-Mlltef 780$
•"'"'" ~-1...,., of T755 199t Calif. 92&e1 Costa M .... Calif. 92626 Family Trust, dated 81221 "-*""' T 111 n..__
NATUAE OF THE PRO---------·~_1 be the aole r"--~tyhls Dl!VeLOPMENT T.a:l Wiiiiam A. Klrkendall, Gteg Albtf1. 6035 Sand-89, 2t10 Newport Blvd_ •1. c:r.tt~ r ' ...... -..-.
CEEOING AGAINST YOU. PUBLIC NOTICE g: ~'"1n PUBLIC NOTICE PLANNING DMllON 24341-1 Santa Clare Ave .. wood, Lakewood. Callf. Cossa Mtta. Calif. 92827 Thi• business 1, con-
YOU SHOULD CONTACT A · ti-1 proper CITY Off PUBUC NOTICE Dana Point. Calll. 92629 90113 Thl1 bu1lne11 la con-ducted ..... husband and
lAWY&R. CP a1T08 A""Mt of plant end 1a3034 HUNTINGTON •EACH Thi• bualnes• la eon-Sub11h Pandoh, H3 ducted by: an unlnc:ot~ wile .. ,.
DATED: Soptembet 20, NOTICS o' cations may be obt.='!; H1C1~!»!f-Na0. Notice is hereby gtven by FlcUtloua ducted by: The 3 PtOole Amigo Way, Newport rated 111oet11ton ot er Tht reglttrant{a) c:om-
t99t PITITION TO o4 ,..,.., 11:-1 • ..,..,... the ~ ol com. •u.a""8 Name named aboYe wiQ be ·in. Beach, Calif. 028eO than t partnerlhlp menc:.d I Inns.ct bull-
FltaT AMUUCAN ADlllNISftR ::,~Fu ~~·r ....... NOTtC• TO mun11y DeYe10prnent. Plan-ltatel'fteftt corp. aoon and wtU II be Tiiis butlneH 11 eon-The regl11rant(1) com-neu unci!, the Rctitlow
.IT ..... -M .... .,.__,_ • Coal• CR•DITOR• OP nlng OM9'on Of the City of The FoltoWlllQ l*90f\I atockhold.. ~ by: a eener-1 part. menc9d to transact ~ ButlMH Name(•) ll:t9d TITLI IN8URANCI .. , • .....-na, .,_..,.,_,upon non ~ •ULK 9ALS Huntlt\atOn leech I.net tho .,. doing bus1nHa at: The regl1trant{1) com-nenhlp Mn undet lhe Flctitlous abcWt on: NIA COii~ 8 Calhrnla llhrabet" J, refundable payment of (Nettoe --uant following Draft Negattve CENTER DEVELOPMENT, menc:ed to trantaet busJ. Th• reglstranl(•) com. 8Ullne11 Name(a) Dated Jefff-JaClc Mltlef c:~~ MaM ab SS.00. M additional chatge C ..-·• Oec:Watlon reque1t hU 369 SM Miguel Drive, Sullt ""' undef the FlcWoul menoed to transac1 ~ above on: July 2. 199t TN -itaiemene laed
a , IWt Au ho-&llaaMth Jan. of &a.00 rnut.1 be Included te UC 9". e10S) been Pi'91*9d end wlll be too Newport 8Hc:h Callr. Bu1lne11 Name(t) hted netl under the Flctltlout Barbera O. Watd 1 wae
, •• ::.~ • t Mann. :,,::::on~ ~ Plana, NOTICI! IS HEREBY tubmlbed to the Olly of 9:1Mo ' ' abcM1 on: Au.gua1 It. Ullt ButlneH Name(a) lilted This atatemtn4 Wit flled ~ tho c'::::' ~ 1t~t "'"' 8.,._,
1
.. tt) J, Menn c:oncnict doc:umenta 0~ =to':~ tale It HL.Wltlnaton a..ch PtaMlng MlchMI I. Cohen. 3't San ~ O. Klitlendall abOVe on: August 14, 199t with tho County Clertc ol 23~t on
len AM. C.,lfeml• M4I h•tr MllM alto be examined al the of. The name(•) .:net buaJ. CommliM4on tof tl'IW ~ ~ DfM, Suite 100. Thia atllement waa flied Gteg AltMltt Orange COW11y on s.pi.m-• FI04713
•270 C
•t .. )
1
......
71
,,. .. ,.NO. ,.1807oa flee of N rao.. Claf1c of the ne .. eddr"' 01 the "'* tlderatlon. The Draft N9Qa. Newport leach, Calif. with the County Clerk of This atalemenlC wu tiled Iler 3, 1991 Publllhed ... -.-a.en. • .. -· -Co ..... , Plant -~e· tlve Oectatatlon Wlll be t2teO Oranot COunty on Augu• with the ounty Clerk of . 'SOSl31 ·~..-· ... tt34 To all htlft. benellc:lariff, ~ of tta Mna will not -PiLAA SANTOS 191 aVllllat>lt fOf ptdc ~ Robert D. Exel, 369 San 27, 1091 Ofangie County on Seplem-P\lbllshed NtwpOl't Btaefl. Costa MMI Pi60t ~..,.._ ,~~·"·~ New••rt credtton, c:ontlngtftt credl-apectbtlonl the ad· 8-ker Sfroet. Cotta' M ... and c:onvnent tof thlr1y (30) Miguel Drive, Suit• 100, FSOIOH ber t3, 199t Coat• MtN Ptlot Stptem-btr 3, 10, 17, 24, 199t ••• :.C•••• •e•• ~=~ .. :::'led~ =~.C::-arve 11 "" CA t2SH • csay1 c:omrntnelng Tu.a:. Newport lleac:h, Cam. Published Newpott 8Mch-PI087~7 ber 101 17, 24, Oclobtt 1, l'51
..... • ........ r t4, tM""" OI ....... ot both, eluded with~ Do4fla llUllneN ... PIU drf, September 24, 199t. t2MO Colla M•N PMo4 Ser>ttm-Published Newport Besc:h-1991 Oo'*' 1, 1
1
1H1. of: Uube4h J. Mann. aka Each bid iNlt be madt Cl.EAAEAS ' Ofaft NegattYe Deelata»on This butln .. • 11 cor.-ber 3, 10, 17, 24, 1991 Cotta Mtta Plloc $et:>lem· T .. 90 lloata and I*• ano
•1 t717 Eliza. beth Jene Mann, a.tty on the Propoaal_ form AH cllb~t bualneu No. tt•it evalualea the r» ducted by: • general patt• T~ ber 24, OCtObef 1, a. 11. --------·• Olll'IPW'I #\Cl con..,. -
---------• J. Mann end 8et1Y Mam ahee1t M W'OU9J'I P.1a namt(t) and ackhN(M) ==::.:-.:. = ~ reglattant(a) com-t.991 PUBLIC MOTICI 11 ttie '*'O' tMt Nik• PYIUC NOTICI A P!TlflON nu been PfOVlded In the cor1tr11Cl uaed br N ""9r(1) wllhln llon of the propo1td menced t0 ,,.~ bU11-PUBLIC NUTICI T-740 Plctttteua """""'""'can be tound --------111ted by Roy tt. MAM In the doc:umenlt, and al\all be tM put tlVM YMt9t u S0urce Aeduc:tlon and A• nMI undaf the flcllttoul In~. WUL llOTICI SU~IOr COUf1 of C.ilfOI• llOCOtne>anled bV • ~ Need bV 1t1e ...er(a), .,.: ...-.. (SMt) to IJutlntH Name(•). 1111ed ••• ~.. PUBLIC NOTICE 8wltie• MMM r=======
NO'TIC• IS HIAllY ""CoutitY of Oftngt. Of cuNtr't c:~ Of a bid none -wttt\ DrO¥lalonl llbOyt ....... 2 \971 --..... 8tet9'Mftt
i .. to1o1MQ The petition requea1a lhll bond few not .... tnan tft The Nml(I) and ...... ~ = '31. ~ ~ Ital..... Pkltltte119 The POllOooMng penioM Pf•••
'-N ., ..,_, Rav t(, M111n be ~ed of the amount of the bid, n•H addren of fhe Of'~ Thia *''"*" ... lled The '°""111Q peraone .......... Nw .,. ~ bullnt.a u : .. t ef .... f hwl Merl ...... 1tV • penonal .-pr~ made ~ to the City ~(I) are: V!N H0AH0. No. t1'21 the wtth the Counly a.ii of are dotrlQ bU11na111! 1 ........ t ZORRO CUSTOM HOMH D....,.._.. 'oil to admlnlltaf the .... i. of of Cotta Meta, Ho ~ 11 fremount Way, ~ tenttal .... onMIUI ~ Orainta couney on~ ~SAL ClU9.. 143St ,,,. ,~ '*1IO"t LTD .. 2 Luceme. Newpoft eu.a. •=.,.-~ ~~NQUMtt the e:' .. ":c:!:,~ ~-~ .. ~ ..... ==-:~.!'!!! bef10,181t PIOtJte ~~,GatdenOtow, ~\~C:-ho... ~Ca~~l.uc:9fne. • •• ~. deciedtnl'• wll tnd c:ocl-auch c:Hhlu • check. ~ deacltbed • ~ HouHhOld Hal~ A .. , .._.......... ........ To"' Ooodwyn, 17071 PN«, 1111 lo. Coalt Of'. =orl IHCh, Calif. Jll' ~ ~ ....._, ... ....,......., 101...,. cit, WW a""-• be adn'lllted to cash. Of bidder'• bond. niu., Mne, eqi Ip..,., w oy ... .._....._ -..... ,, l.t\., u.....-,._,, .,.__._ u....-.. _. ... ....,, -~ to(i ~ The .. and """ No bid lhll lie ~ machinery, tradename ..... -. llerMf1t ~ 9rtMo1 .._, l&M ?OG. 9MCft. Cllr. _,.-...-· m ....,.... --..,_, Men Flaum. 2 Luceme, ... 1We Ciodlcla .,. ~ tof "9d ur""9 l II Made on a aoodW'I. ...... etmtdd :r:=::: &~· CO.. ...... c.M. llClt ..... ~ 14»1 £1.dd 8arbWa M. ~ 11 '1 Newport llHC:h, Calll •--=-,.,.•' Li 1~. rad 1ctMtM ... -1•1Mton In l'9 .. iltpt blri ~ ...... ~ l'9 rtr1ptO¥efMfttl, Wfenent Ooplaa ol l'9 ' P\.tiblehed ~ .._.., IHt, ~ °'°" Calf. lo, Coelt °'· 02ot, C-. 92680 ~ cyclie! loV'a ""8 10Spd by the~ C11y of Coat.a ..... ..cl er not to ~ .,, .. .,.., .,. cin .. -. the~ c.. ..... Nal ......,.. ...., . ......_ Cllf. t2'2t Thi• bua!Maa ta con-~· ~ ~ ~· 1o The Pl~ -. rMde tn aewidlfa ...,. an11 .,. -..... at: .,, ,,_. of,..~-. De\ref. bef 11 2 ... ~ 1 a. Lan Nol~ TOI\. 1C111 a.... ~ ma dud.cl e.r. a "'*" '*"' SJld ...... ~ ~. "*"Y'° the• the pr~ ot .. "°' .._ ...... c......... _., .. ,_ ... , · • tudtel IHI. Oiirdln ~ w • ...._ ,,,,._ n, New-,..,. I
lo(.-. ,._ 11u9 ....... undef the~-.. poe-' ~ CA... =.--= ~ tMt T Celt. llkt ~. 9-t\, Clll. NM4 The regltltaftt(I) CC>ffto ~,I We Ollpcl ,.._ Admll ... .-., of ~ Each blddll '"'* ...... a The ...... II..._... ·10lll Th .. 1Mt9tnou i. ~ Thi. bvs!Maa la ton-menced lo nna.d bull-
"lr.eaer" bieyOto, aftd Act. ~ authocttY wll v.ild .._ of ~ ~ -~ II tM ~~ .__ W. • Olf*• ,.,,. dUcted tir......,... ,,... "'*' the AcWoua
10,._ llHli tOlpd .... ,. ~ ,.,. d111lllCllllklft "C11" ,_....... -ot ~" LYMAN .. .., , ' IT "9fttllp The , .. i.traftt(e) tom-luafMU NatMi•l R*1d ~ llcwde ...,... to .... "*tr ao-tot~ ._ liM ISCM>W CQNt., '1)11 OOIM•it on l'9 ...... TM ,..i9'raftl(1) com-tNnC18C1 lo wwea .._, .._,. ~ ~-. 1811
NOftCI ·. It PU"THIR tleftl whhaut ....... "I ... ertQAltlld • ,.. '°"" ...... ~ CA "'do IO In..,....... ........ lo ...._. _,... ,_ under .. Pk1IMcM AfWI ,._ _ ~ _
DIVIN 11111 "° "'*. C1011Ft ....,,._, ..... •· ~~law. 90101 Sfllfl .. •llk\11'1 d flMI ....., N ~ ••b1eaa NeMe(a) 1a1M PMrltJIMI ,_..NI._.. Ina_,. '*'I""'*"'" COt•edOf tNI ce.-... dlllil er Oc:to4liW 1a. ~~.__,.,..,....,..._. a,a.:__.., I ..,-....11 Llil•• "*"'9(tl .._.. .._.. on: .... "*' t. ..._._.,..... .... '°
tflhiti. of -__..,,y ecllonl......., ....... ~WI!""' ,nt'8bl• o4 ""· .., __ ...... ...., .. -vwv-c ·-~ ..... -.... ... ,., 1•1 . -----~-.n"m ~.0.. '°""'~-lie ...o;. 1''10 to·1no, ~ TheWll .... llaubltdto .,.,.,.. • ...,.....-., T-O.Oht'" . ..,_.a;.c..,.. 1r·1.-.,;;.r-r ..... ._ __________ --.:
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• 1'le th ;z ~ ,.... "t ......... ~a-., -.;: ~= IOOl<W~.~~=."=:.._, -=-~-~---=--.. A51r.1 I fllll I -I Trtbuioo Ad.. No. !· lll'n 8'*'11 C*-...._ t CDWAHV ,_ .................... Dlh9. =-........... ._(t) ,......, ...........
Jl1, MliUl:>n ~. CA ~ ..... c.11. tlln 1o61a CNoa ... a.. WI C.W. -llllOwil ~ I. Oo111: -lllill I ~ ''3:! T. ~ Ill, 2027 :nalloNI A .. oc.tlon :=:., g:: ~'1"'1 ~ ltoOf\ 1•1 amc:twe ~ JD11rt Cciale. JOOI '::.:. _. W S. '' 11, _.,, tllt c:nr. A• No. 1i2. eo.. co., C•t1t0tn1•. 11212 r_, 'Totht)ol.iN TWIOka. D91~ ~~ t:.=· CoM1 ....., tNe ,,, ... ...,... ... .._. t 417 '1111. ·~°'""'°'l..:"'iiiilini1FiF:::liftil""',.. ...,_CA tllV 1otsa Chlcll f\Nd, ~ ~ "-'"' OrM, k a.Id\ ~ ~ ~ toOI ._.. '*' .. ~ a.\ ol -
O.nla ft. O'lrl•n Jt., tnoton IJMch. c.11.12141 tlnalor't 8tecfl, c.tt. RM '"'3 · Orh; COiii '...... call. ~ Countr Ofl ...,.._. ._. '"-:,
•Mm Yll Sat! ~. Tril• bualnrt•• It c°"" Thll b1,1atftff1 I• Thi• '"'''"'' ,. con-t26tt Mr 1 1•1 -.. ...... •• ..... • ~I'."!' .. .... I ·~Mon~ CA Ult2 dl.ICMd *" • corpl)f.aion ~ br. Wt IMMdYel dl.ll:lld by. )olrll wnlln Tiiis . bUSIMIS ,, con-• -... TN ~~(•) """ ....... --oi:·~ ~ ne•• l--=J.::c.d1:'~= Th• f~tranl(I) TM 1~1tr1nl(•' CO!ftoductect~ ........... P~NWllPOltlwho ··:-:-:::--::::-w:"k.~---.... ...
'19tlt\lp . I De'* Mil under the~=-~ ~fle1hl0ul~"*' ~~~'ti\~::: ~7w;:-~~ Thf io1!1119,..;.. ~ llled .. ':.no":a':..::--
The r•gltlr•nl(I) corn. BueJnfft N1tM(1) llltd luslnfll Namt(I) llli.d l!JullnNs Namt(t) lllttd rtell undtf" !ht flctlClout 11111 ' ' ' 'w.Clo!no~u: IOOveon:MIA MOISlllO,WC.,IAQood.
IMr'ICM lo transad ~ aboWI on: Oetober1, 1'90 abOV9om.Jib1, 11111 11boW on:~ 30. llt1 ~ Nafnt(I) t19*1 TJIO THE UTILITY COMPAP'Y, JtlfN¥,,_...., .... ,..,,.,,..., Clill.11111
,... """'" lhe lllcWOul INMnrt .llCOblltl, s.cr.. Torn T. T•acb g,..,. "°°"' •bole on· AuQUll. 21 1 .. 1 • am Mtta Vlft'de hie, Thhi ~ ... Mclli'l'IQ,. N.. A.c.llDmlt 8utlnfll Nttnt(tJ llattd ""' Thll *tmenl Wll tlltld This ~ WU filed Miki eoiir. . M• X.10$ •100. eo.a ..... tht ~ an ol' ~lll!Dft. IA hd) ...
above on: Augut;I 20, 1991 Thl1 11111emen1 w11 l'lled whh tM COUnty Clerk Of whh the Coun~ Clerk ot Thi• ttaiern.ni wu flied PU&UC NOTICE ~Cd. tac121 OfMOI Cowll\' on ·~ !Mril, Clllf. m11
JOnn T. Klilklnlln lll ' 'Jllfth the Co!M'lly C*W ol Otange COLnt)' on s.ptem-OrMQI County on Septltl\o with the County ()erk or OIVld M. M1H1t, 2111 23, 1181 This bu1Tn111 11 oOn.
This •llillfl'lll"lt WIS Wed 0r.,. ~on~ bW 1l, IHI blf a. 1191 Or..-qe County on August ...... ,. = ..... ""de !Ill X•IOS. FI047U. dlOld w.. eorpoiallotf P.M, WI ~t, 3A locA!td "' '
wllh the County Cltf11 of bl!' 1)', 11K11 FI01011 raHOa4 23, 1191 ..,. ...... .._ Cotta ...... Cslll'. ma ~ Ntwpor:t awn. Th• r1t11tr1nl(t) corn-100 CMc Center °""''
Orqe County on August 1'507081 Publl1hldNtwp0t18eac~ Publltl\tdNtwp0t18eacho FI047t:t &t•elflenl Tf'lll butlntt• .... J!, .• ~on-to.Iii M"' Piiot ~ mtnClld lo trwact tM.-. 1W•~PO 9o•838.Sal\VI 23. 1991 Publ!tri.ct Newport BIKh-Co " N•-•-•-· Pl'-' 0;_, ....... .,_ ...... ...__ •--"ntl · folloWVIQ Peftonl ducted by: an ..... , • ....,.. ..._ .. 10 11 24 ,,., ,.. .. lolr1dtt the As\ltJout Ana CA 92702-0838 FS047H 1 Pllol S \trn-Ila ffl """ .... .,!Im-...,.II M... ""' ......,.sm-nlU?I-..... ....... _. _.,_ 9ftl $Wng butlnMI u : Thi r1gl111an1t1) tom. -"" ' ' ' lullne• Nalfll(1) tll"<t 1F YOU OBJECT TO
PubllsNd N rt a.am. Co .. MH• ltP Dlf 24· Ociobll' 1• '· IS, bar 11• 24, Ociot>ll' ,, •• Cotti M ... Pilot Stpeem. PAEMIEA WOAD PRO-menced IO trenud buM-T41!JO .txw. on: Jufta '· 19tl h 9ran11nO Ol lht peti11on.
Cos11 MHI ~St tem-blJ 24· Otlobef 1• 8• IS. 1991 1991 bit 3, 10, 17, 24, 1091 Ct:SStNO, 11152 Nonn.1 MIS undlf lhl fk:tlllOu• Chrltdnl Q.lwn.ill. ~ }'OU thout6 ~ppe;w Ill 1ht.
ber 3 10 17 24 199,P 1991 :r.734 T·71.. r.ese Lani, Garden Grove. cai1t. BullnHI N•m•(•} llltld laty•Tru1 .. ., heltfll\9 and s.tate y01.11
• • • ' T·738 92840 abOY9 on: NIA , · llUC Ttill atAil"""'I Wiit 1111<:1 obetie>n& •Of hl.i w11\Wn
T-379 Terri June M11hur!1n, O.~ M. Mlltn PU JtOTIC! with u,. County a.r. af ob lions wi1h 11'111 coun
PUBLIC NOTIC• PUBLIC NOTICE 11952 NOON! Latw, Ol(dln TtU lltllllnent wu tlled Ftottltovt ~ County on Al911t be re tn. ht»'lr11'19. Your PUBLIC NOTICE 10 Ql'ove, Cellf.12&40 With ,ui. County Cttf11 ol 21, 1191 aP911MIJICI nll'ly .,. In
PUBLIC NOTICE ITAT•MINT OF This bu1ln1s.1 Is ck ,Or~ County on Slpttm-lual••• N•nM Feo.GU ptts00 or by your A11orn~y.
Flctltlou1 Bu:i':!!°::me AaANDOtt•NT OF dueled by. WI lndMdual • blf 3, '1991 ltetemeint l"Ublthld Hewpott Blech-IF YOU ARE A
PUBLIC NOTICE Flotltlou• BualMM N•m• O Ull OP •o-nOOUI Thi r1gl1ttent(•) com-P&OH41 Tl'9~F~ Plf90NI Coeta Me .. Plklt Septifflio CREDITOR Of • lt•l.....,,t l•t•l'IMnt "'" menetd<'.'lo trinuct butl· PubNlhed Nowpo!1 eaacn. .,, ....,_,.., u : conllngenl creditor ol lh• Flc:llOous Bu1ln1N Name Tho FollOWlng persona Thi Fol\0""1ng persons BUIUllEll NAMI•, neu ~Of the Rcihloul Colla Mfft. Piiot Septllfno INTER ATIONAL CON· bt'r 3, 10, 11, 24, 1191 .dlie4laHd. YC!U must tile
8u1lne•11 Name Sl1t1m.nt 81e dolnQ bu$1ntss u~ .,s doing bo9'nlu N : The follo'Mna Pfr~ Buslnett Name(sl lllfld 24 Octoblf 1 SULTANTS LIMITED. 151 T•73 yOUr cia1m w11h tM court
Statem•nt Th• Followitlg persoos T.C.'S C"ARPfT & UPHOL· S AND S VENDING, 3121 h.IYI 1bandonecf!M UN ol sbo'oo9 on: May 1, 1!111 ~ lO, 17• • • Kalmus C·220, Colta Miu, PUIUC NOTICE Incl mall a copy to fie
The Following pe1sons are doing busln1111is: STERY CLEANING. 1521 Monroe Way, Co11a Me&t, 1h1 FlcU\lou• Bustn••• T1t1rl J:Mahurion 1991 c.llf. 9262t per&C!nal reprlSln!Mlve
.,. doing business as: ENV1RONMENTAL TRANS· Alatiam• ,,, Huntington call!. 92626 Name: DELTA PERFORM-This llltemenl 11111 lllld T-693 Donald M. Yuh•s, 2135 Aatlti.u. appoln'9d by tn• coun
'-".,... THE A.CADEMlC EDGE. PORTATlON SYSTEMS. Beach, Carff. 92648 Ph!Mlp & 8'"'erley Stel· ANCE GROUP, 4000 with tM County Clerk of Camino Laurel. 5an Clllm· I lMu H wlflin lour months from
20331 Blufrsld• Clrc11 3"419 Via Udo, Suite 145, Thomae Clarll Click 1521 ltnMn. 3121 MontoeW1y, MacA.nhur Blvd. Suite OJangeCOuntyonSll)tem-POBUCROTIC! l'n!1,Clllf.t21n ut ame ttJtdateollitstlssuanceol
11101, Hun!lng!on Baach, N1wport B•ach, CaLll. A.labama -11 Huntington Costa Miu, C1lll. 92628 3000, Niiwporl B111ch, blf 10. 1991 This bU1ln111 11 con-Thi ~l-=-l lelllf'S as provided In
Cali!, 92646 92:663 Besch Clll!I. i~8 Thlt buslnatt la CO,,. Callf.12860 • ' 1'506290 Ffoth..Ua ducted by:-. lndl-Mual DI nQ !1.'°"' wclion 9100 ol fl•
Darry!l E Winston 20331 Unda Carol Flewltt, 983 This 'business It co,_. ducted tty: IOI• propriltor· TI\1 Flclltloul 8ualne11 Published Nswport Bescb-~Name Thi rsglt1tant(a) com-1tN•EdL~so"" '"•"~•"i"E" .,. ClllilO!nia Pro~te Codll
Btu"slda C11c11 1101. Huo· Post Road. Costa Mau. dUclad bt. tn lndlllldual ship tQrne tlf1nld lo lboYe atelem.nt mancld to transact bUaf. :lN ,.. • The 11m1t 1or liltng dalms
ling•on Beach, Calli. 92646 C1m. 9U26 The r11:i11tr1nt(1) com· The r1glslr1nt(1) com-wu Hied In Ofange County CoslA l.Msa Paot Septem-Thi FoUowlng penons nesa undlr' 1111 flcthlout MflOlbn SL, COsta Mesa. wll not 1xpW1 befOf• lour
This business It con-This bu1in1ss , It coo· minced ,lo transit! busl· ma~~ 10 lrant.eci bull· on July 17, 19111 File b1r 17, 24, Ottob9r I, I , 1,1 dOlntil bYsinus n : Bu1ln11t N•m.(s) titted cam. 9282eC nM>t!lhs tram 111 nean·n9
duct.cl by: •n Individual dueled by: an lnd1vldual "811 under Iha Flcilrloul ness unclClf lhl Foetltlous No.F500548 1991 c & c WINDOWS 18351 lboll'I on: AU91JIU 26, 1191 Gr990f}' ' NlllOll. 154 CS,..llt t'\OflCed above The r1g!str1ntfs) com· Th• r1gl1tran1(s) com-euslne11· N1m1(1) listed Busln111 Name{s) ll1ted Ch••• Wickersham Ill, T-709 Enllrprlu ln .. Hur1Ungton DONld M. Yuhas ~!.IJel!M St., Costa Man, vou MA.V EXAMINE
manclld 10 transact bus!-menced 10 tr8fls1ct bYsl· abovl °"' SC1pt1mblr 11, above on: Saptemblf 15, 2600 W1vecr11t Dt., Co-Beach eaat 92&48 This ttalemtnl wu Ill.Id ...... ,."",'· """', 1 1 !be Ille IWpt Oy thlt court. II
ness under the FlctlU0tis ne11 und•r the Flct!llous 1991 •· f991 rona del M1t. Calif. 92825 PUBLIC NOTICE Ter•Mce M Connolly with lhe County Clerk ol • us n1s1 . • con-you are a pers<>n Business Nama{s) fisted Business N•m•ts) llsled Thoma•CHck Bever1ey Sl•llltflMO This bu&lnlss was con-21002 Strath~ Hunung'. Orll'09 County on August ducttd by: lfl Individual lnleresied 1n the 111a1e.
1bo'o'e on: September 12. 1boll'I on: Septa~ 1, This 111it1mtm was filld This 1111em1111 w;is filed ducted by an lndlvtdual Flcllllou• ton Bead! Call! i2MS 26, 1A91 Tf\1 re9l1tran1(1) com-you may tikt wi1f\ th• court
1991 tll91 with the County Clerk or With Che COi.Hi~ Cl91k ol Tt\11 1t1t1rnent -• IUl(I Buslneas Nam. This builneai It too-F504121 mentld 10 tt-.ct busl-11 fc?rmci.I . AeQuest . ·'°'
D1rryll Wins Ion tlnda C. Flewitt Orange County on Seplem· Ontng1 Coun1y on Septem-whh \hi County Clerk ol ll•tement ducted by: In lndMdual PubHthld Newport Bt1c:t\-nes~ undlr lhl Flctltl II lous SrciaJ Notice ol 11'19 Nlmg
This statement ... 1 .. f!led This 1\1\emenl was filed ber 13. 199T Der 6. 1991 Orange Coun~ on Sept1m-Thi Following paisons Tilt r19l1tr1nl(1) com· Casi. Mesi Piiot Septam· ::!•:. A~!.m .. ~(;2 1~~ o ~n mven">ry atld with 1he County Cftl1k o! with the Counl'f Clelk of f509742 f508035 blr 6, 1991 are doing bY.inet• 11. mlll"ted lo tr1n1.ct bull-bar 3 10 11 24 1991 G C ~ • appiaisal ol estale, assa1s
Or1nge CQUhly Qn Sep!em-°'m• Couniy on Seplem· Publlshtd Newport eeac::n· Publl1h~ Newport Be•ch-Publlshlld N9W?Of1 Beath· GENESfS 9901 Adams ness under 1ne Flcti11ous ' ' ' • T~1 Thin..m.n~a• filed Qr 01 any peli~ ~,
btlf 11. 1991 ·b•r 1 · 1991 fSOOl47 Costa Mesa Pilol Septem-Costa Mesa Pilot Sep11m-~1;1 M2:" ~lrtb Sep1te~ Ave.. Huiiungton B11ch, Busln111 Nam1(1) listed wllh !he COt.1nly Clerk of ~:~' ~5gro~d vi:
FS07o 5 t ber 24, October 1, 8, 15. ber 17, 24. October 1, 8, 199 1 ' ' co ar ' 'Callf.92646 lbOYI on: Set>lember 1· PUBLIC NOTICE Orll'IQI County on August C~JifQrnia Probale Codlt.A Publi5hed NeWJ)Ol1 Beach· Publl5hed N-port 8aacl'I-1991 1991 Ch11len1 K. M. Reed, 1Q91 23 1~1 R t I Sp t N r
CoSla-Mese Pilot septem-Co11a Mes• Pilot Sepltm· T·741 r.704 T·717 12S52 Josephine SL #E. T1teoc1 Connolly m.ci fictitious ' ,504714 lot~':i a~!il<\b~~on~ ~!
lier 24 , lk!ober 1, a. 15, bef 24, October 1. 8. 15. _ PUBLIC NOTICE Ga1denG1ove,Clllll.92641 This 1t1tement was 8usln111Name Pub"shed N-pOfl Beach-coo•tc~k
1991 1991 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE dThl~ b,u1 1n1~~1.J,• _7on· wl0,1~.J,••c:~tyon ~~,r~,: 8ta11ment Cotta M••• Piiot saptsm-Anorn•y 101 P1titlon1r:1 T 1 T·748 FlctHlou• uct ..... y: an~ ....... u... -... ..... ... 7 .... Thll Followi/'1(1 persons THOMAS A RAMSEY • 32 FlcllUou1 Fictitious Buslne•s N•me Tht 1egl111ant(1) com-bar 3, 1991 ire doing bullnns 11: bet 3, 10, 17, 24, 1991 RAMSEY & .RASMUSSEN
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 8u1ln11• N•m• Business N•m• Statement manced 10 tran11ci _busl· F505828 OOM HOLDINGS, 2925 T-657 11 Golden Shore Ot. s1at1m1n1 Statement The FolloWln; PeflOllS ,,.,, under th• Flc11tlou1 Pubflstt.d Newport B11Ch· College All'I. A·10, Cotta PUBLIC NOTICE Ste 430
Fictitious Fictitious Th• following pettonl The Followll'IQ persons ar• doing bYslnets 11: Bustn1s1 N1m1(1) 111\ed Coste Mes• Pilot Sep111m. M11sti. Calll, 9262e: Long Beach . CA. 90802
Busln1s1 Nam• 8u1ln1s1 Nam. 1r1 doing bllllf'll1:1 as: ,,. doing buSlt'llll ta: KRYSTAL KLEAR POOL above on: September 4• ber 10, 17, 24. Octobef 1. Ftoblt'I Oomabyt, 9 P1111ley Ac:tlUov• N11wpofl Btt1'ChiCOS11'
St1lem1nt Stat1m1nt BACK BAY TRADING EZ KJOS , 1864 0 ANO SPA SERVICE 8901 1991 11191 Rd., VaueluSI N.s.w. 2030 luslne••llam• Mr..aP1lot
Tha Foltowlng persons Thi Fol!owino persons COMPA.NY, 2519 Back B•/ Brookhu111 SI., Fountain CllH1ldl or .. Huni1ng1on Charlena K..M. Reed . T-692 Auslrllll . ltalement S@p 17 19. 24. 1991 a1e doing business as: arl doing bYsiness ts· Loop, Co1ta Me11. Cali. V•lley: C-.lif. 92708 . Seith, Call!. 926'16 1)'11• s1a1am1nt was "111.1 Thll bustn•s• 11 coo-Thi Followlng parsonsl ----------
UNDERGROUND CABLE POSH CONCEPTS. "3419 92627 Beti.I WOfld Inc., C•hlOf· Lor1lay E1po1ilo 6901 with the Col.Inly Cllffk ol duc:ledby:anlndlvldlSll areclolngbuslneU•1: "'IUCMOTICI SYSTEM~. 3199 A·3 A.lrpon I/II Lido Ssia. 305, Newport Steven Geo1g1 Hummtl. nla, 18960 Brookhursl St. Cllflsld• or., Hufitlngton Orange County on Septem· PUBLIC NOTICE Tht 11glslrsnt(s) com. ELISE'S CAFE, 23411 N_.f--"-'"'-~-~---
Loop Dn..,.e, CO$\I Mesa, Beach Cati! 92563 251 9 Back Bay Loop. Founcaln Valley, Call!, Beach, Calif. 92646 ber 8, 1991 mence<S to l(sn .. ct busl· p0r1 Btvd .. Co9!• Miii, NOTICcP<J?.
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• 87PQOTI~'
Cal.I. 92626 BarbiU• KMit 7l0 Vil Udo Co51a M1s1. C•lil. 92627 92706 This business 11 con· F5015032 fictitious oess under tl>I Acllllous Call!. t 2627 E OF 'Ell vr;i Robe~ O. McCartriy. trn:., Nore. NiwPort Bsacn, This buslnsss Is con-Thi• business i1 con-ductld by. an lndMdull Published Ntwpclfl Beach· 8 u1ln1s1 Nam• Business N•me(s) ~st.cl Uod• Louise Crslg, 2M9 TO ADMINISTER
a Calllornl1 corpor•"on, Cilil 92663 dueled by: an Individual ducitd by;• COIPof8tlOn The regl1tr1nt(sl com· Costa Meu Pilot S.ptern. Stat•ment 1bov1 on: J1nuary 14, Ca Of Cot M ESTATE OF: 1 21531 VI•, lnvierno, Lake Chi~ Ching cnang, 5300 The 'lglstrsnt(s) com· The 1eglstranl(sJ com-menced 10 tr1nsact busl· bit 11, 24. Oclober 1. 8, The followlng persons 1986 ci::.12627· 11 esa. Elizabeth J . Mwin_ For~sl, C1f1!. 92760, Via Andulusl•. Yorba Unda. menced lo tranuct t>usl· mene1d to lransact busl· nltSI Uncltt The Flc:tltlous 1991 Its dolnt;1busloesl1s: Roblrt Domabyl This butlnlll 11 con-eka Elizebeth This business ts con· Caltl 92686 oess Uf'lder tl>I fklitlous nes~ under the Ficllllous Buslnetl N1m1{s) fisled r .707 LADY DI CLEA.NEA, 30~3 "f!lls 1tat1HT11nl was fllld dueled by: In lndMdual J II ducted by: a corporation ThlS builniss Ii con· Business Nams(s) lisl1d Bll11n111 N•me{I) listed 1boV1 on: October 1, 1991 Eklslol. Costa M .... Cahl. w1lh the County Cllffk ol Thi rl911111nl(s) com. Me ann,
The reglst1ant(s) tom: ducted by: a geneial part· 1ba\te on: September 11. sbove' on: September 9, Loralay E9po1iio 92616 Orat'IOll COunly on August mencad to t11n11et busJ. Betty J. M.nn and
mencad 10 lfansact butt< nershlp 1991 1991 This 1tatamlt1ll was filed PUBLIC NOTICE Huoc Nguyen, 2557 Tern-26, 1§91 ..1:-MIS undef 1he Fictitious Selty Menn nes~ under 1111 Fkll1lous The riglittant{s) com-S111111n Hummel V1ee Pre.idem with lhfl COUllly Cletk ol pie Ave. #B, W. Covina, F::.94924 Buslnets Nam•(•) 1/sted CASE NO. A160708 Business N1me(9) listed mencad 10 uansacl bus"-This 1111emen1 was n1e<1 This 11a1ement was tiled Or1nge Counly on Seplem. Flotlllous C1lif. 91792 Published Nawpor1 e.acn.-above on: NIA To all helts,
above on: September 16, nets und1t the Rtlitlous with lhe County Cl1rk ol wtlh !hi County Clerk of be, 17, 1991 Butln eas N•m• This business 11 con· Costa Men Pilot Septem· Und• loYitl Cialg beneficiaries, creditors, •.99~, Busln1s1 Nime(s) listed Orange County on Stplem-Or•~• County on Septam· F507092 St•tement ducted by: lfl Individual ber 3 10 11 24 1991 This 1tatement was filed contingent credUors, and
re,.,denl . •bove on: August 23. 1991 ber 13, 1991 bet 1 • 1991 Publlshed Newpotl "eeach· Thi followtng person• Thi reg!slr1nl(t) com· • ' • • T.(162 IMth the Counly Clark ol persons \Jllho may
This sta1emen1 was llled Baibara Kini F508744 F$09745 COsta Miss PilOI Seplam-111 dolnO Mlnffs 11: mencld 10 tr111uc1 ~II-Ol•fl9• Counly on MIQU$l otherwise be inl8r1sted In
with the County Clark ol This s1lletnent was flied Published Nawp0!1 Beach· Published Newpert Beach· be 24 Ottob 1 8 15 MCKE W~lR & SONS POOL nets i.tndlf the Flcll~O: PUBLIC NOTICE 27 1991 1he> wiA Of estate at both,
Orang1 County on Saplern. wifn the County Clerk 01 Costa M•s• Pilot Septem-Costa Masa Pl!Qt Septsm-1~1 ' " · ' ' & SPA. 3105 Loren Ln., B~~~·•• N~~(•} ti!,'' 3 • F505028 ol: E~zabeth J. Mann, aka
ber 17, 1991 01anga Counly on August bar 24 October 1 8 15 b« 24 Octoblt 1 a 15 Co1t1 Mesa. Calif. 92528 a ...... ~. on: P •m · Ac:UUoua Published Newpl)rl S.ach-Ellubeth Jane Mann.
F507000 27.1991 t99 ' ' • ' 1991 ' ' ' ' T-739 Michael H. Weit, 3105 1991 Business Name Behy J, Mlllln end Betty Published N-port Beach-' F505020 1 Loren Ln.. CoslA M•s•. Huoc Nguyen Co1t1 M11a PilOI Septern-Mann Costa Mesa p·101 Sep"m 8 T·743 T·729 PUBLIC NOTICE C1UI. 92628 Thls ststement was fUed Statement WI 3, ,0, 11, 24. 1991 A PETITION hu been ' . Published N-part each· PUBLIC NOTICE This business 11 con-with the County Clerk o! Th• followl"G person• T-666 filed b_y Roy H. Mann In ber 24, October 1, 8. 15, Coll• Mesa P~ol S1ptem· PUBLIC NOTICE Fictitious duc:1ed by· an Individual Otange County on Septlm· lfl doing buslf".n1 11: !he Supel'lor Court ol 1991 b9r 3, 10. 17, 24. 1991 Fictitious Business Name The rsg.itlrent(t) com-bit 3, 1991 FORTNtR INSURANCE PUBLIC NOTICE Cslilomilt.. Coun~ ol T·737 T-672 flctltloul Statement m11'1Ced lo lflflllCI bl.Isl· F&051530 SERVICES. 2040 Phalarope ORANGE. ---------~ au1lne1• Name Bu1ln1as N•ml The Fotlowlng persons ne11 under tn. Flcill!oul Publisl>ld NawPQfl Blilath-Court. Cosla Meu, Callf. Flctltlou1 THE PETITION
PUBLIC NOTICE Statement Slalament .. ,. dOing business 11; Bu1Jn111 Name(•) listed Co M Pilot ~~1 92628 Buslnet• Name requests that Aoy H. Mllinn Th• Following persons The FOllOwing person• CLUB SPORTS MED 1785 abov• on· s timber 3 Sta ••• -.. •m-George Godin• fottnlf It, &t1t1nwnt be ~-..i~ted ersonal are dolrig busl"e1111: are doing business as: Anaheim A\l'I. c, 'costa 1991 · ep ' bet 10, 17, 24. Oclobaf 1, 2040 Phal•rop1 Court, The Fotlowln.g persons repr=~tive f.S P 10 flclltlou• THE M41L60X. 177 Rtvef· OLD NEWPORT FUNDING, Ml .. Ctllf 92ii27 M'chaol H Welf 1991 cost• Min, C1Uf, 92526 .,. doing business••: admlnls'8t the estate ·ol
Erin Lynn VaUety, 8usln1ts Name side Dr. 1£ & F, Newpott 480 Old Newport Bool~ Brl.1' M. frank. 1785 Ana· This statfm.nt wai filed T-691 Thl1 business . Is con-FIFTH SEA.SON PESIGNS. the decedent.
age 12. paaaed away Sl•11menl Beien, Cali!. 92663 v•rd, Newport Beaeh, Ca!tl. helm Ava. #C, Costa Mesa, with ths County Clark ol ducted by. an lndivldual 1224 Sand Key, Corona dll THE PETrTION
Friday, Seplemblf" 20, The Following p1r10ns Armon Allk, 13 Plymouth. 92663 Call!. 92621 Orange Counly on S•plem· PUBLIC NOTICE Tht r1glst11nt(1) com-Mar, C1lil. 92625 requests Iha deoltdllnrs 1 991 . In Newport ar1 doing bUs!nus 11: !Nine, Calil. 92720 Newpofl Escape Financial, Thi• bu1lne1s J1 con. ber 6 1991 m~1d 10 trenaaC1 tM,isi.. A.l!ison Elaine Wiiis, 1224 WILL and codicil!!., ii aAy.
Beach. Survtved by ZANY CONCEPTS. 405 Nadia Aslk, 13 Pfymoulll. I~ .. C1Ul0tnl• Coporallon. d\JC!ld by: en lodJYidual • F509D34 FlcUUoull ne11 under 11>1 Rtlltlous Sand K1y. CQrona dll Mar, bl admilled to probate.
her M01har arid Fa· 62nd St .• N-porl B11ch, Irvine. C1lif. 92720 480 Old N-port BouC• Thi r1gl1tr1nl(s) com· 9 I •• Neme Busln111 Name(s) Msled C1lif. 92625 Tile ii and oodic:ls thei, John and Karen Call!. 92663 Tills bu&\nass Is con-vard, N-port 811ch, Calif. meoted 10 transact busi· Published Newport Beach-us ne 1oov1 on: Juty 22, 1991 This busln••• II con-are ~ avaaa':! toi
Vellety, end a brother, Steven D. Dodson. 405 ducted by: husband and 92663 net• under lho fictitious Costa Mesa Pilot Seplem· Th ~t~=.!"',. soni George C. FOrll'lar II dUC'lld by: an Individual axarrination in 1he lile kept
Eric. Memo,tal Ser· 62nd St., Newpot1 Beach, wUe This business ls con. Builnass N•m•C•I ~slid ber 17, 24, October 1, 8, d~ O i "• '. This 1t1tern1n1 wa1 filed Thi r1gltlr1nl(1) com. by \he coutl ,
vtces wlU be held Calll. 92683 The ~reglshtnt(s) com-dueled by: e corpor1110n above on: Sep!embei 11, 1991 ·~~YL~ ~~~·P~ISES with the Coun1y Clerk ol mine.cl 10 transact bust. THE PETITION
Tu •• d.y' S.p'.mb.... Sandra S. Dodson. 405 m1ocld to trans1ct busl· The r111rs1r1n1(s) tom-1991 T·705 3 ••• E C 1 ...... 511• Orll)9e County on August M•• undlll' thl Fictitious requeslS aulhori~ to ... 62nd St .. Newport Beach, ne1s under \he fictitious meneiid to transact .bu1I· Bil•n M. Frink _.. · oas '·-r· · · 21. 1991 eusinesa Name(•) lilted edminisler Ille ""'ta 24th. 2:00 P.M .. al S1. Cell!. 112663 Busines1 Nama(s) llstad ne11 under the Acl~lous This stat1m1n1 w1s !lied PUBLIC NOTICE ~~;Qrona del Mir, Call!. F505023 1bove on: NIA under the lndepllndenl
Andrews Presbylarlan Thls bu1lne11 !1 coo-1bove on:June 15, 1991 Bu1ln1st N1m1(s) l1S1ed with !hi County Clerk ol Th d'w d Doll' Publlshed NIWJ)Ofl Beach-A/Usoo E. Wiiis ~tralion ol Estates
Church , New Po rt duct.cl by: • general p;irt· Aarmen Aslk above on: NIA o 1ange County on Septem. FlctlUoua omaa E 11 1· COst• Meu Pilol Septsm-Thi• 1tattmen1 wu filed Ad (This aulhorlty w11f Beach, lnlermeol will 01r1hlp This statement w11 filed Unda R. Jensen b•r 13 1991 171 Monti Vl11a # ·3, with the County Clerk ol allo. th 1 be prklate. Jo lieu of Tn1 t1gl11r1n1j1) com-wl1h the county C\firk ot Thie statement was flied ' f 509743 Bu1ln11s Nam• Costa M1t11, Calll.112627 bar 3. 10, 17, 24. 1991 Or•no• County on Migutt repr~tai:e 1g~~
11ower9. don1111on1 10 mencld 10 tr1nuct bus!-Ofarig• County on Stptem-with lhl County Clerk of Statement This bu11n1t• Is con-T-668 23 1991 . .lh
Ped!slrlc Cancer Ae-n111 undef tho Fictitious bef 13 1991 Orang1 County on A.ugus1 Published Newport Be1t:h· The Following persons dueled by. 8fl lndlvldual ' FS04J.20 many actions WI fM
h p 0 e Busln1s• N1mt(s) listed • FSOOl28 21, 1991 Co1ta Maia Pilot Septam. are dolnQ business 11: The r19 l1111nt(1) com--PUBLIC NOTICE Published N-port Blach-=~~ki~ce~!fn~~ ~~;~~ 'ora~g~. ~~ Ibo~• on: September 1990 Published Newport Beath· F505034 blr 24, October 1, 8, 15, C. HAGGA.AO SAL~S. manced to l11nsac:1 busl· fictitious Coo•• "'" ~·-i Sop<~ lmnnrtant et1ions1 Ssl1v1n Dodson Publl tied N ....., B n. 1991 24822 Moaquero, Ml11ion ness undef IM fictitious "' •nr ··..--81 92668-0076. Plorc• This llatemenl was filed Cost• M1sa Pilot Sept1m-• -...... 11c r.742 Viejo, Calif. 92691 Buslnes• Ntm1(1) llllld 8u1ln1•• N•m9 blf 3, 10, 11, 24. 1H1 hoWe.,..r. the PeflOn
Bros. Pacific View wllh the County Clark ol ber 24 , Octobar 1, 8, 15, Colla Mesa Piiot Seplem-Charltt Wood1ow Hag· above on: Augusl 3t, 1991 lt•tement T-656 A1present11lv1 wiM be
Monuaiy. Di1ectlng. Orange County on AuQu•I 11191 bet 3. 10, 17, 24, 19'11 PUBLIC NOTICE gird, 24822 Mosquero. Thomas EOw•rd Doy\• The followlog patsons PUIUC llOTICI required '° 9iW notice to 'iiiiiiiiiiii!i!!!!i!i!iiiiii~, 27, 1991 T-744 T-tl71 Mission '/iljo, Call!. 112ti91 Tt\lt 11111msn1 waa flied 1r1 doing buslnn• as: lnlllflS'led pet sons unles.s p F5050t7 Flct1Uou1 Thlt bu1lne11 ls con-w1tt1 lhl County Clerk ol COLLATOR EXCHANGE, th41y Mve waived nolice or MORTIJAlllE1.,:''~'·l/JC!JX?-;:;~)\.:.k,' .. , Pubilshad N~port eaach· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBFL1clC1r1N100uTolCE au;•,•.~:!!::"• ~~ed,~~:1::;.~r;i~u~om-~~1y on Sep11m-g:, ~':,'!~ c'!m: ~~01, NOTIC~~~8WnTtON :'.)~h~ ~~~
Co111 Mesa Pilol Septlfl'I-Flclltlous mencld 1o trtNaci bYsl-F5DH32 Henry W1.U1r Goebel. TO ADMINISTER administration authority
ber 3, 10, 17, 24, 1991 Buslna•s Name Buslne•• Narn8 The F~-~ Pl'IOl'IS ness und•r "" Flctiliou• p .. -•,•-" No~ .. -h· 1s111 w. Grand Ave., Llk1 ESTATE OF: wll be graril&d unless an ~•-:::~:::""•! L----~--~:'. J SI t t •r• doing ....,..,....,, ••: """"' ,,.... --· -El• •·•r .-.. ,. ln!IHll51&d person tiles an T-664 llat1menl • em.n SEACOAST CARPET Bu1!ness N1m1(1) listed Cost• Mesa Pilot s.ptam-note,....,.· .. ~ William P. ob)eclion io the petition PA~ V1EW Th• Following persons •••Thd• FoUbu~~. "••~' CARE. 427 E. 11th Sts. f, 1txr.r1 on: S1ptembar 111, blr 10 17 24 Ocl ber 1 This bu•ln••• 11 co"" Cam~all, aka and sno-QOOd cause --~ lf·---------r1t1dolngbus\ne1111: THE~1GH'TY' EAGLE C01!1MH11,Ctlll.92527 1991 ••• 0 • ducledby:snlndlvldual William Pendleton h lhe rfsl'lould I MfMOftW. PARK PUBLIC NOTICE JADA SALES, 874 Camino Liilie Anti Mu!Mns 306 c.w. Hagga1d lfit Th• 11glstrant(s) com-Campbell ;iZ.i 1t1a :!~ority. t'ID Cemelery •Mortuary di lo• Marff, S1n Clem-GOLF CO. AKA The Gott, Ftochastar, Colla Mesa, Tht9 11111ment was filed T-689 menced lo trenucl bull· CASE NO. A160697 A MEARING on fl• Chapel • Crematory flctltlou1 ame. CaJll. 92672 4590 MacArthur .-55o, Cilll 112627 will\ lhl County Clerk of nns undlf lhl flctltloul · 1on Ill tMt l'leld
••• '
"-•• •• .,. wnnam Rlchsrd Arm-N0!;o:~ort Beach, Carll. Thli. buslneis lt con-Orange Coun1y on Septem-PUBLIC NOTICE Bu1ln1H N1m1tsl listld To all he11~. pell! w on 3500 Pacil!c View OriYe .... 1trong, 174 Camino ct• los "'...,... ducted 111 lndlYldual bet 17, 1991 aboVflon: Augutt 27, 1911 ben~l1Ctilfles. creditors, October 10. 1991 81 1:45 N..,_.port Beach Sl•l•ment Mares S•n Cl1m1nl1 G1ry Eldtr GP, 4590 T br.4 1 {) F50lOS9 JlotHkl\ll Henry Goebel con11ngen1 credt•ors, and P.M.ln .DepL3Alocat~a1 M4·21CO Tha Following persons Cilil. 92872 ' M1cA.11hur #550, N-port ne rag 1 rant 1 com-• 1 H This slatlt!Wt'll -• 111«1 persons who may 700 CNk:: Ganter Oriv• ............. •lf!I''' doing tM,islness 11: This bullntss Is con-B11Ch, Cllll. 92680 mancsd 10 tr•oaa<:I busl· Publlshed N-port Bsach· us ne•• •m• with IM County Cllfk ol olheMlse be in1erest&d in Wnl, P.O. Box 838, Santa r HUNTINGTON HAFIBOUR ducted by' 8fl lndMdOltl Thi• bu•ln••• la con-n11• undlf lhe Fictitious Colla Mesa Pllol Seplem-•t•tem.nt Qfang1 COunty on Augu•I 1he will Qr 8Sll'lle. Of both, AM CA 92702. PlfRCl IROTHEftS REA.LT't. 115390 Paclllt Thi rag'li trant(I) com-dut11d by: 1 Mmltad Part· Bullnlll . Nimt(I) 1111.cl ber 2A, Oclober I. 8. 15. Thi folloWlog ~ 30, 1D91 ol Wilham P CAnlf)blJll, 1J:' YOU OBJECT TO BEU BNllUJWAY Co11t Hwy.. Suite 200, m~ed to tranucl busl-n.,•nlp above on. S1pt1rnblf 10, 11191 are doing bullnau u . FSOMSW ak• W~I~,., PendlelOn 1hll grantinct ol lhl petition
Hun!lngton B11ch, Calif. natl und•r the Flctltloua Th• 11glatrent(1) com-199t T 738 DARK HORSE PROOUC. N B acn. Canlpbell you $h0ut6 appear 1.1 11• Mortuary. Chapel g2&49 Busln•s• Nam•(•) Usllld rnenclld 10 lfllnHCI bull-L11U1 A.. Mutlln• • TIONS, 2127 Mariner• Dr., Publlthed IWpolt • A PETITION hr1s b'*:ln ~llln.Q and lt•t• )'OUI
Cremation HuntlnQlon Harbour Reell'f ibove on: Jenu•ry 20, neu unc:1., lht fictnlous Thi• ttatamlf!t wes til.cl N1wpor1 Be•ch, Calif. COit• Mna Piiot Sept11m· liled by Aiqyle c .,n'tpbell obelQns Of 1111 wnt111n
110Broadway tnc: .. Ciilllornl• 11169 Butln••• Natnt(I) ll1tld wtlh lhe County Cl9fk of PUBLIC NOTICE 92UO bClf 10, 17. 21, Octoblr I , and Ma1ih"' M11cN1'b ao lions wilf\ rhti COlll1
Cos1a Mesa Tnl1 buslne11 11 con· DI Arm 1 sbov1 on: NIA Orange County on Stp11m-Flolltlouo Biii Erkourl, 2127 M•lners 11191 W'1!1aun M>tll 1n 1tltt ~ re ltwl hearing. Yoi.Jr 612·9150 duel.cl by:• c0<por1llon ck s rong Gary Elder ber 13. 11191 Dr .. Newport B18Ch. C11ll. T~ Super101 CouH o1 appeariance may be In '---------'! Th• r1gf1tr1nt(t) com-Thl• 11111mlnl was 11114 This •l•lemant was llled F508725 Bu1ln1S• Name 12680 CalilOl'nia. County 01 person or by you1 allom1y
,---------.llMl'!Ced 10 transacr busl· Q',': 1~~n ~.! with the Counl'f Ct•k Qt Publtlhld Newpor! S.ICh-Statement This bu~ln111 Is coo-PUBLIC NOTICE ORANGE IF YOU ARE A
ne11 Undlf Thi flcil!lOUI bet~ !Ml ~ p Orange County on Aug\Jtt Cotti Mesa Piiot S1pt11m-Th• Following J*IC>n• ducted by. an indMdual THE PETH fON CREDITOR Of •
NO matter Butln1s1 N1m1(1) lltted ' JSO&l30 2t, 1gg1 bet 24, Qctoblf 1, I, 15, 111 doing buSIMlt 11: The .,d'lf!,t1:n~ :,:: Fictitious reques1s 1h;oi.t Argyle tontlnQtnl c:'9dtor ol tie
1bove on: N/A F504925 1991 PORTS WEST, l651 Mar· mlf"IC • •ullltMM N.me C111mpbeH l\nd M~•lhn deoaued )"(!IJ musl file what you're Giron L Grubbs, PrHldent Publi1Nd Newport S.acho p I hid N Bl tt-guerlte, COfONI dll M1t. ,... und..-the Flclllloul ltatem.nt MacNAb W1'1ll'lunM>t1t bll e"'"1 with Iha court doing, your Thls 11a11meot w11 tlled Costa Mesa Piiot S1pt1m-c ~1 'M -;r:"SIP1 ac T·146 C1til. 92625 8Vlit11t1 N_:me<•l ltlad Thi FotlowW1Q penons appoin1ed ns pot1sonn1 ~ mall • copy lo 111 with th• Coun!y Cl11k of bet 24 October 1. 8, II. °' 1 •H •m· PUBLIC NOTICE Joseph R. S11nord. 1658 •boYs on: NI llre dOlnQ butlnMt as· repr1tHntr.1ive to personal • rapresenla11VI hometown Orang• County on Saptem-1gg1 ' ber 3, 10. 11. 24, 1991 M1rgu1r1te. Coron• d•I Biii Elkouri o . SLOANE'S CUSTOM &dn'tlnis~1 n111 11s1n111 ot l.(loointed by th• ooutt
ber 11, 1991 T·747 T~ Aclltlou• Mii". CaHI. 92825 Thie atai.mtnt WU lllld SOFAS 3033 Btlstot. Cotta ttl8 deced&n1 •it.in tour monlha ttorn newspaper f 5D70 18 •u•lne•• N•m• Thi• bu1ln••• Ill con-wtth Iha County Cllffl, ol Mffa. e.ilil.112820 THE PETITI~ Iha datl ot firsl lssuanc101
Pub!llhed N1wport Buth· When roii want 10 9'I r\ghl Dolt beok·IO-tchool meM Staten'l9nt dUclld by: an lndMdual Orange COW'lly on August Dototh'I RM SIMl\I 134\t requvsls th11 d>.l~nl !. .. !Mii u provided In
The -. Costl Mna Pilot Ssplim-tolhlllMr'!Oflhlngl. "'°'9llrnlon~hlndl The F"'......i-...,IOM Thi r119l11r•n1(1) com-30, 1911 Topu, Balboa. c.111.'U:?MI WILL and cooic1ls •I ~ny &Ktion g1oo of fll r9L. ~ 11111 Of'gltllnd, durln9 the de)'? Mllyt>ll t 111 doing~.;;; m1need to lranlact butl-PHl4H Thi I buslnett It co~ be ;1odn111ted to p•obntv C8'1ornla Probate Code tits Jn ber 24, October 1, e, 15. lnfonnallon<i11Ckld"" to psrl-tlme !Ob ti th9...... SMART MONEY, 550 Paul-neu undlf UM FlcttUous PubMlhed MlwP<W' Beach-dlJcllcl by: M ~ The WIM 1'1ld ilflY <;O(kc•5 Thi timl lof th dairni
· 11191 flndwhll"""'"~look .. lof. GallOoklngtlncllAlllld. arlno Apt 11200 Coate Builnest Ntml(t) Hsted Costa Mesa PilOt S.ptsm-The r19l11ran1(tl COf!'lo aia av;1~:ible lor wil nol 1icpi"s before tour •---------''--------''c"~'J5 •-M ""'•' ...,, ..... • 1bow on: Sttpteml>ll' 18, blf 10 11 24 ~oblr 1 IMAOld 10 tranNlci bull· ex11n'tlnation 1n rh .. Ill"' ktipl monlhs lrom lie tMta/tng na. -• •-'"""'' 1911 ' ' ' ' ...,,._._ by '11 COUil ..
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil CUii Morg1nll1!1r. 550 JoffS)hR stanord 1"91 ,,. •• undlf the ........ THE PETITION tenoticldabov•.
::::'1C°oi'P't2e6:6' Cotta This 11a19ment w11 lllld T-tae :='::J::""'(t) lilted requeslS 1'utllorlty 10 itw.V~ka~IA~~~,r~
I A llEW BUSlllESS AA T 1 • b · 1 with the County Clerk of OorothyR Slolt'lll admln$1er thl lt&late you ara 8 per.On START llG -,-, ~~ ~·:·~~J0"' Orangt County on SIP'~ PUILIC NOTICI Thlt 1t111imant w11 1111<:1 undlr IM tndependenl in!ll'Hled in Iha •IW•
--• . . I I-• ._.,.;,.,.,,,,,...,. ""l7, ,,., -Yr ~Ut'-·• -... ,,_., """' of '/&>mif .. Mlh ~· jij\#i m1nc:td 10 ttanllci busl-to,_. r... ..... 0rll"lge COta'1I)' on $19i.... e lonNJ RaQuest lor
MN under 1hl fl\ctltloul PW!lshad Newport ~ ............ ,... blr' •• 1991 If••• ...... Special Notice ol .... Una
Th '-·r ~-·--' --.,~ I -----.... ""--·-Bullne•• NI""'{•) lated Costa MIA Pl&ot ...,,,.. •tatem.nl FSOIOSO ' • , , of an inv.,.,16ry ri • .._.. ..... ~ ... ,,... .. a ,.,. ""' • .--"°P by to •your ftcl,.....,.. llbOYI on: 51e>11mber 1, bit 24, October 1, 1, 15, The FolOWlng petSOnt PvblllMd NtwPOrt hie~ ... .... eppralMI 01 ""',. ..... pleased to ~ a new •aMc. bualnen SUllement al tht Pllol legal 1991 111111 .,. dOlna Minni 111~ COtll Men Pl&ot Sepltmo 01 o1 """I Pfllb or
now ...... 11.ble to new bualnes.... Department, 330 W•t Sty, eo.ta Cillf MOfQlntl$f T·131 INK N lfl'Uf,, 40ll 81ylkl1 Mr 17 24 Odoblt 1 8 eccoun1 MiJ«>iAdild '"
W• wlH now SEARCH the name tor Meu, c.llfom&a. If 'tO" ctn not tlOp This tllfemlr'it was 8lld Or., Hewpon a..cti. Cell!. 1991 ' ' ' ' ~ la ~~ode":
you at no extr1 ct111rg1, and .. w you bf, pi.... Olll us at f 14) 142-4321, ~~ ~ PUILfC NOTICE =ate~ fumat, "°' 1·706 R~1 tor Soeciet Not6ce
th• time and me trtp to tht Court Exl1nalon 3t8 pt 31 Md we wm blr'8, 1lKll PkltttlMtt 811yald1 Or., N1wpo11 PVIUC NOTICI! IOm'l It llV•lll.hie ln)m fl• HollM 11"1 SMtl ML Then, of COUNe, make ~ fof' you to handi. FeoeG2J If ~h, Call!. t29IO court CJlfk. h •ft., th• NltCh .. compleled ""' wttl thltll procedure by rn.a. Publllhecl NNoporl a..cn. .......... HM Thi• bullMll I• COf\o ........... Attorney for ,..,Ulonet: Stat•IMftt ~td by. an tndlYldulll GARV ll ROS(NZWElG. flle vour nctltfoua but!""' ntme It you al\ould hlvt any Mthtr C6&11 Mtu PHOI Slptlm-The l"oMoMng pettoMt The rsg11111n11s1 com· ......,... llfMIA Esa.
atatement with th• County Cl9Jk, quNttone plMle Olll "' and we wlll baf ,7, 24, October t, •••• dolfta tNllneil U! "*1Cld '° tr1nuct busJ.. .,.......... CLAV90N MAHN
publletl once 1 wwk fOf four wHke be mort ih.n g&.d to 1tt . 1111 COAPO""A.T! AEl.OCA-natt ~ h F1CWou1 Thi fo!IOwWlg pwaon1 AREND & VA£Q£R u tequfrtJO l)y I Wld tt*1 file .,.....,. ua you, T•715 TION 8PE.CIAUSTI, 100 8uslner• Mllnlltl ltlld .. ~ bUtlnffl M! I01 S. Mein St.
N r-¥• Good Luck In YoUr PUBLIC NOTICE Bohol~ Plaza, N11wpo11 •Wtt on: Augus11111 tall".Z. (b)l1UM ZONll, CP.O. llCNI 1+47 proof Of publlcldkln with Cowlly CIM'tl. ntW bt.»lneeali Bffch, Cell!...,, Gary s . Turner 28482 0\111 DrlYa, l.aguM orone 'CA t171 .. 1M7 ~,.... lcoft .IMMI w~ TNt ata111MN wa• fllld ~. Cellt. tan ~P .........,_ 1 ,.._, mer, 100 lchot.t Plua, with .,. ea.intv C:aClfltc o1 DiObltl LYM Olwnptpa, p ............... "°'
TR.ftrGl'llhCl•r11U11» •11•fM•• NMn• N•wpo1t 81sch, caur, OrlflQa County on a.ptern. aMU Chit DJM, ~ •-M s.,. 2', 21. OCT 1, 1Mt P.IDL, ........... tHt3 bit 10. llJ1 • Nlaull, CeN1. mrr ACTION I The ..._19 ""'*°"" Thi• buslnu• 11 ton-p~ Tfilt bu1IMll• tt c~ c.I
.,.. dOlng bVllMla u : dUC1ed by: "'~ ~ Newpolt a..o~ ~try: an ~duet ... TRAii HYP!RMATION, 1198 Thi flgltlrant(a) com-Colla MHll PlcM leplem-The r.;l1tr1n1(1) ~OM-A ,....,.. ,~
frtt1pl1 Avt. 11, Cotta mtne9d )0 WWINC.1 bual-... 17 N October I • tnttad lo HnMCt ~ --w I ~ CMJI. 12921 nMa '"'9f lN fll;Sllfoul • t ' ' ntll Wider fhl ~ Ml-MR
ISNtcOtt H. lilMt, 111i11 eu.lneat N11M(1) k1td 1tt1 ~ ,....,.Ill ..... th h •-~"-' M1pl1 Avt. 11, Costa aboYI on: AuouM 21, 1911 T·7tl lltlOW on: NIA rou9 O..-lW'U
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