HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-12-26 - Orange Coast PilotTHURSDAY
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QUOTES OF THE DAY
"It's not a done cledl by any means.
We'ye been looking at several loca-
tions in Orange County, trying to
identify a prominent landma"i#c site. "
-Paul McGuire, director of retail
real estate for Beaverton, Ore.-based
Nike, on the possibMy that 1Ws tetft:
pany will locate a Nike Town ~at
Costa Mesa's Triangle Square
''CNislmlU is OtleT 11nd·Bu.11Ms1 is /Jusina:t. .,
-Franklin Pierce Adams
COMMUNITY EVENTS
• High school buketball teams
from the local area and atound the
region compete In the Coast Classic
tournament at Estancia high school
today through Saturday. Came times
are to be announced.
fuhion Island, 400 Newport =r Dr., Newport ~, has on·
holiday attractions, seasonal
entertainment and activities
th.agh New Year's Eve. Special holi-
day hours: 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-
Saturday and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.
Ongoing attractk>ns: Winter Wilder-
ness garden and Fashion Island Ex-
press noliday train for children .... A
life-sized elephant and gifts with an
environment.al theme await holiday
shoppers at The Think Shop, Santa
Ana Zoo's newly opt!Md SCDre at
Crystal Court aaoss from South Coast
Plaza. The store, sponsored by The
Friends of the Santa Ana Zoo and lo-
cated on the third floor next to The
Broadway, is open until Jan. 6. Info:
. 540-8246.
•Man of La Mancha comes to the
Orange County Performing Arts Cen-
ter wfth Raul Julia as Don Qubcote
and Sheena wmn as Aldonza. Per·
formances are at 8 p.m. T~
AR •
Friday and 2 Md 8 p.m. Sat·
and SUndays. TidCllcl .. S21
For In~ call s~
An exhausted
Costa Mesa
fireman emer~
from the dwied
remains of the
Fullerton Avenue
home thatwu
gutted Tuesday
morning.
' 11111 I 11111 1111:11
111111-
llAlll II 1111
A special report In WeP.kend'lnslde Examining the Seventh Amendment/ AS
Published Tuesdays, Thursdays & Saturdays Circulation 45,000 25¢
coveted retailers set sights locally
Nike l own among those seeking high .. visibility location the arm to whatever property they choose.
Though rumored to be interested in Tri-
angle Square or Fashion Island, a Planet
Hollywood investor said those locations
have now been ruled out.
By Tony Cox
Saft Wlllr
At least three high-profile tenants, in·
eluding glitzy sneaker emporium Nike
Town, are hunting for a high-visibility lo-
cation in Orange County, and they've
crossed paths at the new Triangle Square
shopping center in downtown Costa Mesa
and the -fonner Amen Wardy space at
Fashion Island.
Nike Town, a huge store created by
Nike Inc. to showcase its 1noducts, ap·
pears to be the frontrunner for a circular,
domed building at 19th Street and New-
port Boulevard, the most prized space at
200,000-square·foot Triangle Square.
"It's not a done deal by any means,"
said Paul McGuire, director of retail real
estate for Beaverton, Ore.·based Nike.
"We've been looking at several locations
in Orange County, trying to identify a
prominent, landmark site."
Highly coveted tenants like Nike Town
and Planet Hollywood, which arc ex·
pected to capture the curiosity of consum·
crs in the area, should provide a shot in
McGuire said Nike is still considering
Triangle Square, Fashion Island and
South Coast Plaza, as well as a few other
locations in the area. and he hopes to
h~ve. a deal completed _in Orange County
wtthm 60 days. He said, too, that Nike
plans to open a Nike Town in West Los
Angeles.
The Orange ~unty Nike Town will be
See TENANTS/Ill* Piii
'Everything is gone. I don't know what to do
now. It's just overwhelming.'
-WEFT ..
single mother whose home was destroyed in fire
Family of lour devastated
alter lire destroys home
Officials say Christmas
tree helped fuel blaze;
apartment not insured
8y Ama Cekola
Saft Wl'lll:r
COSTA MESA -For the second
time tn as many weeks, a Chnstmas ·
uce was involved in a quick-moving
fire Tuesday that destroyed the east
side home of a single mother of three
young children.
"Everything is gone," said 30-year·
old Michele Tabor, sorting through the
rubble of her uninsured one-bedroom
apartment in a small home at 1813
Fullerton Ave. "I don't know what to
do now. It's just overwhelming."
Tabor and her three children were
visiting family in Irvine Christmas Eve
when the 7:44 a.m. fire broke out,
spreading quickJy through the front of
the 36-year·old house, which had been
divided into three apartments.
"I'm JU~t glad we weren't home,"
Tabor said, who spared her children,
ranging in age from 15 months to 6
years, the devastating news until they
could celebrate Christmas.
While fire investigators found that
the family's Christmas tree initially
helped fuel the blaze, it was unknown
how the fire started since Tabor said
she did not )cave her tree lights on
when she left the house.
Christmas tree lights were recently
blamed for a Dec. 15 fire on Aower
Street in Costa Mesa that destroyed
the home of a family of five.
Uke that fire, no one was injured in
Mlle~ the blaze Tuesday.
Michele Tabor carries her family's few remaining belongings as husband Kevin and son Nicholia search through rubble. See FIRE/111* ,_
Servino on a Jury
Wei.come to your
civic responsibility
·Any wish is thair com•nd
Make-A-Wish Foundation bring s joy to 'lives of terminally ill children
By Ins Vokol
Siall Wlllr
NEWPORT BEAOi -For
those in-voived with the Make·A·
Wish Foundation of Oranae C.oun-
ty, Oiristmas comes 36S days a
year.
All year loQg. foundation volun-
teeri -many ol them local busi·
ness and community leaders -
work to be Santa Oaus for chil-
dren with life.threatenina illncssea.
showering the you~ten with sifts
and love and arantui& their fond·
est wi hes, no matter how upen·
sive, extravapnt or unusual.
Thanks to tbc Orange ·County
Make-:A·Wilh poup, 13-year-old
Doug. who spends 18 houn a day
in an iroa hlDa and c:an only speak
in a whilper. now bu a warm,
loyal, conawit oompanioo - a
puppy that is lpidaDJ' ~ to
respond to 0oua•1 ~ com-
mands.
A ~year-old lnniUa airl who'd
been brougbt to tbe Ualied States
for ue..tment of a ma!Wwlt brain
tumor wu able to tee Mr beloYed
brother and 1iltoi, ... 7 and 4,
who were flown in from Iran. be-
fore she died.
"We've nCYCJ' turned down a
wish," said Oay Weeb, executive
diredor of the 0raQae CoWlty
chapter, which is based in New-
port Beach. ''There ha'Ye been
time$ WC thought TIC couldn't be-
caute the wilh was IO bizarre.''
But almolt as if by minde, each
wiab has been fulfilled. amuina
CYen ~lunteen, Weeb said. In
Dou&'• case, for eumple, ~
teen Ttere worried a q comdn't
S.WllllllJM
~ I I . '
• ..
• :.
..
Pilot People
Jenrey Glueck
HEIS'~------------~
A product of the Newport Beach educational system and Har-
vard University graduate who was recenrly named as one of only
35 studenls awarded the Marshall Scholarship for graduate study
in England. Glueck, 22, a Newport Harbor High School graduate,
will spend the scholarship's approximately S24,000 to earn a mas-
ter's degree in international relations at Oxford University. "T_he
scholarship committee looks for people who have .been very .in-
volved in their communities, those who hope to gave something
back to their communities," Glueck said.
POLITICS AND ENVIRONMENT-------
As a Harvard undergraduate, Glueck was editor in chief of the
quarterly Harvard Poli1ical Review published by the university's
Kennedy School of Government. He also worked as an intern lob-
byist for the Sierra Club in Washington D.C., and wrote his thesis
on the role of environmental groups in Eastern Europe as a cata-
lyst for opposition to communist regimes. ID EAU ST:__ ___________ _
Glueck said he is keeping his career options open. "I am ideal-
is1ic. I'd like to work for the improvement of society." While at
Harvard, Glueck worked for the improvement of education in the
impoverished Boston suburb of Mission Hill as a grade school
tutor. "It was depressing to go into an area where kids knew peo-
ple who had been killed in drug shootouts, where they lived in
these barren, concrete housing structures without a tree in sight,"
he said. "A lot of them were wonderful children."
Glueck credits his academic success to his parents, Dr. Michael
and Mimi Glueck. "The key has to be family participation in edu-
cation," he said. "My parenCs taught us to love learning, that our
academic achievements were the most important Lhing -I think
that's the key."
-By Russ war
The following stud ents were winners in the "Flights of Fancy"
art contest held recently at John Wayne Airport:
Howard Ju -First grade, College Park.
Megan McDonald -First grade, Kaiser.
Den Powell -First grade, Kaiser.
Tnryn Sheffiettc -First grade, Kaiser.
Choz Templeton -Seventh grade, Corona dcl Mar High
School.
Alrik Yuill -Seventh grade, Corona del Mar High School.
Sarah Druneau -Eighth grade, TeWinkle.
Erin McKay -Tenth grade, Corona del Mar High School.
Aimee MacDctb -Eleventh grade, Corona del Mar High
School.
Amy Frankson -Twelfth grade, Corona del Mar High School.
Karen Reeves -Twelfth grade, Corona del Mar High School.
0
Navy Airman Apprentice Steve Barry, a Costa Mesa resident
and a 1988 graduate of Estancia High School, has returned from a
six-month deployment to the Indian Ocean and Arabian Gulf.
Stationed aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu,
Darry was among those who helped evacuate more than 17,000
Americans and dependents from the Philippines after the erup-
tion of Mount Pinatubo.
mmP01Twc1. COSTA1ES1
PillL
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How to reach us at
The PilOt
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By Anni Cekola
Stall W:tw
I t's been a rough afternoon
on Southland freeways.
There's a fatal on the
210, the Ventura Freeway is
practically falling apart and
there's word of a small toxic
cloud looming over a couple
barrels of pool chemicals that
tumbled from a truck on Pacific
Coast Highway in Dana Point.
This is a world Jill Angel
probably knows better than
anyone else, whether as a patrol
sergeant for the California
Highway Patrol or a traffic and
weather reporter for radio
station KNX AM 1070.
And until recently when she
moved from her home town of
Costa Mesa, Angel was also a
long-distance commuter,
spending about 15 hours each
day involved with traffic in one
way or another.
"I guess I like the goal of
changing driving behavior and
making our>highways safer
places to drive," Angel said
recently, in between the traffic
and weather reports she docs
every 10 minutes during her
four-hour KNX afternoon shift.
"What a goal. And I can
accomplish it at both jobs."
c:ouldn•t refuse - a job in the
public information bureau.
-
0 The day after that l was on
the air doing traffic reports for
three different radio stations.''
she said. 0 1've been flying by the
seat of my pants since I started
this thing. My whole career has
been like that."
-Although Angel aaid she can't
decide which job she loves
better, there is one part of both
positions ~he could do without -
fatal accidents.
"Oh no, shooi." me said
during a recent KNX shift.
scanning the computer screen on
her desk that lists all the calls
CHP officers arc responding to
throughout Southern California.
"We've got a dead person."
Seconds later, Angel broadcast
the information to the thousands
of motorists, warning them of the
perils of driving without a seat
belt.
"On the 210 we have a very
serious collision and I'll tell you,
if you're not in the habit of
wearing your scat belt, this one
might change your mind -an
overturned car, the driver thrown
from the vehicle," she reported.
"And we just got word from the
CHP, this is a fa tality. Please put
that scat belt on; it will save your
life someday.
"lt makes me crazy when
people gel killed out there
because they don't have a scat
belt on," she said, off the air.
"Forget the fact it'~ the law.
They just don't realize what can
happen in a car accident. I've
MN~ seen fatal accidents that just
With her visibility on
television, radio and the
highways, Angel's become a
regular traffic celebrity.
HighwayPatrol Sgt. Jill Angel at her KNX radio m icrophone. didn't have to happen, some at
"I've been asked for autographs," she said,
laughing. "l had a guy who got a ticket.
When he realized who I was he said, 'Oh
thank you, I can't wait to go home and tell
my wife I got a ticket from Officer Jill
Angel.'"
There are also times when she's a sought
after person in the KNX newsroom.
"There have been nights when the officers
I supervise, or myself, will be involved in a
pursuit, a high-speed chase. We'll' catch some
robbery suspects and make a big arrest.
"Then I'll come in here the nexl day and
it's the opening news story. Some of the top
news stories here involve my job. It's like a
double life."
Angel's double life with the media and law
enforcement started in 1985 when she
became a public information officer for the
CHP, doing live and taped traffic reports for
20 different radio station in Los Angeles and
Orange counties and for KADC-TV, Channel
7. ln 1989, she was named Commuter
Transportation Services Reporter of the year.
Later in 1990, after a year of work as a
disc jockey for KODJ (Oldies 93 FM), she
joined KNX and went back to patrolling the
highways.
Making the transistion from law
enforcement to the media wasn;t all that bad
since media involvement runs in her family:
Angel's father and sister arc writers for the
Los Angeles Times Orange County edition
while her brother is a television producer.
Did you know?
'l·ve been asked for autographs . I
had a guy who got a ticket. When
he realized who I was he said, 'Oh
thank you, I can't wait to go home
and tell my wife -1 g'ot a ticket
from Officer Jill Angel.1
-Jl.1 ANG8.
But more than anything, Angel says it was
her proclivity to help people rather than give
them tickets that eventually started her on .
the road to traffic reporting.
"My favorite thing was to help people -
help improve our image," she said. "l felt
like the public had an image of lhe highway
patrol and it wasn't good. I got the mosl
enjoyment out of winning people over to the
CHP."
During this time, a supervisor constantly
encouraged her to get into the CHP public
information office, but Angel said she wasn't
ready to give up her beat on the San Gabriel
River (605) Freeway.
That all changed however when Angel, in
a rush to get a stranded French horn player
to his concert one night, sped by her boss at
a speed that broke all the rules.
In return for keeping the violation off her
record, her supervisor offered a deal she
real low speeds."
Angel can still remember clearly the first
fa1al accident she ever had to investigate for
the CHP -a case involving 16-year-old who
was killed during a head-on collision with a
drunken driver.
"You never forget them," she said.
Defore joining the CHP in 1983, Angel, 35,
coached women's soccer at Fullerton College
and taught physical education at Bishop
Amat High School and the Orange County
Police Academy. A graduate of Cal Poly
Pomona with a degree in physical education
and Estancia High School, her first job was
as a recreation leader for the City of Costa
Mesa.
Despite her grueling schedule, Angel still
has time to train four months out of the year
for the Toughest Cop Alive athletic
competition (which she won in 1988) and
keeps her weekends free for movie
marathons, rock climbing, running, weight
lifting and even swimming, the last sport she
mastered.
She has also won 16 Gold Medals in the
1984 Police Olympic competition.
"I have a lot of energy," she snid. "Neither
one of these is a job to me. I've never had
more fun in my life. I am single and 1 can
live like this. Right now it's just fun to do it
all."
. -. ·--___.....,. . --~~ --
l WU murder that broupt me lO the Daily Pik>L
I didn't know tho victim nor did I know the
Wadi be MAI limp.
His wire wu dead on anival at St.
killer. But throuah a series or Odd and chilling
events. the crime brought me to a small, runctional
desk in the middle of the Dally Pilot newsroom
where -only dayS before - a man named Tom
Barley had worked.
I didn't know Barley but those who did described
him as a refined and aentle Englishman, a classicist
tossed in with a bunch of rough-ond-tumblc
reporten. He had been the p~'s courthouse
reporter and, in his spare time, ifs music critic.
But on a spring morning in 1979, he also became a
killer.
J01Cph'• Hospital and Barley wu
huatled to Orange County JaD.
As it turned out, be never tasted
freedom apin. He was killed in
prison several yean later, an
unsuspecting victim in a prison
brawl.
On that Saturday morning he walked into a Santa
Ana shoppina center and confronted his wife outside
a restaurant. WitneSSC$ recalled that he said, "Well,
love, this is where it ends" before stabbing her.
Barley was eventually knocked unconscious by a
restaurant patron who grabbed a wooden "Wait For
To Be Seated" sign and smacked him over the head
Just days after the crime, I wu
hired by the Daily Pilot and pen
Darley'• desk. his chair and -by
and by -bis assignments. I used
the phone that he bad used. 1 ·
scrlbble1 notes with the pencils and
pens he had left behind and finished
up stories he would never have time
-----• to complete. Deep in one drawer
was a set of engraved Cross pens, Barley's I suppose.
I left them there, undisturbed.
Jn retrospect, it was a strange momenL But at the
Around town
&nd your lttm1 for Around
Town to Bob .-an F,.rlccn, Tilt
Pilot, JJO W. Bay St., Cost•
/tf csa, 92621.
Jlelp for dyslexia
COSTA MESA -The OrlOn Dyslexia
Society of Oranae County is looldn&
for second to fifth gl'llde students with
rcadina problems and possible dyslaia
lo enroll in the ortcr-school ~EAD
program in Costa Mesa. The program
will meet for one hour, four times a week, beginning next month. Then fee
is $20. For information, call 240-6401.
Congressman to speak
NEWPORT BEACH -Rep. Chris Cox (R-Ncwport Oc:ieh) will speak at
the Jan. 8 annual meeting of the New-
port Center Association. Olli 720-8488
ror information.
Celebrity speaker
NEWPORT DEACI I -"Entertain-
Police . ~og .
Costa Mesa
A 61·year~ld Hunlin&ton Beach woman was the victim of a strong-arm robbery Monday 11 South Coast Plaza.
An unidentified man rc~rtedly pushed the woman to the ground at 1boU1 6:25
p.m., stoic her purse and ran. The purse and contents arc valued 11 Sl JS. • Someone sci fire lo 1 wooden fence outside the wcsl Costa Mesa police su!J.
st.ation, S7l Park Drive, at about 10:06
p..m, Mondtiy. Damasc was slitht. A
boot of matches ancf a pile or leaves were found at the scene. • Someone broke into Costa Mesa High School's Career Center Dec. 16 and stole
a typewriter a computer and video
equipment. The value or lhc losses had not been tabulated Tuctdlly. There were no signs or forced entry in ihe bural:iry. • Police ancsted three people on suspi· cion of possession of marijuana and
ment Tonight" correspondent Jeanne Wolf will t>c the auest apcalter at the next Jewish FecJcratioo of Oranao
County Trendscllen event, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Jan. 10 at the Four ~asons
HoteL For information caU 2.S9-06SS.
Dog show
COSTA MESA -Shoreline 0oa Fanciers Association of Orange Coun·
I)' will host its 11th All-Breed Dot Show from &30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Jan. 12
at the Orange County Fairgrounds in
Costa Mcs:i. The public is welcome. Admission is SS for adults, SJ for IC·
niors and $2.SO for children aged 6 lo
J 2. For information, call 644-7907 or
SJ0.1826.
University Women • NEWPORT BEACH -American
AS$0Clation of Univcnily Women
member Jeanene Miller will aM: a
slide presentation and lcciurc about her ~nt trip to Moscow at the u-
socialion 's Jan. IS meeting at the
Newport Beach Tennis Oub. Dinner is at 6 p.rn. and the lecture begins at
huhish for sale Monday. Arrested at
10:20 p.m. were Lara Elizabeth Stanfield! 22. William Ralph F<>r.!!z 27 and Michac John Sommers, 24. 1 nc ancsts were
made al 1331 W. Baker St. Two olhen were also arrested for lesser offenses.
Newport Beach
A container or mail "f(aJ missing from I
mortg.igc comp3ny office at 1301 Dove
St. • Me3nwhilc, a mail carrier's nearly
emP.ty mail b3(. with SS.393 in rcaistcrca mail rcccipt.s an.side, was mis.sin& artcr she set it down near lhe back of lftc: post
office at 191 RNcrside Ave. • A 150-g311on circular fish tonic was
among propeny stolen from an orClcc 01 160 N"cwport Center Drive. • Someone unboJtcd engine mounls on a 1971 Vollciwagcn parked in a lot at JSth and W. O;ty streets. arpnrcntly to steal the rebuilt engine, bu then apparently
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WiSheS you a Safe and Sobei' holida,
If we can hell>, call m at
(714 )760--5656
7:30. Retervatlons arc ~ired. For lntormatlon, eaJI 786-4020.
Fight against bigotry
NEWPORT BEACH -Louisiana
State Refil'.~~:n Central Committee member • th Rickey, founder of
the Louisiana Coalillon apinsa bcism and Nazism. will be the fucsa of the Oransc County chae_ter o the Amcri·
con Jewish Committee at 7~. Jan. 22 at Le Merldicn Hotel 1bc cost
of the lecture. entitled "&trcmiam in
the Politicnl Process." is S13, wflieh in· elude• a dessert buffet. For more in·
Connat Ion. ca II 6<J0..852.S.
Jewish Federation
NEWPORT BEACH -The Jewish
Federation of Oranic Councy will tict
off Its 1992 Major Gins Camptiip with
an appreciation dinner Jaa. "l2 for
those who made gins ot~ or more durina_ 1991. The s Cftftt. al the Four Seasons Hole 1 will feature
guest spetiker Simcha Dimtz. chairman
of the Jewish AAency for Israel For information, call 2S9-06SS.
abandoned the effort. • A man rc~rted $840 cash was missing
from the P.')Clcct of his pan~1: wen: left In a drcssina room 11 saore. 363 Newport Center DrM. • A sack of quarters, ~lry _a_nd camera
equipment worth 1 tocal $2,697 were sto-len sometime between WcdllCICl8y after-noon and Friday momina from an apart· mcnt at the 1900 block of Shcrri111ton
Place. • A b~!c and three tool bases worth a
total S700 were stolen from a c:ondo-minham aaragc on Sea lslaad D~. A
chain ICC\lring the bi~lc was cat and a storaae loclccr containana the tool boxes
was taken. • A red, two-door, 1991 Nissan 300-ZX valued at S3S,OOO was stolen Saturday af· tcmoon while parked near 418 Via Udo
Nord.
BALBOA
THEATRE •''•-I !!!&i I
'7tt I. ..._ NI,,,...,.
)
time, it didn't 1trike me u odd at all. The newsparr
wu full or characters then and -still fresh out o
c:olle1e -I wu wilUng to accept any sort of reality,
even if it meant picking through the belongings of a
killer.
The reporter who sat next to me was a Korean
War veteran who drank ao heavily you could smell
him half way across the newsroom. His mission in life
seemed to be to squeeze as many adjectives as
~ible into a single story, often smothering the story
itself with his purple prose.
In bis hands, a geologist who had passed away
earned this tum of phrase: "Joe Jones has retumc<1
to the 11ounc1 he loved so well." The reporter
thought it was a stroke of genius. I figured the stroke
would be the one suffered by the geologist's widow
once she read the obituary.
The reporter later lost his job when he showed up
drunk at the Costa Mesa Police station one morning.
Another colleague of mine at the paper back then
was prone to simply vanishing on occasion. He would
Thursday, o.c.mbet 28, 1991 A3
tum up in Death Valley or San Francisco or w
Vegas, often broke and drunk. He would return to
the office with stories or how he had been felled by a
nasty sidewinder ouuide a saloon in Red Mountain
or beaten up by a mob of angry sailors in Long
Beach.
He was later hired by the county.
When the Daily Pilot switched to publishing three
times a week last July, I caught myself once or twice
thinking of this madcap group and how 1 had started
out with them. I'm not sure why. Just adding things
_up in the face of dramatic change, 1 suppose.
It's almost as though I felt we had cheated them
just a bit by erasing the word daily from the
newspaper's masthead, that their hard work, eccentric
behavior and lasting memories had been scrubbed
away along with the name.
Next month, the Pilot again becomes the Daily
Pilot. And the paper's legacy and roots remain intact.
I know that now.
Stnt M•rble 16 lbt managing editor.
GRAND OPENING
'WIJy Pay Mall Price•}
Fine Italian t • Kt Gold T•e Store
For Loven
Sate Priced At Fashion Island $615
.... So. Coast Plaza $6'5
estcliff ewelers (7t•) 650-4595
20-0 Westcliff Dr., N.B.
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From A1
hear the youth's nearly inaudible
voice. But then, someone beard
about whispered command training
for dogs and the $4,000 course was
donated to the foundation.
The recession has caused a
iiligbt drop in monetary contribu·
tions this year. But Weeks said
Make-A-Wish has been hun more
by another organization with a
similar name that has' been ac-
cused of spending only 1 percent
of its funds on actual wishes.
Donors have been 'mistaking the
Carson-based Children's Wish
Foundation, which is under invcs·
tigation by the state Attorney Gen-
eral, with the better-known Make·
A-Wish, which spends rouahly 90
percent of funds on wishes and
has nothing to do with the other
charity, Weeks said.
Now an international organiza-
tion with 79 chapters, the Make-A·
Wish Foundation was launched in
1981 as a non-profit Arizona cor-
poration, inspired by the story of a
7-year--Old leukemia patient whose
dream was to become a police of-
ficer. Arizona state trooper$ grant·
cd little Chris' wish with a badge,
custom-made uniform an<t ride in
a helicopter fave days before the
younptu died.
The Oran,e County chapter was
fonned in 1983 by Newport Beach
resident John Davia, whose Ill wife
had seen a televfaion new1 feature
on the charity and asked that upon
her death, money be donated to
the group.
Davis, now a San Diego resi-
dent, wn so impressed with the
charity that he launched his own
chapter, with an office on Dover
Drive.
Todiy, the Orange County chap-
ter hu 65 reauJar ~untecn. while
numerous other busineu and com·
munity ICadCil -miihll fioin
IOcaJ fh'eftlble11 to buainell aecu·
ti"Va ""!'. dOftate both money and
services to put wishes. ••aur COllllllittee memben are
from all di«erent parts of the
county and all diff crcnt waits of
life," said Weeks. "But they aU
have one thing in common -they
all have such a warm bean ...
Last year, the chapter granted
97 wishes. Presently. the chapter is
involved with 32 children. ''We
never say to a child, 'We have too
offac:en, lh~ten eed ~ celebri and ..... ~
chatet lb compucen Md blc;cta
Mab-A-Willa P9J1 all:='
for lbe cbUd and ldl. or her •
Typically, the wish ii panted la I
party at~re wilb addJUoeal
gifts and ~
Volunteen Utorally become
memben of tbO cbildrea11 famBiea.
which can mean IOIDO paiafal mo-
ments if a child auccumbl to the
illness. But volunteen say the chil·
dren themselves make their efforts
worthwhile.
... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil many wishes; you'll have to wait,' "
Weeks said.
"When Make·A-Wilb puta a
wish, we know we\le made a clif-
f ere nee in their lives," said Weeb.
"When you know we've made a
difference and gave our loYe. it
helps ease the pain;"
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Popular requests arc vacation
trips to places like Hawaii and
Disney World, visits wjth police
BEACH: ......._., lb1vN ta • n ell•
From A1
Balboa Boulevard, the 58 Mari-
napark homeowners only recently
formed an association, Williams
said. He said the members came
up with the Adopt-A-Beach pro-
gram as the association's first com-
munity project.
thing back to the community," said
Williams.
Oty general serviocs officials
were delighted by the idea and
have been supponive, Williams
added.
The Marinapark bomcowncn
ultimately hope the idea catches
on and inspires other commuruf·
groups to adopt strior-Ol · bea
throughout the city,""\Villiamliai
"We face one of the most gor-
geous beaches on the bay, and we
deci~ed it'd be nice to give some-
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Balboa lsl•lld, CA
Edito11lal
• • • . I -• ,
Why all the
fuss over a
rew hats?
The envelopes
please ... rl'l\ Thumbs down to
~ the overzealous city
licensing
department in Newport
Beach, which recently shut
down an 87-year-old
widow's crochet hat
"business," ·an enterprise
she admittedly "operated"
out of her home.
Actually, Paula Harold
i~ had propped her
6 crocheted hats on sticks in
i an old planter on the
patio of her 44th Street
home. She sold one or two
hats a week at SS each.
"You can't do
commercial things in a
residential location th~1t
alter 1hc rcsidcnti~1I
characier of the
neighborhood," explained
city licensing supervisor
Glen Everroad. "We don'1
have inspectors out
beating the bushes on
these things. They arc
typically responding to
complaints. We do follow
the letter of the law when
we receive complaints."
How about following
what your common sense
tells you?
~ Thumbs up to the Il.J downtown Costa
Mesa merchants
who've pitched in to help
fellow business owners
Annie and Charles
Morgan, whose rented
Flower Street house was
recently gutted by a
Christmas tree fire.
It's nice to see the
holiday spirit live.
If you'd like to help -.
financially or otherwise -
or know of an castside
Cos1a Mesa rental
available, you can call
Fred Jonssen, the owner
of the Newport Party
Center (1800 Newport
Boulevard) at 650-6070 or
send your checks to: the
Morgan Family Fund,
Wells Fargo Dank, 301 E.
17th St., Costa Mesa,
92627.
f1t\ Thumbs down to
~ the yellow-bellied
caitle rustler who
made off with the little
mechanical pony that had
stood outside the Our
Gang store on Balboa
Island for more than two
decades.
_A Thumbs up to all IlJ those involved in
this year's Newport
Harbor Christmas Boat
Parade.
From start to finish, the
parnde was a smashing
success. More than 200
boats participated as did
about 85 percent of the
1,200 homes tining the
parade route.
It was another quality
event brought to you by
the hardworking folks at
the Newport Harbor
Chamber or Commerce.
Forum Editor William Lobdell. .. 642-4321, ext. 351
A lound•on for our judicial system
Seventh Ame mament ensu res an individual 's right to jury tria l in neglig enc e lawsuits
By Assemblyman Tom Mays
T wo hundred years ago on December
15, 1791, the first ten Amendments
to the Constitution or the United
States, known ns the Bill of Rights, was
ratified by Congress. Unfortunately, this
anniversary came and went without much
!)ublic netice or revelry despite the fact
that this document is the key to our
individual liberties.
Anniversary
1791 *1991
This right is guaranteed by the Sixth
Amendment. However, the Seventh
protects a person's rights to a jury trial if
he is sued by another party for negligence
or monetary damages. This amendment is
reserved to cages where there is a
question concerning federal law or there is
a connict between two parties which arc
from different states.
request that a jury of his peers (the
People) judge the evidence anJ facts
brought ogaimt him will ah\a)'s be
preserved.
Additionally, the amendment bars any
judge or court in the nation from
overturning the verdil.:t 111 a lawsuit, in
federal court, which was Jccided b) a juf).
T he foresight of the Founding fathers
in including this pro\b1on \\as so the
will and judgment of the people coulJ not
be reversed by any one person or
government body. A court uf appeal may
order a new tri:il by jury 1f it feels that a
matter of law or C\ 1dcnce has bci.:11
overlooked or violated, but it cannut strike
down the jury's judgment.
It is perplexing that in a nation where
personal freedom is regarded as a
God-given right, we sometimes take for
granted the written documents -
especially the Bill of Rights -that
provided us with th.e liberties we now
enjoy. In celebration of the anniversary of
the adoption of this revered document, I
would like to take this opportunity to take
a closer look at the wisdom nnd
forethought of our Founding Fathers in at
least one of the Amendments to our
Constitution.
Our federal Constitution is the supreme
law of the land. It is the written
instrume111 that embodies the fun damental
laws ond principles governing our nation
and gu:irantees certain natural rights for
every citizen in America.
times since originally being dr:ifted at the
Constitutional Convention on September
17, 1787 in 'Philadelphia. The Dill of
Rights, introduced to Congress and
primarily drafted by James Madison, wa~
an answer to complaints that the original
constitution did not go far enough in
restraining government from interfering in
our lives.
A t fi.rst glance this may seem
unimportant or unnecessary.
However, because of the fundamental
structure of our government, which gives
each state the right to adopt and enforce
laws within its own borders, our Founding
Fathers saw that there was a potential for
conflict between merchants :ind customers
from different states.
The Seventh Amendment states: "In
suits at common law, where the value in
controversy shall exceed twenty dollars,
the right of trial by jury sholl be presel'ed,
:ind no fact tried by a jury shall be
otherwise re-examined in any court in the
United States than accorJing to the rules
of the common law."
"Common law" is the statutes and
regulations adopted by ~he lcgisl.1ti\e
bodies of individual states. facn though
the laws of the states are in constant
change, the fundament:il right gi,en b) the
Seventh Amendment will stand for all
While the different courts h:ive h:indcd
down Jifferent interpretation of the fine r
points Dill of Right's Amendments, the
fundamental basii. of these richts has nol
:ind c:innot be ch:.rnged. lmtc~tc.I of arguing
in terms of liberal or conscl'ati'c
decisions. such decisions shoulJ be mun:
properly be vie\\eJ in terms of'' hethcr
they grant more po"er to the state.: ur to
the individull.
time.
T he Constitution was ordained and
established by the people, not by
stutes, not by a select group of autocrats
who seized power, not by any outside
governmental power. The whole
philosophy of constitutional government is
th:it all sovereign power rests with the
body of the people.
The Constitution h:is been amended 26
T here arc some constitution:il
Amendments that :ire much
publiciLed and generally understood by
the average citizc:n -freeJom of ~pecch,
the right to be:ir arms, search anJ seizure.
I lowl!ver, there arc some lesser-known
Amendments that actually arc the
found:ition of our judicial S)'!>lern.
A good example is the Sc,enth
Amendment. Most people know th:ll a
person aecu~eu of cornmiuing a crime.: is
entitkJ 10 a trial by a jury of his peers.
W hat the amendment re ally sa~s I!>
that even though a fcJer:il judge 1:.
allowed to interpret fhe law and pass
judgment in :i civil suit bet\\een t\\O
parties that have connicting state IJ\\'S. the.:
fundamental right of an individual 10
Not only in the.: Sc,cnth, but all of the
Amendments in the U1ll oi Rights come
down to one inl!sc.1pJbk f.Jc..t -our
nJ11on i-. a JemocrJC) of the pcoplc :ind
by th e people.: -111.>1 fur the gm·e rnment
-and the '''II of the peupk shall Jh\a)s
pre' a 11.
.-lssembf.1111an 1'om ,\1:1.1l rC'f'rt'.H·nts the
51Jt 11 Vistrfrt, 11 /Jic/1 <'ncumpa.).>e.>
J/u11tinglQ11 Beach, Seal 1Jtoud1. RoHmour,
Suns<'t 1Je:JCl1, Surfside, Lem!: lfracb,
Signal I/ill, and Catalina /:,/;ind.
Comically speaking, not much is
worse than a strip that changes
T here are two kinds of Americans -those
who read the comics and those who don't.
The former arc well-adjusted, good
humored, and generally make wonderful
neighbors. The latter arc gloomy, pinched, and
don't tip waiters or valets.
Comic readers are serious about their habit.
Many arc discriminating -a mere 10 to 20 strips
per day is their fix. Others, me
included, will try any strip for at
least a few weeks. Even
pcrenni:il losers get me . Over the
yeors I've followed Prince
Valiant, Gasoline Alley, and even
Dick Tracy. (My tastes do have
some limits, though. and Mary
Worth, Brenda Starr, and
Apartment 3-G never made it on
to my regul:ir menu. Zippy was
------worse than a loser -so
repulsive, in fact, that it beg:in to
contaminate the other strips
around it.)
Columnist
Without
Portfolio Old friends in the comics
------pages are mourned when a move
or an editorial decision denies the reader that
morning dose. Gil Thorpe w:is -is -n great
strip, but outside of Ohio, I can't find the coach's
endless seasons.
But losing a strip pales on the misery index in
contrast to a strip that changes. Call it the Nancy
Syndrome. Someone had the great idea a few
years ago to jazz-up Nancy, and overnight the
surreal attraction of the strip v.ias gone. Nancy
futures plummeted.
0 ne would have su~posed that cartoonists
noticed this nnd similar incidents. But not
Greg Howard, author of Sally Forth.
Howard can't draw very well, he says, so he
hired an illustrator -Craig Mcintosh of the
Minneapolis Star Tribune. Mcintosh, an editorial
cartoonist by trade, started drawing the Sally
Forth strip in November.
The baclclash was sudden and overwhelming.
Papers got hundreds of calls. North American
Syndicate, which distributes the strip, aot poked in
the eyes as well. The new approach was a tolill
nop.
"I fed like the guy that brought out New
Coke,'' said a chastened Howard. "You just can't
mess with the comics." Howard pledged that,
forthwith, Mcintosh would draw the strip like
Howard had.
W rong. He tried, but Mcintosh just doesn't
get it. The new, new Sally Forth is less
irritating than the new Sally Forth, but it's still
awful. It's different. It's bad.
I'm willing to bet that How:ird doesn't want to
fire Mcintosh. You have to be a pretty good guy
to conceive of Solly Forth, so Howard tried to
keep both Mcintosh and his readers.
Won't work. Sorry to say that Mac's got to go.
The better line is that you can't screw around
with folks' morning habits. E:irly a.m. is a delicate
time around the USA. Routine saves us all from
general mayhem. Howard has spilled the coffee,
and he needs to surrender.
Every morning nowadays I grumble as my eyes
pass over the distorted features of Ted and
Hillary. Jt's as though the pod people from the
Dody Snatchers had nabbed 'em. Sally and her
boss, Ralph, clank around their inky confines
receiving the same reaction from people generally
reserved for funny sounds from the family car's
engine.
h's not Sally, and it's not Ted, and it's definitely
not runny.
T imc for direct action. Write Howard care of
the comics editor of whatever paper you read
it in. Threaten circulation managers. Demand the
strip be exiled unless and until Howard
capitulates. A single newspaper's cancellation will
give Howard the excuse he needs to dump
Mcintosh.
Ruthless, perhaps, and cold-hearted, but these
arc trying times, and the least we can nsk Cor is a
little certainty in our lives.
It's him or us, Greg. You choose.
Ilugb Hewitt pradltts law with Pettis, Tester,
Kruse & Krlnsk;y In l rt'inc, and hosts • lallc·Show
on KFI AM 640, Saturdays from 11 •.m. to J p.m ..
llis column Dp~11rs c•·cry Tbursd111 In The Pilot.
Editor's note: The follo11ing
arc samplc..•s of Pilot rc~1Jcn ·
comments and critid.>m:>. The
Pilot runs these 011 a regul:Jr
basis. However, only callers
who lc:;wc their n:.imes (spelled
out), cities and phone numbc..·rs
(for verification) wi/I be
published.
Ad in bad taste?
I am calling in response to
the advertisement in last
Thursday's edition placed by
the Balboa Day Club's
employees union. I believe this
is in very bad taste not only
from a publication standpoint
but olso from the standpoint of
the employees union to have
even thought of placing such an
ad. I am not familiar with the
issues surrounding the dispute
between the employees of th e
Bay Club and their employer
and they moy very well have
some \aliJ cumpl.Jint:..
l lo\\C\Cr, the forum to hJnJle
those complJints I!> inside the
''ork plJcc at the Ihlbo.i llJ)
Club. not in the public
ncw~pJpcrs or in public
1 his " nut .J .:unccrn fur the.:
citizen!') of Ne" port Oca.:h.
this is a concern for the
employees or the Bay Club and
their management. It is
possible that the ad,·ertising
deadline for this ad to have run
in the paper was pa!>l sever:il
days ago, ho"cver, I do bclic'e
in light of Mr. llill Ray's
pas!>ing that the ad should
definitely been pulled :ind run
nt a Jifkrcnt time.
Mr. Ray was :in oul!>l:inding
leader in the communitv and
this just speaks to how iow
these people will go to :idJrcs!>
their problems.
DAVID PURVES
Ne" port Beach
How to g~t involved
Rebuttal . . . . .
of congrcu -"Gel in, do your job Cor the
country, get out., -no buildina of n new
career in congress -members or congrcs
keep in touch with their origin:il
pro(cssions.
6) Couraac to OppoM the popular
president. Membcn GI conaius would be
more c:apable oC st~ up to a popular
president -rc1urnln1 to tho concept oC
balance oC p<>wcr. The "entrenched ..
career politician do not seem at all
cap:iblc ~r m3inu1inin1 the balance or
power between lhe three branches or
acwcmment.
9) Beil hopo ror a tu~. DecaUll
aw coun(IY II in ..-~we
~Id ive somctt:dftl * a u,. I belM
rix It. No one can look at the condition oC
our country and suaae&t th3t our
law-makin1 body works. lt needs fixing
because congrcu has spent us into a
finanaal quaamJrc (this year's anticipated
budget deficit Is $3SO billion).
Congress shows little or no Inclination
to c:hanac under the prncnt system. The
present system is not woning. How much •
time do we have 10 reYCne this al:mnina
course? Docs the calamity ot the
enormous federal deficit and the
dlmlnishina of the powcn ol oonpess ._.,that It ii ab:eac1J too la&e? We
c..nat allonl this kind ol fnmlnpetcace
lllld-OION .. ~. JlllRY LOMG ..
An Independent N~pcr
•
.. • •• '•
• • . ,
•• •
..
•'
" . ,
' # , •
. .
M ~' o.c.mber 21, 1181
Back P
·=-Ml 11111 lltl
llllblr 111111
FromA1
Residents Suzanne Mel.we and
Andrea Keith, who were at home
in their apartments at the time of
the fire, escaped unharmed, au-
thorities said. A mend of Keith'•
held a dog on a leash and pet par-
rot on bis shoulder as about 16
firefighters battled the flames,
which reportedly shot up about 30
feet at one point
Next-door neighbor Tom Peco-
ra. 32. said be jumped his fence
when he heard the noise of two
other neighbors ll)'ing to make
sure everyone got out of the house
safely.
"The front was engulf cd real
bad," Pecora said. "I tried to get
into the living room, but there was
no way."
Mcl..ure's apartment in the main
house received smoke and water
damage while Keith's unit in a
backyard garage was not damaged,
Costa Mesa Fire Department
spokeswoman Susan Wood said.
Since the main home was con-
demned and all utilities shut off,
McLurc and Keith were not al-
lowed to -move back into their
apartments and made plans to stay
with family and friends, said John
MM:r-..AtM
The Tabor family was able to salvage a few belongings from the fire that des"°1eci their apautment.
Hcathcliff, director of corporate
relations for the Oran$e County
branch of the Amencan Red
Cross, which was called to help the
fire victims.
Tabor, who is separated from
her husband and bad been spend-
ing most of her monthly welfare
check to pay the $750 rent on the
apartment, said she would move
into a motor home that belongs to
her in-laws.
Since August, the young mother
bread box.
"They're dlunaged but I can still
read them," she said.
has been Jiving with her children
in the house, which is located just
down the street from some of the
oldest buildings in Costa Mesa, in-
clu.d~g a former bla~k ~th's • Donations to help Tabor and
bu1ldmg reportedly built ID the her children can be sent to her at
late 1890s. P.O. Box 4259, Irvine, 92716. Do-
About the only bright spot in
Tabor's morning came when she
retrieved the diary she's kept for
the past 15 years, which was pre-
served from the flames inside a tin
nations to help fire victims can
also be sent to the American Red
Cross Orange County Olapter,
P.O. Box 11364, Santa Ana, 92711.
Checks to the Red Cross should
be marked for "disaster relief."
AalnA1
coat eutier this month 1eekina to Pi:a ·prottction from c:Rditon
uniil it can reorganizo fiaaoclally.
UWo had a meetU., witll the
city. and they're plcMcid with our
~ and pRlll'Clt (on the
&re statioa)," said ·Mike Bourque,
.-prelideat of the four..year-old
company. which 1peciali&el in
commercial building construction.
"We're aoin.g to fini1b the
project."
la recent weeks, several con·
IUUCtion subcontracton working
on the fire station have filed 14
stop-work claims witb the city for
more tban $420,000 worth of un-
paid seMces .rangjn,g from laying
bricks to installing underground
fuel tanks.
But even as the stop-work
claims have been coming in, most
of the subcontractors have contin-
ued to work on the fire station,
which is about 80 percent com-
pleted, city officials said. The Ed-
wards Group has also been taking
the steps necessary to eventually
repay the subcontractors, city of·
ficials said.
"We're expecting one or two
weeks of delay based on the infor-
mation we have now," said Tony
#
'We hid a meetlog With
the city. and they're
pleased with our
perfonnance and progress
(on the fire station). We're
gotng to finish the
project.•
-.. 11 II
vice president of The Edwards Group
CDe Baca, assistant developmen-
tal services together.
The fire station bad been W·
geted for completion by the begin·
ning of January, although the
project was already about three
weeks behind schedule because of
earlier weather delays.
"(Cons&ruction) has never
stopped," said Jim Richey, fire de·
partment administrative division
chief. "We might expect 1<>me de-
lays due to the bankruptcy. But
our philosophy has been, if it takes
a little longer to do it right, it's
best to wait. We have been 100
percent satisfied with the work so
far."
.v om: Determining guilt or innocence not always • my tak for those Involved
From A1
When the video ends, the televi-
sion is pushed to a comer of the
room. "Sorry. There's no cable or
I'd Jet you watch the soaps," the
court employee apologizes.
The room itself is small. The
walls arc a blend of white and
mustard yellow, there are three
doors -all marked "exit" -and
there's a single bulletin board dec-
orated with a newspaper clipping
titled "Jury duty: inconvenient,
downright boring" and a small but
colorful ad for Tupperware.
Braced for the painful hours
that lie ahead, C1'eryone in the
room has come armed with a book
... and a healthy appetite for small
talk.
I 've already made two new
friends -a fireman and a trou-
ble-shooter for McDonnell Dou-
glas -and chewed through 50
pages of David Lamb's "A Stolen
Season" when the assignment
clerk breaks the bad news: "Panels
3 and 4 follow me."
I grab a juror badge and follow
the stampede out of the room,
down the staircase, across the
lobby, down another staircase and
into Judge Blair Barnett's court-
room.
It is 10:45 a.m., and already I'm
seeing action .
The two panels fill up half the
courtroom and we're sworn in en
massc. Slowly, the clerk pulls
names from what appears to be a
~eek of cards and then reads them
aloud -careful to spell out the
last names so the attorneys can jot
them down.
My name comes up quickly and
the bailiff -with all the polite-
ness of a maitre d at a Newport
Center restaurant -shows me to
my scat. It's comfortable. It swiv-
els. It roclcs. And for a moment I
drift off, thinking how nice it
would be to have a couple of these
in my living room.
T be case involves drunken driv-
ing. As I come to find out,
drunken driving cases arc pretty
much the main entree around the
courtroom.
In this instance, the defendant
- a Laguna Beach woman -ap-
parently clipped a "No Parking"
sign on her way back from a Dana
Point yacht club, where she con-
cedes she had two glasses of wine
while trying to square away some
repairs on her boat.
The prosecution wants us to be-
lieve that she hit the sign because
Then comes the twist. The de-
fendant claims that after getting
her car home, she stepped inside
the house and, very quickly,
downed two large cupfuls of bran-
dy.
Her attorney shows us the cup. I
try to imagine gulping ounce after
ounce of brandy from tbil cup. My
mind balks at the thought. My
stomach, too.
-,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;::;;:::;;:==============:;:;:r------------, she was intoxicated. From the wit·
ncss stand, though, she tells us
that a rear tire on her Mercedes
Benz blew out, causing her to drift
into the sign.
T he jury room is much smaller
than I imagined. There's a
large conference table with 12
chairs, a pair of bathrooms, a pen·
cil sharpener and a large window
overlooking the parking lot, now
dappled in fong. deep 1hadows as
the sun sinb behind the hill$. Vilfaee 1'ain Sfwppes"
RETAIL SPACE FOR LEASE
600-3000 sq.ft.
Ocean veiw restaurant space available
Largest Mall in Laguna Beach.
Two levels of secured parking
Prime Coast Hwy Location
1100 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach • (714) 497-0132
-Belts
•Sportswear
•Evening Wear
\ ·. ' "· ·.,, \ '
-sags
•Shoes
-career Wear
All of this later seems unimpor·
tant. What seems of weightier con-
cern is that she nursed her dis-
abled car home, walked back to
the scene of the accident and was
arrested. Down at the station, her 1--------------1 blood alcohol level was measured
GRAND OPENING
Why Pay Mall Prices}
Our
Every Day Price
" Only $1,250
On Sale At ...
So. Coast Pitta S 1990
Fashion Island $1990
twice -once at .19 and then
again at .20, well above the legal
limit.
From A1
larger than the original location of
the new concept, a 20,000-~uarc
foot facility in Portland, and 1t will
be smaller than a 6(),000-square-
foot location under oonstruction in
Chicago, McGuire said.
Jerry Klein, a general partner in
the $62 million Triangle Square
project, said that in addition to
Nike Town, high-profile ·eateries
Planet Hollywood, Hard Rock
Cafe and the Cheescake Factory
have considered the center for
The fint order of business is to
elect a foreman. My friend the
fireman nominates me. I nominate
the McDonnell Douglas trouble·
shooter. Reluctantly, he agrees.
Fess Parker has taught us well.
But any hopes of taking a quick
vote and calling it a day vanish
quickly. After two days of silently
taking in this case, everyone feels
inclined to speak ... at lenatJi.
planned Orange County locations.
He said be believes the domed
space at 19th and Newport will be
leased in four to six weeks.
Triangle Square is slated to
open in May. Seventy perc:ent of
the space in the center hu been
leased or spoken for in letters of
intent.
Hard Rock Cafe and Planet
Hollywood, a combination restau-
rant and entertainment-industry
museum, were rumored to be con-
sidering the now-vacant Amen ~===========~-------------,. Wardy location at Fuh.ion Island.
GRAND
OIBNING
CElEBRATirn
VISIT OUR QA.ZZLING
NEW STalE AND
REGISTER TO WIN A
S200 SHOPPING SPREE.
Impostors Copy Jewtls look so much
likt rht daipr QtfgJnals, it's Nni to
r.tll thtm 1p11t. We hive rtmmbblC
copies,,( dtsip by Cvtitt. 8ulpri,
Ttfilny & Ca.. and v.n Cleef & Atpda.
ro name a few. All at a fraction cl
whit the orijna1s c~. And 111
liDed wilh 1 likt'UM 1u1111utt.
Mclltri«aSJS·S9S.
Planet Hollywood debuted with its
first location earlier this year in
New York.
Janice Fuchs, a sales and mar-
keting manager at Fashion Island,
said leasing officials at the mall
After some 90 minutca of de-
bate, we take a vote. We're split
but leaning toward guilty. Then we
take another vote. And then an-
other. The vote changes each time.
Could she really have consumed
that much brandy that quickly?
The cup -introduced as evidence
by the defense -is there la the
jury room. We examine it. We
sniff it. We pass it around. And fi.
nally, we agree. We're hopelessly
deadlocked.
I feel almost embarrassed when
Judge Barnett thanks us for our
effort and bids us f arcweU.
Outaide the courtroom, the
prosecutor wants to know wbat
went wrong.
"l think the feeling wu wilh•.
some people that if there's anyone
out there who could down two
cups of brandy, this woman was
the person," I offer.
"I was afraid of that," be an·
swcrs.
I later find out that the woman
is allowed to plead out to rccklea
driving and given three yean infor·
mal probation.
The truth, of course, will forever
remain a mystery to me.
arc dealing with several prospect&
for the 27,000-square-foot facility,
vacant since last March, includina
one with a restaurant/entertain·
mcnt concept. She declined to
name any of the prospects.
"We would like someone in u
soon as possible," Fuchs said.
"Certainly, we want someone open
by summer."
Antonio Cagnolo, owner of An·
toncllo Rfstoranto ln Santa Ana
and one of six Oranp County in·
vcstors planning to open a fran.
chise outlet of Planet Hollywood
in the area, acknowledged that bis
group considered Fuhion laland
and Trian.flo Square; but eaid
those locatiOns arc no longer in
the running, He declined to dil-
c:ua other prospective locations.
I•
'
.. \
nu•
December 26, 1991
The Newport Beacf\'Costa Mesa Pilot
Sportl F.dltor Ropr CarboL •• .'42-4330 nt.381
Richard Du~preps/83
Brosterhous-tightweigtQIB3
Classifl8d/85
t.ere ii a certain nucleus of ath·
let11 that bek,Mtl to me. They arc
the Matt FuClbriDFn of&. '8ftCia. Brandon finneys of Newport
thrbor, tho Olivia DiCamUU1 of Costa
Mesa. the Todd Kebrtia o( Corona del
Mar and Billy Blantons of Mater Dci,
u well u all of their junior and senior
&eammates.
The rotation comes
ud ps -and for
fJYCry high ICbool
aractuating class in
June, there's a new
lfOUP coming in Sep-
tember. They arc the
cream of the crop of
our bi&h school ath-
letca.
For a few short
months they come
under the Pilot's um-
brella -and frankly,
we love 'cm.
You need to know
-----that to grasp the sec-nario.
The Pilot's Editor, once upon a time
a pretty fair water polo player at Long
Beach Wilson High School, boldly pre-
dicted he could whip any of these play-
cn. u w~ watched the finals of the
Pilot Tip-off Claulc at Corona del Mar
HJgb where Newport Harbor and Hun-
tincton Beach were dueling for the
crown at the outset of December.
"Oh yeah," I replied to the 6-foot-21/l
William Lobdell (I believe he was 6-3
as a high school senior), "how about
(Matt) Fuerbringer of Estancia?"
"How tall is he?," inquired Lobdell.
"I don't know, about 6-2, maybe a little
taller," I replied.
"Bring him on," boldly demanded
Lobdell.
Lobdell bei!D to back down a bit
when I told hl'fn the Stanford-bound
(volleyball scholarship) Fuerbringer ac-
tually is more like 6-7 than 6-2. but he
stayed with the challenge when I told
him to beat anyone else was not news-
~was set up. ~II vs. Fuer-
bringer -one on one, winner's outs.
call your own, Saturday at 10 a.m.
Saturday ... 10 a.m. Fuerbringer'• in
the gym, Lobdell'• late.
10:07 -Lobdell wanden in.
10:10 -Wa= and, I have to
Mtmit, Lobdell pretty &ood -
llooting against air. Swish. Bounce,
nee. Swish. So docs FuerbrfnJer.
10:20 -A crowd of some 30, mclud-
irif, Matt's earents, Estancia Coach Tim 0 Brien, Pilot sports staffers Barry
f'aulkner and Richard Dunn, and most
of the Estancia varsity perks up. Lob-·~11 complains about the noor. "It's too
sticky," be says.
10:22 -Swish. Swish. Swish. Swish.
Swish. Fucrbrinaer>a up, S-0.
Lobdell fi&hts back and closes the gap to 5-3. 8-6 and 10-9 before Fuer-
bnnger puts him away, 11-9. Fuer-
See CARLSON/I!
Lee,~
Matt Fuerbringer (left) offers a formidable obstacle for Bill Lobdell.
Idle boast turns into tall tale
er than me.
My second strategy was a bit more primitive, but prob-
ably my beat chance. I bad planned to hack him relent-
lessly. No easy shots, r.t him anpy, throw him off his
game. Afterall, you can t foul out in one-on-one. But then
I looked up in the atanda and saw Matt's mom and dad,
hil coach and teammates. Sadly, I'd have to play by tho
rules.
In warmups. I played like an All-Star, sticking the j's,
dribbling behind my back, converting my pttented reverse
layup. Maybe I bad a chance afterall.
But then the gamo started.
I watched helplessly u Matt poured in five •traiabt bu-
keta. I looted (M)r at Roter Carbon; a rare llDile broke
acrC* bia face, ear to car. He loYed watcbina Ilia boy cnaab
his editor who giYea him IO many beadachea.
But then, IOlllCthiq mqjcal happened. I iD8de a
Oeorae Foreman-like comeback. Matt bu a winppu like
u a&uou. So, after five bnataJ blocb, I realized &hat my
nplar lhot repertoire wun't aoina to cut it.
'· lw to ao with the junk -hook ahota. acoop1, nicb -.
ead ..mn,ty, tbe llhob awted to fall. I finally clawed my
way biick to where I bad a lhot at winnina, With the pmo
to elewn, I Md tM bill at 9-10.
But tho dram died ilOfta with my jumper. Matt won 11·
'· It wu a belt-Of-three .... bat I knew I Wll == IMil. • I went up 2-0 la the IOCODd pmet I oa
_.. • WwY to pneerw -eon of monJ ~· ·.1 .. ~.b-the more hu_..'C ~ Whlda ln-duW' a .,...., duU bf M9ll enroute to aa ..., 11 ...
\ilCearJ • ....,.,. It .. tbe Ol!lJllD ~ but richt ...... 11111
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.w to• undlHll .. • ~:"t,-rd allO ...._ • ...... ot .. ..,..... • ..... two .....
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T~-.• ,.,_. ................. .... =-~ °"'-t11lc .... ,__..,II die ........ ............. -:•'""?ti w, ......... . ......... .,... .... .. ...... ,111 • .,
., ........... .., ... _.ti
'
lbey'Pe lifl ... running at
Coast Chrllb11a Classic:·
Elgles lilst Dana His;
Newlllrt meets Interlake
CdM duels rugged Long Beach Jordan th is morning
T he seventh annual Coast Ouistmas Oassic, a 16-team high school basket-
ball tournament which has had its share of standout performances, gets
under way today with an eight-game slate and featuring three ,of Orange
County's Top 10 teams.
Huntington Beach (No. 7). Estancia (No. 9) and Irvine (No. 6) are seeded 1-3-
4 with Tustin. the defending state champion on the Division 11 level, No. 4.
The four-day tourney continues on Friday with a potential meeting between
Newport-Mesa District rivals Estancia and Newport Harbor looming at 7 o'clock.
Thal matchup, however, depends on tonight's games where Estancia, the defend-
ing state champ on the Division III level, duels Dana Hills at 7, followed by an
Interlake (Wash.)-Newport Harbor battle in the 8:40 nightcap.
Harbor, bounced from Orange County's Top 10 after a pair of losses at the
San Dieguito Tournament last week, is led by 6-4 standout Justin Mcintee, who
shared MVP honors with Huntington Beach's .... at the Pilot Tip-off Classic in
early December.
Mcintee is ave raging 27.5 points a game and has twice gone for 37 points.
Estancia's big gun is Matt Fuerbringer, who led the Eagles to the state crown
as a junior. With a completely new supporting cast Fuerbringer has averaged 20.4
points per start this season.
Coast Christmas Classic
~ '·--Do< 216
...... ..... )40 p.a
Oo<.17 Doc. 17
(0.-J) a..• ... (0-A)
12:l0p.& t40p.a
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(C-IC) .... (O-ll l
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I .l:JD ..... • .,,... I ~-.....
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Doc. :II Ooc. JI
(0-.H) ~ (0-F}
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lp.& --l p• Doc. 17 Do< 17 1(0-M) __ __,
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1111 ,.,, 11111 11111 Bhort at It
"' • . .. . .
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Newport Harbor wrestling -re-born under Stewart
By Richard Dunn
Spons Wnter
The once-barren mat
room at Newport Har-
bor High has been res-
um.:ctcd.
"When I first got
here, a lot of kids
diJn't even know we
hJd a wrc!>tling pro-
gram o r wrestl ing
team," said first-year
Sailors Coach Steve
Stewart, who spent the
pa)t seve n years as an
a!>sistant at Esperanza,
pO\\er.
Stewart
a CIF wrestling
Newport Harbor, which hadn't won a
dual match on any level in four years, is
back from the dead.
"The mat room hadn't been touched in
20 years," Stewart said, "so we tore it
apart and painted it. The uniforms were
20-ycars-old, so we got whole new uni-
forms. We also have a whole new coach-
ing staff."
Starting from scratch, Stewart is hoping
to create a competitive posture at New-
port Harbor, which opened the 1991-92
·campaign with a 9-7 record.
"(Athletic director) Eric Tweit and
(principal) Dr. Dennis Evans have been
very supportive," Stewart sa id. "We've g<n
a lot of great people helping us. As long
as we get support from the faculty, there's
no reason why we can't have a class pro-
gram.
"We just need to change a few attitudes
around here -some wrestlers have devel-
oped some bad habits. We've r.lso got a
booster club going now and we're remold-
ing the mat room, trying· to start over
again. Our kids are working hard, they're
a bunch of good kids. In two years, there's
no reason why Newport can't be on a
competitive level with anybody around in
the state."
The Sailors, comprised mo!>tly of rook-
ies, have only two returning lettermen,
Chris Edwards ( 152 pounds) and Sean
McKay (145), but droves of potential.
Leading the way is junior heavyweight
Beau Ralphs, an All-Sea View League
football player who has never before wres-
tled.
"He came out in his first match and
was down 10-1, then he came charging
back," Stewart said. "With five seconds to
go, he was down 11 -10, then he put the
guy on his back and pinned him with one
second lcf t.
"Once he starts learning about wres-
tling, he's going 10 be beating some guys.
He's a great athlete and it's going to be
exciting lo come watch him wrestle."
Sophomore Ethan Castanon (103), who
won five of his first six matches, and
freshman Greg Shatterton (140) are ex-
pcctcd to be strong in their class whe1
Sea View League competition .sets un
derway.
"ln a couple of years," Stewan said
"we're going to be pretty impressive witl
all this young talent we have."
McKay and Richard Castanon (13S) an
the only seniors. Other top sophomore:
include Jimmy Klahn (112), Alex Men
diola (119) and Jeff Rennie (140).
"With kids coming out for wrestling for
the first time, I c~uate it to tryin§ to 1u11
for the first time,' Stewart said. 'There':
no way you can be successful at it rifh•
away -it's trial and error. You're gouti
to fa il before you win, but if you stick to ii
and work hard, you can get right baclc/'
Calvary chapel wrestling 'still' a full-fledged powerhouse . · :. " · Schedule
Tiny 1-A school
ranks in upper
echelon of
Orange County
By Richard Dunn
Sports Wnter
In three short years, former
U.S. Olympic wrestler John Aze-
vedo has built Calvary Chapel
I ligh into a powerhouse.
• -
or cou rse,
when you !>tart
with nothing,
there's nowhere
to go but up.
Since their
inception, the
Eagles have
won Arrowhead
Lea gue and CIF
Southern Sec-
..... A:L.-vc-·d-0---....... tion I-A cham-
pionships. They
were ranked No. 8 in Orange
County's prcseason poll, encom-
passing all schools, not just small
ones.
Although Calvary has only one
senior -152-pounder Dustin
Toney -it has five returning indi-
vidual Arrowhead League champi-
Shane Valdez
ons: J uniors Matt Kellogg (140),
Joe Coughran (125) and Greg
Smi th ( 11 9) and sophomore twin
brothers Shane Valdez (I 12) and
Dane Valdez (1 19).
"I've got them back for another
year, too," sa id Azevedo, a mem-
ber of the 1980 Olympic team that
stayed home because of the U.S.
boycott of the Moscow Games.
Azevedo, 35, is also a former
NCAA champion from Cal State
Bakersfield.
Dane Valdez
Smith, recovering from last sum-
mer's knee surgery, was the CIF 1-
A champion at 119 last winter
while Shane Valdez and Coughran
were third in CIF at 103 and 125,
respectively.
Freshmen Matt Van Hook (130)
and Josh Holiday (11 2) began the
year as varsity substitutes because
of injuries, but both went 7-3 in
their first 10 matches and forced
Azevedo to take a closer look.
Kellogg and junior Mike Folmar
Greg Smith
(189), who also advanced to CIF a
year ago, were successful fQOtball
players at Calvary this past season.
Two more juniors, Andy Bcylik
(140) and Matt Coyne (135), arc
expected to make an impact. Bey-
lik is a transfer from Oregon while
Coyne is up from the JV team.
"There was no program here, so
it was a matter of building it,"
Azevedo said. "We've been able 10
do it because we're working with
the kids, teaching them good tech-
Jerry Coughran
niques, encouraging them to go to
camps, getting them to do the
extra things to get better and mo-
tivate them. The Lord has brought
some kids in who have some talent
and the ball has been rolling.
''We have 16 freshmen out, some
with a lot of potential. That's what
it takes year in and year out -
getting those kids in. You have to
let kids know and educate them
about wrestling."
~~ J • ~ ... •t": ..,, ....... ~·~ .• :-.. · · · ..... w..19 nna. I ........... -k -• .;~. • .... · • • ~ • ~·~;.·· • -jJt.. .... · · ,...~ •·• .;. • · t. r,\: · . ·" -.-,.~ ._ !i--;, .-. • •lltfl• iM.1100 uaS ewu ~·~;:''-Lr: .. ··1~ ·r ~~· -, · · ~ .f.··-· ..... • \' .. .L·· ..... ~ .. ... ..-. -L-... ........ ~-.... ·-. ~~!'"\~···' """"'"' ' -. lilt~~*' ...._K,_1.
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
Estancia (5-3)
SEASON (INDIVIDUAL)
Player g tp •vg hg
Fuerbringer 9 184 20.4 26
Faulkner 9 100 11.1 22
Byrne 9 62 6.9 12
Schisler 5 29 5.8 10
King 9 48 5.3 12
Edson 9 46 5.1 19
Trujillo 9 39 4.3 9
Johansen 6 13 2.2 4
Hastings 3 4 1.3 2
Suzuki 5 6 1.2 4
Manz 5 4 0.8 4 '
Log, schedule
79 ~llflowcf 50
64 Mari~ 66
67 TOfmlCe (ot) 59
65 Bn!a-Ollnda (OC) 62
48 Lakewood 65
60 BW!op Amat 65
38 San Betnardino 58
71 Huntington Beach S 1
0 Mis5ion Viejo 34
026-28, 30-Cc»st CbS$ic (home)
Jan. -4-at Brc1-0lind.i, 7:30 Jin. 7-So. Too1nce (home), 7:30
Jin. 10-Laguna Be1ch• (home)
Jan. 1 s -<:enturr (home)
Jan. 17-lt Lagiin.i Hill$•
,.,,. 22 -it frabuco Hilli•
Jin. 24 -Cosu Mesi• (home) µn. 29-CdM {home), 7:30
Jan. :n -IC ~1\1 Beach•
Feb. s-at eenc~
F•. 7-LllUN ~If• <homel
feb. u-fi.abuco ..... (home)
feb. 14-at ~Mes.I•
Feb. 21 -0F Hl·M ~ •P-'<'irre Co;af( L....,...,,.. .,,,.. ..
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
Newport Harbor (5-3)
SEASON (INDIVIDUAL)
Pl•r•r o tp ng hg
Mcintee 8 220 ,27.5 37
McAnlls 8 105 13.1 23
Vallely 8 101 12.6 21
Hartman 8 39 4.9 10
Ofer 8 24 3.0 6
Tlft 8 19 2.4 5
McAuley 5 10 2.0 4
Jameson 3 O 0.0 0
Tufano 2 O 0.0 O
Log,
schedule
78 Bellflower
S4 Santa Ana Valley
71 Too.ince
58 Marina
51 Huntington 84.teh
79 San Clemente
61 Trabuco Hills
61
46
(ot) 68
SJ
(ot) 59
71
69
66 61 Crosoent.1 Valley
026·28. 30-at c.oiet a..c
J.in. l-•t El Toro
JAn. 8-at fOCJdilll
Jan. 10-Coronl deC Mir• (homt)
Jan. 1 S-ac Woodbficfle• J,ln.17-~ cfiomt)
)oln. 22-Slddlebad• ChofMI
Jin. 24-.M TuMJR•
Jan. 3t -•t CorON cMI ~ Feb.s-w=· Feb. 7-et _ __.. •
feb. 12 -ll 51dd1ttiedt• F~. 14-Tustin• (home)
Ftb. 21-0f ffl-M ~
"Se.I View~ pme
I 1m.~ at 7:JO ut1l1 <~ n()tcd .
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
Corona def Mar (5-2)
SEASON (INDIVIDUAL)
Pl•Y•r g tp .v1 ho
Hesse 6 85 14.2 18
Rokos 7 58 9.7 18
Merriman 7 59 8.4 15
Clark 6 47 7.8 13
Wenden 7 42 6.0 12
Susson 7 27 3.9 9
Thompson 7 20 2.9 8
Smead 7 11 1.6 4
Dorsey 2 1 0.5 2
Log,
schedule
4-4 San Dqulto
52 Sonora
77 Bellflower
42 San Pasqual
47 Foothill
49 Cypres.s
SO Savanna
52 C.iplst.tano V.il~
026·28, 30-lt Co;ast Classic
J.in. l -•t Llguna Beach, 7
J.in. 7-ltvlne (hotrw)
(3 ot) '49
54
Sl
35
41
48
48
6'4
J.tn. 10-.it Newport Hatbof• JM\, 1 S -at s.cktebactt•
JM. 17 -Woocfbrldge• (hc>mt)
Jan. 12-Tuttin• <hc>me) Jan. 2<4 -IC UnfYenity•
J,tn. 29-•t tst.lricb laft, )1-NtWpOtt Harbor• (home)
Feb. S -~· (home) fib. 7-at WoOdbridp•
Feb. 12-at Tustin•
Feb; 14-U~ lhomel
Ftb.. 21 -CIF Iii' ..,.._ ._View'--..... All 91mn It 7.:)0 unletl ~
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
Costa Mesa (3-5)
SUSON (INDMDUAL)
Pl•yer I tp •VI hg
Pickens 8 163 20.4 24
Harding 8 78 9.8 20
Amordt 7 53 7.6 17
Smith 7 39 5.3 11
Lw 4 25 5.6 14
Mclachlan 8 25 3.1 8
Harris 8 17 2.1 5
Harber 7 9 1.3 9
Bolanos 2 2 1.0 2
Log,
schedule
63 St. Marg.wt's 34
7S Southcm Qlif. Clwbti.m 31
Sl LOI Amip 70
58 la I t.tbra 66
-47 Century -49
41 Santia91> 53
71 Los Atnip IS
Dec. 27-Anaheim, 9 am. (at
Ceotufy Toum.lment
Jan. 3-lt Ot•rwi. 7:30
Jan. 8-St. ~·s ~(home) Jan. 10-at Ttabuco ...
Jan. 15-lt Lapnl S.Kf'I•
,..._, , 7 -CtncUry· "°""'
""· 22-Laauna Hill• !home) )oln. 24-lt f$t.1~·
_s.n. '1-TrabUco Hills" (home)
Feb. 5-UiUN h,id,• (home)
Ftb. 7-111 'ttnti;ry•
~ n-111 utiP"" Hiii•
Ftb. 14 -&c.lnda· (honw)
Feb. 21-0f llM ~
•pac1flc CAMIC Lt..-pme
All @ilmet lit 7 unle!tt ~
•
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
Mater Dei (10-0)
SEASON (INDMDUAL)
Pl•yer I tp •VI hg
Geary 10 158 15.8 24
Williams 10 112 11.2 22
WilbOm 10 94 9.4 13
Drakeford 9 92 9.2 19
Simon 10 81 8.1 19
Suft 10 68 6.8 13
Jones . 8 46 5.8 9
LaBrlola 6 28 4.7 7
Matthews 10 45 4.5 9
C. Jackson 7 ~1 3.0 7
Fleming 3 8 2.7 8
Jones 2 4 2.0 2
Semonza 1 2 2.0 2
R. Jackson 1 1 1.0 1
Log, s~hedule
86 Chino 39
64 Los AlilmitOI 12
65 Tt.ibuoo Hills 48
70 Lynwood 59
IS Mllllkan 37
81 tngtewood 41
69 Cipntrano V.illey SS
76 Westchesttt 60
78 5'. 8tmMd 4'()
81 St. P•ul 41 Dec. 26-31-TOfrey Pines tourney
J•n. l-~ V•llev, IC UCI, 8 J•n. 4-at Oc..n View, 7:30
Jin. 10-at St. JcM Boec:o•, 7:10
JM\, 15 -s.Mt••, It UO, II
Jin. 17-111 L~•, I p.m.
~. 24-S...~· •• uo,. SM\. H-at ~,.,,.,.., 7
IM.l1-St~ ........ 7:JO Jtb.S~,t1q,m~7 ,..,_~ ...... :.~ ,.u ... s..u v •'1)0 ~ •:,-~~L 71JO
·~ .. ~g.ime
CARLSON:
From 61
bringer has five blocks and Lobdell
is 9 for 26 from the field.
Round n: Lobdell takes the
lead! He's up 2-0!
Fuerbriogcr's response: A steal
at the top of the key and a two-
handcd slammar. The crowd goes
crazy. "1 didn't sec it,'' says Lob-
dell later.
Fuerbringer closes it out, 11-i.
I have to admit, Lot¥iell's pretty
good ... for an old fellow.
Not $ood enough ... however, to
mess with my guys.
Top 10
Orange County
high school
basketball
Piiot aelectlona
Poe., t••m reoord
1. Mater Del 1.0
2. Caplslrano Valley 7·2
3. Edison . 6-2
4. Irvine 9*2
5. Santa Margarita 9· 1
6. Huntington Beach M
7. Sumy ltils 8-1
8. Trabuco HUis 8-2
9. Estancia 8-3
10. WoodbridQI 8-2
l
Thursday, December 26, 1991
-----------_---:-----__ -----------
----------------------------------------- -----------------------
/ High school girls basketball . , _ _ w
...
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
~Harbor (4-4)
N (INDMDUAI.~ ,..,., , tp ..
Ross 130 1U 2
Mcllten 4 48 10.5 18 G. Heads 8 78 ' 9.5 19
EVatts 8 83 7.9 14
K. IZumha 8 28 3.5 11
C. Heads 2 6 3.0 4
T. tzumlta 7 19 2.7 5
Schutz 4 · 9 2.3 S
Log,
schedule
0 Huntington Beach
40 Brea-Olinda
37 University
SS Torrey Pines
4 7 Ocean View
37 Savanna
69 Sant.a Ana Valley
S 1 Ocean View (home)
030, J3-4-Santiago Tourney
Jan. 7-at Edi50fl
Jan. 9-at Corona del Mar"
Jan. 14 -Woodbridge" (home)
Jan. 16-at Univer51ty•
Jan. 21 -at Saddleback•
Jan. 23-Tustin• (home)
38
62
39
3S
68
42
24
48
Jan. 30-Corona del Mar" (home)
Feb. 4-at Woodbridge•
Feb. 6-University• (fiome)
Feb. 11 -Sacldleback• (home)
Feb. 13-at Tustin•
Feb. 22-CIF lll·M playoffs.
•Sea View league game
All games at 7
PILOT
€AGE
STATS
CdM (4-5)
l l!MON (INDMDUALl_ t::r' , ~~ ~.,,
Saylof 8 36 4.5 8
Kane 7 72 19.3 17
Ricci 7 8 1.1 2
FUnt 9 179 19.9 29
Plefcey 3 6 2.0 4
Macfal1and 7 7 1.0 2
Green 6 8 1.3 4
Mather 5 4 0.8 2 Thurman 9 12 1.3 2
Rosenow 3 6 2.0 4
Hover 4 O 0.0 O
Log, schedule
34 Troy 44
JS Sunny Hills 0
41 Capistr.ano Valley Christian 29
21 Thousand Oaks 79
60 uguna Buch 44
3S Westminster 4S
S 1 8olsa Grande O
4S La Quint.a 36
42 Glenn 7S
Dec. 30-Jl-4-Santiago Toumey
Jan. 7-at Cosu Mesa
Jan. 9-Newport Harbor• (home)
Jan. 14-Saddlebilck• (home)
Jan. 16-~t Woodbridge•
Jan. 21 -at Tustin•
Jan. 23-University• {home)
Jiln. 30-at Newport Harbor•
Feb. 4-at S.lddlebadc•
Feb. 6-Woodbridge• {home)
Feb. 11 -Tustin• {home) ·
Feb. 13 -at University•
Feb. 22-CIF 111-A playorrs.
•Sea View league g.lme
All games at 7.
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
Costa Mesa (5-4)
l lAI ON (INDMDUAL)
Plarer 9 tp 11¥9 hg
Moore " 33 3.7 9 Tovanlk 9 73 8.1 17
Ospina 6 29 4.8 8
Haddad 2 9 4.5 9
OICamllD 6 139 23.2 31
Robinson 8 55 6.9 13
Sugiyama 9 54 6.0 10
Millet 5 17 3.4 8
Klm 9 103 11.4 19
Van Sweden 9 46 5.1 13
Spencer 1 2 2.0 2
Smith 1 1 1.0 1
Log, schedule
61 Norco 31
84 Orange Lutheran 28
62 San Clcmenle S3
61 Capistrano Valley 6S
57 Ocean View 67
S 7 Diamond Bar 3 6
54 Gahr 69
S2 St. Bemards 71
73 El Toro 40
026-28, 30-Costa Mesa Tourney
Jan. 4-at Brea-Olinda
Jan. 7-Corona del Mar (home)
Jan. 9-at Trabuco Hills•
Jan. 14-at Laguna Beach•
Jan. 16-Century• (home)
Jan. 21-Laguna Hills• (home)
Jan. 23-at Esurcia•
Jan. 30-Trabuco Hills• (home)
Feb. 4 -Laguna Beach• (home)
Feb. 6-at Century•
Feb. 11 -at Laguna Hills•
Feb. 13-Est.mcia• (home)
Feb. 22-CIF Ill-A playoffs.
•Pacific Coast League game
All games at 7 unless noted.
PILOT
CAGE
STATS
Estancia (5-4)
SEASON (INDIVIDUAL)
Pl•r •r 1 tp avv he
Sweet 9 168 18.7 27
Braatz 9 129 13 9 24
Czlnguta 9 59 6.6 12
Meabon 8 37 4.6 17
Brazen 9 26 2.9 8
Garcia 9 23 2.6 8
Clar1<e 7 16 2.3
Drake 6 10 1.7 6
Christiansen 4 6 1.5 4
McCartin 3 2 0.7 2
Romero 6 3 0.5 2
Log,
schedule
64 Foothill 19
36 Canyon 46
82 El Segundo 16
S8 Beverly Hills 23
S2 North Torrance 53
Sl Western 40
38 Capistrano Valley SS
70 Westminster 51
28 San Clemente S6
026-28, 30-at Marina Tourney
Jan. 9-laguna Beach• (home)
Jan. 14 -Century• (home)
Jan 16-at Laguna Hills•
Jan. 11 -at Trabuco llills•
Jan. 23-Costa Mes.1• (home)
Jan 30-at Laguna Beach• r eb. -l -at Century•
F cb 6-Laguna Hills• lhoml:I
fob. 11 -Trabuco Hill~· (homcl
Feb 1 J -at Costa Mt-sa •
fl'b. 21-CIF 111-M playoffs.
• P.lcific Coast league game
,.,II g.1mcs at 7 unless nott.'Cl.
16-team field set
at Mesa tourney
By DeMls Brostertious
Sports wrtter
COSTA MESA -A field of 16
teams, including four which have
been ranked in the top 10 in Or·
ange County this season, will take
part in the ninth annual Costa
Mesa High School Christmas
Tournament this week.
]lfe event ge ts under way today
with eight games sc heduled, and
continues Friday and Saturday,
with the finals slated for Monday.
The four ranked teams from Or-
ange County are Capistrano Val-
ley, Tustin. Woodbridge and Cy-
press.
"We have 'cm coming here from
all over," said Costa Mesa CoJch
Jim Weeks. "Our top seed (Gre-
sham Union) is from Portland,
Ore., and there's Bishop Union
from Bishop, Calif. and San Mar-
cos from Santa Barbara:·
The host Mustangs, at 5-4 over-
all and seeded second in the tour-
nament, wilt open at 8 tonight
with Santa Ana, a team which has
began the season with a surpri sing
5-0 mark. The winner of that game
TH URSDAY
1 ELE\'IStON
plays the San Luis Obispo-Schurr
winner at 8 Friday night.
The third seed is Tustin. while
WooJbridge is seeded fourth.
In its most recent outing, Costa
Mesa was impressive in crushing
El Toro, 73-40.
Thus far. Olivia DiCamilli is the
team's leading scorer. a\eraging
23.2 points per game. Also averJg·
ing in double figures is Yool Kim
at 11.4.
•Also in action this week is the
Estancia High girls team, which
opens play in the Marina Tourna-
ment today with a 2 p.m. u~He
against Loaru. The E:iglc~ (5-4 )
have been paced by ~ton1que
Sweet, \\ho is a\'Craging I~ 7
points, and Leah Braatz, a\'cra~1ng
13.9.
0 Costa Mesa Tournament
TODAY'S FIRST ROUND
9 I m -T USIJn vs. North T ooance
10.30 a.m. -Cypr!ss vs. Capistrano Vallty
Noon -San Marcos ~s T rabuco Hills
1 '30 p.m. -Santa Maigartta vs W~dge
3 P m -Gresham UlllOO vs Wts!mlnS1er
4 40 p m. -San Clemerite vs. BIS/lop U'llon
6 20 pm -San l.uls Ot>csPo vs Sct'lln
8 p m-Saru AN vs Cosu Mesa
-D,1 1 he l'ilut
FRIDAY
TELEVISION
Collc~t llas'-ctball
Costa Mesa junior varsity girls looking good
Women's Gulr
Noon-Club Champinmh1p. 1:.SP:--1.
l'ru Bosl..ttb.111
S p.m.-Spur)·Krml..), l'Nl
7:30 p m.-C11rri.:r..·JJ11, Ch 13
llocl..t)
J 30 p.m. -E. 1.:nn Sc -Xa\lcr. I-SI''
5 p.m -M1Jm1-M.1r)h.1ll. SC.
6 JO p.m -Li T 1;ch-S Alab . .n1.1, I:. \I'.'.\.
11 30 pm. -Plnn S1 -G \\'a~h. ~C Despite being "I consider the Gahr win a huge
upset for us," said Costa Mesa
Coach Mala Campbell. "We've
been playing well derensively with
our full-court man pressure. Gahr
went scoreless in the third quarter
against us, and Woodbridge had
four points in the first and third
quarters.
0 mark when it starts the Ocean
View Tournament against Long
Beach Wilson this week.
0
The Newport Harbor boys jun-
ior varsity has kept its record un-
blemished after seven games fol-
lowing recent victories over Es-
tancia and San Clemente.
• dereated in the
championship
game of its own
tournament on
Monday night by
powerrul Brea-
Olinda, the
Costa Mesa girls
junior varsity
basketball team
used some wins
over quality
teams to reach
the title game.
111111111 ........
Lightweights
"That's our big push, that de-
fense is the key for us."
Against Gahr, Linda Luong
scored 10 points and Tracy Vega
added nine. Meanwhile, Neiar
Kabua "did a phenomenal job de-
fensive ly," according to her coach.
It's been truly a team effort thus
far, according to Coach Garinn
Morton, as all five starters have
made necessary contributions so
far to kee p the team unbeaten.
In the semifi-
nals onSaturday, the Mustangs (7·
S) crushed n good Gohr sqund, 48-
25, arter dispatching Woodbridge
in the second round on Friday, 42·
34.
Kabua and Vega were the Mus-
tangs named to the all-tournament
team.
"Our whole starting lineup has
been key for us," said Morton.
"Our leading scorer, forward Mike
Eadie, is averaging about 12 points
a game and two other kids, center
Romi Shoukry and point guard
Chuck Archbold, are averaging
•The Costa Mesa girls frosh-
soph team will risk its unbeaten 5-
·Gang violence isn't all bad, not
when it's .in a wrestling room
There were no rererees, no pins, no technical falls
or major decisions. There was no mat or three
count on the cold-blooded streets.
Jorge Rubio, once the lord or a Costa Mesa
gang called Little Town, is now the captain or
Estancia High's wrestling team.
"I was one of the supposed
leaders," Rubio said. "It wasn't
because I wanted to, 1 just
became (a gang member) and
they thought I had what it took
to be a leader, so I would take
the recoanltion.
"When I first started hanging
out five years ago, I was just a
kid. 1 did get into it kind or
hard. It was just a pastime."
Rubio has exchanged his sawy
or fist fighting in distinctive
neighborhoods to executing full Preps nelsons in sultry rooms wnh
inch-thick mats.
••He was one or the leaders in
a gang when he first came to school as a
freshman. and our vice principaJ, Joe Dominic,
said to get rid of him because he could be a
problem," veteran Estanda wrestling coach pave
Alexander said.
"But he's realty worked hard, put in a tot of
time and now all of the other kids around school
admire him and like him."
Rubio, a 13S·pound scnsatJon and four-year
letterman, no longer spars for Uulo T~n. the
aang's chosen namo because of the size of Costa
Mesa versus the larger Santa Ana and Huntington
Beach troops.
"We weren't the first, but we were one of the rew gangs in Costa Mesa," Rubio said. ••we'd wait
for the riaht time (to brawl) ond they'd agree with me and stuff. Whenever 1 said Ir was all riaht -
that it WU time to &0 -h'd be a ao<>d lUnO to 10
ror it."
An artist, Rubio is on tho other aide or the fight
now. Ho works aaainst pns warfare throuah hi.I
drawinp, the latest or which WU displayed On
campus, dcpictina the neaative ramificadons of
1an1 rivalries.
"He's in advanced placement in art and he dou
'Very well_ln all of his cluscs," Nid Alexander. also
an an instNctOr ... Ho let IOmc ,oals and he's aolna to classes now -those arc the rype of kids
lllko workin1 with.
'1When ho was a frahman, that's when the
whole (aan&) ~l•m at Eatancfa started. But
dle_lf_ are no~ anymore,&,.~ b'eCaUte ef 1111llill.W..11-Y'N littlna and taOO~
... .. .. ...... ... , it. ...... ,..,....., ... ~
·;=s~===:::.r:.':J::
(Dominic) was going to kick out of school.
Dominic told me ir there were any problems, he'd
be the first to go."
Even though Rubio had left the gang. he still
dre5sed in the same "gang clothes." Dominic kept
a close eye on him.
"After he knew I got involved in wrestling, he
sow my grades and then started to talk to me,"
Rubio said. "He said he was really proud or me
and that I was one of the top three on his list to
get out of this school. I didn't even know that.
"Then he told me, 'I see now you're an OK
guy.' I was glad he told me that."
Rubio, who started this season 14·0 with 13 pins
after winning his class at both the Bren-Olinda
S-way and Schurr
10-way toumnments,
mode an impact with
his recent drawing.
"You make it
about a feeling vou
have," he said. 1'My
pnrtne1 and I made
our project against
ganp, that was the
main point. We mode
a coffin and put a
doll in it -a manikin
dressed as a ~ang
member -with signs
over It about violence.
It &Qt most or the Jorse Rublo
attention. We even
had gana·rclated (rap) music there. One or the
signs read. 'How can we stop this aeneration or
violence that Is k.llllna our aoclety?' "
TIMt '°"' Rubio aclected for his masterpiece was called ·eo1or1: because pnp typically
Identify themselves with colors. The Clips, for
eumplo. arc blue; the Blo0d1 arc red.
••0culn1 involved In that aana aturr, it'a all you,
in younclf," Rubio said. "You act involved MoStly
becauao of your Criendl. If your friends do it, you
do It, too. That•s a bad lnfiucnce.
"Wrestlina got mo out of it. Coach Ate.under
talked me into it. To be In wroatlina. it takes a lot
-you hftO to be conditioned and dean. You
want to win and not lose and to •'" it takes a lot ...
Rubio Mid bii former png comrades 1till 10licit
hla panfdpation. I.Ao 1 uuo cep11ln. howa~r. he
SW.di rum ud turn• the table ... 1-W telked IOmC
·Of the1n Into wnstUns." be laid. "Now, lbere an
lour ol them ill wnsdlftl who Md tbe IUll
ptObletl9 I did •
.. Now~ taave ........ to .. up'°*
tM(ro """' '°., ......... ..
Rubio hM a.. I IGlli _, .. thll Utde Towa.
'
arountl nine.
"And our defense ha~ been
playing real well, too. We've only
allo\\ctl about 38 point!. per
game."
The other Newport starters arc
off-gunrd Juan Orell ana am.I for-
ward Ryan Anderson.
In one of its toughest tests of
the season, the Sailors defeated a
tough Estancia squad. 35-3 I, on
Dec. 11 and most recently downed
San Clemente, 53-40.
Starling today, Newport will be
involved in the Dana I lills Tour·
nament , playing the host school at
l l :30 a.m. in the first round of the
eight-team event.
"I think we can get to the cham-
pionship round," said Morton.
5:30 p.m. -Ul.id.hl\lo I.)· lllucs, SC.
7:30 p.m.-Sh:irl.~-Kings. PT
10:30 p.m. -Ol.1d.:ha11 k~-Blues, SC.
Bo~ing
6 p.m.-Ma}WCalhi.:r-Rodrigucz. ESPN.
llorse Rucing
7:30 p.m.-Sama Anita replay~. Ch. 18.
9:30 p.m. -Santa AnitJ rcplJy>. SC.
2 a.m. -Los Alam110~ rcpl.iys. l'T.
Senior Golf
12:30 a.m.-Lynch Shootout, ESPN
RADIO
Pro B:ukttball
7:30 p.m. -Clips·Jazz, l\RLA ( 1110)
llockry
7:30 p.m.-Shark~·Kincs. XTRA (690).
CdM JV at Los Al Tourney
The Corona dcl Mar JV basket-
ball te am brings a 3-3 mark into
today's Los Alamitos Tournament
I a m.-La. Tc.:h-S. AlabJm.1. f-!)l'N
Pro 0.1~'-l'tb:ill
5 p.m -R<XkCt>-IJullch. T:-;T
llocl..e)
7 .JO p.m. -Flycrs-Canucl.s, SC.
I lorn~ R:icing
7:30 p.m. -S:int:i AnitJ r~plJy), Ch I'
IU.10 p.m. -Santa An11.1 r•·pl.1~~-SC
:! J m -Los Al.1m1h.>) rcpl.iy). PT
S'-iing
111:30 p m -Sno\lo Summit, PT
RADIO
No event) scheduled.
-D)' Vc•nnis Brostulwus
opener against Fontana, "h1ch rs a
6 p.m. m:uchup.
The 16-team event should be a
good test for his team, according
to CdM Coach Craig Collins.
,;~~~:~~~~~--s49~9s1;;;1
I MOST VEHICLES • Compl9• IMpec:lion • lftalll prembn pedl.tnlnga • Ae.urfece dnlmllroeon • Repe,c* front :
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Noc wild wllf\ otw oln. Good Thru 111.W2 SMOCOPR
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OMulti-grades higher plus $1 hazardous waste di~sal fee.
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service may require add'I partS & labor at a substantial extra
COil *Freon add1.
By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
and T ANNAH HIRSCH
Neither vulnerable. South dea.la.
NORTH
• Q 10 8 8 & 4 Q AQ
¢A +Q983
WEST EAST
tAJ •K73
Q 2 Q 10 9 7 &
0 10876&20 J9.C
•J872 •A &4
SOUTH
t92
Q KJ864S ¢KQS
• K 10
The bidding:
South West
I Q p ..
2 'V p ..
p.,.. P ..
North
It
•Q
Eut p ..
p ...
Openin1 lead: Two or •
The jouat.in1 between Ill good de·
clarer and ent.erpriaing dereoder1 U
what ma.kl!8 bridge auch an escitin1
game. Wit.ne&I thia hand
On thia Kqu11nce, South'• heart.
bid promiled • •ll·card auit. With a
kD<nVo eight.-card major fit and the
valun ror pme, North wa1t.ed no
time in pttinJ to the optimun
cont.rtM:t.
Eat won the club opening lead
with the act: and made the obYioua
ahift. to 1 low ~· West f.OOk the
ace and continued with the jack.
The 1pOtliaht WU DOW on declarer .
Barring an evil t.rumJ> bn&k, it
would aeem South muat make the
rest. or the tricb. However, declart:r
dia not. iiliih Eut Winninc Uli1
trick, ror a third spade from that
aide could devutat.e the North·
Sooth trump bokfina. so declarer
made the fine play o( a low ll)Ade
from dummy-if Wat retained the
lead. declarer could probt,bly claim
the mt.
Eut waa now in the catbird aeat.
Obvioualy, if declarer bad any •MM·
1Uit loeen, coverina the ;.ck of
gpade& with the ~ would have
.et up the apade suit u a .au.roe o(
diacarda. The only reuon for not
doing so had to be t.bat declarer bad
no othu be:n, so the lllttinc trick
Md to oome from the trump 1UiL
Once the problem wu recop'liied,
the eolution became otmou.. Z..t
ovenook \he jack of IPldN with the
king and m.urned a SJ*li. Had th.
game been pi.,y.d with st.a-card&,
decluer tVOUld have known t.o ruff
low. Since that wa1 not tbe cue,
declarer made the normaJ play of
Nffini with the jack, and But'• I.ea
of t.nlmps wu pro.rooted t.o the let· ""'trick.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
'""'"' 5 Both: pr ...
t ~by p69y
14 Hindi.I god ,.........,
180.-•M
17 """"""
18=-ind
19 Deer•
20 "On your ...,, .. ,,_,_
24 Moots
2t A .. 10.ICel
27 I.Ind bodlel: ••• ,.,_
30 Male cat
33 UQht ftlltut• "-.. _...,
"'"""-40~11on
41 8ur1 -
42 o....bec nt.tlw9
44 Foot: d .
45 Pipe ftttlng
48 lf9Md'1 -
'"" 47 Madrid tltllf .. .,,_.,,,.,.
53 Bruin. root• ., ........
51 - -one» .. _ .. .......
1 2 3 ..
"
1 1 Cr.-Mg
62 Writing -"'~ &4 Pwt of -85 -dip .......
87 Weight -DO"" , ..... _
2 LMge lwm
3 ~In IUlly
4Crewn~ horlM: .,., •
5 Fr«ICtl PMk e Murr9Y end w ...
7T-. """'-· -10 Compiolno ,,_
"""""'""' 13 S...: Fr. ,,_ ..,_
FNit Offer. Al tM N-'Wur IP· pruclwlt. ....... ,. ..... ,...., .......
~ ff'ft of c:hltp. Fo.. tlltni•
)nftll'llM Jl••J .._.lfti I k11ow
plMty lbnt Ml'Mi ,..,Lt 1"41 I C:.ft
wrte. dlllp •""'-'Mi •• of .,. c:ol· '-I-1IMI I luve dOM 1 put beolr.
.. th.t lrvadway Mbob D1inon """-'""''I •••1011 .... ~deri•a •U tli.it I
N'YOIYe .. ~H•• .. t.lllr. and wdte
•ltMt thl• I lr.Mw, for 1au1p&., I
will M IOl'llpt t1lr.e tr.Wlto• ._.,. 11 ,,.......,_ ,._ ,._ .... 42 Mort! than • 12 Ontlrio ,,... .,..._ _.rotoar. 1~1 .. 11 lsnor1at of
M Pri.o CMMn w• on IM 1111'~
of d.14Mtte. Mon NMlwtlom wpc:om· .... 30 Hoctt9Y ICOf•
31 lndtil: Fr. ,. __ .......... ,.,_ .. __.
31 '*. R9rnlnt ,,_,,,
... ., ....
"45 Wo'btN .,.,_ .. _
&0 FMA pa
"""""' -
• 7 •
.........
5-4 --podrkla:
WOttment
55 n.uno. unit .. .__ ao "-10· _,,..
ARIES (M1rdl 21·April 19): On thi1
day alt.tr Chf'\11"'• yO\I Might be m~·
ina. "f-or Oftff I didn't miu Mnding .
1rwtlt11f, alftt to thON I mc:iat w1n1td
• to 'l'Htfflbfot," F«w on W'Ol'k metholh.
•Hltlng IMlllJe from admiA"r.
-T;;nr.;-r;;--r.;-, I TAURUS (1'pril 20·M•y 201: sock
D 10 11 12 13 c-ICIM to l'lomt 1(.pw11ibl•. It'• da y 1fttr
.,.-+-+---i--+-i I Chrllf .... but 111rprlM •wl\11 you
fllam• 11 on I.tie d•llttry. Emphula on
jtweJI')'. IUJllll')' 11•1!\. In obtrd. You'll
bt ._.uNd c,I low. Llbrl jnvolwd.
CEMINI (M.ty 21 •Jun~ 20): You
tkwgtlt 70\1 wt,. fo .. otten b\11 by 6
p.m. yow'll ~now }'Ol.I wne mat"'btl'M
"'"" tqy1 •nd 1tf1K1ktl,..AJt•nUon _...
voW" •round l'IOCH. ptOprrty, l1mlly.
lndlvldi..tl ~ndy N"il.ed (tom hOI ·
plt•I. ~+-1-~ ' CANCIR ()\Int 11 ·Ju!y 22)1 fudg ·
rM"ftl, 1111\lldon ...-.In on 1.1,.11. Em·
phltl1 on dffdllne, ~1\billty, 'a ·
fltlH Nf1tlon1hlp1 hdt .. N\l ..... N ,
)'CN tofftf owt Mtter lftatl l'lriflnally 1t1•
Udp.ied. ~n.oth.er Oncn tUM lff ..,... •
.wnttid. .
LIO (J11ly 2l·Avf· 21»: L-1 ""'' Jalld (011uwi .. nkMton ,_... tttM 1111 ._.,_....,,Jocw .. t...-1, ......... I
.,,.... IWNWtll l•pect cf llol..,. ., ..
... 'l•'ll -..n• wu ..... ~-.. ___ _
V..00c.-.,.1'·19111· ZI~ MM)' ol ~ ..... ,.. WIU ... f11lfllltd M 10\t
Nm on ..... Wll'lfOllJI ~ftl.., lft•
11 .... t1a1 """'4• '°"'"' °' ~ ;. ::.,, W6cl _, ,_, M;z: ... 1'11 ....... ,ft• .... ,......,, ..... ....,. ..... Ml,. ...
U-.A ( ... u :0n, 22)1 !Mmtlilm
~""' .... ,,... -.!!!"!: ...... with
•• •
Thursday, December 28, 1991 U
• #If ==-~·1 I =Tl~~y 'n.::=. ::..: ::.-;;arvtA.~ et!~:~--::.::-.... :. ~i,.glnd~ .= ~= ~~~ .:.:-::... ~~ .. ;:--{FIC1) ~ • ,..= ... .... ............. -.00 "°' POMt nt1 ~ .... • ... MM on: OJHll a be 1/tM!a, wtllclh It "'---.... ._. .... ,..... --..__ 1 -• • _.... If WA"llR M ......,. ID _. • POINT 0' 81Qlft..... ~ a, 1-. • 1:30 C._.,.. Oii ?-CCNN butl!MM· dey befarl ... . The ,..... Pf'tonl ebowe on: NIA °' -= V hi 91) IMTTIR HOW ~ • : 1 1 • • ... TH I! N Cl! WE IT IR LY ii\ ._ laillll'1 tg 1M CAA ... dM9 ._ llPIOlecI ....._ f'U9'CHASE °" OHE (t) .. dolflO ._.,... •: D...ict I . RootNfl
.. __ ._ :t,MD ~~ ~-:.:-..... -:-..-::: THWON.N.OOnwTTO ~ tocaMd • I01 ..--t~HC ...... I, ~ ~T f°'4WAAOMOflOH 1331 ==~~-::
" T1 llY OD.MAHT IH tor"-~ d _....THI! ..atNT °' w IOIAh ._... ....._ Or--·--o. ...-..:. .... ··---COii.Loe lo~ HiGhWllY C0tone 0r-. County on Hoo.em-" L...:...'..i'.'01Ca W COf#llCTION WfTli OR Ing "" II JU• p-.. HING. ..... c.-....... TRUSTa .. IALS • ._ ._._.. M .._ .,. 10 be An IC'" dlt Mal' CA l26M. btt 20, ttlll •,,fllt-TinllTU'e eM.a WITH MINCY TO ntl our9d bf ._, o.... ol IXCUTIHO l'ROM IA.ID At th4t t11ie el._ WU. YM T. LM90M corc1Mc9 with tt'f 8ld Doc-SIM Menta. 43 Oolc*wod •lt4t ti
ii ~........ COV .. '10 PfllOPfRTY. Tn.11 ............ ~ LOT 2 ALL 0..:. ~ pulllcadon of .... nob YOU AM .. OEfAUl.T Publl•h•d Ne#port umenl.a wNdl .,. now Oft irw.. CA n7t• • PuDlltM.d HewpOf1 leach-·=:~ Al///I!. IN DE'AULT WHl!'nell IUCH WATlfll cNtae9 Md I ...... ., AU oAs /IHO 01'HfA HV ... totll M*Ml ol the..;. UNDER A 01!1!0 Of S.•ch/COI ....... ,llOt .. end may be MCUt9d In ChtrlH .... O·Y. 1U32 eo.ta ...... Piiot o.c.m . ...., A OftD OP ""'91' MIHTW IHAL1. le AIPM IM T"NltM • • TRUST DATED ~eot-~ tt 1•1 Iha ~ of IN DlrldOf of 8anoor St.. a.I~ a, tO 07/tfl/ to. UNLU1 IAH OYUILYINO, AfA. The l>eMfld9rv ..... D .. 0 CA ft a 0 N I U • peld tMIAence of N ~ BER fa. 1•. UNLESS ' • th03t PwcN11ng of the D111t1ct. CA t2t40 IMI, '* 5, 12, ti, le, 1 t
· YOU TAKI . ACT10N TO "'OPNATI, Pacol.AT· Mid Deed of Trull ...._, ITMCO LV1NO RI.OW A Ion ~ bf "-tlboYe YOU TAKE ACTION TO No tMdd4ir may wllhdraw Thie b~tlneu 11 con-Th-991
:WlcrCT YOUR "'OfA. ING. flMIQVTIYI Ofll tllN ._...., Md ..,_ DUTH Of' 600 fEEr, BUT delcrlbed d9ed OI Wit PROTECT YOUR PROP· PUILIC NOTICE his bid tor • S*tod of tony· ~ i,y ~peltMI'• PUBLIC NOTICE '• • MAY M IOU> A CONT"ACTUAL..t 'fllC). wed to the uiidlli119'1ed a WITHOUT THe ~ Of' end lltlrnat.ed oottt, ..,. EATY, rr MAY le SOlO AT ltv9 (45) ~ afttJ the dat• Tlte reglalrenta com-•---------
A PU8UC SM.!. • VOU vtDID, ~'!1 THAT .men o.defwllon Of O.. IUN'AOI! ENTAY, AS RE· pensn end 9CWMCM 11 A PUBLIC SAlL II' YOU MOTIC8 OF SALE Ml for the opening thtf•cl. menoed to tr~ bull-F1ctltlou• .~ED AH EX!tUHATION TH! M.IUWAHUN MADE ....,.. 9'MI o.m.nct tor .... lt:AVEO IN THE DEED 12MN2.5f NEED AH EXPLANATION ............ , •• , Th• 8oetd of Tru1tM• r•"'" undtr the Flctlllout •u•lnM• Name
, vr THE NATUAt! ~ THE Hl!AEIH SHAU. NOT RE· and ..-, Nob of 0.: ' . OF THE NA.TURI! Of' THE 9fven ... •r11Uant to Seo-HIVff the ptlvlleoe of r• I I N 1 , PROCUDINOS AGAIHIT lltWI TO OR FOfll nm a FROM JOHN HOWARD I 19 poMlble 9* at the PROCEEDINO AGAINST ... -)IClltlg MY end Ill bld9 or u1 neu amt I 1t1d Statetneftt
• YOU, YOU SHOULD CQN. Bl!HEFTT Of' OEClARANT feuft end ElectlOn '° W . MCCORMACK AND HELEN time of Nie the opening YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· Ilona 110f ltftcl 1101 to waive a lrregutarltl" above on: 12-Mt The FolloWlng persons
·.TACT A LAWVER. ANY RIGHT TO ENTER TN ~ ca&INd MCCORMACK. HUSBAND bid may be .... than the TACT A LAWVER. or the UC Code of the Of Informal~ In en bid ere doing buslnHs aa: On 01/03/92 M t :45 A.M., IWON THE IURl'ACE OF Hid noUc. OeflUlt end AND Wtr'E, RECORDED totll lndebtldnets due. On JANUARY 23, 1092, 11 l .. te of Cellfomfa, tM 01 In the bidding. y Thia itattment w1t filed MUSIC MOTION. 3721 S.
N.A. MORTOAQI! H~ THE C0Y£RE0 PROPERTY ~lnlOltle ~ ~ SEPTEMBER 22. 1955 IN Datld: t2J0511t 10:00 A.M., PROFES. undersltned FRALSV lltned1 /I/ Ql!NE with the Counly n Cl~k of Timber, Santa Ana. Cahl.
VICES, INC. 11thed4i'/1iP' IN THI! DERCISI! OF the rMI prope11y II loc.lltd BOOK 32'8 PAGE 535, or TAC41774 SIONAL fORECLOSURE AUCTION COM,ANY FMRl!U, Vice Chen-~~ 1c:f'Y o ~ 9:~o Nunez Jr .• 372t S. =T~::.C,ur:-T,:: ~0~1·0£~t, =~: end more then tltrH OfFICtALRECORDS. tNTD P1NMC& COR· ~~~~?:! ~ :e; wUI ""et ,...lo euo-oellor, Admlnl1tratlv• f51S438 Timbet, Santa Ana. Calli.
. Aitootded ON 0'1/'JO/l/O • COM>EO SEPTEMBER 17 months hlW NPtld llf'°9 PARCEL 2: PORAT ION ea eald punuent to Deed of Trust tloft at to.ta Cr9Wfonl lemoe1, Coa•I Com-Publlihed Niwporl 92707
Ooilurntnt No, to-391911 1190 IN BOOK 1374e: ~T~= LOT 32 or TRACT NO. Trva ... , !Ir T.D. ID· eucuted by RONAl,.O BEV: Can1en Rd., lnte lnUftJty Collqe Dlltrtot Beech/Costa MHa Pllol Thia bualnesa Is con-
llodc -, ... -of Oflldlll PAGI! 335 Of OFFfCW. "" ""' t.,...,... 3145, AS SHOWN ON A VIC& C09MY,...... EALY AND bEBORAH BEV· Ana. CA et tsOO P.M. ~ember 19 2e 1991 ducted by: en lndlVidull Rcordl In the olllce of'*-REOORDS. M.A. MORTOAOS MAP RECORDED IN BOOK 11J lltohelle 'flwr. EALY HUSBAND ANO on 1/8/H the a ....... Pubaahed N-pott Beac:h-J 2 II 1m ' ' The reglslranl(s) COfT!°
Recorder of OR ANOE P4"CEL 2: llllVIC••• IMC., AS tO PA.OE 33 OF MISCEL.. ...-n, AMlstent ~ WIFI! As JOINT TENANTS, doMd Pf'°'*1Y ef Lonn Costa Mesa Pdot Decem· anuary ' ' . lh02l menc:ed to transact t>usi-• ~Y!'.!Y• C1tlfornl1, ••· eWe~,~ AS SUCH ~~~·T.~~--~40 a:o LANE o us MA p s. twr, tof a.utta Lewts u Tru1tor(1) recorded and Shella Mullln1. b9f 26, 199t, JlllUll'f 2, ~~~n."a~~a·~~(:i~=
• A-~R~E~M~M~~ TICULARLY SEfA~&:..A:'N l'LOOA ITOCKTON CA RECORDS OF ORANGE 11.1 Or .... , CA t2M8 ~~~':'~lnlt. Property lnchld .. 1Va, 1992 PUBLIC NOTICE above on· NIA
SEU. AT PUBLIC AUCTION THE AATICU! ENTITlED 9t20 T I ' COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. (7t4) .._..700 . •.of OfTlclal Record~ furnlt\lre, appllan~ th032 Fl tltl Benito Nunez JI.
TOTHE HIQHEST BIOOER 'EASEMENTS" OF THE 2 e .,hefte EXCEPT FROM A POR-IF AVAii.ML&, THE ~ f11ce r County clelhlft9t lnOloroycleso c oua This statement was filed
FOR CASH. ~able 11 OEClARAllON Of' fXN. NUMb•rs 1209) ..... T10N Of' SAID LAND. AU. SXP•CHD OP•MINO Rscor~er :f ~RANG£ end "' 1oelleneoua PUBLIC NOTICE •;tneu Name wltll the County Cletk ot
, time of tale In lawful ENANTS, CONDl'flONS aJSt OIL. MINERALS, GAS AND .. D llAY aE 09TAINED County, CALIF~NIA. general It•"'•• aald FlcUUous The F~ Chnge County on Novem-
• mu•y or lh• Untied ~o RESTRICTION RE· TPS tlJJI OTHER HYDROCARBON llY CAI.UNG THI FOL,.. WILL S£U. AT PUBLIC ...... fot the purpoee halneH Nam. .,. dol ~~.~sons bet 27• 1991
• StatH) et: THE MAIN CORDED IN BOOK 12305, KATHY KING, ASIT. SUBSTANCES LYINO LOWING Tl!LE .. HONI! AUCTION TO HIGHEST of .... ~ a llen of Statement TAU ~TERPRISES . 908 F514263
NORTH ENTRANCE TO PA.OE 748 AND RE· IECRllTMY BELOW A OEPTM OF 600 NUM•Ut9 ON THE BIDDER FOR CASH, landlord, Trang Le and The Following perlOf\I Crttua Pl NfWPO'l BHch Published Newport Beach-
• THE COUNTY COURT· RECORD. ED IN BOOK Publlthtd Newport FEET, 8llT WfTHOUT THE DAY. •&FORI THE CASHIER'S CHECK OR Kerry Salle mote, in dolna buliMllH: Calif. 92s&o ' Costa Mesa Pt101 Decen1·
HOUSE. 700 CIVIC CEN-~2;1~F~~E 32i BOlli B11cl\IC01ta Me1a Pilot RIGHT OF SURFACE SA&.a: (7t4J 38M837 CERTIFIED CHECK. (pay. 1CHM2 Crt!Wfonl Can-COASTAL PACIFIC PROP· V1Jerle Colburn Ward 908 bef 5, 12, 19, 26, 1991 ~ ~"'!. ~~t • ... ~~ AHO IMPO~ RB;o:J>~ Oec.mber 12. 19, 29, 11Ht1. ENTRY AS RESERVED IN ., (213) 127-4165. :· •t time~ ~ ~'= '°" Rd., lant.• Ana, ERTIES. 609 E. BllbO• C11tus Pl, NfWPO'l Beach, Th·990 ,.._ """ uuw • .., thOt• • money "' .,,. CA. Blvd., Balboa. CallJ. t28451 Calif. 92660 inltftst conYIYld to Ind PLEMENTAL OECLARA. lliE DEED FROM JOHN Publl1hed Newport States, paylble to Prole1-h Stephanie Leigh Hough-Thia business Is con· •now held by Ii undtr 11kl TION OF COVENANTS RE·•--PU-8-L-IC_N_O_T_IC_E __ HOWARD MCCORMACK 811cl\IC01ta Mesa Pilot alonal Forecloeur1 Corpo-If •o 1ubJeet I • ton 1908 w Ocean Fronl ducted by: an lndMdual
Deed ol Trull In th• prop-COOOEO IN BOOK t2870, AN 0 HELEN Mc. December 12 19 28 1991. ration) AT THE CHAPMAN name and addr ... of Newport Beach caur' Th• r•g.l11r1nt(s) com·
erty 11tu111d In said PAGE 111 OF OFFICIAL NOTICE OP CORMACK HUSBAND • • , th015 AVENUE ENmANCE TO the person with whom 92663 ' . menced to 111nsact busl·
Counly, C1lllornla di· RECOAOS UNDER THAT TRUITl!l!'l IALI! ANO WIFE: RECORDED THE CMC CENTER BUILD· elalms mar be flied It Evelyn Alchuleti. 303 E. ness under the Fictitious
ac:rlbed es: SECTION HEADING IN Loan No, SEPTEMBER 22 195-IN PUBLIC NOTICE ING. 300 EAST CHAPMAN Fral•J Auction Co., 9th Slreel, Santa Ana, Calif. Buslne11 Nam•(s) 11s1e<1 • PARCEL 1: SUCH AATICLE ~~ITtEO • " AVENUE, RANGE, CA. all 2oe3 lea Cove Lane 927ot abOVe on: N/A .. LOT 4 OF TRACT 9861. IN AS FOLLOWS: RIGHTS 98-024-003145-BOOK 3218 PAGE 535 OF IPU5754 right, Utle and Interest con-C t M CA 82827 Thia buslneu la con Valtri• Ward
< THE CITY OF NEWPORT AND DUTIES: UTILITIES 032..QOOMIXION OFfl'ICIAL RECORDS. NOTICE OP veyed to Ind now held by oe a ... , ducted by· an unancorpo: Thia alalemtnl was filed
PILOT CLASSIFIED
Ifs the resource you
can count on to sell a
myriad of merchan·
dise flems. because
our columns compel
qualified buyers to
calll ~BEACH, COUNTY OF OR· ANO CABLE TELEVISION", T.I. No. 8128238 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT TRUSTl!l!'I SALE 11 undor 1aid Deed of Trusl and the la1t date for flt-rated association othar with the County Clerk ol 842·5878
ANGE, STATE OF CALI· "SUPPORT, SETTI.£MENT UNIT CODm • UNDER A DEED OF TRUST TIS 3$85 In the p1operty aUualed In ln9 clalml 1hall be then a partnership Orang• County on Oacem----------
FORNIA, AS PER MAP ~NO ENCROACHMENT", INTER FINANCE CORPO-DATED 4114188. UNLESS YOU ARE IN DEFAULT said Count~ end Stall de-Januarr 3, t 882, The reglstrant(s) com-ber 6. 199t
• FIL£0 IN BOOK 437, COMMUNITY., f,ACIUTIES RATION u duly appointed YOU TAKE ACTION TO UNDER A TRUST DEED scribed as. LOT 33, OF which 11 the bu1lneH menced to transact busl· F514955
PAGES 9 ANO 10 OF MIS. EASEMENTS • PRIVATE Trualee under I~ following PROTECT YOUR PROP DATED December 18 TRACT NO. 2873. IN THE dar before the Hie ness under the Actltiou1 Publish.a Ne port Boact\-I ~M
• ~:€~~~SEOO~s o~:J~e ~'/i~~JN}~~~.~c:~g deSCflbed deed of lrUll ERTY JT MAY BE SOLD A~ 1990. UNLESS YOU TAKE g~N~: g~s~RA~~SEA date. Business Name(s) llsled Costa MHa ~1101 Oec:em·1 .......
: COUNTY. CALIFORNIA. wORAINAGE OVER .. COM· ~~nc5JL}o Al..l~~~:f. A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU ¢8J~O~oi~R~~iT~~~ STATE OF CALIFORNIA: Publl1hed Newport ~~~· on: October 15· ber 12. 19, 26, 1991. Janu· ,,,,,_$
• EXCEPTING ALL OIL. OIL MUNITY FACILITIES. EST BIDDER FOO CASH NEED AN EXPLANATION BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC AS PER MAP RECORDED Beach·Co1h Mesa Evelyn .Archutell ary 2, 1992 ••••••••I( Rl~TS, MINERALS. MIN· PARCEL 3: (1n the f0tms which ere OF THE NATURE OF THE SALE. IF YOU NEED AN IN BOOK 88, PAGES 22 Piiot December 19, 28, Thls statemenl was filed Th-019
EML RIGHTS. NATURAL eASEMENT OF OVER fawful t.nder In the United PROCEEOINQ AGAINST EXPLANATION OF THE AND 23, OF MISCEL· 1991 with the County Clerk of---------
GAS RIGHTS, AND OTHER THE LOTS OWNED BY Stat") end/Of the cashlef'a YOU YOU SHOUlD CON-NATURE OF THE PRO-LANEOUS MAPS. IN THE Th028 Or~ County on oocem· PUBLIC NOTICE
•HYDROCARBONS BY w$U8JECT OWNERS .. FOR c.rtifled or other chicks ' CEEOINO AGAINST YOU OFFICE OF THE COUNTY ber 2 1991 ·WHATSOEVER NAME THE PURPOSE OF EX.EA· specifle<tln Civil Code Sec· TACT A LAWYER. YOU SHOULD CONTACT A RECORDER OF SAID PUBLIC NOTICE ' n 14342 Flctltlou1
KNOWN, GEOTHERMAL CISINQ THE RIGHTS OF lion 2924h (payable In fl.Ill 800, 817, 823. 829, 859 LAWYER · COUNTY, EXCEPT THERE· Bu1lnH1 N•me
STEAM, ANO AU. PROO. THE IRVINE COMPANY AN at 1M Um. ol iale) an right PRODUCTION PLACE, On JanUary 1o 1992 at FROM ALL OIL. GAS. MIN· NOTIC~ Published Newport Beach· Statement
UCTS DERIVED rROM wENFORCINO OWNER .. AS title Ind lnt~nt conwyed NEWPORT BEACH, CA. 9.45 A.M TOPA,REAL 'Es. ERALS AND OTHER HY· INVITING BIDS Costa Mesa Piiot Dec9IYI· The Follow.ng persons
ANY OF THE FOREGOING. SUCH TERMS, LOTS ANO to Ind now held by It .. (If a attHI addir..s Of TATE LENDING INC as DROCAABONS. BELOW A Notice Is hereby given bet' 5, 12, 19, 26. 1991 ere d0tng busmen as:
TH.\T MAY. BE WITHIN 00 EASEMENT RIGHTS ARE under Nld o..d ol TIUSt In common dHlgnlllon ol duly appointed Tri":11ee DEPTH OF 500 FEET, lhat th• Board ol frust.ees Th·993 RECYCLING PRODUCTS
UNDER THE COVERED MORE COMPLETELY OE· the property hlrtfnafltr d• property Is lhown above under end pureuanl to WITHOUT THE RIGHT OF of the Coast Community Classlfled 11 LIMITED. 177 R1versld1 PROPERTY, TOGETHER FINED AND DE~IBED IN scribed· . . ' Deed of Trust f'ICOfded Oe-SURFACE ENmY, AS RE· Coll90e Olslrlct or Orange C O Ny E .... i E NT Ave. • 1160. Newporl WITH THE PERPETUAL THE CUSTOM LOT OE· TRUSTOR• ROBERT M no warranty b given u lo cembef 20 1990 u lnstru-SERVED IN INSTRUMENTS County, Cahlornla. will re-• Beach, CaM. 92663
RIGHT Of ORIUING, MIN-CLARATION RECORDED HIXSON NINA F HIXSON . Ms compleleneH Of COf· mens No ~15 of Of· OF RECORDS. cei11e sealed bids up lo but whether you re buy· David B111n Rovsek, 3401 ING, EXPLORING AND OP· IN BOOK 12305, PAGE 914 BENEFICIARY· LUSK r1C1ne11)" The beneficiary f1cia1 ReCordl executed b . Thi strHI addreu and no lal., thin 11:00 em, Ing. selling, or jusl Flnl•y Avt .. Newport
ERA.TING THEREFROM OF OFFICIAL RECORDS CONSRUCTION cOMPANY under aald OMd of Trust, ALEJANORO 'LOVERA. J'.4 other common designation, Tueaday. January 14. 1992. looking. classlfled has Beach, Cll1I. 92663
ANO STORING IN ANO RE· ANO IMPOSED BY SUP· recorded Aprl 19 1998 u by reason ol a breech or UNMARRIED MAN as 11 any. of tho real prOperty at the Purchasing Depart· what you needl This bu1lnes1 Is con-
MOVlNG THE SAME FROM PLEMENTARY OECLAAA-lnatr. No. 88·1783ta tn default In the obllgatlons Trustor(,), In the omCe of described above 11 pur. ment of I.he Oi1trlct located PILOT CLASSIFIED ducted by: an lndlllldual
PACWIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mot1uary Cnapel • CrematOfy
3500 Pacrhc V•eY> D<"f'
N-pot1 Beacn ....... 2700
PIERCE IHTIIEH
IELL IHOWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
1 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
141-1111 SAID LANO OR ANY TION RECORDED IN Book page ol Olllclal llCurtd thereby hereto-the County Recofder ol Or· POl1ed lo be: 934 WEST al 1370 Adams AYenue, 842·58'78 Ths regiatr1n1(s) com-~~ ~~~~~1~~1~~~~~~~thel ~~~ange~~~~~~~~R~D ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ THI! RIGHT TO WHIP· OFFICIAL RECORDS. re<:otdef ol Oringt Counly. Oft exec:u lomla WILL SEU. AT PUB· MESA, CA 92627
STOCK OR DIRECTION-.APN: 48t-14t-04 Hid died or trult d. Ired to th• undaralgned a UC AUcnON TO HIGHEST The undersigned Trustee
ALLY DRILL AND MINE The 10111 1mount of the ac:ribea the followlng prop-written Dect1r1tlon of 0.. BIDDER FOR CASH (pay· disclaims any llabllltv for
FROM LANDS OTHER unpaid belance of the obH· erty: r1ult and Demand fOf Silt, able 11 time ol Hie In law· any incorrectness of the
THAN THE COVERED g•tlon HCUrtd by aald EXHIBIT "A" and written Nolle• or 0• ful money or the United street address and other
PROPERTY, OIL. OR GAS Hd ol Trust Ind reason-(LEGAL Dl!SCRIPTIONJ feult Ind ol elec:11on cause Stalts) at: THE MAIN common deslgnetlon, II
WELLS. TUNNELS ANO ably ntlmaled costl, H· PARCEL 1• the underalgned to 1111 NORTH ENTRANCE TO any. ahown herein. SHAFTS INTO, THROUGH penses Ind advances at · THE COUNTY COURT· Said aale will be made, OR ACROSS THE SUB· the llmt of lhe Initial publl· LOTS 3. 4, 5, 8, ANO 7 Hid pro~rty aatlsly uld HOUSE 700 CIVIC CEN· but without covenant or
SURFACE OF THE COV· cation of lh• Notice ol Sale ANO THAT POOTION OF obllgatlona. end lherealttr TER DR'rve WEST CITY OF warranty, .xpreu ()( lm-
ERlO PROPERTY AND TO II S2,935.820.8t. Peymenl LOT 2 OF TRACT NO. the underalgned caused SANTA Al-4A, STATE OF pltod_. reg11dlng Ulle, pOS·
BOTTOM SUCH WHIP· rnl!St be by cash, I cuh-3145, AS SHOWN ON A aald notice ol default and CALIFORNIA, all right, title session. Of encumbrancH. STQCKEO OR DIRECTION· ler I chick drlwn on a MAP RECORDED IN BOOK of election lo be recorded and Interest conveyed to lo pay the unpaid balanc•
ALLY DRILLED WELLS. 11ate OI national bank, a 99 PAGE 33 OF MISCEL· August 2e, 1991 as lnal and now held by fl under of the not1(1) MC\Jf•d by TUNNELS ANO SHAFTS dloc:k drawn by a llate ot LANE OU S MA p S No 91~60470 In Book laid Deed ol Trusl In the aald Deed ol Trust, with lll-UNOER AHO BENEATH OR ltdtral credit union, Of I · P · I 01,,.., R In property aitueted In said le1nt thereon. as provided BEYOND THE EXTERIOR chetJI drawn by 1 state 01 RECORDS OF ORANGE ag• o ,,..,., ecords Counl end State de-1n said note(s). 1dvances, II
UMfTS THEREOF, AND TO ledttal uvings and loan COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, the office ol the roc:Ofder ol acri::':J as: PARCEL 1: LOT "'"!· under the lerms ol
REDRILL. RETUNNEL, 1uociallon. Hvlfl9S H· DESCRIBED AS FOL· Orenge county; 91 OF TRACT NO. 3519, said Deed ol Trust. lees.
EOVIP, MAINTAIN. RE· IOClatlon, Of Uvingl bank LOWS: Said Sal9 Will b• mid•. AS PER MAP RECOOOED charge• Ind expenses ol
PAIR. DEEPEN AND OP£R-apeclfted In Mctlon 5102 ol BEGINNING AT THE but withOul covenant or IN BOOK 128, PAGES 18, the TrustH and ot the
ATE ANY SUCH WELLS, the Flnancfll Code 80d tu-NORTHWEST CORNER Of -renty, •xprn1 Of Im-19. 20 ANO 21 OF MISCEL· trusts cr11ted by aa1d Deed
0" MINES WITHOUT, thOflzld to do bullneu In SAID LOT 2. THENCE pied r91j1tdlng title po.-LANEOUS MAPS IN THE ol Trust. HOWEVER THE AIGHT"TO 1"11 .Ute. • • OFFICE OF THE• COUNTY The total amounl ol the ORIU. MINE, STORE. EX· The l1tMt 8dchn and SOUTHERLY ALONG THE HUion or encumbrances, RECORDER OF SAID unpaJd balenc. of the obl-PLORE AND OPEAATE other common deaigNltion, WESTERLY LINE THEREOF to pay the remaining prind-COUNTY getion 11cured by 1111
THROUGH THE SURFACE If Wft, or the rMI proplf1y TO THE SOUTHWEST pal IUtl\ of the not•(•) ... p AR c·E L 2 . N 0 N-property to be IOld end 00 THE UPP~ FrVE HUN· dlletlbed lboYa la pur. CORNEA OF SAID LOT 2; CtKed by uld deed ol Ex CL u SI v E. A p. r .. sonable ullmeted
OREO (500) FEET OF THE potted to be: 31 RIDGEL· THEN c E EA s TE R Ly Trust, with lnltrHI as In PURTENANT EASEMENTS costl, IXpenlll and ad·
SUBSURFACE OF THE INE DRIVE. NEWPORT ALONG THE SOUTHERLY Hid not• provldld ad· ov~ LOT A ANO LOTS vane" II '"' time ol lhe
COVERED PROPERTY, AS BEACH, CA 92660 LINE THEREOF 51 50 vancn ii any und~r lhe 141 TO t59. INCLUSIVE OF Initial publicat~ ol lhe No-RESERVEO IN A DEED RE· The underllgnld Trullff • · ' ' mACT NO 3357 AS PER tlce ol Truslee I Sale la CORDED SEPTEMBER t1, dllClalma eny Uabaitv tor FEET; THENCE NORTH· 1erm1 ol uld OMd ol MAP RECORDED.IN BOOK $160.028.t9.
t980 IN BOOK 13748, eny lnc:onec:tnna of the EALY IN A DIRECT LINE Trust, lees. chlfg .. and 107, PAGES 1 TO 7 INCLU-The btnellcl1ry under
PAGE 335 OF OFFICIAL lltfft addl-eu and other TO A POINT IN THE expen1es or the TruslM SIVE Of MISCELLANEOUS said Deed ol Trust hereto-
NORTHERLY LINE OF MAPS. IN THE OFFICE OF IOf• executld and deliv-
THE COUNTY RECORDER tred to the undersigned 1 ------------------------------------1 nF SAID COUNTY, FOR written Oeci111tlon Of 0..
-
_PU_B_L_IC_N_G_:r_IC_l!_j PUBLIC NOTICES I PUBLIC NOTICES I PUBLIC NOTICES THE PURPOSES AND AS raun Md D•mand ror Sale,
KM248
PUaLIC AUCTION
NOTICll OP ULm ON JANUARY 29 1ff2
OP TAX.omrAUL TD .-..ONRTY l'OR muNGJiiT TAXIS
DESCRIBED IN ARTICLE Ind a written Notice of D•
XIII, SECTION 4 OF THE fault •nd eloc:Uon to Sell.
DECLARATION OF COV· The und.,slgned caused
ENANTS, CONDITIONS llld Nolle• of Oelau" and
AND RESTRICTIONS RE· Election to Sen to be re-
CORDED MARCH 7, 1974 co~ In the County where IN BOOK 11090, •PAGE the real property 11 k>cated.
Wl*Ma. on J4i/ 8, 1891, '·ROBERT L. CITRON WU dlrec:t9d by the Boan! of S..peMsor9 of Orange '14 Ofl' OFFtCIAL DAT~I 12/23191
Cowrty. State of Callfom&I.. and tNre WU NeeMld by me and filed In my omc. an authortz.atlon ol the RECORDS IN THE OFFICE p .. 0 F II s • I 0 NA L
St1191 Controhr, dated ~ 22. 1981, to ... at pub11c etlCtloft certa!n tax-defaulted pn>per11ea which OF THE COUNTY RE· FOR&CLOSURa COR·
.,. -.w-. to the ..,_ of .... Pubic nodce le ..._.... = thllt unteu Mid ~ are redMfMd C 0 RD ER 0 F SA I 0 PORATION, H TruatH __,.... ,....~-· • ·--~ . , COUNTY. ..ARTY CONDUCTING prior theNto, I wit on Jenuary 21. 1882., Ill the how of o.oo 0 dock a.m. In the of S..pervl9ors ALL WATER RIGHTS ~ SALE FAIRFAX NO.
Hewing Room 1115, ~ Buldlng, 10 CMc C.. Plaza. Sara Ana, In the Colrtty of e>r.nge, INTERESTS IN WATER TICI!: OF SALa SD
Cellfomla, ... the Mid pnipertlea Ill P'lblc auction, to IN hlgheet l*tder '°' cun In~ money of RIGHTS AND ANY AND VICI! INC •
the United ~ or negotabte peper, '°' not .... tNn the mtnlmum bid Mt fofth In thll nob. ~1~~s~ E~ T ~is~~5 K.,: aim'ma, 1 Hutton
PMCm. "'1•DlllQ SYSllM DPLAllATION BY THE IRVINE COMPANY, Centre Drive, lte. RECORDED JUNE 11, 1050 1~71>RE COMMONLY Publl1hed Newport
K N 0 W N AS : 4 5 2 1 BHc:t\ICoela Mtu Piiot
DORCHESTER ROAD, (CO-~ 2e. 1991, Janu-
RONA DEL MAR) NEW· If'/ 2. 9, 1992.
The maps NfM'ed to .,. .vali.bte fof Inspection In th• o1'1ce of the An•eor. Room ti 147, 830 N. Broe-OWflrt, Senta Ma.
PORT BEACH, CA 02625 th030
• ~ ~~~ and PUBLIC NOTICI!
The ~ thllt .,. aubfeCt to thta nodce .,.. lltuated 1n the County of Oninge, State or cauromta,
and .,. clMoftbed .. follows:
Other common dellgNUon, CNlt0213tJ ~t!s ~ ~ NOTICll TO
ITEMI
6.
1.
e.
8.
10.
12.
LOCATION
Huntington
Beach City
H\.rtdr90n leedtCly
=:~ Id*''*"°'
PAftCEL NUMBER LAST ASSESSEE
024-036-03 Undaay, 8NOe How•nl
iUnd POf) et al
5°" lm.reat)
For. 024-038-03.30)
17'-201-31
MINIMUM BID ported to be: 4521 CRDIT°"' OF
OORCHESnA ROAD, (CO-BULK IALI
RONA DEL MAR), NEW· ca1c1. •104,
1108.000.00 PORT BEACH, CA 92625 1101 u.c.c.t
The und«Signed T'lwtH laorow No, ·
dltdallTll lllY ~ for IMOtM ~ ~~ o oJ:: Notice le ltefeby °"'91' '°
common detlgnatlon. If credllot of th• wllltln
S4&00.00 tl'ff, lhOWn hef.in. Seid =i: =to~ n:.:-:
Mii wt" be mede, but wtlho the HHtl dHCrlbed out cov.nant or warranty, betow
"4500 oo ~ or lmpled, ~ The Mme. end butlr'9tl • lnci title, poHIMIO.-., Of -addtlllll Of IM Miier .,.:
cUmbrsncM. IO~.::~ JAM!8 L . ROBUCK,
$9000.00 ~~by._,~AO~~ Deed ofYnllt. wllh .......... CAW71I ""'*"" .. ~ In The loCallkw\ ln CailtorrM Mid noll(I), adYmlCeS. I of .. cHet ~ ofloe "500.00 = ...., the ..,_ of ol ...... ts: INill c1w.:;. .. r .=--:. ~ "::.~ .. ...:.: .: 8110.000.00 ... Ind Of .. lldcll ..... Wed by ·the
"""' ...... by ..id Dted .......... ,.... .. .. Thlll. '°' the ..nounc be ...... a.ch ..... "Ila=-.. tlmai.d IO Mrll Of ...._.,. to "-
t1G1,000.00 ~ ~..,, undef ~:.. ~ .......
... .,... .. Trull ............. of .. ~ ate: '°'9 .... _. Ind _.,.. Cl. THOMAI LARION. VAN ~000.00 INd '° ... uidltllgl~ • T LAMON, 1-WnT WfMln D1•11011 ol 0.. Sw AY&.I ,.14 ~
-tllUI Ml.,_...'°' .... TON 11M::M. CA_, -oouo !.'!.a......_ ti• I at 0.. n. -........ .. ;;' .......... :.= ...... , • .,..._.,._._ ~°"'\: 'JIXT'UMS.
STARTING A llEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Department at the Piiot la
pleased to announce a new aervtc.
now available to new bualneues.
We will now SEARCH the name for
you at no extra ctiarve. and save you
the time and the trip to the Court
Hou•• In Santa Ana. Then, or course.
after tit• , .. rch Is compi.ted we will
file your ftetftlous bualMu name
1tatement with th• County Cleric.
publlth once a week tor tour WMka
u required by law and then file your
proof of publication wtth County Cleric.
I
Ple1te stop by to file your fictitious
bu1lness statement at the Piiot Legal
O.partment, 330 West Bay. Costa
Mesa, California. If you can not stop
by, pt .... call us at (714) 642-4321,
Extension 315 or 3t6 and we will
make arrangements tor you to handle
this procedure by mall.
If you 1hould have any further
questions. pl9ase call us and we wm
be mor9 than glad to assist you
Good Luck In your
new bualnntll
.·
..
~ .
,,..._ Pii~ ....
'
·-...
. )
LINES DAYS BUCKS
Sell your priwte party merchandise in the
Pilot Classified Community Marketplace.
Coll the Pilot today at 642-5678 ond
toke odwrttoge of this greot off er. ,
• .:t.
..
• ,,
-~.0.11 ,., • .,
330 Weat Bat street
INDEX
IF.!-mm a. .... , I
Bouae./Condoe ..................... 1ooa..1094
Mobile Homn ......................... -••..• 1100 Aictre.ap......... ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. 11 aa
Bulldtns • Conuaot ...................... 11150
Beach Prop4t~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l 1 '16
Cemet&.r)' I.,ot,a ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 18111
BoUMS To Be Moved .................... 13115
I.ota Por Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1400
Out.Of.C0unt7 ............................... 115115
Out.Of-State .................................. 115158
Ranchel/Jl'arm.a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 115715
Reaort Propertlea ......................... 11580
Time Sh&N8 ••••••••••..••••••••.••••.•••••.•• 11590
Real Eatate Bxohanp ................... 1800
Real Eatate Wanted ...................... 18115
I
Bou.ae8/Condoa ..................... 1101·1194
Apartment• .......................... 1801·8894
Duplexea ....................................... 1704
Rooma ........................................... 8708
Rote~otela ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 8718
Vacation B.entala ........................... 1711
Roommatn Wanted ...................... 1714
Rental.I Wanted ............................ 1718
Oar.ace• For Rent ......................... 1740
Starace ..•••••..•...........................•...• 8741
Miao. Rental.a ................................ 1744
-
•••••••••••••••• 8TM
.... -•• Pr'Opm'e, .......................... .,.,,
B11etn11• omoe a.t111 ................. ,,.,
-~ ............ ,. .......• .,..,.
Dita,~ ................................ ..
ID4Ullbial ••••••••••••••••••• ··•··········· ••••• l'Paa laoom• ~ •.....•....•.••.••.••••.... 9"90 10 .... u .. JRtl
. Bu•ln Ill ror Sale ......................... 9900
Bumtaa• Opporta.D.117 ••••••••••••••••••• 190-&
BulD111 Wan.tecl ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• aeoe
~t ••••...••.•.•••••••••.•...••••••...•.••••.•• •9047
hl...tm.Dt Opporiun1t7 ............... ~·
ID....tmen' Wanted ....................... 1110
Kon., To 1,o11.n ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 111 •
llonq Wanted ..••.•••........•........•.••• 1111
Moripp8. T.D ............................. 1118
All real estate
listings that run in
Saturday's publication
appear in the. separate
Real Estate tabloid
section.
BMl.lla • nt_. ••..•••••••....••.....•.•.. 1000
-....................... ao1•
.,...,,.. ..••...............•..•....•••.•.••••.....•• 101•
Memberahlpa ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 8011
Per90D&ll •••••••••••• ···:· ••••••••••••• aooa-aooa
Semoe DlreotorJ' ................. 3409-3181
I
E.mplo1111ent •••••••••••••••••• · •••••••••••••••• ISIS30
EmploJJDent Wanted ..................... 1515315
Domeatlo ••........•.•.•.•.•...•••••........•.... 15154.0
An.Uqu ........................................... 8010
Appllan.oea ..••••.••.•••••••.•.•••.••.•••••••••. 8011
AuetUou ••••••••••.••••••••.••.••••••••••••••••• 8011
...
J~Ari •••••.••••••.••••••••••••••• eoaa
BWMI .. ll&te.laJa •••••••••••••••••••••••• 9080 "uh•..,., ..................................... eoa om. Panaltve/BqvJpment •••••••••• tcM'
~Apjmele •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l0i&9
Mus.I Jutru.menta ••••••.•••••••••••••• eolia
~ •••.•...•.••..••••..••••.•.•••• 9081
Blqo)M •••••••••••..•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• eoeo
8pol'l.IDa Ooocla ••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••• eoe.o
'l'lalleU ............................................ 80'fll
TV/8-...•................ aoeo
o.,.... Salee ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8101-8180
Boata •••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••• 7011-7011
Marl.D.e Se.nt.oe •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '1010
Mar1.D.e SUpWI>oob ....................... 7098
Alrplan.M •.••••••••••••••••••••••..••..•.••.•••• 8010
Campe~ra ........................... 8014
8ooo&en •••·••••••······•••••••••••·•····•·••••• 8018
Automoblln .......................... 9010-8090
How To Place A Classified Ad
BY PHONE
714-642-5678
North Oranp Count)'· '540.1120
South Orange County • 496-8800
BY VISITING OR MAIL
330 West Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA, 92827
(corner of Newport Blvd. a. Bq St.)
PUBLICATION DAYS GENERAL POLICY
CLASSIFIED HOURS Tueaday ••.••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••.•••••••••• 15 :OOPM Monday
'l'll~~·····································:J:OOl-1'1! ~ttel.ll~ Saturcl.a7 •..•.•.....................•..........•..... 3t00PK rrl:d.ay
lla&ee u4 fwffl=x are ....,_ to ....,. .w.o.&
...... ,,.. .. ~ ........ Uae rtctd to .....
re1la11lfJ, HYIH or reJ•d ••J elaulftecl
ldNrtl••••· Pleue report uq enwe u.a& .., M
ID JW1 llaeatW Id tnmedktelJ. TIM Jlf..,ort
.... Coeta .... "°' • ,,.. ldtf •da& .......
DO lWIUMr 6lr .., lft'Olr la aa ....,..._. t:.
Telephone 8:~&:30Pll Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30AM-5:30PM Monday-Friday
OlJT-0 1· ST/\"I t-:
PHOPEH rv I ;,;,1-1
SatUl'dq Real Estate .................... 5:00PM 'l'llunday
""* • ~ M atqamfWt .... lar Uae .-ol ... .,.... ......,, ooe18pW ~ Uae tnar; Credi& ....
ODlJ ............. an& .... rUoL
Houses/Condos/
For Sale
COSTA MESA 10:.!4
3Bdrm 2Ba. $227,200
owe 1 °"' 0wn + Expensea. Xlnt cond/
location. 631·5801
llOYINQTO
WVEGAI?
Tired of the high
C08t of IMng? 2 bed-
room, 1 bath home
on a large, walled
corner lot. Super
Loo•tlonl Com-
pletely (enovatedl
Onty 179,000. C8I
Bill 0t Helen todey
• ('702) 388-1242 tor
lnforrnllflon.
ERVICE IRE
E'slde 2 yra new, 381
2lhba, frplc, lndry, •un
deck, big entry kltch.
cloaets galore. 2 ew
att, S305K. e75-e992
MONMCHaUCH
3BR, 2 ~ BA. like new
CataJlna coulflne vu,
walk Ritz C&ttton fJOff/ tennl• $415,000 op.. •• , t-e 248-74M «
11a..355-4150t
NEWl'(ll{ I I
I HEJ\Cll 1111,•1,
Lowest Priced 2.Str In the ••port Streetal
Expanded & up.
graded. Lg lot. .!,5~~
Houses Condos
For Ren t
l.t\ill<\I ·"·'
CORONA DEL MAR· 1bd~··75
CORONA DEL MAR •
2 bd, ntc:. condo • 11350
TUSTIN RANCH· 3bd
Ille• model • 11700
PENINSULA • S bd
HouM ·11850
UDO ISLE • 3 bd
houM 12.000
LAGUNA BEACH -3
bd hM•l2300
BAYVIEW TERR • 3 bd twnhm • '2400
UDO ISU! • 3 bd By. tmt. furn. wntr S2SOO OCNFRNT • 5 bd tlM,
wntt • l3000
UDO lSU! • 4 bd hM
• l3500
WINTER
RENTALS AVAILABLE
Waterfront Homea Inc.
RMltOl'I 83M400, 180:3l00
For Ad Action
call a
flL
AD-VISOR
Ml-M71
let u. .... r.
Sell Y• ''"'"" Cel Ol11llfll•.
Mt-5671
for Information
& surprlslngly
low cost.
1\l>l>JTIONS
HI· :v!OIH 1.1:\11 \ i 'II
Kay Co BkSra. F,..,.q,
conctete, ftnleh. ,.._
model• & new ,.., Uc
11821150.873-3148
QUALITY A MOit
Cu•tom dHlgn &
bulld. R••· Comm,
New & Remodel. Uc ~---
Al' I' I I•\'·' I •
SI J(\ I( I .. ,,
:\llt lflll t 1· HI
I l ! ( ·.I I I '\I , I I '"
· I If l \ I
SI II'. II · , 1
( 1\ H I' t-N r HY . I : , I o I!-I.I-.< r1t1C1\I. .lhlO
~ c ............. ...
P~ Ucen .. llC10o387M5 *"-o., .. .,.., 111-.. POWER ELECTRIC
•,.. •..,,., ~ 432.7900 a4 hna
( i\ fl I ' I I . I • I I
I I \11 ', I
( o· .. c HI I I I ' "·
( 1·11 ' '.. IL
111 I ', ''-'
I 11 I I\ I I I"
•,f I ' •I I :
·-~ .. ,.. ..... -~m.ot~-rlo,......_
tMighbomood EJec:tn.
Uc t11C108n150, Free
.......... 723o4320
• t \i c I ',
\: J) I I I, , " I 1
AIUUIOIClUIA# 9yokllr,,..... .... "*" ,,.., fllllFf'll'f .......... , ....
' 1 . ' r. 1 , ,, 1 ' 1 · 1 ·'·
: I ,, \•, '\ ( I ': I ... '
--· -
I I c, 11
Sll<\111 ·'·
l'I i
<... t H \,' I ( I-~ . I ... /et
l'I l"\1111'.'..<o l'"-'111
PUii.iC IOTICI
The Celf. Publo u-. ... Comm ... lon RE· OUtMa that .. UMCt
houaehold good•
mover• print their
P.U.C. cal T numller,
lmoe Md cheu"9un 1Htn1 tt'9lr T.C..P. num-Miil•• Ph•••lfte. bw In .. ~..... S30Jhr, .....,.,.. No
menla. tf you haV9 a Job too big fl' .,...
quellllon llbo4.lt the ... ~ .. your Dlumblna
geMy ot • mowr, Imo nM«M. "°"''" ~ or chauffeur, call: RepM-a, ;;pjpn, .,.,.,.
Pubic UtlUtlM hHt..... CommlR••·
Commtulon Bonded/lnaured. Cd 71 ....... 151 Tim •tea-0738•
I '.\ I'. I I'\ I , I" , .,
.-t•c?'.:,~
o.ta .... flc:IM .... ~~-.. 5~
l!Olll l'\c, I lfll
Roof l!xpef18. PllC:Nng,
Re-Roof, 8kyllght1.
Ch•nnln9 arewn c .... truotlon. Uc.
#121138. 24t-1413 . .., .... " Low C08t, high quality,
roof ....,.,,. & r9"00f.
oceanvi.w Ro~'a:
"'" .... Uc 115 1412331
•,1 II I I ';
'-.I II\ fl I', i'I '11
".I 1(1",l.1 I 1·
Ii I I' \I I," '
••rt•ldere .,. "" ~bueln•• ........ a ln1t1ll1Uen1.
Cfwtee7» ......
I 1·11111 •,If 1·1•,1,
I: 1 I a a a._., ... ,.
Reupholetet y &
Repaks. 542 .... 12. ·
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9 ,.
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l!Alde CM. ..,. 1M new M•ft/OerS*. _,. 1M 8AUIOA 1 ho m •. •P•t • 0 K. '7IO lnchll 79-0ae1 hM from aend. Fem SHOO. Tt~1IO. prf'rd. UM1mo + ~
CJ.-hahly peln9ed eMo. en.aezs 8ft lpm =:.....'*':n:. 4t: •Alrnoal MW 9111~c ... CW ftlm 1'111, 38R
bade ~ ldMI b ... 17tL a.r, cebla. 28A hM, prof male, rOOIM'_.I.. 171S/mo. P911o, tndry rm M; pooA/ ape. "450, Ind Cal••• tin w ... 1nat1 pd. ~. uti. ...._...
No ,_ Ni.,...7 cU ntam1u atv 28A COITA mlN ••SHARP 11mR 2BA epa w/fem. Al .. OllT UACH IM. ...,. .,..,mo. •men•. "4Wmo + • ... ...,,.. TO cae OK. Cal ,_.... AGt uma. ~1-ans
WW.lmlll ••••••D IVDYTHlllG •CLOll TO AW EASTllDE C.11.
•200 om' 3BR townhoma. I'•
180 ,.-........ It. me1e preterrect.. 1350
V9llf1llV IBR t BA. tndry rm, + ~ utllltlH. lndlucee e2u Bdrm, l~Bldh cfoae to ahopa & lnelde laundry ,_.. eTowmou.. Apt. tf f _..__
Why pfay Hide 'N
SMk~ ~.,
Cell The Piiot todayt '4t-MTI.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
TO YOUI
Is somea.c tpCdel NNtng a ~
In Jn8y? ~ It In the PHot
and lndependaltf Send In a non-mumeble
photo along with S 10.00 or Just e message
wtth $5.00 and ;we wtn publish It on
Jerulry 9th.
Oadtlne: Januety 6, 5:00 p.m.
Send your message to:
The Pilot & Independent
330 W. Bey Sl
Cost.a Mesa, CA 92627
Attn: Classlfled Happy Birthde-t ---------)::.. _____ _
,Phone _________ _
1Masesc---------
e941b'911..,..,. buM-.0 Wll accept _!•~ :•c~er-Ollllad Pwtdng • C. Houelna. M50 _........,,_,.
eOulat Clwdan 1257 MAltLe both, furn I• h •
CENTAUR MGMT kitchen a IMng room s.aino 142·2288 or 831-2725 and larae aundec:k. eEZ Acceea to O.C. Do •831-8959•
Airport • YoU need lg dean 1~--~----•ldeal for Alrpott 2br 1ba? Gatage,•new Houaemat" to ahr ldta
P....onne! cpt, D/W, alorage. lg ocean view Nwpl IUISTMTIAL 1750 No Pel ~2495 Crest 3Br 38• condo,
llOVE .. AUOIMCI •MOVE-IN SPECIAL! LID0'500+1a~· ;~-es~~~
1 8EOAOOM -.__,, q.,... nt41 MM4n Poof, apa. cable hku_p 4Br hH. Ltg patio, nr Jerffte K81 .. r Rill.AK• VILUG• bch. MIF 23-39 n-amkr
c .................
BONNIE
KIRKPATRICK
of Newpott Beachll
YOY ate this w.ek'a
Pilot/Independent Din-
ner For TWo Wlnn•I
AUTO ROUTl'I
AV81abie In Hu~
ton 8Mctt ... Foun-Wn Valley. No colecs.
Ing. Must h8Y9 eco-nomical cw,~
and valid drtvera ..
cenaa. Call Mr. NlelaenatM~.
")'O&K ~ mCIWlg
10 • MW locaaol'I ? Anncua I
IN mow In olalallled. :
"FAST
HSULT"
SHYICI
DlllCTOIY
l"or Kesult
Scrv1rc Call
Early morning motor
routes available. Deliver
Tuesday, Thursday &
Saturday. Must have
dependable transportation
and liability insurance.
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for you. ('714) -.O.e1M .. , ...... ,
MNtH "406 + utll. 723-0400
*.u.T IEEI* M/F ahr beach •Pt.
$415/mo + utlla. 112· $200 OFFU B 39th St. me. rm.
CALL 842-4333
~·iibl New Spacious
2·a1y "" 4BR 3BA. 2 trpk:a, fnc:d !fd.~.
Lg 1BR 1BA, d/w, ga-Mike or Rob 845-2873
Whether YQU'r• buying or .. n1ng, Ctualfled
COYW9 an your Medal
"'642-5671 .... COSTA MESA NEWPORT BFACH
S2000/fn0, ... 94CM>tee-.-
f9ge, lndry rm. etoe. '-....
IO SC Plaza le05/mo. 809 8UNPLowmt
CENTAUR MGMT.
142-2288 or 831·2725
E'aide apactoua 3tw
2ba. 2 car gar, trpec,
lg ptd, pet ok. Avl
now 11.100 /mo. Vitt•
R ........ e?a.4e1a tBR wnoft
Parttakte OCMn view.
Avallable nowl Appt to ... re3t.eto7
•naNoPeta
Eu1alde 2BR 1Ba. gar,
encl patio, no peta.
$850/mo. 2938 Santa Ana Ave flC 845-1020 -3B"'"A-2-~""'BA,--..--1Cf-gar-, w-/
E .. tiJde f'Wnhmei d hkupa, pool & ape,
2 Maater bdrma, St100/mo. 2233 Falr-
2'-'B•, dining rm, vl9W Ad. 548-7001.
trptc, gar. s1oso ALAllOANAAPTI
Ramu Ma.9'197 SllO OFFU
New teoo aq ft condO, 1 a HA. d/w, beaut 3BR 2~BA. Jae, l/p, pool .,.._ Rec rm,
cuat. kit., 2'"' gar. lndry rm, cto" lO St,441/ mo, S500 off •ho d b 1al mo. Dan 712 ... 744 P• an USH. 1588-$875/MO
NlcMa 28r 2~8a twn-530 W. WILSON
hme, gatage, frplc, 722-9012or142-2288
:,C:· ~vr.! GOOD LOCATION!
RMltale 8'7a.4912 Lo 28r 1~8a twnh ...
NPT MiiiTi 211t 1911 lndry ""~· pe\lo.
dpbc, patio, nu k.111 cpt, ao?e TM'WtittN w/d hkup. Nlpeta M2S CENTAUR MGMT
Aval now. 144 esae 842.f298 or 831·272a
NWPtl Hgta dHn 2Br MESA VERDE sunny
1Ba, w/d hkup, P8tk> 2BR 1 \tBA twnhm & yard. Wat«/gmdr atyte. Patio, t car gar
pct 1971 mo eu.oe10 $815/mo 721-C)118
I
Personal s I l'Ul:-,uo-.; ·\I ~ .1110:.!
I S FI· K l ~I.
I :'.H . :\; .1011.1
S E EKIN<•
WUMl-.N .llHH
I' fl! SON 1\1
Sl.H\'J(TS .11111~,
LOVE HOME ABSOLUTE F1NEST1 er.,. County Ladles un P8YCHIC8 TO SKI ALONE? 1-eocM20-2888
ONS ON OM• Very attnlcttlfe SWF, Me too. DWM, Ex· ~ 23 rNnlMl/$23
An ~pth f~ 21, blond hair, blue Brooklynlte, 39, blond-DIN t-IOC)..231-4103
of wt.I'• In store for eyed Ski Bunny, lsh, beatd, ponytan,1--ADU--LT""S,.......ON---.LY_..-
YoU In 1882. vtu/MC/ ... ka attractlYe mele, 5'11", 210 Iba .. NJ s. BEAU11RJLnr.ftlG~IC!I Amlllr ·or blU to "')llCllr • ._ aMae, IO kMP Ufa meet for a m<Me -.. . -.-.. home phone. I0().82+ me warm on • cold and a bite. Y04X nec:tt 1·.uu-.,.... AdulldO ~ 3458, Ext. 701. wlnl .. ·-ht. #4182. or mlne. #3181. DIN 1~1-4103
UNIQUE INTELLIGENT AU. NEW1 AU. LOCAU SI-I-Kl:'.lo
STRAIGHT YET HUMOROUS ~~~.,
A •AMHI FORWARD SWM, 23, 5'9", btOWn 1~
.,...... WF, ~ redhead, hair, blue eyea. ... k• 11 + No.....__ __
l\l F !'1 .WO.I
tll l~ll\:Ctlll'J I
Ht ·\I ' II . • I 1C1 :
OF QUALm attractive '•"'*• 11-f:; _.,._..,.,. 41, 5 ", nMda one 1.-. ........ , ...
25. to share beach1-......-....... --_,...·"--,...---llONTE llRRENO Alltactlve, youngish, woman man for walks, walk•, ballet• and BEAVTifUl & EXCfTINO APARTllENTI mldcn.aged SWF Pro-laughter and Iola cozy fir•• with an In-UVE LADIES
3BR 28A. 2 CM gar, ~ ml bet\. 11310 Incl
grdnr. 1st. taat + dep.
714410S or 813 9804
NI \\ l'C HC I
IH \ c II ' I I ' 'I
1BA 18A, M25. 8390 f .. alonal, loves llfe. more. Respect gets teHlgent, .. Mltlve Col-1·900-37o-eeoo.Adulta _ Ale YoU In your allctlea Y 0 u • v • r Y th 1 n g • ...... atudenL #3152. It 5ICd """ 1et llo Rent and my counterpart? maybe even me. ..._ ........ Frigs avl. Covered #4181. #4151. MUST DIN 1.....,.,.n2-21a5 ~Ing, cable, beaut1-1---~------1 BEST FOR LESS
fully Ind.cpd. Pool, 2 810 LOVE LIVE 1 ON 1 LADIES
lndry ""•·ro1" com-BLONDE KISSING 1·900-37o-ooo91110
plex ...._ 017 49+, aophlallcatad/ Attractive, monoga-DIN 1-aoo-23l-4l03
llW casual, wtoualfunny. IALW Ill.AND rnoua. aec:ure. •Inc.er•, Good ~ I Uvtl •DUPLD amr 28a, 28R 28a, pvt garage, ta there• mu.e.... QIJlnlllAJll communicative, edu-1-900-37o.eeoo1115 garage, balcony, blll waaher/dryer, good non-atnokw guy Who s1nn1a c.ucasi.n 35, cated, tnm SWM, 41 • DIN--11+ 1-8()1).772-2195
to beh. 11ZOQ/rno. Coeta Mesa ioc.tlon. l1n'I looking for • 8;5.T:-hMfthy Prof•· e· • ...._ caring, Mn-
(111).._..sn llow•.fn apeolall skinny 25-z:ar old .WV., trim, ~ N LOOKING FOR FUN'?
a;&w.llllimmn1rt 1875 n~10 l<Jdi.tt? "41 • ~~"!"for S: ~,,!'!..=., ~ 1 • .:::7~~~=••
Avalabla nowt Very NWiti aero.. the 8't'Mt. ENTREPRENEUR Ing, dlNng, huga,J:! & ectMUea together. 20 rnlnut""35
large 3 bdlm. 3 bathe Hr t.aAA, frplc.. gw. PRI I I ill quiet tlmea and #3153. Adi* Ott 1 ~11'N111S
In UM hMrt of 8alboe. l'19lllmo. 1115 IMne 1 Ing your lnterHta.1------DR--l!'-.au--NEWPORT WOMIN"
2 Cllr gar, S1IOO per Alie •1 ~... ILUl-IYID t1131ea. "'' ..... WITH PHONE NUMBERS ~ e;e .:;,,~, ~ ILONDI lfAUTIFUL PACKAGE HOO 114 DATE· Ed. 40 ~ ...,_ '° undr 34, tow ... hd.of 1fOllAll SANTA Pl.EASEi •-·· .......... w I .,.. ll'le bet ec.na, looklng Include .--..... ~ 1 "--11rw• • u .... per mo. tor 90tMOne 11pec1e1 INllDI & OUT -·-... DIANA ~.!! ~~-~a Spao. llR apt. Nu to ewe tor. • lo¥e to wanted by SWMCNS. ~~~ ~:. wwmAdd• 1~773 L.AD'r•• 1on1 ... _ .__ .. _,,., P9lnt. end D91'· AvWt cuddle up In.,.,,. of e '7. tor ...,,._ ~ ....,_ ,_,_
bth, 2 c:er C18f, new immed aml pet OK. w•m .. pf•ce -"" akltng. tnlWI. wllNlf\ 30-60 VW* growth. I'm Adventvroue ~~ :: ~ .... 0.. ••• .,. llOft muaec. • good howlt. """ Mlllthy. :=. ~~ t~137.Q1ftL••• 1~1
Large l Wnn. 1 belt'! man 6 Wlf'9. I CM be coin.mltted ralallon-to Jeane) #'185.
ptua 2 "*"'-a '*' • •_,,..._Met • -.._._-..~ ... n ... 1~11."""!"" ....... ------..,POOC ... ...,WWW .. .--car gar. Clil """ girt at tlrnee. rm • HAM"9AMI JaoofN e'794777 apohd, but I ehould~ SWM 40, 5'9", llvel
or 887__. AGT be. ~ to .... bllle. ITllOllQ C .M. EnJoya th•
opera, U\Mter, hor9ea. " .... ..,. bellch, do you? Seek•
Could I be~ Hott-"""'"" SWF, 37-49 fore lltUe day gift thla rMt"f 8WM, 41, a•u••, 1ff w11'9 and fun UrMa,
Let.. go dancing a Iba. ...-. IWI'. 2+ maybe youl #3184. .... *"112. ,., •T'•. -.o """ "•lot cLiiiiP••b ot lo dlln09, tnvef. talk, It.• 1 h • • •• y .. °' laugh and .... very t f t'-~ ft-4 epedal. .,3151• acce... n orma ........ The mo.t ~,.......,,.._ __ _,____ paokad "lalketptace
9fve and ~ dlrec> 8 •I I r our ho m • *Med reg.arty • •~
IOry of good• and .... lhroumh ce......... Cl'ffafUlly • by .. kinda *-woundl ., ..... .,. °' OONUl"Mr8.
QAYM•N OP N...ORT
1~UNK· fJll. 11
DAM llHOOll TAUi 1~·E.a.110
• 13 lllln. Al ..... 11+
"912/11*1 IO rill "*Mun ,...........,.......,FL
HOW TO RESPOND
TO
A_..,1( .. ,......,111• C-"-Nll
•Call 1-900-844-0100
•Enter 4-digit code appearing m ad
•Listen to greeting
•Leave message (you can change it
if not satisfied)
When leaving a message
•Leave your first name
•Mention your interests
•Tell your age
•Describe your appearance
•Specify your preferences
•include what you liked about the
person you :tre responding to
YOU mar leave a JQ second message.
You wil be automatically billed 98¢
for each minute.
........ taad\,OlllllMlllDflltWo--
.............. OMitll;Z ... wu:•w" toftllodlt ....., pefo sw•iaoe.. Wit.,......, •
...... ~Q ... 1111: ~ ......
...,......, .. ,11 a =••• .................... .::: .. ,.. ........ !&........ a.. ......... .__ .. .,. ...... ..
If 7 ... ~ ....... .. .. ..... ..... •. ·---~ . ,..., ................. ..
p 'lf ............ ~ ... ....
Dinner for Two at
-ADA
Find our hidden
~ifiedAm & WIN!
Contest Rules:
1. SimJjy find our hidden cbssified ach
scmewhere in rut cla.s.sified se<1ion. Cut
and ~ the ~ 00 lhe enlJy blank & mail.
2. All entries must arrive by ~y. 12 noon.
3. Winner will be ~by random cbwing
and winners name will appear in the
following days paper. One winner per week.
4. <:ontest will run 12-9-91 lhrough 2-ID-92
EN'll{Y IU .J\NK
Name _____________ _
Paste Ads Here
Paste Ads Here
Mail lO: DiMer for 2 Contest, c/o lhe Pilot
330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa CA 9U,27
Garage
Sa les
(O S I."• :\11.S.\ hi .. ,
...... c.
ale. cua. lo ""'"· cuet. wtiee. Vef'/ cSMn.
(1211) ...... .,.
ORMQICOAIT
JRPMDUGLI t-eoo-en.;,inp
.,, 4194• IOa~
i\HIH'l-.IH.S •tt:lll
'IS Toyota T•cel, 4•pd.
· aUctc.ehlft, ttail« hitch.
Xlnt cond in.Ide/out
U ,750, obo IM-7148. 'M 380SL frnl"MC cond, n HONDA YTR 250 ·as Dodge Mui Van, antlk>cl( bft<a,ctwoma,.., _____ ...,.
PAU•ne., van frMh 2 top-. 129,NO mu.t '87 C II ** rebuilt, seo ~nglne, MJll 84o-2442. * * • C8 Bright red, t xcenent new tlrea, fram• hl1c:h, •ee 4208EL H rv condition, AM/FM :~ ~:~':ut. ·~· r.c:ord, fUll power, low at•~1. Alp, Cruise, • ml., "clean", 2 yr MBZ Tiit Wnfft 64k ml,
1548-47-43. unllmHed w.,,.,, SAVEi S7500. CaJ( 646-9147 •• ., .... c:e20> ·-======= Pletoher •••-FOHi> 907[>
CLDRANC• UL•r '88 MUSTANG 5.0 1 toroare Newpoft Beach 1187 4-Runner
Everything Must Oo o wner. Xlnt c:ond. a13,19234000 t8,HS(t1'406S252) Thia Weeki New • '87 Legend Coupe Fully equlpt. $5000 714/113a.9300 Must aeel
Used. Call 831·5801 loaded, moonroof, 6-OBO 676-2883/497~1 '88 seo•• whit• one Touota of
Transportation
BOATS 7111 1
30 ft Apollo flybr1dge,
dual control, twin
225s, sleeps 6, Lorran
C, bait tank, UHF/
VHF. galley, head,
windless, new benl·
bles, Dinghy w/ motor,
awlmstep, $25,000
obo. Must see to ap-
preciate! 863-9446 wk,
631·2300 hm.
apd, telephone, pp, • • S11,890. 532-3299 or '89 BRONCO 5.8 Hr. owner, beautiful Inside Costa MtH
725-9691 Fully equlpt. E. Bauer & out, service record, 722·2000
Xlnt cond 47K ml low mt, 2 yr MBZ un· --------1988 ACURA LEGEND. 112 soo OBO 875-2683 II m It• d m I w arr 85 TOYOTA VAN
5 spd . White , ' $43,990 t43,990 Auto, A/C, P S . chromes, aun·roor, '89 ESCORT GT black (#3n883) FletcMI' Uc#2p23824 t4,905
p ow• r w Ind ow s, Ilk• newl Transferable, Jone• MoterAf9
brakes & steering. unllmlted warranty I Newpoft Beach TOYOTA OF
New tlrH. Always ga-$6895. 545-8360 or 213/823-SOOO COSTA MESA
raged $12,900 850-9497 557-4401 ask for Mike 714/113:t.e300 722·2000
89 ACURA LEGEND '89 Ford Aerostar Van '89 3ooc• "rat• car" 87 Toyota Supra SEDAN Eddie. Bauer, auto, 7 chromes, garnet/ Auto, Ale. PS, PW,
Only 14,000 mllosl pasa. Dual ale, Cass. c:rean, bat of fact Tiit, CC, Wheels Ult, c:/c, funy loaded warr., very low ml.. #2KGY2 .. 1 •7 ..... 5 (t11o34745> (1298) t13,925 · t3e,eos j=:n1) .. • ••• LEXUS OF ORANGE COAST Fa.totter Mo-Topta of
WESTMINSTER JEEP AND EAGLE t~~ach Costa Mesa
13590 Beach Blvd. 1-800-522.JEEP 714/1133·9 3 00 722·2000
•92-eeoe 714/549-8023 T RUCK S 9220
32 ft Luhra ftybr, micro,
gen, tw 225, alps 6,
great fishing or diving, •'89 Muat•"tt GT•
take B. Whaler for , Conver tible, 5·1pd ,
BMW 9030 '89 oeoa•L amoke/
cream, one owner, '89 Toyota 4X4 V6
low ml., "beat buy In 5•pd shell c~sto~
townl" Call for detallal whee'ta, at~reo/tape. downpayment. Owner 84 528e 78k ml, 24k mllH, $12,800. financing S32K obo. excellent condition, 861-5023 261·6333d, 875-0617e. new trans, leather, 1 _______ _
auto, $7995. 760-8224. 87 FORD RANGER Give your f amily an
etec:trlc boat for Xmatl
20' 1989 Duffy w/
cover. Bar, atereo,
new batterlH & paint.
$14,000. 962-8235
POWER BOATS 7012
1187 BMW 3251 Uc:ll'2V27438 t4,998
Leather, sunroof, aJc, Toyota of
cauette, cust. wheels, Costa Men
& warranty (1232) 722•2000 $9,950
ORANGE COAST Uaed Bronco
JEEP AND EAGLE 351 c1eve1and engine,
SO COAST MARINlt 1-800-522.JEEP recently Installed w/lift
18' Wooden Hull. Har· 714/549-8023 ayat•m7:.·=2
bor cruiser. Xlnt c:ond. 79 633c 1 BMW bl k
$5,000 OBO. 645-8766 on bla~k. aut~. :!r
You are a wt~ of two window, sunroof, new
free dinners! suspension, chrome
Buy It. Sell It. Find It. momos w/low pro
G t.:0 9 080
(#450376) Fletcher S9000 obo. 545-2676. Jone• Motorcare
Newpoft Beach
213/823-SOOO
7141833·9300
'90 300CI! whlte/g{•Y·
tinted, 18 " ahoy
wheels, CO, Port.
phone, "Outatanding
buyl " S40,998
(lll226952) Fletcher Joftff Motoroare
Newport Beach 213/923-8000 71411133-9300
ANTIQUES A..
C l.ASSJC~ !l:.!aO
'68 Impala SS 3H,
power windows, ale:.
power bfak... tach.
c:onaoled , p ower
aeata, tllt, all stock.
Excellent condition.
$5500. 840-1303.
19541 Dodge Pol•r•
2dr, 90k ml original,
extra clean, $2750.
527-3047 day
760-1879 eve/Wknd
AUTOS
WANTt:D !•:.!70
Chrlstmu cash wamng
for 9 14, otder M.BZ,
British or odd exotJc..
Call Bob, 532-4890.
3 Unea... 3 Daya... 3
Dollars... MerchandlH
under $500. 842·8878 .
Claultled. gator back tires. Th•
-----------------------------------------beat, but l give upl
91 Gto Tracker
Like new. 12,000
miles, Uc#~VMB05S
$7 ,HS
'91 190E 2.3 black/
btack, tinted windows,
"Pe rf ect", SA VE,
S24,H8 j*731408) Fletcher onea Mo-
torcars Newpoft Beach
FLEET CANCELLATION
\.
ORDER '' 15 '' RODEOS
1991 RODEO 4X4 ~1~~
• 3.1 VS ENGINE
• FUEL INJECTION
• POWER STEERING
• 4 WHEEL DISC BRAKES
ABS
• RECLINER BUCKO
• FULL CARPET
• FULL GUAGE PACKAGE
• FOUR WHEll DRIVE
• 5 SPEED TRANS
• CHILD PROOF
DOOR LOCKS
• ISUZU ROADSIDE
ASSISTANCE
FACTORY STICKER
$16,123
YOUR PRICE
$12,688
328222, 328451 , 327702, 328456,
328418,327711 , 328237
$7,950. Dan 722·8744.
BUICK 9035
'86 Buick Century
Limited, loaded,
15,000 miles left of
extended warranty,
$5,250, 363·1433
Toyota of
Costa Mesa
722-2000
JAOUAH. 9 10:>
213/823·8000
7141833-9300
1984 MERCEDES
380SL
One own•. low mlle1,
must aHI (1JWS199)
LEXUS OF
WESTMINSTER
13590 Beach Blvd. eea-eeoe
Sethng merchdndse fur under SSO ? We'I run
your 3 &ne od FREE I Fil out the coupon below
and moil to: CIASSIFIED ADVElllSING
iOle ~ Beach • (0$10 Miii Pilot
330 W. Boy St., Cosm Meso, CA 92627
A
GOOD
AD!
CALL OIE
OFOIJR
FREMJLY
MJ.Vl-soRS
7m4YI
• .
. . •• •, . • I :· • . , • ·' . I • •, • . . •' • .
I . . ' .
'1 . ,• •' I I
.~
·' ,•
t '• • I
GE e _Of\8¥ AUTO
• 7 ~ resident Alex Uvadu keeps adding to his line of Salesman of the Year awards at Crevier BMW.
Derenles_ of sales
Crevier BMW's ·l.lvadal has a knack
Im' seling even a recession can't to•le
By Kitt Wofcott
~&llDr
Don't expect anythin& like a little reces-
sion to slow down Alex Llvadas.
For Livadas of Newport Beach, three
times running the salesman of the year at
Crevier BMW in Santa Ana, the solution
to the sagging economy is just the op-
posite -speed up.
"I have to work a little bit harder," ad-
mitted Livadu, 41, a native of Athens,
Greece. ''I stay in touch with my cus-
tomer bue and my product base, work on
my referrals and try my best to weather
the storm."
Even with the recession, the skies shine
brightly for Livadas. By year's end, he will
have sold more than 90 new cars -down
a notch from 125 sales in 1989 and 132
cars in 1990 -but &&ill highly respect-
able.
Even more impressive, he only got into
the business three years ago. After selling
his athletic shoe company in 1988, Liva-
das, on the advice of a friend, took a
crack at selling cars.
And, from day one, he took the busi·
ness by storm.
In his first month on the job, Livadas
moved 20 BMWs off a lot in Los Angeles.
Three months -and three top salesman
of the month honors -later, he moved
to Newport Beach.
"I wanted to work for Crevier not only
because it is the No. 1 BMW dealership
in the country, but because cvery1hing
about the operation is first class, includ-
ing the facilities, the staff and the ser-
vice," he said.
Uvadas, who has an MBA from the
University of Wisconsin, strives to educate
his customers and prospective customers
by distnbuting quarterly newsletters and
monthly fliers that cover such topics as
automotive safety, new BMW models and
profiles of other customers.
The star salesman also personally
checks each automobile he sells before
delivery and never allows a customer to
leave the store without fully understand-
ing every aspect of his or her new ·car.
Such attention to detail, while a major
reason for his success, also takes its toll.
''On the average, I work from nine in
the morning until eight in the evening (on
weekdays) and every other weekend," Li -
vadas said.
But there arc also benefits, beyond the
obvious monet81)' ones, that come with
being the best.
"Every August I take off a month to go
back to Greece," he said.
Thursday, December 28, 1991 89
' Tuttle Click Nissan of Costa Mesa
Year End Used Car Clearance Sale
a IPd. A/C, 08M.,
(11231)
•3995
'ID ............. IZ
l..Mther, A/C, P/W, much more. Xlra sharp!
(11230)
•10 995
MAXIMA IE Auto .. A/C, caaa .. roof,
P/ ... ta
(11180)
*8999
•• CllBfB.ET •• llOllDA
CMV..111 PIEi llJE 2-DR. Auto., PIS. A/C, cuaa .. P/W, Ult, CIC T -ber roof, v-e. (11217)
*899&
'88 vw JETIA
A/C, cauette, eunroof
(11131)
Fun van for the famlty auto., P/S, A/C, P/W, tflt
moot•oof, (11198)
*6995
'81 reBU..N
PATii Lllfi IE
Auto., P/8, A/C, "-WO.
P/W,Uft, customwn..ta
(11238)
•20 995
MAXIMA
AUTO., p/1, ale, CASS.,
p/w, TILT, c/c p/SEATS,
MOONROOF. (11175)
•9999
Auto., P/8, A/C, cu..,
ewwoof, (11218)
•9495
'88 FORD
IUIUITANG
V..-y Nee, xtta clMn,
io.ded. (11181)
•9595
'88 GMC
116 PICIOll
Calff. Spec., custom
wh ... a. loW mu ...
(11178)
•5995
Low mu... 5 apd. fectory warranty.
(11174)
•7995
'87 NlllAN
200IX 5 apd., A/C, calMl!a, P/W
P/do« lka, tltt, cnllse
conll'OI & surwoof (11183)
•7595
PROBE
5 SPO., A/C, cass ..
P/W, grea1 c.er.
(11115)
*9999
• ........................................ ., .. tl!" ...... 11/M!.
Or ange County's Finest Used Cars in one Location
NISSAN
~·
TUTTLE CLICK NISSAN
"OM ml'-•outh of fl» 405 Frwway"
2845 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa (714) 540-6410
Par18 & SeMc::. open sat. 8 a.m ... p.m.
-... . : ·-·· I .... 1. . . __ ,
} .. ~ ... "
NEW YEAR .... NEW CAR
Times is ticking away.
chance to save on eve
This
car
•
lS
• lil
your last
stock!!!
1992 EXPO LRV
AM/FM stereo, full carpet, tinted glass, power rear lock w/graphics
& molding Pkg.
-$10,995.
(010056) one only at this Price.
LS IPOIT
UTILITY MODEL ·~~~~:s20 033 St 8,• IDG134'> • , 'I
~,~~·20,3a1 •1a,m
1992 DIAMANTE
3.0 v-6, 1'~5 HP, cruise control, floormats, P/W, P/L, AM /FM cass.,
air bag, alloy wheels.
19695
,(030282) One Only at this price,
MIRAGE FACTORY CLE.\Rf\NCE
STIC KfR PRICE
4-DR. -..... ....
tKl.NC. .. ....., ....... M.•• .... .., 9 .. ,,,,.,.
PICKUPS FACTOR Y Cl.l~HANCE
STIC KER PRICE
4x4 P/U
Uv.lllll«l
~:!" s14,229'11,859
:T!t":14 229'11 • .... !Qr3521) , ,
..
•
•
'•-
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
IAlfS • IBMCE • PARTI
SE~YICE AND PARTS OPEN M-F 7A.M.-7P.M.
18 711 BEACH Bl VO HUNllNl: rnr.J RqCH
842·2000
~ OWGE OOASf 9 ~ JEEP/Ela! Uij
* LOWEST PRICES*
*BEST SELECTION*
Why Buy Anywhere Else??
2524 Hcrbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
01•> 5'9-8023
1-800-522-JEEP
SADDLE BACK
Sales Leasing ~Service \ill Parts
IRWNf AUJO Cf mR
1·0-131·3377
71~·•·11l
See And Drive The
All New ES300
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
13500 Beach Blvd. • Westminster
BEACH BLVD . AT THE 22 FREEWAY
(714)892-6906 . (2 13)566-3888
'CREVIER
SALES•SERVICE•LEASING
1500 AUTO MALL DR.
SANTA ANA
. 835·3171
NEWPORT/55 FWY AT EDINGER
Sales Dept. Open 7 Days
Pans/Service Hours
M-F 7 am-6:30pm j , ..._ ___________ j
Serving Orange County
. for Over 70 Years
~. Service
LY Parts
ISUZU .Body Shop
Theodore
Robins..,,_
t060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mal
714-641-0010
uYour Ad Here-a
-
For OnlJ sge
AW.eek
fl/ Call fl/
First mini-motorhome
has come a long way
during its 27 years
Boys will be boys, and maybe lhat•a a
good thing for the mototbome business..
Dacie in 1965, brotben Paul and Ed
Newton had the idea to "destroy'• a
brand new van by cutting away the entire
body from the front doon back. and build
what they called a "housecar.'•
It was a radical idea. but those were
the '60s. The idea qyic.k.ly caught on and
it was not long before lbouaands of
RV'crs were demanwng the unique fea-
tures of the Newtons' new motothomc
concept.
Today, these mini-motorhomcs are
high-tech vehicles oomplcte with all lhe
creature comforts of home. What hasn't
changed arc those features that made the
Lazy Daze mini-motorhome so revolution-
ary Tl years ago:
-Excellent gas mileage.
-Stability in high winds.
-Flexible parking.
-Easy access.
Come sec for yourself just how far Lazy
The 21th edition of flnt U.S. mlnf.tnolorhome, called Luy Daze, wtn be featured
at the Anaheim Convention Center, Jan. 4-12.
Daze has come at the 27th edition of the
Anaheim Sports, Vacation & RV Show.
The show will run Saturday. January 4
through Sunday, January 12 at the Ana·
hcim Convention Center.
Admission for adults is $6.95, children
NEW AUTO GUIDE
Acura
HUNTINGTON IEAC.H ACURA
YrN Expect...We Dell'left
19131 Buch Bl 405 & PCH 100-96-ACURA: U2-oo95
NORM REMS. COASTAL ACURA ,
Sliper Ptlcn, &iper Setectlan
Hart>or 8lwl@ 405 Fwy, Costa Mtta 979·2&00
T\ISTlN ACURA
WE WNfT TO BE #1 ~ ~ 111911 YOU'LL SA~ MOREi
5 FlftWIY@ Jlml>Gf'et 71'-'69·9900
IEACH 1M
So. Cat's leadlnQ Alfa cir tot 17 consecullve years.
Alla Romeo, Sul>. Masmtl • Sales, leMce, leasing
848 OoY8 St.. Newport Beach 7141752..()9()()
Audi
nmu CUC1C AUDI
40 Aulo CerQr DltVe. Irvine .. 7 z.1 '°'1
CRMERIMW
Excellerc stlecilon o4 new & Cftfuly
prepartd BMW's ways In stock.
Sales, SeMc:e, Leasing.
Edinger II 55 FrttWay, Santa Ma Auto Mal. 135-3171.
SADOlEIACIC IMW
45 OJllletd
IMne 310-1200
STERUNG MOTORS LTD.
ExcMM BMW Dalet. Sales • Stf'CI • Luslng.
1540 Jambcm, Newport Bach. MO-MU
Buick
NAIOl IUICIC/CADl.lM:
Sales • Leash;J • Scnlce
2600 Hart>ot Blvd., Costa Mna. 71'1540-9100
REASON IUICK CO.
909 No. Gland Ave, Sara Aria
647·f1H
Cadillac
ALLEN CADIUAC
I 1 In Orange County
San Dlego Freeway 11 Avery, Laouna Nlguel. 582·0100
MCl.EAN CADIUAC STERLING
Since 1939
Tustin Auto Center. 7141731-0990.
N.UUS CADIUAC/IUICK
Sales • Service • Leasing
2600 Hart>ot BIYd, Costa Mesa. n41540-9100
Chevrolet
AUIN ICAHI CHEVROt.IT
New & Used.
7600 Westnwltr Bl. WeslnWls1er 1 8lotk West
al Beach Blvd. 194·1333
CONNELL CHEVllOlET
5*' •Service •Leasing •Patts
2828 Hart>ot Blvd , Costa Mesa 546-1200
DEUUO CHEVROLET • GEO
Oudly Sales & SeMce ''The Nicest People In Town"
18211 Beach 81.. Hin. Bell. 147-6017
JOE MACl'HlaoN CHMIOlET
21 ~ eercw Dr .. ntne 761-1222
Chrysler/Plymouth
AlW CHIVSUR-1\YMOUTH
Con1>lete Bod'f Shop Ind s.Mc1 Sales, SeMee. Piiis-Open 8 Oay1
2929 Hart>ot Bl. Costa Mesa.
3 Blks. S. of San Olego ffWt off Hatt>or Blvd. 546-1934'
.. ...
GIWIAHl'V CHMOUT/GEO
711 E. 17111 St., SalfJ Ma
97J-1711
HUNTINGTON IEACH CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH
16681 Beach Bl IU1llnglon Buell.
6 S.S. So. o4 40S Fwy, 14'2..()6J1
MEISTElt CHIMLER-1\YMOUTM
14 Aulo Cir. Dr .. IMnl. 761-7100
SANTA AHA CHltYIUMIUZU
1405 """Miii Dr .. s.. Anl
M1..U71
TVm.I CUCIC
40 """ Cll'lllr Of, "*' --HUNTINGTON If.ACM DOOGf 11 VAH COfMA$IOH ttrADOUARTERS
16555 8Ndl M .. HI.
1/2 """ Soulll of Ill 408 "-(714) '474111.
MTLJ cucn.,.... DOOCM
40 ~ Cll'ller DIM. 11111111-...00
f or<1
110 JOMU POID 6211 8cldl IWd. .... ,._.
IZ1•3HO
JOE MACPMUION FOIO
2 Ml C.. Drhe, T.-
IH4*
'MT\.I CUCI POIO
4'S ~ C.mtr DIM, 11w. •71"'200
1MIOOOM llOM9 Pom roeo H11t1ot M. eo... 1i1et1.: '42.co10
1111WW.POIO U.•ti'fllil·~· .... ·-.... , ........... .-.. .......... .
GMC Trucks
AUIN GMC llUCICS
#1 ln~Colny
SW! 0teoo Fwy. • Avery, I.JOIN Niguel 512-0100
MCL£AH GMC TIIUCIC ANO PONTIAC CADIUAC
Since 1939
Tustin Auto Center 7141731·0990
UHMllSflY GMCIOLmJPONTIAC
24!0 ttlltlor BIYd., Costa Mesa 714'&4'0-H91
lnfiniti
HARIOUR INflNm
Sales • Lustno • StMc:e
2888 H.vt>or Blvd., Costa Mesa
1h Mile S. of 405 Fwy 7141241-1300
tionda
PINSICI HONDA
SALES * SERVICE * l.EASIHG 13750 Beach Blvd., WestmlnS1er 714/537-7777
RAV fl.AOEIOE HONDA
Sales • Service • Leasing • Parts • Body Repair
IMne Auto Center 714·130·7600
ROGER MIUER HONDA
Sales. Service, Discounts
19232 Beach Btvd., HlnlrlOton Beach 963-1959
HONDA SANTA ANA
2114 E. Am St, Saro AN
547.3555
UNMRSITY HONDA
2860 Hatbof Blvd , C.M.
540-0713
Hyundai
TUTTlE CUCK HYUNDAI
40 ldO Center Drive. nine
4'72·74'00
Isuzu
RAY FlADHOE llUZU
Sales • Service • Luslng • Parts • Body Repair lfvtne Auto Cente< 7t4·130.7000
SOUTH COUNTY ISUlU
Number 1 voklme Rodeo Dealer U.S.A.
18711 Buch Blwl., H.B ... 2-2000
Jag uar
IAUll JAQUA.I
2001 South Manchester Ave .• Anaheim
971-2002
RAY RAOflO! JAGUAR
Sales • SelVlct • Leasing • Parts • Body Repair
ltvine Au10 Center U0-7 000
NEWPORT IM'°RTS
3000 W Coast Hwy., Ne'#pOl1 Beach
122 .. 000
Jeep
HUNTINGTON JU, EAGLE 111751 Beach llMI., ~Beach
U1·J999
ORANGE COAST JUP !AGLE
2524 Hatbof Blvd., Costa Mesa
549..-0U
JfU~ EAGU Of SANTA AHA
1 1 CUslomef Slelsfdon
55 Fwy. @ Edinger 7141161-0tOO
!VTTU CUCK JffP, IAGLI
40 Aulo C«ller Dr.. nine
4'72•7'°'1
Lexus
LEXUI Of WHlMINITlll
In ..... of OrlllOt ~
Avahllle for ~ 0eMyt
22 Fwy. ll Stach BIYd. 7141192-6906: 2131566-3111
MTIH LEM Wottle Flnt Md Llrveet De*
TusOn "'1tJ CllW (U •J 1'4·4'100
Lin coln Mere ur·,·
IMCM~
17331 ... M., .-.... ... 2 IN. toAI Of 400 fwy. 7.t.Ma~
CAMPIRL~ 142& w. eu.. eo. ......... Jn•
DAVID '·...wt MAm. ~ famlt/ WADI .... , .... ...._..,_
5 ftwt, @ Alcll; LlglN tlll U7-2400
Dlll......._BTM w ...
.,. Ol -.ollt
.... lttlRMt,MllM
11l-1llO
'
Mercury
M1tsubist11
HARIOft MfTSUllSHI
Sales • Leasing • F1eel • Parts • SeMc4 2833 Hirt>« Blvd .. Costa Mesi (714) &4'0-'491
PIRfORMANCE MfTSUllSHf
19202 Beach Bl. Hin. Bch. 961·0233; 1·IOC).ICI0-6961
1'UTTU CUCIC MITSllllSHI
36 Auto cerur 011Ye, 1rv1ne
4'72-7'°'1
Nissan
CAMl'tEll NISSAN/HUNTINGTON IEACH
t 1435 Beach Blvd.. Huntlnoton Beach
8"2·7781; 540.0442
TumE CUCK NISSAN
Jotui l.ogon, flffl Mgr.
2845 Harbor Blvd • CoSU Mesa
540·6•10
SANTA ANA NISSAN INC.
2001 E. 17th St , Santa Ana
558·7111
TUSTIN NISSAN
"Trust In Tusnn" Nissan
30 Au1o Center Or •• Tustin Aulo Center 669·1212
llW WUI IRVINE NISSAN
44 ~ Cerut Drivl, Irvine
951-7&75
Oldsmobile
ALLEN OlDSMOIU
~ 1 kl Omge COlfty
SW! Diego Freeway • Avery, l.agura Niguel 112-0100
IEACH OLDSMOIU
17331 Beach B!Yd., tb'lllngton BtlCh
2 nt SCUii of 405 fwy. 714-84'2-6666
JOE MAC,..lRSON OlDSM08'U
2345 N. Gflnd Ave., Slraa Ma
142·1111
UNMRSITY OLOSMOllLE • GMC TIIUCIC
2850 Hatbof Blvd., CoSll Mesa
140-9640
Pontiac
DAVI> J. PHILL.s PONMC
Ouallly famly seMct slnct 19G8 -Siies. Stlvlct
Lag. ttb, 5 fwy. @ Allcla UJ.2400
MCUAN PONTIAC • GMC TRUCK Tudn A&Ao Cerer 714'731-C1990
Porsche
Saab
Saturn
Subaru
MTU cucn """" IUIMU 40 -c... Or., Tinin 73Me00
Suzult1
IOI lOHGIWI IUZUla
Now ~ o.ew.y Al Modell In W.WtsllHlmlrnlliMISleltN, 13800 ~Blvd. (714) 192-6611
nmu C:UCICS l\ISTIN IUZUIO 40 ,_ C... Dr .. Tudn
1»4IOO
J0¥0WW0LVO Of COSTA a.eA 1• ""'* ... eo.. ..... 722.oaOOO
JOI MACPHHSOH TOYOTA
44 ~ c.. OM. TUsln
Ut·SHt
llU MAXIY TO'IOTA
hltaOpMNllUmy
11U1 llldl IM.. ~ 8eadl IU·IHI
IL.MOii toYOtA
How Swett 1111 S. • "'*' • Par1a * LNslnQ
15300 IMdl; W..•• H•·UH
LEW WIN llvtNI TOYOTA
30 Al9 C* OM, nine
7"'°6N
(6 to U ,..a) 12.25 • ..S diM9 --',.,. ... ho. 1'l'9 ...... ...,,
prtce ·d UJIO MGnlllJ dlN 'ffik ...._,
Doon ~ ....._.,, :12:00: -to
10:00 ~ ... ..,. l:l:m ;c;;j Jo 6.'()0 jJ&.lnd~~~UIO
p.m. IO 10:00 p.m.
The Ariabelm O>miention C.Cnter II ao:.
ca"ted at 800 W. ~ aicrom tram 0-..
neylarid. =&),_lie lnfonnadoa ~ Call (714) ~ and dew~ • the lint
inini-mototbolile or 0 Claa C' motorbome'
built ln the United Sta• 1.-y Due
made tu debut at the &-. evor Sports,
V8Clltion & RV Show.
Luy Due began as a family business
and ,.mains 10 today wilh Paul aad Ed
still buildiDa their "bousecarS" ID Pomo-
na. Thein ii ooc of the only P.V compa-
nies in the country without a dealer.
Luy Due ii one of a number of enti-
ties at the Sports, Vacation cl RV ahpw
that keeps getting better with IF· The
show hu something for most any IPO(tS--
minded individual.
It's .. all tho adventure of the creat q,i,.
doors .. with over 800 exhibits COYCring ad-
venture travel. outdoor sports activit)es
and recreation vehicles.
Don't brake!
for a brake
failure check
When is the last time you drove your
vehicle into a repair facility for a preven-
tive brake check? Probably never. since
most of us don't think about our brakes
until they need attention: corrective vs.
preventive maintenance.
The "free brake inspection" frequently
advertised by the auto repair trade is an
off er usually passed up by the public,
even though brake failure tops lhe list of
mcchanicaJ failures feared by drivers. It
also is the leading cause of traffic ac-
cidents attributable to mechanical defect.
Brake failure nearly always is prevent-
able, cautions the Car Care Council. They
list the elements of a thorough braking
system checkup. to include inspection of:
• pads and shoes for lining wear
• drums and rotors for wear
• wheel cylinders and calipers for leak·
age
• hydraulic lines and hoses for leaks,
kinks or blockage
• fluid in the master cylinder for level
and condition
An ideal time to have this impection
done is when the vehicle is on ~ lit\ for
tire rotation or other service.
U brak.e work is necessary, suggests the
council, invest in quality. The of "price"
brake job seldom is a bargain. The better
grade of friction materials (pads and/or
linings), for example, will last longer and
pcrfonn better than a substandard grade.
A quality job will include· flushing of
the hydraulic system and installation of
new, heavy duty fluid.
Drums and rotors would be resurfaced;
parts worn beyond safe limits replaced.
Brake hardware, which includes doz.ens
of springs, bushing and other parts. arc
subject to rust and corrosion and shoeld
be replaced. :
If saf cty and peace of mind are not fo-
centivc enough for having one's brakes jn.
spectcd periodically. try this: the cost of
waiting too long to renew disc brake pads
oould be an added $120 expense for re-
placing a pair of damaged rotors.
For more infonnation on the care of
your vehicle's brake system, send a self·
addressed, stamped envelope to Brakes,
Car Care Council. One Grande Lake
Drive, Port Ointon, OH 43452.
This morning. in a unique car launch-
ing, 80 auto worken from Lansing, Mieb .•
will arrive at Los Angeles' LAX Airport
to personally deliver a 1992 Oldsmobile
Achieva to the home of the fint Abieva
buyer in Los Anoles.
The Oldsmobile Aehieva will be seen
by the general public for the fint time in
this 11ea at the 1992 Greater Loi Anpla
Auto Show at lhe Los Angeles Conven·
tion C.Cntcr.
"We are boldly and directly challenaina
the import auto market here in Southern
Claifornia with the Acbicva, 0 11id
Oldamobile General Manqer Mike Lolb.
11We are apecifteally po1itionina th•
Ahieva aa tbe American-made ear which
will be the successful direct competllor:
againat the Japanese lmporta." • •
•Following a festive landiftl with~ a.
marching band, the Oldsmobile worbn
will travel caravan-style to tho new own·
en' home to preaont tho car.
'f'fheae 80 cmployeea will repreaeat tir·
tually every department at the "'° faiilff·
des, flOln delip to the membly HM, and
from enpeerina to ~lity ~" LOl9'
Aid. ·n• " a brold croee teCtbl o1 u.oM c~~ ~ tar CNedlls a4 m&kllll thia an.;.. ...... .. adlll'
Worm. tbll eftllt ..... ......
"11'19 ... Will be ........ ~
Oftlll.:'ilal ....... ~ .. IP&ll'ID......... I." tn. ,.... ..
at LAX .. 30 UL ..,..,, !11
airpor_t m • Cll8YID ae ~J
espected anMI ........
car OWMr .. .,.. et II 1$ IL
.
'
~
R 1992 DlllANTE
$er~~~~~ 40 at similar savings
PER MO.
1991 llTIUllSlll
MIRAGE 2·DR.
llufg Auto , AIC,
cus ' loW fnilel (043883)
AS LOW AS
Open the doors
to Italy •••
1•-·-•I• ___ , ...
•Cmal--14MI
. ~· ........ Marte White holds one ol the Santa Claus ~ that
decorates her Udo Island home. Her husband Emie'1
CDlledion totals more than 700.
IUFFEl!'S
UPlllSfflY llC. ..................
ltal-.... CllTIQ-Ma-111• FREE LSAT AND LAW SCHOOL
INFORMATION SEMINAR
Wednesday, January 8, 1992 • '6:30 pm • Irvine
(Call for,.;,,. a4 ofl·ClllllJIU loaatin.)
W..-n Stale UniY8sityCn"o9r of Law will bolt an tmoeiAldoft ...mm In your u-.
----C.'J'O'fllqu.tionlwwwed ~ • LawSc:hool ......... t.-• Pllicmllllit .
when it how to apply • ScholmshJpe
• Flnandal AlllRance • The Law School AdmllSion T•
• Irvine Campw CLSATI
Aq....m ml ..ww pll'iod wiD follow tbs ..... .
s..a., ii limilld-.t ,_yllicllll •• aflna-c:ioma. ........ bllia.
To reel•ter, call FallertoG •I (114) ,,-.1• or Inlae llt (114) 19-,100
Ad ,,,,. .. Atlmlaloa• Cotuuelor.
WESTERN Gll'.&"'E. ""'-"'•,,,.,,. ,. ,,,,.,., ............... c,,. • -g&A& •W12n....Al#IC ...... ..,._._....,
9iii!UNIVERSl1Y9iiii . W!J ..-• Ct,C • ,, .. , I •........ f/fC""""'1M I!! !!! • WH..,_ 0 tt,• .... trddr•f/f.._._,c.a.w-
COLLIGB or LAW ;,~.=:::=-:.=..CA_,, ... JJ,.._.,,_CA.,,,
Where is it written
that· this paper is free
to challenge public officials?
BILL OF RIGHTS
........ ' f IW
~--.. -.-. .. -........... .. .. _,,_ .. ___ ........ ..._ ,..._,. ... __ ....., ............. _ ..... ,._ ......... _.,..., .......... ___ .. _ ...... _ .................. .......,. _____ ....., _____ ,....
-,... ......... 0..-.... -.. .,..._ .... -......... __ .. ____ _ ___ .. ____ .,.. ___ _
-•01 I __ ..,_.._., _____ .. "-....-----·--··---------................ _ .. ___ .... ...._.. ...,._ .. ._..._. ___ .. ___ ............ --.. _., .. _ -·--·-...... _ ... ~ ...... --·---....... ·----.... ........................ -.. --.-.. -...,..., .... --... -.... ~ ---.·--·-------w ..... . "" ......... ------------._ .......... ..,... ___ ..,._..., ----------....... _...,_._ =:.-:::..·::::.::..-.. :=::::: ..... ... .......... _ .. ...,.. ... _
11111'-0e c em t>er 26, 1991
Food Editor T.J. Hutchinson .... 642-4321 ext.366
11111111
OietitiatV'2
Recipes/4
APPLE CIDCKEN CASSEROLE
INGREDIENTS
~ cap dlopped areeo pepper
2 tablespoons marprtne
2 tablespoons ftour
YJ tallpooD around ginger
dalh of pepper
~ cap 2,,. m.llk
1~ cups (6 ounces) Krqft Ugbt Naturals Shredded
Sharp Natural Cheddar Cheese, divided
l caps dtopped p&clen ddidous apples
l caps cooked MU.llU RJee•
1 YJ caps dtopped cooked cbkken
3 .e•: tldn pldea ddldou apple slica and thin red
apple llica (opdooal)
Y.t cup stinftd almoads, toasted (optional)
DlllEC110NS
• Heat oven to 350°F.
• Saute green peppers in margarine; reduce heat. Blend in flour
and seasonings.
• Gradually add milk; cook. stirring constantly. until thickened.
• Add 1 cup cheese; stir until melted. Stir in chopped apples,
rice and chicken.
• Spoon into I Yi quart cru.serole. Bake 30 minutes.
• Top with remaining cheese; garnish with apple slices and
almonds if desired. Continue baking until cheese is melted.
Makes 6 servings.
Prep time: 20 minutes.
Cooking time: 30 minutes.
MICROWAVE:
• Microwave margarine and green peppe~ in medium cru.serole
on High 1 minute.
• Blend in flour and seasoning!>; microwave 1 minute.
• GraduaJly add milk; microwave 3 to 4 minures or until
thickened, stirring well after each minute.
• Add cheese; stir until melted.
• Stir in c hopped apples, rice and chicken. Microwave
4 minutes, stirring every 2 minute!>.
• Top with apple slices. remammg cheese and almonds;
microwave 2 to 3 minutes or un11l cheese is melted. turning
dish half way through.
•Made without salt or marganne
Note:
Nutrition Information Per Serving
Calories. KC al 220 Cholesterol. mg. 35
Protein. g 16 Sodium. m[( 220
Carbohydrau. g 18 Cali 1um. m[( 234
Fat. g. 9
For Analysis
• Slivered almonds and thin apple~ shce!> are optional ingredients and
not included in nutrient analyst'>.
• Rice. cooked (omitting <;alt and margannc from pack.age directions).
CREAM OF TURKEY
WILD RICE SOUP
INGREDIENTS
'12 cup mushroom slices
¥4 cup ea.cit: finely chopped celery and finely chopped
green pepper
1/4 cup margarine -~ cipflour
l cans (13¥4 ounces) chicken broth
YJ cup l"' milk
2 cups cooked long grain and wild ritt
I'll cups cooked turkey cubes
I container (8 ounces) soft cream cheese with
cbJves and onion
3 tablespoons dry sherry (optional)
DIRECTIONS
• Cook and stir m ushrooms, celery and peppers in margarine in
large saucepan until tender.
• Mix flour and broth together until well blended. GraduaJly add
flour mixture to vegetables; cook, stirring constantly. until
mixture boils and thickens. Remove from heat.
• Stir in milk, rice. turkey and cream cheese. Stir until well
blended. Add sherry; cook on low heat, stirring occasionally.
until thoroughly heated. (Do not boil).
Makes 81-cup servings.
Prep/coolrlq time: 30 minutes.
Variation: Substitute low !>Odium chicken broth for regular
chick.en broth.
Note:
For ANJlysis
Nutrition Information Per Serving
Calorits. KCal 270 Cholestuol. mg. 35
Protti11. g 11 Sodium. mg 660
Carbohydralt, g 19 Ca/mun. mg 69
FaJ, g 17
• Sherry is an optional ingredient and not included in nutritional
analysis.
SEASIDE PIZZA
INGREDIENTS
1 (tundl) rady-made pizza crust
J tablespoons oUve oil, divided
1 mp <'ounces) Knit upt Naturals Shredded
Low-Moisture Part-Ski• Mouarella Cbeae
1 aap <' ouus) anted parw cMele, divided
1 peck. (I CMlllCel) Loflb «•_, Crd O.~lta Sariml
Seafood FIMel
1 cap.-.: red_... llk:el, mall.room sUca
1 alp ..... daoppe4 tG .. to
l t11 .. -lt11Haa1111a '1
lh t '"a•prtlcpoww
~ a., broccoli flower.a
DIUC110"-'
• Heal oven to 4SO°F. J
• Brwb pizza crust with l tablctpoon oil.
• Top wifb mozzarella chcele nt ~ cup penneun chcae..
...._ ...... _.... .... .._ _____ ---i • Coot rurimi 9CUood. anions. muabrooml. k>CnalOc:I md
teUOninp in 2 tablnpoont oil until tender.
• Spoon IUrimi mixbft ewer cbeelel. SPrinkle with ttmaining
....... cbeelc .,.ct broccoli.
W 8.a I m•H I on boDoni rack of Oven until d-.e q melted
... ,.. 11 lholouahlY hMeed.
Mlillm I -ti II ...., .... up 10 c11·,..._1 t ••
Vat drnz $111 di l l e:-pdlbed baby ti Mimi 111food.
N•Dt11 I• • .... , ... c..._.::. • a..r .......... 10
,., F 11•1· 17 S_ 1111..... 7'0 c.n....... 2J c ......... '"
""'· •· IJ
2 ..... rty .....w ud,
tlals bo dll)', Cielli4 91
ftnt IDlaDfDr llJ
la d's family. 1 am·"1 coot
heaJthMly, but I wu • aUlou:a
for the taste to please nerybocl7
lbal I found m11tlt ul .. a lot or
snvfcs and sauces. Is tlaae a aood
low-Cat navorin& I could use
insttad?
U.K.L., Newpor1 Beach
One of the healthiest things you
can do for your family (especially
the new one you're just starting) is
to learn that the best seasonings
haws winllallJ DO fllt II alt
I am ftfcrNs ID bat. aid
5pices. Wbida ..... --... bJ pa&cMll~-~enh&nce any ol looct 'l"Mli
natural Oa¥ori.ilp are e«cdive,
healthy, and mape~ ~cu
be used either~ or iD
combination; for example. Frcac:h
cbcCs combine bay, parsley and
thyme for the seuonina they call
"fines herbcs."
Until you get used to cooking
with them, remember that a little
goes a long way. And dried herbs
WE DOUBLE
MANUFACTURERS COUPONS
.................
~lbaafNllac.a.A
.-.. or awo lidded to ..., dlill 11
.... Ill ..... .._..JOU will
.......... ID~OWD
talte.
Your bell bet ii to become
familiar with tbia qu.litics aDd
tasee GI e8cb before ~ become
too duina. Al a ICMCC lo )'OU,
and to other readen of &his
column. I am Ustina here a brief
guide &bat yo.a may wish to cut out
and save for reference.
I have taken this list from a
11-0z. Pkg. ff
FRESH BLACKEYED PEAS ................... •
• llPt I
,
..... 9AI(.
.. FHll8•AD
I~. 1.19
0 ll01' 8M STYLI a•m•
20-0~ WT.IA. 2.89
llOllK LOIN
•ACK •l•S
FROZEN
DEFROSTED La.2.98
CllACKaS
1.99
•••••• mw•• ar 1u
8-0Z. BOX 79 REG. OR LIGHT e
.&. ... "=-... ~c~ 7.99
COXidaA COOK9 .......... ........
CCMKT&a a.AWS
FROZEN-DEFROSTED
26 TO :JO.CT. La.9.98 AtOZEN UL 5. 98
AY'S SUPIR SIZI
POTATO CHIPS
20-0%. PICO. llGUl.Alt 3 .59 -HALF
80
PltOOF
Mr. & Mn. T 32-0I. I " llOOOY MAJ.Y MIX....................... •
3-Utw Whl .. Z1nfondel FRANZI.A IOX WINE ...................... 8.ff
St•&•
•WT-
12.oz. CANS 6 " +C.l .V. •
PRICEI
'-_.,. ___ ...... \.90 ........ -· ·----~a.----·-·-,~--=.·,~..:=.::;;::--.......!..~-..:f"t:.:' ________ ,,__... .. .......
-... ....-----... ·--J ,,..,.,_ ............. -. '-.......... ..-............. -..._ ..........
••••• I 2118 .... I •••••• ·-. ,~· I t.J.OUNCI CAL.,_ ... IOCI. "'°· 95c r °"9t ..... ...., ......... ,114 .. 1._. HO, t3',
•• -OltC .. ,,.,,. .... ,...,.... C-41 ,,_.... "'' 1,.t1r..._~,....._.1M .
• •
I
I
HOT Ott MllD
1.U. Pt<G.
•
=. =..,::.t::ri
Fnaias: ~. On•lllS
Oowa; ~. MJat, ,.,.
~
Beef: BaJ, ONa;° Oai'llC,.
Marjoram. 51W>rY..
MJ ..... recadJ~ ......... ne.m
llatt to tau a ,UI, I
take Jt wttla .,.pttnal
j uke. It toUDcb atn• to •
thtre aaytblaa to II!
V.P., Daru
rm preu
I know whc
your sister
that idea."
is somewha
exageratec
although
srapefruit ;
good for ye
certainly ""
hurt in any
Several
-----magazine a have repon
findinp of llliililiil--• study by researchers
London, Ontario (Canada) v
compared the results of pati•
taking a particular blood-pre
drug, felodipine, accompanie
either plain water, double-st1
orange juice or doublc-strcnt
grapefruit juice.
The men who took one pil
the grapefruit juice got the s
effect as those who took thrc
with water. The same was nc
of those who used orange jui
The scientists are not yet
making extravagant claims fa
grapcf ruit juice, but they do
suspect that there may be
something in this fruit that
prevents the drug from losint
some of its benefits when
accompanied by a drink. Una
know more about this, don't
overboard at the grapefruit d
-remember, everything in
moderation -but it is anotl:
good reason for enjoying this
healthy fruit more often.
Q My tecn-aae son tata
much too qulddy. I k.
asldna blm to slow de
bu tr than the ract that l
"seem• 1n'On1t" I can't thlnlt
any cood reasons to aive bim
T.M.,L
Your COn<lem is justified ir
sense. but not in another. As.
teen-age boy. your son -un:
he is overweight -should h~
higher calo~nccds than wo1
adult, because of "growth spt
at that time ot life. By eating
quickly. he is probably taking
more calorics than he otherw
might.
However. there is a problc1
that this cat.in& style can becc
habit and last into adulthood.
That•s when your advice real!
would hit home. And here's t
"good reason" you have been
seeking to use: It is a physiol•
fact that it takes 20 minutes f
the brain to communicate to ·
body that it has had enough f
to meet its needs -in other
words, that it ls "fuU." When
cat so quickly that you've fini
within that 20-minute period,
chances arc you will take in
calorics you don't need -an
those can really add up.
De/'IJte Scaaloo h • ~11
dktltha ID prln,. practice ~
kctura wide~, •od 11 the •u1
of""' boob: "Dka Tbat Wo
Ufl '471N WtlJM.U Book of I.
~nd 10fll' •11trltlon, dlttln1 a
food questlou lo: Dera/ce
Sc•nloa, R.D.
Wiman
HONOR GIFJ
fmmthe
American Ceacer Soc:lct
.--
rote to
tr I
It
tr, Is
a PoJnt
y sure
:re
got
1hich
.t
!
uicc is
l\l and
lUldn't
way.
rticles
:ed the
a
in
thich
:nts'
ssurc
·d by
rength
~th
I with
3JnC
:e pills
1t true
cc.
jJ WC
go
lisplay
1er
eep
IWll,
t just
of
aguna
a one
a
less
lVC
Jtd an
uts"
in
ise
:n in
•me a
y
he
)gical
or
the
Ood
you
shed
d
~
ibt
!bor
rlc"
D.S."
11d
I
. r ,
D
6PaCk
Pepsi
Reg. or Diet
Selected Varieties
12 Ounce Cons
Lire, Hishlife, Genuine Draft Light
12 Pock·t2 Ounce Cons
Tott's Brut
Champagne
or EXtro Dry
750 Miiiiiiter Bottle
Soper Size
Potato
Chis
Lay'sr!d
200unceBag
~ Large
Bacon ~.
Avocados Ea.
Great for Salad
Sunworld Grown
Porternouse
orT-Bone
Steaks
Beef Loin-Vons Lean
Beef-V." nun Trimmed
•
Swift Premium149 Bo~el~Skinl~ 289 Sausue Lb. Chicken Breasts Lb. ....;.I~~ "'._..,...,., Dllilllll9,... n..c Col"*Y ~ h'CI
r!·
Vons
Cream
Cheese
B Ounce
Package
:·
Jerseymaid
Old Fashioned
Ice Cream
• ·':! Assorted Flavors
Half Gallon-Rounds
Save Up To
50°/oOFF
~ the many bcaltti-rclatcd '-
. ~ linked to diet. bean dlllttc icr:baps the mos& studied. Somo ~
lfben it became evident that diet <fl the factors involved in coronary n.....,._."'
disease, a number of new studies we~·~-.·' "'·c·•
undertaken. "
One study. known as the s~n ~dilN
Study. reports on the 10 year experience
ol 12.763 men who have been eating the
ical diet of their country: United
talcs, Netherlands. Finland. Italy.
recce. Yugoslavia and Japan. The
suits showed large variations in the
mounts of total fats and of saturated fats
atel'l.
Dr. Ancel Keys from the University of
innesota and his colleagues. found two
E
teworthy points: the death rate from
ronary disease is closely related to the
rcent~ge of calorics in the diet from
turate<l fat. and the ratio of dietary
pturatcd fats to unsaturated fats is
4xtremct, important.
The following three recipes with an
'1tcmational nair arc all nutritionally
oalculated to be moderate in cholesterol
Ed saturated fats, Suki)'aki. a native dish
Japan. is a hcalthf ul combination of
gctables and lean meat served with rice.
• the recipe calls for preparing Sukiyaki in
two batches. but with a deep enough
~llet, all ingredients can be cooked
tpgethcr. To reduce cholesterol. the
traditional egg dipping sauce is
eliminated. Plaki, a baked fi sh and
vegetable dish hails from Greece. and
Spaghetti with Red Clam Sauce from
Italy.
SUKIYAKI
diagonal
• l l>unch i rcen onions, cul in I-inch pieces
• 2 cups sliced mushrooms
• 1 cup diagonally sliced celery
• 1 cup bean sprouts
• I ca n (8 oz) bambob shoots, drnincd
• 1 can (8 oz) waler ehcslnuts, drained, sliced
• .. '
. : A tteaithY;: . ·
Happy New Year!
• The start of the new year brings us an opportunity
to make fresh starts, and set new goals for excellence.
It is also a time to reflect on the year just passing.
1991 was a particularly exciting one for us at the
Pilot. As the Media Sponsor of Toys For Tots. and
·• Christmas Cantree, we watched our readers take
ac~on, and ensure a happy holiday season for
everyone in our community· by donating food and
toys for the needy. We did it together. in the midst
• of a nation-wide recession. and our tremendous
success is a real reason to celebrate!
Here's another: Starting January 6th. the
• DAILY PILOT is back with local news and events
coverage six days a week. We're proud to be a
part of this active community. We thank each of
•
•
you for your business . • • •
Tit ~moar lllCI • COSTA •CSA
PilDL
•
• • •
•
•• •
• •• •
•
•
------------------------: I~ "'f j...mD ~piAilsfi '-m.d pm.t ._.. ... ...,,.....
I tills cl '9 Ya.
I
•
• •
•
• • •
• •
I SOM ,,.....,~ ... ------' : ,.. ,.. Wonllllb llekJW
: 8dJ(s Nam 8ifdJlt _____ ........,_
I t ftlllf'sNaml_... _________________________ ___
I : i I •mlf'sllle, .... .__ ________ _... __ ..__...., ..... ....,......,
: ...... ~-----------------------------....... ----...... I I Clr b • ...._ ........ ...._.~.....,...._
: '-....... ,.. ..... •Ill piMMI
01i& ll)la • .. to: The Piot/lndeoendent 330. ~St., Cista MeSa, {.( 92646 .
642--4321. 64M678
One of' your most valuable business raources ii the Newport Beach Public ~.We offer you a wide array of s · services, to help you succeed.
rom our l.,.e selection of current
~nes and newspapers, to our
business information assistanc:e. by
phone or fax. to special lecture series
from local business leaders, to busi· ness reference boots, to our new com· puter reference system. Of coune,
you can come in .UUply to rad and
11.iscover new poCentJal directions rot your growiftl bulines in our bull·
nest book sect.i6n. So, be ..... cefW.
md ltt ycMr HblJIY WOft 1*11 JCJU •
~m«U
~Cktnentc Dr.. ~lleach.CA
Call 644-3191 or
FAX 644-5717
Say "split' peas'• and almost ev ..
eryonc will respond "soup." Cer· LENTIL SANDWICHES
tainly thcre•s nothing better lhan a • 1 cup lentils
steaming mug or bowl of thick. • 2 cups water
rich and hearty pea soup. ·: l ~=';,~icinstant chopped onion
But today's diners. and cooks. • 4 ounces firm IOfu, cubed
arc looking beyond the soup pot • ~ cup c~ IJ"CCn pepper •~cup sliced green onion for uses for these versatile little • ~ cup cboPPcd cooked broccoli or
green or yellow wonders. Chefs all r:n beans .,.,.._...., the country arc poppi'ng ~cup reduced caloric mayonnaise ._ • .,~ •Salt and pepper peas into side dishes. salads, ap-• 2 tarac whole wheat pita breads, halved
petizcrs. breads and the like. And • \fi~0~~i'~t~n~~¥um into
with good reasons; navor and nu· sauccJ>?n a1on1 with waler, onion and
tritionl pdic:.. Heat to boiling. Cover and simmer
Split peas arc 1 powerhouse of until lentils arc just tender, about 18 mln11tcs. Orai.-. tr ~ry . aJJ those nutrients that we now Combine lentils. tofu, green pepper,
recognize as important: complex arccn onion. broccoli and mayonnaise.
carbohydrates, fiber. vitamins and Scuon to tn.stc. SP.30n into pita bread halves aJon1 with lettuce, tomato and iron. ~ts.
If you•ve never thought beyond CURRIED CHICKEN soup, just cook up a cup or so or
$flit peas (green or yellow, t~ da· AND PEA SALAD
vws tho.,._) and then tbtlk of • i •~or~ split ~H
dell ut\,~· )nlciA. fl a Jtvtt. or a • ca19 Oic:kcn tiroth or boWllon ~---~~~~~r-! ............... :r~ -. ............... • 1 taut eunr powder •Duh ~sauce • 1 c..aP diced Cpoted chicken or turkey
OR 1 can (7 oa.) hma. drained ana f1akcd • 1 cup sliced c:clcry • 1 to 1 medium apples, c:orcd and ~:plain yopn
• 1 to 3 lablcspooos lime juice
•Salt and~
DlrecdlM: RJw. pea Tum Into uuccpu alon& with broth.. raisins.. onion, ~r and hot sauce. Heat to
UCO ttc.! to simmer. C.ovcr
util -"81 an: Just &ender, **t 20 .... CL Draift. If noc:cmry.
c.c.biM P.CU with all remain~ lll·
pedleatl • .. won. Scrw wann or
C,'Ollllf ... chDl ~.
Lookhgback
d .. hlflilflJIJ
ol 1991 h ,,,. all. . ,
concstl$, cllJiJg &
specld evenls.
-J ~
It was an unf orgittable year
in local arts ,and entertainment
By Matt Coker
Enleiumient Ed'dor
A s we prepare to ring in a
new year, it's only
appropriate that we reflect
upon the year nearly
ended.
Well, :it le:ist that's how we
nc,,spaper types generally fill these
pages when the ncwsmakcrs arc
:iway celebrating the holidays. If
no1hing else, it fills the space
around the ads.
So, after hours of painstaking
research, we have compiled this
totally subjective list of the top 10
loca l arts :ind entertainment stories
uf 1991 (we've also included the
nominees that didn't make the
list).
Elsewhere in Weekend, our
cr:ick staff of arts and
en tertainment columnists have
pulled together their own special
looks at 1991.
And away we go:
1 Orange County
rcrfonning Arts Center'• e liRh anniversary -There
were other arts and
entertainment houses along the
Orange Coast that reached greater
milestones this year {Sherman
Gardens reached its 2Slh
anniversary and Susan Spiritus
Gallery turned a sprightly IS, to
name a couple), but no other
venue had as great an impact on
all facets of the local arts scene.
Need proor? Scan down this list
and sec how ~ny major events
were performed on the boards at
PAC this year -CYe!].'bina from
the Broadway smuh • Les
Mise rables" to the rc:cord~aking
run by the Royal Ballet (in Its
exclusive West c.oast enaqement).
The September bashes that helped
m:irk the PAC's 5th birthday even
brought Gov. Pete Wilson down to
our neck of the woods. Not bad for
:i complex that was scoffed at by
the L.A. arts crowd because of the
incorrect assumption that people
behind the Orange Curtain weren't
cultured enough for the
mult i-million dollar structure.
2 NHAM vs. NEA -The
arts community breathed a e sigh of relief on Jan. 9
when a federal judge ruled
the National Endowment for the
Arts antt-obsccnity pledge created
in 1990 is unconstitutional The
action comes as a result ot a suit
brought by the Newport Harbor
Art Museum and the Bella
Lewi~ Dance Co., which both
refused to sign a pledge promising
not to display "obscene" works in
order to receive NEA grant money.
3 The lloJal Treatment -
The Royal Ballet's e exclusive, six-<lay West
Coast enpgement (and
first performance in California in
12 years) is a smashing succeu at
the Perfonning Arts Center in
August. Attendance at PAC is the
hiahcst of any on the Oreat Britain
ballet's four-city tour, attracting
19,620 dance enthusiasts Crom
across Southern California. Despite
the record run, center director
Thomas Kendrick also announces
the run needs a "six-figure
subsidy." ·4 New Face -Texan Carl St. Oair is named new e director of the Pacific
Symphony Orchestra in
January, and the 38-year-old
announces plans to capitalize on
the 12-ycar-old orchcstra'sJ.outh.
"I want to create the soun , style
and genus of the music, rather
than the sound or the orchestra.,"
he vows. "A modern-day orchestra
must reflect the sounds and styles
or the piece it is playing at the
moment."
5 Touch That Dial -Soft
hits FM radio station e K-OCEAN of Newport
Beach is sold in February,
reemerging as "house music"
station K-MARS in May. Owned
by the man who made KROQ
popular in the late seventies,
MARS-FM's only local connection
becomes the relay tower that
carries the signal created at former
lister station K-SRF in Santa
Monica. The loss or a local station
playlng light tunes hits fans,
supcnnnrkets and dentaJ offices
quite bard. The jury's still out on
the success of the Red Planet.
6 Welcome to the JHlle -
The No. 1 rock b~d in the e world, Ouns N' Roses,
petfonns at Pacll'ic:
r
.......... n..t.11 "LI Baf MM." ........... ,.. o,.. c..e, ~Mt c.ter II M..ti.
iomtvbcx:k
d .. ,.,,,.,.
d1'91 .....
.............. Oltrie httf•, ....... Wwa 11 ...... ._. ,,., .. ,...,.. _,.....,. .. Jelf, .. ""'
... , ..... ...,......, dls1 ............
AetM c.,pla, ... ......... ,.,
0,.. PMffle II
... hr,
Ad t ... ., ... ..,_
• ...... 1 ........ .. = ...... ,...
•-Mliffl.-~ ... It u,. .... ........ · RIB Yiir
Amphitheater in July, triggering contemporary worb -rather than
rears of massive traffic problems a dramatic departure as he leads
and violence which erupted earlier the museum into the next century.
in the tour. Fortunately, the "I'm sayin& more, more, better,
concert goes off without a hitch, as better, rather than 'dirrcrent.
do a record number or shows ditrerent..' "
scheduled during the Orange 9 Sista Mary Hornbuckle
County Fair, which shares the Explains lt All For Yoa -
same address. Despite city threats e In June, the Costa Me&a
to leave the area unpatrollcd, City Council announces
traffic nows wcl~ the shows start plans to wean the 27·ycar-old
nnd end without confrontations Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse from
and all ends well. Until next public fundtns after eooccra arises
summer ... over the &Ubject matter ot IOlne ol
7 Coming co • Thcattr Near the shows pracnted, ~ly
You -Did somebody ''Sister Mary llftlliut Expl•iN It e mention something about a· All For You," Whim o«cadCct 1
recession? Despite a local Catholic falftily. Tbe couDdJ
sluagish economy and the closure come "'P with a plan to lluh
or movie houses elsewhere, $5,000 yearly rrom the pla,houle
Edwards Cinemas, which runs budget untiJ there is nothing left to
nearly every nick joint in the slash.
county, announa:s a chain-wide °' 1 0 Well bn't Tbat box office boom an January. Later Special -The
in the year, the Ncwpon e one-of-a·kind
Beach-based company unveils plans Sherman Gardens
for dozens more screens acroa the celebrates its 2Sth anniversary ln
state. July. The educational and aaltural
8 New Face 11 -Newport center (and 1ood place for cata.
Harbor Art M'*um ieu a accordin1 to Pilot rcitaurant critic e new chief in January, and Morla Bird) at Dahlia AYenuo and
• Mlchael 8otwlnlclc East Coast HIJhway bcpn ln 1966.
promascs more of tho same -post and has educated and eathtalled
World War 11 California art and thouands since then. "~le fall
Important modem and in love wilh this plac:c:, h'1 ID
cbarmias." boasts director Wade
RGbCru.
TD ALSO RAN S
B ese are the 1toriet that al-
most made our list, nn<l
9iaht have made your list.
ni.. me or are not in any par·
tiCular order, dependjng oo your
view of lhinp:
• HOrdes of people go to see
holdll of bees at the Orange
C-.., fair, wblch (ho-hum) wit·
nHIOI &battered attendance
~apln.
•-. Splrilul Galltr)' eel·
... ._ isth··aiinJYCnary in July.
• ._.. J'titlian makes his Or-
a1;111-:0.iaty debUt at tho Perform·
ina Ans C.eater fa January.
• P!addo Dombtp makes his
Ot1np County debut at the Per·
formil\I Ana Center In J1.tne, when
he slap with a Loi Anples com-pan(~bt ot -rhc Girl of
tbe n w .... " • n.. ,.11,, c.Me ltfmslon
181 MH -llOli&k:al 1i1ot potato for
Had ... lw:ll la JllM. A pro-~ 1811 llicrnn la Costa Mesa
at ,..n ud lllO ........ arwnbles.
• Tiie I 11 •• .,.. lla'tl Janu-
ary aaw die Ui'Ml ol tho USSR
... 1891/11
Orange Coast Art Scene
Exp odes in Vibrancy
Local art museums, galleries
presented memorable exhiQits
D uring this last week of
1991, I thought it would
be fun to review the art
this year that proved IQ
be the most stimulating,
and to take another look at the
gallery shows and museum
exhibitions within the area that
were the most impressive and
memorable. Visual images that
lingered for all the right reasons.
like poignant passages from a great
novel, or the powerful finale or ll
Woking Back
mesmerizing film.
Actually, one of the highlight interested in ever since seeing this
exhibitions closing out the year, well-presented display of work taken rrom the Rosenak and one I haven't mentioned Collection. The selection or 86
previously in this column, is the idiosyncratic items on view
current retrospective of paintings included paintings, sculpture,
by Southern California artist Keith pottery and textiles created by a
Crown at Stary Sheets Gallery in host or virtually unknown,
Old Irvine (through Tuesday). An self-trained, nati~ American
accomplished watercolorist with a artists who consistently break with
skewed sense of composition, tradition. This is the artwork
Crown hns-developed a style or created on humble front porches in
painting that Mississippi, in the bayou back
allows the viewer country by the kind or folks who
to sec a landscape peppered the scenes in the movie
from several "Deliverance," or from a bored
points of view at mind's inner sanctum expressing its
one time. human spirit within the walls or
Althou&h abstract prison or a mental institution.
in concept and As you may remember, I perspcctave, the h red I · work idcntir.-s a my co umn wnte·up 11-on this exhibit with a
itself through favorite art enthusiast, my
specific details 8-ycar-old niece Cindy Bacigalupo.
-..-.:.--....;.. and Crown's bold Her keen and seosi&ivc · Arts and Vibrant use of interpretation or what she saw Scene color, adding a provided a fresh locus and
bon vivant spirit unlettered viewpoint to the
to his highly imaginative view or heartwarming naivete found in the
the world. wondrous objects and paintlnp on
As an art prof~ssor for 37 ycDrs ,display. In fact, I am plaoni.oa to
at USC where he retired in 1983, have her work with sne apin oa a
Crown'• teaching and involvement review sometime duru. tho
in &he Southern California art upcomina year.
scene have inspired and given Another exhibit that pushed the
direction to two generations of right buttons for me was the
painters. Havina been honored h II in u-..-;.. u-L! with more than 7S one·man ihows c a ens Ct .. ..,.,,._: '"""'66 At'dtitecture, also displayed at the
throuahout hts career, today Crown Lacuna Art Museum last sprina.
paints Cull time and continues to AJ a survey exhibition of tho
exhibit internationally. experimental Loi Anaelcs . 0 • architectural farm Morphosis led by
T hero were several exhibitions principals Thom Mayne and
thb year that were Michael Rotunda, this viewina
. urtforgettablc, but tho &inglc cxperienco wu like beina whh an
standout for mo wu Jut summer's agrcssivc date who wouldn't talto
pmentation of The CUtlinl &i,e: no for an answer. Dapito my
Con1uviora11 AmCrican Folk An nluctanee to po In eo iu attact
at the Lqijna Art Museum. The on 1111 ~. ttiO ahibit finally
untamed and Informal qualities or teated me into ~ptina &M idea
folk art w.re new terrilory for me, of arc:hit.cctwc u 1 verb -
and a fron&icr of·artislic cxpfCMion an:hhecl\lre U Action to ICO the
that I "'" tiecomo ioctoUlnatY ronnation .. in formation." and to
ART
Keith Crown's "Farmhouse Near Uniwrsity Farm" Is on display at Stary-Sheets Fine Art Galleries.
communicate the culture from
which it comes.
Photography ployed a significant
role i_n lbil year's Orange County
an scene. Typologies: Nine
Omtemporary Photographers at
tbe Newport Harbor Art Museum
offered 1 new, rather scientiric.
appl"OICh to seeing tho tandem
significance of both subject and
method. Moreover, by exploring
the reS.tionship between a lpCCif ~
example and a collection ol similar
subjecll. what we usually view u
ordinary seemed suddenly •
reinvented into somethina
exareordinary.
The Oran&e COunty Center ·
fair O>Qte!DPC>WY Art and
tho Susao Spiritus Gallery aoaeahcr prcMdcd a feast ol lm.aa
by ono ot my fawrite photo-artlsll,
Jerry Uebmann. Renowned u tho
king of tbe manipulated imoge, entitled Dream and Perspective:
Uelsm;ann employs an exemploiy The American S«ne in Southern
kind of pbotognphic hindsight OJ/ifomfa 1930-196, is currently
coiled post-visualization, a on exhibit at the LaguJ)a Art
tnlllSClCndent style which'mixes Museum throu£h Feb. 9. '""""'ly disparate Ul\aaes into A II hough I enjoyed this exhibi1
one. fn:qucntly surreal, -which examines the
pbotopaph. 1be kind ol n:actions to the turbulent
J&W-dtoppin& pictures you never inter-war era between the fcqet.
0 tbcJ' Cldu"bits which left beginning of the Depression and the end or World War II -it is an
iaclcliblo bnpressions on me eerie reminder thot history CC"'"11ts were LA utilt Bnacc _.. Riehl.rd'• ....1.:tec1 look at tho Mad itself. Perhaps too tnac 1 parallel .,.... to the situation of the homeless Hatter's Tea Piny in recent work eccn mt IU&IUMI 11 Qystal Court's and the cc:onomk peril our country
Worb Oallciiy, 1nd NftAM•s is facina as we enter 1992. but l
cuneat inltallarion exhibition hl&hly recommend you tau in this
Ditd Ncwpon Bienni1I: Mappin, ~ricnce. There ls no time like
llllfor;. tbrough Jan.'· . the present to be peyi.ns aueation
ID ~ this year's art chapter, to our nation's future.
a little fDod for tho\laht. A l wish you all a ~ry Him New
pudcUlarty tiJnificant cahibitlon Year!
. ~ Cout W.-.nd I Thuiliday, DeCeiritier a; "81: I
Art Museums
• uguna Art Musium 307 Cliff Ori\'e, Laguna Beach, 494-6531. "Dream and
Persf>Ktive: The American Scene in South-
ern California, 193().1945," an exhibit ol
paintini;s and works on paper focusing on
Southern California's.social and politlal life
during the Deoression. Continues through
Feb. 9. " ·~t(-Help' ArtisU: Plinting and
Printmaking in E.lSt LA," an exhibit featur-
ing the works of 10 artisU from ~If-Help
Graphics, continues throoj!J\ Feb. 9. "Ni-
cholas Brigante; Resonant Nature," an ex-
h1b11 of 15 works drawn from the author's
CSl.lte. Continues through Feb. 2. Hours: 11 a.m. to S p.m. Tuesday thrOl.llli Sun·
day. Admission: SJ for adults, S 1.SO' for se-
nior citizens and students, frtt for children
under 12.
• uguna Art Museum -South Cout
Pl.lu Satellite 3333 Bris(ol St. Costa
Ml'S<l, 662-3366. "Jean Lowe: A Dilet· tante's Conversation on the Topics ol An·
thro~entri>ITI and Western Consumer·
ism, · in which the San Diego arost uses rooms ol painted furniture, rugs and wtll
tapestries to mimic the rich garishness ol
rhe 18th century Rococo period, continues
through March 8 . Ho~m: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday throogh Friday; 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. Saturday; 11 a.m. lo S p.m. Sunday. Admission: Free.
8 Newport H.ubor Art Museum 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport Beach, 759·
1122. "'Third Newport Biennial: Mapping
Histories," an exhibit fe~uring seYen
room-sized of insullations by eight ullfor·
niol artistS, continues through Jan. 5. In the
museum store, jewelry, ceramics, llass and
fabric works are featured. Continues
1hroush Jan. 19. Hoors: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunda~. Admiuion S3 for
adults; S2 for senior citJZem and students;
Sl for children 6·17. Free on Tuesdays.
Community Galleries
• Cosla Mesa Art Lugue Califf)' 3350 S. Plaza Drive, Santa AM, 5-4().6430. Works
l'.?Y various ~ague mcmbefs on pennanent display. Admission: free
• City of Irvine Irvine Fine Ms Center In
Orange Coosrs Most Compete
• Security Padlic CaDen-SSS Anton BIW., CoSta ~. 433-6000. "Sculptural
Innuendoes," reaturing the wolics of seven
ulifomia artists ~ "511! a variety of male-
Nls from c.ast rubber to wire meSh, contin· ues through Saturday. Hours: 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. Admission: Free.
• UnMrllty ol ~lromll at Irvine um-
P'.15 Drive and Bridge .Road, Irvine, 856·
6610. In the rme arts ~I~, routing ex-
hibits ol WOfb by students. Hours: 12 to S
p.m. Tuetday thfough Stlnday. Admission: Free.
Commercial Calle1ies
Heritage . P•rk, 14321 Yale Ave., Irvine,
724-6000. "four Artists/Bon Hoa Si," an
exhibition rellecting the lnnuence ol disJo.
cation and culturar asslmilatlon ol the Iota!
Vietnamese on rour ~ists (Viet N~,
William Short, Rlc:hard Turner and Hoang
Vu), and coocurrent shows: "Portfolio: S.:
lected W<M'b from 'Project NGOC' (art· work from boat people at Whitehe.d Relu-see Camp In HOng kooR); and "New )ulc:e
m Orange County' by husband and wife
Be Ky and Ho TNnh Due., continue
through Feb. 2. Hours: noon-9 p.m. Mon-
days; 9 a.m.·9 p.m. Tuelday-Thurtd.ly; 9
.i.m.-4 p.m. frid.iys; 9 a.m.·l p.m. Satur-
days; and 1-S p.m. Sundays. Admission:
free. •Art lmag,t Peter's Landing, 16400 P.i·
• Newport Beach Oty HaU Callery 3300 cifte Coast Higtlw.ly, Huntington Beach,
Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. 644-3150. ~-6,:-3t22~2-.~=· ~··.and1-Tsij Contemporary mixed media worics by De _.. -·..... ..
De Silver and Call Tomura on view and let' on display throo
through Feb. 11. t:f<>urs: & •·ft!· 10 S p.m. T~. Houn: 10 <Un.-7 p.m. T
Monday through Friday. Admlslion: free. ~ Sunday.
• Oran-Cou~ Center for Contem.-. • Att SkM'9 aa.a.,y 4040 Campus Dme, 0 -••--•~&... r-......._ ee.ch. 150-7153. "New M" my Art 3621 . ~iur Blvd .• 5.:nta i ·~-~ ... _ 1-:t. ':'' ol r-~i..~ ,._,,, .
,.\N, 549-4989. The ~s Alruiate ''°"''""' "'~ nsav.M ~ ....... onua ~ CIOup Exhibition, feat~ WOfb on cisofav ttvouid'I Jan, 23. Hours: ~:30
ol Ann Anson Suki Elf:!g. Jen·Hsln 8oodl, · a.m. IO t p.m .. '"4onday ~ Friday; ShosNna Ernst. ~frey fiisdt and 14 others 9:30 a.m. IO S:30 p.m. Saturd.y. Ad· continues~· 3. Houts: 1\ a.rn. mislion: free.
IO 4 p.m. W ~Sunday. Jv:J. ... ~ ColrfthooM 1970 HMbor ~ frw. BtYd., Com Mesa. 646-5776. AaY.fic and
ol lbarldS by jeMilef Hastett and mbcied
.... waterc06or ard ~Meche f.,-ih ate feltured ~ T . The worb of Juttln Post. wM worb n alternative
llrlntinl (I.e. Po&arofd tnnslets.on 100 per·
c.nt 11'11t or )lpaneR fiber ~. ~
Alrof'I Trip!ett. M experl~ 11tist ~ mm art. f'tlm and ~cchnla, 90 on dis-
• Wednelday. COntinues thri)ugfl ~)\; Houts: 6:30 a..m. IO 11 p.m. ~
~ Thunday, 6:30 1.m. to mldnigtit FridlY and ~· Admlslion: free. • a..-WWkhwdi 5973
Drive, Huntington Beach, 37J-"4S9.
"Midlad Rubin: Inner Galaxies," a collec·
tion of abstract ilCl')'lic paintings, continues
throudl Monday. H:ours: 10 a.m.-S p.m. Mon<f.ly th<oogJl Friday; t 1 a.m.-4 p.m.
Saturd.ly.
• Cosby Callery 3404 Via OpMo, New·
port Beach 723-4758. "from Key West to
leauai," a collection of new lmpres.sklnist
paintings by John Cosby, continues indefi-
nitely. Hours: 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday
througfl Mond.ly. Admislion: Free.
• De Ctaf Att Inc. 3400 Avenue ol the
Ms, Costa Mesa, 557-52-40. ~el paint·
in&' by EUubeth ~ continues In·
delinitl!ly. Hours: l0:30 1.m. to 6 p.m.
Tuesday through Saturday (open unt~ a
p.m. on fridayl. Admiuiori: Frtt.
• u loche Ca.llay 503 llst St., Newport
Bead!, 673·ll01. Hours: 9:30 a.m. to S
p.m. "A Crack In the Orange Cwtaln,'' ~by A&ciJR~~~ ~ u".-(j'• )an. fl ....... _, w ....... .,. FrtdaY.
Admission: free.
• ~ kdell Studio and Gallery
700'h Umation ':h. Caona def Marl 760-9100. Mixed monoprints ana
WltMX>lots by Matpret Bedell and limited
prints and en\boae(f watea:ibs by Linda
Whittemore ~ on permanent ~·
Hours: 10 .i.m. to S:JO P:m. T~ ~ !hundaYF • « by appointment. mmlOll: tee.
• NESE Callery 4131 S. Main St., Santa
Ana, 979-278f. "Unornsoffld.'' I gr<1l\d
opening exhibit ol olletv artists ~.
Alaruai, Veronb L>im!ttoY, Jot& Dubin,
Gerome Gast.aldL Da-.1d Sabanilr, ~
Hleno, ~ lyseo, ldf OelNero, Michael
Milton, T..-a ~. Cs.ab. Mriu1,
Johnny luster and Co&u Moote, continues
through Jan. 31. Call fot hours.
• Off Che Wall catlay 212l Mid\ St.,
~ tad-. Sl'-6418. Worb by
8ehrri, 5t8o. ~. 5-one, Baumhagen and COiby .,. on *w. Continues lndefi.
nltely. Haun: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday
throcAlh Friday; 11 a.m. co 7 ~m .. Sa.tur· day; Y1 a.m. IDs p.m. ~-AdmlSSIOO: Free.
•Off the Wan CaJ1ery 3441 Via lido,
Newpott ~ 72J-$9SO. WOtlcs by
Moses,~~ Mukai, Ward, Betwns ana others.,. on permanent d1s-
pby. Hou~ 10 a.m. IO 6 p.m. Monday itvOud\ Friday; 10 a.m. to S p.m. Satur-
day; l 1 a.m. to J p.m. Sunday. Admis.\ion:
Frtt.
llOn Exhibit 3440 V1o1 Oporto, Newport
ee.d\, 675·1006. ~nals by Jacquehll<'
K.imln are on c:fiso&ay lhfoush the end of
the month. HoUrsi' 10 1.m. to 6 p.m. Sun·
<Py through Tuemy, 10 il.m. to 9 pm
~ and ThunmY.• and 10 a.m. to
11 p.m. F~y and Saturday.
• SMdsloM c.llefY 384-A N. Coast
Hpay, ~N Belch, 497-6775. 011 piiintl~ by ~ Kadle<: on display
ihrougfl Jan. S. Open dolily 11 a.m.·S p.m.
• SflAs Oun Ud. 512 31st St., Newport Be.at, 673· 1726. PottrMtl by ~l11y
phocographef Stathis ()f~nos 1n his first
Onnge County exhibit Continues lnddi-
nllefy.
• Sllldio Space Gallery 326 N. COJst
Hwy •• ~ BNch, 497-2948. "Subtle
lntrUsbns; ' 1 cirect ~ ol visual aes· thetks and maa media COIMlunlcations a~ captured ln sculptural phot.ograptls by Lau·
rie Mlntecon continues thrOugh Wedner
day. ~ ~ noon-S p.m. Saturdays
and Sund¥ and by lpp()intment.
• 5uslft Spirltus Galtty 3333 Bear St.. (in Crtstaf eou.t), C.cJ1ta Mela, 5'49·7550. "In· tenor IAnd.lcapallnlM!d Seas, .. an exhibt·
tion ol hanckdored ~ by Oar
Soaln, a>ntinues ~ Jan. 12. Hours: lb un. ID 9 p.m. Moniily ttvougti Friday;
10 a.m. lo 6 p.m. SaturdiY, ,.net noon to s
p.m. Sunday. Admltlion: t'fft.
• ~ Coat Alt CanW 2a3 [. 17th St,
C... Mesi, 64MS4S. Animation eels from Disney, filmltion, Don Bluth ;1nd
H.anna anen ..... ~ wood ~ ..t cmmk pieas ind I Jelec·
tion ol limked edition lidqppt. and icri·
graphs bv various artiltl .,. on permanent
aisplar.. ftoun.: 10 ~IO 6 p.m. Mond.ly ~ Friday: 10 a.rn. 10 S p.m. Satur·
day.
• llrilyau Alt S4INloe J)) Cabrillo. ~ Mesa. 642:5978. OriliNI oils a~
watttCXllQn; ~ from Ii&, Indonesia; wood atYino and fft..as reatuted. Hours:
11 l..tn. to f p.m. Tuelday dwough Satur-
day ~ by appointment.
• Whltw Caleriee )~S (. CoMt High·
w,,, (.oroN cW Mir. PS.2·'78. Prinls,
etchlnp and origin.lls by )ohn Stobirt,
Robert Tayb, Arine OaVIS·Johnson, josd
Eidenbefger andaui Kasimlr are on view. Continues indefinite . Hours: 1 O a.m. to 5
p.m. T~ . ~~y; 11 a.m. to
5 p.m. Sundiy. Admission: Free.
• WOt'b Calle.ry South 3333 Bear St. (in CMtal Coutt), C05ta Mesa, 979-6757. An
exhibit ol cement and ~=nets by Uddie John Dill continues th Jan. 12.
Hou11: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. y throutti Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and f1
a.m. to 6 p.m. Sund.a)'.
• bf~ hvi1ion 400 Main St., Balboa,
673-5245. Narrated sildltstting cruises ol
Newport Hitbor are olTered daily. utarina ~ SeMce has daily trips 11t 9 a.m.
to CaWina Island throUitta )an. 5. ~a
fishing trips ~ ~ily from Oa't'eY's Lodcet, whic:f, olfers daily wh.l~watdll'ng
trips Mondays, Tuesdiiys and Wed~
ln~n~.
• Huntington had! Surfing Museum
411 Oli'f'e St., Hunti~ Beach, 960-
3483. An extrnsiYe CXll!Ktion ol memcn-~Jia hlghfigfiti!ll matt than 80 )'Ul'S ol
Americ.in iutfing is ~lured. Tours are
available. Hours: 12 to 5 p.m. Wednesday
througtt Sunday. Admlssbl: $1.
• Newport Harbor Nautlcal Museum
1714 W. Balboa Blvd., NewJpt Bexh,
673·3377. ''The C>otvfishetmen -100th Anniverwv'' and "Six Fvnilies ol Sea
Shells and FOllSilittd Shells 200 Million
Yean Oki" are featured exhibits. The mu-
seum also houses a ~nent collect.ion ol historical photograpm, boats, marine dis-=nautial memorabilia related to
Hilbor. Hours: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
W through Sundiy. Admission:
Nee.
•Sherman Ubrary and Card~• 26"'7 E. <:oast H~. Corona de4 Mar, 673·
2261. Attractions indude bmnical pdens
with founuJns, SC\.I~, shrubs, lawns,
flower beds and hanging baslcets. A c::onser·
vatory houteS bromCUids, OtChids. ferns.
other ttopial pants and a koi pond. A pt·
den ~ '°' the blind ~tum ~ts whose essential appe.ll is to the senses d
touch and smell. A hislx>tial ~arch cen-
ter ~ boob and p.imphlm on the hls-
l'Oly o( the Pacific Southwest. A tN ~
SttV!ng ligtlt lunches openitrs S.tutday,
Sunday and Mond.ly frOm 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.
Admission: $2 fOf adults; S 1 for chitdten
12·16 (free on Monday>.
USTING INfOaMATION: al JCM1 haw an
event lisllns or dmtge o11nrormat1on for
llackBooll. dJred lnqulria lo hnjamln
Epstein, do BladcloOlr. P.O. Box 1S00-
11M, Corona del Mar, CA 92625. Phone
(714) 760-2622. A aimpleie yeu ol
Blackllook lisllnp wlU "'" on (he Rnt
Tuesday ol each month.
l.qend: OC. Orange County. BT, bbdt
lie. IT-opt., bbdi tie~· pp, P9i'
penon. l'M. lo be ananiecL
•First Nltht Fullerton. Dec. 31, 5 p.m.-midnilolht, City o( Fullerton family.<lfiented,
alcoh<il-free New Year's Eve celebration
features 100 different ew:nts: snowman
~king. pony rides. p_me from 5 p.m.,
"People's PrOcesdon' at 7 p.m .. continu-ous entert.linment, f~ finale, more.
SS pp. Phone 738-5357. •New Yun Eve Party, Dec. 31 al 9
p.m., Suaimful SingleS International in
Costa Mesa. Membefs, $35 pp.; guests,
$50 pp. Limo servioe avaibble. Contact
Joyce; 241·3858.
• Double Sunset at The View, ,l.ln. 4, 4-6
p.m., ()pi;IS One ol OC Philharmonic Soci-
ety atop the Newport Beach Marriott. Con-
tact Carol Heywood, 55).2422.
• Twdfth Night ol Christmas Olnntt,
)Ml. 4 at 7 p.m .. C.OUrmet Diner's Q.iild ol
Opera Pacific al Conlin residence, "Cafe
Musique." Phone 631·1249.
• Bart lk>Ms, Jan, 5, 2-5 p.m., OC Phil· hannonic Society and American Society ol
Interior Designer's pn!View House ol Oesipt
f« committe.e meinbefs and press. $10 pp.
Phone 553-2422.
•"'To.ca" ~· Jan. 5 at 7 p.m., Opera Pdic Q.iild at Westin
SOuth Coast Pl.lza, Mesa. Opera star
Lida Alba~ discus5es Puccini opera. $25
pp. Contact Margatet Prb, 544·7027.
•Americana Awards IOcbff, Jan. a at
5:30 p.m., Cypress 9>Uege Foundation at ~na Oub 33, ANheim. Contact
Terri O 'Connor, 826-36S1.
• Vtsit lo Armand Hammer Museum,
Jan. 9 at 9:30 a.m., Museum Council ol
Newport turbot Art Museum trip to Los
Angeles, luncheon at uli(ornia Yacht Club.
Coiltact Maxine Caiber, 759-1122.
• Musk.al Encounter, ~-12 at 3 p.m., oc PhilNrmonic Soc:idy recital by ., • to
17·yeM-dd audition winners at Christ Col-
lege. 11'\'ine. Children welcome. Free. Con-
tact Jan Tandowsky, 553-2422.
• Pladdo OomJngo Concert and Dinner,
Jan. 12 at S p.m., Opera Pacific at OC
Perfonning Alts Cent« and Westin South
Coast Plaia, Cosu Mesa. Contact Richard
See BOOK/14
TOP TEN
Dec. 16 -Dec. 23
VIDEO RENTAL
1. City Slickers
2. Backdraft
3. Robin Hood Prince of Thieves
4. Siience 'of the Lambs
5. Soapdlsh
6. What about Bob
7. Out for Juatlce
8. Hudaon Hawk
9. FX2 The Deadly Art of
10. On the
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YOU CAN GET EITHER:
1 Large 2 topplng Pl:z:za,
1 Pitcher of Soft Drtnk, 20 Tokens
(or)
1 Small 2 toppmg Pizza,
8 pl9ea Chlci(en,
1 Pitcher of Soft Drink, 20 Tokens
KIDS EAT FREE
MON.-FRI. ff ·4
coa '°' de4atls
1ml 11 SJ'J tmT• VAWY 841.a73
BEST PRICE IN TOWN
OPll 1 DAYS • ...... , 10:00.1:00
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1:-0oking 1\llead
By Donna and Ray Ott
Specul to Wttktnd You can ring in a ... Eve dinner, dancing, and a guest room at the Radisson,
Collowcd the next !n0nlin1 with breakfast and roundtrip
motorcoach transport from the hotel to reserved grandstand L ocal hotels have planned a variety or ways for you
to bid adieu to 1991.
Their New Year's Eve offerings include oil kinds
of entertainment, from big band sounds to karaoke
sing-alongs; gourmet delights that range from
traditional feasts to all·you-can-eat sushi; and holiday rates
on ove rnight lodging with late check-out, if you choose to
"take the elevator home" after the revelry. And if you're
~111l looking for action on New Year's Day, one of the
packages includes a hosted trip to the Rose Parade.
Following is a sampling of celebrations at Orange Coast
hostelries. Prices quoted arc per person, unl&ss otherwise
noted, and include tax and gratuity. Party favors and
midnight champagne toasts are included at all of the
lounges and second-seating dinners. Reservations arc a
nlU)l.
Happy
New
. seats at the parade, for $259. Call 800-992·1333.
RED UON (54o.7000), 3050 Bristol St .. Costa Mesa: The
dining room will have two scatinp. At S p.m., dinner Cor
two, with a bottle of wine, CoUowcd by music and dancing in
Maxi's Lounae. is $159 for two. The 8 p.m. seating will
feature a jazz combo and dancing in the· dining room, for
$169 per couple. In the Fountain Terrace Room, an 8 p.m.
dinner includes cocktails and dancin& to the 'SOs and '60s
music of the group Big Daddy. This party is $199 for two.
Any of the three panies can include overnight
accommodations, for $100 extra per couple.
RITZ-CARLTON (240-2000), 33533 Ritz-Otrlton Dr.,
Laguna Niguel: The Ballroom party will feature a
five-course Escoffier dinner with wine, champagne, and nn
open bar, plus entertainment for $189; including a guest
room, $275. In the dining room, a seven-course Michelin
dinner will be served, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. ($175). Both the
Terrace Restaurant and The Oub Bar and Grill will serve
five-course dinners nt 6 and 9 p.m. ($65-$165) .
FOUR SEASONS H OTEL (759-0808), 690 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach: The Pavilion Re staurant will
)Crve a seven-course gou rmet dinner with matching wines
and champagne, for $175, from 7 p.m. to midnight. Music
::ind dancing in the Conservatory Lounge will run from 8:30
p.m. to I :30 a.m. (with $35 cover charge). An overnight stay
can be added for the holiday rates of Sl39 for a room, $190
for a suite. On New Year's Day, the hotel will present a
Ch:rn1p:igne Brunch buffet, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., for $39; $22
for ages 5 to I 2; free for ages four and under.
Year!
... and enjoy maid service to boot SHERATON NEWPORT (833-0570), 4545 MncArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach: Join the Palm Garden Party at 7:30
p.m. for dinner, champagne, and dancing. Cor $152 per
couple, and add an overnight room for an additional $79.
The hotel also will host a Senior Gala beginning at 7:30
p.m., at $196 per couple, which includes buffet dinner with
dance band and open bar. An added guest room with late
checkout makes the total package $266 per couple. Both
dinner/ room packages include a full buffet breakfast with
an opportunity to view the Rose Parade on big screen TV.
Contact Chellie Disney, ext. 7076 !or reservations.
llYATI NEWPORTER (729·1234), 1107 Jamboree Rd.,
Newport 13each: The Wine Cellar Restaurant will offer a
)Cven-eourse menu with matching wines at 6 p.m. for $90,
and at 9 p.m .. for $150. Reveler) in the Plaza Ballroom will
lwve a threc·cour)e dinner at 9 p.m., $125 per person, with
d:rncing to the music of The Terry Gibbs Dream Band,
broadca~t live on fM 88.l, KLON. In Duke's Nite Club,
Suzy and the Sweethearts will provide entertainment ($25
cover charge}. The holiday rate for an overnight room is
Sl 15 per couple.
IRVINE MARR10Tf (724-3670), 18000 Von Karman
Ave., Irvine: Champions, the American Sportsbar, will host
dinner for two, an open bar, and DJ music for dancing; $260
per couple package includes guest room and "recovery
breakfast"buffet." Call 724-3640. The hotel also will offer a
New Year's Eve Gala, with a four-course dinner, open bar,
entertainment, and guest room, for $300 per couple (for a
deluxe guest room with 5 p.m. checkout, it's $365).
~· ....
WATERFRONT HILTON BEACH RESORT (960-7873),
21100 Pacific Coast Hwy., Huntington Buch: You can
spend a quiet evening in the Hilton's Lobby Bar and listen
to the piano and vocal sounds of Randy Kline. 9 p.m. to l
a.m., with no cover charge. Reservation aren't required, but
scaling is limited. Another option is the hotel's West Coast
Pack.age: dancing and musical entertainment in the West
Coast Oub, 9 p.m, to l a.m., for $50, including beverages. A
second package offers dinner and dancing in the Grand
Ballroom as well as a guest room with 4 p.m. checkout on
Jon. l, for $450 per couple. Included are beverages and
entertainment featuring the Authentic:s, a rock 'n' roll bond.
The Grand Bnllroom Package without the guC$l room is
$325 per couple.
LE MERJDIEN (476-2001), 4500 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach: Enjoy a five-course dinner and dancing in
Cafe Fleuri for $85, or the dinner plus an overnight room
and breakfast, for $345 per couple. The hotel's Deauville
Dallroom package consists of a five-course dinner-dance,
open bar, overnight room, and breakfast, for $355 per
couple. The Antoine restaurant plans two seatings: a
three-course dinner with classical music at 6 p.m., for $60;
i,ix courses at 8:30 p.m .. for $120. The six-a>urse dinner with
an overnight stay and breakfast is $395 per couple.
You can spend New Year's at the Four Salons Hotel.
WESTIN soum COAST PLAZA (540-2500). 666 Anton
Blvd., C.OSla Mesa: AICredo's Ristorante will serve a
six-course dinner for $185, while The Cafe offers a New
Year's Eve buffet at S p.m. for $18, and at 8 p.m. for $65
(the latter with hnrp accompaniment and a bottle of
champagne). There's a New Year's Eve karaoke sing·alona
at Alfredo's Taverna ($7 oovcr charac); alto, Don "0" and
his Trio will provide dance music ln the Lobby Lounge, 9
p.m. to 1 a.m. If you want to spend the nipt, the hotel
offers a holiday rate of $75 for two.
10:30 p.m., will include an elaborate buffet. open bar, and
live entertainment, for $200 per couple ($250 per couple if
you wont the aU-you--can-cat sushi bar). The party plus an
ocenn view room is SJ.49 per couple.
NEWPORT BEACH MARRIOTT HOTEL & TENNIS
CLUB (729·3554), 900 Newport Center Dr., Newport Beach:
The New Year's Eve party in the View Lounge, 8:30 to
RADISSON HOTEL (833·9999), 18800 MacArthur Blvd,.
Irvine: Reliable TrBvcl Brokers o{ uguna Hills offers a
Pasadena Rose Parade pBckagc that includes New Year's
Movie listings
(Thursday, Friday)
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Morsels of best
columns served
Our intrepid restaurant critic dished
us some spicy reviews in 1991
Editor's Note -Out restaurant
Restaurant
Critic
critic Marla Bird
was last seen
heading lot the
1ftct-Christmas
SD/cs around town
Dnd talking nbout
whale-watching in
Baja (she will re-
turn after D short
vacation). Mean-
while, we have
pulled together
some of our fa-
vorite excerpts
from columns she
wrote this year.
Herc's the best of
Marla Bird lot 1991:
Cafe lido, Newport Jazz Cafe
Chef Pilo Torres isn't into
scnt-a>oklng with Sonoma lamb,
blackened ahi, sundricd tomatoes
or any of the latest culinary
members of the band •.•
The YankM Tavem
If the time hu come when the
recitation of the "daily specials"
has begun to make your eyes glaze
and you f ecl as though you arc
going through a memory test, -
heod foT The Tavern -beyond the
lively bar Is a eteasant comfortable
room with bevies or boats dancing
in the b:sy outside your windows.
Nlck't ltallan Pizza
and Pasta Restaurant
"Honey, l'm just too tired to
cope, much less cook and there
isn't a thing in the refrigerator
that•s user friendly. Let's go out to
eaL"
.. ARE YOU KJDDING??? We
just pald our income taxes and
replaced ~ur tires; we're up to
here In bills and dam it, I am tired
of Caney 1ehmantl)' restaurants. .. ••
.. Not to worry. mon cheri, I have
di.scov'Cred an un4sumlna little
place where we can both cat fOl a
mere twen~ dollan.'•
14We~ BEEN to unasaumln1
little p11f;ic1. I am weary or
Wendy'1, tired of Thal and taco-cd
ouL"
"I knoW. Me too. But, how about
I fl'ft bubt of prllc bn:ad. I
unal1 peen ..tad, freab. delicate,
With 10me creamy rcnuclno
AJ(redo?"
"Stop itl Stop itl You drlYe mo
null wMD 10" talk IUY·
•tea'I face It-We'ro ftat broke
.... It__. 10 fancy food, bua wn. DC.cl ol a fettudae fix ud
there's this place called Nick's ... "
Studro Cafe, Balboa
There's nothing like that singular
mix or Balboa aromas to bring
back great memories: seaweed and
salt-filled air; fish, feathers or
smoke and the fragrance of
barbecued meat teasing the nose.
Balboa: Dillman's, the Balboa
Cinema and Ruby's. glowing like a
magic jukebox; the PaviJion -and
then, there is the Studio Cafe, alive
with jazz, hunkered right down on
the sandy bench.
Sitting at the bar, you can watch
the sky over the Pacific change its
mind about the weather and see
skateboarders sailing past the
windows like errant
seagulls ... "Modestly priced food,
fine jazz, a landmark setting and
an out of sight view."
Dolly Grill
"You want aood food? We have
good food. You want a menu?
Herc it is. You want fast service?
No problem. You want velvet scats
and art work? Go away. We are
very busy here ..• "
The menu will take you back to
those days before wordsmilhs
tarted up the menus with seductive
explanations and adjectives. ..
nothing is described as "crispy"
and the color or pepper-corns is of
no consequence •..
Taste ot Newport
Mucho Munchies -it's a
perfect name for the whole
enchilada which was last
week-end's feeding frenzy at The
Taste or Newport. For foodies, it
was like dying and going to heaven,
surrounded by a choir of
rcstauratcun ••• Tree a
One evenin1 artcr a
ncrve-wnckln& movie, we stopped
ln at Trees and I ordered some
comfort food: meat k>af and
mashed potatoes ••• I mumbled
that somo kctdl-ap mf&ht be a pd
idea -then, a wonderful heap of
freshly mashed potatoes with a dab
or butter melt~ ia the ceotu
appeared. Just like Mom's. A bla
chunk of meat loaf was aenorously
awcred with a rich. fmorful ~mi-N:'PiOf ~'=•) ·-
1 know a coupa. who remOdeled
thelt tltchea and 1Md OD Pim for
fM IDODlM. Wbu Jt WM ~
done. lt., bad OM of the pizza
baill fnimd. 11 laaf\ll OD their wan • a pi.ice ol COft~
I y
Looking Back
art, a statement on today's lifestyle
and a memento of marital survival
under stress ...
Zuble's
and the Hamburger Contest
Where's the BEEF???"
Remember that commercial? Well
I know where it is -up and down
the coast, shaped into patties at a
variety of hamburfcr stands and
cares. Take Zubie s: an exuberant,
crazy, larger than life place right
out of a movie set, with lots of
characters who look like they came
from Central Casting ...
I ordered my hamburger with
everything. My boss, who is wiser
than I, ordered his plain. Mine
turned out to be a
fivc·papcr-napkin affair, with
dressing running down my wrists,
dill pickles sliding out the sides
nnd tomato slices dropping on my
lap ...
Mona's
Well then, we would take it easy
with the soup. Steaming bowls of
Mashaawa appeared; a heady broth
with lentils, garbanzo beans
noodles and little nuggets of
well-cooked beef, simmered with
spices. It was much too good to
leave as much as a single lentil in
the bottom of the bowl ...
lack lay Rowing
and Running Club
Huneu pangs strike and here
you are at the pricey end of South
Coast Plaza whe~ some of the
merchandise in the smaller display
windows costs more than a small
car. Not to worry, because the
Back Bay Rowin& and Runnina
Oub ls just around the comer ••.
Antonello'•
I have aJways f cit that zucchini
wu put on earth to make us
appredatc broccoli •.•
Bad luck stomps
all over vintners
Wine industry faces trying times
after a very rough year
T his past year has been pretty tough for the wine industry in mo!>t
respects. To be sure, there have been some bright spots including
the inevitable medals from county fair judgings and competiJiom..
Wine critics have continued to give laudatory reviews of superb
wines from noteworthy wineries such as Caymus, Hc:.s and Sterling, to
name but a few. Some new wineries were even born such as Jed Streclc's
(formerly winemaker at Kendall.Jackson), which is now ensconced up at
the old Stcurmer Winery in Lake County.
There have been personal lo)ses, though. Eleanor
McCrea, an industry stalwart for almost 40 years at the
legendary Stony Hill, passed away leaving n winemaking
legacy that will be impossible to replicate.
However, it is the insidious political and economic
undercurrents which arc the most alarming, and are the
factors which have had the greatest impact on wine
consumption. The recession (yes, George. there IS a re·
cession) has steadily gnawed away at not only the pur-
chasing power or the middle class, which was just begin-
ning to accept wine as a regular part of its lifestyle, but
al.so at the more affluent consumer who as a matter of
habit had been acquiring and cellaring cases of wine for -----
future enjoyment. On the
Wine label regulations are ever more restrictive with Vine
the government forcinfl vintners to print falsehoods and -----
preventing them from including the true facts . Although
red wine contains vitamin C as well as quercetin, a medically proven
cancer fighter, it is illegal to print this information on wine labels. Guess
the "drys" in Washington are afraid that folks will have a glass of
Cabernet with breakfast instead of orange juice.
T he latest SC<lm to be foisted upon wine lovers is the so-called thre:u
or lead poisoning. Seems as though &he lead foils used to protect
corks for the past couple of centuries have suddenly become a
health hazard, but there is no mention of the fact that any trace or lead
in wine comes primarily from the soil in which the grapes arc grown, no1
the lead cnpsule. Of course, there aren't any warnings with regards to
the consumption of apples or drinking water, both or which on the
average contain more parts per million of lead than a Class of wine.
Curiouser and curiouser, to quote Lewis Carroll.
Phylloxers. that stubborn little root louse that devastated the great
vineyards of France over a century ago, has re:ippeared in the Napa
Valley nnd threatens to devastate vines that have been producing some
of the finest gTapes anywhere in the world. And with banks purnng
winery credit lines left and right, there won 't be much money available to
replant for awhile. Oh boy.
The qwckest way to kill anything, of course, is to tax it to death. The
federal tax rate on wine was increased a modest l,700 percent, which
just happened at a time when wineries have been frantically trying to
move Inventories that arc clogging cellars and warehouses. IC the
government wu really intent upon raising additional revenues, there
should have been a tax on iced tc.a -that's what you see everyone
drinkin& with lunch these days, not &lasses of chnrdonnay or white
tin!andeL The neo-prohibitionist lawmakers missed the "revenue
enhancement" boat on this onel
C hapter 11 b a term heard echoing about wine cellars more and
moro these days. with formerly "hot" labels such as Grand Cru
and Lycth, and venerable old names such as Hanns Komell,
IUC'almbina to a turbulent market. More wineries are aoing bcl!y~up even
u you read this -a ud and Criahtenina portent of the increulnaly
mal~lent times to come.
Wineries and wincmalten for the most part have only themselves to
blame for theit finandal and political woes. however. It is '111 wish for
the new ,ear that the industry will band toeethcr, pay atteolba 10 the
real woitd arid fiabt back before it Gnally ii too late. By~
Mirta llrd ~ clnlft1 critic educatlna and WOltina t.oaethcr. WC Wll..L aet tbrouch lbese times o( In )Muary aftft a iUden' poll. trwall. SALUDl ' 0 .,
• • • I •
· MEW YEAR'S WE
DINNER DANCE
at
MENU
• CRESPELLE BUONGUSTAIO•
n.1n pMCaU fllcd with safood a lobiter ~
• PASTICCIO ALIA BOLOGNESE•
•INSALATA PRIMAVERILE•
Mllld Nied with nut MUCa
•SORBETTO DEL COLONELLQe
Shabot with vodka souce
SALMONE Al.LO CHAMPAGNE
Fresh salmon with chempegne souce
or
FILET MIGNON .FORESTIERA
Rlet with mushroom and white wine sauce
•TRONCO DI NATALE DUE SAL.SE•
ltalien Holiday spedallty daSat
$41.0~~
tax & gratuity not lnduded
Make your reservations atrlY
646-1225
1969 Harbor Blvd.~osta Mesa
An Affordable
Rew
Year's
Ive at ........
S.ived wtth choice of soup or salad an
• ROAST PRDIE RD OF BE:
Yorbb.lre Popoyer
• DUCK ALA ORANGE mce PUcit
• FRESH SALMON
SaUcelemat•
• ROAST POU LOIN
llCGlloped Applel
• NEW YOB PIPPO STE.A
lloa1lll'JI• Sauce
Bntertatnment In TM Loung•
ae.e11allon1: 650·
428 E. 17th Street c
• •
•
PAITY
Huntlagton Harbor
Singles & Couples
Me.I & Mingle
Evening Includes
..,.,.., Open aor, Dondng,
D.J
Chompo~n• Teoat ot .......... ,.... ................ . .....
All ,_ -..... prtce
pleaM U.V.P. "r Dec.'°"' ......... ,. ..,,.,,.~
(714) 84•·47.H
Proceeds to support
OLYMPIC H<>P8ful
Deverlck Lampley
id fresh baked bread.
EF $12.95
$11.95
$13.95
$11.25 ~
x $12.95
.. .. ... -... . . -_______ ........ _____ _ ... ----. ____ _.~ ... -.. . . --
•
..
• I • : ' . .
PLAZA
TERRY GIBBS' HIS DREAM BAND
are RINGING IN THE JArl lhls New
Year's Eve!
This gala event \VIII commence with
a sumpwoua Lhree course prtx nxe
menu. You wtll be&ln with a mecUey ot
appeUJers. lheo proceed &o Lhe entree
or Beef MedaJUooa. wtLb an Herb Crust
on a bed ol Morel Cream sauce and
Prawns Sau&eed In Pesto and Sundrled
lOma&oea. Tbe nnale la a spectacular
Cbooollte Huelnul in,rrtne wllb
Pls'8Chlo Sauce and al.tawberry
Mascarpone Salad.
Tbe doora open al 8:00pm wllh
dinner betnc eerved al 9:00pm. 1ben
lbe excnemenl beCJna. with Terry
Gibbs oomtnc oe 1&1&91l 10:30pm. Al
mldnlgbt. we'll be eervana champaene
Loas&a IDCI Pl"'1 flYWI &o rtnc In lhe
NEW Yr.AR 11 8'Ylel
You1l be Pll'\ ot &tie excl&ement
ln &.be elepal PSua Ballroom. wtua FM 88.1 1CLON broldculln&
THE TERRY GIBBS DREAM
BAND llYel
1135 per f»/900
$115 per pentJll ftJr "'88.,
KLON_,,,ben
SulY and Lhe Sweethearts. set Lhe
tempo ror a vibrant evening or
celebration! A cover charge or $25
per person wtD Include entertain·
ment trom 9pm until tam. party
ravors and a champagne toast at
midnight
Pre·psld reseivaUons wll/ receive
pre/erred sesung.
THE
WINE CELLAR
Experience Lhe ulUmale In elegant
dining. In the lnUmacy or the award·
wtnnlne Wlne Cellar! A retreat.
renowned ror Its French gourmet
cuisine.
1llls New Year's Eve. an unforgettable.
seven course menu. wlll be Lhe rocus oC
auenUonl
Our nrs1 seaLlne wm begin al 6pm
$90 per person. Including LU & gratuity
Tbe seoond seaUng. beeJnnlng al 9pm wm feature lndMdually se~&ed wines
~ with eacb course. and champagne &oast
::} and pa~ favors al midnight
$150 per person. Including LU and
erawll)'. (Early l'BServaUons are bllthly
rtJCOmmendtJd)
Reaervadona for au kallona lbould be Ude wt&b Bubblel • 714 •729 •1234
1107 Jamboree Rd.• Newport Bea<:b. CA 92680
•
-.•
,
t t
· to
~
llii d-/appy cffiw <Jj eat' i
.~ -, ~· ~
Serving New Year'• eve Speclal Dinner 'tll Midnight
Reservations Sugge•ted 831.;&031
2800 W.Coast Hwy. (at Riverside Dr.) Newport leach, CA
«Come to our~
lt11 last froin
one year till the next~
~~
General Manager
"Spend New Year's Eve
at Parkers' Seafood Grill.
Choose items from our
dinner menu from
5:30 p. m. on. Enjoy
m~ic by The Big Picture
beginning at 9 p.m. And
at midnight, we'll supply
the hats, party favors,
and champagne for a
t~ to bring in the New
Year right
"So call Parkers' Sea-
food Grill today. And .
make your reservatio~
to party well into next
year:'
Located at the Ferry Landing on the Balboa Peninsula> Newpon Beach. (7J.4) 673-37'41.
from
Margot & The Gang at
-~J, Y~Yakon
Happy Holidays to all our good
riends & customerslll Come see us In '92
1673 'G' Irvine Ave., -Costa Mesa
645-1100
~ .New Years
Eve
Your Evening will begin
with an intimate champange
•• reception, progressing to an
...... elaborate f.our course ~ .... ~,.,. ~ gounnet dinner in our fine
~/ dining restaurant Palm
/ ··•Garden.
Dance in the New Year followf~ dimer. Party favors
and a champagne toast at
the atroke of midnight Wiii
complete your evening's
event.
$152~~
lncludlng tax
&Mrvlce
chqe
Should you choose to
take the "EJevatOr Home" a
apeclal room rate of 179.00
• double occupancy will • 1~ Include fUll breakfast, 2 hour ~ Cocktall reception anc:t late ,.., cheek out.
CALL llMl70 FOR RDIRVATIONI
rQ"\ S·he~aton
"el N ewpof(:
Experience Orange County's Finest
Italian Cuisine and a Spectacular Bay View
Maks RsservatiorJs Now Fer An Excti19 Nevi Year's Eue!
Whether you're a theater goer. or a HOLIDAY
REVELER, you can start out or top off a lovely night
by relaxing with your favorite beverage and enjoy our
excellent It.alien Cuisine. We serve our Full Menu 5pm
tit 1em (til 1 :30em New Year's Eve) And the Piano Bar
is Humminll We11 pamper and indulge yoo this season!
Reservations 642-7880
3131 W. Coast~ N~ort Beach
I
I
au lllMUl-.u.11,
U¥f4#ullt ~ IOIM
I« I.Mii~ '4uu:Moiu
South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa (714) 54().3340
SAVE OVER s2
ONLYI
I
I
SAVE ALMOST s3
ONLYI
II
II
SAVE ALMOST s4
ONLY!
I CHICKS I
I
CHICkS II
I '"'
~ II
'--.... --....... •--..... --....... 11--..... --...... _.., __ °"'_,. --.--o.._,. -.. --°"'-..
L -'"·--....L _ .. __ .JL _._.,. _ __ ..... __ ....... ___ ....... ----..... ---~-
W. MM od/ hllh, ~ ~ rwtnmd In ...... lngredlell1il
Ind tt.. llowo4'auttd by cduurfe O¥tr en open h to ...i In h lllwr9 lftd ,..... OUr ........... delllglled ... your~ In mhl, too ." ow~ cw.~~~ rtoe. l"OMllld ~
Ind CNcb' pop&is •llMd Yf$ l'f ....
PHONE 964 4211
FAX 961-7422
--;:;..--~ -~--_ ...
Music
Depressed economy wreaked little havoc on local music seen~
B ritish writer/philosophical
pundit Somerset Maugham
pretty much summed up
the national entertainment
-----scene in 1991
when said, so .
many years ago,
"Money is the
sixth sense which
enables us to
enjoy the other
five."
As we all know
by now, there was
a li11le less or that
"sixth sense" to
go around in
-----1991, as the "R" The word (say it Scene quietly: recession)
-----took its toll on
everyone from Paula Abdul to 7Z
Top. Concert ticket sale1 were
down, album sales were down,
radio advertising was down. Things
were down just about everywhere.
Except, of course, here in
Newport Bench/Costa Mesa. Like
that ol' fiddler Nero, while the
national entertainment industry
went down in flames, venues in our
neck of the woods seemed to not
only hold their own but in some
cases prospered. Yes, it seems that
Maugham's other frve senses stiU
got a workout here in 1991, at least
according to a very informal check
of local hangouts and venues. New
clubs opened, old ones were
revamped, people paid ridiculous
dollars for concerts, and de.spite
the recession (heck, why don't we
The Only Afghanistan Restaurant
In Orange County
FREE
DESSERT
15,, OFF
or ANY DINNER From°"' Mal.I
It's been a
t year.
Let's celebrate.
Dirmer for Two only $27
At Benihana two can eat as cheaply as one, which
makes celebrating doubly enjoyable. It's dinner ror two for
only $27 and it's more or a reast than a meal.
It indudes Japanese onion soup, Benihana salad,
6 piece shrimp appetizer, hibachi vegetables, Teriyaki
Beef Julienne cooked with scallions and mushrooms,
Chicken with sesame seeds, fried rice and green tea.
Let bygones be bygones. C:Ome celebrate 1992 at
Benihana. Dinner for two only $27. 111-111 7 , • iiiiiiiii
Endno: 7~7J2J, Mmu 4kl Rey. 821·0888, Ntwpon lt«k 95'-0lll2.,
Anahd...: 71+-f9'f0, To"""9CC: 316-7777, C((y o} lrwl.,,ry: 9J247S.
Ojfa ttdf val" Cit .Jnerfy Hiils loaulon.
Offer v•fkl "'"'Jn.,.,, JJ, ·J992. Noc voli.11 w~ '911 «kl'
Looking Back
just call it a depression? Everyone
would feel better), denizens of
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
managed to have a pretty good
time in this second year of the last
decade of the millennium.
Let's start with the Big Kahuna
of local ente~ainment, the Pacific
LET'S IDAll rr roa
BRUSSELS SPROUl'St
When '°'1 m planoini a menu
to knock someone's socb off,
Bnwels sprouts probably don't top
your list of likely YCFtables. If )'O'l
really want to impress, however,
skip the fiddlebead fems and try
serving Bnassels sprouts the way
Mother Nature intended: u a
tender delicacy. The reUOD the
little cabbage-lite beads ba.e pte1l
ll.ICb a nasty reputation is the blbit
most people ba\IC of ~ them
Into colorlen, muaby ato~ea.
s~ with ~rgron. wltblc or
yellowish sproutl ii UC> boUnd
to end in bittcmoa. Instead
select bright SRCD sprouts no
biger than one and om>half
inch in diameter and steam or
simmer for seven minutes. Senoe
simply with a Utt.le butter,Alt
andpe~.
Al we Ill Dow, one of. the area•
adYaatl&CI to lfvilla ID californla ii
tho bilfl qulky aad Ylriely ot hlla ~ lftilablo ti> • -lllcl
bere at ABBONDANZA we tab
pride In our .. ..,.,.. UICI ot
w•taw. -wbediliw dbd IDto a
1tcamJ11 bowl of Minestrone
AD'ltaliua or pUJ aut.cod whb Piie butter aDd ,.qtaoa dteCll r. out CGN4n•tlm wptlWe plate.
u '°''" ... aperlmcld Olf WW.. ,..., 91,te ltalila Cl6llle,
~ IOt aop bf IOlfPt? We're alJ
tc> &Id ID \'19 Udo Pim a 3421
Vie Udo .... It 3421 m.em.
with an 1dcUtional loc:atloa bl
MWoa Viejo.
lllNTl BnuNb ""°"" ... .,. °"'""' M1WW of "°" """ """""""' A tlltll C
Amphitheatre. Accordina to
General Manacer Susan
Rosenbluth, .. thinp were really
. good fmancially; paid attendance
was up, the number of
performances was up. It was a
good year." Rosenbluth gives most
of the credit to the carefully
selected performance schedule:
eclectic but primarily mainstream,
busy but not overloaded. The
Amphitheatre had the foresight
(and a bit of luck) to book four
acts which had number one albums
in 1991 (Guns N' Rose.s, Skid
Row, Van Halen and Garth
Brooks, not all on the same night,
fortunately). The VH show was
also the only one in Southern
Calif omia, an additional coup.
The Amphitheatre had a little
something for everyone in '91, from
hea~~uty heavy metal ("Cash of
the Titens" with Anthrax, Slayer
and Megadelb) to pop-rick
(Nelson, Warrant) to
thirtysomething rock (Paul Simon,
Michael Bolton. Sting) to Oiristian
rode (Amy Grant, Kim Hill) and
counuy (The Judds. Broob).
From the very big t0 tbe Cai.rtr small. WC move to Studio Cafe rn
Balboa, where owner Albert
Chammas says things were so-so in
'91. "Given the economic
conditions, it was a good year, but
it could have been better. July was
weaker than normal, and that's
usually our strong month because
we're oriented toward the summer
season. But August rebounded a
bit."
Chammas says he is looking
hopefully toward 1992., "but with
apprehension right now. I hope
thinp will turn around for
everyone. It was slow down here all
the way around this past year."
Folks at one of the area's new
entries in 1991, Rock •N' Java, say
that 1991 was a very good year
indeed. The rock 'n' roll
coffeehouse on Newport Boulevard
that closely resembles an
underground beach party p:ickcd
'cm in every Saturday night, and
co-owner Chris Stephens says he
hopcg to do the wne in 1992 and
beyond. "It's been great," he said.
'Nurr said.
I ..... •· • ....... • ••••••••• • • ' • • • ••••
TEXAS ffSi~TRtf:o AND TRUSl'ED
TUAI
THEATER
Non-professionals distinguished selves in '91
Editor's Note -This is the fifth
in 3 series of six columns reviewing
1/Jc year in theater along the Or-
:ingc Coast.
I t's curtain cnll time for 25 ex·
ccptional performers in com-
munity theaters and college
dram.o departments along the
Orange Coast.
trap," Back-
stage The-
ater.
Looking Back
"You're a Good
Man, Charlie
Drown," also a t
OCC. Deadlocked
for high honors
among the actresses
were Marcie Ross
for "Gypsy" at
Golden West Col-
lege and Maria Co-
minis Glaudini for
"West Side Story"
at UCL
were Laura Meadors in "Our
Town" at Irvine Valley College;
Peter Massey in "The Real Thing"
at UCI; and Myrona Delancy as
"Sweet Ch;irity" at Golden Wc~t.
These :ictors and actresses dis-
tinguished themselves in a variety
of non-professional roles during
1991 and -as has been the case
since 1965 -the Pilot again hon-
ors the cream of the community
and coUegiate crop.
BEST AC·
TRESS -
Rebecca
May for
"The Delle
o C Am-
h erst,"
Backstage
Theater.
Runner-up
Pepper Michael Miller and Rebecca May are the cream of the crop in 1991. Also impressive
ln the next and final installment
of this year-end roundup, two peo-
ple who have given audiences r.1any
years of superlative theatrical
memories will come forward for
their special bows as the Pilot's
man and woman of the year in the-
ater for 1991.
,.
11111
Theater
Critic
acclaim.
As usual, the
Irvine Community
Thc:ater shall go
unmentioned, due
to your colum·
nist's extracur-
ricular position
with that com-
pany. However,
the theater ranks
are increased by
one this year with
the addition of
the Backstage
Theater in Costa
Mesa, which cap-
t~d its share or
Hamilton
for "Dorn Yesterd;iy," Costa Mesa guna Moulton Playhouse.
Civic Playhouse. DEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Honorable mention -Laura -Sherri DeMieri for "House or
Black, "House of Dlue Leaves," Blue Leaves," Westminster Com-
Westminster Community Theater; munity Theater. Runner-up -Kim
Maria Hall-Drown, "Come Dack to Burnes for "Come Dack to the 5 &
the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dea11,"
Dean," Costa Mesa Civic Play· Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse.
house, and Nancy Jane Smeets, ''84 Honorable mention -Denison
Charing Cross Road," Newport Glass for "Steel Magnolias," Hun-
Theater Arts Center. tinglon Beach Playhouse; Cather-
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR -inc Rowe, "Painting Churches/'
Oreg lzay for "Deathtrap," Back· Laguna Playhouse, and Michele
stage Theater. Runner-up, Michael Moore, "The Diviners," Laguna
David, "Little Shop or Horrors," Playhouse.
Huntington Beach Playhouse. In collegi:ite theater, the top
D,.,ng f ., -.. ~-.~ce
51.$!""' St'"< • • • . :.. : J\~. "-JG RCX>'v
DNINS t"X:XJ..1 • l[::.Pt.,.' ~
fAJA"11 1((;.()'JI • CCX:><!.~t .OU:-..:1.::E
Ro' .. "'""' Horikawa
Toa yo • Lm "llQliM • Slfq ...,,.
IOUTif COAST PlAZA YI.LAGE • 3800 S Plaza Dr Santa Ana (7 14) !>S7·2S31
• 3 tnl'Mes to Perloornng Ms c.enter
Honorable mention -Rec ranks included a father and son
Johnson, "Dig River," Stuart Erik· team -Nils Anderson for ''The
sen, "The Diviners" and George Failure to Zigzag" at Orange Coast ~~~~~lh~oo~mn~~Q~ui~d~·~·~·n~i~g~R~i~~~r~;~·~a~ll~a~t~t~he~La~·~C~o~lk~g~e~a~n~d~E~r~k~A~n~d~e~rso~n~fo~r~~~~~~~-~~~~~~,m~"~~·1~1~1 s~~~~~o~&~~~~~~~~~c~2·~~~~~~~~~~ choices for end~f-lhe·ycar X·
colades. beginninJ with the com-
munity theater groups. NEW YEAR'S DEST ACJ'OR -Michael C.
Miller for .. A Walk ln the Woods," CELEBRA TJON
Laguna Pl:ayhouse. Runner-up -
Roger Shaftic ror '7be Diviners." I " ·A Night To Remembe.t'
also nt Laguna.. , Make your
Honorable mention -John ,1 reservations now
Huntinaton ... Cyrano -the Musi-I for
cal," Ncwpon Theater Ans Cen-•4
tcr; BIWfley.MWer, "Uttlc Shop of New Years Eve
Horrors." Huntinston Beach Play-
house, and John Parker, "Death· at
c!)HN ]])MINI6
... __,,,., ... .:.... -
GALA CELEBRATION
Seven Course Dinner
Domainc Ste. Michelle Brut
Mouton Cadet Bordeaux Blanc 1989
Concannon Chardonnay t 989
Hahn Cabernet Sauvignon t 987
served throughout the evening
with open bar
Live Entertainment
Dancing + Party Favors
7:)0 Ull ...
$13S.00 per person
Tax, Tip 8c Valet Included
Call 650-S t 12
+Dinner in The Cannery at Spm
Followed By Festive Harbor Cruise
From 6:30-Spm •$55 per person
AS Ha.RE +Inner Reservations in
Main Dining Room
Live Entertainment in Lounge
Regular Menu Prices
MIDNIGHT PARTY CRUISE + HarbOr Cruise 9-11 pm
Hors D'ouvercs, Cash Bar
Steak & Lobster Dinner in
Cannery-11 pm
Champagne &: Pany Favors
at Midnight e$6S per person
675-5777 For Reservations
.. I
CALE NDAR S4C-122 4
BOOK:
From 5
Deary, 546-7273.
COMll>Y
8 Irvi ne lmprov 4255 Campus Drive, Ir-
vine. 8S-1-5455. Bob Nickm.1n and Johnny
Steele perforrn 8:30 p.m. Dec. 26; 8:30
and 10 30 p.m. Dec. 27; 8 and 10:30
p.m. Dec. 2U, and 8:30 p.m. Dec. 29.
Rich tt,,11, Todd Class and Cary Brightwell
perform Dec. 31 ·)Jn. 5. Showtimes are
SundJ) 1hroui;h 1 hursdJy 8: 30 p.m.; Fri-
dJy .1t !I 30 Jnd 1O·30 pm.; Saturday al 8
and 10.30 pm Admission· S7-S10.
8 Liff Stop ~ 12:? S E Bristol, Newport
Beach. 852 6762 Glen Super .md Don
B.lrnhardt .1ppt.•Jr a1 6:30 p.m. Dec. 26; 8,
10 .ind 11 .-IS pm. Dec 27·28; and 8 30
Jnd 10 30 pm 0l'C 29 Adm1~on S7-
S 10
8 OrJnge County CrJzies Westminster
Cultur.11 Arb Cc111cr. 7271 Westminster
Ul.d. \\t.~tmumtcr, 8-10· 140& The Crazies
"'II l'""'dc ··A CrJnd and Outlandish
t-:c•w hw\ [,e CctebrJtton!" is two shows
-,11 7 JO and 10 p m -Dec. 31 al Way
Olf Bro.uJwJy lhca1cr, 1058 E. F1rsl St.,
S.1111.1 AnJ. T1cl..c·~ S 15
COMMUNITY l VlNTl..o
8 farmer's Market 1n main pJrking lot at
Orani;c County F.:mgrounds, 100 Fair
Drove, (ostJ MCSJ, 615·-l 103. Sponsored
by OrJngc County Farm Bureau, the
farmer's m.1rl..ct 1s held each Thursday
rnorn1ni: from 8.30 a.m. to 1 p.m. M -
m1s\10t1 F rl'e
8 City of Irvine 20th Anniversary Cel-
cbr,11ton Irvine Ci~K Center Plaza, A.Iron at
1 lal'\ard, lrvrnc hh1b11ton of historic farm
ec1u1pmcnt 1hrough March 8 Admis.sion:
Frre
8 Piccem.1kcrs 1720 Adams Ave .. Costa ~k-s.1, u-11-3112 "The fun and F;incic-; of
C.ud M.1l11ng." demonstrattons about mak-on~ card~ w11h cmbos~1ng. old quilts, rubber
~tJmps, l'IC., 11 a m ·-I p m )Jn. 1
l)\'-..lt
Editor's Nott -Motr pllfidpatory da~ listings found und« Si~
• BaRroom Dancing. 610 W. 18th St., Costa Mesa, 644-5110. A class oo b.111·
room dancing and West Coast swing is of-
fered Tuesday nights from 6 to 7 p.m.
• .CO$tA ~u Quidlsteppers 1860 Ana·
he1m Ave., Costa Mesa, 545-5669. A se·
nior citizen square dance f<>UP seeks ex·
perienced dancers to j<>in them each
Thursday at 10 a.m.
T odav: Fashion 1s1and, 400 Newport
Center br., Newport Beach, has ongoing
holid.ly attractions, season family entertain-
ment and activities through New Veilr's
Eve. Special holiday hours: 10 a.m.·9 p.m.
Monday-Saturd.ly and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun·
d.ly. Ongoing attractions: Winter Wildef-
ness garden and Fashion tsbnd Expres.s hol-
iday train for children. ... A life-sized el-
ephant and gifts with an environmental
theme await holid.ly shoppers at The Think
Shop, Santa Ana Zoo's newly opened 5tore
at Crystal Court across from South Coast
Plau. The store, sponsored by The Friends
of the Santa AN Zoo and located on the
third Ooor next to The Br<><ldway, is open
unttl Jan. 6. Info: 540-8246. . .. "Timet
Square Angel," a cross-dressing comedy
loosely based on Dickens' "A Christmas
Carol," runs Frid11y and Saturday nights at
8 rhrough Ian. 18 at The Way Off Br~
way Playhouse, 1058 E. First SL, Santa
Ana. Tickets: S 13 IS 1 off with canned
goods for needy children). Info: 547·8997.
Tuesday-Wednesday: A spe-
cial New Year's Eve Vve EVllns and W~
Wayne Show will be perfor~ at CAie
Lido, 501 30th St. Newport Beach. Info:
675-2968 .... Dial M Mysteries, an audt-
ence-particlpation mystery dinner show,
A A A Vacation Bargains
Orlando and the Bahamas
. ,~f4
•8 days & 7 Nights of Sun ,Fun & Action that
you will never· forget!
•2 Round-trip Air fares to Orlando
•4 Days & 3 Nights in Orlando (dbl occ.)
•2 Round-Trip Cruises to the Bahamas
•5 days & 4 Nights in the Bahamas (dbl occ)
•7 Day Rental Car (Unlimited Mileage)
Corporate Overboughts-MUST SELL
1st Come, 1st Served (Limited j\vailabillty)
~ Now Only
$648 per couple
CALL NOW
For Com.,-lnfonnadon by phone:
1-~1858
m-t lOam.11 pm ( .liS1)
Sit: 10am.$pm (JiS1')
Fttlln' Great 1.ntunattonal Inc
2·Kl'·14
features a special New Vsr's EYe show at
Red Uon Inn jllt Bristol and hutarino.
Cosu MeY. Admis5lon: $99-$11 S. Info:
(818) 95 DIAL M. ... Orange County Cra-
zies provide "A c.<and and Oullandish
New Vear's Eve Ulebrationl" in two shows
-at 7:30 and 10 p.m. -at Way Off
Broadway Theater, 1058 E. FilSt St., Santa
Ana. Tickets: S1S .... SU«'flsful Singles
lnterpational holds a New Vcar's E11e
Party. Cost: S35 for members and S50 (or
guests Include$ limo service. Info: Joyce
Packer at 241 -3858. ... Orvige County
C.ithoflc Alumni dub, P.O. Box 2785,
Costa Mesa, holds a New' Vear's Eve Dance
from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. at Sequoia Athletic
dub In Buena Park. Tickets: S40 at the
door. Info: 786-8982. -· The N-VNr's
Eve Champagne Dinner features regular
menu prices at the Crazy Hotw Steak
House, 1580 Brookhollow Dr .. Santa AN,
and Touch o( Country will perform be-
tween 8 p.m. and 1 :30 .i.m. Info: 549-
1512. ... Participation in a Worldwide
Mediutlon will be olfercd .it 4 a.m. at the
Costa Mesa Church of Religious Science,
2850 Mesa Verde Drive East. Costa Mesa.
Info: 754-7399 .... Vibisl Teny Gibbs and
his Dream 8.lnd pcrlorm at the tty.ill
Newpe>f1er's New Ye.ir's be ~sh. which
features a three-course dinner. c:Nmpagne
and party faVOfS. Tickets: $115-$125. Spc·
cial room r.ites are also available at S 11 S
per room New Year's Eve, S 192 for a two-
night stay. Info: 729-123.4. ext. 535. ...
Cust.l( Anders, 650 Town Center Dr .. rinip
In 1992 with "A Night In Paradise" from
8:30 p.m. until wheAeVer. Fire and knife
do:1ncen and a fortune teller will enterta.in
dine11 feasting on a frve-course dinner.
COSl Is S125 per person. which includes a
bottle ol Laurent Perrier c:ham~. The
same dinner is offered from 6-8 p.m. at
S6S per person. Info: 668,1737 .... Knott's
Berry Farm, 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena
Park, features the joyful sounds of BeSe
ilnd CeCe Winans and Christian rode star
Bryan Dunc.an at the pa.rk's N-Ye.ir'•
be Celebration from 7 p.m. -2 a.m.
• Blst.anp, 19100 Von K.lrman Ave., Ir-
vine, 752-5222. Geor9I Qi/fin and the
James Exchange periotm at 8 p.m. Dec.
Friday-Saturday. Free.
• Cale Udo 501 30th St. NewpOrt Seadl,
675-2968 . The Bmy Mitcnetl eand with
John Bolivar plays at 8:30 p.m. tonight.
The Bemie Pearl Blues Band with Har-
monica Fats performs at 9 p.m. Friday.
Mk::hael Pattenon's Rythym and Blues
Band plays at 8:30 p.m. Sunday. Vve Evans
and Wayne Wayne perform at 9 p.m. Sat-
utday. Bobby Redfield L.Uin Jau appears
Jan. 2. Admission: SS Friday and Saturday;
free Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Thurs-
day; S7 every Wednesday in JM\uary (ex·
cept Jan. 1 -clo6ed) when Pandlo Sandlcz
performs.
• El Malldor 16903 Algonquin SL. Hun·
tington Beach. &46-5337. Lester Hughes
featuring s.uophonist Eric M.l~th.ll per-
forms at 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. tonight. Rip-
pington 's saxophonist Jeff Kashiwa joins
lester Huf(hes at 9:30 and 11 :30 p.m. Fri-
day-SaturcLy. Vocalist Miu Oiarly sings 5
to 8 p.m. Sunday. Luther Hughes and the
V.5.0 .P. Band perform at 8:30 and 10:30
p.m. Tuesday.
•Studio ear~ 100 s. ti.Vin St., ea100..
675·7760. The Melvin Davis Trio plays At
8 p.m. tonight. Wallef Lakota & the New
V°'k Jazz Connection play at 9 p.m. Fri-
day. The Chiz Harris Quartet plays at 9
p.m. Sliurday.
Pop, Country & Folk
•Alt.a Coffee W11ehouse & Roasting Co.
506 31st St., Newport Beach. 675·0233.
NNI Keatney plays contempor.uy rock at
7:30 p.m. tonight. Leslie O.rk sings her
unique contemporary folk songs with Mike
Le Ooux on guiW at 8 p.m. Friday. Zeon
sings her folk 10r9 at 8 p.m. Saturcby.
• Bl~ Marble 1907 Hatbof Blvd., Cosu
Mesa. 6-46-5776. Q.ry Trwiefl plays acous-
tic folk 8 p.m. tonigtlt. Rod Frias plays pop
nostalg;a 9 p.m. Friday. Beth Sandi ~
folk ~ 9 p.m. Saturday. )ammln
Java JM t*nt ni&t't is 8 p.m. Monday
LW. ~ plays lolk 8 p.m. )an. 2.
• CoKh HOUM 33157 Umino updl·
rano, San Juan Capistrano. 496-8930. Th
cadiltac Tramps perform at 9 p.m. Friday
Tidcets ~ S10. The Knitters, featurint
three:foutths of the band X. pcrlorm at ~
p.m. Saturday. Tickets are S17.50. Chri
·Isaak performs Monday-Tuesday. •The Hop 18774' Brookhurst St .. Foun
t.aln Valley, 96-4-5902. Chase 'N The Hits
the music and comedy ol Jason awe. it
performed at 7:30 p.m. Saturday IS!
cover). •Out ol loundt 21022 Brookhurst St.
Huntington~. 968-9800. The Ticket
play rode. Thursday-Tuesday.
• Perqs , , 7 M.iin St., Huntington Se.ldt
960-9996. The Randy Davis Band pla
rock 9 p.m. Thunday-Satutday and 6 p.IT'
Sunday.
• 5Wcy Sullivan's 10201 ~ Ave
Fountain Valley. 963-2718. The Coole1
fNtUfing Otis Brown J>Morm 9:30 p.m
1 :30 a.m. Friday-Satutd.ly. K.ltilC>ke singin
8 :30-11 p.m. Sunday.
• Ministry o( Singlet 30 Marlnet
Church, lCO Bison Ave., Newport Bead
6-40-6010. 7:30 p.m. meeting Friday.
• Or.inge County C.itholk Alumni Ov
P.O. Box 2785, CosU Mesa, 786·898:
New Veat'1 Eve Dance from 9 p.m.-1 a.n
at Sequoia Athletic dub In Buen.i Parl
Tdets: S40 at the door.
• SensatJonal Singles Club WaterfrOI
Hilton in Huntin&SDn Beach, 1213) 59:
2137. Dance at 6 p.m. Sunday.
• TM Single Gourmet, an interna•ion.
singtes cfinlng dob which debuted in 0
ange County In Juty, ri"IJ out 1991 with
New Vear's E...e bash In a private banqUt
room at Antonello Ristof ante at Soul
Coast P\aza v.n.ige. The party begins at
p.m. COit is $65. Call 854'-6552.
• 5'ngtn Swln& and lallfoom O.inc ~ 1695 IMne BMi., Q»Q Mesa, 49'
0593. Dance~ and danClt ~ 7:~
p.m. Friday. Les.ons indude Wd. Coi
Mina, Latin and~ $21 pt.f month.
. .
• ' I I.'. 'j •
~ ! ' ' 1 ' ~ o I I
I J I ._, • \) • .•
COSTA MESA
ANGELO 1989 HMxlr Blvd. 646--
t 225. ap.n for lunch Mon. ·Fri.
1t:30 1.m. to 2:00 p.m.; dinner
from 4:30 p.m. RM«vatlons ••
recommended. "'The bat Northern
hallan oullJne fn al d Orang•
County" a:cotding ID co-owner Joe
lngardi1. Fl"Mh IMtood and
pastu .,. ii a epedeltlet of the
house. Catering and pri.Jal• patty
facilitl .. .vai._...
ARIANA RE81AUIWIT 4'0 E.
17th St. (f*d ID Monie'• Flowers).
This unlqu. Wld delghtfut
restauranl f..wMg 1he cuisine of
AfghaniltM ia tM only OM of Its
kind in Or.nge County. For .,..
evening of dining that you won"!
1orget, Ariana II sure to ptease the
palate .nd the Mnaes. Dinner is
served Tu.day thru Sunday Night
trom 5:30 p.m. Catering and Take
Out Availlb i.. ~18.
ARNIE'S MANHAlTAN DELI 2831
A Bristol S11'MC 8"1·9310. Open 7
a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.·Fri. •• Sat 9 a.m.
to 10 p.m.; Sun. 9 a.m. '° 9 p.m.
Orange~~New
Yortt st)1e del rNta&nnt tNlures
corned bfff. patraml, roast beef,
turt<ey, poem Ptnellk•, knishes
and other del cW(gh1a. This
critlcatty ~ ~aurant
serves brukfMt tpedail •arting at
$1 .99; luno h Ind dinner daily. Tak•
out and c1ort11g.
TME BAM NNllft
STEAl<HOUm l300 Hefbor Blvd.
(Eatlidl d lht HiitiOr c.nlM)
64t-am. A111Nnllan.9CC1P1ed.
lunch Mllft.~ ft.a. .m; to 4 p.m.
Dinner Mon.. 4 ID t p,.aa.: Tun.,
Wed, to 9:.30 ~; "ftMI., Fri. to 10
p.m.; S.. SID 10~; Sun. 3 to 9
p.m .. COiia th tNVW•
•te~---30~ tradition .. _..._._ In
chatbft>led ..... hlh WI and
chlc:Mn ....... ,., ~
aul&abM tar _,tHI llN'I from
buainea. ...... tDtimlv
PlltiM.~ ...... . COmplm._ ____ _
Grulng ................ Ill., -4
p.m.ffQlft .... for
bual,..... ...... l .. ihllill ....
dinners, reception• and special
occasion parties.
GINO'S ON THE HILL 428 E. t 7th
Street, 650-1750. ResefVations
ac:cepted. A Costa Mesa landmark.
Warm, intimate meeting place; the
ultimate neighborhood restaurant
and lounge. Lunch, dinner.
weekend breakfast. Expertly
prepared rbs, burgers, sandwiches,
salads and house speciahies. Live
piano bar entertainment In the
lounge; singalong Karaoke
weekends ftom 7 p.m .. Monday
night footbaU festivities.
HANG CHOW 720 W. 19th Street.
650-8960. lunch 11 :30 to 2:390
Mon. -Sat; Dinner 2:30 to 10 Sun. •
Thurs .. ; 'Iii 10:30 Fri. & Sat.,
Sunday Brunch 11 :30 to 2:330.
Popular Chinese Restaurateur 'Mr.
Lee' runs this restaurant especially
with "Chinese Food Lovers· in
mind. Good authentic Chinese
cuisine a1 affordable prices. Full bar,
take~ut. catering, private room for
groups up to 20.
HORIKAWA 3800 S. Plaza Drive,
South Coast Plaza Village. 557-
2531 . Reservatolns suggested.
Fin• traditional Japanese restaurant
uses the freshest ingredients. Sushi
Bar, tatami rooms, cocktail lounge.
Multk:ourse Kalseki dinners must
be ordered 24 hours in advance.
Elegant dining.Lunch and dinner.
LACAVE1695 lrvineAve. at 17th
Street ~7944 Lunch Mon. Fri.;
Oinnet Nlghtty. Absolutely
matvelout steaks and fresh
seafood. S.rved In an intimate and
romantic cellar dining room. In th•
area fOf n..rty 30 year.. this cozy
restaurant has one of th• most
unique dinner menu presentations
around.Homestytelunc:h
epedlltin .. a day time fHtur•.
MA BARKERS 1 S4 E. 17th St. &46·
4303. s a.m.10 10p.m. ddy;
SundtY fTom 7 a.m. s.Mng
bfelkfelt , lunch, dinner In •
homMtyfe fashion. "Country •tvl•
Arnericen cuisine•. At#ayt the
~ NMce, low prfcN for
high quellty homemllde food.
• CAM 208 E. 17th St. 845·7828.
Family "Yte tff>dcan l'Mtau1'1111t.
Prtitldent Buth h• eaten herel
Open~ ail 11 a.m. for tuncn,
dlnnet, Ind mdd ... c;. .......
tor tarv-1*ttea. The oc••nt
pric»t, IOlolloue MMce and
delcioul toad mllke Mi Casa
possibly th• most popular Mexican
eatery In the area.
RIVIERA RESTAURANT3333
Bristol St South Coast Plaza. ~
3840, lunch 1\:30 a.m;. to 3 p.m.
Mon. ·Sat.; dinner S-1 o p.m. Mon.-
Thurs; 'til 11 p.m. Fri. &
Sat.Reservations are suggested.
Award winning Continental cuisine.
One of the only restaurants In
Orange County to off er tableside
flambe. Excellent service, intimate
atmosphere.
SCAMPI 1576 Old Newport Blvd.
6'5-8560. Wann & friefdy owners
Linda and Femando Navar.ua ofter
authentic Italian cuisine served In
the traditonal European maMer.
Fernando'• imprehive aedentiab
include graduating from Culinary
Academy in ttaly, training at Hotel
Concordia, Venice. Italy; Chef at
Don Pasquale in Cambridge,
England; Churchlrs in La Chax De
Fondes, Switzerland; Hotel La Paix
in Agno Lugano, S'flrit:Zertand.
Scampi offers an Intriguing menu
and lovely wine ~st. Banquets,
private parties and catering .
WAHOO'S FISH ~CO 1862
Plac.ntla 631 ·3433. Open daily
from. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Sundays
'til 9 p.m. Outrageously delicious
south of the bOrder cuisine with a
Hawaiian flair. Wahoo's is a haven
tor local as wen u international
surfws, athletes and anyone
looking for good food at inctedbly
low prices. Absolutely no lan:t used
In J>Jeparatlon; everything is fresh
and prepared to order. Laid back.
casual atmosphere. Also at 1133 S.
Coast Hwy. In Laguna and on
campus at USC.
ZUBIES 1712 Placentia, 645-8091.
Pure and simple, just like mother's
lovell Rea90f'lably priced, top
quality food and generously poured,
low priced drinks have kept their
customers coming back for years.
lobster tail . chicken, ribs and
specllis changing nightly. Thursday
night Is prim• tb night. Lunch and
dinner served. Sunday Mexican
Breakfast from $1.99.
ZUBfES GILDED CAGE ANO
OYSTER BAR 1714 Placentia. right
ne~ door to ZUbles. 646-4222. A
big, sprawling •nt•rprise with pool
tables and games. Featuring 16
il•m• on the Oyster Bar Meno;
r9QUlar in.nu Includes pizza,
sandwich .. , burgers and a vaMly
of tpee:Ws. Very casual, tamlly
oriented*"~·
NEWPORT BEACH
A880NDANZA ~1 Via Udo.
87$-8973. Lunch Tues. .s.t. t 100
a.m. to 200 p.m.: d1nn« 5 to 10
p.m. Tuea...Sun. OwMr S..
PanW\ bring• her grandmother'•
reclpee to Newport 8Mch.
Tradltlonw bllan Md M8'ood
MledioM. P..ta 8nd av~ of
unlqu. bt'Mdl made frtieh delly.
Latt ~ noC leut, .. ...,..,. --
Alt comp191• tM ~
CAR ot.r 8" Udo P..tl Dr. 723--
0S 117 a.m. to 5 p.m. daly.
~qualnt~c#•
next to Oelane(s. S.Vn fr•shl'f
biked confec:ttons, apecialty oon.-. cappuccinos, tnakfast
9Pld• Lunch.offerings include
homemade soups, sandwiches.
aalads and international specialties.
Fresh juices, teas and Italian sodas.
Eat in or take out.
THE CANNERY 3010 Lafayette
675-Sm. lunch 11 :30 a.m. to 3
p.m. Mon.·Fri.; dinner 5·10 p.m.
daily. Sunday brunch 10:30 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. ReseNations aooepted.
Continental cuisine, seafood
empha.sls. GfNt dam chowd•.
Newport Beach Historical landmark
features Weekend Brunch Cruises
and live entertainment in the lounge
in addition to lunch and dinner.
CARMELO'S 3520 E. Coast Hwy.
675-11922. Dinner 5:30 ·10:30 p.m.
Sun.-Thurs.; 'til 11 :30 p.m. Fri. &
Sal Reservations suggested.
Classic Northern blian gourmet
cuisine. New, moderately priced
lounge menu served tit the wee
hours. Wdd and aazy lounge at
night when the band stri<M up.
Chic client.a..
MARCO POLO 1260 8 i90n. 721 ·
0801. Lunch and dinner served
daily from t 1 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Freshly mact. pastas, gourmet
pizza, gr•• risotto and gnocchi.
Excellent take out.
MARGARrTMILLE 2332 W. Coast
Hwy. Newport Bead't 631-8220.
Menu MfV8d 11 :30 a.m. 'til 12:30
midnight daily; bet 'til 2 a.m.
Mexican cuisine and famous award
winning margaritas. Enjoy W.
entertainment nightly and happv
hour specials. $1 Monday Night
Football specials (Meet the Rams in
person, too); $1 tacos on Tuesday;
Wednesday beer specials. FuU
service catering specializing in
them• par1ies and events.
TALE OF THE WHALE~ Main
S1reet. Baboa. 673-.4633.
Pano~mlc bay view, entry features
pictures of Old Newport. Seafood
and traditional favoritet. Lunch,
dinner and s.turday and Sunday
brUnch.
VILLA NOVA 3131 W. Coast Hwy.
642·7880. Dinner nightly 5 p.,m. to
2 a.m. Ex<*lent, hearty Italian
cuisine; outstanding wine list Active
piano bat, f~• kJcaJ lite-night
spot. Upstalra room • "Top of the v.ua· for banquets. privlil• parties.
z PtZZA "'23 Via Udo Plaza. 723-
0707. WMkd9Y• from 11 :30 a.m. to
9 p.m. and Fri. & S8l. ·1110 p.m. •
d 11Med when ev~ wu
ready fot I h..nthlet, '9al* Md
mor• creative culllne to gc.. Z
PIZZA wet boml F ... urlng light,
delclou8, -~pizza. pelt• end NlldwichM .. OIV9 ol In
i'9 dough.*'"'~ dally
freeh tt.fbl Ind~~.
fntemailional delit**" ~
Mio In Cofone .. Mer, ~and
!MM.
SANTAANA
CMZYMOMa~
AND W.OC»I Lac 11ed on
llodctlDllM .... off ... o;,.; Aoeid
•ii of 1he 55 fwy. 549-1512. Open
for lunch and cftnner. Live
entMtainment In the saloon. Big
name c:oncefts on Monday and
Tuesday nights. Generous servings
of Steaks, salads, sandwiches,
chicken, fish and specials. Country
theme. excellent serva. Private
rooms available.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN \t\LlFf
BERTOUNO'S 18041 Magnolia.
Ftn. Valley. ~2730 Serving great
pasta, pizza, steak and chicken
dinners-for :he entire family. Prices
are very reasonable and portions
are Qenerous. Family run
r.staurant; hosts are very
hospitable and eager to pleas e. All
the sauces. bfeads, desserts •
so~ and pizzas are homemade.
Though the restauant appears
smaU from the outside, it is actually
very l•ge and homey and the
inside. An excellent place to take
famity and friends for a home
cooked meal.
DEL CARLO 19535 Beach at
Yort<town 536-4045. l unch 11 ·30.
2:00 Tues.·Fri.; dinner 4:30·10 p.m.
Tues.·Sun. Excellent food at
excellent prices featuring tradit10nal
tlalian dishes. Dinner from $6.75.
lunch specials from $3.25 (served
in 7 minutes or they're FREEi )Beer
& Wine list
FU JIN 15070 Edwards (Aaoss
from Westminster Mall)892·8333
Lunch and dinner 7 days. Gracious,
friendly owners Theresa and David
Chiang keep their customers
returning again and again with their
delightful Szechwan and Mandann
Cuisine fk for a king. Excellent food,
prices and service have won this
Chinese eatery numerous awards
LOVES BAR &GRILL. 20111
Brookhurst Street at Adams 968·
7550. Lunch from 11 :30 a.m. daily:
dinner 5 to 10 p.m. Nightly;
Happy Hour 4' to 7 p.m. Drink,
specials. plus appetizers. Featuring
Love's gold award wiMing bbq rbs
and chicken in a warm bar and gr1ll
atmosphere. Eclectic menu
incfudes pasta dish8$, pizza.
choice atHks. prime rib, lamb
chops. fish and genuine world
champion chili. Great food.
moderate prices. casual attire.
UARCEU.O'S 17502 Beach Blvd.
at Slater. 842·5505. Established
since 1973, this famity owned and
operated restaurant afters IOfM of
the best dMls In town. Delicious
handmade pizza. Pasta, seafood.
chicken and veal dishes. New
vegetarian menu. Lunch specials
from $3.85; huge lunch butfeit;
dinner tpedals from SS.95. Their
mono is "Once you go try th• rest,
come~ to the beati
TEXAS LOOSEY'S 101 '2
Btookhum at Adam&. 964-8882.
T•• T..-S. tried and lr\.ltted.
This chll pilr1Dr and aaloon °"*'
80fM d 1M b9st ... ,, ,,....._Md
pktcJns wound I MMquit9 amoked
fk chlcMn. ....._ T_.. c:NI.
~ hcMw .-.. ICldi ... ""
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To Advertise
In This Spaee
Contaet
Janise Cross
at 642-4321
Ext 271
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Newport Beach
4250 Bhda St • 955-0822
Serving Dinner Nightly
Live Entertainment in the Anaheim
> · 3520 E. Pacific Coast Hwy
Corona Del Mar 675-1922
2100 E. Ball Rd• 774·4940
•
Happy Holidays I
MAKE NEW YEAR'S EVE
RESERVATIONS NOW!!!!
~ ~ For Dimer New
Yea's Day Frcwn 3 p.m.
UIDl-.-T .... tt • a11•..., ,.,_ .. ,.••••MT.a ... ,....,..
LOCATm AT Mdl• a_..• HAllDll •a •111 c• •• -111111• ILVD • coeTA _,.
.. •I IVATIGI• CM&. eeMn7
o~tt-uold Awa~d
winning c~isine
i S t\Ot on f y a
9...-eat val~e to
):_'OIAt' health
a nd palate ...
this holiday
gi~ offe...-makes
oCAt' al..-eady low
p..-iced men~ a n
i...-..-esistible offe ..-.