HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-12-31 - Orange Coast Pilot.... IQ
~ ClllkW "' ~ ................. ._
alb .... -' ..... ,..:ti.
TIDES
TODAY
Finl high S:O &.m. S.I
firs1 low 1:15 p.m .•• J
Mcond hfch 7150 p.m. :u
Second low 9:12 p.m. 1.6
WWNf,sOAY '
first hlah 4110 LM. S.4
first low 11 :17 Lfll. 0.7
Second hl&fl S1J4 p.m. J.l
Mcond low 10:11 p.m. 2.0
QUOTIS OF TltE DAY
"I think Cost.a Mda 's task force
sends a very clear messa~, that if
you 're going to be partying wllh alco-
hol to bring in the New Year, you
musrllave a designated dn'ver, get a
taxi ot make some other arrange-
ments. Because to get arrested for
drunk drivin'-is a very expensive
proposition. •
-Janet Cater, administrator of the
Orange County ch~r ol Mothers
Against Drunk DrivlifR
"Tis not the drinking that is to
blame, but the excess. "
-John Selden
COMMUNITY EVENTS
• Succetsful Singles International
in Costa Mesa will hold a New Year's
Eve party tonight beginning at 9 p.m.
The cost is S35 for members, $50 for
guests. For information, call Joyce at
241 -3858.
• Fashion Island, 400 Newport
Center O)\. Newport Beach, has on-
going holi<by attractions, seasonal
fam ily entertainment and activities
through tonight. Special holiday
hours: 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-
Saturday and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.
Ongoing attractions: Winter Wilder-
ness garden and Fashion Island Ex-
press nollday train for children .... A
life-sized elephant and gifts with an
environment.al theme await holiday ·
"1oppers at The Think Shop, Santa
~na Zoo's newty opened store at
Crystal Court across from South Coast
PlilZI. The store, sponsored by The
friends of the Sant.a Ana Zoo and lo-
cated ~the third noor next to The
Broadway, Is open until Jan. 6. For in-
fonnation, call 540-8246.
• Man of la Mancha continues
through Jan. S at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center with Raul Julia
as Don QUixote and Sheena Easton as
Aldonza. Performances are at 8 p.m.
Tuesday through F~y and 2 and 8
P,m. SatuntayS and Sundays. Tidcets
are $21 to S«. For Information, call
SS6-ART6.
JUST TltE FACTS
• Who was Costa ~·s first
r'yorf
·vs·t:S6L 'a1~u1Ma1 ~1Jel()
,..... "A Sb ol 0-,.. The Hillofy ol COlllo M91o." .... ,..... ....., ...... ......,.., '-" ~ ~
01p1 ........ If '1911 he.. .......... eel , •••
INDlJC
ll~7
Busine./M
~flec:VIS
rosswOnW7
ntertalnment/A6
orum/A.7
. . . ~
Police ready for annual crackdoWTV A8
Circulation 45, 000 25¢
, M.lK ""11111\ Piiot
The photo and story of a shooting death of a suspect's charging Doberman during an arrest attempt in Costa Mesa brought strong reaction from Pilot read«;rs.
From war to peace, 1991 is history
,.,,.. ................
In 1991, troops were welcomed home wttti op.fl ~rms from the pre,..
sqn Gulf, ~e. At right, a family of foxes raiffd some fur at home.•
.
Unforgettable events hit close to
home in an unpredictable year
By Steve Mart>le
SUit Wrl1et
I t started with a war and ended with the slow,
methodical dismemberment of the Soviet Union.
It was the year that summer vanished. the year
that the "March Miracle" wetted hopes for an end fo
the drought, the year that President Bush and Japanese
Prime Minister Toshilci Kaifu held a summit at the Four
Seasons Hotel in Newport Beach and the year that
Margaret Thatcher went shopping at South Coast Plaza.
In Costa Mesa, a councilman quit while a former
councilman fended off criminal charges and then quickly
filed suit against the city. But a family of red foxes
·upstaged them all when authorities discovered its den
along an unopened stretch of the Costa Mesa Freeway.
In Newport Beach, the man who had led the city for
See 1991/M
~ Looking Back
. '
Servrno on a Jury
~ivi c d ut}:: Worl<ing
ha rd for the money
111111 • lllil llP woman's hobby
Editor• note: n• ;, tbo Jut ieJIMDt in • tbroe.-put
diary on the bJpl and lows of jury duty.
By StlVt Mnte .....
16-ycar Newport resident, Harold
loved making the hata and thought
she'd offer a few for sale at SS
each.
"It was just something to do to
keep my fingers busy," Harold
said. "I wasn't doina any harm.
Sometimes a whole week would go
by and I would aell only ooe."
But one d-.y before Quist.mas
E"Ve, a city official came to Ha·
rold's home and told her it was
1pinst city !\Ila and regulations
to conduct a buslnw in a reaiden·
tial area.
After her story appeared in the
Dec. 24 edition of-the Pilot. Ha-
rold was contacted by a number of
sympathetic readers who wanted
to buy her hats -including a
Newport Beach police offioer. One
man, a mute who communicated
by writing UtUe notes. bought 1S of
her hats.
The owners of Piecemakers
Country Store, on Adams A\ICnue
in Colta Mesa, said they were
touched by the story of Harold's
S..HATSllll* ..
PAGE 20 I SATURDAY, December 28, 1991
um-ca....-. ...... 11om ... ....., un1.
CIGil9 '° ........ end beldt. Hom9 ......... "1\.C'" t.i11 11 YSY .._.. 11 ..,_.a. R11lc1Mct ,_. doOr II
.......... tor .... -IC*l~"'c t a: a. 1129.000.
CIW -.-T • CUL DS UC In COiia ....._ t.-ge S bedlloom, N bill t *"Y condo, wry ..,..... nm
to ...... -w-1 loclllorl tor lllcl& '117 MO
-....,_ • Ul-8 Nm•1a.-_,.Ill.
HllllfW upgrldld Woocbtdgl 2-elDry ....... --.....
......... .... plill I 71 ' ....... C**ll •. ~·*'· QNf .-.000 .,., .. ., "°""' ua "' Woocb• .... 2 .., ,......_on cU • w frit...,."...., ....-.. ...., "' poat. bll9 ,.... -..... a ....., ,.._ _. ~ • 2 •a.cl ...... ~ oplon .. fCt
$21D,DOO
---• • nm w.a COUTI 1n _. ha a ,,.,.. ..-. lmK eo.a, 1mge 009I* lat. 11.m aq. a. ..,
b1Ad1'11 -al 1110 '9q. I. A pertace ala end ...._to bulld en ..._,... MIM .... INplrtng ._., ..._ .,... .
"CITY IUCl(BI" -• '°"" CMllClll llQ Bind Ranch OUllllda Aano la tor ......... '** your o.t DUDE Rn:h. On 1ha 250 ACRES ._. la, UGO eq. ft.
home, pool, ._. ocut. ......, ~ tfld la on .,.
Trudaaa AMr. "'2.IOO,clOO
ta .,.,..c:osTA MW. llDUCllD MO,GOOI o.r. _,.. edlol'I nowt Theae w1l1r• Wiit, .. I
bedroom. 1 ...... ~ ,......, --"' ...
..., Mala to buatn ,, r, -..., • ·-~ a Med\. ~ mNr9. ....... .. two a.undry ..,.,..
$1,048,CIOO
. . • • ,
Moldy_,.~ ... -==~":"!':. '°\: 12--=: ....... "' ......... 60t. , ... ..........................
SURF
LOCATION Sin UWf
Hllllti"I'°" ... ,. :=.-\.... ~ •.:.:
.... 2A '* ,_ING
G-' caktM9 fll _...... ........... ._.~
aloo ........... ,.,o..
TIDES
TOOAY
Finl high S:4S ~.m. s.a
Finl low I: IS p.m. ·.J
Second hip 7150 p.m. 3.S
Se<:oncl low 9: 12 p.m. 1 A
wtONESOAY •
First hip 4:10 a.t11. S.4
first loW 11:27 Liii. 0.7
SecOfld Mp StJ.4 p.m. J.2
Second low 10:11 p.m. 2.0
QUOTES OF THE DAY
"/ think Costa Mda 's t.ask force
sends a very clear messagt!, that if
you're going to be partying with alco-
hol to bring in the New Year, you
must have a designated driver, get a
taxi or make some other arrange-
ments. Because to get arrested for
drunk dm1n'-is a very expensive
proposition. '
-Janet Cater, administrator of the
Orange County ~r o( Mothers ~
Agiinst Drunk DriviilQ
"Tis not the drinking that is to
blame, but the excess."
-John Selden
COMMUNITY EVE NTS
•Successful Singles International
in Costa Mesa will hold a New Year's
Eve party tonight beginning at 9 p.m.
'The cost is $35 for members, $50 for
guests. For information, call Joyce at
2'41 -3858.
• fashion Island, 400 Newport
Center Dr., Newport Beach, has on-
aolng holiday attractions, seasonal
family entertainment and activities
through tonight. Special holiday
hours: 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday·
Saturday and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.
Ongoing attractions: Winter Wilder-
ness garden and Fashion Island Ex·
press noliday train for children .... A
life-sized elephant and gifts with an
environment.al theme await holiday ·
~ppers at The Think Shop, Santa
~na Zoo's newly opened store at
C:rystal Court across from South Coast
Plaza. The store, sponsored by The
triends o( the Santa Ana Zoo and lo-
cated on the third floor next to The
Broadway, Is open until Jan. 6. For in-
formation, call 540-8246.
• Man of la Mancha continues
through Jan. 5 at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center with Raul Julia
as Don Quixote and Sheena Easton as
Aldonza. Petformances are at 8 p.m.
Tuesday through Friday and 2 and 8
p.m. Saturday$ and Sundays. Tidcecs
.are S21 to S44. For Information, call
56-ARTS.
JUST TlfE FACTS
• ~ was COISU Mesa's first ra)'Ot'
't>S-ts6l 'af>tUtMa1 ~1mo
. . . ..
Police ready for~ crackdo'MVAS
M.lr< M;irtvl p,1.,,
The photo and story of a shooting death of a suspect's charging Doberman during an arrest attempt in Costa Mesa brought strong reaction from Pilot read~rs.
Fr-om war to peace, 1991 is . history
hllfll ........
In 1991, troops were welcomed home With~ arms from the Per-
sian. Gulf, ~e. At right, a family of foxes raited some fur at home.
Unforgettable events hit close to
home in an unpredictable year
By Steve Marble
S1Jll Willer
I t started with a war and ended with the slow.
methodical dismemberment of the Soviet Union.
It was the year that summer vanished, the year
that the "March Miracle" wetted hopes for an end to
the drought, the year that President Bush and Japanese
Prime Minister Toshilci K.:lffu held a summit at the Four
Seasons Hotel in Newport Beach and the year that
Margaret Thatcher went shopping at South Coast Plaza.
In Costa Mesa, a councilman quit while a former
councilman fended off criminal charges and then quickly
filed suit against the city. But a family of red foxes
upstaged them all when authorities discovered its den
along an unopened stretch of the Costa Mesa Freeway.
In Newport Beach, the man who had led the city for
See 19911•
~
Looking Back
. .
Servmo on a Jury IMll • •• for. woman 's h•
Editors note: Tbil is tbe .Jut ICflDCDI i.a • tbtee-part
diary on the bilJu and lows of jury duty. ""'
By S1M MartM
MW11'1r
Resident's business finds headway after officials try to cap trade
16-year Newport rolldent. Harold
loved making the hall and thought
she'd offer a few for sale at SS
each.
"It was just 10mCthing to do to
keep my fingers busy," Harold
said. "I wun't doina any harm.
Sometimes a whole week would go
by and I would sell onty one."
But one dll) be.fore O.ristmas
E-,e, a city official came to Ha·
rold'a home and told her it was
apinst city nilet and regulations
to condu<:t a business In a reaiden·
tial area.
After her story appeared in the
Dec. 24 edition of the Pilot, Ha-
rold was contacted by a number of
sympathetic readers who wanted
to buy her bats -including a
Newpon Beach poli<ie officer. One
man, a mute who communicated
by writing little notes, ~t lS of
her hats.
The owners of Pieccmakers
Country Store, on Adams Avenue
in Cotta Mesa, said tbe1 wc1e
touched by the story of Harold's
See HATUllll ..
41 .
f ) I f
' .
Pilot People
J• 011111811
SHEi~----------~
A Newport Deach resident who recent ly received tho National
Alzheimer's Association's 1991 Distinguished Service Award. The
honor is bestowed on board members who have demonstrated out-
standing seivice to the association. The Chicago-based organiza-
tion has more than 200 chapters nationwide. Dashiell founded the ·
Orange County Chapte r in 1982. INSIDE KNOWl.EDG,.__ _______ _
Das hiell's late mother suffered fro m Alzhei mer's disease for
several years. Das hiell sa id de aling wi th this kind of debilitating
illness is ";.i very powerful experience."
"We were told that my mother was se nile," Dashiell said.
"When 1 brought her home from the East Coast to live with me,
she needed to be bathed, diapered and dressed. I went to look for
resources in th e community but they were very limited. In 1982,
someone gave me a Oyer about an Alzhei mer's Association meet-
ing in San Diego. We officially started a chapter in Orange Coun-
ty in 1984."
GIVING A BREAK----------
Dashiell is chairwoman of the Alzheimer's Association 's Com-
miuee on Patient and Family Services. She has worked diligently
to find private and gove rnment-funding for respite services for
caretakers of Alzheimer patients.
PERSONAL NOil----------
Dashiell admits there is a fear she will be afflicted with AJzhei-
mer's disease. She worries, not only for herself, but for her chil-
dren and grandchildren. Dy Jo)'CC Dodlorlcb
,.-
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Donald E. Vance of Newport Beach has re-
ported for duty aboard the fleet ballistic missile submarine USS
Abska in Sea ule. He joined the Navy in 1978.
0
As time draws near for next year's Orange County Fair Centen-
nial, residents who have served as Fair Queens or Ambassadors in
years gone by are being aske'd to step forward and be recognized.
Local residents who h:ive served as Fair Queen over the years
include Phyllis Yarwood, of Cosca Mesa, Marlene Anderson. of
Newport Beach, Faria Bulkey, of Costa Mesa, June Undcman, of
Costa Mesa, and JUI O'Shaunecy, of Newport Beach.
Former Fair Ambassadors include Nancy Hastings, of Costa
Mesa, Deanne Jacobs, of Corona del Mar, and Scott Emigh, of
Newport Beach.
0
Susana Vlrucgas, of Costa Mesa, program specialist with the
Boy Scouts of America, is one of 22 recent graduates of United
Way of Orange county's Hispanic Development Council Leader-
ship Institute. The 12-week program is dedicated to enhancing the
leadership and organizational skills.
PiiiL
..... 111
How to reach us at
The PilOt
Omllllllaft 0r.,. County 642 .... 333
M4 ......
Cl.wifted 642-5678
OilP'Y 642 .... 321 ,...,...
News S40-1224
5pof'5 642 .... 330
News, sports fax 646-4110
Main <>Mee
Busff*I Office 642..-321
Busi,,_ fax 631-5902
T he images of 1 991 included
Costa Mesa's Someone Cores
soup ki tchen (above) which
found itself endangered by the
possible sole of its host church,
South Coast Christian. Also in
Costa Mesa, this group of young
dancers (right), were part of a
speci al program for the children of
migrant workers. A sign of the
ti mes was the purchase of troubled
Jim Slemons Imports in Newport
Beach by auto tycoons Fletcher
Jones and Fletcher Jones Jr. (below
right). But there was sweetness as
well at the 1991 Orange County
Fair, which brought timeless scenes
such as this one (below left).
Phatol by Marc Mir•.
I
Did .. you . know? Orielly
Thief llCIPll with Jewels worth 820,•
NEWPORT BEACH -Roughly $20,000 worth of gold chains,
lockets and rings were stolen Crom Carol Klein Jewelers, 240 New-
port Center Drive, by a thief who broke a metal panel beneath a
window to enter the store.
The security company reported the store alarm went off around
10:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Carol Klein was one of several local jewelry stores robbed in
1989 and 1990 by a trio of men who were convicted and sentenced
last September to ptison terms of up to 10 years. ,
Illinois and Florida residents Michael Rabb, 47; Frank Zischkc.
46; and John Evans, 52, pleaded guilty last fall to chargei they
smashed through windows at the Carol Klein and Moboco stores
in N~rt Center and scooped up nearly $9 million in jewelry.
llllltml a.I Scolit IXICUllve 1111 It 82
' -C"--...._ ... ~ .. &....._. ~ .-...-----------~ --
Pray fOr rain on
the Rose Parade
L ut I hear~ the wo1tbermu wu torccutlna showcn for
New Ynr'1 Day, and everyone In Soutbem California
toe• 1 little sad. How could it naln on our Roso Parade?
It 11n't Calr. In Cact, It seems downright
unnatural -like tho Anae1s winning the World
Seriol. For the first time In years, America might
not see a briftht, crystol·clear New Year's Day in
Southern Ca Cornia, the perfect weather Cor o
parade and college football game.
Good. ,.
No, make that areat.
The Incredible onnual streak of near-flawless
-.... Southern California New Year's Days had served
.._ a purpose at one time, drawing thousands of
ll-~11 fr01en Midwesterners to our fair state, which
------boomed as a resulL Editor's NBC's opening sequence for the Rose Bowl
Notebook seemed to be a replay every year: The camera on
the Goodyear t>limp panned across the Los
Angeles Basin and over the Pasndena Coothllls
before settling the sun-splnshed Rose Bowl.
On the voice-over, a tanned Dick EnberJ exclaimed to his pal
Merlin Olson and 30 million viewers, most of whom were
shivering in front or their televisions: ''Another gorgeous New
Year's Day in Southern California. Oh. my!"
And by then you knew the conve1'$1tiOn in nine OUt Of 10
Midwestern homes, whore the occupants had braced themselves
for another three months of bonc;chilling, depression-inducing
temperatures.
"Hey, Ethel! Lookie here on the picture box! Shooooooot. No
snow in January in Passcrdenal Let's pack up the mule and head
• 10 Californee!"
We've got.too little room.
left on our freeways and in
our communities to allow
this New Year's propagan-
da ... to continue to be dis-
tributed nationwide.
Enough's enough.
We've got too little room
left on our freeways ,and in
our communities to allow
this New Year's propaganda
-pristine air, 73-degree
winter temperatures,
California-girl cheerleaders
-to continue to be
distributed nationwide.
I'm sure after each
broadcast of the New Year's
events in Pasadena,
thousands of Midwesterners
migrate west. And once the.y
arrive in their rusted Buicks, these folks establish new roots in
Southern California, including Costa Mesa and Newport Deach,
where they suck up finite resources like water, clean air and
parking spaces within a half-mile of South Coast Plaza.
ll's got to stop.
What's needed this Jan. 1 is a little rainfall. Perhaps a lot. Yes,
a real gullywashcr. And some sleet. And hail. Driving hail:
Thunder. Ligh1nin~. How about a freak snow storm? And wind.
Yeah, gale force wands -enough to knock 1ha1 blimp right out of
the sky.
Plus an incredible bank of brown smog should se11le on the
stadium between storms.
And then, a li11le earthquake to shake things up. Midwesterners
are as scared of quakes as they arc of progress. I'm not saying a
big quake, just a nice li11lc jolt 10 ratlle the television cameras and
gel the message to those easily jangled folks in Iowa and Ohio:
stay where you are or else! .
U New Year's Day happens to be sunny and warm for the
bzillionth time, then NBC should be mandated to run A public
service message at halftime on behalf of us overcrowded Southern
Californians. The film could include some of our more quaint
attractions like the 405 at 5:15 p.m., a random freeway shooting
and any Los Angeles Rams game. Thal should make them stay
put.
Dut if the Heartbeat of America still pounds passionately for
our warm climes, then I'd suggest a disclaimer accompany each
Goodyear blimp shot: Southern Calirornia really isn't this
wonderful. Please don't move here.
Or what if the football players, cheerleaders and spectators all
bundled up and pretended to be really cold and miserable?
Please, anything's belier than another yeor of tropical weather
on New Year's Day, the result of which is a new herd of migrants
stampeding our communities.
, Let's pray for rain on New Year's.
W//JiDm Lobdell Is editor of th~ Pilot. Columnist Fred Martin
•rill return Jan. 2.
Police log
Costa Mesa
A VCR and stereo wore atolen from a
home In the 100 blodl; of Eat& 21st
Street. The buralar apparently pined
entry by smoshlna In a palio wlnetow • • Several Christmas ams, a telcvlslon
and a coat were amon1 1ho ltema 11olcn from a home In lho 400 block of Fair
Drive. • Someone stoic a thrcc·fooMall motor-ized Christmas caroler and a lhrco.root· tall woodcl\ lolllPQP. from a front yard In tho 2900 block or Mindanao Drive. Po-lice found boeh dccoratloru in the front
yard o{ a home In the 3100 block or Bor· bacfos atcr that day. • Someone bn*o lftto a homo In tho $00
block ol T11vcno DriYc Friday while tho rcsi4cnts were tleeptna and 1folo a cord· loa.s telephone and a purse • • The Ol'ner of an 1paroncftt tomP.lcJr at
147 E. 18th Stroct laat MondfY tOld lice .omconc broke Into acM:ral ator rooms and atolc SCYCnl bJ.cyclca. 50 ca or Pcpal, one cato ot YOdka and a act o aolf clubL • A tole~ ant''°"'° tOOll ftro dlt-c:ovcrcd ,.,1111nl PridllJ from Western Dlah•I a& 3121 od Hilr Rold. • A resident or the 100 bloclc or Joann
S&root returned home after talclna hit IOI\
19 tho ~tal Frl~J to find hlt le~·
aiOft and ttorco mlulna.
Newport Beach
A ~ar-old man k>tt n.30 worth or cold Olno'1 plua frotn hl1 rdritcratcw =.: bu'IJar ...a.od • troel door
h1111o1ne O:,.:O~=' ot~hez:= no bupr ato ,._. Dlla a~1Cn wtth-
CMlt tlkt'£ ':ri"'"' olto. Pol&co Joultd an
f.:'111chcn 12.~= ~ • .:
llCM l;Op. The vfc:tifll 11Jd he had lut
ICCn hie plm lft the rcrrWn&Or Frk111 .......... . • A
$50.85 were 11olcn from Kites Etc. at 711 EaJ1 Bay Slrcct Salurday ancmoon. Po-lice searched the aurroundina area for
any 1llna•sh01 lolin& suspcclt shortly
aflcr the lhcft without SUCCCIL
forced •n and tho burilar round the keys to thO vehicle lnsido Uio business.,
F Um procastna In o hurry
can be pretty expensive,
especially if you over
tndulpd durlna the holldoya.
But once the picture's taken,
you don't havo much choico. I
did a little re.scorch to find a
solution 11nd cnme up with a split
decision ..•
AAA Photo on 19th Street in
Costa Mesa will do a roll of 35
millimeter 36 exposure film for
Sll.99, the second act is Cree.
But ...
Photo Express on 17th in
Costa Mesa will do two acts Cor
S 12.99 and give you free film ...
It your P.hotoaraphic talents
arc a bit 'afry' and you're not
sure all your shots will come out
you might want to try 1 Hour
Pro Photo on Balboa Blvd.
They'll do the processing for
S2.49 and charge you 29 cents
for eaeh print ....
Probably the best bet is not to
worry about how long it takes
and take the whole batch over to
the CVS Pharmacy in Costa
Mesa ... they'll do the developing
for S4.99.
Around town
Send your Items for Around
Town to Dob Y•n E)'ken, The Piiot,
JJO W. DDy St., CostD Mes•,
92621.
Sherman Library volun-
teers
NEWPORT BEACH -Sherman Li· brary and Gardens in Corona dcl Mar
will offer a training course for ~luntccrs beginning J:in.6 II 9;30 a.m. ~ course
consists or one 1raini n1 session per week
for six weeks. For information, Cllll 673·
2261.
Parks meeting
NEWPORT BEACll - The Newport
Beach Parks, Beaches und Recreation
Commission will meet 111 7 p.m. Jan. 7 in
the City Council chambers, 3300 New-port Blvd.
Health lecture
NEWPORT BEACH -Dr. Joseph Punch, a n:itionally known psychiatrist,
lcc1urcr and columnist will offer a free
lecture on lifestyles and health al 6:30 p.m. Mond:iy in room 105 at St Andrews Prcsbvtcri:in Chu rch, 600 St. Andrews
Rd. F'or more information, call S4S-7114.
ADD lecture
NEWPORT BEACH -Joan An·
drcwt, a Newport Beach marri:igc, family
and child counsclor1 will offer a free Ice.
turc at 7 p.m. Monaay on A11cn1ion Def·
icit Di10rdcr, a mal:idy which affects 11 percent of all Americans. The lecture
will be aivcn at llSI Dove St., suite IOS. For reservations and inform:ition. call 476-0991.
Mature driving
NEWPORT BEACH -The city of N~rt Dcach will offer a class cn1ltlcd "SS Alive: Mature Drivin&" from 9 a.m.
10 1 ~.m. Jan 7 and 8 at the West New· ~" Community Ccnlcr, 883 W. 15th St.
The fee for 1he class is $8. For informa·
1ion, call ~240.
Help for dyslexia
COSTA MESA -The Orton P,yslcxia
Society or Oranp County is loolona ror K<Ond 10 firth p-adc students with rcad-
ln& problems and ~blc dvalcxia to en·
roll In the aflcr-tchool RE'AD ~rocram
in Costa Mesa. The proaram will meet
for one hour, four times a week, beain·
nina next month. The rec is $20. For in·
formation. caU 240-6401.
GRAND
OffiNINCJ'
CELEER!\TKN
VISIT OUR ll4lZUNG
NEW STalE AND
REGISTER TO WIN A
S200 SHOPPING SPREE.
Impostors Copy Jewels look eo much
like the desianer on,tnals. tt's hard to
ttll them apm. We have rmwbble
copl~ ti dtaiaN by Cutler, Bulpri,
Ttll'any & C.0.1 and V1n C1uf' &. Arpels.
to namt a few. All at a fractlan cJ
.hat the qinab tott. And all
mckcd with 1 likta amnn•·
Mr.t ~ S3S·S95.
l~POSIOR~.
0
lf you've accumulated a lot ot
dirty clothes over the holidays
take them to Abdul ...
He has a arc•t
special In time
ror the new year.
"I do no&
tunnel clothes, I
press each and
every one of
them ... you set
better wear out
of them that
way: uys
Abdul Deen
over at Vafoe
Oean on
-----· Wilson and Harbor in Costa
Mesa.
Abdul has a tip for getting
yellowed sheets white without
destroxing them with bleach. He
says, • We add Simple Green to
the water instead, that way • no
wear and tear."
He called to 1ay he just took
over the business and he wants
to attract customers so he's
Congressman to speak
NEWPORT BEACH -Rep. Olris Cox (R·Newport Beach) will speak at the
brc?kfast mcctin& or the .Newport Foun · d:llion, 7:30 a.m. Jan. 7 an the Quarter-deck Room at the Balboll Day Club. Fore reservations, call 6«-4311. Rep. Cox will
JllSO address the Jan. 8 annual mcctin& of the Newport Center As.sociation. Call
72().8488 for informotion.
Panhcllcnic meeting
NEWPORT OEACH -Renee Nama·
sic, D Newport Dcach hYP.nothcrapisl.
will speak ubout her spccaully to mcm·
bcrs of Newport Harbor Panhellcnie, JO
3.m. Jan. 8 ut All Angels Church, 3233
Pacific View Drive. For inrormution, call
646-2524.
Speaking of success
NEWPORT DEACll -Success coach
Jodie Moncrief will discuss "The lnvin·
ciblc Power of Values" at 7 p.m. Jan. 9 in the Community Room at Nc~rt Center Library. 856 San O cmcnte Drive.
Admission is free.
Inner peace
COSTA MESA -Dan Millstein, a
professional stress management consult·
ant, will offer a free workshop, 7:30 to 9
p.m. Jan. 9 at the Costa Mesa Com· munlty Center, 18$0 Park Ave. For lnlor·
malion, call 556-8000.
Jeanne Wolf to speak
NEWPORT BEACH -"Entertain·
mcnt Tonight" correspondent Jc:inne
Wolf will be the 1ucs1 secaltcr at the
next Jewish Federation or Orange Coun· ty Trcndscllcn event, 11 :30 a.m. 10 l ~.m. Jan. 10 at the Four Seasons Hotel.
For Information caJI 259-0655.
Back Bay tour
NEWPORT BEACH -The next free
auided walkina tours or the Upper New· ~rt Bay Ecoloaicol Reserve will take
place at 9 and W:30 a.m. Jan. 11. Meet
at the comer or East Bluff Drive and
Back Bay Road.
Rose pruning
Sherman Llbnry and Gardens In Co-rona dcl Mar prcsc:nts a provam on the
pn.inlnf of roses at 9'.30 1.m. Jin. 11, u part o the library's Weekend Gardener
series. For infonnaUon, call 673-2261.
offerlna aome pretty impressive
deals on cleaning. Dresses,
rcaululy $5.SO to clean are now
S3.50. You can have pants
cleaned for halfCjrice at Sl.25 ...
For carving knives that were
too dull 10 do their job over the
holidays, here's a suggestion ...
Go 10 the Hughes Market in
Eas1blufC Center and pick up a
liule holder. Fill il with your
knives and return it to the meat
department. They'll put a new
sharp ,edge on them for you for
Cree ... There's a three knife
limit .. .
0
Santa might not have gotten
around lo bringing you a new car
this year so why not spiff up the
old one ... ?
Cheapest is to visit Angel Car
Wash on Tustin Ave. in Costa
Mesa ... Make sure you do it on
Tuesday, Wednesday or
Thursday ...
On those days they run a
pretty good special. S3.99 will get
you a._hunkey-dorey clean car.
Several places around town
Dog show
COSTA MESA -Shoreline Dog Fan·
Ciers As.sociation or Orange County will
host its 11th All-Breed Dog Show from
8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Jan. 12 at the Orange
County F:iirgrounds in Costa Mesa. The
public i.s welcome. Admission is SS for
adults, $3 for seniors and $2.50 for chil·
drcn aged 6 10 12. For information, c:ill
644-7907 or SJ0-1826.
Attention Deficit
NEWPORT BEACH -Jo:inie Heine·
mann, a faculty nurse al UCI Medical
Center, will give a free presentation on
"The Ritalin Controversy" as ii relates 10
Allcntion Deficit Disorder at 7 p.m. Jan.
13. The lecture will be given al 1151
Dove St. suite 105. For infonn:ition. call
476-0991.
University Women
will be happy to charge you more
to detail your car. Their prices
ranae from $100 at Automotive
Aftercare 10 over S200. One
no-effort idea is to call Greg
Cantrell at Allied M9bile Auto
Detailing, listed in Newport.
They'll do a full interior/exterior
detailing for $115 but, make sure
to ask him about his special
discount... They come 10
you ... usually w11hin the day. Greg
is definitely serious about his
business ... When I talked with
him recently he was on his
cellular phone, at Hoag
Hospital... He was registering his
wire Cheryl on the maternity
floor. Greg predicts a girl. "I
have a SO percent chance of
being wrong though," says Greg.
Cheryl's due any minute ... ·o
lf you've come across any
bargains or unusual items, or if
you know a retailer who provides
exceptional services or quality be
sure to lei me know. You can
reach me at 497-9873. Or send a
fax to 631-5902.
Getting fit
NEWPORT BEACH -Newport Beach phriciun Dr. Blair L Sweet will
give I tal entitled "Getting Fil ror '92"
al noon Ian 14 in the Communitv Room
al Ncwpon Center Library, 856 San
Ocmcnte Drive. The program is free.
Aviation lecture
-
NEWPORT BEACH -Pan Ame rican
Airways' 1936-37 China Oippcr flights and 11lcir Orange County connection will
be the subject of a prescnlation by •
George Grupe at 7 p.m. Jan. 15 at the Mariners Branch Ubrary, 2005 Dover
Drive. Admission is free.
Pageant casting
LAGUNA BEACH -Ca.sting sign·
ups for the Pageant of the Masters will
be held from S-10 9 p.m. Jan 18 ;ind 19
at the Irvine Bowl, 650 Laguna Canyon
Rd. For more information, call 494-3663.
NEWPORT BEACH -Amcricun M·
sociation or University Women member
Jeanelle Miller will &Ne a slide prcscnta·
lion and lecture about her recent trip to
Moscow 11 the association's Jan. IS
meeting 11 the Newport Beach Tennis
Oub. Dinner is at 6 p.m. and the lecture
begins at 7:30. RCSCJ"Wtions arc required.
Fer infonution, call 786-4020.
Fight against bigotry
NEWPORT BEACH -Louisiana
State Republican Central Commiuec member Elizabeth Rickey. founde r of the
l.ouisi:ina Coalition against Racism and
Nazism. wall be the guest of the Oran..ac County chapter of the American Jewish
Commiucc 11 7:30,p.m. Jan. 22 at Le Mcridicn Hotel.For more inform:ition.
can 660-8525.
-
I{ I~ l 1~ I :\ . \ ~ (, I~ ~ < > \ \.
8% APR 0 FrS 8.25% RATE l ··Yf
1.5 Year Phed
8.875% APR 0 YfS 5.75% RATE 0 PT
Jaabo 3G Year Fbed
Caulndloa, J-bo Loeu, Isl 1ad lnd T.D ... Non..()wMr OcmpallCJ
DON MORRIS
CMS M~e Servlca
lllf\"!l""i.:;......--~ ....... -----
Flllf\ ... ___________________________________ ~ •
1 a t ~ ... , ________________________________ __ ...., ____________________________________ _
~ ..... __________ __ ,. ..................... -
> .,~ ... -= .. ~ .. Jm"'.\=.•(jft646 •
1 . 1
------------·-·-------·---·
, ACTUAL
SIZE
·Jan 7 The South Coast Metro Alli-• ance will hold its annual meet-
2109.
Jan 8 The Oranse County, ~ter of
• Women in CommunlCations
f nc. will hold Its monthly meet~ betdnnlng
at 6 p.m. at the Sheraton Newport..-:l:ost IS
$20 for members, $25 for non-members and
$ 15 for students. For reservations .net lnfOt·
nation, a ll 833-0S3s.
ing from 11 :30 a.m. to 1 :15 p.m. at the Wes-
tin South Coast Plaza. Rep. Christopher Cox
(R-Newport Beach) will be the guest speaker.
Cost is $26 before Jan. 3 and $30 thereafter.
For reservations and inf?rmation, call 435-
~£AL ISl7~
20-Channel Scanner
Save 551
10888
..... 159.95
Low Aa 115 Pet' Month•
• One·Touch Weather Service
*20-1211
TAfilDY•
. Highest Clll•tr J Malile
CeluBJ~
Save 5120
179!!.:
Low Aa 115 Per Month•
• 30-Number Memory • Full 3 Watts
• Handsfree Speakerphone
'17-1076
~£4LISl7<:_ OUOFONEe> DPTI MLJse
MEMOA&X 'M
VHS camcorder
Save s100
$699 "99.?tt.OO
Low Aa 125
Pet' Month•
• 2 Lux • 8x Power Zoom
• With Case and Accessories
116 804
M8MOPMIX
Mlcrocassette 30-Memory Conless PuH·Out C. CD Color TV/VCR Combo
Save 98•~5 s51 ,, ... 1043
Save 9995 ,::s Save 28995 s30 ,.3.sn s70 m .1987 ,::\s Save 4499! s50 116-408 .:3.
Low Aa 115 Per Month• Low Aa 115 Pw Month• LowAaactfter~· Low Aa 115 Per Month•
•Voice Actuated ,.~" Thin Tone/pu!M d .. hllO • 32 Watts • AM/FM Stereo • Automatic-Play VHS VCR • Remote
1"ANDY •25-1oe1
CoMects Tin Printer
Port-lo Slot ........
i2499!.
Low A:'i1'i fter Month• 211.H
T• sv.-1 M U19rNI Floppy llnw Wo1trs 1111 .,,, PC
~£4L1Sf7c_
Plug 'n Talk®
Wlreless llD'conl
.:. ~49:.
·~2'2
I ~1 ••• 1n
DPT IMUS
10·8alldEQWlth s-.. ,,, .... .,
;z~
LowAal11Pw .......
~£AL,Shc_
D1lua ,_ t1atl1 ., ...... •23• Off .... .
-112.as .. ..
~£.4LISf7<:_•
12" ....... ,._. .....
;~·
Low M 11$ '-.....
Rolodex®
1000 .....
T1l1plw Dliler
~~
Low M t1I '-llof*' •
Joycene Taylor is owner of Vortex RIC Helicopters
Who• Joycene Taylor, a 29-year-old Santa Ana resident
• who is owner of Vortex RIC Helicopters. What• Vortex RI C Helicopters sells remote-controlled he-
• licopters on a retail and mail-order basis. The com-
pany also distributes impor:ed helicopters to hobby shops. The he-.
licopters range in size from two and a half to nine feet long. Com-
plete systems range in price from $1,000 to more than $3,000.
Whefl • Vortex RIC, then known as Vortex Precision Prod-
• ucts, was founded in 1988 by a Japanese investor.
Taylor, an American Indian who $rew up in Northern California,
ran the business for two years until taking over ownership in Sep-
tember 1990.
Where• Under the previous ownership, the company
• started out in Hawaii and relocated to Anaheim
in 1989. ·After taking over the company and changing the name,
Taylor moved Vortex RI C Helicopters to 1374-A Logan Avenue
in Costa Mesa. While Vortex R/C's retail trade is local, the com-
pany's distribution network extends all the way to South America
and Europe. Taylor says most of her distribution sales stem from
a relatively expensive line of Japanese helicopters that she imports
and sells to other retailers. Why• While studying Japanese and international .~
• at a college in Hawaii, Taylor was introduced to the
previous owner and eventually went to work for him. She says that
when the previous owner decided to get out of the hobby busi-
ness, he turned Vortex over to her. She said she preferred to stay
in California and devetor Vortex than to go back to Hawaii and
work for her former boss s other businesses. How• Taylor expects the company to finish 1991 with rev-
• enues of $200,000, doubling its 1989 sales. She said
the company has grown primarily by word of mouth. About 70
percent of Vortex RI Cs revenues are derived from the retail and
mail-order segments of its business.
Lesson Learned• Taylor says she's !ear!'ed
• that customer service IS a
crucial part of running a business. '*This type of hobby is some-
thing you have to be very personalized with, and they have to Ii.kc
you," she says. "People who come into our shop I know on a flrst-
name basis. and that's what keeps them coming back." Taylor
says. too, that she had to prove herself to customers in a predomi·
nantly male bobby. At first site, she says, customers think she's
the "office girl."
-By Toa.r Cu
-Do ]'OU bow .romcoat wbo sbould be prollled la tb/1 ~ldy fell·
tuft? U so, stad }'OUr 1u11tslloll to Tbt Piiot's buslaess td/IOI',
Tony Cox, •t JJO W. Bay St., Costa ltftia, 92621.
Up the Ladder
Susan Wright Menkcs, formerly an executive in the Costa Mesa of·
of Ncwp ort Beach-based Boyle flee of Ernst & Youns, has been
En1ineer-
ia1 Corp.,
has joined
Orange law
firm Mur-
tauaJa, MW·
er, Me1er
& Nelaoa
on an of·
counsel
basis.
Timothy
J. Coofely. Menkes
Business Watch
named president of Orange Coast
Venture Group. a non-profit busi-
ness networking organization.
Newport Beach-based Wilsey
Technology Corp. recognized the
performance of folaowtna employ-
ees from its affiliated companies:
Dr. Richard Sakakura. Derek
Olin, Ray Spear and David e.ton.
Pka1• Miid ]'OUr Up IM I.MIMI'
aaaouattmtau to De l'Ufll'•
bwlaeu ftlltOI', T•J11 CG.Ii •I JJf w. Bay st., c.i. Mna, nm.
end.
FraM,A1
socne 2' jUn announecd he was
&IC .... dowia. World dus
y~~CoftDCr sh•t..WM ...... IA tM lftDHI N~.._. nee. SPoril
agent Leith Saeinbera once apln
repmen&ed the No. 1 pick ln the
NFL drift. And • mM known
tocalf1 • tho Pot DOiiy Fluhcr
was arrested.
Swtse&s turned Into
h•llucinosenic 1tT1in with the
wind-blown volcanic uh fram
Mount Pinatubo. •~entomologist
who COYCncl blmlclf with bees
becamO 1 hit at lho 99th edition of
the Oranae County Fair and a
Harbor bland house with U
bathrooms IOld (or $13.6 million.
Much Of the nadonal news hit
homo ln 1991. Students, tcachen,
parca&s Ud sports Cans wept
together when Maaic JohNOn
annoUnC:ed he had tested positive
for tho HIV vlnaa and would
retire. Spirits rote and dip~d with
the stoci. markeL Anita Hall, wu
she ttllina the truth? Everyone
had an opinion.
Here Is our Hst for the Top 10
stories that touched residents in
Newp>rt Beach and Costa Mesa
this past ye·ar.
1) The Economy -The buzz
from victory in the Persian Oulf
fades by late spring, replaced by
dwindlina confidence in the
economy ... Gov. Pete Wilson
faces a $12 billion deficit ... Costa
Mesa enacts a hiring freeze on
July 18 .. .Amen Wardy closes his
fashionable Newport Center
boutique ... Newport hands layoff
notices to five wheelchair-bound
employees but later reverses itself
... Pay raises at city hall arc met
with outrage and criticism. County
supervisors rescind their own pay
raise ... Auto magnate Jim
Slemons files for bankruptcy and
moves to HawaU ... The annual
Christmas jolt retailers hope for is
miss~ng in action -again ... The
stock market shows signs of life.
l) The Gulf War -Bombs and
tracers light up the sky over
Baghdad as the nation plunges
into war Jan. JS. The Daily Pilot's
headlJno the next morning ls in
red and reads simply: "War!" ...
Churches and taverns arc flooded
by those seeking company and
comfort .. : Airport security at John
Wayne is tightened ... Scuds and
Passings ·
Looki116i Back
Patriots become part of our
everyday language ... Flq sales
triple, protest raJlica rmle ud
pizza deliveries take off u a
nation stays home and watchca ...
CNN S)'ndrome ff• Arthur Galvan,
a 33-ycar-old Costa Mesa man. is
killed in action ... The ground war
lasts four days ... the Daily Pilot
headline on Feb. 28 is flip but to 1
the point: "It's over -we win!."
3) The Drousbt -M winter
melts away, Southern Califomlana
realize that they are on the verge
of running out of water ...
Rationing is considered and
quickly implemented in many
areas ... Newport Beach orden
residents to.cut back by 20 percent
... A hardy supply of ground water
saves Costa Mesa ... The "March
Miracle" helps us squeak through
summer ... A survey of local
politicians and water board
members shows most arc failing to
curb water usage at home ... A
trio of intense but bountiful
Pacific storms lash Southern
California as the year ends.
4) Denise Huber -The
23-year-old UCI grad vanishes
June 3 after dropping off a friend.
Her car is found abandoned on
the Corona del Mar Freeway a
short distance from her parent's
Eastbluff home ... Clues arc few
and far between and the young
woman's parents, Iona and
Dennis, arc left unsure whether
their daughter is still alive ... A
private detective, Logan Clarke, is
brought into the picture by
Huber's parents and while he is
quick to theorize on what might
have happened to the young
woman, he comes up with no
concrete leads ... Huber's parents
wait and worry and wonder.
5) Balboa Ba1 Club Expansion
A list of noted local residents who passed away this year:
William Ray -Owner of the Balboa Bay C1ub for 20 years and
avid sportsman and conservationist. Dies Dec. 15 at the age of 57.
M. Robert Guggenheim -One of Orange County's most noted
philanthropists and grandson of Industrialist Daniel Guggenheim.
Dies Sept. 24 at the age of 81.
Calvin Schmidt -Municipal court judge and prominent civic
activist Dies July 18 at the age of 61 .
W.D. "Bill" Schock -Pioneer Newport Beach boat builder who
built the first fiberglass Snowbird Sabot Dies Feb. 8 at the age of
70.
Richard J. Flamson Ill -The retired chief executive of Security
Pacinc Corp .. Flamson dies Oct 17 at the age of 62.
George Stuart Karl Jr. -Creator of the Jane Fonda workout tapes and mult.i-millionaire by age 29. Dies Aug. 1 S at the age of
38.
Trudi P. Roger -Fonner Newport Beach councilwoman whose
late husband was the city's mayor. Dies Jan. 4 at the age of 69.
fthll landsdale -The founder of 4 Day Tire Stores and
Shamrodc Q>lf Shops. Dies June 21 at the age of 83.
Carl Frederick Augustus Last -Noted local yachtsman and
businessman. Dies May 16.
Bob Cook -Cheerful, buoyant Balboa Island Ferry operator who
on his death bed told his father: "Don't ever forget me, but don't
dwell on it. You've got to get on with your life." Dies Sept. 3 at the
age ol 20.
Suunne Marie Huff min -Daughter of St. Andrews
Presbyterian Church Pastor John Huff man who created a hospice
atmosphere in her oceanfront mobile home where she lived with
friend$ durina her final weeks battling Hodgkin's Disease. Dies Sept.
12 at the age of 23. I
Erin Lynn Vallely -Sixth grader at Mariners Elementary whose
fii't with cancer was lnsplratlOnal to hundreds. Dies in September
at the age of 12.
NEW YEAR'S RESOLtrnON
rm going to:
1.) Lose 5 pounds
2.) Slow down more often
3.) fake time to tmell the flowers
4.) R.cherge my batterla at
rhe Uttle Inn On the JSey
~ .............
President George Bush and Japanese Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu
held a summit at the Four Seasons Hotel in Newport Beach.
-Perhaps a victim of its own
image as a enclave for the rich
and famous, the Balboa Bay Club
is handed a stunning setback in
July when the City Council votes
4-3 to reject lhc club's $50 million
expansion plan ... The main culprit
appears to be a three-story,
300·room hotel ... Council
members say they were swayed by
the almost "violent" reaction in
the community, which others
dismiss as a loud and noisy
minority ... The Bay Club later
files a legal claim against the city
... The plan remains in limbo ...
The club's president, Bill Ray, dies
earlier this month.
6) Newport Coast -Some of
the most majestic and untouched
coastal land in Southern California
is altered with the development of
two stunning golf courses and the
sale of ocean-view lots that are
expected to boast opulent,
'CSlatc·typc homes ... The golf
courses, pros say, will rival the
beauty of Pebble Beach while the
planned homes on Pelican Point
are palatial in design. Prospective
buyers have to make appointments
and put up $25,000 in good fait h
money just to get into the ru nning
... Newport Coast Drive, a 6-milc
road that links Coast Highway
with MacArthur Boulevard, opens
Nov. 15. The $67 mi llion road is
expected to alleviate congestion in
Corona del Mar.
7) Costa Mesa Fttcway -From
Coxes to bankruptcy, the
continuing $50 million extension of
the 55 Freeway through Costa
Mesa makes news in 1991 ...
Newport Boulevard merchan ts
suffer as construction turns the
thoroughfare in to a massive
parking lot. Several firms go belly
up and others signal they are n't
fa r behind ... Merchants pack
picnic lunches for Caltrans
workers as a peace off cring ... A
family of red foxes causes a stir
when wor~s discover their den
along the flanks of an unopened
stretch of freeway. The Coxes arc
Costa Mesa's top stories
A list of the top 5 stories in Costa Mesa:
1) Orv Amburgey -In July, former Councilman Orv Amburgey
filed a S3.8 million claim against the city and soon followed up with
a lawsuit claiming city leaders intentionally filed false criminal
charges against him.
2) Ed Glasgow -Before finishing his first term as city
councilman, former police captain Ed Glasgow resigned in June,
citing health problems. Councilmembers eventually appointed
former Planning Commissioner Joe Erickson.
3) General Plan -City leaders closed the year on the verge of
passing the long-overdue General Plan, a blueprint for growth and
development in the city for the next decade.
4) The Budget -Past years of prosperity came lo end this year
for a city long accustomed to healthy sales tax base from South
Coast Plaza and other businesses. In July, the city started a
temPorary hiring freeze, the first step in helping cut mOfe than S4
million from the budget in the next two years. Cuts could reach up
to S6 million in the next two years if sales tax revenue continue to
slump with the recession.
S) OrMlge County Fairgrounds -Costa Mesa traffic omcers had
their hands full in July when three Pacific Amphitheatre concerts -
including notorious rockers Guns N' Roses -were scheduled
during the 12-day Orange County Fair. In the continuing battle
between the amphitheater and its neighbors over noise, a judge
ruled that potentially thousands of residents who live within a mile
of the amphitheater could join a class action lawsuit seeking
damages for concert noises.
Hoag H05pital
Chemical Dependency Center
Wishes you a safe and sober holiday.
If we can help, call us at
(714 )760-5656
l:llcr lnCJllCd to a UIO at an
l!ppfOlimate cmt of S 10,000 per
pup .•. The fint lea or the f recway
ii opened ln May but the
eou&hbound lane. produc.c
oidlock. not relic( ... The freeway
Ts expected to be completed by
next December.
8) Orv Amburacy -When the
former Costa Mesa councilman .
was unseated in late 1990, he said
he had been a victim of 1 City
Hall conspiracy and vowed to clear t\iJ name. And in 1991 , he took
several steps in that direction ...
•The criminal conflict-of-interest
char1es lod&cd against him in the
heat of th~clcction arc dropped
in June aft~r Amburgey produces
a tape recording that essentially
clears him ... He files a $3.8
million legal claim against the city
the sAmc month and follows it
with a lawsuit in September ...
Amburgey files a complaint
against CitY Attorney Thomas
Kathe with the state bar ... Will
Amburgey run for council again?
Rumors abound.
9) Fairview Sbootlna -A
disgruntled worker who believed
he was the victim of racial
discrimination allegedly goes on a
shooting rampage at Fairview
State Developmental Center on
July 30, leaving his boss dead and
two others injured ... Michael
Eugene Rahming reportedly
storms a break room at the
facili ty's paint shop, shooting
James Herbert Pichon and killing
AJ Motis. Police say Rahming then
went to the administration
building and shot Executive
Director Hugh Francis Kohler in
the head ... Rahming is later
arrested and now faces a murder •
charge ... A state crisis team is
brought""1 to counsel some of the
1,089 patients at the state facility
... Kohler returns to work just days
after the shooting.
10) Todd Marinovlcb -One of
the most gifted and celebrated
athletes to emerge from Orange
County reaches a different plateau
on Jan. 20 -the Newport Beach
Jail. Newport police arrest him on
suspicion of possessing cocaine
and marijuana after he and some
pals arc stopped at the corner of
Alvarado Street and Bay Avenue
... The week before he was booted
orr the USC team ... But it doesn't
take long for him to bounce back
~· He is aelected in the flrst round
of the NFL draft by the Raiders
and in the last game of the regular
season tosses lhrcc touchdowns in
a near nawless performance •..
And de spite an uneven showing in
the fi rst round of the playoffs
when he throws four interceptions,
his teammates and coaches predict
he will be a star.
Honorable mentions: Newport
Beach City Manager Bob Wynn
retires aCtcr 20 years at the helm ·
... A Costa Mesa woman named
Omaima Nelson allegedly stabs
her husband to death and then
dismembers his body, stuffing body
parts in bags and his head in the
refrigerator ... Two Orange Coast
sisters testify in Orange County
Superior Court that thei r parents
subjected them to bizarre and
cannibalistic satanic rituals as
children ... Jean Forbath steps
down as director of Share Our
Selves in Costa Mesa ... Voters
snub Measure J, a proposed sales
tax to fu nd construction of a new
county jail ... Newport-Mesa
Unified S"hool District trustee
Tom Williams is pummeled by
newcomer Martha Fluor in a
re-c:lection bid ... Cheerleaders at
Newport Harbor High School are
suspended for a month after
c;everal are caught drinking at a
chterleading camp in Santa
Barbara ... A tiny bird known as
the gnatcatcher thrca1ens to halt
development in areas where it has
been spotted ... The San Joaquin
Reservoir in Newport Beach is
closed due to detection of a
possible cancer-causing agent ...
An AIDS unit opens at College
Hospital in Costa Mesa ... "Stars
& Stripes" smashes the
long-standing
Ncwport-to-Ensenada time record
by a full hour ... Some 12,000
parents and students gather at
Orange Coast College to protest
proposed cuts in state education ...
The Costa Mesa City Council
bucks the trend and votes lo
continue fireworks sales ... Corona
del Mar resident Ferd Johnson is
informed that his ''Moon Mullins"
comic strip is being dropped after
68 years in syndication.
Newport Beach's top stories
N
A list!)( the top 5 stories in Newport Beach:
1) The Drought -Citizens in Newport Beach felt the effects of
the drought early this year when the city mandated, for the first time
in some 20 years, mandatory 20 percent cutbacks on water use.
2) Balboa Bay dub -After two years of design work and
discussion, the Bay Club presented its expansion plans to the city
this year and got initial approval from the Planning Commission. But
the council bounced the SSO million proposal.
3) The Newport Coast -Development of The Irvine Co.'s
pristine coastal land south of Corona del Mar began this year with
the construction of two golf courses and the selling of custom home
lots. Newport Coast Drive was opened in November.
4) Open Space -How much of the undeveloped land left in the
city should be kept as open space became a key issue this year after
The Irvine Co. offered to front S20.6 million to improve city streets
in return for guarantees it can develop close to 1,000 homes and
135,000 square feet of off1CP. buildings on the land.
S) Bob Wynn -After two decades at the city's helm, City
Manager ~obert Wynn announced in June that he would retire from
city government at the end of the year.
I , W p 0 •
For This New Year
don't you deserve the beatl
Shape•Up Newport was
founded in 1982 with a
primary philosophy of
seMcang individual fitness
needs by establishing a
genuine Iona term interest in
fitness and health. Shape-Up
Newport believes in the
buic:s. Fitness programs that
are safe, easy to understand,
exciting and get results with
your goals in mind. If you
have the desire to be fit ... we
have the desire to help!
Robert L. Bums
President
"1111M-"*• n ,-• .., ........ • 11!7i-·-.-. ......... 1 o.9W ....... 4
For Jnformaticll Call 631-3623
Two made
Anthony, McGillis recognized
for their sterling contributions
Editor's Note -This is the last in a series of six columns revicwin1
the yeur in theater along the Orange CotJSl.
T he creativity involved in helping to mount a Cull-blown musical
production is not appreciably different from that required to
stage an intimate, two-character play, at least in terms of
eventual audience enjoyment.
Doth processes demand extraordinary expertise and meticulous
attention to detail. And, when the result is lit up on the stage, both
can elicit enormous appreciation from critics and audiences alike.
Today, this newspaper pays tribute to an exponent
of each category of the performing arts, a musical
director par exce llence and a mistress of subtlety in
the staging of two-character plays. They arc David
Anthony and Joan McGillis, The Pilot's man and
woman of the year in theater for 1991.
Both have been active in the mounting of
collegiate and commun ity productions for the past
--...L.....OJ two decades along the Orange Coast, and both have
Theater
Critic
recently been singularly honored for their
achievements. Anthony is the new dean of fine arts
at Golden West College, wh ile McG illis will be the
1992 president of th e Laguna Playhouse board of
directors.
Anthony, who recently completed two decades of
teaching a{ GWC, has drawn national recognition for
his work as a musical director, composer and educntor. His bnton has
se t the tempo for most of the college's musicals and his most recent
success, "Broadway Our Way Ill," was, in th is column's opinion, the
outstanding local college production of 1991.
As the founder of the Golden West College Musical Theater
Workshop, Anthony has conched students who are currently
performing in all levels of professional musical thenter. Apart from
GWC, he has headed the orchestras for productions at Orange Coast
College, the Laguna Playhouse and the Curtain Olli Dinner Theater.
Additionally, his own compositions for theater and television have
Dawd Anthony ...ct I::
McGllll1, who have mounting theater
productions on the
Oran1e Coast for the paat
two deades, are The
Pilot's man and woman of
the year in local theater
for 1991.
been he.trd internationally. He is currently writing the music for a new
series under development for KOCE·TV entitled, "Time to Grow."
He nlso wrote the music for a Broadway piny and television special,
"The Babe," starring Max Gail, and is currently composing an original
musicnl based on the Emmy-winning ABC afternoon comedy special
"The Girl Who Cou ldn't Lose.:• A hhough Joan McGillis mny•not be the most famous metnber of
her family (her daughter is :ictress Kelly McGillis), she has
become one of Orange County's most accomplished directors. And,
whether by accident or by design, many of her shows have had
two-character casts -"The Fourposter" at the Newport Theater Arts
Cen ter, "A Life in the Theater" at the Irvine Community Theater and
the Laguna productions of "Sleuth," "The Gin Game" nnd, most
recently, the highly applauded "A Walk in the Woods."
MeOIJUI N~ hot murci"1
depe in theater in UC! in 1978
and proceected to put her
knowledp to work In an Qeellent
staaina or-Tire Hot L Baltimore"
for her hometown theater, the
· Newport Theater Artl Center. She
returned co Newpon a few years
later to mount an equally proficient
production or .. The Octeue Bridae
Oub." Her other credits Include
"The Musical Comedy Murden or
1940:' '7ributo,'' "Deathtrap" and L------------'
the world premiere of "ReOections" by Laguna author Mary Jane
Roberts.
With .. A Walk in the Woodt." McOillis marked her 10th
annivemry at the Laguno Playhouse, and she will succeed one of
her actors in that show (Michael Miller, named best actor for 1991),
at the helm or the playhouse's board. Two years ago she directed her
well-known daughter Kelly in "Joy Solution" at New York Oty's
New Dramatists.
For their many years or consistently high-quality productions, for
cllcitiqg professional performances from amateur actors and
musicians, David Anthony and Joan McGillis have given exemplary
service to local theater.
T hey join 34 prior men and women of the year in theater,
includina: David Emmcs and Doris Allen, 1974; Kent Johnson
and Marthella Randall, 197S; Martin Denson and Pati Tambellini,
1976; Ernie Verre and Barbara Hampton, 1977; John Ferzacca and
Jean Koba, 1978; Ben Jutzi and Susan O'Connell, 1979; Douglas
Rowe and Eiieen Fishbach, 1980; Joe Cordio and Patti·Ocnc
Sampson, 1981; Don Laffoon and Lee Shallat, 1982; David Paul and
Betsy Paul, 1983; Robert Conrad and Robbie Schoonover, 1984;
Charles Mitchell and Barbara Van Holt, 198S; Bill Purkiss and Di:ine
Doyle, 1986; Thomas Bradac and Teri Ralston, 1987; Tim Nelson and
Beth Hansen, 1988; Mark Turnbull and Patricia Terry, 1989, and
Richard Doyle and Anni Long, 1990.
Congratulations to the new Inductees in The Pilot's "thenter hall of
fame." Their new assignments should give their talents even broader
reign in 1992. •
Knitters weave entertaining. show MOVIB //stings
X marks the spot for countryfied quintet's set Earlier in the set, Doc
introduced a song by saying,
"Here's a song that doesn't seem
to want to go away and-"
~o!P.~NIMA 300 ~ c..-°"" 644.0760
By Matt Coker
Entettalnment Ec:rtor
T he last time I saw X -five
or so New Year's Eves ago
at the Long Beach Arena
- I was struck by the fact
that the crowd seemed so young.
I caught X's country cousin The
Kniuers at the Coach House in
San Juan Capistrano Saturday
night and was struck by the fact
that the crowd seemed so old.
Gone were the leather jackets,
creatively carved hai rstyles and
biker boots. Instead, most in the
thinysomcthing crowd sported
casual coats, hai rcuts befitting real
9-to-5 jobs and desi$ner tennies
or, for the truly daring, cowboy
boots.
The Kniucrs have aged as well
-they've added some gray hairs,
recedi ng hairlines and a dress size
or two since that X show -but
more importantly, they've aged
musically, too.
Like fine moonshine.
This was The Knitters first
appearance live in five years.
Without having to contend with
the pretensions accompanied with
promoting an album, kicking off a
tour or X's political nnd societal
finger-pointing, the country-fried
quintet cut loose with n
root-stomping 1 1/2-hour show that
put ;ill those whipper-snappers
currently on the concert circuit to
shame.
Vocalist Exene Cervenka never
sounded better live than she did
S:iturday night -nt least she on The Knitters' only album,
sounded better than the six or 1985's "Poor Little Critter On the
seven times I heard her live Road." After nnother ballad, the
before. Motherhood, a solo career deep-voiced Alvin complnined,
and on-stage sobriety obviously "John, you always get to sing the
agrees with her musically. intimate, s~nsitive songs. Just once
With her long, black skirt nnd I'd love to sing one." Alvin then
collar-length. brown hair -only took lead vocals for the playful
. one.shade! -making her appear "Wanda and Duane" from his
more like a typical suburban mom current solo album "Blue Blvd."
th an punk high priestess of past Doe then sum moned the other
(she did don a black, long-sleeve Knitters, whose name is a t:ikeoff
T-shirt with a skull across the on the '50s country group The
chest and names on the arms for Weavers, and the five played most
old time's sake), she confidently of the material from the "Critter"
crooned alongside X-mate/ album, some other folksy numbers
ex-husband John Doc. they haven't previously recorded
M ustached singer-acoustic
guitarist Doe, in blue jeans
and a pink, cowboy-style shirt, was
also in fine form, particularly on
th e Waylon Jenningseque ballads
th at were scattered nicely
throughout a set that also featured
lickety·split numbers showcasing
the rapid-fire licks of electric
guitanst Dave Alvi n (himself a
solo performer, sometime Dlaster
and ex-interim X guitarist).
Whether playing a soft ballad or
speedy ditty, Doc, Alvin, snare
drummer D.J. Bonebrake nnd
upright bass player Jonny Ray
Bartel were so tight you would
think they were just ending a
worldwide tour together, instead
of getting together, as Doc told
The Pilot last week, "for a few
shuckles."
The show opened with Doc and
Alvin alone for Merle Hnggayd's
"Silver Wings," which Doc sang ·
and more songs from the various
band•members' solo projects.
~s Excne summed things up
after n seemingly possessed Alvin
captivated the audience with
nnother of his patented, but
refreshingly non-tedious, guitar
storms, "That's Knitters' jazz. And
there's Knitters' folk and Knitters'
rock 'n' roll and Knitters' little bit
country little bit rock 'n' roll."
T he crowd, like most crowds,
pref erred the up-tempo
numbers to the ballads,
particulnrly "Wal kin' Cane,"
"Love Shack" (The Knitters'
rendition of the X song, not the
D·52's hit), "Skin Deep Town"
and "Wrcckin' Dall," which closed
the show before the band returned
for the encores "Trail of Time"
and "Rock Island Line," which
brought the audience to its feet
thanks to Bonebrake's progressive
ambush of his drum set.
" -Los Angeles,'' an obvious X
fan shouted.
"No, not that one," Doc ..
answered. The Knitters' then did
their version or X's "New World,"
which seems more appropriate
now than it did in the mtd· '80s.
Some sample lyrics:
"All we need is money/Just give
us whDt you can spare/20 or 30
pounds of potatoes and 20 or 30
beers/A turkey on ThDnksgiving/
Like alms for the poor/Al/ we are
the necessities and more/It was
better before, before they voted
fo r what's his namcffhis is ·
supposed to be the New World ... "
lt's nice to have bands like X
around to remind us that the
world's a mess. But it's olso nice
to have bands like The Knitters
around to let us relax for a spell,
put our designer tennies or boots
on the table and listen to some
kick-grass music.
Let's just hope we don't have to
wait five more years.
The Knitters arc slated to play
at McCabe's Guitnr Shop in Snntn
Monica on Jan. 24-25.
0
S aturday's opening oct was the
Snn Clemente band 1--rhe
Wave," which sounded like Gcddy
Lee or Rush bocked up by Iron
Butterfly. The loud, monotonous
drivel was actually apropos. That's
the same kind of music that
caused many to flock to bands like
X in the first place.
1. u.x. (~ 12. 4,.
2. ''*• .. n.i .. (IQ 10:45, 1:30. 4:15, 7, 10
3 . ....-(l'Ol 10:45, 1:30. 4:30, 7 30, 10:15
IOWAIDI ISi.AND CINIMA foehcwl 1t1onc1. Newo
pol! c-640· 12"
I. MMe ef Tl4e• (R) 11145, 2!30. 5:15. I.
10:40
2. ~(IQ 11:30, 2, 4:45, 7:30, 1()}15
3. nw ~ .....,.., l'0-131 12:15, 2:15,
4:15, 6:15, 1:15, 10:15
4 . ...._ .t .._ .,.. rot 12:30. 3, 5!30. I.
10:20
s ... _,, '""" ........ IGI 11 :15, l:IS, 3dS. S:IS, 1:15, 9:15
6. Mr Oltl (P0) 12, 2:30. 5, 7:30, 9:45
1. Sltw T...i. VI l'Gl 11 :30, 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30
UDO C1NIMA ~ ...... 01 ~ VJlooe
613·8350
lv9q (IQ I 30. 4:1$, 7, 9.4S
..On THIATH 2905 E. Coost M~ 673·
6260 llhe1tM4' lft Aupt 2, 4:30. 7, 9.IS
Coltl Miii
lOWAIOI CINIMA CINTU 2701 t1otbot ..... J
MetO v.-c-979.4141
I. ,....,_ et n.. ~ II :d , 2'30, S: IS, I,
10:40
2. n.....,..., 1cwt llQ 12:15, no. 4:4S, 1.
9.IS
3. ~ ,..., l'0-13) 12, 230. s. 7:.30,
10
4, ·~ ef the Mile (P'(ll 12:15, 2:45, S:IS,
7:4$, 10
IDWAaol QNIMA HolW lhd./Adom• lwe. 546·
3102
... vtr-4 the...., IOI 12. 2. 4, 6, a. 10
HAllOI TWIN CIHIMAS ....,_ 11-dA. w.a-
511...i 631 "'"°I
I. N..a. tpO. IJJ 10:15. 1, 4, 7, 9i4S
2. lterTrell VI tpGj 12:30, 3, 5:30, I, 10:15
MUA OHIMA.....,,. liod/19111St.646-5025 c._. ,_ (IQ >:10. a a.<llilrwh 11Q 1?·4S,
5:30, 10:20
TOWN CINTO CINIMAI So.ieh COGll "°"9 751·
4114
1. nw ..... .., aceve (IQ 12,30, '· 5:30. •. 10:30
2. ,,.,_ .. T14u lai 11:15, 2. 4:45, 7:30.
10:15
Anna Chlumsky of "My Girl."
3. lvt-r (llJ 1:30, 41IS, 7, !:.S
4. At ,..., ....... '1elfh ...... '-" .-i 12.
2:30. 7, 10 20
IOUTM COAST l'lA1A In•~ ~6
2711
I. hovty llfMI the._., IGI I, 3, S. 7, 9
2.HHk OO II, 1;4$, 4130, 7130, 10:15
3. J.f.K. (IQ 12. 4,.
SOUTH COAST VIUAOI 5.....ao.-d Mtto1
S40.0S94
I. Hl9h H"la !Niil II 4S, 2 IS, 4.4S, 1 IS.
9 4S
2. The D~le Ute .. V.,.,.,tiue ~ 12,
2. 4, 6 ••• 10
3. Modc11M ..... ,., (l'O· I 3) 11 :30, 2: IS, 5,
7:45, 10-15
lrvlne
THI UNIVIUITY C1NIMA 4245 Comp.n 1M-.
154.Ull
I. My Oltt ll'Gl 11:30, l14S, 4, 6:15, l:IS Cape··-~ 10:15
2. lv1Ff ~ 12, 2:30, S.15, 7:45, 10:15
3. The a...t ., kevt ~ 11:4S, 2, 4:30, 7,
9.30
4 ... .,. Trek VI rGl 12, 2 30. S, 7:30, 10
5. a._., .ct ... hMt IGI 12. 2. •.'·a. 10
6. Ptlthw .t ... Mile ll'GI 12:15, 2:45, 5:15, 1,30, 9~45
WOOOHIDOI CINIMAS 1ononco '~IC..t· -°"" 551-0655 I Tt.e Ail'-Pelftltr (l'G-13) 12, 2 30. 5,
7:30, 9.45
2. ni. '-' .., kevt llQ 1 no. 3, 5:30, e.
10-15
3. '-'•"-la) I, $, t
4 • ....,_ ef ... Mcie ll'GI I 2. 2!30, S, 7130,
10
s .""" "°' 10·30. 1:15 .... 7, 9:45
•peaking of communication, doctors and 1111111111111 saim to have a lot Iii common
I t's not surprising women feel completely
at home with their docton. They don't
. communicate any better than their
husbandl. Al I001l as a
woman staru reciting her ""
Ust of complainu to the man
ln the white coat, she's
confronted with the same
preoccupied stare that
grcet1 her acrou the
&reakfaat table from the
man in tho bathrobe. By
tradition, doctors and
husbands are men of (cw
words. Dialoaue is paired
-----down to essentials -as If It
were bein& sent by oveneu
cable.
Both men, however, play
• dominant role ln a
woman'• life. lt'a like havin1two1pous~s
You pt twb the advice and twice the
dincd\llli TM authority ftpre in charp "' pllll ordlft,. .... _ blM ~te la
tbl mof1 , • _,..ill ·tad. .................... -,_
59 and
Holding
............
mltortly wum ,W ID lllllp ._ ... tlM Ill
• die arrow tbm'l""' to -.,, ..a
change the oil every 3,000 miles or tho enpnc
will blow up .
A woman could use a third spouse. A
communications expert who's on the same
wave lenath.
The lack of interaction between doctor and
patient has been of major concern to The
American Medical Aalociation, which has
publiJhed a guide for medical students and
phP.icians to increuc their communication
sk.iJls. Many medical flcilitiea also offer
workshops to promote sreater awareneu and
compaulon toward patients.
There's no reuon why huabanda couldn't
benefit equally from th ... ~
especially in hnpl'OYlq the bedlfd. manner.
Think what an adYanced coune in Byo
Contact mlaht do for marital romaaca.
U5te:rdft1 '-another lldll In ihon supply on
the profeuiOnal 11 well u Mine front.
Studiet Of 3JI tapecl ........ N¥eaJ that
-~·'i$'.15 ID 2' 111 ....... ..., ..... .. ............... ... .. ....,..,.
~tlll Ira 10 1'1anM '
n. I 1 •"91111 • •n =--.. ,.,..... .,1ain11c t;ISI r-•.,.
a doctor ~n •t a part of )'Our anatomv and
mutters, I don't lite the looks of that~" he
sounda u if he were commcntina on a hunk
of abstract aculptun rather than your swollen
kneecap. Spousa could abo use a little
diplomacy. Instead of a husband blurting out
that his wife'• zebra-stripped bedroom
wallpaper ii cruel and unusual punf1hment
how much moro sensitive it'd be to explain'
tho wallpaper sfve• him inaomnla and double
vfllon.
,. Editor Willi.im Lobdell ••. 642-4321, ext. 351
II c•al •d unu-ual punis-ment .
Eighth Amendment also includes provisions . guarOing against excessive bail or fines
IY DP. ill Ellill Alin
W hen scntencin1 Irish rebels for
treason ia l ns, British judges
proaounced: "You arc to be
drawn on hurdles to the place of •
execution, where you arc to be ·hanged
by the neck, but not until you arc dead;
for while you are still living your bodies
arc to be taken down, your bowels torn
out and burned before your faces, your
heads then cut off, and yo\lr bodies
divided each into foyr quarters, and your
heads and quarters to be then at the
King's disposal; and may the Almighty
God have mercy on your souls."
"Caesar had his Brutus, Charles the
First hls Cromwell, and George the
Third may profit by his example," Henry
warned. Interrupted by cries of
"Treason!" from Loyalists, he retorted,
"IC this be treason, make the most of it!"
Fortunately for Henry and the other
rebels, the colonies won the War for
Independence and their leaders were
spared a fate similar to that meted out
to the Irish. Until then, the possibility of
a traitor's gruesome death hung over
them like a dark cloud.
concerning the proposals that eventually
became the Bill of Rights, Samuel
Livermore, one of only two members
who addressed the punishment issue,
said, 0 lt is sometimes necessary to hang
a man. Villains often deserve whipping
and perhaps having their ears cu t off;
but are we in the future to be prevented
from inflicting these punishments
because they are cruel?"
of the crime for which it is imposed.
Nevertheless, what is considered to be
excessive is ultimately a matter for the
Congress and the courts, and sometimes
the wheels of gove rnment, and justice.
grind slowly.
T ake for example, the matter of
defining "excessive ball." It was not
until 1966 that the provi sions of the 1789
Judiciary Act concerning bail were
updated. Neither the Congress nor the States
that ratified the Eighth Amendment
spelled out what they meant by cruel and
unusual punishment, leaving the
Glving practical definition to the
language of the Constitution may be the
official responsibility of those elected
It would be hard to believe that
Patrick Henry was ignorant of the
penalty attached to the crime of treason
when, in that same year, he rallied
Virginia against the King with his
immortal "Give me liberty or give me
death!" Clearly, he was prepared to be
charged with treason, for only a few
years earlier he had stood before the
Virginia legislature to challenge the
infamous Stamp Act imposed on the
colonies by Great Britain.
I n 1789, during the debates over
ratification of tho Constitution,
Patrick Henry led the opposition in
Virginia. demanding the addition of a
Bill of Rights. Among bis
recommendatiops was a ban of "tortuous
or cruel and barbarous punishment."
When finally agreed upon as th~ Eighth
Amendment to the Constitution. the
prohibition was against "cruel and
unusual punishment."
The obvious problem lies in the
definition of what is cruel and unusual.
The precise language was taken from the
English Bill of Rights of 1689 and
prohibitions against excessive
punishment actually predated the Magna
Carta of 1215. Yet, the fate of thieves,
drunks and other petty criminals
routinely included whipping, branding of
cheeks and the forehead with hot irons,
and cutting off or slitting ears.
In the brief debate in Congress
practical definition to the .people's
elected representatives and the judges,
apparently to reflect the values of
succeeding generations.
T he language of the Eighth
Amendment is vague concerning its
two other provisions as well -that
neither excessive bail shall be required
nor excessive fin es imposed. The key
word in each case is "excessive."
Generally, this has been understood to
mean that neither bail nor a fine can be
grossly out or proportion to the severity
and appointed to serve in government
office. But the ultimate responsibili ty in
our republic is with us as we choose
those who will represent us in those
offices. Patrick Henry was willing to die
for freedom and labored diligently to
secure for us the Bill or Rights, including
the guarantees in the Eighth
Amendment. Whether they remain
secure is-tip to us.
Dr. Jo Ellen Al/en, a resident of
Corona de/ Mar, is the president of the
Eagle Forum of California.
Duke not the answer to society's -ills
M ark Petracca has little
room to talk about the'
struggle to recove r our
gentle nature in political debate.
His column, "Duke's politics at
home in Or4nge County," is rife
with emotion and
unsubstantiated facts that
inflame passions rather than
address real problems in society.
In short, his writing and opinions
arc a microcosm of what is
wrong with American politics.
The way to address the ills of
society are to identify the root
causes and have-a serious
intellectual discourse on
potential solutions. Tbtt hate
crimes alluded to in Pctracca's
column arc symptoms, not
causes.
D avid Duke is symptomatic of
bigger problems facing
America as the nation struggles
to get back on the right track
economically and socially. The
fact that a politician can remake
himself in the image that he feel s
will most appeal to the voters
betrays the basic ideals of the
American political system. Gone
arc the men and women who
stood by their principles,
regardless of how popular they
may be, and led by example.
The real problem with the
David Duke candidacy is the fact
that people are paying attention
to a man who is intellectually
bankrupt and is no more a
leader than Ralph Cramden. By
focussing attention on the man,
the media assists him in getting
his message out by encouraging
him to dilute his true posi tions
and ·in the process hi:lp to create
a national contender.
M r. Duke has the right to
say what he believes. as
does Mr. Pctracca and any other
American. The tr~edy is that
politicians and the media arc so
far out of touch with society that
they actually lend legitimacy to
such candidates.
Another tragedy is the effort on
the part of Mr. Pctracca to
discount the legitimate concerns
of the public. Big government,
taxes, welfare, busing, affirmative
action arc not issues for which
the Democrats have exclusive
rights to the answers. To use Mr.
Petracca's simple logic, if one
advocates a flat tax or a
reduction in taxes along with a
reduction in government
spending, then they are a racist
supporter of Duke.
This oversimplification is how
we got to Duke being a force on
the American political landscape
in the first place. Emotional
arguments that ref use to address
the problems created and
perpetuated by both Republican
and Democratic administrations
since the New Deal move the
nation no closer to finding
solutions. The code words
referred to by Mr. Petracca arc
the creation of those who want
to discourage any rigorous
discussion of the sad truth of
failed policies or of having to
make choices because the
pocketbook is no longer full .
W e must confront head on
the problems of sustaining
prolonged economic growth, the
chronically unemployed, falling
living standards, the decline of
the family unit a'! a supporter of
basic education and behavior.
and the rights of the individual
within society. These concerns
prese11t tough choices that will
be painful and will not be
addressed until the le aders and
media of this country stop giving
people like David Duke
legiti macy through attention.
T he decision to attack the
citizens of Orange County as
being silent supporters of David
Duke and what he represe nts is
typical of smug Northeast
Corridor political pundits. Citing
the New York Times as an
authority on anything remotely
similar to Orange County only
damages the argument he is
attempting to support.
Moreover, the linkage between
Orange County -and the sources
of financing for Duke's
campaign. begs the question as
to how much are the "very
sizable" contributions from
Orange County. The failure to
provide an actual dollar figure
does little for the author's
positiOn. This unsubstantiated
accusa tion against the majority of
Orange County residents is
unwarranted and demands a
responsible accounting on the
part of Mr. Petraccn. He must
identify and prove who are the
racists and bigots of the county.
DONALD C. OSTERLUND
Costa Mesa
Best of the Hotline · How to get involved Photos In the park
I am relieved that the parks and
recreation commission decided
not to allow the sleazy photo
shoots at Tc Winkle Park to
continue. Apparently, it's now up
to the city council to reinforce that
decision. The Pilot quoted
Councilman Van Holt saying the
attire he's seen on models doesn't
offend him. If he saw the picture
on The Pilot's Dec. 19 front page,
I am certainly disappointed in his
value system. However, hopefully
he will understand the near-nude
models and their behavior offends
a majority or thoso who use the
park for wholesome purposes.
DONNIE O'NBAL
C.Osta Mesa
Pruldent • Georae Bu1b, (R), The Whito
House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.,
Wuhinaton, D.C. 20SOO
\'kt Prell ... &
Dao ~ (R). Senato Oaic.
~ Walhll\l10n. D.C. 20510
GMeor
Pete WDIOft, (R), State ~phol,
Sacnmcnto, 95814, (916)445·.2841
U.S. SENATORS
Alu en--. (D)T m1 w.
Oii&Ury BW .. Suitt sis. 1.o1 ~ ~ (213)215-2186. w.-. .., •• ,, (It). )Ao() E.
ICalella A-. Sulle 1068. Anaheim. ..._.,..ma
Foreign Issue ·
I 'm looking at Youth page of
your Dec. 28 issue, and I just
can't believe that on that page out
of the six people interviewed over
66 percent of them arc foreigners.
Js this what this country has come
to?
I don't consider this a prejudice
remark eitficr. I was born and
raised here ~nd my f amity and my
family before them. But when a
newspaper does interviews, I mean
can't you find Americans to
interview?
GUY PIERSON
Corona dcl Mar
Editor's note: The Youth p11ge was
produced as a class project by the
students of Costa Mesa High
School.
This is your community newspaper, and we'd like to hear
from you. Here's how you can become an active participant in
the Pilot's Community Forum page.
1" Call the Readers' Hotline (642·6086) and leave your
message. While we we!come all comments, we'll only publish
comments from those who leave a name (please spell it out), city
and phone number (for verification).
1" Write a letter. Please be as brief as possible. longer letters
will be considered for Community Forum page. Mail your letter
to "letters," 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or fax
them to 646-41 70.
1" Give the editor a call. William Lobdell can be reached at
642-4321, ext. 351 and would love to hear from you.
1" Our views vs. your views. In our news page, we at the
Pilot strive to be fair and objective. On the Community Forum
page, we try to do the same &y publishing a wide range of vie~
-many of which we disagree with -in the interest of fairness.
The Pilot's opinions are restricted to our editorials.
How To Contad: Your LegislaJors
MacArthur Blvd., East Tower, Newport Beach, 92660. 156.()665. Thomas F. RJley Sth Dist.
Newport Beach, 92660. 156·2244. (Reprc1ents Newport Bench.) (Newport Beach. SantA Ana
(Represents Colla Mesa and Nolao Frlnclle, (R). 69th Dist.. Hei&ht') 834-3SSO
Newport Beach.) 1719.5 Newhopc St., Suite 201,
Daaa ...,.Mcbtr, ~R) '42nd Olst.. Fountain Vatlcy, 92708. 662-5503. COUNTY BOARD OF
2733 Pldflc: 0-. Highway, Suile (Represents pac11 of Costa Mesa. EDUCATION
306. :rornnce. 90505, (213) t:ountaln Vartcy and Huntington 200 Kalmus Drive, Costa Meso,
32S..-a. (Represents ~rts of Beach.) P.O. Box 9050, 92628-9050.
H1.1ntlnt1on Beach and Fountain · 966-4000. Valley.) CAUFORNIA COASTAL Elha~th D.1Parktr, member,
COMMISSION Trustee Area 5 (Costa Mesa,
STATE SENATE
MtrlH 8ctP90a. (R). 37lh Dlsc.
140 Ncwpon Ceater Driw. SuJto
120, Newport 8oKh. 92660.
640-1137. (ReptetiOnll Newport
Beach)
JOba t. l#Mi. (k). 3St~ Dist.,
1940 w. Ora,..wood. kite 106..
Oranp. 9*I. 939-0604.
1(Rtpraenta O,.c. .._.)
San Francisco ('41')904-5200 Newport Beach.)
(South 4'081l rcak>n ~raao 1plit
between omc:. in ~ Dcach OIA.HGI COUNn FAIR BOUD
2 3~71, and San Oieao a F'.U Dr .. Colt& Mesa. 7.51 ·FAIR
) 297.9740, President: ......, IA••· Vice
mlaloeer Doe Mdaaltt Preddent, LanJ AIMW; Dirccto~
(619)723-9286 ,.... ,,. ..... Cll•l ........
O..rtlae a.rj, NMCJ DeoitJ,
.... ~ ........... Dea ,.....
For these residents,
it's time to move on
SOB, IT'S LJK.E LEAVING THE OLD PIONEER HOMESTEAD
-Way back in 1959, when Orange Coast natives were selling
beads and blankets to the tourists, Charley Hester became one of
the principal develope rs of a quaint community to be named
Cameo Shores. He and darling wife Nora were the first sett lers,
building their cabin atop a bluff with an ocean view that would
have dazzled ol' Balboa himself.
And now, after 32 years of roughing it, the
Hesters arc about to bid fond farewell to the old
homestead. They're preparing to move up the
pike a piece, to the relatively new colony of
condos known as Belcourt.
"The old place was getting too big for Nora
and me," 5aid Charley, "what with th ree
daughters moving on, and all. We'll miss it, but
we'll try to adjust."
Helping them adjust to the new lifestyle, I've
learned, is word that Belcourt's landscaping
alone cost in the ne ighborhood of $15 million -
-----·-which has got to be one of the nicest neighborhoods on the entire planet.
The Hesters deserve all the best. Their
philanthropies arc near-legendary, but the
-----• charities are almost incidental. Take away all
that scenic splendor, and you still have the same good guy from
Hurst, lit., and his sweet lass from down the road in Effingham,
where - last I heard -they didn't even have a zillion-dollar
ocean view.
0
YOCKS POPULI -There are some funny people out there in
Pilotland. to wit:
•John V. Davies se nds a newspaper clip headed, "Bush
Hunting Quail," and his marginal scrawl reads, "Didn't know Dan
was missing."
• Carlos Moreno insists there's a small thoroughfare in Costa
. Mesa known as Lange Drive, on property owned by an elderly
~entlcman. He's snapped a photo of the sign, which he claims
inspired the traditional New Year's Eve song. The caption: "Old
Lange's Sign."
• Chuck Torres regrets that Mario Cuomo decided against
seeking the presidency. He might've selected Estes Kcrauvcr as his
running-mate, thus providing Hispanic voters with this catchy
ticket: "Cuomo-Estes?"
0 HAPPY DIRTHDAY, CONSERVATIVELY SPEAKING -Peggy
Goldwater Cloy advises tha• her illustrious sire, former U. S.
Senator Barry Goldwater, will celebrate his 83 rd birthday Jan. 1.
If you're searching for a gift for this Grand Old Man of the
Grand Old Party. you might consider a personalized selection of
spare parts. This won't be easy, because Mr. Conservative already
owns a couple of artificial hips, a brace of knee replacements, and
a late-model shoulder.
Which is why his daughter calls him "Bionic Barry."
Peggy and husband Bob Clay can't attend Wednesday's birthday
party in Phoenix. but they're sending a token of affection -the
1992 "Curmudgeon's Desk Calendar."
0
IT DOESN'T GET ANY LOWER THAN THIS -Lots of folks
get depressed over the holidays, but guitar virtuoso Norm Waldrip
fears he may have suffered "the most unkindest cut of all.''
In his Monday mail he found a letter from Ed McMahon,
beginning, "You may already be a loser ... "
Superintendent: Joho w. Nicoll
Board Members: Slael'f'1
Loofbourrow. claalrman; Jim de
Boom, Rod MacMUU1a. Jody
Franco, Forrtst WtrDtr, Ed
Dtt~er, Martha Ftuor.
MESA CONSOUDATED WATER
DISTRICI' 1965 Placentia. Co5ta
MeA. 631-1200 Board Members:
Tnady Ohlls, Haak Pulaa, Marlo
Dunntt, Jack Hall, Tom Nd.son
CITY GOVERNMENT
ONta Maa: City Hall, 77 Fair
Drive, 7~223. Mary Hombuckle.
mayor; Sandn Oeels. vice IU)'OC';
Peter Dutra. Joo Ericboa and Jay
H'!ll'Phrcy. council memben.
N"-'*1 ._. a.,. Hall. 3300
NewpGlt =· w.,or. PU'thw; ....... a...,,.., Cai. ...... Hiri. .... lie .........
R l l,~w.& •
T1£ ~mOll lt\CI • COSTA •w
Pi
An Independent Newspaper
Costa Mesa DUI
By LorlAnn Basheda
Stall W1*r
COSTA MESA -The police department will
more than quadruple the number of officers scour-
ing the streets for drunken drivers tonight and se nd
up a helicopter crew for extru enforcement:
The nine·mpn task force will begin patrolling th e
city at 6:30 p.m. and continue until 3:30 a.m.
The same task force arrested more drun ken driv-
ers th:rn any other county city on New Year's Eve
the last three year's running.
"l think Costa Mesa's task force scnc.ls a very
clear message," said J:rnet Cater, ac.lministr.1tor fo r
the Orange County chapter of ~!others Ag:.11nst
Drunk Driving. "That iC you're goin~ be partying
with ulcohol to bring in the N~w Year, ~ must
hnve a dcsi~nat¢d driver, get a taxi or make some
other arrangements. Because to get arrested ·ror
d~nk driving is a very expensive proposition."
In addition to losing their driver's licenses for 90
dnys, Orange County residents arrested for drunken
driving now pay about $1,200 in fines and court
costs, nccording to Cater. And a DUI arrest raises
insurnncc rntes a minimum of $1,000 a year for five
to seven years, she said. Then there's attorney fees. ,___.....,
"Even renting a limousine would be a whole lot
cheaper than getting arrested for drunk driving,"
Cater said. "It costs a lot of money that is cosily
avoided -and that's the &ood news."
The bad news is that not eve~e . heeds IM
warn Ina.
Through November 1990, Costa Mesa police
made neatly 1,000 drunken driving arrests and in·
vcstigntcd 183 alcohol-related accidents.
And so far this' year, at least two Costa Mesa
traffic deattis can be blnmed on alcohol. Police arc
still tcstinJ the blood content o( three other traffic
accident vactims.
In one traffic fatality, a 26-year-old Costa Mesa
resident is (acing up to 10 years in jail tor the death
of his brother. Julian Morales-Marquez was alleg-
edly drunk when he smashed into a light pole on
• Bristol Street In ~tember. ~ bia ~
~-.~ PoUce ~a1ed remains ol tbe 280 ZX Morab
Muques was drlvina that nlpt on the corner of
l7tb Street and N~ BauMnl -a .._.inder
of.what can happen to people who drlAk and drive.
Another alcohol-n:lated wreck is on display at
FalMew Road and Baker Street -the intersection
with the highest accident rato iA. the city. £
Sgt. Dave Walker said they display can cru led
by drunken drivers on city scrects each holida a-
SOG to nalse awareness.
The C.OSta Mesa police department ranks number
one in the nation for DUI arrests pe:r capita.
From A1
Along the coast, sand flew but the surf stayed do.wn,
preventing d:image to waterfront homes and buildings.
"The surf wasn't really strong enough where it
threatened any houses or structures along the beach,"
Newport Marine Safety Officer Mike Halphide said. "It
was real windy but the surf never picked up to more
than five feet."
For the first time in months, pools of shallow muddy
water formed in the Santa Ana River, but the amount
of rain from the two storms was not enough to require
Oood control releases from Prado Dam or cause any
damage to the 1.4 billion Oood control project.
Although the lower part or the river is still under
construction, the Oood control project includes ways to
' deal with heavy rains and water released from Prado
Dam, said Ed Andrews, a project manager with the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Until the storm hits, coast residents can expect highs
in the mid 60s and sunny skies, with increasing cloudi-
ness New Year's Day, the weather service said. Starting
Wednesdny night, rain is expected through Saturday
with heavy winds predicted on Thursday and Friday.
lttP~duc
A sailboat scurries (or home ,'\!> :t slorm looms over Corona dcl Mar Sunday. The recent rains have brought two inches of precipitation to the area •
The storm will also bring more snow to local moun-
tain areas. The last storms dumped more than two feet
of snow at Bear Mountain, Snow Sumroit and Moun-
tain High ski resorts in the San Bernardino Mountains.
-
HATS: Demand booms for hand-made lids
From A1
hobby and her run-in with the
law, and , .. ould like to ~ell her
hats in their store. The husi-
ncss is dedicated to ke1..ping
craft alive anc.I offer-. more than
200 classes.
"She is a vcl") precious
woman," saic.1 -Pieccm.i"crs cu-
owner Judy llucger. '"People
:ire touchcJ bv her hanJwurl-
an d wha t she's domg. \\'e kel
fortunate that our p.11hs ;ire
going to cross."
Harold, a fo1 mcr saleswoman
who demonstrated products in
major dcp:111mcnt !>tores 1n
London and New York, said
she is delighted by the ~hancc
to <:Ontinuc wit h her ~.
anu she i.) moved b)t-,a:,..._ ~:..;.~
nc's of ~tr.1ngcrs. "My good-
ne~'. I just can't believe it," she
~aid. '"J m alw:.iys praying every
nigh t, thanl.ing Goll lor ull the
little thinp I'm !>lill able to c.lo.
J kd much be tter th.i n I c.lid."
Quality Service
You Can Depend On
BENZ & BEAMER
Specia lizing i n Mer ced es Benz & BMW Cars
375 BRISTOL #85 •COSTA MESA• 668-0882
MON-FRI 8-6 & SAT. By Appointment ~ E£J
German Home Bouy
Wedding Cakes "The Old-
Fashion Way" 2950 Grace In.
C.M. Call for info. 540-0281
c;O\\':\~ HI ...\DPILCES
Deshenll' s Couture
Custom made
Bridal • Fonnal • Dressmaking
& AJtcrations
714-675-3573
rH ):\l.Y;\IOO~S
Doryman's loo
Ottanfrunt Bed & Bruldast
Romanoe. Lu~ry. rc~ndmJ cle~antt &
V1cton:in Gril11dc11r •wall you Make phn•
today for your lfoncymoon or 1nmn\'Cl"\.lry
C'omphmenluy c.hampapie with ad
675-7300
.
JURY DIJTY: ·After three weeks, it begins to drag a bit
From A1
a county firefighter. "Not even
sure why they cut the check."
Weck Four
I ~ l\\Q days before
~rhanksgivi.~and nobody it> lOO
k~crforfbCin}f]'lcked for a jury.
After three weeks of listening 10
attorneys discuss the fin e points of
blood alcohol readings and the
nuances of roa dside sobriety tests,
we'v~ flGd enough. ·
"l\o6'-got all my relatives coming
in from Arizona," a fellow juror
e~plains. "I've go t a lot of work to
do. l don't need this." ·
••1 just neec.I to get back to
v/Ol'k-," (lOOthcr juro r Sighs. • 1 J· suggest it'll be an easy day. No'
judge wants to get hip-deep into a
crimin al case;~ the eve of
Thanksgiving. Trust me, 1 say, I
spent more than two yea rs
cove ring the courts, I know these
things.
I low '' rong I was.
J udge Ronald Krebcr is in no
mood for excuses.
And it's too bad because of the
12 of us seatec.I in the jury box,
there arc at least a dozen good
Romantic Weddings at Su
• l uxury Motor Y.xhts and ~·l•ng Vessek
'
Our ProfC16tOl'lal Cootdin.ll«S
Prov>de T oc..W Planning Design«l to
f rt Your Budj;et
(714) 675-4704
Venetian Gondola Getaway
• c.oti,nW't IJ.lsl..eb \i. L 7r 'Int• Cham!)'p 9 .
c;l.lf • Cit Cl!ll~ 8EACH
Cla1rt.n (714) 61s.4104
reasons why we shou excused
-the approaching holid:.iy, the
need to return to work before the
month gets away from us, minor
surgery, pnrent-leacher
conferences ...
"'Is tlH!te-1mydnc who can't
~l"c OIHhtt;..,t'l J<rcbcr asks,
smiling just enough to let us know
that he's fu lly nware of the
nnswcr.
Hands shoot up like fans doing
the wave at the Dig A.
"1 have an important business
meeting in the morning that I
need to attend," an insurance
salesman sitling next to me
explains,
'1Your' btisincss cnn't get along
without you for a day or two?" the
judge wonders.
"Well, sure it can but ... "
Krcbcr moves on down the row
of jurors, gently brushing away one .
excuse after another. The lone
SUl'ivor is a \\Oman who has to
take her husband to the doctor.
It's a long-standing appointment.
Surprisi ngly, none of the
attorneys opt to bounce a single
juro r -an extrao rdinary turn of
events fo r any courtroom.
"We find the Jury to be
acce ptable," th twn defense
attorneys agree.
Acceptable? I can't believe it.
Juries are never :icceptable. I've
just spent three wee ks getting
bounced off interesting cases and
now, some 48 hour-. before
Thanksgiving, I'm acceptable?
I lower my he:.id. I'm doomed.
A s usual, th e case involves
alcohol.
Two guys apparently wander
into a San Clemente supermarket,
grab a bottle of Kamchatka vodka
and then make a break for it. Ofte
goes this way, one goes that way.
The guy with the bottle is
eventually chnsed down a block or
so from the market by a customer.
A very speedy customer.
Before he's knocked to the
ground, the accused thief whirls
around nnd roises the bottle of
vodka. The bottle later breaks but
a substitute bottle has been
brought to coun to cive us an idea
that -If put to the proper teit -
it could make quite a weapon,
even a deadly weapon.
\
The taller of the two
defendants, a lanky, dark-haired
19-year-old, sCands accused of
petty theft. His defense is that he
never touched the bottle of vodka,
just ambled into the market with
his buddy. No harm, no foul.
The second guy, a short but
stocky kid with a hu~e wave of
hair jutting up off his forehead, is
accused of petty theft and assault.
The petty theft seems a given, the
assault a bit of a stretch.
Neither one takes the stand and
except for some brief questions
directed to the cop who arrested
the two, the defense doesn't call a
single witness.
W hethcr they want it or not,
everyone on the jury gets
one small steno notebook and a
single pencil, generally dull.
The idea is to jot down the
salient points, little road signs that
will help freshen the memory
when you hit the jury room. The
judge cautions jurors not to
become too absorbed in note
taking, to watch the trial and pay
as much attention to what is not
said, as to what is.
Everyone seems to have his own
style or taking notes. One juror,
for instances, writes down the
prosecution's side of the case with
a ball·point P.cn and the defense
side in pencil. A studious juror
who sits next to me jots down little
questions -"Was it dork?," "Did
anyone ask if he luld a
receipt?," -as if there will be a
question-and-answer session by
and by. Still another juror makes
very neat grids on the page as if
he somehow hopes to reduce the
rambling trial to a scientific
equation. But he gives up the
effort mid't\ay throuah the day and
resorts to simply listening.
I n two swift \'Otes, we convict
both defendants of petty theft.
But the assault charge proves to
be more nettlesome.
It's S:30 p.m. on a Monday and
Thanksgiving it bur a memory.
We've managed to extend our ju~
stint Into a new month: Everyones
in a bit of a !unk.
By 6 p.m., we're split 9·3 end
leaning toward a piOty verdict.
Most juron seom to feel that tho
guy intended to assault his
f.ursucrs with the vodka bottle.
'm among those who think it's
just as rcasc>nablc to believe he
merely intended lO 1eare them
away. The judge sends us home at
6:10.
Aner11 night lb mull things
over. the complexion of things has
changed dramaticaJly. We're still
split 9.3 but this time were leaning
toward not guilty. By mid-morning
we throw up our hands and admit
that we could go on forever and,
indeed, it seems as if we have.
Back in the courtroom, Kreber
tosses out the assault charge and
has his clerk read the two guilty
verdicts. The taller defendant, the
one whose attorney claimed he
had nothing to do with the theft,
takes the news hard. His chin hits
his chest and he lets out an
audible sigh. His mother buries
her head in her palms.
For the first time it strikes me
that this is no game we're playing
here. I've just help put a man
behind bars. The memory stays
with me.
"I'm very disappointed in you,"
Krcber says. For a moment I think
he's taUdng to the jury, scolding us
or something, But he's talking to
the two defendants, who arc taken
Into custody before I have a
chance to leave the courtroom.
Both, the prosecutor tells me
outside the courtroom, face six
months in jail.
I t•s 10:17 a.m. and the
courtroom is unusually still. The
hallways arc empty. The air
conditioner in the building drones
gently. A lone Marine stands next
to a pay phone in the lobby,
waiting.
I duck into the jury assembly
room to return my juror badge
and arab my belongings -a
sweater and a copy of "Friday
Ni&ht Light+" The place is
jammed, packed with th is month's
pool or jurors -the rookies. the
kids, the unsuspecting.
There'• a television in the
middle of tho room, and the Fess
Parker video is rollln& -"You
are a juror now ... "
Without fanfare or ceremony, I
leave the courthou.le and embrace
freedom.
Booze & Boats
Don 't Mix
..
KlllPI Cllll
1111 · 101 With
L•lsvllle
By Demls Brostemous .,. ...
Todd Kehrli, Corona del Mar High's
blue-chip quanerback, has made a verbal
commitment to continue his football at
the University of Louisville, acoontin,g to
bis ~h Dave Holland.
K.ehrli was sidelined during the Sea
Kinp' sixth game of the season, a 21-10
loss to University. He was sncked for the
fifth time in that game with 1 :09 left, suf-
fering a dislocated left elbow which ended
his season.
"He's been undergoing rehab on his
elbow and i$ now gettinf ready for base-
ball," srud Holland. "I thmk Louisville is a
program that's going to go somewhere.
h's a top school which is going to get bet-
ter. By the time he's a senior, he may be a
real force."
The other finalists for Kehrli, a three-
year staner at CdM, were San Diego
State, Washington State and Fresno State.
While Kehrli was in the starting lineup,
the Sea Kings went 2-3-1. He completed
76 or 158 passes for 902 yards, eight inter-
ceptions and three touchdowns this sea-
son.
Under Coach Howard Schnellenberger,
the Cardinals went a disappointing 2-9
this season.
Sl\.>un..t N 1'I
Eagles (from left) Ty Schisler, Malt Fuerbringer, Jeff Byrne and' Jim
Faulkner put a net around Tustin standout Jentry Moore Monday.
Sports Edltor Roger Carlson .... 642~330 ext.387
T elevision-radio/82
GiHs basketbalVB3
Classified/BS
Fuerbringer's 28 points ignite Estancia
to 57-52 overtime victory over Tustin
By Richard DuM
Sports Wrtllt
COSTA MESA -Most players only fantasize
of the laurels Matt Fuerbringer has :ic-
complished in two-plus varsity basketball sea-
sons, a career that includes membership on CJF
3-AA and state Division Ill championship
teams.
Last year, on the individual
side, All-CIF and Pacific
Coast League Player of the
Year accolades were added
to his credentials.
Still, there was more for
Estancia High's 6-foot-7 se-
nior to achieve.
"We've never got past third
place in this tournament,"
said Fuerbringer, who led the
Eagles to a 57-52 overtime •FU.l.-b-. ~""
victory over Tustin on Mon-uer ranger
day in the Coast Christmas Classic fin al at Es-
tancia High.
"We've won a sta!e championship before, but
we wanted this one real bad because \\e've
neve r won it."
Fuerbringer, the tournament's MVP, scored
28 points, grabbed 11 rebounds and blocked
three shots as Estancia (10-3) fought off a late
Tustin surge, then outscored the Tillers, 7-2, in
the extra period.
Fuerbringer -who as a sophomore helped
the Eagles to a CIF 3-AA title, then as a junior
to the state Division Ill banner -had plenty of
assistance in this one .
"Last Saturday agaimt Huntington Beach (in
the semifinals), they v.ere triple-teaming me,"
Fuerbringer said, "but my teammates were
shooting so well, (Tustin) couldn't do that."
Fuerbringer opened the overtime period with
3 slam dunk, giving Estancia a 52-50 lead, an
advantage it would never lose.
Russell }(jng, an off·the-bench guard who
made all-tournament for Stancia, netted a 12-
foot jumper with 1 :05 left in OT to stretch the
lead. Joe Eclson's three free throws capped Es-
tancia's overtime scoring.
"That's as good as he can play," Estancia
Coach Tim O'Drien said of fuerbringer. ''Matt
had that look in his eye -he's a tough one to
defend. He was real active and that makes
things work for him."
Tustin (9-6), the defending state Division 11
champion which came in with a six·game win-
ning streak, caught fire in the fourth quarter to
·send matters into O\ertimc. "They just got hot,"
O'Drien s:ml. '
Do'' n by eight f39-3 l) heading into the
fourth, Tustin's Maurice Fletcher started light-
ing up the house. He drilled three consecutive
3-pointers v. ith 7:29. 7:01 and 6:26 left in regula-
tion -giving the Tillers a one·point lead before
th e Eagles ~new what hit them.
See FUERBRlNGER/83
Estancia' s state title was the topper of year
It was one of those runs that wi'l I
never-never be among forgotten
The Estancia
High boys bas-
ket ba 11 team's
run to the CIF
St:itc Division
IJ I champion-
ship has been
voted the top
• local sports story
of 1991 by mem-
bers of the Pllot
sports staff.
The Eagles' title edged the success of
the Mater Dei football team for No. 1.
Herc's a look at our top 10:
• 1. Estancia boys basketball: The Ea-
gles delivered the city of Costa Mesa its
first ever boys state championship in bas-
ketball, coming through with an 82· 72
conquest of Washington High of Fremorft.
Before a capacity crowd for a set of six
title showdowns (three divisions of boys .
and three divisions of girls} at the Oak-
land Coliseum, the Eagles utilized a 17·0
spurt in the first quarter to take control.
"We had that reprieve after Pomona.''
said Estancia Coach Tim O'Brien, refer·
ring to a 48-45 loss in the CIF Southern
Section Division 1lJ finals played earlier
at the Los Angeles Sports Arena.
Estancia was awarded a berth in the
state playoffs as the runncr·up and the
Eagles would go on to beat three straight
ClF champions (Ramon:i of the San
Diego Section and Scf'\itc and Pomona
from the Southe rn Section).
In the championship game, it was a
sterling effort by the Eagles' f\11kc I laas.
who notched 27 points, that helped Es-
tnncia mnintain its grip on the champion-
ship trophy.
• 2. Mater Dci football: It was the
Momirchs' opponent ~ Eisenhower -
which entered the contest as the nation's
top-ranked team by USA Today, but it
was Mater Dci which played like it on this
night. winning, t,35-14, at Anaheim Sta·
dium before a llttnout of 33,20-l.
Dehind quarterback Dilly Dlanton'!> 257-
yard, three-touchdown performance
through the air, the Monarchs claimed
their first Clf' title since 1965, when third-
year head coa<;fl Druce Rollinson was a
halfback on the school's team.
While Blanton was leading the aerial
assault for the Monarchs, his defensive
te:immates intercepted a pair of passes
and recovcretl two fumbles to stinc the
Eisenhower attack.
The Monarchs' season, which had
opened on Sept. 6 with a 34-20 over Iv-
lani at Aloha Stadium, featured just one
See CHAMPIONS/BS
lwl'~
Estancia High's triumphant state basketball champions arrive at John Wayne Airport with the No. 1 story of the year.
' .,~·· '\.· ....... t•· ····~·~~f"lt<' ·~·· -;1-·· ... -.. •-. -, . . . -~·'t'~·llt '~~ ·-•. • • /·.-·...,-~··.,· .. ,,, ,.·~·. I .J.·J-,,1 '->1,•· -,· " ·• ,.'.J..J· .:.l-_.,..'.... ;. -~.d'.: .. ·~~~ ri:-."f. \"-.. ~' -. .. . .. rl· •. • ll ~ .. f .. ~ .. • !"'M'".,. ~f ~ '''·
The moments of 1991 which won't soon be forgotten
1991:
From 81 ,.
lhelt ~ \ICfWe fot lhe upcomil'IJ ..aon.
• Man)h 22-htailda li1o1rkr th,_ no-hlltefl EsunN Hip junlat .,.. . .fl.lndw Kyle Willoll Wibs 0\11 tlX
.nd walb AOM white lloldin& CencUty ""hoUI a hit In the
bfilts' S.O PKillc Cont ~~I win. • Marett 27-Thie« localt Ml'Md Al.Of: &t.1ncb
High junior Mitt f~ is IWllNCf (Va'*"' All.CIF
DMsion Ill by • \IOte of ~n Seclion medil, wfllle
NewpOit Hrior's Huy ~ and Corona def M.v's Jon
Upham. ~• Nmed IO lhe second &um.
•"Pril J-Six girts All-Of: £5t.lllN Higtl's Melody
E•rle .Ind hlra Lumpkin. "5 Mii as Colt.1 Meu's OIMl
OiQmilll. ~ fl•sMe•m All-OF Soul.hem Section
Division Ill. S«ond-ie.m honon go to R.Khel W;a~ (Coslil
Mesa), tie•ther Fl.1herty (UlroN dtt ~rl •nd IC.ab R0JS
(Newpott H•rborf.
•April 4-Wruel wins 200Ch: °'""P Cod Celle#
men ·s volleyball coach earns his 200th are« vic:tOf)I M die
Pirates dispatch South Coast Con~leading long
Be.x:tl City College in three pmes.
•April 8-Tift honored: Newpo<t H.rbor High's Todd
Tift is n.amed CIF l·A Co-Pia~ o( the Ye;ar by Southern
Sect.ion coaches after le.O.ng the S.ilots to the 1 ·A boys
socc" c<H:Nmpionship.
•April 10-McO•niels hu big day: Est.lnda Hilh's
Paul McD;iniels ties • OF recnrd by dubbing (our doublei
and d1M!s in thrtt runs 10 ~ the Eagle$ to • 12·2
Pacific Co.ul le.lgue baseball vlaory wer laguN Be.di.
• April 12-OCC lops Ru.Stiers: left-h.lnder Chad
Rolish pi~ .i complete game and Cotey Parker r~ his Oran~ Empire Conference-le.ding balling •ve-rage to .432
with a pair of hits a.s Or an~ Coast College clefealS Golden
Wesl in Huntington Beach, 6·2.
•April 14-bgles adv•n~: The Estancia High baseball
team advances to the ch.lmpionship semifinals cil the Pricle
of the Coast T oorn.iment with a S· 1 victory O\l'er Orange
Luther an, as Colby French pttches the lirst lour innings to
eam the viaory.
•April IS-Gabriel e.irnt siiith: Newport Harbor
High's Billy G.lbriel places sixth in his third Olympic-siyle
wei~tl1f1ing competition .u the National Championships in
Peoria, Ill.
•April 16-Fryer signs: Jeff fryer. a former All-CIF
basketball standout at Corona del Mar High and who onCe hel~ lead Loyola Marymounl to the final 16, signs with
the Flonda Jack>\ of the World Basketball League.
•April 17 -Newport ends drought: Newport H.irbor
High Co.1ch Dan Glenn t>nds a dry spell ag.iinst Cotona del
MJr .is his S.;11lors bt>at the Sea Kings in foor pmes in boys
volleyb.111.
•April 17-Mes01 nets rare win: Costa Mes.i Hilh
knocks off Estancia, 13·S, to earn what is bt>li~ to be
the Mustangs' first vic1ory over the Eagles ever in boys
tennis.
8 April 18-Palalerri losses no-hiller: Newport Harbof
High right-hander Mall Palalerri spins a no-hitter, striking
out 1 l b.iuers in the process. as the Sailors drop University,
l ·O.
•April 18-0CC stuns Vikings: Matt Winterburn's 30
.mists. 17 kills and live solo blocks p.lCe the Ofange Co.ut
College men's volleyball team to a five-game victory and
season sweep ewer South Coost Confenmce champion long
Beach City College.
8 April 20-Sailors rally: The Newport Harbor High
baseball te•m overcomes an early 6-2 deficit as Chris
Bowen cracks key two-run homer 10 trim University, 9-8,
and protect it5 hold on 1eCOnd place In the Sea View
League.
•April 22-Mu inovich t.1bbed: Former USC
quarterb.lc:k Todd Mari110Vid1 ol Balboa is chosen in the
first round of the NFL draft by the Los Angeles Raiden.
•April 24 -bgles tie for lead: The Est.1ncia High
baseball team routs Laguna Hills, 11·1, to tic! the Hawks al
8· 1 for the P.icific Coast League lead.
•April lS-SU Kings shock Tustin: C.orona del Mar
High Sluns hllthly-reprded Tustin, 1()..4, in Sea View
le.lgue basebalT to extend its winnin~ stre.ik to live pmes.
• April 26-lteluguing OK d: Orange County
principals YOted in favof ol • releagi.iing piopoAI to add
Sefllite/R.owy r.o the Sunsei League, Miler Del to the
South Coast •nd Sant.I Milrg;irit.1 to the·Sea View League.
•April 27 -bF~• r•lly '°' win: Calc:htr Paul
McO;iniels doubles 1n a pair of runs to break a 4-4 lie ilnd
hfl the Estand.1 High ti.seball team to a 7-5 win over
Lagtina Hills •nd into tole pouession of first place in the
P.iC:ific Coail League.
•April 21-Soulh girls f•ll: Despite ll points from
Estancia Higti's Melody Earle, the South girls come up short
in the Orange Coonty Prep Clas.sic all·stv baslcetbilll prne,
82·68.
•April 29-Ensenad• rue t nds: A total of 376 of the
508 00.:.ts which started the Newpo<t to Ensenada Y.ld>t
Raa off the Balboa Peninsula finish by 11 a.m. Sunday,
the deadline lo cross the finish line in Bahi.1 de Todos
S.rntos outside Ensenada H.irbot.
• M.1y 1-Musl•ngs stagger ugun• t;lills: O:ml Mes.>
High give Estancia a 11.lnd,~beating Trabuco Hills, IP. to
keep the Ealtfes, who were upset by Trabuco Hills, a prne
1n front o( Ifie Hawks in the Pacirrc Coast Le;igue ~II
r~.
• M.iy 2-CdM h.u big inning: The C.oron.1 del Mar
High b.lseball te41m scores nine runs in the siKlh Inning to
turn • g,ime around apinsl University in a 9-7 victOI)'.
•May l-Rhodes, W.1lden triumph: The Cotona del
Mar Higli doubles team ol Trenton Rhodes and Brian
Walclen take the Sea View League doubles ch.lmpionshlp
at John Wayne Tennis Oub.
• May 3-Ross, He.ads double: N~ Harbor
High's Cina Heads wins the shoe put and discus and ~
Ross earns two individual golds and conllibutes to a pair of
reby triumpm at the Sea View league tr.ck .lnd field finals
ill Irvine High.
•May 4-Speyer paas CdM: Coron.i del Mar Higti's
Gabe Speyer wms the SO-•nd 100-yard frtt'Styie raoes to ~ad the Sea King boys to the Se• View league swimming
title at Heritage Park in !Nine.
• M•y 4 -E.lgles win track lit~s: For the finr tinw in
school hntOI)', E.suncia High wins ~ and girls trade •nd
l1eld le~ dlampionship1 in the wrne year.
• May 4 -Newport dinchu co-title: With their ninth
straight victofy, a four-g;ime dtcislon over rival Coton.i del
Mar High. Newpott Harbor's boys vof!eyb.111 team dlnches
al least a co-charnpionship with Woodbridge In the Sea
View league.
•May S -OCC wi111 1Ule crown: The Orange Co.a51
College men's volleyball team wins its third consecutive
statt title and fourth in five years by rallying past long
Beach City College .it LA Pierce.
• ~y S-Pirates posl swim sweep: The Orange Co.ut
Colltge men's and women's swimming teams successfully
complete .in unprecedented sweep in winning state lilies
.ii DeAn.u College.
•May 6-0CC rowers victorious: The Orange Coost
Coltei;e crew 1.1ke the P.A. Palmer Cup for the seroml
straight year at the Newport Rel!iltta.
•May 8-Ncwpotl trims CdM: The Newport Harbor
High baseb.311 team edges Coron• dtl Mar, 6·S, as Brannon
Coluccio singles home the winning run In the bottom of
the eighth mning,
• ~y 9-hglet win tourney: A fine defensive play
and dutch hit by [s1ancla High's Jeff Kraus leads the Eag"ls
IO• 5""' ~ 0.. ~r .. diln.yloe .......... .. Mdiill .. C.... ~· • ...,. • ._a... .......... 1hi 0.0... .. ,...,
~ ......... ..._ ... ~..._ ... ~ .. dliidl a Of M ....... fllt .. Illa 1"1> _,
lcnodl tt. Sllort aut °' ~ ...,, •Mir,,_ .................. ...,_
C01Y Mm ..,_-to OW Willelft.. lour..fllaaf, ._ ~ ................. ....,.atlewth~ ...
for the P.atc COlllt .~ tide MICf the No. 1 ~
ti.th In tht Of J<A ~
,J Mar 14-l..,._,... -......... The a.di .... tellm ~.an UI~...,.,,,. Clf .... Iott~ In ....,., l4d by ...... .,.. Drh'ewn-pw70,lhe~~ ... ... CDmf*J1ors by 1J lltOlra 11 u CuinM C~ CM;
.. ~ 1J-CAIM Olltlell tit INlebll1 T-.:0 ... HW!'s INlebil Bin ICllft!I t.ii& ._In tt. ~ ...
to delHt C'.otona dtt Mat, 11"6, In a Of ).,\ wlcl c:ara
pine .
• May 15-Newpoft ~: The Newport HMbor
H' ~ lellm outl.a ltw Hilt .. IW! ~ ~ leCOOd rOlftt Of 4-A ~~behind die
elfMS al 8Nu Silew.vd, ~ MdneM Md Mwlt McMir..
•May ,,_VM ttona mites: wa V111 Hom. •
longt.ime teldetl& ol ~ Mesi. relWs fTOm ~.a.
speonding the ~ 20 ~ • Fullettorl Goltp.
. • May 11-SaDon outlast loyol.\: Newpoit Hatbor
High setter RUSlell Gan ha ,.. --M lhe ~ IPA
go frve pmes to dele« LO)da and ~Illy for die
temiONls OI the OF 4-A boys Wlle)Wll plaYolfs.
• M.y 19-ly wins e.o C10WM: &bnda HJF's Un Ly •
te.lmed with two p.artnim co win the ~ ~ DAM Ng~n) and m~ doubles (With Doan ~) tides It l~ CIF individual ~ champlonshif» al CMlitm
College.
•M.ly 22-f.lgJH oustedt Tustin Hi&f1 ICDrt!I sbc tima
in the last Mo innl~ to down fsWlda. 7-1, In the OF
) ..A playoffs.
• M•y 23-Sailon ruch fin.I.I: &Nu~ (34 kills)
)IJSlin Melntee (24 kllls) and Fr.ank Griffo (16 kl•. 11
blocks> spark the Newpolt Harbot High bc))'S ~
te.1m into the OF 4-A champlonlhip ma&ch wiah a
(our·goi.me vlctOf)l at SanQ ~
•May 25-McDoftald 1~: Mater Del fil#\'s
Melissa McDonald qwlifies for the stile trials In the .. "W'
Jump, long Jump WI triole jump It the OF Southern
Section Masten tnd and field meet at CenilOI Collep.
•May 25-f.lgles win ht badminton: The ~
High coed ~minton team talces its third OF bldmlnton
crown, beating ~ Pilrlt In the 4-A final, 11-8, oat
Cypres& College.
•May 26-Newport comes "P 1h0tt: After• bn11Wl1
run to reKh the d\;mpionshlp ma&ch.1 the Newport Harbor
High boys Wllleyban team dfoos a rour'P.me decision eo
San M.vros High ill Ceo'itol College to Onish 17-4 IM!nfl.
•May 28-Amatal catted up: Rich Amaro1f. former
Estancia Hii;h and Orange Coast College standout. Is ailed
up to the SNttle Mariners fot his first rNjor le.ague
assignment ..
• M.ly 30-P1rOChial1 win battle: The OF Southern
SectJon Council re.ffirms the e.arli« vote to allow Mattt
Oei, Oei, SeMte/Rmaiy .00 Sant.a M.irg;irit<l high fdiools
to be leagued with the CX;ange Coonty public Khools fot
the 1992·94 releaguing cycle. The second ratiriation was ~ ~ after • state CIF appeals committee
remanded the Issue back to the Southern Secllon eucutM!
committee and coondl fCK lxk ol Ondinp.
•June 3-Van'I Hof triumph1: Newport Beadl's
Robert V•n't Hof teams with rim· Paws.It .lnd Noel Potter
to win to win the Men's Open and Mixed Open tides al
the Adoption Guild Tennis Touma.ment al the N~
Beach Tennis Club. Coronil def Mar High alum Oan;elle
Scott, along with Klm Po, take the Women's Open crown.
•June S-M<Daniels shlnet: Estand.1 Higtl atchef
Paul Mc0.ll1iels Nis an RBI-double, walk ;and run 5a>red In
1he South's 8-4 victory O'ler the North in the ~p!
Coonty All-Stir bastWll pme at Cbier Stadium.
•June 6-Brande named: Owlie Brande, the Pilot's
vol~ll columnist, is n.lmed the coach of the South
men s team ill the Olympk Festival in Los Angeles.
• June 7 -Newport. CdM Al.hides of Yur: MicNel
Hanrodc and Eve MattJOn are named Newport Harbor
High Alhletes al the Yeilf, whil~ )on Uph.lm and Tracy
ScM'bef aptunr the honors fTOm COl'ONI del Mat.
•J11nc e-OCC't SmiUI drafted: The ~ Astros telect Oraf11t 0».1t Collette's Donnie Smilh 1n the 461h
round ol batebaU's annual rree agent drill\.
•June ,_Can honcwed: Newport Haft>or Hlgti's
Rusaell <An ii the only junior n.lmed to the 1'11-0F 4..A
volleyball first te.im, while Mater Del atchef Jennifer Cline is te!Kted co the OF S-A rnt INITI In soltball
•June 10-&tancia Athletes of Year. Paul McOMliels
and Nicole~ ate Nmed Alhiefes ol the V'eat al
Estancl.l Hlgti.
• 1une 13-Mn'1; ~ter ~ alhlctn: Ryan ~ ind Rachel Ward 11e named Costa Mesa H!f' Athletes OI
the Year. Named from Mater Del ate Rick £11fs and Melita
Ml:()orqld.
•June 1s-OCC'1 $op athletts: Comerbd Lawtence
Hatch and diver Kim Stanl'ldl are selected Orange COM&
College's Alhle1es ol the YNr.
• June 16-SCC'i Athleeu of Year: Jeff Bickmore,
Mike Henjum, Sherri H.11 and JoY.c..e Lll'ointe earn Athlece al the Ye.r honors •t ~ Cililomiil College.
•June 17-Cronk.hlte rolls to win: Shawn Uonl<hite, a
20-YNr-old Quartz Hill iesldent, holds on to win the senior
cfwislon ol the Costa ~ Grand Prill blqdln9 fJ\leOt,
•June 19-Lam», Watson, frflldl 11.a!MCI: C'.otona
del Mar Hlah's B~ L.lnwir and Btlnda's CMs Watton and Colby rtene11 Nfn AJl..OF 3-A honon In baseball.
•111nc 10-Mc.Donald honored: Mater Del Higtl's
Melisa Mc:Oonakt, a ~ standout in tradt Md
field, Is Nm«! the PiloC'• Area Fem.le High Sdlool Athlete
of the Yeat.
•IUM 23-MdCibben wins altvcr: OWp Mct<ibben ol
the Newport Aquatic Genter rows to a sil-m medal In the
opet1 men's single sculls event at the U.S. Rowing
Ai.toda:tlon's N.atlOnal Championships In lodiaNpolis.
•lune 25-lmltvancy continues: lany Winlce, ~ ~ar·s Irrelevant Wedi honoree, tal<e a tour ol the f>I'
courw during -'dong c:elebr.ation.
•June 27-81C H•ll acids p.a.ir: Dennis Conner MICf
RIM Francis are Inducted Into the Balboa S.y dub Hilll al
fame by President Tom Oeetnef during lrn>levant Weelt
ClefelTIOnla.
•July 4-Harmony In hunt: The yacht H.mftony,
skrpptred by Batbara CoMlle of Newport Hilrbor YillCH
dub mnds second In adjusted time In the '91 Transpac
rM:e 1,400.1,600 miles olf'Hawail. •MY. n -Chance first 10 finish: The yachc Ola~.
buoyed bv three crew memberi. from the Newport Hillbor
Yacht dub, wins first-to-finish honors in the Transpac '91
race from Glllfornla to Haw•n.
• July 13 -North upsel.s South: The underdog NOfth
te.am staggetl the Soulh. 16-1 3, in the Orange Coonty
All-Star football prne at Ofange ea.st College.
•July 16-S.nd wins gord: Costa Mesa's Todd S.nd, te~min& with Canosa Park's N~rash.J Kud11cld, "ams a .,id
medal in pairs figure sk.ltlng at 1he U.S. Olympic Festivil in
Inglewood •
•July 18-Bcas~ ailed up: COSlll Mes.a relief pitcher
Chris Be;asley is alled up by !he California Angeft from
triple-A afllll.lte Edmonton.
•July 23-Edvt t11sl misses: Newpott Beach's T~
Eckert, fkling In IVs Inaugural Op Juniors Surfing
Championship just misses in his bid to adv.lnce to the
semifinals.
•July 23-Prla paces South: Coron• del M.v High product Ty Prlc.e leads his South te<1m to lhe men's
la,.....
Costa Mesa's Billy Blanton became Or-
ange County's an-time passins leader
for one season while gufdf ng has Mater
Del High teammates to the Clf Divi-
sion I championJhlp. The Monarchs
were named the state's No. 1 football
team by Cal·Prep Magazine.
II gold med.ll at the U.S. Olympic Festival al
Marymount Univenity.
I ty 27-hmctt honored: Newport Harbor High's iontlslme water polo coach and the nation.ll co.di for the
U.S: Olympic tffm, Bill S.mett. Is pmented wi1h the
Ovutanding Coach Award at the VII Fir\.t Cup in 11.lrc:elona
-the fint-evef such pre1ent.ation to iln Nnerlc:an coach In
the prestigious a>mpelition.
•1111y 21-cm 011t\ed: Newport BNdl's Tricia Gill,
who hid actvarud to the main ewnt·in the women's Op
Pro ~ C1'ampionshlp, is taken out In the first round
by P.auh Menaer.
•July lO-Collins comes up ahotl: Alter Mi Impressive
vic1ory wer Brad Gerlach in the semiflnals, Newport
Beildl's Richie CclUns On6hes runner-up to Australian
Barton Lynd! In a11 anticlimactic Op Pro Surfing
Championship fin•I. •Aug. ,_UebMnall (umct: Newpo<t Beach Dukes
OWneJ fred Liebernw1 rNCU angn1y alter his Te.mTMnis
dub is efiminall!d from pl.tyoff consideration by Charlotte
In lhe seaJOn finale.
•Aug. 10-0xley rides lo nwffp: Brad Oxley SWttps
the ICl'atctl and hancfop main events -the lirst lime
ltuit's happened since l 989 -during lhe 'Wftkly
Speedway motorcycle racing p!'Ogr•m at the Chnge
County fairgrounds. •Alll-17-Atea uilors triumph: Bill Ward from
Corona del Mil High .net Whitney Finster ol Newport Beach post the lowe5t bc))'S' and girls' tcOttS at the Junior
Sabot Nationals in Newport Beach.
•Aus. 20-Hinridls wins Cup: Of. Robert Hinrichs, •
20-~r member ol the BiJ Ca'¥Jft Country Oub, defe•IS
Curt Ensign in the dlampii>nship round of the Preident's
Cup go# tioumament In lllewpolt Bexh.
. 8AuK. 24-MdCiblleft ~: Olip MdGbben "'
0.lboa fsland, aiona with MW par1ner Doug Burdin rudl
the double tallla fNI al the 1991 Woftd~ps
In Vienna, Austria.
8Allg. 27-Cftanips malnt.ln 111pe1lonty: The ~·· Ol&llore Canoe Oub al Newport te...:h onot superior in the 1 llh aMU.11 ~ Canoe
, ;an eYenl the Newport .temt haS -lost
started In 1979.
• ~ 29-w.llwtt ,icn.: Fotrner &tanc1a tfWt ~ Jeff Graham, hero of the~ Votk-New lerMy
tnm In the World leap ol American Footh;il, Is signed
by the Sin Oieao ~ MICf lent IO lhlif dr.eloprnent.af ~. ... •Aut-l1-0'Neil wins lob: Fotrner Mater Oei Hlgti ttandoul o.nny O'Neil wins ihe surting q~ fob .11
the~ol~. •Sept. J-Cardner ~ 11p: Jeff c.rdnef, ii Pfoduct
ol EsUncia Higf\. Is alled up by the New Yotk Mets from
their Tldl!water trip1e--A farm dub.
• Sept. S -Halet umed CdM c:o.adl: fCKmeot Enttlish pro(esslONI Ray Kile • dlORn new Corona def Mar Aii'
IOC<:ef coadl.
•Sept. S-Mllle.tt, Ward hoftofed1 Ryan Millett ol
Newport Beadl and Bin · W~rd of Corona def ~r, who
both uil fCK the 811'11.1 Corinthian Y.cht Oub, •re tel«ted
to the 1991 US\1lU/Rold Junior s.ilfna Tum.
.Sepe. 7•~ pt'1!¥Mlti Owls Manchester al HespefCa. at 1 e the ~ cyclist competlng and me 1.ut
one added to the field, aptures the Cftt~ »lap
e\'ff1t at the 0...,. CAJuntY falrpmds In~ t.tesa.
8Sept. 10-u.s. pa... fifth: The Unltad States holc:k
elf ~ia, M , to fini5h In filth pbc. at the Junior
Wortcl Wlllf!f Polo Championships at Newport H.arbor
High. • ¥. 14-CdM lluts clod: The Corona def Mat High foOtbaH team opens its season wld1 • thrilling 19-16
~ O\.'ef HuntlnO>n Beach .s Tom HeM boots a
17.,..;d Oeld goal• 6me runs out.
• Seot. 14-Newport rallies: Newport Hatbor Hlgh's ~season bepri1 on a higtl note as Brandon Anney's
1o.,.d tea~ Nn with 1 : 1 O relNlnlng produca a 1l·10 Wloty_Oi..., •S:ttit-21-f.a&lea win llnlufe: A 37"fard field pl ~ MIU SrnfCh ml6way th~ IM foolth ~ x:counts
IOr 1ht ~ acortn9 In Esundil Hid''• l.O foocbaft Yldory
-LIQulnta.
•Sept. 21-Ntwpc>ft drnts Se~1: The Newport
H.li>or tf~ football lNm dominates on both iides o( the
ball In dNliblng host Ocean View, 34·0.
•kpt. 21-CdM, Estancia deM!todi: In ' rootb.111
pme in which both teams had numerous opportunities to
win, CcroN def Mat High scores las! with 3:f4 remaining.
but misses the convetlion, to forse a 1l·13 de wiih
Estancia .. •¥ 21-C.0.LI Mesa et1joyt bl-l: Leading only
13·12 at halhlrne, the ~ Metil Hilh football tum ~ms Los Amigos in the second h.1'1' to win, 29·12.
at Newport Harbor Higtl. •Oct. 1-CdM pololats win I011mey: The Corona dtl
Mar !'iWt water polo ~ roub San Clemente, 13-6, In
the dla~p game ol the South Coast Toum.iment as
A!Atin Welt nets flYe p li.
•. Oct. 1-0f'rahore win• apln: The ~n·s Olfst-e
Canoe Oub ol Newpoft Beach d.lims Its sixth c:onsecut.~
lf the mispelling of this word really irritates you,
The 3rd Annual Community Spelling Bee is
looking for you. It's happening February 28th at the
Newport Marriott. Could your company be victorius?
J Sponsored By
PiiiiL
./--= I'
•
There's only one way to find out. Ptit togethd a tealJ1
of 3 people and ·compete in this competition to t>eftCftt .
the campaign for literacy.
Call Today: 642-4321.x274(entriesare1lmiled)
Sponsored By: L~ L~ Vdlunlem of Ammta and
the Newpo.rt ~b PubUc Llbrrlry
-l
Tel evision-radio
TUESDAY
TELEVISlON
Colkp root11en
11:30 a.m.-llUnols.UCLA, Cl\.1.
5 p.m. -lndlana·Baylor, TBS.
Golf
4 p.m.-Ovmbcl Pro-Am, PT.
Col&tphlllttbell
4:30 p.m.-S. Florida.One., ESPN.
6:30 p.m. -Fordham-SW Mo. St.,
ESPN.
9 p.m.-Mumy Sl.·Ark. $1., ESPN.
10 p.m.-Ralnbow a~ PT.
Mldnlaln-Raln.bow CtauJc. PT.
12:30 a.m.-Fordham·SW Mo. $l,
ESPN.
I
.
. Marina tourney
tEstancia
girls split
OiCamilli, Kim read pPDVldel
6osta Mesa to third the spark
·with Sunset
Eagles bow to Oilers
after Fountain Valley
handled on Saturday
HUNTINGTON BEACH
The Estancia High &lrlJ buketball
team broke even against Sunset
League 6pponents d\lring the final
two &Ames of the Marina Tourna-
ment.
Following a come-from-behind
SS-54 overtime victory .over Foun-
tain Valley Saturday, the Eagles
came up short aaainst Huntington
Beach on Monday, 6S-S6.
ln M9nday's loss to tbe Oilers,
Estancia (7-6) yielded its season-
high total in points thanks mainly
to a hot-shooting Huntington
Bench sqund which connected on
better than 60 percent or Its field·
. goal attempts.
:. .Monique Sweet led the Eagles
with 20 points while all-
, tournament choice Leah Braatz
~added 19. .
Against Fountain Valley on Sat-
urday, Estancia fell behind by 10
points at halftime and 12 points
early in the third quarter before
mounting a comeback. Braatz hit a
, shot with just a couple of seconds
remaining in regulation play to
. send it into overtime.
Once again, the Eagles fell be-
hind in the extra session, but
Becky Meabori's clutch 18-Cooter
with four seconds remai ning gave
Estancia the winning points.
Sophomore Laura Czingula en·
joyed her finest game of the sea-
son, combining 13 e<>ints with 12
rebounds and six asstSts.
The Eagles arc oJf \lntll Jan. 9
when they open Pacific Coast
League play against Laguna
Beach.
0
llWUNA TOUfHWHNT
Fifth Piece leMltlftele
.. taftola H, Feuntaln Veller M ,_ ..... v...., ...._...
ftftlllf• ........ c.... J24llrallll 10t4
TllW 3 2 4 I Blrtll CL 0 S 0 ,__. I 0 I 2 """' • I 3 ,, ~ • 0 4 12 ... 1 , s 17
llWIAll I 0 J 2 Orlllt 0 0 I 0
"" 3147 ...... 4001 ...... ' s , 15 ~ 4 5 4 1l T..-22 10 24 S4 T.W. n I 21 $$ .... "-~ ' ,__ YlilllY I 20 I 1' 4-54 E--. 1 11 1t 11 s-u ,..... .,. ....
T.cwci ID* '°""""' Wiiy 1111ack
a
MARINA TOUWNAMSNT
P1fth"--Nuntl1t9ten haotl H, s.t.nota It ......... ......... ...........
'9ft"'" '9ft!'f11J 1~:~==-~~ir
• ' 4 to llOW 10 4 2 27 t I S 11 Wllllr 10 2 4 12
1004Wldlm 1111' 0 0 5 0 2 0 I S I 2 2 4 14 I 22 51 Tetala ti 1 1' 19 ac-"-GuMerl E--. 14 I IS 11-M .......... u ,, 2' 14-• • ~!.: llllrdl-SW. 1, a..-I; ......
TedllllAlllllll:lln.
COSTA MESA -The leaauo
rau doesn't beain for another ~
doys or so, but the Costo Mesa
High &irls basketball team was
hopln& to deliver a message to Pa-
cific Co:ast League rival Wood·
bridge.
The Mustonp used a 1troita de·
!ensivo efCort in the second holf to
pull away from the Warriors, 60-
SO, Monday to claim third place in
the Costa Mesa Tournament. '
"I think this was our best half
defensively of the season," said
Mustangs Coach Jim Weeks. "It
was an entire team effort espe-
cially Yool Kim, who alowcd dqwn
their point guord."
Costa Mesa, which was in front
29-28 at the break, limited the
Warriors to 22 points in the final
two periods.
The Mustangs rebounded from
Saturday's 60-56 sctbock to San
Oemcnte in the se1nlCinals .
Olivia DiCamilll, who along with
Kim was selected to the all·
tournament team, scored 48 points
in the final two games or the tour-
ney, l5 on Monday. She also
contributed I• rebounds, four
1teat1 • and four usisu apinst
Woodtirldge.
CMMllll•n.W~I...., ..
.... ct11111ne. '°· c.... ...... tMOt•••• c.... .... ........ .. .......
411 14 .... OltO
4101£ 1021 l41t2 025
2115 1 5423 0040~ OOtl • 0 '10 ...... • • 4 I : ...... I I I:
T...,_ 14 12 14 to T..... t2 1t 11 51 a.-"-a.-... ~a.-. 11 1' 15 11-IO c....... 10 ,, t4 11-51
,..to*C:..W.---l . ..-...1.
ThW Pleoe
C.... ...... to. WMdlN'ld9e to ......... c ........
.. ft,,. .. .......
7 1 4 11 ..... 1 1 t ,
S I S 13 TOllMftlc t 1 S 5 413140ll*w 1214
1043HMdld 0000 0000~ 1712$ 0121~ 1023
' 0 , 2 llofl6well ' 1 4 1 0222ICllll 2127
0 0 1 0 YlnSwtcleft 2 2 5 • 11 12 24 $0 'Tet• 21 17 22 IO kete llilf Quettffa ~ 10 11 12 10-$0 Cota..._ 1S 14 14 11-IO
,._ to* Woodllldge-Tu I, Uippld 1: CoS1I
u..a-~1. e .... MeNT..,....efttfl .....
F'~10.'C ~,."· Sduf ~
du:sto:• CYPMS 53. lbfl T-'4 Riii -= Siii lMll '** 5$, GmNnl .... (Ore.) 3$ TIW plla: C.. MIU to, WllodlrlOQe $0
~~V-6S,Sln~4e
Coron~ del Mar girls fall
victim to Santiago, 59-49,
at SanUago £ournament
GARDEN GROVE -After
rallying to get even in the final
three minutes; the Corona dcl Mar
High girts basketball team yielded
the final 10 points of the game
Monday night and bowed to the
host school in the first round of
the Santiago Tournament, 59-49.
Mollie Flint, who notched a
game-high 29 points, made a pair
or free throws to tie the game at
•9 with about three minutes left
but CdM (S-6) was unable to score
again. Rosalie Kane scored 10
points and added 14 rebounds.
Corona will face Sonora in the
consolation round at 5 p.m. Friday
at Santiago.
lantl9tlo 88, Corona del Mar 49 e_ .... , a.u ...
.. ft pf ,, " " pf tp ...,,. 0 0 2 0 ~ • 2 4 11
KIN S 0 4 10 ~ I 2 I 4 TlulNll 1 0 1 2 R.ln*u 2 0 5 s ,.. • 10 , 2t ....., 2 0 0 •
Miiis 0 0 , 0 Olmo:lo 5 0 4 10 l¥lf 2 0 I 4 AollllOo S 4 4 14
Mltfl 204 411u 1 224 Te4ale 11 10 11 41 T..... 24 10 20 St '"""-~ ... COtllN dll Mlf I II 14 10-49 ~ 14 21 10 14-59 ,.,_.to*~._--~ I; SdlQll-RM*v 1. TllWcll 111*: n.-(CdM).
Newport Harbor celebrates
McLaren's return with win
GARDEN GROVe -The
Newport Harbor High girls basket-
ball team welcomed the rct\lm of
Maureen McLaren to the lineup
and responded with a 55-43 victory
over Canyon Monday night in the
opening round of the Santiago
tournament.
McLaren, who has been side-
lined more than three weeks with
bronchitis, scored 16 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds.
McLaren shared team scoring
honors with Kala Ross, who had
half of her points in the third
quarter when Newport pulled
away to a 20-point lend.
The Sailors (5-4) will be off
until Friday when they face Ful·
lcrton at 6:30 in the second roun(l
at Santiago.
0
IMTIAOO TOURNAMENT ,.,.. Round
Newport HarbM Sit Can,on 43
C•ren ltewpet1 ......., ......... ftft,,tp
0 0 I 0 Rott I 0 l 11
11402"8K.1Nmb 2015 51111G.Heects 1016
2 I O 5 fin 4 I 1 10 0020MclMll 1021'
0 1 0 1 T.!n1"111 1 0 I 2 II 1 5 43 TeUl:I 21 2 11 5$
._. "-Ouat1.en c'"'°" 14 11 4 14 -43 ........ ..,., 14 17 " 1-5$ ,.. ... .....-ltlfl>or-lt 11111*' 1. ,.,... .... ....
CHAMP/11118: E1tancla'1· was most memorable
From 81
defeat, 28·20 against Loyol11. That setback was
later avenged, 35-21, in the semifinals of the play-
offs.
• 3. Mater Del rctcaaulna: After months of
meetings and heated debate, parochial schools
Mater Del, Santa Maraorita qnd the combined (all
boys/all girls) entity of Servile/Rosary were allowed
to join Orange County public school leagues for
the 1992-94 releagulna cycle.
Despite public school protests, based primarily
on Mater Del's lack of enrollment boundaries. and
several rejections by tho CIF releoauing committee
and the Executive Council, the Southern Section
Council, made up of leaaue representatives from
throughout the section, voted to allow tho unprec-
edented union In leaguca between Orange Coun-
ty'• private and public schoola.
Mater Del wu subsequently placed ln the. South
Coast Leaauc, while Servile/Rosary will compete
in tho Sunset and Santa Maraarita will jolp the
S~ Vlcw Lcaaue.
• ~. 1Slanton brub county mark: Billy Blanton,
the Mater Del )Ugh senior quarterback, used the
CIF Division J champlonthlp to break Davld Low-
ery's Oranae County ainaJc-teason record or 3,32.5
yards Mt In 1988.
Blanton'• 257-yard effort apinst £Isenhower.
which fnduded 167 yarda In the first hair, 1avo him
3~ for th• 1euon.
•·an1y Blanton, by mldaummor, wu dolna ahinP.
With the footHll that I'd never aeen before." aa1d
Mater Del 'head COKh Bnace Rolllnton. ••1 juSt
needed 10 develop a aophlallcated packaae that
OUt receivers coufd handle because Blanton waa
cenalaly capablt of ~Ina we throw at him."
8 J. Baldwin ftl'M: In thj wtb of his tlrina at
Costa M111 Hip Nov. ~ wteran footbill COICh
Tom Baletwm ..vwed to continue coac:hlna ~
where else In the future.
"I'm aot"I to coach somewhere." he said.
Dalctwin'a elpt·rear ,_rd at Colla MiA wu ~ ~7 IA t991.:1ffoWever, foUr Ol thole Icici
............ -~S.4~3~ .............
The Pirates' average winning margin in the
opening five games was •3·11, but, other than a
Sl-0 rout of Riverside, OCC went winless the rest
of the season to finish In the Mission Conference's
Central Division cellar at 1-4, closing the season
with a stinging 24· 7 deCcat to rival Golden West.
8 7. MarlDO\'lch susptndtd. drafted: On Jan.
1 i, USC quarterback Todd Marinovich. a sopho-
more from Balboa Island, was sus~nded from the
team by Trojans Coach Larry Smith Cor missing a
team meetlna.
On Feb. 1, Marinovich .officially declared he
would enter the NFL Oran. Then, on Sundoy,
April 21, the Raiders selected Marinovich. The
rookie quarterback was 1iven a baptism of fire, re-
1pondln1 _by throwin1 three touchdowns in a 27·21
loss to Kansas City in the season finale Dec. 22.
He would be aiven tho start in the wild-eard play·
off opener tho followin1 Saturday, but threw Cour
interteptions In a 10-6 loss.
8 L Mater Dtl va. Parka: M•rina Hiah'a Chero-
kee Parks, a tenior All·American bouad for Duke,
almost llnale-handedJy 8ut the Monarchs out of
the CJF pfayoffs with 3 points in a 64-SS victory
In Irvine. •
The pme, which attracted 5,100 fans. featured
eishl dunka by Parks, who also had 10 rebounds,
four blocked sh(>t1 and a pair or steals and assistt.
.. Wo threw four or five defensea at him,"
claimed Matlf Ott Coldl Oary McKnipt. "I
don't knOw what elle we could have done."
• t. llack 'l'ueM111 It wu 1 day (Nov. 19) un-
precedl1tted In ana spona, ts no lea than &eYOn
squads. many with bl& reputations. were bounced
rrom CIP playoff compethiOa.
Corona del Mar Hlah wu hardest hit 11 the
watu ,PQIO; atria wl~ll and &iris tenn~ teams
_.... defaated on thil daY· Newport ~ UC>
loll its water ~ •ua. u did 1o.ia Mia; wbOe
thi Mlttr Del airli ~yball turn and lM Pia
tennis team frocn £Stand• uw thelt MUOM ends.
• 1t.. Quiltlu C1•m At 16 yean Old, £1.i
tUda H-,...,_. plaJef anliAn Oo1Mi bad a
....... IO ... •II le n•rt t•lla. lDI .. hll -:;'!:· .. oddllldil • Ml -
Oa•11 Ml &M .... tNrili• Df "61111
llllMllif • •• • ••• ... • Ii .... .
~-.... ,a.... ... ...... '!.::
COSTA
MESA -On
the heels or ;)
t o u r n a m e n t·
record perform·
ancc, Juatin
Mc In tee re·
sponded with an-
other superb scoring eCfort on
Monday as Newport Harbor High
captured the consolation lillc or
the Coast Christmas Oassic.
Mcintee, who poured in 30
points in the Sailors' 61-42 victory
over Pomona in the consolation
championship game on Monday at
Estancia High, produced the
f;rcatest individual scoring output
m the seven-year history of the
tournament on Saturday -43
points -as Harbor nipped Han·
ford, 76-75, in the consolation
semifinals.
Mcintee, who broke the record
of 42 points set last year by Jabarl
Anderson of Los Angeles Banning,
had 16 field goals and was 11 or
14 from the free throw line. He
scored 15 points in the fourth
quarter -including a 7-of-8 stint
from the line -and 13 in both
the second and third quarters.
Marc McAnlis added 13 points,
including lhree 3-pointers, as the
Sailors (8-4) held on to defeat
Hanford.
Newport, which opened the
tournamcnl wilh a 66-58, triple·
ove rtime loss to Interlake, finished
wilh lhrec straight victories. The
Sailors bounced back after their
first-round setback to wallop Dana
Hills, 60-40, in the consolation
quarterfinals.
On Monday, the Sailors out·
!'Cored Pomona, 20-10, in the sec·
ond quarter to take a 32-19 half·
time advantage. Eric Vallely, who
made five or the Sailors' six 3·
pointers, added 18 points.
Newport Harbor increased its
lend by 20 points (50-30) after the
third quarter before cruising in the
final eight minutes.
COAIT CHJUITMAI CLASSIC
COMOtatlon Flnal
Newport HartHw e1, ltomon• 42 ,_.... N9""'·' t ,, ..,,,
.. ft,,.. • '"'"' ......, 201 1~ 10 eooc.. 2014 Vr/llllly 1 111
WoodwMI 0 2 2 2 lilcArls l 0 0 s ..... 3021 MdNlt 13 4 130
....., 111 1 Tit 1002 ~ )Olt Olll 3046
T.,iat S 2 3 12
T..... 16 S 13 42 Total• 2S 5 1 II lceNllt~rt-
flol;lolw • 10 " 12-'2 lltwpoll .... 12 20 11 11-11 ,.,.. ... ,,_,. _ Wlll!VNd 3. Plu1 2: Newpall
Hnw-VllllW S. McAltll I.
Consolatlon lemlftnal•
Newport Harbor 71, Hanford 75
H•11ford Newpet1 HIM'tlor " ft ,, tp ,, ft pf tp
I l ) H V#; 3 2 2 10 10 12Tlft 2004
4 0 2 11 Oler 2 0 I 4 5021lMcW1 50013
3 2 4 10 Mclnlet 1' II 2 0
71 S15Hnllln 1022
I 0 I 2 • 30 I 11 7$ Telal• 29 13 1 16
ICON ltf Guaftoe-Hllllilld 11 '1 22 21 -75 ,.....,~ ,. 22 21 15-78
, ... to*. ltrilrd-JL JOilll "JI. JoNs 2. lyttl 2. AolArlt 2: ....... Hnot-McMll 3. Y#t 2.
-B1 RJcbard Dunn
Mustangs
take off
until Friday
SANT A ANA -The Costa
Mesa High boys basketball team
will welcome a couple or days off
following Saturday's 59-47 setback
to Garden Orove at the Centu ry
Tournament.
"We've been playing straight
through for about two weeks
now,'' said Mustanp Conch Billy
Brewer. "We had no time to prac·
tice between (the Sonora and Cen-
tury) to\lrnaments, and 1 think we
showed It with our sloppy passes
and turnovers. We need 50mc
practice time."
The Mustanas (4·7) don't return
to action until Friday, • non-
leasue date at Orange. ·
Jeff Pickens accounted for m0$t
of Costa Mesa's scorina output,
pourina in 2.5 points.
D
CDTUllY TOUMlWINT ~-···· ............. 0.... ... 47
0....-. ........... e.n .....
~ I l ~ ,: :_ f l t I -.. 'I'' ,O,t =a f l I Ir: J S n: _.. , ~ lal =-'I t l "'*' I I I I lflll I I t li
T... 11ti1141 ~'14:.1 J J J.: -~ ...... ~ ,. at-4' ... _ • ,. '* 11-• ..-.-c..---llic ....... ---, r.... .......
llf't!fl Sl~J ---------
lourney scores
Wwd.y'•~
'"""' 53, l.8~~· ltlJIM,a 61, Hun!intJM kAdl 56
fifth"""" IMne 73, Oendale Hoo-. 47
Rpil u. Int.Nu 44
Contoblloft
PMION 52. Sannlns 48 Nirwpol1 H.a.rbot 76, H.inford 1 S
1Jlh Place
Coton1 c.lel ~ 52, Mlsilon VWjo 38
E'Jl*'ilnu 62, Oan;i HIHs 34
Mondily't finals
~ del M.lr 48, bper~a 39 (13th)
8.anning 66, H.lnford 63 (1 Hh)
Newpon Harbor 61, Pomona 42 Icons)
~ 6J, lnteti.b 60 (71hJ
ltvine 77, Rl~ti 47 (51hl
lll .lotd.tn 68. Ht11. Beach 57 ()rdJ
Est.incla 57, l'ustm 52. ot (hO
CdM rebounds
with two wins
COSTA MESA -Senior guard
Jason CJark continued his steady
3-point shooting Monday while
two other Corona dcl Mar digh
basketball players a1:hieved double
figures in scoring as the Sea Kings
deCeated Esperanza, 48-39, to
clinch 13th place in lhc 7th annual
Const Christmas Classic at fa.
tancia High.
Clark, who led CdM's 3-point
barrage on Sattnday in the 13th
place semifinals, nailed bolh or hi s
3-pointcrs in the second half
against lhe Aztecs as the Sea
Kings came back from a 21-19
halftime deficit.
On Saturday, Corona dcl Mar
sank fi ve 3-pointcrs -including
three by Clark -to topple Mis·
sion Viejo, 5.2-38, to advance.
Theo Rokos (13 poinls), Doug
Hesse (11) and Eli Wendell (11)
were in double figures for lhc Sea
Kings, who held the Diablos lo
only 12 points in the first half.
In Monday's contest to deter·
mine 13th pince, CdM outscored
Esperanza, 13-8, in the third quar·
ter to assume a 32-29 edge.
Hesse, who led the Sea Kin gs
with 16 points, scored seven points
in the fourth quarter as CdM out·
scored the Aztecs, 16·10, in the
final eight minutes. Wendell and
Clark added 10 points each for the
winners. Hesse made 5 of 6 free
throws in the fourth quarter.
COAST CHRISTMAS CLASSIC
13th Place Flnal
Corona del Mar 48, hperenza 39
Corel\9 del Mer Minion Vlolo .. ft pf llJ ,. ft. pf , ..
OOIOTl*n;M 50511 203 4 &1.w*y 0202
2 4 0 10 la.non 0 1 I 1 201 4 0llwef 1012
OOIOlll'tlod 0020
1214CllR 0030 5 g I 1& ~ 1 0 I 16 3 4 3 10 HlrTKOft 3 0 • 1
IS I& 11 44 Tot•I• II 3 13 39 Score bJ Ouarter8 Corona dtl Mir 10 • 13 11-•• C-lllZ:I 11 10 • 10-39
l-poUll oo•s· COION del Mar -CIMt 2 hptfo
WI -MsOft 2, Thtmgall I, IWrlsOll 1
COAIT CHRISTMAS CLASSIC
13th Place hmlflnal1
Corona del Mar 52, Minion Vl•Jo 38
Cerone del Mer Mlulort Vlofo
" ft """ ,, " pf ... Smelld 2 I 3 5 SollftSOll 4 0 0 •
Susson OOIOl'ound 202 4 CllR 3 0 0 I lmnlnnln 2 I I 3
Acaos 6 0 3 13 CMI 4 2 4 10 ~ 10120tmy 2024
....,.... 11236-tnl 2337 Hmt 50011~ 1 02 2
OorMy 0010
Tetllle 20 1 11 52 Total• 11 I u 34 lcore ltf Quart.,. eor-clli I.tar 11 IS II 1-52 .... V1$ • • 10 11-34
,..... goSs_ ecr-Olt Mlf-a.111 HnM I. RGilOI I
-By Richard Dunn
RJERBRINGER:
From 81
Led by Fletcher (21 poinls), the
Tillers opened the fourth quarter
with a 15·3 run, assuming a 46-42
lead. After Tustin led, S0-46, Fu-
erbringer sank four free throws
within 20 seconds to tic it.
Tustin, ice cold from the field in
the first three quarters (11 of 35),
was 7 of 10 in the fourth quarter.
"It's a shame for anybody to
lose this one.'' O'Brien said. "1
haven't seen us play any better
this year. I knew we'd be good this
year, but I didn't know how quick
we wo\lld tsecome &ood· The Tour-
nament or Champions really
rewed us up. It made us forget
about last year and realize thal we
have to work harder."
Estancia opened up a nine-point
lead (23·14) wit.h 2:12 left in the
first hal! after F\aert>ri~aer scored
on a futbrcak, but Tustin cut it to
23-19 before the intermission.
Jentry Moore. an all-tournament
pick for Tustin, ncued a pair of 3-
pointen ln the second quartrr u
the Tillers crept closer.
F1etcber,s haad a<>t hot in the
third, hiUifll back·to-blclt treys to
pull Tustin to within one. 30-29,
but a F\acrl>rinpr led rtan allowed
the ho&ta to toll off seven 1traiaht.
Parlmater
does it ·for
Estancia
COSTA
ME SA
Forced to dial t.::
long distance ~
once again, Es· ~
tanci n High had
a clear connec·
tio1n from beyond the 3-point arch
last Saturday in the championship
semifinals of its own basketball
tournament, lhe 7th annual Coast
Christmas Classic.
"Teams are forcing us to do that
-our strength is th e inside
game," Estancia Coach Tim
O'Brien said of his team's outsfde
shooting, an ingredient the Eagles
required to defeat Huntington
Beach, 61-56, after trailing by Hi
points (24-8) earl y in the second
quarter.
Led by Joe Edson 's fou r 3-
pointers, Estancia sank 10 extra-
point field goals and overcame a
49-40 deficit with 4:34 left in the
game to advance to the tourna·
mcnt final for the first time ever.
"We've always lost in the semifi-
nals," O'Brien said. "We were
down again st Huntington Beach,
17-8, after the first quarter, then
they scored the first seven points
of the second quaner. But then
Victor Trujillo hit a 3·pointcr to
make it 24-11 and things just kind
of snO\\ balled and ii was bombs
away .
"We Y.ere fortunate th:u they
were all going, down. Huntington
Beach stayed in a zone for so long,
lhen we finally got through and
the kids found some openings."
Matt Fuerbringer (15 points),
Edson (14) and Jim Faulkner (12)
fini shed in double figures for the
Eagles, but reserve guard Russell
King was the hero, scoring 10 of
his 12 points in the fourth quarter
as Estancia outscored the Oilers,
23-13, in the fina l frame to earn
lhc win.
King scored eight points in the
final three minutes, hitting a pair
of 3-pointcrs and sinking two free
throws with 13 seconds remaining
in the contest.
"It's not that new for us,"
O'Brien said of the 3-point raid.
"Against Disl'J)p Amat (in the
Tournamenl or Champions) we
had 12 3-poinlers against a zone
defense."
King and Faulkner each had t''o
3-pointcrs while Fuerbringer
added on e.
COAST CHRISTMAS CLASSIC
Championship Semifinals
l!stancl• et, Huntlft9ton Beach SI
H11nll119tort R•tanc:le
.. ft pf tp 4 2 , 10 JoNnJon
' 0 '12 ~ 3 4 3 10 TrulWO
5 1 0 11 (dlotl
2014F~ 33398)T'N
SeNSill FllAnef
Tet.lo 23 10 13 $6 Total•
fvftllftp
1 0 0 2
4 2 0 12 1 0 2 3
4 2 s 1' 1 0 I 15 I I , ,
0 0 I 0 s 0 1 12
23 Sll61 Score br Ollerto,.. ~k«ll 17 IS 11 13-58 Esi.di I 1S IS 23-61
).pGll1I OOlls EllMltil-EdSoll 4. f..,_ 2. ~ 2. 1111-,_ Uun1noir 1.
-By Ric bard Dunn
All-tourney
Most V&luAblt
Matt Fuerbunger, Est.a~
Matt Ambrose, Huntington lleKh
Sean Washington, LA tunning
Ry.Jn Evarn. frvine
Justin Mcintee, Newport Harbor
Matt McPobnd, In terlake
0.1ve Ulkwi, Hoover
E ~rttt R.litle((, LB Jord.ln
Derek Roche, Tusttn
Jentry ~. Tustin
Russell King. Est.and.I
Jim Faulkner added eight poinls
and six rebounds for the Eagles
while teammate Jeff Byrne had fr<
boards and one block. Ty Schisler
had five rebounds for Estancia.
Tustin was also led by Moore
(19 points, five rebounds and two
steals), Jason Reynolds (four
boards, two stenls) and all-
tournamcnt choice Derck Roche
(eight points, two steals).
COAST CHRllTllAI CUUIC c.. ............ .. ....... ST, T...etn 11 (.t) ,...... .......
........ ..ft .....
.... l•>IS-1114 ,... 7tlt1~ 201$
..... 11411F .... •1•• "* 1012,_ tJ•I ~ • : 1 l =""" 1~ ' ~ i1 T..... II t II '2 1'..... 11 1' 11 '7 ,._ .._. '1 ~. 11 1-u
14 ' II II P-&1
-Tlllllll-"91du a, -I: r.cle-~ • 1, ,..,... ... _ ....
M•rchl win, n•t Olk 1111
0.. N . ~ .. ... +
r~·."'
t '· . ; II
I,
~
lo ,
'I
I .
I
j •
f
. ... " •. •. •. ... •.
'· ·-'· I
• • ..
• . .. •• • • ..
• •
• ,.
• .. • • • , •• ..
'· • ,. ,. ,.
I ,. .. .
I
' f . ,.
(
I r t'.
I f r. .. • ,
.·
· . • . -•••
•
I I
INDEX
11\i.mm I ..... iiiiiiii.._t ___ _
8c I '01 fU ___ ............ ICI09ol094
....... -·-·-.. ··---.. -·-·· 1100 ~--.......... , ___ , ................ ..
~ • o-t.n..e ....... -........... UIO --........v .......... _ ........... -... ••n
~ ........................... _.. .... ...
a-r.•~ ...................... .. LaU ... ..., __ .......................... ltOO
~f;T ................. _ .............. .
()v.'-C)f ...... _ ........ _. ..................... ...
.............. .............................. 1-ITI ._.. ............... ._ .................... .. ,.._ ...,_ ___ , ....................... -1190
... ........ -......................... 1900 ................... __ ............ ...
im!t.wm
Bo 111 llOt #cs ........ ._ .......... 11oa-a1H
~ ........................... ........
.,....... ....................................... llM .._ ............................................ ,.,. ............ ................... _ ............. , .
Costa Mesa, CA. 92827
~~ ............................. . ...................................... ..... ...................................... . a.nc-.. ~ ............. -......... ..,.., -...------·-·-·-·-.. ···-· '""' ........... _ ... , .. ___ , .......... ,.44
...,... •• ..,.... FFJIAl ................ •"80
---~ ......................... aftY ---om.. a.iele ................. ,...
(!ow ....... J'l""'"1 ..................... .,..
~ .................................. .
1.84..vtal ...................................... ..,..
1-~ ........................... 1990
....._ .......... -... -........ -.... 8900 ----~ ................... ~ ...._ ....... _ ...................... l90e
er..tt ·-----................... , __ ~ ta......_, O,,..aattT .......... -.nca
.. ..,. t • w-.. ....... -.... ·-••o ...... ,. I.Ma .............................. , • ............ ·-···----·-··· -....., T.D ..... -... -... ·--·-•ll
ERVICE
lt\".1"1 ..... \ , ..
Tu•day, December 31, 1•1 •
1u1 •Ill• .... tnuc•nra •nucm ,...,..
l&a ·-11
Sell Your
Private Porty Merchandise
HEREI!
··-' .................................. atao
~ ............................. n a1
1-ha ................................... ....
Lo9& • r-M ................................ IHO
a.ttll • "'-........................... aooo
~ ....................... 3011
Tra..a ............................................ ao1•
................................................. 1011
..__.. .............................. llOOl..aGOa
a....,_. .................................. Oa30 ......,_. ............................. ~ o-uo ........................................ 10.0
......-........................................ 9010
1,.111-..................................... IOtl ................................................. ecua
IRE
I \ .1 • ,• I '
I , •. I • I •
'7\....1
No matter
what you're
doing, your
hometown
newspaper
Piil.
fits In .
Pllnll&an ....................................... IOl•
1118c. llhnJa.aAd1M ........................ IOll
0.-........................................ IOl l
~-···································'°'" eo.p\!Mra ..................................... IOl l
r.-.._ hew11• ......................... IOU ,,___,,.,trve/Alt ............................ eoaa
•lliklllls llaMl1ela ........................ l030
MM'll9«7 ..................................... .0.0
omo. Pu.naUwe!Bqu1.-& .......... .0.'f
PeUi/AaaaeJe .................................. .O.t
llu.elGal ~ ..................... 9000
~ ............................... eoee
~ ......................................... eoeo
~Oood8 ............................. 9CM9
~ ........................................... eoft
n~ .................... eoeo
ao.u .................................... '701 l ·'POI•
....... ler<rtoe .............................. toao
......... 8U,.n>oella ....................... toel
~ ....................................... 9010
~ ............................. .
............................................... ao1a
•rt r rolll._ ..................... -90&04090
"""'' )? • t '\ J I t I 1 '--.. ~ ' I ' : '\ I •
'-1 1i'. fl I ·.., ' (I
HAMMER
TIME?
llm ~ nMd a linte
MbeanUldthe
.... il 1he Pim _ .......
•
TRADE
ltrougtl ctmltled
MIM71
LINES DAYS
The.l'llL
.... In.
BUCKS
Sell your private party merchandise in the
Pilo~ Classified Community Marketplace.
('()I(()'.\;,,
U I< I. M 1\ I( .! I . • .!
Coll the Pilot today at 642-5678 and
toke advantage of this great offer.
3 LINES for 3 DAYS for 3 BUCKS <Meldlom tbllr ssoo IW,) --
m m10n wcs · tostA •w
PilDL
COSTA MESA :.? t :!4
Clean tre9hly palnWd
2BR hOUM In Quiet
Eastsld• comm. Enct
HllNllNl,(C):\I
BEA< II .! 1 10
Classlf ted Ccmmumty r.1arhctpl~ICC'
back yard, Id.., for 4BR 2llA + f/r, nu
roommate• $775/mo. paint., vacant. 11295/
Call e49-490a mo + MC. def>· cul
PILOT CLAaSIFll!D de uc (310) l7o-3820
It's the solutlon you're ittARP i CLiliii 1 br
searching for.· Whath-condo, quiet, on
er you're aHldng a grMn belt. W/D, frig,
home, an apartment, S975/mo. 54$-15115.
a new occupation or Buy It. sen It. Find IL
even a stray pet. c1 ... 1fled.
Personals
Sl-:I·;KJNG
M EN 3003
A WOMAN
OF QUALITY
Allractlvo, younglah,
mlddte-agod SWF Pro-
fessional, loves life.
Are you In your sixties
and my counterpart?
#4161.
SEEKING SEt-:KJNli I st-.t-.KINI, t•t-llSC ):\,\I
MEN 3003 WOMEN .toc>-t Wt lMt:N .ICH• l Sl-.HVI< t-.S 11111,
l!NTR!PR!NEUR BALIGA ISLAND IWTILLIGlllT •Hown f'INUTI
PRETTY GENTLEMAN YET HUMOROUS ~~Ladlee BLUE·EYED Single Caucasian 35, SWM, 23, 5'9'', brown Adults 23 mlnutn/$23
BLONDE 6'5", healthy Profe.. hair, blue eyH, •Mk• DIN 1-80().231-4103
sional seeklng°)peclal attracUve female, 18---------34, love lite, tired of lady, 30·50, for walk· 25, to share beach ADULTS ONLY
the bar scene, looklng Ing, dining, huge, golf, walks, ballets and BEAUTIFUL GIA.LS UVEI
for someone 1peclal quiet tlmH and 1har· cozy fir•• with an In-1-9()0.737-2229
to care for. I love to Ing your lntere11a. telllgent, Hnaltlve CoJ. Adulta20 mlnutea/$35
cuddle up in front of a #3162. lege •tudent. #3152. DIN 1-80().231-4103
warm fireplace w11h 1--8-EA-U-T-IF_U_L__ LOVING ADULTS ONLYJ soft music, a good LIVE 1 ON 1 GIRLS
man & wine. 1 can be WOMAN puvruL a lady first, and a little ,Jr 1-800-231-4103 V/MC
BIG glri at times. I'm not INSIDE & OUT ROMANTIC BEST FOR LESS
spoiled, bu1 I should wanled by SWMCNS, If your plan• Include a LIVE 1 ON 1 LADIES BLONDE be. Love to sail, bike, 37, for tennl•. beach, lasting relatlonshlp 1-SI00·370-0009/S10
49 +. sophlsllcaled/ opera, theater, horae1. skiing, travel, within with an authentic, sen-DIN 1-I00-231-4103
casual, sorlous/funny. Could I be your Holl· honeat, fun, healthy, suous, unconven-Good 1 _..1_I1.._1 Is lhero 0 mature, tall day gift this year? committed relation-tlonsl, sincere, com· INV9lnrw www
non-smokor guy who Let's go dancing &1_•_h_lp_._,,_3_1_82_.___ munlcatlve, Intelligent, 1·90047o-eeoo/S1S
Isn't tooklng for 8 _s_ee_l_#_4_1_s2_.____ HANDSOME uniquely wonderful OIN-11+ 1~172·2115
skinny 25 year old LOVE and atrlklngly hand-LOOKING FOR FUN?
Kldte11? -41S3 STRONG some, tall, trim, Youth· uve LADIES . TO SKI CARING tua oenueman 43 Clook 1·900-T~'l·ttn Very attracilve SWF 33) then call nowl 20 mlnutff/SSS
Hove A
Garage Sole!
(al llio , ... "'"''"""' 101618 ..... ,.,,r..,.'.ftt.I
21 blond hal bl • SWM, 42, 5'11", 19!5 You: pretty, trim, ......... D1N1~ ....... ,. • r, ue lbs. •••k• SWF, 24-"awHt", compatible -.....,.,,&"&
eyed Ski Bunny, 38, 5'7"-8', who ilkH NIEWJOiif woil•N seeks attractive male, to dance, travel, talk,•-a.nd-_30_+_._*_3_1..;.M.;..·--wrTH PHONE NUMBERS
ages 22·28, to kHp laugh and fffl very MUST HIOO II• DATE• Eld. 40
me warm on a cold speclal. #3151. LOVE winters night. #4182. l ... ONQ •••UTtl'UL
UNIQUE HOME KISSING I" DmMA ALONE? Attractive, monoga· 1-900-773 LADY"•• 1on1 STRAIGHT Me too. DWM, Ex· mo1.11, secure, sincere, FORWARD Brooklynlte, 30, blond· communicative, edu-I'm Adventuroua
WF, young redhead, lsh, beard, ponytail, cated, ttlm SWM, 4,1, 1-900-737-0IRL••• 1-on-1
41 , 5'7", needs one 5'11", 210 lbs., NI S. 9', ... ks caring, ••n-
woman man for walks, Let's meet for a movie •ltJve, trim, alncere, N GAY M•N OP
laughter and lots and a 'bite. Y0ut neck /amkg lady ~ fOt N.WPORT
more. Respect get• or mine. #3191. commitment, ahlll1ng 1-900-2aa.HUNK• Ext. 11
you everything,--------a actMtlH together.
may b • even m • . ..,.-!!!' ______ ,_*,,..3_1_53...,._____ DARK llDROOll TAUi
1114151. For Ad ct on ci..a1nect 1a ... " MI00·90).QtRL• Eld. BO
Call a CONV•Nll•NT • S3mln.AIClllll11+
MEET someone special
through classlfled
Plii..-whether you're buy. '''SVmln 20111111 "**"""'
lng1 • aalllng, or Just TslaYenturee,Ft.M-. fl looking, cJuelfled hu ,~.
what you M9dl Sall your home AD·VISOR PILOT CLA89tll'l•D through cl&Mffted. 842·1878 ...... .,. .. ... .,.
.. FAST
llSULT ..
SllYICI
DlllCTOIY
f"or Re11ult
Service C1tll
642·1671 .. .,.
410 SMwatd 2-story
2BR 1 BA. encl patio,
oomm pool, dbl car·
port. '850. No Peta.
132-44518
l'OSTA MESA 2fi24
**•HARP N•WIER
2BR, bltlna $795/mo.
Cat OK. Call Pam, Agt 848-... 0
D~l f{IN E
•Call t-900-844-0100
SELL
1 your home
through classtned
•Enter 4-digit code appearing in 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 are responding to
YOU mar leave a 30 second n1CSsage.
You wil be automatically billed 98¢
for each minute.
.~
JNUUSTHlAJ. :!'!
2,400 SF Nwllt a
3975 8'r0t1 ...
Unfum apt. 2br, 1b•,l==::--A~~54~1,~ll!'""'~ I 11 50/mo, Incl ulll. RENT 1125 • S1
1019 w. Bay Ave, Np1 mo. 1355 " Bch. 714-673·1874. ALSO 800 ~le mo. 2944 R lpt
VI.WI VIEWI VIEWI "2. 975-6119' 1 8 R ( $I 2 5 /m o ) &
28A($1240/mo) Back
Bay apts. Gar w/
Ol)nra, trplc. 721-1180
Write t1'F F · "2 SR:
28A, ftplc, PoOI, car-
port. 1875. 14W679.
Apartments
For Rent
HOO MS 2706 Looal V•"1tdl1
Large Room Balboa Route.Mullil H I
Penntaula. Pvt entry, Qulok r um
no amoklng, no cook• 1-800.0S 3S.
Ing. $350. §75-3391
llf:NTAI.S TO
SHAHE :n.!·1
CDM furn rm, 3BR
2BA hH, prof mal•I
pooV spa, $450, Inc
utll.944-~·
The new
In -column
For Ad Actiton
Call a •
.... ~.t rm;:
AD-VISOf'
842·1818
---~ -.
.•~
,,
gr
llC1
IClra
Jws:it 1do,
1'T
..stt.
NB ....
110
~
'· rv mkt
IOO -lpbc.
k to • +
51
to
""' :175
wk •• ii Mth
utll.
I
;;iO
om
trd. ma
I
lllgG
"'°' >Ila
lo•
Jtn.
nch
apt.
op.
Ott.
o. so
ml
ch
t
'00
111
.00 's
Ill
>" .0
!57
"' If
4
.....
Ad• .. •lit•••Uent •om-
..,.HllCll" MO good ""9~igak*a
,_.chd for tapldly
l'OWiMg Otthopa9dlc
M•dlcal product•
~ loca'*S If\ ~ Vltt-o-areL
__ ,..
=_elltlve Hlary, liXCERCISE 81KI! a
• fMICkaQe, ca-atalr~llmblng ••~· .,....,"" wattclng envl-clsw, bOth computer·
ronment for right lndl-~.d, utWMd, detulc ~ ... IDund vtduw. e.11 723-4500, moctala w/warranty.
Morocco Nd PM1f. • MUSTANG a.o 1 Auto, A/O, .......,, owner. Xlnt cond.
loaded. lo ml, AMc for f'ulty · aquipC. 15000 M a.rco. • 1 a, ee a 090 11141131_,.-,1 M )(JI Thia l*Owd pet <1•.m= •fGRDllCOllTQT ~-=:=:.
-,....... .er.. ~ llftw Jan 1at, 1992. Orlglnally 1349/aacf\. ti ft. cal, w/epinMk•
Thia cute car i. fully w•IMty, .. reconta.
2'3a .... 8tvd. loaded With .. OP-110,600. .,....11.
-"""-l•I 1-... ~~~-------Take $175/ .. ch. (C.,, 150 1--... boOm -..., ........... --.. TILlllARkETINQ deuver> e.ie 847-8141 euto'Ptk,C. 11 h/p"Oib. c-.. Meea uon1. Haa ground flf· .... ..... fecta and Jots mot'el
;&AF. .m ™ .... pt '· tu1tv equip, m111 ~· 8a.c:k A Earn EXTRA MONEY WATERFORD Cryat.... 12.900. IR-0121. =· 142.;;:,.. Coata ~::•n:,m~~~~':J':~ :W::.. c::.!v ~= labOi ...... , wtth .-•• -.-B•ul•c•k-C·=--.,
,OUMO: uwrn.ow.r and Phone akJlla r• S50 .. Ch. 434-2930. two aalla • CO"-'· -
... r-q\Ned to ••II growing 1450. 7M-9342 Of Limited, load• • ~ 8albcMI ,.. IOcaJ new.paper ' JOt Chrlatmu OHL Enl 7a.1947 15,000 mile• left of llftdot0ao.13fd. · cyclopedla new ed a ext~ warranty, ~-IM915. C 11 • .. 2 .... 33 Jr Ht, great book"'-'5.250, 3413-1433 LOST..e ..... Abyplo-I V"9 ...., Muat s .. 11 731 ... seo.
111 ' I ( fl. '• t > I !1
Sl'I I II'
' :-. K I 1111.\ I s "' l I
....... (117397)
Com. ... our nna ...
lectJon of quality low
mlteage whk:lae Johnton' Ion Lincoln Mercu'! 2e20 Harbor Blv
Coata Maaa, Ca
&4().6030
...... .,.nllf
Fully lo&ft , very
a.ti, 1ow ""'"· ve ,,_, ., ... 80
ORMCll COAIT
JEEP ANO EAGLE t-800-..........
7141'M-..o23
'90 .... Cenv
••'l?c.loe•• Mght Nd, ncelent
condlll~n.J.. AM/fM --~~.en.... ,,. S4k ml,
$7500. &4&-9147 ale, ~•· lo rmtn,
Cutt. Whl9. V.rt Claa.n. ~fW/o~1C:T ~,=1 =TO¥=o=t=.,.=.=u=
JEEP AllD IAQLE Turbe>-6 apeed
1-aoo-en..-.P ~UI ~ 714184e•H3 vr
MEIH l·.l>l.S •11 IO I
Ml~t .\I !Ci ...... ,.,
'llllEllWR
SCORPIO
Thie le ooe of Eu-
rope'• flnaet road
car•. Moon roof,
leather im.rtor & Iota
morel (884211)
····" Com• and drive tt>I• luxunoua
can tocfayl
Johnson ' Son U.ncoln Mercury
2928 Harbor Blvd
Ian. ·~u"' fttaid col· --:TE~LE::MAR:-:-=-~KET=-1-N_G_
i.. ailtMMI ~ I nMd 3 people for 1859 Ctue6C 14ft. ftbw.
Newport Pier araL our Nwpt Bch ofc. gla1l8 bo.a w/35 h.p. A~ 173-2071 •No ••P nee • ..-Johneon. E•c•llent
'19 BRONCO 5.8 ltt.
Fully equtpt. E. Bauer -FLEE IOOD XJnt cond. 47K ml
" I 112,500 OBO175-2683
C :\I I I 1.)..\( '10-lO Jl-.WllHY 1-nts
& /\HI t.ll:.!.1
'90 Chtrok.• Ltd '85 380SL lnwnac eond,
futty kMldad 4X4, 14k antllc>c:* bnca,ctwomaa
ml, deal or the year! 2 1op9. 120,850 muet
(0933) •17,750 .... ~2'M2.
WEITlllltlTER
13580 8aectl Blvd. eu11oe
... vw Clbrlolet
AT, AC, YfK'/ C ...... I
Com• teet drlval
CoataM .... ea
a40-M30
Al'> rIUl'l-.S ~
LOS~. ama11 remaie •Earning potantJal •An....,_ a lbt.te oondltlon wltr•ll•r
--.. ... -.. In to l500/Wtdy J ... ~ I ---... S1200 Obo. '723-0887. « _.. . .,..... •Oam-Noon Mon·Frl .. ., ... --~ dal Mw on •Paid training lectlon of diamond•, 1 iia SM KawaMkl Dec.:. 19. A~ARD. Call 875-4853 Vlnlaga w.tchff, lnct Jet SllJ In top condl-
723-480t. Rolex & Patek. We tlon, no hours on new
LOffi-*i rtng with TRAVEL FREEi Here'a buy, aell, trade & r• motor, 12000 obo. ".'.~.'..f;"on-Udo e.tand, howl Amazing r• pair. William Harotd (714) 842·7207 day11 bee.! 24. RKWARO. COfded mag revHla Jewelers. 3110 New-(714) 842.ote7 ~ _, .. -.... dalalla. eau 540-1992 port Blvd ® 32nd St. v•-973.c>395 M 1\H I \I I -...1 11·-...
Lcat. ltnO old meta Po-~ Vic. ThUfin a 81!1• CM. Aatum to NtMtftW Wanted .Look· e.~ Animal Hoa-Ing for rallable p/t p1t7af.I~. nanny/atudant, M-F, 1·
55 8:30 p.m. for 7 yr girl.
AnponaJble, great at·
tit.Ude, trana provided
:: L w/prOOf of good. drlv·
Ing rec'd. 842-4397 or
47W148.
From-0C to Defwerl
LNY!Aa Jan 1-.= ~ s1oot •Y~TeTO
nWanted e.•ictra money. 0...
Dally Piiot
Early mom-s. No conac-
lnvolved. Naed
available Thura
t. from 3AM to
Valld CA. DLlll
auranca a muat.
2-4333.
Merchandise
Al'l'l.IA!\ll'ES ()011
t 'UHNITUtU; 601-1
•DINETTe• Table wilh 4 chalra.
Soulhweatern, color
chalra. Cram• table w/
e.tentlon. S200 OBO.
842-1822
IH H KS 711:!:.! ••••utlful full
length opo••utn
fur coat Reveralbl• 10 .....,._ To Open as raincoat with fur .. al 18' POW« 1225/
trim, European hoo"•· mo & 34' Sall 1400.
Hardly worn. 1850. Ave Nowt 7--81
642~1X'f~
PlffS ,~
ANIMAL S 1,0 I "
PUG, fawn, female, 7
yaare otd. Fr•• to
good home. Call
650-2498.
PIANOS &
ORGANS tiO!">!t
Garage
Sales llMW BO:JO
•Lovelw 8tlffet• •94 S28e 78k ml,
lampa, clocks, paint~ excellent condition,
Inge, acceaaori•• from new trana, leather.
Udo & COM homaa. auto. $7895. 780-0224. Th NEW P 0 RT Moving, wlll Hll •Qualltw• ttema/
8ElqlH/COSTA MESA cheaply. 780-6289. cheap ptlcH, cloth-'87 329 PU.d.f 19 looldng fOf a n Ing, I CuellDmar Service 8 FOOT plush Ing, •h l1ah camp ng, Black/Black, Priced MntatlYe for the couch $49 llnena, h Id, lampa, Right! lllooee?O
allon Dept to CMe-1008 · Sat lam. 2011 Point STERLING IOTORS fta>elble ec:hed-0 a I M a r • P C HI
pro>Clmataty 10. Antique JepaneH Mac:AtthW. 78CMS289. 8401444
per Wffk. Emparor/Empereaa '88 7501L a r.elable Clloeh doll• w/lamp &
with atrong ahada, 3ft. height. Sliver/Black, Make
hone akllla, Maka offer. 721-8291 CLEAPA.NC• SALIEI Offerl 111008424
phone Y'04ce E~hlng Must Go STIRLING IOTORS ~~~ ~.~~~ This WMlll New & l40t444 _,.,. ..,_ -· quaenal1a $235. Whha UMd. Call 831-680t
'5.50/Hr. a braaa dayb9d, ma1· '89 3251
C ANl•L •HllA treaa a ll'Undle, com-Lo Lo Mllea. Flawleaa,
321 11Xt. SOT pleta 11H. M0-8733. 11108080
~took ..,e_u_u .... -t.-b-o_o_k_c_a_e-e, STERLING MOTORS
CIMk PIT. M-f. couch, aawlng m• MCM444 Co'f~• Pharmacy, chine, cabinat. cheat
440 Fair Dr. Coata of drawer.. 842-8322• '89 7SOfl
M ... ; 648-3208· COLLECTIBLE 1950'a White/natural, lo
DISTRICT molded chalra S45 30 ft Apollo ftybrldge, mnaa, loaded! tfloe653
pair. MO-nee. duat control, twin STEALING MOTORS .:JIANAQER 22.51, llHpa o. Lorren
Ht,.1 train & manage CrHm liquer 8 dtwr C, bait tank. UHF/ Mo.e444
adUft rnotOf carri.ra. (BtO)'-t\111) dre..., w/ VHF, gaJlay, hHd,•---,-"'-1-3-1-8-1-
1
--
Must 1 be anlhualaatk: a~ "*ror & fUW wlndleae, ~ bent-• a dat .. oriented. b· .,..., mllllchlng ~ blel, Dinghy w/ motor, Black/Black, Lo Mllea
perlanca prafarr•d brd, Xlnt condition. awlmatep, 125,ooo looe&84 but~not necaaearv'. 1400. Full*-bad W/ obo. Must 8" to •P-STERLING MOTORS s~ per WHk to frame, good condition. predate! 113-844e wk. uuf41 • ~ COvet lat· 171. 8r1ld 831·7782. e31.a300 hm. .._.... .... ler N8umetoCoae1 ~~~~~~~~
~News.
W. :l~Y St., Coata
M .... CAl2827
.,11under1tandlng will be temporarily
"smoothf'd over " Kttp l'ftOlulions
concerning moderation Pi~ I• In·
vo4vtd •
SCOllPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ). Foc111
on authority. power. organlutlon. role
of hc»t. People look to )'OU for diN<tlon.
lntplratlon, prf'dlctlon1 concerning
1992. Cycle high. you"ll "ttar" at party.
<:.tnttr netlve IJlvolwd.
SACrrTAlllUS (Nov. Jl·DK. 2l ):
RHCh beyond ptf"f*'9 ••pect*lonl -
dunng celebration you'll l'K'ft•• lnvl·
talion relating to aoclal activity, ro·
mane., joum.y Crnt npecutlons for
you durtna 19'11 Aria playt key ~.
CAPlllCOllN (DK. 22-Jall. 19).
E.lrtphalil on (ffth IUJ't, innovat1Ve""8,
l,nventlven .... orig,lnality, Mntu.ality
You'll be uyu'&· .. This ls one of "'Y
81<* enjoyable New Yter'a Ev. ttlebra·
don.r' i...o. 4'quar11a9 lrt an pktllrt.
AQUAllUS (Jen 20-Feb. JI): At·
w1111on rt¥oh'ft al'O\ll\d dirK'tlo11. fam·
lly, budpt In conMCtioft with rtfffth.
menta. lndJvkhaal whodaapeNla "adult
btvetaaff" may be "out of control "
Cancer, Leo. Aquarlut ,,.nona rtpre·
11tnted.
Pl$CllS (Feb. 19·M1teh 20): OtflM
•""'-ch«k hwl~n lltt. mah lo111·
dlattnce call ao that lov.d ONt rt11llus
you IN MMlll.,., aw.,., n>mllltlc. Fun.
frolic 1 .. 111rtd tontcht. Oltptay huinor.
.,.,...lllt1. C..lnl ,..,,_.nted
Loaded .. cs.en .. a, _ _,,,,.,,,...,,...,,..,.,......._,... ____ _
whlatlal ST ,ee9 '89 ESCORT OT black
(224487) W• have Rk• nawl Transferable,
over eo lo mite quality unllmlted warranty!
care 10 chooM ffoml $0895. 545-e380 or JohnlOft & Ion 557-4401 aak for Mike
Lincoln llercurv 2020~8iW
CosaM ... ,CL
640-5630
'81CADIWC
SEVILLE
Come dr1va thla
sporty luxury earl
You'll love ltJ A ... al
'89 Ford Aemtar Van
Eddi. Bauer, auto, 7
pau. Dual ale. Caaa.
Ult, c/c, fully loaded
(1298) t13,925
ORANGE COAST
JEEP AND EAGLE
1-800-522..JEEP
7141$4tM023
at ••·-c:s14949> -t0-FORD--THU-N_D_ER_l_IR_D_1
Wa have ov• 60 low
mHe vehicle• to .... 35th Ann. jet black/ M with auy flnanc.. blck leather, Auto,
lngl OYar 37 yeara In Loaded, Low mun,
OrangeCountyl Aak for Marco Johnson & Son (186209) tH,988
540-5830 .::.·.~=HI
2833 H1rbor Blvd.
Cotta Mt11
540-4491
~--~-·'
ORANGE COAST
JEEP AND EAGLE 1-aoo-en-.tDP T14194e.eo23
l.EXlJS !I 115
90 LEXUS ES250
Sunroof a tal9phona (2RTS681)
. LEXUS OF
WESTMINSTER
13590 Beach Btvd.
992.eeoe
11 LEXUS El250
Only 8, 700 mllaa
(2UTT921)
LEXUS OF
WESTMINSTER
13590 S.ach Blvd.
992-eeoe
USE
THE
PILOrs
CLASSIFIED
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
TO YOUI
Is someone special Mvtng a birthday
In J.,uery? Mnounc:e It In the Piiot
and I~ Send In a non-returnable
photo along with S 10.00 Of just a message 0
-
with S5.00 and we wtn publish It on
Janumy 9th.
Deadline: Jenusy 6, 5:00 p .m.
Send your mcssOge to:
The Pilot & Independent
330 W. Bay St.
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
~: Classtfled Happy Birthday --------
)::.. _____ 1
IPhonc I
'Message
Fl• Dar: o. ai. ffnt .. , el 1"2.
MWS ftYOIYft ... .act traMpOrbdo ..
'""" .......... atlllftk CHI .....
aamclaJ lHolriaa "t-allaa of Ha·
•ra" I• liltp pa.c., Aeddnt ftllltft
to .. metmty"' who Ollft .... IK'M arr
.,. ...... M<n•bed to practk.tllty
ef 11-ll•ltatlOM. C«altd, Vlrp, &.tfttari• ,.,.._ cee14 4eal ....
lileMtlJ-. MlcWh 1£.e peec. •lslilt ..."8..,..._-MtwWC911
.....,,, U.S. wtU ..-..ay t.. .......
tti.. MIL Te all .... Make tllie ,_
,.., .. ~ ........... luppyl
ARI.ES (Mud\ ~I-April 19): Villltor
frotn ,., aw.y, perka,. 0¥tlliMI. .. ,.
priles and del!pll.. You own P..rMJ
'*°"'8 aOft tt\a.n ~ ol "('Otllkl
be ... Sm\ario hishlilhb trawl, ......
tlon, mietlC ~ .. fftL ~In·
vol'ffd.
TAU.US (APfil 20·M.y 20). Faaily
tta.tlonthlpa dotl\lNIW, har'!Mny fin.I•
,, ffttored art.r .Wfkknt .. period.
FINnCtt will bt etnllhMMd out M •
.pi~ C\lffttlt "11\llddle." Individual who
i.cud MOdittMlon ~ffen. ..... lflll•
pillhy.
CEMINI (Mty ll·Junt 20): AMfl·
tlon ,.vol•• around ct.edUne, 1Cron1
love rtlatlonlhlp. addM ...-poft14bUlty.
cl\lntt for~ a.dint to flnan·
d•I jltckpoc. Marital ....,.. llaur.a tn
dyn."'IC ~)'. o.pricon\ pUy9 rot. •
1184 MERCEDES
380IL
Ona ownw. 1ow man.
mu9t ... 1 (1JWS189)
LEXUIOF
WESTlllNITER
(1231) .....
ORMGECOAIT
JEEP AND EAGLE
1-80C).622..JEEP
714/54!Mt023
l l.ASSICS H~ 11>
'$3 RAMBLER ~
can. Good motor,
atralgh1 body. Naeda
paints $800 540-9782
13590 8-ch Blvd. .. 24909
NISSAN 111 :-10
•'72 VW Bug ce»
vertlbla, new topl
headliner, 5,000 m
19H Doc1ea Polan
2dr, 80k ml original,
extra clean, $2760.
527-3047 day
780-1878 ew/wknd
AllTOS
WANT EU 'L!70 90 NISSAN 300Z on engine, must '" to appreciate! Ch"'--u __ .. ~ .. 1...., Glaclar white, Auto. T· ....... .....,, ........ .
t L .... d 0 $5,000. 383-1433 for 814, ok1er MBZ. ~r. ~to,· Mar~! ~===::;:=== British OI odd uotlcs. (004766) •23,988 Shopping fOf a new Cd Bob, 532""890. HARBOR apartment? c1ua111ect
lllTSUllSHI ~~':ta ~~'~:.'.! SELL 2833 Harbor Blvd. or worryl
Coat• Meaa Piiot Cla••tfted your home
through classified 540-4491 M2-se78 .....
Eut· west vulnerable. Eut dee.le..
NORTH
•Q5 Q 7•2
0 AK J 10 7'
• cs 2
WEST
•KJ9882
Q J 10 3
0 52
•83
EAST
•A7
Q 885
¢ Q9 3
-
open ia bit rich for our blood.
Nort.h'a rai9e to three no trump wu
above reproach.
• Q J 10 8'
SOUTH
• 10' 3
'V AKQ9
¢88
•AK97
W eat ata.rt.ed the auack with a
deceptive lead of the two of mpadea.
A. ao often bappena. the only per·
aon who waa taken in wu Eut.
Since South bad opened one no
trump with notbinc in diam<>ndl,
Eut came to the concluaion that
declarer bad apadea under control
• So Eut. captured dummy'• queen of
apadea with the ace and ahifted to
the queen of cluba.
The biddini:
But SouUa W..t North
p._ 1 NT P .. SNT p.. p.. p ..
Open.inc lud: Two of •
In the spirit of the aeuon, we1l
pledp a cup of lrindneaa DOW with
all our niedera. We hope you've bad
aa much enjoyment readini t.bia c:ol·
WDD in the put yMf U .. ..,,. bad
writinc it, and we look forward to
continuinc our ueociation in the
cominc year. It miibt aaem bard to believe that
t.bia band ia from the 1991 &ropelU'J
Championabipa. While we 10 Uc>ns
with the modem fuhion of openins
one no trump with only three auita
stopped. to do ao with two auita wide
Declarer took that trick with the
ace and led 1 diamond to the jack.
Not wantm, to aet up five tricb for
daclanr, Eut allowed the jack to
win. South rwtumed to band with •
heart and repeated the diamond fi.
neaM. nu. time Eut took the
queen and reverted to apad.-not
that it mattered, ai.nce there WU DO
enuy to dummy. Down three.
Thie wu a comedy of errora.
Once the diamond fineaae "worked. ..
dac1arer ... in too much of a.hwJ:v
to repeat it. Befon taki.nc a aecond
fineaae in the auit, deduer a.boWd
have cubed the bicb beerta. When
that suit b10ke evenly, declarer bad
at leut nine tricb-four hearta.
three diamonds and two duba. ln
caahiDc out dec:larer would have
dropped the queen of diamonds and
raked in 12 tricb!
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
""~'*' .. Ct*-. ctwtlt eov.-.
UT-
16 .... ..... .. ......... .
• • •
• •
• •
•
DEAL OF THE WEEK
A HON DANZA
F1esh Posto & Seafood Re1ta1.1ant
342 I Via Udo • NB 676-8973
Fr•• Lunch EntrH wmi IVchaN Of S«oltd
APPAREL
IAUOA IStAND ms a.O'IHltG co.
'l'ol.I cornP'et• chlctena c:tottW'lg store
224 Ma1ne Ave • Bolboo • 723-4490
,,,,,,, 0 dotlGbt al wed dolhlnflltwcltOllly.
19C.W• a ISS t*coun#.
llDWEU 'S llOllQUE
Infant at Toddef A Womenl Sportswear
Via Udo Razo. 3467 Via ldo • NB .• 673-4510
201' OFF JaMv• .Jog Sell (llt ot n)'foN
THE~TIOYS
Outdoof Recreotlon 9 IPPliel/ Apparel
17f:JJ Newport Blvd • CM 64S-3CX>
FIEE U tat C..CCIM wiWt any la 0oWng
IVchme. ~a..c.i••P«~
PAOlO GWIDINI
Ane ltolon Oothel fOI Men
Udo Memo Vloge
3416 Via Oporto.# l • N8 • 67>4044
201' Off any ptllCltoN
SHl'UY'S
O othes for Men. Women. at Boys
2300 Harbor Blvd. • CM 631-3222
Men'• • WomM'1 • loyl nnmE NECQ lf.'9
(Many Colon) " "'· L, Xl
ROY STEP SHOD
Largest Selectlon of SAS Comfort Shoes_, S.CA
City Shopping Center • Orange •634-0631
Addlflottol IOS Oft OC1I19.91 ScN Gftx.t>
AUTOMOTIVE
waalf.Uta
Mc.intenonce A Repolt
375 Brlltol St .. #M •CM 668-0882
l~olon s.Mc• • Salety in.p.clon "9.95
(Sav•50'U
JOHNSON a SON
Soles Setvlc• a 8odV Shop
2626 Hofbor • CM • 540-5630
fmog CMIJcalon '24-95pllUI16 '°' cMBcote .
Fold. ~-MM:wy only
PERFORMAHCE MnSUllSHI
Sol ... Service a leollng
19202 Beach Blvd. • HB • 968-0233
IDS Off Dl«:ounl on M llepoln _,..,.,.,,,
ptOducll only. I
SOUlH COUNTY lalZU
sa ... SeMc• a l9Clllng
1871 l Beach Blvd. • HB • 842-2000
FflU '2 polnl «*tty bp«:lrJiiL C4fl lol dMlll.
SOU1H COUNTY va.JCSMGON sa ... .vtce a a.ecmig
18711 Beocr\ Blvd •• H8 • 8'2-2000
OI •,,,_,~ff.fl,,..,_,...,,, UJ.MJ
vw•~~. •
•
·~
Off H WW. OAUllY
M. CU1tom trormg a g1ns
•
•
Vlo Udo Plaza. ~,-8 Vlo Udo• NB• ~
II& ...... iw. ... ,,_.,,.al $20 Of moN
<UMIW)
HEALTH/EXERCISE
SHAPE -W HlWPOIT
fUI SeMc• Heolttl OJb
1C>iK> !Nine Ave. (Weltclf Flozo) • NB 631-3623
J5S Oft l9gcllot E,.,..,,.,., FH
FOOD/RESTAURANTS
AHGQC)
ltolon Alltoronte
1969 Harbor Blvd.• ~1225 •CM
20"li. Off Enln Check, lunch or Dinner
ARIANA
Atghonlton Resto11ait
440 E. 171h St.• CM• 646-4418
15S Off any dim« chect ot FIEE
O....t ... any drvw
IDIHANA
Japan ... CUlllne
42f:JJ Birch St. •NB 956-0822 ca • ., •• ,...,...,. .. 1\ldttaea1
Al-~uNlaipeclalall1UO
CMOPSllCU HOUSE
Gou-met Chlnete CIM!ne
18315 Brooktult St. #1 • FV • 963-nl 1 RIEE.,.,,.. (al eqlJOI ot ,..,_vat.) wflt PUICftaN
al J ...... CO*Je In only)
GAGPIZZA
Gollmet Ptlzo. Poatos. Subs at Buffalo
1125 Victoria St.• CM 722-7585
RlEE ILilbb l1faa, t'1M 010 ,,..::/tale nec.•JrY>
LA POSADA
Authentk: Me>Clcon R81ta11ont A Contino
16129-D Brooichlrst • FV • &39·2513 a.. FIEE O«!Mol ~(Dine In only)
LOVE'S IAI a Qllll
Newelt member°' love'• Bafbecue
20111 8roolctUlt • H8 968-7500
~Off~ .... d-.ldot ......
U'S IUTAUIANT
~1.Sl9ct'Ma't ACa N._CUltw
8961 Adami • .. 968-6050
lft Off Food lb Qo • 110.......,,
MAIARKEIS
Down Horne C«.rltry Coolcln'
16' e. 17TH sr .• CM ~
2IOS Off An'f INmM. Wndt OI DIM« M
('°")',,_.,CR • ., Menu c.td •
~,,. •• -*'did)
lifO'I NEW YOll PIZDllA
Praa Cotry<>J~
1673 !Nine Ave. • CM 722-1212
IGl99,,.'__..~11.MJ
TEXAS lOOIEV'S a.. Parlof • boof'I
101•2~ .... ~
2,. '· W9dt ...... ..,, any .... larby lad llD ._,.._....,,.._
lPIZZA
Clalllc. QoUnwt Arm
So. CoOlt ~•COM 6~lCX> a
VIG Udo Pkmi • NI 723-0707
12 m Any.,. •llMl lllr tol llllcl
FLORISTS
CAIUOll'I ~ .JI
Lrdam.Ccspet.W:>od.Mable.Tle
25.e2 CoOlt Hwy. N8 57•7.m
,,..~~· a11o1a11i1aa
CIOWN R.00. COVBINO
Roora~eowr
27f:JJ S. Harbor 8Mt • SA 979-7694 a...,..,., Carpel I 1 l.N/;'d. lndaled
ll&P C8CDf\US
Nattonat lrond Mattr ... a CU1tom Funlt\#•
3601 JomborH Rood• NB 833-0551
W•'ll'oy*"lcWtbr
IUCX'S a.oa atOPN
Rne Qdty New. Antique Oock.a
1736WtatclfJOr .• N8 631-3215 as many NflW QoQt ttaDc*
GIFTS & COLLECTIBLES
FoiiwiF.a•
tunmell. Amc:llH. ~Momenta.
Hogato a Doll
1 n7 w..tclft' Dr. • NB 660-5535
IDS Ott An'f ~
HAIR STYLIST
IUIOPA
JMlcoNal~
FotNon l*lnd, Ue 320 • NB 759-«XM
IDS alt lte ACt)'lk llemowll
~I»>
HOME IMPROVEMENT
AMEllJONE
Pont • wolpoper centef
369 E. 17th St. • CM • ~8n4 ,.
JDS Off""*""~. Happy Hollda)'I
PlAINS HAIDWARI
M9lg. SclHMg. Cultom Point Tinting
2666 Harbor • CM 546-7080
O...ffMK., .. ~
IAMEN CONl1IUC1ION
o..tom ~a dMgr\ l9Mcel
660-0885 • N8
HOUOAYftCW: Fm,_., .... Uo.1.WIM
11YUOH11 IY MlfOH
RMd8f rttat a Commercial
SkVI~ Ntolotlonl
3617 W. MocMtu BNO. #506 • SA 545-9793
'"'"""'__,., ... An
1IOPICAIE, IHC.
~Indoor PkJnta a Acc..aMI
20391 WI Bich St. • SA HQTS. 756-0790
Fifi IWMty MlllAlrf ~
JEWELR Y
ANDllW .. :-.W
~
293 E: 17th S . • CM 631-220'2
,.,.,, ,,.,,, '" Olf 'NI ... .,
SERVICES
--WON~
PhotocrGPt'IV
222 E, 17th• CM 54&-7191 ,... ,..,,. "°'*'111
NlWPOlf RtWtaAl GIOUP, INC.
R911cilf lflal Real &tat• I.Dani
4:299~ M . '222 • N8 ,.a......, ... Any,.,..,...., ---
THt\Vli
.. •• • .... • • ,, ,.,,, "flt
t
--
Wisk®
Power SCOOP"' ·seen• •Unscented 58 oz. box does up to
15 Washloads.
II.
IOX
VHS T·120 blank VldeO tape provldeS up to 6 h<>urs of Plav·
tng/recordlng time.
19
SAV-oN DRUCS
24-HOUR
LOCATIONS IN
THE SOUTHLAND I
.,
IACH
21 CONVENIENT
24·HOUR PHARMACY
LOCATIONS:
-AOOURA: 54523 Kanan Rd 11 ... 1.5522
•ANAHE.m: 1021 N State College Blvd
714-111 .. 111 •AZUSA: 387 Horth Crtrus Ave
111434-nn olUMANK: 511 N Hollywood Way
11 ..... 1.0710 .ctlNO: 12u10Cen1ra1Ave
714-511-3111 •OlUIOMD IAA: 300 S Diamond Bar Blvd
714-M1·5531 .OOWNEY: 791 S Flo<ence Ave
310.f27-4747
.EL TOAO: 243n Rocklletd Blvd
714-t30-5090 .GRANADA HIUS: 10208 Balboa Blvd
11WM5135 .HUNTINGTON BEACH: 19121 Beach Blvd
71 ....... 1522 -*Gl.£WOOO: 222 N Market Street
31CM71~1 •LONG BEACH: 4570 Atlanhc Avenue
31M2S·7Ht
·LOS ANGELES: 3010 S Sepulveda Blvd
31M71-M21 •llAAIMA DEL REY: 13171 Mindanao Way
31N21-ltOI 4IONTEAEY NAK: 2103 S At1an11c Blvd
21).2'W524 •RIVERSl>E: 3563 R1ve1s1de Plaza
71"'31MO
•SANTA ANA: 391 1 S Bristol Street
714-551-7113 •SANT A ANA: 1750 N Grand Ave
714-135-3111 •SANTA MONICA: 2505 Santa Monica Blvd
31CM2M451
•TORRANCE: 5020 W 190th Street
31().370-5I07
•VENTURA: 5900 Telegraph Rd
IOMU-3271
r ""• • .. , .: ... -:. • """-... A5Ti ~ • '0\.,. I •
Ultra Slim• Fast®
Diet Powder
•cate MOcN or Pina COlada 15 ounces each •FrUlt.Jutce·11 ounces
99
EACH
-.
21
Revlon Mascaras
•wat.r-nant
•LOng Distance
Assorted Shades.
=-299
-outcu~ot2s. ~oflO.
Your Cllolce'
NutrltlOnal supplements
....... ._. ....... Clklunta =•ltn .... Zlne-100 tablets. ...... Vlmn*I C-100tlblets. 500mg~ .
......... ...... GlrlcOl-100capsules. ....... ............ YWt-
250 t:IDlitS:'
Your CllOlel
+
GEfJ AM/FM stereo cassette
Player
Mini stereo cassette recorder features auto reverse bass boost and auto tape shut-o~. NO..~
I COior Enlargements I Regular Size COIOr Prtnt PrOceSslnl I
#OSI #OIO #092 I 12•JIP. 15eicp. Z•••· Hexo. I I 2 71 2 II 99 1 i 0 u· i" i•• 'i 0 ' 1
I _, Sl7 I,.." 1110 14 1111• I 2 SETS GOO<Jon1VonOOU01eonnt I WWW" ., II _ _, Of'OtnlC .. 1 ==
COior ~nt from your COior MQatlW wnen coup0n llftlrl ~ onllr. I accompantesoroer. •wlldw1Cf11n¥0Ctlef0fftr I -• -..-•-t:• llOtWlldwtal'"Y Offer I L GoodtlW'U 1-442 ..L GoodtlW'U 1+92 J ------~-----------------------•A51c fot Photo Express details• photo department.
5••
2-PackK&M
standard !·Ring
Binders
1· capK.tty. 8\.414)( 11".
299
11ead•w1re1ess,. Neatbook
COiiege ruJe. s-112·· x 11"" size. 80 stteets total. . ...., ._
~~' ~~ ..
~·,. 1 ,.. .. ,_ """""".
Meister Brau
Beer
•Regular •Light
24·Pk 112-ounce cans.
~ OSCO
Peanuts
•DrV ltOlstld, ,.gular or unsaltecl ·~ ROastec:I 16 oz. Jar.
59
seagram's 7 Whiskey, Clan MacGregor scotch or smlrnoff Vodka
1.75 Liters.
99
canadlan Mist, Gordon's Gin, or
Early Times
Whlstv,or.
Black velvet
7SOML
59.
:19