HomeMy WebLinkAbout1994-03-31 - Orange Coast Pilot•
NEWPORT itEACH • Quick like a • bunny -into the
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low clouds, we'll have a nice
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See Weather, Page Al
Winner of California Newspaper Publishers Association's General Excellence Award for 1993
Woman faces · a pier·cing problem
~ Art store employee says
she will quit her job ·
because $Upervisors have
told her she'd be fired
..
BY LouANN BASHEDA, STAFF WkJTta
COST A MESA -To pierce
your eyebrow. Or not to pi erce
you r eyebrow.
For Jennifer Schichi, the ques-
tion wasn't a particularly painful
one.
The Costa Mesa art student
thought piercing a ring through
her eyebrow would be an attrac-
tive addition.
"I find it ironic that an art store, which uses
slogans such 11s 'Where Lifestyle is an Arl,' finds
ualqueness in personal expression unacceptable."
Roughly three months after re·
warding Schichi with a $1,000
scholarship -based largely on an
essay she wrote about striving to
be different -managers at Aaron
Brothers Art Marts on Newport
Boulevard allegedly told the 21·
year-old woman that her eyebrow
earring was a tad too different.
her to remove it until last week,
she said. "They said it was not the
image the store wanted to project
in 1994," Schichi said.
would be out.
'The "arning didn't deter her;
though, and the follO\\ mg day she
"as sent home a second time .
Today is Sthichj's third chance 10
walk into the store without the
ring A111 by Wednesd·iy night, ... b ..
had already typed up her res1gna·
tion .
''I feel I have been forced to re·
sign my position as cashier at
Aaron Brothers in lieu of termina-
tion for my e)ebrow piercing," she
wrote. "This is a mailer of prin·
ciple.
"I feel that no company, no per-
son really has the right to tell you
how you can adorn your body.
That's a personal choice. I have
not offended any customers or re-
ceived :my complaints fron~ cus-
tQ_men ..
Jennifer Schlchl's pierced eyebrow has put her employment at a
local art store in jeopardy.
Her employers apparently dis-
agree.
Although she had her eyebrow
pierced in January -the same
month she won· the company
scholarship -managers didn't tell
When' Schichi showed up for
work the following day ..,, eyebrow
ring and all -she received writ-
.t~n warning which notes that she
was officially "counseled" for fail-
ure to comply with the store's
dress code. Like the tough new
criminal law, she said management
told her that three strikes and she
"My piercing in no way affects
See IYHROW/P•9e A 12
Brown Act
increases
city, -school
accessibility
,... Revisions in .law require
committees to meet in
public and to create and
comply with agendas .
Dv Russ LOAR, STArF '' 1mu
The first significant tightening
of California's open-meeting la":.
in 41 }ears goc:. mto effect on Fri-
day, requiring a m)ri3d of Cl!) and
school district citiLen commi11ec,
10 creat~ Jnd com pl) "ith public
ngend~ for the first time e\er.
Although journalists led the
two·yc:ir ba11le to toughen the
often-abused Ralph M. Brown Act
of 1953, the revisions ultimate!)
benefit the average citizen who
wants to be involved in the deci-
sions of cities, counties and school
·districts.
rHOTO$ l't M.AaC M.Aa11N. DAILY r1LOf
Megan Beeson, 9, neutralizes attacker Tony Stengel during a self-defense class Wednesday at Temple Bat Yahm in Newport Beach.
As of Friday, if residents "ant
to keep up to da te with the hot
topics on the Newport Beach Di·
cycle Trails Commi11ec or the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District Dudget Advisory Commit·
tee, for C\ample, all they have to
do is as!.. to be put on the m:ulang
list for an agenda.
With about 30 such commi11ees
in Ne\\port Be:ich, M :t)Or Clar·
ence Turner sa~ the new re\ ised
Bro" n Act has a substanti:il price
tag 011ached. But in Costa Mesa,
Caty Manager Allan Roeder said
council-appoin1ed committees al·
ready post public agendas.
Coming to ·their defenses
Class teaches children how to protect themselves from abductions, assaults
Bv MAAN1E McLEOD,' STAFP wama
K idnapped, scared and unsure of her
surroundings, Kaycie Craib had to find a .
way out and fast.
She whimpered, she .sobbed, she begged her
attacker for her life, all the while watching for
that one opportunity to strike. Then it
happened. The 7·year-old found the chance and
she wen t for her abductor's eyes. The petite
blond third-grader from Newport Beach then
proceeded to tackle th~ man twice her size t9
the ground, incapacitating him long enough to
escape.
Newport Beach. Kaycie was one of 12 students
to graduate from the two-d ay self-defense class
offered there this week. Its goal: to give
children a lesson in street-wise self defense.
"It wus real scary," said Kathy Craib, Kaycie's
mother, who nervously watched as her daughter
overcame the attacker in the demonstration.
"You just pray they never have to have an
experience like this. But it gives me a little more
confidence to know she could handle herself."
"We\e got a fair number of cat·
1zen committee , but m terms of
how they operate, l don't believe
the new revisions of the l3rO\\ n
Act will really mal..e a material
change," Roeder said.
Ne\\ port-Mesa Superintendent
Mac l3ernd Sa)S the increased
costs of compliance ''ill be small
for the school district, "'h1ch has
only t\\O board·appointed commit-
tee .
Committee created by city
The si mulated abduction was all part of a
self-defense graduation before parents and
peers Wednesday at the Temple Bat Yahm in
The class was taught by Barbara Gallen and
her program, called the Defense Department, is
based in Los Angeles. At times the
demonstrations were surprisingly explicit. The
children, who ranged in ages from 7-13 years
••• CLASl/P••• Au
Barbara Gallen, riSJht, teaches John Evans, 8, how to keep
strangers from getting too close during self-defense class.
council ond school board members
"ere rel:itivel) autonomous under
California' open-meeting laws.
Journalists and acti' ists through -
out the tate ha'e complained that
policy deei' ion "'ere sometimes
made in committee meetings that
~ painting on page 1 to-
day is by artist Anne Oavis-
Johnson. For information on
paintln~, call 722·7136.
INDIX
Around Town ............... A8
Classified ...................... BS
Community Forum ..... A 10
Soc:~ ...•...................... A7
~ ..••....................... 81
Weekend ................ Inside
See IROWN/P•9• A 12
Toll road agency olllcials defend project in lett r to attorney ·general
...-They say inf ormatlon about
the proposal for Newport Coast
Road project has been available
to the public from the start.
BY DAVID Harrz, STAn Wt.ma
'
road agency. "These allegations and in·
nuendoes and so on just don't stand up
when we look at the facts."
Newport Beach Councilman Ph il Sansone
-Corona del Mar residents' biagcst oily in
trying to get the toll removed -paused
wheo told about the letter, which includes
40 exhibits consistina of newspaper articles,
agendas, minutes from meetinp and other
documents.
"Well aood for them," he finally said.
ferauson has ukcd the Attorney Gen-
eral's Office IO detemiine whether the
county acted lawfullJ wbett k deeded a por·
tioa of Newport C.oua DrM eo the toll road
IPftCY· The •ncy il·a joint powen poup cre-
1ted by the county to finance and build the
San Joaquin Hills 1nd Poolhlll toll roads.
Ferguson, Sansone and horde of their
constituents -especially tho e in Corona
dcl Mar -say the county and the agency
delibe rately tried to keep the propo ed toll
under wrnps.
· Stockstill said that accusation is false -
ond the agency's letter will prove it.
.. It's a very complex and very wcll-
documentcd recitation or the racts which.
when you look at them d~pa ionatcly, very
clearly indicue that there \\IS substantial
public hearings -literally dozen or public
hearinp," he uid.
Newport Coast Dri\IC was built by The Ir-
vinc Co. in 1991 to handle traffic generated
by its Newport Coast housif\I de\elopment.
~ral soutb county motorl$tt use it to
att !O t!'e airport and other central county
Clritanattons. ·
But resident in Corona del Mar and
north Laguna Beach fear motori t who
don't want to pay the S 1 round·trip toll will
drive on Coa~t Highway instead, sn:irlina
traffic along the oceanside route.
Toll road officials s;iy traffic ~tudies show
that cars will not spill onto Coa t Highway.
They contend it' impossible to remove
the toll booth anyway bcc3use it will collect
$1 .6 million annually -money needed to
repay bonds for the SU billion toll road.
Toll road reprc~nlati\IC repeatedly ha~c
said the prOpolCd toll booth nc~cr was a se-
cret and is entirely tepl.
"Not>Ody that l'm aware of has produced
a ihrcd or evidence to show •hat anyah"'a
was done unlawfully." Saocblill lllicl
• But Corona del Mar rdidnt Ywnne
... ....,...All
'
Thursday, March 31, 1994
Get\ a\ deal_ on
a car · wash
and a cup of
conee. to ·boot ·
L OOK IN TODA Y'S paper for the
Costa Mesa llnnd Car Wash coupon
for a hand car wash for $3.95.
Steve Goold or the' Costa Mesa Hand Car
Wash says "our motto is service value and
speed." The car wash has made many
clttlng.es,-and-onc~m"'
is offering a free cup of
Boyds' Gourmet Coffee
with a car wash.
Best
Buys
The Costa Mesa Hand
Cor Wash (432-8161) is at
J 195 Doker St., on the
corner of Daker and
Fairview, in Costa Mesa.
D
EDWARDS CINEMAS
offers bargajn prices in
Costa Mesa. At the
Harbor Twin Theater
(63 1-3501), at Harbor
Doulevard and Wilson
Street, seats are $2.50,
and at the Mesa Cinema (646-5025), at
Newport Ooulevard and 19th Street, seats
are SI. 75.
D
SUITE SIX ONE ONE (673-4611) of
Newport Dcach is having an Easter bunny
sale.
LOCALS ONLY
MANAGING EDITOR STEVE MARBLE, 540-1224, c11. 363
~lAac MAllTIN, DAILY I'll.OT
All Easter bunnies, regularly priced from
S6.95 to $300, are now half-price. The sale
includes bunny nags and windsocks "but
our supply of Easter Oags is vel)' .. .fimited,"
snys Joan Wise of Suite Six One One.
• • Roger Neth served as one of Costa Mesa's first police officers and also was named the city's second police chief.
The store is at 2600 Newport Blvd., at
28th Street on the Bnlboa Peninsula.
D
llORNULOWER DINING YACHTS of
Newport Beach is offering a special Easter
L-Ong before be becam e one of the
city's first police omcers and its
second chief of police, Roger Neth wDs
a local hero of sorts. Neth hns lived in
Costa Mesa since 1936. As• football A founder · .
brunch and dinner cruise. .
On Easter Sunday there will be a brunch
cruise from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., and from '
noon to 2 p.m. at $29.95 per person. . •
• J player at Newport Harbor High
School, ht played oo the CIF ol the ·force championship-game bound football
team In 1942. The team lost, but
Neth's reputation was scaled.
Now Neth ls credited BJ ont of the
A "supper dance" from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
includes dinnc.r and entertainment for
$49.95 per person.
Children 12 and younger are half price.
leaders who helped bolster t~e growth Roger Neth was one of the city 's first police of the youn1 police department into
the orgaalzatloa It Is today. The Reservations can be made by·calling
63 1-2469 or for large groups (20 or more)
please call 646-0155.
following Is Netb's own verbnl history
of the Costa Mesa Police Dcpnrtment
officers and helped build the department
D
HAZEL FISHER, OF Corona del Mar can't
say enough nice th in.gs about La Dcaute
(548:8743) or Co~ta Mesa. Fisher says it's
one of the best kept secrets in nails and
facials.
Chrystal Nguyen and Christine Le
opened La Oeaute about a year ago at 440
East 17th St. (across from th e
Wherehousc).
Chrystal docs facinls at $20 and they both
do acrylic nails at $15, fills at $9.95, silk
nails whole set $24.95, manicures at $7,
pedicures at S 12, or ir you'd like a
manicure and pedicure together, it's Sl5.95.
D
TODAY AT KRISTEN'S Lingerie, you can
meet Karen Haines, an Amocna breast
fo rm consuhant, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Karen will be in the store to answer
questions about nfler surgery breast forms
and bras. Kristen's Lingerie is giving away a
free bra with ::iny breast form purchase
through April 30.
Kristen's Lingerie (631-7399) is located at
Westcliff Court on Westcliff Drive in
Newport lleach.
D
lJest Duys nppenrs Thursdays and
Saturdays. Wl1ctl1er you're a merchant or a
s/Jopper, If you know of D good buy call me
DI 5-10-122-1, fax me at 646-4170 or write to
me: Btst Duys, Daily Pilot, 330 W. Day St.,
Costa Mesa, Ca/If. 91627.
as told to Dally Pilot reporter Marnie
Mcleod.
I submitted a letter to the proposed
-City Council of the proposed City of
Costa Mesa. It was a request for a job
opportunity. ln 1953, one of the first
things they wanted to do was hire a
police department. They hired a
medically retired sergeant from the
Los Angeles Police Department, -
Arthur R. MacKenzie, as the first
chief or police -the current police
facili(¥ is named after him. He w::is
hired to start the police department
Oct. 1, 1953.
Then he staned recruiting for police
applic::itions. There were over 150
applications for the first three jobs. Of
that group I was one of the first three
hired. I was one of the top three hired
in the top 10 who passed the test. I
was told later by the chief th::it I
ranked highest on the scores of those
three.
D
I started as a police oCficcr on Dec;
16, 1953. The interesting thing was we
OJlly had three officers. One would
work days, one work nights and the
other was relief on days off. We drew
straws to get the shifts and 1 got the
relief shift, the first shift on the 16th.
lt was a night shift and I pulled the
first shift. The Orange County Sheriffs
office handled the graveyard shirt.
Pay was nor the concern for us in the occasional drunks and in those
those days. We started ::it $319 a days you arrested t~em. N::ircotics
month with eight days off a month. problems were absolutely minimal al
We thought that w::is excellent pay in that time. We ::ilso had family
those days. Our first budget from disturbances.
December 1953 to July 1954 was less The first murder took place before
than $25,000 for full operations, which the department started on the 16th,
was not much in those days. and it was handled by the sherifrs
It was a wonderful experience. Not department. The Mxt murder was July
many people get to start a police 3, 1954. It was a family fight th::it
department from scratch. At that tim e, escalated into a killing with a shotgun.
City Hall and what had become the (A man) shot his wife. h was
police department were all at 11 I East interesting -July 1, we hired nine
20th. ~t was in a converted auto supply additional people. One of the officers
store. It wasn't more th an we hired was a Santa Ana police
1,500-square-fcct -that included Ci ty officer Jim Green and that was his
Hall. We got the back section where first call.
we put a counter for dealing wi th the D public, a small office for the chief and We outgrew the little bu ilding (on later added another small office for East 20th Street) probably around the detective. We also made a holding 1958. City Hall moved out at that tank, we built it ourselves. Everyone time. The city ncgotinted to le::ise the donated time to do the building. old Barr Lumber Company building at We had two police cars -one 1957 Newport Dlvd. The city ::illowed assigned to the chief and one assigned
to the officers. However very shortly us $22,000 to convert it to a police
after that, we added the third. building.
D
In 195.t, when we hired the nine
additional people, the three original
The volume of crime was certainly officers who s.tarted were all promoted
not that great. The biggest problem we
had was traffic. We had an occasional
to sergeant. We didn't need a test
because we needed three sergeants. In
burglary, some petty thefts and once in 1956, the chief gave the examination
awhile, an assault because we had a for position of lieutenant, I w::is
few beer bars in town. We al o had f ortuna\e to be No. 1 on the list. I was
The Nc•pon lkocl\/Colt• Mcso Daily Pilot (UPS.144-800) is published Mon<t.y
1hrOUJll S.1urd•y. In Newport Ouch and Cosi;i Mesa, subscriptions uc only •Viii·
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WIATHI R ANP OCIAN CONDITIONS
..... 71
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642·HH
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TO MAil.i A coaHCTION
h IJ rht ... ~·J pol ... -y 10 promptl) (Ol"tT(t
.ill enun of Jub&c.an.:t. l'~ac c~ ~
122•, t\I. 36J 11l.mk \OU,
Tho.nu H. Jotuuon, l'ubluhCr
Willi.am Lobdell, t:Jit«
Sctw M.ut>k, M~•"I E.inor
Eric AhrtOn, Oak Oltt.(
MlllC Maron. M-toco Edlmf
Job Frllf\ll. C•mil.tnon M..,,...
H Miii l(Naht, rrllJunlCll\ MMUl'T
~tlilflc .. llttcftu, °"""'Y MMUpf
J\Mfy OcnWW. 0..1(1fd MINlff
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MOW TO aUCM UI
Clrcula&lon:
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..
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l\lbl~ by Cal1lum•~ Comm1111>C\ ~ns, a 'Tinin M1rmr C.omp.i.nr '
f.
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Nf"WPO" 8ach: 65/SO
Balboa: 65/50 •
Costa Mesa: 68/SO
CoronA def Mar: 65/SO
• .,,. .. can
LOCATION
The Wedae
=Joint
S.A. Rlwr Jetty
CdM
TODAY
Flnt high
Ant loW =~ fltl>AY
SIZE SWILl
1-2 •
1·2 •
1-2 •
1-2 •
1-2 •
11:51 p.m. J.4
6:2la.m.~.4 ~2~
Hnt hlafl 12:07 a.m. S.1
Hnt loW 7:39 ...... 41
~...... • 2:2' , .... S.2
~... 6:5' ,. .... 2.3
W.._T....,.ulllwe:60 ....... ....................
10tD1S ................
..... _../I tcoc• .... MolWtclomi .. ,... .... """*"' ~ ,,
r. '1 I
prom9ted to lieutenant. It was Aug. l,
1956. Art MacKenzie turned the
day-by-day operations of the police
department to me.
In 1959, the chief decided he
needed two captains. l placed first
::igain and J::ick Iverson was the other.
Jock, be~use of working with kids and
being a juvenile officer, was given
command of the investigative and
uniform divisions. I w::is assigned the
odministrative and services functions.
0
Then the city decided to build a new
civic center, including the police
facility and City Hall, at 77 and 99
Fair Drive, in the beginning of 1964.
We started drafting plans for a
building. We did something very
different. We had alre::idy been
involved in two makeshift departments
before. So the architects designed the
structure, but as far as traffic nows
and locution of offices, that was laid
9u1 by police officers. ·
The new polic~ facility became a
model for modern police facilities in
the are::i and was visited by many other
agencies, not only in the United States
but throughout the world, to get ideas
for facilities that those agencies might
be planning. Some visitors included
India's rederal police force and
Scotland Yard.
D
In July of 1964, Art MacKenzie
became director of public safety
heading both the police ::ind fire
departments. At that time, I was
appointed assistant chief of police,
acting as chief. In June 1965, Art
MacKenzie became city manager and I
w::is appointed :is permanent chief of
police.
When l was appointed chief, I was
told J w::is the 'youngest chief for cities
over 50,000 p°lulation in California.
When I retire , I was also told at that
timc,·l had the longest tenure as chief
-22 ye::irs. I retired in December
1986.
POLICI FILll
COSTAMU A
Oranae Avenue: A bike worth
S65 was stolen from a home
in the 1960 block.
Mcsn Verde East: An electric
golf cart valued at Sl,200 was
stolen from Vista Del Lugo in
the 2700 block.
Doy Street: Someone broke
into washers at a luum.lry
room in the 300 block' und
stole roughly S200 in coins.
Santa Ana Avenue: A jur (ull
of an estimated SIS worth of
pennies wus stolen from o
home in the 1600 block.
NIWPOIT •IACH
Pl111 dtl Sur: A liah1 aray •
1964 VW bua w1s stolen off
the 1treet on the 1700 block.
ButM VllCa Boultvard: A
Wave Runner boat valued 11
SS.000 was atoltn from
anocher boa1 11orcd on the
300 block.
U..1 blt:·A jet lki docked
In the 20 blod was reported
stolen.
• • •
•
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thursday, March 31, HKM Al '
Ruining his best shoes isn't ·Steve's sole problem
-Ge~m__:.·n~g-lu_m_e_d_o_ve~r_.._. a~n-=-ic_e_p_:_a=--ir-=o~I ;:1o~a12e1 J ust like the rest of you, I too
read Steve Marble's column
on hi) gusoline-soakcd shoes
and got quite a chuckle. You
probably thought, ''that poor guy
stepping in a
puddle of gas,
could've
happened to
anyone." Oh, so
true.
Out the
question is not
why it happened
to Steve, but
rather, why
wouldn't it ?
I have worked
with our
/ . . 1 ·"id l'd II)' no! 10. feeling ins!de ~y Cole ~.'
I could hove wrinen about fear. fl My sh.fl an!l l dwt;:1 ~~:~J~ci\e Thinkin& 1 was on the brink or W~en l d r;;~h~:e '~:
I could hove wrincn 11bou1 ne unll :\ nouce pollulina 1he entire building. l mur er myse
. loss. :::, a pinch, t could have ~i~i~; ~~em~~~!!i ~~:~1~:'1e~1~5r or ventured dowi" ~h: h11tl:~~~=n\ ~:J:~e~pu~:!J;0~e;h~ wr;~:t~:d ~~pa~!Jt;0 write about . 1he alph11be.1 -E. So I ~tuppedd 3\1 ~~~!;to;>~l l c:!u1;>;rdy up my fumes roll~d out. 01\dm.:i • .. _. the 1as itauon. gave 1he :111en :in • h thought Ive pollute m~ '""".. 1 h d n my pocket shoes some ow. · h. I know. I l\111f the money a '· I was "andina at the wash basin and ~ryt ina now:d h know. What an and stood there watching a g~y with m left shoe In one l\Jnd and l set. my shoes. a.s1 e, a eJtCilini lllY I IUT\. burr the hood. ornament on lus the o1~r still on my foot when them like a ho.m1c1~e detc Stop me already. Mercedes while. the g~s -l our advertising director walked In. would a damning piece of ln m defense presumed -slugged 1n10 my car. . , ind evidence. l stared at the
this isnrt just any l turncd around, gave the nou.lc H I 1hc~e, l !"ii:~~ i~e old l just abandon them? C . f shoes. h's one last squee~e and was scrcl>.'1ng me. u51 as h111.ma1 team before an) ~a~~i~ of Cole 1he .gas cap back o~. wh_en; ~u~d~dl:e ~s~h~~:~· l~au~gh~e;d~an~d;s~ug:e;stjledliiii'hijat,jl,.;SCjr~iolousljly•inliiu.rc•d•?•Ca•l•I "• ___ _, Hahn loafers, -nouccd 1 wos aian !ng in ut some liquid soar
-the ni~st p:ur of of.-. uh huh, gasoh~eht1ck in10 my ~hen I ,,.,..
...... $hoes I vc '"1C of
Reporter's
Notebook ----· managing editor Yes, you guessed it. The large the process; a person who actually
f9r a very, very oval "spot" was an ink.stain. How walked right into the surf while
had happened?
-----· long time. this happened only boggles the interviewing a lifeguard. However, in the l:is1 few years it imagination. Could it have been a seems his clothes h:tve been taking · • And the·n there is 1-he coffee '. leaky pen or did Steve simply have
"Coffee," he said. ·
an unusual beating. Hardly a week the misfortune of siuin on a en? problem. ~--~.aHWe-gees-by-Httitms--perfeet-Nly---~-G~o~~,g~u~r~e~:,;_..;.:....=..:.......:..:~~.:.......:..:.::.....c:...:...:.:.,;__-1,,,.~umr~e~w~c~·v~e~a-1~1~sp~1~a...i.shedltre-
ironed shirt is .not tattooed with a brown stuff over our clothes,
Evidently the spillage had
happened before he had left
home. Optimistically, he thought it
ould dcy without a hint of the
accident.
i
quarter-si~cd ink spot. It seems This is a person whose neckties but for Steve it is nearly a morni~g
that Steve':, pens are forever losing become more like· napkins at ritual. l think my favorite coffee
Then he innocently asked, "Do
you think it's noticeable?"
their caps, along wi1b massive lunch; a person who once leaned incident was about a month ago.
amounts of ink, while stuck in his up against a freshly painted white Steve· was sitting at his desk one
I, of course, being a sensitive
person, said "Oh, no."
shirt pocket. wall while wearing gray slacks; a morning when I arrived. Because
Due it is not just his shirts that person who succeeded in losing a it was early, I was the first person
Then the next person walked
into the newsroom and -you
guessed it. The first thing out of
his. mouth, "What's that .on your ·
take an ink beating. Oh no, not pair of shoes -during the middle to see Steve up close and
with our boy. of the workday; a person who personal. Looking at his crisp
''Hey S1cvc, what's that spot on closed his necktie in the car door while shirt, l noticed a huge
your pants?" asked Tom Johnson, while trying to rush to a council yellow-brown stain. Thinking it
shirt?" \
And so ii went the rest of the
morning. Finally, Sieve s.tar1e<l our observant publisher. meeting, nearly hanging himself in was an iron burn, I asked what
QUESTIONS? COMMENTS?
Call our Readers Hotline at 642-6086. Please leave your
name an'd phone ·number along with your thoughts.
A'l'rENTION CHIROPRACTORS! * FREE SEMINAR.-
''What To Expect When You're Called To Be An Expert"
-Effective Expert Witnessing
• Charging Expert Fees
• Formulating Sound Opinions
APRIL 18 • 7PM at
Law Offices of Elaine V. Norton
17862 Beach Blvd., Suite 101
Huntington Beach 848-5499
Attendance is limited -Please RSVP by April 12
by
Dr. Michael T. Bywater
Dr. Alissa Ss. Wald
Doctors of Optometry
AIDS FOR
LOW VISION
Why Look •••
for EaSter eggs when you
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--------------~-_____ ,
Back by Popular Demand ..
Zestilink
SJ" lb.
( WAJJ•
SrrpplJ••
Lui
Traditional Easter sausage available
. only at Hickory Farms.
Be tlie Easter Bunny
Just visit Hickory Farms, pick out a basket, fill it with your favorite Easter
candies and treats and we'll add the trimmings.
FREEi
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
17th at Irvine Ave., Newport Beach
· Send A Gift By Phone 642-4302
CAN WE ;vouR-INTEREST?
1 • S O ' 0 • 4 • U S • B 0 N 0
Many people over the age of 65
wear prescription eye wear, but still
have trouble reaOlng. Diminished
vision that cannot be corrected by
conventional lenses ls called "low
vision." It is usually characterized by
a reouced vlsual field or a reduction
of the sharpness In which objects are
viewed To help with this problem.
there are a variety of low vision aids
available. Foremost among them are
magnification devices that range from
the hand·held to those that mount on
headbands or eyeglasses. In addition,
miniature telescopes and blnooulars,
which may be worn like eyeglasses.
can help with distance viewing. For
reading, there are high-powered,
pnsmatic "half-eye" reading glasses
THE TRUTH~BOUT LYING.
available, / For personal service, call us at
545·9162. We are located In the
Hart>of Shopping Center, 2300 Harbor
BIVO., Suite 20 Hours are Mon. and
fl1. 9-7. Tues. 7-6, Wed. and Thurs.
9-6, and Sil 9--3. Ctf11fttd opClcln
on staff. We have 24 hour phone
coverage In cue Qf an emergeocy.
Charter member of Neun>-Oplometrt
~ Aslocidon. Most vtslon
ptans accepted.
MYTH A tum bed •~ betterfor your ba<.k
l~I
Ly111g 011 11 firm bttl,
1l1t spmt rs c-iuvtd
lrt a f)lJX btJ,
tht ~P•"t 1~ s trcm1bi
TRLm1 ~1cnnlu. R")Carth ~ho\1.1) that
to keep your \Plnl in a natural po\ttllln,
your tx.-d nllM be lb1blc cnoutih to allow
shouJdcl'\ and h1fl\ m ''"k m vet '>l!ppon·
ivc enoutih to lOlltoor to our lower back
Onlv a I >UX !led J<x, t1ll tha1
MORE SPRIN<,S t\IORf ~llPPORT
A convcn11onal queen me bed ha ..
~-s to <)(lO 'l)rtng' f\ DUX queen \tze
ha\ I 6i!O to l -400 ~l'lrtnl(\ Mort
\prtnl(\ mean mott' llcx1hlc \ttpport Lt\\
prc~~rc lktm ttrcul.ltton
( omc 1n and trv oi DUX btd Your
Nd. will tell voo the truth
' lHE DUX BED. 1liE BED YOUR BAOC
HAS BEEN AOilNC FOR ' r········-·· .. . .. . ... __.,.,
j StnJ for our{cttt l101>kltl ' I
i Mv,mctJ Ttth110 ogy 111 Slttp111g " j I :
I ~~:, l
I DuX1ANA" I
AT fA4iHION l\LANO I 1181 ~pnr1 lt"tCI ()i 'jlOrt llicAh C" ll)Mfl '"I to l rruM ( II\ l (71•}640.0470or(800\640·60U I
.. ····---··-~! . ..!~}.~. . .J
..
..
, . \ .
beating the new onlookers to the
punch, "OK. so l spilled coffee on
myself."
And the coffee problem
continues. Just this morning, he
came out of the photo lab with a
very nasty wet spot running down
the front of his pant leg. Sounds
suspicious? Not really. Just his
usually coffee accident and his
auempl to wash th e brown stain
out.
As you can clearly see, this is a
man who is destined lo ruin his
clothes, and obviously shoes, too.
Maybe he's been hexed, or maybe
he is just simply a klutz.
Joyct Scherer is a special
sections editor 011d D ncor-spotlcss
dresser.
Editor's
Notebook
William Lobdell is on
\'acation. His Editor's
Notebook column will
return next week.
An Etiq~ Couise F~r Dogs
because we know ou know ... Manners Matter!
• Adjwanenc ro Ch.ildren
•Obedience Training
• f wnping on People
• Come When c.aJlcd
• Houscbrca.ki.ng
• Nippin.g
• Leash Pulling
• Sc.rVing You .Since 1979
Coastal Puppy Training
714 835~8538
For Your Easter Sp8c1a1s ••• Hop On Over to ...
Iii =rn.ie Wilie CBUars
#f~ ~ ftliHe t: Sinc8 /957
EASTER-DINNER-WINE SPECIALS BEER SPECIALS
"Start With Caviar & Champagne" fflnm • rie
Black Pearl·Sevruga ... '12.99 oz. Oregon Honeybeer
Osetra ... '16.99 oz. Beluga ... ~:LE OREG. 6 pk ....... .. ....... ~ .... ~$7.47
Perrier-Jouet Brut N.V. $16.99 $27.99 Sierra Nevada (Spnng) Pale Sock
Binecart-Salmon Brut N.V. 17.99 28.79 6 pk ............ $6.99
Ayala Rose N.V. 19.99 28.99 Bridgeport 'Ole Knockletiead' . ~~~:0~aJ~fu~~:~al9~992 ~:: ~~:: 12 oz bl ... .. ................... $1.86
Beringer Cabernet 1991 (New Release) 8.99 14.99 Coors and Bud Suncase Can ......... $12.39
Se uoia Grove Cab. '90 .S. 90 11.99 16.00
SPIRITS SPECIALS SALE REG.
Tanqueray Gin 1.75 '20.99 $28.99
New Goldschlager 750 13.99 20 99
(Cinnamon Schnapps)
Visit our 4,000 sq.ft. Temperature
Controlled Wine Cellar
••• All bllhl .. 10, , .....
Hop Into ur Chocolatier
For All Of Your
Enter Goall11 ...
Bunnies, Eggs. Baskets,
Balloons & Other Easter
No"Velties
Wini Bar Optn Wtdn1sday thrv Saturday
Wine Classes available., Two Costa Mesa Locations
To Serve You Don't Forget Our Coff" Tea Time,
Gourmet Gift Baskets, Tobacco Shop,
Walk-In Beer Cooler & Flower Shop
250 Ogle St 650 8463
2602 Newport Blvd 6461737
A N 0 c N G
SPECIAL SAVINGS 0 OUR.
CIASSIC BIAZER & TROUSERS
Bl;m~r
reg. S345
$245
Trouse~
reg. S145
$95
, tep into -,pring with gre-Jl valUl'' on our d.1 ... .,Jt h~hr
\\eight navy tropir.11 wool hlJ1t>r .tnd 1rnp1cal wool
troUM;'l"I. ~peoJI prici~ oflcrcd for the month of Apnl only.
Gentlt:ll'k.'fl\ ClothtOJ,t
561 '-'ewport U-nter DriH' • f',t.,hmn bland • ()'i~.-\10
,
Wanna place a classified ad?
Call 642-5678 for information.
\
•
. ' '
M Thursday. March 31 , 1994
Cities wary
ol proposed.
tax system
~ Proposal would
distribute sales tax
monies on a per
capita basis as
opposed to doling
them out In the places
they are generated.
BY PEGGY HESKETH,
STAff Warru.
As city officials hopefully
watch the local economy for
signs of resurgence, many
ar~ keeping a wary eye on
Sacramento at the same
time.
-Slate legislators nave
proposed several changes in
the way local sales tax
revenue is collected or
-distributed that co uld have a
major impact on city coffers.
The latest proposed
change is contained in a
pending bill, AB 3505, that
woul d pu t th e l % sales tax
reve nue due each city into a
statewide pool that would
then be redistributed to
cities and unincorporated
communities on a per capita
basis rather than according
10 sales generated within
each city.
The bill is opposed by
cities such as Newport
Ocach that have pursued
aggressive redevelopment
or economic incentive
programs to auract
business.
The bill would be a
"windfall for bedroom
communities," said David
Doissclle, a consultant with
Municipal Resource ·
Consultants. Ooisselle said
his company, which advises
~bout 130 cities on various
tax, licensing and economic
development isiiues,
supports the present tax
allocatiol\ me thod because
"a cost has to be born· by
the city in which a business
locates."
If a city has to .bear the
costs of public safety, roads
and other services needed to
support busine ses, it should
not have to share the tax
income generated wit h other
cities that do not.
The state should provide
in centives to attra ct
businesses, Doisselle said.
"When they do so at the
expense of local sales tax
revenue, they are shooting
themselves in the foot."
Katie's Fresh
FLOWERS
on the peninsula
Special local Delivery
Program $6.99
723-5283
NEW! Fun & cute ht ..._ slmd IOI'
your dog °' cat. Hand-made for holidays and fNefYdayl
$9"' each Of three for $27-wlth
money back guarantee.
{Spd'y /Jtl'S n«:k "1t nl holdly dlsied)
NATIONAL ~OCISSOBIES ~· ~l p .0. eci-t0Il5, t Biill 0. t2660 ... }
714 I~ ·-
cny 111annars ·dapy BXPlalon bid o1 -ear
•Police department's fears of
increased problems lead
commissioners to turn down
proposal.
BY MAllNIB Mc LEOD, STAfP Warna
COST A MESA -Stag Bar owners' ex·
pansion plans arc still stagnant after the
Pl anning Commission voted unanimously
this week against granting the 32-year-old
watering hole needed permits to open an
adjoining billiards-eatery.
Commissioners voted 3-0 against bar
owners' request at the Monday meeting,
with ·Linda Dixon absen t and Mark Ko-
rando abstaining. The commission agreed
with staff and police recommendations that
----___ ;;....._ ____ _
allowina the bar to expand could lead to
trouble.
"With the history of problems we've had
in the past with large ban near residential
areas, we are just trying to head off any
similar problems," said Walt Davenport.
commission chairman.
Bar owners said the expansion of their
b~siness at 145 East 19th St. would simply
be a consolidation of their now:defunct
restaurant, the Adobe Grill, which existed
in the same small strip mall as the bar.
The expansion would also take over the
space once occupied by a former bar,
George•s Steak and Hoagles.
But a police report written to the com-
mission from Lt. Alan Kent stated that the
motion should be rejected because there
are already too many bars in the area and
because of the number of drunken driving/
drunk in public and noise complaints.
''I think we've really been unjustly criti·
cized by Lt. Alan Kent:• said Chris Saylor,
general manager of the Stag Bar. "This
was a major part of our being turned
down .••
Since the bar is located in a re-
development area of the city, the request
will be heard next by the Redevelopment
Agency on April 13.
In other action, the commission:
• Approved a request by Edwards The-
ater at Triangle Square to install 30 elec-
tronic game: machines in the cafe lobby
area of the theater.
• Granted a vari ance to Dr. Brennan
Cassidy t<> allow him to construct a 3,000-
square-foot medical building on the land at
the corner of 17th Street and Newport
Boulevard, informally known as Teardrop
Park.
American Heart
Association PC DOCTOR
TRAVEL
LIGHT.
,,
EXERC ISE.
Live in Elegance!
Newport Beach
for as little as ·
$1,395 Per month
1st service call Fru!
Wiedowl VJ. l l m..iled It )'GIA' plllce: S69
(714) 751-PCDR
• a
.lW'i-. S'trawberry
Open
D a ily
9-5
The Balboa Merchants/
Ownen Aaociation and
Newport EJemenwy School
plan to make waves next
w-:ekend on the peninsula.
Students from the
century-old school will paint
a seaside, water-oriented
mural at 10 a.m. April 9.
The painting, a lively and
contemporary version of life
at the beach, was created by
PT A. member Lauren Reid.
Other events include a
parade through the Fun
Z.One by the band and
drama club. Students who
participate will get free Fun
Zone rides. The PT A will
sponsor a bake sale and
area merchants Will offer
discounts on food. The
pubhc is invited.
--.... Full Service
Apartments. ONAONcEA~
We have a limi ted
number of studio
apartmen ts al Lh1s low ~ month~ rate and one could ~~!!!!!-~
_be pcrfecL for you. Included in your month ly rent
are: meals, housekeeping, transportation, planned
acLivilies. outings. wonderful social events, and
weekly laundry service.
PLUS, 1r you should need hel p with personal activi-.
ttes of dail) hvmg, we have assisted hving services
avmlable nght here at Newport Beach Plaza.
ALSO, AVAILABLE: Spacious one-bedroom apart·
ments from jusl $1 ,995 pe r month. Howeve r, th ere
are JUSL a few of these special-location apartments
left, so we encourage yo u to visit soon while you
NEWPORT BEACH
P l A Z A
have th e best choice. t'
Call for a free lunch today; and
we'd be glad to.show you around.
(71'4) 6+5-68~3
(800) 597-5812
A Lersure Care Retirement Commumty
... wlW1e~s-~.
' l
1 •
DAY LIKE F~rER, ."WHY
SERVE AN" EVERYDAY .
KlNDoFHAM?
Its not everyday that
friends and loved ones
tome together to
celebrate an
occasion as
special as
Easter. Thats
why for over
fony )(ears. peo-
ple who want to
serve the very best have
made HoneyBaked Ham the cen-
terpiece of their Easter meal.
With a HoneyBaked Ham, you can
make your guests feel like a million
bucks without spending a fonune.
Because al most, HoneyBaked costs
HoneyBaked Hams are:
• Smoked longer, about 30 hours.
• Leaner, Spe,~ially Selected
Grade 1 Hams.
• Sweeter and more tender.
r-- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -.- - - - , just pennies more per • Contain les.s salt.
• Topped with our unique
HoneyBaked Glaze. I ~ Independence One Bank I
I ~ • Of CaliforniCtFse I
I ~
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I I
I I
I I I
: Please Call JoElla MilaD or Steve.Ehle I
675-3345 (714) 675~250 I
I · Paaer I I-!'..!, __ 32.,~;_Co,!8~ H!!,h!a~ '!"!a_!e.!., M.!r ___ ~~=~ _ .J
. I
an ordinary spiral
sliced supermarket ham. Oftentimes,
they're priced the same. But thats
where the similarities end.
• Prepared fresh daily.
So this year, remember: A special
occasion like Easter isn't jusl another
ordinary day. And HoneyBaked isn~
jusl another ordinary ham. •
A.MW.(W-"t _. •WS.. "'8Ml111nt )714~})1 .. 1 QM V.. 619-0S 086S C-Dllllw714 fi7l-9000
W.C:....81t.9(,0..)9Sl c.t.wO., )10.)90·401llT-7148l7 l&1....._ 619~>222
._.619 ne ma~'" 141-0081"·....,....'"16'-:Mst ,...,, ... 01ou. '1711
lh ...... {W~--•190Ullllfll• ... )71 4·MH'7S a..-..>10.-.1114 a.M.619-46M267 a..~2lltl'MllM
~714 99'79* ......... 7'29'2'7 ......... , ........... ..,..'961t
......... t09~7 ...... 6l9~JT-)10 >2At7'0)T .. 7147)l .. 16 u,A.M909 ... US) ,
I
• ,1,
f
I
' :
I
j
I
.
!
'
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thursday, March 31, 1994 Al
.
VOLUllTlla DlalCTOllY
ALI Auecl•tle11
Or••1• Cev11ty Ch•pter
The Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (Al.S)
Association Orange County Chapter has need
for many volunteers. For infonn:uion call
Bobbie Green 111 921-8503 or secretory' Mar-
tha 1 labcr at 436-4872.
lcr's Speakers Bureau. Volunteer public in·
formation officers ar~ also needed 10 act as II·
aisons with the media in disaster and emer-
gency situations. For information, cnll Judy
lannocconc at 835-5381.
oC food, utility and shelter costs. In addition
to moncwry tax-deductible donations, the
group needs tools and a 1ruck for ill labor
work pool, which responds to communi1y
need calls for handiwork Cixin& and cleaning
jobs. Other needs arc a volunteer arant wril·
er, fund-raiser, CPA and legal counselor. For
information on any of the programs or how 10
volunteer, please <:411 Dr. Renee Namastc al
540-5803 or 754-9553.
dren 6-16 from single-parent homci.. rt re-
quire!$ a onc")ear commitment of 4-6 hour~
per "eek to ser.e as a role model for :a chilcJ.
Applicants must go through a screening and
in1erview process as do the children, and cf.
forts arc m:idc to compatibly ma1ch lhc t"o
For information, call 544.7773
noon in the shop arc:i (2·S p.m.) nnd game ·
rooms at :ill three area loc:uions, inchtding
the Rae Center al 661 H11m1lton on the west
side or Co 1:a Mesa, the Lou Y:in1orn Center
at 2131 Tustin A\e, behind the IUiscr School
.sod the Eu~t Blulf Center 3t 2555 Vista Del
Oro by Corona Del ~far High School. For in·
formauon. call Dick Powers or H:irbor Are;i
Bo)'S find Girl> Club ot 642-2245.
Arts Ac•ll••Y ef Or•111• Ceu•ty
American Cancer leclety
The American Cancer Society's Orange
County Unit is seeking office volunteers Tues·
days and Thursdays for any time period from
9 a.m.-4 p.m. Volunteers will help with variety
of ~rojccts such as Angels on Wheels (taking
patients to chcmo1hcropy tr,cntmonts) Oaf·
fodil Days, Making Strides, Jnil & Bdil, the
Great America n Smokcpu t and more. For in·
formation on these and other volunteer' op·
portunities, call Selma Sladek at 751-0441.
The Aris Academy of Orange County in
Costa Mesa is a new umbrella organization
for the Costa Mcs:i Art League, Ballet Mont·
martrc, Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse and
Newport Bench Showtimc. The group is plan-
ning to fund and build a community arts facil·
ity for the four groups in Costa Mesa. For
more information, coll Alice J...cggctt at 540·
2557. '
aallet Pacific•
The Bmlct Pacifica Guild, a volunteer sup·
port group for Ballet Pacifica, needs vol·
un1ecrs to serve as ushers, sell T-shirts, sell
juice and 'COOkies at events, conduct fund ·
raising events, help with costume and scenery
repairs. Volunteers who prefer not to join the
guild arc welcome and 1hey may help as little
or much as desired. For information, call
Molly Lynch at 642-9275.
8oy Scouts of America Inc •
Oran9• County Councll
The Volunteer opportunities arc broad, but
Include shon·rangc projcc1s ltkc teaching scs·
sions at next summer's day c;imp~ to long·
term commitmen1s in fund·rnising. progrJm
development and training to existing troopi>
and packs. For more information i:all Ja\On
Stein :it 546-4990.
Braille lnstltuto
Oraille lns1i1u1e's cl:isscs for lcg:illy blind
utlullS provide social, rccreallonal and educa·
1ion::1t opportunities to help blind men and
~omen overcome isolation an.d other prob·
lcrm rcl:itcd to loss of sight. ,Volunteers arc
needed to assist in 1hc Crcutivc Arts craf1~
por11on of the program, 10 dri'c for outing~
or to tc:.ich Uraillc. Volunteers will be tr:.iincJ
to \\Ork with the blind in 1his worthwhile,
l1gh1hcJr1cd program. Classes arc Thursdays
at the OASIS Senior Ccn1er in CorOnl dcl
Mar from 10 Q m.·2 p.m., or at the S:inta Ana
Auoclatlon Renaluance
Creators
American Reel Crost,
Orange County Chapter
The Orange County chapter of the Amcri·
can Red Cross needs volunteers who enjoy •
public speaking to address community groups
abou1 Red Cross services as part of the' chap-.
Association Renaissa nce Creators is a non-
profit group in CostQ Mesa which sponsors
nnd supports multi-outreach community ser-
vice programs, such as the homeless sonctu-
ary. ARC needs volunteers to donate and de-
liver garage sale items for our Saturday fund·
raisers at 3142 Cork Lane. The group relics
on public support to maintain monthly needs
819 llrothen, 1119 sisters
Men and women over 20 years of age, hav-
ing lived in Orange County for six months on
the job for at least 3 months arc needed to
serve l!5 big brothers or big sisters for chil·
Boys ancl Girls Clubs of Costa
Mesa/Newport Beach
The three area Boys and Girls Club1> n1:cd
volun1eers for numerous reasons. including
. volunteer coaches for athletic teams and
teachers who can spend a couple of hours or
work multiple sessions (\\hJtcvcr one can af·
ford) to teach an arl or craf1 \\-Ork.)hop for 7.
13 year-olds. Volunteers ate needed for after-
Senior Center on Wednesdays from 10 a.m.·2 1,
p.m. For informa1ion, call Marti Rogers at
821-5000.
ASH-OUT
UNLIMITED
80;% LTV to $500,0QO
75% LTV to $750,000
70% LTV to $1,000,000
2nd Home Progr•m Av.ll•ble E. Wayne Hart, Ph.D.
Gatherinas • Treatment
Psychologist C?HllAff
Marriaae Counselor CMA-
Credit Line Features LAllAs LINE
-.OAH QIHMt 367-~
ELECTRIC BOAT RENTALS
Enjoy an Eggstra Special Easter
RESERVE Nowf 18' boat $40/hour seats 8
• 20' boat $50/hour seats 12
• Quiet & easy to drin
• Fully enclosed
• Stereo casRttes
-C.tuing available
Located next to the Ferry
Balboa Peninsula
Stop By or Call
(714) 673-7200
..
for Chet Menkes of Newport Beach, pain
Is no longer par for the course-not since he
decided to have knee replacement surgery.
Like Chet, you can get back to doing the
things you love. If you've been suffering
from chronic, debilitating hip or knee pain
due to arthritis or joint damage, or have
difficulty walking, you may be a candidate
for our joint replacement program.
At Hoag Hospital, our comprehensive
Joint replacement program is designed to
give patients all the slcllls and confidence
they need to ensure a quick, comfortable
recovery.
We'd like to Invite you to attend our frH
seminars where we've assembled some of
our joint rtpllcement team members In·
eluding a HOlg orthopedic surgeon, phys!·
cal therapist Ind orthOpedic nurse. Our spe-
clatty team members wiM be happy to an·
..., your questions about joint repllct-
ment SU~ Ind http you decide Rmlght
be rtght for you. call tor reservations.
'
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Friday and Saturday• Aprll 21st and 22nd
Country Side Inn • Costa M-
Call Sandy at 1-800-585-1335
fot reservations/Information
47rht\nmd
NEWPORT-
ENSENADA
j
70-l 000 pounds
Local-National-International
Door-to-Door delivery ·
Expen packing and crating
GroWld • Sea • Afr • Rail
.... • Pre ented by
E Specializing in
sehold Goods & Applianm l
Art. Antiques. Fragile hem~
1-ull) tn\urcd. 15 yem o( cxpcnencC'
VJ SN MASTERCARD
lKfERNATIO~AL /; ·:
YACHT RACE\<:
• • I
Indep~ndence One Bank
Of California fSB
Official Race Spon or
•
In Cooperation with th e Daily Pilot and ,
Long Dru g Store HOfficial Photo Proces or.".
PRIZES: 1st Place-$500, 2nd Place -$250, 3rd Place -$125.
The top three photographs will be published in the Dail y. Pilot' April 21 special
section dedicated to the Newport-En enada International Yacht Race.
DEADLINE: Friday, April 8, no later than 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO ENTER: Contest theme is Coastal/Nautical to celebrate the pirit
of the Newport-Ensenada International Yacht Race. Open to all amateur
photographers intere sted in trying to capture that undefinable , pirit that m£U<e
our Orange County coastline so specia l.
Submit your color or B& W, 8"x IO" print (not mounted or framed) at one of the
official entry locations listed below. Long s Drug Store , the conte t' "Official
Photo Processor," will print 'your 8x 10 color ent ry at no charge after your co lor -~
film has been developed and you've made your fina l election. Entrant name,
address & phone number must be attached to the back of each entry. Official entry
fonns can be obtained and entries submitted at any of the following locations.
OFFICIAL ENTRY LOCATIONS
THE DAILY PILOT Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 •Monday-Friday
• 330 W. Bay Street, Costa Mesa, CA 92627
INDEPENDENCE ONE JJANK OF CALIFORNIA Hour : M-Th: 9-4F:10-6
• 3748 F.ast Coast Highway •Corona Del Mar, CA 92625
• 24422 Avenida de la Carlota • Laguna Hills, CA 92653
LONGS PHARMACY FASHION ISLAND
• 923 Newport Center Dr. • Newport Beach, CA 94660
LONGS DRUG STORE .
• 175 E. l 7st St. • Costa Me a, CA 92627
'
•
•
l M Thursday, Mardi 31. 1194 Newport a.ohlCoeta ..... DtallY Pl
Wom•, ofllc8r lnJUPad In car wreck
~ Costa Mesa resident
allegedly ran red light and
collided with patrol car.
' BY Lolt.lANN BASHEDA, STAI• Wuna
COST A( MESA -A police of·
ficer anaJa Daily Pilot executive
were hospitalized Wednesday after
: the Costa Mesa woman allegedly
: went through a red light at New-
• port Bouleva rd :ind Mesa Drive,
: :.colliding with the patrol car.
Senior officer Chano Camarillo,
a 27-year ve1eran, was ru shed to
Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach
after the 8:40 a.m. crash. He was
released Wednesday afternoon
with back and knee pain.
Judy Oetting. •U, the Daily
Pilot's classified advertising man·
ager, was rushed to Western Med·
ical Center in Santa Ana with a
fractured pelvis, fractured ribs :ind
a punctured lung. By Wednesday
evening, she was recovering in
guardea condition.
"We (eel very bad for Judy :ind
fOr the office r," said Daily Pilot
Publisher Tom Johnson. ''She is
one of our most valuabtc· employ·
ees. It's tragic that something like
this would happen to two impor·
tant members of our community."
According to reports, Camarillo
was driving north on Newport
Boulevard at roughly 35 mph when
his patrol car broadsided OetU.'•
Pontiac Grand Prix, which had
been traveling west on Mesa Drive
through the intersection.
Bo1h vehicles sustained major
damage, reports show.
Angel Johnson, a spokeswom3n
for the California Highway Patrol,
which is investigating the accident,
said reports show thal \\'itnesscs
told police they sa~ Oetting's car
run the red tight.
The crash is still under investi·
gation, however, and no citations
were issued as of Wednesday
evening.
It is common practice for the
CHP to take over an investigation
when a police officer is involved.
BY LouAlol IAIH.aDA. trAn warrwa
BALBOA -The owner of a
Davey's Locker li&htseeing boat
has offered to take Karey Jaeger
on the vessel next week so she
'can spread the ashes o( her
22·month-old son al sea.
Tricia Ferrell, owner of the
sportfishing boat Western Pride,
docked at the Balboa Pavilion,
said she called Jaeger after
reading about the death of her
son in the Daily Pilot.
Tyler Jaeger died Friday
morning at Hoag Hospital. An
autopsy indicates the Newport
Beach boy bled to death from
ruptured organs -eight days
after he received a stuU
fractwe. Police have arrc,tcd
Jaeger's boyfriend, Brian
Laudenback, who had been
babysitting the toddler when he
died and when he received the
head injury.
"I have a 22-month·old
grandson," Ferrell snid. "ll
would be horrible to have
something like thot to happen 10
your baby. I think everybody Is
touched.by it."
Although her boa t is typically
chartered for school whale·
watchlng trips and afternoon
fishing, Western Pride has been
hired for burials at sea.
Burial wu initially planned
for sunset f riday. But Tyler's
aunt, Amy Jaeger, said
Wednesday ther, were forced to
postpone it until next week arter
learning the boy's body would
not yet be released from
evidence.
"Our family's going through
so much grief," Amy Jaeger said
when contacted at her home in
Glendora. "The anger is starting
to set in now."
Jaeger's friends have set up a
trust fund at Bank of America,
115 W. Foothill Dlvd., Glendora,
Calif., 91741, to pay for medical
and cremation costs.
Jeweler Cl'lllled for thWartlnll poalble l'ObberJ 1894 -1994
FoUll GENERATIONS
100 YBAllS!
.
BY Lolt.lANN 8ASH£DA, STAn wam:a lock the doors, and im mediately
• called police.
NEWPORT BEACH -Police "(The suspects) turned around
commended a quick·thinking jew-LOOIL.off J ike. _a .shot." Bau
eter"'ror denecring an appare~n..--1s..._a...._id. But not before the employees
robbery attempt at his West Cliff got a gli mpse of the license plate
store, and are warning other mer· number.
chants to be.on alert. Police checked the plates and
Mary Barr, owner of Barr Jew· found that the white Buick had
elry, said it was about 3 p.m. Tues-been recently stolen from Los An·
duy when three men wearing geles.
gloves and what appeared to be "This ve ry alert individual pre·
stocking caps approached the store .vented a very serious crime from
after parking in an unmarked occurring," Newport Beach Sgt.
space near the door. Andy Gonis said.
"We didn't wait 10 sec if they According to Gonis, neither the
had any weapons," she said, ex-suspects nor the incident appear
plaining that cmployet>s rushed to to match any other local jewelry
ht Beads ID Your
Basket!
FREE
Necklace or B racelet #Kit
with any purchase of $2 or more.
nc Coupon per Customer • Expires March 28, 199
Design your own jewelry
with our wide selection of beads /I
from aroun d the -world.
607 E. Balboa Blvd.
Newport Beach
(:u 1hc Jhlboa Ferry
cro,.-:ing. bc:ich side)
BEADING CLASSES
AVAILABLE!
675-8960
BUY 1· GET 3
FREE
1 ·-or 2,. WOOD BLINDS
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MAPERYLMi\ <714) s3g.saaa il~=.n,°':~ u 1-800-843-7471
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store robberies, but he warned
merchants to l>c cautious.
"We don't know what's going to
happen OOwn-thc.Jinc.-so it!s im·
portant that merchants con1inue to
network with each other,'' he said,
ref erring to a sort of neighborhood
watch program police have estab-
lished in the business community.
Merchants arc urged to spread
the word to fell ow business people
and police when they see some·
thing suspicious.
The suspects in the Barr inci·
dent are described as African
American men in their mid-20s, 6-
feet tall, 190 pc>unds, wearing T-
shirts and jeans.
~
Vinyl Floors • • Wood Floors • Draperies
.ALI>E~'S
CARPETS, INC.
1663 Placentia St. C,osta Mesa
646-4838
Fri. I 0 t1 I
DAY
Complete From
-EyegJasses$59
Includes &ame & lens
20°/oOFF
Com~ensive Eve Eum Regulu Fee $65
O&r Exp. April 16, 199' • Not VIHd With My Odwr Offer
* Discontinued
*Demos * Floor Samples
*As Is . * Regular Stock * All Sales Final
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23841 B Toro Ao9d
(One beodc Nortl d Aodltmd)--
51MJ744
Mormy ttwu Frldly 10 lm-8pm, 8Drdly 10 am-epm, Sunday 11 am.apm
•. l
--·
• NOISEMAKERS !
The Iron-Ons, The Paper
Tulips, The Women and
Brown Lobster Tank will
play at a free concert
celebrating the third
birthday of Noise, Noise,
Noise record store in
Costa Mesa. The fun
begins 8 p.m. For more
details (like where?
when?) ...
. . . See Local Aiusic, page C
can Fobes thumbs
through a box of
videotapes as her
son Gerard lounges
on the sofa in their
Newport Beach
otne.
"Everyone wants to see them,"
the proud mother. boasts as she
retrieves a tape, slides it into the
VCR and waits for the music
video to flash on the screen.
Gerard, 23, in his first
professional acting role, stars as
high school student Brandon
Fobes wt:io, with his mother's
encouragement, goes out for the
track team over the objections of
his father and the track coach.
Brandon falls in his first race.
Though bloodied, he is urged by
his father to finish.
"Standing Outside the Fire,"
the country music chart-(opper
that opens Garth Brooks' new
album "In Pieces," accompanies
the video, which cost $400,000 to
produce and premiered March 3
on The Nashville Network.
Oh, one other thing: Gerard
Fobes has Down's Syndrome.
Wearing black slacks and a
white shirt as he prepared for
another workday at a nearby
grocery store, Gerard nervously
rubbed his legs while the video
was being shown. After the
emotion-wrenching ending, he
rubbed liis eyes.
He wasn't alone.
"I doubt if I could see it too
many times," Jean answered when
asked how many times she's seen
the video.
Casting agents called Hope
University in Anaheim -the only
private fine arts college for
Savants or gifted people witK
mental retardation -searching
for young men whh Down's
Syndrome to audition for the
video's lead role.
Gerard and eight other students
were selected as candidates, but as
soon as director Jon Small met
Gerard, he had his Brandon.
The video was shot in four
locations. A middle-class home in
Pasadena served as the fictional
Fobes' house. John Marshall High
School in Los Ange les was
Brandon's school, but the
track-race scenes were shot at
Palisades High School in Pacific
Palisades. And the grandstands
surrounding the track were
reconstructed on the Carnation
Co. grounds in South Central Los
Angeles for the fiery climax.
There were 300 extras for the
track scenes. A stunt double for
Gerard, who is on screen even
more than Brooks, took the fall
and drove a car in front of
Marshall High. Brooks only
NEWPORT IEAat • COSTA MESA
Thursday, Ma rch 31 , 1994 Pull-out S ection/Page A
TAKE
TWO
Britta Pulliam, owner of
nearby Britta's, is opening
Gringa•s Grill on the
Balboa Peninsula. So
what's she got cooking?
See Local Dining, page D
board :it CoroM del ~far High
School. Lrl.:c hb character in the
v1uco Jid '' it h tracl.., then -
lOO·pound, 5-foot-tJll GcrurJ \\Cn :
out tor the high·~choul football
-le<tm h~ fr~lf1tttttft-\"~":------J1t
"f le haJ t he:.~ huge p:.iJs on
and ran out on 1he field \\Ith the)c.:
huge people," Jean a•mcmbercd
I h.:n co.1ch Da~c ·Hull:inJ took
Gcr~mJ under 111~ \\ ing and made
him the tc lm's ''Jtcrboy. Ger,:ml
\\Ound up , .. inning a \:ir:.ity lc ucr
-and th~ Sea
c;t· ........... ..
\\ h11 h."
I >11\\ 11 ',
"' 11d111nH',
p l.I\' ·' high
'l hool 'ludt•nl
''ilh llw ,,lint>
.1llli1 lion in .1
(,,111 h Broo"''
mu,it vidt•o.
Kang' ~p1n1
A\\.Md hi,
si:r)ior 'car ~nd thiough ·
la)1 · ... c:.a~CJH -
Holland 's
fi n:il one
betorc rc11ri1 •
-WiJ~ a
li\1u1e on 1hJ
s1delincs.a1
c'cry football
'l\c bet:n
,.ut thc1c lor
-heU "eek ;ind e\e, ·"1!ami: for nine
)ears." Gerard sai . :.I hop.! tu
con11 nue: ..
!\:e\\f>O rt H:irbur ~it;~ 'S1..hool 1s
clo,cr lv Gcr:.11J ~ h~ me, but he
went to Corona dcl N ar becau~c
of 1b p1 ogr:im for :.pc1..· I ... 1uJent~
When h1:. ~btcr, now a 'Cl
frc-.hm.1n, attended cro:.::,I ,\ n loe
Harbor ll1gh. · he·d If'\ to ge t a
ri,alf'\ gl1ing \\1th lk rcne. but 'he
coulJ.111 care II.'':..'' kan laughed
ON THE RIGHT TRACI( Gerard i' ,u ... h a fvmball tanall
that llC \\ :JlChC) \ i ... ...:ot.1pC' 01 na"l
footb.111 game!) Ill the 011:,..:a,Ctn ~
"h~n ho: C'.1n I no time.
In aJu1tion 10 bcm\! '\our lu~.1 b.1g.~...:r .111tl your cu1111r-.; d.·rl.:'' :i.
lblph ·, gn ~.:r' !--h>rt .lHl 171 h
St11.:d in Co t ,1 ~lc,:.a, he i~ .1dhe
.11 !:>t Jo:a~l11111·, C:i1hohc Chur .. h
an Cu:.ta :\lc!).I. ''her.: he la:i!)
'ICC\ed m:i'' ince :..cc 11. .. I IO\C
in,pir111g in the ''ord of God, that
I d!.>i ••
· First professional role for Gerard Fobes of Newport
·Beach is in video by country superstar Garth Brooks
appeared on camcr:\ in scenes shot
one evening at Carnation, but he
was present on all 'ICts all fou r
days of shooting.
"He was there when we got
there, and he wus there when we
left," Jean said. One night, Brooks
ran out and put a jacket over
Gerard so he ''ouldn't get cold
between takes. Another chiJly
night, he inviteJ Gerard and his
mother to stay in his trailer
bel\\een scenes.
"l think he's a good country
singer and a good man," Gerard
said of Brooks. "He's no diffe rent
at all. He just treated everybody
nice, that's all."
By MAT.r COKER
Everyone treated Gerard nice.
Brooks' drummer Mike Palmer
sent Gerard the drum sticks he
used in the video, and Gerard
proudly showed off a photo album
from his first acti ng experience
that included several off-screen
shots of him in the arms of
attractive women who were part of
the production team.
"There was a lot hanging on
him to do a good job," said Jean,
wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned
with the words "practice random
acts of kindness & senseless
beauty." "He knew he could do it
and he did. They showed a lot of
respect, and they were not
patronizing.··
A spokesman a1 Brooks'
Nashville office said this week the
country-music superstar is in the
middle of the European leg of his
current tour and unavailable for
comment. ·<r can say he "as
extremely excited to do the video
and e\plore that part of life," the
spoke man said.
Small, through a spol..eswoman
at his New York company Picture
Vision, said Gerard was
··remarkable, absolutely
remarkable," and displayed u lot
of endurance despite "really long.
really tough days of shooting."
Jean Fobel> reported that the
I l:J\tnl! JttcnJcJ clJ,..,cs at
Or:ini,c t~J)l .tnJ Cu:i ... tlinc
director told her Gerard was .. the commun11~ collcg...:!), he·!!> no, .. a
best actor he's had anJ a dream 10 junior at Hope Unhersit~. and
direct.' "
"Wh en I '"as a kid, I had a
passion for acting," Gerard
recalled. He and Si!>ter Dcrene
used to. wear clown mal.:eup and
put on shows for the family, '' hich
mO\ ed to Ne\\ port Beach \\hen
Gerard \\as a month old.
"If they knew an) thing about
Gerard and came out and talked
to him first, they'd have \Hillen it
exactly the ~ame," Jean s::1id of the
video's storyline.
The 1989 graduate '"as the fir:it
de,elopmentally J1sabled person
on the A!.Sociatcd Student Bod)
perfo rnh "llh Hi Hop~). the
uni,eNt) \ 1011ring perfi.>rrning
troupe
The "idcom:iker:. cnrnurJg.:d
GerJrd lo pu r!!>UC: actan~ further,
somethi ng he plan) to do
\\holcheartcJh.
Doc) he h.1\e an :ll!Cnt \Ct !
·•No. bu t r m going~ to ".orl.: on
that ··
Oh. one other thing G...:rard
Fobe!> \\:tilts to get m:imcd.
"Th:i t\ ne\l. l ju:.l h•l\e lo find
a girl "
.\lull C ol..C'r 1 C'ditor of
l\ ('('" '""d.
Fieldstone Collection
springs in to Mondavi
By LAURI 1\1ENDENHALL
S troll through the perk) Ne" port Center heaJqu:iner~ of 1 he
Fieldstone Co., and )OU can feel the fnendl) upd r::11l \\ hich
has char::1cterized this highly respected and succe:i~ful building
enterprise since its inception in 1981.
If the congenial mood among office emplO)CCs doesn't in)prc
you, the company's extraordin:H) collec11on of Early California Art
adorning the light-colored. rich fabric-co,ered ''alls '"II urcl) rai-.e
your pleasure decibel In the \1sual nostalgiJ cJtcgol). clearly no·
body has done it belier 1han The Fichhtone Collection. \\h1ch since
1985 has assembled the mo t
comprehensive oven ie'" of
landscape art while presef\ rng
the heritoge of Southern Cali·
fornia's unique geography.
As if to punctuate the rite or
spring which has happi l>
pounced upon us thi wed rn u
wave of sunshine and color. o
selection or nearly 60 \\Orks
from this prized collection will
grace the Robert Monda\'i Wine
and Food Center in 11 pcci:>I
exhibition beainning tonight
(through June 26). Curated by
FYI
WHAT: '1ho Fieldstone Col-
lection of Early Cohfomlo Att ..
WHERE : Robert Mondovi
Wino • Food Center, 1570
Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa
WHEN: today (opening re·
ceptlon 5·7 p .m .) through
June 26. Appointment only.
MOii INfO: 979-'510
Mary Hendrickson, manager of •
OlulNIRna ~. D.\n.T P1LOT
MUY Hendrickson dlscu11H a Miiiard Sheet• painting titled "Repalra of the Nelkeleta" to a tour group at the Fleldato.w ~en.
the Fieldstone FO.ndation and att collection adminimotor, the e~·
hibit spans ' period of nearly 50 years and rcprctents the two pri·
mary schools of landscape an: the California lmprc sionists or plein
air (out-of-doon) painters, with works d1tin1 from 1900 to the late
1920s; and, the reak>nalist period or Caliromia School ani~ts whose
hei&hten~ .. 'ense of 1ocial consciousness contributed a more YrbaA
fo~u1 to the landscapes of ·the 1930. to the 19SO.. ~
' ' ·-
.t
8 Thursday, March 31, 1114
FIELDSTONE
~A
rncluded in the exhibition'• im·
pre sive artist lineup are works by
Clarence Hinkle, Franz Bitclloff.
Hanson Pu1hurr, Benjamin Brown,
Will iam Lees Judson, Ben Mes-
sick, Millard Shce1s, William
Wendt, Phil Dike, Dan Lutz.
Barse Miller, Phil Paradise, James
Couper Wright and Milford
Zornes.
CMa1norHH Ault.T, D.uLY Pu.or
Hendrickson, herself a second
generation native Sou1hem Cali-
fornian, is .a key component to
bow The Fieldstone Collection has
cohesively • evolved into one of
Southern California's most impor-
tant collections of historical Cali-
fornia landscape art. About to cel-
ebrate her 10th anniversary as part
of the Fieldstone team, she not
only considers the art to be "one
of lh~ most enjoyable highlights of
my job," bul frequently refers to
her favorite paintings lovingly as
"my children."
"Victoria Beach Laguna" by Clarence Hinkle Is among Fieldstone
Collection works part of Mondavl Wine and Food Center exhibit.
Moreover, Hendrickson's affec-
_tion.. for the collection has. uackcd..Eic:,Jdslo_nc_CEO
Peter Ochs's ph ilosophy and commitment in choosing
Early Califon:iia Ari as the focus for acquisitions: "As
a home builder with a strong belief in traditional val-
ues, and one which has great respecl for the. land on
which ii builds, we made a conscious decision to de-
velop a rcpresenta1ional colleclion of artworks with
an historical perspective depicting the Southern Cali-
fornia region as it once was.
''It is our hope thal the future beauty of California
will continue to be preserved in an artistic manner:
As a company, we share an artist's love of th e land
and. 1he climate - a special quality of air and light
-wh ich has created such a remarkable area in
which to live."
Hendrickson recalled, "Peter Ochs, his wife Gail
and myself made up the original art committee back
in J 985 as we were moving inlo this building and be-
ginning to establish the collection. That was after
Tressa Miller from Security Pacific, who put together
their corporation's wonderful collection, advised us
not to hire a professional art consultant. She said we
\\Ould miss all the fun of learning how to look at ai:t,
of how to distinguish good quality and gather a.sense
about prices. She was so right. None of us would
have missed the experience of museum hopping; pur-
chas ing the art at ga lleries, or the excitement of buy-
ing at auction."
Beginning with the California Impressionists pe-
_r:ain). About four years later, tky added works from..
the California Rcgionalist movement characterized by
Depression cra-WPA subject matter, and domi nated
in appearance by strong, vibrant color, sweeping
light-dark COJ!trasts and bold fo,rm. .
"What we did was commit to one art day a month
which included trips to San Francisco, Los Angeles,
San Diego, Santa Barbara, wherever we could see a
lot of work by a variety of artists," continued Hen-
, drickson. "Naturally, al) ~he works. in the collection
arc of California, and nearly all are from the Santa
Barbara to San Diego area. We purposely wanted ge -
ographic ares where we are buil~ing."
·Spread ou\ ove r three Southern California office
locations in Newport Beach, Brea and San Diego,
The Fieldstone Collection includes a total of 240
paintings. Yet, after nearly a decade of active collect-
ing, the acquisition project is on hold. "Instead, we
have put our allcntion to loaning out significant
works, and traveling exhibits of selected works to
major museums across the country, as well as within
the community," explained Hendrickson, "When you
really get to know this type of art and what these
paintings represented to the artists, you see the ac-
tual landscape differently. It becomes more beauti-
ful " ~ ir the current exhibition at .• thc Robert Mondavi
Wine and Food Center leaves you wanting more,
public viewing of the collection at Fieldstone's corpo-
rate headquarters in Newport Center is available by
appointment only. For information, call 851-8313.
Lauri Mendenhall Is a free-Jan ee writer who covers
the local art scene for the Dally Pilot.
•
.....
IN SEARCH OF EXPRESSION
BJ &OYA POULADI _. CllaIS ClllSWBLL
M ade the rounds oC open
mike night last week.
Open microphone nights
arc cool to ao to when you wan1 10
hear a new band or a budding
poet without having to ray (or
anything but a good cup o coerce.
Most rerutablc cotrcchouses
which dca not only in beans, but-
in ambiance will have open mike
nights at least once a month. If
you're used to fast food style cof-
feehouses, then an open mike
night will not only entertain you,
but also expose you to a whole
world of java joints where hanging
ou t and getting wired is a lifestyle.
Some of the most interesting peo-
ple frequent coffeehouses, and,
chances are, they won't be drunk
and rowdy. These nights offer the
amateur or bored professional mu·
sjcian or poet a chance t.o ll)' ..ou
their latest accomplishments in
front or an honest, buJ forgiving
audience.
m
WHAT: open mlU nlghh
WMlllJWNIN: Alta, I06 31st
.... Newport leach: T\.lel4CIVI
ltue Marble, 1907 Hatbor
llvd., Coda Meta: Monctavt
oncl TueldaVI Deldltch, A7A f , 17th St.,
Cotta Meta: every other
MondOV OUr MouM, 720 W. 19th St.,
Coda Melo; Wednetdayt
ROYA'STAKE
It's cool to sit in a wobbly chair
and watch a dozen wildly different
people take turns gcttif\& 1,1p and
playing incredible original songs or
anJn~redibly bad version o{ an old
classic. On one night, in one
coff cchouse, we saw an old guy
get up and sing his latest originals,
some fresh-looking kids ploy
acoustic and some wizened lookin
guys pounding con~s and
sounding pretty decent. All the
while, we bad some of the county'
best jnva peddlers serving up hot
mugs or coff cc.
Our first stop was the old Alta
Coffeehouse down by Lido lslood.
Old Alta's open mike nights arc
low-slung, groovy, buss-riddled
type of jam sessions. If you want
to slink in like a black cat and no
your head 10 a few good
three-piece bands, this is the place
to go. Great iced mochas, baked
potatoes and a cat named Julio
who naps around the premises, N
really bad a\litudes here. This is
an out-of-the-way, word-of-mouth
kind of coffeehouse that doesn't
try to please in a clinical sort of
way. You'll have !Q enjoy the dark
corners, clapboard ceilings and
scuftling creatures. The place is
•lee IXPaUlleN/
FASTER
SPECIAIS ·
TraJitional Eastn-HAm
~
Rack of lamb
.@
or choose from I
our regular menu
~
CAIL FOR RESERVATIONS
723-0621
Catering Spec\alists
~ WT GtJa-/JolllJ 0-a-.,.,
"J,, :!""' l1'lme (»'in (11/.f' Jininf ,.,,,.._ "
251 Sbipy.ud Way• Newport Beach
· riod, the committee acquired a rich variety of pic-
tures -from dramatic seascapes and rocky coastal
shorelines, to snow-capped mountains, dry and bar-
ren deserts, the verdant hills and valleys, and rugged
ca nyons. (Interestingly, this American form of Im-
pressionism was less a st1,1dy of the optical effects of
light the French favored as it was an interpretation of
th e subject -landscape, object or figure -as de-
fined by light, neatly following Fieldstone's agenda of
identifying and recording Califomia's ch anging ter-. .
Oauifled
advertising:
642-5678 • ~~~~··· ~..,,cam_L ~·4 Nau ~ M~
b.
' ~ co" ount~
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served with home fries, toast or mcuilB 4 gravy.
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L qll(d_~~ 11!!!-2_ _ ~~~.J
320 BRISTOL fG at llMldll ("1 ~o MW Mart)
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location
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675-6855
COSTA
MESA
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GOOD AT ANY LOCATION ,.----:i ;KIDS; ; FAr;
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Carpacclo Melanzane Scapece
Mozzarella Caprese
Cocktail DI Gamberettl
Mozzarella Marinara
Calamari Frlttl
Zuppa DI Vongole Faglolata DI Mare
Crostino Di Gamberl
Splnaci E Radtcchlo
tnsalata Mista
Spaghetti Agllo E Olio
Ravron Al Sugo
Lasagna Al Teoame
Melanzane Parmigiana
Rigatoni Arrablata
Penne Puttanesca
Rigatoni Al Carcloflnl
Fettucclnl Primavera
Tagllollnl Porclnl Gnocchl Al Quattro Formaggl
Trenette Al Pesto
Tonelllnl Papallna
Penne Al Salmone Spaghetti Della Nonna
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..
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Pollo Rosmarno
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Scalooolne AJ Marsala Plocafl DI Vlteflo
==Marla Antonietta
Per Servlng .................................................. ., ........................................................... 2.00
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With Seaso~ Vegetables .............................................................................. : ..... _ .. 3.95
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Pasta and White Toscany Beans SOup ...................................................................... 4.50
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fresh Tomato, Garlic, Basil Olive 011 on Gar1ic Toast ................ : ................................ 4.95
Roasted Bell Peppers, Marinated In Olive 011 and Garllc ........................................... 5.95
Thin Slice of Fllet of Beef with Parmlolano and Olive 011 Dresslng ............................ 6.25 Eggplant Topped with Fresh Tomatoes. Capers and Black Ollves .............................. 6.50
Fresh Mozzarella Cheese. Sliced Tomato, Basil and Olive 011 .................................... 6.95
Bay Shrimps, Scallops, Brandy Terragon Garlic Cocktail sauce ............................... 8.50
ANTIPASTI CALDIJWARM APPETIZERS
Breaded Mozzarella Cheese Topped with Marinara Sauce ........................................ 6.25
Fried Calamari with a Side of Marlnara ..................................................................... 7.50
Steamed Clams In Garlic White Wine ....................................................................... 7 .95
White Italian Beans. Calamari. Mussels, Spicy Tomato Garlic Broth ......................... 8.50
Shrimp, Gar1tc, White Wine, Herbs on Garlic Toast ................................................. 9.95
INSALATA/SALAD
Fresh Spinach and Radlcchlo In Parmlgiano Dressing ............................................. 5.95
Mixed ltallan.Salad ................................................................................................... 5.95
PASTA
SERVfD Wmt SAl.AD
Tossed In Hot Garlic and Extra Vlrgln Olive Oil ......................................................... 7.95
Cheese Ravioli In Fresh Marinara and Basil .............................................................. 8.95
Homemade Lasagna, Cheese. Meat and Tomato Sauce ............................................ 8.95
Layers of Eggplant, Mozzarella and Tomato .............................................................. 8.95 Short Tube Pasta, Spicy Tomato Sauce .................................................................... 8.95
Capers, Btack Imported Olives, Anchovies and Plum Tomato ................................... 9.95
Stuffed Artichokes, Garllc, Herbs and Olive 011... .......................................... _ .......... 9.95
Seasoned Vegetables, Cream, Tomato ...................................................................... 9.95
Small Cut Fettucclnt, Wiid Italian Mushroom Cream Sauce ...................................... 9.95
Potato Dumplings with Four Kinds of Cheese ........................................................... 9.95
Basil, Parmigiana Cheese, Extra Vlrgln Oil and Plnoll Nuts .......... , ............................ 9.95
Italian Bacon, Mushrooms and Cream .................................................................... 10.95
Short Tube Pasta with Smoked Salmon and Vodka sauce ...................................... 10.95
Homemade Meat Balls and Sausage, Thick Tomato Sauce. (Grandma Style) ........... 9.95
Fresh Tomato, BasM and Garilc ............................................................................... 10.95
Fresh Manila Clams with Gar11c, White Wine and Herb Sauce ................................ 12.95
Assorted Seafood In Marinara Sauce ...................................................................... 12.95
RISOTIO
SERVED WITH SAlAD
Italian Rice with Mixed Seafood ............................................................................. 12.95
lt.affan Alce, Lobster Meat and Bay Shrlrnp., ........................................................... 12.95 "' . POLLO/CHICKEN SPECIALTY
SERVED WITH W.AD, PASTA OR VE8ETAIUI
Bonelea Brllst ~readed, wtth Momretta and Tomato .............................. 11.95
BonMs Breast Olives, Artichoke, Plnolt Nuts and Cream Sauce .......... 13.95
Boneless Brust, Eggptant, pepper and capers ........ ., ............................................. 13.95
Boneless Breast. Rosemary, Lemon sauce ......... .,.:,.., ............................................ 13.95
VITELLONEAL SPECIALTY asmo WITH uuo. PASTA OR VEIETAILD ~~ks,:::'.:= with':': Seasoning In Martnara -My Mom's Aeclpe ....... .,.15.95 Tttln
51
uteed Marsala MUlhroom sauce .................................... ,. 16.95 v.: ~Veal Sluteed wttt1 Lemon B'= CIP«l Ind White Wlne .................... 18.95 Cent C on1,=ob, Gartlc, Slge Shirry Wine Sauce ........................... 17.95 er ut Yell k Ground, Vegetables, Herbs ................................................. 18.95
FRUITII DI MARE/SEAFOOD
WMD wmt Ul.AD, OVBI ~NITA t:: ~In Spicy Mat1narl ............... .,., ....................... .,., . ., ................... ., . .,., .. 18.50
Sh:: wnt1 ~."'~room Sherry Saa and Mozz.arelta ................ ., 18.95 t:: ~ =.::: Whitt Wine Sluc:t ................... ., .......... ., ....... 18.95
I -~ 8111 SIUCl .................................................................. 18.85 i:!: ~..:::,: Clllrnlrt, Splntstl Saffron, Ct911 ................................................... 18.98
-r ~· BllCk I= OIMI. Clpn, Tonto, Orepl0 ........................... 18.50 =""''t'~ Mell, Terragon .. ., • ., ................... ,. ............................... 17.50 Sit flWJ In on.to Glrk Brotti .............................................................. ", 8,95
Llrgt--.. ""'-• QtOPPld TorNto, Mulhroom, Biii, Glrlc, Wt* Wini ... .,., . ., ... ., .. 11.15 ""'~, .. , °" ~ Ortly' •• , ..•.••.•.•...•...•.••••••••• "''''"'''''''•••••tt•••••············· .. lillrtlllll Prtc:e
DOLCl/DESSERT
nraml Su (Homemade)
Italian Rum Cheese Cake
4.25
cannon
Pastry Shells Lemon Cream
3.95
Spumoni
4 Flavor Ice Cream
3.95
Tartufo Blanco o Nero
Chocolate Ice Cream Truffle
Dark or White
3.95
Zabaglione
Eo11 Marsala Wine Mousse
4.95
Affagato Della Casa
Ice Cream • Uqeur -Hot
E>a>resso
5.95
Coppa Del Frate Ice Cream with Frangellco
6.50
1516 IEWl'ORT BOULEVARD, COSTA •SA • 645··
'
LOCALMUllC
~oise,
Noise,
Noise is
3, 3, ~
N oise, Noise, Noise, the
local haven for indepen·
dent label punk, jazz
ond other non-mainstream
sounds, celebrates its third an-
niversary with a concert by four
bands that each have at least one
release available in the store.
Unfortunately, the birthday
party -which begins at 8 p.m.
Saturday at Our House, 720 W.
19th St., Costa Mesa, and fea-
tures performances by The Iron-
Ons, The Paper Tulips, The
Women and Brown Lobster
Tank -1s alreaCly solCJ out.
The speed in which tickets
were snatched up is an indication
of Noise, Noise, Noise's success.
IV.TSU'YA RAINON[, DAILY rn.OT
Noise, Noise, Noise owner David James (left) has carved a niche In the local music business.
"""!'.
The shop opened in an incon-
spicuous location in the middle
of a recession by proudly cater-
ing to a narrow customer base.
Still, it's managed to turn a prof·
it every year, lost year grossing
$220,000, according to owner
David James.
He credited "not having real
high expectations" and "starting
small and slowly working up"
with keeping 1\is doors open at
1505 Mesa Ve rde Dri ve East,
Costa Mesa.
"And 1 live at home," he
added. "That also helps."
The store's rise has closely fol-
lowed that of alternative rock
music, but James considers
Noise, Noise, Noise's niche
music th at is more alternative
than, well, alternative ..
"What's interesting is we've
got. these other stores opening
near us, like Tower Alternative,
and we're deali ng in two differ-
ent types of alternative music.
We don'.t sell the stuff they call ·
alternative. What we sell is just
not the mainstrC:lJll stuff.
"When you can get Pearl Jam
and Smashing Pumpkins T-shi rts
at Broadway, it's hard to de-
scribe alternative these days."
James prefers to refer to
Noise, Noise, Noise product as
"indepeQdent." Most bands fill-
ing his bins are local, such as
~tNow!!!
•
HcYS CooKING/
P_!Jpu1ar-Qpt:U.n & Chef from Italy.
Gitt:ano Ianni · kitchen master
Saving: hcalrhy pasras, pizzas & ere.
The lron·Ons and Super Nova,
and hardcore punk, like Function
and Outspoken Neck Deep.
One of the rare bands whose
album you'll fin~ on the charts
and at Noise, Noise, Noise is by
Green Days. "They're a big sell-
er ... for us, so we don't shun the
major-label stuff,, here," James
said. "Well, WC so rt or do. You
won't find the new Pink Floyd in
here."
Customers range from teen-
age rs to octogenarians.
Noise, Noise, Noise, which is
directly behind the 7-Eleven
store at Harbor Boulevard and
Mesa Verde Drive East, is not in.
the most-visible location, so it
""~~~=" ~ Picro Ouusi • resppnsiblc /Or bringing Ludam's
at Dam Poinr ro Gold Awardnxognia'on .
•
Ho's HAPl'Yr
Lucia Luhan who saiJcd 6r from shore via
Ellis Island, & BBG, rcrums ro familjar w.itcr wirh
. good halrhy lt3lim cuisine .
•
HAT NOW!!
Family Style DinDttS · Tua.-S•t. · 5:00 to closing
SIJIMUy · l 1 :00 -7:00
CubUie-ro-go at-C.~ «rrloe
3 party room.1 for~ or~ neats
Whaes Cooking
353 East Coast Highway
Newport Beach · 673-7800
Prk.-.
Goodthru
4-4-94
~wn Onions
25~.
W'MitfCJRTllD'D.,cmD~. • 6CI 6DU . . ...... .
\
draws more people who know
wh at they're searching for than
curious passers-by. However,
James noted his shop is close
enough to Harbor to be easy to
find , without the higher rent of
businesses facing the boulevard.
He would explore moving to
larger quarters before openi ng a
second store, but any expansion
plans arc at lca::.t a couple years
away. If he ever docs move, he
vows to remain in Costa Mesa.
"It's just a good location for
us. We've had a lot of luck here.
I'd rather stick local so custom·
ers don't feel lost. I'd rather
stick around to service them."
-By M:Jtt Coker
EXPllESSION
JNml
pretty easy to play; everyone from
cocky kids to unsure dads give it a
go on their acoustic guitars.
The second place we went to
was The Blue Marble on Harbor
Boulevard, which has the
distinction of being one of the
only coffeehouses to have a
comedy open mike night. We
always seem to miss the action
because it ends so early, which is n
drawback if you arc late starters
like oursel.ves. Most open IT)ike
nights will go past 10 p.m., unless
there isn't a big sign-up by
performers. There arc lots of
other coffeehouses to check out,
mostly in the Costa Mesa and
West Newport areas. Even if they
don't serve up open nights, they
will al the very least have some
good bands playing on the
week.ends, and you. can us~ally ask
for the month's t:ntertainment
sch~dule.
CHRIS' TAKE
Praise be to the people who open
their establishments to the general
public and let them show their
stuff on stage. Open mike nights,
in bars and coffeehouses all
around Orange County, allow
· anyone with somet hing to say·or
sing the opportunity to address the
publ ic with amplificatjon. Some
recite poe try, some tell jokes,
some play guitar and sing , some
do it well, others do not ... but
therein lies the appeal. In
15-minute spurts, you can be
exposed to painfully off·key
renditions of your favorite
classic-rock tunes as well as hear
an undiscovered musical genius
who's still a little shy.
Entertainment by the people and
for the people.
I'm amazed at the divtrsity an
Thursday, March 31, HMM C
open mike night can draw in.
Sometimes you h:ivc to 51t through
some uninteresting and downright
poor excu es for entertainment,
but it's \\-Orth the wnit when you
nre treated to no a cappclla
version of the latest Mariah Carey
hit performed by a 9-ycar-old boy,
or the theme· to "Lnnd of the
Lost" done unplugged. My
personal favorites are the •
songwriters who try out their new·
material on the open if somewh:i t
distrncted crowd. There is an
honesty and distinct lnck or ego
involved when someone expresses
the essence or their creativity and
feels comfortable with making the
mistakes necessary to have their
materinl grow.
Hoving played open mi.Ice nights
1 can say that it can be u thrilling
learning experience. It can be ~our
first chance to impress your
friends with you r playing ability
and, sometimes, you may even
gai n the highest compliment -
the attention of the crowd. At
tlrrte'S' rhe silence f<>llowing a
performer's outpouring will make
your skin crawl with
emb;irrassment but there are thm.e
rare occasions whe re a solo artist
wins the place ove r with a song
you won't soon get but of you r
head. It 's an honest audience and;
hey, they got in free so -they don't
expect too much. If yo·u have
something you w11nt to get off your
chest, grab the stage and let it rip.
Don't bring your ego but do bring
an open mind ... and a guitar if
you have one. Remember that old
Led Zep tune you used to strum
in college?
Balboa Island resident Roya
Foulndi is a /\'euport IJeac/1 .Arts
Commissioner. Chris Crisll'ell is D
Balboa Peninsu/:J resident. lJotlt
arc college students. Off the
Deatrn Path runs weekly in
Hlttkchd.
.... l&l~lll) •H I Tm(N-i i )
MPAPlllllll --~21'91 ,_ 111111111 .. A WIW.. (I) WD-::lN-1S) ., ....
:::...2,~',
Kt•LB"I LST (I)
--~2 (N)
. IClllllLll'I LST (llJ rr,-~. a :m_,, INI
ANAHEIM HIUS FESTIVAL a~ v ·; ~· ~~·:~:
EL MONTE 8 ·•
II:-~-.... ~--..... _.;fF.L ,., • .,_ii" --•111 .. --...
D Thursday. March 31 , 1994
LOCAL ...... NIWI
TWO FOR THE SHOW
Britta Pulliam to open second Balboa cafe
e . By MARLA BillD
ln the same Balboa location where Bubbles went
nat and Mutt's couldn't ge t a pedigree. Grinea•1 GrUI
will open April 15 with Brilla Pulliam as owner.
Balboa is familiar territory for Pulliam; her cafe
Brllto's, ac ross the street from the Balboa Post
Office, has p,Jeased customers for the past 6Y'z years.
lt will remam with its regular hours and crew, serving
breakfast, lunch and dinner.
While remodeling at the 111 Palm address has
been going on, the construction crew frequently
referred to Pulliam as "the Gringa'' and that was her
inspiration for the name of the Mexican-theme
restaurant.
Chef Derrick Frost and Pulliam are planning a
menu with almost all entrees at SIO and under, the
exception being a New York steak with tomatillo ·
sauce and black bean puree. Live entertai!'ment is
planned for Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights.
"Gnnga .. s Gi'ilf will e open every mg t ana 6egmmng
May 8 -Mother's Day -will serve a regular
Sunday brunch as well.
ln 1987, when Pulliam opened Briua's, she had.the.
help of her 73-year-old grandmother, Frieda Kahler,
in hanging dry wall, painting and general
reconstruction work. The indomitable Kahler is not
'involving herself with the manual labor this time .
around, but has promised her grand-daughter that
she will be available for margarita testing.
I FROM TANGO
TO TARANTELLA
Now she's cooking ... Lucy Luhon's Caribbean
Mango turned out to be a mere blip on the Luhan
radar )Crcen, so the place was re-opehed at 353
Co~t Hwy. la~t week as the What's Cooking? Cafe.
elying on the Italian formula which has been so
!IU cessf ul in her two other restaurants, What's
Cooking? llistro and Luciana's, Luhan is fine tuning
this one a!> a family-style cafe. The What's Cooking?
Bistro on San Miguel will retain its own format.
Says Luhan, "For $6.95 per person, a table of four
• can order a big bowl of salad and a platier of our
• special pasta to share, just like a (amily dinner ...
and almost everything on the menu will be priced
under SIO."
For the record, the Luhan family opened this site
as the Ellis Island International Eatery in December
1 1991. Unfortunately, the concept was not successful
so the la rge, expensively furnished restaurant with
three dining rooms was refitted as Lucy's Bayside Dar
J1ckshrlmp fame leased the kitchen and one of the
dining rooms for six months, then moved into his own
Coast Highway cafe. Lucy's Bayside Bar and Grill
closed latet in the year.
This past January, Luhan tried combining
Caribbean food with a Latin dance beat and Mango
was opened in the repainted dining rooms. In less
than .two months, it was obvious that Mango was not
going to work and she quickly revamped and has
turned to what she knows best ... all things Italian.
Luhan says, ''Plan on a warm, happy, friendly
family atmosphere and accordion music at the What's
Cooking? Cafe ... Eat, enjoy and dance the
tarantella if you like."
What's Cooking? Cafe will be open Tuesday
through Saturday from 5 p.m. on and Sunday from 11
a.m. to 7 p.m. for reservations, phone 673-7800.
WELCOME TO
CARMELO,S CLASSROOM
The elegant Carmelo's RJstorante will be
transformed into a culinary classroom on Sunday,
April 10, as a fund-raiser for Corona del Mar High
School. Students will help in the kitchen, wait tables
and provide live. entertainment.
"I wanted to reach out to the community and do
something for the wonderful people who have given
so much to me. This will provide the youngsters with
an opportunity to do something fun while giving them
a behind-the scenes look at the restaurant business
and raising money for a good cause," said Carmelo
Manto, who is celebrating his 10th yea r in business in
Corona del Mar.
For more information and reservations, phone
(310) 491-1000.
SHARE OUR SELVES
KITCHEN PARTY APRIL 7
Chefs, 17 in all, who are participating in the April
22 SOS Celebrity Chers dinner will be on deck next
week serving "wild and crazy tacos" at Share Our
Selves, 1550 Superior Ave .. from 6 to 9 p.tn.
The event will serve to show off the OrangeAld
KHchen, although the entire facility will be open to
the public. A brief program will honor Taco Bell for
its generous donations toward the kitchen, local
restaurateur Hal Rosoff and all who tielped make the
OrangeAid Kitchen a reality.
WHkend
• and Grill six months later, am·acting hundreds of
young people who usually 'arrived around 10 p.m. to
dance and hang out; they were not interested in
dining and the bar receipts were a disappointment.
Meanwhile, in the spring of 1993, Jack Jasper of
Tickets are $25 per person and can be purchased
at the door. -
MarlD Bird is fl tree-lonc:e writer who covers /ocDI
dinin1 for the Dally PJJot.
StlAUSA :-:ouua, DAILY l'1LOT
Britta Pulliam, owner and chef, -and Derrick Frost, manager and chef, make homemade rortillas to
prepare for the opening of the Mexfcan-themed Gringa's Grill. It's located on the Balboa Peninsula,
which is also home to Pulliam's cafe Britta's.
I
' !
w • • "
a ..
l
AMERICAN
CHARUl'S PR & RESTAURANT, A local
restouront/bor with o •hometown~ Aovor Featuring
pool, darts, satellite, big screen TV, Pool Tournomenl
fftlery Wed. night Serving lunch Mon.fri 11 to 2 &
Sot Breokfost 8 to noon. $1.50 Mary's & Drivers
Sot & Sun 6 to noon. Shot of the Week S 1.00.
Open 366 doy o year (leop year onlyl 6am lo
2om. 6041 &lso @ Springdale in Huntington
Beach. (714) 894-6100
DICK CHURCH'S RESTAURANT, A family style
coffee shop located at 2698 Newport Blvd., Cosio
Meso. Menu includes breakfast, lunch ond dinner.
Prices range from $3.00 to $7.99. Open Mon.·
Sot. 6:QOam to 9 OOpm IN, WC, V, MC. (71 4)
~6-7762
ZUllES RESTAURANT, located at 1712
Plocenllo, Cosio ~so Menu includes ribs,
chicken, steak & lob~er. prime rib, pizza, oyster
bor. Prices range from $3.95 ond up. Open doily
from 1 l 30om lo I Opm, Cocktails 'til 11 pm. ID, F8,
WC, No credit cords.
(714) 645-8091
Your Restaurant Guide to Dining in
NIWPOltT llll COMPANY. Unquestionably the Newport 8each, Costa Mesa, Corona del Mar,
Best Boby Bock R1bsl Known for its friendly Huntinldftft 8each & Fou"tain Valley otmosph81'e ond comfor1able booths, Newport Rib ••-•• ••
Co. hos been pleasing o local crowd since 1984. STUDIO CAii, located ot 100 Main St. Bolboo
Open 7 doys o w"k ot 4pm, 2pm on Sunday. L _. f Toke-out, catering and banquets. Just at the end of (ot IUQI' o pierl. The Studio Cofe is the happening
th 55 F (71 l 631 2 Io F place for food, fun & enter..foinmenl. M.enu includes e wy 4 • I ID, B, WC, V, MC, .b h' k fr h f' h • & lod AE DC DISCOVER n s, c ic en, es is • poslo, appetizers so s,
NAPLES Rll COM""ANY ed d . ol$0 servin~bnJnch on Sot & Sun. 10 to 3 :00 which ,,.. · local . on 2n St .. in includes 8e ium wofffes omelettes r.sncokes ond the Belmont Shore area. Naples Rib Co. offers the h p · 'fr $2 9' $13 95 Best in Boby Bock Ribs, B80ed Chicken, Prime Rib muc ma<e. rices range om : · . • ·
ond Solods. Naples Rib Co is open 7 doys o week Open 7 ~oy• o Wffk.Mon-Fri 11 .30.1 .30 om, Sot·
ot 4pm, Jpm on Sundays It hos 0 private banquet Sun 10.1 .30om IN,8RU,F8,ENT, V,MC,AE,OC
room, does cot.ring for parties of 20 or more ond
olK> delivers. localed at 5800 W. 2nd St., long
8eoch f 3 l 01 439·Rl8S
ID, FB, we, V, /lllC, AE. DC, DISCOVER
BRKFST /LUNCH/DINNER
CHARUU CHIU llSTAURANT. located ot 102
Mcfadden Pl. next to the Newport Pier. Mole than
a restouranl-<>ll inslitvhonl S.rvi"9 up great food ot
reaK>noble prices since 1967 Breokfost is served
oll day long. lunch & dinner consists of Arneficon,
~xicon ond Seafood dishes. Don't miss out on
Wednesday oll you con eat chilel The steak and
egg special on Saturday for $5 95 tJ o must ond o
delicious seafood dinner for only $5.95 can't be
b.ot. Prices range from $2 85 to $7 95 675-
7991 . Open 7 doys o w .. k. 7om-l 2om. Sun.
Thurs, 7om.Jom Fri & Sot. MC,V .. Jt.MX, D.C.
CAFE
-..uK UNCH CAii. A very uni~. woodsy
~ to •njoy breakfoal & lunch. located al
ln32 Goldenwest St., in beouhful Huntington
8eoch central pork. Menu includes om.lefties,
sp«iolty poncokes, coppocinos, burgers,
sondwichea, solods ond much mofe Prices ronge
from $ ... 95 lo $7.25 Open Tunfri. 7.30 om lo 2
pm. Sot & Sun hi 3pm Summ« hours~
open 'liM 8.30 f)f!I. Wed-Sot UYe music, coll fOr
ft'IOI'• info 842.0n5 OUT, v. MC, TKO
lunt'I CAii, Located ot 320 Bristol #G at
RedhiA (by Alco Mini ~ 1n Costa Meso Merru Inc~ country cook1n' tw.c*foat witfl the
bett ' ooncoi-, great MeJcicon brdfoJt
dishes ond luncli wilh lfirfry ~1. ter~I
boW', gork ~lcken, mtOfted loloda, heollhy
turt.y ~. hombutpa, w¥ed w/ potato ICllocl or M.t. Try Ruth'• home coollln' today ~ lood. W90! pricetl ~ ronee "°"' S2.99
90 S.5.95. Opeft 7 doyl o _.. 7om to ,pm, ID,
00,WC
CALIFORNIA CUISINE
OICICO"S, Casual Calif. elegance with plenty of
room to •njoy yourself. localed ol 7887 eeni.r
Or., Hunlingk>n Beach. ~nu includes hot & cold
postos, specialty pjuos, fa jita's ond items from
the grill.Prices range from $3.95 to $1 3.95.
Open 1 l :30 to close. Dancing nightly, jou on
Wed. Big Bond Swing Music Thur. 8-midnight ID,
BRU, DttESS,F8,ENT,WC,V,MC,AE,OC. 892-2227
COFFEE HOUSE
OUR HOUll, localed ot 720 W. 19th St., Costa
Meso. Menu includes sandwiches, solods, quiche,
po"'ies, cokes ond coffe.s. Open doily from
7:30om to 11 pm Unless yoo don't wont lo leovet
IN, FB, ENT, w e. TKO.
(71") 650-8960. Featuring live music
MIDNOHT JAVA CAii, loeot9d at 2700
N,wport Blvd. 'l 68 lat 28th st Morlnol
Featuring Diedrich Coffee, Shirley's Bagels, fresh
bolted goods dally ond Dreyen Ice Creom. Open
7 days a WMlt. we. Come join us fOf the best
coffM in town. fr• undervround porklng.
67~1A7.
FRENCH
OIANllCUll, located at 18912 MocMhur
Blvd., !MM, OCroM from John Woyne Airport
Elegant, chonning, groc~• & beoutiful, eoch of If'• dining rooms haa a di"-ent decor The food is
FrencM:Oldomio cubinMHty but healthfully
prepaied ~ ipeeiOh a1 sa oo and up . the
dinner"*"' 1nc1Ddes o 'IOtiety of teofood, meot,
chiden, ealods julf lo mention a r.w Items Prl<! ..
range from S6 lo $25 s.rvi'19 lunch 11 .30.2.30,
Dinner .5:30.10:30. Sundoy 8tvnc:h 10.30. 2·30
open 1 days o WMlt ID. 00, MUNCH RES
lfQ. Fl, (NT, WC. V, NC., AMX DC, OtSC \lolet
'°41'"8. (71A) 7$1-IOOl
INDIAN ·
COPPll CHIMNIY , Enjoy waterfront dining ot
Newport Beach 3408 Via Oporto. Introducing
authentic Indian Mughloi delicacies never before in
Orange County by our famous chef *Mohinder
Rom Guru". Try our lomb or chicken kabobs,
curries and wide vorities of fresh vegetables
cooked in our own ground Indian herbs & spices
ReaK>nable prices starting os low os $1.95 to
$6.95. Open 7 days o wHk from 11 am-8pm.
OUT, TKO, WC. 67'J.7679
INDIAN MIADISI, located ot 1520 West
Coast Hwy. The. menu includes chicken, lomb,
seafood and vegetarian dishes oll prepared to
perfection with only ._ freshest ingredients
Prices range from $2.50loS15 95 for o
complete combination dinner. Open 7 doys o ~. lunch 11 ·30 to 2·30, d1nn_, 5 to 10 10,
FB, V, IN:., AE, OS, 0C (7141 646-3993
... rs INDIAN POOO, Critically acclaimed by
Ell'll8f Ollls. locoled at 3705 So. Bristol, Santo
Ano ( 1 blk No of So. Coo st Plozo, next to
Clolhestime) ~nu Includes Chicken ond
Y.getobles, doily specials & combo plates, o~n
doily from 11 om lo 9pm. IN, OUT, TKO, WC'. v, MC. (71') 850.0595 .
ITALIAN
PHO'S RESTAURANT, located at 2221 N.
Main St 1n Seacliff Village. Serving breakfast,
lunch and dinner Now open 7 doys o week
Homemade pancakes, pastries, postos, & doily
specials Esroblished in 1979. Early Bird dinners
5-6:30 nightly. Look for our n,w breakfast and
lunch menus coming April I .
RANDAZZO ITAUAN CAii, located at
21148 Beoch Blvd., (at Atlonto), family owned,
everything prepared with the finest meots &
cheeses & famous for it's infamous chHMGake.
Prices range From $2.00 to $1 I .95. Open Tues.
thru Sot l I ·9pm, Sun. 1 1-8 pm. Closed Mon IN,
OUT. WC, Wine ond beer
(714) 536-2448.
SA&ATINOS RESTAUUNT a SAUSAGI CO. ,
located ot 25 I Shipyard Woy, Newport 8eoch.
~nu includes greot poslo, award winning Coesor
solod. delicious homemade sousoge, YeOI. lomb,
lots of vegetcmon dishes, good wi~. beer,
coppucino & deserts. •1t•s o family owned & run
reslouront .. Pm:es range from $4.95 lo $13.95.
Open 7 doys o week Serving Sot & Sun Brunch
from 8.30 to I :OOSunday thru Thursday I lom to
1 Opm Fndoy & Sot. 11 am-11 pm IN, OUT, WC,
BRU, W8, V, M, AE, 0C
MEXICAN
AVllAS IL l.ANCHITO, A dining landmark for
QYef' 20 years. Run by the Avilo family, Avilos has 7
localt0n1 IO $«Ye you in Costa Mesa, Newport
Beoch, Santo Ano, long Beach, Huntington Pork &
t.oguna Hills & Huntington Beoeh Featuring
aulti•nlic Food with the Freshest ingredients & o new
creottv• light cuisine along with authentic Moma
AVIia's r.cipes 10, 81tU, F8, ENT, WC, V, MC, AE,
DC, & DISCOVER. • Avilc:u hos o reputation fOf
ITeoflng you like port of the family!"
CIAO, loeoled ot 2600 Ea st Coast Hwy, Ca<ono
o.I Mor. Corne ond experience Corono del Mar's
newest Italian rettauront serving New York style
ptUO, prmet piuos, exclhng poslos, creollve
aolods, coffM, coppuclno ond fresh baked MAllOAllTAVIUI, loeot9d at 2332 West
potlries. Prices ronge from SJ 95 lo $8 95 Open Pocifk <:oo" Hwy Me•ican burgers, foiitas,
7 doyt o WMlt from 8om lo I I pm, e11c-i>I Sunday bun'itos & lnOfe. Speaols doily Price rang. from
open 4 90 11 pm DeleV9fY ovoilobt. V,IN:., AE, $A.95 to $I 0 95 Open 11 30om lo 12 30otn
WC, IN OUT N, fB. V, MC, AE, OC (7141631-8220
Far more i• ntat~ repcli19_ local flavar ml
1he ~Plat at 642-4321 or 1M HUnllllglDn
leach at 965-3030.
;
Ml CASA, located ot 296 17th Street, Costo
Mesa. A trip to Mexicol Mexican Food. Open
doily ot 11 om. Prices range from $2 25 to '
$8.95. Serving lunch & dinner for over 20
~s. IN, FB. we. V, IN:., AE. DC, cs. D 645·
7626.
WAHOO'S FISH TACO, With 3 locations:
1133 PGH. loguno Seoch, 1714) 497·0033,
1862 Plocentio, Cosio Meso, (714) 631·3433
ond 3000 Bristol, Cosio Meso (7141 435.() 130.
~nu Includes Fish locos, burritos, block beans
& rice, salads, sandwiches. Prices ronge from
$1.65 to $7.50. Open Mon.·Sot l lom to
10pm, Sun. I lom lo 9pm. IN, TKO, WC
•
SEAFOOD
HUNTINGTON IEACH MARKET lltOILH,
Here'• 0 cue place for family dining where
fresh seo u king and expert me~uite
broiling is our trodemarii. Our fresh fish changes
doily ond we olK> Feature chicken, steaks ond
pasta. There's o fresh seafood morilet, too. lunch
ond Dinner, full bor. Children's menu. AE, V,MC
and OS cords welcome. 20 I I 1 Brookhurst St
(next to Target, just south of Adams). No
resMvohons.
(7141 963-8166.
PACIFIC FISH & SEAFOOD, locoted at 2620
Newport Blvd., Cosio Mesa. Menu includes
seafood solods, seafood sandwiches, grilled
entrHs, fish & chips, fish locos, sushi and mOfe
Also hos one of Orange County's largest
inventories of fresh fish from' it's fish morkel
Prices range from $1.95 ond up. Open M-F 11·
6, Sot 11 .s. 10. we ''14) 650-0130.
ZU9llS DtrY DOCK, located ot 9059 Adams,
Huntington S.OCh. ~nu include~ seofood, sMok
& lobsi.r, piuo, prime rib, oyster bor. Prices
range from $3 95 ond up. O~n doily from
11 :JOom lo I Opm, Cocktails tit I I pm IN, FB, we. v. MC. (7141963-6362.
STEAKS
1HI IAltN STIAK HOUSl, locoled ot 2300
Harbor 81>.od, t J 1, Costo Meso. Menu includes
slleoka, freah fbh, chicken, burgen ond soloch
Prices range from $3.75 for lunch and $6.25 fOf dinnef Open 1 lam fOf lunch M-So. Oinner
4f>!'I Mfr Dinner Jpm Sot. & Sun. IN, WC, V,
MC, AE, DC. (71') 641-9777.
SEAL BEACH
__.. INN, E.labl1shed in 1930 by the =:· Shit o meeting place of pilots ot0und lh. who enfoy the best In dinfng localed ol
1 AOO Pacific C0ott H:*Y. Seal BeOch TM "*"' lndudet freth fiah dcMly, lleoks, lobtMr & crOb
!eat Pnc.. "°" ot $A.9.5. Open ~ lfOM-l()pm, 'Iii 10·30pm WMltenda IN Fl
ENT, WC., V, l>IC.. AE (31 ot 431-3022 ' '
' :.
NewpCm Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Thursday, March 31, 1994 AT
IOCllTY
Angelltos de Oro to honor former first lady Barbara Bush
I t's appropriate that a
first-class organization like
The Angelitos de Oro will
honor former first lady Barbara
Bush at its annual luncheon•
gathering April 8 at the Hyatt
B.W.
Cllll
Society
Editor
Regency Hotel,
Irvine. I This marks
the 34th year of
, the founding of
Angclitos, a
volunteer
women's
auxiliary
supporting Big
Brothers/Big
Sisters of
Orange County.
Their
fund-raising tool
-the Gold
Book~~·~~-f--'-:>~~~
known all over the state and used
Angelitos president.
"Mrs. Bush is a strong
advocate of volunteer, community
and corporate support or schools
all across the nation,"
commented Thyc n. "She has
taken a particular interest in the
problem of learning disabilities
and encouraged many national
organizations seeking broader
public awareness and support.
She's a first -class lady and we're
honored to have her here with us
in Orange County for Angelitos."
For ticket information, call
544-7773.
0
other than The Four Seasons
Hotel, with chef Joachim Splkbal
of Patina, Los Angeles assuming
the role of coordinating chef. ,
Add to his staff Jon Fernow, also
of Patina, Christopher Gross of
Christopher's, Phoenix, Michel
Picton, chef extraordinnirc of the
Four Seasons, Julian Serrano of
MASA's, San Francisco, apd
Martin Woeslc of Mille Fleurs,
Rancho Santa Fe ... stir and
bake at 350 degrees for 45
minutes ... and you have Art of
French Dining 7.
This season's black·tic gala will
be chaired by Alison Baker
Frenzel, with support from
If you favor French cuisine, Ronnie Allumbaugb, Joan Dealt,
mark your calender for Sunday, Nancy Shtftncr, Pat Ntlsscr,
April 24. Susan Porter, Margaret Sprague
lt'.s the annual Art of Dining and Peg Rtday.
Extravaganza produced by thc~pc.rsoa,cvenLwill
board of 'trustees of The Newport sell out the Four Seasons ,..,
Pacific Symphony fans arc
in for a treat April 8. The
ope ning number or the conce rt
.. Stars :ind Stripes Forever,"
Joh n 11hlllp Sousa's famous
march, is slated to be conducted
by local businesswom;in and
-patroness of the nrts Madeline
Zuckcrmnn.
It seems her loving husband
Len purchased the opportunity 10
conduct the symphony at a PSO
fund raiser last year. Se!'what
happens when you get carried
away bidding on all the prizes
offered by charity fu nd-raisers.
Zuckerman, a. little nervous,
but very excited about her
as a model by charitable
organizations nationwide.
Sales of advertisements in this
upscale compilation of local
business and personal support of
Big Brothers/Sisters has been a
charitable mainstay of Orange
County for nearly four decades.
Angelitos hope to donate in
excess of $100,000 to Big
Brothers/Sisters in 1994 from
Gold Book ad sales and revenue
from the annual luncheon fund
Former first lady Barbara Bush will be honored by The Angell-
tos de Oro at Its annual luncheon gathering April 8.
Harbor Art Museum. As in years Ballroom. 'Sounds expensive but
past, this it the dining affair of you couldn't duplicate the wine
the Newport social season, selection alone for this price.
debut, will "fulfill a lifelong
fanta sy since childhood," she
said. "I plan to pretend like I
know what I am doin " added
the elegant Orange Coast
resident who originally hails
from New York.
• "Corl St. Clair can sleep al
.night. His job is in no· jeopardy,''
she added with a big laugh. raiser.
The Angelitos, limited to SS
women, is a small but
hardworking affiliate of Big
Brothers/Sisters helping the
Orange County unit to reach its
annual operating budgt;t, which is
in excess of $500,000.
Big Brothers/Sisters of Orange ,,
Bayside H~ Insurance Services
..... c.... of c.llfornla ..................
HIALTH INIUIANCI
~w s25*AMONTH
AS · *(AGE UNDER 30)
1-800-854-7776
.
introduces Delta Personally
a new and exciting breast form choice.
Thursday
March 31st
ll:OOam to S:OOpm
Meet Karen Haines
Your Amocna Consultant
Karen will be available to
answer all your questions
about breast forms & bras.
with any breast fonn purchase.
through April 30, 1994
631-7399
Kristen's Lingerie
W csrcliff C.Oun:-1719 W cstcliff Dr. · N
Iii
$798
wtth COUPon
below
I
L
EveM>OOY's Wearing Them
\
'
rt Beach
promising to knock the culinary Extravagant, yes. Worthwhile,
County Is entirely self-supporting,
making the financial support
from the Angelitos significant.
socks off even the most ardent absolutely.
gourmet. The evening is dedicated to the, P.S. Zuckerman is very
involved with 1he May 7
"Symphony of Jewels" Ball. If
she docs well next week, an
encore will be expected at the
black-tie fund-raise r. Well, at
least she'll have a mon th to
practice.
Last yea r's ltatian·themed distinguished Jack and Marion
Arden Flamson chairs the
luncheon honoring Mrs. Bush,
assisted by the dedicated Barbara
Barnard, the Gold Book
chairwoman, and Cecilia Nott.
Catherine Thyc!l serves as
party was fit for the emperors of Shea.
long-ago Rome. So this year, To dine like French royally,
expect no less than a feast fit for and help the art museum, call the
King Louis, given the French museum development office at
theme. 759-1122.
The saran of choice is none
RU Ff ELL'S
UPIOLSTEIY lllC .
.......... C...81ft!
am -••~ cesra mu-w..usa
Make new rlen s this yearl
Meet Catholics, 21 and over, who enjoy the some music, movies,
sports & hobbies os you dol
CATHOLIC S1NGLIS NITWORK
714 999-3230
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Satellite Dish rKMf in our large
bs" ~ring all the major
sport:ing events.
We hope you ~njoy the
atmosphere complemented
with our fine Me:xk:an· food.
I
Lunch • Dinner .. Cocktails
Open Daily at 11,M..1
. C.all Ahead For Food To Go
All IMjor Credit Cards Accepted
RN E. 17th St. • Costa .-waa • 64.5-76~
' •
nB'lll!lN ·PuUenoa Plortlt
l016N.11Mt9or.Bhd.
449-2190 eoo-su...m
\
o ·
IPECIAU •HI .n .. mt~er it•• ef ••111 er 91tater
rel11 it ,,,.~1te4 fre• t~• JUKEBOX SPECIALS MENU.
Offtr ••t Y11i4 wit~ ur ethr .,eci1l1 er 4im11ts.
Offer ••,irtt 4-30·94. ,,., .. , t•h 14 te re4H• effer.
Vall4 fer ,, te twe , •• ,1. ,., ,.,ty.
811r91rt .•• Melts •.• Chili Sizu •.• Friu
Chili ChHH Friu ... Cherry Cohsf
LOCATIONS NEAR YOU:
MUllTlllOTOll IUCM: n..s-.MM LOllO BEACH: J10-416-t1U
21002 PCM, I ... rt., .11 ....... , , •• ,,., JOI w. 9,.., •• , II Ctfo
Egg Beater.
· When it comes to Easter traditiO~ you can't beat flowers.
Send the FTD• Song of Spring"' Bouquet. Satisfaction guaranteed~
Easter is this Sunday. so call or visit your profe~lonal FTD florist today.
..
•
'8 Thursday, March 31, 1994
TODAY
ZOO NOellAM
A dwarr hcdgcho~. possum, talkina
p:irrot and chinch11la ore some or the
un1m:ils from t'hc Sonia Ana Zoo that
will be at a special workshop today
Dnd April 7 at the Lnunch Pad, 3333
Dear St. in Crystal Court, Costa Mc$a.
Workshops ore ot 10 a.m. and I p.m.
Cost is S7.50 for non-members and $5
for mc:mbcrs. For more informotion,
call 546-2061.
FRIDAY ... • COUNTaY DANCI CLAIHI
Learn the electric slide, Texas 2-step,
the waltz. swing and more in a series
of Ballroom and Country dance classes
presented by 1he Costa Mesa High
School Grad Night Committee. Classes
begin tonight and continue every
Tuesday and Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
an the College Park School
Multipurpose Room, 2380 Notre
Dame Rd., in Costa Mesa. Cost is $25
sand 5CUlpturcs and \'Ollcyball. for
details, call 729-DUNE.
UITH 1ee MUNT/ININe DANCI
Parents Without Partners No. 26 Costa
Mesa is havana an Easter Egg Hunt for
children 10 and under at 11 a.m. al
Heller Park on 16th Street in Costa
Mesa, and a spring Dance for adults at
the Holiday Inn on Bristol. For more
informotion, call 554-4266 or 646·0642.
SUNDAY
ILOOD PaUIUH CLINIC
The First United Methodist Church of
Cos1a Mesa, 420 West 19th Street. is
conducting a free blood pressure clinic
from 10 to 10:30 a.m. in the Clark
Fireside Room. For details, call
545.1n1.
MONDAY
DANCI CLAJIU
ans and the ability to give tours at
regularly scheduled time' arc among
the quolificutions. For more
information, call 556-2122, ext. 224.
ALTHNATM MIALTMCAlll
Chiropractor Brigidc L. Daily will lc:id
a free nllcrnative hcollhcarc workshop
ot 6:30 p.m. in her orfacc at 2850 Mesa
Verde Drive East, Suite C, in Cos1a
Mesa. Daily will discuss various
options and choices available when
discussing health care in the 1990s.
Refreshments will be served. For more
information, call 662-0670.
PA•lll a •IC MlnlNG
Newport Beact\/Coata Mesa Daily Pilot
WIDNISDAY
THI MAelC Of OaleAMJ
Transform a sheet or paper into a
leaping frog. a whale and an emperor's
crown with the troditional art of
Japanese p:iper foldina in a special
Discovery O:iys workshop al 10 a.m.
and I p.m. :11 the Launch Pad, 3333
Bear St. in Crystal Court, Costa Mesa.
Cost is S7.SO for non-members and $5
for members. Suitable for children
• Ncwpon Beach Police Department. A
special film and llidc show dcpiccina
the ofric:cn in action will hiahli&hl the
event. Reception Is at 7 a.m., brcakrast
and proaram at 7:30 a.m. Cost is SIS.
For more Information, call 729-4400.
90ATIN9 IKll.U CLAM
Bcainnina boaters and "old uhs" con
benefit hon\ the "Boalin& Skills &
Seamanship" cl3U offered by the
United Stales Coast Gu11rd Auxiliary
beginnina tonight at 7:30 and running
every Wednesday for 10 weeks at the
Harbor Master Facility, 1901 Bayside
Drive in Newport Beach. The class will
cover topics hke boat cons1ruction •
navi&ation, piloting. radio telephone
and much more. A certificate of
completion will be awarded after the
final exam. The class is free. There is
a nominal materials fee. Coll Gloria
Wurthman at 837-2041.
ages 7;12. For more information, call
546-2061. TMUHDAY, APRIL 7
POLICI AWAllDI ••UDAii •on IOCllTY l
SATURDAY, AMIL•
...... llTLUAU
Ever try pig prcporcd Jn a pit over
coals? That's part of the menu at 1hc
American Legion Newport Horbor
Post 291 Youth Fund Raiser & Luau,
scheduled ror 3 to 10 p.m. at 21S 151h
Street in Newport Beach. Events
include a harbour 1our, outrigger
events, a buffet dinner, silent auction,
patio dancing, crafts and island
dancers performing in nuthcntic attire.
Cost Is SIS donation. For more
information and reservations, call
673-5070. .
SUNDAY, APRIL ·10
NIOM ICMOOL fUND UlllR
Students Crom Corona dcl Mor
High School will be taking csver the
reigns of C:irmclo's Ristorante, 3520
Pacific Coast Highway in·Corona del
Mar from 5 to 7 p.m. 10 raise funds
for various school programs. The
students will assume cooking duties, er person or S45 p~r couple, and
rocccds go to benefit the CMHS
-i-:----fCT..:rd Night ·~. For details, call
·57.4264.
A four-week ballroom donci~g class
begin$ today at the Jewish Community
Center, 250 East Baker St. in Costa
_ _.i~!l!..t.J aoncrs arc not rc_q_uircd. For
more information, coll 751-0608.
The Parks, Beaches aod Recreation
Commission of the City of Newport
Beach will hold its monthly meeting at
p.m. an fhc council cliambCrs, 33
Newport Blvd. in Newport Beach.
The Newport Harbor Arc.a Chamber The Orange County Rose Society's
of Commerce is presenting the Annual monthly meeting will be held at 7:30
Police Awards Breakfast at the Balboa p.m. at the Westminster Civic Center,
:iy OUl>in Ncw~l'T freRl'I. The -->g~2oo-wcs1m1ns1cr AWfiuc. Fca™
take orders, serve the cuisine, gr~ct
customers and provide live
~mmmr.Thcrc is limitcd-----
event is sponsored by the business speaker will be C:il Hayes. The public scating for the event, so pleosc
make reservations by calling
(310) 491-1000. llNIOrl IPalNG fLINO DINNMt
Secure Horizons will host a free
''Spring Fling" dinner for Costa Mesa
seniors at 5:30 p.m. at the
people in the Newport Harbor Arca in is invited for this free event. For more
IASTH IOG HUNT
Newport Dunes is hosting an caster
i:gg hunt and pancake breakfast
beginning 111 9 a.m. at 1131 Back Bay
Drive in Newport Beach. Activities will
include visits with the Easier Bunny,
llccor:iting :i 10-foot-tall Easter egg,
TUESDAY
AJtTS CINT .. DOCINTI WANTID
~n informational. meeting will be held
at 9:30 a.m. in the board room of the
Performing Arts Center in Costa Mesa
for anyone interested in become a
Doccn1 and leading tou rs of the
Ce nter. Enthusiasm for the performing
LOANS
Buying • Selling
. Neighborhood Community Center,
1845 Park Avenue in Costa Mesa. The
dinner includes a presentation ·
featuring l loag Memorial Hospital
Presbyterian. Call (800)282-9944
SPECIALIZING IN :
Pre-owned Rolex
Watches
CUSTOM
ACCESSORIES
AVAILABLE
• Diamond Dials
• Diamond Bezels
recognition or the fine services of the information, call 650-0946.
Did You Make
These Tax
And Money
Mistakes This
Year,
IRVINE CA -A FREE
Report reveals how to
av0td the biggest
mistakes that most
people make with their
money Call
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AWABp
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"Newport Balboa
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For Honesty And '
Integrity.
UY llAD •-UH
ORl&llll llll•IT • llllY •ELS snu WllHLS • flClllY man
PAYING TOP
DOLLAR FOR
•DIAMONDS
•ROLEX
WATCHES
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24 houna for a free
recorded message, to
get your copy of the
report the IRS and your
banker hope you never
see!
Fleet Dlscounta Ask FREE. Estimates Car Rentals About • Towing
diiil•J 631-1 "170
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....... ·.······'·······.!.·.· .. .. . . . ..•............ EW ............................... ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.-:-:·:·:·:·: ·: ·:·;· > >
. . : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::: ·-;; :::.:::::::::::: :: : : :: :: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::-.
·:·:·:·:·: . :·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:. :-•.•.!····· • ••·••··· ......................... . • ·-=· r!!il!il!: •••••••• ························.!,.·.·.·.·.· ........ . .•... ~ .... ·····················-·.· .... •••.•.·••.•.·.·.·.·.·.·.· ·.-
AUDI
TU11U CLICK AUDI
40 AIAO Cenlet Offle, IMne .t72·7.t00
CREVIER IMW
EJCoenent selecllOn ol new & carefully pC'epared BMW's always In stock Sales. SetviGe, Leasing.
Edinger .ac 55 Freeway. Santa Ana Auto Mau. 83S-3t71.
SAOOl£8ACK BMW
45 Oilfield • 1Nlll8 380· 1200
STERLING MOTORS LTD.
Exclusive BMW Oealer. Sales • Setvtee • Leasing. 1540 Jamboree. Newpcwt Beach 640.6444
SADDLE BACK
Sales
Leasing
Service
Parts
. IRVINE AUTO CENTER .
1 ·800·831 ·3377
714·380· 1200
The Ultimate in
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The Best Selection
the Best Service
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\40....,_M.,...._......_~.,.._ .... ~V-I
640-6444
BUICK
CADILLAC
.
I
Nabers Cadillac
&Buick ,
Sales • Service • Leasing
2600 Harbor Blvd. of Cars
Costa Mesa
540 .. 9100
CHEVROLET
CONNEU CHEVllOUT
Sales • Semce • Lus1119 • Parts 2828 Hafbof Blvd • Cost Mesa
544·1200
CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH
ATW CHRYSLE.R-rLYMOUTH
Complete Body s11op and Setvlce Sales. Semce.
Parts-Open 6 Days 2929 Hill!>Or Bl , Costa Mesa. 3 Biiis s. or san a.ego Frwy 011 Harbot Blvd. 546-1934
HUNTINGTON IEACH CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH 16661 Beach Bl.. Humington Beach
6 Bllts. So. of 405 Fwy. 842-0631
DODGE
All.AS OOOGE
Complete Body ShDP & Setvlce Sa!es. Selvice, Parts-Open
6 Days 2925A Hart>o< Blvd., Costa Mesa > -. s 11 s.. °'""
ltwt Oii MN! M $46-1934
TUTilE CLICK'S TUSTIN OOOGE
40 Aulo Center Olive, Tustin 7 30-4600
TUTTlE CLICK OOOGE
· 40 Auto Centet Or, 1Mne 130-3311
FORD
TVTTlf CLICK fOID
43 ~ Ceottr ~. IMne 472-5200
THEOOOfrf llOUfS fOIO 2060 Harbor Blvd. of C.S. Cost.I Mesa 6"2.0010
FM11PEASIKIW
CllllRY'I M•IE 11111
,. lllllll mlllE
SERVICE• DAILY RBflN.S
PARTS• BODY SHOP
"" ....
ISUZU
HONDA
COSTA~ HONDA
Scdlern c-.om1a·s Larvest Holm 1>u1ers111p
2888 HalbOr Blvd. CM • .t36-5050
RAY FlAOEIOE HONDA
Sales • SeMCe • Lusiog • PW • Body Repair
lrYile A~ Cemr 714-130-7600
HONDA INFINITI
(714) 436-5050 (714) 241-1300
Both IC>Cltcd at 2888 Harbor Blvd.
MITSUBISID
2833 Harbor Blvd.
(714) 545-1700
@VV~
*Plus *
£~~
COLLISION
1399 Logan Ave.
(71.4) 549-87 55
HYUNDAI
HUNTINGTON IEACH HYUNDAI
16661 leoch llYd
Hunllngton a.och
(6 blks to ol .t05 FrwyJ • 142..0631
TUnLE CLICK HYUNDAI
40 Aulo Center Ot1ve. INioe • A12•1't00
lONGl'RE HYUNDAI
13600 Beach Blvd • Westminlstef
Just So. of 22 Fwy • 71.t-192-6651
INFINITI
Costa Meso tnllnltt
Sales • Leauio • SeMce
2888 Hatbof Blvc1, Costa Mesa
1n Mile S OI 405 fwy 71.t/2.tMJOO
ISUZU
SOUTH COUNTY ISUZU
Humtle< I volUnle Rodeo Oe~ u s A
11711 Beacll Blvd • H B l.t2-'ZOOO
RAY FlAOEIOE ISUZU
5*s • SeNice • LUSlllO • Pills • Body Rep.w
INifle Aulo Cenlet 7U·l30·7000
THEOOOll! ROllNS ISUZU
2060 Hamor Blvd. Coll.a r.ltsa. 6.t2-C010
JAGUAR
IAUEI JAGUAI
200 I Sol#! ~ Ave .• AN11Wn
971·2002
JEEP
TRANSMISSION 1728 PLACENTIA
SERVICE• REPAIR• EXCHANGE COSTA MESA
... -... DOMESTIC • IMPOR'JED CARS •TRUCKS• RV'S __ _
AUTO G -UIDE
LEXUS
wtUS Of WlSJMNS1H
In the Heall of ~ Coooly
Avadatlle for llTVnediate Deliveiyl
22 fwy. a( Beach Blvd 7UJl92-6906; 2131566-38118
LEXUS OF
WE S TMINSTER
* GREAT SELECTION * * Immediate Delivery *
LS 400 • ES 300
SC 400 • SC 300
SEE THE ALL NEW
GS 30<'
Your Best Buy is in
the heart of Orange County!
13590 Beach Blvd., Westminster
Beach Blvd. at 22 Freeway
714/892-6906
LINCOLN/MERCURY
HACH Ll«:OlH-MHCUllY
16800 Beadl et .• Hl#1llngton Beach.
3 Blocks So. of San Diego Fwy. Ml-7739
COSTA MESA LINCOLN MERCURY
' S;ires. SetviGe & Leasing
2626 Halb« Blvd~ Cosla Mm 71.t/S..0·5630
RAY fl.ADOOE UNCOlN·MERCURY Sales • Setvice • Leasing • Parts • Body Repair ltv1ne Auto Center 71"·•»7000
MERCEDES
fUTCHER JONES MOTOR CARS
1301 Ouaa Slreet. Newpcwt Beach
833-9300
Ml$SION VIEJO IMPOfl'TS
28701 Marguetie P~. Mission Viejo
n.t-36.t-1100
Faateat Growing MBZ Dealer ®In the NATION@
• Large ln!!t'!;
• Competatlve Prlolng
• Professional Sal.ea Staff
• Wln/Win Lease Available Now
Shop The Prote .. lonal•
Before You Buyl
MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS
28701 Marguerite Pkwy, Mission Viejo
(714) 384-1700
405 Fwy. ofT • t Avery
MITSUBISHI
\
NISSAN
PONTIAC
lOHGl'li PONTIAC
13600 Beach BIVd , Westminster
Just So, cl 22 Fwy.
(7U) 192·6651
SUBARU
TVTTlE' CLICK'S TUSTIN SUIARU
40 Auto c.-Or., Tuslin
730..t600
SUZUKI
lOHGPRfSUZUICI
I 3600 Beach Blvd~ Westminstef
Just So. cl 22 Fwy.
(714) 192-6651
TUTTLE CUC1<S TUSTIN SUZUKI
40 Au1D CenW Dr . TUSlin 730-.t600
TOYOTA
TOYOTA Of COSTA MESA
I 966 Harllor Blvd.. Costa Mesa
122·2000
VOLKSWAGEN
RAY F\ADEIOE VOUCSWAGEN
Sales • Leasing • s.Mce • Pam • 8odw Repair IMnl Auto Center 7 tA·IJo. 7 300
SOUTH COUNTY VOUCSWAGEN Number I VOiume SM!s In the U.U .
18711 Beach BMI , HuntiflO'on Beach
M2·2000
South County
-®la.
Volkswagen/Isuzu
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
SALES • SERVICE • PARTS
PARTS AND SERVICE OPEN SATURDAYS
MON·FRI 7AM·6:30 PM SATURDAY 9·4PM
C&• t
,.
. '
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot
MONDAY, APalL 11
.llWl8ll ITUDIU Cl.MIU
·'Bible Stories Depicted in Orcat Art"
and "Jewish Heritage Series" arc two
classes 1h:11 begin todny at 1hc Jewish •
Communily Center or Orange Coun1y,
250 East Baker St. in Costa Mesa. For
tnorc Information on these and ocher
classes, call 7Sl·0608.
WIDNUDAY, APalL 1 :S
UOAL HC•DAlllU MllTINO
observes auorncy Michael J. Miaan.
He will speak on Inexpensive legal
sources generally unknown 10 1hc
public in a free noon program in 1he
Community Room or the Ncwpon
Center Library, 8S6 San Oemcnte
Drive in Newport Beach. For more
information, call 644-3181 or 644·3191.
HMALI mAaal IPIAKI
Rnbbl Rnchel Cowan, who conver1cd
to Judaism and gradua1cd from
Hebrew Union College, will speak :it
7:30 p.m. in the Social Hall of Temple
Bat Yam, 1011 Camclback St. In
Newport Beach. Rabbi Cownn teaches
' introduction to Judaism classes and
leads workshops for interfaith couples
to help them clarify the way their
different b:ickgrounds affect &heir
relationship. Cost is $10, and includes
dessert and beverages. For more
information, call 644-1999.
Office auirc lhat gives 1hc right
message ond what to wear to an
interview arc two or the tips from the
"Dress for Success" program of the
Ncwpori·Santa Aria Legal Secretaries
Association dinner mcc1ing at
Wyndhom I lotcl, 33SO Avenue of the
Arts in Costa Mesa. Networking
begins 01 S:30 p.m., followed by dinner
at 6, program at 6:4S, and business
meeting at 7:1S. Cost is $16.SO for
members, $19 for non-members. For
rcsc.rva1ions, coll 7S2·8800.
MIDl·CAI. PLANNING WORUNOP
Families who care for a relative with
Alzheimer's disease, stroke, dementia
or related disorders can take
a<jvantagc of a workshop on lona·tcrm
Mcdi·Cal planninJ from 4 to 6 p.m. at
IHUUDAY~RIL 1•-----.t..--hc.,...-nPl~a~ccr;n~ti,_a.::;.S.;..;cn..;.:.10.;.;r.,,..Cc=n;;;tc;.:-r'-, 1:...;4,;:;.3.,;;Sn... ra or an sta esa. t 1s 1
NDl•HNllON HMtNAll
Strategics for living with and managing
hypertension is the subject of a free 7
p.m. program presented by Hoag
I lospital M.D. Ali Bchzadnia in the
Communi1y Room of the Newport
Center Library, 8S6 San Clemente
Drive in Newport Beach. For dctalls,
call 644-3181 or 644-3191.
SATURDAY, APRIL 16
DIVOaCla A NIW HOINNINO
Newport Beach Marriage & Family
Therapist intern Maxin e Cohen will
conduct a special workshop, "Divorce:
A New Beginning," from JO a.m. to
12:30 p.m. at her Newport Center
office. The workshop will cover the
five stages of grieving and the stages of
recovery, and will deal with 1hc
emotional roller coaster that divorce
can cause. The workshop is ideal for
men or women who arc going through
a \!ivorcc or who have been recently
divorced. Cose is S2S. Space is limited.
Call 759·0S79.
DANCI PAllTY
A dance party featuring Israeli folk
dancing, country line dancing and
dancing to the music or the SOs, 60s
and 70s will be held the third Saturday
of every montb-at the Jewish
Community Center, 2SO East Baker St.
in Cosca Mesa. Cost is $4 for JCC
members, SS for students and S6 for
nonmembers. Refreshments arc
included. For more lnformation, call
751-0608.
IUNDAYJ APRIL 17
81U.YDANCINe
A geographical and historical overview
of "La Danse Oricntalc," as well as a
live prcscn1n1ion of bcllydancing and
how ii has ch:ingcd from nntiquity 10
modern times, will be presented an a
free Sundny Musicale at 3:30 p.m. in
the Community Room of the Newport
Center library, 8S6 Snn Ocmcntc
Drive in Newport Beach. All ages arc
welcome to attend. Call 644-3181 or
644·3191 for information.
TUISDAY, APRIL 19
PHI LIOAL INPORMATION
"Yo1. don't have to pay for an allorncy
if you know where to look for free or
almos1 free legal informa1ion ,"
Is .Y12Mc Ag.!111
SriU in BUSUW.J?
~ ~ s ,JJ.
r Since 1951
Rabbitt Insurance
Agency
631-7740
for materials and administration costs.
For details. call the Orange Caregiver
Resource Center at 680-0122.
PAIN AND
STRESS
RELIEF
714 759-3000
soo 95-4PAIN
FUhlonts!W
(~Center)
1401 Avoc:.do
Newpol1 Bead'I
,
HOUND TOWN
... ~ .. ORM.AftH
"You don'l haYC IO pay for an auorn~ if you know where IO look for
free or aJmoll free lepl information,' observes attorney Mictiacl J.
Mipn. He wiU speak on inexpensive lepl aourccs acncrally unknown to
the public on TIH:lday, April 19 in a free noon proaram in 1hc Commun·
i~ Room of the Newport Center Library, 856 San Ocmcnte Drive in
Newport Beach. For more informallon, call 644-3181 or 644-3191.
AWAllDI a•IAICIAIT
The Ncwporl Harbor Arca. Chamber
or Commerce, the Commodores Club,
Is hosting the 33rd annual Schol:irship
Awards Breakfast from 7:1S to 9 a.m.
at the Sheraton Newport Beach, 4S4S
M:icArthur Blvd. The event is the
chamber's effort to recognize
outstanding scholastic achievement.
Cost is $20. For more information,
call 729·4400.
ONGOING·
PHICHOOL ITOIYTIMI
Winter/spring preschool storytime for
3 to S yc:ir olds have resumed at all
cwport cac u 1c rancs.
Programs will be offered at 10:30 a.m.
Tuesday mornings at Balboa Branch
Library, 100 E. Balboa Blvd., Corona
dcl Mor Branch Library, 420 Marigold
Ave .. and Mariners Br:inch Library,
200S Dover Drive. The Newport
Center library wiJI offer the program
ot 10:30 a.m. every Wednesday.
Programs run 1hrough Mny 25. For
more information, call 644-3187,
•••*"' IUPPOaT oaoup
ToughLove is a community service that
offers group support for parents with
acting out tccn·agcrs. The Ncwporl/
Mesa group meets at 7 p.m. every
Tuesday at Back Bay Continuation
High School, 39o Monte Vista Ave.,
Cost:i Mesa. For more information,
cnll 665-6S65.
IATINO
The Dr. Dean Ornish plan ongoing
class, "Eating for a Healthy Heart,"
meets from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Mondays
DON'T J UST GO THROUGH IT
GROW THROUGH IT!
Div.on:e'' .. Recovei)',,
Wo1kshop
SEMINAR
10 000 ~rsons Over , A .. 15 have a.,tten .,µ
previous work!_h~! -A ~cMINAR FOR
DIVORCED AND SEPARATED
PERSONS OF All AGES
Sill Thursday Evenlnp
April 7 • May U
7:30. 9:30
ST. ANDREWS PRESBYfERIAN CHURCH
Newport Beach -St. Andrews at 15th St.
(across from Newport Harbor Hi2h) -S20 Regjstration
For more infonnation call 63l~ Mon-Fn, 9.)
11 '1hc Oasis Senior Center, 800
Marguerite Ave, Corona dcl Mor. For
more ioforma1ion on this Cree cl:iss,
cnll 644-3244.
amD•I LUIONI
Bridge lesson groups pre now forming
on Mondays and Wednesdays at 1hc
Jewish Senior Ccn1cr or Orange
County, 250 E. Baker St., Cosca Mesa.
For more information, call S4S·SS33.
CAllH• llMINAll
Mc.Cuc and Associates nr<: conducting
career and life direction seminars
geared for pc.OP.le who want to change
careers or clarify their life purpose
and direction. Classes arc Crom 3:30 to
S p.m. every Tuesday through March
29. Cosris SIS. For more information,
call 979-1000.
HNIOU CLASHI
The West Newport Qpmmunity
Center at 883 W. 15th St. is offering
bridge, physical fitness and western
and s~ing line d:incing classes for
Thursday, March 31, 1994 M
older adult1. For dus daces and times,
call 644-3244.
PAlllNTtN• AND
•ILATIOlllM .. Cl HIU
"Parenting Children" and ''Improving
Our Rcln1ionships" arc the ticlcs or
t~o scp:irate ongoing classes held
every Sunday frorr J t•.; 9:45 a.m. at
Community Church, Congregational,
Unncd Church of Chris&, 611
l lcliotropc Avenue in Corona dcl Mar.
Classes arc free and everyone is
welcome. Call 644-7400.
SINO PO• PUN
Come 11nd sing for fun every
Wednesday nt 3 p.m. at the Costa
Mesa Senior Center, 69S West 19th St.
For more information, caJI Glori:i
Ticdkc at 69S-29S3 or C:rrmcn
Amador at S4S-0720.
Stnd your lttms to Around To1rn
tdltor, The Dally Pilot, JJO n'. Day St.,
Costa Mtso, C11/if. 91627.
·erBtmS.
· Make your holiday meals even more memorable by
serving fresh, fat-free, hot cros~buns, cinnamon
buns, fruit tarts, dinner rolls, breads, cookies and
more, All made with the finest natural ingredients.
Call today to-make your orders.-714-646-1440.
r~.------------,
Six Free Buns. I
I
I
Receive$ free hot<ross buns with I
the purchase of six hot<ross buns I L ~':,es~~ ~coo:' ,:r,.!"!,°':: ~'!, J
Open daily 7am-6:30 pm. Closed on Easter Sunday.
On 17th St. by Wherehouse Records. 427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
""Stay!''
..
Does
your dog
behave
better than
your bank?
If your bank has decided to reward your loyalty with a moving notice,
there's a good chance you're thinking about making a change. Which
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range ofhelpfuJ financial products and services. Along with the largest
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Wanna place a
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Right now you can take advantage of some
extra values when you make the change to
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~·
6 MONTHS FREE CHECKING•
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759-4123
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For details, visit your nearest Bof A branch.
I
"<* ._..,,...... ... .._,. Clledlils--o.ly l,.... b ~ ... '*' ~,.. ltill....,, °*' .................... 1-lri<:i..... ... . --.a. ........ Jl*.--M.. ....... ....
,...,..... ...... , .. ,,_.,..._NYSEllll't.' A....-. ....... IVllllNt~a.tcrlM!erialNTA ~-..-~ ................ ~ ..... ..._.. .... nlCw~ ... ll'W •::t--· .......... tl"-'tllw..,11 .. .-....11 t1r•1111111.-... -.--. .. •• ,,,_.. ....... ,......_.,pl \I 1t1~ __......,fl ... .-...NTASA. ... *-Ill~ .....
'
,
t
..
A10 Thursday, March 31, 1994 Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot
. COMMUNITY FORUM
COMMUNITY FORUM RUNS THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS • WRITE TO: PILOT LEITERS, .BOW. BAY ST., COSTA MESA. CA 92627 •FAX TO: 646-4170 •READERS' HOTLINE (CALL-IN COMMENTS): 642-6086
Fredspeak: RIAmON
PnhmlY lrgh
mrol orgry
I
R egarding your March 26 article
"A Lesson in Tolerance."
Tol·er-ance: l. capacity to
endure pain or hardship 2. sympathy or
indulgence for beliefs or pJactices
differing from or conflicting with O!lc's
own. W hen I ran in to Dick and The Holocaust was not about
Renetta Rawlings at the tolerance or intolefance. The Holocaust
supermarket last week, she was about evil. It was a demonstration
said she didn't expect to see me. "We to the world that when evi l is not held in
read in the Pilot that you were taking a check by ror~cs of good, that terrible
few days off and thought you'd be in things can and will happen. It was ~~::. ~xotic fa raway therefore with real shock that I read ''°" ............... -
On the
Coast
"Uh uh. Em rcmpg David Heitz's recounting of Long Beach ·w ::..c:z..;;.
phnmly frgh mrol Wilson teacher Erin Gruwell's English ~.,:::..,
orgry," J replied as class field trip to see ''Schindler's List" ~>Mt::,::;::---> ~-1l-.-I cou·11n------1---LLhe..EdwauCs...tb~Lex.in I ido \liUag;1:;...._._..,, .... ~...,,,~-~·=.___..-"'.'=" ..... r<1.. 11 d h h =-.., __ . .,,.._. without opening my Moreover, Gruwc an er c arges __ ........
mouth. should not be so hasty to believe that ~~ .. ~'":.~
"Huh"." race was the reason some of the people =;,::;.... ---;.:;..
h . .....~ ... ~--After a few more in the Lido area rcacied to t eir T-.. ~~ .... ··-
iries, l was finally able presence. As syndicated columnist ~tr'-:-'!:...:t"-::-
to explain that I was Clarence Page admitted on PBS' ~-'°£,fo~•°'*'
not on vacation last MacNeil-Lehrer program last year, he 5'=·=-..:.=~-=
week. Instead, l was personally feels th reatened by black ""!.'::,.'.=.!~~..!.,-....
having my fun trying youths on the streets of Chicago. And
to recover from a four Clarence is himself a black man. Is his
and a half adventure feeling intolerance, or a reasonable
in Michaef Gahagan's dental chair. reaction to statistics?
We started off with a little scaling While there is little doubt that Lido is
and planing of all available roots; a very "white" enclave, it is the record
segued into gingival grafts and, for the of youth. generally which most likely
grand linale, did three endosseus caused the ladies to grab their purses
implants. . and.necklaces. Young people don't have
. .
.
Readers believe class fie ld tri p to Lid o wa s
an exerci se in stereotyp ing ,· not tolerance
That's dentalspeak meaning, they a good track record tod:iy when it comes
"hittled a life's accumulation of debris to behavior. There's a number of
off the roots of my teeth; replaced reasons for this which have to do with
patches of terminally ill gum with youngsters' general lack of respect for
healthy stuff from the roof of my others, e'en their peers. For whether it's
mouth, and sunk little pegs made of one's casual tossing hamburger wrappers
the rare alloy unobtanium into my out of a car, cruising down the street
jawbone. . with the stereo blaring, or flipping a
Let me tell you, g:ing, it's a lot less skateboard into a storefront or
painful and far cheaper to floss after someone's shrubbery, the insensitivity
every meal. for other's is clearly demonstrated.
Fortunately, there was another The task of molding behavior which is
dentist prese nt, who enabled me to get sensitive to others begins in the home
through all this without so much as an and used to be guided by a universal
''ouch." This was Ronald Davies, one recognition of some basic rul::s such as
of about a hundred dentists in t~e !feating others as you would like to be
country who exclusively practices den tal
nncsthesiology.
treated, and a list of ten items some still
refer to as commundmenls. Schools
could play an important role but holding
students responsible for their behavior
seems to have not been in vogue for the
past several years.
Gruwell's -trip to the movie theater
was ini tinted by her concern that her
students did no t know about the
Holocaust. Perhaps she should ask them
.
the signilicance of Pearl Harbor. Or
verbally inquire what they think about
Euthanasia. If they respond to that one
that they don't know anything about
teen-agers in China, she will i..now th:.it
there's lots mor~ work to be done. And
their next trip should probably be to the
library.
KENNETH l.ARSON
Costa Mesa
0
As a resident of Newport Beach, I do
not believe yo ur article "Lesson in
Tolerance." 1
Newport Beach has white, black,
yellow and just about every skin hue in
betwee n coming to the beach every day
of the week and we are open and
friendly to all.
lf the teacher, Eri n Gruwell, ·had not
put the idea into the children's heads as
to our reaction, maybe "what's up cuz"
would have been taken as a friendly
greeting.
(l. E. ECKENWEILER
Newport Beach
I think staff writer David Heitz used
inflammatory language in his article "A
Lesson in Tolerance." One example waS"
when the teacher, Erin Gruwell, asked
the class how many had been shot at,
about 20 "lired their hands into the air."
Absolutely inl1ammatory language.
The fact ls, he was tryi ng to show that
Newport Dench was intolerant of ethnic
diversity \Vhen a group of 50 teen-agers
come into the city. What he didn't write
about w;1s lh:ll Newport Beach was
cxtrc1ndy tQlerunt. Nothing happened to
these young people. Ttfey weren't 'shot
nt, their bus" :isn't carjacked, nobody
\\us killed. nobody even had a racial slur
,aid to them. There were a few looks at
these SO kids running around Newport
and a "oman grabbed her purse in a
restroom. So would I if any teen-ager
came in, I'd keep my purse with me.
That teacher set those kids up to look
for intolerance, not tolerance and if we
are going to teach tolerance, we better
make teen.-ugers understand that
tolerance isn't loving somebody, it's
leaving other people alone. It seems lo
me ·that when that group came in and
was given a S400 lunch by one of our
residents, that'.s pretty good tolerance.
JOYCE RILEY
Newport Dench
I remember almost nothing that went
on. There were a couple of times wticn
the nurses were telling me to open my
mouth and a couple of times when
Dr.Davies scolded me for not
breathing: Otherwise, it was la la land
all morning.
GREAT BURGER SEARCH CORRESPONDENCE
Not only that, when Ron wakes you
up, the first thin$ you see is this
gargantuan plastic syringe. It is, by
actual measurement, 11 inches long
and two inches in diam~ter.
Bu t instead of being loaded with .
Xylocaine or some other fluid, here's
Dr. Ron squirting Coca Cola into your
mouth and down the hatch. Then,
several gushers of chocolate milk laced
with vitamins.
I t was like when I was a kid and had
my tonsils taken out: the nice doctor
sa id I could have all the ice cream I
wanted after it was over.
l hear stories about people who ha ve
open heart surgery and brain
transplants and they're out playing •
soccer a week later. Apparently I don't
function that way.
When I had my rotator cuff
transmogrified a year and a half ago, it
took six weeks to get back in harness.
At least then I could cat anything I
''"anted.
These days, it's soups and puddings,
puddings and soups. Yesterday I
unintentionally came up with pudding
soup, and it's not so bad. I'm not sure
where that batch of tapioca pudding
went astray, but it came out like milk a
la lumps.
Jello is always good when one ails,
but I find it too sweet. Besides, that
thick skin Jello sometimes gets is, to
me the best part, and even that is too
tough to manage right now.
Anne Spinn, our newsroom den
mother at the Daily Pilot, gave me a
splendid tip on sore-mouth food. Annl!
says it worked perfectly well when
spouse Gerry had a m:ijor bout with an
oral surgeon: "Take a can of Progresso
chicken-noodle soup and put it in the
blender. lt's terrific. In fact, that was
months ago and we're still eating it."
There is an up side to all this dental
delirium. At least I have to keep my
big mo11th shut for another week or so.
Fred Martin's column runs every
Thursday and Saturday.
PRHIDINT
Bill Clinton, (D), The White House, 1600
Pcnns~vania Ave., Washington, D.C. 20500.
(202) 456·1 ll l (6 a.in. to 2 p.m. t>.S.T.
VICI PRlllDINT
AJ Go,e, (D), The CJpitol Bldg., Suite 212,
Washington, D.C. 20500
OOVIRNOR
Pete Wilson, (R), Stotc CJpitol, Sacnmemo,
95814, (916)4-45·2841
U.I. llNATOU
Barbata Bonr, (D), l l l Hart Scn.ue Bldg.,
Suicc 212, Wuh111gton D.C., 20510 (202) •
224-3553 or. 2250 .E. lmpcrfal Hwy. Ste.
545, El Segundo, 902 ... 5, (31 0) 414-5700
Dianne Feirucein, (D), 331 Han Bldg.,
Washingron D.C., 20510 (201) 124·3841 or
111 J J Sanc1 Monia Blvd , Src. 915, Lo1
Angclc:a, 90025, (JlO) 914-7300.
llOUll o• RINlllNTATIVll
The search for the
best burger ;onUnues
The GreDt DDily Pilot Burger Search
-D biennial trodltlon tbat pits the
finest hamburger houses In CostD
Mesa and Ne.+port Dench -is here
again. Where can you find the best
burger in to1.-n? Here arc some reader
responses.
T .K. burgers are the best this time
around. They have the Born beat.
0
BOB THOMAS
Costa Mesa
The best hamburger is the flame
Burger at the Place Across From the
Port Theater in Corona def Mar.
'O
ELANOR HALL
Newport Beach
The Barn still has the best hamburgers
in town.
FRANK GRIMALDI
Laguna Beach
0
Try Sammy's on Wilson in Costa Mesa
for the best hamburger.
-CARY CLAYTON
Newport Beach
0
The best burger is at Big Daddy's in
Costa Mesa, on Fairview. I think it's
culled the Veggie Ourger.
0
JAMES PORTER
Costa Mesa
I am not a vegetarian but the veggie
burger at Hard Rock Cafe is the
burge r pick.
CHARLES ROLLINS
Costa Mesa
0
The Cheesecake Factory in Fashion
island has the best burger. It's call ed
the Classic burger.
0
SID NADLER.
Newport Beach
The best burgers are at Sammy's in ille
shopping center on Wilson in Costa
Mesa. They're the best I've eve r tasted.
. ANN HARDY
Costa Mesa
0
The Chicago Bulls has their 3-peat but
my vote for back-to-back is The Barn
Burger. That baby is a world
' champion.
TERRY WOODRUFF
Cosaa Mesa
0
For 20 years, I've thought that
Woody's Wharf has the best
hamburgers, plus it's the greatest place
to eat one.
JANE HOWLETT
Newport Deach
0
l-suggest th1f Back Bay Cafe in
Newport Beach. Try the barbecue
sauce with bacon. That's all, nothing
else on it.
0
RICK ROGERS
Newport Deach
We often go to get burge~ at T.K.
Burgers in Newport Beach. They are
the best.-
0
DOB RHEAUME
Newport Beach
Dill man's has far and away the best
hamburger. It is flavorful and well '
cooked.
0
JANE PARKS
Dal boa
The Park Avenue Cafe, Park Avenue
and Agate on Balboa Island, has fottr
hamburgers that will just knock you
out. I eat their hamburgers all the
time. Try one, you'll enjoy.
0
DICK MA RTIN
Balboa Island
Village Inn on Balboa l lan d has the ·
best hamburge rs. They have a fab ulous
hamburger or cheeseburger.
LURA DARRONE
Balboa Island
Barb~r shop is
still cutting edge
In the past there have been two front
page a rticles abou t a long term barber
shop here in Costa Mesa calJed
Amador's. The first article related how
the show had been here for over 20
years and because of the excellent
hafrcuts a man drove from River~ide
just to get one. The second article
related that the popular Amador wu s
in the hospital with cancer and th::it his
wjfe Ethel was carrying on the
business. One thing that wns not stated
in your article was the fact tha t Ethel
is an excellent barber. Not quite as
good us Amador, but close.
Everyone needs haircuts and I am
sure that she can cut any style, even
the ones wilh little designs in them. I
will warn you though that thb is an old
fashioned shop, not the super glitzy -
or fantastic. -just good friendly talk
with a lady with a slight "New Yaawk"
accent. This is not only a shop for men
but also you ladies needing haircuts,
styling or whatever and she can do that
too.
The shop is located on the outhwest
corner of Newport and 18th St. in the
salmon colored building (around the
corner). So, everyone in the area, go
get a haircut: ,
Keep Ethel so busy that she won't
have time to worry about Amador and
he can ge t on with kicking the big "C."
Ethel also makes inspiri ng book·
marks with Amador's help which she
sells to bring in a few bucks but if you
give her a nice lip you could get one
for free.
Last chance to
nght coast toll
L. LEYRER
Costa Mesa
A two-mile stretch of the Newport
Coast Road is being incorporau:d ioto
the new planned San Joaquin Hills
Transportation Corridor, forcing users
HOW TO CONTACT YOUR a1PalllNTATIVll
C hris Cox. (R), 47th Dist, 4000 MacArthur
Blvd., Ease Tower, Suite 430, Newport Bc.ach,
92660. 756·2244 or 206 Cannon Bldg.,
Wa.,hington, D.C. 20515, (202) 725-561 l.
(most of Newport Be.ich)
Dana Rohr:abac hcr, (R), 4Sth 1..:~t .. 16162
Beach Blvd., Suite 304, Huntington BC.lch,
CA 92647 847·2433 or 1027 Lorigworth
Duildmg, Wa$hington, D.C. 20515, (202)
225·241 5. (O,m McsJ .md West Newport
Be.ich)
AAftllNATI
Mari.an Bergeson, (R), 37rh Dist. 140
Newport Cc1mr Dme. Suire 120, Newport
Beach, 92660, 6-40-1 137 or (916) +45-4961.
(RcprtiellU Newport Dc.ich, C'.mr.:i Meu) •
ITATI AlllM•LY
Gilbert Fe~ (R.). 70th Din, 4299·
M.icArthur 81\-d,i Suire 204, Ncwpon ~ach,
92660, 756 0665 or (916) 4<t5·722l . •
(Newport Beach ~nd C.om Mcu.)
CALlfORNIA COASTAL COMMllllON
S.m Fr.mcisco (415) 904-5200 (South com
region covcrJge split between oOiccs in Long
Beach (113) 590·5071, 11nd SJn Diego.
COUNn IOAllD OF IUltllVllOU
HJJI of Adminismno11, 10 Civic Center Pl.m,
S.inu Ana, 92701
Harriett Wieder lnJ 01u. Com Mcs.i,
834·3220
Tom Riley Sch Dist. (Newpott Be.a1;h, SJnU
An.a Heights) 834·3550
COUNTY IOAaD O• IDUCATION
200 Kalmw Dnvc, Cost.a M~.a. P.O. Box
9050, 92628-9050, 966-4000.
Eli.ubtth O. Parker, member, Tnmcc AKa 5
(Co.u Mes.a, Newpon Beach.)
CO.An COMMUNITY COLUel
~' •
DllTllCT
1370 AdlmS Ave. Com Mcs.i, 92626,
432·5012
Ch:m~·cllor : \Villfam M. Vega, I::. O .. ;
President: Wll.l ter G. How:tldi Bo.ir<l
Members: Sherry Baum, Paul G. Berger,
Walter G. How"d, Armando R. Ruiz;
Student Trustee: }1U1 Clutter
Cln OOVllNMINT
Costa Meu: Ciry Hall, 77 f.:iir Dri\e,
754·5223. S.indy Genis, m.iyor, Joe erick.\0111 Mary Hombuckk, l'cn:r Buff.a, .md ]Jy
Humphrey, council mcmbcu.
Newport Btadu City H1JI, 3300 t-:c'~"
Blvd., 6ff·3309. i\b)'Or, Cl.:irt'nce Turner;
M.ayor pro ~ Jc.an Warr; John Co~, cvc:h·n
Han, John Hedges, JJn p.bly, Phil Samotlc.
OUN .. COUNTY •AIR •OARD
II Fair Or., Com Mesa. 108·3147 Prcsi\knt,
I.and)' Sm.Ith, Vitt Praidcnt, Buck Johnt;
of Newport ~oast Road to pay a toll
charge. (SI round trip, going to S 1.50
in two years and no end cap.) It is a
foregone conclusion that many of the
thousands of ca~ now using the road
will return to Pacific Coast Highway,
Marguerite Avenue and the other local
~Meets, once more impacting our
neighborhoods; nullirying the traffic
mitigation me:isure that required the
NC\\ port Coast Road to be built in the
first place.
Thus, with the full approvaJ of our
elected officials, a road that has been
in the public domain, will be turned
into a toll road. This was done without
:my public notice rtnywhere near where
users of the road lived.
The affected residents were never
told, warned, or knew that aqion was
being considered to take their
establi~hcd free road and turn it into n
toll road. Since such action could be a
serious breach of the public trust, the
attorney general is conducting an
investigution regarding the legality of
turning a public road into a toll road,
withou t mlequate opportunity for
public comment and without adequate
public notice.
before making a legal ru ling, we now
have a belated chance for public
comment. Did you ever hear or see any
notice or the proposed change in the
status of Newport Coast Road; did you
ever sec notice posted anywhere giving
time of a public hearing; did you ever
sec or hear of notice of intent to
abandon part of the Newport Const
Road so it could be made part of the
plnnned San Joaquin Transportation
Corridor Toll Road and that then you
would have to pay to use your road?
J( you arc concerned about slick
actions by those elected offic ials who
arc more interested in serving their
own agendas, instead of the public
interest. take live minutes and write
Deputy Attorney General Clayton
Roche, 455 Golden Gate Ave. Ste.
6200, S:in Francisco, 94 102-3658, re:
Opinion No. 93-1205.
JEAN MORRIS
Corona dcl Mar
•
D1m:to1s Doy llenlcy, John Crun, Don
Willet, Jim Lindberg, G:u-y lhyabwa,
llmily Sanford, M:u-fan L:i Fo llette.
NIWPORT·MllA UNlfllD SCHOOL
DllTllCT
1601 16th Sr, NC\1 pon Uc.ich, 760-3200.
S11pcnntcnJ1:m· ~be Bernd n~.ird Members:
kod M.u:~UIJiw, pn:~idcnt; Jim de Boom,
Jud)' F1l11<:0, Sherry Loofbourrow, Ed Decker,
M.inl\J Huor, forrcsr Wemer.
MllA CONIOLIDATID WAHR
DISTRICT
1965 Pbl'\:nti~. Com Mesa, 631 -1200 Bo.ud
Mcmber1: Trudy Ohlis, Hank Panlan,
Mario Durante, Jxk Hall, Tom Nelton
COITA MUA SANnAltY •llftlCT r.o. DOx 1200, Com Mcaa 91621-1200,
754-504J. Board Manbcri: Jamca Wahnc:r,
James Fcrryrn~. Narc Reade. Mille Schaf'cr,
-and An l'trry.
•
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Thuraday, Match 31, 1994 A11
Brown Act reVisions put new ·limits on city councils
~ Rules made to bring
more of what officials do
before the public.
BY DAVID H.EJTZ, STArr Warna
NEWPORT BEACH -Discus-
sions among city officials are
about 10 become more public.
Amendmcn1s to the Ralph M.
Brown Act go into effec1 Friday,
placing slrict limitations on what
city councils and their commi11ees
can and cannot talk about when
the public's not invited.
For example:
• Officials will not be allowed to
discuss matters not listed on the
agenda unless a member of the
public brings it up. If a resident
asks a question or wants to talk
about something not on the agen-
da, the council is permitted to an·
swer questions and engage in brief
discussion.
• lf a city official wants to talk
about an issue, the discussion must
first be agendlzed. That means
council members no longer will be
able to bounce issues off their
peers during the afternoon study
session.
• Private discussions about city
business among a majority of
council members is strictly prohib·
ited ou1side of public hearings. Ex-
empt from that law are topics per-
taining 10 personnel matters, liti·
gation, property acquisition and
other subjects allowed ·to be dis-
cussed during closed session.
During a recent study session,
Councilwoman Evelyn Hart asked
City Attorney Bob Burnham if
that means she cannot call indi·
vidual council members to discuss
issues before the meeting. He dis-
couraged it.
•After th e council comes out of
closed session, it must immediately
report what was discussed and
how the members voted. Cities are
not required to report the specifics
'Of closed session conversa1ions.
A written report of mplters dis-
cussed during closed session will
be placed on file in the Ci1y
Clerk's office.
Mayor Clarence Turner said he
doesn't believe the new laws will
significantly ch;inge the way meet·
ings are conducted.
"There aren't going to be a lot
of major changes insofar ns the
public is concerned," he said.
"They probably won't even notice
anything diff crent."
He said some of the new Drown
Act requiremen ts arc going to be
costly because administrators must
print and post agendas for each of
the city's approximately 30 com-
mittees.
"Some of ii is just nonsen!.e,"
turner said. "The Oicycle Trails
Committee, for instance, has to
post all of their business."
City Man:iger Kevin Murphy
s:lid the laws will m:ike it more
difficult for him to get opinions
from council membcrs1
"h makes it difficult for me 10
try to ask n council member,
'What do you think of this?' And
for me 10 call up all seven council
members, I'd be in \.iokuion," he
said.
He said 1ha1 frustrates hi m.
. "The state lcgisl:uurc h.1s caucu\CS ..
and they do exac1ly tha1," he s:uJ . •
0
" It's bizarre."
Restrictions not expected
to affect Newport-Mesa Wanna place a classified ad? Call 642-5678 for information .
f.--tl~Sehool-off iciai s-say-they
have been making effort to
open operations to public
since $4 miilion
embezzlement.
Bv Russ Lo~ STAFF WRm:R
NEWPORT-MESA -There
arc no qramatic changes expected
in the way the school board con-
.. ducts meetings as a result of
• Brown Act revisions.
The Newport-Mesa Unified
School District bas been making a
concerted effort to open its opera-
tions to public scrutiny since the
$4 million embezzlement by
former budgc1 director Stephen
Wagner was discovered in Novem-
ber 1992.
When a highly critical 219-page
report of school district practices
and procedures was made public
last week, Newport-Mesa officia!s
had 50 copies printed and avail-
able at the school board meeting.
"We're workin$ on the second
printing now," said school district
Superintendent Mac Bernd. "The
biggest mistake we made is 'lOt
charging for them. We could have
raised some real revenues out of
this thing."
School district officials, in fact,
have decided that all report~ on is-
sues of public concern will be
available.
"We will have sufficient copies
at school board meetings of any
report that would be of clear in·
terest JO the public," said school
board President Ed Decker.
"That's going to be our posture
for the fu ture."
Under Drown Act revisions, the
school board-appointed Budget
Advisory Commiuee and Audit
Commiuee must now operate
under the limitations of a public
agenda and give public notice of
their meetings.
But school district lawyers say
committees on English-as-a-
second-language programs and
communily involvement which
were created by Bernd are not
subject to the Brown Act.
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ADAMS INSURANCE ~·l570 Brookbollow, #116 -~-Santa Ana, CA 92705 I •Earty wtlbdnrnl• •rt .. llifect .. • 11IJ'fttlder cbe,..
"It just seemed a morc;_ru11urJl1-.. J.1i"E~11JC~;-......,,,......,,,.,..;::~~-7'.~.........:,.._~....111uw:i~N-...._.•+-~.,...;....+~'"""=,.,.::::.. ___ -it--+F;;;:::;;~-tf==;-------------.--:-t--~1 thing for those task forces to be
appointed by staff," Decker said.
"It doesn't seem wise for the
board to be continually involved in
the appointment of committees."
Brown Act Tevisions tighten re-
strictions on what issues qualify ~
for closed-session meetings, re-
quiring them to be indi vidually
listed on a public agenda. And any
actions takef! behind closed doors
must be immediately reported
after the'meeting is through .
~OFF ~
CCJMPUTER
JBOUlllllOUllE
The school boa rd is also .re-
quired .by the new laws to vote in
public on student extJ'lsions, al·
though student names will not be
revealed.
"For our school district, I don't
think the changes will be apparent
enough to the public so they
would perceive any significant
change in the way we're doing
business," said Newport-Mesa Su-
perintendent Bernd. "We want ev-
erything out in the open."
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A t 2 Thuraday, March 31, 1994 • Newport BeaCh/Coata MHa Dally Pilot
BROWN
f,..heeA1
were not open to public scrutiny or debate.
Dut the revised laws do not apply to advi-
ory committees which are noc created by
legislative bodies, according to school dis-
trict attorneys.
Bernd has created two committees to ad-
vise him on English~as-n-sccond-langunge
programs and community involvement.
School district lawyers soy those committees
need not creole an agenda or make public
notice of their meetings.
"The meetings I have involving these task
forces will be open to the public," Bernd
said. "81.1t there needs to be some elcsncnt
of spontaneity. If )'01.1 can only &alk abOut
thiqs on the aaenda, in some cases you 11i-
fle creativity."
Long considered the "Rodney Danger-
field of California Law," the revised Brown
Act tightens limi&s on what can be discussed
by officials at city council and school board
meetings. Unless it's on the agenda, it's out
or bounds. But public officials can respond
to public comments made during meetings
on issues not listed l)n the agenda.
The revisions are the result of a two·year
effort by the California Newspaper Publish-
ers Association and other print and broad-
cast prof csslonals to stop abuses of the sel·
dom-enforccd law.
Local elected omcials can no lonaer con·
duct public business behind the cloak of a
cloled-lellion meeting. Closcd·scuion items
under discuaion must qualify under a atrict
set of guidelines and musl be specifically
identified in a public agenda. And any deci-
sions must be immediately reported after
the closed-door meeting.
The revised law also prevents meetings at
remote locations away from public view.
Citizens can no longer j>e silenced for
making cri1:cal comments during a public
meeting about a local legislative body or its
actions. And public meetings can be re-
corded, videotaped and photographed as
long as those actions arc not disruptive.
Gov. Pete Wilson vetoed a revision of the
t
Brown Act in 1992. but 1i&ned a compro-
mile venion lul year. The Implementation
of the law wu delayed for tour months;
until April l, to &ive local elected off&cialt
time to adjust.
Media officials say it will now be easier to
decipher what is aoang on behind the closed
doors of local city and school district meet-
ings.
It wlll certainly be easier for the media to
challenge Brown Act violations in court.
Previously, successful court action depended
on proof of "criminal awarene~s." Now, all
it lakes is proof or a violation.
"I personally think the revised Drown Act
i~ a great improvement,'' SDid school board
Pn;sidcnt Ed Decker. "It provides consider-
able safeguards for the public interest."
CLASS could really hafpen," said Kristen EYEBROW won her the scholarship from
Whitney, 13, o Newport Beach, Aaron Drolhers. Another was
who in her demonstration teacher references.
"I find it ironic that an art
store, whtch uses slogans such as
'Where Lifestyle is an Ar1 ,' finds
uniqueness in personal expression
u!1acceptable."
Pre• P••• A 1 conquered a knife-wielding •rem ..... A 1 So when she was told last week
old, had to simulate escaping a "gang member" who had abduc-my ability 10 perform my job. I am that the earring would have to go,
variety or situations -from being tcd her. "It could happen 10 prompt, accurate with the register Schichj turned 10 one of her
LEI IER
,,_Pll.-A1
Houssels said the bottom line ls
that the proposed toll booth was a
surprise.
"I think the point remains that
hundreds of people -thousands
of people, really -arc writing in,
saying they were not informed,"
she said. "I think we must be very
careful that the public is properly
informed."
As of two weeks ago, the At-
torney General's Office hud re·
ccivcd ab<.>ut 250 letters on the
issue.
Meanwhile, toll road lobbyists in
Sacramento arc fighting to kill leg-
islation proposed by Ferguson that
would prohibit charging a toll on
Newp<>rt Coast Drive or any free
pubhc road. ·
The Assembly Transportution
Committee will review the bill at
1:30 p.m. April 11.
mugged to sexual assault. anyone." and a courteous custo01cr service teachers, a professional artist, who
"We want to n'lakc sure you Some parents grimaced, others representative. My record is spot-proceeded lo photocopy her writ-E st ........ t h Int E tbluff Park'
never have to be a victim," Gallen cheered children on as the less." ten warning and post it on school 8 Ir ......_,J 0 op 0 II
r,,.,...~~-.-to~l~d~p~a~re~n~ts,.....,..,,.a1~1d"="th~c~ir~c=h~il--d~re~n,....,.,.=-~au_d_i~en~c~e~w~a~tc~h~e~d~srtu~d~e~n~ts~~:=Y:~~~A~a~r~on...--.=B-ro_1_hc_r~s ....... m_a_n~a~e-rs--,...,r~e--~t."-">Unds.JcutlC!UllhCLSlildc.nts . ._~_.._~..-i~~~B·~~-t---'1HW!H:!~er-Httnno1M1111ttt-iton-Tnrnr--~-r~........, c ore e nes ay s emons ra ion moc attac crs in t e eyes, c o e · fused to comment on anytha'ng A hotocopy of the compan 's
began. "The simulations of their throats and even kick Schichi said. So did an Aaron p y Eastbluff Park on Saturday, hiding eggs for children, posing for
k. d ( dress code policy notes that it free pictures and handing out prizes. . abductions are the in s o attackers in the groin. Brothers spokeswoman at corpo-bans "ornament"! J·cwelry (' e attacks children are targeted for. "I'm somewhat shocked to see .. ' 1• • The 11th annual Great caster Egg Hunt, sponsored by the
Th . . . . I' . d . h h d b 1, 1 rate headquarters in Commerce. nose •. tongue or lip rings) and ex-city, begins at 10 a.m. for t~dlers 2 and younger. 1s training is rea 1stic an w at s e can o, ut m a so Schichi, who has worked for the otic/extreme jewelry.". Old · """
graphic." pleased that she can do it," said company for a year and a half, "What's the difference between er kids -up to the agb of 10 -will get to join the hunt
The JO-hour course taug ht Richard Scott, whose 10-year·old said she will seek unemployment exotic and decorative," Schichi about half an hour later.
children <1bout where an attacker's daughter Samantha in her t 1. Th d d h asked, pointing out that she has Eastbluff Park is at the intersection of Vista del Oro and weakest areas arc and how to demonstration wrangled from the s ar ing urs ay, an opes some Vista def Sol. ·
disable someone long enough to clutches of someone about to or the paintings she has on display never been reprimanded for a
ge t away, even if the' person has a sexually assault her: at Fullerton's Ipso Facto gallery wrist lattoo or her magenta--By t11 e Daily PUC?t
knife. Children also learned how "Why leave it up to him," sell. colored hair.
to stand up for themselves against Gallen said, as she coached many A senior at the Ari Institute or
anyo ne trying to tal..c advantage of ·children from the sidelines during Southern California in Laguna
them. the demonstrations. "I want you to Beach, Schicbj's 4.0 grade point
"I think it's good because it leave it up to you." ave rage is on·c of the things that
CHILDREN'S SPECIAL
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t
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~ ,.
Newport Beach/Costa Meea Dally Pilot Thursday, March 31 , 1994 81
PORTS
SPORTS EDITO R ROGER CARLSON, 642-"330, ext. 387
PRIDI Of THI COAST aAllBALL TOURNAMINT ' Ladies have .
a chance
to ·show
their stuff
...,. Players can enter natiQnal
v.aAt-91.u-sHmmHlflfl..~Rm~--...;._~d
from four rounds of play.
T he best women golfers play on the
LPGA Tour.
Good amateurs now have a
chance to compele on the national level.
Today, women don't need to play on
th e LPGA Tou r to innuence business or
society. And they can prove it.
. As the n~mbe r of women taking up golf
increases, women golfers of all abilities
will have the opportunity lo participate in
a national Two-Dall amateur golf cham-
pionship (9 or 18 holes) to benefit the
March o( Dimes Dirth Defects founda-
tion.
SHAUNA !l:OUlUT, D AIL\' PllOT
CdM's Bryson Groat is caught in rundown between second and third by Costa Mesa's Joey Arce (20) as Eric Estrella looks on. Groat was safe at second.
Pl:i)ers, :ifter selecting a partner, s1mpl)
pl:iy and post scores at their fa,·orite golf
course, v. ith beginning, intermediate and
advanced golfers having an equal
opport uni ty lo advance to the national
fi nals Nov. 11-13 at Amelia Island
Pl:inuuion, Fla.
·corona del ·Mar's pitching stall has .a. Friend Co-sponsored .by Working \VomJn and
Working Mother magazi nes and 1-800
TEE TIME, a nationwide golf
reservations and tournament planning
service, the N:itional Women's Amateur
Gol f Challenge will be the premier event
of its kind fo r women . ...,. Sea Kings' junior right-hander
sharp in victory over Costa Mesa.
Bv RICH.ARD D UNN, Sro.-:rs W 11.1Tu.
CORONA DEL MAR -It's not easy
staying sharp in the bullpen. When the
pitching staff is. deep in talent, innings arc
far and f cw between.
Mall Friend, howeve r, a Corona del .
Mar High junior right-hander, made the ·~~~
most of an opportunity Wednesday, pitching 4Vl score-
less innings, and lowering his earned-run ave rage from
3.81 to 2.39 in a single af1ernoon, as host CdM de-
fea1ed Costa Mesa, 11 -3, in the finale of the Pride of
the Coast Tournament.
Although the Sea Kings won their 10th consecutive
game, including fou r in a row in the Pride of the Coast,
they settled with a third-place ban.nee because Santa
Margari1a and Brea Olinda met in the mythical cham-
pion~hip game by vir~ue of sco ring more runs in the
previous three games.
But CdM ( 10-2), last year's Pride of the Coast Tour-
nament winner, isn't concerned about spring t>reak
baseball.
A more meaningful item comes on Saturday, when
the sizzling Sea Kings host Woodbridge in a Sea View
League makeup game at 11 a.m.
Senior right-hander Dan MacMillan, who owns a
1.16 ERA with 28 strikeouts and only one .walk in 18
innings pitched this season, will take the mound for
ill~ ~ DAILY PILOT SCOREBOARD
RUNS HITS ERRORS
COSTA MESA ll E l1
CORONA DEL MAR Ill Ill ll.
CdM. Frien d, 2-0, was almost as impressive against the
Mustangs (5-8), allowing two hits and stri king out fou r.
He also walked four.
"He's going to be a real good pitcher, a nd we're real
excited to have him," CdM Coach Matt Lundin said.
"He's been limited in his innings, and it's tough to
keep a g\ly sharp when you don't have a lot of in-
nings."
CdM designated hitter Jim Huston also experienced
a breakthrough, going 3 for 3, including a two-run sin·
gle in the Sea Kings' seven·run fourth inning that
broke the game open. Huston, who started slowly this
season, raised his batting average from .285 to .354 (11
for 31}.
"I was 0 for my first 10 (at-bats) this year," Huston
said. "Then after that, I picked it up. We had some re·
ally tough games early in the year, like Mater Dci, and
my swi ng wasn't norma l."
ll was normal aga inst Cos ta Mesa.
Huston led off the second inning. with a single to left
field, then singled and scored a run in the fourth, an
inning in which CdM se nt 12 batters to' the plate.
When the Sea Kings h:td already scored five runs
that inning, Huston came up a second lime and
promptly laced a single to left that scored Jeff Dow-
man and Myles Davis.
The circus started when Bryan Dear reached on an
infield error, a soft hit one-hopper that took a tricky
hop and slipped by Mesa second baseman Josh Cant.
Huston singled, then first baseman Chad Johnson !tin-
gled home Bear, putting an end to Mesa ·starter Mike
Adclmund's outing.
"(Adelmund) was tired, and his arm was a little ten-
der going in," Costa Mesa Coach Doug Deats said.
"He threw a couple innings (on Tuesday), and he had
a s;ollision (Tuesday), so his collarbone was a little
sore. We were only looking fo r two in nings from him."
Adelmund pitched three scoreless innings, giving up
one hit, before the fourth inning.
"I thought Adelmund did a grea t job against us,"
Lu ndin said. "He worked ahead of our hitters (in the
count), and it took us some lime to get adjusted to
him."
Mesa's wheels came off when the bull pen was beck-
oned.
On an attemp ted squeeze, CdM's Bryson Groat
scored Huston from third base and wound up with an
RBI bunt single, but Johnson was nailed at third. Fol-
lowing back-to-back walks, MacMillan brought home
Groat with a scoring fly ball to center.
See FRllND/Po1e 13
Pat.terned after the highly successful
Oldsmobile Scramble, the Women's
Amateur Golf Challenge will enable
thousands of playe rs throughout the
country lo part icipate.
The Women's Amateur Golf Challenge
commences "ith the .-
!ilarl of the golf season.
or after April 15.
Entran ts h:ive until
Aug. 15 to post scores
from four rounds, one
of v. hich must be
played in an outing -a
charity (March of
Dimes day), club,
company or chic golf
event.
Using a scoring
sy!item designed by
tournament organizers,
a golfer of any ability
level can pl:iy a 9-or
Club
golf
18-hole rou nd and advance from local
events to regional and national finals.
Check wi th you r local professional to find
out if a March of Dimes event is being
held at your club.
Cabrera's solid pitching effort wasted against Century
Scores are submitted to 1-800 TEE
TIMES and teams who qualify for
advancement to regional finals are
notified by Sept. 1. Regional rounds '' 111
be played in September (weekends only).
All participants will receive a free
fou r-day, three-night certificate (v:ilued :it
$450) lo stay at one of sLx rerorl
destinations.
BY JEFF C H ESEN, SPORTS W R.ITER.
COSTA MESA -Estancia High
pitcher Jose Cabrera shou ld be celebrat-
ing today. ·
He followed Saturday's one-hit base-
ball victory ove r Bolsa Gr<inde with an-
other one-hiller, this time against Pacifi c
Coast League rival Cent ury. But the Ea~
glcs' lack of or' .nse led to a 1-0 loss for the junior
right-hander.
Cabrera stn. ·k out six and walked two in his com-
plete game effort. His domi nance was so complete
that no Century baserunner reached second base
after the second inni ng.
But it only took two poor pitches to ruin Cabrera's
day.
After striki ng out third baseman Richard Cevallos
to open the second inning, Cabrera jumped out to an
0-2 count on shortstop Jorge Frausto. The next pitch
got a little too much of the plate though, and Fraus-
to sent it deep into right field for a double.
When a Cabrera pitch went all the way to the
backstop, Frausto advanced to third: He scored
when Jose Rome ro se nt a fly ball to center field for
the second out of the inning.
"Until we can take care of the little things and
play the game the way ii is meant to be pla}•ed,
we're not. going to be that successful," Coach Paul
Troxel said.
"We've given up one hit and won by a run
(against Dolsa Grande), we've given up three hits
and lost (to Trabuco Hills), we've given up five hi.ls
and lost (to Santa Margarita), and now we 've given
up one hit and lost. h 's just a matter of getting
things done," Troxel said. •
As was the case Tuesday, when a pop Oy fell forc-
ing extra in nings, the 8igles' mistakes got them into
trouble. Runners failed to move up on wild pi1chcs,
he CAaalllA/Pe9e IJ
All regional "inners (280) will recci'e
complimentary ai rfare to the national
finals.
Ent ry fee for the local event!. is $55 per
per on, plus green fees. The March of
Dimes will receive S 175.000 based upon
25,000 anticipated pla)ers. Applications
and further information are available by
calling 1-800 T EE T IMES. Let's see if we
get any local women to the nationals.
•Kitchen Golf ... The second annual
Presto Foodservice Orange Coast College
Gol f Classic, which is being underwritten
by a gencrou donation from Presto
Foods, will help provide for the
continuing renovation nnd im provement of
the college's instructional kitchens, and
support for students enrolled in the
program.
This year's event is April 11 at the
he CLUI OOU/Pe9e 82
World champion Newport Harblir sailors meet some resistance
~ Local squad holds off stubborn rival;
April Fool's Day event on tap Friday.
N cwport Harbor High had more of a fight to
win the local Baker Trophy qualifier last
weekend than th ey expected'.
Even though 1hc NHHS sailors are the dcfendjng
notional and world champion sailing team, they still
hod to fight for rcspcc~ from-San Diego's University
High sallin1 team.
Durin& &he last round of roces, the NHHS team
suffered a surprise loss to La Jolla High.
Meanwhile, University Hiah took three straiaht wins
to offset lint-round losses to Newport Harbor and
Corona del Mar.
11aia left the door open for a la t rl(C.
winner·take·all showdown between Newport and
Univeni1y. Even thouah Newport won the race and
the regatta, they will have to face this same
University High team again at the nationals.
Team racing, unlike fleet racing, uses six
boats matched in a three.on-three format,
with race winners determined by the
lowest combined team score. As Coach
Bill Wakeman puts ii, "If fleet racing is
like a swimming meet, team racing is like
water polo, with more emphasis on
teamwork and strateay."
For the last year, this same NHHS team
hu been the top hi&h school team raeina
team in the counlry.
The Baker Trophy is awarded to the
hip school raclna national champion, and
this year's champk>nlhips will be sailed in
June at lfly·WMland YC in Mississippi.
The top three teams -Newport Harbor,
University and La Jolla Hiah -gualify for
the champion hips. while fourth·plxe Corona del
Mar ii ttM ahernate.
Sailina for Newport were Danny Zimbaldi, Steve
Kleha, Nalhan Dunham, Patrick Hoaan.
Casey Hopn and Courtney Polovina.
Watch to sec the Unjvenity and NHHS
rivalry renewed at the hi&h school
nationals later this year, as both promise
to be top-five teams in the championships.
• The inaupral Para&lidinl/Windsurfina
Ca&alina Challenae will IW\ Friday ·
afternoon olf Pala& Vadil.
Mcontina to e...a «Ma rlltra.;
ProlmionaJ wincltuden Wiil lkerallr
laundl themselves off tlae Pa:5:cntes
dilra. usint paraatiden to floet owu
SOO vertical feet before IUMli• Oil
boards and raana 20 ml._ eo the llllllliul.
Local "board-heed" °"'II Wellb bas
btea pnctidfta perealidifts for weeb to •
ready himself for the nent. Despite bcina a novice
para&lider, Welsh is confident about his' chances:
"My main competition comes from my brother
Chris, who shaved off his beard for better
aerodynamics, and David Blackman, a former Navy
SEAL. who is now a local jeweler.
"But they don't know that I'll be paragliding whh
a new extra-small chute 10 speed up my descent."
Swedish event sponsor Loof Lirpa says that while
combinina paraalidin& and windsurfina is
theo~tically ~blc, this is the fil'll time anyone
bas tried ao cg..._ thele two nealL l.lrpe'a
compa., 1'bep ,,,., lpOftlOn "&uemC" aportina
eventa lrouftd the world.
0Mn the mhtrcnt danacr ol thia ewat. only
profetlioftal boardlailon arc allowed to eater. Besa
Yilwina will be bf boet below the PalOI Verdel can., Ft1dij, Apffl Ant, atcNlld I p.na. Joli•....,...., ... ,.. talll-........ ,., ,,.,,,. ,.,,., rM7 .,....,....., .
...
..
.
82 Thursday, March 31, 1994
\
Newport Beach/C08ta M ... Dally Pilot
R barmen anding success
in local onshore waters
...,. Sand bass, barracuda, halibut, as
well as bonito, _white sea bass biting.
S pring fishing conditions have arrived in local
offshore waters, and anglers heading out on
sportfishers departing from Newport bay are
return ing to the dock with a good mixture of
bottom fish and surface feeders. •
Sand bass, barracuda and legal halib111 have
moved into shallow water off Hun1ing1on Beach,
while over at Catalina Island, the front side has
been hot for bonito, a few white sea bass and legal
sized calico bass.
The bonito bite is pretty consistent at
and receivers are currently only holding large
sardines. There is very little sq uid at the island,
and it 's taking a long time to jig up just a couple
of live squid for .the bait tank.
Squid is being kept and only fished when there
is a chance of hooking into a white sea bass. The
closest any bulk schools of squid arc reported is
off Santa Barbara, and the Channel Islands might
be where the white sea bass season kicks off for
Southland anglers this spring.
• Bay fishing is still on the slow side for most
anglers fishing plastics, li'{e bait anti trolling black
and silver plugs.
Spoiled bay bass, short halibut, jaclc smelt and a •
few croaker Dre being caught by anglers
the island, with the best fishing laking
....,....,._1_i~i~~P~la~c-c~C.r.Mrom..thc..casLcuu.-ui:~-UiJ~~JUl!!r--r
Point, 'and some of 1he boneheads being
caught are real whoppers.
fishing from renlal skiffs and off Pavilion
~in--llall&>oa..-l~"-'~llO-~~~~~i;.....-.~-1
being caught are legal fish, and veteran
l<ATSVYA RA1NON£, DAILY PILOT
The Raptors, winners of the AYSO Region 97 Division 5 Area 0 championship, finished in
fourth p~~e recently in the tri-sectional tournament held at Chapman Fields in ·Garden Grove.
Raptors take their best shot
...-Team's fourth-place finish can't
dampen enthusiasm of fine season.
T he season for the Raptors, the American
Youth Soccer Organization Region 97 Di·
vision 5 Arca Q ch:impions, came lo an end
recently, wi1h the local team finishing fourlh at
the tri-sectional tournament held at Chapman
Fields in Garden Grove.
The Rnptors fell in both of their games at
Chapm:in Fields by 2-1 scores, with Amy Ross
scoring each of 1hc team's goals.
"We still got a fourlh·place medal, and we were
tickled to be 1he re," said he:id coach Glen Ross.
The 1cam members of the Raptors included:
Jordan Carmack, Lindsay "LT" Thayer, Ashley
Parole, Taryn Shefnette, Elizabeth Agne~.
13rinnne Parmeter, Hilary Havens, Sarah Bj.xle'r,
Lindsay Miller, Kristen Hahn, Jennifer Miller,
Meredilh Poiter, Amy Ross and Kate Younglove.
Assisting Conch Glen Ross is Joe Havens. Raptors' Amy Ross (right) heads upfield.
Orange Coast bats silenced by DeAnza in 3-0 loss
...-Cevallos' solid pitching
performance spoiled as
Sues manage just two hits.
VISALIA -Car· it l0s Cevallos pitched '"
J solid eight innings,
:.illowing no earned -
runs, but it wasn'l
enough Wednesd:iy .;
as the Orange CoaM College base-
ball team dropped a 3-0 decision
10 DeAnza in the first round of
the Buckman-Mitchell Classic
hosted by College of the Sequoias.
Cevallos yielded eight hits, but
didn't walk a batter while ~triking
· oul two. However, five OCC errors
proved his undoing, as DeAnza's
single talalies in the second, fourth
and seventh innings were all un-
earned.
On offense, Richard Ernst and
Nick Valencia had the lone hit~
for Coast, bo1h singles. Coast (4·
17 overall) on ly had f.our men left
on base in the game.
The only thing resembling a
thre:H for OCC came in the fourth
inning when the Pirates put run-
ners '1 t first and second, bul cou ld
nol convert the opportunity .
OCC needs 10 win three games
today 10 remain alive in the dou-
ble-cli mina1ion tournament, the
first one coming at JO a.m.
DEAN%A 3, ORANGE COAST 0
DcAnu 010 100 100-3 8 0
Orange Coast 000 000 000-0 2 S
Slmont;icchl ;ind Burke; Cev;illos, Lopez
(9) 01nd Igoe, lfcnson (9). W-Simont01cchi,
J ·O. L-Cev;illos, 1·2. 28-Rodriqucs (0).
Costa Mesa swimmer sets Junior national mark
Jessamyn Miller of Cosia
Mesa set a Junior National Wesl
record in Grand Forb, N.D. re·
cenlly.
The 13-year-old had a winning
time of I :03.39 in the 100-yard
breas1stroke to break 1he cxisl·
ing record of I :03.68 sci by
Cathy O'NeW in 1992. In addi·
tion to setting a Junior Na1ional
Wesl record, she also broke the
Sou1hern California swimming
record for 13-14-year-old girls of
1 :03.83, previously set by Shan-
non Orcult in 1981.
Miller also placed llecond in
the 200-yard breaststroke with a
lime of 2: 16.92. Both times are
Senior National siandards.
The 100-yard breaststroke
record was the only individual
mark se1 al 1he mecl. Miller was
competing in her first Junior
Nationals.
Miller is an eighth grade stu-
dent at Carden Hall in Newport
Beach.
anglers are concerned about the lack of
Tim Best of Dana Point was fishing on
board t~e three-quarter day boal
California Dawn, operating out of
Davey's Locker (673-1434), and hooked
into an eight-point bonito fishing a live
sardine.
smaller fish in 1he bay.
Could it be that pollution and runoff
from last year's heavy rain changed the
quality of water in our harbor and this
has affected 1he natural spawning and
h~llhy popuJation of spotted bay bass
that existed just a couple of years ago in
the boy?
Aceording to reports from the landing
staff, bonito are accounting for 1hc bulk
of the top water fish being sacked, and
when the surface action drops off,
sportfishers are anchoring over shallow
water rock piles where sculpin and
Outdoors
e The Santa Ana River Lakes have
opened, and anglers who braved the rain
enjoyed great trout fishing. According to
reporls from the lake, anglers reeled in
sheephead are biting. lo1s of 1rophy class 'bows.
This outdoor writer fished the west end of
Catalina recently aboard the charter boat Angela
(310-804-1078), wi1h owner Richard Shaw, in
hopes of hooking a while sea bass.
There were 25 1rout checked in a1 the tackle
shop that weighed more than seven pounds!
Russell Baldwin of Cos1a Mesa caught a
9.3-pound rainbow trout on green gliuer Power
Bai l fishing in the big lake at the Santa Ana River
Lakes. Condi1ions at 1he island were good With the
water temperature holding al near 60 degrees with
clean blue water all around 1he west end. The sea
bass didn't want to cooperale, perhaps due to lack
of live squid in the bai t tank, but flat seas did
produce a mixed bag o( calico bass and shallow
water rock fish.
This 1hrce-lake fishing complex is open seven
days a week and also offers 111ght.-time fishing on
Fridays and Saturdays.
The bulk of 1he ca1ch was made on cut squid,
and larger calico bass were taken on.small
sardines drifted in deep water just off 1he bouom.
Catalina Isfond fi~hing should continue to improve
as the water warms daily. There ,are yellowtail and
barracuda around the island and while sea bass
are just wailing to move up to shallow waler.
e Irvine Lake ill also kicking 001 trophy class
rainbow trou1, largemouth bass and channel
catfish.
Cosia Mesa angler Larry Lembke was one of
the lucky angle rs to hook in10 a big rainbow this
past week al Irvine ns he reeled, in an eight-pound
'bow thut engulfed a green Power Nugget fishing
from the lake's west shore.
Irvine is being stocked iwice a week with trout
nnd should continue to provide a good place fo r a
family fishing trip. Live bait has been tough to net off the beach,
CLUB GPLF
fre•P.Pat
Santa Ana Country Club, with a
shotgun start at 10 a.m. in a
scramble format . A barbecue
lunch will be provided on the
course, with awards, lee gifts, door
prizes and a receptiop immediately
following.
Lasl year's tournament drew
more than 110 food service
industry leaders and neued Qvj!r
$50,000 to benefit the OCC..
Instructional Food Service
Program.
Orange Coast offers the only
program in Sou1hern California
accredi 1ed by 1he An1erican
Culinary Federation Educational
Institute, ns well as induslry
accredi1ed classes in culinary ans,
food serv ice managemenl, ho1el
management and nulrition.
For more information, call Doug
Bennett at 432-5126.
e Righteous Tournament ... Blll
Medley of the Righteous Brothers
will perform at center court at the
Newport Beach Tennis Cl ub
during the awards/dinner concert
of the third annual Record Setters
Day Pro-Am at the Newport
Beach Golr Course June 18.
Last year, tournament director
and two-time def ending champion
Keith Wyrick was the spark plug
behind a Sl0,000 donation for the
American Red Cross (Orange
County Chapter). This year, 1he
goal has been upped to SJ00,000.
The field is limited to 160
players in the 1wo-man best ball
tournament.
Wyrick shot a 6-under 53 in
1992 to establbh a course record,
then eclipsed his own standard las1
year with a 7-under.
He shot a 9-under lo break the
course record a third time on
Sept. 10 during the George
Yardley/Newport Harbor High
Football and Music Celebrity Golf
Classic at the Newport Beach Golf
Course.
Yes, Wyrick plans to play again
in 1994. Can anybody s1ep forwa rd
and beat this guy?
0
Chip ahota ••• In the Newport Beach
Golf Course men's club, Hal Green won
low gross (66) and LeRoy Nonemaker
won low net (53) in rounds March 23. Bob
Gelaer was second tow net (54) ... In Ille
third annual Brian Gallagher Memonal
Tournament on Saturday, a low net tournament
with 80 percent of handicaps. lhe top five
finishers were Don Snavely (53 6).
John Anderaon (55), Don Wulf
(56.6), Byron Burton (56.6) and Jack
Stinson (57).
.Richard Dunn I• • Dally Pilot
Sport• Writer who .. club goJf
column •PP••,. e119ry Thur•d•Y·
Men's basketball
tourney slated
The Southern California Mu-
nicipal A1hletic Federa1ion will
conduct the men's basketball
championships April. 15-17 at
Chapman University and other lo-
catio ns throughout Orange Coun·
ly.
Teams will parlicipale in 1hree
divisions according to abili1y. Par·
1icipation is open to all learns in
SCMA F -s a net ione d leagues
1hrough the p:irks and recreation
departmenls in Souihern Califor-
nia.
Each team will participate in a
minimum of two games. The
champion and runner-up teams in
each division, along wi1h consola-
tion champions, will receive
awards.
In addition, the Most Valuable
Player will receive an award.
Teams will be classifed by the
1ournamen,1 director with as·
sistance from the city league direc·
tors.
Deadline for registration is
Thursday, April 9. Entry fee is S75
per team, plus a $20 per team per
game officials' fee.
For fu1her information, phone
Jeff Giacomi, tournament director,
at (7 14) 522-6740.
Speedway cycles ·return
to Costa Mesa on Friday
DEEP Sp FISHING ..
...-A few changes await
fans this season for
weekly racing program .
COSTA
MESA
Speedway motor-
c y c I e racing
thunders back
onto the famous
Cos1a Mesa bull·
ring oval Friday night at 8 p.m. at
the Ornnge County Fairgrounds.
This will mark 1he 26th year
thu t Speedway has been held at
tht: Fairgrounds. In 1994, Costa
Mella Spcedwuy will be running all
of i1s events as :in American Mo·
torcyclist Sanction.
Speedway regulars will notice
... eve ral changes in the event pro-
grom, which were first tried out at
the Coor Light Spring Classic on
March S. The most popular format
change was the new Challenge
Match Race Serie .
This event (calures the top five
riders mcetina fo a series of one·
lap race . The la t·place riJcr in
each of the one-lap, five-man
n1ccs i eliminated
The top two riders then com·
pct~n .. two-lap cc for the ca h. ,
The n;al challenge for the riders is
1hat all fou r of these races must
be run in a row with no outside
mechanical assistance allowed.
Last-ptnce riders after each lap
will simply ride to th e infield,
while the others continue rig)lt
back to the tapes for another start.
The entire five-man, four-~tarl,
five-lap race is completed in le ·s
than three minutes.
The Championship Challenge
will be featured every week al-in-
termission.
Riders will also compete in un
all-new scr:uch program . Riders
who win their scra1c~ heat race
will transfer directly to the scratch
main event. The second-place
rider in each heat will tran!if er 10
the "l:lst chance" eveni.
Only the winner or the "last
chance" race will join the heat
race winners in the five-man
scratch main.
The eight-man, eight-lap handi-
cap main event will remain a big
pan or the show.
Ticket prices arc S8 (or adults,
$5 !or junion (13·17) and children
under 13 are admitted free. Park·
ina and programs remain Cree.
Tickets ore sold at the aa1c start·
ina at 6:30 p.m. each racing day.
. '
WIDNHDAY'I flSH COUNTS
Newpert L•n1ll1t1 -no report.
D.,,•1'• LMkff -3 boats, 107 anglers.
200 bonito, 1 n sculpln, JO m;ac11crel, s
sole.
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yard hardscape
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Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot
SllJ\\IN \ !'IOIH Irr r. DAii \' PILOT
Corona del Mar's J.J. DICesare slides s~fely past Costa Mesa catcher J.ohn Schroeder during Pride of the Coast game Wednesday.
CABRERA
From Pqe a1
and several ru°'1crs were left in
scoring pos111on. The mistakes
frustr:.itcd Tro\el more than the
lack of offense.
"I don't think \\-C have seen a
belier team than us all year,"
Troxel said. "Now, teams have
pl:iyed belier, but there hasn't
be en a team belier than us we've
played all )'Car. We've lost four
one-run g:imes where we didn't do
the li11lc thing!..
Shoukry
named to
All-CIF team '
"We're playing better defen-
sively and getting great pitching.
But unless you do the little things
like bunting runners over and run-
ning hard, you're going to be in
bad shape."
Estancia (5-8) faces Century
again Tuesday in a PCL matchup.
CENTURY 1, ESTANCIA 0
Estancia 000 000 0-0 4
Century 010 000 x-1 1
C.lbrera and P. Arceyut; Gomez,
Andrade (S), Our;m (6) tlnd J. Torres.
W-Comez, 1·1. l -Cabrcra, 3-3.
S-Ouran, 2. 2B-frauslo (C), M;utlncz
(E), P. Arceyul (E).
FRIEND
,, .... , ••• 81
pavis singled in another ru n,
Bowman followed by reaching on
Mesa's second error of the inning,
then Dear walked with the bases
loaded to force in another run,
making it 5-0 CdM.
"The electric battery just r:.in
out of juice," said De:11s, whose
squad avoided being shut out,
when Charles Chatman ripped a
three-run home run to right field
in the sc\enth inning.
Johnson, in relief of f riend,
struck out five in Fl.1 innings,
\\hilc CJM right-h<inder J . .J. DiC-
es.ire mJdc hb i1uugural pitching
of the year.
CDM 11, COSTA MESA 3
(O>l<I .\\cS.l 000 000 3 -J 5 J
Curun;i dtl MJr 000 1.io ~ -11 11
Adelmund, Rice <-'I, Mul.edc (S), Stell.
16! and Schroedw; friend, Juhnsun (SI.
D1CcsJrc (71 Jnd t.nl·chl \V-friend, 2·0.
l -Addrnund, 2-3. 26-\\orten\On !Cd\\),
D1Ce!o.JrC (Cd\O. tlR-Ch.>tmJn (CMl.
•
CdM's Matt Friend delivers pitch against Costa Mesa Wednesday.
Newport Harbor loses .
slugfest to El Mo.dena
NEWPORT 13EACH -When
Mike Freeman smashed a l\\o-run
homer in the bottom of the first
inning Wednesday 10 give host
Newport Harbor High's baseball
team a 4-0 lead, it was just the
start of a big day of offe nse in the
Pride of the Coast Tournament.
El Modena (3-7) erupted for 18
runs, all scored within a span of
four innings, to defeat the Sailors.
18-10.
~ ~:.:..•;_-·,· ~~ .. ~J
~ ~ '·S ... ~<. f'1P-<\L''> !
El MODENA [lJ lD E
NEWPORT HARBOR (!!] (fl l'J I
.1
by a pair of Saifors' errors, pro"ed
too much to O\lercomc.
Ne,\porl Harbor return~ to the
ScJ View League \\ ars ne\t
Wednesday b) ho!>ting SadJlebaclo.
\ edncsJay and tra\'clms to Santa
Marg~mta Frida) ror 3: 15 match-
ups.
EL MODENA 1f, l(EWPORf 10
"
LOS ANGELES -New-
port Harbor High senior
Ramy Shoulo.ry, a 6-foot-7
center, has been named to
the All-CIF Division 111
boy!. basketball se¢ond team
by !.pomwriters r.eprcsenting
the Amateur Athletic Foun-
dJtion/First I nter!.tate Bank
All-Southern California
Board of Athletics.
Other highlights for Newport
Harbor were Brett Hli!>ta's t\\O·
run homer in the fourth and a
two-run double by Dave Sno"dcn
in the first. Snowden went 3 for 4,
\\hile Freeman and Hli!>ta, al! "ell
as Joe Urban, had :l pair of hit'
apiece.
El Modt>n.l 042 930 0-18 16 3"
Shoukry was a first-team
All-Sea View League selec-
tion who averaged 14 points
and nearly nine rebounds
per game.
He capped his prep ca-
reer with an 18-point, 15-
rebound, 1'3-blockcd shot
performance in the regular-
season-ending victory over
University, which clinched a
playoff berth for the Sailors.
Shoukry missed Newport's
first-round (II.A playoff loss
to Mag nolia due ta an ap-
pendectomy.
L111unorm ;\ \~f'. lhlLY r1LOT
Newport Harbor center Ramy Shoukry has been named to the All-CIF Division Ill basketball team.
Zach Diehl had a double Jnd
scored a pair of runs. Dut for
Newport (3-9 overall), a nine-run
El Modena fourth inn ing, fueled
NC\\port 11.libor 420 220 0-10 1J 4
Nt$ren, M;ay (6) tlnd Mitchell; Crod.lch,
McMoniment (3), k..lhl (3), Biehl (4) ;and
Biehl, Smith (4). W-N)'grcn. l -Crod.>clr,
0-3.,2B-Frederidi (CM) 2, Bojorquez (E.\-1 ),
M.Jldon;ido (EM), Biehl (NH), Snowden
(NH). JS-Emery (EM). HR-fre<.'miln
(NI I), II list.ii (NH).
LOCAL SCHEDULE
TODAY
Baseball
Community colTege -Or.ange Co.ut .it
Collegl' of Sequoi.u Tourn.lllll'nl in Vis.iii.a
lconsobtion round, 11 .i.m .. ~.
C.l\ il.Jn·Cl>lle~ ol Sequoi.u loser).
Softltall
Community college -Or.inge Cu.t>I .11
College of lhe Oe>t•rl Tourn.imt'nl.
foftftb
Coll<'ltl' men -Soulhe.n (.Jlifor,,i.1 Collegl' .11 Beth.ii Uno>t•nity, H.J,...111, 9 ;i m.
Collegl' "'°"'"" -Suulhern C.iliromi.;i Coll•-ge .u Ch.imin.ide H.i,..1ii, 1 p.m.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE and Interest conveyed to UHM iectoon to tM pe1111on and PUBLIC NOTICE 93C8793 any cod1c11s aie avll 1able tloner: PUBLIC NOTICE clasong the U1gency thereof. ---------1 and now held by It under 8 • J LI d show good cause why the lor oxatn11Ut1on in the Pe MART 1 N A . NE u. THE FULl TEXT or the or· NOTICE OF said DHd of Trust In the TR-,.USoT•EnnE• s'l•"e: OF court should not grant the SUMMONS Tne riame arid address ol kept by the court. MANN E WEIN NOTICE OF d•nanc:e may be read 11'1 tM TRUSTEE'S SALE l>fOperty situated In said -. • authority. (CITACION JUDICIAL) tho court 1s (El nombre y THE PETITION requests ' aq., " C.ty Clerk's Office. 77 Fair APN 139·115-03 County and State de-FI CE R: J 0 ANN A A HEARING on the pell-NOTICE TO OEFENOAN'r., direet:oon de la corte es) autno11ty to admimsler the STOCK MANION, REIS· PUBLIC SALE OF Onve, Costa Mesa
LOAN NO. 983300-8 scribed as: LLOYD, EXT.3011 lion will be held on APRIL (Avlso a Acusado) DARWIN ORANGE COUNTY MU· cs1a1e under 1he lndopen-MAN, SHORE & NEU· ABANDONED MARY T. ELLIOTT
REF SUTTON C 0 MP LET ELY DE· Published Newport 28, 1994, 11 1:45 P.M. In K. PEARSON INC.; OAR· NICI PAL COURT, 4601 dent Adtn1nlstrat1on ol Es· MANN, 1881 Century PROPERTY Doputw City Clork ' KENN~TH & JULIE SCRIBED IN SAID DEED Beach-Costa Mesa Daily Dept. 703 localed at 341 WIN K. PEARSON AND JAMBOREE RO SUITE l~les Act (This authonty Pk E. Sto. 800, Loa An-Notice Is hereby g1\08n PublJsh d Ne I OF TRUST. Pilot ~arch 24 31 April 7 The City Drive South, Or· DOES 1 TO 50 ·• '"'" allow the personal rep-gel•• CA 900e7 that the underSJgned In-0 • wpor FD FHLMC The street address and • • • arige, CA 92668. YOU ARE BEING SUED BY t04, 4601 JAMBOREE RO. resenlallve to take many 1 CN242993 tends to sell the personal B.ach-Cosla Mesa March
T .S. No. 307833 other common designation, t994. IF' YOU OBJECT TO the PLAINTIFF· (A Ud lo asta' SUITE t04, NEWPORT ocllons without obtaining II d N l>fOpony described below 31, 1994.
28950 If any, of the real property lh459 granting of the pelilion, you demanda~do) FRANKLIN BEACH. CA 92660.2595, court approval. Belore tak· B P~bc she •• ew0P0,rlyt to enlOfce a hen Imposed Th476
IMPORTANT NOTICE described above Is gur· PUBLIC NOTICE should appear at the hear-BANK HARBOR JUDICIAL DIS· 1ng certain very important eac,.· 011a ...... ai on said property under the , TO PROPERTY . aPrfi'rULT':R b.:~E~U7EB Ing and state your Ob· You have 30 CALENDAR TRICT acllons, however, the rer· Pilot March 31 , Apri.I 1, 7. Calllornle Sell·Servlce Slor· PUBLIC NOTICE
OWNER: COSTA MESA CA 92626 • BSC 2718 'ecllona or file wnlten ob-DAYS aher lhis summons The name address and tonal representative wil be 1994. age Facility AC1 (Bus & Fictitious ..., • NOT Cl 0 • ecllons with the court be-Is served 0 10 fie 1 ' • required to give notice to ThF470 Prof. Code ss2t 700.217t6) • YOU ARE IN DE,AUL T The undersigned Trustee I r ore the hearing. Your ap-1 n you 1
1a te ephone number of plaln· Interested persons unless The undersigned w•ll sen al Bualnoaa N•m• •
UNDER A DEED OF disclaims eny liability for PETITION TO pearance may be In person ~~:' tten response at th s tiff's attorney, or plain11N they have waived notice or PUBLIC NOTICE public sale by compellllve St•t•mont •'"
T R U ST , DAT I D any Incorrectness of the ADMINISTER or by your attorney. A letter or hone call will wllhe>Yt an allorney, Is. (El consented to the proposed bidding on the 14th t:>I The follow.ng persons are
MARCH 11, 1989. UN· street address and other ESTATE OF: IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR not protect Pou· our nombre, la d1recclon y el action.) The Independent NOTICI Apnl, II 11 30 am .. on the domg business as· .
LESS YOU TAKE AC· common desl9nallon, II LUCIU.I H. or a contingent creditor ot written ros;/onsey mus7': numero de telelono del admlnistratoon authouty will INVITINQ BIDS premses where said PfOP-OICI< MlllER ALT4 DENA.
TION TO PROTECT any~hown hefe n. CAL.DARES, IM deceased, you muat Me In proper legal form 11 you abogado del demanstante, be granted unless an inter-Nolle• Is h8feby given arty has been stored and DAIRY INDEPENDENT DIS·.
YOUR PROPERTY IT Said sale will be made, •k• LUCILLE your clalm with the court want the cour1 10 hear your 0 del demandante quo no ested person files an ob-that the B<>Md of Trustffs which are located at 17ttf TRIBUTOR. 270 S Olive,· • but without covenant or and maU a copy to the per· ca . )action 10 the petition and of the Coaat Communoty Sttfft Sell Storage, 670 W Orengo. CA 92666 MAY BE SOLD AT A warranty, express or Im· CALDARIS aonal representative ap-If se. d ri Ilene abogado, es) show good cause v.hy the CoUege District of Orange 17\h SI . C_.. Costa Mesa. Richard LH M1ll8f, 270 S. PUBLIC IA&.I!'.. IF YOU plied, regard1~ lltle, pos· CASE NO. A172512 POlnted by IM court within s~e ~~~~le y~~ ,;:; THOMAS J. STOLP, ESQ., coun should not grant the Couniy, Calolornla. wlM re-County of Orange, Slate of Ollve, Oraoge, CA 92864
NIED AN EXPLANA-aosslon, cond1uon, or en-To an helra, beneficiaries, lour months from the date 1 th • BAR NO. 114211, LAW OF· authon!Y. c11ve sealed bids up lo but CaMomoa Ur11ts and ten-This bus1nu; Is con-·
TION o' THI MATURI cumbrancH, Including creclllors. contingent credi-ol nrat l11uance of the let· ,:s• s ·~·· ::;t ~~ur FICES OF STEVEN J. MEL· A Hll'AING on the pell-no later than 11·00 AM. Fri· ants I steel below Contentt dueled by: an indovldual
OF THI! PROCllDINQ feH, charges and H• tors, and Pof'IOOS who may tefl u provtded In section .~may be ~ken wi~~ MET,113t32 NEWPORT AV· t•on wtll be held on APRIL dsy, ~ol t5, 1994, at the Include personal Items, The reg1slrant(s) com-
AQAINST YOU YOU ponsea of the TrustH and oth8fWise be Interested In 9t00 of the Cahfomla Pro-further wa""ng ltom tno ENUE SUITE 206 P.O. 28, llMM. al 1:45 P.M. In Purcha11ng Department ol househOld gOods. vetucte mencect 10 transact bu$1-• ol the trusts created by the wtn « ntate, or both, bet• Code Tho time for fli· rt · eox • 2095 TUSTIN CA Dept 703 localed at 341 tile District located at t370 parts, & m.sc Items nus under lhe FICtlllOul
SHOULD CONTACT A said Deed of Trust, to pay of: LUCILLE H. CALOARES Ing clalmi wtll not expire ~'~ are other legal re-92680 (7t4)• 73().2000 · TM City Dnve, Orange, CA Adams Avenue, Bid~. D, 103 J Howell Business Name(a) lt.atod
LAWYER. the remaining principal aka LUCILLE CALDARES before four months frOIJI Ir y 92668 Costa Mesa, Calltomia. 11 129 M Bearce ebo\le on· 2·15·M
On APRIL 14, 1"4. at sums of the nole(s) se-A PETITION hu been the hNl'lng date notice<I : :;.en~ a~O:::Y rlg~: DATE: NOV 22 1993 IF YOu OBJECT TO lhe "'hlCh time b1d1 will be 11 t3 M. Bearce Richard Lee M llet
10.00 A.M. CAL-WESTERN cured by said Deod ol fifed by VIRGINIA ELAINE above If Y J. PETERSON, Clerk, giantong of the pellllon you publicly opened and read 1141 K S.pulveda Tl'ua stalemenl was flied
AECONVEYANCE CORP .. I Trust to wit: $183.276.05 ARNEf!1 ~ho. through ty· YOU . MAY EXAMINE the :·~nor: y~~ ~~y~~ b11 L. COTA, Deputy She>Yld appear al th• hHI· for: Landlord reserves the "'U1 U'IO County Cl«k ol
Caltlomla corporeUon as with Interest thereon from pograprwcai enor. was re-Ille kepi by the court. It you an alt 'referral s8fVlce NOTICE TO THE PEA· Ing and stale your ob-PURCHASE OF FURNI· rtght lo btd at the sale Pur· Orengo Col.w'lty on Febfv. 1.
duly appointed trustee 11/01/93 at 10.875"' per leried to u VIRGINIA AR· are a P8fl0t'I Interested In CK a :;:'aid ott ce O steel SON SERVED· You are l'ectlons or r.te w'llnen ob-TUAE FOA TECHNOLOGY chuea must be Pl•d for el ary 16, 1994.
under and pursuant to 1r1num as provided In said NESS In the Petition for lM estate, you may file In the phone boo~) 1 served as an ind dual de-ecuona with the court be-AND INTERIOR DESIGN Ille t.me of Pl,llChase In ,59 ... 1 Deed of rl'Allt recorded note(a) plus cost and any Probate flied In the Su~ wilh the cOurt a formal Re-Despues de que le en-I d 1 iv ote the hearing Your ep. PROGRAM; ORANGE cash only All •purchased Pub111hed Newpon B•ch-
MARCH 23. 1989 as Inst. advance• wilh Interest. nor Court of Cahlomla. quest for Special Notice of tr uen esta c taclon Judi· •n an · pearance may be In person COAST COLLEGE 11ern1 sold .. ., 11," and Colla Mesa Daily Pilot No.89·149293,lnbookX, ESTIMATED TOTAL DEBT CountyofORANGE. the filing of an Inventory :? 1 Publlahed N ewporl orby yourattorney All bids ate lo be In IC• must be removed at the
•
page X. ol ONlclal Records $204,090.113 THE PETITION requests and appraisal of estate as· cl ustecl tlene un plazo de Beach·Cos11 Mesa Daily IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR cordance with the Bid Doc· llme of ule Sale aub,.ct March 17• 24• 31• A.P'I 7•
In the office ol the Countv The benellcl•ry under that VIRGINIA ELAINE AR· sets °' of any petition or ~~11°1:~ .. ;n~;~N~A:i~; Pilot March 17, 2,., 31, Al>fll or a contingent creclllor of uments which are now on 10 cancellation In the event l994 , • • Recor~er of ORANGE Mid Deed of Trust hereto-NETT be m,ppolnlecl as I*· account .. frOllfdecl In spueata eacrlta 1 maquma 7, t~ the decntecl, you must fife f~e and mey be MCUfed In ol Hlttement between Th455 .. • •
County, Slit• of CALIFOR· lore executed and dellv-aonal represontaUve to ad· eoctlon 1250 0 the Calilor· en esta corte th44e your claim wit!\ the cour1 the offlc:e of the Dtreclot or owner and obhgatfld party. 1---,5,,..-------
NIA Hecuted by KENNETH 8fed to lhe undenlQned a mlnlst8f tM est:\te ol the nla Probate Code. A R• Una carta 0 una llamada and mall a copy 10 1he per· Purchasing otthe Otatrlct. Pub 11 sh• d N • w Port th r~~0Yh0~f~~W.
L SUTlON, A MARRIED written Declaration of De-decedent. queat for Special Notice lelelonfea no le olrecera PUBLIC NOTICE aonal represenlallve ap-No bidder may withdraw Beach·COtta Mesa Dl•IY e48•M78
MAN AS HIS SOLE ANO fault and Demand I« Sale, THE PETITION requeall form 19 1v11la.ble lrom the protecclon· au retpuesta pointed by tM cOUtt w1lh1n his bid tor a P8'fod of forty· Pilot March 31, April 1,t;:==::::======
SEPARATE PROPERTY and a written Notice of De-lhe decedent'e WILL end court clerk. esrlla a ma ulna Ilene ue NOTICll OF loor months fYom the date five (45) daYI •"-the date 1994
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC fault and Election to Sell. codicils, II tny, be admitted Attomer tor tho Potl-cumplir co~ las f()(~I-PETITION TO ol 11111 Issuance of tM tel• set lor the Opening ttlereof Th465
AUCTION TO HIGHEST The undeftlgned caused lo probate. The will •nd tlonen dades legaloa apropiadas ADMINllTIR tera as provided In aec:uon TM Board of Truat ... re-PUBLIC NOTICE
810DER FOA CAS~1 Mid Noflco of Default end any codlcll1 are eveJlable DANI•• BRODlfUCK al usted qulere que la Corte llST'"TI OF 9100 ol the Cllllornie Pro-serves the PfMleoe of ,.. ---------CA s H I E R . s c HE c"' Eloctlon IO Sell IO be ,.. for exemlnetlon In the tlte -• .. I bate Code The time for fJ,. jecting eny Ind .. bldl Of DRAWN ON A STATE OR COfdod In the county where kept by the court I 8 Q • 1 l I a I 3 I 4 t, nc:uc:he au caso. LOii '· ISHIHAJllA 1ng clatma 'Wiii noc 0 Ire to waive 11nY lrregulatltle• COflRICTID
NATIONAL BANK, A therNlproper1ytekxaled. niE PETITION requnta MOW81R & aROWN, ~ ~:""~ CaaoNo.A172S31 belore tour mornhl tom or ln . ..Kmal•ttot In l/t't bid SUIHIARYOF
CHECK DRAWN 8Y A POR ~· INPOA-auchortty to edmlnlster the 4140 CAMPU8 DR., perder el cuo y lo 'pueden To al htlrs t>ener1cla11os, Ille MIMQ date notieecl or In the btddlf'9. PROPOSED
STATE OR P:EOERAL MATIOlh Men.Prl Htale under the lndepono 8TI 100, NllWPO .. T qultW au 811.rio au donero crecl1tor1. cont.ngent credl-•boYe lleMda /SI lllTn OWDIMMCS
CREDIT UNION. OR A 1100 ...... 1100, ... dent Admulnllon of ho ••ACM, CA 11110 y otrH coaa'a de IU tor•. end petlOOI who may YOO MAY EXAMINE the 8M.DWIN, ...... .. A PROPOSED OROI·
CHECK DRAWN IY A C•t•I •1• HM ..... Act. (Tiiie 8'AhOrtey (7t4t ..... aoo propledad .... 911\ao 9dldoo otnetwi•• be ln18f8Sted In file k89( by the cowt." you Pur•h••lnt c .... NANCI II ectleduled lor
STATE OA FEDERAL IAV· CAL.WlaTl"N .... wtl allow the l*90NI rep. f'llbllahtd Newport NI por Pll'9 c9-.. torte the ..tu Of estate, or bOth, ate e petaon lntereel9CI In CoMMunltJ 'Collate ~IC l"8 ~City ~~T~? J=s ~ cownuc• CORP., ~_,:. ~ "':: ~* -.. Dtlly lldaeen cine f9CIUilltOt. • ~ L1~1lli1~~~ '"" ::, :-'!urr:',::::. =. .,...,.... f=.=' .=;·~ °'::!1e~
SOCIATION, OR SAYtHOS Tlea Lii .... ....._, pr<Ml. ..,_ ta1dr'9 Ott· Noe ~ 30, i1 ... I, =• ..:=-. que~ tied by Robert lahlt\ara In queet lot Spedll Noice oC 0.-t .. ta, t ... 11•1rtdll19 a~ on
BANK SftEClfl!D .. sec-.... .....,, P.O. ... taln "'Y """°"'"' 9dloM. 1..... '""'•d'•'*"'":' SI no the 5'.lp«lof C<A.r11>f c.I· the Ung of lft ~ • '' -• u1111 ............. and TtON &t02 CW TH( flNAN-to09, Lii ..... ~ however, the IMftONf rep. Wf\230 con~ 1 un 'ebogtdo tomla. C~ty e.I OAANGL end appt ... of ..... .. 9W ... , tM4 ........ Antcle I ol
CW. COO! AHD AlJTHO. .... tttU HM reeantlilM wll be '*"*9d puadl 11efNt a un Mtvtdo THE P!TITION reQUMtt IN Of of anr ~ Of ft11bll1ha4 Na•itort C..., g of Tiit 13 of :n~~OIT~~= l•ttl ...... tO ~"::..'°:::".:: OverMockedwnh de,...,.IMebofadOt ::-.~~=~..: ::::'1::0 ~c.: ~ -.. Deir g:.eo::.::.--=
HILD AT THI !NTAANCI D8t0411 M•rell 01, wllvtd rlCllce or CCM .... lllad 1tutr? •-r:. ~dt := ...,..._Ive 10 ldminit* Ila fom1a ~ CocM A Ae-Not ~ ~1• ,.,,. 1 ........ 1· a u ""*'
TO Ttte Of'AHO! CITY fhe &mmUnitY 10 Ila ~ action.) A cal to eonlco). or ..Wle of the dlCltdtnt quest tor Special NoUct '114• .. Cllr II C.-.... to
HALL. 300 IAIT CHAP-Mllltl .. Pl8Ce The lnd1p1ndtnt ""*"" ClaMlfttd ca.. NUllaa THE PEllTION ~ '°'"' I• ....... "°"' ... M1t ...... ..... tl*tctl: MAH AYINUI. OMNOI. ~ C ... l.d tr•uon authortly Wll be wll MIO the dOC8'deflt • Wit.\. and Cour1 ~ auy It ft. Ind ._ ,,... ... "'-...... anCI
ReJXJinting? .,.... ....... ................ .............
~ ...... .............
CALJFOAN&A Ii ,... .. 948 ... 78 gr9nled ""'"' "' .,... Ml.fftl ,.._..,..., c ... , eodicll•. "a y 1:1e edmlaael An..Mr ._ .. .._... ci. .... 11 ....,, , ., _.., on.
J ...... ,__ ... "'Ob-----IO pl • 11 .. WU! and 1:--~~ .. ~-~·~ .. !!·~·L: !-~!•!;Mlmll!llli•••··· .. ..
I
M Thut!day. M..ch 31, 1184 ........
~ ---~ -·----
WIOTICll ~ .. WIG.,,_ .... .,.. . ... ...... .......... '
• • • : l>Ott '° be: • property °' ndoftal blftk. a c:fltCt 4 . , HUA menl must be filed belor1 lflal aald deed of lll'll d• ee1865 In Book Page of ~J8Rl~E IN stJ>e R=~ rent Calif a Contractor'• Boatd. h«elnatt« relerr LOT '5 OF TRA T NO. h•r•tofore dtscrlbed Is W a 11111 °' tederll «edit °" ,.. • .., 2 ,... .,. ,. .. llmt. Tiie llllna of lflls siatement
ICribea th• foUowlng prop-Otflclll Rtcorda In the of· SAID LANO OR ANY UcenM In the claaalflcalion &o u the City, wUI rec:.lve 3182, IN THE CITY OF ~ aOld "aa la": 3386 Of 1 Cf** nwn by stRI 0 ~~ • .c.c ... ~ does not ol ltsetl authorize the
erty: llce of th• recorder of Or· 0 ER • .mo INCWOING of "C.15" at the tJme the up to, but not lat• than N E w p 0 R T 8 EA c H • CARMEL DRIVE, COSTA .... ~llld '*' .. C.Wemle, ... "-"' _... use In lhls stall of I FlctltlOUI PARCEL 1' AN UNOI· ange county; TH ..,.,... • contract II awarded; No 10:00 Lm. of the day of COUNTY OF ORANGE MESA. CA 92821 of blnll •: Business Name In Violation ol
VIDEO ONE·SIXTH (1/ISTH) Said Sal• of properly wld TSHTOCE KRIGO~T o~~Ecrl~~: payment shall be mad• for April 25, 1994, Maled bid• STATE OF CALIFORNIA: The undersigned Tl'Ultff "'Sec.tote 510 ol 118 u 1*4 00 u. CUMOICY the rlClhlS of lllOthtl under Fed
INTEREST IN ANO TO ALL be mad• In "u la" condl· WOfk or material undtt the for 1he award of • contract AS PEA MAP RECORDED dlactalma any llablUIY for d ...._.. d ... _, • • • · erat Slate. or common law (SM THE REAL PROPERTY OE· tJon without covenant °' ALLY DRILL ANO MINE contract unlffl and untJI for: l-405 FREEWAY AT IN BOOK 85, PAGES HI TO any lnc:Orr9c'tl .. aa of the Code 111 .,II.,._,, to o ...,_ •• .....-~ co He1M1 SecUon14400 et seq .. Business
SCRIBED AS LOT 1 OF warranty, expr• .. or Im· FHRONM T':oNs0e5 H~1~~N~ lhe Regl1trat Of Contrac. FAIRVIEW ROAD SOUTH· 18 INCLUSIVE. MISCEL.· etrMI addrffl and Othff ~"6#"' :, s=:; In '::' .fMfl ... ......, c .... ~ ''"" and Professions Code) TRACT 14138. IN THE CITY plltd, regatdlng tltl• pos-T A tori verlflH to the OIS. B 0 u N 0 0 FF ·RAM p. LANEOUS MAPS, IN THE common dHlgnatlon, It-·-0 cas IC-I , , .... ~ .. IMne ,. ..... flrslflllng
OF COSTA MESA. AS Hulon, or encumbrancea, ABOVE DESCRIBED, OIL TRICT that the CONTRAC. PROJECT 94-06. OFFICE OF THE COUNTY any, ahown 'herein. Said ltd, lie TMtM ~ WIUI· ~. NIW(Jort Buch·COstl MHI SHOWN ON A MAP RE· to pay th• remaining prlncl-OR OAS WEU.S, TUNNELS TOR waa pro,,.rty Uc•nted All blda ahall be made on RECORDER Of SAID .... will be lnadt, bUt with-old Ille llSuanc:e Ol lht TM· n.. "~ ••v1e1~':'1o1 O•ilf Pilot
CORDED IN BOOK 874, paf aum of th• not•(•) ... AT NROOUGSHHAOF~S A~~6sos at th• tlm• th• contract • bid fOtm furnished bV th• COUNTY. EXCEPT THERE· out covenant °' wananty, .... s Deed untll lllndt t::.:.!i r\?:: of -"•""' CN238079 Mar 11,2uf Ap, 7 PAGES 21 ANO n OF MIS-cured by said deed of H WU awarded. Ally CON· Cltv. FROM ALL OIL, OAS. MIN· txpreued °' Implied, r• lllbll to the PIYM Ot •n· ... Uely c-y.., _..., CELLANEOUS MAPS Trust. with lnt•rtll u In THE SU0BS~R~~BO~~ TRACTOR not ao llcenaed Bfd1 will be rece!Ved al ERALS AND OTHER HY· gardlng tlUe, po ... 111on. OfMIMamatltfol rfOhlSlidMC!flellN11t>eOIMrietAnarfwv PUBLIC NOTICE RECORDS OF ORANGE Hid not• provided, •d· THE LAN £At.Ii la aubJtcl to penaltlta lhe Cltv of Coala Mesa at onOCARBONS BELOW A °' encumbranoet, to pav .. be """ bul wtlhou of Or ... c...wv he WU.Ced
COUNTY TOGETHER vancea, II any, under the DESCRIBED, ANO TO BOT· underthelaw,andthecon· theOfffc•oltheCltvCler11, DEPTH ' OF SOO FEET, th• r•malnlng prlnclpll ant or WWTint'/. upfestllf~'•'erleit----: FlleNo.FI015'1
WITH All IMPROVE· term• of said OHd of TSTOOCMKEg 'b~ ~1Rrc~6~: !tact will be con1ld•r•d P.O. Box 1200. 17 Fllr WITHOUT THE RIGHT OF aum of the note(•) HCUled or lmplltd, regarding Ille, pol• =-~'S::ic::.-=,,.., Flfil~~o:A~::rss MEN TS THEREOF EX· Trust. IHI, chalgH and vold. Orlvt, Costa M .... C&llfOf· SURFACE ENTRY, AS RE· by uld OHd of Trust, with 0t w:umllfancee to 114114 • ....,..
CE PT ING THEREFROM. axpensn of lhe TruslM ALL y Efl"t~8 ~~L#s If the license claulflcatlon nl• 92828, al Of befOt• the SERIJEO IN INSTRUMENTS lnterut thereon, u pro-tilt;'" lndebltdntls .ec:Urtd Yeu ~ '"9tNcted !NI " y Th• lollowl~ persoe2)
CONDOMINIUM UNITS 1 and ol the trust• created TUUN~~R ANO BENEATH OR apeclfled herein la th•~. or • time and date a lated OF RECORD. vldecl In said nott(S), ad-by said Died ldYlnClll "" ....... ,. c---, ..... _. ls/are d2r9g Ebus Oceess u 8 te' THAU INCLUSIVE LO. by u ld Deed of Trust. Sald "apecl•ltv contractor .. aboV•, at which tJme they YOU ARE IN DEFAULT v•~· If any. under th• ..... wltl ~· t cMded.,. "'-"'· ,..._ 10"""" 2000, as! an Oii CATEO THEREON. Hit wlll be held on: . BEYOND THE EXTERIOR defined fn Section 7058 Of wl• be publlcly opened~ UNDER A DEED OF TRUST terma of the OMd of Trust, n-. llfM a~ ... _, a.te1y c.-. s:;:;: vard. Suite 670. LOng Beach. CA
ALSO EXCEPTING April 7, 1994, at 3:00 p.m. LIMITS THEREOF. ANO TO the Cllllornla Buslne11 and read aloud In tht COUflCll OATEO 5/20/91. UNLESS H tlmaled fffl, charge1 tin, end lie unpaid.,. • ...._ !.!:!~1• yeu;::..:::!. ii\ IN 90802. •-THEREFROM ALL MINER· on the front lllPI to the REORILL, RETUNNEL, Profe1tlon1Code,theape-ChambersaUaldaddrffe. YOU TAKE ACTION TO and txptnHa of theollhenollMCUredbylllddeed,,-"'-;:,_,__d.,.. PaalleHeallfl Medical Man
ALS OIL. OAS PETRO. 11\lrance of th• Orang• EQUIP, MAINTAIN0, le·~· clalty eontractOf awarded Each bid must conform PROTECT YOUR PROP· TrutlM and of tht 1tu1u ln1tr11t lllereon •provided 1r1 IN "-'• c...,. of ttw aoement Organization, 249 Easl
LEU
0
M OTHER' HYDRO. CMc Center, 300 e. Chap. PAJR. DEEPEN ANO • the Contract for this work and be responsive to all ERTY fT MAY BE SOLD AT CtNted by aald OHd of '* No•. lea, cNrget and C*'"'Y " o..,.. wo!HI\ lNrty Ocean Boulevard. suns 670
CARB.ON SUBSTANCES man Orange, CA ATE ANY s~~~E~oC: ahd ltMll construct a ml· per1Jnent Bidding and Con-A PliBLIC SALE. IF YOU Trust, to.wit: $257,344.1t Ill ol lhe miff and of ''°' .. ..,. of .. ,,,..~ Long~. CA 90802. (Orano•
ANO AU. UNDERGROUND At lhe tlmt of the lnltlal MINES w.'.... . • )orlty of the wortc. In IC> tract Ooc:umenll. A Mt of NEED AN EXPt.AHA TION Eltlmaled 1111Sll crealld by said Deed of ... N-. uni-yeu-== County) so~ North Dwyer Oftvt
WATER IN OR UNDER OR pubUcaUOll of this notice, EVER, THE RIGHT TO cordance with the prov!-Bid Documents may be ob-OF THE NATURE OF THE Accrued Interest and ad-tTrvst =~u·~·~~ ::•.:,_., Anahlun.CA92801
WHICH MAY BE PRO. tht tot&I amount of th• un-ORIU.. MINE. STORE. EX· lion• of Callfornla Bual-fained at the Office of lh• PROCEEDING AGAINST dltlonal advanc:H, If any, TE:Ol/10/1994 ........ -of -dWft TniS bUSllltSS ls conducted
OUCEO FROM THE LAND paid balance ol th• obUg•· ~~~Su~H'~e ~e~~~~ nest and ProlHslon• Cod• City Engineer, 77 fair YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· will lncrtHI this flgur• lllOlrlllOlffT T.D. -o.tnct "".,....,., o. .... bYacorporabon WHICH UNDERLINES A lion tec\lfed by the abov• Section 7059. Drive, Costa Men. Caltlor· TACT A LAWYER. pr1or to alle. JMCEI, Al TIWlnf 24005 CN'WY IAnn: ,._ o. J-. SIGHED· Pacllic Hut111 MedlC:.lll
PLANE PARALLEL TO ANO described deed of trust g~ :m: ~~~~R~C~EfF All work must be com-nla, upon nonrefundable "800 RIVER AIJE., NEW· Tht beneficiary under NTURA BLl/O SUITE 100 ~:~w::: "'s!: Management Ofgan12allon, 6y
500 FEET BELOW THE and estimated costs, Ill· THE LANO HEAEINABOVE pleted within 70 consecu-payment of S30.00. An ad-PORT BEACH, CA. said Deed of Trust hereto-CA·• 91302 (Ill ,_, ce .;'70, .. .-... ,~ 110 Jens Mueller, President & CEO PRESENT SURFACE OF penHS, and advances, 11 IBEO AS RE· Uvt daya from the tlmt ot dlUonal charge of $10.00 "(If a street addrfft Of f0tt executed and dtllv-223•3222 fiy; USLIE Uti, H¥w flf er., ..... " er. cieim The registrant commenced 10
THE LANO FOR THE PUA· St97,SSG.01. . g:~i~ BY THE IRVINE the Notice To Proceed Is-will be made lf handled by common dHlgnallon ol ered 10 the undef1lgned a VTCE PRESJ/JENT .,_ ~ c_,,oc;w ~ tJll\sact bUslnass under the 1,... POSE OF PROSPECTING It I• posslbl• that at !he COMPANY IN OEEO RE· aued by th• DISTRICT. mall. Bid Oocumenll and property It shown aboll9, written Oeclarauon Of 0.. IORITYS7309 The ....... ,. ~ , ...... tltlous bllsiness name or names FOR, THE EXPLORATION, tlm• of sale lh• Opening CORDED 'FEBRUARY 15 nrne la Of th• euence. other contract document• no warranty II given a• to fault and Demand for s.... 4 ""'1.44 _,. ..... , .. d-.. _...:: Dsled at>ove on November 1
DEVELOPMENT, PROOUC· bid may be less than th• HMM AS INSTRUMENT No' Fallur• IQ complete lht may also be examined II Ill completeneu °' cor· and • written Notice of 0. 1 ;Jn ...,.. .-:::, ~-= "·-=· t IN 1993
TION, EXTRACTION ANO lotll lnd•btedn111 due. 8,.-085323 OFFICIAL work within th• tlmt aet th• Office of the City Clerk rectnesa)." Tht beneficiary fault and Ei.ctlon to ~· , PUILIC NOTICI .,_,. ...,. 'd.ct-..i • •· This statement was llted Wllll
TAKING OF THE MINER· Date: 3/11/(M RECORDS • forth herein Wiii result In of the Olty of Costa Mela. under aald Deed of Trust, The undersigned caused . .,... fetf .. t I• -SIM• • the County Clerk ot Oranot ALS OIL. GAS, PETRO. N p flNAHCIAL COR• · lhe lmpo1ltion of liquidated Bid Oocumenll wiH not be by rNIOn of a breach or aald Notice ol Default antJ N011CE 0# lRUSTE.£'9 Clllf-w -.,i!MAM ,..._ M O 199• ~~~'ONOT~~=ST~YJ>~~ ;~~~!ION, 81
aald ~TJ! c!f\i:n'!~1~E1 ~:"o'11~u~J~~~m~~:.~~ ~~~ sr~:::~~~= Is•~: ::~::d lnth~~b~.~~~:o! ~:'1nt~h~ty ~:. ~~ ~T =~~[.~: .!::!! ~::~~n·~~~~b~~s ~:: ANO WATER FROM THE ' s•RVICE any. r ,.. ,.... •• , ($200) l0t each calendar eluded In payment. f0t• txtcuted and dell\'· the rt11 property Is located Tl No UJ,.QQSto w 1 C,...101 ' I LANO BY MEANS OF Br T .D. • described above It pur· dav of delay, payable to Each bid 11\all be ac-ed t the d 11 ned 1 and mor• than lhr•• · · · OOI03 03124, 0313 · tram ltle dale II was flied n U'I•
MINES. WELLS. DERRICKS COMPANY, agent ~~•dJ~m 22~:W~J'~j th• DISTRICT. companiad by the bid ... :.inen° oeci:!u:i ~f o.. month• hav• etap•ed sine• LoMo::;:; _ PUBLIC NOTICE · OFlclllceolttgec:nty~ler~ i~~w OR OTHER EQUIPMENT Br France• DaPalma, • Each bid ahall be ac· curlty, List of Designated fault and Demand for Siie euch rtcordatlorr AP ~ 4;14,_.., btlous us ess ame e·
FROM THE SURFACE LO. Aaalatant Secretary, B,f:.CH~~~ T t companied by a cettlned or Subcontractors, and-Non-and wrttten notice of d.: DATii 0 31141t4 YOO AM iN Dl!fAUL Fiie No Ft0lH2 ment must be llled belora that
CATIONS ON ADJOINING 101 South IAwfa St., dlldal u II bill~ f: cashier' a check or bid collusion Affidavit required tauh and of tlectlon to p II O,. a a IO NA L UNDER A DEED O FICTITIOU's IUllNESS lime. The llkng ol ltlls Sta1!_mtfll
OR NEIGHBORING LANO Orant• CA 92118 lnma any a if the bond In an amount not leas by the Information For Bid· cauM the underalgned to 'OlllCLOaURE COR TRUST DATED April U NAME STATEMENT does nol ol Itself aultlor ... tilt
OR LYING OUTSIDE OF • 700 any corrtclnesa 0 than ten percent (1°") ot dera. ell aald rv~ 10 aatlaf'I • , ..... ~•• YOU TAKE TII• 1onowlng person(s) use rn ltlls stale ol 1 F'ICbbous THE ABOVE·DESCRIBEO (7f4) ,.M ltrMt adcbu and other the total bid !>fie•, payable Thi• ptoject la a federally I '; ........ ,and !her• , 0 "AT I 0 N. • • 1117 -dolna bllslness as· BRfS-Busmss Name in ~lion ol
LAND, IT BEING UNDER· ~PEA:.:~'D'Bk=EN1:: com'::wnd=~natJon, 11 to lhe DISTRICT aa a guat· funded proftct and will be :f.'!,~, ~·denlgntd Trustee, I HUTTON :8.1:.o~R~R'lrT~ ~·DENTAL GROUP 1J212 S the llQlllS ol anothtf under fad
STOOD THAT THE OWNER E anrr,e total n. l f the antM that the bidder, lf Its under federll regulations cauted aald notice oJ cs.. CUTR• DRIVE, SUITE BE SOU> AT A 'PUBLI HARBOR GARDEN GROVE c erll, State. or common law (5" OF SUCH MINERALS, OIL. BID MAY •E OBTAINED amoun o proposal la accepted, ahatt which Include Oavl.s-Bacon fault and of electlon to be 1050, SANTA ANA. CA ff YOU HEED 92642 ' ' Section 14400 et seq , Buslflb~
GAS. PETROLEUM, OTHER BY CALLING THE FOL.. un~ bllarv:re :' ':;; ~ promptly •1tecutt lht and related acta. The Wage r•cofded November 24, 82707 Telephone ~~ANATION Of THI OR. fWIV N DESAI ODS andProlesslonsCode)
HYDROCARBON SUB· LOWING TELEPHONE ga~ a~cut! aold and Agreement, tumlah a aall• d•lermlnallon will be under 1993 u lnatr. No. 93-Nulftben 1714) 4'2· NATURE M THE PR INC . A Calilomla Corporallon. Fltstflllg STANCES ANO WATER, AS NUMBERS ON THI Pfv., ....... , b~ llmaled factory Fallhlul Perform-Oavls·Bacon and related 082l564 In Book Page ot 77H CEEOtNG AGAtNST YOU 18427 SlUOEllAKER RO l l2T Ntrr;port S.llCll·CosUMIU SET FORTH ABOVE AV •IFORI THI rHaona • u ance Bond In an amount acts and the Oepartment •or Ofllclal Recorda In the ot ACT A ERRllOS CA90703 . • °'JyP'fet
SHALL HAVE NO RIGHT ~I (714) HM8:S7 costa, ex~ and I~· not 1eu than OM hundfed Industrial Rtlationa, State nc. of the recorder of 0r: •rs Kr I a ta Vart•• ~ COHT C This bUslMss Is conducted CH240290 Mar 17 24,31APr7 TO ENTER UPON THE I vances .. me 0 • percent (1001') Of the lot.al or CallfOfnll (the Conhc> Inge CCMlty: Trual ...... OfncM • ~ II .
SURFACE OF THE ABOVE· or (lj't •27-4811 ~'.!-' ~~~ .. ~f =.~ bid price, furnish a Pay· tor and Subcontractora Ud Sale O. property w111 Publl1hed Newport-~ le6 m':N~po~~ onRAJIV N DESAI PUIUC NOTICE DESCRIBED LANO NOR TAC204212 ...,. of IM ... -• ment Bond In an amount ahall pay not leaa than the be fNlde In "u le" COid-~ta W... D111ty .,.. ~ own · TO USE ANY OF niE Pubtlahed Newport In llddiUoct '° ceM'I, the not lesa tMn ftfty percent higher -ge rale). lion wllhOUl cov.nant or Piiot March 1• 31 April 1 ...,,~, tnc. • caM 0 0 S INC 8y OR IWIV H CNS1115U<M ~~ ~:o~~~o:~~ Beach.Cotta M•aa Daily ~~~~ ~ • ~ =/:~: c'!::r:!~J':: Ir~~~'= 0f~ wananty, •llPf"'· or Im-1994. ' ' Th4e0 ~:O, -:.U.".:~· OE~~::;~~:~ commtnc.4 to W:::::s ':au
PARAU.EL TO ANO 500 Pilot March 17, 2 ... 31, atat• or natlonal ~ • denclng lhal the required partment of lndu1trlal Rel• ~egardlng ~~ PUBLIC NOTICE aub9U\Uled ~rt t1awlsac1 D&nlntss under tilt Ile-Trustees• No:
FEET BELOW THE l99o&. cheell drawn by • •tat• °' lnaurance la In enect In the Uona the genefal pr.....Wng ~ rt it:~~ prlnc:i: auanl to lh• Dea of tllious bllslness name or names FC 20389 C
PRESENT SURFACE OF 1h448 federal credh union or • amounta Mt forth In the , ... of per diem Wlgff and 0.f aum or=(•) ... FlcUtlou• Tnal uacut.d llslld above on Januwy 1, 1994. YOU ARE IN. OEFAUL T
THE LANO FOR Al-4Y PUR· PUBLIC NOTICE =,'!, dr=r by ~tat~°' Agreement form. the general prevlilfng rate ~ed by aald deed or •u•IM .. Name i :':nenenc:and an Tiiis statement was ltled ~th g~~Sts~~EJ>~Jt'gW
POSE WHATSOEVER. nga an Pa)'mefll and per10trn1nce for holiday and overtime Trust With lnterfft .. In Statement u ~ CMIU/1M the County Cllf'k OI Orange UNLESSY<>UTAICEACTION PARCEL 2: UNIT 8 AS cpp208331 auoclatl~ :vln~a bi:: bond• ahall be required work In the localhy In aald ' note provided, ad-The fonowlng pertont are wtfe fl _ p _ lnal County on Mardi 10, 1994. TO PROTECT YOUR PROP•
SHOWN ON THAT CEA· LOAN NO. 209~11 IOCI•= I S ~ 5t02 prior to execution ol the which the work 11 to be vane:"' If any, und•r the doing bualnetl u : ~n7 ~114 ~ Olflcle NOTICE·Tllis fictitious Namt ERlV IT MAV BE SOLO AT
TAIN CONDOMINIUM OT E RIF 801H2 ~ n IC and contractandahaHbelnthe performed'°' each er.It, tffml of Aid Deed of OREWVIEWUSA.309M•r· • offlc:e Statement exptrts llvt years A pUBLIC SALE IF YOU PL.AN RECORDED AS IN· TH t" HO e.310 outhu:u~-rcl~oc~:lnHS form HI forth In tht con-cluslftcallon or type of Tn.11t, Ifft, charges 8nd guerlte Parkwav. Suite C, ~I~ ~der : lrom lht dall 1t was filed Ill the NEEOAN EXPl.ANATIONOf
STRUMENT NO. 91-11 t8511 • • • • 0 tract documents. In th• work needed '° t)(tcut• t xpen... of the Trustff Corona dtl Mar CA 92625 n., c Ill Olllce ol lh• COU)lty Cler~. A lllW THE NA TIJRE OF THE PRO
ON MARCH t1, 1991, OF· MB l~hla ''=· 1~ th~: event of failure to •nter Into the contrac1. Holiday ratH and of the truita created George w Mann 2035 Oran~ Countv •. 1 ti or· Fictitious Buslnm Name Stall· CEEDING AGAINST vov.
FICIAL RECORDS OF OR· A.P. NUM•ERI I er,.':J' th Tan tM m&" auch contract and ••Kuti •hall be paid .. specified by said Deed of Tru1t. Said ClubhouM . Orlv• 'steam-~···, ~~ll •n menr must be Hied belore 11\at YOU SHOULD CONTACT A ANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR· 440-023-09 •cc•p • • rut ' lht requlr•d documenll, In th• colltcUve bargaining aale will be htld on· boat Springs c6 S0..7i· ot ce 0 time. Tne hllng ol lhls staiement LA WYER. NIA, ANO LOCATED ON VOU ARI IN OIFAUL T withhold th~ luuance 01 lhe bid aecurlty wlll be for-. agr•tment applicable to Ap(ll 7, 1994, at 3;00 p.m. 1185 ' Elecllon to Seti ~3 does not of Its.II aultlorizl ltle A public auction 111e to
THAT CERTAIN REAL UNDIA A DllD OF ~ T=M• o~b:i~I ltiltd. Bondi shall remain tech par11Culll craft! CIH· on the front •t•P• to th• Thia bualnHs I• con··~~ 1 Intl' use In this State or a Flcdtlous the highest bidder for CHh.
PROPERTY DESCRIBED TRUST DATED Deoem-the • ome~v~s!. u ~ In f\111 f0tc• and ;enect slncatlon Of type or work entranc• of th• Orange ducted by: an lndMdull ~ t790la , •~ -Ottlclal Business Name In Yloladon ol cHhier'1 che~k drawn on • AS LOT 1 OF TRACT NUM· .. _ 1... 1.,._ UNLHa /•Y3 lgOfht 0 throughout the guarantM •mployed on the prolect. CIVlc Center, 300 E. Chap. Th• regletrant(•) com-· d 0 ~I Sell on th• rlQllts ol anothtr under fed· atata or natt0nal bank. • BER. 14134, AS SHOWN -r ,., ·-ma er ' · period 11 specified In the CoplH of acheduln of man Orange CA menced 10 transact bUeJ. ecor a, w 111 Sllll or common law (Set cheek dr1wn by • 111te 01 ON A MAP RECORDED IN YOU TAKI ACTION TO Said aale wiU be mad•. general conditions. ralH ao dttarmlntd art on Al the tfme of the lnltlll under the Fictitious 411994 al 1:00 PM el S.CUon 14400 11 HQ Business faderel credit unlcm. or '
BOOK 87", PAGES 21 TO PROTl!CT VOUll PROP• but wlttyhoUt covenant 1 Of Purauant to Ste lion file at th• City Cltfk'a Of· publlcatlon of wa notice ::,~nell Nam•(•) listed HofU\Cfronl ~·nc: nd Prolesslont Code)' check drawn by • •t•te or 22, INCLUSIVE, IN THE OF· IRTY IT MAV •1 IOLO w1~ ... an • txprHUS ,_Of m-223300 of the Public Con-tice, located at 77 Fair the totll amount of the U0: abolle on• 3-MM o tne 100ouClntr ,.~~~ int Filing · teder~I .Hlllng1. and toan
1 'p LIC SALE IF P..., regatcSfng t .. , po•· ltac1 Code the conttlci will Drive Cotta M... Callfor· f th bl"'• · aa, * ..,...,_ •11oc1etton, ••VlnG• HIOC AT A U• • aeaalon or encum~a. tal , vlslona permit· nit 82628 and ait av.Ii.. paid balance o • o ...,.. George W. Mann Weel, Santa An•, N1wport Buch•Cosu All atlon, or Hving1 llank •PK" YOU Nll!D AH l!XPLA-to satJafy the lndebtedneaa c:on n pro f\il bid ' Int tJon aecured by the above Thia atatement wu filed at putitlc auction lo OllYAlo tied in Section 5102 of the
NATION OF THE NA-MC1Mec1 by aald OHd, ad· ~a:!ti:i.U:c:!urmea ~: ~ble ~ ani!st. lfHted party dncrlbad deed of trust with the County Clerk ot hlVh"t ... dd•t 'tor CN238077 Ma.' 17.24,3f Apt 7 f"tnenclal Coda end 1utho
TURI OF THE PRO. vancet thereunder, with In-any monlea wlthheld by the I:,°" ac:rdance with Sec> and Htl=ed adVcoata, ·~· Orange County on March H h 'f '•Y•bl• at the PUILIC NOTICE riztd to _do bu1lneH In this Cl!IDING AGAINST let'Ht u provided therein, Olalrict to ensure perform-lion 1773.2 of the California ptfl*"• ancH, 1 •. 1994 Feooec>e m• o 1ale In lawful •t•t• wtll be held by the
VOU, YOU SHOULD and the unpaid ptlnclpel or ~ undff the corwact or Labat Code, the ContractOf 5"92.239.42. tha1 at the Publthed Newpor1 Beach-oney of lhe United fllt No. FI01531 duly appointed tNl1H ..
CONTACT A LAWYER. ~"°:ha:"'~ ~aald permitting payment of r• ahall post a copy of the 11~' r:::-the opening Co1ta Mesa Dally Piiot lalelJ, alt riQnt, :•:; FICTffiOUSIUSINESS ~~wznd~~:r.:i'c:':i~~ WBO .. uw Notic e of ovl~ :•said N:" ltntlona Hrn•d directly California Labor Cod•. the bid may be lesa than the March 10, 11, 2"· 31 , 1994. ln..,_Mtd~~ N.AMEITATEMENT to ~nd now held by UMt
,. -Trvat .. •a S•le ;a• pr chergH and .:: Into tacrow. Contractor •hall Poll • total lnclebtednell due. Th438 , .. ~ of T~ll In the The foloWlg personls trui tH In the "-"•'"•It•' flllOUWT O&M Uncle Deed Ha, Each bid rnuat conf0tm copy of tht detwmlnallon D tel ~7194 ... kt IS/We dolnO bUSlnm IS SRI dueribed property under c__, • *'--Y r Tr t penaeaf , .. _ ~!. ~ trua~':cs andby and be rHponalVe to the of prevailing rate of wag11 T ~ alJllVtCI COM-PUBLIC NOTICE lindtu.tiad1.,.:: :,d TOL OE~L GROUP. 1212 S end punuent to a Deed of a.,.• ()....-..y • .P rua 0 u.. "vi s ere contract documtnta. The et NCh )ob tit•. • • ounty • BRISTOL ST , 117C, SANl Trust dn cribed below. Tha "C:-.1-AU FoiJJu" Notl• 11 heret>y given aald OHd of Truat. DISTRICT reatrVH the The Contractor and any PN«, .. Mid Truat.. Flctltloua tbed .. tOltowa; ~ CA92704 u le wiU be made but w1tti· ~ ..... that THE SPRING MOUN· PIONll!ll SAVINGS & rtght to reJtct any and all IUbCOntractOt(I) ahall pay BJ Doreen Strand, Aa-9ualneu Name PARCEL 1: Lot 21 ol OR fWIV N DESAI o OS out covenant or' wa"enty !~ ~ TAIN GROU~ A ~UFOR· LOAH ASSOCIATION, bid• or to waive any Ir· not le11 than the apeclfied alatant 8eoretar1, Jtalement ract 1161, In tt'9 Cl'la:f INC , A C.hlornla Corporation exprenorimplied. regtrdlng ~ -NIA CORP RATI N, aa F.t.L.A., regularHIH Of lnf0tmalltlH prevailing rattt of Wlgll to 3100 Oak Re.cl, ate The following persons att I.a ...... ·~ 41 18427 STUOEllAKER RO , l 12T 1itle, ponenion. or encum .... -=--=~·=·=·=·~--truatH, or aucceuor C/O RIAL aSTATI In any bid °' In the bid-d workera employed by 300, Walnut CIMll, CA doing butlneaa as: nte:orded In •CERRITOS CA90703 brancn, to pay the remain. ' tru1t1t, or aubaututtd FORl!CLOIURI 1111-ding. them In the execution ot •4188·1071 111 0) VALUES DEPARTMENT lltaoe 41 to 50 lnctua Tiiis business Is conducted Ing princlpal 1um ot thtt trullH pursuant to tilt Q Al required by Section the conttact. STORE 18312 Ftllowl Or., t U.tcetl•neow Map•.~ uo note(1l Hcuttd by th• o .. a '~ VllW Deed of Truat •xtcuted by VICll AS A INT, 1713 of th• Callfornl1 A a ment bond and pet• 944-tota Orange' CA92065 In the Oftlca of th •corpora n of Tru1t, with interest •nd ~PAM ROBERT 8. BROGGER 8 t 0' •ALL ROAD. Labof Code, tht Director of 1orr:Jc. bond Wiii be r• " AVAILA9LI, TH• Barga.I~ Exchange Inc., County ftKOl'det of ~ ~NSE01N8R·By~~ ~~~S~ leie ehe1gn thereon. u c.n.e.v • Mortuary AN 0 Y 0 LAN 0 A P · aUIT• SOI, CYPRlll, the Department of lndu• quired prior to the txecu-EXPICT•D OPINING Thia bualn111 la con· nty. · · · 1 • • provided lo the not•l•l ~ i CMnal(ll'Y BROGGER, HUSBAND CA 80930 (714)821· trlal Relatlona of the Statt lion of the contract. The •ID MAY •I O•TAINID ducted by: a c0tp01atlon PARCEL 2: An eHe· OE~~I, Pre~~·n~ d I adveneH, If 1ny. under the
3500 Padftc View drM ANO WIFE, Recorded 12/ 3071 of Callfornla hll d•ltr· pevment bond and per-llV CAU.ING THI POL-Th• registrant(•) com-ment tot 1nor-a. -0 •reg 311 commence 1 ttrm1 of the OHd of Trust,
.....,_,...,,. 21/1990, In Book N/A. Pagt D•tecll 03/tl/1994 mined the generllly prevail· l0tmance bond shell be In LOWING TILIPHON• menced to tranu.ct bUeJ. and enfoyment over 11ansao1 buslntSs under the le· fntert1t thereon, reu.
...... N/A, Inst. #90-M1168 of • IUZAlllTH ••II Ing "'" of wagea In the the form and arnount Mt NUM•lll ON THI DAY net1 und• the Flctltloul common ., .. , ot ~· ~ous buslnessJname or n1~~s charg11, 1nd expen111 of ~~=~~~=~-ti Official Rtc0rd1 In the of. fl • loCallty In which thla WOftl forth In the conttac:t docu-B al " Name(a) lllled Trac:t HM at Mt fOlth In .... tad at>ove on 1nuary 1. .. -. the Trustee for the tot11 flee ol the County Recorder •111. VICI PlllSIDINT i. to be perf0tmed Coplea ments BIFOlll THI IALI& .~'on· 1•2•04 Articte 11 iec;&;on 1 of U'9 Tiiis s1a11ment was lded wllll emount l•t th• time of the ,_ II I·-of ORANGE County, Cd-Publlthtd Newport of INN , .... d9termina-In aecordanee with pt0\11-1110) MM317 Bargain Exd\angt Inc., /I/ Declar.;tlon OI Cov Ill• County Cletll ol Ofange lniti•I publlc1tlon of th• ml 111 .. IY fornla, and punuant to the Beach.Co•'-M... o.lly Ilona, entJtleCt PREVAILING alona of Publlc Contrwlet TAC300909 Treaaurer enana.. Condition• an County on Matcll 10, 1994 Notice of Selel reuon1blv N~ of O.lautt and Elec-Pll04 MllCh 2A, ,1, Apfll 7, WAGE SCAl.E, art In Ille at Cod• Section 22300, aul> Publl•htd Newport Thia •tal•mtnt waa flied R .. tttollona ~•cord• NOTICE·Tllll Flctttloos Name :!:"'t~o ~:~1·~~;i~ Mortuary* Chllpel tlon to Sell uw~ r• 1994, tht DISTRICT Purchallng et1tutl0t1 of eligible and Beach.COeta ~ Dally with the County Oler1C off~ 1, 1111 In Sla\lmenl explrn tNe vws ,..:·r on t~ day of u le ~ corded 09/10/19913 In Book ttMel Office· and coplet may be equivalent aecurlllea fOf Piiot March 17 i" 31 Orange County on Match 111sa. Pao-unt, Otflcl lrom 11'1• data It was tiled Iii o 11 tor: Kevin c Hutchin
110 BrotdMly NIA Pege NIA Inst. 193-obtalried on requtet. The any mon1e9 wlthhtld to en-' ' ' 1 l9M FeOO:ITO RecOfdt of aMd OHlcloflhtCountyCllrk Ant 10~11~ 11;,g19 "''". Colla Meae Ol111lt of Aid Oftldal Buy tt. Sell It. Find It. CONTRA. CTOR and any aurt pef1otmance undef t9M. IM47 Pub41ahed .,....__.Be~ eountv. CaHIGMla Rcdtlous Binlntss Name State· O~lv Atlpolnted TruetH 1 •-..lllil.l--a·-~-.JIRecords, wU11e1 on °'41151 Cl ttlff 9UDcomractot under ft ahall thla contract will be permll> ,.,.. .. ~, Land l• aleo IUMMn b ment musr be hied before Iha GMAC Monoao• SaMca
• 19M at 9:46 a.m. AT THE -• • *' 11 Irle *lUMt and U · PUIUC NOTICE Coat• M•aa Dally Piiot ~ Oranoe Cowtty Ta ame. The 1R1nQ ol lhls s1.a11men Compeny of Cet.lom••
Pef* of Irle eontrac10r. March 31, Apfll 1, I , 15, Au••or aa 1100 dott not ol ftsen IUlhortllt the Trust Deed Oat•: October
Each bldclef ahall potMal Tltle OrW.... ,... UM In 11111 Stall ol • flctlllOUs 25, , H1 Recording 0•11
al the time Ihle ooncratt le a tt au.. Butlnen Name In YlolaDon o October 31 , t H 1
awwded a Oltat"A" ~ TNe1...... ... the ~hi• Ol lllOlher un4ef F•d· lnltrunfent NumDer 91
tractot'a UcenM, ~ ' PUILIC NOTICE lion, u any, ot .. 11, S111t °'common 11w (5" s111o.a
to Public Connc:t Code •a.Mae7 llO--~·••f property deacH lb• s.c:dol\t~400atstq .BuliNQ Recorded In Counw or 8ectlon 3300. The aucceea-llef..,ClftOe .... ,,,__ •-•H•-abCWe la~ to be. d Prolesslons Code) 01ange, Stat• of Cakfoml1
IUI bidd« muet maintain ~37'4 LOM NO. IOl·151 1100 DennM om., ~I Fling Date end Time Of S•lt the..,..~ the APNl4tl·10U7 T.I .... ...-..&. ...... c•••· /Hwpottllucll·CostaMf Aprll 19, 1H• •t: t0.00
STIRTlll& 1 llEW BUSlllESS1?
•
The Legel Oepertment llt .,. Piiot la
pleaMd to MnOUnCe • NW ~
now IVIM._ to new bulrtn ...
We Wiii now llAACH lht rwnt tor you ll no ..,.. ctwge, Ind 11ve you
the ISme and the trtp to the Cow. Houle In ..,.. kw.. lhen, of COUJN,
., 1he ew'Ch II compl1•d WI wll
.... yo&H ftotltloul ~ Mint
~ Wlttt the County an.
pubtllh once • week far four Melle
• requlr9d by i.w and then ... Y'O"'
proof of putilc9Dor1 ..., County an.
duration of tNe concract. NOTICI CW llleWtnOtNo. The~ T OMIYPrlo A.M
No blddtf may wlthdfew TllU8TD'8 1AL1 YOO AM IN DEFAULT • dladaltN any I CN238078 Mar 11 ;4,lf Apr 7 PleG• of Salt: At the north • hit bid for a partOd of alldy VOU A.Ra .. DU'AUL T " A OHO Of T1'UST Ol\Tt tor any inCOnectneaa lt0nt entrlll\Ce to the Countv
(IO) d9Y9 aftef the dale_.. UND&ll A DllD OP 12, 1"2 UNUlt ~ ,.,_ _.., .. , e PUIUC NOTICE Court0_!lou•w•· 7oo5~~ ~n for the opet*'ll thereof,... NI! ACTION TO PROTE Gitter OOllWftOfl ter n\19 Ht, .,.,1 .. n1 ~ .. ~C:."'.:: W.3~ ... --:::U~ ~ :<>r:U~ ~. :n· 11 any.~ ,~~.. C:1t1m•t•d Salt Amount
lion 1100 et eeq, ACTION TO PROTICT OU NHO NC EXPl.ANATI The~ amount ot .. MAME STATIMINT '"30,81t.t8
The City Col.net of the VOUll "'°"""· IT THE NATURE Of THE PR unpaMt balance Of The following pe11on(s) ~·~~ ir~c~~i:o1~~f;°P City of Cotta M... ,.. llAY U aOLD AT A EOINGS AGAINST YOU obllgauon e.cuted b la/ate doing Duslness ,.. BAHIC· • sl; .. i Addren or Prop•rt~
....,._ ':: ~ lo = "'8UC IALa. " VOU lO CONTACT A LAWYER. IN ~ IO be ~RS MUTUAL. ~695 MJ(Atflur lor Otfltr CoMMOI\ 0H1Qne :z:c'..-1n or ~w llllD AN UPLAJM. ...... n,_...._ .... ....., and rMeonabta ~Court, 11100, NtwPOll Std tlon, if enyl: 60f ·a· :.J11·
COntt = ~ TIOll OP T1t8 UTUll8 ..... n,.. ed G0919, e.penMt CA92660. mini Avenue, Newport
....... ..,..ectt/lprcMttont of a.o. OP nta PROCUDtllGa NOb II =~ ~ ... ~ ~ BAHl<ERS MUTUAL, • moft• Beech. Cetifomla no:z& ...v. v-N:11t Tiii IN ln*al SM--IC--• blllklng oorpor1t1on, iOrantt Countyl tlon 1no to 11'0 lncluahl9. AOAIN•T YOU, vou llllT ·v.;~N .... NobCe of aala I• !omit corporation 4695 Th• undtttitntd TfUttH
of the Callfomla Labof aetOULD COllTACT A EOIEIMCH,ACNJR)M 1113 .... a. Ma'Nllur COIHt, 11100 New-dl.,olalm .. nylfebilttvfo,.nl
Code, the P'9'tllfln0 ,... LAWYSA. POMllOM, • hlllt, In 1 llMIA 10 OMI\. POf19Ncll CA 92660 cailtorn 1ntoneetne11 of the 1trH t'
and acale of .,.. Nlabo On °'4114194 • 10;00 twtM,er '" wtll auapt IONo 01o4MOO • ecfd1911 end othe' co"""°n lahtd~~~ A.M:l PlllOllHllONAL ,_..... .. ~.~ a Gtteck •aw Thil IMlnm Is conducttd dtalfnetlOn. If eny. 1hown
the ... fO,.itCLOIU"I COR~ ""' .allld w \.r1u..-l a ..... or M bv. CCWporllon .-ow. " ne atf'Mt 9ddtHI
trial Atl•tlot-. ..... of C-. AATIOH • IN fAit ap.. MO MNf L ~ a Gt-* *-S!GffEO· IJAHl((AS MUTUAL. 0t oU-common ••iena
ltomla. ~ ~~~of poHed TruetM Uhder and , HUSIMO MO WR AM ..... • ....... m-...'. "-':.\ lllOn tlon le lhown. dllwct10n1 to IN CftV CW.. "' ... Qty o pur.uanc IO DMd of Tn.iec. T[IWfTt ~ • • .,... - _ _.,.. COfPOf · me looelion of tht ~
eo.i. Meta; 9"d thal lor· AtoonMd °" 1°'1MIW .. MM lool Pllt INt tf/!tlf • ..... ., ....... lly Trent lloou, tltdent may IN oltteened Illy leNlnd ten _..... pretcrlMd Oocurnenl No -.&34111 Oflldlt-.,.""""8 Md toM aeMCJ TlleregllhnttommenClld • wrilt9n ,. .. ,t to '"'
thtf9'n •tor noocon_...~ aooti ••• p.Q. ••. of Of. ~: "' ,._ ~. ..wt:=:•Hocl nnaact lllltlntll·und« Ille ID-bentfidert ""'hln 10 MY• of the aelcl COOi. tldal ~ In the of1ki9 --,.'t_ ., ban 1M1n1tt name ot et tht 4fat• of fnt ~·
llAllT ILUOTT of ._ Raooldef °' ()A. " ~ -• in 11 ._on JuM 7. 1 t.n or tNt "°"" •• ••· Da~•ty CltJ Cl•rll, AHO! Coune,. Ce1bNa. ~E....!. h Ptnafte6al Cod T1lll I~ -9lf -· Oett. M..ti 11. 1'14 _ .. c........ ........ W. PMLQ Y. ----aull\eriaod .. ~ of CIMAC ~
Pu1tll1t11d Ntwport ~ ~:"'~,MM::=.,_ _..•::...--:3;.Tllll .:.=,.~': ~Tyru~t ... u1:: ~ta Mw • W91'1MJCiiNTTDWITI a11•n .. •O-.. ...,. • _... ... ,...v...nw ..... 1u11e ,,o,, Not Mlrcfl ,t, .. 1, • lN9llr HOU11MOLD .. lll•M71t"4 ,...__, ......... ........ o .... CA IHO:t
,... ....~-BANK. ,.a'.a .. 81 ..,.._,._A.M.••TMEW •, ........ et •=~!!,!L_ •• ,. :f=~=
....... CllWY ~N.. S\MPOl.HAT T)fl , .. , .... o.e~ -_. ..---ill•••lliillil•••••••••• --------~"~D'"iiODu ;& ~~m'T ..,_., •n•i.: ::" 11 :" .. .,.,. OMt. w.1
I .I
~ ..
Thur9day, awch 31, 1914 U
Co•ta Me.., CA 92827
Bow To Plaee
Classified Ad
NEWPORT
BEACH
NEWPORT
2169 BEACH 2e69Brldge
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii lly ...... QOllEN
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE ' BY PHONE: 714 142·5171 2Br 1 Ba Step• to Great 4Br 2Ba duplex wlda OMAB SllABlF
beac h front unit w/ 1tep1 to bch. All new
patJo, fplc, gar. Vrly decor. prkng, nice
BY Vl81TING OR MAR:
330 W. Bay Street
lease $1025. 998-1918 view. $1700. 846-1957
LIDO PENINSULA DIG DEEP
Cotta Me11, CA 92627
2BR 1 BA twnhme, pool,
1pa, nr Geleon'•,
1tep1 to Npt Cntr
$1175 Bkr 840-5684
1 & 2BR Moblle
homH avall 3/15/1MI
Pvt bch, $800-$1200
mo. 873-8030 7 daye
Both vulnerable. South deala.
(Corner oC Newport Blvd. a B.y St.)
CIASSmEO BOlJBS:·
0
Bluffs Tennis VIiia
. Matr + 3BR, tam rm,
country kltch, 2650 •If
710 Lido Park Dr
NORTH
•K2 7 A4
¢K97632 +976
m onday-Friday •Harbor View SBA, • Q 8 7 5 4 3
DE' an• ~s Impeccable decor, up-~ 8 3 ~&41.,.~ grades. Xlt loe $2700 .::0 J 6
Monday ......................... Friday 5:30pm 975-1234 X843 MISCE'' 11.n!OUS • 10 4 2 + J 8 3
T d M d S 30 ••Lido lele bayfront 1.WUu• SOUTH -uea ay........................ on 1Y : pm & Interior homes! L.se RENTALS •A J
Wedne1day .................. Tue1day 5:30pm o~ ealel Biii Grundy v Q J 10 7
Ind ""'Dd•nt · W d d 3 30 Realtors 975·8US1 r. 10 41 .. er. .. .. ......... e ne1 ay : pm .p ..
Tb .J~ W d d 5 30 Newport Creat 2 + ROOMS 2706 +AK Q 5 ur1uay................ e n et ay : pm 2in. den. exec twn· Th b'dd" F 'd · Th d ' S 30 hme, furn/unfurn. e 1 m g: n ay ...................... Ufl ay : pm 553·6139 or 509·5359 Coate Meaa-Female South Wnt North Eut Saturday .............. : ........ Friday 5:30pm non-smoker Chlld 1 NT Pass 3 NT Pua
NEWPORT SHORES 3 OK. Must like cats. Pus Pass GENERAL POUCY bd on canal. Comm 631·9011Alter6pm Opening lead· Five of • Ri __ .... __ _..,___ \ ·"·--tennis, pool & spa. · let .aau ....winc:i. are 11111jeet to ........., without Walk to ocn. s1600• E'ald• CM c ondo w/ When declarer fii:st sees the com·
DOtic:e. The pab!Uher rtetm• the right to ctlllOr, AGENT 673·6900 pool, $400 + 'hutll. bined North-South assets, one line
recluaify, reviae or rejeel any cl1uified VIII• Balboe 1 Br 1 Ba Nice loc nr bu1. Kitch seems so obvious that considering ad~t. PleAte report uy ann th.at 111y be penthse. ocean/hrbr prlv, lndry. 831""'747 any other would be a waste of time.
ia you daaeifiecl Id immediattly. The Oaily Pilot a view. pool, t1tnnl1. fljo NB pvt upstairs Ste: br/ But there are almost always altema-
1\e bidepeacleat aeoeptt .. liability for Ht error iD smkr. $900. 646-9036 den/be/huge clst, gar, tivu . some of which can be investi·
111 ~t for wt.id. it .. Y be ............. ocn vu. Shr kit, pool, gated ai no cost .
e1oept fer the cotl OI tM "*'~occupied by etc. $1150· 642'7360 The auction was strai ghtforward
I.lie error. Credit UD oeJy be aDowec! for lk &nt APARTMENTS 1--------enough. With a relatively balanced
iaaertiea. HOTELS 10 points, there was no reuon for ... -.--.. __________ _. •F•O•R_RE_NT ___ & MOTELS 271 8 North to suppose that an 11-trick
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii contract in a minor would be any ••••••••• _O_O_R_O_N_A_____ LIVE IN LAQUNA better than three no trump.
in the closed hand with the jack.
Declarer could afford to give up the
lead just once. so it m ight seem
automatic to pin your hopes on find·
ing a doubleton ace of diamonds
with West by leading a diamond . .
would have re1ulted In a-two trick
Mt.
However, there is another way td
come to nine tricks. If clubs divide
evenly, South can score two spades,
three hearts and fo\Jr clubs while
surrendering the lead just once in
hearts.
Since the clubs will break 3·3
some 36 percent of the time, that is
a substantial estra chance. So after
winning the opening lead declarer
plays off the three top clubs. After
cashing the fourth club. declarer
leads a heart to t he ace and returns a
. heart ta force out tbe king 'and nirie
tricks are there.
What i f t he clubs don't break?
Declarer gives up on that line and
now goes after diamonds and is no
worse ocr than if a diamond had
been led to the king at trick two.
By the way, i f you spotted this
line. did you take c.are to win the
opening lead with dummy's kin1 of
spades to make sure you had an
entry to hand to cash the good
hearts?
ACROSI
1 Gwnbo
i!vedlent 5 Kkwnaie t Twla1ed
14Swatc:l'I 15 Germ.an rtv.
111 Mcwe mellow
17 GrMnbecltl
country
20P~t 22 Gllltety
· mineral
24 Fame
26 Hits (a fly)
27 Fashion
dellgner
Chft1t1an -
29 No\ hers
30 Sol
33 Named
37 Ids'
coOnterparts
38 Singer Bonnie
39 Be\184' age
40 Not taut
41 Heraldic
border
42 Brand names
44 Dessert
45 Greek letter 46 Attempt
47 Footwear
49 Scents
53 Canadian
Island
57 v..-i1c1e
58 lndlan -
59 Actress Adams
61 Where Japan
Is
HOUSES/ ~EL MAR 2122 CORONA Furn studios, kitchen· West led a fourth-best spade, won
2622 ettH, TV, pool. $1751--------------------------11
112 Complete
83 Charlie Brown
expreulon
&4 Nomecfl
lheller
85 Malla
M Speak
lttl11bly 117 Boundary
1 Famous
1111uette
2 Fluc;al
3 Ascended
4 Gocldeu of love
5 "Are yOIJ a
mi n --m01Jse?"
II Sa.ndplper
7 Disorder
8 Slone Age
relics
9 Ankles'
coonterpar11
10 Pieces of
Jewelry 11 Hair a1yi. 12 Singer
Diamond
13 Alumnus, lor
short 21 -and turn
23 Placed 25 Negative word
28 Hunting dogs
30 Food additive
31 P1wn
32 Inquires
33 Harvest
34 M1t1 -
35 Annoy
36 Teachers
CONDOS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DEL MAR & up wk. 494-5 294 -------•--------i--------
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ,.,_,-+-+--+--FOR SALE o c e a n·Ba y-Catallna OMMERCIAL LOST L EMPLOYMENT 14 ••••••••I view• d'lux 2Br·2Ba Cute & Clean 1BR apt RENTALS TO C ._ condo mrbl, mirrors, on Bay. Ownstra crnr so•n~ 2724 PROPERTY 2778 FOUND 292 5 5530 17 new cpl, pool, spa unit, new crpVpalnt. n.n.au;; liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
'-$1990 Agt 548·5133 . $1100/mo. ~2-6515liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
--' Stud io So of Hwy. $350 INCL UTIL Kitchenette. Ready to .Roomy CM hae, w/d, COSTA MESA 2124 move lnl ss75/mo Incl cable. Respon, F pref.
tOUAL HOUSING utll. Shella 123-1500 Avall now. 842·5689
Small business rental/
private offices. from
$200 w/prkg. Xlnt CM
location. 760-8364
o"po111u111n $100 OFF 1at mo $350 walk. lo bch. HB. ••••••••• A11111lls&llelfttrtl1illglnlllls rent Spacious 3Br ---------M/F, lrg room, lndry.
-..rll11111jc,ttot11eFe•· 2Ba 'house-uh apt COSTA MESA 2624 Smkr ok. 636-6333/e BUSINESS &
$REWARD$
Lost Small Shlhtzu
Lt. grey & tan, 3yra
.... eb•"
Very Friendly.
In the vicinity of Dover
Shores & Bay Crest.
Plea1e Call Roger
lfll fllf HMlilt Actol 111111 E'alde. Yard, gar, 852-8240/d David FINANCE ....-wt1~1N11nkllle9ll hkups, nu pnVdrapes $300Off1st Month $375/MO. plus dep. •••••••• FOUND 3 /18: B ox lo ...US. ''My ,,.imiu. floor $950. 631-6936 E'alde CM. Utll paid. Turtle, male, on First
850.1309
llmlllllt1 ., 1111mlt11lutlon 2Br 2ba Apts. In Quiet 0 b th Male f 1 MO. FREEl·E'alde gated comm w/lot1 of wn a · pre · St. between Fernleal
' ..._ 11 rxc, eel«. f'llJtiM, studio nr 22nd/Nwpt. trees. CarportSl Jae, Work refi. 642•9622 BUSINESS & Dahlia, COM. Call
sa,llMllla,.llMlllllSUCuur No kll. 180 Cecll Pl lndry, BBQ'e. Private $390 5Br 3ba Fem FOR SALE 2900 675-7006 or 805-888·
Ulieul ...... • • llltlllill II $400 mo. 722·2900 patios, OIW, celling N/S, N/Pete, util pd. 2236 ~..,., .. ~..!:..~ ... llml· ---------fans. $7515 & $805 mo. W/O. 7081B Avocado-1----F-O_U_N_D __ _ _ --C OZV 1Br house In COM 67"'·8634 Sh ri ""1 TIEMPO 1 yr. lease. 646-4055 ~ er *• Very ofd Shellie In Tiiis ....,.,.. wlll 1111 quiet clean area. Bale FACTORY WARRANTY ........,'"*"..,.....,.,.. w/ocn breeze, nr bike $500/Mo NICE 1BA 100 • to Beach 1br In 53•780•16 #102340_ Seftla Ana Heights
-·•-....... -~ .. •·.:. trall to bch. vauh ceils, Cottage-style • Quiet, 4br 2ba dplx. Male 3/29. Call 7-56-1>1 58 -·--_.,. • .J S425 722 8303 91 Century $5,280.1 ________ _ ......,_ .... i...o. .. Mlr1 frpl In llv/bdrm, gar, clean & ready. Stove. pr,... · · 1608l73. 90 caravan Lo a T 1 d I act $750 873-083 8 Kent, Evenings beat .. NtQy .._.tall 114 n ry rm , mm $5,430 .16,!1'553664. Perscrlption Glasses ..... ...,, MwrnMlll I• !Mr N/pet. 909/676-7797 1-$-M_o_v_e_ln_S ___ c_la-1~$-CdM·S400 mo. Shr 3BR 91 Taurus $5,430 Silver w{Brown Bows
M ''''' .......... • 11 ,... 2BA condo, walk ocn 1117433. 88 CAO (In aott, brown, case) _.. tllllll .._la Ea1t1lde 1BR, bright, gated. summer only $400 mo 49,000 miles $5,730, Lost al the Co11a
•••AIR\.INES***
Now hiring entry level.
Customer service/bag-..,_,~--+--+-~f--gage handlers, many
other positions. $400·
$1200 wkly. Local or
relocatlon. Application
& Info 1·510·796·9675
ext. A241.
Bob·Tall Drivers
Need Class B (w/air .,_,.~--+--+-brake endorsement)
or Class A drivers lor
growing transportation 1-:-:-+--+--
depar1ment to handle
dollverles throughout
LA .VEN, oc. and SB
Counties
Part·tlme. 2o-30 hours
per week. $8.00/Hr. """,..-.t--+--+----if---Most dehverles are
PM, some AM.
Apply In person:
330 W Bay St,
Costa Mesa.
;m..i'J..~' .. al= Two 3BR units. Ga· pool, cable Incl, close Incl uti11 723-8353 #503123 Public notice Mesa H.S. baseball 1'1·• • 1·11D-42•·--,., rage, frplc, yard, w/d to 1hop/beh 642•585S CM Non-i mkr ahr 4Br over 300 reposse1-field, on Sat. March ... ,.1111..-.DC••--hkup. $1200 & $1250. APTS FROM $550 2Ba hbu1e near OCC. 1ions & Leases being 19th. during "Angel
ClllNUDllUI·-Villa Rental• 675·4912 1er 1Ba & 2Br 1'hBa. $525 Incl u111. $125 llquldated. Consum· Tryouts." Please call
Lovely 3Br 2Ba condo Great location. Harbor dep. Avl 5/1. 979-6020 era, Call Free. 1-800. Balley @ 873-8804 lnhtervlehwAlng;1 15 54~ 787 9 t roug pn .
,,.V10US ~ 10&.V'ED
org
37 Fancy
40 Chte
42 04d word for
"you·
43 Tlmellble
lnlo 45 Cills
47 Burn
48 Famlly cat
50 Pondered
51 Oelullng
completely slang
52 Gllde on Ice
53 Pledges
S4 Pein .
SS Gu tor Signs
56 Actress
Hayworth
60 Mlnd-feadlng
13
nr Triangle Sq. $1100. Villa Apts. 546-9081 NB exec condo. Tennis, LOST CAT No phone c alls, EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 642·2649, ask for 1BR upstalr1, quleVSe-pool, w/d, walk to ---------Black & orange on please CORONA Benny: or 641-0593 eluded. Near 1hop-bch. Fem nl• ahr wt BUSINESS face and body. Older . SERVICES 5533 SERVICES 5533 SERVICES 5533 DEL MAR 1022 NEWPORT HEIQHTS ping & frwye. Well 1ame. $500. 722·9414 OPPORTUNITY female, a.mall with LOS ANGELES
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 3BR hse + storage kept complex. Pool. NB twnhH next to bch. short le~s. Answer• to TIMES
No pets. Grndr, refs No pell, please! $550 25+ Prof, n/a F 1hr w/ 2904 "Moon. Vicinity ol Orange County edition Data Entry PIT Feahlon lal beauty
1alon has space for
Electrolyslst & Acu·
puncturlst. 640-5125
HAI RDRESSERS
Luxury full service spa
& salon located In th•
Sporting Club In lrvlne
now Interviewing tal·
ented professionals &
a ssista nts. FT/PT,
rental or comm. Kelly,
250-4422 ext. 314
2 Townhom•• On req $895. 650-2256 mo. 848-0392 same. Pvt Ba. Pell ok. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Flr1t Ave. & Carnation, • We have positions 13,000 key i trokH
Avocado! 50' lot. 2BR 1 '""B h t I $525 + .... ul 72"1983 ""C 0 0 K I E"" CdM. Plea .. call 673· available In our So. per hour. Mnny flex· 604·2BR 2'1.iBa, l/p, Newport Hts Twnhm 3 ...-. a tn • 1 Y •· " • o>' 0v STR B .TORSvHIP 3687, leave message or a 0 g e c 0 u n t y . Ible positions avail· dre11 rm. Matf Br 3.5ba 2 car patio.gar-pool s7oo Npt Shra 11•P• to 1 1 U on machine. telemarkellng room. able. Call Joni at (714) Hair Stylists
606-Ultra modern re· gar w/carport. FronV No pet 1032 W .Wllaon beach. Muter br/ba Wlth leading Gourmet ---------Earn $5.46/HR + S4-720-9130 E>rt 125. For THE HAIRCUT·
model, 3BR·3BA, f/p, back yard w/gardner. #C. 646-0105 $700 walk-In clat, pvt andk, Coropany. Restock LOST March 20, 1994: $15 comml11lon per TEAS • Costa Mesa,
deck + legal rental $1500• 434-9188 aft 4 e 2BR·2Ba upatra unit cath cell, gar, w/d. M/ dls~aya earn high In· White female Teacup sale. Work whlle quail-Experienced Pleatlc Newport Beach area.
inc. 875.o98t t In 4-plex w/frplc, gar, F n/a. $575 Incl utlV come. Investment Poodle, 5 'h Iba, tying for an attractlv Injection mold maker Great lob. great loc! ---------
no pell. 679 W 18th. cable. &s<HS032 $6,900. Call Ron wearing red leather benefit• pkg. needed for Hunt Bch Busy store. No cllentel PILOT CLASSIFIED ---------•HUNTINGTON $695 mo. 644-7004 SHARE NB ocean view ~,..1...,.a'""""00.~3,,.,.,.3'"'3,..·7...,4-,:3~5::'."" collar. Near Newland 714-988-4588 shop. Call 898·9877 nee 714-722·8571 842·58 78 CO~~ll 1024 BEACH 2140 1--------1 hu~ bch. -~CRUISE SHIP~BS &~an~~ue~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~ E'sldeX·LgStudlo cloua. prkng. S600. Earn $300/$900 960-6047 or968-2109· R d · ~40 Magnolla 545-0444 or 631-1753 wHkly. Vear round LOST1 ORANQll CAT Un your a In EASTSIDE DUPLEX 2BR 1BA vintage cot· S585 mo 842·1390 po1itions. Hiring men/ male, fat, large paws th N rt B ch
For Sale BY OWNER tage w/yard & pvt EASTSIDE Awesome STOn •GE 2742 women. Free room/ with "lhumb1." Lost 3/ e ewpO ea
• • 760-8364 • • drive. Pell OKI seoo 1BR No peta. Encl ga· &\A board. Will train. ca11 11. vicinity Pomona & Costa Mesa Da'ily mo. 1 yr IH. 289-0876 rage, laundry. 5550 + liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1-504-641·7778 Ext. 16th, CM. 650-5668
dep. •842-5964• PARK STOMQll C7312. 24 hours. Fee. MliSINQ CAT Pilot and the NEWPORT
BEACH 1069 IAGUNA
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil BEACH 2148
LO 2Br E'elde. New
crpVdrpa. fncd patio,
shade trees, gar. Nr
shops. No pete. $815
&50-8832 or 548-0983
Storage/garage, .~ .. LOCAL RTE•26 Loe•· All gray, 1hort-halr,
12Jc27 In CM. Lowe1t tlons•Buy All Or neutered male, 14 lb1, H t• ton Beach Prlcea. Office aleo Part•Poulble S3K 1maU nick on left ear. Un 1ng
Pen lnaule Baytront iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
w/dock & beachl 4BR· Panor•m lc ocn vu. Lg
3BA. Lse/aale. Prlncs 2 master ate hae, frpl,
only. 875·8 18t Bkr w/d, bll·lne. $1450, yr
avall. Localed New-Wkly•S00-599-8780 Lost near Orange & Fountain Valley
port & 17th. 756-3277 VENDING RTE ESTAB • 22nd, CM. 645-9063
lmmed CASH Flow R E w· A R D Independent to $2000/wk Pot'I. Must
Sell 800-870·2354 Lo al • Ma I e •BI a ck reach over
Labador•Retrl ever
IH. Avl 4/1. 857·6800
Llvt In A Forest!
Studio• .... From S550 COMMERCIAL
1 Bdrm• •.. From $625 T
P I S BBQ• REAL ES ATE Would you like to earn BEACH
PROPERTY 1175 NEWPORT
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil BEACH 2169
oo • pa, 1• $420 thl1 wk ·while cov'd parking. Corner I••••••••• working from home? of Newport Blvd &
Wiison. 842·1390 1---------Call 344-1581 anytime
• K!LLY • 100 ,000 homes.
11 yrs w/Wht chin Fax us th '1s form
MONTERl!V
OWN A 2NO HOME
On The Beachfrontl
·AIA Award· winning
condominium• start·
Ing at $178,000·
$425,000. Furnl1hed
models open dally.
Call tor brochure ....
1·(800t-477•774A
HOUSES/
CONDOS
POR RENT
BALBOA
ISLAND 2108
Great Yeartr Ren .. 11
2Br 1Ba, large patio,
parkng 1pc. Non-1mllr
pref. s1100. 875-9007
BALIOA
PBNINSUlA
Lu• fufn condO. t• baf view, 2 MllA
1te1. turn-key cond.
l1IOO Agt e40-•••t
' COIONA
Dlt II.Al 2122
0 n 3 ·2 1 ·9 4 . A I •
BUSINBSS OFFICE Horace Ensign Jr. • Wt.th your credi't 1-------FOR RENT 2769 -------H .S . Pleau Call : Beach Area NEBEAWPCHORT 2669 ANNOUNCEMENTS ~~!0071 ••••• I........... card # or mail it in
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CANNllRY AlchltecV --•
Yrly Lg Studio or 3
BR liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii design •tudlo. Conf I••·-----· my. w'1th a check 1nc1 wa1ertront are• 550 aq'. Olh9' ---------•ps•~"'NALS
Unfurnllhed •1BR $125• offlcu avail. 873--0348 ANNOUNCEMENTS I!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!! r I! .. • • • • • • • • ~oday! Run for a $850 to $1500 mo. 28R 2.a •n•"•r_ 1, VIII A t I u.. • fil#V EtllCUTIVS SUITS 2920 a en a I Ii"~ Our a• oc Airport. 1250-PIRSOllAl.S 3002 week! If your 875-4912 pee • Frig , d/W 1700. Full Hrvlc• A WONDERPUL d :::~. 80~ ,:::,· : 1100• 714-833-9550 trAM1Lv car oes not ..... Me-48•• L.agune acn.s5o-2100 a1 axPaR1nc•1 HOT & WILDI II II f, From 11.2:5 MQ. Scandinavian , Euro-1..eoo-eeo-e989 Se we' run it 18R, atepe to beach e>c:.an view. Plenty of pea.n, South Amen-Toll FrM Call th I! RENTALS ~~~.:·~erty parldng. 497-0132 can, Japwae hlghl-.... iiiN ........... , .. o .... IWi ........... h ... 1-f 0 ... r I :·· for ano er weeK
1BR. Ocnft . $850 Wki-------Newport Beach. Ofc achool exchange •::U-,..,.OlyOllolrie FREE! All for $1 o· 1BR. Udo . 11850 mo I WKI FREI RENT apace avt • 150 a/f, dents •'TMng Augu.t. W1'd Qab/UYe Une
2BR. Penln . 1450 wk WITH L•••Ell copier • FAX avail Secom• a host famlty/ I00-494-4739SUQ{mln t
28R Penln 11175 mo 5A4' 1275 mo.133-1"9 AISE. Pl .... Call J"·,·S 3BR Penln 11575 mo 2BR-38R A p i a, 2 e Ofo ~ 11xu, Ore •1-80Q.:Sl8UNQ• llatoh D•t• Line ~·" • • • • •• • "
3BR . Udo .12250 mo Yeara Newl Famlly atmotphere, 1811 OE81. CONSOLIDATION Ouye, Olrla. Othef'a :
4BR • Udo • '3000 mo complex,-=· play-Newport Blvd, CM. Xlt FREE. Cut payments 1-90C).71Match X 280
The '" d•lfllm/S l-:g.;;.round-:--":'•-=::--::a_1-:o::--::-l • ...:1oc:~I :l.:.;17~5:..:8~7.:3-::.1.:.M::;::=..3 ~. ~~ Interest. ~-~~C:.~i3.1o'~ K&L .._. • a.vtront Studio 6 •t To place an ed In Stop cdlectlon. Avotd .,,..._ ...... ._._ ~ -mo. Avail N:w: The Piiot claallfled, bankruptcy. Non-Profit -..,.-Ml--l-IS_Hl_PS---1
,711.1900 Call e42·••7•. Company. Bonded. RLG .or * e7a.438a * KCC 1-I00-2ff.0190. 3018
HOTII.S
2111 • llOTILS
BOTII.S
2718 • MOl'ILS
SPICIAL WIB&LY U ·r ar--
Prcma •1eo
2718
Call 24 houra.
PR a a PD80NALl'TY ecdualW C«\18' Club
m em bership. Coat
1 OK MC JK lno ltan9
, ... Nancy 14CM711
40 TeST •9
Yovt ~ deter•
min•• your happl-
neu? Know whyf ~ 8"ch Coun ~ c,.,. CIW 'ound6no ~
1.eoo;,aa4-1.J.. ...... • 19' ~··
TOO llAllY DDT87 Dua1Matn1·t4M
Overdue blht Com-..... ~ .... blne d9bt9 Into ........ .v ...... &
Cle.-reom, mblt n, payment. Cut P•~'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll menta ..... '°"f. plaoM, ....., ..W Mnb Reduce Int.,..._. lllftOIMlllT c.a ,... IMn••ClllJ .... 1. ..... .... ooo.a100.ooo. ss•o i NCCS (NOn•tUOfll) ~
IOfO •ajilft llN., Ooli&a .... • _ _!1 ~:!--~D!!D~H~1!;:04!,!1!,!8!_1 ('H)•t-tOOO n oa , .............. RIHT
lnuf1 dmlled
.. • • ii . ...
....
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lllO l8lllV 11VCD EMPLOYMENT DIPLOYllllfT MBaCBAllDISI nu TO YOU IOU ·n·a·mon-·ra-n·o· ..... _11.•.11--'°"-·
5530 5530 TWO aeAUTIFUL er .... -At;, "' 94' 410 hi •• *GUO ....... Al:, MOVING MUST ALU
iMi8••&iill••ciliiimil Ceo"-<:;;»I~•••••• bt.U.,wtndowe. .... LNMC1 • ,., .....,.. ...,. -. _. ............ 10 .. 9111•
D R~• OllW-A•••ll ''" 1o good home. c.... crulM, tinted 7000 ml. I.us eca.n. IOec Ml. 11.. .-o. ._ ml. ,.,,_ good
lne Rep. Mutt have OUT OP SANTA P'S AlfTIQUIS IOlO Blk/Wht, IMM/female POWD IO&TS wlndowa, alloy wNe Tai&• over ........ Ut•Tt• a100 ObO .... 1311 own car & Uh • &Olb PT/FT exp'd •al•• n.utwed/apayed, from O 115,600 • MOoMM l•a•e from owner.
copier. 'ollow roOt• to people tor upscale the Hm• lltlerr 3 7 12 Qual bUyer wel ,. ---------t----------
copy record• at medl· So. Western ahop In t955 Wedg«WOC>d, ,,... yHra old. PleaH celv• a MOO qual TOYOTA 1210 VUS 1225
cal tacllltle1. $7.50/hr Futtlon ltland. HrtyT 11andlng r~•· gd Call 649-8789 1., EBKO 1 .,,..~ u~.,...., JAGVAJt 1105 bonua. Once ap. ·-~~11!11·•-
PT 10 FT. RHume 10 comm. 954.5399 cond, make otfarl Call .. -& ---'I••••••••• proved t>v MBZ credft. n· Cetlca QT8.fftbll "Te l'ORD tactory cue-
KHn Imaging, Box attar 8pm 434-0268 •---------=:~-:'o. ~': 'M JC.le VMden ..._ Call Fran« l'lnn or aM, AC, PW, PM, "· toml<d tor CMtPlng.
7000·877' Redondo RETAIL SALES JEWELRY fURS e ut AC bllc/ Oerl '"'°'" lo make M-•. lepd, ---· Vl,..,..,.AC,PS,PB,new'-------B••ch, CA 90277. PIT avallabl• In up-•BUYING ITEMS• • ••• ' •025 A.J 895·5802 PP eye, • 0• • appe to ... tttla apeo-n~ •·m .... 1 • .,-14-9 .. I:• xva Cln, rune ..-.. ANTIQUES •
al I F hi From 1800·1980. 1 ftol\I v ~,,_..,,,......--.,.....,.--tlln ltht Int, fUtl pwr. I bl --... .... -· PfT Poeltton• Av•ll •c ••tore n •• on 17' ... ton Wha .. r. PB/PW/PS, crulH, ~l!c7u..!!.,.. axut~1• 10•r· The Pl .. t ect. 11171.154•1211 CLASSICS 925 For flln•H iraJner1 & l1land 1peclallz.lng In piece Jewelry to entire 10 Evrwd, runs greatl caea, 1unrl, tlnt gle, .... _......, ..,.,.,. " a. a1t1e4 • .t..-aeroblc Instructor•. handpalnlad Euro· hou1eful. Immediate •••Ladle• 5Vo total ._,... obo. calm tlre•,.....le, alarm. pg• a1 2e&-0107 C • Thinking of tta .. ""' a pean ceramic• Prior cHh top $ 873 8223 cl ring S22K ap~raleal; _...... .,.... Th• moat COmpt'eMn-gar~ Nie? Exp raq'd. Apply In retall exp req'd. Must • · • wlll ••II for $11~ firm. 714-848-1872 PP 17495/obollOIM7 .. "2t Sett Yout home alve and current dlrec· Give u• a calll
per1on, Racquetball Call Al 854-8152 -+ B It S 1111 Find 11 through claHlfled. tory of gOOda and aer· PILOT CLASSIFIED World, Fountain Valley. have a •table work•---------18' Dunw ••eo 1H2 uy · • ' · M2•8•7a ''le•• •• ~ .. ndl e4a.•9'-a --history, be able to lltt APPLIANCES 6011 --------M 1 LI Cl•••ffled. .. _..,.. '"' ' POSTAL JOB ult Sell k• new, 50 Iba. Soma week·liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii OFFICE loaded $10,500. Start 11 l.41/hr. For end and avenlng1. For New 1e• Duffy Demo
••• Muet•ne Ceu 289 V8, PS, auto, ve
cln, only 55K ml, a
orig, $8500. 548·7985
exam and application Immediate consider· Kenmore •lac dryer. FURNITURE• s10,100. American Info. call (219) 769-atlon, send resume or white, like new, $100 EQUIPMENT A047 Boat Co. 840.1765 8301 ext CA885, 6AM call Jamea Zimmer· firm. 957-0169 ~
• 8PM, Sun·Frl. man, Cottura, 2900 Kenmor•Llke New, ""G-ran_d,....,,,B-a""nk_a....,..3.,..2,-w-ood-,
Real E1late
MM. nTATa IAL.U
Busy Walk·ln location. comp plan. For Interview
can Ron Tavtor. :I
Rowena Ave.. L.A. White· Refrlg water/ Air oompreeeor, de•k 1973, hull #418, >Clnt
90039 (213)662·2112 Ice In. door: ~asher & w/retum, aleel wrhae cond, well equlped.
dryer 721-0607 •h•IVH, Bink• spryr, $39,750 841·8200 · factory . chalra, IBM
Selectric, •hip. tape & Lyman-18 cla11lc bay·
FURNITURE 6014 dl1pen1er. 846-9201 boat; xJnt cond; totally
South Cot111ty
ThePnJ .....
NtW1*1
673-7300 Secretary
CdM ore. Proficient In
WPS, shorthand
PET~ 8r
rebtt, trophy winner.
$5500. 759-0400
7014
ASSISTANT 8:30-5:30 M·F. Call Mr1---------Every Sal & at 2S' CAL, 7.5 Honda, Must be an organizer, George 844-1400 Contemp lacquer bdrm PETSMART, Fountain VHF, depth, 3 sails,
po1lllv• peraon, good ••l. Ivory, Incl arm· Valley. Puppies, kit· compaaa, whlakar
communicator • writ· Secretary olre, 6-drwr dresser w/ tena and more, all pole, dinghy, xtrH.
ten & verbal • com· For Medical Lab. FT/ mirror, king &/or qn lool<lng for loving, car-$3798.50. Purchulng
puter experience. optlonal 4 day. Full headbd & nlleatand w/ Ing homes. CALL 241· another sallboat. Daya
Send re1ume to: ofc respon. Type, Ille, 2 drawra, like new 0317 for more Info. 310-435·7094 ext. 255;
Grubb & EUI• payroll, computer exp $1250. Trad wood roll· PUPS rescued from Eve/wknds 714-673·
23 Corporate Plaza pref'd. DOM II. Nr top desk, new $190. death row. Adopt with 2351 or 960.3664
fl 190 NB CA 92860 Hoag Hosp. 642·8206 631 ·5007 or 509-3101 d o n at I o n . C an , t ---------
AECEPT/SECTY •Secret•rY PT• DAYBED whl/braas. adopt? Ba a foster or Lido 14•1962 Sall
Phones, gon olc. PIT Small frlendly NB area complete w/trundl• & volunteer. Call 714/ *1041 w /traller,
M·F lor beaut lrlendlr ollice. You'll be multi matt's. Never used. 559.2704. need• tuneup. $200.
extremely busl Int I skilled w/a sales Cost $850, must 1e11•·P-u-re_b_r_e_d_D_o_b_e_r_m_a_n_' 631·3376
ore In Newport enter. personallly. Hrs flex. S250 cash. 774-6500 Female, 3 yrs old.
Must be hard working , Resumes: PO Box -------,-~----------detall·orlonted, ener· 1246 NB CA 92663 Entire hou1eful of high Abuud but very MARINE SERVICE getlc w/good phone • quallty Lodge.pole 1weet and great with
voice & xlnt typing, SECURITY GUARDS furniture Incl bdrm kld1. Needs to be only SUPPLIES 7020
compuler & mallroom NEEDED, South Or· sets, enter centers, pet. Call 714-373-0771
skills. $8·9/hr DOE. Pd ange Co. Will train. din rm, Uv rm, etc. By 642 8898 • .. •••••••• Boal cover, new, V·hull, parking. Call Donna Call 714·921-7122 appl. • 1• 15• $150, Other alzes
Brown at 760.8279· SPOATS·MINDED? URGENT! MUST SELL GARAGE SALES avail. 642-4665
Restaurant Market sports services Storage unit full of un· I••••••••• ---------Grlnga1 Grill by phone. Leads pro-used quality furniture. Y•m•h• 90hp, 1986.
Now hiring • 'all posl· vlded. Great Income Uvlng room, grandla· $400. Call after 6gm
hons available. Apply poten. CM. 436-1627 ther clock, leather BALBOA (714) 434-028
In person, 111 Palm WE NEED PEOPLE TO den. f~r~al dlnl~g ISLAND 6106 ~~116.alboa, alter 10am SE~ our hair acces· room714-;5~~~6 e c. _MAR.l ___ NE __ S_U_P_S __
Y sones at home. We SA7 8·121 305 Amethyst Restaurant pay up to S3~6.00 Wicker armchairs w/ Ave. Antqs, plants, DOCKS 7022 NOW HIRING! weekly. No experience cushions, wckr tbl & pictures, furniture, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim
needed. Fun a~d shelf unit, pine cotfe'& nautical Item• & misc! easy. Call ~f..C~ssones tbl, white desk, asst
Now Interviewing en·
erge1lc & outgoing
peraonallll•• for all
Etc. 1·f41-'?P4-7576. chalra, lbl1. 648-9201 S AT, April 2, 9-4 Ext. 9. . Antiques, video cam-
Excellent loc nr Ferry.
40' +. on-shor.-bath
faolllitles. Pvt parking
avl. 723-4597 .. era, clothes. 409 No. WILD CRAZY MERCHANDISE Bay1ront ___ ....,.. _______ _
CAN'T BE LAZY SLIP TO 80 FT
No exp nee, we train MISC. 60151---------Clastlc NB toe. Uv• Yott, Call 557-1661 COSTA MESA 6124 li60llrd-;po1. ,631·8481
· Beautiful Kerm•n Sl4 per h. ----------EMPLOYMENT Orlent•I Rug, MOVING SALE 372 E. 16th St. SERVICES 5533 10'•15'. Call 721-0607
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ref rig, 1 \Ill yra $250 obo. Frml wed gown,
•••-•-IZ 6-6, $300. 962·0486
SAT/SUN 8AM·1PM
Moat Items are Ilk• AUTOMOBILES
new. Don't miss oull
Please b• aware that•---------Soccer Fund·R•lser the listings In this cal· SUNOUEST•WOLFF Sal 8-4. DHk, couch,---------
egory may require you TANNING BEDS lots of misc:. 2755 BMW 9030
to call a 900 number New commercial Gannet, Meta Verde iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
In which there I• a home unlla from charge par minute. s 1 99 . 0 0 . L. mp •• •-N-E_WP_O_R_T ____ es• 318 I-Champagne Lollon1·Acce11orle1. gold 4 dr·AC snrf.pwr
po1lllon1 tor our new· ---------
eat location In Corona EMPLOYMENT
Monthly paymentl BEACH 6169 '1111-cassette.gd cond
low as $18.00 iilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 14250 obo. 218-9422 Call today·FAEE NEW d•I M-S~RVERS WANTED SS3S color catalog MOVING SALE! Sat 8-2 '80 5281, b<own, 6 c~I. 1·800-462•9197 Furn, hOUHhOld, paUo auto, 4·1pd, AJC, p/b, HOST(ESS)/CASHIER
FOUNTAIN
BUSSERS
LINE COOKS (experience preftrred)
Apply In peraon
Ruby's Home Office
Tuea, 4/5 • Fri, 4/8
lOAM ·NOON
1PM • 4PM 110 Newport Center Or.
Suite 1 to
Newport Beach
Thinking of having a
garage sale?
Give us a caUI
PILOT CLAS-IFIED
842·5878
EASY WORKI HI, major appl. 243 p /W , p /s , . am If m
EXCELLENT PAYI Tree RosH SS; Cltru1 61at SI. 631·3388 alerao, anrf, tinted
A b d or fruit tree• w/frult 1_s_E_LL-IN-0--0 -,.-.,c-e-F-ur-n-I· glass, allo~ whls, ssem le pro uc11 at s 0 o p 1 •9·s10 home. Call toll free 1 ; n a ma ... tura, De1k1, Chalra, S3,250. 7S9 388 Gal plants Sl; shade, T bl p Hl00-467·5566 pine, fruit 15 gal $20; • H, ayma11er.
Ext.11718 herbs 135 kinda, $1; BIQ GARAQI! SALi! ---------I MAKE 110,000 mac 510 9og.a74.9422 Sat. Aprll 2, 435 Allio HONDA 9085
WEEKL v TRY out iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
working only one•---------PILOT CLASSIFIED 78'Accord•2Dr·HB hour a dayl No joke. COLLECTIBLES ll'a th• resource you Gd mech end, Rf rack
Revolutionary home 6017 can count on to sell a Nu ·carb·Brk etereo
bu1lne11. No lnven-,'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii variety of merchan· S1000 • 631·7149 tory, Accounts and 1• dlse Items, because training. Minimum In· Buying Vintage Barblea our columns compel _9_0_'_A_c_c_o_rd.,.._E-X-, -22_K_m_I,
v e 1 t m e n t S 6 K . & Acce11orles. Mu11 qualified buyers to blk, 5-spd, llhr, 1nrf,
Won't last. Call aay "Made In Japan". calll 842•5878 a/c:, Alrm, aplr, chrm 1·800·940•2299 Top price pd 960-35681_________ whls. SlSK• 650-4390
THIS AMAZING LEASE OFFER INCLUDES:
1 • 10 Year/100,000 mile limited powertrain warranty
• 24-hour roadside assistance provided by the U.S Auto Club
• 2 Year/24,000 mile no-charge scheduled maintenance
•AM/FM stereo cassette• Anti-theft alarm·~ystem
• 4-Wheel power-assisted disc brakes
• Air conditioning • Power central locking
LEASE ENDS MARCH 31ST
18711 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach
842-2000
THE NEW
JETTA
'.ltlll 111 Glwillt Sl4,llS M,.S lP. ... .,.... .. w... SltU3 ''"' ....... , .... so ......... moo,.,.... .. ~~ .. ., ........... ~ .... llllllSt,54114. °""411t ,uidw 11 i-... I• SU'1. l1inff« i _. 11 -'-' c.-.rJ lly Wf Cie4lt, IM .... CA r~ .... II.di 11 .. 1"4. Olhr _. ... 11CAr..w..s;.,.,._111111 llM CA
rt;sl . ..._. ........ MWll 111 14 .... iMl. , .... All/JM ... -. u...-1 .......... S450 ...... leelmc--·sso•• • ,...~, ..
r*'-al SSOO, ... h c..W tf!ICI &11111......, lrellWdilll. OtW Ofllillls.,... ""'""" r'liL ..... l .. r..,..Alt w 111111. M ......... ,...,....... fer S.tOI• ... 60,000 ._. ,°' .._.. ...i 1l11UM-•• mo••• t.. &cW.s_.._. ""-'-"' • .,,,.... s. yw,.., 1er ...._
(01"4 ~ SlAJllUS SAW£ um. D0111 DIM D1U111
•SE•R•Vl-C•E---1 CARPENTRY 3510 CLEANING ELECTIUC.AL 3610 HANDY MAN 3710 INSURANCE 3778 MASONRY 3828 PAINTING 3858 PLUMBING 3890 REAL ESTATE
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVICES 3 548 iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiliii-iil SPECW.IST 3 911 DIRECTORY A to Z HANDYMAN liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A-1 &leotrf081 work Car pantry, roofing, Affordllt>la Health tn1ur. M••onry Expert• BOB MUTTON CO. ••XTRA QUICK•
tns1111/retace c1blnet1. WINDOW CLrat.1ING Local Uc:. contractor plum bing. drywall, No Deduct. 50+ local Block/Brick/Concrete Painting Interior/Ext• Right now. Minutes Come lo Colo!adol Colo Spg
Kitchen•, p1Uo1 & roofing * ~ * Quick Reaponsel stucco, painting, Ille, Med Fae. FrH quotea. Stucco/Rapalra. Low rlor. Acou1tlc celling• from youl Drains ruor ,.10 help. ~ Off m
repalra. Doug 541H258 FREE ESTIMATES FrH Eal. 950.7042 tlactrlcal. Jim 641·7494 Matk LI Croix 725-0562 Prlcaa, Uc. 531·7643 • palnttd, repaired, cleaned from $7.50. costs. Sue-ColclWtll Bri
Rtpalt1, Rtmod. Door1, 297-8081 David Euro-an Creftaman applied, removed, dry Complete hou .. S55, Walktr & Co 800-57l-&S25 .. _ ............ _ 1 A~ -.. -wall repair a texture. 1 yr guar. Plumblng1---------1 ...,...., .....,.. ..... a ..... co -r·•--------FENCES Tile, painting, r•roof, JEWELRY 3784 MOVING 3834 #622631 Ha.8320 repair• from $9.75. Relocating to Denver wan. ~s. gatH, tic. Uc. CONCRETE • repair and moral Ref'• JohnnlH, 540-2092 All SSS ranges. Al
35yn •~p. ~eny 142.0517 MASONRY 3 5 5 7 .,.8riiiiiDiiEiiCiiKSiiiiiiiiiiiii3ii6iilii5 Stefan 581·7981 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Jerry L Davl1·Speclallu 1r POX PLUMBING* Am er 1 can R E. ( e 0 b
Bookkpng. 20 yra Npl 1• Home Repalra/Remodel Wllllam Harold Jawelera Cept. Holm•• Mover• * Cu1tom Res/Comm quatltu work, 1001'. lnl/ Knudsen) 800-553·5299
Sch. All l)hasas, aalH CARPET'INSTALL •P•NCES OAT••• Costa Mha/Newpon Walch & jewelry repair Th• Captain beall P!llntlng/Wallpaperlng ,
tax, P/R & P/R tax ~ L "Dep,••'Ds 3516 * Btlt Prlct/Qu1llty new/Jepalr/poat ""9Ced 25 Yra Experience! Antique/Fin• Jewelry everyones prices! Ina. Ll441235 * 788-2028 bond:f· ~16531'8. Ff -ru-e-------•
Hcty Hrv. 780.1771 a:~ ~ Undtcapt, brick, atone. Redwood• Ll576605 *JIM e76o8099 * BYy/Mllllrldt 973-0395 hardworking, prof. PAINTING U8• t::1rM ue~I ~~~t3 iiiiiiiGiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil JT Concrete 143-0IU Jim WhYt• 842·7206 Ltfl 174192 944-4937 color conaultallon
CPA SINC• 1994 carpet Repalrt·power B lcX Block St Tll •Wood llfenoe•• M•aonr~ Problama/ I O free w/eal 20yra exp Phamltlne Rep•lre & Rep•lr Specl•ll•t IRS audit•, appeal• & rHlretch·wtr damage, ~o~ PatkJ ~:~wa~ ~ ht~ Repair/add. FREI! HI. LANDSCAPE • PUBL C N TICE custom/maintenance Oralna CIHred lrom Clean, Caulk, regr04Jt
compromlHI, divorce 1natall any size Job. Fplc, 'aBoa.' Raf. 20 Yr tltlmlltS. ~ pr1ca. Uc'd form•rtv wtlh Aoger'1 IAWN CAI! 3808 Th• Calif. Public Ullll· 41615891 &4NI03S 15.50. All flxtur•• In Haling &. lnatall
& lltlgallon. 862-3340 20 yr e>Cp. 726-7032 Exp. T.,.-y as7•7894 Advanllge Constt. !174-5301 Gardna. Phllllpe 841-2187 tie• Commlasion RE· ---------• llallad. Slave'• 545-8298 Uk•Nu Tile 840-2211,
-Plumblng/elec/Waler QUIRES that all used MIN.OW Clfole llalnt. ITA•.,llLD 'LUMllNQ QUALITY CPA Camant/brlck/llone/111•1---------B•alo Y9" ... Int; houHhold good a Pllnlln9. ~ HouMI 11 II'• plumblng, we do ---------1
at affordable fixed fH. CLEANING drvwy slab 12.50/•q " FLOOR INSTALL r~~=~·~~~~~.·lffl:~c.~~~ L9Wftl!J c ....... p.. mover• print their Ape. Oual. job. FrM.... It I SI n c. 195 7 . WALL Br:~·l~,&~;~~~8' SERVICES 3548 ~~~~~~°:c8~~~1':r REPAIRS 3620 FREE Ht. 241..0137 1;::,.!~1e~4~t ri~0~· ,:;,: !~~= St lcl589lll7 830-1751 • • • ..._1944 • • COVEJUNGS 3132
QUALITY MASONRY Semi Retired con'1aclor. Down to Earth Lawn & print their T.C.P. num· -,-IAN--0-.-V-O-,.-.,--•
---------1 1 '•t Team Cteanlng Block & wood fencH, Ylnwf, h8rdwoocl Rpr1, lmprvmnt1, eml Garden Service. Conll ber In all advertl•• --POOL
APPLIANCES Vacancya, Home & cone drlvH & patios. ceramic, marble, eub Job•, Ouallly, Integrity, Malnt & Renovation. ment1. If you have a 't11t!SONS 3168 SERVICE 3894 SERVICE 3426 Commercial. 8am-8pm Uc•871812 988-0422 floor repair, carpet 1 care, Kan 642·1770 Cuatomer Satlafactlon quHtlon about the I• ~ 297°1788 7 days Uc, Bond 943·3882 gallty or • mover, limo
CuetOf'ft lnetellatleft
Rea/Comm •trip/pain
No job too 1malll
5% Otf w/ad 873·2937 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 100"9 l •tl•f•otlon ------------------our tat priority! or chauffeur, call: 1at La880N PR•• POOL CLllANINQ
ors back. Home/Otc. DEC!'; •---------BAUUNG 3720 Uc#4118039· 648-7819 Public Utllltln Plano: Maatera cand. CMm. aerv., aqulp.1,-------...;.~ Mlchael1 Appl Repair·
W/D·elOVH•reftlg·d/w mlcro.grbg dl1p 10%
olf w/ad. 962-4824
Hona11, r•f•· Soma COATIN,. •3570 ::AINl!!7RB •••••••• °'9en kene Landacpng Commlulon 8 Vf8• leeching. repair, elQae, etc. Ins.
BATHTUB
RESTORATION
3448
Don 't Repl•o•
Reel••• Tuba•tll .. .. nllla•epaa•flberglaH
repair. Fr" In home
Ht. Quar 151>-1795
Why play Hide 'N
Seek with chlldcat•? Call The Piiot todayl
542·5178.
Eng. Rebeca 265•1308 v ._ 3622 'JUNK TO THE DUMP' ~ Irrigation, Trimming 714-558-4161 Jonathan 759-&087 FREE ESf 775·1722
M•rl•'a Hou1ecleanlng STOP Deck Lea1ca-'"li!•iiimi•lililiil•lilli Immediate debrla • Removalt, CIHn· S•v Oft Movtne •• removal. Ouer Hone1t upa & Malnt, St. Uc. L t St t pay Low ratH, good raf1. waterproof coatings-c.,..ptete Reatorlltleft Prlc:••· eea-1882 1599025, 43a.aao4 owe•• orage, pro · G ROOPING
Fr" Eat. 20 yr exp. decke, atalrs Qual. 't/OOd, wtcker, uphols, XLNT rep. 1 IV min. Ina. 5••vtCJS 3870 ·-------ii Call anytime 241-0531 work. L1687430 Fr" etc. FREE pickup a ---------Jungle J im• Land1cape T187859. V/MC 73t-29M GA
Rell•bte Home/Offl,.• ·Est. BHt I 722·8789 dallvery. M2·tea:s &Q-• ratn11 Malnt.Hrdec:pe,Yard -.""'i'""u~f'""•""R""'M...,,...O""V""•""R""i,,,_*-ll·------llHotllne Aoonngl FREE -nu. ~ cleanup. Teme It w lkl lh 0 A Earqthquake kit w/ Cleaning. Excellent sm•vtc S 7 nowl 497-ette Careful, courteou• a ng • og· frM Eat. Uc'd a lna'd, ~~~ 10" ~:~.~'a:::1·DOO--l-S ____ 3_5_8_0 RANDY AuN 3710 ~ E J 60 Lan•H•'• Re,alr•an ;;~~:.0.t4i!A.9:t. ~:~::~.1~~~~.na~I:~; eao.3aoo t1'804N7
., ..... a MAI ""UNQI HOMS NUR811/ Yard llghf••prlnklers. tlome. lne. 173-1114 8edler ......... Lio •
You make th• 1111· .... ...,., MW entry Me•U"tal '"'"'11ee COMPANION TrH trlmng-prunlng. -,-.-.._--... ----·• ---------lne~e comm.
housek .. f*I do th• maker a door hanger1 Palnt·Carpenlly· 25 yr• exp, many refa. Call Pet•. 722·7732 nanunG 3858 On the move? ,. ""'*"· IS ~·
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How do you like to savor your
Sunday mornings? Maybe It's time
spent with family enjoying a
favorite activity followed by a
hearty sausage-and-eggs brunch.
Or perhaps your perfect Sunday morning is a
gathering of friends for good food and fun.
However you like to savor a Sunday, It
probably doesn't Involve a lot of time spent
In the kitchen. And today there are lots of
great ways to streamline preparation with-
out shortchanging yourself on the tradi-
tional quality and good taste you want.
Convenience products, like quick bread
mixes, allow you to ha ve home-baked
goodies In less time than it takes most of us
to run to ·the bakery. And with refrigerated
biscuits, you can make main dishes, sweet
and savory breads, desserts and more in
record time.
For example, the ever-popular sausage-and-
eggs combo turns into a simple-to-make
quiche using the giant-sized refrigerated
buttermilk biscuits as an easy, no-roll crust.
With fla ky refrigerated biscuits, you qtn create
savory Dilly Cheese Ring that as~embles in a
snap yet looks company-pretty.
W h en you want a sweet addition for your
brunch, choose a fruit-or nut-flavored quick
bread. Nutty Sour Cream Orange Muffins and
Cinnamon St reusel Brunch Loaf, both starting
with quick bread mixes, are good mates for
egg main dishes or with coffet> for dessert.
Take advantage of the do-ahead features that
• make these recipes even more convenient to
prepare and serve. Also, try out the easy
brunch Ideas Included here. They're all de-
signed to help you savor your Sunday mornings.
Diiiy
Cheese Ring
For a fresh-as-springtime taste, serve
this quick and ea,y bread with the tantalizing
scent and taste of dlll.
1/4 cup rMrg•rlne or butter, melted
1/4 cup P.rmes.n cheese
1 teupoon dill weed
1/4 tuspoon g.rtk powder v
2 (10-oz.) CMS Hungry )«k
Refrlger•ted Fa.ky lb<utts
Boon ..
Heat oven to 350°F. In small bowl, combine
margarine, cheese, dill weed and garlic
powder.
Separate each can of dough into 10 biscuits.
Cut each biscuit In half and randomly place
20 pieces In ungreased Outed tube pan. Spobn
half of cheese mixture over top. Repeat layers
with remaining 20 biscuit halves and cheese
mixture. Bake at 350°F. for 20 to 30 minutes
or until golden brown. Cool I minute;
remove from pan. Serve warm. 10 servings.
Nutty Sour Cream
Orange Muffins
Prepare these on Saturday to serve
with your favorite egg dish and fresh fruit for
an easy Sunday brunch. Brush muffins with
marmalade just before serving.
1 pkg. Pillsbury Nut Quick Bread Mix
1/2 cup or•nge juice
2/3 cup d•lry sour cream
2 teupoons gr•ted orange peel
1 egg
1/2 cup sliced •lmonds
3 tablespoons orange marmalade,
warmed
Heat oven to 400°F. Line 12 muffin cups
wlth paper liners or grease 12 muffin cups.
-,.
In large bowl, combine rnix, o range juice,
sour cream, orange peel and egg. Stir 50 to
75 strokes by hand or until mix is m o ist-
ened. Spoon batter into lined muffin cups.
Sprinkle with almonds. Bake at 400°F.
for 18 to 23' minutes or until golden brown.
Cool 5 minutes; remove from pan. Serve
warm or cool. Just before servin g, brush
with warm marmalade. 12 muffins.
HIGH ALTITUDE-Above 3500 Feet: Add
l tablespoon flour to muffin ingredients.
14 muffins.
Biscuit Sausage
Quiche
Streamline morning preparation
by browning the sausage and b eating
the eggs the night before. Refrigerate over-
night and assemble the dish quickly on
Sunday morning. It will be ready to bake in
just minutes.
1 l b. turkey breakfast sausage
1/4 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup chopped green bell pepper
10 eggs, beaten
1 cup (4 oz.) shredded Cheddar
cheese
1 (17.3-oz.) can Pillsbury Grands!
Refrigerated Butte rmilk Biscuits
Thul'9day, March 31 , 1894 C1
Savor your Sunday
mornings by
Including these ·
simple-to-make
recipes in your
brunch men11:
(clockwise starting
in lower left comer)
Biscuit Sausage
Quiche, Nutty Sour
Cream Orange
Muffins, Dilly
Cheese Ring and
Cinnamon Streusel
Brunch loaf .
. I ~
Heat oven to 375°~. In large skillet, brown
sausage, onion and green pepper; drain well.
Combine eggs. cheese and sausage mi\.ture.
Separate dough Into 8 biscuits. Press bi~cuits
into botto m of l 3x9-inch baking dish. Pour
sausage mixture into biscuit-lined pan.
Bake at .l75°1·. for .lO to 35 minutes or until
quiche is set and cru\t i'i deep golden brown.
Cool 5 minutes before !lerving. 8 ervings.
~£ Cinnamon Streusel _.,2!J Brunch Loaf
Start a (am11\ trad1t1o n-erve
delicious quick bread li ke this on Sunda\
morning for a <ipec1al treat
BR EAD
1 pkg. Pillsbury Banana Quid<
Bread Mix
2/3 cup water
3 tablespoons oil
2 eggs
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
STREUS EL
1 /3 cup finely chopped pecans
1/4 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1 /2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon butter
GLAZE
l /2 cup powdered sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
2 to 3 teaspoons mrtk
Heat oven to 350°a,. Grea'ie and flour bottom
only o f 8x4 o r 9x5-inch loaf pan. In large
bowl, combine all bread lngred1enb; 'itir SO to
75 strokes b> hand until mix Is moistened.
Pour batter Into gr~ ed and fl oured pan. In
mall bowl, mix all streusel lngrl•<ilent~ with
fork until crumblv. Sprinkle evenlv over
batter.
Bake at 350.F. for 50 to 60 minute or until
toothpick Inserted in center come out clean.
Cool 15 minute ; remove (rom ptin. Cool
completely.
ln small bowl, combine all glaze Ingredients.
Stir together by hand until of drizzling con-
sistency. Drizzle over loaf. 1 ( 12-\llce) loaf.
HIGH ALTITUDE-Above .\500 feet: Add
1 table.spoon flour to bread Ingredients. Bake
at J7s•f. for 40 to 50 minutes.
• C2 Thursday, March 31, 1994
I t may sound impos ible. But it
takes only 2S minutes to make
the e heany, wholesome
chicke n dishci for your family.
Wi1h the help of Stove Top
~turfing f111X 1n the caniste r and
simple ingrcd1cnu you probably
have on-hand in your kitchen, you
can prepare these three chicken'
recipes in just minutes. Featuring
one simple cooking technique,
these recipes make it easy to add
variety to basic chicken. And the
d1!.tinc tly delicious flavors of each
recipe will have your fo mily
clomori ng for seconds.
What's more, with these recipes
there's no, "what can I serve?"
panic at mealume. These Stove
Top kitchen-tested recipes are
designed to help you easily and
quickly put together a meal out of
items you will likely find in your
stuffing mix helps ertsure that each
recipe is a s:uisfying entree. With
these recipes, simply adding a
!>alad and beverage turns mealtime
.. Crom a chore into a cinch.
For example, take you r family
South of t~e border with the Sa lsa
Chicken and Stuffing recipe.
Mi:xican food is so popular that
salsa is probably in your cu pboard.
Simply brown chicken, stir an salsa,
cook. then serve over cornbread or
chicken flavor stuffing mix. Serve
walh tonalla chips and a sh redded
vegetable salad.
r or zesty Italian style chicken
try Chicken Cacciatore and
~luffing. Skinless chicken breasts
cooked in a sauce of tomatoes,
tomato sauce, sliced mushrooms
and sliced green pepper give this
da~h its ltali:in taste. Serving the
cooked chicken on a bed of
humestyle herb or chick.en navor
stuffing mix gives just the right
tll)te to this meal. Na turally, hot
I ta la an bread and a salad of olives
and grecm can go on the table, as
\\Clf.
Wha t's as America n a) apple
pie? PoullJY served with cranberry
s:JUce as in the recipe fo r
Cranberry-Glazed Chicken and
Stuffing. Cooked in a mixture of
cranberry sauce, orange juice,
carrots and water, the chicken
takes on the sweetly tart fl avor or
cranberry. Served on a bed of
chicken navor stuffing mix, this
chicken recipe is as pretty to look
al as it is good to cat. A colorful
gelatin mold salad wi ll add just the
right homey touch to this meal.
With these recipes, your own
~imple ingredients and Stove Top
stuffing mix in the ca nister, you
will be able to create a chicken
sensation -and do it in only 25
minutes.
SALSA CHICKEN AND
STUFFING
Prep Time: 5 min.
Cooking Time: 20 min.
• 2 loblespoons murgarlne
• 4 boneless skJ nless chicken
breast halves
• I cup mild salsu
• l/l cup waler
• 2 cups Stove Top cornbread or
chicken nnvor
•stuffing mix In the canister
• l/l cup (2 ounces) shredded
cheddar cheese
Don't cry over
soggy cobbler
The mouth-watering scent of
frc~hly-baked cobbler can waft
through your house in minutes when
you use Sora Lee Pound Cake as a
bal>c. Ulackbc rry Pound Cake Crisp
1~ -,wift, simpl e and scrumptious.
BLACKBIRRY POUND
CRISP
• I Suruh Lee fn mlly Size All -
Uuller Pound Cake (16 ounces),
thawed
• I cup plus 2 tablespoo ns all·
purpose nour, reserve 2 lublc-
spoons to mix with blnckbcrrles
• ¥4 cup nrmly packed ll&ht brown
suga r
• l/l. tcospoon ground ci nn amon
• •h cup bulter or moraarlne
• 4 cups rrcsh blockberrlu, rinsed
and drained (may subslllute with
seasonal berries)
• 2 tabl espoons aronuloted suaar
• l/.l cup cream
Six servings. Preheat oven to
350F. Ligh tly grease 9-inch square
baking pan (optiohnl: 8-inch round
springform pan). Cui Sara Lee
Pound Cake ~erticnlly into five 11/
2·1nch thick slices. Reserve re·
maining pound cake. Make the
Crisp Topping: C.Ombi ne l cup
nour, brown sugar and cinnamon
in o small bowl, mix wc;ll. Add but·
ter or margarine and rrii.x wit h an
electric mixe r on low, dr with a
fork, to fo rm 11 moist, cour e
dough. Set aside. Lightly toast
: pound cake lices on both sides in
o toaster oven or under a broiler.
Arranac slices In a si ngle layer
over bottom or bakina pan.
Combine bl11ckberrlcs, 2 1able·
poons nour, and aranulated suaor
in a medium bowl and toll li1h1ly.
Carclully dl11rlbute berry mixture
over the pound cak\ layer. Dalee ~ abou\ 3.5 mlnutea.
Heat muiariAc in large skillet
on medium-high heat. Add
chicken; br~n on both sides. Sur
in S31sa and water. Bring to boil.
Reduce heat to low; cover and
simmer 10 minutes or until
chicken is cooked ttlroogh.
Remove chicken rtom skillet. Stir
stuffing mix into skillet. Place
chicken over stuffi ng mixture.
Sprinkle with cheese; cover.
Remove from heal. Let stand 5
minute!. Makes 4 servings.
CHICKIN CACCIATORI
AND STUFFING .
12-Pack Coke
+CRV
Prep Tune: S min.
Cooking Time: 20 min.
• I lablnpoo11 oU
• • boedeu lklalHs tbJdu>a
bnaat laalwn
• l cu (I OUttS) lkWH
lomaloa
• l can (I ouaca) tomaco sauce
• l caa (.C ouattl) aU~d
mu.brooms, dralntd
• l medium ~reeo ~p~r, thinly
sllctd
• Ill ltaspooa dr5ed oreaano leaves
• 2 cups Stove Top bomes()'lc herb
or chicken navor stuffin& mix in
lhe canister
• 2 tablnpooos anted Pannesaa
cbffse
Heat oal in larae lkillct on
medium-hip heaL Add chicken;
brown on both sides. Stir in
stewed tomatoes, tomato sauce,
mushrooms, green pepper and
oregano. Bring to boil. Reduce
heat to low; cover and simmer 10
minutes or until chicken is cooked
through. Remove chicken from
skillet. Stir stuffing mix foco slillet.
Place chicken over stuffing
mixture. Sprinkle with cheese;
cover. Remove from heat. Let
stand 5 minutes. Makes 4 servings.
NewpOll 8whfCOlla Mela Dally Pilot
CllAll•IRU·OLADD
CHICON AND ITUf PINO
Prep Time: S min.
Cooking Time: 20 min ..
• 2 tablespoons margarine
• 4 boneless skinless chicken
breast halves
• 2 carrots, thinly sliced
• ~ cup orange juice
• ~ cup wnter
• Ill cup whole berry cranberry
sauce or jellied cranberry sn uce,
divided
• 2 cups Stove Top chicken flavor
stuffing mix in the canister
Heat margarine in large skillet
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Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Thursday, March 31, 1994 C3
T•atoes: A juicy way to alleviate calorie c•cerns
I n the mood for some of those
traditionnlly rich comfort
foods, but concerned about
1hc calories? Get ready to feel
good. Fresh Tomato, Ham And
Corn Chowder cuddles you wi1h
navor, but cut's the calories. To
make this soothing soup, chunky
bits of fresh, red-ripe tomatoes are
simmered with seasonings just long
enough 10 cxiract their juices but
retain their meaty texture. Then
sweet kernels of corn and cubes of
lean ham arc added for extra
character. The good news is that
each satisfying serving has only
Shri oc Bun Portion ·Fully CooUd
Bont In. \r.uct Addtd • um11 One !'ct Family
Wluk Supplies l..&11 Lb. I
190 calories.
If you're feeling especially in
need of comfort, have a Baked
Tomato Cheese Sandwich. Juicy
ripe tomato slices and reduced·fat
Swiss cheese arc layered between
bread spread with honey mustard,
then allowed to marinate in an
egg·and-milk mixture before
baking. This cozy concoction has
fewer than 400 calories.
' But please don't compromise
the goodness of these comfort
foods by using less than perf cctly
ripened tomatoes. To ensure their
peak flavor and juiciness, simply
F1'llll Tll'kay
ButlCfblll Bnnd .
Young • I 0 IO 14 l'ounds
AVUl(! \t'nglu
keep your tomatoes on the kitchen
counter for a few days until they
are bright red and slightly
softened. Don't refrigerate them.
FRllH TOMATO, HAM
AND CORN CHOWDER
• 2 Jorge (1 pound) rresh Florido
tomatoes
• 2 tablespoons vegetoble oil
• • l/l cup chopped onion
• l/l cup chopped green bell
pepper
• 1 can (141/l ounces)
ready-to-serve chicken broth
• 1 cup frozen corn kernel
• 1 teaspoon basil leaves, crushtd • v. teaspoon snit
• ~ teaspoon ground blnck pepper
• ¥.. cup cubed cooked hom
Use tomatoes held a1 room
temperature until fully ripe. Core •
tomatoes; coarsely chop (mul..e'i
about 2·•n cups); se1 aside. ln a
medium saucepan heat oil until
hot; add onion, green pepper and
reserved chopped tom:uoes; cool..,
siirrif)g occasionally, un1il onion
and pepper are crbp·tcnder, about
S minutes. Add brotn, corn, basil,
3 pt SIP8'ies
~alt and black pepper; simmer,
co,ered 10 blend navors, about 15
minutes. S11r in ham; cook,
uncovered, until heated through,
abou t 5 minutes. YIELD . .a.
portions. 4'h cups
BAKED TOMATO-CHIESI
SANDWICH
• 2 large (1 pound ) frl'~h Morida
tomatoes
• 8 slices liruHl'\lurcd "hitc
bread
• 6 teaspoons Dijun·SI) le huncy
mustard
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• 4 'lieu (J ounce tach) reduced
Swiss cheese •4eus
• 2 cups lo"r11t (1%) milk
• I teaspoon sail • v, teaspoon iround red pepper
U~e tomatoes held at rOOQ'I
temperature until fully ripe. Core
oI the 1oma10 and cul into eisht
slices; set aside. Lightly butter an
8·inch square baking pan. On 3
\\Ork i.urface place 4 slices of
bread; spreai;I each with 1
teaspoon of the mustard; arrange
cheese over mustard, culling 10 fit
shape of bread. Top with reserved
tomato slices; cover each with 1
slice bread. Place sandv. iches in
prepared pan. In a medium bo,.,.I
whisk 1ogetber egg, milk, salt. red
pepper and remaining 2 tea poons
mustard; pour over sandwiches.
Co' er with plastic wrap;
refriger:lle for at least 2 hours, or
overnight. Preheat oven to 350 F.
Bake until egg mixture is nearly
sel, about 30 minutes. Core and
slice remaining tomato into 8
slices; top each sandwich with 2
tomatoes slices. Dake until a knife
inserted 1lear center comes out
clean, 10 to 15 minutes. Let stand
10 minutes before serving.
Lender's
introduces
new bagel
T he latest addition 10 1he
family of Lender's Dageb is
found not in 1he freezer. but
in grocer's bread aisles. ~to:.1
1mpor1.intly. Le nder's Dagels !>l.iy
fresh and delicious on your
l..i1chen counter for days and days!
"We're excited about offering
consumers a new way 10 enjoy
Lender's Oagels," explains John
Craig. president of Lender's. "For
the last 30 years, we've been
predominantly in the freezer case.
Now, Lender's Dagel lovers can
find their favorite bagels in !he
bread ::tisle, too."
The new bagel is 50% larger
than its frozen coun1erpar1 and
um.liced like a tradi1ional bakery
product. This new Dagel Shop
0Jgcl is , .. a1er·boiled and
hearth·baked in the same
traditional way that made Lender's
1hc No. I selling bagel in America.
Lender's Bagel Shop Bagels arc
a\'ailable in four varieties: plain.
egg, raisin and onion :ind are
pcrf ect for breakfast, sandwiches
and snacks. These satisfying bagels
are 2.85 oz each and are sold sLx
(6). to a bag. The suggested retail
price is S2.09 -S2.1 I. Lender's
Dagel Shop Bagels can be found in
your favorite grocery store.
Lender's Dagel Dakery has been
baking bagels since 1927 and is the
\\.Ofld's largest producer, baking
more than one billion bagels
annually. Lender's' has four plants
around the country including the
world's largest, in Mauoon,
lllinoi . Lender':. Bagel Bakery is a
di' ision of Kraft General Foods,
Inc.
Dagel crving suggestion:
•LOX 'N'CREA~tCHEESE
BAGEL· Spread bagel half ,.,.ith
cream cheese. Top \\ith onion
slice, tomato slice and lox.
•HAM & EGG BAGEL
SANDWICH: Top toasted bagel
half \\1th ham slice and cheese
slice and scrambled egg.
•SLOPPY JOE: Top "arm
bagel half with heated prepared
sloppy joe mixture.
•PIZZA DAGEL: Spread bagel
half with pizza or spaghelli sauce.
Top with shredded mozzarella
cheese. Broil until cheese mehs.
•CHILI CON BAGEL: Top
\\.arm bagel half with heated
prepared chili. Top with shredded
chee e, sour cream and chopped
onions. if desired.
•CHICKEN SALAD BAGEL
SANDWICH· Spread bagel 'half
\\.ith mayonnai e. Top with lettuce,
1om:110 slice and your favorite
chicken salad. (Tuna or any
fa,oriie salad can be substituted
for chicken salad.)
•BURGER ON A BAGEL:
Top bagel bottom with hamburger
p:.1tty, onion slice, lettuce, tomato
slice !lnd p1c~lcs or your favorite
burger toppers and bagel top.
•CREAM CHEESE A: Spre:id
bagel half with cream cheese. Top
with jelly.
•APPLE CINNAMON AND
CHEESE: Top toasted bagel hnlf
\\ith apple slices and cottage
cheesci sprinkle with
cinnamon-sugar.
• CHEESEMATO DAOEL:
Top touted baael half with
tomato and dtecte 1licc1. Broil
until cheese melts.
• FISH STICK BAGEL
SANDWICH: Spread betcl
battom with tartar sauce. Top with
rash 1ticb, lettuce, tomato II~
and bap1 lop. (., . .
• BAGEL OilPS: Cut bl&el
horizontally into .... i ... Gki
slica. Oat elda lllOI ift half! ..._
Scrve.ri1hdip1..,..._.
fondue. •
. . .
I'
ThUreday, March 31, 1994 Newport Beach/Coata Mesa Daily Pilot
ove Top stumng make old
H ow often hnve you wanted
to serve your family a
delicious, treasured recipe,
one that features appetizing,
home-cooked goodness and a
reminder of cherished times past,
but found you just didn't have the
time?
Now with the help or Stove Top
stuffing mix in the canister, and
simple ingredients you probably
already have on-hand, you can
quickly pr~pare a dish that will
have your family asking for more.
These new takes on favorite
chicken and beef recipes utilize
basic ingredients probably found
in you r cupboard. And the recipes
demonstrate the versatility of
Stove Top - a stuffing mix that
can be more than just a favorite
side dish.
While your mother may have
had to spend hours preparing
favorite family dishes, t~ese easy
new kitchen-tested recipes are
designed to get you in and out of
the kitchen in 10 minutes. And,
while the meal is baking or
cooking, you can spend precious
extra time with your family. .
Ch icken pot pie, a perennial
favorite, 1s a dish you can now
serve more often by following the
steps in this new Easy Chicken Pot
Pie recipe. Using cubed cooked
chicken as a base, simply stir in
mixed vegetables, mush rooms,
:iea:ioning and a mixt ure of con-
densed soup and mi lk. After
spooning Stove Top :ituffing mix in
the canister over the top, bake and
st:rve. What could be easier? In·
elude a tossed salad and beverage
and you have a mea l that wi ll sat·
isfy your entire fam ily's appetit e.
Here's a new, easy twist on a
family favorite -ml!a t loaf. When
you r family experiences the saucy
savori ness of Barbecue Meat Loaf,
they will definitely be asking for
this dish again!
Moroccan flavors
sweetly spice up
chicken dishes
At the western tip of
North Africa where the
Mediterranean meets the
Atlan tic, the cuis ine is as
lush as the cli mate. Fragrant
spices mingle with dried and
fresh frui ts to produce
deliciously exotic foods.
In Moroccan Chicken the
home econombts al the
Kikt...ornan Kitchens have
created a succulent entree
that is very easy to prepare.
its spicy-sweet navor comes
from marinating the chicken
in a mixture or low sodium
li te 1eriya ki marinade &
~:iuce, garlic. cinnamon and
cloves.
Lite teriyaki marinade &
sauce i!> :i n ideal ~hort·cut
ingredient for many
differen t kinds of recipes
becau!ie it has a full-bod ied,
~weet taste. A ble nd of
n:itur:illy brewed soy sauce,
wine and :ipices, it works
well here with the other
seasonings to give the
chicken a sa.,.ory, exo11c
navor.
Cooking is easy as the
chicken simply b:ikes in the
m:irin:ide along with thinly
sliced onions, lemon and
whole pilled prunes.
MOROCCAN
CHICKEN
• 3 pounds frying chicken
pieces
• t/1 cup low sodium eUle
terlyakJ marinade and sauce
• 2 lorge clo.ves garlic,
peeled and sliced
• V• teaspoon ground
cinnamon
• " teaspoon ground clo,•es
• l onion thinly sliced
• 1 teaspoon suga r
• th cup pitted whole prunes
• th lemon, thinly sliced.
Rinse chicken under cold
water, pat dry with paper
towels. Combine lite teriyaki
marinade and sauce, garlic.
cinnamon and cloves; pour
over chicken in large plastic
food storage bag. Press air
out of bag; close top
securely. Turn bag over
several times to coat all
pieces well. Refrigerate 8
hou rs or overnight, turning
bag over occasionally .
Spread onions to cover
bottom of 13 x 9-inch baking
pan; sprinkle suga r evenly
over onions. Remove
chicken from marinade and
place skin side down on
onions. Pour marinade over
chikcen and onion . Arrange
prune in pan and lemon
lice on chicken. Dake In
375 oven 20 minutes. Tum
chicken over, bake 30
minutes lonacr or until
chicken is no lonaer pink m
center. Strvc with onions
and prunes. Mlakea 4
servinp.
The secret is mixing barbecue
sauce and Worcestershire sauce
with the stuffing mix before mixing
in the other ingredients. The
ingredients for Easy Beef Stew
with Stuffing take just 10 minutes
to get ready for cooking.
Then.,brown cubed beef and
chopped onion, add canned'
tomatoes and mushrooms, carrots
and beef broth. Simmer, then top
with stuffing mix and you have an
easy, hearty one-dish meal.
got the basic ingredient to help
you easily prepare and serve
fa"oritc dishes that your family
will request time and time again.
IAIY CHICKIN POT Pll
Prep Time: 10 min.
Cooking Time: 35 min.
• 1 v~ cups hot water
• 3 tablespoons maraarine, cul
Into pieces
• 3 cups Ston Top chicken flavor
stumna mix In lht canister
• 1 cup mllk
• J cups cu~ cooked cblckcn
• 1 packaae (10 ouncts) trozcn
mlud vqttoblt11 tbawtd
• 1 can (4 ounces) sliced
mushrooms, drained
• \4 teaspoon dried thyme lea~es
Heat oven to 350F. Mix water
and margarine in large bowl until
12X8-inch baking dish. Spoon
stuffing evenly over lop. Bake 35
minutes or until heated through.
Makes 6 servings.
MaalCUI MIAT LOAf
Prep Time: 10 min.
Cooking Time: 50 min.
• l egg
• 1 cup milk
• 3/~ cup barbecue sauce, divided
• l tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
• ·~ pouada ...... beef • 1 cup lbawed rrona 1weet con
• ~ cup dked pw• pepper
· With stuffing mix in the canister
on hand, you've got more than the
makings for a side-dish •• you've
• 1 can ( 10 ~ ounces) condensed
c:rcom or chicken soup
• margarine is melted. Stir in
stuffing mix just to moisten; set
aside. ~ix soup and milk in
another large b,owl until smooth.
Stir in chicken, vegetables,
mushrooms and thyme. Pour into
• 3 cups Stove Top chicken navor
stuffing mi.x In the canister
Heat oven to 350F. Beat egg in
larae bowl; stir in milk, \4 cup of
the barbecue sauce and
worcestcrshire sauce until well
mixed. Stir in slurring mix just to
moisten. Let stand 5 minutes. Mix
in meot, corn and green pepper.
Shape into oval loaf in 12x8-inch
baking dish. spoon remaining II.?
cup barbecue sauce over meat
loaf. Bake 50 minutes or until
cooked through. Let stand S
minutes. Makes 6 servings.
NICIS f"fCTIVf I A.M. THU•S., MAKH .11 THIW WID., ANH. 6, 19N
OPEN EASTER SUNDAY
flllSllAnAlftlC
SALMON snAKS
FARM RAISED
(flllETS ... 5.99 LB.) ua.4.99
Hawaiian Whole
PINEAPPLE.. ..................... .' .......... LB .• 3 9
GINIUL MIRCHANDlll
4 ·MCK G.I. LIGHnULBI
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l•La.
.99
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REGULAR, UNSALTED ORUGHT 1.49
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WATER ADDED· UMIT 1 (Bun PORTION ••• 1a.5!C)
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HUOHIS PUMllR
PRUH HIN TURKIY
GAADE '&l6T01S·OZ. I 29 WITH l'Vt'·UP TIMER 3.00 Off W /COUPON SHOW LB. e
STANDING
RI• ROAST
SMAllENO 3 29 ~EF l8. e
FRESH STRAWBERRIES
U.S. #1 , Tender 49 GARNET YAMS ........................ LS. •
llAITIR CANDY
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CANDY ,
I I TO 12-0Z. SELECTED VARIETIES e 99
Hlll.IHIY'I usn•
CANDY
8 TO 9-0Z KlSSES,
HUGS OR MINIAMfS 1.89
CAUFORNIA GROWN
EA.
Hb.Bog
DOLE SALAD MIX ......... 1 EACH
DIU DIMllTMINT
'DU•UQUI
CANNID HAM ·
1.79
OVAl
H B TIN 8.99
PlllLADILPHIA
CRIAM CHllSI
8 Ol. SAA RfGORUGHT .99
6·PACK COKE
DR PEPPER. SPRm -REG. OR Din, 12-0Z. CANS, +CRY • LIMIT 4
llllOWN a
savm llCM''
HUGHES, 12-0Z. 69 REC OR NAl\JIW. GRAIN e
HOUDAYnAn'I ..
...n• DINN•• oao1a•
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CUT ~EEN &EANS, MIXED VEG
.79
.79
Frozen
All WEIGHT WATCHERS ENTREES.. 3 ,_t 5
26-0z. Ready to Boice Apple or Cherry
MRS. SMITH'S PIES ...................... 2.99
eoz. FROZEN
...... co ....
6·MCK PINI eo11 n• I
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12-oz. CANS .av
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TOP ltOUND
ltOAIT
BONELESS
BEEF. 1.97
Extra Lorr Deluice Mix • EASTE BOUQUET ......................... 7.99
WINUA UCIUOU
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VMllUll•
16~~=0R 2 .. •1
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. ,
AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT DEVOTED TO '1 l lE EASTER SEASON
•. 1 r
• SpecioL holiday worship services A sp1Cill 11Ction
devoted to Easter A long with churches
mentioned throughout this
section. special services are
also planned at thc~e community
hou!>CS of worship. Come
celebrate the Easter season!
First United Methodist Church
of Costa Mesa Jt 420 W. 19th
St., invites you to join the Miracle
of Easter, April 3. The Rev. Steve
lsenman's sermon is Glimpses of
Glory. Worship services arc <1t 9
and 10:30 a.m. Refreshments will
be provided from 10to10:30
a.m. C1ll 548-7727.
St. Mich;icl and All Angels
Episcopal Church at 3233 P;:icific
View Drive (MJrguerite Avenue),
Corona del Mar, will celebrate our
Lord's rc>urrection with three
worship !>erv1ccs: 7: 10 p. m., Sat.,
April 2 1s the Great Vigil of Easter
"1th Holy Baptism. On Easter,
April 3. a lc:>ti"al Choral Eucharist
will bl' celebr;:itcd at 8 and 10
a.m. A children's Easter Egg
Fc!>tt\ ,11 tollows the 10 a.m.
worship. Call 64_4-0463.
Orange Coast Unitarian
Univcrsalist Church Jt 1259
Victoria St., Co;ta MesJ, will
celeurJtc 1~ Easter Sunday service
10:30 a.m., with flower
communion and an [a!>tcr egg
hunl. Titled, ·1 he Myth of
lmmortJlity .:ind the Truth of the
Eternal, the sermon is by the Rev.
Brandoch L. Lovely. interim
minbter. E.lch persDn is invited lo
bring a cut flower for exchange; a
communion created by Or.
Norbert Capek in the 1930s in the
UnitJriJn Church of Prague,
Czcd1o!>IOvJl.ia. Infant Jnd child
CJrc pro\1dcd. C.lll 646-4652.
PrcsbytcriJn Church of the
Covcn<rnl at 2850 f airv1cw Road,
Co)IJ tv\es,1 will hold its Ea>ter
Cclcbr ,1t1un Sl'rv1ce 10 a.m ., April
3. lht' CU\.en.1nt Choir.
accompanied by brass instruments
will be featured. The Rev. Danna
Van Horn will officiate.
St. John The Divine Episcopal
Church at 183 East Bay St. in
Costa Mesa will hold Stations of
the Cross and the Good f riday
Liturgy, noon April 1 ; and an
Easter Vigil Service, 7 p.m. April 2.
Holy Eucharist services Easter
Sunday, 8 and 10 a.m. Child care
is available at the 10 a.m. service.
Prince of Peace Lutheran ·
Church at 2987 Mesa Verde
Drive, Costa Mesa invites you to a
viewing of the film "JESUS," Good
Friday, noon, April 1; and again
on Holy Saturday, April 2, 7 p.m.
Call 549-0521.
St. James Episcopal Church at
3209 Via Lido, Newport Beach:
Good Friday, April 1, 6:30 a.m.,
Morning Prayer; Noon to 3 p.m.,
homilies on Christ's seven last
words (come to all or part or the
three-hour service); 6 -7 p.m.
Confessions, 7:30 p.m. Stations of
the Cr~ss. Choir; Holy Sa~urday,
April 2 Children's Service with
baptisms; 7:30 p.m., Great Vigil of
Easter, Holy Eucharist Rite II;
Easter Sunday, April 3, 7 a.m.
Holy Eucharist Rite I, with
orchestra; 9 a.m. Holy. Eucharist
Rite 11, with orchestra; 11 a.m.
Holy Eucharist Rite II, with brass
section. Child care will be
provided Easter Day for children 2
years through second grade; also
nursery care at 7, 9, and 11 a.m.
services. Call 675-0210.
It. Andrews Presbyterian
Church at 600 St. Andrews Road,
Newport Beach: Sat., April 2,
5:30 p.m., features guest musician
John Brown. Easter morning,
(three services), 7, 8:30 and 10: 15
a.m. The full Sanctuary Choir and
20-piece orchestra, directed by
Dr. Daniel Sharp, leads a musical
celebration. Senior Pastor, Or.
John A. Huffman, Jr., delivers the
Easter message. Call 574 2228.
O ur l ady Queen o( Angels at
2046 Mar Vista Drive, Newport
Beach, will observe Good Friday,
CJoin Our crMl.rch ::;Family
'5?ls ~e c.:Prepare for e aster.
T HE PRESBYTE RIAN CHURC~
OF THE C OVE NANT
:Jnvites ~u 7o Our 9loly <'Week. &rvica
MARCH 31st• MAUNDY THURSDAY 6:30PM
Light Supper and a Shon Service
APRIL 3rd • EASTER SUNDAY JO:OOAM
Special brass l choir presentation with Thomas Axworthy on the
~.su and John Cather playing the trumpet
2850 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa (71 4) 557-3340
Near Orange Coast College, Fairview & Adams
HOLY THURSDAY, MARCH 31 HOLY SATURDAY, APRIL 2
Morning prayer -8:30 om
Evening Moss of the lord's Supper -7:30 pm
GOOD FRIDAY, APRIL 1
Stations of the Cross -12 noon
Meditation • l :00 pm
Liturgical Service with
Veneration of the cross -1 :30 pm
Preparation rites for elect and candidates being
received into the church -9:00 om
Easter Vigil -7:00 pm
EASTER SUNDAY. APRIL 3
Mosses -7:00, 8:30, 10:00 11 :30 om
No 5 :00 pm Moss
A+ Been inactive? Exp~rience Christ's Easter Peace
2046 Mar Vista Dr.
Q..R LADY (Jamboree & Eastbluff)
QuEN a= ANca.s Newport leach • 644-0200
April 1 with Stations or the Cross,
~oon, followed ~y a Meditatio.n at
1 p.m. and Liturgical ceiebrat1on
1 :30 p.m. Holy Saturday, April 2,
8 p.m., Easter Vigil with reception
of new church members. Easter
Sunday Masses 7, 8:30, 10 and
11 :30 a.m. Tpere will be no 5
p.m. Mass. Call 644-0200.
St. Matthew's Traditional
Episcopal Church ::it 1723
Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach,
will hold services during Holy
Week to commemorate Maunday
Thursday, Good Friday and Holy
Saturday. The Resurrection of our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ
celebrated with Holy Communion
9:30 a.m., April 3. Childcare is
provided. Call 646-11 52.
In 1hk special adver-
tisina wtlon, a>me cele6rate the season and
the many signs ol Easter
that symbolize new life.
Community churches
invite you to worship.
Take time out for
traditional feasting wi th
family and friends. Find
out where the Easter
Bunny is hopping for
some fun-filled events.
Join in sharing the spirit
of Easter.
SPEND EAS1:ER WilH
THERJSEN CHRIST
I
St. Andrew's
Presbyterian.
y "CRAD~~ROSS,
EMPTY TOMB ''
Church
(Manhcw 28:1-15)
Satun.lay, April 2, 1994
5:30p.m.
unJa\', Apnl l, 1994
7:00, 8.JO anJ 10: I 5 a.m.
..
Glonou.s choral music of Sanctuary Clu111 .
Dr. ~IL Sharp. MmurnofM1m' c.111J
\Vorslup dtrecang. Cluld cart is pm•:id.!d
Dr. Jllhn A. Huffman, Jr Pt~~h1n1t
600 St. AnJre~ Rood, Newron Beach. l A
1 ~"•"'•~~H.wt.•H .... ~ho•A ~ 1<-1rw..,J 1'11
JOIN US FOR
EASTER
BRUNCH&
DINNER
Bnam7-3
Dinner 3:30-10-.JO
Spedlll e.n & Uni> Dinners Pa
m81P~IUNce
CRUISE
SundaytO-....
Enjoy Brunch While Cruising
&aulifuJ Newport Harbor AboanJ
111EPAWJJON~
Lift~--& Dom-Prim
Adalls~~
(714) 631·.!880
2 /CELEBRATION OF LIFE · AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE DAILY PILOT• THURSDAY, MARCH 31 , 1994
. .
Easter at Easter youth events at Mariners Church
South Coast
Community
Easter weekend
celebrations will begin at
South Coast Community
Church on Good Friday,
April 1 at noon. The
one-hour service will
feature special music by
Christian recording artist
and South Coast worship
leader, Fernando Ortega.
Senior Pastor Bob Shank
will be speaking.
There will be three
identical Easter Celebration
services, Saturday, April 2
at 6 p.m. and Sunde;{'
April 3 at 9 a.m. an
10:45 a.m. Special music
will feature a 115-member
Easter choir and brass. Bob
Shank will be speaking on
"A Love That Knows No
Limits."
The children of South
Coast will celebrate the
Risen Jesus by decoratin~ a
floral cross on the churc
grounds. Each child is
asked to bring a flower
with them to class. Child
care (infants through 6th
grade) is provided at all
services. Ample parking.
The church is located at
5120 Bonita Canyon Rd.,
Irvine. Call (714)
854-7600.
~
-
'
Children are special every day
at Mariners Church and Easter is
no exception! They will enjoy an
exciting morning guaranteed to
make the meaning of the empty
tomb vivid and relevant.
The program will start with
fun music led by our great Kids
Celebration Team. A surprising
and compelling drama will rivet
them to their seats as we
discover, along with Peter, John
and Mary, that the tomb is
vacant. We'll wr.ap up a great
time together with a craft project
~T. MATim'W' ~ QflJ001
TRADITlONAL EPISCOPAL
Biblical Faith -An&lican Tradition
HOLY WEEK
~undy Thursday
Good Friday
Easter Even
Satter Day
7:30 p.m.
3:00p.m.
7:30 p.m.
9:301.m.
Child care provided at all services.
1111
I
I
1111
1723 Wes1eliff Drive. Newport Beach
(behind Wcsteliff Court)
714-646-1152
Celebrate Easter
With the
Hootingeon Beach Churth oC
Religious Science
Topic:
"A Resurrection
Consciousness"
Rev. Mary Murray Shelton
BeautifuJ outdoor Sunrise Service at 6 a.m. with chc full
Easter C hoir.
Plus three indoor ervices: 8, 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.
Nursery, child care and t hildren's church available at alJ
services except Sunrise.
White Eagle to sing ar 8,
9:30 and 11 a.m. A citizen of the
Rosebud Sioux Nation, White
EagJc has ca ptivated millions with
his enthralling voice.
designed to make the morning's
events memorable.
Our warm and experienced
teachers are looking forward to
welcoming each o( you r
children personally. Easter
morn ing at Mariners Church
will have an impact on your
entire family.
Join us for worship and
children's programs at 8:30 and
10:30 a.m. Mariners Church is
located on Bison between
Jamboree and MacArthu·r Blvd :
in Newport Beach. ' Children will celebrate Easter at Mariners Church.
IRYllE MEllW~ RMPHlllHUR
I RV I NE •CAllfOltNI A
THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1994 •AN ADVERllSING SUPPLEMENT TO THE DAILY PILOT • CELEBRATION OF LIFE / 3
Bake a batch of hot cross biscuits
Hot Cross Biscuits are quick, easy and a terrific baking actMty to do with children.
Family fun at Easter can include
more than coloring eggs :ind hunt·
ing for chocolate bunnies. Il:ll.ing
together offers a double bonus:
quality time with )Our children :.ind
delicious ri.:sults the whole family
will enJOY eating.
There's even a hi:.tory lcs:.on to
be lc:.irned when you select a Ira·
dition:.il recipe with a contemporary
twist. Hot cross buns, a not-too-
swect yc;ist roll Oavored with cur-
rants and topped with icing in the
shape of a cross, is ;rn English
bread that predates Chrbtian1ty.
These buns first were baked to
honor the Goddess of Spring.
Later, when the Christian faith
come to England, bakers slashed a
cross on the tops of the buns, ::ind
the buns became nssoci:ncd with
Good Friday.
Uecause they rely on yeullt to
make 1hem rise. 1radi1ional hot
cross bun~ require both skill :.ind
time. Hot Cross lliscui ts, on the
other hand, are much quicker :rnd
ea~icr to make.
A biscuit at its most b:lSlc re-
quires ju~l fi ve ingredients: nour,
baking powder, salt, shortening or
butler and milk. Because they use
bnling powder instead. of yeast for
leavening, biscuits are sometimes
~(erred to as quick breads. Some
biscuit recipes call fo r buttermilk
and baking soda; others use grains
such as oats in place of some of
the nour.
Many biscuit variations include
additional ingredients such as dried
or fresh Cruit, nuts, spices, even
chocolate chips. And not all bis·
cuits arc sweet. Cheese, herbs, ol-
ives, shredded carrots, sun-dried
tomatoes, diced ham, chilies and
other savory ingredients are also
fou11d in biscuit recipes.
So how should a biscuit look and
taste? According to Karen Doher-
ty, a manager in the Quaker Kitch-
ens, a perfect biscuit is light and
tender with a golden brown crust
and straight, even sides. V. hen bak-
ing Hot Cross Biscuits, or any
other biscuit , Doheny has these
tips.
•Combine dry ingredients thor-
oughly to evenly distribute the bak-
ing powder. When substituting oats
for part of the nour, either quick
or ol<l fashioned oats can be used.
Biscuits made with old fashioned
oats will have a heartier texture
and wholegrain flavor. Oats 11tay be
substituted for up to one-third of
the nour in recipes fo r biscuits,
muffins and other breads.
• For the Oakiest biscuits, use
chilled butter, margarine or short·
ening and a pasuy blender, two
knives or your fingertips to com·
bine the fat with the dry ingredi·
ents. The mixture should look like
coarse crumbs.
• Add milk all at once and stir
.See 81SCUITS/5
Qa.slorante rt.aliano C51 Conlmenlale
WIU BE HOPPING .•.
EASTER SUNDAY
APRIL3
SPM
LIVE MUSIC & DANCING
SPECIAL EASTER LAMB DISHES &
OTHER ITALIAN PASTAS & ENTREES
TO MAKE YOUR RESERVATION CALL
(714) 675-1922
3520 East Pacific Coast Hwy.
Corona Del Mar • Dinner 7 Nights a Week
100 MAIN ST.~ BALBOA
(et toot of PW)
675-7760 .
What could be better! cha~ and fresh,
Join us th is Easter squeezed ~ juice you'd
Sunday, April 3rd 3f like. ~·,all kinds c:l
the Waterfront .., entertainment, too, from a
Hilton Beach Rcson. morning Easter ea
Enjoy a feast c:l : ...,.,. • hunt fcx-the kids, to
seaiood apecialties · ·., "I • • • .. • • • '" a mackian, a pianist,
and succulent meats; exquis· and, c:l courx, the
ire egg dishes and made·to-Easter Bunny.
order omelettes; our home-Fram 10:00 un • 3100 pm
made waffle station; fann-fresh Adulu $29.9S. Childrea 12
fruits, vegetables and cheeses; S'\ and under $13.9S.
gourmet salads; our Vienna ~ \. F<W raenationa, pleaM
~rt table; and, all rhe call (714)960-7873. • ne~?'~~
Reedl lteMlt
On SOWthmi California's Be.ti Btacll
21 lOO Pacific Coast Hwy., Huntington Bc1Kh, CA 92646
4 I CELEBRATION OF LIFE• AH AOVERtlSING SUPPLEMENT, TD ntE DU.Y PILOT• THURSDAY; MARCH 31. 1194
BISCUITS •rem•
jus1 until the dry ingredients are
moistened and the dough clumps
together.
• Knead dough quickly and gen-
tly 6 to 8 times on a lightly floured
surface just until no longer sticky.
Too much fl our and overkneading
1hc dough will make biscuits tough.
• Roll or pat dough to an even
thickness, usually Ill inch.
•Cut biscuits with a floured bis-
cuit cutter and a straight downward
motion. Avoid .twisting the biscuit
culler or biscuits may rise uneven·
ly.
• Brush tops of biscuits wi1h
milk, melted butter or margarine
before baking for richer brown
tops. tr desired, sprinkle with ~d
ditional oats.
• Bake biscuits in a preheated
hot (42Sf to 450F) oven until light
golden brown, and serve hot.
HOT CROSS 811CUITS
• 1¥, cups all-purpose nour • v, cup dried currants or raisins
• 1 cup Qunkcr oats (quick or old
fas hioned, uncoo ked)
• 1 teaspoon grJlcd orange peel
• ¥' cup buttermilk
• 2 tablespoons firmly packed
brown sugar
• l tablespoon morgorine or butter,
melted
• 2 teaspoons bakJng powder
• 2 tabl~poon_s Quaker oats (quick
Or Old (ashioned, UDC~)
• 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
• V.. teaspoon bakinc soda
• V.. teaspoon sail (opOonal)
• ~ cup (5 tablespoons plus J lea·
spoon) marzarinc or butter, chilled
lCLNG
• 11.t cup powdered sucar
• l to 2 teaspoons buttermilk
Heat oven to 450f. Lightly
grease cookie sheet. In large bowl
combine first 1 ingredients; mix
well. Cut in m:trgarine with pastry
blender or 2 knives until crumbly.
Stir in currants and orange peel.
Add bullcrmilk, mwna jus& until
moisleaed. Turn out onto li&ht~
floured surface; bead genaty 6 to 8
times. Roll or pal dou&h to 'A-inch
ahickness. Cua with floured 2~
incb biscuit cutter. Gather douah
scrap1 ICllCfher (do not knead): re·
roll and c¥t until 1A dough is used.
Ph1ce on prepared cookie sheet.
Brush tops wiah melted maraarine
and sprinkle wiah remaining oats.
Bake 10 to 12 minutes or unlil
light aolden brown. Remove to
wire rlCt; cool 3 minutes.
For icins. combine powdered
sugar and buttermilk; mix well.
Usina 1 small spoon, drizzle ici ng
on each biscuit in the shape or a
cross. Serve warm. 1 dozen. NU·
TRITION INFORMATION: 1 bis-
cuia: Calories 190, Calories From
Fat 63, Total Fat 7g, Saturaaed Fat ta. O\olcsterol lms, Carbohydrate
28a. Dietary fiber ls, Sodium
220ms, Protein 4a.
Where to find the Easter Bunny
CORONA DEL MAR
Roger's Gardens hosts the Easter Bunny Sat., April 2 and Sun.,
April 3 between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. thrOUl,hout rhe gardens.
Located at 2301 San Joaquin Hills Road, COrona del Mar. Call
640-5800.
COSTA MESA
15th Annual Easter Playday at Christ Lutheran Church and
School, Sat., April noon to 2 p.m. Easter egg hunt, games, prizes,
refreshments and a live Easter Bunny. Located at 760 Victoria St.,
Costa Mesa. Call 548-6866.
NEWPORT BEACH
Fashion Island invites children to ride the Easter Choo Choo
Train and have photos with the Easter Bunny at Fashion Island
through Sat., APfil 2. look forthe Easter Bunny in the grassy
area, adjacent to the Limited store. Choo choo rides are in the I.
Magnin wing. Call 721-2000.
11 lb Annual Great Easler Egg Hunt at Ea.stblu(f Park 10 -10:40
a.m., Sat., April 2, for ages 10 and under. Ages 2 -4, 10 a..m.;
ages 5 -6, 10:20 a.m.; ages 7 • 8, 10:30 a.m.; ages 9 -10,
10:40 a.m. Free photos, bring your baskets and look for the
Easter Bunny. Sponsored by the City of Newport Beach Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Dept., and Eastbluff Village Merchants
Association. Eastbluff P'ark is at Vista del Oro and Vista del Sol.
Call 644-3151 . ..
St. Michael & All Ang els Episcopal Chu rch
Corona del Mar
SPECIAL EASTER CELEBRATIONS
Good Friday
(April 1)
Holy Saturday
(April 2)
Easter
(April 3)
7:00pm
7:30pm
8:00am
lO:OOam
Stations of th e Cross,
Music, Holy Eucharist
Greaa Vigil of Easter,
Choral Eucharist, Holy
Baptism
Festival Eucharist
Festival Eucharist,
Children's Easter Egg
Festival
NurNry tare provldH
THI llV'D PETER D. HAYNES, llCTOI
3233 Pacific View Dr. (at Marguerite), Corona del Mor 644-0463
~liiiil~~ p ~ \_.:
Join Us for Palm Sunday and
Easter Dinner Specials
featwing a variety of gourmet pasta dishes & fmh seafood
plus 0CK famous homftnode desserts. .
Nominated Orange County's Most Promising New Restaurant
00 HI llSINDS & llWWD
Family Brunch
As Good As You Remember It.
Rnnember the first time you
went out for bnanch with your
family? 1t wa prob:ibly at some
mcc ho1el, .,.,th a fabulous bu1Tc1,
on some unpunanl oc:ca\1on.
Thls E:aster Sunda)', you can
relive that Sllmt Spt'C1al feehng with
our Famil)' Ea~ler Brunch 111 the
Hyan Ncwponer.
In our Arbor area. or a lush gar-
den sctung, yuu"ll cn1oy a bounuful
buffet from I 0 am rn 3 pm
Entenainmeni abounds with a
Doocland Band, nmlhng mus1cuns,
plus pony ndes (10 30-l:JO), a pct-
nng 200 and Camp H yan for the kids.
Ynur liule one~ "111 ol•o lo\ e
the Ea~tcr F.gg Hunt\ al 11 am.
1.:? lO and 2 pm.
Pn"1: for :adult~ " S.27 Q~.
Scnt<lC'\ o1 and .wcr $23 t)5, Ju..h
unJcr I:? Jlbl SI J.<>5 And t\>Jdltr-.
under 1 }Can a~ frte
So .... 111hc Hvau Ncwp..1rtcr nuw
ot (7 11) i:?.9-12H • .:x1 582. for an
bl~ter Brunch rnu'll lt•ng remember
'"t'\t'T'bougtu offanyllung
11 ~-\-1 I
OURFMI'ER OIAMB\GNE
BllUNOl IS FOR.EVERY BUNNY!
1 l.<XJAM -3:00 PM
SERVED IN OUR PAaFIC BALLROOM
ADULTS $18.95
KIDS(• 5-12) S<i95 (""'16 5 jtt) .
SENIORS SJ 5.95
This &.tt parade J".U · ~a • bu8's ind~~
UHJldrr onidmcs arJd r c:arwd rounii~ balmi ham.~
P.dl. ~gra.f ~=-~.&ads, amp., and our tpUial ac:alll&)"OW~ ballra tt ctc.n.
Plus ~ Rabbe in pmon to meet the kids.-. 0
11hatc his~~ lmlES.
~ alllmai immt by the 4'nn Smich Trio.
Hop to it aD iodaytocmurcyour raerv.lliom 0 1") 833-0570. f.xt. 7069.
®~ ff 0 T E L
4~5 MacAlthur Bhd., N n Beach
ntURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1184 •AN ADYERTl8ING SUPPLEMENT TO THE DM.Y PLOT• CELEBRATION Of LFE / 8 "'' • .. . . . .
-·
Easter in
the Meadows
Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa
in conjunction with Capo Beach
Calvary and Maranatha! Music,
invite you to a weekend of
celebration beginning on Friday,
April 1 and ending Sunday, April
3 at Irvine Meado\Vs Amphitheatre
in Irvine.
Event schedule
Friday, April 1:
• Noon -Good .friday
Communion Service (gates open
at 11 a.m.). Special music by
Duane Clark, John and Lisa
Wickh;:im; message by Pastor
Chuck Smith, Sr.
• 7:30 p.m. -"A He;:irt in a
Box," a music.:il drama by Michael
Sewell (ga tes open ;:it 6:30 p.m.).
Saturday, April 2:
• 4 p.m. -M.:ir•rntha! Music
Fe!>tival ~\ Picnic (gate!> open at
3:30 pm). Special mu!>iC by love
Song, The l'rJise Band, The Kry,
King) Road, Billy Batstone, Paul
Alrich, Jon Gibson, Chris Falson,
Alfie Sila> & Choir and others.
Sunday, April 3:
• 6 a.m. (d<iylight S<lvings time
change) -Easter Sunrise Service
(gates open at S a.m.). Special
music by The Praise Symphony
Orchestra, Calvary Chapel
Wor!>hip Community, MCA
Children's Choir, Calvary Chapel
High School A'Capella Ensemble,
Mich<iel Sewell, Bob and Dixie
Olinger, MJrk Zeeman and others.
Message by Pastor Chuck Smi th,
Sr.
• 9:30 a.m. -Easter in the
Meadows (gates open at 8:30 a.m.
daylight savings time change).
Special music by The Capo Beach
Worship Band and 100 Voice
Choir, Christ Falson, Scratch, the
Lovable lion, and Kaleidoscope
High School Song and Dance
Company. Message by Chuck
Smith, Jr.
Cele_brate cit New Corimiuiiitt
Tim Timmons and New 10:30 a.m. In addition to
Community invite you and
your family to share in one
of the most remarkable
events in history -Easter.
Tim's message is "East is
best celebrated in
cemeteries." According to
Timmons, "the focus of
Easter is not and must not
be the picture of Jesus on
the cross, nor the burial, but
the fact that Christ is alive.
And, Since He is alive, there
is power for all to start over,
even in the midst of a
nightmare."
Easter is a time for
celebration of life with
family, friends and
community. At New
Community we are
celebrating Easter Sunday
with services at 9 a.m. and
Tim's spe<;ial message, we
are featuring special music
under the direction of Alex
Palermo -the New
Community Singers, Choir
and Band. Children's
programs and nursery care
will be provided at all
services.
New Community is not a
cause ... it's not ~ club .. .
it's more than a church .. .
it's a community. It is a
place to grow -a process
of mentoring the individual,
a plan for molding and
mending relationships, a
program for reproducing a
valuable generation.
New Community is
located at 2025 Alton, Irvine
(between Redhill and
VonKarman). Call 442-9249.
Christ Lutheran Church
Come and Celebrate Easter!
EASTER SERVICE
8 and 10:30 am
"H ooray for Jesus"
Paster Tornow
t
GOOD FRIDAY WORSlilP
April 1, l2·3pm & 7pm
BASTER PLAY DAY SATURDAY
For children ages 3-10
12-2PM
EASTER SUNRISE
6am
"Good News for Today"
Paster Tornow
Easter Brcalc:fast 6 :45 ro 10: 15 am
760 Victoria, Costa M esa • 631-1611
2025ALTON
IRVINE
B•tw•-R•AUI 0-V.,. JGurru.,.
CJnlJrnu ,,,..pil#U •• ,,, .~
442-9240
. .
Sunrise service at Lookout Point
The Community Church,
Congregational United
Church of Christ at 611
Heliotrope Ave, Corona del
Mar celebra tes Easter, April 3,
with a 6 a.m. Sunrise Service
at Lookout Point on Ocean
Blvd., above Big Corona State
PPach. The full worship
~ v ces will be 8:30 and 10
a.rn. at the church.
Interim minister Or. Dennis
Short, will lead worship
servrces. Music direaor
Rodger Whitten, will conduct
soloists, chancel choir and
guest trumpeters in the joyful
music of C.P.E. Bach and
Dietrich Buxtehude.
Children's Sunday School is
at 9:45 a.m. with an Easter
egg hunt .on the church law11
following the second service.
Call 644-7400.
EASTER SUNDAY
7:00 A.M. SU"llSI
9:30 A.M. FfSllVAl
CHILD CA.l1
CHILDU"'S EGG HU"l
ST. MARK PR£S8TI'£RIAN CHURCH
fASUlUff A.1 JNMOUI NEWPORT IEA.CH 644-1341
8 I CELEBRAT,ON OF LIFE• AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO ntE DAILY PILOT• THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1184
'
· The newness of
the resurrection
BY THB ll.Bv. PBTB .. D . RAYNES,
Sr MICHAIL ..uit> ALL ANOIU
f.PISCOPAJ. CHll'llCR
What do you believe? What
do I believe, I who preach the
Gospel of C.od in Christ Jesus?
Strange things are happening to
my believing as I get older. A..s I
mature I believe the
Resu rrection of Jesus Christ
more literally, in a more
concrete way, than I did 20
years ago. Yet, the paradox is
this literalism is not about dead
carpenters being resuscitated
and making the 10 r.m . news.
It is the explosion o the
radically New. ·
The Good News is about the
New breaking-in on ou r tired,
frustrated and divided world.
The Resurrection says that we
and Cod are so met together in
Jesus so as never to be parted,
and that this Christ raises us ·
from our deadness and our
deadlin ess now. What in you,
then, needs to be raised from
the dead? What deadliness,
''hat part of you long dead,
forgotten, rejected, needs to be
touched so that you may be
complete?
It is put beautifully by Dante
in his Paradise: "And when we
pOl completeness on afresh, all
the more gracious shall our
pcr~n be, reclothed in the
holy and glorious flesh."
The came glorioso, the
glorious flesh of the
Resurrection is the glorious
parti cularity of you, you and
me. All of us together are one
body in the Newness of the
Resurrection. It is a powerful
message that touches all of us
insofar as we are open to the
New.
St. Michael and All Angels
Episcopal Church St. Michael
and All Angels Episcopal
Church is at 3233 Pacific View
Drive, Corona del Mar. Call
644-0463.
Clolsonne
Cross by
Jerry
Campbell.
Rich in
Medieval
lymbolism,
the phoenix
at the foot
of the cross
represents the
Resurrection.
Displayed on
the North
·Sanctuary wall,
Saint Michael
and Angels
Episcopal
Church In ~:!:;':=Silt Corona
del Mar.
"\\\\ · EASTER SUNDAY
Cl\,.il'l~q_"i Our 20th }'ear Serving ~\"'\f\lal' Award Winning Food
in a Delightful
Waterfront Restaurant
SPECIAL TREAT
Enjoy a scenic
Harbor Cruise before
Brunch or After Dinner
Brunch 9-2:30 Dinner 4-10
Call 675-5777 ~~~~r
HISTORIC WATERFJ()NT RFSTAURANT • 3010 LA FAYETTE. NEWPORT BEAOi
Cannc C ruise Boat "Isla Mu·crcs" Lcavin the Cannc Dock
OPEN EASTER SUNDAY'!l.-~
Featllrlnlf Breakfas•
GILDID CACH no. ....... ._., 4 ~ DbuaerS lals
81JNDAY NIGHT SPECUL·ClllCDN, Ria A BRISKET DINNER
Nen ..... .......
Came Celebrate
Easter Jay with Us
EASTER WORSHP SERVICES ON 1lE PENNSUlA
1 ........... ._.
....... -0-.. -
9:00 and 10:30 Ai'Vl EASTER WORSHIP SERVICES
al Chrlet Church by The SN, 14th Strffl I 8afboll Blvd.
(Clllld c ... ""'"""'
Chrfll Church Br The See Unll9d IHttlodltt. 1411t s1,..i . e.lboe Blod. -Newport 8Hch . (714) 513-llOS
•
Visitors are welcome'
Child care at all services Easter Day
The Rev. David C. Anderson, rector
3209.Via Lido, Newport Beach 71 4 1 675-0210
..
•
~\~\1 \\\\I" II l'!f //I /fl/;;~:~ ~ ' RISE WIIH ·~~.
OURIORD ~ ~ -r? ~ Celebration! ~
Sunday April 3, 1994
Sunr ise Service
6:15 a.m.
Pastor Bill Kirlin-Hackett. preaching
Futlval Services
8 :00 & 10:30 '·"'· Pestor Susan Kirlin-Hackett, preaching
Ch1ncel Choir & Orchestra
Directed by Wllll1111 Wells
Easter Egg Hunt
IAge 3 ~ Crlde 61-
9: 15 e .m.
Maundy Thursdey
March 31 at 6:30 p.m.
Seder Meal
Easter Pencak• Breakfast
1:00·1p :oo a.m.
Cood Frld1y
April 1 1t 7:00 p.m.
Service of Darkness with Choir
Childcare 1t 111 .. ,.vices (except 6: 1s 1.m. I
Pastors Bill Kirlin-Hackett· & Susan Kirlin-Hacket
~ ~ NEWPORT HARBOR ~ LUTHERAN CHURCH
798 Dover Dr. at 16th St. in Newport Beach
(714) 548-3631
THURSDAY, MARCH 311 1994 •AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE DAILY PllOT • CELEBRATION OF UFE I 7
I
I .
I An Easter message Portuguese Easter s~eet bread
Hv T11E R.Ev. DAVID F. LElL\tBERG
C11u;r C11u1t1:1t llY 111c Sr~
E .:ister is a wondrous time for
the church, and can be for
the world rn general. Easter
shours of hope and new
beginnings. and our weary old
\Vorld needs to hcar th.:it mcs!>Jge.
The church mw.t not be shy in
proclJimrng ir and musr r;ibc the
world's c'pcctJtions. God seems
to w.:int to give u) more rhJn \\C
expect.
Tni:. rs !>omcthr ng lrl-c the rcJlly
nice grft I gJ\C my son on hrs third
birtl1dJy, only to d1)Covcr he w.1s
for mun~ mtcrC>tcd m plJymg with
the giit box. 5umcd.:iy I hoped he
would come to Jpprccratc the grft,
but rrght thrn !he p.:icl-aging was
'' h.:it JttrJctcd his attention.
1 hO)l' \\ho 1,, ccJ in Jesus' dJy
''oulc.J hJ\c been content wrth a
,\1cs)i.1h \\ho '' ould free them
pol11ic.11l~ so they might livt>
JCCor<.ling to their traditions. God's
ia\ur aml nJtion.:il prosperity was
the grit thl'Y JntrcipJted. Instead,
the E.hll'r l'Xpcriencc announced
th,\l Jt•su-., his mission .rnd
mcs-..1g<.·. '' J) the Mcssi.1h Goel
.. \\,)11[(•tf lU g1\(',
l lw; h:m.Hl-.1bll• gift tmrn Goc.l
'huuld ha\ c created cnthus1,1srn.
but not C'\ en J<."sw/ disciples could
.lCLCpl 1t .it iir:.I. The people just
drcln ·1 \\.mt \\ h.ll thl'Y wcrcn 't
C\IJL'LI · 11!-\. Li~l' mv young !>LH1,
thl'\ !ungcd for ,1 IL''>) cxp~nw.c,
le:.~ l'\pJn::.1\·t• ~ilt.
I "U"l'''Ct tht rt• rn ::.unwthing nt
tlw thrl ·~ \lW old 1n .ill of u::.. \ \\~
develop our own set of
expectations about what we can
expect from God. We find it
difficult to think God may be
offering us more than a fancy
package.
This Easter, try standing back
from all the packaging of the
Gospel message, and imagine
instead the limitless gift God is
trying co give us. Being more
hopcf ul, more trusting and more
willing to let God have the Divine
Way with us, may be the
unexpected, priceless gift Cod is
holding out to us.
Christ Church by the Sea United
Methodist is at 1400 W. BalboJ
Blvd., Newport Beach. Call
668-0610.
Easter wouldn't be Easter ·
without a traditional holiday
bread. Each nationality has its
own, handed down from one
generation to the next Featured
liere is a Portuguese Easter Sweet
Bread. It has a delicate lemon
Oavor, making it a unique Easter
bread. The uncooked egg placed
in the center of the loaf covered
with a cross of dough symbolizes
the resurrection. In the United
States, dyed eggs are often
substituted.
Portuguese Easter Bread
• 5 lo 6 cups nil-purpose nour
• 2 packages quick-rise yeast
• VI cup sugar
• 1 teaspoon salr
• VJ teaspoon grated lemon peel
CELEBRATE GOD 'S LOVE
THIS EASTER!
Community Church, Congregarional
United Church of Christ
611 Heliotrope Ave. Corona del Mar
Easter Sunrise Service 6:00 a.m.
Lookout Point (Heliotrope & Ocean)
Easter Services 8:30, JO a.m.
Easier Egg Hum after JO a rn. !.crvice
Child Care Available (644-7400)
The Reverend Dr. Denni~ W Short
Director of Music. Rod er Wh1t1en
Ii
• l cup mllk
• "1 cup bultcr or mar&orine
• l tablespoon lemon juice
•4~s
• .V.. cup aolden ralslns
• l uncooked eggs
ln a lnrge mixer bowl, combine
2 cups flour, yeast, sugnr, snit
nnd lemon peel; mix well. In
saucepan, heat inilk, buner and
lemon juice until very warm
(120-J30F; butler does not need
to melt). Add to nour mixture.
Add eggs. Olcnd at low speed
until moistened; beat 3 minutes
at medium speed. lly hand
gradually stir in rabins and
enough rem::iining nour to make
a firm dough. Knead on floured
surface 5 to 8 minutes. Place in
greased bowl, turning to grease
top. Cover; ler rise in w:irm pl"ce
until double, about 30 minutes.
Punch down dough. Set aside
a' dough ball about 3 inches in
diameter. Divide rem:iining
dough into 2 parts. Shape each
half into a round lo::if. Place in
greased 8-inch cake pans. Cover;
let rise in warm place until
double, about 25 minutes.
Pince an uncOQkcd egg in the
middle of each loaf. Press down
gently to keep in place. From
uough ball, muke 4 ropes abou t 9
inches long, and form a cross
over each egg. Oake at 375F for
40-45 minutes until golden
brown. Remove from p::ins; cool.
Makes two loaves.
All jainfa Q!~urc~
18082 Bushard (So. of Talbert)
Fountain Valley
71~3801
I
Blbllcal • Traditional -1928 Book of Common Prayer
Maundy Thursday
Good Friday
Saturday
Easter Sunday
7:00p.m. Holy Communion
&Tenebrae
12 to 3:00 p.m. Seven Last Words
7:30 p.m. Stations of the Cros1
4:30p.m.
8, 8:15 & 11:00
9:15. 11:00
Easter Even
Holy Communion
Child Care
GOOD fQIDftl
April 1st
12:00, 5:00, 6:30 & 8:00 pm
Ch1klcare for up to 3 yrs. o1j1 at)he 5 & 6:30 pm servK't!
• •
f ftST f R SUrDftl
April 3rd
8:30 & 10:30 am
~
MARINERS CHURCH
1000 Biso n Newport Beach f40-6010
ING NEW DREAMS
A lOT Of FlOrtE mm OAYS HAVE lOSl THlll Ow.MS. Llfl IS NOT
AS MUCH fUN AS IT usm TO IL NO ()toll IS lNCOURAGING us TO
DREAM alYONO TODAY. ANO so W£ en ffi.IC( IN Y£SllROAY.
HAS llfl STOLEN VOU~ OIUMl.S7
WOULD YOU UK£ TO rtNO THEM AG.AtN?
WE INVtn YOO TO ClUIAATI [ASTUl WITH US ON
AFRll 2 & 3: 1994 ANO THfN 1£GIN TO
DISCOVER YouR DRFAMS
AN llGHT"WEE~ SERIES ICCINNlt-<G ArRJl 9 & 10. 1994
T HRlf Suvicu:
SAT\JWAY. 6:00 P.M.. k SuN~v. 9:00 & 10:45 AM.
SoorH Com CoMMuNITI CHURCH
Sl20 lofmA Cwl'ON bl>. IMNl, CA 92715 7141854-7600
8 /CELEBRATION OF LIFE• AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE DAILY PILOT• THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1994 .