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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1994-12-14 - Orange Coast PilotI
J •
THE NEWPORT. BEACH • COSTA MESA Our Grinch
weatherperson
wants us to give Mll'ILY1 1 , .. ri1 •r• ( you another bum '-'~:J!J,!J
forecast, but we won 't.
Tuesday was beautifu I.
Today wil! be the same.
See Weather, Page 2
Winner of California Newspaper Publishers Association's General Excellence Award for 1993
oun
Schools suspend most
non-essential expenditures
....... ~ Investors told to expect to lose a percentage of
investment. Loss, at $2.02 billion, will likely soar higher. mation will not be determined
until a restructuring effort is com-
pleted, according to county
spokesman Lance lgnon.
vestment pool.
BY EVAN liJ:.NBJLSON, STAEF WllJ'Tli&
\.
BY MA.J.y ANN HA.Jr.MON,
STAH Wann.
NEWPORT-MESA -The
Newport-Mesa school district will
suspend some services not directly
related to the classroom in order
to deal with the potential losses
from the bankrupt county's in-
But Newport-Mesa Unified
School District officials conlinued
to maintain Tuesday nigh~ that
they can pay the bills at least
through June without impacting
learning programs and class sizes.
· Newport Buch reiidenl
Harold Ezell, sponsor of the
conrrovcrsial Prop. 187, has
a radical solution to Orange
C:Ounty's financial problems
-disband the county
governmenL, he Sil)"
See story, page S
An announcement Tuesday that
Orange County's investment fund
had suffered a $2.02 billion loss
has left investors fearing for the
worst and hoping for the best.
Financial experts said that the
county's announcement makes it
clear that the vaiious pool inves-
tors, including the cities of New-IHICHOOU/P•1••
The Mclaughlin family has been Involved with SOS'a
Adopt-A-Family program for 25 years. At right Is Audrey
Mclaughlin with daughters Tay Simmons and Resa Bearce
M.w: M.A&TIN/D.W. Y Pu.or
(In pink) and Bearce•s son, R.J ., 6. This year children from
Bearce's day care will help the program by donating
canned food items.
Super . Outstanding Santis \, . . .
Family has p,.articipated in Share Our Selves' Adopt-A-Family program for 25 years
BY Tl.NA BO&.QATrA, STAPP WUTO.
T ay Simmons remembers going
Christmas shopping as a child with
her mom and two sisters, searching
for toys and clothing for children
they'd never met.
"1 remember wondering why the parents
weren't buying these kids presents and why
we had to do it," said Tay, now 28.
Tay's mom, Audrey McLaughlin -who
was one of the first volunteers for Share
Our Selves poverty relief center -had
explained to the girls that some parents
couldn't afford to buy their kids gifts, so
they were adopting a family to h~lp make
Christmas a little merrier for children who
ON THICOYIR
Th\? painting on top of
page 1 is by local artist Anne
Davis-Johnson. For more
information on paintings, call
722-7136. -
INDIX
Almanac .•.•...•.•..•••.•.••.....••.• 2
Around Town ..................... 4
Cityside ........•.....•...••........•• 2
Cla.ssifted ....•...... , ......••.......• 9
Jerry Kobrin ........................ 3
Police Files ...............•.......•• 2
Sf>Orts .•..••. ··••4·•··················· 7
Weather ..........•...•..•.•....••••• 2
were less fortunate.
"As the girls got older and got married,
they all kept 'in touch with SOS, either
through volunteering or donating food or
gifts,~' said Audrey.
1\venty five years late1, McLaughlin and
her daughters are stiJI buying Christmas
presents for the SOS Adopt-A-Family
Program. The oldest, Resa Bearce, who
runs a day care center in Brea, has even
begun an SOS canned food drive.
"It's their helping hand," said Resa.
"The kids bring in their cans, and then we
draw an outline of their hand and stick it
on the can with their name on it.
"Then, I'm going to take them all over
... -
to watch the volunteers put the Christmas
bags together. I want them to understand
that not everybody's as lucky as we are and
that it's our responsibility to help them."
This year, Audrey and her daughters
have pooled together to adopt one large
family. They'll be buying gifts for a family
of nine -mom, dad and six children
ranging in ages from 2 to 18 years old.
"We have asked for a family with older
children because that seems to be the
hardest to adopt out," Audrey said. "Most
people want to buy toys for the little ones.
"The family has three boys and three
girls, and we have their ages and their
lff SANTAl/P• .. 6
NUMalU
BUSINESS FAX 631 -5902
BUSINESS OFFICE 642-4321
CIRCULATION80Q.252-9141
CLASSIFIED 642-5678
RETAIL ADS 642-4321
NEWSROOM 540-1224
01Y DESK 547--4233
NEWS FAX 646-4170
642-6086
SPORTS 642--4330
port BeaQ1 and Cosla Mesa and
the Newport-Mesa school districl,
can expect to lose a percentage of
their invt!$lment.
The $2.02 bill ion represents a
25% devaluation of the 101al pool,
finance officials said, and the
county has given no indication of
how much of a loss ea~h investor
will be forced to incur. That infor·
Meanwhile, the \osses could
continue to rise, financia l experts
and city officials said, particularly
in the face of rising interest rates.
"h's not as high as I would have
expected, and it's not a solid num·
ber at all," Costa Mesa City Man-
ager Allan Roeder said Tuesday.
"l ~xpcct it to fluc tuate in a down·
ward trend rather than upward ."
See FUND/P•1• 6
1Naterspoutleaves
onlookers dazed
~Water-based version of
tornado never reaches. land
and causes no damage.
B! MAile S. P OSNER, Sr.uF W1mu
CORONA DEL MAR -::.,... A
large wate~spouJ whirled south
along the coast Thurscfuy after-
noon, about a mile Qut from the
Newport Harbor entrance, slar-
Ying and amazing onlookers.
The water-based version of a
light tornado never reached land
and there were no reports of dam·
age from Mother Nature's 12:15
p.m. display.
"When it touched the water, it '
picked up water and turned a
darker gray," said Dale Ince, the
store manager at Dasin Marine
Shipyard in Balboa. "It kind of
looked like a straw."
Ince said he was wo rking in the
store when ·other employees car'ne
in from the yard to wa rn of the
weather condition.
"It was a spectacular sight,"
Ince said, searching for the words
to describe his first impression." I ·
would have to say . . . amazed. 11
was huge."
From his location on Harbor ls·
land Drive, Ince said the wa ter-
spout appeared to be moving at
about 50 mph in a southern direc-
tion towa rd the harbor entrance.
And the water fun nel held its
form for about 20 minutes, he
F Y I
An about a waterspout
• A waterspout is the
equivale1~t of a wea k
tornado over water.
•Waterspouts form when
cold ai r mi.'(es with wa rmer
ocean water below it.
•They happen about 20
times each year along the
Southern California coast. •
•Waterspouts !\ave abollt
enough power to uproot
weak trees, but rarely reach
land.
said.
"It w;.is a real defined wa ter-
spout," said Gordon Reed, a New-
port Beach marine safe ty officer.
"(It was) about 200 1ards in diam·
eier at its base, mayO't 300 to 400
yards across the top.''
In his 20 years as a lifeguard,
Reed said he's seen some 15 wa· •
lerspouts off the coast, but none
with a form this distinct, he said.
A second, smaller spout appeared
about 15 minutes after the first.
While not unusual, waterspouts
along the Southern California
coast aren't "as common as low
clouds and fog," according to An·
See WATERSPOUT/Pat• 6
Political deal making could
. give Ferguson Senate seat
~ Rumors say expected
opponents will opt out of
. race for Bergeson's post to
help keep Willie Brown out
of Assembly speakership.
BY MAllc s. POSNEll, ST.UF Wam!L
NEWPORT BEACH -Former
Assemblyman Gil Ferguson, who
has been planning to run for the
seat vacated by state Sen. Maria n
Bergeson, expected to face former
state Assembly colle agues Doris
Allen and Ross Johnson in a spc·
cial election for the post.
But now rumors are circulating
that Johnson (R-Fullerion) and
Allen (R·Huntington Beach) will
abandon the fight for Dergeson's
·seat in order to race to the rescue
of another Assembly member, Ri-
chard Mountjoy (R-Arcadia).
And that could leave an easy
ride into the state Senate for Fer-
guson.
Word is that Mountjoy will be
forced to gi"c up the stale Senate
se;it he won in November because
he feels compell ed to stay in the
Assembly and prevent former
Speaker Willie Brown from regain·
S.el1HATl/Pw1••
INSIDI
Salute · .
to the
champions
The Daily
Pilot's Tribute to
the Sailo~ is in
t~y's edition
-Showcasing
Newport Harbor
High's
undefeated
football team, as
well u the
national
champion girls
volleyb.11 team.
\
Newport Beach/Colla M-Dally Pilot
LOCALS ONLY.
cm EDn'OR IRIS YOltOl, 547-4233
ALMLW
alRTHI
Most rtteot blrthl lo
Ntwport Dtilch and Castll
/llt.)IJ,
IT, 'OllPH HOSPITAL
NOV. io
• ThomH D. ond Nancy C.
Arnold, Newport De:icb, boy
IADDLHACK MIMOIUAL
MIDICAL CINTIR
NOV. 26
•Tyson and Btcky Peteraoa,
l'{cwport Beach, boy
HOAG MIMOIUAL
HOSPITAL
• NOV. 20
• llamlsb and Michelle
Michael, Cost:i Mesa, boy
• Gary and Morlene TolfJa,
1 Newport Oeach, boy
•Saeed Al-Qubuil•I and
: Mariellu Uro" n, Newport
Ucach, girl
• Paul and Teresa ConllfTe,
Th)r.i Me)a, boy
NOV. 21
•
• Jo'eldronlo and (lc,·erly
tsperon2a, Co~iu Mesa, boy
~•Timothy and Kimberly ~hiclds, Go)ID Mesa, girl
,. • Frunsls.c:o Rios und Sora ~ Curll)le, CO)>la Mesa, boy
• Eric and Kerry llmkelman,
~ Newpon Oeach. girl ~NOV. 22 i: •John and Melanie Crawford,
l• Costa Me):i, girl
F.
t4 •Michael ond Lauren Velasco,
Santa Ana I !eights, boy
NOV. 23
~ • Koss and J11lme MartJoez, ·
:• Co)>la Me:.a, girl r •Thomas and Lorraine t Gyulay, Ncwpon Deach, boy
• Palrlck,und Diana Sherman, ~ Co:.ta Mesa, girl
r: NOV. 24 t •Robert and Linda Losey,
f~ Corona del Mar, girl
ri" NOV. 26 ~ •Steven ond Chri)tine · • ~ Vcnsand, Co:.ta Meso, girl
C: • Uoui;los und K)lle llodi:e, s; Ncwpor1 Beach, girl
;-• Nell and Catherine
~ Urundom, Newport Be;ich, boy
NOV. 27
• Mark und Su.canoe Freeman,
Newport Beach, boy
NOV. 29 ~
•J ohn and Kelly Gahlo,
<oFona dcl Mar, boy •
~----------<GUI ARRISTS
1'hc ful/oi.lng people M"tre
arrc.)ff'd rttrntly on suspklon
uf drilillx undu tl1t influence.
7 llc~t people luJ1 c on(y ~en
un ested 011 ~uspirion of a
crime 1111d, tu-with 111/ sucb
crimes, tllty ure lnnO<'ent until
pro1·c11 guilty.
COITAMISA "
• Frank G. Roor, SO, of Santa
Ana.
• Dario Guy Sullins, 44, of
Irvine.
•Miguel Angel-Kojus, 37, of
Costa Mesu.
• Evan Andrew Chase, 26, of
Long Be:ich.
• Michael John Arcbuoeeto,
23, of Costa Mesa.
• Sarah Ann llelse, 23, of
N ewport Beach.
•Patrick Joseph Carey, 27, of
Irvine.
• Debra Lu Good, 28, of
Costa Mei.a.
• lleldl Krlst:i Voorheis, 21, of
Fullcrio n.
•Alvaro Mercado-Ortiz, 32, of
Co)la Me)a.
• Elisa Uenha Ui az, J.i, of
Co:.la Mc)>a.
• Ku1hy Ann Merritt, 31, of
Sanla Ana.
•Albert Puco Romlrn, 43, of
O range.
• Llldlsluv Jajko, 48, of
Fullerio n.
•Christina Lynne Lukosk,y,
27, of Costa Mesa.
. • Suesan Marie Chandler, 29,
uf Cosia Mesa.
•Julie Renee Rohlnoe, 25, of
l luntington Beach.
• l\lurlo Alexander Chavez, 3S,
Tustin.
•Connie Jo Lehde, 35, of
Sanla An:i.
• L)nne Marie Nieto, 32, o f
Corona del Mar.
THI. 111.Vt'l'l.>llT BlA('!t • C'an'A MtllA lllilJPIDL
VOL 88, NO. 800
Tllomas II. JohnM>n, Pubtlshcr
\\11llant11..clbdtll, Edi1or
Sttft Marblt, Man•&Jna Edi1or
lrlJ Yollot, Ciry Ell11or
Marc M1nl11, Photo Edhor
Oob frank. C1rcul~1ioo MaMscr
llaak KnlcJll, Produe1ion MlUJllCr
Mkhul fltt,btr, Displ.ty M•M&Cr
Judj Otulna. Clllsifted Manater
PBmed llall, CootrollCr
RIADIU MOTUNI
641·6••• .
YOW' commcnb about the Delly
Pilot or news 1 pt "''" be rCClOf'Ckd
and pn directly to Editor Wil•
ll~ro Lobdell. The ..-. 24-llour Ullft""' ~ _, be ulCcl to
record lencn IO the editor °" qy
I topic.
• Tbenla Gale lbornton, 39,
of L.aawia Niguel.
• Rodri&o So&o-Ald1co1 24, of
Santa Ana.
•e Fida Ahmad, 26, or Cos11
Mesa.
• N&cbolat ChrlstJan Castle,
21, of Chino Hills.
• Sua Victor Macias, 22, of
Newport Beach.
• Nelsoa Alfonso Eiqulvel, 30,
or Anaheim.
High school
reps may get
Costa Mesa
Councif s ear
BY TlNA Boa.GA~ Sr.ur Wairu.
• Marprito Jesus.-Salas, 22, of
Anaheim. Rcr.resentatlves from Costa
Mesas rhree high schools may
soon become regular speakers at •
City Council meetings.
• J oapb Lawn nee RomaDO,
~2. of Costa Mesa.
•Vidor Castelo-Unarcs, 24,
of Costa Mesa.
•Mark Sprlnemeler, 30, of
Newport Beach.
e.Manuel Ramos-Sosa, 22, of
Costa Mesa.
NIWPORT HACH
•Kevin John IJoward, 32, of
Newport Beach.
• Mary Elizabeth Wanzek, 39,
of Brea.
• Emad Az.lz Salameh, 27, of
Anaheim .
•Eva Marie Beyer, 18, of
Newport Beach.
•Megan Doreen Laramore,
31, of Yorba Linda.
•Mark Stephen Spaneel, 31,
of Huntington Beach.
• Royland lbeopaUus Walker,
24, of Los Angeles.
• Richard Edward Denike, 32,
of Hunt.ington Beach.
• Robert Aron Brown, 34, of
'Marina Del Rey.
•Sylva Kruplckova, 20, of
South Laguna.
• Kiri Victor Olson, 23, of
Huntington Beach.
•John Mlchael lleni&, 46, of
Balboa.
• Wendy Rene Mock, 35, of
BcUOower. '
• Pat Roebuck, 25, of Buena
Park.
•Joan EUzabeth Casowln;r;ck,
50, of Newporl Beach.
• Romee Dechev, 35, of
Newport Beach. ,
RIAL UTATI SALIS
Rtttnt rui estate salts as
rrportfd by the Continental
Lawyers Title Co. in Santll
Alu.
COltAMUA
• Roberts, J & K, 3006 Samo:i
Place, $536,711
•Sharp, D &,V, 1628 Corsica Place, $543,301
• \VblU. R. 2940 Andros St.,
$486,811
•Wood, J, 2961 Bimini Place,
$361,200
• Pauon, D & C. 2965 Country
Oub Drive, $405,250
•Widera, J & L. 3016 Java
Road, $571,097
• Olacy, P, 2900 Java Road,
$315,247
•Lyons, D & A, 2952 Maul
Place, $362,924
• Buckham, K & K. 2939 Maui Place, $588,088
• I.anon, D & E. 2924 Pemba
Drive, $406,639
•Hall, L, J, K, C & K. 1653
Palau Place, $428,000
• Hlcucbl. M & L. 1645 Palau
Place, $509,5 IO
• ScUJmo, S & G, 1617
Minorca Drive, $526,546
•Tao, C, 2933 Royal Palm
Drive, $511,499
•O'Neil, R & A. 2855 Corvo
Place, $333, n8
•Leuck, C & M, 1877 Rhodes
Drive, $563,299
' NIWPORT HACH
• Neumann, K & L. 2209
Channer Road, $454,722
• Uasbloka, T & S, 2121
Seville Ave., $433,869
•Tolan, P & J, 2101 Seville
Ave., $533,869
•BX Propen!es Joe., 2116 E.
Balboa Blvd., $450,899
•Manser, M & A. 521
Redlands Ave., $551 ,681
•Jackowski, R & R, 410
Rivenlde Ave., $588,200
•Ford, M, 510 Riverside Ave.,
$319,724
• Falrchlld, C & T, 525 Aliso
Ave., S373,43S
•Fraser, A. S22 Aliso Ave.,
$439,496
MAIUN•ADDRUS
Ow addrea ls 330 w. Bay SL,
Coa&a Mesa, CA 92627.
TO MAKI A COUICTION
Ir ls die Piloc'a policy to promptly
,ccmct all crron o( subeancc.
Plalc call "°" 1"4, cu. llO. Thank you.
m
11lle l"lcwpolt Beadi/Cole1 Ma. D1i1J PUoc (USPS-144-800) ii
pllblleMd Moaday ~ Selitr·
., ... Newport Beldl and c.o.ca
..... ~.,. oaly l¥ail-
Ible "' I ' 11Nc IO The Ti.a Or-. o..r, JraJ> 2Sl.914l .•• arc11 4*lidc Newport Beed!
Md c.o.ca Mal. ~ IO
die ~ Piloc o#y UC ll¥aillble "1 ..a U.sl per -th. Sec-
oed ...... i»id .. o.u
,..... CA. (Prica llldllde ....
~ ud locll '*'-) A: Sc&Ml ......
..... IO 11-Newport 8s.o/
Ollla Mall Dal!y Piiot, P.O ...
1se, C.. Mca, CA,..._
~ No .... MOfia. I-
During a City Council study
session on Monday, t_he Costa
Mesa Chamber of commerce
outlined a plan that would allow
students from Costa Mesa High
School, Estancia High School and
the Alternative Education <;enter
to report on cafl\P US news durin~
regular City Council meetings.
Under the proposed program,
the students would give
three-minute presentations to the
council on a rotating basis.
(IAH H OCSBH/DAILY PILOT
Newport-Mesa school trustees Serene Stokes, left, and Judy Franco, center, give three big thumbs up
after a swearing in ceremony Tuesday night. Wendy Leece, right, and Jim Ferryman, not pictured,
also were sworn in. All but Franco are new to the board.
The council will formally •
consider the proposal -which is
the brainchild of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerc:e Education
Committee -during its next
council meeting on Dec. 19.
Franco · named head of school board "Unfortunately, what we hear
about high schools on the news
arc all the negatives," said Tpoy
Petros, the chamber's vice
president. "This would provide BY M.u.Y ANN HAllMoN,
STAfP Warrza
After weathering 14 sometimes
turbulent years on the board,
veteran Newport-Mesa school
trustee Judy Franco was elected
president by her colleagues .
Tuesday night.
Franco, 57, was chosen to lead
the board after she and new
trustees Wendy Leece, Serene
Stokes and Jim Ferryman were
sworn in by Orange County _
Municipal Court Judge William L.
Evans.
Trustees chose Jim dcBoom to
be vice president of the board for
the next year. Martha Fluor was
named board clerk.
Franco has prevailed in school
politics despite being blamed by
some in the district as a part of the
"old guard" r~sponsible for the
embezzlement of $4 million in
district funds by former budget
director Stephen Wagner two years
,ago.
But, in November; voters didn't
make the financial fiasco an
election issue and Franco won
re-election handily, despite a feisty
campaign by challengec Karen
Evarts, who also ran against Franco
five years ago.
Now Franco faces the challenge
ot'pulling the sChool district
through Orange County's
bankruptcy, which Qbservers have
deemed the biggest municipal
finance debacle in history and has
.
the potential to batter the district's
$80 million investment in the
county fund.
"It wilJ be a difficult year,"
Franco said 'during Tuesday's
swearing-in cere mony. "But 1 do
think you'll find we have our
priorities in order."
During her campaign, Franco
told voters she'd work to complete
the district's strategic plan, a
document that will establish the
mission and goals of the district.
Some issues consi~ercd in that plan
include s\uing up an accountability
system for administration and
teachers, increasing community
involvement and exalJ1ining the
English as a Second Language
prog:iam, she said.
for real time reporting on some of
the good things that are going on
in the schools."
While all the members agreed
the program could lead to a
heightened awareness of
community issues among high
school leens, Councilwoman
Sandy Genis expressed some
concern that the program might
eventually grow to include reports
from -homeowners associations
and other resjdent groups,
eventually bogging down th e
council agenda with unne}essary
business.
·Newport Beach man forced to strip by ponce Impostor
But, Cou ncilwoman Mary
Hornbuckle pointed out that most
of t~e .citizen groups already take
advantage of the oral
communica tions porliora of the
council meetings to voice their
co ncerns and inform the members
of any news.
"High School students don't
feel as comfortable doing ·
something like that unless they're
invited," Hornbuckle said.
A Newport Beach man who
allegedly posed as a poli~ officer
forced another man to strip of all
his clotties and then left the man
stranded on the beach early
Sunday.
Anthqny Scott Owens, 38, of
Newport Beach, was arrested in
Motorist suners
fatal heart attack
A Garden Grove man died
Tuesday after suffering a heart
attack while driving and
running his car into a tree.
Tony Villa Estrada, 54, was
pronounced dead at Western
Medica l Center in Santa Ana
just before noon.
connection with the 5:30 a.m.
incident in the 3700 block of West
Balboa Boulevard.
The incident apparently was
sparked by some type of advance
the unidentified 33-year-old victim
made on a female acquaintance of
Owens, Newport Beach Police Sgt.
Andy Gonis said.
Police respond~d to a report of a
disturbance in the area and
arrested Owens and Kristen Denise
Gardenhire, 25, also of Newport
Beach, on suspicion of kidnapping
for robbery charges.
City OKs memorial plaque for slalil teen
A memorial plaque honoring local
teen-ager Natis Stinson should be
installed at Smallwood Park in the
next month, now that the Coats
Mesa City Council has approved the
project.
The council last week accepted
the plaque and $1,000 donated to
the city by friends of the
The friends raised the $1,000 by
hosting car washes to help pay for
funeral arrangements. One friend,
Trina Filbey, said the g.roup agreed
the remaining funds should be
donated to the park to help pay for
new equipment or landscaping.
Newport Beach Police
to oUUine thel~ new
anU-party law tonight
Newport Beach Police oITicials.
will hold a meeting tonight to
inform property owners about a
proposed anti-party ordinance
th at will fine landlords as well as
tenants.
The meeting will be held at 7
p.m. in the City Hall council
chambers, 3300 Newport Olvd.
Police said it appeared that
he had suffered a heart attack
while driving west on South
Coast Drive near Fairview
Road. Investigation was
continuing pending an
autopsy.
• 15-year-old, who was shot and killed
wfiile her father was reportedly
Friends say Stinson -who was
considered the community babysitter
-would spend hours at the park,
talking with her friends or
entertaining the younger children.
The proposed new law, which
the City Council is slated to adopt
in Jainuary, would increase fines
and extend the repeat-offense
period from 30 days to a calendar
year. Both renters and property
owners would be on the financial
hook for such on-going party
· cleaning a handgun in their Corsica
Park-area apartment.
Witnesses reported to police
thnt they saw Estrada slumped
behind the steering wheel of
his car before it ran through a
red-a rrow turn light, struck the
·center divider and careened
into the southbound lanes of
Fairview.
Newport Harbor Art Museum omces to. be
closed Mondays In cost cutUng move
.problems.
The council gave a prelimin'ary
nod to the proposed law at its
meeting Monday.
Don't wait for the c scd sign to
be turned around at Ne rt
Harbor Art Museum o Mondays.
Tuesdays through Fridays. The
workers' total weekly hours are
unchanged.
The car then struck the curb
and ran up an embankment
and into a tree, police said.
In a cost-cut · g move, museum
offices arc now ~losed Mondays.
Employees man officc.s every other
Saturday and an extra hour
The galleries-already routinely
close on Mondays and the
rearranged staffing saves utility and
security costs at the museum.
The legislation is part of an
effort to improve residents'
quality of life, especially lhose in
West Newport and on the Balboa
Peninsula where the problems
appear to be the most severe,
Newport Beach Polic~ Sgt. Andy
Gonis said.
IUJUations, cdlt0fi41 matter or ad-WIATHIR SUUllDORT POLICI FILU
vcrtileme.nta hereiJt can be repro-
duced without written pcrmiuion Increasing TIMPIUTURU .............. , COITAMllA and tools wo~th $2,720 were ol ~i&bt owner. doudlnes1lale Newport leach afternoon, 2 foot ......... 900 block of West 17tb reported stol n when
61/SO ........ .,. ... ., somc~mc pried open the
MOW TO lllACM UI Balbo. wind wave1 with Street; Personal belongings doors to a metal shop
61/SO 3.fOOC we1terly . wea1ien1nc1~ -worth $9,000 -were storage room at the school. C~ulatloa Cos~Mesa ••II. ·r,:aan In reported srolcn from a A pay phone and vending (TbeTlmn 63/$0 adfic hu allowed •toragc unit where the locks machine atso were broken Oraap County) Corona del ~r TIDU lhe llorm trade to were cut orr. The items into. thlft further IOUtl9 Included clothes, fur, (800) 252-91•41 63/50 TODAY 700 block of Tuatlo Avtoue; Ant low °"" .... I.a _.... jewelry, a television anc.J
AdYertblq SUUfOUCAIT 12:08 ....... --· 2.0
Thal IMlftt IUtchcn items. A $10 bottle of vodka was
Cauifted 642-5678 -First hip llronpr ...... out°' 1700 block of Samar: An air reported as the only i1cm
Display 642--432 l LOCATION SIZE ' the west and stolen during the burglary :Jb; ....... 2.0 notlhMll ......... compressor, hoses and of a home. Eclbortal Wedge 2·3 w ....... Looll .. power cords were reported NNport Pier: The sign News S40-l 224 ~= 2-3 w 1t42 p.na.-........ 0.0 ............ Ill ~en rrom lhc back or an
2-3 w SemftdMp .... :l .. open truck. The a&olen announcing: "pier closcc.J 6 Sports 6'42..t330 lMr Jetty 2·J w L-Up.&--U pell were worth SJSS. a.m. 10 8 a.m. for cle:mi~ (~ ..... Newa, Sporta Fax 646-4170 CdM 2·3 w THURS04Y .......... was reported stolen, a Sl Pdc"=r-loss for the ci1y. Mala Ollke Flnllow --·c= .. -·••llACll Businesa Office 642-4321 IOATI• 12aaa.&-2.1
Busioeu fu 631-5902 w..eeo ........ -.... JIM llllocls fll C... Platt: nP Of Tiii DAY
IOL ............ .. a.ha • Someone placed an 7:00LM.-J.7 ........ • The sound or brcakina =~ 15 .... .....,. ~-unknown l~ or cxploiive ...... alau Ot other loud c"plOli~ .......... Small 2114 ,..... __ .0.2 =-........ into • mal cau11n1 It IO ooilcs could mean an NIM, 1 n.. Minor C.ompAny Olft adwlwy for ~ .... C..t7WUlll. cxplodo. Damaac wu llslcd accidcnli house brcaki~ or ... ~ -....__ ... l:Jtp.M. , .. n. Clll CIDlll ••.so atSJO . vandalil1ft1. · ,.....nl .. ............. w ... -..i,. ,.....,,. ........ b1tp Sdaool: Tool b01cs -courtay Newport polil:c •
' • \ . ..
~
)
Newport Beach/Coata M-Dally Pilot Wednesday, Decem~ 14, 1184 I
Clerk named occ staner
of the year
Pat A. Thornborrow, an Orange
Coast College senior mail clerk,
has been named the college's
"Classified Staff Member of the
Year" (or 1994.95.
Four OCC staffers were
nominated by the ir colleagues for
the award. Members of Orange
Coast's classified staff selected the
winner in an election held Dec. 6.
Thornborrow, 59, an Irvine
resident, will be honored March 7
during a noon ceremony in the
college's Student Center. The·
community is invited to he:ir her
remarks.
A reception will follow frym "
1 :30 to 3 p.m. in tlle oollcgc s
Captain's Table Restaurant.
"This is a big thrill for me,"
Thornborrow said. "The outcome
of the voting was completely
unexpected." .
Thornborrow
An Orange
County native,
Thornborrow
was born and
raised on the
Irvine R anch.
She graduated
from Irvine
Elementary
School and
Tustin High
School. She
attended
Santa Ana
College (now Rancho Santiago)
for one year.
The OCC staff member now
lives in Irvine's Woodbridge
community, not far ,.Crom where
she grew up.
After college, Thornborrow
worked for a time as a post oCfice
clerk in a small town in Arizona.
Prior to joining OCC's staff in
1985, she worked for four years at
Rancho Snntiago College.
OCC's mail room handles the
postal needs of the college and its
more than 1,200 employees. About
30,000 pieces of mail are
processed through the office eac.h
month. ·
Thornborrow has enjoyed her 10
years at OCC:
"I know most staff members and
that makes this job very
rcwardir.3,'' she said. "I love
working at OCC. This has become
my home. The people here are
~upportive. They've been great to
me." ~
Thornborrow is the mother of
two grown children. Her older
daughter, Susan, is married and
has two children. Her youngest
daughter, Sheila, is a student at
Irvine Valley College.
College speech team
second In tourney
Orange Coast .COilege's
1994-95 ·speech team fin-
ished second among 38
schools at the Fall Champi-
onship Tournament at Cal
State Los Angeles, Dec. 2-4.
OCC finished just two
points behind Saddlcback
College in the final stand-
ings.
In addition to OCC's sec-
ond-place finish last week-
end at the fall champion-
ships, the Pirates also won
the D.L. Miller Perpetual
Sweepstakes Trophy for best
performance in the tourna-
ment during the past several
years.
The team will compete in
other tournaments in Febru-
ary, March and April . ..
Looking for a
good aeal?
Read Best Buys
-every Thursday
and Saturday
in the
Daily Pilot
.
1.
• Ideas to earn money for county make a lot of 'cents'
K EEP THOSE SUGGES-
TIONS (AND DOLLARS)
C()MJNG -As mi&ht be
expected from such good-hearted
folks, readers arc responding to
our urgent pica to save Orange
County from fi-
nancial collapse.
Local
Scene
These ideas
have been
added to Mon-
day's list of
fund-raising
possibilities and
should be given
thought£ ul con-
sideration:
•Send scuba
divers to Pelican
Hill and othe~
golf courses to
reclaim thou-
sands of balls
lost in the treacherous waters.
Offer them for re-sale to public
servants and cronies who are
gamely doing business as usual.
• Persuade departing county
officials to donate -their ill-gotten
pensions to SOS (Save Our Stu-
porvisors.)
• Charge admission to all parks
and other public facilities memo-
rializing the names of county su-
pervisors, past and present. (As
one constituent noted, "This
mess never would've happened if
good ol' Tom Riley had been
alive today.") ·'
• Convene a conclave of all
lawyers who've been circling over
our county's carc~s. and implore
them to kick back 10% of their
pickings. (This wouldn't even put
a dent in a fkct of Mercedes.)
• Sell the movie rights of "The
Monster That Ate Orange," and
the certain spinoff, of other hor·
ror films to follow. ·
•Plant Lima beans in lhe fer-
tile arta known as South Coast
Plaza; and start all over again.
{Hey, it worked before.) .
• In anticipation of a citizens'
revolt, commandeer all yachts
owned by the "boat people" of
Newport Harbor and make them
available, a la Dunkirk, for evac-
uating office-holden. (This would
not raise-money for bail-out pur-
poses, per se, but it's still a hel-
luva idea.)
Other suggestions arc invited.
Now is the time for all good vot-
ers to come to the aid of their
party hacks, who need all !he
help they can get.
0
HOT STUFF, BIG-TIME -If
you don't subscribe to The New
York Times, you're really misfang
spicy stuff. Take, please, last
Sunday's Western edition, which
featured a front-page portrait ot
our own Bob Citron (above the
fold yet), and revealing these
tangy tidbits:
• It's still called 0range Coun-
ty, but "citron" is French fdr
lemon.
• In the dining room of the
Santa Ana Elks Club, where the
former county treasurer has been
enjoying thrice-weekly lunches
for many years, the tables sport
bottles <1f Heinz Ketchup and
..
Mcllhenny's Tabasco Sauce.
• lf this isn't spicy enough,
you'd also read this hot !.luff -
that, batk in the 1940's, Citron
played clarinet in USC's march-
ing band. Fight on, or write on,
whatever.
G
A LL THAT WAS NEEDED
WAS A SANTA SUIT -So
there I was, the other day, hob·
bling along from the ophthal-
mologist's office, where J'cJ been
ordered to wear dark glasses for
the rest of the afternoon.
And I'm waiting outside the
doctor's office for a friend to
drive me home, and l'fl\leaning
on a cane to favor a bandaged
foot.
. Sympathetic site, right? Cane
.and dark glasses. And, during the
five-minute wait, affluent people
are passing by.
But there was one prop miss-
ing -a tin cup.
Dang. I could've made a small
fortune.
0
ANO H ERE'S ONE YOU CAN
SEND TO READERS DIGEST
-Outside the medical offices,
two workmen were building a
smull 'wall. They were ap·
proached by a dude wearing a
while jacket ..
One of ·the workers called,
"Yo, arc you a doctor?"
The re~ponse was affirmative.
-•Terrific," yipped Our Hero.
"My girlfriend made me promise
this morning that I'd see a doctor
today."
0
(NOTE -The two pcr~onal
anecdotes above are intended to
take your mind off The Big
Bankruptcy. Otherwi!.e, they have
neither importa1\CC. nor releYance.
They're merely appended to
show that ever) body's got prbb-
lems. Thank you for your kind at-
tention, mumble, mumble ... ). ·
Jerry Kobrill's colum11 11ppears
Monday 1wd U'cdnesdDy. •
Volunteers needed. to give tours at Sherman Gardens
Volunteers are needed at the
Sherman Library and Garde(ls in
Corona del Mar to give tours to
children and adults.
guiding people through the
gardens. t
Interested volunteers should
contact the library at 2647 East
Coast Highway, cOrona del Mar,
CA 92625. Or call 673-2261.
.~~-.
NAILS
MANICURE + PEDICURE
An in-depth docent training will
be available under the direction of
Shirley A. Kerins, a professional
horticulturist. Botanical knowledge
is not a prerequisite required to
volunteer in this volunteer
program.
.. The first training class wilJ be
held at 9:30 a.m. Jan. 30. The
training program includes one
training sessio" per week for eight
....... 520
.525 ~Rf.NC.H MANICURE SETS. . ...
~ H ARAFflN DIP ss
Hands -FEET .•
weeks. .
Trainees will be introduced 'to
'plant behavior and characteristics,
botanical terms, environmental
awareness and techniques for i-g
""i
BAICll
ADAMS" l. nr.· ... ~
~I
(Drdls used IO shclf1ln onlV)
HAIR
HAIRCUT SPECIAL <Slyl«llnd> '"' .......
520
PERMSc1ne1 ti1C t Stvte> .. .... ... _ s45
WEAVING c1ne1 H!C & srvie> , ............ 560
HAIRCUT & S ,
FACIAL& HAIRCUT ....................... 50 Christmas Blend is Back!
(Oller gooo tor fksl time cllenlS only) Ben
loc1'\I h t.•t'(), • eoi-., 0 c,.,.1,,.,. Mmdau Featuring
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Rjch tlavor and festive aroma will bring back your
1055 El Camino Dr. #A Costa Mesa Call 957-0341 · fondest memories of Christmas.
642-3310
9-'J.M
1803 Westcliff Dr., Newport Beach
Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner
Ord• your Holdcly Pies Now .
55.00 ANY PIE TO GO
wnH C°"'°9't EXP. 12-22-M ..
· 2~ Mari.,. Ave., Balboa lsklnd
Available only at Hickory Fanns.
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
17th at Irvine Ave., Newport Beach
•Send A Gift By Phone 642-4302
A Free $25 Gift Certificate
To The J.C. Penney-catalog!
It~ hlce a shopping spree 1n your awn home Your
SlS gift certificate is our gift to you So. buy that
speetal someone. or yourself a gift-theres
thousands to choose from
Enjoy Cinemax Free
For A Month!
Su back and en.ioy some of the ye an best f earure films
as Ctnemax premieres a ne-,.v ITI0(1on picture e-very
Fndclj' night Wrth Ctnem,;u.; tree fOI a month. our
J.St.:lr pacl<cge 1s only S 36 99 ·
These Gifts Are Yours When You Order Our-
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i HBO and Cinemax.
The excitement never stops with the depth of COMCUt Cllblevtslon• lnchantecl
Servke. From movies and sports, to muste and comedy -programming yoo wonl find on ordinary TV
You'll receive ~ Disney Channel where you II discover ongtnal mOVtes. wonderful music and c~
specklls Au top-qUclltty fam1~ enrerta1nment. 24 hours a day and commemal-free To complete_your
encei ca1nment package. HBO and CIMRNI• gives you th~ Widest vanety of entertainment. all for only
S 36 99 (or your fir Sf month. Etnd S 4 I 99 each monrh thereqfter GNe the gift of enreru11rvnem to ye:; 1r ~m•ly ;in(1 Pf"IJ"J'f the gifts we h.-l\/e fOf you -bur do 1t n<:m When 1994 is over. so 1s this otferl
.ScaMCAaT·
1714) 54Z-6ZZZ
• .... .,...,, ..... -~ .............. c...,.. .. s.-....... .._,...... .... ,c......-·MIMlll·--··--,,... .................................. _,__..... .... ia...-lt.,..,.., ....... ""'-... x....., .... .., ~ ........... _... -............ ...., . .
-
T09AY
•u•••-••vorw n.c Ncwpott Bcxb aod ea.a Maa
...embcn ol the Lcapc ot W~a
VO'lcrt ol Oranic Cotit will cootiJ:luc
g disamioft o( IUtC and Joca.I
p rn.mcnl f&Aa.DCC'I al a priva1c home
In J ""1line Creek al 9-.30 •-tO. The
mcctlna is lrce and open to ~ pubUc.
For dircctionl and detail&, caU
6.$6-8396. '
MOU DAY fUMlAL Tin
loc;il ftoraJ consultant Tom Wdkowski
will offer ideas for holiday decorations
durin& a Cree 7 p.m. p1ogram at
8~1boa Branch Llbrasy, 100 E. Balboa
DlvJ. in Newport Beach. Call 644-3171
lor more infonru11ion.
l&NGLU' MOUDAY •AnY
The Meeting Room, an a1Jotdablc
~in&)cs organiz.ation, ii holding a
holiday party al O:ikwood Apartments
Oil 16th Street in Newport Beach. Cost
is S4 for non·rcsidcnlS of Oakwood,
and includes appetizers, drinks,
liqueur tasting. games and prizes. Ca!J
S4S-8082 !or details.
tu•AY
W IUl"MM"U
Did )'OU kno-rkrc ii :i formula for
auiact&na lhc cigJlt pcn.oo? F"Uld out
v.b.at that formula Is dutu11 a ICa.loat
from 6 to 7;JO p.m.. at ~ M.c:ecJnc
Room. an affordable siftaJes'
orpoi.z.a ooo, 29 IS Redhill Ave., SWCc
Cil04 m U.1.a Mesa. eo.t it S2 Ccw
members and S4 lot DOCMneoibers.
Ca1J 545-8082 for more iolonulioo.
MAI •MMI & AMUULI
Oranac County People for A.oima1s it
hosting a boat parade party at I.he
Randall Residence in Newport Beach.
Hors d'ocuvrcs and dessert will be
actved and a n1Ile drawing will be
held. Cu..:sts arc asked to bring a new,
unwrapped companion·animal item to
bC donated to a needy local shelter.
Cost of the event 1s SIS. RSVP to
751-6272.
ICC oaCMUTllA Dl8UT
The Jewish Community C.Cntcr Strina
Orchestra will bold its debut concert
at 7:30 p.m. in lhe auditorium of I.be
Jewish Federation Campus. 2,SO E.
Baker St. in Costa Mesa. The concert
WY •M•M VllWIM
UVIUI MOltlOAOI will feature IA-Orks by Mozart. Bach
It's time for the Newport
Harbor G'hristmas Boat Parade.
The Newport Jaycees are
hosting the ~dstand viewing
area with parking and shuttle
bus service for the event, which
runs Saturday through Dec. 23.
Park at Newport Dunes, take a
shuttle to the Sea Scout Base
and enjoy grandstand seating
for the parade. The Boy Scouts Arc )IOU ol(jer t.han 62? Learn about ' and Mendelsohn. Cost is S6 to S8. Ca1J
how Lhe HUD-approved, FHA·insured 751-0608 for details.
reverse mongage can help you during
o free J p.m. sem inar conducted by
Bob Brennan, senior reverse mongagc
consultant at 011 '"1,;tors Mortgage
Corp. The seminar will be at 2244
Pacific: Coast Highway in Newport
Dcac:b. Call 722-6523 or 723-0233 for
JeLalls and reservations.
,AaALIOAL PAaTY
The Newport Bcach·bJSed Orange
County Patalegal A~1..~1atlon is
holding its an nual hoiiJay party and
1995 board clcc1ions a~ 6 p.m. at the
Irvine Marriott Hotel ,.,n Von ~rmcn.
Cost is SS for members, SJO
non.members. Call 744 7747 or
640-3800, cx1. 3107 for details. . '
THURSDAY
fUllVI HAii
1 he Newport Bcacn varden Club will
cc leb{ate Christmas v.ith a Festi'e
F'ca~t and cntertainmc.nl at 11 a.m.
OQnations.and unwrapped gilts for ·
charity will be ...ollect4.d. CaJI 644·6088
for details.
FRIDAY
IUllNUI HIAKIAIT
"The New Alt of Hiring Smart" is lhe
topio at the 7 a.m. mcet,ing or
Con~\amer Bu~111css Ncl~ork at
Gcc:.ecrs Garlic Grill, 4200 Scou in
Newport Bc .. .:h. Cc.~i ~ Sl5. CaU
SS0-4185 fo, J c.r ib
SA1VRDAY
DIV,aClr A HI.-ilQtHNINO
Ncwpcrt Beach Marriage &. Family
Thct)ipist intern Maxine Cohen will ,
conduct a workshop, "Divorce: A New
Bcgi~ning, from JO a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
at hor Nc~port Center office. The
wor~hop will cover the five stages of
gricv~ng and the stages of recovery,
and will d'-JI with the emotional roller
coasfcr thJ< divorce can cause. Cost is
S25. Space. 1s limited. Call 7S9-0579.
OR~f AMl .. CAH TltAJN SNOW
America's largest tou ring model train
show will be at th e Orange County
F11ir11ounds in Costa Mesa today and
Sun4ay Crum noon to S p.m. More
th:m 10,000 trains will be on di.splay
and for S<llc, and there will be many
operating .11odcl railro:id layouts,
including 1.111c that the public can
operate. Admission is SS for adults,
children 12 and younger arc free wilh
an adulL i-or more information, call
(708) 834-1.1652.
TOft POR fAJaVllW
lhc Costa Mesa Men'' Oub is hosting
il's l\nnual Toys for Fairview Golf
Touinamcnt today and Sunday £com 7
a.111. lo noon al 1hc Costa Mesa Golf
Coui'sc, 1701 Golf Course Drive. Cost
i) S..O per day, and all proceeds go to
Fairview Developmental Center for
various programs such as Special
Oly~pic:a. Call 751·9255 for more
infotmation.
JCC IUDI IC.LU8 -i<ida KJub, 1 mon1hly social club for
1hirCS· through sixth·graders, will meet
JI t'c Jewish Community Center, 250
E. Haker St. in Costa Mesa for an
OVCUli&hl. Activities will include
movks, games and an ice-cream
&un~uc party. Call 7S1·0608 for details.
YIDDISH CULTUaAL CLUI
The Yiddish Cullural Club will mCft
al 2 p.m. :it the Jc"i~h Communit)
Center, 250 E. Baker St in Costa
Mesa. This month's prcwam Nill focus
on the life of Hershcle Ostropolier,
the f;imous Yiddish folk jestet. For
more information, call 7SS-0340.
aOAf Pil.ADI, UPU8LJCAN nYU
The Balboa Bay Republican Women,
Federated is holding a l loliday Boal
Parade Pany from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. al
a private home in Balboa. Cost is $20
and includes buffet, assoned wines
and entertainment. For rcservitions,
caU 494-6490.
THU .. DAY, DIC. 22
llJCILODOIPAaADIPAaTY
The Newport Harbot Elks Lodge is
hos1i11g 1 Newport Harbor Boat
Pa r.ide Party from 7 to 11 p.m. al the
Elks Lodge, 3456 Via Oporto in
Newport Beach. Cost of S2S per
person includes boat parade viewing,
dinner, dancing. entertainment by the
Colony of Performing Arts and the
Rams cheerleaders, Santa Oaus and
prizes. Proceeds benefit Parent Help
USA. a Child Abuse Prevent ion
G.ntcr Fur rcscrv11tio11s, c.tll 723. 7170.
High Quality & S e rvice at Low Prices
I
I
. . . . . . .. ' . .. . . .
-~·~--........ ,,.-., -. --"'"&ill -•
.___
2
_
1
_
3
...... ::.=~~;~""-:=~~t .:....:T:....;~:;:;~~rf··:..:~ .. ,t_r ... ___ 6_ so. a 2 2 s
VALUE
PRICED
GIFTS.
Save Money On Selected Gifts!
Cheese Balls & Logs
Now any 2 for $6.99
or 3 for $9.99
12 o.t. $3 99ca
Melt Away Mints
2 Bags for $5 99
CChri~lflia\ Colors Av:ulablc)
16 Ol. \3.491!3.
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
17th at Irvine Ave., Newport Beach
•Send A Gift By Phon~ 642-4302
RU Ff ELL'S
UPIOLSTEIY llC. ... ,_ .... c... 9arel
Jtn -..... CllT• llll-Ml-115'
, BIG
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;Christmas T ee Jamboree FOR TWO@
nlFFll WITll IAIA ITYLE
IAIY LOllTEI TAIU,
HAIOIEI Tllll lllllP
lllLLll IAlllmt
0110111 •••
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AIAtA.
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we've
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NO TREE
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$26?8 +tax
Noble Firs,
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have twine,
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fllll
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IAUA, llAll, llOE All
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2104 WE 'T OCEANFRONT
lNEYPOBT BEACH,723--0606 ------==...-..1 Ii ..... -·-I .-. .
, ...
will haYe a cooccs.sion ltand for
Jbose wishing to purchase
refreshments. All proceeds will
benefit the Boy Scouis of
America sea Scout Base.~
Tickets are S.S to $7 and
include parking. shuttle arid
seating. 'They can be purchased
at any TICketmaster outlet or
Crom the Jaycees. For .
infonnatioft and reservations,
call 451-2178.
u.tlWCAN AIAMILY •ADY
'
State Senator Muian Bergeson will be
the guest speaker at Lhe Newport
Harbor Republican Assembly's
Ouirunu Boat Parade Party. Wine
and hor d'ocuvres will be provided.
Cost is SS for non·mcmbers and free
for members. Call 436-1242 Cor more
information. ·
FRIDAY, DIC. 23
vnutAJQ & IOAT •&a.ADI
The American Legion Post 291 invites
aJI veterans to auend an open house
from 6:30 lo 10:30 p.m. and watch the
Newport Harbor Boat Parade. Free
_')
• OUR MEALS ARE A
• • TRl.P TO MEXICO
(()(ICTAILS ·FOOD TO GO
PHONE AHEAD
296 EAST 171'H ST., e
COSTAMISA
2nd hour FREE
with this ad
Bikes ·&
lnline Skates
exp. 12-31-94
laod ud tc6 'r'lt. Call 6»5a10
lot mcwe iAb'ma&ioca. ·
''MCllNa ... Mft
Today c.brouP Tbunda)', )OUQl'ten
-.cd S '° 14 cu au.eDd cQ&Crtaioio& wl ,.....1.ioaal 90-m&out.e WOlbbop&.
llcW tine tima daily, llaat feawre
....... daDoDsU'aUom aad
mako-&Dekake crafta. .Today ii
DolpUa ~ wic.b dolpbios made with
lwfodd Map:. Wcdocsday is Space
Scicace wilh ballooa rockets. Swbb
aod acatc a MMtian, and Tbundiay is
Eye Spy, feat.urlna optical illusions and
make a kalckbcopc. Wockshopl arc
held " 11 a.m.., 1 •l\d 3 p.m. Cost is
S7..50 foe ooo-mcmbcn and IS lor
members. Space is limited and
rescivations ace rccommen<Scd.
Lauocb Pad is at Crystal Court, 3333
Bear St. in Costa Mesa. Call 546-2061
for dttails.
THU .. DAY, DIC. 29
1111eur •OUDAY •Altl'f
The Meetin1 Room, an -.fforcbblc
singles organiz:atjon; is holdin& a
Holiday/New Years Party at Oub Max
inside t.he Red Uoo Hotel, 3050
Bristol St. in Costa Mesa from 6 to 8
p.m. The event includes appetizers,
pmcs, priz.ci and dancing. Cosl is S4
for members and $6 for non·membcrs.
GalJ S4S·8082 for more information.
TUUDAY, JAN. 10
SU .... DU MllTINO
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VariouS mul!J.pawa&Cr boala depart
niabl.Jy Dec:. 17-23 Crom I.he Balboa
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unique vancaac point. Some cnUscl
include dioacr. CAJJ 673-5245.
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Is your boat s:afe? The Coast Guard
Awtilialy is offeritil fr~ \"CSSCI
-e.wninatiooa. Call (800) TOY·SAIL
MINTAL ILLNUl IUPPOlt'l.eaOUH
Alliance for the Mentally Ill of Orange ·
County provides education and
cmotioruil support for families dealing
with mentally ill loved ones. A free
5upporl group mccta every Tuesday
evcniog from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Orange
.County Mental He:ilth CUnic, 3115
Redhill Ave. in Cosu Mesa. Call
~8488 for details.
LIA.DI c&.Ua
The Costa Mesa Leads Oub -
Women's Chapter meets every
Wednesday at 7: 15 a.m. at Mimi's
Cafe at Harbor and Newport
boulevards in Costa Mesa. The club is
p:irt or an intcmation:al networking
organiz.:uion dedicated to exp:indlng
each member's business through
quality leads. Call 474-2225 or ,
975-8338 for more information.
WOMIN'I IUPPO•T oaOUP
The Healing Connection, healing body,
spirit and mind, Is conducting a
women'$ therapy support group every
Tuesd:iy at 7 p.m. in its office at 4425
Jamboree Ro:id, Suite 180A, Newport
Beach. Call 720-373~for mo~c
information'.
Surfrider Foundation is a non·profit
organization dedicated to the
protection of the world's oceans and
beaches through conservation, rcsc:ircb
and education. Learn about SurCrider ·
Foundation and its activities for 1995
at a free meeting from 7 to 9 p.m. :it
Oasis Senior Center, 800 Marguerite Send your Items to Around Town
tdltor, Tbt Dally Pilot, JJO W. Bay St.,
._ CoslJI Mesa, Cullt 92627.
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Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daity Pilot
Former INS i:hiel says county
government should be disbanded
• Newport's Ezell, who
sponsored controversial
Prop. 187, says 'major
surgery' is needed to fix ·
ttnancial woes.
former regional director of the
INS predicts that the county cri-
sis will cause cities to depend
less on the county and attempt
to provide their own services·. In-
fluential members of the Repub-
lican Party will also join the caJI
for county downsizing, be said.
BY EVAN HENEUON, STAFF warru Ezell called his idea a "radical
surgery" rather than a "Band-
NEWPORT BEACH -Of aid'' approach lo addressing the
the 1,001 hypothesis being of-county financial situation. lnsti-
fered on how best to resolve Or-tutions such as the county prisoo
angc County's financial woes, and medical system would re-
Newport Beach resident Harold main in existence. The county
Ezell may have the most radical should assign unincorporated
sol'Jtion: • land to cities .and "quit playing·
"Disband the county govern-Monopoly,!' Ezell said.
ment," Ezell told the Daily Pilot Republican Party members
this week. "There will be a agreed the county will expcri-
strong movement toward that. ence substantial changes, par-
The county is essentially a dupli-ticularly ih light of Tuesday's an-
cation of every city government nouncement that the county in-
now in Orange County. vestment pool had suffered
"Recall the supervisors or $2.02 billion in losses. The coun-
havc them voluntarily quit and ty and cities will both be forced
give all the county employees to review their respective bud-
golden parachutes. Think of })ow gets and determine what they
much we could save by eliminat-can and can not afford to pro-
ing county government." vide, officials said.
Ezell, 1t will be remembered, "All of these people are going
is the spon1or of the controver-to be looking at a shrinking of
sial Proposition 187 initiative de-. resources," said Buck Johns,
nying services to illegal im-program chairman and executive
migrants. ·The 57-year-old board member of the Lincoln
Oub. "I appreciate what Hal is
thinking about, but there will be
no shortage of blame to go
around." ·
Lincoln Club President Doy
Henley said that Eze!l's idea,
often diS<:ussed at past Lincoln
Club meetings, would probably
not be feasible under Jhe cur-
rent circumstances.
"We have to offer very serious
·suggestions to try to make
changes," Henley said. "It's
going to take us a generation to
get over this kind of a fiasco."
Newport Beach Mayor John
Hedges agree~ that Ezcll's
"major surgery approach" 10 re-
• structuring would probably not
be. There are simply too many
services which cities would be
unable to provide or which the
county can provide at a lower
cost, he said. ~ ,
"There are people who say
the county should have been dis·
solved a long time ago," Hedges
said, "but there are problems to
·a simplistic solution like that.
Wh,o would implement the plan?
Who would take over John
Wayne Airport?"
"I don't see five supervisors
stepping up and saying 'Let's do
it.' ..
SCHOOLS
~ .... ,
Superintendent Mac Bernd pro-
vided a list of suggested items lo
put on hold to trustees at their
regular meeting Tuesday night.
The board supported the sugges-
tions, which didn't need a formal
vote because they are administra·
tivc and fall within Bern~'s juris-
diction.
The items suspended arc the
hiring of non·csscntial classified
personnel; supplies not ordered by
the district; consultants not es-
sential to the district's legal, fi.
nancial and student welfare; most
dues and memberships; most trav-
el and conferences; non-essential
rentals, leases and ore pairs; all non-
essential building improvements;
dis'trict-paid field trips and out·
door school activities; all contracts
related to the district's administra-
tion center; and non-essenJial
equipment.
Bernd said he will reexamine
the suspension of field trips in re-
sponse to a request by Trustee
Thursday, December 14ullltMf !:8, .,
Martha Fluor. '-
Bernd said he hopes to know
more about the county's flnanciul
condition and its eCf cct on the dis-
trict after attending a meeting in
Los Angeles today with 20 of the
county's largest creditors.
Besides the suspensions, all ex-
penses will obviously remain under
close scrutiny.
"If we take these steps, we're
going to make it," Bernd said.
"We will not impact classroom
teaching or class siz.es. We're
going totally away Crotn the class-
room to work this out and we do
not anticipate any layoffs.''
The county announced Tuesday
that its jnvestment pool had suf-
fered at least $2 billion in losses,
which represents a 25% devalua-
tion of the total pool. How the
losses will be divided up among in-·
vestors, including the Ney. port·
Mesa school district and local city
governments., remains to be seen.
But financial experts said agen-
cies like Newport-Mesa -which
borrowed funds to invest in the
pool -will be hardest hit by the
county's loss.
The Newport-Mes& distriClhas -
hired a bankruptcy allorney.
Wilh the recommenced suspen·
sions and caslj now anticipated r ~
from property twces, district of-
ficials maintain that teachers, staff ' • 1
and bills will be paid.
About 75% of Newport-Mesa
revenues comes from property tax,
dollars the district ha~n 't com-
pletely collected yet, said Michael
Fine, district director of £heal ser-'
vices.
District officials plan 10 be oble
to access their share of all incom-, "··
ing property taxes -payments
that arc going into an account sep·
arate from the troubled county in·
vestment pool.
With this cash flow, the district
says its day-to-day operations can
be taken care of. • . : ~
Meanwhile, the county Depart·
ment of Education released news
Tuesday night that county teachers
will definitely be paid on Dec. 1'6
and Jan. 3. But future payrolls
were not addressed in the county
statement.
.....
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CHRISTMAS EVE IS SPLENDID AT .
Saturday, December 24, 1994
Seatings: 5:30 -9:30
Rescrvarions Requi~d (71•) 752-8001
Enteftainment By Terry Conder Al The Piano
&
Strolling Carolers
MENU
Ch<>ke of ApJ)«tizer:
Palf du Maison or Es\.irr,ols In Puf( P.istry or Coqu1!lts SI. Jacques
S.1ladt du Malson
· llflgwn Endlv' wilh W•ltrcrtu m Walnut lMarid.Jrin Orangt Virw1grtlle
or
Lobsttr 81JQut
Choke of Entru;
Roast l oin o( Lamb with Confit of Qarlic
' Sundned Tom.ito m Boroelaise
Ro.1st Duck with Raspbcny I Port Wint Sautt
Baktd Halibut with Caper & B.ls1I Vinaigrette
Toumtdos of ~ef with Wild Mushrooms I Morelle Sautt
Choiu of ~stert:
C l'fmt llNltt
P\iff P.utry w11h ~Wf'fl Altnond Crum
Aourfm Ch<Kol~t' l Jkt with Vllllltt Cho<oltlt Mounc
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$39 .00 pu pttlOll
$10 ~r child unckr lwt'lw
18911 M«Arthur Blvd., Irvine
MacArthur & Douglas, Mar John W1YM Airport
"
.. . . ,,
' . we' re ha vi rig a sale.
So come in and take advantage of our first saJe in four years
on DICIMltlR 15, 16 and 17
and we:ll take 25% off all hardware, machinery
and surplus yard merchand1s~.
I I•
Or . v1s1t our MAIO AN OFFIA area for surplus, overstocked
and used merchandise .. · . and JUSt plain 1unk.
~
. .,
~al' Houn: TH-F from 8:30 am to 5:30 pm & SAT from 9 am to •
WRIGHT'S HARDWARE ~ 126 Rochester Street • Costa Mesa
(714) ·549.7745
Business Hours: M..f from 8:30 am to 5:30 pm & SAT from 9 am to I pm
Christmas Day Is Joyous At
Sund~ December 25, 1994
Seatings: 11 :30 -5:30
Reservations Required: (714) 752·8001
Terry Con~er al the Piano
MENU
Choke of Appdittr:
Cream of Chanlerellcs Soup
or Baby qrtcns with Fresh Crctnlitnia. Apples .t Wctlnuts in
Orange Vinaigmtt
OlOice of Entrtt:
Qrilled Qlaztd Salmon with Julienne of Crispy leeks
Crab Cake topped with Poached Egg & Sweet Red
Pepper Rmlolade in Mustard SaUtt
Prime Rib au Jus with Potato O.kes
Crepes filled with Lightly Curried Olk:ktn
OM>itt of DaM1:
~trbmyTart
Pums*tn~ nourtns ~ Ctkc
$27.SQ ~ pa:sorl
$1 •.oo SJtT child u.. lwtM
18'11 ~BMI. IMne
MICArttu & Donall\,_. Jahn~
:
',.
.... ,. r
ts Wednesday, December 14, 1984
. FUND the city of Fountain Valley and two wat~r districu, had hoped to
study the county'• proposal for a
fr•• ••1• I couple of days to determine c 0 s t A Me~ a c p A J 0 h n whether liquidation WU the bcsl
Moorlach, who snid that an eatly course of action for the four inves-
cst1mute by County Treasurer tors, according to Newport Beach
Robert Citron th;it the pool would City Manager Kevin Murphy. ~uffcr u $1.S billion loss was a con-"We felt we needed more time
:.Crvutivc guess, agreed the losses to look at the proposal," Murphy ~II continue to rise. said. "We see the necessity of sell-
" On Dec. 1, l said $3 billion, ing off the pool and we know that
d it might be higher.'' Moorlach time is critical. The court undcr-
i;t1 id. "h's not over yet.'1 stood our concern, but they grant-
The county also announced ed' the county's motion anyway."
Tuesday thut it will begin to re-With pool investments of $16.2
structure the· pool, with coordina-million and $3 million respectively,
• tlcrn by the Salomon Brothers in-the cities of Newport Beach and
'""cstment firm. The remaining in-Costa Mesa represent a relatively
• vestments in the pool will be sold small portion of the investment 'w transferred to less risky ac-fund. Officials from both cities
,
Counts, according to a statement have repeatedly stressed that the
rdca:.cd by the county. county's bankruptcy will not ad-
01 the reported SS billion in the versely, affect city services.
pool, the Cund') net equity is ap-With investn'lents sp~ead over
pro,imately S5.4· billion. · diverse accounts, £ity finance of-
1$non: who is a memb~r of the ficials in Ntwport Beach and
publicity firm hired by the county, Costa Mesa tiave said they will be
saitl th;it the restructuring effort able to meet all routine financial
-.houl<l not be viewed as a liquida-obligations. .
tion of the fun~. · The city of Costa Mesa, which
"If )OU use tlwt term anywhere attempt~d to withdraw the remain-
dost.! to a bankruptcy filing it ta.Ices der of its investment two weeks
on a wholt.! new connot~ion," before the !und suffered ' its loss,
lpnon !>aid. "Obviously the county still hopes its routine withdrawal
j, not going out of business." request will be honored, according
13ut Moorlach ·· s'aid the in-to Roeder.
'cstmcnt pool \Viii not be stable "But .. I find it hard to believe
until the entire pool has been liq-that any of the investors can ex-
uiJ:itctl und riJ of such high-risk pect to get 100% of their in,-
i11H:-,1me11t~ as h;ve rage derivatives vestment back at this point," he
l>r structured notes. As long as the . said. ,
l1.>Unty can receive a fair price on Newport Beach would also like
.cteri-.atives, the county would do the county to consider giving the
yell to liquidate the entire fund , city securities rather than liquid
In: aJJe<l. assets. The city would b~ willing to
I he city of Newport Beach, wait the duration of ·the securities
ni1..:rnwhilc, went to bankruptcy in hopes of receiving a full return
c;ourt Monday in an unsuccessful .on the investment in the future,
1..•fflm to block the county from im-Murphy said.
mcd1Jtcly liquidating the pool. The likelihood of the county
·1 he city, "hich has aligned with granting this request is slim, Mur-
..
E~ATfRSPOUT than a tornado over water."
Winds that form the rotating
column of air m'ove between 36-50
mph, he said. But the twisters
aren't likely to cause any major
damage.
• 'rom Page 1
-drew Rorke, a mctcorotOgist with
the National Wca1her Service.
· Up to 20 of the twisters are re-
, ported to the wea ther ~ureau dur-
ing an average ycu r, Rorke said.
·•It's similar. to the weakest kind
~f tornadoc~." Rorke said. "In
fact, a \\atcr)ipout is nothing more
'
Tltey've got enough strength "to
plant you on y6ur bottom or up-·
root a weak tree," Rorke said.
And if it reached 1and, it woultl
"blow over some sand castles on
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phy said, but the city will continue
to fi&ht for its funds.
"We will go anywhere and do
anything io get u much of our in-
vestment out u soon as we can,"
Murphy said.
Aaencies such as the Newport·
Meaa Unified School District ~
whfoh borrowed funds to invest in
the pool -will be hardest hit by
the county's loss, said George
Rendon, senior vice president for
RSR Capital Group.
, "Not only do you have to repay
the ~y to whoever you bor·
rowedi;J' from, you also have to
showra 20% to 30% loss on what
you've; deposited,'" Rendon said.
"The picture is still unclear as to
how everyone is going to be bur-
dened."
Both Moorlach and Rendon
agreed the county had little choice
but to assess its losses and move
on from there. Since risky in-
vestments and rising interest rates
caused the collapse of the pool,
the county would be unwise to at·
tempt to earn the $2.02 billion
back before restructuring the pool.
"They're saying 'We've got a $2
billion loss. It's gone,' " Rendon
said. "The county can't be subjec.t
to the market anymore. Th$:y can't
do what Citron wa!.doing."
To Moorlach, the largest issue
at stake is not how high the losses
will rise, but whether the county,
the pool's 180 investors or both
will bear the loss. In the only com-
parable case in recent memory, he
said, the county of Cuyahoga,
Ohio incurred an entire $130 mil-
lion ·toss to its investment fund
while "making whole" its inves-
tors.
"Until. we have a_definitiv an-
swer Crom Salomon Brothers, it's
aJI in limbo," Moorlach said. "But
whether the expense is borne by
the county or by . the investors, it
will still be borne by the rcsiden1s
of Orange County."
the beach,'' he said, noting' that
most waterswuts sputter before
ever reaching land.
Waterspouts form when the cold
air at the tail end of a cold front
mixes with the water below it,
Rorke said. They last about 20
minutes on averag~,
"AJI the conditions get right,"
he said. "Then they happen and
go away."·
SENATE .._ ......
in& control of the leaislati\'e body.
• The political rumor mill bu
Johnson and Allcn belpina Mowat·
joy out by donatina their campaign
bank accounts to him and opting
not to challenge Ferauson.
A Republican insider told the
Daily Pilot that a dtal la in the
works that would have Mountjoy
give up the Senate seat now -
only to seek it again in a special
election early next year.
His campai&n would be financed
-as a thank you -by colleagues
such as Allen and Johnson.
None of the players would di-
rectly confirm the rumors.
.. Ferguson, who's still using his
former local Assembly oCCicc and
his now-unpaid sta(f members to
prepare for the Senate race, said
he's heard pothing official about
when a special election Tor Berge-
son 's seat will be held or who his
opponents .will be.
"What I had heard from sources
in Sacramento," Ferguson said,
·sANTAS
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot
.. (is) that Mount~ wouldn't stay
in the Allcmbly ii he thought 1ha1
Roa Jobmoa or Doris Allen
would go oil and run for the Sen-
ate. lie doean't wiilt to sit there
and watch (them) run for another
Senate scat while he's sacrificed
himself."
Still, Ferguson -the only of-
facially announced candidate for
Bergeson's seat -said he expects
to run against both Allen and
Johnson.
"l'Ve never had an easy election
or Tc-election," Ferguson said,
"and don't expect that this one wm be."
Mountjoy said he's heard the
rumor of a financial windfall, but
described it as "just a comment in
passing.''
"Both Doris Allen and Ross
Johnson are good 'friends of
mine," he said. "I counsel with
both of them. We've been long-
time friends (and) I would guess
that they would (donate their cam-
paign contributions) just' because
they would do that."
Johnson, Allen and Mountjoy
are the Republican Party's most
senior ,kmbcrs in the Assembly,
and all told lhe Daily Pilot last
week that keeping Brown (D-San
Francisco) out of the speaker's
scat is their top priority.
But Allen said she wasn't part
of any deal with Mountjoy, and
she said she intends to announce
she's seeking Bergeson's seat after
a special election is called in Janu-
ary.
Besides, "1 don't have a war ·
ches1," Allen proclaimed.
'' 1 don't 4ove anything to db-
nute, •: Allen elaborated. 11Ross did
state that he would put (money)
into the party for him. He did say
he had $250,000 he was pledging
to the war chest. He said this in
caucus."
Johnson wouldn't directly ad-
dress his plans for the Senate seat.
"l have absolutely no personal
political ambition that is more im-
'POrtunt than to guarantee that
Willle Brown is never (Assembly)
Speaker. again,'1 Johnson said in a
statement read by his spokes-
woman. "And I know Doris Allen
feels the same way that 1 do."
able to match 1,300 families. That from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m., at St. John
may sound like a lot of donors, the Baptist parish hall at 1015
but according to-Forbath, the Baker St.
Jr•• ••1• 1 agency still had 300 families that "We usually create a traffic jam
sizes. It's really ·been fun. One of weren't adopted. on Baker because w~ have so
the boys in the family is IS, and I "We never find enough donors," . many donors coming in,'' said
have a 14-year-old grandson.·So, said Forbatb. "But, some people Forbalh. "It's like a Cecil B.
we're chec~ing with him to find brought in extra toys and turkeys DeMille production.
out wha~.kind of things are · and clotning, so we were able to "1 remember the first year, we po~~J~~~y and her daughters aren't .> give ev~ryone in the program thought we were really bus1> and
alone in their commitment to the so~cthmg. . . . we only had something like 42
agency. According to Jean We pr~~ise to provide for .all families."
Fp rbath, SOS founder, the of the f8J1?ihes that. we accept ~nto Forbath said the agency is still
Adopt-A-Family program has the program, e~en.1~ they aren t .. looking for sponsor families and
become a tradition for many adopted by an 1~d1v1dual s~nsor. accepting indivi~ual food and gift
families. At least a dozen of them The agency will be collechng the donations. For more information,
have been par.ticipating since its Christmas donations on Dec. 23, contact Forbath at 549-200\.
inception 25 years ago.
''It's aJmost becom~ a ritual for
a lot of our donors," said Forbath .
"The children in the donor
famiJies have grown up, and now
, they're married and doing this
with their own families."
Last year, the organization was
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Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Wednesday. December 14, 1994 7
PORTS -
SPORTS EDITOR ROGER CARLSON, 642-030, ext. 223
Eau1es· 11ei· muscles, 11anen tiJe Costa Mesa schedules
Sunset League football ·
power Edison. tor '95
...,. Estancia's first-round opponent·
proves to be no match at all;
Chadwick awaits-tonight.
IRVINE The Estancia
High boys basketball team
after scoring an average of
less than 58 points in its last
four games, cranked it up in
a big way Tuesday.
The Eagles (7-1) blew out
La Habra in the second quarter and went
on to de_feat the Highlanders, 94-56, in t
he openmg round of the Irvine World
News Tou~na~ent at Woodbridge Higl\.
The 94 pomts 1s, by far, the highest total
for the Eagles in a game this season.
"They tried to run with us, but we
owned the· r~bounds," said Estancia
Coach Ti m Parse!. "We. had to have at
least.twice as ma ny boards as they had."
Estancia pnished with 55 rebounds, led
Estancia
tunes up
for bigger,
liltter .. foes
...,. Orangew ood no rnatch at
~II for Eagles' girls Tuesday.
BY lUCHA.llD D VNN,.SPotJS Wann
COSTA MESA -With
a minute left, the cry came
from the Ora ngewood
Academy bench: "Let's go
for double digi ts, ladies."
That's a minute left in
the gu,me, not the first
quarter.
Orangewood Academy, a Sevent h
Day Adventist school in Garden Grove
with an enrollment of 100, was the op-
i>onent for Estancia High's girls bas-
. ketball team Tuesday night in the open-
ing round of the· Estancia Classic, be-
cause a team from Canada that had
originally been scheduled Lo play in the
tournament pulled out at the 11th hour,
forcing Estancia Coach Russ Davis to
scramble for another team.
"I just hope they show up," Davis
said of the Spartans (1-3) an hour be-
fo re tipoff.
Orangewood Academy indeed
showed up for the Eagles, who defeated
the Spartans, 69-8, a game in which the
visitors did not make a two-point bas·
ket.
"That's amazing. I don't think I've
ever heard of that before," Davis said.
The Spartans, who hustled Crom be-
ginning to end and never let up, fin-
ished 2 of 3 from three-point range,
both by Amy Slagle. Ruth Merid (1 of
5) and Jodi Barron (1 of 2) each made
free throws.
But that was the extent of their scor·
ing, ~ the Spartans were 0 of 24 from
the field inside the three-point line.
"It's tough to play against a team like
that," Davis said. "Obviously, they
didn't play well Nothing against them,
but they were just overmatched. It
could've been a lot worse, but I played
my starters in the first and third quar-
ters, and my reserves in the second. and
fourth quarters."
Estancia, which defeated Anaheim
last year, 87-8, will host Saddleback to-
night in the semifmals (7:45). Diamond
Bar plays Marina at 6:15 p.m. in the
other semifinal.
Karla Dominguez, a senior guard, led
NEWPORT BEACH
quaner -and our defense was a little bit
lax," said Parse!. "But we started tighten-
~-..J • ing up the defense in the second quarter
and they were.. unable to penetrate like
they were before." Tom Feeney Kevin Byme
by Chris Candlish with 15 and Kevin
Byrne with 10. But it was an evening in
which all 11 players in uniform not only
saw frequent playing time, but scored.
The first quarter was -an indication that
it was going to be a productive night for
the Eagles in the scoring depanment, as
they scored 27 points. But it was only
good enough for a five-point lead.
"We fouled ·a little bit in the first quar-
ter -they had seven free throws in the
The game was out of hand by halftime,
Ill the Eagles stretched it out to a 51-28
lead.
But Estancia did not let up in the sec-
ond half, scoring 21 points in the third
quarter and 22 in the fourth. Kevin Radi-
say had all 11 and Casey Hammond all six
of his points in the final period.
"(La. Habra's) fairly quick, but we sort
of pounded them into submission," said
Parsel.
Senior. guard Tom Feeney played a
LIAM H oosnN/DAILY PILOT
Estancla's Megan McCartln (left) puts the heat on Orangewood's Amy Sia·
gle in first round action at Estancia Invitational Tuesday night.
the Eagles with 14·points and six steals,
but backup guard Vivi Rodriguez made
a pitch for added playing time in the fu-
ture, scoring a dozen points with a 6-of-
UTANCIA 6t, OllANOIWOOD I
b~ Tourn~enl
O.Mla--1 &IMda """" '• ll pl ., CMnlca r 0 0 • • Walll 4 ' 0 ' t.Wtld 0 I • I Da I I tz ' 2 ' t4 ::.t.fOOI 2 0 J ' .. McCMUil 1 1 0 l
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ICOU 111' eUMTUt
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He~ther Porter, and second in the B DI·
vision, with Casey Hogan and Cassie ·
Thompson.
7 shooting performance from the field.
"Rodriguez was awesome," Davis
said. "She earned some more playing
time."
Estancia led, 25·3, after one quarter,
as the Spartans committed 15 of their
37 turnovers.
It was 37-4 at halftime, and 52-S after
the thfrd quarter.
Slagle sank her first three-pointer in
the first quarter, then netted another
with 1:42 left in the game to cut Estan--
cia's lead to 61-8.
Estancia's starters shot 45.7% (16 of
35) from the field, while the Eagles' re·
serves shot Sl.8% (14 of 27).
Sophomore Jill Black had eight
points, five rebounds and a pair of
steals, while Jennifer Robertson added
four points and four boards for the Ea-
gles.
The NewP.?rt Harbor High
varsity sading team outfin-
ished a record number of •
teams in ithc ninth annual
Anteater Invitational last
• Ne~rt Harbor's junior varsity team
placed Ufird OYCrall, with Ste~ Kleba and
Allison HiJ!, who placed fifth in the A Di·
vision and Patrick Hopn and Crlsll
Dyen. who placed fourth in U.e B DI·
vision.
-venity (San Diego). 80; 3. Newport Har·
bor junior varsity, 92; 4. Point Loma var ..
lity, 109; S. University (San Dieao) junior
vUlity, 120; 6. San Marcot, 122; 7. Corona
del Mar, 132; 8. Long Beach Poly, 148; 9.
Bilbop (Saa Dieao), lSO; 10. Bishop Gar·
cia (Santa Barbara). 174. weekend.
·'Twenty-eiaht teams, reprcsonlina 2A
schools. competed in the two-day eveat.
battling the Upt and ahi.fty winds of New·
port Haibor to complete 14 lbort-coune
rac:cs.
Teaa trPClcd from u far IOUtb u
San Dicao and as fat north as San Fru-
cisc:o to aa1J ln &hia 1Ca10n'1 ftnt bJab
school reptta giled ln Flyina Juniors.
Newport Harbor'• varsity ~ fint In
the A DMsion, with Nathan Dunham IDd
..
Tho JV team would haw placed sec·
ond; ~r, Kleba and Hill were dis·
qualifaed rroln ooe of the ncea.
The second owenll llnllber wu UllMr·
sity Hip of Su DlqD. led by B DivWon
winners Orea ..,_,.. IDd Albley Kurtz.
How the team1 ftnlabed. with polnta in·
duded:
J. Newr>rt Harta wanitJ, 44; 2. Uni-
11. Oroumont, 174; 12. Marin Acad·
emy, 180; 13. Miuion Bay, 193; 14. Torrey
PblCI, 205; IS. Santa Barbara, 209; 16.
Marina. 219; 17. La Jolla, 219; 18. Albany,
222; 19. Cate, 227; 20. Point Loma junior
vanity. 243.
21. Caadwick, 253; 22. Loyola. 268; 23.
Dana Hllll, 272; 24. AUIO Nlpel. 297; 2S.
O>ronado, 322; 26. Padflc Orove, 32.A; 27.
North Monterey vanity, 3"; 28. North
Moatere, junior varsity. 36l
steady game, accounting for seven assists
to go with his 12 points. He was one of
five Eagles to ·
score in dou---------• blc figures.
COST A MESA -Costa
Mesa High football coach
Myron Miller finaliLcJ the
Mustangs' 1995 non-league
schedule Tuesduy with the
addition of Sunset League "We had
real solid bal·
aoce to-
night," said
Parsel. "And
the guards
did a good
job of getting
the ball into
the right
hands."
'We had real
solid balance to-
night, and the
gt1ards did a good
jolJ at getting the
ball into the right .
rcprcscnt:Hive Edh.on High. • •
hands.• ,.
-TIM PABIB. Estancia coach
Next.up for •
the Eagles is
a matchup \t
6 tonight at ---""--------
Woodbrid$e ·
against Chaawick, a tea~ from ?alos Ver-
Soo UTANCIA/Pa90 a
The Musl:lngs, 7-3· l this f~ll including u
first-round CJF Divhion Vlll playoff Joss,
open the ~eason with home games agaubl
Mayfair, Westminster and Edison, before
traveling 10 Troy and Santa Ana. .
"I had an open date, because Mayfair
moved from the third week to the firi.t
w~ck, an~ tl}erc weren't maf!Y options,"
Miller saad of the match w11h Edison,
which finished 8-3 this fall, including a
berth in the ClF Division 1 playoffs and a
near victory against Los Alamitos.
Edison replaces Ocean View, which
dropped the. Mustangs. .
Dates for all games are pending New·
port-Mesa District studium allotment. .
-By Barry F~er
HIGH S CHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL
Sailors open some eyes
with im~ressive victliry
...,. Everyone 's tuned in, Cre scenta
,Valley bears the brunt of it.
BY BAll..llY PAULICNEll., Sloan Wann
CYPRESS -Though ~ AT',.,!t~
four victories had preceded / • · • · · · · it the New or Ha b f~ 11\ Senior Dianne Pultdo, another full-tune
H'gh g· I b r l~ II l r ~r ( ·J . basketball player. continued her -solid start
5J 44 ~reas~ ~o a earn s ~ with a team·hi~h 16 points and 12 re· qu~rterfinal t . ur~ament '\1.r bounds. while senior returner Mandy
1 nump over . Clayton a<lded eight points and . nine Cre~enta Valley Tuesday was officially boards against the F:ilcons (8-2) .
considered opening day. · . "This is the first time we've had all our \he "'tn :11.lvu_n~cd the_ Tars to Thurs·
players this season," said Ne~port Coach dur.1s.1~ p.m. scm1f1nal against Lakewood.
Shannon Jakosky, whose talented and un-' lts ~as our tqughest test so far," !a·
beaten cast hit the floor running against a kosky said of Crescent~ •Valley, which
strong Crescenta Valley unit. forged a 12-11 lead la1c 1n the first quar·
Senior Tina Bowman, one of three play-tcr.
ers detained by the Tars' run through the But Newport then reeled off a 22·5 run, aF Southern Section and state volleyball spanning into the fim three minutes of
playoffs, made her firs t appearance after the third quarter, to build a 33-17 bulge.
illness sidelined her last week. She had The Sailors, scoring in transition and
eight rebounds and four points off the finding the open shot in the halfcourt set
bench. by whipping the ball around with hardly a
Newport senior Melissa Schutz, pbying dribble. everuually upped the lead to 49·
in her second game after anothl:r AJl-ClF 28, before the Falcons !.taged a late rally
volJeyball campaign, also appeared slightly to make it respectable, largely again:.t
more comfortable with the larger orange Newport resel"\es ..
ball, as her 11 points and 10 rebounds "l hated to put my starters back in
would attest. " (with 1 :20 left and the k:ld pared to 53·
Despite· the late additions, which have 44), but not as much us I would have
become routin e to Jakosky, this year's edi· hated losing the win," Jal..o!>ky said
tion appeared near mid-season form. "That's just a prcscJ:.un lc»on that play·
"We have better passers, penetrators ing time is earned."
and shooters," said Jakosky, who also ---------------
credited the full-time attendance of eight NEWPORT HARBOR 56
players (as opposed to three last year) CRHCENTA VALLO 44
during fall drills as a key to the early co· Cypress Tournament besiveness. N~ .. pcw• 11.1.1bo< ut.c•ni.. v.wi.1 lg fl pl Ip f& h pl Ip
"We're definitely further along," said S..huu s 1 o 11 Cholpnwn o o 1 o
Jakosky, who has replaced graduated All· ~~';:::" ~ ~ ! :~ =d ~ ~ ; 1!
OF guards Gina Heads and Genevieve ~~w~!,""' ; : ~ ! th: ~ ~ ! 1:
Evarts with sterling sophomore transfers ao..11\Mt 2 o 1 • Hocupwiu o o 2 o
Jenny Jennings (Estancia) and Andree :::!'w.i ~ ~ ~ ~ :::~ ~ : : ~
Verhulst (Ewson). M.l.Cl•>'on o o o o Wll1on O 0 0 0 " s 10 « "Jenny has been extremely consistent · 1oui. 2s s 10 s' all year and Andree has limttless poten· -1<-0-
0
-,-Y-Q_UAA_r_us _____________ ,.,..
tial," said Jakosky, who watched her
youthful backcourt tandem score 11 and
four points, respectively, while splitting 10
combined assists.
"'ewport H.lr bo< ll 1' H U -5'
CtH<tnl.\ \'-l~Y 12 .S 9 11-·U
l.,.oonl ~: t.nopo<t H.>rbO<-~nJS 1; Crhc.nl.\ \~
lty-l-..ud l.
T.ctwu.1 fo.IU: f\ootwt.
Taking it slow, but sure
..._Costa Mesa takes its time,
puts Huntington Beach away.
BY B.u..a.Y FAVLICNEJL, S.POa.TS \Varna
CYPRESS -Patience is
not a virtue for first-year
Costa Mesa High girls bas-
. ketball coach Len Whitacre.
It's a requirement.
Whitacre, still implement-
ing a completely new def ensivc scheme,
while tinkering more than slightly with the offemi~ sets used by his predecessor Lis3 •
McNaincc, was a ponrait of self-restraint
Tuesday in a Cypress Tournament quar-
terfmal clash with. Huntington Beach.
Whitacre watched reservedly as his
youthful squad amassed 21 turnovers in
JUSt lea than 12 minutes, calJil\g nary a
timeout u the bloopers accumulated.
Maybe the fact that Huntinaton Beach
wu stockpiling dou~le-fiaure turnovers,
while ahootina abysmally during the same
stretch, helped Whitacre'• perspecti~.
In fact, HuntinJlon managed to build
'only a 17·14 lead, before Mesa stopped
the bJeedln&.
Wbi11ere'1 troopl com.mitte6 just eight
hll'DO¥Crt the rest of the way en route to a
SM2 Yictoly, p~lllna the Mustanp (S-
2) IDIO Thunday a 7:30 p.m. quanerfiaaJ
apiDltNubonne. •
•we've had a bard time st.artina pmes
thil ..uoa," aaid Whitacre, who uw n · hlnlna atarten c.om Lurmaa.n and Koo
Kim pace nine Mesa scorers.
Lurmman, a 6-foot· 1 junior, had nine of
her game-high 21 points in the third quar-
tei, as Mesa extended a 27-21 halftime
lead to 43-25. She also had 10 rebounds.
Kim, a sophomore guard, poured in 14
points, including a pair of three-pointers,
and pulled down a tea.m-high 11 boards.
"Corri's been doing a lot of things for
us," ~id Whitacre, who allowed Ki.m to
do most of the ball handling, a chnngc
from the ptescason plan to shift her from
the poitU to the off guard spot.
cona MUA at, MTN. uac11lll1
Cyprtu Toul'MIMnt
H·tllllrt .... llot-.h C-MaM ... ,,., ...., 1 0 2 • l w-
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' • • • 11 I ,. . ,,_,. •• ••-u •a.
........ ~
det which tuned baa Capia1ruo
Valley in another first·ro&&nd tour-
nament matcbup on Tuesday.
Panel wu able to witneta lbe
end of the Clladwick·Capo pme
after Estancia'• aamc ended
Wednesday, aad admi&a tbat ll
could be a challenalaa teat tor tbe
Eagles.
"They're very
disciplined and
play &mart." he
said of Owd·
wick. ''They're
not real bia,
but they've sot
some good
shooten. They
were one of the
top three-point Kevin Radlaay
shboting teams
last year, and they seem to have
that ability again."
UTANCIA •4, LA llAIU a6
Irvine World Newt Tournament La .... IMMda ... ,, .
0 1 0 1
1 • 0 2 , 1 , 1
1 0 1 ,
1 2 2 ..
2 , 1 t
2 0 .. 4
J 0 .1 I
1 2 • 4
2 4 1 •
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Cllbl Miii ...... slam
llddleback arUll, 3-0
SANTA ANA -The Coita Mesa High girls soccer team improved ils
record to 6-2 Tuesday allernooa wilh ll 3-0 non-league victory o~r Slld·
dleback.
'Ibo M.aatangs took a 1-0 lead in the lint half on a &oal Crom Heather
Brackett about 2.S minutes into the match.
It stayed that• way for much of the match until Jessica Schroeder
scored with about 10 minu1es remaining to mukc it 2-0. Tasea µrown
complelcd the scoring about two minutes ufler thut.
-"J think this is the. best ·Saddlebock tcQm ever," said Mustang Coach
Dao Johnston, who was unable to truly breathe easy until Schroeder's
late goal.
Schroeder and Brown were each credited with an assist to go along
with their goals.
con&MUA~
IADDLla&Cll 0 IC ..
COiu MeA K0ting: Schroeder 1, Brown 1, Brack~tt 1. Sawes: Rinderknecht 7 •.
Saddlebad: Scheli.e 12.
Halftime: Cosu Mesa, 1.0.
Newport Harbor girls fall, 4-0
MISSIC.,N VIEJO - The Newport Harbor girls will have until after
Christmas to regroup following Tuesday's 4-0 lashing·· at the hands of
Trabuco Hills. · · '
The hosJ Mustangs did all lheir damage in the first half, and held the
Sailors without a shot on goal In the match.
Newport, which dips to i-3-3 overall, resumes actio n on Dec. 27 with ·
· a tournament match.
• , C\SIT P. L'UQCH/DAJLY PILOT KOU9YeUMTIU
u tWira n ' 12 1'-J4 TIMUCO HILU 4
NIWPOllT HAltaOI 0
Newport Harbor Hves: Teal 14. Mari< Pierson (32) and the Estancia Eagles will collide with Chadwick's Dolphins tonight at
Wo 9dbridge High in the second round of the Irvine.World News Tournament. Chadwick Hi'gh
advanced to tonight's quarterfinals by stopping Capistrano Valley.
blMda J7 2A 21 2l-t4
~ ... : La"*·-~ 2.. McAMlly l; b-1Mda-"9dl >. lkllar .. 2.. Milli&M 1, 11.Mliay 1.
TediWc.al .... : ~ Trabuco Hills scoring: Casey 2, Summa 1, M.acleod 1.
Hal(time: Trabuco Hills, 4-0. -Marina gives CdM girls a lesson . in pressure . LOCAL SCHEDUL!
TODAY
Quesuon or the day
~ Where's my team? liv RJCHARD DUNN, s .. ous Warru
COSTA MESA -With 4:20 m
rcmJining in the second quarter,
f\fJrirt} High girls basketball 't
cvach .Pete Bonny called off the •
fu 11-coDrt press.
11 ,y0s 37-9. I le'd seen enough.
··1 d)Jn't mind it. I was actually sorry l're took
it off • .because that's good experienc~ for us,"
s:.ii<.l O)rth }:-1i11t, Corona del Mar coach, whose
squad t(2-5) absorbed a 77-36 beating Tuesday
in th~opcning round of t!le Estancia Classic,
ag.iin · a highly regarded Marina team (6-0)
thal sGffocated the Sea Kings' offense, while
· shooliwtg 44% (23 of 52} from the field in the
fir::.t 1hree quarlcrs.
CdM, led by 6·foot-1 junior Jennifer Gard-
ner's 16 points and eight rebounds, had eight
turnovers in the first 5: 14, finishing with 35, 22
in the firl>l half as Marina built a 43-15 half-
time lead.
''We're just young and inexperienced," Flint
s:.11J. "Dut it's good to face a team of that cali-
ber. because we're going to be facing teams
like 1h:it in the Sea Vtew League, like Wood-
bridge and Newport Harbor."
Corona will meet Irvine today at 4:45 in the
consolatiop bracket.
G:irdner scored CdM's first three baskets,
giving the Sea Kings a 6·5 edge. But Marina's
Shandy Robbins, a 6-foot senior post player
headed for Oregon next year; followed by con-
verting a three-point play, and ·the Vikings
never trailed again.
"We hurt ourselves wilh (35) .turnovers, (22)
in th~ fi rst half," Flint said. "l think we beat
ourselves, especially in the first half. When we
bTOk<;.(Marina's press) •• ~dld well.''.
MARI~ 77, CORONA DIL MAR ~I
EsW\ci& Tournament
Cotona del Mat M.vlM
War"'lnctoft rord
Catd.-
M.li(f .n.wl
CasUnedD
AlbAftO Tt...r......,.
Simoft tt.1>1ty Hwvili
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TOIM•
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J.polnl &NI•: COf'Ofla •I ~r-WMllll"&lon 1; ~
r!fta-~ J, lnlde 2, Sotllno I, No\. NM.u.'1. Tedlnlal -...: None.
Robbins, who averaged 16.9 points and U.6
rebounds last year, led Marina with 20 points,
including three three-pointers.
The Vikings ended with seven Crom beyond
the three-point line in 15 attempts. CdM was 1
of 6.
Sonya Bryant, a 5·10 junior forward, added
19 points and seven boards for Marina, while
6-2 junior Kirsten Cappel grabbed nine re-
bounds for the Vikings, seven in the third
quarter, when Marina scored 21 or more points
for the lhird consecutive frame.
Marina cashed in early from three-point
range, hilting four in the first quarter for a 22-
6 lead. Adria Sortino's three-pointer gave Ma-
rina a 15-6 lead, then Marisa Emde nailed one
with 1:4} left for a 19-6 advantage. Robbins
capped the quarter with another trey when
0:35 remained.
Sophomore guard Lindsay Warmington had
seven points, four rebounds, two assists and a
steal for CdM, while teammate Melissa Ford
sank 4 of 5 from the free-throw line.
ftlUUDAY
leccer
HisJt Khool boyt -CorOM .. MM at lru
To..mwMnt.
Hid! Khool pk -ur~ k lldl a.I CorOnA ckl M.v, l :JS.
fleltl llecby
Hip Kt.ool boyt -CclrOM d~I Mu at l ru Tour-'-
Hlslt Kflool pu -, H1<ntlnpon k~ ~I
Newport H~, 3 p.m. •
WrMtll•9
Hl&ll Khool -&Unda al DAN Hllh, S p.lll.; San~ AM VAllq at N«wpor1 H.ubor, ' p.m.
Often in the arena of
youth s.ports, moms, dads,
fans, players and coaches
wonder just how can tbey
get their events recognized
in the media, and who's re-
sponsibility is it to get it
done. ·
The answer is you.
Just pick up the phone,
call 642-4330 and ask for
Sports. We1ll tell you how
and, you'll be surprised how
easy it can be to get consis-
tent cover:ige of your special
endeavor.
Try it. lt's 6-4-2-4-3-3-0. ..
DEEP SEA FISHING
TUUDAY'I HSN COUNTS
D-•J"• ~ -I a-i, lhnJl«s. t Mn4
~~ ~ JI 1>hlldhh; I bl.odismilh perch. lS
N....,t M111tll•9 -1 a-1, 14 a11&k<s. 14
Kulplt1, 4 thffplMMI. 'Whurish, 10 ~lh
rrdt. 20 ...adcrtl
OBITUARY 888 PUBLIC NOTICES PUB,LIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES ii0BUC NOTICES
'
iliiiiimW PUBLIC NOTICE 0833767 In Book page of rectnea1):· Th• beneficlmry expenses of the TN•l" wUI allow th• pereonal rep-PUBLIC NOTICE on It. bUllneu at 120 New, Dal1d: December 31 , undlf the tictltlous·nam•(•) --------Official R8COl'ds In the of· under aald Deed of Trust, and of the trust• CtNled r1Mn1AUv1 to take many port Cenllf Drive, Suite 1993 listed above. NOTICE OF l1c1 of the R8COl'der of Or· by reuon of a breach °' by aald Dffd of Trust. actions without court ap-aUHRIOfl COURT 220, Newport BNch, Call· LIVINGSTON PROPER< Jan Ferlnga
TRUSTEE'S SALE •no• cou.:r default In the obl~tloo• Said Ille wUI be ~on: prove!. BtfOft taking cet'· OP CAUFOIUHA, f()(nla 92660, hU been dis· TIES, a California COfpora· Thi• statement was liltd T.Su:i:c~!°c:31 ,;~:es~he fol~wl~~t d• ~:.ui:~~:rb~ d~11~ p~.;. ~=·,f!~:~ ~. =-.o::i:~ COUNTYOFOIWIQ& =:!r~~~.11
or De-urv: C. Biadlly Uvlng1ton, Q','~~~°fyt~ ~~
LOT 165 AND THE 11ed to the underllgntd a the entrance of the Orange rlMOC&llvt will be required a.41 The Cltr Dm.. Afllf that daSe. no person President 31, 1994
HUIOI LAWN· Loan No. NORTHEASTERLY ONE· wrilltn Declaration of D• CMc Center 300 E. Chap. to glY9 notice to lnttt11ted Poat Office au 14t1t or entity hU authority to Published Newpo rt F82H3t 185t440t81MILLER HALF OF LOT 168 OF lault and Demand IOf Salt, man. 0rang9. CA l*sont unlasa they hlv. Ormnee, CA bind the Partnlrlhlp, IX· B11ch-Co11a Miii Dally Publlshtd Newport Beacfl. r~ ~ AP1423-23G-04 TRACT 907, IN THE CITY and written notice of • Al the Um. of lhe Initial waNtd notlc:e or consented Uet3-tl1t Clpt tor THE WflnNBERG Pilot Dtetmber 14, 1994. Col la Mesa Daily PilOt No--·~r --• COMMONWEA LTH OF NEWPORT BEACH, AS fault and ot elec1lon 10 publication ot lhia notice, to the PfopoMd ectlon.) IN TH• llATTD OF COMPANY, a California W768 vemblf 23, 30, Oec.mber
.. ~ .. AJJ~a'·L.I• TRUST DEED SERVICES PER MAP RECORDED IN cauM the undlfalgntd to the total wnoun1 of the~ The Independent 9drNni• TH• PRTITION TO corporation. whO hU been PUBLIC NOTICE 7 14 1994 ...... -.,. ri UIU INC.. u duly appointed BOOK 28, PAGES 25 TO NII aald ptOperty lO llllaly paid balance of the obtlga-trlllon authority will be dMlgnl&td .. the liquid» ' • •
1625 Gisler TruttM under th• lollowing 3& INCLUSIVE OF MISCEL. lllld obllgatlonl, and thef• lion MCUred by the above granted uriMae an lnllf· CKAllG• TH• KAii& Ing 8g9l'rt to wllld up the W7S1 Coat.a Mesa described died ot ttust LANEOUS MAPS, IN THE alter th• underalgned dMc:ribtd c»ed of trust Mted penon ... an ~ OP Miit llMllvl•..a ,_. Plll'tnelrahlp01 aftalr1. NOTICB PUBLIC NOTICE WILL SELL AT PUBLIC OFFICE OF THE COUNTY cauaed aald notlc9 of • and estll1\l&td coeu, tx· jectlon to the petftlon Ind Utloew, ........, AMII Dated: December 31, INVITING alDI ~-·IM0;;11•;t;t;4 •• ~1 AUCTION TO THE HIGH· RECORDER OF SAID lault and of election to be penNS, n adYelas, la ahOW good cw Why lht GreeHnlaH•u 1993 NoUce 11 hlfeby given LW:loe3M ' EST BIDDER FOR CASH COUNTY. Recorded S.ptemblf 7, 1351.357.20. court Should not grant the CAa•llUllaD WITTENBERG LIV· \hat the Boatd of TNt1Ms FloUtloua Nc.tc YllW Qn the IOfms which llt YOU AAE IN DEFAULT 1994 as lnsll. No. IM-• la pou1b1e that at the authority. At'1e700 INGSTON HOMES, a C.U· ot the Cout Communfty ._DNAL PMllC lawful tender In the United UNDER A DEED OF TRUST 0545984 In Book Pege of time of .... the opening A HEARING on the peU-fomla g.,..11 paMlflhlp College Dlsttlct Of Or111g9 auslnesa N.,...
-Slates) and/Of the cashltr'I DATED 11/16/93. UNLESS Officlal R.cortla In the of· bid may be teu than th• lion will ti. held on JANU-ORDER TO aHOW By: TM wiu.nblfg Com-County, Clllrornia. will r• lt.tewt ~ • Monuery certlUed °' o\hw et\tekl YOU TAKE ACTION TO !Ice of the reccxdlf of Of. total~ d\19, AAY 5, 1995, at 1:45 P.M. CAU81 POii CHANG• pany, a Ca11tom1a COfpot• c:eivt bld1 up to but no The followlng persona.,.. C,.,.. 1 Cnmetory tF19Cltled In Clvll Code Sec· PROTECT YOUA PROP· lflg4t County; Deter tl/08/IM In Dept. 703 located al 341 OP MAiia . tlon, tta: Plr1nlt later thin 11:00 AM, Janu-doing buslneu u : 3500~~ \Ion 2924h (payable In lull ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT Said Sale of pro~ wlll COMMONWIALTH The CJty Ortw South, Or· PET~~,_~ey By: Eric A. Wllllnberg, ml'/ 5, 1995, Thurtdly at FAR WEST PROPERTIES, __,..,.., __,, al the time of aale to T.O. A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU be made In "aa la" condl-ange, CA 92668. Alan Gr HASI Pr~ the Purchaalng Department a Calllotnla lllt*ll part-
., ......... Service Company) all right, NEED AN EXPLANATION tlon wlthoul covenant Of TRUIT DE&D SER' IF' YOU OBJECT TO the HAVE FILED A PETITk>N By: LMngatoo Propert.191, ot the Dlsttlct located at Mrahip, 7970 Orchid Driw, ~~~~~~~~ tilll and lnlerH t conveyed OF THE NATURE OF THE warranty, expt ... Of Im-YICll, INC., U Mid granting of lht petJtlonl you FOR AN ORDER TO a Callfomla corporation, l370 Adami AVlnY9, Bldg .• Buena Park, Calllornla r ••t•ll to ond now htld by 11 PROCEEDING AGAINST piled, regarding tllle po• TruatH, bf T.D. SER-ahOUld IPJ*lr at the near· CHANGE NAMES FROM Hs: P811ntt O. Cotta MtU. Cl.lllornla, 90620
undlf aald Deed or Truet In YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· .. u1on, or encumbranc .. , VICI COMPANY, egent Ing and 1tate your ob-J 1 t Irey A I an Gr o t-By: C. Bradley Uvlngatoo, at which tlrM bld1 will be David D. Dunham, 5890 18.1. llUIW&Y th• property hereinafter de· TACT A LAWYER. to pay th• remaining Pflncl· •i Teri Phelps A.-j9ctlona ot llS. written ob-Mnbaoh« TO Jeffrey Alan Preald90t publicly opened and read Mulblfry Ridge Drive, C•
MtVt * Ch I scribed: 215 VIA RAVENNA, NEW· pal aum of the not1(1) ... I t t I t }ectlonl with the court ti.-Welllf Dated: December 31, IOf: matlllo, Callfornta 93012 .....,uary ape TRUSTOA: LORENZO C. PORT BEACH, CA 112663 cured by lllld deed Of a a an eore •rr, tore the heating. Your IP" II la hef'eby ord11ed that 1993 PURCHASE OF TRUCK HollV Andntjewskl, 7970 ·Cremation ' MILLER "(If a 1trMt addr... or Trust, 'wtth Interest u In t 750 I , 4th St., lte ~anc:. may be In pereon all persona lnterllted In W ITT EN BER G· MOUNTED VACUUM AIR Orctlld Drive, Buena P11k,
"10 Broadway BENEFICIARY: QUALITY common designation of aald not• ptovlded, ad· 700, lent. Ana, CA or bY Your allomey. thl1 mattlf ~pell' befor• LIVINGSTON INC., a Call· SWEEPER; 0 RANGE C&tllomla 90820
"t:oeta Mesa MORTGAGE USA. INC .. property la l hown •bow, vances. " any, under the 92705 (7t4t 843-8372 IF <tou ARE A Cl\EDITOR ttll• court "' o.partment fornla COfpotaUon COAST COLLEGE Thi• buslne11 II con:-: Ml·t111 Recorded December 1. no wamanty Is given u to term• ot aald Deed ot IP •YAILABLE, THE or a contingent creditor of No. 703 of the Or1ng9 By: Eric A. Wllllnberg, ~ bid• art to be In IC· ducted by: • genlfal part-
••••••••• 1993 as Instr. No. 93 Its compl.ienen or cot· Trust, IHI, ohargca and EXPECTED OPINING the CS.C.lttd, you rnuat tilt County Sup«lor Court It Prllk*lt cordll'IC9 with the Bid Dc>c-nerahlp BID llAY ••OBTAINED your claim with the court the 1ddt111 lbown abov. Publl•h•d Newport UIMOll whlcn are no# on The r1gl1trant(s) com---~----------------~-------~~~--~ n~~~"~and~a~tothe~~1~.1~.~~h~~~M~~~~~be~ln~~tt~~ :·s T]r;wJ:l~G . LOWING TILDHONE aonal repr•Mntatlve •Po o'cloclc p.m.. Ind thtn ~ Piiot o.c.mber 14, 1994. the~ of the Director of lllll undlf the Flc:Woua
• ... ..
.. ANEW
.. UMaERS 0 .. TH• PGlnWd bY lht court WIUlln '**-9how CIUM, It any W717 Purchaalng ot 1M Dlsttlc:t 8ualM11 N1me(1) lated
.. .. 5 tow monlht from the dllt they~. Why the pellllon No bldcMr may withdraw abOYe on: 1884
DAY aEFOR• THE of tint 1aeuance of the let· tor chlng9 of NIM~ PUBLIC NOTICE his bid lot a p«rod of fOftY· ~ o. Ow\ham
IAU1 l714t 480-Hto i.... aa provided 1n NCtlon not be gr9IMd. -·t•-•te flw (45) days aft« the dale Hoity Andrztjlwskl
TAC40e777C 9100 ot the Ca1190m1a Pro-•It tur1Mt onwed that a ----Ml tor the Opening thlteof: Thia MlllfMnt -._ filed
PubUahed Newport ~ Coda. The an-tor 111-copy of lhla orct.r to lhow DllSN!TUTICl1c:',.P MD The Board of Truat.11 r• with the COWlty C .. k of
BMch-Costa MM& Oalty Ing dalrne wW not uplre cauM b9 publlahtd In -llfWI the DtMllae of •• Orange Col.w1cy on Novwn-PloC Oec:embtr 14 21 21 befcn bw monUw from N.8./Coata M•ea Dally LACK OP Jec1lna any ilnd al bide or ber 22, 1994.
1.._ ' ' • the hearing date notlctd Piiot. • rwwepeper of 01n-AUTllORITY \o wilve any lrf~ FUM73
" abOYe. lflll drCUlllOn IPUl*'htd In POR WlTTUaUG or ~ In any bid PUbllahtd Ntwp0r1 hech-
1 _______ wr_ee_ YOU MAY EXAMINE the lhlt counly ...... once. LMllGITOM .... or in the bidding Coeta ..... Deity PloC 0.
PUIUC NOTICE = ":P'.,:V.::-~ =.';tor~~ WITTENBERG UVING-::.:.~ CM\bef 7, 14, 21, 2'. , ....
.. c .......... lhe ....... ~ m9Y .. lhe hMring. STONllHOMES. ·-~ ._ Cwt Ce••vnltr W757
-wWI the court • tonNI ,... DATaa NOV t7 tff4 i"* ~ .... p ,,._ .... , ....._._._.. PUBLIC -TICI llOTICa OP ~ tor .__._. Notice o4 ' Panntnt!lp'1, tormtd . bv Cellele --· "" Pn'ITION TO IN t ~ TH 0 II A I H • and beCwMn THE wrr. 01ten1 .IAJllUAAY 1, 1--------e e e · e e e e e e e e e e e AD¥1NISTD and::..... :f :*"Y ICHULT~..! COllMI .. TENBERO COMPANY, a t•l• 1tl90All Flow..
•atATS Ol'I .... ot of ,,.,., pedllon ': llOllRR UP TH8 au ... ~ :or.i:,_~ (91'9 IN .. , te74 Bualneaa .....
BUSINESS??
The Ltgal. Departmmt aJ tht Daily Pilot is pkasM .,. o. wao11 cavaa. acc:ouni .. Pl'cMded 1n "': ::"" ....... llO ~ PAOPar=. Publl•h•d Newport The J!::ne-:;'1Gf'8 .,.
... • •/_LI_ L . ..: CMS llO.A17Ut• ~ 1250 Of .. c.ltor· Hn ... • c.tltofnla corw-1Mch-Coat9 ..... DllllY -'-butlrleee et:
llfl annquna a new senna""'" 111NtttmJ11 to new UWJntsSeS. To 11 "*'· ... ......., n1a ,...... Code. A ,... !. 11th It., .c. .~ wt11ct1 carried 0n 'b-.;;.': Plot Deceml* 1. 14, 1"'4. APi .. NNAHCW. 1 ~ 1V~wiJinow S'c:'ADCH ./ .... _ .. &...'\lr)tl ......... -~. ___ J,,. .... VJU tht c:redllott, C011111igenl aedJ. ~ .. ~....._Notice leech, CAeata. ntll .. 120 Ntwpof1 ~ • W759 ANCE IEMCES, 311C).J we !LJrlft. JTJe ,_,,Ko.!"',,--... ,..,....,.,,. "'-l>"'' ana-,,--'°'9. and~ who may ""'" ""'" the Publlahed Newport tw Drtve. "* 220. N...-Aifpcwt \.oop, Costa Meea,
#ime and the trih to the Court House in Santa Ana.. Thm, ,.r course, J;... tht /lelmh Ollel.._ • ll••U In ~~ .., .,.. ..... 8MCh-COeta ..._ Dally por1 . leach, Calltornla PUIUC NOTICI CA 12811
'I' '/' "J 1 NJK' the .. a:' ...... , Cit bOCh, .;;;;-Pilot Holli--a. .. 0. 92llO, h19 '*" dlllQMd .......... N'f flnlndlll ltMcet Inc,,
qcompl&d we tdUfikyour fictitiuus business Mme Jlllkmmt with tht ~ , 0~.:::~ ,_..'°""GOLD cembw 7, 14. 1114. • W74:t ~. • Of ~ l•ln•• ._. ~a~~
"'-'-. -·"fish once a iuetltfor:· &..-UJ«lts l1J rwmirtt/by law and thmfi'k your--'° lll•d by MICHAEL c . :-0 (CHl7447d NfM thll dMt, no penon .......... nle .,_.,.. .. , /'..., 1v-· -i-J"""l CAYEU. In the ~ a GOLD PUILIC IOTICI . or .._, hal ~ to The~,._.•• Tltlt bu"""' le con-~•,,..,J.J;-,.;,.n with the Countv Clerlt. Coult Of Cllllamlll. eouney 110t DOn IT an 111nc1 ._ ""'*""P.-• dOlna .....,_ •: ~ br. • COfltOflllon JI...,_.., 'l Of C>MHOe. '' -t~4 ~ tDr b Uquldlllng at ~!J., lat AUTOMOTIVE The •eata"ant(tt ~
by , &I.-, /:~,, L '...:__ .J._ tL.;L. n:J~ 22n W, THI flE1lTION ,.._.. 4 40 • • IW P 0" T PMntf-. hM ....,_ .. l)(PORTI INURNA-menoed lo .,.... ..... ~ PfBtse HtJp fQ 1--Y""" r ·--uun.ne» Il4kmml Ill VK ~J ~-"""' JJV • thll MICHAEL c. CAVEU. BIACN, CA 11110. llOTm OI' ....... • ._ llQuldlllhl T10NAL. ct PWtGA MITO ,... ..,_, b ....._
R,.., <'.. r ---Mt:14.. Jf W>U CAfll'IOt dnf) L... Al-.. etJJ us 111 (7140 642-4.321 llNi aw • '"alnled • ,_.., MH C7t4t TW 1 ~ .. rw1!!"m, .,.,,_ eo .w. uphhfl IALEI. am UncoM Ave .. buttneaa nemec•• 11e11c1 rJ ~ \.MUI 'Jr-~r VJ' rw-··-.... '° ..... Publlthtd Newport -~--=-,...... ...... ~ CA-1 ...,... -Noc .... "· ',;//---L tsfor·mullJhand/ethis--'-_.bymA.i/. ._,. ........ ,....,~.._Dair ,__,__ Plledl DecemNt It, MDt.-...... ~ , .. re-: mmcr 1111'1t/lt''11tcl r-I""",._,~ denL Nat o.o.,,.. 1 I. ,.., MIOCIATD tlD ,, .. ~ ,,,... .. Al'I P'IMnOlal a.:1111,
Tl'. _L .. JJJ ,&~ · -.1-r• --" __ J .•• .:JJL ..L-THI NT1TION ,...,.... ' IOUnlmGI AllOQ. THI wmu.IAO COM-.. -.CA.et741 llnl..111111,,.DuMI 4rnJUU1UfNIWIVIJ1--~· quesatms,y-awUSIU1" ~.,wwoemo!f'elntm ... Im•• ... WIU and ,.... WlhJlil ATll.. c 7 .......... PANY.•C ..... ..,.. ""'~"'° w. Uft. Tiiis 111'17111 -9M ~.,.. ,...,;##VDU.. ,-. __ J L. ..L ,,,· WllD' _,, L ..: _ _.1 oocldle, hnr. M admlltd ,.......... ... 1111 ..... ~ ............. CA. ""' .. Colll'llJ Olrtl ti ~ -16»4H ,,.--~ VWU lllC7C .r-·--l1lllUim: IO ......... 1"' .. Ind ...,, ...... 11r Mii .... Ir. .... A. ~ ~ c.t1r on .....
"r ~ ....... .. ....... On ....._ __ , ..... wtf ··-I.Na .... ....... ..., ,... .,. w. Uft. Mt 11. , ... llMllili.MIM w aw •u11 • ~ h .. .... "...,_ INGl10N HOMll, a·c.. ...,. ,,,.._ ..,..,.. CA. WJ49 •
.... "" .. llUlt. w ut'lll • ..,. ..... ~ ........ SlnL _, "" ..... ....,... ..... ntl NilflON........ ,-• m:...._ end T1"9 ...,...,.. la~ c.111 ..... DllJ,_ ...
............. hi lie h()UMhoid -~~·"· ......................... a DI 'Ir 1 a -....., .. ...... ---"""-· ... IC.• Cll-,.. .... ..,. ... • L.J ___ u.1-_::..... ...... ..::...:=:.J~~-=:.:..::..:.~_.;;__,__,.:._ ___ __. __ .JI.!~!' ~l...~*J';(!!""~·~::~"'~,.,~ .. ,.~•.L.Jg.,S~·-.··m151.--1.i:t..~··.e•!!!..,!:.· .!!=.!!!!..•!! ... !!!=~ c11111111 =·:c.=. .:.,J: 14.11. ' Mr-""'
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CLASSIFllD HOURS
Telephone 8am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
.Walk.-ln 8:00am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
DAILY PILOI
DIADUNES
Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00Jln
Wednesday ....... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ........... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ................ Thursday 5:~
BY PHONE .-
(714) 642-5678
BY FAX
(714) 631-6594
(Please include your name and
phone nwnber and we'll call you
back with a price quote.)
BYMAILOR ..
PERSON1
330 West Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
QimerofNewport Blvd & Bay SL
Put a few words
to work for you .
Call 642-5678 .
GENERAL
POLICY
Rates and deadl ines are
subject to change without
nouce. The publisher
reserves the right to censor,
recl assify, revise or reject
any classified
advertisement. Please
report any error thar niay
be in your classified ad
immediately. The Daily
Pilot & The Independent
accept no liability for any
error in an advertisement
for which it may be
responsible except for the
cost of the space actually
occupied by the error.
Credit can onl y be allowed
for the first insertion.
2169 APARTMENTS COSTA MESA 2624 MISCELIANEOUS BUSINESS & •a•o•u•s•E•s1--• •a•o•u•s•E•S/--• ~W[J>RT
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii FOR RENT FR•• CABL•. clean RENTALS FINANCE CONDOS CONDOS
FOR SALE FOR RENT
--r • .-':'1 i L ·· r '· t ... i:_ t f Ill .. tr,
BALBOA
PENINSULA
I••••••••• 18R, quiet, gat9d, car·l••••••••I••••••••• Port parking. Clo1e to
BALBOA
PENINSULA 2607
•hopping, beach &1------------------
but. Ask tor our Spa-CONDOS • BUSI?iESS
cialll M 2-5 858 TOWNHOMES 2702 OPPORTUNITY , ________ _
2904 •
. ~
With CAL•SCAN!
Hive your dlssltlid ad In 178 newspapn
with a cOmblned clrculatlon over 3 million.'
1400 11 111 II t11lt1 to pl1c• 1 25 "ord
or IHI cl111lfled 1d. 115 for t1ch 1ddltton1I word.
CAL•SCAN
(918) 449-8000
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10 WtaMlday. December 14. 1994 -llCTa.BS IOIO v111J1i SUPS
IOll ---.-•IDOCJCS 7022 l'O:tiY'S ·
CRQSSw I) PUZZLE ·---···•ll•"'~~·~~W OT PwoeeriM ........ l!l!ll~!ll!J~ W.. NOoa•on • L ••••••o -.. •...., .. ,. "' -4 u Pt U1oro1111 Wd-VAnllolm CIA&. IHHned l11Q/obo, Ctll .... ..... w/MOl9
LOST &
FOVND
111: 3 Klndof.,..m
4 Adf ... Minnellj
5 Spofige1e 8 Top
7 Prohclenl
8 High·IChool
ICudenll 9 Rolelend regutationa
10 Advel1i1Jng llrm
11 Hiii 12 VleWpOlnl
13 Howled
21 Sense oigan 23·-er .. 11y Hearf'
25 o.t In shape
27 Robin Cook
book 28 Greelc war OOd 29Loch-
~
30 Fee"*Y ecar1 0 3t O.lsy Mae's
boyfnlnd
LOST &
2925 FOUND
Gen. ()Mo. ...... & I» Wood. .... ....,.,,. ?1...-1-1020 •. In lronl ol =
___..._ --, --· 0roer ....,. o.o. 11 Maii·a -.-1i:;;ci rnldenoe on
TOO MUCH DUCK ;,,p;;t. Mr ;;;:;O:O tDt tf\la low prlc•. """ b..-a1so. oarra Pen. ~or Nllboal
flax/RH. 717-1270 IHO/Cord, 180/haH ~ 12-.pd OK. ~6836
~Frenchman's
"91
38 Hindu disclc>line
37 Oklahoma town
38 Prollla 40 Ctloosiesl
41 Eaayas-43 Orange pekoe andEar1 Grey
44 lm9gined
45 Pria
Eaat-Weet vulnerable. West
~fftM dea.la. NOR'nl
•AQ5
OK4 oJ&••
• 10532
48 Get used lo 49 Pnckty plant
50 CaH·roplng compel.it ion
51 Pace
54 Undo
56Aclress
Oeb<>fah -
57ll)ou0ht
58 Smatf no1cti
59 E111ranco
&2 Sault -Mane
EAST
•1097-4
O Q102
0 1031
•J94
SOUTH
•KJ8S2
OAJ7
OAK7
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The biddinr. WEST NOR111
Pa.-P ...
PUI · 20
p... SHI' P .. s
EAST SOtJl'B p .....
p.,. lNT
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Opening lead~ Five oro 47 Scrooge a.nd
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11 12
Some plays have become so auto-
matic that players make them with·
out thinking -always a dangerous
.,..,....-+--+--+--t practice at the bridge table. Consid-
er 'this hand from the World
Olympiad in Albuquerque.
South's bidding showed a bal-
anced hand or 22-24.points. No
doubt South added a point for the
fifth spade, bllt the ract that the
king-queen ori:lubs are bare makes
the hand look more like 20 points to
00td. 7t4-711-M31 mtn blka 1150. avt•a H F1 .... Xlnl IOo. ua. And Nonb'1 nat 10 ,PO'ntt are HOLIDAY QIPT8 20", 135. 641·926' 1C1n1 dQcka, walM/f/MtO. ~ auia.d to an. inYltaUonal jump lllPLOYlll1IT Aeclondll'd a.rtM'a a Men'• fliK road bike e21 Udo Park Dr., Npt
raaae.&baa '° • clinct &ea, to elam CIS 5533 Cabbege ~*" k&da, 1.....,_0 175 caii acn. s13/Fl. 875-7939 Lookillf a& the Nort.h·Soulh haadl SllVI & bikM. a.-Dud• &4M662 ' .
onl)', thrff DO a.rump would be • Tt443t·?Ma·iM Sub ILM I••••••••
very colllrorteble contract, t.haak • n1HH WliiiT W.S ACM~ '::a!;'!: S-epd, 11:. new, AUTOMOBILES
YOU. ....... lae ..,,.,. U'9t Xmu ., ... pot&ed M ldtU $1&5 644-6'11 Weat.'• openina heart lead pve the 11a11nQ8 In We oet-14(), Ctlrue, avoc.cao. · ·
South aome breat.hln1 room. egoty may require vou fruiting 110. Herbe 11. --------1--------
Nonetheleaa, it ltill aeemed I.hat the ?: =.:. -:... ~ = J~~·::pr:~ nans 6075 CIDVROU!T 1045
fate of I.he contract. hinted on find. charge per l'nlnule. .,.,. 110. 90tMl74-IM22
ing one of the del'enden with • dou· .. , ., l'reno~oon Alrtlne Tloket 1-way •ae CORVIETT• Blk bleton queen of diamond1. But. for _.,. xlnt cond OC-Traver .. City, Ml Leather. Wood Int.
watch what happened on the way to '350 &3t-3084 Iv mag Fly by 12/18, male Cuetom epoll., ZR1
the Forum. MBJtCllAJfDJSJ! · -$225. " 368-e112 pckg. Nu tlrea & ttana.
Declarer captured Eut'1 queen Woman'• olo~ CHARQllRS Warrarity 65k S18,900
heart.I with the ace and CJ"098ed to ...... az-18, VS Showroom condition.
dummy with the king of heart.I to U·10 112 N ~22 48US 8 7 3·7784
lead a club to the king. The defenae ANTIQUES IOlO S.U your unwanted 2 plaza level Hall.1--------
would have been in no trouble had at.me the ... y wayl S200 each obo. Can DODGE 90~5
West won the aoe, but the defender ci:: :'~ <919> 1S9CM542 leaveliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
made \he 'automatic' duck, which *IUYINQ ITllll• 842 ... 78. menage '87 RAii CHARGER
could be right on a different lie From 1800-1960. 1 ~ 360 V8 LOADED. New
the cards. It. certJlinly wun't here. Jewetfy, booka, entlf• Snow Tires. $5,000
Declarer ca1hed all t.he major-Htate. Immediate GARAGE SALES 714-e46-5384
s uit winners, reducing tbe cloted c:uh, top $. ~
hand to three diamonds and the1________ • IOll FORD 9075
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of diamonds. Ea.st drof~ the ten •e...Drvw, K9nmore, SAT D•C-t7 UM new tires. Calif amog. in t.he hope that dee arer would nearly new, drying Kida bikes, 111 tlkea 3· $4000. Call Devin 714-
play for queen-ten bare. But dedar· wrachltk•, !-'D-1 ..... ~"!.· pc kit. ••t. cordless 557·1020 · d h 1 b d w • · 1115. ~ phone, car stereo & er ex1te wit a c u , an eat a epeakera, handmade•--------
forced diamond return away from Prlgldalr• Refrlg Chrlatmaa ltema. HONDA 9085
the queen presented declarer with white, 20 C?U ft, xtnt 248 Brentwood ••· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
an extra trick in tbat 1uit and t.he cond. s1715• 645-7175 •82 Accord Hatch·
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EMPLOYMENT 29251 _____ _
reaum9 to: · ORDER DESK ~=Uni P•r::~t n!: R at t a ti Ta b I • FREE KJTIENS wlndo~•. batterlH, ~o~n:. =~1!:0~k
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0
•
THE DAILY PILOT 'S TRIBUTE TO THE SAILORS
' Perfect!
Newport Harbor football .completed its first undefeated season in 64 years
with a win against Servite last Friday for. the CIF title. •SEE YEAR 1N REv1ew 1Ns10E
Girls finish No. 1 in nation · . ..
· The Newport Harbor Sailors girls volleyball
team, led by Misty May, won the state title
and mythical national championship this fall.
• SEE STORY PAGE 10 ·
I t r • • .
I • ~
L
)
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14,
• J
Newport's 1994 champions, a team of destiny
Jon Benzinger lined up at quar·
terback John Giordani's left
a nd ran a deep route, went up
and found Gtordani's perfect pass
between two Santa Margarita High
defenders, came down and scam.:
pNed the last few yards. his team·
mdtes piling on to him in celebra-
tmn in the end zone.
For the Sailors, a Sea View
League football championship.
Mike Freeman lined up to Gior·
dani's left, went deep, 're~ched out
and grabbed Giordani's perfect
offering at the 12, bowled over a
would-be tackler at the five and
was swanned over by his jubilant
teammates in the end zone.
For the Sailors, a CIF champi·
onship and a perfect 14-0 season.
On the surface, it was so easy.
In reality, it was a feat of tremen·
dous proportions -a season never
to be forgotten.
Those two touchdown plays,
mere symbol.S<of a campaign of
perfection, placed in cement to
prove good things can happen to
good people, that all of the cliches
of a football coach's playbook are
indeed the way lt's done.
The Season of '94 is surely well·
inscribed on the minds of all
Sailors fans -the lack of returning
starters, the lack of returning hon·
ors, the lack of realistic high hopes,
and the presence of a group of
youngsters who refused to buy any
of those notions.
What they sought was more
than the coaches were most likely
to pile on them m practice and in
the weight room. And in the end
those traits carried this band of
Sailors to a season which in all
likelihood will stand aJone for
LEAH HOGSTEN I OMY Pl.OT Senior Uadsey Breuu was one of 8,200 fans at Ole
1tnall wben Newport Hubor rallied to flnish wttb a 14-0
record ud CJP Division V football champions.
IDITOI
roger
earls on
many years ... maybe as many as
64 years.
They won 1heir first two games
of the season and appeared to be
every bit as expected. a hard·hit-
ting, no-ooosense, fundamentally
sound, balanced football team
which could be expected to give
any and all a good run.
Then, they proceeded to pull off
one of the great stories of prep ...
football, coming through with win·
ning efforts every time.
Nobody expected it. Their coach
surely didn't. Neither did the assis-
tants. Fourteen wins and no losses,
a CIF crown and immortality on
the Sailors' campus? ·
Maybe Bij,l Jl>hns dreamed of it,
in his inner-thoughts. Maybe Dave
Riggle, Matt's dad, dreamed of it,
and maybe others did as well. But
I'm certain no one evea considered
saying 1l. Everyone dreams of .....
impossible things, of utopia, few
ever.come-dose to accomplishing
what these Sailors did
So thanks Jon, thanks Mike,
than.ks John and Bill B,!lan, toQ.
And all the rest, including oneol
the best coaching stdffs ever
assembled.
Mike Giddings, a rOdch of
renown a few years bdrk when
coaching Harbor to very big
s&d it best on Saturduy night at
halftime.
"That's the best-coached team
I've ever seeni" shouted G1d ·
from the stands.
If it isn't, I'd be pll'd'>ed to see
better one.
It can be done. That much bas
been proven.
All you have to do I'> do e''eJY·
thing wiUun your powN to be m
the right spot to become> a tedlll
destiny.
·IT WASN'T ALL MAGIC ... .
They .had some horses;· too
T he statement made the·
rounds all season long. With
each repetition it was perpet-
uated, more deepTy fugraine<finto
discussion surrounding the New-
port Harbor High football team:
"The Sculors don't have any
stars,· so said the masses.
But teams don't win ClF South-
ern Section championships without
taJent in rich supply, and this year's
Sailors were certainly no exception
To wit
•Senior running back-comer-
back Brian Johnson displayed
explosive speed and 'Strength in
abundance on both sides of the
ball.
Once he found a seam, or
turned the comer, 1t was usually
ti.roe for a PAT. and he wasn't
afraid to take on tacl<Jers, either.
His paten~ed spUl move and pow-
erful leg dnve helped bun pop out
of, or avoid altogether, many a pile
of defenders.
Defensively, his picture:i>erfect
form taclcles, which often stuffed
ball earners much bigger than his
mooest 5-foot-8, 175-pound frame,
were as impressive as tus team-
leading seven interceptions.
•Senior Bill Johns (5-9, 1951
sho4ld be the poster boy for Coach
Jeff Brinkley's recurring request
that tus players "maximize their
potential.·
Though he became an mcreas-
ing target of double-teams from tu.s
delensive line position, he contin-
. ued to redefine the line of scrim-
mage as 2 yards into the opponent's
backfield.
• Senior quarterback John Glor-
danJ is a natural leader, his field
presence, combined with a more
than ample passing arm, touch, and
decision-making, helped Harbor
keep defenses honest
And. by the way •Gio, • thanks
for making my prediction in la.st
week's column (that a big pass play
would be the key against Servite)
'r
PllP SPO&TS
harry
faulkner
look good.
• Seruor bght end Mike Free-
man may aJways be remembered
for the game-winrung 38-yard
touchdown catch Fnday night
against Servile. But those who wit-
nessed his blind-side block on El
Toro linebacker Damian
DeBeaubian (and U you didn't see
it, you surely heard it) have another
unforgettable highlight to savor for
the ages.
Freeman's pair of first-team dll·
league selections on offense may
have overshadow his huge conbi-
bubon on defense.
• Senior lmebacker Dan McDo-
nough put tus name alongside the
a long list of hard-nosed Tars to
piay the posibon, and also helped
out on offense 111 the double-tight
end sel.
His relentless work eUuc, how-
ever, may be his greatest legacy to
the program.
• Matt Riggle, a senior fullback·
linebacker-punter, typified the self·
less attitude that pervaded on this
team. His dual role lllce)y thrust
him mto more high-impact colli-
sions than a.ny other Tar.
• Senior cornerback Scott Sand·
strom brought as much unbridled.
enthusiasm to the tedm dS he dld
skill and desire. But hts c·o,e.rage,
and punt-rushing (hl' blocked
thl"ee) ability wds no ldughlng
ter to opponents.
• H senior widcout Jon Ben-
zinger was on the olhl'r t'nd of a
Giordani pass, the rc>~ult llkPly
changed either held po~1uon, or
score.
• Sophomore rece1vc>r Danny
Pulido led the team m rC'repuons
and may threaten Mdtk Crdlg's
school career record b) the ume
he's through.
At 6-4, 190, he aJso clrl.'W
parts praise and dread from op
ing Sea View League cMrh(!)
• Senior defensiv<• pnds Tom
Eaton and Jack Hogan (dllds Mt
Fumble Recovery) wert-ron .. isten
forces on th~ defens1\'P Line. w
Eaton shiued time .... 1th Johns at
offensive guard.
• Speaking of off Pn,1\ <' guard,
diminutive junior Brandon Baker
(6-0, 175) packs as big ti w11llop
any player on the team
• Offensive tackJe James "Big
Country" Moureaux 11mVl'd fro
Kentucky to add size (6-1. 2401
skill, an ever-present smile. dnd
amiable Southern chann
• Senior starters Dao Eadie an
·Dan Berger provided sedwn-loo
consistency in the seC'Ondal)'. w
junior defensive linemen Sky Co
way and Moises Piedra ~11pplled
quality work and verSdt.1.hty at
defensive tackle.
• Junior offensive hne starters
Sberlf Peplc (tackle) and Bran
Helrkk (center) will ensur<' that
question marks that sWToun.ded
front wall coming into Uus
won't appejlf next fall.
• Dependable place-lucker
Pardy will also return.
• Noteworthy contnbutions w
also turned in by Edon Kagasoft
Jen!lay Muon. Joe Urban.
Lew-., Andy Langsdorf. A.arOll
Liii. o.n-'llaordten, John IY
and .... Jobm.
-'
J
l r
. .
NEWPORT
HARBOR HIGH ·
~ GIRLS
VOLLEYBALL
.TEAM ·
The FOUR SEASONS Salutes The Athletes Of
The Volleyball & Football Sailors of Newport HighJ
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL
ff~1'ieJ
A FOUR SEASONS• REGENT HOTEL
Tiu Only Five Diamond Hott/ in Newport Bear/1
690 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA • TEL. (714) 759-0808
•
,
-..
f" ,,...~-· ~·~--':r::=JI . -. -... . ... . .__ -. -WEDNESDAY. DfCEMBER 14, 1
MARC MAATIH I VAWV VOICE
Brian Johnson (46) catapults for yardage; lames Moureaux (78) ls ln
foreground.
Talkin' luxuries!··
By Ryan T. Blystone, Staff Writer
A mong the comments ol a cham-
pionship rught ... Sophomore
wide receiver Danny Pulido, as
the kickoff approached: "Remember
Uus stuff, guys, remember this.•
Assistant Coach Tony Clarelli; I
think our tradition was taken lightly by
everyone before this game. I think this
team has shown Orange County that
we deserve to be one of those pro•
grams.·
lWo-way ~dout BW Johns: I was
crying in the last minute of the game.
It was a great feeling.·
Fullback Matt Riggle, who went
down m the first hall wtth an ankle
m1ury "Wmrung the championship
takes care of (suffering the inJury). It
Was fun. I Uunk our school has won a
CrF title m JUSt about every other sport.
We've aJways been good in football,
but we've been underrated. This is the
best state ment to make (winrung the
btle). •
Quarterback John Glordanl: "We
had come trom behind before this
game. I remember the Santa Margarita.
homecoming game we did it and that
was great. too. But this time. it was
even better. This was just a group of
guys for who it was our destiny to win
this game. Good things happen lo
good people.·
Peggy GJordanl, John's mother:
·All I can say is wowl I'm really happy
for Newport Harbor and the team. It
feels great because they earned 1L And
being 14-0, you just can't do any better
than that."
Running Ndl Brian Johnson; ·we
have very disciplined coaches who
teach us well. We were picked to finish
last in the Sea View League. but now
we're first. l like that. This was a.great
football team that relied on hard work
and a team that played together Wte
they were brothers.•
Assistant COKll Mike Downs: "I've
never known a coach who deserves a
ClF championship more than Head
Coach (Jeff) Brinkley does. He is the
best coach l've ever been associated
with." .
Unebac:ker Dan McDonough: "This
proves Jhat Newport Harbor has a
football program that needs to be reck-
oned with. We ea.med it. This year, we
showed that we are one of the best
football teams in Orange County.•
Assistant Coach BW Brown:
"(Going 14-0) means a lot of hard
work by the staff anti the players. We
played against schools that were larger
(in enrollment) than us. We aJso had a
lot of young men who had to play both
ways because we didn't have the luxu-
ry.. .
More Downs: ·1 think making it
there (in 1992) was great. but mentally,
this team was ready to win the game.
They knew they were going to win it
because they worked so bard for
everything they got. They deserved to
win."
More McDonough: ·we learned a
Jot this season. We learned you have to
trust yow buddy. U we worked ha.rd in
all facets of the game. even in practice
and in waUc-througbs and gave it ow
all l thcrugnt we could do ll This team
loved to play as a family. We came
together as one.•
More Clarelli; "Even if this pro-
gram wins 10 more CIF titles in the
future, people are always going to look
back at the 1994 team that started it
all. 'lb.is is the first team to do it and it's
a really special feeling.•
Mon a.rem: ·n was a great
comeback by the team. but that's just
them. They just knew that if they've
got the football they've got a chance.
In the face of adversity. they didn't fall
apart when Servile scored.•
More Brown: •No ooe qv.it. no one
gave up on this team. They proved it
throughout the year. lbey kept their
poise on both the sidelines and on the
field. Th.is team played as a team. not
as individuals.•
-Never a doubt
• Servit~'s 15-14 lead with 4:08
left was simply the 'go-ahead'
sign for the amazing Sailors.
By Barry Faulkner, Staff Writer
Newport Harbor High football coach Jell
Bri:nldey never used the word.
Similarly, Sailor players, well-schooled by
their mentor, side-stepped media attempts to
discuss this team's increasingly-apparerrt "des-
tiny .•
One senior went so far as to acknowledge
some good fortune after a late-season come-
trom-behind win, only to
catch flak from his disap-
~~
he and hiS mates faced en route lo the hnal
He later wondered how he managed to get
behind the Servile defender on the impromptu
sideline streak. which upon brea.lung the hud-
dle, Giordani intended lo be a handpff up the
middle .
"I'm not faster than be is," said Freeman,
who could not divu}ge his tirpe in the 40-yard
dash, the sport's universal
speed measurement He
proving teammates, who
had read bis printed quotes \I \ I 1 couldn't volunteer this mfor·
mation because the Hcubor
coaches seem to have c:Us-
continued timing players m
the 40, perhaps for lack of
encouraging results
with scorn. .
But no matter what word
· you assigned it. something
seethed from the souls or
the 11 Harbor players hud-
dled n yards trom paydirt
with 4:08 left in Friday
night's 20-15 CIF Southern
Section Division v. cbampi·
onship victory over Servile
at Orange Coast College.
"There were smiles on
our faces;• senior quarter-
back John Giordani recalled
o.f the situation, after
Servite's go-ahead touch-
down erased the Tars' 14-9
lead.
Indeed, nothing yet bad
managed to deter this col-
lection or believers, these
insatiably·ded.k:a.ted ath-
letes, this Teflon team.
Not the stream of doubt-
ing pre;season prognostica,
.tors; not the overload of
extra conditioning work
they implored the coaches
to put them through, dating
baclc to spring practice; not
a handful of injuries that
sidelined starters at various
bmes; not the seven previ-
ous opponents who took a
lead; not the inevitable let-
down that coaches have
come to expect from teen-
agers; not overtune; not
even 63 straight renditions
of "Wait till next year,"
recited by every previous
Sailor team since the school
first passed out pads in
1931.
·Never a doubt.• said
sertior tight end Mike Free-
man, who caught Giordani's
38-yard game-winning
touchdown pass ~>n the
fourth play of the drive with
2:37 left.
It was the first reception
in 121 offensive snaps -
more tbAo eight quarters -
for Freeman, a two-time All-
Sea View League choice
. , and the Jone starter remain-
ing from the 1992 squad
wbich came, saw, and
admittedly got its collective
butt kicked in the 1992 Divi-
sion IV title game, a 30-8
1rvine romp.
John Glordanl
OUemlve Player of the Year
Brian Johnson
Most Valuable Player
But somehow, in one of the
bead-saatclung scenanos
Harbor seemed to unpose all
season upon opponents and
supporters alike. there Free-
man was ... runrung free
under Giordani's Mtonc
heave.
The overflow ctowd of
8,200 seemed to gasp callee·
lively as the white-ringed
NFL replica footbaJI spiraled
downfield from Giordaru's
hand.
It was the same hand
Giordarrl. then a sophomore
still 21 months away from
bis first varsity start. u~ed to
gesture adamantly toward
1992 senior quarterback
Gregg Williams. The same
hand that poked home the
pledge that he and class·
mate Dan McDonough
would alsoup thelf swan
song season by playing for a
ClF championship nng
"Those guys are studs,
Willia.ms said on the held
durtng Friday's postgame
celebration, which mcluded
hundreds of fonner Sd1lo1
ptayers eager to pay
homage.
Yes there Freeman wa~
... ~g the ball into his
chest with both hands
cupped skyward, shoWlll9
only the .half-worn-away No.
85 on the baclc or tus iersey
to a Servile team that nught
always be haunted by its
image.
There still remained a big
defensive play by Harbor
defensive ends Tom Eaton
and Jack Hogan. who
respectively forced and ~ered a tumble to end
Servite's desperation come·
back bid with 1 :35 left.
But. in their heart of over-
si2ed hearts, the players and
coaches lining the
jubilant Newport sideline
must have relented to the
blatant end beautiful truth
that resounded from the
Giordani-to-Freeman coUab-
Freeman. who at 6-foot-
1, 225 pounds was the thlrd-
largest player from the blue-
clad battalion, still carried
bruises courtesy of the more
physically formidable foes
BW Jotms oration.
Delellllve Player of Ille Year 1be reality that then. and
forever more. they were
destined to be champions.
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...
.a.. .... , WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1
Clock runs down~ and· it's a bell-ringer a
By Richard Dunn. Staff Writer
Their d ock-ending celebration was exact-
ly llke their dress rehearsal. only this rune
dboul 8,200 extra people were ther~ to wit-
ness it.
Dunng their week ot preparation for the
CIF Southern Section D1vtS10n V champ1-
onstup football game, Newport Hdlbor Htgh's
Sailors were a team that had been given
plenty of d.isbncbons and labels by th~ Satlor
fdlthful. Team of Desbny. On a Mission, God
IS d Tar Fdfl. Their final assignment by Sailor
Coach Jeff Brinkley in last Wednesday's
practice. before only a couple of fathers and
tramen.. was to tram for vtctory.
Brinkley simulated a game situabon, wtth
players standing on the sideline, beguming .
to hoUer up a storm. high-bving as the ldst
mock IJcks wound down. On the field, Sd.l.lor
quarterback John Giordanl took a knee, com-
memorating the inevitable. then tnggenng a
mad ruc;h of players onto the held
HHey, catch
that pass, and
just go turn
upfield ... N
-JEFF BRINKLEY
No script could have been written any
more certd1Jl. Fnday rught, the Sa.i.lors repeat-
ed their victory moves preosely how they'd
practiced two nights earlier, alter coming
from behind to defeat Serv1te, 20-15, in front
of an overflow crowd at Orange Coast Col-
lege.
The following is a diary account or the
Tars' championship week ·
• Dec. 6, 4 p.m. -·we told them we won
that (semifinal) game, because our scout
team gave us a good look against Foothill.
and we were able to go into a goal-hne
offense and score (in overtune). • said Tony
Ciarelli, defensive coordinator. "For John
Ryan and Darren Thordsen, they're seniors,
but they're out here for 14 weeks and they·re
mentally prepared. U somebody went down.
they'd be ready to do the job.•
ln the S~tvanna game, Ryan had blocked
two defenders on the first play to open a hole
for Brian Johnson's touchdown run.
5:15 -·w e really haven't hit as hard as we
have today ma couple of weeks,· Ci.arelli
sdld. "Today was a little wakeup call.·
5:28 -During a seven-on-seven offensive
dnll, Brinkley gives wide receiver Danny
Pulido instructions, alter he makes a catch
nedr the s1deillile and goes out of bounds:
"Hey, catch that pass, and iust go tum
upheld,· Bnnk.ley yells.
Pulido m the game would catch five pdSS·
es for 79 yards, mostly near the s1dehne, turn-
ing upfield each time for extra gdin.
5:3 1 -Johnson's an street clothes. "H e hurt
tus back (llfbng weights) on Thursday,·
teammate Bill Johns says. "He was It\ so
much pam in the Foothill game.· ..
• Dec. 7. 3:45 -Johr!Son\ back m pdds.
"I see people
I don't even
know, and
they say 'good
game .. _.'"
-SKY CONWAY
4:14 p.m. -Amin Mirbadi, Tar.faithful and
former lineman (1990-91) under Brinkley.
stops by to see practice. He's wearing shorts
in 4o'-plus degree temperatures. He coached
most of these seniors two years ago. "God is
defirulely a Sailor fan Uus year.• he said'."
·Just look at the Corona del Mar game. and
all the other games;'"
4:59 -"Jt's kind oJ hard for me to believe
we've gone this far,· Jack Jiogan, defensive
end, sdid. •At the beginning of the season, l
wasn't really expecting to go this far. It's real-
ly a dream to me.•
6:14 -A lady joggm9 on the track nobces
Sky Conway, defensiv(> \ackle. "HL Sky/ she
says. whtle running wtth a fnend.
"The whole community'~ totally into 1t. •
Conway says. "I can't believe It. After gdmes,
I see people I don't even know. -and they say
good game •
6:18 -Bnnkley tells QiorddJU to take a
knee "OK. let's go. We're going to pracbce
how we're going to win this thing,• he
instn1cts the SJdehne players.
•• • CONGRATS TARS!
Truly a memorable class act
to cherish forever
•• • CONGRATULATIONS NEWPORT SAILORS
• ••
VICTOR H. JASHINSKI
BROKER
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS
PO. Box 1276
Newport Beach..t California 92663 ·
(714) 045·6269
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6:31 -"It's not being cocky,• light
end/linebacker Mike Freeman Sd1d ·n ton
of takes the pressure out of it. It's tJke VIS
izing a win. It's not something you do ev
game, it's just something that make., 11 easi
to deal with, because every night when I g
home, that's all I can think about, the ga.m
can't do homework, I can't sleep. C0ctch
Brinkley likes to do stuff like that lo keep loose.·
Th~ only other time the Sailors did cele·
br~tion training during Freeman's three-ye
tenure WclS in 1992, just before tht•y play
CdM in th~ Battle of the Bay 11 an the ClF
DivisiorrlV semifinals, a 28-21 victory for
Tu.rs.
6:40 -"We're prepared for everytlung.
we're prepared for a victory,• Bnnkley sa
Dec. 9. 2:30 p.m. ·-Jon Benzinger. wide
receiv.~r and an Associated Student Body
(A.SB) member in charge of pep rallies and
lunchtime concerts, is sitting with Johns al
Sizzler. • rve never seen a band at lunch,·
Johns barks.
"That's because you're never thNe, &>
zinger replies.
2:37 -It's Freeman's 39th consPcuuve, a
final, time attending a pregame ml'<ll at th
Sizzler on HaJboc etvd. "It's only mv 38th
because I didn't come my first gdml' m\
sophomore year (in 1992). • Johns '><IY'
"Then, on the first play agdl.tlst Orangl' I
ripped a guy's helmet off.·
2:42 -Benzinger didn't go to Thur,,,ddY'
team meal at Joe Urban's house "l don'I q
to team meals." he says. "I'm suf)l·r~IJIJOU'>
about ~t.·
3~24 -Brinkley s!ts at his desk "Twrr1c
"l don't go to
team meals.
I'm supersti-
tious about
that..."
-JON BENZINGER
ago, that rW:i to the finals kind of snuck up
us. We were playing our best footbdll in th
playoffs. but this year it's been a consll>len
climb. We'vf!. talked the same for 14 wet>k.s
and played consistent all the way through
1\vo years ago. the fact that we got (to the
finals) was a great accomplishement. We
Irvine, and it was a great team, a team on
mission. It didn't sneak up on them, so we
had our work cut out for us that night. Thd
was our maiden' voyage.•
3:37 -People talk about smashmouth,
Giorda.ni & Co. proved the Tars' passing
game in 1994 is a factor not to be ignored
"That's where we cou1d possibly have an
edge tonight,• Brinkley says. •Jt would be
nice if we coukl stick it down their throat
(with the pass) ••
1be 'hrs would win the game drama be
ly with a 38-yard scoring pass from Giord
to Freeman.
t :31-1be team's walcbing its tear-1er
bigblight film. It's showing tbe play when
Johns sacks the footbil1 quarterback in OV
time. "See ya,• Brinkley ays, shaking tus
bead. "(Johns) was being beJd. too.·
Brinkley adds: ·1 told (Jeff) Pardy on
sideline, if they don't make it. we're
4:5e -As playen bead toward the
a walk-through. there's a letter posted on
bulletin board from Deve Cadigan. tonne
Tar standout now witb tbe Bengals. An
excerpt: "Football gums don't lest. but y
memories end relatiombips do. You guys
go out and have some fun. Set the tempo
~ . .
EONESOAY, OECEMBE~ 14, 1994
ail ors ring Up CIF football champio~ship
e game from the start. Let Servile know it's
oing to be a long night.•
5:15 -The team huddles in the gym.
Wini. they yell, as they break and head for
e locker room lo pick up their pads and
ard the two charter buses waiting on bvine
ve.
6:51 -Rick Foster, a Newport Harbor track
ch, returns from having put champagne
n ice in the coaches' c>ffice. He doesn't want
anybody lo know. "I told (the coaches) in the
middle of the year, if they go all the way, I'll ·
buy them a case of the best champagne, w
Foster said.
7:05 -Eric lWeit, Sailor athletic director, ts
instructed by a referee to keep spectators on
the sideline at least two yards off the line.
7:08 -Dr. Alex Tuchler, the team doctor,
gives lWeit a bag of cigars. His wile hdd a
baby the previous night. "(The cigars) dre for
a dual pwpose, • Tuchler says.
Brandon Hetrick on the -sideline after a failed
Newport Harbor offensive series: "They
knocked the crap out of me.·
8:10 -Servile kicks a field goal. it's 9-7
Friars, in a game that would change leads
five times. •
8:12 -Former Tar assistant coach Bob Lar-
son is on l!le sideline and g1ves Johns, who is
Sandstrom,
playing with
a broken
hand, is
hurting, but
he bite'S the
bullet...
Scott Sandstrom 7:25 -Brinkley tells the players m the
OCC home locker room: "Don't spend all of
your energy m the first quarter, w e need you
for four quarters. It's an emotional game. so being triple-teamed, some encouragement:
play wiUl emotion, but play with mtelli· "Even If you make a p.a.leup, you're doing
gence. • , good.· .
7:41 -After Servile rushes seven times on Larson adds: "They're conung off the ball
the game's first series and scores, Johns ·real good, and they're going after Johni. dnd
comes back to the sideline and says to as IS· McDonough, because those guys mcike <lll
tant coach Mike Downs: "Coach, I Just got ~the tackles."
my (butt) kicked." 8:16 -Scott Sai:idstrom, playtng wi.th a
Downs, among other thing , tens Jo~·-bro n left hand, ts hurting. But he bite the
"Th.at drive didn't mean (expletive).• bu1Je . .
8:00 -Dan McDonough, Dan Berger and 8:1~ -Giordaru scores on a keeper.
Urban combine to knock the mouthpiece out Pardy s extra-point luck is good, giying the
of Servile quarterback David Marlln. Sd.a.lors their ~~nd lead, 14 -~.
-e:06 _Brandon Baker tells teanunate • 8:21 -Serviles MdtVUl Srruth ru!>hes for
•
Tommy
Tar
and the
family
Salute the
1994
First Ever -CIF Championship
Sailor Football Team
1994
National & State Championship
Sailor Women's Volleyball Team
and the All Star
NHHS Cheer Leaders • Song Leaders
S,ailor Band and Pep SQuad l
Wowl What a Yearl1 .
nine yards. "They're running the ball right at
US,. Brinkley yells in disgust.
8:27 -It's halftime. T1SChler checks out
Matt Riggle's left ankle. It's slightly sprained.
"But ll looks like we'U be OK without h1m
the way we're playing.• Tuchler says. ·
"There always seems to ~ somebody who
steps up.•
Urban, a linebacker, replaced Riggle.
8:36 -Jay Sloyer, 14. is the team's water
boy. "Torught I'm running water, because I
want lo get on TV,• he said.
8:38-Brinlc.ley repeals his plea. "We get
the ball going out. Whal did I tell you before
the game, g-4ys? It's four quarters. -
8:40 -The Tars back onto the held.
9:02 -M cDonough intercepts a pass, but
his long return IS called back because of a
dipping penally on the Tars. "It 'Was 54,
coach ... hve, four,• the referee explains to a
furious 81U1kley. 9~10 -Johns socks Servile q\larterback
Martin for a 4-ydrd loi.i.. forcing Servile to
'J)unt e~ly m the fourth qudrtcr.
9:12 -ln unison, Bnnklcy. Downs and Bill
Calloway put their hands over Ule1r faces and
Wt their heads back. Newport Harbor JUSl
rrussed a pa:.s.
9:13 -"Great throw,• Bnnkley tell!. G10r·
dam "Great throw. gredt throw.·
9:15 -Trdiner WW Thrower give!> the
gu.a.lty Tar receiver a pair of gloves "He>re.
wear these,· he says.
9:19 -Servile scores aga.m. But 1ls two-
point conversion pass Is intercepted in the
end zone by Dan Eadie.
9:23 -Servile kicks off. Four minutes,
eight econds remain. Johnson takes it dt the
2000 Newport Blvd.
631-2110
It's halftime.
Tischler
checks out
Matt Riggle's
left ankle ...
Matt Riggle
10-yard line, returns 1t to the 23. Now. 4:03
remains on the dock . The energy level on
the Tar's1deline is high.
9:25 -Servile is flagged for holding, but
N ewport H arbor declinE>s after G1ordani com·
pletes a 20-ya.rd pass to Pulido.
9:27 -Plllyers'on the sideline c1Je holding
bands.
9:28 -Newport Harbor Ccills Ll.meouL
McDonoµgh gci.tures lQ thl' crowd to quu::t
down, i.o the .offeni.e cc1n hcc1r Giordam
9:29 -The Dnvc i' capped by Thl• Cdtc-h
e extra point is blockE'd but the• Tdf'i ldkt•
a 20-15 lec1d. You cc1n fC'el thf> ground move•
because of the rommotJon
9:34 -Jc1cob Mt1lbn b ckons for the· horn<>
crowd to get up c1nd mcikl· noise
9:35 -Tom Eaton sac-ks Mc1rtm, cc1\ising
the fumble Jack Hogan re<:"over-.
9:37 -Johnson rushc~ for c1 first down
9:38 -Bnnkl<>y get~ douc;ed wi th Wdtcr
9:39 -G1orddm goo'> to <1 knet•, jw.t bk<' 111
. prc1c1Jc<>. The rehet111>dl worked bedutffully
The, LI.me. lhOU'>dnd' WdlCht•d
... Newport
Harbor went
undefeated ...
10. Valid Excuse to douse
Gatorade on coach Brinkley
9. Giordani's right arm
8. Coaches promise another •
"Hell-Week" if they lost
7. A brick wall defense
6. The best fans in O.C.
5. Avoided weekly chores
4. Brian Johnson willed it to
be so!
3. Had no dates on Friday
night.. anyhow.
2. A really "offensive" line
...and the #1 Reason ...
1~ They Get ~"~ at the ir
year end banquet.
. See you January 19th'
... . ..
' .
"
I ·
-:-:· I .. _
-NGRATULATIONS!
TO
-THE SAILORS ,.
, Fe>RA
. -DYNAMITE . .
SEASON!
<--'--s . EE ' S ____ ........ ,,__
AND ESPECIALLY
. TO OUR GOOD NEIGHBORS
THE JOHNS BOYS,
BILL AND REED .
•
DONNA&JOHN CREAN
...
• • I 'II
1be Daily Piloc WEDNESDAY, DECEMBtR 14, 1994
N~wpoft Harbor's rise to top a sustained · process ;·
•Like the little bunny rabbit,
they just kept going, and
going, and going ...
BY Rkhard Dunn, Staff Writer
. . T his year's Newport Harbor High
. girls volleyball Dream Team was
not an overnight sensation. It w~
a sustained pioCess.
F<tt' many, it began al youths in dub vol-leYbeD. under the guidance of Charlie
Blande. Later, there would be countless
houri sweating in the weight room, under
the supervision of the school's highly
teapected conditionlnq coach, Tony
CiareDI. wbk:h contributed greatly to their
development.
' For ICllDe of the team's dozen seniors,
thBy were varsity players in 1991, when the
Sdon reached the CIF Southern Section
Division I playoffs, only to lose in the open-
ing round. Their Back Bay rival. Corona
~ Mar, won the Sejl View League title
Ulllt season. Some of their greatest memo-
ries would later come against the Sea
KJngs.
The following. year, the group would
advance to the CIF Division I semifinals,
lollng to Laguna lleach. ·But they entered
the State Division m playoffs a week later
and woo the title, their initial taste of
dutmpombip fruits.
~juniors last year, they defeated CdM,
the 8Y9Dtual state Division I and
MizuDolUSA Today national champions, .ttPce in leegue competition to win their ·
~ S.. View title. They wouJ4 lose to
CdM in tbe Southern Section and State
Dlvlllan I finals. n.,. knew what was in store for 1994.
11lme would be no repeat of losing in tiUe ...... , .
~~J)udng the summer. there were •oond-
.. tdpl to Rancho Santa Fe and San ~fte. tben in early September, there.was
._ pr•11nn CIF State Division I poll.
Newport Harbor wu No. 1. It would 1 -~ IMft that echelon. ~-~It's not a onf-year thing. lt's a three. ,_.plOCflll, almost a four-year process,
IDd f1ft6Y year they've shown improve-.a.. Mid N9wpolt Harbor eo.ch Dan
Glmn, whole squad finished 33-1, playing
~belt volleyball of the season dwing the
playalfs. ~
"1bere are so many people involved, as
I
t
I
I . w.., wwwwu1oau; m uae aacc:rn ueae. a J • -•Pp••••wr c:vu•p•u•c ''*"** 9uau 1a""ua1;3 ~•ea--rvne., a......,. & 011 uw 111911 ::sc11001 9111::r-voneyoai1--st:ene. Charlie does so much that people don't
bow about, and Tony Ciarelli with the lift-
~~ and then there are (uststant coaches)
•.-'ftlm Pestolesi and Sienna Curd, who we
··-
... able to bDng in..
~· \Getting 16 players (14 during the regu-
.......,) on the same pege each day for
~ IDOlltbs isn't easy. Coaches call it
committed."
On the cowt early in the season, the
Sailors openea with a bang, winning the
Orange County Championships (Division
I). n.y auised tbrough the Sea View
League. at times even IMCbing the point of
boredom. Sometimes M "80wed on the
floor.
homecoming festivities). But even if
Jeannette was there, we still would've lost,
because we didn't have the detennination
or desire out there."
The loss was a ausbing blow for a
team. that in its heart, wanted to go unde-
feated.
townament, we knew it wasn't going tq
work if people were arguing out on the
court. Everybody realized it. From that
point, we weren't negative. and there were
a lot of positive attitudes out there. I think
we were just frustrated.
championships.
It was a team stretched to five games
only once, a non-league match against ~t.
Mary's Oct. 22 at the Spanos Center in
Stockton, a Newport Harbor victory, 12-15,
15-12, 15-13, 12-15. 15-8, after being down.
6--0, in the fifth game.
• 1: ~.irs ~to get~ to do the same 'I.:.~ -it's a ctuiJJenge, , Glenn said *It's
'f-jult with high 9Cbool girls, but kids (in ~ ..-Ul with the attitudes nowadays. It's a
~ fMddng project to work i.s a team f-buy ddngs together (i.e. uniforms). •. ·vou•re fighting against society, a sod-
On Nov. 4, they reached their low point.
losing their only match ol the season at the
Tournament of Champions in Santa
Barbara against Archmshop Mitty of San
Jose, 15-4, 1-4-16, 15-11, 15-6. Jeannette
Hecker, their junior setter, didn't play.
"That was the low point of the sea.son.•
May said. "But I think it helped our team.
losing, because it opened our eyes to these
other teams out there.• ·
Perhaps the doldrums of a rather non-
competitive Sea View League schedule
contributed to the Sailors' brief decline,
which culminated in their only setback of
the year.
*When you're tl!lla No. 1 team. obviously
you go into theee tallmlments thinking
that it's going to be eay. That's wbat we
thought the whole year, that we'd go unde-
feated. But after that loa, we realized that
teams we bad never played before could
take that away from us."
~bi.shop Mitty awoke a sleeping
giant.
The Tan woUld need only three to
sweep St.. Mary's in the state title matc:b.
while tying a st.ate record bf a~ta.
their fifth state dMmpAnn-IDlkil, ..
accamplisbed o.iy bf Mira Costa since tbe
post-season toumamant began in 1978.
Last Thursday. tbey finished No. 1 in the
national Mizuno/USA Today rankings. • «y that says it's OK to be selftsh. I think tt.e kids did a good }ob, because it's a
--year; JQU start in August and finish in Qfremtw, .
•'Jbese kids got along well, and cbem-
iltly is aoJmportant. lbat's what you're
·bt1"ding when you do a trip. The more
tllP8 you put into something, the more
axnmitted you a.re, as a group you're more
*But that's not why we lost.• said Misty
May, the team's senior outside bitter. who
eemed her second consecutive CJF
Division I Player ol the Year honor in 1994,
and the queen of the Sailors' four-year
pre>a!SS. ·we weren't scared, we just
wenm't focused We were just out there to
fill up space. We ~uld have won had we
. been playing well, even without Jeannette
(who bad prior commibnents in the school's
"Toward the middle of the season. I
t.h.in.k ev'erybody started getting tired of
each other. Then we got it together,
because we finally realized that we're not
going to accomplish anything if we're
fighting or not getting along, so we all
came together,• May said.
•Since our loss at the Santa Barbara
Six days after l<>ling to Archbishop
Mitty, the Sailors opened their post-season
run that included victories over Capistrano
Valley, Agoura, Edison (semifinals) and
Mira Costa (finals) in the CIF Division I
playoffs, then wins against Millikan,
Rancho Bernardo of San Di~o. Harbor of
Santa Cruz (semifinals) an~ St. Mary's of
Stockton (finals) in the State Division I
May (548 Jdlb), Melissa Schutz (317 ·
kills, 101 blocks and 130 digs), and Hecker
(1,126 assists) earned All-Southern Section
Division 1 honors. Sara Fairborn (230 kills,
204 digs and 52 aces), nna Bowman (110
kills, 96 digs and 78 blocks), Julie Hecker
(180 digs, 84 assists) and Laura Osborne
(116 digS) helped form the greatest team in
Newport Harbor history .
•
tlleir best for last ... eIF -.;. .
, 1'berit were only temporary moments ol greatness
during the regular season. Newport Harbor High's
girts volleyball team wu saving its best play for last.
Almost on c:ue. tbe Sailors could reach another
lete1. and dwing the CIF Southern Section Division I
playofts, they increased that level virtually every
matcb oo their way to the championship.
•we talked about it all year,• Newport Harbor
Ceach Dan Glenn said. "That's what we lifted
'tl'GigHs for, and trained for, for the playoffs. They
... were much aware of that At the beginning of the y.r, we were getting reedy for the playoffs.•
1be top-seeded Sailors defeated Capistrano Valley,
ts-6, 15-4, a~ 15, 15-6, in the opening round of the
p&ayolfs Nov. 10, swept Agoura, 15· 7, 15-3, 15-5, in
• tb&quarterf1nals, then turned it up another notch
.
against Edison in the semifinals Nov. 17, a 15-10. 15-
5, 14-16, 15-4 victory.
It bad been two months since Newport Harbor
played as well as it did against Edison.
•we played well for that week after the Orange
County Championships, when we beat Laguna Beach
in three straight lSept. 27) and Calvary Chapel in
three straight (Sept. 29), and another week after that.
but then we went in a lull," Glenn said. ·we didn't
play well for a long time, so it was nice to see (in the
playoffs). We probably turned it around in the Edison
match. We'd struggled., but then we just played good
volleyball in the semifinals, then we played well in
the final.•
Against Edison, Misty May led the way for the
Sailors with 33 kills and 15 digs, while Melissa Schutz
had 18 kills and five blocks (four solo). Sara Fairborn
added 14 di~ and a dozen kills, and setter Jeannette
Hecke.r bad 65 assists. •
They rose their level of play another notch against
Mira Costa in the CIF Division 1 title match at Cypress
College Nov. 19, hammering the Mustangs of
Manhattan Beach, 15-5. 15-1, 15-7, in 61 minutes,
while allowing the fewest points ever in a best-of-five
CIF Southern Section final, spanning 81 matches in
all divisions since the section shifted from a best-of-
three format in 1981. .
"In the cdison match, we played good volleyball,
and tbal got us ready for the finals.• Glenn said. "We
hit another level in the finals against Mira Costa.•
May finished with 25 kills in the finals. Mira Costa's
entire tt!am had 19 .
T here may never be
· another like Misty May,
who created more oohs
and aahs from Newport Harbor
High tans than perhaps anyone
in the school's distinguished
\I isty ... !\/laking it happen
different level dunng the play-
offs," Glenn said. "They didn't
have one bad game. Both
played like seniors, like they
should. It was nice to see. but
girls volleyball history. Following a celebrated fou:r-
year c:ueer for Coach Dan Glenn. the Newport
ltarbor faithful will certainly miss her guided-missile
kills and aaobatic digs. Foe someone S-foot-10, she
could block as well as anyone.
Her ha.rd-swinging jump serves, accomplished
only by those With great accuracy and tremendous
top-spin control. set her apart from others.
What might go unnoticed by some was May's
• nMT-legendary passing ability.
She began her Newport Harbor career as a setter
,in 1991, and may well play that position next season
for Long Beach State, which Misty bas verbally com-
mitted.
Individual honors are fine, but nothing could
, 1 bave been more rewarding for May than this year's
CIF State Division I championship, a tiUe that
allowed the Tars to finish the season ranked No. 1 in
the Mizuno/"USA Today• na.tional poll.
May, while meriting her ~nd consecutive state
... \
tournament most valuable player honor, had 21 kills
and 10 digs in the state final
A year ago in the State ~vision l, when Newport
Harbor lost to Back Bay rival Corona del Mar. May
had 34 kills in five games.
•rt means a lot (to earn back-to-back state MVP
laurels), but not as much as the team winning,
because volleyball is not a one-player sport. For us,
it took 16 people.• May satd.
Four times she earn¢ All-Sea View League
accolades, three times May was an All-CIF Division
I and high school AD-American choice, including
this year's national Player of the Year honor by
"USA Today.~
May. also a back-to-back recipient of CIF
Southern Section Division I Player of the Year kudos.
is the second Newport Harbor player to earn the dis-
tinction of national Play~ of the Year, following
Jenny Evans in 1986, who merited a similar award
by Volleyball Mon1hly.
•(May) and Melissa (Schutz) played at a whole
4
(the playoffs) bad been some
thing they were waiting for. That's the best thing
about Misty, she played her best volleyball at the
end of the year.
•Last year Misty was awesome, and every year
she's gotten better. That's the best thing about her;
she's going to get better.·
She finished with 548 kills, an average of 16.1 per
matcb, most of which were three games. May also
had 302 digs (8.8 per match), ~ assists. 48. blocks
and 40 service aces.
It would seem hard for Ma to duplicate last
year's first-team All-American nd CIF Di~n 1
Player of the Year season, but she did indeed, while
even taking it a step further, lafgely because of h.er
summer experience at the U.S. Olympic Festival
"I had a lot better ball rontrol than most of the
college players," May said. ·And I was one of the
few outside hitters who played defense, because a
lot of them are really tall.
"It helped my game, being around older, more
experienced players.·
l
i • > • I r; .• ~·,I
S rr ~~ rr 1: I; I ~ /\ I J S
A walk in t!ie park ...
AD early wakeup call came in the first round ol
the CIF State Division I girls volleyball champi-
onships. I
"I really didn't think Newport Harbor would lose,
especially attar dropping that fim game against
Millikan That was a reality check for them, then it
was cruise control.· Sl Mary's Coa.dl Kathy
Hardigan said before her squad faced the Sailors ln
the State Division I title match Dec. 3.
The Sailors, seeded No. 1 in the State Division I
playoffs, had some fidgety moments in their open-
ing-round match against Long Beach Millikan Nov.
22, losing the first game, 15-10. It would be the last
game Newport Harbor would lose in 1994, as it · 1
came from behind to win three, 15-5, 15-4, 15-8. :
In the quarterfinals, Newport Harbor mwihed
Ranc:ho Ber;nardo of San Diego, allowing only seven I
points in a 15-1, 15-1, 15-5 victory, then defeated a
strong Harbor of Santa Cruz team in the semifinals,
15-2, 15-4, 15-4.
•we didn't play very well against Millikan, then
we bad two real good matches in a row,• Newport
Harbor Coach Dan Glenn said. "Rancho Bemanlo
wasn't that strong. but we were ready to piay, then
our best match of the season, by far, was against
Harbor. That was the best we've played all year, and
I don't think we even came close to playing that well
in.the state finals.·
Newport Harbor bad defeated St. Mary's, 12-15,
15-12; 15-13, 12-15, 15-8, in a non-league match
Oct. 22 at the Spanos Center in Stockton, coming
from behind in the fifth game after being down, 6-0.
It was the only time the Tars had been stretched to
five games all season.
The Sailors were top-ranked in state and nation,
pollS; St. Mary's was ranked fourth in the state.
Newport Harbor capped its near-perlect sea.sort
with a 15-4, 16-14. 15-10 victory over St. Mary's in.
65-minute inatch at Cal State Fullerton before 1,911
faJlSi most QI whom were on Newport Harbots
cheering side. Misty May, who finished with 21 k"
and 10 digs, was named state tournament most v•
able player for the sec6nd consecutive year ..
j •
•
..
~··~·~·~""~:q 37~ tie~ J7tMU4'. ~ta&ttMJ ·
M Jl(){Ul 19917MJM .. ~ ~F ~
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WEDNESDAY; DECEMBER1 4, 1994
•Battle of the Bay Ga.Ille cata-
pulted Sailors into a new aura
.. . this was a tea.In which could
not be beaten.
Ab~arre
ending to
perbaps the
sloppiest install-
ment of the 33
Battle of the Bay
affairs with Coro·
na del Mar, was
truly fortuitotis for
the Tars.
Newport senior
defensive ~nd
Jack Hogan fell on
the 10th turnover of the 'night, a CdM. fum.
bleat ll\e Harbor 12 to protect the l~ous
7-6 lead with 20 seconds left. before an
overflow crowd of 5,500.
Cd.M Coach Mark Schuster, who said
immediately following the game he was try-
ing to center the ball between the bash
marks and eat more time off the dock when
a bobbled center-quarterback exchange
botched that thinkihg, later admitted it was
all a regTettable mista.ke.
Schuster said two days afterward he had
wanted to let the dock run down, then call
time out and trot the field goal team out to
attempt the would-be
25-yard game-winning field gQ;ll.
Instead. someone on the field called
timeout with 20 ticks remaining, and the
Cd.M offense used the timeout to talk
Schuster into trying a quarterback sneak.
which produced the turnover.
The win gave Harbor it's first 7-0 start
since the 1942 Sailors, the perpetual Victory
Bell. and a 22-11 lead in the Back Bay
series.
The six turnovers also gave Coach Jeff
Brinkley a story for his grandchildren, as he
said such single-game misfortune had never
befallen his team in 17-year bead coaching
career.
The six giveaways (five lost fumbles),
and a stingy Cd.M defense, helped limit
Newport to a season-low 121 yards of total
offense (later tied in the Foothill semifinal win). .
But Newport's defense was equally
impressive, holding Sea King tailback Brian
Hogan, the then-third-leading rusher in
Orange County (1, 134 in six games), to just
73 yards on 27 carries.
Cd.M opened the scoring by cashing in a
Newport fumble deep in Sailor territory. But
the conversion kick sailed into the line and
was no good.
Scott Sandstrom returned an interception
to the CdM 8, and quarterback John GioT·
danl scrambled around the right side to knot
the score with 8:43 left in the second quar-•
ter.
Jeff Pardy toed the game-winning PAT
and neither teem would score again.
eardy earned Player ol tbe Week honors,
as did senior middle linebacker Dan McDo-
nough.
The win pushed Newport to the No. 4
spot in tbe Orange County Top l 0, where. it
would remain.
Sopbmore Danny Pulido milled tbe
game after injuring bis shoulder 11\ prectice.
but would return the following week. ..
. -,...,-..
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1994 CIF illl••ll•
Roadrunners serve Sailors have comeback
for some tras:Q-talkers 1 wake up call in playoffs
The Sailors put together their most complete game of the
season against a trash-talking JJrea Olinda squad. before d
home Wildcat crowd muffled
by N'ewport's 17 second-
quarter points.
Leading an aerial assault
that eventual title-game foe
Semte might have taken
note of, senior quarterback
John Giordani amassed a
career-high 14 complebons m 22 attempts
for 161 yards and two touchdowns.
The victory helped the Tars tie the 1988
Corona del Mar CIF championship team
112-0-2) for most single-season wins by a
Newport-Mesa District school, while brealc-
mg the 1992 Harbor unit's previous school
record on 1 It was also their second quar-
terfinal triumph U:i six tries under Coach Jeff Bnnk.ley. .
Against a gambling, attacking eight-man Brea front. Gior-
daru rolled up 140 passing yards by half!J.me.-including a 48-
yard first-quarter bomb lo Jon Benzinger to the Brea 22 to et
up a 25-yard Jeff Pardy field·goaJ lo open the scoring.
Defensive end Jack Hogan forced an errant option pitch
dJld linebacker Dan M cOonough shlvered Jerome Owens "1
ThP Sailors began their sath straight CIF playoff run in
·explosive style, as Brian Johnson burst 56 yards on the first
play for a touchdown.
The Tars scored on two of
their next three possessions,
but went mto cnn e control,
prompting some anxjous sec-
ond-hclll moments and some
caullonary words from Brink-
ley in the aftermath.
"Thts was definitely a slap m the
face that will wake us up,· Bnnkley
l>aid of the underwhelmmg victory .
over the former Sea View rival Road-
runners, who finisMd 4-7.
Scott Sandstrom blocked two
P_!mts to set up touchdowns and
quarterback John Giordani maxi-
rruzed his only two complebons (on
four atlemptb) for scoring ~trikes to
Danny Pu!Jdo (5 yards) dnd Mau Rig-
gle (7 yards) to help tie the 1992 Iars
school single-season victory recofd of
11..
. -
..
Overtime victory se~ds
Sailors to title contest
After wmnmg frw bdtUes dunng lour quarters of regula-
llon, which <'nded deadlocked dt 7-7, Newport won the cotn
loss and elected to put
Foothill's off(>n<;t> on the i.pot,
before an alr<>c;1dy drdm<'d
crowd or 4,900 at Tustin High
After a pair of pena11.Jl'.s
and a super-human slop ford
4-yard loss by Newport nose-
guard Bill Johns forced the
Knights to settle for a 22-yard held goal. 1t
was Harbor\ offense which fated !he pres-
sure in the California Tie-breaker.
Bnan Johnson. who'\' it was later
revealed was playmg Wllh a painful back
~ent. earned 2 yards on flrst down, and
,-ftght end Dan M cDonough mad~ an out-
standing catch under hdr4ssment on second
down to move it to the 4
Johnson burrowed underneath a horde of
Krught tacklers on lturd do~ to put the ball
on the I and Harbor COdch Jeff Bnnkley ccllled l!rneout to
cohsider his options.
) away from the bounding ball. before reco.vermg tumself to set
up a live-play 19-yard drive that made 1t 10--0. I
It was the sixth first-round p(ayoff triumph in seven tnes,
the h.rst al home, dunng Brinkley's rune-year tenure.
After conferring wtth his confident offense. and gauglllg
Lhe fac"l that Footlull's offensP was out perfonrung tus own, a
trend which could continue tC d Newport held goctl forC'ed a
second round of overtlme, Bnnk.ley deoded to let John.,on
crtny behind his b<'st blockers for th(' po~cnllal gdme-wm-
rung touchdown
I'"\
Newport scored on its oext two posses~1ons. then, as per
B~kley1s pattern, sunplified the offense to mtlk the clock.
allowing the defense to protect the lead.
McDonough, who later bpped a pass mtercepted bv Dan
Eadie intNceplcd at his own 4, wa!> the .Dally Ptlot Player of
the Week. •
Sophomore receiver Danny Pu!Jdo (four calche-; for 4 l
yards) and linebacker Mike FrPeffidn, utilized for thP hn.1
limed' a down lineman man occa 1onal 50-front. W<'re
tdbbed players of the week by the r oachel>
Sandstrom was named Daily Pilot Player of the Week,
while Brtan Johnson and Dan M cDonough were the COdChf's'
choices for learn playerS of th<> week
Saddleback actually led, 7-6, prompting the !>IXth of New-
port' c>ven come-from-behind efforts on the season
Johnson's 194 rushing yards gave him a career-high for
the s<>cond 'ltraighl week •• and gave tum 100-plui. m four
'ilra1ghl games
Johnson and Mike Freeman added mtercepl.Jom to frw.-
trctle the Golden West.League\ thud-place team. making its
llJ'St playoff appearance in si.x '>easons.
Thdnks to the blockmg of Mike Freemdn, Jdmes
moureaux, Bill Johns, Brdndon Hetnck, Brt1ndon 8dkc>r.
~henf Pep1c. Dan M cDonough, Matt Rlggk• and JcrPmy
Mason. John!>on Wdl> dbl<• to hnd payd.irt to send I Ldrbor to 11-.
st'COnd lJUc gdIJl<> 19 lhrt•f> sea on~
Bnnk.ley Idler <»cpre-.. d d1sdppomtmenl with h1., tl'c1m.,
fundcLmentdls and evcral Sailor playc•rs ... aid thc•y IC'lt lurt.u-
nate to escape agcnnst ..i b19ger Foothill <,q11dd
CONGRATULATIONS
FORAN
UTSTANDING N ewp·ort Harbor
·High School .
SEA$0N. ' .... , -... . . .. ,, .. . ·~ ..... . .. . .. . II II .. -~· ,. ... .• ' .. . ,. J
F_ROM YOUR FANS AT
THE ·HYATI NEWPORTER
..
Call the Hyatt Holiday Hotline
For All Your Party Needs : ..
Whether At Your House Or At Ours.
(714J 729-1234 Ext. 540
1 1 07 Jamboree Roa~ Newport Beach
CIF Southern Section
Division V Champs
We salute your
Outstanding teamwork,
determination,
and dedication
to your goals
..
I
A real thirst-quencher
By gdme's end. Newport Coach Jeff BnnkJey was enjoy-
mg the> hrst Gdtordde !>hower, dfld the first outright league
chdmp1onslup of !us 17-year coadung career. .
But tlungs were not qwte as joyous for much of th.is game,
lhdnk'> to opt>rung-game bhtzkrieg by a VlSlting Santa Mar-
gdntd !>quad that handed
BnnkJcy's Sailors their most
Pmbdrrassing loss in yedrs lo
l'nd the 1993 regular season
(19-0)
/\liiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
S MA GARITA "4£WPORT .......... ..... Coc1ch Jun Hartigan's
EaglP'> drove 7 I yards on I 0
pldy<, ford '7-0 lead, then
.. . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . .
' needed JUSI six more plays to double the
mMgm after rPcovenng an on-side luck.
Thl• 14 -0 dehnt was Newport's biggest of
thP ~ed~on, but the quest for the school's
first St•a View League crown !>mce 1985, its
llrst outnght lJUe since 1983, proved dlDple
mollvdllon to turn things around.
Back-to-bd<'k touchdown dnves ctllowed
l ldrbor to tie 11, the latter score the hr..t of three TD'conne<:-
llon!> bPtween quartcrbdck John G1ordani dnd Jon Benzinger.
But Santd Margantd rcgdtned momentum by returning
the r>n-.umg luckort 55 yMds, then working mto pos1bon ford _
12-yard held 90dl on thl' hnt1l play of the half.
-. r
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14; 1994
5-0 in S~a View League
An inspirational videotape featuring a closeup of a CIF
championshi'l ring put tears in the eyes and fire in the hearts
ol the Newp0rt players, preceding the regular-season finale
against V1S1ting El Toro.
Tlie result was evident early, as Brian Johnson went 84
yards off right tackle on the
game's first snap tor a 7-0
lead.
Newport scored on its sec-
ond possession, then
answered an El Toro touch-
down With two more to lead,
28-7, with 6:01 left in the
third quarter.
Johnson rushed for a then-career-high
193 yards on just sue cames, including a
73-yard fourth-quarter TD burst to com-
plete the scoring.
Senior fullback and outside li,nebaclcer
Matt Riggle earned the individual spot·
light, however, ranging sideline lo sideline
to make plays on defense, and scoring his
first varsity touchdown on an 11-yard pdSS from John Gior-
dani. .
Riggle was the Daily Ptlot Player of the Week, while Johl)-
son and senior rover Dan Eac:Ue were the coaches' players of
the week. NPwport rwt'ded five pl<1y~ to dnve 87 yMds with th<' !.ec-
11nd-h<1U luckoll, to tdkl• d 2 1-17 lf'<1d ctnd thnll the homecom-
irrg crowd of c1mund 4,000
But Santd MMganln rcgdmed thl' lc>ad, 23-21, with a
, touchdown 4 14 left
The wm capped an unbeaten regular season and a perfect
Sea Vjew League run, surpaSSUlg the 1942 Harbor squdd for
most regult\r-season wms. The 10-game winning steak was
• also the school's longest in 64 vanity se(lsons and clinched
the No. l seeding for the upcoming CLF D1vision V playoffs.
i
A kt•y 3-yard Bnnn Johnson run up the middle on fourth-
trnd-orw mov£>d the> Sauors ncdr rrudfleld and. after only h1!>
lourth 111completion ol the night. G1ordani found Benzmger
lor r1 12-yrird c;conng JldSS w1th 1.50 left
Starter Moises Piedra was sidelined in the hrst quarter
with an ankle injury. but Sky Conway moved in at defensive
tackle and had two of the team's four sacks. · Dcin Bc:>rgC'r mlt>rC'1'pted on the next plc:ty and Harbor had
rt-. Lill£•
C1orcldni hni.,hed 12 of 16 for a CdrPer-lugti 196 p.issmg
\'<lfds, '>hdnng rodcht".' Player of the Week ldurels Wlth Malt
lllggll' G1ordt1111 wc1•;, hOW<'Vf'f, SdCkPd twice to end a
J>fPIOU!>ly <;dCk-les!> Sl'cl'iOn
CASEY P lUl(SCH I OAll.Y PILOT
Newport Harbor quarterback Tofui Glordanl
looks downtteld for the payoff.
Typifying the team's resiliency Wlth injuries, Conway start·
ed the rest of the eason, while Piedra continued to earn time
in a reserve role after his anlde.healed.
El Toro, which won a coin-flip to make the playoffs. went
on to reach the Semifinals, before falling to SeMle.
CONGRATULATIONS
1994 C.I.F. CHAMPIONS!
NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL AND VOLLEYBALL
PLAYERS AND COACHES
,
Your dedication and teamwork
are an inspiration
to our community!
BILL FEENEY
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REALTORS
Dethroning the · defending champ
The Sailors ~gan their Sea View Ledgue
title campaign by stdftlng at the lop,
dethroning two-time defendmg champion.
Irvine.
The 9-7 victory ended th~ hos I Vaqueros'
15-game wm streak agamsl Sea View foes.
Having lost three limes to COdch Terry
Henigan's juggernaut in two preV1ous sea-
sons, Newport made good on Coach Jeff
Bnnkley's prediction of victory by playmg
nearly nustdke-free.
Newport recovered its oruy fumble, had
Just hve penalties for 45 yards, and con-
tained a !ugh-powered Irvine offense for all
but a span of 2:16 lale in the second qudrter,
which produced a l()..play. 78-ard go-
ahead touchdown drive.
The Sailors opened the scoring with a 28-
yard TD toss from John G1ordaru to Mike
Freeman, who hung on at the goal line
despite a blind-side wallop by an Irvine
defender.
Je(f Pardy's
conv<>rston
luck WdS
blocked, but
the sopho-
more place-
kicker wowd later prove
Bnnkley cla.uvoyant, mak-
mg good on the coach's
predictmn be would naU
the game-wmnmg field
goal.
With a 38-yard s1dellne
bomb from Giordani to Jon
Benzinger, the Turs proceeded ms1de the
Irvine 10, before Pardy's go-ahead 23-yard
held goaJ was true with 8:58 left m the
game
Mason rushed for 76 ycllds to share Play-
er of the Week honors with Matt Riggle.
Sailors chop down Woodbridge
The Sailors earned their most ones1ded
victory of the season and league cbampi-
onstup and ClF playoff aspirations began
creeping into their trademark •one game at
a time· comments lo the media
After an early turnover helped Wood-
bndge advance to the Newport 3 early ln
the contest, the Warriors. oruy three weeks
removed from the No. t ranlung m Division
V. nussed a 19-yard field goal and were •
barely heard from again.
The Sailor defense stuJJed the Wood-
bndge ground game for cl minus-10 yards,
and hmited the Warrior aerial attack to SlX
complebons in 2 t attempts for Just 33 yarrls.
way with the
Warriors.
Wood-
bridge man-
aged jut
three tmt
downs ttnd
its 11 olfensive posse sions
averaged just 101 seconds.
"No one bas stopped us
like Newport has.• said
Woodbridge Coach Rlck
Gibson, who also had
praise for the Tars' offense.
Johnson, begmrung a
I L
Bnan Jpbnson and Dan Eadie had inler-
cepllons, Bill Johns (two), John Ryan (one)
and M otse Piedra and Grant Lcwdn (one·
hall each I bad quarterback sacks,"1-0d tho
rest of the front seven basically held th 'U
sJ'leg of !ilandout rushing perfonnances that
woilld tnrry on the rest of the Cdmpalgn,
compiled 122 yards on 16 cames, mdudmg
a 58-yard touchdown burst which opened
the scoring.
. . .
. . -
4flt9 DISCOVERY .
BAUER MOTORS
. . '
..
J •
. '
2001 So. Manchester Ave., Anaheim, CA 92802 (714) 971,,2002 ..
The Statement
Thr "'•11111 ., •ti '1\ N1 in the> mmd"' nl mdny h)' UJ.>:>t•tting d So\<1nnc1
I• .. ,n 1011i..• ·cl '-• • I 111 IJ1\ hlt>ll \ <>rghlh m Ordnql' County. lt1dcllng
lho 1 mllll\ 111.,,1111ng (more lhdfl 45 poml!. per gdmPJ, dfld owning tht>
t 011111~ .., '''< unct·lon~w'>t wmrung :-teak 1101
And 11 c1Jdn t lr1k1 long for Harbor
to m<lkP t1 '-lrunq ... tt1h•mi>nl dt Ld Pdl-
mc1 P,11 k
Br 1.111 John.,011 1t•ll1rrwd the open-
HHJ kH koll q4 vc11(1-. 111 prlydut. dnd
Btl l John'>, Tom Ec1lnn 1111d, Srnll Sand-
.,1rom r1mbu'>htorl th1 • Srtvc1\mt.1 punter
four pldy'> lc1t1•1 to hC'lp turn a bad •
"ll<IP llltO pnllll' lu•ld pO'>lllOn
.l1mwr tt11lb.1< k Jl'rt•my Mc1son, stepping up for
Edon Kogc1'>1>ll ('>llll bolhNC'd by d thigh bruise) and
loh11'>11n (n11111 •ntr nllnq on rontd1mng the Rebeb pro-
hhc offt-n'>1· .1110111Prh<1ck1. cc1pped t1 short three-play
drn" \'Ill! h ,, I \ :.u fl tnurhdown run JU<;I 2 2H mto the-
qnnw
To lur1hl'r .,tun lht• ho.,l'>. Oan MrDonough rdn m
th1 two pmnt comt>1.,1on fur a 15 -0 bulgl' on d ... wmgmg gdte pldy,
nnd tht• dl'lt>nw hc1ndk•d the rc>o;t
l\.lclll R1qqll' H'C ttH'rl'd ct lumblt> to 'iet up c1 16-vMd srnnng pdSS
horn John ( j101dc1111 lo Jon Bi>nzmger. and Savc1nnc1.., offf•nc.,C' managed
uni\ t1 10111 hclo\\ n culcl a lll'ld godl
1 larhor clul y1dd t1 50-yc1rd punt rPturn tor c1 TD but th1• o.,p1•<•dy
R .. lwl' n1<1tht<fl'cl fl\ I' nfll•n...i\ t• play ... in Lht> fourth quart• ·r
l\J,..,1111 ltn1 ... h1'CJ \\1th <1 ...i•do.,on-tugh 95 ~ t11d-. on 28 c c1m1•' Ill h1•lp
lh• Tr1r.., "Jmnq 10 No l 111 lhl' D1\'ls10n V poll t1nd hnc1U} < rrtc k the
1 nlllth Top Ill"' '\lo 1:1 Mc1..,on., wo1 khorw dfort ht·lpPd LhC' Tar~
nll• ·r ,.,. to •··ii ,,11 but l 28 ol th!' game\· hnal It; 4 I
l ,,,, 111 r1 111111111 <h•l1•n ... 1V<' Pnd, ramc• up big w1Lh two sc1ck'> to t.•am
"''' 1'111\l'I ut tilt' \\i•t.•k lc1u1PI
~1·11101 l\Jd,,. ht>1•1)1ctn, c•xpPtlrd to 1111-; ... the hro;t of tu!> two gr1mrs
\\ rth ,, ll<t<ll~ 'Jlrclllll'd c111l..J1•, Wd~ ttie t·oc1ches' olhl'r Plc1yer of lhP
\\'1•1·k lctp111q hi"' qtmry 111mt so hedvl.ly he lunped lus way to two
r P< 1 •pt1t•n .. I• 11 2h \ .11c1.,
li1IH1..,.111 wh11 lictd d k1•y mtl.'rcepllon lo l'nd Sc1vttnnc1'c; h nctl dnve,
w ..... th" l>11ilv Pilot Plc1yr1 of the Week.
Rollin's
Copy, S lollor•c• ~ Poslol
488 East 1 P' Street. ::.1e. A 101
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
631-2627 .
FAX 63 1-2617
Monda~Thuraday • 8am-8pm
Friday• 8am-7pm
Sotu,.day • 9am -3pm
Marilyn Read
Aealror Associate
"Congratulations Newport"
The Prudential ~
California Realty
?101 E Co;ist Hl(lhway. •250
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Rf'<. 111 111675 2?86 ~ti
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r.u ,;1.11640 5732
Color Laser Copies
Stationery & Cards
Boxed Notes
Desktop Publish ing
Self-Serve Macintosh
Typewriters
FAX • Postal
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,.,., .._.,. ~.,'"'..,,~, .-. .. _, ,...,, """,.'!Kl'~~ r,,. ~-~ E-ltaMI ._...,.. Int
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Bank of Newporl Bldg , Ste 250
Coast Hoghw1y at Avocado ..., PO 80119879
Newport Beach, CA 92658
Bus (714) 759-6600
Fax (714)640-5732 l ---Jle8. (714) 645--6345
,, '""'-· JERRVBROOKS •f~\";
REALTOR• -...~~
°''o "
...... ""' ...... ---· •1 ___ ••• _..__··--···
.. I WEDNE SDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1994 -···-1-----,,.....----------~.-----
The great escape
Senior no,eguard Bill Johns dlsplt1yed the b1y-plu} dbil1l~ that
would lc1te1 earn tum Sea View League Delcn-.1\l Pld}'f?f 1.11 the
Year laurels to help stave off a valian t comeback bJd b~ d lhe11·
unbeaten Canyon High squad.
Wtlh Newport clinging lo a nar-
row 21-19 edge. Canyon's tugb-
powered n.in-and-shoot offense
took posse s1on at midfield with
plenty of urnc to gdin its first lead.
But Johns, using hiS suprem e
q ukknes!>, somehow batted lbe
bd.ll away iro.m the Canyon center,
interrupting a would-be exchange to quarte rback
Adam Hoover. Johns ttien recovered the fumble with
6:39 remaming. •.
It was the la~lhe Comanche offense saw of the
he ld, dS 1uruosf.leremy Mason, whom COclch Jefl
Bnnkley later referred lo dS his "closer." p.iled up 12
of his 21 cames to run out the clock.
Hoover. who earned praise frnm Bnnkley for ~
dccuracy bebmd q solid offenslVe front, burned thP
Tars for 240 aenal yard.S.
But Johns posted two of the visitors' four sacks,
and the offense came up big with a pair of fourth-
aown touchdowns to escape Wlth the wm.
Mason made good on Brinkley's first fourth-down
gamble, powenng 5 yards to paydut on fourth-dnd-one> to break a
scorelP'i5 be wtth 40 seconds left in the hrsl quarter
John G1ordan1 tut Jon Benzinger on fourth-and-seven for d 32-
yard ct1tch and run, then connected Wlth Dan McDonough for d
J two-point conversion lo make 11 14-0 rrudway through the second
quarter.•
Canyon scored 10 of Lhe 17 dddiuonal hrst-hdU pomll>, then
posted tht> firc;t rune pomts dfter halttunf', before Jolw~ ~c1ved the
ddy ~
Runnmg back E;don Ka_gasoff bruised a thigh. wtuch hclmpeted
tum the nPxl c;everal y;eeks, as the Tars creepcd up the ClF D1vi-
s1on V poll to the No. 6 spot. Rover Dan Eadie and olCc>n~1vp lclcklP
Shenf Pe p1c were Pidyers of tqe Week.
Dme
In
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Our
5930 Pac1fte Coast Highway
Newport Beach. Calrforrua 9l<i6J
Tclqihone: 646·i202
Fax: 646-7095
ClnMllc'-' .. o(Soipc,.or..,POtl
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CHEMICAL. I NC.
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COSTA MESA
STAT IONERS
DAVI PU•CILL
CHml HICK
Season stats
(14-0. 5-0)
SEASON (INDIVIDUAL)
Rushing
Player tcb nyg avg td long
Johnson 153 1119 7.3 12 84
Kagasoff 109 537 5.0 6 44
Mason 133 456 3.4 4 20
Thprdsen 18 87 4.8 0 16
Riggle 15 29 1.9 0 -7
Urban _ i 8 4.0 0 8
Berger 1 4 4.0 0 4
Fredriksen 1 2 2.0 0 2
Giordani 32 -33 -1.0 2 9
Passing
Player pa pc ydg Int pct_ td
Giordani 206 107 1,518 8 .519 17
Fredr1ksen 2 0 0 1 .000 0
Benzinger 1 0 0 0 .000 0
Reaiving
Player pc nyg avg. td long
Pulido 35 471 13 5 3 34
Freeman 25 311 12 4 3 38
_ Benzinger 23 520•22.6 7 57
Johnson 5 57 11 4 0 • 12
McDonough 5 44 8.8 1 19
Riggle 4 46 1l 5 2 21
Mason 4 37 9.3 1 15
Kagasoff 4 19 48 0 7
Berger 11 11.0 0 11
S<orin9
Johnson 78; Benzinger 42, Pardy 42; Kaga-
soff 36; Mason 36; Pulido 18; Freeman 18,
Riggle 12, Giordani 12; McDonough.10,
Sandstrom 6; Berg,er 4
Field Goals
Pardy 3 (36, 25. 23)
Interceptions
Johnson 7; Sandstrom 4; Berger 2; Eadie 2;
Freeman 1; McDonough 1
SEASON (TEAM)
· Opp Tars
Total first downs 162 187
Rushes-yardage 394-1,420 459-2.214
verage rushing gain 3.6 4.8
verage rushing yardage ·101 158
Total passing yardage 1,433 1,518
Average passing yardage 102 108
Pas.s unp, att. ~nt 143-269-17 107-2()9.-9
Avg. gain per pass comp. 10.0 14.2
Avg. gain per pass anmp 5.3 7.3
Net ret\.lm yardage• 198 227
Total sacks-yardage 28-165 • 6-29
Average sacks, yardage 2-12 0.4-2
Net yardage 2,898 3,920
Average net yardage 207 280
Total punts-average 52-32.1 50-31.5
Fumbles-fumbles lost 32-16 19·12
Total turnoVers 33 21
Average turnovers 2.4 1.5
Flags-yardage 68-622 71-671
Average ilags.yardage A.8-44 5-48
Avg. time of possession 24:17 23:43
•Punt returns. interceptions, fumble returns
Accumulative Sconi by '-riods
1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Tot,
Opponents 46 43 12 44 3-148
Newport Harb 68 138 45 57 &-314
2B
28
28
21
22
9
7
24
27
35
28
24
13
20
1994 log
Non-a.ague
Orange (4-6)
Ocean View (2·8)
Foothill (8-5)
canyon (7-4)
Savanna (B·l)
Sea View U..,.
Irvine (4·5-1)
C0<ona del Mar (5-6)
Woodbridge (5·5)
Santa Margarita (4-6)
El Toro (7-5-1)
Of Division V "9yoffs
5addleback (4-7)
Brea Olinda (8-}-1)
Foothill (8-5) (ot)
Servite (11-3)
10
0
7
19
15
7
6
0
23
14
14
8
10
15
•
•
WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1994 The Daily Plloc ·•
A dill>ious debut · Favorites on a roll Foothill flattened ·
For the second str~bt year, the Sailors stumbled early in
their opener. fumbling on their first play at their own 16 to set
up visiting Orange's go-ahead touchdown.
Orange returned the 5ea$0n-opening kickoff 83 yards in
1993 for a 7-0 lead, and
earned the same edge thr~
plays after this year's open-
ing-play fumble with a 13-
yard touchdown~·
Newport. ·unveiling an
inexperienced offensive line
and first-time starters at
quarterback (John Giordani) tail-
back (Brian Johnson) and receiv-
er (Danny Pulido), didn't take
Ieng to respond.
The Tars drove 80 yards on
nine plays for .the equalizer, with
Edon Kaga.sotf, who joined John-
son and junior Jeremy Masoti in
Coach Jeff Brinkley's tailback-by-
committee rotation, capping the
marCh from 5 yards out.
Entering as prohibitive favorites against an Ocean View
team with the longest losing streak in the state (30 games),
the Sailors drove 65 yards on 10 plays on the ir opening pos-
session fo take a 7-0 lead.
The eventual 28·0 verdict,
however, left Coach Jeff
Brinkley slightly under-
whelmed.
·we weren't as crisp as
we'd been during olir week
of practice,• said Brinkley,
who extended his Harbor
te~ winning streak over Ocean View to
nine straight seasons, and the Seahawks'
overall losing skein to 31.
Some players later admitted cited this
game as a cautionary tale in regard to look-
ing past an opponent, but the Sailors
moved to 2-0 for the sixth straight sea.son
with their fifth sh utout over the Seahawks.
' Ocean View packed eight men on the
line to try to thwart the Harbor ground game, but quarter-
back John Giordani proved such philosophy unsound,_ com-
Johnson, who finished with
109 yards on 11 carries, darted for
a 9-yard toucbdoWn to give New-
• pleting eight passes for 127 yards before halftime to forge a
14-0 cushion.
port the lead for goOd, 5: 11 before intermission. J ohnson then
broke 46 yards to-paydirt early in the third quarter to put "
things away.
Giordani later found Jon Benzinger from 18 yards out for
his first 1994 touchdown pass, to help the Sailors post their
highest point total in 12 games. despite losing three of their
four fumbles. •
The victory was Harbor's sixth straight iri a season opener,
the fourth straight over the Panthers to open the campaign.
Senior Dan Berger impressed in reserve duty at free safe-
. ty. a posi~ be would quickly take over as the starter.
Giordani and senior tight end-linebacker Mike Freeman
earned Player of the Week honors.
Senior tight end Mike Freeman bad five of his six recep-
tions by intermission, as well as 85 of bis 94 receiving yards.
The Tars' defense_yielded only 31 rushing yards, 43 pass-
ing yards and four fiFSfoowns, ~ senior defensive end Jack
Hogan bad 1112 sacks to captvre share Player of Ule Week
honors with Edon Kagasoff.
. Kagasoff led all rushers with 61 yards, including a 44-yard
touchdown run.
Starting right offensive taclcle Andy Langsdorf, a junior,
went down with a strained knee. Senior Kentucky 1tansfer
James,"Big Country• Moureaux·moved over from defensive
tackle to replace him and started the remaining l 2 games .
After the win, the Tars de buted on the CIF Southern Sec-
tion Division V poll at No. 10.
In a preview of the CIF Southern Section Division V semi-
firiaJ, the Sailors held favored Foolhill to 131 yards in total
offense, rallied for a 14-7 balltirne lead, then controlled the
clock after halftime to begin the ir third straight season 3-0.
A young Foothill squad,
still gaining the experience
whitjl would rfiake it a pow-
erful playoff force, fell lo t -2
and dropped out the Division
V Top 10, after holding the
No. 7 spot
John Giordani earned Dai-
ly Pilot Player of the Week honors for com-
pleting 9 of 16 passes for 164 yards and
three touchdowns, including a S7-yard •
lhjrd-quarter strike to Jon Benzinger to
make it 21-7 .•
Danny Pulido caught five passes for 83
yards and Scott Sandstrom hauled in two of
Harbor's three interceptions, returning one
28 yards to set up the game-tying touchdown, to earn Player
of the Week la urels.
Senior middle linebacker Dan· McDonough had a sack
and recovered a fumble to set up a Sailor score and Bill Johns
added a sack for a defense that still hadn't allowed a touch-
down drive of more than 16 yards (with that <><;eurring after a
lost fumble against Orange).
The Sailor offensive line of Sherif Pepic, Brandon Baker,
Brandon Hetrick, Johns, Tom Eaton, and James Moureaux
continued to impress, negating the charge of the Knight
brigade.
Tigbt ends McDonough and Mike Freeman each caught ..
TD-passes a nd Edon Kagasoff posted a season-high 95 rush-
ing yards on 17 carries, upping bis season total to a team-
leading 235 yards on 36 attempts.
Coach Jeff Brinkley praised the scheme of the defensive
staff, headed by first-year coordinator Tony Ciarelli
The victory helped Harbor move up to No. 8 in the Divi-
sion V poll.
•• •
B lb. ·Island a oa COFFEE co.
• • • C.). Segerstrom & Sons
Congratulates the
Newport Harbor S9itors on
another Winning Seasonl
..
Located at:
· 322 Marine Avenue
Balboa Island CA 92662
.1
n
3315 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA, CA 7 14-5 46-01 1 0
Ne
•
•
IF ·
hampions
orl Harbor
•
. ..
. "
.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1•, 1
Newport Harb'br's Sallon had all of the
rtght guns to get the job done, lnclud.lllg (top)
Blll Johns (54) and Jack Hogan (84) above, 1bown
putting the skids to a Savanna back. At left, Brian
Johnson sends·a sttJf arm and a meuage to a
Santa Margarita defender. Above, linebacker
Dan McDonough zeros lD for a Mell on Sota
Margarita's quarterback. The victory over Santa
Margarita clinched the Sea View League cbampl-
omh1p, a full w~ before league play llnllbed .
-
,..,.. . " . _ ........ _ ..... ., -., .. ---·. --..
WEDNESDAY, OEaMBER 14, 1994
J ,
.·
• Collisions, moves and barks -those were some of the sights and sounds of Harbor's run
through 14 opponents In 199.t without a setback. Above, Newport noseguard Bill Johns slams
Into El Toro's quarterback as be tries to pitch out. Below, left, Coach Jett Brinkley lets the offi-
cial know exacUy how be feels about the situation during a tense moment In the Batlle of the
Bay against rival Corona del Mar. Below, Newport Harbor players celebrate their triumph in
the CIF football finale.
-· . .
. .
•
..,
. ~ -•
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23600 ROCKFIELD tn LAKE FOREST• 830-7386 I ~
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Visit Our Other Wahoo's Locations at j
3000 So. Bristol, Costa Mesa • 435-0130
1862 Placentia, Costa Mesa • 631-3433 .
1133 South Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach • 497-0033
~werBar. • ev1an.
natural spring water
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