HomeMy WebLinkAbout1995-01-13 - Orange Coast PilotDon 't walk
under laddQrS,
stay away from
black cats and
stay dry. It's Friday the 13th,
but the good news 1s No
Rain!
See Weather, Page 2
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
LONG ROAD TO RECOVERY -BEGINS
~ Supervisor Marian Bergeson sees three challenges ahead as county fights way out of bankruptcy mess
8'f MAalAN llaGISON
W hen I arrived at the
Doard of Supervisors last
week, I was reminded
again how much of government
runs from crisis to crisis. We seem
to spend so much time on the
short-term trauma that we have
no time for preventative care and
problem solving. As a case in
point, the atmosphere around the
Hall of Administration since Jan.
2 has reminded me of the last few
days of the Dpitoh legislative
5Cssions -with i.t:iffers, prcs,s
pc9ple and vitally important
memos all circulating with no ap-
parent destiny. I've hardly had '
time to catch my breath, much
less unpack the boxes that I
brought over from my state Sen-
ate office.
It was always fru~trating to see
that pace going on at the Capitol
-because everyone there knew
that we really could l1ave done a
year's worth of '"ork in three
us to keep in better contac1 "ith
the people '"e reprc::.ent Lci;1~l.1-
tors \\Ould be in a better po::.ition,
too. to under::.tand and ~•.,~i't the
county in it::. trouble~ 1f '"e ''ere
\\Orking side-by-::.ide.
(and Orange Count~ it::.dl) need-
ed more Jttcnuon from th pre~::.
and the!public. 1 be alh.:ntion 1s.
here -"l. h:.a' c more CJ ner ... ,
and journali)h follo\\ ing the
board') ;ict1ull!> th:.in I CH~r could
hJ\1.! 11nag1neJ. ~fan) Jrl! .iltcr 3
quic.k Mur~ that "ill help them.
"in ~1 Pulltier -but others .ire
here fur a far belier rca~on.
-months if the 9cmocrat leader-
ship would ha"c kept the calendar
moving. We ne.,,er needed a full-
tim e Legislature -and the ex1ra
time at home would have nllo\\ cd
Lano Wheeler, 10, left, and his brother Jeremy, 6, play ~ith sticks on the beach Thursday against a colorful sunset.
long-lost -rrienil .. miles · ·r1e appearance
,... But the curtain call isn't over for
the storm clouds. A pretty _powerful
encore may be in the works.
. BY MAile S. Pos~ER, STAFF Wanca
NEWPORT-MESA -Spotted on Thurs-
day: Sun.
Albeit through fleeting glances masked by
often-dark cloud cover, Southern Dlifornia's
top attraction marked its return to the sky
after nearly a week'!> hiatus.
The sometimes-blue sky and golden glow
\\ere vaguely familiar sights to those still
mopping up after rains .lingered longer into
the morning than weather officials predicted.
Those same experts now say a new storm
anticipated for th is weekend may arrive a bit
later than expected and it may pack a better
wallop than they initially thought.
Meteorologists at the National Weather
Service in Oxnard say the Or:inge County
coast is the weekend storm's t4rget. The big
question, fo recasters said, is how much rain
will fall and how quickly?
"The ground is still pretty saturated," Me-
teorologist Robqt Dnrufalldi said. "It's not
going to hold that much more moii.ture. If it
comes in and it's steady and light for a long
period of time, you'll probably be OK.
"But," he said, "if it comes down real
Storm t\\icC as bad for former Costa ~tc)a
family and Newport city \\Orker injured
during rains rcco\·cring.
see stories. page 2
heavy, you'll probably have some problems.''
Other Thursday devclopmeQts:
.-•.Individuals hit hard by the ~torm cJn
seek public nlonet:.iry help, federal offici:ils
announced.
Residents and business O\\ ners in Orange
and 23 other California courtics are eligible
for financial assistance for damage, debris re-
S•• STORMI'••• ,
Vie\\ing the \Cry necc,~ary
rapid pace of the board from the
in~ide now, I am struck "1th the
irony of my_No,embcr U)i.umpt1on
that the Doard of Supef\ 1')or::. See HRGESqN/Pa9e 4
Is ·Costa Mesa High·
Grad ·Night doomed_?
Due to lack of support
from parents of seniors,
a~nual celebration may
be lost this year.
co~ r A ~tc$A -h 1hi) th\!
enJ of tht: lon~ime trall1tion of
"Gr:'lJ Nigl11" at Co)ta Mc::..1 High
Sd1ool?
Due tu IJck ol )UPflOll '1ro111
pari:nb of tht: st:nior cl.l!>,, thc 1c,.
ti\lttc::. -a ntt: ol pa,,;1gc '.'>111ci.:
the Jlro, -.ire on the hrjnk vi
C).t llLliun thi) Junt:.
~ct:dk" to 'a). ~1.11101-. ;ircn't
pl..:.i'.'>cd l' the pru ... p..:d
"Im p1..:tty bumm1.d out .1b"U1
~ it," -..1iJ Lr11.:a S1ebi:n .... chwl p1c'-
ident. .. I h1:0. '>Orta i•bt hit u,, I
• thi nk e\en,onc JU'l :ll>)UmeJ th:il
~e'd ha'c a Grad Night"
The gradu:iuon night p;u I) 1::. a
· tradition :.it man) .,chooh 111 1h1.
count). ::.tatc and nalll'1 • ,,11J
Costa Mei.a l l1gh Prlnc1pal [.J
Harcharik. It 's :.i 111nc studcnh lJn
F Y I ·
How to help
Costa Mesa High School
grads and an)One else
interested in helping plan
this )Car's Grad Night
should call the school at
S56-33.i4.
be 10~1. thcr ;i, J cl.i" for one IJ~t
time -.inJ !>hare mcmune~. Har-
c.h:mi... )..i1J.
~Ian\ -.tudc.:nh h;.i\c! h ·arJ tJk
ol !>Uc.:~ ..... ,tul -C\1.n c\tr.i,Jg~1nt
-PJ't Gr:.H.I ~i;ht pJ1 tic., Jnd
hJ\C ,.., k1..J fom.irJ lU lh~tr l\\n
-.pc.:1:11 n,ght.
"I \\OUIJ be \C~ Ji,Jpp01mcd 1f
"e l.krn'l hJH. on.: · .. .1iJ Cu-.1:s
~k::.a cnior S...irJ !)mdcr "I\~
he:irJ a lot .. ,,J<Il 11 .in.J u°t'v ... : .tll
the ... U1..1l ::.tull ihc' h.1d thCr('. [(,
111..1.!. Oh \\u\\. i can't \\:Ill 'til
GrJd !"11!ht . ' . -.
See GRAD NIGHT/Po9e 3
Lo·cal man accused
of Costa Mesa rape
tc .. 11111011', offtciah ~J1J
Co)tJ ·Mc J police! ;ill.:gc. that
,. U.:nnell r.ipeJ and fl bbc.:J a
\\11m:1n .it kn1flpoin1 in her ~luntc!
\''la A'enue JpJrtmc.:nt alh:r
".ti kin~ in throul!h an uni keJ
lll·lll J~oor un S.:pt. :! ....
,... A granct'jury indictment
pins a local rape and
robbery, as well as a
murder in Laguna Hills, on
Eric Wayne Bennett. Aller the Jlleged J))Juh. th.: 40-
A Co~t.i ~h.:~a man ha" t1e-en-i-n· 5Clt-old \ldilfl SCllllj'..:"iCd 1..101 ol
dieted b) the Or.ingc count~ the apartment and J1.1kd 911. pu-
li.:-c: 'Jid 1 he nun. "ho tuul.. S 100 Grand Jul') on 1..harge., uf murJ.:r. rape. and robbe~. in c.1.,h. cluJed ;i poh.:c Jr:ignc:t
Eric \V:i\nc lknnett. :!5. h.1, th .. t induJ,J .i heltci..1ptcr ~e.irch.
b.:en gcncticall) l1nkell to th.: .11-olli.:ial :.JiJ.
le •d Jpe · nd robi.,n. of ., r,, IJ U ... 11111.lt .tbv \\J'I indicted Oil ge r ;J l''-'·; .. 1.:tv\ Mc)a \\Oman l:.ii.t Scpt..:mbcr and clurgc:. that he murJ.:rcJ Lagun.1
to the r:ipe and murder of J. La-1 lilh re!>Hknt ~brtt: K. faJn), 50,
guna .Hills \\Om::in the follo\\111~ un O.:t. 14 Sh..: \\J., founJ blud-
montb, a.:cording 10 police. gee.med tu death 111 the lo"cr lc\cl
Denneu. "ho \\OrkcJ :l) Jn in-of hc.:r Camino Tecatc hlwnhoui.e.
depende nt contractor in,tallin~ al.7..:orJing to Or.inge Count~ Shcr-
nooring for a co .. ta MC\J com-111"... p1..1!.:Cl11l1Jll Lt. D.1n ~lJrtini.
pany, i::. being held "nhout b.1il .it ,\11.:r karn1ng al~l1ut the L.1~una
Orange County JJ1I. 1 he chJrgc' Hilb c.i::.c. Co)tJ ~k)J Jc.: t.:~tl\c.:~
could bring th.c death penalty or .i ~eg.in to con.,1dcr a hnk t d\\cen
life sentence "1thoul parole. pro'>· th~ l\\ o c.i~es. a.:"ordmg h' J JOint
ccutors s::iid. tJtcmcnt I:!> ucd ~' th.: ::, ll'r ilf~
The indictment "a) handeJ Department" and Cui.ta ~k'"' (>\)-
do"o Wcdnc)day after \\\0. dJ)' of See INDICT/Po9• 4 .... Historic Corona del Mar toy store will close its doors
•
,... The Toy Shop will go
out of business Jan. 31
after almost 40 years, but
manager will open a similar
store elsewhere in the city.
BY EVAN liENEllSON, SnPF Wann
since 1987.
The good new~. :iy local toy
lovers, is that the Toy Shop's cur-
rent manager, Di:ine Nauman, "ill
open a similar toy shop nt 333 1
Pncific Coast Highway. The ·store
will be called Toy Doat.
And the bad news: the loi.s of u
city institution.
''We hate thi situation," s:>id
CORONA DEL MAR -The longtime cu tomcr B'!rbara Liljen-
Toy Shop, venmlble site of the wald, who hos bought tO)'S nt the
penny counter and the historic Co-Toy Shop for her children and
ronll Del Mar Birthday Book, will gr:mdchildren. "This was the i.put
close its doors after nearly 40 in town. H )'OU wanted a toy. )OU
years of operation. • c1me here." 1
With lhe •tot:,e'~ lease expirina.. First opened in 1954 as Mary
at .the end of the month and the and David's Toy , the •hop was
adjacent Crown Ace Hardwnre oriainnlly on adjunct to a local planni~c. an expansion, the Toy bard...,are ~tore. Dorothy Sylvester
Shop IS in the midst o~ a 30%-orf ooucht .the lore in 1956 and
dose-out Pie and ~111 ~hut II . owned ii for \ix years, rcnamina it
doors Jan. 31, according to Candi
McNcilly, co-owner o! the tore ... TOY no•l!Pe9• 4
f
• • MAac ~lA.anlCi'\)Atlf PiLOf
Diane Nauman holds a favorite hand pups>e' outliae the
venerable Toy Shop In Corona del Mar, which will close Jan. 31 .
~
\
• ~ • .lmnUlry 13. ....
. .
A mong the lhoi.lS!lnd~ of people
'i iuns Scv.pon Beach Public
u'br:snc~ eic=h month arc those
~d1'lg 'l.'.nrichment and enlightenment
dem .:red not in print or ,;a electronic
re~urce , but in li\'C presentations In
Mjd111vn .o the tangible matcnals the)'
cuntain, !'e"pon hbranes prO\idc a forum
for progra!'ls, diSC"U»ion groups, dramatic
rc:id1ngs. lfa,clogucs, afternoon teas,
mu~1cal pcrlorm:..nccs and anists'
rcccpLon~.
Pre~entcd b) local profes.sionals.,
:sJthor • anists, "rite rs
and informed cuizcru,
1hese arc planned
throughout the "eek.
during both day and
C\Cning hours. All are
free and m~t require no
preregistration.
Check
It Out
On the agenda for
"inter arc programs
fo..used o n career
strategies. legal issues
zsnd financial planning.
For those looK.lng to
mo'e up the corporate
lldder or enhance job "'
secunt), career counselor
Su').in L .. n "1 .. discuss "~ et-.orking .for
Cvn:1:r s ...... 1::>S. at lhe Celllrnl UbrOT), Ot
-pm on fan. 26. I-or the self-empJo)ed,
Paul \ mnicoff "ill focus on personal
fin:.r.::.:il pl:inn:ng on the e'cning of
~farch ~. ;il.!Jre~ing a')set protecuon,
.n•t:':m1:r.b. cornpemJt1on plans that
ClllllM
luH lfoc:;~AJLT PILOT
Wet wheels: Water or no water, Vahid Berdjis was on a mission to relieve stress Thursday as he pedaled along
the bluffs _near Victoria Street in Costa Mesa. BerdJ1S, who was covered from head to toe with mud recently
be.gan spnng pre-med cfasses at UCI. · •
Storm twice as bad rOr _.,ne family
~·1
-Rmn• fllll
J UST AV V.£.S. -Ncwpon-Mesa
school di)trict Superintendent Mac
Bttnd h3s btcn t:abbcd as the
honorary ch:i1rm:in for the 22nd Annu3l
~omao fe:i)t & Cll:irity Auction.
The event, .... hich benefits the Youth
Ell}PIO)'ment Service, will be held Tuesda),
Feb. 7 from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at t.hc Com
Mesa Community Center.
"h 's easy .to p3rticipatc becau.sc )'Ou cJn
purchase a ticket, sponsor a table or
conml>utc something to the :auction,"
Bernd said. Over the years~ the
Youth Employment
Service has helped tens
of thousands or Costa
Mesa and Ne"" port
Beach youths find jobs -
usually their first job, a
tough obstacle.
In order to
accommodate Bernd as .Jlll the honorary ch:iirman, lie BDlill the event, which is
------usually held on the
Behind the second Tuesd:iy of
Scenes ,February, a school board
meeting night, was
------·changed to the fo-st
MOnday.
· The Roman Feast is the major
fund-raiser for Y.E.S. cath year. and
upward of 450 people will feast on ~al<td,
pasta and dessert,
• rec .. _e IJ\C~ ;ind safeguarding bUSlnC:SS ~ Former Costa Mesa residents
rescued ~ram flooding in
Northern California.
~-cah before m(}".tng to Gu m~illc in
19 1
:ilrcad)• seen enough. They "'ere just
reall) an.,ious to get out.':
For more infom1:it1on on the Roman
feast, to sponsor a table or make a
donation to the·auctiorf. call Y.E.S.
executive director L)nn Grah:im at
642-0~74.
• l!vod "'"I • ~ Plan •. 1ng for a college education can . \\Jkf 10 th .. d\J\\Ji.,tairs ponion Of
the 1-.'Tle, v.here S nuns' &!-\C.wr-olJ mot~er-in·IJ\\ 11 ~d. w:i!> :ibo~e their
Simms -~ho spoke \i3 telephone
from a motel room in Santa Rosa,
¥bout 17 miles from her home -s:iid
she fears she m:a\ ha\e lost almost
• rcCj1.:m: scr.o ... s 1me!>tmen1 planning. Fin d 0 : oi;t :.w ... 1 >Our es of funds, calculating
C}!;h ;.i.1:J de' eloping an IO\Cstment plan at BY MAllC S. PoS:SEll., SHH \'ann t:.. ... . .
S.iT.ms ~id Jhe1r b:ig> "ere pJckcJ
"I .... the rc!>Cuc. ooat :.srri\ed
C\Crything. • • SPECl'RUM LEADERSHIP AWARl> -
High school kniors from Costa Mes:i and
Newport Beach can apply for.the Ninth
Annual Spectrum Lc:ide~hip Awards.
• Jclf U:.rlo•' > c:'ening lecture on Feb. 2. For Chri!>tic Simms and her famil'" ··Hnve there been looters in the
area?" she "ondered, panicul:lrly
concerned :about the je .... elry case th:ll
"as left bel)ind.
Lc:;irn t.o., to legall~ shelter offshore
from auurn1..: o .. , ad Gardiner at noon on
~Lr~::i i.!
U, .'>Ider wl..C\Jmul:':ling Capital by raising
a · sho.\ L.L t-.J .. using 1m1ghts from t:ilcnt
m:.inJger Kl.1h.e Gr ... nl, presenting
"Helping Yo-.r Child into the H eadlights"
at noon on Apri. ~
For entcrtJ1nmcr.t :ind cultural
cnnc.hmc.r.t. h~Jr the mu)1cal talents of
cl:iss1e<1I guit;mst ~hchacl Olsen and cellist
l'anC) Ta> lor at this Sunday's 3:30 p.m.
musicale :it the Central Library. On Feb.
19. enjof the. b.irber shop·>t)lc harmonic)
and >m<irt cl orcography of the
a" .ird·"' 1ontng S" eet Ade lines, performing
four·pJrt ur.Jccompan1cd tunes. If leisu re
"llh ;.i murc literary bent as your St)le, se t
aside tt.e I hu rsd:iy e\ening for a R~der:.
Theatre 1nterprctzst1on of Henrik Ibsen's
"Hedda Gabler." Return on Feb. 16 to
hear George Oernard Sh.J~ 's "The De' 1rs
D1 .. c1plc ... Glean in)truc11on in the art or
"rning screen plays and other literary
"orks at Corona del Mar Branch Libra'}'!>.
Thur:.d.1} afternoon tea), planned for 3
pm. on l·cb 2 and M:irch 2.
Defore ~ou ,jsit )Our tra\cl agent, head
for ~tanners Un.inch LabrJ ry on
Wedncsda) e\ening fo r a ,jcarious trip to
Pak1st:in led b' \\orld tra,eler Oowrene
Hahn f-urgct )our p:issport, but come for
a 'is11 to Costa Rica on Feb. 15; on March
15, tra,cl lo the "Pyramids of the New
\\'orld ...
-fn udd1t1on to offet ihg outlets tor acto
Nc""port L1br;mcs arc a ~tagc for
ch1klren s slOT) IHf!CS and other programs
designed to 111troduce youngsters to good
l1ter.11urc, 1ni.p1te creati vity and provide
1n:.truc.11on 1n the use of library resources.
Among the newest is "Mariners
~fadne~s." an expansion of the
af1er-.,chool drop-in program at Mariners
Branch l..:ibrary featuring activities ranging
frum sports tournaments to art work~hops
and ><:rccnings of popular videos.
l·or a complete schedule of adult and
children·~ activities, pick up a monthly
CJlcndar of e"'.ents at any Newport Beach
library. Whatever your interests, you're
bound to find something beyond books to
expand your world and enrich )Our life.
the "eek's storms ha' e brought •
double \\hamm).
Simms h3.Sn't h:id time to \\Orf)
about her drenched Co)IJ ~teSJ home
beca\J~e she \\M invol\ed m a
harro,,1ng csc:ipe from the family's
second home in Northern California. :i
house tb:it was partiJll) buried b)
torrential 000<.b.
On TuesdJy morning, Simm~. her
husbJnd and 9-ycar-old son \\ere
greeted by a couple ,,f boaters -a
shcnfrs deput~ and a fore st ranger \\i,O
co:i~tcd up 10 the couple'') Guernc,iJlc:
home.
"The \\Oler ".J~ so high," Samms
recalled in a tclcpl.onc intef\1C\\
Thursda), ""e had to th: lo.. under 10 get
under the po"er lane:) ...
Tha.t ~a~ just before noon and .lft.cr
an attempt to lca'e on their o"n had
been th\\artcd a d;n earlier, said
Simms, "ho lived in the College Park
community in Co'-t<t :.tesa for !.Ome 15
13'1t, the. ""en.n·1 :illu'>'-ed 10 take
a0)1hing _: C\Cn the fomil) rctS h:id to
be left behind .10 fend for thermcl\cs.
' I JJSt hope the .... a1er d.dn't come:
into the main l1\'ing are:i up:.tairs,"
!>imm.s s:iid of the area "here the dog.
c:st aod birds "'ere left "ilh food :and
~ l"tude. ··1 was ~ble to get out "ith m)·
pu~e 1
o~ bo3t, the fJmil) was taken to a
bridge "her'-they \\ere put in a
lour-\\ hcel·dmc truck that eot them
th rough :i Ooodcd mte~ctiOn. ~1mms .nJ-.
:-.c,1. she ~id official) "'htcrall>
lo-dcd us into an army transport truck"
that dro'e them to :i u11ht) station
''h1:re the) board!!d :i l:irge military
tran'>port helicopter.
··11 •us an incredible flight," Simms
rcc<11led. "Looking down on the Russian
R1\er •. -I \\:l) coing. There "ere very
fc:w people "'ho took the effo1t to look
:u the water. 1 thin k c\et)body had
The occupational therapist, "ho
"oru out of her home ::and at an area
school, said she's at lc:ist temporarily
out of a job because or the floods,
"hich have cl~d tbe schools as welt.
But she rcaliz.cs it could ba\'e been
"or~. The family plans to move out or
Guernevillc once they're able to
cle:inup the damage. The family still ·
ha::. its C<bta Mesa home, "hicb they've
rented out for the p~l four )tars, but
Simms said the family .... m probably
rcm:iin in Nonhcrn California.
"My thoughts ha-.e been on our own ..
suf\ hat and sa(ety,'' she said. "\Ve
pretty much decided th:it "hen "ego
back, things arc going in packing box.cs.
I'm not going through another flood.
"It's been an adventure I don't want
10 repeat. And I don't want to do the
cleanup. It nooded overnight, but it will
t:ike \\eeks to clean up."
City worker recovering lrom iljuries sailla'ed ii .-m
BY ~Lu.c S. PosslR,
STM F \'.ama
Les Wh itehc.id h<.1'> a
broken jaw, a numb fact: and
Tihrobb1ng he:id to help - -
remember the ~torm.
The 48-~ear-old J'e,,port
Dcach emplo)ec \\:J\ nearl)
killed \\hen the br:rnch o.La
eucalyptus tree snapped back
at him while he \\Orked 10
cut it a\\ay after it brolc in
he.1\)' rain IJst 1 hund:.t).
"I \\a~ culling the bru\ih
off and all of a '>Udc.lcn I got
hat," he said. "And then I
~cnt out."
t"o head surgeries,
Whitehead returned to hi
Rl\erMde hams.: on ~1ondJ\
Jfternoon, \\here he's taken
-ro a steady dice of sooip
operas to help pa!>S the time.
"The "a) I underst:ind it,
they did n't lo..no'' if I was
going to 11\e or die," said
Whitehead, u 21-)car city
employee. "That's the "ay I
heard it after the operation."
Whitehead's "1Cc ~as at
Hoag before he was \\heeled
into ~urgcl), but he was ~o
daz.ed he didn't know it at
the time.
··1 can't belie'e how many And then there arc the
bos:.e came by," \\ hitehcad questions that flood his
said. "E,en th-e city manager mind.
(Kc\'in Murph)} came up "I don't know if· I'll be
aud SJ\Y 111e. It wnrntce~o~r---ab~l~e tO gol>tick to my 1o-, ~-
him 10 do that."' he said. "Am I going to be
A \\CClo.. J:uer, Whitehead hun the rest of my lif c? Am
said he's still sm:irting from I going to h:rve a problem
the accident. with my equilibrium? I guess
"rm just numb," he ~aid. I just have to wait."
"The "hole right side of my In the meantime,
face is like I've been to the Whitehead said he's having
dentbt. The doctor said: sleepless nights because of ·You may ha .. e wme nerve damage where you mioht be the pain. But he's also found
o some comfon in the dog.s he
numb the rest of your life.' raises 10 show.
"Right now my cheek is .. 1 got this one f emalc
re:illy sore. Achy. lt ju~t that's in the house," he said \\On't go away. It's not
. excruciating pain. lt's just of the 135-pound canine
there all the time." named Summer. "I've got to
He's on seizure , watch her or she's likely to
The program is sponsored by The ll"\ine
Co. for hig)Wthool ~eniors from the
communities in which it docs b~ine~s.
according to Carol Hottman. an ll"\<inc Co.
vice president.
A boy and a girl from each of 10 high
schools "ill be selected to recch-c a S 1,000
scholarship from the company. From that
pool of 20 students, eight semifinalists "111
be chosen in a competitive interview
process and wilt receive 4Ul additional
Sl,000. Four finalists from that pool \\,ill
be eligible for an additional SJ,000
scholarship.
The 20 Spectrum Leaders chosen "'ill
p3rticip:ite in o series of events, including
a group of leadership exercises -
emphasizing this )Car's theme -Vision:.
of the future ... Clas~rooms of
Tomorrow.
The aw:irds will be presented at an
impressi\C Honors Court on May 15,
atteaded by teacher, school board
members, superintendents, city council
members, community le:iders and fnmil)
members.
Applic:itions for the Spectrum
Lcadcnhip Awards arc available from
high school counseling offices.
__, 0
PROMOTING NEWPORT: Knthy
~J&cn. corporate sales manage.r.!.or the_
Newport Beach Conrer~ncc & Visitor:.
Bureau, and Mnrtbn Klei ne, the bureau's
n:itional sales manager, are off promo11ng
Newport Deach as the place to visit this
summer.
Austge n will be attending a Meeting-
Planners lntern3tional conference in San
Francisco ~ hilc Kleine is going to Atlant:l
for a meeting of the Professional
Convention Management Association and
Chic:igo for a De.stin:ition Showcase. '
Their viSits in January are imporrnnt to
th~ loc~I. economy in 1995 as th~ help to
bnng v1s11ors to hotel rooms and
rest:iurants and provide sales for local
retailers.
L:lOonna Kienitz is th~ Newport Beach
; Jibr:Jritl/1. "Cllcck It Out" is written by tilt
,. st:J ff ol tlte NeKport /Jcach l'ublic Libr:uy.
: Tiiis ucek's column is by Melissa AdDms.
At the time, Wh itehead
wa!> in the budc.t or a er.inc
that was ~ome 40 feet in the
air. When he re covered from
the initial ~tang, he brought
the basket do" n.
After a fhc-day I loag
Hospital ~t:iy 1h:i1 included
Iii~ supcf\isor Marcelino
Lomeli w:is there too. and
refused to k ave until the
doctor c:im out of surgery
and deli-.ered a ~talus report.
That was around JO p m.,
roughly 8 hours after' the
accident.
medication, because head hurt me. If I move an inch
injurie often prOduce such a she wants to move two
reaction, and under orders inche~. She's just that loving
not to drh•e. or a dog ...
Visitors 10 Newport Beach mean an
impr~ving economy and more sales tax for
the city coffers, for which we all benefit.
Jim dt Boom is tht OMnrr of Tbt E•·cnt omce, a school trustee and a communil)•
activist. Ills column appears t ••cry Friday.
• • • • • • •
• '
·-~
....... 11
1,11_.t It Joli•-· P11b1M<.t
\\ iPla111 l.obckll, Ed1IOJ
Si"'t Mlrblt, MJ1natins Ed1IC)f
lrlt Vokoi, C111 Cd11or
1\l•l'f A11111 .. Ptioto Ed·141f
... fr111li. C'llcvb11011 Muuicr
lltalt Kai&JIC. P1od11C11011 t.ta~
Mk91af f'lnd1cr, IMplay Manater
J11d1 Ocul•a. Cla..Sficd M•lllJl(t
, ...... ""'' ~rolk1
RIA.DIU NOTU911
M2· .... ('
Y0111 comm.:nts llbout tho D11ly
P1loc or-. llpl wtll M reconlc4
Md ~" d1r~aly IO Ed"°' Wit-
1~111 LoWclL The unw U.hollr
.,..e'l'I"' Kt\ IM1 bt YJo;d IO
rca>fd kucn 111 IM cd11or 011 any
loptc
• ,
MAILING ADDltUS lui1~ .. 1oon1. cd1t1Xul m;att.r ur aJ.
•c111i.:m.hl\ licrc•n tal\ t>t ref"~
Our adJrcu as )JO W O..)' S1, d11t..:d •1lhoul •ti11cn ~rm1uion
C:O.t.a Moa, CA 92627. of COJ!)ril;tit °" n.:r
TO MAK.I A CO ltltlCTION HOW TO HACH UI
Jr ., d)t Mut't pot,<y io P't""ptly CimdatJon contt'I al trmn uf wb.<1n.:~
t'lc.1~ c.i.U S•O-I ll4. ~u. 230 (TbeTimts
Tiunk ~'OU Orance County)
(800) 252-9141 m
The Ncwpon Oc~1 Meta
Advtrtiilnc
OatlJ Ptloc (USJ'So14'400) is O:issified 642-567ti
pillbla.Md M-say ""°"Ill Sa111r· Oispl:ay 642-4321 .
di)'. 111 Ncwpon Dcac:ll MCI Coi41 £ditorlal· M$. wblcT1pcK>M arc Oflly watl· News .S40·1224 tblc bf wbtctlbillt '° n. ,,_
Ortnte Cllllnry~) 2S2·914l. la Sports 642-4330
tlCll' ~ tofc-pon lndt News, Sporti F:uc 646-4170 Md C.0U. t.k ... Mila~ IO ,.. Oai't:iloc • .,. lie W111abki Mala Omce
llf -11 M.sa per lllOlllll. Sec· Du,incsa Office 642-4321
CMd dllM ..... ptid .. eo... Busincsa fu 631·5902 Meta, CA. (Prien ....... •p-
~ ..... -lot.a tun.) =~lll•Ull"T MASTER: Scltd addrat
Cht,..Ct IO n. Nc-pon Bttdlf
0-1 Meea Dally Ptloc. P 0 . las ~a T11na Mt~ c:.imranr
1560. COii.i MOM. CA 92616 .. ,OalobF, . '"' OlpyfitJ'I! "'° _.. tl(lflct., I • rm..tme an.I n 0 ..
• ·~
WIATHER IUR•RIPORT POLICI FILU
T ... lltATUltU today witb )Omt .,... ......... , conaMUA
Newport Buch morning fog but no l .........
6 2/S2 rain in lht ......... ,...., 1100 bl~k ot Patalarlno Ayenue: A $2,300 dirt
b l hen forecut. motorbike ~ reported stolen from a 10.r~c that hod
It's ailed the been left unlocked,
61/52 Pine~le Connection, JlOO ~ of Bear Strttt: Some I l rcplin jerseys of Costa Mesa TIDIS the ifornia 64/49 TODAY phenomenon that occurs
profcSStOn:il and collcac basketball, football and
Coron.t del Moar First low baseball teams were reported stolen from a closed when the cold northern store lnlidc Crysto.I Court. The itenu were wonh '
6l/S2 12:24 ~m ...... : .. 2.2 branch ol the jet 1tnMn $387.89.
First high dropt down and mlus
SUltf fOltlCAIT 6:0 •.m ........... s.s with the WMm
LOCATION SIU Stc.ond low JUbtropial Jet stre.m to lllWPOllT UACM
2:00 p.m .......... -0.l create 1tron1 storms 1110 Weck el Comla: A bracelet and a ttllular phone Wtdge 3-4 w Second hl&h with huwy rlin and were rcponcd stolen from a car that had a window
Ntw'f>0'1 •)-4 w 8:24 p.m ........... l .S stroneoathoNWch. . popped ouL Tbc lou was catlrnatc:d at $400 •
11.ckl.s l-4 w SATURDAY ~ "-t't brouJht 11 .. W.. ti....,_. C..1er O..,~ Some cut the t~
li~r jttty l-4 w Flnt low of a COIWCftllle Vol~ sedan to act ln and llCO a
CcM . >·3 w 1:02 a.m .....•..... 2.1 inrMtaM~ol car phw. ~k and an -.mbrclla, a S210 estimated high surf, bUt tMnp first high lou.
aoanN• should be smaller and 7:16 p.m ........... J.7 cleaner ct3, the ...... ad. Soul~~ windi. Second low For turf ,.cwt• n•OfNINY
IS lnott with Mo 2:28 p.m .......... -0.4 And~(900) • ~ iMoccnt ealvitics INiy be crimes in foot wind WIWH, 8 S«CIM ~&h 976-SUll. cal cottt rooe southwnt 8:52 p.m .......... J.6 $1.SO plut My po1elble
~& a~ nc~. be oblC~ Ud watch
'""· r.ar11y doudy Wattr temp.: 56 loll • orun.....a~.
• -(\')tlncsy Ncwpon 8ctth polite .
~ . ,, • • r
..
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot
.......... ,
Ncwpon·M~a high schools usu-
~~Y hold a celebration :sficr gradu-
otton.
"This is a gift the parents are
l>uppo~ed to g"e to the kids :ind l
don't know why this hal>n't gQtten
off the ground," iaid PTA presi-
dent Kathy Koenig, who helped
plan the event lalll year for her
son's class.
Nawport collllllltbla vows to nna
ways to continue water monnorlng
"I'm concerned that it won't
happen._ After graduation, kids go
10 parties and maybe drink and
then get on the road, which isn't
safe. ~is really is a nice op·
portunity for the senior kids 10 be
together for the last time until
their reunion. It's really fun."
. The on~ampus event is de-
s1gne~ to be a safe, all-night cel-
ebra11on, Horcharik said. The
evening is usually coordinated by a
team of parent volunteers who ·
3lso raise funds.
A~ross the dist.Tiet, Grad Night
par11es over the years have ranged
from the sublime to the subdued.
Parents have turned high school
gymnasiums into everything from
Hollywood mo,ic sets to Missis-
sippi riverboats and Drazilian rain
forests.
lliere is typically music and
dancing, food :ind prizes, games
and surprises. Budgets for these
extravaganzas generally begin
around $15,000, which is about
how much last year's Costa Mesa
party cost to prepare.
Last year's event included a
h~pnotist, carnival games, dancing
to music from a disc jockey, ·a min·
•. iature golf course and plenty of
food .
Planning usually begins a year in
advance, and at this point, time is
running out, Koenig said. A com-
mittee o( parents from the current
junior class has already starte'd
planning for 19%, she added.
Seqior Donald Bendz hopes
some parents step in to help. The
sets arc there, Dcndz said, and
some money is also available, ac-
cording to PTA members. The
project just needs leadership.
A meeting of the senior class
"ill be held today to encourage
students to ask their parents to
participate, Dcndz added.
Costa Mesa High School grads
and anyone else interested in
helping should call the school at
556-3344.
Men's Pants
Ladles' Slacks
• Worried about county
cuts to water testing
program in Newport Bay
and the ocean, the Harbor
Quality Affairs Committee
brainstorms lobbying and
fund-raising ideas. /
v BY EVAN H EN£&.SON, STA.Ff WUllll
NEWPORT BEACH -Con-
cerned members of the city's
Harbor Quality Affairs Com-
!11ittec will work. ~w~rd. restor·
mg county water m'bnitonng ser-
vice -or will find a way to do
the work themselves.
After learning that budget re·
dustions would eliminate county-
rund.ed water sampling an~ test·
mg m local bay and ocean wa-
ters, members of the citizens'
advisory committee gathered for
their regular monthly meeting ·
Thursday afternoon to share
ideas and concerns. The situa-
tion, they acknowledged, looks ·
particularly bleak.
For years, county environmen·
tal health specialist Monica
Mazur has regularly tested wa-
ters from Seal Deach to San
Clemente and in the county's
-2
OUR MEALS ARE A
_TRIP TO MEXICO
COCKTAILS· FOODTOa:J
PHONE AHEAD
196 EAST 17TH ST .• • COSTA MESA
-
Ladles'
Blouses
******* .
186 East 16th St.• Costa Mesa• 548-4381
three harbors. Between Mazur'$
work and the committee's effort
to keep Newport Dench bay and
ocean waters safe for swimmers
the city's waters have recorded
the lowest bacteria counts in 16
years, according to Jack Skinner,
a member of Stop Polluting Our
Newport.
Dut the county's budget cuts
-designed to ~enerate rev·
cnues lost through: the collapse
of the county treasurer's invest-
ment fund -has eliminated
both Mnzur's position as well as
the county's entire ocean water
sports program. Mazur, who will
move \O a different department,
has conducted her last water test
in Newport Day.
Harbor Quality committee
members say that without the
tests, there will be no way to
monitor whether their efforts
arc having any effect. .
The committee will lobby the
CQunty to reinstate the program.
Should their efforts prove unsuc·
cessful, the committee will at-
tempt to raise the funds nec-
essary to reinstate regular test-
ing. .
Funding is the key issue. At
Thursday's meeting, Mazur esti·
m:ited th:it regular county-wide
water-testing efforts cost be-.
l Antique e!r Fine Fumitu
l Fine Porrelain
l Colkctibles
l Paintings by listed artist
l Lamps -Deco 17iffeny
l Clocks -Wall I Mantk
FBATfRING:
Mai1Dg1tny & Art D«o
Fumttu" from thr 20i -30i -40i •
Offen:
Fumiturr Refinishing & Upholstrry
qo Do~,..,.._... • -.. Cot!. ~ ............... eo..ia-w.loomecl
W.IHiy ..... ......
Please .Join Us
For Dinner
l\\.een $250,000 and $300,000 an-
nually. ~verl by limiting te iiting
to Newport Deach waters, the
committee would still need to
come up \\ith an estimated
$55,000 to $60,000 per ycnr.
ln the weeks before th eir nc>.t
meeting, the committee "ill con-
tact Jaborato~ies, compile the
necessary testing co~t data and
will considet numerous fund·
raising possibilities. In a city •
whose image relies on the clean-
liness of its waters, \Oluntcerl>
will not be difficult to find , com·
mittee members claimed.
The committee will also ask
the city of Newport Deach to
contribute funds or resources to
the testing effort.
Councilwoman Jean Watt, the
committee's chairwoman, noted
that the committee could face a
difficult tifsk. Raising $60,000 for
a one-time effort would be an
accomplishme.nt. Attempts to
raise the same amount every
year could prove impos~ible.
Committee member Nancy
Skinner suggested that every rcs-
ipent of Newport De nch be
asked to contribute SI per )ear
for water monitoring and testi ng.
"1 don't know how fc:isible it is
or how we would work it," Skin-
ner said.
Lunch or
Weekend ll:runeh "Saoatino~s-was originally Toun<fecr---
in Chicago after our father brought the family recipe for our famous Italian Sausage from Palermo. Italy In the 1930's. Today, his sons & grandson continue to provide a complete menu of authentic rtallan food prepared fresh dally and seasoned with 5 generations of family pride. Thank you, · The Sabatino Family
CATERINO SPECIALl8TS .........,,.,. ... c.... ...... Clwfilfw .... ,..,, ,.,,,. ., ,,, ..... ,..... .. ,,
For Reservations C.-
723-0821
251 Shi W Beach
Microwave• Electro Gu n
After 12 yean of continuous use, and treatment of over
50,<XX> government buildinp, schools, apartments and
homes, the FJcctro gun and MicroWavc systems have
proven to be o~e of the most environmentally sound "
methods of drywood termite control available today.
A Ylable alternative td tent fumigations, I.cola Sen1ca
and the FJectro gun and MiaoWavc system together make
a very attractive package, offering its customers security
and peace of mind, knowing that
.. THERE'S NO NEED FOR:
• Poison gas in your home • Lan=-,/: damage ·
• Removal of food or plants • Ove • t lodging for you
• Costly roof tile damage and your pets
Treatment includes a written two-year warranty AND is renewable yearly for the
life of the property! Now doesn't that make more seme?
CUL NOW IOR A nEE LlMl7'ED INSPECTION/
ECOLA SERVICES
O~GE COUN'IY
1-800-552-8107 •
' '
.
Friday, January 13, 1995 S
STORM surfers from 4 th Street to the
Santa Ana River Jelly, due to high
fre• P•i• 1 bacleria lc,eh C"Jused by large nmounts ol debris-filled runoff
moval, repairs and other iilorm-Crom mers :snd creeks. ,
related costs. •Only one loc:il pubhc street
A Joint hotline bct"een the remained clo .. ed, nccord1ng to of·
Federal EmcrgenC) ManJgemc nt ficial • Gbler A"cnue in CoiitJ
Agency and the state Office of Mc ;i '"as clo!>ed at Washington
Emergency Services can be AH.'T\Ue Thur~day alternoon be·
reached at (1)00) 462·9029. 1 he cause ol pour drainage.
hearing impaired can call ( 00) • Ne\\pon city ofriciab \\Crc
462· 7585. puuled by 1 hun.day morning tides
Those whose JObs or sd f · that rose almost a foot higher lh:in
employment hJve been interrupted they "ere supposed to. High tides
by the storms :ilso can get IC'llcrJI arc a cunce1 n in the tlood·prone
hl!lp. lnform:\tion abou t the Ois:is-D;.ilboa area. J\iederlHlul> said.
ter Unemploy ment As~is1 .:1nce pro· Thb. \\Cd.cm.l's tide\ likely won't
gram can be obtained by ca lling be high cnougti to compound rain
those same phone numberl>, or at floods, an otl1cial :11 the Orange
state Employment Dc,clopment Count> Sheriffs Department Har·
Department offices. bor P.itrol s:ud.
•The city orNe"port Uc;.ich's •Sandbag CcntrJI: Some 15,000
storm tab is pegged Jt SS0,000, the sandbags h~ve been filled and d1s-
bulk goi ng to O\ertime pay lor po· tnbutcd 111 the past ''eek in Ne".
lice, rire and city rep.:iir crc\\s, s:iid port Dcach :ilone.
General Services Director Da'e Today's fon~cast calh for a 20'1
Niederhaus. chhnce of shO\\ers this morning
City offici:ils are ket:ping a clo!>c \\ith high \Cmperatureii in the mid·
eye on the cleanup rigures, angling 60l> S:uurd:iy, the rain is sl:ited to
to get state and federal reimburse-return, "it h continued precipita·
me nt. tion through Sunday, Uarufalld1
•The beach in Ne\\ port re-i.aid. There's also a chance of
mains closed to S\\immers and sho\\ers cont inuing into Mond ay.
--1
• Reol £stole Tille, Escrow
and Soles Problems
• toncftoid.Tenoi\TOispu s • OUl-Trof& oefeiUe
_ and Evichoo~ . • Civ11 11tigotion
• Wi1s • Collections • Divorce • Adophons • lemon AiJos • Susine» lrtigalion • Mi~ry low
MAURICI • WfttGHT AlTOll..W &~R 1AW
V90Harhor11-11 .• llOI • .. ID• CGllD M9eo, Co 92628
4
EL "ORO I ... , "" ., ,. I I ~'.~ I' I.All fOll!ST • ·u !111 nD1
El J!S..:! IJ.
... Ml D'iiMili"ck·13)
l.Q.INI LHOms If tMl FALL (Ill
S'AOOLEBACK I '•'' "" •••••• , 't ··-·i 14 ,m •oius· • ··1 st·.,,.
OCEAJI nUtrH 7 "-' ._.. • :-.. ·-rwr" ..-"Al ""fl • . , ' u:i • u
RANCHO NIGUEL ~·" ., "~ ....... -"~' ~-.. ,, ,,. '"'
LHlml W r. Fill (II) ... :.nr1 -· .._... (PS-1S) '-Ln/ -~(Pl)
CERRITOS 10 . ..... .~ ... ~ . 'l• ~
. D IC. ;· . & Sl' al,_
•
• "
4 Friday, January 13, 1995
,,...._..,
T hey'll be telling the story or
a dr:im:itic restructuring in
1he \\3Y that a C:aliromi:i
county Jocs business. For starting
th1) month, the long road to recov-
ery begins.
The p3th to our recovery actu-
0ally started in the state Lcgisl:l-
ture. When legislators began a
process or "realigning" specific
health :ind social services, they al-
lo"ed counties greater latitude to
plan and implement programs bet-
ter suited for their own counties
than for the state as a whole. It
\\,IS the beginning or "local COn·
trob" for counties -an idea that
h.1s cau&ht on anew in Washington
und Sacramento with the Republi·
can Re,olution as Congress and
the Legislature realize that some
-.e n ices arc provided bette r and
more efficiently at the local level
than m the capitols.
It mJl-es sense -"hv should
st.Ill!\\ 1de standards that attempt
h.> find a common link bet\\een
Shasta County and Orange Count}
be our limitations? Shouldn't \\e
be able to set our own goals, keep
our tax money at home, and meet
our own population's demands?
And "hat about priv:itization -
shouldn't counties have all the op-
1ions"l11 their disposal before de-
ciJ ing ''ho, what :ind when to pro·
,iJc a program?
Realignment and local control
l:Jllle about in part because policy
m::it-crs recognized a strong trend
111 go\crnme11t -that counties
hJ\C undergone dramatic change
since the days of the incorporated
'i::ind barons" that guided the <fe-
'dopment of South County and
the l nbnd Empire. No lo nger an:
l.1nJ U!>e decisions the hot topics
un buJrd agendas ~ instead, we
1\\.>\\ look at \\::t)S to improve ser-
RUFFELL's·
UPHOLSTERY llC • .... , ..... c...-..1 tm Ullll llft .• ctSTA •sa-su.ma
E.STAB. 1977
vice delivery and gel a bcner bang
for our buc~ Crom Sheriffs patrols
to tuberculosis testing.
I sec three challenges ahead for
the bo:lrd of this new county with
new priorities as it prepares for a
me:>ner, leaner future -they in-
volve a short-term crhis, a mid·
term problem and a long-term
project. As I describe 311 lhrec, it's
important again to note that ad-
dressing the crisis is of far less im-
port:>nce than working on the
problem and the project.
•Today through June. The loss
of the interest income that w:>s
supposed to come from the pool .
will leave us with a drama.tic bud-
get shortfall -a real "crisis" -
between now and the e nd o( the
current fiscal year. We'll need to
meet that deficit through asset
sales, more cuts and sonte relief
from the matching fund) that
we're required to put up to receive
cert:iin state and federal al·
locations for health :ind social ser·
'ices. They will be painful, :ibrupt
and contro\ersial -like the
"quick fo'es" to any crisi .
• Fiscal Year 1995-96. As we
prep:ire for and discuss the "prob·
lem" -the cop1ing budget ye:ir -
I've called for ~dependent man·
agement au$iits or each and every
county department. The audit
teams will need to go over budget
requests with a fine-toothed comb
-something r3rely attempted at
the county before. h just seems
that if we were able to cut $41
million in just two or three short
weeks, we should be able to-track
down two or three times :is many
r~ductions bet\\een now and July.
Car allo'' ances, travel budgets and
other perks will be at the top of
ihe -reduction list, We'"e got to
focus, too, on the economic de-
''clopmcnt that will help us "gr9w"
our '"ay out of the shortfall -
\\ith less regulation from Wash·
ington and Sacramento, OrJngc
NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT'S BEST KEPT SECRET
PRIME RIB DINNER EVERY TUESDAY '6'~
AND GREAT FOOD EVERY DAY
MON. • FRI.: From 4 p.m.
SAT. • SUN.: Bruhch from 9, Dinner .U 5
675-2340
30 I I Newport Blvd. -On the Penlnsum. .
Lingerie • Loungewear • Gifts
January Clearance
Begins Thursday, January 12
SO tO 7S% Ofl
Savings on selected
merchandise throughout the store!
IN WESTCLIFF COURT
631 -7399
1719 Westcliff Dr.• Newport Beach ~ Monday -Saturday 10:00-6:00 ~
DRAINAGE PROBLEMS?
FIREPLACE LEAKS?
.PLANTERS OVERFLOWING? ·
CALL THE DRAINAGE ANO FIRE PLACE SPECIALISTS
JOHN GUSSELL
MASONRY COMPANY
(714) 434-7744
Ltc.48M4a MIKE FARNSWORTH
LANDSCAPE COMPANY
(714) !54&!5132
Ltc ... lt070
County should be at lbc forefront
of new economic~
• Oarter ~......._Be
cause anr propo.cd county chaner
~ill rcquare majority ¥Oter ap-•
proval the aooncst that we could
prepare and submit a c:hancr {the
"project") for condderation will
be March 1996. This timcline is
vital because a charter will be the
ker. to an important reform -the
ability to privatize many county
services. We're prohibited from
doing so now -a portion of state
law (which l 'vc tried to repeal re-
peatedly) keeps "general law"
counties like Orange from con-
tracting out. It's a silly dis1inction
that allows Los Angeles County all
1he flexibility it needs to deliver
services -but locks Orange
County out or the privatization
game. I'll co-chair the charter ef-
fort with Supervisor Jim Silva in
an attcmpl 10 bring in broad-based
community support for a thorough
re-examination of county govern-
ment.
As we pass (slowly) Crom the
crisis mode into problem solving.
l 'm confident that we can bring
about a new county with a new
structure. We'll need the support,
advice and patience or every coun-
ty resident as the transition occurs
-because things will not be done
as we've come to expec1. But ·
that's as it should be, for the
metamorphosis of the county -·
the one that began in the days of
the land barons and planners .:.. is
just now hitting its stride.
Supcn ·isor Mari:Jn Bergeson, :1
fom1er state Senator, took office
on J:in. 1. She ~presents Nettporl
Bc:Jcb, ltvinc, lustin and portion
or.South CeOUJJty.
..........
Waymar Toya after her children,
Wayne and Many.
h wu S~ter who created the
Binhday Book. a large bound vol·
ume in which local children re·
corded their namcJ and birthdatcs.
On the day of his or her birthday,
the child could come in and re-
ceive 3 SI toy or a SJ discount to-
ward a gift.
"We still have· that book,'' Mc-
Ncilly said. "People who are 30
and 40 years old come into the
shop and say, 'I was in th:lt book.'
And they slill arc."
The Pie™>I family ran the store
in the 1960s, \\ith McNeilly's
mother-in-law, Billie McNeilly,
acting as manager. Billie McNeilly
bought the store in 1972 and sold
it to her son Patrick and daughter-
in-law Candi in 1987.
While .the Toy Shop never tried
to compete with Toys R Us or
Kmart, the store's emphasis has
INDICT
frem P.9• 1
lice.
Relatives discovered Evans'
body after her employer, Newport
Pacific Funding Corp. of Newport
Beach, called out or concern when
she didn't show up for work.
Sherifrs _investigators said Evans
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aiways been Krvicc, accordina to
owners and aas1omcrs. Toy Shop
cmpk>yees wall sift wrap, deliver
and even assemble toys.
Many hu been the lime when a
regular customer would call "i_th a
special order -"I need a bart~
day gin for an 11-ycar-<)fd. Hav~ 1t
ready in 20 minutes." -leaving
the selection to 1he store employ·
ees.
Olildrcn of managers would
work in the store and longtime
cus1omers would usher in new
generations or toy-hunters.
"We :ilways had 4 good reputa·
tion," said Dorothy Sylvester. "I
used to drive to Santa A na to pick
up things for customers. People
knew that the youngsters wo uld be
taken care of and not taken :id-
vantage of."
Children could spend their al·
lowances :it the candy rack or
penny counter containing items
priced between 3 and 50 cents.
Under the McNeilly reign, the
Birthd:iy Book gifts increa~d lo
hired Bennett to install linoleum
in her L:igun:l Hills townhouse
where she had lived for six weeks.
Bennett had worked as an inde·
pendent contractor for Mike's
Carpet Emporium in Costa Mesa,
where owner Lenny Peterson said
he fired Bennett around the time
$2 in value. "We were an old-fashioned toy
store. Thal wu the draw," Candi
McNeilly said. ""ThCre are so m3ny
specialty ~tores i!' F~ion Island.
But there s noth1na hke this-any-
more."
McNeilly will se.....c as unofficial
''toy consultant" to Nauman :it the
new store, but will devote 1hc bulk
of her time to other efforts. Regu.
lllr cu~lomers have promiied to
make the move,. store employees
said.
The Toy Shop leaves behind a
legacy of excellent service and
friendly and he I pf ul employees ...
:is well as 1he occasional unique
memory.
"I remember once spmebod)
called me at 1 a.m. and said, 'Yo'u
belier com~ down here quid.,' ~·
S}lveloter s:i1d.
"Some drunk driver cut the cor·
ner and just missed the Albert·
son's window. He plowed right
through the side o f the Toy Store
window. Everything was a 1errible
mess inside."
or the murder for refusing to com-
plete a job.
Authorities said Bennett h3d
finished work for Evans about a
week before her body was found.
Martini said investigators believe
she died the night of Oc1. 13 or
early Oct. 14.
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•
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EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE
I
.
We at Bank· of America are committed to helping our customers hlthard by the floods .
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We'll also offer increased credit limits to those with BankAmericard VISA' and MasterCard 11 credit cards.
and 9elay upcoming monthly payments: If you have an existing line of credit we ~11 see about raising it.
Help for Depositors
We '11 w~ive·all bank early withdra~J p~naJties on time depo its and
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Gl llM~ l~n\ Qf ._~ '<T ·~~ ~ H>4<: malt
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·-
• Friday. January 13. 1995
".TS '
SPORTS EDITOR ROGER CARLSON. 642-4330, ext. 223
Newport girls turn n iln 11rly, d n·a II-DUI IOr CdM
~ Verhulst comes through
with 20 points as Sailors
ro ll to Sea View victory.
Bv RlctlAllD DUNN, Sl'Oan \\'a.nu
CORONA DEL MAR
-Ag3inst Coron:i del ~far
High's tri:inglc-:ind-two de· •
fense, l\c\\pOrt H:irbor
sophomore gu:ird Andree '-s--a.~v
Verhulst w~b lefl alone to
freel:lnce Thur..d:iy night an the S:iilors'
59-34 \lCtory O\er the host Se:i Kings in
Se:i View League girll> b:bketball :iction.
' In a g:imc r\e"pon Harbor (13·1. 3-0 in
league) tr:iilcd on!) once, \\ith 2:14 ex-
pired, \'crhubt dro\·e in, :iround aod
Ray George
succumbs to
stroke at 78. .
through 3 CdM defense that concentrated
on blocking out 5-fooH 1 Mclis.s3 Schut;.
as \\ell as 5-10 post players Tin3 Bowm3n,
Jenny Jennings :ind Dianne Pulido.
"With th3t kind of defe~se. )'OU'rc at-
w3ys going to have one player open, and
(Verhuls\) was usu31ly open," Newport
Harbor Co3ch Shannon Jpkosky s:iid. "We
told our pl3)'Crs whocver's open to take
the shot. Tonight we had gre3t shots by
the "hole te:im, in everybody's range."
Verhulst finished with 20 points. seven
assists and five steals, drained a pair of
three-pointers in the first quancr when
> the Sailors built a 15-10 edge, and netted
8 of 10 from the field. both misses coming
from beyond the three-point spectrum.
"The plan was to let her score tonight
and stop the big girls. all those volleyball
players," CdM Cooch Garth Aint said.
"With Pulido (averaging nearly 11 points
per game) and Schuu (seven ppg), we
wanted to cut their scoring average in
half, and take those two or three shots
away."
Th:u mission was accomplished. But Pu-
lido, Bowman, Schutt and Jennings com-
bined for 20 rebounds and three blocked
shots.
Corona del Mar (8-10, 1-2), which trav-
els to Irvine Tuesday, one of three impor·
t,ant road games Flint is pointing to in
... va.wu .... · GlrtaS......._a
~ ......
W L W L
llawpett 3 O 13 1 WoocllltdQt 3 0 16 1
c.I 1 2 • 10
EIToro 1 2 6 10
Sanla MQdl ' 2 5 6 !Nini o 3 a a n.............,·.~
... .,.-' S9, c.m 34
Woocb1dge 94. IMnl 26 El Toro If: S.. ~ 54 ,.... ........... 7:301
C.•Mlt s. ..,... ....... rt
El Toro M Woodbridge
terms of playoff
ramifications,
led 3-2 in the
first quart~r.
when junior
guard M~~sa
Ford (11 pQints)
scored and lsank
a frc.c throw
\\ith 5:46 on the
clock.
Newport Har·
bor's Mandy
Clayton (10
points) sank
two early jump·
ers, the latter giving the Sailors a 4-3 lead,
an advantage they "''Ould never give up.
The Tars, who outscored the Sea Kings
---. Corona del Mar resident was one Of
1
USC 's key figures for nearly five decades.
B Y ROGtc.k CAJU..SOS, ~N.un J;.om,a
CORONA DEL MAR -· Ray George, one of the
major playe~ behind the scenes during many of the
glory years of USC football and a longtime resident of
Coron:i dcl Mar. died Thursday morning :is a result of a
stroke suffered on NC\\ Year's Eve.
He lc:i\'eS '"ifc Martha. sons Jack nnd Greg and five
grandchildren.
Also left ;ire :i \\ealth of college football companions
'"ho were with him from the days of Loyola H igh in Los
Angeles, three years :is an offensive t:ickle under:
How:ird Jones of USC ( 1936-39), brief stints with the
Detroit Lions :ind Phil:idclphia E:igles, as \\ell :is some
simult:ineous football playing days with St. Mary's Pre-
Flight and the Hollywood Dears.
He coached under Jeff Cravath (1946), Jess Hill and
Don Cl:irk at USC, then "1'es one of two holdover as-
sistants when John McKay entered the scene in ·1960.
For three )ears he was a he:id coach a t Texas A&M
(1951-53), highlighted by his te:im's initial game in 1951,
a 21--14 victory over UCLA.
Probably the most memorable. season of all of hiS
coaching d:l)S was 1962 as a defensive coach with New-
port Beach's Mike G iddings \\hen the Trojans, 11nder
McK:iy, went l 1-0, ''ere n:itional champions and c:ippcd
it with the time-honored 42-37 victory over Wisconsin in
the Rose Oowl.
It was at th:it same :.1te "hen as a senio r he and the
Troj:ins defeated previously unscoted-upon Duke, 7-3,
"ith the Doyle Nave-Al Krueger p:issirtg combin:ition in
the last necting moments of the 1939 Rose Bowl Game.
"\Ve was a gentle bear of a man" said Giddings on
Thursd:iy. "He was a mentor and a friend to me, and to
a lot of other people, too."
He continued his coacfiing d:iys into the first John
Robinson era :it USC, eventually became an assistant
athletic director at USC and retired in 19'85.
1t was in the late '60s th:it he took a five-year sabbati·
cal from coaching, for the mo~t part that he would not
miss his son's (Greg) playing <lay:. at Corona del Mar
High School.
l\lr. George, who would have been 79 ne>.1 week, was
a lieutenant commander in the N:ivy during World War
I I.
Ray George was one of the key figures at USC tor
vitually 35 years. as a player. coach and
administrator during the course of the late '30s to
the mid-80s. Above he's seen with within the staff of
the 1962 national champion Trojans (back row. from
left, Mike Giddings, Marv Goux, Dave Levy. Joe
Margucci, second row, Mel Hein, Ray George and
Charlie Hall, and John McKay. "t the right as an
assistant coach with the-Trojans in the late '40s.
Below. with Giddings and McKay on the USC
sideline.
~s-are scheeu led .fuF Oltf-l:.edy Queen of Ange-1S--1--
Church, 20.t6 M:ir Vista Drive, Newport Beach, at 10
a.m. hn. 20 with a reception following the M:iss. Pri·
vate burial is planned for Pacific View.
LWf liOGSt1.M/l)AILT PILOT
Erin Brown (14) watches Cyndee Arellano and 'Eagle Cyndi Richards duel.
•
Estancia · puts a halt to
Misa girls' PCL streek
~ Eagles ' defense key as
Mustangs' league run ends
following 32 straight wins .
BY BAllllY FAULXNE&, SPOaTS Wuru
COST A MESA -Est:in·
cia High girls basketball
co:ich Russ Davis called it
the edge his team needed to
break out of a three-week
winless streak that put the
Eagles on the verge of Pacific
Co:ist League title elimination.
le:igue lead for the first time since 1991.
"We wanted everyone clapping for c:ich
other, on the court and on the bench, and
our -crowd helped out, too,'' Davis s:iid.
"We needed an edge and emotion was the
key. We disappeared for lwo weeks, but
now we're back."
Estancia senior Cyndi Richards called it
"taunting ourselves."
The Eagles (10-4, 1·2 in le:igue) arc in·
deed back in the PCL thick of things, one
game behind Mesa (12-4, 2·
Either way, the pent-up
emotion that made it impos·
sible for the visiting Eagles
to s it through the in-
troduction of starting line·
ups, spilled onto the Costa
Mesa High court for four
quarters Thursday, triggering
a 50-45 triumph that ended
the Mustangs' 32-game PCL
winning streak.
· P•clflc CoHt L••eu•
Qlrl1 St•ndlnga
a.._..,. Overall
W L W L
~ 2 0 10 4 c .. te ..... 2 1 12 s l.lolN Hiit 2 1 12 4 ....... 1 2 10 ..
AllolllUll 1 2 e 10 LlluN 9udl 0 2 3 10 ~ .......
......... 50 ...... 45
Alla ...... 37, Ugn a.ti 23 ~ 41, l.aglN .. 40
T....,'• 0-... (7) Allo ,.,,. • htenole c.... ....... ~ ~ hldl .. Laguna ....
1) and Laguna Hills, which
are both one-half game back
or firs t-place University (2·
0).
"We needed this one,"
added Davis, whose squad
unleashed consistent dcf en-
sive pressure on the hosts,
forcing them into an abysmlll
25% shooting performance
from the field (16 of 64) and
an uncharacteristic 20 turn·
overs.
"We played our first two
league games with no emo-
tion, and we made a promise
to ourselves that we weren't
goW\g to let that happen to-
niaht.''. said Davis, whose team never
"There is a lot of emotion
in a game like this and we
ju5t couldn't calm ourselves
down," said Mesa Coach Len Whitacre.
trailed, reljeving the Mustangs of the ... ITlllAIC/ ..... 'I
•
..
•
in the fourth qu:irter, 20-8, while connect-
ing on 9 of 13 field.goal attempts, cruised
in the second half.
ln the second quarter, led by Verhulst
and Mary Anderson, they built a 22-13
le3d when Verhulst S3nk two free throws
with 6:26 left. CdM cut the lead to five,
but the Tars came back with a mild 7-3
scoring run to take a 29-20 lead by qu3r-
ter's end.
Only Lindsay Warmington's thr~e-
point'tr with 1:<>1 left in the first half kept
the Sea Kings from being shut out in the
final four minutes.
Newport Harbor, ranked No. 6 in the
Orange County sportswriters' poll, upped
its lead to 39-23 in the third quarter, a pe-
riod when CdM shot only 12% (2 of 17) .
Sea Kings have . .
everything but
right nu'1Jbers
..._Newport Harbor 'pins' CdM
to the mat, with ~ix forfeit ·Wins,
and a Jason Deere specialty.
Bv D ENNIS B~OSTEIUIOUS, Sl'OaTS Wuna
NEWPORT OEA<!H -
The Newport Harbor High
wrestling te:im, which
earned its firsr dual meet
victory in six years last
week :ig:iinst Santa Marg:i-
rita, made it two straight with a 48-22 Sea
View League decision over visiting Corona
del Mar Thursd:iy night.
And the Sailors hardly h:id to bre:ik :i
sweat to put this one in the win column.
Thanks to six forfeit victories resulting
in wh:it was, in effect, a 42-0 lead before
th~ meet even started, Newport had this
one literally wrapped up before it began.
CdM, which fell to Irvine in its league
opener last "eek, had five \\Testlers who
competed on the varsity level, :ind did it·
self proud by winning four of the indi-
vidual matches. But Se:i Kings Coach Paul
Serio admitted he's frustrated by the num-
bers game.
"We h:id three or four kids who de·
cided not 10 wrestle this year, we've had a
couple injured and two or three kids
transferred," he s:iid. "Overall, I believe
\le've won more matches th:in we've lost
so far this year, but we give up too many
points on forfeits."
Newport was able to fill each weight
slot with a competitor, with the ex~eption
of I 19, w.hich was not contested since
CdM did not h:ive a wrestler at that level,
either.
"Our numbers usually run around 35
wrestlers . in the program," s:iid Serio.
"But this ye:ir we're down to 15 or 20. I
know it's :i cliche, but this is truly a re-
building year.
"Our freshman team has only one du:il
loss, against Irvine, and we have only one
senior on the v:irsity (Dave Lee), along
with five juniors and a sophomore."
.loho~..KQSOIT pinned.his Coe just mate
than a minute into his match :it 112 to
give Coron:i its first points. Ji.m Maynard
(13~) and Lee (171) .also won by pinning
their opponents, while Ch:irles Gellman
(145) defeated his foe by :i 9-1 decision.
Gellman improved to 10-5 this se:ison,
:ind his efforts included a four-place finish
at the Irvine Tournament earlier this sea·
son.
"We call Gellman our 'Six-Minute M:in'
, because he never seems to pin his mon,"
said Serio. "He likes to stay out there and
wrestle."
. Many of Newport's top wres tlers we re
idle due to the forfeits, with the exception
of heavyweight Jason Deere, who was
com~ng off his championship at the Es-
t:inc1a Tournament last Saturday.
Deere improved to 23-3 this season by
pinning his opponent with just 'seven sec-
onds remaining in 1he second period.
NIWPORT 41, CDM 22
10l-M. urge (NH) won by (orlcit.
112-Kosoff (CdM) p. N. lu&e. 1 :CM.
119-double rorlcit.
125-Weig.tnd (NH) won by forlcit.
1l0-Keyes (NH) won by forfeit.
1l5-M.ayn.ard (CdM) p. M.ltsul, 1:41 .
140-loclo (NH) won by forlclt.
145-Ccllm.an <CdM> dee. Pettit. 9.1.
152-Rodrl&UCl (NH) won by fotfciL
160-Hoblkk (NH) won by forl'rit.
171 -lee lCdM) p. Edler, :32.
119-k.aubour (NH) won by (9Jfcit.
Hwt-Dttfe (Nit) p. Jona, 3:5).
LOCAL ICHIDULI
TODAY ...........
Community collep mt'n -Oranp Co11t at
CyprHt, 7 P."'·
COMmunity collep MNMft -Cypras It Or.a11&• Coest, 7 p.m.
Hip Khool ~ -llt.w:l.a at C011.t ~ 7 p.m.; CoroM del MM It Newpot1 !Utbor, 7:JO p.m. .....
Hlah tdtool "1oys -~ HMt1cw 11 Ccwona
del ~'• 3:1$ p.m.; Ettaftda ll ~ ~ l :1S p.m •
......
We were real pumped up and we
l a lillle 100 much air in the ball
the (U"St hatr. only scoring IS • IS.'..:
The Eagles' smothering man·to-
aa helped force the hosts into
strctC:hes without a field goal,
ndudin1 S:48 of the fint quarter,
:01 between the .second :ind third
riods, and 5:07 of the tail end or
he third.
Frequent Mesa misfires helped
the Eagles overcome 31 turnovers,
as the Mustangs. ranked 10th in
range County, :ipplied typically
strong defensive pressure them·
selves.
While junior point gu:ird Jessica
Waltz spearheaded the E:igtes
with eight points, 10 reboun~. five
assists and four steals, it was soph·
omore Jill Black and senior Karla
Dominguez who proved to be
equally troublesome to Mesa.
Black, in her varsity debut
against Mesa, man:igc;d to calm
her nerves well enough to drain 9
of 12 free throws, including 8 of
10 in the final 5:09 to fin ish with a
team-high 13 points.
P~cific Co.ut le.gue
CosLa'-lew fg II pf Ip fg II pf Ip
"'°"""' 2 0 s • lvnn~n 7 0 l 14 ~ l l ) ' ~Jm ) ) • 11 W;alu • 0 • • ·-) 0 2 7 llad 2 , ) u '~Y"" 1 2 ) • M-M<CMtiA 1 2 0 • ~ 0 2 ) l ~l ) ) • , 1 ) l l ~ ' 0 2 l A<~no 1 0 l l ........... 0 0 0 0 'l\~k 0 0 ' 0
2 0 2 • ~ Touh 17 " 2l so Touh '' 10' u o
H ... QUAUIU
...........
from the field.
Verhulst nailed a jumper "ith
3:21 remaLning. then scored on a
la yin following a steal "ith 3:05 on
the clock, giving the Tars a 37-23
lead. Anderson hit a jump shot
with 1:23 left fo r their 16-point
lead.
In the fourth quarter, when
CdM shot 21 % (3 of 14 ) from the
field, the ~ailors started "ith a 15·
4 run, capped by Verhubt's fast·
break layup with 3:45 left.
Newport H3rbor. which has
J3ycd all thre.e of its league
ames on the ro3d, trave ls to
ourth-ranked Marina Saturday for
non-league game (7 p.m.).
"We try to schedule the tough·
st non-league games we c:in," Ja.
kosky s3id.
NIWPORT llAltaO R 19, CDM 34
SH View leoigue
~ tWbot Colona cld IM
.t.U.0.)IOn ,.. .....
ktt..U ~in ..
v..t1..i>t ---~-LMI~ MC0.11on wa'°" Alfo<d
ToMll
""""' r1 11 ~ ~ ~ I~ ~~·Ion~ ~
1 1 2 l C..,Jn« ' 1 1 0 2 2 f~d l •
lll 20Simon 00 2l 1 7 Alb.ano 10
l 0 l I 6 Thurman 0 0
I 0 O 2 Ca~lar1f'do 0 O l I 0 l MKfa1bncl 0 0
0 0 I D
0 0 I 0
pf Ip
l 1•
1 2 2 )
0 11
l 0 0 2
l 0
l 0 I 0
2l 11 l2 st Tol..>I• l2 7 16)4
LL\11 Hocsn:s DAILY PILOT
Mesa's Len Whitacre and assistant Cindy Vyskocil plead for justice.·
sec men
punish foe
COST A MESA -Fi\e players
scored in double figures as the
Southern Californi::i College mcn·s
basketball team rocked 'isiting
Christian Herit:ige, 102-78, in a
nonronference game at The Pit
Thursday night.
Ch:iuncey Woolridge \\enl ., of
10 from the floor and 7 of 9 irom
the free·throw line, finishing \\ nh
a game-high 21 points. Woolridgl!
also pulled do\\ n 10 rebounds-.
sec women
overpowering
COSTA ~tESA -The South·
ern California College ''omen':.
basketball te::im cruised to an easv
100·45 nonconference 'ictol) O\C.r
'isiting Christian Heritage at The
Pit Thursd:iy night.
Christian Heritage, a ·fi rst-)CJr
women's program, is yet to ''in in
l 0 outings so for.
Senior fof'\vard Heather Bran-
nan led .. si.l VanguarJs in double
figures with 18 points, hitting on 6
of 1 shots from the floor, including
4 of 5 from three-point range. sec improved to 7.7 overall.
• 'Y' ''
PA(lri( (I-Hi' sec . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . ........ : ..... : .. ..
sec 102, PAetrte CHRISTIAN Tl
s;..11.,," ti~~J.\ttuft .....
S.haltnllkh
.tt.\.U-Uil\
~~~,.
~i. . .w,
I Jt
·~·~,. l illrfl ''''""""' , .... ,
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: • • • • • • •• f : ••••••••••
sec '00, CHRISTIAN MHITAGI 45
. Non-conference
<.""''·~~ 1~;u~• SoC.al c..n.g.. lgllp(lp fgllpllp c;,,rr."
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PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC fft>TICES PUBLIC NOTICES
f
B
• School officials hopeful Super Ball incidents
are things of the past in CdM-Newport rivalry.
Friday, January 13, 1995 T
aoan11• usuLn
a.AUOA \'ACM CLU8
SU'')JST 0UT)l0f llGAnA
•11a1a
1. Ut".trtbc~ Ctwitt It~ r, MnC. 1.S; 2.
A.l'Nntt, llt<.hlC' bra.I;;, Si l ... .ark-qu.n. Iv~•
Cut\llk>, i...1nc. •: 4. \\bi"6tt, Pete JotuutuM, llC.
": S. CunOr, Jdf F~ .. -U. tt\'C. !, 6. Miid10c!,
~\ft 11.ard>,, IC\C. 12; 7. P.:nJr.a~ 0.a'e Ct.l\
S.S\C, U ; L' ~~ hd Lt1Il1t', l\C, 1S; 9 A.bbJ
Z..I>~ D.act. O.a,.d St""~m.aft. l\C, 15: 10. Sol
Cr.a.g ~~notd~. B'C. 1S.
The Il3ck B:iy bo)'S b;U~ctb3ll ri\ try bc:Neen Sc:t \'icw
League comb:itants New port lhroor :ind Corona dcl l\far high
schools, marred in recent )ears b) mc1dents of spc.:1:uor mi con-
duct, resumes tonight at 7•30 in the S:ulors g)m.
First-ye:ir Newport H:irbor High Prmctp31 13onmc Ma~pero PMaf •
s3id Thursdny thar steps ha'e been tJlo.en to help ensure thing) t !Ysul, Did. tt.a\d~ ICK t 5. 2 Sp.lrls \\111
don•t get out of h::ind this season, as the) d1J last '· eJr :st lfarbor nv. Tom Pon.all.. a'c 4 J l..ll1tv Split 1~ D :nbudt IC\C. 6. ,. S«c.:rN Ot.-nni~ Ito 4.'t\" "'hen tcchnie31 fouls \\Crc c:illed Jg:11n)t e::ich rooting l>e'Ction for Mc tti.:t. SS\C 6. s. J.ft\ Too Jim ._err .a". BC\C
thro\\sng Super Balls onto the court. 6.:s. 6. Stulcr Stf'Phe1\ ''">l>c:r, 8'C, us -Zoo•
The second technical, ~::iin!>l Nc"port, came Yttth t,,0 cc· D'"e llrt'nn.a"· "c. ll 5: a T.lnunun. J.am1..~
onds left in rcgulntion and the score tied, :div\\ ing Cd~I t·' -arn °""ttut.. AL,C. 1,.. 9 lnd·to 11>:''' fuhn ';cl.. \""l C.
'<#'" H , 10 HC•r.at,GhnO.a\tt'S 8C\C 1-lt Bu,trr, a t:linted 52-48 win th:u prompted outrage ::ind from both co3ch-\\1;.h.itl DcRocht. ssK. 19, 1:? Ole, \\id1 1
cs and disappointment from adminbtrators. T1cnhur1, SBHte. lO.
"Maybe Lhc rcpercusl>ion of h:i' ith! this decide the outcome -,.-H-.-,-c-------------
of a game will put an end to something th3! has become a stu·
pid tradition," Nc"port Coach Richard Smith l>Jid after 135t
)ear's 3forcmentioned loss. Feb. 9.
' "l\e been briefed on ''hat h::ippcned la~t )ear Jnd \\C plan lO
h::ive administr.ithe staff in attendance, including three repr~
sentatives from Corona del Mar:· l>lid ~taspero. "ho met "ith
CdM Principal Don Manin this \\eek to discuss game ::idminis-
trativc procedures. ··w e have abo hired three addition:il securit\
guards to assist "-ith both the gJmc and a 'Disco Inferno' danc~
10 be held foUo>Aing the game in the girls gym."
In additiop to the Super Qall sho\\Crl> th::it ha'e occurred Jt
l . Am\)tuU> BC\C 1; 2 \.1ll·t1t" fted Pi\\\:ll BC\C, b l ll1gh Stnmg. Bub )tun~ 8'C, ·; 4
\\.a•~ttd<-t R.tnd.lll Rf),uld BOC 11: S. T1trt"S~. t.ol
._nud~on BC\C. 8.T5. 6. \\lrl•\ Bruce lv.1ch II
SBUtC n · -. Je.tc~llt Bob longpce l'C 1q, 11.
SN '\\'~->. P .aul C«lpu.1 SB\ RC l 1 9. !'I.ere id, Pckr 6tCIHhgN. 8,C. 2J 10 Big B.1d \\olf. J.imcs
Dl'\\ul11.•, 8C\C, 23; 11. Althc1t) lb' Booth, 8\C,
21. ll. Off, R1to Br.aggins, SS\C H ; 11. S.indburr Chu .. I. P1trce. O~C. 14; H . At.cs, OtnJUs
Codtimun. Al.\C, H · 15 TBO \\'111lton Crc-cnbl.att. SS\C, 2c.. 16. \.ak-nt ne '\J" lon&i>re B,C, :?8.
both gyms in recent years, including a 199:! incident :it H.'.lrbor PHRF D
which prompted referees to stop the gJme for 10 minutes and . PuS>~c.u. John Sul.t~. n c. t s. 2. B.ld ln1lucn-.
send both teams to their lod..er roums. mini::iture remote Rob Ell1011. BC\C .... ;s l . \\1ldcbccst. Bruce
I d h fl h d · d' fcrguson. B\C, S, .i. Cle\(•r Trc•or, \\t'> Seib~. ))\C contro -operate cars on t e oor a\e cause consistent 1srup-6; s. ~ptunitc, Pckr Cont..') ll\'C. 9: c. . .\ndi.tnu 11
lion. Bob Sod.iru. B'C. ~. -. S110\•mJn Cl.t•r Sno.•, S!o\C
.. It seems the b3lls come out of the :.t:lfld) and the cars come 9 8. \\1ld Child, Rub Hu ... c SS\C 13· 9. \lll. rir
onto the court "hen thel>e t\\O schvoh pl:l~ ... l>ltJ Cd~l CoJch Don AlbrNht, SSK. 15, 10. L.lrn. A.ndr ....
h CornfQ11h, SS\C, t8 1 I UJn, Ou11g \\,II. BC\C :!\I, Paul Orris. \\-bO .iCOrned t e unseen perpetrators al ter llst \C3r'S 12. Brccic, \fJrt.. £11)\\urth B\C, 21, u . Pebble~
contr'O\ersial \ictory. "I'm ju~t hoping thi )e::ir, the outcumc 0 f And B.tm B.tm, O.i\A ~\.1mmc11. Sl>K :!c..· u
the game will be decided on the court... Doctor D••troi1. toJJ R~.:r> s \C 30
"!he Sea. Kings 00-6, U!-i~ the Sea \'ie'' LcJgue). enter l..L-HCMILLS
sohd favorites, led by senior gu::iras l3nJn Fracalos). Dominie d. 1 D G · d J I O II · · r d B . 1. Sc uct1on. \\1~e P.ucd .. 8\C, 1.s 2. e raz.ter an . oc \\Co, .as. "e Js JUntOr 10f'\,ar nan 1 Crc\hound, And, 8.nl•·rd 8\C 2.-5 1.1113111<.>t
Coleman and senior center Enc Schllf. uot, ).lei. c~nnon 8,C s .i. Ll'.id.ng wd' C.a>tun
The S3ilors (7-10, 1·1) are leJ b) 'en1or gulrd \\'ill Rlnktn Ortiz. B,C, 8.
(l l.8 ppg). -S.-N-TA_N_A_2_0_'s---------
The 'ultimate upset'
• Thafs Mesa's mission in Mustangs' quest
to end 21-game losing streak to visiting Estancia.
Bv BA&R.Y FAUl-N."~R, Srot.n \\"anu.
Bidding to end a 21-game Estancia Ht~h ''llllllng 'tcJk, "ith
\~hat could be con)idere<j Cl.QC of the biggest up etl> oi the enc~.
the Costa Mes3 High bo}'S basketb3ll team ho)u. the cro s-tO\\n
and Pacific Coast League rival Eagles tonight at ~. ·
Coach Tim Parsers Estancia juggern:iut ente.) \\llh ::i ~-0. 15-3
record and the No. 6 r:inlo.ing in Orange Count).
Cost::i Mel>a (6·11, l·l ), ''hich could ~c \\1th1>ut CoJch JJ)Ot\
Ferguson for the second straight g3mc -the fir:.t·)CJr, 13-~eJr·
old head man was e~pected to be held Jt the CC ll"\ inc ~leJ11.::il
center "ith lo.idney stones through at kast WJJ~ -\\un ib fir:.t
PCL contest since 1992-93 \\'edncsdJ), 52-51. Jt Alt-.1> i\1gud on
a l::is1-second l>hot. Ass1)tant Chris FrcemJn, ''ho gu1J~d the
team Wedne!>1fay, "ould fill in if fer~uson tit u1uble to :ittcnJ.
The Mustang!> nearly ambushed th~ hCJ\ll)·fJ,oreJ EJgles
last year at home. le:iding through three qu:mcr) .rnJ dc:id-
locked at 38 "ith 1:55 left. before Z:ick Richan.hon':. three-
pointer keyed ::in 8-2 Estancia run to !>ecure a 46-4:! CioC:tpc.
That near mi s. in the PCL opener, m3rl..ed thl! firl>t tune in
11 seasons the Mu tang came \\ ithin 13 points of the E3gles.
Stackijlg the odd in fa\ or of the Eagles is an e\ten j, e heisht
advantage, including 6-foot-S ~e' in ll) rne :ind 6-6 Chri · CJn·
dlish against a Mel>a squad featuring 6-4 !>Ophomorc Dn.in L~Jh\
as its t:illest pla} er. ·
The Eagles hardly rely on their in idc scoring, ho\\e\er, a)
guards Dane Plock, Richardson and Greg Foster join the l\\O
big men, all averaging at or near doublc·figure scoring.
Mes3 is led by 5-9 junior guard Mike MontO)l (14.S pomt
per game), a three-point speciali~t. :is \\Cll a 6-1 )entor Ter~
C:irmon ( 11.6). Josh Weeks, a 5-10 guard. tallied ~O ~int
agJinst Aliso Niguel, including the g.1me·\\ inning IJ) 1n. and con-
tinues ro emerge for the Must::ings. He a\er3ges 8.-1 pointl>.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
1. In The Red. \\h1tUl.N Couper. \O).lgcr~. 1.S l Sm.ill World, \\1ch;icl R.t1ns, 8\ C l ~ S, 3. 8rCJ.l..-r
R.>brrts Cd' Pbbons .• 8\ C -:.
SUNKIST SERIES STANDINGS
THISTLI
I. Strt".11.. O.ilc Hml.lc 8\C 1l S: 2. P.a1ntcd lJih \\.tll rorem.in B\C u.-s 3 B Bob Bc :in BSS.\
19. ·s, 4 8111 Bis.di OP\C Jo IS Bl.ad.. Oood O.,n Sch.iif.:r, .r.-;.; b fk,i I her l\11 \\;.Clurt> SS\C
)1; 7. foe D11ll. J.t1..L..Llur.t Choum.ts 6\C, 11
METCALF
I. kh1b.tn'I. \\11.c Smith. 8\C 10.5· ::!. Bob Rollin• B,C, 10.-s; l. Pin.ti~. Bub Rc1lh 8\C u ;s· 4. 801; Blur, lurrn Linh<.>fl, B\C. 19.
LASER -1 Stc\e Sch~.11.. 8" 11 s :! Rub
\.tndcr.ort, B'C 12.i; l . )Nn·rrJn~O•S .\lb•:•l 11>; 4 Se.arl.y lhc Poorh OcP.tul 81.tnl.. B\C 11>.-s.
LIDO 14& -1. \\.trl. Clud10 BOC,:-; 2
Pir.in.t, Peter t..crrig.tn, BC.C. u.·s ) 0. II.om
\\~Rlc, 8\C 18; 4. Bird, \\il.r 0Juh BOC. 2J 5
Jim l.kL.m.ln, 8,C. ::!8; 6.. C•n crbrl'.1J \l.t n O.i'" Sm11h, AB\C, 19; i. CJ~ fcn.im<.>l.i. .\8\C H 11
O~ .functi.ln.il, Rid. Cri.ficld. ~\ C 19
LIDO 141 -1.Goril!J P.iul\\1tliJm) 8\C
tl.5; 2. Zeus, Ted Dl'JOll\ B\ C I b -;. l 1nu1 .J\.lil.tblc). 1 "" ... 5. ~. luhn P.t1uJopoulu~ 2:? 5. llum1lit) Al P1:·rez. B'C 2J 11. rr1:.iJ..in Sop BS!o.\ ~J
TWICHELL 12 -1 l1 I Ou.I.en 01~1. \\1lhon.
8,C, 9; 2 Cn>>S Cut J.>hn 01.on. B\C ~1 · J. lou(h
Torttlloi. H.anl. \\.agner. 1'11\C l2 4. \\1ghh Duel.
John Or.tl.e, 8\C, 23; S. T.-iu> Ringo \\•~ncr 'li\l.
24; 6. \\m \Im Good, Doug C.ampb....tl 8\C, le..
SENIOR SAaOT -1, S.tint Ccu1gc Pct1:r
Colle~. AB\C, 16.S; 2. 8t'\l'rl~ R\lbcrt , 1q; 3. \ Pini., Crl.'cne, AB\ C, 21 .... Cd\\ Cub;.-d t..ent
H~r\C). 8\ c :?J; s. PhO<'bl' '.in. \\dlon. th c 2·.
JUNIOR SUOT -1. B'C C.mctt 'lxi.l.n.
B,C. IJ. ·s; 2. G.l"' C<.>m\Cll, B\C 18. ·s; ) Puil, Stt•phcn Odon}. 8,C. 20; 4. J.11..I. The R1pp..-r, 1.t.:I. Re)nolJ>, 8,C, 29.
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Costa Mesa, CA 92627
Carner of NcwJxxt Blvd & Bay St.
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Credit can only be allowed
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lOU•l MOvSIHG
Ol'l'OllllllOITY
All U 1$1111 alftrtlPllf In llllS
....,"" Is a.'lcct to Ille fed·
... , ....... ~lllllll
............. llllitt rt lllttal
" MW!ttst "lllY ,,.ttrtnct.
UMl&llll111 tr .isc111111nation
~ ta tKt. cot~ 11ll1ion.
M•, U..iu,, ._.,!¥Ullo.IS Of
..._.. lftlia, • 11 unlM • .-. .., ..u Pf111ttnct. hml·
....... •lscn-111111."
Tiiis .... ,.,., will not
........., '""'.., .n.Mt ..
MtllllerlUltdlll"*lclllsln ...._...ti 1111 law. Our ruden
wt ._._., 1-..11 tlllat all
......... Nwertlud Ill uur
....... Mldll.UlttAN
..... ••I I M'tf Mlil. Tl com-
-...... In ..... Clll HUO ...... 1.•..a•-mo.r.
1111' '1£111t .oc ... ,.. ..
ulHUDllU6·3*.
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY
COSTA MESlf 2624 RENTALS TO
2134 SHARE 2724
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Eastsld• 2 Bd Ouplox liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
LG 2Br 1 'l!!Bo Twnhso. gar, l/p, yard, n/pots $390/mo. + ulll. Npt
Sato, quiet complox. w/d hook·ups, d/w. Beach close to beach.
2·Car gar -+ storage. sees. (619) 934·3710. Garago, W/d. Catt KJrk,
Sl 100/hlo. 965·0227 .,...,...EASTSIDE 631·5799
----------2Bd·gar·wld hkp $700 1~B~a-c-:-k---:B=-a-.,-. ~3-r_m_s
NEWPORT
BEACH
Funky 1Bd ulls pd $350·400/mo. Tennis,
$495. Agt S46·5eeo pool, pvt spa, w/d ga· . 2169 NPf HTS Now Studio rage Avail 1/15. 548-4140
iiiiiiiiiiiiii&iiiiiiiiiiiiii Moture porson. Bdrm COM 432Ml \Goldenrod
aclove livln9/dlnlng/k1t Rm/pvt ba iava11 in lg Beach Area & patio. &50·32451 apt. $475. N/S. 675·
Yearly Unfurn ••TOWNHOME•• 2212 673-6790 675-2263
2Bdrms & 3Bdrms 2br 1 .5ba, pool, CM·$325 Roomy hse.
$550 to s1eoo mo. gatod, patio, $795 2bd Want respon person ". Illa Rentals 2.5ba garage. hookups, Utll,cable.w/d incl .• $925 MOVE IN SPECIAL Avail now. 842·54589 67 5•4912 548-7367 or 548-7460
~,,__..~---HUNTINGtON
2BR 2BA Vino Balboa BEACH 2640 lh!rfoct rontal. ~ mas·
tor• suilos, pool, 1pa.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
E'sld• CM lux home
Loll $500, 2Br's 'S550.
Marylou 631·3799
N Leguna El Morro
Oen vu, lbd 1b3, no
pots, ldry, furn, dock,
51500/mo. 650·3144 LG 1BA ONLY $595 S625+dep 494-2729.
Big Canyon C.C.
Fully fu1n, gorgeous
2Bd ... 'don $3000 mo.
Encl garago, lndry lac.·•-N-8_11t_O_C~EAH--F-R_O_N_T
Boac:h & Edinger. Pet Modern, Boaut1lu l
OK. 77e-0480 Pl3cel W/0 , orw. F/P.
V1l1ntln1 ProptrtlH1-'--------$600 + Oop. 650-0t40
Joyce "759 -7659 NEWPORT
GATE-GUARDED BEACH 2669
Bayshoros 3 Br 2Ba, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
NB 2 blk• from
beac h . Shore largo
J~r. $425 ·mo~ •.t.i uhl.
675·6211 or G73·t707 Ip, dbl gar, lumlshotf/
uni. S2800. 6'12·5290 •1BR $4525• NB blk to oc:n Share ---------i LIDO Baylnt. Lgdoc:k tovoly 3bf'3b3 • 13 rm-41h
br, moryr, h.trn/unlurn.
poss lse opt, 673·7677.
2BR 2BA S725/Up '4Br dplx with one por· SPAe'c~1a~s~.ouFtrlgO,urd/w son. Furn rm r' pvt IAGUNA
BEACH 1048
11! bath. $750. 723-0584 Incl. 60x30 pool. N01---------
pots.• No lees. No NB Condo 2Bd 3ba
I03Se 5454855 +don. MOdOrn· Newly iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil *Lido/Pen In sula/H ts
Cottage W/ Velw Oc:n 1n1ori0< Baytron1 Hm1 •~---.,,-----
vu, 1 Bd 1 Ba ~ studio, Yearly Lease or Salo Beecon Bav over gar
doc:or. Prof. $600/tnc.
utl. Avl 1·20 434·1200.
wood firs, frplc, pvt Orunoy Allrs 675·6161 studio apt. 100• water1~N'""B=--""'p_•_n_n-.,,.,Jb,...d-..,.h_o_lt!"'"s•-.
d W d C vlow, sun porc:h, par·
Plug Into the Pilot
Classified section to find
services from electricians
and plumbers to \
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.iiiiirPiiDL
642-4321
.......
By CHARLES GOREN
w ith O MAR SHARIF
and T ANNAH HIRSCH
WHERE'S 1llE LO ER"
.East \\'rc:t vu'nerabl« Snu~h
dealf-
1'0RTH
•Q8 ~ i 6 2
0: A98
.a.A K10 72
Tht> biddinr
OUTIJ WEST
i.. . PU!i
2• p~
•• Pus
·EAST
•i6
: A 10 8 4
(' 10 7 6 s 2
•9 s
NORTH EAST
26 Pan
3,. Pas.o.
Pas Pus
Opening It-ad Kinµ of~
Take a rood loc1k at Ull" dia~
It llllltht 'et. m lMt vnur c:u,· .'ear-old
dau11hter w<1u.d oc ab!~ w make 10
tnc-k.• at c •p..idt· conlract. and \·ou
11n>bclb' ,. u:d b-nj:hl H<Me,er.
~ V.OrtO I.;•• pldyt'r manarfd l<l j!O
duwn' 1 hi!-,., "'ha1 h3ppentd
•equenct-umd> tt prorn1Sl' a •Ill.·
care sw: henct 'ort.h .. r~rC(·
Wesl led lht kmi:: oft ea.rt;, en
"luch i'.J~l ''~alf'd enthus111c:ucal·
I} Tht queen c-( ~ earu "il' contin·
oed. fol ""'eel b\ 1th.rd hPa11 to the
act, "mh declare1 contribut.ml'.' tht
1ack
F'rorr East'._ point 1..f \If'"' 11
~med unhkt>h that the contr .. n
could bt defeated leg111ma1eh
DecJ..u.;r could hardl~ haq• le•~
that SI} cpade~ he11ded b' thl" ac•~
tt.ng and the K.inr of d1dmC nd .. "<l
oeclarrr had no morf' .. pp.&rc nt
lo-en. The onh chance "'~ lo c:or
'.nee declare .. that lht-oppont'n~'
"t'Tf lct0K•nr rur • trumri promo·
lion Su1t111~ the dt'<'<I t\• tht thought.
E.ast led !ht Litt. hea-; ll~darer
d.•cac.otd a d1arr.ond and V. ~'t •
ruffed \\1th lhe n1111' forcmr tt l
queer! from dumm' Dc:darer oeclU
ed tha~ Ea!'t h;id to ha't thre1
trump• head~ t•~ the J"" I &dr>pt' •
ttu!" deft n"'"'· ~o ronllr.uf'O ! ' t.•d '"~ the c1i:hl hf trump-anrl iirr. f ·
•n!! th1 lt D""''' one
c:ty · oo 5 ove. Newly Aemod 1ux 3bd lially furn, all ulil. in Prof. clean, n/s , f/p, $325.000. Call Bob t b h $375 Celuccto 553·235e 2ba+scp ofc,gourmot gar, w/d , tie space tor steps o enc . llllch, ocn vu S 1 e95 12 It skiff. Avail 2/1. ~ ull & dep. 723-4728 Grubb & Ellis 6'75·6517 205 30th St Classified Community Marketplace
tour 'llpllde-. "'a' a normal ro1 •
tract lO Tl'•Ch and thC' auruC>n
fl hown 1~ typical for partntrsh1p•
who pie) fhl"-<:ard maior.. and Lnat
a 1wu-over·one rei.pon~ •~ a gamt
force The spadf' rebid in this Ind Ownd & Op'd $1275/mo. 644-9664 NB·Beau Lge 2 Bd
Ne~ort Heights HUGE NB Penthouse gareg. yd. furn, no drugs
0 Jed 3 C Wstc:lf & liv Ave, Toddler NEWPORT Now be3ulllul 2300 ceaf1 Vu ' · ar OK S400 548·2512 BUSINESS OFFICE a1f twnhse. 3Bd + Garago. Inside Spa & · BEACH 1069 study, 2\1100, family Steam room 645·2140 AVAIL NOWI Call anytime FOR RENT 2769
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil rm, 2 frplc, w/d , frig, LIDO PENINSULA Npt Hghts 2200 SQ h iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
*••ftordable Bluffs* AJC, tiled patio, grndr, (2) 1 BR Luxury Un1t1 hom•. frpl, w/d, pvt ARTISTS: Largo work-~ 2 car gar. Avl now l Quiet, Private Beach bath. parkng. No smk/ Ing & exhibit spaco Lowest priced 2BR e 7-5·4912 Ag t $1200/MO pet. 5450. 642· 1029 avail to sharo. NB1CM.
Incl landll Muse Sellll Newpor1 North newer 710 Lido Park Or **SEVERAL•• S300fmo. 673-71e1
$185.000 JBd·2inBa, family rm 714-873.eQ30 LOCATIONS
Open Sat & Sunl + morel $3000 mo OPEH 7 DAYS $400·750/mo. Call tor
iii32 9 Vista Huert• 553·23e5 or 644-7362 details. Dave 675·08401----------t
714-S7S.1212 LIVE AT THE BEACH,~-.....,,.,,---,-----· Can't seem to Grubb & Ellls Newport Terrace Furnished apt. Water Sh3re 2Br 2Ba opt noar
Ind Ownd & Op'd Upgraded end unit, bed, micro, frig. 2 blks UCI. Avail 2/4. Pool. get to all those
HARBOR VIEW HOMES 31>d·2V.iba 2·sty, t car 10 bc:h. $550 631-2343 spa, basktball, tennis. repair jobs
"Port Stroets." Best parking, pool, lrplc.' Newport Heights S445· N/S. S09·77GO around the house? w/d hkup, $1095. AVI priced 2·sly on green-1111 675-4912 Agt 2 Bedroom, poot, new1---------Let the
boltl 4Br 2 inea. cloan. · carpel, no pots. 5795 RENTALS Classified
bright. upgrded, super NP Shor•• 3Bd 2Ba 642·765e WANTED 2726 Service toe. S569K. 721·5737 2 car garage, flrplc, B~R VW HOMES Incl comm pool & ten-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Directory ---J''":""~addo~'.58~~:·i~~~: o c: ~d· MISCELIANEOUS or co~~~s:·m~~~t---tr"'elrtriarb1T1lenhnehr;11':.t--
s2eoo 760-9672 s 1800-$2000. 2Bd RENTALS N/amk r'Gtirod c:ouplo.
S900.S1100. Studio•,,.•••••••• Rel'•. 7'4-650-8213 842·5678
S575·S700. Balboa••
CEMETERY LOT/ Newport Ally 723-44941--------GARAGES
CRYPT 1225 -----•ROOMS 2706 FOR RENT
2 lots Pac View· Del Mar APARTMENTS
section. 2 lots, West-FOR RENT
mlnster-Oovotlon. Big ••••••••• savings. 619·34 I ·382e
............ !CORONA
DELMAR 2622
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
LAGUNA BEACH
MOTOR INN
$175 & Up/wkly.
Maid service. Kitchen
avl. 985 N Coast Hwy,
2740
Beach Parkng/Outslde
All ok. $99/mo inc:I
bathrm access. 722-0824
Laguna Bch 494·5294 •••••••••
Chances are
you w1JI land
what you need
at the price
\ you want to pay
· when you read
Classlfled HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR RENT
LIDO ISLE Studio, pvt COMMERCIAL
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ent, steps to bc:h, furn REAL ESTATE daily
1 Bd 1 Ba & den 1 in avl. Tennis, w/d . s495/ 842·5878 blks to beach. Frplc, mo ulll Incl. 673-6103 I••••••••• ___ ;:;...;;.-.... ........ --. __
CORONA
DELMAR 2122
dOCk, prkng. Avt 211.1---------$ri~~·H3o'u61~ i!Vs"':,~• VACATION _B_U_S_l_NE_S_S_O-FF_I_C_E_
12-3pm 613.eo18 RENTALS 2722 FOR RENT 2769
Rooms,
apartment!.
homes
Classified
can satisfy
2Bd 2 Ba firplc, deck, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
DfW, W/O hk·up1, dbl NB OCEANFRONT 3 Ottlce Units, 31st St ..
gar, nr bch, no pots. Weekly. Fully tum 3Br Cannery V1llege. 5250/
Chermln9 3Bd 2Ba $1200 650-3801 !>48-3797 2Ba, gar. N/pe1 51200/ 295/670. Art & design your
Cott•u• newly 3Br 2Ba, gar. lrplc, week. Karen 434·1424 amb'9nce. 873.3733 housinQ needs.
QUIET &: SERENE
remoct, skylt• I
•pa + beau decor t>eautitut & spacous COSTA MlSA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 Complel•lr Furnlehed rwnhse. quiet, S 1625/
g111oe wfW/0, S2s0otmo rno. yr lso. 759-3092 "iiiiiiiiiiii
Call own.f 640-5239 41 O S••w•rd 2Br l'1
tBa, encl 1>41110, comm lfvine Terrace, superb pool, dbl carpr1. se75
day/nit• vws. all now N t 832-4618 neutral cpt/palnl. 3Bd· _...._o_p_o_s.,... -......,-~~
3Ba, 3 car gar. No Lowe< unit duplex 2Bd·
amk/pet S3 100 mo Up, new point, now Incl grndr Of SALE carpel, submit on pets
11.2951< 909'593-6127 $375/mo. 759·1262
Palm. ~esa Aparnnents
COSTA MESA 2124 COSTA MESA 2624
S750 E'1lde 2 ,. t •S·alde 2 Bd, gar\J~ O•r. Pet f 900 sq ti. nu carpt a pnt, I 317 E. Cab111lo Open
hk•up. no pets. 263f.B Encl .nstlo 631-4036 Sanla AN 1850 64S.10:ZO ..,. · ---------12 Maater ire. 2Ba, 2 3BA 1¥.BA. 2-car oar, b•lc. 1rplc. W/d hkupl,
hdwd firs, lg yd. Pets cntrl gas heat, gat 6
ok. 21'M Meyer Pl •Ira prkOg ape:. 2 min
11250/mo. 72~·7282 10 Triano!• Sq. $880. Uifi1ol 2Br '~Ba. ar .. t offer tor , yr
1-car g.,9ge, carpels le•MI 714-851•1933
6 dfapea. No pets. a•aeH 9ao11 ...
723-7180 18R W/peUo. S¥S/mo.
Keatalde CM, 3Bd 2.$ ~.::=a•L
... twntvn. bktHIY. lg ~ "''*· ypgteded ....... c ..... , ...
tt)OO/mO, 842..... l9cl .... M, 9'dr· lrlll.
Two a·..ae hOuMe. w/d ... No P9I llO lttt
hlluP•· lncd . rd•. eel wa'llt ltl •1 ......................... ,. .....
OKI 77 .... 70 ..... ..,. tacMml
e 2BA·18A w/gw .... Y9fd. wld hlcups a741 e UIR • den 11N ... peee 8'1·7113
So near & >oet so far ..
lhat's the fee.ling you g~
when you live at Palm
Mesa amid the 1\1\h
gttctery of sedudcd •
woods & Stately p;ilins.
A, Sructios.. 1 1!t 2 Bcxitooms 1"-S575 11> S600
·1US625io~
• 181l Sn& to $750.--
6, No Pm
A, Vcnic:al llindl
.. C'.ciq ran.
A NEW~ Paw &:Tlk A f'mcse ~oom
t Hcaft'd Pool & /llO!UJ
P.00. 8c Bak:ooG
Glr'taA~
08icc Haun: 9:00 un · 5:00 rm M·f
ind J0.00 am ~ f 00 pm~
1561 Meil Dr.· .SW. AN Htishu. CA
(714') 546-9860
------------------~~-------------~~~ ..... ----------..... ...
'
v Have your classified ad in 176 newspapers
~with a combined circulation over 3 million.
$400 Is all It takes to place a 25 word
or less classified ad . $15 for each additional word .
'1
CAL•SCAN
(9~ 6) '449-6000
..
•
to Frtday, January 13, 1915
TODAY'S
CROSSWQRu PUllLf
INCOME
PROPERTY
gfallllg
25 Bad! to lhe
salt -
26 Typeof l\d
27 ~
weogtll 28 Or9g0rt c:ily
29 Tallredon and on
32 Loamv soil
34 Smal ~ef'I
39 o,,iomat'S
base 40 Joseph Conrad
novef
4 I Formal attire
I
HEALTH• FITNESS 3000
EMPLOYMENT
Clesslfted Office Asslst•nt 20
Th• most comprehen-hrS/wk, various duties
alv• and current diree-Incl phone & typing
tory of goods and aer· skills.C•U 548·2218
vlcea around! between 3pm-Sttm.
..
Call
Cla~alfled
Today!
842·5978
18' PACKET ·As 1s·
$5,.,.,
18' '95 DEMO
MAllY EX'l1IAS
17' 'M DEMO •LOADED•
14''MDEMO $4. ..
7011
., ... 22ft S1d Boat•
1.7 lltte v... King
Cobra Q/D, tow proflte
hull, Just Mrvlced,
new c:oc itrollef nMmlnll
uphot•*Y· Great ski
boat-fut-look• QrMt. Tum.«ey ••. t'Mdy to go.
111,000 ~71291·
9241pgr
AUTOMOBILES
CHEVROLET 9045
88 Benetta Red.nu
brakes,5 sp,am/fm.·
cass. $35!50, OBO 1173-
6725 or pag 413-2524
HONDA 9085
ea Accord DX
4 Door, 5 speed,
66,000 mi, 1 owner.
$5,700. 848-2413
BUY OWNER $298,QOO iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1---------
TrJ-plex 1·3Br, 2·2Br 100K1450K,850K, 1 1111 LOST & Nr SCP Frwy 405 & 55 T I r-'fRoNT -, r .--REAR-- ,
I BRAKE PADS I I BRAKE PADS I
.... ------, MAJOR Ez to rent. Trad e for hese are my ncome FOUND 2925
comm·11 Prine. only. #s for years 1•2•3•4 in1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NWM. I'm building 1• P h 11 3 10-43 1-42 55 again. Wanna come F,OUND Gray kitten In
Halm 7 14-668-7474 a long? l (800)683-2231 . area of 20th & Church I includt's pads & labor ~nso..,. e\tral I tndudes pads & labor I I SERVICE I I 15,000/ 45,000/ 75,000 Miles I .-------11 ATTN: R.E. AGENTS St. Ot/5/95 631-3428 100% comm I Com-FOUND: Blec k Shep.
BUSINESS & plete office on bay. herd·l1'P• dog,
I s 6 9 o~ I I s 4900 I
L--_ _: ~x-.J L-- _ .:;_T!; _ .J A U T 0 S E R ~, I C E
I s22g oo+TAX I
L------.J .------, FINANCE
Only S3SO/mo. 548-7900 male, with brown
paws, Jnn. 9 In New· -------•ll LOCAL ATE•24 Loca· pon Boach. Tnken to Ilona Buy All or Dover ShOJ"es Animal
P art•Posslble $3K Sheller 722-7387
Weekly•800-599-6769 ----· -----
CLASSIFIED
rLu8EsE'RVlcE, ~~ ~-.ai...._ ......
I Includes oll. 011 filler & lubrication I (3~~"fe~ 1 645-1234 ·· .MAJOR
I SERVICE I H's the aolu\lon you're
searching for • wheth·
er you're seeking a
home, a n apartment,
a new occupation or
even a stray pot.
Cleaslfled Thinking of having a garage sale? The most comprehen-Give us a calll
I safety inspecnron I
I $2600
+TAX I 217 AVOCADO UNIT 4
COSTA MESA
I 30,000/ 60,000/ 90,00..0 M II u I
s1ve and current direc· CLASSIFIED
tory of goods and ser· 842·5878 vices around!
I . $ 2 9 8 00 +TAX I
L-------.J • Off£1l5 APl'LY TO MOST M00£LS•
PET TlUlNSIATOW
. •5E•R•VI-C•E--•ICARPENTRY 3510 CLEANING CONTRACTORS ELECTRICAL 3610 HANDY MAN 3710 JEWELRY 3784 PAINTING 3858 SERVICES 3870 TUTOR 3927
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVICES 3 548 GENERAL 3 5 58 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim I ~~~~~~I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
DIRECTORY A to z HANDYMAN iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LACEY'S•ELECTAIC Electrlc•I Speclal~ William Harold Jewelers 2, Quall"' Pal ti ROY .. ' TR ... T ... E S PANISH/ENGLISH INSTAUJREFACc CABINETS 25 yrs exp. Fr" est. residential wiring Watch & Jewelry repair ,,_ •• n nt • -. . -• NT• Technical & Gen. Also eBOWEN'Se QUICK RESPONSE! RH/Comm. Sr disc. phones, cable. Reis. Antique/Fine Jewelry PLUS 1ouchup1. Drop In pet sitting. Kitchens, baths, doors, HEAVY DUTY HOME Local Uc. 20 yr exp 1.....,.,.. 873-0385 24 Hrs. Richard Sinor Safe & Convenient! Interpret/Tutor Serv.
¥11ndows. Doug 546-7258 CLEANING SERVICE Small Jobs, big Jobs L# 238300 642-6568 Integrity. 24 hrl 798-2516 Buy -uldl Uc 280644 645-3209 Prof'I Care. 740--0262 Native So. American.
ADDITIONS
REMODELING
HIRE A CARPENTER 714-530.2492 Duncan Cons 65().7042 ---------HANDYMAN Carpen-1---------QUALITY CARE Susane 873-7409
Additions/Remodels CLEANING DONE ftJGHTI LOW COST All Phases FENCES t~1 t~;Y• f~:'b!;/ger: IANDSCAPE • MAINT·PAINTINQ P~~~~:i-::~:~~e~~~ 3410
Fire/Water/Repairs. Private Residences. a. DEC•S 3615 r · r P r · IAWN CARE 3808 20. yrs exp. Great stresS/INorry. Lie. Ins. TREE
DUNCAN Concrote/Elec/Plumb. Referencea's Avail. Electrical Drywall iigiiiiiiiiii&'-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Jerry Bell 775.e3 eo '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pncesl 645·2417 Ron & Refs. <;:) 673-7184 SERVICES Jerry, 848-7540 Rita 842·7979 Acoustic Baaebrds. HANDYMAN CHARLIE I• 3929 CONSTRUCTION Fire Water Damage •Wood Fences* B••lo Yard M•lnt. CHUNG'S PAINTING
20 Yrs Exp. Small & Repa.itt. Atmod. Doors, win-Lori'• Hou••c•re Cement Maeonry Tile rrplact/rtpllf, "" l\aullng Hauling & Yard/Gatage Lawn!! Cleanup•, 20 Yrs "Exp. Gd Price! ---------
Lg. J obs 850· 7042 dowt, cabinets, stucco & dry· Detailed service, sup· Painting Wht Laquer estimates. Low priees. Uc'CS clean-up. Fence building. Tr .. Trimming, Lt Guar work. Free Est. PLASTER •ALL AMERICAN•
TREE SEVICE
Free Est./Sr. Oise.
Yard Cln-up531·8415
Bell Construction wll, fences. gates, etc. Lie. plies furn'd. Rel'a. Specialty coatings Advantage Constr. 97•-5301 House Painting. 760-5044 Haullng 979-8245 Uc#375602 538·1534 REPAIR 3880
•Additions• bath remodol ~,.,up. Jerry 942.0517 Best Rates 760-5044 Abr11lve blast CWpel Plumblng/elecfWaler or .. " Sc:ene.Landscpng Ike'• Custom P ainting iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
•P111os• k1lchen remodel ftELIABLI! HOUSE,..,,,.._L_l_c/1...,,..n...,•,....9..,.9....,2,...-44,....--8-5_ FLOOR INSTALL heater1/1prl•klera/cell 6 Irrigation, Trimming Prof, Clean, Quality
U B d d I d ---------CLEANINQ. BY THE'c fana. FREE Esllmalesl 6 Removals, Clean· work. Int/"" ... & Docks • t • on e ., nsure r11nnET Aemodel•Addltlons REPAIRS 3620 241 "137 or 21" "169 & Mal S LI ...,., F1ea Ell. 871-4941 '-AIU" DAY. XLNT REFSI T.I. Commercial, Real· "" ...... ups nt, I. C. Reasonable 631-4810
KITCHEN,,_ BATH CLEANING 3515 YOLANDA 631•5967 dentlal, Old & New. "599025' 9 SCMU09 PREPARA~ION TO
AVARCA ENTERPISE L#B624386 552-0119 VINYL•HARDWOOD HARDWOOD Landscape Repelr PAINTINQ & Papei
INT/EXT-OUALJTV 1ST Big Mike'• Tre• Svc Patch lo complete Tree trlmng/removnl,
Jobs. Licensed. 25yrs clean-Yp. 16Jrs In CM.
exp. 24 hrs 554·7831 Free Esl. 850-0270
Cal:>mets/Tile/Plumbing CARPET & UPHOLSTERY COMPUTERS 3556._________ Ceramlc•Marble•Sub FLOORS 3712 Mallbu-'gh11-Speclalst Removal. 14 Yra Exp.---------Free Est. L,,586003 .-Floor Repalr•Carpet TreeS/Clean-up1/haul1 Ref's. 549.5799 •TT Fe rnando 542-6701 Carpet repairs, profes·liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim DECK Uc/Bond 843·3882 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili Catt P•t• 722·7732 PLUMBING 3890 w~
atonally done. 20 yrs. MAC TUTORING 3570 C ...... _, ...... _OLISH QUALITY Int/Ext Paint-COVERINGS
exp. Sr disc. 775-6380 (Individual & Bus) l:CiiOiiiAiiTINiiiiiGiiiiiiiiiiiiii ---------~-;;bl;R:J;enallng TREES Ing, Acoustic Removal iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 3932
APPLIANCES
SERVICE 3426 CEILINGS 3518
HOME REFRIQJFRZ
REPAIR. Same day
serv. Ropalra guarnl'd.
Mll/Sr./Stdnt d is c.
Reliable Aelrlge1allon
Acoustic Removel
Increase Resale Valuel
Artistic Interiors
Uc.Jina. 714-998-3650
L#41728 999-3483 ---------
Set-up, Quicken. word 11 FURNITURE 35 Years Exp. T•~"·· '--"9 Uc'd/bonded/ln1. Fr" nt• LOCAL PLUMBER
Excel, Modems, DTP STOP Deck Leaksl REPAIRS 3622 714448 .. 709 ..... ..._ 751~~ quotes. Call 848-9676 • Wiliam 8anQlf1 Co.-
Mark 875-7245 Waterproof Coatings: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Since 1947 O~k·'Stal~ Best $1 LEGAL ... INBOW Clrcle llelnt. Friendly Service MICROSOn WINDOWS .... ., ·•· Complete Restoration HAUUNG 3720 ~P . 1....,.1n1-r ... .......:....... L#47""""" 67.,93,.,.,. HELPll QuaJily wqrk. Free Est. Refinishing, repair. up-''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim SERVICES 12 llll-,. ~ ....... ......,_ """" ... .,.. 20% Discount• On-slle Ll587430 722-8769 hol1, etc. FAE& pick· 1• 38 Apt. Oual. job. frea est. Plu1nb1ntt Repelrs &
PC lnllallatlon, setup up/dellv/est. 962-1823 Haullng Junk, Appt1-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii St. licl569897 636-8888 Drains cleared from
& troubleahoollng. •-0-0-0-R-S------• ance1, Yard Clean-Up, Rl!VOCAllLE $~.50. Alf fixtures In • Q .. Ml 3580 --------E c 1 M lk LIVING TRUST STEVENS PAINTING •·"~ s • .. (7v•1r41,98~33c1r7o liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii HANDY MAN 3710 t c .-. ...... _1a3191 • •--.. teves 545-8298 ._ __. S 199 COMPLETE Frff Eat, 20 Yrs Exp.
-
________ ,CERAMIC •---------C7141 948·7207 Quaflty Work. Rera.
••TUTOAINO•• An ••perlenced JUNK To The DUMP Uc# 452054 645-3348 BUSINESS TILES 3528 Wlndowa, Word, dependable doo r Hei .. &Rental ProporttH C714-... ·18821 -------...-ROOFING 3910
SERVICES 3488 iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii 'Ex c •I . A e e • • • hanger. Guar work, Paint.Carpentry-Wiii haul what Trash MASONRY 3828 --------
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil AEGROUT & INSTALL 20 Yr• Exp. 723-1985 reu. Oon 521·8910 ~r,.;'~~:;.07~ Man won'tt 894·52159 PIANO• VOCAL 8 8dler Rooting-Uc·&
•• OOK •• PING. Leaky showers re-DOOR'S RiPiiREO Qual Crpnt~, Paint, JOH• DOMll llAIONllY LESSONS 3868 Ins. Speclallze comm. a I d LI 67013 0 CO C TE Brlck•Sto'n .. Block•Lg rHoof/repalr. 25 yra. AP/AR Profeulonal P ro • N RE • Sallafactlon guaranleodl CloHt/Gar tor, wall HEALTH/ & small Job• OKI Uc •FREI! EST 175-5095 Reasonable & Uc.'d 673·8065 or 846-8526 MASONRY 3557 Ask. for ..,Ike BleH. units, furn, formlca, un'l"ln-oN 3742 •548•2099• 642·2043 L1'431830 repairs 876-6359 Fr"' '"' &IUU • lfl887191 •31"3832 Gottuao Mualc Studio •THUNDlll ROOFING• liiliii••••••I Plano & Voice l••aoo• For all of yow rooting Mulll·Medla: Deak Top CHIMNEY * Int Prlc-ft.••lflv Cerp''!'Y• roorg. plbg, Thin Por LMet Herballf• ------3-8-5-8-t • al agea, beginning needs. Reroof/ropalt.
Publlshlng·RH. Script SWEEPS 3538 i-..w :;,:,.•• !i'ECTJUCAI. 3610 paint g , Ille, otc... lndepeilderll DfsltlbUlof PAINTING to daulca M0-1M7 Uc 838t44•49-4122'
/Book Writing. All Your -__,.... SR. DISC. Free Est. Call for product• « --------ii Bua. N .. dst 540-1947 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii CMONte.14~22 MORGAN •S0.3281 Bua. Opp. 759-0559, PIANO Beg.-'Advanced --------
SMOKEf CRACKSf Brick, Block, Stone, Tii. A-1 •a.otrloel wortll Carpentry, roortng, •W.P . YOUNGQUIST All ages ·Teecher c:.n..
All repairs & remodel-Cone, Patio, Driveway Duncen ConatruetJon ptumblng, drywtill, p ......... C.treoter Entortalnment Avail.
Ing. Spark Aneatera. Fple, BBQa. Rof. 20 Yr Quick AesponH atucxo, painting, Ille, 3784 OUalUc~by.,:rona Jennifer S40-81e9
800-714-LUCKY ElCp. Terry 887•7994 local Uc. •ao.7042 .. ec1r1cal. Jim &41•74t4 ,.,.. Ml. &4t4305
--------
CARPENTRY 3510 REH·T
tvough classifled ------
Custom Wetlpaper
Stripping/Painting
No job too amalll
5% Off w/ad.173-2937
We gals should l\ang
together. Strip, Install,
advice to the crazy.
831 ·2111 anytime
SELL ·
YOUf home through classlfled
Can't seem to
get to all thoH
ropalr jobs
around th• house?
let the Claealflff
Service Director,
help you find
reMablt help. ------
REACH 112,000 HOMES
EACH WEEI< FOR ONLY sza ' Call Gina At ,
642-5678, x246 [ :J
• I : .•. • "t ·1
{ -1 1/'" f f · :. Ii 1 t' I
-.. _ --~-~_: --r --. ~:!:~-~·~'-~,,"..,~-~-•. '--~-.. f..• ~ ... _. !_" ~~ -.....:_~~:_...,..,~-~·---~~ .. ~-JI' -...__ • ...___-."..: '-~~-~ .., --~J""Ca ---
• ' I
'