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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1995-03-09 - Orange Coast PilotTV neY1SeaSters and ducks love a good rain. The : , : I II I: I rest of us ho~ : ! ! if f ff : the clouds will blow awdy quickly and let us get back to our sunshine. See Weather, Page A2 Char-tf;IP , plaQ gets failing gra~e . lrom · some readers . . . Some quesdon -why school is seeking charter status BY M.\i:y XNN HA.IP.MON, Sr.UP Wun& CORONA DEL MAR -A charter .school movement at Coronfa del Mar High brings promises of creative curriculum ~ Gladys, a day care center's pet, was last seen heading out of the town once known as Goat Hill: BY ANNBTD CHA~ S'TAn Warm COSTA MESA -There were nt> smiles or laughter Wednesday afternoon at the South Cout Ree> reation Center. Instead, the chil· dren there were heartbroken after lcamina that one .. kid" wu miss,. ing. It seems Gladys mJaht have squeezed through her pen, which "ls in the back of the center. Or, someone mi&ht have foraotten to ck>lo tho aatc -allowina the pypny aoat to run away. . . .. All of us arc almost an tean here," said Sheryl Hawkinson, di· rector of the day care. center· at 2070 M#le ·Drive. "AJI of the Children. .. , the staff arc jUJt &let about it."· HawldDioa Mid Oladyi wu Jut • 1M11 lriNnd 11:30 1.m. Wednea- day, Nnnin1 on Victoria Street, changes and innovative teach· ing techniques but · leaves one lingering question -why? "CdM is one of the most outstanding high schools in the ... WHY/P•i• Al I toward tbC Huntington Beach bor- · der. Gladys, who was originally named April, is wcariog a blue collar with "April" painted on it. Her coat is black, 81•Y and white and ahe llas Nownish-black eyes. Her two front hooves h"' white near the bottom, "like socb," and ihe has two little horns on her head, Hawkinson said. Hawkinson also said tho center ii offerin1 a reward for th& person who brinp back Gladys. Anyone with information can call Hawkin· IOD at the center at 646-4334. In the meaatiine, the children are pra)'ina they will bo able to ~IY with their friend one more time. .. I didn't act to seo her at all today," said 7-year-old Nina. "I bOPi ibe'll come back bY hOnelr!' · $ix-year-old Devon wu a bit more realistic about the chances of Olldrs matlft1 it bidt to Ooat Hill, U • Costa. McU once WU boWD. .. o~ doali't know tbe way," be laid. ''She'• a pl. Sho can't ·read 1 map." -' ~ Opinions expressed on Hotline about CdM High proposal range from 'it (makes) a great deal of sense' to 'it is ill-conceived and totally without merit.' ~ Corona del Mat High School has a state and national reputation for being an academically high achievement institution and I don't know why they would want Editor's note: The proposal to make Corona.::del Mar High a charter school has received a lukewarm reception from Daily Pilot readers. Here are some of the opinions called into the Hotline. I support the charter school activities going on for Corona del Mar High School. It would be very good for the community and for the students and P.robably for the district as well. to attempt to fix something th at's not broken, instead of directing their efforts to improying what they already have as far as supporting the school, faculty, the students and the athletic departments. Secondly, although it may not Newport Beach be invoked today, people work 0 very hard to live in areas where DICK GOCHNAUER they feel the community and the students reflect their values and their students' goals. Irvine would be a prime example for some people. . So, having a situation where you're forced to bus in students to ethnically diversify is not in keeping with many parents' objectives for moving here to begin wi th. It has been shown, nationwi de, busing for the most part is not u favorable way of trying to achieve, not only ethnic See .HOTLINl/Pa9e A 11 Jury ponders late Eight people ~re in T~s mpedal election to fill Marian . ~n's vacant state Senate selt. Six of the hopefuls are Repl.lblicans, three of them ~ names, making it unlikely anyone wOuld get a majority of the W*5 and the seat. iThatleaves the two Oemornts, Mike Palitz and Madelene Aralcitfian, ~ng to ~ ~ Ott* fOr a spgt In a May runoff. see story/Page M 01 accused • ~ Deliberations began Wednesday morning to determine if Brian Laudenback is guilty in the death of ·toddler. Bv MAac S. POSNER, STAFF wium~ SANTA ANA -Brian Lauden- back's fate is in the ham.ls of the jury. The six-woman, six-man panel deliberated for some six hours on Wednesday without reaching a res- olution on the second-degree mur· der charge that could bring Lau- denback 15 years to life in jail. Jurors began considering the ev- idence at 10:25 a.m. after hearing the last of closing statements from both the defense and prosecution and a half hour of instructions from Orange County Superior Court Judge John J. Ryan. "A!> I was listening to the clos- ing arguments, I was hoping that the jury !>ees the truth," said Karey Jaeger, whose 22-moQth-old son Tyler died on March 25, 1994. Police and prosecutor David Brent contend the child's injuries -which included a fractured skull and punctured abdominal or- g:ins -were caused by Lauden- back, 33. "I'm very nervous," Jaeger said outside the I I th-floor Santa Ana courtroom. "I've been waiting 11 months for this day. I gues:, I'm just trying to keep in mind tl1at nothing's going to bring T) kr back. But I hope Brian's locked up for a very long time." Family and friends of both Lau- denback and Jaeger -roughly 50 people -filled the gallery to near-capacity during the closing arguments It was the largest crowd dun ng the tnal, e>.cept for a See TRIAJ./Page ll ~Costa Mesa libraries not on list of closures ~City officials say they've been told that facilities won't be victims of cuts. Bv TINA BoaGAlTA, STAPP Wanca . COST A MESA -City officials said Wednesday that they've re- ceived "assurance" from the coun- ty that the city's two Orange County branch libraries arc not among the six slated for closure. County Librarian John Adams could not be reached for comment on Wednesday, the day after Chief Executive Officer Willi am Popejoy announced a budget slashing plan that includes cutting $5.6 million and 45 jobs from the library sys- tem. However, Mayor Joe Erickson said he received word from the county a few weeks ago that the Mesa Verde and Downtown Spring slag Patrons donate subscriptions. Page A2 branch libraries will not be af- fected by the cuts brought on b) the county's bankruptcy. And Adams in recent weeks has said the Costa Mesa branches boast a IJrge number of patrons '"'ho use the facilities regularly, which lessem. the risk of closure. Still, Erickson said the ci ty is continuing to JO\ e!itiga te puUing ou t of the county S)stem and shar- ing !.ervices "1th other cities that operate independently. "We feel that by contracting wit h other cities, \\e will be able to offer better services nt a lower price," Erickson sa id. "Righ t now, we put more money into the library fund than we're getting back in services." Thur'lday, March 91 1895 Na:rport ~ U.. D!lty Piiot Ught up your store that's ~ been a Costa Mesa nxture A WED LIGHTING, a fix· turc on the comer of New- port Boulevard and Victoria in Costa Mesa for 40 years, is hav- ing an unprecedented sale on se-• lected lighting fixtures discounted up to 60%. Allied Lighting is much more (han a top-quality lighting fixture store, it has the only light lab in lhe area, says co-owner Rob Hertzber&. The light lab encompasses a 1,200-squart-foot space within the retail store, which allows home owners, busi ness owners, architects and de- signer$ to sec all types of lighting · in different envi- ronments. The lab simulates ------li~ht effects in six · different vi- gnettes. l AJlied also has _ _.._ __ _. lighting consult- Best Buys ants certified with the American Lighting Association who can do office or house calls for proper lighting recommendations, and can even draw complete lighting plans. Allied Lighting (646-3737) is at 222 Victoria St., in Costa Mesa. 0 BRITISH AUTO SPECIALISTS (646-8802) at 1760 Monrovia Ave., Unit ClO, in Costa Mesa offers a special for new customers - a free oil change 1lnd filter with any regular service. The auto repair shop is a Jaguar and Range Rover repair specialist. It's a family type business that of- fers "good value and good quality work, with a very competit~ve labor rate," says owner Graham Reid. 0 LAST WEEK'S BEST Buys had an error. Bow Danglers sale was not fa st week, its today through Satur- day, and selected merchandise will be discounted 30%. The store has a selection of la- dies clothing, accessories, bath items and picture frames. Bow Danglers (642-5459) is at 369 E. 17th St., No. 9, in Costa Mesa. 0 TUE OUANGE COUN1Y Phllhar- monic Society is having its Phil- harmonic House or Design Tour April 22 through May 21. The chosen home tour is Chau- teau sur la Mer in the Pelican Hill community of Newport Coast. Proceeds from the tour will bcn· efit music education Youth Pro- grams presented by the Orange County Philharmonic Society. If you purchase tickets before April 17, the price is $14. After, April 17 the price is $17. For more information, call 840- 7542. 0 IF YOU'RE LOOKING for top of the line stationery and supplies, Francis-Orr Stationers ~ the best selection, and it's discounting all wedding invitations 20% through the end of March. Francis-Orr Stationers (675- 1010) is at 2823 East Coast High- way, in Corona dcl Mar. Dest Buys appears Thursdays and Saturda,ys. Whether you're • mer· chant or a shopper, If you bow of o good buy, call me •t 540-122-4, fax me at 646-4170 or write to me: lJest Buys; Dally Pilot, JJO W. Bay St., Costa Mua, Call!. 92627. LOCALS ONLY Costa Mesa High to be spruced up on 'Mesa Pride :Day' Scraping gum off the bottom of benches isn't a prclty job. but someone's gotta do it. . And volunteers at Costa Mesa High School arc ready for the challenge. Students, parents, staff and ncighbora of Costa Mesa High will pitch 1n for the school's second annuaJ "Mesa Pride Day" to clean and spruce up the campus. The work day runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on March 25. People who would like to help but can't join the work crew can donate plants or shrubs for the effort, said Principal Ed \ Harcharik. • \...... "The idea is ro build pride in our school and to create an environment that encourages kids to become a part of the facility and their education," Harcharik said. Last year's event brought out about 50 volunteers to ~elp scrape gum, wash windows and plant blooming-flowers, bushes and shrubs. The cleanup crew will even borrow a steam cleaner from the fairgrounds to scour years of grime and chewing gum off the grounds. The cleanup comes right before a state -accreditation committee visits the campus. Associated Student Body member Hicu Ho said he expects even more people to help out this year. " "In ASB, for one thing, we think it's our obligation to do something like this for the school," he added. "And I think people notice it when you come back to school and it's clean. "Last year, 1 scraped gum and I have never spit out my gum after that. You don't realize how much gum there is out there until you · have to scrape it. I guess it was a learning experience." Service clubs will also participate in the "spring cleaning," and students will be able to earn community service hours needed to graduate. CITY iDITOR IRIS YOJtOI, S14-42ll ClftllDI Dedication Event planners arc also hope to find a business or service group to sponsor lunch for the workers. To volunteer, donate or for more information, call the school at 556-3344. 0.SIT LuncH AILT Pu.or People gather at the Norman R. Loats Performing Arts Center at Newport Harbor High to dedicate the theater in the name of Robert Wentz, whose pic- ture is prominently displayed In the lobby. Wentz, a longtime drama teacher at the school, died in October after a long Illness. Magazine subscriptions .rain down on Costa Mesa library Earlier this year, the Costa Mesa libraries put out a call asking patrons to donate subscriptions to magazines that were cut last July at the Costa Mesa Downtown-Main Library. As usual, Orange Coast r~sidents opened their hearts, and their pocketbooks, to ·renew some of the periodicals that had lapsed due to the county's budget woes. The following is a list of donors who provided subscriptions. American Legion -Tom Sowden Architectural Digest - Margot Morgan Arizona Highways -JackJe Headly Atlantic Monthly - Anonymous Audubon -Tom Sowden Bon Appetit -Jon Swedlund Byte -OC IDM User's Group Christian Science Monitor - Sunny Carlson Computer Life -Kathie Wheeler Conde Nast Traveler - Jackie Headly Discover Magazine -Gina Lesley Entrepreneur - Entrepreneur, Inc. Family Handyman -College Hospital Auxiliary Field and Stream -Robert Schrimmer Forbes -Harold Snyder FW (Financial World) -Jon Swedlund · Harpers -MJchael Olds House Beautiful -Kristina Clayton Inc. -Adam Probolsky J(jplinger California Ncwslener -Adam Probolsky Mademoiselle -Delores Golden Marth.a Stewart's Living - College Hospital Auxiliary McCalls -'Lori and Thomas Han•ey Modern Maturity -Tom Sowden Mother Earth News - Jennifer Brown Mother Jones -Cynthia Corley Motor Trend -Buzzi Guyot Nation -Jean and Marcel Mathevet·Femllng National Review -Adam Probolsky Natural History -Carol Paquette Orange County Business Journal -Adam Probolsky Organic Gardening -Kathie Curtiss PC Computing -OC IBM User's Group PC Magazine -Kathie Wheeler Parents -Buzzi Guyot Popular Photography -Sam and LJ. Horton Reader's Digest (Large Print) -Jane Abbott Sierra -Tom Sowden Skiing -Wayne Golden Smart Money -Randy Clayton Success -Kathleen Cohen Town and Country -Jackie Headly Vanity Fair -Cynthia and Charles Gardenhire Weight Watchers -Barbara and Henry Panlan Working Woman -Leslie Corsini World Press Review -Jon S\ivedlund Writer's Digest -Sam and W . Horton Volunteer tax assistance program begins Saturday at DCC Cucl OKI Ta te or Coltl Men bllllers A free Volunteer Income True Assistance program designed to help low-ineomc, handicapped and non-English speaking taxpayers with the preparation of income tax forms, will be sponsored this winter by Orange Coast College's Community Services Office. starting this week and running through April 8 in room l04 of OCC's business education building. Attendees need to bring: the current federal tax package mailed out by the IRS, wage and earnings statements, interest statements, receipts for child care and other deductible expenses, along with a copy of last year's return. The South Coast Metro Rotary Club is gearing up for this year's Taste of Costa Mesa event, scheduled for .May 19 to 21. The City Council on Monday gave the service club permission to bang 50 banners throughout the city beginning April 24. The charity event will feature 30 restau- rants, live entertainment, karaoke contests, puppet shows and a Harley-Davidson mo- torcycle. Representatives Crom the Internal Revenue Service will conduct three-hour sessions from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturdays For more information, call 543-4060 or 432-5880. Proceeds will go to local charities. • iilf lilii.: MAIUN•ADDRUI ll&llrltlons, cdJtorill m111cr or Id- ftrtbcmcnu herein can bo re~ WIATHIR IURF RIPORT Ovr addreu ii JJO W. Bay St., C.O.Ca Mae. CA 926%7. duccd without wriucn permission of ciopyrl&hl OWDCr. TIMPIUTUHt wtsterly swell. ,, .... ,. .... , COITAMUA • lllFlld'I prOlllPtlt1ll, raps ll'OllQ8'· law. to help schools BY ~y ANN ff.uMON SVJP WIUTR ' At the.urging oi district S\lperintendcnt Mac Bernd, two s(atc senators have prop0scd a law that would allow school districts to use funds from the sale of surplus property for general .Purposes. State Sens. William Craven and Lucy J(jllca plan to introduce their bill in coming weeks, according to Bernd. The proposed legislation is just what the cash-strapped Newport-Mesa Unified School District needs as it deals with a • potential shortfall in funds due to the county bankruptcy. Many community members have llrgcd the district to se ll surplus property in order to avoid teacher layoffs and other drastic cuts that would directly affect the classroom. In fact, the district has already made moves to sell the Bear Street School property, which was valued at $4.5 million in November. · But current laws prevent school districts from using money from the sale of property for anything but building maintenance or construction, Bernd said. • · "To use the money for anything else, we have to go through an extensive waiver process," said Bernd, who ~itched the idea to Craven. 'This legislation will cut through the red tape of that process and allow us to use the funds immediately." · Because the county bankruptcy froze $80 million in district funds in the county investment pool, Newport-Mesa · trustees had to cut $3.1 million from next year's budget. If the proposed law is approved by lhc state legislature, the district , -.vould be able to use money from the sale for general operating purposes. "This could put us in a . position where we could solve our financial problems with our own resources if we needed to," Bernd said. "We have one-time financial concerns that have arisen from the bankruptcy. The ability to sell this property will allow us to meet some of those concerns and allow us to keep teaching and learning in the classroom as our most important priority." Of the $80 million in the now-bankrupt county pool, about $33 million consists of proper~es and other revenues that the district must by law deposit with the county. The district borrowed the other $47 million specifically to invest it. The bill first goes to the state Senate J3ducation Committee for study before it is passed on for approval by the Senate and Assembly, said Scott Johnson, a Craven staff member. Bernd said he called on Craven since the Newport-Mesa area doesn't have a state senator right now. Also, Craven has consistently demonstrated support for public schools, Bernd said. Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer Is also aware of the proposed law and has indicated her support to Bernd. POLICI FILU ........ TO MUI A COU lmON MOW to DACH UI Ir ii die Pilon policy co prompdy Clrculatloa Newport Beach Jally heavy rain 62/51 lh posslble loal blboa oodlng and 62/51 severe weather Cosu Mesa conditions In some w ... ,,.ac • .. , ..... , .... llY A punchy new west-southwest swell has arrived on our coast, which will mlx with a smaller IOUth•IOUthWeSt •well to make fun head-high wavet In betwffn storm fronts this week. 1000 block ot Newport Boulevard: A 31-year-old man was arrested on suspicion or prowling and indecent exposure. n..u U. JoliUMt N>h1bcr · comet UI ttrOrl o( IU~ WlllW. &Mdtll, Edltot Plc.ue WI 540-UU, Ut. uo lcf\'tM~M~Edltor Thank you. 'tri. YNM, 01)' EdllOf m Mart Ma,,111, Photo Editof W rm-. Om1l.uiOll M1n1&~r Tbc Ncwpon BcachlC'Olta Me11 llHl ICal&llt. ProdllCtloo Muqcr Dally PllOt (\JSPS-144-800) u publiahe~ Monda£:~~"' Satur· MkllMI fldct..r, Dilpley Malllfll d11. In ewpon and Colu Jr.df OtttJaa. a..ll'M Man11tt Mesa, wblcriptiom an oely evall· able by ~'bina io na. nmu PnlMll SMla, Controller Onnic °'9nry jf/SJ) lSZ.9141. Jn an• OllWck Ncwpon Buch HADIU MOTUNI and C:0... Mua. aublaiptlolll to the Da~ Plk>c only ere evaU.tbte Ml·6016 by Nil ...,,. f)9f IM'.lfttL $e(.. YCNI COlllJMOll about the Da ly ood daa ~ c.id ,at C.O.C1 P1loc or news llpe wUI M rtcOfdff Me11. CA. (Prices ldt en •p- end iMn dtrcctly to Edl«W W~ rolcable ltate Md *al tuct.) STMASTER: Send edd,_ 111111 a.ow.a. n. ... 24-hc>Qr cbafllCI to .,,,. Hcwpon lcldll answcnna MMe. 11117 he uMd to C'.olt.1 Mae Deily Piloc. P.O. lor ftcord ICllC'1 IO the 1d1cor Oii My 15'0, Cott. Meu, CA '261' • topic. ~ltht. No llCW'I AOrict, Iii· ~ (Tbt Tlmu Orwap County) (800) 252·9141 Mm1UID1 Owified 642-5678 Disp~ay 642-4321 Eclltorial News 540·1~ ~rts 642-4330 ews, Sports Fax 646-4170 Maha Omce Bu1incq Office 642-4321 Busineu fu. 631-5902 ht>llshcd~ ~ unity N'"9 a T11na Minor Compin1 ... ~ .. PNUdcN Ind . 0 .. 64152 area. . Corona del Mar 63151 IUUMalCAIT LOCATION SIZE Wedge 1·2 w/sw Newport 1-2 w/sw lbdJH 1·2 w/sw ltlvef Jttty 1·2 Yl/'w CdM 1·1 w/fw 80ATINO South wind• this motnln110 to 20 knots. Wind w.ves, lhret ffft.S foot west 1wtll. Tonlahl. winds soudi.e.t IO to 20 knots With J foot . . TIDU TODAY Finl high 2:31 a.m ........... 4.0 First low 10:45 a.m ......... 1.0 Second hl&h 6:06 p.m ........... 2.9 s.cond hlah 9:35 p.m ........... 2.7 FRIDAY Finl high 3:59 a.m ........... 4.1 Flrtt loW 11:42 a.m ......... 0.7 Stc:ond hl&h 6:36 p.m ......... " 3.2 Second low ....... - ' 1 tCM P·"'··••N• .. 2.S wae......,.:•2 AJthoup there are not any major swells on the lmintdfate horizon, the ovtfall Mt•Up In lM Northern PadRc Is WI)' similar IO rnid-Oiamber 1994, whkh brOuah. t epic waYH through j&nu.y. For c&a1ty surf reports and -...., Call (900) 976-SUU. Tht all CD1t1 S 1.50 plus •J' pot11N toll. NIWPOU8UCM .00 block or Momin& Canyon: An unknown suspect entered a park.Ina garaae by cutting a holo in the wire screen door u•ed by pedestrians. Once Inside, lhc suspect reportedly broko the ri&ht rear window of the victim.'• car and stoic a car stereo worth $2,025. 600 block Ol Udo: A woman reported that when she ten her btlercasc in lhe lobby or Udo Condol and returned 30 minutes later, the briefcase and Ill conlents - SJ,400 lo cuh, a LA. C.Cllulat portable phoftc and a caJcula1or -bad bcon stolen. llO blecli el Topu: Ai'l unknoW'n auspeci repottcdly eAllred a prep throoah an unlocked door ud ltc* 11 flsblna rods and reels. the flshl111 cquipncat MS Worth and aaimated Sl,000. • W .. llll NY • U.. '°"' ndle on I.he ...... bl lM _.,...boot wlUa ~ Weill Md ... --•• • .. .Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Thursday, March 9, 1995 A3 ·cemetery' S exp•sion plans, in a word, stink ,. Anderson · Elementary oners f1Ve-week parenting series I t was rainy and overcast _ Sunday when I looked at the view from Leonard Fish's ,.,. living room. Not only could you see Catalina on a clear day, but probably Maui and Guam, too. fNll .... The emerald lawn of Pacific View Memorial Park is also part of the view from the Fish residence, and that's OK with them. At least, it's OK the way it is now. On the Coast . When the Fish family moved inio their Spyglass Hill home last October, they considered the view of the cemetery as part of the natural beauty of their total environment. They had no concerns about Pacific View because they had been told that there was a 50,000-square-foot cap on expansion, which included a 125-foot b.uffer between cemetery' plots and the homes. Bracing their confidence was the fact that the expansion cap and buffer zone are part of the Newport Beach General Plan. They soon learned, however, that the new owners of Pacific View -Houston-based Service Corporation International -had ambitious plans. SCI is one of the major playen in tbe cemetery business nationwide. It reportedly owns some 700 funeral homes and more than 200 cemeteries. Among SCl's expansion plans is pushing the grave site limit Crom 125 feet to within 30 feet of neighboring homes. Right, 30 feet. Leonard Fish has put stakes in the raw land ~ehind his house to mark the 30-foot boundary. Thirty feet is not very far away. Thirty feet is right there. Thirty feet is in your face. SCI also wants to build new mausoleums, including free-standing granite structures that look like Grant's Tomb. "Private Estates," the bfochurc ~ calls them. · . Leonard Fish is not looking kihdly at such ambitious plans. While he is by no means the only Spyglass homeowner fighting the expansion, Leonard certainly is the most prolific. Over the past few months, he has pelted planning commissioners, staffers and city council members with volumes of detailed memoranda in a crusade to prove that Pacific View and its new owners simply don't have the right to push the park -and the city -to its limits. After. visiting with Leonard, and spending many hours studying his memos and accompanying data, one fact has become perfectly ctear to me: The deal stinks like a AWAep AAATCO Is The Proud Recipient of The "Newport Balboa Rotary Club• Award for Honesty And ' Integrity. Mufften1 •Brak•• Ask FREE• Estimates Traller Hitches About • Towing •••r.1 &31-1··r7o TRANSMISSION 1728 PLACENTIA SERVICE• REPAIR• EXCHANGE COSTA MESA ·--·DOMESTIC• IMPORTED CARS• TRUCKS• RY'S, __ _. You Are Cordially Invited to Attend A ~. e f\o"'7erda1~' s Landscaping Class , s Pro1ess\ooa\s F\ow?rda\eoduct c\asses. wt\\ co Learn to identify and define your Dream Landscape. We can help with your landscape Investment worksheet. The right professional can design and install your Dream Landscape . Home Consultation Aval/able COllPU'ft LNWAN'IO •YUM SANTA ANA COSTA MDA 2IOO N. 1\JSTIN A VIL %JOO BRISTOL ST. --·Cl ..... ~_, (11•) ~ (714) '1SM661 dead whale. How is it a Texas company, that doesn't give a rat's rear for anything or anybody in Newport Beach, can come into town, push the citizens around and put major crimps in not only their lifestyle but their financial well-being? According to a certified appraiser retained by Spyglass homeowners, Hayward Appraisal Co., homes near the cemetery stand to lose from 10% to 25% of their value if Pacific View's expansion plans are allowed to go forward. A firm hired by the city &ays the expansion of Pacific View won't do any damage at all. Mnybe. Tarantello & Associates, which does feasibility studies and impact analyses but is not a certified appraiser, studied real estate pried in the•affected neighborhoods before and after the announcement of SCI's plans for Pacific View. "Spyglass Hill," their report says, "has not been negatively impacted by the announcement of the proposed changes .... An actu~l impaetion on rhe resale value of the homes surrounding Pacific View cannot be accurately estimated until the changes are completed .... However, it is virtually impossible to perfectly assess the impact of an economic event prior to its occurrence." One can only hope. that a weasel-word report like that ''ill not be the basis for the Newpon Beach Planning Commi sioft to bless the massive expansion plnns of Service Corporation Internntional. By the planning department's own estimates, property worth in the affected neighborhoods will go down $4 million. Fish figures · values will plunge by ns much as $100 million. The truth is probably somewher~ ih between, but probably much closer to Fish's numbers than the city's. One of the appraisals 1 saw valued a home in Spyglass at $850,000. If Pacific View is allowed to f:Xpand the way it wants, with grave sites 30 feet . from the family's back yard, the appraistr estimates the value \\ill plummet $212,500 to $637,500. Pacific View opened in the 1950s as a welcome asset to the community, a tasteful place where locals could finally get some ~t. It was never intended to be, as Leonard Fish calls it, "a regional concrete interment jungle." Fireworks continue at tonight's meeting of the Planning Commission. Locals got the McDonald's and Taco Bell they didn't want. One can only hope that the· members will give the citizens a break this time. Fred Martin's co/IJmn runs c•·cry Thursday and Saturday. E.q1erience our luternational l?eputation . D A I LY LUNCH BUFFET $7.95 Monday -Friday SUNDAY F AMILY B RUNCH $10.95 l l am -3:00pm .ALL ~EVV ~ENU DINNERS from $9 .95 A-C~ • ROYAL KHYBER Cuisine of India 1000 Bristol'St. North (at Ja mboree)• 752-5200 . LARGEST '• SELECTION : NEW& USED ROLEXES .MARQUIS Silt TUl'lllCl Silt ~ JOd SW· 1 Did .1296t- l$CI ... $175-3 Did .$11• * '315-3 Qd m25t- Md sza. 4 1lcl $31» • Sid SS5t-' 1Jd mm. Md $5~ __ ...., : f: SS,000 : : m: last•• I '1d S111t-(r· i£ 1Jld S112t-'9l 1.* sw-O.A.C. 1 iSd ~1· .___ ..... lllSUWftE Rf'lJCEMHITS A five-week series of parenting classes will be offered at Andersen Elementary School beginning on Friday. 1• Classes will be from 9:30 to 11 a.m. in the Andersen multi-~ purpose room and led by Debbie Smith, a registered nurse and aclive parenting instructor. Cost is $20 for all five sessions or SS per session. The available coun.es are as follows: • Friday: Parenting Styles nnd Understanding Your Child I• •March 17: Devclo1' Responsibility nnd NuturnlJLo&ical Con~c-I• quenees ' • March 24: Instilling Courage nnd Seit-Esteem ~ •March 31: Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll •• .J •April 7: Winning Cooperation Other parenting classes available at other Newport·Me~a Uni·• fied School District sites include: •How Much Frced9m is Enough?: Corona <lei Mar High, 7 to 9 p.m., March 21. • Sixth Grade Coftfe: Harbor View clcmentar). 9:30 tu 11 a.rh., I • Marc·h jo. " . •Help for Teen-age Pressures: Ne,\ port Harbor 1-ligh, 7 to 9 p.m,, April 5. •What Makes a Happy Family?: Ne'' port Heights Elementary, 7 to 9 p.m. April 5. •Sexual Peer Pressure: Corona <lei Mar High, 7 to 9 p .m., April 27. •Parenting Tips: Ne"'port Harbor High, 7 to 9 p.m., May 10. • ASB Panel Presentation with Parents: Corona del Mar High, 7 to 9 p.m., May 23. •Surviving Summer: Newport Harbor High. 7 to 9 p.m., June 7. We're off to see 'The Wizard' this Friday .. CORONA DEL MAR -School. Andersen Elementary School students ''ill present a production of "The Wizard of Ol" at 6 :10tJ 8 p.m. Friday at Lincoln ElcmcntJry Ticket~ are S3 and are available at the door or at the Andersen School office. Seating is limited. C:ill 760-3490 for more details. Income Tax Preparation N,m cTROMC 1'4XFIUNG Weekend & Evening Appointments Available Reasonable Rates Excellent Service Over 25 years Experience Preparing Income Tax Returns John C. ·Faris, CPA Christophe r J. Faris, CFP 1-800-953-4TAX {7 14)434-7641 1503 South Coast Dr., Ste. 301 Costa Mesa, 92626 For everyone who is sick and tired of being ick and tired. l mrr,ive the hc.ilth uf \•lUr minJ. txxJ) anJ <.oul .u The Welln~' R\. l~H·l,,reJ .mJ rre-cnceJ hv he~c ~lling .lutht~r and Amem:.t\ rreemanenc \\Cllnc'' J11cwr, EJwarJ A Tauh, M.D .. The Wdlne-..-. Rx'' a highly msmicc1onal <.('11\tn.u ,m c.1,ntr1lllm~ ,·,~r own health de'-t1n) chmui;:h a 7-~ccr. ~If J1recctJ rroi.tl",111\. You will h.\\'C the.' r:ire \TflllrtU· nuy to lc.u-n n,c Wcllnc !. Rx ttom the lkXt1n wh1' c;u:.ueJ tt, <mJ ll111Cover th.n health I\ J 'll'rtnlnOO hy fte~m 1\ t'C'>('OO• "b11tty, elf \'al~c, and rs:vcrcncc for hk. "TM Wtlhw.u lb iJ an lntelU,mt, JttUlctw piM foT u ftJ.kr, ~hin IJ/t." &role 'I I, M.o .. 1.\w1lw1t "l.mit. Mabl:11tt ~ M~L:.·· "A dcxtM'J Wi~u JU #iw 1''"'"'-fk ... f'Ot' 1.J#f!" I ··--11'9• • ..__ lurv y l>M""''>nd " ....... , •tn•tn .. Cl•f U t hw maYt ~Ion anil ttsrf\lil&ions, u1U (800) JJ6·l9J9, it.of "Fu fm Uk .. .. ~· ~ ._,...__ -. --- Thursday, March 9, 1995 • Democradc state Senate race h"palull aye In runon •I ~With no one in the eight·way race expected to gather a majority, the top vote getter between Mike Palitz and Madelene Arakelian will likely be found on run·off ballot Bv M.u.c S. P8sNBa, Siw• W UT11. · With less than a week to go be- fore ballots are cast in the eight· way elec tion to fill ~ian Bcrge- 'son's state Senate seat, co~tender Mike Palitz says he's worried about on1y one opponent - Madelene Arakelian. ·Since it's unlikely that any one of the eight will garner a majori ty or votes cast on Tuesday, Palitz - a Democrat -needs only to get one more vote than Arakelian to advance to a runoff election in May. But if Arakelian comes out on top, she'll be the one to face the top vote-getting Republican in two mon ths. ''All I'm really doing at this poin t is focusing on getting the Democratic nomination for the (May) election," Palitz said.· "There's just too many powe rful people in this election to focus on , anyone else." The 35th state Senate District has 66% more registered Republi- cans than Democrats, but Palitz sqld that hasn't made things dif- . ficult. "lt really hasn't been u much of a problem as it has been help· ful," Palitz said. "Most of the peo· pie are ... upset with the Repu l· cans." Arakelian cited a lack of leader ship on the county Board of Su· pervisors -all Republicans, al- though the scats are non-partisan -as one reason she believes a Democrat can win. "We've got<"in A-1• mess," she . said of the q>unty's bankruptcy fil· ing. "(The new Chief Executive Officer William) Popejoy is a hatchet man. (The supervisors) hired someone because they don't want to take the responsibility. That's wrong." Palitz added another reason: "Most people agree if they elect someone to office, they have an obligation to stay in oCfice." He was ref erring to the decision Bergeson made to leave her office early and the attempt by Republi- can Assembly members Doris Allen and Ross Johnson to win the vacant Senate seat after win- Having the kitchen you've always dreamed of is as easy as recycling the one you already have! Our ex- clusive services will bnng new life back to your kitchen cabinets. 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For more Information call (714) 753-1663 Atk for Sondra or Billte J\nn.e Th Irvine Clhdcal Re.earch Cenlt>r ' Otttf.t.d 1ty W 9' ........ n . M.D .. P.A.C.P .. ... ,...c.~ ·~""·' .... 16259 Lquaa Canyon Road lrnne, CA 92718 ~,.. ... ,....._.. C:-7 f,W I&,_,. Com« d &.agun1 (ftnyon ni AAon Plltll'wey • Cit ltle 405 Freewey • . . ... nina_re-elcction four months •so. Here's a look at the two Demo- crats in the race, their beckaround and their politics. Maddeae Ankellan Arak.elian, who co-owns a wute manascment company with her husband, is known to introduce herself at Newport Beach City Council meetings as a "trashy lady." , . She's known tor avidly protect- ing her business interests and as a atchdog of county government. Now, she's looking to turn the tables on Republicans. Since the GOP nabbed control of both houses in Washington, Ar- akelian is l09king to becoflle the only Demo~rat from Orange County to hold a partisan scat. ~ ..,..)'What happened in November , -giving a mandate to the Repub- licans -I think it can happen the other way here in the county," she said. Arakclian concedes that all her goals can't be met immediately, but added she won't seek re- election in a year if she's ac- complished nothing. Her priorities: • Attraction of new b\1$lnesses and keepinJ those currently here. "County (Officials} talk about shrugina off mandates from the state. How about tak.iag some of the mandates otf of business." • Return education to the basic:s and restore the fine. arts. ''Chil- dren can be taught in a tent, but they need good teachers." • Private·public partnerships and volunteering. "I believe in giv· ing back what you've been given." Mike Palltz Palitz's last bid tor elected of· flee was shot down by ll·year-old Brett Lawrence, The youngster, a family ,friend, gathered signatures for Palit~'s Newport Beach City Council ·nomination papers -a job that's only supposed to be done by registered voters. PaJitz, a Corona del Mar resi- dent who owns the D0,ryman's Inn and Little Inn on the Bay, said he .was unaware of the ..Ule. But, rather th"an go through the process needed to make the baJlot, Palitz decided he was "chalking this one up to humor." This time, Palitz said, he's mak· Old F••hlOMd Frl•.nd/y Service FREE Local Delivel'.Y '\ College Pharmacy & Surglcal Supply Serving Cost• M••• For 32 Y••ts • C•Hlllceet Miil • lllC .......... ..,,. ... • a..ier C... DllCeeMI • Hetf .. AM..._ •Melt.__,.._.._,.., in& sure only registered voters arc involved in his campaign. With those 1S volun - teers, Pali~ has been walking neighborhoods and bas been to some 10,000 homes, the tandl- date said. "I · feel that a strong Democrat . . . can win the race," he said. His plan· • Elect~d-ofCicial re- form. "l feel that Johnson and Allen . . . shouldn't even be allowed to be in the election. If 1 get to Sac;ramento, l will (intro'· ·duce) legislation that these ..• career politicians won't be able to pull out of their elected positions (to run for others)." • Primary objective - Pass legislation to improve edUCflion Crom elementary school through the com· munity college level. • Increase spending for jails and focus on rehabili- tation. Madelene Arakelian Age: 61. Residence: Balboa Peninsula, 18 years. Occupation: Business owner. Political experience: Lost bid to unseat Rep. Bob Dornan; dropped out of county supervisor race. Mike Palitz Age: 31 . Residence: Corona del Mar, 1 5 years. Occupation: Businessman/ financi al consultant Political experience: Aborted Newport Beach City Council bid last November. . I. -CENTER SHOE REPAIR ·~ , I ·1 I Secure HorizOns would · like to give you 6 less things to wony aboUt. Does your plan charge expensive premiums? At Secure Hori zons, our plan premium• is SO. In addition, we provide 100% hospitalization~ And doc- _____ _. tor visirs are only S5. ·Further. there's absolutely no d eductible· for an.y covered service available through our plan. , e ~ Vis ion care? Sec what you th ink-' ... ~of this: examinations are available for o nly 55, w hile eyeglasses, if · needed . are jt.1st a low $20 every two years. It's just another example of the Secu re Ho rizons plan for ~ood healt h. Are you pleased \\'ith your choice of doctors? We contract with some of the finest private ' practice physicians for you to choo e from. And you can rest assured that chey are licensed an<l credentialed . That'S' beca use Secure Ho rizons is a managed care organiza tion that strictly scrutinizes our contracting providers. Dental coverage~ As a member of Secure Horizons, you will also receive premium- free dental care covering proced ures such as examinatio ns and "cleanings. All we ask is SS for denta l visit'i to contracting dentists. And all other dental procedures are significantly discnunced as well. I Does your plan include prescription coverage for no ad?itional premium? With Secu re H orizons, you ca n get many brand nam es and generic medicatio ns from our Preferred Drug List for only $7. And we also have a Prescription Mail Service Program w here you can get medication you use o n a regular basis delive red right to your home for o nly SiO, for a three-month ~upply (medication not on our Preferred Drug List is available for a S20 copayment or $45 through mail service for a three-month supply). Unlike many o ther plans, o ur Member Service Department specializes in senio rs and other Medicare beneficiarfes. • And as a result, they understand your particular needs. Jf you have any concerns about your coverage, our rep~e entatives w ill work to find a $Olution. Maybe that's one reason we're o ne of the largest Med icare risk plans in the nation, w ith over 300,000 members in Califo rnia alone. If your current health plan isn't up to the standards of o ur health plan, come to one of the meetings listed below. A sales re presentative will be on hand to answer all your q uestions an9 give you an appli- cation . Or ca ll us at 1·800-282-9944. We'd be happy to explain ho w you can get mo re for your health care do llar and the quality coverage you de5erve. SecureHoriwns · Offered by PacifiCare · ( 0\11 <.t I' 10 "\()\\ l ' C:OCO's 151 Newport Center Drive Newport Beach Friday, March 10 • 10:00 a.m. & 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, March 15 • 10:00 a.m. & 2:00 ·p.m. Breakfast Seroed at 10:00 a.m.! Pte & Coffee Served at 2:00 p.m.! If ' \ I 1 If I ( ( I \ i \ ' I \ 11 I I l I \ I I I I. I I I I _. " '. ' I 'l I ' • 'f:llf\' ""rlZWI,\ "' "'"'"'"""' c>f.I'~. a~U·· tfll#/t{Wd M«Jt<are Wlrllfl'''"N HMO 199f """'',/11$ '".~alftl hew ore t1110tlablt' ,,, Los AllHf.'i~. UnmRt'. ~<·ntmv. Kc•m, ~" f>*'1l'1 at1d fJclr1' of Hfnmkk muJ Sa11 /Wrnnrrlttw Cmmtlc'j cm/1• and""" suhjett tt> HCFA u11J noc 11ppmr«L All n11•mht1~ mu.~'""''""'' to />'~I' Mct(J/um• pn•m1Um,, """ n'!f! w'1trr1cllnR prof1tler...·. tMltt1me1l Cc"f/'t~l""'"'·( u111 aj1ply. All Ml.'dlc11ft' hi.!t1tjklt1rl<~ mt1y ''/>/J/.I' 190 tit~)' llfi•ttmCJ limit WI l11/x1twnt /"Y< blatrl<' bo.'IJ>llullwtlm1. Amwul pn~rlp1lcm ht•n<fit '' .J J.200. Pn':\{., rJptlu" coflt~11·mc•t1h an•'"" 11u•dfwllom h.-Ut'rl 011 th<• J>n.j'i..·m~l l>rt1H /Lott, • Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thursday, March 9, 1995 M t:~:.r. ~~~:1~~£:wE1:J~ . Wast Sida residents . to hold · anti•crlma meeting ...._ .... At rics, not a skull fracture, caused TRIAL brief visit by a group of students Tyler's death. on Monday. The jury specifically wanted to "We're just hoping for the know about when certain injuries best," said Jackie Jefferies, Lau· occurred, 8 court officiaJ said. denback's aunt. Testimony Crom Singhania and According to Jefferies, Lauden· Jiraki _ each critical to the pros· back told his parents during a ecution and defense respectively phone call Monday night: "I'd like , -was contradictory. you all to be calm and quiet out of Singhani.a said a pancreas injury respect for Tyler." · happened two or three days before Through his attorney, Deputy Tyler died. That doesn't cor· Public Defender Sharon Petrosino, respond with the tiJlling of either Laudenback agreed before leaving the CPR Laudenbatk reportedly court on Wednesday that he didn't attempted on March 25 or with a need · to be present if the jury fall from• a picnic table the defense asked for testimony to be re·rca4 maintains happened a week car· -something that will speed the lier. deliberation process along.~ Jiraki testified that the ifljury fJter Qeing told by Ryan that happened about a week before he d be informed of everything Tyler's death a good match with that happens in-h~ absence, ~U· the reported tumble frorh the play denback offered h1s only audible · table that Laudenback says caused comments during the five~ay trial: the skull fracture. "Thank you." · As Petrosino concluded her . Thr~e times after going into .de· closing statements, she reminded liberations, memb~rs of the Jury the jury that she needs only to asked to have portions of the tran· raise a reasonable doubt.· script read to . them, seeking re· If both her explanation for freshers on testimony from: Tyler's death -that the brain ex· •The .def~nse:s m.edi~l e~pert panded as a result of the skull Dr.. Kahl J1rak1; J1raki said a fracture and . the internal organs bnltse on Tyler s buttocks w.as-were ruptured by the ill·fated caused by so mething other 'than CPR attempt -and Brent's - Laudenback's .han~, ev~n though that the· boy was beaten :-.. are the. def~.ndan.t admitted in a taped reasonable, the jury must return a police interview that he spanked not-guilty verdict. the child; ...-People who live in troubled Costa Mesa neighborhood say they are tired of being victims. BY TlNA BOJlGA'JTA, ST.UP Wa.rru. WEST SIDE -West Side resi· dents arc sick and tired of the drug deals and property thefts that have for years plagued . their neigh· borhood, and they're ready to take a stand. "We no longer can just hide away," said Paty Madueno, who's helped organize a number of West Side community improvement cf· forts, including the opening or the Shalimar Drive Le.aming Center. "We need to assert ourselves and say enough is enough." And to help them, the Police Department and the Orange County Congregational Com· munity Organization at St. Joachim's Catholic _ Church -of which Madueno is a member -is organizing a neighborhood crime prevention meeting to give resi· dents a forum to voice their con- cerns and gather tips on how they can help clean up their com· munity. _ The meeting will be at 7 p.m. on •Jaeger, which included the ad· mission that she never suspected Laudenback, her former boyfriend, of abuse until she saw a phqto· graph of her dead toddler's l 'a 11 Htt hhi tt I n~u ranrL' f ll r r\ LI l 0 Q ti 0 l l ' ~ bruised buttocks; • Dr. Aruna Singhania, who performed the autopsy on Tyler's internal organs and told the jury Microsoft Windows ~H e l p! ~ I~ I I 1!lli I ··::• I~ Service & Stabilicy Since 1957 631-7740 441 Old Newport Bl vd.• Newport Beach (enr tbs Ho.pull ~V. At.>' 0 UV s g BUY & SELL USED CLOTHES, TOYS & ACCESOAIE&, ETC. 2584 Newport Blvd. Costa Mes• (N .. r Felrgrounds) (714) 831-7383 LIKE-NU CONCRETE CO . • Ugly Stains Removed • Guaranteed' Plu\ (rd•• Rqc,,,. Free Estimates 760·8427 March 23 at the West Side police substation, 567 W. 181h St. Organizers hope to draw resi· dents and property owners along Shalimar Drive, James Street and Wallace Avenue -areas fraught with high crime rates. Police have targeted those strce1s in ongoing undercover and patrol details. And this meeting will be just one more way of com· baling crime. "There is a lrcmendous effort to improve the situation on the We~t Side," said Police Lt. Alan Kent. "People may not sec the uniforms, but that doesn't mean we don't have people out there every day. "We have undercover officers from our narcotics detail, our spe- cial enforcement detail and our gang detail out there every day. We also have an officer, Da-rrell Freeman, in our West Side substa· tion, and we have ou r bike patrol. We try to keep a constant watch because of the various historical problems in that area." The department will give the residents and property owners at the meeting an update on various police operations in the neigh· .;! OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO COCKTAILS· FOOD TO GO PHONE AHEAD 296 EAST 17TH ST., • COSTA MESA 64$-7626 DENTAL CLEANING - ANY $5 800 111cl11dc·, tJt•111.11 •~t-i PET h.1111 II> . /)Cl( '"' Professional Grooming Available • 7 Days Spay/Neuter On Wednesday Appo1ntmt·nt l{l'<Jlllrt·d 631-1030 ~~~ll'n"""~ ~~ll!ltll'n!l9!1!WR Pu6{ication 'Date: Thursday, March 30, 1995 'DeadCines: ---= March 17· Advertorial· 6 p.m. 0ELEBRATION 1j March 24 · spaces p.m./ Copy: 6 p.m. March 27· camera Ready 6p.m. Jld !l{fites: $18 per column Inch OF CircuCation: Reach up to 107,500 readers '11iis Sectiott 'Uli[{ indutfe: • Holiday worship services •Great Places to enjoy Easter brunch/dinner ~ ..... borhood and explain proper proce- dures in reporting crimes. "Sometimes, people will call th• department after the fact," said Madueno. "The Police Depart· ment wants us to report. what's going on while it's happening. It helps both partners to know what needs 10 be done.' _. "So, the police will be able to give us 'a priority li~t. Like if there's someone shooting in the neighborhood or someone'll bang· ing on your door and threatening to break it down, that's a Priority 1, and you dial 91 L'' \\-hich owns an :ipartment complex at 734 James Street, hired Ameri• Corps In October to begin wottin' wi th residents on community im• provement efforts. "We've been holding mcctinp with the residents and getting their feedback on how we can im· . prove life inside the complex and outside1 as well," said America Dowen, of AmcriCorps. ''The resi· dents are very interested in the l::.SL courses because many o( them don't speak English. Many or them arc interested in learning the language in hopes of getting a bet· tcr job." This isn't the only project taL.ing shape on the We~t Side. 'I here arc other small·scale programs abo scheduled to begin this month. ·A ·new Teen (:en1er will be up and 'running on Shalimar Drive be· fore March is out. The crafts and house cleaning cour es will touch on how to start a bw.iness. ~nd, Bow~n said, all clal.SCS will be> ope n \o anyone iq' ttfc comm\lnity, free of charg~. And within the next few wccl...l., \\orkers from AmeriCorps -an organization which develops cdu· cational programs in communitiel. with special needs -will bcg111 of- fering courses in English as a Sec· ond Language, house cleaning and crafts in the James Street area. The Civic Cooter Barrio Corp., And, beginning next week, the group , ... 111 open their neigh· borhood meetings to the larger community. The first community· wide meeting will be at 5:30 p.m. March 23 at the apartment com· pl ex. For more information on the meeting or the courses, contact AmcriCorp!> at 835-0406. ~•v 17th St. BEAUTY CENTER murad '],Jf Stwicc ... ~,.1fo11 .ind !Beauty cSuppt> 20 {)f We proudly offer: -/0 Ave<ltt Wetline, Cosmetics and Skin Care • Ecoly 0 FF • Dcrmalogicu • Sensience .__ __ cx_..•P_· 3-.._2_3_·9_5 _ _. Along with 40 other quaJity brand~ 642-1717 . . ... 2\J./) lith Street, Costa llesa <.Vex/ to Ross1. Ope11 i /Jays: 1f .f JO.R Sat. lfJ.7 Sun. J /.6 Win Lunch wich SoJp Opera Star Joshua Morrow "Nicholas" on "Young & che Rescl ess", m TAJ~ m·iow• • FACEFI NDl:RS Mo.It! 'x\1rd1 olft'r' th1l,!n-n Jnd ru·m cht' opportun1cy co launch an c:xucin,t.:, .im·r in 11111.!tlin~ .inJ or u1mmt·ru.1l acC1n~. Just fill out the • entry bl.ink belo\\ or \WP h> d1t' lnformJc1011 liourh JC lluncington Beath Mall. Tht' malt' and femall 11. 1nm·r nl th< t hilJH n' t arti,:nrit' \\ 111 rec.e1vt' awards .ind an •!:enc 1ncerv1t\\ Thl m.1k & ll:mJlt· "''""'rot cht• Fautinders l ' &. over UI\ 1S1on \\ill ht d1.i:1l1lt tur '' holal'\1111'' C• iht I Jtt'linJer; World Class. Model T.ilt'nc fapu chi' '>tptt·ml)f:r 111 P.ilm '-rr i.:' "ht rt rc:prt'St'nc.it1"es or . I morl' thJn 20 m111.ltl1m. an.I tJknc ,,.. ' 1 "" I llt 'wurini: tor you I \1;11 •• nJt,m.ik ... 1 u .~ •,.:< 1, rn•• cnttr ~ [n"""'' un•l<'f chc •,i;t' .~ I~ mtl'I 114•< • J-Yrc-nt "~n.uun. \ t)nnn<n r<r !""''" ' 1 t , f1 o1 r •n ~ ''"" ,. 11 r l•n1n..k"" 1,,, Tm1 .ml"' ..-omou.i • ..,. l'"'"JC'' '"' "'"''•"'•·•!' "''r"~" nnh •I < >nr m•'< mJ 01 ltm.olt on ct>< • h1IJl't'n \ t ' f t i I I AOI "'t phocu. M.w ~ v.h111 t>r u•lur.1f{h1 •hh • hC'.iJ '™"· m•1 hc cnc;n-.I l'ltu"" ;;n'l\'.•1 ht l'l'IUtnN ' \1>1n•tur< on rh .. n:IC'•" lurm rd~'"'' ph<>lu for""' in puhlh 111 •n•l nr "'"' r1t>1n~ h1 111 •hEorn' "t11 tr'\tl\t '"' n,1\ .. ,:C'nt 101C't~ I ht.,. "'"'' ttit 11r1"mun1l\ 111 rn•j:r't'\\ on to I 'I'' 'I"'"'°" Ill ( um1~• 11 1 ntf\ lnrm .111 .. h ph<'lll. olllJ (, Pl'l'ltm1n•ri .... v.111 ht 11' I.I .1n•l l1nal1•U '";;(i,'" 111 chc m;ll fnh1tmit111n B.•11h Tilt-l't' l "n" 1111n In •n,I no punh.i....-I\ miu1ml "I" 1c1I RUl lS I U5UlAllONS Pl l Nl CllAllT C11cl1 Ou Bl~y hen M him hm H 2 f mli1dm 13 mr Dalt• '\111111•; >\ddn.''"' C1I)' l'hCllll'. 51flnlllllrt' ol C111111w111111 ,_,. ----lh'1irh1:. _____ _ lla1r: ____ t-.~1''·----:0----- Slfllllll11n.• of l'nn•111 (II unilc·r I~ ~'"'·l • Easter Flowers and other gift Ideas to celebrate the season • Calendar of Events •• •W1n1M't an,t 'unf •1'1 •~frntt rt-1\.tH lulklln>n f.,r .,.,.,, ()t ra ''" oc~I Ju,fp'' ~I l'ACrl INUl "li M•Mlrl Seth h I tn•I• •• Hun11n.c1~ fl,. .. h Mall •• t.~1~11. "-'tut.I•} • /lotlv I I Mtl\f ... It> VHI\ Qf ''""''In lllf!>ol Fc\try.i..l1no M.tr I, lf'l'I \\111iwr •1lllw AnhWlMN ul 11\t M•J l<h ~"f <'I 1lw . ' .. H1tn1 "-"Jn l h I ...i.,'""1cn1 ""'llf8f'M Ont ""ry rr• I""'"" lo I m tt .,..liJ • rP•••rd ... ,,h _, ...imr, .a.tin" It ~ mtl'llbi'r aDJ •Jl' 10 luNh •.Ch~ \\int °"Ill ... • ,ill!! (Oft l'!Wtl lnilt1 1'0~1'6'1 <:mt1MN,C:A9 ft • ............ ..._._ ............ .. ......... ~ ...... .. ... llN, ... , .... PMl9""" ___ ... __ _ A8 Thursday, March 9, 1- Mr. and Mrs. L. Ski Harrison of Newpon Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Jennifer Lynne H:irrison of Vienna, Va., and Christopher Paul Orlando of Washington, D.C. They will be m:arried Aug.. 19 in J.,aguna Presbyterian Church, Laguna' Beach. The bride-elect is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and UC Santa Barbara. Jennifer Lynne Harrison and Christopher Paul Orlando MIDDLIMAl·TAXMAN The engagement of Karen • .. CRIAMIR·MOCUTT . The engagement of Newport Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jose ph Orlando of Dana Point. He is a graduate of Capistrano Valley High School • ~nd UC Santa Barbara. Middlemas and Glenn Taxman of .Chicago, Ill., has been announced by her parents, Dave and Pat Middlemas of NewJ>on Beach. They will be married in the Sutton Place Hotel, Newport Beach, in August. B~ach residents. Sheila Mary ... Creamer and William Alan S~llN·LIX Ken and Nancy Skeen of Jacksonville, Ore., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Kimberly Skeen of Costa Mesa, .1nd Frederick Lex, son of Don Jnd Darlene Dickey of Costa ~k!ta and Ron Lex of Burbank. I hey will be married Aug. S in Mesa Bible Chapel, Costa Mesa. The bride-elect is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and UC Santa Barbara with a degree in political science. She attained her MBA at Pepperdine Universjty, Malibu. Mockett has been announced by her parents, Dr. and Mrs. George Creamer of Putnam Station, ~ He is the son of Or. and Mrs. Robert Mockett of Newport Beach. An October wedding is planned in Saint Mary's Church, Ticonderoga, N.Y. The bride-elect is a graduate of Westlake High. School in Thornwood, N.Y., and Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vt. Her fiance was graduated from Newport Harbor High School and the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. She is a graduate of Aptos High· School and Southern California College in Costa Mesa, and her tiance attended Newport Harbor High School and Teen Challenge Ministry Insti tute in South Gate. US TREASURIES 114 250-6345 or eoo 876~829 5«utties Amtnc:a. Inc. M1n1ber: NASO SIPC 2082 Mtc:helton Oriw, Ste. 212 lrvlnl, CA 82715 24 Hour Ra1e Info 1 BOO US TREASury Sy and Nancy Taxman of Wilmette, Ill., are the parents of her future bridegroom. He is a graduate of New Trier High School in Winnetka, Ill., and UC Santa Barbara and is currently enrolled in law school in Chicago. G .I Individually Alarmed Unils ./ Security Gal& Access ./ Resident Management Team ./ Open 7 Days • 1000 Units STORE NOW & SAVE $25 ./ Competitive Rates ./ Personal Business & 644-2747 Seasonal Storage ~ Deliveries Acce~ted 1177 Camelback Street Newport Beach, CA Mention ad for d~ount • New renters onty V' THE EXTRA SPACE YOU NEED WHERE THE SMART MONEY IS HEADING Every day, more and more md1Vlduals who require a higher level of servtce and banking expenise are l':1mmg to Independence One Bank of California. UNIQUE RELATION SHIP BANKING PACKAGE Our RelalJOnsh1p Banking Package proV1des our cuslomers wnh one of the most unique combmauons of essenual servtces found m the banking industry today. ThtS includes one of lhe highest interest rates available on a Money Markel checking ac.:count. A personal checking account. Overdraft protection. And Al M card convenience With no transaclion fees, regardless of the ATM you use. EARN 5 .39°/b ANNUAL PERCENTAGE YIELD fhe high return on your R'tlationship Bankmg Package IS just pan or the many benefits you'll enjoy. WE'RE AT YOUR SERVICE Let us demonstrate how Independence One Bank of Cahfomta <.:an meet your finanoal needs With levels of personahzed service that you demand and deserve. Though far apan from conven- tional banks, we're nght here in your neighborhood. The Relauonsh1p Banking Package is a limited time offer So, come m soon Lo d1SCOver exactly•where the "smart money" is head mg ... Indc::peodtnce One Bank O f Ca lifornia ,,. Extraordinary Service ls Only The Beginning -·-•COUllTY J7'f8 &ut Coast Highway Corona dtl Mar; CA 92625 (714) 675-8866 23521 Pasto dt Valencia LJ.iguna Hills, CA 92653 (714) 8.,59-3111 a.oe ........ COUlll'Y 9401 W1lshlrt Blvd. Btvtrly Hills, CA 90212 • 010) 275·4351 1801 Avenu; of thr Stars Los A"gtlrs, CA 90067 010) 553.2102· -8IMO COUllTY 8813 Villa IA Jolla Drivt IA Jolla, CA 92037 (619) 'f52-5660 ~--­..,Member FDIC lllt •Wlt'llilllp ......... Pwt• lftllAN Sl6.000 .. opr11 •I U' WO -"l'l"P'I '*"~ Wllll a -Worn ill '2' CIClll ......._ 1111 l'cfll!NICMll ,.,.~ _.. IJ) fl OUO•tlllll .i won1cirCMMftlrt11# CJofttu..,A<<!IU!W l1ww ~ ,,.._!Wd ~ llftll • Al'M Id, .0 lw .prMf on llw fww *1 d - -'fl"! w "1 dw llw ,,_,.,..,,,. c.:..i, ..... Ai;--\~llW'll llw "'-,..__ w -· dw~NI ftowAdOW!l"'*'"'1llw 1-.itody~l'lmU!l~Miiok1C'Nt'*'1~-i"1.(lr.illa .... O~ U> ... ,,..irul If !ht m no! ""' lht ITttlWI Gwh Flow Al:tOul!I wlll ~ rnlM!I .. • MMrj w.wu...,... ~ ""'h lht AllllUll ~ ~ ll"lllllWl~-...... ·iM-,,,. ....... rt1t~·· 19" • ...., ...... dlll)'Af'Y_..,, ... """'_ ..,..,,..., C(.,..,, Olrt •....., • tlllililir.....,. -t ""~ ltdlu ClrftllW ... .,. _ 01 .. • ~ .. .-tn! no m dr iw~ Om rllht hWwa ,_ t..mt.ir it ....... 1111"' ~ -ll flrM11 af ft!INlfy I) I~ .. . ' Shella Mary Creamer and William Alan Mockett +BACK if ISSOES by Dr. Tommy J. Knox. D.C. MEW BACK PAIN GUIDELINES Are you wondering what to do about a sudden, painful attadc of low back pain' Unless a senous condition such as a fracture, tumor, or infection 1s suspected, ConsetVative treatment is recommended over surgery and h1gh- cost testing This is among the gu1de- hnes set forth by a 23-member gcw- emment panel for the U S. Agency f0< Health Care Policy These specialists said that surgery helps only one in 100 patients suffering from 10\N back pain. The panel also frowned upon such unproven treatments as steroids and m1ec1tot\s It pointed out tf\at sudden- onsel low bac~ pain goes avvay spon- taneously 1n 90% of all cases w ithin four weeks In the interim, the panel maintains that ch1ropract1c manipula- tion •can be helpful for patients with acute low back problems • From chronic pain that's lasted for years to acute pain caused by an accident °' fall, you'll ftnd a variety of effective treatment options available for you · Without drugs °' surgery We believe that our patients dese~ the bestr of health Start feeling better - call us at 631 ·5664 to schedule an appointment We're located at 2013 Newport Blvd • Mon Fri. 8 30-7pm, Sat Snoon P.S. he government panel's guide- lines do not address. chronic back pain problems. VY'hrch are defined as lasting longer than three months. Chert e Ethlyn Barnett and Joel Ellis llAMln·IWI Cherie Ethlyn Barnett o( Newport Beach and Joel Ellis o( Chico will be married in Bidwell Memorial Presbyterian Church in Chic2:_Ibcir engagemen_! hat been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elton Barnett of Newport Beach., The bride-elect is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and receivtd her medical transcription certificate from Orange Coast College. Mrs. Henry Redding of Orange and Jim ~llis of Riverside are the paTcnts of the future bridegroom. He is a graduate of Sunny Hills High School in Anaheim and received training as a polysomnography specialist at Orange Coast College. fJJue to tfie Popufarity of Our 'Weine.scfay 9{jgftt 'Wine 'Tasting, Cliantecfair now Presents tfie atftfition ef: ~riday 9{jg6t Wine 'Tasting _/ 'Dance to t~ Tunes of 'Ifie Jerry Lam6utfi rtrio J"eaturing our ftma(e v~fist rterry ~{[en 'Dining. and 'Dancing from 5:30 pm · 10:30 pm . 'E.tyoy our .91.wartf-winning Cuisine and .91.mDiance {714) 752-8001 18912 Ma~rtliur'B{vtf., Irvine 'MaOt.rtliur & 'DougCas, ntar Jolin. 'Wayne Jl.irport The Spa at South Cout Pbza offers reUef from thi• hectic world with an uncrowded yet fully equipped gym.A spe with every lu'tury lmagi~>lr.. And people trained to make e\lcrything :.sy. ' for die off er of your ct1<>k"t (on -,,.r tt "'• "'"") / "11 us ~t 714 ISO OOS • • -··---..l LIAH HOOS'1'Ul/DAILY PILOT Tree·mendoua: Harbor View School students, from left, Jeanette Tartaglini, Marcus Hoffman and Jeanette Jones, are encouraged by Sandee Kerr to plant a tree in honor of Arbor Day. As a perfect example, Kerr told the youngsters that the-tall pine In front of her house was once a sapling -like the ones they are holding -that her. daug~ter brought home to plant when she was a third-grader. Parents Who Care to locus on children's freedom "Giving Wings to My Child: How Much Freedom is Too Much or Not Enough?," will be the topic wh~n the Corona Del Mar High School-based volunteer group · Parents Who Care hosts its monthly meeting March 21. The meeting will be from 7 to 9 p.m. in the school's Little 'Theater. Guest speaker David E. Rice will discuss ways parents can f~d a balance between freedom and control so they can raise children to be independent and able to ENDURING •Most St~in Proof •Most Crush Resistant •Most Durable •Sui table For Residential Commercial & Apartments SINC• 197.f BAIMA cmn MIUS, tlC. 029 Ttnnlnal W1y, 120 • Costl Mtn ... • 722-0420 0 n Mon. ·Fri. 9·5 cope as adults. Rice is a licensed marriage and family counselor at South Coast Psychological Center. He has appeared on TV and radio and is a contributing writer to parenting magazines. He frequently conducts workshops for schools, churches and other non-profit organizations. Parents Who Care is a group that meets monthly to discuss topics such as college planning, teen sex and childhood drinking. Information through books, tapes PHOTOGRAPHY ' and names of helpful counselors are also available through the group. Other upcoming meetings include: · •April 27 -Preparing Your Child to Withstand Sexual Peer Pressure. • May 23 -ASB panel discussion with parents. All meetings are from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Corona Del Mar Little Theater. They are free and open to all parents from all schools. For more information, call 644-0553. "AteJfandra" Children's Special ~ 50% OFF on sitting fees 25% OFF on portrait fees Reorders included. 240 Newport Center Dme, \u11c 110 Newport Bc.ic:h (714 ) 644-693~ Olebrating our SOth Anniventiry ·PERFORMANCE -JAGUAR• ROVER 714/650• 5860 ' .. .. 'I Hoover® Wet/Dry Vac Deluxe • Exclusive 2-tank system • 12.5 gallon tank • Attached .8 pc. tools. , ,.- • With detachable blower • Model #56751 , HOOVlll. *Bring In y9ur old shop vacuum, working or not, and receive these rebates $ 88 Model #56755 16 Gal. .......... $144.88 Hoover® Wet/Dry Vac Deluxe • 6 gal. tank • Attached tools • Model #56543 $ 88 Model #56547 8 Gal. .. $64.88 .I' Mo~#S6529 ............ $44.s.86 6 gal. (Does not include tool kit) PlllCES GOOD THROUGH MARCH 19th 199S Hoover® Wet/Dry Vac Deluxe • Exclusive 2-tank system •· 12.5 gallon tank • Attached 8 pc. tools • Model #56631 56635 16 Gal. .. $109.88 -.. ._, - A8 Thul'9day, March 9, 1995 Mus11111 llPOJICt -.r 83,• __, . muacu.m wu crammed into a buildil)a on Balboa Boulevard. Steele decided to help the mu· scum find uJ acquire a new loca· tion. . t nt ........ A, boost .... m new ra1111•11 Ficker, Don Merritt and Dick II,, Steele of the Harry and Grace Bv EVAN lbNIMON, S'rAr• Wann NEWPORT BEACH -Even a new local business got involved in the eCfort to help move the New- .port Harbor Nautical Museum across the bay. At its opening night "Very lm· portant Guinea Pig" party "two weeks ?go, Hooters of Newp~rt Deuch made a voluntary donation to the museum. The ' testaurant's staff requested a $10 donation at the door, where members of the mui.eum's board or directors stood rcudy to collect. The mu!teum's one night total: approximately $3,~. . . The opening night do~ataon is part of the company's effort to es· tablish a link wim its community. Hooters generally brings in be· tween $3,000 and SS,000 for a local charity or organization, ac- cording to Newport Beach Hooters co-owner Frank Fortson. "We try to find an organization with roots in the community," said Fortson. "Our whole philosophy .is to find something within a one· mile ring around the restaurant so we can really giye right back into the heart of our nei&hborhood." . In a sense, the museum won the donation by defauJt. The restau· rant originally targeted the Sea Base operated by the Boy Scouts of America. The Boy Scouts' response: thanks, but no thanks. Scouts are not ecrmitted to ac- cept money directly from a com· mercial organization, a~ording to a spokesman. "We do not get in· volved in any activity involving any kind of sponsorship or public com· mercial venture," said spokesman Devon Dougherty. "Anybody who wants to raise money in support of tbe group's efforts can go through an auxiliary organnation." But Fortson said the group's re- fusal was pro~pted by ~ncern over image rather than pohcy. The Hooters franchise has been ac· cuseo of exploiting wom en, par· tially because its wa ·tresses wear shorts and tight T-shirts. "(The Boy Scouts) felt that with the Hooters perceived image in the public, that it wouldn't be a good choice to get involved wi th us at this time," Fortson said. We'fe blencllnl Cite convetience bf fast food wHlt today's need for delldous nutndont ~·········••:.:••··~···············~ . ·3 : iiidCCOil TraVei . ~ : . $380.00 Round Trip Airfare Most Cities No Adv ance Purc hase Som~ resCr letlom1 moy npply Inde Con Travel . . (714 ) 998-1026 . 4 ~ • • -• -• • • • • -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • # ~ ROSES $83~ REG.' 11" SEEDS 20% OFF :F~££. I I I 4" BEDDING COLOR I limit one ptr coupon On. COllpOll ptr culOtomtr ..-, _ ----- GROUND COVER $6so FLATS REG. '1'' . LARGE SELECTION ~ 16:20 HAMILTON AYI. HUNTINCTON ll!ACH OPEN7 DAYSB·S Steele foundation. Represcnta· tives from the companies and agencies ~re extremely helpful os well, LiWlll said, particularly since a multi·billion-dollar company like Family Restaurants did not have to Jet a smaller player like the nautical museum lhtough the front door. "I was the point man, but there's no way l <lid this alone.'' Littell said. Capital development committee members say that, modesty aside, Littell's involvement was crucial to the success of the project. "He's an amazing young man and i tJ1ink be surprised a lot of people," Steele said of Littell. "l think people didn't know that he had so much ability hidden awpy." It was Steele, a longtime friend or Littell's, who brought the bro· ker into the process. Steele hoped to assemble a.first-class model ~hip collection, an effort which would involve joining forces with the nautical m1,1seum. Since the TAI PREPARATION "A FULL SERVICE FABRIC The museum commislioned a feasibility study from consultant Tom Ashley which listed the ide:il criteria for a new museum loca· tion. or the nine local sites which Ashley identified as prime loca- tions, the Balboa Pavilion and the Reuben E. Lee -which became a Charley Brown's restaurant in re· .cent years -were listed I and 2 respectively. That's where Littell came in. A graduate of Estancia High School and USC, Littell knew Steele through boating circles. High-powered museum affiliates opened doors for the museum with The Irvine Co., wbich leases the property to Family Restaurants, the parent company of Charley Brown's r-estaurant. The barge sits on city and county-owned tide· lands. The development group-besan its inquiries at The Irvine Co. and was later given pcnnission to ne· gotiate with Family Restaurants. To further complicate matters, representatives from Family Res- PATTERNS 99~ Selected No Limit • While Quantities Last SENIOR DISCOUNT WEEK Special discounts for sewing students ever da I FABRIC WAREHOUSE 1805 PL~CENTIA AVE. (PLACENTIA AT 18TH) (714) 646-4040 ~~!W!!P-P.~~ Affordable Prices are only One of the Reasons to select Harbor Lawn ~ Experienced and knowledgeable ~ persons to assist with all of y~ur questions and needs [:lf .A beautiful convenient location A staff that understands all faiths and rituals "Affordable & professional" We encourage and invite comparison of our funeral home and crematorium manufac tured in our own factory Specializing In Slipcovers Custom Upholstering · Re -UpholsteriYJg Satisfaction Guaranteed Immediate DeliveryAvailable Huge Selection of Fabrics at Wholesale Prices RI Sofa Direct Inc. §J 2 900 E. Pacific Coast Hw . • Cor.ona Del Mar • 1 • , .(714) 759-9268 tauranLI &old Littell that ano1hcr restauntcur wu biddin& for the location. Where the museum bad no money, the compctin1 bidder, Littell later learned, could finance ahe entire deal "on bis Bank:A:n\Crkard." Littell ultimately struck a deal with The Irvine Co. and Family · Restaurants whereby the museum would buy out and asi.ume Charley Brown's leases in exchunge for the river&oat replica. The restaurant hoped to get money for the barge as well, but eventually settled for a straight lease/barge exchange. The museum al~o needs to acquire use permits from-both the city and county. In December 1994, the fund- raising began ... again behi nd th~ scenes. Littell helped organiie a . Founders Circle of 40 individuals who wouJd donate $10,000 e;ich. The museum teceived an ad· ditlonal $320,000 from the Steele Foundation. ... According to Littell, the money will finance the lease buyout as well as the museum's move to the Reuben E. Lee. A committee of four prominent restaurateurs have formed a committee to bring in the museum's food service vendor. "You couldn't afford talent lib this .. Linell said or the fooCI ser· vi~ committee ... They're volun· teering their time because they want to make this site a winner." Littell acknowledges that tbe nautical museum was an un(ra: ditional deal even for a man wath his business history. "Mine is • niche market," he said. "I'm used to going in l\lld getting the de~ done and getting back out agalll . My clients usually don't want any publicity. · "This time I had three different ''entities, each of whom had the ir own way pf doing things and I ha to keep them all moving in th~ same direction. Thank God t))as was a non-controversial project." Both Steele and ~lurock -the barge's original designer -de- scribe Littell ns an excellent.or- ganizer a man who excels at "put fi!tg to8ether" ~omplicated de~ls even though his.work seldom in- volves stepping into the limelight. · "He operates on his own and he's a very quiet type," Steele said. "You wouldn't think he'd have as much get·up·and·go as he's shown." Quality work in Costa Mesa and Newport.Beach Since 1969 Expert Brick, Block, Stone, Tile, and Slate. (714) 645-8512 Jim Jennings Custom Masonry State Lie# 392707 170 E. 17 St. Suite 206 Costa Mesa "In Newport Beach Since 1973" JAMES R. REED, CPA INCOME TAX PREPARATION Acco'unting • Individual • Corporation • Partnerships • Estates & Trusts "Convenient Location/Easy Parkingn 901 Dover Or., Suite 238 •Newport Beach 631-2128 FAX 831·0716 THOMAS C. BECKER 350 E. 17th Costa Mesa StEL 117 646-8803 Sp ecializing in individual tax returns All States Also Corporation -Partnership -LLC Estate/Trust Tax Returns . It's Your Money ..• r ... and WC can help you keep more of it. By finding cvcry tax deduction ond rtax credit you're en1jtlcd to 111ke. By suggesting strategies that will minimir.e v your tax liability each and every year. Call for an appointment today. C hr istine E. Brown, C PA 100 Pacifica, Suite 130, Irvine • 453-0680 Z A.HER F A LLA.HI · -CP.A- oiumn• (I lndM.'idMal 'rau• Ytar-i11tmd T• Piannins Finoncial S1a1nnm11 AUiu and R""'- Utilaf Ion~ IRS and fT8 R$'umc.t'-• fnt'°'1'0f'Glloo I/ l}i,.dMClon • Conapu,,..,.,.,.,. ~JntsMI c.n.ldMst.n {714) $40-4CPA {4272) C'vcr 2) Yc.'IU E_x~r~nce 650 T11wn Ctntcr Dflvc, St11te 800. C.oso Mesa. CA 92626 ''l'\ ,, All~--714250-6377 /( J,J ....... BOO 666-6829 Prv,.ulolMI Income Tax PNIMratlon Individual • ,artnerihip • EstltM l frusts Thursday, March 9, 1995 Al 'Color It Or~nge' sbldent artilts shine at Tiffany-hosted reception F if teen student artists were welco~ed at Tiff any and Co., South Coast Plaza, by the elep nt J o Ellen Qualls. They were not there to buy jewelry. Recognized as outstanding local stu,dent artists, the honored 15 came to participate in the 21st annual "Color It Orange" student art ~xhibit, • . The Crowd . sponsore~ ~y The Designing Women of The Art Institute Of Southern California. It was the fourth co nsecutive year that Qualls and Tiffany opened their granite and steel showroom for the young creators. "Tiffany believes in the artist. In fact, we are proud· of our CALL US FIRST FOR THE BEST QUALITY, CRAFTSMANSHIP AND DESIGN ASSISTANCE FABRJCAnON AND INSTAUA110N • MARBLE • GRANITE • LIMESTONE • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • FLOORS Award-winning art student Justln Young (left) lsJolned by Jo Ellen Qualls, vice president of Tlffany and Co., an John Lottes, president of the Art Institute of Southern California. Maria Fiore (left In bottom photo) of Newport Beach poses with Anthony and Suzanne Valentino. longstanding corporate philosophy of standing behind the arts. It is, after all, our business. Everything we sell originates with the artist," offered store v.p. Qualls, welcoming The Designing Women of The Art Institute of Southern California arriving for the reception. · Doretta and J ames Ensign, Maria Fiore, Jane Grier, Susan McFadden, Ruth and Ditk Montgomery and Verna and Joseph Degenhardt of Corona Del Mar we re among the chic mid-week guests turning out for cocktails and art, among. the gems. Fred Chuang, talented. Tiff any display designer, judged the three dimensional an category fo r the fourth annual Tiffany Selection Award. Seven winning compo!.itions will be showcased in Tiffany's seven windows through mid March to compliment "Color It Orange" 1995. D. W. Cook's column appears Thursdays and Saturdays. ANTIQUE QUILT SHOW I I II "1 '-I I' " \ I \\ \!I /I ' I \I I I j t (If\ I,, h' l 1 ,, J, ...... , J I ( j 11 I\ ...... ' Onr 100 udque quilta to be UqaJclatecl each Sata.rclayl In storage for years. Every pattern and type. Each is one-of-a-kind. All are guaranteed authentic! sa.,.,. 8:00to10:00 , .•• Comcast of Newport B. 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March 9. 1995 , Newport 8NchlCoeta Mau Dally Pl COMMUNITY FORUM .COMMUNITY FORUM RUNS THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS • WJllTE TO: PILOT Lm.ERS, 330 W. BAT ST., COSTA MESA, CA 92627 •FAX TO: 6-46-4110 •READERS" HOTLINE (CALL-IN COMMENTS): 642-6086 , ' ~•TH AlllMaLY llACI ~Time liJr ·talk almosi over, special . Senat9 . electi•. is Tuesday· ~ ! o n Tuesday. voters will go tQ the polls to . The1e are eight candidates, but three figure to be . decide who will -or will attempt to -fiU the top vote getters -former Assemblyman Gil the shoes of Marian Bergeson, the respected Ferguson, Assemblywoman Doris Allen and Newport Beach politician who left the state Senate Assemblyman Ross Johnson. for the county Board of Supeivisors. The race in the special election among the by JACIOI HIATHER AND EVILYN II.Alli T akc our word for it ... it is so much easier to be a city fa ther than a city mother. lt sceins all city fathers have to do is be "one of the good old boys" to get results. However, we professional "city moth'cts" do what mothers do best -we care and we. worry. Because w~ "cared," we have done almost 'every rotten job there is in Newport Beach city govern- ment for at least SO years (col- lectively spcalUng, that is). Now we're at the stage where we have to share a big worry with you. We didn't worry too much, how- ever, back when we were elected to the Newport Beach City Coun- cil in 1978 bec~usc we knew we could handle the local scene and we had Marian Bergeson to back us up in .Sacramento. However, when Marian decided to run for the Board of Supervisors we were devastated, but then we rational- ized that the county needed her leadership more. We didn't realiz~ how much more at the time. And besides, because of term limi: tations she wou ld be out of the Senate any- way in 1996. "However, you have got to find a good replacc- men t," we begged. us. He voted against th e Beach Li- ability Bill that Marian carried and the city desperately needed to pro- tect us from more than $6 milhon in judgmenls from people injured while swimming at our beaches. We also worried about the peo· pie who kept trying to break our airport agreement by hijacking a bill on the last day of session and trying to get their noisy, aftcr- curfew cargo nights accepted with- out public notice or debate. Mar- ian never let them get away with this skullduggery. However, instead of guard ing the fort, when Gil became our as- semblyman he took off a day early and went to Europe. And then there's this Paul Horcher business. How could Gil betray us and hi.s party in such a despicable way? ln addition, Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer, who now repre- sents us in the 70th District, tells us that, among other things, Gil has made her job more difficult by erasing all the constituent infor· mation from the computer that goes with the office. How can we have any faith in a man who be- haves tike this? Marian's senate district is twice the size of his forme r As- sembly district. lay PHIL SANSONE AND ILLIN WILCOX T he March 14 special election to select our new state senator will mark a turning point for our coastal communities. · Its significance can't be exaggerated. A new; cxpanding1political . power group has spent half a million dollars tryi.!lg to impose on us their candidate -an outsider -by sme aring and attempting to tear down the hard wcSn reputation of Gil Ferguson, whom we overwhelmingly elected from this community five times to represent us in the stale Assembly over the past decade. Did we go wrong? Five times in a row? We think not. Gil Ferguson, unlike most professional polititians, had a "life" before politics. As a former corporate executive and later a local busin ess owner, he is the only one who has ever met a payroll. And this was all after he had spent the first half of his life as a U.S. Marine, fighting in three wars for America. Gil and Anita and their family · have lived and playe d a leader~hip role in our community 25 years. Why anyone locally would cast their lot with and advance the interests of outsiders, is difficult to fathom. Some, however, ' ~ apparently have old political "scores" to settle, or new ones. The carpetbagger from Placentia whom they are helping knows next to nothing about us. How can we expect him to care for us, when he • Republican colleagues bas been feisty and bitter with charges and counter·charges rolling in like waves. Johnson is a ca11etbagger. Ferguson helped Willie Brown stay in rrwer. Allen is in the pocket of the teachers' union. · Unless one of the candidates earns more than 50% of the vote, there will be a runoff between lhe top Republican and the top Democrat. Following are ~ trio of commentaries on the big three. just abandoned the people whq. re-elected him in November, having first led them to believe he would serve them? The incumbents in this race knew that they planned to enter this Senate race a year ago, long before they sought re-election to the Assembly. Neither WClS forthright. Gil was forthright with us, and more. He believed it would be unethical lo seek re-election to the Assembly, knowing he intended to run for the Senate. He was the only one who did the.right thing. He gave up his seat, gave. up the power and the office. He alone gave up the power of the incumbency. And, he also gave us the benefit of electing a new Assembly representative after a full-fledged primary. We didn't go a single day without a representative in the Assembly. A fter Gil wins this Senate race, we won't have to waste badly needed tax dollars for yet another expensive special election to replace him. Nor will his election change the dynam ics of the Assembly. lf one of the incumbents wins however, the loss to Republican numbers in the · Assembly will keep Willie Brown in power until term limits Jcjck him out next year. Gil Ferguson authored or co-authored a significant amount of legislation, in virtually every area of public policy, during the decade in which he represented us. Included were some of the most important bills which became Gil Ferguson law, affecting our ;.conomy and economic competttivcness, public safety, transportation and political reform. We've not only followed his legislative record, we've read the compilation summarizi~g the record; tt runs 45 pages. It's available from his office to nny voter. Gil Ferguson has been a tireless spokesman for what is right. He has been willing to take on the tough issues, going head to head with the liberals and head to head with special interests. He authored the first term limits bill, which was def eatcd but soon grew, with his help, into the initiative which voters approved. His Ferguson-Polanco Act made , possession of child pornography a crime. He helped qualify and campaigned for Prop. 187, cutting off benefits to illegal aliens. He's doing the same for a-new initiafr!'.e to end race and gender · preferences under so-called "affirmative action" policies. The choice in this election isn't about who has the most money. It isn't about political philosophy. And il isn't about who can sign up the most politicians. T his race is about ~aracter - whether we want a voice for independent conservatives in Sacramento, or whether we want to further empower this new political group. And it's about whether we will be represented by one of our own, or by either outsider, one who is favored by the power group and the other who, with the backing of the public employee unions, is simply seeking refuge Crom term limits. Gil Ferguson is an outstanding, independent ~onseivative leader. And he is one of our own. We know that we can count on him. He has proven himself time and again. He has earned our supporc We, our community, deserves a person of his caliber, and he deserves our votes. We urge all of you to join us in making Gil Ferguson our new stale senator on Match 14. Phil Sansone is tbe former ma1·or and longtime council member In Newport Deach and Ellen WJ/co.Y is' the former foreman of the Orange County Grand Jury. We didn't wait for that. though. We started beating the bushes looking for someone who was good and also had enough money to campaign with. We even sent a "good old boy" to see Assembly- woman Doris Allen repre· sents the other half of Marian's Senate di strict. She is well thought of in her district, and as a former school board member, usu- ally gets hefty support from CTA, the te achers' union. " ·Allen has best interest of constituents at heart if form er .. Sen. Ross Johnson John Seymour was interested. (He wasn't). Marian Bergcson's size six shoes will be hard to fill, but on March 14 in a special election we have to do it. Since this is a "safe Republican !)Cat" and you are, of course, a "likely voter," your mailbox un- doubtedly has been filled with bro- chures from these three Republi- can hopefuls: Assemblywoman Doris Allen, Assemblyman Ross Johnson and retired Assemblyman Gil Ferguson. The main complaint the other opponents have against Johnson is that he moved to Irvine to run for this scat. Johnson's answer to this is; "Ferguson didn't think moving was so bad when he moved to La- guna Beach to run for Diamond Bar Sen. Frank Hill's vaca ted scat, and Allen moved to run against John Lewis for Seymour's seat." We agree. We think it is a given that all J three candidates know the district and Orange COunty. However, we want to be reassured that our new senator will (I) pay attention, (2) respond to our concerns and (3) have some clout. Our county needs to elect an effective legisla- tor. It is no secret that we were not happy with Gil Ferguson's repre- sentation. In (act, in 1988 Evelyn tried to unseat him. Our biggest beef with Gil was that he was often working against As chair of the Health Com-mittee, she made a strong pitch to the doctors for their support. J ohnson countered by telling the doctors that he was on the Health committee and in addition, he is vice chairman on the power- ful Rules Committee that decides what bills get out, and if so, to what committee. Another thing, he gets the high- est rating from the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association for his fight against new taxes and wasteful spending. 'the California Journal, which ranks the performance of the 80 Asst:mbly members in such things as intelligence, effectiveness, en- ergy and problem solving ability puts Ferguson near the bottom at 77, Allen was 69 and Johnson was at the top of the Orange County delegation at 29. Since there arc less than two years left on Mari:in's Senate term, we are casting our lot with Ross Johnson, but we have made it abundantly clear that we con- sider this an audition, not a lock. Who knows, we might even find a "statesman instead of a politi· cian" under this legislative rock. That would be a big worry off our minds. J•ckle He•tbcr and Evelyn llart •re former Newport BCJJcb City Council members. Both 1/so served as the cit¥'• mayor. By JAMES D. PETRIKIN N ewspaper headlines for months have proclaimed, "Layoffs Planned," and "School's Face Bankruptcy" as Orange ·county continues to reel from the failed investmen t fund . As a member of the state legislature, Doris Allen has refused to join the chorus of special interests demanding an increase in the county sales tax to bail out the Bob Citron fund and county government. As a parent who raised a family and a former member of a local school board, Doris Allen refused to spend time pointing fingers at those responsible, even though she was one of the few who criticized Bob Citron's investment policies and supported and endorsed John Moorlach's valiant effort to call attention to the impending doom. Protection of our schools from bankruptcy and state takeover ti.ave been her highest priority. Doris Allen introduced a bill to assure that local schools will not be forced to close, declare bankruptcy or layoff hundreds of teachers while leaving our children without .ta..n educational future. Doris has lived in our district and community Cor more than 30 years and battled the special interests to win election to the 67th Assembly District scat over two well-funded incumbent politicians. Today, Doris Allen faces a similar battle for the state Senate against two better funded opponents, both senior members of the Republican Party hierarchy. They nre formidable opponents who are s.pcndlng huge amounts of special interest money on a campaign that initially seemed focused on two other Sacramento politicians, Willie Brown and Paul Horcher. For weeks the two were like a pair of lions arguing over turf and have shouted about who was responsible for Willie Brown's election as speaker instead of discussing the most pressing matters facing Orange County - the bankruptcy and how we can solve this crisis without passing new tax burdens on to the hardworJcjng taxpayers:' I am proud that Doris Allen has never voted for Willie Brown as speaker of the Assembly, but I'm more proud that she's concerned about jobs, keeping our schools open and fully staffed, protecting our county's economic future and solving the crisis of mismanagement in county government. Her opponents, particularly Assemblyman Ross Johnson, has now turned to spending huge sums of money on a campaign of lies and half truths about her strong record of support (or PropositiQn 13 and opposition to new taxes. Dozens of your local citizens and public officials have endorsed Doris Allen's campaign for the Senate. Ask them for youraelf about Doris Allen,• record on Proposition 13, opposing taxes and work to solve the bankruptcy crisis. Campaigning for public office can tum nasty. And Mr. Johnson has opened the Ooodgatcs of dirt, lies and half ·truths. This means we must take a closer look at his personal record co••••PONDINCI Doris Allen and his fitness for holding public office. His is not an enviable record - the only legislator in· California ever to be censored by the California State Senate for anti-Jewish remarks, fist fighting in the Capitol and obscene remarks · about another legislator that have no place in a family newspaper. Jie had the third worst attendance record last year among Republicans and the fifth worst record among all members of the Assembly. And let's not forget that he is being recalled by voters in his North County·assembly district for abandoning them by carpetbagging into this district to find a new job. Proposition 140, the term limits law, which Doris Allen strongly supported, will force hlm from politics·ncxt year unless he's successful in his carpetbagger campaign. . Everyone should regret a political campaign that requires having to bring forward these milttcrs to the attention of voters, but having lived and worked in this community for her entire adu lt life, Doris Allen has no secrets from the voters she represents. And that's why so many chiefs of police, police officer associations, teachers, nurses, firefighters and local public officiaJs have raJlied to Doris Allen's campaign. D oris Allen has never represented the southern portion of this Senate District, but she has dozens of endorsements of local officials -four members of one city council for example - because Doris Allen worked closely with local officials on legislative proposals impacting Orange County. That's why las~ year, Doris Allen was selected as the first legislator to receive the Orange County League of Cities • "Legislator of the Year" award. Doris needs your help and support. We face difficult challenges in Orange County and in Sacramento. With your help, Doris Allen will continue her efforts to protect our schools and educational future of our children while leading the fight against new tues to bail out the special interests responsible for the Orange County bankruptcy. Jomes D. Petr/kl» Is o past mayor and current councilman In Fountain Vallq.ctx .. More on GOP llroldlaha In my best auempt not to violate Ronald Reagon 's 11th ComrnandRlcnt, l must take exception to Mildred Murry's March 2 letter to the Dally Pilot. AJ president ot the Corona del Mar. Repub- lican As5et11bly, l did not give her au- thority to tef•ct delesate1 for the entire ~r nor f'Ot'-tho conventi9n in quution. business how they voted. h is unfortunate thnl Gil Ferguson took it upon himself to upbraid the Durio's at the convention in front or wit- nesses and 1 Will stand behind their vcr· aion of the story. who we should vote for (March 4). He knows this, yet dcnl&rates our can· didates using the rating aystem of Tho California Journal, a political periodical owned and controlled by liberaJJ In Sac- ramento. I noticed he didn't di.sclose tbc source of all those "bad" ratlnp. No doubt he also spreads .. f acts0 to his 1tu- dents without eating his sources. It'• no wonder so many colleae studenta' heack arc filled Cull or mush. down. That's what we do when wo want to correct the bias of the liberal medla. u ual five sense . • We're well aware of how wrong your Fred Mortin is on just :ibout everything. and now we're treated to the droolinp o( this nitwit Mark Pctracca. AJ per our by-~ t 1Ubmitted her name and the .Ourlo's to Lesley Stoll, membership secretary or the Cllifomia Republican Aslcmbly. u deleptcs. John and H• Durio voted at the convention on a secret ballot and his none o( my BARRYZANCK Corona dcl 'Mar California Republican ASSembly PetrlCCI DllCI WIY on So, Mark Petrac.ca, the. acknowledged . spokesman ror the liberal wing o( local Democrats, is now ln the busincsa of tell· ing the most Republica~area ln America lf your readers want a true meuun ol the errcctiveneu and quality o( CIUt CIDUll• ty'1 Republicans ln Sacramento. Ill tbey need do is turn that rallnl ~ uplidc 0 CHERI KETNER Newport Beach Ono would hope that' the Pilot would sect out comments from those who have an atmoa sixth seDM about predktina oomin1 election rCIUJts ud world cvcatl ao that readcn would obtain soate new lnai&bt into tbe human coadillon. · Alu, lM Pilot Mems IO DOt only have a problem m findina prophets ind criti• cal thinken wida dali -liitn 1enae, but it can't even seem to find writers with the Petracca just doean't 1ct it. The sad thins abOut this IUY is that ho teaches political science at UCJ. Whot must his 1tuden11 be lcarnina bUt politics from a auy who dodm"t understand even the moat buic tbinp about ~tics? OU Fcrpson il'aoina to win in a land· slide. PulOd. H. Mllt.:ARD Costa Mesa ... Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thursday, March 9, 1995 Af 1 ........... , diversity, but students working together in a common interest and a common locaJity. Why we would bring that aspect to schooling in Newport Beach is beyond comprehension. l support the people's views in trying to better the education at any of oui local high school. ·But they're going about it'in a strange manner, considering the strides ' that Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor highs have made ' specifically in recent years, not only in the academic world, but in other factors of high school education. BILL LIVINGSTON Newport Beach 0 I would .Jike,to add my vot~ in favor of the charter school idea. There are no· negatives, that I can sec, and that's something that · makes it a great deal of sense to do. JOHN KEATING ·Newport Beach 0 1 would like very much to see this take place. Anything we can do to make our school system more creative would be very, ve ry helpful. 0 JOEY LONG Newport Beach 1 support the charter option for Corona del Mar High School. 1 think that any option in which parents can contribute money to . the school to cut .down the ratio of students to teachers, and -otherwise provide resources that schools need, ought to be enacted. ALAN LEGUAY Newport Beach 0 The idea of charter school status at Corona del Mar is a good one. It would be a tremendous advantage in expediting changes necessary for improving education at Corona dcl Mar. This also ·would allow for more local control for our school, something educational experts across the nation see as a major force in improving public education and raising the standards that havt fallen over the years. MARIANNE SCOTT Newport Beach 0 I'm one of the people who is spearheading the effort to bring CdM High School into the charter program. The more that I look into this opportunity for the high school, the more l am Gonvinced that it can really do some wonderful things for the school. MICHAEL GEISEN Newport Beach 0 Who died and left Michael Ge isen, Linda Mook and Karen Wilson king and queens? As a parent of a 1994 Corona dcl Mar High graduate and also a current student, I can state unequivoduty that this unholy trio neither speaks for me nor represents the best interests of my freshman daughter. Th e last time I looked, I believe that Corona del Mar had the highest average SAT score of any school in Orange County. Is this a bad thing? Is this something that needs fixing? If l wanted my kids to wear uniforms I would have se nt them to a private school. If I wanted them to be re sponsible for turning out the classroom lights, I would have put them in a home study program. And if l wanted them to partake of ethnic and cu ltural diversity, 1 would have sent them to school in Garden Grove or Santa Ana. Since I do not want them to do any of these things, l sent them to Corona del Mar High School. This initiative has no place at Corona del Mar High. It is ill conceived and totally without merit. Mr. Geisen, Ms. Mook and Ms. Wilson -you arc wasting your time. Corona del Mar High will never be granted charter stature. I will bring to bear whatever resourt!es are required to see to that. And stop sending me those moronic letters begging for money for "needs'' items for Corona del Mar High. CHARLES E. GRUBBS Newport Beach 1894-1995 FOUR GENERATIONS 101 Years! Carpet Remnants Sale All Remnants Below Manufacturers Cost · ALDEN"'S CA RPETS, INC. 166.l PllCCacia Sc. Costa Mesa 646-4838 ' •.i WHY .......... ,_ state and nation and if change is needed I think it can be made within t~ current system," school trustee SereRc Stokes said. Stokes, like other members of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District board of trustees, said she's uncertain what charter advo· cates arc seeking. "We have a brand new board and we have a new philosophy on this board to improve education, and I don't think they have even approached us with their ideas yet," said Stokes. "We would cer· tainly want to listcri to them." . Board president Judy Franco ech~d those thoughts. "Even though I've been to meetings abo\lt this, I'm still not sure of where the plan is going. 1 guess· I would !ike .. to know what they see they can gain by ha"'.,iqg charter status, versus what they can do under the current system." Trustee Wendy Lecce said the proposal needs a broad base of community support to get off the ground. "And frankly, 1 think they are rushing things. l'm the kind of _person who takes their time in doing things so it's right the first time." The charter proposal, which would make the high school inde· pendent from the rest of the dis- trict, is spearheaded by parents Karen Wilson and Michael Geisen and teacher Linda Mook. The three said they believe a charter school, which is a state- supported public school, could be a next step in the school's restruc- turing and improvement process that began a f cw years ago. The state permits only 100 char- ter schools and 77 are already in place. Charter supporters are watching the ·numbers closely. Trustee Ed Decker said he would like to know the goals of the proposed charter school but that his vote on the measure would depend on the level of sup. port from teachers and the com· munity. Corona del Mar High School Principal Don · Martin said that during a meeting Wednesday with the school's 6S teachers, questions ran from structure aftd hierarchy to the very definition of a charter school. "The most important thing, I believe, is that a steering commit· tee from all groups should be con· vcned to address the question: what is the goal of the school?" said Martin, who witnessed estab· lishment of one of the first charter schools in the state two years ago when he was an assistant superin· tendent in Santa. Bar~ara,. ''A joint committe~ of staff, Students, par· ents, distriC't staff, teachers -ev- eryone Should address the qucS· tion,, "But if this issue creates a .di- vided staff ·and/or community, the efforts in this direction must be withdrawn and we'need to refocus our energy on other methods of achieving our ultimate goals. I cannot support a situation tha\ leads to divisiveness at this critical time." Maftin's leadership is another reason why the school works well wil'hout the charter system, Stokes said. "He has done things there that haven't been done in years and he need,s time to make positive changes and get his ideas across," she said. Stokes has other concerns with the charter plan, such as the large amounts of money it takes 10 run a high school, how th·e school plans to govern itself and how that board will be elected, and what happens when teachers move on and children graduate and parents aren't involved in the school any- more .. .• START YOUR WEEKDAY A 'HOLE· NEW WAY ••• DEUCIOUSLY! . . ~ r--------------------,r--------------------, COMMUTER SPECIAL BREAKFAST SPECIAL Bagel, Cream Cheese & Regular ·coffee $·1.50 Omelet Sandwich· w/Cheese & Regular. Coffee $·1.99 GOOD MONDAY -FRIDAY ONLY GOOD MONDAY -FRIDAY ONLY EXPIR.ES,.3•16-95 EXPIRES 3-16-95 BIG CfIY BAGELS DP BIG CI1Y BAGELS . DP L-------------~----~~~L--------------------~ 1712 NEWPORT BLVD. COPPERTREE BUSINESS PARK (Next to Kinko's) 151 KALMUS DRIVE, #M-8 COSTA MESA COSTA MESA 642-8805 FAX 642-8807 437-5500 FAX 437-5501 . If you're entitled to Medicar~, our phone number isn't th e only thing that costs notliing. Doctor Visits Monthly Plan · Premium Hospital Services He-.ilth Nee Seniority Plus* has some nice, round numbers you won'c tind with other senior health plans. You'll like our ocher numbers, coo . Like our $5 dencal visits. Our $5 chiropractic v1s1ts. And our $7 prescriptions. And while we've kept these numbers low, we've raised a fe~. Like our annual limit for prescriptions. It's now up co$ l ,500. And our nerwork of quality private pmctice plan physicians is now more than 14,000. We also have a number of other benefits that go well beyond Medicare. Including vision and podiatry programs. Come co a meeting. A health plan representative will be available to answer your questions or co cake your application. Or call 1-800-935-6565 EXT 806. ...lr J ~, Mmrdt 15 .t 10:00 a.m. Kaplan 's Oelt ltfondq, -..ch 13 at 10:00 •.m. Frld•y, M•rclt 10 •t 10:00 •.m. Marni's Cafe l 83 S Newporc Boulevard Costa Mesa Mimi's Cafe 18461 Brookhurst Fountain Valley '21 l llorbor Boultvard Costa Mc» Tlt,,,..-y, Miwelt IB •t 10:00 •·"'· TH•d•y, MBelt 21 •I 2:00 p.m. Wedn••d•y, Merclt 2 2 •f 1 :00 p.m. Co ta Mesa Stnaor ('auzens Ctntt'r 69S West 19th Srr('tt International House of Pancake' 18782 Beach Boulevard Huntington Beach C..O!ta Mc\a HEALTH NET ·.· SUNIORI1Y PLUS :.\ Health Net Product •A ~ ol Health Nfl, , fecltt.a, ~ HMO wiih 1 MNkut ~net. All Medkart bendkiarics may apply Benefit lrPI to L<'I A¥kt• <>ran&e. IUftnidt, S.n krnardino, San otep and Km\ coundie9. Al carw ""*be J:;';kkd. c:~ or authoriatd by the Primary C•~ !Jbytte'lan. Members nhltl conunu~ to pay MedjC'aft Part I Pftl'niUmt • Vllion ,,.run lnclu UO allowance fot framr. Routine duropracuc C•f! hm1ted tu U v1t1t1 annuall). Ct'94 Hftlth Ntt I ' I l l t • Ttwraday, March 9, 1995 Newpoft BNch/Colla Mesa Dally Pllo ..... .,.... , Lcun to look your belt on a ll'UJJ budiet at a free 7 p.m. proaram at the Newport Beach Central Ubruy. Presented by ccrtifted ima&e consultant Beth Bambelser, "Looldnt Your ProCeuional Best: a Seminar for tden and Women" will offer tips on how to dress and (eel better. The proiram is in the Friends' Meetinj · (loom at 1000 AVQCado Ave., Newport ,Beach. Call 717-3800. &MPaOVllATIONAL COMIDY NIOllT An evening o( comedy with proceeds to benefit girls and boys swimming proarnms will be held at Newport liarbor High School. The event will run from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Norman Lonts Performin& Arts Center at the school, 600 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. For th~ SS tltkets, call Teresa Po111croy at 646-2647. H NIOaTAUI Tax counselor Mark Frisman and the Jewish Senior Center or Orange County arc offering free tax assistance to seniors 60 and older every Thursday through April 13 to help prepare federal and state tax forms. ............... Tbe Direccon Mortp&e ud Lou Corporatioa II~ a eemlnat on bow a HUD- FHA-lnsured rcvcree mortpae can help you. The seminar will be bolted by Bob Brennan, a senior rcvcno moniaio consultant at Ditec:ton, and will convcpe at 3 p.m. at nu Pac:Uic Coatl Hlpway ln Newport Beach. For reseMtioos or more lnfonhatlon, call 722-6523 or 72J.0233. UJIUllUCAN MlmNe The 199.S annual Meetin& and Reception for the Republican Associates or Orange County wiJI take place from .S:JO to 7:30 p.m. at Westln South Coast Plaza, 686 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. Special iuest will be State Sen. Rob Hurtt, 34th District. Price is Sl.S ror members, $2~ for non-membcra.. RSVP i.s needed by Tuesday. Call 8J8....S736. MOOllACH TO IPW .............. _,.... lutiel Dbllon, owner of lnncMtive Bualocu Solut.iou, will offer hints on how to perform publlc relations functions for your busincu at the weekly Pinnacle Group mcetin& at 7:1' a.m. Colt is Sl.S. The &TOOP meets at The Center Oub, Orange County Performln.f ArU Center, 6SO Town C.entcr Dnvc, Costa Mesa. Call 723-4212. ININeaounOUI Fairview Developmental Center is holding ill annual Spring Boutique from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fairview' ls located on Harbor BouJevard at Fair Drive in Costa Mesa. · fMHIONIHOW Neiman Marcus, in Fashion Island, is hosting a YSL Encore Think Show from 10 a.m. to 4 p.in. For more Information, c.au 759-1900, ext. i407. • FRIDAY • Appointments arc required. For more · John Moorlach, well-known CPA who forewarned Orange County's investment crisis, wllJ speak and ll{lSWer questions at the Balboa Bay Oub, 1221 W. Coast Highway; Newport Beach, at a noon luncheon for the Newport Harbor Republican 8UllNUI DIYILOPMallT MllTINO The Consumer Business Network is hostln& a meeting titled "Understandin& the Mechanics of the aUTalT The Friends of Newport Bay conducts Its last free walking tours of the season at Upper New- port Bay Ecological Reserve between 9 and 10:15 a.m. Saturday. Tours depart every 10 to 15 minutes from the corner of East Bluff Drive and Back Bay Road and last 1 'h to 2 hours. Wear comfortable shoes and bring binoculars and cameras. The tours Introduce the rich variety of wildlife and plants at this coastal marsh. Call Fran at 646-8009 for details. Large, Sweet, Vine Ripened BRITISH AUTO SPECIALISTS: Quality care for fine British Automobiles • • Engine Oil & Filter 17«J Monrovia Avenue C-10 Costa Mesa, CA, 92627 CALL 646-8802 • w/any regular service • • • Castrol GTX 20/SOWMotor Oil ••Quality British Oil Filter • • Detailed Safety lnspt.achon w /all • · regular services • • • • 11n1• cu~le>mrrs 011/y -0111· cou1io11 llC'r • FOR APPOINTMENT • customer · rYJ1 4-1-95 • '---------------------------· ................ ~ .. "Duffy" Electric; Boat Show " In-The-Water Come try the new D uffy 16 S u rre y, complete for $9,995 Satur day, and Suriaay, March 11 and 12, 1995 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. • New boats • Used boats • Fin ancing available • Slips ava ilable • ~..::..- ----~,. ~ . ~-~·· "-···, · .numr:rr~w D uPFIELO ELECTRIC B oAT CoMrANY 670 WF!i1 11TH Surn, 0·2 CO!>rA M1; A, CA 92621 Pti~NE (714)645-6812 fAl( (714)645 -9206 I • Body," fclluriq speaker Mlcbacl Oooiift&. Tbe mectina will take place at Gcezcn Oarlic Orm, 4200 Scott, Newport Beach, at 7 e.m. The prlc:e is SIS. For more Wormation, calf SS<M785. •••wuu Stretch your budaet and please )'Our wallet at the semi-annual rummage sale today 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m. lO noon at the Fil'lt United Methodist Churcli of Costa Mesa, 420 w. 19th St., Costa Mesa. The event is sponsored by the United Methodist Women's Organization to . aid their Mi'5ions Projects. For more information, call S48· 7727. HlnOllY o• IAIUNO "The History or Sail" is the title of a seminar, from 7 to 9 p.m: at Orange Coast College's Sailing Center In Newport Beach. The f resent er will be sailor •nd history bur Leo Block. Registration fee is S23 for singles, '$39 per c:Ouple. For more information about the session, call 645-9412. UAaN MOVT NOTOTYPU A seminar on prototypes is being sponsored by the Inventors Forum group from 8 lO 10 p.m. at Orange Coast College's Science Lecture Hall. Registration and networkin& begins at 7:30 p.m. Seminar fu Is SU tor noa-mcmbcn aod SS for mcmbcr1. .. wym1••••1W1 Sunshine Commwiity Nunery School is aponsorin, a "8 Family Rummaie Sale from 8 a.m. lO l p.m., rain or shine, at Presbyterian O.urcb of the Covenant, 2850 Fairview Ave., Costa Mesa. The sale wilJ continue on Saturday. • llWIUIY ......... M'PIAUllCI Jewelry desisner Dana Kcflln will .... make a special appearance at Neiman Marcus, 1n Fashion Island, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more jn(ormation, call 759-1900, ext. 2407. SATURDAY ADULT anuaNllle ITUDINTI Orange Const College's Adult Re-Entry center will conduct a seminar tilled ''TransfonnatiO'ns." The event will run from-9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. ~ and is designed to assist adults who arc interested in returning to school. The conference, which is gC4rcd toward single-parents, displ:i~ed homemakers or those interested in a career ch:mge, bas several scholarships available. The registration fee is $15 and includes continentol breokfast, SINCE 1918 Largest Selection of one of a kind Investment Persian Rugs, New & Antique -Contemporary Line of Custom Rugs -· Collection of Old World Iillims & Sumaks buffet lunch and patkina. Olildcare is available. To make reservations or for more information, call 432-5162 • UADHHWI Friends or Costa Mesa Llorarics will hold a used book sale at the Costa Mesa Downtown Library, 185.S Park Ave., from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. l;lardcove and trade paperbacks arc $1, reaular paec:rbacks and records. SO cents, and children's books and magazines are lS cents. Tho book sale will be held indoors if it rains. ACUPUSIUU woauHOP A four·hou( workshop tcachina acupressure techniques to refresh the appearance or the face will begin at 10 a.m. m Room 207 of Orange Coast College's Lewis Applied Science Building. Registration rec is $29 and a SS matcrfal fee is pnyable in class. Auondce~ should wear comfortable clothes, and bring a towel, w:uh cloth and mirror. Rcgis~ation for th~clnss is being held in OCC's Community Sel'\liccs Office or by phone, using Visa or MnsterCard, at 432-5880. Send your Items to Around Town tdltor, Tbe Dally Pilot, 330 l-Y. Bay SL, °'sta Mesa, Calif. 92627. We Ofter Ah'lbuch Dnplay M~-C.ellulm; Paging And Voice Man Service AD In One. II' ,,,_ A MOii• II' If"• A ,, .. _.. II',,.. A tfOIG MAI' AllVIC• II' If"• AM rHU• Ill Oii• MOii• • Aa'Rluch Display ~ service allows )'OOf Mcaagc Ready cellulat PlOOC IO reociYe i-FSt take \'Cicc mail mtSllgll:S apd di!playw.t mc:uer:s nati on the PIOOC dilplay. ·-= ....... ,..,, .. • ...., b ,_.,....., .. ... " .............. $1& • ,,.,. I. ,.., •l'Nrr la lwl • I+ If • •• "9i.I ...... # ,.,,,,,,.,, I •The <Xlllt is only an additiaml $9.9.5 per monlh for clsp&ay n~ 9CIVice. • Avalllble only from Air'blch Cellular. .,,,.,, .. ewport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Thursday, March 9~ 1995 81 PORTS ' SPORTS EDITOR ROGER CARLSON, 642-4330, ext. 223 tockton' i pace pu1s.· him · .,n · one of ·-the favored spots Mesa Verde Country Club is like oming home for former USC ~tandout. ave Stockton, former USC standout who played in the PGA Tour's Haig Open at the Mesa Verde Country Club in 1968, has always been a slow starter. .Not that the leadi{lg.pioney·w?nner the put two seasons on the Senior GA Tour has anything to worry about. who bas graced the winner's circle nine times in his previous three years on the Senior Tour. The problem is, when he has won. "I've always been a slow .starter," he said. "My goal this year was to get oCf to a faster start. and I'm real pleased at my start. l played well at the Tournament of Champions. (wberr; he tled for s'ixth), but 1 had a b,ad"Sunday at the AT&T and I followed that with a bad outing in Naples." ru:w cl ubs to go with my driver. They arc extremely good clubs, but they had a slightly different fe el than what 1 was used to." Stockton, who joined the Senior Tour after turning 50 on Nov. 2, 1991, has amassed almost three times as much money on the Senior Tour In less than 3111 yea rs . than he did on the PGA Tour ($1,279,299), , wh ich he began playing in 1964, . •Swing on the Rnnge ... Although Jac k Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer will not play in the inaugural Toshiba Senior Classic, Robert Landers will. Most have heard of Landers, the self-taught golfer and Texas cattle farmer with the muttonchops, who played in the Senior Royal Caribbean Classic in Key Biscayne, charming the gallery, while hacking away with his homemade clubs, blue jeans and bent-up tcn}li~ shoes. Landei:s, 51, made this year's Senior ;four by finishing six.th out of 11 1 golfers at a qualifying tournament. . Stockton, who will return to the Mesa Verde CC ext week to play in the $800,000 Toshiba Senior lassie, won three times fast year en route to keting $1,402,519, one of five players last year Stockton, who didn't win until June 12 last year, came back th• following week and •found the winner's circle at the GTE Suncoast Classic .. The difference was in the ~Entering the 1995 season, 'Stockton had merited $3,247,885 on the Senior Tour, already collecting S 150,580 this yea r as he looks for a three-peat in capturing the money title. Club golf Stockton plans to be a force next week in the Classic, battling a field of 77 other Senior Tour pros that will include Trevino, _Colbert, "What a story!" exclaimed llilly Cas per, "'ho made a visit to Mesa Ve rde CC last month to promote the Toshiba Senior Classic. "lt'i. great for the tour to get his Landers coming in. You couldn't believe tht: people talking about it and foll O\\lllg him. It's tht: ho earned over $1 million on the tour (along with e Trevino, Jim Colbert, Jim AJbus and Tom Wargo). irons. "I was using a new set of irons, and they are the same ones my sons use," Stockton said. "I had 13 So winning hasn't been a problem for Stockton, DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK pressured effort Corona d~I Mar's Brian Coleman got it done in title victory. Y BAJUl.Y FAtTLOB1, SPO&JI Wann ·ntil Friday night, the most heroic thing Brian Coleman had ever done at UCJ's Bren Events Center was to sncak·in an unauthorized layup as an 8-year-old Anteater ball boy. ~ That all changed, however, with 35.8 seconds left in the CIF Southern Section IV-AA championship game, when the "Corona del Mar High junior ent to the free-throw title for two shots, traillng St. Bernard, 46-45. Though St. Bernard cailed the customary imeout to 0 icc" the shooter, and one Viking layer imparted an inaudjblc verbal sugaestion leman figured wasn't a reminder about otation, the 6-foot-3 forward converted both ttempts for what turned out to be the winning argin. To some degree, the pressure-packed foul hots provided redemption for the Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week's otherwise inawpicious oCfensive pcrform~ncc, which to that point was a season-low-equaling two points. And, ironicalJy, he said, the fortuitous trip to the stripe provided his largest comfort zone of ' the evening. "When I came out onto tho court, I wu overwhelmed," recalled Coleman, who amassed a team·hi&h 10 rebounds and added four usists in the title pme. 0 1 remember lookina up to tho UCI etayen so much when I was Huie, and here l was on the court, In uniform, in front of all thole people in a championship pmc. It wu ovcrwhclmln,." Coleman'• nerves aot tho bes\ of him early, u he mitlcd au four firat-quaner lholl and mJlfbed on both free throw attcmp11 before illtlnniu6on. 'When I came out onto the court, I was overwhelmed. I remember looking up to the JCI players so much when I was little, and here I was on the court, in uniform, in front of all those people in a ·championship game. It was . overwhelming.' --CllllV.l,C* ..... ••, . .....,aQIDI the heart that htlped make • ~ a Da.DJ·f!llOt flnMeam All.SU View ~ lllilctJaft. Coleman, who aveta&ed 10.9 :polllta pa pme. went lbO\at hel~I bla Malll ... COl.IMAll/hte U . . I American dream. Straight off the cow past ure Albus, Wargo, Bob Charles and Chi Chi Rodriguez. See GOLF/Page 15 • evtan ...... 'Moral ·victory' ~Newport's girls short four, still nearly upset Los Alamitos; Sailors' boys roll. NEWPORT BEACH What Coach Todd Kolber said may be his strongest Newport Harbor High girls swim ever, showed it wasn't too bad at well less than full strength Wednesday. Visiting Los Alamitos · took an 89-81 nonleague de- cision over the host Sailors, but the absence of four "elite" Newport swimmers due to illness and inju{y left Kolber more than pleased with his team's performance, "Los AJamitos is sup· posed to 6c one of the strongest teams in Orange County, so \o lose by only eight points wu a good ef- fort," said Dlber, who was without Shannon Sweeney, Hanna Widger, Marin McElfresb and Ashley Foss. Kolber did, however, have seniors Rachel Arrow and Mdis$a ~ wJio CODf.o Newp(d'°Sfnmltel Rachel Arrow (top) and Melfssa bined for three event victo-Schutz share a jacket before the 'start of their race. rics and one relay triumph. Arrow, the defending Sea View League "Melissa is on target for a great sca- champion io the 100-yatd bre•troke, IOn," Kolber snid of Schut.z, )Yho a.dmiued won that event in 1:10.27~rturing she is struggling a bit in her early ·transi- the 100 backstroke in 1:06 .... -" ~to the poot Schut.z, who Kolber snicfll\W f'cnefited "My $Oal is to get stronger every work- from only six workouts sine~ tlkidg part in out," said Schutz. the basketball team's run to the CIF semi-Newport Creshman Rob Williams earned finals, won the 50 freestyle (25.65) and was victories in the 500 free and the 100 second in the 100 free (56.36). breaststroke to hel p pace the Harbor boys Schutz and Arrow joined Erin Hartig ·to a 99-71 triumph. and Melissa Pomeroy to hammer the Grif-Andy Snelgrove (22.99 in the 50 free) fins in the 400 fre e relay with a time of and Rudolpho Tinajero (100 butterfly) 3:55.56. See SW~M/Pa9e 82 Star-studded field slated for '95 Congressional Cup ..._This year's run full of blue ribbon candidates for honors. 0 ne of the most highly-touted regattas of the year is now expected to become even more prestigious. The annual Congressional Cup, a match-racing event of national acclaim, will this year boast 10 of the Cup's earliest and most well-known winners in a star-studded rematch on lhe waters off Belmont Pier in Long Beach, all beainning Saturday and running through ~arch 17lh. • specifically for match racing, to allow the crews to compete against each other as fairly as possible in a true test of skill. The 31st running of the Congressional Cup promi~es to be at its pinnacle in excitement, with the top guns of sailing once again competing against each other for honor of the win. Spectator boats arc available for those intcrc led in seeing this momentous event, leaving from Long Beach Y:icht Club each day at 10 a.m. The list of these masters of match racing include local talent and past Congressional Cup winners Skip AJlan, Scott AJlan, Dennis Durgllll, Henry Sprague and America's Cup winner Bill Ficker, along with Harold Cudmore, Dick Deaver, Tommy Pickard, __.. l•fl • After doing battle with more than 130 competitors from around the '.ltorld, BYC member Nick Adamson emerged victorious, winning th is year's La er Midwinters East held by the Sarasota Sailin& Squadron. rules guru Dave Perry ind America's Cup winner Ted Turner. Boating The Midwinter East ancl West arc two of the top La~r regattas in the country, atlrnc1ing Olympic hopefuls from every counlry. First '8iled in 19651 the C.Onsrcssional Cup has become a fiercely competitive provin, around for tho world's top $kippers and ctcw, many of whom are now trainin& for the America'• Cup. Al a pan of the 'Yorld Match Rlc:in& Conference, this rca1tt1 <:0ntinuc1 to let the atandatds for the other races of iu kind. The COnsreuional Cup ls sailed in ickntical Catalina 371. }'adlll built ' As in m01.t lnrac-flcel r1:gauu. the particip~nt were .plit into two Oiahts, with the tQP 30 in each fliaht qualifyina for the Champion hip Divilion. Both Adamson and Newport ruident Alex Asccncios saUtd lo strona finiahu an their niahts. qualifyin1 cuily for the ... ..a~ .. . ' . 'l ., .. 112 Thursday, March 9, 1995 YOUTH INllTS ' Celtics, Rockets eyeing NJB crowns Sanday NEWPORT-MESA -Two Newport-Mesa Nationnl Junior Basketball teams, the Division l Celtics, coached by Russell Check, and the Division II Rockets, coached by Early Hawkins, will piny Cor their respective post-season divl· )ional championships on Sunday. The Celtics advanced to the final by defeat- ing the South Huntington Beach Raptors, 44- 33, at Edison High. The Celtics were led by the def en:,ive efforts of Jeff Check, Tom Hartman and Dlake Moore. Matt Hic tbrink led all scorers wilh 12 points, Ryan Dale contributed 10 and Judd Hietbtink six, while Michael Chai dominated the boards with 15 rebounds. first pla~ in the South Conference. In the first game, they dercated Mission Viejo, 57-46, at Trabuco Hills Hlgh, as Forrut Mack soored 26 points and pulled down 14 rebounds to go with six blocked ahots. Aarvn Yarnall scored IS points and David RJchardsou added seven re- bounds and fivt assists. In the sccond game played last Sunday, the Rockets ran away from Capo Dana, 73-25, at Costa Mesa High. Mack and Yarnall each had 12 points and ldean Sha- banglan and Eric Snell contributed 11 to the lopsided victory. •In Division 1 (seventh and eighth graders), the Jazz girls lost a 45-40 decision to the West- minster Lightning at Westminster High. The Jau were led by Usa Steinfeld with a season· high 20 points and fi9C rebounds. EIJ,zabetb Dennett added nine points and three tebound$ and Melissa Vargas scored five. points. · Bowlus led the Magic with 13 points and 11 re· bounds, while MJcbet Armstron1 had nine points and Charlie Amburpey hauled down 20 rebounds for the Macie, which will play for third place this weekend. · • ln Division HJ. (third and fourth graders), the Suns beat the Warriors, 56-43, as Michael Fltibu,gh poured in 24 points and Erik Ander· son had ci~t straight steals at one stretch and finished with 17 points. The Suns will play for the consolation championship this weekend ... The Magic girls edged Capo Dana, 28-25, at. Newport Harbor High. The Magic, who will play for the consolation championship, were led by Emily Abbott with 12 points and Kristen Bagwell and Ashlee Cookson with eight ... The BuUs, who will also play for a consolation championship~ knocked off FuUetton, 36-27, at Fullerton H1gn. TM 11ulls were-led by Taylor Young with 11 points and Ryan Heenan with 10. The Rockets def eatcd the Tri-Cities (North- e rn San Diego) Warriors, 53-50, at Saddleback • College Lo advance to---ihe chan1Pion.ship •final at El Dorado High this weekend. Tfie Rockets were led by th eir returning big man,Jonathan Smith, who had been sidelined with un ankle injury for the past five weeks. Smith scored 14 pomts and had 10 rebounds, whi le Arya Hawkins contributed 12 points and Brian Keller eight, including two three- pointer~. • In All-Net play, the sixth grade Rockets (11 ·2) won two games to take possession of •In Division U (fifth and siXth graders), the Bulls Jost to Fountain Valley, 54-43, at f oun- tain Valley High. The Bulls were led by Bran- don Chadwick with 17 points and Rudy Serna with 15. Matt Elder continued his fine inside play by pulling down nine rebounds io the los· ing effort. The Bulls will play for third place 1his weekend ... The Magic Jost a 46-44 beart- breaker to Cypress at Cypress High. Garrell • The Championship Series concludes this weekend with games throughout Orange Coun- ty. The Are'l All-Star Tournamen.t, hosted by Newport-M~a NJB, will commence March 18- 19 at Newport Harbor High. The tournament will be open to the public for a small admission charge. City finals next HIGH SCHOOL •OYI AND GIRU IWIMMJNG NEWPORT BEACH -The fi- nalists have been. set for the City of Newport Beach Youth Basket- ball playoffs, with the champion- ship games set for Saturday at the West Newport Community Center. ln the 1'-B" Division, Harbor View No. I will face Newport El- ementary No. l in the 10 a.m. game. The "C" Division final which follow) at 1 J o'clock, pits Li ncoln against Harbor View No. 1. Champions from the "B" Di- vision will represent Newport Beach in the Orange County Mu- nicipal Athletic Youth Basketball Tournamen t March 17-19 in Duena·Park. The West Newport Community Center is located at 883 West 15th Street. Recent playoff results fol· low. · C DIVISION SIMIFINALS t-1.lrbor View No. 1 (26)1 J. Hubbard 22, K. Swartz 2, M. Ci1ninlll 2. Lincoln No. 1 12.iJ: A. Northridgt, 10, T. Huris 6, N. Ccro 4, M. Yourmu• 2, D. Rubino 2. Newport Element1ry No. 2 (22): fl Sinclair 6, D. Krctschmar 8, M. Dutton 2, J.- White 6. Andersen (10): It Welch 6, Z. Thind 2, L Mouyenl 1, S. Edlund 1. a DIVISION l lMlflNALS Lincoln 153): \.. Najar 2, J. NaJ1r 15, C. Bowles 13, J. M1hler 1,, A. Gero 7, T. Pham 2. Newport Eltmenury (15): R. Thomas S, M. Allman·Dunn 4, C. Rinesmilh 6. Hubor View No. 1 (36): C. A.lshuler 20. 8. Matsen 7, J. Nlng 2, C. Stafford 3, S. W;ird 4: Marinert (30)1 R. Cllu 2, C. Moghadd.lm 4, 8. 8artlett 14, J. Cruz 4, C. M.lnderino 6. Estancia swims past ·La Quinta COSTA MESA -The Es- tancia High boys and girls swim- ming teams each evened their overall records at 1-1 following nonleague decisions over visiting La Quinta Wednesday. The· girls claimed n 97-74 vic- tory, while for the boys, it was ·lit- tle more than practice as the Ea- gles won, 114-0, over a team which did not field a varsity. Estancia's Jenny Mahan, Jessica Harrison and Aileen Bennett fin- ished 1-2-3 in the 100 free, while the Eagles won all three relays in the girls meet. SWIM . •rem .... 81 eaCh won individual events, and teamed on winning 400 free and 200 medley relay quartets. Williams was also on the win- ning medley reJay squad. Adam Madokoro won the 100 backstroke, while Chris Richard- son and John Jones also contrib· uted in the 400 free reJay1 which recorded a time of 3:33.13. HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AND ~IELD Sailors sharpen spikes NEWPORT BEACH -Strong efforts from the distance run- ners provided the highlight for the Newport Harbor boys track nnd field forces Wednesday in a non-scoring meet against vis iting El Dorado. Shahram DeZhad keyed a 1-2-3 sweep for the Sailors in the 1,600 meters, while Ne.,.. port also took the top three spots in the 3,200. Jon Benzinger came over from volleyball practice to post the best mark in the high jump at 5-10. On the girls' side, junior )¥eight specialists Lia Roussct and Laura Wibon and se nior Cara' Heads all had impressive marks. frc~hman Jamie Swarberg was tops in the 1,600, while Tina Bow- man look the high jump, clearing five feet in just one jump. BOYS& NEWPORT VS. I L DORADO 100-I. ltt (NH), 11.8; 2. long (ED), 11 .9; J. Catts (ED), 12.1; 200-1. Cates (ED), 24.7; 2. Lee (NH), 24.9; 3. long (ED), 24.9; 400-1. Snydtr (ED), 53.8; 2. Frye (ED), S4.l; 3. Adams (NH), SS.4; 800-1. Oout (ED), 1:04.8; 2. De.Zhad (NII), 2:06.8; l. Adams (NH), 2:11.2; 1,600-1. OeZhad (NH), 4:49.4: 2. Vin Nott (NH), 4:S1.I; J. Swoanson (NH), 4:5:Z.6; 3,200-1. Chi111 (NH), 10:44.4; 2. Swanson (NH). 10:48.8; J. Overton (NH), 10:58.1. 110HH-1. Thompson (ED), 17.7; 2. Loo (NII), 17.9; J . Smith (NH), 18.9; 330LH-1. Thompson (ED), 45.0; 2. Smith (NII), 4S.S; J. Stites (ED), 45.8; 400 reliy-1. El Dorado, 47.1; 1,600 rel.iy-1. El Dorado, 3:42.l. HJ-1. Benzinger (NH), 5· 1 O; 2. Ten pH (ED), 5-8; J, 11.lutt (NH). S·6; LJ-1. Kelly IEO), 19·0'•; 2. Schenk (ED), 1 Nlth; 3. Miller (ED), 17·7; TJ-1. ~lly (£0), 37-4; 2. lu (Niil, lS·41/>; no third; PV-1. Merold (ED), 11-0; 2. Masters (ED), 10·0: J. f'teeman (NH), 9·0; SP-1. McAdams (ED), '49·9; 2. McMinn (ED), 47·l1h; J. Fo11 CED>, 46-41/J; DT-1. Mouruwr (NH), 143·10; 2. McAcUm1 CED), 137-10; J. Churchill (ED), 136-101/J. GIRU1 NI WPORT VS. IL DORADO 100-1. Osunsanml (ED), 13.0; 2. Puro (NH), 13.4; 3. V•ldu (ED), 13.S; 200-1. Osunsanmi llD), 28.4; 2. Valdez (£0), 28.9; 3. Gibson (NH), 30.1; 400-1. Halltn <ED), 1 :03.S; 2. H1wliln1 (NH), 1 :04.9; J . Bry1nt CED), 1 :07.1; 800-1. Swarbtrg (NH), 2:35.5; 2. A. uple1 (ED), 2:37.5; 3. Thlel (NH), l :40.0; 1,600-1. Swuberg (NH), 5:35; l . A. uples (ED), 5:J6; J. M. CIJ>les ((0), S:.i0.1; l,200-1. M. Clples (ED), 12:45.3; 2. unrlght (NH), 13::19.3; no third; lOOllH-1. M. Oayton (/'jH), 17.5; 2. ME Cayton (NH), 17.6; 3. Goldtnberg (NII), \8.1; JOOllt-1. Eadie (NH!_, S1 .8; 2. Puro (N~t)1 S2.1;1\0 third; 400 rcl.iy-1. Ntwport Hvbor (Puro, t.tdic, Clbson, H1wtUns), S5.1; 1,600 relay-1. Newport H.irbor tH1~kins, Eadie, S~11betg. ruro), 4:27.5, llJ -1. 80\o'rman (NH), S·Oi 2. Quinn (NH), 4-6; 3. 8ourstol1 (NH), 4-<4; LJ -1. Bryant <ED), I S·l l/l:' 2. M. Clayton (NH), 15·3; 3. Mf Cayton (NH), 14-6V..1 TJ-1, M. Cl•yton (NH), l2·S; :z. ME O•yton (NH), 31-t'h; 3. CJamo (EO), 30-1; SP-1. •.Vilson (NH). 3S-4; l . Roussd (Nfi), 34·91/JJ J, Heads (NH), 34-0; DT-1. Rounet (NII), I 19-3; 2. Head• (NH), 116-3~; J. Wilson (NH), 101·3~. BADMINTON Corona del Mar wins third straight CORONA DEL MAR -The Corona dcl Mnr High badminton forces made it three straight wlns withoul a loss Wedne d11y, easily 01.11scoring visiting Westminster, 11-2. ...,. lllWltOllT ...... " LO• AllMITOI 71 lOO medley ttlly-1. Nfttport H.wbor (kt!. Wll"-5, l1MJeto, ~). 1:,S.Sl; 200 frtt-T. l"loelMf(tA), 1 :50.41; l. TiAajeto (NH), 1150.79; 3. Seib (NH), 1:S7.,2; 200 u.t-1. c-r•ll (l.4), 2:1G.32; 2. ICont cw. 2:1105; Anow (NH), 2:16.4; .scl ffee-1. s.ep.. (NH), U.9'; l. r1tten <W. 24.19J 1. Seit <NHI. 24.SS; 100 fty-1. Tin.lieN (NH), SU l; 2. ~ cw. SJ.61; i .... (NH), 1:04.00; 100 ffee-1. ~CIA). SJ.31; 2. IMfgnwe (NH), 52.92; 1. ~ (NH), SU2; 500 frH-1. W.u..r (\A), S:00.97i 2. WllUarM CNH), S:OS,44; J. rloHMt (I.A), S:27.1'; 200 he ttlly-1. Newport Hvbot lhtz, ~ l'fttl. Jones), h37.J6; 100 bld-1. MadOllofo (NH), 1:01.lS; 2. Ridwdsoa (NtU, 1101.n; J. Wllktt {lA), 1:01.41; 100 .,._.-1. Wlltilms (NH), l:OS.16; 2. ~(LA), l:OS.78; 3. M.ldolloro (NH), 1:d"l.ll; 400 free rtlly-1. Ntwpott HMbor ISMtlrowe, TiRlje1o. Jcwr, ~ J~>.11. UTANCIA 114, LA QUINTA 0 200 medle-y ret.y-1. &tMc:la (~at\, Simonds, Stephens, lolleabadl), 2:00.9; 200 free-I. Stephens (E), 2:05.1; 2. Mdcalf (E), 2:19.6; no third; 200 lM-1. BoUenbach (f), 2:26.3; 2. Waynwt (E), 2:34.l; no IWrd; SO flff-1. SJmonds {(), 16.S; 2. ~(I), 26.S; l . Hdh (£), 21.l; 100 fty-1. Stephens (E), 1 :02.8; 2. WaymM ((), 1:10.2; no thlrd; 100 free-1. llollenhKh m. S4.1; 2. ...... w. 1:06.1; 3. Hoss (El, 1:07.9; SOO free-I. Metal~ ~E)1 ':32.); 2. Johnlon (£), a: 14.S: no tNnll; 200 ftw ttlaf-t. Ettandl (St~, Oun, Holl, 8ollcnblch), 1:43.S; 100 Udl-1. De.an (E), 1:14.3; 2. Johnson ~:JI.I; no third; 100 bre1St-1.1 (f), 1:19.9; 2. Simonds (E}, 1 :2.S.I; no third; 400 frt.e relly-1. Estand. <Waytna!I. Metal(, Johnson, Simonds), 4:27. OlltLI L09AUMIT018• NIWPOD HAUOa II 100 ~ Felar-1. lM AIM!itos, 1 :59.SS; 200 ffte-1. <>'Kelley (lA), 2:02.29; 2. Hartl( (NH), 2:13.67; 3. Rubi.10 (I.A), 2:14.61; 200 lM-1. Aller• CW, 2:20.27; 2. l'Oftl«O¥ (NH), 2:22.61; J. Sdl-.c (lA), 2:37.71; SO free-1. Sdlutz (NH), 2US; 2. TM (lA), 27.o6; J. MdlllH (Nii), 27.63; 100 ffy-1. AfflNt (NH), 1:02.41; 2. Schubtrt (I.Al, l:OS.44; • J. Mitalin (NH), 1:07.G4; 100 frtt-1. O'~ (t.A), J.4.92; 2. Schutz (NH}, S6~S; j , Caffnty INH), 1:01.58; 500 free-1. Rubino (W, S:11.20; l. Hlrtig (NH), S:Sl.66; 3. Mlllkn {NH), S:S4.92; lOO free relly-1. Los A.llnlilot, l:S0.10: 100 b.lck-1. O'KeUey (I.A), 1:02.20; 2. r Onlteroy (NH), 1:06.71; 3. Cuerln (lA), 1:10.001 100 b~llsl-1. Arrow (NH), 1:10.27; l. O'Ktllty (lA), 1:1S.11; J. Ensley cw, 1: 18.251 400 ''" re~r-1. Newport Hatbor <Schutz, turtlg, romttoy, ltrroill>. 3:SS~6. UTANCIA f7, LA GUINTA 74 200 !Ndtey rtlay-1. fmnda (Wil!Ume, Bennett, Ucecb, fusnachO, 2:1"2; 200 (ree-1. Benndl (£>, l:21.0; 2. fUthon ClQ), 2:46.9; 3. Nguyn (f), 2:49.9; 200 IM-1. Kim tlQ), l:36.4i 2. l.lctdl {E), 2:.37.4; 3. Nefis (f), 3: IS.3; 50 (rtt-1.J.idlon (lQ), 29.8; 2. twnlmur1 tLQ) Jl.O, J, Vu llQ), Jl.2; 100 Ry-1. ~ (E), 1:09.9; 2. N'tef50n llQ), 1:31.S; J. llusso (LQ), 1:32.6; 100 free-1. MAhan (£), 1:04.1: l. H11rlson (f), 1:10.l; 3. ltnMtt ((), 1:10.6: 500 frtt-I. Williams (t), 6:S7.4; 2. l.asora (lQ), 8:00.9; 3. . lrooks (E), 8:41.2; 200 frtt relay-t. ~ (~ FuMldll, Mahan, a..tnett), 1:S6.9; 100 badt-1. Willlltnt (E), 1:16; l. LiiwtS tlQ), 11\1.2; J. Fannadlt (E), 1:24.4; 100 breast-l. Kim (lQ), 1120.l; 2. Vu (LQ), 1:21.8; 3. Ngvyen((), 1:36..'; 400 free ttl.ty-1. &~ lMahM, HMrison, llroolii, WllliMns>, nt. WHOLESALE TO· THE PUBLIC •SHOWROOM AND CATALOGUE• KPH Sn ans Golf fo111ptnu•11~s 119 MACNOLIA AVE., Af'AHEIM (7141 761-4901 IRVl"E SOCCER CLUB .Strikers CWBTRYOUn GIRLS U10 thru U14 SUNDAY MARCH 12& 26 BOYS U10 thru U1 4 SUNDAY MARCH 19 & APR 2 PLAN ON AT1EIDi"8 IOTH OATH LISTED FOR YOUR AGE GROUP U15·U19 TRYO IE II MAY. PLWE CALL FOR DAY AND TIME. TIMES: 9:00AM 10:30AM U10 10:30 AM 12:00 PM U11 12:00 PM 1:30 PM U12 1 :30 PM 3:00 PM U13 3:00 PM 4:30 PM U14 ~ ...................... . MUNITY PARK CORNER BRYAN I YALE, IRVINE ·~.;.;.;..;;.;..;;.--..~;.;;.;.;.-..---., Club Coach DON EBERT • Two hme NCAA Player ot llle Year USA ()fymj)iC Clplaln • Mtmbtr USA follllonal Team. 9 yetrs pro soccer IXPtrlenct • Coacll tSC Pmnier CSL tum Jerome Poyyak, Tim Wcttin, Euaene Wana. AJlysun Turner, Chrislina Carlson Kerri Smith, :rrina Howard, Slammer McFar· &and, Rupatf Saapr and Josh BlaM au won their matches u tho lloill dominated. CdM is at LI Quioca al :1.S coday. 1HEODOREROBINS . 2060 Hcirbor Boulevard of Cart in Costa MUG (714) 642~10 s.mng 1N ~At.a Sinci1r 1921 THE STORE Newport Beach/Costa M-Dally Piiot Suns' Erik Andersen VOLLEYBALL Pirates sweep COSTA MESA -The Orange Coast College men's volleyball team moved into second place in . the Orange Empire Conference by handling previously unbeaten Golden West, 15;13, 15-9, 15-10, in the Pirates' gym Wednesday. OCC (6·2 overall, 3·2 in the OEC) received strong setting from Colin Bemus (54 assists) and Jason Crone ( 18 kills). In high school play Wednesday: •COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High's boys volleyball team swept visiting Saddleback off the floor in nonleague play, 15-13-, 15· 9, 15-9 to improve to 1-1. Adam McNolly (17 kills, 10 digs and four blocks) and Kyle Mullens (10 kills, seven digs and fo ur blocks) led th e way with the able assistance of setters ~ieu Ho (35 assists) and Kenny Morganstgern (20 nssis ts). ln college play Wednesday: •COSTA MESA -Southern California College's men's vol- leyball team was a 15-11, J 5-10, 15-4 winner over visiting Point Loma Nazarene, keyed by the play of Mike Haney (IO kills) and Peter Johnston (nine kills). Pany's on and running CORONA DEL MAR -The Newport EHt Pony League, a 13· and 14-year-olds baseball league for players living withln the Corona dcl Mar Hiah School attendance bOund- aries, opened league play on Tues- day and Wednesday. The five teams playing in the league \his season arc: Athletics (David Hatfield, mnnegcr), Cardi- nals (Rick Knechl, manager, Phillip Larson, coach), Marlins {Ted Snell, manager, Walt Harper, coach), Mets (Steve Bottom, manager) and Red Sox (Robert Drown, manager, Randy Wiethorn, coachj. , • The league is under~ the lendet- shjp of Knecht, who is dividing his time between Pony Lengue and being president of the Corona del Mar High Baseball Boosters. Sup- poiung Knecht this season are Harper (fields), Dill Hossfeld (ad- 11'11nistration), Snell (equipment) and Suzanne Za rrilli {secretary- treasurer). • In opening day action Tuesday at EastBluff Field, the Red Sox hosted the Marlins and the game was called with the score tied, 3-3, after seven innings because of dark- ness. The game will resume on March 23 with Geoffrey Hunt pitch- ing for the Marlins and Jon Schrank for the Red Sox. Matt Marshall pitched the first three innings for the Red Sox, giving up one run and two hJts while strik- ing out three. The Marlins started Ty Harper, who pitched a fine five innings, allowing one run, three hits and one walk, while fanning 10. The Red Sox scored twice in th<! sixth as Eric Wielhorn singled in Matt Marshall, then scored on a wild pitch. The Marlins fought back in the top of the seventh. Jay Reed's two-out hit in .the right-center field gap scored a pair of runs to tie the game. • In Wednesday's game, the Ath- letics trimmed the Cardinals, 2-1, on a game-winning single by David Millman in the bottom of the sev- enth inning. The winning pitcher for the As was Bart DeClark, in relief of Mark Hatfield who worked the first si~ in- nings, striking out 15 while walking three and allowing three hits. For the Cardinals, starter Matt Larson pitched the first five inn ings and struck out 12, while allowing two walks and a single and dou~le. .CAL'S CADDY5HACK I I 1784 Newport Blvd.• Costa Mesa, CA •92627 P.hone 014) 646·7714 •Fox (714) 645-2052 .6' t't; --·-. ... -~,. .~ .,,;:;..., Mo,1 Om & Ligh1 Trucks • JNCLUDES1 • • New 011 fihcr •Che.ck .JI fluidJ 'J • Up ro S q11 I OW W oJ • 01fpoul Ftt lndud<d • By Arre Only Ile 'I 9"' W'"h Any Serna g. • Eap.4·M~ • I •• Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot sonULL . LEAH HocsnN/DAILr PILOT Estancia baserunner Jill Black watches Harbor's Molli Mullen throw back to third after scoring in sixth. Thursday, March 9, 1995 83 Black powers Estancia, 8-7 COSTA MESA -Winning pitcher im Bl•ck Corona del Mar p~•s 7-2 victory helped herself at the plate by going 4 for 4, and ~ Stephanie Serr had clutch hits in both the first and si.xth innings to lift Estancia High to an 8-7 nonlcague softball victory over visiting Newport Harbor Wednesday. The Sailors {l-3) opened the scoring with four runs in tile top of the first inning, but fatancia answered.with three in the bottom half, helped by three walks and a run-scoring single by Serr. The Eagles (2-2). built th e lead to 8-4 "ith a three-run sixth, keyed by Scrr's two-run single. However, Newport threw a scare into the Eagles in the top of the seventh. Stephanie Gosselin and Molli Mullen cracked back-to-back doubles in the inning as Newport climbed to within 8-7. But Olack retired the last- CORONA -Corona del Mar High junior Hay- den Aley fanned a season-high nine en route to a one-hitter and freshman Wesley Wills drove in f<1ur rum, to lead the Sea Kings to a 7-2 triumph over Bethel Christian in a Corona Tournament consolation game at Uu11crficld ~ar~. It was the first win of the season for C<.IM, which po)U!d four run-. 111 the tl~n.1 and cruised home behind Ale}. ''ho did not \\Jlk u bauer. W1lb had a l\\O·run single in the third, then platec..1 1wo more with a triple in the seventh. Jenny Luchesi i.inglcd in a run 111 the third, "hile Jill Mather, Anna Smith and Katie Thur- mqn all went I for 2 for rhe \\i~ncr). batter on a comcbacker with the tying run on sec-CORONA DEL MAR i, BETHEL CHRISTIAN 2 ond to preserve the victory. Gosselin was 2 for 4 and Lori Metcalf tripled ~~;~~.,c~~~~:~ ~~~ ~~~ ~::::~ ~ ~ for Newport. Aley iind Smith; Johnson .ind Koster. \V-Alcy, 1·3. Estancia returns to action today, weather per-L-Johnson. JB-\-\1lls (CdMJ. milling, in a nonleague game at La Quinta (3: 15). • Newport hosts Santiago Friday afternoon. • Pirates fall to Rancho Santiago, 7-0 UTANCIA I, NIWPORT HARIOR 7 Newport Harbor 400 000 3-7 9 1 EsUnc~ 310 103 x-8 9 S Mullen and Gosselin; Blade iind Roberuon. W-Black, 1·1. l -Mullrn, o-r.28-Mulltn (NII), Gosselin (NH). JB-Metalf (NII). RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. --,_ .... c...""' COST A MESA -Orange Coast College was a 7-0 lo~er in softball on \\\:dnc,J.1> as Rancho 'San1iago College put togethc:r a p;.ii r of t~uee-run innings, leaving OCC 4·6 O\Cr.ill. 2-~ in the Or- ange Empire Conference:. Tars lead by nine GOLF Corona· del Mar tralls Orange Coast falls 1122 -..... CISTA •U-541·1151 COTO DE CAZA -Newport Harbor High's golf team took a 204- 213 lead over host Trabuco Hills in nonleague golf Wednesday at Coto / de Caza's par 36 course. over nine holes, with the finish of the match scheduled for April 5 at Santa Ana CC. Morgan Anderson, Bill Collopy and Drew Whue all shared medalist honors in a four-way 1ie a1 40. NEWPORT BEACH -Corona del Mar High's golf team is down by a stroke after nine hQles at Newport Beach Country Club Wednesday, with Esperanza up by a 217-218 count in the nonleague'match. · RIVERSIDE . -Orange Coast College's .golf team fiJlished in the No. 3 spot at a Mission Conference match, scoring 401 points a1 Moreno Valley Ranch's par 72 course. Lead- ing the way for Orange Coast was Chris Ny at 73, who was second to Cuyamaca's Glenn Mauhews. Jenny Glasgow, Steve Brooks and Max Wallick are lumped together at 42, two strokes off the individual lead and sev~n strokes over par. NEWPORT 204, TUIUCO 2U U!'IUNZA 217, CDM 218 CUYAMACAU9 OllANGI COAST 401 alVIHIDI 3IO fULLHTON 42t I. Ander~ (NH), Collopy (NH). White (NH) ~nd Worflnden (lit), 40 uch; S. Sh1plro (NH), ~I ; 6. ).ad.son !Niii, 41. 1. Sdno (E). 40; 2. Oo<lonn (E), G11s1ow !CdM), S. lrooks (CdM), W~lidi (CdM), 42 uch; 6. ICUM (CdM), <lS; 10. C. lroob (CdM), 47. 1. ~llhl'WI !Cuy), 71; 2. Ny <OCO, 73; Other OCC: Rfllding 79, Cochune 8\, Ntiglio 14, Mctcibbin 14. ... 25 % of the Field wins CASH! Over $16.000 in Hole-In-One Prizes! 48 tournaments planned for Southern California in 1995. NO SANDBAGGING • The TGA's copyrighted Scoring system ELIMINATES SANDBAGGING and equalizes competition for golfers of ALL SKILL LEVELS tn a single flighted tournament. No matter what your handicap, the TGA's system is fair! TAX ADVANTAGES FOR GOLFERS PLAY FOB CASH as a !GA Professjonal Handicapped Golfer Learn how to WRITE-OFF your golf expenses hke golf professionals. Join us at our first premium tournament for Orange County at the Fabulous Marbella Country Club March 27th. Call 1 ·BOO·B·1GA GOLF (711) 210-3062 Mtg. thru Fri, lam-51m in2 .FREE Pro AM Spots - (Toumament, Monday, March 13) -or the Senior PGA Golf Tournament at Mesa Verde Country Club Puttin& Contest (sl .00 donation) to qualify for: • 100 Single Day Passes (25 passes given away per day) • 2 Monday, March 13, Pro AM Spots (drawing held Wed. March 8th) (Must have an established handicap of 27 or better) • An opportunity to win: • Cubic Balance Titanlum Drivers • Putters • Golf Bags • $25 Gift Certificates to Cal's Ca<J4yshack Plus Much More! The Contest will be held dailY for · -4D<zys - Wednesdav, 'ThursdaY, Fri~ & Saturdqy March K, · 9, 1 o & l i • 5:00-B:OOp. m. at '/Hangle Square's 1bwn Square RAIN OR SHINE! If you have any questions, please call 722-600 IL1E All proceeds will be donated to chariO' e · .Cal's Cad4yshack LUBE, OIL & FILTER CHANGE 10% -~-. Discount-·-- OFF ANY REPAIR r ~ -ol.d W•"' Qn}' o"'-t""pon N uon•Only bp ) 31_!5 -------~-~-~----------~ 15•/o Discount OFF ANY SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE Nol "°'"' w>lh any oll.... <oupcin N•uoru Only b<p 3·31 ·95 I 1 So/·Off NISSAN PARTS 20°100ff t NISSAN ACCESSORIES I The best in Men's & W~'s Golf apparel, accessories , equipment & gifewear. \lmtourloo•Duat: FaShm~&.di 714-759-5509 Wn 71+9724541 ·-.. . , - 114 Th&nday I March 9, 1995 .. Dos Au.ge\ea mimes . .. . Lee Trevino Dave Stockton Chi. Chi Rodriguez Jim Dent • · · Jim Colbert Jim Albus Bob Charles Tom Wargo Bob Murphy 11 31 of the top 35 tour money winners will compete 11 NMVpc;wt BNCh/Cotta M1aa Daily Piiot Thursday, March 9, 1995 81 ftllNll CORONA DEL MAR -Soph· omore John Capello did not lose a game from his No. 2 singles slot In pacing th~ Corona del Mar High boys tcnnts team to a 15·6 .non- league vic~ory over visitlng Capist- rano Valley Wednesday. The Sea Kings hnproved to 2-0 this season. Tars topple LB Wiison NEWPORT BEACH -New- port Harbor High's bpys tennis team banded visiting Long Beach Wilson a 12V..-8¥.J nonleague de- feat Wednesday behind the play of singles standout Yuski Kojima and the No. 3 doubles team of seniors Jerome Bouchat and David Wat- kins. Kojima swept his singles opposi- tion, and Bouchat and Watkins teamed up to win two of three matches as Newport Harbor im- proved to 1-2. NIWPOaT HAJlaOa 12th LONO 81ACH WIUON I'll SlnJla: Kojima (NH) ~. Kato, 6-1, ~. 1Jh1g11ro, 6-0, ~. Emigh, 6-0; llMll (NH) won. '-Cl, '-01 6-1; Slmt (NH)-. 6-0, W, 6-1. OCMlbltt: D1vid1011·S11m1Mrt (NH) loft to Munhow-Castertn, 4-6, loft to £wrlan-No4, 0-6, Iott to Okon·Htnl.vl, 4-6; Oylt,..fvAIU (NH) lost, 0-6, WOft. 7·S, "'°"• 1-6; loumal·WMIUM (NH) !Qst, 2"--· 74, 6-1. sec women brieze COSTA MESA -Quynh Le and Wendy Andel each won in singles and teamed for a triumph in doubles to pace the Southern CaUfornia College women's tennis team to a 7-3 decision over visiting Occidental in a nonconference match Wednesday. The Vanguards improved to 5-3 with the verdict. IOCAL COLLIOI 7 OCCIDINTAL a Singlet: Le CSCO def. bt, 6-1, 6-0; Andel (SC(') def. Hu&. 6-0, 6-2; Smith (SCQ def. Balboa YC-'iltting ·table tor Lipton Cup .. Gary Jobson lined up for speaking duties at April 8 banquet CORONA DEL MAR -The Sir Thomas Lipton Challenge Cup Regatta will be hosted and conducted by the Balboa Yacht Club on the wecke.nd of April &-9. . Three races will be held on Saturday and two on Sunday in the winner-take-all event. The races will be sailed in the highly competitive Schock-35s, one-design racing sloops known for their speed and maneuverability. · Early entries indicated 15 to 20 West Coast yacht clubs and sailing associations will be represented with a skipper and eight crew members for e'llch boat. The prestigious trophy, which rivals the America's Cup in size and beauty, will be U. stake and goes to the winner for display at its facility until next BOATING ,, . .,. ..... , Gold Fleet: The first day o( racing saw light breeze in early afternoon, picking up steadily as the day grew longer, allowing the Race Committee lo fel in two-sOttd;-to~e-racu. At lhe end of the day, Adamson had posted a first and a 16th, the latter being his worst race in the series. Day two began the same, with light breezes building throughout the afternoon.up to a steady 15 knots, giving the competitors three races to test their skills, or to gain them back. Long-course sailing gives plenty of opponunitics to make up for early mistakes, and with a drop-race in the series, one's position is never assured. Adamson fought back from some tough starts to finish with a first, a seventh and a ninth. His ability to grind competitors upwind propelled him ihrough the fleet to his top finishes. The last day again echoed the two previous days in conditions, year when the competition will again take pince. Magazine. ln 1988, he won an Emmy !or his coverage of yachting at the Olympic Games. Jobson served as commentator for Turner Broadcasting System's Goodwill Games in Moscow in 1986 and in Seattle in 1990. Presented personally to the San Diego Yacht Club by the famous tea merchant, the late Sir Thomas Lipton, it has been raced for annually since 1903. The last three years, it has been won by the Balboa Yacht Cluo against all comers. Gary Jobson Jobson has also oovcred the Cup for ABC's Good On the evening of Saturday, April 8, the Balboa Yacht Club will host a banqueJ for the participants, committee, judges and BYC club member volunteers. The featured speaker will be world class sailor Gary Jobson, now in San Diego prepariQg coverage for this year's final~ of the America's Cup. In 1992, Jobson covered the Cup for ESPN and Yachting but ·jt was this day that the real battle for line honors began, with only two races scheduled and one race actually run. Even with Ad;imson's top scores, some stiCC competition and the drop-race still left the door open for anyone to win. Af-ter aoother tough srn rt and with fellow team member John Myrdal only eight points behind, Adamson again relied on his grinding power to outlast the other competitors and move up in the ranks. In what Adamson called "hectic", the last upwind beat saw an extreme left $hift reverse the fleet's position, moving the lop half into the bottom and vice versa. Luckily for Adamson, he was in mid-fleet, and easily recovered from the shift, grinding his way up to 12th and into first place overall. Myrdal was not so lucky and finished deep enough that, even with his drop, he lost another boat, placing third overall, eight points behind Canada's Jamie Boyden. Ascencios sailed to top finishes throughout the regatta us • Morning America, Nightlinc and Wide World of Sports. For the past seven years, he has been ESPN's sailing commentator, covering the award-winning 1987 America's Cup in Fremantle, Australia and the 1988 America's Cup in San Diego. Jobson has also published l 0 books and is an editor at large of UlllA CORINTHIAN YC ST. P',UlJCJ('S DAV RE~tTA SltlOT A-1. Jene Mc~t, BYC, 7.25; l. Jennitet PQfler, NHYC, 8.SO; 3. Jeu!Q Aldlen, ICYc, 1 s.oo. SAIOT 1 -1. Matt Mctan~, BCVC. 11.7.5; 2. Derek Webster, BCVC. 12.75; l. Muin Yoshida, BCYC, 14.75; 4. Cran\ flftfter, NHYC, 16.SO; $.Mike fru~r, NHYC, 21.00. SAIOT Cl-1. Adam Yoshlcb, BCVC, 7.00; l . Henry Sipos, NHYC, 12.00; J. David Levy, BCYC. 13.75; 4. Kendra Witul, l(VC, 21.00; s. T rnor OIMarco, NHYC. 24.00. SABOT Cl-1. f'IUI Stemler, NHYC, 3.75; 2. $6en1 LMMlcr, ICYC, 10.00; 3. Adrienne Patterson, ICYC, 15.00. SABOT 0-1. ~ 01i¥tr, ICYC, 3.75; 2. JUIUn Taratitlno, BCVC. 15.00; l . Kristin T11antlno, ICYC, 16.00. well, with three scores in the lop 10 placi ng him cigh,th overall. This co ming weckena, more than 140 Laser sailors from around the world, including Adamson and Ascencios, are expected to converge upon Long Beach to compete in the 1995 Laser Midwinters West. Adamson, currently ranked third on the U.S. Sailing Team, looks to repeat his last California finish, Yachting Magazine. He regularly hosts the Sailing Qoanerly Video Magazine and has prOduccd five home videos. He began his career at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and the U.S. Naval Academy. Jobson has won a number or championships in one design over the past 20 years and has also competed in most of the world's ocean races. He won the Yacht Racing Hall of Fame Regatta in 1982 and was watch capt<iin aboard Ted-Turner's Tenacious when it won the infamoµs 1987 Fnstncl R;ice. He participated in the Am~rica's Cup U.S. Trials in 1980 and '83.and was tactician ~· for Turner aboard Courageous during her successful America's C,up defense in '87. Jobson has been named All- American sailor three times and was twice selected CoUege Sailor of the Year. His presentation will include slides, VCR and film of current trends and event's in today's yachting scene. IA.LaOAYC BYC 66 SERIE~ NO. 1 PHRF A-1. CurM>r, Jeff f~~ll, NHYC; 1 Concorde, TM( Wi!JjamJOn,' NHYC; 3. R.u-Ma·Tar. blpll ~ron, BYC; 4. bider, Jay Underman, BYC; s. Tatiana, Bill uwh0tn. SIYC; 6. Hirlequln, Barbara Colville, NHYC; 7. Bolt, Craig Reynolds, IYC. PHRF 8-1. Zoos, Oa~ llennan, VYC; 2. Jmy Too, JI"' Ketrip", ICYC; 3. Sorcerer, Dennis Rosene, IYC; 4. lkkity Spilt, Joe Degenhardt, BCYC; s. Stoktt, Stephen Mother, JYC; 6. Allherls, R. Booth, IYC. PHRf C-1. High Stlung, lob Strang, BYC; 2. Puuy Cat, John SUlay, VYC; J. 8ibe, Andy Sui, ~C; 4. OevOf' TreYOr, Wt$ Selby, SIYRC; S. Seamego, Paul Deapua. SIYRC; 6. Valentine, . Mary Longpre, BYC. winning the 1994 Laser Nationals heJd in Los Angeles last July, and win Midwinters West. Because Midwinters West will ·be the last qualifier for the U.S. ~ailing team for the year, participation and competition look to be extremely high. Steph11nie Keefe's boDting column appears Jn the Daily Pilot every Thursday. COLEMAN ........... , win without nn orficial field 1041 attempt the ftnaJ two periods . CdM Coach Paul Orris also cited heart as the kcJ factor in helping Coleman ad1ust his game from the perimeter to the paint. ••As a freshman, Brian ~ an outside player, but playln& w itb most or this year's seniors on the junior varsity last year, he rcaliud it was a guard-oriented group, and he could fit in a little bettet playing up front,'' Orris said. "He's only 6-3 and he's not the biggest guy you'll find, but it's nm how big the body is, it's the size of the heart," added -Orris, who admires Coleman's abililies in the classroom as much as on the court. · ''Nc's a great kid, outstanding academically aAd a solid citizen,'' said Orris, who will count on Coleman to lead next year's squad. Until next year, Coleman, a standout outside hitter on the volleyball team, will savor his clutch contribution to the Sea Kings' fou rth Clf crown. "l've had a lot of people who • either wenc to the game or read about it say some complimentary things and it feels great," Coleman said of his hero treatment. "I'm not sure people will look back and remember what I did, but winning a CIF championship will always be a big deal to me. And I'll always remember those free throws." There; were probably a few 8-year-olds in the Bren Center stands who'll remember them, too. LOCAL SCHEDULE TODAY v.11 • .,r..11 ,!\~,= tt.;;,. T=:::~,:; ~*I-· LO Swl .. •h•1 """-~..,.-"'" -~-.c.w-u -.. s-oi. c..... llNy ,...-.. .. s..o a.-. )._ , ..... c-•Nll'....,.. _ -, __ •o. .... c... ... 1 , .... c-.-. ........ --o.-· c....i .. ,~~) ...... H .... te ...... ....,,-Cl_•t....i..>ts.~Hiao ....... ,.., ........ ,) .... GeU Hip """"' -C...-. M -... MM"" IC "4<-\ CC. :l:>G ,. .... : -... """"''"' .. -~ ..... cc. l.t>O ,.... .. ,.,.." """ --..._ ....... ~ l'IJ ,._, c.... ... -•i..--.>:u,.-' ..,.1 •••• ~ --C.0.-.. -.. u ~ JilJ ,. .. Tnrdi ••II fleltl "'II' -...,.. _,pit -~ .. 0.:-"-· J:IS. .... ,..u Colftnl••"r a>llofo -w-.a • occ. 2. H1at-..--~ u.. ,_ ro1111,,._ _... ,_ .... c-. .... -. lits: 11• "'""'-~ -~ l!IJ: c.....-. T_ ...... c;,_. .. .....,... ..., ... , l!IS; 0. ..... ~-• C-.-J:ll Sl.Jmm, 6-3, 6-3; "'.If>& (0) de#. Cecwp, 6-2, GOLF 3·6, 6-4; Cltlson (SCO ~. Wolfrum, 7-6 (7·3), 6-4; Yan1 CO) def. Vigil, 6-0, 6-2. Doublff: le-Atldd tsCO def. far-Hia, ... ,, Valley Coun try Club. Only Sunny Hills' Jenny Lee and Sanca Margarita's Kellee Dooth, the 1993 U.S. girls junior amateur champion, had lower rounds' than Glasgow among county competitors. Boat show at Anaheim Stadium Saturday ANAHEIM -The biggest all-indoor boat show in Or- ange County begins a nine-day ru n on Saturday, March 11 at Anaheim Stadium. 6-2; <Mlson-GeorJ.! <SCO dd. sc~•r•• 11'•1• 81 6·3, 7-6 (9-n ; Smiih·l lnnqulJt <SCO def. nto the golf course. He couldn't even talk, because he was Woffrum·YlllS. 6-3, 6-2. d d h Glasgow has also been a standou t tennis player for CdM. Chip ahota ••• Ca!CNng up WM the NtwPOll Buch Golf Course men's club, Hal Cr•tm won low g~s (63) and Jim Ano•ll won lo.v ntt (51) in rounds March 1 Don Wulf was second low net (52) .... In night rounds Feb. 25, Sorin Zdrahal (low grou 65) and Mlk• Molus (low net 57) won Right A: Byron Burton (low gross 65) and WIJt (low net 52) won fllgllt B: l/ld Biii Holzgrat (low gross 66) and Walt Shar•r (low net 56) won fll0t1 C ... , scare to eat . The Orange County Boat Show features more than 400 new boats, ranging from eight-foot inflatables lo luxury motor cruisers, with the bulk of the attention being fo- cused on affordable family sportboats, ski boats and fish- ing boats. DEIPSIA WIDNUDAY-S JllH COUNTS Dn•r• Leeker -3 bom, 26 anglera. 12 calico ban, 106 whitefish, 2 black fH bus (~leued), 14 red 'Ml'~'· S und ban, 20 KUlpin, S 1heephead, 1 rodcfish, SO mackerel. Newpert L-tlle1 -t boat, 1S anglera. 12 und bass, 4 aJko bass, 19 Kulpln, 1 1herphnd, s blue ~rdl, 24 mackerel. "That's what we need: a few cows on the green to make him fe el at home:" •Switching clubs ... Corona del Mar High senior Jenny Glasgow, who twice has played in the U.S. girls junior amateur, received nearly a full golf scholarship to attend UC Berke ley. Glasgow, a four-year member of CdM's varsity boys golf tcatn and the captain of the team this spring, will be a part of Cal's inaugural women's golf team. Glasgow reached last year's CIF/Southern California Golf Association Invitational Golf Championship at Redlands Country Club, after finishin~ third among Orange County girls at the CIF/SCGA qualifying tournament at Apple \ In 1'QUlat rOl.Wlds Feb. 22 .... nk hF•bvr• won lo.v gross (651, Borton won IOW net (SI) and Angell was second low net (52) .... 111 flight rounds feb. 18. Jim ForgHh Oow gross 65) and lob Forb•• {low net 54) won Flight A; Don Snav•llf (IOW gross &6) and Craig ..l•na.n (low net S3) won F~ght B. and Sharer (low gross 74) and Bob DHrbom (low net 56) won Fligt« C ... In lhe ci\Jb's senor Cluslt Feb. 8. a net lolr'namel'l. Al S c hn•ll won will1 a 53. IOllowed by Lefebm !SS), Green (55), Jack Lang (55) and L•rov Nonemak•r (SS). ... Close dotsn't count In 0011 ..•. In regular rounds that day, Lefebvre posted the best low-gross sCOfe (64), while SthneU won low net l/ld Joe RuHo was 5etond low net (SC) Richard Dunn Is a Daily Pilot Sportswriter tfbose club golf column appears every TbursdDy. In addition to the large selection of new boats, there will be a wide assortment of marine accessory and boating gear booths, including water skis, electronics, marine hard· ware and vacation opportunities. Boat show hours arc Monday ttnough Thursday from 1- 9 p.m.; Friday, 1-10 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m.-10 p.m.; and Sundays, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Admission prices arc $7 for adults and children 12 and under are free. For more details about the boat show, call 633-7581. PUBUC NOTICES PUIUC NOTICES PUIUC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES Thia bualnesa wu con-wu Nad In Ofwla• County PUBLIC NOTICE as trustee, °' auccesaor TM 1trfft address and PUBLIC NOTICE strHt 1ddresa llld other IN THE MATTER OF YNf 515,034.358 -----------~~-ducted by.,.. Individual on July 3, 10'90, Fiie trustee, or 1ub1tltutad other common dt1lgnatlon, common d11lqnaUon, It THE PETITION TO Dl1b11rHm1nt1 for the PUBLIC NOTICE Sharon Jo.no F9f.nc. No.F462.4108 YOU ARI IN DI FAULT tru11.. pur1uant to the If any, of Iha real property YOU ARE IN DEFAULT 1ny, shown heretn. CKANOE THE NAME Year S 12,269,811 --------• Thia atat«nent WM tiled Emll NU1r1, 31987 Circle UND•ft A DalD OF OHd of Trust executed by delctlbed above 11 pllf· UNDER A DEED OF The total amount of the OF NHAH DAI DANO We hereby cert1ly that the STATEMENT OF with U'8 CounCy Cler1t of Of~. l..agl#ll Beach, CA TRUST DATO 10/09/ e. EDWAAD NYSE AN UN· ported Jo be: 119 24TH TRUST DATED 09/23/ unp.id ba1anc. of the obit-CASE NUMBER above ltema are In llC- ABANDONM•NT OP Of1nae ~ty on JaruMy 92977 IO UNL• a MARRIED MAN and r• STREET. NEW P 0 RT 881 UNL•ss YOU gallon H cured by the cordSMa wilh Iha Annual 19, 118f Thia buafneN WU con-18 • a YOU corded on October 19 BEACH CA 92663 1 ' .. property to be IOld and A1788H Statement tor the YHt US8 OF P1CTITIOU8 PUbu.h.d Newport Beacn-ducted by an lndlvldu.I TAK8 ACTION TO PRO. 1990 as lnsttument 1eo.'. The u0derllgned TrustM TAKE ACTION TO PRO. 1111on1bte Hllmated ORDER TO SHOW ended Decembef 31, 1994 aUSIN•aa NAMI Cotta M.u Piiot ~ Em11 Nullt TICT YOUR PROP· 558052 of Otfic:lal Record1 dlscl1lm1 any 1i1billty f()( TECT YOUR PROP· coats, axpensaa and ad· CAUSE FOR CHANGE m1d1 to the ln1uranc1 ha~~ 11. 23, Match 2, t , 11195. Thia atatem.nt waa tllad l.RTY, IT MAY 8E SOLD In Iha office ot the County any lnconec:tnau of the ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD vancn at tha tlma of the OF NAME Commiuloner, pursuant to V9 UM Th112 with the ~ Clettl of AT PUBLIC SA.LI. IF Recorder of ORANGE llrHt addreu llld Oth« AT PUBLtC SAlt. IF Initial publk:allon of Iha No-PETITIO~ERtS) NHAN law. ~· ~lc!!th105ut1 B~nHI Orlln09 County on Match YOU NEED AN IXPLA. County,Califomla..andpur· common dt1lqnallon, If YOU NEED AN UPU. tk:aolu!ela:$200,331.24 DAI DANG HAS/HAVE Donald Qeor1e •me. 4.-IMt Of'l"IOo PUBLIC NOTICI 3.z.1.~ NATION OP TH• NA-1u1nt to the Notice of 0. any, atiown herein. NATION OP THE NA-In addition to cash, Iha FILED A PETITION FOR AN Dr ..... ,, Pr9Md41nt ~ =uw.= ~~ aTATU ... T-t'UDl!ahed Newport 8at.ch-TUR• OP THE PRO. fault and Election to S.11 The total amount of the TURE OF TH• PRO. Trustff wlll accept a cuh-ORDER TO CHANGE Mlci.t .. Mule Johno ~"'T' ..... CA..,.,,.,.. v.., ... .,.... Coate Mesa Pilot March 9, Cl•OUeQ •Q •INST lhereunder recorded on unpaid balance of the obll· CllDINQ AGAINST ler'1 chec:lc drawn on a NAMES FROM NHAN DAI Mft Seo,..tary ..., .,...n, _ __, MANDOM....,. OI' 11, 23, 30. 11195. .. .. Octobef 26, t994 u INtru-gallon .. cured by the state Of natloNI batllc, a DANG TO PETER DAI ' Th• Flclltloua Bualnau Ul8 Oft l"ICTITIOUI \h734 YOU, YOU SHOULD ment No.#94~1242 of PfOl*tY to be aold llld YOU, YOU SHOULD chaelc d ... wn by a atate or DANG Publlahed Newport Name ra::red tor~~ 8UllNllll NA.Ma CLAlllFlaD CONTACT A LAWYER. 11ld Official RecOfdl, wtll r111onabt1 Hllmated CONTACT A LAWftR. fed1tll credit union Of a II 11 hafeby Ofdtred ttlat 811ch-Co1ta Meu Da!Jy w11 fll9d0 10!,~ Tii'' The tollowlnG pertone It'• tho roaourc• you T.a. # Ml81-TQ2 Sell on 03/30/1995 at 12:30 costs, •XS*IH• and ad-T.S • ., 34411·TQ2 chec:lc drawn by a t\ate Of aQ peraona lnterHled In Pilot March 7, I , 9. 10, 11, On 1 • ·•'" • • hav. abllndonecfthe UN of NOTICll OP P.M. AT THE NORTH vance1 al the Ume of the NOTIC• OF federal .. Ylnga llld loan lhll matter ippell belOl't 19115. NoSh.F585717 F 1h• FlctltlOUI Bullneu can '~d nt ,on to Mith a T"UITll'a &ALE FRONT ENTRANCE TO lnltlal publlcatlon ot .,,. No-TRUSTEE'• SAU! 111oclatlon, U'llnga ... this court In Depanment T02.2 MOI\ ~ .... nee. N . E'lan Sala And ,... myr-0 m.n: an-THE COUNTY COURT-tJce of ....... $451,5-40 30 IOClallon or ~ bank N 703 Of Ill Orange --------~----2551 Elden Ave., 1·1, .=.. 1aea MacMhur di" lterrni, becaU•• UNDER 0110 HOUSE 100 CIVIC CEN· In addition· to cQh ·the UNDER DEED aS*lfled In ~ 5102 ~IY Supe1l0f 1 Court at PUIUC MOTICE Co1 .. M .... CA 92127 Blvd. Sta 200 INIM CA our columna COmJHtl OP TRU8T TER DRIVE WEST, SANTA Tnmff wlll acc:apt a Cuti-OF TRUST ' ot the Flnanclal Code llld the addren ihown lbove•-------- Buy It. s.,11c. Find IC. 82715 · • ' quelltl•d buy•r• to uJot~~~~:~DglR~ ANA. CA at public auction, lar'1 chaelc drawn on • tha~~N~~:~lDgl~~ aulhOflz.ed to do bualneu on 4118, 19115. al 2:00 Plotttlou• Cl ... lftH. TM f!c:tltlow llualMaa calll CONVEYANCE CO PANY. to the hlgh11t bidder fClf state or national banlc, I CONVEYANCE COMPANY In 11'111 state. In the .vent o'clock p.m., and then and ......._ lhme --------Name 1'9f9rfed to &bow M2.S878 M • cash (payable at h UrM checl( drawn by a state or trust · la(\CH( othat than caltl 11 lhef• .now cau.. u any llM.-.nt -~-------~~~~~~=~~=======~--~~~--~-~~~~~of~~~unlonOfaU ~M~~~~~tha~-~-~~~~~-~~~ r-the United Stat"), all rlQht. chaci( drawn by a atate "' truatH, or eub1t11ut1d ¥Wlthhold the luuance of tor change of name lhould dOIAll bullnae9 u: S 11:4.Ri:z~G uue. and lnter111, conveyed t.deral uvlnga and loan 11\111.e ~urauant to the tha Truatff'• DNd untl not be ranted NEWPOftT alACH P~ to and now h9'd by It a11ocl1tlon, 1avlng1 as· ~.g~ ~t 1~ifo~~ ~ funds become avall1bla to "11 J.tner otdtred that 1 1455 ~ Aw .. New- undlf Nld Dead of Truat In ~ or aavlng1 bank tha payM Of endorMa u • copy o4 thll order to show port BNch, CA ~ _... lh• pcoperty lluw.d In •P«:lflad In SacUon 5102 UN~IED e~~ '2:9 matter of right. cauH be publlshed In NBI !'lorlyn lulldata-Newpott ~ /71? aald County and State and of the flnanc:lal Code and ~~ C:.~ 181 • Said .... wll be made, Colta Mesa Dally PIOC. 1 a..ct\ a Calit Ud. Pam.. I )• ~ ~Jl , ~1t8~~,~~ De-~.t:. :~~ ~1~~.omr~~~ ~~~.:::. :~:,,~:J:*: ~ r.t~~=:.;.WIWla 7 SCRIBED ON SAID DEED lender Olhw than caall II R d of OR•NG1Y pli.d t9g8ldlng W., pot· county at least one. a M, DIVld Or.an, 111.25 Yo. Of TRUST acces>tld, the TruatM may ecor er o " E MUk>n or eneumbfancaa, ..--for tour ~ kum Drlve, ~ .... APN 1047· 141·24 wttMotd IN iatuanea of ~~<;:Of.:~~ to aatltfy the lndtbtednaea Wlka pclor to aw day or CA toa10 ·ANEW TRUSTEE IS SEUINQ the Trua•'• DNd untll MCUred by Mid o..ci. ad· lht hearing ~ fttaza AICltemenl 9lll~:W. PROPERTY "AS IS, funda b9coma .vall&ble to tfahult andd EIKllond~ s.tl 'llll'M* ~ .... wlUI In-DAT•i RB 11 1•1 lnC., (CA), 21'1 111th A.,. WHERE IS" the peyM or endor ... aa • etaun er recor .., on terfft u proWled "'«aln .,. ___ , __ .___' enue, LE. 1 220. ~ BUSINESS?? • • • • • • • • • • • • • • TM Ur/ DtJNll",."' 111 tht lMily Pi"1t is f>l-tt! IO l11mOfl.1f« • W ltnfict "'1W lll'llil#/e IO MW ""1int:.s. Wi wiJJ "°"'SEARCH the"""* for. Jflf' 111"""""' ~. -""""'JO"' tk timt "1tli IM ttip,,. °""'!"-in s..r Mil Tbm, t{alllM. "for tJx Jttlld, $. ?:!!'.:/:':,,;=~;;;L"!.'fo,c;::proef ofJ . . with d. °"""' °"" J""-S1JtJP ,,, IO fill Jiii"' fiailit-.,.,,,,, n.lt mml Ill 'ti# DttiJJ PiJ«. 330 W. a., & C.-Motl. /f Jiil' _,,,,, :i,.. ""'"'. (lJ"J 642-021 """~ wi/J 1'11"1i .,..,,,,.,.fit',., • ;,;, ,_..,, "',,,,,;J. -·Ir llJotJJJJIMJj.,, JitnJ-' ~-"',_ ailJ .. """ .... ,,, morr ihttit ,,_ ..... ,.. GtJOJ w;,, I"!' ---- I HARIOR LAWN- MOUNT OUYE Cemetery Sales Leads Furnished inatW ot right Novel'nb9r 14, 1994 a1 In-and the unp.ld prlndptll Of __ .__.. WA MOOI Said .... wiia b9 ~. awm.nt No.1'4-M1111 ot ._ NM MOnCt by Mid Tl\•MH H. aohulta, Ttrla butll\9H 1, con-w wfdMMll ~ or said Offldal Recotda, Wiii clMd with ...,_. thaf90C'I COIHlllllONI" OP ~ ~ a 1tn1M l*t- WW'1111tf, ~ cw im. ~on :rot~':° ~td~~ .. prcMdad In ea1ct Note. TH• a U PI R I 0" _.,. pied ~ ..... po.-FR. o'NT ENTA·NCE TO , .... ch&ro•• and ••• COU9'T Th• rqletr&nl(I) COf'ftO Mallon Of 9neumbfanceA, " P9r1Me ol Iha IN .... and NHAN DAI OANQ, 114 mancecil ·te lrlnMc:t ~ to ~the ~ THI! COUNTY COU"T-of 1N tn.ta ~ by CH&YfNNe ST COSTA ,,... .._, .. ~ alClncf by Mid Deed, ado HOUSE, 100 CIVIC CEN-Mid DMd 9' TNllL " ~ NafM(a) .._. VWIC9I "*9undOr wllt! ,.._ TE.R DAIV! W!ST, SANTA CCNtlOUIMlTID Rll· ME.SA. CA l2t2t ~on: 1cti'01111 -.,tu~~ ~CA..:'n::'°~ COMV•YAMCI CO .. Publlal'ted .;:.•port NewDoft ...... ,._,._. :: ::. ~;:= Wft {Payabtt ec the time PAMY, 11011 YI• ::C~°:~ a, 11 11.°':/. ~ K. 9lml. V.P. deecS _,_ .,,..,. o1 .... In ~ rnon.y oC TUM •LVD., IUITI 1-Nt s 1 •• -. 9ed • prcMded In Mid He*. IM Untied ........ al rlOhl.. 110, W 0 0 DLA MD lt\7'21 _. ._ ~ a.fl 9' fffa, cl\are•• Ind ••· •end......,_ cono..-" MILLS, CA 11Moil (811) OJanea Qeul'tf °"......, '*"" o1 .,.. ~ ancr to and now Mid by • M0-44ft PUl&.JC MOTICI 11. t• o1 ttie truata et-.ct by under Mid Deed of TNlt In ..... oa/Q1/11M NMla ll"ll .. IMllllllll•lllll"Mid Deed o1 TNllL lM propet1y _,.... In ._ IC&U.Y RDV11a PIM MD UMIM n • ultJN -..._. COldOUDA~ • Mid COWlly _. ._ anit .... • sws• °"nm ____.. P.-.0.. COMV•Y&Mcl°'io• dMC4aM•~ TRU•T•• SAU OP. ANMOMaT•Tlt DIT c... -.., .... !...,!•, =~ T'·u~!· •'LVD101t .Y.,T .. I ~~ ~y ~ Pie ... "" tltat ...... ulftlUI ~-·"" :.-:=.' , .... --.. ---• .,... •• •9 Of' TMJST '"'bll•h•ll Newport MAMC8 -· --1 0.... Oailla t :::-i. WOOILAMD AfltU41MllooOOI .. aclleo.e ..._ ~ --,cw. .. RIU ,_, "°''Tli':r-MCM4:•, .. ca1•1 ,r,rgr.-:n• .. ~~ .......... ,,., , ..... ftM.::-.... I ... WHIM•• "131 1-...... --r;rrmaEn ... OM,, ,.,. --..... -WJC •TICI .... .. ... .!Wl,T•u•u·.~ ... • ............... IHI.. Tot•l 1.l atUll1UI .:.. -• --..:"'... --~1:''it: .... .... ,.,. :.:... .. =--· --··===-.. "=1: Mlr"*Y * ~ Pu111ne"ad H:-c; CGUM, COITA ll1IM. OMMUt"!!._• .:::: ----· ••Lftlr Ql ..... 10. ~ --.• _ ... .._ • ·-_....__ -"" ............ r.-.. .... ... 'tit::' ,.....,_1,11.a.1-. •u••• ;.... ._._," • .11[11. • .1 am Ill-.•-., , __ _.;;;°';;.;;';.;.'%~~.;;M;..;,;.__11..-....,.....,. ( ....... NllMl•llu .......... ..... , , -Thunday, March 9, 1985 • "flUIUC llOT1Cll NII.IC llOTICll IWLIC .,._ WIC.,ICll • • W IOTICll W .,_ PlllUCllOTICI --"*ICllOTll:I ;;..: r:..,:"fo>. '~":'= ""':'.:.-=:-_..._. __ A -.... -~:.-- wtH0974 ....... R•••• .....,CA en s.1• Pubic .... • '"' • 11.tea.4a 111•~•.1• ...... ._YI"' '= Ploteu.u. ...... a...... •11'ru1-. ........ '°"" ICM'9ftctllul.... ............ l ~J'~~ 1451111 t.~ .. ltl-...... _ ............ . .,: • ..-au..... • ... a..... •111111111 ~,:~.::anT>*com-OMIM~-:-:.=-::~= ~M~ M h1l•1111 a'Helllh ,,.-. hM~CA~1J.tl~ °'==~ .......... ,.... tollo'#lno pef'IOfW ... The .....,..... ,...,. .. ---lo nrwt ~ oC N Coufttt Cler\. A"" _....under' .. lcllollt Wm ..-• IS.3M.eel rvou OIJ(CT • .. .., ................ M ~ = ::eont .,. ~ ~u:ih-YEv c:,"'\, ........ ~~. b) ... _ "'*' the ~ ICMM luSNa NlnM .... nw Ind -of Ll&HT =~':::: ~ CIC IM u•~an '°" 1"111-" ........... , AY'1N PA .. TNEASHIP LOW PAO[S, 14142 Plau CUSTOM ~·1 '111? =::me(•) '*<! I lllUSI bt lllld btfort II.ti ISTRY JWf~l'SHIP, IO II.. Ind not If ... 81111of91 .. "IELO MAAKETIHO P.atlc Or., I 203, Tu•Un, CA Weetctlff Ot a .. ' 100. ..._, __, Con.-' TM llllno ot 11111 tta•mtnl Cllltofnl8 DtiW111Pf11'11ltrttllp, A~ Ind t.-"h .... .._ cillllOIOftl Of 111 M 1llll of • ,tcllout --.;:.:::;:==- of lie. C. 1 • 4400 12eeo ---. I.di ,.,. f2t10 _.._ ... _ a.-.e1 not Of l&tn 11111or1Z1 IM tS1 s lMil ''"'· c~ """' . onot c.Momi. ~..,Ill court befllf' 1ut1n1n N"1lt 1n VIOllllOn 01 MacArthur ~~.'·sth fl. P.rride tong, 34912 Cam-',i;"'F._ 1i1?w..-"-•111"*" "' _. ~Ills •Wt ot • flCtlloul s.n .. Ana. ~of°' ...._.,....to Ill '-lllO YOlif ..., ~ Of "'°'* llll4lf -----~....-.::---Newport S.ech CA lno C.P~t Cap11ttano Of., St•. 100, N••Pott ~the~~: Suslnesl NMne In YICllllOll 01 8811 oC Cllllomla OIO en "Te w • ._..y ~ U\M .. """ .,. In Ptl10ft Of by ..... Stlll. Of COllllllOft llW ~ .... 1"" II 0 .1... Ryan Companlll, a..cn, CA 92G24 BNch, CA taeeo 3, 191t, lhl f!QlllS ot 11\0lhlf undtf 20tll dltf of February, 1995, Mlow ..._ -In 8"0f" •llOt~ s.. Siclon 14400 et aeq , ,,.,.., __ • LJd., 155 POii Rold W•fl. CMttopfw ~ 34912 Thia butlnnt la ecm. ' ,_.,.. rf Stalt, Of common litw "'utllll conttnl d~ 1M •~ wkh IN Annual If Y'OU ARE A CREDITOR lftd Prollt1110nt _. ITATOlllR WfftpOl't. CT oe8'IO Cltnlne capi.1'9nO, c .. dUdld by: an tndMcUll PUbllthed ~ s.. Section 14400 et MCI pa-'""'1141 #id twmNtt :::ro: .. :,-, = ~· er.-. ol 1):. lllt loloWlllO parson~•) 'TyJ>9 of bualMts: ~111ket· 'ln01 s.actt1 CA929124 Th• r•gle11ent(1) eom-Cotta M~"' Pilot COdinm and ProlnslcnS rdlllonlhlp • '*'*' ~ °:i':::' N°ur~ .......:. rou must *d _.. r.,. ~-~ ~:W:r 1nQ & Pr0t001lon ~ Th • bua n•u • eon-rMnCed to tranuet bus!-., e) tflln ~ of \NI Stm _, "9. C'Alllrt .. .,_ L.-... D. L..-. fell, .... ~ .... ., Tlili bualnHt la eo~ duct.CS by: huabllnd and MU undM tM fidldoul Marc:tl I, 11123, 30, 1195. First~-• lllld ~ In IN fulUre f c:.lifomNI pur.uM\t to to tl'lt C*IOllll "11'1111111-tl31 r ..,.,,. tw NNlAl. 1'120 NOit! a.tr duc:1ed by: an lndlvldual wll• 8ualneH N8me(1) lilted 1'1740 l .A.rtfOfESMOMLEICMW be c:ofldlldld by DIANE L t_ ' tilt IDPOl!lttd ~ flt 'CCM SU11500 ht1lSlnllAna,CA92706 Th• rtgl1trant(1) eom-Th• r•gl1trant(1) eom. abo\19 on: n/a PUlllC NOTIC• CW. L.MAH AND STtPHEN M A!Mlt o WOOdtlno Pr•li-_.. four monfls trom Eldlo. CA lt"6 CJvlllN Mllll T..,., rMne.ct to 1tansact bual-IM~ to tranaact busl-Jim Fulton 5 34'0 Wl/$11111 IJNd El.MAH who -W pay 111d d.ot ' da• Ol lhtlnllinc:t Ol leltlfl Ntwpott llUcfl·CGlta Mm 1920 North Wlf &•"I S..ta n.u under 10. Fl<:'tlllous ""e 1 undltN the(flclll1oue) U.tld Thia lt.M!Mftt wu flied floutlou9 Su/11600 lllMll>lliblund dtf>ts Jeme• f stiennan, secre· ptcMdtd In MCllOll 9100 ol llltCM2971&7Mlr2.t.16,23,1996 An•.CA02706 d Busln .. • Nam•(•) titted ~!!.8". n/ llM • wflh tM County C1e11' ol au.an... Mame LoJ Ano#lff, CA goo10 I 1111 and recelVe ,. mo· taiv Cllllomll Pfoba• Cede T PUBLIC NOTIC! lllls buslnm Is conduclt atx>v• on: n/1 • .,.,.., ... on. a Orang. COYrlfy on Fet>N-Newport Beadi·Cosla ~ 111 Pl¥ablt to 111t 111m lime IOI llllna clallns -W no by 111 ~ual 0.1... Ryan CompanlH, ~1'~~ nt to.d llY 28, 1995 • · TM ,J="=!on. • CN299168 17183-CY Mat f'ilf1htf noact Is hereby glYtt'I 03!00, 03/07, 03/08, tJCpll'• btlOft lour monlls lrom fl,.UMO WUALTT fltvlslllllll 11• not Y9l btatJn. Ltd., ThOmas P. Ul>onata, with• Ille ~~ ...... ~k 1 11928344 dolna bUllneU u: 11 8,16.23,30. 1995 I Ille Wldtfllgned w11 not bf 03/09, 03/10 Ille llNf\na 0"8 nollCtd abOYt a-•• Of THE ...... ,,., to hnuct bUmtlt under lhe Pru. ,,_ .. 6 o Publahed Newport e.acn. SAl..l:> s etPCM1* lro1111t1ls day on lor YOU MAY EXAMINE Ille Ille ,...,..._ _....,... ~tlout buUltlS name or Tti11 11111m1nt wu flied Of1ngt County on F•bN-coai. Mffa Oalty Pilol SA N d. HER, Hll7 PUIUC llOTICI OC>laallOll ~rm by '#It PUIUCJIOTIU... by Int murt If you n llATYltll ilMRHlsWlltltlll • with the CountY Cletk of If'/ 8, 1995 , ......... ,.. MarCh2 9 18 ~ 1~ ~ti!ff c~·blt~~:o New-111tr(1l\ Tn (hlll(her)(lllttr) own '*'°" lnllrtslld In lhe est.all YWI lM>ED CMCl ... IU1 • SIGlfEO' Ct1RISTIMA TALAVERA 01ang1 CountY -00 Febru-.....__ • • • • tnno .,..,... • \ Fl ...... FIW27 i(s Of in lflt f the NOTICE Of PfTITION T you 1111'1 Ille wltll the ·court ' "" 1'1111 sratamtnl was llltd With • llY 28. 1995 Published N.wport Beach-Daina Sn•r' 211 1 /2 FICTITIOUI ~&I 11m name o ADMllOSTER HT ATE OF lorlllll Rectuest IOI' S ful Corpora .. Na-ne: lJNICARE flt CounlY ~ of ORANGE ,,38422 Cotll MtH Dally Pilot PUBLIC NOTJCE ~251"" Colla MHa, MME ITATtMOIT d al Santi Ana, ClllfOfnla, JAMEi ... OlllfRT NOllCI ol lllt liflnO ol an l!Vlfl· INSURANCE COMPN4'r' ecunwon ltbtuary 17, 1995 Publllhed Newpor1 S.ICh-Mateh 9, 18, 23, 30, 1995. Thia buslnnt It eon-The lollowlng person(1) Is 20th d~ OI Ftbruaty, 1995 CIM NO Af76949 IOfY and llC>l)rlllal ol es ~'::' 1 c:c'CA ~~~ OUl>OI' NO'TICE·Tllll ffctloul Nam. Costa M111 oatty PUot Th739 FJctltJoua ducted by: an 'lndlvtdual Islar• doing business au) DBA. AHN.GLASSMAN , To all heirs, bentllclartts, asse!S or 01 any pelllloli · rv total tdmlttld 1SstlS Stltlmtnt •-. five yws M11eh 9, HI, 23. 30, 1995. PUBLIC NOT·'CE ausa ..... "..... Th• r•gJJtrant(I) eom-~.OBA Off ICE MACHINES. DIANE L KEL. MAN Cl'ldltOfS. conllnQant credftol1, nt • provided In Mellon 1273 cu aac lrom lhf dall If WIS ftled Ml lhl Th735 ~ llat......,t IMneed lO tranaact bl.Ill· C DIGITAL BUSINESS ~UTO· STEPttEN M KELMAN Ind persoM who 1111Y bt oth-1250 of 111t Calllornll Ptol>a _..~..., Olllcul lht County Cln A new --------1 Th1 following .,_rlOnS 11e nest under the Fictitious ATION. 1361 Wes'! f901h RODI, POU.atl(. PfTTICER, ET trWISe lntlres .. d In lflt Wit M Code. A Request 10( S Tola! llabll1lls 115•878•4 flctllouS 8\lslntn Name SWl-PUBLIC NOflCE Bu~~!~!0:!me doing bulln.u u : euslnHa Nam•(•) listed Street. Gardena. CA 90248 AL. niatt, Of bolh. ot JAMES M Nob form Is avallablt 11om .lh• Aggieoat• wr~:,! .. ~~.~= mtfll rnutl' bt llled betOfa thal GREEN ELECTRICAL abOve on:~· Modem Buslnm Automa-801 s Gf1111t1Ave $ult"OO GILBERT cllf'lc .,... " *"' Tilt lllno ol llllS siatemenl ' Flctlttoua Statement CONSTRUCTION, 2451 Daina si. bOn {Calllornll COlporalk>n), Los MQl/1$: CA 90017 A PETITIOH has been flleO .,.., .. r ,.....r: ClpUal stoclts 2.5oo.ooo does nol of llstll IUlhofla "'" • BuslnH1 .Ham• Th• following ~'°"' at• Eld•n Av•., 12, Co111 This 11atem•nt wu flied 1361 West 1901h Street. Gar· Newport Bhcli·Costa Mesa Dan F. JtlftltS In lllt Supe'lor ROIEJIT w. HANCOCK, &Q. Aclo'IOall •lte·lns lor 0"* use In ltlls st.a .. of a flcllllous Sta~ement dcolo>f.~~5f~~:-· MICRO M..., CA 92621 With IM County C'-ik of dena, CA 90248 CN299268 3943·G Mar 9, 1995 Court of Calllornta, County o RUUELL, HMCOCl IJEF· than lpecQ!Ssul~! IU"!! 00 Buslntst Name In vlollllon 'oJ Th• tollowing P41'ION 11e Timothy Grady Or•tn, ~ County on F•bru-ThiS ~ Is conducted ORANGE. FRIES ur.,.... no,.. !hi rla/111 ol 111olhtr under d8olngEbuFlsNlne1Ps ~R:TNERS g1gr:~u;~1 ~1a ~~=: 2451E.kMnAve.,12, Colt.a wy 24, 1995 t>yacorporallofl PUBLIC NOTICE THE PETITION requests"'' 2005 LosRoblUAve 5'153 6'osspald;ln~dQOl12685tr~000t•d F•Cltfll. St"8, or common raw LU ,. • " • M ... , CA 92627 F838348 The registrant commenced to Dan F. JeHrlts be appointed as Pasldlna. CA 91101 ur,,..,s · · {See Stc1lon 14400 11 seq .. 1218 E. Balboa Blvd., Bal· iA 11~828st nlty 3081 Thi• bualn•u It eon-Publlthed Newport Stach-tJansact business under Iha CNS1260302 personal rlPC'esenlallve lo NewpOftBtach·Costa Mesa Unassigned lllnds(su~s~ 8uslnen and Professions t;f:t).~ rri~wart, Jr., 613 G1t!~ar Av!., eo.i. Meta. ~~.ar%'i:i':=~om-Costa M•H Dally Pilot ~=s115:s:s~ ~~ar~ Lff AM> ACCIDENT AM> =~:i~r lht estate OI the CN298413 Mar 8,9,15, 1995 Surplus 15 regards ~o:, ~::~1b t/2, Poinsettia Av• .• Co-CA 112628 menced to tranaact ooli-March 2, 9, 16, 23, 1995. 22 1994 HEALTH THE PETITION r unts tilt PUIUC NOTICE 87,677,590 JOlfltA 11.vmm ( rona del Mar, CA 92625 Thia builna:il~~~on-nttll und., IM Flctltlou1 th729 SIGNED MODERN BUSINESS SYNOf'SIS OF THE :ldeol's WILL ancnodk:Hs II Income lor lht year 50o S K1•mH,::; Jho:a~~;· :~~111~ ~~.csr:~:l::;ant(s) com-B~l~•11 •• ~!"',•(:)5liated PUIUC NOTICE AUTOMATION. !,NC. llY Richard AMIUAl STATDENT • • t>&.admlltld to problle Th Fill Ne. ,.17111 ·, Otst>u 1117 ·~5.884 · Suitt to5 · " meneed lo transact busl-,.,.,,.. on . .,_.. • 99 . Gomez CEO YEAft E111DED DEcomER and any codicils 111 tvailable FICTntO\JI IUatMEM rsements Of •• e year Bru.. CA 92621 ~A 1 92661 I I nen und., th• Fictitious Tlmoth.r. G. GtHn Fiie No. Ft31121 This statemtnl was hied With 31, 19M for ex.amlnallon In lllt Ille kep • llAMf STATEMENT 125.157,212 Newport Btac:tl·Ccsla Mesa d~t~ ~~~ ~e~:ner~ = Business Name(s) fisted ~· IM l~\ty ~~l~ FICTfTIOUS BUSINESS the Coun1V Clerk ot Orange &•tl.GW. , ... n--by Ille court Tile lollowtng person{s Wt llereb'( cerUty INI lhubovt CN295649 Feb 23, Mar 2.9.16. nershl . at>ove on: n/a n o MAME STATEMENT County on Marc/13, 1995 ~ THE PETITJON tequeslS ls/Ire doing bOslntss as: GRUB llems Ill in accofdenct with Ille 1995 The ~e latrant(s) com-Mark Stanley Of1ng• County on F.t>N-The lolloWll'lg pe<SOll(S) NOTICE·lhlS fle~llous Name MO --..... Cefttef autllO(rty toldmlnlsttr l!le estale & HUS RESIDENTIAL REA menced ~o transact busl· Thl1 statement w11 . filed ary 8• 1995 Fe3es IS/are dolog t>usmess as Sratemenl expires lrva yein ~. SL l.Mle, llllO !3141 under Ult Independent Admlnl-ESTATE SERVICES. 23 Corp:!;===::==:::::::!:::::=;:::;:=::=:::; ntss under lh• FlellliOYS wllh th• County Cl.,k ol N a-~ GOLDEN STAR TEXACO. 6962 trom lhe data It was tlled In Ille Total admitted .... 1. $ Sll'atlon or Estates Act. (ThlS rate Plaza. No. 190. Newpo Put a few wordys Business Name(s) listed Orange County on January Publlshed .wport ...._.,.. Edinger Avenue. Huntington Olllce ol Ille Couniy Clerk A new 937,292,474 aulhori!y win allow Ille persona Beacll. CA 92660 abov• on: Jan. 5th 1995 24, 1995 Co•la MHa ~ally Piiot Beach. CA 9~7 flciillOUs Busaiess Name Slate· T 0 t •I II• b Iii t 1.. • represen1111Yt to lalca man Newco RUlty CCfp . a call Robert B. Stewart F834838 Mareh 9, 1e. 23, 30, 1995. Joanne Leng SIV LO, '941 ment must be hied beloie that 778,848,902 acuons wUllout obl3llllng cou lornla corporation. 23 CorpOfl to WO r k f 0 r you . This statement was filed Published Newport Beach-Th738 Marvlew Avenue, Los Angeles. time The tiling ol lllrs statement Capltal 1tocke • 2,600,000 approval. Btlore taklno certain Plaza, No. 190, Newport 8eacti with the County Clerk ot Costa Mesa Dally Piiot CA 90012 does nor ol Itself aut11or1ze tile Aggregated wrllo·ln• for very Important actions. however. CA 92660 Orange County on Januaty Februtf'/ 23 March 2 9 PUBLIC NOTICE Dianna Keno SIY Lo 941 u~ In !Ills stare ol a Acbtious other lh•n 1p1cla1 1urpl!J• Ille personal represeniauve WI 1'tlts t>umess Is (jO!lducted llllJ'IHllllWPOITllACHPllL,•oorrAMJ:SA 30, 1995. ' ' ' Matvlew Avenue. Les AAgeleS. 8USllllS$ Name In vlOtallon of fund• $ O be required to give notlce by a eo<porallon F835504 16· 1995· Flotltloua CA 90012 the rlQhts ol another under Surplu1 notee • O . Interested 11ttsO/lS unless Ille Theregtstranl commenced 1 • Published Nowport B•ICh-Th724 Bualaaa Name This t>uslness-i5 conducled Federaf. Stale. or common law G~ou p~ld 1~ ;~ c~r~ llave waived notice or consented 11ansact business under ltl• Costa Mesa Daily Pilol Statem•nt byco-panners (See Stcoon 14400 el seq . • •urp ui • · 10 tilt PfOposed acllon) The llctlllous t>uslilm name or February 16 23 March 2 TRADE Th• following persons 11• The regi51Jant commenced 10 8usll\8Ss and PfoltSSIOOS :go",.o•ted •peclal •urplu• 1r1<1e11tndent aamtnlSll'allon names llSIJd ll>ove on Nowm· 9 1995 · · • doing buslneu 11: transact business under the Code) Un•1t'9ned fund• l•urplu•I authorlry wlll be g1anted unless ber 12. 1994. 642•5678 • ' · th h I lf1 d POWER TREE VIDEOS, llClillous , business name or Flrsl Fiiing t 49 443 572 · ' an Interested persoo files an SIGNED· NEWCO REALT _______ T_h7_1_01 roug Cass e 2575 San Clem.nt1 Or .. names liSted above on NIA Newport Buch·COSta Mm Gain iLotel from oper•tiont objection to the petltiOn and CORP .• By· Dtnnls Gordon. Pris Buy It. Sell II. Flr}d H. 642·5878 1 103, Co1ta MHa, CA SIGNED DIANNA KENG SIV LO CN297183 251 Ml<9.16,23.30. s 19,804.299 shows goOd cau .. why lhe This statement was fled with Clasalfled. 92626 JOANNE LENG StV LO 1995 Not lni:ome ' 19,973,323 courl .should not grant the the Counf)' Cler-01 ORANGE ,_ ' . ~-") , , :· .11T J J... I .. , 1 I ~ · ·" I 1 ~ .. .1: - a A5SIFIED HOURS Telephone 8am-5:00pm Monday-Friday . I 1 j,1 ': ',.1 -T ·"" I "' I ~ . Walk-In 8:00am-5:00pm Monday-Friday •" .. , . ,• ... • 'I It{:;.· I ri . ., , . .... ..... .. ,.J. .. ~ -- 1' I) 'I ;,t j ' I j , ' -:r lo,. • -.. -!' : ~-,;. DAILY PILOT ·DIADUNIS Monday ...... ~ .. Friday 5:00pm Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm Wednesday ....... Tuesday 5:00pm Thursday ........... Wednesday 5:~ Friday ................ Thursday 5:00pm COSTA MESA 2124 COSTA MESA 2124 NEWPORT HOUSES/ CONDOS FOR SALE CORONA DELMAR BEACH 1022 PROPERTY 117 5 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. iiiiiiii BEACH iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 28d Hae w/famlly rm Riviera Townhom• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii GOVERNMENT FORE-MONTEREY °'3rd Bd, E·slde, E'alde 3Bd·2.5Ba, fem 1Br+loft w/pvt patios. -------•I C LOSED HOMES LIVE ON THE BEACHI bright & cln, N/amolc, & llv w/fp, big yd, View of BaJ Isl. Furn. FROM $l.OO (R•palr Ocean front condo-N/Pet1. $1075 722·1681 pool, lennla. Avl 3/15 T•nn/gym/poot. emo- = ne•ded). Delinquent mlnlum1. Poola, apas, E'ald• 2 m1tr Br/2•ABa +. S 1325 433-9528 1yr. S14SO. 675-9576 Tex, Repoa, REO'a , a a u n a 1 , g y m . Cln, quiet, w/d hl<..Yp, •BACK BAY 1 BR, FDIC, ATC, IRS. Your S174,000 lo $335,000. grdnr, fp, ictru. $1250. NEWPORT stove, refrlg, gar, aml area. Toll frM 1-800-Furnlahed models 65()..2809 or 642-9722 2169 yrd. Gal/wtr pd. $585/ 69&-9n6 Ext. H·5139 op•n dally. Call for E'alde 38d_18a cottag•, BEACH mo, No P•L 648-6680 lOVAl "°"''"a for current llatJngs. brochure 1..S00-4n-new cpl/paint, w/d iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii o""o"'u""v n42. Broker cooper•· hkupa, carport, patio *8~e~~~~Ji~!* All rtll 1suta lfwertls11111n tllls IAGUNA tlon. $895 No pet 722-6294 AT THE BEACH 3 8 d •2 8 • up at,., MWlll•PetllJUlljCCllO lllCfld· HILLS 1050 •'•Id• 3Br 1Yl8a, w/d Annual Rentals lmmac n•Y'er bldg, 1rat fair Hov.sln9 Ail ot 1961 11 !••••••••• hkup, 1-<:ar gar, grdnr. roohop d•ck, 2 car ... Hffwll"""'auallill•l•I HOUSES/ 381 '18th Pl. $1175/mo L•rge 8•1•ctlon gar, $1700 mo yrly It Mftftlu "111y praler1ncc. ~e.131ulldre PWano°'rldam. 0tculvcuk CONDOS 622-8535: 650-8013 ev 212 Balboa ...... :1= 2Bd·2Ba dwnalra. llmllalltn or dl1u1m1n111on ... EAST&IDE 28, l lhBa 2/2 Lg condo ·• 1 Patio, n•w cpVpatnt, 2 11m11 111 l'ICC. colot rtllglon , acce11 to F'waya, bch FOR RENT 1-car garage, carpell ~';de:ln~~n·i'::: =~~g car (tar $1150 • .so, hfllllup. l-11111 1111111 w & ahops. $480k 472..e262 & dr•P••· No peli. Call For lul'llMr Ust Clndy/Agt 873-3777 allilllal .np.,., a11i1111Alioll1t --------76()..8384 Cannery Vlllag• Alty "'lllMt lllY mll pralcrtllCI. Uml· NEWPORT 1---------•---------The,,..._. Thinking of having a C1tllllflll1cri111111lllt a." OA RENT ._.._ garag• aale? 11111 ,.. .. ,,,., wtll net BEACH 1069 ISi.AND 2106 ., ........... ...,ca-orve ua a calll UIWl4!1ty acctPI lftY ld"'111t· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CLASSIFIED "'"' '°' ,.,, '"'" w111c1111 111 B'/ Owne,..Sp'jglHt liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii , __ tti_ro_ug_h_c_la_s_slr_ie_d_ 842·11878 ....._._..__ 11 ... •-,..._,.& .. •rs Co... 2Br front houM. y--"'' -""' -~ 4Bd-2Y.rBe. upgraded, _,, .... lllRW '*"'" ~at 1U pool/ipa, park va, 3 car Porch & patio, e.,.b«1--------------------------- llwtlU.11 .-mt11d IA 11111 Reduced to 1590,000 crpt, gar, w/d . No pets. COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 ... ,.,. art 1Ri181• " " S.st value, Must lff,l Yrly S1050/mo. 4119-6321 ...,. 11u 11riJ.,.. lt cain-Open Hou .. FrVSun ,.. ., ...,,"', ....... a11 "uo 2s:Mo1e °' 79-7629 liBALBiiiicouAl ____ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ltll·llw • 1-a.m.1$!Q. Ftr Ptclfto Coet1 l11wttl1Nftt• 1111'!!1101 1111r.OC11ta,itue EASTBLUFP BHut P!NJNSUl.A 2107 UllHUOIC4M·lSOl View, lg 2500 aq ft hm ------ on .3 acre w/poot B•lbo• Newport • GENERAL Owner Wiii finance. R~72.__ .. AftA 1002 16251<. 2i27 Carob. ~_.. 844-6603 l'RONT8 iiiiiijjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilNewport North/b•au, 38A "2000 4BA l2AOO • HONOLULU lulC 1 BR 2400 af 4Bd/2.1Ba. St!Jdk> Apt '515-$700 unit at On• W ater· comm pool/dealgner PnthM VW Apt *2000 • front. owner wanta to owned $48$1<. Aa.um-1 ____ _... ___ _ , •rad• f()( bHOh c:lly ebl• loen • Sy Ow'* CORONA property 0< .. u. Call 841-0707 or 780-111' Chrll ., 71~0s1224 DIL ~ 2122 or F"AX 8()1.732·94H •---------•,,•••••••• MOBRB 1• -CO_R_O_N_A ___ ,HOMES 1100 DELMAR 1022 CA.Mao HIOHLANDa euatom pool horn.. Remodeled 4 Br :JS•. 125,000 dWn. AHum• 111 TO at '45?1/mo. No •g•nra. 17M500 bu1, ..,..~82?' res. On th• move? Sell your extra household lt•m• In Ctasslfled ---------- •STAT•Ul.9 So. Cout Metro fam-ily pwtl. *1000/obo. Sold aa la, 1551·73" Chanc .. att you wUI find what you nMd et th• pftct you want 10 P•V WMrl you rtld c-.MIM deity 111-11n aat11••Mouee w/f)004 on ltg canyon lot. Oul•t MlghbOr· hOOd Of CorONI HJG,,_ landa. Key to prlv bch &cc•••· St 700/mo llS 1-&"3 78C).1 ..... Absoluttly GoflOtUI 38d-3b& rantala avall- a b I e In CdM/NB. Ocaan, bay a canyon vtewal 8om• oc..,,. front, canal, bayfronta a 80fM gott ~ pro~IYl'fy ...... ...... from h1CIO. Call flranklln Rt1y, AIM AefUI S~t. No , ... to rent•rt .... 7000 tit 30t . QUIET &: SERENE Palm 1".esa Apart:m.ent:s So near 8c yet so fv ... That's the feeling you get when you live at Palm Mm amid the l~h grunc:ry of s«luded woods 8c staccly ~· A SNdios.Ll & l 8cd.roomt · Jn SS~ to $600 · lllll $625 m S650 • 211l S7l6 to $750 .& No Pcu A Vcrtical !lindl A Ceding f1m1 .t NBW Carpc.t, Pline ft TUi FIO'G1 ROorn A. Hca~t r ool & JaruzzJ t r.oo.acn~ Ganp Av111llhk otlicc Houn; 9:00 am • S:OO pm M-F and 10:00 am • 4. 00 pm wcekcnd.• 1561 Mesa Or • Sanri Ana Hci&flc:-, CA (714) 546-9860 BYPllO• (714) 642-5678 BY FAX (7 14) 631-0594 (Please include your name and phone number and we'll c.all you back with a price quote.) BYMAILOll• PIRIONs 330 West Bay Street Costa Mesa, CA 9'lfJ27 Cam-of~ Blvd&: Bay Sl. GENERAL POLICY Rates and deadlines are subject to change without notice. The publisher reserves the right to censor. reclassify, revise or reject any classified advertisement. Please report any error that may be 1n 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 sp ace actually occupied by the error. Credit can only be allowed for the farst insertion. $400 la 111 It takes to P-l•c• a 25 word or less claaslfled ad. S15 for each addltlonal word. \ CAL•SCAN (916) 449-6000 •• ttewport Beach/Cotta Mesa Daily Pilot Thursday, March 9, 1995 117 aawrorr COIOIU -----•• ,,. 218I Dl!I.11.11 2•22 llISCIJ.UDOUS ID1'A1S TO BUSINESS IUSDIESS LOST• LOST 6 SCHOOLS t ;;;;~-~=l!~=~~:v~ IE1n'W SllUI 2724 OPPOl11JNITY OPf'OrnnmY POUND 2925 FOUND 2925 PERSONALS INSDUCTIOR 3012 StUdle Apt OUlet, NIP, ·-----iii 2904 29041 ... -iliiii .. iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiil . -------- Be•chArea Y...tvUnfum rv ocn, nu carpt, SWIY Npt Ht1ta Ltg Bt/pvt iiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiliiiii CORRECTION Smatt, LOST CAT Solid gray--------BECOME A MEDICAL ant, avt Imm--' .,at--' 8a In exec home. Jae, DR.,..."S VEN DINO Roule .. lg gentle, old lady CAT, ahort-naJr allm female, PEJtS0NA1$ 3002 TRANSCF\IPTIONIST. '! ~ 3 i-4i{A.~ Balt\a 11371 lo t1IOO mo. 15451 utlla 7::.:_.-,._.u, ROOMS 2708 fp, N/S. 1475+ ~ utll. WITH• .. 4•-.... -u found In TeWlnkl• daclawed front lHt OpPortunltV to WOtk at .. ~ Ownw trvla. 64S.7373 .,., ....... D/O •-9'9. MoMy Makar·lmmed Pane, not Port StrHta. Loat from Newport home or In office. 1800 If MW decorated 327 L 24 H .--. ... I" C..h r:1ow 12.500/Wk Neutered, appears to Beach Oakwood Apia LIVE UNCENSORED Typing for doe1ora. 3Bd-3Ba, a11 amena, :SM HamUton, Coata • • ve mag r Start 28 centa/mlle (In. poaa-lnvaat. Req. be half SlamHe, ball AewMO. 648-2306 aoo.sae.1129 Home study. FrH ijt. VIiia Rtntala 975-4912 frpl, aar S1~5 avt ~ .. •50••1• reat1 u1nJt. ~ ... !!', Nwpt keht•-nl• Prof 2 cOwludea bonuH•) 1 +1 h. (800) 8()()..5395 tabby color. 873·2223 LOST• PIOMY QO'"'T 100.lto-3505 U.ff/11\lft erature. p .c.0.1 .. nowl 789-08'14 -mo, or .._.. ahf neat clean quiet ner operator8 wt -• -1P71 .. t~-e21-8117 11 + o 1 L mo. Open, go aH h I Iv b FB Trailer, 95 cent• all FOUND DOG Black "Glady•" wandered Atlanta. eorg •· Pro!MrtY Mgmt re 18d llte/open bm any\Jme 64w 178 m w ~ •· prkng, mllea. Aak aboul CREDIT 2907 Lab with collar, In away from her 1mJe You Can Find Your ~:"P~~A~:2~~~0 calla/grt carpt/mlnl ' 1478+ utll. 850-3325 heavy-haul. 1.8()0-547• Coata Mesa near 17th day care friends al ' Specl•I Som•on• blndl/bale/pat, W/O, gd COM 1 b1k to beach. 2870 Dept. R. Tue-Sat. and Santa Ana. Call South Coast Recr• 1·900·562-5500 >t 6381 BECOMI! A O..,_ moblle home, 2Br Mlghbora.,sns 873-1283 lmmac, aunny rm/pvt • DIEaT • co,.aOLIDA-722·9591 , leave mea-atlon Center, 2070 S2.99/mln. 18 +. P~EQAL. 2Ba. hi celling a. new bath. Kitch prlv. 1445/ Get Rich in Real ia. 'TION Cut paymanta HQ• with description Maple Ave.. Coal a Procan Co 602-954·7420 Accredited, auornay etpt, x-lg patio, carprt. COSTA MESA 2624 mo utll Incl. Quiet N/S. COMMERCIAL tat• Nowt Learn how to 50%. 24 hour ap· or dog. • Meaa. If aha wanders tn•tn.1cted dlptoma ClbhH amen. Sr. patk Chrl1tlna, 673-5332 REAL l:C:TATE to buy forecloaurH proyal. Klmberly Have you •••n our Into your yard: ploasa and degree hom•a- 55+. sans. 875-2044 Private nn/ba In Npt ~ before th• auction Credit 1-8()()..228-0190 IZZV? Striking blk. & call 646-4334. 1Udy. Up to 50% credit ••aalblufl Home• fBd 1Ba 1-car gar, Beacl'I townhoma. ~ using lltUe or no Ext 13. wht female cat, prone awarded for academic for .... 8Bd 3Ba, lri Drlv•by aponalbl• N/8, no money down. Amaz· ito spitting urc We leH H •. and Ille-work experl· d C t -• t 1n5Weatmlnlater peta p l/t I/ lngtelaphonetralnlng. FRl!BDl!BT thecountry 0'rayear, EALTBui enc e. SCl·NIPAS Yi:. '0r~at.,:.~ P&7oci 1750/mo 642·5488 Kitchen °:,,;n7.~:~ BUSINESS OFFICE Call (310) 578-8806. CONSOLIDATION our catsluer gave Izzy FITNESS JOOOllilmlillllill•llllill ... llliel.Wlilll FREE CATALOG 1· S21eC>/mo 840-4718 l BR Mob lie l'ICfflle. PfMlegff. 1495-lnol FOR UNT 2769_ EEIJw:L CAELOJST~ IMMEDIATE RELJEFI away to an anony· 800-669·2555. Npt Hght• on Snug From 1490. Quiet & utll, Muat atand credit AVAILABLE. National Too many debts? mous Newport Bch DIABETICS! Medical/ Harbor. 3Br 2Ba, gar Secure. 1991 Newport check. Call 650-0454, company servicing ac· Overdue blUa? Reduce woman, phone & address Insurance billed dlrecc & yard. Avail 4/10. Blvd. 94e-&373 leave mauage. Adjacent OC 49rport counts only. No sall· monlly payment 30% unknown. Please eall tor Test strips Insulin MEMBERSHIPS 3018 $1600. 31<>-498-7279 2BR·f8A a. f8fto1BA Wilt trade space and Ing. No overhead. Low ~~t~io~•d~~.~~~~ (310) 897-4042 Glucometers ,& mofe·a--------..:--1 ·- Ooeanfront-Yrty 4 •2 Lndry, pool, quiet, nr VACAt;ION . ~;'1f:,'·~~ o~r ~g~ Investment. Ba your calle1s. Reatora credit. LOST BINOCULARS UtUe or no out·of·lr:;;~iiiiiliiiiillliiii~~~~~~~ii 1-cw gar super cln, all tran1portatlon S559 RENT'llT c 2722 aecty help. Ideal to own boss. $50-S100k NCCS non-profit. l· Bausch * L:omb 7x5o, pocilel. SS. Statlsfac-Balboa Bay Club $23..,.. ....,r mo. 40.2 c . & l650NQ.peU64e-.o392 ~ potential. Full.time/ soo-955-0412 at Inspiration Point. lion Guaranl'e9dl Ub-Memberahlp ~ .. -.. •tart own aecty aerv Part·tlme. Call 1·8()().. Corona dot.Mar. arty Medical Supply Oceanfront. NB agent Bayfront Bldg 18d· Bl B or almtlar business. 980-1818. R•ator• Your Credit REWARD to finder. 1-800-762·8026. Want•d Jim Jacobs 875-3n7 1Ba-c:lean, quiet, safe g ear 3Bd 2Ba, flr· Call Laurie 9-5 M·F lbtlng Self-help pro-Call 714-725-0124. Please call 675-&448 ON LIDO PENINSULA 4 blks to Fun Zone P1~· cable, nr •lopes, 251~/fax 251-<>420 LOCAL RTE0 24 Loe•· gram la already used TRADE Seu vour unwanted 1 &2BR bll ho YrfVS695673-1943 w or w1<end. Great•---------tlona Buy All or b th d G RENT 11ems the easywayl mo 8 mea , famllv home. (714) OFFICI! SPACE AVAIL Part•Posalble $2K Y OUHn a. uar· From 1850 E &IDE 1 BR $625/mo. 645-8512 or 645-8928. for non-prallt org. Xlnt Wkty•s00-599-6769 antead result•. Call through classified To place your 710 Udo Park Dr S1"UDIO $525. No toe nr sc Plaza. Lota now 1-800-848·1298. through classified ci~,~~~8a:8~1 714-e73•9030 amk/peta. Drive by NB OCEANFRONT of prkng. Up to lO,OOO MAKE OVER $250,000 United American Fl· --------642·5678 1971 Church St. Call Weeki)'. Fully tum 3Br aq ft, w/utll. Roger or YEARLY. Unemployed, nanclal. ---------•--------- APARTMENTS FOR RENT 760-0189 or 548-8283 2Ba, gar. N/pet 11200/ Unda, 714n54·1400. disabled, students, E'alde Nice ~dr 1Ba week. Karen 434-1424 professionals, check•--------- unfurn. $650+aec fae. Tlmeahare Unit• ttlls opportunity. 100% MORTGAGES & Inquire 165 Rochester and Campground on mall. Satisfaction TD 'S 2918 St .. Apt. A. 645-5418 Memberehlpa. DI• BUSINESS & 100% guaranteed. For.'iiii•iii•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Eaatalde 2Bd upp dplx, tress aalea-cheapl FINANCE' free Information pack·•• ---------1 lgbolc,gar,w/dhkup, Worldwide Hlectlons'. · age call (310)672-$13,000 FIRST BALBOA xlt loci Reta & aec Call Vacation Network 2237. 24 houra. TRUST DEED In· IST11un 2606 depS825.645·5819 U.S. and Canada. 1-PAYPHONEROUTE terat only paid """'"' 800·543-6173. FrH monthly. 13% yleld. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil EAS1'SIDE 2Bd·1 'hBa rental Information. BUSINESS 50 Local & Estab Siles Appralaal available. 2Bd+ carport W/O • New palnt/cpt, ga-(305)563-5588. Earn 51500 weekly. Golf Course, Country Ilk• new, modern: rage S825/mo. 1665 Ir· OPPORTUNITY 1·8()()..866-4588 24 hrs Club. Homa value 11200, TRW 110. vine Ave. 720-9422 I---------2904 PAYPHONE ROUTES $210,000 at compl&- Agent 873-7702 Eaatalde 2Br 1 Ba, RENTALS TO Local sites • for sale, lion. ISC Corporation cozv STUDIO encl garage, yard. SHARE 2724 $2000/wk potential. Principal (800) 339• Kitchen, w/d, parl<lng Quiet complex. Call liiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A S 138,450 INCOME 800-208·5300, 24hrs. 9733. & utll Incl. Yrly lse 65<>-4342 or 540-7191 ~50 Utlls Paid PER YEAR Huge profilS. =""""'='_,..,~__,,~.....,.. ........... $675/mo. 557.9202 "A GREAT PLACE Maater Bedroom 10 Eat. buslneu. 1st tJme ol· TRUCK DRIVERS DRIVE I••••••••• TO COME HOME TO" share 5 Bd 3Ba, N/P, leredl Only $4995. Any· TO OWNlll SO down Cute 1 Br apt. Lg living room, pvt antr, 1mall porch, d/W. No pets. 1750/mo. 673-9247 Spacious & bright N Smk. 708 Avacado, time 1-800-552-0901 ~er;.~mg~Yneeiv;;~ ANNOUNCEMENTS 1BR & 2BR. No pets. COM. Sherrie 675-8634 CRUISE SHIP JOBS! gram. $0.78 all milesl lll•••••••• Call Now 831-8427 Earn $ 3 O O ·S 9 o O Tractor ownership 30. Bal Isl. Respon prol to WEEKLY. Year round 42 monthsl Average•--------- ---------·---------shr lux 3Br 3Ba home. position. Hiring both 10,000+ miles/month. ANNOUNCEMENTS BALBOA NEWPORT $550/mo Incl utll. Paul men and women. Free New Apple Lines. Inc. 2920 PENINSUIA 2607 BEJJ,CH 2669 590-3714/w 723--0566/h room and board. Will 1·800·843·8308/1·800·1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BEAUT NB/Prlv Hm train. Please Call 843-3384, Madison,•• *1BR s825* Lrg unlurn rm, kltch. 1 ·504-e48-4502 South Dakota. Mon·Frl $500 STUDIO, $850 2 BR 2 BA $725/Up w/d. N/P,· cln, quiet Ext.7312.C-08 Fee. 8·5 PM Central. fBr, utll Incl Behind Relrlg & dlshwuher· $375+ utll. 645-9515 •--------- library, 106 E. Bay. COM p f ---------723-0423 or 310.596-0619 lnct. 6ox3o pool. No by ocean ro to BUSI•TesS OFFICE BUSINESS OFFICE peta. No fees. No ahr 2Bd 2Ba hae. Cln, ni;. e104 15th st #8 1ease. 545-4855 quiet, no drugs smk FOR RENT 2769 FOR RENT 2769 1 Bd·l Ba upatra W/ B I I t I 3B OK. s7oo+ 723-5468 1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii some ocean view & a • cu • am r ---------•• carport I 1725 Avl 4/1. prkng S 1150 Incl ulil. E'alde CM glrltalk, 1hr Call Gary 720·9422 1804 Clay 2Br, ldry, spacious 3bd 2ba hm, fp, gar S935. 673-3039 frpl, w/d, yd. Sep ph. B•¥front 2Bd·2Ba •Beach V.Ml·Nr Hoag• 2 rms ay1 for 2 prof condo, 2.car parking, lBd 5725; 2Bd, flrplaee, $425-$440/mo 1,.C,utlls, pool, dock avl. No encl gar gas pd 5925 $300 sec 548·4435 pet• $1500 673·8640 PooVSp1' 646-683S NB Prof/Quiet to Studlo/302 E. Balboa share 3bd, 3ba Condo 81vd.tll3. New pnt, aap Studio Unit Sanitized, Pool, tennis, Jae. $550. ba & kit. 1 blk to bch prlv, atudlo, 1 hn frm 6.42~ ev, 75~5160 dy & downtown. $525 Incl Bch. N/P, avl now, utll No pet• 631•2494 $600 Incl utllJ. 548-2369 N B /BI u ff•. Sh a r • · · beaut condo on gm· Put a few words to work for you. iiilf Pil. 6"2·5678 ADDITIONS l!MODWNG 3410 SMC Carpet Repair• Power atretch, allies. Repair aquHky noora co:~:.f~TION 7 dya 239-0289 24 hrs 20 Yra Exp. Small & --------- 1.g. Job• eso. 7042 CERAMIC ~-----------•TILES BUSINESS 3528 SEltVJCES bit. Pool. Avail 3/1 O. $400+dep. 644-0263 •Nice person aeeka same to ahare cute clean 2Br 1 Ba dwntwn HB hH. No amk/peta. $425 +. Call 95~514 •NP Creat-2 rm aulte• W/f'ltll ba In lrg 3bd, 211.tBa Pool, Jae. ten- nis, flrpl, gar, W/0 , $625+ ~ utlls, 642·9050 Npt Bch. Ocean view. step• to beach & bay. Master & ... econd bed· room avail. 648-4143 Want an Office with water included? .. .lots & lots of water? . m ,1 lt'mltc, uph:.it hu)tne" envimnment ! .. wuh C "Y :tCCC)' ,mJ ~TCclt parking! We luw .1 few ,p.ict:) twm 4(10 "' 1557 Xl· h. ( • ,1111,. We re one h .. 111•'" tn N~WJ")ft 1h.1t 1' Jt·fmndv not w .uereJ down ~ ., ...a..:: :.A.. 1 aaa LIDO PENINSULA COMPANY 101 'h1pyarJ Way, Cihm I. ewJXin Beach, CA 91663 (714)673-9330 20 /20 WITHOUT GLASSES I Safe, rapid, non· 1urglcal, permanent restoration In 6·8 week1. Airline pilot developed. Doctor ap- proved. Free lnforma· lion by mall: (800)422- 7320, (406)961 ·5570, Fax (406) 961·5577. Satisfaction guaran· teed. Backba1 Chiropractic Announce• Or Darlol'lo * Lara 631-0200 * 2675 Irvine Av•Stel 18 FREE REPORT ON HOW TO GET OUT OF DEBT and aave thousands on Interest paymentall Write: S&S Enterprlaea. 333 9th Street N.W.. Byron, Minnesota 55920. Oarden Tellera Rear· Tine Troy bllt Tiiier• ar low, direct from the factory prlca1. For FREE catalog with prices. apeclal sav- ings now In ettect, and Modal Gulde, call toll frea 1 ·800·922· 4600, Dept 22. Plug Into the Pilot Classified section to find services from electricians and plumbers to landscapers & painters . THE NEWPOR-1 BEACH • COSTA MESA DailyPilo 642-4321 3926 3929 •ALL AMERICAN• TREE Sl!RVICI! Free Eat./Sr. Disc. Yard Cln·u.p531·8415 . . -Th&nday. March 9, 1115 1 ICOIT& 1111& 1114 Mlnp IUJI hDOD::DGl:.~-==i===m;= I DOCIS TOUli .. • .. =::-:-=-.:~.. .. ==r.:Ttrw ---.=--::~ ........... '' .. 11. a.. ......... ... .........~ llOOd, 71~ ~"'-1"4t• ..,.. '° ~ ~ Ion. Cllll o.n. 71'• dllfon. .,.: -• eta, pr\nl9, tiarnee, YD 11•. ._....., __ _, ___ _ = ~ ~ DOCK tor 11 a ~ BOllD& IOll lllSC. &Vr0 IHI chine, lrampollne. Or9nd ~soO!mo Mbo9 ,,,. .... _ PROM Afraid that ~eat.a ba ~. oer.,,.,., c.aa ee7.aoa · •79 .._.. llH~ ~ ...:;:;;., C8dl-.pede9 Aubbt WM& ~ many mlee. -.ma. 4"* 9UIOINllo aood ~~· ed to UtKk with a an6 Heme brend mena ' IHO lllce, _,,,, e. •"'• •-.. tboo .. l•ad ot the quff"', womene chlldrw a tran•portatlon 960 CoNeftM. JMpe, NORTH ••• WI _.. .. •• babr c:k,u,.1 ~ DT S oeo. a1.11... , wo·a. v°"' ., ... Dumm,y's kine WOD and South could '*'-· baa., ·eoaNM: A OllOBD It •.O La-"9 LX 4 .-. Ton frM 1-eoNN- count eiJht tric.U. The NDth would balhlng eulta, llngefle. auto, chmpgne utJ 9778 Ext. f..6131 for c;>K2 OK8tl •AK.171 .have \0 CIOIXle from an endplay. 9ook9: 1eiict. ...,..,_, bUr9 In&. /I.IC, 64K mt. ourrenc 11.an09. Declarer cubed all eevm minor-cook, "°"919. p.,,.,. CADILIAC 9040 o~ owner. Mint cond·i------~- WEST .t.AJ1072 OAQJ98 Q .J 'I EAST •Q85 0 '78 OQ1042 1uit winnen, com~ down t.o the ~~~~(~~f, 19 00/obo. 720-0421 AUTO pDfS ~-~o°: t., ~t :ubai;~ badx CoetuiM Jewelry by '7• SllYIL... ' '91 Honc1e CIUt idr, • DPAllt 1210 ._.... plec:e and by th• bag, All power, >dnt cond.' a Ir con d , am /f m • .. •••lllllll!ll!llllii• ... , • 10883 to diecard from A 10 7 in apadee plua ba9e & bag• of S3400/obo. ...,eo, 5 ap, lo mil"·'' AUTO a TaUCK and A J 9 of beana. Regardleu of looM gJaaa bead• & 114-eM-9277 ftt,~· = = QleH R•i:a~~•ent SOUTH •K BI 0 10148 what West pitched a heart to the ~ :::::~·c~! 91 Setl•n Devlll• $899!5. oay 558-3115 1..eoo-a , •• ten would complete the endplay, eartul a3 e . "-le St IU\f, pwr, xtru, cxg eve e7:a-2193 Tefm• ~Off in...u n w/ad. 31 Kalmandlfs S2~~ OA98 and thelcingofepadel would be-the ~ l7th ~ owner, lo ml, Ilk• nu. CLASSll'l•D fulfillins trick. Santa Ana a Orange) SHS,995. 645-6512 utwn5 ftl 15 It'• th• reaource you S4 Ship's record • Q 6 4 locale 33 California With a sure entry in the ace or --,m:-=1""11"-wr.::tr"lll""'l!bl"W"~ ..,....v .. can count on to Mii a apadea, the textbook lead wu far c;......,.,.. Overstocked with myrlact of mercnan-~r=:;~ ;: =:lodtlngs The bidding: from beet in t.hia aitdatioh. The cor· stuff? * * * 9 8 Le au • di.. Item•. beeau .. rect lead la the ace of bearlf. 1( ·A call to SC;IOO 37k ml ciur columns ·compef 35 -my lips! 36 T alt Ilka a chlkl 37 Pali$ airport 3t Dalal -.. 42 Moc• snobOtsh « Big FOOi's~ 59 CroWded WEST N()Jt1B EAST· 80UDJ 60 6tiical P'OJ>llet 16 14 P... 2NT 61 Aeandlet P.. IHI' P.. P .. dummy turns ul> with two or three Claaslfled loaded, pe,one+CD, quallitled buyera 'o hearts headed by the ten, Weat con-wlll help apruce, $27,000 calll hetdsman P .. 62 lnv(>lved wilh M rmepas1 65 Spol(en tinuea with the queen and moat TUNSPOITATION __ .;::;M=2.f=.:if:.:7..:8:.-_ 717-4400 786-27851 ___ 94_2 _ _.. __ 7_8 __ score four tricka in the suit. Simi· !••••••••I cousin "47 Wildebeest 49 Goes off the 68 Fruit cooler 70 FourQl8. Openiq lead: Queen of O Every betinner't textbook haa •· table of opeoini leada, and by and large these are correct. West fol- lowed the book alavishly, and learned that even textbook& can be wrong 110D1etimea. larly, if there are three heart.a to 1------------lr----------------------::;; the king on the board, declarer BOATS EMPLOYMENT Once South ahowed a spade stop- per and interest in game, North had ample values to accept even though a 1ixtb club would have pro- vided a margin of comfort. The out- come was felidtoua. again continues with the queen. In these cases an initial lead of the liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii uld l 'M 8outh Coaet 19' queen wo have wor~ equal y Bayboat In NP. Good well. shape, nHdl paint, Where the open.inJ leader 1ain1 Atomic 4. No rau ia when the cards are distributed aa offer refuaed. 7011 in the diagram. Now West. can sim-(408) 662·9048. ply play a low heart at trick two, •----------- and the defenden will come \0 four POWER BOATS hearts and the ace of spades regard· 7012 leas of how declarer maneuvers. t5' BOSTON WHAi.EA EMPLOYMENT OPfJCE CORONA Good cond. Plus ex· WANTED 5535 flJlOOTURE & DEL MAR 6122 ~~~~. :t~s5?ontact ..,..,...-t-+--+--4 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii EQUIPMENT 6047liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1--;;;~!;;C;;;;;;;;-- A prof' I, levlng iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •&TATE aAL• 18'ELE TRIC Swedl•h Nur••'• OAK deak, refrlg, MBlch 11, 7am-:lpm BAY BOAT Aide. Wiii help w/Or. chalrs, file caba, con-Antique fum, appll· Newport Packet appta , shopping. ference table, phone ancea, clothlng & by W.O. Schock Co. cooking, laundry, lite system. 851-1556 misc. 2810 Seav1ew EXCELlENTCONDITION haekplng. 12 yra exp $8900 * 66<>-9000 In area/local reta.J·9-ET-S_L _____ COSTA MESA 6124r-------- Chr11t1ne, 846-3735 c Ul EASY WORK! ANIMALS 6049 SAIL BOATS 7014 EXCELL.ENT PAYI AHembl• products at home. Call toll fret 1-800-467 ·5568 Ext. 11718. S50 Off All A.KC Pupplea & CF.A KJttena **48 FamllY** Rummage Sale Extravaganza I March 10 • 11 8am·2pm. Rain or Shine. Sunshine Coop. Preschool. 12 FT SLOOP TWltchel 12. Near new. $2700. Call 675-8125 MERCHANDISE with thla ad We have the largest aelectlon of pedigree dogs & cats anywhere SPE!D 6 SIU BOATS 7016 2850 Fairview, at lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Fairview & Adams. Presbyterian Church of the Covenant EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT ANTIQUES 6010 •1988 22ft Ski Boat• 5.7. litre V-8, King Cobra.0/0 , low protlle hull, just serviced, All loved & well Cared for PETLAHD HUNT ICH Northeast corner of Adams & Brookhurtl 963 .. 887 •----------Large Sale: complete new controller/Bimini/ 5530 5530 ADOPT-A.PET motlonleaa waterbed upholstery. Great akl •8UYINQ ITl!MS• Eve!l Sat & Sun at w/g ey le th 11 le boat-tut-looks great. F 1.,,.,..1....,,"' 1 r • er Y Tur~-key ... ready to go . . Office Clerk HB Ina Retail rom vvv-""""· pc PET MART, Fountain frame, ent centers, 3 111·.~000 9.,A_A 2671291• !MPLOYMENT Agency. 2yra office Out of aant. Fe to entire eatate. Paint· Valley. PupplH, kit· place couch aat, ..,....... 5530 exp. Phones, heavy fil-Outpoat tHkl exp'd Inga, boou, furniture, tena and more, all dreatara, tv atands . ._a_2_4_t pg;..;;..r _____ 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ing, word process txp nlesperson for 1llver etc. lmmedlale cash, looking for loving, car· clothes, misc llemt. CLASSIFIED ADMIN ASST PfT Flex hrt. 2-3 hra/day. SUS/hr. Word Prcx; & admln exp req. FAX reaume: 714-434-9785 req. $1200/mo 842·7859. )ewelry kiosk In Faah tll. top S. 873-6223 Iv mag Ing homes. CALL 597· 1078 Mission, Mesa It'• the eaay·to- pfT D PT/luly + comm. Call 9037 for more Into. Del Mar track. Sunday accesa, lnformatlon-tmonstntora Poppy 844-5953 6014 AQUARIUM, 120 gal, 9am·? packed marketplace For grocery atorH In S•llm•kln• FURNITURE 6'x5'x1'6". lnclud••'---S-el-1-yo_ur_h_o_m_e__ visited regularly -IUC· you.r area. Fri/Sat/Sun. FT+ benent.a. we wlU lights, pump, fllt9r8, through claHlfled. ceasfully -by all kinda Car necessary. Eng & ' Run your ad in the Newport Beach Costp Mesa Doily Pilot and the Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Independent to reach over 1 00 ,000 homes. Fax us this form with your credit card # or mail it in with a check today! Run for a week! I( your car does not sell we'll run it for another week FREEi All for $1 o• -··-·····-······--···----D YIS,51U. ~y CAJt ,._ <:-" <:.crd CJ/olC. CJVISA DAM X ' bfl-- loN# TO' !W. y l'IOT 330 w ........ c.--.u. n627 ,,, "'642-wt 0-Wf IJ'l"I "'""" ~~Oilrl ,.._Olod ,.,_ -,...__... -----o•r.-0 -"-0 1oooW o•_. o-o--o--0 -0--o•-O--., 0 -.. I o•-G--o--0•-o~-o.,,.._ a...._.....,_ O C-0 QC...~ OM-0 .... W 0 ....... - 0$10/or ,litw,$1.00.,J,~w ····--··-·-·-----·---·-·--· ADVERTISING INSIDE SALES REP blllngual. 71._557-5579. train. Muat be delall 7 ft Sot• •l••P« ~ rocks. $450. 631·7253 642·5678 o consumers. vr-''w.:ri::-"'im:""""'ih.:1-.....!o~rie~n~ted~,!64~S-88~~9~7:_ good condition $150. Columbian Red·T•lll-------- P/T Work FIT P•~ Saleaperaon Exp'd ln (714) 548-7592. Boa, nice matklnga, 1 .. ------------------------------------------· Sam-12 M-F, no exp selling ladle• clothlng. approx 2 yrs old, CS' In rttAOIQ<ll•OtM tlS'ON)ll(•Ol•f()ot.() Pl!ASLllUCGtutiasicuetY O l'1'HIANDIOlttNOtlH-atc:A tNC neceuary. $8.00/hr Call John L.eonatd at Beige Velour aot• w/ length. Wiii Hll with Ask tor Mark 652-0247 NB golf shop. 852-8689 walnut trim & match· aquarium & other ax· Th• Cla11lfled Adver· pa rt.TI m • p • 0 p I e Ing chair. X·lnt cond. tru for $350/obo. Call tlslng Department for wanled to address la· $400. 646--0945 310-925-3057. a local community bela for pa.y. You have EMPLOYMENT newspaper group Is a typewriter. computer SERVICES 5533 Bunk 8ed red. almost FREI! to good home: seek Ing a a e If· or good handwrlUng. new. full on bottom White, 221b, American motivated, organized, lnt'I LO. ratea·apply. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lwln on top. In Eskimo DOG, almost dependable, Inside 1·809-47 4-4289 ·--• frame, matt, Slmpsona 4 yra old. NEEDS a aalea rep. Strong .,,.----,-------Pleue be aw81e thal aheeta & comforters. backyard. Very active phone-aelllng skills a Preechool Teacher or th• llatlngs In thla cat. $185/obo. 546-7033 and somewhat tem· must. Draw/commit· H•'p•r. Afternoon• & egory may require you•----------permental until ad· alon. Full bentlltl. soma moms. e ECE to call a 900 number Complete W•terbed juatt to new envlron-Phyalcal/drug screen· unlit prel. CM. 642-4050 In which there 11 a motlonleaa mattress ment. Call 721·9621 . Ing required . Fax re· Real Estate charge per minute. grey contempory S•v• abused and 1ume: Attn: Judy Oet·I,_ _______ " •-,-1-00--'::....;D:..AJ-LY--..U.;;.l-St_u_n frame abandoned pet.a. Be a _tl_ng=--7-14_·_6~31_-6~5_9;...4 __ 11...a. DTATI IMD erivelopea In your 5200 964-4267 volunteer/fotler. Call ••ASSEMBLE ARTS, Busy Wiik-in loclllan. spare time. For FREE Eng Wint wrdrobe/curlo. 714-597·9037. CRAFTS, TOYS, l•W· ~ pCln. f« ,.,_ Information, write to: c1900, glaa, mlra, w/ --------~~· .~:~g~t~~~·P~~ n.~T.~f ~~;~• v~,~~:; .f.:ci'. :~ !~~brd~n~1e0~~ MUSICAL work from home In .... ,ort #608, Montrol9, CA S800 Dk oak deak w/ INSTRUMENTS 6055 your spare time. Great 91020. bOok frt, c 1920, $800 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pay. Frae details call 673-7300 $485 WEEKLVI CdM 723-1766 Tiii Sun Dark blue Jaokaon, 1 ·800-832-8007. 24 !::::======== hours. Malling lettera from OAKs (\lnlng table/4 Dln~ XL w/reverae AUTO MECHANIC REAL ESTATE home. Full/part·tlme. chairs ssoo. 3-drawer headstock. Been uaed ADVERTISING No •~clence nece• dreaaer 5175 wall only 3 tlmea. Includes 'Needed full time to aaryl Eaayl Any mlffor sso. 96().g132 heavy-duty ABS road· tarvlce Mercedea. Call SALES REP houra. F,.. lnf04'TT\ll-case. $500/obo. Call Steve, ~S.-1153. lion call Clearing. 310-925-3057. c:~L~ c::~ ~~a:_ ~~u~!!;, g org:i~~ ~~1~~~ca~ J: MERCHANDISE G~~~~ M!~~l!~M 1omot. 3.5 dys/wk dependable, service-24 hour recording. MISC. 6015 pay up to $12,500 for 8:30-2:30. CM home. oriented outalde CRUISE SHIPS HIRING C4'rtaln pre-1970 Glb- Muat have own trans •aleaperaon for com-Earn up to $2,000+/ MOVING: Bunk bed W/ ·~~· Fender, and & •Pk Eng. 557-4312 ~~~~y ex';!~::p:~ month working on trundle 1125, SchwlM Gretsch guitars. CLERICAL Tamp PfT degree preferred. crul .. ahlpa or land-beh crullef $45. El· Fender amplltlera In Tuatln. Phna, baalc Draw/commlHlon. Full tour •companies. No llngton aurfbd, 6'4'' also. Cell toll frae 1- -0fc •kill•, typing. Exp benefit•. Phyalcav experience n~•arr· 1185. Baaa amp $85. 800-995-1217. req. $7/hr. 544-$858 drug acreenlng re-For Information call : Eleo b ... guitar $100. -------- COMPUTER aYSTEMI quired. Fax reaume: 208-834.0488 ext. Culo keyboard SSS. SPORTING MANAOER·Experl· Attn: Judy Oetting C89512• Toyota 1ruck rear wln-ancact Novell netware, 714-631-6594 EARN 1200 to 11,000 dowa, bHt otfar. Pull· GOODS 6065 complex network ar· Receptionist/Seo W EEK l Y AS. down atalra for attlC/liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ll chltaclure. Famlllar LocaJ Assembly office. SEMBLINO PROD-'°ft $150. 75e.1663 Ski•, anowboard· DOS, MAC hardware, Hvy phonea/WpS.' Fu ~oiTS~:! H1~~c;.~ PLAHT m. ACREi ~'!!.kl b onaor dbl d1 ,e !,o software, graghlca. Rn+tal hist 863-9337. """"""' E ..... Pine tr ... 15 naJ pot· """"' • n n. • Rural mountain area. .....,.. -'· ,_.,, ted 8-9' $20 • Cllrul $100 080. Roaalgnal Reaume to Golberg, R•N•taOu~Want HIRING Ho M e T v p 1 s Ts av0cado•frulting ,10· 1kla .. 1moat new w/ Paradise Poat.Drawer NEEDED. AJao PC/ Herb• 11 . Gal lunlper~ pol .. & bindings. 64S-~°Mi.F:.:(:1~)18~l3C:...A. FULL&PHT•TIIH! Word proceaeor 11. Shade/ptne/cyprea 5612 .... M 115 uaera. $40,000/year In. 4.9• $10. 909--874-9422 ,,r••atr•t-.. Networ"" *Kit ...... Staff come potential. ToU -TV--e--re-1"1'11---0----•,• .-;.. MLM 11 f:~ c .. ,.n tree 1-eoo-eea-erra suNouEST•WOLFF • ~'"·~ NICS, -...-.gelm .. No preHnta-*Une Strvert Ext. T-5139 for det.ita. TANNING BEDS ST!ltEO 6080 .tlon•I Do part·tlm• by •cuhJtra . HOME TYPISTS, PC New commerclal· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii mall and tefephone. USeRS NeEDEO. home units from 2 Orlon 12" XTft Adv.rtltklg co-opa, f9' •~ ~1.1.1. ..ai...-· $35 ,000/year lncome I 1 I 9 • 0 O · lam P • dual voice coll woof· crultlng malleta. FrH "'loa """'8ttl.....: potentlal.O.talla. Call Lotlon1.Accaa.aorte1. .,.., Bandpaa• enclo- lntormatlon peckege. *Cl11n I: Entrgttlo t.eos-ee2-aooo Ext. a. Monthly payments 1oW aure • 100 Wlitt Targa QOLDVl•W, (510) Eftvl-OI....;.... 5680. F... •• $20.00 Call todayl ampllfl« lnduded for 943--7M7 ex12702. " -PART·TIMI! PEOPLE FREE NEW color cata· total price of l400I Rooms, apartmeni., homea Classified can aatlafy your housing nHds. STAY HO Me MAKI! ... •a ISlJUfD l1o41 A DAVI~ ..... ., ........... . Ing mall for eoc.I oom-MOVING aALS Sat & •Meal DllCOUnta NEEDED TO AD-!oQ.1~-9197. obo. 31CM2~7 *Excellent ,., DRESS LABELS for .• *VforkC1oMtoltotM pay. Mu1t have a w•~o ------•ill typewrhet, word Pf'O-AR•IO ~--·l!E t!RTWlt! c ... or or QOOd hanct-TO BOY 6019 ~ ~ wrlllng. Call 1 •oe-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 474M290. Av_. 10 minute lnlerruatlonat1 .. ---------BJ-UB--0-.------lonp dllltMCe calf. n panlee In your .,... JOR 0$90 aun "81 4/3. l't..lmhure, nwWTlllNf~ Work dropp9d otfl L'8VI'. 101'• reft~, w/d, ..._._., Pa.Id ct.My. cal Brlctc n.. ..... ..... rMM1 equtp. l1W7'0 FGr lrllt .:;.:c=i a • ..,~---EDI. o-tkic:tced .. ..,,,, A c8ll to ct111"1d .;:.;,, Proc.aalng 1413-461-•·---~vv~"".;....'"';;.;;.;.... __ ... ______ -:-______ __, e111 Elet. N. We ,_. JOUI 164,000 GI .... •yew 10 prooeae a ''116•1H HM ~tlUlonl • ~ .rn· ... .,.,....rM for Pee 1.0 . • ....... C.al (IOI} 12~ w.mt>et eoecon ...., '11t•IU CMOl .,..,,... Bur..u. C...jeltl .............. ........ w .. ....., 11'1 aJJ 1here !qQZ:&d ..... 1UM'fAD AatJc, basement, and eloeet then get 101ne euh. Wll78 Spend less time.at home with your kids. TOP 10 THINGS TO DO THIS Wl lklND 1 AU REVOIR: The final West Coast shows of Cirque du Solell's "Alegria" ls Sun· day at South Coast Plaza. 2 MAJOR SYMPOSIUM: "Holocaust and the Nature of Memory" ls presented 2 p.m. Sunday at Newport Har· bor Art Museum, In association with the "People Speak" exhl· bition by German contempo· rary artist Jochen Gerz. 3 UNLIKELY TOPIC: "As· sassins," Stephen Sond· helm's comedic musical about real.life American presl· dential assassins, opens at 8 to- night In Orange Coast College's Orama Lab Theatre. 4 DUELING OPERAS: Opera Pacific's presentation of "The Magic Flute" opens 8 p.m. Saturday at Orange County Performing Arts Center. The company's staging of "Madama Butterfly" continues 2 p.m. Sunday there. . 5 'THE GREEK LEGACY': There's an opening night re· ceptlon 6 to 9 tonight for this major Greek folk art ex- hibit In OCC's Art Gallery. Cu- rator lrlnl Vallera-Rlckerson also gives a 45-mlnute slide lecture at T p.m. In Fine Arts Lecture Hall, Room 119. 6 COMEDY TONIGHT: Im· provlsatlo nal Comedy Night, whose proceeds ben- efit girls and boys swimming programs, runs 7 to 9 tonight In Newpo rt Harbor High School's Norman Loats Per· forming Arts Center. 7 P ERENNIAL SELL-OUT: , Popular Irish folk group Paddy West presents Its 14th annual St. Patrick's Day celebration concert 8 p.m. Fri· day In OCC's fine Arts Recital Hall. 8 LAST NOTE: "Lend Me a Tenor" bows out 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Newport Theatre • Arts Center. 9 STRINGING ALONG: Jim • Gamble brings his "Won- derful World of Puppets" to OCC's Robert B. Moore The- atre 2:30 p.m. 'Sunday. lo R ECEN T WORKS: "Legends, Ufestyles and Dreams." an exhibit from a women's folk art coop- erative from Costa Rica, opens at Timbuktu Tribal & Folk Art In Costa Mesa with an artist's reception at 6 tonight, followed at 7 p.m. by slide presentation. . • For more det•ll• o• IAeH •ad otAer loc.J elleau, ••• IAe Oa t6e Towa ll•tlagll/CZ. · ·· Thursday, March 9, 1995 Cl How do yoti get overlapping ·o.peta~ ·on the .same stage? .Practice; practice, practice WIW '1he MoQiC ""'9• (performed' In Englllh) WMIN a p.m. SaturdcrVS ttwougti March 18, Mateh 22 and 21 and 2 p .m. Mc:scb 26 By C~STOPHBll TRELA P roducing an opera is an immense undertaking. There is housing and travel arrangements for the principal singers, set pro- duction, wardrobe, rehearsals, technical staff and lots of late nights coordinating those and other .opera-related items of busi- ness. Imagine multiplying those challenges by two. Opera Pacific must have a good imagination, because it's present- ing two operas on the sam~r­ ange County Performing Arts Cen- ter stag.,~. in Costa Mesa. "Madarna ButterflY} opened last week and continues Sunday, Wednesday, March 17, 19 and 25. "The Magic Flute" opens Saturday and contin- ues March 18, 22, 24 and 26. These overlapping productions cause Opera Pacific to coordinate two separate rehearsal spaces, two choruses (singing in different lan- guages and styles), two technical rehearsals and dress rehearsals. Even the name on the dressing rooms have to change depending on the night and the singer. Many. of these details have been in the planning stages for months, and sometimes years. "A lot of decisions that we make with repertory pieces is l;>ased upon union requirements," ex· 'plained Lori Durrill, Opera Pa· ciflc's co-mana'ging director, who is. responsible for overseeing the pro· duction and finapce areas. "It all goes back to the union, which goes back to our budgets. From the very beginning, you have to take these things into consideration. of people in the two choru;es were th e J>ame people. They'd rehearse or perform for an entire month without a day off. This was a big thing. The union was saying you must give them a day· off or pay them overtime, and I S<\id no." WHAT ELSE "Madamo luttefftV'' (pel'fofmed In ltallon With English IUbtltle1) WHEN WI ~ p.m. Sundays through Marcti 19; a p.m.. Wednes-. day, March 17 and Maid\ 25 Durrill wa.s not being heartless. 0 She sympathized with th.e plight of WHERE "Our union contract ... deals with all the principal singers, the stage directors, stage managers, chorus and dancers. Decause of two pieces being in repertory, a lot . the choruses, but the operas were two separnte productions and therefore utilized two separate contracts. The union agreed. Cho· rus members did have days off, but those who were in both opern Orange County l'erf°"'*'9 Ms Center. 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa HOW MUCH $18 to $15 MORI tNfO (800) 31).0PfRA See OPERA/C2 -HERE ·COMES TROUBLE! Newport Coast girl's stage career takes flight in 'Madama Butterfly' .Story l>y MATT COKER Ph oto by DON LEACH A h, the powers of applause, adulation and teddy bears. · Hours before Samantha Turner's first rehearsal in makeup, she was asked how she likes playing Trouble in Opera Pacific's "Madama Butterfly." . "Good," the fidgeting 5-year-old answered from a couch her Newport Coast home. Would she want to do something like this again? "No," she replied while dangling assorted limbs around her: mother sitting beside her. Why not? • "Because I don't want to," the bundle of energy, now upside down on the floor, deftly explained. But after opening night ovations on stage~nd cards, books, flowers, congratulations and two teddy bears backstage, "Sam's" tune changed. "She really raked it in," mother Nadine Turner reported by phone. "She had a really good time. After the curtain calls, she decided she wants to do more." Considering her rapid rise in show biz, don't be surprised if Sam's handing out the best picture Oscar later this month. Before "Butterfly," her stage experience was confined to playing a dancing poodle in a tap and ballet class production. As is often the case, it's not what but who you know ... and who knows you. Opera Pacific, which was looking for someone age S to pass for a 3-year-old boy, phoned Nancy Greenberg, the music teacher at Cincoln School in Corona del Mar, who often finds young extras for the Irvine-based company. Lincoln's kindergarten teachers pointed to Samantha when Greenberg asked who would take direction well. Out mom got the minivan to the audition on time and, checking out the dozen children in the room, imm ediately knew her daughter's only competition was 4-ycar-old Dalton Orbrand of Mission Viejo. The girl was taken to a room for a brief meeting with a soprano and then thanked for showing up. The next day, a call came saying Samantha and Dalton would sh:ire the role as there are dual casts for the opera. "When Dalton and Samantha are together, we call them Double Trouble," Nadine Turner said. The girl , who had three inches of hair lopped off to play a boy, is on stage for acts II and Ill, which means she doesn't get out of the theater until quite late for nighttime performances. Dut, so far, Som hasn't missed school due to shows or rehearsals. Not that there hasn't been sleeping problems. There's a scene where she's !>upposed to pretend to doze off in an adult character's arms. Obviously a method actress, Samantha actually fell aslc;cp twice during n:hcars:ils. Nadine Turner was w:irn ed it might prove upsetting that her daughter's stage mother -sung on alternating nights by Elena Filipova of Bulgaria and Guiping Deng of China -dies in the show. That hasn't been the case, however. "She has one mother who is Chinese and one who is Bulgarian pl:iying a Japanese singing in Italian," noted Sam's no1Mtage mother. "So she has no idea \\hat's going on." B ut she does undcr~tand backstage gifts, and Samantha's made sure to give everyone flowers , from Dalton to her alternating Madamas. "Now she Sa)S Chrb11na :icross the street is her first best friend and Elena 1:. her second best Criend," Nadine Turner sau.J. Samantha appears in ''Butterfly" Sunday, Wednesday, March 17 and 25, gi\ing her just four more visits to her new favorite place: the dressing room where a card emblazoned with "Ms. Turner" is affixed to the door. "None of the reviews mentioned Samantha," her mother said, "but everyone in the opera says 'here comes the star' when they see her." ·SamBl\tha "turner, 5, Is Trouble In Opera Pacific's "Madama Butterfly." "Yeah, for everyone but me," noted her mom. The opera company called a month ahead inviting the girl to audition. When a reminder call came the morning of the tryout, it had somehow slipped the mind of her mother, who also tends to Jason, 8; Jack, 6; Madison, 2; and husband Jim, a lieutenant in the City of Newport Beach's Marine Safety Department. M Dtt Coker is editor of Weekend. Hockney· paints stage for 'The ·Ma.gic Flute' B7 LAUlll MBNDBNBALL W ithin the international art community, British-bred David Hockney has long been considered the leader of the pack, a heroic stand~ut among the gentry of contemponuy artists. SinQe the mid·'60s, Hockney's faMeachina talent ha.S continually dazzled audiences with colorfully bold paintings that cleverly aive new menning to visual verve and · aeomctric shape. Actually, it's a given that if an artist is capable of permanently altering viewer perception of a coMmonly accepted lmaac or scene, such lnOucncc naturally bec:Omes his or her tic:ket to the hallowed Halt or Art Fanie -a feat.Hockney hu mutered with photopaphy and staac deaiari, u wlll u peintlq. PcnonaUj, f. can ..., ... IOoll at a~ ..-~ ...... linmocliatclJ ...... ol HOGbtt• 1978 .... .-.-.....,,,,~ Por nte, the . .......,. ,. •••Id ia *lll-¥1 ... ._._.,~mof light on the water's surface pfayfully tweaked a tired cliche, and forever redefined the sass or the splash in our endlessly sunny clime. My first eneounter with a David Hockney opera occurred last year when his 1992-'93 production of • Richard Strauss' "Die Frau Ohne Scbattcn" was presented at the Dorothy Chandler Pavil ion in Los Angeles. Similar to my poolsc.ipe revelation, this opera experience was viscerally mesmerizing -his palette spectrum was a complete makeover of sharp and Oat colors I'd never seen before, like waving a wand over a dream. Since then, it's been almost impossible for me to watch other opcru and not imaainc what more they mi&ht have been iC Hockney had done the 1taac and costume desians. Indeed, bis vision la like an electric pulte, a acnsYOUS Oamo or fantasy noc Cilily WnCd or ~uen. ...... '.lllll _,., nJabt. Open P.iiclJc wUl pr I 11 M ~ ,...--.o1 MUllwl'a • Glyndebourne Festival in 1978 and one of his first works created (or the opera stage. Only his 1975 set for Stravinsky's ''The Rake's Progress" preceded "Flute"; since then, he has created nine more full opera productions including: "Parade," "Le Sacre Due Printcmps," "Tristan und lso)(le" and "Turandot." Volumetric illusion, symbolism and social comment are combined in "The Magic Flute" to construct a Cniry-tale land of poster-like clarity that echoes the physical and spiritual progression toward a happy ending -the evolution from chaos to order -that is the central theme of "Flute." In addition to &he large backdrops, Hockney dC5igned a variety or smaller .ct elements and characten -rocks, obelisks, ct1ssie1l columns, a firc-.pittina draaon and a mytholoiical menaaeiie -which. are presented ~uaaenes-ol conllalitlJ 'dlUllnl situation-. rather lhan • 1 ftled tableaux. n. libteuo Wlca•• dw the _,__,_,_ill . n& David Hockney'• Mt In the first m or~ II depiCta a beautiful palm grove outlining a con'ldor. Clltensive research at the British Museum to come up with ao 18'b century ~an ttavelU'a view or Mid·Eulem hOtica, which alto rcnccted a Renaissance ViCW of qypc tten in early Italian . paintina. The desian approech js both itweot.IVe and qu'*>tically naive -tort ol .. Raiden bf the LOU Arc" meets -rbe I.Jon Kina." Moreover, Hockncy'1 conception . opted for a lyrical fusion of exotic forms lhat ~r a noticeable amount of~ ~ilc mt0rin1 the allepicil balance or nipt and day. tFor i~ the QUeu Of the Niaht'1 kiftldom in act I 9PPCan u 1 luminous realm of urucalable mountains and delolate terrain. followed b'y SanstrO'I hannonloUI pelaee •ttlld ia ..... ~ ., ac<>mcuy. lia •he &AJ scene ot lbl first IC1, che entrance ao the tiip prieit' domain ii maned by , ...... small cemplts Which repment n:nure, rcaon 'Ind wisdom in 1 wash of G"'t:av KJimc4itce C2 Thursday, March 9, 1995 -rHf Galle LEGACY• ' Or.ut~ Coa t CoUege Art Gallery ,~ d11ector lnni Vclll ra·Rkkerson ti curated. major Greek folk art exh1bJI fl of 150 pi ~from late 17005 t through 1900s, culled. from private :: coll<'clions in the United States and a Greece, on (ijsplay through AprU 1!3. 2l Hours: to a.rn to 3 p.m. Mondays f; through Thursdays and 7 to 8;30 f p.m. Thursdays t1nd Monday. March 20. Opening night reception 6 to 9 • 2' tonight. t:ree ad1TUSsJon. Orange 311 Coast College Art Gallery, Art ~ Ct.>nter BuJ/dlng. 2701 Fairview 4< Road, Costa Mesa (parking Jot for 4' Fine Arts ii oil Merrimac Avenue). 4: 41 432-503(}. Vallera-R1ckerson gives a 44 free 45-mmute slide lecture at 7 tonight in OCC's Fine Arts Lecture 41 Hall, Room 119. !it "UGENDSi LIFESTYLES AND DREAMS" 5 Recent work~ from "Mujeres en MMcha, • a women's folk art cooper- $ dllve Crom Co ta Rica, opens today 51 dnd runs through April 9 Artist's 5. rrcepllon at 6 tonight, followed at 7 s by slide presentdUon. Artist's talk 2 er p.m. Sunday ($5 donahon). Timbuktu 1'rlbal & Folk Ari, 1661 Superior Ave .. Costa M esa, 650-7473. "MADE IN AMERICA: OBJECTS & ARTIFACTS". Exhibit of quilts, coverlets. blanke~. wet1lhervtlnes, vessels and tools on v1<•w for their aesthetic rather than 11hlil<1nan qualities closes Friday. I lours. noon to 5 p.m. BankAmerica Gui/cry, ~pt. 4055, South Coast Metro Center, 555 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. 433-6000. NEW WORKS • Exhibit of mi.taUdlions by Kirn Abele>'>, Conni!.' Sasso and Karena Mc1s.,cng1U closes Fnday. Hours: 11 a 111 to 4 p m Orange County Center for Contemporary Ari, 3621 W MacArthur B/Vd., 549-4989. SOUTHWEST ART Exh1b1l of ongtndl otl'>, watercolors, copper t1nd sculpttirf'., by Paul Grybow Frt1nk Lomb.irdl, Mdnuel Z11111gd dnd V1rg1l Earl "Robbie" Robmson clow'> Saturday Thrill You Ari Ga/Jt•ry, I 30 E. 17th St .. Suite D, Costa Mesa. 642-5948. "THREE WOMEN SHOW' ExprcS'>IVl' d~lract pamungi. dnd pnnt., by Jcan1.'1te Debonne, contem- port1ry hguaritve works on· paper .ind bod rd by Rebeccd Calhoun and colorful t1b<,tractions on cr1nvds by 1 Oebrc1 Z1Jlc11.ny on vinw Saturdt1y I lhrough Mdrc h 31. Artist's reception 6 to I 0 p.m. Saturday. Gallery G. I Contemporary Art, Art & Antique _ Row, 130 Old E. 17th St .. Unit P. I Co<itu Mt!'Ja, 646-1919. JOCHEN GERZ "P<'oplt• Spt•r1k," exh1b1t1on or two I Ul'Ctldei. ol mult1med1a work!.. tn'>tc1l- l.illon.,, video .tlnd mult1-pancl phuto/t1•xt work<, by German con- lt•mport1ry drtlbt. on vww through _ MMch 19 Houl"t TUP!>ddy ... lhrouyh Thur'><lt1y<i 10 d m to 5 pm Fndtly'> 10 .i m to 7 pm . Sdturdays 10 d m tu 5 p.m . Sunddy<i noon to 5 pm 1\dm1'>'>1on S4 for c1dults, $2 for stu- OPERA From C1 prouuctions ofte n rehearsed one opera on the off day of the other opera. Some members rehearsed six weeks struight, but had under- stood that when they agreed to t ~ing in buth operas. Another challenge was the or- d1c\tru. About 75 percent of the players rn Opera Pacific's or- chestra are members of Pacific Symphony Orchestra, so Burrill • had to coordinate the opera schedule with that of the sym- phony. One costly planning headache is t lighting, which must be rei.et for c.1ch opera. And using the same tech crew for each show proved challenging. Often these crews, f cumprised of local union members, HOCKNEY ' from C1 corridor o f decoratively patterned thunderbirds, the temple porch, a black and blue night garden, the temple hall and its vault and two Temple-of-Doom-like phenomena: ; a great wall of fire and a gigantic woterfnll through which heroic Tamino and Pamina must pass - unscathed, I mighl add, and protected by the magic in the ' melodically playing flute. The opcru's concluding moment is also ! its epiphany -a bright yellow sun whose roys extend the lenglh and the breadth of the stage. According to David Hockney: ". ··n1e Magic Flute' is one or the few operos that ends on a note of ,. <k?nt and ruors. h ee to mr.mber w t hikir n uiader 121 Tu~ya 6re ftee. MaJor l}'GlPO!tium tlled •ttotocul.IM •tnd the Nature ol Memory • Pl coted 2 p m Sund11y free with museum adma.iol1. but reservdtions requ&J~ Nttwpo11 Harbor Art Mu9eum. 850 San Clemente Dru:e. 159·1122. IAAIARA MltSH Plein alt watercolor pamter's works on vLew through March 31. Artl5t'i. recepllon 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday GClUf'ry hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m Tuhdayi. lhrouQ h Saturdayi.1 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunddys1 closed Mondays. Showcase Gallery. South Coast Plaza VUJage, · 1631 Sunflower. 540 6430. PHOTO EXHIBITION "Hard Documents 4 WhuJc Being Dwells.• black-and-white, sJlvt>r- gelalln-print Lmages of nu des situat- ed in nature by Japdllc e photogra- pher Hiro Salo, closei. Monday. Jeffrey CrusseU displays hb photo- graphJc worksTuesddy through April 17 Hours. 10 cl m to 3 p m. Mondays through 'ft\ur<.day:., 7-8.30 p.m ThurSdays and the first and Uurd Monday of each month Free:: admtss1on Orange Coast College Photo Gallery. FJne Arts Building, 432-5039. "FIVE MEXICAN PHOTOGRAPHERS" Pdrt one or an exchangl' exh1b1t1on with the University of Colima, Mexico, foclturei. work!. by drt1sl<, Lold Contreres dnd AleJandrd Rocha WE'dnei.day throug h Apnl 14, Also on view i<. "tnnitiei.· Wisdom. Insight dnd Md91c Power.• which fedturcs new mlx.ed medld worki. by Nicola Ldmb nnd Alu ... on Kl•ndi'>. Hours: 11 d.m. lo 4 p.m Wednc>'iddys through Sundays Orangf! County Cenler for Contemporary Ari, 549-4989 FELIZ THARIN Solo exhib1t1on f Pdlunnq the "EdgE' of Chao'>• '>PnP•., which .,tmlu.>., the illusion of pNn•pllon by u .. mg action painting techmqut'" whl'rt' berng on the edge or control 1-. thl' < n•t1llv1' source, runs through MMch 31 Hours. 9 d m lo 5 p m dt11ly Amencan lnslilu/t"Of Arch1le<·ts Orange County Gallet) 3200 Park Center Dm <'. o. 110, Cn.'>ICI MC'sa, 557-7796 CYNTHIA CHILCOTI An exhibit of pastci.. by th<• Tu<itm arttst on dli.play tn the lobby or the Newport Beach C<'nlral L1brdry th rough Mdrrh 31 I four., 9 d.m to 9 p.m. Mondays through Thursdtly!>, 9 d.m. to 6 p.m. Fndc1y'> <111d Saturddys -and noon to 5 p.rn. Sund<1ys. 1000 Avocado Ave., 717-3800. COREY STEIN Thematic objccti.. induding "The Tomato Hal," "The Tomc1 to Ve'>t" and "The Eye 5 Tom<1to lhtrk, • on v1ew through Apnl 2 Laguna Ari Museum Sott>llite, South Coa'lt Plaza, Costa Mesu, 662-3360. JENNIFER HASSETI Pamtmgs dnd monopnnl'> or db'>trnc- tions or cxtenor dnd mtt•nor lc1nd- scapi''> conhnut.>'> through Apnl 5 Pascal Ep1cene al Pla7a Nc•wpml. 1000 Bnstol St . 261 -9041 "WHITE" Photograp~ by Shoji Yoi.h1dc1 William Chlt. Cdrol I lenry. Eikoh HO'>OP Mtlnlyn Littrn<1n, Floyd Peler~on , John SN.Ion. Lomd Stok1•-. work for a solid week on a touring production at the center prior to signing on with Opera Pacific. "They nrny have a show Sunday night, and then they have to load io our S'how at 6 a.m. Monduy morning, and go straight into 16- to 20-hou( days sometimes," said Burrill. "For the crew, that's really difficult. We hnve to take tha t into consideration. We really to a cer- tain degree have no control over the center and what they book in, but you want them to do the job. "The (local) union isn't very large, so to get 40 men of quality to know what they're doing, you can't get another 40. You basically have to work these people around the clock, but then you run into safety issues. Things like that have to concern us." In "Madama Butterfly," Opera Pacific has the added challenge of hope. Central to it is the journey motif, much like life itself, toward truth and light. Because of this journey, the scenes must be constantly changing without prolonged intervals; and, in counterpoint to the clarity of the music. is a wonderfully complex, ambiguous plot. "Opera is the last extravagant theater, an art form that is • ephemeral in its effect. So the visual thing must fit in with the spirit of the music. Ultimately, It's the space that keeps me interested. It's a question of illusion and perspective, so that opera -the theater -becomes a vast mirror of ourselves." Lauri Mcndcnhol/ COtitn local art for lhe Dally Piiot. ONTlllTOWll Ct'orgt: n ee, Larry Vogel. Don 4Ucllliom IOI' tbe SW1UMt program C1I Worth and Ron Wohlauer and RUll&a .. prelligk>u! KSlbY .Bdet Patrick Crabb'• new ce1amk pwte Sunday C.U for d"fue. J~ on view through Aprtl 9. Hour~. Defloie Dance Center, 151 KaJmua noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday , 'til 8 p.m. DrlW, eo.to ~"1. 241·9908 Wedne days and Thursday . 'til 9 UQA'S 1'0&MNI DANa CJJlllNl"I p m Fnddys and Saturdays, ·w 5 Free public peifonn.lllce 9 30 a m p m. Sundayi. and d osed Mondays. Tuetiday. Alterwa1d, UCLA tnstructor Susan Splritus Gallery, Triangle Ron Brown teaches a master dance Square. 1810 A HorbQr Blvd., Co11ta cll\Jil geared towaid mtennediate Mesa. 548· 1558. modera dance students Orange CAL60RNIA l.ANOSCNES Coatt Colleg~. Dance Studio B. 2101 David Stary-Sheets showcases 40 PalrvteW Rood, Calta ME'ao, 432· Cahtom\a landscape paintings spot· 5500. UghUng the works of his late fa~er MOOfRN DANCE MASTU QASS Millard Sheet and l).me olber Scott Rink, a featured dancer with notable artic;ts Crom his private COi· Now York-bai;ed Lar Lubovitch . lection clS well as art from his Stary-Danre Company, teaches an inter-. Sheets Fine Art Gallery in lrvlne mediate· to advanced-level modem through May 15 Sul/on Place Hotel , dance master class 2 to 4 p.m. 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Thursday, March 16. Fee: $12 for Beach, 416·2001, ext. 2194. non·OCC students. Orange Coast • ~ • College, Dance Sludlo B, 432-5506 lJl) BooKs & ' ·~NB&~~~:~:·-]b I ~ "Kids Fun Day,• where St. Patrick's "ALEGRIA" Day is celebrated with Cacepalnting, lntemallonally acclaimed French· contests and prizes, runs 10 a.m. to 4 CanadJ an theatrical circus Cirque du p.m. Saturday. Al Benson signs Soleil's hnal West Coast sbowS.<()f its copies of his first novel, ·vortex of latest production are 8 tonight. 6 and Fear,• 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday. Mayd the 9:30 p.m. Fnday, 4:30 and 8:30 p.m. Storyteller appears 7 p.m. Thursday, Saturday and I and 5 p.m. Sunday. March 16. 1870 Harbor Blvd., Costa Tick.ets: $7-$39.50. South Coast Mesa, 631-0614. Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Costa M esa, COSTA MESA DOWNTOWN LIBRARY 557-4111. Friends of Costa Mesa Libraries hold --r~-:..::::;;.-1----------a used book sale from 9 a.m. to 3 F & p.m. Saturday. Downtown Library, IL M 1855 Park Ave., Costa Mesa. VIDEO NEWPORT BEACtt CENTRAL LIBRARY The Uterary works of Pulitzer Prize- winnmg poet tlnd essayist Karl Shapiro IS the focus of thf' Voice~ & Visions meeting 2•30 to 4 p m Wednesday in llie Friends' Commumty Room. 1000 Avocado Ave., 717-3800. COMEDY & MAGIC IMPROVISATIONAL COMEDY NIGHT An evening of comedy with pro- ceeds to benPfll girb and boys swim- ming programs runs 7 to 9 tonight at Newport HarboJ High School. Tickets: $8. Norman Loats Performing Arts Center, 600 lrvmt> Ave., Newport Beach, 646-2647. HWONDERFUL WORLD OF PUPPETS" Jim Gdmble brings his colorfuJ enlOlirdge or "little people" to Life 2·30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $7-$13 Orange Coa1-ot College, Robert B. Moore TheotrP, 432-5880. - }DANCE . KIROV AUDfTlONS DrForc Foundaf!on rm lhr Art., hosts double casting the principal role, and one i.inger has u supporting role in both operas. "Even when two or three roles are double cast, it's like uoing a whole other show," stated Burrill. "You've got to spend time staging them in, you've got to gel them in costume, you've got to get them in rnakeup, you need to get them interviews." Burrill, who is seven months pregnan t (her 3-year-old daughter "ARMCHAIR ADVENTURES" Orange Coast College's travelogue film series contin ues 7 p.m. Friday with "l'>rael and the Holy L<tnds." Tickets· $7-$9. Remammg series films "Emergmg lndochiM, • April 21. • Ame>nca\ Favonte Places." Mdy 5 Robert B. Moore 'Theatre, 2101 Fair\IJew Road, Costa Mesa, 432-5880. ~MUSIC PADDY WEST Popular Irish folk group presents it!> 14th annual St. Patrick's Day cele- bration concert at Orange Coast College 8 p.m. Friday. TickPts: $8- $11 (advance purchase advtsed as concert always sells out). Fine Arts Recital Hall, 270 I Fwrv1ew Road, Cos/a M esa. 432-5880. "THE MAGIC FLUTr Opera Paclfic presents David Hockney's celebrated production 8 p.m Sdturdayi. through March 18, Wedne~day. March 22, and Fnday, Mtlrch 24, and 2 p m. Sunday. March 26. Performed m Engll<;h Tickets: $18-$85 Orange County.Performing Arts Cc11IPr, 600 Town Center Drive, Cos/Cl Mesa, (800) 30-0PERA. MASTERS OF HARMONY Nauonall y acclaimed, award-wm- was born on opening night of "Tosca" in 1992). noted that, "The more you (produce operas), the more you know what to ex- pect. The first couple of years (of rep .productions) mistakes we re made because we had never done it before. We have gotten to the point where it's manageable. It all comes down to really, really, really good planning." Cbrlstop/1cr Trela corers local entertainment for the Dailf Pilot NiKi's I I 50% I I Complete Lunch or Dinner s1's : OFF* : I Duy one combo get 1 1/4 Tandoori I One of Equal or Chicken Noon, Rice I Lesser Va.lue at 1 /2 I & Salad I Pnce t Wlm coupon L • oo onv 2 () :> ll•m combm ..I ----------------..-~-....-o-.-P_.E=-;N DAILY -Call for.,..._,-=-.-.--...-... :>70.5 s. Oristol Sonto Ano ( 1 bl f'4 of So COOSI Plozo Mlll ro Clolhe5time) •SO.Oltl Laguna Hills Moll 24'155 Loouno Hills Mol 12360 (l.ogurlo Cofws Food Coun) 1110161 2031 E. 1st St .• Santo Ano (1 bl 'ti. at TUSlln behind COit's k.) ••2-2tlt MONDAY NIGHT .F11111Uy S""lal ning, l 20-mttmber b&rbenbop c:'ho- NI performa 8 p.m Salwct.y • 1\ckeb Sll·Sl&. Oto• CoiJar Collefle, R•rt B. ~ ThPatre, 432·5'IO. "M.oAMA IUTTWLY" Opera Pacific presenb Puccuu'1 story or a geisha who f..U. in love Wilh a navdl officer 2 p.rn Sunday5 through March 19 and 8p10 Wedn~y. Friday, Mclrch 11. and S..turday, Maleh 25. Performed in Italian with Engli&h subtitles. 11ckell> St8-S85 Orange CQunly Performing Arla Center, (800) 30.0PBRA. NORMA ROBPTS Singer/songwrltN/musidan leads "Wedrin' or the Crocn, • a free musi- cale, 3'.30 p.m Sunday, Pr/ends' M eeting Room, Newport Beach . Central Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach, 117-3800. PETER SVALIE Costa Mesa resJdent and former Orange Coast College piano ~tudent who currently studies di \Jhiverslty of North }eicas gives fr~e recital noon Thursday. March 16 OCC M usic Buildmg, Room IOI , 2701 · Fairview Road, Costa Mesa SPECIAL EVENTS IM~GES OF WEST AFRICA Travel photographer WiWam Bloomhuff presents free multi-media !>ltde show at 7 tonight featunng scenes of W<>sl Africa on black clnd white, color dnd hand -painled sltdes set to tribal tlnd contemporary music. Limited edition Bloomhuff prinL<; available lor sale Adventure 16 Outdoor & Ttavel Oulfi//ers, 1959 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, 650-3301. MOTORCYCL£, CAR SWAP MEET New and used pdrt!>, t1crer,sones and memorabilia ror motorcyde'> offered by 200 vendor!> 5 to 10 p.m Friddy Volkswagens, Por.,rhei. dnd off-rood vetudes take over 5 to 9 p m Saturday Adml'-'>IOn $6 ('dC h '>how Orange County Fairgrounds. Commerce Buildmg No. 10, 88 Fair Dnve, Costa Mesa, 364-05 15. "OL' RIVERBOAT CitUISE" Fund-raiser for Soys & Girl<; Club of · Eastbluff fedtur<'s dancmg, dining and casino games m "Riverboat" setting 7 p.m. Saturday. Cost: $35 per person. Fanciful rivcrbodl dress opllonal. 2555 Vista de/ Oro, Newport Beach, 723-1515. "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" Center 500, a support group for th<> Orange County Pc•rforming Arts Center, holds ii!. second tlnnual Casino Night and Silent Auctton 8 p.m. Sdturdt1y Tickets· $55 m • advance, $60 dl the door (include<> $20 m gaming chJps). Balboa Pavilion, 400 Mam St., Balboa. 556- 2122. ext. 220. .A VISIT TO NORTHERN GREECE' Art Gallery director lnru Vallera- Rlckerson gives slide lecture 7 30 p.m. Wednesddy for Fnend<, of Orange Coast College'i. Norman E Watson Llbrary. Adrn1~<,10n $5, reservdllons neccs!>t1ry Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via l.Jdo Soud Newport Beach, 432-5087. "ASSASSINS" Stephen Sondheim'!> comedic musl- cal about real-life American pre l· denUat assaSliins opens at 8 tonight. c;urtain: 8 p m Thursdays through Saturdafs ~nd 3 p.m. SUodays througb March 19. Ticlcet9: $10 (available at the door only). Orange Coa!lt College, Drama Lab Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, C~ta M eaa, 4S2·5880. "LEND ME A TENOR" Final performances of Ken Ludwig's fast-paced comedy about the trials and tribulations or an opera compa- ny in circa 1934°Cleveland are 8 pm. through Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: ~-$10. Newport Theotre Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive. NewfXlrl Bea.ch, 6·31-0288. "MURDER IN GREEN MEADOWS" Mystery/thfillec by I;>ouglas Posl continues 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through March 19. Tickets: $10 Costa Mesa Civic Playhous~; 611 Hamilton St., 650-5269. "GHOST IN THE MACHINE" David Gilman's story about a quartet of Ivy League academics who dis· cover lines from a famous hymn in d computer-generated piece of'music an d try to unravel whether it is a miracle or ho~ _continues 8 p.m. Tuesdays llirough Fndays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays through April 2. 1ickets: $26-$36. South Coast Repertory, M ainstage, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa M esa, 957-4033. "ONE FlEW OVER THE CUO<OO'S NEST" Dale Wasserman's stage adaption of the Ken Kesey novel about a dehtlnt nusht who enters an msane asylum and inspires his fellow inmates to dssert themselves continues 8 p'm. Friddys and Saturdays, 7 p.m Sunday<, through April 9. Tickets $15 Theatre District. 159(} Superior A\.e., Costa Mesa, 548-7671 . "DENIAL" NcwSCRlpls play reading 7'.30 p.m Monday of Peter Sagal'c; story dbout d crusading Jewish woman lawyer who agrees to defend a man who argues the Holocdust never hdp· . peQed. South Coast Repertory, Mains/age, 957-4033. "PTERODACTYLS" Previews are Tuesday th'rough Thursday, March 16, for Nicky Silver's story of a proper Philadelphid family whose membe~ live ind permanent stale or denial before the prodigal son returns lo '>hdke the skeletons in the dos<'l and dinosi;1ur bones in the backyard. Rrcommended for mature audi- ences. Preview llckets: $16-$20 South Coast Repertory, Second Stage. 957-4033. "THE IJTTI.£ FOXES" South Orange County Theatre's Readers Theatre group perform'> d drdJUallc reading of Lill1dn Hellmdn work 7 pm Thursday, March 16 Pr<•·r<>gtstratll)n not necessary Newport Beach Central Library. Friends' Meeting Room. 1000 Avocado Ave., 717-3800. f:JOW OPEN. Speedy Linguine Cafe' "Low Cost International Dishes" APPETIZERS Mushrooms Polaita frlttus ................ $3.50 Splcy Sldtlan ChJcken Wings .............. $3.95 Cata.marl FrlW ..................................... $4.50 Baked Mozzarella Strudel... ................. $3.95 East Meets Wut Shrtmp ...................... $5.25 Frttto Mlsto ......................................... $4.50 SALADS Caesar ...............•••••.... $4.95 AnUpasto .....••..••• $6.95 OtlmtaJ ChJcken ......... $5.95 ScampJ Fustlll .... $6.95 Th~e Cheese TortdtJnJ ....................................... $5.95 Southwutem Cobb ............................................ $6, 7~ PASTA UlllU/n• CapcUJnl Pomoduro .............. S4. 75 CapcUlnl Pottoftno .............................. $6.75 Fcttuctnc Al&tdo ................... $4.95 That Chlcba UnauJnc ........................ ss.so Szccbwan Sbrlmt Unaulnc...S6.75 Santa Pe llnaufnc ............................... SS.75 Wiid Mushroom tnautnc ..... SS.SO ProvmcaJc Uncutnc ........................... $5.75 ITA.Ll.IN POT PIES, l.ASAGNAS, PUllJS, "Mllll.Y STYLE DID!R ... ," $6.95 PER ADULT ... $3.95 PEI CBllD .. MD llUCB llODllll r•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 TRIS COUPON GOOD POI OHB COMPUIDHfTAIT lT'Bll..Wlill 1 • ANT OaDll: '"WILD MUSIDOOll POLBN'IA RJTTU, BADD ' 1 llOZZAUUA SnuDBL, SPJCT CBJCQN WJRGS 01 SPUI>T 1 : • CJtOSTOO APPBTlZUS 01 DESSUTI · 1 1 1J SPUl>T LIHGUIHB CAPE... : • __ .... __ ...,... ...... Jl)vte • ~------·····------·---------------· PIZZA Numuo Uno famous thick CMll. New Yodt Tbtn, NEW ~ ~ : ~ .. 3664. S. Brtstol (Brtsto! & Mac Arthur) Metro Town Cm.tu nut to Home &praa) 714-754-0624 I Weekend · Cozy confines can't quell 'Cuckoo's Nest' By TOM TITUS T he raw, visceral powor and the suffocating sense ~f confinemen t, both physical and·psy- cholog1cal, of Dale Wasserman's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo'g Nest" are magnified appreciably in. th~ intimate atmosphere of Costa· Mesa's Theatre District. With a reduction in seating (from the already sparse 41 to a minuscule 32) to accommodate the siz- able and frenzi~d action, this production probably covld run well into the summer and stilJ elude poten- tial tick~t buyers: Those ro.rtunate enough to secure rese~at1ons ar.e 1.n f?r a stimulating experience. · This dramatic indictment of sup.pressed individual- ity in a state mental hospital has been around the local circuit several years. Theatre District's gripping rendition is superbly directed by Jo~n Lescot, who has molded some fascinating individual characteriza- tions into a highly involving ensemble. The central role of R.P. McMurphy, the malinger- ing convict who talks his way into the "easy life" at th.e asylum, is proj~cted ~ith eart~ly, robust gusto by Victor Santana. His physical and idealistic energy ig- nites the cast as remarkably as his character's outra- geousness encourages his fellow patients. Nancy Peterse n as the cool, calculating Nurse Ratche<i' seems to strain for the authoritarian menace which should be inherent in her character. Neverthe- less, Petersen impresses in her confidential moments, maintaining her maddening rigidity. Mario Lescot, who has directed all the previous Theatre District shows, resoundingly displays his act- ing talent as the burly, mute Indian, Chief Bromden. Lescot wrings volumes of agonized torment from his cha racter, enriching his transition in the secoffd act to a more normal, and ultimately pivotal, presence. As the intellectually superior, emotionally bankrupt leader of the patients, Robe rt Germon delivers a richly de~ailed timid Cheswick, but maintains his jit- ter)' character nicely. Kennedy York is terrific as the slight, stuttering, introverted youth who can't escape his mother's ty- rannical shadow. Michael Carter invokes some neeQ- ed laughter as the halluci nating patient dealing an -m WHAT: ''One Flew over The Cuckoo'• Nest" WHERE~ The Theatre District. 1599 Superior Ave., Costa Meta WHEN: a p.m. Fridays and Saturday•. 7 p.m. Sundaya through Aprtl 9 HOW MUCH: $15 MORI INFO: $48-7671 Todd Steinhilber's "Basement Videos" and Ph yllis Miller's "Fyllis' Film Flashes" ap pear on C4 today. - Thursday, March 9, 1995 LOCAL THIATIR DON LEACK/DAILY PILOT Cast of "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest." extra hand to an unseen player. Omar Barba's grinning mad bomber and Michael Urdaneta's catatonic vegetable (whose eye inflections are priceless) add appreciable depth to the patient corps. Jeff Bickel is splendid as the henpecked doc- tor, while Randy Bushnell and Gilbert Clark add , credible muscle as the no-nonsense aides. The eye-catching Autumn Hafenf-eld significantly enriches the party scene, while Sudan Kane is less ef- fective as her girlfriend. Tim Rhone is solid as.the boozing night attendant, but Paula Fell overdoes her character's mousiness as a young nurse. "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" is a formi- dable challenge for the Theatre District, and one which is impressively realized in nearly all aspects. The show will ultimately move to the company's new .facility on Bristol Street at a future date. Tom Titus reviews /teal tl1cn ter for the Daily Pilot. 'Ghost' asks more .questions than it answers :watching David Gilman's _ "Ghost in the Machine," the latest production at South Coast Repertory, is like trying to decipher an M.C. Escher painting -what you see may or may not be what you are supposed to gel. This fascinating, yet perplexing cryptogram of a play is layered with multiple interpretations, some cere- b.Ji.I and some visceral. 'The very ele- ments whi<;;h set Gilman's work . """"' __ .;..........;-..-.:.:.... ..... apart are, ironicany, thb weights which ultimately pull it beneath the surface of enlight_enmenl. Gilman's four protagonists, two prof esslonal couples, are all intel· lectuals -a professor of compara- tive religion, two musicologists and a computer specialist. The points of conflict are two incidents - a theft and a seduction -which may Of.- may not have occurred. The audi- ence must be the judge, for this is· not a play which ties all i t s loose ends together at the final curtain. Under David Emmes' meticul ous -FYI WHAT: "Ghost In the Ma- chine" WHERE: South Coast Reper- tory. Malnstage. 655 Town Center Drtve, Costa Mesa WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays through Aprll 2 HOW MUCH: $26·$36 MORE INFO: 957-4033 _ Dos LucH/l>A•LY ru.o~ Stephen Rowe and Jane Fleiss in "Ghost in the Machine" ai SCA. direction, "Ghost in the Machine" didly projccteJ. e\'olves from the technical tedium of Jane Fleiss has the play's most in· its earlier scenes to a mildly pro-teresting role, that of the blatant se- vocative first-act curtain. The second ductress, but she is never truly con- act, . in which two fringe characters vincing. Nevertheless, hers is a val- are introduced, plunges headlong to-' iant effort to add dimension to a ward an absence of. re~olution. character notably deficient in that Of the four pnnc1pals, Stephen quality. Row~ as the pr~~e.ssor earns highes~ Two cameo roles complete the n:arks for credib~hty. Ro~ve endows. cast in varying degrees of effective- h1s ·charact~r with . an mtellec~ual ness. Hal Landon Jr. delivers an ex- bravado which effectively neutralizes cell' 1 ac t f ti 1 b the accusations thrust at him. . en coun ° ie 5 ern pu , · W d R b. b · 1 d' lasher \\ho punctures Canavan s en y o 1e nngs ess amen-. . sion to the part of Rowe's musi· qu~t for. glory •. but Enc Steinberg cologist wife, whose role in the re-can contribute little mo~e than smug search project is strangely under-pmlurrng to the ambiguous char- stated. She increases her volume but actcr uf the composer "hose mono· nc\er really expands her character lo~~c str;i~gcl) completes the ~l:iy. \\hen a ~ual crisis bubble!> to the I he art1st1c;illy urban scenic dc- surfacc. sign'> of Gcr:ird Hm\land are be..1ut1· Her fellow musicologist, Michael full) re..1l1£1:J, at ll!ast in the m..1111 C;ina,an, comes closest of the four-;ircJ of the st..1ge. His roller-co;.istcr some .to genuine emotional anguish. pallern fo r the final scene is ap·- H1-. re:ictions to his girlfriend's al· propnate for q play that ask!. mort:. kged infiJclity and the th'' arting of questions than it ans\\ers. hi~ 01\ n research project arc spic n--By T0,\1 TITUS , : C I N E l\t1 A S : 1_ ----· --------------------· ----~~~---~ --, __ • • $3.75.DAILY rARGAIN SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 5:45 PM •c ~ ~SSOO ) \ lllUWAY flt) TMf SHAWSIWS llEDlMl"TIOll {fl) MM Of TNE JIOUSE {f'G) JUST CAUSE lfll FOMlST GUMP (PC-13) ~ FOMUT GUMP ('= ' IUT llAllD~-=I jN-131 .~~~ PULP FICTtoM'jfl) LEQHDS OF TNE F (fl) ROOMMATH (Pl) THE SHAWSIWll flED£Mf'TICHI (fl) HtoEAWAY (fl) MAI Of THE MOUSl (PC) CERRITOS 10 T , • .,.. '""' '"" • aM!ll 1JT81 C8) '1l) 11'1 $23-1356 WESTMlllSTER 10 wt-si~i'i~~.,~~ii JUST CAUSl ~} HEAVYWtlQlfTS IPG) FORREST QUMPlK-13) OUTIRUI( l HtoEAWAY THE SUwsewnt RE IOll (R) LEliODS Of THE FALL (lll llOIOOY'S F\llj) ROOMMATU IOYS OI TME lfl) TME SfCflC:V:r'oJ"l.s.. (PG) FOMUT GUMP {'11-13) IOYS Oii THE SlllE 1111 I TliE MAllliLEl (ll) LEliEllDI Of TM£ FALL Cfll ..ss••-•tllll11lftl .... ," MAJI Of 1'Ml HOUSE (PG) OUTllMAI 11'1 \ Thursday. March 9, 1995 -' LOCALDl•l•e . . ' SUSHI KURA Shake, rattle and hand roll? · By MA1lLA BillD I M Uauo Okura and his family surveyed the wreckage of t"ir Northridge home and restaurant after the J994 earthquake and decided enough is enough (or whatever is said in Japanese). They pulled up slakes and headed for Or- bnae Cou~ty where the Okuras hope to build the kind or business they enjoyed 'before the quake shattered their dreams. They had been discovered in Northridge by gourmets and had • achieved a degree of Came -Jines formed at lunchtime outside the door in anticipation of choice sushi and tantalizinJ. tempura. Jt was a wrenching decision forced by Moth· er Nature making them into refu· gees as they left their home and res· taurant in ruins to begin again in Costa Mesa. High rents in Newport Beach and the central district of Costa Mesa were not affordable, so Okura chose a site in the modest Fairview Court at the corner of Wilson and Fair· view. Not exactly at the hub of things, but definitely worth the trip for sushi fans. One of them, Ms. Michiko, is a connoisseur and restaurateur who owns Jssay's on Old Newport Bou· • lcvard. She was born in Japan and bas lunch at Sushi kun at least three times a week. one of the high· • est endorsements Okura could ask for. Sushi Kura look.a small from out· aide, but is spacioua and comfortable within. The sushi bar is where the action is, but there are plenty of ta- bles for people who want to dine from a menu which includes beef teriyak.i, $8, shrimp and vegetable tempu.tl; $9.50, or deep fried soft shell crab, $8.20. The room, which seats 48, bas a first class atmospher- e. Everything is 1'cycd by the gentle, ·soft spoken 40-ycar-old Mitsuo Okuras.. Who bas a wife, a 6-ycar-old, 3-ycar-old twins and a ferocious work schedule which keeps him from enjoying them as much as he would liket . Freshness is everything at Sushi Kura, and he will settle for nothing less when he goes to market in the wee hours to buy the best of the lot. Fish and shellfish come in grades at market, just like ve.sctables, and he buys only the top graCfe. He says the ycllowtail is excellent right now; so arc the tiny morsels from spiny sea urchins and the sweet. white shriny> from Mexican waters. -m "FlSh Salad" is a mundane title for an exciting arrangement of shrimp, crabmcat, scallops, ycl· lowtai~ grecn""JDusscl, roe, avocado, asparagus, halibut and daikon with a smooth, mild miso dressing, $7.80. The luncheon special, also $7.80, is a beautifully composed tray of de- lectables with miso soup, kim pi.ro, salad with vinaigrette, rice, tuna sashimi and an.inventive special dish invented each day -last Tuesday, it was a cabbage roll with steaming chicken within. C.UIY LUUCH/DAJLT PuoT Mitsuo Okura prepares a fresh fish lunch dish at his Sushi Kura. WHAT: SUshl Kura WHERE: 2263 Fal.rvlew Road, Costa Mesa WHEN: open dally: lunch, 11 :30a.m. to 2 p.m.; dinner, 5 to 9:30 p.m., 'tll 10 p.m. on Fr1doy1 and Saturdays HOW MUCH: mod erate . Lunch II a round $7.90, din· nera $9.50. Nothing much over $12.75 All lunch combination orders in- clude a bowl of excellent miso soup, piclcJes and rice. All dinner orders include miso soup, pickles, salad, rice and ice cream, and any dinner can be had with a California roll or tuna sashimi for a few dollars extra. Okura has a generous hand when he slices fish, and his combination plates of sashimi and sushi look as though they should be photographed before they're eaten. The man's an artist. homcstyle shredded root -exotic, $3.25, be sure to try it -and there is unagi donburi, hot smoked fresh water eel on rice, $7.50. For a refreshing ending, have an orange, sectioned and presented in its own skin with a dash of plum wine, $1.50. The house Chardoonay is $3.50 and. sake, Japanese beer, tea and soft drinks arc available as well. MORE INFO: 645·5502 A tiny saucer of kim pira is . crammed with natural fiber and a strong taste of sesame. This is a Marla Bird n .-Jews local reslau· raats tor the Dalzy Pilot. . ISSAYTC> EXPAND At Sushi Kura, ~ilco told us that her restaurant, lssay'1, which serves marvelous ltal~n dinners at 485 Olil ~~Ivel., is · maut to have a regular kitchen the'faampea quarters chef Paol haf~ft"Wortdng in for the past fi &pect some disruptions, but It will tie ness as usual during construction, ~ ing to Michiko. Phone 722-2992 for Info. FAT AND SKINNY FACTS Co-author Erica Bohm of "Healthy Dining in Orange Coullty" will give dinen the skin· ny on restaurant dining at the leat'ftlnr smith Bookstore in ~uth Coast Plaza from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday. Back Bay Rowing and Running Chib, home of Orange County's finest salad bar, AMERICAN STUDIO CAH, loc:o1ed ot 100 Main St. Bolboo (ol fool of pier) The Studio Cof. is the happening place for food, fun & entertainment Menu includes ril», ..<h1d;en, fresh fuh, poslo, appetizers & solods, also serving brunch on Sot & Sun 10 to 3:00 which indudes Belgium waffles, omelettes, pancakes and much more. Prices range from $2 9.S.$13.95. Open 7 days o week. Man-Fri 11 30.1 :30 om, So..Sun 10.1 :30om. Also locot.d at 300 P.C.H • Hunhngton Seoch. IN. 8RU, FB, ENT, V, MC, AE, DC. .536-8775. IUlllS lllSTAUltANT, located ot 1712 Placentia, Cosio Mesa. Menu includes ribs. chicken, &leak & lol»ler, prime rib, pizza, oysler bar. Prices range from $3.95 and up Open doily from 11 :30om to 1 Opm, Cocktails 'til 11 pm ID, FB. WC, No credit cords. (714) 645-8091 CAFE ITALIAN .unt'S CAii, locol9d ot 320 8'1dol tG at Redhift (by Arco Mini Mart) in Cotto Mesa. Menu includes good country cookin' breokfost with the best omelelles, po~s. great Mexican breokfmt dishes and lunch with lhrfry-..getobln, terl)'Okl bowl, garlic chidten, ouoned soloch, healthy tur\ey burgers, hamburgers, aer* w/ pototo solod or friei. Try Ruth's home cookin' today Great food, gr«Jt prQsl Prm range from $2.99 to $5.95. Open 7 days o w.ll 7om to 2pm. ID, oo, we (71A) 6A1-7321 CHINESE OtOI HONG, Gourmet ChlneM. light & healthy, no msg uted, only noturol ingred .. nts. Menu Includes -low col meals, combination plates. beef or pork dishes, chicken & Y9Q9 dishe!i and fomily volu. dinners. Toke ovt o"°iloble. ~ 1 • buck o plot. ovoiloble. Locoted ot 17938 M<>Qnolio St. (nelCf to Pie N Sow) Fcwntoin Voll.y (71 4) 965-3698. SAIATWOI llSTAUltANT la SAUSAOI CO. locot.d ot 251 Shipyard Woy. N.wport Beach. Menu Includes grwot poslo, oword winning Caesar aolod, delicious homemade aouaoge, '*II, lomb, lob of ~Ion dl$hel, ~ wine, beer, coppucclno & deterts. *lt11 o foml owned & run restouront.. Prices range from$,, 5 to $13.95. Open 7 doys o w..k Serving Sot & Sun Brunch from 8:30 to 1 :OQ Sunday thru Thuradoy 11 om to 1 Opm. Friday & Sot. 11 om-1 1 pm. IN, OUT, WC, BRU, W8, V, M, AE. DC (7 l4) 723-0621 NICKS PIZZA D'OllO family holion Restouront CHAHllC&MI, l,o(otied at 18912 MocAtthut with hofnemode posto souc.s ond hondmode ll¥d , Irvine, ocrou from John ~ Airport . piuo'a Fomcx11 for ~MSdoy Spaghetti • oA you E~. chorrning, Gf'Oclou• & beoutifvl, eoch of 1t. con 9o1 for $2 75 ond Sunde~ you con 9ot dining room• hos o diffe:tent d.cor. The food I• . -losogno for $3.75 . W. olJO the piggiest plDo french<:ol1'°'n10 c.iitt~tly but heollhfully in town, our potty p.uo 36•. Oltlef dishes include PfePOr-.d l.uftch apeciob ot se.oo ond up . the ¥901, eggplant, chtcbn, brosciofto ond drf!Mnt diM« IT*W ~ o ¥Oneity ol ..afood, meat, poslOS. A bdel lunch on Mon., Tu.., lhura. & frl. chicbn, tolod• iUI! to INnflOn o '9w ii.ms Prices Bonquet room oild cotering ovo1loble. Wt ore range 1rom $6 to $25. ~ng lunch 11 30-2:30. locoe.d ot 10.585 SICNf Ave Fovnloin \4otlty Phor.e Olfw'9r .5·3().10:30. Sunday 9tunch 10.30· 2.30. (71') 963-0227. Gt*' 1 dOya o ...-. I>, 00, UONCH ltES REQ. fl, 00, WC. V, NC, AMX DC, DISC Voltt ~· l11At 75MOOI. FRE N CH I By PHYLLIS MILLER My movie motto: "I'll tell you what's hot ..• I'll tell you what,s cool, but not the plot . . • lhat,s my rule." r·fm;;~;r+-•·HJdcaway: After suffering a n near-death cxpcrien~c, following an auto crash, Jeft t;ioldblum finds himself psychicly Jinked to a young psychotic. The attempt to be part science fiction, part horror film and part crime solver :idds to the confu· sion, leaving audiences to wonder why this film did not remain hid· den away. · •The Sum or Us: Based upon an award-winning play, the upbeat fa. ther/son scene stars Jack Thomp· son, the dad/pal, and Russell Crowe (currently ~pp.caring in "The Quick and the Dead") as the loving son, with an excellent sup· porting cast and superb dfrectors, Kevin Dowling and Geoff Burton. ITALIAN CIAO, locolitd ot 2600 Eost Coos1 Hwy. Corona 0.1 lier. Come and •JC99fi.nc:. Corona del lier'• newest ltolion restouronl Mrving New York style piua, gourmet plnm, eicciting postoa, creoti-4 IOlod1, coffee. cappuccino ond fr.th boked poetrift. Prbt ronge ffom $3.95 lo $8.9.S. Optn 7 doy1 o WMk from 8om IO 11 pm, except Sunday open ' IO .1 l_pm, Oeli~ry CMliloble, V,WC., AE, WC, IN OUT 6'0.2291 RANDAZZO ITAUAN CAPI, Located ot 211'8 Beoch Blvd., lot Altonto), Fomlly owned, .wrything ~ wlth the flnett meota & c'*"-' & fomoua Jo, hi l11fomous cfieeMcob Prlcet ronge from $2.001o S 11 .95. Open Tues lhni Sot 11·9pm, Sun. 11-8 pn1. Cloeed Mon. IN. OUT. WC, Wine ond beer l A 536-24'8. KINTA,.. JAMiii• a.-. F~ hn. dining. Suthl lof, ~ Toblet.:in Oin!ng loom. full bor ond codtoil IOllnge ring spteiOfly tropicol dr1nb JOlz bond~ frl. & Sot. night ond ICoroob ~ Tuet nlaflr. Open for lunch Mon.Fri. 11.30.2:30, Dlnntt •"lhwa .S.loPfft, fn & Sot .S.11 PfTI. 8052 Adomt . .-: (comir of' leodl) ~ntlfl8'00 8eoc:h, f71A) 5~. Al lftOjOf ctedlf cords t.11cept 0111tn Club. M, fl. E, WC . , \ FYLLll' FILM FLAIHll The seuing may be an Australian sea port..,and the son may be gay, but themes like love and compas- sion· are universal, and it will touch your heart as much as your funny bones. • Murid'a. Wedd1ng: Toni Collette is an Australian femme unfatale, surrounded by supcrficiaf shallow friends, a berating dad and couch potato siblings, and she's got a bad case of bride-on-the-brain. You'll have the time or your life following the cast from Porpoise Spit to Sid· ney as they display a full spectrum of style and emotions ranging from giddy and gaudy to driven and de· pressed, all to the rune of Abba songs. •The Last Good Time: This ls a characterization more than a story. Armin Mueller-Stahl is the retired violinist whose routine makes a robot look innovative. Maureen Weekend Stapleton is Mueller's well meaning but matronly neighbor, Lionel Stan· dler rattles off sexual fantasies from his hospital bed and Olivi:1 d'Abo is a distressed and warm· hearted young woman who breathes new life into this tired as- semblage. • Once Were Warriors: Drunken· ness, cursing, wife-beating. sex and extensive body and face tattoos may not shock you, but the po<,qer- ful realism of this native New Zeal· and family's story Will blow you away. Director Lee Tamahori inte· grates locals with professional ac- tors to detail the optimism and pride of the Maori in the face of poverty and abuse. PLEASE NOTE that my revjews are subject to change, und I wcl· come other viewpoints. Pbfllls Miller ls an Orange Coast Rtaltor. SEAFOOD MCIPIC P'lSH la SIAFOOO, Locot.d at 2620 N.wport Blvd., Casto Mesa. Menu indudes MOfood solods, seafood sondwiches, grilled entrees, fish & chips, fiih tacos, sushi and more . Also ho1 one of Oro~• County's largest ln'4ntorles of fresh fish from it's fiah market. Prices ronge from $1 .95 ond up. Open M.f 11-6; Sot 11..S, ID, WC (714) 650-0130. zualU DRY DOCK, located ot 9059 Adams, HunlinQIDn 8eoch.. Menu Includes MOfood, si.ok & lobtttr, pizza, prim.r~ oystitr bor. Prices range 3.95 ond ~d. .. Open doily horn J 1 :3( l Opm, Cockkilla 'II 11 pm. IN, F8, WC, Y, 1714} 96U3«1: THI ..... l1IAK MOUll. loCoted et 2300 Hofbof INd, 131, Colla Melo. Menu ird.des ateou, fNlh flth, cfllden, ~s ond solods. Pnc. rongt ftoin $3.15 fof llinch and $6.25 '°' dinner. open 1 lom for lunch MSo. Dinner Apm M.fr. OitlMI' 3pm Sot. & Sun. IN, WC, V, MC, AE, DC. (71 4) 6.41·9m. ... • • .. ' DUON·GLAZED CORNED BEEF Wll1I SAVORY CABBAGE a RED POTATOES • (pictured) Total preparation and cooking ti~: approx. 2-314 to 3-314 fwurs 2-112 to 3-112-pound corned beef brisket Water Dijon Glaze: 2 tablespooos honey 1 tablespoon frozen oranae Juice concentrate, d~ · 2 teaspooos D~on-style mustard I. Place corned beef brisket in Dutch oven; add water to cover. Cover tightly and sirnmeT 2-112 to 3-112 hours tit tender. 2. Meanwhile prepare Savory Cabbage & Red Potatoes. 3. Combine glaze ingtedients; set aside. Remove brisket from cooking liquid; trim fat from outer surface of brisket. if necessary. Place brisket on rack in broiler pan so surf ace of meat is 3 to 4 inches from beat In small bowl, combine glaze ingtedients. B_rusb glaze over brisket; broil 2 to 3 minutes or until brisket is glazed. 4. Carve brisket diagonally across the grain into thin slices; serve wlth vegetables. SAVORY CABBAGE 8r RED POTATOES Water I small bead cabbage (approx. 1-1/2 pounds), cut into 6 wedges I ~und small red potatoes, quartered Savory Sauce: 114 cup butter 2. tablespoons sliced green onions 2 to 3 teaspoons prepared horseradish 118 teaspoon salt 118 teaspoon pepper I. In Dutch oven, place steamer basket in 112-incb water (water should not touch bottom of basket). Place cabbage and potatoes in bMket. Cover tightly and heat to boiling; reduce heat. Steam 20 to 25 minutes or until tender. 2.MeanwhUe in 1-cup glass mwurc, combine sauce ingtedients; microwave on HIGH 45 seconds to .. 1 minute or until butter is melted. Drizzle over vegetables. Serve \fith corned beef. Maka 6 servlnp (1ervlna size; 1/6 ot recipes). Foon ·We're ·all a little Irish on • ri·c 1s h ' der, flavorful corned reef is as much a part of . Patrick's Da~ celebrations as the wearing of the green, and an easy-to-prepare traditional menu of Dijon-Glazed Corned Beef with Savory Cabbage & Red rotatoes bring~ out the Irish in all of us. The corned beef brisket requires little attention while it . gently simmers for a few hours, leaving plenty of time for other activities. With today's fast-paced lifestyles, even leprechauns can use a few shortcuts in the kitchen. Thanks to convenient deli corned beef and a few quick, updated recipe ideas, corned beef travels beyond custom to the busy weeknight supper table. CORNED BEEF a PASTA ALFREDO (pictMred) Total prrparotlon and cooking tilw: 25 rninUJtl 314 pound fQUy-cookecl corned beef, tUcecl 1/4 lnch tldek 8 m 1IDCOObd ..,.petd 1 peck .. (lt oacel) n6 ........ ~188Ce for .... 3H ·cap frailea peM V4mp.a . 1/1 ten IJlGClm ........ autmea (opthrnl) Gntei ........ m.. I.Cook~ 9CCOldinj to ~ dlreccionl. Keep wwm. 2. MeiDWbile lrim fill from corned bed, if nece11wy. St.Ck corned beef .uc.; Cal into l x I fl-inch acrqaSetlilcle. 3. In ... 8DlildCk lkiUlt, bell ..ace. pell, .. Md ....... Q,wt medium 11111113 IO 5 .m._ or ..-il IMJI; Sdr cOIDllCI bllf U.0...,. mt1nt ooak • ....._. 1eo2 ............. ~-- ... hi -*l Cdllbme ..... - ..... -•GJll. ... ...... diililt. lfdlilk ... tlt1111, • ifclslftd. ' Mllllil 4 • •t I .......... llJ~ ' Holiday leftovers and deli corned beef open the door to family-pleasing weeknight meals, too. Corned Beef & Pasta Alfredo makes use of prepared, refrigerated sauce and frozen peas for a simple meal. Let children help assemble Corned Beef, Broccoli & Swiss Cheese Pockets for a fun, family dinner sure to please all ages. Best of all, these flavorful recipes take 30 minute or less to prepare, which is sure to keep Irish eyes smiling. So, whether you prepare a succulent corned beef brisket yourself or stop by the supermarket service deli on the way home from work, versatile corned beef fit into the 90s-style St. Patrick's Day or any evening your family longs for a change in the mealtime routine. CORNED BEEF, BROCCOLI lt SWISS CHEESE POCKETS Total preparaJion and cooking time: 30 minutes " 112 pound fully-cooked, well-trimmed corned beef, cut into lll·lnch cubes I tablespoon butter 1/2 cup chopped onion l·l/2 cups frozen cut broccoU, defrosted 1 cup shredded Swiss cheese 114 teaspoon pepper I can (10 ounces) refrlaeratecl plua crust 2 tablapoom Thousand Island d~lng 1. Heat oven to 425°. In medium non tick skillet, heat butter until ho<. Add onion; cook and stir 2 to 3 minutes or until tender. Remove from beat; add corned beef, brocooli. cheese and pepper. mix well. l. On ungreased baking sheet. unroll piua dough; cut into quar\ers. Flatten each quarter into 6 x 5-incb rectangle; pre.ad each with 112 table poon drc iog to within 1-incb from edges. Place equal amounts of corned beef mixture in center of each. Bring together 2 opposite comers of dou&h. pinching to sea[ Loosely close tra.ight edge of dough to fonn diamond- haped sandwiche . (Not necessary to seaJ edge completely.) See below. 3. Bake jn 425° oven 11 to 13 minute or until aolden bl'own. 'Maka 4 1emnp (ltnlq aae: 1 auclwidl). l \ a FOOD Thursday, March 9, 1995 Here's · a look at so~e spirhed ·ice cream aplUrges A sweet splurge is the happiest way to end any meal, and the best way to begin a party. Whether it's a family supper for fqur, a dinner party Cot eight or a festive gcMogether for a crowd, sweet treats are in order. Everyone remembers what was for dessert, so it pays to make something special. But that doesn't mean you have to spend all day in the kitchen whjpping up some fancy pastry. To save time without sacrificing quality, cr~ate a dessert ~rou~d your favorite super prertuum ice cream. Haagen·Dazs has introduced two exciting new flavors: Di Saronno Amaretto Ice Cream, flavored with the delicious Italian almond liqueur, and Baileys Ice Cream, a cold and creamy version of the famous Irish cordial. Both ice creams have Jess than 1 % alcohol content. These two luxurious flavors transfonn any simple dessert into extra-delicious party fare. Fot exampte, top a square of plafo, home-made gingerbread with a scoop of Di Saronno Amaretto Ice Cream, drizzle with a spoonful of Butter Almond Sauce, add a dollop of whipped cream and you have Di SaroMo Gingerbread Indulgence, a desse rt that wilJ have evctyone at the table smiling. Di Saronno Amaretto Ice Cream is also the perfect partner for any combination of fruits -sauteed apples and cranberries in the winter, or fresh peaches and blueberries in the summer. The almond liqueur flavor, swirled throughout the ice cream, is just as good wit h chilled orange sections or baked bananas. For a show-stopping spectacular, make a Baileys Ice Cream Calce. Simply line a ring mold with plastic wrap, scoop in Baileys Ice Cream -pressing it down a bit so that it will take the shape of the mold -and sprinkle crushed chocolate wafers over all. Re-chill the ice cream in the mold for several hours. When you're ready to serve it, just unmold (so that the chocolate crumbs are on the bottom), and drizzle melted white and dark chocolate over the ice cream ring. The combination of the two chocolates and the Baileys kc Cream is unforgettable. DI SARONNO AMAREnO GINOIRBREAD INDULOINCI • 2 cups all-purpose nour • 1 \1 teaspoons bakJng soda • \1 teaspoon salt • 1 \1 teaspoons ginger • 1 teaspoon cinnamon •~cup butter • ~ cup dark brown sugar • ~ cup molasses • ~ cup warm water • l teaspoon vaniJla extract • 2 eggs • 2 pints Haagen-Dazs Di Saronno Amaretto Ice Cream • 1 recipe Buttered Almond Sauce • 1 cup all-purpose cream whipped with • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar (optional) Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a 9 X 13 pan with aluminum foil and coat with non-stick baking spray. Sift together flour, baking soda, salt and spices into a large mixing bowl. In a 2-quart saucepan, combine butter, brown sugar, molasses and water. Stir over low heat until butter is just melted. Remove from heat and beat well, th en stir in vanilla and eggs. Stir butter mixture into dry ingredients using as few strokes as possible. Pour batter into prepared pan and bake in center of preheated oven 35 to 45 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool cake on a rack. To serve, cut gingerbread into 12, 3-inch squares. Split each square in half horizontally and ftll with a scoop of ice cream. Top )Vith Buttered Almond Sauce and garnish with whipped cream if desired. Makes 12 se rvings. BUnlRID ALMOND JAUCI • \14 cup butter • .Y• cup chopped or slivered allnonda • V• cup ll&ht brown suear • 2 tablespoons water • ~ cup IJ&ht corn ayrup • \.t teaspoon aaJt • ~ teaspoon almond ulnct OBSERVE THE WARNING SIGNS. It you hM ~ pail laslPJ two ~ rTilJtes et more, see a doct« Melt butter in a 2-quart saucepan. Add almonds and situte over medium heat 2 or 3 minutes. Add brown sugar and heat through until sugar is dissolved. Add water, com syrup and salt, stirring until smooth. Remove from heal and add almond extrac1. May be served warm or cooled. Makes about l ~ cups. UILIYI ICI CRIAMCAKI • 2 plnt1.Haa1en·Dais Baileys Ice Crea in • 1 cup chocolate wafer crumbs (about lO wafer•. crushed) • V• cup coanely chopped white chocolate or white chocolate pieces • V• cup coarsely chopped 1eml·ned chocolate or semJ-neet chocolate pieces • 2 tablespoons bland vegetable oil Line I ·quart ring mold. moong bowl or other l·quart mold with plastic wrap . .Remove ice cream from paper carton by cutting the packaging seam. Slice pints into rounds ~ to ~ thick. Pack into mold, pressing down to remove . ... . ,. ~~· ~-CEI any air pockets. Smooth top and sprinkle with V.. cup wafer crumbs. Cover with plastic wrap and freeze 4 to 6 hours or longer. Melt the chocolates separately with 1 tablespoon of oil each in two. heat-proof cups set into bot water, or at a low setting in th'e microwave. Remove ice cream cake from mold and discald plastic. Placing the crumb side down on a wire rack or plate, drizzle alternately with melted white and dark chocolate, Pat · remaining chocolate crumbs around edges-. Makes 8 servings. DI IAllONNO uuamo ICI C-M WITH APPU CltAN811UlY 10 .. INO · • 6 Golden DeUclous or Granny Smltb Apples • ·~cup butter • ~ cup anouJated suear • 1 cup craaberrib • 2 pints Haacen-Dazs DISaroooo Amaretto Ice cream Peel, core and slice apples. Melt butter in a 12-incb saule pan. Add apple slices and sugar and cook until almost completely tender. Add cranberries and cook until berries begtn to burst and apples are Cully tender. Serve warm or cooled over scoops of • Haagen-Dazs Di Saronno Amaretto lee Cream. Makes 8 servings. Note: Virtually any fresh fruit c:in be prepared this way. Try combinations of oranges and bananas, peaches and blueberries, or plums and nectarines, for trans-seasonal ice cream treats. ..... . . We Doullle M•ufacl.en' Coupo.-.. .. W. lccept ~I Oiiier Super11.trets Coupw FRESH GROUND BEEF NOT TO EXCEED 300/o FAT . . 112,:n-.=HIS I TOP~N ~'=~=N ASS~lt~s -I" ~~ -~ ~~ACK_69! fta TWIN PAK ~) ALASKAN t:'°°°) . FRESH lti3l1 POTATO CHIPS DfPT. COD FILUTS DIPT· WHOLE IROUT IAURA SCUOOER'S 79c: FROZEN/DEF. 3 49 CLEAR SPRINGS zo 6-0Z. BAKE OR BROIL PAN READY RIG. PRICE 1.59 LB. (FRESH BONED TROUT 3. 99 l.6.) LI. ~ LARGE \£.IULTRA TIDE OR ULTRA CHEER 900 152 TO I 70-0Z -- SEEDLESS GRAPES RID BELL PIPPIRS CRISP SWEET 99! 32·0UNCE GATORU»E THIRST QUENCHER 99.c. CHILEAN GROWN FRESH EXPllESS GARDEN SA• AD ( 13-0Z. UTEHOUSE ~ l·LB. PKG. 99· DRESSING 1.89) • POST RAISIN Ba.N 25-0Z. 229 _ UMIT 4 RIG. PRICE 4.59 . RICE·A·RONI OR-NOODLE RONI, 4 TO 7-0Z. ASSORTED OSCARMAYIR MUTWllNIRS 16-0Z.OR 2·---12-0Z. MEAT BOlcx:;NA : ....-~ 4·1/2·1NCH LOVELY PRIMROSE IN MATCHING POT COVER 2" LARGE HASS AVOCADOS BUTTERY aa~ FIAvoR 7EA. 1/2 GAL KNUDSEN ORANGI JUICI OilUfO CARTON 1" I' •• ThUflday, March 9, 1995 SEAFOOD VALUE Alaskan Halibut Steak Pttv. Frozeo-per lb. (Halibut FlJJet lb. 5.99) FlJLL CASE 6Pack •7•Up or Cherry 7•Up Replar or Diet •RC Cola or Diet Rite •A& W Root Beer or Cl'Wll Soda-Rea. or Diet •Sunkist Orange or Lutoaade-Replar or Diet Mahl Mahl flllet Ptt •. ........,... ... J99 •Welch's Grape Soda __,,,.,,.~=s:s or SCnwbmy or~· 12 oz. cam.Plus CRV·Plus Tax •Hawaiian .Punch Replar or Diet 12 oz. can•Plus Tax ...... "'-~-w-,1&-~ ........ 6Pacb 7•Up or Cherry 7•Up .......... -"""'"'" II~.;: i.. ,_.__.o.r...e rwc:.i..r. ~ ....... ~IS.la ................ 6 PacblC Cola or Diet Rite ··~ i.. ....... o.r...e 11wa..-r. .............. 1s,1• Ralphs Calilo1nia Beef Top Sirloin Steak • l.5DA~kct • Bed l.olJ>.tler lb. DAIRY /DELI VALUE Ralphs Fat Free Yogurt Allorted flavors - Fresh Green Cabbage .ii> DAIRY /DELI VALUE I lb. Parkay Spread 4 StJck FOOD 3 Del MOnte ·- .Golden Ripe Bananas per lb. Del Monte Canned Vegetables Cut or Fttocb Grtto Seana, ' Whole Kernel Com , Peas or Splnach·13.5 o:t. to 15.25 oz. can 6oz. cup Buy J..Save .SO llb.pq. Buy 2-Save . 76 Save •P to .15 ...... tt~D!llll ...... 6 Packs Wtlch's Grape .....1111'1:111 ... lllr<' IS, 111$. ., ....... GROCERY VALUE 4 Pack Northern Bath Ti~ue Auorted or Pr1nta 1120 count~ach Save up to .36 GROCERY VALUE FROZEN VALUE Weight Watchers 4 . Frozen Entrees ~ Sttak.1.Maina or Dfh1u Plu& 6.08 OL lo It OL Of SiDar1 ()on ChlcktD Chow MtlD or ~moo Ht>rb Chkkeo 7.So£tolloi.pq Buy 4-Save ap to 5.36 GROCERY VALUE Candy Paper ~----KhlM• • !!~~~. • MUlt Cboco&lt&J.45 oi. to 1.1 01. bar Bay J..Saye ap to _.51 Heb Save ap to .30 Prices effective 8 a.m. Thunday, March 9 thru March 15, 1995 ' • ...... • FOOD For the three fint prize winnen in the fifth annual Quaker Oatmeal Bake It Better With Oats Rcci~ Contest, baking is a creative outleL These baken routinely relax by doMi.ng aprons and beadinJ !or the kitchen once a week, on aYCrage, to create Anne Altaner of Ft. Lauderdale. Fla., a,new mother and children's librarian, describes baking as a areal way lo relax. "I love to make bar cookies · ~ausc they're easy, and friends always appreciate receiving them, she said. , , A Javorite childhood drop ~kJc; served as inspiiation for her Oat~al Dream Date~. a layered bar with a rich • oatmeal-coconut cookie crust and topping. The contest judges loved its updated classic flavors so much they awarded it the $2,000 first prize in the cookie category, the most popular contest category for the past three years. Clear across the country in Marina, Calif., Mini Deitch Frank bas been baking yeast breads once a week for tbc last 30 years. A retired homemaker, she describes herself as a pretty much from scratch baker. Although Deitch Frank prefers not to take any shortcuts when baking, she knows that many consumers today jus1 don't have the time. To appeaf to busy bakers, she decided to use a packaged hot roll mix for her Mocha Walnut Crunch Coff eecakc, the $2,000 first prize winner in the bread category. Quick or old fashioned oats stirred into the mix provide the texture and whole grain flavor Deitch Frank prefers in her from scratch baking. And she chose her favorite flavor combination -coffee, chocolate and walnuts -for the streuscl topping. "' In addition the thrce·$2,000 first prizes, a $10,000 Grand Prize, three $1,000 second prizes, and 25 honorable mentions were awarded in the fifth annual Quaker Oatmeal Bake It Better With Oats Recipe Contest. Recipes were judged on the basis of taste, convenience, appearance and creativity by a distinguished panel of newspaper and magazine food editors and writers. However, ·low-fat recipes have not gone unnoticed by Quaker Oats. Not only do the breads, muffins and coffee cakes take minutes to assemble, but they disappear in a flash. Made with less fat, they still taste delicious. Fat's primary role in baking is adding tenderness. So, lower-fat baking experts recommend reducing the, fat rather than eliminating it altogether. lo most traditional recipes for muffins and loaf ·type quick breads, the vegetable oil, melted margarine or butter can be redu~d by as much as one-third with acceptable results. Depending upon the recipe, low-fat or nonfat yogurt, canned pumpkin,, apple butter, applesauce, or another pureed fruit or vegetable can be substituted for the fat that's taken out. For maximum tenderness, lower-fat baked products also need both an accurate eye when measuring and a gentle hand when mixing. First, stir dry ingredients like flour and oats in their containers, then lightly spoon into standardized metal oc plastic dry ingredient measuring cups until overflowing. Using the flat side of a knife or metal spatula, level ingredient even with the top of ihe cup. Before mixing, thoroughly combine all of the dry ingredients in <>nc bowl and the liquid ingredients in another. Add the liquids to the dry and stir just until the dry ingredients are evenly moistened; a f cw lumps should remain in the batter. Finally, be sure not to QVerbake. Preheat the oven and check for doneness after the minimum J>aking time specified in the recipe. A wooden pick inserted in the center of mumns and loaf-type quick breads should have a few moist crumbs clinging to it. Compared to their more traditional counterparts, these quick breads developed in the Quaker Oatmeal KJtchens are proof positive that lower-fat recipes can tute tcrrl.fic. Oatmeal Carrot Cake Bread is scrumptious even without the optional cheese spread. Contributins to Its moist texture are rolled oats that have been soaked in skim milk, a healthy helping of finely shredded earrot1 and crushed pineapple with ill juice. The oats Impart a wholesome whole ataln texturo and liaht nutty tutc to the bread, and either tho quick or old fuhloned oats can be used. For case in lllcina. be sure to cool tho bread completely and use a sharp serrated knife. Ju.st rfahl lot breakfast or a an.ct. Apple 'n 0.eddar Oatmeal Muffins are rcan.initccnt of anochcr all-American Cavorite -apple pie • ~nd Chee11. A rdUced fat sharp ~ . . I cheddar will ee z: aa in this recipe. Because lower-t bUed goods tend to dly out more qWck.ly, they're best' eaten the Ame day they arc baked or frozen. To freeu either the bread or mul.fina, wrap airtight in aluminum foil or place in resealable .freezer b13S, label and frc~e. Thaw bread at room temperature. To reheat muffins, place foil-wrapped frozen muffins in a 37S degree oven and beat 20 to 25 minutes. Or, reheat individual unwrapped muffins in the microwave oven about 30 geconds on HIGH. For mote lower-fat baking tips and a free set of recipe cards, · send your name and complete address to: Quaker Oats Lower-Fat Bakinf Recipes, The Quaker Oats Co. P.O. Box 049003, Chicago, IL 60(i()4.9003. Off er good while supplies last. Allow 4 to 6 weeks for delivery. OATMIAL CARROT CAKI aRIAD •Bread ~~cup raisins • 1 cup Quaker oats (quJck or old-fashioned, uncooked) • one 8-ounce can crushed , pineapple ID Julee, undrained • ~ cup skim milk • .. ea whites or 2 eggs • 2~ cups all·purpose Dour • ~ cup vegetable oll • 1 cup firmly packed brown sugar • 1 teaspoon vanilla • 1 tablespoon baldna powder • ~ teaspoon baking soda • ~ teaspoon around cinnamon • ~ teaspoon salt (optlonal) • 1~ cups shredded carrots (about 3 medium) a. ....... . ...................... , ........ • 2 ......... .,...,.,.1 .... .... _ ..... . • v. ............ .. ..... ..,.. .. U.. U.,MIY ~1tett .... 1y .... ......................... ....... 8fN"tlY ..... .... u...., ........... , ..... .. .... .-.111r1..aawe11 .... ....... ~ ..... , .... ... ..... , ................... , ............ ,cl••-••tliHI .... , ......... -... '" .. ........... c.,.1t .. . NelnM ............ , ' , .................... 1c., .. . ....... ,,. .......... ... .. u •• , .............. ,, ..• ,... ..... , ............. ,, ....................... ......................... hkeMte7a•l ..... er •Rtll ...... pick 1 ... rtell In ..... ,, ....... , ...... . ...... ,., .......... c •• 110 ....... , , ...... fr•• , ••• c .. 1 ... ,1.111y. ............ , ... , •... ...................... u.t11 ..... 11a.1t .... ,ceveretl, la refrl9lf'tlter •P I• 3 tltsyS. .. ,,, .. 16. Nvtrltle• .............. 1/16 .... , .... wltlae ........... C•l•rle1210, c.1 ... 1 .. ,, ..... 36, , •••• ••• .., .... , ....... 19, a. ...... , •••• ,, ...... . 12s • ., C•rlt••ytlr•t• 399, Dlet•ry fllter 29, Pretela 49· APPLl'N CtllDDAR OATMIAL MUFFINS • 1\4 cups Quaker oats (quick or old fashioned, uncooked) • ~ .... ~ Wt (opdoul) • • ~ cup chopped apple (about l mtdhUD) • lV• cup1 all·purpote nour •~cupnpr • ~ cup (3 oaces) 1bredded ftCluctd tat cbedclar cbeete • 1 t.teapooa b1kJn1 powder • 1 tea1pooa apple pie spice or around cln.umon • 1 cup apple Juice or sldm milk • l eu wbltet or 1 eg, ll&hlly beateo • ~ teaspoon baldna soda • l lablespooDI vqttable OU Heat oven to 400F. Line 12 medium muffin cups with paper baking cups or spray bottoms only with no-stick cooking spray. Combine oats, flour, sugar, baking powder, apple pie spice, baking soda and salt. Stir in apples and cheese. Add combined apple juice, egg whites and oil; mix just until dry ingredients arc moistened. Fill muffin cups almost full. Bake 20 to 24 minutes or until golden brown. Serve warm. Serves one dozen. Nutrition information: 1 muffin: Calories 170, Calories From Fat 39, Total Fat 4g, Saturated Fat Og, Cholest~rol Smg, Sodium l lOmg, Carbohydrate 28g, Dietary Fiber 2g, Protein Sg. OATMIAL DRUM DATU • One 8-ounce package pitted dates. coarsely chopped • 1~ cups (3 sticks) margarine or butter, chilled • 1~ cups oranae Julee • 2 cups Quaker oats (quick or old lashlonid, uncooked) • 2~ cups all-purpose Oour • 1 ~ cups firmly packed brown _s:ugar • 1 ~ cups naked coconut, divided • ~ teaspoon salt (optlonol) Fartners = • . , daW uu · ;· T•N• 31~ -. d·•P••npM1~11e1 bwilfli6"350F. In medium ._ aa~pan. combine dates and • ~ cup 1upr oranac juice. Bring to a boll; • l4 -cup Quaker oata (quick or old rccMie hear. Simmer 15 to 20 Whiolled, uncooked) mifuta or until thickened, stirring • 1 tablespoon Jnstant coffee ocauionally. Remove from beat; aranules • coQI IUghtly. •~cup O 11iot) margarine or in large bowl. combine flour, sugar and salt. CUt in margarine butter, chHled until mixture is crumbly. Stir in • ~ cup semi-~eet chocolate piece• oats. 1 cup coconut and nuts; mix • ~ cup chopped walnµts well. Rcs~rve 4 cups oat mixture Grease 12<up Bundt pan or . tor, t~ping; set ~ide. Press 10-inch tube p~. For coffeecake, in reqwrung oat mature onto . large mwng bowl, combine hot roll bottom o( ungreascd 13x.9-inch mix. yeast packet, Qats and tall; mix baking pan. Spread. date m~ture well: In small shucepah, heat milk evenly over crust to within_ V• inch and margarine over low heat until of edges. Sprinkle with reservect margarine is melted; remove from oat mixture. Sprinkle with heat. Stir in suaar; cool mixture to remaining ~ cup coconut, patting 120F to 130P. Add to oat mixture; gently. Bake 35 to 40 minutes or add ~ggs. Beat at low speed of until light golden brown. Cool electric mixer until well blended . completely; cut into bars. Store . . 1 • s · tightly covered. 24 bars. _ Stir m choco ate pieces. poon into NUTRITION INFORMATION: 1 prepared pan. bar: Calories 280, Calories From !...\ For topping, combine flour, sugar, Fat 121, Total Fat 13g, Saturated oats and coffee granules; cut in Fat 3.Sg, Cholesrerol Omg, Sodium margarine unt.il mixture is crumbly. 140mg, Carbohydrate 38g, Dietary Stir in chocola~e pieces and nuts. Fi~er 2g, Protein 3g. Sprinkle evenly over top of dough . MOCHA WALNUT CRUNCH COFFllCAKI COPPllCAKla •Coffee cake: One 16-ounce packaJe hot roll mix • 1 cdp Quaker oats (quick or old rashloned, uncooked) • ~ teaspoon salt (optional) ·~cup milk • ~ cup (1 stick) margarine or butter • ~ cup suaar • 3 eggs, room temperature • ~ cup semi-sweet chocolate pl,~u et • a Cover loosely With plastic wrap. Let rise in warm place 30 to 40 minu tes or until nearly double in size. Heat oven to 3SOF. Bake, uncovered, 45 to SO minutes or until w<X?den pick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool in pan 10 minutes. Remove from pan, topping side up, onto wire rack. Cool completely. Store tightly covered. Serves 16. Nutrition information: 1/ 16 of recipe: Calorics 390, Calories From Fat 170, Total Fat 19g, Saturated Fat 5g, cholesterol 40mg, Sodium 350mg, Carbohydrate 49g, Dietary Fiber 2g, Protein 8g .. at Atrium Court 99~ IN FASHION ISLAND Home Of Orange County's Finest Produce! Prices Good Through Wednesday 3/15/95 ...