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1995-03-30 - Orange Coast Pilot
INllDI A 'Bear' market Newport-Mesa school district officials hope to pocket more than $4.5 · million from the sale of the Bear Street school site by mid-October. Page A3 D Cross about lost walks Corona del Mar merchants are unhappy that the Coast Highway repaving project will lead to the loss of painted crosswalks at three in~ersections. D Signing on Page A4 Merchants continue to voice their displeasure with the sign ordinance in Costa Mesa. Page A6 0 Slngln' the happy blues Jeff Bitetti, who lost his mother, father and brother in a two-year period and was left to raise his two nieces, has every reason to sing the blues. But the Corona dcl Mar musician will treat his audience to upbeat, original and life-affirming songs when the Jeffrey John Band debuts in concert Saturday night \tVeekend/Page Cl D Newport Harbor's Erin Murphy shouts encouragement to a teammate during the Sailors' 90-80 girls swimming victory over Corona cfel Mar Wednesday. The Newport boys were also winners, 93-77, marking the school's first swimming sweep over their crosstown rivals in more than a decade. Sports/Page B 1 LOCALS ONLY Event to benent omcer The Newf>:<?rt Harbor-Costa Mesa Lions Club will stage a coloriul and extrava~ant fashion show on April 21 in an effort to raise funds for Bob Henry -the Ne~rt Beach police omcer woo was critically injured in a shooting earlier this month. "Islands, Hott Hotl Holl " will feature a Polynesian dance.troupe and a fashion show featuring various dignitaries as inodels. A silent auction will Include an opportunity to bid on dates with Newport Beach police orncers. Tickets to the 6 p.m. fund -raiser and dinner are $40 and mar be purchased thrQugh loca police departments or by calling 644-3665 or 546-1429. INDIX Around Town ............... A.15 Best Buys .............. ~: ........ A.2 Classified ........................ 84 Community Forum ........ A.14 Ttle Crowd ..••............... A 12 Fred Martin .................... Al $pc>tts .....•.•..•.....•.....•.....• 81 W..tcerld .•....•••...•.......•.• C1 - Spring sets off the tourist spark ;""\ v( Soon there'll be No place to park It's warm enough to go bare toe'd And this will end our weather ode. See Weather, Page A2 : .. Little local support. shown for :·sales tax hike . ~ Proposed half-penny raise headed to ballot; county officials say agencies' returns will be slashed without increase. visors voted Tuesday to. place the . ~ item on the ballot. BY EVAN HENEUON, STAFP Wann A half-cent sales tax increase, proposed to help Orange County work its way out of bankruptcy, is no more popular with local resi- dents and city officials than it was before the county Board of Super· But county offici als say without the tax 'hikc1 cities, schools and special distracts may not get as much of their investments back. Whil e the county could likely guarantee a 76% investment re· turn -tax or no tax -the ability to supply recovery notes guaran- teeing an extra 10% to 13% might be jeopardized without a tax in· crease. "The county's ability to make good on those recovery notes is very dependent on tho revenue The1 don't mind staJlng after . school D rama students Elizabeth Pernstein, right, and Rachel Furman, both 9, practice their animal roars at Kaiser Elementary School in Costa Mesa. At right, drama insb11Ctor John Doige goes through lines with Rachel and Jason Hardy, 10, as part of the new After School Classes program at Kaiser. See story/Page A 7 PHOl'OS 8Y MAic M.AilTIN/DAILY PILOT Cellular phones are popular article with local thieves ~ Criminals ring up profits by snagging portable phones, reprogramming them and reselling them. BY C.U.OLYN MlLLBJ.. STA" Wama NEWPORT BEACH -Wheth· er it's hidden under your car scat, left for a minute on your patio table or clipped to your clothing as you wait in the lobby of a crowded restaurant. cellular phones are bting ripped ·off, reprogrammed and ~used at a rapid rate. ln Newport Beach, it happen to an estimated 2S cellular phones a month -mostly from cars, Newport Beach Police Lt. Paul Henisey said. And accordina to re· cent police records, nine incidents or Molen cellular phones were re· ported in the ,ast two weeks ak>ne. "It is a hot Item," Henlaey Mid. "It has been onp>ina lhlce ceU phones came out. 11'1 peaked ower the last year becau• they ire H9 Marlnera Elemenwys year-end field trip in jeopardy after thieves rob school safe. See story/Page Al to reprogram and sold to unscru· pulous users." Stealing the portable phones - which range In price from $40 to more than Sl,000 -can be quite lucrative for the cellular swindlers, who often resell a reprogrammed phone on the black market for about $200 each. "They can make phone calls and it winds up on other people's bills," Henisey said. "They have people out there scannin• the air· waves and have software tn a por· table computer that can reproaram 110lcn cell phone to radio f re· q!Cncies (unauspcctina) people ait usina as they are drivina around." Henisey said with their in- creued knowlcda• of hoW the ...... ...._.1. stream that would enable them to go back to the bond market for' additional funds," said Todd Ni- cholson, president of the Orange County Business Council. "In that sense, it's my understanding that the (tax increase and the settle- ment plan) arc linked." County spokeswoman Lynne Fishel said the full effects of the tax increase on the settlement plan have not been determined. But she too indicated there could be a strong connection. "Both the settlement plan and See TAX/Pa1e A9 NeWport-Mesa angry about county's secret deal with district creditor Bv Juus Ross CANNON STAFF Wa.rru N E W P 0 RT ·M ES A School board members were stunned this week to learn of a secret December agreement be- tween the county and one of 1he district's creditors. . In the agreement, the counly promises F:rnnic Mac paymen t of 1he $7 million principal owed by Newport-Mesa before the district gets its share of money invested in the county See DIA.L/Pa1e A9 Water district threatened with another lawsuit ~ In a letter, a former Mesa Consondated meter reader's attorney gives district officials one week to address her sex discrimination and harassment complaints . Bv TtNA BORGATIA, Sr.uf \\'1unR COSTA Ml::SA -Mesa Conwlidated Water Di!tlrict olfo:1als have one more .... eek to <Hldrc,., complaints of SC.\ Jiscrirn111ation and sexuJI h;,i· ra )smcnt oullineJ in a grievance filed morl! tlun two )Cars ago, or che 1he agency m;.iy fJcc a second lawsuit, sa) s a Ne" po rt Beach at· torney hanuling the case. Deirdre Demb1I.. -''hl) \\a:s cmplO)Cd a-. J meter rc.11.lcr fo r the d1s1rict up until Dcccmbl!r -filed her grievance an No .. embcr of l<N3. Since then, the case hai. been me t \\llh nu· merous delays -primarily on the pan of the dis1ric1. Dcmb1k's complaints \\Crc brought to 1he at· tent ion of the district's board of dircc1ors just th is month, when she approached the members with lhe allegations. Last week, 1he board set a May l~ hearing dale for the mailer. Dul on Wednesday, Terry A. Nelson, Dembik's auorn ey, said that's 100 late. Nelson sent a letter to district officials on Fri· day, informing them that the May 18 date was not acce ptable . "We have advbed the district that .... c e\pcct to have good faith discussions begin "'i1hin 1he next week, 01herwise we will assume th:u they have no desire to resolve the maller," Nelson said, adding that the delays in resolving the grievance suggest a lac!.. of commi1ment on be- half of distric1 management. "It 's apparen t to an)body who lool..s :it th. c:ise that it has not been taken seriow>ly," he said. Dcmbil..'s case would be the second l:i"su1t fil ed against the district in just a li11lc more than a yc:ir. Another forme r employee -Ka1hy Gunter, who was employed by 1he district as an eng1· ncering technician -filed a lawsuit alleging similar complaints in February of last year. That case is set for trial on April 24. However, other former female employees claim thal complaints of sexual haro~ment and di scrim ination date as far b~ck as 10 years ago. Meanwhile, a Mesa Consolidated spokes· woman said any delays in handling Dembik's SH DISTRICT/P•1• A10 THANKS, .ROD Retired school trustee and longtime community volunteer MacMillian will be the guest of honor at tonight's 'Reunion in the Park' BY A.NNETI'E CHAVEZ, STAFF Warna R od MacMillian thought it was about time for a reunion. Since he retired from the Newport-Mesa Unified School District In December, the 68-yeor-old Youth baseball program Is just one of Rod MacMillian's legacies. Sports/Page 81 Costa Mesa resident doesn't act to sec much or his former colleagues anymore. And having pent nearly three -decade in the district, there arc Iota or people he y he'd like to 1ee ._ain. Well, at turns out there arc Iota ot people who would like to ... MACMIWAll/h9e A1e I G, ba ha Ye SC Fe pc tk a~· ag th ag ·O ti< ro tic pc A2 Thursday, March 30, 1995 Antique store .celebrates With sale N EWPORT ANTIQUES IS celebrating its first anniversary with discounts on merchandise. · Included in today's paper is a coupon for 1S% off any item In the store: The offer expires April 10. Newport Antiques is the largest antique store south or the 405 Freeway, with 4,000 square feet or ' space. It has a large selection or oak furniture, art deco pieces, mahogany, collectibles Crom Austria, plates and --... vases. Newport Antiques (631-2411) is at 2384 Newport Blvd., in Costa Mesa. D IN HOPES THAT the rains may finally be over, Mike Dunkley of Knlghtsbridge Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning Best is offering Best Buy B readers a •--•u•ys __ "Springtime Super SpeciaJ." The special includes: any sofa and love seat or armchair cleaned for $75; a whole house of clean carpets, including all area rugs, for $95 or less: and your traffic areas in all rooms and hallways cleaned for $45. · "Of particular interest and value, along with every carpet cleaning, is the offer of a free application of Fibergaurd stain resist treatment, which is particularly effective around children and pets," says Dunkley. "Additionally all of my work is guaranteed with the dictum, 'if the · spots come back ... so do I.' " For a Cree estimate Crom Knightsbridge, call 673-7561. D LOOK FOR THE coupon in today's I paper for a baker's dozen of bagels , for $3.99 at the new East Coast Bagels, next to Diedrich's Coffee on 17th Street in Costa Mesa. East Coast Bagels is the fir,t franchise store opened ~y Tony and Patty KJune of Long Beach. The store has two entrances, which the Klunes say allows employees to help customers twice as fast. The bagel shop serves breakfast and lunch, and it opens at 5:30 a.m. Monday through Friday, and at 6:30 a.m. weekends, closing daily at 6 p.m. LOCALS ONLY cm EDITOR IRIS YOJtOI, S74-423J Looking Into the future: National Career College student Eileen Byme, center, uses three-dimensional CITYllDI M.u.c MArm~/DAJLY PILOT glasses to view a computer screen at a. job fair Wednesday at the Orange County Fairgrounds. Captured murder suspect may be linked to local robberies A man arrested in Oregon Sunday on suspicion of a Laguna Beach robbery and slaying Feb. 20 may also be responsible for a string of armed robberies that include two in Costa Mesa. Manuel Ramirez Rodriguez, 25, of Corona, was arrested in Chiloquin, a small town in Oregon, and brought back to Orange County Tuesday by Laguna Beach police officers. The suspect was immediately booked into the Laguna Beach Police Department jail for parole violation and robbery warrants in Tustin and Riverside County. Rodriguez is suspected of killing the owner of a Baskin· Robbins ice cream shop in Laguna after robbing a flower shop and music store in Costa Mesa and another Baskin-Robbins in Tustin - all within an hour. Although the suspect has changed his appearance by gaining weight, shaving off his moustache and thinning his eyebrows since the robbery spree the night of Feb. 20, he still bears the tattoos -one in block-calligraphy lettering and one that may form teardrops under an eye - identified by witnesses in the Costa Mesa robberies at Conroy's flower store and Blockbuster music store, both on Harbor Boulevard. "We think they're linked but it's still under investigation," said Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Tom Boylan. Rodriguez has an extensive criminal record and had been in state prison twice for felony offenses, including robbery, police said. Laguna Beach police investigators, who had more than 300 leads, were tipped off by a woman in Oregon who recognized the suspect on the "America's Most Wanted" television show. The woman had met and talked with Rodriguez at a bar in the Portland area. A live line-up was organized Wednesday to allow the victims of the Laguna Beach Baskin-Robbins incident to view Rodriguez with five other individuals similar in appearance, according to a press release from the Laguna Beach Police Dcpartm~nt. If Rodriguez is responsible, the night shift at Conroy's on Harbor Boulevard will breathe a sigh of relief. "IC that is him and he's guilty, then he's getting what's coming to him," said an 18,year-old Conroy's employee who did not want to be identified. Newport~ Mm Dally P weekend ban111t· ruins students' fteld trip plans BY CilOLYN ~JLLBll, STAM Wt.JT11. What the sixth·f raders at Mariners Elementary Schoo didn't know when they left school Friday afternoon was that . come Monday morning, they would have to start from scratch rais- ing money for their end-of-the-year field trip. Over the weekend, the $116 the stu- dents raised by recycling aluminum cans was stolen -along with $115 for other school projects -from a se- cured safe in the Newport Beach school's administration office. The students had been saving for a field trip to the Huntington Library, Art and Botanical Gardens in San Marino. "They estimated they needed three buses at $200 a bus to get the kids up to the library," said Nadine Wilek, di- rector of communications for the New- port-Mesa Unified School District. "Now they've got quite a ways to go." According to police reports, an un- known suspect entered the school's ad- ministration office and removed the money and a set of keys Crom a se- cured wooden storage box -marked "safe" -in the supply room. The master lock on the box was not found, leading police to believe the lock was possibly cut. The school's alarm system was set Friday afternoon, and over the weekend the alarm was not activated. "Every school is security-conscious, but nothing is fool-proof," Wilek said. TeWlnkle Middle School to host era~ fair on Saturday TeWinkle Middle School will host a crafts fair on Saturday in an attempt to raise funds to support the school. The fair will be Crom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Boswell Hall at the school, located at 3224 California St. in Costa Mesa, and will include a number of items for sale, including bird houses, doll clothes and quilted animals. The school wiU also have raffle prizes and food and drinks available. For more information, call the school at 556-3433. East Coast Bagels (650-9223) is at 474 E. pth St., in Costa Mesa. D SMITII & HAWKEN, the Mill Valley-based garden store, finally made it to Costa Mesa. The Smith & Hawken ( 437-9526) store took over the old Scars lawn and garden center, between Nordstrom and the Scars Hewitt, Lobdell to host May 5 seminar on how to access the media automotive repair station at South Coast Plaza. Everything you'd ever need for gardening can be found in this store. There's a large selection of plants, clothing, shoes, hats, tools, garden furniture and garden ornaments. There's also lots of merchandise for inside the home, including indoor plants, vases, wreaths and plant stands. D THE BAY SHORES Inn (675-3463) at 1800 W. Balboa Blvd., in Newport Beach is offering a "spring senior program." Any AARP member will receive 25% off regular rates Sunday through Thursday, through June 1. For more details and reservations, call (800)-222-6675. Dest Buys appears Thursdays and Saturdays. Wbtthtr you're a merchant or a shopper, If you know of a good buy, all mt at 540-1214, tax me at 6464110 or write to mt: Best BU}'s, D•lly PJJ04 330 W. Bay SL, Costa Mesa, Calif. 91621. Would you like to harness the power of the media? Get gobs of free ink? Become a media sensation? "Journalists Reveal the Secrets to Get· ting Good Publicity" is a lively three-hour seminar conducted by television and radio personality Hugh Hewitt and news- paper editor William Lobdell, working JOurnalists who know -from the inside ACADIMIC •Newport Beach rcsidcnl Loren C. Pannier, senior vice president and chief financial officer of Carl Karcher Enterprises, is the newest member of the University Advisory Board nt California State University, Fullerton. • Dr. John J. Cloonan, Dr. Jdfrey D. Schones and Dr. Scott N. Mac Adam , or the Costa Mesa-based Broadway Chiropractic Center, received Masters recognition after completing an intensive postgraduate course on the AMA guidelines to ttie evaluation of permanent medical conditions. • Jennifer 4'un WldlowskJ, from Costa Mesa, was selected for the Dean's List in the College of Natural Sciences at California State University, Chico for fall 1994. She is a senior majoring in physical sciences. iiijiiliL MAIUNe ADD•UI Nitrations. editorial matter or IMS-vcnilemenu herein can be n:pn>- Our addte11 II 330 W. Bey St .. duced without written permission Colla Mcaa. CA 92627. of flOP7rllll1 owner. ...... TOMAICIACOU1mo11 MOW TO DACH UI h ii b J>doc'1 policy 10 Pftl"'PtlY Circulation n...1 ff.,..._, Publisher coma Ill cnon ol lllblcantt. (The Times wwi.. t..Wcll, £dil0f ])leMe call 540-1124, en. 130. Thank ro-i Oranp County) s.m: ~ ~n-M Editor (800) l52-91 .. l I.rt. Y...._ City EditOf m Matt M ....... hoio Editor The ~ lcach/CAJlc• Mm AdvertJslna 8611 fn..i&, Circulation M•n•' D1ily Pl (USPl-144-IOO) Is Classified 642-5678 1111111 K1ipt. Pn>d\actbl ~MfCr publilllcd Moftda~~ SM1tr-Display 642-4321 MkNel n.ttMI', Di.play Malilttr drj. I• Newport Md C.olta Editorial J""1 OetU ... Ouliflcd M••t ...... ~.,. cMlty ~ News 540.122'* ,,..,... lhll. C'olllJofltr able "Y tublcrtbina eo Tiiie T1mu Sports 642-4330 On!llC ~•IJ JO) 1'2·9141. In .,. .. Olllllde N-.on 8ucfl News, Sports Fax 646-4170 end Coal• McM. auf11c:ripdoN to alADIU NOTUlll die o.,_ Ptlo4 only .,. 8'1ailnble Main Omce '4t·MU .., .. 11 •.51 "" -•h. See-Bu iness Office 642-4321 Giid datil ,...... Cild It Coftl Dusfoess fax 631·5902 Yout'llMWMllta abcMlc clle Dally Mm, CA. (Prbl u61111 ap-P110t or ...,. dpi wUI be ieootdcd = uace ll'ld local cues.) Pul>l.htd~ and fl'tc9 dWwaJJ to f.dil« WI-MASTER; Send 1ddr• Cali(onw t11ty '""' LoWcll. n. ... 24-hour ~ llO The Newport 8uctll Ne_,, a Tuna M"'°' Company alll*Criaa umc. mey be vJoCd to co.ti Mal Daily Pilot, P 0 Bo• ICQ)(d ~UCIS to ltie cclltOf on 1111 1'60, 0.1 Mae, CA 92626 aopt~, "" ~ Coprfipt: No MllWt ttorica. u. J'mldcnr Md :t.0 .. I -how to access the media. The program -geared for anyone who understands free p~blicity but doesn't know the best way to get it is priceless (including CEOs, non-profit executives, entrepreneurs, PR professionals) -will be off cred Friday, May 5 from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the Balboa Bay Qub, 1221 W. Co:ist Highway in Newport Beach. All proceeds from the $95 seminar will go to the Orangewood Children's Home for abused and neglected children. Seminar topics include: why good pub- licity matters; 10 easy way to get free PR; auditing your past PR effort; how to be- friend the media; 20 PR tactics that ir- ritate the media; and how to handle a PR crisis. Participants will also receive easy- to-use Corms and other reference materi- als. For reservations, please make your $95, tax-deductible check to the: Daily Pilot (please mark on both the check and en- velope: Media Access/Orangewood Fund- raiser), P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92628-1560. For more information, please call 642-4321, ext. 334. FINI PRINT • Courtney D. Berlinger, daufhter of Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. BerlJn&tr o Newport Beach, was named to the Dean's List of Emory College in Atlanta for the fall 1994 semester. • Sboko Takada, of Corona del Mar, was named 10 the Dean's Lisi for the fall semester al Scripps College in Oaremont. • PauJ Henderson of N~rt Beach, a junior at Corona dcl Mar High School, attended tho National Youth Leadership Forum on Law and the Constitution in Washington, D.C., March 14-19. He was among the 350 high school students from across the United States selected to participate In the conference. • Two local students from Costa Mesa, AJlaa CastJllo RamJrn and kck)' L WIUJam10n, were named 10 the President's WIATHIR 11MP1unaau chance of low cloud• a.ncf fog Newport Be¥h Atons the coast 64/47 Bal~ after mldnlsht. 64/47 Costa Meu TIDD 70/46 TODAY COf'OM del Mar Flnt low 66148 2:36 a.m ........... 0.1 Flnt high I UaJ fOHCAIT 8:39 a.m ...... m .. 4.1 LOCATION SIU Second low .... " ...... Wedge 2:41 p.m.-....... 0.) 1·2 S Second his" Newport 1·2 s 8:50 p.m ........... S.2 Blacklff 1°2 S FRIDAY Riwt ,..ty 1·2 • flttt low CdM 1·2 • 3:11 a.m ......... " 0.0 . First high · 80ATIN• 9117 a.m ........... 4.S Uifit vatbble Stcond low wtftd• •hlftlna 3:08 p.m .• _ ...... 0.7 southwnt 10 to 1S Second hish knots, 1 fooc 9:17 p.m .. , ........ S.l wutetfy ~II. A Water temp.1 62 .. ~ ..... _.... .. Honor Lisi for the fall semester at Cypress College. both of Newport Beach, and Bao-Quoc Nguyen, of Costa Mesa, were named to the Founder's Day List for academic excellence for the fall semester at Indiana University. • Gonz.olo Gonz.aln, Amil Davfd Pabalan and Danlelle A. Smith, all of Costa Mesa, were recently named to the Dean's List for tho fnll semester al Cypress College. · • Mitchell S. Purcell, from Newport Beach, was recognized as a Oarcmont McKenna College Distinguished Scholar for the 1994 fall semester. • Dalo L Mananall, of Costa Mesa, received a bachelor of science degree in special education from East Tennessee State University In December. •Catherine B. Salvino, Crom Newport Beach, was named to the Dean's List for the fall semester at Northern Michigan University. • Courtney Lyons Scott, of Newport Bench, was named to the Dean's List for the fall scmestc;r al the University of Delaware. • Corona deJ Mar Hlab School Clan of 1975'1 reunion will be held Saturday, Sept. 16 at the Balboa Yacht Oub In Newport Beach. For more information, contact Shannon Aikman at 721-0172 or 645-3700. MIUTAaY •Army Sat Thuy-Khue T. Pham, brother or Costa Mesa resident Lyty T. Nauyen, has completed a U.S. Anny primary leadership development coune at Fiwimons Army Medical Center In Aurora. Colo. •Andrew P. Vlebc and Andrea G. Browac, IUU RIPOltT ...... s.rt11 .. iW.ntnk ......... heeHy Weak, gutleu waves and a small dropping combination of swells made • nothl"g weekend for local surfers. New storm actlvltiet In the Cull of Alub later this week will hopefully bring us a new northwest 1well for lh• "WHbnd and Into nellt week. Also, new storm activity In the toUthern hemisphere promllff us som. south swells around the .,.....nlns of n«•t week. F&r dlJly surf repottt and forec.uts, Qll (900) 976--SUU. The ca• COIU '1.so plus M.Y pottlbf. IOll. POUCl .. LU COITAMUA 2JOO block ot Caft10tl: An unidentified tcen·•aer brought •Iona an unidentified 6-year-old when he attempted to break Into Head Start School. When a school supervisor uw the teen-aacr attemptina to break Into a dassroom, she yelled at him to leave and at that moment he picked up the small child and ran. NIWPOU aUCN 1600 Jam.boree: Never mind the cuh, tires. or automotive tools, what an unknown 1uspcct ran-off with from the ps llatlon was a .4$ Colt stainlc11 steel handgun hidden in the bottom drawer ot the lara.c. rolllna tool box. T1HOJTlll DAY • Use a ~rte with a lhoulder atrap. Clny It with tho sldo that opcn1 toward ye>\!. Hold your purse eecurcly. •Don't let any .uanacr •nto yc>\lr home -no maner ~hit the reato11 or bow dire the emeracncy ls SUppOICd to be. Make thO anerpDq pboot cal •fllle they Wiit oulllde. -OOll,,.. H.wpon .... ~ ot Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot 1 Thursday, March 30, 1995 A3 One mani s storage-space filler is another's treisure trove P lease excuse me if I boast a bit for the next 18 column inches. I have been a fairly decent fellow . recently, recyclingwise (to put it in the current, rather unsavory vernacular). fflll Ila Ill On the Coast 1 don't mean the . business ot putting our · newspapers in their bags, our plastic in its bags, my dozens or weekly diet soda cans in other bags and our unclassifiable trash in yet other bags. The recycling to which I refer involves a mountain of things that have been sitting idly in a stora~e !Jnit in Van Nuy$ smcc my father died 11 ~ years ago. I have been putting off dealing with this conglomeration ever since. Part of my procrastination is probably emotional. Most of it, however, is just sloth. Most of the storage room is filled floor to ceiling with musical scores -nearly 4,000 or them -going back from 1983 to the 1930s. I am trying to organize these and hope to donate them to a university school of music. The charts will, I think, give students and researchers an insight jnto hatr a century · ·of American popular music. The rest of the stuff consisted of trunks of band uniforms, cases of mu sic stands and lights. There was also an array of gourd-like instruments that are rhythmically shaken or scraped or honked together in the performance of various Latin dance music. To this I added some surplus musical · instruments on which our daughters used to honk; retired and/or defunct computers and slide-projection gear. In a column a few w"eek.s agd, I offered the whole batch to locaJ teachers, first-come, first served. I am pleased to report that all these orphaqs have gone on to new homes and should enjoy many more years of usefulness. The musical things reaJly never had any purpose in life but to give people pleasure, and their futures seem brighter than ever. Estancia High School music teacher Linda Messenger logged in first, at 8:30 the Monday morning after the column ran on Saturday. Linda waltzed off with an entire Jeep-load of uniforms, music stands, two clarinets, an alto sax and tlrree batons. Even with such a windfall of great stuff, Linda was able to resist my off er to throw in an aged accor<tion. Some of these items will begin their new lives this Saturday when Estancia's jazz band and combo perform in a stage-band competition at Fullerton College. I am curious to sec which of the three colors of uniform jackets they'll wear, ·and how they will cut one down for their mighty-m ite of a bass player. K atberine Infantino may well have been the first to log in, but since she called the Hot Line, 1 didn't get the message until later in the day. It worked out just fine, though, because Katherine wanted only the Latin instruments. Katherine lives in Bayshorcs but teaches in Santa Ana. She plans to use the maracas and other rattlers to give rhythm to the stories she uses to teach non-English-speaking children. Neat idea. .I gave her pick of the litter, with tbe condition that she also take the accordion. Grudgingly, 'she accepted - with the proviso that she could. bring it back if she couldn't unload it on her school's music teacher. I have not found the squeezebox on my front stoop, so I assume all goes well. Actually, I need not have gone through all that horse trading with Katherine. Another teacher, Carol Jewell of Andersen Elementary, Y{as genuinely disappointed that the accordion was · already gone. However, she overcame her grief and gladly took a couple of music stands and an assortment of Latin goodies. Dana Anderson, a Newport Heights school mom, collected the final assortment of Latin rhythm-makers. That left my computers and slide-projection stuff. A longtime friend and former colleague, graphic designer Dave Martin, told me that CompUSA in Fountain Valley accepts deceased computers. They arc used to train prison inmates in computer repair which, hopefully, will keep them straight in the future. F inally, Sally Alvarado sent a note · saying that Boy Scout Troop 104 in Costa Mesa was in dire need of the slide projectors and screen. Seems the scouts take slide photo~ on their various outings and show them at Court of Honors. "Unfortunately," Sally wrote, "the one family that owns the equipmenr just had their son reach th e rank of Eagle Scout." The lad moved on, Laking the (amity photo gear with him. "Now (our scouts) are left with nothing with which to share their great camp outs .... We would love to kelp you get rid of some clutter, while at the same tjme also benefiting a great · cause." And that's why I am so pleased with myself today. Fred MDrtin's column runs every 11wrsdDy and SDturday. Bear Street site could bring $4.5 million to district Deadline to file nnanclal aid forms at DCC Is Friday ~ Newport-Mesa could have the money in hand by October in the sale of the former sch ool location. Bv JuL1E Ross CANNON STAFF W111n:11. NEWPORT-MESA -School officials hope to pocket more than S4.5 million from the sale of the Dear Street school site by mid- October, according to a schedule presented to trustees Tuesday. The anticipated bounty, which officials are relying on to make up part of a $9.5 million expected shortfall next year, is based on in- FIGGE i' PHOTOGRAPHY formal offers received from two separate residential developers and an educational group. The Orange County Department of Education currently leases the 10.7-acre site for $100,000 per year for its child development services program. The recently renewed lease doesn't expire until June 30, 1999, according to Carolyn Stock- er, district director of management support services. The lease's termination clause Children 's Special cs-- 50% OFF on sining fees 25% OFF on portrait fees Reorders included. 240 Ne:'' port Center Drive, Suite 110 Nc:wpon Beach (714) 644-6933 Celebrating our SOth Anni11enary requires a 12-month notification prior to a sale of the property, she said. District officials plan to no- tify the county and begin negotia- tions next month for an early ter- mination of the lease, according to a schedule Stocker provided trust- ees at their regular meeting. She said she expects an updated appraisal on the property by May I. An appraisal last November set the property's value at S4.5 mil- lion. The board will set a date at its June 13 regular meeting for open- ing the bidding period, though no closing date has been set yet, she said. Board members will open bids in a public session July 11 and ac- cept oral bids, according to the schedule. Oral bids must exceed the highest written bid by 5%, Stocker said. Trustees will accept the highest bid or reject all bids within JO days. Stocker said she expects the property to close escrow by Oct. 20, at which time the district would receive its cash. The Bear Street School closed in 1987 after serving the com- munity for 22 years as a grade school. The board declared it sur· plus property March 14. Follow Your Heart t o a Spring Cele bration "Follow Your Heart.". the 1995 Ltm1t&:l Edition Event flgunne, will be av•il•ble nai.tonwide for one weeltend only • Enter the "Follow Your Heart." SwHpeWlkee tO win Precloue Moment• ehopplne •pru• throughout the year • New •print lnirc>ductlon• on dlepl•y •NI available fM .. 1e. K.C .'S -ft~ Kmart Plaza 2200 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. 646-1557 Come in and ee the finest O riental R ugs in the country. Whether you are in the market for an antique fine investment rug or a fine n ew reproduction to grace your home, come to Kismet now l ! . 10'X14' Kashan ..................................................... '2, 950. 00 THIS OFFER IS GOOD FOR THIS WEEK ONLY! 10'X17 'Ant. sarouk ........................................ : ... : ..... ':),450.00 ( Orange Coast College's Financial Aid Office is now accepting financial aid applications for the 1995-96 school year, which begins in August. Applications will be accepted through Friday. They are available in the Financial Aid Office, located on the bottom floor of OCC's Norman E. Watson Library. For application information, call the OCC Financial Aid Office at 432-5j08. WHY PAY RETAIL? BUY DIRECT FROM MANUFACTURER! ,':o 1 ·111tJ ( >rn111Jt' t 01111tr I 111 ( l11 : / ' 1, d.' QUALITY JEWELRY AT AFFORDABLE PRICES Large Selection of Loose Diamonds & Settings ~,~-~ -(j~I /" .t. ... ~_i) ~ .. ;,~ . . ~ ·~~~ W:jt~~~ . \ i-~· , ,,'.-· I~ ' .• ~ "' ~"'r: .iif·:~~ .. t . --~· I •-"'." . . \ . ' " '" 1 ct. $385 1 ct. ~785 LAJlOIST HnCTION nw• USED •• ROLEXES 11.UQUJI Ill • l'SI SIZl -I'S( ...... 00· tal ... 12111- .Jkt ... lm-Uld .S1• .4111. sns. l.Od.m» .5111 .. sza. UM ..... .5111 .... 1.1111 .. ..... 151'5' ---.net .. Iii'& $S Mt ....... J1tlo I 1 .... Sl• lmtllt 1.tld . .,. l N .szm. Crtft IJlll.11& 1 .... ~ o•c. 1.li1U6t• -"""-- SOFA DIRECT MANUFACTURED IN OUR OWN FACTORY & SOLD AT FACTORY PRICESI .. • Huge Selection of Fabrics (at "1tolesall PrlceS) • Reupholstering • Custom Upholsterilg • Satisfaction Guaranteed • Immediate Delivery AVlillMe Visit Our Showroom Nearest You! ·' . ·--~ ~ .... ~---..· -~ . . . _ . .,._\ .. ~-· . ' Gr ba ha Ye SC. Fe pc tic o~ ag th ag Cc tic ro tic pc A4 Thursday. March 30. 1995 coraa del Mar •rchanls CPllB abollt removal or pedestPI• 1 .. ~ The Coast Highway repaving project isn't winning any local favor with news that three .crosswalks will be gone. goinJ. to do everything humanly possible to get them to stop what they're doing and keep the cross- walks." risdiction over the roadway, thC?rc is linle the city can do. "In Corona del Mar, you have a major thoroughfare aoina through a major business community, and it's not always compatible for pc· destrian use," O 'Neil said. "If the state is saying there are more ac- cidents at those intersections and the city agrees, then I would have to give that serious credence." Studies by Caltrans, which is conducting the roadwork, indicate that there is a grenter potential for traffic accidents at painted cross- walks than at non-painted ones. BY Ev AN HENSUON, ST.ur Wann Even without a traffic· signal, pc· CORONA DEL MAR ._ An destrians get a "false sense of se- East Coast H ighway repaving curity" when they sec painted project, already unpopular because line~. said Caltrans spokeswoman o( the parking headaches it will Rose Orem. cause, has t'llkcn on an even more "The safety of our pedestrians is bl · d' · · "' I 1 our primary concern" Or~m said. pro ematic amension w1!•1 oca "Pedestrians feel that just because merchants. . . Officials from the Corona del there arc markings, the motonst Co will always stop." Mar Chamber of mmcrce re-Pedcstriahs can still cross..Jegally ccntly learned that W repaving at the three intersections, or else will elim.inate p~intcd . crosswalks they can walk to the nearest traffic at t~ree intersections without traf-signal. Because of the higher rate ~c signal~. The cro~walks at D~I-'Of accidents, Caltrans removes 1a, Orchid .and Ins avcnu~s w1ll -1crosswalk Jines at all non-signal in- not ~e r~paanted once the highway tcrsections whenever the agency grndang is ~mpletc. . has the opportunity, Orem said. . The prOJC~I, scheduled to beg~n Caltrans has been discussing the tn late April or early May, wall crosswalk situation with officials in eliminate parking along major Newport Beach's public works de- stretches of Coast High~ay during partment, a fact that has angered the 10 days of construction work. some chamber officials who be- Merchants and chamber rep:c-lievc they are being kept "out of sentativcs say the project will dis-the loop." courage pedestrian activity and City Public Works Director Don harm businesses. They also say Webb asked Caltrans 10 keep the motorists will drive even faster on painted crosswalks, but Caltrans the highway without painted cross-operations staff, citing the studies, \\alks 10 slow them down. have said the intersections will re- ''People will be afraid to cross main unmarked. the street unless they're at a street City Councilman Dennis O'Neil, light," said Charlie Gabbard, a whose district includes Corona del. Corona dcl Mar resident and Mar, said he understands the mcr- chamber board member. "We're chants' frustration, but without ju- Chamber officials say they will not let the matter rc$t. Gabbard plans to go to Sacramento to meet with Caltrans officials later ·this week. Chamber President Toni Van Schultze says Corona del Mar needs additional traffic lights. "I'm getting mixed messages," Van Schultze· said-. "The city is fo. cusing on business improvement, but it's not business friendly to make a speedway out of (Coast Highway)." I.any Snyder, an employee at the Mail Room. uses the Orchid Avenue crosswalk to make daily trips to the Corona del Mar post office. Using the crosswalk is al- ready a treacherous prospect, Sny- der said, and removing the mark· 'ings will make it worse. "That crosswalk is a lot of peo- ple's direct line to the post office," Snyder said. "I guess in a back- hand kind of way, this might be good for our business, but it's still stupid." And will the removed markings make Snyder change his route? "No," he said. "I'm not going to walk blocks out of my way to pick up tons of mail every day." Free tax assistance available to local residents Free income tax assistance is offered to local residents by the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS has trained volun- teers to assis1 low-income fami- lies, senior citizens, people with disabilities and non-English- spcaking individuals in preparing f cdcraJ and state income tax re- turns. Local residents can seek help by Dr. n..y J. Kn-. D.C. CJml4CTOIS AS PIMAIY WE PIOmlS Those considenng the use of chiro- practors in primary care capacities have good reason to do so. The scope and integration of services that ch1ro- i><a<:tors PfCMde make them suitable as points of entry into the health care system. Chiropractors are licensed 1n all 50 states and receive an edualtton that is quite s1m1lar to that of medical doctors Aside from many hours spent studying such subjects as anatomy, btochem1stry, and physiology, chiro- Pf«:t1c students devote attention to the study of rrusculoskelotal dlSOfdcs and their relationships to other illness- es Beyond d1agnos1ng and treating patients, the chiropractor also stands r~ to consult with and refer to a complete spectrum of health care P<OV•<Xrs In doing so, chiropractors meet their obhgat1ons and duties as pomary CtYC prCMders We grve special attention to the spine, muscles, ~. circulatory and skeletal systems -working to relieve back, neck, ltg and arm pain, head- aches, muscle and jomt discomfort. Providing our patients with excellent chiropractic health care 1n a comfort- able and df1cicnt environment is ve.ry 1mportont to us Please call 631 -5664 to schedule an appointment We're located at 2013 Newport Blvd , where our hours arc Mon-Fri 8 30om-7pm, Sat B-noon at the following Newport-Mesa sites: •Costa Mesa Library, 1855 Park Ave.; 5 to 8 p.m. Wednes- days, through April 12. Call Marianna Hoff at 646-8845. • Costa Mesa Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St.; 1 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays, through April 11. Call Walt Montgomery at 551-5 183. •Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Business Educa- tion Building, Room 104, Costa Mesa; 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays, from March 11 to April 8. Call George Blanc at '432-5880. • Oasis Senior Citizens Cen- ter, 800 Marguerite, Corona del Mar; by appointment only, through April 15. Call Celeste Jardine-Haug at 644-3244 for times. GRAND OPENING ~~c§;,J>l' BAGEL co. ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• HOT BAGELS Baked on the pr.emises • No Fat • No preservatives • No Cholesterol •COUPON••---- Don't Buy a Mattress th.t 19 bu#t to be cheap ... when you e.n buy• top-of-the-lln• Simmon~ BMutyresr lmpetfectt FROM King (9' Size 3 pc. set · These mattresses are new but are cosmetically imperfect. Some have mismatched fabrics, scuffs from shipping, sewing flaws, etc. All sold "as-ls" But at these prices, who cares!. . ~ 545·7168 3185 Hlrbor Blvd.• Co8ta Mesa (Ont 8'ock South of -Fwy.) 4 DAY SALE EVENT! . THURSDAY, MUICH 301M THROUGH SUNDAY, APRIL 2 ·TAKE AN EXTRA .. o · .. 0 OFF THE ALREADY REDUCED PRICE -ON OUR EN11RE STOCK Here is how it works: ORIGINAL PRICE TICKETED PRICE EXTRA 20% YOU PAY ONLY $10.99 7.99 -1.59 $6.40 ~~~-Demo's all four days!!! ,. HANDS-ON with all demo's! Products available for you to try on-1he spot! Check for demo schedule on the following products at the store nearest you. Winsor Newton Products • Bero! Markers • Strathmore Greeting Cards Jacquard Tie Die • Mask Making (model magic) • Speedball Block printing Paasche Airbrushes • Paper Marbling • Iwata Airbrushes Jurek Textile Airbrush Paints• Logan Matt Cutters• Fimo Clay Karat Watercolor Pencils • Sennelier Pastels, Pigments Nitram Charcoals• Caran D'Ache •Patina Antiquing Holbein Oil & WC (West L.A.)• Yarka Products• Fontek Colortag Liquitex Acrylics• Yatsutomo Inks (Chinese Calligraphy) Academy Watercolors Rotring Art Pen• Letraset Tria Markers Umited to stock on hand• No Rainchecks Bay & Oakland Area Exceptions on following: Uquitex 2 oz. tubes, Strathmore Sketch Drawing, Winsor Newton Products. ore NEWPORT BEACH 4040 C.mpua °'· LOS ANGELES STUDIO CITY 714·250-7353 7301 W. Beverly Blvd. 11450 Ventura Blvd. OHNSUN~Y1 213·933·9284 818·505-1383 WESTl.A PASADENA SANTA BARBARA 11 HO s.nta Monica Btvd. « South Reymond Ave. 3021·A De u YIN 310·477·0451 818· 795-4985 805·687·9191 SAN DIEGO OAKl.AND/BERKElEY SAN FRANCtSCO 13tA 1 tth SC. 5301 IANldw•y 112.......nlt. 619-233-95« 510·858·2787 415-m-2111 V1SA MASTERCARD DISCOVER AMEX ACCEPTED Free Pertdno •t MIHlon 1treet gerege With •10 pun:heM. t \ Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Thursday, March 30, 1995 AS CHEESECAKE ON A STICK Inventor offers the frozen treat at his Costa Mesa store and hopes to sell his product in malls soon BY ANNA MAlu1 STOLLEY. SnclAl. TO THI DAILJ Pn.c:>T 0 n a hot summer dny, what do you crave? Something cold? On a stick? New York Cheesecake Company owner Vince DiMeglio thinks he knows what you want. frozen cheesecake on a stick, of course. DiMeglio came up with the idea several years ago. "They put hot dogs and bananas on sticks," said DiMcglio, "and, I knew chce5c- cake froze real well. "(So) I t~ought: 'Cheesecake on a stick will sell,' It seemed reason- able." DiMcglio invented, then dis- played the cheesecake on a stick at his store on West 19th Street. DiMeglio. And even today, customeri aren't exactly lining up to snatch up the portable slabs of cheese- cake. Still, DiMcglio believes his cheesecake on a ~tick is ready for the masses. He and new partner John Capezzuto plqn to expand the business and have high hopes of opening up severaf stores in local malls soon. "Cheesecake on a stick is per- fect for the 'llall," explained Cape- zzuto. "1t•s easy to carry." DiMegliO. has run New York Cheesoca~ out-of·his small shop on 19th Street for 10 years. The Huntjngton. Beach re$ident claims his cheesecake recipe is more than 100 years old, inherited from his father. But with Capez.zuto's help, DiMeglio now plans to increase distribution of his cheesecake and introduce the cheesecake on a stick to the wholesale market. But arc the masses ready for cheesecake on a stick?. "Well, l'd give it a shot," said Dennis G ross, manage r of Smart & Final, a neighboring i.tore . "But to be honest with you, I like io sit down for cheesecake with a glass of milk." Dipped in chocolate, ·the large slice of cheesecake on a i.tick comes in several varieties: plain, stra-.xberry, chotolate tnarble fudge, chocola~ r(larble fu dge with chocolate; r hips and amaretto. clers & Lo:in Company owner Sam Solomon gave his approval to the chccsecake-siclc concept. "I think its a good idea. My wif c likes (DiMeglio's) cheesecake very much." But th~rc are always naysayers. Said Solomon'i. friend Jan Wenj: "I think it's stupid." Down the street at Taco Mesa, restaurant customer Joe Absey was a bit confused by the idea. "Would the crust be on the out- side o r the inside? How abo ut the cherries? Would they Superglue them on~" p0ndered Absey, who "as taking a lunch break from his job ti'> a snlesman. "l am just try- ing to figure th~s out." Out ~1tick·thinl..ing Frank Pirkel, O\\nC r of Erhardt Insurance Ser- \ICC, took the idea one step fur- ther. At first , customers ignored the new product in favor of his more traditional fare. "It's gone through fou r or five variations in size, shape and packaging," said Up to now, most of DiMeglio's business has consisted of supplying whole cheesecakes to restaurants such as the Rusty Pelican and the International House of Pancakes. ll'..All HOOSTEN/DAILY PILOT Vince DeMeglio is the inventor of cheesecake on a stick. "It sounds like it would taste . good," said Tom Jurado, a pmatc security officer for the DepJ rt- ment of Motor Vehicles. "Nice on a hot day like today. But it would probably be a lot of calories." ''I wbh there we re other things they put on sticks," Pirkel said. "Taco on a stick would be a lot · easier to cat." Costa Mesa seeks volunteers for April 22 clean-up day Residents, groups, and busi- nesses interested in helping Costa Mesa put on a clean face arc invited to join the city's an- nual neighborhood cleanup day April 22. The event, called ''Neighbors for Neighbors," is an attempt to help reduce trash, graffiti and other unwanted items from the _'J OUR MEALS ARE A • TRIP TO MEXICO (OCKTAILS ·FOOD TO GO PHONE AHEAD community. The cleanup is co- sponsored by the city or Costa Mesa, the Orange County Fair- grounds and the California As- sociation of Nurserymen. The clean-up will take place from 9 a.m. to noon at Canyon Park, 970 Arbor St.; and from 8:30 a.m. to noon in the Joann .Street-Maple Avenue neighbor- hood, located south of Estancia High. Participants are also invited to attend a post-cleanup get- together at Canyon Park, which will include lunch and entertain- ment. Call 754-5023 for more infor- mation . • Bankruptcy • Corporations • Wills/Trusts •Divorce • Tenant/Landlord • Much, much more ~lf f otnf n llntnleonl Clinics, Inc. Richard H. Foltz -we accept all ma1or credit cards -751-0734 2900_Bri t I Sujte A 1 QB_!__Costa Mesa magical Entertainment for Just a Few Beans · Get Cable Installed for Only $4.95 and Your Choice of Premium Packages For Only 95¢ Embark on a Golden Adventure Experience the adventure of enchanted entertainment with C.Omcast Cablevision's Enchanted Service -a magical package of cable channels which is truly golden! Comcast,s Enchanted Service gives you exciting television entertainment with the best in movies, specials, news, music, sports and so much more. With Comcast's Starpack Premiwn Packages you can enjoy the latest Hollywood blockbuster movies, uncut, uninterrupted and commercial-free, in the convenience of your own home. Order a 3--Star Premiwn Movie Package along with Enchanted Service and rec.eive Encore and The Disney Channel and your choice of two from HBO, Showtime or Cinemax for only 95¢ for your first month of service. Or, order a 4-Star Package along with Enchanted Service and receive HBQ Showtime, Cinemax, Encore and The Disney Channel for only $1.95 for your first month of service. Starpack Premium Packages, with the latest hit movies, original ~ri~ and special events are your magic . fonmtla for entertainment adventure. Call today and get htstaJlation for only $4.95 1r&11 .. 1ion oner vmlld 1or •tendard ~ of one 111 ou1tt It. ~ .,.., flll9*1 '" acip6e9 IO .. Olhe• Nlaki-t ~I motlltl• of Sl•rpecia-Ottt Ml It lor ).$Ur Of '51118 IOr ~ si.r peck11g9t I* mo!!lh PrlCi9e Clo nOC indlne lf1~ Of tu .. Olh« r~ l'WY ICllllV Ofltf • ..,.. .. M41y • 1 IOS ) In another store not far from DiMeglio's shop, Costa Mesa Jew- PERFORMANCE JAGUAR• ROVER ojr fo o o I ;t ~ d ~! ,, / 4.~ ! ,.o ' ! 1 OTH ANNIVERSARY! 714/ 650•5860 7:30 AM -6:00 PM • 2 SHUTILES RUNNING DAILY 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• c\\all\be~ ......... 1 Niw!, HAA~ AREA u••-~. CHAMIER O f COMME:CI 111'4i4' ~·~ td th ~~~~~fJ/~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• at 5:00 pm at John Dominis Restaurant. The power of the Newport Harbor Area, Irvine and Costa Mesa Chambers come together lor one great networking event! Then, on April 20, come join the ex· citement at our Spring Busiless & Health Expo. Held at the Four Seasons Hotel, The Chamber has some great events for you 1n Aprdl This month, be sure to join us et the Silver Anchor Awards Breakfast on April 18 at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel where we honor five of our community's best volunteers. Come help us salute these unsung heroes. For those of you looking for net- working, be sure to be at the special Tri·Crty Business After Hours, Apol 19 · the event win feature table-top d15Plays from local busiless, as weU as great net- workilg. The event is FREEi New Chamber Members in February! The AM New Newport Auto C.nter Aulomob!le Selet & SeMU • 673-0900 Apphd Wet• lKhnofogy ErMron.IPoll\Aion Control • 444.32()() The hdt Company Coosultantl • 730-0662 c.11tomta Shit• Bank Banks • 760«>00 "obbV Conn, Attomey at Law AttOf'nlYI • as 1.e 1 oe Cooper o.-.n ~-GrlPhle ~ N> • 497"508t 0.. c:onwnunec.ttone, lnc.IDtrneMton ~·831-70tl o..,.~Qroup,lnc. ~ Mwgement' 33MOOO Dewit to Ellfttt L .... I o.nten SVc. ~ S.Mc:e. •111t E.D.P. lrMip .... Oalllgt f"Nnelll Aid PWlq • 673-875& ,,..._. c.lel ..... Mtorne, MU. ..... •17Mlla Fln.nctel ~nagement Netwofil. Inc. Finanaal Services • 455-0300 Genev• Rnend .. , Inc. ~ SeMca. 582·7179 Geneoia Aetoclltlon Netwon Relocation SeMces • (800) 455-3' 11 George. Shleld• Attorneys • 263-1085 Minuteman Preas -Cofon• IMI M•r Prinbng SeMcel & ~ .... ~ Newport Cout Umowtnet Limousint SeMct • 646-208 t Opet'9 .... ~nteNkvMnl e,.,..,,.,,. • 567-8423 hrtl Window a. ... WlndoW Clwing • 720-9101 .....,. •utd 1191lr19 hMc9 ~ SeMctl. 548-9293 Tlt'~.tnc. Ccnl1ldon • 474"465 ~I 5 Scholarship Awards Breakfast 7:30 am • Hyatt Newporter 7 Annual Meeting/ Volunteer Recognition Breakfast 7:30 am • Hyatt Newporter 12 NHACC New Member Reception 5:00 pm • Chamber office 18 Sliver Anchor Awards 7: 15 am • Newport Beach Marriott Hotel 19 ~ 1\'i·Clty Business After Hours 5:00 pm. John Dominis Restaurant ~ 20 Spring B•lneea A Heatthbpo 3:00 • 7:00 pm • Four Seaor1I Hotel 27 BU9ineea OpportW"ltr ........ 7;00 ll'ft. Ne rport 8elct\ ...... J ag th ag a tie ro tic pc M Thurlday, Meich 30, 1885 Colla Maa bulllil11 IWPI 1111 nat rlldy to ll8li on on ordlnlnee • The city has had a tumultuous past surrounding Its banner laws and, even with recent changes, merchants still complain that rules are too restrictive. lh' TtlfA Boa.GA1TA, lrAn Wt.ma COSTA MESA -It took two yean for Costa Mesa officials to come up with a sign ordinance that the city, residents and locat merchants could agree upon back In 1974. Business owners weren't entirely pleased then, and they aren•t now -not even wi th a new sign plan on the horizon. Local merchants have com· plained the old sign-ordinance is • too restrictive. And in recent months. business owners have be· come most vocal about its time limits on temporary signs and ban· nc:rs. Many local merchants say temporary signs arc their most af· fordable and effective means of I· promotion. Now, merchants are M)'ina a new proposal helps a little -but not enough. City staff membcn and a com- mittee of business owncn. resi· dents I and sign manufacturers worJced for more than a year draft· ing proposals for the new plan. And last month, the city's Plan· ninJ C.ommission incorporated rec- ommendations from both sroups into a proposaJ that will be pre· scnted to the, City C.ouncU next month. On Monday, the commission eased up on time restrictions for banners and temporary SiJllS, but placed stringent regulations on in· natable signs. Crystal COtll'!' 1 111111111 garden allow begins Aprl 8 Crystal Court of South C.oast Plaza will hosting its sixth annual garden show April 8 and 9. The show runs from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 8 and 11 a.m. to S p.m. April 9. Scheduled activities include tips for shade gardening, floral ' ./ Individually Alarmed Units ./ Secu~ Gate Access ./ lesldtitt Management Team ./ Open 1 Days • 1000 Uni1s ./ Competiti¥e Rates ./ Personal Business & arrangements with backyard blooms and growing orchids. Also featured each day are exh ibits from more than SO garden clubs, societies and nurseries. Admission is free. For a list of scheduled events, call 435-2167. TMJ1 5-MINUTE REOOROEO MEll1'GE EXPLAINS TMJ OISOfl>EM Call (714) 288-3440 Businea ownen have ruom- mended a 180-day time limit !or bannen. a substantial increase from tbe current S6-day limit. Last mootb, the commisaion approved only a 90-day time limit but mem· ben reconsidered on Monday and ended up approvina a 120-day · limit for up to 10 events. ~t'• still not enough time, some local merchants say. 0 1t•s obviousJy a • littJe ~tter th.an where we were before," said Randy Oarell, owner of The Grant Boys sporting goods and gun shop. "But we stilJ need more days. We set 180 days as a mini.mtUD of what we needed to get 'by. '"Then, they limited us to only using them 10 times a year. JC you're going to give us 'the days, give us an opportunity to use them when we need them." And GarelJ said the commis- sion's recommendation for the use or inflatables is Un.realistic. The commission is recommend· Would you like to place a classified ad? Call 642-5678 for information. • STORE NOW & SAVE $25 644-2747 1177 Camelback Street ing that only inflatables measurina goes before the council. 10 feet or feu in diameter be al· "We will pursue this with the lowed. The inflatables may not City Council.'' said Colt.a Mesa contain any words, may not be iJ. Oiamber of C.ommerce director luminated and may not rise more • Ed Fawcett. • than lS feet above the building On Wednesday, Mayor Joe height. Ericbon said he'll conaider all In addition, the commission set recommendations before making a a 4S-day, four-event time limit on flhal decision. the Inflatables. Councilwoman Sandra Genis "I don't understand why (com· suggested it might be diffiCUlt to missionen) are treating the in· monitor either of the proposed natables differently than the ban· time limits on banne11, ners in terms Qf time," Garell said. "Once you get to 120 days or "And as for the height limit, our 180 days. there!s no way you 're expert on inflatables told us that going to be able to keep trac.k of won't work. that," Genis said. "'/ou might as "In order for balloons to fly well just say to them, ·u~ them freely, they have to be high above all you want,' because what can the building. Otherwise, tflc. in-happen is, you'll have the people Oatable's just going to knock back .who are trying teaJly hard to play down against the buildinf'and pOs· by the rules being penaJizedt" sibly present a safety hazard:' Despite differences of opinion, But Garell and other business the process for mapping out the owners say they haven't given up. new ordinance has gone miich They plan to push f<ff more le· --more smoothly than. it did foi the nient restrictions when.:the matter current ordinance, which was adopted in April 1974. At the time, Harbor Boulevard bad become a bodgepodae of signs of all shapes. sizes and height, leavina the strip lookin& cluttered and messy. The 1974 ordinance wu developed to give the city's business districts a cleaner look. It allowed for fewer and smaller signs and imposed a 10.year amor· tization, so that by 1984, all old non-confonning signs had been re· placed. Business owners didn't wann up to the plan right away. Just prior to ,its adoption, a group of busi- nessmen hired' an attorney in hopes of softeniqg some aspects or the proposal. Some contr0versial ·points were re-worked, and the plan finally .passed. A City officials say the ordinance has worked well for C.osta Mesa, and the new proposal doesn't stray too far from it. Large, Sweet, Vi ne Ripened Open Daily 9-5 I c a n't b elieve ... Corner of 16th A Dover It's My Home! Landscaping or re-landscaping is your answer to a beautiful new look for your home. FLOWERDALE can make your landscape dreams come true, and increase your home's value too! Com~ in today and discover the people who can make a difference to you and your garden. Seasonal Storage ./ Deliveries Accepted llSOllMllUt Newport Beach, CA Mention ad for discount• New '1llllB only ~ NURSERIES, INC. , SANTA .\t«A • 2900 H. 'ruS11N A VB. • (714) 633-9D> ------COSTA MISA • 2100 BRISTOL ST.• (714) 7~1 'rH E EXTRA SP ACE Y OU NEEll ~ ~ ..... ~~ '----------------~~~~~--------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-" April is Natio nal Saving Month. How much do you have in saving.s? If you're like many Americans, it's probabl> not enough for the thing.s you dream abou1. Buying a home. An education for your children and a comfortable rcurement for yourself. Bui it doesn't have to be that way. This Apnl marks the second year of National Saving Month. And in our continuing effort to educate Americans on the vital importance of sav1n~ Mernll Lynch 1s proud to be a national sponsor of this event. W1rh our planning-based approach and a wide variety of saving options, we etln help you get started to save for your American dream. And it won 'r c.-ven take that much. The chart shows if you saved and invested S40 a week, in 10 years you could have over S3 t,ooo.• A Merrill Lynch Financial Consultant can ~how you how it's done and offer other valuable saving uggestions. So tan saving now, and celebrate Nanonal SavingMonrh™. h can make a difference for your future. The difference is Merrill Lynch. • '7htH a11mplt1 do no11a'-e into 11ccoun1 11JX1s, ~mes Of' (tu. Tht awra11 mum m lhtu txampla u for 1llust,ative pu~s only attd not md1Utive of t>M futw~ ~rmanu of an1 J«Nnty. DATE: Tuesday, April 4th TIME: 7:00 p.m. -9:00 p.m. PLACE: Holiday Inn 3131 S. Bri tol ( '405 FWY at Bri rol, Co ta Me a) SPEAKER: Lanccjmdcs, Senior Financial Consult.-tnt Mcmll Lynch Private Chent Group RSVP: Roupina at 714-836-3 t 08 ·~ ...... •f"'I'-............ -- -,,, \:Flr s TAL COURT 'S 6 TH ANNUAL I J oin u~ an cxcldng two day event co-spont0red by Sunset Maaaiine, featuring more than 50 unique exhibitors with .. 1aitc-of-the.-art" Ideas for the plant enthusiast to the t0phlsdcated p rdener. Purchase unique hybrids, attend educational aemlnara and experience the wonder of magical wallc-throuah prdens fearurina unique landscape Ideas, wa~r prdens and morel Brina your f.avoritc shears for a complimentary parking arc free. Friday, April 7, 199 5 6pmto9pm Prt'Vl .. 'W P.uty Rcnd1ttin" 0c,1~1ng Wumcn Surroninic che An lruorur.c of Southern LJllfomlil Saturday, April 8, 199 5 10 am to 6 pm 10:30 am · International Palm Sociery GuiJed "Palm Walk" Tours 11 am • Shade Onrdenlng ' . ·~~· .~ 12 am ·The Ultimate Herb Garden 1 pm · Floral Arrangements With Your Backyard Blooms 2 pm • Gardening Secrets From Sunstt Mnster Gardeners 2:30 pm · lntemational Palm Society Outded "PaJm Woilk" Tours l pm • AJI About Water Gardens 4 pm -A Beginner's Guide ro Growing O rchids Sunday, April 9, 1995 llamto5pm 10:30 am · lntc:mational Palm Society Guided "Palm Walk" Toun 11 am • Shade Gardening J pm · West'! Be t New Super Manta (71•0 435-2160 2 pm · lntecu In Your OarJen: Su Met' MAOA11Nl ll OOICe 3333 Bear Srreet. a t1t Me~a, CA 92626 Friend or Foe? 2:30 pm · lnccmattonal Palm Sociecy OulJeJ "P Im Walk" Tours 3 pm • Dc:1l1n1nH Whh Roses ~ '7'5 °'more from MY C~el ~.,.._end~ a~ gift from UNet. ,.,..,. lnaWI Amltlolll ,_. loc:lilly ' Mtl1 & lone • 9oominQ ,-.,. fl'.1tm • o..t IO JunOll • f~ locitlY GI AMM11i • • O.Nieoi Dl;tlr ~ • Hlltds CM4ry a... . Hro'• .,,.., ,.,l'Mt) • ~ • tnletnMlotlll '*' ~ ....... c._ "°'9 ..._,. • ""'* lof Dry "'90ll • Alinlof• ''°" • ltatN'a Ormdl • Trll 8°'bln Celllomlt Qerdllw • Vin ,, ' Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thursday, March 30, 1995 A7 STAYING Amil SCHOOL -FOR FUN I Kaiser Primary and Elementary school kids stick around campus to learn yoga, drama, chess and even first aid BY AXKA M.u.aa &rou.n 5ncJM. TO Tiii DAJLT PILOT , mother, likewise raved about the program. "With the book club, N ormally Ka· El Ashley is required to finish a book ' • lSCr ewentary in a certain time frame and theD student Ashley Bal<fi. 8 heads straight home after talk about it, .. Price-Steiner said. school tQ do her homework and ''Ashley gets a bit of a challenac." hang around. . The After School program got "It's very boring," Ashley its start two years ago at a meeting confided. of Kaiser parents and teachcn to But, once a month, she gets a discu5' intepting school and break from this humdrum routine. community. She stays after school to critique a · Action 'ream member ~ie plot at her book club meeting. Furman, mother of three ~r Ashley attends one of many • students. suggested encourapng classes offered by After School people from the community to Oassca, a program administered teach classes at the school. by yolunt~ers and. sponsored by Furman sent a flyer to pan:nts of Kaaser Pnmary Center and Kaiser Kaiser children requeattna ideu Elementary School : and input. She received a npmbcr Af t~r School Oasscs offers a of responses. ·• variety of courses, including With ·Furman's help, the After lessons in calligraphy, chess, · School program began last fall. drama, quilting, yoga and even The program initially offered three -lifesaving techniques. "It's better classes, including a quilting course " than doing homework." said taught by Furman's mother, Sally :---Ashley, who has also attended the Schwartz. • · d Now the program, administered program s sewmg an computer by a committee of three teachers classes. Cherie Price-Steiner, AShley's and five parents, ~eaturcs 27 BEACON BAY AUTO WASH JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT 4200 Birch Street Newport Beach, CA 833-0660 • DOVE x: (.) "' a: ~ Ci) ~ BRISTOL a: :::> I r----------------------, BRING THIS COUPON FOR A 100% HAND WASH SEALER ·WAX AND ONLY ''6!J& (TRUCKS I VANS St .00 !XTRA} WITH ANY ,..XICO Fill-UP . COMPARE OUR LOW GAS PRICES Offer Explree 4l30l95 L-----------~----------~ ~ BEACON BAY ENTERPRISES fiiC. '' IT'S BBTrBJl .THAN DOING HOMEWORK. '' AsHLEY· BALDI 8·Yl1AJ.·OLD PAJ.TICIPANT IN APTEll. SCHOOL PllOGM.M counea in ill spring catalog and boaatl 100 students - approximately 10% of the Kaiser school population. · Furman explained the popularity of the program. "Many thinp which were integrated into normal clasaroom situations arc no lo~r there.'' she .said. ''Parents seek othe'r sources to enrich their children." Parents, professional instructors and Kaise r teache rs teach the classes. As for enrichment, some of the classes offer unique experiences which many students don't get in school or at home. For example, instructor Poli Rizto teaches "Meet the Masters." Through.a combination ''Sail into Spring" ffi©l!J~D~m© (i)(i)@J f3@(ii)(j)O@ f3@l1© Saturday, April 1, 9:00AM -4:00PM Harbor View School 900 Goldenrod, Corona del Mar (Just off PCH or McArthur) · Free Parking. Free Admission Come join us for the fun. Many Great Crafts. Good Food. Wonderful clothing for all ages. 644-4532 for Information We will be off eri11g a complete line of services, including: cool air controlled fur storage, cleaning and lusterizing, repairing and remodeling. Unusual items such as leat~er, fur trims, cashmere raincoats, microfibers & shearling. We lookforward to seeing you very soon . D of storytelling, visual aides and hands-on art activilies, students learn about famous artists like Cezanne, Monet and Homer. 4' Meanwhile, the classes arc d affordable, parents said. Costs And instructor Sylvia Hatton tcache's a course in "Imagination Art," in which she focuses on the process of art, rather than the end product. Children can expe riment with art materials, such as wood, paint and cardboard. 'What I provide is an outlet for them to feel the material and just do what they want," said Hatton. "l might provid~ some ideas or show them how to do something. But, if they wan~ to p{lint their hands and feel the paint, they.can ~o that." range from $2 for a one-day a bicycle maintenance and repair _ course to $120 tor IO keyboard sessions. "At that price, they can experiment, and, if they don't like it, it's not a horrible wa~te," said \ Monica Cottam, parent of three ., Kaiser students. •1 The location, too, is ideal, " Cottam noted. "It's all right there 1 at the school -that's the beauty of it," Cottam said. 1 As Kaiser Elementary student ._ Jennifer Ryder, 8, put it: "It's r\ • something to look forward to. It's something to do after school." . ·~ In Celebration of our 1st ANNIVERSARY I ~ I Any Item 1 ~~~r~t or in -store ~ more. 1 mo.re. E. 4-1()..95 I etJ& 4-10.9$ lbtJi; .. 10.!JS Not VoHd wllb 1 Nol NIM rib Nal rflll4 "'*" __ ""!.°'_~<>.g_er_ _ 1 -.~~g.,._ --l .iqotlHlrq/hr, 2384 Newport Blvd. ~ntil 1sa~ M1ctni 1VilsOll & Soldo lsabtl "' Costa Mesa I 714 631-2411 Eiwin Ward, a nationally recognized fur craftsman for over 40years has returned to Corona del Mar. R REMODELS APPR I , 2867 E. Coast Hwy. (nl'~I to Port Thl•utrl') ona del r • · 673-812 e G1 ba ha Ye se Fe . pc tic OJ: ag th ag a tie ro tic pc .-1 ' I I I I I i I ,_ . ' •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •1 •• . , •• •• •• ... •• •• •• •• ~ ... ~~ •• 1 r , . ' 0 UAL IT y · s ()l ''l'l l (' () \ ~ .,. I) ! , \ I \ •, CRYSTAL COURT . TOWN CENTER . VILLAGE NOROOTroM BUU.OCK'S BUu.ocK'S MEN'S STORE Sf.ARS ROBINSONS-MAY THE BROM1i/AY SAKS Atrn AVEMIE MollMw,.,. fi*f 10 u II 9' 111 S.t111'tf 101111 lo 1, 111. Sil. II 1111 II 630'111 S.11 Difff (.o5) Frwylf 3333 Bristo/St, CDstl MIY. CA 926261714) 05-2<X» (800) 782-8M8 . .. 1- ............ the sales tax are integral pieces of the recovery plan," Fishel said. For •1e.nclcs like the ~· Mesa mfltd Sdloolt.8" t r,turn r JM thab 9""° coqld ~ dfsastrous as tax repayments COJnC due in June. Howe er. S~~· d~t Mac Bernd ~id W~. tha& the language of th ~.· recovery tax gava no idb1c;aiion' that the true hike ond the se ttl e· ment plan proposed by th e pool investors' committee were part of the same package. "There has been no linkage lhilt we )lave been able to determine, .. Bernd said. "Since the recovery notes have to be good on June 5 and the tax won't go on the ballot until later in the, month, logically, there can't be a connection." Following several hours of testi· mony Tuesday night, the Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to place the half-penny sales tax in· crease on the ballot in a special election oo June 27. In addition to generating $130 million each year, the tax' increase would help the oounty raise hundreds of millions of dollars in new bond proceeds to help the county pay its creditors. fifth District Supe,rvisor Marian Bergeson, who plans to take part in an informational campaign prior to the election, said supervi$0rs had no choice but to put the item on the ballot. The tax is a neces- sary evH if the county is to survi.ve, DEAL Frem Pa9e Al pool, said Superintendent Mac Bernd. Bernd said he had heard rumors of t.he agreement, but didn't be- The <:04inty Board of Su~lso$ voted late t~ to put a half-cent sales tax increase on the banot. The Increase would boost Orange County's sales tax •!f 8.25% -the same as , 1'.0$ /\ngeles County's. Currently, Orange County's sales tax is (.75%. Voters decide on the measure in ~ special electiq~ on JUP,e 27. lution." While private viewpoints differ, city leaders in both Newport Beach &11d Costa Mesa said they will not take formal positions on the proposed tax increase. County CEO William Popejoy sent letters to all or the pool invcston urging them to Connally support putting the issue to a vote, but neither Newport Beach nor Costa Mesa has taken such action. And city council· members said Wednesday that they have no plans to place the matter on coun· cil agendas. Several balked at the idea that spreading the message was somehow a city duty. "I think that's a cop-out," said Newport Beach Mayor John Hedg· cs. "The leadership should come she said. from the Board of Supervisors. "If the tax goes down, the coun· They were elected to make these ty simply will not have the ability tough decisions, and to ask us to to meet its · obllgatibna and de· get beblnd the tax increa,.se.is a lit· faults will occur, and that will have tie too much to ask." a chilling effect statewide," Berge· Several city officials believe the son said. "~e have taken every county did not study all its rev- other conceivable action to close enue-gcncrating options before the gap." . \ turning to a tax increase. Many Several superviso~ have said view a tax increase as a potential cities, schools and seocial districts '1bailout" that would keep the should work with jhe county to county from going forward with spread the word to voters. The so· privatization efforts, asset sales lution to the county's financial sit· and reduction in county govern· uation must be part of a county· ment. wide effort, accordihg to Bergeson. "I'm not in favor of a tax in· "This has got to be from every crease myself," said Costa Mesa level of government," she said. Mayor Joe Erickson. "In my opin· "We can't have cities fighting the ion, the county has been operating county or school districts fighting inefficiently for some time. They cities. We have to recognize that need to make some tough deci· this bas to be a county-wide so· sions and tough cuts before turn- lieve it until be saw an actual copy at a meeting Monday with other county school officials. The county agreed to do the same with money owed to Fannie Mac by the Irvine Unified School District, the county Department of Education and the North Orange County Community ' College District. "We were a little miffed that we weren't told about this," Bernd said, hinting at a possible lawsuit. Even though the money cur· rently is held in an escrow account and can't be touched by Fannie Mae or the district, Bernd said he in& to a tax increase.'' The city will likely remain out· side the debate, Erickson pre· dieted. "To this date, not a single councilman has asked that it be voted on," he said. "I don't sec a lot of support for it on the coun· cil." Bill Ward, a Costa Mesa resi· dent and member of the anti-tax watchdog group Committees of Correspondence, shared Erickson's view and predicted that the voters woiild follow suit. "Scare tactics" used to frighten voters into accept· ing a tax increase will not be suc- ccssf ul, according to Ward. "The tax people have all the money and we've got all the volun· tecrs," said Ward, who envisioned a pro.tax campaign touting voters' "civic du~y.," "I'm putting my money on lhe volunteers." Newport Beach Councilwqman fan Dcbay ·said sbe believed that, at the county level, matters were progressing in an appropriate manner .. A ballot measure would give voters the opportunity to learn where matters stand and then decide for the~selves if a tax is the correct remedy. "The worst thing that could happen would be to have a state trustee (take over the county)," said Debay, who has not decided how she would vote on a tax in· crease. "There needs to be a whole lot more information gotten out. With a ballot measure, we would get the information we need to make the right decision." doesn't expect a direct impact on the district. "I think the whole situation will be resolved before the county dis- tributes any money," he said. "It's probably not that big a deal." The funds arc owed to Fannie Mac anyway by mid.June, he said. r -------, For a limited time I $55 Includes 2 man I crew, truck. equipment, a I exper:tlH 1 PER HOUR (4 hour minimum) Phone quotes ava•lable Not 1nclud ng COSI ol L ma1e11als or hauling deb11s if necessaty .J ------- (714) 645-8512 Jim Jennings eudoMM_~ State Lie# 392707 -Thursday, March 30, 1995 AO YOLUNTllR DllllCTOU TM Vohuatttr Dlredorf na:u pe- rlodJcallJ la lbt Dally Piiot. u you'd lib halon111don 08 ldCln1 JOW' orp.ahatloa llstecl, call 642· '311, nt. 331. AUAu.cl .. lea The Amyotropble lateral Sclero- sis (ALS) Association, Orange County Chapter has need for many volunteerJ, For information, call Stacy Korcssel at 37S·l922. Aldl•l••r'• Auecl•tlon The Alzheimer's Association of Or· ange County needs visiting volun- teers, support groups for patfonts and caregivers and a volunteer hel- pline. Interested volunteers can call 283-llll or (800) 660-1993. Amerlc•• C•ncer Society . . The American Cancer Society's Orange County ':!Pit is seeking of· ficc volunteers. Also, volunteers are being sought to answer calls for the units Helpline lnfoCcnter. For infonnatioo on these and other vol· unteer opportunities, call Cari Dav- idson at 364-3829. a. ........... c.... The Oranic County chapter oC the American Red Croll needs vol,. untecrs to address community iroups about Red Croa 1emce.1 and to act as liaisons with the media in disaster and emergency situations. For in(onnatlon, call Judy Iannaccone, 835-5381, or Joan Miller, 835·5381, ext. 422. Arts Ac•d••Y ef o.c. The Arts Academy of Orange , County is pl:innin& to fund and build a community arts facility in Costa Mesa. For more infonnation, call Alice Leggett at 540-2557. Auocl•tlon ••••1 ... ace Cr••tors ARC is a non·profit group in Costa Mesa which sponsors and supports multi-outreach conimuniry service programs, such u the homeless sanctuary. V~lunteers are needed. For infomation, call Dr. Renee Namaste, 54()..5803. Ballet Pacific• The Ballet Pacifica Guild, a vol· untcer support group for Ballet Pa· cifica, needs volunteers for a vari· ety of tasks. lnfonnation, 642-9275. I Join the 552 Club in suppor t of Hoag Hospital ... You are invited to come to our 29th birthday party at the Balboa Fun Zone! April 6, 1995 5:52 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. @fl'1?,etl1Zn9 j~1~ evet•y 11?,e11?,l?e1• f!f fli e j~~aly ... Games, fun, entertainment, contests, door prizes for memben, limbo contest, Moon Bounce for the kJda, big band music and dancing, dunk tank, ping pong tOM for gold fish, street maglclam, carlcaturlsta, steel drum band, barbershop quartets. and much, much morel ~vale by ,~,, 1~?11 1'i1h~~ "fl>;'! J,3 ... trl ~,.r/ J;f ,,( "P·,t"';r/r ~lal A~&BDCH b) tf:n-r9 "l}:A1~1·ft. lr11111rfr1• ]rir~ cff>h"{dtin. <mJ ,}(J/1,. ~' 11fr.i1•r/, (SJIA ~A·NA band member) Vint• Four ~nbop Quartet and Oult Ukule~ Stumme~n_....,. 850 for each FAMILY OF 4 BACK TO BAL FlJN ZONE PACKAGE TICKET 820 for each BACK TO BAL FlJN ZONE PACKAGE TICKTI 810 for each BACK TO BAL GENERAL ADM~ON TICKET Inquiries: 552 Club, Hoas H09pltal Foundation, 714/57'4-7208 I ~ ' ' 170 E. 17th St. Suite 206 • Costa Mesa , ln.troducing the revolmionary new AirTouch Me sage Phone. It works as an answering machine, a pager and a cell ular phone, all in one. It's I.he first cellular phone I.hat ( l) pages you, (2) tells yoµ someone has left a message, and (3) lets you return • phoJie caJ~~ntly. It's aJso the first message-ready flip the AirTouch Message Phonr is just $99 after rebates.• The cost for AirTouch di play me saK!_ng and Buy a cellular phone and we'll throw in a pager and an answering machine just for the heck of it. 'l ~ 1nun1 ~ 1edftdoll .nct StOMotoiOla.-...n~· ( s I t rA10 Thursday, March 30, 1995 ,, ......•. • 1 see MncMilllan again, too. So to· night they'll all gather at the Costa Mesa Community Center for a special "Reunion In The Park" to ., honor their long-time friend and ... celebrate MacMillian's SO years of , service to the community's youth. · Although MacMUlian said he wasn't 00mfortablc with an event centered on himself, he did think , the reunion was a great way to bring so many people from his past together. -"I feel honored that they're doing this. I'm anticipating seeing many faces," he said. • man of the committee that organ· ized the event. De Boom. who served with MacMiUian on the school board, said the tribute dinner originally planned turned into a reunion when members of the committee couldn't stop sharing stories about the honoree. "It got to be where we couldn't start a meeting until everyone was done telling their stories about Rod." he said. "I've chaired a Jot of committees before, but I've never had this.much fun. It's been one story and one laugh after an- other." The reunion is also a way to raise money for the Rod MacMil· lian Student Assistance Fund. de Boom said. Proceeds from the fund will provide schQlarships and loans to higl} school student~ in the areas of sports, arts apd sci- ence. The Reunion in the Park begins at 6 p.m .. and will include a special salute to MacMiHian, who has · · be~n involved not only in scfiools, but also in youth sp.orts. One of l! ' · the evening's highlights will' be ·a c video compilation of MacMillian's p MacMillian's jnvolvement io ed- ucation began as a teacher at St. Joachim School in Costa Mesa and Mater Dei High in Santa Ana, and as a ·~ubstitute teacher in other Costa Mesa schools. a ti a ( p personal history and \he legacy or community involvement he left be- hind when he retired from the board after 28 years as a trustee. "When Rod decided to retire •We thought it was an appropriate ! time to recognize his 50 years of , service," said Newport-Mesa .:.school trustee Jim de Boom, chair- Always concerned that young people did not have enough extra- curricular activities, MacMillian founded Harbor Area Baseball and was a founding board member .~PHONES And whether they are the thin flip phones or the more heavy- duty model with adapters, batter· ies and leather cases, they are fast becoming a "gotta have it" item. 1 From P•1• Al sca m works, police have been able · to arrest several individuals who either have a stolen cellular phone , in their possession or are fraudu- lently using them. "We do have information that makes it relatively easy to look at 1 •:the operation characteristics of the -phone to determine whether it's ~;being used fraudulently or not," he said. "Before, everyone wanted a pager -now it's a cellular phone. It's the new status symbol of the '90s," said Chris Saucedo, a sales- person at Celluland in Costa Mesa. "They are small, portable; easy to pick up and can be acti· vated anywhere." Saucedo said she hears many I • CENTER SHOE REPAIR • 285 E. 1 7th St . Costa Mesa : Next To ROSS Dress For Less I 645-5511 1 Hours: M-F 8:30 -6:30, Sat 8:30 -5:00 •:; 1 15% OFF ANY REPAIR WORK I I , (Good with ad only) 1 ... ~ Complete Shoe Service & Vacuum Cleaner Repair, Key COJ]Y :1.I J'\§rc~i HkFS58Ut ~-_ J ., Inco~e Tax Preparation Starting at $35.00 Weekend & Evening Appointments Available Excellent Service Over 25 years Experience Preparing Income Tax Returns John C. Faris, CPA Christopher J. Faris, CFP t -800-953-4TAX (714)434-7641 1503 South Coast Dr., Ste. 301 Costa Mesa, 92626 SAFE BRAKES??? FREE BRAKE INSPECTION • NO PURCHASE NECESSARYI FRONT OR REAR BRAKES TUNE-UP I I I s3a••,.,..,. I I s47•• I I New Plugs, I I 1 ..., c.n 1 I 1 I Set Timing 1 I 1·-•_.,._°'_ I I & I ti • rum • Tlw-<Hor-. I I nspec on I I C.V. JOINT BOOT SPECIAL ':=:.,~-I I 2nd Boot On I I 4 Cyl. oCyl. 8 Cyl. I I '·c1 .. d;-~I I Same I I '14• s34• 'J,. I l •ITopo;r•-I I I .,,,_,~ ..... Axle Half ·Price 1 1 1 MOST CARS 1 •.,._, __ .. " •' 'I I --.... -~ .. ·-' __ ..., __ , ... I I __ .. _,_ .. , ... I I --------------------~---1 I I I 557-7587 375 S. Brlatol #100 •Costa Mesa I L. - - - - - - --<=~~Tl.:.:=-.:. ~·~:u!!J -.4.. ,.~ . - '' IT GOT TO BB WHBllB WE COULDN,,.. STAllT A MEETING UNTIL BVBllYONB WAS DONB TELLING TH.Biil STOllIES ABOUT ROD. l'vB CHAlllBD A LOT OP COMMITl'.BES B.BFOllB, BUT I'vB NBVBll HAD THIS MUCH FUN. IT'S BEEN ONE STOR.Y AND ONE LAUGH A.FrBll ANOTHBll. '' JIM DE BOOM CRAJJlMAN OP EVENT TO HON01l Roo MAcMtLLlAN of the Harbor Arca Youth Prob- lem Center. He was elected to the Costa Mesa school board in 1965 and was a founding mctnbcr of the combined Newport-Mesa schoot distrid, for which he served as board president· four times. Mac- Millian has been creditcd·with leading the district to recovery · after a $4 million embezzlement scandal almost destroyed its repu- tation. The event tonigbt pays tribute to this kind of professionar leader- ship, de Boom said. "Other school board members came and went -but Rod was stories of stolen cellular phones, but she, said at the time of pur- chasing their phone, customers are also informed of safety features. "Fraud protection is offered to all customers and if a phone has a lock feature, we teach them how to use it," she said. "We do try to the board's stability and reason," he said. . Sine~ his retirement, MacMillian has kept busy running his rcstau- ra.nt, Cafe Prcgo, on Catalina Is-. , land: Y ct, he says, he still has mixed emotions. about n,ot sitting • on the school ~oard anymore. "You miss the good things and then are kind of happy that you don't have to deal with some of the complex issues they're facing right now," he said. "I just hope that (trustees) never lose sight of what's good for the kids. As long as they keep that in mind, I think they'll do fine without me.'' do everything we can to protect customers.'' \ According to police, the only way you can protect your cellular phone is by not leaving it in your car. And if you do, keep it out of sight in the glove compartment or under the seat. Easier & Mother's Day Orchid Blowout 5,000 Blooming · Orchids, Anthuriums & Bromeliads $5.00& Up 20% OF'F' All Foliace Plants Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot DIS1RICT ,..._Pe9eA1 case were not intentional. "We can understand and ap· prcciato Ms. Oembik's desire to move forward -that is our desire atso," said Mary Urashima, the agency's spokeswoman. ''Ms. Dembik's grievance was closed at one point, and she had not asked for a mec&ing with Jhe board at that time. Then, (general manager~ Karl Kemp received new information., and said he wi,shed to reopen the case." · Urashima said the district has been unable to move forward in t'he case because investigators are still reviewing the matter. She said the invcstisation should be com· preted by the Ma)'. 18 hearing date. Di$trict o(ficia!s may near . the matter before then, if board presi"" dent Tom Nelson calls a spe~ial meeting. But, no steps have been taken to indicate such action. And on Wednesday, board member Trudy Ohlig said she still hadn't received a copy of Terry · Nelson's letter und was unaw:ire or the one-week deadline. She expressed Crustration over the delays in resolving Dembik's case and said she was surprised by the nature of her allegations. ln addition, Oblig said she hod hoped to review the mutter fur- ther, but when she asked to sec copies of depositions of witnesses, she was denied access to the re- ports. ''It's not that the board doesn't care or isn't interested in the cm· ployees," Ohlig said. "But we have to go by our own policies. We need io look into it , and get the whole scope of what's going on. "And, 99% of the time, the board is kept in the dark. Then, all of a sudden, you hear about this. . "People always wonder! 'How could the board not know about ·this Qr that.' But if the manager .doesn't bring you the info.rmn)ion, and 'if the employees don't come to you because they have to (fol- low company procedures), there's no way for us to find out. "lt's a very frustrating situation to be in." ~WI E AT TOTAL DISCOUNT Phonetci FREEWAY CLOSE• NO'MEMBERSHIP FEE n!:ter •unt1e1ev:t low pricea -the moet pc>puW piece In lhe L,A •• ,.. toda for ,...,.. buy premluin wine.• uye Wine 6 Sc*b mepzlne CAS.UOPOSTOUf SAIN. 81.AHC '94 (PARKER 89) ... 4.99 ST!*ESTREET MERtOT W INEWRB.f.ASEll. $13.59 SWANSON CHAR='92 INCREDIBLY AICH!l .......... 12.59 FISltm CM. wtH INSIGNIA '92 (NEWVINl~--·-· ... -.13.99 $.WORD CM '93 A BARBAAA'S FIPlESTl) .... 1059 lllTZ t.a.BERtET !WA '00 (NEW RElEASE!J ................... 13.59 ROBERT MOMlAVI RESERVE '92 (PARWI 91) ....... 18.99 CH. SOWERAIN ~ERNET '92 ~EW RELEASEl) .•• .7.99 IAAT~ CREEK CHA!lD '92 (PARKER 91/ ............. 15.99 PElfOCOS KOl*l*6A Hill SHlRAl.t . W (BEST 8UY!)~6.99 GAINEY CtWl~Y '92 (NEW RruASE.) ....... : .••• 8.99 GUIGAL HERMITAGE '90 (PARKER 94) .................... 26.99 LYTTON SPRl"S ZINFAM>EL '92 IWOW!) .•..• -... -13.99 CH. MEYNEY '89 (PARKER 92) (GREAT VALUE!) ..... f6.99 SAUCfllTO r.AHY~ ZJNFOOB. '00 (BIG & BOlD) ..... 10.59 CH. CUNET '00 (PARKER 92)., .............................. .42.99 DOM. DROOilNPINOTIORlAlllEHEW !SPECTATOO 91)-.2'2.59 CH. CLERC MILON '90 (SPECTATOR 94) ........... 26.99 ROBEllT U(N)AVI PlllOT !«MR R£SERYE '1l (PARXfll ~).......21.59 CH. LAFITE ROTHCHILO '76 I PARKER 96) ........ 124 .99 OORmH1A MOOEPllCW«l d ABRUZZO 193._, ____ ...... 5.~ Cit PK:HON lAlAN[l '83 (SPECTATOR 97, PARl<ER 93) .. ..42.59 ~ UMlm> TO STOO< OH HN«l • VIS4• MASTEJlCARO .A. n Il ~rJ 714-835-&185 • eoo-966-5432 • CLUB 2ttot~Ul'E~SMTUU.CU2705 C>PE!N 9 TC> 7 SUN. "t"t·-e HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE The Irvine Clinical Research Center has been awarded a research grant to study an investigational medication for the treatment of high blood pressure. This study is funded by a pharmaceutical company at no cost to participants. To qualify, patients must have a diagnosis of high .. blood pressure . Participation includes physical examinations, lab tests, medication, EKGs, and close blood pressure monitoring. Up to $780 in payment available for participation in this trial. Call (714) 753-1663 For more information T lw Irvine Clinic-al RrMt'areb Ccnlf'r Mt>dieal AMticwiatf>S 16259 Laguna Canyon Road Irvine, CA 92718 Corne< of Laguna canyon and Allon Parlcway on the 405 Freeway "In Newport Besch Since 1973" JAMES R. REED, CPA INCOME TAX PREPARATION Accounting • Individual • Corporation • Partnerships Estates & Trusts "Convenient Location/Essy Parking" 901 Dover Dr., Suite 238 • Newport Beach a31.e1ea FAX 831·0718 THOIVIAB C. BECKER 350 E. 17th Costa Mesa Ste. 117 646-8803 Specializing in individual tax returns All States Also Corporation -Partnership -LLC Estate/Trust Tax Returns I It's Your Money •.• ... and we can help you keep more of it. By finding every tax deduction an tax credit you·~ entitled to take. By sugacsting strategies that will minimlz your tax liability each and every year. Call for an appointment today. Christine E. Brown, CPA 100 P.ctftca, Suite 130. Irvine • 45~0 Z.A.FIER. F".A.LL.A.._..I -c•~- Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thursday, March 30, 1995 A11 WIDDINGI Mr. and Mrs. Gerlt OIRLT-ROUSSILOT Linda Susan Rousselot and David Al::in Gerlt were m:micd July 30 in the Communi1y Church Congregational, Corona del Mar. They greeted their gues1s at a ORDER NOW ~de s.tts . I'VE BEEN CITRONIZED T·SHIRTS & SWEATSHIRTS Know anyone who has been affected by the O.C. Bcinkruptcy7 Has been bankrupted or ts going to be7 Know someone who lives 1n Oranqe Counry7 Southern Cahrornia7 Somewliere 1n 1fie u S. or some small & remote 1srand 1n the Bnt1sh Virgin Islands? Bnng a smrle to therr race wi!h ihe one and only C1tronizec> T Buy 11 as a grh OI' fOI' yourself and t>ecome Ci1ron1zedl lnstrucllonal Manual Included Available: M-l-Xl 100% Cotton T-Shlrts $12.00 Sweatshirts $20.00 To order C.11: f7t4) 96f.17J7 reception at the Big Canyon Country Cub in Newport Beach. The bride, dauJthter of Terry and Sally Roussefot or Newport Beach, is a graduate or Corona del Mar High School. She received a B.A. degree in English from Principia College and a Masters of International Management degree from the American Graduate School or International • Management in Arizona. She is employed b)! Prima Publishing in Rocklin. ' Her husband is the son of Irwin and Marcile Gerlt of Mount Vernon, Wash. He is a graduate or Mount Vernon High School and received a B.A. degree in Economics from Principia College. He is a student at the University of the Pacific's McGeorge School of 'Law and works for the law firm ~ Porter, Scott, Weiberg & Delehant in Sacramento. The couple honeymooned in Maui and Kaua'i and arc living in Sacramento. WAL TIRS·.IOHNSON Vanessa Johnson and Robert K. Walters exihanged wedding vows Feb. 18 iR a ceremony in the General Assembly and Church of the First Born in Fullerton. Her father, Bishop Van Johnson of Lake Elsinor, officiated at the cere{l'lony. She is also the daugher of Nancy Johnson of Lake Elsinor. The bridegroom is the son of Robert and Bette Walters of Costa Mesa. Mr. and Mrs. Walters The bride wore a gown of white tulle with a fitted bodice, embroidered with pearl rosettes. Her short veil was held with a fluffy tulle headband and she carried a cascading bouquet of red and white rose!.. Judy Ander!.on, sister of the bride, was matron of honor and Cheyenne Anderson, her niece, STOR& HOURS: llON-l'RI 10 All • 8 PM MT 10All-6PM SUN 12 Pll -5 PM Y2 OFF- FABRic PRINTS • LIMIT ONE CUT PER COUPON • LIMIT 6 YARDS •VALID THUR APRIL 8, 1995 FABRIC WAREHOUSE 1805 PLACENTIA AVE. (PLACENTIA AT 18TH) Oii 1 ,,,.. MTNAnoll ... ,, .. .... ... ,,. • • 1 ,,. .. •• 0 ,,_ ............ .. •$.Mii# .... .. ............. ·"'*""---: :~ .. :.,,"":' . .,....c-c.. .,.,,,.,,...,.. «You'O Save Money At Global!" COSTA ........ . ,,..,,, .• ,..,, • ""Ff .. ,,_, .ct I 'n •• ,.., .. llMlt .... ., ... lllllCI • IWl·WIY 111111 • ICCllllllll was bridesmaid!.. Sarah and Michnel Johnson, twin niece and nephew of the bride, were nower girl and ring bearer. Mac Graham was best man for the bridegroom and ushers were Michael Hollister, Drct Ross and Craig Winbcr~. After greelin$ 1io guests at their reception m the Conestoga Hotel in Anaheim, the couple went on a honeymoon visit to Cardiff-By-the-Sea. They are re sidents of Fullerton. She is a designer and owner of Ness Crafts and he is owner of Ben's Spa and Pool Supplies in f'ullcrton. WALKIR."CLOSI Christ Church by the Sea was the selling for the March 4 wedding o( Newport Beach residents Teresa L. Close and Jeffrey C. Walker. They greeted 275 guests at th eir reception in Bistro 201. Mr. and Mrs. Winfield M. Close Mr. and Mrs. Walker of La Mirada are the par-cnts 9C • the brrde: She wore a p'rinccss style gown wjth tulle trimmed full skirt and a pearled and beaded bodice with long pointed sleeves and an off-the-shoulder neckline. Wendy Evans was maid of honor and bridcsm.iids were Ce~li Qose, Knrla Vassy. Kirn Alford, Robin Paladino and Marina Walker. The bridegroom is the son of Yvonne Walker of L:lke Matthews. His best man was David Hurwitz and ushers were Mark RuS'Sakow, John Drowning, Chris Sanders. ]{jrk Alford and Eric Ttost. The couple are at home in Newport Beach. They arc owners of The CO Listening Dar. :. The Djily Pilol welcomes the chance to share the news of your engagement or wed- ding, Pick up engagement or wedding Corms in our lobby at 330 W. Bay St., Cosia Mesa, or • se nd a self-addressed stamped envelope to the Wedding Depariment, The Pilo1, P.O. Box 1560, Cos1a Mesa, Calif., 92626. ANTIQUE QUILT SHOW I /I/ I'./ .... /; ..... \/ I 1\ I'' I . \1 ' I j I fl JU j I h' ~ i I: I\ -....1 I I ' I I ! \ '-., Over 100 antique q1lilta to be Uqaiclated each Sata.rclayl In storage for years. Every pattern and type. Each is one-of-a-kind. All are guaranteed authentic! s.twnlq1 8:00 to l 0:00 , .•• Comcast of Newport B. Ch. 3 Comcast of Santa Ana Ch. 3 Dimension M. of Laguna N. Ch. 31 Visa MasterCard & Discor>er a ted r,························· 17th St. BEAUTY CENTER 1894-1995 I '""·-I FOUR GENERATIONS I •md 101 Years! I I n vict .Salen and !Buw.l!J .Supp(!J 1 I Carpet Retnnants I I 20% URAD I I I Sale I OFF I Open House I Prest'ntt>d by the M11rad Representatives I Free Consultation & Sampl~s 1 All Remnants Below Manufacturers Cost I _4.7.95 I Sat. April l st 11-4pm 1 ALDEN~S I I If you want to make a reservation I for a free private consultation call: I CARPETS, I C. 1663 Placencia St. Costa ~1csa 642-1717 646-4838 n shop around bank, but you find one with a Interest in For every new accout1t relationship, we'll dot1ate SS to tlle Newport Mesa Scl1ool District Foundation. your children's education . California State Bank under~tand!. that a child's education I the most Important Inv tment there Is. That' why for every new account rel.lllonshlp that starts before June 30, t 995, we'll donate SS to the Newport Mesa ~hool Dl,trlct Foundation. rht• more at.colHlls, the more the children benefit. Just thlnS... of It a a gift from your newt.>St netghbor . But we're more than lust a nelghborhOod hanJ.:. 'tillfornla State 8.mk Is a rodMolid tl1l nc.:ial lmtltutlon with 15 years ot wntlnuom growth, S46 million In capital nd O\'er S,.60 million In total U\tU. ~ M"'bftFDI So help us help out the school district by openlnR up you r new account today. While you're In, _9lle of our friendly representative\ t.-.1n tell you how our a \ wide-variety of loans I ~ .and financial St'rvlres I I can http you. After all, J ""nco..n - what rt ntlghllors for? fl California State Bank J1e1 1 ... CMll .........,, COl"OM .. .._,CA "'2S Te .. phone (7'4) * 1111 I NewpQr1 Beach/Costa Mesa Oailv; Piiot Oscar-night bash brings out The Crowd's best dressers 1 s he' one of the top five best ' dressed ~omen on the Or· ange Coast. And that's best dre~ed always. Her fashion sense tends to be classic. Often seen in the latest tailored designs from the worlds major houses ot Cashion, she accents her clothing with equally classic jewelry ... r~al jew· clry. She wouldn't be caught dead in all that glitzy paste many or her so called "social equals" consider' rnshionable. B.W. CB Monday evening, at the very chic "Night of The Stars," a second annual Oscar celebration thrown by The Assistance League of New· port-Mesa, this best-dressed woman swept into the massive Distango Building The Cro d atrium in a l · W creme satin· Mandarin col· hired tunic, over pants. Sipping Champagne with her husband and friends, chatting about the awards being present ed to the crowd on a mullitude of large screen tclevi· sion se ts posi tioned all about, she began lo describe her clothing. "\Ve were in Vietnam recently, and I had this outfit made in S.1igon. It's a classic Vietnamese \l\lc ... very 'Miss Saigon' as you c:in sec. I chose the fabric and the Jrcssmal..cr made the ou tfit to order. Do you like it?'' she asked \Cry i1111occntly. All agreed that it . ",ts c\qubne. ~ "My wife is probably the only woman at this affair in a $30 drc<,s," added proud husband Handy ~lcCardle, putting an arm 1 around the shoulder of his beau ti· lul ''ire, Sukl McCardle. ··That's right, we paid $30 for this handmade outfit. Who says tltc1c aren't any bargains left in the world," said smiling Suki. ·'Thut's OK," said anot her \\Oman under her breath, listening to 1hc confession of price. "Be- lieve me, she deserves, or J guess he deserves a bargain or two along the way. It helps to even out some f the cost or her other clothes!" The Oscar night bash was actu- . tty filled with a bevy or best dressed ladies and gents. In fact, it was a better looking crowd overall than the Hollywood types on the ... crcen. Mary Lou Hornsby wore a black sheath accented by period rh111estonc jewelry befitting an ac- trci.s at the Oscars. Very ladonna. On her arm, best· lllllk111g mate Scott. out dnshing the best ol them. Zee Allred, one ol the honored gucMs of the C\~:111ng, very grand in a ballgown iH:t:cnled by diamonds nnd emer· allb. Dr. Jerry Wchards wore an cmcralJ green si lk bow tie wi1h tu'<. 11 cou1dina1cd very nicely wit h AllreJ'll emeralds. ho among the consistently el- egant, the beautiful lady wi th he elcctric smile, Ronnie Al- u1111Jaugh. La!.t yen r Ronnie and lU'>banJ U)ron AJlumbaugh were .1111ong the honored movers and h.ikcrs at the first annual As· r '>l~tance League Oscar Ball. This columni~t. you may recall, mistak· 1 cnly referred to Dyron Al· •i lumbaugh in last year's coverage a'> one of th e finest ladies in the community. (The copy was sup· I po~cd to read ... people.) "I can a\!.Urc you I ain't no lady!" came Im immediate and official re- By Melissa Ghavami GOLDEI OPPORTUNITIES Wilen loobno to purchase a serious p.ece of gold iewelry. ooth1fl0 less 1han solid 141( gold shOUld be considered Lesser pieces are considered 10 be costume 1ewelry and any1h1ng less than 1 OK 1s most assured!'/ so The same may be said of any piece of a less precious me1a1 lhat is coaled with gold For enslance. vermell 1s gold·coated silver. and must have an underlying metal ol slerling silver. coaled with a minimum of 120 millionths of an inch ol gold Gold·f1lled pieces have a gold coaling that 1s 1120th or more of lhe11 to1a1 weight When lhe surface layer of gold 1s less lhan 1f.l0th of lhe we1ghl of the piece. the terms gold·plaled, gold overlay. or rolled gold plale apply Ptaled and go1d·ftlled 1ewelry resull lrom bOnding sheers ol gold or gold alloy 10 a base melal m heat. pressure or a chem11:al process If you are en lhe markel to buy a hne piece ol gold 1ewelry please come see us al ROYAL JEWELERS We w~I be happy 10 answer any questions that you may have about the quality of gold Our hne 1ewelry and gems are ollered to you at very compe11t1ve pnces and we stand behind everything we sell Come V1S1t us at 1280 Bison. Ste B-6 (64H804) m !he Newport North Slloc>IMno Center (at the corner of BISOn and MacArthur). and 32411 Golden Lantern Ste G{248-8995) it the Ocean Ranch Village Center. lajjuna Nigutl We also feature eipert watch repau, ,ewetry repair, remountino and reswng. as well as pearl and bead strWllflO PS Gold plating with a minimum thiekness ol 100 m1lhonths ol an inch is called ·heavy gold electroplate." and IS preferable to plain •gold eleclroplate• (minimum standaid of 7 m1lhonlhs of an melt). C;d I Rah hit t l nsu ra n r l' fpr :-\ uto Quoll'..., Service & Stability Since l 957 631-7740 441 Old Newport Blvd.• Newport Beach (nar~~ial) Electric Boat Rentals Make It An EGGstra Special Day ,.. .. r-:-:-~-r.~n ~------~ Located nrxt to the ferry 80/"°'1 Pt'nlnJu/a • $40 hr. Mention ad and get 5096 off 3rd & 4th hr. • Optn Dally • Quiel and Easy to Drive! • Catering Avalfable •Make Restrvatfons Carly AIH Avallablt ... Sailboats, Kayaks and Motor Roaf\. For Rturvatlon Call · 673-7200 The Assistance League's Oscar bash drew the likes of: (top, from left) event chair· woman Linda Mayeda, Dale Johnston and incoming As- sistance League president Joanne Johnston; (at left) hon· orary chairwoman Mary Jean Simpkins and Ted Simpkins; (above, from left) Chan Lefeb· vre, Marie-France Lefebvre and honoree John O'Donnell. ADULT VIDEOS FOR SALE • FRO M ~.5(1" UP F U LL LENGTH RENTALS FROM '1' -1 · (714) 751-1500 LEISURE TIME VIDEO 1 500 ADAMS. # 1 07 COSTA MESA 92628 DON'T BECOME A VICTIM OF YOUR OWN LEGAL ACTION! Consumers For Legal Reform is here to help EVERYONE We are a non-profit organization seeking to assist the consumer In obtaining accountablllty from lawyers and Judges. Staffed by business professionals. attorneys, paralegals and consumers, we plan to bring a dramatic change to the legal Industry as a whole. we are In need of tax deductible donations to further the efforts Of this long overdue project. . Please contact: Barbara Swist or Richard Foltz 714-854-0881 ll<>RM<>NE REl>f.A('EMFN ·1· ·r1 I ERA P)'' The Irvine Clinical Research Center has been awarded a grant to study an investigational estrogen and progestin patch as hormone replacement therapy in menopause. This research study includes physical examinations, pelvic exam and PAP smear, mammograms, comprehensive laboratory tests, uterine ultrasounds and endometrial sampling at no charge to participants. To qualify, women must be healthy and postmenopausal between the ages of 40 and 70 years. Patients must not have had a hysterectomy. If currently on hormone replacement therapy, you must be willing to discontinue it for six weeks. Up to $400.00 payment available for participation In this study. For more information call (714) 753-1663 Ask for Sandra or Bilhc> Aime Tbc lrvhtc Clinlr.aJ Re t•ar.~t. CN•h'r ,.,,.., 1 ... 1 hor "td R ....... 1i1.11. 'lt.u •• •.i\.c:.f' .. o ... ". c ... run ... 11utrrniolltndorl'I~~· l 6259 La1turu1 Cnnyon Ro•d Irvin<·, CA 92718 !'lt-r>li;,i Ou"ll' C.01t1tt~ f·•• II>,, ... $p<H1SC. He ii, however, quite a gentleman. Trlsb aad John O'Donnell, also honored as major Assistance League Stars, turned out in splcn· dor, as did Mark Johnson, Jane and Jerry KJngsley, Barbana and BUI Yingling, Vlr&lnla Knott Bend· er and husband Paul, PatU and , Chrls Rose, Elaine and Bob Das· majilln and chair of the a(fair Unda Mayeda with her husband Sam. The Queen of Lido Isle - the very pretty and always perky Marlon Pickens -was dazzling in a low cut black gown and antique diamond cho.ker. Marion and daughter Allsoo McCormick (also pretty and perky ... the apple doesn't fall far from the ... ) are busy with fellow Lidoer Joyce Boghosian (president of the Lido Isle women's club) planning this Friday's Lido home tour. They haven't opened up the bayside chateaux for the' past four or five years, so expectations are rOnning high. The home tour is slated from 1 to 4, including afternoon tea, with tickets available on site for $20. Proceeds go to Hoag Hospi· tal. Joyce, Alison and Marion managed to convince M>me of the really choice homeowners w open up. Snoopers ... th~s is your big chancel As the Oscar tele~ast went on ... and on ... Ass1stnnce League devotees dined on the spectacular Distango cuisine (It's really one of the best restaurants on the Coast). Seated at hond· some round tables covercd'in black, white and gol<l stars, nt· tendees centered their conversa- tion on the vulgarity of the tele· cast and the apparent, ever dcclin· ing lack of taste at the world ':; largest and most prestigious cre- ative awards. "I'm pleased -that Forre!.t Gump is doing so well, but must it's suc- cess be punctuated with .constant reminders Trom winners; present- ers and host that all they want to do is pee l" exclaimed one man in black tie heading in the direction of the men's room. In the end, $100,000 W'1S raised for the programs of The As· sistnnce League. And that, after all, is what really counts. B. W. Cook's column nppcurs Thursdays and Saturdays. Now you can recondition you·r ~abinets at a fraction of the cost of buying new! Or replace your cabinet doors & drawers for a complete new look and save thousands of dollars compared to replacing your cabinets! A OMSION Of KT\J WORLDWIDE 963-2582 ZiilCD FREE no-oblfgation demonstration! ~~ J>l:?l:CISI(),_, ~D ~ELI: Vl:SH;.-., CALL US FIRST FOR THE BEST QUALITY, CRAFTSMANSHIP AND DESIGN ASSISTANCE FABRJCAOON AND INSTALLATION • MARBLE • GRANITE • LIMESTONE • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • FLOORS GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER? Agollpu,_ A •vie Im Am~ A best frieiJtl A new romance. Won't YOU /oil!_ usl ColTodoy 1·800-TAlll-4-6 Where friends refer their frfends!f f ;iii1 M4fJl!f1J::~:e~rs: ~: • Traller " TRANSMISSION Hitches 1 , ... ~-_ I · d . 9601 I Family owned & Operate since 11 1 AYIABD •service •Repair I ~omp~Jl.n• I eRUISE I f'lellETS I I I E h I Newport Harbor I • xc ange • Estimates I . . I k b t l=REE• Towing I w!Transnyss1on I As a ou • Road Test I SerVJce I 6Sf •f f70 I Re~air I 1728 Pla_centla 1 I Costa Mesa oomestlc•tm orted cars•Trucks•RV's Affordable Prices are only One of the Reasons to select Harbor Lawn ~ Experienced a'nd knowledgeable l.!:J persons to assist with all of your questions and needs llJ A beautiful convenient location ~ A staff that understands ~ all faiths and rituals 11 Affordable & professional" •We encourage and invite comparison of our funeral home and crematorium • ~ Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot Thursday, March 30, 1995 A1a Emphasis On Education Ind 1 DeVelopment Advertising Supplement• Dally Pilot• March 30, 1995 ~alifomia ~tu~ of The ·university· of Redlands offers CUStom Engmeenpg of . . · Orange County trains Business Degree Programs in . ~ ~ field service~· · · Oiange .County California lnstitute of C.I.C.E. attepd the training Customer Engineering class for a period of 24 (C.I.C.E) offers just one weeks, covering 720 clock course of study. For more hours of hands-on than 14 years, C.I.C.E. has application and lecture. trained students in the While the course consists of troubleshooting. a combination of lab maintenance, and repair of a~ivity and lecture, more small office machines. Our than 75% percent of all Office Machine Repair training lessons are hands" course provides the on applications. student with training in Classes are held at the Practical Electronics as Main Campus in well as Customer Relations Westminster and the and Professional Ontario branch, Mon.· Fri., Development. Upon course completion, graduates earn the well· deserved title of Field Service Technician. . from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.; classes at the Panorama City branch are from 11 : 30 a .m. until 1 :30 p.m. After· school tutorial is available. Since 1976, the Alfred North Whitehead Center of the University of Redlands has be.en ottering adult evening degree programs in Orange County. Students attend classes one night per week from 6:00 p.m. until 10 : 00 pm. Programs are offered in either the Irvine Regional Center next to the John Wayne Airport or at the Brook.burst Community Center in Anaheim. Degree offerings include· a Bachelor of Science in Business and Management (BSBAM), a Bachelor of Science in Information Systems (BSIS) or a Master in Business Administration (MBA). While many evening degree programs require only one or two years of work experience, it is essential that students attending the University of Redlands' evening programs have at least five years· of full·tlme work experience. The wealth of knowledge and experience that the students bring to the classroom facilitates the quality of instruction. Classes are taught in a rigorous, accelerated format which averages six weeks per course. Since students stay with the same learnmg cluster for approximately 25 · 27 months, it is also important that they have sufficient work encourage students to draw upon their previous oi current work experiences. Students enro~d at Call (714) 897-5501. Co~ ~po~g offers High-quality wuque a~vantages for academic and ~~~~~!?d~n~~~~ vocational · experience so t hat they feel comfortable m be mg able to contnbute some of their knowledge and experiences back to the u fellow classmates. Many cours~ assignments also Accelerated programs at both private and state universities are becoming increasingly attractive because they off er adult learners realistic opportunity to balance their careers and family obligations while finishing their education. 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UNIVER511Y OF REDIANIB The Whit~Mad ~a Fowntltd 1n 1907andd<'crtdirtd11;, tltc Western Assocwuon o/ Mob and Co{kaits • e A14 Thutaday, Maleh 30,.1995 Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot COMMUNITY FORUM COMMUNITY FORUM RUNS THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS • WRITE TO: PILOT lElTERS, no VI. BAY ST., COST A MESA, CA 92627 •FAX TO: 646-4170 •READERS' HOTLINE (CALL-IN COMMENTS): M2-6086 COMMUNITY COMMINTAllY Newport Beach is proud . or . its_ dedication to planting trees in city ay~INM~RPHY T his letter is in response to two articles that were in your newspaper recently re- garding parkway street tree plant- ing jn the city of Newport Beach. Specifically, there wns a comment in Fred Martin's column (March 18) and another by a citizen in th~ Community Forum section re- gardin( the issue of the city re· forestation program. plant trees in parkways, to, replace trees removed but never re· placed. The fied areas in Newport Beach that have been without trees for sev- eral years. Additionally, the grant was an opportunity for agencies to work with private sector con- tractors in purchasing and plant· ing trees to enhance California's environment. · pleting the project, which ulti- mately will result in planting 500 replacement parkway st reef trees were selected come from an of· ficial design?ted tree list that was adopted by the city seve ral years ago as well as state guidelines. We arc projecting that by the end of this month 200 trees wi ll be planted in the parkways adja- cent to homes of residents who agree to cure for the trees. We expect our goal or planting 500 trees will be met by June 1. General Ser-by June 1. . The city had the opportunity last year to apply for a state of California Urban Forestry grant and receive up to $30,000 to vices Depart- ment Street Tree Division submitted an , application and com· 4l ~ I ~ ..... :w .. peted with a multitude of other agen- cies through· Murphy out the state. The grant application identi· City staff was very excited in being notified a few months ago th at the city was the recipient of a grant of S30,000~ the maximum amount and the only city in Or- ange County to receive the fund- ing. As a condition of the grant, the city must also con tri bu te an additional $17,000 toward com- The state funding can only be used to plant trees in locations where trees have been removed and not be used for the removal or trimming oC trees. 'The planting program began in f ebruary with staff from the City Tree Division notifying prospec- tive property owners of the intent of planti ng trees in vacant park- way locations in their neighbor- hoods. The variety of trees that As part of this process nnd as required by law, paint was used to mark any underground utilities near the potential tree sites. Res- idents were asked to respond if they had questions or concerns ·relative to a tree being planted in the park.way. "rrees were not planted if residents did not desire them si nce the trees must be cared for (except for major trim· ming) by the adjacent home· owner. The city urban forestry pro· gram is very commiucd to excel· lence and because of this we have been selected for recognition by the National Arbor Day founda· tion for the fifth consecutive year as being a "Tree City USA." Kevin Murphy is tile city man- nger of Neuport JJeac/1 MAlC MAlTlN/OAILY l'ILOT Andersen Elementray students· are holding weekly bake sales to raise funds for injured officer Bob Henry. GAINS The giving spirit The depth o( compassion in Newport Beach for wounded police officer Bob Henry may have best been captured by students al Andersen Elementary. While various fund-raising effort are under way to help defray Henry's medical costs, students at Andersen held a bake sale to raise money (or the officer. Handicapped access As part o( its renovation, the Harbor Marina will construd the first waterfronl handicapped access ramp in the county. The work should be completed by the middle o( June. More bark than bite Costa Mesa officials have come up with a unique -but untested - method (or raising money to support lhe city's first park for dog.s ... "donation" · They love us ••• I'm going to respond to the comments from George Lampinen (C.ommuoity Forum, M11~ 23) regarding the unfunny weather humor. 1 don't know who writes it, but he's definitely is in the minority because everyone 1 1olk to loves to reod the weather on the top of the page, And to be honest it's the first thing I read before 1 look for any•hing else. So whocver's doing it -you do a great job and lt makes so many of us laugh. PAMELA LOVELL Newport Heights 0 I like the upper right hand weather reports. The Labor Olly report was my (uvorite. The ~ubtle humor pokes fun :11 our frustrations with the weather. I had to reod the one March 21 report twice bc(ore 1 aot it. J look forward to this item everyday. 0 JUNE LINVILLE Coi.ta Mesn Reprdina Ocor4e lAmpinen's letter condemnina she "silly little weather thinp in 1hc upper right hand comer of your first p:1ac," I ju r want you lo know 1har cule litale bo~ is she first thing l parking meters. Proceeds from the me:ers would go tu BJrk P,trk. Hoop dreams Two Corona dcl M.ir I ligh School basketball !.lJr!., 13rian FracJlosy and Dominic DeGrJLicr, were honored with All-CIF laurels Wcdne!.dJy. 1 he two led the Sea Ktngs to the CIF Division IV-M championship ... Today Estancia High's big two, Zack Richardson and Kevin Byrne, were accorded similar honors (or CIF Division Ill-A after lc.1d1ng the Eagles to an unbeaten se.1son in Pacific Coast league play. West Side teen-agers Following in the fool!.teps of the popular Shalimar Drive le;irning Center, the Shalimar Drive Teen Center opened today in West Side Costa Mesa. The center, run by tommunity volunteers. offers tutoring ;ind career counseling. CORRISPONDI NCI read. Whoever writes it is very clever and original. Mr. Lampinen must really be a grouch! • • • PAULA GODFREY Oalbou Island they love us not My wife and I were amu~c<l, in a 'en e, by the hcu<lhnc on Murch 23. We wondered I( fewer books might have been the .... source or a lcu effective u e or the Englii.h languuac. Looking at your headline "Longer hour ·, le:.s btiok~ may come from library cut . " Sometxxly's not reading the books on En1Hsh arnmmar. 0 ROOERT ROSS Co ta Mesa I was looking at the hca<Jlinc '1Longer hour , le s books mt.1y come from library LOSSES Library targeted How lo cul $ 190,000 from the library budget in Newport Beach? There is no painless way. Library trustees are cur- rently considering several options, includ· ing slashing its library book budget, dumping telephone reference calls on Saturday and staffing branch libraries pri- marily with assistants rather than librar- ians. The lone bit of good news is that the branch libraries would be open six, rather than the current ftve days a week. Ila's sophomore jinx Ila Border, a sensation last year as she became the first woman to break into the male-dominated baseball ranks, is strug· gling this season for Southern Callfornia College. She made Sports Illustrated last year after winning her first two starts. This year has been different ... five loss- es and an ERA of 8.80. cuts" and it seems to me that the reason that you want the library in all of its splendor is try to avoid the huge grammatical error in that headline. Any sixth-grader knows that longer hours, fewer books is correct. BILL GEKAS Newport Bench 0 Daily Pilot Editor William Lobdell writes fine articles, raises good . issues and plays Monday morning quarterback as well os nnyone around. lntere!.tint: was the Ncwsrnaker of the Year feature on John Moorloch, who last spring predicted our county's current financiul crisis. Another was Bill's recent chiding or local governments for their heavy participation in ex-treasurer Robert Citron's risky invc tment pool. Yet where the 'hell was Lobdell' when John Moorlach needed him for 011 endorsement? Did Bill even vote for his fellow Co ta Mesan ond Pilot guest columni ti It's doubtful us Bill love to go with likely winners e pcciolly if they are incumbent, status-quo woe Uben1ls. Flow. Oo! CHRIS M. STEEL. Co 111 Me a COUNTY SALES TAX Sell an organ, save your job T he agents of Chut zpah, Incorporated have spoken again. They, who have stolen and gambled away our money, actually have the gall to ask us to pony up even more. This hyper-arrogance is yet another layer of proof that the self-anointed ruling class still doesn't "get it." They are still trying to preserve their empires in the face of total loss of confidence by the financial commu nity. And why not? The best solution Jhey can come up with is to go whining to Sacramento or come back to us, who have already been plundered, to rescue them from their own prodigality. What hubris. The burden on taxpayers of carrying this profligate government has gone on long enough. It's time to abolish the corrupt, maggot-infested Orange County government, devolve its few worthwhile functions to the cities and abandon the rest to private enterprise. Anything worth doing will be picked up the entrepreneurial sector. The patronage pit of Orange County government is no longer viable. But to prove J can do more than just criticize, here's an idea on how the remnant!. of this government could prei.erve themselves. It was submitted previoui.ly but I didn't see it get discussed anywhere. Perhaps you thought it wa!. a joke. It is not. The people who p<1y for it i.hould be the ones who st<1ml 10 benefit the moi.1 -the entire complement of 18,000 OC employees. I suggest th:u each of them sell at least one, preferably l\\O, vital organs. (There is a great need for hearts, lungs, livers, kidneys, p:rncreases, eyeb:ills, etc.) The requiremen t would be one org<1n fur each S20,000 salary. At an average of $25,000 per organ, the "Donate a Kidney -Save Your Job Program," \\Ould raise S450 million; two organs \\Ould raise $900 million. At this rate, the $2.7 billion would be quickly liquidated ns long :J!> the bureaucrats were willing to give the same level of sac rifice they demand from the rest of us. The only organs to be forbidden for sale <1re th e hearts and souls of the Do:ird of Supervisors. because th ey were already sold, long ago tu the "highest bidders." The braini., which have hardly ever been used, could command extremely high prices. Of course, the br:iins should be washed thurougMy, and injected with a freedom loving virus, before bc.ing put on the market. Otherwise, they could be sol d tu pathology research labs for Mudie!. 11110 the poi.i.ible phyi.ical properties of hubrb, arrogance a'flJ oor~aucratic bungling. DON HULL Col.la ~lcsa Merits of tax increase debated W ith regard to the sales tax, J think we'd be better off with creating a special assessment district covering the entire county and increasing our property truces. l think it would be a more fair soluti9n instead of putting the burden on the merchants and seeing people going to other counties to buy larger items. ROOERT GRAHAM Costa Mesa 0 I feel that the half-cent tax would be very important to vote yes on. 1 would like to see it limited to a five-year term. GINNY KEMPLER Corona del Mur 0 1 want to go on record for su pporting a property tax or a sales tax qn alcohol and tobacco, with a definite expiration date and clear instructions as to where . , the money goes and what 1t is used for, in order to get through the budget crisis caused by the bankruptcy. Another suggestion would be to suspend Tom Riley's pension and the acting supervisor's salary for one year. They should be able to live off their savings which is what the laid-off county employees will have to do. I do not want services cut, school b11dgets slashed or anyone to lose their jobs t>ccnuse o( this fiasco. I would much ratheF pay a few extra taxes and get this problem solved. MARY JI. PASCOE Costa Mesa 0 Orange County poor and disabled senior citizens better get their yes votes in fast before the California do-gooders rise up to repeat the series or starvation cuts they used in the past to hike up Social Security. RUTH HULSMAN Newport Dench 0 I don't thlr\~ thcia's any woy to ".lvo1d it. You laM • e this 5oles tax in order to pay Wt bt. If we do not pay our debt , there II never be ar\othcr school built without high interest rate because you h:lVe to float bonds 10 build schools. The different (ities will not be able to build any type of civic cen1cn, any type or libraries, because you have to noat bonds to build thalc without paying a hiahcr interest rate. So wo have to keep our r:iting up in order lO avoid the l11gh rate. Indirectly, \W \..:ill have a tnx with the high interest rate so the only other way out, unfortunately, is to have a i.Jles tax . 0 JAY 13. LARSON Cumnil dcl Mar To not p.1ss the lax incn.J ~1· ,,ould be penny \\tsc and dollar fo\,::~!· Or \\C will ~cc our home \alul.~ dccn:.1sc by 10% or more ii \\C become kno" n as an area with .1 poor, untlcr-funJcd school system'' We will lose many of our public services und \\c'll Joi.c our credibility in borrowing money bccnu!.c or our having reneged on our obligation to p<1y our debt!.. We voted for 1hei.e supervisors nnd Citron and we sha re the responsibility for not having investiga ted them adequately before voting for incompetence to mnnugc our money . 0 PHILIP ARST Corona dcl Mur A big no for increa~cs sa les taxes. It seems the schools are doing mo!.t or the complaining about lack or dollars. I worked for a junior college for 12 years and 1 know the waste of taxpayers' dollars. l say schools should act like big business when things get tough and cut bnck the frills and bells and whistles. Focus on basic education. 1 say "phooey" on new taxes to cover waste. ADA COLI:. Costa Mesa 0 1 'rn definitely against any tax increase, sales or property tax, to bail out the county of Orange. l suggci.t they go through the b:-iokruplcy ond thut the county be divided in lwlf. Services for the wcM side of the Santa Ann river would go to Los Angeles County and the eo<it side uf the Santa Ana river would nil be ~crvcd on contract whh JUvel'!.1dc or Sun Dh:go county. In other word'!, ju'it do uway with Oran~..: County nil together. Tho upcrv1~r1 hu'c: shown th ut they have no rcspon ibility for b•1ilina us out by ju11 1ulldn1 about more laxes. So I 1hink lhal the best thing to do i jus& 10 cllmlnetc Ornnae .County nil •oacu.er and let the 1urroundin& coundet contract for services. WINTON ASH'I ON Newport Coa)t r Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thursday, March 30, 1995 A15 BOUND TOWN TODAY ftNANCIAL llMINAa "UndemandinJ Your Financial Risks," is the lllle of o free program planned for 7 p.m. In the Friends' Meeting Room of the Ncwpon Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave. For more lnformntio~, call 717·3~16. wa111 YOUR OWN HORY A crc.ati.vc writi.ng "'.Orkshop~ designed 10 turn interesting life experiences into enga&ing s1ories, meets from 6:30 10 9:30 p.m. at Orange Coast College. Regis1r111ion fee is $49. Call 432-S880 for rcgis1r111ion information. fOUCLOIUU llMINAa Ora~ge <;oast ~liege is offcrina a seminar 1nstrucun1 how to take advantage or bankinc foreclosures. Tho seminar will meet from 9 a.m. to S p.m. in Room 206 of OCC's Lewis· Applied Science Building, Registration fee is $49; $79 for two. A $15 material fc~ is payable in class. Details, 432-S880. »•LI CLUa child's name in li&}lts, but haven't a due as to how to go about it, arc invited to a Cree program at noon in the Friends' Meeting Room of the Newport Beach Central Ubrory. Talent manager Ruthie Grnnt will review enlightened approaches for parents to introduce their children into ~h,ow business. Details, 717-3800. .THURSDAY NAVIGATION CLASI members :ind interested gue~li at the Nc"'port Beach Country Club, 1600 East Coast I ligh"'ay. Reception begin al l 1·30 a.m. Guc~t speaker will be Douglas Morcl:ind, director of development for the Disney Development Comp:iny. Cost is S20 per person. Reservation de:idlioe is Monday, April 3. For more Information, coll 548-4942. WHAT'S YOUR STORyt The public is invited 10 "Everybody I las A Story," :i free presentation by local author Nancy Robison, followed by a tea at the Corona dcl Mor Branch Library. The program, "'hich begins at FRIDAY Orange Coast College's Orange Apple Computer Club will meet Jn Room 214 of OCC's Chemistry Building. Sessions for various Apple products run throughout the day, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Forums for beginners arc held at noon. Annunl membership fee for the club is $30. Visitors arc welcome. For more information, call 770-186S. AUODO CLAll 0...... t Orange Coast College is offering an eight-part navigation course from 7 to 10 p.m: at 9cc•s Sailing Ccn.tcr in Newport Beach, l801 W. Pacific Coost Highway. Registration fee is S68. ror more information call 64S-9412 . 3 p.m .. will focus on how :ill life cxpcrie11ccs -including travel, 1;h1ldhood trials and cnumphs ond family relationships -c;io enhance a writer's story. Details, 644-3 lJS. IUllNIH DIYILO•MINT MllTINO The Consumer Business Network is gponsoring 11 lecture tilled "Turning Your Creu1jvi1y into Profit, Part IL". The lecture will be hosted by designer Suz11nmaric Chin, at 7 a.m. in Geezers Garlic Grill, localed at 42001Scot1, in Newport Beach. The cost ts SIS. For more information, call SS0-478S. SUNDAY ILIDI LICTUal Orange Coast College is offering an aikido workshop from 11 a.n\. to 12:30 .p.m. A.Pril 8 in its Aerobics Room. Registration fee is $24. CaJI 432-Sgg() for more information. . ASK THI lXPHTS The 'Home Office and Business Opportunities Associatjon will meet at the Country Side lnn,•325 Bristol St , Costa Mesa. The meeting is open 10 local homebascd business entrcpcneurs to explore and discuss their questions about working from their home and operating a business in the 90's. Rcgis1r:i1ion/nc1working begins al 11 :30 a.m. Cost is S:?O w11h advanced paid registration received by April 4 or $25 al the door with a phone reservation. Details, 261-9474. SATURDAY TAX ASSISTANCI A free Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program for low-income, handicapped or non-English speaking taxpayers will be held from 9 a.m. to noon in Room 104 of Orange Coast College's Busine~s Education Building. Details, 643-4060. FAMILllS ON COURH A 7-stcp intervention and mediation program for families is scheduled from 9 10 11 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Community Center, 184S Park Ave. The program will focus on ways of communicating with any out-of-control family dispute, anger and gcncrnl family disharmony. Cost is SS fo r adults, SJ for kids 13-18. Parents do not have 10 be present. Details, 5S6-8000. RUMMAGI SALi The Costa Mesa lligh School Mustang Band Booster Club is sponsoring a rummage anJ bJkc sale from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m., and a car wash from 8 a.m. to I p.m .. in the high school's parking lot, corner of Fuirview and Arlington. For more information, call SS6-321S. GLASS llADMAKINO WORKS .. O• A workshop teaching beginning glass bead design is scheduled from 9 a.m. to noon in Room IOI of Orange Coast College's Art Center. Registration fee is S50 and a S7 material fee is payable in class. Details, 432-SSSO. 9 t At)-~ U 9 s g BUY 6i SELL USED CLOTHES, TOYS & ACCESOAIEB, ETC. 2!584 Newport Blvd. (•t 0.1 Mer) Coeta ,... (714) 831-7383 A slide lecture titled, "Ccrcn: The PrcColumbian Pompeii," will be presented by Dr. Payson C. Sheets from 2 10 4 p.m. at Southern California College (Lyceum), SS Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. For more information call 9S 1-SS86. IPIRIT IAHQUU Costa Mesa High School's annual Spirillcading Banquet will be held at the Halccrcst Swim and Tennis Club, 3107 Killybrooke Lane, Costa Mesa, at 6 p.m. Details, SS7-7234. SWIM PROGRAM A Master's Swim Program begins at 6:30 a.m. daily in Orange Coast College's Gymnasium pool. Enrollment is limited. The session will run through April 30. II is open 10 adults, ages 19 and over, rcgardlcs of swimming experience. Registration fee is S40 for one month. Details, 432-5880. ADD LICTURI Coastline Counseling Center of Newport Beach is offering a free lecture called, "At1en1ion Dcfccit Disorder: The Big Picture," from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 1200 Quail St .. Suite IOS. For more information, call 476-0991. CAJlllR •LANNING Orange Coast College is offering a three-part career planning workshop, 3-.mlnvte AE<OADED MESSAGE explains replodng missing teeth CAll (714) 288-3470 from 6 10 8 p.m .. in its Re-Entry Center, Room 106 of the Counseling and Admissions Building. Allendecs will examine personal interests, abilities and values. The free workshop will continue on Monday, April 17 and 24. Details, 432-S 162. · TUESDAY CHOOSING HIALTHY RILATIONSHIPS The singles organization, "The Meeting Room," is sponsoring a . rclalipnship ~o.rkshqp from 8 to 9:30 p.m. at 2915 Redhill Ave., Suite Gl04, Costa Mesa. Cost is S40 for members, SSO fo r non-members for this four-week series. Space is limited, reservations with advanced payment only. Details, S4S-8082. UCalATION COMMISSION MHTING The Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission of Newport Beach will meet at 7 p.m. in council chambers, 3300 Newport Blvd. IGG·STUVAGAHU Costa Mesa Community Services Department is offering "Egg-Stravaganza" Craft Class for kids ages 7-14 at the Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave. at 3:4S p.m. Class will continue on Wednesday. Cost is S25. For more information, call 64S-8S5 I. US TREASURIES m 250-6345 or eoo 876-6829 Seci.wtt1es Ameoca. Inc. Member. NASO SIPC 2082 Mlctlelson DriYe, Ste. 212 Irvine, CA 92715 24 Hour Rdtc Info 1 800 US TREASury BRITISH AUTO SPECIALISTS: : Quality care for fine British Automobiles : Engine Oil & Filter • 1760 Monrovia Avenue C-10 • w/1ny ~luwrvi~ : • • Costa Mesa, CA, 92627 •• Castro! GTX 20/SOWMotor Oil • CALL • • Quality British Oil Filter • 646 8802 ••Detailed S.f~ty Inspection w/elt : • regular services • • : Mu t11Jlon1m only · on* coupon I~' • custom~ • ap 4-J0.95 • FORAPPOINTMENT ~•••••••••••••••••• ENDURiNG • Most Stain Proof • Most Crush Resistant • •Most Durable •Suitable For Residential Commercial & Apartment$ W.it cmn MIW, INt m '-•1 w.,, m • c....- 722-8418 . ..._ QUALITY IS MORTON'S OP CHICAGO NOW OP1N la IOUTH ~PLAZA VILLAGE ..... .. .......... n .... ~PI' l<AUTI CLASSll Adult Shotokan karate class begins at the Newport-Costa Mesa·ltl'ine YMCA, 2300 University Drive, Newport Beach. Cost is S'.30 for the four-week class. SI S for each additional family member. Classes will con tinue Tuesdays and Thursdays. For more information, call 642·9990. FRIDAY, APRIL 7 IUSINISS WORKSHO• Consumer Business Network is hosung J seminar on "fifteen Techniques To InsrcJSC The Profitability of Your Uu\1nc~s in l99S," at 7 a.m. at Geezer~ Garlic Grill, 4200 Scoll, Newport l.kach. Cost is SIS. For more 111forma1ion, cJll SS0-478S. HOW TO II A SHOW llZ KID Parents who would like to )CC their COAST ASSOCIATION MHTING Orange County Coast Association will hold a membership luncheon for S<•nd your Items tu Arou11d To1111 i:d/lor, 1'11c Daily Pilot, JJO W. D11y St .. Costu !tfrsu, Calif. 91617. HEALTH EXPO Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce and the ' THE NEWl'Ol<T !IE,\l'H • rosrA ~!ESA Daily Pilot .~~. ~ .. t ••••••••• , h •• Thursday, Apri·I 20, 1995 3.7 pm• Four Seasons Hotel •What is the Expo all about? • »'lzat is included? 1 A fun. casual networking opportunity. 11 will feature almost 100 local businesses with table· top booth space to show off their various prod· ucts and services. It also give· ~:Jsinesses a direct way to have personal contact with many new potential customers in a single day! •A six-foot table (draped. electricity avai!able) •Table-tent s1gnage •Who can participate? Virtually any business, large or small, whc wants positive exposure to Newport Harbor area business leaders and the community at large! Sign-up & pnv b11fore April 1, 1995 NHACC Non-Nor>-Profif ExhlbttS~ ,,,.mo.rs ,,,.rnbetl. Ori.'• £. lllAI $19000 S27SOO SHIOOO T "° U l&blls 100\be~l '29000 S37SOO S20000 E ltClrul S2SOO sisoo S2SOC • Complete hst of attendees • Opportunity drawings ... and the chance to really market your company! '\'' tt\Jl\a . dline B·rd'' dea "Ear\Y ' tting! approac S1gn·up & pav {tftcr April 1, 1995 NHACC Non-Hort-Profit Ell11blt Sp«• tlemberl ll•ml»rl• org..·· 6,"""' $24000 S32SOO $150 00 '"11Gni.oes lc~s;...:~I UIOOO "2500 SJO(IOC e-.a $.IS II! s~oo 12" 00 (Additional space for racks will be charged an additional fee). 'Non-members J0m1ng the Chamber before Aprtl 1 receive a 565 00 credit toward membership dues "All non-profit orgamzaflOns partJC1patmg m the Expo must be NHACC Members Call the Chamber and we'll FAX or send you a registration form! """ ....._ .. ·•· . , ... .... , '~""ltl I (714) 729-4400 • ' ' , I ' . j I l I I .. Newport Tobacco of Fashion Island Where the sw1. the oceanbreeze, . acappuccmo and a fine cigar . can make yoor day! Service shop area, next ro Tuno-Mart Restaurant 0pm 7 0a)S 714-644-5153 The sun, • the moon, ~. and the stores. its 200 stores ,. . .... and restaurants is one of ....... w..-~1.:J.~;ar~~ : of Newport Beach. Nowhere else can one enjoy this uniqu e blend of shopping variety, from specialty shops to leading deparrmcnt ~tores. Follow the sun, look for the moon and bask in rhc: glow of Southern California's most luminous shopping. FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT 8 E A C H ~ NelMH M•ro11 • Tiie lrHtllwey • lloltlHOH·Mey llH41•f dire,, ... , 1 ... te .,., l•t.,••f 11•• t• .,., H41 le114l•f 12 HH t• 1, •. (7141111·11M AlleH PHHI• CH .. Mlfllwey ......... tAltltef ..... eM .l1••ar ..... I•...,.,, IHetl, • I • .. Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Piiot Thursday, March 30, 1995 .. PORTS . SPORTS EDITOR ROGER CARl.SON, 642-4330, ext. 223 BY llooar. C.U.UoN, Sl'Oa11 Eorroa aded blue caps and time-worn T-shins are today's in-hand legacy of a baseball program born and raised by one of the favorite sons of THE ·THRILL · OF·· THE CE Jeast three innfogs. The arguments of Little League vs. "MacMillian's Way" can be debated forever, but in terms of sheer numbers, no one was more responsible for the youth of Costa' Mesa and Newport Beach to have. the opportunity be a part of a sports program than Rod MacM11Lian. ~ Amid memories of colored T-shirt~ and blue baseball caps, Rod MacMillian takes his bow at lions Park tonight. Newport Beacb and Costa Mesa, and tonight Rod MacMillian takes his long.overdue bow at "A Reun.ion in the Park,'' honoring his service to both communities over the course of virtually a half-century. . ~ Rod MacMillian took some of the ideas, dreams and philosophies . of ~alph Recd, the original coach . and athletic director at Newport Harbor High in the very early '30s, where MacMillian prepped in the mid-'40s. And with them he built it into an empire of collective positives, where seldom did the clicbe, 'loser/ surface. It began with a squad of 30 which showed up for a Rod MacMillian flyer inviting..youlh 10- play baseball in the summer of '47. Before it was over the numbers were approaching 4,000 each summer enjoying the thrill of the race, and everyone got their shot. It begins at 6 tonight at the Costa Mesa Communitr Center, located in Lions Park, including a dinner at 7 and a "Salute to Rod" at 8, but if indications prove correct, it'll go long into the night as old friends reunite over a common bond that transcends every walk of life. Ma<;Millian harbors no illusions that his program was directly responsible for anyone's success. But he's very proud his agenda was a part of so many lives regardless of eventual success. The list of success stories is surely one without virtual end. It's this leJ&Cy which MacMillian 1s most proud of, that he and his program were indeed major points in so many's lifetime experiences. "Our goal was to tum out good people,'' said MacMillian. Wednesday, as he made his way on a walk through the park from his home across the street, he admitted a somewhat uneasiness with the "Center of Attention" label, but conceded he could live with it, especially in lieu of the fact the ultimate realization would see these long-ago contacts reuniting with one another. M any community heavyweights will be there; but in typical MacMillian fashion, he said he's looking forward to seeing Johnny, Bobby and Jerry, and Billy, too. "I think of this more as a deal for people like Luke Davis and oth~r coaches and players," said MacMillian in his familiar unassuming role. It was 48 years ago when MacMillian began the journey into youth sports, and always it was with the primary goal that everyone got his (or her) shot. Although flag football, track, softball, swimming, boxing, wrestling and even tumbling would evolve within the Boys Club, it was baseball which was the catalyst. The cost? A buck for the T-Shirt, a buck for the plain blue cap and $3 for the season, unless you couldn't afford it and the costs ~WC MA~TIN/DAILY PILOT Rod MacMillian, in his old haunts adjacent to Luke Davis Field. would be absorbed. The operation? Rod and his staff, consisting of his own family ~nd volunteer youth-help, would issue the "uniforms" at Lions Parle. the cities of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach helped out ftnanciaJly for the umpires, and schedules were handed out. The facilities came in every form, including grade school play yards with all-grass infields, seldom with .a fence and often with makeshift bases. All-Star teams would eventually evolve and an in-house tournament would be conducted, but it went no farther. Williamsport was a long ways off. Eventually the Harbor Area Boys Oub baseball program would dissolve as Little League took over in the late '80s, and MacMillian admittedly stills swallows hard. Basically he wanted his 4,000 involved with virtually no parental input, locked to an "everyone plays" format, as opposed to Little League's obviously higher-powered program, which includes some 700 tn Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. "I always wanted our players to play to win," said MacMillian, "or at least play to do as best they could. But, yes, we never demanded it." The demands were emphasized on the format. Everyone batted in order on a 12-to 15-man roster, everyone was on the field for at Today he splits his time betweo1 his Costa Mesa home with his wife, Millie, and his Catalina Island restaurant (Cafe Prego), but what keeps him ·in constant ., touch with Costa Mesa and Newport Beach is a near-phenomenal recollection of • those who played under him, and under his coaches. And when talking about those years he constantly brings into play those helping hands which made it work ... as in "Theodore Robins, The Lions Club, Alvin Pinkley and the cities of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. HC'"is an inveterate name-dropper. Sons Pat, Tom, Bill and Mike , daughter Christine, Bob and Bill Wetzel, Gary Nettles, Todd Hess ... the list goes on and on in the playout. W hen recognized he invariably begins his acknowledgement with "You had a brother, too, Ron . .. " or "That's right, you were with the Phillies," or "1 remember you best when you were on Luke's team .. Yet he admits he hopes tonight's fare includes name tags. "Sometimes it's hard to put a finger on it, it's a lot easier remembering the names," he said. One thing which seems a lead pipe cinch. No name tag will be needed for Rod MacMillia n. Note: Late-comers are advised there will be extra seating and dining available at $25 per. Read · it: Newport Harbor girls victorious, 90-80 ~ Sailors come from behind in a thriller to punch out Back Bay swim rival CdM. Bv BAllR.Y FAULKNER, SPoan Wuna NEWPORT BEACH -The in- ferno that enveloped the muscles in Carey Read's arms and legs Wednesday was no match for the adrenaline she summoned in the last 25 of her iOO-yard breaststroke effort to help put her Newport Harbor High girls swim team in e<>· sition to knock off visiting Corona del Mar. Still shaking noticeably with ex- citement afte r her second-place fin- ish helped the Sailors pull even, 78- 78, heading into the decisi-Je 400 freestyle relay, Read watched from poolside as Melissa Schutz, Hanna Kevin Byrne ' Zack Richardson All-CIF honors I or Richardson, Byrne , Widger, Shannon Sweeney and Rachel Arrow cruised to a four- b od y-1 en gt h victory in the See OIRU/P•1• 12 Cun P. LUDCH/OAJLT Pn.ar Newport's Melissa Schutz glides through the 50-yard freestyle en route to a winning 25.01 clocking. LOS ANGELES -Estancia High se niors Zack Richardson and Kevi n Byrne, who shared coaches' Pacific Co=.i:i.t Lcagul! Player of the Year honors, have been named .to the All-CU· Sout hern Section Divbion 111 boy:i. basketball team. ~ Senior Classlc's site for 1996 expected to be decided April 19. G Ood art does not necessarily pay the bills. Just ask the Orange O:>unty Sports Association. Don Andet5~n, execatlve director of the financially burdened' OCSA, and tournament director of the recent Toshiba Senior Classic at Mesa Verde Country Club, the first Senior PGA Tour event ever played on Orange County soil, said Wednesday night that both the country club and OCSA did not proOt as much as the orcanizations had calculated. Andcnen, who did not have specific financial numbers, also said it's a "better than ..... U /U Ne:wport Harbor Hlgh'I Moll Mullen ; up showing -in which be shaved three sec- onds off his pre\'ious best -the signature performance of the win. "That's a huge drop," Desmond said of Arrow's clocking of 1:06.891 almost a second off Williama' victorious time. "That's what I calJ doin& the job." Williams, u •eU as Newport senior Rudol· pho nnajero also put in a substantial day's work. WilJiams aJs6 won the 500 freestyle and swam on victoriOus 200 medley and 400 free relaY quartets. 11najero obliterated the competition in the ... aon1Ptt9e a2 Richard~on, a 6-foot gu.ird, ".1~ a firsHcam pick, whih.: Dry ne, a 6-8 post player, was a second·team selection b)' sportswriters representing the Am=.iteur Athletic Foundation All-Southern California Do:ird of Athletics. Richardson, a three-year varsity starter, aver:igcd 10.1 points, nearly fou r a!>sists and two steals per game for Coac.h Tim Parsel's Eagles, who won 14 straight games, including .1 perfect JO-game romp through the PCL, before fa lling to Dos Pueblos in the CIF lll·AA semifin:ils at Santa Da rbara Cil~ College. The Eagles fi nished 25-4. Richardson, the Daily Pilot PCL Co-Playe r oi the Year. hit 62 of his 152 three-point fie ld goal auempts (40%) and J \· eraged 16 paints in three playoff games, including a career· high 26 against Temescal Canyon. . Byrne, who along with Ricnardson wi ll play for Parsel' South team in Friday's Orange County All-Star Tournament game, 8 p.m. at UCl's Bren Events Center, averaged J0.4 points, 5.2 rebounds, led th e team in blocked shots and shot 60% from the field . Jason Collins, a 6-10 sophomore from 111-AA section cham· pion Harvard-Westlake, and 6-6 senior Devin Daley, who led Artcsi:i to the Ill-A section and state Division 111 titles, shared Division lll Player of the Year laurels. Mullen's bruising agenda N ewport Harbor High softball pitcher Molll Mullen's path to the strike zone has gone directly through her father's shins. A sophomore in her first season as the featured Newport burler, Mullen said she is finally feeling confident with her five-pitch repertoire. But this new-found comfort zone woulJf stiJI be foreign territory without the devoted work of her middle-.agcd catcher and SU'ilor coach, Mike Mullen. "He's worked with me a lot, outside of my ... MULUll/hp 8J Another crown ~ Sailors add to their growing list of sailing credentials. eye (O(ltoct Optometric c ~2711 •• , ___ 81 ~. M.-ch 30. 1995 .... ._81 200 .......... _..., (Wf I I" .... .. 7.5 ..,.... iD 2:GUt) Ud dae ICIO IMaa_tly (SS.10. bCucr *-15 sece.dl Mad ol die naaacNip). He lllQ cm- lribuled IO the 400 free and 200 ~ rctay unias. ahe btser a CIF DmsiOn I qualifier in 1:443'. Desmond 'atso sioakd out the work of I 00 bacbltoke winner Adam Madokoro. and Andy Snelgrove, second in ' both Cr~tJ and a contcibuaor to tbc 200 medley rday And the second-place 200 free relay. "Our &cam geu better every year,'' Desmond said of the Sailors. now 4-1, 1-1 in league. CdM. the two-iimc de· fending league cbam· pions, fell to 3-2. 0-2. . .. The· ~ for us was one of our lcids leaving before his second event, because he bad an ap-. pointment to go to, and another one of our kids changing l:ines in one of his races, which disquali- fied him for that event and the two subsequent relays he was in," said CdM Coach Mike Stark- weather. "You take points away from four events like that, and it's bound to hurt you." ......... , meet fimle, afvins the hosts a 9G-80 triumph and Back Bay bcaaging rights.. "'It hW1 10 bad. but {Ncw- pon Coach Todd KOlbcr) told me we had to get first and sec- ond', so I knew l bad to dig • deep and come through," Read recaUed of her late surge, sec- onds before the Tan swarmed Kolber ror the vtetory dunking. "It feels pretty good right now, though," added Read, a senior who finished behind breaststroke winner Arrow to counter one-twO and one-three CdM finishes, respectively, in the 200 free relay and the 100 back.stroke. Those Sea King swims Lurned a 60-50 New,port lead fn to i 72-68 CdM~ edge. "They really got us in those two events. .. said Kolber, who included Read on a long list of praise-worthy performances. "But once it came down to the relay, I felt very confident in our four girls, and they turned in a championship swim. That 3:46.42 time was one of the best in Orange County this year." Indeed, Schutz. a 6-foot se· nior who also won the 50 free (25.01) and the 100 free (55.36), surfaced from her leadoU dive with a half-body length lead, and Corona was left in New- port's wake from then on. Coming into this week, no other county quartet had gone Caster. Arrow, who also won the 200 individual medley and teamed with Melissa Pomeroy, Read, and Sc hutz on the winning 200 medley relay team. • "It doesn't get any better t Cun P. LUDCR/DAJl.T Pll.OT Newport Hatbor's Carey Read swims the breaststroke leg of the 200 medley relay; later she finished second In the 100 breast to pull Newport even as the Sailors' glr1s rallied for 90-80 victory over. CdM. Newport's Rachel Arrow w ins In 200 lhdivlduaJ medley. gram,'' Kolber continued. "This was the big meet. There's no way we can generate the kind of adrenaline we had today for the rest of our nonrivalry league meets." Pomeroy (first in the 100 fly) and Sweeney (second in both freestyle sprints), also pro- vided huge points for the Tars. Melanie Pelts doubled in the 200 and 500 free for CdM and anchored the winning 200 free relay team that included Michelle Dahn, Julie NDfton and Christy Sawyer. CdM's Laura Weeshoof won the 100 back- stroke, while the 200 free relay "B" team of Libby Stockstill, Hillary Hoeven, Kristi Corn- well and Courtney Hardt also earned a huge second-place effort. Brian Ward (200 frees) and Adrian Strei· zow ( 100 free) were among the CdM winners. as was the 200 free relay quartet of Matt Ellis, Adam McFarland, Ward and Strelzow. than this," said Kolber, who termed the meet mistakes. "Give credit to Newport, but we'll see them again at (Sea View) league finals," vowed Voiding, who would love to avenge the Tars' second Back Bay dual meet victory in 13 years (the other in 1993). one of the bigge,st on a team level in his five seasons as coach, "We pulled through with no "(CdM Coach Doug Voiding) does a great job and we ~ave a lot of respect for their pro- "l told our girls this was the best team ef- fort I've had in a dual meet during my coach- ing tenure," Voiding added. Gulledge comes through · with critical 7-4 victory ~ Junior left-hander makes his first start on mound count as CdM gets back in race. CORONA DEL MAR -With a hunch from his coach, and inspi- ration from fell ow southpaw!> Jim Abbott and Chuck Finley, Corona dcl Mar High's Reuben Gulledge defeated one of the best teams in Orange County in his first start of the season. Contributions came from every- where, such as Chad Johnson's tie- breaking home run in the third in- ning and Chris Wills' save, but it was Gulledge, a junior who had pitched only one-third of an inning before · Wednesday's spot start, who bafned Irvine in host CdM's 7-4 victi>~ in Sea View League ac- tion, ttle-Sea Kings' biggest win of the season by far. Irvine (8-2, 3-1 in "We just needed a change, and I had a hunch," CdM Coach Joe Koh said of his decision 10 start Gulledge against Irvine, which has several left-handed hitters. "We needed to shake things up, and (Gulledge) had pitched a lot in the winter and had been pretty successful. Reuben keeps guys off balance, and that's exactly what he did today. "It wasn't like I was trying to trick them. (Kevin) Stuart would normally be pitching today, but he was out sick Monday, so that just confirmed (the selection to start Gulledge) for us." Us included Abboll, who wore a CdM uniform in the dugout and is considered a temporary assistant coach until the Major League Baseball players' strike is settled. Abbott, former Angel hurler who pitches for the Yankees, lives in Newport Beach, as does Finley, the Angel pitcher who regul arly works out with the Sea J(jngs. Fin- ley does not wear a uniform. league), ranked No. 4 in the Orange County sportswriters' poll, had previously lost only to top-ranked Fountain Valley in the Loara Tourna- ment final. Se• View League "It brings every- one's goals closer to reality when they're around," Gulledge said. WLT Sanu MargUU 4 0 0 IMne 3 1 0 Corona del Mar 2 2 0 El Toro 2 2 o WOOdbl1dge 1 3 0 Newport Harbor 0 4 0 W•tln•Ml•W'• 01,...a (31111 5-111 MlrQ11111 7 .. ~ ' "l t h ought (Gulledge) did awe- some," Abbott said. "He knew exactly what his strengths were, and he showed tremendous poise. He gave up a couple C:tlM 1, Mn14 CcJM (5-3-1, 2-2) had lost six in a row against Irvine, in- cluding three last season, when the Va- queros knocked the Sea Kings ou t of a e T OIO a. WoodtJlldOI 2 FrltllY• Oa"'" (3111) C.r-d91 Mat 'l'I Woocbldge. •Windrow Pn O Toro II N•wport Harbot &Ira MllQ11111 • """" possible playoff spot in the regular-season finale. The Sea Kings, back in the thick of things in league, benefited from three Irvine errors, leading to three unearned runs against senior left-hander Matt Ward, who start· ed the game among Orange Coun- ty's leaders in wins (five), strike· outs (25) and earned-run average (0.83). But CdM tagged Ward for three runs in the first, triggered by lead- orr hitter Myles Davis' line single to center. Davis finished the game 3 for 4, raising his batting average to .S15 (19 for 33). Ward lost his first of the year. Following ll n out in the CclM first, Dryon Dear reached on on error, then Johnson doubled to right·ccnter to score Davi$. After another out, Matt Friend scored Ueor and Johnson with a sln&le to right-center, WnrcJ's thfrd pitch of the inning that was up in the strike zone. of runs early, then battled back and kept his team in the game. That's the sign of a champion pitcher." Gulledge, who made 89 pitches, had faced only three batters be- fore this one, getting one out and giving up a walk and a base hit against El Toro. He relied heavily on his fastball in the last four in- nings. Wills, relieving Gulledge in the seventh, came in w1th two runners on and one out, with one run al- ready over. Wills needed only two pitches, the latter forein~ Ethan Gragnano into a game-ending dou· ble-play. He earned his second save of the year. After Irvine scored three in the third to tie the game, Johnson cranked a pitch over the right-field fence for a solo home run, giving CdM a 4.3 edge, a lead it would never relinqui~h. Mike Mortenson, CdM center fielder, also had n pair of knocks in four trips to the plate. Newport absorbs 7-1 loss; remains winless In league BY DENNIS BllOSTEllHOUS SPOan Warna NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport Harbor High baseball _team was overpowered in more ways than one against visiting Santa Margarita in a Sea View League game Wednesday. The Sailors came out on the short end of a 7-1 decision. To sum up, Santa Margarita win- ning pitcher Mike Penney was dominant on the mound, fan- ning 11 Sailors, and at the plate, the Eagles lashed out five extra-base hits, including three solo home runs. "(Penney) had good stuff, but l didn't think we were ag- gressive enough al the plate," said Newport Coach Kirk Bates. A misplayed pop ny in shal- low left field with the bases loaded in the top of the first helped Santa Margarita to a pair of unearned runs and a lead the Eagles would never re- linquish. Newport used some little ball to manufacture its run in the bottom of the first. On the first two pitches of the game, Scott Sandstrom and Rhet Coluccio reached on bunts which re- sulted in errors. Following a fielder's choice, Sandstrom trotted in with the run when a balk was called on Penney. The loss, Newport's fourth straight in Sea View play, marked the 20th straight league setback for the Sailors, dating to 1993. SANTA MAJIOAalTA 7 N1W11onMAa1oa1 Sa11u Marpnt. :u t 001 t -1 9 1 ~ tfvbof 100 000 0 -1 l J 'eftfteY, Tn1ma11 In Md Nlaltr~ UrlNft Md liehl. W-renney. l-~ 1-l. ·Jl-Crilfl11 CSM), M.t•lrey (SM), llefll (NH). ttl-Hawldnt (SM), Ttttman (SM), rtnfMY CSM), LOCAL ICHIDULI TMUUDAY .......... Hiii! ottlool .alrit • C6\4, ~ l1441ftdi II Of~,.,,.... .. ..._. ...... J"""' ........ c._. -Conconll 11 s.c:M c.ltet. J """ tll&ft t<hool -~ HMMr .. Mlttleft VI.Jo. J, ISJ C..U ~ 11 s_, Hilt, J tU. ,,... ........ HIP IC'-l Myt Ml 11r11 • c-.. Mar .. ~ ...,..,, >: &...,... ...... h4Mc.lt,. BRllFLY CdM tops Tars, 13-5 CORONA DEL MAR -The Corona del Mar High boys tennis team flexed its muscles against vis- iting Back Bay rival Newport Har- bor Wednesday, claiming a 13-5 Sea View League decision. The Sea Kings (6-3 overall, 2-0 in league) were led by sophomore John Capello, who remained un- beaten in league competition with a 7-5, 6-1, 6-0 sweep. In doubles, the CdM teams of Greg Colema n-Josh Weinstein and Raj Shukla-Mike Feyka also won their three sets. CclM won its league opcnr on Tuesday, by the same 13-5 score, over El Toro. CDM '~, NIWPOltT HARaoa • Siniles: Capello (CdM) dd. ICojlm~ 7-S, dd. S11ns, 6-1, def. Havel, 6-0; Stauffer (CdM) lost. 3-6, won, 6-2, 6-0; Mxfwne (CdM) won, 6-2, lost. l-6, 4-6. Doubles: Jahangiri-fruchbom (CdM) lost to Utman~sur, 3-6, lost to Evuts·Oyltt, 4-6, dd. Davidson-Summers, 7-6; Shullb·feyb (CdM) won, 6-3, 6-3, 6-2; Coleman-Wtlnsttin (CdM) won, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. occ rans 1n 101t11a11, 4-2 SANT A ANA -The Orange Coast College women's softball team could not overcome an early 4-0 deficit and bowed to host Ran- cho Santiago, 4-2. in an Orange Empire Conference matchup Wednesday. The Pirates (6-13, 4-7) scored a pair of runs in the top of the fourth when Carrie Schwab singled and came home on America Rob- lcdo's two-out, two-run homer to left center. Robledo was 2 for 3 on the day. OCC had the tying runs on base in the fifth and sixth in- nings but could not convert against the Dons (18-8, 9-2). llANCNO SANTIAGO 4 OllANOI COAA' 2 °'•"P Cout 000 200 0-1 6 1 bftcfio Santiago 201 000 •-• a 0 lfantom and JtffWJJ fettmlft, loblet (5) and Erkltsen, VIiia (S). W-Tneman, 114. L-lraMOm, 1·J. S-llobln, 4. ll-IGr\wood (RS), )effen (OCC), HI-llobleclo (OCC). I I I I Mesa bOyS swim to victory ALISO VIEJO -Sophomore Dominik Szuksztul, a native of Po- land, won the 50 and 200 freestyle events Wednesday to pace the Costa Mesa High boys swimming team to a 99-65 Pacific Coast League victory at Aliso Niguel. James Comfort also doubled, capturing the backstroke and but- terfly events and contributed to two relay victories for the Mus- tangs. Mesa had 1-2-3 sweeps in three different events, despite a number of swimmers competing in off-events. e Elisabeth Christiansen dou- bled in the freestyle sprints and was a member of the victorious 4 x 50 freestyle relay squad as the Costa Mesa girls fell to Aliso Niguel, 111-59. Katie Grogan took first in the indo for Mesa. Eagles' BoDenbach sparkles COSTA MESA -Chad Bol· lenbach's runner-up fin ish in the 50 freestyle and two third-place showings by Mark Stephens boost· ed the Estancia High boys swim- ming team in a 127-37 loss to pow- erful Pacific Coast League foe La- guna Hills Wednesdar. e The Estancia girls also fell, 127~-43~. to Laguna HiJJs as Ail- een Bennett's and Megan Wil- liams' second-place finishes were the top efforts for the Eagles. Estancia llllled on In four IRVlNE -Despite a fast start, the Estancia High boys volleyball team remained winless in five out- ings following an 11-IS, 15-4, 15-1, 154 Pacific Coast League setback at University Wednesday. "We came out with a lot of co- hesiveness and passed well In the first game, but Uni really picked it up after that," explained Estancia Coach Dave Castle. Estancia'• Ryan Haney had six kills and five aces (all in the first game), alona with four digs. IWIMIUMMARIU COITAMUA.ff ALISONIOUIL•• 100 _., reby-1. Aflto Nlgvtf, 1:S7.~; 200 ;,.., _ 1. Shbalil (0t). 1 :51.13; J. Hyhon CCMJ, J :Ol.41; J. ~ ICM>, 1:09.IS; 200 ti.t ~ wo. ~M; .l. Mtln~ (AN), lill 0 • IMI llWd; 50 fftt-1. ~u_b.rlul IOU, 24.42: 2. kbt (AN), 15.17; J. MtOMniel CCM), 26-26; 100 fty-1. Comfort (CM), 1:00.ol; 2. IClrnos ICM), 1:0s.26-J. Slln.son CAN>. 1:11.n: 100 frH-t. OMdy (CM), 5J.04; 2. ludJey (CM), $3.11; J, T.,-b (CM) 53.0; 500 frft-1. Ctay IOU. S:Jt.f6; 1. T~ 10.0, 5:41.12; l . ICirn (00, S:06.S2; 200-(,;; rel.JY-1. Cosu Meu (T•ylot, IClrllOI, OM\dy, Comlort), hJl,92; 100 Ndc-t . Comfort (0.t ), 59.27; 2. O•ndy (CM), 1:°'-SS; 1kitJICAN),1;08.40; 100 ~ust-1. Nil.-(AN), 1:10.95; l . lftlnpohn (4N), 1:15.70: J. Md>Mln~ ICM), 1:t9.0; 400 frtt reby-1. COIU Mew (H)ltoa. ludJey, Comr Cnytli), nt. LAGUNA HILU 127 UTAHCIAU • JOO tM6y reLay-1. l..qUN Hinl. 1:47.l; 2 frtt-1. 1'\Ut ICwoli ClH), l:SJ.7; 2. VOiing (LH), 1 :S9.6; J. Sl~ns ((}, 1 :St.a: 200 L"i-1. "w ICwoli (lH). 1:56.1; 2. Oollng (lH), l)t; l , W•)m 1£), J:l4; SO frtt-1. M.vll Kwok (LH), 22.17; 2. llolknb.0 ((}, ll.7; J. Nguyen CLHI. 24.08; 1 fly-1. l>Ummontttt CLH), 54.49; 2. Tin& CLHJ, 57.24; J. Sltpflefis (t ), 1:00.2; 100 frtt-1. ~trC'f (lH), 49.6; 2. lol~bxh m. $2.7· l. YOlln& (LH), 54.5; 500 frte-1. Oobtr tLHI, S:lS.67; J. CrtrN CLH), $:55.06; l. Hsltn (LIO. $:55.67; 200 fret rtl•y-1. laiun.a 111111, l :ll.8 100 b.Klt-1. fine (Lii), 59.69; 2. Ngll}tn CltO. 1:06.79; l. ~Khntr CLHI, 1:07.0J; 100 ~t.ut-1. t.Utt IC_., CLHI, 1:05.32; 2. Crtm• (lH). 1:08.93; ), H•ltft (LH), 1:16.9J; 400 frtt rtLay-I. upn• H1ll1, 3:4..l.Sl. GllU NIWPOH MM80a H coaoNA DIL MAI IO 200 !Melley ltLay-1. ~'J)Of1 H.vbof • (Pom<rr0y, lud, AlrW, Schutz), 1:56.U. JOO frtt-1 .. Petit (CdM), 2:01.47; 2. Wldgt'r (NII), J:06.87; l . H~dt (CdMI, J:l 1.SL 200 IM -1. AmM (NH), 2:14.11; J. Norton ICdMI, 2:25,81; J. Althul« (CdMJ, 2:U..Ll. SO frtt-1. Sch111l (NH), ll.01; 2. SWHM1 CNH), 2U1; J. O.t.n CCdM), 2'.24. 100 ny-1. Pomuoy (NH), 1:03.S 2. Milliltn (NH), 1 :06.07; 3. Alshul~ (CdM), 1:06.lO. 100 frtt-1. Sdluu (NH), SS.36; 2. S-nty (NH), 57.ll; l . O.t.n (CdM), Sl.24. S free-I. Peth CCdM), 5:3$.'8; 2. Mllliltffl (NH), 5:44.37; J. HMnill.on CCdMl, 5:46.17. 200 frtt rd.ay-1, CoroM 4tl M,a, (Dahn.""°"°"• S..W)tr Ptlls), t :46.J9. 100 llKI<-1. WftShoff CCcl.~). . 1 :Ol.2'; 2. Pomeroy CNH), t :04.42; J. Norton CCdM), 1:07.49. 100 br•ul)1. Air-CNll), 1:10.27; 2. leid (NH), 1:12.14; J. lurch (CdMI. t :1 l.6t. 40 frft tt&.y-1. ~ H.lrbor CSdlUU. W1d&tr. SWttney, An_.I, 3:46.42. Al.110 NIGUIL 111 COIYAMUAH JOO "'""'1 r.rlay-1~ Aliso Nipl, 2:04.Sl; 200 lrtt-1. Mnty•nblc (AN). 2:09.$2; 2. Lund ICM), l :t4.SS; l . Silo (AN), 2;17.47; 200 IM-1. IC. ~opn (CM), 2;03.'1; 2. Thornton CAN!, 2:16.07; J. H.an (AN), l :Jl.63; SO frH-1. L 0.rlstLannn (CM), 26.79; 2. M.ard.lrt1w (AN), 27.37; J, Nguytn (AN), 29.81; 100 ny-1. Thornton (AN), 1 :Ol.32; 2. l. Cl11ls~n1ffl COii 1113.21; l. Truh~'I (A."l), 1":16.99; too frtt-t. (. CMui.anstn (01), 57.15; 2. Shed.lto<lich (AN), 1·o1 .08; ). J.inis CANI, 1 :06.17; $00 frH-1. MHty•ntk (A"I), 5:45.H , 2 IC. Ctog•n ICM), S:46.JI; J. H•n CAN), 6:18.63; 200 frtt rtl•y-L Coiu Meu (Lund, [. Chrltli.anltn, L Chrlst~nsen, IC. Croe•n), 1 :S0.1 O 100 INcl -1. V,unum VJll), 1:03.06; l. S.to CAM 1 :08.11; 3. Lund (01), 1 :09.41; 100 h<tHI -I. M.uduMw CAN), 1: 18 OI; 2. Rubinson CANI, 1:23.06; J. S.mpwn (AN), 1:24.75; ~00 lrH reLay-1. Aliso Niguel, 31S7.16. LAGUNA HILU 1271n UTAHCIA 4i1n 200 m~ ~Lay-1 . ugun• Hill~. 2:11; 200 frH-1. LtLand (LH). 2:063; 2. Shubin ILH), 2:16.2; J. Wyatt CLH), 2:16.3; 200 IM-1, Rodripti (LH), 2:44.93; 2. Oobtr CLIO, 1:55.0; l flttgef.id ClH), 3:21.$6; SO frtt-1. Shubin (Ut), :21.021 J. O'Unoll (LH), 29.66; l . l>Uhu C(), 30.0; 100 fly-1. lodrl&utr (lH). 1:04.49; J. Uctd. m. 1:10.02; 3. Doller 1rn1. 1:20.01: 100 frtt-1. l'lltlmath&m• CLHI, 1:00.74; 2. ltnnttt ((), 1:03.4; l. O'Carroll ClH), 1:04.99; SOO frH-1. Pinon (lHI, 5:30.2; 2. fil:z&trald (LHI. 6:02.29; 3. Ucedi {£), 6:25.J; 200 "" rtLay-1 l.u\IM Hillt, l:Sl.4'= 100 INdt-1. Wltl.lnd (lR), 1:09A1; 2. Willt.ms Cf), 1:12.I; 3. Wf•lt ILHI, 1:1l.16; 100 lwus1-1. Pinon (lH), 1121.99; J. Hosobwa (LH), 1128.06; J, Nguy•n ((), 1:32.J.4.; 400 fr.r• rtl.ly-1. u1un• Hiiis, •:tt.J7. Oullcdgc, who scattered JO hfts in 611.1 innings, was 1tuna by a cost· ly Infield error in the third, lead· ina to 1hrce unearned Nns, as Ir- vine rallied with two out. coaoNA DIL MAa .,, IRYINI • IMM 00J 000 t -4 tO l Coron.t ck-f ~ 301 OJt •-7 10 t Jt4)J c:.... Mft.t .. Alhe .......... ~ .. . 1HEODORE ROBINS Oullc<f101 who allowed only one corned n, walked two and struck out no • Ward, Manrlqw.1 (6) "'' Cr.tsru1no; Q.ftfd&e, Willt (7) ~ ICnethL W-C41l1Hp, 1-0. L-Watd1 5·1. 31-lnK•tt fl> l. JoMson 1CdM>. Hll-Johntoit <C-.). ..,. ,, .. , , •# 2060 Harbor 1ou1.varc1 o1 Can in Costa Mesa (714) 642·0010 -• ...., n..,.,,,,, ArlO Sila J 921 THE I·= ), II Newport Be ch/Costa Mesa OaJly Pilot ........... Wl wcek'1 1torm' blew 10 10 10 both da~. Knowing that the top fi\'c team~ would qualify for National made the competition quite 1t1ff on the water. Newport Harbor ha dominated hiih SC;h~I ~iling thtoughout the sea~on, wn~ its ~nly opposition coming from Un1vcts!tY High of San Diego. Again, Unwcnuy wus the main foe th is weekend, with A Oivi~ion skipper Oreg Reynolds posing a strong threat aftor • the first day of rucing to Newport Ht1rbol"1$ clean ~weep of the geason. Sunduy saw Reynolds continue his top-notch sailing, but nlso sow Newport Harbor come toge1her ns n tenm to run away wich the rciaua. · Long upwind bca~ combined with tht.: high winds made for two grueling day~. but Newport Harbor's depth allowed the team to have •'fresh legs" out on lhe water through substitutes. Nathttn Dun~am and E:asey Hogan • sh.a~e~.the ~kippering duty in A 0 1\11S100, w11h Patrick Hogah, Heuther • Porter and Kassy Thompson sharing lhe crewing. The range of weights gave Newporl Har~or the option to sail light or heavy, depending upon the current wind condition for the sei. Though there was some tultering in A Divi~ion, the five tenm members worked together to keep their team in contention for first, finishing second overall. B Division saw an incredible show or sailing expertise, as Steve Kleha, with crews Mandy McDonnell and Alison Hill, rolled over the Oce-t on lheir way to win~ing their divii;ion and getting low·point for the regatta. Wi1h nine firsts in 13 races, Kleha, McDonnell and Hill were unstoppable in their demand of the divbion. PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES Though their o,..lhc-water performances were outstanding. their cohesion 1 a team was even more impre~ive. Each 11.me a Newport Harbor boat would rounJ a mark, a loud choru) of "Go Harbor!" would ring out, and when chc) had finally wc,m, they properly oriented their freshmen, thruwinc them into the water as part of the grcu ~illn& tradition. Q>rona dcl Mar High School ali.o participated in the PCC's, finishing eighth. TI1ough the team did not ~tu~lify for 1he High School Nationals, ltit unprovernent over the !lea on i obvious. With only four members of the team . at the regatt(l, Mike Rcicher :uling with Ju!ltin Reeves, and Jimmy Beck sailing with Robbie Rader. thiit all-freshmen group a.bowed their ublhty 10 compece against oldct, more experienced sailors· on an equal level. With no substitutes and extreme conditions, the team snalcd its best reg:ttta of the season .ind is loo~g forward to ~vcr\ greater improvement next season. Under the wing oJ Coach J:ume Malm, a three-time Collegiate All-American, both Newport Harbor arid Corona del Mar high teams have flourished in their pursuit of sailing excellence. ln his tenure, both of these teams have experienced the thrill or competing al the national level many times and even competing in a World Ch ampionship. •Friday: A look at the U.S. Women's Chullengc for the Bettina Dent!i Memorial TroP.hY and local Olympic hopefuls Mike Sturman anJ Nick Adamson continue their quests for lhe gold. Stephanit Keefe's /.>oDtlJJg co/unw apµeurs in tbc Daily Pilot cYt'IJ' Thur~day. GOLF ........... , SO-SO chance" that Mel)a Verde will ho t the econd To biba Senior Clas ic ne~t year. Out whether or not OCSA, which h~ debti; of some Sl million, wall continue to manage the event is also still 1n que lion. "That will be part of the total cvalu111ion," Andersen said. "The Senior 1'our knows the financial srntus of OCSA, and it knew ii going into the event. We've paid all of our bills and we haven't shortchanged anybody." Andersen and officials from Mesa Verde, Toshiba and the Senior Tour will mcel April 19 to decide the future of the tournament. Tosh iba has a guaranteed three-year C!)ntracl with the Senior Tour, with prize money escalating to $1 million in 1996 and 1997. This year's inaugural event.was SSQ0,000. "from a pure (financial) bonom line, it\ probably no1 going to be profitable," Andersen said. "But l can say frQm an art1st1c standpoint that we're vel'Y. pleased with lhe look of the tournament ;nd th e MULLEN From P•t• B1 pi tching lessons," said the Daily Pilot Ath lete of the Week, who ulied her fa stball, curve, drop, change and ~crewball in a complc1c-gamc three·l11 t 2-1 victory over v1s11ing Edison Friday, adding seven -.1rikeouts to give her 24 in 27 urning' this year. "AmJ he has the bruises to prove it." Mullen s strong showing against Edison ul<.o lowered her ERA to 1.29 and raised her record to 4·1·1 for the 5-3·1 Tars. "She\ going lo be pitchang about 90% of our innings," said the elder Mullen. who employed hi\ daughter as an All·Newpon-Mesa District lhird baseman PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES way It came oft. The players liked it, the tour liked it and tclevi ion Hkcd it .. ESPN fell that at made for a good 1elcvision •how, and that the show came oCf very well.·• 1here'i no deadline for the part1C) to reach an •ircement in terms of a future 'lite o( the tournament. Before Mesa Verde was chosen as the ho t ite for 1995, OCSA had also co~idcred Coto De Caza, Dove Canyon, Yorba Linda ftnd Los Coyotes a!t possibilitie~. Although Andersen has been evaluating segments of the seven-day event on a do.ily basis since it concluded March 19, the nucleus of the appraisal will be wifh Ric Clarsof), director of administration for the Senior POA Tour, in less than three week,. "I don't really have a gut feeling (whether or not the event will return to Mesa Verde)," Andersen said. "l don't 1hink Mesa Verde made as much money out of 11 as it had hoped to. They had a guaranteed site fee, but they didn't make as much as they wanted to from the pro shop and dining room." • REDUITAb ... In response to a correspondence in 1he 'Daily PilQt l:ist Thursday from an unhappy hfes_a Verde last year, behind pitcher all-district senior pitcher Jennie Colclasure. Mullen, a travel ball veteran currently aligned with the Irvine-based Orange County Lobos, hit .327 to become the lon1. all-district freshman last spring. She has, however, been slowed offensively by an ankle sprain sustained in a prescason scrimmage. _ "lt doesn\botbc.r her pitching, bu1 ii\ affccled her running," said Mike Mullen, who watched Molli share the team lead 1:i,1 season with 12 stolen bases. Out with Mullen in the pitching circle. thl• Tars haven't needed much offense. Hours spent as his daughter's sideline battery male make Mike th e perfect pr.:1,011 to call all of Molli's pitches from the PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES f hUreday, March 30. 1995 U re ident, who tatcd, among other thing$. hi di pleasure or the Senior Cla le invading hi neighborhood and causing havoc with the p rking ituation enforced by the Costa Me Pol ice Dept., former COsta Mesa Muyor Bob Wil on had a piece or bis own mind to clear when he phoned the other day. Wil~n. who founded the Costa Mesa Oolf and Country Club, and was instrumental in evera l positive changes within the cily, including the renaming of the SS freeway to the Costa Mesa Freeway, believes the Ser,iior POA Tour event that wits played at Mesa Verde Country Oub is a tremendous boost to the community. Not only financially, but also in terms of morale. "ll was good for everybody at Mesa Verde," Wilson aid. ''That's how you get a city going with it spiri1. and spirit is \Omething we haven't had in a long time. We've lost it "iomewhere, and maybe this is a chance 10 get 11 back. "Despite (the letter) in the editorial page, I would ju!>t like to say than~ you to Mesa Verde and all the people, the nearby. resadenl) at Mc<;a Verde " · dugout. and Molli said she hasn't shaken one off ye1. "I le wanm me up before the game, so he knm\-. which pitches arc working," said ~toll1, who credit' her pa tching lessons, exlr:i <>e'>'111n~ at home. and a heavier high school pttdung worl..lm1d with helping her gain 1111.rcas1ng comma nd of her five deliveries. "1'111 1101 a hard-th rower, so I have to • hep hitters oil balance," she explained. 'lfo.: onlv tune I throw a fastball b when I nci:J ,1 sl 0 nkc · l1csp111.: her le\-. than intimidating H:ll>l'tl~ Mike 'nid the occasional sideline n11,f1rl' can still r:it\C a well "I'll <:.Jy l'm used to it b)· now, but it hurt ;1~ much .11 40 mph as it d0es now at 45," \\il..e 1,aid -By Barry Faulkner PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE tS HEREBY the Oepar1monl ot tndu»· MESA. CA 92626 01S111bu10 10 m1111on gallons Pres Ismael Angel Correa RKorder or u ld County lht1ton H provided In dams Inf~ for ll'f lllCOI· GIVEN !hat tho at>ov&-t11al Relation~ of tho State lhe under11gned Trustee or reclaimed water 10 ser· This statemenl was tiled This statement was filed EXCEPTING THEREFROM said Nott, fees. ch•r9es rtetnest ol the~ lddln1 Ind named School Distuct of ol Calllorrud has doter· d1!.cla1m1 any hab1hty lor vice ox1stmg and 1u1u18 wtlh the County Clerk bl w.lh the County Clerk ol the following (•} Unit, 1 and uptnsu of the trust· octletcommon6uionfton. ii ll'f. Oiange Covnty. Califomla. 1T11nod the gunerally piovail· any 1ncorrec1neh o tho tandscopo tmgatlon, agfl· Orange Counly on Fobfu-Orange County on March through 8 as shown upon ee •nd the trust• creeled shown heftlin PUBLIC NOTICE STATEMENT OF ac1111g by and through Its .ng rath of wages 1n lhe streel ad<.tress and other cultural. and dual plumbed 1lf'/ 28 1995 3. 1995 the Condominium Pl•n re· by said Dud of Trust The tmll amount of 1f1t unpaki ABANDONMENT OF Govurning Board, herolnal· locality in wtuch me Work common designation 11 reclnimed water users F838422 F838799 corded as ln11rument No. Con t Fed Services, as bllinca ol flt olllOdon seo,,rtd USE OF FICTITIOUS tor relorrod 10 as "DIS. 1s to be performed Coples uny, shown herein Betty J . Wheeler Publtshe<l Nowport Beach· Published Nowpor1 Beach· 89-32183', of Ottlclal Re· u ld Trustee, • Callfornl• t¥ ltlt propel\' " be sold and BUSINESS NAME Tl~ICT", will rocelve up to. or lhe$e wage rilte deter ml-11181J0~8\ amou~alh or ~e District Secretary Costa Mesa Daily Pi~ot Cos1a Mesa Dally Pllol cords of said County (b) Corporation, 19900 Plum· reason1tle · ntmated costs The following persons but nol later lhan 11111 na11orn;, enl1lled PREVAIL· ~~~i~n :oac'!icr~g b~· 0th~ PubhshoCl Daily Pilot March 9 t 6, 23, 30, 1995. March 9 16, 23, 30, 1995. Ttle ~•ctualvt right to uu mrr St , Ch1tsworth, CA expenses 8lld advances It 9" have abandoned lhe use 01 obovo·statod tune. sealed ING WAGE SCALE are 11 1 b Id u March 30 t995 Th735 lh740 the Restrlc!ed Common 91311, (818) 725-'310, 8y: -me of the Ii.ti! putkl\ion of th Fl 1111 6 n bids tor tho award ol a m111n1111ned ot tho OISfRICT prupo Y 0 0 so an · ArH" deslgn•ted 111 O•· e,~\ltz Osorio, Anls111nt 1f1t ,.,_ce ol S.e 19 1198 975 60 Naeme· E.c lanouSsalea ~!1d oAsss contract lor tho p101ect de· oll1ce locaiud at· 1370 rua1soni1bli1 esllmdallldd Th7Gt PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE rage Spacu, Reserved Secrttllly, Dated: Ill ld<ition to cash ...... 0T111s .. e · ~ "'' · IC bo·• . Ad A c , 1 M cos~. expenses on a · p kl s p I 03115/1995 · u"' "' sociatos 18862 MacArthvr 11 u II!! ams w .. 0~., osa, v c at lh 1 I th PUBLIC NOTICE ar ng paces. at os, win 1CCept • CMtief's check Blvd .. sio. 200, Irvine, CA Upgrade Chiller Md Thor· CA 9262~; Physical Faclll· 1:i;;0~~ubllCU~O~~i' 1~0 No~ Flctltloua NOTICE OF •nd Deck as 1hown upon ~~~p~~~8~~6 drlwn on I Nit or llftonal banll, 927 15 mal Energy Slorage Sys· ties Planning, an~ are e11a11. Ilea or sale Is· 5446.28d.9Ci LEGAL NOTICE Bualneas Name TRUSTEE'S SALE the Condominium Plan • • 1 check dtawn ~ 1 11111 °' Tho Fic\lllous Business tcm Orange Coast College able 10 any 1n10•1isled par1y In addllion 10 cash tne NOTICE OF Statement UNDER DEED OF TRUST •bove referred to PUBLIC NOTICE ltdef'll CIMt ution OI 1 dlecl\ Namo referred 10 above Mus1eiF1ne Arts upon requclit The Con· Trusloo wlll accept 11 cash· PUBLIC SALE OF The lotlowlng po11ons are Lo•~l:l~~~;::~cs PAR,CEL 2. Unit C, Build· drlwll bt 1 Stale or ftdenl sw. was filed In Ornnge Counly Bids shall b" received 1n traclor shall post a copy of 101 5 checll <.tr awn on a 8 0 doing business as Ing 1 u shown upon the NOTICE •nos and loan assoadon, SI\' on July 3 1990 File tho ploco 1dunt1hed above, lh1s docvml'nt at e,\Ch 1ob I 1 I I b k A AND NED THE COMMUNITY VEL· other: 2610615-11 Condominium Pt1n 11bovt YOU ARE IN OEfA'• T UNDER i-moo9'on OI sl'llngs bal1' · Jnd lhoso bids !lhall be slle Tne Contractor and 1 a 8 or na iona an a PROPERTY LOW PAGES. 14742 Pla:za AP. Number 934..a....011 referred to IA • .,,. 02 1 No.F462410B opened and publicly ro11d .Jny. subcontractor under 11 check orewn by 11 state or Notice 1s hereby given Or, *203, Tualln. CA YOU ARE IN DEFAULT PARCEL 3· Tht uclu·IA DUO OF TYIUST DATt :1:11ed in Stdon 5l ol lie Emil Nasl!i, 31887 Circle oloud at the abOvo·slated shall poy not lass than the ledernt creCl•t urnon or a that the undersigned will 92680 UNDER A DEED OF slvt right to use the "R .. 1211\190. UNUSI YOU TAKI nandll Codi Ind llJttlolbld 111 D11ve, Laguna Bo:ich, "CA limo and plJce spoeihed prevailing rates ol check drown by a state or sell al public avct1on pvr· Pat11c1a King, 349t2 Cam-TRUST, DATED March 1. strlcted Common Arn~ or ACTION TO PROTECT YO do business In "'' ltl9t Ill lie 92677 In accordance with Ille wages lo a I worl.11rs em· lodoral savings and lo:in suant to Seeton 21701.l ol 1no Cap1s1tono Capistrano 1990, UNLESS YOU TAKE those portions or Lot 1 dt· PROPERTY.J rT IUY BE SOLO A Mnl ttndtr 04htr d\111 CIStl IS Tills busiriess was con-prov1s1ons of Calltorn1a ployed 1n the eJtecuuon ol association saving!> a.-lhe Business I!. Prolos· Beach CA 92624 ACTION TO PROTECT scribed In P.,ctl 1 •bove A PUILIC IALL If YOU NEED acctl*d, flt Tt\IS1tet ~ 'Mll- ducled by an 111d1v1dual Public Contract Coae Sec· the Contract soc1a11on 01 saving:. bank sional Code the following Christopher King 34912 YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY designated 81 Oerag~ EXPUHATION OF TlfE NATURE l'dd the issllence of flt llllStiet's Emil Naslrl 11on 3300. the D1w.c1 ro· No b1dOer may withdraw ~pocthod tn Soct1on 5 I02 desc•1bcd property to wit' Camino Capistrano Caplll· BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC Spaces (0) Rnt•vtd OF ntE PAOCEEDINO AOAI Detd uni! luncb becolfte l\llilatfe Ttus Slatemenl was I.led 1;u11e:1 lhat tho b1uder po~· any bill for a period ol 111tty o the Financial CO<le and EA IC LEN H 0 FT I ·5 8 rano Beach. CA 9:z624 SALE. IF YOU NEED AN Spaces (P), P•tloa f PT), YOU, YOU IHOUlD CONTACT 911 lhe l)attt OI tndonH • 1 with lhe Covnly Clerk of shs 1ho lolh>wYlf\9 ctJs· (001 days aft11r Iha dale HI avthom.cll 10 au bvsinau Cooter p1ct bag BRUCE This b1151neu 11 co~ EXPLANATION OF THE and Deeks (D) u appurte· UWYER. IN'lel ol llOf"- Orango County on March 11loc.it1on ol LOntraclor~ ~· lortt•eopervngofb•ds in lhis state In lho evenl OELINDE 1·10~ G·c!ba. oucted by husbano and NATURC OF THE PRO· mint to Pa1cels 1 and 2 MOTICE OFT1'USltnSAlf SlldYewilbe mede,but..,.. 3 t!111S conse at tho tinw tnat the A payment bond sh3!1 bo tenoer other tnon cash 15 b<ke boolls. clotneli m.sc. wile CEEDING AGAINST YOU, above described lnlDfA 0£E1> OF TRUST 1111~ CCMllll'll or~. bSll'U Put>hshad Nowpc>11 Boach· con1ract1s awd1ded r.,qu.re<I poor to ax11;u11on accepted, Ille Trustee may CONSTRUCTION TEMP I· Tha reg1s11ant(S) com-YOU SHOULD CONTACT A The propt?rty address LN11Mo.01722•~ATIQ cri~~l'OMt,poua· Cosla Men Pilot Miich 9• Conlraclor; c1 .. ~s C·20 ot the contrdCI and 1hall be withhoid th! issual'\Ce 01 52 Ladder. shell electron.c menced to 1ranuc1 busl· LAWYER and other common deslg TI ... HAMOnon sioo or encumtntw:u, " Slt'!Y l6 23, 30. l995 hJ .i PUBLISH March 30. t995 1n the IOfm sa' lu<th in the Iha TrutlOO 1 OHd uni.I pans ERIC COX 1·8 Sofa, ness voder the Fichuous Notice ls "''"by given nation, If •ny of th,. rut A.I ... U 1·'34·0• !!:'.!_'..ndetilldneu staJltd ~said ________ 1_3_1 and Apr1l 6 t995 contract dcxuml!nli. funds bcKomo available 10 bed lug. rel ctolhes, Business Name(•) 111ted that CoHI Fed Services.• property ducrl!>4'd above Mol!011 is titre~ ~wn 11111 San.~ ~ thtftu~. •Ill PUBLIC NOTICE WALK THROUGH April Pursvant 10 Secllon 22JOO tho payee or endorsoe as a misc CYNTHIA ESCUO. above on n/a Calllomla Corporallon, as ts purported to bt 133-C d.lll! Tt1.1S1 Ottd' Ser.Ice Compa •nltmt ~ ~ lhtltin, and 1 t t99S at 10:00 a.rn of the Pub11c Cont1ac1 mailer of ughl ERO A·16 chairs cto1hes, Patucta King tru1tee, or 1ucceuor Cecil Pl Costa Mna CA as trustet 01 111ccen01 trustee. IN unpaid ~nclpll ~ fie noll ___ c_n_a-12_5_7_0_9_3 __ , OCC. M,;in1en11ncu &. Op· Code lho conltacl will con· Sa•d Ille will bit made, misc household MARV This stalemenl was filed trul1H, or subslllvted 92626 or subsnlttd 11\lslu p11s111nt to ltCllll!d ~Aid~ with.''*l'ISt STATEMENT OF era11ons tocat11d on 2701 lam prov1!>10m; perm1t1111y bvl Without covenant 01 EUSEV K·I File cab. cl\,111, w1lh the County Clerk of trustee pvr1u1nt td the The undfrslgnl'd lw'lttt IN Deed ol T111st txtalltd 11t1tttOn IS~ m Slid Hoitt. ABANDONMENT OF Falfv111w Road, Costa lhe avccessful b1ddc1 10 warranty, OYpreu or im· pool heater p1cts. misc Orange County on Febrv-Oted or T1u11 uecuted by dlsclalms •nv llat>lllly tor TIM:>THY JOHN HARTIG, ttt. tN!ieS Ind eiirienset of 1111 Mesa CA (White Tra11e1s i.ubsMU1o secu11lles for any pllod r09arding tillt, P0•· LEADING EDGE F·l 1 ary 8 1995 Ho1h11ng 8 Mogh11dd1m 11ny 1nco11.crn,.•• of \hf MAARt£D "'-'ff ~ HIS trustee and of flt trusts Cllllld USE OF FICTITIOUS located oH fa,,vierw Road monies withheld by Iha 1oss1on or encumbrances, Chesl, 2 lites. tools ' Fe36480 and Sh•m•l e M oghad· piopfrty •dd•us And oth· SOl&SEPAAAlE PAOPERTY AHO~ slld Deed ol TNSl BUSINESS NAME dlld Monnor W.i.y) 01strn;t 10 ensuro pe1turm· to salisly tho indebtedness Sale will be by compeh· p oli h d N 11 8 Ch d•m husb•nd and wife er commnn dulgnl\llon tr FAAHCINA M HARTIG, A WOOW SlAHOASU> lRUST DEED S£RV. The following peri.ons BIO DATE: April 2!'. 199!i ancr under the conlract secured by said Doell ad· t1vu bidding (written scaled u s 0 owpo oa • Recorded on 03108/1990 any, shown herein ' RICOftled on OECEMBER 21, ICE ~. ~ TRUSTEE. hove abandoned the use ot a1 tO·OO am al Coast EdCl1 01d submitted "' ru. v.inces thereunder, with In· bids may be subm;ltod In Costa Mou Dally Pllol 11 lnst1umenl No. The total 11mount of tht 1990 IS tnstrumellt II ~669036 2600 STAHW'fll ORM. SurTE the FICllllOUS Business Community Collogo DIS· spoose to lh1s Nol1Co shall lereat OS p1ovided therein, advance) on tho 13111 day March 9, 16, 23 30, 1995. to.122153 In Book -F'•gt unpaid b11lence of the or Olf1dll Reconb In "' ornee of 200. CONCORO, CA IMSZO, (510) Name: AIX Armonl Ex· trlct. Bldg "D · cunta1n, as a bid nem. ad-and tho unpaid principal ol or Aprtl, t 995 at t :00 P.M. Th739 -of Offlclal records In the obllg11tlon secured by the the County Rtceltler ol ORANGE 603-7340 llv OE88!E JAiC~ change. South Coast Plaza BOARD DATE: May 3. equate shoetrng, shoring. lhe note secvrod by snld at Ille premises where said PU N TICE office of tht County Re· propeny to be sold and County, C#1foml1, and pJISUI ~SISTAHT SECA£TARY Oaled Relall Canter, Costa Mesa, 1!195 and bracing, 01 oqu1valen1 deed Willl tn11rt11t thereon proper1y has ouen stored BLIC 0 corder of Or•nge County, rusoMl>le utlm11ted ~ t11t ~ct ot Default and 03oO!Ml5 CaJ1lornla ~2626 No payment shall be n1elhod, fOf the protection as providod In said Nola, and which is localed at Callfornl•, and rur,uanl cos-ts, upenses and ad· Election m Sell ltlereunder Re· RSVP9274 The F1c1111ou1 Buir.lnaas mode for worl. or mate11al of lite and hmb In trenches leas. charges and ox· AYRES SELF STORAGE. Flctltloua lo the Notice o Default vancu 111 the time of the cordtd 011 SEPTft.'l!CR 19 1994 316 3'30 Nome rafe111d 10 ebove u11de1 the contract unless ;rnd open excavallon, ~ns~s of the trustee abd 7012 Emesl Avo., Hunting· Bualneaa Name and Election to Sell lhtrt· Initial puhllcatlon of tht as tnstniment II 94.0566875 o~rl····· was flied on September 28, and unhl the Regtsl!ar ol which shall conlorm to ap-o di Do -~us,asT created Y ton Bench, Ca (714) 848· Stalemenl under recOfded 06/1511994 Notice ol Sale 111 '8111 Olfidll Reconb "M~·Sel O~ 1992, In the Counly of Or· Conlraclors vo11t.os 10 lho phcable safety ordet1 sat Ovu 0 rust 7314. Landlord reserves The following persons ara In 8ooll -Page -as In-S213 6116 04 04-0&95 II 1000 AM AT T ange, Original File No FS-DISTRICT that tho CON· Governing Board, Bv IMPERIAL CREDIT the righl t.o bid at the sale d0tng business as· 1trument No M-399982 of In ~ddltton to cuh, thf' ElflRAHCE TO THE ORANGE CITY 46007 TRACTOR was properly II· Wllllam M Vega Ed INDUSTRIES INC., Purchases must be made PS Personal Secretary, uld Offtcl•l Records, wlll Trustt,. wlll accept • c•· HALL 300 EAST OWlMAH S1mlnl Rat.all, Inc . Dela· censad at the time thO con-0 Chanc~llor Coaat TRUSTEE BV: CON· by cash and patd for•at the 7882 Baachpoint Circle, Sell on 0411311995 at the shler's check drawn on a AVENUE ORAHGE CA 11 "' ware corporation 650 F1hh tract was awarded Any c" It C 11 SOLIDATED REC ON· lime of purchllSe All pur· ~uite 9. Huntington Beach, North rront enlranc• to state or m1llon11l bank • .,ctOll 'to IN t.g~t b~r fo Avenue, New York NV CONTRACTOR not so Ii· 01°m1mtun V 0 ege VEYANCE COMPANY, chased goods are sold as .t 92;48 MUI h 7882 the County Courthouse, check drawn by a state 01 cash (Oat•~• 11 h 'me or salt 100t 9 censed 11 subJKl to penal· lh c AS AGENT FOR STATE II and must be removed at m uzanne c • 700 Civic Center Drive feder•l credit union or •in llWfut mo cl !ht Un This business was con· ties under the law. If the h· Published Newporl limo of sale Sale ls svbiect Beachpoint Ctrcle 19 Hu,.. W11t Santa Ana, CA •I check drawn by a staff or Stl!es) Ill~ •• and ill"!reSI, ducted by a corporahon cense class1licatton ~P8CI· Beach·Costa Mna 01111y STREET BANK AND to canceua11on In the event Mgton Beach, CA 112&48 1 00 PM •t public •Uctlon federal u vlngs •nd lo•n ~ID Ind now hfld by 1 Simint Aata1I Inc Rte· fled hereinabOve 1s that of Pilot March 30 Ap11t 6. TRUST COMPANY OF of seltlement between aano. Thll business 11 co~ to the hlghut bidder for association, s11vlngs n · under s•CI Deed ol TlllSI tn t!lt cardo Qo11·Montanelll, a •P8C•.t1ty contractor II!> ,995 CALIFORNIA, BENEFI· IOfd and obhgatad ~ny dueled by an indiYldual cuh (pay•blt at the time soclatlon or savings bonk M>Pf~ .,11!<1 d Cou Secy defined m Serct1on 7058 of T 7 CIARY, 21031 VEN· Avre• Self Storage, Tha ragtStrant(a) com-of sale In l•Wful money of specified In Section 5102 ~nd SIJ tr 1" sa T111s 11atemen1 was filed 1he Cahlorn1a Bvsinoss end h s.i TURA BLVD. SUITE Reildent Managers menced lo tra""jf1 bust-the United States), all of the Flnanclal Code •nd •OllOwS 11 Ind dfWlbed 15 with 1t11 Covnty Clerk of Profaas1on1 Code, 1he ape· PUBLIC NOTICE 5 2 o, w o o 'D l. AND Published Newport ness undor the tct;•~ right, Ihle •nd Interest authorized to do buslnen A.OT 52 Of TRACT Ml •260 .... lililillllllililiiillllll Orange County on Morch c1a11y conlractOf awarded HILLS CA 91384 (B 181 Beach·Costa Mesa Daily B~inoss 371•J:sel•I tat conveyed to •nd now held In this slate In the evenl 'THE CITY Of COSTA MESA. ~ • 20. 1995 tile Con1ract for this WOfll YOU ARE IN DEFAULT 3 .,. .. ~ a vo on by It under uld De«! ol tender othei than cash 11 lllCR •un 800 _ Published Newpon Beach· shall Itself construct a ma· 4.,_..72 P~ot March 30 April 6. Kim Mutch Trust In the property al-accepted lhe Trustu m•y ,.... .....,.. RECORDED N PAC ........ V.W Cosla Mesa Piiot March 30, tor1ly of lhe Work, tn ac· UNDER A DEED OF Dated: 0 2/23/1995 1995 This slotemenl wu nled tu•ted In uld County and wlthhold lhe Issuance of 1!>7, PAGES 29 THROUGH MIMONAL PAM April 6. 13, 20, 1995 coidance with the p<ovl· TRUST DATED 02/03/ 8~: NANCY VIGIL, lh763 wilh lhe County Clerk of State hereinafter de-the Ttustet'1 Oetd unlll mclUSM Of MSCRl.AHEOUS Cemetety e M«!vety Th757 1lon1 of Caltfornla Busl· 1992. UNLESS YOU TRUSTEE SALE OF-OronJt County on March acrlbed· funds become avalhtble to MAPS, If THE ~ Of T ~ e CtwMtaty r __ P_U_B_l_l_C_N_O_T_l_C_E __ , neas and Professions Coda TAK£ ACTION TO PRO· FICER PUBLIC NOTICE t, 1 5 F8SBS30 EXHIBIT .. .,-the paytt or endoraee as~ "L,.~ .,2'~F~ 3500 P9dftc v... om. • Sacuon 7059 TECT YOUR PROP· LPP 12103 A Condominium com-• matt•1 of right .......,...., vo-c; ,....,.. Newport e..cti • ----2--0-9_2 __ All WOl'k must be com· ERTY IT MAY BE IOL.D Publlshod Newporl Flctltloua Published Ncwpon Beach-prised of: Said salt will be made, All OIL GAS, a.tNtRAlS ....,_ • cnat 57 plated within 77 consecu-AT PUBLIC SALE IF 9 h Co 1 M 11 Dall Bualnesa Name Co1t11 Mose Dally Piiot PARCEL 1: An undivided but wltllollt covenant or OTHER HVOROCAABONS, BE·-~~~===~~ ABASTNADTOEMN~NETNTOOF F t1ve days. Time II of the IS• YOU HEED AH EXPLA-p eloac ~ • • es 3 v St•~•ment March 30, Aplll 6, 13, 20, 1/8'th lnte1Ht In and lo Lot warranty, upress Of hn· ~ A DEPTH Of 500 FEET r -•••••• ,.. 11nce. Failure to coml)ltt• 1 t arch 16, 23. O. The following persona are t995 1 of Tract 11218, In the plied 1ega1dtng title pos-HOUT Tt4f. RIGKT Of SUA· "'~"-. ••• USE OP FICTITIOUS the WOfk within the time NATION OF THE NA. 1995 doing businese as: City of Cotta Meta, H per se11lon or encumbrancu M:E OORY, AS RESERVED llLl .... ,, ' BUSINESS NAMI set forth herein will retull In TURE OF THE PRO· TH742 A) Sliver Splendor Jewelry; Th7S4 map recorftd In &ook to satl•fY o~e lndebte~ TRUMENT Or RfCOROS 1 Th• following perlON th• lmpo1ltlon Of llquldated CEEDI NO AGAINST PUBLIC NOTICE B) Steve'• Fine & Fashion PUBLIC NOTICE 132, '•OH 'Z1 end 22, of nus secured by llld ht lll'ttl tddrm tlld Olht Mortuary* c~ ha\'8 abandoned the use of damagee fOf each day of YOU, YOU SHOULD Jewelry Co.; C) Cindy's Ml1cellaneou1 Map.a, In Deed, advances thet11un· mmon deslOllMlon. ff ~. of Crema11on '. the Fictitious Bualnou delay, 111 the amounl HI CONTACT A LAWYER. NOTICE OF Fashion Jewelry, 24331 FlotltJou. th• office of th• County d4H, with tnterut H pro• rttl ~~ deWlbed lbOllt 110 Btoectway Name: NX Aimanl Ex· fO<th In the "lnlOfmatron fOI NOTICE OF PREPARATION OF Muutands Blvd. #4114, El Bualn .. • Nam. Convenient vlded thueln, and the t t!)Oltt!d to be «>7 MAG£\.· CO.ta Mele change. 3315 Fairview 81dder1 " TRUSTEE'S S.ALI! Toro. CA 92630 Statement C unpaid prlnclpal b.tlence STREET. COSTA MESA. ..... Road, Coil• Men, Cahfor· Each bid must conform UNDER DEED NEGATIVE Steven Terry, 23010 Lah The followlng peraoni ate l•••lfl•d of the Note aecuted by ni• 92626 and be respon11ve lo tht DECLARATION Forest Dfj\le 1212. Laguna doing buslMU as· •42-5878 said Deed With lnftrut 111 Tl\e Flctltlou• BualnHI contract document. Each 0, TRUST The IMnt Ranch Water Hill•. CA 92653 GREEN ELEC.TRICAL • ~~ ~~td ~ ~ve~~~~~~.on~ TS,3~~~ ~mct~W~~pr~~ng~~p~~~tOL.a~cONURU~ION 2•51~------------------------------~-~~=~--~ :•wasflledonSeptembef 18. rorm furnished with the Nouce 11 hereby given a Negahvt Oedaralion IOI' Foreat Of. 1212, Laguna Elden Ave , 12.' Co1ta Sh~~lNiG • 1992 In Ille COUnlY of Or· contract docum1n11. a list that IMPERIAL CREDIT IN· the prOJICl(I) dlSCllbeG Hiiis, CA 92653 Meu CA 92627 ~ '• ange: O!lglnal Fite No FS. of 11\9 proposed IUbcon-DUSTRIES, INC • as below A "Dfaft" Negauve Steven Raby, 6 Memn Ttmolhy Grady Green, • • •St32 ttactOfa on lhl1 p<OjOCt u trust••· or 1ucce11or OedarallOI\ Is on file at the Road, YOflt, PA 17402 2451 Etdan Ave 12 Costa ' .. .. Slml.nt Retail. Ille. Dela-reqwed by the Subletting ttu1t11, or substituted 01str1ct otr1ca and 11 avail-Thi• business 11 con-Mesa. CA 92827' ' ~~ • -\ wilt corporation, 650 F11\h and SubconlraChng Fafr t1u1IH purauanl to the able IOI' public ln1pec:t1on, ducted by: c:c>pattnets This bu1lne11 11 con-/)1 r., 7 .. ~lj 1 Avenut, New Yonc, NY Practic .. Act Governm.m Deed of Ttutt executed by A Negative Oectatallon will The raglllrant(a) com-ducted by an lndMdUll A ~rew ~ ..l' t00t8 Code sectlOn 4100 et seq. LIRIO NAVARRO A SINQL£ be considered lot approYal menced lO transact busJ. Th• reg1111ant(1) com. Thi• bualnaH WM con-Each 8•d shall be IC-MAH •nd ~ded on r e1> or dlUPJ>IOVal by Iha nu• under the Fici•ltOUI menced to transact bu9'- • • dUd•d b'i a corpotlltJon companied by• cerlllled or ruary 20, 11192 u lnatru-Board of Dtfectors of the Bu1lnau Name(s) hsttd neu undel lhe Flctttloua ,• SIMinl Retail, inc., Ric· caahler'• check e>t bid nient 192'°99020 of Of· Olsltict et lta meeting to be abovt on: 2/11'85 eusineu Name(I) 'lllled •"" cardo oorH.4on1anetll, bond In an emount not 1 ... hclal ~C• In 11\e off~ held at e·oo PM . Aptll 25, Steven Terry •bo1re on Jan 1 11195 , • S.Cy thtn ttn J*cenl ( 1 O~) OI 01 lhe C04Jnty Recordlf Of 11195 at 15600 Sand Cl,._ Thie •latemenl was hied TimolhV Q GrMn •"' Thia ac.ttmenl wH filed It~ total bid prl¢t, P•Yabl• ORANGE COllniy, CIJ.IOr· yon Avt ' ""'"'· CA Com-with the Couniy Cieri( or Thia statement wu flltd B US.lN~SS ~ ~ • with the Col.lllty Cltrlt QI IO Ult Dlltr~ •• • guttan. "'•· and p11t1uant 10 the menta from membeta o1 Or1n99 County on March with the CountY Clerk of •"•" • Orange COUllly on March '" that the blddtr, tf ltt Notice of o.tauh and £lee-the oublie or othef Inter· 13, t1195 Orang• County on Febfu. 20. 1995 p<oposat It ~ptea, thall lion to Sen tnetevodet r• "'ed paniH on th• Ne9• N3N05 ary a 1995 Publlahed Newport 8"ch-promptly eocula lhe COfded on Jul( 22, 1"4 ... uve DeclaraUon wilt be ,.. Pubklhed Newpor1 &MCh-' F~tMO • • Costa MtM p11oe Match 30, Agreement, furnlah • aaua-In 111 um• n No . 1t4-celved by the Dlltltet from cost• Mtsa oaity Pilot " bU hod Newport 8eactlo • Aprll 8, 13, 20, 1995 llCIO<Y. F•llhfu4 P11torm-04676$4 ot .-Id Olf1Clll 11\41 date of lhll Notice Mitch 30 ...... q a 13 20 c"' 1 M 0 .,,.., .,11 • • • • • • • • • • • • Tht uta' DepmtmmJ (//the Dm}y Pilot is pkitJNi "' Th769 ~ Bon<I In an amount Rtcord1, wlll Sen on 04/0el through and lnctudlnQ the • ......,. '" • • 011a aaa -, ,. ot ----~~=-:-=-:=---not 1 ... than one hundred 191>5 .. 12:30 p M AT THE clOM Of the J)Ublte mffllng t995 M11ch 11. 18, 23, 30. 199$ PUBLIC NOfiCI pttctnt (I~) of th• lolat NO ATH FAO NT [ N· held by the Board of Dlrtc· Th7S5 Th73' C To bid price, turnlah a Pay· TRANCf TO THC COUNTY 10re on the datt thewn PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICI NOT& & ment OOn<I to an 1mouot COURTHOUSE, 700 CJ\llC lbovt, Cornmenta lhOUld CONJMCTORI not .. " ttlMI lilly J*'9nt CENTEA OAIVl WEST, be directed to the 01e1r1ctl---Cl-M-12-509--7-4--1---,.-0-.. -.. -..,.--- CA1LINQ 'o" llDI (~) of the IOtal bid Pflc•. SANTA ANA, CA at public a.er~. P.O. Boll 57000. School Dltlt1\;t: COAST and furnish c.t11llcltet tvf· auction, to lht hlghtat b'd· ~.CA 926tt-7000. The •. _ .. Flctl~--8walneu ..... COMMUNITY COLLEQI dtnelng ttlaf the required dtr IOf caah (pay..,.. al cC>nUtc:I '*'°" 11 D•lty -MM --lt•te....e DISTRICT an.urance la In alftct In Int !tie tltM Of hS4t In lawful ~ ac (7t4) 453-$315 Sltt .. ,....t Thi lcllOWtng ptt.ona M ltlO pe1d1in1· Ap<I ts, amount• .. t fotll'I In tl'lt money of tht U11lttcl Tt\41 ~tnCV undertaking The following pereona .,, dOlf'IG ~ .. w. 119!> II 10 00 . m Qtf*al condlllone In the Slatet), ... tight, tide, IM1d 11\e (a) .. the IMne dOlnQ bualnMa u : POWEA ma vte>«OS, Place of Did f'tctlpt• Of· OVWll of l1tlure to tnl• lneo inttr .. t. ~ad to Md Ranch et• O..trlet Thi RYAN PAATNIEASHf P 2511 Sin Cllmerle• OJ• ' f.c:t Director of flurchaelng, the contract and •11ecute new hilld by It undtf Mid PfOftel(•t c:onMt of the fo6. FIELD MARK£TINQ, Paclfte 1103. Costa ...... CA COMI Commurvty Coll• tllt reqlilttd dOCutnenle Deid of TNtt In IN ptopo; ~: Ofllu Ctnlefl, HOO tae2t ,.___ Ole1t1CI lldO .. D'', 1170 aucf\ bid MCUntY -41 bt tflY .. llO In ...S COunly " MOii • Zone A MecMllUr lhd., &ch "· ~Anoe'......,_ 1171 Ir.demi Avenue, Coett ~. The fal'INul ..., • ...io ._.Md dtecrtbed • ,...._lf'Nd W.a.t NeWpoft ~CA g_, ~ fh 1 f '°'· M,.. CA 1262t tormance 8ood at*9 ,._ iollowl' Md ,.,...,_ O.L. Ay9n ~::r"'"· COlta MMe. CA ' 1trolec1 Identification mein tn ful tore. 8M tfted Al MORI! NLLY-'.'.Dlo Ill -..ed • Ud .. II ,.... W.. Thie ~tlneee i. ~ Name: Ofaf'l9 CoMt COi-tlw°"8f' 119 ..,.,._ pe-ICfl•IO ON MID .,_ •.IOO fMe ......._ CT W cMt'9d bf: M IN94AIMI tee-~ Me C.... ,.., • ~ lft .. 0# TUT ....... I: ftl ...._ ........ TIM '"''''Mt(al «*"• lfriid "*""' ,~ ........ oordlol... ~ • ....... ..... ...... le ...... ...... • ... U;i:sridti 9111 . 111t YM Dl""9CT ,...,,. .... _ II _.. Mii IMlf .. ....... ............. Md "''fllM•r9'1d.~•· 19'fY "A ....,llf: ..... U II ll1as-....... ._. ...... 11: o.... " • "'· • .... "" r nem 1 &$·"" .. ,'11•111•ll41;iiiiiiiliii"'H OR1t1r "Ji • t II I ' -........ -..llMillltil • .... P1 tr> am1(JU.na a nrw mvia n(JW 11va11.thk to new hur:int:S:StS. \U wi/J fWlU S£.ARCH t/Je 1llmle for J<I" (I/ RO a1n'I dJt111!, mJ Slllll J'* i/Je time"'"' tht trip ro tht C>urt House m .. nl4 MtL 1""'1. of llJU1'1!f, iftr&.h 'swm:h is lY!'"P/mJ u.~ uili fi.1' y>ur fimtiow btm NSS """"ilrlkmmt ivith IN °*"J ~publish on« a Ult'rlrfor ,four umb 4S rrguimi liJ Jiu, 11nd thtn fik JIM' proof of puMititti<m with the Cc*nry On*. ,_ llDP by to# your fo1iti'*' llflliMSJ ... ~"' thr Dili~ PilM. 330 w. ~St, U¥t.r Mol. JfJll# °"'""' 11t1p b) /"'-aJJ w 111 "(7 ll) ti4U'21 tbtJ aw wiJJ ""'* .,,, • .,.,,. Jw '"'"'" ""1ttt& thi.t ptw lr"'.,,... Jf ~ "-" ... ""'j'ttnhw ... ftJilr,,,.,., oil. iilfli .... ., /Jr,,..,,,,.,, ""' ..... ,... (}#I"°.,,..""" ..... .. Mollee of Pubic H11mg Nocioe II ~ gtweri that the c.y ~ 61 Ill City of NftPor1 BNdl Wll hdd 1 puDlc ,..q an Aoftl 10, 1885, IO ~ end ~ the Cly't plopoeed Conloldldld Plan Oocumenl=·· ~ CPO la the new pial1•ig dOCUment tNt •'I*-the~ ~Alb S t ..... ...,...., (CHAS). TNI OM documenl la Uled to ~r lhe low ~ gtW'lt progrwNdlL'M by the Department of ~ and Urben t (HUO) The bN (4) tomUI gnn ~ ere: communlty DtwlOpment Bled Grant ~~tment PattnMNDt Pn:latWn (HOME). Emergency Sheteef GtMt ~), and fof PMOfW wtltt AIDS (HOP· WA) The City~ to IPpfy fof .000 In C08G fof ftlcal year 1~1988 The statutes for lheM ~ gt8nl l)tOO{ama eet f0t1tl three balk: goata whloh are cloMtv Nlated to the major comrnltrnents and ~Of HUD. The pie~ PfOvtde deoertt houelng a-) Provide a 1U1tab6e IMng envllonment and 3) Expend economic . Eectt goel l'!Mt prlinatty benefit low and very low Income ~· FUf1het, actMl6es tunded Wllh CDBG turidl must meet al IMlt OM of the ttvee (3) national~ of the CDBG program Whictl afe: 1) ~ low and modef ... Income penona, 2) AklrlO In the prevention or eljmlnallon of slums °' blight; Of, 3) 'Meeting ~r oom- monlty devek>pment needs having a particular urgency *8use existing Conditions pose a aerioua' and Immediate threat to the health and welfare of tn. community and other llnanclal resouqs are not ~vallabte to meet such needs. The proposed five year CPD ldenllflea Community needs Including a housing martcet analyals and Incorporates those needs lnt.o a proposed five year strategic plan. The One Vear Action Ptan Identifies proposed actlvltles to be Implemented during the neld fiScal year and lnctude8 the propoeed use of funds for those actlvlttes. The goats for the City's proposed CPO for the ftve year ~ 1995-1999 .,. oonsistent with HUO's goals Tl\e activities prooosed fOf COBG funding are consfstent wi1h the three (3) national Qbjectives of Iha COBG Program. these goals are based on needs ldenttfled In the com· munlty needs section of Ole proposed CPO and Include goals for new construction of dofdlble rental housing, sllelter for the hOmefeas and "at risk". for farriities to be assfsJ:!~ Section 8 Rental Assistance Program. Removal of ArChllectura! Barriers for pel"IOllS wi1h • Job Creation end Economic Oe=t for lower Income persons and families, Pvbllc Facffitles Improvement, Social Services for ne persons. and Rehabllitatlon of Commercial and Industrial Businesses throughout the City. Tbe s IC obfe<;tlves proposed In. the Orie Year Actlon Plan a'te: · OBJECTIVES Remove architectural barrleFs to provide access to public facflitles, senior centers. public restrooms. public piers. part<s, etc. for persons with dlsabilltlea.; 2 To provtde services to aide the homeless within the Community. 3. To provide assistance to the elderly. 4 To provide social services which benefit low and moderate Income persons within the Community 5, To provide for administrative capacity to Implement the City's COBG program and to provide fair housing services The City proposes 10 fund the fQllowing activities contained In Ifs One Vear Action Plan with CDBG funds PROPOSED BUDGET 1995-96 COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT AND REALLOCATED CDBG HOUSING FUNDS Social Serylce• (15% Max.) $80.100 t st Pdooty. Homeless Services 1. FISH • Homeless Emergency Asst. 2 SPIN (Serving People In Need) Guaranteed Apartment Payment Program (GAPP) Substance Abuse Rehabll· 1tation Program (SARP) 3, Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter 4 So. O.C YWCA Hotel for Women Subtotal 2nd Pdort~· Low Income Famllies 5 F SH • MOBILE MEALS Subtotal 3rd Pno~: Low Income Families 6. MCA Center for Family Counseling Subtotal TOTAL SOCIAL SERVICES BUDGET: Removal of Architectural Barriers 7 Physical modifications to buildings facilities and improvements to make them more accessible. Curb Cuts • City wide Administration (20% Max = $106,800) 8 9 Fair Housing Counsel Admln Expenses INFORMATION MATERIAL AVAILABILITY: Subtotal: Subtotal TOTAL: Bequ11ted s2~.ooo $19,890 s 7,500 s 7,500 $ 1,300 s 1,300 $t5,000 $ 8,174 1112.000 lLZM $53.800 $44,648 S2l2.l2® S2Q,OOO $20,000 $20,000 Ll.500 LL.282 $ 7,500 $ 1.282 $81,300 $65,930 $152,208.63 (89,9t·94 CDBG funds) $361,270.00 $525,00Q C95·96 COBG funds! $525,000 $5t3,478.63 s 10.135 $96,665 $106.800 $713.100 $10.135 ~ $106,800 $534,000 The proposed CPO and One Vear Action Plan are available for examination and comment at the Plan· ning Depanment, City of Newport Beach, 3300 Newport Boulevard. Newport Beach, CA. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN of the HUD required 30 day public review and comment period concern- ing the proposed five year CPO and One Year Action Plan, Which begins on the day this notice Is pub- lished and continues for 30 days. The 30 day period will end no earller lhan May 1. 1995. Comments received during the 30 day public comment period and at the public hearing will be considered and a summary of these comments or views shall be attached to the final 1995·1999 CPO and submitted to HUD NOTICE IS HEREBY FURTHER GIVEN that said public hearing will be held on the 10th day of April, 1995, on the evening agenda, at the hOur of 7·00 p.m., In the Council Chambers of the Newport Beach City Hall. 3000 Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach, CaHfomia, at Which time and place any and all persons interested may appear and be heard thereon. If you challenge this project ln court, you may be llmited to raising only those Issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described In this notice or 1n written correspondence delivered to the City at. or prior to, the public hearing. For lnfor· mation call Craig Bluell at {714) 644-3225. Wanda E. Raggio, City Clerk City of Newport Beach. Pu~ed Orange Coast Daily Pilot ~fCh 30, 1995 ... • • ... 00 ... 1• Al ...... . -417' 8. 8ey Av, •tvl HJ 541· Hcl .... ..-wtJ t 2nd fir "Pt. tor IH by owner. Af 1200 eqlft. No Nr maln(8alboe. Howl 111 I01 o.........,te~... ••wtnNtt 21kt4 CONVllNl•NT car perking, ..,..,_ Vo'f,. dock avt. Ho lfte, Mlllng. or IUet S1IOO 11~ =1ng· 0:.,~ ._ cute * , .. " ce'S-.ao ~· ,.._ Ma Mn . 11190 Inda:-~ I e .. 3 ). ...: )() O; l ' _, II lot 00 II; 1; I• , r, 2 O: ) ). Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Thuraday, March 30, 1995 U Ul.IOI. l'llllRSULA COSTAlllSA 2824 NEWPORT IENTALS TO IUSIMESS oma INV!STMENT LOST. llEALTB. PEJtSOHALS 3002 UIPLOntmn' 2807 1 ........... MOiiie l:::;liii!ACBjiiiii. ~-·2-ee.9 SllAU 2724 POl lt!NT 2789 OPPOR'roNITY POUJID 2925 PITN!SS 3000 -----· 5530 1• 2908 8PORTS/STOCKS 'I .............. . "':~111.::~~l~o·:.~~ 199~~"'~. 4•1Bflt8a•• AGrMOteoe .. LMI N EWPORT BCH.OFC l'eund Watoh at DIAllST1ca1 PINAlllC•awaa D•l"'-'Y D ...... "· ------- Steps 10 beach. ~73 28R 211A l7211iUp Lra 3 Bd 38a condo From l400. 418 Old boltlntt ,. .. ~ Backbay. Ms.9062 Medlcare/1n auranc• 1~ ~on for F'lornt • ..W:, mu• Jim 873-087& Relrlg & dlahwuner •Newport c,.et• Newpon Blvd. Frank· tlon 1,.teM Creal•• FOUND1 CAT bitted direct fOf Teat 12.99/mln. 11+. know NB/COM .... Ooeanfront Fum 1 Bd atudlo apt $700/mo yrly Incl utll1. 1175-5449 P•TIT• STUDIO V acant. $800/mo. Stov• • & ref rig. Clean, remod, 1afe. 873-8819 1 •R·1 BA 1&50/mo. Incl. 80X30 pool. No pf1Y ba w/twO rml/2 lln Realty &4C>-7000 4sK Every 30 Daya. Tortola• _.,811 with cot-•tripe, lnaulln, Qiu-_,,,...,,.,_oc:a1.,.,._eo ___ . I02 ___ ~ __ 7•_20_ Start SS.50/hr "*4-141' ~d~~n=:ta~et.. Nnor p~~.~:..~:a·55No cloHta, aulle·llke. OFPICll SPACI! AVAIL Min Investment 13,400 lar a tag, Coata Me1a cometen & fn()(e, Ut· W~T DIRECTION DIUJV&RY DRrvmR 6-0~ Quiet, pleaaant, clean, for non-pront org. Xlnt Call 800-&41-8354. 3125. Call 6314428 tie or no out-of-pocket al!WVULD YOU GO?? Nffded aam-1:30pm peta 84 392 •a.ach VaMJ.Nr tcoee• nice lrg pool, Jae, ten-toe nr SC Plaza. Lota SS. Statlatactlon Ouar· lAt a paychlc help. M•F. Own .,.,, • plua. •1st II th F R t 1br w/hug• ma.tr, walk In nla, trrph baHm •nV of prkng. Up to 10,000 Gold a dlemond Hnk anteedl Liberty Medi-1-~72!>-4000 JC4901 Local detlY. 642_.795 Oft lff lft t clat '710: 2bf ;!ba 1875 work-out rm. W/D, breolet; LOST MA.R cal Supply. 1·80(>-782· S3.99/mln. 18+. Large 1 Br, frH cable, PoOVspa 04&-6839 $825 + d•p + IA u111a, aq ft, w/utn. Roger or ANNOUNCEMENTS 27 In either Balboa or 8028. Procall Co. 802"54-7420 Driver Wented by sln- PoOI, gated parking, Pen Pt beaut ramod 842·8050 Unda, 714mS·•·1400. NB Bch, Rewerd FIND OUT HOW TO --------~1 gl• dad w/auapendltd catporta. 842"5858 1Bd, upatra, lg aundk, A OrHt Plec• t• Liwel 973.oe9e . AVOID ILLNBS S 6 MEMBERS81PS ~c;.9~~~.,~ dJv/'c:?. Bright & Br••-1BR blk b•'J/bch. N/S, no L.tQ 3 Bd 3B• co do BUSINESS •· LOST COCKATIEL D 1111 A a ll upper. Pvt ga;: pool, pet $725/yrly 850-8040 •N•wPOrt Cr•~t• Ul ANNOUNCEMENTS Gray & white, very NATUMLLY, )Yfthout 3018 :~~. & .::.to';:,::"~~: ________ _. + more. 1685, 1 mo •Weatcllff 2B, 2Ba prlv ba w/tWo rms/2 FINANCE 2920 tame. Lo1t 3/22, Roch· drug•. with Natural wagea negotiable. CORONA fr•• w/ad. 722·1999 frplc, refrlg, d/W, n.W c loaeta, ault•·llke. Hier & Orange, CM. Healln~ Handbook Balboa Bay Club Poulble rm & board DEL MAR 2622 E' I carpet & paint, pool. quiet, pleasant, clean, AUCTION SUNDAY Please help! 548·9471 (328 )am-packed, M b hi later on. Casual, NB. ii~!!i!!ii!i!~~~iiiiiil •de 3Bd·1 Ba cottage, $850/mo. 725-8455 nice lrg pool, Jae, ten· BUSINESS APRIL 2ND, Bl!AA LOST DOG easy-to-read pagH), •:.n~':d P Prefer good OMV & CLOSE TO BEACHI ~=:pa,c~:~~~· p::i: nla. flrpl, baaemant/ OPPORTUNITY MOUNTAIN ANGUS SNOW WHITI! LAB '19·95 Total. Please can 631-6031 appearanc.. 844-5450 Charming 2Bd·2Ba + $895 No pet 722-6294 work-out rm, W/D , RANCH Total dla-Named "Klondike." 1-80C>-3NUPOWER. EDITOR, $625 + dep + •h utlla, 2904 Heartbroken chlld. To 81ace an ad In Lifetime membership ofc. New cpt, •love, =E~'S:":":ID=-:-:~----MISCE"" B'IU'l!QUS .... 2 80•0 pefaal: Heifers, Bull•, 1 lfl d to University Athletic ASST MANAGING fr1g, w/d, 2 car, $1375 I! Hae 2Br, hw a.wuu;; _.. • .,, Palra, Show pro•· SSOO Rl!WARD aas • Club In Newport Bch. EDITOR. Avl 4/1 780-3878 fir• $925. Studio RENTALS ll'ald-CM Feminine *AMERICAN DREAM• pecta. 1991 l"tema· 714-447·3111 Call 842·5978. $3000, no dues. 714-Strong In dealgn, copy COSTA MESA 2624 * * * * * '1>ecl1I Or••l Value From Low S540/rno Bike To Beach like new & very quiet 1 & 2 bedrooma ref rig/range/micro Lob of Bulla.Ins laundry, pool, carport * * * • * Great Locetlonl Oreat Tenant•! Cell 548·0492 1 Bd, walk-In cloaet, en· clOHd garage, $650. A.vi 4/151 No pe1a. Betty 844-2270 .· On the move? Sell your extra household items In Classified s 5cso. New carpets, decor, ahr apaclous Frlto/NesUe/etc. New tlonal Truck, A.luml· Lqat Dog !558-9263, Beas editing for award· FREE UTIL 650-5286 3bd 2ba hm, frpl, w/d, vend machine•. Earn num Traner, Tractor, Whtllan,1»1k Begal winning thrlc•wffkl'I E 'Slde/Npt Hghta yd. Sep ph. 1 rm avt tor BIG $$1 No aelllng. lnY'll ChutH, ITluch more. Name-Sam, Please PERSONALS newspaper. Send 1Br garden 'apt. $650/ ROOMS 2706 rup, S440{mo ~ utlls, req. 800-821.a363 dy/..,. Escalon UvHtock Aue· call tag or 722·95t1 •••••••••I clips, resu{Y\e: Jillelllnk, mo Incl utll. Avail A.pol $300 sec 5411-443~. •AREA MltLIONAIRE• tton. Call for more lnfor·1---------EMPLOYMENT Para~lse Poat. P.O. 1. Call 759-1064. 384 Hamilton, Coata HB/NB border, 1 ml to Seeka 5 entrepreneurs matlon. (209)22$-0490. LO:~:::~ Drawer 70, Paradise, EASTS.DE M 11 S400/ Interested In making CONSUMER ALERT I c o 1 s 1 PE,,SONALS 3002 CA 95969· 1BR, new esa, f.l'Ar un . beach. Share 2Br 2Ba. unoua S Call 549-5386 Stop Collectloq, calla urrent ea gn o. ~ Hin L I D I carpeta & paint, encl mo. See alter 6pm. • No amk. S450+$200 to home and('work. atlce ST model, yellow iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil EMPLOYMENT & ~~rmrn=: M:ri::~ yard. No peta. $695/ 548-8179 • dapo1lt. 988-9439 A.REA. M ILLIONAIRE Call Call Prot.C.. Your deck, cream colored 5530 Must have Class A-COL mo. 846-0758 CM ne•r OCC. Sate, H .. hr I Bk b H NEEDS 5 PEOPLE Rlghta todayl 1-aoo-bottom. Blown off my With Hazmat EASTSIDE , friendly home Incl a '1 • ay ae who want to make 544-5558 Include ext. dock In Newport Har· Natlonal Dlatrlbuton N 2Bd·1 ~Ba utll lndry pool. Avail M/F n/smk, golf vu, lrplc, aome aenoua money. 1606 for apeclal rate. bor on Friday, March AAMCO TRANSMIS. 1.SQ0.334.""n. • ew palnVcpt, ga-• • · lfg yatd no peta I have For I t rv1 call 1 Oth, with blue canvas s 1 o N "" rage $825/mo. 1665 Ir· now. $350· Non-amkr. 2 $485/~ 631....491 an n e ew IS O.J. INNOCENT OR cover attached. Serial ·AR 1 ZO N A.· ext. 502 or 509 vine A.ve. 720-9422 875-9805/d 662·2123/• · (800)896-4678. GUILTY? B• heard. 1• n u m ber 0 0 C O· needs experlenc•d ,..,..,...,.......,,,..,...,.'=""----Newport Crest town· CENTS PER MINUTI!. "OO 988 1032 $1 501 bullder. Starting $550-MA, CERT. to aaslat LAROE 1 Br w/gar & RENTALS TO home to •hare with re· Get paid to give •WV • • • . . 48050994. Please call $600 week. Wiii train w/busy primary care opener, lndry & refrlg, aponalble N/S. Private California's loweat Call. A.verage 1 714-644·5771 day: to further career. 1· medical weigh! lo•• ti t/d S minute. 18 or over. 875-6485 night. 8oo-23s-5866. practice. PT/FT, Npt new pn crp rapes. HARE 2724 room w/bath, cable, p h one r atesl Earn Touchton• required. Rewerd-$200. Beach. FAX reaume $895/mo 545-3229 private phone llne. money 7 different R •au It• • 0 fa r· ADMIN ASST 714-645-1059. "A GREAT PLACE ***** Pool/tennis/spa. $485 waya. Serious In· Innocent 63"' Gullty Lost photos w /negs ••••••• TO COME HOME TO" Roomate wanted to Incl utll. Credit check qulrlea onlyl Call us 37%. People~ Poll, Bk called HypMapace. 9lffkl•t Ftr left?. Spacloua & bright ahare a large 4br 3 ba req'd. Call 650-0454 n0w. (209) 225-1010. Inc. Douglasville, GA CM/NB area Reward. l 1BR & 2BR. No pets. custom home In Hun-and leave message. DRIVERS WITH FLAT· (404)942-1361. 1_64_5..,.·9..,0,..,5,,,,2,,,,....,,..,..,.~--9 Fli4 t THIJI • Call Now 931·8427 tlngton Beach. Pool & Npt Bc~Oulet rmmate BEO EXPERIEN CE LOST RINQ -(Uf, ftl hltfl1t - JacuzzJ, whitewashed wanted tor beachlront ($31 k·S36k/year). LOST. Gold Pinky, domed .::,1'90MSW00012509.,.. JAG UNA BEACH oak everywhere, foyer home. $800/mo, 1aV Heavy-haul expert-with deeply etched M '. 'M & plush landscaplng. last req'd. 504·7731 ence ($37-39k/year). FOUND 2925 lln•a. May have been ~ .. IWll:dOl.A.~7l7J'Y 2648 $400 mo. + 500 aec. Clasa A COL. verlfi. loat 3/21 at Irvine ••••••• 964-1339/!574-4247 Npt Hgts Lg rm In 2Br able 3 yeara OTR. FOUND 3118195 Price Club. Femlly..---------9' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii COM Non-smkr share duplx, lots ol shelves. Owner-Operators Flat· Q 1 H 1 ••ntlmentel velue •• r..----------.-i N..... Brt H Lan 2Bdr Clean kitchen. N/S. bed/Stepdeck/OORGN ueens ey ee er REWARD. Please call '"'"'"• • •• • 3Br 2Ba, frplc, new s375 d 722 808 Mix. Female, white w/ 2Ba all appl 2 lrg + ep. -7 (S 100-$135k/year) M· 873-3458. • · carpet. Near beach. black & brown apota, i---------dcka. ocn vu, steps to $450/mo. 675-4502 Npt Hgt• Lrg Br/pvt S. 1-800-637-4407. red collar. Paulatino & LOST1 BLACK CAT bch. Sl250 lse/673-1576 Ba In exec home. Jae. ORIVERSI FLATBED 48 Bear SL 7t4-751..SS51 With hair mlsalng on Ip, N/S. $475 + 'h utll. STATE OTA. Assigned rear. Balboa Penin- Na11onal hotel real •s· Nurae Practloner to tale firm, Npt Beach asslat w/busy primary otflce. Strong admln care medical weight exp req. Real estate & losa prectlce. PT/FT, Macintosh exp a plus. Npt Beach. FAX re- FAX reaume to 714-aume 7 t4-64S-1059. 760-ee58. Hotel Part· nera. Inc.. 840 New· Occealonal PT Event port Center Dr. til490 Staff call Solr" Ca- N B h CA 92660 • terlng 754-4405 from pt eac • · 8-10am, ask for &Ian. Owner tn1ls. 573-4848 new conventlonala. FOUND PUPPY aula. Call 675--2184 x 327. Lve msg 24 Hr CompeUtlve pay, ben-Male, 5-6 moa old. LOST M , 1 Call to ID. 831 ·8333 I •n. •re• COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 ADMIN ASST PIT OTR·FLATBEO ORIV· Asst to regional mgr ERS NEEDED NOW. ol Fortune 500 co. 20 Ru 40 states with con- hra/week, aomewhat ventlonal tractors with flex. Small congenial walkin sleeper•. COL office, good phone & with Hazmat required. PC akllla (DOS). Must For more detalla call be adaptive, depend· 1-800·548-3120. M/F able, quick & able to S· 1. •OCEANFRONT eflla. $1,000 sign on blue JACKET. North'.•llilllliiltillllllillil6illll6ili._. ... 1 bonus, rider program, Bay Alley, Balboa Is-~---------' Q UIBT & SERENE Pet ok. $499 722-0824 Shr 3Bd 3Ba·HB HH flrplc, pool, apa, w/d, gar, resp, $450/mo. 644-9812. Leave mag. flexlble lime-off. Call land. 875-9797. *Live Psychic! * Roadrunner Trucking When you write ftlV\_n.,9000 ... 6401 R.w.rd•• Lost Cet <TVV' .,.. e .. . 1,800-876-7784. a Classified ad. $3 99 per mln/18+ w ork with minimum ""P-/T ...... D ....... •-11-ve-,..,--:P,...•_r_•_o_n supervision. Process • PIT Food S•rv•rs expense reports, or· for upscale catering ganlze meetings, take flrm In CM/NB area. on apeclal projects, Oellvery: neat, reapon gen office duties. SS-lndlv w/ciean OMV. .,0/hr. Sond resume On-call M·Sat A M to: Eaton Corp., 1647 $10/hr. Sen1ers: on: 3yr old .gray/white · Greeting Cerd Dl•t. Include all Slamlse. 111bs .. blue _P_roc_a1_1 (_&0_2_)_954_·7_4_20 __ 1 · Avellebl• the facts eyea (big). Missing 2 o /2 o w 1 T H o u T Palm ~esa Apartn1ents So near & yet so far ... That's the feeling you get when you live at Palm Mesa amid the lll~h greenery of secluded Wooru & Stlltcfy p.\lms. National company ser· and get the a Ince 3/24/95. Last G LAS S Es I s ate • vicing accounts only. seen on Santa Ana St rapid, non-surgical, No selling. No over· results & w a In u t , cost a permanent reslorallon GARAGES FOR RENT head. Low lnves1ment. you want. Mesa. Please help. In 6-~ weeks. Airline 2740 Be your own boaa.1----------646-2063. pllot developod. Doc· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii S50·S100k potential. ---------tor approved. Free In· Garae•• 6 amall of• fie••· 17th & Newport blvd. CM. Amerlland Realty. 83G-B787 Full·t lme/part-tlm•. i------------------formation by mall: Call 1-soo-990-1a18. BUSINESS BUSINESS < 8 o o > 4 2 2 -1 3 2 o. PAY PHONE ROUTE (406)96t ·5570, Fax Babcock St.. Costa call •en1lng staff for Mesa, CA 92627. FAX caterng. Pay based on I 548-4650. exp. Call btwn 8· 11 or ADVERTISING 1·5 for Interview' Mon INSIDE SALES & Tue. Clnay 6'6-4118 REP A Srudios, 1 & 2 Bedrooms 50 Prime Estab Locs OPPORTUNITY OPPORTUNITY (406)961·5577. Salls· · Jr1 S575 ro S600 · l BR S625 ro $650 · 2BR sns '° s1so &No Pcu A V crtiaJ Blinds A C.Ohng faru Earn $1500 wkly. Call 2904 2904 faction guaranteed. The Cla11lnad Adver· 1-800-200-9137 2A hrs Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Call Your Date Nowl tlslng Department for PAYPHONE ROUTES 1·900-726-0033x5285 a local community COMMERCIAL Local sites. for sale, $SO • $1 OOK 2.99/mln 18+ newapaper group la Pnican 602-954-7420 Seek In g a a• If· REAL ESTATE $2000/Wk potential. mo11vated, organized. A NEW Carpet. Paint & Tile A Flll1CSS Room 800-208·5300, 24hrs. G d fl f t wth b s ness HOTTEST NEW dependable, lnald• roun oor, as gro u 1 ••T·ER"'•TM o•TELINE f h · II I d -"'" ,. aalea rep. Strong ':::::::::=~:::::::::::=:===. Or mec anica Y lnC ine Gay or Streight phon•aolllng akllla a independent contractor. Five spots 1·900-n6-0033 ex 9826 must. Oraw/commls· BUSINESS OFFICE CREDIT 2907 A Heated Pool & f3CU22.1 A PatXl! & &JcX>ruo FOR RENT 2769 FREE DEBT available greater So. Cal area. We S2.99/mln. 19+. (Procan aion. Full benefit•. Chances are have SOiid customer base, sales Co. &02•954•7420) PhyslcaVdrug acreen· h I v d CA D l SINGLES: MEET SIN· Ing required. Fax r• you will find e p. iOU nee r. IC • GLE people through· aume: Al1n: Judy Oe1· what you need A Gar.tgo Avadahlc CONSOLIDATION Office Houn.· 9:00 am · 5.00 pm M·F and 10:00 am · 4:00 pm weekends 1561 Me.«a Dr. ·Santa Ana Heights, CA NICE window office In PR firm. 10x11, •lrport area. Wateracaped. Great prkng. Ofllce equip avall. Kitch & cont rm. $350-$450/ mo. Sarah 436-9576 Too m eny debts? OVerdue bllla? Cut p e ymente 30"9 to 5 0%. Reduce In· terest/l•t• ••••· $4,000·100,000. NCCS (non·p ronn Llc eneed/bonded. Insurance $10 to S25k out rural America. _11ng ____ 11_4_-63_1_-6_5_94__ at the price cash/eQu1ty depending on Confldentlal, repu- overall Qualifications. table , U1abllsh•d TRADE you want to pay Call plan. Free detail a. when you read· Country Connections th h I lfl d ClaHlfled 209/445-1346 Newsletter, PO Box roug Cass e dally (714) 546-9860 1-e00·955-0412 406, Superior, Ne· 642°5878 nlte braska 68978. ---------1 ___ .;::8""'4""2'-.S""8~7-=8...__ 3910 ------I CARPENTRY 3510 CLEANING CONCRETE• FENCES HAUUNG 3720 IANDSCAPE • PAINTING 3858 PIANO 6 VOCAL lOOfING SERVICE iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVICES 3548 MASONRY 3557 •DECKS 3615 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii JAWN CARE 3808 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LESSONS 3868liiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii DIRECTORY A to z HANDYMAN liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii JUNK To The DUMP liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •W.P. YOUNGQUIST R~ lpaalebt INSTAWREFACE CABINETS A TOUCH OF CLASS ,....Quellty a Pride-All •FENCES GATES• 1714-888-1882) Green Seen• Landscpng Painting Contrec tor PIANO Beg • ..A.dvanced ~~ ~~i::.~ ANTIQUES, ETC. 3420 Kltchena, baths, doola, C leaning. Rea/Comm aapecta of concrete & MW/repair/poll replKed Will haul what Truh & Irrigation Trimming Oual. painting by p«>Ms All ag .. -Teacher cert. 77 windows. Doug 546-7258 UC/Bonded. Free Est. maaonry. But l«Vk:e, Redwood• L#576605 Man won'tl 984-5259 & Remova'la, Clean-Ucl 602099· Ins. Entertainment A.valJ. Ho-21 Ter... 282•7143 33 yra In atea. 831-3859 Jim Whyte 642·7208 upa A Malnt, St. Uc. FrM Ht. &45--3305 Jennifer 640-8869 •THUNDER ROOFING• #599025, 85CMS109 2tps Quality Palnllnt For all of your roofing lama•I'• Gardening PLUS touchupa needs. Aeroof/re~r. CONTRACTORS Complete clean-up, 24 Hr1. Richard Sl~r PET Uc 6381448441-412 2 Grand Openln1 In COM Tr•• trim, General Uc 280644 645-3209 SERVICES 38701--------- Th• Antique G•t• 8aok Bay Chlropreotlo Malntenanc9. 550-9318 QUALITY CARE TRANSLATOR/ HIRI! A CARPENTER Addltlon a/Remod•I• Flre/Wate r/Repelra. Concrete/Eleo/Plumb. J•rf"I, 780-7884 BOSS HOUSECLEANING Ucenaed·lnaur•d. $9.75 per hour. 71 4--548-0368 GENERAL 3558 3617 PCH/bahlnd Blooms ---------Haecleanlng, exp'd, CPI BUILDl!RS INC. Announcea Or Oartene •-L-•_n_d_•_o_•_P_•__,M_•_l_n_t_. -• 20 yra exp, excellent CARI.FRO VACATION! TUTOR 3927 wrought Iron, antqa. CARPET INSTALL reaa. ratei, WHkly/bl· RHldantlal Conal. GJASS/ *Lare S3\-0200 * Repalr/Mow/Cleen-upa w orkm a n ahlp, fair Don't strHa ,._,..., furnlture/etC/675-8017 6 REPAIRS 3516 weekly, one time, amply Uc.#518424•1naured MIRRORS 3682 2875 IMne A~Sta111 Mallbu·llght-Speclalat prtcee. 845-2417 Ron In-home TLC by COM property. Dora 83&-812' (714) 985-4883 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Lo .. Fat Faatl 016 MDa Call Pete 722·7732 CHUNG'S PAINTING , .. , •Dally walka/hug1 aPANISH/ElllGLISH BUSINESS SERVICES 3488 8ua Own.,'• IUght Arm WOfd Proceutng Pro OWn nol•book computer Katen 15().4439 SMC Cerpet Repalre Ket~~:~::~;::,~~· HARBOR GLASS CO. ~~~. a.·=~ .~~t= TREES 20 Yra Exp. Gd Prlcel :~c~u~T:k~:~''::: ~~rs!. ~~ Power •tretch, aaiea. Reliable 441-7975 DEC!( Comro/R... Storefmt, on TV• 20/20 & Feb. To11podlfto•owo. uw11a. Guar work. Frff Eat. •DaJIY check4n If ,..q. Sueene 87 3-7409 Repair aquffky ~oors Pager. (714) M7..o918 COATING 3570 Windows. wrdrbe, tub/ Allure mag. Newport ~ 751-3478 Uc#375802 638-1534 •LOW RATES. LIC/1--------- 7 dye 23~89 24 hrs 1-------------1,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ahower. Uc. 642-0424 Ban•trlc Ctr. 873-8!58e JENKINS PAINTING bonded/reta. 644-4841 TUTO,,rarG · 393 0 NEW waaT CLEAHING.. •---------Tim R .. ,, .. Flootlng Home & rWltal prop. STOP Deok Leeksl Reflexology Therepy LEGAL Int/Ext . Wallpaper. Pager 294-3722. •Below Retail Price•• Quality work. Refa/llc/ Waterproof CoaUnga: RANDY MAN 3710 will help you achieve SERVICES 3812 ~rrv::.·1~;:a Peraonallzed Pet Care _.T a.tnlNlre. Excel Carpet/Wood/Uno bonded. Fr .. eatlmale Oec~/St&lre. Beat $1 your goala. Cl .... a Kennel altematlve. No with Pat O'Oowd. Test Ll379738 MM7t 1 662-0HS1; w 413-0514 Quality work. FrH Eat. dally. 979-7827 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Emereld ••tntlng ltrMa or wony. Uc, prep since 1979. 5 Out.ouroe your word L•S87430 722-8789 Ho19e&R8fttat Pre,.rtl.. Shlatau M•uege L .. el l"orm lnVExt wallpap«/Ule ins. Rel• 0~7164 mHtlng1 In Irvin• proc: editing, compo-•WINDOW CLEANING• Paint.Carpentry-A tull range of Therapy Preparetlon CornpeChfYe rat ... 10 yra $19!5. c.11 ~3e0. altlon, gen office. Prof CERAMIC FREE ESTIMATES 3580 OrywG a11 .. ~.d ::'°'27•71 Reliellel str ... tension DIVotce/WllVTru.Vetc. •xp-F,. .. "' 75t·2039 eLTn.-.lNG 3890 ---------quality guar. 850-e108 nm 297-8081 Oavtd DOORS •IY --.. muscle achM • ll84-97al *** l!M-6075*** ~ VJWUJ 3528 1'iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Carp'lry, rool'g, plbg Tenant evlctlOn 1ervlce, Gene Ab'"'' Peanune WAU iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil1--------1• An experlenoed palnt'g, glaaablocka •--u-f"l!T-,,,-----uncoqteat.d dlYO~• & = ~P~C:-.! TH• LOCAL PLUUU COVE.IUlfGS 3932 CABINETS Le•kJ SMw&ra Rep•dCOMPUTERS 3558 d e pendable door Elec/Tll e/S t ucco. n~ 3784 auppon modlncatlOn. mov9Cl &retext.14t ... n • WlllMI llflOM Co·I•••••••• UPINISBING 3500 Th• O•an of Tiie. C.. hanger. Guar wotk, Concrete daclca/Repan Fr" con sult. 457.o388 --....... --..,.,...--1 Sine• 1947 Cuehtftl ........... ramie new/repaJred r• MAC TUTORING reu. oon 521-s910 M~GAN. Uc'd 450-3281 Wiiiiam Har ..... d J---·--lk•'• Custom Painting Friendly s~ at••••l--alntl-grout, balhrm remodel "' ............. ---------Prof, CIHn, Ouaflty L#478000 17'"9304 u o'°' .... !" ... ...,too~ i ma··1•11 plum blng L9'1170130 Syatem & all progrma DOORS R8 PAIR•D Cerpentty•llJectrtcel Wat<:h & t.wetry repair MOVING 3834 Work. lnt/e.t • ~kt, ~ .,... ---873-8085 Ot 64N5ae M•rll 875-7245 Satlalactlon guwant.edl Plumblng•Drywall 6 A.ntlqu•/Flne Jewelfy LI07Met .,,-4110 l'iu;nwn8 "~•In a ft •lad. ··-·31 ---- Cabinet RenovetlOft Ralaca, r•flnlth, paint Cutt ~ by amen ......... 5-4to7 le2.4401 --------- Call IM buying cmp4Jtr Mike Bl .. a, ~ More. Comm'I Reaid. ~ e7:S-03e8 ........ _ C'-"-M-"-'" Or•lna cleared from Wellpape •lnttne ••TUTORING** Of 1142·2043 L#431130 Jim M1-74lM PUBLIC NOTICE .,._. -· "'""' ...,., '5.50. A• tblturM In-M~ w Ind ow a, W o rd, Ao,... A .. toreUOft i LANDSCAPE • Th• Calif, Public Utlll--~-: ~ Malled. S..W'a 14&-ate Ouere11te1cl C .. ~ iufoiiiN c.u1N11T am.D CARI 3!31 Stained or pelnted. ••••••••] Variety or flnl•h••· c""°"'!:lTh' .... w.m I e x c e I , A. o o ea a 11~ecnur•T 3•JQ fleM•delln9. Tlla, "a0ru r••• 3801 tlM Commlaaton RE· :f4'1cl ..... 7 :: ::.. Pr.ol .. Phi........ HM'H?/14 lw .... 20 Vra Ocp. 723-1181 ~ _.... v drywall, woodwork, w."n ~ QUIAES that al UMd Rep.In & Aemodeltng "111'11 1:1 I I .. nc.a, d~ roon\ ho\luhold oooda liOilliN PiiNTINd ,-,.. 1...,.,.... we ge1e ~ ,...,,. Uol99814& 378-0371 ·~--------u•YalTT•R (QUCU~ 6 24 tw/a/A ...-f'40-409t A UJ IUJODY CAU·GlVER 3501 ~1 •1eotrtoe1 WOf'k eddldone, '°°'11, 09" .._ ......... Mow/ mover1 print their ./~~!! .. Com L #ll73M .... 1090 eooee-. t.rtp, lnateft, D\R1Cl8n Consttuctk1n repair•. Comm/Aea. ~lera/ P.U.C. Clll T nwnber, /1nt ...,., /.-.I adYICe to 8'e OfUJ. QuackAeaponM Aet.lf',.. ~ •• ~.N ..... n• ""'"end cNufMn Uc# ...... 319-0311 a1~1i1 ...,.... Ldoal Uo. ..0-7049 ......... .,.._ ~ meg • oel lifter I pMC ._., T.C .P. num-ber In .. ..,..,... f'MfU.. w-..... .................... ~". -· .... .. .......... Mlt:,._ ____ ...,. ___ -11 ~~, l'llllO • WOC11.iMal...!!!!!l•mm.1 a TODAY'S CRQSSwoRo PUZZLE POW& IOl!S 1~llDllDl;;;; • .:--·1~ ... ;;;' •;';llS~~·~130~~D~IV~·~l!l~l~~·;u~o 70121! ~=-===1 .. uc ... .,., ... ._ t• _.•ea ON•VY ato I _. .,,_, IOMed. 11i...a atvome wNe. like nu, TAMM. VI, .... IPD,...., • ...._. n•if1>111. •.OOO ml. nu plat••· 139.HO loaded, aeK mll••· awtn lnbcl. ~llll .... w, ......... 090. 191-41118 SllOC). MIMS88:t 57 N:.tor r--. 61~-83 NoYelllt - CAUGHT IN 11IE &ND elect. Ned1 to 111L ...... eT ..... T tW MO IL e.-..t :::,.. = iiiVS 1115 ~ ~ =•-1115--C-.-A-VT-O--l-2,.l~s Twtn Mero '641 JllnC reoorda, new top, drM ---------- ~ Both vulnerable. North deala. NOR'111 •KJIO QA1080 OAKl73 •A the Cap Volmac IDvltadoD Pain lD oond. f'llh, dN9 Of & ball. 131.200. Steve/ CARS AUCTIONl!D NA· Am9terda,m. On tbJa bud 6'0ID tbe ONIM. Only 165,000 ... .._ UMOO -day• <•1•> 931-e719 TIONWIDEI Alao. 6' Collet ll'IOfe lhendue r,=.~--· 68~~ event they reached t1:;&.pular ~11 & a.n. lmmeo. to.did. ev•• (tUI) 431-o909 truck• motorhomea • .J • • ..... ..... _t2 • • contnd vr IUl hMrta. N I jump '"°""'ll/l830 1 mo computer•, boat•, etc. to four club11howed a ai.ngleton llAllNI SUPS Ml 1111 ' TOYOTA 9210 V•hlcl•• under $200? 89 Faahlon oruea 70 Thomu Hardy EAST South cue·bld in reeponee a d' Call Information Bu· h Ke .... __ i 0 • 'Doas 7022 rHU toff fr .. I 1·800o w en a Y·\Al'U BlackWood ult, an UNCOLN 1120 ·~ "AS•O. Bii<, auto. 378-4901 El<t. A·1062. heroine 71 Clnadian doctor •QI ~K3 which the king oftrumpe count.I u air, am/fm atereo1----------an ace, revealed t.hat one control 40 PT MOORING caa1, apoller, alatm. SEIZED CARS FROM O QJ lOJ • 105482 wu miu.ing, Norih laced the Newport Har~r. •n Townow Everv• IK ml. 113,995 or take $175. Por•ch ... Cadll· tract in lix ~ P OOll· Moving! . Mu11 ••Ill thing working, new ov.r IH••· 444-4158 1ac1, Chevy•, BMW'•, DOWN · 847·7411 tlrM. 71k ml, ••c•P-Corvett11. Al10 Jeep•. A club WU the lead at mo.t. of the DOCK aPAC• tlonallV roomy $2800/ '74 Towota C•llo• 4 . WD'1. Vour area. 1 Cotton unit 2 Wicked tJable1. Some declarere croaaed t.o Newport laland 28 ft obo. 721-11555° R~: ~tr~nt99ne;:~ Toll free 1·800·898· t.he ace of spadea and immediat.el.Y pow., boat M ..... •e1 CONTINllNTAL ~ooo: r• 9778 Ext'. A·5138 for 3 Soy l)fOduct took the trump fineae Lat.er they $190/mo 650-1304 "Exec S•rlH" ElC1d current ll11lng1. 4 Bound together 5 Garden tool 6 Roe 7 The -Tnangle 8 Lawand- 27 Mouse catcher 28 Managed 50 Bath pc)'#de( 52 Bundle of gt9in 53Cocoon~ 54 Fiim tried the spade &new for thei~ COD• a10• Tm for 30 ft uJ1. warranty, or1x..:'· •ruu ~ ~ ·~~d~~· t.uct, but that, tOQ, failed. Down boat, Npl Bch, good 113,850/obo 21 amlm ·.r.,eo. cn11se:'·A-UT--O-S _____ _ ~ . loc. Water, •lee, dock aunrf, tint gla. $5000/ ••"'-" 9 Dlrectlon 29 Farm 8nimal 31 Tl'im the grass 33 Freshwater fish 35 Twangy 9270 Sitting South. Rosenberg adopted bo>C 19/tt. 675-7138 Overstocked with obo. 968-631 o W n.n '._.., a ditferent approach. AAei' winning •LIP• AVAIL 42'·90'. stuff? 10 Ofalned t 1 Relieved 12 Rent 37 Singing 55 Boor 57 Attic 59~ngs 60 Pilcher the club lead, he c:aahed the ~md nice loc~ charter cw./ A call to REN"' WMted: oar, Minivan king o( diamonda, then rutred a dia· IX'>•• frff allp. Amer Classified • ..& or v•h conver1lon. mond with the nine or trumpa. Vt Charters, 673-"'453' 'Wiii help through classified $200.SSOOO. Will come 13 Voice above bani one 18 Utlhzes cowboY Autry 38Eve's ~ .o Negative votes 42 .Nesl-.gg inits. 45 Replacement HershlMr 61 Giant In tairy taJel Opening lead: Seven of• West'• failure to overruft' marked 842·§178 to you. 114/839-7868 t.he trump king with Eaat, aol••••••••• 24 Desert plants 25 Red Sea pentnaula 26 Soul-singer -James • vehicles 48 Rivelt>ank clowns 62 CIOse by 85 Oomlclle: abbr. Who ie t.be beat among the younger generation or ezperta now challenging the old order? Poll those who know and we would baz. ard a guesa that, leading the fie)d would be oft..time world champions Eric Rodwel1 and Jeff Meckstroth an~ former British internationalist Michael Rosenberg, now a New York resident. Roeenberg rutred a club in dumm1,1.A•UT_O_M•OiilBiiiililiEiliSil ------------ruffed another diamond high, theo1• cashed the ace of trumps and exited, ________ _ wit.ha heart. Eaat waa trapped. A club return ACURA 9010 would alJow declarer to rull in hand while discarding 1111pade from dum· '83 LaGEND La 4 dr, d d caahmere/tan, loaded, my, an a .spa e return would like new low mil•• assure no ~06era in that suit. Either S23,500. 722-0124 · Earlier this year, Rosenberg and Zia Mahmood succesafully defended way, 12 tricks were there without a finesse. 1-B-U-IC_K ____ _ MERCHANJ)~E NEWPORT '88 Centu~ Ltd. Per· fectly ct .. n. Jtlnt cond. fully loaded, 4-door. $2995/obo. 645-8748 MISC. 8015 INSTRUMENTS 6055 BEACH 6169 Toyota ahort·bed CAMPER SHELL, white, $75. Call 114- 866-1n2. Dark blue Jackaon, Sat April 1 at Dinky XL w/reverse 8am-3pm. Furn, cop. CADILLAC 9040 headstock. Been used ler, apeakr1, bullt-ln jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii only 3 tlmea. Includes oven, etc. 1000 OoVlf or. *,83 El Dorado heavy-duty ABS road· COLLECTIBLES case. $500/obo. Call ·-------Great Buyl $2950. 310.925-3057. 642-3559 6017 ______ TRANSPORTATION, _____ _ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PIANOS & CBRY$LER Reik•• •••rs. good 9050 prices, Hamilton coi. ORGANS 6059 BOATS I e c ti on. Legendary ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii7iioiiiiil il '92 Le Baron Con· queens. 760-8015. Splnnet piano, xlnti• vert. White, Full Instrument, w/malch· 18 FT LAUNCH flber· power, xlnl cond. Ing bench. In tune. gl1. Teak decl<, beaut $8500. Call 496-2663 WANTED $485. 714-527·1854 boall New dl11e1 eng. --------- TO BUY 6019 • S695o/obo. 675-7939 FORD 9075 'l"T""-t---+-+--+--t liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii TV ELECTRONICS 22 ft aoeton Wh•l•r liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 4 Mahogany lyre back • ' center con1ole, 235 •ee MUSTAHQ dining chairs & match· STEREO 6080 hp Evlnrude, $12,900. Street Rod Boss Ing arm chair. Good 631·5678· 302, all TRW parts, cond. 310-430·9971 2 Orlon 12" XTR1_________ Hooker headera, gran Nice llv rm & din rm dual voice coll woof· POWER BOATS TS ateerlng, B + M f rnll e t d b era. Bandpasa enclo-ahlet kit, ldelbrQck u ur wane Y sure & 700 watt Targa 7012 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT FURNITURE 6014 pvt party. 12t-t735 carb, Intake, new Int. , ...... ......_...;...........;.._____ ampllfler Included for liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii black, candy apple 5530 SERVICES 5533 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil•------.i total price of 54001 iB'ELECTRIC red ext. S6K or best E t t S I d I CA. obo. 310·925-3057 otter. 644-4350 PIT OFFICE ClerlcaV EAAN $200 to $1,000 I a. • .... gner B BAY BOAT erranda/computer. w EEK Ly As. Furnaturtl760-8015 Newport Packet On the move? Good phone manner. SEMBLING PROO.•---------• $ G11n11GE SALES by W.D. Schock Co. Need reliable car. Lag UCTS AT HOME. Call L-ihaped cream couch FOR U BD nAn EXCELlENT CONDITION $ Bch. Tricia, 494-7018 toll free 1·800·574-$75, Wood Bunkbed Lm'VI'$ 801'$ $6900 * 660-9000 ell your extra 9635 E 32 ••t w/mattr••••• household Run your ad in the Newport Seoch Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Huntington Seoch Fountain Valley lnciependent to reach over 100,000 homes. Fax us this form with your credit card # or mail it in with a check today! Run for a week! If your car does not sell we'll run it ·-·---······--·-·---------• • D YIS,SELl MY CAR ......... C...ditCard D MC OVISA O MfX --~~~~~bp~- Moll lo !WI Y l'!IOT lJO W ...,_,C-_CAm:l7 17141UZ.'61'0.fNI 11141 "11"59' ""*'-""'°>' °">'I im.. a....,.,,._..._ -~--'*"""--O•-0-n-OS-W a""' a ...... .,..... a ,...,~ o--a-.-... ,,.,.._c.-o•-a---. o_.., o•-a--o--o ... ~ oo-~ o.__ o ...... _ o c-. 0 0--0 M-O_._, O.,.. __ • SI 0 lor ' lin., S I .00 eod. odtliliottol w -------·-----------------·· PIT Teachable Aaaoc xt. 1 · $200. 19 cub ft. Frlgl/ • ___ u_p_to_•_2_B_00 __ 1__________ Whether you're buying In Whol•aal• Supply. EARN $400-$1 ,200 freez, aide x aide BALBOA or aelllng, Classlfled items lilj:liilC'a T ... ~~-• Po11lbl• S3000/mo & WEEKLY! CASINO s100. Pine table & 4 Oruace ISLAND 6106 covert •II your need11 1 _ __,i.:..:n~C=la:.::S:.::S:..:.if:..:.ie~d=---lnB.. ~ 1u10 w/ln tyr. 642·1634 JOBS. Dealer1, Bar· chr• S100, 1 walnut 714•UMl80 _____________ ....;.......;......:..;..;;~.;;;;;;;._ __ ...:.,_..;;..;;.;;..;;.:..J for another week FREEi All for $1 o• PfT Work FIT Paw tender•, Maln1enance, desk $50 673-1311 ~iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltr-------------------------------------------- 68m.12 M·F, no exp Cashiers and morel---------Gar•ee Sale Sat 8-5, neceuary. 58.00/hr Hiring men/Women. MOVING Houseful of &~UOW.PCB Avon boat, Jetskla, Aak for Mark 852-0247 Training and benefits tum. Everything goHI -~~ outboard molora, fi•h· avallable. Call 7 days, Nice oak din rm ••VB GI. N Ing equipment, beer· PART TIME WORK 1-504-646-4502 Ext, chra, kg bdrm aet, etc. 714•Ml-0101 tapper trig & many FULL TIME PAY H7~1~ ~·13~ Y P 1 s TS ~f~g~o~~.w8~2-~~~~n. ~~~e~:.•66:_~1~nyx Times Orange County I' I I Is looklng tor bright, NEEDED. Al10 PC/ Off white plllOW·back -·· -energetic aales poople Word proces1or couch, good cond, to work wllh outside users. $40,000/year In· $140. 675-3254 sales team. Earn come polenllal. Toll..,,.....--------·~-~~~~~ .. hourly wage• and a free 1 ·800·898·9778 Que•n•lze W•v•I••• generous commission · Ext. T·5139 for detall1. W • t • r b • d w Ith ---------' bonu1 while qualllylng INTERNATIONAL EM· healer, oak frame with JEWELRY FURS M•rlne Stuff new life veals, $5, WHI Marine soap S3/ql; Also, gas cans $2. 5 gal paint $35. 2000 W. Balboa Blvd. 7am-7pm. Frl·Sun. 975-1331. bookcase. Sheet• In. • for our ollracllve ben· PLOYMENT • Make up eluded. Xlnl cond, & ART 6025 ---------eflls package which to $2,000·$4,000 +/ CORONA Includes medical cov· month teaching basic S225· Call 444-4030. erage . ORANGE conversatlonal Engllsh 1"s""o"""f,...a..,..b-•"""d,....,"""b,....•"""l,....g-•-&-2 Fabulouaartframedb1 DELMAR 6122 COUNTY AREA • In Japan, Taiwan, or matching rocker•. Lehalna Oellerlea. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Working houra 4:30 · South Korea. No good condition Artl111: Lynn Nelson, GARAGE' aALE IN 9:30 pm Mon·Frl. Call tHchlng background $150 OBO 644-9354 Guy BuffeVJan Kuprzy· 714·966-4574 between or Asian languages re-· ckl. All w/cert of 1uth. ALLEY. Furniture. 1-4pm ask fOf Jourdain. quired. For Informs· WATER BED PROO. Priced rlghll 720-9051 . Sam Saturday Only Part-Time People tlon call 1·206-632· UCTS DISCOUNTED! 314 Heliotrope wanted lo addrH1 la· 1148 ext. J89512. Fee. Heater• $18.99, Wav• OFFICE bela for pay You have PART·TIME PEOPLE lea a mattreaaea · $44.95, au .. n aof1· FURNITURE L COSTA MESA 6124 a typewriter, computer NEEDED TO AO. aided bed• from S289 '1l or, good handwrlllng. DRESS LABELS for UPS/FEDEX delivery: EQUIPMENT 6047 2·FAMILY SALE Int 1 L.D. rates apply. pay. Muit have a Enormoua Hlectlon el Saturd•Y 8-2 1-809-474-4289 typewriter, word pro-whol•••I• price•. Furniture, baby alutt, Real E1lale c111or or good hand· FREE COLOR CATA· Cloaed OUr aualneaa clothH, blke1, Iota MM llTATI ULD Busy Wllk..fn loclllon. ccmp plln. For .... writing. Call 1-6()9. LOG . 1-8()().992-0873. deaka, file cab, copier, more. 435 Eath•r 474-4293. Average 10 phone 1Y9· cont table, (Tustln & Either) minute lnlernatlonal I---------computefl. 722~155 I di t call BIO PARKINO LOT ong • ance . MERCHANDISE De•kl 2 conference SAi.Ei SAT 7am·2pm, ell Ron Tavtcw. :I ThePnt••---... .,.. POSTAL JOBS. Entry MISC &OlS tab •• 2 antique Fairview Community level pay 1tartlng ' French aldeboards. Church, Fairview & $12.68·$18.52/hour. 852-0181 al1er10am. Fair. Lola of furniture For Job Information Angela Seaaon Ticket• & clolhlng. (Vendor 673-7300 and appllcatlon call by 2 .. ata, club level, PETS & apace avall. 545-4610) 03/31/1995. (818) 506-$650 each, during SUPER QARAQB UL• Re11aurant 5354 Ext. 1134· •lrlke, (310) 1576-2127 ANIMALS 6049 Furniture In •Int cond: FOOD SERVERS At Johnny Rocket• In EMPLOYMENT BIG SALE! SSO Off All Hunt. Beach. If you WANTED 5535 22 bronz .. Including AKC Puppl•• & have a dynamic per· llfealze horaea by Cl'A Kitten• 1onellly, apply In per· Houston, 6' Blind Ju• with ttlla ad ion 1 Oam·5pm Mon tlce, 6' Diane, dolphln We have the largHt aofa, 4 bar atoola, lampa, dtapea & roda, Iota of mlac, plua en '83 Volvo. SA'r 8-4, 2032 Fullerton Ave. lhru Thura only, 300 lable, mermaid end lecil f pedl Pacific Coast Hwy. Nurae, 20 yra Exp table, Mongolian alave d•• .. on ° ghre• HUNTINGTON Offering Care In table, 5· angel, cherub oga .. cat• anyw •r• Relall ****** Your Ho~. con1ole & coffH ta· All loved A well BEACH 6140 Out of Santa Fe good refl/M2.e5H bl11, nude "Girl In Cared for PT .. lea poalllon In Wind" table & more. PrfLAND HUNT BCH Fashion 111. Exp pr• Tiffany lamp, china & Northeut com« of ftfTed. Hrty +commlsslon. curio cablneta, 7' B... Adame & 8tOOlltMnt Clll Poppy 944-5953 glan 100.yr-old er• ~7 RETAIL S"'ES/SVC MERCHANDISE denza. clolHlone, ADOPT-A-PET '"" ro..Wood love ... t. e· aPRINO CLEANING GA.RAG• aALE Miao houMhotd ltema, bed· ding, clothing. even Xmaa ltema. SAT only 6-3, 9592 Port Clyde Klamet Rug Gallery marble Roman nude Every Sat Ii Sun •1 In COM .. eking .. .,. atatuea, coat 111,000 PETSMAAT, Fountain--------- motivated, energetic ANTIQUES &OlO Heh; Victorian loV• Valley. Puppl .. , kll· NEWPORT peraon. Exp pref. HS couch, 0 • Baroque tena and more, all BEACH dlploma req. Salary m Irr 0 r, 01 n n • b • r looking fOf loving, Cat· '169 +comm. Apply In per· 3•.PC OAK bdrm Hts VHel, 6• acreen, Ing homH. CALL 597· •on 3837 I!. Coaat ermolre, dreuer w/ palntlnga, Ivory, Jade, 9037 for more Info. 8 PAMILl•a -------- Hwy. 723-4422 OaVld mirror & cheat. '976 etc. 1240 Logan '91, Columblan Red-Tall Saturday a.2 all 3: oak buffet 1425; Coata Meaa. 444•1112 ha, ntce marking•, Behind McDonald'• amall oak armolre approx 2 yra 6'd e· In on Brlatol (between EMPLOYMENT 1150. Walnut curved Full •• Md new, Sim-lenufh. Wiii .. 11• with Birch• JamborM) SERVICES 5533 front armolre 1435. mon'• man l300, .. " aquattum & other ... EiTATI IALI 110·9455: pager olub•·Wlleon Ofar tru for 1350/obo. c.i1 Fabuloua antlq French •--411560.5158 Effect lrona, 3·PW 31().825-3057. & Otlenlal furn, at.,• Pleue be aware lhat ••UYINQ ITiMI• S100, PUii\ lawnMOWW l'r•• to ttOOd Home Ung, Haviland & rnlao -------- lhe li1tlng1 In thla cat· From 1800-1980. 1 pc 125/obo ~7192 A "Peopte C*l." Male, chfna.. ahlp modele, egory may require you to ent.lre ••tale. Paint• Harbor RIOO• Salel ahort hair "Morrla." toy ao4diera, bootee, to call a 800 number Inga. book•. furniture, lron/gl••• rtound patio D~lawed, neul•red. Fr. atove, Oatden atat• In which 1here la 1 etc, lmmedlat• caah, Mt 1150. Wood wino lnelde cat. 957•1650 uary, fine porcelain charge per minute. 1op I . 173-6223 Iv mag · dowe 135 eech. r..,. miniature boxee, i106 DAILYlll Stuff clae bench 120. Much •••• abund end c1oc:tc, c:ryatal chande- envelOPH In your FUUITUU 1014 morel ?H-?eH !!~::;'#0:::.· 8c!Ji ~· ~ ~1~1.co;'.':: apare time. For FREE Aefrf9, trundle bed, 7t4-681·I037. 1pm. Set Aprtt 1-. Information, wrl1e to: Y9fvet bed•Pfd, Otlentl eani.noon. 6a Via Udo Trane Culflre Co .. •= .. ~~ 9-: rug, Webber 880. T., Min PlnMhef.*" Soud, Udo..,_ 2155 Verdugo Btvd. r • .,..ng uaed once, minor• GOfgeoue, blkltan, Id #809. MonlroN, CA frame 1190.173-13,.4 door•, bathrm pu1.: moa, haebrkn, papen. Qw ...... .,.._. 7-4 t1020. Dr•••• 1tlnln9 ••• "*'• ewocaoe. ent• l400 nrm. l50-2723 E~ 2 Ooodwtl 1111. draw table oet, Brown I Jordan Zebra l'I • 10 Ct. ~•au. can·t'"'" to g.t toal thON repair JOb• "°""" .. hc>uM? l.91theCllll .... ................ ....,,..,.,_, NMll ... l350, carwd Chlnea• patio Mt. M4•7IOS White peace dov.. S*lor·follow •· chMt '350, tall Cheat 11a. Celft ........ -..... -l30. NIGM a1and8 .10 8UNOUEST WOLF' _,,.,, ,.,.......1,,. each. 768-1...0 TANNING ••Da New oommeroteloo For Ad Action hont• tanning uoha Cell 1 from 11".oo. Lampe- Lollona-Acce11orle1 • MGnlhty paymenta low .. uo.oo. Cell today! ,AIE NEW cotot ca .. log. 14I00-4e2·t1t7. AD-VISOR 142 ... 71 When you write a Clulffled ad, lnclUdt .. the flCtl Ind get tM ,.IUltt you want. Protect your family from the most dangerous aninlals on earth. • LAB ONE: In honor .of The Lab beb:lg 365 days young, th~ so-called anti-mall" at 1930 Bristol ., Costa Mesa, celebrates n to 9 p.m. Saturday 'th raffle drawings, food d birthday cake, fresh ·on show by Axcess agazine, free T-shirts for e first 100 guests and live usic by Supernova, the Neptunas, Phazz and Sugar Ray (formerly Shrinky Dime). 2ETHNJC DANCE: Ballet Hispanico, America's preeminent Latino-Amer- ican dance company. perlorms 8 p.m . Saturday in Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre. 3 ECO-TRIP: Chevrolet's third annual Action Adventure Expo con- sumer show dedicated to international-adventure and environmentally responsible travel runs 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m . Saturday and Sunday at Orange County Fair- grounds. 4 KID'S STIJFF: Colony Cable hosts popular children's performer Roty from The Leaming Channel's "Ready, Set, Learn!" ,eries 1:15 p.m. today at St. Joachim Ele- mentary School in Costa Me:;a. 5 TIME TRAVEL: Con- ductor Jack Everly and Pacific Symphony Orchestra present Pops Series concert "The Fabu- lous Forties - A Musical Jowney Backwards in Time Through the Radio Years 1949-1940" at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Orange County Performing Arts Center. 6KID'S S11JFF ll: Gold record children's artist Joanie Bartels perlorms sing-along, dance-along family concert 4 p.m. Sun- day in Orange Coast Col- lege's Robert B. Moore The- atre. 7BACHTOTIO: FUIURE: Ami Porat leads Mozart <;:amerata in "Bach and.Porth" 4 p .m. Sunday at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach. 8ELEMENTARY, WAT- SON: Pad.fie Symphony Orchestra's latest Mervyn's Musical Mornings family concerts -at 10 and 11:30 a.m. Saturday at Orange County PerfQrming Arts Center -is "Snoopers and Bloopers,• an April Fool's Day treat where audi- ence members will don Sherlock Holmes caps to seek the musicians playing the wrong note. gBOOING OUT: "Ghost in the Madiirie" doses 8 ·p.m. through Priday, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sun~ day on SoUth Cout Re~ ry'•~·· y By Matt Coker. Weekend Editor J effrey John Bitetti was at the tiniSh line to hug his brother after he completed a 26- mlle run in Utah in less than four hours last October. A week later, Bitetti was in his brother's Newport Beach driveway to bug his nieces after they lost their father to a ruptured ao~ probably an after-effect of the matathon. HE .'FOLLOWS HIS H.EART "All I could do is hold tht!m," Bitetti said last week from bis living room, which is a few steps from Pacific Coast Highway in Corona del Mar. Only months before that tragedy, 34-year-old Bitetti lost his father, before ,lhat liiS mother. Divorced, he was left to raise brother Rand's two daughters, Bronwen, 20, who has since gone off to college, and Blythe, 16, a jUB.ior at Newport Harbor High School. If anyone has a right to sing the blues, it's Jeff Bitetti. But he'll have none of that. When the Jeffrey John Band makes its con- .-t debut Saturday night e Galaxy Theater in ·~--~ Ana, listeners will be treated to upbeat, origi- nal and life-affirming folk, rock, country and Christ- ian music. "The only reason I want to do it is for everybody else," said Bitetti, the five- piece band's singer, song- writer and guitarist. "It brings people together for the right reasons. It's not • pissin' & moanin.' As of last week, the Galaxy show was nearly sold out, something Bitetti attributed to "tremen- dous support in the community." Devotion to bis hometown emerges often in casual conversation. "There's not a finer place in the world to live, let alone have my roots .... Wtth all the bad places in the world, the Rwandas, let's stop for a minute and get some perspective. Let's look at Catalina, look at the Bay." Firing off his credits, Bitetti, who got his first gui- tar at age 6, proudly begins with Conrad Birdie in "Bye, Bye Birdie" and Professor Harold Hill in "The Music Man• -musicals staged nearly a quarter century ago at Mariners Elementary School. He atso starred in drama productions at Harbor High, where he was class president and still holds the quarterback sack record. After a couple tragic years, Jeffrey John Bitetti returns ... more upbeat than ever His music put him through use. While lus mends continued in the biz, Bitetti ventured into commercial real estate, working locally at Nexus Development and Scher Voit Commercial Broker- age. When the recession swallowed his job, it was a godsend. "What is happening is I've been there, done that in the work world, which is important but that JUSt wasn't enough for me. ll you follow your heart, the money will come. (Money) is not the focus for " IrRAYELS Back .up the rabbit hole By Susanna Clemans Since sauntering into the Deep South, it's as if we're in a land of dreams where absurd images occur haphazard- ly. And as we do in dreams, we willingly become a part of the craziness, only questioning when we awaken. Start.led out of this unstructured travel-world by phone calls, occasional mail and Simpson saga updaters, we crawl back up the rabbit hole, blinking our eyes, searching for our center. Hurricanes (a huge, juicy-red, potent drink), strolling the rub- bish-strewn streets to the upbeat jazz, occasionally breaking into a strident strut. Age and race held no barriers but one's sex did. When we'd parked our car, we'd noticed three young women wrestling with their bras under their loose tops and then flinging them into the back seat. We were soon to discover why. "U you pull up your top, I'll give you real beads!" the beads were merely plastic or glass but were perceived as priceless during Mardi Gras. Masks, costumes, music anti drink all helped young people assume urunhib1ted identities, act m outrageous ways. do everything in excess 'tiJ after Fat Tuesday. when withdrawal set.in and everyone repented for six weeks. We ate shn.mp-tluckened, tobasco-spiced gumbo, cooled down with French bread and water chasers. LOCAL DINING The Qui,et. Woman: Marla Bird tells all 01e .... I'm still the music man. I'm totally unem- ployed. 'I'his is what l do. I feel I'll leave ·a legacy.• Over the last couple years, be's donated his tal- ent to Harbor High pep rallies, benefits for Child- Help USA, which helps abused and neglected chil- dren, and the memorial service for local architect Etnie Wilson. As for paying gigs, whcst was then known as Jeff Bitetti and the Band opened for local faves Honk at the Coach House in San Juan Capistrano and the Ma{Shall Tucker Band at the Rhythm Cafe (which the Coach House owners have since bought and renamed the Galaxy The- ater). · Cory Mered- ith, owner of the event secu- rity company Staff Pro, approached Bitetti after the Marshall Tuck- er concert and offered to help the musician "fulfill his dreams." His brother's death post- poned those dreams. Before this weekend, Bitetb had con- fined his hve playmg to cov- er tunes with the Wildman Party Band at Corond Caf~ But the self- described "big- picture guy• is back. He's recording his original maten· al and sending it to record companies. He confided, •it's COUNTY DON Jeff Bitetti's new song, "~emg Country." is inspired by an incident at that involves a memorial service and billionaire developer Donald Bren. A few years back, Bitetti's then-wife and Bren's then-girl- friends were friends. After din- ner one night, the two couples wound up at Bitetti's home, where the musician performed. the Willie Nelson/Waylon Jen- nings' chestnut "Mama Don't Let Your Babies·Grow Up to Be Cowboys." Bitetti bumped into Bren again a couple years ago at the memorial service for local archi- tect Ernie Wilson. The Irvine Co. chairman asked Bitetti, •Are you going to play any of that country music here?• The musi- cian answered it might not be appropriate. But the encounter did spur "Being Country.· Here's a sam- ple lyric: "I'm a city boy that's come to understand! there's a litUe country boy in every city man.• After singing some of the song in his living room last week, Bitetti a.mended the lyrics to "there's a little country boy in every Donald Bren.• difficult; they want to pigeonhole me • Indeed, categorizing Bitetti's muSic is a challenge Live, one hears traces of Billy Joel. Neil Diamond and Bruce Springsteen in his cleclr, powerful voice But his new three-song demo tape (which will be available for $5 at the Galaxy) leans toward coun- try. His strategy JS to g1ve record execs a sampling of all he can do "This is good music The market segregates I'm 1ust going to play 1t and let you decide Corne bs- t.en and have a good lllne • It all started with the Mardi Gras in New Orleans. The nar- row streets were packed with rowdy college students, profes- sionally dressed men and women, and tourists drinking The carnival frenzy turned even the very sedate into wanton women when it came to neck- laces. Men smartly dressed ·· yelled from the balconies, dan- gling the elusive beads, and all ages and classes become one vying for the prize. Of course, During this time, we stayed m Baton Rouge, finding no room at any inn m New Orleans. Friends. professors at Lowsiana State University, took us to the Satur- day Baton Rouge Mardi Gras parade that poked fun at every- one in the news from Hillary to Newt, kind of like the Doo-Dah Parade in Pasadena. With our fnends. we drank beer and ate hot jambalaya from a street ven- dor they knew, in the hot Febru- ary sun. Unlike New Orleans, we saw more families, little chtldren and • SEE TRAVELS PAGE C4 MOVIES The 'Doctor~ is in • Restored version of 'Doctor Zhivago' to be shotvn at benefit for fledgling Orange County Ftl.m Office ~CHlO, 1995 AIT llMA OJNHMiHAM "Feathered Flyers 1n Landsedpe,• w•tercolors and acrylics of b11ds in night by local artist on dJsplay Saturd4y through Apnl 30. Hours: 9 a.m to 9 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, to 6 p.m. Satwdays and noon to 5 p m Sundays. Free ac:bnis· sjon. Artist's recepUon 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday in Friend.a' Meeting Room. Newport Beach Central Ubrary. 1000 'Avocado Ave., 117-3816. NANCY a.AAKE MARLOW MulU media works -including 1 acrylic. pastels dJld watercolors -by Costa Mesa Art League's featured artist ot the month are shown Saturday through April 21 Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. Sundays and closed Monday . Free admis· sion. Showcase Gallery. South Coast Plaza Vlllage. J 631 Sunflower. CORITAKENT , A retrospective of serigraphs ol the artist's work from 1952 to J978- indudmg biblical scenes, abstract unpress!orust composition.!> and pop art prints -on view Sunday through Easter Sunday, April 16. Call to arrange lime to v1ew exhibit ouls1de Sunday morning services. St. Mark Presbyterian Church, Sanctuary, 2100 /Viar Vista Drive, Newport Beach, 644-1341. COREYST£1N Exhjb1t of "The 1-5 Art.il>t's" thematic objects closes Sunday. Laguna Art Museum Satellite, South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St .. 662-3366. MARGE CHAPMAN Exhibit of Newport Bcdch amst's fig- urative and abslrdcl mixed media closes Sunday Sandstone Gallery, 384-A N. Coast Highway. Laguna Beach, 491-6175. "'ZOOLOGY: ANIMAL IMAGES IN ART" More than 30 pamllngs, drawmgs, pnnts and sculpture of dmmals - both domeslJc and wild -on Vlew through May 19 ArtlSts represented include Joe Andoe. De borah B11tterf1eld, Roy De Forest and Roy Lichtenste in. Hour. noon to 7 p.m. Mondays. noon 10 5 p.m Tuesdays through FnddY' Artist reception 5 to 7 pm Wednesday. BankAmerica Gallery. Dept. 4055, South Coast M etro Center, 555 Anton Blvd., Costa M esa, 433-6000. JENNIFER HASSm Exhibit of painting!> and monoprinls of abstrac-llons of exterior and inte ri- or landscapes closes Wednesday. Pascal Epicerle at Plaza Newport. 1000 Bristol St .. Newport Beach, 261 · 9041. .. LEGENDS, LIFESTYLES AND DREAMS• Recent works. mosUy paintings, from "Mujeres en Marcha. •a women's folk ar1 cooperntive lrom Costa Rica. runs through April 9. Hours 11 a m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays and by a pporntment Sundays. Tlmbuklu, 1661 Superior Ave., Costa Mesa. 650-7413. DANIEL WHEELER LA i.culptor and lnstdllatJon artJSt's mued media exh1b1ttoo "pseudethe- sla & synecdoche" conunues 'lit April 9 Hour'> 6 to 10 pm Thursday'>; I 0 a m to 5 pm Saturdays. noon to 5 p m. Sundays; or by appointme>nt Gnffin Ftne Art 1640 Pomona Ave., Costa M~ 646-566.s. 'WHITE• Photographs by Shoji Yostuda William Clift, Carol Henry, Eikoh Hosoe, Marilyn Ltttmtm , Ployd Peterson, John Sexton, Loma Stokes, George Tice. Larry Vogel. Don Worth and Ron Wohlduer and Patrick Crabb's new ceramic plates on view through Apnl 9. Hours: roon to 6 p.m. Tuesdays, 'W 8 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays, 'til 9 p.m Fndays and Saturdays, 'til 5 p m Sundays and closed Mondays Susan SpJTitus Gallery, Triangle Square, 1870 A Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa, 548-7558. "THE GREEK LEGACY" Ma1or Greek folk art e xtub1t of 150 pieces from ldtc> 1700s through 1900s, culled from pnvdte collPct1ons in the United Std\~ dnd Greece, on d1Splay throuqh Apnl 13 Hourc; 10 a m to 3 p m Mondays through Thursday!> and 7 to 8 30 p m Thursdays FrPe adrnc.r.1on Orange Coast College Art Gallery, 2101 Fairview Road, 432-5039. •FIVE MEXICAN PHOTOGRAPHERS• Part one of an t•xrhange exhibition with the Un1vl'r.1ty of Colima, MPx1co, h•atuit•s works by artists Lola Conlren•i. and Alejandra Rocha through Apnl 14 AJso on view Is "tnnltles· Wisdom. Insight and Magic Power." which features new mixed media work.!> by Nicola Lamb and AUISon KendlS Gallery hours· 11 a.m. to 4 p m Wednesdays through Sundays Orange County Center for Contemporary Art, 3621 W. MacArthur Blvd., 549-4989. PHOTO EXHIBTTION J effrey Crussell displays his photo- graphic works through April 17. Hours 10 am to 3 p.m Mondays through Thursdays. 7-8:30 p.m Thursdays and the first and Uurd Monday of each month. Free admis· slon. Orange Coost College Photo Gallery, 432-5030. CAU'°"NfA LANDSCAPES David Stary-Sheets showca cs 40 CaJilom!a landscape paintings spot· lighting the works of h1s late father ' - Mdlord Sheets ind,lllne ...... notable ~b from bJI pnva .. ml· ledlon weU • ut bom hil SLuy· Sh ts rma Art GaDary In lrvlne through May 15 Scltlon Ploce Hotel. 4500 MacArthur Blvd.. N wport &och. 476-2001, exc. 2fg,I, JONOAklS Works by the arust who for 20 years has perlected the craft of hand thrown adobe ve els wtlh a combt- natJon of clay, pa111t and gJue that a.re carefully added and fired ln a blazing Raku kiln tilled with dried eucalyptus leaves or seaweed now on view. Winter hours: 10:30 a.m. to 5~30 p.m. Wednesdays lhrough • Mondays. Gregory Oo1JerylR1111Sell Jacque! Studio, 3406 Vla Udo, Newporl Beach, 123-0881. ARTISTS' COOPERATIVE Cooperative of 11 lO<'al paintots and sculptors_ Phyllis Biel, Judee Danna, Jack Roberts, Carole Weaks, Llnda Bloemberg, Nancy Howard, Myrna Strasner. Midge Thompson, Judy Cardoza, Victona Kerr and Bob White _ displays works 10 a.m to 5 p.m. daily. Lott Art Gallery, balcony of Plains 1tue Value Home Cent~r, 2666 Harbor Blvd., Costa MeSo. CLUBS & · COFFEEHOUSF.S ALTA COFFEE Pilgrim Soul, 8 torught. The Woodbys, 8:30 p .m. Friday. 506 3lsl St., Newport Beach, 615-0233. ATRIUM MARQUIS HOTEL In the Hotel Ballroom. Balboa Beach Big Dance Band, 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday ($5 per person, $8 p<>r couple). 18700 MacArthur Blvd., 833-2770. THE CANNERY Fabulous Jetsens, 9 p m. lo 1 d .m. through Saturday, 3 to 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. to close Sunday. "Live Jazz Night· features shows ell 8:30, 9:45 and 1 l p.m. Tuesdays with vocallst/hos\ Jack Woods and p1amst George Galrney, bassist Luther Hughes, drummer Paul Kre1b1ch and trumpeter Buddy Childers. 3010 Lafayette. Newport Beach, 675-5111. CLUB MESA Shattered Faith, Chula Wtute. Crowd, Screws and Decline, Friday. Leather Hyman and Foreskin 500, Saturday. Free punk rock practice, Mondays. 843 W. 19th St .. Costa Mesa, 642-8448. CORONA CAFE The Voodudes, Thursday and Fnday. Tropicdl Squeeze. Sundays. Gene Murrell, Tuesday.!>. Chester Stanley Duo, Wednesdays. 3201 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona del /Viar, 676-75'15. DIEDRICH COFFEE/COSTA MESA Ben Cleall. 8 p.m. Fnday. 414 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. FOUR SEASONS HOTEL In Conservatory Lounge Jimmy Hopper, Wednesdcly~ lhrough Satudays. 690 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, 759-0808. LAVA ROOM Mighty Rhythm Track. Sunday'> Thom Hill, Monddy 1945 Placcn11u Ave .• Costa Mesa, 631 ·0031 MARGARfTAVILU Crosscut, tonight Blue Mach mt>. Sundays Peter Shambrook, Wednesdays 2332 W Coast Hwy . Newport Beach, 631-8220. NEWPORT MARRIOTI In The View Lounge· Tom Stein Band, Thursdays through Sclturday'> The Byte~. Tuesddy'> and Wednesdays. 9000 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, 640-4000. PIERQ STREET ANNEX Lettuce Jones. tomght through Saturday. Starmakcr show, Tuesdays 330 E. 11th St., Costa Mesa, 646-8500. RUMPELSTILTSKIN'S Pipe s & Drums, tonight through Saturday. 114 M cFadden Place. Newport Pier area. 673-5025. s10·s Bnan Barrell, 8:30 pm. tonight, Sunday and Monday 445 N. Newport Blvd, Newport Beach. 650-SJDS. STUDIO CAFE Angry Itch. tonight Royl Jply. Fnday and Sunday afte rooon John Heussenslamm, Saturday and Monday. The Fables, Sunday mght The Works, Tuesday 100 S. /Vlaln St., Balboa, 675-7760. THUNDE~BIRD CLUB The Llfd>rs. Fnday Henry Carvajal & San Pe dro Stun, Sdlurday-. 3505 Vm Oporto, Newport Bearh. 675·6599 VILLANOVA Michael Pattrrson and Paul Biondi, Thursdays through Sclturdays. Richard Fauno, Sunday~ through Wednesdays 3131 W. Coast Hwy .. Newport Beach. 642-7880 WAREHOUSE Modem Faith, 9 p.m. tonight through Saturday ($5 cover). T.f.M .. 9 p.m Tuesday ($2). Hannony Road, 9 p.m. Wednesday {free). The Shout, 9 p.m Thursday, April 6 ($5). 3450 Via Oporto, Newport Beach, 673-4700. WOODIE'S WHARF Green Natives, torught through Saturday. Kerry Chesler, Tuesday . The Shout, Wednesdays. 2318 W. Newport Blvd., Newpol1 Beach. 615-0471. [1J DANCE BAU.ET HISPANICO Latino-American dance company perfonns 6 p.m. Salurday. Tickets: $2)-$29. Orange Coast Coll ge. Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Palrvkw Road, Colla Meao, 432...'J880. ..... ,-. . " . _,___.-'I. ..• -•· N 1 GINHIUM IRK> PlAY DAYS Chlklren get fJee, "hands-on· opportunities to play with Brio wooden trains sets 10 a m. lo 6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday lmaglnanum, Lil fronJ of Broadway/Neiman Marcin Courtyard. Fashion Island, 644·0188. ACTION ADVENTURE EXPO Chevrolet's third annual consumer show dedicated to inte rnational· adyenture and en\lirorunentally responsible travel runs 1 l a.m. to 5!30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Activities indude scuba diving and rode. climbing, children's eco-work- shops and an exotic animal zoo. world-beat musicians and more. Ad.mission: SB.SO for adults, S4 for children under age 12 and free tor children under ~. Orange County Fairgroundsi 88 Fair Drive, Co.la Melfa, (310) 471-6711. NEWPORT HARBOR IOAT SHOW lbe 22nd in-th~-wat.eT boat show - the oldest and largest in the West with exhibits, daily seminars and .more than 300 sail and power boats on display -is presented at two local marinas. Hours: noon to 7 p.m. Wednesday; 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday. April 6-7; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, April 8; 10 a .m . to 6 p.m. Sunday, April 9. Admission: $8 for adults, free for children under 12. Water taxi service between marinas is $2; continuous sh uttle buses are free. Newport Dunes Marina, Back Bay Drive off Jamboree Road, Newport Beach, aJld Brokerage Vessels and SaJJboals, LJdo Marina Village. Via Oporto off Via Lido, 157-5959. I~ I FILM & VIDEO •DOCTOR ZHIVAGO" Orange County Film OCfice cele- brates the 30th anniversary of David Lean's ep1c film with a special VIP screening of a newly restored ver- sion by Turner Entertainment Co. at 6 p.m. Thursday, April 6. Edwards South Coast Plaza Village Cinema, 1561 W. Sunflower Ave. The screen- mg is followed by a Russian-themed receplion that benefits Orange County Film Office. Donation: $50 per person. Red Lion Inn, Paularlno Avenue and Bristol Street, Costa M esa. 634-2900. I ®I LITERARY ARTS ALTA COFFEE ·Poetry at AJta • 8 p.m Wednesday features mus ic by Neil Miranda & Full Moon S19nups begin at 7 p.m for open readmg (ollowmg mam pro- gram Free admission 506 31st St., Newport Beach, 615-0233. CORONA DEL MAR BRANCH LIBRARY CtuJdre n in first through hfth grndei. Cdn partlClpate in "Klds' Stuff. TalPs Tall & Smdll, • a free, afte r'ichool dct1v1ty senes 3:30 p.m. Tue!.days that includes folk tales and wnllng ld ll ldle~. 420 Marigold Ave .. Corona de/ M ar, 644-3135. Does your listing belong here? Weekend prints list- ings, free of charge, for arts, entertainment and communi- ty events in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Listing infor· mation is needed at least two wee ks before an event date. Send information to On the Town, c/o the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay Sl, Costa Mesa. CA 92627. Items can be faxed to 646-4170. lllWlfttA"'S IOC* mJM ~~Dr. JtiCbaid a.yton 51gr11 COP'8 o1 •ne PorgM.ng Pl4ce: Cbooling Peace A/tJer Violent itau-." ·_whk.h Ch.ron-- ides b» emoUoDal }Wmf>Y ·~ the murder of hia wife during a rob- bery of thett home, l to • p m Saturday 306 112 /VlarlJle Ave .. Bo/boa /a/and, ~13-1185. OAANGE COAST COUlGE A creaUve writing workshop, designed to tum interesting life experiences lnto engaging stories, meets from 6:30 to 9:30 tonight. Fee: S49. 2101 FolrvJew Road, Costa M~sa, 432·5880. ORANGE COUNTY INSIDE EDGE Doug and Napmi Moseley authors of "Dancing in the Dark: The Shadow Slde of Intimate Relationships,• speak on "The Positive Power of Rage 1n Intimate Relationships• during the 6:30-8:30 !i.m. Wednesday meeUng of this sup- port group for leaders. Cost: $15 for first-time guests (lndudes 'breakfast buffet), Scott .. Restaurant, 3300 Brf.!toJ St., Costa Mesa, 730-5060. ••. ~ lli!USI C VIRGINIA UIELS Vocal student offers her sophomore recital noon today. The mezzo-sopra- no performs works by Henry Purcell, Alessandro Scarlatti, Stephano Donaudy. Hugo Wolf, Richard Strauss. Claude Debussy and Samuel Barber. Free admission. Orange Coast College, Music Room 101, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa M esa. RORY Colony Cable hosts popular chil- dren's performer trom The Leaming Channel's "Ready, Set, Leaml" series 1: 15 p.m . today at St. Joachim Elementary School Auditorium, 1964 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa, 514· 1411 (ask for Sister Sharon). PAOFtC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA George Cleve. former San Jose Symphony musk director. leads PSO in Ravel's "Le Tombeau de Couperin,• Lalo's "Symphome espagnole • with guest v1olirust Nai- Yuan Hu and Elgar's • Erugma Varlat.Jons· at 8 tonJght. Tickets: $14-$63. Concert preview at 7 p.m. Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 1bwn Center Drive Costa Mesa, 755-5799. ' PAOFlC SYMPHONY POPS Conductor Jack Everly and Pacific Symphony Orchestra present "The Fabulous Forties -A Musical Journey Backwards in Time Through the Radio Years 1949-1940" 8 p.m. Friday and Salurday. Soloists indude Judy Blazer, Alli Kore y, Michael Horton, Jason Graae and The Fa bulous Fort.ie~ Vocal Quart.et m a program featuring works by Rodgers & Hammerstein, lrvmg Berlin, Martin & Blane and famous radio Jmgles Tickets $22-$53. Orange County Performing Arts Center. 755-5799. MERVYN'S MUSICAL MORNINGS Pacif ic Symphony Orchestra senes lttl<'d "SchemP & Vanat1ons" a nd geared toward children ages 4 to 13 and lhC'lr parents continues Saturday with ·snoopers arid Bloopers.· an Apnl Fool''> Day treat where ctudi- r nce membe rs will don She rlock Holme~ Cdps 10 seek the musicians playing lhE' wrong note. PSO assis- CAFE ~ ~ ~ OLE' BREAKFAST • LUNCH • SPECIAL TY COFFEES • WATERFRONT DINING OPEN OAILV 7~· 4 00 723-0616 • 634 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH tat cooclUcMr l!dwtrd CWruNng )el&U the <ClldlettrA kl lbe ·'5·nUnUt8 concerts at 10 and U :30 • m. 1kk8Ca. Sl-SIO. Orange Cqunty hrlonitbtfl Attt Center, 155·510Q. JEfFMY JOHN IMD Debut concert showcase by thls folk/country/rock band fronted by Newport Harbor Hlgb School prod- uct Jeffn>y John Bitetti is 8 p.m. Saturday. Those with dinner reserva- tions at 6:30 p.m. get preferred con- cert seating. Galaxy Theater, Harbor Boulevard and Lake Center, Santo Ana, 951-0000. JOANIE IMTELS Gold r~cord children's artist performs sing-along, dance..along family con- cert 4 p.m. Sunday, Tickets: $7-$11. Orange C<iost College, Robert fl Moore Theatre, 432-5880. MOZART cAMERATA Am1 Porat leads Cam~ata in "Bach and Forth·_ Mozart's Adagio from K.287, Clmarosa!s Oboe Concerto (featuring oboist Leanne Becknell), JC Bach's $inlonla opus 3, in G. and Haydn's Symphony No. 42, in 0 _·4 p.m. Sunday. Ticltet.s: $1<4-$29. St. Andrew:, Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews R~ct Newport Beach, 631-2233. , CHARLES RUTHERFORD QUARTET Orange Coast College jazz music professor Charles Rutherford leads a jam session featuring 20 Orange Coast College jazz vocalists and musicians 8 to 11 p.m . Wednesday. Restaurant Kikuya, 8052 Adams Ave., Huntington Beach. 536-6665. u SINGLES TIPS FROM A LOVE COACH "Creating a Loving Relationship" is the topic of a workshop for singles and couples from 7 to 8:30 tonight. Fee: $25. Oakwood North Apartments, Clubhouse, 880 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. 722-77r7. CHOOSING HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS Singles orgaruzation "The Meebng R~m· sponsors four-part relallon- ship workshop beginning 8 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday. Cost: $40 for me m- bers, $50 for non-members for entm• series. Space limited, reservations with advcillced payment only. 2915 Redhill Ave., Suite GI 04, Costa Mesa, 545-8082. ~SPEC IAL EVENTS SPRING FASHION SHOW A spring fashion prPsentation celc>- brating work week/weekend fashion options is 6:30 tonight. SPaUng Limit- ed; caU for rei.e rvatio ns. Neiman Marcus/ Fashion Island, 759-1900, ext. 2407. 365 DAYS OF THE LAB In honor of The Ldb bemg 365 days young, the !>o-called "anti-mclll " cel- ebrates noon to 9 p.m. Saturday with raffles, food and bu'thday cake. lresh rastuon show by Axcess magazine. free T-!>huts for the hrc;t 100 guests and liv• mua&c by Supemove, thi, Nf!ptunu. Pbu2 ~ S*r Ray (fo1. inerly Sb.n~ Dinx) 2~30 Brlatol SI., Coata Me."1, ~t. GOLDEN MJ0N MlA former •s.tun1.1y Jlligbl Uve• cast member Dana C.rv.y headlliles the Orange County Philhannoruc Society's gala 6:30 p.m. Saturday Awards, cocktails, silent auctJon and dinner and dancing round out the program. Reservotions required. Hyall Regency Irvine. 553-2422. "SW1M FOR PEACE" Lecture and slide presentation by Lynne Cox and Dr. Gabriella Mlolt 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 6, details the formers swim between Jordan and l<>rael during peace l.alk.s and the latter's stint as swim team doctor Donation: $5. Timbuktu Tribal and Folk Art. 1661 Superior Ave., Cost(J Mesa, 65Q-7473. S "PAGE •GHOST IN THE MACHINE" Closing performances of David Gilman's story about a quartet of Ivy League academics who discover lines from a famous hymn in a com- puter-generated piece of music - and try to unravel whether it is a miracle or hoax -are 8 p.m. through Friday, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $26-$36. South Coast Repertory, Mainstage, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa, 957 4033. "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUOCOO'S NEsr Dale Wasserman's stage adaption of the Ken Kesey novel about a defiant misfit who enters an insane asylum and inspires his fellow inmates to assert themselves continues 8 p.m Friddys and Saturdays, 7 p.m. Sundays through April 9. Tickets $15 The Theatre District, 1599 Superior A\-e., Costa M esa, 548-7671 "PTERODACTYLS" Nicky Silver's story (recommended for mature audiences) of a proper Ptuladelptua family whose members live m a permanent state of denial belore the prodigal son returns to shake the skele tons in lhe closet a nd chnosaur bones in the backyard con- tinues 8 p.m . Tuesdays through Fridays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays through April 16. Tickets: $24-$34 South Coast Repertory, Second Stage, 957-4033. •JUNGLE BOOK" Rudyard Kipling's classic work - adapted for the stage by Orange Coast Colleg e student Michael Nottingham -presented by OCC's Repertory Theatre Company openc; with "Khool perfonnances 10 a.m Wednesday and Thursday. April 6 and regular shows 7 p.m. Friday, Apnl 7 and 2 pm. Saturday, Apnl 8. Tickel5: $3-$4. Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 FalNiew Road, Costa M e'la, 432-5880. We're blelNllnl die COllftNence of fast fOocl wHll todays need for delldous llllCrlUon! Cafe & Coffee Bar Serving Breakfast Luncti & Dinner Open 7 Days A Week ~------------,~-----------~, I SwortJfl9h II DINNER FOR I I Ch•rbrolled 11 . 2 1 I Fish r •cos II w/50UI' or Salad I I I $M 95 11 Choice of Salmon, Mah l, I 0 n y --r. II Swordfish•. Ps6ta, I I · • 11am .. 5pm 11 Shrimp. Top Sirloin, 1 I FREE LARGE COKE II $5tesk or Chicken 1 I DIET SPRITE, II 14 • 95 percouplo I I ICE TEA or COFFEE 11 Offer vauei u!i to :3 coupiee 1 I Up to 4 ordere per coupoo 11 •$1 ;:t8 ~/~~.., I L ~~~ I -~----------~L~----------~~ 2744 Eaet Co.aet Hwy. Corona Del Mar (~e'twoon Mac/\rthur & Golaonroa) 0 en 7:00•m Mon -5at 8:00sm 5 unda ,. N~wpon S.ach/Ca.ta Mc a Daily Piloc UNDERGROUND See booty-shaking transvestites By David James Try wnting an introducbon to this column while listen· ing to the Orb after 10 bows of deep sleep. It's take n me about 15 minutes just to get this far. Not a good thing. At this rate, I'll be done tomorrow morn- ing. I went up to West Hollywood last Saturday to catch locdl wier· dos/noisemakers lnstagon at Sin- a-matic. These kooks play eclec- tic tribal soundscapes, with most of the music improvised. Mad techno freakbeats were provided by deejay O.S.S.T., whose hard trance kept the crowd on its feel. Not for the meek dt heart, th~ coupling of the band and the club created a very intense ambience. lransvestites shook their booty as Instagon's huge tat- tooed dnuruner pounded along with the deejay's beat. Modem primitives' piercings glittered with the strobe light's flash as twin guitars.spat out choppy, unfamiliar chords. And I held my ground in a dark corner, mind· ing my own business. lnstagon plays frequently in the Orange County area at coffeehouses and other less menacing venues. Keep your eyes peeled. ·Step On It -The Best of the Ska Parade Radio Show" has been released on the fabulous C D and cassette fonndt'i, bene- htmg KUCI 88.9 FM (locdl msti· tute of higher learning UCl's excellent on-campus radJo sta· lion). Sk,a Parade host Tazy (rhymes with daisyf Phillips has compiled some of the top rank· ing moments of a number of bands who have perfouned live on the show. The album is a virtual who's wbo of modem ska, featuring acts such as Suburban Rhythm, Meal Ticket, Sublime, Skankin' Piclcle, Voodoo Glow Skulls, Jump With Joey and many, many more. All tracks are unique to this album, and were recorded live on KUCI. This compilation should be available in hip record stores now, and part of the purchase price will help support this great indepen- dent radio station. Orange County has a brand new all-ages club, the strangely named Viva La$ Vega$ in Orange. The grand opening was last Saturday, and was a six band ska festival, with Hepcal and Mealticket topping the bill. Bands playing in April include The Skeletones, Gameface. Smile, D.1 .. Ignite, and Farside. For a more complete schedule, call the dub at 323-8683. Viva La$ Vega$ is located at 612 N Ecknoff in Orange. Hopefully the patrons will keep their knives and fists to themselves. Punk rock legends (?) The Diddes play Old World Village in Huntington Beach next Fri- da,y. April 7. Rounding out the bill are (bed), One Hit Wonder, and my current raves, Home- grown. The 8 p.m . show is an all-ages deal, With a full bar (with 1.0 .. duh). I don't know which is older, Old World or The Dicldes, but you can make your choke at 7561 Center Ave., No. 68, Huntington Beach. The show is $10, but $8 presale tickets are available at all Bionic Records. Call 964-1958 for more info. Last but not least. The Fallouts are playing a secret show (i.e. l don't know where) in Costa Mesa tonight. Keep your ears open, because these guys serve up a mean plate of garage rock 'n' roll that will .<;ertainly please the palette. I do know it's NOT at Our House Coffee Bar, so leave them alone. Well, the good lord put some speed to my fingers, and I've fin· ished this in a timely manner after all. As a season pass holder · at Disneyland, I've discovered how to get onto the new Indiana Jones ride in 40 minutes or less, so I'm gonna go take a whirl. Talk to you soon. David James is proprietor of Noise Noise Noise, an indepen- dent record store at 1505 A Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa Mesa, that specializes in alter- native, punk, techno and jazz CDs. tapes, even vinyl records. Call 556-6473 for more info. F Y L L I S '· F I L M FLASHES By Phyllis Miller • Farlnelli: Not for opera aliciona· dos only. this passionate portrayal features rhapsodic music, a splen· did cast and stunning staging and costuming. Stefano Dionisi as Farinelli, the world-famous castra· to, proves that tesbdes are not d prerequisite to arouse women; dnd Errico Lo Verso, as the devoted brother/musical composer, Rlcdf- do, fosters a brotherly bond that lS at the very least unconvent.Jonal. Subtitles. (R) • Funny Bones: Las Vegas comedJ· an Oliver Platt doesn't measure up to the standards set by ht!. famous comedJan dad, Jeny LeWlS When Platt finds he can't make c\UdJ· ences laugh anymore, he escapes the old neighborhood LO Black- pool, England, to dUdJlJon local talent and find the source of humor. You may or may not be entertained by a bunch of odd bdlls, a bungled smugghng opera· lion, and a bit with Leslie Caron. (R) • Major Payne: Damon Wayans is an out of work military man, who takes a position at Madison Acad- - [:::::::~:::::::~:::::::~:::::::] emy for Boys, training a unit of "out of shape" ROTC cadets for an upcoming decathlon. Wayans' dis· lincttve comedic style takes over as he strives to mold boys into men, and the "Major/misfit" winds up bonding with the "rrunor/mis· hts." (PG-13) •Circle of friends: Three fnends ·graduate and move on to college, boys and sex -or al the very least, foreplay. The picturesque setting and the Catholic mfluences of 1957 Ireland provide a refresh· mg break from life in-the fast lane. Chns O'Donnell is the pre- med/rugby player whose only flaw is that he doesn't hdve any Minnie Dnver is the outwardly pldm, mwardly beautiful lass smitten by O'Donnell. and Alan Cumrrung plays the "creep of the crop" so convincingly that you may need an antacid after watching lum. (PG-13) • TaU Tale: The Unbebevdble Adventures of Pecos Bill: After decades or power action heroes, and metc:l.l men, we are re-intro· duced to mythical champions of the Old West. Paul Bunyon, John Henry and Pecos Bill (played by Patrick Swayze). Predictable as it is, Uus film provides a fair measure of mordls through the dreams and ddventures of 13-year-old Nick Stdhl, who's looking to trade in drudgery on the family farm for potent.Jal conveniences in the com- mg dge of industry. (PG) • Exotica: Stripping and mind tripping occur regularly at the "Exotica" establishment, cour· tesy of Mid Kirshner, a dancer with a school-girl style, and Bruce Greenwood. a tax audi- tor/voyeur carrying enough cmol.Jonal baggage to fill a ledger. ThJS him is like a puzzle; al the start, you can't make sense of the seemingly uncon· nected characters, conversations and events -but stay focused and you will see the pieces come together to provide a complete picture, even if it's not the pic- ture of your fdntdsies. (R) Phyllis Miller is an Orange Coast Realtor. I MARCH 30, 1995 SPECIAL EVENTS ~-------------------------~ 'By Christopher Trela Y ou Sc\Y you enjoy boating but wouldn't Ill.ind taking d class or two to increase your knowledge and apprecia- tion of sailing the seas? Maybe a class on survival and safe ty at sea, or a course on stonn strategy? How abollt learning diesel engine mainte- nance or the fine art of anchor- ing, or maybe something fun like sportfishing in Baja or cruising Catalina? How much would you pay for one of those classes? How does eight bucks sound? Too good to pass up? That's what the New- port Harbor Boat Show is hop· 'ing. f . Y.I. +MIA~ 22nd Newport Harbor ~Show WHIM: Newport Dunes Marina, 8adt by DrlYe off Jamboree "<*t, Newport Beach; and Brokerage VesMls and Sailboats, Lido Manna Village, Via Oporto off Via Udo +WHEN: noon to 7 p.m. Wednesday, April S; 11 a.m. t o 7.p.m. Thursday and Friday, April 6-7; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, April 8; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, April 9 + HOW MUOI: $8 for adults, free for children under 12. Water taxi service between marinas is S2; continuous shuttle buses are free. +MORE INFO: 757-5959 . . " ~ : I I " I I • I I • I ( I I I •• The 22nd annudl Newport Harbor BQ<tl Show, wtuch opens Wednesday and continu!?s through April 9 at Newport Dunes Manna and Lido Marina Boat --~------------:-~ _______ J~ . ·.Village in Newport Beach, is offering five different boating- related seminars eclch day as part of the daily $8 adnussion charge to the show. The boat show itself features more than 300 power and sail bodts on dis· pldy in the Wdter, as well as 30,000 square feet of gear, acces- sory and service exhibits . The Newport Boat show has grown so much over the years thdl it lakes up two mdrina!>. Newport Dunes will feature new power bodts in the water, dcces- sories and the boat.mg semmdrs. The Lido location will have dJs. plays of new and brokc>rdge sail- boats, pre-owned power boats, and more accessones · True boating enthusiasts will be delighted with thP many new boats a t the show, mcludmg the New Zedland-butlt Eclipse 39. geared for sportfo.hmg. dnd the ltdtian-butlt Azunut 40, f1;1dtunng liberal use of ch erry wood. burled wood and granite coun· tertops. , show has class You can also marvel at the new, two-stateroom. two-head Tollycraft 45 and the three-state· room, three-head ToUycraft 65, both making their West Coast debuts. Or how about the only Vtking 43 Express on the West Coast, featuring twin 550 hp 6V· 92 Detroit Diesels for a 32 mph cruLSlllg speed and a 40 mph top speed? ror those who prefer not to spend their next five years take· home pay on a specialty vessel. you'll be glad to know that small lratlerable boats, personal water- craft and inflatable boats will also be on dJsplay. Returning boat show visitors will be happy to learn that the tent at the New- port Dunes location that houses · electromcs, gear, accessories ana service exhibits has nearly tnpled in size from last year. The best way to experience the boat show 1s to park at New- port Dunes, wtuch has 1,300 parking spaces, attend the semi- ndrs that begin every hour from l to 5 p.m (space IS limited, so get there early), see the boats and extub1ts at that site, then take a fun and relaxing half- hour water ta.xi ride to Lido Manna Village. Tbe fare is only $2 each way, and it swe beats driving. Christopher Trela covers local arts and entertainment. :: CI N E "1\ AS : '""-----~-------· ~ --~~ -• • i .WlM!~!,!IARGAIN SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 5:45 PM I A a JC WWWS or 5-30 ti c MAA04 JO, 1995 '' 4'!" • ~,,. • .. ~· 'w . ~·-,----. The Quiet Woman has following to shout about By Marla Bltd, Dming Editor egardless of The Quiet Woman's offensive ame and logo, owner :ynne Campbell made smart move when she dedded to buy the restau- rant in Corona del Mar seven years ago. There's nothing quiet about the business she's enjoy- ing -It's phenomenal. On recent week nights, we • approached the ivy-covered • e ntrance, climbed the used-brick stairs and eaoh time foUJld a full house With a 45-min•.lte watt for a table in the bar or dining room. The hostess assured tis that this wasn't an unusual happening ,.... "just the regulars.· At lunchtime, we managed to snag the last unoccupied table in the non-smoking section, only because we arrived at noon straight-up. In several visits, we hadn't found the food to be all that great, but there's a successful formula at work here having to do with its 30-year presence, a genial staff, a long llsl of simple .foods at moderate prices and cozy, old fashioned tavern arnbi· ence. The menu is •American," meaning grilled or broiled steaks, chicken, chops and hsh, a smattering of Mexican-Ameri- can dishes, pastas, lots of variety in a selection of entrees, sand· wiches. an array of appetizers and a hne listing of Calif omid wines personally chosen by Ms. Campbell. Floral tablecloths give a "Merrie Olde EnglandN atmos- phere, and the floral design is echoed in a spate of beautiful menus. Oddly enough, appetiz- ers and desserts are listed together on a separate menu, so TRAVELS CONTINUED FROM C1 babies on shoulders to help snag the look. People knew no shame; we wakbed them scramble for not only the necklaces but for candy, cookies and cheap toys. Within minutes, mob mentality kicked in, and we were yelling and risking our bodies like everyone else. Later. our friends fed us King Cake, a custard-mar- bled coffee cake, decorated U\ Mardi Gras colored sugars of green, purple and yellow. A plas· tic baby is buried in the cake for good luck; none of us found it. We were conbnually surprised by the pervasiveness of Mardi Gras aU over the Deep South for these two weeks. Moving on to Mobile, Ala., we were told it hdd all started there in t 703. We went to a parade. all children's floats and bands in the morning and an adult parade in the evening. Everyone begged for moon pies. marshmallow sand- wiched between somewhat stale r-------------·-------·---, • I ~·"·'· : • + WMD The Qua.t Woman l .. -. J224 East COMt : ~:~::.. l week; lunch. ""'tdav& 11 . : a.m.to~. l ..,. Moder.U ~ : lfc. NO: 64C)..7440 I : . : L ~------------------------~ if, as in our case, the waiter for- gets to show you the appetizer list, you won'l know wha\ you've miSsed until the menu is pre- sented for a choice of desserts. · ·The appetizers mentioned represent a tantalizing batch of old fa vorite standards such as fresh vegetables with dip, crab cakes, spinach phyllo, stuffed baby potatoes, nachos, steamed dams, shrimp cocktail, trench fried zucchini, roasted garlic and oysters on the half shell -from $3 to $9.95. At lunchtime, the ·ow quick lunch " is a good buy for $5.50, half a sandwich and soup or sal- ad. Prices hover around the mid· dle of the road -a ·ow Cheeseburger" is $6.95 and is served with soup or salad and a choice of French fries, cottage cheese or fresh fruit A purist's version of Caesar salad is $5.95, with the addition of mesquite· grilled shrimp it becomes $10.95. The lunchtime fish of the day usually runs around $10.25. A hefty slab of prime rib is often a midday special, served with an . army-size mound of mashed potatoes and soup or salad. At our lunch table, a thick cut of salmon looked appealing but carried an unmistakable fishy character and after-taste. It was not dining at its best. On the oth- chocolate-covered cookies and wrapped in foil, apparently a Mobile treat. We tried one and gave the rest to the kids next to us. With the beads, we decorated our rear-view mirror and admired the way the sun made our cheap baubles look like pre- cious crown jewels as we made our way through Biloxi, Miss., and into northwestern Florida. We were not alone; carloads of Florida State Unlversity students, sleeping on each other like pup- pies, beads draped all over their cars. made their way back to FSU with visions of revelry danc· ing in their heads. In Florida, we were to slip down a different rabbit hole, peopled by even more fantastical characters and surreal environs. In Tallahassee, we visited FSU. ate dinner with students at a brewery, and fin<illy saw wooded lands again. We visited Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings' house in Cross Creek, a remote, swampy wild area she independently staked out so she could write "The Year- ling,• a Pulitzer Prize winner. DON LEACW OAllY PILOT The Quiet Woman In Corona del Mar has a strong following. and "Cross Creek,· an autobio- graphical account of her life at the Creek and the independent natives who became her friends. We read this real account of he rs while traveling, which gave us a far deeper understanding of peo- ple who pragmatically live on snake, squirrel. alligator and in huts. we felt as if we were back in New Orleans. er band, the chipotle pasta with tender, moist chunks of mesquite grilled chicken and that smoky chipotle flavor was creamy com- fort food, $8.95. Juicy baMball steaks and be· man portions of broiled sword- fish are among the spedalties of the house -and mesquite- broiled pork chops are supposed to be quite popular. Mine bad irreconcilable differences with a steak knUe. Hard to chew and swallow, the chops won after a single bite. The waiter, who seemed to have vanished, finally ~·and, unfazed by the unpacb.ed entree, offered to patkag.r Ole chops to take home. Well. thanks but no thanks. Salad greens were Icy cold, crisp with excellent croutons and the bleu cheese dressing ls mild and flavorsome; the seafood bisque, on the other hand, tasted like library paste. Prices at dinner escalate, with swordfish at $19.50 and lamb chops at $20.50. A vegetable main coune is available at $9.95 and ciappino, $18.50, tops the of$r listed entrees. In some cas- e$, mashed potatoes come with an order along with soup or saJ- ad, other vegetable side dishes run from $3 to $5. Check out the bar carte as well as the Late Night list- ings for rosemary chicken salad, Santa Fe pasta, soft beef or chicken tacos, $4.95, baby lamb chops for $10.95 -good stuff for tender. a noshes. The bar is a ngenial affair with and an amiable bar· Servi~ in the Quiet Woman is slow; the place feels under- staffed during peak hours, but the harried serv-ers seem to do the best they can under the cir- cumstances. ospreys and egrets. As we drove down the nwner- ous keys, islands connected by an amazingly ambitious series of bridges we saw Caribbean-blue waters, bleached sands, boats, dive shops, and young people. Dri'!iJl,g down the tree-lined dri- veway of our B&B, we almost ran into twQ small, tame deer, key deer, natives only in this area and fiercely protected. Parrots A B&B on the outskirts of Jar- pon Springs, about 30 miles north of St. Petersburg and Tam- pa, is run by a retired New York couple who became friends for the few days we stayed in their unmaculate country home. The nearby fishing village, a Greek settle ment for sponge fishing. draws tourists from everywhere. -During our Flonda exploring, we'd seen white-hc:tired rebrees riding bikes, Jogging, walking dogs, all with deep tans a nd big smiles. Alter working for 30 or more years in harsh winters. they flee to the sun in droves. We were often the youngest in shops, restaurants and galleries. After years of gray and beige ~ these seniors decorated~ themselves in salt-water taffy colors making uc; feel drab1rt comparison. Especially in Miami, where years of C'Onservation are finally unleashed and these northerners become children again. _.,.1111111W1tM!i.e._ swayed, the ocean sparkled and we'd found I~ stt '1tllles north of Key West, the southern-most tip. Nearby, we saw grinning alliga- tors and large soft-shelled turtles ln the many Greek cdfe!i>, we all watched each other, exam- ined our purchased sponges, ate stuffed grape leaves and moussa- ka. In Tampa. we talked to the art director, Andrew Maas, a t the Tampa Museum of Art; he told us of Floridd's strong art colony. The New York realists show we saw there was a fine example. And when we took in the Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, We waJked through pricy Bal Harbor shops. ate at sidewalk cafes, drove through blocks of art deco buildings (the largest con- glomeration in the world). and people-watched 'til all colors and forms became a gray mass. I n the Everglades, we looked out on water and savannas, took a boat ride through the waterways and caught glimpses of alligators, blue herons, cranes, amiably swimming together. Instinctive conch-style architec- ture, a combination of Bahamian, Victorian and New England, is the perfect dnswer to a casual beach lifestyle with its screened- in porches, shuttered windows and gingerbread fret work. When in Key West, we visited Hemingway's Spanish-style ram- bling house, inhabited by 56 cats, all descendants of 50-plus cats he owned with his second wife, Pauline, and sons. His favorites Ms. Campbell bas initiated a catering service and wine last· ing dinners (the tint one on Feb. 28 was $100 plus tax and gratu- ity), red wines included a 1985 Grieb Hills Cabernet Sauvignon and a.1986 Beringer Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon. Check out the wine list Jor. unusually personalized descrlp· tions o1 her choices. Her wine menu makes for a good read. Space has been purchased next door for The Quiet Woman catering firm and two, 1,200 bot- tle cellars; some of these wines will not be available for con- sumptfon until 1995. .dining news , Garrs on the moye "We will have more pool tables and at least 15 lVs in our new place, plus a long bar and f asl foods," says Rita Garofalo. She's the owner of Garf's, often named as one of Costa Mesa's most favorite neighborhood bars. The move has been on the back burner for months since her lease on the property of Share Our Selves.at 1550 Supe·- rior Ave. in Costa Mesa ran out in January. · Now, she's almost ready for relocation and hopes to take her faithful cllentele right alon g with her. Garf's will remain at Superior Avenue until May 1, when it heads north to 3046 Bristol, for- merly Love's restaurant. Mrs . Garofalo is pondering the possi- bilities of a "wake" around the end of the m onth "to drink a toast to the past and another to the future." -By Marla Bird were six-toed, and grandchildren live on in splendor in the house and tropical grounds filled with hibiscus and vines. W e talked with artists and writers who said eve ryone here is passionately into the arts even though they may look like waiters or shop keepers. We saw Tennessee Williams' red and white house, Harry Truman's Lit· tle White House and heard sto· ries about the residents ~ho came down to visit and never went back, who claim ?¥> affilia- tion to Florida or even the U.S. We looked at our itinerary, tried to remember where we were, what we were doing and understood the Keys' lure. Before Lt was too late, we forced our-· selves back up the Keys, bought a paper, and called home. Susanna Clemons is a Costa M esa resident who teaches litera- ture at Cerritos Community Col· lege. She and artist/husband Har· vey Cl emons, who teaches al Golden West College, are on the second leg of a cross-country trlp to homes of artl.sts and writers. The Doily Pilot periodjcaUy runs her stories and his sketches . • "tr"'"" .. . ·.~-1." ·. ADVERTISEMENT .&.-: -~ AMERICAN 5lUDIO CAii, located ot 100 Main St. Balboa (ot foot of pier). The Studio Cofe is the happening place !cf food, fun & entenoinmenl. Menu inc~ ribs, chicken, fresh fish, pwlO, oppetia11 & 1alods, ofso MMng brunch on Sot & Sun. 10 lo 3:00 which include. Belgium wofRes, omelettes, pancake, and muc:h mor9. Prices range from $2.95-$13.95. Open 7 days o W916t. MoMri l l : 3(). l : 30 om, Sot-Sun l (). l :30orn. Also locotild ot 300 P.C.H., Huntington 8eoch. IN, BRU, F8, ENT, V, MC, Af., DC s3~ns. RUllU USTAUltANT, Located al 1712 P\oc:enlio, CoSiO Mesa Menu includes nbs, chidten, .ieok & lobsltt, prime rib, pizza, oyslef bar. Pric»s ronge from $3.95 and up. Op.n doily from l\ :30om to lOpm, Cock1oil1 'til 1 lpm. ID, FB, WC, Noaeditcord1. (714) 6'5-8091 CAFE IUntS WI, located ot 320 Bnstol #G al Redhih (by Aral Mini Mof1' in Costa Meta. Menu includes good country coolin' bteokfost wi!f\ the best omelettes, poncoM., great Mexican breokfost di.hes and lunch with stirfry vegetables, lefi~i bowl, 90rflc chicken, assoned solods, healthy lurby biirgeu, hombiirgen, wV9CI w/ ~ sotod Of fr!M. Try R\llti's home coolin' lodoy. Great kiod, gteat pricesl Prices 'Oll{ll from $2.99 lo $5. 95. Open 7 days o ~ 7om to 2pm. ID, 00, WC (71.4) 6'1·7321 · CHINESE Your ledaurant Guide fo Dining In H.wporf leach, Costa Mesa, Corona del Mor, HunlirtffOn leach & F°""""'8 Valley ITALIAN IMAnNOS .aSTAUUNT & MUIAOI CO. Located 01 251 Shlpyotd Way, Newport Beoch. M.nu lnclud.1 9fW pasta, O'WOfd winning Coesor ao&od, dellclout homemodt tcMOgl, veol, lomb, lots of ~Ion dith.t, ~ wine, beer, coppucclno & deM111. •1t•1 a fom' ~ & run rftlovronl .. Pticet range from $~. 5 k> $13 95, Qc>.n 7 doy1 a ~ Setvtng Sot .& Sun 8nJnch from g.30 to l ·00 Sundoy hu Thufldoy I 1 om k> I Opyl Friday & Sot 11~11 pm. IN, OVT, WC, 8RU, wa, V. M, A!, DC (714) 723-062\Coe.ring Speclollab. ITALI AN CIAO, l.ocoted Of 2600 foll Coast Hwy, COfono o.I Mor1 Cbme and tllf*lenl:e COfono del Mar's newest llol°' testouront wving New YOfk .tyle piua, gourmet piuos, elldting poSIOs, aeotM solods, '°"'9, coppuccino and flesh baked ~ies Pnc.s ronge from $3.95toS10.95. Open 7 doyt o week from 1l om to 11 pm, Sunday Brunch 1l om o.livery ovo1loble Colttl!19 ~ilcble for oh occoilona V,WC., Af., WC, IN OUT 6'0-2291 IAHOAUO ITAUAH CAFI, locot9d ot 211 d leoch Bl-Id., (at Manta), Family owned, "'91'ytt\lng ptepored wifh the finest meota & cM. .. 1 & l'omoua for lb lnfomcM dleeMcc* Prices fe>nge ftom $2 00 ta $11 9.S Open Tues thrv Sot 11·9fll", Sun 11.t pm CloMd Mon IN, OVT, WC, w,,.,. ond bMf 1 .536-2.U8. • I I MEXICAN Aw.Al & IANCHIJO, A dining londmortl for OY9I' 20 ,,_ors. Run by the Avila fomlly, Aviloa hcu 7 loc:offona to ..,._. ycxi iri Costa Meao, Newport e.och, Sm*> Mo, long Beoch, Huntington P~ & loguno Hih l Huntington hoc:h. Feoturing o~ food with the fmhest lngredi9nb & o MNt creative light cultlne olona .wltti ouNntic Moma Mio'' ~•pa. IO, NU, F8, ENT, we, v. MC, AE, DC, & OISCOVD. •A¥ilos hot a~ for !Noting ycxi like pott of ht fomllyl Ml CAM, LocOMd at 296 I 7th Sir.et, Cow Meta. A ll'ip to Mexico! Me.Icon Food. Open dolly ot I lOf'll. Pricet ~from $2 25 to $8.95 5-mng lunch & dmMr for O¥W 20 ~' IN, f8, WC, V, tK.., AE, DC, ca, D. 6..S-1626. WAHOC>-1 ftlH TACO, W1_, 4 locotiona. 1133 PCH, lOguno 8eoc:h, (71'1 '97.0033, 1862 ~. Com Mtta, (714) 631-3433 and 3000 8'llfol, Cotto Meta {11 ~) '3$-0 I 30, 120 Molft. Huntington e.och, (71') 536-~ Mi.Iii ~ fl.ti locot, burriloa, ~ '*"" & rlal, .... toridwlc ..... me.. ...... -$1.65 to $1 ~ cp.ri Mon Sot I 1 GM IO 1 Oplft, Sun. 1 I om 10 9pm IN, TKO, WC. SEAFOOD PACIFIC "5H a llAIOOO, locot.d ot 2620 Newport Blvd., Co.to Meta. Menu includes seafood salads, wofood sandwich.I, grilled entrNS, fish & chips, fish tacos, au.Jii ond more. Alto hos one of Orange County's largest irwen'°'les of fresh Rs~ from it's fish morket. Prices ronge from $1 .95 and up. Open M.f 11-6; Sot 11.S, ID. WC (714) 65~130. zu .. u Ort DOCK, locoted ot 9059 Adams, Huntington Beoch. Menu indudes seafood, stec* & lobsw, pizza, prime rib, oys•r bor. Prias ronge from $3.95 and up. ~doily from 1 I :30om lo I Opm, Cocboils til 11 pm. IN, F8, we, v, '/IK:.. (7'~) 9~362. STE AK S THI IMN S1'IM t.IOUll, locoted at 2300 Harbor~. 131, Costa Meso. Menu indudet ....-.. fresh fi.h, chicken bii~ and 10lods. Prices rollQI from $3.75 ~lunch and $6.25 for dlnMr. Op.n 11 am for lunch MSo. Dinner ~ M.fr. Dinner 3pm Sot. & Sun. IN, WC, V, Ml:., AE, DC. (714) 6'1-9777. For 1110re e t e lftOl 1.11Clli011 regarding locaJ flavor : cal 11'8 Delly Pilot at 642:4321 or 1he Hunli_., leach k-lcl1p .-.dent . at 965-3030.· - FOon . I . KEY ·TO NEW 'CUISINES FUSION An intriguing MW cuisint that combines European or rtgioMI A~rican flavors with an Asian accent, Fusion is ~ropping up in restaurants across tht country. Btcaust pasta exists in virtually tvtry culture, it male.ts sense that it bltnds wt// with any combi111Jtion or "fusion " of ethnic cuisines. Bow Tits with Asian Chicktn is a delicious example. Juicy pitces of chicken.fragrantly spiced with a marinade that includes soy sauce, honey and Dijon mustard. art tosstd with vtgttables and Bow Tits for a delicious "&st meets Wtst" main dish. (Serves 6) Bow Ties with Asian Chicken I pound Bow Ties or other meruum pasta shape, uncooked 4 tbsp. low-sodJum soy sauce 2 tbsp. hooey 2 thlp. lime juice 3 tsp. Dijon or grainy mmtard 1 pound boneless, skinless chicken brusts, cut into 1/2-lnch cubes 112 cup chicken broth or puta cook.Jog liquid (see note) 2 small red bell peppers, cored, seeded and thlnly sliced lenathwlse 6 IC8lllom, trimmed aad thlnJy sUced Frahly ground pepper 4 thlp. chopped fresh parsley Stir the soy sauce, hooey, lime juice and mustard io a small bowl unlit the honey is dissolved. Add the chicken pieces and tum until coated with the marinade. Refrigerate for 30 minutes. Transf cr the chicken and marinade to a large, non- stick skillet. Cook over medium heat until chicken is cooked throu&h, about 4 minutes. Remove from the heat and pour in the chick.co broth. Prepare pasta according to package directions. Drain thoroughly in a colander. Return the pasta to the pot. add the oontents of the skillet. the red bell peppers and the scallions. Heat to simmering over low heat. Toss the pasta once or twice, add the pepper to taste and divide among serving bowls. Sprinkle each servina with chopped fresh pars.Icy. NOTE: If yoM do not "'1vt chlcbn broth, ladlt off and restrvt 112 cup P9·'ta cooking liqMidjust before drolnlng th• pasta. E8dt ...,..... pro.tdet: 296 Calories; 24.5 a Procein; 44.4 I Clrbohydntes; 2.1 1 Pat; 44 llll Cboleataol; 48'4 ma Sodium. NEW AMERICAN Pasta is a kty ingredient of New American cooking, which tmphasii.ts the use of fresh ingredients indigenous to America's many regions. Sinct there is virtually no tnd to the combinations of vegetables, mtats and cheeses that can be paired with pasta, it deliciously suits thefretdom encouraged by this cuisine. Ont txtJmple is Angel Hair with Frtsh Spinach, Peas and Goat Chtese, a full-flavored, fresh-tasting "all-A~rican " meal. Angel Hair with Fresh Spinach, Peas and Goat Cheese (Serves 6) I pobnd Angel Hair or Thin Spaghetti, uncooked 1/2 cup soft goat cheese or berbecl cheese spread, such u Boursln, at room temperature 114 cup sldm milk 1 tbsp. nnely chopped rresh basll or 1 tsp. dried basll 1 13 314-oz. can chicken broth 3 cups thinly sliced fresh mm brooms 1 cup frozen peu, defrosted 6, cups (IOOlely packed) flnely shredded spinach, or a mixture or spinach and arugula (see note) 114 cup tbJnJy sliced fresh chives or dried chives Whisk the cbcesc, k.im milk and basil in a small bowl until smooth. Prepare pasta according to package directions. Drain thoroughly. Heat the chicken broth in the pot over medium beat to simmering. Add the mushrooms and simmer, uncovered. 2 minutes. Add the peas, goat cheese mixture and pasta and to to coat until the cheese is melted and the pasta is coated with the sauce. Fold in the spinach. Check the seasoning. Divide the put.a unong serving dishes, prioklc each with aome chives and serve. NOTE: St•m tlN spinach and/or orugula. Wash tht 1~•ru In sewrol cltangts of cool wottr to remove all din. Drain tlN gntn.r well, preftrobly in a salad splnncr. Siad 1~rol k avts and cut them crosswilt Into tltln nrlp1. Id llnllll 111'"1•11 506 Calorie ; 26 a Protein; 88.5 I c.twlb)drita: 7.3 I Fat; 10.2 ma Oolestcrol: 4601111 Sodhma. NPA TFST KITCHEN QUAUIY • Tho N•ional Puca Auocillioa ii dldk:lllld to pmvidinl pd-«w ... eGa\'ellicoc. accurate recipe$ eo lhe public. To ensure NI our pall recipes meet your hip •-t di. Id f9Cipe is seated io our test ....... Whenever you tee 1he NPA Tiit ~ LotO Wtdl a l'llClpl. ,__lie Maurod that lhe roc1pe -111i9111 by a professioftal recipe..., .ct w 1 ~ \ Ethnic Food Boom Enters Ameri~an Kitchens . . Americans have aJways loved pasta. usually enjoying it in trldilioftal ~ODS like macaroni and cheese, lasagne and spagbeui with malt • sauce. Recently, however, the ethnic lobd boom -which iniroduced seasoninp and ingredients from every cultural comer of the wOOd i:lllo the mainstream -bas shown Americans a whole new way of eating pasta. The ethnic food boom staned in restaurants, where Americans first became acquainted with the signature flavors of various regions of the nation as well as of countries around the ,.orld. Recently, ethnic disbes have blazed a trail from restaurants into oor homes, where consumers are starting to experiment with recreating these cuisines -often using pasta to do so. Now that the exciting flavors of such ethnic cuisines as Fusion. Iralian, Southwestern and New American have gained popularity nationwide, pasta is being put to more innovative uses than ever before. · Pasta is the perfect base from which to build any type of ethnic meal. Because it's easy to prepare, people feel comfortable using pasta to experiment with the seasonings and ingredients that mark edmic cuisines. Using pasta also makes sense economically since-it's incx.pensi_ve and can be used to "stretch" more ex.pensive ingredients like certain peppers used in Southwestern cuisine and wild musbrooms favored in New American cooking. And because it's so versatile. pasta blends well with the distinctive flavors that mm each cuisine. The increasing popularity of these cuisines bas led to a growing appreciation of pasta's flavor, versatility and ease of preparation. Over the years, pasta bas evolved from being served only on occasion -and usually as a side dish -to the main attraction; prepared in innumerable ways and served center-plate, often several times a week. Given the doors opened by the ethnic food boom - whether the preparation is New American, ltalian, fusion or Southwestern -the possibilities for creating new and innovative pasta dishes are endless. Cooking Perfect Pasta Every TIDle To cook perfect pa.~ta. boil 4 to 6 quans of water for one pound of dry pasta. (You can divide this recipt: depending on how much pasta you arc cooking.) Add the pasta with a stir and return the water to a boil. Stir lhe pasta occasionally during cooking. Follow I.he package directions for cooking times. If the pasta i LO be used as part of a dish that requires further cooking, undcrcook the pasta by 1/3 of the cooking time specified on the package. Taste the pasta to dctenninc if it is dooe. Perfectly cooked pasta hould be "al dcnte.'' or firm to the bite. yet cooked through. Drain pasta and to s immediately with sauce. Pasta is the cornerstone of Italian cuisine, and it was through pasta that the rest of the world becanrt intimately acquainted with Italian food. In Italy, pasta is celebrated for its taste. its many shapes and its al dente texture. Penne with Quick Tomato Sauce and Ricotta Cheese, made with canntd whole tomatoes, ricotta, garlic and Panntsan chtest, is one example of a flavorful pasta dish that requires few ingredients and little preparation timt. It is due largely to the influence of Southwestern cuisine that Americans' pa/alts have adjusted to spicier foods. Because pasta tnhancts IM assertive flavors that make Southwestern cuisine distinctive, it's tht idtal bast from which to build a Southwestern meal. Pasta's com•enience and east of preparation also makt it an ideal mtdiumfor experimenting with the many unique ingreditnls key to Southwestern cuisine. Spaghetti with Turkey-Black &an Chili is a study in hot and cool -with the pasta and cilalllro tempering tht htat of the chili powder and jalapeno. Penne with Quick Tomato Sauce and Ricotta Cheese (Serves 6) I pound Penne, Mostaccloli or other medJum pasta shape, uncooked I 28-oz.. can wh ole plum tomatoes with liquid 1/2 cup loosely packed fresh basil 2 small cloves garlic, finely chopped l cup part-skim ricotta cheese 1/4 cup Parmesan cheese Salt to tute Freshly ground black pepper, to taste Chopped rresh basil or parsley for gamJsh Prepare pasta according to pack~ge directions. While pasta is cooking. combine tomatoes, basil and garlic in a blender or food processor. Blend at low speed until tomatoes arc completely pureed. Pour mixture into large auccpan. Heat to boiling, reduce the heat and simmer S minutes. When pasta is done, drain well. Return pasta to cooking pot, add tomato sauce and beat over low beat until sauce is immering and pasta is coated with sauce. Remove pot from heat and stir in ricotta and Parmesan cheeses unlil evenly distributed. Salt and pepper to taste. Divide among serving plates and top with chopped fresh basil or parsley. Ed llnlllspn.W.: 27S Caloric : J3.6 a Procein; 42.8 I ~ydnees; 5.7 g Fat; 15.9 ma Cholesterol: 345 ma Sodium. Spaghetti with Turkey-Black Bean Chili (Serves 6) J pound Spaghetti or Llnguh\e, uncooked I tbsp. vegetable oU t2 oL ground turkey I small onion, peeled and finely d.ked I jalapeno, cored and thlnly sliced 1 tbsp. cbJJJ powder I tsp. cumin 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped t 16-oL can black beans, rinsed and drained l 15-oz. can crmbed tomatoes 2 tbsp. chopped fresh dlantro 2 cups water Heat the oil in a large, deep skillet over ~um heat. Crumble the rurkey into the k.iUel Cook. tirrin.& to break up the turkey, until the liquid is evaporated from the killct and the turkey begins to brown. about S minulCS. Add the onion, jalapefto, chili powder, cumin and garUc and coot until the onion is softened. about S minutes. Add the beans, tomatoes. cilantTO and water. He.at to boiling, reduce the beat and simmer, covered, 1 S minutes. Add salt and pepper to wtc. (The chiU can be made up to one day in advance.) Prepare pasta according to pack.age directions. Drain the pasta and rerum it to the pot. Add the chili and tir over medium beat until the sauce is immerina and the pasta is coated with sauce. Divide among serving bowls and serve immcdiatcly. bdi .ent111 prowt•11: 642 CUoria; 34.9 a,.._.; 92.51 Caltdlydnta: 14.61Fat;57.8 ma Cboh 1 rol; 206 ma Sodium. For I lrll IOl'Y of "Palll ,,_ Al"lll'lll II Ziii," ( ... 1111•••1111•, ..... ant 111 ... 11,111: ,_AllZ.D111L•,n11_..._, ...... U 1(11,•11at • - , I Go Ape Or~~· Chooolatc S'Mores, Moo~~.icen. No they're not S..turday mornin& carloons or video a me ch.:>ractcu. They're the n mes of milk treats created jU$t for kids by TV' Slim Ooodbody, Superhero of Kids' Heahh. Because the calcium in milk is such an important nutrient for growing bone_s, Slim is spreading the word to ~ids to drink more m·ilk. Slim Goodbody's calcium campaign, which also includes a TV public ervicc announcement ffhe Bony Boy Bebop) and a kids' fliOY your lamb Mswillla t•h of curry The subtleties of s~nd their enhancement cf foods have been a teaming expetience for people over generations and each year someone new combines spices or herbs which are a bit different lo create a new food trend. Food trends come and go and often a food loses popularity only to resurface as something new years later. ln much of the country, the popularity of hot and spicy has been thought to be a result of the cur~ent interest in Mexican and soulhwest cooking but a quick review shows hot and spicy in other cubines. Thai, Szechwan and Indian foods all come to mimd when you think of fire on the phlle. Curry 1s a very traditional Eastern Indian dish which we have enjoyed in this country for years but now that people are rediscoveri ng fire in their foods, it is developing a new following. Curry comes from an Indian word kari meaning sauce and the integral part of this dish is curry powder. Curry powders are ground fresh daily in India but found on the spice shelf here. Authentic curry powder may contain as many as 20 herbs, seeds and spices. The popularity of lamb also seems to follow trends and mild American lamb is becoming a perfect choice to team with many of the dist inctive herbs and spices that are in. Although mild, lamb has a flavor which holds its own with the more overpowering and hot spices such as pepper) and cu rry mixtures. American lamb is found in many more cuts and bonekss cubes, menty s1c;iks ;ind sm;ill roaMs join the more tra.dition;il , longer cooling cuts such as the roast. Ask most cooks which cut they know and prefer and lnmb chops usually are mentioned first. The loin chop is known not only for i1s 1enderness but also for its leanness. The loin chop is sometimes cu lled a lamb I-bone because of 1he shape of the bone. Lamb is ;i perfect choice to broil or gri ll as 11 only takes about JO to 15 minutes to )lave chops on the 1able. Remember to keep the heat moderate to avoid overcooling. Although the flavor or the curry spice blend is enhanced through longer marinating time, this mixture can also be used as a basti ng sauce for lamb chops or steaks. Just brush the lamb chops generously on both sides wi th the marinade mixture while grilling or broiling. Remember not to ovcrloo~ some traditional foods in your search for dishes that fit our current lifestyles. Familiar meats such as lamb chops need little expertise when it comes to creatin& dinner in a hurry and 11 :\dds such a delicious change to the menu. CURRIED LA.Ma CHOPS • 8 American lamb loi._ cbops, trimmed and cut 1 locb lbkt • lh teaspoon curry powder • V.1 teaspoon lemon pcppel\ • YJ cup lemou juke • v .. teaspooa arowad cumlo • v .. cup oDloQ, Clocl,y dlopped • ~ teaspoon p-ound catdamom • 1 &abk.5~D olive oU • v .. &Us~D ai:ou.ad aJ~cr In small bowl, combine au inarcdicn\S except the lamb chops and set aside. Pour marinade over ch<.?PS in non·metal container or sealQ.ble plastic bag. Cover or seal one.I place in reCrigerator for 6 to 24 ~urs. Broil or &1ill 4 inchc rrom heat 50urce (01 S • 6 minutes on each •idc or until lamb reache! dcsited doncnw. Nutrition lnlOraw.i04 ~r sc:l\'ing.: CaJo1ics 255, Tow faL 11 .. CboJc terol 88 ~ Sodium 173 ma. PKG Of 20 T02A MICHIUNA'I . DINNI .. mu. Slim says his recipes are designed to show k.ids how to make playful foods that arc good for them. Chocolate S'Mores is a smooth concoctiop of chocoJale pudding, marshmallows, milk and honey graham cereal. Go Ape · Grape stars cubes or grape gelatin, m de with miLk, floating in banana-flavored milk. A Moo-Juicer is created by • I I ,, .... reconstituli~ (rozen juice ('Ollcentrale wilh milk instead of water. • 1 pacJcaae (3.4 ounces) Instant cbocola&e puddin& nd.x •2 cups milk • VJ cup mlnl marshmallows • lh cup bOQey a:roham ttttal 1n a medium bowl combine pudding mix and milk. Using a wire whisk, rotary bc:iter or electric mixer set on low speed, beat until well combined, about 2 minutes. In each or 4 (8-ouncc) &1WeS place IA cup of the chocolate pudding; t<?P each with I 1able5poon of the mini marshmallows, another ~ cup • chocolate pudding and 2 tablespoom cereal. Serve immediately or cover and rcfrigcnue up to 2 days. YIELD: 4 portions • l packaaet (3 ounces tACh) arape·Oavottd selalln dessert • 1 cup bolling water · Ill Sll&WBERRIES BLOOMING MUMS A l/2" POT IN MATCHING COVER 1"' ~. March 30, 1995 • l\11 cups milk • Bauaa.O.vortd or plialn milk, as nttekd In a l·cup gla me;buring cup pour arnpe gelatin mix. Add boiling water; stir until gelatin is completely dissolved, 3 to 5 minutes. Pour into on S·inch 5C1uore pan; stir in milk. Cover and refrigerate until set, about 3 hours. Using a knife cut gelatin mixture into 64 (l·inch) cubes. f'or each erving, fill an S·ounce gl~ with grope cubes; top wit h · banana-flavored milk. YJELD: 8 portions, 8 cups. 12·MCK ...... ~l~s" BOTTlES +a:-1 1•L8. MILD CHIDDAlt Cllllll ~~ 2:'5 BONELISS BEEF LB. fLAT CUT 6·MCK BllP ... IKIT I ·LB. BACON llYIN·UP I I PAllMIR JOHN lOTO 12-0Z. 119 26! R~ THO< Oii 1 39 A & WWDIET RITE 149 ASSORTED LO R SODIUM OR NKIST FROZEN EA. 1 ~-OZ. CANS +CRV 9·LIYll ...... FLORIDA'S NAIUIAL IAGLI THINS CATPOOD ULMON flLLITS OllANGI JUla POTATO CHIPS 5.S·OZ. 4:•1 ~) ATIANTIC 5 9! l /2 GAL CHlu.ED 199 5T06-0Z. -~ ASSTO. VAR. CARTON ASSORTED 12·PACK PEPSI MT. DIW OI Ul'l'ON lllSK YEA, 12-0Z. CANS +CIV,4llMIT 4 1.69 7»M. --~()G.iii.. • 199 IAllON HERZOG~ .... --··-~··-.. ··- ( I Leprechauns ore powerless againl>t treats made with this new frozen dessert. Try tempting them with a Baileys lee Ctcam Pie, a delicious combination of crisp chocolate wafers, creamy H1111gen-Dazs Baileys Ice Cream, chocolate sauce, pecans and whipped cream. Just scoop the ice cream into a chocolate wafer crust and freeze-for several hours. Garnish the pie with chocolate sauce. pecans and whipped cr~m just before serving it to your local lcprec~_uuns. a~d don't forget to save some (J>r yourself! Of course, .. if the green guys in your neck of the woods are less craditional and do not want to send their taste buds on a magical journey to Ireland, you migh t offer them a dessert made from Hangen-Dazs Di Saronno Amaretto lee Cream. For those leprechauns, you could whip up a Di Saronno Amaretto Charlotte to top off their St. Patrick's Day feast. A charlotte is simply a fence of cookies with a filling in the midd le, in this case a filling of rich Di Saronno Amaretto ice cream. Linc a six-cup, straight-sided mold wi th plastic wrap and place pirouette cookies or lady fingers around the sides to form the fence Spoon in the ice cream, freeze for several hours, unmold, drench in chocolate sauce and freeze again to set th e chocolate. After a slice of this dessert or the Baileys Ice Cream Pie, your lucky little friends will be su re to share their pol of gold at the end of the rainbow. BAILEYS ICE CREAM PIE • 1~ cups chocolate wnfer crumbs (about 24 warers, crushed) • 2 tnblespoons gninulatccnugar=- • l teaspoon Instant coffee • v~ cup butter, melted • 2 pints lfaagcn·Dazi. Dalleys Origi nal Irish Crtnm lee Cream • ~ cup Baileys Original Irish Cream liqueur or htuvy cream • l/J cup coar ely chopped semi-sweet chocolute or semi-sweet chocolate pieces • l tablespoon butter • V4 cup chopped pccons or almonds • 1 cup heovy cream whipped with • 2 tablespoons sugor, opllonul Preheat oven to 375. In a .. r · Haagen-Dazs Baileys Ice Cream Pie. medium bowl, thoroughly combine wafer crumbs, sugar and coffee. Add melted butter and blend well. Press crumb mixture firmly onto the bottom and up the sides of a 9-inch pie plate to form a cru!.t. Bake 6 to 8 minutes in preheated oven; cool completely. Remove ice cream from carton by culling the packaging seam. Cut 'I.! pint ice cream into four lices and arrange in bottom of pie crust.-· Press down to smooth and remove air pockets. Top with scoops of remaining ice cream, cover and freeze 4 to 6 hours or overnight. Jn a small heavy saucepan. combine liqueur, or heavy cream, chocolate and butler. Stir over low heat until melted and smooth. Cool completely. Dria.le chocolate sau ce over pie ond sca tter chopped nuts over top Garnish with whipped cream if desired. To serve, slice pie and pass extra chocolate sauce. Makes 8 servings. D I SARONNO AMAREn o CHARLOnE • I pnckage pirouette cookies or lndyflngers • 2 pints llangen-Dazs DiSnronno Amorello ice cream • 1/1 cup coarsely chopped scml-swttt chocolate or semi·s,~t chocolate pieces • 3 tablespoons bland vegetable oil Line a straight-sided 6-cup mixing bowl, charlollc mold, OI ournc dish with plastic wrap. Stand cookie!> on end around lhl! side~ of the bowl. Remove ice cream from carton by cutting the packaging scum. Slice into round~ Seasoned with global flavors These da)'!>, when it comes to creating recipes with distinctive taste, Amcri~ns are looking beyond continental borders for inspiration. Old rules and taste combinations are getting new life thanks to flavors from around the world. Ingredients, such ~ spicy salsas, fragrant herbs and flavorful chec es like feta, are finding a new home in American cuisine. A delicious example of this trend is Chicken Fajita Feta-Chini, a new recipe which won Priscilla Yee from Concord, Calif., a $3,000 grand prize in the national Go Beyond Greek Recipe Contest sponsored by Athenos feta cheese. This flavorful chicken entrce combines traditional Southwestern ingredients, chill, cumin, lime juice, peppers and salsa, with Italian pasta and robust, flavorful feta cheese made from the finest Wisconsi n cow's milk. A true example of fusion cuisine; this recipe blend!! Ot\VOrs from all over the globe. Best of a'll, this meal can be easily prepared in a half hour, according to Yee. Even alJ-Arnerkan mashed potatoes can benefit from the addition of added flavors, as recipe contest finalist Candy Stern from Apolta, Fla., knows. By adding crumbles of f cta ~hcnc and bits of chopped garpc to simple mashed potatoes. she crea&cd a winnina recipe '°3dcd with a subtle )tt d. tinctive lbvor. Simple to prcpate, th i tCCip$ SOOwJ hQW I tradi&ion:al c Jmforf fodd can t.ike on • delick>u Jlobal spirit. Karen Berh. anoct.cr feta chccM conwc (1MliM; malff an clepn1, bUt ..., =:;' recipe tor • T.... I Torte. Eme1t•IJ a..., c ..................... uses Athenos Basil and Tomato flavored feta cheese as its main flavor ingredient. It's an easy-to- prepare, yet stunning appetizer that can be sliced and served tip as an elegant appetizer with slices of crusty bread. Short and uncomplicated, the recipe calls for only four ingredients and is cleverly designed to deliver maximum taste and easy preparation. For the complete set of award-winning recipes from the Athenos feta cheese, Go Deyond Greek Recipe Contest, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to: Athenos Feta Cheese Award, Winners, C/O Hunter MacKenzie, 41 Madison Ave.,, New York, NY 10010-2202. CHICKIN fAJITA fnA·CHINI • l tsp. chill powder • 1 tap· each ground cumi n and dried oregano leaves, crushed • J Tbsp. lime juice • J boneless skJnlt'H chlckt'n breast halves, cut Into 21~-lnch a trips • l Tbsp. olln oil, dlflded • J cups red, areen and yellow pcppu strips • 1 medium onion, 1llctd • l cup mlld or medium salsa • 6 oz, ATHENOS Feta Natural Chteff, aumbltd, dMdtd (l VJ cups) •I OJ, feUucclne, cooked, drained . M~ chili powder, CYmin, orepno and juice. Add chicken; stir to coat. Heat I Tb'Sp. or the oil ht litll ftOftSlick skillet on rMdhint Mat. Add chicken: cook Md M S Jiluftl ot util ..................... at •1111, 1 n.p. to boil. Add chicken and ¥~ cup of the chee5e. Spoon mixture over hot fettuccine. Sprinkle with remaining cheese. Toss before serving Makes 6 to 8 servings. TOMATO CHEESE TORTI APPETIZER • 1 pkg-(8 oz.) ATHENOS Feta Nnturnl Cheese '\\ith Bnsil nnd Tomato, crumbled • l pkg. (8 oz.) reduced fnt Neufchotel cheese, sotlened • l ·container (8 oz.) ricotta cheese •3 eggs Heat oven to 325F. Dent all ingredients with electric mixer on medium speed until well blended. Pour mixture into greased 9-inch springform pan or pie plnte. Bake 35 minutes or until edges ore just beginning to brown and center is set. Let cool l hour before serving or refrigerate overnight. Makes 12 servings. OARLIC & PITA MAIHID POTATOll • 4 ti1kJn1 potatoes, petlcd, cut Into qu1rttr1 • 3 ··~ dons aarllc, peeled • Vl cup milk. • 1 pq. (4 oz.) ATH£NOS Crantbfid Ftta Natut•I Chetse wltli Ptl'l'trcorn •J ~.--.•Hne Ptae. ;ot1toes and prlic in l•fll •11e11p1n. Add enoup w1ter to awer. Brina to boil; reduce hat lo low. Sbncnor 20 111•1a or lllltU pota&oea are ....., .... ~.Add ................ IO ....................... ............ .... .. 'Ill to l/4 inch thick. Arrange rounds, overlapping as necessary to fill bowl. Press each round down to remove air pockets. Smooth surface. Cove r with plastic wrap ::ind frccLe 4 to 6 hour-. or ove rnight. ln a small heavy saucepan. stir chocobt1. \\tth oil over IO\\ heat unt il chocnbt1. i.., just melted and c;mooth. Remove charlollc fmm mold and discard plastic wrap. Place. bollom up on a \\ire r:ick set over a pl:itc. Pour chocolate mi:"tturc over lop allm\ing some chocolate 10 drizzle down over cookies. Return to freezer To sen·e. allow charl<.lltc to stand' :it room temperature for 10 minutes. Slice as you would a cake. Makes 8 servings. A crusty Preneh roll, deli roast bed, onion and peppers plus melting good Mozzarella cheese add up to n great sandwich. This hefty Philadelphia Checsestcak Sandwich certainly deserves u hefty status. Besides great flavor, it is simple to prep.ire in portions for four or more. Great go-withs for this super sandwich rrom th e city of brotherly love arc dell three-bean salad, mugs of hot tomato soup and a splurgt: dessert, such as double chocolate bro\\ nics or gi::int chocolate. chip cookies. For more great tastin!: sandwiches featuring chcci.c. send for Delicious S:rnJ \, ich Recipes -.. from that noted sandwich maker DO&\\OOd Bumstead of the Blondie comic strip and Sargento Food' Im. For a copy of the brochure, send your name, address an d a self-addressed, stamped, business-size envelope to Sargento of Wisconsin, Delicious Sandwich Recipes, P.O. Box 27443, Dept. Pub. West Allis, WI 53227. A Taste of Illond ic anJ Sandwich Trivi= • lt's believed that e sandwich was ere by the Fourth Earl of Sand" ich "hen he refused to lca\e the gJmb· ling table to eat. He ordered his valet to bring him meat tucked between two pieces ol bread and toda) thou-.:1nd' ul s::indwich \'arictics throui:hout the world are his leg:tC).- • Dogwood's popubr !.t:.1cl..cd sandwiches have become a part of the English language Webster's New World Dictionary describes the Dagwood Sand \\ich a~ J 1:.ill sandwich with a v:Hiety of fillings, often of app:Hcntly incompatible foods. The recire for Dogwood's Favorite sandwich ca n be founJ in the new Sargento of Wisconsin Delicious SanJwich Recipes brochure. • In the first l31ond1c strips. Blondie, a.k.a. lllonJic Boopadoop, was a nigh t> gold-digger with numerous suitors, including Dog\\OOd , scion of the Dum.;tead Locomotive Wor~ \Vh..:n Blondie and Dog\\OOd kit in love and got married, Dog'\ l tld was disi nherited because h" parents disapproved ol DlonJ1e • f ort}·five percent ol u~s cheese usage is accounted for by s:ind\\iches, accorJing lo 1991 data from ~1RCA Information Sef\ices. Sargento Foods sliced cheese sale\ 1 :ink Muenster, Mozzarella, Pro .. olone ond S" i)) :is Americ an ra .. oritci.. •The first Olondie feature film 'tarring Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake uppeim:d in 1939. It wac; fo llowed by 27 sequeb, muking n1 ond1c th~ longei.t-runn1ng feature-film serics ever produi:cu. • ·n1e Philadelphia Chee'>C'>le:.1k S.1ndwich is un American cla,,ic. It-. origin d 1tc-; to the Depre.,,iun \\hen PJt\, a :?4-hour ).111d,,ich or steak place in Philadclphi:1, cr.:.1tcJ 1t ~1::. a w:i) tu s.cnc up a lot ol c:ilorie::. dtc..ip Th~ D.:liciuus • Sanc.h\ich Rccip..:~ brochure from S:ub1.nlo of Wi~con:>in c-Jp,turc~ lh1. Ir Jdir on of thi~ lime; honorl;d ,J .. J\\ id1. Tr. 11 \\ h1. 11. \I. r } OU 'r1. Ill 1 he lllOl;J fo tli~ t J IC l•f Pl lh •I Lr GO }1.Jr,, UlonJ~c \\.i!> ponru)ed .ts J huu~.:,\ik On l :1bur D:1~ 1991, munJie jvined the \\uri... for1.c, l>t.11ting !.er O\\n catering bu~ine.,~. \\1.!'rc ce1tain !>and'' iche-; arc on the menu! • Culin.1ry hil>toria11>. <..1 l.!J1t Nl:.11 Yu1k Jdi uwnl?r .\11hur Reub<..11 ,,j1h 1.rc.itini.: ti.: popul.1r Rcub\:ll l>.1I1J1\._h Ii.' 111JJ1. thl:. t'orneJ bc.:I. '>Jucrkh1u1l'1 nc '~1h!\\1.li hunoring \11 \; tl..: .S. h.i:. .i k.1ding IJc.l. in j ur..:;.i l'Ji4 Ch;irlil.! Ch:1pli11 r·· ,\ .. u:!.cr deli m:.in m.1Jc t! .. , .. nJ,, i1.!1 \\ ith h:im 1 n 11 .... P .. ubc 1 i1: the S 1r~ .. n10 · : \\ .~,01 · Dd.1.1L1t" $J11J11 i1. . IL ~·: • ' brod.ur.: \1 itll .. 1tl....r I 1.' 1.orncJ b.:cl PHILADELPHIA CHEESESTEAK SANDWICH • J l.1rg1: Spnni'h or \\Hll onion, sliu·d • 1 gn:l'll bell prppl·r, cut inlu thin strip~ (optional J • l lablt•spou n huller •..a f re mh rolls (6-inl'hJ • 1 pound r;irc ru:>st l>~d· !>lkn •..a slices '"' oL.) '):irg1.:nb Slic1:d '.\lo11Jrl'llu or Pro\Olone Chcci.c, cu t in half In 111.:J Jill !>kilkt, cuoi... l'rl; 111 ;.ind p~ppcf in buttcr S1 111 rolb .ilno't all the \\.I) through. Li)cr meat .inJ onion mi\1111 c in roll.; top each "ilh i\loa.1rcl' d.ce-.c l>lic.: Placc nn l':ikinc )>heel. Oroil S in~hc' from hcJ~l. '.! to 3 minute' or until chcc~..-1, mcltcJ . .; -.:ind\\ k hes. i\utrilil'll Information Per Scning C.1luric' . .n..,, l'rutein 36g, C.11h•lh)dr.1t1. "':!g: r.11 15g, Chuloterl>I 71mg. Newport H arbor Area Cha mber of Commerce and thr $. 1-'lll u St:A'!ON'i 1101 Fl. I.,.,...~. 4 , • ~.. • ..... ,. " ,, Tl1ursday, April 20, 1995 3 · 7 pm • Four Seasons Hotel • lVhat is the Expo all about? A fun. casual networking opportunity, it will feature almost 100 local ~sinesses with table- top boolh space lo show off their various prod- ucts and services. It also give· b:.Jslnesses a direct way lo have personal contact with many new potential customers in a single day' • Who ca11 participate? Virtually any business, large or small, who wants posttN! exposure to Newport Harbor area business leaders and the community a1 large! . • What is included:> •A six-foot table (draped; electricity ava1:able) • Table-lent signage • Complete list of attendees • Opportunity drawings ... snd the chance to really market yo ur company! 9tJt\1\tt anne 8 1rd'' ii•• ''£artY ch\ng\ appro• . ,• 4 FOOD I w·o~lllJt:::. Fresh Calif. Grown Whole Fryers Save up to .54 per lb. per lb.-Umit 4 MEAT VALUE Ralphs California Beef BoneleM Chuck .. Roast USDA Seltt1-Bttf Cbudi per lb. cmmette lJtl Fresh Atlantic Salmon Steak 4'' i9 • Ralphs California Beef BoneleM Cro~ Rib Steak or Roast 59 • DAIRY /DELI VALUE l lb.-Ralphs Monterey Jack Cheese Naturak>r Mlld Cheddar HC:bpq. Cuclna Tosca Italian Eotrees San 1.30 12 Pack-Budweiser or Miller Genuine Draft Beer GROCERY VALUE 1 Gallon 2 $ Ralphs Drinking Water or Pllrlfted each btl. 12 PACKS .. IO lb. ·nag -.. Russet .· .. Potatoes U.S. No. 1-uch baa GROCERY VALUE Gatorade Thirst Quencher u.o. u.e, Fnalt Pvach, Oruae or 1-0ll ice-32 OL btl. I •Coca-Cola •Diet Coke •Sprite ·•Dr Pepper •Barq's Root Beer Re1uJar or Diet Replar or Diet d/111 ...... 12 packs 12 oz. cant-Plua CRV ................. 12Pack Sprite illJi: Lllllln..lllm .. O.C...-.. c..r. ............ &.•• Prices effective 8 Lm. Thunday, March 30 tlUi1 Aprll 5, 1995 !.J]{ay lhe 9od of hope jLff you ~ wifh alf;oy and peace as you I rusf .in Jf/m ... Romans 15:13 f j ; I Advertts1ng Supplement to the Do.fly Pilot/Independent • Morch 30, 1995 Cefebralion of B~ -,.~~·~ ~~..-~ What do you beline? By Michele M. Marr St. Matthew's Traditional Episcopal Church "I am the resurrection and the life . He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live." During the late 1960s, I had a frtend named R.C. On weekends, I often went with him to business parties in Hollywood and Beverly Hills where he did business, and where he would sometimes play a prank I thought would someday get him killed. In the wee hours, when the partiers were very weary and drunk, R.C . would give me a wink, jump up on a table and shout, "Nobody gets outta here alive!" Every person in the room, now alert and silent, stared at R.C. and waited. After a long, tense moment, R.C. would laugh, jump down from his stage and slap a few people on their backs. He then would usher me out and drive me home. "They don't get it," he Sunday April 16, 199 5 ;iii -- Sunrise Service 6:15 a.m. Pastor Biii Klrlln·Hackett, preaching Festival Services 8:00 & 10:30 a.m. Pastor Biii Klrlln·Hacken, Preaching Chancel Choir & Orchestra Directed by Wllllam Wells Ea•ter !Ge HYnt (Age 3 • Crade 6) 9:1 S a,m. Eut•r PaMAk• lraal&fut 7:00-1 0:00 a.m. Maundy Tltunclay Aprll 13 at 6:30 p.m. Seder Meal ~ GoodFrlAy Aprll 14 at 7:00 p.m. SeM<e of Darkness with Choir ~ ~ NEWPORT HARIOI </--->' LUTHERAN CHURCH 798 Dover Dr. at 16th St. In Newport Beach (714) 548-3631 Poge2 said. "They think I'm a madman. They think they're safe now, but everybody dies, nobody does get outta here alive." I couldn't argue with him, we do all die. But I thought his prank was mean and depressing. And as it turns out, R.C. was only partly right. The bible does tell us, " ... all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God," (Romans 3:23). It also tells us, " ... the wages of sin is death," (Romans 6:23). But the good news is this, "The gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord," (Romans 6:23). Jesus "died for our sins and was buried and He rose again the third day," (1 Cor. 15:3-4). St. Paul wrote ln hls letter to the Romans, "If you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe ln your heart God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved," (Romans 10:9). It's a message which was given to all humankind. What do you believe? Jesus said, "I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may dle, he shall live. And whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die," (John 11 :25). And then he asked, "Do you believe this?" It's the most important question we ever answer. If it's a question you're struggling with, please visit, coll or write us at St. Matthew's Church. We'd be happy to talk with you. St. Matthew's Trodittoncll Episcopal Church commemorate\ the events of our Lord's POMlon With services on Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, Good Frida)' and Holy Saturday. We celebrate the Resurrection of our Lord and Savior Jesus Ch!Ut on Easter Sunday. For. service times and directions to the church, cdll Fr. Stephen Scarlett, (114) 646 .. 1152. St. Matthew'• la at 1723 We.tcllft Drive, Newportlleach 92660. APRIL 8 -18 Palm Sunday &t6pm Sun 9 & 10:30 am Good Friday 1~ boon 5eriice P1i8acJVer Sedei Dlruier !Meie¥aUOO. Reqtiired) Eaater Sunday 8at8pm Sun 7:30, 9:00 6 10:30 am • Putor TllD 'flalalobli trMtee you to jOtn the Hew~ lilmlJ m oomn:aemoraun, the mmt tHat bM *° .... t.ly tmpiK:ted d'MilOOnd. t • G ) c • c c ! f t Advertising Supplement to the Dally Pilot/Independent • March 30, 1995 Gefebral10n of BJf!: ~~~~~W/IT ~~ y;.<;JfJ WI''"" Holy Angels Church invites you to .celebrate Easter early this year The Ancient Orthodox Catholic community of Holy Angels Church, which meets the first Sunday of every month at Pacific View Chapel, 3500 Pacific View Dr., Newport Beach, invites you to celebrate Easter early this year. According tp Bishop Donald L. Jolly-Gabriel, Holy Angels invites the entire commimtty to participate In its annual Easter celebration on April 2, at 11 a .m., in conjunction with its regular monthly mass. For more information, look for "Angel Wings," the Holy Angels newsletter, enclosed in this issue of the Dally Pilot. The celebration will be highlighted with contemporary Christian music performed by several guest soloists and will be followed by a Charismatic Healing Service, Including the Ancient Orthodox practice of laying on of hands. "Easter ts the most blessed season of the year,'' said Bishop Jolly- Gobrlel. "Holy Angels lnvttes'you to Vlslt ona begin your celebrotlon of tlils tlolieit Of lioly days two weeu idt'ly, With a JoyOUI mc111 lft CMbrdtlon iJI the IU'e, dlatb liltllNdlOn of our a.tit. congregation and meet only once a month at present," said the Bishop. "We are eager to share our ancient rltes with Christians of all denominations. So, lf you are Interested in learning about the andent church, please Join us for this special celebration.'' Holy Angels practices Christianity as It was practiced by Jesus and the Apostles, in an entirely open and completely non-Judgmental way. All believers ore Invited to take communion and participate fully in the church, regardless of former religious affiliation, gender or morttal status. Orthodox Catholic churches are sacramental in nature, which means they celebrate the seven sacraments which constitute the very basts of our belief. These sacraments were Instituted by our Lord . Jesus Christ and entnist~d to the t hurch as visible signs of our divtn~ link with God. "The sacraments brlng to llfe everything that ls necessary to matntatn a spttltuOl commitment from blrtli to death," sold the 8'1hop. "At no time ls that JDON meaningful thGn ot this soaed leQIOD, so pleQl8 tom ov.alebmtlon ot the .......uonot ... ~ Olla• Special Holy Week and Easter services planned at Mesa Verde United Methodist Worship Schedule: · • April 9: Palm/Passion Sunday, 8:30 and 10 a.m. Message -"Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up." Procession of the palms, children"s choirs and dramatic reading. •April 13: Maundy Thursday Communion, 7:30 p.m . Meditation - "The Gift of Memory." •April 16: Easter Sunday services, 8:30 and 10 a .m. Sermon - "Love Never Ends." Special music with brass accompaniment and handbells. Child care is available at all services. Mesa Verde United Methodist Church is located at 1701 Baker St., Costa Mesa. Dr. Dick Geo e serves as pastor. Advertising Supplement to the Daily Pilot/Independent • March 30, 1995 Gelehralion of B~ ~~~~~~~~· Preparing to receive God's good gifts at Eastertide: To be loved in eight parts · Wisdom wjthOut love does not enlighten. By Reverend Peter 0. Haynes, Rector Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church I To be loving and lovable, you must first be loved. Being good does n ot make you loving or lovable. Being wise does not make you loving or lovable. Being strong does not make you loving or lovable. Being religious does not make you loving or lovable ------------------- COME SI ~Alff \\/ITJ ' l/5 I 11 n L/l~I An5 1 Uf 1\LL LO\ 1 ~ I ST. MICHAEL & All ANGELS EPISCOPAL CHURCH CORONA DEL MAR April 14 7:00pm Stations of the Cross 7:30pm Good Friday Liturgy Apn115 7:30pm Great Vigil of Easter Apn116 8& 10am EASTERDAY Followina Easter Egg Festival M arguerite Ave. al Pacific View Dr. 644-0(63 Special Easter Services at the Huntington Beach C hurch of Religious Science Healine Lives & Building Dreams Rev. Mary Murray Shelton Celebrate Triumphant Life! 8, 9:45 & 11 :30 a.m. Magnificent Easter mU1lc by Eric Strom &. Debi Wheeler, The Celebration Choir, and Tapesky. Nunery, child care and children'• church available at all services. Church of Religjoul Science 2205 Main St. , YOrktown & Main Streeta (Seacliff W~se) HundnjtOD Beach, 114 .. 969,1331 Page4 Only being loved. II To be good without wisdom is prudish. To be good without strength is indulgent. Tc;> be good without love is stagnancy. · To be wise without goodness is sterile. To be wise without strength is useless. To be wise Without love is selfishness. To be strong without goodness is capricious. To be strong without wisdom is destructive. To be strong without love is tyranny. III Goodness without love does not invite virtue. HOLY ANGELS CHURCH An Ancient Orthodox Catholic Church Meels The 1st Sunday of Every Month 3500 hdllc View Dr. • Newport Beacb • 11 a.m. Cbarim8dc e.llD& FoUowtna Mass (714) 754-9868 CELE.BRAn GOD'S LOVl THIS EASilRI Comr'9'tJ Olllda, Consrepdonal lh'tid a...u of Chrtst H 611 H•-;r.: Awe., Corona del Mar 14)644-7400 0 LY · VV E EK Pauover Seder'&.: Holy Communion Aprtl 13 at 6: 15 p.m. -AH are Invited Came IQy GoM fdclay Service Aprll 14 at 12 noon to 1 :00 p .m. Ip •1r s.nlceil ... IOiOO a.m. Eater Ea Hunt aft8' 10 a.m. service alld c..re AYalW* -up to 31/2 years old Strength without love does not empower. IV To love without goodness becomes pride. To love without wisdom spreads confusion. To love without strength weakens others. v Without humility goodness becomes pride. Without humility wisdom becomes display. Without humility strength becomes manipulation. Love, giving humility, turns goodness into sharing, wisdom into guidance, strength into helpfulness. VI Love is a blending of love for self and love for others. Without love of self, love of others is escape. Without love of others, love of self is withdrawal. Alone, love of self turns into defensiveness. Alone, love of others turns into domination. The blending is blessing, miracle. VII In the end, all human love of itself, suffocates. A greater love must enter to fulfill the human loves. VIII Gifted is the person who is good, wise and strong. But blessed ls the person, so gifted or not, who lives in the greatest of all loves. And now, come, beloveds, let us recall, celebrate and share that Greatest gift of all loves. . Sahit MJcllcael cmcl All An9ela £pbcopcal ........ clmrcli, 3233 Padftc VltrW Ddft, Coronca del Mar 93625. Call (71•) 611 0163. Advertising Supplement to the Doily Pilot/Indepen<:fent •March 30, 1995 Gelehralion of BiJ!: ~~~--~~~~ Rejoice and be glad thiS Easter at Christ Church by the Sea The most important day in April for believers this year is April 16, Easter Sunday. Historically, there has been no more important day for the Church and the Christian faith. This year will be the same. Even when the Jesus Seminar's announcem ent questioned some of the historical accuracy of the Gospels' resurrection account, the Seminar affirmed the historical and theological authenticity of the resurrection faith. So what do we celebrate at Easter? An historical event? A faith daim? Some universal meaning? The love, goodness and faithfulness of God? The answer for most of us is probably all of these. We use our most powerful telescopes, even one orbiting in space to look out at the world of the very,· very large -the infinite -reaches of space. We see the mysteries of suns, galaxies, novas, black holes and all the rest. We observe the laws that govern them, and marvel at the Ultimate Reality who lies at the heart of it all. We use our most powerful microscopes to search out the world of the very, very small. We calculate with advance mathematics to discern quantum truth, and marvel at the Ultimate Reality who is the source of the awesomeness we find there. And we peer into the eyes of a suffering friend, to whom life or fate or luck has dealt a h orrible c\\u.tth of the R_f£ L"'-~ llr,.ec1,;. ~~ HOLY WEEK SERVICES ~ Thursday, April 13, Maundy Thursday 7:00PM Meditation: "In the Nighr Friday, April 14, Good Friday 7:00PM ,,, "Were You There?" A Drama depicting the Cructfixion of Jesus EASTER SUNDAY April 16 . Festival Servioes at 7:00, 8:30 and 10:00 arn Sermon: "The Sepulchre and the Sun" Japanese Sunrise Service at 6:00 am Japanese Easter Worship Service at 11 :30 am Easter breakfast served between 8:00am and 10:00 arn (Freewill donation) Child care provided #-·- blow, and share the search for some meaning and comfort in life. We marvel at the Ultimate Reality who is the source of the strength to go on - in spite of ... All of this is part of the faithfulness, ·goodness and love of God, most dramatically symbolized at Easter. The celebration of Ultimate Reality's most ultimate act, the Jesus Christ resurrection faith is upon us. Might not an adequate response to this be to S11da1 Su1rise Senice n,ril 16 • 5:30 am .... .......... rejoice and be glad? For information regarcling Easter services.. and celebrations at Christ Church by the Sea, Newport Beach, call 673-3805. .. Community Church hosts Passover Seder and Good Friday services Our Lady Queen of Angels commemorates Community Church, Congregational in Corona del Mar will host a Jewish Passover Seder on Thursday, April 13 at 6:15 p.m. This event will take place in Mertz Hall and be led by Barry Koff, Education Director at Shir Ha-Ma'alot Temple in Irvine. The public is invited to this 3,000-year- old service, which re- enacts the Jewish liberation from Egyptian oppression. Matzo ball soup, a chicken dinner and traditional wine will be served. Donation: SS . All are invited. For reservations, call 644- 7400. Following the Seder, a brief Christian service of sacred music and Holy Communion will be held in the sanctuary. The same unleavened bread used in the Passover Seder will be used in the Communion Service. On April 14, Community Church, Congregational will host a community Good Friday service between noon and 1 p.m. Featured speaker will be the Reverend Edward Martin of Newport Center United Methodist Church. Other participants will be host pastor, Or. Dennis Short; Peter Haynes, Rector of St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church; Reverend Gary Collins of St. Mark Presbyterian Church; and Pastor Mark Anderson of Lutheran Come Celebrate 8:00am 14th Street. Beach Semce (begins April 23) • ST. JAMES EPISCOYAL PARISH • "A Community DedicatfHJ to Loving and Serving Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior" Good Friday 6 30 am Mor ning Prayer Noon lo 3 pm Homilies on Christ's Seven Last Words 6 lo 7 pm Confessions 7 30 pm Stations of the Cross w'rth choir Holy Saturday 4 pm Children's service with puppet show. ooptisms 7 30 pm Great Vigil of Easter, Holy Eucharist Rite II Easter Day 7 am Festival Eucharist Rite I. with choir. orchestra 9 am. 11 am. Festival Eucharist Rite II. choir, orchestra Visitors ;ire wC'lcnmc' Child care at all services f-astcr Day The Rev. David C. Anderson, rector 3209 Via Lido, Newport Beach 714 I 675·0210 Paqe 6 •• Church of the Master. Easter Sunday's sunrise service will be held 6 a.m. at Lookout Point, overlooking Corona del Mar main beach. Worshipers will gather at Community Church at 8:30 and 10 a.m. for one- hour worshif services. The Chance Choir and guest brass quartet will be featured at both services, led by Music Director Rodger Whitten. An Easter Egg Hunt will be held for youngsters on the front lawn of the church, follbwing the 10 a.m. service. Organized in 1944, Comm~, Con United Chu:idl of Christ Is the oldest church In Corona clel Mar. It Is located at 611 H~Ave., one block north of E. Coast Hwy. For more Information, call 644- 7400. Holy Week •Sunday, April 2: 6:15 p.m., Father Stan Bosch presents The Joyful Church: The Presence of Jesus in the World. • Sunday, April 9: Passion Sunday Blessing of palms before all masses in the Gathering Place From 8:15 a.m. -12:30 p.m, childcare available 7 p .m .: St. Brigid's Choir from Los Angeles will perform and give praise. •Thursday, April 13: Holy Thursday 8:30 a .m: Morning Prayer in church *7:30 p.m.: Evening Mass ofllie Lord's Supper Adoration until midnight in Hall •Friday, April 14: Good Friday *Noon: Stations of the Cross *l p.m.: Silent meditation *1:30 p.m.: Celebration of the Lord's Passion Liturgy of the Word, Veneration of the Cross, Communion service 7:30 p.m.: Stations of the Cross •Saturday, April 15: Holy Saturday 9 a.m.: Preparation Rites for Elect and Candidates -Hall Annex *8 p.m.: 'Easter Vigil Music for choir, organ, brass, timpani, handbells 11 p.m.: reception for newly baptized and newly received members -Hall EASTER SUNDAY 7t00 A.M. SUHllSt 9:30 A.M. FESTIVAL CHILD CAlE CHILDUH1S EGG HUHT Cont. page 7 ST. MARK PR£SBYT£RIAN CHURCH £ASTILUff "T JAMIOUt thWPOlT BE"tH 64~· 1341 TRADITIONAL EPISCOPAL Biblical Faith -Anglican Tradition Special Holy Week and Easter Services at . MESAVERDE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1701 Baker St., Costa Mesa Dr. Dick George, Pastor April 9 -Palm/Passion Sunday: 8:30 & 10:00 Message -"WiU the ReCll Jesus Plecue Sto.nd Up· Procession of the palms, children's choirs. and dramatic reading. Apn113 -Maundy Thursday Communion: 7:30pm Medltatton-·'I'M Out of Memory• April 16 -Easter Services: 8:30 & 10:00 Sermon -·~Never Ends" Special music with brass accompaniment and . hand bells Child care 18 pnmded at all eervtcu. ' HOLY WEEK AND EASTER SERVICE TIMES Palm Sunday 8:00 &. 10:00 a.m. I Maundy Thursday 7:30 p.m. Good Friday 3 :00 p.m. Easler Even 7 :30 p.m. Easter Day · 8:00 &. 10:00 a.m. chUd can provided 1723 WeslclifT Drive, Newport Beach (behind We!ltcliff Court) 714-646-1152 • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ Advertising Supplement to the Daily Pilot/Independent • March 30, 1995 Gelehral~On of BJ/:: ~~~· ~ ~/~~~.?"~~-$ Our Lady .Queen of Angels Spring arriYes at Harbor Center cont. from page 6 Sunday, April 16: Easter Day 7 a .m.: Mass in church - cantor and organ *8:30 a.m.: Mass in church - contemporary choir Mass in Hall -cantor and trumpet *10 a.m.: Mass in church - adult choir and brass Mass in Hall - contemporary choir *11 :30 a .m .: Mass in church -handbell choir a nd trumpet NO EVENING MASS EASTER DAY *Childcare available in the school's Room 111 Our Lady Quem of Angels Is at 2046 Mar Vista Drive, Newport Beach, 92660. Contact Sister Agatha for Information, (714) 644- 9218. A\\e\u\{t\\ The Harbor Shopping Center will begin the spring and Easter shopping season with a sidewalk sale on Fri., March 31, Sat., April 1 and Sun., April 2. Shoppers are encouraged to pick up an entry form for the holiday decorating contest, to be held April 1 through April 15. Gift certificates of $25, $15 and $10 wiU be awarded to the winners in different age categories. Mark your calendars for Sat. April 8 and April 15, when the Easter Bunny will be at Harbor Center handing out FREE candy to everyone from noon until 4 p.m. The merchants and management wish all of our loyal customers and their families a Happy Easter. We invite everyone to attend our annual dassic Car Show on Sat., April 29 to be held in the back parking lot near the Barn Christ Lutheran Church Come and Celebrate Easter! EASTER SERVICE 8 and I 0:30 am "Hooray for Jesus~ Pastor William Hemenway t GOOD FRIDAY WORSffiP April 14 t 2-3pm & 7pm EASTER PLAY DAY SATURDAY April 15 For children ages 3-1 o 12-2pm EASTER SUNRISE 6am "Good News for Today" Pastor William Hemenway Easter Breakfast 6:45 to 1O:15 am 760 Victoria, Costa Mesa • 631-1611 Christ llises/ C ome Rise Wit h Him ... Be Wit h Us for Holy Week Services Bol~ Tlnnsclay, Ajnil 1.3 Momin& Prayer - • 8:30am Even.ins Ma.SI of the Lord's Supper - 7:30pm* Goo4 F~, A JWll 1.4 Sta~ of the Cross'· 12 noon* Meditation -lpm* Celebration of the Lord'• Pusion - + 1:30pm* Statiom oftlle Cross -7:30pm Holy Sat11nlay, AJWll 1.5 Baster Vigil µturgy 8:00 pm* Eatn-St1"4fay, AJWll 1. 6 Muses: 7:00, 8:30*, 10:00*, 11:30am* No 5:00pm Mass _.... ............... A Q.R LACJV 2046 Mar Vista Driw (]amboret & &utbluff)Newport &acb ("\. ......... A .. ..-ror (714) 644-0200 *Child Care Available ~..._. OF ~ at These Services Steak House. For more information on these and other events planned for the year, please contact our marketing office at (714) 540-7520. Remember, we at Harbor Center strive to be your neighborhood shopping place. We are located at the northeast comer of Harbor and Wilson at 2300 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. f \ J.J -~ ~(~;;-· . .,,. •' •. r,c. -. ,,, m a r n e r s c h u r c h , : , 6:3 &. :·._, ....... .....__ Our tnadltlonal pensive terVICe with commun100. 0.lldcare provided at the S & 6:)()pm service only ~ MARINERS CHURCH I 000 alton Newpotl koch CA 92660 7 I "6(()6() I 0 Page 7 .- .. ---------~- BARN STEAK HOUSE 2300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa RESERVATIONS 641·9777 Groups 8 To 80 Closed Easter Sunday • I ' ' ,-'I, f Brtmd Na~ (}µa/ity Furnilurr cJ 5 Piece Dining Table Set ""°~ Only $159 , .. ... , •• s1la1 Hr, ..... ,,.. ................. • WriN a check without a cheddiuld • Make putdta ... without ... • Shop at °"' 12 '"*°" plac•• wOftdwidel GLENDALE FEDERAL BANK-642-4711 . ----------- 2300 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa (714) 540-7520