HomeMy WebLinkAbout1995-12-28 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS
Melee mars tourney
win for Estancia
WEEKEND
10-year-old prodigy
is a work of art
NEW P 0 R ·r BE AC H •CO 5 TA ME 5 A TH URS DAY, DEC E M BE R 2 8. 1 9 9 5
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
Fashion Island wins BJoomingdale's battle
• High-end retailer picks
Newport Beach mall over
South Coast Plaza; Broad-
way in Crystal Court will
become a Macy's.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT CENTER -Orange
County's only Bloomingdale's will
open in Fashion Island next
November, representatives from
The Irvine Co. and the depart·
ment store's parent company
announced Wednesday.
The new store, one of four
Bloomingdale's which Federated
Department Stores, Inc., plans to
open in California, will take over
the existing Broadway store loca·
tion. Converting the build.mg will
require substantial renovation,
company officials said.
The announcement brought to
a close three years of speculation
over whether Federated would
bring their high-end retail store to
r------------------~-----------·-~----------·-·--------1 F. Y.I.
+ WHEN: High-end retailer will open by November. + WHERE: Wall be located in what's now Broadway. + REA en ON: •A tenific day for Newport Beach,· Richard
Luehts, president of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com·
merce.
"It's not the end of the world." Ed Fawc~tt. president of the
Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce.
L------------------------------------------------------
I
I
I I I
'
Fashion Island or South Coast
Plaza in Costa Mesa. City and
business officials in Newport
Beach hailed the choice of Fash-
ion Island as proof that the oty is
still a prime retail draw.
"This is one more mdicauon
that the Newport Beach commu-
Fire causes $1 million in damage
• Evening blaze in
Corona del Mar believed
started by a candle; fam-
ily escapes injury.
By lina Borgatta, Da1ty Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -A
family narrowly escaped injury
Wednesday evening after a fire
ripped through the rear half of
their Marguerite Avenue
home, causing about $1 million
worth of damage.
Firefighters were called to
the 4,000-square-foot resi-
dence at the comer of Ocean
and Marguerite shortly after 5
p.m. and fowid flames shooting
out the home's second-story
windows, causmg two palm
trees alongside the house to
also catch fire. .
Donald McNalley. a 31-year·
old am.st, bis Wlf and their two
children were chased from the
large home after a candle igrut·
ed items in a back bedroom.
Deputy Fire Chief August
Wagner said.
"One of the kids was playing
with a candle and took the can·
dle into one of the bedrooms,•
Wagner said. "Then the child's
father heard screaming, and
when he opened up the bed·
room door, it was full of flames.
"The father then grabbed
both the kids and told his wife
to call 911. •
McNalley's 64·year old
father, who owns the house
with his wife, arrived home
while firefighters were still
attacking the blaze.
Wagner said the blaze
caused about $400,000 worth of
-damage to the home's struc·
ture, $200,000 to the contents
md destroyed about $400,000
worth of McNalley's artwork.
"The fire damage was pretty
much contained to the rear of the
house,· Wagner said. "There's
smoke damage throughout, and
then water damage just on the
second floor.•
The black smoke that bil·
lowed from the wood shingle
roof and the bright flames that
shot out through the home's
second·story windows attract-
ed the attention of nearby resi-
dents and passers-by. Specta·
tots lined the block, watching
• SEE FIRE PAGE A4
CASFY LUICKH I DAllY PILOT
Smoke swirls from an adjacent palm tree as Newport Beach ttieflghters put out the remnants of
a fire that struck a Corona del Mar home Wecln~day. No one was hurt ln the blaze.
Busin~men ran prostitution ring, police say
• Newport brothers allegedly operated escort service ana
were about to go on-line with pornography business.
----------------. dancer and e cort rv1c m the By lina Oamlkolas, Da1ty Pilot Southw t -the Caliber Group.
NEWPORT Bl?ACH -Two
Nowport Beach businessmen
who were apparently on the
verg e of developing an Internet
pornography service were
anested 1\letday on 1u1pldon of
operating a prottitutlon ring
that was dilgul1 d as an escort
busln 1.
Brothen Khaled •Tuny• Nam· mart. 35, and Zeld • Nkk • Nam· :man. 30, were arneted in their
Newport Beach office whll a
1hUd ...,.ct. RObert Jamet JOhn·
t0n. WU etrelted Iii hll 1\llUi\
cac., H\alatlD9tOn Seidl POiice
"'4 MIU WW.U Mid.
1111 .... ~ oper•t· '1~ ot ibl-·JIJVllt ifitic
Huntington B ach polic olong
with detectives from Tucson,
Ari%., sa.id they investigat l<l th
company for thr m onths and
determined that the c cort1 and
exotic dancen engaged in prosti·
tuUon with customers.
Huntington Beach polic:e •ten·
ed lnvestigadng the Caliber
Group, which hu offices in thrM
states, after a Jocel man repoited
he wu robbed by an .cort'• dn·
ver, Huntington Beach Poliee Lt.
DanJobnlon aald.
The tbrM men, en.tteel an
~of··~.~.
money Jaunderi1i9 ,and ~·
cy, will be an~td Jan I 'I,
~~au ortu. wm Rllll
extradition of the men after their
Orange County arraignment,
police said. The men's Caliber
Group ha offices in Newport
Beach, Tustin, Moreno Valley,
Tuscon and Dalles, Texas, Wil-
lett JOad .
The Newport busmes w
about to go on-lino with an Int r·
n t pomography business when
rch wanants were served in
late November, Willett aid.
Caliber also operat• a herd·
oore adwt mO\l'le bUline11 out of
its Newpott Beedl otftc», WUlett
Mid.
The ln~tlon ii coatlnumg
in Orange County ud O.U..
with more mug. padtng, WU·
lltt 1114. ffuDtin9tan Beech Palk'9 ...
·-C'\llnDt Md fonDlf •• ,_ ol Cal'w a... to
'Miia • D• l!ttN Dlf'P
.. aA11t .-1•1111.
1\1>1 \
AROUND TOWN
8EST8UYS
CLASSIFIED
FOOO
POUCE lltlES
PUBLIC NOTICES
SPORTS
IOQETY
M
A2
85
A10
Al
u
81
AS
. -
ruty lS alive and we'll and still
holds out a great deal of interest
to businesses," said Richard
Luehrs, president of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Com-
merce "1lus is a temf1c day for
Newport Beach.·
I said "I coµldn't be happier.•
Federated officials also
_ And Councilwomdn Jan
Debay, wbo said she was con-
vinced that Bloom.mgdale's was
Costa Mesa-bound, said sunply,
"Hallelujah!~
"They have a free-standrng
building in Fasluon Island Tlus
1ust makes so much sense," Debdy
announced the Broadway store in
Crystal Court will be converted to
d fl.1<tcy·s after February Since
mergmg Wlth RH. Macy's Co last
December, Federated·has gradu-
ally announced plans to convert
many eXlSl.lng Broadwdy and Bul-
lock's stores to the Macy's label.
What will happen to the Bul-
lock's and Bullock's men store at
South Coast Pla·L.a and the Bul-
• SEE STORE PAGE A4
Don't use Back Bay
as inexpensive toilet
L et's reverse the s1tuauon.
Newport Beach residents
don't want to bwld expen·
sive toilets So they deode to
save money by domg their busi-
ness in Irvine swururung pools
Don't worry, Newporters say,
we'll add )USt the nghl chenucals
after each use so your pool will
be perfectly safe. In fact, it will
be cleaner than before.
And here are a bunch of doc-
uments proving how pnstine
your swimming pool is gomg to
be after we dump our sewage
into it. So go ahead and swim
your laps, have your kids play
Marco Polo and even drink the
stuff. It's perfectly sate.
Oh, by the way, do you like
our plan?
No, we hate it, the Irvine pool
owners say unanimously. We
don't want your stuff -treated or
otherwise -in our water.
Screw you, Newporters snap
back, you can't stop us.
Invert the sewage flow, and
that's just about where we are.
The Irvine Ranch Water D1stnct
is about to shove 5 null.aon gdJ-
lons of, gulp, crap down our
throats -seven days a week
'-',I I B<H>"-
william
lobdell
Yes, they'll show you a stack
l of envuonmental reports con-
cluding a daily dose of 5 million
qallons of treated sewage UlJect-'
ed into the Back Ba)· -a state
ecological re erve -v.'ill unpro\'e
water quality.
U you have any nagging
doubts. you're not alone.
If we've learned anytlung
from the county bankruptcy, it's
use our common sense. We may·
• SEE BAY PAGE A4
Officials checking if flu
led to little boy's death
•The usually healthy 6-
year-old had been suffer-
ing a fever and vomiting
just prior to his death.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Prlot
COSTA MESA Saturday
morning, 6--year-old Miker
Vogler was chatting exCltedly
about the toys he hoped Santa
would bnng hlm for Christma~
1bree days ldter, on Tuesday
morning, his mother reportedly
found his cold body lymg uncon-
scious on his bedroom Ooor m the
family's apartment m the 800 block
of Center Street in Costa Mesa.
The young boy was unrespon·
sive to medical treatment and
reportedly pronounced dead at
8:25 a .m . Tuesday, Costa M a
police said. ·
The boy had been sick for
It~ qJficial ...
three ddys with the flu and had no
pnor medical problems, accord·
mg to Costa Mesa police. He
reportedly had flu-like symptoms
uch as a fever. vorrub.ng and feel-
mg ·icky.· Orange County Coro-
ner's ofbctals said
The coroner' department
requ ... ted county health ofhoab
take VU'al cultures from the boy to
see what VU'US caused him to die,
coroner·~ officials said
The boy' d th oomcs dunng a
flu season .in which a •type A•
strain of influenza has been making
sror of peopl all over the county
and the Uruted States Sick. accord-
mq to mroical officials Anoth r
VlT\lS called respl!atory syncypial, or
RSV, has also been detected m
Orange County and tends to cau
the great ~problems in children 2
y&US old and younger, a rounty
medlcal official ~d.
• SEE FLU PAGE A4
Frostbitten ,
suspect plucked
out of bay
By carolyn Miller. Daily Abr
A2 THURSDAY. OECEMIER 21. 1995
greer
wylder
·Womens clothing going
cheap at CP Shades
M-any are exdted about
the CP Shades (556-
7288) sale at The Lab
located at 2930 Bristol St. in Cos-
ta:Mesa. CP Shades has dis-
counted all of its women's mer-
chandise clothing to $10 per
item There are plenty of dress-
es, pants, sturts and crushed vel-
vet items. The sale ends Dec. 31.
Balboa Island Kids and Maga-
sin 209 are having a spectacular
year-end sale with clothing
slashed 50% oft and more.
Included in the sale are all holi-
day and fall women's and chil-
dren's clothing and gifts. Balboa
Island Kids Clothing (673-5547)
and Magasin 209 are under one
roof at 224 Marine Ave. on Bal-
boa ~
U your interested in finding
unusual lighting fixtures for your
home that you won't see every-
where else Squadgy located at
1685 Tustin Ave. in Costa Mesa
has the best selection. Many of
the lamps, sconces, and chande-
liers are French antiques.
Squadgy also has a nice selec-
tion of accesones for your home.
Owner Derrick Armor has
shades custom made for the
lamps, including some made
with vinldge fabrics.
There are plenty of aiter
Chnstmas sales in progress. For
holiday decorations, Christmas
Callfomta Style (644-4825)
located at Fashion ISalnd is
reducing its merchandise
depending on what the 24 artists
chose to dlscount. At Bullocks
lcx:ated at Fashion lsland there is
a special section downstairs
named Bullcoks Chrismas. All of
its decorations are reduced 50%
off.
Rebel Smltb Collectton (67 5-
5499) for womens clothes shoes
and glfts is haVlllg a sale on
selected items up to 50% off
Rebel Smith JS m its new location
at 406 32nd St. m Newport
Beach
Twice The Style (642-1844) a
womens clothmg consignment
shop is having a Hsidewalk sale"
oow through Dec 30. Also
mcluded m the sale is a 1ewelry
special -buy any item at full
price and receive the second
item at SO"'o off TW:ice the Style
I! located at 369 E. 17th St. in
Costa Mesa.
Since I've begun to remodel
Jlly bathroom, I've found the best
pj.ace to hnd bathroom fixtures is
at.:Famllian Bath-Kitchen Cen-
ter. It's showroom is located at
1'71 Placentia Ave. in Costa
Mesa. The showroom is filled
\fith all of the best name brands
Y?U'd want to find, and at the
best prices
For infonnatlon on product
lines and pnces you can call Lm-
da Klem at 650-0646.
• llEST BUYS APPEARS Thursdays and
Saturdays Whether you're • merchant
ore shopper, If you know of a good b\.\¥ all me at 540-1224, fax me at 646-
4170 Of write to me: Best Buys, Dally
Pttot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa,
92627.
Watch out locals-the Wildcats are.in tOwn
• Northwestern University
alumni are taking up hun-
dreds of local hotel rooms
as they celebrate therr alma
mater's first bowl appear-
ance in nearly 50 years.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Rose
Bowl Fever f 996 begins in
earnest today.
More than 5,000 alumni from
Northwestern University have
begun their descent upon New-
port Beach, booking blocks of
rooms in local hotels until Jan. 2
and planning both pre-and post-
game celebrations.
Clerks and staff members at
the Hyatt Newporter will be
dressed in Northwestern colors
and the university's fight song
will ring out through the lobby as
the first large group of guests
arrive this altemoon. No fewer
than three hotels have planned
•official" New Year's Eve bashes
the night bet ore the game
against USC and a pep rally will
take place at Fashion Island Sat-
urday.
So it goes when your football
team last competed in a bowl
game nearly 50 years ago.
•Northwestern bas the Cin-
derella thing going this year,•
said Rosalind Williams, CEO of
the city's conference and visitors
bUreau, which lured the alumni
to Newport·Beacb. •A lot of peo-
ple who wouldn't nonnally be
interested are interested this
year.
•Even I kind of like them, and
I'm a use graduate."
The football team itself
anived before its alumni and
held practices at UCl. The team
has since moved to Pasadena
where members will conclude
their stay in Southern Calif omia
until after the Ros~ Bowl.
Alumni, meanwhile, will be
participating in golf tourna-
ments, harbor cruises, sightsee-
ing. shopping and trips lo Dis-
neyland. The festivities will
begin practically the moment the
crowd.5 hit the city, tourism offi-
dU Mid. Costa Mesa also cheers ahunni influx The Hyatt Ne\Vl)Orter bas
guests booked in 350 hotel rooms COSTA MESA _ Newport Beach won't be the only town cash-
wbile Northwestern alumni will ing.in on the crowd of Northwestern alumni who will be fiocldng to
fill up all 420 rooms of the Sutton. the area for the Rose Bowl game.
Place Hotel, said hotel spokes-• Costa Mesa's expecting a few guests, as well.
woman Barbara Eidson. Last month, the Newport Beach Convention and
. • •They start arriving Visitors Bureau announced a deal it hAd struck
today, ail 700 of them,• with Alumni Holidays, a \ravel planning agency
Eidson said .• •Then on ( ' that contracts with Northwestern University
New Year's Eve, we tu.rn ~~M • sza-and other school alumni associations. Rosalind over tbe baijroom to ' ~ ~ Williams, the bureau's ehi¢ executive officer,
Northwestern. • • .,-,,., said she expected more than 5,000 North-
• 1 think the New _ , ~ western alumni would'be staying at Newport
Year's toast is at 10 p .m. ', ~ 'lli'Sfl Beach hotels, shopping at Fashion Island or
That's midnight, Chica-tJ'' dining in local restaurants.
go time.• Now it appears Costa Mesa will be sharing
in some of the wealth of travelers.
Barry Lewin, general "We've got 800 rooms per night booked at four of
manager of .the Hyatt ourhotelsforfivenights,• saidCostaMesaTuurism ~~~o~er~c~~!o!!:!~ ~~ Costa Mesa's commemo-Council~ Wayne~
b tin 1 alumni th raUve Rose B«>wl button. And smce most people travel m pairs, Bod-~s g arge ga . • ington, who is Westin South Coast Plaza's gen-
enngs. In post years, eral manager. said be figures the city can expect to see some 1,600 al~ ~rom P~ State and the new faces in Costa Mesa starting today. And that translates into
Uruvers1ty of Arizona spent the some hefty sales tax dollars.
New Year at the Hyatt. And the tourism council is milking it for every drop it can. The
"We get some contingency group has created a commemorative 1996 Rose Bowl button, which
from the bowl games every the council has been distributing at hotels and shopping centers.
year," Lewin said. "We're pre--By 1lna Borgatta
l?ared and very excited.•
briefly
Course offered for
senior shutterbugs
A five-week, non-technical
entry-level course for both automat-
ic and adjustable 35mm camera
users will take pJaoe Saturdays from
9:30 am. to 12:30 p.m. at the Oasis
Senior Center in Corona del Mar.
Registration is $45 and can be
done by either stopping by tbe-
Newport Beach Community Ser-
vices Department at 3300 New-
port Blvd. or calling 644-3151.
'Discovery' booklet
available at OCC
'Discovery' a 44-page booklet
that lists all workshops, perfor-
mances, tours and non-credit
classes being offered this spring
by Orange Coast Collegets Com-
munity Education Office, is avail-
able to the public free of charge.
CASEY lUKSCH I OAILY PILOT
Remnants of the Deja Vu nightclub are carted off by construction workers Wednesday. A car wash ls planned to take its place.
The booklet is available in the
Community Education Building
located next to the library. Hours
are Monday through Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday from
9 a.m. to 5·p.m. and Saturday from
8 a.m. to noon. The office will be.
closed Dec. 20 through Jan. 2.
Booklets can be mailed upon·
request by calling 432-5880.
Artis~ invited to sub-:
mit work for gallery Former nightclub site not washed up yet
By Tina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Ever since ,the state
closed down the former Deja Vu nightclub
on Newport Boulevard two years ago, City
Hall officials have been holding their breath.
Over the years that site at 2285 Newport
Blvd. has been home to a string of night-
clubs -Kiss, Jaws, Deja Vu. And they all
had their share of problems.
"The dubs that have been at that locdlion
have not only been problematic for the city, but
they haven't survived the test of time,• said
Gabriel Elliot. an associate planner for the city.
That's why city officials were •all quite elat·
ed" when they learned a Costa Mesa busi-
nessman who purchased the property from
Caltrans wanted to build a car wash on the lot.
"There have been about three or four night-
clubs at that location.• Elliot said "And they've
been more of a problem to the Police Depart-
ment and to the surrounding eusmesses. Once
the parking lot would get full, the overllow
would go into surrounding businesses.
"We just did not really want to see anoth-
er nightclub go in there.•
While dty officials say the problems relat-
ing to the various nightclub operations were
nothing out of the ordinary, they did create a
burden for police.
•A nightclub which sells alcoholic bever-
ages is going· to create a demand for police
services," said Costa Mesa police Capt. Tom
Lazar. •You may have people who drink too
much, and as a result, they may get into
fights. And, there is also the possibility that
people may be utilizing drugs there.
But over the years, the problems went
,beyood run-of-the-mill disturbance complaints.
As Jaws in the late 1970s, the nightclub
was sued by a Costa Mesa man who claimed
bartenders acted negligently when they
continued to serve him even though he was
obviously drunk. He blamed the Club for
injuries be sustained when he was struck by
a car while crossing Newport Boulevard
after leaving the club. The man lost the case.
Then in 1982, after the dub reopened as
Deja Vu, it burned to the gtound. Police at
the time suspected arson. The owners
rebuilt the club and opened it again.
But about two years ago, Caltrans, which
has owned the property for about 19 years,
decided to close it down. The building's
been vacant ever &mce.
"The (nightclub) people didn't want to
leave, but Caltrans dosed it down anyWay, •
said Mike Steiner, who now owns the property.
And buying the land was no easy task,
according to Steiner. He was in escrow with
Caltrans for more than a year.
Steiner said he's already released the
property to a partnership that will be leasing
the land and building the car wash.
"The Freeway Auto Spe, I think that's
what it's going to be called,• Steiner a.id.
Elliot said the new busmess should be up
and running within the next few months.
The Newport Beach Arts
Commission is seeking new
artists for the 1996-97 City Hall'
exhibits. Artists working in all;
media types are eligible.
For consideration, artists
should submit 10 slides of their
work to the Newport Arts Com-
mission, c/o Newport Beach.
Community Services department,
3300 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach, CA 92658-8915. For more:
information, call 644-31Sl.
Rose Parade
excursion offered
Costa Mesa Community Ser-'
vices is offering' an excursion to:
the Rose Parade with reserved•
seating and transpoMtion for $49:
per person. ;
For reservations contact the•
Neighborhood Community Cen-'.
ter, 1845 Pm Ave. 1n Costa Mesa·
between 1 a.m. and 6 p .m. Mon-:
day-Friday or cell 645-8551. :
usedtorecordlettentothe
edltOf on Vl'J topic.
• THOMAS H. JOHNSON.
PubH5her
WMJJAM L0eDaU. Edltot
STIVIM• ......
Man"91ng Editor
1M YCMCOI, City Editor
MMC~. Photo Editor
• KIM CMUMTH,
Olt«tor of OperatiOfls
'NOY Ol'TTWG,
: Claillfied Manager
• J.AlllA JOHNIOtill,
: Promotlont • ,..,MOO IMAH, Controller
AQDRESS
Our eddreu Is 330 W Bay St.,
Costa Mew. Calif. 92627.
CQR8ECDONS
It Is ti,. Pilot'1 pollcy to prompt-
ly correct all erron of subltaoce.
Pluse all 574-e2U. ~you
TEMPERATURES
Newport Beach
66144
Balboa
66144
Cost. Mesa
70(46
Corona del Mar
72144
SURF FOMCAST
LOCATION SIZE
Wedge 1·3w
Newport 1:4w
Bl~lti 1:4w
Rlwr~ 1"4 w
CdM 1·3W
90ATINCI
HIQh ckk.ldl~$
wlll lncrHM during
the d1y whh a
sll9ht chan<• of
thowen by late
•ft.,noon .,
h9nlng. 'Wett to
nonhw.st Winds
t lhlft nontlwnt
20 knots with 2 foot
wind waves and 5
foot west swell.
110.S
TODAY
First hlgli
2:42a.m. 4:7
First low
9:10 il.m. 1.7
second high
2:40 p.m. 3.5
S.cond low
8:46 pm. 1.1
THURSDAY
Flm high
3·42 am.
Flnt IOw
10:l9 • m
S.Cond hlgh
4:21 p.m
S.Condlow
t'Alpm. t.5 ....
~
COSTAMUA
• 1700 blodc of Nftwpoft lloulevwd: A thief walked Into a
store and stole • $20 carton of cigarettes.
• J100 blodc of Merbor loulevard: A burglar SM4Shed the
wtndow of• cir. unkxbd the door •nd tool( $1,466.86 worth of
computer equipment.
• 200 Wodi of~ A metal roll-up door on 1 busJness was
e:t.trn.oed. •nd SS,500 worth of mlJCell~ tools w.. f'9POl't· ed stolen from Inside, •
• JOOO Mods of "-'*· A thl f may have cut the locX Md m.1n on• trMh lrM of• gas station and took ~ht box. of ofd ~ndy 1nd sod• worth $915.SO
• 2400 blodl of N.wport loul.viird: A thi.f stole l'Wlge
worth S 1, 700, lncludlng the c<>Menu, from the pewme~ .bV the
side of 1 <1r In • motel parillng lot.
,..oallAOI
• IOI Modi of lrvlfte: A bUrgler smaihld the window of a CM.
rariNCked the whk:le Md toot $1,020 of pt0per1y ~a wali.t. CM phone end .-.o.
•IOI ... of~ A burQI« ~the wtfldc>W of I c-. unlocked the doOr .-1d toak M75 Wcwttt of Pf °'*"Y lnducfO
Int I tool bOlc Ind • liOtt.
• f ........ -.... ··~--lr*tlbMI ... mint ...... SUQ0""'8t1Qal ~ ............ .......... ''* 121 ·--· .... --.. ~~ grlbta...,balplr\ •StMO_...-~ ... ...-WOl'l\of90Ml flJ1suUICl .... 1t'OmHI..__ ......
"-=---='=---~~--~-= -·-=-------~-
•
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1995
·-
1,~Woman
I· dies of
This Christmas provided pleneyj of stories
~apparent
i suicide t
I
' ~ NEWPORT BEACH -An
: employee at the Old Spaghet-
• ti Factory restaurant found
• the body of a 42-year-old
: woman, with an apparent
• self-inflicted gunshot wound
: in her upper body, under the
~ stairs outside the eatery
• Wednesday morning, police
: said.
• Police received the call
: reporting the dead body at
, 11 :45 a.m. and at first weren't
• sure whether the woman's
: death was a suicide or homi-
: cide.
But Wednesday afternoon,
' Orange County Coroner offi-
: cials ruled the death a suicide.
A handgun was lying next
, to the woman's body, but
• police won't release the
, details of the shooting until
, the autopsy is completed
• today, Newport Beach police
: Sgt. Andy Gonls said.
, Red and white plastic
• ....shielded the woman's body
from the cwious crowd gath-
ered to see what attracted all
the police and yellow crime
tape, .
--The woman, whose identi-
ty was withheld by police,
does not live in the area.
According to her young son
and husband who were ques-
. tioned by police, the three
)lad been walking on the
beach throughout the mom-
, ing, Gonls said.
-By Carolyn Miller
L AST ADD HOLIDAYS. In
newsroom parlance, that
means this will be the final
installment of an endless series
of columns built around the big-
head.line news that I am a last-
minute Christmas shopper.
Actually, I had houxs to spare.
The last gift purchase was at pre-
cisely 2 p .m. Dec. 24. That left
plenty of tip'le for a leis'W'ely
lunch of a quarter-pounder and
Diet Coke beside the tidal foun-
tain at Fashion Island.
· The weather outside was
hardly frightful and watching the
swarm of Christmas-crazed. kids
playing in the water was quite
pleasurable.
· It certainly put a nice head of
steam on my Chrisbnas spirit, to
mix a metaphor or two. But not
nearly as much as the Nativity
pageant at our church, St.
Michael and All Angels.
It could have been the same
bunch of youngsters, but these
kids were serene and quite seri-
ous about their work. Producer
Peggy Strong only once left her
hideout behind the altar -when
she had to disarm the shepherds
who were trying to balance their
6-foot crooks on the palms of
their hands.
We didn't have to deal with an
early Christmas as our grandson
lravis and his parents weren't
due to arrive until 2:30. This left
plenty of time to get the turkey
started and go for a long morn-
ing walk with our dogs.
Toward the end, it became an
adventure. A block from our
house, we encountered a late
"'"---•, . -. --
~ ---' !
fred
martin
shopper -a coyote out looking
for Christmas dinner. He had
found iti a cat, which lay bloody
and quivering in some ivy.
The coyote had gone around
the block and come back to.
claim its prey. Though by now
half a dozen folks from the
neighborhood had gathered
around, each of us with at least
one dog in tow, Wiley stood
behind a shrub just 20 yards
away.
The coyote's eyes stared us
down as its mind worked on a
plan to nab the cat. One of the
neighbors called the police, but
learned that animal control had
the day ott. Yep, they're never
around when you need him (or
her).
The cat wouldn't let anyone
near it.
Finally its owners showed up,
wrapped kitty in a blanket and
hurried off to find a vet at 7:45
Christmas morning. Next time
. : 11~~3) '-':t.y ~ 1996
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anyone looked, the coyote had
disappeared, off to wherever coy-
otes spend Chris1mas day.
he has. 1 told him I didn't either.
He has come a long way from
driving the Balboa Fe~.
One of the neat things about
Christmastime is families and old
friends getting together. Our Sao
Franosco daughter, Carol. was
only here for three days.
It struck me that Christmas
Spirit didn't come easily this
year. Dunng the Boat Parade
around Newport Harbor, only
one out of scores of boats was
playing Christmas mUSlc.
clerk gift-wrapped a book for a
lady Seeing tbis, several male
customers zipped over to have
their books wrapped, too. . · ·
So the woman stepped behind
the counter and wrap~ three
books as the cl~rk was struggling l
with hen. ·
She was a dutiful daughter
and did all the family neces-
saries, yet she also managed to
get in plenty of time with her
pals from high school and
beyond.
Most stores didn't either. They
assaulted your ears and sensibili-
ties with shrieking rock music, I
mean the hard, screammg,
makes-you-cringe kind of stuff .
But hardly a note of • Adeste
Fidelis• or •God Rest Ye Merry,
Gentlemen" or even "Jingle .
Bells."
·she seemed to be someone
who was used to doing for oth-•
ers, • my wife said. A character-
istic in woefully short supply .
these days.
Carol's best friend since virtu-
ally forever, <:a.rolyn Johnson,
came from San.Luis Obispo,
where she iS an anchor and
reporter on the local NBC affili-
ate.
• FRED MAllTIN'S column runs Thurs-
days and Saturdays.
Still, if you were in the right
place at the right time, you saw
some nice, human things. RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
....
Carolyn anchored. the morning
news broadcast at some dreadful
hour on Christmas Day, caught a
flight to LAX and was home in
time for presents and dinner -
and a get-together that night
with her buddies.
My wife was in the Barnes &
Noble at Fashion Island as a Where YOl.I Dolor Coven Morel 1922HARIOR BLVD., COSTA MESA · 5'a-ll~
Honors for the longest trip
home would have to go. so far as
I know, to Chris Bakewell. Chris
jetted in from Aruba, where the
yacht he skippers for an East
Coast publisher is spending the
winter.
I talked to Chris Tuesday and
he moaned a lot about how
nobody feels sorry for him when
be talks about what a tough job
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M THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21. 1995
BAY
CONTINUED FROM A 1
not Understand the Byzantine Wodd
OI derivatives and Invest ftoaten,
but :we all should have known that
higher rates ct return mean higher
risks. And if Orange Cowlty was
~the~ rated return in
the country on its investments, then
it had a very risky portfolio.
The common-sense financial
ptindples we teach our kids elud-
ed almost all of us, and we lost
$1 :64 billion. A costly lesson, but
a lesson nonetheless.
Wby misplace our oommao seose
again? The whole Irvine Ranch
Wats!:r District plan -intentiaoally
mislabeled a •wet1ands restoration
project. -seeim just plain wrong:
Thke Irvine's daily ~age, add
chemicals, and thep dump it all into
a state ecological reserve.
The water district's environmen-
tal reports may dazzle you, but here
are the smelling salts: The Irvine
Ranch Water District is the same
agency that had $300 million in the
ill-fated Orange County invest-
ment fund and was one of former
county Thea.surer-Tax Collector Bob
SUSPECT
CONTINUED FROM A 1
riding their bikes in the 3300 block
of Via Lido at about 4 a.m. Wednes-
day when a Newport Beach police
officer stopped them for riding
without lights, Goms said.
After stopping the two men,
the officer chscovered Lerer had
an outstancting warrant from
West Orange County Muncipal
Court for a $10,000 drug violation
and arrested him, Gonis said.
The officer then attempted to
tClke Bradner into custody once
he learned he had the outstand-
mg burglary warrants, but before
the officer could handcuff hun,
Bradner bolted and took off run-
Citron's biggelt boolten.
And 1 would ~ the water
district still bll • act d financial
~ touUbg the virtUfJI d jump..
mg into the county iDVeltment pool.
But the only people In Orange
County who benefit by th1I new
water district plan are Irvine
·water users. No one else wants it.
And tbatsboukl be enough to~
this poject. The people don't want it.
SO even.if we amoede the ~
woo't hwt the Back Bay, it doesn't
mean the plan should go through.
Let's all be common-sense
champions of. the Back Bay -the
John Moorlacbs of water quality.
Your last chance comes Jan. 26 in
Riverside when the Caliiomia
Water Quality Control boMsi meets.
You can write to the board at 2010
Iowa Ave .• #100, Riverside, 92507-
2409 or join forces with Citizens For
a Sewage Free Bay, P.O. Box 170,
Balboa Isl.and. 92662, 722-1110.
If we don't act now. ooo com-
munity's magnUicent Central Park
-the Back Bay-will be sent down
the river towards ecological tyran-
ny (and perhaps even bankrupt-·
cy) ... all because Irvine decided to
use it as an inexpensive toilet.
• WILUAM L080ELL Is the editor.
ning for the bay which he jumped
into, Gonis said.
Police called on the Sheriffs
Harbor Patrol to help them find
the alleged burglar. Harbor Patrol
authorities reportedly found
Bradner in the bay at 3336 Via
Udo at 4:13 a.m . but when offi-
cers tried to pull him from the
water he resisted, Gonis said.
. After a short struggle, officers
finally removed Bradner from the
water.
The water had been so cold
Bradner's body temperature fell
eight degrees below normal and
hypothermia set in, Gonis said.
Bradner was treated at Hoag
Memorial Hospital, Gonis said. ·u he had stayed in the water
much longer he could have died,•
Gonis said.
STORE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
lock's womens store at Publon
Island ii not clear at this time.
Federated representatives
could not be reached for com-
ment Thursday. But officials
from The Irvine Co. said th.at
Bloomingdale's and Fa.sh.ion
Island are a natural fit.
•t think this says a lot about
the quality of customer we have
in Newport Beach and about
what Fashion Island has
become,• said Frederick Evans,
president of The lrvine Co.'s
retail division. •nus is going to be the only
Bloomingdale's in Orange
County. . That really makes
Fashion Island all th~ more spe-cial..
Evans credited a large team
with helping to bring Blooming-
dale's to Newport Center. Com-
pany offid4ls knew of Federat-
ed's decision last week, but
agreed to postpone the
announcement until after
Cb:riMmal, Bvam Aid.
Spedftc details of the Broed·
way building renovation were
not availllble, but a Federated
p1ess release said the company
pl4m to spen~ $525 million over
three yean converting and
remodeling existirig Broadway
stores.
Federated had previously
announced plalu to convert the
Fashion lsla.nd Broadway .to a
Macy's. Now, offidals say, the
Broadway will begin a store·
wide clearance sale 1n January,
close in March and reopen as
Bloomingdale's in November.
The development came as
unwelcome news to economic,
development offidals in Costa
Mesa. But Chamber of Com-
merce President Ed Fawcett
said that, Bloomingdale's or no,
South Coast Plaza will continue
to be the premier shopping des-
tination in southern California.
"Fashion Island can't touch
South Coast Plaza in tenns of
total sales or the number of peo-
ple going through,• Fawcett
said. ;,>This is disappointing, but
it's not the end of the world .•
~.ehel ~mitq
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FLU
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Mikey'I parents. Kim and fired
Vogler, were attending to their
son's funeral arrangements
Wednelday afternoon and left
Evelyn Roller, their relief manager
and hie.rid. in charge of the apart-
ment complex. which they have
managed and lived in for lour
years.
FIRE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
the aew of 40 firefighters from
Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and
Huntington Beach shoot water
onto the roof ~ through the
Mikey was the oldest of the
Voglen' three children.
•Mi.key WU in bete Saturc14y ~
and seemed to be hil old self;
tallcing about Christma.s and So-
ta Claus,• Rouer sa1d. ·
The whole family seems to bd
shocked at Mikey's death, she
said. And his 5-yea.r-old sister,
Lauren, has been uk:ing where
her big brother ls, Rosser said.
"l told her yesterday he is 1n
heaven and is an angel nowi"' ·
Rosser said.
home's windows.
The fire could even be seen ofl
the coast.
Harbor Patrol offidAls ~
fielded several phone calls froni
boaters out in the ocean who saw
the Oames fanning above the~. '
-Carolyn MUler contributed
to thb atory.
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, .
N~ Beach/Cosca Men Daily Pilor
fvpcals press flesh with
'Spider Woman, stars
.. ! . l:;,I t speaks to the audience
on many different levels,"
1 said actress Chila Rivera,
lo<Jktng gorgeous and relaxed as
she entered Morton's restaurant
at-South Coast Plaza Village.
"This is a very passionate show W\Ui. a very powerful message."
ruvera joined Perfonning Arts ~tee patrons for Qpening night gr~tings folloWing her perfor-~c~ in "Kiss of The Spider
Woman," debuting dt The Cen-
tef Jhis week.
4-ne sultry actress took home
the Tony Award for best actress
in,.e musical in 1993 for her por-
lrfiyal of Aurora the screen
siren.
Aurora is a chardcler recreat-
~ in the mind of Molina, a gay
department store window dress-
e( imprisoned for having sex
'~th a nunor, who now shares
We in a b.ny Latin American cell
W).th the macho revolutionary
Valentin.
:.~ot exactly "The Sound of
?vjusic," however, the Broddway
caliber touring producbon star-
uig RJvera, Juan Chioran as
MDlina, and Dondn Harewood as
Valentin, captivated the Orange
($Ast crowd mingling with the
stftts at Morton's as the clock
struck midnig>M the day after
Qtristmas
• "I love tlus show And I get to d~e with these fdbulous young ntn every night," said Rivera as
s~e was introducPd to Center
denor Catherine Thyen
: Also on band for the late night
s11fom sandwiches and Caesdf
s'1ad was Vesta Curry, RJchard
S(einhoff, Timothy Rasic and
Janet Corbin. The whispered
b6zz at Mortons before Rivera's
a(rival centered around dtscover-
ing the star's personal secret con-
n~ction to "the fountain of
y~th."
:0ne woman standing in the
bQlfet line said, "she has the
~t incredible body. How does
s4e get 1t to move like that, I ~she's my age?"
•She's not standing in buffet
lines at mtdnight, that's her
st.Wet,• the woman's fnend
rdi;ponded.
:ruvera, ageles , was chamung
a.ad disamung with the local
wd.
~Call me Chita," she insisted
fans pressed her flash
~ 1:-ido Isle's lovely Linda Gtan-
OBU, former actress and daughter
oCBroadway producer Elliott
~ commented on Rivera's
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spectacular costumes.
·vou wore the most fabulous
shoes," said Giannini, spotting
the high-heeled strapped shoes
from her seat in the first tier of
The Center. ·oh, you are too much. Thank
you for noticinQ' my shoes," said
Riverd, confessing that Liza
Minelli had introduced her to the
magic of diFabri.zios. "What did
you think of the yellow feath-
ers?"
Giannini was far more
unpressed with the sets and pro-
jection designed by Jerome Slr-
lln, the lighting of Howell Bink-
ley, and the direction of Harold
Prince.
Co-star Juan Chioran (Molina)
entered Morton's, thanlung the
crowd for the cold night air that
rerrunded him of his Canadian
roots. On the road with the show
for the past 14 months, Chioran
said he never tires of tus
demanding role.
uWhen the energy is not
there, I rely on technique," said
the tall handsome actor •It 1s
what actor's do, 1t is why we
study. It is not always inspiration,
not every night, not every perfor-
mance Sometimes the excel-
lence is simply the techruque."
And for operung night at The
Perfonn.ing Arts Center, was it
inspiration or technique?
"Pure mspirabon," Chioran
said •Pure mspirabon."
Center donors like Sandy
Fa.tnbarg, Byron Henderson,
Pat McDaniel, Unda Pierog,
Rudy Schweitzer, and Michael
Suk.off, on hand for the recep-
tion\ agreed. "Spider Woman"
runs at The Center through Dec
31
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EWPORT HARBOR Tl L M EM
•
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1995 AS
Here are members
of the Asslsteens
Aux:tllary, to be pre-
sented July 1996:
Mega.JJ. Ann Algeo,
Undsay Ann Bear,
Jodi Anne de
Boom, Devon Lacey
Donsker, Sarah
Dlane Ganiere,
Christine Marte
Hayes, Kelly
Michelle Ueben-
good, Kimberly
Ann Long, Margrel-
ta Ann McDonald,
Michelle Lynn
Robinson, Kristina
Nichol Schauppner,
Carrie Lynn Stem.
Shannon Marie
Sweeney and
Katherine Hawley
Williams.
THE AZ EBO
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.... $145
. .
weekend
TALENT SCOUT
Costa Mesa art gallery director Ben Valenty discovered a 10-yttar-old
prodigy and in some ways has become" as popular as. his find.
8y Evan Henerson, Daily Prlot
Stgn up one adolescent and·
the cultural world thinks
you've cornered the mark.el
on prodigies.
•we've been approached by
parents of 8-to 10-year-old
pianists and vwlimst.s, • said Ben
Valenty, dlrector of gallery opera-
tions for International Art Gal-
lenes. "I wish J knew where to
steer them. Our business is art •
It's a natural enough mistake
Currently, the hottest artist repre-
sented by the Costa Mesa gallery
is 10-year-old Alexandra Nechlta.
a cubist pamter who gallery offi-
cials are calling the next Picasso.
The gallery is Alexandra's
publ.J.sher, dlstnbuting the artist's
work throughout the United
States and mtemallonally and
coordmab.ng media appearances
lo the past six months. lntema-
tional Art Publlshers has coordi-
nated more th4n 12 exhlb1tions,
including three at the gallery's
Anton Street location
And, at least for the time
being. there appears to be no end
Ul Slght to the Norwcl1k art:J.st's 15
minutes of fame
·She's pretty much the tops.
not just with our collectors but
. .
with the people we chstnbute to,· Alexandra Nechlta, 10, ii a young artl5t with a world ol talent. and gallery executive Ben Valenty
Valenty saJ.d. ·1 suspect a lot of st ts determined that the world doesn't pass her by. has to do with the fact that she's a
cubist There aren't that many out
here• I a senes of three Disney-inspired He's not domg ttus Just fot the
I
up to hls death at 93.
"We're not looking for a short-
term, flash-in-the-pan tlung
here,• Valenty said. "She'll go
[t was Valenty whose interest works which she plans to keep) money,· Alexandra said tn a tele-
p1qued after a clJ.ent told tum of I a.nd there ts a substantial waib.ng phone mterview from her home.
an unusual story A duld in Nor-list for onginal works, Valenty "A lot of things have grown in
walk -9 years old at the tune -said. these 10 months and, gee. every-
• had her work displayed in a Whit-Alexandra frequenUy comes to thmg is great.•
tier book store It was the kllld of the Costa Mesa gallery and she The hype over Alexandra will
work. the client told Valenty, th~ and Valenty have struck up a I eventually taper off, Valenty Sdld,
you don't normally see thcked up friendship Valenty says that, m ' and the gallery hopes to stay with
on a proud parent's refrigerator. addltion to being a talented artist, I the art1St as she matures Picasso
I through puberty dDd that will
show up in her paintmg. Maybe
she'll end up having children And
, Valenty went to the bookstore, Alexandra is a cultured and well-was considered a master at 19,
I gomg through political changes.
·Her style is going to change
dramatically over the years. I
I hope art collectors have as much
fun chroruchng h~r We through
art.•
• saw the work and umnedlately I behaved young lady. At the same Valenty points out, and went
requested a meeting with the time, he also desaibes "the prod.1-I through numerous changes even
a.rtlst and her family At first, he gy• running around the gallery liiiiiiiiii::i5i0iii55iiiili5iiiimliEilEIBilliEiiimii&iilli!~-==i!Elli:iiiiil!ElE!i!m!!=:e!llilR!5!lll!!Sl!!!!!
didn't belleve that a 9-year-old j engaging in rubber band fights
had produced the work But after with television crew members
• seeing Alexandra paint in her stu-"It's not at all Wte you're meet-
cho, Valenty was sold mg a celebrity,· Valenty said
• ·1 believed st, but I didn't •she makes you feel Wee you're
believe it,• he said "I knew that royalty and she takes compU-
Uus was a prodigy· ments with a great deal of humil-
Although Alexandra is proW1c sty. She's very grounded •
in her producbon, Valenty says Alexandra returns the compli-
the works seU out almost inunedl-ments, saying that Valenty has
, ately The pamtmgs range in pnce made the advancement of her
• from $12,000 to SS0,000 (Alexan-j career a personal prionty.
• dra hM turned down $100,000 for ·aen's a wonderful person.
• . • • • • • ' • BREAKFAST • LUNCH •
Burgers
Sandwiches
Bacon&Eggs
Tacos
Burritos
Subs
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4253 MARTINGALE WAY
NEWPORT BEACH
l9(Hl"'O SHU•.u o .. HOTI L AT M•CAllTHUl!/811tCHI
From
tuxedos and
florists, to caterers
and bridal gowns, it's
all in the
Wedding&.
p~·
Planner, For
advertising
info., call
642-4321.
~.Pilot
1 'KISS OF 111E SPIDER
WOMAN': A pnson in a
repre&lli.ve Latin Amencan
country is the backdtop for this
1ale ol flAmboyant window-
dresser and his cellmate. Runs
through Jan. 1 at the Perform-
i.nq Arts Center. Information:
556-ARTS.
2'Pl?IER AND TifE WOIF:
Jim Gamble pedonns bis
awcUd wmning-manonette
interpretation of the <:b.ildren's
claSsic "Peter and the Wolf"
Friday at 11 a.m., 1 p .m. and 3
p.m. at the Launch Pad at Crys-
tal Court, South Coast Plaza.
Call S.C6-2061.
3 'MANIPUl.ATED
POLAJlOIDS': California
artist Marion Talley's
•Manipulated Polaroids,• a col-
lection of line art photography
usmg time-zero manipulated
polaroids pnnted by laser. will
be 011 display begmnirig Tues-
day and throughJAD. 31 at
Newport Beach's ~tral
Ubrary. •Kaleidoscope of Col-
or,• watercolor land.scapes by
Zula Jane Huffman, ends its
run on Saturday. Call 717-3800. .)4 PAPIER-MACHE POR·
TRA.n'S: Joa~ Vtl-
lAsenor's papier-mache fig-
ures, •The Vargi.ns of MeXico"
are on qi5play at Timbuktu Folk
and nibal Art through Swiday,
Dec. 31. $5 donation. 1661
Superior Ave. in Costa Mesa,
650-7473.
5.,-S..~Wl!M: Usmted . edialQ«t ~ aDd Art to_
Wee(~ by tbe Alt z
Deco ...... Bite, ... Oil dis--
play at Orde Gallery through
1Ue.sday. Call 540-5011.
6BLIND Bl!Atn'Y: Aitilt -.
Sophie C4lle photO{{!Apbed
blind indiViduAls and .
asked them for their image of •i
beauty, then pa!Jed the por-
traJts with a photo of lb.at ~r
son's vision. An exhibit of the b
photographs and text, titled D
"Sophie Calle: The Bllitd, • clos!J
es Sunday. Newport Harbor Arti
Museum, 850 San Clerilente -. r
Drive, Newport Beach. 1
7wrm VISIONS OP SUG·
A.R PLUMS: You can get a "
free body fat arus.J.ysis at o
Perfect Fitness 111 Costa Mesa )
this weekend. lbe body fat ,
checkS ere ottered from 1 O a:m. •
to 1 p.m. Friday; 10 a.m to 5 'i
p.m. Saturday, and 10 a.m. to l >
I p.m Sunday at 495 E. 17th St, •
Suite 201, in Costa Mesa. I
8SPEAKING OF FOOD J
AND FUN: Or, throw cau-1
bon to the wind and check''
out the belly dancing at 1 and &.
pm Fridays and Saturdays at ~
Royal Khyber restaurant, 1000 "
Bristol St North, Ne~rt 1
Beach. Call 752·5200. ''
gLOCALS ONLY: Stroll
through Ne~rt Beach's "
City Hall and take a free ' I look at work by local artists 1
juned by gallery owner and artt I consultant Susan Thomas. TheU I exhibit ends Tuesday at New-J
port Beach City Hall~· "
:l
10SEA.ENDIPITOUS SIN-
GLES: The Serendipity!
senes for singles ,
resumes its weekly sessions "
Wednesday at 7:30 pm. at St I
Andrew's Presbyterian Cburch,
600 St Andrews Road in New·
port Beach. Call 574-2214 -,
•
AnDAn1n .
Geurmet
• *
•Lunch• Dinner• Take Out•
• Cocktalls • Catering • ~ •
1500 Harbor BIVd., • Cotta M
(atAdllQll
(71•) 540.1937
!: ,: •• . • • • • •
·=
.
Neqc:n ~Mesa Dally Pilot THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1995 A7
Husband and wife team draw year's top local honor
• EDITa.'S NOTE: Th s is the last m a
series of three articles reviewing the ~ 1995 In loc.al theater.
By Tom Trtus. Daily Prlot
Lloca.l theater has been
nriched over the yesrs by
any husband and wife ~. but rarely by a pair as
dynamic as the couple hooored
today.
They excel i;l seJ>4Iate, but
related. areas. He's an actbr and
director, she's a musical director
and choreographer -and' often
their peths intersect, as Utey will
nen month when •A Funny
Thing Happened on the Way to
the Forum" opens at the Hunting-
ton Beach Playhouse.
Their talents, together and
separately, have bolstered the
quality of community theaier in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach,
Huntington Beach and the sur-
round.mg area for the past 10
years They are Gregory d1ld K ysa
Cohen, the Daily Pilot's man and
woman of the year m theater m
1995.
Greg Cohen, 38, was born lll
the proverbial trunk. Hls family m
Walnut Creek was quite active m
the theater and Greg saw lus first
show, "Gypsy,• at the age of 7.
But 1t was a San Franosco pro-
duction of "You're a Good Man,
Charlie Brown• a few years later
that gave lum a b1g push toward
his chosen avocation
Aiter viewing the Peanuts
musical, Greg persuaded the
principal of his grade school to let
him stage a production of it -at
the age of 11 He stuck Wlth the
theater and graduated from the
Umvemty of the Pacfic m 1979
with degrees m drama and Eng-
lish
AmVlllg m Orange County m
1934, he embarked on a virtual
nonstop career of acting and
direcb.og, often simultaneousJy.
He directed and played George m
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A
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"Of Mice and Men" a few years
before Gary Sinese pulled the
same tnck in the movie vemon.
Amony his directorial tnwnphs
were •Division Street/ "One
Aew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.·
"Llttle Shop of Horrors,· ·on
Golden Pond" and "Rumors.·
which opened the new Hunting-
ton Beach Playhouse last year and
was selected as the season's best
show.
Tim year hc1S been a vmtage
one dS Cohen staged the hilanous
"Lend Med Tenor" at the New-
port TheatN Arts Center, the nv-
eting •A Few Good Men• at the
Huntington Beach Playhouse and
the wacky ·Pia~ On· at the Costa
Mesa C1\·1c Playhouse. while find-
ing the time to play the baker m
Huntington's "Into the Woods,"
under Kysa's dm."Ctlon.
Kysa, 44, also was born mto
show business -m Kentucky
where her parents were both
musicians She first trod the
boards at the age of 5 m "Show-
boat• with her father m the pit
orchestra and she's been dancing
and choreographing ever since
An Orange County resident
since 1969, Kysa first achieved
local prominence as the choroog-
rapher m a talented tnwmvate
that mcluded di.rector Kent John-
...... .,. ~&pedal· CBJCICBN, JU&t <:I JUUSDr DINND •
l /2 BBQ Chicken. Spart Ribs &: Brisket ol Bttf. Baktd Potato, Beans. Com oo lM Cob & Cole Slaw • Sm"ed from Spm
Happy New Year To You And Your Family
. From
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Practic~locally
since 1983
Call Today!
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NEW YEARS EVE ...
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1
Gregory and Kyu
Co en. together and
separately, bave bol-
stered the quality of
communlty theater tn
Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach, Huntington
Beach and the sur-
rounding area for the
past 1 o years.
OON LlACH /OAJJ.Y .... Ol
son and musical director Tirn Nel-
son Her credits mclude "Okla-
homa,· "The Mikado,· "HMS
Pinafore,· "The Pl.rates of Pen-
zance• and • Bngadoon •
As a musical director, she
helmed the Newport Theater Arts
Centers "Bdffiwn" as well as the
Hunllngton producuons of
"They're Playmg Our Song• and
·Little Shop of Horrors • Moving
into the directonal arena, Kysa
st ged "You Can't Take It 'Wi
You• in Laguna and the HWJting·
ton Beach productJons of "D
at Sea," "lbe Mugc Man• and
the supcrlatn:e "Into the WoOd .•
KY'4 and Greg met in the t
Hwitmgton Be ch production of
-Where's C harley• ond wero
marned two years ldt~r. CWTent-
ly, Greg i~ a t .. chnical editor u
McDonnell Douglas, and is tn hi
Uth year of teaching hi own
actor's workshop, while Kysa
te1.iches dance and drdina at Cen-
tury J-ljgh School and has choreo·
graphed mUSlc videos for Micha
Jackson. Duran Duran and Cmd)
Lauper
The Cohens are one of local
theater's most devoted couples ,.....
to theu work and to each othez
They're happiest when working
together and hopE> eventually to
branch into profess1onal thectter
Greg and KySd 1010 a local hail
of fame of pdSt men and womM
of the year in thed.ter. Previou
honorees mcc the project was
fus1 started m 1974 are. oa ... ia
Emmes and DoflS Allen: Kent
Johnson and McUthella Randall,
Martin Benson and Pati Tambe:Ui-
m; Ernie \'erre and Barbara
Hampton John Ferzacca and
Jean Kobd: Ben JutzJ and Su.wn
O'Connel1; Douglas Rowe and
Eileen Fishbdch Joe Cordio and
Patti-Gene 'ampson, Don Lat·
foon and Lf'c. 5hallat, David and
Betsy Paul Ro~rt Conrad and
Robbie 5choonover; Charles
f\.-1ltcbell and Barbara Van Holt.
Bill Purk.lss and Diana Doyle.
Thomas Bradac and Ten Ralston,
Tun Nelson and Beth Hansen
Mark Turnbull and Patnod Teri)
Richard Doyle and Anru Long
David Anthony and Joan
McGillis. Terence Alane ano
Salome Jens .\I Valletta and
Mary Sull1\'an Slack. and Hal
Landon Jr and Kand.ls Chappell
It's a galaxy of stan>, all ot
whom have provided outstanding
entert&runent for local theatergo-
ers.
PopP)'Sttd Belgium Waftles f1Jith lnMn itml ll1UI fe$b r/l.Sf'bnrin
PotatO Pancakes fDidJ muJwJ u/,,,..,, •dll cn·illr
~ liced French TOU( -oith ~ frwit
Frittata SpeCialt)• ~ o• r:wieruls
BruJiflUt fr-m
7:00 To 10:30 Weekdays • 8:00 To 12:30 \\'cckcods
200 Promontory Dr. in Promontol')' Point
Off &r, lib ,,,J PC H • nnplt f'll'*mg .tbtr:." ilflJ J.tlu: 1m11un111 t
574-0608
YOU NEVER
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SAUSAGE
Or Such Delicious Food!
Holiday Catering Available
For Rcsicnatmn' nJ
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~ '""-=·"' . . ·.~ ... -11~-.... - -_,_ -~-· ·~·
It could be worse -a longer verse!
By Matta Bird. Daily 1'fJof
This momh's been ha.rd. with
~out •
We spent weeb with St.
Fluenza, mstead of St Nick:
So forgive my attemp at this
sort of prose,
My attenli.OD is nearer my
Rudolph-like nose.
Here are some memones of the
past yea.r's endecsvon -turns out
they're ma.de of good folk. food
and ple.uures.
We ate tender Newport JUbs
wU.h d literary crowd, checked
pncey i1.ea.ks at Morton's, but dl
1be B.vn. we chowed
Prime nb at La Cave later that
This spnng, dined on GOoM.
bentes' wondrous .wames. and
Mallllllo'• pizus, :iD good -are
Stopped at Carf'I ro tee Rita in And while w '•re · still out
her new place and wished her a Peninsula way, it into Medl&er-
tbef lawtul? . llfc full of j~ and good gracx:. nneo's for a fresh O)'Ster day.
We found delecta'~ food at La We saw MJddko at bsay'• m
Con'1-mpe1Thai.andfreshsush.i the c.afe's front yard, Her remod-
on Baker at Japanese IC.anpai. eling's done on old Newport
Boulevard.
We licked up Pint's bread
pudding. n~ ori Wahoo'• spe-Huzzahs tor wild mushrooms
cia1s of fJsh and visited Amle'1 to and broth. jus d!J foie gras; hi--
have a ~h cal~s ambrosia with pasta was
A new star was bom, called
Memphis. this year -The gumbo
l.S bnngmg crowds and so IS the
beer.
The muu French cale,
moJe than fim dass
For expert deUgbts we
returned to D Farro'•·
The owner's so cordial the
beach front's a scene, this place
has Italian aulheobc CUlSUle
And stop by at Brltt.'s, she' a
phenomenal gal and no qu:Uta.
Mahlft'• tS doled and though
Te.co Bell took the buildjng, noth-
ing bappened•so'fa.r 'and nolh-
1.0g's ready for grilling
1be Corona~ is meeting its
maker: tom dDwn for the lot's new
tenant and taker. '
Medals for Prager, Hamllton
CAFE .,iOLE'
BREAX.fAST • LUNCH
• SPECIALTY COFFEES •
• WATI..RFRONT OfNING •
OPES DAILY 1 AM-'lPM '
• 723-0616.
634 LIOO PARJC ORJVE
NEWPORT BEACH
PLUG IN
aid~. roo for the charily enly and l'\lcd with clan.
they are ~illiDg to do.
We loved the gospel SUlg.et5 lll
1'da hllM on Sundaf5.
And Presa's oamlt ar per·
feet tor Mondays
C Anders will open Bade
Pocket as soon as they can unlock
ll.
And our llrtr. G ., a.lsO known as
George 1'.ookoosted.ls has pur-
cbaSed Chuted.air, a companion
for J. Domlnls
Good Lebanese food as pre-
pared by Hassan 1S close to heav-
Phil Crowtey, Alu Grwley
and Doug ~vauugh paid great
homage to a falleu friend without naw.
Tbe Sulton Hotel makes a per-
fect Year's End -La Fleuri'• cele-
brations t a gala trend.
fi~ COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE ..., "6lll'S
Al Singing, All Dancing, AD Ger1hwin
CRAZY FOR YOU
AKltl IT WIT IUlS
P1000C1D rr m
.-.., ""'~II 1"6 ~~~-·~ ..., ..... Hllpll
Plvg into ;-our community Find·our what's going on in you• oty,
parks, churches. schools, entertainment and sports ReacHhe Daily Pilot
John Sharpe, owner/partneT of Bistro 201, organized a fund·ralser to help the Villa Nova
recover lrom a devastating tire.
A Orristmas story that covers friends with glory
Th1-gnnch stolf> f'hnstmds
1 from f)(J Vllla Nova Pmployer~
m Septf'mbN Wlth o night of
sm<Jkf· dnd fldmes a., 7 3(J d m • oWPdl)' Newport
8Pdr h ftr,·flghters dnd Vslld
NrJVd\ Pmplc1y~ thought they
hPdrd Jmglf• bPlb, ond werP
hP<irtf'n~ t<J St:E: a pcuctdf> of
B1rtll<1 201 Stdtf, Ji:,d by rhPf
AndtPd Boch <dnymg raraf~ of
c.offH: csnd troy of s;indwich(~
fTCJm nf:!Xt d0<1r to < h'""' up thf!
exhtJusti:d crowd
W1trun th,, wer:-k. nPxt-door
O"J~hbor John Sharpe. own1>r·
p.1rtnPr r,f BL\lTO 2<11 fwho hdd
new~r met Andy Crean owner of
V1lld Nov<tJ, organized ·d fund
raiser lo asorw~t the \tncken
restcswdllt staff He combined tal-
ents of both kitc:hPns. used
81.Stro's hugf' k.Jtchen, and cal.If'<!
upon provenders to supply
goods ·Poppd Bed!· and hts
band dppeM~ free of charge
whl.lf! hdrbor restaurdllts proVld-
ed dinner certif1cdles for the
drdwtng Proceeds of the everung
went to the Villd Nova stdff.
Meanwhile. Santa's helpers,
Barbara de Boom at the New-
port Harbor Area Chcimber of
Commerce. and Danny
Marcbeano of The Arches, put
the word out through the cau.
fomfa Restaurant As1octatlon
thdt 60 well-trained people
needed work. Most of Villa
Nova's pP-ople are now
employed dt Orange County
restaurdllts and last week, the
fundc; from the park.mg lot party
were dlstnbuted to Villa Nova's
staff at a boat parade party held
by Andy d.Od Charlene Crean r hope the Villa Novd employ-
ees gave Sharpe, Bach, de Boom
and Marcheano Chnstlnas hugs
all around
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALLI
HOUSE
FANTASTIC FISH!
Savor the fresh seafood
that's made us famous!
Come to Landry's soon for
mouthwatering seafood 1n
a spectacular setting
overlooking
Newport Bay.
2807 Pacific Coat llWJ.
(over1ookJng Newport Bay)
890-1818
• • •
•Does your listing belong here? Week-
end prints listings, free of charge, for •rts. entertainment and community
events in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach Listing information is nt.'eded at
least t\l'IO weeks before an event date.
iend Information to On the Town, clo
the Dally Piiot, 330 w. Bay St, Costa M68. CA 92627. Items can be faxed to
646-4170. For more information, call
642...4321, ext. 366
KIDS
'ANIMALS DOWN UNDER'
Wild Wonders will bnng ani-
mals from •Down Under" mclud-
mg a wallaby and a kookdburra
to the Launch Pad today. On Fri· I
day, Jim Gamble wdl perform tus
award-winning marionette inter-
pretation of •Peter and the
Wolf • Performances for both
1
clays are at 11 a .m., t p.m. and 3
p.m. The cost is $5 for each per-
(bnnance. A make-and-take craft
activity will follow each 45-
minute performance The
Launch Pad, a non-proht pre-
view facility of Discovery Science
Center, 1S located on the thlrd
on the town
COdst College's Robert B Moore I
Theatre at 9:30 and 11:30 a.m. on
Thursday, Jan 18. Da.rected and
choreographed by Tandy Beal,
•Jump Cuts! The Circus Goes To
Hollywood,· 1s a kaleidoscope
view of Amenca's favonte fantasy
-the world of film The produc-
tion as filled with clowns, acrobats,
and a host of colorful characters
Tickets are $7 for general ad.mis·
s1on and $5 for children under 12
For more mfonnabon, call 432-
5880
YOUTHFUL ETIQUITTE
·Etiquette for the Younger
Set· 1s the title of a new class for
six to rune-year-olds at Costa
Mesa's Pacific School of Music
and the Arts. TWo five-week ses-
sions will be offered, class
7153 101 meets from 3:30 to 4.30
pm on Tuesdays beganrung Jan
9; and class 7154.101 meets from
10 to 11 a.m on Saturdays began·
mng Jan. 13 The registration fee
is $65 For more mfonnatlon, call
644-3151 .
LITERARY
noor of Crystal Court at South I ALTA COFFEE
Coast Plaza. For more mforma-An open poetry read.mg with
6on, call 546-2061 music by M1chael Olsen on the
fAMILY ORCUS flamenco gwtar will be at 8 p m
The New Pickle Fanuly Carcus I Jan 7 at 506 31st St . Newport
.Will perform two shows at Orange Beach, 675-0233 I
RIVERBOAT CAFE • Now Open !
Breakfast Fron1 7 AM Daily
Lunch fron1 I 1 :30 -Bnmc h on unday
ABOARD THE NEWPORT HARBOR
NAUTICAL MUSEUM
(l·orm erty Tiu• Rculx·n E. Le.'(.')
: 1s 1 E. Coast Hwy (Back Bay Bridge at P.C.H.)
Newport B each CA 92663 673-3425
~,... ,· ·~·-.......... THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1995 At
~·--,,,
•MNDMWG
D =•••••• ........... ............ .............
..... ....., llltid
....., lrOID 7 to u
.. • 'Ille Coll.it
M8M Senior Center,
HS W. 19th Street.
Tickets an SS and
$4 for SAGE mem·
ben. C&ll 145-2356
for mo~ lnJorma·
lion.
SINGLES
SERENOIPfTY
The Serendlp1ty senes for sm-
gles resumes its weekly sessions
Wednesday at 7·30 p.m. at St.
Andrew's Presbytenan Church,
600 St Andrews ROdd in Newport
Beach ·Dealing with Personahty
Dillerences ma Reldtionship" will
be the topic. All singles are wel-
come. A $3 donation is requested
For more information, call 574· I
2214.
DANCE
For more in1onnanon, call .C32·
5880.
TORONTO DANCE THEATRE
Christopher House, one of
Canada's most innovative dance
choreographers. bnngs hi 1.C·
member modem dance ensemble
to Orange Coast College on Jan .
2d at 8 p.m Advance tickets are
$21 For more information, call
432-5880.
AUDmONS
Audltions will be conducted
begiruung at noon on Friday, Jan
26, for Orange Coast College's
performing; danc,e ensemble,
Danc'n Etc. The company, wl'uch
performs the latest contemporary
styles includmg .hip-hop. Jazz,
ballet and modem, is looking for
singers, dancers and actors. The
ensemble is geared for intermedi-
ate to advanced·l~vel performers.
For more mformallon, call 432-
5506.
SPECIAL
BODY FAT ANALYSIS
Free body fat analysis will be
proVlded at Perfect Fitness from
10 am to 7 pm Fnday; 10 a.m to
5 p .m Saturddy, and 10 am. to I
p.m. Sunday at 495 E. 17th St ..
Suite 201, in Costa Mesa. For
more mformallon, call 631-9965
DOU AUCTION
Thenaull's will return to New-
port Beach tlus year for its 25th
anruversary celebration and five
new doll auetJons The festivities
began Jan 5 with a cocktai.1 recep-
tion dnd the ftrst auction of
anuque bisque dolls thdt are 12"
and under Jan. 6 auctions will
feature a hlstonc and classic
selection of anllque dolls and
Sunday's auctions mclude •The
Legendary Dolls of Madame
Alexander,• which contains 300
Alexander dolls, • Slltches ln
JAZZ WORKSHOPS Tune,• over 400 dnllque doll
Orange Coast College's Dance dresses and acccssones and ·Dis-
Departrnent will host a pair of covery Day." which fedtures a
three-day workshops tn Ja.nual) number of connolSseur dolls per-
The workshops will meet Tuesday feet for the begmrung collector
through Thursday from 11 a m to I The auctions tdke place dt Sutton
. 2 p.m . Jan. 9-11 and Jan. lb-18 .Plt:1ce Hotel m NeWport Beach.
Participanls should have interme-Call (800) 638-0422 for catctogue
diate-level dance skills in ballet or or auction mtormatlon
lecture and $25 tor the 8o\.U1>aki
Gambit lecture (two of Dr. Djeras-
5i's novels will be diStributed fre
of charge). The entire sen can
be purchased for $35 Members of
Launch Pad can attend the lec-
tures for $3 per lecture and $20 for
the Bourbalu Gambit lecture,
entire senes, $25. Launch Pad 1
located at 3333 Bear Street m
Crystal Court at South Coast
Plaza. Call 546-2061
ORANGE COUNTY FAJR .
The Orange County Falt·
grounds host a Gun Show Jan 6·
7, from 9 a.m. to 5 pm. on Satur·
day and 9 am. to 4 pm on Sun-
day m bwldJngs 10, 14 and lb
Adrrushlon 1s $6 50 for adults, $6
for seruors and children under 1 l
are free. For more mfonnallon,
•Call(801)544·9125
On Sunday, Jan 14, the fCUJ·
grounds will hold the Shoreline
Dog Show sponsored by Uw
Shoreline Dog Fanciers The
event takes place from 8 a m to h
pm m bwldmgs 10, 14, 16 dlld
I
tent 11. Adrrussion is $5 for adults
$4 for seniors and children and
cluldren under 6 are free ror
more mformauon, call 532-55Sq
A Motorcyde Swdpmeet \"111
I take place from 5 to 10 p m on
Jan 19 m bwlding 10. Adnuss1on
is $6 for adults and chtldren undl'r
12 are free For more mJonnatJon,
call 364-0515
I
Every Thursday there is d
Fclrmers' Market in the main
parlung lot from 8·30 am to t
p m The Orange County Market
Place lS every Saturday ctnd Sun·
I ddy from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. m llw
mam pdtking lot Fot more mfor·
mation. call 723-6616.
'STARS OF MAGIC'
Producer and dWdrd-wmrunq
mdg1cian Dale Sdlwdk returns to
Orange Codst College on Jan 1 J
with two showmgs of an all ne''"
full stage productlon ol the "Stdr~
of Md91c " Showtimes are 4 and 8
p m m OCC"s Robert B l\toow
Theatre Advanced tickets dfe
$15 for adults and $8 for chtldrt•n
For more mformdllon. call 432·
5880
TAGE 1azz. The fee lS $25 m advance for SOENCE LECTURE SERIES
each workshop or $30 at the door "Geneticdlly Mochfied Plants. I 'KISS OF THE SPIDER WOMAN'
ror more mformatJon, call 432-I The Future IS Now" lS Tuesday, A pnson m a repressive Latin
5506. Jan 9 Other lecture topics and Amenca.n country is the backdrop
LATIN DANCE WORKSHOP dates The Bourbaki Gambit -I for tlus tal<> of flamboyant wm-
Orange Coast College will host The People Who Brought You dow-dresser and h1~ ceUmate, a
an eight-week soaal LatJn Dance I Jurassic Park, on Thursday, macho revolut1onal), who hold
Workshop on Thursdays begm-March 7; and Stratospheric the brutahty of their late dt bay h)
rung Jan 18 from 7.30 to 9 pm Ozone Depleuon by Chloroflouro-the sheer force of unagmahon
Partners are welcome but not carbons, Wednesday, May 1 The Runs through Jan. 7 at the Per-
necessary. Registration fee is $45 lectures cost $5 per person per fomung Arts Center <:;howtunes:
8 p.m/IU~ay-turday, Dec. 26 ·
·Dec. '31, Jan. 2-Jan. 6; 7:30 pm
Dec:. 31r a.nd 2 p.m, Dec. 30 and
31, JM. 6-7. TI<'kets: $19-.C9 50
Infonn non 556·ARTS."
'lliE HASTY HEART'
South Orange County Com-
murucy Theater's Readers Th@dtie'
presents a dramatic reading of ..
•The Hasty He rt• on Thursd y1 Jan. 18 m the Pncnds Meeting, ..
Room of the Newport Beach Cen-.
traJ Library. The Central Ubrary i
located at 1000 Avocado Ave. For .
more mformabon, call 717-380!.
AUOmONS
Auditions for Orange Coast
College's production of Scott
McPherson's comf'd.y, "MafVlll s
Room.· will be Jan 24 and 25 m
OCC's Drama Lab Theatre from
6-9 p m For audJbon mfonnauon.
cd.ll 432-5640
ART
TIMBUKTU FOUC AND
TRIBAL ART
Jodqwn Villdsenor, The VU'-
gins of Mexico papier-mdche
hgwe ... through'Dec 31 $5 dona-
t1011 1bh1 c:;upenor Ave m Costa
Mesa, 650-7473
OCC ART GALLERY
· ThE> sptraJ -dn orclenng pnnd·
pie lound throughout nature sci-
ence drt ctnd mysbcism -is the
theme •Tue Sptral Exhib1bon, • a
mulll·mP<ild exhib1hon featured
dt the annual fault) art exhibition
m the Orange Coast College Art
Gallery The exh1b1t runs through
Feb 1 .
LAGUNA ART MUSEUM/SOUTH
COAST PLAZA
"Seuss 1s Loose'" Free exhibit
mdudt•s ongmal illustrauons and
layouts from the Dr Seuss books
Tht-C'dl Ill the Hdl Comes
Back "I low the Gnnch Stole
Chn,tmas' • "Horton HecU a
\\no' and "Hdppy Blrthyday to
You'· dS w~l1 dS cmganal dlljffid-
llon eels from Spu,s T\ specials
Ends l\1d) 5 Ldqunrt .\rt Muse-
um's Sdtellite Gallerv at South
C0c1St Plaza is at tht> C arou el
C'ow1 <>ntrdnce, Adnuss1on I'> fr~ .
lfou.r. 10 am .Q pm Monday-
Fnduy; I 0 d m -7 p m Saturday;
11 a m ·b.30 p m 5unda) Call·
b62-33bb
NEWPORT BEACH CITY HAU
\\ork by local drtlSts 1uned b7
qallt>ry o'" ner dnd art ronsultant
Susrtn Thomas End Jan 2 New-
port Beach City Hall Gallery, 3300
Newport Blvd from 8 a m to 5
pm l\tonda~ through Fnday The
exhibit 1s tree and open to the
public Call 644-3150 •
@•@
~ ,t', AMAR~A!!!
~,<.. 9 .... ~ ~ f •Authentic Sushi Bar
~ LU1CM ., 11~2::11 • Elegant Dining Room ~ ._. IWtll 5:11-111:9.ll. • Lunch Buffet ~ 2675 IMnt Avenue. Costa Miil><! • Complete Bar re; (Ir.IOU !tom Nf'#'llOtl Goll C:OU1se
Sushi To Go
645-5518
645-5519 ~
; :; ; . ADVERTISEMENT .: . -
AMERICAN
JOHNNY ROCKETS, located 1n Triangle Squore ot the
end ol the 55 frwy in Cosio Mesa, Ente<to1nmenl level,
nex1 to Edwards Conemo
63 1 2967 Menu includes Gteot hombvrgeo. Chicken,
Tuna & BlT Sondwiches, Mohs & Shakes, fries Chilo
Fries . plus much moretl Prtees Range from $2 2.S-$4 .75
Houts. 1 H>Oa m -10 OOp m. Sun-Thu" 11 OOo m -12
midnight Fri & Sot lndoof & ouldoof d1n1ng crvc11loble,
wheel cholf excess we accept Visa M/C, /I.MEX, Dtnecs
Club & D1ac0Ylf
STUDIO CAFl, loccrled at 100 Mo1n St Balboa
(at foot of pierl The Studio Cor. Is the happening ploce
for food, fvn & entertoonmenl Menu includes ribs , ch1den,
fresh ~sh. pcuto, appetizers & scrlods, also wv1ng brunch _
on Sot & Sun 10 lo 3 00 wtuch 1ndudes Belgium waffles.
omeletl.s, pancakes and much more Prices range from
$2 95$13.95. Open 7 days a WMk Morcfn 11 30.1 30
om, Sot.Sun 1().1 30am Alao locoted ot JOO PC.H ..
• HunlinglOn Beoch IN, 81tU, F8, ENT, V, foll:., Al., DC
: 536-SnS
• ZU91U USTAUIANT, loeoted al 1712 Plocentio,
: Costa Meao. Menu Includes ribs, chicken, Jteolt & lob~. ! prime rib, p1ua, oysllf bar Pncei range from $3 95 ond
• up Op.rt doily from It· 30om IO 1 Opm. Cock1C11la 'Ill
1 lprn.10, FB, WC, No cred11 cards. (71.t) 6A5-8091 .. • • CAFE
: IUTH'I CAii, lOCCllild ot 320 BriilOl IG ot Redhill (by
• Arco Mini Moot In CO$IO Me!O Me1w includes good
: counh'y cook1n' bieokfot.1 with the beSt omelell.s,
• pancakes, great Me1ocan breakfast d1stt.i and kinch with
OI' .t11lry vegetobles lef1yoki bowl, garlic chicken, assorted
• t0lods, h.ohhy ""*er lw1gtt1, hombufgtn, served w/
• poltJIO aolod 0t Ir..-Try Rllltt's home cook1n1 today GttOI ! rood, IJ'tal pncMI Pnce1 r0f'lg9 from $7 99 lo $.S 9.S
• Open 7 days 0 ~ 7om lo 2pm. 10, 00, we (71")
: 641.1.321
FRENCH
-~T"---.T1 •II• • t
ITALIAN
good \1111ne, beet, coppwdtlo & dewt\ ·~·, o family
ow~ & nm res'®ronl . Prices range from $4.9.5 to
S 1 J.95 Open 7 doyi o WMl Serv1ne Sot & Sun
Brvnch from 8'30 lo 1 00 SUndoy lhtv lliuudoy 11 om
to l()pm Friday & Sot-l la1nollpin IN, OUT, we,
8RU, W8, V, M. AE. DC (71 Al 123-062. CoD for
d1r.c.hon1 Coi.t1119 Speciolt,'1
IT.~LIAN
WI I. MllO l.oeot.d ot 111 21 ST floe•
Newpoft Beoch, N.or the pi•. Sptie1al111ng 1n forro
postos, piuo, h~ ro"1olt1• MOfood, chicken,
\itlal, ond buf late night coppucc1no, c*wts, M10Cks
Open 7 days wM ·lunch. diM« 11°12·30 .... .,, day>
o ......... (71"1 n3..S711 V, wt:., DC, co ng
01tn1loble
MITA CONNlcnoN, "Fmh Po$1a Mode Oooty• A
Bonqv,t rootn lor ~ people • 1.S k nd of frtth poilO
ond poUo dl1hti (!c> got • HoNmode l!olion IDVSOQe •
'Ital Partnlgiono ond Bot..a.au.t d'uha • f1nt fr.nth
8o ery Gocch • Walth OUf ~.to ~ c:hef of ~
Opei:i 7 dcrfl o ...a 1Yom 6 om to 1 o pm (7 l 'I 646-
3414
11\PANf<,f
JAPANESE
CAWOINIA 11AOt IOCX 'N SUSHI !!Wiii
includes JopooeM ~ cv1Mne ood fUD '\ush1 bcw A
ploce lor ~food ond gt.ot fun 33S5 VIA
LIOO,Newport a.odl Pritea vory $2 15 lo
$10 95 Open nlghtJy 5:0Chl dosi~ ID~ MC
AJti1.X DINERS ClU8 (7t•l 675-0S7.5 •
AMACHt ~ ot ~675 Irvine Ave OCtOU frOln
Ntwport Golf CourM ~ bot lunch Mf
11 ·30 "2 00 DinMf 1 doyd:()()pn • l 0 OOpm
~-Wf10go 6"~518 ~llllilaro9dltcardt~
MfXl(l\N -n ,, .... ~,. . -.....
d nner lot OV9! 20 rtofs IN F8 V\ C V M'::. Af
8 D o.t'l.70~0
WAHOO'S FISH TACO Will'\ 4 locottO!ls 1133
P. H ogu~ Seorh (7 4 .tQl .()()33 1862 Piocent>o
Co~ Mesc (71.t 63 I J.t 33 and 3000 Sr1i'OI C~
Meio (71.t 435-0130 120 Mo n H.ir !ing!On 8-odl;
(71.t) 530.2050 Menu 1ncfud., fish io.:cn burrtc» :
block beoM & net soled> 10ndwoeh•' P«es range
from $ 1 65 to $7 50 0pe<i f.'\on -Sot I I om 10 1 .
Sun 1lom10 9pm TKO WC
4 • THURSDAY, DICIMIQ 21. 1995 I
rime-saving turkey salads
veryone wants to 1pend
more and more ~e out-
llde-. Still, nutritious and
9]>1>etizing meels must be seJVed. ~.to delldoua, convenient
y-cooked dell turkey meat, we ~ have it both ways: enjoy out-
~r activities as long as you'd tilke and still have a ta.sty, nutri-
ous meal on the table in a mat-
t r of minutes.
By featuring turkey in salads,
you are presenting a delectable
1114?at that is naturally low in fat,
• cholesterol and calories. All its
goodness is ready to be used in
aQ.Y number of tempting ways.
Because of turkey's adaptabili-
ty, it can be served often and in
many different flavor moods.
Turkey Thai Salad and Curried
Turkey and Rice Salad borrow
seasonings from Asia to bring a
subtle, exotic note to the table.
11• Cup each coarsely chop~
umalted dry-roasted ~uts and
shredded coconut, toasted
6 Leavet leaf lettuce •
In 1-112 quart saucepan, over
high beat, combine water, onion,
curry powder, garlic, ginger and
salt1 bring to boll. Remove from
beat and stir in rice; cover and set
a.side to cool.
In large bowl, combine turkey,
apple, celery, pepper, onion and
.
raisins with rice mixture. Toss
with Hooey-Mustacd Vinaigrette,
cover and rebigerate 30 to 40
minutes or until well di.Wed. To
serve, spoon on each lettuce leaf
and top with ~anuts and
coconut.
HONEY~USTARD VINAJGRETT'E
2 'niblespoons each white wine
vinegar and olive oil
1 Tablespoon each honey and
~~
•lff:JCEllial
Dijon-style mu.ta.rd
1 Teaspoon minced garlic
112 Teaspoon each salt and pep-
per
In sinal1 bowl combine vinegar,
olive oil, honey, m\J.stard, garlic,
salt and pepper.
Also great for the summer is
turkey and vegetables. Gardens
• SiE TURKEY PAGE 11
In the Curried Turkey and Rice
Salad, a few chopped vegetables
and a zesty dressing are stirred
together to complement the star
of the dish -roasted or smoked
turkey. This moist white turkey
meat needs only to be cut into
cubes or strips. The rtce is ready
m just mmutes and carries an
exhilarating combination of sea-
sonings that permeates the entire
salad.
*We Doullle ManufClcturen' COupons ••• We Accept All Other Supenn~rkets Coupons ~
In adwtion to exceptional fla-
vor, these salads also have great
eye appeal In the Tuxkey Thai
Salad, a bed of nuxed greens acts
as a frame for the crisp vegeta-
bles and moist turkey that crown
it The Curried Turkey and Rice
Salad is a medley of colors, high-
lighted by the green of the apple
and onion and the red of the bell
pepper Pale golden turkey and
raisins punctuate the salad,
which is finished to perfection
WJth a spnnkling of peanuts and
coconut.
Since each of these salads
incorporates salad greens, keep
these few pointers in mind when
buying and preparing any variety
of lettuces ot sprouts:
• When buying greens, avoid
leaves that are yellow, spotted,
oversized or limp; all are indica-
tions that they are past their
prune
• Do not overlook crunchy
spmach leaves as another kind of
salad green. Their firmer texture
insures that the leaves will stay
fresh in the dressing.
• Sprouts should be crisp and
free of brown spots that signal
decay. Before using sprouts, wash
them m a strainer under cold run-
ning water
• Greens lose flavor quickly;
store them m the refrigerator for
no longer than two days. To allow
air circulation, wrap them in per-
forated plastic bags.
• Green leaves need thorough
cleansmg to remove grit. Sepa-
rate the leaves, drop them into a
bowl of cold water and plunge
them down several times. Lift the
leaves out of the water to a sec-
ond bowl of water and repeat the
process (Note. By lifting the
leaves out of the water, any dirt or
gnt remains behind in the bottom
of the bowl)
• Dty the leaves thoroughly,
usmg either a spmner or plagtig
them between two kitchen~ or
paper towels and rolling them up
gently With ready-to-eat roasted
and smoked turkey at the super-
market, hearty. rewarding salads
are but minutes away There is no
need to fuss. JUSt enjoy.
TURKEY THAI SALAD
(Serves 4)
1/4 Cup rice wine vinegar
2 Tablespoons canola oU
1 Tablespoon chopped fresh
olantro
1 Teaspoon each sugar, lime juice
and soy sauce
1/8 Teaspoon hot pepper sauce
4 Cups mix~ greens
1 Cup bean sprouts
3/4 Pound smoked turkey, cut
into 114-X 2-inch strips
l Cup cucumber, scored and
Uunly sliced
114 ,Cup chopped peanuts
In small bowl combine vine-
gar, oil, cilantro, sugar, lime juice,
soy sauce and hot sauce.
To erve, place mixed greens
on four plat and top with 11.C
cup bean sprouts. Anange
cucumber slices over sprouts and
top wttb turkey and chopped
peanuts. Driz%1e dressing evenly
over each salad before se.rvtng,
CURRIED TURKEY It RICE SALAD
( rv 6)
1 Cup water
2 Tabl poona dried onion
2 Teaspoons curry powct.r
l Teupoon in1nc4td garlic
1/2 Tl upooo ch ground gtnglr'
and Mlt
1 Cup tnltarit cooking Hoe
31• Pound nO-N.Jt turkey, cut In
1/4·lilcb '1rips t Mediwn Oranny Smith apPle,
cut in l/2•Jnch cubes
1 Cup eaeb chQJ>ped ~ and
red bell~
J/2 Cyp 1.ech tblAly l1iold gNID
Onl06 and wlliM raliliai
l/3 Cup ....,..MulUftt vtnai-,,.._ , .. reap. blllow)
~
LB.
BUDGn GOURMn
ENTRIES
·i'id~'· 2:f3
KOKUHO
ROSE RICE
20-l.S.
SAG ••• -------
JOY
DISH DEnRGINT
14.7-0Z. ULTRA
LIQUID
REG , CHERRY
ORLEMONUME
99c
TRI TIP ROAST
BEEF LOIN, UNTRIMMED (TRIMMED 2.69 LB.) UMIT 2
·~~..._ ......
SUPERSIZE LAYS
POTATO CHIPS
OR TOSlTTOS"' 20-0Z. 1 " REGUl.AR VAKIETIES
~~t!lls&.
LB.
12-PACK COKE
DR PEPPER OR SPRnl, 12·0Z. CANS +CRY
FRESH EXPRESS
SAIAD
~ PAd~Gf 99c .79... EA.
"Qj.GA''ON 0 GE JUICE
~c..b 2:f3
u. ....... ..
'HD• ..... OfANAl•t ............
49
~
111.AUllFUL
BLOOMING MUM
6·1NCHPOTIN 399 MATCHING POT COVER
~ ~
COOKID
DUJIGINUS
HUGHU
PAPIR TOWELS
-~~-2:$1
KILLOGO'S
FROSDD FLAKIS
15-0Z. OR U .8-0Z. 199 RICE KRISPIE TREATS CEREAL • LIMIT 4
t URKEY
CONTINUED FROM 10 .,
iltd produce stands are explod·
lng with goodness. Capitahze
ob nature's bounty and u~e veg.
dtables with carefree enthusiasm
m the kitchen. .
Tender, appetizing turkey
cutlets provide the perfect vehi-
<!fe for turning a few fresh herbs
and vegetables into hearty din-
ner fare. The three recipes pre-
sented here also prove that lean
. ' turkey and healthy vegetables
rcan come to the table \n a variety
.. , of guises.
, T. MATO AND BASIL
RKEY BUNDLES
erves 4)
4 Cup Parmesan cheese
4 Teaspoon each Italian sea-
ning, salt, pepper
Pound turkey cutlets
1r 2 Cup julienne-cut fresh basil
~Roma tomatoes, seeded and
jUuenne-cut
ol,ive oil spray
1/4 Cup seasoned bread crumbs
Mixed greens
Vinaigrette dressing (optional)
In small bowl combine
cheese, Italian seasorung. salt
and pepper. Sprinkle mixture
evenly over one side of cuUets
and top with basil. Divide toma-
t9es equally over cuUets. Roll
ritlets up, Jell y-roll style, to
ncase tomato and basil mixture.
l>ray each bundle with olive oil
hhd coat with bread crumbs. ~Pl~ce bundles, seam sid e
own, on (14-X 9-X 1-mch) bak-
g sheet sprayed Wlth olive otl.
Bake at 375F 20 to 25 minutes or
~til meat thermometer registers
0 to 165P and meat is no
tnger pink in center.
'· If desired. serve bundle on
bed of mixed greens tossed with
store-bought vinaigrette dress-
ing.
CtiUNKY TURKEY &
VEGGIE PASTA
(Serves 4)
1 Pound turkey cutlets, cut mto
2-X 3/4-tnch strips
1 /4 Teaspoon each salt and pep-
per
I Tablespoon olive oil, cliv1ded
I ,Cup thinly sliced onions
1 Cup bell pepper, cut tn small
strips
1 Teaspoon rrunced garhc
1 Cup each yellow squash and
zuccb.iru, cut in 112-inch chunks
1/4 Pound mushrooms, quar-
tered
1 J¥ A26 ounces) spaghetti sauce
1 Bay leaf
1,Teaspoon Italian seasoning
Cups ziti or other tubular pas-
• cooked according to package
·ons
12 Cup Parmesan cheese,
tional
Sprinkle cutlets evenly with
salt and pepper; set aside. In
large, non-slick skillet, over
medium-h.lgh heat, saute turkey
pieces in 2 teaspoons oil. Reduce
heat, cover and cook 2 to 3 min-
utes or until turkey is no longer
pmk; remove from pari.
In remami.ng oil ~aute onions,
pepper and garlic 3 to 4 minutes
or until vegetables are soft. Add
squash, zucchini and mush-
rooms. Cook 1 to 3 minutes or
until vegetables are heated
throughout. Stir in spaghetti
sauce, bay lea! and Italian sea-
'ioning; increase hfiat to bring
rµix.ture to boil. Reduce heat,
dQver and simmer 20 to 25 min-
utes or until heated throughout;
remove bay lea! and discard
Add turkey to vegetable mix-
ture. To serve spoon turkey mix-
ture over pasta and sprinkle with
Parmesan cheese if desired.
TURKEY SLICES WrTH
ARTICHOKE HEARTS
r T:!:Joon each salt and pep-
dUnd turkey cuUets
(6 ounces) marinate d arti-
es, dra,ined; set aslde and
r ervmg marinade
1 Cup thinly sliced onion
l Teaspoon minced garlic
1/2 Pound sliced mushrooms
1 Large tomato, chopped
1 Teaspoon drled basil
1/2 Teaspoon dried oregano
1 /2 Cup dry berry
4 Serving couscous, cooked
o.ecording to package directions
f Spriilkle salt and pepp rover
ach Side of cuUets1 set 0111de.ln
large, non-stick skillet, over
m diwn-hJgh h at, aute cuUetl
!l tablet~ of reserved mart-
de 3 to ' minutet, or until .V ls no longer pink tn cen-
ter. 'Remov from pan. cover and
keep warm.
Reduce heet to medium and
aaute oniont aDd garlic 1 to 2
mtnute1 ln Nrnalntng marinade
o until vegetablll .,.. ttanllu·
nt. Pold In mUlbroom1, ant·
oUI, toiuto. bull and
ano. Add 1heny, idduce
to lnedtum·lo'w and w11ow •;» ~utet or until mlxtUre
~ tbrougbo\lt. ~ Mmt,
-Jjaltloli of Oftlt-... "Wllli ....
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1995 Afl
Apple muffins are a family treat
"The first bushel of apples
from our neighbor' orchard sends
me to the kitchen, "says Ken·
Haedrich, baker, break:f ast lover
and tl!e author of "Country
Breakiasts" (Bantam), "and I start
thinking about the coffeE> cakes
and other breakfast breads I'll
bake.·
Muffins happen to be one of
Haedrich's favorite breakfast
breads, so he has several different
apple muffins in his repertoire.
"Muffins are easy and fast .
maJang them an ideal c:ho1ce for
the less experienced baker or
someone who doesn't like to
spend as much time tn the kitchen
as I do," he said. •And you can
always bake muffins on the
weekend, pop them tn the freezer
and reheat them for d fast week-
day breakfast."
Apple Walnut Crumb Muffuls
are among Haednch's favorites.
He says wheat genn gives these
.• ~ ~~:
.
moist muffins a great grainy tex-
ture without making them heavy.
Bursting with bits of juicy apple,
they're topped with a generous
layer of the crumb topping, since
that's the part ·his children love
best
Haedrlch always k eeps a bag
of the crumb topping m his freez-
er (it doubles easily and freezes
beautifully).
"ThlS is the crumb topping to
use on muffins, for throwing
together a quid( fruit crisp, or to
use in place of streusel on coffee
cakes," he says. •And there's
room he re for a few personal
touches. I often use whole wheat
flour instead oJ unbleached, and I
like to substitute up to 1/2 cup of
wheat germ for an equal amount
of the flour. "
With the muffins, Haedrich
adds fruit, freshly brewed coffee
for the grown-ups and cider or lus
special hot cocoa for Ben. Tess. A.IJ
and Sam, hiJ four children.
APPLE WALNUT CRUMB MUFANS
1/2 c;up toasted wheat germ plus
a little for dusting the muKan cups
2 c;ups unbleached flour
1 tablespoon baking powde r '
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
112 teaspoon salt
1 large egg
112 cup lightly packed dark
brown sugar
1-1/4 cups milk
1/4 cup unsalted butter. melted.
or flavorless vegetable oil
1 large apple, peeled, cored and
grated
1 cup chopped walnuts
1-1/2 cups Oat and Brown Sugar
Crumb Topping
Butter 12 muffin cups and
sprinkle a little wheat germ into
each one. Tap the muffin pan on
all sides to spread the wheat germ
around. Preheat the oven to 400 F.
In large bowl. combtne the
flour. wheat gcnn, hoking pow-
der, cinnamon 4Jld salt. Whlsk the
egg and brown sugar irl a sepa-
rate bowl. Wbi.5.k 1n the milk.
Make a well in the dry ingredi·
ents, add the liquid -includmg
the melted butter • and stir to
blend. When a rew streaks of dry
a.re still visible, fold in the grated
apple and walnuts Divide the
batter among the muffin cups.
Scattei; a good amount of crumb
toppmg over e~cl\ muffln and
bake for 22 minutes. Cool the
muffins in the P'11 on a rack for 3
nunutes, then pop them out and
serve hot. Makes 12 muffins.
2/3 cup packed hght brown sugu
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
MJ.x the flour, oats, brown sug-
ar, cinnamon and salt in a largl!
bowl Add the· butter and rub 1t
into the dry mgredients until you
have uniform, dampish crumbs. U
it seems overly clumpy, rub in a
OAT AND BROWN SUGAR tablespoon or two more floun
CRUMB TOPPING Store whatever you aren't using
1 cup unbleached or whole wheat
1
nght away in a sealed plastic bag
flour · in the freezer. Makes about 2-1/2
Pinch of salt • cups.
3/4 cup rolled oats Note: 1/2 cup wheat germ may
112 cup (1 stick) cold unsalted be substituted for 112 cup of the
butter, cut into 1/4-mch pieces flour "
Vons & Pavilions Your Neighborhood Food & Wine Headquarters . ,, • :a., • .. ' V I NS. Take Six & Save .
Un· and 111atcb a1~r ~h boll/es fro111 our cellar
and u·e'/I gltV! )'Oii a co111-e111e111 Mr fk1ck w111e carto11
lo car~r them tllld a 10· odlscm111t too' ·
A WORLD Of' DIFFERENCE
PAVILIONS
Champagne
·~ Freixcnet Brnt (\on~ctub Pmt·.,. -.9> 5.-f9
Korbel Brut -Extra Dry !\ousfJ11b Pm·<' Ci.<)<)> ...,_99
Gloria Ferrer Brut 1von,C111b Pnre 8.88> 9.88
Piper Sonoma Brut (\on~C'Juh Pnn· -9tH 9 . .:+9 . Domaine Ste. Michele Brut !\on..Cluh Pnn· -'!.<><>> 5.99
Mumm 's Cordon Rouge 18.99
Laurent Penier Brul1P (V-0.nsCl11h J•nttC> P .l'il:i.)6P.u·i..1u 10>19.88
Veuvc Clicquot Gold ' 38.99
Vcuve Clicquot La Grand~ Dame 69.99
Perri er jouct Grand tJrut 18.88
m>cdercr Estat~.Bnll ('<)Q W10;¢:,-01~alnr) I 2. 99 .. :·:·:· . ; .
Chardonnay . " lliiJ•'
lfaymon<l Amber.ijUI Chardonnay 6.49
Chateatf deJ3~lJH,{von~11f>:l>ricc 6 <><>) 7.if9
Corbet Capyou J · l Li~r (VonsOub r nc(' ~ 91) b Pack.~ bOJ 'i."+9
Meridian (Stock trpfotd~llohdars> 6.99
Cypress (\onsCJub Price 'f •9> 't99
Chalonc Estate 19.49
Tr cf ethcn fachol 6. <i9
Firestone ... 99
Grgich llilb 18.88
Kenwood Sonoma 8. 99
Forest Glen 6. 99
Rodney Strong Sonoma 1'011,<:l11h Prin· 'i 1>W <>Pack 1 'fOJ 6. 99
Sonoma Creek Estate < \on,l.luh 1•11(l· 1> 1><> / <>Pack<> OO> I 0.99
Clos Du Bois 7.99
Chateau St. j ean -Sonoma C\011'<l11h P11u· 1i .. <>>
Zaca Mesa
Estancia (\on ... Cl11h r nc<· '91>)
J. Lohr (\on'>Cluh Pnn· C> <)')I b 1•ark h ~o 1
lless Selection
Fess Parker
Si mi (\onsc:luh Pnrr Ci l)l)/ Cl 1';1< k <1 ~Ol
Kund e
Forest Ville
l~abbit Rid~c
Sanford
Tref cthcn l\apa
l.indeman~
<aoria Ferr~r
I.a Crcma ncscrv<>
Chalonc Gavilian
William llill \apa
Far Niente
.,.99
'.99
6.99
7.99
888
8.99
7.99
9.88
2n.oo
7.99
I0.99
12.99
4.99
12.'19
7.99
9.99
7.49
23.99
Sauvignon Blanc/White -Imports K11.111
Groth Sauvignon Blanc
Kendall Jackson Sauvignon Diane
Santa MarRarita Pinot Grigio
Chatc:iu St. Jean Sauvignon Ulanc
Murphr (;oodc Fume
Honny Doon Big I louse White
Simi Sauvignon Blanc
J.ouic jadot Pou illy ~·uissc
Caynm Sauvtgnon Hlanc
Zcnato Pinol Griglo
Sanford SauVfgnon Hlanc •
fl~'s Parker Johanni~bcrg Riesling
Prl EB'ectlve thru January 3, 1996
6.99
6.99
13.99
• H) "1 .
6.99
5. <)<)
6.tt9
I .9<)
12.99
5.'
7.79
6.9<)
'•l'Jlk l'rin
4.95
"7.20
8.90
8.55
s.-.o
t, .1-0
17.90
.)5.10
6.:S.00
17.00
l J.7()
5.85
6.75
q.())
6.30
4.50
17.55
5.85
7.20
17 .00
8.10
6.30
6.:)0
9.90
7.20
7.20
'.lO
6.30
"7.20
8.00
8.10
7.20
8.90
:).15
7.20
9.90
11. 70
4 50
11.25
7.lO
9.00
6.75
21.60
6.30
6.30
12.60
4.50
6JO
5.<tO
5.8-
13."'0
11 . 0
7.02
6.30
Cabernet -Red
Rabbit Ridge \Jlurc
Tr cf ct hen Eschol
Bonny Doon Big I louse Red
Charle~ Krug C\011'C111b Pncc 6881 b Pack u .!Ol
Monda,; Coastal l\on)Ouh Pnn·. -'fl) / b PJck . 6 -, i
J. Lohr l \ 011sCl11h Pncr (I C)<))
Grgich 1 lills
Fore"! \'ille
Ra\Cll'-1\\ ood Zinfa.ndel
Guenoc -\orth Coa...,t
~ -t) ') . .,
6.99
6.-.9
'.88
7.99
'"'.99
18.99 2r .oo
<> 99
I· l'J ·i. l'ro•"
5.0 ...
6JO
5.85 -.w
-.20
-.10
1 .... 10
3 J 5
6..30
-.20
Rodn ey Strong Sonoma tV<Jn,OubPncc. 1 ryq;{l Pack ·" 40} b..30
... 20 Clo.., du Bob
Merlot/Pinot -Imports
Columbia Cre~l \1rrlol
Llndcmans Mcrlot
Forest Glen Merlot
Ceretto Barolo Zonchern (\ort'>Club Pncr -t_\ QQi
Gabhiano Re!\crva Chianti
Ruffino Rcserva Ducal Chianti
GuigaJs' Cotes du Rhone
Duhocuf Estate Beaujolais \<1llagc
George Dubocuf Estate Merl ot
Chatcau Graysac Bordeaux Heel
Mouton Cadet lkd
Santa Rita 120 Mcrlot "Dan Bc~~r ~me of the \\'eek ..
Rabbit Ridge Mcrlol
Wild l lorse Merlot
Firestone Mcrlot
Steele Cameros Pi not 'oir < oo \lu1t pccworl
KrUll
8 -.9
-..99
7 <i9
15.99
9 99
11.99
-.99
:; <)<)
219.00
9.99
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218 00
l l 99
11. <)<)
999
1-. 99
... 20
8.00
13.50
-j 50
9.00
16.10
26 10
9.90
I0.35
28.80
(I l'.l .. l'rlC\'
... 65
'f.50
6 ., ... . .,
...... o
9.00
10.80
"".20
; .. o
-f.05
9.00 ;.-.o
~ 60
11 7()
l 0.80
9.00
I :t~O
p~cials ~
B. V. Rutherford cabemet
Chandon Brut or Blanc de Noir \ ... ~
Columbia Crest Chardonnai· ? ·~ JJ.
Cook' Brut or E\1ra~~w1• hi<t . • 1 •
Dom Perignon '"'-
Gloria Ferrer Brut Royil ~ 1
Jordan J Sparkl lnR -,1 IWflliiilli_,,
KtndaJljac~ n Qanloa.,
Maison Dtutz Int or 8laft(
Mott 1\itt Star
Munun C1vtt ~ or P"l!IJl~l'!ll.;..'
11tU11 <> r..o. t'M·
8.S9 7.7i
9,99 9.00
-..69 .23
3.69 .~3
69.99 63.00
12.88 J t.60
I I .00
8.69 .83
8.88 00
18.79 16.~U
9.88 1.90
6.00 68.to Ptrrler joltft Rowtr
..-metllill
'""Cl .........
~---. .. -_;,;_....:~~,,.,, .50
.00 14JO
..
..
'
l.5DA Select -large f.nd
per lb.
• Sne 11p to 1.30 per lb.
SEAFOOD VALUE
............,. __ ...
Dungenete Crab ,__,.,_,_.
Sword&h Steaks
Large
Tiger
Shrimp
31 to 40 eou.ot
per lb.
fld?D
Ruffles
Potato Chips
SdectN Vwtdlet
.-9
wttlleo•po•
Uialt 0... It•• -4 OD. CcHA~o Per c--r Coepon Elhrtl.,. 0.CC.IMr 2S thN .taauery s. , ...
ll/l.D
Eagle
Tortilla Chips
•• wltla eo•po• Uall One It-a.d On. Co\lpon Pu C--r
Cou f'.lr«tl"• Dttee.,.r d °'"' .lao I, ....
'° ~
N 0
'°
,... .. A'-'
0 'O
., .. N 0 -0
Top
Sirloin
Steak
USDASekd
per lb.
i.
DAIRY /DELI VALUE
tA q.i
?'~
•/2 Gal.
Ralphs
Orange Juice
1 • florid.aaJ.Ued.rora Cooceatralt aic:b dL{Cal. t2.St)
--Keebler Wheatables
or Munch 'Emt w...v ..... ....................
9
1 /2 Gal.-~pbs
Eggnog
O...,w~ca.
J09
.29
°' .. N 0 '°
---------t~
Korbel Extra Dry
Champagne
Ot' 8nrt or BIMIC De PWr
Tst ml ~dud« Natinl)
Dbcout Applle4At lep.ter
GROCERY VALUE
Rosarlta
Refried
Beans
6 PACI
•Coca Cola
•Sprite
•Diet Coke
•Dr Pepper
12 oz. caoa-Plua CRV.Plua Tu
SM fo
6Pack
Coca Cola
CW CllWT1 Cole
I Z-. -"'• UN.f'I• Tu 1~9
lawAO
6Pack
J.£,rlte . .,...
11 ... ~CllV.f'l•Tu
139
~~~fGr 179 ~DletC* •
Dr Ptpptr or 5pl1a 40 ~~nllM •,
llilll !Aopla II llill Jff Ad You Pay~y
ForOadM
Piii CIV.,._ Tu
'
"' "' N 0 -'°
...... :'!:'. Ullll 0.. .._ 0.. ~P• «:i. I -DnH•n •
GROCERY VALUE
46 oz.
Tropicana
Twisters
AO
6Pack
Diet Coke
-c.i.....'"' lleet Col• l:loa. ...,_UN,,,_ T•
139
6Pack DrPep~r
...... et
l t -....._UN,,,_Tu
139 ---c· .... ... 0..
• ,.
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• •
•
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THURSDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1995
cominuni!Y forutn -
.. ----• -.-, --7 -----~.-~-~-=.:=-----= ..,,-----~ -•. --=---
_ ... -1.M,..:..___~ -:! _,, -.... J_~~-_ .... _.._~9i~~ .L... .. __ Ji.... -----~-s--.
correspondt;!nce
MARC MARTIN I DAl.Y PILOT
High school a oss country races on the Upper Castaways property between rivals Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar are a
thing of the pa.st now that construction bas begun there.
Castaways future is a sad sight to see
Passing the Castaways on my way to
school at Newport Harbor High the
other day, I saw a sight that made me
infinitely sad -a blue heron, a magnificent
bird, winging in to land behind an ugly
new black fence.
Somewhere behind that fence, smaller
birds and diminutive ground sqw.rrels
question the intruder5 on their land with
chirping voices. In the past few days, I
have seen metal monsters invade that
space behind the da.rk wall conquerors
standing forebodingly against the sky and
now a.s I pass 1 wince and shiver and turn
away, feeling an overwbebll.ing sense of
powerlessness.
I read someone's message calling thls
progress. Progress schmogress.
Some called the atomic bomb progTess
too. ls it progress to see plants and ani-
mals destroyed, to destroy our heritage
and eventually ourseJves as we continue
to build, polluting our air and water and
destroying those 1'.hings vital to our sur-
vtval?
Natural open spaces are necessary not
only for a physical well-being but also for
the health of our souls. This land does not
belong solely to the human race and it's
bJne we remembered that
The people before us lived in harmony
Wlth the land and with respect for theu
brothers, and our culture called them sav-
ages as we slaughtered them. We must
remember how to share the earth with the
plants and animals and future generations.
I've spent my whole life in this area,
much of it within a mile of the Castaways.
When I was younger I sat in the pew on
Sundays at Newport Harbor Lutheran
Some called the atomic
bomb progress too. ls it
progress to se~ plants and
animals destroyed, to
destroy our heritage and
eventually ourselves as we
continue to bilild, polluting
our air and water and
aestr~g those things
vital to our survivcil?
Church at the end of 16th Street, kicking
my heels and staring out the window at
the open land, wondenng why, if God was
great because He created the earth, did
we shut ourselves away from it to worship
Him?
As 1·grew to understand that the large
sign on the land meant they (developers)
would eventually build houses there, I
wondered how they could do such a thing
and, more importantly, was such destruc-
tion imminent?
Years went by and nothing happened,
so I had hope and faith that nothing ever
would.
l wandered through the gTasses and
trees, walked along the blufftops and
scrambled up a.qd down the cliffs, won-
dered at the birds, insects, ground squir-
rels and even the occasional snake
I watched fireworks from there on the
Fourth of July. I rode my bilce by on the
way to school, watching the sun turning
the morning fog pink and orange or twin-
kling off windows near Fashion Island,
rode home through dusty beat as birds
scattered at my approach.
I collected insects and plants for my
edification and later for biology class.
Every year in mid-winter, after whatev-
er rain we had, I watched as the land
slowed turned gTeen again like a fairy tale
and then grew up higher than my head,
gTasses and mustards and others until I
could lose myself on the trails Then they
would cut it all down and nasty tumble-
weeds would gTOW and tumble over the
spring and summer parched earth.
Even recently, after my last hopes for
untouched beauty were dashed and the
decision to build was final, 1 had hope that
at least they would wait until after one last
green season to begin construction.
Instead, JUSt after the fust rams that
would bring a bit of green, a wall bas
been built to shut me out as the r,pe of
the land begins. It seems appropnate that
this walk is the color of death and mourn-
ing.
But this land and I have witnessed each
other's lives, and I t.hmk we all need to
witness its death as a rerrunder not to let
this happen every place, to keep some
nature around.
And I wish to seek solace in whatever
bit ol green might still appear this year as
they begUl building, for once it is begun
and done, there lS no going back.
MANDY HIMEL
Age 17, Newport Beach
Rubino is wrong man to blame for county's ills
W hat is the matter with
us, or to put it "more
finitely, what is the
matter with the Orange County
Diltrlct Attorney and the Grand
Jury?
The fact that Bob Citron was
indicted for ma.king what looks
to me like a legitimate error in
Judgment in carrying out his
duties is one thing.
Going after his lieutenant.
Matthew Raabe, on similar
Charges is still another. But the tnsanin-of indicting a man like
Ron Rubino has left me incredu·
lous, particularly when we oruy
chose to deliver a slap on the
wrist to our U1U1trlou1 county
superVtJon -and only tWo of
them at that.
At far u I"° tell lh1I witch
bunt riulket the Spu'tb lnq\illl·
tlon look like ditld .. p&ay, tbe
McCartbynaeoep..-.. Wbo'l-==---wbat IW _._I .... .,
a.r-'il
readers write
themselves at taxpayer
expense.
They're being served up siln-
ply because their exceptional
performance faltered briefly last
year and some superior being
chose to make an untimely liq·
uldaUon of the county's bond
portfolio.
Why don't we indict thos
penons or agencies, as well?
Hu enyone bothered to note
thet our funds would have
made a couple of blWon dollan
by now if we bad limply ltaYftd
the coune for anOther 45 dayaf
Of COUIM D0t. II It D0t com-
mon ~ tMt trying tO ....... Ii. daDg9roua
si-f Wbat IOkl UI out ..... wont ... , Why
lla'tbefor ,.....__
worked his heart out for the
county for many years, and
when he went home each
evening devoted much of bis off
time to local non-paying phllan·
thropical pursuits -all the while
being a loving father and hus-
band, a great neJghbor and
fnend.
We need mor Ron Rubino
in th.is community. It' that Sim·
pla.
U we are to crucify our ma.t
talented people wtMnever 1t
aultl our taste for blood while at the same time dodging the rM.l
lou•. or ahWdtng IGIM blgb·
er-level bureeucrat. Chen wbo'I
going to ltMr the boltt The
cabin boyl
Why aa,_. woukl even
COlllkler pubUe .....-... tOday II
~-. .. aubmou• .... d'lll&
...... IOhatlob He ....
.... II good-• ... =z::'i· ..... e: "
torl6-..C9 .. ..
Ron Rubino Ron Rubino is no
crook I
PETER C._PALLETl'E
Balboa
It is extremely diff1cult to
remain silent when on~of the
most honorable individuals I've
ever had the pleasure Of know-
ing is being accus d of aiding
and abetb.ng Bob Citron in the
mlsapp.roprtatloo of public
funds.
As a neighbor of Ron Rubino
for almost 10 y a.rs, I can aver
to his dedication to both family
and to bis Job.
Over the years, we have
talked about many hard counly
Lau., Ud I have alw•ys come
away tram thoM c:Mtl wltb die
comfOlt Of kDowtng ......... ii
.... wbo tnaly C8* ..... ...
ml~uddaep1aplt _____ ,.. ,,__ _ _.,-..two 11s a
~... . -·
best of the readers hotline
A c;ourt order .
• EOfTOltS NOTE: We asked our read-
ers if they thought the county SUJ>eM·
sors should vote for emergency funding
for the courts. Here ar9 some of the
responses:
Should they fund tbe legal'
system?
It'd be insanity not to. You're
on the road to anarchy. It would
be worse than Bosnia. I can't
belleve that the supervisors
could be so stupid again.
JOE HOLESTINE
Newport Beach
The county supervisors should
allocate enough money to the
courthouses to buy toilet paper,
Kleenex, paper cups and to fund
an emergency reform effort.
The bankruptcy may present
an opportunity for the county
supervisors and potentially the
state legislature to change fun-
damental, costly standard operat-
ing procedures in the court.
These changes should include
shorter trials, quicker jury selec-
tion, more alternate dispute reso-
lution, limitation on appeals and
summary dismissal of frivolous
law suits.
The voters did pass a •three-
stnkes law· but some county
Judges have defied, creatively
avoided or reinterpreted the law
to their own sentiments. As part
of reform we need tougher sen-
tencing laws to avoid recidivous
crimesandrecu.rrentcostlycourt
appearances.
We should view the fiscal cri-
sis as an opportunity to make
long overdue reforms which
would reduce court costs.
MICHAEL A. GLUECK
Newport Beach
My feeling is that I would far
rather see the county taxpayers
pay for bailing the courts out and
keeping the municipal and supe-
rior courts open, than I would
see them pick up the tab for pay-
mg the legal fee for tbe supervt-
sors and Bob CLtron, who got us
into such a great mess and didn't
do their j6b
At least the courts are trymg'
to do their job.
CAY HENDERSON
Newport Beach
Concerning the allocation for
the money for the courthouse,
I'm an attorney in Santa Ana. I
live 10 Costa Mesa.
All I do is traffic tickets. I'm a
traffic ticket attorney. I've written
two books on the subject and 1
practice mainly in Orange Coun-
ty. I'm real familier with the coWt
systesu.. .
In my estimabon the courts
have to become effioent. They're
not efficient They are not run
efficiently yet. They don't use the
resources that they have.
There is a vast amount of
resources that are untapped, as
in the pro-terns. who are attor-
neys that sit on the bench for
essentially free and hear cases
Their work etluc 1s lackmg.
U they don't work, they
shouldn't get J>dld and my opin-
ion is that the courts don't put m
a full days work dnd therefore
the people aren't gettmg theu
money out of what the court sys-
tem is
MARK SUIHEJU.AND
Costa Mesa
Democrats also have
problems with truth
Some of the quotabons and
comments by Jun Toledano,
chairman of the county Democ-
ratic Committee, which appeared
m an article on page 1 of the
Dec. 16-17 edition of the Dally
Pilot are very mteresting. consid·
ering the source
He infers that he and the
Democrats are Wy wlute, when
be refers to Republicans in the
county and says that "political
power seems to be everything
and truth is irrelevant •
Is be saymg that when the
Democrats were m control of the
Cahfcmia. legisl.ature that they were
always truthful and their political
power was of no consequence?
Does he believe everything
his president says these days is
true when be states one thing
today and contradicts b.unself
tomorrow, leaVing the public to
deade whlch, if either, is true?
Let hlm who lS wtthout fault
cast the first stone.
IRVIN C. CHAPMAN
Costa Mesa
What's the secret?
My Chnstma.s gTeebng of the
year award goes to Gerald
Mitchell of Balboa who wrote my
wife and I an insplrlilg seasonal
message and also wrote ·1am92
years of age and m good health •
Whatever you are doing Mr
Mitchell, keep it up But also let
the rest of us m on your little
secret.
Happy New Year
CLAJrE.NCE J. 11.JRNEll
Newport Beach
contad your representatives
PMSIOENT
Bill Ointon, (D), The White HOUS4!, 1600
Pennsylvania
Ave .. Washington. D c. 20500. (202)
•56-1111 (6 a m.
to 2 p.m. P.S. T •
VICE MESID£NT
Al Gore, (0), The Capitol Bldg .• Suite
212. Washington.
D.C. 20500
GOVaNOlt
Pete Wilson, (R), Sute (.apltol. Sacra·
mento, 95814,
(916)445-2841
U.S. SENATORS
Barbara Boxer. (D), 112 Hart SeNte
Bldg .. Suite 212.
Washington O.C.. 20510 (202) 22•3553
ot, 2250 E.
lml)eNI Hwy. Ste. 5'5, El Segundo,
90245, (310)
•1'4-5700
D~nne Feinstein. (0), 331 Hart Bldg ..
Washington D C..
20510 (202) 224-3841or11111 San~
Monk.a BMI .. St•.
915, Los Angeles. 90025, (310) 91•
7300.
HOUsa a. -JTAlMES Oiris Coic. 00. •7'h Dilt.. .tOOO
MacArthur lt¥d.. [mt
TOWer; Suite 4.)0, Ne\:4')0(1 lffC.h,,
92660. 756-2244 Ot
206 Cllnnof\ ltdg .. Washington. 0.C.
2051 s. (202)
225-5611. (molt of Ne\wport IMch)
o.nii w. ....... OQ, $1 *· 16162 ...,, ltwl,
~ 304, HulltlllgtOI 1 IMch. CA t2647
147-NlJot
1027 U11'9W0'1h Mdlrt-o, WasNogea..,
D.C. 2051§.
(202) US.2415. fColt.I ~ m1d W111t
NM.,.art a.d'1
COUNTY BOARD Of SUPERVISORS
Hall of Administr•t•on, 10 Civic Center
Plaza. Santa Ana.
92701
Jim Silva 2nd Dist Cost.a Mesa, 834·
3220
Marian Bergeson 5th Dist. {N~
Bead\, Santa Ana He1ghu)
B34-3550
COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION
200 Kalmus Oriw, Costa Mew. P.O Box
9050, 92628-9050. 966-4000
Elizabeth D. Parker. membef. Trustee
~a 5 (Costa Mesa. Newport &Ndl).
COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT
1370 Adams Ave .• Costa ~ 92626,
432-5012.
Chancellor: Wilham M. Vega E D.; Pres1·
tient Sherry Baum; Bo.rd Members
Paul G. 8ef'ger; ~ncy Pollard; Walter G.
Howald; Al'fNndo ft Ruiz; S~t
Trustee: Enc Wanf!<I
OTY GOVERNMfNT
Costa Me-sA· Oty H.IU, n Far Drive.
92626, 754-5223
Jo. Ericksoo. fNYOf, Peter Buffa. Sandy
Geols, Mary Hombudi. and <?at)' Mon-
ahan. c~I rMmben
~Bead'\ City H.11~ 3300 New-
port ~ 9266.), 644·3309
John Htdge. ~ klhn ca.. an ~ 1hor1* EdWlrds, Norrnl ~ °"" ~ iMlln watt GUlcil ••••• ,
l I
AM THUftSOAY, DKEM8ER 21. 1995
-- - -TI---;---.-'
-----,.,;l~_;~
·~DOWN UNDElr
WUd Wonden Will bring ani· iials from •0own Under: such It the wall~by and kookaburra. m the Launch Pad for a lively 45
mtndte show today at 11 a.m., 1
p.m. and 3 p .m. The cost is $5
~ penon. rrbe Launch Pad, a
don·proflt preview facWty of
~1covery Science Center, is ~ated on the third floor of
Cfy1tal Court at South Coast
Plaza. For more lnf ormation, call
546·2061.
J
'PETER AND THE WOLF'
Jim Gamble performs his
award wlnning·marlonette
ii\terpretation of the children's ~~ssic •peter and the Wolf'"
~ay at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 fl.'in. at the Launch Pad, 3rd floor
Crystal Court, South Coast
Ploza. Make and take activities
follow each performance. The
cost is $3 for members and $5 for
~Qn·members. Seating is limit-
\'~ For more information, call
S.6-2061.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERT
Jeff Johnson will provide clas-
sic rock musical entertainment
Jrom noon to 2:30 p.m. and again
rom 1 to 10 p.m. on the Town
are, 'Iliangle Square.
ODY-FAT ANALYSIS
Free body fat analysis will be
ovided today from 10 a.m. to 1
. ., Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5
.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m . to
.p.m. at 495 E. 17th St, Suite 201
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
' call 631-9965 or 645-4792.
SATIJRDAY
OCKJN' AT THE SQUARE
• Jeff Johnson will play classic
lkk from noon to 2:30 p.m. and
enny Richards will play folk/rock
m 7 to 10 p.m. today on the
own Square at Triangle Square.
TUESDAY
PARKS COMMISSION
The Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Commission of
Newport Beach will hold their
January meeting today al 7
p .m. in Council Chambers,
3300 Newport Blvd. in Newport
Beach.
'MANIPULATED POLAROIDS'
California artist Marion Tal-
ley's "Manipulated Polaroids,•
a collection of fine art photogra-
phy using hme-zero manipulat-
ed polaroids printed by laser,
will be on display today through
Jan. 31 at Newport Beach's
Central Library, 1000 Avocado
Ave. during normal library
hours. For more information,
call 717-3801.
PETITE MODEL * SEARCH
Scouting for petite females
ages 12 & up, and ac lease 5'2"
& up. One day on~y! Top · ...J,
pente agency coming co ~
Southern Californja.
LOOKING for new faces. *
CALL
.JOHN ROBERT
POWERS
TO RESERVE YOUR TIME
Make Those Patios &
Entries Beautiful
tom ewport ac patio wl ue
patio cover with a ps heacer above.
Jim Jennings
CUSTOM MASONRY
170 E. 17th St. • Suite 206
Co.ta Meaa
(714) 645-8512
tau Ucmae 1392707
Let Jim Jennings
install your
complete
yard hardscape.
• Expert brad:,
hlock, stone, cite,
slate &. concrete
work.
• Can recommend
qual1~y de 1gners
• Qualtty work in
Costa Me-;a &.
Newport Beach
smce 1969.
• Drainage
problems? We
solve them.
SERENDIPITY
The Serendipity series for sin·
gles resumes it's weekly ·sessions
tonight at 7:30 p .m . at St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
600 St. Andrew's Road in New-
port Beach. "Dealing with Per-
sonality Differences in a Relation-
ship" will be the topic. All singles
are welcome. A $3 donation is
requested. For more information,
call 574-2214.
ARTHRms EXEROSE
An exercise program designed
speaficaJly for people with arthri-
tis will begin today at the New-
port-Costa Mesa-Irvine YMCA.
The five-week program will pro-
vide gentle movements and activ-
ities under the guidance of
' trained personnel to help increase
the mobility, muscle strength and
stamina. Pre·registration is
required. Por more i.Iif ormation,
call 642-9990.
PANHEUENIC MEETING
Newport Harbor Panhellenic
will meet toda-y beginning at 10
a.m. at St. Michael's All Angels
Church, 3233 Pad.fie View Drive
in Corona del Mar. This month's
program f eMures "Missions of
CalifomiA" by Anita Freedman of
Bowers Museum. A luncheon fol-
lows. Donation is $4. For more
information, call 846-4164.
COSTA MESA AMERICAN LITTLE LEAGUE
BA·SEBALL AND
GIRLS' SOFTBALL
FINAL REGISTRATION
At Costa Mesa
High School
Saturday
January 6, 1996
9am to lpm
~_. A1es 5 throuab 15 ruldln1
within the CMALL bound.aria.
A $60.00 donatJon per player not
to exceed $150.00 .per family.
Call for more lnlormatJon.
SERVING NEWPORT-MESA AREA FOR OVER 14
YEARS • RESIDENTIAL 8c COMMERCIAL
• LAWN/GARDEN MAINTENAN&E
• NEW LAND.SCAPING/LANDSCAPE
RENOVATION & CLEAN UP
• LAWN RENOVATION, AERATION
& FERTILIZER
PROGRAMS TO FIT
ANY BUDGET
-----~ --
. ~· .. ..
Wkif EWS WORKSHOP
•wrtting Like There's No
Tomonow," a six-week fiction·
writing workshop, will be
taught by internationally pub·
li.lhed writer Barbara DeMarco
Barrett beginning today at 10
a.m. at Local Grounds Coffee
House, 3007 East Coast High-
way in Corona del Mar. The
group ls for advanced students
who are working on a novel or
short stories and will have
weekly critiquing sessions and
writing exercises. Pre-registra-
tion is reql.Ured. For more inf or-
mation, call 160·8086.
-.'. fo.~ .-.•. I
--_. . ·_ ; . '· t! . "
I TABLE TENNIS
Orange Coast College offers
table tennis classes for the
entire family on Friday
evenings ~nd Sunday after-
noons. T.he Friday session is
from 6 to 10 p.m. and begins
Jan. 5 and runs through June
1 . Sunday's session is from 2 to
& p.m ., Jan. ? through June 9 .
The annual fee is $50 for
adults and $25 for seniors and
young people under 1?. For
more information, call 432-
5880.
GUN SHOW
The Crossroads ol the West ~
sponsonng a 9U!l show today tram~ a.m: to 5 p.m. and Sunday from •
a.m. to• p.m.. at the Orange Coun
Fau: & Exposition Center on p, ·l
Drive m Costa Mesa in ~
#10, #14 and #16. Admission ~
$6.50 for adults, $6 for sen.ion ~
children under 12 are free. For mar$,
information. call (801) 544-9125. ~
LEON URIS . i Intematio~ acclaimed auth~t
Leon Uris Will speak on the top~
"The Word and the Survival d the
Jewish People" .et 1 p.m. at Temple
Bat Yabm, 1011 Camelback ~
NewpOrt Beach. 11ckets are $30'
reserved. $20 unreseived and s~
for seniors and students. For mcmj.
information, call 644-1999.
WOMEN IN FOODSERVICE 1
The January dinner meeting of..
the Orange County Chapter of th;
Roundtable for Women in Poodser·:
vice will be tonight at 6 p.m. at !hi
Sutton Place Hotel, 450Q
MacArthur Blvd. in Newport
Beach. Fifi Chao will be gues[
speaker. For more information, cait
665·6312.
JOIN US FORA
NE\N YEAR'S CELEBRATION
Parties • Grou • Catering
0 Truly the best seafood in Orange County" :
WHOLi NEW ENGLAND LOBSTER $24.95
Includes: Drawn butter, rice or potato,
vegetables and salad
CAJUN BBQ CHEF'S SPECIAL $21.95
1 /2 New England Lob1ter • 1 /2 Cajun DungeneH,
Grilled vegetables (Enough for 2)
PRIME RIB DINNER 10 oz. $11.95
lncludet: Potatoes, salad, vegetable.
Aiu• and horseradi1h
CHICKEN PICATA $10.95
SautMd breast of chicken, potato or
rice wfth salad and ¥egetable1
A Limited umber
of Attractive christrza~ ~
caro -· :,,;
Song Sheets
~ )J
• • •
'
s
ii
' ' • •
UNIVEllSJTY UTENSION, UNIVEUrrY or CAt.IFORNIA, lRVINK
Still whecslng with ovel'-tlte counter medication?
Consider participating In an a thma clinical research trial.
LEARN THE KEYS To SUCCESS IN
THE RESTAURANT BUSINESS!
No Insurance Needed
~ Quallftccl
pa dpanb receive:
• Fret L • Frtt Physical Exam
• Fttt Study Mt.dlcotlons
• Comptnsatlon Upon
Completion of Study
fof Mon .......... Cd
(714) 347-8700
CALIFORNIA RESEARCH CENTER • WUUam E. ....,, MD
2'732 Caww v.llly Pmlw1y, Slllle 361 M...._ ¥1ejo, CA t2Mf .
UCI ExteMIOf\ Introduces a new ! • .... ......._to ...... ,...,
CerUftcat.t Prosrim In ..... -.Dt : M• 1 ••t 1\aetday1, I Mrs111nent. with COUrMUnd • Januaty P.MM:h 12, 7-IOpm
aemlnan iauaht by Onnse Couniy'• ! • •• • ACltGUdna and
rataUl'arit industry prof~11on1t.. : <:-..... Thunday ,
ofrmna me ln1redienca for proflllbil· ! J-..y .._~ 1. 7.10pm
tty. Chootc from the tollowlna : • 1 1 • .._. ... 111.,.."'1tn111 Winter 1996counet: ' I r-~·,... : u 0 111 MOltdays.
: Nlr'fll'y ~Mln:b 11, 7 • I Opm
I
: • 84 A 1 al' 3' S,1 >•
I ) .. ,.,_~
: ,..., ,..~ '· 9:30illt-lpm '
1o leam more abliu1 the pro&f1lm,
attend a frte RFSl'AUR.ANT
MANAGEMENTCAREIQt
FORUM. Meet 1n1uuc1ors, hear
1heir pettonal 'areer PJth• Md leam
about R; taunap1 Manqen)llll
cc>W'ltt. Thi• event b QPI'! 10 IM
aenmi public.
Mondly. JMWy 22. 1996
6;0().8.30 p:m
Rooms 10 I· I 02. lJni¥eriky a.....-A. UCI Campus
c.11 C7J4) CM tJll ...... • .... ,. ... _ .................... rn.,-... ... 1 ... , •••
.. -.,, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1995 A15 ~··· ~ .
~ ":E1-... -.. ...
SINGLES MINGLE
Christian Singles Mingle Will ~ld a progressive dinner and
~ with I<BRT talk show
and Minirth-Meier therapist,
eg Cynawnon. The cost is $10
the three-course meal and
minar. The event takes place at
p m. at Newport Beach Public
dolt Cowse in the Tea Room
iestaurant, 3100 Irvine Ave. For
more information, call 375-0400.
PEltSONAl DEVELOPMENT CLASS
•Personal Development and
Modeling• is the tiUe of a new
f6ur-week d.ass that begms today it Cliff Drive Park. Class No.
1\55.101 is for 14 through 17-
~·olds and is from 4;30 to 6 1 ass# 5055.101 is for adults
runs f:rom 6 to 7 :30 p.m. The
tion fee is $55. For more
G\iormation, call 64-4-3151.
MASTERS S'l{IM PROGRAM
11 Orange Coast College offers a
monthly swim program for adults
sbe 19 and older, beginning at
6?30 a.m. daily in OCC's Gymna-
~um pool. Registration is $40 for
e month, $70 for two months
d $99 for three months. For
iNore information, ca.ll 432-5880.
FREE ADO LECllJRE -= Coastline Counseling Center
of Newport Beach will hold a free
e titled ~Attention Deficit
der in Children, Adolescents
ults tonight at 7 p.m . at the
enter, 1200 Quail St.,Suite 105.
Joan Andrews will take an tn·
depth look at ADD, what to do
about it, and how it's treated. Por
more Information, call 476-0991.
CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S WNCHEON
The Newport Beach Ouistlan
Women's Oub Will hold a luncheon.
fashion show, music and lecture
today. Doors open at 10:(5 a.m. The
cost is $18 inclusive and reserva-
tions are necessary. For more mfor-
tion, Call 964-5007 or 760-9616.
L-ORDER ~USINESS
Orange Coast College will
hold $ workshop on "How To
Start a Order Business" today
from ij:30 to ~:30 p.m. in Room
110 of OCC's Counseling and
Admissions Building. Marketing
sped'11st Nancy Miller, will teach
the basics of the mail order busi-
ness. Or learn to market on the
Internet with presenter Mike
Rounds in Room 111. Registration
is $35 for either class and a $20
material fee to be paid to the class
instructor. For more information,
call 432-5880.
'DEALING WrTH LAWYERS'
Learn to deal with lawyers at a
free noon program today in the
Fnends Meeting Room of the
Newport Beach Central Library.
The library is located at 1000 Avo-
cado Ave. For more information,
call 717-3801.
PRESCHOOL CLASSES
Three new classes · for
preschoolers are being offered by
the Newport Beach Community
SeJVices Department. •r Love To
Draw• on Tuesdays and •1 Love
To Pa.int" on Thursdays f:rom 1-2
p.m. are tor 4-to 6-year-<>lds and
.begin today. The fee for either is
$43. "Sunflowers and Mud Pies"
is for 2 -to 5-year-old.s on Thws-
days from 9:30 to 10:15 a.m . and
costs $38. For more information,
call 644-3151.
WBDNmD~ JAN. 10
MATH WORKSHOP
A free four-part workshop
titled "Becoming Math Confi-
dent" is offered on Wednesdays
beginn,ing today from 5:30 to 7:30
p.m . at Orange Coast College's
Re-Entry Center in Costa Mesa.
For more information, call 432-
5162.
NOON NETVOORICING
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will hold
their Jan. meeting from noon to
1:30 p.m . at the Steamboat Cafe,
151 E. Pacific Coast Highway.
The $15 cost includes lunch and
"Healthy Tips for Business 1hps"
presentation by Dr. Roy Levin. For
more information, call 729-4400.
T'Al CHI
A variety of seven-week class
for beginners, intermediate and
advanced levels of T 'ai Chi
Ch'uan -the ancient Chinese
exercise art that combines tech-
niques of meditallon and motion
-will be offered by Orange
JAGUAR & ROVER
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
c\\all\be~
.-... (~1 N.;:; H..:.. AREA
..... • CHAMBER Of COMMERCE
111'41• "¥~e'""'J ~ tk
~~~~"'~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
N ew Charnbc r Members in Nove 1nber!
APPUIO MICRO IUllNlSI
mTDtl.INC. ~ &SeMce• 723-0582
ULIO.-NEWPORT AW.TY Rtll &tilt 6llM & SeMce. ~
CHIMAYO GRILL
AlllllnnCI. 640-2700
CORI .. QUIU. PUIUIHtNO
Nllltq S....-• 720-2805
IL SLOME'S CUSTOM toFAS 6
MmQUEI
Hiwnt Fumilhlngl • 866-2938
LYNN -. M.D,, DIRMATOU>GIST
=•la.tglCll~
fUNllONl*"8-a.w~·e7$-9002
GAIL llOPP PM MT
Alt•S74-t1t1
~WIWWW1UL
...... O....Llw•754-1t00 ....... "' COM, •• 79M$IO
LllTM ILICTNC
Cs tt•11•175C71
UTIDIC ~INC.
lllcMM••MMMt
THE LOG NEWSPAPER
N>llhn-Marile Ntwlplper
(819) 226-U!Q8
C. JANICE MATIUYAMA, D.D.S.
Otnllltl. &31-3733
MERRILL l VNCH
Finlwldll ~ • 95W138
OPlRA PllCIAC
Non.flrolt ()rglnlulionl. 47~
PACmC S'tlTEMS
~Salee I StMcet • 281·5571
POI~
~ SerYIOll •474-5577
HtOCA IH1'1MAllOIW. Food 8'oQra. ~199
ITVLI INIUMNCI AGINCY, INC.
~·729-31n
TAXl~C*>UP
F'nndll SerAcee Bl*'-lnMlncl
223'1100
1W1N PM.Ml """°"' IUCM ~·721.fi211
WINDOW MIHtONI ft aAClt TI1
W'ftlOw CMfr!OI • 01714
WYMll QMNT .,...,.. DlllGN "*"°' DlilciOl-...1 Dlllgrllft • 721-411 S3
~·~ --··"°'°'43
w~ Dinner <.?1
uction--!.,.
J••lrJ11, .. . ..,.......,. ...
10
Healthy Noon
Networking
12:00 Noon• Riverboat Cafe
10
New Member Reception
5:00 pm • NHACC OfflC8
12
Business Assistance
Workshop
7:30 am • NHACC Office
16
Dolphlns Breakfast
7:15 am • Newport Beach Marriott
Hotel & TeMis Club
17
Business After Hours
6:00 pm • Windows on the Bay
19
Newport Harbor
Christmas Boat Parade
Awards Dinner & Auctton
8:00 pm • Hyatt Newpofter
23
Home Based
Buelnns Meeting
5:30 pm • JOhn Oomlnll
24
..
........ Oll••tVlllW ...... d ..
7:151m·---·Hc*I ..
CoM;; •• ! ....... ., .......
. 7:11>••MOlllrCM
Coast College. for more inf orma-
tion, call "32-5880 ·
DIVORQ REAUTIES
"Financial and Legal Realities
of Divorce• is the title of a free
evening program planned for 1
p.m. tonight in the Friends Meet-
ing Room of the Central IJbr(U)',
1000 Avocado Ave. in Newport
Beach. For more information, call
717-3801.
COSTA MESA CHAMBER
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce welcomes Jim Warren
to it's breakfast meeting today
from 7:15 to 8:4S-a.m. at the Cos-
ta Mesa Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Drive in Costa Mesa. War-
ren will discuss health and fitness.
Reservations are $10 or $15 at the
door. For more information, call
574-8780.
FRIDAY, JAN. 12
SOCCER CLASSES
l\vo new eight-week soccer
classes are being offered by New-
port Beach Community Services
Department. Both will meet at
Bonita Creek Community Center
on Friday mornings beginning
today. •Goat For It-Kid's Soccer• is
from 11 :15 a.m. to noon and is for 3
and one-half year-olds to five years
of age. uGoal For It-Women's
Soccer• is from 9:30 to 11 a.m . For
more information, call 644-3151.
APPLE COMPUTER CWB
Quark will present its latm
technologies at the Orarige Coun-
ty Computer Groups meeting
today from 8:45 a.m. to noon a~
the Chemistry Building on the
campus of Orange Coast.College,
Fairview Road in Costa Mesa.
The meeting is free and open to
the public. For more inlormatlon,
call ~36-0522.
ONGOING
SERIOUS ILLNESS SUPPORT
A free support group for md.i-
viduals -facing any serious illness,
including IV I AIDS and cancer, will
be held at 7 p.m. every Thursday _
in Institute for Holistic 'tl-eatrnent
and Research, 4019 Westerly
Place, Suite 100, Newport Beach.
For information, call 251-8700.
APPLE COMPUTER CLUB
Orange Coast College's Apple
Computer aub will meet from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. in rooms 207 and 214
of OCC's Chemistry Building. The
club -which is open to anyone
interested m computers -encour-
ages the development and
exchange of information related to
the Apple computer. A beginners'
forum Will be at noon. The annual
till Oral Surgery.
Implants
till Orthodontics
till Evening
Appointments
Avallable
till Partials a---------------m ?'1~8.!~r&::;·•,
I Complete Dental Exam I
I X-rays & Consultation, Oral Cane.er Disease I
& TMJ Evaluation
L Thls Certiflcate vabd thru 12/31/95 _J ----------------To Create a Perfect Smile For You
Payment Plans Avallable llE
member5.b1p fee is $30. Meetings
are tho flm Saturday ol each month.
F« informAtioD. call 770.1865.
MICROSOFT COMPUTER Q.UI
Por individuals who pref j
Microsoft Windows and Wmdo"lt
applications, Orange Coast Co
Lege bas some-thing for you, tQRO
Every Saturday from 9 a.m. t~>.
noon, the Winners Comput~
Club meets m room 116 of OCC'
Fine Arts Build.mg to discuss~
development and exchange Of1
information related to Mi~
Windows and Windows apphcq-:
tions. The cost of membership ~
$20, which includes a newsletter
For information, call 5'2-0468, "
BIG-BAND DANCE , _
The thud Friday of each mon1Ri
Adult Ballroom Dance is bttlfli
wtth music by Balboa Beach Bioi
Band from 7 to 10 p.m. at ~'i
Costa Mesa Seruor Center, 695 \'!i
19th St. l.I1 Costa Mesa. The COStJ-11
$4 for SAGE members and $5 ft:Nt
non-members. "'
• SEND YOOR ITEMS to the AroJRd
Town Editor, The Daily Pilot. 330 W. ~i
St .. Costa Mesa, Calif 92627; fax 64-
4170 orcall 540-1224, Ext. 333.
We Know You'll Save Big During Baby Depot's
Year-End Clearance
Starts
Dec.
16
It
9AMt
Stroller
Blowout!
30%-673 om
... our original low prices!
Huge Mlec:tion of stroktl
including Combl, Aprlca.
Perego, Graoo,
Kobaft, and Delta.
Not .. 9tytM IWld,,...
riali.bll ... looationl.
Clearance I
Furniture Floor Models
Save 15~ to 50~ I
ChooM from Chld Oaft, Slmmoc '*· Oefta UN. ()lbe. Che9tt, ~
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~ dl8contlnued, tome ecratchee,
tome def'4I -nothing to an.ct
wear°' qudly. &!pet VeluMI
•
Open
Nnr
Year's
Day,
11-6
Buy One, Get Anothr
HALF PRICE!
• All Picture Framal
•All libsl
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lnfMt leddlr19 ~
lncllldnO NOJO. fCldlllM. Red~ ~ ' ~ ,,., • .,,.. °' .. li..or low' Pfloee on ..... ,... you Med llf lie ninury Huny ~ tllt bllll ....._..
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THURSDAY, DEaM&ER 28. 1995
• THI VOLUNTUa DWTOlrY runs
periodiQUy In tM o.itv Pilot tf you'd IM!.e Information on gettlng your organ!·
:ration llsttd, call 642 ... 321, EJCt. 331.
IAU.ET rAOFICA
The a.Ket P.clfiQ Guild. a ~ sup-
group for Ballet hctflc:I, needs ~
b av~ of Ul5ks. For infonNtloO,
cllll Molly Lynch at 642-9275.
' lf'Ollmts. lfG SISTERS t Men and women over 20 years old I who have lived In Orange County for at , least six months and have been on the
•job for .t least three months are needed 1 to serve as big brothers or big sisters for
chMdren ages 6 to 16 from single-parent
: f\Qmes. For lnf<>rrNtion, call S44-n73.
80Y SCOUTS Of AMEftlCA INC.,
ORANGE COUNTY COUNOl
• Volunteer opportunltles include fund
,,Ising, program development and
I tralolng to existing troops and packs. For
more Information, c.all Devon Dougher-
ty, 546-4990.
' : BOYS AND GIRLS CLUBS
Of COSTA MEW/NEWPORT BEACH
The thr~ area Boys and Girts Clubs
need volunteer coaches and arts and
crafts workshop teachers. For locations
and more information, call Dick Powers,
642-224S.
CENTENNIAL FARM TOURS
Volunteer docents are needed at the
Centennial Farm at the Orange County
Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa. Call Ginny
Smith, 708-1517
CENTER FOR CREATlVE'ALTERNATIVES
The Center for Creative Altematives, a
non-profit charitable organization that
works through the United Way. needs
volunteers, graduate level interns or
trainees For information, call Karen,
642-0377.
COUEGE HOSPITAL
The College Hospital Costa Mesa Auicil-
1ary is ~king volunteers to perform cler-
ical, reception desk, gift shop and other
duties at the hospital. For information,
call 642 2734 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.
COMMUNITY HOSPICE CARE
Communrty Hospice Care, whkh pro-
vides medical and emotional support to
terminally ill patients and their families
in Orange County, needs volunteers in
Costci Mesa and Newport Beach. For
information or to register, call Cindy
Laird, 978-7447.
CONSUMERS FOR LEGAL REFORM
Consumers for Legal Reform has an
ongoing need for volunteers to monitor
dvll court judges. A computer and dona-
tions are also needed. For more infor-
mation, call Barbara at 854-0881
COSTA MESA OVIC PLAYHOUSE
The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse needs
volunteers for ushering, backstage, mail-
ings. typing, lights and many other
dulies. For more information, call 650-
S269.
COSTA MESA HISTORICAL SOOETY
The society collects information, pho-
tos and artifacts relating to the history
of Costa Mesa and the harbor area Vol-
unteers are needed for clerical tasks,
complrter Input and help in the library.
For information. call Charles Beecher,
631 -5918
COSTA MESA LITERACY GROUP
The Costa Mesa Literacy Group needs
volunteers to help people become liter-
ate or teach English as a second lan-
guage For information, call Fuller, 548-
3384.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER
The multipurpose senior services facrli-
ty at the corner of 19th Street and
Pomona Avenue seeks volunteers for a
variety of tasks For more information,
call 645 2356 from 9 a.m to S pm.
DEFORE FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS
The DeFore Foundation for the Arts, a
non-profit organization dedicated to
dance at 151 Kalmus Drive, G-3, Costa
Mesa, needs volunteers. For more Infor-
mation, call 241-9908
DISCOVERY SHOP
DiKOvPry Shops are run by the Ameri-
can Cancer Society Volunteers are need-
ed. and no special skills are necessary
For information, call 640-4777 between
10 am and Sp m
DISPUTE RESOLUTION SERVICES
Disputt! Resolution Services needs vol-
unteer mediators, case specialists and
outreach assistants to help in a variety of
mediation cases Bilingual language
~kills are needed for office volunteers
And for mediators For more informa-
tion, call 250 0488
EASTER SEALS
The Easter Seals Society needs volun-
teers for ongoing clerical work and to
help in programs for children with dls-
'lbilities and In special events. For lnfor·
matron, call 834-1 l l 1
EXCHANGE CWI CHILD ABUSE
Pl'EVENTlON C£HTtR
Volunteen are needed to help families
when an incident of child abuse has
been reported and a referral made by Jae county and to work with families of
high-risk victims of parental drug addlC·
tion For lnfomiation, call 722· 1107
FAJ"VJEW DEVELOPMENTAL CENTtR
The Fairview Oewlopmental Center in
Costa Mesa needs volunteers, and doM-
---
·'-:1111, "11 · ( J111/c1
70% Off of What?
Compare our price.~. Sec our
selection. Experience our
cu tomer service.
·Fri 10-6 Sat 1 Q.S 722· 7224
230 fast 17th St., Cotta Mesi
tlons.,.. wekorN. For men~
c:aH 957-5114 between'•-"'-Md~ p.m.
f\$H ~AREA IHC.
Fri.Ms In Service to Human!tY (flSH)
offen emergency assktance to thole 1n
need and provides the Mobile Meals
program. VoluntHn are needid to help
In a variety of arNS. Fa< more lnfonna·
tlon, call Debby. 645·80~
FOOD DISTRIBUTION CENTE"
The Food Distribution Center, Ora~
County's pr.ivate non·proflt food bank,
needs voluntfft'S to Inspect and sort
donated foods and to help with mail·
lf19S For more information, call the vol·
unteer coordinator; n 1-1343
FRIENDS Of THE ~OSTA MESA UIRARY
The Friends of the Costa M~ Library
nffd volunteers. For information, call
the library, 646-a84S.
GIRL S!:OUTS
The Girl Scouts of Orange County need
volunteers to be trained as troop lead-ers, serve on special committees and give
lect\.lres, demonstrations or classes. For
information, call 979·7900.
GIRLS INC. OF ORANGE COUNlY
Girls Inc. offers educational and enrich·
ment opportunities for girls and boys.
Volunteers are needed. For more lnfor·
mation, call Amy, 646-7181.
GLASS MOUNTAIN INC.
Volunteers are needed to aid disabled
adults who meet monthly for education-
al, entertainment and soclal purpos~.
For Information, call 779-3441.
HAT CONNECTION
The Hat Connection ls a women's phn·
anthropic extension of the Chamber of
Commerce that serves Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach For information, call
Kay Walburger, 65G-2144.
HERITAGE HOUSE AUXILIARY
Volunteers are needed for an auxiliary
support group being formed by Her-
itage House, a non-profit substance
abuse recovery home for pregnant and
parenting women and their children in
Costa Mesa. For more information, call
646-2271
OtglnlzMion .w,g me "'-* of hel6-
~ ~ l'ld thelrfamiliet. ls ..tlna ~For information, cMI 646-7458.
HOS1'1CE FAMll Y CAM
Hospke Family CA,. Is seeking people
to hetp with «rands. vklts and c~
lonship to terminally Ill patieou and
their fMl'lll*-For lnfortMtion, call LAwry
Mariotti at 73G-l 114.
INTfftfNTH COUNOL
The New~rt-M~a-lrvlne Interfaith
Council, an umbrella O(ganlzation for
several area se"'ke groups, nffds volun-
teers actrve In local congregations For
Information, call carol Brown, 548-3283.
KIDS CAHC£R CONNECTION
The Kids cancer Connection Is dedicat-
ed to the emotional, educ:atlonal and
financial need$ of children afflicted with
cancer. Volunteers are needed. For Infor-
mation, call 851-l.774.
SUSAN G. KOMEN
BREAST CANCER k>UNDATlON
Volunteers are' needed to assist In a
variety of programs w ith the Orange
County chapter. For more information,
call 480-5222.
MAKE·A·W15H FOUNDATION
Make-A-Wish Foundation of Orange
County, which makes wishes come true
for children with life-threatening Illness-es. seeks volunteers to occupy a variety
of positions. For Information. call Giida,
476-9474.
MARCH OF DIMES
The March of Dimes office in Costa
Mesa needs volunteers for fund-raising
committees, speaking opportunities,
occasional office work and help with
bulk mailings For Information, call 63 1-
8700.
MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY ASSOOATION
The Muscular Dystrophy Association of
Orange County is in need of volunteers
for support group leaders, packet stuff-
inc;i. special event staffing, office help,
coin counte~. speaker's bureau, etc. For
more Information, call 75G-1408.
NEW DIRECTIONS FOR WOMEN INC.
NIWPORT COSTA MllA YMCA
The ~MIMI YMCA needs
a ~ of general voiuntMr help. FOt
infotmation cw applications, c.aU Ma. 642·
9990
OflfftA PACJflC
l1w Opera Padfic Guild Alliance," sup-
port group for Opera P.clflc, Ns a wide
r1nge of actMtles f'Of ~~ Fot
ltiformation. c.11 474-4418.
ONAATK>H 0JAN SLATE
Oper.tlon Clffn Slate, a CostAI ~
based orgwilzMJon ~t fOCUMI on graf-
fiti prevention, needs vok.lnteen to
paint out graffiti end for othef dudes.
For more lnfor~tlon, call Michael
6 Week & 3 Month
PersQnal Training
Specials
NATALIA LARSON
MEMBER FOR 12 YEARS
TWO AEROBIC CLASSES & TWO WEIGHT
TRAINING SESSIONS A WEEK
SHAPE-UP
NEWPORT
Howard at 43~7~5.
OUNGf COAST ICTBf~ SHElTElt
The ll'lttf°falth Shelter Is the ~
family ~ In the County. housi09.
feeding and counseling 20 famllles daily.
The group needs volunteen and dispos-.
able di.pers. For Information, call Jeff
Reynolds. 631·7213,
HIGH HOPES HEAD INJURY PROGRAM
The High Hopes Head Injury Program's
Rea Center In Costa Mesa, a non-profrt
The non-profit recovery center for
adult women with akohol and other
chemical dependencies seeks volunteers.
Call 548-9927 between 10 am. and 6
p.m. or call Joy at 548-8754.
Corner of E. 17th & Irvine Ave. in Wescliff Plaza -631-3623
Your Neighborhood Health Gub Since 1982
The ·only expensive thing
about our produce is the taste.
Sunkist Navel Oranges
]11,,,J., C11ltjw111.1 f""',,
Iceberg Lettuce
(,,.,,,, m •f 1--,,J, f•"' I/tr \"/11u1 \.11/1)
Ru&Set Potatoes
Roma Tomatoes
._ ........ 49<t lb.
fresh Certified Angus
Spencer Steaks
Fresh New Zealand
Rack-0f-Lamb
Fresh
Swordfish Steaks
$999
.. lb.
Large Cooked Shrimp
26 10.1111111 $1299
,b
............. 3 for$} OO
...................................
Bananas
Molinari Salami
Farmers Market Party Dips
Ml /rri/.ly 1'1Jd< ., 011r thtfr Cl....ut /n,lfl !.N·"""'"''· 111/tJ,
"""'"'· ,,.,,,..,J.m"..J7 /111-rJ1p ..
$399
.. . • • • lb.
Fabulous 2 Ft. Hero Sandwiches
Fresh Baked Mini-Boule
REGISTER TO WIN
A 1 Week Trip For 2, To The Fabulous Greek
Island • Drawing To Be Held January 2 7, 1996
'
Orangina ......
S/vr>lurx 11tr111 lvt..r11gt 1111h ""t11ro1/ p11lp .. ~............ .......... • • •• ..
Domaine Ste. Michelle Champagne
1\11.tfll '"'"''"I Jf'-rHtr /n ":,,/.,,,,,.,. ~'""' <.lwt /rM
Br•t, o.m; Jry "'•I•• tk .,.,,,. .............. .... ....... .... • ................. " ......... · · • ..... .
.-------.,
:tllEE ExmA LEM GKOUM> BEEF:
I Buy I pound or our extra lean aroancl beef, I
I get a second pound ffUI I
I Llmlt I coupon per automer. I
I ~,.p1,... J /()4.(H ..
.. ___________ _
FarmerSMarket
--
At Atrium Cour1
F hii n f land
401 Newport Ccnm Olive
Newport 8t11th 92060
714.76().().401
HOURSs
Mon:&d 8-9 • .-...., 8·8
Open In Summer of 96•
At Mtrkrt On 1lic u~e
277'42 V1 tt\ Del I 1go
Mi 1 n V1cJO, 92692
At Mal'Mlla Plua
l t 109 Rancho V1e1<1 Rd.
S nJu:an CA,>tatr no 92675
71'4·248 0838
HOURS:
Mon·Fn 7130-8 ~·8·8
$1 49 ca
EYE·Ol'ENER
Estancia s Chris Candlish lost for
tonight~ showdown with Bellflower
QUOTE OF THE DAY
·11~ fDa.nny O'Nt'W lS ow bfgjbh ... •
-PIRANHAS PRESTDENr ROY F.NGLEBREO!f
Eagles'
Johnson
All-CIF
LOS ANGELES -Estancia
High senior offensive tackle
Chuck Johnson, who played
a major role in the Eagles'
first CIF Southern Section
foQtball playoff berth since
1989, has been selected All-
CIF Division vrn.
A 6-foot-2, 250-pound
tack.le, Johnson's powerful
presence up front in Coach
John Liebengood's newly-
installed smashmouth dou-
ble wing scheme, helped the
team post a school single-
season record 282 points,
nine more than the previous
standard established by the
1970 Eagles.
A two-time All-Newport-
Mesa District offensive line-
man, Johnson was first-team
All-Pacific Coast League this
fall.
Johnson, who shared the
Eagles' Offensive Lineman
of the Year award with three-
year starter Joey Herman,
was also honored at the
team's banquet by winning
the GPA award; with a team-
best 3.75 mark.
In addition to his offensive
excellence, he handled spot
duty on the defensive line,
filling in at tack.le to help the
Eagles earn the lone at-large
berth irl Division VIII.
Estancia, which opened
the season with four straight
victories, fimshed the regular
season 6-4, the only plus-
.500 team in the division,
though CIF officials have
said the use of an ineligible
player will force them to for-
feit a victory over Laguna
Beach.
Opening the playoffs
agairlst second-seeded La
Mirada, the Eagles stunned
the host Matadores by forg-
ing a 7-0 lettd just 85 seconds
into the game. La Mirada ral-
lied to win, 16-14.
The All-CIP squad is cho-
sen by sportswriters who
comp rise the Amateur Ath-
letic Foundation of Los
Angeles' All-Southern Cali-
fornia Board of Athletics.
-By Barry Faulkner
'95Top10
rom the thrill of victory to
the agony of defeat, from a
woman suffering frOm
multiple sclerom who won a
club Chempic>nihip to a golfer
Who shot seven ltrokei lower
thin his age on one remarkable
day.
In 1995, there wu no •hoftaOe of great VOW storiil 1n ~ BMCb Ud Costa MeiNl, c:aaab6Md MrVe u omy a
tiny fr~ Of a..~ but no
dOubt • ,...,_. ladllf ,ot die
woddolglllf
lo Mn goee. OUr Mcond
8 •1 TOP 10 MGE M
Danny O'Neil returns to the arena
• Shunned by the NFL, former Ro~e
Bowl hero is No. 1 on the Piranhas'
Ii.St to guide them through the red
zonts, of Arena Football League.
By Roger carlsor1, Daily Pilot
ANAHEIM -Corona del Mar's Danny
O'Neil, a three-year starter at quarterback for
the. University of Oregon with 62 career touch-
doWn passes, is back. ·
Shunned by the National Football League
last spring without so much as even an invita-
tion to be a "walk-on,• he is the No. 1 choice of
the Anaheim Piranhas, an Arena Football
League entry where they play in a constant
"red-zone.•
O'Neil, who shared Most Valuable Player
laurels at the last Rose Bowl Game after setting
numerous passing records, was ·excited, and
looking forward to having tun, and winning.•
Piranhas President Roy Englebrecht called
him "Our big fish," and Director of Football
Operations Rich Saul, a former longtime Ram
and a resident of Corona del Mar, predicted the
new quarterback •will take us to the promised
land."
·.
Home Arena: The Pond
Season Opener: The regu-
lar season opens In May with
the schedule expected to be
released January.
PntskMnt: Roy Englebrecht
Coach: Vito "Babe" Parllll
Dlredor of Football Oper-
iltion5: Rich Saul
Tldcets: SHson tickets,
ranging from S63 (S7 per
game for end zone, rows ._
16). to S405 ($45 per game for
end zone, row 1) are available
by calling the Piranhas office "'
at Anaheim Stadium (254-
3020). Sideline Row 1 ($80 per ~
game) and Rows 2-3 ($60 per
game) are sold out).
The game: Eight players; 50-
yard fiefd; ball in play (off the
nets) after missed kicks; goal
posts 9-feet wide. 15-foot
high; no punting.
O'Neil, donned in a business suit with a foot-CASrv l KSCH 0 ... 1 y Pl OT
Corona del Mar's Danny O'Neil fields questions after be lng announced as the Anaheim
• SEE O'N EIL PAGE 02 Piranhas' fir st signing; Piranhas President Roy Englebrecht ls ln the background.
Personnel: Quarterback
Danny O'Neil has been signed,
balance of squad to be
announced.
\\ \ ·1· I· H f> <>I < > ~ < < > I{ l·: ~ • ~ I . .-\ ·1 l
Wednesday's
Scores • Sweetwater 63
Newport46 • CdM47 Dana Hills 45 • Edison 57
Antioch 53 • Estancia 57
Marian 47
Today's schedule 2:30 -Antioch vs. Glendale Hoover
4:10 -Sweetwater vs. Stockdale
5:50 -Rialto vs. Dana Hills
7:30 -Estancia vs. Bellflower
KATSUY4 RAINONE I 0.All.Y I'll.OT
Fonner Corona del Mu H,lgll wa&er polo studout Chris Oedlng, shown here while competing agatmt an Australian squad
earlier ln the year, 11 wltb the U.S. NaUonal Team whlch meets •92 Gold Medalist Italy Satilrday at Corona del Mar Htgh.
Me lee
cripples
Eagles'
attack
T
MAKING A BIG SPLASH •Estancia wins, 57-47, but Chris
Candlish is lost for tonight's
biggie with Bellflower's Bucs. Corona del Mar's
Chris Oeding has
been doing that
since his days with
the Sea Kings.
C ORONA DBL MAR-ombine the
-~ ftneae of~ with the physi·
_.. cal natuie of ~ -and then to9I
in the playmaidng teamwork ol basket-
ball -and you Will pretty much have
water polo.
If the picture is still a. little fuzzy, take
some time this Saturday and Wednesday
to fine tune your appreciation of the
game when two of the best national
teams in the world compete in a
two-game event.
The U.S. Men's National team will be
matchirig skills with the Italian National
team ~turday at Corona del Mar High.
Game tune is 3 p.m .
The action will switch to Belmont
Olympic Plaza Pool in Long Beach next
Wednesday for e 7 p m . gamo. ·rm most concerned about havmg
the opportwuw to train with the
lWi.tns, • U.S. Coach Rich Corso said
during W~osday's afternoon s1on.
•we played six periods today. This tune
is so valuable in development and
perfonnance.
•nte games will be vezy compebtive,
but this is where we really learn.·
The Italians were the No. 1 team in
the world up until last year. This season
they won the European National
Championships and were second ir. the
FINA World Championships. The US.
team made il to the bronze medal game
in tbe World Championships, losing to
the Russians, 12-10, to finish out of the
medalS.
There are currently 23 players on a
U.S. team which Will be whittled d O\\'Jl
to 13 by May ln anticipation of this year~
• SEE OEOING PAGE 82
dally pilot high school athl_.· .. ~ of th w k
By Barry Faulkner, Dato/ Ptlot
COSTA MESA -Th4> Estancia High
boys basketball team lost more than its
poise Wednesday night in a 57-47 'Viet~
over Mari.an Catholic of Imperial Beach
irl Daily Pilot Coast Classic pool play 'at
the Eagles' gym.
Moments before a one-nunute
postgame melee erupted between play-
ers from both teams, as well as some
spectators who streamed onto the court
from the bleachers, Estancia senior Chris
Candlish and Marian seruor t.e :Von
Lynch were both ejected for fighting with
19 seconds remam.ing.
On the rebound
By Barry Faulkner; Daily Plk>t
E stancta High'• Chris Candll.th came
into his senior seat0n at a svelte 235
pounds, as trim u he'd been iince hit
tteihi:nan year.
But it wasn't unW about eight games lnto
the campaign that the former 6·foot-6,
260·pound center was able to shed the
seU·tmpoted blll'den that began to weigh so
ponderoUlly upon hll lhoulcfen.
•1 bad times when I lOlt lt, When I
thought It WU • kitt CAUM to even be out
there," laid the three=vanlty ltarter,
Who wttb MCb frultra performance •••med to......... bdO hll eesty ....... funk. .
•1fM W , pll't WU~ bow m\lda
• Estanc:!-a High's Chris
Candlish has turned his
game around 180 degrees,
in a span of some 180 hours,
to gain Daily Pilot Athlete
of the Week accolades.
better I coUld pley, • Candlillh explained. •t
kept trying to fix what was wrong and I Just
dug a cleeP. and deep,Jr bole •
But, after 90\11 MU'Chlng tn IOUtude. then
~Wltb~Ud ......... . ·""Caadliia ____ ............ ~ .... tn ..
6iclllaD '° dl11• bl rt ..... °"' WIMlt many btill1 wed w • b~'f :tip f\abn ta
football as an offensive lineman· fun.
What followed was a five-gam tr tch in
whith h av aged 24 3 pomts pe.r gam ,
'after having produced Just 12.7 per rontest
the preVK>us seven.
•.ThlS is definitely th most fun I've bad
playU:ig the game," adcJ\Owledged the o.ily
l>Uot Athlet ol the Week. Who ICOFN 22
and 23 points lut week in victories over
Orange end CaplltranO Valley to help the Ea¥* bnprove to I l • l ,
The NCOlll be'I ha\l'ing now bu ndy
helped relieve• lot ~ the~ M WM ~early in tbe •• la.Ml ..... coeda
1llD P....a •WMD cu~ IO pw up IOa4bllL I tblak ._. ._ .... _ ........, ........... ...
~-----.. ------;---------
THURSDAY. D£aMIEA 28. 199S
---·:r~ . ~ --
, J
.... . . ·. ..j it?,.,.. t,~·-_,)~ I'' • ---
NMM satOO&. ams c.-............... ...... ..., ___ ,
• O•mi Hiiis 1 1 12 15 7 • 45 Costa Mtla 14 14 11 17 • 56
, ~ ttlltl • Gomez O, Hau 24, Tiii·
man 8, Beaty 0, Ballard 3. Wolther 4,
>Hamllton 2, Howard 2.
3·polnters Hus 1.
• fouled Out -Wolther.
• Co.ta Mesa • Grover o, Chapin 7, HC>Me 1 O, COiiett 1 O. Watanabe 0, (fro~I 2, A.ncMnon 6, Kim 19, Pey-
ton 0, Harb4tr JJ. Lurmann 2.
J.poJntar l(lm 3, HOWM 2.
0
~ 10. IA Qulnt.8 (LQ) 19 SCof'eby~
1l:a Quinta 7 4 6 2 •. 19
~·~· 19 15 27 19 • 80 ~ La Qumu · Diaz 4, Roldriguez 0, ·
P~ Kirkland 2, Totten 13
...1·WH.ilftda ·Camberos 5, Waltz 22,
iladc 15, Rodrtguez 12, Deming 16, J.
M'~rtln 4, M McCartin 4, Tafolla 2.
Mllur ~ 76, Newport Katt>or 44
Score by Quarten -Newport 10 5 14 15 • 44
Mater Dei 28 18 23 7 · 76
Newport Harbor • Alford 1, Badorek
6, Dunne 2, Verhulst 10, Eadie 4, Diaz
6, Clayton 15
• 3 pointers Verhulst 1
Mater Del Mendoza 8, Ovitt 2, Day
6, Lechman 3, Gondrlnger 14, Luckey 8,
Grey 2, Hollis 6, Peterson 25, Larson 2.
Fouled out Mendoza.
a
CdM 54, R.1tncho Alamitos 30 ·
Score by Quarters
Rancho Alamitos 8 5 10 7 • 30
Corona del Mar 20 18 11 7 • S4
Rancho Alamltos Dao 2, Loera 6,
Cijaka 4, Lo~z 2, Nguyen 2,
Hernandez 9, Ramirez 5
Pi&<. .· '
O'NEIL
OONTINUED FROM 12
ball and bueball cap, and witb
bis ~ Bcmnie and Du, tn
attendance, fielded a few brief
questions much in the manner as
be deals with would-be blitzing
lipebackers.
He shoved most aside, IDAin·
taining an up-beat attitude and
outlook.
MQDey? It won't ri"'11 Steve
Young's celebrated bonus with
the now defunct World Football
League:
•we've pretty much agreed
verbally to a contract,• said
O'Neil, •but the specifics are still
being ironed out•
Dealing with the opposition's
deteriR on a 50-yard layout in an
arena? •
"It's just part of the gaine,'
offered O'Neil.
Does all of this fanfare affect
the ego, especially in lieu of the
NFL's snub?
•Probably,• said O'Neil. "but
it's just secondary.•
If it was a big day for Danny
O'Neil, it was a monstrous day for
his parents.
"Finally/ said dad, "I read in
the Pilot (Wednesday's breaking
story on Thursday's event) about
Danny and it didn't say 'Corona
del Mar transfer' before his name ..
CASEY LOOCH l 0.AJLY Pt.OT
Danny O'Neil'& best fan -
mom, Bonnie O'Neil.
'ligh-powered Division I program
which left scars seemingly on
every avenue between Eastbluff
and Edinger Avenue in Santa
Ana.
Mater Dei football coach Bruce
Rollinson was in attendance and
predicted Orange County would
be proud of O'Neil's endeavors as
a Piranha.
"He always surpassed every-
one's expectations," noted
Rollinson, O'Neil's coach in his
senior year at Mater Dei.
Piranhas Coach Vito "Babe ..
Parilli knows all about the style of
an O'Neil, whose scrambling,
ability to hit a clime on the run,
combined with the resiliency to
absorb and fend off the heaviest
of hits, makes him a legitimate
start for a pro franchise.
Colona del Mar Warmington 24,
Albano 4, Fofd 10, Hawley 4, Gardner
8, Racine 4, Anderson 0, DeMille 0,
Stmon 0
Danny O'Nell will be looking for bis targets In arena football.
O'Neil dad was alluding to
most stories on his son, which
almost always beckon back to
when as an incoming junior, he
left Corona del Mar High to
become a two-year sensation at
Mater Dei High in Santa Ana, a
"He has everything you need
-good mobility, good accuracy,
good touch, the ability to make
3 pointers Warmington 3, Ford 1.
u
COUEGE WOMEN
Soc:al Col'-ve 57, Concordia 45
Concordia · Th1Cklns 0, Langager 4,
Twigg 7, Ramirez 10, Squires 6, Adana
8, English 8, Standley 2
3-pointers • Adana 2, Ramirez 2.
SoCel College Burt 6, Caruso 2,
Werdel 8, Woodruff 12, Whittemore 5,
Kempton 6, Gulfan 0, Blomker 7, Harti·
gan 6, Minor 5, Thornburg 0.
3-polnters • Werdel 2, Blomker 1.
Fouled out Whittemore.
Halftime SCC. 27·22
0
COMMUNITY COUEGE WOMEN
OCC 72, Monterey Peninsula 65
Oranv-Coast -Nakamura 6, Afan
10, Pulido 7. Geraci 8, Salapski 2, Botana
•3, Shine 18, Kelly 18, Takemoto O
3-pomters Nakamura 2, Bontana 1
Fouled out Shine
Monterey '-11nsula Lagon 14, K
Hanson 10, Kn1p~I 10, Foster 10. M
Hanson 22
Halftime O<C 37 24
BRI EF LY
.. Shot put, discus clinic
scheduled Friday
HUNTINGTON BEA CH -
UCLA trdck and field throwing
COdch Art Vanegas wtll provide
mstruction to coaches and ath-
letes ell the second annual
Throwing Chruc for shot putters
and discus throwers. Fnday from
t 0 a.m to S p m at Golden West
CoUege
The fe<> for athlPtes of aU dges
lS $35, while th<> charge for
coaches IS $50
For mformallon. phone Don
TumbuU (509-8780)
Three locals on
Jiu-Jitsu team
NEWPORT BEACH -James
Boran, ruck Lucero and Garth
Taylor of Joe Moreira's Jiu-Jitsu
de BrasU school will represent
Team USA m the first World Jiu-
J1tsu Championships to be held
Pebruary in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil
The tno were among more
than 100 athJetes competing for
17 spots on the mtirtlal arts team's
blue and purpl" belt divisions.
Boran and Lucero competed m
; the purple belt division. Boran
t won the heavyweight division
while Lucero took the top light·
w lght spot.
Taylor won the blue belt open
d1Vlsion.
SPORTS ROUNDUP
Mesa,. Eagles, CdM _-girls top hoops foes
Mesa races to 56-45 hoops win
COSTA MESA -Host Costa Mesa High
started off hot and finished hot Wednesday to
beat Dana Hills 56-45 in the opening game of
the Costa Mesa Girls Basketball Tournament.
The Mustangs jumped off to a 11-0 lead,
but led by only one, 19-38, heading into the
final quarter.
Koo Kim scored seven points and Chanel
Anderson scored all stx of her points m the
final penod, as Mesa outscored Dcma Hills 17-
7 to take the wm.
Kim finished with 19 points to lead all scor-
ers and Julie Collett added 10 for the Mus-
tangs, now 6·5
Costa Mesa will play agam tonight at 8
p m again t Villa Park.
Eagles blitz basketball foe , 80-19
PALM DESERT -Estanoa High's unbeaten
girls basketball team punished another foe en
route to their 11th stnught victory Wednesday
as the Eagles handled La Qwnta High's Black-
hawks, 80-19, in the h.rst round or the Palm
Desert Christmas Classic at Palm Desert High.
The Eagles, who defeated Compton last
Saturday by a 70-point margm, blew La Quin-
ta off with a 34-11 first-half run, then unloaded
with a 46-8 margin in the second half.
"They were i.n a zone and we were hitting
our shots." said Estanoa COdch Russ Davis. La
QUinta, a ftrst-year school based in nearby La
Quinta, fell to 4-2
Jessica Waltz led the way with 22 points, 1
assists and 14 steals, while Jill Black came up
with 15 points and 8 rebounds •
Also sconng m double ftgures were Amy
Derrung (16) and ViVi Rodriguez (12).
Estanoa has two games today -meeting
Palm Desert at 1 :30, followed by a 6:30 contest
agamst lndio
Estancia (11-0) defeated Palm Desert in a
nonleague game last week at Bstancia, 58-18.
Sea Kings top Vaqueros. 54-30
GARDEN GROVE -Lindsay Warmington
scored 24 points to lead Corona del Mar High
to a 54-30 victory ov<-r Rancho Alamitos in
opening-round pool play of the Santiago Tour-
ncUnent.
Corona raced out to a 20-8 lead after one
period and extended that to 38-13 at mtemus-
SLon.
The Sea Kings are now 10-2 as they head
into the second gamo of pool play today at 5
p.rri. against El Modena.
Melissa Ford finished With 10 points and
Jeruiller Gardn r had elght for Corona del
Mar.
Newport humbled by Mater Dei
HUNTINGTON BEACH -The Newport Har-
bor girls ran into a buzzsaw Wednesday when
Mater Dei rolled to a 76-44 victory in the
opening round of the Marina Tournament at
Manna High.
"We came out a little flat and we dJdn't play
our game as well as we could have," said
Coach Bob Du.kus of his Sailors who are now
7-2.
Mater Dei jumped out to a 28-10 lead after
one period and led by 31 points at the half, 46·
15.
"Mater De1 has a lot of ways to pressure you
and we need to learn how to respond to that,•
Dukus said. "The girls never gave up and that
will pay off in the future."
M.E. Clayton scored 15 points to lead New-
port and Andree Verhulst added 10 points.
The Sailors will meet East Anchorage of Alas-
ka at 10:30 a.m. in the consolation round.
Edison holds off Antioch, 57-53
COSTA MESA -The Edison High boys
basketball team rolled to a 32-18 halftime lead
and held oU a furious fourth-quarter rally by
Antioch for a 57-53 pool play victory in the
Daily Pilot Coast Classic Wednesday.
Edison senior Chris Gibson hit all four free
throws in the ftnal period to help the Chargers
prevail and also share team-bigh scoring hon-
ors with junior Kevin Hemsley with 10 points
each.
Senior Matt Hurd Jed Antioch with 19
points, mclud.mg seven ln the final period.
when the Panthers outscored the Chargen,
18-9.
Jovan Dancy scored all seven of his points
m the fourth quarter to help Antioch close the
gap.
Sea~ split pair in boys soccer
HUNTINGTON BEACH -Corona del Mar
High's boys ·soccer team played the military
equivalent of hurry up and wait Wednesday
morning, showing up for its 7:30 a.m. match
with North Torrance, only to be awarded a for-
feit victory when North Torrance failed to
show for the firSt round of the 32-team Marina
High Invitational.
Then it waited some more -but later ln the
day the wait wasn't worth it as Mater Dei
handed the Sea Kings a 6-2 loss.
Josh Weinstein gave Corona a brief 1-0 lead
with an unassisted goal on a breakaway some
three minutes into the conte t, but by halftime
the Monarchs had rallied for a 5-1 lead.
Matt Hoyt, with an asstst from Leo Belandano,
knocked in CdM's second-half goal.
The Sea Kings return to the same site, Marina
High, this morning at 7:30 to duel Wood-
bridge, and if victorious, would play again at
noon.
Sail'?~ drop 1-0 decision
SANTA ANA -Newport Harbor dropped a
tough 1-0 decision to Los Alamitos Wednes-
day in the opening round of the Orange Boys
Soccer Tournament being played at Rancho
Santiago College. ·
Newport, 8-3-2, will play agam today at
1:15 p .m. against ~cho Santiago.
Los Alamitos made a 1-0 halftune lead
stand up for the win.
Shine. Kelly lead OCC, 72-65
SAN JOSE -Jamie Shine and Kathleen
Kelly each scored 18 points Wednesday to
lead Orange Coast College to a 72-65 victory
over Monterey Peninsula in the opening game
of the Lady Jaguar Invitational.
OCC jumped out to a 37-24 halftime lead
and held on for the victory to moved to 10-3.
OCC will play San Mateo tonight at 5 p.m.
Corona splits in girls soccer
HUNI1NGTON BEACH -Corona del Mar
High split two games in Wednesday's pool
play of the Ocean View High Girls Soccer
Tournament.
Cd.M beat Lakewood 1-0 in morning play
and then dropped a 1-0 decision to Peninsula
in the afternoon.
CdM falls into the consolation bracket
where it will play Thursday at 8:30 a.m.
against the loser of Millikan-Mater De1
matchup.
Corona won the first game on a goal with
eight minutes left by senior striker Julie Carri·
son.
Peninsula took a 1-0 halftime lead in the
second game and made it stand up as Corona
moved ro 4-7 on the season. Both teams
played well throughout the game.
sec wms conference opener
COSTA MESA -Heather Woodrulf scored 12
points to lead Southern California College to a
5?"45 victory Wednesday over Concord.la in
the Vanguards' Golden State Athletic Conler-
ence opener.
Woodruff was the only one of ten Vanguards
scorers to reach double figures.
sec, which led 27-22 ~t the half improved
·to -4~5 overall, 1-0 in conference. ConcordJa
dropped to 2-10.
costa mesa· high school swim honors
Varsity
Scholar/Athletes (first quarter)
Roger Kirnos, 3.8; Katie Grogan,
3.6; Ryan Kelly, 3.4; Ryan Dandy,
3.3.
Players of the YHr
Robert Grayeli and Sean Hylton
lest Offense
James Comfort
lleltl>efenM
Justin Taytor
Mustang Awn
Elijah McOannlel
Most Improved
Most Promising
Todd Hylton
Fr0sh-$oph
Scholar/Athlebtl (tint....,_.)
Jim Wrkich, 3.6; Gene Nguyen,
3.5; Alex Soria, 3.5; Hunter Taylor,
3.3.
P .. yer Of the YNr
Jimmy Walters
~Awn
Matt Tipton
Most Improved
Alez Soria
Girts
ScholmiAthletm (first qu•rter)
Colleen Lund, 4.0; Allison
Alastuey, 3.6.
Pl•yer of the YHr
Katie Grogan
Roger Kirr1'P5 __ .... ..•
MOit Promlllng
Hunter Taylor
.
Newpon ~Me.a Dllily ~lac
quick dedliON and good leader.
abip/' N1d Parilll. a former Ken-
tucky great (1950·51) who went
on to a 16-year career with the
~
As noted in Wednesday's edi·
tlOn, O'Neil WtJl continue h1I iiilil-
istry at CalVa.ry Cluapel ol Coeta
~·and will be in the football
program the1e in the fall, as well,
although be conceded on Thurs-
day that aspect was a secondo.ry
issue to him.
For Bonnie O'Neil 1t was a res·
urrection of her son's athletic
career after this one-year IUatus
since that glory-filled day in
·Pasadena la.st Jan. 1.
•rve been watclililg him com-
pete since be was fotWoyears old,•
said O'Neil's mother, "and we au
thought it was kind of a tunny sit·
uation.
•we all thought be was going
to end up on an NFL team, and
when it didn't happen it was just
a surprise.
"It was a letdown, but Danny
had said he didn't thinA he would
be drafted.·
The NFL looks for a different
mode at quarterback, with past
performances by quarterbacks of
O'Neil's stature a guideline.
Yes, they can be effective -
until the crushing blow comes,
ending a career.
There are crushing blows m
the winds within a 50-yard red
zone on a carpet, as well, but
O'Neil, for one, believes he bd!>
the ability to sidestep the big bit
as well as he can sidestep a hard
question.
And so do his employers.
The season begins in May with
one preseason game. seven
league games and then, with
good fortune, the playoffs.
OE DING
CONTINUED FROM 81
Summer Olympics in Atlanta.
There are 10 Californians on
the U.S. team including local
star, 24-year-old Chris Ceding of
Corona del Mar.
Ceding was a member of
three CIF Southern Section
champions while at Corona del
Mar High and continued tus
winning ways at the University
of California at Berkeley with
three NCAA Division I
championships m tus four yedI'S
of competition (1988-92). His
freshman year. the Bears lost in
the championship game. He was
the NCAA's co-Player of the
Vear his senior year.
He has been on the US. team
since 1992 and is looking
forward to a shot at an Olympic
gold medal.
•He definitely can help the
team -no question." Corso
said. "But we really leave it up
to each member's performance
and dedication to see who is on
the team.
"The key is not making the
team. but to medal. We have 205
days left." Translation. Nobody is
safe at this point. It'~ the players
who work the hardest in those
205 days that will have a shot al
Olympic glory.
•At times Chris has shown
flashes of his junior and senior
days in college," Corso said
"But it is up to hun, how hard he
is willing to train."
Oeding is coming back from
shoulder surgery which at first
looked to be career-ending. He
inJured his left shoulder in the
first training camp for the
National team back in January
of 1993 and missed the entire
year.
•it was very frustrating, but 1t
made me look at what I'm going
to be doing once water polo is
over," Oeding said. •1 really
enjoy teaching -and
coaching."
Ceding has been exploring
his avenues the past year,
teaching at Orange Coast
College and filling in as the
interim head coach for the water
polo team He replaced Don
Watson, who's on a two-year
sabbatical.
The Pirate~ went 11·1?·1 i.n
Oeding's firit season and
advanced to the first round of
the Southern California regional
playoffs where they lost to Palo-
mar, 12-9.
Since graduating from
Berk~Jey with a Political $dQnce
degree, oeding has been
huttling back and f ortb
between h.iS parents' home th
Corona del Mar, th OCC
campu9 ond Belmont Plaza Pool.
•rm training two or three
hours eacb morning and two or
thr" hours tn the afternoon, 11x
days a week,• Oedtng Aid.
•nie ahOUlder feel.I gOod and r
feel pretty good IOOUt
everything at lhll point.•
The U.S team had a Gmilar
eXhlbltion with the Australian
Nadonal 1Mm baCk In
11\id·Decmaber' at CdM M
Belmaat. Tbe U.S. teun won Uae --2·1·1.~tbi
dtddlng ~. 7.a, ~ ..
=:~-=i:...-w ..... the u s. bec:ll Ina • J. l
delcit and into • a.3 ..
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1995 IJ
Sea Kings ~ally for 47-45 victory, roll into ·semis
• CdM comes back from
10-point deficit to post
decision over Dana Hills
in a classic contest.
By Richard Dunn, Oaily Pilot
COSTA MESA-It should have
been play~d in prl1Ue ~e.
Among other things, it included:
-A second-half comeback by
Corona del Mar Hlgh's basketball
team to erase a deficit of 10
points. •
-A fourth-quarter in' which
neither CdM nor Dana Hills led
by more than five points, after the
period's opening minute.
-It featured Dana Hills shot a
remarkable 7 of 9 from the field in
the first quarter, only to go 2 of 12
in the third.
Mustangs
rally for
.51-38
vi~tory
• Costa Mesa uses 11-1
run to topple Bolsa
Grande at Canyon
Classic.
ANAHEIM -Mike Montoya
hit two big three pointers during
an 11-1 run to lift the Costa Mesa
High to a a 51-38 win over Bolsa
Grande Wednesday in the conso-
lation round of the Canyon Clas-
sic at Canyon liigh.
The two teams were locked
together at 19-19 in the third
period when the Mustangs used
an 11-1 run to open a 30-20 lead.
Mesa led 37-25 heading into the
final stanza where the two teams
traded scoring opportunities.
Costa Mesa, now 2-10, will
play again Friday at 3 p.m .
against Magnolia.
•we started out well in the
second quarter and extended it
into the third quarter,• said Mus-
tang head coach Jason Ferguson.
•1 thought the kids picked up the
intensity that we lacked in the
opening game.•
Brian Leahy led all scorers
with 17 points. Montoya finished
with 13 points and Jim Weeks
pumped in 11 for the Mustangs.
c:osta Mesa 51, llolM G,.,. J8
ScoN by Quaml's
Costa Mesa 10 13 14 14 -51
Bolsa Grande 10 6 9 13 · 38
Cost.a Mesa · Leahy 17, Montoya
13, Weeks 11, Ogo 6, Correa 3, Payne
1.
3-pointers • Montoya 2.
llolsa <Wande -Chavez 14, Tran 6,
Nugent 6, Fair 2, 54!zerino 2, Mason 2,
Dienhart 2, Dul 2.
Fouled out • Fair.
DAILY PILO
COAST CLASSIC
SUMMA.RIBS
Sweetwatw 61, Newport...,._. 4'
Score by Quwtws
Newport 10 16 10 10 • 46
Sweetwater 17 16 17 13 • 63
Newport Het1M>r • Cunningham 2,
Glass 2. Hornung 13, Badorek 4,
Coluccio 14, Schwartz 0, Jameson 5,
Thlssell 0, Wertman 2, Matlln 4.
3·polnters -Hornung 2. Jameson 1.
Sw.etwner • Nation 12, H~on 4.
Wiiiiams 13, Solorio 10, Nafarette 18,
Gonzalez 6.
3-pointers • Wllllams 3, Solorio 2,
Nafarette 2.
Corona def Mair 41, Dena HUis 45
SclOreby~
Dana Hills 17 10 5 13 -45
Corona def Mar 7 12 20 8 • 47
0-W Hllh • Hutchens 17, Bowser 6,
Barnett 11, McKee 8, Spfegl 3
).polnten • Hutchens 2. Barnett 2.
Sf>"Pgl 1.
CMotw del Mer • Kllnke 12.
Coleman 17, MacOonald a. Ketne 0,
EVIO$ 10, Friend o. Walz o. Shimer 0
l-pointen • Evans 2. .... ..-.1. --Olthollc47 .... ~~· Man.n Catholk 11 12 11 e . 47
htande 12 1l 11 21 • 57
....... Qitholk • KUilbber 6, La J.
~ 8.U V. LWflCh 11, King 14, ZUrtti 8.
11)0ln:teri • turlta 2, King 1. ~-Lav.~.
Tttchnk911 • C'*" Melon. 11•:• . c.ndlht't , .. '9oct 21, ~ 7, HOWlk 1, ~. t. c..llal J,
~ Jln4un 0. Jltttd o. ~. fllodl 4. CillllM '· ...... c:anclllh.
-In the end, Corona del Mar,
a team renowned for good free·
throw shooting, couldn't hit the
broad side of a barn 1n the waning
moments from the charity stripe,
but held on by the skin of its teeth
Wednesday for a pulsating 47-45
victory over the Dolphins in the
Daily Pilot Coast Classic.
As if fans' palms weren't
sweaty enough, both teams went
the final 2:45 without scoring.
The Sea Kings (7-5), the Pool B
winner following victories over
Dana Hills and Rialto, became the
first team in the tournament to
advance to the championship
semifinals.
They will play the Pool A win-
ner on Friday at 5:50 p.m .. which
will be determined today.
Dana Hills (7-5), coming off a
third-place finish last weekend in
the Raider Nugget Classic in
Sparks, Nev., in which the Dol-
phins 'went 3-1, had plenty of
opportunities down the stretch.
But two ~ses in the key in the
final 1:i. were batted away by
CdM defend-
ers, then the
Dolphins were
given a last-
dl\ch effort wtfti'&.O 1 left.
Dana Hills'
Jeff Barnett
missed a shot,
but the loose
ball went out of
bounds as the
buzzer sound-Klln.ke
ed. The refer-
ees ordered
another second on the clock, with
Dana Hills getting the ball back
under its own rim.
Reid Spiegl got a long pass
near the three-point line, but
CdM guard Josh Walz blocked
his shot to end it. within three points on two occa-
-They had been running the sions.
same inbounds play the whole Dana Hills led at halltime, 27·
g~e. so the guard (Spiegl) who 19, but the Sea Kings stormed
was at the top ol the key, we did-back in the third quarter, outscor-
n't want to defend him, so we let ing the Dolphins, 20-5.
him run up top and get the pass,• CdM scored the first seven
CdM Coach Paul Orris said. "Josh points of the second half to pull
defended exactly how he was told within 27-26, capped by Evans'
to defend him, and we made them three-pointer with 5:24 on the
throw the ball out high. (Watz) clock. ·
stood straight up and got the Mike Hutchens (17 polnts), an
block.• All-Coast Classic selection last
Aside from CdM's usual char-year, n.diled a jumper with 3:45
acters -Brian Coleman ( 17 left in the third to give Dana Hills
points and six rebounds) and a 32-30 edge, but the Sea Kings
Adam Klinlce (12 points and six finished with a 9-0 quarter-end-
boards) -it was serupr Brad ing run.
Evans who stepped up buge in Hutchens' three-pointer with
helping the Sea Kmgs' comeback 6:52 on the fourth-quarter clock
Evans (10 points, three moved Dana Hills within 39-36. It
rebounds, two assists and a
1
remained close the re~t of the
blocked shot) scored two baskets way.
in the second quarter, when CdM Hutchens bit another trey to
erased a 17-7 defiot and pulled to cut CdM's lead to 45-43, then .
LEAH HOGSTEN I DAA.Y I'll.OT
Estanda's Dane Plock {5) finds himseU sandwlched by Marian's La Juan Lynch {left) and Marcus King In what became a heated
and physical duel, culmlnattng with the ejection of two players and a melee In the aftermath Involving players and fans.
EAGLES
CONTINUED FROM &1
Under CIP Southern Section
rules, both players are suspended
for their team's next game, which
means Candlish, who finished with
18 points and nine rebounds, will
not be available for tonight's 7:30
showdown with top-seeded Bell-
flower.
Parse! said Marian (3-3), scbed·
uled to face an opponent to be
determined in Friday's consolation
bracket, expressed serious doubts
about returning to the tournament
before leaving Wednesday.
fighting fouls'..
Parsel said he would attempt to
gain a greater understanding of the
chief instigators of the postgame alter-
cations, and did not rule out further
punishment to Eagle players.
'Tm going to have to talk to some
more people, before I can comment on
that," said Parse!, who cannot consult
an Estancia administrator, as none
were present at the conclusion of the
game.
Estancia players reported no
injuries from the postgame fracas.
The tumultuous conclusion wasn't
the only reason Parsel had to be disap-
pointed, as his heavily-favored squad
struggled mightily most of the
evening. •They're understandably con-
cerned, and they may not be
back,• said Parsel, who escorted
Coach Terry Mason's Crusaders
Tension exploded in the aftermath with teams, fans In it.
After Marian hit 7 of 12 thtrd-quar-•
ter field goal attempts to erase a 25-23
halftime deficit, Estancia senior guard
out ol the gym and into their vans, after a
series of altercations followed the teams'
postgame handshakes. ,
•1 told (Mason) that the last team that
pulled out of a tournament wasn't allowed to
compete in tournaments the next season,"
Parsel said. ·1 think they're going to have to
think it over (whether to return).•
A phf.Sical game, which. included fre-
quent tangling of players's arms while fight·
ing for possession, pileups for loose balls on
the Ooor, and various other collisions, most
of which did not elidt whistles, escalated in
the final moment, after the Eagles had ral-
lied from a 39-,.36 third-quarter deficit to bold
a 52-46 lead en route to their 12th win in 13
games. '
While Estancia'• John Maraya laid on top
of a Marian player, both sharing possession
of a loose ball prompting an alternate pos·
session nlling, Marian'• La Juan Lynch hur-
CANDLISH
CON11NUED FROM 11
succea in buketb&ll be wanted.
He alWayi lmltW be~ dO u.
but be n11iled to ... ,_..
tel\alti. I tlalDk ~ et...,
down. beW 101De doubts •bout
etjpptng foOtblJI. Where I OdDk ... , ................. . .......... .., .. _
de+ , .. ..._cmblill• 11 a1dto ..................
-.....~N9wport-Mw
Dllltd .... ANldlt CaMt i-.-......... -e1.., . ,..,... ,... .. ,..,.
ried over to the fallen players, attempting to
pull Maraya off his teammate.
Players from both teams, then
approached the pile and Candlish and La
Von Lynch exchanged shoves.
After order was restored, referees con-
ferred near Jllidcowt and emerged with dual
ejections for fighting, automatically disqual-
ifying both offenders for their next game.
Parsel and Estancia assistant Rich Boyce
questioned the bghting ruling and Panel
made reference to a videotape review be
believed may clear Candlish.
•111e offidab> have to write it up as a
fighting violation to take the playcn out of
the next game,• Parse! S8ld afterward. not-
ing the official disqualiflcation would hirige
on such a written report from the referees.
Both officiAls, however, cl arly indicated
to the scorers table Candlish and La Von
Lynch w re being ejected for •flagrant
Dane Plock netted the first eight
points o! the final period, including l\ pair of
three-pointers, to put the hosts on top, 44~41
with 4:36 left.
Candlish posted the next six Eagle
points, including four foul shots and Plock's
coast-to·coast layin with 59 seconds left
gave the Eagles their biggest lead, 52-44.
•(Malian) played well and we didn't,•
Parsel said. •Tue only thing 1 can attnbute
that to was the (Christmas) break."
Parse! said he d.ld not blame the offioat-
1.ng for the escalation of violence, and added
he was most disappomted by the mvolve·
ment of spectators from the Estancia ide of
the gym.
•1 hope this doesn't affect the toum -
mcnt, • Parscl sa.id.
Plock finished with a gam ·high 21
J><?inls, while Sam Nelson and Nick Novak
added aev n points apiece for th Eagl .
"As long u I stay within llmltS, I
can pretty much JUSt go out and
play.•.
There it, however, U.. matt
of foul trouble, which has
benched CUdlish for extended
ltJ'tJttMI, even during hil r«ent
n)ll
• J d9ftnitely feel ne I'm blilng
weteblcL • Mid C.nd!llbe WhoM
mere ...
oftm JtlUll.t• .. ltigblillt
...Wlda~kdo ........ W'GiCllf of ... Oftldal'I
Qllrb-.adWllllll9
..~-=·lot ~-1· .. c.a1t1Wa ,...,. pa c.wkl II/mg. ................... ,.., . ....... .....,...,....,
Kllnke drained a short baseline
jumper with 3:34 left on a pass
from Walz. Dana Hills' Josh
Bowser sank a pair from the)irt.e
with 2:45 to play, but there weie
only fouls, poor passing and
missed free throws until the con-
clusion.
Cd.M had a chance for breath-
ing room, but missed 6 of 6 free
throws 1.n the final 1:30.
"When it comes down to mon-
ey time, I would agree that we're
!JSUally pretty good at the Qne, •
Orris said. "That was surprising. -
Cd.M's Darren MacDonald,
who made his first six free thrOws
before the final penod, was the
primary defender in the key,
when two Dana , Hills passes
inside were knocked away. Mac-
Donald also had six boards· dlld
three steals. Walz had three
asSlSts .
Sailors :
tumble:
63-46
•Sweetwater sizzles to
put Newport Harbor away.
By Richard Dunn. Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Jet lag h°M
affected Sweetwater High in past
Christmas-time basketball tour-
naments. So it must have been
that smooth drive up from
National City (near the Mexican
border).
Whatever it was, Sweetwater
Coach David Ybarra had no
answers for his team's phenome-
nal shooting on Wednesday in
the Red Devils' 63-46 victory over
Newport Harbor in the Daily Pilot
Coast Classic at Estancia.
"That's the best game we've
played all year, and that's the best
we've shot.· said Ybarra, whose
squad (6-4) was 57% from the
field (24 of 42), sinking six held
goals m every quarter, including
6 of 8 m the second and 6 of 9 in
the third.
·usually,· Ybarra contmued,
•we don't play well in the first
game of tournaments But I guess
since we didn't have to fly, we did
OK."
The Red Devils, who travel each
December to a different preseasoo
townament, have competed m
Nebraska, Kentucky and Canada
in recent years. Costa Mesa
seemed quicker in wtuch to get set·
Ued. They aid better than OK.
Newport Harbor (5-9), whlch
had its four-game wmrung streak
snapped, was never m it during
the second half.
After Chad Coluccio (team-
tugh 14 points) tied the game, 8-
8, m the first quarter, Sweetwater
turned on its fast-break faucet
and sprinted to a 21-10 lead by
the second quarter.
What the Red Devils lack in
size, they make up for in speed,
qwckness and def(mSe. "They .
didn't let us do anything we
wanted.• Newport Harbor Coach
Lany Hirst said. •we were totally
unprepared to play mentally."
The Tars chipped away in the
second quarter, getting a 16~7 run
that pulled them to within 28-26
wtth 1:-42 left, when Coluccio
concluded the surge with a
jumper. •
Colucoo (five rebounds) sank
his first SlX field-goat attempts m
the game, while guard M rk
Hornung' (13 points) and cent
Wed Badorek (four boord )
played trong.
Sweetwater, 1 of 12 from
beyond the three-point curva-
ture, went ahMd at halftime, 33·
26, th n blitzed the Sailors in
th.iid quarter, outscoring th
17-10.
The Red Dews made th.tee at
their thr pomt in the third.
building the lead u &.arge as 50...:M
•we hadn't been shoOt&Dg
th.ree-polnten; we had put a 1U>J>
to at,• Ybarra H.kl •
So why the sucx.'911 agamat the
SaUonf ·t don't know,• Ybura
Mkl
Newport Harbor pull9d _,
within $2-41 *" iD lbei ~ • .,._ liwh•an
Mea ,le ...... ChlDlld •
po6fta.r ind Jeeob
nrilibMt • ., .....
lul 9wemtl1B ... Pd 1 KOdilililllil,..•• .,. .. ,_ .... .., ..... .., ........ ~ .... ,.,..
THUR.SOAY. DECEMBER 21. 1995
-~ .anaual 'leer-Ending Top-10 Golf
llfOmdei. ., •• • , 1. (Orum roll please) ... To.aal-
'D.lor Cluale A ncrbra.iner.
With the bttarre turn of events
·lov1>Mng the tournament, lhe
event ls moved from Mesa Verde :~untry Club to Newport Beach
.• ~unby Club, alter four monthS ol
·a.J>eculaUon when neither Senior
l\bW' nor sponsor officials would
~'t9nfinn a return engagement to
~sa Vetde.
. , 2. Dr. Bob Peelor: The 78-year-
~~ Costa Mesa resident and Santa :4Jm Country Club member shot a
-tCllreer-best 1-over 71 on Oct. 25,
·malcing birclles on 17 and 18.
·• '" Peelor, who made 11 pars, sank ~~ J-(oot birdie putt on 17, a
.,i.a.s..yard pa.r-3, and climaxed lus
'lftemorable round with another
btfdle on 18, a sharp dogleg lelt,
~where the green as protected by
-bunkers a.nd water
•J've never been anywhere
,'d6se to that,• Peelor said after lus
round wtth Dr. Kirby Day, Dr. Abe
Ukshin and Dr. Frank Villalobos.
Speaking or whoRl, how about
lhf' others in the foursome? "Well,
-they dldn'l say much ... Just
moilning and groaning a little,•
Pt,elor said.
3. Sandi coa.r. In 1986, abe
WU dia~'With mWtiple
i<:lerolis. a diM.lre of the central neIVO~ 1ysh!m that .lmpe.in motor
functions, peed\ and visiQn and
baS no known cause and or cur
Be/ore 1995, Cott t was pnvat
about her 'uffetlng from the
disease. She formed a commltt
through her NBCC compa.ruoos
and on June 12 hosted lhe
inaugural RockWell lntemational·
sponsored Sandi Coffer Summer
Classic, a goll townament at
NBCC to benefit the National
Multiple Sclerosis Society (Orange
County Chapter).
Earlier in the year, Cotler won
the women's club championship at
Newport Beach CC, shooting a
four-day gross total of 328 to earn
the coveted Kathleen Lenahan
Perpetual lfopby.
It was bet eighth career dub
title, proving to all that nothing can
impair her love for golf, even
multiple sclerosis.
•Golf is one o1 those things that
kept me going," Coffer said. "I
think when you bave an illness,
you need goals, and golf fills the
bill on that.
4. Cathy Mockett She qualities
for the LPGA Tour, then cracks the
gender barrier by becoming the
first woman professional to play in
the 21st annual Taco Bell Newport
Classic Pro-Am in January, playing
from the blue tees with the men.
Mockett -after enduring
tendinitis in her shoulder that kept
. . -.
• + • • t •.
'. . -,~
her on the she.ti for MYeD montbl,
and. rocq. ~Chat mded in
J 99-' -recovered . thll year and
returned to glory.
Moc:kett, who returned to th •
LPGA Tour Feb 16-18 (1he wc15 a
tour rookie ui 1993), opened the
Newport ClAIStc Pro-Am
Ooodgates, as five other LPCA pro
a.re expected to play neXt month an
the 22nd event.
(In 1985, a.s a junior at Newport
Harbor High, Mockett was the Drst
female amateur to play m the
event.)
5. Jenny GJaavow: The
Corona del Mar HJgh senior upset
Sunny Hills' Jenny Lee, \he
defellding CIF/Southem California
Goll Association girls champion,
last Jun~ in the ClP/SCGA.
Championships at Bernardo
Heights Country Club.
•1t was the ~t round of my
life,• ~ Glasgow, among the last
players to finish, who btrdied the
final two holes to finish al
1-over-par 73 .
Most everyone figured Julie Ob
of Torrance had won late in the
afternoon, but Glasgow, playing in
the last group, was posted atop the
leader boa.rd following her 18
boles.
On 12, Glasgow sank a 25-foot
putt for birdie, a 165-ya.rd pa.r-3
over water. Her tee shot landed on
the fringe, before sinking the long
putt.
On 13, a par-5, Glasgow was
four feet off the green in two, then
dljpped 1t up abclut Ov feet from
tbepin
*'We baa no 1dea (aha bad
won),• said D1dc Moma, CdM
cioach ·We were the last ones in,
and the fWth t out, and we bad
to take a cart back.
"Th.is wu the bOSt round
Joruiy's ev(!r played. She
Scrambled 'a lot, and she drove
well Her dnves weru 240 to 280
yards. WP. m asured one drive at
281 yards.•
Glasgow, who accepted a golf
schoJarshlp to UC Berkeley, beat
Oh by one stroke, while Lee and
Jenna Daniols of Bonita Vista
finished at 15.
Glasgow, who bas twice in her
career pla~ed in the U.S. girls
junior amateur, was No. 1 among
46 girls from four CIF sections; the
Southern, Central, LA City and
San Dlego. •
6. Tom Sargent: Sargent,
president of the Southern
Califorrua PGA and a highly
respected teacher, accepted the
position as head pro at Mesa Verc(e
in May. Sargent, 47, had been the
head pro at Yorba Unda Country
Club for 17 tn years
Among h1s distinctions are
reputable junior programs. Kellee
Booth, the U.S. girls junior amateur
champion in 1993, had been a
Sargent p upil for many years.
Sargent was later voted the
SCPGA Teaching Pro of the Year
for the third time in his career. • u bjt me all of the sudden,~
$alg41Gtsaid. •it WU an
opportwiity, juat Oft8 of those
UUngs that come Ak>QQ and tt~ •
cballeage you have to take. J can't
"Y. I WU prepared for it.. 7 ..... George: The
qumteuential golfer In th annual
Costo Mesa City Ownpionsblp;
otherwise known u the Wlll Jor-
dan Cl.usic, Ceorge does the C \
RJpken Jr. thing, playing inhls
23rd consecutive event at Coslll
Mesa Goll and Country Oub.
George, also the origtnal
champion, la believed to be the
only player ever to compete in
every Will Jordan Classic.
•I won $200 in merchandise
and a trophy,• George recalled of
bis 1973 title. Ml got to kiss Miss
Costa Mesa, too. They used to
have the queen of Costa Mesa
come to the tournament.
(Tournament founder and the late)
Joe Costello used to have her
present the trophy.•
8. By George, again ... as well
as SACC bosttng tbe Soutbem
cautomla Amateur. George, a
part-time bag boy at Santa Ana
CC, qualifies for the SoCal
Amateur tha t is played on the
course in which he shines goll
shoes and cames bags for
members. ·
The event itself, featuring more
than 300 entrants, teed it up in the
96th Southern California Gou
Association Amateur
Championship at Santa Ana CC,
one of the nation's oldest contested
amateur c:bampionthip. ll wu the
&It time llDce 1956 that SACC
b09ted tbe f!ftllt. AJ Gel~ of
tbe Senior PGA Tour playfid t.bat
year. 9. Monty Blodgett: Alter 10
years as the bead pro at Newport
Beoch CC, Blodgett reb.res in July
a.nd ii replaced by Paul Hahn, later
voted the SCGA's Assistant Pro of
the Year.
Hahn had been involved in
NBCC's juruor program, which
reaped plenty of rewards earlier
this year with Glnsgow (see No. 5).
10. Lucky wtnner: If you think
you're lucky shooting a
hole-in-one, check out J.E.
McLeod of Newport Coast, 'Wb06e
name was selected as the grand
prize winner out of a raffle at the
Taste of Newport.
Whai did McLeod win? Ob; just
a spot tn the celebrity pro-am in
the second Toshiba Senior Classtc
at NBCC March 11-17, 1996.
The drawing was held Sept. 25
at the Newport Beach Conference
and V1.Sitors Bureau.
John Weiner of Costa Mesa, the
runner-up, won a customized
T~shiba golf bag in the rafile.
Word bas it that McLeod's
mother filled out the raffle ticket
and entered his name.
• RICHARD DUNN is a Dally Pilot
Sportswriter whose dub golf column
appears every Thursday.
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aYMA&OlllN
' eo• 330 West Bay Sttcct
Cost&Mesa. CA mzl
Comer O/Nrwport Bhid A 81J St.
RAWll.o.·~··
Culle a NlllMnt af
Hunelnglon .. ecft for
mot• thin M y .. e died Sunday, O•, .
17th at FHP Hoepl!&I In ,..ountam Vatley at
th• age of 71. Caa
waa born In La.Q>
caster, Ca and ~ ll>
Aluka at an •arty •o• "to ... k his fortune ...
H• a pent 1 e years In
Wrang11U end Ketchl-'
kan Wh8'4 he had his
own bualn•H an.,P
Hrved as pr .. ld•nt gf
th• Aluka Liquor
D••l•r• A .. oclat on.
DUtlng the y•ri of WWII h• Nrved In the
Coaat Guard. "
Atler moving to H8.
where h• •P4tnt his
time playing golf ~°'
aeveral yeara, h• •n·
tered th• clty admlnla-
traUon office where h•
aerved for 1' \.11 years,
3 \.11 as purchulng
agent and 11 y•ar• Ila
aulatant city adml'bl$-
trator retiring In Jan.
1973. Since hi• r•tlr,-
ment, he nu epent
hla lime playlng ~
and travellng ext.n·
alvely.
He leave• a nephew,
Michael Caatle, of
Nampa, Idaho and a
alater·ln·law, Sue C.·
lie, of Mountalr1
Home, Idaho.
GINlllAL
POU CY
Rates and deadlines are
subject to change without
nouce. The publisher
reserves the riplt to censor ..
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any clasiliied
adveniscment. Please
rcpon any etTOr that may
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accept no liability foe any
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re9POftsible except for the
cost of the spice actually
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Credit can only be allowed
for the first insertion.
II lHUASOAY. DEClteER 21. 1915 -
~lead: Kini oto
The sreat Be!sian detective, Her·
cule Poirot, and hla amaoueruia,
Capt. Haatlnp, we~ oo their way
home from the club after an
eveninr'• bridee. Poirot was in a
foul mood, occuloned by this hand.
•Have you taken leave of your
teruff, Haatin11?" he rumed. "Do
10U r.ally think t.hat. ~r you a»
bid bearta, I would ha ve paHed
wub enouch to make slam a Sood
venture had you 1l111pl1 cont.in\lfid
wit.la rour 1pedal? How ~ tlm.e
do you want to bid the ume valu.M?
You were fortunate that it wu 1
who wu declarinr the band."
... WU r .. 11n1 lucky," Hutiop
replied. ·1 can't for th• life of me
think bow you manared to ruea•
th• band.· .
"Guesa? Gue11?" •hrilled Poirot.
"I, Poirot, aueu? What do you take
me for, mon ami? I med thoee Uttle
lfeY cells, that ~ all. The hand WU
an open book from the very lirat
tnclt..
"West WU marked with the ~
queen of bean.I by the cpeniq 1eaa.
and there wu no way to make the
contract it the kin1 of apadn could
not be finetlld -it wu too much "'° hope for a ain1leton k.ir)g with
East. I had to aet to band for the
trump CioeaH with a club. Had
West held the ace of clube u well,
he would not have opened with a
weak two-bid -the band would ~have been eood enoufb for one
heart. Therefore, when led a clnb
at the second trick and Eaat fol·
lowed low, riailll with th~ ace waa
automatic. N'eat ce paa?"
lllPtOlMUT llUCllDDISI SAU.IOAD 7014 tol'UI
5530 lllSC. toll •ao 8AIL aoAT* 1H• LO
l•••••••••I DMMI. whMA. OINft. Red/black facto1 aAL• ..... ONll ltrun~I• beet l1IO. OM* tenna. IU 000 demO CMG mph In 4. ovu QUAUl'ID? Crib $100. Car ... Poe wme. 7D"4074 .~. ~ &.oo'dna for ~. as. Toye. lkown & •• bt pnc. 171,"6 le .. 1tr .. 1? P .. ceful Jordan petlo table w/ 34 PT. C•lulftltla our M6t P'* 161, ....
Boa ting/Matin• Env. chair• 1100. Web9r Chall....., ....... 1u1Cury tax already
1500+ WK, M9d &>en. Bbq 140. C.n• chairs 1795. Minney'• Yachl paid mull Hfl by war
Start lmm9d 723·737S l 2S/ea. 9.IC12 Orlenlel 8 urplu1, 1500 Old andllll Vin-' ah~14
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Otflct: S••k• motl· Record playtr. 1 t O. eoo Jeemlne Ave. ---------vated HUer for Inter· Corone del Mer. MAJUNE S!ltVICB L nel'a #1 Boating Co .
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9250
aervlc• oriented, rell· •BUYING ITl!MS• A«Oblc HtlM Rider From Sl49 '83 Chev C•maro al 11 l5,000. 780-8702 Found Inflatable boat In able, wk .. nds a muau From 1800-1980. 1 pc Trdm'New S190Ql()nlyU49 Ber11natta. Full power, _..., ______ _
H2o, Balboa pen, near w1111ra1n. 875-9300 to entire eatale. Paint· ~Nlw Sl~S250 T·top , wheels. 1
Cypreaa at. 848-4005. Computer users Needed. Inga, china, glaware, SIS M. Hew S21951Qi1y $211 owner, all record•, work Own Hout• furn, ate. lmmed ca•h. Lhc'ldtNtwl2395/()llyS29S alarm. 723·11504 I••••••••• Loat cat• naar COM 20K to SOK/yr 24Hra top s. 673-6223 Iv mao SololluHtwS1300r'CnttSlts 91 Chev 810 Blaser •_._.__.._L...CANNOUN~EMENTS High, 1 white Persian, t-800-881·3358 x 603 --------HUGESALHNDSSUHDAYI Muat Hiii 1 owner,·~--------1 white dark/brown, _________ ...,......, __ ..,. ·-
tabby Kim 844-15425 If a r n I 9 o o aS 8 o o APPLIANCES 6011 2000 WRCISE MACHINES!!! receipt•. Super cleani c1a .. aned
COSTA MESA 2624 ••••••••GARAGES w .. kl~ •tufting •nva-'*"-"'•114451-4M7 ''2 •500 723•7979 Th• mo1t comprehen-
MISCElIANEOUS •--------LOST: male t•Y· blk & lope• at home. For FF frig SU5. WHh•r alve and current dlrec-POR RENT 274 0 ANNOUNCEMENTS wht Tabby, 10· riutty, 1n10 • • n d ••If· & oryer s110 each -TI-C-~-----6-07_5_, HONDA 9085 tory ot good• and •et· 18A/28A Mobll• Home RENTALS liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lrlendty. CO M area. addreued stamped warrant•• & Oellvery. ~uaS · vices aroundl
Quiet & Secure. •••••••• •'•Id• Coate Meaa 2920 Owner heartbroken I envelope to: B&A ( 7 t 4) 9 5 3 .9 8 2 2 ii, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1---------1991 Nowport Blvd. Storage ror car, aml REWARD. 760-8586 Homemallera, Bo11 KIH of Spider woman 92 Honda Aooord
9 48-8373 boat or 7. $85/mo. FREE DEBT CONSOLI· 2158, Lubbock, TX Sat Dec 30, 8pm OC LX, auto, all power op-O th ?
ROOMS 2706 Avall now. 720-1585 ' DATION. IMMEDIATE 79408 FU,.,NI.,..,rDE 6014 Perl A ... _ 72""7271 tlona, air, great cond., " • move Collene Park 2 mu· REL EF T " &v" ""... ,... S9500 bo 434..a500 • iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1 1 00 many PERSONALS FT/PT Cashier, apply19iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 0 "" · Sell your extra ter BR IY.rBA 1 oar, BUSINESS OfFICI!. debts? Overdue bllta? In person, between a.••
S825. 2288 Fordham Share hou•• In Nwpt POR neNT 2789 Reduce monthly pay· 11 or 3-S M F South 75% OFF JA,.UAR household
•B (8t8) 961-4783 ahorH, 2BR, 2BA, AG ments 30% to 50%. Pacific car w~h 2750 DHlgn Center PrlcH TRANSPORTATION " 9105 Items
OCEAN BREEZES. 2Br gar, fully fum axceptl~!!!~!!~; Ellmlnat• Interest. Brtatol, Costa Meaa Entire contents or ••••••••1liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii In Classified
2ea. water & gaa your room $575 Incl II Stop collectlon callers. Pl!RSONALS 3002 model home: Iron 1989 JAGUAR XJ8, --------.--........-...-...._
paid, ~ oN lat mo ulll a4e-5336 Reator• credit. NCCS, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Q~UR':'l!TI COOK{Lt beda, aoras, chairs, ---------1 Foraat GrHn, loaded,
rent, S800/mo 64!5· ---------non-profit. 1·800-955· DATING? SHY? ouH HP ng, e11p d, atono vaHa, armolre. BOATS 7011 runa grHt, MUST
225" 53•~1375 RENTALS TO 0412. llve out, Ffr. Non· 248-n27 or 383·8838 SEEi 14995 OBO .. .,... For a fun time call amkr. Nawport Beach •---------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml •Loving, Nurturing, 011•5 .. 2 ... ,.,. ""5. area. 714-873-3843 Lovel~ queen aota DUFFY 4 3 4 ·8 15 0 0 LI c Open S un 1/4 2 BR, 1 S011111e 2724 St bl C 1 WI h • OJ~ (1SOR""'2) ~ • • oup •: • 33c per minute, 18 + New food service In Ir· bed, beige, fine cond .,., 'h BA, gar, w/d hkup, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lo adopt. Ufe In rural vine ... ka enthualu· Rtduc9d lo $75 873-8103 ELECTRIC BOATS no peta, 292 E. 16th 8 1 p community, country, •GUARANTEED• pl. HOO 435·9404 a •nn r••P· p•raon wooded, home. Prom-'*DAT I!'* lie, org Hlf·atart•r W/1---------•SALES for 2 ~BA 1BA HouH _....,..._ ___ .;;;;;;;;._ d & near bch. SSOO/mo la• future devotion W/Southern California'• goo computr com· MERCHANDISE •SERVICE
• .. •••••••• and love to newborn. E.Kctualvt Men & Women. mun akllla. Oppty lo MISC 6015
MAZDA 9125
'83 e2eDx Sliver, •dr,
at/ac/pa/pb, am/fm
No room left
In the garage
for tht car?
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help NEWPORT Inc. ulll furn 574.97155 1• Cati Ellleen & Bob 1·900·388..0400.IC1893 grow w/ual 833·2928 •'iiiiiiiiii• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •RENTALS
BEACH 2 669 Balboe Penn. Prlv BUSINESS & 1-800·488·3238 S2.99/per min. 18+ POI TALIQOV'T JOll 1• •USED BOATS
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil bedrm w/bath. Sep. PIN AN CE Procall Co. 802·954-7420. 121/HOUR +BENEFITS Herba, Juniper• St, On tTRADE•INS entr, fp, W/0 . Quiet NO !XP WILL TRAIN palms 4·6 $10. Cllrua·
caaa, Ult whl, phn, --------
new tlr•• le taga, mlntl Orig owner. •1BR t 925• area. S550. 873-81557 I•••••••• LOST & Appl+lnlo 714-e4M991 avocado (fruiting) 110. tCONllGNMENTI
2 BA 2 BA 1725/Up CDM 1 Bdrm avl. uua POUND 2 925 EMPLOYMENT Sal•• Promotional En· SC1•tm0.•bnlrtd fboauthn.1asl2no•. Factory Showroom
Relrlg & dishwasher paid. No pet., non BUSINESS liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii terprlaH now haa 10 909-874-9422 2001 W. Coaat Hwy.
Incl. eox30 pool. No amklng. 708 Avacado OPPORTUNITY F 0 UN D I poaltlona to fill·ASAP.•---------(B•twHn Ardell & P•1•· No leH. No S390 676-8834 Germen Shepard Earn S250·St500/per Sea Scout Baa•)
leaae. 0 4 5-4&55 NB B 2904 A big puppyl wk . Direct A corporate Rooms, ____ M __ &.e_4_2_7 ___ 11987 Mercury Sable, .,...,,~--.,~=--=~,,....,,,. Hut hse, lg yard,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii EMPLOV1l'1C!NT 1ale1 ln~lved. Star1 N d d 12' I n t bl & I k 1 BA APT NEAR by nature park. prlv. Black w/brown and '''"° rt 1 •• • : n a a • runa oo a great Bl!ACH. S775 Incl pet ok S550 PO 454• $Pan>hone RouteeS white coloring. In my 5530 todayl C I 1567-4755. apa mens, for marine aclence 63k mll••· all options,
gaa, water, eleo, frig. 3404/hm 845-5640 Local alte•for •ale, yard, Dec. 2tat. 11am iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii homes olaH•• at CdM High muat ... ,, prlc9d to
Owner 873· 1177 N•wport Height• $2.000/Wk potential. ~~:;fyl~eg· ::::;·:~ 1315 000/Vr lnoom• TRADE Classlfled =~;~;;ontact Stark, :~.~~~ so~~~34-
Lr9 2BR 28A gar, 2 yra new, deck, FP, 800.208-15300 24hr po,•ntlel. Read ing can 1atlaty
bullt·lna. 11175. Lse, vaulted call, own bath, Buy It. Sell It. Find 11. To 8~~c:.rn~ In bOOka. Toll Free (1) through Classlfled your
no/smk/peta. 842· full prlv, NS, lndty. Cl ... lfled. Call .-.. 2 •878• S00-898-9ne Eld. R· 842°5878 housing needs. ease or 980-8383 S500. 573-4848 x 337 --138t for detalla. 1---------1----------
110,4150. &4•·&424
MERCURY 9135
SAIL BOATS 7014 4X4 9221 ---------------------
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around th• house?
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Dlr•ctory
help you find
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842·1878
........... ,CLEANING
SERVICE S!RVICES
CONTRACTORS P!NCES HANDY MAN 3710 IANl>SCAPE • MOVING 3834 PAINTING 3858 PST SPIUNn!U 392i
3548 GENERAL 3558 6 DBC~ 3615 LAWN CARE 3808 -----------~ -----•ISERVIC!S 38701 _____ _
----------------DIRECTORY Hendyman Ch8rll• PUBLIC NOTICE OHUllO'I ltAINTINQ 8PIUNKUR R•ttAlfll -----··•I A TOUCH 01' CLAll CPI 8UILD•RI INC. •I'• NC •I• Painting, carp entry, • fR... • Th Calif P bll Utlll 20 Yra Exp. Od Prlcel lt••onall.red Pet Care Va lvu•HHd••Tlln•
C WOOD/CHAIN LINK plumbing, fence bldg. llilii9 t · u o • Ouar work. rrt.. El t. ~n I att Uv N ctocka. 25Yra t.oc.I Exp. leaning. RH/Comm Ra1ldentlal Con1t. ·No Jobb too amafl· Local rHld. 700-5044 T•"""'•• .. •· &.Mr1tt , tie• CommlHlon R~· Uc-'3715802 &31o1534 ne erna •· o John aea.aaai CARPET UcJBonded. Fr•• Eat. Uo.tlll518424•1n1ured ~ ...,... _ _,,,.._..,....~---•*•.._ 7514'71 QUIRES that all u1ed •trtae or worry. Uo, "'
TerHa 282·7t43 (714) M&-4993 7t 48412t Horne Repalr/ii•mod•I Lancleoape Remod•llnt houH hold g o od • iilitilow C!lf'01t li•lnt. In•. R•ra. • 173-71841----------
ct!ANING 3515 •80H HOUS£CLEANINQ ..,,.l ,'""J-, 8o~o-tt__,,,C_en_i_t_ru_o_tl,...on-· •FiNCil OAT•i• Coata M"a/Newpor1 Yard lune up/malntenace, movera print the ir 'alnU119.U.tlbt H®H/~t 11tARSLATOJ/
lloPhffC.,IMWl'hl Uoen1ed-8ond~ ~r:'r.'e 1~:t 8,f'.~~ ==":'~-~= ~.~y::~::zo ~r,:~~·2~:'~: ri~;· ;,~ !h~~W!~~ ~:'~~J;be:::~i PLUMllNG 3890 TUTOlt 3917
C#ptl & airi...'""""" 110.00 P9f hour. 7 t · Jim Whyte 842·7208 Pt ri 1 E hie 1 IMIS-7505 print their T.C.P. num•
,,0,,.,.., ttMct• "'Rai.': 714-948-0318 14-71o77H HOM• l•RVIC•• 0 1 • • bar tn all adV•rtl•• G~ »rama Palntln1 ...... L-·· PLUMi•• LSMll 8PMllH MOWI TI ....... t82 •WINDOW Cleanlni i---------V i l A Anything A Everything PLAHT ARTl8T m•nte. If you have a lnl/EXt Qua.I Pllnt!R•••I '~ J~ llngtrt c;,_ Great glfl for you et\d *W"OUOHT IRON• FrH 1!9tlmate. Aer.. Sp1clall1t In existing quHtlon about th• I• l.lo'd/1nt'd t lno• •1e. ~ 1947 family. lbp'd IA Tut&
CBRAMIC nus
!it~~t}apc~:·~~~~! DOORS 3580 ~~~·~f:" Mlohael 788-1440 landacape/lrtlQ•tlon galfty of a mover, llmo .... TOH ~7 ,..,eriOIV StMoe•lneured euMlfta •7:1-7409
,.,.. E1tl•729·7079 upgrad ... 78C).;9792 or chauff eur, call: lk•'• Cu1tom PalnUng ~~t 17"'9304
3528 An e-..rleno•d Publlo UtllltlH Prof, CIHn, Quality •·--w-.----3-_.-2•1 Reu ... creanlne depenela bl• door PLOOl INSTALL HAULING 3720 LEGAL CommlNlon Wont. lnl/bt • Oocka. AU.Sala ltl.UM81NQ au.G • ·------•I Xlr:it Aaf't. Suppllel hanger. Ouar work, · 714-558-41151 L1'70'4M ea1~tO l4Mr.....,....., ~"'~~~-~·-L.Mlcy lhow9n Aetl'4' Fuml•h~. own Tiana. r•N · oon 1521-8910 UPAilS 3820 'UNK To Th• DuM• SllVIC!S 38121 ...... --------Dreln C..enlngtAlplpee C•MMte •MM•&.• Regroutlng a lnatalt'n Lora. 790-8044 .,, r DllMmerdo'• MoVlng .IUNQ &.a• Patntlne flauoena•Ol:r.o:al• GllANIT• lnalatt •
LH70130 Dean of Tiii • •QUALITY WORK• (71 ...... ·1•••) Jud .. ment• Coli.ctted Looa l/Offloe/ltorao• lbUlft4 HeliweontL Lowaet Lf747J1llncl/N Ht Pab CIMl'Hlp. uo 'cl 173"80tl Of 14e..8521S DltYWaYY Will haul Whal Truh No -~-.• ,., • No FEI Long Dtat. ,,, .. l!l t. .. Clu#MMdl T9fm• 01( ~ ;.._,_ o...._.__ Aeu'.. -... .:..
COM..,.T'1'11:11S 355• ...,.... Hardwd/Vlnyl/Cetamlo Man won'U 801o1182 .......,... ·• T"tl1832 9794t t4 L,-U7'et 111-0110 -..""'mbl"''J ::..._• .... -.... ••• • -------~ a-yu1 ID SBltVICB 3584 Mrbl•/Carp•l·Bnd/lna Turn '/OUI Jt.ICl~nto ,..ov " -CHILD CAD 3538 ••••••-L1oe27e 71•·7~~• -------cAtHt Ht n .t .. liOtttera llfttfti C ... =..= WALL c ............ c..... .....llAU "" IXNRT BOMI CUI!/ ·-------Ho~ • 7·D•ya PllSONAL cou.•Y•GS 3a3~ c",...,..,. .... ,"" '°' effecttve ~ Dtyw..,,.._ A.tpalr BMD'f MU 3710 SUVICU 3780 MASSAGI 3830 ~~f::.0 •1n::1.~~ SllVJCI 3817 ',~::!:: ::::::,. •INYR • •
Of 2-prowtdlng at• In ,::,.,,eppe ~;o~;:. /K•n~apl110/Ttature · "'" l!.edmat" we ga1a ~ "Ml ~y home • .....,,..-et; Com •• 661-ao7i Palftteee,....err ..................... Cu•••r.••M.,.,..... Ll•HM .... toeo togethtf. 8'11p, lnttd, ,...n P~J'C'A-114 liliif9 htl•tn11 ~ DryweU end"'°'•' llCtended ctW, plan a MUSIC Oall••r•.-llf. You ad"'°9 to IN crqy. o., ........ ~ • .,... ,,ovkiH oom .,,., ILICTIJ"'•T 3810 Sm ... Jobe Oki Prep. m ..... Dr. apple WSONS 3131 provide ...... !~ ... ~ root . ·~141 u anytime Uo'd.t,..,.' 111 NII oonnecHMty. c tor ~ G•rr ...... 77 erranOI d•y/ntaht Kint Cl9uea --....... C"'· ........... lncill*d. dttall•. 7t4-6d•llll. .... RetlfM OtMr_... ref8 ..... C~ ... 1Me1 _________ fl••••••••
, ________ A-1 cl!:"~"' R..,.lra, lmprcw.menta, MOVDIG --------i.---·•••1 co•cun • Oulclc~• ~~ au.:L.~ JIWll.IY 3114•----•
3557 1.00a1 uo. 7041 AooMNd owp, p1t»g,
-------....... tleo, ~ Wllllam HAIOld ......... a Home ,.tpalre ~.. w__, a ~eP* -,.-.o om B°"ded a 1n1ured. Uo'd •804•1 Maque•l'IM i;i.7'..a. . .' ,._,~;:?, L#7Ql741 N1 .... 7 Mob1ee #43IMI. ~-en.oa
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