HomeMy WebLinkAbout1995-12-30 - Orange Coast PilotHOOPS
Corona del Mar in
tournament finals
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
T he Daily Pilot
· -as part of our
annual cus-
tom -presents a look
back, through sto-
ries, photos and the
people who made
headlines in 1995.
Here's the lineup:
TODAY
• Images -A look at 1995
through the lenses of the Daily
Pilot's photo staff. See AS.
• Sports -The ultimate arm-
chair review or the year in
sports. See B 1
MONDAY
• Top 10 -Our annual list of
the top news events in Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa.
Mercy is
_pleaded
for dog
• Costa Mesa Animal
Control officials say man's
pit bull, Hemi, is a hann
to other animals and
should be destroyed.
By 1ina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -To Mike
Marshak, Hemi, a 4-year-old pit
bull, is a kind, gentle and loving
pet that rarely leaves. his side.
To Costa Mesa Animal Control
officer,, Hcmi is a savage beast
that should be destroyed..
•He's never been like that with
me,• Marshak said. "He's alwa~
been a really good deg. I take him
to work with me. I take him
everywhere.
"That dog has never bitten a
person in his We.•
Maybe not. But animal control
officers claim Hemi has bitten a
couple or an,imals.
Marshak said he was shocked
when animal control officers
showed up at his Bayview Tenace
home on Dec. 5, calling Hemi a
vicious dog and teillJlg him they
were going to take tl}e animal
away.
They told him Hemi had
attacked another dog three days
earlier, and the owners had to
91ell out $1,500 in veterinary bills
kJ treat the wounds that Hemi had
caused.
"I had no idea that my dog had
been in a fight,• Marshak said. ·1
didn't have the dog that day. The
woman who had given him to me
asked if she could take him for '\
day, so I let her take bim.
"She apparently took him to
her house and had him chained
up in the front yard, but he some-
how broke free and got into it
with another dog.
"I thought it was strange when
1 came home and found my dog
•SEE DOG PAGE A10
~------~--~---~--,
l\ll l \
AROUND TOWN
• IEST BUYS
CLASSIFIED
·POLICE FILES
PUBLIC NOTICES
SPORTS
I • I
I • M•
N. ~ •• I
• Epfiogue -A
postscript on .some
of 'the people we
introduced to our
readers.
Tr,eated sewage hearing postponed
• Dubious d11-
'ttnctton1 -Those
moments that some
would just as soon forget.
• Milestones -Those who
passed away in 1995.
TUESDAY
• Quiz 95 -Take the Daily
Pilot year-end challenge.
• At large -The unsolved
crimes of 1995.
THURSDAY
• Newsmaker -The Daily
Pilot's annual selection of the
newsmaker of the year.
• State water board
· delays IRWD 's Back Bay
plan until March.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -State
officials have postponed until
March a review of a controverstal
proposal to dump treated sewage
in Newport Bay, potentially
delaying the Irvine Ranch Water
District's hope to start diverting
water from San Diego Creek by
s~er.
"It's starting to push the time
frame for getting our summer ·
diversion project ln place,• water
district General Manager Ron
Young said. "We're hopeful this
doesn't have an effect on moving
this back "
The state Regional Water Qual-
ity Control Board was to review
the water district's proposal at its
Jan. 26 meeb.ng. However, the
agency's board members have
informed the water district that it's
time to separately review the dis·
trict's summer mitigation program
and the winter sewage discharge.
The water district iS hoping to
HCl\I \\ 110111> \\
I' II o I O" H' I I \ II 11 0 c,-.. I I \
T hey started rehearsing nightly.
just before Thanksgiving, Tbe team members march
but tonight marks the end behind a Roman captain in
of Estancia High School student hopes of raising en~ugh money
athletes' stint as Roman soldiers through the venture to pay for
in the "Glory ol Christmas• play an invitational wrestling meet in
at the Crystal Cathedral. Hawaii next year. Above, J.R. Peer, right, and And that's probably not a Richie Mason, left, wait in the
moment too soon for wrestler wings for their curtain call.
Thai Dinh, far right, who need-The players were recruited
ed a 20-minute break between I for the play by their coach,
two of the three performances David Jones, who is a member
be and other students complete of the Crystal Cathedral.
STltl· AFLOAT
OCC president Dave Grant is retiring but
.will continue as crew coach
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
D ave Grant may not be stepping mto
the president's office when Orange
Coast College resumes dUles next
month, but the new retiree doesn't plan to
abandon college activities.
Grant, OCC's president Since August.
1989, said he w1ll continue as the school's
crew coach and plftN to spend more time
catehing up With longtime friends. '
•1t'1 been a wondertul stx yeen, • Mid
Grant. 57, ~et hOme with bal 31-year
old golden 1'ltrieYer "'!\'" thli nik ......
8DJoy9d 8"f'Y llDnute ol It. but It --tDDI tor~ little ... " Grant jGlned OCCs fatWty In tie2 ...
..mng COlldl ana 8lllltant cnw ~ &bin
liglled GD II I pCllbl ldlJlc9 ....... I
yemllls. He W'9I .. I I 111= ... fl ....... 181C tbrouib 1 .... Wll
dMDol .... hm '197etiOuF t•
Qallt ........ ~= =-~::.:~... -
dump 5 Iilillion gallons of treated
sewage a day into the upper bay
as part of an effort to save millions
of dollars in disposal costs with
the Orange County Sanitation
District.
District administrators say that a
separate proposal to divert water
out of thP s~ Di~o Creek dur-
ing the summer months would
substantially improve the water
quality in the bay.
That claim is critical since New-
port Beach residents believe the
sewage discharge plan would
damage the bay. Project oppo-
nents are concerned tho added
nutnents from the treated waste·
water would cause an algae
bloom and possibly harm fresh-
water creatures. project oppo-
nents say.
Despite daims by the water dis-
trict's consultants that the highly
treated sewage poses no threat to
the bay or its users, opponents are
also worried about the health
risks of being exposed to the
water. The oty of Newport Beach
has voted to oppose the project
although the city has no contrdl
over the project's fate. •
•SEE SEWAGE PAGE A10
• mm ors
• Three men were
arrested by Costa Mesa
police on suspicion of
narcotic sales.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Piiot
COSTA l'vtESA -One of three
Costa Mesa men arrested Thurs-
day for allegedly dealing drugs .
out of an apartment, is also sus-
pected of peddlmg narcotics to
children.
Ramon Pena-Perez, 29, his
brother Julio Pena-Perez, 27, and
Juan Vizcarra-Padilla, 21. all Cos-
ta Mesa residents, were arrested
Thursday afternoon after under-
cover police narcotics officers
allegedly observed them selling
narcotics and transporting and
selling mari1uana, according to
Costa Mesa police reports.
All three men are in Jail with
ball set at $25,000
Police first suspected in Sep-
tember that Ramon Pena-Perez
was a drug dealer when a 13-
year-old boy flagged down a
patrol officer after he allegedly
saw Pena-Perez selling cocaine
and marijuana to teens 14-17
years old behmd a liquor store on
Baker Street, Dennis Sanders, a
Costa Mesa police narcotics
detective said
But because of false addresses
and Abases used by Ramon Pena-
Perez who went 10 and out of hid-
mg, police couldn't locate and
arrest him until Thursday,
Sanders said
·The kid did a great JOb -he
absolutely did the nght thing by
wavmg down a police officer, and
started tlus going,• Sanders said.
"We encourage any kids who
•SEE DRUGS PAGE A10
..
• A2
,
BESS RADOSTA
]!>cal poet writes· from life's experiences
greer
wylder
»ith holidays over
head to Launch Pad
fir stay-at-home mom.1,
ow that the holidays are
almost over, it's a good time
to sign up for Mommy and Me
classes.
The Launch Pad located on
the third level of Crystal Court
has a science-based program for
moms and toddlers ages 2-5. The
sessions are weekly, ~ 90 min-
utes, and run for three consecu-
tive weeks. The cost is $30 per
mother and child ($8 for each
additional child.) For reserva-
tions please call (546-2061).
n you're looking for tile for
your home, Concept Stud.lo
(75~-0606) has the best selection.
Despite the fact it's located in
Corona del Mar you can find
some beautilul tiles that are rea-
sonably pnced. Many decorators
say after shopping around for
better prices elsewhere, they
alYntys go back to Concept Stu-
dio. It's located at 2720 E. Coast
Highway in Corona ael Mar.
jim
de boom
, .... ,,
Old lessons are stilt .:
good ones to live by-··.
. ,.
CLIP AND POS~ As we start ·.
the New Year, it's time we pro-.
mote some good old fashion val.
ues to live by. Values that many. •
members of service clubs, reli-
gious congregations and our
community believe in and live ..
by every day.
Here is a story I first heard in ,
1953 at YMCA Camp lhduhapi * l
near Mound Minnesote. · _ •
rm·lbtrd
A boy left home for college,
with the anxiety and interest .,.
which parents always feel when ,
a son goes away from hpme. He
was fortunate in having a fine
religious father and mother who
believed in him.
Before be left home, his par-
ents called him in and told him •
there were some things they -
For people who like to shop
and eat, Elizabeth Benetleld has
recently added a Tassels Tea-
room in the back of the store
that serves lunch aI)d afternoon
lEAH HOGSTEN I DAl.Y PLOT
So tar every poem Costa Mesa resident Bess Radosta has submitted to poetry contests has won an award.
wanted above all things. They
wanted him to do well in col-
lege, but they did not want him ·
to sacrifice some things in order .
that he might win popularity or
make high marks.
A few days after the young
man arrived in school, a small
framed motto appeared above
• tea. You can make reservations
by calling 673-7714. The borne
I accessories store has a nice
I selction of antiques and repro·
i duction pieces. Elizabeth Bene-
beld is located at 3127 E. Coast
Hwy. in Corona del Mar.
For the ~t m fine lingerie
Eva (720-9787), located in the
Atrium Court in Newport Beach,
carries many EurQpean lines not
found at most department stores.
Penguin Ptonnalwear (548·
5211) recently relocated to 2700
W. Coast Highway in Newport
(
Beach (next door to Newport Ski
Co.) Unlike many tuxedo rental
shops, Penguin also sells tuxedos
and accessories. It's currently
haVlllg a sale on its two tuxedos
-the single-breasted tux is
reduced from $425 to $325, and
its double-breasted tux is
reduced from $450 to $350. Oth-
er prices are reasonable includ-
ing shirts from $22 to $65, vests
from $28 to $62, and stud sets
from $8 to $140.
SHE IS
Costa Mesa's answer to Eliz-
abeth Barrett Browning. Bess
Radosta is a 46-year-old wife,
mother, grandmother, person-
nel manager and published
poet.
She has lived 111 Costa Mesa
since she was 8 years old.
Though she has written for
some time, she only began to
write seriously, with her bus·
band Frankie's support and
urging, in the past two years.
And she only submitted her
work this past year to poetry
contests.
·1 write about the passion
and experience of living. I hope
my work is easy to relate and
spark.S' something wonderful
within the soul.•
ACCOLADES, ACCOLADES
So far every poem that
Radosta has submitted has won
an award. Her poems, "I Once
Knew An Eagle," a tender trib-
ute to her mother, and "Good
King Sabatino," in honor of her
favorite South Udo eatery, have
both won the Creative Arts and
Sciences' Accomplishment of
Merit award.
The slightly erotic "Freefall,"
inspired by her husband,
received the Editors Choice
Award from the National
Llbrary of Poetry and appears in
the recently released •A Sea of
Treasures,"
"A Sea of 1\-easurei • viUl go
into the Library of Congress and
can be ordered from the Nation-
al Library of Poetry or a local
book.store for $60.
"Preefall" is also one of 11
poems narrated on "The Sound
of Poetry" cassette.
"I Once Knew An Eagle"
graces a wall on the fourth floor
of Irvine Medical Center where
her mother was and was pub·
llshed m a nationally distributed
hospital volunteers magazine.
MEETING HER MUSE
Radosta writes when
inspired, with no set writing
time or favorite . place.
"Freefall" was composed dur-
ing a break at work. Having
had no formal training, she
credits "life's experience.•
"l just write from my heart. I
write what I feel and it comes
out on the paper.•
HOW rr HAPPENED
Radosta subscribed to
Writer's Digest magazine and
entered some of the contests
that were listed, avoiding those
that publish your work only if
you purchase their book. She
wanted to be published for her
works' merit. She entered five
or six contests and made the
finals in all of them.
The National Library of Poet-
ry runs contests every other
month. About 20,000 to 30,000
submissions are received. Of
those, around 18% will be sent
semi-finalist notices and 3%
make Editor's Choice. Each
book contains close to 3,000
poems. Poems are published
free of charge.
Ra.dosta has this advice for
aspiring poets: "You're never
too old to try. All they can do is
say no. 'No' isn't personal. It
doesn't mean you're less of a
person. You just have to keep
trying."
FUTURE PLANS
On the burners right now,
Radosta bas a biography, a fic-
tion story and a series of chil-
dren's books, which contain
moralistic life lessons -such as
teachlng kids not to prejudge or
play dangerous practical jokes -
through the use of colorful,
charming animal characters.
The children's books are an
area of special interest for
Radosta. She was a child advo-
cate for more than 16 years, tak·
ing young people to church and
into her home.
She wu involved with Praise
Repertory Company and its
television show "Catch the
Vision" for four years and she
counseled at the boys correc·
tional camp, Artesian Oaks in
Saugu.5.
"I loved it. It wu one of the
best things I've ever done.•
-By Valerie Fugent
his desk, with these words upon
it: "I'm Third.• Everyone com-
ing into the room was attracted
by the uniqueness of this motto
and many asked what it meant.
The young man would always
replay, •1 will tell you what that -
means the week I graduate
from college:
TI.me went on. He kept bis 1
high ide.als and faith, he did :
well in school, made his athletlc-
teams and was always foremost
to take his place of responsibili-
ty, although neveT a great star
or headliner in studies or athlet· f4 ~ ics. •l Year after year, this young :•
man went to college and finally ~
the last week of his seruor year : • ~
came and his fellow classmates : : ti
wanted their answer and the ·: p
why of MI'm Third." :• ..
When they questioned him, : : ~·
he replied: •Fellows, when I • : -;
was leaving home for college, : • ~
my parents called me to them ·: h
and said that they were anxious:· ~
that I should do well in school; • • ~
that I should make athletic •:
teams; that 1 should be popular, ~
but that there were some things h
Which they did not want me to ~
sacrillce for these things; and •• The Girls Gym is having a
grand re-operung special. If
you're interested in joining you
can pay "zero down and $9 per
week.• lt also offers 10 free per-
sonal training sessions included
• with a reguJar membership. The S Girls Gym is located at 2902 W.
I Coast Hwy. in Newport Beach.
Wildcats on the prowl at local beaches they were not anxious that I ~
should be a great star or bead· .• •
liner, but they were exceedingly
anxious that I should remember ·~
to keep God first in my life, the •
• _ A new home accessories store
( has opened at 1532 Newort c Blvd. m Costa Mesa. Pat:irul car-
i ries a btg selection of armoires,
tables, lamps, bedroom sets, and
sofas, and chairs. --------• IUT BUYS appears Thursdays and
-Satufdays. 'lv'hether you're a merchant C or 4 shopper, If you know of a good buy t call f'Jle at 54()..1224, fax me at ~170
i °' Write to me: Best Buys. Dally Piiot.
L 330 W. Say St., Costa Mesa, 92627.
• Purple-clad
Northwestern fans flocked
to the shores to frolick in
frigid water.
By carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -North-
western University fans were
ctawling all over the beach Friday
like purple ants with an attitude,
undaunted by chilly waters many
locals wouldn't dare dip their toes
in this time of year.
•Tuey are pretty much every·
where, N Brent Jacobsen a New-
port Beach Marine Safety Officer
said. "A lot of people are in the
water, walking on the piers and
there's a good line at Ruby's Din-
er.•
And what gave the wily Wild-
cats away'?
"They're walking around in
purple sweatshirts and shirts,•
said Jacobsen, an ardent USC
alumni and sell-proclaimed, •die-
hard USC football fan."
Despite a wtntry 59-degree
c
ii
Used to recO«l letten to tti.
editor on •ny topic.
Mesa, CA. 92626. '°9Yrl9ht: No news ston.s, 1Uustr1tions, edito-
ri•I m.tter or ~ts
~ eot!WMI• *"' ""~ ,.lot Of MW1 tipl wlll be recont-
ed Md~ dlNdtJ fO .... ~ LGNll,,.,. MMt ~
~ ........ 111 ... ""' ..
AQQUSS
CM tlddt• ls 330 W. Say St , con. Mat. C.llf. 92627.
It Is N "lot't polky to prompt·
ij comet .ti erTOB of subf\atlct.
,..._ c..ll S74-42ll TNnk Y°";.
herein an be reptoduc.ed INftti-
ovt written permt.loo of c09)'·
right owner.
HOW J:O REACH us Orculltton
The Tima Ora~• County
(800) 252·9141
~2-S678 ~
="42-4321
NM S40-122.4
5potU '42-030
News, Spor1s F•x ~170
E-Mail:
Pl.Tl71 MProdlgv.com
Mllft Ofllcil
...... Office "2"'4321 """*' faK 6J1·"°2
TEMPOATUQS
Newport Beach
?1145
Balboa
70r'44
Costa Mesa 73142
Corona del Mar
71145
aMPPORlCAST
LOCATION SIZE
w.dQ• 24w
NfWPOrt 2~w
l'-tki.s '!Mw
RMf Jettf 2-4w
CdM 1.-
IOATWICI
£arty ~with no ldvlt<wy. nds art
~tt15
knots. Wind.,,.
are 2 feet Mm I
wettM91fof6t.it
wtth•JI~~.
,,
water temperature, the combina-
tion of 71-degree air tempera-
tures and 4· to 5-foot waves from
a western swell drew droves of
surfers and a pack of Wildcats.
out the surf Friday morning.
"There are lots of swfers out
which seems to provide a show
for the tourists,• Jacobsen said. To
make it even more of a sunny
showplace, a few photographers
from magazines were out on the
beach clicking away at the
surfers, he said.
other fellow second and this ~
motto means 'I'm TIUrd,' and •
fellows, this I have tried to keep "'
in my life." •1
There was silence among the . '\
fellows present and then they ;
too, understood why he had ~}
been chosen president of his
The Northwestern fans left the
zero degree weather in Chicago
behind them Thumlay morning
and headed to Southern Calif or-
nia for the Rose Bowl match
again.st USC New Yea.rs Day.
Jacobsen beard even the
Northwestern football team
couldn't stay away from the
beach and stopped by to check
Ja'cobsen had to admit that the
beach was a great place to be Fri-
day for tourists, especially if
you're from Chicago.
class, president of his college
YMCA club and voted the most •
popular man 1n school. ' ~~-~~~-~~--~'1
• COMMt.HTY a a.uas Is published • ~ery Seturday In the Dally Pilot. FAX • .)
your wrvke dub's meeting Information •
l1DU
TOOAY
First high
4·37 a.m 5.1
First tow
11:47 a.m 0.8
Second high
5:49 p.m. 32
Second low
10:47 pm.
SUNDAY
1.8
finth~h
5:241.m. 5,.3
Flntlow
12!39 • OJ ~high
6:54 PJ"n. 1.4
Second low tfttr midnight .,...
•YBLAnmtS&
•tt's baking down bere, it's a
real nice day,• he said.
to 631·5851 or mall to 1743 Bayport ...
Way, Newport Be.m, 92660.
Frain Surfllne w.vetlmk through ......,.
lfyou~anew surfboar from Santa the timing couldn't
haw been better.
Surf •long the coast hM been CMH'htad,
and • long period of
WtlW switlll It pre-
dSCted tJY WIWfax.
Expect lllOw !: Into the Melt
8ndhln•New y_., ~ sw.11 ~II
~-lhow-~ wttt'I s. to ..
toot ~ ...s '°"'" ble~-of 12i*a ......
........ Clld
with nQ CIDl ... 11 tar clll•rid. Por dlf. ==Ml-~,
=-=r-~
COSTA MHA
• JOOO block of Enterprise: A burglar smashed •
car's window end took credit cards, chtcki and two
leather 1•ckets worth $650. ,
•COO b odt of ••tt 17th Street: A burgl1r broke
Into 1 business while It was closed and ltolt $2,050 worth of computer equipment and a brlefc11e.
• 100 blodl of W"t 1tttt Str'Mt: A thief opened tht
door of an unlocked truck and stole a $720 Colt .38·
c1llbtr revolver from lnsldt.
NIWPORT llACH
• 1H Medi .t •~: A thief removed 1 victim's
cht<k from an exterior mallboK •t the post office.
• MOO lttedr of Viti ot1artoc A vandal put epo~
glut In the door locks end bolt of • man's buslneM.
The victim w11 rtctntly ln th• Mme sticky 11tuetlon
when hl1 car tocks were filled wlm the glut while he
was on a boat In th• Huntlntton hech HarbOr. !fltel __ _
'11ee INftl oUtskte windows WMf9 you're concerned
._ pr~ fM nolM of wne ttep•lnt on h wtll _.,.Wea.It you.
SA"l\MOAY. DEC£M8£R 30, 1995 AJ
1995 brought chicanery, skullduggery, a few good folks, too
T his is the time ol year ·
wlierl media types dean
out their da~ bases -in
the Fred Column's ~. a manila
envelope full of scribbled, mostly
indeopbeBble thoughts -and
assemble their •-st• lists.
The best, the worsts, the
costliest this, the rottenest that
These are usually interesting,
· an(! always a great way to fill
space at a time when staffers are
on vacation. recovering from a
wretched excess of holiday cheer
'OT out with the flu.
I see no reason not to partici-
pate in this annual bout of list-
making. After all, columnists
have rights, too. With little or no
further ado, the Fred Column
presents its awards and citations
for 1995, a year which bas been,
generally speaking, a stinker for
most of us who fit under the
heading of Folks, Ordinary.
Rottenest Pollttcal Trlck
Award: There is simply no way
to declare a clear winner in this
category. At every level it is over-
flowing with a treasure trove of
mcompetence, slrullduggery and
up-yours attitudes on the part of
politicians and those who serve
them and bribe them (legally, of
course).
What it boils down to is poli-
tics no longer even make a pre-
tense at what it is·supposed to
be, •The art and science of gov-
ernment •
It is now nothing more than
Uie art and science of acquiring
limitless power and the public be
damned.
There is no more honor, there
is no longer any such thing as
truth. There is only anything
goes.
Recipients of the Fred Col-
umn's Rottenest Political nick
award include, but are not limit-
ed to:
• Gov. Pete Wilson, for lying to
the people of Californi4. Pete
promised he'd stay four years if
we re-elected him. We did, and
within three months be was run-·
ning for President.
• Dana Rohrabacher, who
spent his time diddling around
ma rtin
with the assassination of Doris
Allen instead of doing something
positive in Washington. which is
what we pay him to do.
•Dana Rohrabacher, Curt
Pringle, their minions, et al, for
finagling the election coincident
with Allen's ouster. The result ·
was an election so fetid and ugly
it is being investigated by the
Republican district attorney of
Orange County, the Republican
attorney general of California
and. I am told by a fairly reliable
.source, the GOP itself,
Nice going, guy$.
• Haydee nllotson, a Hunting-
ton Beach planning commission-
er and Assembly candidate, for
being suckered l.nto pulling out
of the election to replace Allen l.n
favor of the eventual wmner,
Scott Baugh.
(And a spedal award to any-
one who-actually believed nllot-
son's statement that she was not
offered any political carrot to bail
oul Of course not. It will be a
mere coincidence when she is
appointed. by Wilson to the next
available power seat -probably
Roger Stanton's supervisorial
dulir.
She will have to carpetbag a
bit, but that's no longer a prob-
lem.)
• Scott Baugh, the Assembly's
newest hack, for being the latest
in an ever-growing line of
stooges we send to Sacramento.
Makes you wonder how Manon
Bergeson and Marilyn Brewer
ever got elected.
Rose Parade bands play on at Fashion lsland
• It isn't just the North-
western Wildcats who are
in town to rehearse for
New Year's festivities.
By Valerie Fugent. Dally Pilot
NEWPORT CENTER -If you
thought you heard a marching
band at Fashion Island yesterday,
you weren't mistaken.
There were bands marching,
playing and . twirling in their
shorts and T-shirts through the
parking lots of the Marriott all
morning.
They came, they saw, they
marched.
And it wasn't just the North-
western University's Wildcat
band in town for the Rose Bowl
festivities.
At the Newport Marriott, two
high school bands are also antici-
pating their appearance in the
Tournament of Roses Parade on.
Monday.
Mahomet-Seymour High
School of Mahomet, ill., and Blue
Springs High School of Blue
Springs, Mo., have been at the
hotel since Dec. 26.
The Mahomet-Seymour High
School Band will take the 92nd
place when it marches in the New
Year's Day Parade in Pasadena.
Mahomet-Seymour high band
director Dick Wat.kins, assistant
director Michael Stevens and
Principal Janice Jack are veterans
of the parade circuit.
*We've won six Governor 'Ih>-
pbies, six years in a row," Jack
said, proudly.
Add to that the Fiesta Bowl in
LIDO BEAUTY
SUPPLY
&SALON
723-5372
3441·1 '11 UH, Ne ..... INela •Next te Pavlllou
ly die water r..cala • 8pea I .. YI• °'8M Suays
I COCKTAii s & CATERING I
JoiN Us FoR A GREAT
NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY···
............. $14 95
1988 and the Kmg Kamehameha
Parade m 1992
. Just getting accepted to the
parade was no easy feat.
The band applied two years
ago to the tournament of:fi.cials.
Included in the application
process is photos of the band in
urufoon. the drum majors and a
resume along with letters of rec-
ommendation from governors,
awards achieved -the works.
After finding out in October of
1994 that they were going, band
members bad to raise money to
get themselves there
Friday the 145-member band.
and the 250 adults that came Wlth
it, visited Uwversdl Stuctios
Today it will be DlSTleyland.
•We Citizens, who elect the
likes of Baugh, R05S Johnson and
Mickey Conroy. But that is the
tradition here among we who
voted in great numbeB for Jim-
my Utt. John Schmitz and, yes,
good, old Gil Fergu.s<'n.
Attila the Hun Award: To the
reader who called the Daily Pilot
hothne and groused that Gil is a
"damn liberal!"
Nosy Parker CerU.ftcate: To
Barry Zanck (a runner-up, by the
way, for the At:ila), who soolded
the Pilot for danng to write about
the Baugh-Rohrabacher-Allen
dreck.
Tenible N~hbor Cup: No
contest the Irvine Ranch Water
Distnct for its loathsome cam-
pa.ign to flush its nicely treated
sewage into Newport Harbor.
How is it that a political entity in
one city can force itself on a
neighbor that says no, no, no.
Would you call that municipal
rape?
Good Neighbor Cup: The oty
of ll'Vllle, for stating in its
response to IRWD's environmen-
tal unpact report that. m its opm-
ion. the IRWD plan was the least
demable of several alteJ"Mtives.
Grump of tbe Yeu: A tle .
between the reader who charac-
terized a 5tory on the pains of
bomelessness as •liberal aap•
and the woman who c.aviled at
the ailing Tom Riley for taking an
air ambulance from John Wayne
International to the Mayo Cllnic.
Munldpal Employee of the
Year: Bob Burnham. city attorney
of Newport Beach, for domg bis
unpossible job with remarkable
equity, equarunuty and ethics
Mayor of the Yeu: Joe Erick-
son of Costa Mesa, who governs
f8JJ'ly, calmly and Wlth innate
dignity. Runner-up: John
Hedges, who surely tries.
Wlsh of the Week: A happy,
solvent New Year that tS free of
vicious and rancid pohtiqal du-
canery (and a fat chance on
that!) But a happy one to "YOU.
anyway.
FRED MAR'TlN'S column runs t!tlet"t
Thursday and Saturday
-U~IO
We Cater Fiestas
lxh1bftion CC»Oldng Our Spedaltyl • 5bzl'::J foiitaa lar • HcumoCM Tortilloa • Strolling Moriochis
714 ·02
Open New Years Day
10Ml-6/M
100% WOOL SUITS
Selected Styles
Sale Price $159.99 to $199.99 ~
Sold Elsewhere to $400
DESIGNER WOOL SUITS
St1lded Sty/ts
Single-and Doublt-BrtilSted
Sale Price $299
Sold Elsewhere to $550·
100% CAMEL HAIR
SPORT COATS
Sale Price $169.99
Sold Elsewhere to $315
100% PURE WOOL
SLACKS
Flannels and Tropicals
Now $M.99 to $49.99
You'll save 30% off
our everyday low prices!
FAMOUS MAKER SHOF.S
Selected Styles
25~ ·50% Off
SELECTED SPORTSWEAR
Now 25~ -SO~ Off
our already low prices
SELECTED SOUD &: FANCY
DRESS SHIRTS
Cottons and Cotton Bltnds
Now2S~ Off
our alrudy low prim
100~ SILK 11E.5
Now $9.'9 or 3 lot $24
Regularly $23 to $40
.. .
~·AT THE SQUAU
llott Johnson will play classic rock
from noon to 2:30 p .m. and Jenny
Richards will play folk/rock from
7 to 10 p.m. today on the Tuwn
Square at niangle Square.
BODY FAT ANALYSIS
Free body fat analysis will be pro-
vfd~ today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
at -'95 E. 17th St., Sufte 201 in
Costa Mesa. Fo1 more informa-
tion, call 631-9965 or &45-4't92.
TUESDAY ...,..._,_ ___ _
PARXS COMMISSION
The Parks, Beaches and Recre-
a llon Commission of Newport
Beach will hold their January
meeting tdday at 7 p.rn. in Coun-
cil Chambers, 3300 Newport
Blvd m Newport Beach.
• MANIPULATED POLAROIDS·
CaWorrua artist Marion Talley's
-Marupulated Polaroids,• a col-
lecbon of fine art photography
using lime-zero marupulated
polaro1ds pnnted by laser, will be
on display toddy through Jan. 31
at Newport Beach's Central
Ll.brnry, 1000 Avocado Ave. dur-
ing normal library hours. For
more mformation, call 717-3801.
WEDNESDAY
SERENDIPITY
The Serendipity series for singles
reswnff ~ wMkly Mlliou
tonight af 7:30 p .m. at St.
Andrew's hesbytenan Chwch,
600 St. Andrew's Road in New-
port Beach. "Dealing with Per-
sonality Differences in a Relation-
ship" will be the topic. All smgles
a.re welcome. A S3 donation is
requested. Por more infonnation,
call 574-2214.
ARTHRITIS EXEROSE
An exercise program designed
spedfically for people with arthri-
tis will begin today at the New-
port-Costa Mesa-Irvine YMCA.
The bve-wcek proqram will pro-
vide gentle movements and activ-
ities under tbe guidance of
trained personnel to help increase
the mobility, muscle strength and
stamina. Pre-registration is
required. For more infonnation,
call 642-9990.
PANHEWNIC MEETING
Newport Harbor Panbellenic will
meet today beginning at 10 a.m .
at St. Michael's All Angels
Church, 3233 Pacific View Drive
in Corona del Mar. Titls month's
program features •Missions of
Ca.li!omia" by Anita Freedman of
Bowers Museum. A luncheon fol -
lows. Donation ls $4. Por mpre
information, call 846-41&4 .
THURSDAY
WRITER'S WORKSHOP
"Writing Like There's No Tomor-
row," a six-week fiction-writing
workshop, will be taught by inter-
aalh Ir pqbllthed ..,... ..._
bara DeMarco Barrett "-Yhn\b1g
today at 10 am. at Local Grounda
Coffee House, 3001 &st Cout
Highway m Corona del Mar. The
group is for advanced students
who are working on a novel or
short stories and will have weekly
critiquing sessions and writing
exercises. Pre-registration ls
required. For more infonnation,
call 760-8086.
FRIDAY
TABLE TENNIS
Orange Coast Coll~e offers table
tennis classes for the entire family
on Friday evenings and Sunday
afternoons. The Fliday session is
from 6 to 10 p.m. and begins Jan.
5 and runs through'June 7. Sun-
day's session is from 2 to 6 p.m .,
Jan. 7 through June 9. The annu-
al fee is $50 for adults and $25 for
seniors and young people under
17. For more information, call
432-5880.
SATURDAY, JAN. 6
ROSE PRUNING
A fret: program on rose pnming
will be held at Sherman Ubrary
and Gardens in Corona del Mar
,--CENfER SHOE REPAIR ·-~ WORLD'S FINEST WINES
AT TIIE BEST PRJCESI 285 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa • ~::_,ma.•. leMllM Next To ROSS Dress For Less um wine retaller
• Q,..t _..ectlon 645-5511 • Frtendly Mrvlce
Hours: M-F 8:30 -6:30, Sat 8:30 -5:00 I> Delivery avala.ble
Call~ 1 (BOO) 966-5432
for a ~monthly catalog 1 1 5% OFfc~!tht;d !!!PAIR WORK
1.t._ I ~ Compl:.:~ s.:z~~ t;;::;;: Rep~y Copy ~~~--- - - - - - -- - J
~WINE CLUB.
me L 11cF1••11 •f 111t1 aa. cam•
Oranse CotmtY's
Cigar Headquarters
The Tinder Box
Premium Cigard
• Arturo Fuente • Ashton
• Avo· Cuesta Rey
• Davidoff • Don Juan
• Don lino • Dunhlll
• El Subllmado • ExcaJlbur
• Fonseca • Griffin
· H. Upmann • La Unlca
• Macanudo • J\Aonteslno
• P.G. • Partagas • Punch
• Romeo &. Julieta
• Savinelll • V. Centennial
· lino &. many more.
Cigar Humidors
• Elle Bleu • Club • lino
&. more
Fine Lig'1terJ
lmporte3 Pipu
Toba«DJ • Cigarettu
Unique GiftJ
Shipping A"ailabk
C rystal C ourt at
South Coast Plaza
(714) 540-8262
Benefltln@ Orangewood
Children s Foundation
zrQh ........ _...et:~~
LOOK AND FEEL YOUR VERY BEST
We Make It Easy!
~
Fresh ... Delicious meals-co-go prepared from scrarch.
Nutritious .. Low rn far. sodium and cholesrerol.
Convenient . Breakfasr. lunch and dinner
available ar three calorie levels.
Order one meal or an encire week's worth .
Affordable .. A full rhree meals a day
beginning ar jusr $13. 95.
Relax and enjoy!
~
$5.00 off your first order ~ of $25 or more. "~ ~... Delrvery is available ~t'f ~Call Today ... (714) BJJ-2929
SALE
"/ ;,,. , ,.,./ ( 1fJ(ltl \(11/ I ·•
Examples of Savings Approx Our Sak
' R'tall Price Price
MARY ANN RESTIVO 2pc./iackct $750 $210.SO $78.93 f7LM a: klrt
GINNEY 2pcJac.kct a: Skirt $67S $178.SO $66.93
2pcJacket a Sklri $345 $88.SO $33.18
GUN SHOW
The Cro11roads of the West are
sponsoring a gun show today
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Orange County Pair & Exposition
Center on Palr Drive in Costa
Mesa in buildings #10, #14 and
# 16. Admission is $6.50 for adults,
$6 for seniors and children under
12 are free. For more information,
call (801) 544-9125.
Orange County Pair and Exposi-
tion Center
Ml CASA
M~XICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A
TRIP TO MEXICO
The l'illidftlon
Coiattlllles SI~ f972
.... /,
. '
I 11 1tJt ,\t11 f,[;
.•
LEON URIS
Internationally acclaimed auth~r
Leon Uns will speak on the topic
•Tue Word and the Survival of
the Jewish People'" at 1 p.m. at
Temple Bat Yahm, 1011 Ca.mel-
back in Newport Beach. Tickets
are $30 reserved, $20 unreserved
and $10 f6r seniors and students.
For more information, call &44-
1999.
WOMEN IN FOODSERVICE
The January dinner meeting of
the Orange County Chapter ~f
the Roundtable for Women m
SINGLES MINGLE
Christian Singles Mingle will hold
a progressive dinner and seminar
with KBRT \elk show host and
Minirth-Meier therapist, Dr. Greg
Cynawnon. lbe cost is $10.
Send yow IMn'W to the Around
Town Editor, The Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay
st., Costa Mesa. callf. 92627; fax 646-
4170 or call 54().-1224, Ext. 333.
~'3-~-R_,~ ~ On The ~k. --<::~ RIVERBOAT -~.
(Formerly Reuben E. Lee)
NEWPORT HARBOR AUTICAL MUSEUM
DINING • DANCING • ROMANCING
LIVE ENTERTAtNMENT·BY THE JETSENS
64 0 PER PERSON CALL 673-3425
RIVERBOAT CAFE
151 E. Cckl'il I IWY • ~t'\\l)On A<'arh
A
$10,000
• DUI
ls One
Holiday Expense
•
Anyone Can Live Without
Onr more drinJc for the roncl ra11 rui11
anyone'~ holiday. 'lUe co t!> relate<l to u
first-time · mibdewt•ru1or ronvictfon for
driving under thP inOuen<'<' (OLTJ) cttu
easily exet>cd 10.000 and i11dud(' nil(' ..
& pr.raaJtie , hail, n-qu1rcd alcohol c•du<'n-
tion da sc , inrtta~d i.n.i,uranre pruuium
and lf'gal ( e .
The good 11r.ws i" thnt r.urn•nt lav.r ,
t•nfon•t ml'nt nml f't.fl.J{'ation efforts have
rc..,uJtrd in o d ·tine in tlir. number of nko-
hol-n-lntrd (a1aJitir: and injurie for thf'l
lll'll IC11 }f'lln.
'J11e Auto Club helie' thut woohol
1\9.'(ln'nr.11 UU'Ough t'ducation and inf onna-
tion about tl1e ronsequt•nc of drinking
l\11d driving lcat.b to lif c-Mving choke for
11ll motori'lt11, thdr pas ngr:n and !limilie.is.
• Automobile Club of
Southern California
I
._,.
~ ·-' I . .
• • ,
' f . ' ' ' . . . . "
:~ .. . ..
~
' ,
' ' ' ' p • . .
' ' l ' ' ' • • • ' I 1 •
• : J. I
I
! • I
r
-
84 DECEMBER 17, 1995
Experts Crack
Access Codes
By D. E. ClPHER
SAN RAMON, CA -Using hlgb-pow-
ered computers, cryptograpbel'8 at
Pacific Bell have cracked the vexing
"access code" that some people use
when making telephone calls.
The code "lOATI," for example,
when dedphe~ed reads: "You could
be paying long distance prices for
basic local calls."
Consumers who notice unusual
charges on their phone bill are urged
ocall 1-800-PAC BELL for more lnfor
ation .
PACIFIC EIBELL.
NET W 0 R K
Row will you uae it?-
r---------------------------~-~-------------------·····---------------------------------------~-----------··1 i In the spirit 1 I I I I I I t I ! .. Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach I
I I ! + ADDU!SS: 2""01 Irvt.ne Ave., Newport Beach. :
I • 11!Ll!PHONE: 548-6900. ' : • YBAlt ESTA.BUSHED: 1970. I l +It.UBI: Joseph Mendelsohn. l I +STAPP: Vladimir Shtayennan, cantor : • • + SDVICE TIMES: Friday, 8 p .m. Torah studies are held I
: S&turday at 10 a.m. :
i' +SIZE OP CONG.REGAitON: ~3 families. I + CONG.REGATION MAICEUP: Mostly older adults. The 1 l synagogue bas a religious school with six students. I ' : + CHll.D CARE: Not provided. l .. +TYPE OP WORSJUP: The Kabbalat Sbabbat (evening se:r-t c Vice) is performed in both Hebrew and English. "There is a I •set order we follow tn worship," said Mendelsohn. ·very
• tereJ.y do we deviate from that" l +TYPE OF SERMON: The sermon is usually taken from the l portion of the Torah to be read that week. The rabbi draws I lessons from the readings and applies them to daily lile. : + RECENT SERMON: Mendelsohn spoke about Yehuda and
'lllmar, which is foWld inserted in the middle of the story of
Joseph and his many-colored coats. He discussed why an
'• apparently unconnected and seemingly unimportant story ,
would appear in the middle of a very famous one. : + OtJfR.EACH PROGRAMS: The synagogue routinely con-:
, tributes to a local food bank. While Judaism followers prac-1 I , tice the tiJ<ku.n olam ("to make right the world•). I l + DRESS: Casual to formal. • ,
:: +WELCOME WAGON: The synagogue has a welcoming l
: committee, which answers any questions visitors have and l
: • invite them back to the temple. The informal motto of the :
'• synagogue is "You are a stranger here only once.• : I~ +INTERESTING NOTES: Mendelsohn, while considered 1 l the spiritual leader of the synagogue, is a conservative semi-l ' I nary student and not an ordained rabbi. Temple Isaiah will I l hold an auction on Jan. 20 in the Oakwood Apartments club-I
: house m Newport Beach. -By David Silva CASEY LUICSCH I DALY PILOT :
I I L---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------J
~.eh.el ~mitly
'1Inll.ectian
MORE TIIAN JUST
CLOOHES
50% OFF SELECTED CLOTHES,
SHOES & GIFT ITEMS
. .
One Dollar
Firs• Mon•h~s
Ren•
On Selected sizes.
Bring Ad for d iscount.
call for Details Expires i 2/31195
-....,_.~ , ' .-. -
"9."\.. ' I • o t. -: . • ~ ~1o'r ..,
-.) '°'o f t I • 0 .. ,,. ~----~·· ' ~· · .. ·.~ ._ : ... "-~
SATURDAY WORKSHOPS
The Newport Bea.di Church of
Religious Sdence, 901 Dove St.
Suite 145, offers Saturday Work-
shops throughout January. Dr.
Juan.ell.a Evans presents "Master
Mind lor 1996• on Jan. 6; •n-ea-
sure Maps tor t996• will be Peg
Machin's tc.plc Jan. 13; Practition-
er training, "Religious Sdence
m• taught by Evans, and "Art
Fun" at 1929 'J\J.stin will be held
Jan. 20 and •New Adventures
with Jody,. led by Jody Carter,
will be held Jan 27. Workshops
start at to a.m. Ct:ll 646-3199.
PARADIGM SHIFT .
The Newport Beach Baha'i Com-
munity allows partici>ants to hear
and experience "Paradigm Shift:
A New Way -A New World"
7:30 p.m . every Friday at /1 private
residence in Corona del Mar.
Together, they explore such ques-
tions as: Can racism and preju-
dice be eliminated? What is the
new world order? Can cenfilcts be
resolved without force?· Are
women and men equal? What's
the spiritual solution to our eco-
nomic problems? Music and food
are included. Directions: 759-
0999.
SERMONS
REFLECTIONS AND RESOLUTION~
That's the topic of the service pre-
sented by the WOnbip Service
Committee, Dec. 31, held at 10:30
a.m. at the Orange Cout Unltari·
an Univenau..t Church at 1259
Victoria $l tn Costa Mesa, and
followed by a ~uck brunch at .,.
t 1:30 a.m. POt infonnatton call :
646~652.
•ON BEING THE SAM£ OlD 1
Is the title of the sermon at
Orange Coast Unitarian Uruver-~
salist Church, 1259 Victor.ta St. 1ri ,
Costa Mesa, on Jan. 1 at 10:30
a .m, delivered by the Rev. Diana
Heath. For information, call 646-
4652.
HARBOR OfRtSTIAN 'CHURCH
Dr. Joseph Read and Harbor•
Christian Church (Disciples of
Christ) at 2401 Irvine Ave. in
Newport Beach, 645-5181, invite'
all to worship with them. All Sun~
day morning worship service$
and Church School for children
are at 10 a.m . Adult Sunday
School CJ.ass is 8;30 a .m. to 9:30
a.m. Pastor Joe has been with
Harbor as acting minister since
September. He was the pastor of
Bixby Knolls Christian church tn
Long Beach for 33 years.
Pleue ..Mt photogrl!phs and typed
releases detailing stories, upcoming
events, sermon topics or any other news
involving Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach churches to Religion Editor Laurie
Busby, Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa, 92627. You can also fax items to
646-4170. Releases are requested two
weeks prior to an event date.
5Al£ STUTS 12126/9'1 • 2 Wuks o .. ty
406 32'td St. (at New_port BltJd.) Newj)orl Btach
675-5499 NEWPORT/COSTA MESA ·Low Rates ·Ooen7Da~
'I
METHODIST
Cotta Mesa
MESA VERDE
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
1701 Baker, C.M
Worthip & Church Schoof
8:30 and 10:00 a.m.
Or. Richard Geor(Jft 979-823.4
NEWPORT CENTER
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
I b~IOl'~~·~ve
644-0745
Worship at 8:00AM & I O.OOAM
Sunday SChool All ~es 9;00AM Rev Edwdrd C. Martin
LAGUISI:&
United Methodist Church
21632 Wesley Or.
Laiuna Beach 99-3088
SundaY. M~rn1ng Wors~ & Christ an ducatlon 1
Ministers David Beades & Virginia Wheeler Wffley Counseling Center services Aval ble
RELIGIOUS SCIENCE
tll.IGIOUS SCllNCI NIWPOIT RACH ICllNCI OF MINO IOUCAAON CINltt
(COtrw ol Dow • QuaN • lfl Oltlol lltlq
OCllOf.f lrom ,.,. ..Jona)
901 OOWl1'5
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Udo, Newport Beach
67J,.1340 or 673-6150
Church ioam ar Spin.
Sunday Sc:hool lOam
Wednesday Meetings Spm
... rht word of tht Lord
tndunrh for ti'tr. .. • I Ptttr 1:25
Branch or The Mother Church
The Finl Church or Christ Sdtntlst
Boston, Massachusetts
---·-----~ -
CONGREGATIONAL
m COMMUNflY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
To lel.w" To C..; To CM't w To DO.
Or, O.nnia W. Shon, Minister
Sunday Wot1hlp 8.30 & 10.AM
Oiwch School 9AM Adi.ft • 9:4$ Clldclltn
Child C.r• ~rov1ded 644-7.-00
611 Heliotr A Cotofta Otl Mw ..
PRE SBVTEf?IAN
W,1r11tuf1 AnJ twar rhtt ~UC.I,
C.lirill«nttto.f, btbliail ,.......
14FJV£ WORKABLE
RESOLUTIONS FOR '96" (~t21·2U
2950 Bear Street • SUP.8! Sec1Jrlty ·Mad Boxes 714 540-9000 • Moving Supplies
• Camera SUrVel!Jance
PRESBYTERIAN
A
!a. Q ,-= a <
ST. MARK
PR£SBYrER.IAN
CHURCH
SundalJ Worship 9:30 a.m.
C/,ild W{e, Sundal/ School
]ambore1 «( Eastblulf
Newport Buch 644· 1341
CHRISTIAN
Y HARBOR CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
(Dl1clpl11 of Chrlat)
2'01 ll'YIM Awt. et IMC. lnHI
Ntwpofthlcll
Sund1y Wonhlp • 10:00AM
Or. Joseph R11d 845·5711
EPISCOPAL
SAINT J~ES CHURCH episcopal
•A c-m111tlty_ OecflC.,,.,, lo lovlllf anti IMvfttt Je6111 Chmt ••lord ottd ~
Fr. David C AnderlOfl, rector
3209 Vio Lido
Newporl 8eoch
lA/675-0210
7:30 om Traditional
9 om Contemeororr.
9 om Church SchoOI
I O:A5 om Chofismotic
and Wednesday noon
..._\I:\ I" \IH II \I· I
,\ . \I I \ '\ <. I · I .:-.
I· l 'b( OI' \I l Ill IH II
A FRIENDLY. WING MN
COMMUNrn'
SUN°"Y WORSHIP 8 & I OAM
~Wonhfp8& IONA
e<y. StMay
Mappy :New Year!
'For information on the ·
"Religious rDirectory
tJ'lease Call
Xristin 'Bennarz
574 .. 4240
•
SOUTH COAST C HRISTIAN CHURCH
We Care About You Because Christ Cares.
,,,.. .. !• . ..,
' -. ~~'
'.• ,,
Jerrold A. I lollobaugb,
Minister
December 31
De Witt Clinton, Guest Speaker
J Wol'lh1p ScMc:e 10: U am
Bible S111diu 9 00 am
Kidr For Clirut SJO pm
792 Victoria Street • Costa Mesa, CA • 92627 (7 14) 548-3468
(Comer of Vittona A Plattnu•)
COMMUNITY CHURCH
"!R....ules, !R....egs, aruf ·
9(elationsliips )I
HVRCH
Pastor William Hmmway
-Wt love chttdrtn. youtlt youna adults, carttr
adults, smk>n. We love to ~rt. to rtach
out. lo mttt nttds, lo
1nswtr quntk>n(
• Sun41y,5'Mtts-8i00, 9:30 & 10:45
• ~ SdtOol & ... StuCllll -9:JO
160 Victoria Stmt • Codi Mm, CJ\ 91617
(714) 611·1611. 1~ 14161•6
• • • • ,. • " . •
~ -~ ii ~ '-' . . . . ~~'...· ·,.··. ' . . .
A boatful of Christmas cheer sails on Newport Harbor 1
I t
-t
T here were certainly as
many parties as lights for
this season's Newport Har-
bor Boat Parade. There was one
affair, however, that was the place
to be. Harbor Island's Elizabeth
and Wllllam Vincent invited fami-
ly and friends into their home for
cocktails and then aboard their
yacht, Nordic Star, for dinner and
a cruise through the spectocular
harbor of holiday lights.
Elizabeth Vmcent transformed
her immense living room into a
tum-of-the-century fantasy, com-
plete with a vintage 1902 doctor's
buggy with Santa holding the
reins of a lifesize animated
mechanical horse. The carriage
was filled with holiday gifts and
surrounded by poinsettias and
orchids grown by Vmcent in her
greenhouse. The magnificent
blooms also adorned the yacht
Nordic Star.
As the enormous boat pulled
out of its residential berth, a din-
ner of roast sirloin. sliced turkey,
angel hAir pasta, alid traditional
Waldorf salad a la Vmcent was
seived to passengers Gordon
Cowan. Wally Schroeder, Mar-
garet lllcbardson, Amelia Seton,
Blynn Bonney, and Mary Lou
and Scott Hornsby.
Down,from Beverly Hills for
the harbor festivities, longtime
friends Ernest and Veronica
• Chambers joined the hosts.
Chambers, a veteran film and
television producer, used to
spend Christmas at the former
Vincent home on Sunset Boule-
vard, a Georgian Colonial man-
sion now owned by author Sid-
ney Sheldon and his wife
Alexandra.
The Vincents had purchased
the estate from its original owner,
the widow of Charles Correll, of
Amos and Andy fame. When Bill
and Elizabeth moved from Holm-
by Hills to Newport, they repli-
cated much of the borne in their
new Harbor Island residence.
Nora and Jlm Johnson joined
Vincent family members Dwight
Spiers and Melanie Vincent
along with Mike Russell and a
host of others on -board the
Nordic Star for a holiday jaunt.
B.W. COOK'S column runs Thursday
and Saturday.
•
-r:w.--PSYCHJc··,:--~-~ Ma-. FAIRE p~ I
NEw YEAR'S DAV SP£CIAL MONDAY, JANUARY IST 1
Inna Qu•t Found. Fund RolHr 3:00pm to 9:00pm I
1k:Ut l>cMMdoa sa.oo Elldt COSTA MESA I
Sli¥e 4 for $SO ~·• Cid I
&ch 1cMt good b lhor1 IWdkie 610 W. 18_. ~ I
t «~ b longer .-a.. I
....... o.-t Fein. S.... Loc:atloe for 20 wan • 909~279-5022 , •
-------------------------· r I I -----------
""I I 17th-St. BEAUTY CENTER ~I I -------. ~I I
:_1 I
... I 1.-...--..l":JJ~~~f...l:l~:!::::~~~t:i~--~.
.• •I • •• t •• I
I
I
I
I
I __________________ .._.....,,
642-1717 I
I
283-D 17th Street, Costa Mesa (N1xt to Ross) I ': t Opn l Days: M-P 10-8 Sat. J().l Sun. 11-6 1
:-------------------------· I
·We're 1btally Stocked
with Fresh & Delicious
Dinner Rolls
Breads
Croissants
Cookies
sweet Loaves
and much morellf
:Happy :New Year!
Sunflour Natural Bakery
427 E. 17th St.
~Costa Mesa • 646-1440
Open Dally
7am .. 6 ;30pm
Closed 12-3 1 & 1-1
'
• rr{j
COMING SOON!
" .
WATCH FOR OUR GRAND ONNINQ
S•ndwlcliee • .. a.de • C•t•rlntl
Enjoying the
boat parade
party were
(above) Mr.
and Mn.
Hunter Keck
and (from left)
Wally
Schroeder
,. and Gordon
Cowan.
70% Off of What?
Compare our prices. See our
selection. Experience our
customer service.
HEMPHILL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
Mon-Fri 10·6 Sat 10·5 722-7224
230 East 17th St., Costa Mesa
*********
'
PETITE MODEL· * SEARCH
Scouring for pcrice females
ages 12 & up, and at least 5'2"* & up. One day o~Y, Top
peote agency commg to
Southern California.
LOOKING for new faces .
CALL
.JOHN ROBERT
POWERS
Elizabeth and WWiam Vincent opened their Harbor Island h~e
and yacht to family and friends during the boat parade. ..
RUFF ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
9t4•J-OU9ig
BUY & SELL USED CLOTHES,·
lUYB & ACCESORIES, ETC •.
WtMNe Your Dolor Coven Mol•I 1922 HAR90R II.VO., COSTA M£SA • 544· 1156 2984 N9wpof't Bhld. (at Del Mw) •
~ Meee (714) 83'·7~ •
lft58m
fi.) ..., COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE
All Singing, All Dancing, All Gershwin
CRAZY FOR YOU
DllECTll IT IJllY ~
rtOOUCID IT Ill 1DMlllltS
~IUn~ll.l"' .,....,. ffWtr. w..,. uo.-.., ....... !:OOfa
DON'T LET YOUR
MEMORIES FADE AWAY
~-
Q4Q--~~
~~~ _ _....... 369 E. 1 ith St. J
Costa Mesa
Par~ Lot p ____
Sunday, Dec. 31st -9am to 4pm
. -
M SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1995
A golden sumet
along the New-
portCout
made a perfect
backdrop for a
one-on-one
l>Uketball
game at New-
port Elemen-
tary ln January.
. .
Last year's Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa was highlighted by the Firefighter Challenge, Capt. Steve Tiedeman of the Costa Mesa Fire Department hauls up a hose from make-shift tower.
:·
Above, Dina Girl and Rockie Racoon groove to the tunes at the Empire Ballroom during the Dls-
co 2000 night. At right. a shy youngster· bides under her mother's shirt while her younger sister
looks around to see what all the fuss ls about at the Healthy Start Cllntc ln Costa Mesa. Below,
the team effort ol the Newport Beach police, fire and marine departments combine ~ pull .a
horse out of the muck after lt fell off a foot bridge ln the Back Bay.
A s the door closes on 1995, we
thought we would share with
you some of the interesting
images captured during the past calen-
der year. With so many stories, people
and places, it's impossible to get every
picture that made this year so special -
from the dramatic moment of a horse
being pulled from a swamp area in the
Back Bay to the simple silhouette of two
boys· playing hoops, from the challenge
of a firefighter compet~tion to the futur-
istic dance hall. It is all of these stories
and more that make up ~he fabric of the
Newport/Mesa community. It ha's been a"'
plea~ure for us a.t the Daily Pilot to .
bring you these photogra.phs on a daily
basis and we look f or~ard to another
great year of coverage.
•
.
'
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS
__ ___..BY ---
LEAH HOGmN
DON LEACH
CASEY LUKSCH ANO
MARC MARTIN
, .
• -.......
,.-.,"":
._,..,~
·"-.... _ _,
'"' tvn.r
-••..'rt ..
ll~I
~ ... ,,,,,,
~ ...., .. ,,. . ,,. ·~
-t t l+)
~ ...
...
.. .
• • ·.>
"'
" ...
' I
I
I
I ,. ,.
I
I
I
I
I .. .. '· I .. ,· .· ,.
I
' :· ......
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1995 Al
'Spider Woman' light on politi.Cs, hea:vy on technical wizardry
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
Back in 1985 when its
movie version first gar-
nered attention, •Kiss of
the Spider Woman" was some-
thing of an oddball. Manuel
Puig's story or two men
trapped in a South American
prison was part love story, part
political drama and part cine-
ma dream.
Now that Terrence McNally
bas adapted "Spider Woman"
into a Tony-award winning
musical, the play's. polltics are
·go~e and i~ priorities have
shifted. McNally's "Spider
Woman," which has settled
into the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center for a two
week run, ls a gay window
dresser's escape fantasy. Don't
be fooled: the prison bars, tor-
ture scenes and revolutionary
cant are smoke and mirrors.
None of this makes the play
any less entertaining to watch.
In addition to Harold Prince's
direction and some real techni-
cal wizardry by the production
team, "Spider Woman" boasts
a flashy star turn by Chita
Rivera -still kicking high at
age 62. The musical team of
John Kander and Fred Ebb, the
duo behind "Cabaret," have
produced a score which is
uncomplicated and easily
digested.
The story's basic plot
remains unaltered. A rotating
partial curtain gives the audi-
ence a telescope-eye view.into
the prison, dividing Jerome
Sirlin's set into a series of win-
dows. The view finder comes
to rest in the jail cell of Molina
(played by Juan Chioran), a
window dresser serving time
for corrupting a minor.
Molina's newest cellmate is
Chlta Rivera ts the title chara cter ln .. Kiss of the Spider Woman."
a Marxist guerrilla named
Valentin (Dorian Harewood),
who the prison 's sadistic wa'r-
den believes holds valuable
political information. 1Tading
prison favors for information,
the warden uses the apolitical
Molina as a spy.
Molina finds the duplicity as
distasteful as he finds Valentin
brave. As his means of coping,
the window dresser reenacts
scenes from his faverite
movies. His dreams summon
Aurora (Rivera), a B-movie
actress who Molina worships.
Rivera doubles as the mysteri-
ous Spider Woman, en ~gel of
NEW YEARS EYE ...
... PARTY WITH US!
s99 per couple (+tax & gratuity)
lndudes ~dinna~~~ party favors & chamPagnC toest
HAPPY HOlJR MON -FRt l/-~:30
nun . 12128 S:J0.12:30
Pason to mon, 8:30.12:30
Nt.iet v~ E~ ~
Soul Provider
8:30-Close
Savor the fresh seafood
that's made us famous!
Come to Landry'a soon for
mouthwatering seafood In
a~setttng
overlOo~
Newport~.-
Juan Chloran, as Molina, and
Chlta Rivera ln .. Klss of the
Spider Woman."
death who hovers over the
prison.
This is Molina's story, but
probably half of the play's
musical numbers revolve
around the women of his
dreams. Accordingly, we get
Chita Rivera doing Marlene
Dietrich, Chila Rivera in a
feathered jungle skirt, (Flo-
rence Klotz is the production's
costume designer) Chita Rivera
wearing web-decorated body
suits scaling the stage's fenc-
ing. Choreographer Vincent
Patterson and musical director
Rob Bowman stage these num-
bers with flare, particularly
when Molina gets creative,
adding a bunch of half-naked
men to his fantasies.
I And while there's nothing
particularly wrong with a two
· and a half hour escape fantasy,
r-------------------------, I
I I I I
I
'
F.Y.I.
+ WHA~ "Kiss of the Spider
Woman" + WHERE: Orange County
Performing Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa + WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesday-Sat-
urday; 7:30 p.m. Sunday; 2
p.m. saturday and Sunday.
Through Jan. 7.
+HOW MUat: $19-$49.50 + MORE. INFO: 556-ARTS
I
I
I
I I
I I I L -------------------------~ . the play's earthier elements
don't mesh well with the stuff
of Molina's dreams. The char-
acter of Valentin, in particular,
becomes an interloper at some-
one else's party. The specifics
of his political •cause" are
vague forcing Harewood -an
actor more talented than his
material -to play macho rage
in order to balance Cbioran's
flamboyance. .
Chioran holds the spotlight
beautifully. t:anky and pale
with sad eyes and a beautiful
voice, the actor is as fluid in
bis movements as Rivera is in
hers. His role is designed to
connect more to the audience
than to fellow actors and Cb.io-
ran's is a surprisingly personal
performance.
But the show's biggest
crowd-pleaser is Rivera who
earns every bit of applause she
gets. The play seems so tai-
lored to her particular talents
that it's difficult to imagine
anyone else taking the role
(Vanessa Williams replaced
Rivera on Broadway.) Her per-
formance pushes what might
otherwise be a misguided
show to a new and very watch-
able level
Accepting Students Now For
Grease, Little Shop of Horrors,
& Alice In Wonderland
Musical TMIU'C Ac:.-cXmy Students es sttn In
·Joseph Ii the Amnin! T «hnicok>I Oturnc.oat"
at the O.C. Ptffonnins Alts Ccnta
646-6624
2488 Newport Boulevard, Suite C-2, Costa Mesa
EDWARDS 21 ·
MEGAPLEX '··'· · . , ,.
~10 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1995
SEWAGE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
That falls to the regioal water
!ality board. ln a letter sent ear-
th.ii month, the board's exec-
ve director said that under the
guidelines of the California Envi-
onrnental Quality Act, the
wage dump and the summer
aeek diversion projects require
eparate environmental review.
"The (San Diego Creek) diver-
~on project is a separate project
and should be considered as such ~or the purposes of CEQA," the
~otter written by Gerard
;Thibeault says.
, When the project does reach the
water quality control board for
final approval. it will receive the
ieview of former Newport Beach
City Councilwoman Evelyn Hart.
Hart, who has been involved in
'Water quality iss1.a ... s for Assem-
blywoman Marilyn Brewer, was
rec;ently appointed to the state
board ~y Gov. Pete Wilson.
A.l~h her appomtment is
~ubjett"to approval by a state
Senate Rules Comnuttee, Hart
. expects to be on the board when
the water district pro1ect comes
1 up for review.
"That's just one of numerous
issues which will come before the
board," said Hart who says she
has not taken a stance on the pro-
ject. "It's also an issue that's of
great interest to our city."
IRIWAJ(T DEDUCTIOllS
Tile bnlhance' ol a colored gemstone refers to its
abthty to reflect hQht and ~or back 10 the eye of the
beholder Colored gemstones that PoSsess this abtllty
in abundance are said to have ·1i1e· while thOse that
do not are termed to be ·11ead In any case. brilliance
Should not be confused with glare. whteh is the pale or
llQht re11ect1on ot hQht oH the surface of a oemst0!16 nos disbnct10n should be kept rn mind wllen lookino
at and companno colored gemstones Look for a
~nre to Q1vt oH boQht blue retlect1ons .1nd for a
111by to snow ri.stits of brioht red Do not be overly
concemed that ll'~St stones may also 11.1,e some dart
and non bn! Jani arus In f•tt ~ ·s qu te rare for a
sappllire oi ruby to em bit bOl!wllCI! Mr nlOlt than
80 percent of 11S bOOy The 1mooriant tiling is that rt
does possess the ab ':'/ to lla$ll cotor a"id light back
lnlolhe eye
Hert at ROYAL JEWELERS wt are proleuional
,.we~rs and we ilDOleclate .1nd resoec1 Mry ispec1
ol I gemstOM ll'ldacMo br~lianc.e WP chOOse O!lly
the hlg!le$1 qua ltV merchand st. aOd IM sett111QS are
,Oesignecl to Show o!I th' l>llst 1ea1ures ol actt
fem'IOO' for Ullbeat.tbte service ano great pnces
ccme w us soon Wt are IOcaleo ii 1280 B•son. Ste
88 (64H804t 1n llte HewTIOfl Nort11 Shopp111g·~ter
(at the comer of Bison and MM.Artnor). and 32411
Golden Lantern. SI, G (248 8995) at the Omn Ranch
Vtl1.lge Cemer, lagu~ NIQuel Visa and M.lstercara are
mpttd We would like to lake lhts opportunity to
wisll our readers and their tam11ies a haplJ'1 and
tiealthy New Year•
P.S Tile dCQrff of a colored oemstone's bnU1ance
varlts KCOrdino to the type, in1ens1ty. and po$rtion of
J i It I
CONTINUED FROM A 1
at my house all alone." ·
Manhak said bis friend never
called him to tell him that Hemi
hadescapedorthathe'd beenm a
fight.
"I felt so bad when the animal
wntrol officer told me," Marshak
said. •I asked if the other dog was
OK, and she said the owners had
to take hUp to a vet and that it took
a lot of money to fix him up. Then
I asked if I could help with the vet
bills." .
The oificer told Marshak that
she'd get back to him, and then
she took Hemi away.
During the next week, Mar-
shak found himself riding a roller
ci>aster of emotions.
A few days after Hemi was tak-
en into custody, Marshak received
DRUGS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
know about this guy to make
contact with us.•
Narcotics officers began
watching Pena-Perez's apart-
ment in the 1200 block of Baker
Street Thursday at 11 a .m. after
they learned from an 18-year-old
from the South' County that he
.. cell from aDOCbel anllml c.'Olati'ol
c6»1, a supervi8or, Wbo told blm
he'd NiVe to fork over S2.200 -
$1 {500 for the vet billl ad IDC6-
-er S100 to have Hemi neutered.
But that's not all tbe ollldal told
Manhllk; HI 8lso told Manbak
that the young dOg had been tn at
least one other fight with another
animal. And, be suggested Mar-
shak put the dog to sleep.
"I told lilin that it's my dog, my
pet," MMshak said. "I just can't
do that."
· A few more days went by, then
Marshak said he got another call
from the same supervisor. 1bis
time, Marshak cI¢ms the official
told him.he didn't have a clioice.
"He tt>ld me the clog was a
rlsk," Marshak said. •1 offered to
pay the $2,200 in one lump sum,
and he said no. He told me I'd be
getting a letter in the mail letting
me know when the dog was to be
put to sleep."
bought marijuana at the apart-
ment, according to police.
ln a two-hour period, police
reportedly saw about 12 cus-
tomers go in and out of the apart-
ment.
HWe saw a lot of drug traffick-
ing back and forth between the
apartment and cars in the back
parking lot," Sanders said, who
added that police recorded most
Qf the license plate numbers and
will probably be able to track
SERVING NEWPORT-MESA AREA FOR OVER 14
YEARS • RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL
• LAWN/GARDEN MAINTENANCE
• NEW LANDSCAPING/LANDSCAPE
RENOVATION 8: CLEAN UP
• LAWN RENO'{ATION, AERATION
8: FERTI LIZER
• REASONABLE RATES
PROGRAMS TO Frr
ANY BUDGET
J(~'(~iW.l.
ROVER & JAGUAR
Another few days went by, and
Mdmk -*ved Uottier call. b
WM tbe l\IP8l'Vil0r, calling to Jet
him mow ht Hemi'I cate would
have to gC? through an ad.miiUltra-
tive hearing before Animal Con-
trol could destroy bim.
•1 said,·~;, he's alive. lbat's
great.'" Manh4k sold. "Then he
told me that I have two options.
·He said I could summder tbe
dog over and they would eutha-
nize him and waive the fees,
which are now up to $3,000, with
board and care. I said no.
"Then he said my second
option was to go before the City Coun~"'But first, I'd have to meet
with the poJ.ice chief."
Marshak chose the second
option. He claims he's called Chief
Dave Snowden's office a couple ot
times, but hasn't had any luck
schedWing a meeting date. Nei-
ther Snowden nor the animal con-
trol official could be reached for
them down.
Police also saw Padilla carry-
ing a large bag apparently deliv-
ering and resupplying Pena-
Perez's apartment with drugs,
Sanders said. Police stopped
Padilla after he left the apart-
ment and found he carried
$1,700 cash and an illegally
acquired cellular phone, Sanders
said.
Police obtained a search war-
rant for the apartment and once
.~~~....,.!UNCH
• SPECIALTY comts.
• WATERFRONT DINfNG •
OPEN DAILY 7AM-4PM
• 723-0616.
634 LIDO PARK DRlVE
Nt.WPORT BEACH
( 11' I" 1111 I I I \ II t f 1 : ' t 1 •I .I' '
h1' ,, ,, ' 1• .111d.1111111 .,• 1111
h11,1111 '
/i1 IC/I/ /1111/f•l/I{/
J. Murphy shnes are the
right shoes anytinu'fMany
place, any wear
B ryan H .. Ltd.
MEN s SHO E S E TC
In Westcliff Court
1727 Westdiff Dr. NB 650<>856
C'CJllH1Mmt Oil Priday.
Desperate to save hll, dog,
Marshak c.alJed Mayor Joe Erick•
son.
•J talked to him a week or IO apo. • Erickson Mid Priday. • Jt'J a
tOugh one. The Pit bull bas t.ml
~ by the police .. vidoUI
and a menace to other animals in
the city, but he does not want to
see his dog put to sleep
"... I'm just not swe that the
City Council is the appropriate
body to decide that.•
Erickson said the council may
consider the case dnring its J~.
15 meeting.
Meanwhile, officials are con-
sidering revising U. city's animal
destruction policy ~ that only an
administrative review is required
for euthanization of a vicious ani-
mal .
That matter w1ll come before
the council at its next meeting on
Tuesday night
inside, they discovered more
than three pounds of marijuana
with a street value of $3,000,
cocaine with a street value of
$1,000 and $3,200 cash, Sanders
said.
Also inside the apartment was
Ramos Bautista, 24, who was also
arrested for allegedly possessing
the illegal phone, according to
police. Bautista is in jail with bail
posted at $10,000.
Now police are looking for
CONTINUED FROM 'A 1
OCC alSO initiated an Interna-
tional Students Program, a col-
lege-wide Honors Program and I
a Skills Guarantee Program.
' "All the years were filled with
different things," Grant Said.
"But the most important thiilg a
college president does is hire
bigh•qua.llty staff and faculty."
While Grant said he accom-
plished many of his goals as
president, "there will always be
things to be done."
He plans to stay active in t
fund-raising for the college foun-
dation for projects such as the
school library.
"For me, it's not really retire-
ment. It's the next great adven-
ture," Grant said. "Maybe it's a
promotion."
more evidence to charge Ramon
Pena-Perez with selling drugs to
minors, Sanders said. This
charge carries a five year maxi-
mum in jail, instead of the maxi-
mum of three years he now faces,
he said.
"If we had a kid that said,
'Yeah, he sold dope to me,' we
would.n 't prosecute the kid,"
Sanders said. "That's what w.e
need in order to charge him with
selling drugs to minors."
YOU NEVER
SAU-SAGE
., SAUSAGE ••
Or Such Delicious Food! 3 E Holiday Catering Available j
•• Join Us For ••,) trh . Dinner • Sunday Brun<=he~)
~ For Reservations and 3
t. 123':0621 3
25 I Shipyard Way • Newport ~h •• • •
We Know How Hard It
Can Be For a ~aregiven
... trying to meet your own needs as
welJ as those of a loved one .
\ we can help.
Let us provide temporary care for
someone close to you in a home-like.
,professional healthcare-setting. ·
Call today for rateS and
tnformatton.
Newport Rehabilitation
and Living Center
1555 Superior Avenue
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(714) 646-7764
6 Week & 3 Month
Personal Training
Specials
-~ ' ~' .,.,. ---~,,-.~,--~·-.-
" J ' •• ,... • ·: ,' • JI ..
• • ' J • .. • • •
\ \ • )-• c f .. ' ,,.. • ... . . .. --. --' -~ -~ --" ~--.j~~· 1 i ~~= =l~
NATALIA LARSON
MEMBERFOR1~YEARS
TWO AEROBIC CLASSES & TWO WEIGHT
TRAINING SESSIONS A WEEK
EYE· 'Elt OF THE EAR
CdM High s procrastination on naming
Di.ck Freeman as head football coack
CdM, Bellflower collide for title tonight
• Bellflower offers a major roadblock
to sudden h\rn in Sea Kings' fortunes;
they'll tip off tonight at 7:30 for crown.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Piiot
COSTA MESA -'IWo distinctly different high
school basketball teams, heavily favored Bell-
flower and Corona del Mar, will meet tonight at
7:30 for the Daily Pilot Coast Cassie champi-
onship at Estancia.
The Sea Kings (8-5), who had been struggling
before entering the 11th annual Coast ·Classic,
came in with unfavorable 10-1 odds, while Bell-
flower (11-2) was picked to win it.
CdM's tactic tonight? It's simple: Slow down
the tempo, and hope the athletic Buccaneers foul
enough to keep the Sea Kings at the free-throw
line.
,
daily pilot coast classic
"We want to get into a half-court game," Cd.M
Coach Paul Orris said. "We don't want them to
get all over the floor. They want to run up and
down and make long passes, and put pressure on
the ball and crack the paint, so we need t6 put
bodies on them. That's what Jack (Enion, the late
and former CdM coach) used to say ... put some
sweat on them.
"We don't jUrnp with anybody, but you do it
with a butt in their groin.•
Bellflower Coach John Downum, in his sixth
year, lost to CdM in 1991 in the Daily Pilot Tip-Off
Classic at C9M. "We lost badly, by like 25
points,• Downum said, shortly after his Bucs
defeated Sweetwater, 85-70, in the Coast Classic
semifinals Friday.
year in review
Bellflower, wlµcb won its opening-round
game against Marian, 80....49, was paced by
Rashard Richardson (21 points), Kelvin Gibbs
(19), 'Iramale Chabnan (14) and Jerald Sua (11) m
its win over Sweetwater.
"When we play hard defensively, we're a good
team, but if we don't, we're not too good."
Downum said.
CdM, which will start Brian Coleman, Adam
Klinke, Darren MacDonald, Brad Evans and Josh
Walz, is seeking its first Coast Classic title. The
Sea Kings reached the title game, and lost. in
1985 (the inaugural year) and 1987.
"It will definitely be two contrasting styles,•
Orris said of tonight's matchup. "We'll make
them beat us in a half-court game, and lf they do.
then they beat us. They pass the ball very well,
and they're very athletic."
Gibbs, Bellflower's 6-foot-6 center, makes d
habit of blocking shots with his 7-3 a.rm span.
YEAR OF TRANSITIO
Stunrters,
gut-checks,
and the
great efforts
all helped
make '95
truly a
year to
rernernber.
P erhaps more than any
other year in recent
memory, the landscape of
the Newport-Mesa sports
community underwent sweeping
change in 1995.
As if caught in some collective
daytime talk show makeover,
coaching positions changed hands
for various reasons, athletes
retired, events, teams and
facilities relocated or were sold,
and a few prep programs ditched
doormat images en route to
near-unprecedented success.
So, it was no surprise that the
year's top 25 Newport-Mesa
sports stories, selected by the
Daily Pilot sports staff, greatly
reflected individual and collective
transition, which figures to leave a
lasting impression for years to
come.
While some change was subtle,
expected, and sometimes years in
.the making, events such as the
stunning arrest of Corona del Mar
High football coach Mark
Schuster and Costa Mesa High
boys basketball coach Jason
Ferguson being diagnosed with
cancer, provoked the sudden and
sobering realization that sports
doeSn't always provide a diversion
frOm the banisblps of life.
A1lo on the list. however, are
the upliftino accomplishments of =Oaaliip teams and -~ lndlviduals, as weU
as the Wetime contnbutions of
thoile such as youth baseball
pic?neer Rod MacMillian, which .
tralucend the triviality of wins
aDd loMes.
He.re'• a look at the top 25:
1 Schuster arrest • A Corona
del Mar High fOotb411 season
that began with two blowout
vtc:todel, further padding high
expktatiom, was hit broad.side by
•.he bombshell of the Sept. 19
amWt ol leCOlld-yeer coach Mark
Schulter, charged with 16 felony
counts Of lewd conduct with hll
adapted teenage deughter.
Schuster, biied in March ot
1994 after nm. • heed
coach at Az\114
releued on 525, balttbe
foUowtilg day and matntalm hll
lDDooeDce heeding Into •
~'Y beutng itbedul9d unday.
But IU~ dlltaill relewcl
~· ~ Schuster'I UM of IUUAl ntlaUona
Eyw~teru • for poor or gltl
...,, tol•.
c 11 HlltolboC:k•......., ~badfDd
C osta Mesa's 41-year-
old John O'Brien
trained for two years
for his welterweight
bout with 33-year-old Ellsea
Toi:res ln the .. Batlle of the
Ballroom" at Irvine's Marriott
Hotel. He came out of lt with
a victory, and with the
knowledge that lt was a very
good Ume to bang 'em up.
He's No. 12 on the Top 25 list.
\ I~ I \ I I 't' I -< > I' I. ' I H
AATSUYA AANONE I DAA.Y I'll.OT
ltla Kln91 quarterback Josh Walz (7) takes oU behind hla offensive wall, led by Kevin Stuart (13).
well-liked and
relpeeted during
bi.I tenure at
CdMasboth
football coach
and health
ldence teacher,
WU mmediately
~dedwith
pay.'But, u
dictated by the
itate education
Code, be wu
Jater~oo lbmdlltory leave
ol abillnce
dboUtpayor
beneftt• and the
tmnlDatioa C:X-wu uated.
Wbile Dttk ~ the s..
Klftgl' deleDitW cooftUDatar, WU
Mftied inmtm bwl cmda Sept.
20, ... ....itlnO ......... wl .......... CM••:er ............ cnwa ....
~ ........... .. ........... =-pfllllUl•olMoul~ I
successful seoson,
which tulininated in
tho CIF Southern
Section OiVl.Slon V
senl.ifinals.
2 TOlb.lba senlor
Oallk-More
than :S0,000
spectators Vi51ted
Mesa Verde Country
Club, March 13-19,
for the inaugural
Thlblba Selllor
Clallic. the first
Senior PGA Tour
event ever held in
Orange County. ...... ......
wbiCb hid about ftve
mantbl to put the
~t tog9tbim, MrMd kudot for
ltl liftalt, anted latgiliy_ bY • iiiiiAU--~ ._.,.
~
............ foloWtng
Q111 .. Aldllr'A CJ81 ....
Sidi f Oftrbc61*W..,acl
QUOTE OF THE YEAR
"'17te d«t.on said I hane a chonoe qf dlJlng.
(Jfld a C'hall<V! of living ahd I'm chooiing to live ... •
-CXJ~TA MESA HOOPS COAOI JASON FF.RGUSON.
't ')1\1, "' 111 l>l I I
Toda. s schedule
11 :10 a.m. ·Antioch vs. ~rian (consolation)
12:40 p.m. -Stockdale vs. Rialto (consolatlqn)
2:30 p.m.,.. Dana Hills vs. NewPQrt Harbor (5eventh place)
4: 10 p.m. -Edison vs. Estancia (fifth place) 5:50 p.m. -Glendale Hoover vs. Sweetwater (third place)
7:30 p.m. -Corona del Mar vs. Bellflower (championship)
Friday's Scores . .
Bellflower 85, Sweetwater 70
• Corona del Mar 72, Hoover 61 • Estancia 49, Newport Harbor 37
•
Edison 57, Dana Hills 51 (ot) • Stockdale 57, Marian 36 •
Rialto 74, Antioch 66
Sea. Kings r oar
from behind to
post 72-61 win ·
over Tornadoes
•Corona del Mar turns 10-0 deficit into a
clear-cut victory over Glendale Hoover, and a
ticket to tonight's finals against Bellflower.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pi/or
COSTA t-.'fESA -Maybe some pregame aerobics will help.
Or some laps around the track.
Whatever the remedy, Corona del Mar High basketball
coach Paul Oms is probably open to suggestions.
Why? Because the Sea Kings have struggled answering
the bell this season, as they did Friday rught in therr unpres-
sive, come-from-behmd V1ctory over Glendale Hoover. 72-61,
111 the senufmdls of the Da.tly Pilot Coast Classic at Estancia.
· CdM (8-5) WdS down, 10-0, before its fans got their seats
warm.
But the Sea Kings. on the strength of their free throws,
outscored Hoover in the second quarter, 27-9, and led the YeSt
of the way, earning therr tlurd trip to the Coast Classic cham-
pionship game. their first smce 1987.
Corona del Mar has never
won the tournament.
Hoover (6-5), an origmal team
m the tournament, as is CdM,
advanced to the championship
semifinals for the first time
But 29 fouls by the Tornadoes
-mcluding one technical and a
pair of intentional fouls -kept
the Sea Kmgs at the free-throw
lme throughout, m wluch Cd.M
sank 32 of 44 (72.7%), mcludmg
13 of 17 in the second quarter.
So elinunate the first period,
and Cd.M outscores Hoover by
20 points (64-44), all of wlucb
can only make Oms scratch h1s
head and wonder
·we talked about it at half-
time,• Orris said. #We're going
to change up our pregame dnlls,
because we're sleepwallo.ng lD
th~ first quarter We'll start domg
some four-on -four drills before
the game.
#Once we started playmg.
·we talked about
it at halftime.
We're going to
change up our
pregame drills,
because we're
sleepwruking in
the first quarter.
We'll start doing
some four-on-lour
drills before the
after the first two-Uurds of the first quarter, we were all nght."
CdM, led by Bnan Coleman's 20 points. four rebounds,
four steals and two assists, fell behind, 17-8, after one quar-
ter Hoover, which came out flnng from the get-go. drained a
trio of three-pomters to put the Sea Kmgs m quick hole .
But Corond del Mar went the chanty stripe early in the
second, netting 7 of its brst 8 attempts, whtle outsconng
Hoover, 11-0, to begin the penod. capped by Josh Walz's two
free throws With 5:56 on the clock that gave the a Kings
their first lead, 19-17. They led the rest of the way
They contmuecl to build their lead in the second, as Dar-
ren MacDonald'(lO points, 11 rebounds) hit a pair from the
line and Coleman followed with a Jumper from th
with 2:29 rcmauung, giv\ng CdM ~ 26-20 edge.
Coleman, 10 of 12 from th liile, hit two more fr thro
teammate Nick Fnend an.k on~ th~n Coleman went coast t
coast for a laym after his own steal to give the Sea King 3 t ..
22 lead with 0:55 left.
Cdtvl's AJam Klinko, the only starter on the fioor from botli
teams wtthout a foul in th first half, cored to beat the
hall b'?r on a fast-break pass from Frtend to corlt CdM'
gt
TO
SI s
e
tJ
u
i!
b
h
j(
g
r ... 12 SATIJROAY, DEaMIEJl 30. 1995
ky Jim Walters, Daily Pilot
I
. GARDJ;:N GROVE -Corona
p.el Mar High jµnior guard Und-
~ Warmington couldn't wait to
e the Door Friday night and
ce off against Sonora's senior
JJUard Aiyana Nash, who is the
Jeading scorer in Orange County
pveraging 28 points a game.
• ln an exciting duel, the two 5-
tool-7 combatants traded baskets
With Warmington winning the
final battle 28 points to 23, and in
Uuee-pointe.rs, 5 to 4.
The difference in the two stars'
totals ended up being the exact
margin in Corona del Mar's 58-53
Victory over Sonora. The Sea
MustangS go down fighting against Westminster, 59-53
\
verdict. By Barry Faulkner; Daily Ptlot Junior point guard Koo Kim's
• Uuee-poinl attempt at the buzzer,
' COSTA MESA -Building the I1!sult of a diagramed
Character and refusing lo quit inbounds play
aren't just cbches for the Costa from Mesa's
Me.sa High girls basketball team, b a s e 1 i n e ,
)Nbich should explain Coach Len bounded off
Wlutacre's timeout with one sec-the rim, while
pnd left and no chance of victory some Westmin-
m the semifinals of the Mustangs' ster fans
~3th annual Winter Classic sneered aloud
tlgainst visiting Westminster Fri-a b o u t
l:lay night. W h i t a c re 's
• "Somewhere deep down in closing side-
their dark recesses, our girls may line statement. Grondahl
have wanted to quit. But we're "I was
hot going to let them," said proud of the way we finished,"
Whitacre, whose squad scored 29 added Whitacre, whose team fell
fourth-quarter points, including to 7-6 entering tonight's 5:50 Pte final 14 of the game in the last third-place game with San
·102 seconds, to turn a Lions' Clemente. ·we play bard and we
~lowout into a respectable 59-53 don't like to lose."
I
The Mustangs just couldn't
seem to play very well for tlJree
quarters, due primarily to a
smothering full-court Lion press,
which forced 15 first-half
turnovers cmd triggered a deadly
transition game.
"They JUSt killed us early,• said
Whitacre of the 18-3 first-quarter
thumping by .the Lions (11-2),
who had beaten Mesa, 62-48, the
second game of the season.
Kelli Grondahl, who typified
the Mustangs' continuous sec-
ond-half effort by scoring all sev-
en points after intermission, sank
a putback for the first bucket of
the third quarter to make it 32-19.
But Westminster, which takes
on Woodbridge in tonight's 8
o'clock title clash, showed a little
heart of its own, reeling off 11
straight points to pad the lead to a
game-high 51-21.
While Westminster Coach Dick
Katz emptied his bench, Mesa
kept surging, with Kim (a game-
higb 21 points), Grondahl, Chanel
Anderson (six), Kelly Chapin
(seven) and Margaret Grover
sprinting to the finish.
Mesa senior center Corri Lur-
mann chipped in seven points·
and six rebounds, before fouling
out early in the fourth quarter.
Westmfnst... 59. ~Mesa 53
Westminster 18 13 20 8 · 59
Costa Mesa 3 14 7 29 -53
Westminster -Schult 12, Holmes
14, Gol 6, Erickson 8, Tran 2, T. Moore 2,
E. Moore 7, Glaser 1, Gray 7.
l ·pointers • Gll 2, E. Moore 1.
Costa Mesa -Anderson 6, Kim 21,
Lurmann 7, Collett 3, chapin 7, Gron·
dahl 7, Watanabe 2, Peyton 0, Howse 0,
Grover 0. 3-polnters • Kim 1.
Fouled out -Lurmann.
: COMMUNITY COLLEGE BASKETBALL I
I ~ates capture third place OCC women lose 72-59
I .__
SAN DIEGO -Matt Ambrose
dropped in 25 points and Orange CAtst College breezed to a 95-63
!ory over Grossmont Friday
t to capture third place at the
Diego Mesa Tournament in
's basketball.
:t;:"J'be Pirates dropped m nine
~s, led by Brian Fracalosy with IZ"ur, with the game wired from ~start. Coast led 54-37 at half-
jme and was never threatened m
eroving to 9-8 overall.
~Coast 86, Victor Valley 67
~ Coast • Tosic 4, Mitchell 15,
m1ung 4, Parker 2, Curtis 13, Fra-
iiii*lsy 13, Ambrose 13, Downs 16,
'dmson6. ~inters • Curtis 3.
~Valley -Watson 4, Harris 15,
Ciinedy 7, Nickelbury 8, Treadwell S, mtr 2, Marshall 4, Richardson 4,
JiliiCarron S.
1 :-pointers · Kennedy 1, Treadwell 1,
Richardson 1.
Halftime: OCC. 33·32
San Diego Mesa 77, OCC 73 (ot)
Orange Coast • Tosic 2, Mitchell 9,
McClung 1, Parker 4, Curtis 12, Fra-
colosy 7, Ambrose 14, Wilcox 13, Downs
4, Adamson 7.
3-pointen · Curtis 2, Fracolosy 1.
San Diego Mesa · Nichels 20, Wash·
lngton 4, Williams 22, Jones 2, Bolton
18, Miller 2, Lewis 6, Amos 3.
3-pointers -Nichels 3, Williams 2,
Bolton 4, Amos 1
Halftlme: San Diego Mesa, 35·33.
Regulation: 67-67.
Ot~ Coast 95, Grossmont 6l
Grossmont ·Hasan 10, Jackson 14,
Hunter 21 , Elpheage 8, Fassett 8, Low-
ery 2.
3-pointers · Hunter 2, Elpheage 1,
Jackson 1, Hasan 1
Otanve Coast Tosic 2, Mitchell 18,
Curtis 14, Fracolosy 12, Ambrose 25,
Wilcox 2, Downs 14, Adamson 8
3-pomters · Fracalosy 4, curt1s 3,
Ambrose 2.
Halftime· occ. 54.37
~ta Mesa boys stumble, 73-56 ...
:ANAHEIM -Costa Mesa High
·or Mike Montoya matched a
!,!!Son-high with 26 poUlts, but
iii Mustangs fell to Magnolia,
:z:t56. in a consolation game of
Canyon Tournament Friday.
;tvfontoya netted four three-
~ters for the Mustangs (2-11),
MIAile Bryan Leahy had 13
ld;)ounds and 12 points.
Mesa closes out the tourna-
ment today at 11 :40 agamst Fri-
day's Saddleback-Lowell (San
Francisco) loser.
M1tgnolla 73, Costa Mesa 56
5a>r9 by Quarters
Costa Mesa 11 14 14 17 -56 ,
Magnolia 19 12 22 20 • 73
Costa Mesa • Montoya 26, Ogo 7,
Payne 3, Leahy 12, Weeks 8, Correa 0.
.)..pointers -Montoya 4, Weeks 1, Ogo 1
llAPPY H<>LIDAYS
~ · RABBITIINSURANCE ~ <:.. \) 441 Old Newport Blvd.• Newpcxt Beach _,
../ ..-'J (near H~ HO)fl!Ull) ,.
631-7740
SAN JOSE -Orange Coast Col-
lege was hammered Friday, 12-
59, by Chaffey College in the
championship game of the Lady
Jaguar Invitational.
The two teams had split two
close battles in previous games
this season, but the rubber game
was never seriously m doubt.
uThis is the last time that we
will play them this year,• said
assistant coach Cindy Robbins.
"Unless we meet them in the
playoffs."
The game was the Pirates'
final wannup before Orange
Empire Conference "play gets
underway. OCC finished the pre-
season 14-4.
uThe conference schedule will
be a lot like this game,~ Robbins
said. •Every team is talented. If
we don't perform we won't win.
"It's really hard to know what
to expect. Right now we're play-
ing so up and down."
Jamie Shine led the way with
14 points and she was joined in
double figures by Kathleen Kel-
ley with 12 points, and Tina
Afan's 11.
OCC trailed 36-19 at the half
and closed the gap slightly in the
second half.
COMMUNITY COUEGE WOMEN
Ourff9y n. Orange Coast 59
Ot.nge eo.st -Nakamura 6,
Takemoto 2. Afan 11, Pulido 6. Geraci
8, Shl.ne 14, Kelley 12.
3-polnters -Nakamura 2, Afan 1.
Fouled out -Kelley.
Chaffwy -Landros 10, Pena 13,
Stremel 4, Tiiiman 16, Buckner 8, fyler
11, Kusek 10.
3-polnters -Pena 1.
Technical fouls -Chaffey Coach
Stephens, Kusek.
Halftlme • Chaffey 36-19.
NO Drive, Une or Hasslell
"We come to your home or office
for computer service "
Make Those Patios &
Entries Beautiful
CUSTOM MAIO Y
170 E. 11• 8t. • s.Jle 206
C...Meeia
(714ll~5-8512 ... ·-~
••
Let Jim Jenninas
install your
complece
ynrd h:udscape.
• Expert briclc,
hlock, stone, tile,
slate & concrete I
work.
• Ctul ~commend
quail• y dc:sisne rs
• Quahty.worlc in
Co&tl\ MC$a &
Newport Beach
since 1969 .
• Dtatf\aRf'
rroblcmsl We
10lvt-t~m.
PALM DESERT -Estancia
High's girls bosketball teain had a
le4d by as many as 1 points and
led at halftime, 33-20, Friday
afternoon, but foul trouble for Jes-
sica Waltz early in the third quar·
ter and an effective press turned
the Eagles' game around as Ran-
cho Cucamonga, 12-2, outscored
Estancia 35·18 in the last two
quarters en route to a 55-51 victo-
ry and the title at the Palm Desert
Christmas Classic.
The loss is the first of the year
for Estancia, which opened with a
school record 13 straight wins,
most by runaway scores.
Waltz left the game near the
end of the third quarter with the
Eagles holding a five-point lead,
but once she was retired from the
game the Eagles' floor game went
.to pieces.
Marlisha Naulls hit two three-
p0int shots in the fourth quarter to
give Rancho Cucamonga the lead
and the winners never trail61
therea.f ter.
Estancia, which went into th1
game with a squad of six, Wl\
down to five wtth Waltz out oj
fouls, and the Eagles were unabl1
.to get back up to speed.
Naulls was named the tourna
ment's MVP and Waltz and JU
Black were each dccorded all
tournament honors.
Black had 21 points and nin~
rebounds in the championshif
game.
Rancho Cucamonga 55, Est.and• 51
Score by Quarten
Ertancia 19 14 9 9 • 51
Rancho Cucamonga 11 9 17 18 • SS
Estancl• · Camberos 2, Waltz 8,
Slack 21, Rodriguez 2, Deming 11, J.
McCartin 7.
3-polnters -Waltz 1, Deming 1.
Fouled out • Waltz.
Technicals -Black 1, Davis 2. ejected,
Rancho CUc:among• · Thompso~ •
4, Stamsbury 1, Andrew 10, Naulls 26,
Johnson 14.3-pointers • Naulls 4, John-
son 1.
Sailors fall, 42-34
HUNTINGTON BEACH -
After winning its first seven
games of the season the Newport
Harbor High girls are finding
themselves in a slump.
The Sailors have lost their last
four games, including Friday's 42-
34 decision to Lakewood in the
consolation round of the Marina
High Invitational
"We're in a little slump, but I
know we will come out of it." said
Newport Coach Bob Dukus.
"Today's game was a carbon copy
of yesterday's game."
The Sailors fell behind 21-10 at
the half, but then battled back in
the third period only to see Lake-
wood pull away for the win.
Wednesday's game with
Anchorage of Alaska followed
the same pattern, with Anchor-
age winning 53-43.
The Sailors stdrted the season
strong winning the South _Coast·
. Tournament at University High
and finishing second in the Lady
Matador Oassic at Bolsa Grande
High. The Sailors' 49-33 loss to
Laguna Hills in the championship
game started the slide. The
Sailors lost all three of their
games in the Marina tournament.
uu•s hard lo put a finger on
what's happening.· Dukus said
"But we will
hit the nail on the bead soon.
It's just a matter of time before we
pull out of this."
It may be at least one more
game before the Sailors tum it
around. Their next opponent is a
talented Woodbridge High. The
game is Thursday
Junior guard Andree Verhulst
was the Sailors leading scorer
against Lakewood with nine
points and she added four assists.
Junior forward M.E . Clayton
added seven points.
Juniors, Breanna Badorek and
Colleen Eadie, pulled down nine
and seven rebounds, respectively,
for Newport.
Lakewood 42. N9"lpOl't Hltf'bor l4
Score by Quarters
Lakewood 11 10 7 14 . 42
Newport Harbor 6 4 10 14 • 34
Lakewood • Borton 4, Buycks 9, Nel·
son 4, Phillips 2, Watkins 10, Verner 4,
Thomas 9.
' 3-pointers -Buycks 2.
Newport Harbor -Klytta 2. Alford 2,
Badorek 4, Verhulst 9, E2'die 4, Dia~ 4,
Talley 2. Clayton 7.
COSTA MESA AMERICAN LITTLE LEAGUE
BASEBALL AND
GIRLS' SOFTBALL
'
FINAL REGISTRATION
At Costa Mesa
HJgh School
Saturday
January 6, 1996
9am to lpm
Ages S thr_ougb IS residing
withJn the CMALL boundaries.
A $60.00 donatJoo per player not
to txettd $150.00 per family.
Call for more Information •
.. Estancia
returns
to form,
49-37
' • Eagles will play Edison
for fifth place today after
putting away Newport
Harbor Friday afternoon.
By Ric.hard Dunn, Daily Pilot
COSTA tvlESA -It took 24
minutes of game action, until
finally, Estancia High's basketball
team was able to do ... well, nor-
mal things.
·we had a real hard.time get-
ting the ball into me, until the
fourth quarter," said Chris Can-
dlish, Estancia's 6-foot-6 senior
center. "That's when we start¢
doing things as normal"
The Eagles (13-2) $\9Ved off
upstart Newport Harb6r, blowing
matters open in the final eight
minutes, as host Estancia
advanced to the fifth-place game
of the Daily Pilot Coast Classic
with a 49-37 victory over the
Sailors (5-10, Friday.
Candlish, after serving a one-
g ame suspension Thwsday
because of his part ~ an alterca-
tion and subsequent ejection on
Wednesday against Marian, was
. hot under the collar for missing
his team's game against Bell-
flower, a 67-58 loss for the Eagles.
It wasn't until the fourth quar-
ter when Candlish made up for
lost time, scoring 16 of his game-
high 21 points in the final quarter,
as Estancia, which had been held
to only 17 points in the first half,
broke open a five-point game.
Candlish, who didn't start, was
5 of 8 from the field in the fourth,
while sinking all six free-throw
attempts.
Newport Harbor's Peter Cun-
ningham hit a three-pointer with
6:27 left on the fourth-quarter
clock. cutting Estancia's lead to
32-28, but the Eagles soared from
there with 17-5 scoring spurt.
"We played a nice three quar-
ters, but our inability to keep
them from scoring in the paint
killed us," said Newport Harbor
Coach Larry Hirst, whose squad,
which will play Dana Hills today
COLLEGE
WOMEN HOOPS
SoCal College 54. Gracel.nd 4'
Gracieland -Ozlnga 4, Williams 10,
Maher 15, Neoroth 1, Crockett 2,
Wilton 3, Martinson 6 ..
3-pointers -Maher 3.
SoCat College -Caruso 19,
Blomker 8, Woodruff 14, Chaney 2.
Gulfan 2, Hartloan 5, Whittemore 4.
3-pointers -BTomker 2, Hartigan 1.
Halftime: SoCal College, 25-23.
SCHEDULE
SATURDAY
IASUT9AU
College men • Whitworth College at
Southern California College, 7:30 p.m.
High school boys -Dally Pilot Coast
Classic at Estancia High,
Consolat ion finals at 11 a.m. and
12:40 p.m.; Seventh Place finals, 2:30
p.m.; Fifth ~·finals at 4·10 p.m ..
Third Place at 5:50 p.m.; Championship
at 7:30 p.m.
High school girts · Corona del Mar at
Santiago Tournament. 8 p.m.,
Championship, vs. Canyon; Costa Mesa
Tournament, Costa Mesa vs. San
Clemente, 5:50 p.m., third place.
PRIOAY'S COUNTS
D.tWy"I Locbr • 3 boats. 100
anglen. 19 calico bass. 12 sand bass, 4-4 JCUlpln, 21 shffphead, 3 h1llbut, 14 rodtfish, 250 mackerel.
' NeaJpert ...... • 3 boati, 49
1nglen. 14 sand bau. 2 "lko bass, '6 m.ckn, 1oe whitefish, 10 rockflsh, 20 sheephNd, 12 blue perch, 1 ling
Cod, 1 trMftsh
• SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1995
daily pilot coast classic
LEAM HOGSTEN I DAILY PILOT
Eagles' Nick Novak (12) com~s under pressure of Greg Wertman.
(2:30 p.m.) for seventh place,
stayed with the Eagles for three
quarters.
·~ held Dane Plock to four
points, and any time you do that,
you think you have a chance."
While Plock struggled with his
shooting, the Tars refused to go
away, even though they scored
only two points in the second
quarter.
Newport Harbor, led by Chad
Coluccio's 11 points and seven
rebounds, and Wes Badorek's
nine boards, three assists and two
blocks, led 11-8 after one quarter.
All three of Estancia 's three-
pointers came in the first 10:41 of
the game.
·we've been a little sluggish
for a while, but actually it's not too
bad to be sluggish now, rather
than in league," Estancia Coach
TI.m Parse! said. "Newport Harbor
also plays real hard. They're out
there diving for loose balls, and
maybe that makes us look a little
more sluggish. And with Dane
having an off night shooting (1 of
9), he's not going to do that every
night. If he just handles the ball,
we'll be OK.~
Plock drained his only three-
pointer early in the second, giving
Estanaa a 15-13 lead. Estancl• 49,
Newport H..t.or 37
Score by Quart.en
Newport Harbor 11 2 10 14 -37
Estancia 8 9 11 21 · 49
Newport tt.rbor -Cunningham 6,
Hornung 4, Coluccio 11, Badorek 6,
Glass 0, Jamesoo 2, Matlin 2. Wertman
0, Schwartz 6. 3-pointers -Hornung 1,
Cunningham 1. Fouled out -Hornung.
Estancbl · Plock 4, Novak 6, Candlish
21, Nelson 11, Maraya 2, Ry. Simpson 2,
Jahld 0, Casillas 3. 3-pointers -Plock 1,
Nelson 1, Casillas 1.
BEACON BA~
AUTO WASH
4200 Birch Street • Newport Beach, CA
833-0660
John
Wayne
Airport
.c: "
!:?
Dove as .
Bnstol
100%
HAND WASH
STA-IGHT SPICIALS
Com,.,. 0. Low, llw O• Prtcts • lat Otlallty • lest lll'Ylct
0,.1 Delly, ...., .... HetlQyl • Senior Dtscounta EwtrplJ
We accept: AMeX, MC, VISA, DISCOVER, DINER'S ANO TEXACO
~----------,r----------, I S-STAR SPECIAL I I 4-STAR SPECIAL I
I •FULL SERVICE HANO WASH I I •FULL SERVICE HANO WASH I
I •SEALER WAX I I • ILUE CORM.• FOAM WAX I
I •ARMOR All TIRES I I •SEALER WAX I
I • OZJUM9 AIR FRESHENER I I •ARMOR AU TIRES I
I OR VINYL MATS I I • OZIUr AIR FRESHENER OR I
I •WHEELS ANO TIRES I I VINYL MATS I I I I •WHEELS AND TIRES I
I ~ 'J• 11 oeu .... I
I Nol Wild..,.,,."*.._,.,. I I Hot ...... """' W'ff oht ~ I ~--,,...... • • Coupcin~ 111 .. ~----------JL----------~ ~~---~~----------------, ~_,-AR SPECIAL
I • FUll SERVICE HANO WASH I I • IWI ... TRIPLE CAANAUBA WAY. OlaY , I
I • SEAURWAX ..... I
I • IWI cmw. • CUAR COAT PAOTtCTAHT 111.: I
I WITH A•,_. .... .,... .-.,.. I
I ·-11.LIXTIRIOR(lftdudllh) ...,......., I I • ... Ml,.._ROAVINVlMATS ~--NII I • Wtlaa All> T1MI I ~--------~-------------~ ,,....,,,, ... ., .. ...
.. If' f ......... JI L ..-. ,.., ... ,.,..
YIMTIRPNll•
c-..
Hlgll~,.. •.
lldesto
atfempW--.:
Glendale llGGlllll'll
Mark HaD btMIB
night's Mmum.I Gf
the D8Uy Pilot
Coast CIMatc iii
Estancia High. The
72-61 Victory sends
the Sea .Kings into
tonlghfs fbial
against Bellfiower.
lfAH HOGSTEN I OAA..Y PllD'T
CDM
CONTINUED FROM 81
35-26 intermission lead.
Hoover, which had seven
tbiee-pointer5, staged a
mild comeback in the third
quarter, pulling to within 39-
35, after guard Arbi Bagh-
dasarian (20 points) nailed a
three, then scored again
with. 4:06 lefL .
Three Hoover players
eventually fouled out.
"Fiee throws could be big
(tonight)," Orris said of the
Coast Classic title game
against Bellflower.
10.inke also added five
boards, two blocks and two
steals, while Walz had eight
points, s.bc on free throws.
Walz a.lSo had four
rebounds, one steal and one
assist.
COl"OM Ml Marn
Glendelettoowr61
Score by QulNtws
Hoover 17 9 17 18 • 61
CdM 8 27 13 24 · 72
Hoov.r ·Russell 10, BaQh·
dasarian 20, Jenkins 5, Hutr 24,
Azatl4ln 2.
3-polnters -Hu!I 4, Baghd.Mari·
an 2, Jenkins 1.
fouled out -Baghdasarian,
Azarian, Avanessian.
Technkals • Avanessian.
Corona def Miii' -Coleman
20, Klinke 17, Evans 5, Mad>on·
aid 10, Keane 3, Walz 8, Peyton
0, Friend 3, Shimer 2, Garity 1,
Guthrie 3.
Order Comcast Cablevisio11 today attd enjoy a
holiday seaso11 filled with top quality ffltertai11mait
a11d star-filled movies. Attd ask about our special value
packages that spread good cheer throughout the year.
Comcast is here to help your wishes come true/
CALL TODAY FOR THE
3-STAR PACKAGE AND GET:
• Complete Basic Service, The
Disney Channel, Encore and
two more premium channel .
Choose from HBO, Cincmax,
or Showtime.
• Installation Ju t Ss1
• Ss credit on your first month
of premium service.
• Wc1J be on-time, or your
installation's free, plus wc11
<.Te<fjt you $20.
• 30-lAy Money Back Cuarantect
PLUS O U R SPECIAL BONUS GIFfS ...
• $25 JCPcnncy
cataloe gift ttrtifiatc.
• 30 fTtt minutes a
month of
SPRJNTl
'
••
'
..
"'
•
• ..
SATURDAY. DKIMISt lO, 19'5
CONTINUED FROM 81
Dick Stockton, Senior Tour officials
• sought a new site for the 1996 event
and came up with the Newport Beach
Country Club, which will host the
event March 11-17.
International Sports and Event
Marketing Pr~ldcnt Bob Neely, who
took over as event operator for the
Orange County Sports Association,
announced the move July 18, giving
NBCC the nod over Coto de Caza by
virtue of its gallery-friendly course
layout, as well as its surrounding
hotels, shopping and recreational
opportunities. .
The $800,000 prize purse offered at
Mesd Verde was increased to $1
million for the 1996 Classic and NBCC
Vice President and General Manager
Jeny Anderson expressed optimism
that a long-term agreement could be
reached to make the townament a
fixture in Newport Beach.
3 Ferguson battles cancer -
Responding with the same upbeat
manner that garnered glowing
reviews early in his first season as
Costa Mesa High's boys basketball
coach, 23-yea.r-old Jason Ferguson
vowed to defeat WJJ.m 's tumor
dJagnosed m his kidneys and lungs
Jan 13 "
Only hours alter being released from
UCI Mectical Center, where he
checked m with what was initially
thought to be kidney stones, Ferguson
returned to the Mustangs' bench for a
83-65 loss at Uruvemty High, Jan. 18.
. . J:ie .finished out the season, despite
uutiating chemotherapy, and in the
subsequent months, continued to
inspire awe over his unyielding resolve
to ove~come the life-threatening illness.
While Ferguson credited various
treatment strategies with delivering
degrees 6f relief during the off-season,
the obviously emaciated former prep
Ail-American guard from Workman
High~ th~ City of Industry began
coa,ching his second season in a
wheelchair.
Still possessing the insight and love
for the game that fuels his desire to be
a Division I college head coach,
Ferguson barks sideline instrUctions
during practices and games,
h~~g borne his philosophy to
!1uuntam the hardest-working program
m Orange County.
In addition to inspiration and sup-
port, several members of the local bas-
ketball community and beyond have
responded with good will.
Various fin8J'\cia1 contributions
streamed into tJli.e Jason Ferguson Fund
to help offset mounting medical costs
-including a $1,000 donation from the
boys basketball team from Laguna
Beach High, and another $1,000 from
Calvary Chapel High School. Proceeds
were also generated from a series of
three-on-three basketball tournaments.
run by Ferguson's friends and former
colleagues at Fast Action Sports.
4 Coaching changes -A significantly
higher coadung turnover than
usual was lughli9hted by one
10-day penod m late April and early May.
F1ISt, 1t was learned Apnl 29 that
Costa Mesa High football coach and
boys aUtletic dlrector Myron Miller was
leaving for Tustin High.
Then, on May 8, Southern California
College baseball coach Charlie Phillips
was abruptly fired after six seasons by
SCC President Wayne Kraiss, who
cited •pluJosophkal differences."
Miller, whose three-year tenure
produced unprecedented football
success, including the Mustangs' first
outright league championship and
inaugural CIP (Division Vlll) title-game
appearance in 1993, was also credited
w1th hiring coaches who either turned
around (baseball) or maintained (water
polo) the fortunes of other athletic
programs.
A 2.S-year coadung and teaching
veteran who came to Costa Mesa from
Ramona High, the Costa Mesa resident
said h1s stint at Mesa wos the most
settstying of his career. He said he
chose to leave for Tustin. however, in
order to draw from a larger enrollment
(nearly double Mesa's).
•tt'1 a selfish ded.sion and J make no
bOnee about lt, • said Miller, wbo went
OD to Jead the nllers to their first CIP
playoff oppoaronce since 1991 last fall.
•Whe n I got to Costa Mesa, people told
me it was the graveyard for coach s.
(My tenure} was o v ry 1.dting time
and I think the community and th
CAmJ>UI benefited."
PhUllps, bow ver, wq in no m60d to
P8J1 on glowing rocollectiont, iilitead
~emng shock and dllagreem nt
With Kii111' d lion, wh1Ch he! learned
al via a letter.
•They told me to develop kids, be a "*' mOdeJ for them, anC1 help bUlld rMir chAracter through academia and
IJ*tlullity, end not to wony about winl
ud lomet, • Mid PbWips, who later
........ be ... beMI .... OGQI .,.,.. °"" ........... With Krallt aboUI ~wtcfl 1......,....,
Phillips led the
Vanguards to the
postseeson eoch of
• bis first four yean,
but made his biggest
U,,pact by recnliting
pitcher Do Bottlers,
who drew scores of
media to the school's
modest on-campus
diamond as the first
female to win a
college bd.Seball
game.
Phillips, a former
pitcher in the Angels
• • year 1n review
and Dodgers
organizations, also
sent 12 SCC players DON LEACH I DAll.Y Pl.OT
on to the professional Newport Harbor High's Jeannette (left) and Julla (right) Hecker' gtve
ranks. Corona del Mar's Kelly Campbell a consolatton kiss after they learned
The starting five of
Zack Richardson
(10.9 points per
game), Chris
Candlish (10.9),
Kevin Byrne (10.4),
Done Plock (9.2) and
Tum Feeney (8.4) all
earned places on the
Daily Pilot's
All-Newport-Mesa
District team, wbile
Richardson (first
team) and Byrne (sec-
ond team) were All-
CIP Southern Section
selections and shared
PCL Player of the
Year honors, as cho-
sen by the coaches.
Other noteworthy of the All-CIF Dlvt.slon I selections, which listed the two Newport girls
Ne~rt-Mesa aa first-team selections, and Campbell, a Mizuno AU-American and
Parsel was the
Pilot's PCL Coach of
the Year, while Plock,
Candlish and Feeney
were voted first-team
c~ es who headed for Colorado on a scholanhlp, u a second team AJl-CIF choice
resigned, retired or •
moved on, included Shannon Ja.kosky was one of four two-way performers
(Newport Harbor High girls including Waltz (comerback), Bogda'.n
basketball), Dick Tucker (fonnerly (defensive end) and Nichols (outside
Orange Coast College football), Ed linebacker).
Blanton (Estancia boys athletic director Senior place-kicker Jimmy Keane
and former football coach), Bob Wetzel also established records for PA'IS in a
(Orange Coast College men's game, season and career (seven, 43
volleyball), Lance Stewart (Cd.M girls and 66, respectively).
volleyball), Rick Buonarigo (Costa Senior Newport Harbor transfer Sky
Mesa softball) and Richard Smith Conway was the Newport-Mesa ~
(Newport Harbor boys basketball). District Defensive Player of the Year
. laurels, collecting 17 sacks from his
5 Cd.M boys basketball -Like a tackle spot.
scene played out through the ages Conway also joined Walz,
on driveways and playgrounds, Schawnburg and Nichols on the
Corona del Mar High junior forward All-CIF Division V and all-district teams.
Brian Coleman stepped to UCI's Bren Also all-district were O'Meara,
Events Center tree-throw line with 35.8 Goode, MacDonald, Bogdan, safety
seconds left and the chance to win a Chris Wills, comerback Ryan Bums,
CIF Southern Section rv-AA and middle linebacker Ryan Crogan.
championship with two foul shots.
Coleman's clutch conversions made
ll 47-46, and when St. Bernard missed
a would-be game-winnet in the wan-
ing seconds, the Sea Kings had the fifth
CJF crown in the school's storied
33-year hoop history.
Though Coach Paul Orris' squad
opened with three straight wins, it
KATSUYA RAINONE I DAA.Y PILOT
Dlvbion Il Co-MVP Rob Grayeli led
Costa Mesa to the CIF championship.
endured seven one-game losing
streaks before ascending to a
postseason peak, beginnmg WJtb a
regular-season upset over Sea View
League champion Santa Margarita
65-59. I
CdM rolled through section playoff
foes Beaumont (49-46), Crespi (66-49)
and Daniel Murphy (76-66). before
r~peating a 1993 CIF championship
victory over St. Bernard, by the
identical score.
Serra handed CdM a 76-64 defeat in
the firs1 round of the Southern
CaWomia Regional playoffs to finalize
an 18-12 campaign.
Senior guard Brian Fracalosy
averaged 17.2 points per game en
route to Newport-Mesa District Player
of the Year and first-team ll-ClF
Division rv recognition, wtule senior
backcourt mate Dominic DeGrazier
was second-team All-ClF after scoring
12 points per contest.
Coleman joined Pracalosy and
DeGraz.ier on the Pilot's all-district
team, while seniors Joel Owen Eric
Schiff, limm Quinn, Jesse Fels~t and
juniors Adam Klinke and Darren
MacDonald, contnbuted throughout.
7 Danny O'Neil -After a brilliant
college career at Oregon, where
he started 41 games -capped by
a record-setting Co-MVP performance
in the Ducks' first Rose Bowl
appearance in 37 years (Jan. 2 before
102,247 agamst Penn State) -the
former Corona del Mar (freshman and
sophomore years) and Mater Dei
quarterback passed up two chances to
make his mark in professional football
before signing Dec. 26 with the '
Anaheim Piranhas of the Arena
Football League.
. Instead of accepting opportunities
with tbe NFL Kansds City Chiefs and
the CFL British Columb1a Lions, O'Neil
chos~ to become the youth pastor in
the high school ministry at Calvary
Chapel of Costa Mesa, where he
spends his Sundays at the pulpit, not ln
the pocket, and is the offensive
coordinator for the Eagles' Div1S1on X
football team.
Rich Saul, the Piranhas vice president
of football operations and a fellow
assistant coach at Calvary Chapel last
fall. made good on his hope to lure
O'Neil back onto the playing field But
O'Neil agreed to play only after it was
clear his position with the team
wo~dn't affect his Calvary Chapel
assignments.
Many were surprised he was not
drafted by an NFL team, after throwing
for 8,301 yards and 62 career TDs
in Eugene. He broke 32-year-old Rose
Bowl records for passing yards (456),
completions (41) and attempts (61), to
share MVP honors with Penn State
running back Ki-Jana
Carter, who led the Nll-
tany Lions to a 38-20
triumph en route to being
the No. 1 selection in the
subsequent NFL draft.
8 John Wayne Club
becomes Palisades -
Ken Stuart, the
owner of
all-league by the circuit's coaches.
1 0 Rod MactdWlan -Close to
200 people, the child.hoods of
. each touched by the man
himself through his creation of -and
continued devotion to -Harbor Area
Baseball, gathered at the Costa Mesa
Community Center March 30 to
shower praise, commemorate a lifetime
of volunteer service, and just plain
remember some good 'ol days on Uie
diamond in a "Salute to Rod.•
MacMillian, who founded Harbor
Area Baseball in 1947 with the aim of
giving every local kid a chance to
~articipate, did just that over a span of
five decades, before Little League
established itself in Newport-Mesa
area in the late 1980s.
"I. always wanted our players to play
to win, or a t least play to do as best
tbey could,• MacMillian said, recal.Ung
the total lack of parent intervention
that often plagues the Little League
experience. "But, yes, we never
demanded il •
11 Ila leaves legacy -Ila Borders,
Southern California College's
celebrated female pitcher,
presented equipment from her
intemationally-cbron.iclecl collegiate
career to be displayed at tbe Baseball
Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y. as
well as the Orange County Sports Hall
of Fame at Anaheim Stadium.
On the field, Borders, followed up a
2-4 freshman season, in which she
compiled a 2.91 ERA, with a 1-7
sophomore record and a 7 .20 ERA m
50 innings with the Vanguards.
While playing for the Swift CWTent
Indians in the Saskatchewan Major
Baseball League over the summer,
Borders dispelled rumors of her
departure from SCC -after Coach
Charlie Phillips, who'd recruited her
was fired -by committing to return'
under newly-named coach Kevin
Kasper.
12 Th~ ~dent Irishman -After
trammg for two years to make
his professional boxing
debut, 41 ·year-old Costa Mesa
welterweight John O'Brien emerged
bloodied, bruised, cut, confused
limping and lethargic from just iess
than eight minutes of boxing before
1,218 amused fans at tbe
Irvine Marriott's monthly
"Battle in the Ballroom.•
But he also came away
victorious over 33-year-
old Elisea Torres when,
1 :53 into the third round,
the referee awarded
O'Brien (trailing after two
rounds, 20-18)alechnical
knockout. The referee
stopped the fight on
instructions from the ring
doctor, who was concerned
with excessive bleeding
near Torres' ear. ·5 CdM football -The Sea Kings' fourth tnp to the CJF Southern
Section semilinals in eight seasons
end~ in a disappointing 21-16 loss to
Servtte. But the resiliency required to
post a 9-4 record, as well as almost a
dozen school records will make 1995 a
season lo remember.
Costa Mesa-based
Palisades Tennis Club,
announced in June he
had purchased the John
Wayne Tennis Club in
Newport Beach for a
reported $1.4 million,
which initiated a shakeup
of the entire South
Orange County club
tennis scene.
In addition to nearly
doubling the membership
of the former John Wayne
Both fighters had hit the
canvas in the first round.
"I really obtained my goal
tonight. but I think I've
learned my lesson," said
ll(A~UYA RAINONE I OAlY PILOT O'Brien, who officially
Brian Pracolosy led Cd.M announced bis retirement
to CIF hoops crown. the following day while
Surviving the coaching transition
created by MMk Schuster's arrest the
Sea Kings also rebounded from '
back-to-b.-icl< Sea View League losses
to El Toro (40-35) and Newport Harbor
(7-3) to ride a four-game winning
streak into tbe semifinals.
Senior quarterback Jo h Walz,
operating behind the vaunted f'1ve
Crowns offensive Uno, rolled up a
chool smgle-season record 2,249 yards
rushing ond passing and httd a hand in
23 touchdowns for th high st-scoring
team in tho Khool'a 34 v4J'liry easons
(366 polnt.s).
Wafa capped a 'trcam of postseason
honors by be1ng na.rnod ClF Dlvi.4tion v
Co-Play r o' the Year. after already
clatming Da11y Pilot N wport-Mesa
Olstrtct and Sea View J.A,agu MVP
hlurel .
The Pive Crowm offerulvc Un ,
including 1enlon Nlclt SChaumbwg,
Jeff Bogdan, ruchy Nichols, Tun~
Goode and Kevin Stu rt, h lped Walz
wreak havoc u a doubl thr at, while Jurllbt tillbeck Tom O'Meara also
rolled up 1,45' rushing yards and
1ehool 1lngle·tea.ton recordS for
toUtbdowm ( 19) and pointsJ! 16). 91n1o1' end o.n.n d>ona.ld ._.. •~rorm ,_.. 'I••""'-Nallvw, and
Club, which opened in 1974 witb
Stuart as its original general manager
Stuart's reputation as the most respect-
ed teruus manager in the area spurred
numerous other dubs to upgrade fadll-
ti~ md instruction, OJ well as promote
the gam and provide more flnandeUy
attractive membership packages, ln
order to compete.
The John Wayne Club took on the
name Palisades Tenrus Club wblch
closed, effectively transferri.~g ltl
mem~rship to the Newport foc:Wty.
The •new• Paltsod is now wid1 ly
considered th rnost prominent dub in
the area.
9 Estancla bop buketkll -Wlth all
nvo &tArt rs ov ragln'g betw n
8.4 end 10,9 polnt.s per gftm , Coa~h Tun Pars~l'• juggernaut follow d
up a 13-3 preleagu llC?lllOO with t2
straight victories, including a perfect
10·0 run through th Pad.fie Coast
League that featured a 26 4 av rage "'
victory margin.
BUI J)kidng the wont polllble time
to play poOriy, I.he Bagles, leeded No. 2
Jin DMtkm m-A. MW their MUon end
With a $7-<&B CIP Southern Section
IMl•lfloet loil to hOlt Doi Pueblos at Santa...,.,.. CltY CdJege to tlmltl 25-4
shuffling on c:;rutches
between doctot appointments to: have
a ruptured eardrum drain~; have his
right hand -which he thought be had
broken -diagnosed as a sprain; and
have seven stitches applied to close a
gash over his left eye.
"l accomplished my dream and now
I'm done," ~d the S-toot-81 145-pound
O'Brien, who also reported cuts on two
knuckl , eight facial welts. red, puffy
ars and o sore rtght bic ps. •r•m done
and I'm happy."
13 CadJpn retirel • Bnding one
of the most diltlngu.lshed
caree.ra of any foocball player
to come out of the Newport-Mesa
Unitted School OOtrict, former Newport
Harbor High standout and USC
All·Amerlcan offenalva lineman Dave
Cadigan announced his retirement
after a seven years in tho NFL.
•The gam hat been greet to me
• J'va played It hard, and I f Ml th1' Is just
the time to move on and do~
else," the 6-foot--4, 290.pound Cadigan
told the Delly Pilot July 19, the ~Y
before be wu tcheduled to repqirt to
the OndiuWi hngdl.
CacUgan, a~ LeucadJA
S cme lell tMlt ._~CID dae
playmg fi8ld9 or; P.irfleJJ9, for ibe& RileJ OD tba lidellne.
But tbe ewttw ol lllgbl members
d the NeWpolt-Mesa spartl
C'!IDIDlJDlty IP'llNld fond
meilDorles. •dnea and reOectioil
ln1995.
JUst six d&ys into the new year,
'=~=~~' lriendl u .. Al ..
for •Lock;•
ACCUmbed to
1'illg dileue at
tbe age Of 85.
LocubeY
1pe11t 32 of1his
55 yeantn
jownalilJil at
the Daily Pilot
(1959 \,\lltil b1s
retirement tit
1991). Once
~as the foremost
yachting writer in Southern
California, he chronk:led events
including the Afuerk4's Cup, the
Olympic Ga.mes and numerous
Newport-to-Emenada races for
the Pilot. the Los Angeles ?lines,
tbe New York 11ines and the
Associa.ted Press.
Also known for hii ability to
lrivoke laugbter with a humorous
story or a joke, Lo<:.kabey won the
Bahia Cori.ntbian Yacht Club's Ed
Kennedy trophy in 1986 for
outstanding service to yachting.
• JObaaj Ikeda. whose
contribution as a baltbadc on the
HM1 Newport Harbor High
football team belied bis
diminutive statute, passed away;
May 29, a YiCtim ot heart failure
due to compllcatiom from
diobetes He was in his ~ly 70s.
• Pldllo Tozer. a SO·yea.r
Newport Beech relident and local
leon who owned the Balboa
PaVilloo and O.vey'1 Loeker
aportflshtng, reJeDtecl July 20 to
aaptic:atiGbl nlllted t.o arthritis •
at the ege ol 14r l
The J 972 NeWJ>O(t Harbor
Chamber of Commerce Man of
the Year lil 1973, Tozer was a
community tJeftlure, whose
autob6ograp.by wu titled'
•ReCollections e:od Rellections of
a Dedicated Beach Bum.•
• Hlli'old •JW• SJaellln, who
held legendary statuie as an
All·CIF fullback for the 1942
NewpOrt Harbor High foot~
team Uuat reached the ld\ool's
first CIF Southern section tiUe
game, died Aug. 27 at the age of ?1.
Shefliii, a longttme Costa Mesa
resident and 21 ·year Newport
Be'lch pollen Offtc:er, reviSited the
days u a prep gridiron star in
1992 for the ~ Pilot, when the
SaUor1 celebrated the ~year
4Dhlversary "' tbe SbeOi.P-led title-game appearence by
returning to the CtP title game for
the ieCOnd ume ln school biltory. . w.,.. a.....-. a former
Newport Herboi foOtbaD coach
and an atbletic diredor at both
Newport and Eltanda,
l\ICC\llDbed to a tingeilng bout
wUb dementia ~. 10 at 7~.
A Corona del Mar iesident
active in. Boy $cX»Uts and Sea
SCouts, Hugbja ClOiDpU8d a
t5-l7-2 leading tb8 SeDon
football tNm from 198().64.
• Tbe Oct. 19 puling Of a...,
1-de, • 14-~-old Newport
Hct>ot High helvnen wbo
suffered an apparmr. be4irt altldt
btoWJbt Oil by. CODl'l=bMrt defect. hours iiftil'~.i
poolldd8 ~. flolb~ Wet.Ir,. pl'.ldb at Iba ICllool.
WM moamect ,.,..,......""**
A Cli*dD iD lbe ,._.
......... ~lfboell'Mlt*4 ................
,.. I -ad a clri9'e tD ............ ~ .. =-..:.~:;:r~--=· ,_..!! ~:Z n•tlltMe In Id •&-fmac:ma•wlllf ......
A. ........ Od..
CONTINUED FROM 84
resident, gave up the final two years of
a three-year, $2.1 million contract he
signed with the Bengals during the
1994 preseason, after spending his first
six pro seasons with the New York Jets.
He was selected ninth overall in the
1988 NFL draft, after playing in two
Rose Bowls for the 1\'ojans.
14 Costa Mesa water polo -The
top-1leeded Mustangs
avenged a loss to Manna in
the 1994 CIF Southern Section
Division n water polo quarterfinals by
jumping out to a 7-1 lead and holding
on for a 12-11 triumph in the Division
ll championship game, Nov. 22 at
Belmont Plaza.
Senior Robert Grayeli, who shared
Pacific Coast League MVP honors with
fellow senior Sean Hylton, was later
named CIF Division Il Co-Player of the
Year.
Hylton and Elijah McDanniel were
named first-team All-CIF for Mesa,
which earned its 10th straight PCL title
en route to a 22-4 record and the
school's fourth CIF polo crown.
Ryan Dandy and James Comfort
were second-team All-CIF selections,
while Roger Kimos and Justin Taylor,
the latter the qnly starter not a senior,
were named third-team All-CIF.
Second-year coach Brian
Kreutzkamp, who coached Grayeli,
Hylton and Dandy for the South in the
annual Orange County All-Star Game,
later announced lus resignation and
the position remains unfilled.
Todd Hylton and Katie Grogan
rounded out the top contnbutors.
15 Dukes depart -One day after
owner Fred Lleberman
revealed he was selling the
Newport Beach Dukes to World
TeamTennis officials (Jan. 9), a WIT
spokesman said the franchise would
leave Newport Beach after five seasons.
·1 have tremendous remorse. It was
my passion," said Lleberman, who
agreed to:sell the Dukes to the league
after two potential deals fell through.
The Dukes. perhaps known best by
charismatic and quotable coach Greg
Patton, who guided the team its first
four seasons, won West Division titles
its final three years, losing in the WIT
championship match in 1992 and '93.
The 1994 Dukes, who often played
before modest crowds at the then-John
Wayne Tennis Club, went 14-0 in the
regular season, a first for a WIT
squad, but fell in the semifinals to the
Patton-coached Idaho Sneakers.
Lieberman said the franchise was
profitable each of its final four seasons,
but cited a 10% drop in sponsorship
revenue after 1993 and an about an
8.5% reduction in ticket revenues
during the same period.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
16 Tan upset No. 1 -Though
the Newport Harbor High
girls volleyball team could
not approach the consistent excellence
it displayed en route to a winning the
1994 national championship, on one
night (Nov. 11) Coach Dan Glenn's
Sailors were better than the best the
nation had to offer.
Coming into Newport Harbor's
low-altitude gym top-seeded, 18-0 and
nationally top-ranked, the Huntington
Beach High Oilers rallied from a 13-15
first-game loss to claim the second and
third games, 15-5, 15-8.
But unseeded Sea View League
co-champion Newport, led by 1994
holdovers and twin sisters Jeannette
and Julia Hecker,
responded to
claim the fourth
game, 15-13,
and the fifth,
15-6, to put a
shocking halt to
the Oilers'
season of
destiny in the·
CIF Southern
Section Division
I quarterfinals.
I · Though
Harbor's season
Seniors pro Larry ended at 13-6
Laorettt fires away. three.days later, after a four-game
semifinal def eat
by Mira Costa, the remarkable upset
proved for the fourth straight year that
the road lo national prep prominence
led th.rough the Back Bay.
17 Wlllard reaches NFL -
Though both knees were
ra\ra,ged by four years
patrolling the artificial turf of Cal's
Memorial Stadium (tom up and
replaced with grass one fall too late),
former Corona del Mar High star
linebacker J errott Willard proved
worthy of a fifth-round selection in the
NFL Draft by the Kansas City Chiefs.
Though surgical repairs to his knees
put him on the sideline for this year's
league-best 13-3 regular season and
subsequent playoff run, an
All-American career with the Golden
Bears proved the 6-foot-2, 235-
pounder can indeed play on Sundays.
"I'm going to be 100% (physically)
and they' re willing to wait for me,"
said Willard, the 1989 CIF Division VI
Player of the Year for leading the Sea
Kings to their second straight Southern
Section title. •J just want to be a
productive player in the NFL.·
18 Phebus NCAA's best -UCLA
junior Keri Phebus, who as a
Newport Beach youth
established national superiorlty in the
12s, 14s, 16s and 18s United States
Tennis Associatlon age-group
ran.kings, returned to national
prominence, winning the NCAA
Division I singles and doubles
championships.
A three-time All-AmeriC6Il m
singles, Phebus posted a 55-4 singles
record, including a 6-2, 6-3 title-match
triumph over top-seeded Kelly Pace of
Texas. Phebus later won the Honda
Awa.rd for women's tennis, an honor
the top female in each NCAA sport.
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE
year in review
19 PooCball rec:ord..tten -
FolloWing a prevalent them
of tbe 1990s, teams and
trid.Mduals sent Newport-Mesa prep
f ootba.ll historlans scurrying to the
teeord books this fall.
Corona del Mar set or tied 1 O team
or individual records for single.game,
·single-season or career excellence,
while Estancia High running back
Bachy Gonzalez became the school's
single-season rushing leader for the
highest-scoring squad in Eagle
history.
Gonzalez's 1,211-yard campaign
broke a 23-year-old school record, but
left him just 144 yards shy of the Josh
Wojtk:iewicz's career record of 2,497.
The Eagles, who rode their
newly-installed double wing
smashmouth ground game to t!1eir first
CIF playoff appearance since 1989,
finished with ~82 points, nine better
than the previous single-season high
set in 1970.
The Sea Kings. however, kept
grid.iron historians busy all by
themselves, as quarterback Josh Walz
(total offense) junior tailback. Tom
O'Meara (touchd9wns and scoring)
and senior place-kicker Jimmy Keane
(conversi9n kicks) eventually overtook
the marks of former Sea Kings. Cd.M
also scored a school single-season best
366 points in 13 games.
2 0 Costa Mesa baseball -Costa
Mesa High Coach Doug
Deats' diamond men earned
their first trip to CIF playoffs since
1981 by finishing second in the Paalic
Coast League, developing a penchant
for late-inning dramatics en route to a
13-12 record.
Jeremy Starns' three-hit victory at
Aliso Niguel in the regular-season
finale paved the way to the playoffs,
but Mesa managed just one hit (with
two outs in the seventh) in a 3-0 CIF
Southern Section Division lil
first-round loss lo Irvine and pitcher
Matt Ward.
21 Kelly Cam. pbell -In one of
the more obvious -and
many believe ignorant -
sleights in the history of All-CIF
Southern Section recognition, Corona
del Mar High senior All-American
Kelly Campbell was named second-
team All-CIF by a committee of
Ct"ftches devoid of Orange County
representation.
·That's pretty shocking,• said CdM
first-year coach Brian Chartier, who
utilized the 6-foot, University of
Colorado-bound standout as setter and
outside hitter. "She's a Mizuno
All-American and I think one of the
five best player:; in all of high school
volleyball.•
Campbell, a four-year starter and
member of back-to-back CdM
national championship teams m
1992-93, was one of 10 players chosen
to represented Ca.lif omia against a
team from the rest of the country in
the Mizuno All-Star Match in~ Jose.
2 2 CdM girls basketball -After
going a dozen seasons
without a postseason victory,
Corona del Mar High advanced to the
CIF Southern Section IV-AA Division
liOiiBiilTUiiiiiARiiiiiY iiiiii8ii8ii8 PUBLIC NOTICES
~arterflna.ls, dispatching playoff
victims Sacred Heart of Jesus and
Notre Dame Academy on the road.
after locking up third plilce m Jeague
with a 50-46 regular-season-ending
comeback win over El Toro.
Coach Garth Fhnt's Sea Kmgs
(13-15) ~ ~ top-seeded Santa Ynez,
77-32, in the quarterfinals, but not
before playmg thelf best game of the
season in a dassic 66-63 overtime
upset of Notre Dame Academy.
Sophomore Lindsay Warmington,
averaged 13.5 ~ints per game to join
6-0 junior 1 enter Jennifer Gardner
(10 ppg) on the Daily Pilot's
All-Newport-Mesa Dred.m Team.
2 3 Gardner retires · Estancia
I Ugh and Orange Coast
College product Jeff
Gardner, whose professional baseball
career included big-league stints with
the New York Mets, San Diego Padres
and Montreal EJtpos, reb.red in the
middle of his 11th pro season to
become an advance scout for the
Padres.
~r felt I rellred on my own terms/
said Gardner, a second baseman who
elected to d.Jsconnnue playing m the
middle of a sobd triple-A campaign
( 323 batting dVerage) with the Iowa
Cubs of the American Assooation.
HI felt I got as much out of my
abilities dS I couJd and I have a real
peace about it," he said weeks alter
reaching ms tlectsion.
He had 404 at-bats m 1993 for the
Padres, lulling 262 with 21 doubles
and 24 RBI in lus only tuU season m
the ma1ors His major-league totals
mcluded d 246 average in 492 at-bats.
21 doubles, eight triples, one home
run, 26 RBI and two stolen bases.
He made his major-league debut
Sept 10. 19~H wtth the Mets, but was
traded to the Padres in December of
l991. He had his best pro season (.335
with 30 doublPSJ for Las Vegas of the
triple-A Paclhc Coast League in 1992,
earning an August call-up to San
Dii:>go.
After bemg released by the Padres
m '94, he s1yned with Montreal, bnefly
playing for the Expos, before hooking
on With the Chicdgo Cubs
organization dS a six-year fret! agent,
before the 1995 campaign.
2 4 Reggie honored · One-time
Newport Beach resident
Reggie Jackson, who hit 123
of his 563 career home run-; as a
Califomid Anqel, was inducted mto
the Balboa Bay Club Sports Hall of
Fame, Jtine 28, as part of lrrelevant
Wee k XX.
The lone inductee into the Baseball
Hall of Fame in 1994, ~Mr. October•
amassed a maJor league record 2,597
career stnkeouts in a 21-year·career.
2 5 Cara Heads -The Newport
Harbor High senior track
and field standout unleashed
the fifth-best discus th.row m Orange
County history ( 149-5) to qualify for
the CIF State Finals, where she went
on to brush fifth.
The record-setting heave broke the
school record set the previous spring
by older sister Gina by more than
three feet. Heads also captured a
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS??
SAT\JROAY. DECEMBER 30, 1995
bronze medal at the CIP Southern
section Masters Meet, after t4k1Dg
silver in the Southern Section Diviltoo
n competition and gold at Sea View
League fi.na.l.S.
01HE.RS which receJved consideration:
Newport Beach resideui. M!~ Whtie
named head coach of Oakland Raiders;
CdM Htgh's Jenny Glugow wins CIP
Southern California Goll Association
indMduaJ guls championship; Fonner
CdM H.tgh Coach Dave Holland hired to
head Laguna Be<ich H\gh football
program, Seruors Charles Chatman
(Costa Mesa) and Mellua Schutz
{Newport Harbor) each receive $500
scholarstup as Daily Pllot's
Newport-Mesa D&Stnct Male and Female
Athletes of the Year; Costa Mesa's
Schaefers (Mike, Jason, Sandi and Erle)
are named CaWorma's Youth Baseball
Fa.nuly of the Year; CdM residents Roy
Engelbrecht and Rich Saul named
president dlld director of football
operations, respeebvely, for Anaheun
Pirctnhas; Mesa Verde Country Club's
Tom Sargent
namedSCPGA
Teaching
Professional of
the Yeat;
Orange Coast
College
women's
swimming team
wms seventh
straight stale
champ1onstup,
Newport Harbor
product Jenny
GrtWth wms
WPVA
(women's beach Ex-CdM grid coach
vollcybdill Mark Schuster. Rooloe of the
Year award,
CdM H1gh sernor Jerome Poyyak wms
CIF bad.mmton smgles crown, Newport
~!arbor product Mike Hancock named
OCC Men's Athlete of the Year;
Newpor1 Harbor High salllng team wms
dinghy nationals; OCC's Laird Hayes
becomes NFL offio<il; Ch.rt.s OedJng, a
former Ccitl-1 High standout now
coadung OCC water polo team. helps
U S water polo team wm Pdn Amencan
Game:. gold medal. Southern Califorrua
College's Ryan Seidel drafted m 34th
round by Ctucago Cubs dfter wmrung
Golden State Athletic Conference Player
of the Year laurels, Costa Mesa High
sernor KaUe Grogan is y"ungest player
named lo U.S. nabonal te.un m women's
water polo. Newport Ea.st l.JlUe League
female Britta Vogele makes Daily PLlot'<;
Little League Drea.m Team, Former OCC
women's volleyball coach Jane
Hilgendorf among first mducted lo
Califorrua Juruor College Women's
VolleybalJ Coaches Association Hall of
P;une, SCC's Kevin and Brian Carlson
each clear 6-t l 3/4 m tugh Jump.to fu:ush
sPCond and Uurd, respectlvely. at NAIA
Tl"ack and Field Nabonal
ChdITlp1onships; SCC SOCC<'r star Jason
Allen named All-Amencan
scholar-athlete, Costa Mes. High boys
cross country team wins tU'St (Pacfic
Coast) League tJtle tn 15 years; Former
OCC football standout Israel Ue.anyi
suspended by NCAA for everal USC
games alter talo.ng money fTOm native
tnbe m Nigena; Estandl\ High water
polo brushes 22-5 and Wl.OS first-round
CIF playofl game since 1979
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTlCES
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
The Legal Depttrtmmt at the Daily Pilot is pleased
fQ anriouna a new service now atKU/abk ltJ new businessa.
~will now SEARCH the name for you at no carrt chargt, and save you tht
~and the trip /() the Gnat H<nm in Santa Ana. 'Ihm, of CtJUl'1e, afar' tht sttircJi
is crnnpl&J ~ wiO fik your fiaitious bunness name st:atmzmt with tht County
Clerlt, puhlish ona a Wttlt for four wteh as requirtd by '4w and Ihm file )OIU'proof
of publication with the County Ckrlt. 1 •
P~ skljJ by "'file ytJUr fo:titious buriness stlltm1mJ at the Daily Pi/qt, 330 W.
Bay~ Costa Mesa. If you amnot stop b) plMse cdiJ u.s at (1I4) 642-4321 aNf, UC'
wiO mllM ammganmisfor you ro hanJle this proatlurr by mail
If you shoulJ have any farther questiqns, p~ adJ us mtJ ~will bt more th"1I
~ fQ ~JOU. GooJ /uc/t i1f JOU" MU ""1inesr
D • l'Pilot
p t a w
:
'(5)
1002-1625 m···
2102-2744
II 27.
•
NEWPORT
BEACH
CORONA
1069 DEL MAR
NEWPORT
2122 BEACH
..-..~------
a UllHID llOUllS
Telephone 8am-5 :00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:00am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
DAILY PILOT
DEADLINIS
Monday···~······· Friday 5:00pm
Tue.sday ............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ....... Tuesday 5:00pm
ThW'Sday ........... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ................ Thlll'Sday 5:00pm ·
NEWPORT
2169 BEACH
CORONA
2169 DELMAR
, ~~~ .. ~ Best Area Value! 2Br·2B• F1~nt Du· 3Br, 2B• 2 car gar, LIDO Mobil• Hme Park 2BR 1ABA w/ View A#nllllai.~•lllis Quality 4/SBd 3Ba p~ex, 457A Seaward vaulteo ~ell1, ocn vu, Charming lurn'd 1 +1 $1150/mo. Ullls Incl.
,,_blAject•llltfed· exec hdme nr Fashion Road $1 195 Min. 1 Yr steps to bch. $1300. Steps to pvt bch. 51250 Call 222·5775 M·F 8-5
"""SilltAd9'lMIJS Isl w/epa, pvt yard on Lease. Avail 1/1/96 Call Bkr. 642-3850 675-3969 909-371•1160 tor appt.
111• I CDS. Xlnt cond, won't 3•0-476-9862 2 Leeses Hd wlllcll maua 11 ,.,, 5 year new, decorator Seawlnd twnhse near _C_O_S_T_A_ME_S_A_2_6_2_4 I ..._rt,_ . .._ __ ..._11,.. laatl Only $499,900 w/ lmmac 3BR 3BA Hse 2· o• --••• -r .,....... ... / perfect, 3 BR. 2 ~ BA Hoag. Lg 2Br 21h Ba, 11.ti11a11111 •r dlacrl111l••lf::; TERMS I Calf Nowl car gar w d frig lrpl $1950 mo. * G•t•d frplc, pool, 2-car gar. '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .,,,. ... 11 ...... ci•-rtlii lOll. P•trlck Tenore Agt blk to bch $1850 He $12001 788-1914 1• -r• .• .., -7e0-8702 saVsun 1-4 673·7975 Community * 4 BR, mo. * 1 BR Studio• w/lg patio great view $650
ulll Inc, for 1, no pets
•645-1121*
~:....~.tni.~l!,S::: BIO CANYON Dover Lrg 2Br 2B• w/har· 3 BA, 3 car gar. 3 lrpl,
-.. _ BR o B b I N k prv. spa. xlnt cond 9 ••••••••• IDIUanyAdl~liml· plan. 2 , en. 2 A. or v ew. on·sm 'J. yoars now s 2800 .. ..i
161w•lscrimilll&iol." $489,500.;, By Owner. Many xtras. $1700 lae, Diana Prosser 644· APART1vxENTS
·-: Tiiis lllWIPIPof wtll not Call 844·:>215. ulll Incl. S~-6004 6590(760·5000 ext. FOR RENT •"'-'-aty-.., ... dfttUle· PLUSH 2Bdrm 1 Bath 112 _...... _.,.._, H b N ·..,.---=----••••••••• Chances are mllll llr rt1l 1111te wlllcll ls 11 ouae Y ocean. 0 Bayview Terr gated
titlalllll ol Ill• llW. Our rtMers HOUSES/ 1moklng/pet1. Incl utl. comm. lmmac 2br 2ba you wnl find
.. krt'Y lllltlrmtd tht 111 CONDOS • 14oo e 73•1427 hse. A/C. trg patio. no _B_Al_B_O_A_____ what you need
11 .. ma11 .Mwe1111d .. u11s pot $1750. 760-1219 at the price ·~.,. __,,,.,, 11 • FOR RENT COSTA MESA 2124 Beecon Bey 2 BDRM. iiISiiLANiiiiiiiDiiiiiiiiiiiii2ii6iiOii6 you want to pay ...,.,,.,.....,,_.Tic.. 2 Bath, LNDRY RM, when you read
,iilllf .... 111111'911,ClllKUD ES 380 2 BA +pool Flrepl, 900 sq. ft. Be~ront 1 BR apt,
Tlll·nt1U·lll0·424·159Q. r. dbl gar, nice yard, Avail. JAN, Call John partially turnleh•d. Cl•Hlfled 111fwas111111111.oc .. 1,i.111 GENERAL 2102 quiet street, w•ter, 723·0714/96G·0744 avail until 5/1, prkng, dally ~HUD 114Zl·3SOG. gardner, pool aorv. One Hso from Prv. flreplc, no pets/smoke 842·5878
3 BR Oceanfront $1800, paid $1450 548-8571. Beach $950 mo 673·6640 1-----...-......;...o....;...o. __
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
· ...
COSTA MESA 1024
Xlnt Alea Value!
Gorgeous 2BO 2BA
Twnhm W/2·Car gar. A
.bargain at S 149,900. .,Patrick Tenore Agt
7eo-a702 ~ -
4 BR Oceanfront 2632 Rlverelde Or. Big Cyn guard gated CLASSIFIED
$2100, Nwpt Shores 3 Neer B ack Bay lBR furn 2Br 2Ba. den. LV 'BAI.BOA ~! ~:u~:~~u~~·.:.~~
BR S1350, 2 BR nr + ottlce, 2 car gar, airy. Reis. $3100· 619. myriad ol marchan-
Bch s1000. 4 BR nr backyrd. 2 bale, lndry 36()..2629 80S·96~3848 PENINSUIA 2607 dlse Items, because
sand $1800 Balboa hkup $850 597-0612 BLUFFS 4BR, 2.5BA our column• compel ~::fort Realty 123-Sant•'• Speciel end unit, vaulted ceil· $000 1 BR BALBOA . qualllled buyera to
C..-.Crllllt .....
ID0'1Dfl_..
GaarantMd Placement
Opx atyle. 2Bd 1Ba. Ing, 2 car gar, pool 417 E. BAY AVE. calll
country kit, gar. Only 51995 456•5232 UTILS PO. STV/FRIG. 942·S078
$750. Call 968-3905. FABULOUS SAVINGS NO PETS ..... 547-1155
II you would llkr; to 1 Bd 1 B• "fear Bay HUNTINGTON live In a home that'• and OcHn. $870/
BEACH 2140 valued from S800K to month. Garage avl. No
by ClllMI lltaatlla liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
$12M, Visions Proper· pets. C&ll 65().1219 ties on Olsplay 11 •
looking for qualified 2BR 1BA 1 houH to
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
CILltTOllYI , ......... Home for the Holl·
d•Y• RENT TO OWN.
2Bd 1.5Ba, lncd yd.
Only $775. 968-4495.
managera to live In beach, patio. Yearly
these properties. For $950/mo. Avl lmmed.
further Into contact Jim ............... 675-5069
Ellzabeth or Mellaaa
Ltttht
CIHtlfled
Service
NEWPORT
SEA CH
CORONA
1069 DEL MAR 2122 NEWPORT
BEACH 2169
714~280-8080.
CORONA
DELMAR 2622
PIRSON:
330 West Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 926'2:7
OxTltt of Newport Blvd & Bay St.
GINlllAL
POLICY '
Rates and deadlines are
subject to change without
nouce. The publisher
'reserves the right to censor,
reclassify, revise or reject
any classified
advenisement. Please
report any error that may
be in your classified ad
immediately. The Daily
Pilot & The Independent
accept no liability fo r any
error in an adverti~ment
for which it may be .
responsible except for the
cost of the space actually
occupied by the error.
Credit can only be allowed
for the first insertion.
Have your classified ad in 176 newspapers
with a combined circulation over 3 million.
$400 Is all It takes to place a 25 word
or less classified ad. $15 for each additional word.
AL• AN
------1 CHILD CARE 3536 CLEANING t:=~~~ RY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVICES
DOORS 3580 FLOOR INSTALL HANDY MAN 3710 LANDSCAPE & MUSIC PIANO & VOCAL POOL
3548 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii REPAIRS 3620 IAWN CARE 3808 LESSONS 3835 LESSONS 3868 SERVICE 3894
ll I I I \ 1111 I{ ' I' I < I \ L:
I-IH I klf.1,11<\llO\' Hou•••Cleenlng
Xlnt Ref's. Suppllea
Furnlahed. Own Trana.
Lori• 7e0-5044
An experienced HOMK al!RVICES
dependable door *QUALITY WORK* Anylhlng & Everything PLANT ARTIST ¥ Give Violin or Plano PIANO Beg.-Advanced PURE WATER CARR
hanger. Guar work, HardwdNlnyl/Ceramlc Free E1llmate. Rel'a. Speelallll In existing Leuon1 to aomtont y~u All age•THcher Cert. PooVSpa Svc & Repairs.
CARPENTRY 3510
A to Z HANDYMAN
0 INITALUREFACE CABINETS
Kitehtn1, bathe. door1,
,,-(ndcha/1. Doug 546-7258 . . .
reaa. Don 521·8910 Mrble/Carpet·Bnd/lna Mlcheel 780.1440 landscape/Irrigation lovel Call Katherine• Entertainment Avail. Fllter .. Pump .. Heater1
L708279 722·7332 upgrad ... 7e0-9792 Concer1 Assoc. 631-1288 Jennifer 040-8909 WMkly Svc. 845-9721
DRYWALL •QUALITY WORK• HAULING 3720
•--------Hardwd/VlnyVCeramle •--------PARTIES._ p:~ounrohoLm•e•.sFolenx•hrltn. ROOFING 3910 COMPUTEIS 3556 SERVICE 3584 Mrble/Carpet·Bnd/lna LEGAL -. Lo
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii L708278 722~7332 JUN( K1 !~8T8he 8o~!A,P SERVICES ~ 3812 OCCASIONS 3840 As:fo~~~~~ :iL:~::· REROOFINO·"'' m:•
Computer Coeoh vSMAl.L JOB EXPl!AT 7 ..... ·1 -~
F If ti I I Wiii haul what Traah a I I! B U C B Expert Repat11 LIS7 54 or 8 ec ve earn ng DrywalVPIHter Repair HANDY MAN 3710 Man won'tl 968·1882 J d t c II t-~ ... we om 0 n e Beet Value Aoonne
--------
All •PP• & aol'tware JH1nging/T1plng/Texlurt u e•m•n s 0 •c -ProvldH Moon Bounce PET •714-258·7038• CARPET M•rk 075•7245 comm/AH 551•5573 No Re<:overf • No FEE ror chlldrena partlHI ~ ... " 1t--\J~1"\llU~~t-t Mfcro Swttems Support Palnt•C•rpentry BOMB ,.11111zt Tum yoAJt Judgement Into •1·800·22e-Be23• SERVICES 3870 &upervl••d Roofing Cif=A!uNG 3515 , Drywall and morel ~ CA$Ht 1$$ H0.8437 Export Rooltng Svc. ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill CA"08N PRE.scROOL Provide• computer ELEl"'l"D'CAL 3610 Small Job• Oki SERVICES 3760 ll01159~•8onded•ln1'd • 721 Utica, HunUngton8ch conMctlvlty. Call for "uu Gary M5•8277 PAINTING 3858 Paraonallzed Pet Care Free Eel. 031°4900 McPh .. CarpeWphl (714)5J6..l"41 detail•. 714-642·5925. u11rSAG! 3830 Kennel alternative. No ~-& • ......., Cllalll lend Rellre4 Contractor Nutritionist/Nun• ANt .1tuW 1--------~~ &;.;!:~, Ra: --------A•1 Eleotrlo•I work Repairs, lmprovem1nt1, EJCtended care, plan & •W.P. YOUNQQUlaT atr••,: ror worry. Uc, TRANSLATOR/
714·845·0182 CONCRETE 81 Duncan Electric am Job•· Ouahty/lntegrlty Prep. meals. Dr. appt1 Skin & •oe1u C•r• Painting Contractor Ina. • •· • 673·7184
CLEANING MASONRY 3557 Loc~~~~.R:13.';'~42 I care, Ken 842"1710 •rrand1, day/night xlnl 10% OFF AliFaclaJa Oual. painting by prol'la TUTOR 3927
--------• 8 •--------ROOFING catp, ptbg, rela .•..• Cheri 998·5589 Ma.Hag•• A Waxing F~::~~3:;5 PLUMBING 3890 LE.MN SPAHllH NOWI CERAMIC SERVICES 354 Brick, Block, Stone, Tl'-JONES ELECTRIC palntg. etec, tlle, 11ucco. Cell Becky ~8MOOB ..., & Home Repairs Remodel•. MORGAN 21Yt10ualltyPalnlln9 Great gift lor you an<>c TILES 3528 A TOUCH OF CL.Asa Cone, Patio, Driveway Bonded & ln1ured. Uc'd e11o.32e1 JEWELRY 3784 PLUS touehupa. THE LOCAL PLUM81R famlly. Exp'd SA Tutor" -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Fplc, 880• Ref. 25 Yr L1'705749 es1-eae7 Mobil• 11'403-536!5. MOVING 3834 24 Hra. Richard Sinor •• Jamn E. 8•NM1rt Co.• •u••n• 873-7409 '1 Cleaning. RH/Comm Exp. Terry 557.7594 -... Leaky Showers Rep'd UC/Bonded. Fret Eat. Llo'd Contractor ROOFING carp, plbg, W1lllam Harold Jeweler• Llcl280644 645-3209 Since 1947
Regroutlng fl ln1tall'n Tereaa 282·7143 * Btlt Prlct/Qu1llty Small Job 1peclallet palnlg, tlec, tilt, 1tucco. Walch A Jewelry reptlr PUILIC NOTICE CHUNO'a PltNTINO [~~~8~ervlc•:i~~9;: WALL
t..!A670130 Dean or Tiit •IO'li HOUSECLEANING t.and1cape brick •tone Fans•Llghl .. Spe Remod .... MORGAN AnUque•Ftne Jewelry 20 Yra Exp. Gd Prlcel COVERINGS 39321 673·8005 or 846·8525 Uceniad-Bonded Concfttt. 10o.11i.1001 Demand £ltclrlc 645-3658 Uc'd ••0-~2•1 Buy/Mll/ltldt 873·0308 Th• Caltf,1 Publlc Ullll· Ouar work. Free E1t. ALLllOIS PLUMBING 1
•10 OOQ per hour Moblle #403·5305. tiH Comml11Mon RE· Uc#376602 538·1534 .... Hr lm•,t•ncv lvo 1
714-IM8·038a ••X~llRTi Blk walla, C•rpentrr•lleotrloel '•vn5r•--._ QUIRES tnat au u1ad RAJNllOW Clrole Ma.Int. Or~ln CleanlngeA pl~e We gala thould han~ CHU.D CARE 3536 •WINDOW Cleenlng brick, concrt, atucco & FENCES Ptumbtng•Orywafl• &on&n1 '-oftejg • household goodt l'einlnt_. I/bl Ho11 .. /Apl Faucetta•Dl1p0Hlt together. Strip, !natal,. atone. 25Yr Exp. Lows ._ DEC•r 3615 St •P 1 11 •Tit T.atttu r••• 3808 movera print their Ou h n F , ...,.73 ,. .... ,.. ...... 32,.... advice to the cruy.• •Carpet Cleaning• Joae 531·7M3 q 11\<'1 ucco an ng • W?tnn -..uo p UC CaJ T number• • ty Job. ree HI. '""'''" l, ... ,.. .... -v· u• 831·2111 anytime '
Chrfetlan•Mottt.r •Streak/Spot ~ret• Roofing•Jlm Mf.1414 II~• tllld chauffe\Hi LIMM97 e:l ... 888 LiMf'i Drain t1 .. nfn1 I
o( 2·prov1d•ng care In l'rH llat1•72e-701e •~ • H c a•• CARPINTiiYewlnd ... •••lo Y•r41 Metnt print 1Mlr T.C.P. num· OW AbrelM Pelntlnt & Plumbing Repair•
my hom•. Meals/enaek1 •WINDOW Cl••nlntt CONTRACTORS WOOD/CHAIN LINK Door• • WOOd l'ence• tawna, CtrHipt, TrM ber In aft advertlM• lnt/!llt Oual Ptlnt/AeUI 10'f'r1 ••P· M Miik QI.Ill. Can't aeem to
f"N'T 'atrlcl• 969·8547 •Carpet Cleaning• GENllUU. 3558 -No ~0:~00 amall· • OrywaH Repair .• Trim, 8Pf"""'9, Attale, ments. If you hav• a Llo'd/lnt 'd since '78. 119" 141-1298 get to all thoae
' •StreakfSpot l'rae• 71 ... a21 L#HIN1 •Call lk>b Thltctlt7Ma41flt-413"11'2 qu"Clon aboUt th• I• .... 7082 Pg,,....4947 repair Jobe DU~dendp~~~·, ~D~1 t8!1~1 l'ree !all•729·70'78 c•1 •Ut a • ... ,,•NC•• XIT••• H~•.t-Nn.....,._P9"3Cht2•-0026rlle T-REii O•llty of a,m, over, nm,lo lk•'• Cuttom 'alntlng 'reotM Plumblng around thil hOuot? c • ..... rlCI. • ,...,,.., H '.l .. 1 11 d 1 ..,. LD R INC, .. -or ohau tur, ca : Prof, Clean, Ouallly Aepalr• & Ramodelt C,"' .. ~............. .................. ar.wo,,. n• " .., A"lden11~• Contt. • .... .....__. .............. -........ Utll U 1 '""' ... n .....,....,_ .... ._ A , .. _ ti I In -~.!!:1.-wl•~;r-7 __ .. Painting, clNpentry, Topp .. ~t1111Ye. L11111n1, r..=.,.,..,•0tnl W0tk. tnVEllt • "''"'-kt. FrH Eatlmatea o..\ "'t ~PT. '"" ' Tl.C. 164-1740 H uwn a c ave. UC.il6ll.42A•lneured nwvYvvv • .,., vvv5 • .-..a..:-fl _....,. "' ....,... LIM7Jel ff .. t090 ' A•••· ratee. Ouar. 1714, H9-4M:I Jim WMAt .,.2 • .,209 p1uim... ... *'c:e bldg. ..,, .. ....., t44N '1.t-lll-4l&l Ltl7034fl 831-4110 Claeetn.d
M11t9artt 173~221 .. ,. l.ocel rwld. '71C).O()M '-MllH'' S8"toe th:li•~:,:~. 't!:"~ .... ~7.~:1,.0 ... ":.~= =:.::.,•=IWtr•aa•. Ir~~::,.::~ PIUO •VOCAL POOL Director, ·······----•-1_• __ Lto;~~/::,,::•'•· ~--=·~ :_v::;-_.~ Col*Mllt 1 =··=f,'l tllSOltS 3111 SlltVICI =~~ou,,;
I
Newport Beach/Cotta M~sa Daily Pilot SATVROAY, DECEM8E9' 30, 1995
' COSTA MESA 2624 ROOMS 2706 UNTALS TO
.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SHAll LOST•
2724 POU1'D 2.925-.... llobU• .......
OW.t A 89Cure.
'"' ~port 81\fd, M641373
•NB 1/2 Blk to beach.
Prof, non/sm1<, kit prlv.
Gar. W/D. S400/mo No pets. 848-58715
--~-------
1J10WIUSCIOBN Newp0rt H•lehta l.o•I Otl Met COM wtlfl OM.All SHA9
TODAY'S
CRoSSWaRD PUZZLE
Col ... • Park 2 mas· Sh.,• house ltl Nwpt
ter BA 1 ~BA 1 gar, ahorH 2BR 28A
2 yr• new, deck, FP. High, 1 Wf\lte Perlian, .-.. r.aa....aLa ..--... vaulted cell, own bath, 1 white Oatk/brown -__.,.,,.... ..,,.._..
full priv, NS, lndry. tabby Kim 844-M2S $500. 573-4848 x 337
ACROSS S8U 2289 Fordham ' ' ' Oc•anfrnt Nwpt Bch l•lllil••••••• '"B (818) 981-"'783 gar, fully furn except Prlv, Am In 3BR HM PERSONALS " your room $575 Incl WEEKLY BRHJGE QUIZ 1 Ru.ded
6 Oealwith
".WLY REMOOeLEO uttl 848·5338 upstalra unit, rHp.~•••••••••• rellable, S575 + d•p & 1• Sec. gated eompteic In ut 1 Avt 0 84 N5891 Q. 1 • Neither wlnttable, aa
South you hold· prime toe. 1 BRl'TBA. _R_E_NT_ALS______ 1
• n w. •---------
Som• w/ gar. 158<>-TO •----------PERSONALS 3002 47 58'0/mo. 842·1800 SHARE 2724 GARAGES <:7AJOU OKJ ~.19816
OCEAN BREEZES, 2Br FOR RENT
2B•· water & gas B•I P•nn reap. person l~iiiiii~iiiiii~iiii
paid, YI otf 1st mo for 2 Y,BR lBA House E'alde Coate M••• rent, S800/mo 845· near bch. 5560/mo Storage f01 car, 1ml 2259 838·1370 Incl utfl 723-4335 boat or ?. $85/mo.
Avafl now. 720-1665 O~·~:.~~~~: ~~;, Be,boa Penn. Prlv All Klnds ol Jobi For
2740
no pet1, 292 E. 16th bedrm w/blfth. Sep. All Kindt of People. pl $900 435.9404 entr. fp, W/O. Oulctt ClaHlfled. · area. SS:i-0. 673-6557
DATINQf SHY'T
For a fun time call
01 Mi92-590·035.
33c P•r minute, 18 +
*QUARANTEED•
*DATE• I
W/Soulh1tn Cslllornla's Excluslve Men & Nomen.
1·900·368·0400x1893
S2.99/per min. 18 + Procall Co. 602-954-7420.
The bidding hAS procl'C.'<fod:
NORTH EAST SOlT1'1l
14 Pau I • 2NT" PUI .,
Whnt do you bid now?
WEST
Pasa
Q. 2 • J\s SouLh, vulnernble, you
hold:
•KQ85 QAKQ63 OVoid •K 1076
The bidding haa proceeded.
SOtrnt WEST NORTH
10 r... so
' What do you bid now?
.... .,..,. 10~::"'1
""""'. 14 Misiak• P-15 Actreu Artams 18 i canno11e11 -·
t 7 Fishing nel WI Extt
Q• 5 • llolh vulneroble, 81 South 19 WOlght Untl'I 20 Cahtgraphy you hold: lluid
21 End of a boot •
4l0G3 ~A.J 10 OA96 32 +82 23 Common
The biddinK haa procC<'ded:
NOll111 •!AST SO\ml
I• PRJfS 10
It> I'",.. 7
Whnl do you bid now'!
24 Singer nodtl1nq
25 Comos forth 27 Roy11l home
WF.ST 30 Fo1es1 11n1m111 r._.._ 31 Pll:'ying marble
32 Homey dish 37 Actor Perry
38 Greeted
S3 Tholt
56 MIOUI
57 0tesamekef1
CUI
58 An1ri\al
resembllng • leddv bear 60 "I m -your
lr!Ckat"
61 Lrak
&? Appendt11 ot
11 IGKI
63 Bnog lo a c1op 64 Singles
65 Loud
DOWN
1 Lucy s panner
2 Small~blrd 3 Actor Eitrada
4 AClor Chaney
5 Sawhorse
6 Grants 12 »15 NEWPORT
BEACH
•n Blk to be•ch 3Br CDM front house with 2Ba, stove, 1-car gar, yard. 2Br, 1 Ba, w/d.
aundk, now paint. No $600. Non-smoker.
The bidding has proceed~:
SOUTH \VF.ST NORTH
10 Pa" 2+
'
PAST
30
Q. 6 • /\~South, vulnt'rnbl<'. you formally
h Id 39. Tramp 0 : 40 Place In
7 Fragrance
8 Blazed a trail 9 Poers always
10 lmgata
28 Water. In Ba,a
29 H H. Mutlros
pen name
" Sal!Slactory 45~.
peta. 840-8140 644-8634
..-1BR $925• COM Jasmlne/oen.
28R 2BA $725/Up 17x20+ 14'clost mstr Refrlg & dishwasher 1uite. Huge eust. hm 2
Incl. 60x30 pool. No patios $775 723-0377
pet1. No I•••· No ~,.,,..,,-------leaH. 845-4855 CDM Room avail w/
What do you bid now?
EMPLOYMENT Q. 3 • Both vulnerable, as South
5530 you hold:
$3000·S8000/MO
Inside aalH for ad
agency doing business
nationwide. 96M552
•AQJ 1063 Q62 oK.J 7 •AS
The bidding has proceeded:
NORTH EAST SOUTH
47 6 QK.J 4 OKQJ 10 4 +K Q9 =:n··
The bidding has proceeded:
NORTH EAST SOUTH
IQ Paa 20
2• PftH 1
Whftl do you bid now?
42 French
playwngh1 WEST 43 Shppery ltsh
Pus 44 Modest
LoM for nn.~tu~r• on Monday.
45 "The Four Seasons·
composer 49 Charges
11 Tag -
(accompany)
12 W11sholf
13 Votes"' favor
22 Even SCOfl
23 Belorade natfYe 24 Ptaylul animal
26 Heal
30 Chorctllll -
(Oefby S11e)
32 Alliance
33 OstrlchWle
birds
34 Ages
35 Urge on
36 -on fuss over
38 Ran, as dye 41 Bellow
46 Actress Dume
47 View
48 F 8b6e writer
49 Electrical
safety deYic:es 52 Tear down
53 Oty l"IVO{ bed 54 BollflQht ~
55 ParaRin-ac.
57 Vooce
Newport Heights, Lrt
2BW 2BA Up9raded
gar, bulll-lns. $1175. L1e, no/amk/pota.
642.-6688 or 950·8383
male roomates. $400/ •••••••••
mo. Available now. BUSINESS & Call 721-4084.
ADVERTISING
ASSISTANT
117 p... I•
317 Pan 1
Whal do you bid now?
WEST
Pu• 50 H1s1onan Durant 51 More loyal
27 Bossy's olfspnng 42 Cnsp plCkJe
dlsapproval
59 Lennon's Wife
NB Beaut hse, lg yard, FINANCE
by nature park. prlv.
Full time position
available tor self moll-Q. 4 • /\8 South, vulnerable, you
vated and flexible lndl· hold:
12
14 pet Ok $550 pg 454· ---------3404/hm 545.5540 BUSINESS vldual to provide sup-,.9 5 4 QA 7 G 4 s OK +A J 10 4
MISCELLANEOUS
RENTALS
NB Shr 2br 2ba Oen OPPORTUNITY Hbr Vu. Prkg, lndry, · 2904
port for last paced ad
dept. Candidate must
be detail oriented, bale, pool, Jae, sauna.
F/P $550 646-5788. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii possess strong organ-~---------------------------w
lzatlonal skills and the
A
GOOD
AD!
Call
642-
5678
$Payphone Routes$
Local s ites-for sale,
$2,000/Wk potential. 800.208·5300 24hr
Medical B1lhng F/M
100,000 + FfT
45,000 + PfT
Join 1 27 year old com·
pany. Home base com·
puter business. One on
one training. No clearing
house ftes.
HO SELLING REQ1D
1.S00.297·2878 ert962
PAYPHONE ROUTES
local 61101-for 1ale,
S2,000/wk potential.
800-208-5300, 2'4 hrs.
ablllty to communicate EMPLOYMENT FURNITURE 6014 PETS &
well. 5530 ANIMALS
Retponslbllltles will iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii KI N D E L furn II u re· I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .,,,......-+--+--t--+-lnclude sales support wicker day/lrundle
6049
function and admlnis· Sales/Phone bod, white wrought
Relaxed Waterfront Iron twin bod frame, Every Sat & Sun at lr.:::--t~-+--+----1 trallve duties. Excel· Office: Seeks moll· girls darling twin bed· PETSMART, Fountain
ADOPT ·A·PET
lent telephone and In· vated seller for Inter-ding, Kenmore a/e Valley. Puppies, kit· t::;-t--+-+--.. terpersonal skllls are net's #1 Boating Co. 1·839t tens and more, all
essential. Knowledge Xtnt S/Benl 723·7389 ,.._....:..-.......,.----..,.. tooklng for loving, ear-
of word perfect a plus. Matching bod and desk Ing homes. CALL 597. w/book shelf for S 150 9037 for more Info. Opportunity for ad· EMPLOYMENT wlll 1811 aeparately.1 _______ -..,
vancement. We offer a 850-8094 Auatrallan Shepherd
g1>od benefit package SERVICES 5533 Cuddly Black Tri
I di di I Panda Bear Pups. l;:;;:-1~-1"--t--t--lnc u ng me ca • MERCHANDISE 5300 Tim 545.5400 dentitl, vision and ·-•-•
401 K plan. Physlcal} Please be awate that MISC. 6015 lgu•n• large 511 adult
drug screening re-the llstlngs In this cat· male. Genue pet. $400
quired. EOE. Please egory may require you Harps, junlper1 $1. On obo. Call 645-8964. len~._-+-+-
f t (714) lo call a 900 number ptlt\'\S 4·6' $10. Cltru1-•Poodles AKC¥ ax resume o In which there Is a avocado (fruiting) S10. Tea Cup Toy & Mini VENDING FANTASTIC
NEW PRODUCT. 400% profits. $1200/
w~ potential FREE
calll 1·800·788·3358
631-6594 or mall to charge per minute. Cement fountains 5250-5950 714.838-4457 j
Dally Pilot, Attn: Judy A HI h Cl s110, bird baths $20. =----..,--.,.-----: ._...__..._ __ _
Oetting, 330 W. Bay 8
0•lnner C~mp•ni!~ 909-874-9422 S•v• abused andt---------,.------------....--,,,,....--=--~--St eel Costa Mesa abandonod pots. Bo a The Community r • ' Platonlc, Top P•"I House & Contents volunteer/foster. Call Market Place.
MONEY
TO LOAN
CA 92627 5 3 3 ·7 9 0 5 f e • S225K. Chippendale 714-597·9037. BOATS 7011 CHEVROLET 9045 Classllled
Coffee Hou•• Server din rm tbl w/8 chra iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 842·5978
2914 PT, friendly, customer Sl950, mahogany HC· ---------N••d•d: 12· Inflatable '83 Chev C•maro •---------service orionted, rell· EMPLOYMENT retary $1200, 7FT ma· SPORTING for marine science Berllnella. Full power,
able, wk-ends a musll WANTED S535 hogany China cabinet, GOODS 6065 classes at CdM High T·lop, wh .. la. 1 MAZDA
will INlln. 675·9300 heavily carved OFT School. Contact Statk, owner, all records, LOANS 3K·60K Computer UHr1 Ne.did. teak armolre, Louis iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 962-0313 alarm. 723·1504 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
912~
1f..,nc>1'9QUl9<1> work own Hours HousHinlng wanted In XIV desk, Tiffany Atfobict1ftlltl~Froc:os1c9 .... 9-1,....,,,C-h-•-v""s ... 1.,..0--8,.,1-.-
2 -.... r '93..-ZODX SUver, 4dr, 8.1d OI no .trt'dlt {)!( 20K to SOK/yr. 24H'ra COM/NB, Xetnt refer· Bronze (not zinc) Trd~ New S1800i0nly S249 ---------1 •t/ac/ps/pb, am/rm
All l\'IX'S .w""'4C>k· 1 ·800·881-3358 ic 603 eneealll Klm 644-6425 tam pa, elabOrale mlr· MLMiYl!l Nlw Sl300r<lliy S2SO SAIL BOATS 7014 Mull aelll 1 owner, tilt hi ph
lJc o • F~ Dondl'CI ror and console lots SIU M. Hew S2l9S/Ollfy $2S9 receipts. Super ct.an I ~~ Urea w & • tag:: ~ s.nc~ 11 E•rn $900-$800 of Ivory, mahogany IJlqdlNlwS239S/OnlyS295 24 FT. Columbla $12,500 723·7879 mint! Orig owner. ~C .... 1 ,r00.99~41Mcw·83~2~1' weekl" atutfmg enve-DOMESTICS 5540 Davenport desk, SaolluHewSt~Sl95 Cha lle nner &loop.---------$10,450. 644·542" .,., -o 1ope1 at home. For French Bombay ped· • AR 9 OS "S.UCHt G,...tfn 11• In Io send a• If· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hta11, French cabinet HUGE SALE ENDS SUNDAY! $795. Manney's Yacht JAGO 1
addr••••d stamped LIVE·IN WANTED w/marble. Credenza 2000 rvrRCISE llACHIHES!!! Surplus, 1500 Old •·.,.-.~-R-C-UR--Y--9-1_3_5
B&A /B b f t ~ Newport Blvd 1988 JAGUAR XJG, in£ eHnovme•lompa•11e'ros:. Box In Costa Mesa home to w om ay ron , ma-l&ntlltpo'a 71-.S57,..H7 54"·•192 l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii hogany dbl life 1lze .,..... Forest GrHn, loaded, 1• 2158, Lubbock, TX take care 01 3 chlldr•n. swan tbl. Tea tbl, Ma· runs great, MUST ANNOUNCEMENTS 19400 s400 per month plus room hogany curio cabinet.I•••••••• MARINE SERVICE SEE! S4995 oBo -==-==-""!'."""~"."". ----:--and board. teak drop leaf desk, GARAGE SALES '4 3 4 .s 5 o o L I c I••••••••• FT/PT Cashier, apply (714) 574-4243 love seats, Chaval SUPPLIES 7020 (1SDR952) In poraon, between 8-mirror, misc French & !••••••••• _....._ _______ _
11 or 3-5 M·F South Chippendale sofa
ANNOUNCEMENTS Pacmc Car Wash 275o ehra/1bts, Jade carv-1--------TONS OF FISH NET
2920 Bristol, Costa MHa MERCHANDISE lng1, 31FT Chris Crall. NEWPORT
1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii QOURMET COOK/LI •••••••• No )uni<. 540.7578 BEACH 6169 1• housekeeping, exp 'd, ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •Loving, Nurturing, 11 • out FIT Non New portable oicygen1,
Stable Couple: Wish v k N ' rt. B h ---------lank, all aece1 Incl, MOVING SALE
$2.50 per pound.
Mlnney'a Yacllt Sur-
plus, 1500 Old New-port Blvd. 548~192
SELL
your used vehlcle through classlfied
642-5678 to adopt. Liie In rural am r. owpo oac ANTIQUES 6010 coil $450 Hll $150 area. 714-673-3643 obo 675_7329 • 1-0ay onlyl Sat 12-30 _MARI ___ N_r_S_L_I_P_S __ 1 community' country' 1-H-o_m_•--•-I d_/_c..,.l_e_a_n_e_r iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ---------..,.... 9am·2pm No early i;; LOTUS
wooded, home. Prom· T di b d $150 birds. Lots of fum, ~~~~~v~~iiiiiiiiii~0~2~2il~~:'~~~;-~~ lse future devotion SaVSun Eng/Spanish •BUYINQ ITEMS• run • • · deco Items & misc. ~ 9123
and love 10 newborn. 01< &45·1353 Nftn From 1800-1960. 1 pc Crib StOO. Car IHI 1962 Vista Caudal 1995 LOTUS S4S
Call Ellleen & Bob Office Help lo entire estate. Paint· S25. Toys. Brown & Dalbo• Penn. &llpa Rod/black factory
1·800·488·3238 Entry 1 -vel position In lngs china glswara Jordan patio table w/ 40 to 55' max at S13/ demo 0-60 mph In 4.7 ~ f ' t 1 ' _... h' chairs $100. Weber ••••••••• fl All f 1111 d f advertising S7/hr. plus urn, e c. mm .... cas • B 540_ Cane chair• . ac t e1, pr1v. ••con 1 manu ae:ur·
LOST&
FOUND 2925
FOUNDI
Germ•n Sh•p•rd
A big puppyl
Black w/brown and white coloring, In my
yard, Dec. 2111. 11am
(In Coll~• Ppk atH).
Jocelyn 540.2318
FOUND
A LOST DOQ ...
Small, white, female
do-1J . Poaalbly a
•Terrier/Greyhound.
•Big brown eyea.
•Sweet disposition.
In th• vicinity of
Costa Mesa at 17th
St. & Santa Ana Ave.
On Fri., Oeo. 22,
10pm. Please Call
714-574·4257
benefits. AHi Estate/ top S. 673-6223 Iv msg s~ ... 91112 Orienta! TRANSPORTATION parking. 723-5835 ~~~ ~::. i;:;~~ =~~:=~
computer knowledge design ea.rpet $100. ••••••••• •••••••••I lu111ury tax already helpful. Please lax re-8x10 Kermm rug $100.
1ume: 120-0373 Attn: APPLIANCES 6011 Record ptayer s10.1 ________ AUTOMOBILES ~~~~1\r~~;e!~~U~:'
Kelly 900 Jaamln• Ave. BOATS 7011 --------1 POSTAL & GOV'T JOH W•ah•r/Dr"er $135 Coron• del Mer. ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
S21/HOUR+8ENEFITS each. 25 cubic ft. frig. 1" ---------I
NO EXP WILL TRAIN 8 DUFFY CADILLAC 9040 App1+1nro 114~1-1991 5275· 646"584 FREE TO YOU 6022 ELECTRIC B'>ATS S •I•• Promotional En----------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
1erprl1H now has 10 FURNITURE 6014 Qolden Retrievers •SALES
po11tlon1 to flit-ASAP. M/F 7·8 yr1. Beauv •SERVICE
Earn $250·$1500/per hHlthy both grt kldll RENTALS
wk. Direct A corporate 75% OFF Ted,68-0388 848-0119 •
10IH Involved. Start DHlgn Center PrlcH •USED BOATS
todayl Call 567-"'755· Entire contents of•---------•TRADE•INS
SALl!S/PHONI! model home: Iron JEWELRY, FURS •CONSIGNMENTS
OVER QUAJ..IFIED? beds, aofaa, chair•. ac ART 6025 Factw. Showroom Looking for change, atone va1e1, armolre.1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IH• a1re11? Peaceful 248-1727 or 383·8638 11 • 2001 • Coast Hwy. Boating/Marina Env. MINK Short Jacket. (Betwetn Ardell &
1500+ WK, Med ben. Belllnnl baby furniture SX•tall allm S460 Sea Scout Base)
Stan lmm•d 723·7375 721-8391 873·3402 945·9427
•ao 350 Blarlts
Oetwi.e ed. 76K odg
ml. 1-onr. Moonrl.
Run1 good. $1300 obO. 675-0048 Np8
Clasalh•d 11 ....
CONVENll!NT
whether you're buy·
Ing, selling, or jull
looking, elaaalfled ha• what ).'OU needl
CLASSIFIED 942~978
COSTAMUA
2115 Hart.or Blvd
"2-7700
1987 Mercury Sabi._
runs & looks greaa
53k miles, au options,
must see!, priced 10
sell $3500 Obo 43+-6500. Uc # SPFAN
TOYOTA 921Q
*'91 Toyot•
Supr•* • Hard to llnd, beauti, white-out package,
·ownef grandma'•~ fully loaded, a trans, factory 1un
premium 3-ln-1 ...
Htte/CO, pwr w
dowa/loeks, leatb~
White apok• whMl
low miles, must -..i
CaU Matt $13,495 693-
2937
VOWWAGEN 92lS
'83 VW .fETTA 2-dr. snrf, auto, a/C, atioy...
Good condition.
$1250 OBO•e31·7149
ANTIQUES•· ~
CLASSICS 9250
Chevy •94 lmp•I•
Convert, ltlnt cond.
Great Xmae gin. Sac:
at $15,000. 780·'70:t
COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MBSA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624
·;'The Buyer's Market"
VCheck your shopping list off ·
by stopping in today at any
one of these local Orange
County Auto Dealers!
--------
------------
.Cllb Haan: 9:00 • • Wo,. M·P •10:00-·Ml111t•-• INl .... Dr.•._AlllEW••CA
(Ir-...._.._ ____ ...__ ___ ..-~
"Buy, Lease or Bro1'vse"
nge County's Auto Dedlers are Number
One in Customer Sa · action
•ADD L •BACK -----=-...... ~~~~---
NO MONEY DOWN
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
'13V.W • ..
AIC, C999 (#013851)
LOCAL 8HUnU 8DVICm ••m001•aa
f DONUn • 8lllVICm
WllUYOU-.r.• ...,.AL CAM AVAILAlll I
BAD.CRIDIT
NO CREDIT
NO PROBLEM
HUNDREDS OF
NEW&USED
. VEHICLES
Cover. .. Metro Realty
2. Map I Index
3. The Prudential -Jon Douglas Co.
4. Fred Sands Newport Properties
S. Coast Newport Properties
7. Grubb &t Ellis
Residential Real Estate Services
8. Cover Home
9. Metro Realty
11. Star Real Estate
12. Mortgage Rates ,
13. Waterfront Homes, Inc. Realtors
16. Coldwell Banker Newport Beach
----. . ~ . --.. . . ...
-. ..
~ Wishing ~
You and Your
Family A
Wonder{Ul 1996!
OCEAI VIEW · COROU IKIUHS
Ocsi Ylelr lrom all INIOf nna 11c:twmrio 4BR.3M. ~°' 2900. sq llamatyhm Verywd ma11Uined $515,•
aa£ClFf1
eal opporuiey lo ~ ~ ctun nm in desnble Shotechlb
11 loC localed on cyn w/sclne ocean views qhalming JSR. 28A hm ,
• gues1 house New pare + new C¥peL $515,000
COi.i ctJuRst uam•
C...d gatad ~ Fartatic como. 28R +den or 38R w/rlflVZt PoOI & "" Al on 0111 IMI -no stan. Prad to set' $511,•
liUIAQUll ·MUST SH!
W. is~ mocrvalld-has iudmednfls hm. To13lly l.W1dld 2M. 28A.
Mlfbll ny, nr to cethng mnors m hall. 9'1111 msr Clown moldrio. Gaooenau
apj:>hances, IS~ blodl-lop, .ciu laq kC cabll1els $53t,•
IWllOR llCIUJllS
Lendlr owned. remodelld Im on 1¥99 COf1* loC w/pool 4811 + 2BA. remodeled
Uchlrl, ba1t1s Slcyllths. wood llrs, Fttnettdoors lJ~ & b19'C SSH,•
OCWI VIEW ·CAMEO lllHAllS
48R, 28A hm 11 deslflbll lll!llly ~ wJeqmlld hwlg rm. o-lookrio
lllQI yard Prlwall beactl ICDSS Gr .. 'tllkJI & ~ $511,DDI
PRIVlll YARI OFFERS SPA a WATWAU
EJslbluff Uec.hm. 38R. 28A. LW* inchde oak blHns, dblt Wice root, Air..
SIC.Sys , lmlbll lloo111g. Must ..t $417 ••
• CHAmB. RUF COlllO
BIU~ ciconted corun.,orwy condo wiltl 1 wondrill lwtlor YllW Plantalm stdlls. scrapaS c:11hngs. aowi mold11gS P.-s doors hOU!tl OIA 8Mlld
m111orld room .all Aas.s nc:ll ~custom looono. $415.-
COROU IB. MAii • SOU1'M Of Pat
Onappitia 45111oC 38R,38A,den+officl ~oa 2400sql,Re0ad''$441,•
IEWPORT HUiHTS
Gr .. hm on taJge let w/pool & 5"' 38R. 28A. wry na nawer k~ OP8llll0 to
hmg & dMo rm. V.y b~ & b11gtt A or• enlllrta!OQ hm SO'.•
OPPOlll\ltITT llOCU
EISbdl rrGmn aid "1 motncld9* 5-2Mlllbwlgnges ~.-
STEPS TO 11tE m.uE PACH:
&llll 51, 2SA lrn on corn. lol Pr.-•io & pa.ty ol lllfblg JU!I Slec>S '°'"
h t.df A gr.-dell' $321,•
CIM IEAUTIAI. m , 2IA COlllO Beac~ 28R. 28Acondo, Olde Coronadll i.w. Sic tpl, ~lnflCOllCIB ... bar
Large dd. <.lose to blacll & -.i1or Cdr $311.-
PIUCO TO sau
Gt•Gllll kx:aiorl Mob"*' .... Mrnitolnl 18Rhollll 11•ort let $311;•
SOU1'M tulmCJOI UAat
BIUl!t.l 1 stofJ, 48R, 2SA 1111 °" ~ I.qi Id Wffo/ accm Prr4lt
hood -
,,
13 Fred San<!!.~o.!~ rt PropertiesDl
featuring fine properties
from condos to castle 11/tdd '°"' tJ«lt, ~ ~ ""~Bead,
S~ SUta 1969
NJ1N. LOCATION DUPLD
lt.1~ "''~ frufn Ufll"' '"-' ... <\UM .!Ut\ Hf' 11\t-' ..!U<\
'" ·~u '"'-th"-lk hit lit''""'" .tnd ht.·lp """" tfl-l n~ 1tf~0IJ.(t" ( It,...,,... 14 I hJ) 11'0,I\ h \~ I Jll ~ 111
S59S,OOO At2
GOT IUDS?
l '"kt 't<•t Olll Ut I ...A.)(llfl.t
lk tt I ~UR .!I\-\ -ftrt P'-'''"*' I ••M~ , nh:n 111ut~ 1u tk:t l..
Int• n·---•n)l h.h 5'. , ,.,, f "'nh "
111 111• "' .. tlk '' • ltlud 1ud 1'.1rk $389,000 86
SUlllFU SNCIAL
' "P' n luf"k·' "l"f""-·• u.nn " u1ll1 • f 't."1ltn)i(' ~'(. Ith. pf.u.' ._
lu,w, '"""-' v..-._,.,, \K.•w4
I 1"°'f11 ,, ur-" I••¥-, r untt' ''' """°
,, tm pl lt.l ! t.H ~U+lj.('-"'
$340,000 02
24CAMT
'1""4.' u.ul.ar '"'-~ ''" lt)C.hh '°' fuh V 11,·t ( ii thll I ~ ( -iltft 'f
011 H1\H..·r.J lt-11.,..IH•~ '""..,. I
uh 'u"nfll litt4 Appt"tA.11 f1tt
,\.t ,k, nlllt·n..10 tk·'•.M,t~·tl h• .. l'k· $1,HS,000 M5
DRAMATIC cotn"DIPOllAll
')\U~ •t"-hntit <\HR \I\!\ 1wctf._.,
lllto•U tlf d~:\.hF..th·4J l)fttfM "'""
f 1lt 111''41 ... \M "'' ff.H\.fW1,.11tl
fJi JI''"' ftfl\ .Jh 1 KlhJ.i M •f '-p.t .!, .. ,, .......... "'"""'"' S8S9,000 P7
( ""' ntl\ two \tnkfltt ,.,," Ult,
t •fk 1\4 \."•"'-h llM"Uf't'1'.' ptctf"'-ny
Ut ....... M4...""-" '"'"""' ,,. 4.°"'t;f"\'•
tl11nN l nM.fU4.' tn"'c.....,nwnt
••Pf"''nun•cy ~.ooo r.z
'l'-h..MMh '\UR \0 tt"-\."f '-Ci '-.C.tClt
tnur\tt\ (_u<i,,tt..-n ,fnUh.·•' fl.10.I
'A-t 11t 1C.J tluor" t h .. 1rm•f11' ''"''l' ~ • 01n,. ... nJ Uu11f u1 \.:f\h.·n .• un
u"'·nr ''' <>t.-..·.an \tt.•W-$189,000 Ttf
t Ofl"""\ Rll ........ , 9r.-tth C..k.~"'f ''*""'°"'""K"" "'"'"t .• u fh\• ''"-''-' ... I out UR w ur""1 "-.lf\l"k n ptu ...
fll' "'"nM. ru-n1 l1.1r .. ' vtt..•w ...
nt.•.u h .. uhur
.... ,000 C3
WANTNSWt
'4.·114.-r l\tokk."T w'"'"" tha... uc c.Jn
t. •• ......._.. U'M.1tf1 14..""\t.·I hnffl\" ••olc.f'
<•~•tl,I .,,.._.n Ono1pl.Jn tBR ~I\.\ Llf)(.l.' ~" ..tt.l1oJtt·nt fft .nT
...... •,. • •f"'-'O .:'.'LYt..t 'ul c.k· ~.n •
$329,990 05
N•LU• GAR. LOCAnON
'«-h.u )-nun..·""•'"'"" h•r" 1 ... ..._ '"' turd,. . .-ttlR illA .. lnl(f.
14·\t.•I tn lf"k· '..c.Ht· ""'"'""' htt..h.""(llh,,. \.ft~" ''"·'' .,.,...v .. ' ) IA .. ,'-.), u( pnh.·ntt.tl lk u.. UTo,000 N2
'. 111 w.1 1r•"-I 1•.1frnill•
I
-CllMT-• A'lllll',_ ff \>OU Ww..nl "..._....,.._ \IK."'W'
•"-"""'" & ~•fut..• ~.tlut. ,._,Im·.
lh°' I• 11• 1..<nt I\ 'tilt \Ill\
Jn.·.tm "'"""" M:' "'-•'"""' 1 k•• .. t.,...., • ~'1'''' it..£!"'"' ~ _"l ... NT0,000 A6
~~euut
~~ti>
~4~,
~,euut
for information on these and other properties:
DllAllATIC ocaM.......,..
I ~•"ry <"\ <"nilljt (nlO\ lhl' .1lm<N
lfJCll) •I I )""~ M-l'<.-.WI)'
W..tl< , ........ Rte, ~ ............ h l•
hr )tu.A~~c..,.J Mon•n h
lk•,., h "'"· l 7'i0A -\.J<.mr-'37•,000 Rl
SHOWPLAC8 STYUll
c;.,,,,_ '"" !Nill 'f '" •koc;•>r•U,,. .,-..·rt• 'lllt..-•n Lune.· ..font• C't\tr)
•pr.k .... t, f\•,,,h "1-f._,\f 'MUh." w """'w tukt'f\) ... ,thn)t '"'4 &
M..tk4' t..·tttt..•n • .uo.fn)l l .. ,. ·"'' """ .
........ h ""'''7" 0 """... ,, 1\111 .,..,.. l'olnc k>L .. flon •llH
l 7~UA I xu .. ~-UY\.· """': 4'4 Jitt .......
t h.1rm1n14M_"ooc;i 88
A ~fl" PUil llODI\. MOIR
"<lnn) ~ ''"-"" It 1,.·~u11l11lh "f)j(r.1<lo.'\J iU fl. .! "illl\ h•lll
••Mkj flt•"" l'l...tnt.tfMI(\ 'hut
u.·t"-.. '"""-'-~d cuh I' h.k\ ,,,1 ""'ttkn lt willow ,~,.,
•2M.llOO Ml
firt..•pl.A'-'-" U!':f..lClk ""' h.•'h !'II.._."-• .. 1.,000 02 .... u,
UOUllAHlaum.
"'\"''"""'" .. ~._ lfom ~ .._ • .., .. , •• i IH l.1.,kh "'"'°"'"" w ft't,.._.,., •"••I "'"f'U. ..-"'"''"'"'1 l..t•d..,n. • tlt<-Jr.1 •~·•hn,.., h•ni-.. .i
""'"' '""'"' ~n,900 SI
WllATA LOT1
~ t .t< r\' tAt•tl. ""fl·• 14.tA hu
'"'"'-•-th.II V, ~""'" I ni11 "''' hor~ er.an ;.t'"'-""'-' M'K~ ,. "'" "'II"'""''._. "n11· .. n..v lUR 411'\
•rtm '' I 0110 Goa ..-, StB
Wht•ia.• -.~ .. ,.,. v~ l111n1 th.6 ....
ll[IJltlk.k<oc;l 00,....... 1""" 11.n.,
llR 111111•, • ~~h 111111 '"'I ft
(,,.,,..._I Wllf uU.. l<fll"'' l'~ht • ............ .-..ooo S7
Ca/1489-8900
1100 New ort Center Drive, New ort Beach CA92680
, ' f I t I . ... . . f I ' ... . ' .
From.
Wast Newport
Properties
. 644-1600 -
4 Civic Plaza, Ste. 260
Newport Beach, CA
• • • -ll . . ...
Westpark neighborhoods offer a
range of homes in the heart of Irvine
Aventura, Brio, Brindisi
and Positano featured
Showca\ing four neighborhoods
encompa~'ing 18 townhomc11,
condominium~ and ~ingle·family detached
home1,, California Pacific Homes' popular
We'>lpark ne1ghborhtxl<h truly have
M>methmg for everyone • m the hean of
Irvine. And with their unique Advantage
Homebuymg Program now available,
there 's never been a beucr tune 10 purchase
a 'running new home.
"From young fir-.H1me homebuyers to
growing fam1hc~ who desire more hvmg
~acc. thc'ioe Wcstpark neighborhoods have
II all · IO tenns of pnce, Ooorpflll lielcctioo
and financing opttons." explained Kathleen
Pircher. vice in ident of sale for
Cahfom1a Pacific Home
"When you v1 it Aventura, Brio, Brindisi
or Pos1tano you will sec first hand the great
arthllccLura l diversity these neighborhoods
offer Orange County homebuycrs. And
while the overall dcMgos may differ, all of
the..e re\1dcntial collectioM !i.llll offer a
trcmcndoui. financial value and prestigiouli
Irvine addre~\." P1rcher ~id.
"Furthermore, serious homcbuycn. are
urged to learn m<Jre about our Advantage
Hnmebuymg, which feature!. programi;
runging from ~pccml below mark et fixed
rale lx)nd financing to co;nplele
l.md-.capmg "
At Po,11ano, homebuyer~ can now lake
.idvantagc of our trade in program. Under
th" program. family homcbuyers can
choCJ\C a new Pos1tano home in select
loca11on\. A market analysis of their current
home" performed and homeowners meet
with a lender for an independent appraisal
and fina~1ng detail on thcLr Po\lt.ano
home When a tale) pnce I\ agreed upon by
llll pan1e\, the e1mtmg home will be listed
in the m.irke1 while the new home i in
C'-lr<lW
FiN lime homebuyer. can benefit from
the Welrnme 10 Home Owncr.l\Jp ~m
featured at A~entura, Bno and Brinuisa.
nm bo11d financing program offers a below
mark.el fixed rate or (2-1 buy-down) and
1.:ovcr<1 \Orne cloc;ing cost..c;, allows gift funds
and provides lower monthly paymenu and
more lenient qualifying guidelines than
conve1111onal financing.
Please see a sales representative for
detail<>.
Also available i\ the Total Home Bonu~
Program which feature" all the extras at no
extrl cosL~. and can be applied 10 all four
ne1ghborhooch. nm 'pecutl offer
encompa.-.sci. complete rear yard
land-.caping (where apphcable). upgraded
nooring, window covering\ and/or
add1tional appliances including washer.
dtyer and refrigerotor
"Because the Advantage Home Buying
Pro~\ are avail ble on select homes pnd
m~y nry per nci&hborhood. WCJ IP3fk home
tk_tppers hould CQiKult their re pcctive
repn:.-nWivc~ for pcc;ific detail ."
Pircher added "Potential bomebuyeN
hould also note that VA financing ii.
available at Aventura, Brio and Brindi111."
fcjejl for first-time buyers, Brio offers six
condominium noorplan, rangina from 784
to J .222 square feet of space. The5e homes
h.avc one and two bedrooms. one and two bath~ and one or two-car aaraae,. Brio,s
resident~ will alw have accw to a private
on· Ile recre:ition area wilh pool. pa,
In Westpork ~ r8$idents hcNe o "Oriety of ffoorptons and models to choose from.
~uc area and cabana. Price arc from
Sll9.900.
Aveoturl' feature. a series of
condom.l!llwns and townhomcs that are
~lgned with two and threi bedrooms, up to
two and one-half bath and two-car Jatages
will.direct acces in five models. Prices
from the $150,00()'s floorplans range from
1,049 to 1 ,347 square feet bf anterior living
space. Residents can also rcJu at the private
recreation area which bas a pool, 5pa.
barbecue area and cabana.
Brindisi's four contempor.uy floorplans.
which off~r two to three bedrooms. up ID
throe baths and two car garage.~ with dtrect
interior access in 1,344 to 1,953 square feet
of 'pace. Profe sionolly landscaped front
yanh arc included. Re111dcnts hen: can dso
relax at the private recreation center wt\ich
has a poet, spa. and bru'becuc erea. Prices an:
from the low $200,000' .
Accenting the Med11crranean charm of
these neighborhoods. each will be
highlighted by meandering walkway and
trail • evuarecn tree t nowerina . hrubs and
colorful vines. The community' major
intersection ~enhanced with lirJe theme
pl~ accented by P41-m tree • bencbe •
special pavements and landscapina.
Embracing the active life tylc of
Southern California residents, the four
neighborhoods arc ituated near numerous
recreational facilities within the community
and nearby. These include Santa CJara, Son
Carlo, San Leandro and San Marco f)llrks;
Heritaae PArk which hll o lake; Deerfield
Part which ha.-. a ballfidd and communily
center, Harvard Pad. Mason ~giooal Part
and Wildlife Preserve.
Homeowners will also be a short drive
·from the ma's most popular entertainment
opportunities. Regional attraction include
lrvinc Meadows Amphitheater, Rancho San
Joaquin Golf Course, Wild Rivers, Old
Town Irvine, Laguna Beach. Newport
Beach and Harbor, the Newport Harbor Art
Museum. Pacific Amphi1heater, Orange
County Fair Grounds and Orange County
Performing Arts Center.
Orange County's most attractive shopping
centers are aJso a quick drive away. 'The
Crossroads, Westpark Plaza. Harvard Plaza.
Woodridge Village Center and Culver Plaza
F~hion lslarld. Sooth Coast Plaza and Mam
Pl ace malls as well ll,) almost two dozen
local shopping ~ntt:rs are nearl>y. •
A major plus for families with school-age
chil~n is that Irvine Unified School
D · tri.ct · one of the top educ;itional systems
in the \fate and is home to the Uni\lcr5ity of
California at Irv~ Concordia University
and Irvine Valley College.
The Irvine ba5ed Compleit and Ir.int
Spectrum are home to numerou bu I~~
and corporations. and two major hea lthcare
facilities are located in Irvine as welJ as
several major acute care clinics with a wide
range of physicians and specialists.
Wcstpark residents autom:ttically become
members of the individual neighborhooJ'a
Homeowner Association and the Pasco
Wc~tpark Maintenance As.~ation.
M<>nthly association dues maintnio the
quality of common area f acdities.
W~ i in..:!Uded lJ\ an Assc. mcnc
Di~lric:t, Community Facilities (Mello Ro<>!. I
Di. trict and Landscape and Lighting
Dlstricts, These districts wen: fonned to
fund infrastructure and schools as well as to
provide for landscape maintenance. Consult
a sales rcprcscntatJve for details.
California Pacific Homes offers
homcbuyers a depth of professional
experience and commitment to excellence
second to none. This dedication can be seen
and appreciated at every step of the
homebuilding and bomcbuying process.
California Pacific Home is building
neighborhoods of award-winning home and
a tradition of success and tability.
To vi it California Pllci6c Homes' four
new nciahborhoods from the San Diego 405
freeway, u1t at Culver Drive. Travel nor1h
to Barranca Partway and tum left. Tum
ri&flt on Pasco Westpark and follow the
•an to the t offices.
From Sanlll Ana 5 freeway. wt Culver
Drive. Travel south to Bamnca Parkway
and tum riabt. Tum ri&ht on Pa.sec> Wcstpark
and follow the igns to U. sales oft"tceS.
The model homes and salC$ oft"JCtS arc
open weekdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m .. and
weekends from JO a.m, to 6 p.m. For more
information on Brio, call (7J4) 559.0330;
on Aventura, (714) SS9-0220; on Brin.di i,
(71•) 559-0404; on Positano. (714) S59-
0S99.
t·
Grubh ·tsEllis ®,_,~ 644-6200 Residential Real Estate Services • Independently OWned and Operated
I COM. EXCELLENT VALUi!l .
Gt121d-gatcd community, tennis, pool, greenbelts create an enchanting set·
~~is bca~tlfully remoddcd 3bd home with lush Rogers Gardcru
$479,000 Harriet Botwinick Code 706"n
HARBOR. VIEW HW.S
Pabulo'!' family neighborhood is calling you ro view .this I~ (bd home with pnvatc pool and sp:t.. l..ovdy froot courtyud with built an BBQ. An
exceptional value!
$5'9,000 Ano, Ted & Suzanne Code 70107
• LOCATION·l.OCATION-LOCA110N
•bd, 2ba NewpO;t Hills home wlFrcocb doon, white decor, bdWood
Roon. kit wruland. ex>mm. pool ac spa. A.bloJutdy perfect.
$S39,000 Mtli Gulledge Code 72167
I I 1 \ ( • I 11 ''I ' ,'\, I 111'
MANOR
BYTIIESEA .
Timeless style and quality arc
presented in this aquisirdy
rcmoddcd 3bd, 3ba ho~.
Rich wood &ors, step-down
Hving room, brick patios,
bcau1ifu1 landscaping on a
double North Laguna lot.
Ted Jarvis
$1,225,000
Code 71337
HEJGHT OP SOPHISnCATION
Tastefully upgraded Bckoun Hill rownhome. Over
2.220 s. f. of neutral decor with gourmet lcitchcn, lav-
ish MBR with fuq>btt. Higb assumable loan and low
down payment.
Steve Leverett
$439,000 Code 71327
GOLF COURSE LUXUllY
2 nory 3bd, 2.5ba on the golf course. Family rm
w/frplc and built-ins. Large master suite. Selling ac
a'°"· Gisela Burmeister
Code 70897
IJNDAISI.£
&pansivc channd views and aq,uisitc interiors arc pre-
sented in this custom 5bd baytront residcnoc with a
private dock.
$2.395,000 Ann, Ted & Suzanne Code 71197
CITY
UGHl'S VIEW!
Exceptional •bd, 3.5ba
home boa.su a dramatic
marble entry, Euro-style
kitchen, landscaping by
R.ogtt's Gardens and city
ligbu view!
Carol Allison &
James Gray
$1,U9,000
Coclc 714'17
SPACIOUS SEA ISi.AND HOME
Single kvd 3bd, 3ba w/gotf course lie baclcbar viCM.
Sec. sys. ovcniud master suite. Comm. pool. tennis
oouru, 24br guarded pc.
Laraine & Eric Sh.aw
$675,000 Code70047
SPECTACULA.ll VIEWS-N. UGUNA
Fabulous cust0m home w/4bd, &nilly rm, gowmct
lcitc:hcn, beamed ceili~ lie the most incredible views.
Priced LO sdl!
Carol Allison & James Gray
$895,000 Code 71487
EN GUSH
COUNTRY FSfATE
Cwtom built 4bd, 4.5ba
w/grand cnoy & circular
swrway. Fam. rm.
w/SUllken bar. Pm. ooun-nrd lie side yard w/watcr-blJ lie spa.
Jo Ann Kenton
$1,495,000
Code72057
PJllME BEAOIFllONf
Spacious 5bd w/almon 100 ft of secluded beach.
Pm pool lie tpa. Total privacy.
Kent McNaughton
$5,700,000 Code 71937
J\1.ul",.' I .inc 1-800 --1·1--·l ·l.l ·
Coldwell Banker Sales
assoc iates are motivated
Cliff Baird gives
motivational talk
Coldwell Banker Orange County sales
J-.-.oc.:1ales recently galhcred lO bear a
pre-.cnlauon by well-known motivational
'pcaker. Dr Clifford Baird Focusing on lhc
challenging real e~tatc market an Orange
County. Baird provided information and
mi;ight on how best to ca pture momenl'> of
opportunity.
"Dr. Baird'" prc~mauon wa~
phenomenaJ." ~id Charlie Johnson. Orange
County regional manager "With a bright
forecast for lhc 1996 real estate market and
an ever improving economy, th1'
presentation was tn'>trumcntal in motivating
the sales associales for a terrific year
ahead."
PoUowing a successful career as a sales
associate and brokcr/manqer. Baird drew
from ptil experiences co ucate tbt alb
associates. Throupout hii thn»hoUr
prc~nuu.ion he provided numcrou'
lnlle&J:CS for success u well as many
helpful tips to handle the current real e tate
market.
Baird's presentation Is yet another
eumple on the on-aoina education
provided to Coldwell Banker sat
Left to Right: Charlie Johnson, Dr. difford
Baird and Bob Lefever
associates through ColdweU Banker
University. Coldwell Banker University was
cstabli hed to increase the productivity of
sales associates and mana.gers through
specific training at every level of expc.ncnce.
By constantly updating the curriculum,
Coldwell Banker Univcndty provides
comprchen Ive training and education.
For oU '°"' rt4l nltlU IUMI, coll.lacl
iJOW locwl CMlw•U Baker, oJfk•. Coldw•U ... , ,.., flf#Y.,, l,#0 0Jfk•1 and "'°"' tluin 51,000 "'"1 ouodota ill North
Aaeerico. In c.Jifondo, Colb~U Bonln
ltos "'°" tlton lSl raWcnlitll nal ulllU
olfk•s oltd "'°" tluaA 6,IU 1.Us 4Sloc:iaffs
OM qaplo,.•s prot1""1tf 0 COlffPklc Nllff
of nslMftlMI rffl c,..,,, 1iimn. S""°rt
You Can Co111ft 011.
NEWPORT COAST
Custom Estate in Pelican Hill
This richly designed two-story estate best
describes this SPECTACULAR custom home,
with panoramic views of the ocean and Pelican
Hill golf course. Situated on over 112 acre lot, this
home features approximately 5600 squ~ feet of
elegant living space.with 5 bedrooms and five and
one half baths, plus a library, and a three car
garage. Other features include ...
•Expansive grand cntl)' to maximize the spectacular view'
•Extensive use ofCoJiseum Stone Aooring
• Custom cabinetry in library
• Three Formal designed wood/ps bominJ fireplaces
• Pool cl Spa sunounded by tropical landscaping on O\'c:r
in acre lot
• Dramatic Ocean and Golf Course Views
• Gounnel Kirchen with center L land gourmet cooktop
• 48" GE Mqnogram refrigeration I
•Dramatic Master Sujtc w/luxuriou pa tub
• Marl>le shower with dwtJ control and steam
•Expansive cx:can view balcOny
Protldly Prff...Ud .,._
Keith Dudley
714-729-16'1
Metro Realty
.S Q)rponde ~ Newport BcM:.6
V.eew1 Of Huntington leach Pier ~.NawYort4Ylc
~bedroom,~ and one-half bath ~on thM llWelt Willl ~--~
ModCi'n ind white throughout, featuring ao abundance of "*1>le ilill W.. ..... ~
security intercom. Other custom features include a fircpl.cc in master bcdrooln and apa tub.
The pacious livin& room is enhanced by a fircplaec arid the white contcmpot'lry kitdlen is a
chefs delight Tbere are three patios for outdoor eneertainins. Thi home tw been drastically
reduced for a quiet sale. Fabulous investment It $499,000.
'FOi' _,,.. "4/0IWWllH, cd Gi#M aww .. • .,GlilM • llllltl...,. t'd""""...,,,
Sn?len, 23 ~ l'ftltA. S... JJf. N...,n ...._ '(114) uu-.
•
t,
PELICAN HILL
New Custom Home
with Stunning
Panoramic Ocean &
Gott Course Views!
This elegant home of
5BR, 5.5 BA, approx.
5500 SQ. ft., over .5
acre w/beautiful
pool & spa:
$2,495,000
Traditional Custom
48R, 48A Home.
Vaulted ceilings,
gourmet kitchen with
aqoiling large fanWt
rooo1. Lush park-Ike
settilg with pool & spa.
REDUCED
$995,000
CAMEO
HIGHLANDS
Spectacular Ocean
Catarina and Canyon
Views. Recent
custom renovation.
Pool and spa in
courtyard. A rare
site affording both
view and privacy.
-
• • - . . • -9 . . . . . ---- . ·•
OCEAN RIDGE
Exclusive Custom
Mediterranean Vina.
48R, 4.5BA
w/approx. 4,400
SQ.ft. Designed to
take advantage of
exquisite full ocean,
harbor, & city
views. Magical
brilliant sunsets are
breathtaking.
$1,750,000
SPYGLASS HILL
OPEN SUN 12-5
Truly a unique
setting with
stunning Catalina,
harbor and city
sunset views. 5BR,
3BA home, new
gourmet kitchen.
SeDers are
motivated.
REDUCED
-..-........ $949,000
HARBOR
RIDGE
Spectacular Ocean
and City Views! 5BR,
3. SBA beautiful
homt in gated
community. Owner
transferred-Must sel!
720-9422
OCEAN RIDGE
The ·carrtomia
Lifestyie.9 Newly
constructed open &
spacious one-story
home completely
furnished
w/captivating views
of ocean, city &
Newport Harbor.
$1,495~000
SPYGLA$S HILL
OPEN SUN 12-S
Breathtaking
Panoramic Ocean
Harbor & Premium
Fashion Island Views!
Beautiful 48R, 3BA
home w/nf!W carpet &
new paint. Lush
landscape with lovely
sparkJing pool.
$895,000
PENINSULA PT.
Trutyo Cape Cod
charmer! Enjoy the
finest of ocean blue
waters, sailing and
superb fishing. All
with a true community
spirit
$589,000 -
-'1 ' "'\ -....
'' " • . ' ' • ' '.,' . • I ,. ,.._
' . .
..
,..
.i
••
Add interest and value
to your home
When choo!>mg painl colon for the
outside of your house. the thousands of
color chips displayed at the paint store can
be overwhelming. Although it may seem
easier to JUSl paint your house white. color
can add mt~t and value to your home
while reflecting your personal taste and
•ayle
"Color can give your house the inviting,
comfortable feel that you crave." said Bill
PodoJil. color specialist for the Glidden Co.
"Even sub1le color changes can make aU the
di ff ere nee."
Ideas for color schemes. One of the best
ways to get inspiration for your home is to
go on a house safari. Wander through your
neighborhood or another area that you
admire. and take photos of colOJ
combi~tions you like. Read home and
architecture magazines. and save pictures of
coloo. lhat catch your eye. If you're
interested. do some research on the
h1stoncal colors of your geographic area.
·'SeloctJng the colors for your borne can
be a fun and educational process." Podojil
srud
Podoj1I suggests three clements to keep in
mmd when selecting extenor colors for your
home: architecture. environment and
possible zoning restrictions.
"First. keep in mind the architectural style
of your home. The stately. classic appeal of
a center-hall Colonial would be lost if
painted like a Victorian painted l~y." he
said.
Podoj1I says his favorite way to add color
to a house is by simply painting the front
door.
'1be front door of a house is the focal
point of the facade. Most people remember
a home's front-door color, especially if it is
somcthtng unique aod personal," Podojil
sa1d.
Color aho can make a home appear larger
or smaUer. Gcoerally. painting a house in
light tones with white trim will mate it
visually larger. Bi11er homes can appear
less iotimidabn.g by using deep. warm tones
with subtle <JOOtraSU.
Secondly. the 1urroundin1 environment of
• your house. espccit.11)' the landscaping.
plays a big par1 io how color looks. A house
paint.eel in dark shades of blue or peen can
be Iott in a yard fuU of shrub& and trees.
Con~ly, homes without landscaping can
be made leas oberuslve by paint.ins with
neutral colors. like muted geens aod earth
tones.
"Also. consider what your ocigbbors are
using for exterior colon, and try to
harmoniz.e with them." Podojil said. "It is
very important to coordinate your house
with the style of the neighborhood. or you
risk ending up with a sore thumb of a
house.''
The third thing to remember is that many
areas require color schemes to be approved
by a local zoning board. Most boards arc
rather liberal in what they will allow. but it is
always a good idea to check first before
making a large investment in pdint and labor.
Once you have some color ideas. bring
them with you to the store. Paint department
salespeople can help you match colors and
estimate quantity based OP the siz.e o( your
home. The Glidden Co. Master Palcuc color-
matcbing system ofJen 6, l 34 colors. the
largest selection available. lf you have your
heart set on a color tba1 docs oot appear in
the Master Paletto system. Glidden also
offers in store computeriud matching to
reproduce any color.
Dolnc tt yoandf. Once you have scl~
a body <Jolor for your bowe, you will need to
select trim and accent colors for other
architectura1 details.
''Traditionally, people paint thei.r house a
light color with dark trim. but now, you sec a
trend toward deeper body colors and lighttr
trim colors," Podojil said.
He suggests arranging the color chips you
get from the paint department in order to get
a good idea of how the colors go together.
Often. a color cao look very different when
combined with other colors.
Usually. colors are selected for three major
sections of the house; the body. window and
door trim and froot door. These can vary
depending on the style of the home.
Contemporary homes tend to featw"e one or
two colors. while Victorian homes can have
more than seven.
· Fl.al paints are mostly used for 5iding,
sioce they hide surface imperfections, while
semigloss and gloss painta are used for
accent areas. Depending on your geographic
area. the color you choose for dM-outside
can have a big impact on the inside. Since
dark colon absorb sunlight. they're great for
homes in northern clirn:uu that benefit from
ex.tra beat in the winter. The opposite iJ true
for southern climates; most homes in the
South tend to be lighter pastels and neutrals
to rdled beat.
Tbe ftnal tat. lf you ate still unsure
which color to choose. Podojil suuests
paintioa sample plank.a of wood in the colon
your like. Let paint dry complct.cly, and tbco
hold the planks up qainst yow bollle to get
an idea of how the color will look.
"Colors change throughout the day
depeoding on how much bade or sunlight a
house receives ... Podojil said. 'Test colors al
different times of the day to make sure you
like the overall effect."
With some thou&bt, mean:h and
creatlvity, the final mull of addi"I Cokw to
your home can ~ a welcome end eitcitin&
cbanae.-
•
ESTHER TABAK:
The arts are her
pastime
AGENCY:
Oru.bb • Ellia Re.ideotial Real Estate
Services
JOBTITLE:
R~
FARM ARM:
SOUlbern Calilomi1
BOW LONG WITH AGENCY:
Three yctn plOI
CITY OP RESIDENCE:
N~Beaeh
HOBBIP.s/INTE~
()reek folk duce. opera and thellrc
CLUl&'ORGAMZAnON8:
Ten-year docent Newpon HartKlr Art
Muteum
FAVORITE GETAWAY:
San Francisco
PET PEEVE:
Inconsiderate driven
FAVOIUTE
MOVIE:
Most foreign
fi.J.m5
JAVOIUTB ~ USl'AUJtANT:
Broadway Dell
BOW DO YOU DEFINE SU~1 Havina enoup mooey to help the charities I
believe in.
Barbecue on the roof deck with white water
view Oloose your 4BR. 3BA townhome,
each with 2 car gar Near new. Low down
OK No Assoc. dues ...... $324.900 EAOI
Sprawling ranch style with a over 2,000 s.f.1 A upgraded pool home on a large comer
Totally upgraded 4BR, 2BA, hard wood lot 4 bedroom, 3 boths & family room & 3
entry, new Berber. formal OR, enclosed car garage. Great kUchen. Shows beautifully.
li>atio ......•....•........•................ $278 .. 000 Reduced! ............... : ............... $SS4,000
NEWPORT SHORES CORONA DEL MAR
Olarmlng cottage plus ocean view artist's
studio. 2 car garage. Rl zone but has 2
sepanite living areas. Roof deck. South of
Coast H ........................ $624,950
NEWPORT COAST
LIDO ISLE
A tranquil setting on the bay, with a sandy
beach and picturesque view 3 bedroom. 3 5
bath & studio rental unit w/prlvate ent
Great location on Uso Isle .... $1.095.000
BALBOA ISLAND
Uttle Balboa Island. Massive brick fireplace
accents thl~ 3 bedroom 3 bath main
residenca of pretty duplex. Shared dock. Large
brick oatk> •.•..•....••..••••....• $1,400,000
I
·1
-
:,.__ ~~.~T~•~ ·-rT ~ ~3"·~~:.'-~.:-~~---;--r 1) ---
One of Newport's prime neighborhoods
C.Cntrally located in Newport Beach. the community of Newport North bas 120 townbomes
and 159 single family villas. '
The townbomes arc all two bedrooms with attached two-car garages, gourmet kitchens
with European cabinetry, spacious living areas, aU with fireplaces and enclosed attached
g~es. Each unit also offers a private patio. Prices start in the townhomes at $183.900.
Lido Isle bayfront Featuring four bedrooms, two and one-balfbalbs and a
new dock with room for a large yacht plus side tie. Views of main bay and lights from main
room' with traditiona l styling, high ceilings, French doors and used brick. Two marble
fireplaces , marble flooring and large bayside masLer suite with a fireplace. Enjoy Lido Isle
amenities, pr:vate beaches. tennis courts. clubhouse and security service;:. Walk to shops and
re~taurani<._ Offered a: S l .599.000.
Newport North Villas is a 24-hour guard gated community. The three-and fo1.1r-bcdroom
villas arc an ideal alternative fodiomeowncrs who ~ not want the burden of a remodel or
continual yard maintenance. The lush setting is maintained by the homeowners association.
The homes range from 1.920 to 2,400 square feet Prices start at $389.000.
Newport North is steps to the Back Bay, nature trails. Bonita Park and the Newport North
specialty shops.
The resort-like amenities -tow-tax base, Lincoln Sc00ol District. close proximity to the
beaches. Fashion Island, the l..S Freeway, UCI and South Coast Plaza -make Newport North
the perfect home for the active lifestyle. · Call Russ Flutu or Beverly Cleveland al Cannery Vrllap Realty, Inc .• 2025 W. Balboa
Blvd., Newport Btach, (714) 673-3777.
For nwrt infonn.tf/ion, call Greg Lombardi al Coast Newport Proptt1U1, 4 CiYic Plaza,
SU. 26(!, Newport Beach, (114) 759·3751.
Rates as of December 28, 1995
Ab:icus F1nanc1al Grp
American Savings Bank
Bank of America -California Federal Bank
Coast Federal Bank
Countrywide Funding
CUB Funding Corp.
Detnck Mortgage Group
Downey Savings
Emery Financial
F1dehty Federal Bank
First Federal Bank of CA
Fleet Mortgage
Glendale Federal Bank
Home SaVlngs
NationsBanc Mtg. Corp.
Newport Coast Financial
Oceisnview Financial
PtoFed Mortgage
Sanwa Bank
Union Bank ------Westem Financial SB
Weyerhaeuser Mtg.
KEY LENDERS AND RATES
30-year fixed 3 0-Y ear adjustable.
INTEREST 'lft POINTS LOCK· INTEAEST 'lft POINTS MAX, MA.AGIN ADJ.
TYPE PHONE RATE OWN ('Xt). IN A.P.R. RATE OWN ('Xt) A.P.R. LOAN ('Jt,) INDEX FREQ.
R (714)375-6666 6.7500.k 5 2.250 30 7.009 2.950% 20 1.000 7.615 500,000 2.400 110 1M
s (800) 562-6272 7.125% 20 1.500 30 7.312 2.950% 25 1.000 7.665 600,000 2.450 110 1 M
B (800) 424-2632 7. 125% 5 1.875 45 7.351 6.125% 5 1.000 7.853 203, 150 2.500 1TS 6M
s (800) 225-3337 7.000% 20 2.000 45 7.237 3.700% 20 1.000 7.622 203,150 2.400 110 1M
----~-----------------------------~ $ (800) 300-5626 7.150% 20 2.000 0 7.389 2.950% 25 1.000 7.615 500,000 2.400 110 1M -----------K (800) 8n-5626 7.000% 5 1-625 45 7.198 5.125% 20 0.875 7.970 203,150 2.750 110 1M
K (714) 753-7424 7.125% __ 5 __ 1_000 ___ 12 __ 7_.2_6_1 _ 3.700% 20 1.000 7.622 500,000 2.400 110 1M
-------------------~ R _J714) 759-9692 6.750% 5 2.125 15 6.996 2.950% 20 1.250 7.591 600,000 2.350 110 1M
s (800) 336-9639 7.000% 20 2.125 30 7.250 2.950'k 20 1.000 7.665 500,000 2-450 110 1M
R (714) 729-9200 6.7500.k 5 1.750 15 6.958 3.100% 20 1.000 7.622 500,000 2.400 110 1M
s (800) 232-2309 1.125% __ 5 __ 1._1_50 __ 1_0 __ 1_.3_38_ 3.950% 10 1-750 7.803 203,150 2.500 110 1M
s (800) 672-4332 7.125% 20 1-875 30 7.351 3.950% 20 1.250 7.750 203,150 2.500 110 1M
K (800) 700-5650 7.000% 20 2.000 45 7.237 5.500% 20 1.750 8.002 203,150 2.750 1TS 1Y
s (800) 560-9000 6.875% 5 2.250 45 7 .135 3.750% 25 1.000 7.122 203,150 2.500 110 1M
s (800) 975-5051 7.050% 10 1.500 30 7.236 3.950% 20 1.000 7.624 600,000 2.400 110 1M
K (800) 622·0102 6.875% 20 ' 2.250 30 7.135 5.000% 20 2.600 8.028 203, 150 2.750 HS 1Y
R (800) 808-5626 6.875% 5 1.250 10 7.034 2.950% 20 1.250 7.591 600,000 2.3So 110 1M
R (714) 651-6355 6.875% 5 1.625 15 7.072 5.500% , 10 0.875 7.911 203,150 2.750 1TS 1Y
K (800) 686-3756 6.875% 20 2.375 30 7.148 f .250% 20 1.000 7.851 400,000 2.625 11 D 1 M
B (800) 237-2692 7.300% 10 1.500 15 7.489 5.625% 10 1.250 8.446 203,150 3.125 1TS 6M
B (800) 453-1288 7.125% 20 2.000 60 7.364 4.375% 20 1.250 8.303 203,150 2.875 6CO 6M ---s (800) 393-9372 7.125% 5 1.125 30 7.273 6.000% 10 0.750 7.950 203,150 2.750 1TS 1Y
K (800) 669-7183 7.000% 10 1.625 10 7.198 4.Zli0% 20 1.625 8.043 203, 150 2.750 11 O 1 M
Bo1t1 ftud & ldfuSlllble programs .,. 3Ql30 COIMWlllonll motlglgH. Type of IAndlt ii: 8 • 8M1t K • ~ l>lllM; R • ~ llrOlciw: S • llV1nQI & loan Mol1glllgt ~ end blolWa .,. bmd by lhl Clllfornla
Oepet1rnllnt of Aul Esta'9 u either a bloker« cotp0111tion. Forlnfonnationcall Calif. DAE .i (1118) 227-0931 • ...,... ANb~ll en ll'lllodUdory u for tie 1111t~ pertod. Down~ll llll'ICK.Wltofcalh ("'of
..... price) peld to lender prior IO algr1ing mortQ808 contract. Polnta ... "" of toen beleflce paid to lendeir at time of tolrl doling. Loclc..fn " lhe ~ Of days lllnder gumw!IMI ratl Ill'°' to doli\o A.It.... .. ht.,,.,...~ ,...
whlctt is en e~ 1MU81cottoftheloan10 lhl boli'bwer. M A.P.R.1 are CllaJlaled by Mol1Qloe News Co. t>Uedon a '203,150 IOllnam<>unl, lhl pOlntt ltlOWn and $700 ICM!,._ The AP.A.a.,.~ In lfllt chlrt bcompM-
son orty. When applytng I« a loen, Ftderal Truth-In-I.ending law requt• lenderl to c:alculale en A.P.R. f99Clk to eacll IOlln offer. ~""' loen Is tilt MUlrnum **' wll loen urldW ~ llnna. Al 11.s,... l>tCl!ll'WN hew a 1111»-
mum of '203, 150. Margin (In %) ii llndel1 profll; margin + lndell • ecci.i rate .,.... 11111 ~ lndeJC le tie l>Ull lor Mltlng 111 ~ 11111 (Margin + lndu ,• New Ratl). 110 • 11 lh Diet. Coll of Fundl, 1 TS • 1 ·Year"Tf'MIUIY
811, l6M • 8'nlonlh U80R, 8TB • 1knon111 Treasury Bii. 900 • kn«lfl ..... ~of~ Adtuetment fNqWney la lhl peltod ~ ~. 1M • 1~. 8M • t-MonlN. 1Y• 1 Yw. M ,_ ..... IO
c:nange. V9t'ly rate and 1eM11 prior to IPJllYll'lo .,, a 1oen. All ~ PfO\llde 1oet11 with dllfelM ,... •"'1 1enn1 tor dlllltent 1oen lfl'IOUlltl. The lnfonnaaon ~ le not en offer to !NM • ioen. F« • CONU1Mt ~ on !low II) ~
kM' 11n011gage, send a S4.50 check peyab1e to~ News Co .. 1810 E 17111 St. Suite 100, Santa Anl, CA 112705. (714) 93f. 11 n COPVAIC'.HT o 1"6 ~ ,..._Co
•
-__..r . -, - : • ·. r.~
...._ ·-.. •. · ... '·~~
NEWPORT'S WESTCUff 2sty 2bd twnhm Ill
desirablt ~r Wlage Upgraded kitchen & new
carpet Comm pool & c:lli>hoost
631-1400 $189,995
COSTA MESA HEIGHTS Near lugh school
track & ttlVlls, 3bd twnhm w/dining & fam~
rooms & large private yard
631-1400 $219,000
CompneJ./ charmmg 2bd cottage. 0 w/v.'tt bar)
hiijl bum cdnJs & lwOMJ firs. close to Oasis. shops
& serv.ces REDUCW $309,900
NEWPORT Gated complu w/pool & spa ex·
ating 3sty 2bd condo w/granrte hrdwd Ors & 2
frplces
63J.1400 $234,900
IRVINE'S Rancho San~ compelx, romm
pool & spa OlttrfU 2bd upper llll1 w/goff course
& grembell view
63J.1400 $247,000
COSTA MESA HEIGHTS °"1mmg 3bd home.
hcMd firs, remodcltd kitchm & baths R 2 loc
631-1400 $269,000
BAYVl.EW TERRACE Bnght 2bd 2ba home In
gated comm w/pool & spa Hrdwd Ors. NC & pn-
vate WiDed yard
631-1400 $299,000
NEWPORT SHORES
flbt dalnblt loorplan, 2sty Jbd +den W/'6Y,
open f~ CoiMI ltlvill, pool It cUlhOuse.
lo oct.111 REDUCED! $365,000
9Tappy 910/idogj
~rg{ghmfnuM & 9ToppyD'Ye1D~efM
From
Pat & Gil Foerster
and the Agents & Staff at
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
Realtors®
NEWPORT HEIGHTS Darling 3bd cottage, walk
to al schools Used brick, picket lmce & rostS
631-1400 $379,000
NEWPORT'S WESTWFF GROVE
largest 4bd Jian lndu!es spacious master w/frplc
dlllllY:] & lm>y rms, bbrary & cOl.lllTy kitchen Pool.
spa & att dbl garage $544, 900
CORONA DEL MAR Bnght, newer 3bd twnhm.
lrplc, vaulted ceJlings. granite cOUtlters, stroll to
ocean
631 -1400 $379,000
NEWPORT'S BELCOURT Hill. Comm pool &
spa Dramanc 2bd w/ den. secunty & ocean View
631-1400 $479,000
AT ntf BEACH 5 doors to ocean ~torn 2bd
w/ocwi \,ew, den. larruly rm, 2 frplces & studio
631-1400 $545,000
UDO ISLE Bright 2bd w/den & swiny paho
Larger lot on pnme street w/good expansion po-
tential
631·1400 $595,000
NEWPORT HFJGHTS
&yjlt 4bd home, tastchjy remodded w/ccmty-
s¥e kitchen. f~ rm & frPca m master, diBng
& Mig room Deck & spa $6 79 ,000
SE.A ISlAND T~ remodeled, 2bd 111/cblg rm
& den 11'1 ~ oomm w/pool, spllS & teins
631-1400 $599,000
HUN'TtNGTON HARBOUR l sty 3bl mnodeled
b.1yfrott home w/family room, dfck & 30' dock
~1-1400 $649,000
LINDA ISLE 5bd traditional w/2 sty ceiling & dock
for large yachl Land may be purchased. OJi)
631-1400 $692,000
PENINSUlA POINT
T~ uppded 2sty 3bd "9iowc.ase. hm, custom
wood firs, cabinets & sh~+ craftsman.) garage.
St.rlny pabo & private deck. $895,000
BELCOURT Airy 2bd twnhm, dining & family rms.
high ceilings, 2 frplces, marble floors & yard w/spa
631-1400 $749,000
HARBOR RIDGE Estate' Home. Remodeled Sbd.
grand master suite w/frplc in pirvale forested settmg.
631-1400 $799,000
PENINSULA POINT 3bd w/fmly rm, 4 frplces.
rooldeck w/spa & YltwS & 3 car gmge. Fr. doors &
hardwood floors
631-1400 $820,000
DOVER SHORES 4bd custan. lab ws of i.wer bay
& city liijlts ~ & fmliJ rms, pool & 3 car garage
631-1400 $865,000
DOVER SHORES
lnun.xulate. oompletely remodeled 3bd bayfront w/
brand new kitchen, dining& family rms, &dock for
SO+ ~-$989,000
OLD CORONA DEL MAR Cbe ~bay&OCU'lws.
08lm lxl ~ 2 frr*:es, 2 decks. spa & 4 ca !J9
631-1400 $995,000
Nl'WPORT OCEANFRONT QISlom 4lxi, mm w/
Fr docn to plbo & btadl 8e¥ns. brQ & lca!ed 9Ms
~1-1400 $1.095,000
IRW£CAMP\JS Dnm1tic. ~~
4bd, ~ & dining rms • Lvnily & dira room\
(LIO IMscldd)
631-1400 $1,350,000
UDO ISLE
Romanbc custom lxl ~ on extra large quiet c:tt·
ner loc Scone. archrs & cobnns. 3 lrpbs & ex-
traorduwy~w/lush \'leWS $1,599.000
UNDA ISLE 5 bd ~root. ~ wde bay VIN.
large dock and ~ 1" Dining & lamay rocxns & lush
~(Ui)
631-1400 $1.495,000
DOVER SHORES CMr 1 Ii acre w/tennisaut & pool
Custan 4bd sU!es, librdfY, dining, ~ & game rms.
631-1400 $1,495,000
~OELMAR5lxl~11gml~
wfterris at & \leNS ol a:e.an. b.J,I & ay oo owr 1 acre.
631-1400 $1,695,000
IRVINE COVE Elegant 5bd c~an w/5 c.ar garage &
ocean win ~oceanfront comm w/r-No beaches
631-1400 $1,975,000
HARBOR ISIAND DRIVE
Bayfront w/t 25· hon water & doddor 70+ yacht
Gorgeous Villa. 4bd suites. '-l9e stone terrace w/
waterfal. & resl514nce $2.795,000
PELICAN POINT Front row huge extra pnvate lot
rn premier location on 12"' green w/whrtewater
views
631·1400 $1,895.000
CORONA DEL MAR Exclbng new 3bd bayfront
viDa w/tmace. lawn, pnvate beach & dock for 2
boats
631 -1400 $2,495,000
LAGUNA 4bd conternpo work-d..n w/rnagnJicent
octan & coastboe ~ • so· pool & spa
~1-1400 $2,795,000
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 9bd Frtnch Olateau w/
pld tnlertuirig rms on 4+ pad acres Va8'y &
octan~
631-1400 $3,995,000
Specializing in properties/ or sale or lease ... on the water. .. near the water ... and with a view of the water. ..
NEWPORT BEACH SOTHEBY'S BALBOA ISIAND
2436 W. COAST HWY 315 MARJNE AVE.
714-631-1400 INTERNATIONALREALlY 714-673·6900 ®
.
Grubb & Ellis acquires
Turner Associates
The real estate company
is based in Laguna
Beach
hiunJcd by Loui~ Turner in 1964.
T11rncr A\-.oc1alc). ii. one of lhe oldest real
c-.tatc firm). 1n Laguna Beach area.
.. Grubb & Elli' t ) ideally <>uited to
cnnlinuc the -.ucce\., of thi' office," Turner
"ud. ··~cau..e 1t' management style and
bu"ne" ... tandard'> arc consistent with my
(l\lo n
C'trn,1dered the area's premier )ales office
for luxury home., and e.,tate,. Turner
A''clt:1ate' boa\L\ the tugheM average sales
pnce in Laguna Beach
The office ha'> de1teloped an impressive
market mche by 'pec1allllng in the North
Laguna office It ,., home to 20 sale)
J\\0C1ate\. many who have been involvc!d in
landmark Laguna Beal·h real estate !tale,.
"We are plea!>t!d to announce the
l'>.pan'lnn of Grubb & Elli\ in the North
Laguna market:· ~ard Denni' Gordon.
prc,idcnt of Grubb Elli'
··Turner Ai. .. ociatci. ha.' a reputation of
excellence in the repre..cntation of premier
propcnie~ and we have many reM>urcel>
which will further compliment itc; sales
efforts."
Since 1968. the North Laguna office has
been at 1105 N. Coast Highway. and will
remain open under the name of Turner
Associates, an affiliate of Grubb & Ellis
Re.,idential Real Estate Services. Jim
Vermilya. manager of the Grubb & Ellis
Laguna Beach office. will also manage the
North Laguna office .
Grubb & Ellis 1s the exclu\ive affiliate in
Or.inge and San Diego counties for Christie's
Orea~ E.'tate\, the largest network of
inJcpendent real esl3tc brokers speeiaJizjng
in the sale of pre tigiou.'> propertie...
Grubb & Bilis hsUklllW Rtal B.•tat:e
Snvius has 10 0Jfict1 a:n4 340 sahs
a.uociaks 11rvin1 Ora1t1e an4 San ot.10
coun/Us. Grubb & Ellis Ruuundal RtAl
EstaU ~rvices lttu Htll a 1rttmkr of du
Bttkr Ho1Ms and Gardens Real EstoU
Servius n1two1* of indtJHnd.tnl nal estate
firms sintt 1992. Bttttr llomts and
Gardens Real &taU Servius.formed in
1978, i~ an international network of wwre
than 700 member firms with trWre tJra11
1,400 offices and more than U,()()() licensed
saks associatts in tht Uniled Staus,
Canada and Puerto Rico.
Grubb & Ellis rewarded
for super effort
The Newport Beach
office donated the most
canned goods for
distribution to the needy
The Orange Coa"l A -.~ociation of Realtors
awarded Grubb & Ellii. Residential Real
F;'tatc Service-. the Sweepstake Award for
donating the mo~I canned good!. to the
Salvatmn Army for di\tribution to the needy
of Orange County. Al'>O. awarded to Grubb
& Ell" was the be~t CanTrec Design
Award
··Our agent' made the difference," said
Ron Mau.ano. vice prc!'ident and district
manager "All our agents responded with a
complete team effort. We would like to
express our tppreclation to the communities
where our agenl'i collect food goods. Next
year we plan on an even bigger and better
food drive."
Many of the •aents commented on the
generosity of the community. some agents
arc still gettina telephone calls to pick up
more food. which they are doing and
dlrecting it 10 the Salvation Army.
Accordina to the statistics released by lhe
Orange Coast AsJOCiation of Realtors, this
(1 • f) Paul Wnpic.. Dick OicUon. BJ. John6on.
Marilyn lembntr. Sally Sh1pky. Sbirtcy Lkbr
year was exceptionally good with more than
30,000 canned &oOds dona.t.Cd by 10 rcaJ
estale office who paiticipated.
Grubt & Ellil Rt11M"""1 Rid/ &taJ~
~rvlt•, Ntwport Bucls/•111" rm
coM111lbnt1tl lo IM COllUlfMttity aN is lulppy
lo Hof Hnk1. ~ oJfkt ii .t 23
C"""'1'* ntwJ, SU. 190. N1wport BMilt,
(1U)UUZOO.
..
~·---~-~-~ --____ _...,. ~----
Coast Newport ~es applauds the effom of Marv ~ and Sandie F'uc for their
P.Ort in rais•!)Q funds for On>nge Coast Association of lleoJk>n' <:an Tree driW . .f>idured (I
r) Mlry DuffY, Kimberly Foreman (OCAR) and Sandie Fix.
JCVVAd~
2 8:45 a m .. Affiliate Committee Mtng.
3
5
11
10
11
15
17
<!
18
19
Sl
8.45 a m .. GPA Committee Mtng.; 9 a.m -noon. Ethics; 1 • 4 p.m .• Agerv:;y
8·30 am .. Board of Directors Mtng ; 9:30 • 11 .30 am .• COMP~ Beginner
Cruse
MLS Book delivery
8 45 a m .• CorrmritV Relations Convnittee Mtng ; 9 a m .• MLS Corrmttee
Mtng'.
9 a.m. -noon. Ucensee Responslblities: 1 -4 p.m .• 14 Wa'f$ to Prevent
Lawsuits;
2 -fl p.m .. Internet Classes
2 -4 p.m .. COMP~ Advanced Course
Martin Luther Kng. Jr ·s Bithday. Association Otnce Closed
9 o.m. -noon. Probate: 9 o m. • 4 p.m.. Protimklnci StondadS Trolnilg;
1 -4 p.m .. Appalsols
9 a.m. Grlevalce Committee Mtng.: 2-4 p.m .• COMP~ Begimer Coi..ne
6-8 p.m .• l..aglllo/Newport Cocktal Cruise
8:30 o.m~ Qtentatlon/lrdJCtlOri
9 o.m. -noon. Foreclosure; 1 -4 p.m. Pap9f trail: 2 • 5 p.m .• Internet Closs
2 • 5 p.m .. Lightning Closs.: 3 • 4 p.m .• CAA Testng
9 o.m. ·noon. REO's: 1 • 4 p.m .• Mere Sclles lhrougi TelemOO<eMQ
Heart of NewDOrf ~ perfect locauon for a continuous vacation, this home
was des~ ~ -btlilt i~ t'ti8~ ;_,i-th newer rna~erials and l~hniques. The Cape Cod aUure is
captured in .intncate detAil .. usang the fine t de. 1gner matenals and concepts. From the whHe
sbu~red wiodows to the symmetrical white railing on the balcony and the pale blue siding. no
detail h been m~. '
The two-story, four-bedroom home is complemented by four and one-half bath\. Beamed
ceilin~s acce!lt the ~ivi~g room while Berbe~ carpeting and oak cabinetry create mood. Light
and. bng~t ~Lth white I.tie and plenty of ~unhght th.rough windows. the home sets the p~ for
Cahfom1a lifestyle. A wet bar and fireplace lend a festive touch to the living room. A spiral 1,tai~ase leads to the third floor loft and roof-top deck that overlooks the peaceful waters of the
Pacific OoeJln. ~home is air conditioned to ensure the perfect climate every day of the year.
The bade bow.e 1s perfect for weekend guesL'>. maid's quarters. or an income unit.
Fenced for privacy and design. the home 1s landscaped with tropical low-maintenance plant
hfe. Thc two-ar garage a complemented with a two-car carporL encouraging visitors and
overcoming parking obstacles. Built-in storage provides organization.
Thc home is &Leps from the sand. Quaint shops. unique restaurants and bistroc; make the
enchantment complete.
F~ U./Of'tlfllliott °" trttltive jiJulncin1 and a priwm 1lwwin1, call Marine Mink & Jo1
C11rti11 ot tM Nrqorl lkoch office o/Tlu PnuklllW-Jon Do1111as OJ., (714) 159-6600.
~~in Newport Heights Thi spectacularbome
as locared in the Newport Be«h community of Newport Heights, just minute away
from _I.he 1lil11cnlna blltlor and undy beacheS of Newport Beach.
This cu.wm home of*-5,000 .-re feet ftatura four bedrooms and four and one half
baths, an absolutely f abuloua fmn.ity rooatltitcheft with fareplace, large cennl i lAnd,
brcakf ut nook and Vik.inc rmlF· Thie hOnie also feaawen bUtler'1 pantry and spacious dimoa ~ u weU u a lovely breakfast ~ ovei1o0ki.Da the 'interior willed prden.
In addition to tbe fireplace in me family room. there IR also firei>J:aces within lhc living
room Md muta' bedroom attu of the bOme. Upon cnterina the bOnic. one is pted with a
sweepina l&lirale ud wonderful large entry ball with fabulous moldinp lild hardwood
f1oora. UplClitl ii a .,.,_ pine paneled den rcm.initcent of a mounup recreat:
Thia boine dilpla11 fine cnftimanibip and i1 located near some of the final 1ehool.s in dill
Ila. ...... *9.000.
For ... = Jfr1 Ml J.,,, ,,,,."' (11') 1S'9J1~tw""....., ~ W "'(114> 11' • CMif,..,,.,.,,,..,.,.,, 4aric1'1ia4 S... 1#, N.,,,.,. lk«la. ,
'
1 ':i . -
Bci~nt home Located on Lido lsle. with an open. flowing floor plan and
offenng three bedrooms and three and one-half baths.
The ~urmcl ki~bcn provides_ ~very a~nity and the.-c is a boat dock for a large boat. Other
fca~rcs mclude high-vaulted ceilings, wmc ~loset. wet bar, recessed lighting. security system.
grarute and marble surfaces, ~~blc aw!lmg and spec~ular curved ta~ with skylight
The master retreat offers a s1ttmg area with fireplace, his and hers walk-LO closets. built-in
bookcases and bay views. Marble lavs, steam hower and marble Jacuzzi tub.
Coll CindJ Piii/Ups 111 CannUJ Villatt RWt], Inc., 2025 W. &/boa BlwL, Nnqx>n
Bt«la, (114) 673-3771. ·
Large family home in Costa Mesa Spacious noorp&an rcatUtts
an open country kitchen for nostalgic holiday festivities. This ingle level home maintain<; a
comfortable flow for entertaining. Four bedroom and three bath • the home is filled with
potentiaJ. Private front courtyard. new paint and carpet ma.Ice the home hjnc with .1 new ljght
'The two-car garage adds storage and safety. The newer cement driveway enhances value.
.Located near the park. nestled among tree-lined streets and pride of ownership residences.
thi~ home could be a dream-come-true. Near schools and recreation area<;, the home provides
a good foundation for growing families. Conveniently near shopping. theaters and restaurants
and within minutes of the prestigious Southern California beaches.
The lender-owned home is a great deal for the square footage. The b3nk priced it al
$205.000 to facilitate a fast sale. Some lender concessions may be available and seller
ftnancing is a good potential. f'trSt-limc bomebuyer programs Yltth low fixed rates malce it
easier than ever to become a pan of the American dream and own a home.
For Uifof'llJlllilJn on lellMr pltklinn """a pri'POU """'of tlti.s txcdklll wrbu, call Bna
ltjla1141tuUlRitaMcDonald 111 tltt Nwpot"I Btaclt office of Tlte Pnult ttJilll-Jon Doutlas
Co., (71') 126-4183.
..
•11
.
I
4
/1
O ne of the
true joys of the
holiday season .
is the chance to
say thank you
and to wish you a
happy new year.