HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-01-11 - Orange Coast PilotWEEKEND
............. ____.... __ 'B..;.._a _lla...._d..;._:..ol Y~m!I!!_·
strikes ch~
.
T oday's
l)eUy Pilot
tab a~
Jookataman
Who llv.d a
woadedul life:
Jeny, we'll an miss you •••
• Friendi
voite feelmg1
on KObrin. ......... I n keeping wtth his penchant for pushing the '
boundaries of political correctness, Jerry Kobrin
walked out of the Arches restaurant and took stock
of the midday sky. He smiled, cleared his throat and
said -in a boop:ling voice that anyone within half a
block could hear -"I think it's time for a cigar."
Although his health had been less than perfect in
recent months, his death came as a surprise to friends
and admirers, mostly because }le always seemed so
full of vitality, so ready with a joke, ever curious as to
what the future might bring .
•S~
from Kobrin's writings .
See ... 14.
•A classic
column from
Kobrin
Kobrin was never basliful about his love for a good
smoke, a good story and a good time with good friends.
see Page 15. Jel'.l'Y Kobrin, ~t, P9ses wltb SOD Jeft
A fixture in Orange County journalism for decades,
Kobrin's wit, droll humor and ability to mix criticism and
kindness made his newspaper columns m':1st-reading.
WILL TRAIN ?
MARC MAATlof I 0M.Y Pit.ID
Model train engineers Al Thompson, foreground, and Marshall Nelson ride the Chesste System train to the storage area.
• Thf Goat Hill Railroad has been a long-treasured feature at
Fairview Park. But will its future be derailed?
By Tina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
C OSTA MESA -When the
Orange County Model Engi-
neers opened up the Goat Hill
Railroad at Fairview Park back in
1989, the club had just a little more
than 700 feet of train track for their
model steam and diesel engines.
, Now, they have about 14,000 feet
:::::-:--w--of trac.k that &tretch.es across the.east
end Df. the wk. cOJTYln~ Visitors
along one side of the Costa Mesa Golf
Course, over a httle wooden bridge,
past the miniature Mehren Water
Tower and through the Hornbuckle
X. The tower and the •y• were
named after Parks and Recreation
Commission member Dick Mebren
and Councilwoman Mary Hornbuck-
le, respectively.
•we know bow to kiss up to our
city officials," says Robert Donnelly, a
spokesman for the organization,
which is made up of 90 model train
enthusiasts from all over the county.
But, recent talks about the future of
Failview Parkbas some members won-
dering if they're going to have to pack
..YP. their tJe.ins ano tracks and move out ·-City Mficials ·woWd llke to desig-
nate a small portion ofl=airview Park
for playing field development, but
they're having difficulty deciding
wh~re. Much of the park is consid-
ered •biologically sensitive,• with
• SEE :fAAINS PAGE A 11
For now, Cos-
ta Me a and
the Oran$Je
County Model~
Bngtaeenue
at a cro roads
over the future
of the Goat
Hill Ralltoad
to Falrvlew
Park.
Kobrin's life was the stuff of legend. During his years
~ . at the now-defunct Lion Country Safari, Kobrin all but
crea~ed the myth of "Frasier the Sensuous Lion," a sto-
ry that made news from coast to coast. During his
• SEE JERRY PAGE A14
-IRWD purchase
of nearby marsh
residents-~
-
• Opponents of treated sewage project fear the water
district's gain of 335 acres means expansion of plan.
By Evan Henerson . Daily Piiot
The recent purchase of 335
acres of marshland by the Irvine
Ranch Water District has Newport
Beach residents concerned the dis·
trict is planning to expand a con·
troversial proposal to dwnp treated
sewage m Upper Newport Bay.
The district recently paid The
Irvine Co. $18 million for 335 acres
of marshland surrounding the
Michelson Water Reclamation
Plant. Water district adrnirustrator.,
say they have no plans to develop
the area, whlch is bordered hr
Carlson Avenue, f\..hchelson Dnve,
Campus Dove and the eastE>m
bank of the San Diego Creek
But district critics remdUl duht·
ous. Why pay $18 million. they
ask, ~o leave land dS open space?
For the past several months,
the district has been orgdruZmg d
proposal to dump S million gallons
a day of treated sewage into New-
port Bay.
• Flood of input may halt IRWO
plan. Fred Martin. Page 3
Billed as a two-yeM demonstra-
bon project to take place dunng
the winter months the proposal
would allow the water chst.rict to
save more than $20 million Ill ell"·
posal costs with the Orange Coun-
ty Sarutabon Distnct
Under the plan, the di.'itnct
would run the treated wd.Ste \\dter
from the Michelson plcUll through
adjacent duck ponds and into the
San Diego Creek, where 1t wou1d
gradually filter mto the bay
'.. ' I I I ! ', c ' I ' I·
iteve
marble
This water just
doesn·i wash
A s nvers go, the San
D1ego Creek is not
e>.actly a study in
beaut) Oh at has 1t moments,
sure Its banks are green and
its environment wide open
where 1t curves lazily around
UC•. d.Ild it gl\'es way to
e.xpansive and occasionally
colortul agriculture fields in
the foothills of Tu.stm
For the most part, though,
1l'., a long, gray slab of con-
crete a causeway that car-
ne trash, litter and whatever
else is wa hed off the streets
on a long and watery tnp to
l\lewport Beach.
And o it is thAt oil and
solvents and t and a mil-
lion other things are finally
dt•pos1led in the Upper New-
port Bay, an 4X:Ological
reserve that is considered
one ot the hnest estuaries in
South~m Galifomit:t.
The Back Bay, as locals
Newport Beach ofhoals expect
.the disbict to expand the dJllount
of water being discharged after
the two-year demon5trabon pro-
ject is complete. The purchase of
the entire marshland area mch·
cates fue district plans to move Ill
that direction, said NeWport Beach
afy-Cou.ndlwonum Jean Watt: -... · . ·
"This appears to be "AifoUi f"') "'·' -su.san~ef. a'1ocai ~ySt:
means for (the water dlstnct) to can and member of Citizens for a
add to Uus project in the future,• Sewage Free Bay. also thinks
Watt said W<>dnesday. •There' expanding the ewage discharge
no substantiabon of this, but it's is the motive belund the purchase.
ciretµnstantial ,. evidence that "It' not like that area's a botan-
there will be more than 5 million
gallons a day in future projects.• • SEE PURCHASE PAGE A6
,Newportofficiwsundaunted
by Irvine's protest of toll b~
RuJing won't change condom p<>licy
\
' • Road is crucial to keep-
'mg Newpoft Coast Drive
'itee from planned toll.
• Courts say school offi-
cials, not paren~, have
authority over condom
CfiStribution on campuses.
By Julie ROIS cannon, Dii'ly Pilot
__ -• ~WKSOt1~'H'lOf
Outdated heaters :
brjnging chill tO
ocal classrooms
• The ..D:d district will be.
iepairiDg elementary scbool
l)eating ~that have
long been on the blink.
COSTA MESA -Students at
Adami Elementary School are
used to~ on an extra layer
or two of Clotbtnq in the nM;irDings.
Not that tbe weather bU beeli
espedaDy cold lately, but for the
past two months, students and
teachers in six classrooms have
had to forgo beat for breathable air.
When school custodians
turned on the classrooms' furnace
in November, the heater immedi-
ately blew sand and grit through
the vents and into the classrooms.
Teacher Sue Bise turned her
beater off after the first day. •n just made you feel ill,• she
said. •1 knew it I was feeling bad,
the kids were, too.•
days, thinking it woUld blow out
all the soot accumulated.during
the summer.
No luck. Next they had a pro-
fessional service dean the ducts.
Strike two. The furnace just
sucked in more sand
Some teachers even took to
taping cheesecloth over the ducts
to act as a makeshift filter, Har-
rington said, but the doth simply
ba~ed up grit and was even
m&e detrimental.
l
A group of pelicans pauses Wednesday afternoon to catch a breather -and a little sun -on the log ~m at Norlh Point Beach.
The rooms are heated by an
old em, which draws air from
ffie 0\11 e, "heats it ln a turii.ace,
then blows through undergroun
ducts into the six rooms, said Prin-
cipal Barbara Harrington.
But on Wednesday, several
classes received some temporary
rehet iii e orm o our eieCttic"
SJ>ace heaters. The &strict nas
tWo more Presto HeatDish Pluses
on order, Stocker said.
-·An que easures can0e1oun everly & Partner 1be-problem is; the padding
underneath tbe furnace bas deteri-
orated to the extent that the fumac:e
sucks in the sand beneath it. then
blows it through the ducts, she said.
~ board
members Tuesday designated
$611,438 of block grant money
received recently from the state be
spent to fix· Adams' heating prob-
lem; to clean heating ducts at 10
other district schools experiencing
similar problems; and to repair
roofing at eight distri.cl schools.
Beverly a Partner, (548-
7187) the great little
antique shop at 1800 W.
Coast Highway in Newport
Beach will be having a parking
lot sale this S4turday from 9 a..m.
to 3 p.m.
•There will be all sorts of
interesting things for sale at
great prices,• says Carol Thielen
of Beverly & Partner. Also, there
will be assorted antiques inside
the shop that will be offered at
sale pnces as well.
•Beverly & Partner has two
new deal~ and the shop and
garden are over flowing with
new treasures,• Thielen said.
At-Ease Women's and Home
Store is !;laving a sale on a wide
selection of designer fashions
and other merchandise reduced
from 30% to 70%. Designer col-
lections on sale include Ralph
Lauren, Randy Kemper, Carole
Wang, Geiger, Barry Bricken and
Zd.Della.
At-Ease Men's Store will also
offer savmgs on a broad selection
gree~
wylder
of the finest European sports-
wear, top-name golf attire and
sports clothing from their collec-
tions of Mondo, Axis, Ike Behar,
Zanella, Bobby Jones, Cutter &
Buck, Reyn Spooner, and Tim-
berland. Clothing will be
reduced from 30% to 70%.
Rag Baby (644-6369) is having
its semi-annual winter "blow out
sale.• The sale begins today and
ends Sunday, Jan. 1•. All cloth-
ing will be reduced 40%, and
there will be more savings on
selected items.
Rag Baby specializes in batik
cbildren's clothing and acces-
sories. It's located at Fashion
Island in Newport Beach. adja-
cent to Haagen Dazs, and across
from Sam Goody.
Cnften (:omer of Newport
Beach (650-5223) is celebrating
its first year anniversary with a
discount of 10% to 50% on every
item in the store. The sale lasts
through Wednesday, Jan. 31.
Crafters Comer is also \
accepting baskets, grass and
stuffed animals and dolls for its
annual Easter basket give-away.
Last year 150 baskets were
donated. Items can be dropped
off anytime during store hours 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through
Saturday. It's located at 400
Westminster in Newport Beach.
Another sale is in progress at
Just Bastes on Balboa Island. The
annual after-holiday sale ends
Friday, Jan. 19. All clothing lines
are on sale including Russ
Berens, Michael Sta.rs, Autumn
Moon. and there's also Bella
Luna jewelry. Just Basics (675-
6216) is located at 308 Marine
Ave. on Balboa Island.
Joanne Pavia, a Best Btiys
reeder says, •ne Health~
rtum in Corona del Mar is a new
beautifulheallh food market ·
With deli (eat iii or take out)
catering, all organk: produce, full
juice bar, complete vitamin sec-
tion. and dairy, etc.•
And Pavia says there are reg-
ular specials. Currently &ue Sky
natural sodas are on sale at.$2.28
a six-pack, and Crystal Geyser -·
one liter bottle is 89 cents.
• 9EST BUYS appears Thundays and
Saturdays. Whether you're a merchant
or • shopper. If you know of a good
btJy c.ell me It 540-1224, fax me at 646-
4170 or write to me: Best Buys. Daily
Pilot. 330 w. Bay St., Costa Mesa.
92627.
•After we turned them on, you
would notice an obvious layer of
dirt on everything in the class-
room.• said fifth-grade teacher
Lynn Murphy.
District workers took samples
of the conta.m.lnates and found no
b.a.rmful biocarbons or monoxide,
Hanington said. just sand. ·we decided rather than blow
sand over the children. we'd tum
the beaters off. We told the kids
that Just as they weer less clothes
in the summer, they needed to
wear an extra sweater of jacket
during the next few months,• Mur-
phy said •1 move them around the
dassroom to keep them warm.•
The sand did wreak havoc
with three new CD-ROM com-
puters, which couldn't handle the
grit either and shut down, Har-
rington said. The computeIS have
since been fixed.
The situation has perplexed
district maintenance ·workers
from day one.
First they told teachers to run
the system continuously for five
The district has ordered one
$100 gas-fired wall unit to test at
Adams. If is deemed a suitable
solution, more will be ordered,
Stocker said.
Not all of the Adams class-
rooms are affected by the heating
problem. Some rooms are housed
in relocatable buildings, whiai~
have their own system. 1
Other original classrooms'
were fitted several years ago I
with roof-based units, which did-1
n't work .as well as maintenance
workers hoped, said Carol Stock-
er, the district's executive direc-
tor ol business services and aux-1
iliary operations. The district1
abandoned the project beforei
installing them in the last six ~
classrooms. ,
The electric heaters are only a.
temporary solution, Stocker said.~
•They're just meant to take the'
chill off in the morning,• she said.:'
schools at a .glance
Superintendent Bernd the distnct's classified union, which rep-for nearly a year now, put our perfor-
fi ll resents bus drivers, food service mance far exceeded even our fondest 1na y given a raise employees, office workers and other dreams .•
After two and a bail yeor-; on the job, non-teaching staff. The college's dance squad finished
Newport-Mesa Unified Superintendent s~cond in the national competition's
Mac Bernd received his first raise fro-m-+-P.i:..~..a.em a C-0-N"-G-R-A-T-S ... open division. OCC was the only com-
school board members Tuesday. munity college dance squad to reach
Trustees unanimously approved the Orange Coast College cheerleaders the open divisipn finals.
1.2% pay increase, which is retroactive have something new to cheer about -a Members of OCC's cheer squad first place trophy. include Tom Ciesynski, Shelley Engel,
to July 1• 1995· The college's coed cheer squad cap-Julie Erickson, Josh Fitzpatrick,
Bernd, w~o has been paid $104,000 tured first place at the United Cheer-Gretchen Hinsley, Kelene Keating, Ben
annually since he came to the Newport-leading Association National Cham.pi-Kelly, Tim'LaVlano, ntsha Salvo, Erick
Mesa Unified School District in 1993, onsbips Jan. 6-7 at Walt Disney World Sandoval, Sandra Trujillo and Roni Ven-
will now receive $105,248 in base pay. in Orlando, Fla. tura. The squad's coach is Mike
"We're very pleased with his perfor-The squad is the first California com-Reynolds. .
mance during trying times and hope it munity college team to win the.tt!!e in _ J'-ieuiber of OC<;'s dance 1eam~
continues,• said .trustee Jim .ferryman, tlie cOmntunlty eoll~ge diruion. 4-1.UCJ~e Shawna Br6dford, JennJfer
Teathe.nr and other certificated staff "This is a huge thrill,• said Joyce-Christensen, Jessica Jackson, Patty
"'tnetnbl!rs tete!'i\'i!d the slltne retroactive lyn Groot, adviser to OCC's cheer Munoz. Kelly Parker, Sarah Reichert,
1.2% pay raise in October 1995. The and dance teams. •We've been Aubrey Starns, Angela Valley and Nie·
district is still in labor negotiations with dreaming about competing in Florida bole Van Allen. J'he tea1n'' coach is
VOL It, NO. 312
THOMASH.~
ftublldwr
-.UW La.JILL., Editor
ITIWW ...
==-~tdltor MAK MMT1N. l't'toto Ed/toe K• JI& ilih,.
Oit9ttOr of Op.rations
NO'I0.11NI.
Olllltfled MaNger
UMJOll•O-..
Pwontodoi• ...... aw-. Controller
.... I I 911A1CZY"K. Pte ...... ........... ,,..
CAA~~d
Dildudon
William Lobdell. The Mine 24-
hour answering service may be
used to record hrtters to the
edttor on any topic.
ADDIESS
OUr addrftl Is 330 W S-V St..
CMc.I Mesa, c.llf. 92627
O.lly Pilot. ftO Sox 1560, CON
Mesa. CA. 92626 Copyright No
news st~ lllustmlons. edrto-
n.I matter or~
herein Gin be reproduc:led wltfl.:
out Wfltten permllllon Of copy-
right owner.
~
The 1ln* Orange County
~252-4141
~ o..lft«l 642-5678
Dbplay 642..021
EcleofW
News 54().1224
Sports '42-4330
~ Sports F• 646-4170
E-Mail; FLn71Mflrodigycom
Melf\Oflb
....... OffQ 642-4ll1
..... , .. 631·5'02
~by .,,.
Celfimii ~ N9wl. • 'T1ril Mlrnir ~ w ...,,., ...... .......,...,ao
• ,,. C.lllf, CM.
AlrW119 .........
[ ----: -
~ warming tempen1·
Newport Beach tu re. 63144
~ ,..,.
63144 TOOAY CostA Meu
66145 First high
Corona ct.I Mar 12:44 e.m. 4.0
W45 first low
6:1Sa.m. 2.3
WPOllK'AST Second high LOCATIOH SIZE 11:441.m. l.t ~ 2·3 SW ~!OW = 2·3sw 6:)) p.m. O.t 2""sw ff«JAY Rtwr Jetty 2-4sw Jim high CdM 2•3 SW 1
1:l11.m. 4.1 ..... Arlt toW
Wtnds wett 10 7:)71.m. 2.2 knob~ north· S«ond high Nit 20 knots betow U;49 pm, 1A canyons and patMS. Second low MOdtrete s.nta
Ma tof'idttlON With 1:11 p.m. 1.2
--gusttng to .0 ,,.phat~wtth ...
dewlkt.Md ~51 . ---
Dan Sapp.
Both the cheer squad and the dance
team will perform their winning rou-
tines at OCC's home men's and
women's basketball games Jan. 24 and
26. The games begin at 5:30 and 7:30
p.m. each night.
by the district's teachers union anch
five administrators appointed by th~
district's administrators association.!'
Interested teachers are subject to a~
extensive interview and must presen
a 10-minute sample lesson to th&,
committee. ·, ' Mentor teachers welcomed New ment6r teachers, along witb,
their school, include: Bim Barry, New~
port Harbor High; Pam Eastman, wu~:
son Elementary; Sharon Fairborn:•
Newport Elementary; Micha et:
Newport-Me~a Unified School Dis-
trict board members welcomed 11 new
mentor teachers to the district's arse-
nal of 33 innovative Instructors who
help other district teachers with their
expertise.
Groscost, Costa Meso. High; Broce Hall,:
Kaiser Elementary; Shannon Maddux:,
Paulartno Elementary; PhyWs McK·~
own, Costa Mesa "High; Cbarleni·
Metoyer, Paularino Element~; Bett•-....
Ross, N!_"!PQ~ j:lem.entary; Prank To~
zollna, Whittier; and Diane Wood4
En.si9"1 lntermediate. •
The meptor program ts state funded,
and positrons become available when
mentors resign or when.. additional
funding is sent from the state.
Mentor teachers are selected by a
committee of seven teachers selected -Compiled by Julie Rou CannotJ.t
f •
I ---., ~
I --• _ .. I
CDSTA..sA ......... • JOI llllOcll flll Muc ... u.: Pofk:e wer. ~tied to a dOmestk vto-..., e.Q dhputj ~ night whete the boyfriend of • WOf'nll\ 1hft wtlf be • sbN ~ ~ her, c.alng her ldt eye to Mii. Wh9n
drop In Uf ectMty poea .nv.d llt the ..,.nrnent. 1he min br~. Ptlltt gun
todaY~fri-Ind clmbed onto the rOof of the ~rt.: ... ---the
~. Expect strong f: to a pob offtcer and,., bedt Into the~ and out
west Miis s.tura.y front door. The man refused to ObeY offlc.Ws• orcte;s to "°Pt
wtth--4to6Mt so ~ ~ s-pper ~ on him. lut ewn the IP'9Y «M\'t
Ind •fool sets It ,........ the men; Who ~the~ ind ren undl he
W9I fln8ltt =by polke In.~ yard. the belt w.st-tiiith-' w.sttn.ks~ • _ .._ ca*'s A thief • sso batt*Y frOlfft lnllde
• mnlten pertc9CI It lht,.., of • bu*-.. ett.moOn ri Sun-._.._._, ........ A=Uled•~ .,.Diep.-lmllh the~ on a car. then the $250 ...._ .......... from lnllde .
tomeleiVlflMI.
Alfo look for mW-r• IGmlMGt
mel IOUlh ~IN .............. ~ ..... A~lfMll'U .. _..
dMn a>ndltlons .. dow Of• cer. ,..._.In ... IDc* 1 S1SO =-cme.
WMk•we~ •"9lllilll ............ A1'111f~,._ ~
Nnmer. In ........,. Roca• '°"'*"._wll....,lif emilndtt.. '°11*et1•.-.. '°' dlly IUf1 rtpcwtl
.. ,.... ..............
........ .,,. J•rt=r:iss&A_..Cllt,....lln mndfDrecMl.Cllll .............. "' ·--·~ ... (IOGt m.u.. the . .......... ~ ......... 19:.
ail -St.SO pU WNdl-==--·lllad11&en11 .. 1.-; _. .,..,.....tol. llil ...... ,. -
mWD needs a deluge of letters right now
S omettmes lt takH a Uttle
wlille to get through. I
WTote the fLrSt column
about the IMne Ranch Water
District's proposed invasion (one
if by land, two if by sewage) of
Newport Harbor last spring.
There have been five or six
more. The last piece was a
report on the meeting at which
;----· the IRWD bomd-=-desplte
industrial-strength protests
from more than a score of
people who will be most affect-~ ed by the onslaught of effluent
-approved its own environmen-
tal impact report.
"Can they really do that'?"
people asked time and again at
holiday gatherings, in th~ •
supermarket, on dog walks and
wherever else I couldn't bide.
"Can they really dump their
sewage into the bay?"
They surely can and they
surely will, unless the people
most affected will begin
demonstrating the mightiness
of the pen. And thai is starting
to happen . P.eople are now
asking what they can do to
stop IRV(D.
In Carol Faranella's case, she
told me she has already started
circulating petitioris. Carol said
she went all around the bay
during the Christmas boat
parade, getting signatures from
· people who don't want extra
added ingredients in the water
during next year's parade. She's
also contacted supermarket
home offices to get permission
to set up camp at their
entrances.
This is one determined lady.
and I sus_pect there are dozens
---morellke lier out tliere. -·-
Del and Shirley Kahan c e
f red
. martin
and left the message. "What
can we do to stop this?"
"Write letters,• I urged Del,
"Lots of strong, civil, intelligent
letters to the California Region-
al Water Quality Control
Board,• (Address letters to Ger-
ard Thibeault, Executive Offi-
cer, 3737 Main St., Suite 500,
Riverside 92501-3339. Add: "cc
Regional Board" and copies wtll
be distributed to the seven
board members.)
"OK, that's fine," Del said,.
"What about if we want to go
over the board? Who's in
charge?"
"The governor, I guess."
"OK. that's fine," Del said. I
pictured him making a mental
note: "Call Pete and raise hell
about this.• .
"Where's the EPA in this
mess? U there were ~ver some
environmental protection need-
ed, this would sure be it. I don't
want their s---in our bay. I
don't care how treated it is, it's
still sew~e. • en K. Murrafis a high-
leveJ consUltiDg biologfst wbo
has been making waves about
pollution i.n Jhe back bay for
more than a decade.
Al's a quadruple threat. He's
concerned as a boater who sails
out of the harbor, as a resident
of Newport Beach, as a scientist
and, as he said when this whole
thing first came up: ·1 hate to
see the politicians screwing the
people again.•
Al has been in touc,b with Ed
Liu, a biologist and environ-
mental specialist with the Water
Quality Control Board in Sacra-
mento Before being kicked
upstairs, Liu coordinated the
remarkable clean-up of New-
port Harbor and upper bay.
Liu and Murray believe
that, "The problem is not with
the concentration of nitrate
in the effluent water, but
when you multiply it by the
volume, it comes out to some-
thing like 1000 pounds a day,
which can wreak havoc with
the algae.•
Al feels an even bigger prob-
lem could be lurking in treated
sewage water. "The ecological
types haven't even gotten
around to looking atPthe nutri-
ents in the form of carbohy~
drates, but they know it is a BIG
problem ... I would really like to
know what the carbohydrate
content of these effluents might
be. That would be a good food
source fqr both algae and bacte-
na in the bay.
"I hope we can convince
someone that these clowns are
simply gomg to screw up the
I bay,•
And so it goes. IRWD pushes
its 9!eedy, ill-conceived plan.
Off ended citizens begm fo pusb
baCk, ana Will push a lot harder
as the hearing date 1n March
draws nearer.
It's your chance to make a
dlff erence.
RIP, Guys: When I answered
the phone yesterday morning, a
man's voice said, •1 was just
checking to see if you're OK, It
has been a bad week for colum-
nists."
It was my friend Brian Carter
and I think be actually was a lit-
tle concerned. We both won-
dered if the legend that mbvie
stars die in threes applies to
newspaper columnists as well.
We hoped lt did not.
Brian knew Jack through
serving in the same Marine out-
fit on Iwo Ji.ma: he had known
Jerry through some of those
infamous Amigos Viejos out-
ings. He wanted to make sure
his other columnist friend was
doing OK. I assured him I was
strong like bull.
Curiously, I had known Jack
Smith much better than I knew
Jerry Kobrin. Jerry I met only
once, for about 30 seconds.
Jack I knew fairly well back in
.the 60s -We were good
acquaintances, I think you
could say.
Both of them will be missed.
There's yet another farewell
to bid today: To Dick Hayden,
who died last week of cancer.
Dick was a quiet, friendly guy
who was probably among the
top three or four big-boat sailors
in Newport Harbor.
It seemed Dick was always in
the money, but be never talked
about it. He will be missed, too.
Fair winds, Dick.
• FRED MAimws column runs Thufl:_
days and Saturdays.
llL~IO
We Cater Fiestas
Fashion Island -Newport Beach
SEMI-ANNUAL
Starts today, January 11 •h, 9am-9pm
COME EARL~~
,,...,.
o•r
. .
Free coffee & bagels at J.B.;s Sports Deli
~·.:=o·,.from 8:30-10:30am. r .. ~ ~-
Exhibition Cooking Our Specialtyl
• Sizzling Falito• 1or • HandmaCJe Tortillas • Strolling MariochU
714
-
fWNlde llgla Scbool mwl• 'WM Mrs' 3, Md lar eftlring
tel« ~ CIOCkett 'WM .het baille al a' I i rnrf 11111 .. IF aw.m.ct u ABCDE award . for bim..
from ==·Mela ICbool After~ .ttbe CIOUD· bomd 1-day •tor ty's Qt Claildrm'I .emce abcn9 end beyond the Home, auNnlly a. htDg
call 'qt~ fq: ~·. in & COltaMelaJomr ....... He
l!atAilda Prtndpal Peggy was on hand u board tnlifUH
Anatol nomin ated Crockett for presented blt Nummg coun-
the award lor ber dedication to .selor with the award and a gift
students and :for •her ADcere certifioete to a boobtcn.
interest in helping every stu-Many Of CrockeU's Ell&Dda
dent make tt in life.• colleagues alsO attended the
'Dustee'I and Anatol parttcu-board meeting and 9ave Croc:'k-
larly praised Crockett • for ett' a ~ ovation 4fter' the
bebiending freshman Chris Lin· award ~la.tion.
den earlier this yeer when he -By Julie .,. CM!tOCe
'i
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Garage bllrglati~ show need for precautions
•Unlocked doors and ..... ,
valuables left in dear
view are ~ targets for
thieves iii Newport Beach.
By Carc>lyli Miller, lW/ Plot
NEWPORT BEACH-Ws easy
tw htilidentl to assume a false
sense ol leCWity in this city of
palms, glamour, glitz and beach-
es.
But what peop~ t.eDd to forget
ts this attractive ~ c.an also
be an invitation for aime.
Unfortunately, residents Law:ie
and Ted Luckow learned this the
hard way. Their Harbor View
Hills neigbbolhood is safe and
residents take it upon themselves
to look out for each other, Lawie
Luckow said. Sometimes it's easy
to let your guard down and..
neglect to tum oo your house
alann, close the garage door or
lock the cars, she added.
Late Monday night was one of
those times. Sometime between 9
p.m. Monday and Tuesday mom-' ·mg. a burglar broke.into the
Luckows' garage -which they
lb.ink was unlocked -and stole
more than $800 worth of property.
Among the item5 taken were a
wallet with cash and credit cards
and a pair of designer sunglasses
left inside the couple's Ferrari that
was parked unlocked in the
garage, according to police
reports.
A racing bike and custom-
made mountain bike were also
StOlen from the g~. The rac-
ing bike was later recovered by
police down the~
The theft made the Luckows
the 11th vidims of garage tnu-
glary so far this month, according
to Newport Beach police reports.
In-line skates, bicydes, swf •
boards, golf clubs, car stereos and
cellular phones were among the
items stolen from garages in vari-
ous neighborhoa<k throughout
the city, according to the burglary
reports. Many of the garage doors
or windows were reportedly left
unlocked.
·~ dmtlly we ..._. prob-
--. It .m be quilt, lbm .. 'D
b8Ye • lpllt al ...... ~
.... ~ Beech LL Andy
GiJnil said. •Jt'a ....... ~ al •
l8CUrltr -95% ol the time reli-
denla ere going to be ()IC. bul DOW
we are bavtng a ~ 10 it's
better to be extra cau&us. •
Being cautious tndUdes taking
obvious precautions such u Jock.
ing your home, garage aDd can,
he Mid. AdditiOOaDy, do not leave
valuables in plain sight. whether
it is in your 9M9 or in a car
parked inside the garage.
Ganis also adViled residents to
call police if anything lOoks suspi-
cious. And make it a habit to look
out for fOW' neighboiS and call .
them if they forget to dose their
garage door.
•Now we don't feel as safe,•
said Laurie Luckow, who bopes
others learn from her unfortunate
experience. ·we were lucky
because we didn't have our al.mm
on in the house -but now we put
it on.•
Father implicates son in elementary school burglary ·
By C.arolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA-When a Costa Mesa father
fo und what appeared to be stolen items in his
teen-age son's bedroom. he caDed police, who
traced the property to a burglary at Killy-
brooke School earlier this week.
The man's son was one of two Costa Mesa
teen-agers-a 13-year-old and 15-year-old -
who were taken into custody by police Tues-
day in connection with the burglaxy at the ele-
mentary school over the weekend, Costa
Mesa police said
A custodian walked into a sixth grade
classroom at Killybrooke Tuesday at 6:30
a.m. and discovered burglars had slit the
classroom's window screens, then pried
the window' open, according to police
reports.
The burglats took about $478 worth of
property, including a small yellow portable
stereo, a fire extinguisher and a basketball,
police reported.
The father, whose name police would not
disclose, found in his son's room an electronic
spelling device, which was also among the
items report¢ missing by the school Costa
Mesa Capt. Tom Lazar.
Officia.ls at Killybrooke said they hadn't
been told by police whether the suspects were
fonner students, nor had the items been
returned.
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scenery, the songs and the stories of the Great Landt'
The live performance and slkk show presents the his-
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Date: Tue . Jao. 23rd • Time: 7:00 p.m.
~ Place: Nci&bbol'hood Community Center
1843 Patt Ave.• Costa Mesa
R.S.V.P. TODAY! Don't miss ON STAGE ALASKA.
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POOCHES ON PARADE
The Shoreline Dog Fanciers are sponsoring a dog show Sun-
day from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.. at Orange County Fair & Exposi-
tion Center's bulldJngs 10, 12, 14, 16 and tent 11. Ad.mlss1on
is $5 for adults, 5' for seniors and children age 6-12 and
children under 6 are free. For information. call 532-5559.
I ·•
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cl '5053.101.
.. COSTA MESA CHA.a
The Costa Mesa Cb.&mber of
Commerce welcomes Jim Warren
to it's breUfa.st meeting today
from 7:15 to 8:45 a:m. at 1he Cos-
ta Mesa Country Cub, 1701 Golf
Course Drive m Costa Mesa. War-
ren will discuss health and fitness.
Reservations are $10 or Sl5 at the
door. For more information, call
574-8780.
FRIDAY
PAOAC SYMPHONY CONaRT
Singer, songwriter and pianist
Michael Feinstein, who has per-·
formed at the White House and
Jroc:k from poop to 2:30 p.m. and
Jeff JOhDIOn ~ys CLuaic rode
from 7 to .10 pm. today at ntangle
Square. The concerts are free.
MONEY TREE
•arowmg The Money 1\"ee;" 11
free busin a · lance work-
shop, will be held today from 7:30
to 9 a.m. at Ne'WJ>_ol:t Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce, 14 70
Jamboree Road in Newp<?rt
Beach. Three eJq>ert banking pre-
senters will give loan and fip.ance
information. Reservations are
requested. Call 476-3223 for more
information.
Carnegie Hall witt join the Pacific CPR QASS
Symphony Orchestra for two con-Fitness Concepts will bold a
certs t'onigbt and Saturday at 8 commwuty CPR class today from
p.m. at Orange County Perform-8 a.m to noon and'agam on Feb
• mg Arts Center. Tickets range 3 at Grace Hoag Conference Ceo,
from $22 to $55. For more infor-ter, Hoag Hospltal, 301 Newport
mation, call 755-5799. Blvd. in Newport beach The cost
SOCaR CLASSES is $25 and reservations are
1Wo new eight-week soccer reqwred For more information,
classes are being offered by New-call 631-3623
port Beach Community Services YOGA DEMONSTRATION
Department: Both will -meet at The Yoga Place of Costa Mesa
Boruta Creek Community Center will hold a Teacher Demonstra-
on Friday mornings beginning tion Night from 6 to 9:30 p.m.
today. *Goal For It-Kid's Soccer" tonight featuring presentations by
is from 11:15 a.m. to noon and is some of the top yoga teachers in
for 3 112-year-olds to 5 years of the country. The cost is $8 and
age. H"Goal For It-Women's Soc-includes food and beverage. Yoga
cer" is from 9:30 to 11 a.m. For Place is at 1835 Newport Blvd.,
more information, call 644-3151. Bldg. A in the Costa Mesa Court-
ARCTIC ADVENTURE yards. For more information, call
Orange Coast College's Sailing 642-7400.
Adventure Series kicks off its WALKING TOUR
four-part series today at 8 p .m. m Friends of Wewport bay will
the Robert B Moore Theatre. sponsor a free walking tour of
• •
THURSDAY, ~ARY 11, t"5 AS
integral rOle in such cartoons MS and ~ pn15t fur·
Bugs lBW1ny and The Lone niih their own te<:Qrder ..... more
Ranger Will be the theme of intonnauon, caJ1 432-5880.
•(l_).argel, •the Pacific Symphony APft.E COMPUTER aUI
Orc:bestra's COIK'ert for children Qwuk will ~nt its lateSt
~iourto'1S18nd th~ famili . ta:tmologies1rt1be-()nspge&>un·..--......
lbe concerts WUl take place today ty Computer Groupi. me ting
at 10 a..m. and 11:30 p.m. at the today from 8;45 a ·m. to noon at
Orange County Perfonrung Arts the Ch nustry Building on th
Center m Cost.a Mesa. nckets arr. campus of Orange Coast Colleg
$11 for adults and $9 for children. F&rvlew Road in Costa M .
For information, call 755-5799. The mc;tJ.ng is froo and o~n to
'STARS OF MAGIC' the public. Call 836-0522.
"Producer and award·wmning TRIANGLE 'SQUARE CO'NCERT
magician Dale Salwak returns to 'lhangle Square pre ents Jeff
Orange Coast College today with Johnson perlormmg classic rock
two showings of an all-new, full-tunes noon to 2:30 p.m. and Motif
stage production of the 'StMs of plays a mixture of folk/classic
Magic.• Showtimes are 4 and 8 from 7 to 10 p m.
p.m. in OCC's Robert B. Moore INCOME TAX WORKSHOP
Theatre. Advanced tickets are A free workshop designed to
$15 for adults and $8 for children. eqwp volunteers to provide free
For information, call 432-5880. mcome tax assistance to low
RECORDER WORKSHOP mcome, elderly, non-English
Orange Coast College is offer-1 speak.mg and handicapped per-
in9 a sev~n-week recorder work-sons will be held today, Jan. 20.
shop for all skill levels beg1nning 27 and Feb. 3 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m
today through Mar. 2 from 9 a .m Interested partles need only
to noon in Room 108 of OCC's attend one session For more
Music Building. Registration fee information, call 643-4060
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TODAY overview of football basics and 1 "Distant Drums -High Arctic Back Bay on Saturday, Jan 13
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CONSUMER HEALTHCARE Jan. 18 at the Oasis Senior Center ences of Alvah and Diana Simon's a.m. Tours will start at the comer
·A Consumer Perspective On m Corona del Mar just in time for 12-month escapade on arctic ice of East Bluff Road and Back Bay
Navtgating The New Healthcare I the Su~ Bo~l. Registration is Tickets may ~ purchased s.ingly Road Small groups will leave
visit our web sire at http: w~1,:a11awan>.com
System" will be presented today $33. Register 10 person at the 6r for the senes. For more inf or-every 10 minutes or so and take /!? Anawan Software, lnc.
at 7:30 am by The Newport Newport Beach Community Ser~ I mation, call 432-5880. . approXlDlately an hour and a 1/2. 1300 Bristol Nortk, Suite no 800.711.8030 Foun9ation al BaJboa Bdy Club, 1 VIces Department, 3300 Newport~ TRIANGLE SQUARE CONaRTS I CHARGE! _ --~==--"-Newport Badl, CA"660 -----mysr~m; t2Zt West Pattfic--+ Bl• .. '6-.~pllene -at-044-3~.fei ~~ .pe~ · ~m~~ lfict-~~\iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,_ __
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.--~illlO includes breakfdst Ear nµire -.-----~'-:-'~~---"'.:--:----__;:......:;==------------=:.~~-------...-.;:.....;:.:..:;:::_:_......_ ___ ___,_~~~r.•••••••••••••• .. information, call &75-3228
DIVORCE REALITIES
"Financial and Legal Realities
of Divorce· is the title of a free
evening program planned for 7
p.m. tonight in the Friends Meet-
ing Room of the Centrdl Llbra.ry,
1000 Avocado Ave m Newport
Beach. For more mJonndt.lon, call
717-3801
FOOTBALL CLASS
"Women's Intro to Football,· a
two-session class covering an
Opening up
communication
goal of business
Wilham A Furlow, former
marketing director of the Costa
Mesa-based T1mes 0 1 ange
County, has
recently
opened Furlow
Corporate
Communica-
bons in Irvine
. Furlow said
be will concen-
trate on cris.15
communicd-
tions and
teaching exec-
utives to deal Wllllam Furlow
with the news
media. He dho will wnte speet"h-
es and work with speakers.
"I want to help busmess own-
ers and executives commurucate
pieir most unportant messages to
their most unporta.nt conslltuen-pes, • he silld. "Through crisis
communications and media train-
).ng, I can help companies tum
communications challenges into
opportunities to enhance their
images."
• Before leaving the Los Arlge-h?s Times last year;· Furlow, 47,
bad spent 25 years m the neW$·
paper busi.ness He was a
reporter and editor for 17 years
and a marketing executive for the
~t eight years. ·
•1n my career, I have been the
~on asking the tough ques-
).ions and the one answering
them," Furlow aid "So 1 am
~ell-suited to help companies
J>r~pare for and get through clilfi-
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• ..
Erickson sides with Newport in toll dispute
• He votes in favor of a ton road b~ss, although
that puts the city ~t odds
with the city of Irvine.
By Tina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Mayor Joe
Erickson says while he stands
behind a decision to construct a
San Joaquin Hills toll road
bypass, he hopes the dty of New-
port Beach may one day be able
to return the favor. ,
He noted Costa Mesa's oppo-
sition to proposed bridges on 19th
Street 4nd Gisler Avenues is
equal to Newport's need for the
bypass, something the dty of
Irvine vehemently opposes.
Erickson, on the city's behalf,
voted in favor or the bypass during
a recent meeting with Orange
Cowity Supervisor Marian Berge-
son and city officials from Santa Ana
and Newport Beach. But that sup-
port didn't set well with the hvine
Conservancy, an environmental".
group that is fighting the bypass.
PROTEST
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Manager Kevin Murphy. "We
need to get that bypass built.•
Murphy attended a meeting
Tuesday at which the Irvine City
CounaJ refused to transfer the city's
portion of the road to the county of
Orange. Irvine is also looking to
avoid paying any share of the pro-
ject's $10 million pnce lag. -·
The group's
p re11d·e .n t ,
~ Gat-
laghier, on Mm--
day asked the
c:oundl tC> reoM•
sider its pcismon.
suggesting they
didn't have a full
understanding
of the bnpact e bypass Joe Erick.ton
would have on
the city ol Irvine.
On Wednesday, Erick:Son said
he feels he made an informed
decision that protects the interests
of the region ·as a whole.
•Newport Beach and Cotona
del Mar residents really need a
bypass for the toll road." Erickson
said. "The-ideal, of course, would
be to have no toll road along
Ne\vport Coast Drive. But, from
wtiat I've been told, that is unlike-
ly at this point.•
When it's finished, the toll road
will link the Santa Ana Freeway
in San Juan Capistrano to the
Corona del Mar Freeway. But, it
will swallow up a section of New-
port Coast Drive, which was built
hardly surprising, Murphy said.
"City muncils have a diffia.tlt
time dealing with tlueats," Murphy
said "rm still confident that once
everybody has gone through all the
issues, this project will still be built"
Irvine officials say the bypass
would in no way benefit their citi-
'ZellS. In fact, residents of Irvine's
Turtle Rock and University Hills
communities have complained the
road extension would increase their
area's noise and traffic. The city has
agreed to let the project proceed.
but refuses to contribute funding or
-Oelp-with-if&.(»~.
to t.lla IOIDe al the treftic off of
Bait Cout Highway .•
Nna>ortr-Beech oftldaJraie
cancan8d that if a bypul lin't
CODICnaded. But Cout Highway
will~ to look~ like a park-
ing lot than a major thoroughfare.
And Erickson Mid he sympa-
thizes with IUS neighbor. • r know ther' is lOngstanding
opposition to the San Joaquin
Hills Corridor, and I understand
that opposition." Erickson said.
"But, if there is going to be a
toll road, I don't want to see the
residents of Newport Beach
impacted, just as l would hope
the city of Newport Beac;h would
understand what the city of Cos-
ta Mesa would be facing if the
county ever moves ahead with
plans for the 19th Street and
Gisler Avenue bridges.•
Costa Mesa for years has been
negotiating with the county ·to
drop the bridges from its master
plan of highways, saying the
increased traffic would overbur-
den dty streets. The bridges
would link Costa Mesa with Hunt-
ington Beach at 1 ~ Street and
Fountain Valley at Gisler Avenue.
Newport Beach and Irvine would
like to see the Coast Drive toll
booth removed, O'Neil said.
•But we're diametrically
opposed in our feelings about the
extension of Neviport Coast Dri-
ve,• O'Neil said
Costa Mesa attorney Jim
Toledano has filed a lawsuit
against the Thmsportation Corridor
Agencies cballenging, among oth-
er thin~. the TCA's right to charge
motorists to use a public road. If
that lawsuit proves to be success-
tul, there would be no need for the
-bypass. dto/~ Aid,. -
Toledano said any threats
against withholding a city's Mea-
WATER
CONTINUED FROM A1
ed-it .... been piiplttedfor·~-
decedel You c.n't twtm in it. You
can't ftlh in it. And you l\D'e as
heCk can't dJtQt It.
Now Chk lm't to say that the Bic:lr.
Bay lrJ aDvttma lea tblln a ptzed
jewel aS a .wiklile habit.at and a nue
~ ot undeveloped spleador. And
believe me, when the &Wl's go6og I
down and the watet' tu.ms gold, the
p&aooi9~.
But it's polluted. And there's no
way around that.
And as much as anything else,
ifs that fact whid\ bas added an
interesting sowidtrack to the
lrvtne Ranch Water District plan to ·
dump up to 5 million gallons of
treated sewage a day into the Back
Ba)"s many tnbutanes.
Pmpments ot the plao. like
water district Jft.Sident Peer Swan.
believe the redaimed water not <Illy
won't hurt the delicate ecosystem
but might 8dUally improve it He
a1so contends the treated water will
rut down an the annual algae
blooms that tum the bay and New-
port Harbor into graen swamplands
dw:ing the warm months.
Of course, it's worth noting the
pJan would save the water district
about $20 million, money it now
spends piping its water to the sani-
tation district.
Opponents of the pJan. and
there seems to be no shortage of
them in Newport
Beach, are suspect. How can
dumping treated sewage into an
ecological reserve be a good thing?
How c.an pouring millions of gal-
1amo1armt~~ ~ W-.'*>• ...... ol ................. beOOod '°' lb8 bllllMf 1be~~lkaJGb,--1obetw ..... CID.,.,.... ...............
I mMn. ...-)W ~ -ldlll"'-lltilB-
by the .:ore Mying the .......
19Wageil*nply~ You
could drink ........ 1-v~
Botde tt up and pul tt Iii# oat to
the fMall. ]l's practiclly d>ampagne.
Newport f'l'llklents, ot coune,
have seen their fair share cl Iden·
tists come roam.mg thri>ugh the
area.~ the vutu. ot tbingl
that might seem~· Abport
~1 J~ wail. il1l dOUbJe your quality oC life. Those bttle tiny
bugs in your drinking water? Hey.
get over tt. They're more afraid cl
you than you are ol them.
The di.mict's rush to talk up the
near-pristine quality oC 1t$ redabned
water bas left some suspicious.
But ii you put aside the scien-
tific studies, the promises that this
water will not worsen the already
fragile Back Bay and even disre-
gard the rising concern that this
whole issue will become a prece·
dent-setting debate on the merits
of reclaimed water, you are left
with one tiny detail.
Newport Beach does not want
the water dumped in its backyard.
Period.
Residents have said It The New-
port Beach Qty Council has said ll
Yet the Irvine Ranch Water District
pushes on
Newport Beach said no. That
sbou1d be good enough.
• STEVE MARBLE is the managing
editor.
k:81 gaaJen," SJdnUer laid. •1
can't think ol any other reeson
why they'd do this.•
Water district adnilnistrati>rs say
that they have been looking to pur-
chase a ~ pmtion ol the marsh
smoe tbe early 1980s. 1be pur-
chase and the sewage <bscharge -
which the district bas labeled the
"Wetlands·Water Supply Project" -
are not connected; said water dis-
trlct Chairman Peer Swan.
Despite considerable oppos1-
tion frotn Newport Beach resi-
dents and environmentalists,
water district administrators say
their proposal will improve and
not harm the quality of the water
in Newport Bay. The project is
awaiting final approval from the
state Regional Water Quality
Control Board in March.
As a companion prQject, the
water district is also proposing to
take water out of the San Diego
Creek during the sl!mmer
months, a plan which they claim
would remove a substantial
amount of nitrates from the bay.
The city of Newport Beach has
formally opposed the discharge
proposal and environmentalists
vow to take the issue to court if
the state boafd grants a discharge
permit.
Residents are concerned the
added nutrients from the treated
sewage will cause an algae
bloom, threaten saltwater habi·
tats and pose health risks to peo-
pl~ who swim in the bay.
.. 1111111111111111111111 COUPON 111111111111111111111 ~
By refusing to declar~ th~ roads
munty tenitePf -a~
would allow the county to begin
cons1ruction -the Irvine council
may jeopardize up to $4 million in
Measure M trans rtation funds.
-nie Orange-ounty ~rta
tion Authority has threatened to
cut off Irvine's Measure M funds if
tlie city does not cooperate.
Murphy says even without city
of Irvine funding, the county has
nearly enough money to fund the
first and second _phases of the
roa ypass.
sure M funds are illegal. He also •
found it unusucti that a city would
operily defy the ceun{y. ----=--~~~~~~~~~~-w I any purchase of $25 or more •
· Facing that type of pressure, the
decision by the Irvine council was
Newport Beach Councilman
Dennis O'Neil, whose district
includes Corona del Mar. says he
is baffled by Irvine's decision to
jeopardize its Measure M money.
"It's an interesting thing for a
city council to tell the county, 'No,
you can't have your way,'"
Toledano 5aid. •1 hope that's a
portent of things to come."
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.~ THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1996 A 7
t ~ • .\a
.... , ~ -... ... -
Kobrin .had a gift fo.r reveaJing htµnanity's foibles and ironies
' [-earn to dance on· your
own table top,• wrote
author Anais Nin
. responding to some young
·man lamentlng on bis inabUi·
ty to travel the world in
search of excitement. ·
Life is just as thrilling, just
as rewarding in Costa Mesa
as it is in Costa Magnifica,
wherever that is. Or at least it
can be. It's up to each of us to
make the most of every day.
Reaffirming the sanctity
and mystery of life each day,
we pause this week to
remember the spirit of colum-
nist and raconteur Jerry
Kobrin. Although we worked
the same beat for the past
several years, I never got the
chance to know the man of
intellect, wit, and individual
voice that passed on Tuesday.
One year ago, the gentle-
man with the ever curious eye
and the big cigar sat in the
lounge of his pal John Cre-
an's. home. It was Super Bowl
Sunday, and the Creans were
throwing an annual open
house benefiting charity on
the day of the big game.
Kobrin was offering his own
philosophy to a couple of
strangers sbafing the big
screen.
b.w.
cook
•Never get on a plane if a
major celebrity happens to
board ahead of you," he
mused.
"Why not?" questioned the
amazed and delighted
strangers.
"Uthe plane goes down,
the headlines will read, so
and so lost in downing of
flight XYZ ... You'll be lucky
to get mention on the back
p age; n Kobrin said.
The front page of the
Wednesday edition of The Los
Angeles Times mourned .the
passing of columnist Jack
Smith. The passing of Kobrin
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• WITH "'llCHAK M IOTII 'A8111C a I.MOii
was on the back page of The
Orange County Section. No
doubt Kobnn is somewhere
smiling at the irony.
Revealing the foibles and
ironies of humanity was one
of his gifts. It was a talent he
•hared with many ~ople
throughout his lifetime, each
and every day.
Kicking off the new year
last week I asked readers to
share wilh me their t:oncems
pertaining to today's society.
Frankly, I had no idea what to
expect. In the spirit of making
a difference, tellirig the truth,
avoiding political correctness
for the sake of the betterment
of society, I inaugurate this
reader driven column of social
conscience in memory of Jerry
Kobrin.
Dear B.W.:
Maybe I'm just jealous that
I can't go to all the big par-
ties, but sometimes I wonder
just how much all the folks
that get their pictures in the
p aper really care about the
cause they are supporting. I'm
afraid that while the emperor
wears his new clothes, the
people are slipping further
into the abyss.
Su san M. Brigham, Costa
Mesa
Dear Susan:
There are plenty of people
who just want their mug in
black in white. It's good for
business, and it's an ego boost
amongst their peers in the
community. It's also human
nature to seek recognition tor
a good deed. It feels good to
have a pat on the back. But
rest assured that you live in a
community where many peo-
ple are very serious about
their purpose. Their cause is a
life commitment, a passion
that is all consuming. Many
have made a personal pledge
to do something, give some-
thing back, as a result of a
personal involvement such as
the loss of a loved one to a
disease. In our world, the
social gathering is the avenue
toward social and cultural
involvement. If you need
funds to support a cause,
throw an event. It's really sim-
ple, give something to get
something in return. As gov-
ernment funding shrinks, your
fellow citizens with their pic-
ture in the paper will be
called upon to make a real
difference in everything from
medical research to hearing
the sound of the
symphony.There are many
changes ahead. Here's a li t
Of a few people in the paper
often who are super passion-
ate about their cause.
Peggy Goldwater
Clay .... UCI Brain Imaging
Center
Gloria Osbrlnk .... The
House Ear Institute
Patty Edwatds ... Childhelp
USA
Donna Crean ... The Chil-
drens Bureau
Marle France Lefevre ... The
Assistance League ,
Ricl:lar
tal
Jerrel aJcllards •.. Orange
County Protocol ~
Mark Johmon ... The Per-
forming Arts Center
The list could go on for
pages. And that's a good
thing.
To write B.W. address your
letter to B.W. Cook, c/o The
Daily Pilot 330 West Bay
Street, Costa Mesa, Calif
.92627.
• a.w. COOK's column runs Thurs-
d1ys 1nd Saturdays.
KIIS,, PM IR1 -B' RC6IN5Cl\lS. MA y AM 1• ., Cl W\'
1996 COSTA MESA
MAN.& WOMAN OF THE YEAR
.. • .. -i....>. <!If!~ ~
Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce and the Daily Pilot are pleasect to announce the t996
Costa Mesa Man and Woman of the Year Award Luncheon. Application forms are now being
accepted by the Chamber. To be selected, candidates must meet the following criteria:
• Live and/or wO(k In Costa Mesa
• Involvement In various professional, civic and charitable organizations for a considerable length of trme
• Demonstrate leadership In the community
• Well-known in the community
• variety and merit of volunteer (not pald)
• Services contributed to the community
• Contributed to the bettemient and growth of the community.
Please submit all applications no later than 5 p.m., Jan. 29, 1996 to the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce, 1835 Newport
Blvd.; Suite E-270, Costa MeSa, 92627; Attn:,chalrman 1996 Man and Woman of the Year
__ _._ __ ..;._;._..._._ __ ...._ __ ~_...-... __ ~_.__._~~---City·~..;._--..,..........,_... ____ ~.__--~--_._--1......._..__
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• THURSDAY. JAMJNN 11, 1•
weekend
SCR's 'Ballad _ofYachiyo' -
strikes ·a universal chord
By Cynthia Takano,
Special to the Daily Pilot
M ore than a dozen years
would fly by between
the time playwright
Philip Kan Gotanda would hear
his aunt's call from a long forgot-
ten past until the time he would
bring her tragic story to life
onstage.
He would spend those years •
traveling back in time, ·talking to
the few relatives still living who
could share what little they
remembered of the early years of
the century on the Hawaiian
Island of Kauai; studying record-
ed oral histories; talking to pro-
fessors and painstakingly rewrit-
ing the play over and over again
to shape it into the "Ballad of
Yachiyo,· which opens Friday on
South Coast Repertory's Main-
stage.
"It's not unusual for me to
work on a play and think about
an idea for years,. Gotanda said. LEAH HOGSTEN/OAl.Y PILOT
"It was only about a year ago that 'Ballad of Yachiyo' playwright. Philip Kan Gotanda (left, at a
I flnally was able to write the recent rehearsal), tells his family's nearly forgotten story of his draft that became the play we're doing now, that I was able to find aunt. Yachiyo, played by Sala lwamatsu (right) it the play's
Yachiyo's character, find her voice world premier opening Friday at South Coast Repertory.
andhn.d the story_• -· _ -- ----· • Gotanda, 44, learned of his with history in his tale of a young
father's long-dead elder sister woman's sexual awakening and
while tracing his family tree. an ill-fated artist's passion bound
Although his father did not warit up in a culture that protects its
ro recall the ramnroagetty, ---hF>n4'ifH9.H<ig-<:"ivilizetion someti:mes-
Gotanda was able to piece at the expense of its individuals.
together a few details by talking "Most of his plays deal with
to other relatives in Kauai, where Japanese-American culture from
he also turned up the only the '50s on," she said. "So, in
remaining photo of his aunt. looking at the beginning of the
It was 1919, when workers culture, he's been able to use
imported from Japan to serve as more of a Japanese flavor than in
cheap labor on the sugar plarita-his other writing." •
tions lived in crushing poverty, The Guggenbeun Award-win-
and labor strife rended the islarid Ding playwright's previous plays
paradise. Seeking to spare their include "Yankee Dawg You Die,·
16-year-old daughter the hard-"A Song for a Nisei Fishennan"
ships of plantation life, her family and "The Wash,• which has been
sent her to live with friends in performed in New York and Los
Wairnea, where she could receive Angeles and aired as part of the
a more refined education. "American Playhouse" television
But Yachiyo fell in love with a series. An independent filmmak-
manied man, became pregnant er, his latest short film, •Drink.mg
and, unable to live with the Tea," will follow his earlier "The
shame it would surely bring to Kiss" to the Sundance Film Festi-
her family, threw herself into the val m Utah later this month.
sea. Although his Japanese-Ameri-
An early draft of Gotanda's fie-can-Ulemed play fits in with
tional retelling of her story was South Coast's goals for cultural
read several years ago in a South diversity, it was commissioned
Coast Repertory workshop, he nine years ago, long before any
said, but he wasn't happy with it. formal programs were launched.
"The main problem was trying John Glore, literary manager for
to do a story from the perspective South Coast Repertory and dra-
of a 16-year-old female on the maturge for the "Ballad of
island of Kauai in 1919," said Yachiyo,• was instrumental m
Gotanda, who grew up in Stock-bringing Gotanda aboard.
ton and lives in the bay area. ·1 "Reaching out to the Asian
couldn't find what I felt was ari A.rnericari audience has been a
authentic voice and authentic concern for a long tune, but I
way to tell the story that felt good have to say that when we estab-
and real to me, and until then, I hshed our contact with Philip, ttie
JUSt kept putting 1t aside." pressure to have a more mulbcul-
Yet he continued his research, tural focus didn't exist yet m the
returrung to Kauai, reading books culture,• Glore said
and talking to people. "What was on our rrunds was
"I'm a great believer that you that here was a good'wnter, and
Just sort of feed your head with we warited to be associated With
information and trust yourself to him and get some of tus work on
be inspired by all the stuff you our stage. But over the rune years
put inside you, and it will gel and the project has been gomg on, we
come out a coherent story." have been more and more
It was prodding from director focused on diversifying ourselves
Sharon Ott, who has directed culturally, so it is serendipity that
several of Gotanda's plays, that we're able to bring this project to
got the project back on track. , fruition, and we hope we'll be
And, as artistic director of the able to attract Asian Americans
Berkeley Repertory Theatre, she in our local community to come
steered the two theaters into co-
produdng the world premiere of
the long-delayed play.
The play was well-received by
audiences and critics alike at
Berkeley late last year, Ott said,
yet it represents a new direction
for South Coast Repertory.
•We hope it's something they
can build on in future years,• she
said.
•This is a very accessible play
for audiences of any culture. It is
a universal story that anyone can
, respond to. It's a ballad, a sad
love story, like 'Romeo and Juli-
et.'"
Ott said the work is also some-
thing of a departure for Gotanda,
• who interweaves images ol
Japanese puppetry and pottery
CAFE ·~LE.·
BRLUfAST • LUNCH
~-------------------------,
F. Y.I. I
' I I I
I I + WHA'r. 'Ballad of Yachiyo' + WllERE: South-Coast-
Repertory, ~55 Town Center
Drive, Cdsta Mesa.
-+-
+ WHEN: Opens Friday. 8
p.m Tuesday-Friday, 2:30 and
8 p.m. Saturday, 2:30 and
7:30 p.m. Sunday. + HOW MUPt: $28-$38.
"Pay What You Will• mati-
nee Sunday; suggested mini-
mum per ticket is $5, subject
to availability.
' I I I
I
I I
I
I
I I
I
I
I I
I I I
I
I I
I +MORE INFO: 957-4033 . I
• I L-------------------------~ see it.·
The production is being sup-
ported by grants totaling about
$100,000 to the two theaters from
AT&T:OnStage. It was among
only eight plays selected for the
grant from a field of 53 applicarits
from the around the world, said
Suzanne M. Sato, vice president
of arts and culture for the AT&T
foundation.
"It was quite a competitive
group of scripts, and they're vast-
ly cWferent from each other It is
an amazing group of wrtters
rangmg widely in age arid expe-
rience," Sato said
"The AT&T Foundation is
mterested m innovation and the
creative imagination,• she said
"We're excited South Coast is
produang the worR.. We're
thnlled to be part of the partner-
ship that brings 'Ballad of
Yachiyo' to the public. It's a won-
derful play, and we're very proud
to be associated with it."
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udthe
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1 MICHAEL FEINSTEIN:
1be singer, songwriter and
pia.nb,t will join the Pacific
S~5*ony Orchestra 8 p.m
Friday and Saturday at the
Orange County Performing
l\rts Center in Costa Mesa.
2Cl.ASSICAL CARTOON:
The music that has played·
an integral role in such
cartoons as Bugs Bunny and
The Lone Ranger Will be the
theme of "Charge I,• the Pacific
Symphony Orchestra's conceit
for children ages 4 to 13 and
their families.lo am. and 11:;30
a.m. Saturday at the Perf om\-
ing Arts Center.
3APPl.AUDING
GERSHWIN: The Great
American Music Company
pays tribute to oomposer George
Gershwin at Orange Coast Col-
lege at 4 p.m. on Sunday in the
Robert B. Moore Theatre.
4A CAPALLA: The Cornell
University Glee Cub, one
of the few remaining
male-voiced. a capella wliver-
sity singing groups in the
wornt. will1>e performing at 7
p.m. Tuesday at Mariners
Church. 1000 Bison in Newport
Beach.Suggested donation is
$10. Call 553-0808.
5'STARS OF MAGIC':
Magiaan Dale Salwa.k
returns to Orange Coast
College on Saturday with two
-showtng of the an:ne~roauc
tion of 'Stars of Magic." Show
times are 4 and 8 p.m. in OCC's
Robert B. Moore Theatre.
6'BALIAD OF YACHIYO':
Playwright Philip Kan
Gotanda's story of a young
girl who leaves her Hawaiian
island borne for a better life
and becomes entangled in an
artist and his wile's struggles.
The show opens Friday at
South Coast Repertory and
runs through Feb. 11.
7-0NE-ACT PlAYS: The
Back.Lot Repertoire will
present.a series of Lanford
Wilson one-act plays at The
Theatre District. The show
opens Saturday and runs
through Jan. 28. Show times:
Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m.,
Sunday at 7 p .m. Tickets: $10.
BONE-MAN SHOW: Song-
writer-pertonner, Mark
1\lmbull, present his new
one-man show at Ne~rt
Theatre Arts Center, for live
performances. Show times: 8
p .m . Friday and Saturday; 8
p.m. Jan. 19-20 and 11 matinee
at 2 p.m. Jan. 21.
90RafESTRA CONCERT.
Pacific Symphooy Orchestra presents, Marin Alsop, ooe
d tbe :wodd's leading female coo-
dudors and directi:r d the Col-
OO!ldo symphooy, in her Pacific
Sylnphooy debut 8 p.m. tonight
at Orange Cotmty Perloiming
Arts Center in Costa Mesa.
1 0 KID'S HOUR: In cele-
bration of Martin
Luther King's birth-
day, the 1 p.m. Sunday kid's
hour at Barnes & Hoble will
have stories and activities to
INm about this great man. 953
Newport Center Drive.
,
Bruce Schwartz's puppets have a
starring r-0le in 'Balla$! of Yachiyo'
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
W here he once traveled
the world with a
trunk-full of hand-
made marionettes, Bruce
Schwartz now says he ,"picks
and chooses" his puppet pro-
jects.
"l don't often accept pro-
1ects and I don't depend on
this type of work to make a
living," Schwartz said by
phone from his Los Angeles
home. "It bas to be really
interesting to
hand-sewn costumes.
And they are not easy to
manipulate. Three separate
"koken" -oq-stage handlers
dressed in black -are needed
to operate the male figure's
head, body and legs. Schwartz
trained the koken who
worked the production in
Berkeley and he will train
new crew members who are
on board for the Costa Mesa
portion of the run
•There are no mechanisms,
strings, levers or rods,"
Schwartz said "To manipulate
them in space,
me."
In fact, the
two liie-size
figures
designed by
Schwartz for
"The Ballad
of Yachiyo"
are more like
jointed dolls
l(The play is so
visually stunning. I 'm
honored to be part of
the koken have
to have a lot of
skill and a lot
of strength."
Schwartz,
who saw the
production in
Berkeley, says
he is pleased
•t II l •..
-BRUCE SCHWARTZ
than traditional bunraku
Japanese puppets. In the pro-
duction, which open s this
weekend at South Coast
Repertory, the puppets are
used both as dolls and m a
series of dream sequences to
parallel the action of the play
Although he is fascinated
by the art of Japanese puppet
theater -which he studied
while on a 1981 fellowship
exchange to Japan--it was
the more personal relationship
between doll and doll owner
which attracted Schwartz to
th~ ~eet.
"A puppeteer moves the
puppet for the audience," said
Schwartz, 40. "But the rela-
tionshiP. b etween doll and doll
owner is much more personal.
It's more like play than perfor-
mance and that's what the
playwright (Philip Kan Gotan-
da) wanted to get across."
Schwartz's interest in man-
onettes began when be per-
fo rmed at birthday parties at
the age of 9. In the early
191'>'s, he started performing
at Renaissance pleasure
faires. Eventually. he devel-
oped a one-man sh,ow, "The
Stage that Walks," which
toured all over the world.
Schwartz has been a guest
puppeteer on "The Muppet
Show" and has had his work
exhibited at the Mu~eum of
Contemporary Art in Los
Angeles. He also designed
and manipulated a puppet
cutout figure of actress Irene
Jacob for the film "The Dou-
ble Life of Veronique.•
It took Schwartz more than
four months to design and
build the two "Yachiyo· pup-
pets. The plastic-cast figures
are both 4 feet tall with a lac-
quer finish and human hair
wigs. They are dressed in
both with his
handiwork and with the way
the productionnas turned out.
It is not often·, he says, that a
collaborative effort proves to
be so satisfying.
"I'm usually disappointed,
but this is one collaboration
where I'm really not,"
Schwartz said . "The play is so
visually stunning I'm honored
to be part of it •
His arran9~rn~nt with .SCR
and Berkeley Repertory enti-
tles the theaters to rent the
Yachiyo figures, as well as
sets and costumes, to other
the-ate1s who produce "The
Ballad of Yachiyo." After five
years, the agreement runs out
and the two puppets return to
Schwartz's collection,
although the puppeteer says
he is happy that they are get-
ting extubitlon.
"I don't perform that much
a nymore," he said "It's nice
to think that some of the work
I do is out there A puppet
packed away ma basement
trunk doesn't do an'y body any
good "
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\\ th 1 hoc c· 1•11 fll'c1'1.ll I·~ t; or '\lllrrh ,io 1 h1·1.•:-;<• ,
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QAYft.AY ~~~~~~f~Ne~~wpOl~~d;;·tfal'bm Alt ,.. ....
ADULT Mr ClASSES • cflers tour ,~ ol m.y idlY·
1b'e Newp;irt HarbOr Art MUl8Ulll llM9 far C!ildam ege16 tD 12 JM111
will ofter a •c1ay for eauns· dMi. beginnmg ·~. The dlalii
a •drawing, painting and pbiotog-JNOl .be weekly bom 3:30 to 5 p.m..
rapby• class and an :tntermectiate The OOlt IS 5'5 with • SS material
watercolor• daa beginntng Satur-fee due at tbtLlllt dul. for more
day. Information: 75~1122. lnformaUon,.M6il.:.3151.
SHOWCASE GALLERY
Genevieve Bennetfl oil pain!lngs
will be displayed during the
month of January. Admission is
free. Hours: Wednesday and
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday
and Saturday, 10 a.m. to1l:30 p.m.
.and Sunday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Infor-
Q)Ation: 540-6430. 1631 SUnflower
in the South Coast Plaza Village.
JAZZ WORKSHOPS
Orange Coast College's Dance
Depirtment will host a three-day
workshop on jazz. The workshop
will meet Tuesday through Thurs-
day from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Jan.
16-18. Participants should have
intermediate-level dance skills in
ballet or jazz. The fee is $25 in
advance for each workshop or $30
at the door .. lnformation: 432-5506.
KID'S STUFF
YOUTHFUL ETIQUETTE
•Etiquette for the Younger Set" is
the title of a new class for six to
nine-year-olds at Costa Mesa's
Pacific School of Music and the
Arts. Class 7154.101 will meet
from 10 to 11 a.m. on Saturdays
beginning this weekend. The reg-
istration fee is $65. Information;
644-3151.
KID'S HOUR
in celebration-of ~*
King's birthday, the kid's hour ·
have stories and activities to learn
about this great man, 1 p.m. Sun-
day Kid's ..Hmlri at Barnes &
Noble, 953 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. Call 759~r
more information.
STORY AND CRAFT HOUR
Every Sunday, Barnes & Noble
holds a tun-filled craft and story
hour for children of all ages.
Refreshments will be served.
Barnes & Noble is located at 1870
Harbor Blvd, lttangle Square µi
Costa Mesa. For more information,
call 631-0614.
MOMMY AND ME
Explore the wonders of art with
your child through hands-on activ-
ities at the Newport Harbor Art
Museum. The first session will run
Wednesday through Feb. 7 and
the second sessj,on will run Mar. 6
through Mar. 27. The class is for
children age 2 and 1/2 to 5 years 0 and will be held Wednesdays from
2 to 3p.m. The cost is $36 plus a $5
material fee payable at the first
class. Information: 644-3151.
•
ltOUND TAILE WEST
lbe Round Thble West will meet
today at noon for its luncheon pro-
gram. Special guests will include:
Nina Blanchard, author of •The
Look,• a steamy, no-holds-barfed
novel of the modeling industty;
Fred Basten, •Max Factor's Holly-
wood"; Ray Sahelian, M.D.,
•Melatonin -Nature's Sleeping
Pill•; and MAy Wale Brown, •Reel
Life on Hollywood Movie Sets.•
Advace reservations are required.
nckets: $35. Reserved seating for
tables of 8 or 10. Information: 256-
7977.
BARNES & N08LEITRIANGLE
SQUARE
Prom 1 to 9 p.m. Friday Doreen
Vutue, Ph.D., author of "Losing
Your Pounds of Pain: Brea.king the
Link Between Abuse, Stress and
Overeating• will make an appear-
ance. 1870 Harbor mvd., Costa
Mesa, 631-0614.
BARNES & NOBLE/NEWPORT
Barnes & Noble Poetry Group will
meet at 7 p.m. on Wednesday with
selected poems of a New Vear
nature. An open mike session fol-
lows. 953 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach, 159-0982.
MUSIC
OROfESTRA CONCERT
a c _ p ony--0-rclfestra 15re-
sents, Marin Alsop, one of the
world's leading female conductors
and director of the' Colorado Sym-
phoay,-in her Pacific Symf>hon¥
debut tonight The concert will
begin at 8 p.m., with a concert pre-
view at 7 p.m. at Orange County
Performing Arts Center in Costa
Mesa. Tickets range from $15 to
$43. Information: 755-5799.
GALAXY THEATER
Tonight, it's an evening of Magic
and Comedy with magician Eran
Raven and comics Ben Gilbert and
Charlie Laborte. On Friday Uttle
Joe.y La Familia perform at 8 p.m.,
Safuraay it'S lhe Royal Crown
Review and SU:Oday the Dance
Hall Crashers, Stretch Armstrong
and Waterd.og will perform. All
shoWtimes are at 8 p.m. ncket
prices vary. For more information,
call the concert hotline 957-1133.
MIOfAEL FEINSTEIN
Michael Feinstein, singer, song-
writer and pianist will join the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra Fri-
day and Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
Orange County Performing Arts
c.... In c-. Mele. Peln1htn ........ ....... ~ .....
Md Cemegte Hall. 'l\c:bts range
fram 122 to 155. Por more lnfonna· Uoa. caD 7~5199.
CHMGEI
The J8Ulic that h4s played an inte-
gral rOle in such cartoons as Bugs
Bunny and lhe Lone Ranger wm
be the theme of "Charge!," the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra's con-
cert for ch11dren ages 4 to 13 end
their families. The concerts w1ll
take place 10 a.m. and 11:30 p.m.
Sunday at the Orange County Per-
f onning Arts Center in Costa
Mesa. Tickets: $11 for adwts; $9
for children. Information, call 755-
5799.
TRIBUTE TO GERSHWIN
1be Great American Music Com-
pany pays trtbute to composer
George Gershwin at Orange Coast
College at 4 p.m. on Sunday in the
Robert B. Moore Theatre. Advance
tickets are s1o. Information: 432-
5880.
GLEEO.UB
The Cornell University Glee Oub,
one of the few remaining male-
voiced, a capella university
singing groups in the world, will
be performing at Mariners
Church. 1000 Bison in Newport
Beach at 1 p.tn. on Tuesday. Sug-
gested donation is $10. For more
information, call 553-0808.
SINGLES
SINGLES MINGLE
Christian Singles Mingle will bold
a progressive dinner and seminar
on •Everything You've Always
Wanted to Ask a Shrink -but
Couldn't Afford the Fees.• The
cost is $10 for the three-course
meal and seminar. The event takes
~ Monday:M -t.p:nr.-af~ew
port Beach Public Golf Course in
the Tea Room Restaurant, 3100
Irvine Ave. Information: 375-0400.
SPECIAL
'STARS OF MAGIC'
Producer and award-winning
magician Dale Salwak returns to
Orange Coast College on Satur-
day with two showings of all-new,
fullstage production of the 'Stars of
Magic.• ShoWtimes are 4 and 8
p.m. in OCC's Robert B. Moore
Theatre. Advanced tickets are $15
for adults and $8 for children. For
more information, call 432-5880.
ORANGE COUNTY FAIR
On Sunday, the fairgrounds will
hold the Shoreline Dog Show
~ by the Shoreline PQ9 ,~from 8 a.m. to 6 p.~ The
event will take place in buildings
to. 14, t 6 and tent 11. Adrriislion lS
$5 for adults S4 lor seniorf and
childre'1 and children under 6 are
free. Information: 532-5559.
THE INSIDE EDGE •
The Inside Edge will host produc•
er/director Dr. James Sauceda and
soprano Joarlne LaPointe who will
perform a iegment from the musi-
cal "Shatter Me with Dawn: A
Postmodern Musical of Letters and
Poetry from the Works of Emily
Dickinson,· from 6:30 to 8:30 a..m.
Wednesday. Both events a.re at
Scott's Restaurant, 3300 Bristol in
Costa Mesa. The cost is $15 for first
time guests and $35 for others and
includes the meeting, breakfast
and networking. Information: 730-
5050.
STAGE
'BAUAD OF YACHIYO'
Playwright Philip Kan Gotanda's t
story of a young girl who leaves
her Hawaiian island home for a
better life and becomes entangled
in an artist and his wife's struggles.
The show opens Friday at South
Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center
Drive in Costa Mesa and runs
through Feb. 11. Showtimes: 8
p.m. Tuesday -Friday, 2:30 and
7:30 p.m. Saturday, and 2:30 and
7:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets: $28-
$38. Information: 957-4033.
BACKLOT REPERTOIRE
The BackLot Repertoire will pre-
sent a series of Lanford Wilson
one-act plays at The Theatre Dis-
trict. The show opens Friday and
runs through Jan. 28. ShoWtimes:
Friday and·· Saturday at 8 p.m.,
Sunday at 7 p.m. Tickets: $10.
Information: 435=40434 29J.0.....,.,·--'~
tel St., Costa Mesa.
New year welco:nles
new ~performances
to local theaters
By Tom Titus, Daily Pilot
T he new year bongs a
few new wrinkles to the
local theatex: scene, with
at least half of tlie first 10
plays of 1996 making their ini-
tial visits to the area.
Starting off the January
schedule Friday night is a
Japanese-flavored drama set
in early-century Hawaii, "The
Ballad of Yachiyo,• on the
main stage of South Coast
Repertory.
Meanwhile, Costa Mesa's
Theatre District brings the
lights back up the same rright
with an evening entitled
·s ackLot Repertoire,• consist-
ing of there one-act plays by
Lanford Wilson.
The "new• Gershwin musi-
cal., •crazy for You," makes its
non-professional debut Jan. H3
(it once played the Orange
County Performing Arts Cen-
ter). Comedy will be king at
the Huntington Beach Play-
house with a revival of
Stephen Sondheim's• A Funny
Things Happened on the Way
to the Forum• on tap Jan. 19.
SCR's Second Stage comes
alive Jan. 25 Wlth "Three
Viewings,• a comedy com-
prised of three monologues set
in a funeral parlor. Then on
Feb. 9, the ven~able comedy
•Bom Yesterday• will be
reborn at the Newport Tbeotre
Arts Center.
An evening of skits and
blackouts is planned for the
Irvine Community Theatre
Feb. 16 as Tom Hardy's
•shenanigans" makes its
entrance.
The Theatre Dtstrict will be
back in action Feb. 23 with
•comeback to the 5 and
Dime, Jim.my Dean, Jimmy
Dean,• set in the backdrop of
a tiny Texas town.
Shakespeare makes bis
annual visit to SCR on the first
of March with one of the
Bard's more popular comedies,
"The Taming of the Shrew.•
And Orange Coast College
has a new look at the face of
death, "Marvin's Room," wait-
ing in the wings for a March 8 •
opening.
Tbe season is just about
history at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, which
has one more touring show -
the Pointer Sisters in "Ain't
Misbehavin'," on its docket for
a May 21 opening.
All in all, a little something
for everyone in this theatrical-
ly active community where
few weekends go by without
something happening on local
stages.
ent dining excursion
ik three of us to the 4-
nth-old Cabana'• Crab
'Jftp, on the Balboa Peninsula, at iM-ocean side of Palm Street.
There is plenty of parking at the
beach tot within 20 feet of the
ta{e and the rich dose of Pacific
•ch sea air is an extra treat.
Cabana's Crab nap is owned by
Doug Jones, who also owns the
Cycle shop next door.
; The small cafe uses top-grade
fM!ood and you can taste and
tee it is, indeed. Orders look
Utoubding because of the lavish
portions, and they still manage to
-'°°k artfully arranged. A thought-
ful waiter was kind enough to tell
\II we were ordering too much
food -an unusual occurrence.
1'he service was friendly and
f.ccommodating all through the feast.
r-----------------------~-, I I : F.Y.I. I
I I : + W11G C.t>Ana'S Crab Trap I : + WI ... On the BalbOa I
: Penlnsul1. 103 Palm St., New-:
I ~rt Bead\ I : + WHIM Open daily 5 p.m. : : + HOW MUCH: MOderate, :
: with most entrees at $12.95, : : + MORI NO: 723-0619 :
I I I I L-------------------------~ breaded, fried to a golden brown,
non~greasy finish, on top of a bed
of stir-fried vegetables. All
entrees are served with a mound
of rice or roasted re<l potatoes,
quartered and seasoned lightly.
Coleslaw, too, and we were on
the verge of plate-panic as the
table surface filled.
The salmon steak was tender
and moist with tomato-basil but-
ter sauce. If you like, there is a ,
fabulous Dijon mustard sauce as
an alternate choice. We didn't
have room for the ($12.95) MNew
York Steak, Certified'Black
Angus, Kobe style or blackened
with Cajun spices," but it will be
interesting to find out how ~
fish house does with its one beef
item on the menu.
good stuff is the tomalley, and ca) in Hyde Park, New York.
that little "filet mignon• choice After getting his diploma, he
piece of lobster hidden in the worked in Baton Rouge, . dining news
CASEY LUKSCH I
DAl.Y Al.OT
I ~ the 1980's, the Crab nap pee was occupied by a small,
Well-known Thai restaurant
~ed Bangkok Three. It was
~quisite. Well, the exquisite part 41 gone, but the fresh, glistening
teafood is worth the trip. Who
Can resist an appetizer line-up
Which includes Dungeness crab
legs, steamer clams and fingec-
117.ed strips of fried calamari <
fSS.95) atop a bed of sbr fried red
cabbage. For starters, share a big
Pile of •peel and eat• Mexican
JWeet shrimp ($6.95) along Wlth a
small, rounded loaf of hot Bon
~t1! breed.,
The best buy for two people is
a huge platter ($21.95) of shellfish
and vegetables which looks like
it came from a dazzling beach
claw. You ma¥ have to draw Louisiana, Hawcw, Acapulco, and
I straws. On the other band, if you along the wdy, was a regional fl i;-• t Italy banzo beans, baby back pork
warit a Jarger Jobster with two big chef for the WR. Grace Company rOrDaIO OTirS nbs, escarole, onion and tomato,
claws, call ahead. and a consultant for posh San A new year and a new crop $4 95, prosoutto di carpegna e
party. There is half a Maine I Seafood pastas are on the Francisco restaurants, including of menus come together as D peconno _ cheese and black
menu and a seJection of ·Kid Postrio arid Stars The spices and Fomaio's restaurants offer olives. $7 25; muscioli alla reca-
A cup of "Grand First Place,
Award Wmrung New England
Clam Chowder ($2.50)" is so
lobster, Oungeness crab and
shrtmp, their edges slightly
charred. Grilled whole onioris,
big slices of red and green pep-
per;--and-f~mushrooms crowd
the platter. The finishing touch:
Stuff" (fned shrimp, chicken or a techniques of his adventures regional cuisines each month in natl _ mussels marinated with
hot dog) with all the trimmings show up throughout the menu addition to the regular menu lemon, olive oil, garlic and pars-
plus ice cream are $4 .95. White lmens give the place Speoals served through Sunday ley and baked in the wood-
D~l?JlJS.nol a big deal.here. snm~ paMChe .4ll4 a g"""".4-U.l.looU!:f--.--.~~lilolll ~ ~ ~ bumm1J ~~lmmo
STOp lhe Ieafill'ed flaming too. The cheerless, institutional-area, called Marche (pro-· ~ 95 wine, .pr. . bananas covered with whip green interior With lots of bldck nounced MAR-kay) The pasta, pizza and ruotto
¥011 willwish you had
ordered a bowl ($3.50), and the
cllnner salad ($2.95) makes the
grade, too, with a skillful combi-
nation of red wine vinegar and
Dijon mustard in its dressing,
subtle, and not too harsh.
All these goodies are served Wlth
a phenomenal Cajun butter
.sauce, a rich blend oi flavors
which give just the right boost to
the whole savory affair. Ask for it
on the side, so you can put it
where you want. Of course, it will
end up enhancing everything.
cred.ffi There is ice cream and accents is a downer Some bldnd "Rough and savory" are two rushes, as well as the entrees of
cheese cake, but after all the re-astel pictures bn_ghten up the ad'ectives used to descnbe th~e_,_.s..lfJ~:!IS..~'1DJ·ll.ei:Ulim...t.tw·~:n...-i---
vious gooclies, a choice of so-rr-e--:-ts-t-"-w-,,-s-, .,_uflJleY dre too gen e to cuisine from ·s te tory -which
would be a good idea. hold up against this color scheme includes both coastal and
The chef, Brad Margan, won Fortunately, the CdJun and Kobe mountain terrain. Wines of the
the clam chowder award in San sauces simmering away in the region accompany the meal.
Francisco but he's a local. After kitchen practically call to you Here a.re the three mouthwa-
graduating from Newport Beach saying, "Stay! Stay! You'r~ gomg tering appetizers. m.inestra d1
lamb, saus~ge, and pancetta
with grilled polenta and sauteed
wild greens are definitely worth
I investigating.
1 . Call 668-0880 to~ reserva-
Thick calamari steak ($9.95),
the best I've had, was lightly
For anyone not familiar with
Maine lobster, the meat has a
gentle flavor, but the ultimate
Harbor High, he ended up at the to love the Crab Trdp " ceci e costine -soup with gar-
CIA (Culinary lnstitu~e of Ameri-We <lid stay and we loved it
tions.
-By Marla Bird
.tOtNfY IOCICm, Locoted in Tnongle Square at the
..id of !he 55 frwy 1n Cc»lo Meso, En*1ainmenl Lewi.
next lo Edwards Cinema
631 -2967 Menu 1ncludn Great hamburgers, Chiclen,
Tuna & BLT Sandwiches, Molts & Shokes, Fries. Chili
Fri9s .. plus much morell Prices Range from $2.25-$4 75
Hours: I l:OOo m -lOOOp m Sull-Thurs I l·O()JJ.m.-12
midnight fn & Sot lndoo< & outdoor dining available,
wt.I choir oc:cess, we occept Visa, M/C, AMEX, Diners
Club & OilCOVer.
STUDIO WI, locoi.d at I 00 Moin St. Bolb: · i tat foot of plerl. The Studio Cole is !he happening ploce
for food, fun & tn*1alnment. Menu lndud. ribs, chicken,
~•sh fish, pasta, appetizers & salads, abo wving bru~
on Sot & Sun.10 lo 3:00 which Includes Belgium waffles,
omeletles, pancakes and much more. Pri<* ronge from
$2.95-$1 3.95 Open 7 cloys o WMlt. Mon-fri 11 ·30.1.30
OM, So..sun 10.1 :30am Abo loca1ld ot 300 P.C.H.,
Huntington !eoch IN, 8RU. F8. ENT, V, Wl'_ lof., DC
536-lnS.
~ llSTAUUNT, Locoi.d at 17 l 2 Plocet\lio,
~ ~ Menu 1ncluc:Jes rib., dliclt.n, Molt & lobal.,
Pl'.tN rtb, pizza, uystw bar Pricea range from $3.9S ond
11P Open doily frOl'll l 1:30om '9 IOpm,'COcbciils 'ti.I
1lpn. I>, F8, WC, No a.d1t c«ds (llA) 6'5.8091
CAFE
~T lby
lwf1J Mini Marti 1n COW MMo , Miirl4J indud.s good ~ cooli.in' bfdfOst with the b.ai ~.
pioncobs, great ~ breokfcnl diJ. ond lunch wiltl
~ wgetobles, lwiyoki bowl, garlic c:McMn, ouoittd
iiibk, lieollfly iutl-, butgen, hamburvir'. ** w/
pOIOIO tOlod Of fries. Try Rulh'• hOme ~· tOdOy Great
ldOd,'Qreot ~icesl Pnc .. ronge fr'olil $2.99 to $5.95.
Opei, 7 days o week 7om to 2pm. ID, 00, WC (71.t)
6'1.132l
YOU NEVER
SAU-SAGE
SAUSAGE
Or Such Delicious Food!
Join Us For
We are very pleased to announce the mer~in~ of .....
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Your Health ...
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Call Tod.ay. (714) 556-9188 Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
Holiday Catering Available
For Reservations and Directions Call
For Complete Exam & X-Rays (if necessary) for Only $59.95
125 E. Baller. Suite l 00· W
723-0621 Costa Mesa. CA 92626
"To~ether we brin~ 37 years of Practice Experience to service your Chiropractic needs
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ITALIAN
good wtne, hew, coppuccino & deserts "It's o fomily
owMd & nin mb/ront . Prices ronge from $4 95 IO
$13.95. opitl 7 dOya o ~ $«Ying Sot & Sun
8Nnc:h fr°"' 8 :30 lo 1 00 &lndoy lhru Thur.Goy 110111 -
IO l()prii. frldOy & SOI l lo1t1-l lf>!'I . IN, OUT, we,
UU, W8, V, M. AE, DC (714) 723-062. Col for
~ CO.ing Speclolilh.
NICKS PIZZA D'OIO Fom1ly ltolion Reslourant with ~ patio souces ond handrnodt pluo't
Famous kif~~· Of~ &Olfl iQI rOi
$2.75 ond Sunday~ yo., con eat lo~ b $3 75 .
Wt oltO ho¥it the blpsi piuo In town, our pdr1y
plUG 36. O!tltt ..... ~ "'°'· eggplont, ~ brGlclola cind dlfllrtnt poMclt A buffilt lvneh
°"Moll , Tue&, 1'Mt & Fri ~ room Oftd .... ~-en locWCf al 1058$ SkMf
-fourM~ ~(71.i)963-0221. ••ADO .UVI C#l locdld at 211'8
..... -~. NlilllYrcMMct. -.-~ ~· ... ~--&ct......&'-cMb ......... , .... ,...,.. .. ,200111
tU.95.~Mi.-S.U ..... S-"°',_ a... .. IN.OOt we.---VIAi ., ...
ITALI AN
CAii ll MllO Loco..cf at 111 21 ST !'toe.
Newport Becdl, N«lf Ifie~ Spect0liting In forro
poslOs, piuo, lioNrriode r<P11oli, Mofood, chiCken.
vt0I, ond bW. Ide~ ~ino, deSMcts, $n0dts
Open 7 days wMk · liindl, d1nnet l 1-12:30 *"*' ~
o week. (714172)-5711 V, MC. OC1 eolllring
ovoiloble
MITA COfWllON, •fmti Posto Mode Oally• A
8onqUtt l'OOftl for 30 p9ople • 15 k111Cfs of hlh ~w
clrid piostQ diahet (9c> .eoi • ~ l!ollon toUIOQe •
v.al Pcwmlgioilo Giid lot.a.Gue di-'-• ftM F~
Wery Goods • Wold! OUf po11a ~di« cit wor\
Open 7 doyl o .....-from 6 om lo 10 pm (71 "J ~6-ua.
'r. PANE SE
JAPANESE
MfXICAN
......--,.,..---'T--.-r--, . . ... .
dmnlK for av« 20 years IN FB WC, V MC., ~.
DC CB 0 6.t5-7626
WAHOO'S FISH TACO With .t loc:otiool 1133
PCH, loguno Beach (714) .t97-0033, 1862 Plocentio,
Co$IO Mei.a (71.t) 631.J.t33 and 3000 Sri~. Com
Meso (714) 435-0130, 120 Mo•n, HunlingiOn 8each,
(7 14) 536-2050. Menu inc~ fish loCOs bur-rb,
block bean' & nee, solods ~ches Prices rung.
from $1 65 '° $7 • .SO Open WP .SOI 1 lorn lo l()pm,
Sun llom 1o 9pm IN, TKO, WC.
CHINESE
CHONGS a.tlSI CAii ~ c:o1•~1117 • ...II en 1rochonal ~,,. 011.--eutsine Pr1C* tOnQ11 from '3.95
1a$1195 ()pin 11 JOICI lOOOpm Suo.·Man 11:300111
la 11 ~ m Fn Sat locmcl 111 Triangle Squcn, 1175
~ 1M1 , A. 209, Cotlo M..o ~O
0 D ~ M C ,t.M EX. DINERS Cl.Ua
e thy
]]~ leJM 1a ~ f8odta.
if lt is p~ Wlth mayon·
Dais& or Mlad dreaing, it
can deliver quite a bit of fat. A
recent study cla.im&that a typi-
'. ,:~l Ml}dwich shop or deli tuna
salad sanCt "ch 'With ·mayon;
nahe,has more ,saturated fat
than a deluxe bijrljer.
So, can you have your conve-
ruence and eat it low-fat, too?
You bet. Without mucll effort,
a:nd certainly without buying a
lot of expensive specialty f oo<l
items, it is entirely possible to
create a low-fat tuna salad
~andwich that appeals to botli -
the eye and the palat~
Fat carries and melds flavors,
but bear in mind that just one
tablespoon of mayonnaise con-
tains about 100 calories, all of
them from fat. The trick to
reducing fat is replacing the
regular mayonnaise or dressing
with ingredients that can pro-
vide moisture and the right
mouth feel (crunch or chewabil-
ity) plus a flavor boost.
All thJ'ee tuna sandwich
recipes below are visually
dppealing . they not only look
good, they taste good, too -and
eye appeal is important in set-
ting up the taste buds. Each
recipe, however, approaches fat
replacement in a somewhat dif-
ferent way. Plain yogurt or non-
fat sour cream provides the base
...... Grqejukeud --.M-~
qruge peel. Stir in canots, l can (about 6 ~ chunk
l9lim aDd tuna. Place lettuce white tuna, drained aDd Oabd
and Sandwich Stackers slices hi l medi'l\JD tomato, ehoppect
pita ha,lwl. Spoon m tuna mix-(about 1 cup)
ture. Makes ' ~1. • 1/4 cup chopped celery
4 Romaine lettuce leaves
HERBED TUNA ROUNDS 2 English muffins, split and
2 tablespoons nonfat sour cream toasted 1
1 tablespoon lemon juice 8 Vlasic Zesty Dill Sandwich
1/4 tea.spoon dried basil or dri.-d Stackers (prepared sandwich-
lllllCl~ MD IOUl a--. lemaa jtllce
_. bull. Stir laW., tomat9
and ci9lery. Place lettuce on IDW-
fin halves. Divide tuna mture
among muffin halves. Top with
Sandwich Slackers sli~ .•
Makes 4 ,sandwiches.
ZESTY TUNA TOPPER
Ptep time: 10 minutes
2 IA~U nonfat sour a-...
1 ~~Dash blaCi'
pepper
1 can (obout 6 ounces) ,chunk ,
white tuna, drained and flaked
112 cup chop~ cucumber
1/4 cup chopped green ~pper
2 tablespoons ch<>J>~ onion
' lettuce leaves
2 English muffins, split and
toasted
~ , ~ --I .~
' ·-4 ··--.. -
Jad --,, : ..
GOLDEN DEUCIOUS APPLES
WASHINGTON PREMUJM
.,.,,.._
8 VluiC Zesty Dill Sepdwich \'Staa-. ~ea'MnctWldl
slicediplck•es>
Mii sour cream, vinegar arid
lack pepper. Stir in tuna,
cucumber, green pepper and
onion. Place lettuce on muffin
halves. Divide tuna mixture
among muffin halves. Top with
Sandwich Stacleers slices.
Makes 4 sandwiches.
for the tuna salad fillings, butc-----
vanety takes over from there.
Tuna packed in water is also
used instead of tuna packed in
oil to keep the fat content as
low as possible. Flavor
enhancers include lemon or
orange juice, fruits, garden veg-
eta bJes and herbs. Vlasic Sand-
wich Slackers -pickles cut long
and thin to fit in a sandwich -
are the secret ingredient in all
three sandwiches, adding zing ~
but no fat. If you're planning a
p1cn1c or (amily outing, make
the salads in the morning, pack
them m plastic containers and
refngerate or keep cold in an
ice chest until serving time to
let the flavors blend and pre-
vent spolldge. Wrap the bread
separately and prepare the
sdndwiches when you're ready
to eat
The Enticing Tuna Pocket
melds the bite of nonfat yogurt
with the sweet-tart flavor of
orange Juice, plus carrot crunch
and the d~!Joous chewability of
ra1slllS m a pita pocket. Bread
and Butter vanety Vlasic Sand-
wich Slackers (prepared sand-
wich-sliced pickles) add zip.
Total calones: 241, with 2 grams
fat, no saturated fat
Meanwhile, two open-faced
sandwiches give zesty choices
to calorie-counters. Herbed
Tuna Rounds combine lemon
jwce w1th nonfat sour cream for
a mayonnaise-like base that's
seasoned with oregano or basil.
Chopped tomato and celery add
flavor and crunch to the tuna.
Vlastc's Zesty Dill Sandwich
(. Slackers compliment the salad,
Which ls serv~d atop half of att -
English rnUffin. Total calories
per English muffin half: 149
with 2 grams of fat, no saturated
fat.
Finally, the Zesty Tuna Top-
per marries vinegar to nonfat
sour cream for a mayonnaise-
like flavor, but adds chopped
cucumber, green pepper and
onion for a sophisticated crunch
when served on an English
muffin. Again ~asic's Zesty Dill
. Sandwich Stacken.add a satis-
fying burst of flavor. Total calo-
ries per mUtfin. half: 1-''11 With 2
grams of fat, no saturated fat.
ENTICING TUNA POO<ETS
rep e: 10 minutes
114 cup nonfat plain yogurt
2 tablespoons orange juice
1/2 teaspoon grated orange peel
(optional)
t cup shredded carrots (about 2
medium)
112 cup raisms ·
1 can (about 6 ounces) Chti.nk
white tuna, drained and flaked
~-----·~+~4 letttJCe leiiWel
8 Vla1lc 8*d and B\ltter Sind·
wlCb Staeun (pnipaied And·
Wich-.uc.ct p6Ckie9) f!. ,.._ mwdl fS.Jntb). cut In
half, fonnlng .......
4 1 /2" POT IN
MATCHING COVER 3"
HORMEL
CHIU
ASSTD. VARIETIES ... 15-0Z.WrTHBEANS 99-
JUICY
RIB HALF
·PORK LOIN
· ~AVG. WT. 7-9 l.8S, , 59 ~ SUCEDATNO
EXTRA CHARGE LB.
FARM RAISED
~ CATFISH FILLETS ~~ FROZ./DEF. 349 ~ BAKE OR BROIL
18.
ROUND STEAK ·
ORAl.-B
TOOTHBRUSH
INDICATOR
1-EACH 2:93
YONIQUE
UQUID YOGURT
7-0Z.ASSTD
VARIETIES 6•'
ULTRA nDE l.}BROWN SUGAR r -:;J DITIRGENT .,.u HAM · ~ 98T0110 5" 1t~ HIUSHIREFARM 4" "'• •9 OUNCE SUCED TO ORDER
I ~· I LB.
LB.
HUGHES INGUSH MUFFINS
6-PACKREG.
OR SOURDOUGH 6•
M SlllUDIL SftCKS
APP\fORCHERRY 8!$, FIWNG ·~
1·LB. SPAGHEDI
89
\
CREAMmE, REG., THIN OR VERMICEW
U.WIUDlllY
ORG.-Z08IAllS
J 5 25-0Z. REG. OR LESS SALT 2:*1
..
KNUDSEN
ORANGE IUICE -
!I, c~h1~ 189
3·0UNCE ASSTD
HEALTHY CHOICE
WNCH MEAT
LB.
6-0Z. ASSTD.
VARIETIES 3:W
HUGHU
ORANGI JUICE
12-0UNCE
FROZEN 79 -----
£"1iirR
PIP.II
I if;!~ U: f Jff;! ~ li1J i1:1 r,1 :J H Hi
London Broil . or Top
Round Steak
USDA Choice or Select
per lb.
SEAFOOD VALUE
Large
Tiger
Shrimp
~Y.~l/4tcout perr.,
• Betty. Crocker
~'!11!1 Helper
u .... u ...... ..........
&tty Crocker
~j_PotatoeJ ............. ..........
Betty ender
Tua Helper .... ~ ....... u ........ ... .......... =er
O...c.MI""'* I lalM -...... ..... ........
~
Fresh Fryer
Drums, Legs,
Wings or Thighs I
f'Ulrill'•rrlde ,,__ ~._ Sae AO per lb.
DAIRY /DELI VALUE
Ralphs
Fresh
Cottage Cheese
four Vartet8
11 OL Clip
Nllln Ylllij
Gruofallln .......... ........ ... ......
...Smtt ,... ...
.... Clmll .... .........
European
Ready Salad
4-tedV~ tnbll
DAIRY/DELI VALUE
Pillsbury
Crescent
Rolls
Ort8lA&I Seyle-8 OL pq.
~~~
I
S-eapto.70
FROZEN VALUE
Texas or
Florida Red
Grapefr~it
aic.h
PRODUCE VALUE
lib.bag
· Fresh Peeled
Carrots
-----==
I
GROCERY VALUE
Star-Kist
Chunk Light
Tuna
laOllorW.ttr B•J s Saft •• to !.91 I OL cu •• , z Saft .... ;SI
GROCERY VALUE BAKERY VALUE
_: 24 oz.-~phs
Split Top or
Sandwich Bread I
WW..•WMll Id..., s..., ti:.
• ,
.
'Good humor. .. in a callous world,
friend called me this morning
to tell me that Jerry Kobrin
passe4 away ond I am so sad-
dened. He was the best writer
I've ever known of in my life.
He did a story on my tiger for
several days that evei:ybody just loved. It's
a great loss. He was a kind, fuie, wonder-
ful man.
I want to tell you -you don't know how
much I miss the Daily Pilot. I wish you
would bring it down h~re where I live
now. I really miss it.
I'm so sorry to hear this. He was a truly
fine, fine man.
PAT HUG
Laguna Hills
, I was sorr}r to hear of Jerry Kobrin's
f,1 assing but I'm really glad to see that
meone from the city I was born in made
really, really good name for himself in
furnalism.
And by the way it's Reading.
, MARGE BELTZ
Newport Beach
: Although I never m et the m~. ITe1t as -
(hough he was a good friend and I know
biat he was a fan of palindromes and for
tears I meant to write him with one that I
ttave that I've always liked and that is: A
Man, A Plan, A Canal -Panama Jerry,
we'll sure miss ya.
clear oif the table. I'd tell him, •vou mow
you don't·bave to wait on us,• and he ~
•That's OK. It makes me happy to see Jett
happy.• Now that's a goOd father, I'll tell
you. I think he'll be missed by evetybody.
SHIRLEY SOLOMON
Newport Beach
It's with big sadness that I read this
morning about the passing of Jeny
Kobrin. We never had a cigar dinner night
without him. He added great pleasure. His
presence was always welcome by all our
customers. He'll be greatly, greatly missed
by all of us at Newport Tobacco and our
cigar dinners. My husband Richard and
myself, all our thoughts will go to him.
ANNIE HAllAJIAN
Newport Beach
As a member of the Daily Pilot news-
room staff, I had a head start <in every-
body else, beCause I was the first to read
Jerry Kobrin's column as I typed it in. He
was a very dear man, and an absolute pro-
fessional. His copy was always on time,
beautifully typed and correctly spelled .
Jerry always got it right the first time, and
generally, if he caught flak fo~ any typos,
they were mine, not bis, and he graciously
forgave me. His good humor and genuine
love of humanity were refreshing in our
callous world and I will miss them VeJY
much.
_ I just wish I bad told him more often. ' ANNlfSP -...--~ ! RI~G
: "" ewportBeadl
I
: This is in memory of Jerry Kobrin, a
~enerous friend, sharing a wealth of his
~owledge. He WAS never too busy to
take a phone call and teach me. He was a
mentor to me. ' FRAN MULVANIA
Corona del Mar
I was one of Mr. Kobrin's nurses on a
daily basis and I just had a really great
memory that I think you'd like to hear.
J:veryday I'd come to work and Mr. .
Kobrin would say, "Michele, write this
down, it's going to make a great story. n
' MICHELE BRADLEY
Newport Beach
I'm a friend of Jeff's and any friend of
letf's was always a friend of Jerry's. He
was so glad that Jeff had friends to go
with. One time I remEmt~t
at a dinner at liiangle Square for SOS and
he was so happy that Jeff and I were there
~g dinner. Every time he'd walk by
(>ur table he'd either bring food or he'd
Huntington Beach
Jerry Kobrin was a wonderful colwn-
nist. I served on several media conunittees
for charity organizations and when I asked
Jerry to attend events and to reply .in the
· paper, he always did. I am very sorry that
Jerry is no longer with us. I do hope he is
happy in heaven.
ELLEN wn.cox
Newport Beach
I am grateful for the life of Jerry Kobrin
and for the joy he brought to all of us.
•Love never dies. Love does not ever die."
BETIY PORTER
Newport Beach
My husband, Bob Sanders, was an
Orange County reporter for the Long
Beach Press Telegram and knew Jerry
from the Llon Country Safari days. When
Frasier died, Jerry absolutely delighted ip
the headline that appeared with the Frasi-
er obituary in the Press Telegram. The
bead.line written by one of the copy read-
Snqpshots •••
CONTINUED FROM A1
into smau literary masterpieces, writings
that often deserved second readings.
What may have been lea obvious to
fans of his colwnn wa1 the fact that
KObrin WM, *Mn trWJtyth1Dg else we.a·
itripped away, a natural newsman. He
frequently pbaned m tipi to the Dally
Pilot, WhetJMr it WM tomething he had
beard about an umohed crtme or m
funny bulbi• at dty heD that had bien
~ontoldm.
Ute hll .,.._4Down counterput,
Loi An~ 1'llMI Cohuimilt .lade
Smith, KobrtD WU bit 11111 wtlb tbe gift
OI blll1Dg able to tlnd bUiDOr .ad a goOd
f
Jerry Kobrin and one of Frasier the Uon's many offspring.
ers was to the effect that -Frasier has now
gone to that great cat house in the sky.
Jerry just used to roar Qver that one.
Also, when the March of Dimes had its
20-mile walk down in the Irvine area, we
thought, well heck, we need a sponsor.
Our whole family knew Jerry somewhat,
he's such a likable guy, so we asked
would you like to be one of our sponsors?
There were four of us. •sure,• Jerry said,
&I'll sponsor you.• He didn't think we'd
ever make the 20 miles -any of us. So
magnanimously be said, ·1 will sponsor
you for 50 cents a mile.• Well, all of us
made il Poor Jerry, as you figured it out.
Fifty cents a mile for 20 miles for four peo:.
ple, he had to dig rather deep. But know-
story in the most mundane things. When
he moved to Corona del Mar in the early
1990s, for instance, he managed to get
not one or tWo but three columns out of
tb8 turmoil and ttauma • Of chaDging
hdmel.
~lte his years --.of ~ence,
Kobrin Wiii alwa)'I e n~OOd guy.
He WI<* about the loCal~
and cNmt-president.,
M .... Dr .. lina1l in his COlumDa u his
...... lmOwD fllndl. wc:h M Johnny a.. ad_, 8'1bop,
KObtlDtw Wike WM UlllqUe. It Will not
-~
-ing him ... I'll bet you Jerry got Llon Coun-
try Safari to pay the sponsoring of our
walk.
JEAN SANDERS
Cosl(iMesa
Regarding my friend, Jerry Kobrin. Jer-
ry was Jewish by fllith, but he was one of
the most ecumenical men I have ever seen
as far as in practice. He had many close
friends, not only Jews, but Protestanli,
Cathnlic:s. I once went to an open house or
a house warming that be had and he was
§0 proud that be had it blessed by two
bishops, one was of the Catholic church
and the other was by Joey. He loved that
line.
In talking about tag lines you could also
end thiS with -•Mwnble, mumble, mum-
ble. I think I will just go and lay down for
a while.• How many times did he end a
colwnn with that?
BOB BRENNAN
Newport Beach
I was so sorry to hear about Jerry
Kobrin's passing. I was born and raised in
Newport Beach and, in fact. was a Daily
Pilot paper girl on bicycle as a child.
A couple of years ago the Pilot was res-
urrected and again became my hometown
newspaper. Jeny Kobrin added to that
hometown atmosphere. I read every one
of his columns and always got a chuckle.
His sense of satire and good-natured
barbs, always were a welcome relief. I
will miss sitting at work with my coffee,
chuckling over Jerry's column as I began
my day.
JULIE WAHLSTEDT
Newport Beach
I was very shocked this morning when
I heard the news of Jeny Kobrin's passing.
I'm very upset about it. We've been
t. friends for 30 years. Jerry was a man of
tremendous wil Always a gentleman. A
good family Dl4!l. It's a great loss for his
family, bis friends and the community.
God Bless Jerry.
PllARWAYNB
Newport Beach
With the passing of J~ Kobrin and
Jack Smith. Jan. 9th was"a dark day for
SOuthem California Writers and readers.
DOR01HY JEAN'
Costa Mesa
Jerry liked to be Visualized as a man
about town and he was, in a sense. Hil
best friend was John Crean -~ were
very close. However, Jerry was a true
egalitarUui. He didn't care whether peo.
pie were rich, impo.rtaht, unlaloWri, poot,
Jew or GenWe -his friendship had no
,requirements except a aense of humor and
a good heart.
A few years ago, he was tnvtted to a
black tie dinner at a p08b Beverly Hills
Hotel and the party traveled by prtVate
ltmOUline. On arriving, J~ clllcoVefed
there would be one empty seet at hJI
table. He went b8clc. Outside and returned •
wtth the chauffeur, much to the lwPrlle "
the $.SO() per tk:k4t ...... at the table.
Hit friend.a lndildea one 12-~
otrt. ElYM ~ WtiO ID~ blm for bar junior bigti ldloOl pa~. Sbe
became another feaiale ~atlild by h1i
ltoriei, Jot• ana gentle dwu1D. Jerry
loved to be pbOtograpbed with bis arms
Uoulid .. fiiindi, ....... bly f9male OMI,
but be ..... )'I the pflfect ~ wtlb • ipUkHng wtt.
MAMA_,
N9wpcllt 11..cb ,,
ATaste ·
Of Kobrin
• EDITOR'S NOTE: Jerry Kobrin's
columns ~re poignant, funny
and biting. Here are some mem-
ories: ·
NOVEMBER 2. 1991
A tribute to Kitty, his wife who
died earlier in the week after a
long illness.,.
"She was the dearest.
sweetest. gentlest, most
loving lady I've ever
known. Totally selfless.
ever caring. ever sharin_g ...
Ther7ll0e no /u.Mral ser-
vices. She believed in cele-
brating life ... Despite her
crushing afflictions. she
had been looking forward
to celebrating her, birtl_iday
Nov. 2 and the gathenng
wtll take place this afte,-..
noon. graced by her joyous
spirit.
Son Jeffrey and I.
blessed to have basked in
her radiance. now miss her
very. very much. Shes at
peace now. ~d her repose
is richly deserved. ..
a
FEBRUARY 12, 1992
Upon receiving a newsletter
from the Richard Nixon Library
and Birthplace listing books for
sale including •Tue White
House Family Cookbook.• fea-
turing best loved recipes:
·And now I'm confused.
With perfect clarity, I can
recall President Nixon
declaring. ·1 am not a
cook.··
0
OCTOBER 27. 1992
Planet Hollywood o~g.
which ignored locals.·
"11-ithout exception, eye-
witness reports from Fri-
day's premiere of the new
restaurant (or whatever it
is) blasted and blistered the
perpetrators.
·1 couldn't believe the
arrogance of tlte organiz-
ers,· seethed a veteran ·
Orange County journalist,
who s seen it alL ·0n our
own turf. we were handlid
like illegal immigrants.·
0 -
NOVEMBER 3, 1992
Retun:ilrig from a Fleetwood
Enterprises, Inc. celebration in
Las Vegas after rolling two con-
secutive ~ of fours et the
aaps table.
"On the flight home, I
thought I was wearing
John Crean 's pants. •
a
NOVEMIER 29, 1992
Ruth Ko hosted a dinnei Jtl her
Turtle Rock home, and brulhed
against a candle on the porch,
setting her hip-length bait iftte.
atherly wisdom for a son
•
• EDJTOll'S Ndn!: There u no ahott-
age ol cJo.aJc Jerry Kobrin column.a.
T11ere~ one -U not three or lour -lor
ewry oocaaslon. This column. a humor-
ous but thoughUul bit of advice.Jo his
aon, appeared In Decem~r IP92. lt'a
one oJ our lavoritea.
FOR YOUll BIRTIIDAY, SON,
A SMAll LEGACY -Jeffrey
Sembower Kobrin, heir to my for-
tune, celebrates his 30th birthday
\oday, and it's time to pass along
1be Torch of Accumulated
Knowledge & Wisdom.
1 Some of these profound truths,
it should be noted irreverently,
can't even be found in the
blessed Torah. They were
learned the hard way, in day-to-
day coping. Herewith aJew real·
izatiOns, coupled with practical
advice:
1. No matter what the state of
the household budget, never -
never! -run out of cat food.
Feeding Crystal ts like stoking
the furnaces of an oldtime ocean
liner, and there's no sound more
piteous than. her 2 a.m. mewing
and whimpering when the cup-
, board is bare.
2. Crystal dines on Fancy
Feast, and it's important that you
shop around. Per-can prices can
range from 45 cents to 51 cents.
Be prudent and judicious at all
t&mes, and check the Daily Pilot
food section for discount
coupons.
3. The hours for Thursday
morning's trash collection are
irregular, so my best advice is to
put the stuff out Wednesday
night. Cans bearing old foodstuff
should be tightly covered, lest
the whole plan be toppled by
marauding mongrels.
4. When the phone rings, and
the caller is offering a once-in-a-
lifetime investment opportunity,
try to limit the conversation to 10
minutes.
5. Same with calls beginning,
NCongratulationsl You've quali-
fied for an all-expense-paid
vacation in ... •
6. After showering, don't place
Sl,OP P.\ \Tl\G BILl~S!
CONSIDER BANKRUPTCY!
·~~ ·~s.neDay flq •Stop~ t9t19~ -•Slop diooa. -~
t Keep Yu Bullnm • Dllccut Rates t Se Hlb&a Eapenol
Stop l10ll hMlltb IQ phone Clll1
·MCINTOSH a PAn,soN (714) 835-3987
IOO w. aanta Ana Blvd., Suite a1e. Santa Ana
Classified ads work
for you!
THE Daily Pilot
the wet.tow81Md ~Gil
tbe bed. ~if tt'I my b8d.
7. WMS IOqMltbing, anything, When amwerfllo· the doorb8U. ~
I. Ken~ Pried Cbk'ke
bOeits Of a worlcMamous recipe.
TheN't no need to aatiify this
craving at, say, Gelson's dell. The
resultant savings should be
invested in municipal bonds.
O. In further adherence to the
virtues of thrift. try to expand
your reading-range. When dining
in a high-priced resta\lrant, for
example, make every attempt to
read and fully comprehend list-
ings on the right-hand side of the
menu.
10. When loading the-w8$her-
dryer on Laundry Day, do not
mix the white with the colored.
From this, believe me, people
have been known to dye.
1 t. If you must attend a black-
tie event, which I discourage,
never wear your mink tuxedo.
(People will talk.)
12. Either shave re9ula.rly, or
grow a full-blown beard. Any-
thing in between is strictly from
Vasser Arafat.
13. Now that you're entering
your 30s, son, we should have an
open and candid discussion of s-
e-x. For some seven decades, I've
been studying members of the
opposite gender, and there are
certain observations that should
be passed along. For this no-
holds-barred session, in which
you'll learn everything I know,
we should allocate approximately
three minutes.
H . Appr~date and admire
every stunning sunset. Remem-
ber, as you go through life,
there's a diminishing supply.
Enjoy the day fully, dear Jeff -
and all those to follow.
WARNING!
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...
. .
~Good humor. .. in a callous world,
11 friend call~ me this-morning
to tell me that Jeny Kobrin
passed away and I am so sad-
• dened. He was the best writer
I've ever known of in my life.
He did a story, on my tiger for
several days that everybody just loved. It's
a great loss. He was a kind, fine, wonder-
ful man.
I want to tell you -you don't know how
much I miss the Daily Pilot. I wish you
would bring it down here where I live
now. I really miss it.
1'1111 so sony to hear this. He was a truly
fine, fine man.
•
PAT HUG
Laguna Hills
; I was sony to hear of Jerry Kobrin's ~assing but I'm really glad to see that
meone from the city I was born in made
really, really good name for himself in
~urnalism.
, And by the way it's Reading. ! MARGE BELTZ
: Newport Beach
I • I • Although I never met the man, I felt as
biough he was a good friend and I know ~at he was a fan of palindromes and for
Ears I meant to write him with on~ that I
ave that I've always liked and that is: A
an, A Plan, A Canal -Panama. Jerry,
we'll sure rruss ya.
' I
I
I
I
: This is in memory of Jerry Kobrin, a
~enerous friend, sharing a wealth of his
~owledge. He was never too busy to
taJte a phone call and teach me. He was a
mentor to me.
I
' FRAN MULVANIA
Corona del Mar
I was one of Mr. Kobrin's nurses on a
daily basis and I just had a really great
memory that I think you'd like to hear.
~veryday I'd come to work and Mr. .
J<obrin would say, •Michele, write this
down, it's going to make a great story."
MICHELE BRADLEY
Newport Beach
l'm a friend of Jeff's and any mend of
Jeff's was always a mend of Jerry's. He
was so glad that Jeff had friends to go
with. One time I remember I was bis guest
at a dinner at 1\iangle Square for SOS and
he was so happy that Jeff and I were there
having dinner. Every time he'd walk by
Our table he'd either bring food or he'd
clear off the table. I'd tell him. •vou know
you don't·have to wait on us,• and be said,
"That's OK. It makes me happy to see Jeff
happy." Now that's a good father, I'll tell
you. I think he'll be misseci by everybody.
SHIRLEY SOLOMON
Newport Beach
It's with big sadness that I read this
morning about the passing of Jeny
Kobrin. We never bad a cigar dinner night
without him. He added great pleasure. His
presence was always welcome by all our
customers. He'll be greatly, greatly missed
by all of us at Newport Tobacco and our
cigar dinners. My husband Richard and
myself, all our thoughts will go t-0 him.
ANNIE HALLAJIAN
Newport Beach
As a member of the Daily Pilot news-
room staff, I had a head start on every-
body else, beCause I was the first to read
Jerry Kobrin's column as I typed it in. He
was a very dear man, and an absolute pro-
fessional. His copy was always on time,
beautifully typed and correctly spelled.
Jerry always got it right the first time, and
generally, if be taught Oak fo't any typos,
they w~ mine, not his, and be graciously
forgave me. His good humor and genuine
love of humanity were refreshing in our
callous world and I will miss them Ve.JY
much.
.!J~wis~Ih~dtoldhim~·~m~o~re~often.iPl!iQN;====f========*~o=,j==~:=~!i=!!!!l!t----
Huntington Beach
Jerry Kobrin was a wonderful colum-
nist. I served on several media committees
for charity orga.J)izations and when I asked
Jeny to attend events and to reply .in the
paper, he always did. I am very sorry that
Jerry is no longer with us. I do hope he is
happy in heaven.
Eu.EN WU.COX
Newport Beach
I am grateful 1.or the life of Jerry Kobrin
and for the joy he brought to all of us.
"Love never dies. Love does not ever die."
BETTY PORTER
_Ne~rt Beach
My husband, Bob Sanders, was an
Orange County reporter for the Long
Beach Press Telegram and knew Jeny
from the Uon Country Safari days. When
Frasier died, Jerry absolutely delighted ip
the headlihe that appeared with the Frasi-
er obituary in the Press Telegram. The
bead.line written by one of the copy read-
Jerry Kobrin and one of Frasier the Uon's many offspring.
ers was to the effect that -Frasier has now
gone to thcit great cat house in the sky.
Jerry just used to roar Qver that one.
Also, when the March of Dimes had its
20-mile walk down in the Irvine area, we
thought, well heck,' we need a sponsor.
Our whole family knew Jerry somewhat,
he's such a likable guy, so we asked
would you like to be one of our sponsors?
There were four of us. ·sure,• Jerry said.
•111 sponsor you." He didn't think we'd
ever make the 20 miles -any of us. So
magnanimously he said, "I will sponsor
you foi: 50 cents a mile.• Well, all of us
made it. Poor Jerry, as you figured it out.
Fifty cents a mile for 20 miles for four peo-
ple, he had to dig rather deep. But know-
ing him ... I'll bet you Jerry got Llon Coun-
try Safari to pay the sponsoring of our
walk.
JEAN SANDERS
Costa Mesa
Regarding my friend, Jeny Kobrin. Jer-
ry was Jewish by faith, but he was one of
the most ecumenical men I have ever seen
as far as in practice. He had many close
biends, not only J~buj Protestants,
Cath't>lics. I once wtfut to' an open house or
a house warming that he had and be was
so proud that he had it blessed by two
bishops. one was of the Catholic church
and the other was by Joey. He loved that
line.
~napshots
In talking about tag lines you could also
end this with -•Mumble, mumbl~. mum-
ble. I think I will just go and lay down for
a while." How many times did he end a
column with that?
BOB BRENNAN
Newport Beach
CONTINUED FROM A 1
:f
into .man literary ~ecet, wntings story bl the most mundane things. Wben
that often deserved second read.mgs. he moved to Corona del Mar ln the early
What may have beeri lest obVious to 1990s, for instance, be managed to get
fans of h1I cc>lwnn was the fact that not one or two but thl9e colWJUll out of
Kobrin WU, wbeD tW~ 8JM wu· the turmoil and trauma . of changing
ltripped aw~. a natural .newsman. He bdaMii.
frequently jDIDed ID tiJ>1 to the Deily Oesptte hit years of e~rience,
~. whether ft WU ~ be bad• kobrtn WU always a ~hbOrhoott guy,
lte4rd about an UDIOlftd atmi or IOID8 He Wl'cM about the local lhopkeepen
funny mniP• at dty'baD that had beeri Ind dwabar prelidentl, maklng~them
paaecl aa • • • ..... • • limal1 in hit columm u bil Ulut 1111 .....,.~ couo~ .,._.lmoWD lrladl, IUCb u Jobbny
Loi Anaelel ,,... Cohmmllt .. Jadt a.a -.,.,. llibop.
Sm&tb, KOllltD w 111111111 Wlb the -Kobda'I v*9 Wal ~. It will not
Of .................. Md • good b9 repllcled.
f ...
I was so sony to hear about Jerry
Kobrin's passing. I was born and raised in
Newport Beach and, in fact, was a Daily
Pilot paper ~l on bicycle as a child.
A couple of years ago the Pilot was res-
urrected and again became my hometown
newspaper. Jeny Kobrin added to that
hometown abnosphere. I read every one
of his columns and always got a chuckle.
His sense of satire and good-natured
barbs, always were a welcome relief. I
will miss sitting at work with my coffee,
chuckling over Jeny's column as I began
my day.
JULIE WAHLSTEDT
Newport Beach
I was very shocked this morning when
I beard the new$ of Jerry Kobrin's passing.
I'm very upset about it. We've been
• friends for 30 years. Jeny was a man of
• tremendou-._ wit. Always a genUeman. A
good family man. It's a great loss for his
family, his friends and the community.
God Bless Jerry.
PILA.ll WAYNE
Newport Beach
With the passing of Jeny Kobrin and
Jack Smith, Jan. 9th was "a dark day for
Southern Cal.if omia writers and readers.
DOROnlY JEAN
Costa Mesa
Jeny liked to be visualized as a man
about town and he was, in a sense. His
best friend was John Crean -they were
very close. However, Jerry was a true
egalitarian. He didn't care whether peo-
ple were rich, important. unk:DOWn, poor,
1 Jew or Gentile -bi.s friendship had no
• requirements except a sense of humor and •
a good heart.
A few years ago, he wu invited to a
black tie dinner at a posh Beverly Hills
Hotel and the~ traveled bY private
limousine. On antvtng, Jeny dilcoVered
there would be one empty 1Mt at h1I
table. He went beck Outskle and rerumed
with the chaufteur, much to the IUrprlje of
th• ssoo .,... tk:JuA::t-at the able. His ftiendl tncfl __ tm12-~
gtrl. El)'le Pappen. 'Wbo lnteMewm him
for ber junior bAgb ICbool paper.she
became another r.male capttvatllid bf bit
storlel, Jobi and gentle chitin. Jmy
=~===".:...111111cw, but ...... -~~ Wlb • 'PUldlni wtl. MQI•_,
Nww.,..t 9lida
.......... _. ...... ~ ... ., • I ~-~~1 I
I I I I I I t• L---------------------------~
A TClSte
Of Kobrin
• EPffOR'S NOTE: Jerry Kobrin's
columns were poignant., funny
and biting. Here are some mem-
ories:
NOVEMBER 2, 1991
A tribute to Kitty, his wife who
died earlier in the week after a
long illness ...
·she was the dearest,
sweetest, gentlest, most
loving lady I've ever
known. Totally selfless, 1
.e'!l!!Lcaringt. ~Vf!!: shapn.JJ ·--=-
There'll be no.funeral ser-
vices.· She believed in cele-
brating life ... Despite her
crushing afflictions, she
had been looking forward
to celebrating her; birthday
Nov. 2 and the gathering
will take place this after-
noon. graced by her joyous
spirit.
Son Jeffrey and I,
blessed to have basked in
her radiance. now miss her
very. Pery much. Shes a~
peace now, ~d her repose
is richl.y deserved.·
a
FEBRUARY 1~ 1992
Upon receiving a newsletter
from the Richard Nixon Ubrary
and Birthplace listing books for
sale including •Tue White
House Family Cookbook,• fea:.
turing best loved recipes:
. ·And now I'm confused.
liiith perfect clarity, I can
recall President Nixon
declaring, ·1 am not a cook.. ,.
a
OCTOBER 27, 1992
Planet Hollywood opening,
which ignored locals.
'"Mthout exception, eye-
witness reports from Fri-
days premiere of the new
restaurant (or whatever it
is) blasted and blistered the
perpetrators.
·1 couldn ·i beUeve the
arrogance of the organiz-
ers,· seethed a veteran
Orange County jourrialist.
who's seen it ac·0n our
own turf. we were handled
like illegal immigrants. •
a
NOVEMBER 3, 1992
Returning from a Fleetwood
Ent~, Inc. celebration in
La.s Vegas after rolling two con-
secutive pairs of fours at the
craps table.
·an the jUght home, I
thought I was wearing
John Crean s pants. ,.
a
NOVEMIER 29, 1912
Ruth Ko hosted a dinner in her
Turtle Rock home, and brushed
agemst a candle on the porch,
~g her hip-length hair afire.
•Mr.de gunta nuMd to
die rncue, qUkklg atOCJa.
mng &M~ wUJa their
,... and bodln. llr!r
~ ~ ~ _, w,.
ma1'f ~ ilad au *"""" .... "71tat~ • ... ft* he ... Md ,.,,,,,., ... •JIN.. ••
I
Fatherly wisdom for a son
--. . .... , .....
• EDITOR'S NOTE: There la no short-·
age o/ cJa.aJc Jerry Kobrin colUJn/16.
Theie• one -JJ not three or lour -lor
every occoasJon. Th1s column, a humor-
oua but thoughtlul bit of advice.Jo hl.t
.tOl'I, appeared Jn December 1P9Z. It~
one of our layorltea.
FOR YOUR BIR'IHDAY, SON,
A SMAil. LEGACY -Jeffrey
Sembower Kobrin, heir to my for-
tune, celebrates his 30th birthday
today, and it's time to pass along
The Torch of Accumulated
Knowledge & Wisdom.
Some of these profound truths,
it should be noted irreverently,
can't even be found in the
blessed Torah. They were
learned the bard way, in day-to-
day~· Herewith a few reel-
izatiOns, coupled with practical
adviCe:
1. No matter what the state of
the household budget, never.:.
neverl -run out of cat food.
Feeding Crystal ls like stoking
the furnaces of an oldtime ocean
liner, and there's no sound more
piteous than her 2 a.m. mewing
and whimpering when the cup-
board is bare.
2. Crystal dines on Fancy
Feast, and it's important that you
shop around, Per-can prices can
range from 45 cents to 51 cents.
Be prudent and judicious at all
times, and check the Daily Pilot
food section for discount
couporu.
3. The hours for Thursday ·
morning's trash collection are
irregular, so my best advice is to
put the stuff out Wednesday
night. Cans bearing old foodstutt
should be tightly covered, lest
the whole plan be toppled by
marauding mongrels.
4. When the phone rings, and
the caller is offering a once-in-a-
lifetime investment opportunity,
try to limit the conversation to 10
i;ninutes.
5. Same with calls beginning,
"Congratulations! You've quali-
fied for an all-expense-paid
vacation in .. ."
6. After showering, don't place
Sl,(tP P.\ \~l\G BILl ~S!
CONSIDER BANKRUPTCY!
• Frei Ccndlllion • Emergency Same Day fing • Stop Forldouel/IRS
•_Slop WIQt Tllmp • $IW ~~ ___!l(teg_f1S.Q c.tl • Kiii> Yu 8uli*8 tfl)llcotn Ratel • Se Hab&a &plml . 5'c1» "°",..,,I ling phone call!
MCINTOSH & PAnSON (714) 8394H7
eoo w. Santa Ana lllvd., Suite a1e, Santa Ana
Classified ads work
for you!
thi wet-towelW·wMtng:cm·----,,..-~~ ......
the bed. P.llped9Dy jf it'I my bed.
7. Wear .,,,...Mng, anythinq,
When amwertna. the. doorbell. -:-
1. Kentµcky Pried Cbiclam
bOutl ot a world·fUllOUI recipe.
There's no need to satisfy this
a aving at, say. Gelson's deli. The
resultant savings should be
investea 1n munldpal bonds.
9. In further adherence to the
virtues of thrUt, try to ~d
your reading range. When dining
in a high-priced restaurant, for
example, make every attempt to
read and (ully comprehend list·
irigs on the right-hand side of the
menu.
10. When loading the washer-
dryer on Laundry Day. do not
mix the white with the colored.
From this, believe me, people
have been known to dye.
11. U you must attend a black-
tie event, which I discourage,
never wear your mink tuxedo.
(People will talk.)
12. Either shave regularly, or
grow a full-blown beard. Any-
thing in between is strictly from
Vasser Arafat.
13. Now that you're entering
your 30s, son, we should have an
open and candid discussion of s-
e-x. For some seven decades, I've
been studying members of the
opposite gender, and there are
certain observations that should
be passed along. For this no-
hol~-barred session, in which
you'll learn every1hing I know,
we should allocate approximately
three minutes.
14. Appreciate and admire
every stunning sunset. Remem-
ber, as you go through life,
there's a diminishing supply.
Enjoy the day fully, dear Jell -
and all those to follow.
GE
BET
VALIA
CHACO
FIJIGUES •
COURTNEY•
RIEDEL • GO SIL
COMPLICE • BERNA
THURSDAY, JAHUM'f 11_, 1916 A
-so:rriething
~Sollltll
wtaltwo .....
fnodte people=
IODJeff( ........ )
and fiteDd .1oa
Crean.
LAWN & GARDEN SERVICE
·c~~~o-F~~·
SERVING THE NEWPORT-MESA AREA FOR OVER 14 YEARS
• RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • • •
LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE & CONSTRUCTION
CALL Now FOR A FREE ESTIMATE!
646-7819
LICENSED 8t FUU.Y INSURED Lie. t C27"86038
CONTINUED FROM A 1
._native plants. vemalP091s. arche-
ological ~ a variety of
blrds and ~ W:ikhife. The train
ya.rd ls far removed from all of
that.
Some have suggested relo-
cating the club's worlt atea to
make way for the playing
fields. But, Donnelly says, m ov-
ing would not be easy. They'd
have to tear out 21 steam
engine' h eating bays, a small
clubhouse and several storage
barracks.
"It's taken' five years to
build that area," Donnelly says.
•we have three yards of cement
at $60 a yard la~g down there.
We've got fences aet in cement.
We've got ste~ bays out
there. We can't j\iil~ it up and
move it.
"If they ask us to do that,
knowing these members, they'll
rather pack up the tracks and
move out of the park, go to some
other city.•
And that would be a loss to the
community, says Mayor Joe
Erickson. The members entertain
between 3,000 and 4,000 visitors
every third weekend of the
month, sometimes running as
many-as 17 trains at a time.
Hit's i} joy to ride 00.. n Erickson
said. "It's a joy for parents and
grandparents to be able to do
somethrng llke this with their
chlldren. And, 1t fits very well
with FaUVlew Park and our goal
of making ll accessible to people
of all dges
WThe bottom hne 1s, 1 appre-
ciate the dedication and many,
many hour~ of work that the
Model Engineers put into the
CONDOMS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
In Newport-Mesa, parents
have to· give written permission
for their children to participate
in sex educdhon discussions at
each grade level.
"We do allow condoms to be
shown in sex-ed classes which
are age dppropnate, but the dis-
play must be tastefully done, not
with any apparatus or fruit,•
Bernd said
Nearly three years ago, an
explicit AIDS presentation at
Costa Mesa High School
demonstrating condom use
drew sharp crillcism from par-
ents and profuse apologies from
school <listnct officials.
Parents concerned with what
is being taught in Newport-
Mesa schools can review the
district's sex education materials
currently on display at the dis-
trict's cumculum office, he said.
The office is located at the cor-
ner of Baker and Bear streets in
Costa Mesd.
TrustE>e Wendy Leece, who
has been dO outspoken advo-
cate for dbstmence education,
said NE>wport-Mesa has main-
tained dn ddequate sex educa-
llon pohcy
"We hve in a very conserva-
bve community that has a high
moral ground that we are teach-
ing abstmenc:e, but we can do
better,· she said "We have to
keep evaluating what we're
doing •
Leece Sdid she agreed with
the Massachusetts parents'
challenge, and 1t is up to those
parents to demand more from
theu school board members.
·So.me people think young
people need access and mfor-
mation to birth control, believ-
ing all young people are sexual-
ly active or will be soon, but
the re are those of us who
believe as parents, educators,
board members and clergy can
do a much better job inculcating
into our young people values of
self respect and patience to
overcome passion and immedi-
ate sexual satisfaction,..-Leece
said.
"Condoms made easily avail-
able is an easy adult solution,"
sh e said
••••••••••••••••••• : Newport :
: BEAUTY SUPPLY~
: d•"' •oitCNil • • • • . ~-. . --: :£ ................ ~
= ZCPA» OFF~
&Ith Purchase :
MuOO a OIJitA s AveGa •• • ·e1 ··················: : 3601 Jamboree Rd #8 N.B. •
• 261..'.6788 • • • JatnbOree at en,,ti)I
: Back say Court : •••••••••••••••••••
MAAC MAATv-4 I DALY Pit.OT
John Higgins Sr. pushes a cart ~g his engine from the tracks to the storaqe trailer at
Palrvtew Park In Costa Mesa.
park, and I'd like them to know
that I believe they're a valued
member of the community. I
would bate to see them even
con.sider relocating to another
area."
Some members spend as
many as 30 hours a week at the
railroad yard, repairing the
train engin and maint~g
the wooden r~ilroad tracks.
With the city's permisstdn,
they've planted trees around
the work area, installed bench-
es and poured cement walk-
ways.
Norm Jacobsen, who's been a
member for three years, spends
most of his free time at the yard .
He says it gives him •a reason to
get up in the morning.•
·rm retired and don't have
much else to-do,• says the' 64!"
year-old Jacobsen. "And there's
always something that needs fix-
ing. Just the other morning I was
spraying some weeds on the
tracks and I noticed a wheel on
one of the trains needed some
repairs.
"It's a lot of work, and you get
out of it what you put into it.•
John Higgins, who spends
about five hours a wee:K af lbe
train yard, says he enjoys watch-
ing young faces light up at the
sighl of the trains.
•That's the reward," says the
73-year-old Higgins, •when I
look back and see all the smiles
on the kids' faces while their rid-
ing on the trains."
"The bottom line ls, I
appreciate the dedi-
cation and many,
many hours of work
that the Model Engi-.
neers put into the
park, and I'd like
them to know that I
o elieve they're a val-
ued member of the
com.mum ... •ty ,,
-MAYOR JOE ERICKSON
IOY SCOUTS Of AMENCA tNC.,
OMNGE COUNTY COUNCIL
Volunteer opportunities Include fund
raising, program development and
training to existing troops arid packs.
For more Information. c.all Devon
Dougherty, ~990.
IOYS AND GltU.S auas
OF COSTA MEW/NEWPORT BEACH ,
TM three area Boys and Gins Clubs
need volunteer coaches and arts and
aafts workshop teachers. For locations
and more Information, call Dick Powers,
642·2245.
CENTENNIAL FARM TOURS
Volunteer docen1s are needed at the
Centennial Farm at the Orange County
Faltgrounds in Costa Mesa. ull Ginny
Smith, 708-1517.
CENTER FOR CREATIV.E ALTERNATIVES
The Center fot Creative Alternatives, a
non-profit charitable organization that
woric.s through the United Way, needs
volunteers, graduate level interns or
trainees. For Information. call Karen,
642-0377.
HAT CONNECTION
The Hat Connection Is a women's phil·
anthropic extension of the Chamber of
Commerce that serves Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach. For information, call
Kay Walburger, 650-2144.
HERITAG~ HOUSE AUXILIARY
Volunteers are needed for an auxiliary
support group being formed by Heritage House. a non-profrt substance abuse re«Yt1-
ery home for pregnant and parenting
women and their children in Costa Mesa.
For more Information. call 646-2271.
HIGH HOPES HEAD INJURY PROGRAM
The l:figh Hopes Head Injury Program's
Rea Center In Costa Mesa, a non-profit
organization serving the needs of he»
INTIRfNT'H COUNCIL
The NeWport-Mesa·lrvfne Interfaith
Council, an urnbNtta 0tganlzatlon for
several area 5eMce 9{~ needs volun-
teers active In locel cong~atlons. For
lnfonnatioh', call C.01 Brown, SQ.3213.
SUSAN G. KOMEN BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION '
Volunteers are needed to assist In a
variety of programs with the Orange
County chapter. For more l!lformatlon,
call 480-5222.
OPERATION a.EAN SLATE
Operatipn Clean Slate, a Costa Mesa·
based organization that focuses on graf..
fltl prevention, needs volunteers to
paint out graffiti and f0t other duties.
For more information, call Michael
Howard at 435-0745.
ORANGE COAST INTERFAITH SHELTER
The Interfaith Shelter is the largest
family shelter in the county, housing,
feeding and counseling 20 families dally.
The group needs volunteers and dispos-
able diapers. For infonnatlon, call Jeff
Reynolds, 631 -7213.
OC CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
The Orange County Chamber Orchestra
needs volunteers to help sell tickets, staff
social affairs, woril the office and assist
with mailing parties. The orchestra also
needs YOlunteers who would like to team
more about classical music to participate
on its admlnfstratille board. Call Gil
~ams at 644-7019 for more Information.
The only· expensive thing
abo~t our prod·uce is the taste.
Asparagus
Tmh ,_,,,,/ 1h111
Romai ne Lettu ce 2 $100
... ....... .................. for
D'Anjou Pears 59¢
\u,.1 \lr.1 /Jflil 1.r.1./1 ,,_,,, <lfl '1 • ft•<1I r~tOlfJ, • .. ......... ., .... ,;,,,. , """'"""'"""' lb,
Red Radish or Green Onions
I,.,,,, I I''
Mediterranean Cous Cous Salad
7rw.l11wn,1/ 1•111 ttJtt 1nth 11 '·"'") ,,,,.,., lltilrtNJJU ..... ..... .... ... .. ...... : ........................... .
Smoked Salmon Whipped Cream Cheese $499
Da11hlt u./nPJwl o·'""' 1nrb N""""''"" 11tt.iNI '"'"'o,, ....... ':'.... .. ... ....... .................... ...... lb . .
REGISTER TO WIN
A l Week Trip For 2, To The Fabulous Greek
Islands. Drawing To Be Held January 27, 1996
Halibut Fillets
Froun. dc/nmtd ............. . .
Black Tiger Shrimp.
U11111o!J, 16120 co11111 /'ff /"JNnd.. • ...
USDA Choice T-Bone or
Porterhouse Steaks ...... . ........................ .
Fresh Center Cut
Pork Loin Chops -
Duke's Balsamic Vinegar o
Ptrfrn fw "1Uvis. v1//J SUJ/1 & ""!-' •U" .. J.rf 11/ ,...., /" b 11r.i11 ~"'
Arrow Head Mills Bread Mixes
Flff' "" u'llh brtad ,,,.,Jm1a. 4 1 -"If/HJ .......... ..
Samuel Adams Lager .
o., t/ tlJt ,,.,,.,,, 111 A.-itflll ,,,,...,.,, llrru.~J "'1rr1 ... ..... ........ •
Farmers Market
-------------------. --------------------------
.
At Lake Ml•lon ~ 27742 VMta Ott Lago
Mtaaon V1t'fO, 92692
Open AuSUtt 1996
$29916.~2.
$499·-
6 pack
Solving
some of \
the aches
'n pains,
• Coron a del Mar's Jake
Pivaroff has com e up with.
some revolutionary ideas
on turning a traditional ·
downer into an asset for
golfers on all levels. _G_ ~e~.-peciallythe
professionals,
experience more
physical pain than
you probably imagine.
Your back, hips and neck
become vulnerable to the
twisting and turning. Some form
of chiropractic is on site at each
PGA Tour event.
But now, through the
revolutionary efforts of Dr. Jake
Pivaroff, a Corona del Mar
chiropractor, there's a quicker,
mor• simple way for golfers to
endure relief of muscle aches
and pain.
It's the Deep Muscle
Stimulator (OMS), a hand-held
instrument -sort of like a
power tool -invented by
Pivaroff which is close to being
put on the market.
•rm hoping it will be on the
PGA Tour this year," said
Pivaroff, whose device was a
welcomed sight last year during
three PGA events, the Las ,Vegas
Invitational, the Franklin Punds
Shark Shootout and the Sarazen
World Open Championship.
Sounds like Pivaroff, whose
office is just down the street from
the Newport Beach Country
Club, would be a welcomed item
in the coming days and months,
considering the Taco Bell •
Newport Classic Pro-Am is 15
days away and the Toshiba
Senior Classic is March 11-17
The OMS treatment,
perf onned before a golfer tees
off, amplifies circulation and
lymphatic flow, with a decrease
in systemic nervous tension. It
amtrates on general or local
muscle spasms, wlule increasing
the lactic add cycle to relieve
• SEE GOLF PAGE 83
QUOTE OF THE DAY
llN Sea ~ ,,_,__..,)....,It~ all--...•
-WM~ aMQIPAUL ORRIS
CdM holdS on fo~ B4-33 victory
• Sea Kings' stingy defense
keeps a lid on Chargers 1n Sea
View League basketball.
By RiChard Dunn, Daily Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -Typical Sea
View League: Hard fouls, stingy def eme,
a game that comes down to the wire.
Corona del Mar Higb's basketball team
should get used to it, if it isn't already.
El Toro had two scoring opportunities
in the final seconds Wednesday night, but
couldn't convert, as host Cd.M held on for
a 34-33 Sea View victory.
The Sea Kings (10-7, 1-1 in league),
whose biggest lead (29-23) came early in
the fourth quarter, staved off a pair of
three-point baskets by El Toro's Fabrizio
Mendiola, his last coming with 1 :05 left to
create the game's final margin.
Following a timeout by El Toro (9-9, 0-
2), Cd.M broke the Charg~
ers' press, then worked the
clock down to 0:30. That's
when El Toro's Mark
Wulf emeyer was forceq to
foul, but CdM ~ the
front end of a o~e:.~d-one
situation and El Taro had
new lile.
The Chargers, after
killing the dock to 0:12
before taking a timeout,
had an unsuccessful shot
attempt by 'ltavis Senik,
but got the ball back when
it caromed out of bounds
with 0:01 left. Senik had
another attempt from
beyond the three-point
arch, but failed to beat the
buzzer.
"The Sea View League -that's what
it's all about," CdM Coach Paul Orris said.
uThis was a huge win, and that's what I
lllt.11 .... ( lltll)( "'l)( (fl{
C/QY WKSCH I Olll.Y Pl.OT
NewpGrt lllnor fbgb .. 8niadon Browa hMil a~ away lrom Int.De's
Cima Sliva (Dt. WedneldaYI Sea View IOCl"el' ..... For ...... Seie B3.
told them before the game.
The loser of this, really, is
behind the eight ball.
(Third place) is between us,
El Toro, Newport Harbor
and Irvine.•
CdM, which will play at
Newport Harbor .Friday
night, shut down Senile,
while El Toro's defense
shut down Bruin Coleman.
the Sea Kings' 6-foot-4
senior forward who was
held to a season-low six
points, the second consecu-
tive game in which Cole-"
man did not score in dou-
ble figures, the only two
times this season.
Coleman, however, was
the beneficiary of an intentional foul by El
Taro's Shane Lindstrom, who hacked him
• SEE COM PAGE 82
Hawks stagger Estancia
with 26-12 fourth-quarter
en_route _to_a _Z3-60. upset-
•Laguna Hills ends 13-game
losing streak to the Eagles;
verdict throws the race wide open.
By Barry Faulk.ner, Daily Pilot
Indeed, the Eagles appeared once again
to be on their way to surviving another
game without their mside enforcer, leading
all but the first two minutes and hitting 17
of their first 28 shots (nearly 61 % ) to seize a
12-point cushion with 5:54 left 'in the third
quarter.
Junior Brandon Casillas, now the team's
LAGUNA Hil.J.S -It had been close to tallest player as a 6-foot-5 forward, sparked
two calendar yea.rs since the Estancia High the early surge, appearing quite willing to
boys basketball team lost a Paci.fie Coast prove lus tnp1e-double in Friday's PCL-
League game. But that span was nothing to opening wm at University was no fluke.
the last bme the Eagles fell to Casillas, who bad 23
Laguna Hills. po10ts, 13 rebounds and 12
Both streaks, however. blocks against the Trojans,
were reduced to mere trivia exploded for 16 points in the
Wednesday night as the bot-P9dflc C.-t ~ first 9:07 of play, including
shooting Hawks outscored CO...tl) ~ four three-pointers, to help
v151tmg lraincta, 26-12, in Alt.> Niguel (10.:n 2 o the Eagles claim a 26-17
the fourth quarter to rally for C....._ f6-11) 1 1 advantage.
a 73-60 Pacific Coast League &tald& (144» 1 1 "Where did he come
tnwnph. t..guN Hills (U-6) 1 1 from," Brown said of Casillas, a.ch (11) 1 1 The Hawks' victory ended Un 0 2 who entered league averag-
an 11-game PCL winning s--. mg 4 4 points per game, pri-
streak for the Eagles (14-3, f-Atiso N1Qt11t • n · manly off the bench
1 in league and ranked ninth ~ lWs 73. 11•• • Casillas, however, man-
in CIF Southern Section Divi-~ 7Q. llnMi11ty69 aged Just two points the test
sion ill). It also ended Laguna a.ta .;:..--.::-,(7 r> of the way and 14 second-
Hills' 13-garne stretch of futil-Aliso Niauef at ~ 8"i:h half points from s~nior back-
1ty against Estancia, dating Lagoni Hilts at UniWnity court star Dane Plock weren't
back to 1987, when the enough to stave off Laguna
Eagles were still four seasons Hills' fourth-quarter fire-
away from PCL membership. I works.
"That's a big, big win for us," said Lagu-Plock finished with 19 points, five assists,
na Hills Coach Dave Brown. "We were four steals and four three-pointers. but
down by 10 or 12 (43-31) in the third quar-exemplilied the Eagles' late frustration,
ter, but we kind of circled the wagons " earrung a techrucal for bounang the ball
More unportantly, -the Hawks (11-6, 1-1) toward the basket, after fouling out with 39
circled both baskets, dominating the seconds left
rebounding war, 32-17, including more Casillas led the Eagles with five
than a dozen offensive boards, of wluch a rebounds and also blocked three shots, but
handful led to easy put-back buckets. was among those vtc:timized by Laguna
"We knew their strength was inside,• Hills' 6-7 seruor center Matt Houser, who
said Estanaa Coach 1im Parse!, who could funshed wtth 13 points and eight rebounds.
have used 6-6, 235-pound All-PCL senior Laguna Hills' inside attack was also
Chns Candlish (out at least another week keyed by 6-2 Juruor sixth man Mike Brew-
with pneumonia) in this one. ·1 thought (the er, who snagged all but one of his six
Hawks) played about as well as they could
play, but so did we for the first three quar-
ters.· • SEE EAGLES PAGE 82
.daily pilot high school athlete of the week l\t)\ll'.l.
"He is 6-5, but he
doesn't have a lol
of bulk .. He's always
been a perimeter
llfayer, and he
has the slcilJs to
p~ the Pf:>lnt. He
just may do that lor
u~neJCt year ._.. •
-TIM PARSEL
At first thought it sounds near-impossible, but don't be
surprised if somewhere down the line you don't find.
Brandon Casillas of Estancia High knocking 'em dead
with points, rebounds, blockeds shots AND assists.
By Bany Faulkner, Daily Piiot triumph over the 'n'ojans:
· · •tte is &-5, but be doesn't have a lot of
bulk. He'S always ~ a perimeter
player, and he bu the skills to play the
point. He JUSt may do that for us next
year.• •
Casilla.s agrees his court comfort
increases the closer he is the to
three·point line. But with 6-6, 235-pound
senior Chris Candlish sidelined with
pnewnoNI for another week at least,
CUWu' temporary status as the teem~
&alle.l JMY9' dktalel a little mon ~-tlaltblock . .... OK. rn lmt have to \lie my elbows.. C-Olet Mid .• 'Ibey cu be
pretty P'JIM.d•wg • CdlM#;; ~. ICJnwlted the
~ wtcb mol'e daan *ID ad boae
P.rtday, amtln\llly gtYlng Ont ......
• wllk:b... ,...,.,..,
•Jt-.Maldlda'lWlllllltDW ..
Sail Gi~
Challen~
canceled
Mal()ll,
24 JX*\tl aftm' inten.DilRon. lndultiDg. of 6 touJ .. in tbe final 1:27 to tbWalt,any
BeP, aimebd. cbaial.
An 11-0-nm paDed-tlMi Hawks to wtddn
G-4l ..... ID tba tbii'd.. but ll9e Eagle fiee =E 1ol8througl:ltbree~) a ~7 edge heading into tba ~.,.,,....,
Sceglione drlJJfd a 11-footer from the
~-..~----,~~ to erase that lead, bow.,,_, and only a
• hVine overcomes slow
start and steadily pulls
away to send Sailors
away empfy,-handed •
m.a:J:: him an opening.• fintshect witll a game•
high 16 pcdldl u lnU\e puQe<l
away for the win 1n the fourtll
peqoc!.
Newport II itill li>oking for the
right COIJlbQlation on offense. 'Ibt
inse1'tioD into tbe starting back·
cowt of frelhman Matt Jameson
IRVINE· -After an early 7·2 wbo finished with seven points
lead evaporated, Newport Harbor bas added some spark, but thE
High just didn't have the firepow· Sailors still need someone to stei:
er to get back into the game up and take control on the often·
Wednesday night, dropping a 53· sive end.
• 1 boys basketball decision to Senior Chad Coluccio tried hi!
Irvine. be$t. ,leading Newport with 14
Coach Larry Hirst tried points -eight of tbOSE
everything be could thinlc mming in the final period
of, but in the end had to Coluccio made twc
watch as bis Sailors fell to big steals in the fourtl:
0·2 in Sea View League period that led to twc
play, 5·13 overall. layups, cutting Irvine's
•nie biggest problem lead to 39.33 with 4:3C
is we don't execute, 11 left.
Hirst said. •we weren't Irvine hung tough
very active tonight. Right connecting on three tra·
now we're in Hirst's Dun· ditional three·poinl geon. • _..__ __ .._._ plays in the closing min·
Irvine (2·0, 8·10 over· Colucdo utes and using four freE
all) outscored Newport throws by Rahimi down
Harbor 9·0 to tum the Sailors' 7·2 the stretch to ice the game.
lead into an 11·7 deficit one The Sailors had made a mi'.ru
minute into the second period and 10-6 run to open the second hall
extending it to 22· 14 at the half. and trailed only 28·24 with 3:04
Newport actually was having Jett in the third.
good success on defense, using a A traveling call on Irvine gave
2-3 zone. The Sailors had taken Newport the ball and their bes1
Irvine's top scorer, Amir Rahimi. opportunity of the night. Unfortu·
out oi the offensive flow, holding nately, the Sailors went out ol
him to just two points. their offense and missed on twc
1\'a.ilj.ng by eight at intermis· three-pointers on their next twc
.-~·1nw,--ttie-Sailors heel to~ essi-OB9:-
qamble and went to man·to·man Irvine took advantage of the
defense to start the second half. miscues, starting fast breaks that •r was surprised they did that,• led to a ttiree.pointer of its own
said Irvine Coach Steve Keith. "ln and a free throw. The Vaqs added
the zone, it was harder for us to another layup to lead 36·27 one
isolate Amir, but the switch to minute into the fourth period. --BASKETBALi; SUMMARIES
HtGH SOfOOL 90YS
Leguna HUis n. Estand• 60
Scol'eby~
Estancia 21 1• 13 12 • 60
Laguna Hiiis 15 15 17 26 -73
. Esunda -Plodc 19, Nelson 10,
Novak 5, Casillas 18, Maraya 8, Ry.
Simpson 0, Jahid 0.
3-polnters -fitoc:k ... Cl:slltas 4, Nelson 1.
fouled out -Pl~ Maraya.
Technicals -Plock.·
HIGH SOtOOL IOYS
Irvine 53 Newport tWiM>r 41
Score by~
Newport Harbor 7 7 13 14· • 41
Irvine 9 13 12 19 -53
Newport Harboc -Cunningham 2.
Glass 0, Homung 8, Jameson 7,
Archbold 2, Wertman 2, Badorek 5,
Matlin 1. Coluccio 14, Schwartz 0.
].pointers -Jameson 1,
Hornung 1.
•When he's doing his job, we can pay
With just about anyone,• Brown said of the
•3 senior, who netted 16 Qf bis game·high
pall'. of Plock three bi1l8 kf)pt Estancia
cloM, before the Hawb paraded-to the
fiee·throw line to bit 12 of 15 in the final
J:.47.
Laguna Hilli bit 26 of 45 shots frOm the
Leguna Hiiis -Scaglione 24,
Houser 13. Makakaufakl 2, Coleman
11, Brewer 14, Morton 9, Pham O.
3-polnters -Scaglione 2, Houser 1.
HIGH SOtOOI. BOYS
Corona ct.I M#' 34. El Toro 33
Score by Quwten
Irvine · Choi 0, Schneider 2, Rivera 0,
Hanson 5, Miley 0, Roberts 4, Krill 13,
Guinn 5, Hill 8, Rahimi 16.
3'-pointers · Hill 2, Guinn 1.
HIGH SOIOOl IOYS
Aliso Niguel 51, Costa Mesll 37
Score by ~mn ' .COM
CONTINUED FROM 81
widemeath on a sure basket with
2:43 left in the game.
Coleman made one of the free
throws, giving CdM a 30-28 edge.
Adam Klinke, who led the Sea
Kings with 12 points, while play-
ing superb defense on Senik,
hold.mg turn to JUSt six points, net-
ted a pair from the line with 2:34
to play, increasing CdM's lead to
3~~8.
:~ Toro's Elias Vargas sank a
J~per with 1 :30 to go, then
Knnke drained two more free
thtews 12 seconds later for a 34·
30 lead.
While it was certainly a charac·
teristic league ·game in terms of
physical play, it wasn't necessari-
ly pretty from the shooting
department.
El Toro shot 31 % from the field
(14 of 45), the Sea Kings 30.7%
(12 of 39), and when CdM missed,
it usually didn't get it back. The
Sea Kings had only five offensive
rebounds the entire game, none
in the third quarter, when El Toro
came back from a 19-17 halftime
deficit to post a 23-21 lead with
3:57 on the clock.
Llndstrom ( 12 points) scored all
six of El Toro's points in the third
period. "Defensively," Orris said,
·(Klinke) did a greatjob on Senile,
that was key. And Brad Evans
(CdM seruor guard) did a great
Mustangs miss opportunity
to take over ~l!CL's top spot
•Lack of enthusiasm
and five-minute scoring
drought to open second
:~alf spells demise for
Costa Mesa's boys in
,51-37 loss to visiting
'Aliso Niguel.
' COSTA MESA -The Costa
'Mesa High boys basketball
team's bid to take over sole pos•
session of first place in the Pacific
,Coast League fizzled in the sec·
.ond half Wednesday, as visiting
•Aliso Niguel expanded a 27·22
:intennillion edge to win, 51·37.
Mesa seniors Josh Weeks and
Mike Montoya paced the hosts
(4-13, 1-1 in league) with 13 and
· 10 p:>ints, respectively, but the
•Wotve.rliles improved to 10.7, 2·0
'to move into the league's pent·
, tiouse all alone.
' •1 felt ilk we didn't have ·the
same type of enthusiaSm or mten·
sity we had Friday night (a 54.50
•league-opening win over Laguna
Beach)," Mesa Coach Juon Fer·
"gutc>n aa.td. •Maybe we were
.looking ahead to Blta.nda on Pri·
;day, but for whatever reuon. we
•didn't have the ezdtement we ~ntlid to have.•
: Mela committed nine OI Ill 22
turnovers in the first period and
shot poorly throughout, according
to Ferguson.
•Tue surprising thing was, we
were still in it at halftime,• Fergu-
son said. •1 thought we could still
come out and have a good oppor-
tunity to win in the second half,
but we didn't score for the first
five minutes of the th.lrd quarter.
That's where (Aliso) really won
the game.•
"We prepared well and we
stuck to the game plan,• said
Aliso Coach Ken Goldstone. ·we
got out on their shooters and we
guarded the ball real well. And
offensively, we stayed in control.
.1 (Mesa) likes to get ahead,
then pull the ball out, but we nev-
er let fuat happen."
Senior Mustang point guard
Donny Ogo chipped~ six points,
while junior Brian Leahy added
four points and nine rebounds.
Montoya netted three of the
hosts' four tbree-pqinten, with
Weeki accounting for the other.
Wolverines' senior point guard
Jason Mulkey, wtiom Goldstone
said hAs stepped_ up h1s game
since league opened, peced the
Winnen with 13 points, while
OtCM Gardner (eight) and YOUMI
Btemadl (MYen), U well u C0ry
ChUdlet, Juon Danlel and' Jell
MUDMU (m apiece) alto JWped.
•
job on Wulfemeyer (two points).
But we let Llndstrom have too
many points early. I didn't realize
he could shoot it out there.
u1 thought we played real pas-
sive early, then Darren MacDon-
ald started playing harder. But we
couldn't get five guys playing
hard together. Then we let them
in the ball game and it was nail·
biting time."
Before the fourth quarter,
CdM's biggest lead was 5-0. The
game was tied three times in the
second.
The Chargers went up, 17·12,
when Lindstrom sank two free
throws with 2:11 to play in the
first half, their largest advantage
of the game. But the Sea Kings
came back, triggered by the first
of two three·point shots by Josh
Walz, CdM point guard.
Alter Walz's trey, MacDonald
(eight rebounds) scored on a put-
back with 0:57 left, tying the
game, 17-17, then Klin.ke swished
a long baseline jumper with 0:18
left to cap a 7·0 half-ending run.
It was tied twice in the third
quarter, before El Toro went
ahead by two with 3:57 left, its
last lead. Walz canned a three-
po~ter with 3:32 left, giving CdM
a 24-23 lead, and never trailed again.
CdM's last field goal (and only
one in the fourth quarter) came 43
seconds into the fourth, when
MacDonald spun in the key
around an El Toro defender, then
flipped the ball underhand for the
basket.
El Toro 6 1l 6 10 • 33
Corona del Mar 7 12 7 8 · 34
El Toro • Senlk 6, Wulfemeyer 2,
Vargas 2, Lindstrom 12, Mendiola 9,
Pearce 2.
3-polnters -Mendiola 3.
Corona del Mar · Coleman 6,
Walz 6, Evans 3, Kllnl(e 12, MacDonald
6, Friend 0, Keane 1, Peyton 0, Guthrie o.
3·polnters -Walz 2, Evans 1.
CX>MMUNITY COUEGE MEN
Or ... Cout 79, Golden West 69
Golden West -Miiier 18,
Scheuerman 19, Jimmerson 12, Hill 8,
Cooper 5, Lalazarian 3, Kline •. Smith O.
3-polnters -Miiier •. Jimmerson 2,
Cooper 1, Laluarian1.
Follled out: Miller. 0r...-Coast -Reyes1, Toslc 0,
Mitchell 7, McClung 0, Pairicer O, Curtis
1•. Fraailosy 7, Ambrose 22, Wiicox 0,
Downs 10, Adamson 18.
3-polnters -Curtis 1, Ambrose 1.
Fouled out: Ambrose.
Halftime: Golden West, •2-37.
briefly
Aliso Niguel 14 13 12 12 -51
Costa Mesa 1 1 11 8 7 • 37
Aliso Niguel • Barrett 2, Gardner 8,
Childs 3, ~ulkay 13, Etemadi 7,
Chandler 6, Daniel 6, Munsell 6.
3-pointers ·Childs 1, Mulkay 1,
Etemadi 1.
Costa Meu -Weeks 13, Montoya
10, Ogo 6, Payne 2, Correa 2, Leahy 4.
3-pointers · Montoya 3, Weeks 1.
COMMUNITY COUEGE WOMEN
Golden West 76, Or•nge Cout 73
Golden West -Love 10, Huttenhoff
5, Monahan 9, Kavan 3, Ryan 18, Wiora
15, Ramirez 10, Linsey 6.
]..pointers -Ramirez 2, Love 1, Ravan 1.
Fouled out -Linsey.
Orange Coast -Nakamura 5,
Takemoto 0, Afan 10, Pulido 0, Geraci
11, Salapski 0, Botana 12, Shine 20,
Kelty 15.
3-polnters -Botana 4, Nakamura 1.
Technical fouls -Golden West Coach
Greenfield
Halftime -Qrange Coast. 44-39.
Sailors' baseball vacancy on a ·walk-on basis
• Newport Harbor officials hope to
fill void left with Kirk Bates'
resignation by January 30.
NEWPORT BEACH -
The new Newport Har· BASEBALL
bor High baseball coach
will be a walk-on, at least fbr the upcoming
season, according to Sailors Athletic Director
Eric l\veil
l\veit said walk·on candidates may apply
through Jan. 19 to replace Kirk Bates, who
resigned Tuesday after five seasons at the
helm.
"We're looking for a wallc-on coach and
we're trying to do it as quicldy as possible,
while still conducting a thorough search,"
l\veit said. •we'll use the week following Jan.
19 to interview candidates and tallc. to peopl
and we want to have a coach in place by the
time the second semester starts, Jan. 30."
l\veit said a teaching pOSition was unavall·
able at th1a tinie for the pro~ve coach but
he did not rule out a futw-e facwty operilng.
•That's something we cowd reconsider
After this season. But right now, we're just
lookinJJ for the most guali(ted person to get
the pr991am going again.· .
_:'IWelt said Us&tant coeches are currently
wor~ wtth pla~ ln preparation for tbe
lpnng seuon. tor whld1 practM::e pn.idally
begln.Nb.17.
•we d blri ktdl ~ on JkWi and •
conditioning (during sixth period), but they
obviously don't know what's gotng to be
expected until we have a new coach in place.·
l\veit said the status of current assistants
should not be affected.
"We may have some coaches who will
leave because they were close to Kirk. but it
shouldn't affect the commitment we've made
to our coaches.•
Bates, a member of Cal State Fullerton's
1984 College World Series champions, Will
retain bis teaching position at the school. He
compiled a 32·80· 1 career recor(i and none of
his five teams earned a spot in the C1F play·
offs.
-By Barry Faulkner
F.agles need two ~taut ooaclies
<:;OSTA
MESA
Estancia
High School's track and field program ls iii
need of two assistant coach• to handle the
1prints, hurdles and juinps on a paid poeition
With & wal.k;.on basiS.
Th°'ose lJiterested should contact Athletic
Dlrector Jeff Gall or girli track coach JOe.D
Carlisle at 160·3315.
Bntriel for the Pride
of the Cout Beleball
1'tJwmmtm have tiieen
J ---....
ftu"-1 .. au fom loc8l ldMdl -0.
I
Mesa, Corona del Mar, Estancia and Ney.rporl
Harbor entered.
The tournament, which runs April 6 and 8·
10, is loaded with such entries as Sunset
League powers Powitatn Valley and Edison
and· perennially strong LakewOod Of the
Moore League and Sant.a Margarita Of tbe 5911
View League.
FOunta.in Valley is a two--time defending
ClP Division I champion.
Also, Bishop Montgome:ry, Bolla Grande,
Brethren Chriltian, Cbaminacle, Laguna
Beach, Mira COlt4, Orange I.:utb4nJa and
Rancho Alainitol.
..
I
'· . ..
••
I' ' ' .
I
" ., .. .
I ,
•
TtMtSDAY, JAMJNrf 11. 1996
.
Friendly rivals renew 10-year battle;
,Orari.ge CoaSt wins Round One, 79-69
• Estancia races to second
straight Pacific Coast League
triumph; Newport Harbor
settles for a tie in Sea View
League; Coropa del Mar
frustrates El Toro with 1-1 tie.
LAGUNA Hil...LS -Estancia High's
boys soccer team ran its record to 6-3
overall, 2-0 in the Pad.fie ~ ~ague
Wedne5dayasthe agles posted a 2-0
victory at Laguna Hills.
Willie Alfaro broke the scoring ice five
minutes into the second half with a shot
off an assist from Greg Austin, but the
major blow ca.me with 15 minutes left as
Ramon Garda, taking the ball virtually
coast to coast, ri.Oed in a 30-yard shot to
put the game away.
"lt was a beautiful shot," said
Estancia Coac;h Steve Crenshaw of Gar-
cia's goal, which caught the upper left
comer of the goal.
• Pirates rally in second half
to dispose of Golden West
men in Orange Empire
Conference basketball game
on the winner's floor.
By Jim Watters, Dally Piiot
COSTA MESA -It's that time of
year when coaches are trying desper-
ately to collate what they've learned
in the preseason for a sustained push
towards a conference title and a pos-
sible postseason playoff berth.
It's also the time when the coaches
who have matched wits with each
other over the years get another
opportunity to cross sworn, in the
ever-continuing chess game of col-
lege basketball.
Wednesday's matcbup between
Orange Coast College and Golden
West College of Huntington Beach,
won by Orange Coast College's
Pirates, 79-69, over the Golden West
Rustlers, brought together two such
friendly rivals in OCC Coach Tun
O'Brien and Golden West's Tom
McCluskey, who have challenged
each other's skills on several occa-
sions since their prep coaching days.
OCC'a Darnell Adamson (42} leaps for a pass. •we've been coaching against
high school boys soccer
ecto igriltes Eag es~2-0
Tars end up in scoreless tie
NEWPORT BEACH -Newport Har-
bor High's boys soccer team has been to
the post twice in Sea View League
action, and the Sailors are still looking
for a victory after sustaining their .second
straight standoff, this time a scoreless tie
with invading lrvine.
The Sailors outshot Irvine from the
field, 19-6, but couldn't find the target.
Zach Wells was credited with three
saves for the Sailors, who are now 11-3-
4 overall, 0-0-2 in league as they gird for
Friday's Back Bay Struggle at Corona del
Mar.
.QIM ties fl Toro in knots, 1-1
County going in, held a 1-0 halftime lead
and made it stand up until the last 10
minutes wb.en Hoyt evened the count.
Goalie Ken Brown came through with
10 critical saves for the Sea Kings, who
also got some standout play from Andy
Mickler and Jon Anzaldo.
Corona del Mar is now 6-6-3 overall,
0-1-1 in Sea View League play. El Toro is
10-3-3, 1-0-1.
c.osta Mesa drop; 2-0 verdict
COSTA tvfESA -Aliso Niguel High's
Wolverines ran to a 2--0 victory over host
Costa Mesa Wednesday in Pacific Coast
League boys soccer, dropping the Mus-
tangs to 2-11-0 overall, 0-2 in league
play.
Carlos Losa was credited with 10
saves for Mesa and sweeper Eric Solis >.
and center-def ender Juan Escobar both ~
came in for praise for their play by coach .....
Mike Dunn. ·
Gus Ojeda played well offensively,
each other twice a year for about 10
yea.rs now,• said O'Brien, Who
coached at Estancia High before
moving oxer to OCC. "We're both
competitive. Ct's . rarely a casual
thing.•
O'Brien is in his fourth year at the
Plrate helm while McOuskey, who
spent four seasons as the head eoach
at rival Tustin High, is in bis second
season at Golden West.
Both teams are off to their best
starts in years. OCC appears a lock to
notch its best finish in O'Brien's
tenure and if Golden West could fin-
ish at .500, it would be the Rustlers'
best sea.son in the last six years.
The two coaches split their games
last season, OCC winning the first
matchup 65A61, and Golden West
coming back ih the second half of the
season for an 88-83 win.
"A game against him always has
that special flavor,• McCluskey said.
"It's always competitive -on the
court.•
Before coming over to OCC in
1992, O'Brien was the varsity boys
head coach at Estancia where his
teams went 111-42 iii five seasons.
He was the coach at Tustin for two
seasons (with a 36-16 recrod) before
coming over to Estancia and it was
McCluskey who replaced O'Brien at
Tustin.
"It's l!Onic that I came in when he •
left Tustin,• McCluskey said "Our
careers have seemed to par4llel each
other.•
The 1991 season was ..a gOod
example. Both coaches. took their
respective teams to state titles that
season. O'Brien's Eagles winning the.
Division m crown and McCluskey's :
Tillers winning State in Division Il.
It was after that season tha
O'Brien moved over lo OCC.
·1 thought I was rid of him at that
point,• said O'Brien. ·1 say that with
respect because Tom is as good a
coach as there IS out there. w
Instead of getting rid of him,
McCluskey ended up as an assistant
at Saddleback College for -two sea-,
sons, before landing at Golden West
last season.
It took a second-half rally by the
Pirates (121-9, 2-l)to dispose at Gold-
en West (11-12, 1-2), as they
outscored the Rustlers 42-27 in the
second half, with Matt Ambrose and
Darnell Adamson doing the major
damage with 22 and 18 points,
respectively.
OCC's first lead came at 59-57
with 9: 19 left on an Ambrose bucket,
and the Pirates took the lead for good
at 63-61 .
Brad Wayman (seven saves) and Jor-
dan Brown (three saves) combined foi
the shutout, dropping Laguna Hills to 0-
2 in league play.
LAKE FOREST -Corona del Mar
H1gh's boys soccer team left a mark on
the El Toro High field Wednesday after-
noon as Matt Hoyt took a pass from
David Fruchbom and drove it home from
the left side, some 25 yards out, to lift the
SeA Kings to a 1-1 tie with the host
Chargers.
although it was the offense which bore ~ , _
the brunt of the verdict, as Mesa missed ~
El Toro, ranked No. 10 in Orange on each of eight shots on goal. Newport Harbor's Scott Tackaberry and Irvine's Josh Baron duel for possession.
~---------------------------------------------------------------------~
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 81
pain. Deep, rapid, short-duration
percussion is the key to
elimination of pain.
"It speeds up muscle
metabolism and speeds up the
healing process,• Pivaroff said.
Fuzzy Zoeller is sold on idea.
Pivaroff can't get to him quick
enough on the tour site. Zoeller
experienced noticeable results
during all three visits last year.
Peter Jacobsen, Tom Kite,
Raymond Floyd, Mark O'Meara
and Mark Calcavecchia have
endured Pivaroff's treatment at
least once.
•1 feel proud that PGA
players actually come up to me
and seek the treatment,• Pivarott
said. •rve come up with a golfers
method for the (OMS), which
works from the top of the head to
: the bottom of the feet. It gives
the golfer the 'ibility to function
~without pain. and he's able to
strike the ball better." ·
Zoeller, who played 1n the
Newport Claslic Pro-Am in 1975
end '76, ts cummtly on a fishing
trip in Florida and was
, unavailable for comment. a
SpeeJt1ng ol IM N9wport
ClaSaic Pro-Alli Jan. 26-27, there
are currently 13 members of the
Senior PGA ~ -all ol Whom
,BOATING
are expected to play in the
second Toshiba Senior Classic at
NBCC -played in the Newport
Classic at least one year. It'll be a
reunion for Jim Albus (1976, '77),
Jim Dent (1979, '83) and A1
Geiberger (1981), among others
a
Three mem.Rn of last year's
Ryder Cup team. Loren Roberts.
Peter Jacobsen and Tom
Lehman. are also alwnnus of the
Newport Oassic Pro-Am.
Roberts played in the event in
1983 and '88, Jacobsen in 1978
and '80, and Lehman in 1983, '84
and '91.
Q
The Newport Clusic, with an
event record $80,000 purse, is a
feeding ground for the PGA
Tour. Most of the players have
yet to reach fame and fortune,
but proba.bly will someday.
"(It) is well-established as an
Orange County tradition,• said _
Hank Adlei, event chairman.
"Over the years, our galleries
have been privileged to witness
some of golf's rising stars who
have gone on to becOID.e
i'eoognized around the world."
0
Pro-am tMml will tee ottat
apprqximately 1 a:m. both days,
with all teams guaranteed a
second day (uiilesl the sky opens
up), the higJiett ICOOiig teams
itartlng first on Jan. 27.
Golf fans are invited to I08.k ln
the action. All apectaton Will be
granted free admission to the
tournament and an opportunity
to witness rising pro golfers on
NBCC's cballenging course.
The wooded par-71 course plays
at just under 6,600 yards, with a
course rating of 71.0 and a slope
rating of 118. a
The 22nd annual event began
in 1975 as a satellite tournament
for professionals who missed the
cut at Bing Crosby's famous
Pebble Beach "Clambake.• To
date, the tournament bas helped
raise more than $1.8 million for
Hoag Hospital. Proceeds for the
1996 event are expected to reach
$200,-000.
Q
In the Newport Beach Goll
Course men's club, Hank
LeFebvre won low gross (64),
Wayne Thuestad won low net
(54) and Hal Green second low
.net (55) in regular rounds Jan. 3.
In Saturday's flight rounds,
Sorin Zdrahal shot a career-best
1-under-~ 58 to win low-gross
honors in Plight A, while Mike
White won low net (53). In Plight
8, A1 Elder (low gross 67) and
Jack Brown (low net 52) top~
the lilt. while Johil Sullivan (low
gross 71) and Ron Greene (low
net 54) merited supreme honors
in Plight C. Neal 1acbild was
dOlelt to the pin.
CASILLAS
CONTINUED FROM 81
score inside at all,• he said of the
lrojans, who do not have a
player taller than 6-0.
And while many of his points
came inside the key, he did
manage to drop in two of his
four three-point attempts and
drain 7 of 11 foul shots.
•He's had some real good
spurts, but he hadn't carried it
through for an entire game,•
Parse! said of Casillas, who
upped his season scoring
average to 5.2 and whose
previous varsity high was 10
points against lroy.
Ca.sillas, whom some of his
classmates dubbed
"triple-double" upon bis return
to school Monday, said even be
was surprised by Friday's
confidence-building
pertonn.ance.
But, minoring the bravado of
several Schwanenegqer-like
flexes he displayed to celebrate
his blocked shots Friday, he
believes he can continue to
produce.
·1 think 1 can have games like
that against anyone,• Said
cumes, who is fer less
demomtrativ away from the
court;
•Buketball gives hbD a
chance to let hAI hair down.•
Mtd PvMl. wbO pUed.
C.ti11M' Mrioul appro.cb and
tin~ W(ft etbk.
· •He II wocklng m\lch ~
In ptat'tlelt ..... be bU berate
aDd be'I Ml1IDg to pUlb bln.V,
I tblDlt bl'a ...-0 to Niilllil
w ol lllil F a'11Mtl ml w.at. •
CWW~blt ...............
eourt. .......... , blfp,.
S-HA
Make
the Healthy,
Wealthy and
Wise Business
Investment for
the New Year
.. 19.IM~'WJ._..111!--~~----... ~~~~ ~ .. ,.......... ,..,.
'C p ...... .__,_ Jenay19.1991
,. ..... th 2
.... _ .. ,.. .......
SELECTION!
•.
PUBLIC NOTICES
-.-. ----1
~ . J .. . . .... -··-....... --. ' ~
WIDNllO~Y'S COUNIS
~ IAdl.r • S bo.IU. 34 anglers.
1 white .. bn$. 55 e1llco blu, 57 sand bass. 20 sculpin, 14 sheephud, 30
rockflsh. 66 white fish, 79 petth, 17
red snapper. 1 C1JW cod, 35 IMdcerel.
Newport a..nclng ·no ntport.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICH PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTIClS PUBLIC NOTICES 888
FOR SALES INFOR· hOWever, the s>eftOnal rep-PUBLIC NOTICE \he requirement• ol · the duct.a by: • corporation cl1.1ctld by: an lndMdual w DIM Wlllt .... AM. CA 11 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
MAT 1o,.1 M 0 n .p 1 I PUBLIC NOTICE rHtntaUvH will be re-• Calllornla Environmental TM regltt,..nt commenced Have yo1.1 tlantd doing t:tO PM. It ......... " ..
• O•OOam to SaOO,m asc 480 qulr.U to give notice to In-NOTICE 0, Quality Act. lo transae1 buslntu under bualntH yet? no ....... .., ...... ..
r .-PUBUC NOTICE fet9) "°"9200 CAL· NOTtC• 0, ltrelted peraona unlesa PUBLIC HEAJ!tlNQ NOTICE IS HEREBY FUR-lh• llctlllous n1m• or WalidYOUMI ................ MIMrof
' they ha\19 waived notice Of NOTICE IS HEREBY THEA OIVEH tttat nldl!Ubo MrM9 .. t.O ~ OA ~ This tt.tement wa1 tii.d lltlJllllll=··--• cma1337193 WESTl!RN RECONVEY· PET.ITION TO conHnted to the proposed GIVEN that tht CITY He hearing will bt held on Quat 8, 1985 with the County Clerk ol ... ..._. ....
STATEMENT OF ANCE CORP.,.825 Ea1t ADMINISTIR action.) Ttlt lndependenl COUNCIL ol the City of the 22nd day of JANUARY The Irvine Company, Alch· Orange County on 12-12.95 !ilrl.... DlldofTNlllll ...
• ABANDONMENT OF Main ltrMt, P.O. Box l!STATI! OFt admlnlattation authOrlty will Newpoa Beach win hold a Ul96, 11 the hour ol 'l':OO ard Q, Sim, E11ecuUvt V~e tH53H7f3e ~ ....... 111 tllld C01111y ~ -JllE OF FICTITIOUS 22004, El Cajon, CA QIOROI! A. IHORE bt grant.a unle11 an In-public haarlng on lhe ..,._ p.m. In the Council~ Pr11lden4 Dally Pilot Jan. 11, 18, 25, _, ........ dllllllld: ~
llUSINESS NAME 92022·9004, (818) aka OEOROE ARTHUR ltfelltd person litt1 an ob-plication ol Brtcu Atstau-btfa of the Newpo11 Beach Thia atatemtnt wu filed Feb. 1, 1998 lh188 ,..,...,._... Oii MldOlld The lollowlng petaOns 690-9200 SHORB au DR jectlon to the peUtlon and rant (John McLaughlin ap· City Hal, 3300 Newpot1 with the County Cltt1c ol offfw& .,,.,...._...__.
have abandoned the u• ol Dated: January 02, QEOROI! A. SHOAi ·~ g=dc~ wtl~ ~· pllcant) tor Use Pttmli No. ~111tvnlard, Newport Beach, Orang. County on 12-26-95 PUBLIC NOTICE .._ __ f Is *4 I.,, ttte Flctltjoua Bu1ln1u 199t cou • no gran e 3571 on pre>perty locat.U al ,,... or a, at which Ume 1tt538t8t28 of llt ,... ~ ..,.... Name: Chateau San Juan, ake DR. QEORO• authority. 2600 East Co111 Highway. and place a_ny a/Id an per-Dally Piiot Jan. 4, 11, t8, Loan No.; OlSON eowll....,...lltll«JM,._
245 Fischer Avenue 0-1 Br Wendy V. Perry ARTHUR SHOAi A HEARINQ on the pell· Req1.1est to ntabllth a IUll '°"' Interested may ap-25 1996 lh172 MU Ofdef No · 01720 YOlll ,_.... Cotla ..... CA Costa Mesa CA nm ' TRUSTEI! SALE OF· CASI NO. A 110899 Uon wllJ be held on FEBAU· atrvlct restaurant whtft peat and be heatd thetton. 1 NutnW: 1'3.-0a1.oa Gia TM _... ..... T~
The Flctllioua Business Fl C llR: WIN DY V, To all helrl, benellc:Wiff, ARY 1, t9961 at 1:45 P.M. an existing 1peciahy lood II you challeng41 thl• PUBLIC NOTICE NOT'la o,i TIWITEE'S ..._ -ir...-Wlar.,lllCllf·
Name refe"ed to above PERRY, EXT.3034 crtc11tor1, contlngent credl-In 0.pl 703 iocated at 341 use previously txlstf4, with ptolect In court, yOl.I may IAl.I! UNOBl ~ ,.._ t1' Ill~·• was filed on February 8, Publllhtcl Newport tora, and pefaont who may TM City Drive South, Or· flmlt.O daytime use, on. bt "llmlttcl to raltlnt only ons1339091 OF TRUST _. ..__. f
1993, In the County of o,. Beach-Costa Meaa Dally oth•rwl•• be lnltr11t1cl In an~, CA 92~C ult alcoholic beverage thoN l11un you or aome· Flotltloua Butln•H YOU ME IN DErAUL ""' .,_ .... ....,
ange, Original Filo No. FS-Pilot January 11 18 25 UI• will or estate, or both, I YOU OBJ T TO Ule aervlce. live entertainment ona tlee. raised at ~· P\Jt>. Name Statement UNDEK A o.G OF T"UST llllOUllt Iii flt ......, ~ ol
60251 1996 • • • ol: GEORGE A. SHORE granting ol the petition, you and a waiver ol a portion ol lie hearing d11c:t1bed In The IOllOWlng ptl'tons art DATED ' .. ........___. ..... ,...
American Retirement Villas . aka GEORGE ARTHUR •~Id appear at the hear· th• required weekday off· lhl• notice or In wrlntn cor· doing buslne$1 u: Mission UNI.ass ~lltlltlOld.•,......• Prop8f\lts, Vil, LP., 245 TH180 SHORE aka DA. GEORGE Ing and stale your ob-strMt parking. The pro-rtspondenct dtllll9fed to Viejo Famlty Partnerahlp, TO _.,.OTECT YOU ._. ~ .,._ n1
Fischer Avenue, D·t, Costa PUBLIC NOTICE A. SHORE aka DA. e:lont or lilt written ob-posal also Includes: a re-the City at, or prior to, the LP., a Calilornla kmlted ~~ IT MAY ..._II h .. of 1111.-Mesa CA 92626 GEORGE ARTHUR SHORE Iona with the court bt· quoit to convert an existing public nearing for lnforma· partnership 13 Corporate • ...,..tllltNalceol .. 11:
Thi•· business was con· 39757 A PETITION has been ore th• hearing. Your ap-Bast FAR UH to a Ae-Uon call (714) 644·3200. Plaza, Suite 200, Newport WctTN~~~~ l11UG.11 lll....,tot.11111, ...
dwcted by a limited part· NOTICE OP tiled by STEPHANIE pearance may bt In person duced FAA Use In conjunc· WANDA E. RAOGIO, Beach, CA 92660 NATION OF nil! NATU"I TllMa "' ~ 1 ..,._
nershtp TRUSTEE'S SALE SHORE VANDEVEER In the or ~Jour anorney. 11of} wi1h the expansion ol CITY CLERK, CITY OF Stephen C. Hopklna, 2695 Of' Tii PROC dlldl *-Oii i ..... or.._
American Retirement VIiias APH· 933 88 050 Sup~~o~ Court0 ol Catifor· 0
1F ~~E ~ C~~ITO~ the restaurant fae11rty Into NEWPORT BEACH Riviera Drive, Laguna OAJNsl YOU EE~ ....._ • diedl *-lllr 1 ..... or Proptrt1os, Vil, LP., By: • nia, """nty of RANGE. r • c ngtn er 1 or 0 an adjoining commercial Published New ort Beach, CA 92851 • ......, ad .-. or 1 ct.l ARV Assisted Lhiing, Inc., LOAN HO: THE PEtlTION requests the deceased, you mu11 me spaco. P . Thia buslntsi Is con-SHOULD CONTACT *-!Jt•_or...,. ......
General Partner (formerly 2018172 that STEPHANIE SHORE your claim with the court Thla/.roject has been re-Beach-Costa Mesa Daily ducted by· a llmilld part· LAWYER. Ind ii.~ ....,. •
k.AO>Nn a&.Ani8'iC..n 11 .. · R~F; ~OJ.E, TRlffA VANDEVEER be appointed and mail a copy to the per· vlowe • and It haa been Pilot January 11, 1996. ntrship ' NOTICE IS HEREBY' todlllollor;;;;;;;'-*..,....
meot Villas Corp.) o. Brian FD 431929341 as persOhat'leprtntlUI tOM! '9P'~eillallwea dW1Wrmlned-1Mt i} ~ .Jh ~r~ P~N. that on 01131/1998. lfLS«loll 5.102 ti. flt Arww;W
Christle, Executive Vice T.S. No.201390 to admlnlater the Hiatt or pointed by the court with n egorlcally exempt under PUBLIC NOTICE to transacl buslneu under al 'V 1l AM of aald dfY, COcla and....._ to dD .. Pr~sidtnt · IMPORTANT NOTICE TO the decedent. lour monthl from the date the requirement• ol the the fictitious name or THE CHAPMAN AVENUE ,.. Ill .. ...._ Ill ... ..,....,
19953118122 PROPERTY OWNER· THE PETITION requesll ol flrtt luuanc. of the let· Cthlornla Environmental NOTICE namts l111td above on 12-TRANCE TO THE C .................... ... . YOU ARE IN DEFAULT the dee9<fent'1 WILL and tt11a U provld.0 In ltCl10ll Quality AC1 1·93 NTER BUILDING LO. Tlllllltllllf ..... llllalMol This statement waa flied UNDER A DE D OF cOdlclls, II any, be admllted 9100 ol the California Pro-NOTICE IS HEREBY FUR· INVITING BIDS Stephen C Hopldna TEO AT 300 • EAS t1' ... T~ Dim .......
with the County Clerk of TRUST DATED JtLY 24 to probate. The wlll and bale Code. The time for Iii· THEA GIVEN that aald pub· Notice Is hereby given Thi• statement was tiled HAPMAN AVENUE, OR· beoolN ~to 1111.~ or Orange County on 12-26-95 1990 UNLESS YOU TAKE any cOdiells are available Ing c:Jalma will not ticplrt lie hearing will b• held on that the Board ol Trustees with the County Clerk or E. CA •. RESS FINAN· ..._••lllllwof• Slid
Daily Pilot Jan. 4, 11, t8. ACTiON TO PROTECT for examination In the file btlort lour month• from th• 22ND day of JANUARY gf nth• ~11~1 ColmOmunity Orange County on 12·26-95 IAL CORPORATION, • .. _.lltlllldt,IM.._~
25 1996 YOUR PROPERTY IT MAY kept by the court. th• hearing date nol!Otd 1996 at the hour of 7:00 ° ege 1&tr ct 0 range 19 .. 53168t38 kfomte Corif:,81'°" M Niil or~-•~ ' ' • THE PETITION ts above. ' . County, Califomla, wlll rt· ., · • -.--111t70 BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC authOflty to admlnl'::!~~e YOU MAY EXAMINE lht p.m. lnl the Council Cham-c:elve aoaled bld1 op to but Daily Pilot Jan. 4, 11, 18, ulyappomted ruat .. uncMI .... ,..... ,...._or
---......... -----•SALE IF YOU NEED AN fll k b h II bers o lhe Newport Beach no late than 10.30 25 1996 tht74 nd purauant to IM power IM»ID& .... to ""'1111 lft. PUBLIC NOTICE EXPLANATION OF THE estate 1.1ndtf the lndtpen· • •pt Y 1 •court, Jou City Hall, 3300 Newport M d r J 22 t~6' ' .... conferred In that certain cl!Mldwww ..... !Jttllld ~
---------1 NATURE OF THE PRO-dent AdmlnlstratJon of E•· are a person Jnltreste In Boulevard. Newport Beach, ,o~ ayPu ·~r 6 : PUBLIC NOTICE Deed of Tnist execUled .,.__ .._., • tNnlt 40071 CEEDINO AGAINST YOU tat11 Act. (Thll authority the tllale, )'Oii may file California at which time a t re ~ ng tpart KA OlSON • prorMed .... aid h ~ NOTICE OF YOU SHOULD CONTACT A win all~ th9 pertonal rep-with the court a formal A• and place any and all ptr· tntnt of the Dialrle1 located Flotltloua Bualneu R~ on 08/30/1994, ..,._... ....._ ti ... Maet •
TRUSTE£'S SALE LAWYER rettnlauve to take many quest for Special Notice ol aon1 lntttested may •P-atBld 13D70 CAda~ Avenc~~· Name Statement '" eoo. nJa of OfrlCiaf R ontl 11¥ 11111 Dlld • *"'
0 · aetlont wilhOut ~rt ap-the filing ol an lnvente><y pear and be htatd thereon 1g. , osta mHa, ..... Th f Uowl _ ~ APN: 139-251.04 n JANUARY ,8, 1996, at proval Befort taking ctr· and appraisal of Hiatt as-II . lornla, at which Ume bids • o ng pera~ns art Os of ORANGE ~nty. •I ..._,•,.._Ill llllf -LOAN NO: 10.00 A.M., CAL·WESTERN lain very Important aCtlons Hll or of any petition or I you challenge this wlll bo pubhcly opened and doing busmen as. Trade peg. nla, ReconM'• lnstru. .... dw911.i ..... 11111
104418-3 RECONVEYANCE CORP., a • account 81 prollldtd In ~oject In cout1, you may ,.1d lor PURCHASE OF Aoearct\ International, ment No 94-0432n1, hme and h.,... ~ 1Jt
REF• TAGGART Calllornla COfporatlon u ~.~~i:~!uf4::.SO:::J~~ aecUon 1250 ol the Cali· 11"11led lo ral1lng only THREE . (3) VEHICLES; T.R.I., 2688 N. Santiago r•son o( t breach or d~lauh uldO....afTM&. ""-Rlcall-
JAMES• & CHRISTl,NE dudly appdolnted tru1stt1• to give nollce to lnt•t1ted lornla Probate COdt. A Re-~'!is!':i!~~t~~:or:: COAST COMMUNITY COL· =~~7 llO, Orange, CA ' pe'f"*'lorperformanee ::~··-::~· un tr an pursuan o peraoN unleu !My have qu"t for Special Notice 1 ht 1 :J LEGE DISTRICT obllgaflona aecured ....... ....., _,.., CV Deed ol Tnist recorded AU-walV.O notice or conaented f0tm 11 available from the ic, ~1 ng 1escrt In All bid• ere IQ bt In ac· Trade Research ln1l., T.R.I. her9by, Including that breach ......._CAtml,~; T.S. No.002119 OUST 6, 1990, ae Inst. No. to the ro •lid actl court clerk. th• nolc• or n w!ilttn cor· cordance with the Bid Doc· (CA),. 2688 N. SanUago default Not~ of which ...,UM ... ~ ey.m.
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO 90 415543, In book, page, The lndf""'~tnl ldmf':il Attorney for the Pell· r1~pcond1 •nc• del1iv.fed to umenll which are now on 8111., #10, Orange, CA recorded 02I02/1t95 81 111 C.-. ~ ,
PROPER'N OWNER· of Official Record• In the ..-• • ty at, or pr or to, the flit and may bt sec red In 92667 dtr' 1 11 1 No Dleld: t~MllS M#
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT office ol th• County R• ~~~~~ a:!'Y .,,wtutnt!:' JtloAnCer0
1 U EL 1N 11 M put>~ ~.,(~· For lnl0t· th• office 0 lht Dlr:cior 01 Thi• bu1lne11 .I• coo-ecor $5 ~ a::" nla at 1D.11'. tit! UNDER A DEED OF cord., of ORANGE County, eated rton llH an 0~ • mat c I 4) 044·3200. Purchasing ol the District. eluded by: a corporation nit Wu SEU 'AT'•---------
TRUST, DATED MARCH 24, State of CALIFORNIA ex-Jectlon ~ the 1 tlon and JENSEN, WANDA It. RAGGIO, No bidder may withdraw Have you 1ta11ed doing ~ AucTION TO THE OBITUARY 888
t995. UNLESS YOU TAKE ecuftcl by 'mlNA ELIZA· shoW good ca= why the INC., (CSB.1000451), CrTY CL"ERK, CITY OF hl1 bid'°' t period ol lorty· business yet? yes, Jan HEST BIDDER FORi"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
ACTION TO PROTECT BETH COLE, AN UNMAA· court lhOClld not rant th• taooe SKYPARK CIA· NEWPORT BEACH live (45) days aner th• date tm H lewf I of the•·
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY RIED WOMAN authorlt • g CLB, STE. 108, IR· Publlth•d Newport Ht for tht opening thereof. Trade R_esurch Intl., nitad' Stat! ~ HAYWARD BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC WILL SELL AT PUBLIC A H~ING on the pell VINE CA 92714 BHch-Costa MeH Daily The Board ol TrusltH re· T.R.I., Wahd Yousel, Prosi· "'-ah· , ,..;. __ k .._ __ by ---.-SALE. IF YOU NEED AN AUCTION TO HIGHEST SI • ' 1trvH the rMltg ol dent "'"' ,_a ..,..._ ''""'"' on ~ EXPLANATION OF THE BIDDER FOR CASH Uon wlU bt held on FE AU· Published Newport PUot January 11, 1996. jtctlng P nd 11•bld re-This statemenl was filed Ital• 0t national benll,
NATURE OF THE PRO· CASHIER 'S CHECK AAY a, l996, at ':45 P.M. Beach-Costa MtN Daily th181 to waiv:"~1 1r: ular~tf:~ with the County Clm of tie equMilent thefeof dnlwn ~EDING AGAINST YOU, DRAWN ON A STATE OR fh~t8ti/°c? ~J~1~1 ~1 Pilot January 4, 5, t 1, PUBLIC NOTICE °' lnlormahll~s l~any bid Orange Counly on 12·12·95 any other fineneiel lnatitu
YOU SHOULD CONTACT A NATIONAL BANK , A an e bA9;66~ • r· 1994. ( or lnlh•blddlng. 19953917131 lonsper;lf~NIMCtlon5102
LAWYER. CHECK DRAWN BY A I~ YOU OBJECT TO the thll75 NOTICE OF ..,Signed: JS/ ROGER, W. Diiiy Pilot Jan. 1 t, 18, 25, the C.lifornbl FmlflClal
On FEBRUARY 01, 1996, STATE Ofl FEDERAL granllngoflhepelltion you PUBLICHEAAINO DAVIS DirectorolPurchas-Feb 1 1996 lh189 ,authonztdtodobu.i-at 10:00 A.M . CAL-CREDIT UNION, OR A • O Ing COast Comm 11 Col . ' In the Stale of Callfcw· WESTERN RECONVEY· CHECK DRAWN BY A should appear at the hear· N TICE IS HEREBY 1 • o 1 un Y • PUBLIC NOTICE 111 ALL PAYABLE AT THE 1ng and stilt your Ob-PUBLIC NOTICE GIVEN that the CITY eo• 1str ct Me OF.,. .. ,"' . ,.._ ANCE CORP., a Cahlorma STATE OA FEDERAL SAV· iecllons or file written ob-COUNCIL of the City of Open: JanualY 22, t996 . ~.all nght, tmw oorporat1on as duly ap-INGS AND LOAN AS-10·30 am NOTICE OF lnlt<8'1 held by ii 11 p0ln1ed trustee under and SOCIATION SAVINGS AS-ecUons with the court be· NOTICI 0, Newpor1 Beach will hold a Bid N · 703 APPLICATION FOR NSIM in that rHI,............ SOC o ' 0 s lore the hearing. Your •P· p C publlc hearing on the ap· o .. 1 · ,.. . ...,..... ., pursuant to Deed ol Trusl IATI N, R AVINGS pea.ranee may be-In ~rson UBLI HEARING pllcation of Steve Sliver· Published Newport CHANOI! IN uated In~ Counly and
recorded MARCH 3t, 1995, BANK SPECIFIED IN SEC· or by your attorney NOTICE IS HEREBY stein tor Amendment No Beach·Costa Mesa Daily OWNERSHIP OF Slate. descnbed as follows: as 1ns1 No. 95-0136069, tn TION 5102 OF THE FINAN· IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR GIVEN that the CITY 838 on property located ai p 1 t J 11 1• 1,,,,..., Al.COHOLIC OT 8 OF TRACT NO 3S25, book X X, page X X. of Of· CIAL CODE AND AUTHQ. . COUNCIL ol tht City of 1 o anuary • 0 • '""" N THE CITY OF COSTA l1c1a1 Records 1n the oll1ce RIZED TO DO BUSINESS or a contingent creditor of Newport Beach will hold a 4717 Hampden Road, pro-th179 BEVERAGE LICENSE SA. IN SAID COUNTY
ol the County Recorder of IN THIS STATE WILL BE the deceased, you must file publlc hearing/review of posed ORDINANCE NO. December 20, 1995 O STATE AS PER MAP
ORANGE County. Stale ol HELD AT THE ENTRANCE your clalm witn the court the appllcallon ol Morgan 96-2. am~ding • p0rtlon PUBLIC NOTICE To Whom It May Coo-ECOROEO '1N BOOK 130
CALIFORNIA execulod b TO THE ORANGE CITY and mall 8 copy to lht per· Development (Max Morgan of Dlstrle1ing Map No. 31 cern: CALABRIA FOODS 7 '
JAMES F. TEGGART ANO HALL. 300 EAST CHAP· sonal representative . ap-applicant) for General Plan so H to establish a lron1 cn11331538 INC .• la(are) applying to the AGE(S) ~R~H 10
CHRISTINE TEGGART MAN AVENUE ORANGE pointed by Ille court within Amendment No 95 3(E) yard aetback of 33 feet Flctltlo1.1a 8ualnHI Department ol AlcohoUc MISC L EOUS
HUSBAND AND WIFE AS CALIFORNIA ail right U~ lour month1 from the date Amendment No . 8-37 -Sitt lrom the newly Hlablfshed Name Statement Btvartgt Control to atll af. , IN THE OFFICE Of'
JOINT TENANTS and lntert1t conveyed to of firat Issuance ol the let· Plan Review No 7S and front pr~rty hne on Lot The following peraon1 are cohollc beverages at 223 COUNlY REC~DER
which he held an Ad·
11anced Ucen1e.
From the day he
Joined the Navy, Stew·
art loved the 110•. Ho
and Jo Ann moved
from Paaadena to
Newport Beach In
1961 and Stewart re-
tired one year later. He
joined tne Shark Is·
land Yacht Club and
becamo II• Com·
modore In 198B. His
boat "Top Notch Ill"
la a familiar sight In
Newport Harbor.
He Is survlvod by his
wile Jo Ann of New·
port laland; a brothor
David with wife
Jeanne of Huntington
Beacn; a son Chuck
with wile Ginny ol Ir·
vine; three daughters,
Sandra Robbins of
Pomona, Suso.n Costa
wllh husband Tom or
South Pasadona and
Nancy Ressel with
husband Randy ol
Coetti---M•••: tw4
grandchildren and
three gr ea I·
grandchildren.
Memorlar services will
be at 11 :00 a m. on
Saturday, January 13,
1996 at Pacific View
Memorlel Park In New-
port Beach. In lieu of
flowers. d o natio ns
may be made In mem·
ory of Stewart L Hay-
ward to tho UCI Foun·
datlon tor Parkinson's
Ro1earch, University
ol California, Irvine,
UCI Foundation, Ir·
vine, CA 92717·5601-
Pacillc View Mortuary
In charge of arrange·
ments, 644-270Q.
OBITUARY 888
SOMERS
.J•me• Fr•ncls
Somera died Tues-
day, January 2, 1996.
Born September 12,
1932 In Teaneck, New
Jer1ey, Mr. Somers
served a1 o Lieutenant
In the Army during tho
Korean War and 9rad-
u11ted from tne Unlver-
alty of Penn1ytvan1a's
Wharton Business
School In 1958. As o
young execu1tve wnh
lht Stnger Corpora-
tion, he was included
In Who's Who 1n
America. Later as a
Vice Preslde"t of ITI,
he was tronsforrod
from Now York C11y to
Los Angelos In 1966.
He was a reaitJent of
Newport Boach for 12
years p11or 10 moving
to San Ologo where,
for the pa11 t 1 years, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC and now held by 11 under It~ ti provided In section Re1ubdM1lon No: 1021, on 27• aa wall ., an easterly doing business as: a) Marl· Marine Ave., Balboa, CA SAID COUNTY
AUCTION TO HIGHEST said Deed of Trust In th• 9100 ol Iha Cahfornla Pr'?" proptr1y located at 507·521 side yard aetback ol 15 ntr Squ.,a A11ocla1e1, b) 92463 with a "41" On-Salt The alreet addrns or
BIDDER FOR CA SH property ailuated In ••Id ~at• Code. The time for M· Oranga Avenue The ap-leel, where the Districting Main/Redhill Auoclates, Beer & Wine (Pub. Eat. Pl) herc:ommondellgnellon
St•w•rl L. H•Y· as President o f Som.
ward , Lt. Cmdr . era and Anoclates,
c As HIER. s c HE c K County and State de-1ng c1alm1 will nol ·~plrt pllcat1on1 being considered Map currently dHl~nata1 • (Th• Irvine Company), 550 llctnH\•>· he real property n.nnnabove
DRAWN ON A STATE OR scnbtdas· before lour month• from 11 If approved allow for frontaatbackof15 Ht and Newport Center Drive, P1.1bl •htd Newport rlbedlapul'pOftedtobe·
N ,A Tl ON AL BANK. A C o M P L ET E l Y D E· th• hearing date noticed ~. dtvtlopmeni ol an 8 a Ilda yard aatback or 6 Newport Beach, California Beach-Costa Mesi Dilly 1 Mlnneeota A\'90U8,
CHECK DRAWN BV A SCRIBED IN SAID DEED 1~· MAY EXAMINE h unll rHldtnllal condo-= fl~m the o~gi~al lront 92660-70t1 Pilot January 1t,1994. Meu, CA'92128 STATE OR FEDERAL OF TRUST 1 t mlnlum project General 1 t prope y net, 1• The Irvine Complny, th187 The undenNgned dis-
CAEDIT UNION OR A. The atrett eddresa and lila kept by th• cour1. "Jou Plan Amendment No 95. apectlvaly. (Michigan), 550 Newport lalms all liability fOt any
C}iECK DRAWN BY A other common dHlgnaUon art a person lnltrHlt In 3(E) 10 rednlgnate the ~roject ~11 been re-Center Orlve, Ntwport PUBLIC NOTICE ncorrec:tMSa In .. Id atreet
STATE OR FEDERAL SAY· ii any, ol the real pre>pttfy !.:h ~!·~~uf:'~r ~~~ property fOt Mulll-Famlty ~ltterminedndth:t ~~·1, b:~ ~0•~fh• California 92660-FlcUtlout Builneaa r ... or othef common
TNGS AND LOAN AS-deset1bed abOvt II P\lf• RtlldtnUal UH and tstat:>-I Ill N St t SOCIATION, SAVINGS AS· ported 10 bt: 345 UNIVEA-quell lor Special Notice ol llsh tilt perm.n.a density egor c y exempt under Thi• bu1lne11 11 con· ame a ement Seid late win be made
SOCIATION OA SAVINGS SITY DA ID-3 COSTA lhe filing ol an Inventory of dtvelo ent· Am ncf. the req1.1lrtm.nt1 of the ducted by: a corporaUon TM following person1 ara hollt ~nty ~-or BANK SPEClFIED IN SEC· MESA ci>.' 926n ' and appraisal ol Hiatt ••· ment No P8~7 i • d Calllornla Environmental The reglattanl commenced doing buslneu aa: Ana· mplled egardl • lit ..
TION 5102 OF THE FINAN-The 'undartigned TruatH HI• or of any petition or Districting Map J0 ·~~o Qutllty AC1. to tranaact buslntsa undet helm A Penny Inn Motel, ' or o1":.r enc'::
CIAL CODE AND AUTHQ. clltclalma any llablllty for account aa prolllded In rezone the propert from NOTICE IS HEAEBY FUR: the llctlt1ou1 name or 1800 W. Uncoln Ave., Ana· nca'. lo satisfy tn. unpaid RIZED TO OO BUSINESS any lnco"eetneH 0 the ~tlon 1250 ol the CalilOf· the "R.2" Olstrlcl Y (Two-~HER GIVEN lhal tald pub namH llaled above on helm, CA 92801 igtltlons MCUred II'( said
IN THIS STATE WIU BE street acldru1 and otn• a Probate Code. A A• Family Auldentlal) to he: heiring wlll be held on March 1980 Shu-Chen Whitworth, 460 cl Trust, with lnterd
HELD AT THE ENTRANCE common clHlgnatlon II queat for Special Notice "MFR (8 du)" Dill let tM 22ND day of JANUARY The Irvine Company, Wil-N. CoHt Hwy., Laguna nd ottlef ~ TO THE ORANGE CITY any, ahown herein. ' form la available Crom the (M1.1IU.famll Rnldtnll~I)• t998, 11 the hour of 7:00 flam H. McF11tland, Execu-Beach, CA t26St eums " ,....~ HALL, 300 EAST CHAP· Said •al• wlll be made court cltrk. Site Plan A/view No 75 1 • p.m. In the Council Cham-tlve Viet Prealdent Thi• buslotlt It con-herein, plue •tdl"'~-w:ea--.
MAN AVatUE. ORANGE, but without covtnam 0; Attome~ for the Petl• taUaty condltlona of a: bett ol lht Newport BHch This atattment WH flied d1.1cttd by: an lndlvldual ny, l~ncMt end Interest
CALIFORNIA 111 right, tiUe warranty, exprtH or Im-tfoners proval of General Plan City Hall, 3300 NtWPort wllh the County Clerk ol Have y0u •tarted doing hereon, and phi• '-·
and lntertsl COOYeYed to pll.U, regarding title, Pol-WILLIAM V. SCHMIDT, Amendment 95-3 (E), t• Boulevard, N.wport BHch, Orange County on 12·26-95 bualnt11 ytl? yea 12-3-95 rgea, and ~dthe
and now held by It under HUIOl'I, con<litlon, or en-EIQ., (CS8102•0H), quiting appiovw ol a •It• California, at which tJme 1995391Bt30 Shu-Chen Whitworth """" end O! the lrusta
said Dffd ol Trust In th• cumbrtnces, Including 1030 CAMPUI DR. plan rtvfew tor th• and plac. any and*" per· Dolly Pilot Jan. 4, 11, 18, Thia ttatenient wu filed by Mid Deed. property 11tuatad In 1atd ftu, chargH and ••· NIWPORT aUCH cA Pot.a 8 unit condoml,C aona lrittlfttt.U may ap-25, 1998 th173 w11h the C~y Clerk ol ruat The toeal ernounl County and State de-penaH of the Trullff and • rojtct· and RH1.1bdlvltlon pear and b• heard thereon. Otangt CC>Urlly on t2-4·9e Id obUgationt 111 ltle IHM acrlbtd aa: of the 11u1t1 et••t• 8H80...Zt7t ' II you challenge thla • PUBLIC NOTICE 1H531ff223 ltlel publlcallon of lhla
COMPLETELY DE· said Deed of Truat to pay parcel• of~ nto one ~yew~ Dally P110t Jan. 4 11 1t lcela~31 82.
SCRIBED IN SAID DEED the remaining p'rlnclpal 8each-Coata M ... Dally parcel rp, conclomlnfum tho~.!*' to ~ only cnat33U30 n 109e ' tt,118 ed! 01 18"
OF TRUST sums of the not9<•) ..,. iH>t Janully 10, 11, 11, purpo1t9. Also Included In H .. was you or aome-FJct1tlou1 au11ne.. ' "EU PtHAHCW. Ih• 8'rHt acldrtaa and cwed by 1ald Dffd of 1ne. lhe appllcatlon I•• mOdill-one., .. ralMd al the p1.1b-Nam. statement PUIUC NOTICE ~TION. ~., common designation, Tr\411 to wll: S1 T5,N2.00 wth42 l cation to th• Zoning Code lie hearing clHcrtbed In The IOlloWlng p9'aont are • C.hfomla Oorporetlon,
" any, Of lh• real property with lntarnt thereon from lo allow a l)0(11on ol a two thl• notice or In wrltttn Cor· dolna bu1l~1111: a) Irvin• FlcUUoua lualneH H TMllee
deacrlbtd above Is put• 12/01/9<1 at 10.250% per PUBLIC NOTICE car gar1ge to encroach 1 ~~·~ cl•~IYtrtcl ~o L.ancf Management Com· N•m• IJatement er. 8ruoe R. llelMy, pc>tWd to tw. 2970 JAVA annum .. prO\llcled In tald lttt 10 lnehea Into tht r• 1 Y • .. or pr or to, t • pany, bl Irvine Lind Man-The folloWlng pertoN 111t PNeldenl
• ROAD, COSTA MESA. CA nott(I) plus COit and eriy BIC ... ,_ qult.O t foot 10 ~ ..,_ ~ h1'(71°f4) ~ ... ''.~!2.'° 1gemtnt, no Newport doing bulln.u u: The 17291 IMN loulewlrd. 11 '242t edvancet wllh lnltrffl ES-NOTICI o' ywd .. tbac:k adjacent to ma on c:. ,._.._...,, Center Drive Newport cteeillna People 8211 Wtfl. Sulle 282
', The l.lndtttlgned Tru11 .. TIMATl!D TOTAi. Dl!BT PllTITION TO ,6th SttMt C WANDA L RAGGIO, Btacti, CaJllor'nla 12Gf0. helm Clrcle, Huntlntlon Tu.tin, CA t1UO
I dl~lalmt any ltablljtr for $t99,$54.94 Thia P'ofect h .. been ,. ITV CLIAK 0, NIW· 70t 1 &etch, CA 92$48 TMptlone (~714 an.-741
any lneorrecine .. o tile The beneficiary 1.1ndtt A.DMINllTlft viewed, and It hu bttn POftT BUCH The ltvln• Company {Mich· leabet me.a. 9211 WUI· ff•: (714 873-7437 • lttMt addr•N and othtlf tald Deed otTru1t htttto-18TATIOP• del.,mlntd that It 11 cal· Publlth•d Newport lgan), 550 NewPQrt Cenltf' helm Circle. Hl.llltloglon 01111191,01/1 ,01125'118
common de1lgnatlon, II fOfe executed and dtlv-FLORllNCI P. KISIR egotlcally exempt undtt Beach.Cotta Mela Dany Ortve, N4"WP0'1 Stach. C.U· Beech, CA 12648 f"NSS53302
any, ahown Mltlf\. trtd to the Undeltlgntd 1 CAii NO. A1I081a Int requ1tttnetrt.1 of the Plic.4 .1 .... -.. 11 19". fOfnlt •~1011 ~hi• butlnttt I• con-
Said ul• will be made. wr111en Deci...ation of 0.. To att Ml,., beneflc:ierlM, Calltornla Environmental __ , ' Th-ia3 Thlt bu11ne .. 11 con-ducted by: en lndlYldual PUBLIC NOTfC!
• but wtlhoUI covenan1 °' f ull and Oemal\d fOf sai.. credrt0t1, cont•n• credl-Oualltv Act. duct.a by:• corporatlOn Hev. vow ttatttd c:J01nO
' warranty, HP<tll Of em.; and a wrltttn Nolle• Of D• ton, and ~ wtlO may NOTfCI! 19 Hl!AHY FUR· PUILIC NOTICI! TM rtglttrant cotnmtneed bUtlne .. yet? ~ M ·IS NOtU °' TUTll'I w. \Mo
pli.d, rtgardlng lllle, POI' faun and Election lo a.ti, OUllf'WIH be lnl.,tsted In THIA GIVEN theUlld pub-to ttan .. c:t butlneta Ufldet l .. bet klc.,a OllU&»CWlUTfk 1'91
MN!on, condtOon. or en-The unclertlgned CauMd th9 wtll Of ettate, or bOtti, llo hearing wil be held on NOTIC• OP th• llctltlout name ot Thie •tatement wu filed U.: 1SllaOlr. ..,_ M cumbranou, ll\cl1.1dlng laid Notic. Of De,_,,. and of: 'l.ORENCE P. KIUR IN a:zHD day Of JAHUMY PueLIC ~•NO namet ll•ttd abOve on wlttl the County Clerk of .... _.... '1QI ,,_ Ii
' IHI, ch1rgtt and •11-a.cUon to Sell lo be r• A PETITION hat been 1tM, at 1ht hoYr of 7;00 NOTICI 19 HEAUY febn.tary .UIN Or8nQ! Coun1y on 12"'"'5 llliJMA.T ._ A DEB> Of
:· pef'lttl of lhe TNSI .. and eor~ In !he CounlY •her• filed by NANCY N. AIKEN p.tn. In llW Col.Inell Otiwn-QIVl!N Intl th• ctn ~ Wint Company, Wll-1MUIMNt ~r-...r ,,,.
ol the ltUltt crtated by the rMI property It roc41ttcl. and Lit.A .... NELSON In be<t Of the ~ Beacl'I COUNCii. of the Clty ot Ram H. McFarland( Execu-Deily Piiot Jan. 4 11 11 TNCl ~ 10
aald Dffd of Tru.I, lo PIY FOft tAl.U lNFOft• tn. 8UP,erl°' Court Of Call-9t)' Hall, ~· Newport ~ hech will t,Old a l!Vt Vlca Ptealdent • 21 ltN ' thl1i PMJHJt---r"'Y W
lhe remel"lng prlnclpal MAT I ON t 11 en..,. r I f°'nle, County of ORANOI. lo\HVatd, Newport a..ct\, public htatl!'Q. on the ap. Tlllt ltelement Wit flltcl ' • IMf •-.OAT APUaJ:Mti
ll.ITll of lhe nott(t) •• ltOOam to 1 100,m THI PETITION ~ C•tornl .. al which tlme pllcatlon ol cny of NfWPOf1 with IM County Cltrk Of "11UC NOTICI • '1al -M Dl'UMTD
cured by aald Deed of 1819) leG-taOO CA&.-INI NANCY N. AIK!N end #tel plKt any and al P*• IMch 1or Amendmtnl No. OtMQt County on 12·26-86 M -f/1 M "'°' TN91 to Yfll: "429.31448 Wl!IT191l" RICOH'Vft Ut.A M. NUSON .,. ap. eon. lntttHltcl INiy .,,.. ua. propottd ORDI· 1fflH .. 111 ft.Utteue ..,.,,.... .-r 10U. '1QI With lnltf'ett tMrtOf'I !torn • pointed u pttlONI rtpt• Ptfll and be heetd lhefeon. NANCI' NO. H-t. Dally Piiot Jen. 4 11 11 ..... Stat•IMftt CDIW:T A LAma. .. /01195 at e.ooo" per ANCI COftP,, 821 ... , aentel!VH to tdmlnleler uw tr you chtlltl\gt thl• A City lnltlat•d •mend-25 ltM • th11t The following Peftont we ...... ....,..._ ........
tMum u prov'<Std Ind tald Main '''"'• P.O .... t1tai. ol th• ~1. P<O)ic:t In court, you may menc to ttie N~ Piece ' ... ILIC -TtCI dOlnt bualnNt u : WllOI ._ a ~ • .... note(•) plus cost en any 22004, II C8'en1 CA THIS PETITION t~ be llmlttd to taltltlg only flllanntd Comrm.tnltt DI.. r:v -Ae1turent l Hight Club, :1'-----·--td~ .. Wiii) lrittrut. H· •20••·•004, (t1t) the ~·· Wit.I. and ... --~Of tom. ltlet and Table t0'..33 ol 2e. H. santJaoo .... "· ............. .... TIMATl!O TOTAL OUT 890-8200 Codicllt, 11 tl'r/,.,. ~ one .. rlllMd .. ll'le pub. Tile IO of the MUhldNI .... 1aae1t4 a... CA ... , ........ " ...
"'54,tlS.lt Datecll Deoelfthf 14 to proo.t.e. The wfl and II '*'1nt deteflbed In COO. ..tlleh Will ptohlblt FJotHleUe ......... Wallil YOUMf, -._ ........ -.. ...... ._. The b•ntllcltry under t H• ' eoy codlcllt at• availatlW "* de• 0t In written 0«· 111.110 tlofage, IUtomobllt llatM • ......._, nego llv., Or~•· CA ._. • illll ._... •
.. ,d Oetcl of Trutt htrtlO" ror ... m1na11on In the flle ~ CHllYtftO to 11911( and 9'1tom0blle de-Ttie 1o11ow1ng P«tont .,. 12t17' i& • ...._. -.
{' IOf• .. ~ end dtl!Y' Ir Pmrto .. D8"1•1• ltepl by "" court N CltV .. cw prlOf IO, the 181111'9 In lht ~ Pa.ct dOlnt butlneN H : lrMt Thi• bueln•.. •• co,.. ......... .
tred 10 the undertlgned • TftVITU MU O,_ THI fllETITIOH rfQUelll pUb!6f Mlrina. '-lnlOr· Planned Com""'""Y and ,..._. ~ Comoeny iSWIJND • ......... Ai ti
•• wilttn Oedwallon Ot o.. fl. c ... I "A Tit I 0 I A tulhoftly to ~" N fl'lllllon Clll (7f•) ~ Wllhln .,. An 'and AMC MO ~ c.nt.. . omre: .... .,,. fMOUJOe "OU .. E '' .. " .... Ill.ill and ~ fot Salt, DMIS&.11 UT.to21 ....ae ut!der N ~ WAmA L MGOI01 DiMrtCU, ...,.._ MCt111tJ tO Newport INcn; ~ , o..aClll ...... .
and' written Holice of 0• •ut»llthed Newport o.iC .A&lmlolllrlllon of .. cm 0Lmt CrTY OF an~ .... ----..1011 !~.:un:..en n:.c-:.: ... . f.a>ll end lllldloft to lel h1Ch49ta ..... na11u ...... Aiet. (Ttll9 llUlhOlllJ •#OfiT MAOft 0t ~Of IN prtnct. The lr.tne CompHr. .....!:. -...... --•·--nw und*tlQned C:IUNd ..... , Will allow ..... "''°"" ,... , .. , HI~""'*'.,.~ l~an); llO """"" --"' ---.. • ............ :it 'Deflliwll IN Hot Dtcemblt ._ 1•. ,.....,,_ to .... ...., •• l•fl•d Ntwport ~!NI hllll -.. ,.. Centtt Ori•• N••lllOd our oolutM9 OOfn..., ~...-. .. Iii .. lilt ... ~~ 1t, ,... M1oM ..... Coult .. le11fi(loe&e ..... Dillw a I hes.._.. 8tec1t °""°""' W quellfi.cl h;eN to • • •dfdll\ f'9 C°""f llfttre flt .. .,.... ..... tt1i'"9 ..,. .... ..., t1, 1M, 911111 I 11 ello 1011 1 ... , -:•
USNR (Rel) of New-ho has been rospon·
p ort Boacn passed alble for The Bridal
away January 6 1996. Bazaar, one of tho
He was born May 8. largeat trado shows o f
1918 in Loi Angeles, lta kind.
CA to Sumner ond Ht Is survived by his
Edith Ogden Haywatd wile Heamor; aons
and was married to Jo James Butler Somers
Ann Erikson March 8, and Peter Putnam
1963. Somera and their
Stewart bOQan his mll· apouse1, Dena and
ltary cereet In 1943 In Cher It Som• r I :
the U.S. Navy. At an dougl'lters Marcia Ward Somera and Ensign aulgned to Ellzebelh Falrchfld
the destroyer USS Somera; and grand· Putnam, he served In th• Pacific theater ol children Michael.
World Wai 11, partlcl· Shannon and Johanna Somers. paling In the cam-A private aervlc• will
palgna ol lwo Jima be held o11trlool<Jng
and Okinawa. He con-the ocean In Lo•
tlnued hi• aervlc• lr1 Oaos, Calllorrna on tht Naval Reserve until 197B. January t3, 1919. Oo-
Prlor to WW 11, he r• notion• In his name
.c.tllCt!L_a bach_elor'e may be made to thct
cs.gr" from thaUnJ· .-Amerloen Cenoer So--
verally of Oregon, 1_c_l_• ... ty _____ _,;.._
where "• wu • mem-ber of the Cotta Up•I·
Ion fraternity, Alter the
war ho earned th• d•
gr•• ol MHl•r of
Bu1lnes1 Admlnl1tre·
tlon from th• uni.
v•ttlty or Southern
Callforl&.
Stewart's carter u an
edvertl1lng executl~
began soon atter th•
Wal, With the PHI•
•MOlllU.NM
~C:::r:l
denalndopendenta.ndll~~~~~~ Star Newt, where h•
mot Ill• wire Jo Ann.
In 1060 he bee.me a
partn•r In th• Loa An-M e
gel .. advortltlng firm ~c-!'"'--~
ol Perl(tns. Stephana ·-·-""''
von der Lleth and 1~~ .. 8Y Haywatd, at.aMe•
While rHldlng In Pa.. ..._. ....
edena, Stewart att11ed II•••••••• .. u PrHldenl of the
Advert111ng Cl1.1b of
PaHctena, PrHldent
of th• Megull'le Rep.
re .. ntatlv.. A9toel•
tlon of Southem C11J·
f0tnl1, lll}'man •I All
lalntl Epl•copal
Church,• end aa a
memt>et of the Am•rl·
can ~Ion, th•, ...
11~ Junior Chamber or com"*~· the ,. ..
MfV9 ~· Of ..,. H••• hrv!C" and lhe ~ ,..,,.,, =--=._ ....... ..,. MdNlm
facNO Dfi*dOM In IM,.., fWO!*!Y .. rocatec1 leln ' ....... ...._ 1"111 flO'lcaly •*"ftt undef Thll billln"t ll OOfto M84eTe ••M-• • _________________ ..... ____ ..._ __ .._ ______ .....,looriiiiiii
t '
BY PHONE
• (714) 642-5678
BY FAX
(714) 631 -6594
(Please include your name
and phone number and
we'll call you back with a
price quote.)
BY.MAIL OR
IN PIUONz
330 We st Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
Comer of Newport Blvd & Bay St.
CLAISl•llD HOURS
Tele~10ne 8am-5:00pm
onday-Friday--
Monday-Friday
DAILY PILOT DIADLINIS
Monday ....... Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ....... Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday .. Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ..... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ........... Thursday 5:00pm
Saturoay ...... Friday 5 :OOpm
PUBLIC NOTICES
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
CORONA
DELMAR 1022
OCEAN & BAY VIEW
212 Carnation
3br/3ba REDUCED
$539K 7 t 4.573.904 t
Assume Lo•n $2081<,
Eastblulf. 3Br 2!hBa.
1800 sq ft. Pd $270K.
648·7004 or 675-478 t
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair Jobs
around the house?
Lei the Claulfled
Service Directory
help you.
PUBLIC NOTICES
Unuauallv large 4Br
4Ba 2·sty updated hm
Lg patio, Frnch drs. 2
fp, stops to bch. No
poll. 53000. 723·4633
BALBOA
PENINSULA 2107
Waterfront with side
tie. 1 Br, huge dock, t •
car gar. Nwpt lslaod
S900 David, 722·1488
PUBLIC NOTICES
NB Lg, 4bd home. 2·
rms avail. Pool table, I •••••••••I
lndry, tennis, jacuzzi, ANNOUNCEMENTS gar., n/smk. 642·6058
NB Ocean View
Modern, nr sand, lg ---------
bdrm. $525. $100 o ff ANNOUNCEMENTS
1st mo rent 646-4400 2920
NB Pvt Home. Lg Br. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I
pvt bath, kllch, lndry. OVERDUE BILLS?
Inc ull/cble. No smk/ DEBT CONSOLIDA·
pots. $500. 722·9755 TION. Cut payments
Npt Bch near Fashion 20·50"1'e. Stop Collec·
Island. Br ·pvt bath. 11ons. Avoid bank·
Quiel clean N/S. $485. ruptcy. Help with IRS
759-0756 Ive message debts. Reduce Inter·
Npt B each Own mas· est. Not a lender. LI·
tor suite. Close to censed/bonded. (Non·
beach Quiet. Pool. profit) MCCS 1·800·
?5; ~ -• 35 £lU..106~
PETS NEED YOUR
HELPI. Joan thou-
sands ot people, res-
cue abandoned pats
elfortlessly, from
home. FREE BOOK
explains how. Call for
recorded message. 1'
313-458·6100 Ext. 14
NOWI
Unemployed single
mom wlll e>Cchange
book keo pl ng/cl er I cal
for good n.mning car
to look for work. Call
645-6180.
GARAGES
FOR RENT 2740 LOST &
I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii FOUND 2925
GOUltll&T COOKJU
houaekeeplng, ••P'CI,
Pacific Investment live out, F{f. Non.-
Management Com· amkr. Newport Beach
panv (PIMCO) was aleL 714-673-l643
founded In 1971 tol~=--=-..,---~-~-
provlde apeclally PIT Sal•• Asaoo t~
mllllagement of fixed upscale NB hot-' Oifl
Income portfolios. we shop. Must ~ honest.
are 1oc_.ed In New-reliable, poaltlve.
port Bea.ch, !SO mlles Some wtmda. sa/hr.
south or Loa Angeles. Call-Catol ~2394.'
Assets under m.nag• POSTAL ~ GOV'T JC>el
ment are over $68 bll· $21/HOUA +BENEFITS llon with accounts NO EXP WILL TRAIH
ranging In size from Appl+lnlo 714-CMM9'1 s 15 million to S2.8 blt-1=,,,,-~==-:~---hon. We seek a: RE ASST' Busy prop
mgmt co. Enlly .....
position for p.,son w/
strong olfice skill.a.
Must be well organ-
ized, detaU oriented.
Cuual dress. Non-
smkg. 30 hrs/wk. Must
work Sat. $8.50/hr.
Call Stacie, 675-4930
FILE CLERK
This pos111on Is re·
1pons1ble for provld·
Ing administrative sup-
port to the share·
holder service depart·
ment. Rosponsibllitaes
include lll1ng, copying, "'R,_e_c_e_p-..,..t/""S,....•-c""'t:-y-'="s-.~lf.
faxing, light work pro-starter. Phns, gen ofc,
cHslng and assembly computer word 8.0
of large maillngs to i)l'ef. Type 60'+ wpm.
our shareholders. Start ASAP. 252-8835
The selected candi· ----.,.----~~-date must have edu· RECEPTIONIST
cation or experience Entry-level posit w/
equivalent to a HS de-oppty to grow In Npt
groo. Previous othc• B e a c h • H a n d I e
experience and begin-phon•t &. computer.
ning to lntermed1nte Call 489:..a900.
knowledge ot Word 1-...,.,..,~===""'"'"="=--for Windows required. RECEPTIONIST
Must possess good Seeking outgoing , re-
organ i z at Ion/com-sponslble team player
municahon skills and for NB salon. PT/FT.
be able to work lnde-Call Bonnie 756-0493
pondentty to complete Sales
assignments and In-
terface elf• .. •• all levels of manage-
ment. Must be able to
lollow spoclllc ln&tru~
lions and support statf
members as nocoss·
sary.
PIMCO otters a com-
petitive compensation
package. Qualllled
candidates are Invited
to forward their re-
s um o s to: PIMCO,
Dept. OCR-107, P.O.
Box 9000, Newport
Beach, CA 92658·
9030 Or FAX (714)
725·6950 .. Principals
only, ploase.
PIMCO
Would you el'\joy sell-
ing publishing sOIVlces
to people in the news?
NewsMakers, Inc. Is
seeking talented &
ambitious satesper·
sons (entry-level or
•xperienced) for in-
side sales positions.
You'll sell to top com·
panles, successful
business executives •
and even celebrities-
who arit malting newsl
•Full training
•State of the Art sales
support materials
•Unlimited leads,
unlimited territory
•Base salary and
unlimited
comm1ss1<>ns
•Fun and talented
entrepreneurial
co-workers
lODAY'
CROSSwoRo PuZZLE •1•·•= • IDO a.a 1111 lfMI
AeJ•ll g ....,,_,,.. caMPet ::';..-=., ~ '*"""'et~ ... IOl1'S eheU. 'Jt• Toyota MMof'tNIM. •
~CM>SI )~'-I ·
•1 Doe'amale
llO~~t1$. ~ '.'W &.ooMr'8d
Voice et:tOt ·-Blane
7 Seled ingredient
11 WIOld Jet> Kind
'21 Iowa town 22 Overact
~4 GrMkood 26~oru1ad
21 t(ape>ened 10 ~~buner·
m
32 Adored ones
33 Sudsy 3" Kind
37 Snobs might put
M PQpUIN
vac&llQO rnq
51 Indulge Ill ll"IYClout actMty eo iTo lfle-
dfOnM! 61~
82 Fenmut
83 Small child 54 Musical eompo 111()11
65 Church pat11
DOWN
1 Droops
2 Curly ha1tdo
3 Whart
4 SaltV snacks
5 Desire
6 Looks es If
7 Reco<d
8 Serpents
9 Commanct lo a mule cut
:=== ehort•bed. Good Ill ml Ulc'f*-~-DUFFY co"dl 1715. 090 ••• T" W•gon IOIOllte*-11~11• Call VM·1172. 1ny1ne1bci4J:•••ll
captu1'CI ~'l,,.ck wtth lhe kine. llUr.IULEDDSIUIDAYI ElECTlllC IOATI ~~~:~~ 1~" ~f1~~
f
lA 8'l"BP 8110RT or 8UICO>B
O.cluu could tount. aeun laat. 2000 EXQC1Uuctlll1!!! Rani • new Duttvr llOTOICYCL!S Tranaterlng $20,900.
NOR11t tridl, anc1 that. increa.ed to eiaht. IMkRtft'•nwn~"1 b•:.~·::,:.::_r'» scooTEJtS 8018 71'-"98 .. 911·
• 10 I '"'-"-~ ....... '----,..cwcc;beu~ , at. trick two, the queen ot dia· ·s~u;s ----------
O At• moiida wu <XWeted by the kiDI &nd I•••••••• •SERVICE o A 4 as talten with dummy'• ace. A 3-3 aplit GARAGE SALES •USED BOATS
'79 Pl180 Veap• MElCU'aY Scoot., Great cond. 9135
WEST
•AQ9S~ o.st
OK1098
•103
• K Q 2 in c]ube would lfivo declarer the ful· •fRADE·INS
EAST filling trick, but that was againatl•••••••• •CONSIGNMENTS
Bra, 2·Tone paint, yes-liiiiiliiiiiiiiiliiiiii~i!i
low/wht. 8800ml.
$875. Call 6-46•1162.
SOUTH
•K'18
'V K87
OQJ6
•A784
• J 8 the odda. Instead, declarer elected ---------Faccorv Showroom 2001 W. Coat! Hwy, o Q JO 5 -4 S to exit with a apadef BAI.BOA (Between Ardell &
O 8 7 Weal won and cashed t.wo more IS""'"' 6106 Sea scout ease) • J 9 8 5 apade tricb, declarer disc:ardinr a WMUJ • 846-0427
dub from dummy and a heart from liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --------•
'94 H•rley D•vldeon
FXLR 4800 ml, Xlnl
cond. 114950. 060
Call 434-6500.
'87 8abl• Run• greatl t05k ml. All options,
must see. Priced 10
Hll S2SOO 434·~500.
9210 hand.~-... .:. .... ~ wit.h two heart.a, QARAGE/MOVINO Needed: 12' Inflatable .,.....~ ...... ~ SALE s J 13 ror marine 1olence •••••••••1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim and West waa now juat. one atep at. an. ' ctassea at CdM High AUTOMOBILES 1• away from havina to commit. ........ Slam. fumllure & misc. School. Cont1ct Stark, * ' 8 t T o Yo t •
. '"!'" ..... ~ 22' Abalone ••••••••• 5 these on
38· European
• 'eap1t11
39 eusyas -40 T~kened. as
10 Out of lhe
quesllon
28 Actress Adaias
29 Candid
44 Eternity
45 Atmosphere
46 Meager
ner to the pillottne. Had Weat led 962-0313 upr•*
another epade ~aat. would have SUN 1/14, 8am-tpm Hard to find, beaullful
been ab' det' t.h · 'tab) b 109 DIAMOND whlte·out package, 1 . .~e to . 83 e mevi 8 Y· Trunl<, furniture, lots POWER BOATS BMW 9030 owner grandma's car, The bidding: 11 Atver mouth 30 Sffded 47 Ninth planet
48 Movie spoob
M Bra<»
NOBTB EAST 80111'11 WB8T diaca.rdiq a diamond, but 85 aoon or kltchenwaro, fully loaded, -euto pudding 41 Flat
42 ~res. Burstyn
43 Mended
lormal!On 12 Cfalher
15 Gloomy
18 Suiger
31 Salute 33 Keep
35 Aober1 E. and
Spike
51 Jacob'• twin
53 Oiamonct
as declarer played a diamond East housewares & misc. 7012 •ea 7351 LOADED I trans, fa.ctory sunroof,
would have to make a fatal aluJT in immmmmmmiiil c f _ _, premium 3·1n·1 cas· ..... _ b cl '--I---------0, phn, anr , lint'""'. eaw..:r earta or u-. '84 Lyman 2SFT Full Xtnt conct. 112k miles. utte/CD, pwr win·
But West wu a thoughtful part· CORONA c:anvas. 225 Horae-$11,900 obo 545.9070 dowa/locks, lealher,
10 p.,. 2NT hm
INT P-P.. P ..
Openif'4r lead: Three of• 45 Mosl capable
46 Grow
48 Canoonlat
McCariney
23 "Of Mice and -·
36 Superman's
ahas
38 Skin
even11
54' Leg joint
65 Probabll11tes 58 E>cpresslon It is bad .-.nourb having to euffer
the throes of a squeeze executed by
your opponel\t. But when partner Is
the perpetrator ....
ner. Puttinr the last. =e in cold DEL •nn 6122 power. Clasalc Boat.---------white spoke wheels, •'-d·,.. d · th "~ tow miles, must Hel storage, 1.ne 11:1en er to e $7,500 OBO 979·4023. CHEVROLET 9045 Call Matt $l2,998 obo Goldberg 49 Hold fasI
50 Equal
25 Overhead
trains
39 Caveman ol -
comics of surprise
59 Genetic maten11
ten of diamonda. Now th~re was no 3 fam 1t•cae• ••I• 693.2937
way for declarer to establish the ful. Sat 1/13 only 8·5 SAil B0·11ys 26 Mugs 41 Mal<es merry
42 Sub$ide filling trick.. • 421 Morning Canyon <n 7014 91 Chev 810 Blazer•---------52 Singer Ono 27 Dressmaker's
3
& Pacific Cst Hwy iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml Musi Hiil 1 ownec. fR,UCVS 9220 receipts. Super cleanl "
HUGE ALLEY SALE! 24 FT. Columbia $12,500 723-7879 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 3 lamllles • Incredible Challenger Sloop.
coltectlon,. Sat/Sun $795. Mlnney'a Yacht -------9-0_6_5
8om 214 Carnation Surplus, 1500 Old DODGE
The auction could have come
from a bridge primer. South had a
balanced band of 13 pointa wilh a
stopper in every suit, facing an
opening bid. The ju.mp to two no
trump described that band perfect·
ly and North had no ambitions
tleyond game,
Learn to be a better bridle
player! Subacribe now to the
Goren Bridie Letter by callina
(800)788-122G for infonnation. Or
write to Goren Bridie Letter, ~?o. Box ""10• Chicaao, n. 6068(). 1'""c_o_S_TA_M_E_S_A_6_1_2_4
Newport Blvd. iimmmmmmmii 548-4192 e4 Datona Turbo.
New brakes, S·speed,
'88 Toyota SR5 4x4
Longb•cl w/GT campr shell. 87k orig, 1111, PS
PB, POL, alarm, new
clutch, KYB shocks,
much more. Black.
MUST SEEi. $5150 obo. 479·1848
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SPEED & AJC. Great earl ~1450.
Multf.famJly sale, Sat SV'f BOATS 7016 ____ 5_6_5-_3_o9_e __ _ 6·2, 2000 block R• ~ ----.~--,...,....--.~...,.. public, S on Natlonal iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil FORD 9075 '87 Toyota Xtra Cab
fi7'. Victoria PJU. Xtra long bod, ""' •1988 2211 Ski Boat• iiiiiimmmmmmii Xlnt cond. Orig. Ownt. Variety or household 5.7 litre V·8, King 84 Tempo QL 6-cyc AM/FM Casa. 127k ml.
West led a spade, and declarer
MERCHANDISE OFFICE
MERCHANDISE MISC. 6015 FURNITURE &
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii F.Q UIPMENT 6 04 7
ANTIQUES 6010
Items & clothing. SAT Cobra 0/0. low profile automatic, while/red. $3GOO e554·9022
1/13 8am-2pm, 1014 hull, just serviced, Groal earl S1250. Herbs, Junipers $1. On mmmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Oak St. (National & new conlroller/uphol· 565 3098 palms 4·6' $10. Citrus· Ricoh copy machine Victoria) stery. Great ski boat· • VOLVSWAGEN 9235 avocado (fruiting) $10. Reduce/entrg, auto last·looks greal ..... re· 91 Explorer burgandy r.
Comenl fountains sort. w/cabinet $1,2S01---------ady to go. $10,500 2 dr, 4·spd, lmmac, mmmm-miiiiiiiii
•BUYING ITEMS• $110, bird baths $20. 642·9164 HUNTINGTON 646·9449/574-4247 under 50k ml. 2·Whl From 1800-1960. 1 pc 909·674·9422 BEACH 6140 drive (less Ins cost). '83 VW JETTA 2·dr.
1nrf, aulo, a/c, alloys.
Gooct condlllon .
$99S OB0•631·7149
to en111e estate. Paint·=---------AiC, l·owner. A deal
ings, china, glsware, Potted plants, lots of PETS & liimmmmmmmii MARINE SERVICE at $9.500. 673·3442 turn, etc. lmmed cash, varlet1os & sizc!s. Exer· ANIMALS 6049 Yard Sale 1·13 Oam
_ top $. 673·6223_ Iv *msg, i _ _:c::.:ls:.:e:_:e:_:q::u::_:IP:,::··..:6:.:.7:.5-:.0.:.69:4.:_JiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ' No early birds I Micro· SUPPLIES 7020 1 n ~n n n , 9 0 V u..1 C d
--4 ·w"vo-. ,.,-.... -a'e'trrt: ~~ ~ ~· ~ctrra o ______ •--------w o L FF TANN 1 NG ADOPT·A·PET .. u•u "' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiii Wh ite. Mint cond.
APPLIANCES 6011 BEDS. TAN AT HOME. appl., furn., •tc ... TONS OF FISH NET oo_.oeo C Aii Pgr Buy direct and SAVE. Every Sal & $1.ln al 8402 Doncaster Dr. •e3 JAGUAR XJ& #714·457·6580.
FF Frl9 $135. Washer
& Dryer $110 each. Warrantoe & Delivery
( 7 1 4 ) 9 5 3 ·9 8 2 2
C 0 mm 0 rc1al-H0 me PETSMART, Founlain $2.SO por pound. Runs strong. Body
units from $199_ Low Valley. Puppies, kit· Mlnney·s Yacht Sur· slralght. $2500. Call---------
hi tons and more, all NEWPORT plus, 1500 Old New· 644·6247. MISC. AUTO 9245 mont Y payments. looklng for loving, car· 6 69 port Blvd. 548·4192 ---------Free color catalog. Ing homes. CALL 597• BEACH 1 '88 XJ8 Forest green. mmiiimiiimiiimiii
Call today 1-800-842· 9037 for more lnro. liiiiiimmmmiiiimii ---------• Loaded. Runs greatl 1305. Musi see. $4995. OBO Maytag Washer/dryer, Save abused and •ESTATE SALE* MARINE SLIPS Call 434·6500.
stacked. Full sz. S300 ---------abandoned pets. Bo a 60 years of furn, appll· DOCRS 7022
OBO 546·8704 CAMERAS & volunteer/fos ter. Call ancos, colleclfblos, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1---------EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 114.597.9037. toois. 1011 0 1 craft & LINCOLN 9120
5530 SERVIr..Es 5533 SERVICES 55331-F-U_RN_I_T_U_R_E ___ EQUIPMENT 6016 w d f 1 h hsehld Hems. FrVSal/ 45' MOORINO For iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
SEIZtiO CARS FROM S 175. Porsches, Ca-
d 111 a ca, Chevya ,
BMW's, Corvet1es.
Also Jeeps. 4 WO'a.
Your area. Toll tree 1 ·
800-898·9778 Ext. A·
5139 for current llsl·
Inga.
"" 6014 iiiiimmmiiiiiiiiiiiiii on •r u om•• Sun 9-4, 400 Redl11nds Sale In N.B. Coll iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil needed for 2 beautl-Sl9-7SJ.6801 Eves. •e7 Mark VII
Be A High Classliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CAMERA EXPO f u I 4 ·month ·O Id ESTATE SALE Looks & runs great .
Dinner Companion * * KITTENS,-very af· Newport/Back Bay. 50 FT max side ue on Must see. SSOOO. Pla tonlc, Top Pay! 75% OFF SUNDAY JAN 14TH lectlona1e. 964·8319 Antiques. colleC11bles. Bal Pen, greal loc 851-8345
•••••••• Teacher/Pre-school, Please be aware that PT/FT, CM Ideal for s tudent. soma the listings in this col· ECE, 842•4050• ogory may require you to coll a 900 number
5 3 3 .7 9 o 5 fee Deal9n Canter Prices 9:30AM • 3:00PM crystal, glass. ponory, near NHYC. $12/11.
Enlfro contents ol 0Avdemr 2
15
0S0
10
1'!bS1
4
0•5 PIANOS & sllver, paintmgs, In· 67S·9282 -MAZ--0-A----9-1-2-5 ANTIQUES &
YMCA Cuslomer ser· In which there Is o •---------.-
Vl\:O tor evening & _c_ha_r ... g_e_p_e_r_m_l_n_u_te_._ DOMESTICS $540
weekend hrs. Phones/
model homo: Iron ~ d1an artifacts, Oriental ~.,._.,..---=----,,.....,--1 CLASSICS 9250 beds, sofas, chairs, of pholo equipment. ORGANS 6059 Items. jewelry, furnl· 80' deep Dock faces mmmmmmmmiii
stone vases. armoire. America's Largest ture, clothes. A Ille main turning pt. 124 83 RX7 l5·Spd, loaded,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
rog1stra11on. Incl lull ctr membership. Npl
YMCA 642·9990. SS.SO
hr. Contact Wendy
YMCA F11ness Trainor
for or1en1at1ons, super·
w1sion and testing
Must have experience.
Proler cerlil1cation In·
eludes lull ctr mem·
bershlp Npt YMCA
642·9990 SS.SO hr.
Contact Jill
Chances are
you will find
what you need
at the price
you want to pay
when you read
Classified
dally
642-5678
Call 248-7727. Monthly CaMera Show time of treasure. Jan S. Bayfront. Balboa sunrf, tine windows,
Eld /h -~.,-::-,.,,..,,,~~-=-=,---SequolaClub Antique Player 2 3 80n.Aoo 11 ct 2•21211 er ca" ouee-HOUSEHOLD -Pf I 1 ' 1 • 14. : ..-.: s an ........... ., . new llr•s. N•eda eng. '89 XKI! Jag Sport
conv. All new Interior.
Wire whla. S 1 SK obo
Owner 87$·7239
keeping English/ 7530 Orangethorpe ano Upr ght, oak. 2422 University Drive $1050. S65-3098 Spanish OK. P{T Grandfather clock, €!Beach 81, Buena Paik 1908 Autoplano. $475 Off Irvine Ave. Balboa Panln Sllps ---------
645-1353 Nan Vic1orlan sofa £ love 714-78&·8183 Call 646·1162. 40 10 55' max at $13/ seat, 3·pc leather CLASSIFIED Garage Sale Sot 1/13 It. A.II lacthtles. priv.
LIVE·IN WANTED couches, cherry for· ---------11•1 the resource you In alley at the rear of parking. 723·S83S
In Costa Meso home to mal dining rm, cortee JEWELRY FURS can count on 10 soll a 40S Holmwood btwn -------..,,....--.-,.....,,-=•
take care ol 3 children. & end tables, elc. All T • myriad of merchon· ._B_r_o_a_d_&_B_ea_c_o_n_. __ BAL B 0 A VA C" T S400 per monlh plus room In lmmaculale condl· & AR 6025 ·-BASIN has boat allpa
tlon. 894.9880 dlte Items, b•cause MOVING SALE from 31 10 40 ft avall, and board. our columns com pol s t 1113 8 12 1714) 57A42~3 Q ' • $14.SO/ft, 673•1761
1 __ . ____ .... __ 4 __ Love seat & chair, MINK jacket. Size tall/ quallfied buyers 10 Toys. clolhes &
Buy It. Soll 11. find It. beige w/floral design slim. $450 obo. Call calll household Items.
Classlfled. S75 646-3627' 673-3402. 842-5878 525 Catalina ---------
Boat .dock for rent 15-
18' $100 mo 675-5095
CLASSIFIED 1955 T·BIRD
It's the resource you Tu'rquolsa beauty!
can count on 10 sell a Like new w/2 IQpa.
myriad ot merchan-818·980-8586 dlse Items, because, ________ _
our col1.1mna compel Chevy '84 lmpala
qualllled buyers to Convertible, xlnt
calll cond. Sacrttlce at
842-5878 s 15,000. 76()..8702
FLOOR INSTALL HAULING 3720 IANDSCAPE & MOVING 3834 PAINTING 3858 POOL
3 584 REP AIRS 3 62 0 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LAWN CARE 3 808 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVI CE 38 94
•5E•R•VI-C•E--•I CHILD CARE 3536 COMPUTERS 3556 ~:~~
DIRECTORY
CARPENTRY 3510
Christian• Mother
of 2·provlding care In
my home. Meats/snacks
FT-PT Patricia 969-8547
PC PRO lntornet,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii JUNK To The DUMP PUBLIC NOTICE lk•'• Custom Palntlngli!iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~~ifsl~~!~~n~~:!d~~:: vSMAl.L JOB EXPERT •QUALITY WORK• (714·988·1882) • TREES • Tho Callf. Publlc Utlll· Prof, Clean, Ouallly PURE WATER CARE
DrywalVPlaste Repai H d dNI t/C 1 Will haul what Tresh ties Commlailon RE· Work. lnVExt & Docks. Pool/Spa svc & Rfpalra. David al 50°·2089 r r ar w ny eram c M · 968 862 T -...-• -Ll703468 831 '"•to ~ , Hanglng/Tlplng/Tulurt Mrble/Carpet·Bnd/lns an won 11 •1 ·~··'"•111•n. ........ QUIRES that all u1ect ...... Flllere•Pumps•Heat•r•
Dependable<::IDaycare Comm/Res SS l -5573 L708279 722·7332 ~ 75l~71 h ousehold goods WMkly Svc. 145-1721
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Lied. Pedla111c1. 1111 /I.Ad/ CONCRETE & Lawn Service. Mow/ movers print their PIANO & VOCAL
A to z HANDYMAN CPR. MeaWsnacks included MASONRY 3557 HEALTH/ edge/sod/aprtnklera/ P.U.C. Cal T number; ROOFING 3910 INSTALL/REFACE CABINETS FT.PT. Fun • n.c. 964·1740 ELECTRICAL 3610 HANDY MAN 3710 NUTRITION 3742 ctn-up. Al 9 88•2718 llmos and chauffeurs LESSONS 3868
Kitchens, balhs. doors. Carman RN/Mom mmmmmmmmiii Ive mag or call ef1er 5 print their T.C.P. num· l~~~~iii![iiiiiiiiiii
windows Doug 541).7258 Nice Home & Garden. Brick, Block, Stone, Tile A t OrHn Scene Landsepng ber In all advertise· REROOFINQ-AJI Typee o /E ~'"'k d e u Cone, Patio, Driveway • Elactrlcal work Palnt•Carpentry STOP SMOKING ,/M .;1 I u ments. tr you have a PIANO 6eg.·Advanoed Expert Aepalra ll67835G H:;:tr:O:.nl:O~;'~~~ 0~~ca~r~~ G~od 1·b~Y: Fplc, eea1. Ref. 25 Yr Duncan Electric Drywall end morel /Trr~~~~ /R~~~v~~ question about the le-All agea·Toacher Cert. a .. t Value Roonn1 anced values. 650-6533 Exp. Terry H7·7094 Quick Response Small Jobs Oki N 0 w m Clean-up•. Maintenance gallty of a mover, llmo Entertainment Avail. •7t4-21S.7038• Flro·Water Oamago T O ~ Local Uc. 850·7042 Gary 845·5277 WANT I! Di 6 0 L..,,...,902., ,.50.010.,. or ct)aufleur, call: Jennifer 840-8889
Eloc. Plumb. & Pain! ----------• CEMEN W R • people With a burning .,...,,. "' "' • Publlc Utiltllea 1---------646·2342/Pgr 227-8122 CLEANING PLAIN/STAMPE JONES ELECTRLC Serril Rellred Conlractor desire to quit smok· Ul\dacape Remodeling CommlHlon Plano Leason• In SPRINJU.BRS 3921
Brick/Stone/Tiie/Biock & Home Repalrs Repairs lmprovemtnts Ing, to tty FREI! YSld lune up/malntenac•, 714·558.,.HH your home. Flex hrs.''iiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ----------•SERVICES 3548 L541651 831-4310 Bonded & Insured. I ' Ou 1 -., ·1' Herbal Produot. tanct1cape/at1istlc des"'n Low Rates. All agea.1• ..... ~
CARPET Ll705749 851-8887 am obi. auty, ... 89fHY ,. __ •• ,...1 ......... ,. .. 'T 'V •• • v1..,.. Jor-e.cat-1~*1 Jl~NK• ••REP iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii *Belt Price/Qual .... 1-.,...,-------I care, Ken M2·1770 Over ~ ~ ra'9 ----......... """'.... --v I H CLEANING 3515 A TOUCH OF CLASS , -ndaca""', brick, 110"081 • Llo'd Contractor •7t4-78o.8182• Prof'I & Etl\fcal. 645-7505 LocaJ/Olflce/Storage • vet• Udt•Tlm'•
C R C ...... ,,... carpantry•Rooflng Long Dl1t. P'rH Eat. clockL 25Vra Local Exp. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil leaning. OS/ omm .CancrtlLIOO·Z80.t007 Small job SJ2e<:lallst f>lumbln-g•Orywa1t•1--_;;.______ PLANT A.RTIST T!ll181832 8'78·31'14 nUMBING -Jahn n:r-zn,.-
.IAN Speclal 3·Rm $50 TL1creond~Cl.A9F:,,ee71E4&3t. ~an•• LI g ,h ta •Spa Stucoo•Palntlng•Tilo• H0"•1:1 CARa' Speclallsl In ut1tlng Truck Mount Unite eresa • ..... •---------Otmand Eiecltlc 645-3656 Electrfcal•Repairs-. Uc. "~ ~ landscape/Irrigation •Two Brother• Moving iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii1·--------
•0.C. STEAMWAY •BOSS HOUSECl£ANINQ CONTRACTORS Morgan ea0-3281 liSiiEiiiRiiVliiiiCiiEiiiSiiiiiil:ii3ii7ii6iiO upgradH. 780-8792 Home/Olflce • l'-Day• THE LOCAL PJ.UM9!A TRANSIATOR/
1 ·800·385·8'725 Ucensad·Bonded GENERAL 3558 pw::NCES Insured •Ince 1081 · •James E. B~ett Co.• TUTOR 3927 $10 00 h .-C p t •El t I I •---------CALT134650 957·f500 SI~ 1947 McPh•• CarpetJUphl · a per our. ., en r» ec r ca AJ.ZHl!IMER'S Cue LEGAL lii~!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiii Car-' l U......,•t""' Cle""""" __ 7_1_+._54_18_-0_3_8_B_ CPI BUILDERS INC & DECKS 3615 Plumbing• Drywall• QI T I' Friendly SetVlce•Lnatted L., ... N ., ..... llH NOWI ,..... ....~ •. , --.,. NDO C • '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Stucco•Palntlng•Tlle var. op r• •· SERVICES 3812 p•'""'""'G 3858 __ L1_m_9a_1 __ •1_s._s_304_ -... .... P1omp1 StMeuflal Rain •WI W leaning Residential Const. 1• Rootlng•Jlm 641.7494 1 on 1 attention. Day n.u• un Gtea1 gl" for you ar\d
714·845·9192 •Carpet Cleaning• Uc.#518424•1naured •FENCES OATES* +nlgl'rt, Carol 842·8732 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil--------.. tamuv. Eicp'd S.A. Tutor ~~~~ .. ~~~r.~'211~;~;:. __ t7_t .... 4_J_8_8_5 _·4_9_8_3_ ntw/rtpalr/po11 replaced CAAPENTRY•Wlndowa CAREl;;;JQIVER 15 STARTS IT •W.P. YOUNGQUIST •DAN DAWSON• •uHn• 873·740•
CEMENT
MASONRY 3526
JOHN DORAH MASONRY
8nck•Stone•Block
pirge & Small Jobs OKI
Ucl 687101 831·3032
LEWIS Cona•ruollon Redwood • L115766015 Doors • Wood FencH For l:lderly. Exp'd. STOP l!VICTION PalnUl\I Contractor PLUMBING
Hardworking Student Remodel•Handyman Jim Whyte 6"2·7206 • Oryw111 Repair • Ref's. Own car. LlV•ln Motl Legat Matter•. Qual. painting by prolls W1t1t Heaters • Drains
Realdentlal cln ave. L1704773 Local Res. V i (A ~:£~~~1 P•g.~~~.~~~ or Dally. Tass S4~5oe Bankruptcy • 24 Hr• UCll02098. Ina. Remodel • Repair Reu. ralea Ouer. •71+.Cl57·5925• •WROUGHT IRON• • 71+.T40-29t 9 • Fr .. ell 1454305 Faucets • Fl•lurH
_,M,.,.a_ro .. a_r_e_t 6.,,,7,.,.3_-6_2...,2,...1 __ l .J. Scott Conatruotlon Oa1t1•F111e"'s.curily Ooor• Handiman Charlie LIVING TRUSTS anr1 QwaU~ hlntlnt I.* 554722U8-4S720
Hou•••Cleanlng cuslom Home Bu•ldlfs 1·800-3to.v•LA Painting, carpen1ry, JEWELRY 3784 Probate/Conurvator· PLUS louchupa. Pgr# '717·5728 We gala -"Outd hang
Xlnt Ref's, SuppllH Llcl41U54, Atf'1 . •F •NC E i e . plumbfng, fence blctg.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1hlp1. Call for l'AEE 24 H,.. Aic:hard Sinor --------~ togethtt. Strip, Install, r~r;.~hed. ~act~~~~ 7tW7e.7TH WOOD/CHAIN LINK Local reald, 760-50<*4' Wtlllam H&tolct JeweJera Brochure. e44-H01 Uc'280644 6'6·320, bpett Drain ClaMtlng a~~;~.~o1 ~~=n~:~·
WALL
COVE JUN GS 3932
CERAMIC
TILES . 352 8 COMPUTERS 3 556 iiDOiiOiiRiiSiiiiiiiiiiii3iiS8iiiO
·NO.lob too small• Home Repair/Remodel Watch 6 Jewelry repair ---------CHUNQ'S PAINTING & Plumbing Repalra 'liimiiiiimi!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii." 714-e48·8S21 Coata MHa/Newport Antique • Fine Jowelry MASSAGE 3830 20 Yr• Ex!). Gel Prlc:et 20Yra ••P All ffOl1c. ouar.1 •
U"IQU£ & STYLISH ae Year• &•P· Bll)'/Hll/lrldt'873·038S Ouer work. ,.,.. Est. ltew 14M2tl f Ad A .:...
Gotos/Foneos. DHfgn Jlm e:u.24eo 8EST MASSAGE•• U0*3lHOZ f,3&ot&'4 PraclH P'lumbtn9 Gr C.at
Leaky Showere Rep'd
Regrout1ng A lnatairn
L#070130 Dean of Tile 973 .. 005 Ot 048-8526
Computer Coaoh
f or •ffKt1ve teaming
Alf •PP• & aoltW4ra Mark eTa.'7245
Micro Sratem• lupport
---------1 Provides computer
conn1te11vlty, c .. 11 for
d•ltllll 714-642-~025.
An eicperlenc•d dtpend•ble door
henger. Ouar work,
, ..... Don 621-49910
and handc;raned by HOMB SERVIC•S IANDSCAPE • 71 ....... 7-3080 iiiJHaOW CINI• MaJnt. RepaJt• & Remo<1alt Cal I
tanctaoape archltec:t. AnythlOg •Everything IAuru r••e l&OI 17434"' Soach, HO Pllntl~Uht Ho11 .. IApt fr" !111matn
Ll:S883 ..... 21011 Fr .. lhlTUlte. Ref•. TU .. W,l;i (Beach/Slater behind Ouall«y tob. l'rff '"· ..... u •• " .. '090 ntf&·
Mich••• 706-1440liiiiiiiil&iiliiiiiiiiimiiii Mobil Gas) 810 ... L•MUt7 .a...... ~
If ¥OU're loold119 fOr •car,
cle111fted Ml new1 for you.
•••I• Yard Malnl 11&111 'i •ottw Care GM m l'iLliifti ---------• ....
-------------~•wn1, Cl!Wlpt, TrN tO. 0'F Alt Faclalt tnWa1 Quli P~ Wri.th., Y°"~ a.. ....
lrlm, &prlnldra, Aerate, Ma"egea a WAJUno Llo'dlll'l•'d elnn ·11. :~111.::Prour flMClef w.&·~11 TNWI t7N245 pt..t1w10 , __ c_.u_e.c_k_r_2_~---· ... ,on .,......1 ....:.L....:..:.:..;:.:..:.:..:.:.:.:.:.;J:m•••••--