HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-01-18 - Orange Coast PilotS,Olf TS
Estancia boys slip by
Aliso MgueL 58-53
WEEKEND
Gospel singers on the
Sunday br.unch menu
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907 .
])og _owner SIJ1Tenders yiCiQ_us pet to city
•Mike Marshak sto~ti.mony during hearing to say he doesn't
need any more encouragement to put pit bull Hemi to sleep.
By Tina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Mike Marshak could
hardly believe his ears Wednesday, as he
listened to story after story about how his
pet pjt bull Hemi had savagely attacked
d~ after dog.
1 don't really need to hear any more
stories,• Mars~ told Costa Mesa Police
Chief Dave Snowden Wednesday after-
noon. ·rn sign the dog over to you.•
Students go
Qnholiday
following
power surge
'.Juli~Ross Cannon. ~ijy Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -While
their East Coast counterparts
braved a record blluard to get to
school, students at Corona del
Mar High got out of class
Wednesday -and will again
today -thanks to the effects of a
mere one-do.y rain. 6 The entire Eastbhiff area lost
power temporarily Tuesday when
a Southern Callf ornia Edison
transformer located at the school
blew at 9:45 p.m. during Tues-
day's rainstorm.
Power was restored by mid·
night to the 2,600 homes and
bwimesses that were left in the
dark, said Edison spokesman
David Bam>n, but the subsequent
power surge destroyed Corona.
del Mar High's power supply
panel.
So a four-day school week
quickly turned into a two-day
week after the power meltdown
left the school lifeless Wednes-
day.
•Tue smge went through our
system and caused our panel to
bum up,• said Eric Jetta, New-
port-Mesa Unifled's director of
maintenance and operations.
"Right now the panel 1s being
refurbished and repaired.•
Marshak's surrender of the dog ends a
month of ~oil for the Costa Mesa man,
and it will ultimately end Hemi's life. The
dog -which has been in custody since
Dec. 5, just a few days after the most
recent attack -will be •humanely"
destroyed.
Marshak says Hemi has been nothing
less than a loyal and loving pet during
the one year that he's owned the pit bull.
He even showed up at Wednesc;iay's
hearing carrying nearly a dozen letters
from friends and neighbors who say
they've never known flemi to be a prob-
lem.
He had hoped the letters would per-
suade Snowden to release the dog back
to his owner. But during an investigative
hearing on Wednesday with police and
animal control officials, Marshak learned
that his dog has a darker side, and he
changed his mind.
•1rs like I'm living in a dual reality, a
parallel universe," Marshak said. "My
experience with the dog has been so dif •
ferent. But, it's totally unacceptable to
keep a dog thal•s V1ci0us. Heel like a vic-
tim too because I never knew any of this.
Today's classes have also been
canceled, but school offj.cials said
the power could be restored by
Friday.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
School telephone lines were
down Wednesday morning, but
maintenance workers managed
to get two lines working by mid·
attemoon.
Prindpal Don Martin said he
learoed of the power outage
about 5:30 a .m. Wednesday and
cranked out a memo to students,
~tatt and parents on his home
computer. After running ott 1,000
copies at Kinko's, Martin and oth-
er school administrators passed
out the memo to arriving students
and teachers.
•SEE STUDENTS PAGE A10
---
' '. I• I \
A6
A2
84
A2.
B3
11
A12
HERE'S THE SKINNY
Daily Pi,lot sports department to gi,ve pounds
qf flesh for Davidson Held renovation
"It's totally unacceptable
to keep a dog that's
vicious. I feel like a victim
too because I never knew
any of this ... "
up 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. You
know at some point you're going to let it
drop, and I don't want to be holding a
smokmg gun•
Arumal control officers say 4-y~-old
HeDl.l's record of attacks date back to
1994, before Marshak owned the dog.
Hls last attack -which occurred on Dec.
1, while Heau was being cared for by a
previous owner -left a 2-year-old Aus-
tralian shepherd with 394 stitches and
nine wound drams in her legs and chest.
-MIKE MARSHAK
.
But, I feel that I just can't ignore the his·
tory of the dog.
The 41 -year-old Costa Mesa man sat
solemnly throughout most of the bearing,
"I can't~ promise he'll ~ever attack
another dog. You can't keep your guard
Alvyd.as Klsunas
(left) ls a
IJthuanlan
police ottlcer
whose face wu
d.ldgured when
a booby trap
exptoctecl. But.
Dr. Eclwud
DOmanut1,a
~BNch
plutic~n.. ls~his
~tohelp
bMltbe~cal
and emotional
LEAH HOGSTEN
I DAl.Y PILOT
of Lithuanian descent, leamed of Kisunas'
condition and wanted to donate his services
to restore the young Lithwmian officer's face.
KisUnas sat in Domanskis' Newport Beach
office WedneSday with his cousin and a
friend. waiting c8lmly for laser surgery which
would last one hour and be the first of sever-
al procedures that will span over three
months.
•He has a mission while he is here -his
face,• said Nemyra Enck, Kisunas' friend and
interpi:eter.
Kisunas, Who arrived in Los Angeles from
Lithuama last Tlfunday, has high expecta·
tiona anCi ii confident the surgery will help
heal h1i face so tbit be can return to bis for-
mer lob M an elite ofticer, guarding not only \he Utb1ynian pnilident but other .govern-
ment ........ be ilUl. -~-........ -
•SEE HELPING PAGE A10
• SEE PIT BULL PAGE A20
Trustees
hesitant
about sale
of school
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Piiot
NEWPORT-MESA -Some
school board members are hav-
mg second thoughts about the
district's plan
to use a loop-
hole in the
state's Educa-
tion Code to
get the maxi-
mum revenue
from the
potential sale
of Monte
Vista School.
School
adm1mstra-
Superintendent
Mac Bernd
seeks to set the
record straight .
about sale. See
Community
Forum.
..... A1&.
to.rs, wanting to get the highest
sales price possible to pay for
necessary mamtenance projects,
claim the loophole entitles the
distnct to get fair market value
for the 6.25-acre property from
public agenoes.
They maintain the cbstnct ism
•SEE SCHOOL PAGE A10
Coach listed
in critical
condition
Costa Mesa High School
head basketball coach Jason
Ferguson remained listed in
critical conchtion at Hoag
Memorial Hospital Wednes-
day
Ferguson, 24, was on a res-
pirator all day Wednesday,
said Matt Montoya, parent of
Mustang basketball player,
Mike
Montoya said he learned
from the coach's brother that
Ferguson's remaining kidney
had failed.
Ferg\1900, who w~ diagnoseQ
•SEE COACH PAGE A10
'The Broadway (~-1212) • : at Fashion Island in New-
port Beach bas been PreR4Jing for its mid-March clos-
ing with a storewide clearance.
sa.l,e.
Merchandise is marked down
ln every department, and current
µiark downs are tieing ta.ken
down an extra 25%. The Broad-
way's Crystal Court location is
having a similar sale, while it
rnakes its transition to Macy's.
Fo~ best buys on fresh.fruit
Growen Direct (631-7880) is
having a special sale today only.
Specials include, bananas at 25
cents per pound, oranges at 10
cents per pound, blueberries at
99 cents per basket and straw-
J:>errles at 99 cents per basket.
Growers Drrect is always
receivmg new shipments of in
season fruits and vegetables and
claims to sell 258 varieties oT -
fruits and vegetables. It's located
at 101 East 17th St. in Costa
Mesa. .
: After recently having a bad
experience with a local tile com-
pany, I've found one I prefer for
~election and prices.
i• Walker la1'ger (546-3671)
ocated at 2960 AirWay Ave. in
tosta Mesa has beautiful tiles
lmd stone selections and its
prices seem reasonable.
, ; Walker Zagner has two show-
:rooms on Airway Avenue, one
'featuring slabs for noors and
~ounters and the second one is
•lts tile showroom.
:. Most tiles are readily avail-
able since lts warehouse is locat-
~ in L .A. Walker Zagner's tiles
!11ave been featured in Architec-
tural Digest. .. .
•: Aaron Brothen Art Marts
• (645-6880) is having another
:one-cent sale on its frames. I've
~heard that since Aaron Brothers
temodeled, its merchandise has
•Jmproved.
: • Aaron Brothers is located at
:~714 Newport Blvd. in Costa
Mesa.
H you're lookmg for plants
and accessories, The Plant Stand
(966-0797) claims to be a whole-
sale and retail outlet that sells a
large selection of patio and
indoor plants.
The variety includes 4 foot to
20 foot trees, orchids, bromeliad,
and for potted plants there are
lerra cotta and glazed ceramic
pots, baskets and all of the fertil-
izers and chemicals needed to
keep them healthy.
. "You will find the sales team
~o be both professional and
!i!xceptionally knowledgeable
: about our product," says Judi
: Beatty, director of sales and mar-
' keting. "Th.is is a rare occut•
rence these days at any sales
'outlet." ! . The Plar\t Stand is located at
: 2972 A Century Place in Costa
Mesa. ,...._ ____________________ ~
: • IUT MIVS appearl Ttnhsd•ys and
• ~turdays. If you know of a good buy
: c.all me at ~ 1224, fax me at 646-
, •110.
--MAACt.~ll':);6AV f':..01 ---
Director Shell Smith takes care of rare finds at the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum llke this 1955 wooden Trans-Padflc
Race trophy on the museum's lower level -
Newport Harbor
Nautical Museum haS
hired a new director to
steer the facility on a
journey of expansWn
museum's board of trustees has hired a new
director to oversee the changes and expan-
sion.
That would be Smith, 40, who comes
from the Los Angeles Maritime Museum in
San Pedro where she was senior curator for
six years. Uttell, who departs at the end of
the month, said he couldn't be more pleased
with the selection.
"She's very technically skilled, she has
lots of experience and outstanding interper-
sonal skills,• said Llttell who will continue to
work on sped.al projects for the museum.
"It's rare to find that in a true academic."
fortably run an adequate professional staff,"
Smith said.
"We're still looking for people to (finan-
cially) back the children's room ahd to spon·
sor different exhibits," Smith said "The com-
munity has shown great support. If I didn't
think our gQals could be met, I wouldn't be
here."
The Napa-bom Smith also served as a
curator for mu.sewns in Vuginia and Maine.
And she has traveled around the world par-
ticipating in archaeological projects.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
N ewport Harbor Nautical Museum
will seek world-class status as a
maritime musewn with a new direc-
tor at the helm.
Shell Smith, who began work last week,
takes over the directorship from interim
director Jeffrey Llttell, who helped coordi-
nate the musewn's move to the former
Reuben E. Lee river barge in Newport Har-
bor.
The director has a doctorate from the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania in historical archae-
ology with an emphasis in nautical archae-
ology. She studied the use of space and
"communities at sea" aboard ships built
during the 16th through 19th centuries.
After coming to Southern California in
1990, Smith learned of a small nautical
museum on Balboa Boulevard in Newport
Beach She came down and disoovered a
"mom and pop" mu.sewn with a few "real
gems" in its collection.
Now that same museum is growing at an
astonishing rate, Smith says. The 10-year-
old museum's expansion is right on sched-
ule, she says. After a decade, maritime
museums are generally ready for a s1gnlf1-
cant move, Smith said.
·srups that sank." Smith says with a
laugh.
Now with considerably· more space and
two new galleries -including a children's
room -scheduled to open in March, the
But Smith has no intention of letting the
nautical museum sink. The board of
trustees' five-year goal to elevate the muse-
um to world class standards involves raising
$8 million. The money would go towards an
endowment and allow the musewn to •com-
. The director also belie\'es maritime
museums are experiencing a renaissance as
people become interested in that aspect of
our heritage.
Taco Mesa president named. to chamber board
•The appointment is part of an effort to involve more
Latino business owners in the chamber.
By Tina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
COSTA l'vfESA -The Costa
Mesa Chamber of Commerce has
a new face on its board of direc-
tors.
Taco Mesa restaurant presi-
dent Ivan Calderon has been
appointed to serve on the board,
part of an ongolng effort to
involve Latino businesses in the
chamber's activities.
"I'm very honored to have
been invited to participate in the
chamber's board of directors,"
Calderon said Wednesday. wit's
very nlce to be recognized for
what you're doing and I'm very
excited about it.
"I was also very touched by the
fact that the chamber is address-
ing the West Side and the Latino
market as a market of opportuni-
ty. We are bringing fort)} bicultur-
al indivi4~"~~~ ~· bring the two cultures togewer.
Up until now, the chamber
hasn't attracted much involve-
ment from the Latino community.
But members of the group are
hoping that will change.
"One of the chamber's goals
this year is to show recognition
and acknowledgment for the con-
tribution that a lot of the Latino
businesses make in the comm.uni,
ty," said Chamber of Commerce
president Tony Petros.
•we hope to identify any com-
mon ground that we have and
ultimately integrate the Latino
business community into the
chamber so that we have one
strong, clear business voice in the
con:ununity. •
The chamber began organiz-
ing Latino business summit meet-
ings in the community in Septem-
ber to help open the lines of com-
munication. The first meeting
drew about eight people.
·With ea.ch meeting, the atten-
dance has grown," Petros said.
"At the last meeting, we had
probably two dozen people,
reflecting the business communi-
ty, education and religious groups
in the 'Community.
"I don't think the Chamber of
Commerce up until now has real-
ly understood the extent and
strength of the Latino business
community, because they've
always been a very quiet for90 .
And likewise, I don't think the
Latino business community has
felt there would be any benefit to
participating.
"But, I think now we're all
realizing that if we become one
cohesive business interest, a lot
can be done. The net result will
be the consumer will have a
greater choice ln where to pur-
chase their goods and 'Services.
and the retailers and business
enterprises will burgeon ..
"If-we're successful, .everyone's
gQing· to. ..benefit. .and the most
beautiful pa.rt of it will be that we
will grow to have an understand-
ing of one another •
Corrections
almanac
• IDllGa I NOTIS Do yQll or someone
~ know tMM a landrNtk blrthdlly or ~~up? If'°' ~·d Iii<•
to Include It In our AlmltWK section
Plffse call the information Into the RucMrs' HotllM, 642-6086, fax it to
646--t 170, or mall tt to City Editor Iris
Yokol, 330 W. Bay St., Costa ~ Calif.
926l7.
BIRTHDAYS
De Muri Tosh c.Mbrated her 90th
birthday Monday, jan. 1. She owned
and operated ~ Mur1's florists for more
than 30 years, serving the Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa communities.
She was a member of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of commerce, Soroptomlsts
and business and professional women's
organizations. She was named •costa
Mesa Woman of the Year• in 1975.
BffiTIIS
Most recent births In NeWpOrt Beach
and Costa Mesa.
COSTA MESA
Lorraine and John Bull, Costa Me~rosa..-, .... ,.---
son, Jan. 7
DEATHS
Most recent deaths as reported to the
Orange County Recorder's Office.
COSTA MESA
• John S. BeMso, 78 on Oct. 18
•Jeromy Troya. 19 on Oct. 19
• Martha L Burger, 69 on Oct. 20
• James J. Denko, 52 on Oct. 20
• Cyrus M. Tucker, 84 on Nov. 4
•Jonathan C. Chavez. 14 on Nov. 3
• Josephine M. Priem, 87 on Nov. 3
• Kathleen H. Doebler, 90 on Nov. 1
• Efstathia Kat:sargyri, 87 on Nov. 1
•Howard A. Cunningham, 67 on Oct. 31
• Jack F. Schick. 72 on Oct. 30
• Leland L Towers, 71 on Oct. 30
•~Ilda I Sainbnrn..M an Oct..28
• Zinaida G. Yarltova, 79 on Oct. 28
NEWPORT BEAOi
• Rachela D' Avirro, 103 on Oct. 21
•Lucille G. Jewell, 83 on Oct. 20"
•Clarence R. McMicken, 76 on Oct. 17
•Helen M. Betts, 82 on Oct. 21
• Paul A. Cona, 40 on Oct. 20
• Judy M. Domaszewicz, 54 on Oct. 17
• Hazel M . c.allahan, 84 on Nov. 3
• Elizabeth H. Dalton, 66 on Nov. 2
• Robert L. Koehler, 88 on Nov. 1
• Henry T. Johnson, 84 on Nov. l
• Edith L Rehnborg. 93 on Nov. 1
t-•Louis Cherney, 76 on Oct. 31
•Walter M. Roys, 96 on Oct. 31
• Dorothy J. Leary, ~ on Oct. 30
• Barbara E. McKae, 71 on Oct. 30
• Eda H. Schwegler, 83 on Oct. 28
• Roger 0 . Wells. 90 on Oct. 27
• Rosallnd H. Belknap, 103 on Oct. 25
MARRIAGES
Most recent marriages as reported to
the Orange County Recorder's Office.
COSTA MESA
• Ian 0. Searle married Lynell S. Martcert.
on Nov. 3 in Newport Beach
• Harold E. Martin, Jr. married Diane K.
Billman, on Nov. 4 in Costa Mesa
• Ryan F. Garcia married Soledad Del
Toro, on Nov. 7 In Santa Ana
• Guillermo Lopez Piedras married Elvia
Benitez Loza, on Nov. 7 In Santa Ana
• Neal A. Schwartz married Andrea Vil-
lalovos, on Oct. 7 in Orange.
• Michael S. Lingle married Robin K.
Latimer, on Nov. 12 In Newport Beach
• Scott J. Destefano married Lori A.
Brown, on Nov. 11. in Long Beach
• Edward G. Partch Ill married Lisa M.
Horgan, on Nov. 4 in Tustin
• John G. Irwin married Alisa Lynn on
Nov. 12 in Newport Beach
• Long H. Vu married SUsan T. Le. on
Nov. 11 In Huntington Beach
• Earl R. Biggs married Deborah A.
Peterson, on Nov. 13 In Santa Ana
• Rafael Hernandez Arreola m..rned
Martha Belmontes Sanchez. on Nov. 13
In Santa Ana
• Ramon Mendoza Valiente married
Velvet Z. Lopez Jacobo, on Nov. 14 in
Sant. Ana
• James C. Robinson married carrie
Mc.Cartan, on Nov. 11 In Garden Grove
• Jose A. Sosa Alvarez married Mayra A.
Davis, on Nov. 11 in Costa Mesa
NEWPORT BEACH
• Anthony G. Ourvos married LIS.t M.
Sekerls. on Nov. 4 In Irvine
• Charles f. Plahk. Jr. married Rose M.
WatU. on Nov. 4 in.Newport Beach
• Lan Allon Gustav De Jounge married
Barbara K. Cooper, on Nov. 11 In Carmel
Valley
• Robert.c. Voll married Tracey A FJores.
on Nov. 11 In CostA Mesa
• Michael C. Janett rnatried B~ J. Morris. on Hew. 11 In Newport Bw:h
• G.al W. Prwnal1 mllried Shlton l
Gatewood, on Nov. 12 In Ne~
Beach
Wliu.n Lobdell. The same 24-
ho.,,tr ~ MMcl may be
Ulitd to record letters to ttw
editor on arrf topic.
ADDIE$$
~ily Pilot. P.O.&<>. 1560, Costa
Mesa, CA. 92626. Copyright; No news rtorif:s. lllustr.non., edtto-,
ri•I matter « adwttisements
~n an be reproduced with-
out wtltten l*"l'nltsion of copy-
right oiwn.r.
TEMPERATURES
Newport Beach
61152
west to West wtnds
tonight with " chanc. of showetS to
thehorth.
"'°'" Swfllne w.v ... llk
• A brief In w.dnesd.ty's Dally Piiot lncl'lded .tn incOO'eet start
date for the Pltgrfm's whale-watcNng auisti. The cNiMs began
Jan. 14 and ar• continuing. For lnfonnatlon. CAii ~2~75. •
• A brt.f In Monday's Dilly Piiot gave an Incorrect channel for
the c.tble television broadcast of the Costa MiSa Partcs, Recreation
and Partcw-vs Commission meeti095. TM commission meetings will
be ~ on Channel 62 In CoN Mesa. beglMlng JM\. 24.
Our~ Is 330 W. Bay St.,
Cost.a Mesa, C.lif. 92627.
COIUtECDONS
It Is the Piiot's polky to prompt·
ly correct all etrOB of sUbttan<•.
,.._. all 574-42:U. Thank you.
HOW TD UAQ1 US
ClraMdOn
~ ,.,,,_ 0r-. CoUr!tY
(IOO) 252·9141
""""*'• Cltllllfl.cl 642 ·5678
~642-4)21 .........
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NIWI, Spoj11 P• ""4170
~ ft.n.71Wi illlMG'f'
..... Oflll
.....,_OfllmMMUI ...... ,.Ut-912
>UV
Balboa
61151
Costa Mtia
64152
Corona del Mar
63152
SURF POMCAST
LOCATION SIZE
Wedg9 l·SW
~ l-5w
Blacklt1 ).5 w
"' .... , J•tty 3-5 w
CdM J·Sw
nou TODAY
flllt low
12:33 1.m. 1.7
First high
6:52 am. 64
Second low
2:02 p.m. ·1.3
Second high
8:24 p.m. 4.1
PllDAY.
Fnt loW
1:2.5 1.m. 1.s
Pint high
:Jta.m. 6.7
s.condlow
l;4e p m. • 1.:S
second hlitj ~p.m. 44 -"JmJtn•9t
thrOulllh 'IU•dey
Local surfer$
might want to
head for the
slopes Instead of
the beach this
week. Seml·sloppy
conditions ~ of
thfs week with
scattere<t r.ln and
var~SE.SW
end west winds.
dMnest Periods
may be Thursday
Md~. II«
dely.,,. rwports
..... git
(tOO) 11&-SURF.
Theall mm
11.IO.,Uwty ,.....tOll.
City of San Francisco may
-have left its heart at the polls
I t ls pretty well-documented
that most of us have a
guardian angel. He, or she,
keeps us pointed in the best
direction for us, steering us
around the rocks and shoals.
Most cities, ?owever, do not
have a guardian angel. Maybe
they did at one time, but most
of the Governmental Guardian
Angels have suffered nervous
breakdowns and requested
reassignmenl to a less impossi-
ble and perilous task.
The exception, of course, is
San Francisco. It is surely the
most coveted beat in all
guardian angeldom.
San Francisco has survived
earthquakes and fires and every
other disastrous curve ball
Mother Nature can think of.
It has thrived despite'genera-
llons of blockheads who insist
on calling it wFrisco" or "San
Fran• or "Ess Eff" (that last, to
me, being especially wretched).
And San Francisco continues
----~~'et"vb<>Cly's-Eavorit-& city,
despite the dozens of really ter-
rible songs that have been writ-
ten about it.
But based on what I learned
during a trip there last weekend
(to help No. 2 daughter cele-
brate the Big Three One), some
San Franciscans are even now
beginning to wonder bow they
will survive their new mayor:
His Eminence Willie L. Brown,
Jr.
Willie is already clashing
with the city's newspapers
(which, by the way, are not
fred
. .martin
that bad.
I suspect that is especially
true in an era when our country
is awash in middle-aged, upper·
middle managers who have
been outsized and downsized
into a dismal existence of virtu-
ally perpetual unemployment:
Brown is also colliding with
some of San Francisco's leading
corporate types because of bis
abiding vanity.
He buys $.1,000-and-up suits
the way most of us buy boxer
shorts and is always seen in a
snappy snap-brim {which may
have more to do-with protecting
his balding pate from the San
Francisco chill than making a
fashion statement.)
Willie is also single-handedly
trying to eliminate the increas-
ingly pervasive custom of pep-
ple in coiporate and profession-
al offices dressing down on Fri-
days. Instead of dressing ever
so properly, as usual, San Fran-
cisco's legions of suits -male
Levi Strauss, Banana Republic,
Espiit and The Gap.
The chairman of one of those
companies, I learned from an
inside source, last week sent a
testy letter to Willie. This top
exec reminded the mayor of the
importance of these companies
in San Francisco: the number of
employees on the payrolls, the
number of contractors and subs
who were retained and the local
taxes all these c9mpanies paid.
I think you'll find Willie down-
playing his dress-up views.
When talking to locals about
the mayor they recently elected,
I got a sense of: "My God, what
have we done?"
Willie's predecessor, ex-
pollce chief Frank Jordan, was
not a terrible mayor. He might
have squeaked into office again
bad it not been for the notorious
shower incident with L.A. radio
wackos Mark and Brian.
You know, they somehow
talked Jordan into doing an
J.ntemew..Uom..a shower. I guess
the mayor thought it might help
hUIJlanize him and soften his
stuffed-shirt image.
It must have seemed like a
good idea at the time. But noth-
ing was said about the photogra-
pher who snapped the in-the-
buff trio -waist up, of course.
fustead of tossing it off as a joke,
Jordan mewled all over town.
He groveled and cried and, in
general, came acro~s as a whiner
-and still a stuffed shirt. ·
even close to half as good as the
Times, or even -Lord save me
fur tlnS'-the-R~ yet -coot
twice as much).
-l'tl'W"'-'~.sawal-OnfFrt
day.
wu he'd simply asked the
public, 'What's the matter, can't
you people take a joke?' the
whole thing would have blown
o.ver andJle.Jnightj)ave__~f!..re
elected," says our daughter Car-
ol's gentleman friend, John
Lane.
One of his first ofhc1al acts
was to decree that no city
staffer tctlks to the press but
WiJhe. The penalty for doing so
1s death by dismissal, with
Willie serving as judge, jury,
prosecutor and executioner.
Now, this is not something
that just happened. It has been
carefully orchestrated and heav-
ily promoted by companies -
the Levi's and Dockers folks,
especially -that make and sell
casual attire.
•After all," John added, "this
is San Francisco and we can
hand.le anything that comes
along."
The local bugles are also
irked at Willie's announced
intention to repeal the statute
that says no city employee -
save the police chief, fire chie f
and a few others -can earn
more than 70% of the mayor's
salary.
San Francisco is home base
for a mighty bunch of these:
• FRED MARTIN'S column runs every
Thursday and Saturday.
Hizzonor says all he can get
for that are second stringers.
The watchdogs say that a pay·
ctieck of $97,000-plus ain't all
..
(,..\LL Y<>l'R \l()'fHER
~ · RABBfIT INSURANCE Alla
<... \ )..J 441 Old Newport Blvd. •Newport Beach -
./ r (near Holg HO!plUI)
631-7740
OBIE SPORTS LTD.
SKI & SNOWBO
SALE
All Skis, Boots, Bindings & Poles
Starts Friday Jan. 19™10AM
All Snowboard Equipment On Sale
Burton Morrow Airwalk
K-2 Mercury Quicksilver
Sims Lib Tech Deep
All Ski & Snowboard Clothing 25% Off
Bogner Columbia · Edelweiss
Nils .Burton Convert
Obermeyer Roxy DesceBte
Accessory Items 10% Off
.
..;;iO"s1 E SPORTS LfD.
CORONA DEL MAR • 676-9700
2831 Cout Hvzy., Corona Ml lifar, CA
. .
THURSDAY, JANUNtY 11. 1• I
Witnesses go extra mile
to chase hit-and-run driver
•In an.increasingly apathetk world. two ,residents thought little about person-
al risk as they aided their fell ow motorist.
"I said, Oh my gosh! That guy By Carolyn Miller, Daily f'l1ot hit a car and now he's running,'"
she said. "I said to myself, I'm
COSTA MESA -When most going to get him.'•
people witness a crime or ace-Kimberly took off in pursuit
dent, they are more likely to tum and at the same time picked up
away and pretend they didn't see her cellular phone and dialed
anything than take action. 911. She was hoping to see the
But for two motorists on the suspect's license number to give
streets of Costa Mesa last to police, she said
Wednesday afternoon who Wlt-Alongside Kimberly in a sepa-
nessed a hit-and-run-accident rate car was Dave, who also
and pursued the suspect -they asked that his last name not be
never thought about the risk, used. The suspect's negligence
only about justice. made Dave's blood boil.
Costa Mesa police commend-"I didn't want him to get away
ed the witnesses' awareness and with it,• said Dave "He was a
efforts, which aided police in dirt bag I wasn't scared. I was
identifying and arresting the sus-pissed."
pect, Costa Mesa resident Joseph The two witnesses pursued
Martins, 35, the following night. the suspect to the College Park
At about 2:30 p.m. Wednes-residential neighborhood where
day, a Costa Mesa woman and a be surprised them both and got
Corona del Mar man were d.ri-out of his car. Kimberly, who had
ving in separate cars down Fair her 10-month-old $On in the car
Drive and Harbor Boulevard with her, panicked for the first
when they saw the driver of a red time as the suspect turned and
1983 Honda Accord collide into looked at her.
the back of a 1993 Ford Aerostar But Dave' wasn't daunted and
van and speed away from the followed the suspect as he aban-
accident, according to Costa doned his car and ran. When the
Mesa police reports. The victim suspect tried to cllmb over a
in the van, who police did not fence, Dave grabbed at hlm and
identify, was not injured the suspect asked h.sm what he
Kimberly, the female witness wanted.
who did not want her last name 1 u1 told bun, You're going
used, was behind the suspect's nowhere,'" Dave said "I said,
car and saw the acodent -but ·vou just rut that lady. I'm not
couldn't believe her eyes. going to let you leave '·
At this point the suspect
reached behind his back and told
Dave he had a gun. Dave~
Although no gun was seen. Dave
backed off.
"I didn't want him to
get away with it. He
was a dirt bag ... "
-DAVE
The man hopped over the
fence and disappeared. Dave
said he turned around and
walked back toward his car just
ciS pollce arrived and took up the
search for the suspect.
Both Kimberly and Dave don't
regret chasing the suspect for
those heart-p6unding 15 min-
utes. and both said they would do
It again.
"I would do it again so long as
there's no harm done, because I
believe people like that shouldn't
be on the streets," Kimberly said.
Dave knows he helped police
because it was he who had to
identify the suspect for police ,in a
photo lineup.
"It Just seems like whenever 1
get a ticket or get in an accident.
I have to pay for it,• Dave said.
·He should be responsible for
what he does."
• '
Man suspected or b')'iBg 1o hit police c:ar
bound CJD ~ --• left tum onto .............
Pclmnne. Laau llkl. ........
be N9Veid towiril di9 jQIClt
CV, aJniollt blttjDg II. J1Mn COi'· •
rected his steering' and' tried It
again, then drove doWD
Pomona, Lazar Mid.
Sutton radioed for help and
police immediately stopped
and arrested Valenda. be Mid.
"He told police he knew it
was police car and that he
was intentionally aiming ai the
car," Lazar said.
Sutton WU not injured io
the incident.
-BY Caro~ Miller
SKIN NV next to the sports department •
"We'd also encourage any
readers to call us if they see our
sports staff wolfing down a Big
Mac and fries at a game,• said
Lobdell. who personally pledged
Sl per pound. "Our sports depart-
ment will need to be policed."
CONTINUED FROM A 1
also hopes to replace Davtdson s
lnterior lights and aging press
box.
"We're looking to make two 1
major improvements 10 our com-
munity,• said Editor William Lob-
dell. "We're hopmg to make
Davidson Field -and our sports
department -look a little better • j
To aid in the eUort, the Dally
Pilot has hired John O'Bnen, one
of the top personal trainers in the
business, to help the caJoncally
challenged staff; has purchased
sports club memberships for Carl-
son and Crew, and taken out dll
Junk food m the vending mdchine
Those readers wanting to
make a per-pound pledge can
call the Daily Pilot's "Pound of
Flesh for Davidson Field• hotline
at 540-1224, ext. 365 dµri:ng busi-
ness hours. Please leave your
name, -city, phone number and
amount you want to pledge.
The Daily Pilot will run a list of
donors (unless you request
dnonymity) aloJlg with monthly
updates on the weight-loss chal-
lenge.
"Over 50 Years of Fine Quality"
DRAPERY SALE!
Cust<nn
lNindoUJ Treatm.ents
Shutter:,, • Shades • Duettes • Blinds
Cust om Slipcovers • Bedspreads
Create Unique Styles With
Our FREE Designer Consultation
50%* OFF
' o.•J I f f 1 f f'l t ' I ' ; ~ r ~ , , f ,
:S ~·?if::!~
FURNITIJRE
REUPHOLSTERY
1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
. 642-8400
• WITH l'\.lllQIASI! Of IOnf 'AllllC & ~
'8/YAT_ra'!el gency
Is proud to host the ltvc-performancc,
multi-Image travel show-ON STAGE ALASKAt
Produced by Holland America Westours Alaska$
largest and oldest tour company, it is an entcr~lnlng
and informative hour and a hall ·
ON STAGE At'ASKA ~atures the remarkable
scenery, the songs and the stories of the Great Landi
The live performance and slide show presents the his~
tory, culture, beauty and variety of WestourS Alaska.
Date: Tues. Jan. 2Jrd Time: 7:00 p.m.
Place: Nci&hbothood Community Center
1843 Park Ave • CO\ta Mesa
R.S.V.P. TODAY! Don't miss ON STAGE ALASKA.
AAA Tr.vet-Newport Bach
(714) 476-8880
• Pund-reilt•8' events are~ this weekend and m PelJruary tohelp Bmbara Saunders as she seeks CUI·
tody of bet oq>baned grandsons
~ EWft .... ..,.,.,, ~Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The
outpouring of support has been
generous beyond description.
says Carole Hagstrom.
• ,sltice founding the non·
profit organization, Barbie's
Friends, Hagstrom, an Irvine
resident and close friend Euiily
Ehrenfeld 01 Newport, have
found no shortage of people
willing to extend a helping
hand to Barbara Saunders.
Three months after Saun-
ders' husband died of a heart
attack, her daughter, Melinda
Reeves, and Melinda's daugh-
ter, Vanessa, were shot to
death by Melinda's husband,
James, at the family's Lake
Arrowhead house. James
Reeves then shot hi.Inself in
front of the couple's three sons.
Saunders, who lives in New-
port Beach, found herself the
custodian of the-three grand-
sons, ages 13, 11 and 6 .
It wa~ a situation she was·
unable to cope with. The three
boys have been placed in the
county~~ Orangewood Cbil-
dren'sr·fome and are awaitmg
either adoption or the result of
a lego.l custOdy battle.
Now Saunders is
help.
The first of three fund-rais-
ing events for Saunders and
ber grandsons will take place
this weekend. Barbie's Fnend~
is sponsoring a huge garage
fiale Saturday beginning at 8
a .m . at Etuenfeld's Eastbluff
home, The sale will continue
next weekend, with furniture •
featured, and there will be a
tennis tournament at the New-
port Beach Tennis Club Feb. 5.
Merchants from Costa Meia
and Newport Beach have
donated supplies or raffle
pnzes for the tennis tourna-
ment, while local consignment
stores are emptying their racks
for the garage sate. Tbe pro-
ceeds from both events will
help pay for counseling and
leqal 1ees for Saunders and the
boys
"We've got sri: bins of furni-
ture and JUSt piles of clothing,•
said Hagstrom, who began
·-
c,O~~~~~~ ~ -:-~~
WE'RE BACK FOR '96
FARM FRESH TO YOU!f
PARKING LOT
88 FAIR DRIVE • COST~ MESA
f<IR--NO --·~-co•-••M. RaiiU&IE:Biii...lCALL 714 573-037 4 fiiiiiiiiiliil••fl
.. NIKETOWN
PRESENTS
VOLUNTEER DAY
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20
1:00 PM-3:00 PM
SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKER
CALIFORNIA ANGEL
JIM EDMONDS
KICK OFF THE NEW YEAR BY
VOLUNTEERING YOUR TIME IN THE
COMMUNITY: JOIN US AS WE
SALUfE OUR L0<3At NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZA'TIONS.MAKESUREYOU
STOP BY TJIE NIKETOWN SPORTS
CHALLENGE HOSTED BY THE BOYS &
GIRIS CLUB OF COSTA MESA.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL (714) 642-6363
NIKETOWNISLOCATED
IN COSTA MES~
AT TRIANGLE SQUARE
~
thha'dng about •• ,. to Mlp
her frieDd daya an.~
o1 th• tragedy. •av~g bU
beeD volunteered. Nobody ~
for Orudp'1•Dt9 Anleting I
GrU4~· ACCc>rdlild to Bhrerdeld, the ,
c~ us anything.•
last few months bave been "'
both pb)'sic&lly and emotional-
Contributors
'include Bugbe.-~-~itti*Nll~
Market in But-
bluff, Cappucdrio
Alfresco, Ruthie's
Cafe aad A Pine
Affair. Among tbe
contributing con-
signment store•
are Stanley Mar-
ket and Twice ii
not Enough.
Shortly after the boys
arrived in Orange County,
Hagstrom arranged to buy
them new clothes and take
them to the movies. At an
Edwards Cinema, Hagstrom
told the theater manager about
what the boys bad been
through and was immediately
banded free movie passes.
"That was my first example
of what people will do,"
Hagstrom said. •This is not a
hard-hearted community."
The Friends are ln the
process of establishing a ~cbol
arship at the Lake Arrowhead
school Vanessa Reeves attend-
ed. The organization hopes to
eventually be an outreach arm
ly draining for Saunders, who
is also taking care of two elder-
ly parents: But her friends bav&
not hesitated to pitch in, said
Ehrenfeld.
"Barbie's hanging on. She's
going to make it,• Ehrenfeld
said.
Saturday's garage sale will
take place at 2163 Via Entrada.
The Feb. 5 tennis .tournament
begins with registration at 9 :30
a .m . at the Newport Beach
Tennis Club, 2601 Eastbluff
Drive.
For more-information-about
either event, call 854-3483.
Send donations for Barbie's
Friends to P.O. Box 348, 5319
University Drive, Irvine, 92715.
IHra: 7:00 •• t• 6:00 t•
AIEf 6 Wtt•• • S.•HI At•
• "Appropnm Curriculwn -• l:iT>rary
• Hands-On Leaming • H1 Tech Secunty Symm
• Computer IAb • Cmified Teachers
..&..--.
TuTglitl~
955-2672 The Oftk:W ONld Cel'lt •
1550 Briatof St. North• Newport Beach, CA 92660 :=Zo.NAMO.:.,h
(Between Jamboree & Campus)
Uc. 30427011M/195
>
,
. -·
THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1996 AS
I
briefly in the news
EStaiicia zone dads'
group meets Friday
COSTA MBSA -·The
recently formed Estancia Zone
Men's Group will have its sec-
ond men's breakfast Friday in
the Estancia High School Com-
mons.
The 6:30 a.m. breakfast will
feature Oscar Santoyo,
Estanci~ graduate and director
of Save Our Youth Center in
Costa Mesa, as guest speaker.
Santoyo will discuss tbe chal-
lenges facing today's teens and
..... SOY's impact on the communi-t!.
All fathers, grandfathers,
male guardians, uncles and
any other interested adult
male~ are invited. English to
Spa.rush translation will be pro-
vided.
Connie Cassady and Tim
Parsell also will make brief
presentations on Estancia 's
Academic Decathlon and bas-
ketball teams.
t. The seven Estancia zone
schools include Adams Ele-
mentary, California Elemen-
tary, Poinona .Elementary, Vic-
toria Elementary, Wilson Ele-
mentary, TeWinkle Middle and
Estancia High schools.
A contirrental breakfast will
be served beginning at 6:15
a.m.
TeWmkle PTA seeks
craft fair vendors
TeWinkle Middle School's
PTA is looking for vendors to
_lMumaU:sl OOlFAPPBl~ ---=--MowfUMmTOP .. ... '-' ... ..... ~~ .. ··20 SAU '9" to s29"
• :.,:-.t:Sri"
a....• 2071...,_ llW.l l•ltt 111 Coltl Mtu ~ ... -......... -111 ..... ~ .. """=---·==-~-= . .
rent spaces at the Khool's third
annual. Spring Craft Pair nezt
month.
Vendor spaces in the audito-
rium and lawn cost $25 each".
for the day and are limited to
40. Vendors may rent more
than one space to display thelr
crafts.
The fair will take place from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. March 30 and
will feature merchandise like
hand-painted clothing, jewelry,
hair bows, photography and
stuffed animals. Proceeds will
benefit the school PTA.
For information on renting a
space, call Carol Chandler at
957-3262.
Artist sought for
Scenic SK promotion
The city of Newport Beach
and the Corona del Mar Cham-
ber of Commerce are seeking
an artist to design graphics for
the 15th annual Corona del
Mar Scenic SK and one-mile
Fun Walk in June. The race is
expected to attract over 2,500
athletes from across the United
States. ----·
The design selected for the
crystal anniversary of the pop-
ular race will be reproduced on
fliers, posters and T-shirts.
All artists, illustrators and
graphic designers are eligible.
For more information contact
Sue Stein at 044-3151 or stop
by the city's Community Ser-
vices Department at 3300 New-
port Blvd.
Am, sports,
e<lucation8.1 classes
offered by city
The Costa Mesa Community
Services Department is offer-
ing a variety of classes for
adults and children.
Classes offered include
gymnastics, "Kid in the
Kitchen," Uny Tot co-op, gui-
tar, karate, ice skating, CPR,
country/social dance and bon-
sai. All classes are designed to
help kids be creative and gain
self-confidence.
Registration is at the Neigh-
borhoQd Community Center,
1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa,
from 1 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
For more information, call
6-45-8551.
'Discovery' booklet
available at OCC
'Discovery'-a 44-page book-
let that lists all workshops, per-
formances, tours and non-cred-
it classes being offered this
spring by Orange Coast Col-
lege's Community Education
Office, is available to the pub-
lic free of charge.
The booklet is available in
the Community Education
Bllilding located next to the.
library. Hours are Monday
through Thursday from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m., Friday from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. and Saturday from 8
a.m. to noon.
Booklets can be mailed upon
request by calling 432-5880.
·-SIOP -P~\\~l!\lJ-BllljS!
• Free Conl4Atallon
t Stop Wage Takilgs
•,Keep Ycu Buslnesa
CONSIDER BANKRUPTC Y!
t Emefgency Same Day Allng t Stop F«edosln8/IRS
•Stop ColleCtions t Keep $15i()OO Cash
• Discount Rates • Se Habla Espanol
Stop those hanuslng phone calla! .
MCINTOSH & PATISON (714) 835·3587 .
800 W. Santa Ana Blvd., SUlte 818, S•nta -.
-
___ SAVINGSUPIOZ18.-=---I
ON F-INE GENTLEMEN'S CLOTHING FROM
SOUTHWICK • SAMUELSOHN • H. FREEMAN • CORBIN
BARRY BRICKEN • GITMAN • IKE BEHAR • ROBERT TALBOTI
ASHWORTH • PATAGONIA • AND MANY MORE.
Suits
Sportscoats
Trousers
Dress Shirts
Sport Shirts
Sweaters
Neckwear
Regularli SALE
$395.00 to $975.00 from $149.90
$275.00 to $650.00 from $89. 90
$60.00 to $225.00 frOm $19.90
$45:00 to $150.00 &om $15.90
$65.00 to $160.00 from $11. 90
$80.00 to $395.00 from $29.90
$40.00 to $100.00 from $9.90
STORE HOURS
Mon.trunJ\Ved. lo-6, Thurs. & Flt. l();.9, Sit. IM. Sun. 12-6
561 NewPOtt centet Drive, Fashion lsllnd. Newport Beem
('ll4)64N319
•
GAR¥S
Fashion Island .. Newport Beach
SEMl-.AMMUAL
1:'oday through Sunday, January 21st
10 DAYS
ONLY
OFF-
ner & branded collections:
\
Sale Mon.-Fri. 10am-9pm, Sat. 10am-6pm
Hours: Sunday 11 :30am-5:30 pm
FASHION ISLAND -NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 759-1622
Ladies Shoes
·Handbags
Belts
COLf.,HAAN • GUCCI • JOSEPH ABBOUD
ANNE KLEIN • ROSSIMODA • DONNA KARAN
, WES ST. J.AuaENJ' • aMfH IA
,.....
The J9wllla s.1or centar wm
pr•lllt ,....101,' an apnwtng
..., _ _,.....,_.....,llide lecture by Herb Romer
today at 11:30 p:m. Tbe pneepta·
tion lndudel upbeat. Yignatt8I ot
lite, ~ and kwQag in tbe UDit·
. ed St.atel with a tolxb sll Judaic
--+---".....,folkloii and Ylddli1i WlttidmiS. A
kosher lunch ii available. For
information, c411513-56'1. ·
NEWPOKT aNTa MEmNG
The Newport Center Associa·
. tion will conduct its annual meet-
ing luncheon today from noon to 2
p.m. al The Ritz Restaurant.
Guests will hear first hand what
they can expect at county, dty
and national levels and how• the
plans will effect businesses and
professionalS in Newport Center
and Orange County. The cost is
$25 and reservations are required.
Call 6"--4622 for information.
CLIMBING SLIDE SHOW
Climbing guide Robert Parker
will present a slide show and
recount bis expedition of a remote
Patagonian ice cap located
between Chile and Argentina
called •Escoba de Dios -the
Broom of God.• The show will
take place at Adventure 16, 1959
Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa
tonight at 7 p.m. For more infor-
mation, call 650-3301. ·
40 PLUS FITNESS
Orange Coast Community Col-
GARDEN CLUB
Newport Hills Garden
Club meets today at 9:30
a.m. In Clubhouse II on
Port Carlow Place. Atten-
dees will bear about a
variety of gardening tech-
niques. Xeroscaplng also
will be dlscussed.
M --· ~-
lege is offering a six-week fitness
course for people age 40 and up
beginning today from 6:30 to 7 :30
p.m. The class meets Monday and
Thursday through March 4. Reg-
istration is $49. For more informa-
tion. call 432-5880.
'THE HASTY HEART'
Hear a· dramatic reading of
John Patrick's comedy-drama
about a wounded Scottish sol-
dier's last weeks of life in a conva-
lescent ward of a hospital in the
Orient. The reading is free at 7
p.m. at Newport Beach Central
Library. For more information, call
717-3800. -•
CAREER NElWORK MEETING
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church will hold its Career Net-
work Meeting for the unem -
ployed tonight at 7 :30 p.m. in the
chapel. Titls weeks topic is #Man-
aging Personal Change" by Kent
Nethery consultant. The ongoing
Thll!Sday evening meetings are
open to the public at no charge.
For information, call 574-2239.
FRIDAY
ESTANOA MEN'S BREAKFAST
The next Estancia Zone Men's
Breakfast will be today at 6:30
a .m . in the Estancia High School
Commons. All fathers, grandfa-
thers, male guardians, uncles and
interested adult males are invited.
English to Spanish translation will
be provided. The Estancia Zone
schools are: Adams Elementary,
California Elementary, Estancia
High School, Pomona Elemen-
tary, TeWinkle Middle School,
Victoria Elementary and Wll.son
Elementary. Oscar Santoyo,
Estancia graduate and Director of
SOY (Save Our Youth) will dis-
cuss the challenges facing today's
teens. Connie Cassady, of the
Tstaiic1a-Acadermc-Uecathlon
and 1im Parsell, Estancia Men's
Varsity Basketball Coach, will
give brief presentations. Conti-
nental breakfast served at 6: 15
a.m.
BOAT PARADE AWARDS
The Christmas Boat Parade
Awards Dinner· and Auction will
be hosted by Commodore Barry
Lewin tonight at the Hyatt New-
politer. For more information, call
729-4400.
'HIGH NOON'
The 1952 Western classic star-
ring Gary Cooper, Uoyd Bridges
and Grace Kelly will be shown
today at 6:30 p.m. at Newport
This Saturday -9:30 to 11 :30am
HIGHEST QUALITY VACCINES
COMPLIMENTARY "HEALTHY PET" EXAMINATIONS
STATE LICENSED VETERINARIANS
CAT~ DOG
FVR+CP •.•..••... $8 .Rabies •••••••••. $6
Leukemla ........ $12 DHLP+P •••••••• $10
CArpet & Drapery
Jap.uary Cleara:rice
ori Al,14 REMN.Al'ITS
50°/oOFF
·Now Open Sundays
from 11 -4 m .·
Harbor Art Museum, 850 San
Clemente Drive in Newport
Beach. The cost is $5 general
admission, $3 ft:>r members. For
more information, call 759-1122.
COMEDY MYSTERY THEATRE
Young Jewish singles and cou-
ples will meet for an evening of
food, mystery and laughs today
from 6:45 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Reservations are required. The
SH .\P~~-lT P
------
NEWPORT
Wllh fee.
Open 5:30ain to 9:00pm
~ In V.ft:skliff Pima ...
at 17th & Irvine• NB
631-3623
cost is $40 for members and
includes champagne reception,
dinner and theater. For informa-
tion, call 755-5555 ext. 551.
SATURDAY
CREATE WORK YOU LOVE
Elizabeth M. Slocum, will hold
a free community workshop on
•To Build the Life You Want,
Since 1982
Create tbe Work You Love· frOIQ
to lo-l 1 :30 a.m. at 2900 BristOI
St., Suite J-108 in Costa Mesa.
Tbere ii no fee but reservations
are ~· P.or more infonna-
tion, call 850-1889 .
ANG!tt CONfftOl WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College off en a
uiree-hour woruhop designed
to help ~nts contfOl anger and
unprove clilld management
skills. The workshop titled
•Anger Control -Parent nam.
ing" will be held from 9 a.m. to
noon today in Room 201 of
OCC's Lewis Applied Science
Building. Registration is $30 per
person or $50 for two. A SS mate-
rial fee Js payable to the presen-
ter. For more information, call
432-5880.
TAX ASSISTANCE WORKSHOP
A workshop designed to eqwp
volunteers to provide free
income tax assistance to low
income, elderly, non-English
speaking and/or handicapped
persons will be held today Crom 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. and again on Jan.
27 and Feb. 3 at OCC's Business
Education Building, Room 104.
Attendees will learn how to pre-
pare a variety of tax schedules.
Persons only need attend one
session. For more information,
call 643-4060.
SHARKS OF CALIFORNIA
The Upper Newp_ort B~ Eco-
logical Reserve ana~egional
Park present.S Jeff Landison, d
marine biologist from Cabrillo
Marine Aquartwn, speaking on
"Sharks of California: FactJ dnd
Fiction" as part of its Campfire
Programs. The event takes place
from 7:30 to 9 p.m. tonight at ·
Shellma.ker bowl on Shellmaker
Island. Marshmallows and roast·
ing sticks provided.
R 'The~P_. Speda', ..
·-<=>. c::> Groui c::>.~c:::> ~ c::::> lnaJred.llc.•~
RJli UFt O.UB
Starting today the Full Life
Cl}lb will meet every Sunday at 2
p.m. for entertainment, speakers,
-:fun and more. The cost is just a
few dolla.ni and all proceeds go to
Olive CreSt Homes & Services for
Aoused Children. The group
meets at the Island Bagel, 504
South Bay Front on Balboa Island.
For more information or reserva-
tions, call 640-1531. .
MONDAY
FRENCH CO~VERSATION
Intermediate and advanced
French conversation workshops
will be offered by Orange Coast
College's Community Education
Office. The first is Mopdays from
4:30 to 7 pm. in Room 219 of
OCC's Chemistry Building, Jan.
22 -Apr. 22. The fee is $65. The
second session is Wednesdays
fro~ 9 a.m. to noon at Promontory
Pomt Apartments in Newport
Beach, Jan. 24 -Mar 27. The fee
is $59. For more information, call
432-5880.
COLeR ME BEAUTIFUL
Christine Sherlock, co-duthor
of Color Me BeauWul's "Looking
Your Best,• will be in Costa Mesa
for a free seminar on looking your
best from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the
Countryside Inn, Bristol Street in
Costa Mesa. For reservations, call
1-800-COLOR-ME.
YOGA/MEDITATION
A six-week basic yoga and
meditatlon workshop will be held
Mondays, Jan. 12 -Mar. 11 from
7:30 to 9:30 pm. Attendees will
learn a balanced program of exer-
cise, breatlung, deep relaxation
and imagery techniques. For
more informallon, call 432-5880.
ADD LECTURE
Coastline Counsellllg Center
will sponsor a lecture on "ADD
Personality Styles & Relation-
S!ilp'S:-Presenter Denise Davis
will discuss the· symptoms of
Attention Deficit Disorder, the
challenges of dedllllg with ADD
ift. relationshlps and how to cor-
~ct potential problems before
they develop. The lecture is
tonight from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 1200
Quail St, Suite 105, Newport
Beach. A $5 donatiQn is request-
l!d. For more infonnation, call
476-0991. -
TUESDAY
OSTEOPOROSIS Cl.ASS
A free class on Osteoporosis,
undPrstanding its causes, preven-
JiOn and treatments through phys-
ical therapy will be hbsted with a
light lunch by Corona del Mar
!Shah and Mard Legge at 2600 ~. Pacific Coast Highway, Suite
~· Call 640-2121 for more infor-
mation or reservatioris.
WOME BASED BUSINESS
A free home based business
meeting on "Using the Internet
for your Business" will be held
today at 5:30 p.m. at John Domin-
is Restaurant, 2901 W. Coast
T;lighway in Newport Beach.
9pen to all businesses. For more
information, call 729-4400.
REPUBLICAN WOMEN MEET
The Costa Mesa Republican
Women Federated will hold their
hmcheon meeting today at 10:30
a.m. at the Costa Mesa Golt and
Country Club The speaker will
be Yorba Ll.nda Councilmember
Barbara Kiley For more informa-
tion or reservations, call 557-6545.
WEDNESDAY
USED BOOK SALE
The Newport Beach Friends of
the Ubrary will hold a huge used
book sale today through Jan. 28
in the' Friends Room of the Cen-
tral Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave. in
Newport Beach. Todays sale from
4 to 7 p.m. is for members or peo-
ple Wishing to become members
of Friends of the Ubrary only.
Thursday sale hours are from 9
a.m to 7 p.m., Frida~ and Satur-
day hours are from 10 a.m. to 5
RU Ff ELL'S
· UPHOLSTERY INC.
Whef9 ~Doler CO\'M ~ 1922 HMIOl llVO., COSIA t.asA • Wl-1156
p.m. and Sunday houn are from 1
to 4 p.m . .Prices begin and .50 and
up.
JUVENILE JUSTICE ""'
•Juvenile Justice in Calif or·
nia" will be discussed by Cotta
Mesa and Newport BeaCh mem-
bers of the League of Women Vot-
ers today at 9:30 a.m. at a private
residence in Newport Beach. All
league meetings are free and
open to the public. For more inf or-·
mation, call 548-2692.
DEBBIE GIBSON
Debbie Gibson along with cast
members of the national touring
company of Broadway's hJt musi-
cal "Grease" will be at Planet
Hollywood South Coast Plaza
from noon to 2 p .m. fro an after-
noon ·sos bash. The event
includes special contests, prizes
and autographs. For more infor-
mation, call 668-14.40.
POSfTtVE PARENTING
New Directions for Women,
Inc. offers a six-week course on
. parenting. to explore and under-
stand how children develop and
what makes them ticlc. Sessions
will be held on Wednesdays from
6 to 7:30 p.m. beginning today at
Faith House, 334 University Dri-
ve, Costa Mesa. Tuition is $55 for
the full six-weeks. Call 548-8232
for more information.
TlilJRSDAY, JAN. 25
TENANT RETENTION
The Building Owners and
Managers Association Orange
County chapter will hold its lunch
meeting with motivational speak-
er Bonnie Dean discussing
"Upsi.zing Tenant Retention in a
Downsizing World" today begin-
ning at 11 :30 a.m. at The
Sutton Place Hotel, 4500
MacArthur Blvd. in Newport
Beach. The cost is $33 for BOMA
members and $38 for non-mem-
ben. for more 'inlormetien ·m--""l._._.,.,......1--to,.._~
reservations .. call ~9960.
IUSINESS OflflORTUNITY
The January Business OppOr-
tunity Breakfast ~ti motiva-tional speeker Alan Kievit who
'Will Speak on "flow Tu"-Mak.e
Your Dreams Come 'Ihle" today
from 7 to 9 e.m ... at the Sheraton
Newport, 4545 MacArthur Blvd.
in Newport Beach. The~ is $17
for members and $19 for non-
members and includes breakfast.
For more infonnation, call 129-
4400.
WOMEN IN MANAGEMENT
Women in Management wel-
comes Lee Reinke Bright who will
speak on "How to Build a Busi-
ness Relationship in Five Minutes
or Less" at tb.eir dinner meeting
tonight at 6 p .m. at the Sheraton
Newport, 4545 Mac Arthur Blvd.
in Newport Beach. The cost is $35
and resetvatiollS'are recommend-
ed. For more information, call
838-1558.
FRIDAY, JAN. 26
'JUST FOR YOU'
A day o1 mini-workshops
includin~ hair cutting, manicures,
makeovers, massage, fashion and
more. The event is today .from
8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Costa
Mesa Senior C~nter, 695 W. 19th
St. Tickets are $1 for members
and $2 for non-members. For
more information, call 645-2356.
WEDDING WEEKEND
Barnes & Noble hosts author of
"The Wedding Workbook," Mar-
lene Holloway as she signs her
book and answers questions
about planning the perfect wed-
ding today from 7 to 9 p.m. and
Saturday Cynthia Munchnick,
author of "Will You Marry Me?"
will share toucb.i.ng and humorous
stories ol unique wedding propos-
als from 2 to 4 p.m. Barnes &
MOTORCYQE SWAPMEET ..._,..
Inter Shc>ws wU1 spomor Jhe motorcycle swapmeet Pit., trom S to 10 p.m. tn building ti 4'f
the Or~ County Fair & Exposition Center. AdmtMlon Is S6 and clalldren under 12 are tree.
For more tnformatton, call 364-0515. ·
Noble is located at 953 Newport
Center Drive in Newport Beach.
Call 759-0982 for more informa-
tion.
WOMEN IN LEADERSHIP
Women in Leadership hosts
State Senator Lucy Killea at a lun-
cheon at 11 :30 a.m. at the Pacific
Club, 4110 MacArthur Blvd. in
Newport Beach. The cost is $30
for members and $40 for non-
members. Call 644-0278 for more
information or reservations.
SATURDAY, JAN. 27
JACK JONES
Popular singer and Grammy
winner, Jaclc Jones will perform
tonight at 8 p.m. at Orange Coast
College's Robert B. Moore The-
atre, Fairview Road in Costa
Mesa. Tickets are $20 in advance
or $27 al the door. For more infor-
mation, call 432-5880.
SPANISH VOLUNTEERS
The Child Abuse Prevention
Center will tram Spanish-speak-
ing volunteers to act as parent
aides today from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at 2482 Newport Blvd., Suite 7 in
Costa fviesa. Parents aides help
Hispanic families where an inci-
dent of child abuse has occurred
or is in danger of occurring. Call
722-1107 or 449-7888.
• Send your items to the Around Town
I Editor, The Daily Pilot. 330 W. hy St..
Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627; fax~170or
call ~ 1224, Ext. 333.
January 20
and 21.
The sun, the moon and the stores. .
FASHI()N ISLAND
EWPORT BEACH
M•l•H MareH • l•ll•ok'• w ..... , at.re • TM lrHlwq • a9'1• ... •·M•t
Mondev thru Fridev lo.ft\ to e,m . ......., toem to'""-.,..._._,,.,. to tpnt. rr1.,'n1.-.
Above P9cffle COMt H~ 11ettu11n ~ IMI. .......... , .. M lfttl1 ''" ....
ShellY Emily n.ysor, daugh-
-of Mn. Albert w. Sn)'der of
Newport Beach, and Craig
AndenOo SCudder ucba~
wedding vows Jan. 4 m tlii
Colorado River Weddirig
Chappel in Bullhead City, AriZ.
tn a ceremony officiated by
Rev. Crystle--Payne Pender.
The bride wore a forest
green chiffon dress with a
5'C1Uin beaded neckline and -
earned a white i:ose bouquet. .
Her husband is the son . of
the late Mr. and Mrs. John
Scudder. Lyn and Daryl Mur-
phy were bonor attendants for
the couple.
............... .......
.... ., I --1br1Mr' pa f I 11 a lldlday ....,._.,t
11111.:t. bdde ll1ctil. gnwluate ol
1\d:m•r ~-Scb:OOI Md-. um ... , o1·Soudlam California w-. lbll wea amHAtect with the
Della Gemma IQl'9dW. She ii a
.... at tbe lhUvwsity of the
--Padk SCJioQl of bentiStj iD San
PrandKo. Sbe was a 1987
Nation&l Charity League Oebu-
tante.
The future bri~ ~adu-·
ated from noy High School
where he was an All American
swimmer, Stanford University
with a degree in Economics and a
member of Stanford's NCAA
championship swim team, and
the Univenity of the Pacific
School of Dentistry.
The couple honeymooned
in Laughlin, Nev. She is
employed by the Hemet Uni-
The wedding is planned for
September 14, at the Community ·
Church Congi:egational in Coro-"'
• fied School District and he is in Sbelly Em1ly Ta}ior and
management and investment. Craig Andenon Scudder
na del Mar and will be followed
by a reception at the Big Canyon
Country Club.
engagements
JAQUES~ALUSHA was graduated from California -· Polytechnic San Luis Obispo and
The engagement of Amy received her master's degree in
Jayne Jaques and Timothy clinical psychology from Pepper-
Galusha has been announced by dine University in Malibu. Her
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eber fiance is a graduate of Corona del
Jaques of Newport Beach and Mr. Mar High School and UC Berke-
and Mrs. Paul Dean Rea of ley and received his Juris Doctor-
Pasadena. He is the son of Mr. ate of Law at Hastings Schqel of
and Mrs. Michael Howard of Law in San Francisco.
Corona del Mar and Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Galusha of Boulder, Colo. JOHNSON -GENC They will be married in May at
Rancho Las Lomas in Silverado The engagement of Kimberly
Canyon. Kathe,rine Johnson, daughter of
The bnde-elect is a graduate of I Dr. and Mrs. Paul Michael John-
Santa.. Barbara High School and son of Newport Beac!.1 to_ Dr.
WORLO'S FINEST WINES
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The current Interest in chokers began as a result
of Princess DI appW!OQ al the Counc~ of Fashion
Designers of Amerlea Awards a Uttlt more than a
year ago wearing a pearl choker Yrrth a sapplufe
center After that. chokers began showing up at
wedd1nos. on runwiys. and at blade lie lffairs.
Once the Irene! was set. chollers again ~ lo be
pilled '°' thtk versatwty They shOW wen on bare skili. Wlillif it bi with 11'1 evening gown Oiiisili a
cnsp white blou9e. lntemtiogty enough. ttus piece
of jewelry first became popular W'hen an evtler
Princess of Wales (Queen VICtorial daughter·tn-
law) hit upon the Idea of weanno purl dog coOars to
COYtr a sw on her nect. These three-to-live-strand
choker Y111eties frt llQhtJy around 11\e Adam's apple
to meet her needS nloely Today. ol course. chokers
are worn more to make stitemems as evening
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From the simple elegance of a vetvet band to the
more flamboyant multl·strand a great gilt for yoursett or a loved one If you woukl.hke to see a
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Newport Horth Shopping Center (at the corner of Btson and M3cArthur). and 32411 Golden l.mttm.
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I I
I The Bod I I 369 E . 17th St. I I Cos~ Mesa I.!~> 642-8910
The Bod
369 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
(714) 64i4910
r
DECEMBER 17, 1995
· E:xperts Crack
Access Codes
By D. E. CIPHER
SAN RA.MON, CA -Ualnt ~
ered computers, cryptographers at
Padftc Bell have cracked the vexing
"access code" that some people 1l8e
--~~~--~--~._,.~--......... ~~~~~~~~..hen.JPA)dng..telephaoe.&.:LUJ~
.. -
'
Tbe code "1 OATI," for example,
when deciphered reads: "You could
'be paymg long dlStance prices for
basic I~ calla."
Consumers who notice unusual
charges on their phone bW are urged
call 1-800-PAC BELL for mqre lnfi
atlon.. · , .. ·· · · · · ) .. ,
PACIFIC El BELL.
NE T ·W 0 R K
Row will you uae it?•
-1m1.-..a..iMed of • tdibol in lbe N~ Coast area and is active·
fy Joaldng to purch.ue the proper·
ty, thUs entitling it to use the _._,.._._,r-f· -~eX.u>tion even if the NewpQrt
C<iuricllOOl Will De paid for
~Mello-Roos taxes.
But dty officials, who are lnter-
~ed in purchasing the property for a ~k. read the code differ·
ently. They want to purchase part
f the propeny for 25o/o of the fair
market value, as stipulated in the
Naylor Act, and say the code's
exemption doesn't apply to the
rustrict.
rrhlstee Ed Decker, who lives
in Costa Mesa, said he believes
the district should adhere to the
Naylor Act if it sells the property.
"While the school district feels
piat there is a loophole, I'm some-
what uncomfortable with that
position.· Decker said. ·Having
read the legislative intent of the
Naylor Act, it seems to me. the
tntent is to really assure that the
property is not lost to the commu-
nity."
Decker said the situation has
put him at odds since he is a
school board member and a city
resident.
"I think that while there may
be this loophole tn the law, T'm not
comfortable wllh what is the
developing distnct position, ff
Decker Sdid "I trunk the school
district should also be concerned
with the greater good of the com-
munity as a whole.
#( don't trun k that what we're
doing is m the spirit of the law.•
he said
But some of Decker's board
colleagues disagree.
..., .. .-...... ".' malnten1nc:e,. she ,..... .. ...
got IO t'CIDe to grlJ'I witll the
problem. I think it's man attlceJ
now tba'1 at any other time.• ~ Jtm Perryman.-.
"There's an $847,000 differ·
ence if we use the exemption,•
he said. •we can put that to pret-
ty good U$e. As school ~
members. we pretty; much have
to look at this from a selfish
standpoint." .
But Perryman cautioned the
. board.has not decided whether It
will sell the site. The trustees will
meet later this month for a spe-
cial study session to review the
district's overcrowding problem. •
The board could decide to
open the school to take in the stu-
dent overflqw from neighboring
Kaiser Elementary, tlley say.
•rm not sure I want to see us
sell Monte Vista, ~ said board
president JlDl de Boom. "I'd real-
ly like to see us get the full value
out bf the (Costa Mesa High
School) farm property.•
De Boom said be would favor
using the Naylor Act exemption
to sell the farm property to devel-
opers because it would yield a
higher price than Monte Vista.
1hlstee Wendy Leece said she
also may oppose the sale of
Monte VlSta, if the board deter-
mines a need for another elemen-
tary school on Costa Mesa's East
Side.
But if the site 1s sold, Leece
said she would depend on the
district's legal counsel to interpret
the Naylor Act
"If we have an opllon to use
the Naylor Act to get the mos.t
bang for our buck to fix our
schools, we have to do that,~ she
said. "As a school board member,
that's my plionty •
COACH
CONTINUED FROM A 1
with cancer a year ago, was
rushed to the Newport Beach
hospital Tuesday after his
roommate and assistant coach
CrtU Freeman found him
unresponsive and having trou-
ble breathing.
Montoya's wife Karen said
she heatd from the coach's
friend, Dan Anderson, that
Ferguson's truection was not
related to the cancer, but was
serious because of his weak-
ened immune system.
"He's so run down, it's ta.le·
ing a beating on him," Karen
said. "He's very, very ill.•
The latest tum of events
cquldn't help but affect Fergu-
son's players as they battled
University High in a game
Wednesday night, the Mon-
toyas said.
·ne kids had a rough
game. They're very disturbed.
It's visible he's not there,"
Karen Montoya said.
"We're all hoping and
praying."
Added her husband,
between tears: "The kids
played their . hearts out
tonight. I don't know how they
do it."
Ferguson, the youngest
head coach in Orange Coun-
ty's history, was diagnosed
with a rare form of kidney can-
cer in January 1995. The
beloved coach underwent
nine months of chemotherapy
treatments. which sporadically
took him away from the court.
·we can talk about the spuit of
the law, and then we can talk
about the law 1tsel!t • said truwe
Serene Stokes. "We need to Lalk
about the extreme s1tuabon we
tiave ·in our district and how we
can take care of it in the best
lnterests of our chiJdr~n. •
-MakeThose-PatioS &
Entries Beautiful
Stokes pointed to the district's
$15 million deferred maintenance
Jist as her support for using the
exemption
• "I don't know where else we're
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Costa Mesa
(714) 645-8512
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COSTA llESA ·
Ctpp1rtr11 811. P1rlr
tit
H
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Kllunu WU wom ID the gov-
ernment ag8SlCJ. but in a differ-
ent, lea dangerous capacity. U
his face is restored, Kllun.as and
bis coworkers alike won't feel
uncomfortable, he said.
•1 am almost overwhelmed by
the fact that someone who does-
n't know me and is so f~ away
can pay attention to and help
me," Kisunas said. "Not only the
doctor, but my relatives.•
After exitmining Kisunas in
hls hometown of Vilnius, the
capitol of Uthuania, a year ago,
DomanskiS determined laser
surgery was necessary to remove
the black pigment from Kisunas'
skin. But such 'technology is not
available in Lithuania, where the
mark of communism is still
painfully evident. Medical prac-
tices in Uthua.nia are still about
STUDENTS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
-"When I found~ut-the power
was out, I thought 1 was going to
have ari easy day,~ Martin said,
H but it's been one of the busiest."
The district has not estimated
the cost of the damage yet, but
administrators did file an insur-
ance claim Wednesday, said Carol
•na cars.r.. ..... .,.
Bdllamlt .. pm..
Brvan H. Ltd.
M hJPs S H 0 ES . E TC
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tripl to Uthuanla since 1990 to
teacb the su.rgeons there aboUt
plastic and reconstructive
surgery • Ufe is not important
there. People are expendable. It
will take awhile for it to chang~
and for the technology to catch
up."
Domanskis is donating the
surgery, which he est:!mates will
cost about $10,000. The surgeon
hopes to remove 90% of the
black pigment, and ~0% will be
erased during the first proce-
dure, he said. After the laser pro-
cedure, Domanskis will try • to
reconstruct Kisunas' eye socket.
DdXnanskis is using the
newest laser system, which emits
light in very short flashes to
remove or lighten dark marks
such as tattoos. The black stains
Stocker, the district's executive
director of business services and
auxiliary operations.
While the students escaped
without homework, teachers stuck
around for a school staff meeting
and lef\ about noon, Martin said.
Today the teachers will meet at
Our Lady Queen of Angels School
across the street for staff develop·
ment. · They will discuss the
school's restructuring efforts and
the district's technology master
,.. .......... KlsunU·
to a tattoo .,.. ..... Aid. •
Tbe nwM• com S7o,ooo
and .. usually rented by docton
4or -Sl,$00, HI baaGe laser
Rentals in Pountaln Valley 15 donating the use of the machine
to DomaniJds.
Kilunu arrived at DomansJcis•
Office with his cousin Giritu Ter.
leek.as, who accompanied him
from U thuania, and Enck, who
has offered to share her h•me in
West Los Angeles with them for
the next few mon ths.
Enck said she communtcated
over the Internet with 'terleckas
to make plans for their trip to
Calitomia -thousands of miles
away from their homes in Lithua-
nia.
K:isunas, the· father of two
young sons, said he was not ner.
vous about the surgery. •rm very
happy," he said, smiling at
Domansk:is. •Thank. you. Thank
you very much.•
plan.
The teachers also have agreed
to cancel two in-service days
planne:d for Feb. 20 and March 13,
which will now be school days to
make up for the cl.ass-time-los this
week.
If the power panel isn't fixed by
this afternoon, Friday's classes
could be canceled, too. If they are,
Martin said the school might·have
to push back the last day of school
one day.
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17th St. BEAUTY CENTER
---
642-1717
283-D 17th Street, Costa Me$1l (Next to Rm)
Opn 7 Days: M-F 10-8 Sat. 10.7 Sun. I 1-6
------------------
PRICES GOOD FOR THURS. 1-18-96 ONLY
Come in •n' e~erience tire l11r9est selection of fr.es/I piw/uce
11roun,. We offer ""er 258 "•rleties of fruiu 11nl "•1•t11llles
from 1111 o"•' die worli 11t un'1elie"ttllf 1J low •'1•"il•IJ prices.
ociety in black and white
SIDEWALK .
.SALE
JANUARY 20th· & 21st
UPTO 7'0% OFF
• No 11Jiunmcnt on priot purdiuo
. A R M 0 I R E.
Lynn H.lrsch, of Newport
Beach (left) and Alyce
Williamson turned out for
opening day at Santa Anita.
Newport ladies turned out for the races at Santa Anita Park, Including: (from left. seated) Usa ,
lllllgren, Lynn Pyle, Ann Ramser; (from left, standing) Jody Bw;nham, Katy Krupp, Debbie Exley,
Diane Connelly, hostess Tracy Bowie, Mary Buckingham, Jan Thompson (of South Pasadena) and
Angela Doheny.
~,.,,.. vuvsg
BUY & SEU USED CLOTHES,
TOYS & ACCESOAJES, ETC.
2!584 ~ewport Bhld. l~ Del Mer) Tel: (714) 646-1298 .....,., !..!1..=+-'--N
Coeta Me.II (7141 831·7383 Fax: (714) 648-3958
YOUR EYETUCK SPECIALIST ~
CALL N·ow FOR FREE CONSULT
LYON EYE 760-3003 #1.t~ ?Jr.,••·
1401 AVOCADO 402 · NEWPORT BEACH
GRAND OPENING
All of our inventory will &e on sal~
UP
TO
All services will be-at 50% OFF
including FREE pick up & deliveryl
· through Fe&-15
M11t cl11111 1r1 held 1t Co11tlin1' 1
C11t1 M111 C1nt1r loc1t1d 1t
2118 M111 V1nl1 Orin E11t •
Call tlt4J 151-9140 for a Weekend College
brochurl or mo11 information.
ORCHID
COASTLINE WEEKEND COLLEGE
CLASSES: .
• are held on Friday evenings and all day
Saturday.
• transfer to the CSU and UC sys tem.
~ meet the needs of busy students who can't
attend classes during the week.
• provide a way to earn a cenificate and/or _
A.A. degree in accounting. business
-administration and management aRd
superv1s1on.
• Three different Weekend College sessions are
offered this Spring starting February 2. March 22
and M~ 10.
at Twin Palms' Gospel bnmch
ouni:ll of praise to Jesus
~ted guests aa they
entered the large canvas
end facWty on Sun4ay,
th1I wu not an old-time
ous revival in a tent.
Instead, it was 1Win Palms'
1~:J91J1til brunch, where praise
pancakes mix together
cter a.retractable canopy at
ahion IJland in Newport
acb. •we didn't need to go to
urcb today,• said John
:Qicero, 29 of Newport Beach.
cero was joined by his
mother and girlfriend, Robin
Janey of Costa Mesa. ·
•we loved it,• said Kelley, ·us. "We could stay here all
dayf•
Indeed, with an a la carte
menu and no set time limit,
.patrons are invited to spend
fhe day dining on food that
~andma might make -if she
l(Ted in Prance.
The menu features such
fare as fresh seasonal fruit,
gaufres aux pecans (waffles
with pecans) and eggs Bene-
dict classique with pommes
Trites (trench fries). Beverages
{,lover the gamut from fresh-
ueezed juice to champagne
QOcktails and cappuccino.
And it's not just the ·cus-
f-=~~ t.emfll! who lik9 to li.n~ -
"It's a beautiful atmos-
JtJiere. We could sing all day,"
~d Don Siler, a member of
e Real Truth, one of the
ospel groups that perform
gularly at the restaurant. '!• The singing quartet, which
~so includes Weston Lauder -If., David Lewis and Melvin
$nighton Sr. sang under the
?»md shell from 11 a.m to 3
p.m., with 15 minute breaks in
between their 45 minute sets.
• With songs ranging from
·smooth and silky to jazzy and
bluesy, th• Gospel lingers had
.J>atrons clapping, dancing and
linging along to tunes like
!"Used By Jesus,• which is fea-
jured on their release "Press-
ing Toward the Mark.• .
Members of The Real Truth
have also managed to turn
their performances into their
own Sunday family gathering,
since Weston's son Tremayne
is the drummer, and Don's son
Benjamin plays ban guitar.
Keyboard player Monese Siler
is also Don's brother.
Group memben have been
pleased with the response to
their perf onnances, and said
that the Newport Beach ~rowd
is livelier than those that
attend brunch at the restau-
rant's other location in
Pasadena.
"The people are very excit-
ed over what's happen.lng, •
Lauder said. 11 They make us
think we can almost sing.•
. Members of ne Real Ttuth
have been together for the
past twelve yea.rs, but still
managed to put forth such
energy while onstage that
they frequently used their
black monogrammed towels to
wipe the sweat from their
faces.
Response to the qospel
brunch has been positive, with
many customers attending
specifically to hear the music,
sani Leslie chaeter, a super-
visor at the eatery.
"That's why we came," said
Bob Gunn, who works at
Mariner's Church in Newport
Beach. •t like the music a lot.
It's fun and the food ls good."
Although th.e volume dur-
ing some of the uptempo
selections made it necessary
to speak loudly, Sachaef er
said that there have been very
few complaints.
"Everyone loves every sin-
gle Gospel band," she said.
•When they walk in, 99%
know what to expect, or they
walk in and tbey.'re so happy
with it. We usually have more
than 400 people attend.•
The Gospel groups that
have been chosen to perform
during brunch appear at both
restaurant locations, but are
not scheduled in any particu-
lar order. On.e week may offer
a men's quartet, while several
Sundays later a women's choir
uom SoutlLCentraLLos Allge-
les may sing. The Real Truth
will return Feb. 4.
•we use an agent to book
the groups at both proper-
ties,• said Carollynn Wolff,
director of marketing and
public relations for Twin
Palms. •The niche propels the
program, but we want the
music to be as consistent as
the eggs.•
Although the restaurant can
seat up to 400 at a time, Scha-
effer recommends making
reservations, since even dur-
ing football playoffs the din-
ing room was booked during
brunch.
.......... :tre-MlliiDllrJllll
i j : 1 'HIGH NOON': The west-1 em clas ic -stAJrtng Gary
• Cooper, Grace Kelly and
' Uoyd Bridges -ts showing 6:30
' p.m. Friday es part of Newport
Harl>Or Art Museum's ongoing
series. Adm!Ssion is $5 or $3
' or mem.ben. and students. 850
1 San q.emente Drive, Newport
Beach. '.
'THE HASTY HEART':
I south Orange County Com-
m\ll:tjty Theater's Readers
' Theatre presents a dramatic
~ reading of •The Hasty Heart" 1
p.m. tonight in the Friends
Meeting Room of the Newport
Beach Central Llbrary, 1000
Avocado Ave. Information: 717-
3801.
3 FOUR FRESfil\ofEN: The
group will perform at 4
p .m. Sunday at Orange ·
Coast College's Robert B. Moore
Theatre. Advance tickets are
$18. Information: 432-5680.
4TORONl'O DANCE TIIEATRE: Canadian cbore--
ograt>her Christopher
House bnngs hls 14-member
modem dance ensemble to
Orange Coast College at 8 p.m
Saturday. Advance tickets are
$21. Information: 432-5880.
5 MOTORCYCLE
SWAPMEET: Al the
Orange County Fwr-
'9T'Ounds, 5-10 p.m. Friday in
~""""Hulldmgil'.1. Admlssionis $6 for
adults and children under 12 are
'free. Information: 364-0515.
OUR MEAU ARE A
TRIP TO MEXICO
The n.ca1t1on
Continues
Since 1972
COCK T.-.IL S
f ()( 1r• T () l1U
PH(JNl AHfAD
..
{Ji1l who 1eaYel berHawdsn
llland ,_.for a bllllr •Md
beoomet eatangledtn m ma.c
and his Wife's MNgglal. At
South Coast R.epenmy, 655
Town eam.-Drive in C.O...
Mesa, throuqh Feb. 11. Show·
. ~: Tuesday • Friday at 8
p.m., Saturday at 2:30 & 7:30
p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 & 7:30 p:m. ~cketS: $28-$38. lrifonna·
tion: 957-4033.
7ST. PETEltSBUJLG PHD.-
H.UMONIC: Led by con-
ductor Mariss Jansons, the
program includes Weber's
•E\!fYB!lthe Overture,• Bruch's
"Violin Concerto in G minor•
(featuring vioIµUst Pamela
Frank), and Dvorak's "Sympho-
ny No. 9, 'From the New
World'• 3 p.m. Sunday.
80TEUO: Shakespeare's
famous tragedy becomes a
great music-drama. Verdi's
final tragedy features Vladimir
Atlantov, reprising his acclaimed
potrayal of the noble Moor, as
well iJS Kallen Espertan, debut-
ing on The Centers stage as
Desdemona. (In Italian, with
English surtitles projected aoove
the stage). 8 p.m. Satwday, Jan.
24, 27 and 31; 2 p..m. Feb. 4.
Tickets: $18-$85.
9 FAMILY CIRCUS: The
New Pickle Family Circus
will perfonn two shows at
Orange Coast College's Robert
B. Moore Theatre at 9:30 and
11:30 a.m. today. The production
is filled with downs, acrobats,
and a host of cololful characters.
Tickets are $1 for general
admission and $5 for children
under 12. Information: 432-5880.
1 0 MAAK TIJRNBULL:
The songwriter-per-
fonner presents his
new one-man show, •Grand-
~~~ Sttaa~ anu -
Wonderful Thing ... ,• 8 p.m. Fri-
day and Satwday and 2 p.m.
Sunday at Newport Theatre Arts
Center. Tickets are $13. 2501
Cliff Drive, Newport Beach,
Information: 631-0268.
famous for our.t
Light Cuisine
recipes prepared lean on calories,
but not flavor.
Cilantro-Lime Salad • Light Tostada •Chicken Tomati/UJ Tacos
• Light Enchiltu/aJ • Frijoks Fmco -(Fmh not rt-fritd)
' .----.. -l'LigluEn.,.Coupoa • JI,~ 1 ~2for1 1
I u.-1.!!'! "'::r I I ""~~ I Newpon Beam
67~ .. 6855 a. ...... ,... .ii
SCR's 'Ballad of Yachiyo'
entertains and educates
By Tom Titus, Daily Pilot
I T he ~allad of Yachiyo,• South
Coast Repertory's
home-grown Japane'se tale,
unfolds on the theater's main
stage at approximately the
pace of the meticulous tea
ceremony depicted therein.
It's a delicate, often quite
beautilul piece of theater,
with individual performonces
that gradually solidify as the
play progresses. If its audi-
ences, resist the temptation to
nod off along the way, they
will be substantially reward-
ed.
Playwright Philip Kan
Gotanda has written a loving
tribute to a teen-aged aunt
who loved impulsively and
chose tragedy over shame on
the Hawaiian island of Kauai
in 1919. His story is presented
with unhurried style and sub-
stance by director Sharon Ott,
recreating her work on the
play's world premiere in
Berkeley.
The central role of the 17-
year-old Yachiyo, sent by her
parents to work for a pottery
maker and his wile, is beauti-
fully and dynamically ren-
dered by Sala Iwamatsu. She
endows her character with an
almost strident stubbornness
· and strong moral fiber, which
she allows to unravel ever so
gradually while maintaining
her audience's empathy.
The bitter, hedonistic pot-
ter who eventually becomes
her lover is p~rfq_rm~brU:
liantly by Lane Nishikawa.
His dominance initially
repels, then later becomes a
magnetic force, drawing the
impressionable Yachiyo.
Emily Kuroda as
N1shikawa's wife of conve-
.
r·-----~--------·--·----...-~ I • • • --.-~J l
I
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~------·------------------~ nience retains a proper
demeanor even when casting
thus far-untrue accusations at
her young guest. Eric Stein-
berg gives an impassioned
portrayal of Yachiyo's home-
town boyfriend, a fierr. labor
organizer in the cane fields.
Yacbiyo's parents are com-
passionately interpreted by
Sab Shimono as her kind,
twinkle-eyed father and Dian
Kobayashi as her more realis-
tic, troubled mother. Annie
Yee has some fi.ne ·intermit-
tent moments as Yachiyo' best
friend at home.
Visually, MThe Ballad of
Yachiyo" is quite wonderful.
Loy Arcenas' unit set with
scenic scrim ~ackdrop pro-
vides substantial atmosphere,
gloriously illuminated by
Peter Maradudin's lighting
effects. Lydia Tanji's period
costumes are quite impres-
sive, as is the original back-
ground music by Dan
Kuramoto, executed by
Stephen LeGrand.
"The Ballad of Yachiyo" is
at once entertaining and edu-
ca.Wmal~ presenUng a vjvid
glimpse of Japanese culture
in the early century. The pot-
tery.making scenes appear
quite authentic, and the
aforementioned tea ceremony
is performed with exquisite
care.
@•l!J
~ -; "1'-AMAR~A!!~l ~ E
~~~~~-· ~ ~ I •Authentic Sushi Bar JS. E
~ ·-.., 11---• Elegant Dining Room PJ ~~ ~ &~Tu~a cs ._. ..-1:11-1.-... • Lunch Buffet 645-5518 ~ 2875 Irvine Awnue. Cos1a Mesa 645 5519 {ICIOa from Newport Goll Courie) •
lIAH HOGSTEN I OALY Pi.OT
Yachiyo (Sala Iwamatsu), and Papa (Sab Shlmono) say gooclb~l
before Yachiyo goes to Uve with family friends -a potter and >(?
his wife·-to escape tolling in the sugarcane fields. ~
COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE
-fa!!lm
• All Singing, All Dancing, All Gershwin
CRAZY FOR YOU
OltKll.D IY WIY WArn
PIOOOOD IV lEX lOMPllllS
Jelluary II tin Ftlwwry II, 1'96
n.tdoy. ~. Sllw4oy . l:(JC)pin
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MONDAY · SUNDAY
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Coffee or SY.iss Proces5dl
Deafftinated Coffet
Orange Sptctd Tu
Rilntlk"s Mulll-gnut Oatmal with
Br<P<m SugM Rai)IJ\S mi Walnuts
Smoked Silmon &gel 111th ~ Omoo
C.n. T~to illld Crum Chttse
Fmich~
Belgian Waffle)
Multi-berry Tower with Whipped Cream
Multi.gnin
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BE\ER.\GES
TuStln:llon
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S3.50 frt.Sh Frwt ToWt~
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$3.50 Mannmde. ~Nuts. Banw's
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Multi-PD Cnnob ~ith BanaN's & Walnuts
S3.95 Georgia Puch Crtpe v.ith Sa~
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~
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$175 Buttmnilk w
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UU( ON DI J'IU> SID£
If ,,
•f •• II
u
n. ltinatt Wiit P«.alo Pwm With,_~ d ._.1ftth Fnsh Fnli~ Ice Crm, Fr\tbD tJ. die ~ (w.1181 ,_.,_Cmm A Pmm Si.SO PtN Mtit llln
PwmdWldtt ~PDaMt
With Lanon Cwd' ~ $6.75
(Scniaj Olly pllft tww ~ ~·
SATURDAY· SUNMY
8.-00 AM .. 12:31 PM
.
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CASEY LUKSCW DAILY PILOT
Steve H~ward plays Kermit Wasserman and Nancy Petersen plays J.H. Joslyn tn the BackLot
Repertoire production of .. Betrothal."
Bylom Ttt us, Dally Ptfot
P laywright Lanford Wil-
~ son, best known for
involving seriocomic
plays such as "The Hot L Bal-
timore" and "Talley's Polley,"
spent a good deal of his cre-
ative time fashioning one-act
plays about the human condi-
tion, three of which are cur-
rently being offered by the
newly formed BackLot Reper-
toire at the Theatre District in
Costa Mesa.
It's a mixed bag of enter-
tainment under the direction
of actress Shannon Hunt,
wh o'$ featured in one of them.
Those attending should resist
the urge to leave at intermis-
9ion, smce the quality level
soars thereafter.
The "best of show" in this
trilogy clearly is "A
Betrothal," in which two
British breeders (of what
I -----------------..:------~
: F.Y.I.
I : + WHAT: Backlot Reper-
: toire's production of t hree,
• one-act plays by Lanford Wil·
: son : + WHERE: The Theatre Dis-
: trict
: +WHEN: Call for next per-
' formance. : + MORE INFO: 435-4043. I
I I ~-----------~------------~
Petersen excels as a frosty,
snooty society maven given to
repetitious phrasing (•I have
my pursuits• is uttered at
least a dozen tunes) Shanng
a tent during a rainstorm with
the likes of Howard -a bum·
bling, jittery first-timer in the
competition -1s not her cup of
tea at all.
How these opposites attract
each other, like a pair of gid-
c;!y_teenagers planning d first
sexual encounter, 1s whdt
-wmeh corup1 b~ i"he ~i.liter
mission program. Neither of
them really goes anywhere,
and it's difficult to care a
great deal about the charac-
ters involved.
The opener, •Ludlow Fair,"
involves two female room-
mates who d rive one a nother
crazy. Rachel (Gwen Yeager)
is the more serious head case,
agonizing over turning her
. thieving boyfriend in to the
police. Agnes (Terri Smith) is
ostensibly the calming influ-
ence, b ut her character simply
bores. More lively is the sec-
ond play, "Breakfast at th e
Track," in which director Hunt
and P.J . Agnew portray night
and morning people, respec-
tively, trying to coexist on
vacation.
Both performers give their
roles more energy than
llMJUll ,.... ca.ta w.. Alt LMgue Geo·
~..a 1 twnz. w11 be blild at 1 p.ui. ~~~ ~ Aw. an c.a.t.a Mela. Thit .. IDCIDlb .. ~will be con-
duc:l9cl by Mil known watarcol-
orlat Bdgltte Crolilon. Por more
~ mll.540-6430. SHOWCASE GA• I ay
GeoeYteve Bennett's oil ~tiµgS wm be ~yed ~the month
of Jan~ Admission is free.
Houn: Wediwday and Thursday
10 a.m. to 5 p.m, Friday and Satur-
day 10 ~.m. to 8:30 p.m . and Sun-
day 11 •.m. to 5 p.m. Information:
540-6430. Showcase Gallery, 1631
Sunflower in the South Coast Pla7.a
Village.
W£STCUFF GAU.ERV .
and ,....., lbOwlr Gary Bitz ad
DJB-u:111m~~wtth
pelt ~ dim. bank. trop..~, addjUi. tedlno and
home, 9Ye(y Saturday. 21 and old·
•· ~ a>d8. 21 end over. 640 W.
l '11b St.. Cotta Mela, 722-6100.
1HEHMP ..
nadttlonal· Irish music, every
Thunday night. The Penians,
every Pridily, 9 p.m.. 1 a.m. 130 E.
17th St., Costa Mesa. 646-8855.
LAVA ROOMINEWPORT STATION
Uve local bands, feafurlng differ-
ent bands alld disc jockeys every
Monday and Friday. Newport Sta-
tion: Alternative-lifestyle dance
club every ThW'Sday and Saturday;
Doors open at 8 p.m. l 945 Placen-
tia Ave., Costa Mesa, 631-0031.
MARGARITAVIU.E
Peter Shambrook perfonns every
Wednesday at 9 p.m. 2332 W
Coast Hwy., Newport Beach, 631-
8220.
PIERCE STREET ANNEX
Ding tonight traai 7&30 to 9 p.ig.
Partnen ere wekmle bUt not ftel:
tlfNY, ~ lee II S45.1Fdr
more tmarmatioP. Call ~-5880.
TORONTO DANCE THEATRE ~ House, one of cana-~'I most innovative dance choteb'!
gl'apherl. brings his l<Wnember
modem dance ensemble to
Orange Coast College on 5aturday
at 8 p.m. Advance tickets are $21.
Information: 432-5880.
BAUET AUOO'lONS
The School of American Ballet will
hold auditions for its sununer ses.
sion in New York City on Sunday
at the Jimmie DeFore Dance Cen-
ter irt Costa M~. Audition times
are 1 to2:30 p.fD. for 12 to 13 year-
olds, 2:30 to 4 p.m. for 14 to 15
year-olds and 4 to 5:30 p.m. for 16
to 18 year-olds. A $10·application
fee is required at the time of audi-
tion and students must regi.ster an
hour in advance. Information: (212)
frl7-0600 •Impressionistic Nostalgia," fea-rures oils by Mimi Sharon and runs
throUgb March 31. Also d.i&'played
are oils by Dennis Patrick Lewan,
Marty Bell and Lena Uu. Hours are
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through
Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. on
Sunday. Westcliff Gallery, Westcliff
Plaza, 1044 Irvine Ave., Newport
Uve blues featuring Three Blind
Mice, every Tuesday and Joel
Schechter, every Saturday. The KID'S STUFF
Sharks play 5 to 9 p.m. Sundays.
330 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa, 646-KID'S HOUR 8500. To celebrate A.A. Milne's birthday
StD'S this month, Barnes & Noble will be
Brian Barrett perfonns blues guitar reading Winnie the Pooh stories
every-Monday night at 9 p.m-. .j.....G.J.Ull!g with activities and birthday
There is no charge. Sid's is smoke-treats Sunday. Kid's Hour is at
free. 445 N. Newport Blvd., New-Barnes & Noble, 953 Newport
• Bead:l. P:ormore infoanation
574-9182.
port Beach, 650-SIDS. Center Drive, Newport Beach; 759-
STUDIO CAfE 0982.
Gene Murrell, every Monday; Eric AMERICAN GIRLS ACTIVrTY HOUR
ATlANTIS · Sardinas Project, every Thursday; From 1 to 2 p.m. Tuesday, the
Disc jockey Steve Beltran spins John Heussenstamm. every Satur· group will continue to learn about
retro, funk and rare grooves at 9 day and The Fables, every Sunday. Addy and play with toys from that
p.m. Thursdays. Beltran 9 p.m. Fri-100 Main in Newport Beach, 675-time. Barnes & Noble, 953 New-
days and Maxwell House 9 p.m. 7760. port Center Drive, Newport Beach.
CLUBS
Saturdays spins KROQ flashbacks, TIKI BAR For more information, call 759.-
house, old school and 1970s. No Uve reggae with Upstream. every 0982·
cover charge 9 to 10 p.m. all three Monday. Local bands every
nights. 21 and older; tastefully Wednesday. Alternative bands
casual attire. 3388 Via Udo, 3rd every Thursday. Dance bands
Door, Newport Beach, 675-8008. every Friday-Saturday Heavy
!!!P.P.A.lllOfl~~ 1 ;·~~ __ ,_,~..emat:ivo -0.lnds, e-;ery S-unday;
Matt Johnson nto, jazz, 7-10 p.m. Show time: 10 p.m. Cover. 1700
Sundays. South Coast Plaza, 3333 Placentia; 548-3533.
Bristol St., Costa Mesa, 850-9090. WESTIN SOUTH COAST PLAZA
DIVA Ragtime pianist Dave Holden
Uve music featuring: Kevin Guil· plays 6 to 10 p.m. Tuesday-Thurs-
laume on piano, every Wednesday. day. Jazz pianist Paula Prince 7 -11
Jazz Duo, every Thursday-Satur-p.m. Fridays and Saturdays in the
day. Music hours: Wednesday-Lobby Lounge. 686 Anton Blvd.,
Thursday .. 8 p.m.-midnight. Fri-Costa Mesa, 540-2500.
day.-Sat., 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. 600
Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa, 754-
0600.
EMPIRE BAUROOM
"Disco 2000" Thursday nights.
Disc jockeys spin 1970s, 80s and
90s dance music. Every Friday, The
Cat Walle featuring DJs live bands
DANCE
LATIN DANCE WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College will hold an
eight-week social Latin Dance
Work.shop on Thursdays begin-
MUSIC
JAZZ_fAR --•
In celebration of its recent faceutt,
Gelson's Market in Harbor View
Center will host a jazz fare. MUSlc
will be provided by a New Orleans
jazz band, along with food sam-
plings, mimes and caricaturists.
The event takes place Jan. 20 from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 1660 San
Miguel Drive in Newport Beach.
For more .information, call 644-
8660.
GAlAXY THEATER
On Thursday, Jan. 18 it's ~tand-up
Comedy and Saturday is a night of
illusions by Eran Raven. All show..
times are at 8 p.m. ncket pi:icei
vary. For more inf onnation. call the
concert hotline 957-1133.
we're not certain, nor are we
meant to be, until very late in
the play) overcome their
poles-apart positions and
achieve a nervous detente. It's
a playlet that might induce
slumber if merely being read,
but tl becomes sensually hilar-
ious when enacted by compa-
ny regulars Steve Howard and
Nancy Petersen
gives •A Betrothal" its magi-
~al charm. Howard plays his •
introverted character like a
bug squirming on d pin, while
Petersen has her best transi-
tional moments during the
defrosting process
they're worth, making the
segment watchable, if not par-
ticularly satisfying. When he
is good, such as in ·A f
CAFE ~H OLE' • BREAKFAST • LUNCH
• SPECIAL TY COFFEES •
•WATERFRONT DINING •
OPEN DAILY 7AM·4PM \.
• 723-0616.
634 'uoo PARK DRJYE
NEWPORT BEACH -
;5
Betrothal," Lanford Wilson is
very, very good, but when he's
bad, as in the other two
In "Betrothal," Wilson and
director Hunt have captured a
magical quahty which 1s sadly
lackmg m the two playlets
playlets, he can be horrible.
Shannon Hunt earns an A for
her staging of ·Betrothal," a B
for her pedormance and Cs
for the direction of "Ludlow"
and "Breakfast.•
~ SIR ROGERS~ LTD~ i ~ Breakfast Served 7:00 a.m. -10:30 <Un. ~ Serving ~esh 0¥ tt R.oa$ted Turkey & " • ~ mplete Sandwich Menu &
Party Traya • 3..S ~. Long Submarine S 8
Vl Great Selection .of l)sed Books
5 270 E. 17tH ST. #17 • COSTA MEsA. • ~ (71-0645-~252
Q M -F: 7:00 a.m. -6:00 .m. • Sat . Sun: 7:00 a .nr. --4~00
l>~H~t;~
-PAR'IY BEGINS AT 2:30-
BBQ BUFFET AVAilABTuE ALL DAY
Admission $10
DRINK SPECIALS
Darin The Game!
Marg<:tflta Ville a favorite
Newport Be<ish hangout
A gOod Margarita ls bard to find,
since most have more tnl.x. salt and
ice than they ~o tequila in the
glass. But not so at MargarftaVUle a
favorite Newport Beach hangout V:.her~
margaritas made of fresh lemon and lime
juice and Sauza Gold tequila are the best
in town.
The food is fine, the bar is generous
and the conviviality gets an A-plus. Seven
1Vs feature football and trivia games and
there is live music every night. Specials
on beers are a daily feature.
Ba.ck in t:he"olden days, (y'OU' know, like
the 1970s) this place was known as Car-
los' and Pepe's Marganta Ville and before
that, in the Pliocene era, it was Chuck's
Steak House. This lore came to me from ·
general manager, Steve Pickford, but if
you readers know any other history about
the place let both of us know. •
Six years ago, a woman named Al
Volini walked through the doors of this
big, neglected Tex-Mex restaurant and
pulled out her checkbook. She was an old
pro in the restaurant business -district
manager at the Rusty Pelican and before
that, at Far West Services. She knew she
had found a winner. Carlos and Pepe still
owned the establishment but they were
south of the border and Margarita Ville
had the feel of a neglected orphan.
~w-----~------~•--•-•••---------, I I F.Y.1. :
• WHA't Margartt."'Ne I I
+ WlmM: At 2332 west Coast Hlgh-' w~~ Bwh + t D9ily; from 11 :30 a.m. + ltOW MUat lnupensive
+MOM IM'O: <:all 631-8220
I • I ' I
I I ...
I
I ----------N--------------------~ First, let yow'Sell scan the right side of
both pages. Boy, does this look good -
there is nothing more than $7 .95 -a.n4 a
lot of good stuff less than $6. Well, except
for steak fajitas for $9.95 and a full pound,
double order for $14.95.
Appet:iz.ers range from $1.75 to $6.95;
black bean soup ($2.75) gets a topping of
sour cream and diced green oni2ns and a
clinnEf salad ($1.75) is fresh, crisp and
nicely priced Most everything else,
including Gus' Special, a shrimp cocktail,
Ecuadorean style, is $5.95. It has shrimp,
oranges, diced cilantro, avocado and pick-
led onion. Tums out that Gus is Margari-
ta Ville's Ecuadorean valet out front,
whose mother has been making this since
he was a nino.
Margarita Ville owner Al Volinl ln he r Newport Beach restaurant
and moist, tender camitas. To beck with
the veggies, I mined under them with a
MI knew that th.ts place was a natural-
it just needed attention and I decided it
could get back to its old glory with good
food and drink, and some lively sparkle,"
owner Voliru says. MLlve music with popu-
lar crowd-pleasers like Mark Wood and
hter Shambrook add plenty of that, and
on Sunday afternoon, the Blue Machine
packs the house "
Buenos Nachos mak~eat pals with
a margarita, a alf order ($3.9-SfIS enough
to put a dent in your appetite for a while.
Later, when you get around to some seri-
ous eating, look at the combination plates.
The three-item combo is a good buy
($7.95), with a choice of any three: taco,
tamale, chile relleno and cheese enchila-
da. Spanish rice and refried pinto beans
come along automatically. I bad every-
thing but the enchilada. and the plate was
embarrassing. The Andes of food. Every
ctllp of china was buried in food. As for
calories -who's counting?
fork for the shreds of savory pork and I
didn't really indulge in the entire taco too
much because the camitas were much too
dining news
The restaurant features a sunken, oval-
shaped bar with the tables and booths
overlooking the festive bar scene. Volmi
W that W.hOPVfi'.C Uloughloi.J.ha.l.i.d.ea..
was on the ball, as far as the customers
are concerned. Diners can view all the
action, 1V's, friends and so forth, and they
can walk down into the bar space easily.
The floor plan works and so does the
help. These energetic people are fast on
their feet and ready to serve you in a
blink. Chips and a peppy salsa hit the
table so fast, you never even notice its
arrived. These munc:hles help out while
you study the humongous menu.
Although I was doing most of the talk-
ing, this culinary challenge was rapidly
disappearing from my plate. The tamale
vanished first. It took the worst hit -the
t-=-4amale-wus ~t<)pen an<l-crammed
with tender, shredded beef. Unlike most
tamales I have devoured, this one had a
delicious coating of melted cheese.
The chile relleno was good, but not
sensational, because in this case, the
melted cheese seemed strangely flavor-
less. Since rellenos are high on most peo-
ple's list of necessities of life, this was a
big frustration.
However, the soft taco was filled WJth
onions, tomatoes, lettuce, grated cheese
good to leave a single shred.
One of my friends had a chicken fajita
salad ($6.95) with granctioso chunks of
chicken over fresh, aisp spinach and a
cilantro vinaigrette.
Her husband ordered chicken fajitas
and got a beautiful arrapgernent of
.bmUe<l chicken..,Sautee<i onio~~ Q.ell,12.ep-
pers -sizzling as they arrived, sparked
with cilantro and fresh limes.
And, oh yes, there was guacamole,
sour cream. fresh salsa auda and spicy
beans. Aour tortillas, too, so you can roll
up a big package of fajitas and have at it.
For the younger ones, there are appealing
choices of Mexican favorites at $1.99.
For dessert, try the deep fned ice
cream ($3.25) or bury yourself in a mud
pie ($3.50).
YOU NEVER
Restaurant Antoine
closed
Restaurant Antoine, at The Sut-
ton Place Hotel (formerly Le
Me nd1en) has been closed,
accomtng"TO Jean'!'Pteffl! turtat,
general manager of the hotel.
During the past 10 years.
Restaurant Antoine wore awards
locally and nationally and was
considered one of the finest
French restaurants 'in Southern
California. Its closing comes. as
I
the hotel contmues its $1 million
renovation dunng 1996
Antome's star C hef de Cwsme
Jean-Pierre Lemannlsier, left m
Nove mber for a position m Palm
Spnngs
.(;afe-Floud ~ !-.1. ~~~~--+--.i
rant located m the hotel's four-
story atrium -will be remodeled
and christened with a new name·
Accents but will con tinue to
serve patrons as Cafe Fleuri until
March 1. Andrea Htll will remain
as chef de cuisine
-By Marla Bird
GIFT CERTIFICATE
SAU-SAGE
SAUSAGE
Treat Yourself This New Year Season
Or Such Delicious Food!
. Join Us For
Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
Holiday Catering Available
For Reservations and Directions Call
723-0621
251 Sh1py1trd Way • Ncwpon Beach
. .9?=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Practicin~ locally
since 1983
DR.GOOING
My Gift To You
Call Today!
(714) 556-9188
Named one of the TOP CHIROPRACTORS in the U.S. by Self Ma~azine.
Specializes in detecti~. reducin\J & prevent~ spinal arthritic disease
-,,,.
_ ADVERTISEMENT
AMERICAN
JOHNNY Roams, locot.d 1n Triangle Square at the
end of lhe 55 lrwy in Costa Mesa, En!ertoinment tr..!,
MJd lo Edwards Cinema
631 -2967 Menu includ.s G<eot hamburgers, Chicken,
Tuna & BlT Sandwic~. Molts & ShoUs, fries, Chili
Fries pJus much morell P"nats Rong• from f2 2"5-"14.75
Hours. 11 OOa m -10 OOp m. Sun-Thurs 11 ·00a.m.-12
midnight Fn & Sat Indoor & outdoor d1n1ng <NQiloble,
wheel choir access, we occept Voo, M/C, A.MEX, Diners
Club & Discover
STUDIO CAfl, locat.d ot 100 Main St. Balboa
(ot foot of pier) The Studio Cole Is the hoppeoing place
f()( food, fun & eni.rtoinment. Menu Includes ribs, chicken,
fresh fish, poslo, oppetl1e1s & solods, also wvlng brul)ch
on Sal & Sun.10 lo 3.00 which includes 8tlgiumwoffles,
omet.IMs, pancakes and much m<n. Prices range from
$2.95..$13.95 ep.n 7 days 0 week. Mon-frl 11 :30.1 :30
om1 Sc»Sun 10.1 ·30om. Also locat.d at 300 P.C.H.,
Huntington Beach JN, BRU, F8., em._~__,JE..OC.. • .....---:=----:--=--:-
36-8n5
· IUllU RISTAUUNT, locotied ol 1712 Plocentio,
CoSIO Mesa. Menu includeS n'bi, chicken, Wok & lobsaer,
prime nb, pluo, <If* bor. Pricu ronge from $3.95 ood
up Open doily from 11 30om lo 1 ()pm, Cocktails 'til
1l pm ID, FB, we. No er.def cords (71 A) 6'5-8091
Ufl. ~at 320 8rillol IG al RecN !by
1vt» Milli Moftl in Coeea MM Menu Includes goOd
~ cooltin' breakfast Whh !he bea omeleees,
pancakes, great Meiiicon breoUost dishes ood 14'nch w1tti
wfry ~. lefiy~lu bowl, garlic chicbn, o..on.d
iolods, htOM!y 1vrkey t>ufgen, ho.nburgen, Mtwd w/
pc_itolo 1alod °' fries, Try Ruth's hOiM CX>Okin' loday G<.al
~.great pri(esl Prtces range from $2.99 to $5.95.
Open 7 doyl o week 7om lo 2ptn ID, 00. WC (714)
6"1·7321
FRENCH .-'\ ',..., -.-y,~ . .. . •, . .1111!
ITALIAN ITALIAN
CAPI ll MaO lOCClllld o1 111 21 ST Ploc.
Newpott &eoc:h, Neat the pier. Specializing "' Jon.o
poslos, piuo, homecnode rcMoll, aeofood, chklen,
wal, al'd beef lolli night coppuccino, desMrts, anocb
Op.n 7 doyi w..lt • hJnch, dinner 11·12 30 M'¥tr'I dciy.
o week. (714) 72J..5711 V, MC, DC, coteri~
CM>1loble.
MITA COl:W'nON, "Frt$h Posio Mode Dotty• A
~ rOOfll kif 30 peOple • 1.5 klllds of fresh polkl
Ond p!*.Q dlahn (to goJ • Homemode ltoleon souaage •
v.cil Parmlgiono and Bot.a.Que di.tits • fine FIW!Ch
Bokety GoOdl • Wald! our ,,.. tadorY chef at WC!f\.
Open1 ~oweilt from 6 •1o IOs-(7141~
34'
lf\P.l\Nf'-f
JAPANESE
Mt X I\.. ,\ !'-J . .,.. -.. ·. --
dinner for o.... 20 years N fB WC V f'K. AE
DC CB D 64.Pb26
WAHOO'S FISH TACO W th 4 kxotions I 133
PCH Logvno Beach. (714 497-0033, 1862 Ploc.n!o,
Cosio Mesa (71 4) 6J I .J433 ond 3000 Br siol, (a&IQ
Mesa (71') 435-0130 120 Mon HUllhogton Beach,
(7 1') 536-2050 ~ 1ncludti Fish toccx bCJrnlo$ ~
block beoM & rice solods, so!'dwiches Pr1Ce5 ronge
from $ I 65 IO $7 50 Open Mon.-Sot 1 lam ID 10prn;
51111 1lornlo9pm IN TKO. we
CHINESE
CHONGS 09llSI CAR ~(Dtl~ as
well en trodtllonal fine OiiMM CIMIM PriaM n:119 lrom $3 9 5
IO $11 9.S. Opel\ 1 J :JO lo l 0~00 J1.tn. Sun. • Moo. 1).JO G m,.
IO 1 l OOp.m fn Sat . l.OCXllld 111 Troongle Sqyare, 1875
Ntwport 11.d A·m ~MelO U>
0 0 VISA Mc NA. EX DINE~ aua
ny any of the signature
chills topped with Vidalia
Onion Chili Relish Qr a slice of
sizzlln' Skillet Com Bread with
Jalapeno Pepper and Goat
Cheese. ln addition, there .are
also suggestions for the best
chill toppings and entertaining
·tips to tum everyday occasions
into special occasions.
ROAmo MEDITERRANEAN
VEGETABLE CHIU
The vibrant colors and fla-
vors of Provencal rataouille
team with chick peas, olives
and Carroll Shelby's distinctive
~,. Qllinq~ to l'JIBk.e w a
memorable vegetarian chill.
Lots of shredded fresh basil
adds a special savor. Serve the
chili over strands of pasta for an
Italian-inspired change of pace.
2 medium-size zucchini,
trimmed and cut into 3/4-inch
dice
2 medium-size sum.mer squash,
trimmed and cut into 3/4-inch
dice
1 medium eggplant, trimmed
and cut into 3/4-inch dice
1 large red bell pepper, seeded
and cut into 3/4-inch dice
1 lar9e yellow bell pepper,
seeded and cut into 3/4-inch
dice
1 pound Portobello mushrooms,
stems discarded and caps sliced
1/2-inch thick
113 cup plus 3 tablespoons olive
oil
1 large onion, minced
5 cloves garlic, minced
1 package Carroll Shelby's
Chili Mix
1 can (28 ounces) crushed
tomatoes 1-1/2 cups water
2 cans (19 ounces each) chick-
peas, drained and rinsed
1 jar (7 ounces) Spanish olives,
drained and halved
1 cup shredded fresh basil
leaves (optional)
Cooked linguine, spaghetti or
penne for serving
Freshly grated Parmesan
cheese. to garnish
Preheat oven to 450 F. Toss
diced zuccbiru, swnmer squash,
eggplant, peppers and sliced
mushrooms together in large
roasting pan. Drizzle with 1/3
cup of olive oil and toss again
to coat vegetables lightly and
evenly with the otl. Roast veg-
etables, stirring occasionally,
until they are tender and lightly
browned, 25 to 30 minutes.
Meanwhile, heat the remain-
ing 3 tablespoons oil over medi-
um-high heat in large pot. Add
onion and garlic and saute until
softened, 5 to 1 minutes. Stir in
large spice packet from Carroll
Shelby Cbi;li Mix and add
cayenne pep per (small red
packet) to taste for a h otter
chili. Season with salt. Cook 2
to 3 minutes and then stir in
tomatoes and water. Bring to a
boil, cover and simmer, stirring ...
occasionally, for 30 minutes.
Add roasted vegetables,
chick-peas and olives to the
pot. Slmmer for 10 to 18 min-
utes to heat through. H a thick.-
er chill is desired , mix masa
flour (white packet) with 1/4
cup water until smooth. Stir
into chill and simmer for 5 miri-
utes. Just before serving, mix in
1/2.cup of shredded basil.
Serve chill hot over pasta. Gar-
nish the top of each serving
with shredded basil and Parme-
san cheese. Makes 8 to 10 serv-
ings.
VIDALIA ONION CHIU REUSH
Chop~ oniom have long
been a favorite chili topper, but
this relilh goes one step further
by 1teepirig sweet Vidalia
onion• in a inarinade of fruity
olive Oil, tart vtnegar and
crMIDf feta cheese.
3 large Vidal.la• onlom, "9)ed
aDd alked thinly Into rings
I ounces feta chMH, ftnelr.
aumbled
f
ll2ClllR ......
11' cutfwblte Win• vinegu
3 tab:lelfOOGI ~ar
Pre9hly ground pepper to taste
Tall onlou aad feta cheese ~ether in 4 riWdng bowl. '
WhiU together olive oil, vine·
gar and 1U9ar. Pour over, onion
mixture, tossing to coat well.
Season tO taste with pepper. Let
onions marinate in the refriger-
• •a_M CUISINE
etor, 111ntng......,. ClCM ...........
for 24 houn. Tbe reltlh wU1
keep in tbe ~ .. •01 • week. •Note: U Vidalia oRlom
are not ave"eble 111e PtarPle or
sweet white omom. Mates 5 to
'6 cups.
FIESTARICE
A colorful scoop of rice is the
perfect accompaniment to many
• pot of fW\ry dill; llere, Wbite
rice tMml wttb tbe c:niDch of
com and bright spetten of red
pepper, ep'em oniom, and black
oliYel far • f9IUve lid~ dish.
3 -~ otiYe oil t b""'b acalliom, tilmmed and· minced
2 cloves garlic. minced
1 red pepper, seeded and diced
1-1/2 cups fresh or frozen and
I clefr09ted-an .....
4 cups bot cooked whlte rice
l-112 tlbl99p00m fresh lime
juice
1/2 cup blfck olivn,-pitted and
~chopptl!d
112 cup minced frelh pv,sley
Salt and pepper to taste.
Heat olive oil over medium-
high heat in a large skillet.
Add scallions, garlic, ~per
LB.
FRESH AMIRICAN fJllSll
FROZEN ENTRIES ·LEG 0' LAMB · LAKI WHITlflSH
~ eorn and 1au• until .oft.
ened, 5 to 7 ml:aute1. Add~
cooked nee to the u'wet,
lng anaJUfflllD to combine
with ~blel. Stir In lime Juice, olives, an<l ~sley. Seac
son rice to ta9te with salt and
pepper. serve at once, or cover
and k,eep warm over very low
heat until ready to serve.
Makes 6 to 8 servings.
URTON
'SIDE DISHU
SPAGHETTI, MEAnOAF 5 TO 11-0Z .. LASAGNA · , 69 I RU~R~ 219 -~-~-wosr-.:::I~ (FIUfl~ l.6.) 399 4-0Z. RICE OR • BA·
NOOOLES&SAUCE • UY~ OR SALISBURY STEAK
12·PACK. 7 ·UP RC, Din RITE
A&W OR SUNKIST 249 12-0Z. CANS, +CRY
IHI INDIAN IN
THE CUPBOA._llD VIDEO
·-----~--•£99 --·----------IV
ULTRA CHEER
LAUNDRY DETIRGENT
98 TO 106
OUNCE 599
~-----.~
COOICED, 1 &oz. NET. WBGHT
LB. ~Oltfs · LB.
HUGHES .
1 ·LB. MACHtONI
SMALL OR LARGE ELBOWS 59~
FRISH
CAUUFLOWIR
69~. NUTRITIOUS .
CASCADI AUTO
DISH DlftRGllll'
50-0Z. POWDER
ORUQUID
STRIPS Otl ROUNDS
12·0JNCE
1"
8-0UNCE
REGULAR
TEXAS GROWN
4%" POT
AFRICAN YIOUTS
INMATOflNG
POT COVER 149
'GlllMAN
CllOCOLAll CAKI
8·1NCH 2'-S SQUARE 0
R
99
BORDIN
AMERICAN SINGLIS
CHEESE FOOD 12-0Z. INDMO. WRAPPED , 99
t
J ' I;
ti
\' ' •
' ' I
.. --•'f!D---•
4 Pk.-Northern
Bath Ti~ue
Selected VartetteH.ch pkg.
Wllh t l0.00 MlDhDWll P\att"!M, Exc:llldtn_LU_!t..-F1uld Milk au~11cta. Producta. Umlt One
ltotm aod Oae Coupon Pu C-omer. Coupon
Ellfftlve J-.nuuy II tbna JeDuuy 24, 19"
60041
MEAT VALUE
Fresh
Chicken
Breast
PUpi.m'• Prtdt .Nabe>P~lb.
.I
Porterb~or
T-Booe Steak
SEAFOOD VALUE
Swordfish
Steak
;r or l'Tn\ouely frotte
• perlb. ••
~V~VlllttCkt
lloa. CM
Pepperldge Farm
Goldfish
Crack en
('.ampbell's
CbUDky
SOllpl ...... -........ . ..... ,ea ... V .......
a•---· .
1/2 Gfil.-Ralphs
Orange Juice -
CblW100% f1oridl.from CooceatntMICh ctn. (t).
~ ••
With f 10.00 Mlalm,._ Putt"-• I.lu:JJldlAa Uq"'°r.,.
f1"14 Miiie .. d MUI& Proclucte. Procl1Kte. UmJI One.
It-u4 Ota• Coupo" Per CuatoaMr. Coupoo
Uf«tlve JaalMU')' 18 tbna Jaouary 24, ION
1111 I ~ 61647
DAIRY /DELI VALUE
Ralphs
Fresh
Pasta
Allorted Cat V&Mlles 9 OL pq.{Fl.Ued Vlridta Sl.119) me•pto.Sl
GROCERY VALUE
CUapbeil'i
Healthy Request
~l!v..... I .... _
SAVE •TO $4.00 ................
12 Pack
Coors Beer
With 110.M Mlttta .... P\l""'-• E.lthtdlft1tUq_.,.-, --
fluid Miik .,.4 Milk Proch;cu. PJ'Oducta. Umll Oae
lleio and Oue C6upon Per Cuetomer. COUJ>O&
£trecUY• Ju...,,. 18 "'"'January 24, ION
6190
FROZEN VALUE
Budget Gourmet4
Frozen
En trees
llqWar or LJPI & Heal~)<cttd •
v~OLto 10.12SOLpq.Bu14 Save ap to 3.92
Four·6 Packs
:!:~t~rOL~~1:r~P
•A&WRootBeer ~~
Rtplar or Dltm OL cant-l'lllS CRY-Plus Tu
•RC Cola
12 oz. cutPlu CRY.flu Tu
.... lllriWf d?.9 ......
41b.b'ag
Navel Oranges
Callfomla.sweet Julcy.acb bag
r1"!l ~-• ...._., .... Ml..._ ~.a.-. Eacdtodtnc Uquor,
fhlld Mlllt aad Milli h-od...:C.. Producta. Umlt One
lie• aad Oo• Coupon Per Cualocner. Coupoo Ufectlve JaalMU')' II lbni ,,.,.......,, 2A, UIN
Ill~ I~ 619Z9
Fresh
Hawaiian
Pineapple
~ Moott ~ Cllt lloz.lllC•udl)
. '
Th~ following is th~ e~logy giv@n by fofm(lf
Reglst~r editor Jim DHn at a memorial service
for his friend Jerry Kobrin.
Jerry Kobrin.
Th.at brings a smile.
Because immediately we think,
•Hey, here is a funny guy!" And he
was that.
Maybe we smile because we see a
warm, cuddly-bear, impetuous, a con-
stant twinkle in the eye. And, that he
was.
After the smile, deeper emotion
from that place in the heart where J~r
ry Kobrjp lives today and always. For
each of us, that place is different, for
each of us, it is special, and for all of
us, it is a place reserved for a friend.
Jerry was like Fol~er's Crystals;
instant friend I But not just a friend, he
was an old friend, just like that. Some-
one to trust, someone to confide in,
someone to help and someone from
whom to seek help.
It truly was amazing. A total
stranger quickly became a pen pal, a
telephone tipster and a happy convert
to the cult that would help perpetuate
the myth of Jerry Kobrin
If Don Ameche had not invented the
telephone, we could not have invented
Kobrin. You see, Kobrin didn't write
that column, w~didl Hejustmade us
sound more interesting, more amusing,
more important, more glamorous, more
beautiful than we really are. That was
Kobrin's secret. That was Kobrin's
genius.
We never really knew when to
believe Jerry because he played so
many roles in our lives. But, accept
this: that he was truly a warm, caring
human being, a proud and loving
father to his rema(kable son, Jeffrey,
and he was a mental giant, quick wit
wielding an awesome skill with words insist, to listen to Mozart or to the gen-better offer came along.
... these were genuine Kobrin. tle waterfall or just stillness and then We each have our version of Kobrin.
But, let's face it, the man was a jump with joy when a hummingbird For most, he was that clever writer of
fraud, Jerry was a con artist. He took ·ventured by. . funny thlngs; high praise indeed,
us for everything and then gave it all It·is not part of the Kobrin myth that being funny isn't easy. But Jerrywas a
back to everyone else. He learned he was a tender soul; that was real serious journahst whose dedication to
what we might need and what we His love for animals is well-document-accuracy and whose drive to get the
might give and he knew exactly where ed, but he was such a softy, he couldn't story made bim an editor's dream.
it should go. put a fish hook through an anchovy. Ne'WSpapers were his first love, and
One of bis more successful cons was So aboard the Bounder, Royal had he never lost his heart to anything else.
his role as Felix Unger: "Disorganized, to bait his hook, and if Jerry caught a It w4S painful when he had to close
untidy and sloppy.• And these are the fish, Chico Mendez would take it off. bis be~oved Berkshire County Record.
kinder, more generous descriptions of And when it came time to cut off the Great stories and fine editing alone
Jerry's personal habits. His office once heads and fillet the fish, Jerry had to will not pay bills. And though he
was so cluttered he couldn't find his go below to lie down for a while. -escaped into successes with public
telephone. And he used to say "m tie He also ]>_la.Jed "F;..;r:..;:e:.=d:.=d:.Ly....:th::..:,:::.e..:.F..:,re:;e:::..---1--::r~e~la:..:ti:..:·o~ns=-=-fo=:r:.....;a::;-=tim.el Je!!Y_Kobrin was
has gravy stains older than you ar ..... e.,...__._,,_o_a~e-.r ~t~o llie hilt. His quest for the born again when he joined my staff at
And be wasn't kidding! free meal was legendary. He.was the The Register as a featured columist,
He also did quite well as the inept man who came to dinner and stayed and be stayed alive later writing for
fumbler around the house. He was a for breakfast and lunch ... unless some The Daily Pilot.
watchmaker wearing boxing gloves. If
an appliance had more than two mov-
ing parts or more than one button to
push, Jerry was in panic. But friends
were always there for him.
John Crean would show him how to
plug in the TV, Royal Radlke would
apply the eye drops and Bob Brennan
would boil some water.
And of course there was Jerry's
harem. l.J.nk and Marla, Kathy and
who knows how many other beautiful
women, besieging Castle Kobrin bear-
in~ food and drink, hosting a cul_t r..ga,th_--+---~--~ enng or cooking d speoa:I m~ar. ""'
Mitzvah Bar and Grill never closed.
When' Link converted the tangled
mess of his patio into a peaceful gar-
den, it became Jerry's most special
place. Complete with a cedar tree .
shaped into a menorah and with a stat-
ue of St. Jude, Jerry quipped that he
was hedging his bets.
And he was eager to share that idyl-
lic spot with others.
"Come see my garden," he would
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
A ki,dS .eye view of Jerry·
Elyse-Danielle Poppers interviewed
Jerry Kobrin in late 1994 for a school
project. She was 11 years old at 'the
time, a student at Mariners Elemen-
. tary; Kobrin was 73.
Poppers said she selected Kobrin
partially because he was a family
fnend and because •He Jives a very
interesting and exciting life as a jour-
nalist." •
The school paper, friends recall. was
one of Kobrin's favorite interviews.
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF JERRY KOBRIN
I t all started in Reading, Penn. on
Feb. 10, 1921. That was the day
that Jerome "Jerry" Kobrin was
born to Joseph and Anna Kobrin. His
Hebrew name is Gershom (that means
Grace) He said he's su.re glad lus par-
ents didn't name tum Grace.
Jerry has three brothers and one sis-
ter They were all born in Russia. He is
the first member of his family to be
born in the United States. The birth
order of tus brothers and sister are:
Moms 86 years, Bess 84 years, Hy 80
years, Leon 76 years, and Jerry 73
years
Jerry's parents were born in Russia.
His mother was from Kater, and his
father was from Dagda. They were
married in 1909.
Growmg up, Jerry's favonte bed-
time stories were by Russian and Yid-
dish authors. He loved Russian follc-
lore, and Mark Twain.
During the Great Depression of
1939 the Kobrin family did not have
many financial problems. The Depres-
sion affected the rich people more than
the poor ones. They didn't have as
much money as they would like, but
they were rich with love. Joseph
Kobrin gave his music away for free.
He US'ed to say: #We are always broke,
but never poor."
The Kobrin family Lived in a low-
class neighborhood where all the
houses looked the same. They had a
three-story house, and Jerry slept in
the attic. The people on Jerry's block
were mostly Jewish On the hotidays
the whole neighborhood would get
together and have block parties
Jerry's first school was in Read.mg,
Penn. The school was called 12th and
Green, for the streets that it was on. His
favorite teacher at that school was Miss
Morrette. He was best friends with Bill
O'Connell. One thing that amazed him
about elementary school was that he
got from one grade to the next.
Jerry Kobrin with just one of Frasier the Lion's many offspring.
Jerry always wore hand-me-downs
from his older brothers, which they
purchased at second-hand stores. He
mostly wore knickers lo school. They
never did have a lot of money.
The Kobrms mostly ate kosher, and
I Jewish cooking To be kosher is to
have no milk...and meat together, and
no pork. Je~avonte food is, and
was, brisket.
Jerry is Jewish, and he speaks Yid-
dish. He was raised as a Democrat,
but later became a Republican. He
wrote about the assassination of Presi-
dent Kennedy, and traveled with rum
during his presidential campaign. Jerry
was also fri~nds wilh Jacqueline
Kennedy.
In the town Jerry lived in, Reading,
Penn there were some violent storms,
and blizzards. During those cold, hard
Pennsylvania winters the Kobrins kept
warm by having a gas heater and a
coal furnace.
They always had a pure water sup-
ply from their local river the Schuylkill,
and always had a few light bulbs
around the house.
Growing up, everybody in Jerry's
family was very healthy. They very
rarely had to see a doctor. In those
days the family doctor would make
house calls. The Kobrin family doctor
was Dr. Cantough.
An important invention that came to
be when Jerry was young was the
radio. Jerry did have a radio, and his
f avortte programs to listen to were the
comedy shows. ,
..
Yet even in this chosen enViron-
ment, Kobrin some~es suffered the
po.ngs of persecution. Just as Mozart
informed the Emperor of Austria that
his composition had precisely the cor-
rect number of notes, the content of
Kobrin's column was p~ely as it
should be, and if an editoraeleled one
single item. Jerry would go ballistic,
sulk for hours, launch a telephone bar-
rage to his cult, dwing which he might
question the legitimacy of the editors
birth, then swear never to write again.·
Or something. -
My fondest personal moments with·
Jerry were those occasions when we
talked about "real newspaper days.~
and lamented the state of the modem
media. We were two old dinosaurs
thrashing about on the fringes of a
journalistic jungle that no longer was
our home.
Finally, no tribute to Jerry Kobrin
should neglect mention of bow he
liked to gamble. He loved to play
cards, and if the game was gin rummy.
he was required to register the deck as
a lethal weapon.
He bet on football games and when
he got behind, he was always eager to
go •double or nothing" to get even or
sometimes to give his victim a chance
to recover.
And he gambled with his health,
savoiing the thlllgs that sp1 s life
and ignoring the perils. Somehow I
think that in those waning hours when
dark clouds cast that omininous shad-
ow, Jerry knew he was way behind. So
he may well have made a bet with
God; "Double or nothing!•
God won.
But in our game of life, all of us are
way ahead.
Thank you, Jerry.
-Jim Dean
were operas. He never liked rock n-'
roll.
The first time he saw a plane fly be
was impressed. He thought flight
would never become popular. He said
"If God had meant for man to fly he
would have given him wings.•
The Kobrin family was very active
in World War II. Each month they
wo1lld buy a $25 war bond. Hinnother
and father being musiqans would
entertain the soldiers when they were
in town. Jerry and all of his brothers
were in the Army. He served in World
War 11 for four years and in Korea for
two years. Jerry would write and learn
about all of the wars du.ring his jour-
nalistic training.
Jerry was married to a woman
named Kathryn (Kitty) Elizabeth. She
passed away three years ago. Her
birthday was Nov. 2, 1925. They were
married for 32 years. Jerry and Kitty
met in Reading, Pa. She was his secre-
tary. They had one child Jeffrey •Jett•
S. Kobrin. He is now 32 years oJd. Jeff
has always bad special education.
Jerry has adjusted to modern living
although he does not like stupid sit-
coms or rock music. He was there at
the first rocket launching and is a
friend of the second man on the moon,
Buzz Aldrin.
His present job is as a columnist for
the Daily Pilot. He really enjoys it
because he gets to be creative.
Jerry's favorite sport is pro football.
When he was a kid he played table
tennis and street games. He also liked The relationship between Jerry and
his family was described ~s very har-
monious. Jerry's father was a musician,
so one of Jerry's favorite hobbies was
listening to classical music. He also
played the piano. As well as he liked
the piano he also enjoyed table tennis.
Did you know that Ping-Pong is a
brand name like Kleened His first
bicycle was a red, three wheeler, but
Junior high was so different from
grade school because it was harder
and tougher for him, but it wasn't all
hard. His favorite subject was English.
In middle school Jerry started laking
journalism, and was the editor of the
school newspaper.
As for high school be dropped out to
continue his joumalistk studies. While
Jerry was in school be had to go to the
principal a lot, but the discipline was
always fair.
When Jerry was 11 he could buy
candy for a penny, ice cream for a
nickel, a movie ticket for a dime and
all of it for under a quarter.
The Kobrins celebrated all the Jew-
ish holidays. Whatever tradition the
holiday called for they participated in.
Jerry's favorite nolldays are Passover
and Hanukkah. He also enjoyed all
the American holidays such llS Hal-
loween and the Fourth of July.
Jerry purchased his first television
in 1958 when he got married. His
favorite TV shoWs are channel 28's
•upstairs Downstairs," historical docu-
mentaries ano pro f ootOall.
· girls. A club he belongs to now is the
Mitzvah Bar and Grtll. He has no
favorite place to travel but says he
Ukes the ballet.
he mostly had wagons. .
The first movie Jerry ever saw was
a western starring Ken Maynard.
When be was a kid the movie stars
were Charlie Cbaplln and Buster
Keaton. The picture was scratchy and
the sound was terrible, but he just
loved it.
He had a job as a sports writer for a
local newspaper called The Reading
Eagle. That paid $2.00 a column. Jerry
enjoyed this job because he could get
into all the sports games free, sit in the
press box to watch them, and after-
ward interview all the players. He
spent most of his teen-age yea.rs writ·
ing.
The dilterence between t)le teJe-
phone thd Kobrins had and the tele·
phones tohay are that phone numbers
only had four digits. There were no
touch-tone phones or key pads. For a
while the Kobrtns did not have a dial.
They would tell the operator the name
of the person they were calling and the
operator would put them through.
The Kobrin family also owned an
ice box. It is a little smaller than the
refrigerators we have now. Ev~ day
the ice man would come and put big
blocks of ice in it to keep it cool.
Jerry's first car was used with three
previous owners. It was a black Dodge
convertible roadster. The cost wat
about $600. When he got it, the gas
stations had individual pumps and the
gas was 12 cents per gallon.
Jerry's favorite songs gtowirig up
In conclusion I'd like to say that
somebody can learn a lot from Jerry
Kobrin's life. I learned that we should
be tbank:fu1 for our family and friends
and lf there ls something we like to do
a lot then we should work at it to the
best of our ability.
Jerry has a very exciting and
meaningful life. He ha.a met a lot of
important people. I think he should be
proud of bis great success tn journal·
ism and life.
Superjntend~nt says· get your facts straight ~
readers w rite The city received this requ t for post-updated appraiJal on the property
ponement last week. becau.e we think it wtll be worth CCGlld·
. 2. The story aays the dlit.rict has estab-erably more than SJ.25 miDlon. We will
lilhed an asking prlc:e ol $3.25 million. not enter into negotiations uiUelil the
The fact ts the district has not tab-: boUd authorizes U1 to do so and w wW
fished an asking pnce and h1ts not indi-certainly not negotiat with anyon With·
cated 1 price of S3. 25 mi___Won for the out a CWTC?nt appraJsal on the property.
ManW VIit.A property to anycme..:..l'he um:.,,...,...,~. The tQJY y1 lh4t lhefiiatric.1.ts
ol tM pbrue • uking price• ~ we dabning it planl to use the proceeds from
JlaVe eiitered tnto negotiations and are the Sale to purchue a school .lite in New-
~ riumben. This is not true. port Beedl The fact ii we ha\19 never
A#. • matt• ot Ian we are ordering an made tb1a da.lm. Since we we bi the
process of acqu1rlng a school lite 1n the
Newport Coast a.me, we are lim~ uang
the ex mptlon we are entitled to under
the Naylor Act so that we can dertve
rriu:imum revenue U we dedde to Mil
Monte Vista.
l find it curious that the paper keept
re"'8tqi the amt-tire> Mfenjtd to~
ln When I have told the Dally PUot diet
this II not the CMe ~ mver w -. u the bOiud. de('idll to ..........
WW reCormDend that lhe mcmf dllMd
from the sale be targeted for deferred
maintena.ooe whkh ts • \lie tbat ii~
tmt With tbe l&W.
MAC aRND, Supert;_...
Newport M8ll ScboOl ~
I •• -•'
A
"",.. .. .... \i • . ..,.
best of the readers hotline Condom handout Clebated
open ·
season~
!on RVs
I
' I I With reg4Id to the RV parking,
I wowd favot no parking whatso-
iever. 1 think we look a bit like
iWestniin5ter South.
I don't see RVs parked in
Cameo Shores or Lido ls'.and. I
think it should be removed total·
ly and parking spots should be
allowed for those ~ople who
own them to park them m a clus-
ter area, some park area, in
Newport Beach.
With 25 loo\ lots a 20-foot long :RV etf ectively blocks tho entire
front of somebody's property and
this is not fair to the pemon or
anybody else.
I would vote strongly in favor
;of having no parking whatsoever
for RVs in Newport Bea•ch.
: JOffi~WAITS l West. Newport
' I : As a 20-year resident , I would
like to see the orchnanc1~ stay as
is with a three-day I.mutation and
not change it.
MARC MARTIN I DAILY Pl.OT
• RV enthusiasts, llke Bob Ro sen, may bav~ to find other parking
arrangements for their vehlcl-:s.
--~The---diatribution ot OODdoml to on. WMWI
Sunnillng tHere may be aome
"hor ~.I dedded to
• weigh in with a crucial point that
rillght otherwise get lost.
First an~ on something
safer, say, ~nal hygiene. To
me il'11ncumbent that schools
educate youth about any number
of things.
So if a kid reeks every day in
class, the smell getting in the way
of classroom learning, it's apprcr
priate to somehow tackle the
subject of regular bathing. I
wouldn't hand him a bar of soap,
however, though I might tell him
every market sells it.
Regarding condoms and kids.
Discussing condoms and handing
them out are very different
issues. We all agree that sex
education belongs in the home, is
I'm so glad to see that the City I believe 24 hours is more most effective in the home. But
Council is going to do somethmg than adequate for RVs to be what of the kids whose parents
about this. We live m the bluffs parked on city streets. Where I renege or are too embarrassed or
area in Newport Beach and VlSta live we look like we are an RV busy to broach the subject?
del Oro has become almost an van area at times during the Who would be sadistic
RV parking lot with these large, year. enough to throw those kids to the
ugly vehicles parked. The owners of RV vans are winds; allowing them to contract
I'm all for just a 24-hour llmit. very destructive to city pmperty_ the AIDS virus just because their
In fact I would like to see them They chop down the city trees parents haven't done their job?
eliminated off µie public streets that are in the parkway because So schools must bolster the mes-
permanenUy if possible. they don't want them to scratch sage from home, even be the
BRENDA PETERSON the tops of their vans and they do prime message-giver where nec-
Newport Beach this constantly and the trees nev-essary. .
er have a chance to grow. Parents overwhelmingly
I definitely don't Uunk that I think that's more than agree, according to polls here 10
they should be allowed to park enough I don'( think we should Orange County, that schools
Uon on the second belt wa to avOia AIDS and S'l'DS.
In spite of what the moralists
say, condoms have been proven
to be close to 99 percent eftec·
1ive, when USed absolutely,
absolutely correctly (source: Cen-
ters for Disease Control, Red
Cross).
School boards and administra·
tors should stop running scared of
their shadows and scared of the
small vocal minonty that will
probably be registering its nar-
row agenda on the Pilot's hotline
on this topic. ·
I say yes to talk about sex,
about the need for abstinence. I
say yes to.talk about condoms,
the how tos,'the where to buy
them, etc.
I say no to hand-outs.
KA.REN EVARTS
Newport Beach
I'm a retired lugb school
teacher and I believe that the
superintendent has, accord.mg to
his quote, taken pride in the fact
that the Newport-Mesa School
District does not distribute con-
doms-to-teenagers.
It's a large mistake. It's a terri-
ble mistUe.
The bUUi aooThe act li mat
the teenagers don't buy them
other places. They should be able
to reodlly get them at any cam-,
pus, at an~e. from any peTSOn:i
Reminds me of the old days,
no sex education because if you
didn't give them sex education •
teenagers weren't going to
engage in sexual relationships.
It's just a bunch of horse
manure.
It's really sad that we take
pride tn Newport-Mesa in not
protecting our teenagers from a rusease that will kill them.
CHlUSTINE CHAMBER.IAIN
l Bal~
I
We are against distributlon of '
condoms at schools. :
We think that's a matter for t
parents, not the schools. to take • I up.
Fwtbermore, I remind the 1
school officials that we taxpayers 'I
pay their livelihood and we
should have something to say , I about such things as condoms on
the campus.
NEIL AND NORMA BENNER
Costa Mesa
'
WARNING!
, I 11 , r .' 1 .• v 1 ~, • i ' .• v,, 1, 1 1 1 , c r\111 , • 1 • 1 , 1
L'-.L r --J ""() INSL J l~r\..NC :l~ Particularly, m that they
haven't had the acader ts any-
:way, why the big move to
change it?
on Balboa Island It becomes a even allow them. It looks just need to spend more time, not
danger. You can't see dfound hke a big parking lot. Streets are less, discussing the menace of We Specialize in FAMILY ACCOUNTS with
them. You can't see if there's a meant to dnve on and that's AIDS and sros. T.:een 01..n~ers
We have an RV. We •:ome in
and load it and sometimes have
it in front of the house cLS long as
'a week as we get loadeod and
1ready for a tnp. ·
stop sign, if they park near the what streets should be used for. Kids need to know they can u • ,.,.,
curb. ' A car possibly yes but vans are and should say no to sex before • Free Telephone Quotes
I
JACK BRANSFORD
· -ewport'"lreacn -
Definitely, 24 bourn should
be included for the RVs, actual-
ly I'd like to see them eliminat-
ed.
TERRY BJ.illllEMAN
Newport Beach
If there's any kids or arurnals out of the question. they're ready to deal with the •Absolutely No Broker or
crossing the street -there's no ANNETTE CATES consequences. But they also need Policy Fees
way to see around them. The Newport Beach co.rrect, unexaggerated informa-• n. 'Bl'it'll Personalized Service streets are much too small to ~· '"7 h~Y..paJ.kedJ1ke thdL _;======================--.l-•.~stsmily_bfJ-wD,._~_'!f11.nAll~~cy I'm sorry that they buy 1t for ,;;;; 11 ~ tr;U l l ::;,&! 7
recreation. The Dunes is around THE EARL'S
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MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Newport Heights Elementary Wth-grader Paige Lansing leads her class in a group "I Have A
Dream" speech Wednesday.
Students study life, dreams of Martin· Luther King, Jr.,
Like school children across the
district and country, fifth grade stu-
dents at Newport Heights Elemen-
tdty have spent the last two weeks
studying the life and dreams of
f\lartin Luther King, Jr.
ln honor of the slain civil rights
ledder's birthday earlier this week,
teacher Laura Holmes helped her
PIT BU[[
CONTINUED FROM A 1
students memorize King's famous
~1 Have a Dream" speech and cre-
ate their own dream speeches,
which they recited at a school
assembly Wednesday.
The class also learned about
discrimination first hand when
Holmes separated the class based
on ~ye color. The students then
participated daily in exercises in
which some were discriminated
against based on their eye color.
MI think they learned a little
about how it feels," Holmes said.
Other students in the district
learned about King through tech-
nology -watching him deliver his
speech on CD-ROM.
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NO ENROUMENT FEE • NO DUES ,
-Includes full use of all club facilities
NATALIA LARSON
MEMBER FOR 12 YEARS
TWO AEROBIC CLASSES & TWO WEIGHT
TRAINING SESSIONS A WEEK
E-UP
NEWPORT
Corner of E. 17th & Irvine Ave. in Wescliff Plaza ..... 63 1-3623
Your Neighborhood H!!!!!_th Club Since 1982
Plug into the Pilot Classified section to find services from
electronics and plumbers, to landscapers and painters. InilyPilot
rlii the other dog owners recount-
<'d lheLr experiences with Hemi.
"I was walking my dog, and
since she's an Akita, I always
walk her on a choke chain," said
I Jelen Johnson, an East Side Cos-
tcl Mesa resident whose dog was
1ttacked by Hemi in November
1994.
"Then I saw th.ts dog come
from out of nowhere, and 1
choked her up close to my chest
so that she couldn't go anywhere,
dnd this dog just grabbed onto
her neck and wouldn't let go. He
The Only expensive thing
about our pro9uce is the taste.
" iust kept chewing away at her,
<ind this went on for about 30
nunutes." Chaquita Bananas
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I
Another man who witnessed
.m a ttack last January told Snow-
den that Hemi's owner at the time
had to use a screwdriver to pry
the dog's jaws from another
pooch.
Marshak's decision to turn
over his pet came as a relief to
Cc1thy Blue, who owns the Aus-
tr olian shepherd that was
dtlacked last month. But, she said
<;he felt bad for the owner.
"I'm deeply saddened that Mr.
f\lclrshak will have to relmquish
the dog," Blue said. "He gave
love dnd attenllon to the dog, but
11 was too late in its We "
After the hearing, arumal con-
trol supervisor Robert Bork
offered to ammge for Marshak to
adopt another dog to replace
Herru, but Marshak declined.
"No, thank you," he said. "l
think I've had enough of dogs for
dwhlle."
'
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EYE-OPENER
N~t1 ~Nelsen has aticepted .
a aoccer ~ offer to N.e6rasm
QUOTE OF THE DAY
•M!w QJfMI tJw ltard pan. tw. J IMA IO Ulll
tltlt kk# /tow bad h#on " -•
-ASSJS1'ANT OOAOI CRISS FREENAN
Dennis, a
' menace on ·
Eagles slip past AliS~ Niguel~ 58-53
• Estancia in a tie with ·
LaQuna Beach for ~e PCL
lead after holding off the
Wolverines1 Candlish
returns, plays eight minutes.
AUSO vm.JO -The Estancia
High boys basketball team wel-
comed back senior center Chris
Candlish, who missed the previous
three games with pneumonia, and
made it an even more festive occa-
sion by holding of1 Pacific Coast
League host Aliso Niguel, 58-53,
Wednesday night.
Candlish , a 6-foot-6 post man
who lost close to 30 pounds from his
previously stout 240-pound frame,
scored two points and cleared four
rebounds in about eight ·minutes of
playing time, according to Eagles'
Coach nm Parse!.
•He played in three brief stretch-
es at the end of the first, 6econd and
third quarters, but he has a long
way to go,• Parse! said of the two-
time All-PCL selection, who was
cleared to practice only Tuesday.
•He was able to get up and
down the court, but I'd be surprised
if he were able to play much more
Friday night (against visiting Lagu-
na Beach). We tested the waters
with him tonight and he's obviously
pretty weak. He wasn't totally
gassed when 1 took him out, but I
didn't want to get him to that
point."
The Wolvednes (10-9, 2-2 in
league) never got the Eagles (16-5,
3-1) to the brink of defeat either, as
the visitors opened an early su-
point lead and eventually turned a
15-15 first-quarter deadlock mto a
45-37 edge after three.
Estancia senior point gu!ifd
Dane Plock scored 17 of h.1$ game-
high 26 points before mtermission
and sophomore teammate Sam
Nelson split his 16 points evenly
between halves for the winners,
who moved into a first-place tie
with Laguna Beach.
Plock, who like Nelson was 8 of
12 from the field, (incldlting " of 7
three-pointers), chipped in seven
assists, while senior Nick Novak
matched his six points with six
rebounds.
Aliso heated up frqm the outside
to keep things close, as Jason
Mulkay contributed three of the
Wolverines' eight three balls, two of
which came in the fourth quarter.
The hosts, however, never got
closer than four pomts down the
stretch and Estancia Junior Brandon
Casillas iced the win by rutting 3 of
4 foul shots in the cloS10g 45 sec-
onds.
___ the Newpoi:t,~Mustangs falt
but decision is
hollow, 73-62
Classic Hnb,
returns!
• Meanwhile, strong
field, beautiful course set
for NBCC's "clambake."
M aybe ... it could be ...
shall we dare say it?
Well, OK. Here goes:
Weather permitting, the 22nd
annual Taco Bell Newport Clas-~=--srcPro-Am collld be its best of
· all-time next week.
Why? 1Wo reasons: The golf
course at Newport Beach
Country Club is in perhaps its
best condition ever, while one of
the strongest and most
interesting fields in tournament
history will be competing Jan.
26-27.
Thanks to the anticipated
arrival of national television
exposure with the Toshiba
Senior Classic in March, as well
as Beverly Ray's generous
pocketbook, the golf course bas
never looked better. Its fairways
are plush, its greens hghtening-
quick.
Newport Beach's celebrated
•clambake• will also feature a
record six LPGA professionals,
last year's champion (R.W. Eaks),
and .... drum roll, please ... Clark
Dennis.
Dennis, you s~. is the event's
only baCk-to-back champion,
winning titles in 1992 and 1993.
He made a bole-in-one dwing .
the first round in 1993. John
McComish is the event's only
other two-time wifmer (1985 and
'87).
Dennis played on the PGA
Tour the past two years, but
failed to retain bis card this year.
He has been given a special
invitation by Newport Classic
officials, one of six issued this
year.
•(Dennis) called us, and we
were delighted,• said pro-am
chainnan Jake Rohrer, also the
pro recruiting chairman with
Gene Baum. •He obviously
knows about us and we're happy
to have him come back.
Considering he won twice, I
think that justifies an invitation.•
Dennis Paulson, a Costa Mesa
High graduate and a former
PGA Tour player, is also playing
with a s~dal invite.
Paul Stankowski, who was
featured last year on ESPN's
• 1nside the PGA Tour," is also
returning.
Stankowsk:i,whoeamed
$144,558 on the tour last year,
finished tied for second in the
Newport Classic following a
memorable one-hole playoff in
1~. when Jerry Foltz sank a
10-foot birdie putt to defeat
Stenkowsld and Sonny Skinner.
Foltz and Skinner are also •
retumiDg to Newport Beach.
•J ,was nervous u hell on that
lUt putt. but lt wu one of the
best~ rd had all day,• Foltz
said theft. later iKbriittiilg that be
stayed".QP ... the pnvlou.I night
to attend tt.e event'I gU.. •1t
giVel ~~confidence to win a t like this, but lt
aMlo pcowd to me that I coWd
play ,Wlth a haDgover." on.r notable proe include
S.... ~n, a Newport Bellcb. Nlldent. and ... t
~=~ ·--till tbltd y,lr tn .. ~a·•· Aid--=~~ at•..... layQD ------
DOH LIA04 /DALY PLOT
Calla Miia"-... MeMl>ya (12) deftly t.... a pbapolnt pus tllroa,gll .. Ualftnlty del!me.
• Costa Mesa extends
University with gutty
peif onn.an<:er just tlie
way it was coached.
COSTA MESA -It was the
way COit& Mesa High·~ bU-
ketball c:Oilcb JQOn Ptif ..
guson wanted it. _._
With tbe amceJ-
stridtaD Pagmw ding· .mg to life at HOag ~-tal. the Mustang players.
unaware of bit grave
CXiidltiiiii umn aaer the
I mimnd tbtir 14-..oQIG mentm"s ~
l>atlleegaimt w..
caDCa' by figbttng ....
dously agatmt ~
Padftc Coat-LMgue
riv.I Unnem~W~#t.
The MustaDgs (4-15, 1-3 in
~) lbeved • ~2-21 cWic:lt
early 'in the third qWU1m to With-
in 58-52, end launched • thre&-
poinl ....... Wbicb wouJd tMtft
broagbt tlaD ... clOlel'. But tbe
lbot cunecl oil thie rim and tbe
~ (8--11, 1..3) ~ away
fat. 73-62 victory.
*Now come1 the hard part.•
said Mesa assistant Criss Free-
man, filling in for his beleaguered •SEE MESA~U
Sea Kings never fmd the handle, 82-49
• Burgess & Co. have it all
their way in slamming
Corona del Mar in Sea
View h oop s.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
IRVINE -It was a blowout that
got worse for Corona del Mar
High's basketball team Wednesday
night.
For host Woodbridge, it went to
its monster mash.
Chris Burgess, Woodbrldge's 6-
foot-10 junior center, showed up
with an attitude. He had slam dunk
on the bram.
•One problem,• CdM Coach
Paul Orris surmised, following his
team's 82-49 Sea View League set-
baclc, •is that our strength is our
inside game.
•Tuey did what I told them to do
ln the beginning, and we took it
right to them. Unfortunately,
they're just bigger and stronger.
We did a good job the first four or
five times down, and we got
layups. But we missed every one of
them."
CdM (11-8, 2-2 in league)
missed its first seven field-goal
attempts, two of which were
blocked by Burgess.
The Warriors (16-5, 3-1), ranked
third in the Orange County sports-
writers' poll, were tied with the Sea
Kings, 4-4, when Brian Coleman
finally broke the ice and scored
CdM's maiden basket.
But what followed was a 13-0
first quarter-ending run for the
Warriors, who led by 18 polnts four
times in the first half, built a 36-16
lead late in the second quarter and
continued to punish the Sea Kings
inside in the second half.
When Burgess (25 points, 16
rebounds and three blocks) wasn't
intimidating CdM's shooters, it was
6-6 junior Jared Dannis (eight
rebounds) and 6·5 junior Brandon
Beeson
Burgess made all of lus blocks in
the first quarter, setting a tone that
led to five others by different War-
rior personnel. William Stovall had
14 points and three blocks for
Woodbridge, whlch led by as many
as 24 points in the third quarter (52-
28) and by as many as 35 in the
fourth (82-47).
Burgess had five dunks and a
three-pointer, including a double-
pump slam in the third, when he
made a steal and drove coast to
coast with 1 :44 left. That gave
Woodbridge its 52-28 lead. And it
• SEE COM PAGE 82
high school athlete of the week
SWEEPING UP
~~~~~~·s r·----------------------
who refuses toi>e
.. marked" bl soccer.
N ewport
Harbor
High't
Jill Nelsen,
shownbere
maneuvenng
against a
Corona del
Mar foe (right)
in See V\ew
Leeque gti1I
IOC(W, bu
beencholen
.. the Delly .
~fftgh
SChOol AtblMe
olthlWeek.
STANDI NG<;
dllllll. • ua. We hwe .... p9lty good ..-1----'-&.ll----GDUkl -MN _,.. ~-.: ~~-1 ~ ••
pMdabp 7 tsbdlle~ ., ......... 15 Old 'tiris I.mt ... tbe ....
~ injury wty oa. ~
.... ~-~fledded ~ 10
~~be~have
NEWPORT BRACH-~
~ High Coach Larry Hirst
~a feeling bis team might be in
forsome trouble before.-Wednes. aay'• 50 ... 2 loll to Sea View
1~e rival El Toro. .J "They've been on fire and
mat's what scares me,• Hirst said iO • pre-game assessment of the
Chargers .. "But we have soft
I
Cared. They Came oUI llllOlliig: and ant lllll 1oo)tng for their ftnt weapon, ~ ts ~ an4
1*Ung 11 of 20 frOm tbe field (8 ol league wtn in four trtea. A win going :C of 4 from three-point
16 from three·poil_ll land). WOUid have mo\l9d tbpl into a range. Tbiee other ~ allo
Newport played a .t9ady fitth-J>i:ace tie with El Toro, but the found the ,bole fiocn tb8 long-
game, trailing only 10-8 after one loll puts them In the Cellar-two range stripe.
periOd, but the final four oWiutes games ~htna the Chargers (11-9, Newport's Peter CumUngham
of the half belonged to El Toro u 2-2). matched Senik. point-for-point,
they extended a three-point lead ·we feel very fortunate to tying for game-high honors. He
to 11 by halftinle, 31-20. come in he.re and Win," said El connected on three threes.
"Except for a four-minute lapse Toro Coach Dave Shoemaker. Newport could have used
in the second qw,u!er and a few "This is always a tough pl.ace to some more muacle tnslde against
spots in the second half, we play a game. El Toro's front line. Wes Badorek
phtyed well," Hirst said. •But you "They came out 1n a zone and did a nice defensive job, bu\ the
can't expect to play 27 of 32 min-Wt! just attacked it with the S4Uors au.re could have used Dan-
utes and win. Not in this league. threes. That's not uncommon for ny Pulido, who suffered a season-
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS SOCCER
been wOrth at lieut ldx or seven
points a game,• Hint Mid wistful-
ly ol Pulido'• abteDce. •A feW
wins here and there aJMi we
might be looking at a dilfenm'
season right now."
The Sailors played El Toro
even in the third period and cut
the lead to 43.35 on a 14-foot
jumper by Chad Coluccio to open
the fourth period. With the score,
45-37, El Toro scored five straight
points in a 38·secorui stretch to
lead by 13, 50•37 I with :55 left,
Estancia handles Aliso Niguel easily in major PCL test, 5-1
• Wa yman's two stops on pe nalty
kicks highligh ts Estancia's victory.
·Newport Harbor bows, 2-1
LAKE FOREST -Newport Harbor
Hig h's Sailors, 12·4-4 overall, took it on the
chin in boys soccer Wednesday afternoon.
as El Toro scored with just four minutes
remaining to capture the Sea View League
game, 2·1.
CdM drops 2-0 decision
CORONA DEL MAR -Corona del Mar
High's boys soccer team maintained what
is becoming a constant this season, push-
ing the opposition, only to eventually fall in
Sea View play Wednesday.
Costa Mesa loses 1-0 verdict
COSTA MESA -University High's Th>-
jans broke a scoreless deadlock with six
minutes remaining 1n their Pacific Coast
League boys soccer encounter with host
Costa Mesa with a run on the goal, culmi-
nated by a sharp cross and ensuing boot
into the Mustangs goal deep into scoring
territory to claim a 1-0 victory Wednesday.
AUSO VIEJO -Estancia Higb's boys soc-
cer team swept past its closest competition
tn Pacific Coast League circles Wednesday
everung, dropping host Aliso Niguel High,
5-1 .
Gerson Salgado scored twice and the
Eagles got singles goals from Willie Alfaro.
Greg Austin and Carlos Silva.
But tH.e biggest noise came from in the
net as second-half goalie Brad Wayman
aune up with two specta~ar saves on
penalty kicks to lift the Eagles' motivation.
Tobin Junowich, with an assist from
Brandon Brown, scored in the fust half to
pull the Sailors even with El Toro at half-
time, 1-1, only to see it unravel late in the
game on Ryan Kenyan's goal for El Toro.
The Sea Kings were 2-0 victims to
invading Woodbridge in a yellow card-
marred game as the Warriors posted a goal
in each half to ease to the victory. ..
Ken Brown was credited with six saves
for Corona, which fell to 6-8-3 overall,
0-3-1 in league. Woodbridge improves to
11-3-3, 2-1-1.
Goalie Carlos Cosa was credited with
nine saves by his coach, Mike Dunn, who
also lauded the play of John Louis Besacon
and Jared Call. a pair of forwards who
helped keep University off-balance with
their offfensive thrusts.
Zach Wells was credited with nine saves
for Newport.
Estancia improves to 4-0 in league, 8-3
overall. Laguna Hills falls to 3· 1 in league.
The loss drops Newport to 1-1·2 in
league play with heavyweight Santa Mar-
garita. visitirtg on Friday.
Corona del Mar will try to bounce back
on Friday with a tmk to Irvine, scheduled
for a 5 o'clock st.art.
The loss drops Mesa to 2-12 overall, 0·4
4n league play.
-NELSEN
(ONTINUED FROM 81
have been impressive.
•She's improved our defense
and we're scoring more goals as
a team,• Laird said. •Jill is so
composed with the ball, she's
able to get us out of situations
when the oppollng team ii
threatening our gOal. She bas the
abWty to dribble by people
oo.e-oo--0ne, which you don't see
too often. She gives u.s
leadership in the back.•
A sharpshooting finilher,
Nelsen records most of her goals
these days on comer kicks and
tree kicks. But her ablllty to set
teammates up bas helped build
the confidence of her younger
supporting c.ut.
•1 th1n.k I'm at my best when
I'm settmg othet people up,• Hid
NelMa, who doel jUlt tbat u e
omt.r midfteJclfJI' for the Miiiion
Viejo~ • neUonaJly
top-rUiad ct.lb team in the
~ 17•dtvtskm.
~a member ol the Olympic
~·~Whlre tbe bid b a lpot GD the ................. =. Milim lall played ••t 8-VetY ~ oa dlt W.,,.,
according to Laird, makes her
uncommonly •soccer smart.•
The Nebraska-bound Nelsen
is thrilled with her team's
current contender status and is
also pleased to be back at full
strength.
She returned after missing a
pair of early-season games Jut
year, after breaking her tibia for
the second time, Sept. 7.
"It wu the worst thing,•
Nelsen said of pla~g througb
her recovery at len than 100%.
Nelsen said pl&ytng tweepet
is fun arid dUillenging, and she
aJlo enjoys the scoring role for
Newport which it somewhat
different from her primary
cOnttibUtloDI in dub.
•e>ur dub tM.m 11 so
awesome, anyone C4Jl score, so
we don't oount on any group of
players," Nelsen explalried.
•niere are times when I get
hungry for a gOal. but 1n dub,
you have to mow Wbetl to tat
your lbOtl.
•Samtldmes at New}>o!rt. our
t..m JoOkl more toWud me (for
ICDltag). But tbat'1 OK, I lib prmue.• ...
OCC tops Irvine Valley, 94-84
IRVINE -Orange Coast College's men's bUtetMU team. behiJid
Duane Curti$' 30-point scodng output, 2.4 in the tint half, swept past
host Irvine Valley Wednesday night with a 9'-M Orange Bmptre
Conference victory.
Curtis hit 8 of 10 from the field, including 4 of 5 from three-point
territory, and nailed 10 of 11 from the line.
Three others were in twin figures -Matt Ambrose (22), Adrlan
Reyes (13) and David Downs (10) -u the Pirates unproved to 12-10
overall, 3-2 in coriference.
IM.ne Va118y, which WU OUt·boenied 49·341 d.rQPped to 11·11, 2-3.
• In a women's community college game:
COSTA MBSA -SophomoR forwaid Jamie Sbine"i:>ow9d In a
career-high JS points Wednesday tC? help Orange Cout COUege to an
88-65 trouncmg of Orange Empire Conference rival Irvine vap.y.
OCC, 17.t; O¥er8ll and 3-2inconference1>4ay, trailed.,, ompolnt
at the half, 35~. The Plfatet outlcoNd lntne Valley (1•5, 2-3) bp 2'
points tn the second b4lf, 54·30, to pull away for an ~ ~.
'
~••BA -C011tA Mela Hlilr.. Jlldl bulred>ell coach ~SberWood wm fb1iah the
., 11 ,f:l!I :ttm' be+ tnd ==i eoilti for 'Wiim lbtl season
ends, Co.ta MIR High~ Ath-
letk Dk ll'U =.I.Milt con-flnDld}f]rA •
SherwOocl WU named to
replace Len Wbltatte, who
reilaned Monday ID the middle
of bfs l8CODd •1101D at the helm.
Leahy Mid Sherwood and
a.iai1t4.nt Cindy VyskOdl Would
finish Out lhil MUOn, but that an
admtnistralive dedllon had been
reaChed to qpan tbe job to appli-
cants for the 1996-91 campaign.
-By Barry PaulJcner
COM
CONTINUED FROM 81
was show tiJne.
"He's just a real solid player,•
CdM guard Josh Walz said. "It's
tough to get around him.•
· CdM made its only run in the
third quarter, 1~0, following
Adam Klinke's three-pointer and
four free throws by Coleman ( 1 o
points), cutting Woodbridge's
lead to d-27.
But the Sea Kings never got
closer.
The Sea Kings, 'Who will prob-
ably host Irvine on Friday at a
neutral Site because of a power
outage Wednesday throughout
the campus, had their most exlul-
arating moment tainted by a
'technical foul in the third period
Darren MacDonald, stopped
inside by Woodbridge's defense
throughout most of the gi!JJle,
along with Coleman and Klinke,
got a steal and was all alQne on
the break, which he finished with
a tw~aqded...du,nk..... _
MaCDonaJd, b~wever, was
whistled for a tec.hnical after
hanging onto the rim.
•As be was ready to come
down, a (Woodbridge) player
went underneath him, so be held
on longer,• Onis said.
Coleman (2 of 12 from the
field) was the only CdM player in
double figures.
•0nce they got it going early,
it kind of exploded on us,• Orris
said of his team's worst loss of the
season.
HIGH SCHOOL
BA'SKETBALL
SUMMARIES
Untv.nlty 7), Costa Mesa 62
Score.by Qwwtws
University 18 22 13 20 -73
Costa Mesa l4 7 21 20 -62
University -Scoggin 9, Adloo 11.
DeGrood 1, Palmer 8, Schachter 17,
Alampour 10, Doyle 4, Groendal 2,
Namkoong s. Lynch 6.
3-polnters -Schachter 4. Scoggin 2,
Lynch 2.
Costa Mesa -Leahy 11, Weeks 14,
Montoya 17, Ogo 13, Payne 5, Correa 2
3-pointers -Montoya 2, Weeks 1.
Fouled out -Ogo.
Estancia 58. Aliso Niguel SJ
5c:IOr9 by Qwnws
Estancia 15 17 13 13 · 58
Aliso Niguel 15 12 10 16 -53
Estancia -Plock 26, Novak 6,
Maraya 2. tasillas 6, Nelson 16,
Candlish 2, Ry. Simpson o. Jahid o.
~pointers -Plodt 4.
Aliso Niguel -Childs 8, Mulkay 13,
Etemade 13, Chandler 4, Daniel .C,
Munsell 11.
3-pointers -Mulkay 3, Etimade 3,
Childs 2.
Fouled out -Childs..
El Toro 50, Newport Hllrbor 42
5c:IOr9 by Qwwtws
El Toro 10 21 12 7 -50
Newport Harbor . 8 12 13 9 -42
E1 Toro -Vargas 11, Mendiola 12,
Sliva 2. Senlk 16, Miranda 0,
Wulfemeyer 3, Purce o. Johnson 2.
Yearlngton 1, Lindstrom 0, Adams 3.
3-polnters ~ Senik 4, Vargas 1.
Mendiola 1, Wutfemeyer 3.
Newport lwt.or -Cunningham 16,
Homung.O, Nchbold-0, Wert!mn O.
Badorek 3, Matlin 4, Coluccio 8,
Jameson 9, Thlssell 0, Schwartz 2.
31>0lnters -Cunningham 3.
Woo6rldge az. ~.,
SCore9'J~
Corona def M¥ .. 16 13 16 -49
Woodbridge 17 21 18 26 -82
C..... .. Mw • Cotem.n 10.
Kllnke 9, M«Oonald 7, Walz 5,
Ev.ns 3, Kune 4, Friend 4, ~on .C,
Shimer 1, Guthrie 0, Garity 2.
3-polnten-kllnb 2. MacOonatd 1,
Walz 1, EVMS 1. "
'Ttchnk*·~.
• ......... -.... 25. '"'°"' 7, Stollltl 14' Jenkins 4, ~ S, o.nnls MadMj~S. ""-9 2. Grorinen s, ~10.
.J.polrttrl I · lurga 1, leelof'I 1,
Stovllf t, Oulntl t, GroaMn 1. Tec::hnkllls • Qum.
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 81
perform near agricultural rnira=cl=~=·=--
0
It WU J~enso11 three yean ago who won ln the
love.at-first-par category, when be met bis future wife
Cheryl Paulette, on th& Newport Cassie links. Paulett~
was a scorer for Jurg&D.iOD'&-group-.
Q
Among the LPGA playen, Cathy Mockett
(Newport liarbor High) is the most recognizable around
these.parts, but Patrtda Hlll'St.is clearly the most _ ~ro~e~t. Hurst was the 1995 LPGA RooJcie of the
ear, finishing 49th on the money list, earning in excess of $125,000.
Sharon Barrett. Kim Saiki, Pearl· Sinn and Muffin
Spencer-Devlin are also l..PGA pros committed to the
Newport Classic Pro-Am.
Q
~t year, If you remember, Mockett broke the gender
bamer by becoming the first female pro to compete in the
event. Mockett played in the event as an amateur in 1985
when she was a junior at Newport Harbor. ' a
In the Newport Beach Goll Course men's dub, Hank
LeFebvre won low gross (59), John Sullivan won low net
(50) and Joe Russo was second low net (52) in regular
rounds Jan. 10. Russo was also closest to the pin on bole
No. 12 (92 yards).
In Saturday's flight rounds, Jack Stinson (low gross 61)
and Don Wulf (low net 54) won.Flight A, while Bill Holz·
graf {low gross 63) and Lee Crumbley (low net 52) won a
combined Plight B and C division. Lyle Link was closest to
the pin on hole No. 12.
• RIChard Dunn's club golf column appears every Thursday.
'
The Surf, from AYSO Region 97,
c4.1Jle up wtnn rs in a battle of
unbeaten• Soturday, defeating
North Irvine 4-2 for the Aie4 Cham-
pionship m girls divtsi.On 4.
The Surf were one of three
Region 97 teams to claim area cham-
pionships. The Cosmos took the
boys division 3 title, while Quiksilver
took home the championship 1n girls
division 5.
In other games, the Blue Sharks
finished second in boys division 5
play and the Green Giants are still
alive in girls division 3 after going 1-
0-1 in weekend action.
The Swf got two goals each from
Katie Iacovino and Jennifer Miller.
Goalie Sarah Cassesso had a good
game in the win over North Irvine.
Amanda Williamson and Danielle
Kelly each had their best game of
the year, according to Coach Kirli:
Mcintosh.
After wrapping up the title, the
Surf came back and tied South
Irvine, 2-2, in an afternoon matchup.
Miller scored both goals.
Boys3
The Cosmos won both of their
games Saturday to grab the Area
title. They hammered SOutb lrvine 5-
0 in t.he morning gam and applied
another shutout, 2-0, to North Irvine
in the afternoon. Goalie Andy Gold
recorded both shutout wt.m.
Tun Bird.song and lkaighe Con-
cannon each scored two goals and
Scott Perkins had a single goal in the
Cosmos romp over South Irvine.
Concannon and Perkins connected
again the second win.
Hod Lambertonn, Brad Patteraon,
Charles Lumpkin and Andrew
Brown were noted for their defen-
sive play by Coach George Bird-
song.
The offensive attack was support-
ed by Nick Popov, Nick Bowser,
Garrick Torrey and Erle Gonzales.
Girls 5
Quiksilver put together two wins
to claim the Area title.
In the first game, Amanda
Wittman and Amber Lopez scored
both goals in a 2-1 win over Tustin.
Katie Erickson had two goals and
Wittman added another as Quiksil-
ver beat Costa Mesa 3-1 in the later
game.
Brenna. Duncan and Lauren
McMelkan did a good job in goal
a.nd Annie Wlght and Teresa Sim-
mons were noted tor their outst4nd·
ing p~y.
BojsS
The Blue Sharks playcu.,---.
ties to claim second 1n AI
tition.
Matt 1\-acy and Bric pu~u
scored in a 2-2 tie With
Jose Robles and Phil'
Adam Pinkerton played
with goalie Matt Ruccio.
Glrls 3
The Green Giants pick
win and a tie Saturday and
tinue on their march tow an
Areochampionship this Saturday
The morning game with North
lrvine ended in a 0-0 tie and the
Green Giants came back to take a 6-
1 victory oyer Corona del Mar in the
afternoon.
Relief goalie Colleen Farrell put
in a strong effort, playing in goal the
whole way in both games.
In the second game, Kristen Case
put in four goals and Lisa Owad had
two to lead the Green Giants.
Lindsay J.,ynes, Hillary Evans and
Kristen Holmes had good showings.
rm..•
l'ba rims could have been
pad llfJ•'wllJor ... Cbu..-
Cared. ""'8y came out ~. hitUnO" 11 or 201t0m the field (8 of ~""-'!'~~--....;... _ __,;~!"""'<" 16 from three-point land).
, NEWPORT BB.ACH-Newport
Hmbor High Coach Lany Hfrst
~a feeling hiJ team nlight be in
for::~ '1oUble before Wednes-
day'• 50~2 loss to Sea View ~e rival El Toro.
,· •TI:ley've been on fire and
t.tlat's what scares me,• Hirst said
tit e p{e-game assessment of the
~hargen. •But we have soft
Newport played a steady
game, trailing only t 0-8 after one
period, but the final four mh:\utes
of the half belonged to El Toro as
they extended a three-point lead
to 11 by halftime, 31-20.
•Except for a tour-minute lapse
in the second quarter and a few
spots in the second hall, we
played well,• Hirst' said. •But you
can't expect to play 27 of 32 min·
utes and win. Not in this league.
...... ~ '6dJ OD. 11Mrf'f!t
Md IGtllM deakled t.w &O .......
•1 ~ to1ilileve be woU'ld11aw
been wc>rth at l8ut m or MVen
points a game,• Hint said wtidul·
ly of Pulido'• abliDCe. •A few
winl liere and there iDd we
Q:light be loo~ at a different
sea.son right now.•
The Sailors played El Toro
even in the third period and cut
the lead to .t3-35 on a 14-foot
jumper by Chad Colucdo to o~
the fourth period. With the score.
45-37, El Toro scored five straight
points in a 38-second stretch to
lead by 13, S0.37, with :55 left.
COM
CONTINUED FROM 81
was show time.
•He's just a real solid player,·
CdM guard Josh Walz said. "It's
tough to get around him.•
CdM made its only run in the
third quarter, 7-0, folloWUlg
Adam Klin.ke's three-pointer and
-...-.....11i--.a'"o""ura.--ftee~.._.throws by Coleman ( 1 ()
DON 1.£.ACH I DAI.¥ Pl.OT
MESA ·
°'**' -8-.S lMd, befclre Ull ltftmg~an 11·2NDm
route to an 18-t:C lead .a .._
end ol one period.
It was 23-18 belcn ..._
wu4'0-21.
"We pla~ 1entbiJ ID tllie fiat half, Freeman laid.
•'l\Jmntn (18 GI .... :?I mtned he tbroWI (2 of 7)
Estancia handles Aliso Niguel easily in major PCL test, 5-1
• Wayman's two stops on penalty
kicks highlights Estancia's victory.
Newport Harbor bows, 2-1
LAKE FOREST -Newport Harbor
High's Sailors, 12-4-4 overall, took it on the
chin in boys soccer Wednesday afternoon,
as El Toro scored with just four minutes
remaining to capture the Sea View League
game, 2-1 .
CdM drops 2-0 decision
CORONA DEL MAR -Corona del Mar
High's boys soccer team maintained what
is becoming a constant this season, push·
ing the opposition, only to eventually fall in
Sea View play Wednesday.
Costa Mesa loses 1-0 verdict
COSTA MESA -University High's lro-
jans broke a scoreless deadlock with si%
minutes remairdbg in their Pacific Coast
Leag\le boys soccer encounter with host
Costa Mesa with a run on the goal, culmi-
nated by a sharp cross and ensuing boot
into the Mustangs goal deep into scoring
territory to claim a 1-0 Victory Wednesday.
AUSO VIEJO -Estancia High's boys soc-
cer team swept past its closest competition
m Pacific Coast League circles Wednesday
everung, dropping ttost Aliso Niguel High,
5·1.
Gerson Salgado scored twice and the
Eagles got singles goals from Willie Alfaro,
Greg Austin and Carlos Silva.
But tl1e biggest noise came from in the
net as second-half goalie Brad Wayman
came up with two spectacular saves on
penalty kicks to lift the Eagles' motivation.
Tobin Junowich, with an assist from
Brandon Brown, scored in the first half to
pull the Sailors even with El Toro at half.
time, 1-1, only to see it unravel late in the
game on Ryan Kenyan's goal for El Toro.
The Sea Kings were 2-0 victims to
invading Woodbridge in a yellow card-
marred game as the Warriors posted a goal
in each half to ease to the victory.
Ken Brown was credited with six saves
for Corona, which fell to 6-8-3 overall,
0-3-1 in league. Woodbridge improves to
11-3-3, 2-1-1.
Goalie ·Carlos Cosa was credited with
nine saves by his coach, Mike Dunn, who
also lauded the play of John Louis Besacon
and Jared can. a pair of forwards who
helped keep University off-balance with
their offfensive thrusts.
Zach Wells was credited with nine saves
for Newport.
Estancia improves to 4-0 in league, 8-3
ov~all. Laguna Hills falls to 3-1 in league.
-rpe loss drops Newport to 1-1-2 in
league play with heavyweight Santa Mar-
garita visiting on Frlday.
Corona del Mar will try to bounce baclc
on Friday with a trek to Irvine; scheduled
for a 5 o'clock start.
The loss drops Mesa to 2-12 overall, 0-4
in league play.
-NELSEN
CONTINUED FROM 81
have been impressive.
•She's improved our defense
and we're scoring more goals as
a team," Laird said. •Jill is so
composed with the ball, she's
able to get us out of situations
when the oppoling team is
threatening our goal. She bas the
ability to dribble by peOple
one-on-one, which YC>.U don't see
too often. She give. us
leadership in the ha.ck.•
A sharpshooting finisher,
Nelsen records most of her goals
these days on comer kicks and
free kicks. But her ability to iet
teammat~ up has helped build
the confidence of her younger
1upporting cut.
"I think I'm at my belt when
I'm setting other people up,• said
NelMft, wbo doel juat that as a
center mldfte1det fOl the Mlaion
VlejO Sbamlotb, a natkmaDy
top-raDked c:IUb teem bi the
youth 17• dlvtlion.
~a meznber 'ol the Olympic
=:+.::2.~~~
DatiaDlltllmn ........ =. Mlllm Ml JillJwd vftn every ~on11M11Ml.rblii, :s ..
according to Laird, makes her
uncommonly ~soccer smart.•
The Nebraska-bound Nelsen
is thrilled with her team's
cune.nt contender status and is
also pleased to be back at full
strength.
She returned after missing a
pair of early-season games last
year, after breaking her tibia for
the second time, Sept 7.
•1t was the worst thing,•
Nelsen said of playirig through
her recovery at leu than 100%.
Nelsen said pla~ sweeper
is fun end chAllengtng, and she
a1io enjoys the scoring role for
Newport, which ii somewhat
different from her~
contrtbutiom in club. •<>ur dub team la so
awesome, anyone can score, so
we don't count on any group of
p14yers, • Nelsen explallied.
11l'bere are tiJnes wben I get
hungry for a ~ but in club,
you have to know when to take
yourlbotl. •
·~101e1 at~ our
t.am IDOkl .mon towaid me (for ....mg,. Bui tbat'I OK. I lib
pr~.·
OCC toPS Irvine Valley, ·%-84
IRVINE -Orange Coast College's men's basketball team, behind
Duane Curtis' 30-point scoring output, :U in the first half, swept past
host Irvine Valley Wednesday night with a 94-8' Oran~ Bnipire
Conference victory.
Curtis hit 8 of 10 from the field, including 4 of 5 from three-point
territory, and nailed 1 O of 11 from the line.
Three others were in twin figures -Matt Ambrose (22), Adrian
Reyes (13) and David Downs (10) -as the Pirates im~ to 12-10
overall, 3-2 in conference. •
lrVin.e Valley, which was out-boarded '9!34, ~peel to 11-Jt, 2-3.
• In a women's community college game: ,
COSTA MESA -Sophomore forwUd Jamie Sbme~ln a
career-high 35 1>9inll Wednesday to help Orange Coast to an
88-65 tround.ng of Orange Empire Collference rival Irvine Vi •
OCC, 1?~ ovetill and 3-2 in COnf•ence play, ti'a8ed by OM paint
at the half, 35·34. 1be Pirates outlcored lmne Valley (1~5. 2-3) bf 24
point.a lo the Mcond half, S.·30, to pW1 away for an euy W:tory.
mu.Ill ... Or•• Cilllll M,; .,,,.... _.., ..
~ ee.t · ~ U, TOlk 2.
Mltchetl '· ~ o. Curtis 90, ' Ff~ 4. AmbtoM 22. WllcOk 6,
Oowt"9 fo. • ,.._.,.. Cut1i 4. .,..... =.Port« 11, l1rnmON 7,
Gtttn ''· ~--· 0. GrtMn 2. Todd '2, ~11, ...... Mocri 5. ,.,....,.. ... ~ ........ -...1.
Mltftlmt: ar.,.. Collt. .. ..
points), cutting Woodbridge's
lead to 41-27.
But the Sea Kings never got
closer. ·
The Sea Kings, who will prob-
ably host Irvine on Friday at a
neutral site because of a power
outage Wednesday throughout
the campus, had their most exhil-
arating moment tainted by a
technical foul in the third period
Darren MacDonald, stopped
inside by Woodbridge's defense
throughout most of the game,
along with Coleman and Klinke,
got a steal and was all alone on
the break, which he finished with
a lWO-hanuoo-cttmk.
MacDonald, however, was
whistled for a technical after
banging onto the rim.
"As he was ready to come
down, a (Woodbridge) player
went underneath him. so he held
on longer," Orris said.
Coleman (2 of 12 from the
field) was the only CdM player m
double figures.
•0nce they got it going early,
it kind of exploded on us," Oms
said of bis team's worst loss of the
season.
HIG}I SCHOOL
B~'SKETBALL
SUMMARIES
University n. Costa ~ 62
Score by~
University 18 22 13 20 · 73
Costa Mesa 14 7 21 20 · 62
Untverslty • Scoggin 9, Adloo 1 1.
DeGrood 1, Palmer 8, Schachter 17,
Alampour 10, Doyle 4, Groendal 2,
Namkoong 5. Lynch 6.
3-pointers • Schachter 4. Scoggin 2.
Lynch 2.
Costa Mes. · Leahy 11. Weeks 14,
Montoya 17, Ogo 13, Payne 5, Correa 2
3-pointers -Montoya 2, Weeks 1.
Fouled out · Ogo.
EstancNi 58, Aliso N9* 53
Score by Qwlrtws
Estancia 15 17 13 13 · 58
Aliso Niguel 15 12 10 16 • 53
Est.ncNI · Plock 26, Novak 6,
Maraya 2. Casillas 6, Nelson 16.
c.andlish 2. Ry. Simpson 0, Jahld O.
3-pointen • Plock 4.
Allao Niguel • Childs 8, Mulkay 13,
Etemade 13, Chandler 4, Daniel 4,
Munsell 11.
3-polnters • Mulkay 3, Etimade 3,
Childs 2.
Fouled out • Olilds.
EJ Toro 50, Newpwt Hllrbor 42
Score by~
El Toro 10 21 12 7 • 50
Newport Harbor . 8 12 13 9 • 42
El Toro· Vargas 11, Mendiola 12,
Sliva 2, Senfk 16, Miranda 0,
Wulfemeyer 3, Pearce 0, Johnson 2.
Yearington 1, Undstrom 0, Adams 3.
3-polnters • Senik 4, Vargas 1,
Mendiola 1, WUlfemeyer 3.
Newport tWbor • CUnnlngham 16,
Hornung 0, Archbold o. Wertman 0,
Batdorek3, Matlin 4. Colucdo 8, •
Jameson 9, ll\lssell 0, Schwartz 2.
3-polnters -Cunningham 3. •
waadbrtd11a.CdM4t
Sawoeby~.
Corona def Mar 4 16 13 16 • .C9
Woodbridge 17 21 18 26 -82
Corone ........ COieman 10,
Kl~e 9, Mac:OoMtd 7, Walz 5,
Evans 3, KMM 4, Friend 4, ~on ••
Shimer 1, Guthrie 0, Gottty 2.
3..pOljiters • Kllnl(e 2. MacOonatd 1, w.iz 1, Evens 1.
lldWc.tl5 • Macl>Onild.
• ... , ..... ~.a..ort7. Stov•I 14. -.ms 4, S. Dennh 5,
Madlny' S, larTWe 2. S,
Self.andlry 10. )""°"""'. •urv-1, IHlon '· Stc:NMI 1, Qulm 1, Groan1n 1.
19chnktls. tMin.
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 81
perfonn n a.r agricultwal muacles.
Q
It wu Jurgenson three yean a90 who won lD tbe
10\'e·at-fust-par category, wh('n he met his future Wife,
Cheryl Paulette, on the Newport Cassie links. Paulette
was a scorer for Jurgenson;s ~oup.
Among the l.PCA playen, Cathy Mockett
(Newport Harbor High) is the most recognizable around
these. parts, but Patricia Hurst is clearly the most pro~ent. Hurst was the 1995 LPGA Rookie of the
Year, finishing 49th on the money list, earning ·in excess of $125,000.
Sharon Barrett, Kim Saiki, Pearl Sinn and Mutfln
Spencer-Devlin are also LPGA pros committed to the
NeWJ><>rt Classic Pro-Am.
Q
Last year, lf you remember, Mockett broke the gender
bamer by becoming the first female pro to compete in the
event Mockett played in the event as an amateur in 1985,
wl)en she was a junior at Newport Harbor. -
0
In the Newport Beach Coll Coone men's club, Hank
LeFebvre won low gross (59), John Sullivan won low net
(50) and Joe Russo was second low net (52) in regular
rounds Jan. 10. Russo was also closest to the pin on hole
No. 12 (92 yards).
In Saturday's flight rounds, Jack Stinson pow gross 61)
and Don Wulf (low net 54) won Plight A. while Bill Holz·
graI (low gross 63) and Lee Crumbley (low net 52) won a
combined Plight B and C division. Lyle Link was closest to
the pin on hole No. 12.
• ltlmard Dunn's club golf column appears every Thursday.
PUBLIC NOTICES
youth~rts
sun, Cosmos, ~er capture crowns
The Surf, from AYSO kegloa 97,
ca.me up winners in a batUe of
unt?eatena Saturday, defeating
North I.rvtne 4·2101 the Area Cham·
plonlhip 1n girls divtaion 4.
The Surf were one of three
Region 9? teams to claim area cham-
pionships. The Cosmos took the
boys division 3 title, while Quiksilver
took home the championship in girls
divi5ion 5.
In other games, the Blue Sharks
finished second in boys division 5
play and the Green Giants are still
alive in girls division 3 after going 1-
0-1 in weekend action.
The Swf got two goals each from
Katie Iacovino and Jennifer Miller.
Goa.lie Sarah Cassesso had a good
game ln the win over North Irvine.
Amanda Williamson and Danielle
Kelly each had their best game of
the year. according to Coach Kirk
Mcintosh.
After wrapping up the title, the
Surf came back and tied South
Irvine, 2-2, in an afternoon matchup.
Miller scored both goais.
Boys3
The Cosmos won both of their
games Saturday to grab the Area
title. They bamroered South lrViDe >
O ln the morntng game and applied
another shutout, 2-0, to North lrVine
in the afternoon. Goalie Andy Gold
recorded both shutout wins.
Tun Birdsong and 1\'aighe Con-
cannon each scored two goals and
Scott Perkins had a single goal in the
Cosmos romp over South Irvine.
Conci\Wlon and Perkins connected
again the second win.
Hod Lambertonn, Brad Patterson,
Charles Lumpkin and Andrew
Brown were noted for their defen-
sive play by Coach George Bird-
song.
The offensive attack was support-
ed by Nick Popov, Nick Bowser,
Garrick Torrey and Eric Gonzales.
Girls 5
Quiksilver put together two wins
to claim the Area title.
In the first game, Amanda
Wittman and Amber Lopez scored
both goals in a 2-l win over Tustin.
Katie Erickson had two goals and
Wittman added another as Quiksil-
ver beat Costa Mesa 3-1 in the later
game.
Brenna Duncan and Lauren
McMeikan did a good job in goal
• uld Annie Wight and Te Sitn·
mons were noted for tbeu outstand·
mg play.
Boyas
The Blue Sharks played to two
ties to claim second in Area compe-
tition.
Matt n-acy and Eric Schelin each
scored in a 2-2 tie with Costa Mesa.
Jose Robles and Phil Gustin and
Adam Pinkerton played hard, along
with goalie Matt Ruccto.
Girls 3
The Green Giants picked up a
win and a tie Saturday and will con-
tinue on their march towards an
ATea championship this Saturday
The morning game with North
Irvine ended in a 0-0 tie and the
Green Giants came back to take a 6-
1 victory over Corona del Mar in the
afternoon.
Relief goalie Colleen Farrell put
m a strong effort, playing in goal the
whole way in both games.
In the second game, Kristen Cdse
put in four goals and Lisa Owad had
two to lead the Green Giants.
Lindsay Lynes, Hillary Evans dlld
Kristen Holmes had good showings.
..
,•
-. . '
' ' ' ~
J
I
I•
l • ' I
• • •
I • f •
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•Y PHONI
(714) 642-5678
8YfAX
(714) 631-6594
(Please include your name
and phone number and
we'll call you back with a
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•Y MAILOR INPlllMNa
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Costa Mesa, CA 92627
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Telephone 8am-5:00pm
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lOUAI. -Oll'll'OllTUlllTY
rt'IMESMR!S 1590
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.. CIOlltlnued with tM ... oh..... . """8 & Aun•I l4400. • .. CHllW a.to ·--------
from band. Buen,.. .. not eure , ***** 173-1041 Long~. loeded, Jdnt Dl'IQUIS •
wbatw•piiisaa.butonetbbwht CBIVIOLIT 9045 -300 81!, s.o. btlc lnV cond. Muat ... 1 a•ss1cs k:nnr: It South Wut.ed to cone.a. a ext, deer!, h~ ,::o l4400 obo . .,.5-eOH ---
trlek that did not baYe to be i., it '87 a PRINT Very ~~=~at; •e7 Torota Xtra Celtll.••·----couJd not be ri1ht to win it, 10 good mech cond. , P/U. Xtra long ~. .. a.nu 11• V4. Haien underplayed the ei1ht of SOmpg. $995. Call ae aOOT• Wagon XJnt cond. Ot1g. Owrv. AT, Futbeek. ~ eped-. 144-783S. Englne/body/detell AM/FM Cua. 127" mt new -.U. l2IOO Mio. Declarer next trieid the and perfect.. Whlte/palo-•aaoo 8 .._8022 Cal John .,..,.1. . w i1 CiM1V 110....... mlno. 17k mllH. ,.-ki~ ol clubt. Appl.Yiaa the aame Mu.t ... 1 1 owner Trana!ertna • '20,800. •.,.e JUUi .... .._. 80Vl"B
IQ principle u btfare. t..t nbed to receli>t9 Super cteani 714 4.......,1 VOWWAG11• 9235 c.,,,,-,.. Al ne.# lnllllot. rulf. That left declarer with DO a121e0o 723-7879 • '°" Wir• Whls. 1111( 000
reeoun:e. South had to CODCldit two TRADE Owner ..,...~ club tri.cb for down coe. '84 vw .lllTTA 4-c:IT, 1 iu fZU
n-..i-t Notice that. had 1tut taken the DODGE 9065 ttvough cluSlfled 5-spd, amlfm cua. Turquola• ltNutyl
••
,.,_...... wi: Ten olO jack Qf trump• any time it wa1 842-1871 ~,~g: o~~~~2 Uke 8~ Wjf ....
"Beware o!Greeb i-nna lift,..• otrend, dedarw wou1cl have~ e4 Detone Turbo.•--------·--------1---!.!!:~=~....:..
When the beet plQw in your pme 12 tricb euily, 'lbe niDe ol~.,C'. NM brak .. , kpeed,
wantl to live you a trick lo which then beeon• an •try to the ' AJC. Oreat cart S950.ll!=:::~===========~~~ you are DcK entitled, think canfully allowin1 declarer to diacard two 6e5-3098
before acceptina it. club1 on the kins and queen of Thi~ hand waa played in. the bearta. . 1_Jl_O_RD ____ 9_0_7_$ ~t--t===l--t4ie4;1iia;4A;.~~~~riciir;.---ra.;ara;;;;-...-~~.~.ter na •• ----
SiWn1 ••t wai our good fr.iend player! 8ubeerlbe now to tlae '91 Aeroat., ecyl
end busl.neet aaaoclate. the late Lee Goren ~ Letter ~ callia& auto ttana, e/c, f/p. cc: Hazen. while ~ South pl~ waa (800)788..1111........ • .. or alloy whl•. Low m11 .. 1
the mew& experienced in the pme. write to Goren 8rldp Letter, $9500 OBO 434-0281
South limpl,y ignored all the enemy P.O. Boz 4410, Cla~ U. tl08IO-84 Tempo QL a.eye ~o~pd bid a alam in •P•c!ea '410. au1omaUc, white/red.
Oreat earl S950.
585-3098 MA1UNE SERVICE MARINE SUPS
SUPPLIES 7020 DOC!tS 7022 J\UTOMOBILES GMC
-------~
TONI OF FISH NET eo~ dock tor rent 1a-, ______ 9_0_3_0 •es auauRBAN ~
12.50 per pound. 18 '100 mo l7&-509S BMW TON, 4WO, LOADEOI
Mlnney'a Yacht Sur· 19K Ml. SLV/MET.
ptua, 1500 Old New-'88 7381 LOAOEOI S28,950 87~2 port Blvd. 54M11l2 CO h -~ tJ _ ..
MOTORCY,.y 'It~ ' p "' arv1, nt .... . i--------~ Xlnt cond. 112k mll ... 1--------MUINB SUPS SCOOTERS 8018 s11 .to0 obo 645-9070 BONDA
DOC!tS 7022 ~. ~~-~~iiliil n1JIQ _v._.
45' MOORING For
Sale In N.8 . Call
818-753-e801 Evea. io' Mooring
Scooter Great cond.
Bra, 2-Tone paint. yel·
low/Wht. 8800ml.
$875. Call 648-1182.
SELL your home
throu h classified
csc.~~~~ apd, e/c, alrbaga, tntd
wndowa, 3700k miles,
aporty red, $12,500 obon0-5885
Or IHa, Great penln-
1ula Jocallonl CloHat
Mooring to land. Call
••• ,,. 723·5883
Newport-Costa Mesa-Irvine Family YMCA
·······-···---··---·· : Ons-....,CM-
n your ad in ---~
the Newport Beach
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley .......
Cid~ OMc ~ OAMX
-------------....... --------._.------------80~ deep Dookfac .. Y "Wt tndld strong kids, sttontfamUies, strong communitia ~tto I G ,..
.. • • • • • • • • • •• •
POWll BOATS SAIL BOATS 7014 spaeo. maJn turning pt. 124
QI;; Si Baytront. Balboa 7012 Sia BOATS 7016 1a1and ........... 2s2-1271 ~~-iiiiiiii~iiiiiil Belboe 80 •atlboat W/ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiil aelboe Penln Sllpe
'84 Lvman 26FT Full Evlnrude 0 /B. retract· •1988 22ft Sid Boat• 35' to 55' max at 113/
canvu. 225 Horff-able kHL Sac. S700. 5.7 lltre v-e. King ft. All facllltlH, pr!v.
power. Clualc Boat. 7o1-1Mae Cobra 0 /0, low profile patklng. 723-5835
$7,500 080 97~23. WE PAY CASH hull, Ju at Hrvlced, i AL a o A y Ac HT
For good uaed Sabo11 new controller/uphol-BASIN haa boat allpa
& boat equipment. 11ery. Great aid boat· from 31 to 40 ft avatl,
MlnneY'• Yacht Sur-faat-looka lilfeat. ... .re-114.50/ft. 873-1781 Overatocked with
etutf?
A call to
Claulfled
will hefl> M2.S8'11
plua, 1500 Old New-~~J;4..4~~~500 Why play Hide 'N port Btvd. 548-4192 89" with chlldcar.?
Buy n. s.11 It. Find It. Buy It, SIU It. Rnd It. Call Cleeelfle41
Claulfled. Cleulfted. todayl 142-ee78.
out&O fAMILY PRoa~·~ -. ~-\l! K·Uyean . --.,.,,1/va
• Before &t After School Care
• CatAlina Caravan
• Swnme! Day Camp
• Parent I Child <Y·lndiam)
c.ta Maa lrviM coniiaa JM Mu
'3f.2N6 131-2111 6't 0580
CL!ANING
3515 SERVICES
DOORS 3580 PLOOI INSTALL llEALTB/
3548 -------IBPAIRS 3820 NVnITION --------------
CNfli' 100,000
homes. Fax u1 this
form with your credit
card I or mail it in
with a check todavl
Run for a we.kl If
'f04K cor does not
Seit w.'I rvn it
for anai. we.It
FREEi Al for $ 1 o•
...... Qll&Y "'°' -.w ...... C..-CA'IU7 Vl4.o""901M'7J4QI ..... ,...."'t'Oitl
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• • • . . • ' • ' • : ' , ,
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+ 89S + tax 24 mo. cloeed end leeee. Total to ltalt t2000. Total of payments $2040.
Residual $8582. 12,000 mllee/yr .1<>e/mlle e>toesa mileage charge. On approved credit.
(80597U) Model 1302. One only
ALL· NEW 1995 TACO
Model #7114
--1 •• v.,., .. (#711111)