HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-02-01 - Orange Coast Pilot•
~rving th~ Newport-Mesa community since 1907 .
· ~S~hools hit by,_ 'white flight'
• District officials look to tighten transfer policy as students flock to
Ne'Wport Beach; ethnic balance may be in jeopardy.
:By Julie Ross Cannon, Dally Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Worried about a
new trend of Costa Mesa "white flight,•
'SChool officials are working on a new dis-
:mct policy to ensure ethnic balance in
-their Latino-majority schools.
· The new policy, which Newport-Mesa
.Unified School District trustees will
)"eview at their Feb. 13 board meeting,
would require students to stay at their
;home schools if their departure would
¢ange the school's ethnic balance.
: ·1 think the issue the board is going to
• have to grapple with ... is we've got a
:White flight problem and we've got it for
~sta Mesa," Superintendent Mac Bernd
~old board me mbers during a special
study session on district-wide overcrowd-
'ing Tuesday.
Board m~bers are concerned that a
large number of Costa Mesa students are
laking advantage of the district's open
enrollment policy and transferring to
Newport Beach schools.
The move is overcrowding some New-
•Statistics adding up. See page A17.
port Beach schools and decreasmg the
racial balance of those in Costa Mesa,
officials say.
"There are reported to be a lot of peo-
ple transferring from the Estancia Zone to .
certain Newport Beach zones,· said
trustee Ed Decker. ''We've known that
has been happening ... (District adminis-
trators) are becoming concerned that
•SEE SCHOOLS PAGE A17
Jerry King
\\ I \ I 11 I I\ I'\. (, I 11 I -I ( 1 I\ \I
·.
WEEKEND
New z:oo book laelps
ldds tame ABCs'
PlAYING KING SOLOMON
• Newport Beach resident and state water quality board
member Jeny King has a tough decision ahead as the board
reviews the IRWD sewage project.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -As the
debate over the Irvine Ranch Water
District's right to dump treated sewage
into Upper Newport Bay rages across
the city, Jerry King has tried to soak up
the information.
other members of the state Regional
Water QualJty Control Board will vote
on whether to grant the water district
Its dlscharge permit
U the board approves the project at
the March 8 hearing, the water district
would have license to dump 5 million
gallons a day of treated sewage into
the bay as a means of saving up to $20
miU1on LO disposal costs with the
Or~nge County Sanitation Disbict. As
a companion project, the water distrlct
is proposing to take nutrient-loaded
water out of the San Diego Creek
He has conducted his own
research, attended meetings, read the
media accounts and listened quietly .
And in discussing this, one of the
most controversial proposals in years,
the Newport Beach resident remains
cautious. In March, King and some 14 • SEE KING PAGE A7
Parent warns
approached boy
•California Elementary student
reports that a man stopped him and
claimed he was sent by his mother to
pick up the 9-year-old.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
MESA VERDE -lt could have been a parent's
worst rughtmare
But thanks to Richard Schlutz's son·~ quick
thinking and swift feet, tragedy may have been
prevented Wednesday afternoon
•(My son) was
stopped about a
half a block from
school by an older
man who told hlm
that he had gotten a
call to pick him up
and give rum a nde
home," Schlutz
said, Wednesday
everung "ThlS was
a total stranger -
and my son took of1
and ran home."
"Our concern is
that this guy is
on the loose cind
parents don't
have a clue ... 11
-RICHARD SOIULTZ •
The stranger told the boy his instructions were
from the boy's mother, according to Costa Mesa
police. When the boy reached his house, he
reportedly told his nanny about the incident, then
his mother, who rushed home from work.
The encounter happened al about 1 :50 p.m .
Wednesday while the 9-year-old was walking
home from Cc:lhforrua Elementary School where
he is a fourth grader, Schultz said. The boy was
reportedly stopped m the residential area of Mesa
Verde at the mtersecbon of California Street and
Michigan Avenue by the stranger who was
standlng near a recreational vehicle.
The expenence left the boy frightened, and bis
parents concerned
DON l.FACH I OAl.Y ~OT
Zach Lafata. 14, tries to make his own shelter from the rain after wrestling practice at Newport Harbor High School. The storm camed very
few problems for local residents except for a number of malfunttioning traffic lights which slowed the afternoon commute. ·
The neighborhood IS a generally safe one and
reStdents may have a false sense of security,
Schultz said He 1s not only worried about bis
son's well-being, but the safety of other school
School trustee bills
district for hotel ~room
•Judy Franco says sh e
stayed in Long Beach
during state conference
because of early morning
and late night meetings.
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
--
•SEE STRANGER PAGE A18
I
• f
Spruce up your home
with new carpet
I t your rugs are looking tired,
and you need a change, the
best shop for carpeting and
area rugs is Hempb01'1. The store
is having a sale through Feb. 10
on all rugs in stock. That's a true
bargain, since the rugs are
always reasonably priced.
Hemphill's has a great selection
of Karastan and other high-quali-
ty rugs, and the styles fit most
decors. Hemphill's (7.22-7224) is
at 230 E. 17th St. in C9lt& Mesa.
U your looking for some
good, clean fun and entertam-
ment for your kids, The launch
Pad is holding its third annual
Bubble Festival at 11 a .m., 1 p.m.,
and 3 p.m. Peb. 10 and 11. The
Bubble Festival features Tom
C)d(ly's act, which has been
seen on e orug t ow an
The Disney Channel. Inside the
v theater, Noddy will blow 8-, 10-
and 12-~ed bubbles as well as
caterpillar bubbles. C hildren will
have a chance to create bubbles
as well. The Launch Pad suggests
making reservations by Tuesday,
since space is limited. Tickets are
$3.25 for Discovery Science Cen-
ter members and $5.75 for non-
members. The Launch Pad (546-
2061) is on the third floor of Crys-
tal Court at 3333 Bear St. in Costa
Mesa.
Bob Hod.son, of Hodson Gal-
leries, suggests giving your
Valentine a portrait. For portrait
package pri~an call (646-
0337).,o\,~ st ~y the studio at 124
Broad\'ntf ~ost*1 Mesa. Hod-
son can e anyone look photo-
genic. After many WlSUccessful
mug shots for my column, Hod-
son took a decent one.
Now is a good time to stock
up on outdoor camping equip-
ment, outerwear, and ski wear at
1be North Face. Thi \ere is gearing up for its bi saie} start-
ing Friday and en · M . 19.
There is someth•ng for everyone
on sale, includi· J sleeping bags
reduced to $109.99, backpacks,
tents, sweatshirts, gloves, jackets,
pants, and vests. Merc,bandi5e is
marked down as much as 50%
for the sale. The North Face (646-
0909) is at Thangle Square, 1870-
A Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa.
If you've been losing sleep
over what might be the latest in
Wonderbra creations, yo~
rest easy. The latest are Wonder-
bra's spring styles in cotWll,-#tin
front-close, and embrOtdered
satin. According to Elizabeth
Meyer, Wonderbra brand manag-
er, ·0ur research indicates that
women want a broader wardrobe
of Wonderbra styles, in different
fabrications, to wear with the lat-
est fashion looks."
The new styles are due this
month at departments stores,
except the embroidered satin,
push-up, plunge bra will have tQ
wait until May. The bra retails for
$26. .
• New assistant librariap, John
Callahan ill, is a bookshelf
veteran who's done everything
from driving bookmobiles to
building branches.
C'.a1Jah1m comes to Newport Beach from
Brooksville, Fla., where he spent four years
as the library services director for Hernan-
do County Public Library System. Prior to
that, he worked in the Virginia Beach sys-tem. heading up that system's automation
effort and later as its administrator for sup-
port serviees.
The Massachusetts-born Callahan stud-
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot ied English at Lowell State College. After a
• stint i]}..the U.S. Navy, Qe eom.eB amaltep
NEWPORT BEAcff--o~tCanahan d . "" m library science.from the Universl-
m bas selected flf .. fW •Cl' saletl!tftld-S" ..... M.,er.Carolina at~
books. And everything in between. lt wos 'the diversity of his resume that
He has helped build library branches sparked the interest of Newport Beach
and_expand others. He has installed cable Library 1iustee Lucille Kuehn, who made a
and brought his hora.riel online. In 1972, he point of meeting all the assistant librarian
was even a bookmobile driver in c:andidates.
Kempsville, Va., taking books to hospitals, "T called (1htstee Chairman Ben Jack-
jails and detention centers. : son) and said. 'You ought to meet this one.
·rve always liked being able to do He's top notch,'" Kuehn said of C'.aDaban.
something different every few years," said "He managed a library with six locations,
Callahan, the new assistant city librarian so he's used to the branch system.•
for the Newport Beach Public Llbrary. For ('.aJJahan, the Newport Beach posi-
w Hopetully, I'll be able to do the same thing tion was attractive for several reasons. The
here." city's public library system was well-sup-
Roman feast and
charity auction
Bring out your olive branches
and toga gear.
The Youth Employment Ser-
vice will honor local U.S.
Olympians Tuesday at its 23rd
annual Roman Feast and Charity
Auction. The event will feature
dinner, dancing, door prizes and
an auction.
The money raised will go to
help area youths to t>btain full or
part-time employment. Interested
donors J!lay reserve tables, obtain
seating with Olympians, receive
publicity recognition or attend a
special reception.
Tickets for the feast cost $8 for
adults and $5 for senior citizens and children ·and will take place
at4be-eosta:-Mesa Communtty
Neighborhood Center at 1845
Park Ave., from 5:30-8:30 p.m .
To. obtain tickets or learn how
to become a benefactor, call
Lynne Graham, YES executive
director, at 642-0474. •
•1
William Lobdell. The SlfM 24-
hour 1nswering ... may be
UMd to record letters to 1he
acfttor on ~ topic.
O.ily Piiat. P.O. Box 1560, Cost.I
Mesa. CA. 92626. Copyright: No
news stories, lllustrltk>ns, edlto-
"'-' !Nttwor ~ herein c.i be reproduced ¥Wfltl-
out wnn.n pennllllon of(~
rigNowner.
.. ,-,. ----~. . -. . . . .
wtth 6 foot west· erty swell. M9"V ow ..... If D> w. 1-v St .. <-a MIN. c.-.f. '2627.
•• .. ·--~1.· .. ~ HOW' JQ ltEAOt us
CllalllMlon
The Timet Orange~
_,2S2·!14l
TDIS
..-rcmcAST
LOCATION SIZE
. Wedge .... 2-4 s
NWilport 2.-4 I
lleddes 2-4s
fllwr Jetty 2-4 I
(dM 241
ported and well-used, and had stroi;tg tech-
nological capabilities and a good funding
base, be said
There were other incentives as well.
"We kind of missed the ocean from
when we lived in Virginia Beach," Calla-
han said. "My wife is an artist jllld we think
this will be a better market ior her paint-
ing."
Three days into his job and a week in
Califomia, Callahan met with the .DeilY
Pt1ot can,man. , who confessed be was still
leamtng ms facility's e-mail system. said
technological upgrades me a big part of the
library's future. Access to the Internet and
online data services will be part of the new
way of conducting business, Ca!Jahan said.
"Consider sQmething like a medical
database, something that it would cost
between $10,000 to $30,000 to own," Calla-
han said "If you access it 5 to 10 times a
year on-line, it pays for itself ..
"We have to keep up with the new tech-
nology, but maintain traditional services as
well"
C'.aJJahan, who will be in charge of day-
..
John c.11.ahan m ..
tbe new llliltant
Ubnrtufor
Newport BMdl
Public Ubnry.
DON LEACl-WAll.Y P9.0T
to-day library operations, bas heard talk ot
the library's growing pains and of tbe fact
that the system enjoys heavy use by resi-
dents of cities other than Newport Beach A
fair resolution of the DOD-resident use ilaJe
is "politically. a tough nut to aact. •Calla~
hansaid. .
('~Uaban said be went through a similar
situation with a library system in South
Florida. That lystml lolt It.ate fhMmdal aid
wbe the dly M'8cl ~ DODoftlli·
dents. Newport Be«dl CCMM me.I the l8me
fate, he said.
Although he will be hued in tbe Cemra1
library, Callahan bas vilHed the three
branches, each d which. he mys. bu its
own unique character.
"The Balboa branch bas a nice atmOIJ-
phere and Mariners looks like it's bunting
at the seams,• CaDaban Mid. •Tbat'I a
6,000squarefootbuildingcirculating1,000
books a day.
"I've found that people take real pride in
their branches. It's a part d city's cx•mnuni-
ty. service that they c.an see right in their
backyard."
' .•
I
Storm droPS few
local problems 's more than meets the eye in the newsroom
Wednesday's rain storms
didn't wrea1' too much havoc
on the streets of Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa -it just
soaked them.
Eicept for the h8.rmleis, but
p_esky puddles that llawed the
roads, the storm's only appar-
ent aftennath was a handful of
malfunctioning traffic signals
which, in turn, slowed the
motorists to a snail's pace.
From 2:50 p.m. to about 3:30
p.m., the signals at 17th Street
and Santa Ana and Irvine
avenues, Newport Boulevard
and Fairvi~w Road and New-
port Boulevard and Broadway
y.reren't working, and were
patrolled by poli,oe or regulat-
ed with temporary stpp signs.
In Newport Beach, police
had to direct and control traffic
at Jamboree Road and Coast
Highway around 10 a.m.
Wednesday.
But the cause of the defec-
tive signals remains a mystery ..
"It's probably a UEP -an
unexplained electronic phe-
nomenon,• Newport Beach
police Sgt. Al Fischer joked.
Y ou may think you're read·
ing the little ol' fishwrap-
per that covers the tiny
bits of the world identified as
Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach.
Thatrs right, so far as it goes.
But what you a.re also reading
is the flagship of a burgeoning
empire ·of newspapers publish-
h'g under the collective banner
of California Community News
Corp., a subsidiary of nmes-
Mirror Corporation.
If you have read the tine print
on page 2 of the Daily Pilot, you
already know -about corporate
structare.
What you probably don't
know is the size of this outfit. I
hactll't paid much attention to it
either, until Tuesday, when our
boss of bosses, Jeff Klein, bared
all in a posh conference room on
the filth floor of the Los Angeles
1\Ines building on Spring Street.
First thing I learned is we put
out a flock of papers -seven, by
my count -including a couple
I'd never heard of. Two of them
are dallies, the Daily Pilot and
the Glendale News Press.
· There are also two weeklies
H11r1: 7:00 ·~ tt 6:00 t•
AIES 6 Wttka -Se•ttl Ati
~e APpni.pnate Cumculum • L1bnry
• Hand~·On Lea.mi~;-· · :-:mT~i'.inty Sy11tcm
• Computer ub • UM.Jlied Teachers
TuToR1iME' t=::ll CHILO~ CllNn,,.
955-2672 The OfllcW Ctlld c... Pro¥lder For NASA 9t the 1550 Bristol St. North • Newport Beach, CA 92660 1(-.dy Spece eent.r
(Between Jamboree & Campus)
Uc.3042701941195
and one twice-weekly: the Inde-
pendent, covering Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley and
Sunset Beach; the San Gabriel
Valley Weekly, covering the 30
cities on that side of the councy.
and the Westside Weelly, cover-
mg the westside of LoS Angeles.
The Independent has been
around for generations, but the
other two were started only last
summer -and they are going
gangbusters.
CCN also includes two week-
lies, in Burbank and the foothill
communities, plus profit centers
of printing,·inserting and deliv-
ering newspapers.
All in all, an impressive little
company, More impressive is the
fact that the commanding gen-
eral, J~ Klein, who's actually
the company's chief executive
officer, called together all his
troops and told everybody
exactly where the company has
been, where it is now, and
where it wants to go. .
The details, of course, are
confidential. Suffice it to say,
Jeff's extremely upbeat, despite
some of the chronic problems of
the newspaper business.
Let us make your life less stressful. Come in for
the Brand Names & quality you can depend on.
We have a wide variety of sizes & styles in
blowdryers, hot rollers , curling/straightening
irons, facial saunas, hair clippers, beard
trimmers, lighted mirrors & much more.
The appliance you use can make a difference in
.the style you can acheive. Use professional
appliances to help you get ready in the morning
& out the door. to enjoy the day. r------------------------,
The Bod
369 E. 17th St ..
Costa Mesa ·
(714) 642-8910
lu.,..u might~. the ~ii~ .DMt. More like
an insurance company than a
DeW'll'OOID.
What if there wu th.ii new lhiDO
called a neW1P4per? It con-
tained everything. you could
possibly want to.mow about the
world, the nation and the city,
abOut sp<>rts and business and
entertainment, and it was deliv-
ered to your door every morn-
ing.
Then I~ one desk that
rea.uuredme •. .''.l'lMste-w.a,.~......_---w
mountalJl ol stiilf -llf!WIPBpen,
magazin•, piles ot notes, st.eeks
fred
martin
The cost of newsprint, for
example, has almost doubled in
just two years.New subsaibers -
to all news~apers, nationwide. -
are dwindlihg everyday.
One of the news staffers
asked about how the Internet
may be nibbling away at the
newspaper business. As part of
his response, Jeff cited an item
in a newsletter published by a
Wall Street-type who specializes
in newspaper stocks.
The sense of the piece was,
what if the tables were turned?
It came i.il sections, so mem-
bers of a family could individu-
ally look at stock prices or the
big stories of the day or the
results of last night's basketball
game at the high school, per-
haps even read a favorite
CQlumnist.
Wow! What a threat to the
Internet something like that
would bet
1n'addition to getting all the
scoop on our company, we also
checked out bow our colleagues
at the Los Angeles Times live.
Letting us see that might have
been a mistake. That place is the
Four Seasons of newsrooms.
lt is hushed ana carpeted, and
the furniture is right out of a
Swedish design studio. All the
computers have a special key-
board mechanism designed to
combat carpal tunnel syndrome.
of reference books and who
knows what else -with more
oozing out of shopping ~ on
the noor. Obvioualy, there was at
least one real, old-taShioiled
newSma.n living there. And ru
bet be can't touch-~. either. (I
say newsman because this was
obviously guy-type clutter.)
Then we saw the tum and
video screening room; a photo
section bigger than all (>ur edito-
rial quarters put together; the
Food section's photo studio and
test kitchen, with enougq cooks
to handle the lunch crowd at the
Ritz .
I looked at our wide-eyed
young aowd and wondered:
•How you gonna keep 'em
down on the farm, after they've
seen Paree?-
• FltED MAJrTIN's column runs every
Thursd~y and Saturday.
·-------------------------. I I ---------- - -
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17th St. BEAUTY CENTER ------~ ----
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iii8!1i1'1!!!··
283-D 17th Street, Costa Mtsa <Next to ROS$)
Open 7 DaJ3: M-F 10-8 Sat. 10-7 Sun. 11-6
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C1ystal Court Presents
The
Fascination
. of
Jn a brilliant diaplay of color Orchids -.
and bloom, the 16th &Mull Orange County Branch
of the Cymbidlum Soc1c:ty of AmenCA Show
will be held ltt Crystal Court, Friday,
Febtu1ry 9, Saturday, February 10
and Sunday, February 11, 1996.
Rated among the top-ftve orchid
shows in the <ountry,
rrhe hmnation of Orch1d1•
brings together the nation'• leading
orchid growers, nur1eriet, 1oclcty
members and hobbyists. The
~how wtll feature an array
of amaoc displays, exhibitions,
demonatraoona, eerninara and
compedtiona officiated ~y judges
from the Cymb1dium SOcicty of
America and the American Orchid
Soc:lecy. A variety of intematJonal
orc:hld1, bouquet arrangements and
co111pa wW be available for
puccl\He duou,1bout the ~ckend
and Ju tin dme fur Valentine'• Day.
Come aee all three levels
of Cryacal Court tranalormed into a san:ten
oE orchids. Admiaalon ii free.
And the falclnation will INt forevtr.
for more lnfonnation
plcaae call (71•) ~·ll60.
February
9 10 11
esa water
With the toll-free number, emP.loyees can report
arassment -~f diSCriiiiiiiation complaints to an outside
-consultant, w!io would then re~rt it to the agency.
\
"" COSTA MESA -In coming
2S).onths, Mesa Consolidated
.Water District employees will
-eave someone other than a super-
.Msor or an administrator to tum to
..,r help with personnel issues
such as harassment or d1scrimina-
Jion problems.
By March. water district offi-
cials hope to begin implementing
a 60-day program that Will give
employees an option of calling a
\oil-free number apd reporting
tbe matter to an outside consul-
tant. The consultant would then
report the grievance to tbe
agency's human resources coordi-
nator. .
•Tue consultant would be a
conduit,• said Mesa board mem·
ber Hank Panian, who served on
an ad~hoc human relations com-
mittee tbQt recommended the·
hotline.
"It's an alteniattve to provide
the employee with Uiat extra step,
whereby the board and ~veryone
else is saying, 'If there's is a prob-
lem and You're uncomfortable
talking to your supervisor or the
human resources coordinator
immediately, here is another
avenue for you.'• 1
Tbe ~.......,.., taam.
........ ~~1111.,,tbe ~· WU formed attar ttie dtltlict paid two bmel'
female employeei -Deirdre
Dembik and Kathy Gunter -eecb
$85,000 iJi a settlement over
deUm of .aua1 baramnent and
di.lcrimln4tlon.
· Under the cliltrict's current pol·
icy -wbkb was revileCl after tbe
agency's Mttlement with Dembik
and Gunter -an employee can
report such problems to a supervi-
sor, to the bwnan resomces coor-
dinator or to the general manager,
in no particUlar order. Previous
policy required that the com~
plaints first be submitted to a
supervisor and then to the gener-
al manager.
Both women complained of
problems with their supervisors
It's time to get into the Spirit .Run
Some 6,000 participants are
expected in the 1996 Spirit Run,
st:beduled Feb. 25 at Fashion
1sland in Newport Beach.
Races will include a 10K Run-
Walle, SK Run-Walk and a variety
of kids'·runs for children age 10
and under. Also included in the
days' events are a Fitness Expo
and after-race celebrations.
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C \ )_, 44 t Old Newport Blvd.• Newport Beach •
./ r (ra Heeg Hclqlital)
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Registration begins at 6:30
a.m. that day.
For more information, call the
•Spirit Run '96 Ho~ at 733·
4188.
No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaper
FITS IN •••
. Daily Pilot.
January Clearance
on AI,I~ REMNANTS
50°/oOFF
Now Open Sundays
• from 11 -4pm .
and claim they reported the prob-
lems to General Manager Karl
Kemp. But, they claim KemJ.:1
nothing to remedy their pro .
Kemp has denied kilo'wing of the
women's troubles while they were
occurring.
On Wednesday, Dembik, who
still attends water boa.rd meet-
ings, said she's not sure an outside
coosultant would have helped her
•
••••••••••••••••••• : NewpOrt :
: BEAUTY SUPPLY: • • • • • . . ~. . ...... : :£ ••••••••••••••• r:
~ZOO/O OFF~
: Entire Purchase :
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• t1.p l'J ,gj • ••••••••••••••••••• • • • 3601 Jamboree Rd #8 N.B. •
• 261-6788 : • • Jamboree at Brtst:ot : • • Back Bay Court :
~-..........--.-...-.......-.
deal with he,..Jituation.
•An 800 number would be just
wonderful if you didn't have to
give your name and if it wasn't
reported back to the .general
manager,• Dembik said. "I know'
that the report will go to the
human resources coordlllator, but
the general manager will be
made aware of it.
•1 think the information should
go light to the boiiid .•
Panlan Mid be bad ~est.ed
offering a type of •suggestion
box,• in which emplo~ could
submit complaints or concerns
about penonnel issues to the
board. But. he Aid. th& agency's
attorneys dite<>uraged imple-
menting such a pr~.
"That wowd be a breach of
procedure because, in the final
analysis, the board will act as a
board of appeals,• Panian said .
Pani.an said 1he district will still
offer a suggestion box, but it will
be open for all comments of inter-
est. Any complaints about harass-
xnent or d.isttiminatton w9uld be
forwarded to the human
resources coordinator.
~ ~/ize in FAMIL·Y ACCOUNTS with
Teen Drivers
• Free Telephone 'Quotes
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• Quality Personalized Service
• Family ONned Aoencv
• Est:Bblished in '1927
MERCURY
INSURANCE CD •
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(714) .. 760-1255
240 Nsv.sporc Csnt:et-Dr., 1122 •Newport Besch in FBShion Island
Bath & Kitchen ·west
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FAUCETS•CABINETRY•TILE•SHOWER DOORS•ACCESSORIES•WATER FILTERS
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Buy 1 dozen long-stemmed roses for Valentine,s Day
& Receive a coupon for a completely FREE dozen of
long-stemmed roses* during July 1-Sept. 1, 1996.
r-------------·--····--• LoVE isN'T BLIND SPECIAL : : ~ 00 Apy fo>ral purchase of $34"' or :
1 morr tklivtrtd 1
1 ·Feb. 11, 12 or 13, 1996 1
OFF V.Jjj"' ~ /i1W HJw. I
~wm··~~.;r".W#/ftir :
I
I
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------------·----------
I I
·Mesa water officials tty to dissuade city fuom taking over agency
• Mesa Consolidated offidals tell Costa Mesa leaders
, 1bat citizens' proposal is aklii to hostile takeover. .
By T1na Botgatta, Daily Pilot situation WU heeltby, and that the agency bu always practiced long-
COSTA MESA -A.Dy consoli-
dation of services between the
water district and the city would be •a lhotgUn marriage,• Mesa Con-
IQlidated Water District board
member Hank Panian told the
ma~r and a handful of residents
' who attended a meeting on
Wednesday.
Offidals from both agencies met
to discuss a letter from a dti7.en's
watchdog organization. the Coali-
tion· for Clean Water-Costa Mesa,
form.ally asking the City Council to
consider absorbing the water dis-
trict into its municipal operations.
In the letter, coalition founder
Heather Somers cited recent prob-
lems with sexual harassment, con-
oems about the structural effiden'-
c;y c:i the agency's new 18-million-
g.Don Reservoir 2 and the loss of
!90,000 worth of fossils u reasons
to take over the 67-employee
agency.
On Wednesday, Panian told
Mayor Joe Brickson, Council-
woman Mary Hornbuckle and Oty
Manager Allan Roeder that the
ac<:u58tions leveled at the district in
recent months either have been
unfounded or the problems have
been resolved. He offered a
lengthy presentation. assuring dty
otfidals that the district's financial
rapge ~oning and bas coasistent-
fy met its goell.
AlMI, bued on that infonnation;
Panian told the dty that be would
oppose any comOl.idation of ser-
vices at this time. ·rn not be open to any discus-
sion (of a merger) under the CWTeDt
circumstances because it is
desi~ to eliminate the (water
district's) five board members for reasons other than service,• Panian said. .
Under the coalition's proposal.
the water board ,would become a
Oty Council-app0inted commis-
PRE
SEASON
"Great Selection"
PATENTED
NON-PATENTED
592s
s742
s12 01
OPEN 7 DAYS 8-5
989-3875 l820 HAMILTON AVE. HUNTlHOTON BEACH
lion that acts as a recommending
body to the council. That ~would
give the council more control over
wbO sits oo the panel and the deci·
siaol that are canied out Current-
ly, the board members are elected
m.to olfiat.
~ Por months, Somers bas been
ap:;r~ beforo the col.mcil dur-ing meetings, urging the
co to cpnsider taking over the
agency's operations. That action
has raised the ire of some water
board members, who have com-
ptamed to the city about il •u you am solve your problems
in your own forum. they won't
come over to us,• Roeder told the
water district officials on Wednes-
day. •And. believe me, we would
rather they be solved In your forum
and not ours.•
Ericklon bU Jaki be wOu)d CQR•
sider a merger CX1ly it both the
board and the council worked ·1n
tandem• on a pJan; And. Panian
told city olfidAls, the melitioo's pro.
~ appean to be more ol a •take-over• request than a •tan·
dem apProedl • to sharing services.
•1t certainly ba.sn't been brought
before the boaid," PanUui Ald. •n
seems to me that if there WM a
dame for this to be a tandem
app~ch, it would have come
before both agendes."
Board president nw:ty Ohlig,
who alsO attended the meeting
along with Mesa General Manager
Karl Kemp, said a consOlidation of
services probably wouldn't result
in aqy cost savings because the dty •
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646-7Bf9
LICENSED 8c FULLY INSURED l.IC. t C27...c86038
Feel calm, comfortable and cared ·for.
· Finallj, a Health Club for women with the right environment.
Owned and operated by women,
Aiko's Health club is dedicated to
~
helping women of all ages stay fit
and healthy. Our experiencedfemale
trainers work one on one with each
member providing a personalizec/,
training progrQJ1].. m offer~
and help sett:inp afe
tko's is afrie non
whe~ w<)·~_,, share
--·---achie'I) alance,
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,
Come in, bring a friend or
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NEWPORT BEACH
852.8655
CALL FOR CLUB HOURS
would have to bite the same type
of staff to provide water services.
And. she Mid, there isn't sufficient
cause to justify a ~er.
"People have been ayinq about
Reseivoir 2,. Oblig said. ·Nobody
wants il But, wait until there's an
earthquake or a fire. Tilen they are
going to be happy that it's there.
"When it comes down to the Dit-
ty gritty, Mesa has done a wonder-
ful job.•
And a few residents echoed
those.thoughts.
:'TbE? tiedsion of whether to
consolidate should reVolve around
tmprovin~ lel'Yice arid !IOWI ..
COit/' MJd TOily Petrol.
Si(le hOmeowner and .1119 ....
the Costa Mesa Cha d
merat. •If it'• abOut things•
ual harassment and the lom d
sils, then that's not ICWJ>dhiNr
can be resolved by thiS.
•If there's a management _.
Iem. fire the manager. I tfm*
problems with policy-m•ldng ..
decisions, then elect a new Jiolllll,
But if yol,l're looking at ~
tion to address these thiDgl. tbllll
not going be tesoJ:ved by a ......
er.•
THE EARL'S
BAT H "" KI T ( H !_ N pl •.1 I: 't I l ( I:, l I" Ts
PHOTOGRAPHY
240 Newport Center Dnve, Suite 110
Newport Beach
(71 •) 644·6933
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DECEMBER 17, 1995
· Experts Crack
Access Codes
By D. E. C IPHER
SAN RAMON, CA -U8hlg hlgb-pow-
ered computers, crypto~pbers at
Pacific Bell have cracked the vexing
"access code" that some people use
when mald tele bone calls.
The code "lOATf," for example,
when deciphered reads: "You could
be paying Jong distance prices for
basic local calls."
Consumers who notice unusual
charges on their phone bill are urged
ocall 1-800-PAC BELL for tnore lnfor
atton.
.-r ~ -. -... .... -";' -....-
PACIFIC EIBELL.
NET W 0 R K
Row will you use it?··
Chriltopher Buckles and Kelly Hall
engagement .......................... • HALL-BUCKLES
"The engagement of Kelly Geralynn
Hall and Christophe; Allen Buckles was
announced by her parents, S. Wilson
Hall and Mary Gall Hall of Newport
Beach. The fiance, a. Newpc.irt Beach
reiiaent, 11 the son oT CfiiQy Bucldes of
Laguna Beach, Danny Stewart of
Canoga Park and Tom Buckles of Ana-
heim Hills. He proposed to her between
loops in an old bi-plane over Carlsbad.
The bride-elect is a graduate of New-
port Harbor High School and the future
bridegroom, a Laguna Beach High
School graduate, is a student at Orange
Coast College and is employed by Tom
Buckles at his company, PBM, in River-
side.
Your Source """-'~~ For
RUFF ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY lNC.
Local News ~'-~Dolor Coven Mof91 1922 HA1110R II.VD., COOA MESA · 5'8-1156
COMPUMENTARV •HEALTHY PET" EXAMINATIONS
STATE LICENSED VETERINARIANS
CAT~ DOG
FVR+CP •••••••••• SS bbles •••••••••• S6
Leukemia •••••••• S 12
. . . . . .. ~. "', ... _' -.. ·.. -
-.'f'T'-·.~·
DHLP+P •••••••• $10
KING
CONTINUED FROM A 1
durinq the summer months.
An urban planner and a mem-
ber of the regional board since
1983, King sa~ be bas not
received a staff report from the
board, nor has he dedded how he
-will vofe.
King and former Newport
Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart are the
two regional board members who
live in Newport Beach. But despite
the fact that the Qty Council and
residents throughout the city have
declared opposition to the project,
King says he will judge the pro-
posal based on its merits.
"This is not about 10,000 letters
and faxes,• King said over lunch at
a reStaurant in Corona del Mar.
•The decisions we make are
meant to protect the waters of tile
IUYYOURSW
As designers 1n vanous art I01111s contmut IO pare
down their wol1l from the exceues of tile previous
decade, we see a tum toward s•mphc1ty No'#llere is
this lllOfe eV!Clent lllan on tilt 118Cks of those w!lo hive
lorsalten their hllYy neck1aCes tn la..or of Cleileate balJ'f
jewelty Tiles means 1 return to such lfM"Y as a btt1e
gilfs first l>tnltstOlle net«llce. a llf'IY IOckel or 1 Ila.by
sttand ot i-tts Women 111 wanno SllCh items as
tiny nec:lcllces with p11CtOUS oerns set 111 stenino
platinum, Ind Oold on a ful-bme basis Tilus these unolJCnisi';e forms ct nec:Kwar t>eeome more of a
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 1, t996 A1
state. Gov George Deukma)ian arad
•rve tried not to diJCUSS (the twl by Pete WDaao I>uriD,g tdl
project) because I don't know 13 y~ on the bomd, King M)"I
what my side of the story is yet I he has •taJcen grief• from the ~
don't know what the standards a.re.• lie over any nwnber at projeds.
While Jean Watt, Jack and But ;.the fi4p over the lrYine
Nancy Skinner and Frank Robin-Ranch Water District plan might
son are among the city's more rec-have been miirimized, King
ognizable environmentalists, believes, ii the distiict had done a
King's expertise in water ~!Y is better job with comm~ out-
equally formidable. He grew up fn reach.
· , · PJMimity to Lake--•J'IIHW' il-the-(water di.Arlct)
Decatur. King was 7 years old had it to do again, they'd talk to
when he joined the area's Youth more people," King said
Conservation Corp. King praises both dty officials
"I still have my stickers," he and residents for oonducting exi.a.
said. research and obtaining a.s much
Later, King would work for the information about the project as
adult Conservation Coips and the possible.
local parks department. In New-U the project does go forward,
port Beach, the first meetings of King wants to make sure that
what would ultimately become the monitonng efforts continue.
Harbor Quality CoIIUJUttee took ·I'd like to see some backup
place in King.'s office. testing," King said. •Maybe we
King was appointed to the could use the facilities at Sheil-
regional board twice by former I maker Island for that as well.•
anniversary
.Special
""4-tllllliM't----~--~ ........ ~*'-~~.,;;_.;........=o._:....,..._..~.
tlOll. Actually, this return to delicacy ano-
S111191oc1ty IS notruno new Tiny pendants worn on gold
chains or ~tile strands of pearls were llltvlOUslY
popular dunno the 1860s and 1870s wnen women
turned av<~ from overwrouoht Voctor11n t1esions
Today the pendulum llas llga.n s..vuno tQWJrd delicacy
Here at ROYAL JEWElfRS. we keep up lo date wrtl'I all
ot the latest forms of fashion tor )IWtlry. and have a
grat selection of bab'f iewtlry Our proftsSIOnal statt
Is wklely known tor 111111 Ir iendly and knowledoeable servlce, so come tn soon and visit us 11 1280 Bison.
Ste B6 (644-7804) In the Newport North Shopping
Center (al the comer of Bison and MacArthur) and
32411 Goklen Lantern. Ste G (248·8995) at tile Ocean
Ranch VillaQt Center. Laguna Niguel V1$1 and
Mastertard are atetpte<l We also otter e~pen ,.we1ry
and watch repair If you are loo~IOO for a spectil
Villcn1l!le's Oly gilt tor a loved one please come 1n
500ll Our wtt w1U be nJppy to help you seleet somelhlnQ 11\at v.111 be en,oyecl Ind treasured for ~rs
toto!M
PS Tile spa11 IOOll of m niature iewtJry was also qu te
popular as recently IS the late 1970s
MEMBERSHIP INCLUDES:
New Member Orientation • 25-Yard Hcate<l Pool• Use
of Fre~ Weight Room and Equipment by Body Master •
Basketball • Volleyball • tair Climbers • Treadmill •
Lifecyclcs • Schwinn Airdyn~cycles • Life Rower •
Concept II Rower • Upper Body Ergometcr • Nordic
Track • Racquetball • Handball • tcp Aerobics • Active
Ider Adult Fitness • Hard Bodies Class • Aqua Aerobics
• Aquatic Fitness • Senior Aquatic Fitness • Swim For
Your Life • Senior Lap Swim • Locker and Towel Service
•AWAY Program Allows Us~ of Other YMCA Facilities
.. ~ .......
•1cotwntca1 ..._t Wed·
CllDgl• ii the title Of. a •enJlnar
Ihm 6:30 to 8 p.aa. at o..ae
Coat College. RegistratiQD ls S3S
per pencm or $59 for two. For
-. iilfOrmation, clLU -'32-5880.
MASTa'S SWIM PROGRAM MAYOR'S DINNER . Otange Coast CommunitY Spea.Jt Up Newport's 15th
Col19 Olten 4 swim progr4Dl annual Mayor's Dinner will begin
for adults, age 19 and older, at 6 p.m. tonight at the Hyatt
monthly. The)>ne-hour workou'ts Newporter, Jamboree Drive in ~ at 6:30 a.m. and are Mon-Newport Beach. The program
day through Friday. The cost is includes hqp.oring past mayors of
MO for one month,' $70 for two Newport Beach and a report on
months and $99 for three months. the City by current Mayor John
For more information, call 432-Hedges. Supervisor Marian
5880. Bergeson will report on her first
PIZZAZZ IN YOUR WORK year in office. For more informa-
"Put Pizza.zz in Your Work" is tion, call 224-2266.
the title of a free program tonight BUILDING SEMINAR
at 1 p.IJl. iD the Friends Meeting The Building Owners and
r Room of the Newport Beach Cen-Managers Association of Orange ! tral Ubrary. Creativity trainer County will hold a seminar on
• Gwen Laurie Wright will teach "When the Lease Auditor Comes
: participants to be more sponta-A-Knockin'" tonight beginning at
neous and imaginative, while 7:45 p.m. at Sheraton Newport,
reducing stress, through drama 4545 MacArthur Blvd, in Newport
, exercises. For more information, Beach. The cost is $45 for mem-
' call 717-3801. bers and $75 for non-members.
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT For more information, call 838-
, The .Business Development 9960.
, Associl).tion of Orange County's TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERT
1 monthly luncheon meeting Jenny Richards will perform
, begins at 11: 15 a.m . at the Wynd-folk and classic rock from noon to
'ham Garden Hotel, 3350 Avenue 2:30 p.m. and Jeff J~hQ,son plays
: of the Arts in Costa Mesa. .slassic rock. from 7 to 10 p.m.
1 George Sifuentes, chief of th~ tonight at lhangle Square.
: construction operations branch of MONEY MAITERS FOR WOMEN
1 the California Department of A free presentation by profes-
: Corrections will be guest speak-sional money managers Sue
' er. The cost is $33. For more Mamer and Flora Burke 12:15 to
, information, call 832-5741. 1:30 p .m. in the Friends Room of
1 MATH CONFIDENCE WORKSHOP the Newport Beach Public
•Becoming Math Confident" Library, 1000 Avocado. A light
is the title of a free four-part lunch will be served. Guest
, workshop offered by Orange speaker is Steve Borowski, man-
•Free~
t Stop Wage T8"'1gs
• Keep Yru &.lslnesa
• Emergency Same Day Aling t Stop ForedoeuretJIRS
• Stop ColediorlS • Keep $15,000 cash
• Dlacount Rates • Se Habla Espanol
Stop those harraaaing phone calla!
-MCINTOSH & PATISON (714) 835·3887
eoo w. Santa An• Blvd., Suite a1e, a.ma An•
111tfrrEfTlft\ l-'Rft11 fftlJJ~f]'lft.\
~.;-----,I
. '
-.
UfEC1!M ..... MlllftlNG
St. ADdmt'w Pnlb~
Chwdl wm hold • one-c1ay_~
rerence titled •Bff~ve stngJe
Parenting: Practical Ap~es
!or Fulfillment• beginning at 8
a.m. The cost is S25 in advance.
The chwch is at 600 St. Andrews
St. in Newport Beach. For more
information, call 574-2222.
APPLE COMPUTER a.ua
Macintosh specialist Guy
Kawasaki, a noted author, colum-
nist and speaker who pioneered
Apple's sOttware evangelism pro-
gram, will be the featured speak-
er at today's Orange Apple Com-
puter Oub meeting from 8:45 to
noon at the Science Building,
Orange Coast College,· Fairview
Road in Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 836-0522.
CD SAVERS SEMINAR
•conservative Investment
Alternatives for CD Savers" is the
topie-of the seminar at Orange
Coast College, Room 204 in the
Lewis Applied Science Building
from 9 a.m . to noon today. The
cost is $19. For more information,
call 432-5880.
DOCTOR WITH A HEART
•
let's help keep our Valentine's spine in line for the month of February. •
From now until February 29, 1996 mention this ad and receive a consultation,
• complete exam, x-rays if needed, re-examination or regular office visit •
GOOING CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
125 E. Baker Street Suite 1 OOW
(between Redhill and 55 Fwy)
Costa Mesa, CA.
(714) 556-9188
Dr. Michael Goolng named one of the top 27 Chiropractors In the U.S. By: Self Magazine. ..
Serving Oran11e County since 1985. • •••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
iLUNCHES TO LOVE! l
at
Big City -Bagels
. ,,. .. ~ .. . -. . .
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• OVersizea 'Bagel f})eli Sanawic/ies
-~ • ----.
• !J ast & !J rieruf fy Service • f})ai!y Meal f})eafs aruf Specials
• Perfect for tfie Off ice -'Bagel Saruf widi 'Pfatte:rs!
COSTA MESA COSTA AllESA
1712 NEWPORT BLVD. CoppertrM lus. Park
(Newport & 17th St.) 151 llLllUS DL, #Ml
142·1105 417·5100
SAVE $1.00 : SAVE $1.00 : SAV E 7 S <
On any
Bagel Dell
Sindwlcb
I II
" .
Dnany
Bagel Dell
Palk et
I
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I
• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • ' ' •• •• •• •• •• ..
... , ... lld'y
CDld'1' 2 la1 pie-..........
.263 E 17th St• Costa Mesa
714 • 650-2432
Hours: 7 Da s eek 6am -1 am
• IDA1' SA8TY FOR KJOS
,..,.,_ Bnnch Ubrary 11 offer-
ing a Mdel ol one-hour programs
oa s.turilays, Feb. 3-24 from 10 to
It a.m. TM dus mcludes videos,
....._ act1vtties and demon-
malkibi of boat safety tech· ~ Children may attend one
ar all d the programs. For more
iDfcJaMtion. call 717-3800.
TllMCiLE SQUARE·CONQRT
iock today from noon to 2:30 p.m.
and Stan Hodson plays classic
tock from 7 to 10 p.m. at Triangle
~t!.
SONDAY • ·
IMERICAN CETACEAN SOOETY
lbe American Cetacean Sod-
~ ii sponsoring a fundraismg
trip along the Orange Coast
• aboard the Freelance today from
8 ~.m. to noon. The cost is $17 for
adults and$ 10 for children. For
more information, call 675-9881.
YARMONIA BAROQUE PLAYERS
The Harmonia Baroque Play-
ers will perform a chamber music
concert titled MSometbing Old,
Something New" at Christ
Church By The Sea United
Methodist, 1400 West Balboa
Blvd. in Newport Beach. Admis-
eion is $10. For more ihformation,
call 970-8545.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERT
Jeff Johnson plays classic rock
: today from noon to 2:30 p .m. at
: Triangle Square.
. OUTDOOR FLEA MARKET
Antique Outdoor Flea Market
will be held rain or shine at the
· Newport Dunes, Newport Beach
· 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free parking.
For more information, call 673-
2771
A two-part workshop de-
signed to assist people m
matching their personahty
traits and skills with possible
career paths takes place today
and Feb. 12 from noon to 1:~0
in the Re-Entry Center of
Orange Coast College,
Fairview Road Jn Co~ta Mesa.
The series ia free. For mote
irifonnation, call 432-5162.
HIGH PRIORITY NETWORK
The Orange County High Pri-
onty Network's Members
Prtendship Brunch is from 9:30
a.tn. to 1 p.m. at a private resi-
ence ht Newport Coa . ttor
more infonnation, call 850-0803.
AlTENTION DEFICIT DISORDER
A free lecture on M Attention
Deficit Disorder in Children,
Adolescents and Adults• will
take an in-depth look at ADD,
what to do about ft, and how it's
treated at. 7 p.m. at Coastline
CouJlseling Center, 1200 Quail
St., Suite 105 in Newport
Beach. For more information,
call 476-0991.
TUESDAY
TAX PLANNING
Mortgage broker John Ander-
son presents a free seminar on the
effects of purchasing and refining
real estate on individual incomes
taxes from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the
Holiday Inn, Bristol St. in Costa
Mesa. Reservations required. For
more infQrmation, call 721-8600
ext. 223.
SUCCESSFUL RETIREMENT
Orange Coast College offers
MFinancial Strategies for Success-
ful Retirement,• a four-part work-
shop that helps prepare individu-
als for a secure retirement, from
6:30 to 9 p.m. on Tuesdays begin-
ning Feb. 6. The cost is $59 and a
spouse or guest may register at no
extra co~t. For more information,
call 432-5880.
MISSION STATEMENT
"Create Your Own Mission
Statement" is the title of a free
pr am a noon m e nen
Meeting Room, Newport Beach
Central Library, 1000 Avocado
Blvd. Ann Kinner will help partic-
ipants identify goals, prioritize
activities and make progress
TROPICAL ISLANDS
TANNING
Yalentine's Day
·specials
~ Single's Night $3.00 ~ 10 Turbo Tans $50.00 1' · Thursdays 5-9 1 1' · . Save $30. 00
~ $4.00 Tans ~ 10 Tans $40.00 1' · Tuesdays & Sundays 1' · ·
~ Be My Valentine (Couples Only) "!. Two Months -$60.00 One Month Each Person
Win a Gondola Ride for Two Around
The Canals Of Newport Beach rnter By February 14th
CALL POI AN APPOINTMENT: 714·474·9740
3601JAllOlll111 NOT TO DllDllCH conn Al lllSIOL
HO•a l.fs 7 ... tp• • 11 Sa .... ,,.
..._ ___ OFFHS Wiii FEBRUARY 29, 1996 -.--.....,
• B.S. la H.atll Servieel Manqement
• M8lter ol H.n Adlilla181ndioil (MHA)
" ! I ' I I• I I I. ' I I. I 11 I. l I I' : I \ I I I ' 111.' .
toward things that are most
important to them. Por more infor-
mation, call 711-3801.
PARKSIREOEATION M££Tll«i
The Parks, Beachel and Recre-
ation will meet at 7 p.m. in Coun-
dl Chamben, 3300 Newport
Blvd. in Newport Beach. For more
information, can 644-3151.
CREATION SOENCE ASSOOATION
The Creation Science Associ-
ation of Orange County holds a
publl.c meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
Mariner's Church, 1000 .Bison
Ave., Newport Beach. Arlin
Penner, an expert on butterflies,
·will present a program entitled
"Butterflies: bow they refute
Darwin's Theory of Evolution.•
He will talk about the metamor-
phism of butterflies and illus-
trate it with exhibits from his
extensive collection. The meet-
ing is free and open to the pub-
lic. More information: 898-8331.
SELF HELP BOOKS WORKSHOP
"So you just bought another
Hlf·belp book" ls the title ot •
free community workshop by
Elizabeth Slocum, 10 to 11 :30
a .m . 2900 Bristol St., Farst floor
conference room, Building B.
Relate the most popular self
help books to the most com-
mon needs of those who buy
them. A discussion will
include seven ways to increase
your emotional intelligence
and build higher self-esteem.
There is no fee, but reserva-
tions are required. Call 850-
1689 for reservations and more
information.
SATURDAY, PEB. 20
WOMAN'S OVIC LEAGUE
Phyllis Drayton, a member of
the city of Newport Beach Art
Commission for eigqt years, will
speak on "the Function of the Art
Commission• at the Woman's
Civic League monthly meeting in
the Jorgenson Room at Mariner's
Library. Coffee hour begins at
9:30, meeting at 10 a.m. The pub-
lic; is invited.
KELLY & COMP ANY
CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNT ANTS
1995 Tax S™n
Its that time of year again!
At Kelly & Company, we have experienced professionals
who understand your unique tax situation.
Additional Services We Provide:
• Litigation Support
Servicing The Community For Over 20 Years
393 1 MacArthur Blvd., Ste. 205, Newport Beach, CA 92660
(714)474-7440 (800)526-0869 FAX (7 14 )474-7554
INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE
The Oasis Senior Center offers
free tax pi:eparation assistance for
moderate to low income individu-
als. .The service s~cializes in
seniors. AARP volunteers are
trained by the ms. For more inf or-
mation, can 644-3244
SPANISH FOR SENIORS
The Jewish Senior Center
offers Spanish classes every
Wednesday at the center, 250 E.
Baker St. in Costa Mesa. For more
iriformation, call 513-5641.
CARDS/BINGO
Every third Tuesday the Jewish
Senior Center offers various card
games and bingo from 10 a.m. to
2 p.m. A kosher lunch is offered at
noon for $3 per senior. For more
information. t:aJI 513-5641.
MIOlOSOfT COMPU1'D a.ua
Every Saturday from 9 LID. to
noon, the Winnen Computer
Club ;meeti in l'OOIJl 116 of
OCC's Fine Arts Building to dis-
cuss the development and
exchange of information related
to Microsoft Windows and Win·
dows applications. The COit of
membership is $20, which
includes a newsletter. For infor-
mation, call 542-0468.
BIG BAND DANCE
The third Priday of each month
Adwt Ballroom Dance is held
with music by Balboa Beach Big
Band from 7 to 10 p.m. at The
Costa Mesa SeJlior Center, 695 W.
19th St. in Costa Mesa. The cost is
$4 for SAGE members and SS for •
non-members. . .
Make Those Patios &
Entries Beautiful
Custom Newpon Beach patio v. 1t ba que and
patto cover with a heater above
Jim Jenn111gs
CUSTOM MASONRY
170 E. 17th St. • Suite 206
Costa Mesa
(714) 645-8512
State Uceiue #392707
Lee Jim JenninJ1
install your
complete
yard hardscape.
• Expen brick,
block, stone, tile,
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work.
• Can recommend
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• Quality work in
Costa Mesa &.
Newpon Beach
since 1969.
• Dramage
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solve them.
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Meteor Shell Jacket. Cordura reinforced
shoulder and elbows. Prt zips Chrn guard.
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Galaxy Pant. tun-length.
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Crest Anorak, Gore-Tex 2-ply Shel
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eave 30% -50% th .
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Rene~ Bec*padk, 3 a r• ~' teen ibii Peck ..,.,. Wld ~' .,,.
*-. 4000W· 5,200W
~t11S219 now--.•
T hey called it an evening
of discovery. Jlm and Bar-
bara Glabman opened
their upscale furniture empori-
um in Costa Mesa for after-
hours guests of the Pacific Sym-
phony. Organized as a kickoff
affair for underwriters and sup-
porters of the annual Symphony
of Jewels Ball to be held later
this season, 130 midweek
guests entered the fine purvey-
or of top-of-the-line home decor
on a deluxe Oriental carpet
rolled out the rear door of the
store.
Greeted by a staff of polished
and polite servers from Neff-
Neff Catering of Laguna
Niguel, the crowd was made to
feel right at home. And indeed
they were at home, that is if
their own home includes the
ultimate collection of the best
that money can buy in the way
of new furniture. Many of them
were quite comfortable. Others
offered that they were never
n· .hqrns again Sortofa-
•once you've flown first class,
coach just isn't the same ever
again• kind of experience.
The Black Iris of Laguna
Beach accentea the Glabman
store with their artistic floral
spreyt,_adding to the drama of
tbe decor. Once a ~ bad a
flute of champagne in one hand
and a canape in the other, Pad.f-
ie Symphony staff memben
~ed out a card with mstruc-
tlons for the evening's treuure
hunt. It was then that one well-
dressed patroness, wearing her
winter red knit coCktall dress,
red Givenchy handbag to
match, flung her Blue Iris Mink
coat over her shoulder and went
to work. The evening of discov-
ery began as the crowd
searched the store for clues
leading to treasure donated by
the Glabmans.
It was no walk in a furniture
store. The questions were
tough. They required a knowl-
edge of 18th-century design,
fabric quality, and the differ-
ence between a saber-legged
table and a George m ch.est.
Th~re was a little cheating, it
must be reported. But in the
end, democracy ruled as all
entrants placed theif completed
treasure cards into a large cbi-
noiserie bowl, from which five
winners were selected, provid-
ing they had the proper
answers.
As Neff-Neff served a buffet
dinner of Indian curried chicken
with all the condiments, the
treasure hunters claimed the
goods. A $500 gift certificate
went to one fortunate symphony
donor. Others proudly accepted
a handsome array of decorator
accents such as a beautiful cloi-
sonne vase on a stand and a set
of six large Oriental chargers.
Not bad, going over to some-
--0n~.cs.-Of...b¥.~
ner and leaving with their prop-
erty. -
M. Wllliam Dultz, president
and founder of TRAVCOA, was
on hand to announce his dona-
tion of the two grand travel
YOUR EYETUCK SPE
CALL NOW FOR FREE CONSU
LYON EYE 760-3003 ·1 ~
1401 AVOCADO 402 ·NEWPORT BEACH
our Loved One11
Galleries / &tudio
124 BROADWAY, .-JD, COITA MESA, CA. 12827 (714) 141-G337
FINAL CLEARANCE
50% OFF
+ pluS +
•
Additional 2 5 % 0 FF at the Register
Thursday Feb. 1-Sunday Feb.4
.
ARMOIRE
D RISSINO IY O!SI ON
...
• No
prtsea for the
ball.~tour
~'!4=d
and AUltrali4
and Cambodia
And Vietnam Will
go on the auc-
tion block, pro·
viding the ulti-
mate treasure ·
hunt in the
southeast for the
highest bidder.
The ball will be
chaired by
Pamela Boblt Donald and Uza Segretu (left tO right) of
and Jo Ellen • Newport Beach, wUh Lou.ls Splsto (right), vice
Qu.allJ, vice president and Executive Director of PSO.
president of
nttany and Company,.South · ls slated for April 13 at the
Coast Plaza. Hyatt Regency, Irvine.
Considering all the dining
and hunting going on in the
store, the Glabmans were very
gracious and relaxed. Were they
worried about scratching the
• 8.W. COOK'S columns run Thursdays
and Saturdays.
Jim and Barbara Glabman (left aDcl center), oJ Newp>d BH IC
recently underwrote "An Evelilng of Discovery• In support el
the Pad.fie Symphony Orchestra'• "Symphony of Jewell• Ball:
Designer, Steve Allen, ls on the rlghl
-$15,000 table from the· Newport
Collection, or the $30,000 secre-
tary where one patron had
pulled up a $3,000 chair, low-·
ered the secretary desk and
placed bis champagne and cur-
ried chicken on the mahagony
finish?
-----------1
Long Beach Coin & Collectible Expo ~~1/\ !~!~· ;
"You use your furniture at
home, don't you?• said a smil-
ing Barbara Glabman standing
next to one of her designers,
Steve Allen, of Newport Beach.
"We'll clean it all up later, just
as good as new. Actually, we've
done an in-store event before,
and the guests are very respect-
ful.
February 1 ·4, 1996
LONG BEACH CONVENTION CENTER
100 So. Pine Ave. Long Beach, Calif. (Entrance & Parking on Pine Ave.)
RARE COINSI STAMPSI SPORTSCARDSI
JEWELRYI PHONE·CARDSI
COLLECTIBLESI SPORTS GUESTSI
SAVE AN EXTRI
10 %0NALL~
STOCK RUGS I
SALE ENDS FEB. 10
"As long as they stay off the
white silk sofas with the curry,"
* U.S. Coln Auction * Foreign Coln Auction *
Call for Details (818) 839-8986 or (310) 437-0819
During Show Call (310) 436-3636
HEMPHILL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
e'"ll • Mon-Fri 10-S Sat 10..5 722-7224
The Symphony of Jewels Ball
~~~
11 Over 50 Yea rs of Fine Quality 11
2 5 °'0 QFF * h1hric t~ L11bor Iii/,/, .~ /·1•11,
~·~EDUW:::oo
Factory & Showroom Complimentary
1998 Harbor Blvd., Cosca Mesa Design Consulting
• with &bric and labor purchased thru Mesa U holstc
Modern Dry <leaning
. Machine
Some tine garments require ·udo's' pampered hand
washing core .. but most clothes look and teel better after
being Dffp CltaHd at Newporrs Newest most sophlsti·
coted dry cleaning and laundry foclhty .. 'Udo Cleaners'
Wt woukl like you to try us .. so hart's our
Introductory offer: r------, ,------,
I INTRODtJCIOllY OFFER I I 2 PANTS OB 2 SK/IrlS I brilW ""'114 ,,,,. lltU Oii
I=~ llf:s I I 'WI 11\rik we do IN t.t !llW!s in IO•••r I I ~AllQ $3 7& s.n Alu $425 I 2d0y...-t_on....,.
L------.J L------...J
,......,..._ .. ..,... .... ,...,._,,,,, .. K,....t. ... -t:t 1~
L ~1 00!0• --.fn ll.IMIO-
CLIANIRS :-~s...-
vour Ntighborhood Cl1011111
(i14) 673-1010
3424 3426 Vlo lido. NewpOO Beocn ,-..-.... lldO~
Beginning and intermediate ballet, jazz, modern dance or
tap class~s are available daytime and evening. ·
All classes are taught in a professional dance center .
Call Coastline Community Colleges
Costa Mesa Center today/ (714) 751-9740. ~~~:~~
Cl••••• start the weak Of Febtuarv 5 .
.,
•
I • •
THURSDAY, FEIMJMV't, 1,_
weekend
LEAH HOGSTEN I DAILY PILOT
creative nature ln Costa Mesa resident Diane Hill dates back lo days ln the Girl Scouts, but it
k the blrlh of a grandchild to tum her ideas and arttstry into bowtd form. Her book is now sold
the Santa Ana and Los Angeles Zoos.
A ·NIMAL ABCs
ocai· artist's ~zoo ___ et Book' a hit with Xids
is for Sam -and sea lion,
swan and serval, a spotted
African cat.
Such a simple premise, but
· g her love of the zoo with
grandson in Florida seemed
·cult until Diane Hill began
etching animals that spelled
t the tot's name.
Samuel, who was 2 at the
e, loved the letters with the
'""""'11"-'d-drawn illustrations of exotic
als, and so did Paul, Hill's
band. He suggested that she
her ideo, iQto 8Jl alphabet
k available for other children
enjoy.
So, the soft-spoken Costa
esa grand.mother said she
ame a hermit, as she drew
n her artistic talents to create
complete book of sketches to
ustrate the alphabet. For six
onths, she did nothing but
earch and draw from the pho-
aphs she had taken of ani-
s from San Diego to Wash-
gton, D.C.
She painstalongly drew ani-
als both familiar and exotic,
electing from four to eight illus-
ations per page. Frequently
used letters such as S were easy
to find accompanying animals,
but Hill said she encountered dif-
culty with the letter N. She also
CAFE _lOLE'
BREAKFAST • LUNCH
•SPECIALTY COFFEES •
• WATERFRONT DINING •
OPEN DAILY 7 AM-4.PM
• 723-0616 .
634 UDO PARK DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH
found the letter X to be trying,
but decided to use the scientific
name for the animals to complete
the alphabet. And there were
special animals she wanted to
include, such as the Kookaburra,
an Australian bird the former
Camp Fire girl and troop leader
had learned from a camp song.
Hill wrote the text to accom-
pany each illustration in a way
that a child would be able to
understand and used phrases
such as •it's about as big as your
mother's hand.•
Once the project was complet-
ed, Hill and her husband were
trying to figure out how to get it
published. Then, while attending
a gift show in Los Angeles they
met a printer's representative,
and were able to arrange for a
Korean company to publish the
manual, which became the "Zoo
Alphabet Book."
The book debuted in stores
just before Christmas and has
since been purchased by people
from across the United States,
Canada and in Europe. In appro-
priate style, Hill celebra ted with
an elephant ride at the Santa
Ana zoo along with Samuel, who
was here for the holidays.
Available in a spiral-bound
format, the 13-inch by 15-inch
book was designed for reading
on a lap or for use in a classroom
The book can also be purchased
m the form of a kit, so parents
can spell out their own child's
name.
"When you think about it, the
most important letters are the
ones that make up your name,"
Hill said. "It's a gentle puzzle,
because you can also rearrange
the pages to spell out other
phrases such as 'I love you.'"
And even though the project
took nearly half a year to com-
plete, it hasn't diminished her
love for animals and for the zoo.
She's a member of the friends of
the Santa Ana Zoo, and wherev-
er she travels, she looks for addi-
tional inspiration for her ~
At one point she vi.sited five
zoos m 10 days; from Cincinnati
to Orlando. Paul continues to
help her out, using his own form
of Dr. Doolittle communication to
bring animals closer.
She said he'll stare quietly at
an animal for a long time, and
then begin to blink. The animal
will often blink in response, and
at a zoo in Cincinnati his skills
brought a cat down to eye level
so Hill could take a photo of the
creatwe.
She's also become somewhat
of a local celebrity, most recently
appearing at an author's day at
Hawes Elementary school in
Huntington Beach.
"It was really a loving experi-
ence," she said.
1 A comu! OP JOES:
Grammy Award-winning
.Ma 1UCJP119aist Joe Hen-
' denon and ~blues vocalist Joe~ team up
for a performance 8 p.m . Friday
at the Performing Arts Center.
ndtets: $20-5'0. Information:
556-ARTS.
2SAMULNOIU: The Korean
percussion ensemble
makes its Orange County
debut 8 p.m. Saturday at the
Performing Arts Center. Formed
in 1978 by Kim Duk Soo, the
name is based on the Korean
words •sa," "mul" and "non·
meaning "to play four things"
which ief ers to the four tradi-
tional Korean percussion instru-
ments in the ensemble. nc.k.ets:
$10-$37. Information: 553-2422.
3 GUITAJl CONCER'n Clas-
sical guitarist and recording
a.rti.St, Joe Poshek, will per-
form. at 8 p.m. Saturday at
Orange Coast College's Fine
Arts Recital Hall. Posbek per·
forms exclusively on~
menb he~ and buUdl
hlmself.1\cketl: Stt in advance,
St3 at the door. Information:
.C32-5880.
4 fVU..CONTACT
TIIEATRE: Returns 8 p .m .
Saturday with •nie Re-
Retum of the Son of Revenge•
in Orange Coast College's Ora-
ma Lab Theatre. 'JWo tea.ma
aliclde improvisabons suggestM
by members of the audience. A
winning team lS ~ted at
the end of the performance.
Tickets: SS. Information: 432-
5932.
SKIDS VALENTINE '
CRAFTS: The Environmen-
tal Nature Center will bold
a Valentine Craft Workshop for
kids in first-sixth grades from 9
a.m. to noon Saturday. 1601
16th St. in Newport Beach.
Information: 645-8489.
6 "IHREE VIEWINGS': Set
in a funeral home in a
small midwestern town,
Jeffrey Hatcher's 90-minute
play is one monologue by each
of three people: the funeral
director, a jewelry thief and the
wife of a man whose recent
death exposes her to bis mob-
ster creditors. On the Second
Stage of South Coast Repe$ry
through Feb. 26. Show times:
Tuesday-Saturday at 8 p.m.,
RESTAURAN T ANO BAKERY
~ T-0 T --.--
,._··. ,,~---=--_.:: .
SUnday .a 7:30 p.m. ... ---
--at .i;30 p.-. • 8llb.9day aD4 Sunday.~ DJio.'36.
~ 957.-io.13.
7 CANTOa G8AHI': Cantor
Jonathan Grant and the
Overture Compeny ol
Opera Padftt will be in concert
1 p.m. Sunday at TemJ>le Bat
Yahm, 1011 Camelbaclc'St.,.
Newport Beach. llckets are
$12-$25 and may be pW"cbued
in advance by ¢ontactiDg Alma
Brooks at 644-1999. A dessert
reception follows.
8 '011!UO': The final perfor-
mance of Opera Pacific's
version of Shakespeare's
famous tragedy, •Othello• ls 2
p.m. Sunday at the Performing
Arts Center. Tickets: $18-$85.
Information: 556-ARTS.
9 HARMONIA BAJlOQUE
Pl.AYERS: The Hamwnia
Baroque Players present
~Something Old, Sometlifug
New~ at 3 p.m. Sunday at
Christ Church By The Sea
Methodist. 1400 W. Balboa Blvd.
in Newport !;leach. Tickets: $10.
Information: ~70-8545.
1 0 1HE EXTINCT: The
Los Angeles-based
band performs songs
oft of its debut album, Ouch, 8
p.m. Sunday at the Galaxy The-
ater.
In Italy, in California,
Il Fornaio tneans
.The Baker
Jo1n us for dinner February 5-18 as we explore
the food and wine of the remote
Italian region of Val d 'Aosta
IRVINE 1805 1 VON KARMAN AVE RESTAURANT 7 14 261 1444 BAKERY 7 14 26 1 2202
650 ANTO N B LVD 7 14 668 0880
A deal you can sink
your teeth into.
Kids 3 -11 eat for only a dollar.
In celebration of Presidents' Day, kids 3-1 1 eat tor Just one dollar at Knotrs Restuants
ttv~ the month of February. For t:1ery aciJlt entree you order (~ tJcduded),
you'll rece~ a (8fnP SnoOp~ Kid's Meat for only a dollar. So whit }Q.1-re ~ one
of <XK CaHfomta lights or Farm F~e entrees, yo.x kids or grand kids wl bt ~
a delicious deal. And thars no lie.
Musa&_, ._..
,.., ft11C1dc 9t. :17145 ... ..,.... ""'•
(t09) '91-4tl0 (114) &SS-7500
.
~------~--------~---------, By Tom Titus, Dally Pilot
L ast season, South Coast
Repertory offered Brtan
Friel's "Faith Healer," a play
consisting of three extended
monologues. It was hardly the
company's finest hour.
F. Y.I.
+MIA~ •n.,... vtewmgs•
...... South co.st
~ 655 Town Center
Dnve. Costa Mesa
+WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesday-Fri-
day; 2:30 and 8-p;m. Satur-
day; 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sun-
~-JhroUgh Feb. 25
+HOW MUCH: $~$36 + .. IC> ... 957;;.t033
I I I
I I
I I I I I
Thus, one might be forgiven for
harboring a bit of trepidation en
route to •Three Viewings," set in
essentially the same f onnat. One
would, however, be delightfully
surprised. L-------------------------~
Jeffrey Hatcher's chuclde-fllled
excursion into the lives of three
people m a small town funeral
parlor is a play that connects quite
nicely with its audience. Hatcher
paints vivid word pictures, and
supplies each of bis entertaining
vignettes with an 0. Henry-style
twist at the end.
Under David Emmes' finely
tuned direction, SCR's three actors
engage the audience in different
fashions, one with his timidity,
another with her brashness, the
third with her naivete. All create
rich, full-bodied characterizations.
In the opening segment. a
funeral director oonfesses his love
for a local reaJ. estate agent -to us,
not to her. Don Took skillfully low-
ers the barriers of professional
restraint ever so slightly as he
painfully recounts his tale of unre-
SlR ROGERS, LTD ~
• ~ y>
5 Ci2 ~
Breakfast Served 7:00 a.m. -10:30 a.m.
Servinf 'f' h Oven Roasted Turkey & "Roast Beer'
Complete Sandwich Menu & SaJads
P 1r. • 3-8 ft. Long Submarine Sandwic es
270 E.17TH ST. #17 •COSTA MEsA •
(71'4M5-2252
Q M -F: 7:00 Lm. -6:<>0 p.m. • Sat -Sun: 7:00 a.m. -4:
• Lunch Buffet
• Complete Bar
• va..a ............ Surf·
boardl OD ~· J.-boo.
Rattan. Gr• but for cllilc
jockey. 1lkl 1tatuet ev.-y-,,
where. Pool tablet. TV.
Dance floor. + Attire: Don't show up ln
an evening gown -you'll
ttud out. This place is.
casual -to the JJlU, We're
talking jeans -ripped, dirty
... whatever. n.ny black T-
sbirts for the gait. Flannel
shirts for the guys. + Bar boanty: Draft beers
include Bud, Bud Ught,
Coors Ught, Rolling Rock,
Red Hook, Double Diamond
ale and New Castle brown
ale -14 ounce cup for
$1.75; Pitcher for $5.25.
Also, an assorqnent of bot-
tled beer, IJli,xed drinks and
shots. Monday night is all
you can drink for $5. + Specialty drlnk: Lemon
Drop -fresh lemon,
Smirnoff Citrus 'l'wist, Triple
Sec -muddled over ice and
strained into a sugar-
rimmed shot glass, $4.25.
+The crowd: Late 20s to
mid-30s -mostly on the
make.
+ Tnne1: Bands every night
-rock n ' roll, top-40, punk
and blues. Starting in Feb-
DON LEACH I OAl.Y Pl.Of" !1
The entrance to the Tikl Bar is an tnvttatton to a South Seas ... ~:
setting. • • 1ul
quited ardor.
The liveliest perlonnance of the
night is turned in by Hope
Alexander-Willis as a woman
who attends funerals chiefly to
remove from the deceased any
burdens they may have ca.rrled in
life -such as jewelry. Hers is the
funniest, and also the saddest. sto-
ry of the three and ~ander
Wlllis spins it beautifully.
Bibi Besch garners our sympa-
thy as a widow whose husband
has left her deep in debt. His
shady dealings are as far beyond
her as the verbal fencing of her
more sophisticated daughter.
Besch weaves her web, and extri-
cates herself from it, splendidly.
•Three Viewings• may revolve
aro\llld the theme of death, but its
morbidity level is low indeed. This
is a comedy, or rather three come-
dies, about individuals affected by
another's passing. It's a fascinating
experience elevated by three
excellent perlormers.
ruary -1970s retro Thurs-+Works llke a charm: Did-
day night. Shows starts at n't hear any winning Jines
1n--· u,..,. ·--y· ..... ·. ~~!!m9.
+Grub: pizza, burgers, hot +Bonding vs. daUng: "We
wings, artichokes, egg rolls. come here when we want to
The list goes on .... have a quiet night. We
+ Don't try this line: think we'll pick up girls,
"What are you, stupid?" -but. then we get to playing
drunk guy, before losing pool, and we forget about
two games of tick-tack-toe. finding them until we've
~runner-up: "I'm not mak-missed the boat.• -24-year-
mg you uncomfortable, am old marketing manager.
I?" -same guy.) + Dat~ to take: A group of
No matter what you're doing,
you~ hometown newspaper
FTTS IN ... Daily Pilot
fi~ COSTA MESA CMC PLAYHOUSE ..., PIESBllS
All Singing, AD Dondng, All Gershwin
el :1. friends for a night of m -. ,.
low mingling in a South
Seas. . -+ Boring, but crucial info:
d rl
Address: 1700 Placentia
Blvd .. Costa Mesa
Phone: 548-3533
Hours: 4 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.,..,
every night. ,
Cover charge: $5 after 9, ,
p .m. r\ . ,
-By Anna Marte Stolley• u
"
CRAZY FOR YOU
DllKTED IY IAllY W'11S
PlOOU<lD IY l£X 10ll'lllS
.-.Yll6rw~ll, 19"
~,,_~ ...... ...., ....... ~
AODRDIO G•urmet
------,
ocn's · EST 1
-DINNER . ~oR · r.w~ $29
lnclildcs:
• Shrimp a~tizu
I · • Ja~ t onion soup
• Fiuhly cut vtget.a.ble
• Rice and hot gtten tta
\~
...... (111)7U·7121
I
I
I
• *
I walked into Gustaf Anders,
South Cout Plaza Village's
mo.t elegant restaurant,
and stood in the foyer looking
for help.
•1 want to have lunch at
your new cafe, Bae Pocket,
but I can't flnd the entrance," I
told a hostess. She smlle<l and
led me through the tables and 1
beyond to an archway and into
a small dining room.
Traditionally, excess areas
deep within the fine restau-
rants of Stockholm become
.baftcka, or "back pocket• din-
ing rooms with more cai;ual
service, lower prices, and food
similar to that of the main
kitchen.
And that's exactly what UU
Anders Strandberg and
William Gustaf Magnµaon, our
Swedish consulates of fine
dining, have done. They
opened their own Back Pocket
in space at the rear of their
famous, award-winning
restaurant. ~
Parmesan cheese, ii one of tile
star concoctions next ijoor and
is served here, too.
The hening mini-bW:f et ($7)
i~ awesom~; it's hard to find
this quality of herring, but
Strandberg pickles it himself.
He also cures celestial salmon
with sugar and dill for another
appetizer called gravad lax
($8) -it tastes as though it
comes from a different galaxy.
...
If you have always wanted
to dine at their nea.rly flawless
restaurant but couldn't afford
the $45-per-person tab, plus
tax and service, you can now
have salad, entree and dessert
prepared under Strandberg's
supervision and the caf e is
overseen by the other dedicat-
ed perfectionist of this t~am,
Bill Magnuson. It is virtually
impossible for these two inge-
nious men to create anything
but a class act and that's just
what !hey hav~done with
their small restaurant-within-
a-restaurant.
Laden with two baskets full
of fat walnut, caraway, and
anise rolls and Swedish flat-
brod, the bread man comes to
visit your table two or three
times dilrlng the meal.
Two sandwiches a.re fea-
tured -the first is a combina·
tion of blended cheeses a.nd
salty black olive slices, rolled
into raw dough and custom-
baked in the open wood-burn-
ing oven ($5). The other is a.n
open-faced sandwich of
gravad lax with cheeses ($6)
looking like a Swedish P.izza.
The.filga.ds and_thei.Unsides
meld together in the wood-
burning oven. These two are
the most voluptuous sandwich-
es you might find in this life-
time.
' 11
Back Pocket's dining room
&as a clean, no-nonsense
appearance and a single, one-
page menu for bQth lunch and
dinner featuring bold and
beautiful food. A virtual bowl
of health, Anders's famous
parsley salad ($8), with garlic,
chewy little nuggets of sun-
dried tomatoes and a cloud of
For entrees, the rib-eye
steak is tender and juicy with
a suave garlic butter ($17) and
leg of lamb ($12) is roasted
with thyme for a rich, country
flavor. The menu has three
fish entrees and two of chick-
en, enough variety for every-
one. All entrees are served
with a*'Sp1i:ug-iala~ W-bscd
with a gentle balsamic vinegar
and soy/sesame vinaigrette.
Kalops, Swedish-style beef
stew ($12), comes bubbling in
its own clay casserole. An
espagnole-type sauce deepens
and enhances the flavor of
tender beef chunks and veg-
etables. Mashed potatoes,
browned on top, form a ring
around the dish.
I Another sizzling casserole •
makes vegetables look like
t.i.nea:uati,. stare. Lu~~ ·
chunks of red and yellow bell
peppers, onions and eggplant
are baked in the oven in a
mild olive oil, the whole thing
shining and accented with bits
of charred herbs. When you
dig into this hearty serving
($10), don't forget those excel-
lent Scandinavian rolls for
swabbing up the last, best
drops.
The wine list is very good
but beet is the drink of choice
:_ Swtden rnd-it'-:-:r::rf~ \•/!th
this food. Coffee is excellent
and the desserts are delicious.
Being a restaurant critic on
the prowl for a new or over-
looked gem, it generally is
several years before I' return to
restaurants I've reviewed. Giv-
en the chance, I would head
for Back Pocket and order
honey-glazed pork loin ($13),
fresh from the rotisserie and
another gravad
lax sandwich.
An~nr~oo~
oven and the rotisserie add to
the casuo.l aspect and
Swedish-woven linen table
mats take the place of white
linens. The only entrance into
Back Pocket is to go through
the entrance of Gustaf Anders
and find a hostess or host on
duty to show you the way.
You'll be delighted that you
did.
·"'
.. v .. ..
YOU NEVER
SAU-SAGE
SAUSAGE
lf ....
ANIA80AT CAFE
()i boerd the "Pride of Newport" RM1rboet. Home Of
The Newport Herbor NaUbeel Muaeum (Fonne1 ~
Reuben £ Lee) Is Open From 7am-5pm (Untr1
Midnight For Private Partlaa, Weddmgs, Etc .. )
ReaerVetrons Needed Onl'f For Waddings. Banquets
Q-Pnvate Parties) All ¥eicx' C'..redtt Cards Accepted.
Located At 151 E Cont Hwy, Newport Beach. C.A
92660 (714) 673-3425 Fax 67~7964
AU8Y'S .IAOUAA DINER
Dessie 40'a Stvl• Diner, Tredlbonel Hamburgers.
Greet Shekea S. Melts. Aleo Serving Breakfast. Hours: Sun-Thur 6'.3Qam.9om fn.Set 6:3CJam.1()pm.
Mastercard. Visa, Amex. 'Dl1e. Diners Oub, carte
Blanch. No Reaervattona Needed. Located At 3CXD
W. Pee& Coast Hwy. (714) 631-7829
•AOGEAS,LTD. .
Sendwlchea ·(Hot & Cold) 8ntish Grocery Items For
Sele -Full Sendwich Menu, Small Breakfast Menu,
Olednch'• C.Off~.· E~•prnao Drinks. Grocerv. tt.ems. Hours: Mon . .fri. 7:ClJem.8·~ Sat..-Bun. ':OOllm-4:~. Cred!t c..rd9 Not Aocept9d -MM Availebl9. ~ Not Needed. Located At 270 East 171h Slrelt. Q>sta ~ 92627 (714) 645-2252
ZU8•1
Menu Include.· R1b9, Chicken, Steelt & Lobster. Prime Rib. Paza. ()yst.er Bar. Pncu Ranae From
S3.95 And Up Hours. 11;30lm 1~ -Cockteils
Tel 11pm end Cerda Not Ac::ceptad. ~ Not,.._.,, Locacad at 1712 Plecefm, Colt9 ~
(714 I f345.EICS1
, .
I / ! ( I I . I • { ,
.. 1111011•.
Or Such Delicious Food!
Join Us For
Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
Catering Avallable
For Reservations and Directions Call
723-0621
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beech
, ..
1714 Plaeeada (at 17dl) c..ca Mesa
,,.-I ; I ( J '. I ' ' I j ' (I • /r • // r • J' r ( 1
FORTY Cll.CDDl8 ~ AMllH
r.ontloem.1 -Col im.Tlp9I ery eu.... South Coast Sullhi & Sushi to Go. Compliq Bar All Major Credit
P.lim, 3333 S. Brila:ll Coltli Meea (714) 556.97CXl Cerda. Lcated At 2875 hlne -·· (Acrose From lnfoml9I And 8-dul. Our Menu la V*"8d Wrttt A NewPort Golf Courie) (714) 645-5518 WO.RlngeOf~~ F1 ...... w.~
end Suoei'b ~ At Ari Atltec:tM PriCe Vlilul.
Moo-fr{ 1().gpm • a. S-8pm • Sun 108p. v.. CM.NRJIM llACtl AOCK'N ....
Masc.r Card ' Md ~n Expresa Accepted. _._. ~ o.ine And Ful al8hi Br. A Piece FOr ~Are Not t-Mdld. ~ Food. Hours 7 Deya Per Weelt -s·~ 'TI
• ~ Viaa, Mastercerd, Amex Dinera Club. ~ Loceted et 3355 Vii Lido, Newport Beech ~ -Cui9iriil From Spein Wttti LMt FWnet"° '714) 875a>75 ~ ~mg In Peelle. BtMk, Grlhd -Freeh Fieh ... -..-
& ~. Open '5 ~ 'NMll. CloMd Son. -& Mon. Mejor ()edit ~. ~ lit StJlhi EMr And Oit'ling. (Mners Sui Cl 11\ltt Clpritijd ~ ~ ~ ~ IE . Thi Shel 9tol1 Hot91 Jlpel-Aella.nnt In Sen F«Tlllldo ~ r... · At MecArtfiur & Birch, Newport Beech ttlur'tl 11 '.3Qlm.2;~ • Dinner '5.~10:CDi'!!. (714) ~114 All ~ Credit Cerdl Aceepted Aeu...,1rOOW91b111111i111w
Not Nec.nery. 37'5 Bristol, 140, r.o-. MM1
(714) 8446854.
t· I~ f I. , .• '
THI IAM STEAK HOUI&
Menu lnciodel Steak. F1'9Sh Fish. Cllicbn, a.,..
Slleda. Pl"DI Range From $3.75 For l.J.n:tl & li8.25
For Dinner. Hours: Mon.~ ~11em For Lunch 4 :CX)pm Mon -Fri . Dinner 3: m. Sat. & Sun .
Ma1or Cred•t C.rds Accepted oceted At 2300
Harbor Bl 131. Costa Mesa (714) 641.S7n
LA CAVE
Manu Includes . Lobster, Crab, Shnmo. Steeka, Rib •
eye ~ Soeciala Fn & Set. Prime Aib. Fut Bar Wne Llat. Casuat Dress Hours· Lunches 11 ::n.2:30
-Olllner Mon .set From 5:~. VIS&. Maste1a1nS,
Dinere Oub Loceted At 1695 Irvine !we .. (And 17t.ha 1 •
Neer Blockbuster Entertainment Coste Meaa
(714) 84EP944
RUEIENI STEAKHOUSE I FREIH IEAFOOD GRILL
Steak, Prime Rib & Seefood. Early Bird Dinners NiQht:t1. Qpen For Lunch Delly And SundaY 0iamoeane Bruocll
Bencioet FBC1htiea Hours: Lunch 11 :3(}.4':CD Dinner
4 00-9·00 Fri/Set 10.0Clpm Sun. Brunch 9·3Q. ~.(Q;im ~ Mlfor'lnd 0...CM. Vila, Mata"*'d, Amex., Reaervations (714) 87~1505 Fax 873-5920 .. CAM " • locataj At 251 E Paofic COM1t ~. Newport Beed\
A Tnp To MeiUco. tbn: D1.t.tf From 11 :Cllllm PncM (714) 87~1505
Range From $2.25, $8 95 All Meior' 0-.dit CArd9
Accepted. Located At 298 17th St.~ Costa Meae
(714)64~7626 .....-~~~~~-:-~~~~....;.~~~·
WAHOO'I ,_.TACO F111h Tecoe, -eumtos, Black Belna & Rice, "a.iads,
S.ndwlehea, Pncea Range From S1 65'-$7.W Hcxn· Mon . .s.t. 11:00ilm -10 OOpm. • Sun
11. CJllm.Q«lpm, Q-eck Cards Accepted Loceted At 188Q Plecencie, Costa M .... end It '3CXXJ 1 __ _.
Brilla!. Com MMe. 12CX> Mein Street. ~ Beedl (114) 53NalO
THURSDAY,~ 1, I• A•
ushfooms and chefs sprout a great love aftair
esh mushrooms and pearl
nlons give lnsplratton to a
d wine sauce over grilled
ck en.
er of two successful restau-
ts that bear his name (one in
ew York City, the other in
anta Monica, California), Chef
cCarthy often features his
vorite fungus on his menus.
Frequently served is a lus-
us Fn!sh. totusbrooni and
earl Onion Red Wine Sauce,
ooned over grilled chicken or
uck breasts. To prepare the
uce, sliced mushrooms are
uteed in butter and lemon
·ce. Then they're stirred into
richly flavored wine sauce
ong with caramelized pearl
~ons and crispy bacon. The
sult is a savory, intensely fla-
red delight.
Chef Michael's salad of fresh
ushrooms with herbs and pine
uts is a real show-stopper. It
gins with a tangle of sauteed
·te, shiitake, crimini and oys-
mushrooms, Toasted pine
ts, shallots and garlic add
yers of rich flavors. When all
· is tossed with fresh salad
eens, you'll have a warm sen-
ous salad -one that will beat
your own love affair with
ushrooms.
resh mushroom and pearl
nion red wine sauce with
lilied chicken
1.2 cup (1 stick) butter, divided
:tablespoons lemon juice
ounces small fresh white
ushrooms, ·quartered (2-1/2
ups)
12 cup minced shallots or
nion, divided
cup Pinot Noir or other dry
ed wine
can (1 3-3/4 ounces) reduced-
Qdium, ready-to-serve beef
roth
1 cup frozen pearl onions
1 leaspoon sugar
)llces thick-sliced bacon,
c"°ked and crumbled (about
113 cup)
Grilled Chicken Breast
To prepare sauce: In a small
sducepan place 1/4 cup butter
~d the lemon juice; heat until
butter melts. Add mushrooms;
caok covered, over medium-low
h6at, stirring occasionally, until
t$der, about 5 minutes.
: Using a slotted spoon.
r~ove mushrooms to a cup.
Tiansfer liquid to another cup;
sdt mushrooms and liquid
8.#de. In a large skillet p\ace
1/2 teaspoon coarsely ground
black pepper
6 boned and skinned chicken
breast halves (about 1-3/4 .
pounds)
In a cup combine shallots, oil,
basil, thyme, salt and black
pepper. In a glass baking pan,
· place chicken breasts; rub with
shallotm.ixture.Coverand
refrigerate at least 2 hours or
overnight. Preheat broiler. On a
broiler ~ place chicken
breaati1 broil 4 to 6 inChes from
heat until no longer pink, turn-
ing once, about 10 minutes. • U
using parsley, add 2 teaspoons
dried basil, crushed. Yield: 6
portions, 2 .. 112 cups sauce.
Fresh mushroom melange with
herbs and pine nuts on salad
greens
8 cups mixed salad greens
~~
4 tab)Mpoons olive oil, divided
1 pound mixed fresh mush-
rooms, sliced (including white-;-
shiitake, cnmi.m and oyster)
1/-4 cup pine nuts •
114 cup finely chopped .shallots
or onion
1-1/2 teaspoons minced garlic
1/4 cup sherry wine vinegar
2 tablespoons chopped fresh
chives or 1 tablespoon sliced
green onion (scallion)
112 teaspoon salt
1/4 teas~n ground black pep-
per
In a large salad bowl place
salad greens; set aside. In a
large skillet over medium-lugh
heat, heat 3 tablespoons oil.
Add mushrooms; cook, stirring
occasionally, until browned, 3 to
5 minutes; transfer to salad
tablespoon oil; stir in pine nuts:
cook, stlrrtng frequently, until
golden, 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in
shallots and garlic; cook, stir-
ring occa~onally, until ctisp-
tender, about 1 minute. Add
vinegar, scraping up any brown
bits from the pan. Stir in chives,
salt and black peppet Pour over
salad mixture; toss to coat.
bowl. .
In skillet heat remaining 1
Serve immediately. Yield: 4
.. to 6 portions.
---:--.
-~~-. ., We Doullle Manufacturers' Coupons ••• We Accept All Oiiier Supe1111arkets Coupons•
CALIFORNIA, WHOLE BODY-LIMIT 4
MARIE CAI I 1NDER'S
DINN IRS
13T017-0Z.POTPIES 2·tS OR 9-0Z. PIZZA O
SAVI 2.11 OH TWO R
BAYIR
CHILDRIN'S ASPIRIN
SAVI UP TO .50 36-CT. ORANGE OR OiERRY , 99
..
BEEF
ROAST
NABISCO
FRUR NEWTONS
11TO16-0Z. ASSTD. VAR2ft5 SAVI 1 .$1 ON 1WO 0 •
HUGHES
COTTAGE CHEESE
16-0Z. REG., LOW FAT
OR NON FAT 149
LARGE NECTARINES
KUINIX HONEY CURED
FACIAL ftlSUI HAM
1750R70T0108-CT. 99~ lWVK1 ~ff~e.wM 4" SAVI .30 ~ OIU SUCEO TO ORDER ~~ LI.
SWEET, CHILEAN GROWN
BLOOMING
MUMS
6·1NCHPOTIN 3" MATCHING COVER •
SOUR CREAM
COFFEE CAKE
S·INCHROUN _ ___,. FRESH BAKEDb 279
OSCAR MAYER
LUNCHABLES
4.5·0Z ASSTD VARIETIES A ·ts SAVE 2.16 ON FOUi 0 . .. .
STONYFIELD
NON FAT YOGURT
8-0Z. ASSTO. VAR
SAVE.33 so~
~-----.---
12·PACK
HAMM'SBEER
2.~:~~n 3 99
AVAii.AiU IN STOU
GLOBI A·1
PASTA
All VARIETIES
shallots and wine. Cook over ~
hlghneat until wine evaporates
but shallots are still moist,
about 10 minutes.
~ Add beef broth, 1 cup water
apd reserved mushroom liquid;
reduce,over high heat until 1-
tla cup~ce remains, about
1~ minutes. In same saucepan
upd to cook mushrooms, melt 2
~~lespoons butter. Add onions,
tlie sugar and 1 tablespoon
•ter; cook uncovered, over
~um-low h eat, stirring fre-
<I1fently, until tender and gold·
efl! al>out 10 minutes. Stir
oiions into reduCed ~uce
aJOiigA~th bacon and reserved ~hi'Oom1.
:l~Y slice chicken1 arrange
•l!Ch breast on a 1erving plate.
Slittl remaining 2 tablespoons
-Into MUce, heating juat \!,4J butter ts mcotporated.
hot, over chicken.
~Chldlen ..... ~ ... ::7"""---....."""'__...____ .l!!!!!::!!~;;;;;;;~!!;.::::::::::::::.::::::::~::::::.. ......
ui cUp minced lballotl QI' r2lii~~2=fiiii~~~~~iililiit£= r~ .. oU
~.......................... ·=a:,,, .. .... w ........ .....
-,. ....
It~ a battle 1bm Bclwarda went
thiough le• than two yean ago:
But UU. Ume, he~ encoW'aglng
peopJe to vote no.
Ectwcudl, an attorney and a New-
port Beach city council member
aJnce 1994, II one of the city's moat
~n1%able authorltie• on aJ.rpon
iasues. A longtime proponent of
commercial CJVlaUon at the Marlne
Corps A1r Stat.JOn, Edwards lobbied
heavily for the ~ge of MeCJ6ure
A in t 994. That iiUUallve, which
ca.Us for commercial aviation oul of
the mar1ne base once the facility
closea in 1999, passed by a narrow
51%-49% margin.
Now Measure A is under attack.
In addition to a lawsuit chaHenglng
its validity, a March 26 ballot lnltia-
Uve, Utled Measure S, Is deslgned to
repeal Me(lSure A and dlssolve the '
El Thro Alrport Citizen Advisory
Committee. Because the federal
government has the ultimate say on
what happens to the bqse, Edwards
calls the philosophy behind the
Measure S argument a "giant step
backward for the county."
This week, Edwards met with
Daily Pilot reporter Evan Henerson
to discuss Measure S and the future
of the El Toro Marine base.
~~,,__.. ____ ..:_-F..--=--;.~~~--~mfuumlJi;u:s,nlthPMl!1~J.reS
ballot inJtlatlve appear to be fairly ·
clear ln their lntenUons. Is this sim-
ply an effort to wipe out Measure
AJ
There are lots of hidden glitches.
To people who don't read the initia-
tive,.its apparent intent is to merely
. repeal Measure A, but if you look at
the language, it goes wa.y beyond a
mere repeal.
Measure S has the federal gov-
ernment retain ownership of base
until 2015 which is well beyond any
expectations of what is anticipated
by even people who don't want an
airport there. So essentially, there's
no planning.
a .um margin. wu tbtrc:reatlon of a
M...ure·S or a comHfable ln1Ua-
ttve lnevltableJ
• •
No. You'll hear fiom people in
Irvine and Lake Forest that they're
somehow not brougtit into planning·
process, saying that for a lot of
them, that's what prompted Mea-
sure S. But Measure S goes beyond
bringi,ng them into the planning
process. Three times, the county
Bbard of Supervisors sought to
appoint the cities of Irvine and. Lake
Forest to the El Toro Citizens Advi-
sory Committee so they can study
aviation or non-aviation uses. Three
times, the cities have publicly said
they will not accept a seat unless it's
on their specific terms. So, no I don't
think Measure S was inevitable. ln
my opinion, they could have had
input.
Can you comment at all about
some of the people who are push-
ing the Measure S agendaf .
I debated (initiative co-authors}
Bill Kogerman and Bert Hack on
Measure A the last time around.
They're nice'felloW5, but I just think
they're being short-sighted. To IJJ.e.
this would be ~ major step back for
ing to the past as opposed to what
this county can ultimately be in
terms of tts diversity, jobs, economy,
culture.
It's been an airport for over 50
years. Every planning decision in
the last 50 years has been based on
the fact that it is an airport and
would remain an airport for the
foreseeable future. And opponents
seem to be arguing somehow that
there hasn't been planning taking
place. The thing I'd hate to see hap-
pen, if Measure S passes, the gov-
ernment could basically say we're
just going to make the whole thing
an airport, all 4,700 acres. They
have the ability to do that
Do you have any predictions on
the outcome of the elecUon f
about.
There's always Idle talk about
Soq1h County seceding and lorm-
lng a separate county. Could the
outcome of Measure S further open
the rlft between North and South
CountyJ
I can't speak for South County,
but I've been to meetings where
cities send their city managers and
there's a real distrust. Yet I feel
everybody cbuld argue that they
don't feel they're getting a fair
shake. We live in a big county, it's
almost like a small state, so I'm sure
it will have some effect.
When I got involved in Measure
A, I got involved in it pretty much
from the city of Newport Beach per-
spective. But when I starte<! looking
at all the information, it's reCllly a
no-brainer for the people of the
county. It's sort of like, why are we
having this discussion over an air-
port that's been there for 50 years?
It seems to be a natural when you
look at what it does for the econo-
my. We're talking 53,000 jobs, an
annual payroll of $1.7 billion and
the ability to let a lQt of business
compete at a larger scale. Form an
economic standpoint, it'~ally the ~tndual n( ~'!!'!-!¥-
Orlgtnally, how did you get
involved ln airport-related lssuesf
We moved into area approxi-
mately 20 years ago. I was talking
to a neighbor, and somebody said
there was meeting at Jackie
Heather's house. She was very
active in Mariners Community
Association. That's where I got ·
interested in the issue. r raised my
hand and said I'd do some follow-
up work. That's how I got involved.
"The thing I'd hate to see happen, if Mea-
sure S passes, the government could basic-
ally say we're just going to make the whole
thing an airport, all 4, 700 acres. They have
(Measure S proponents} talk
about how they're going to look for
highest and best use, but there Is
absolutely no planning process put
in place by the initiative. They say
that base should be developed to a
level of environment insignificance.
That would mean no development
which ls essentially what this talks
about. Forget whether you want an
amusement park, another Disney-
land down there, it would not hap-
pen if Measure S is passed because
anything is going tD have some lev-
el of significance.
I think Measure S is going tO go
down, although I could be wrong. I
don't generally like to predict what
the electorate will do. There will be
a real strong turnout in south county
and it's a Republican primary. I
guess it depends on how people
view this, whether they see this as a
step forward. I think north county
residents will vote against S,
because they think the concept of
jobs the economy, the planning
process will equal what they think
the future of the county should be
I lived in the area and l saw
what was going on regarding the
airport. There were concerns about
how John Wayne was going to
expand Bac)t in 1979, there was lot
going on. l'fiere was a proposal for
the master plan at John Wayne and
administrative bearings. I participat-
ed in those hearings, in the environ-
mental impact report bearings and
with the Mariners Community Asso-
ciation.
How much extra time do you
plan to devote to the oppose Mea·
sure S campalgnt
Whatever people need. Maybe
an extra 10-20 hours a week. That's
probably what I spent last time in
terms of debates or talking to
groups. the ability to do that ... " -TOM EDWARDS When Measure A passed by such
Two views on the
proposed Monte
VISta school sale
Should our School District
nustees be "hesitant" about try.
ing to create a loophole in the
(Naylor Act) law to sell the
Monte Vista school property?
Absolutely.
Our school distrtci-attetnpts to
teach our kids not to believe "the
end justifies the means," and it is
not okay to be selfish and "two
wrongs do not make a right.~ But
we all know, actions speak
louder than words.
That is why it is troubhng
when our trustees advocate
ignoring the sprrit of the law, if
not the letter, by creating a loop-
hole because "our extreme sttua-
tion • (Serene Stokes} justifies it,
or because •we pretty muc.Q
haVe to look at this from a selfish
9t8Ddpomt" (Jim Ferryman)
If it was wrong that our school
distrld administrators and/or
trustees let us be put in this
fmandal situation of woe, are we
teach.ing the kid1 that another
wrong Will somehow make a
rlohU
Are we teaching the kidS, to
"do u I say, not as I do?"
Ed Decker ii to be prailed for
his <-omments that we should
take th tii h n>ad Ud~y
correspondence
with the intent of the Naylor Act
law. That is teaclung by exam-
ple
We must remember, the peo-
ple own the school district and
the people own the city of Costa
Mesa.
Do we really want to pay
again as owners of the city for
the property that we already
paidior as owners of the school
District?
MICHAEL R. DUNLEVIE
Costa Mesa
I have been·following your
coverage of the city of Costa
Mesa's attempt to purchase the
Monte Vista School site for use
as a park at a fraction of its true
value.
It might be good to review
some of the history relative to the
unification of the three school
districts, use of property and
educating our children.
Costa Mesa res1dentS forced
unification on Newport Beach in
1965 with Newport taxpayers
getting a huge tax increase of
$1.70 per $100 while Costa Mesa
had an increase of one cent.
Costa Mesa's~nttlbution to
the newly tihitied district was Jots
of land. Urilflcation promised
~al programs and serViC8 for
all youngsten olJhe Ne\\IJ>Ort •
Costa Mesa area.
The distritt hu 'Men more
than fair With the dty of Costa
Mesa in making property avail·
able for parkl, stJeet Widening,
as well as use of its gymnasiums,
fields and excess facilities.
nue, in the past, the school
district has made some of its
e;xcess property available to the
city at a very large discount
(vacant lots on Estancia Drive, as
well as sites for Tanager and
Wakeham Parks).
The fact is the district needs
the funds from tbe_sale o1Monte
Vista for extremely important
purposes.
The time has come now for
the city folk to realize that aH •
money derived from the sale of
the Monte Vista site will go to
making our schools, saler, clean-
er, brighter and better eqipped
learning centers. ·
Any money the city may
"negotiate" at a longer price
than maximum will be fwldi that
could have been used to
enhailce the education of our
children. It is time for the city
and tdlool district to work
together to make Costa Mesa a
better place for adults aDd chil-
dren to live, play and learn.
They could work together to
make the other 50 aaes of land
the diitrlct owns on the eut Ii.de
more suitable for park activtti~.
If th~ put themselves to it;
they eould mue all the ichool
fadlitiet available to the dty for
tcheduling ol all activtties iD
non-schOol bOun an,.,..
1tOD MACMQ 1 IA.N
Ponner NewpOrt-Mela lJnifted
~.C...Mese
best of th.e readers hotline
Thanks for .Ferguson portrayalS
0 n behalf of Costa Mesa
High School please let
me express our sincere
appredation for the caring, sen-
sitive manner in which you cov-
ered the story of Jason Ferguson
over the past year. .
Reporters Tula Borgatta, Car-
olyn Miller and Julie Ross Can·
non. along wiUl Sports Edltor
Roger Carlson, Barry Faulkner
and Jim Walters did an excellent
job of portraying Jason's story to
the community.
The outpouring of concern
that we have received at the
school is because of, in large
part, your paper.
While it may be true that the
Pacific Coast League Champi-
onship is not within our reach,
we are a~are that victories on
the court cmne and go.
The liellons that Jason has
ta~ht all ol us will last • If• ttme. Becau.e cit Juan we are
champlonsl
KATHY KOENIG
School Community Coordinator
Costa Mesa High
service, the food was good, and
my dog was given a "cookie" by
the owner -a charming and
friendly girl named, Jodie. I
enjoyed the view, the friendli-
ness of the people walking past
-and it was a very pleasant
experience.
The joggers were the biggest
problem I experienced while vis· iting'Balboa"lslAJi .~~~~"'-',__~
LEE AMES
Scottsdale, Ariz
Balboa·s roads ate
much neglected
Balboa must be considered as
an illegitimate offspring of New-
port Beach.
The deplorable conditton of
Balboa Boulevard resemblei
some of the 'Third World CO\Ul·
ties I've Visited.
Tbe only decant stretcll ls by
the Newport FJemen~ School
Where $900,000 was spent (and
whiC:b by the recent rain it did
not solve anything).
Prom that point on, tho.
Boulevard becomes an obstacle
coune almost to the very end. A
penon OOuld become seaskk
from the way the automobiles go
UR aiad down over the inn~
able patch jobs and where the
canent ti aaclted. Jbe wear '
manent l'8lldlrlll ia ap hie.
I dbd~ lmoW wtaat •
puts Newport to shame in main-
taining and providing decent
roads.
ED FOSTER
Balboa
'
Why pay for a bypass
all over again?
It's interesting to read in your
story. "lrvlne officials say cash
will keep them quiet on
bypass," Daily Pilot Jan. 26 that
Den.n,is O'Neill, Newport Beach
city councilman representing
Corona del Mar and our area, ts
more than willing to take almost
a million dollars of Newport.
Beach's money to pay for the
building of a bypass for an origi-
nal bypass.
The oiigimil bypass was
Newport Coast Road from Cout
Highway to MacArthur BoWe-
vard. Now we're going to~
almost all our money to build a
bypass to the o~ bYJ>!'•·
Why doesn't the aty ~a
little money and help the lawsuit
of the residents and the dtizenl
of Newport Beat:h to keep the
orlgtnaf tiypa. ttee and openl
They hav,n't ~ a nJc:kiil
trying to keep it open.~~
say, Well it's ftC?t a~ l&wsutt
but they won't NY why Jt'• not a
goo<l lawtdll. Jt ..-.. aa our
dty Would ratbet ~ for a dys-
functional county tbail work fCll
its own HHzww.
and tear on the can °'E"
mmt ii......,. lair coa-H-__;~-,llmM.l.DJlll ... H H
dllkliaaltbel'Mdl.bulitJladil-
~· om Miii. our mtgbbGt, •
f
SCHOOLS Newport Elementaiy, and New-
port Htdghts ant .eemo drUUc
iDa'8Uel in tramf• enrollment.
"Tbat<:a.-us eome~·
lbeMld. m.bor' View WU OM ol
few ett.oall open became ol tbe
district's dlCJ6ce policy, h WU not at
capacity.··
with where paregts work and
what's oon.....U.U. • r·------------------·---·---'-~-------------------------, •
CONTINUED FROM A 1
IOID8 ~ the transfer situations are
caUling significant changes in eth-
nic balances .•
At Tuesday's meeting, Mike
Pine, the district's chlef financial
officer, told board members a
1Jrowing number of students are
Jeavbtg Costa Mesa elementary
schools like Whittier, Pomona I ' I Kaiser and Viet.on.. while Newport
Wlllon EJemmtaor a11o aw a
large number ol students transfer-
fuig' out tlilj year, out scbOol offi-
cials attribute that number to la:;t
year's boundary change between
Wl.15on and Adams Elementary.
Most of the transferring students
live in the JoAfm Street triangle
and chose to stay at Ad.ams.
Currently, students can att.erid
any school in the district if the
school is not at capacity. With <&30
students, Harbor View is at 87% of
itsca~ty.
But 10me board members said
they don't think the transfers can
be wholly attributed to white
fiight.
The numbers for middle and
high school transfer 'ltUdeDtl are a
little misleading. Once a student
has transferred to an elementary
school in another zone, ~ are
automatically "nrolled in that
zone's middle and high schools
and aren't considered transfers,
said Fluor. ·
--... .... .:-' T ~--..... -,4'r" --~Jir"t.---' -. "M.:..._~~ -=---· IJ -=~~-"---_:--~·~-__ -_ ..... •»_~ ---
+c.o.t.Mesa Vtetoria
In Out Whittier
Adams 110 30 Wilson
Calif om la ... 33 23 • Newport 9Mdl
College Par1C. 19 36
Kaiser 47 67 Andenen
Kaiser Primary 9 24 Harbor View
Klllybrooke 24 20 Lincoln
Paularino 25 34 Marinen
Pomona 10 34 Newport Elem.
Sonora 40 26 Newport Heights
17 • 7 42
13 139
In Out •
12 17
68 11
26 J 25
58 21
42 15
64 11
Beach's Harbor View, Mariners,
1h1stee Martlul Fluor said she's
awareofalargenumberof Adam.s
students who transferred to Coro-
na del Mar's Harbor View, at the
other side of the district.
"I'm not sure it's a white flight
situation,• said board president
Jim de Boom. "It might have to do
$ch.ool board members will
meet Feb. 20 for another over-
crowding study session. Revisions
to the district's transfer policy will
come before the board for discus-
sion and action Feb. 13. L------------------------------~-----------------------j
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with precious stones ... guaranteed
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with a i& that will last a lifetime. ~----~--~~ .......
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1803 Westcllff Drive, N.B.
Valentine
pPCiaJ
Buy I dinner
~a:~~'Janean
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Roasted Qua ll
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Couscous Vege table
UJl'tCHatD~
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Give the gi~ of Relaxation
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eeth ar
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50%off
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Christi Frantz
Paul Dangler
Elyse Fradkin
CHARLES H. BARR
642-3310
• Steam Embraa • Aromatherapy
• 1 HOllr F11U Body Massage
GFT CERTFICATES AVM..ABl.E • OFfER EXPRES l/31/96
Va1enttne's lJtq
u. MO' bott1~
"""~ .,,..... .. '° fwl
~ lllltllJ'•• tr.
MJl'*'..,I l'I t'
-~·--·,..d-
1"4ilill .. ---·····.
C:0.... MMe poUce OD A\IP·
oi ~and abduct·
bll tCHDoada-old bdf, remt-
..... ad ~til)g a custody order. ~ laid. The baby,
Milko, slept through the
..ct w,. not barined.
Tie standoff in the 2900 block
Hubot BoukWard was emo-
J.,aaJ.l.Y charged becaU88 officers aell'ed Milko had a gl.µl. Howev-
• the incident ended without
y Injuries or guns fired and offi-
.found he wasn't armed.
COit.a Mesa police were alert-
by Las Vegas Metro Police
ednesday evening that ~o
abducted his lO•month-old
whom be did not have cus~
y of, and was headed for a
1n.,...c:}ltte1 Mesa strip mall to pick up
h, Costa Mesa police Capt.
ve Brooks said.
Police had Milk.o's desaiption
.and spotted him as he was leav-
ing the Harbor Mail Center,
Wt.re be WU.CS h....., ...., = wbO nfuled to get au& -~~~
llil car Gld Wll ~ tbil ~ ol bis lurr8D
der.
"The guy l8ell1I to be Dutl
and claims he is a candidate for
~t and an actor,• Brooks
said. •And as a presideritial can-
didate, he Will only give hJ.JM8lf
up to an PBI agent."
He did talk at length, how~ver,
to the three police hostage nego-
tiators who tried to keep him
calm.
•He showed us an application
for running for president." said
Costa Mesa police Sgt. Gary
McErlain, a negotiator. ·1 glanced
at it. It looked like some sort of
homemade computer paper.•
When an FBI agent arrived at
about 8:30 p.m., he was able to
convince Milito to roll down his
window more to talk, then finally
tum over the baby. Once the bal>y
was sale, police moved in quickly
and arrested Milko without inci-
dent.
"He said that he would make
voluntee·r directory
.! THE VOUJNIEER DIRECTORY runs
periodically In the Dally Pilot. If you'd
c like Information on getting your orga-
nization listed, call 642-4321, Ext. 331.
, ORTON DYSLEXIA SOOETY
The Orton DY$lexia Society needs
people to help teach reading skills,
work on malllnga and coordinate the
adult group. For lnlormation, call 999-
0118 between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
MOAC SYMPHONY ORO.ESTRA
t~rs to assist children in a variety of
hands-on musical activities. Volunt~ers
spend a total of six Saturday mornings
with the children. Call 755-5788, Ext.
244.
PEDIATRIC CA.NaR
RESEARO. FOUNDATION
The foundation raises money to support
the pediatric cancer resee.rc:h laboratoiy at
the Olildren's Hospital of Orange. lt needs
vol\lllteers for a variety of duties. Call the
main dfice, 532-a69'2.
PRENTICE DAY SO.OOL
,.__ ___ 1lie~~'.~D~d~~~:lQ:....-+-....,l;l~~~~~~~
ny Orchestra's Volunteers in Education
, Opportunities program needs voloo-
.... --........ 1&1111111 ........... =find.· .... -.Id, s. aDd
Rlllftd. ......... .,.. .... ~ ..... ,...,..
cs, ltU8ed with ldl end the
babJ"I be1aaglap and decorated
Wttb IArge ltkbrs 1aylng, •Mllko
for PrMldent,• and •Mllko for
U.S. COngiwww. • A'netbeJ' bumper
aticker lmkle t1be ..car Mid, •My
other car ii a presidantia1 limb,"
and a package ot Gerber beby
food was amongst the trash litter-
ing his dashboard. .
Police didn't evacuate any of
the businesses in the strip mall
because they nevet thought the
man posed any real danger to the
public, only to the baby, Brooks
said.
Milito was boOked into Costa
Mesa City Jail and is being held .
in lieu of $10,000 bail.
Even tho\lgh he violated a cus-
tody court order prohibiting him
from associating, contacting or
harassing his son or the baby's
mother, be is being charged with
only child abduction, not kidnap-
ping, because he is a non-custody
parent, police said.
cific language disabilities/dyslexia. Vol-
unteers are needed in many areas. For
lnlormation, call 538-4511.
PRIME DYNAMJCS
Prime Dynamics, a Newport Beach
non-profit organization for the 99 and
younger 5et, needs -.iolunteers for its
programs. Call 262-7300.
PROJECT TOGETHER
Pro1ect.. Together, a component of the
Orange County Health Care-Agency's
Cluld.ren's Mental Health Services,
matches adult volunteers with children
who are emotional or
E
CONTINUED FllOM At
Mac Bemd, wbo1e travel
report showed S392 tn
expenses.
While he didn't use the
room during the conference,
Bernd said other board mem-
bers did.
"It's not fair to tag Franco
for the whole thing, but it's
also not fall' to charge the
same to other board members
who didn't use it,• Bemd said.
Fluor stayed over with
Franco the first night of the
delegate assembly, but said
sbe decided to commute the
'STRANGER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
and neighborhood children who
may not know bow to act should
the stranger choose to strike
again, Schultz said.
"Our concern is that this guy is
on the loose and parents don't
have a clue," said Schultz, wfio
added police and schOQl officials
were immediately notified of the
incident. "The school said, 'We
can't tell students because it will
cause a panic,• but parents should
know this creep is out there."
Police arrived at the scene at
2:20 p.m. and searched the area
for the man, but there was no
trace of him or the RV, Costa
Mesa police Sgt. George Yezbick
said.
The suspect is described as a
white . · · 50s or_ 6
about 5 feet 11 inches tall, dean
netoltlaedeye.. ·~ doa't 1tay,• Pluor • dloee to tpUd
tile nlabt OM ldgbt. but molt
of us clro.e beck and fortti. I\
Other bOucl ....... Mid
they used tbe 1001D qondi·
cally as • gathering place
before going to dinner or to a
conferebce Htlion.
•1t•1 nice tor us to have ..
place to relu and compare
notes in the privacy of a room
instead of the crowded lob·.
by,• said board 'president Jim
de Boom. •And I don't like
using public restrooms.•
Other board members said
they wefe trying to be cost-
con5cious instead of getting
indiVidu41 rooms for all the
shaven, heavy-set with gray hair.
He was wearing 1l brown vest and
jeans.
Schultz and police want chil-
dren in the area to keep an eye
out for the man and run for help i1
they are approached.
"Do just exactly as the kid did
and run away from the guy,"
Yezbick said. "And go to school
or home, wbicllever is closer."
Schultz said school administra-
tors assured him they would
inform teachers about the inci-
dent and instruct students on
safety measures.
The only expensive thing
about our produce is the taste.
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Drawing To Be Held April 2 7, 1996
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I umit I coupon per cust~. Expires 2/7196 I L-----------------------------~ r-----------------------------, : Free Ground Turkey :. I Buy 1 pound of our freshly gr_ound turkey , 1
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1 Jui ces,
1
get a second bottle free! I
I Limit 1 coupon per CUSCOJ'M'. Expires 2/7196 I L--~--------------------------~ r-----------------------------, f ~ Free Arctic Springs Water I I Buy J. ( 1 .5 Liter) of Arctic Springs Water, get I
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I Buy I of our rresh baked I
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I FREEi I I Limit on1 coupon ,... customer. I
Expires 2fT /98 L------------~ FarmersMarI<.et
Ac Lake MMltlon Wjo
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Open~1996
At...._Plua
J1109 linch0 Vttjo Rd.
S., J.-°'*'8no 9267S
71+1*-0838 HOVRSi
M..Prlf/r»a s ........... u
board• .......
• (PrUCO) decided abe W&I
goina .to •Y cwendalll uy· way lMteauae lbe bad" a lot of
early mornlDg meeting• as
put of the delegate UMJDbly,
and the rest ol us Just met
there before meeting• and
dinners,• said trustee Ed
Decker. •1t saves the district a
lot of money.•
But because.Pranco stayed
at the hotel overnight, she ate
all of her meals in Long
Beach, raising ber meal bill to
.nearly $110 while other board
mempera apent about $60
eoch. ·
This year, boa.rd memben
will have to travel to Sail Jose
for the annual conference.
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EYE-OPENER
South African John Bland
headed for Seni.or Classic
QUOTE OF THE DAY
~MJG1a6i(g,,,_.~_.~
bell -"'*""" did m • -~TANOA HOOPS <XMOl 11N .MltSQ,
• ~ • J
.. ~ I
Tai-s .fill b8sehall coachillg void with Jim Kiefer
•
•New coach comes from
baseball-deep background;
says hopes rest on basics.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH' -Jim
Kief er, 25, an assistant coach the ,
last four seasons at Brea Olinda
High, bas been named baseball
coach at Newport Harbor High,
Sailors Athletic Director Eric
1Weit announced Wednesday.
Kiefer, a Yorba Linda resident
who also accep~ed a teaching
position at Newport in physical
education, replaces Kirk Bates,
who resigned Jan. 9 after compil-
ing a 32-80-1 record in five sea-
sons.
south African John
Bland. one Of the hottest
gQJfers on the Senior PGA
Tour, hu committe<l to the
,,I want to make Newport Har· cw'rently is athletic director and
bor baseball something a kid is track and field coach at Fullerton
going to look at and say, 'Hey, I'd College, as well as Brea Coach.
like to be a part of that: # said Steve Hiskey and Cal State
Kiefer, an overachieving • left-Fullerton legend Augie Garrido~
handed pitcher at Rowland High "(Hiskey) has built a very suc-
and Fullerton College, before cessful program at Brea (the last
completing his education at Cal two Orange League champi-
State Fullerton. onsbips as well as the 1994 Pride
"I plan to be enthusiastic and of the Coast Tournament crown)
promote l>aseball in this area and and I'm glad to have been a part
I'm excited about it. I've always of that."
loved baseball, I'm a student of -Kiefer said his dad's greatest
the game, and I think I've always adVice has been in the area of
· had a coaching mentality. I think I how to build a program. Toward
we can create some enthusiasm that end, Kiefer said bis philoso-
and notoriety by ·working hard phy is based on three principles.
and doing some of the things I've •First, the kids are the most
learned from my mentors." important thing," be explained.
Kiefer said his coaching influ-"I'm not in this for the press or the
ences include bis father, J.C., a money, b!t just to help a group of
25-year coaching veteran who high school kids get the most out
of their baseball experience.
"Secondly, a goal o( mine is to
bring a diverse group of kids
together to work towQ.Td a com-
mon goal, whether that be to
work hard and enjoy team cama-
raderie, or to be competitive and
beat people.
"The third thing is to try to
teach th0u} respect for the game
of baseball."
Kiefer, who plans to work
closely with pitchers, said h1s on-
field philosophy is based on fun.
damentals, and, like Bates, be is a
proponent of "little ball.·
"Pitching and defense is what
makes a team successful, so I
want us to throw strikes and play
catch. Offensively, we'll have to
manufacture runs."
Kiefer, who coached Sailor
standouts Joe Urban and Garrett
Nuzum last fall with the New
York Yankees •scout team,• said
he will retain the existing lower-
level staff, but will ask that all lev-
els implement his system
#I'm an advocate of teaching
on a program-Wide basis. I know
the timing of my arrival (practice
begins Feb. 17 with the season
opening March 1) will present a
challenge. I'll be trying to get to
know the players and they'll be
trying to get to know me.•
Kiefer said he welcomes the
strong competition from the rest
of the Sea View League, against
which the Tars have lost 27 of 29
games the last two springs.
"Playing against quality pro-
grams should raise our level of
play." he said.
high school boys basketball
Eagles hold on, win, 51-48
TOshiba Senior Classic at • Estancia prevails despite a NeWport Beach Colllltry
Mesa's season
of agony goes
~----~£'.!!~U~-~h~1~~~1'1L===--J~-!.......S!!!9Q~~~enil·t\4 .QOP-" .llD bv -., r•v ""1 z
Bland, who turned 50 late ·th thr 1 Jut~ to become eligible two games wi ee to p ay.
for the Senior Tour, is
coming off a s~cular
tdumph at the 5e.nior •
Tournament o( Champions
in Puerto Rico to win his
Second dtJe in only four
events lince joming the
Circuit. Stand also won the
Ralph's Senior Classic at
WUsbire Country Club in
October to qualify for the
ToUl'D4Dlent of Champions,
which launched the Senior
Tour season Jan. 19-21.
•1t'1 qµite an
acoomj>llihnient for a new
~,_ on the tOur to oome
out .ana Wia two of his tint
foUi tournaments like that,
~DytbeTo~t
of CbampioDs, .. Michael
~. eventmanager, said
Wedrielday.
-By Richard Dunn
I -------------------------~
GOLE
richard
dunn
Paulson
still seeks
the elusive
short touch
• On the greens is where
Costa Mesa's Dennis ·
Paulson searches for the
magical combination.
A s the axiom goes, you
drive for show and putt
for dough. Dennis
PaulsOn can tell you about it.
Paulson's a strong guy.
Wetgm abOut 195 pounds. He
can aush off the tee. One year,
oilly week.a alter playing his
seniOr year at San Diego State,
Paulson won the prestigious
NatiOnel Long Drive
ctwnptooship.
·1·ve ways felt like [ was a
goOd paaye ... " Paulson said last
week. after a roU.nd at the
N~ Claalc Pro-Am. •1t•1 a
bummer, beoaUR I've always
been lmowD for my drivtng. •
la UMN and 1995, Paullon'a
hWO ,_.cm the POA Tour, he
'"""'Nd llCODd 4M third In dd*" dalluat. an average OI • ,..bl .... _._..._, ... '°"
.......... hullan. wllo son ; -•two ..............
cllll-.!-11. tar"-* .....
By aarry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Estancia High boys
basketball coach nm Parsel might have
shaken his head Wednesday night, had
he not seen it so many times before.
As the evidence against a huge Paci.f-
ie Coast League victory over visiting
Laguna Hills continued to mount,
Estancia's level of play appeared to
somehow rise at a slightly higher rate,
allowing the hosts to secure a 51-48 deci-
sion, as well as the inside track toward
back-to-back PCL titles
·This was a big game,• Parsel said,
after moving two games ahead of three
teams tied for second place with three to
play. •Anything can happen, but we
Novak
needed that one.•
It was the Hawks,
however, who
appeared willing to
match their 73-60
first-round triumph
over Estancia in a
game that featured 10
lead changes, only 14
combined turnovers,
and some unlikely
occurrences.
Consider:
• Estancia made
just 1 of 12 field goal attempts in the sec-
ond quarter, but managed to tum a 14-14
first-quarter deadlock into a 22-21 half-
time lead.
• The Eagles missed 8 of 15 free
throws through the first 23 nunutes, until
Dane Plock's three consecutive foul shots
broke a 31-31 tie Wlth 50 seconds left in
the third period.
• Estancia center Chris Candlish,
who bad sparkled in his first league start
after battling back from pneumorua, took
just 20 seconds late in the third quarter to
p1ck up bis third and fourth fouls. He
spent the next 5:26 on the bench biting
his nails.
• Eagle ~or point guard Dane
Plock was held to just one field goal (a
layup off a steal) and seven points, one
above his season low.
• An ill-advised foul beyond the
three-point line gave tfawk star Mike
Scaglione three free throws with 12 sec-
onds left. He made all three, allowing the
visitors to pull within a desperation
three-pointer from sending the game
into overtime.
But, as it has done time and time
againr Estancia (19-.4, 6-1 in league and
ranked No. 3 in CIF Southern Section W-
A) made plays when it counted, with
On --~th !'7~ A_') n.a I I till.
loss at Aliso
STANDINGS
DON UACH I DAl..Y Pl.OT
Chris Candlish (left), Nick Novak (12) smother an attack.
senior Nick Novak stepping to the fore-
front on both ends of the floor in the hnal
eight minutes
Novak, a mere 6-foot-2, 160-pounds,
posted nine of h1s 13 pomts m the fourth
period, assisting on Candlish's final
bucket, as well. He finished with a team-
high seven rebounds and drilled two
front ends of one-and-one free-throw
opportunities in the final 43 seconds, 3 of
4 from the line during that crucial stretch.
Perhaps his biggest contribution,
however, came at the defensive end,
whet€be"helped smother Scaglione, last
year's Daily Pilot "PCL Co-Player of the
Year as a jwlior.
After collectin~early half ( 10) of the
Hawks' first-half points, the league's
leading scorer (19.4
per game coming in)
took JUSt three shots
from
the field after inter-
mission. Scaglione, under Novak's blan·
ket, never even touched the ball in the
final 10 seconds, forcing Hawk forward
Rashad Coleman to boist a three-pointer
-only bis second shot of the game and
first since the eighth minute -which
Plock blocked at the buzzer.
•(Novak) just gets better every time
out,• Parse! said "When be makes a JtUS.
take, I'm always surprised.•
Parsel also praised Omd.lish. who fin ..
• SEE EAGLES PAGE 83
Cday
MOc*eU
... a wood
torw
..m.illaot . ........
~........
Ne4art = .......
CIEi .. Ht --Ill ••
'1rtb-sb-ai t
-win campaign ·
t Orange Coast
t
•Pirates' women's
~ketball coach has five
m~~ose magical 20s in
~en years; but there is·,·
4hotber item which might
· 9ive hiril even more
Pleasure -the elusive
~ct<>ry over Golden West.
I
®range Coast College
women's basketball
Coach Mike Thornton
marked a milestone Friday,
reaching· the 20-win plateau for
tfie fourth straight season, and
fOf the fifth time in his seven
seasons at the OCC helm.
jim
waiters
OCC is now 21-6 after
defeating Cypress Wednesday,
68-42. The Pirates, 7-2 in Orange
Empire Conference action, are
alone in second place and
appear on pace for the team's
fourth straight playoff appear-
ance.
All-Orange Empire Conference
last season as a freshman. Shine
is second in the conference in
scoring with an 18.1 average per
game and third in shooting from
the floor (51.6%). She's also tied
for third in rebounding at 11.3.
Freshman guard Tina Afan
has been a stabilizing force in
the backcourt while dishing out
5.4 ~sists a game (third best in
the ,conference).
Wm No. 20 came Jast Friday,
a 64-49 hammering of a good
Riverside game.
•Reaching 20 wins means our
program has Deen~ -
consistent,• Thomfon said.
"We've been fortunate to have
good student athletes who fit into
our system.
_ Sophomore center Kathleen
Kelly is averaging 11.4 PQints a
game and is third in the
conference in free throw
sliOOtttlg accunicyf14.7"%j.
Q
• Despite all of the success over
the years, one basketball team
has continued to have OCC's
number.
"We're pleased with 20 wins.
Things have gone well for us this
season, but we still have •a lot of
goals we still want to
accomplish."
Golden West (14-lZ, 4-4) has
beaten the Pirate women 21
straight times, including an
early-season 76-73 loss at OCC.
The Pirates had to watch as a
15-point lead midway through
the first half evaporated.
Thornton has had onJy one
losing season at OCC, when the
Pirates went 14-17 in 1990-91.
His overall coaching record is
147-74 at Orange Coast which
translates into a .670 winning
percentage.
Thornton's 1992-93 team,
which holds the school record for
most wins in a season, 27-6, was
the first Pirate team ever to
advance to the State
Townament.
"I don't know what it is,• said
Thornton at the time. "I thought
this was the game we were
going to do it. It's disappointing,
for sure, but we need to look
past Golden West and go on.•
The Pirates have done just
that, but ·nie Streak" still sticks
in the collective craw of Thorn-
ton and ~ Pirates. OCC (22-13) made a retwn
appearance the following season
and last season's 21-13 squad
lost a heartbreak.er in the
semifinals of the Southern
California Regionals.
They'll have another chance
to put an end to the streak this
Friday when they travel to
Golden West for a 5:30 tipoff.
Thornton's first team (1989-90)
went 26-6. His '92 team was 17-13.
The Pirates are unbeaten (4-0)
on the road in conference play
this season, so don't be surprised
if they smash through this barrier
big-time.
The Pirates are led by, center
J~e Shine, who was
COMMUNITY COLLEGE BASEBALL HREVIEW
J)on't necessarily believe ....
~hat you see on 'paper'
• • • • Pirates confident their
gj.tching arsenal will be
a. strong point in '96
"' l)aseball CaJ}lpaign.
Ir Jim Wafters, Daily Pilot
The starting rotation will
feature southpaws Jason Uuz.zi
(6-2, 190) and Jamie Surdock
(5-10, 170), who were both
medical red.shirts last season.
·surdock would have been
our closer last season,• Alto-
belli said. "This year we're
moving him to the starting
rotation and Ryan Evans (a 6-0,
190-pound rtghthanded fresh-
man) will be in the closer role.•
Jim Brewer, a lefty who was
2-0 in 24 innings of relief with
a 4.56 ERA, will play a key
role.
The rest of the staff includes
four freshmen -righthanders
Mike Stevenson and Bryan
Moore and lefties Andy Unnen
and Jairo Guido.
The Pirates have four every-
day players returning to a line-
up that will try to take advan-
tage of some speed at the top
of the order. Fans can expect to
see a lot of bit-and-run plays.
Three returnees, outfi8Jders
Geoff WU.00 ~ Adam Can-
cellierl and shortstop Forest
Long, all bit above .300 for
OCC Ja.t seuon.
Wllloi1 will be movil'lg over
from right field to center. He
was first-team All-Orange
Empire Conference, betting
. 325 While 1eed1ng the tee.ID in
hits With 53. He ICOi"ed 42 rum
and .. 23 of 31 buM. He'll
be In the Pttates' leadoft ipOt.
Cancenteri (5-9, 160) flll·
iibed wtth a .302 av9rage 1n 36
~· ~ .. the rigbt-twdei', he's anotbet ........
He Md four ~ and nine
ttOlen buel Jut .... .
l.cGg (5-5, t..Ot ... ~
lbortltop, bit • ...... •••ding :321 ana ... 12 o113111--.
baa demi* ,. .... No. 2 ...
Catcher Deric Yanagliawa
(5-11, 210) is the other retwn-
ing Pirate. He hit .254, but flirt-
ed with the .300 mark in con-
ference play.
His backups will be Eddie
Mejia (5-10, 230), who could
also see time at designated hit-
ter, and sophomore Graham
Turner (6-0, 208).
The starting infield will
sandwich Long with with three
freshmen -first baseman
Chris Ponchak, second .base-
man Craig Ritter and Rosh
Gruwell at the hot comet.
Ponchak is a righthander
with some power. He'll share
time with Joe Jones (6-3, 195),
who could be the starting des-
ignated hitter.
Ritter (6-0, 175) didn't make
an error last season while earn-
ing SWlSet League's co-MVP
honors. Fonner EStancta High
product J\lan Mendoza (5-10,
170) should see action at sec-
ond. ·
Gruwell (6-2, 190) was a late
arrival for Pall ball, but has a
slight edge for the start1ng job
at third.
P...-shmen li~vis Clutter and~ Roden aro also avail-
• able!tor infield duty .
Preshrium Jeff Gonterman
(.S<!S, 162) will round out the
lineup iil leftfiekl. Joey
(5·9, 170) and Vince
ato (5·10, 110), both
~n. will atso see playing •)D the outflekt.
I ~lllit fear:'• teem .eemed to
~. but thele guys have
bMll Pkldng eecb other up
ttU1 Pall,• AltobeW Mid.
~ )Ult galftig to try and
~ buUdln'g OSI tbat conft..
~.· '
community college hoops
occ falls, 98-84
• Cypress punishes Bucs
in high-scoring affair;
result drops Orange
Coast to 4-5 in Orange
Empire Conference.
COSTA MESA. -The Orange
Coast College men's basketball
team wasted a 21-point effort
from Adrian Reyes Wednesday,
dropping a 98-84 decision to vis-
iting Cypress.
Both teams are now 4-5 in
Orange Empire Conference play
after splitting their season series.
OCC beat Cypress on the road,
83-75.
Despite the loss, OCC (13-13}
already has assured Coach nm
O'BI1en of his best season in bis
four-yeo.r tenure with the Pirates.
The Pirates' 12-19 finish last sea-
son was the previous betil
Orange Coast led 48-43 at the
half, but Cypress shot 58% from
the field in the second half (21 of
36) to pull away for the victory in
the high-scoring affair.
Kevin Morris led all scorers
with 22 points and Jason Krauss
had 21 for Cypress (12-14).
Four OCC players joined
Reyes in double figures. Darnell
Adamson put in 17 points, Matt
Ambrose had 16 points and 13
rebounds, Draper Mitchell scored
12 _poibts and Duane Curtis
chipped in 11 ..
Cypress ... Or .... Cout 14
Cnar-s -Sand o. Neal 18,
Morris 22, Ream 0, Krauss 21,
Pappas 12, Rutter 11, undemeyer 6,
Miller&.
31>0lnters -Pappas 4, Rutter 3.
Or ... Coast ·Reyes 21
Mitchen 12, McCfung 0, Pa~er 0,
Curtb 11, Fracalosy 0, Ambrose 16,
Downs 7, Adamson 17,
3-pointers ·Reyes 5, Curtis 1.
Halftime -Orange Coast, 48-43.
Pirates roll, 68-42
• Cypress is no match for
Orange Coast women as
they improve to 21-6
overall, 7-2 iI\,Orange
Empire Conference play.
COSTA MESA -The Orange
Coast Coll~e women's basket-
ball team Jwn~ out Quickly
Wednesday and ran away wt.th a
68-.42 victory over Otange
Bfnpire Conference cellar-
dweller cyptws.
Jamie $blne . scored t 0 o( her
game-bigh 20 p(Jtntl u occ (21-
6, ?-2) Jijmped out to an eadY 23·
7 lead Md coated to a· ·31.19
tl!iiliUb;l at the bait. . Th8 Plratil lbot 50~ fnllia tbiit fioor, 1eo1n,.._ .. ..,......,
Wtile ~ (IJ11. I.a) ..
Qqlf• 0('21 .--.. ~).
Tina Afan joined Shine in dou-
ble figures with 17 polrits and
Kathleen Kelly added 12.
Shine also pulled down 11
rebounds to help OCC to St-35
edge. Monica Gerad also fin-
ished in double digits on the
bo4rda With 10 and Kelly added
nlne boaida.
Unda Rodriguez led Cypresa
With 16 points and eight
rebounds.
or.., c.we •~a c..-. ...,.. 11, Rodrtgulz 2.
~~~=.\ '°""*' 0. J.palnlln-"°*9p111. .FoUled out ............
~t:t~: =\--~::;,t .................. , 1.
HllfUtaw • ONngt C--. •tt.
MOCKETT
CONTINUED FROM 81
Mockett had made the cut in six of
her first nine LPGA events last year.
"They misdiagnosed it," Mockett said.
"They said it was a weakness in the
rotator cuff, but it wasn't the rotator
cuff .•
Mockett, who has relocated to East
Longmeadow, Mass., decided to see a
specialist, a doctor who knows about
shoulders. So who better than Dr. Brian
Bosconi, a University of Massachusetts
sports-medicine authority who works
with the Boston Red Sox and is
considered one of the leaders in his field
on the East Coast.
•All (Bosconi) does is shoulders, and
he and his partner (Or. Arthur Pappas)
knew right away what it was,• said
Mockett, whose scapula on her left side
had been damaged, causing her "
shoulder to slide in and out of place.•
"(Pappas a.Qd Bo.sconi) w;ere iurprised
I got through the season as far as I did,~
she added.
Mockett, meanwhile, was the
essential ingredient for the Newport
Classic getting five·additional l..PGA
players last week, a tournament record.
On the links, though. she struggled at
Newport Beach Colllltry Oub, shooting a
tw<Klay total of 19-over-par 161, last in ,lbe
field. Muffin Spm.tcer·Oevlin; alSo of the '
LPGA Tour, was Seeond-to-Jast at 18-over.
Before entering the tournament,
Mockett hadn't played competitively in
·six months.
Mockett, who beeame the first woman
prof esslonal to play in the NeWJ>C?rt
Classic last year, Will ljegin her IMlon
officially Peb. 22·24 in the Cup Noodles
Hawaiian Ladies Open. ln Ewa Beech,
Oahu, where she finilhed 11th in 1995 .
In 1993, Moclcett's ro6kle year oa tbe
LPGA Tu\lr, It WU a trial. She dneil the
cut In 16 of 23 tOUl"QaJDllltl, ..ming jult sn.1n. 135th on UMt money Jill Sbe ia.t
her card. Her lhoukW wu m pmn.
Upon f9tUrnlng to the ..... May
UKM, wtth ber .a.alder 41+tdt
blillad. a .jaimd tllll ..... ~
-.. Moclllt ............. tip lOID
... ......... _ tb,)g$d.
,.....~ ...... .
Mlle• .... •-.-~ ~ .............. ~ ,.
-·.
# --r.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------, MUSTANGS
I
THE BIG PUSH
CONTINUED FROM 81
tipoff, •wtt get two 1ubltitutes
off the bench rather than one.•
Aliso Niguel (12·10, 4-3 m
PCL) had startin_g ~ playe1$,
6-foot-5 Jeff Munsell and 6-3
Yousof Etemadi, and two back-
ups, 6-4 Rich Bourne and 6-4
Cory Chandler, who controlled
the game inside.
Aside from Bryan Leahy,
Mesa's only player over 6-1,
the Mµstangs grabbed only
two offensive boards, both
long ricochets to Donny 0go
well beyond the top of the key.
Costa Mes4, fired up early,
drained a tno of three-point
shots in the first quarter to stay
close, 19-15, then pulled to
within 21-20 when guard Mike
Montoya sank a three with
6:31 left in the half.
Aliso Niguel led by baU-
time, 32-25, but Mesa missed
its first nine field-goal attempts
in the third quarter and the
Wolverines' barnstorming 12-1
scorfug run put it away ..
' DON LEACH I DAILY Pk.Of lo Don't be left out -be a part of a community effort
to turn 'Davidson Field' into 'The Dream Field'
Foster, playing his firs
game of the season, nailed
three-pointer with 0:56 left ·
the third, Mesa's first (an
only) field._goal of the period.
HThat seems to always b
our problem, falling off in
third quarter," Freeman sai
*It's fatigue, because they pl
so hard in the first half. We J
Estancla's Dane Plock goes hard to the basket, drawing a foul;· lol•."1,
r----------------------------------·---------------------------------------------, I I
I I I I I I I I I I
I I I I I I
I
I . I
L--------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
SEND YOUR PLEDGE TO MOOERN1ZE DAVIDSON FIELD TO JOHN WAlZ
clo Daviclcion Fleld Reoovaiion Project. 3311 Susan St., Santa Ana. 92704
0 St per pound D SS per pound D $20 per pound .
1 couldn't deal with their b'
guys inside. We're contin ·
to focus on basketball,
that's the way Jtlson would'
wanted it.•
Josh Weeks, Mesa seni ,
had a team-lugh 17 points
Aliso Niguel 71, CosU Mesa 4
Scpre by Quarten
Costa Mesa 1 5 10 6 1 1
Aliso Niguel 19 13 15 24 •
Costa Mesa • Leahy 4, Payne 2
Weeks 17, Montoya 8, Ogo 2,
Correa 6, Foster 3.
3-pointers • Weeks 2, Montoya 2.
Foster 1.
Aliso Niguel -Munsell 21, Mulkay.
Etemadi 5, Daniel 6, Gardner 0,
Childs 6, Chandler 7, Barrett 2,
camadini 4, Evans 6, Bourne 6.
'.!, £. Name< 0 $ ··· -other per pouni Phone N~:;.. _ maximum ~
Address: AffillaUon: ~ I I I I
3-pointers • Mulkay 1. Childs 1,
Etemadl 1.
L------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
youth s ports
Hornets and takers
win big in NJB play
NEWPORT BEACH -The
Newport/Mesa National Junior
Basketball traveling teams, the
Hornets and the Lakers, put
together winning combinations in
weekend action.
The Hornets pulled away from
a halftime tie to take a 54-44 deci-
sion over Diamond Bar.
Dustin Ulingworth scored 10 of
his game-tugh 20 points in the
third quarter for the Hornets. Alec
Hanson had a season-high 13
points (nine on three-pointers).
The sixth-gtade, all-net Lakers
outscored Fount&n Valley 20-1 in
the fourth penod to break open a
two-point game and race away
with dn easy 56-35 win over
Fountdlll Valley
The Lakers held a slun 36-34
headmg into the final period
before busting loose.
Micah Young led the way with
14 points, David Conte added
nine and Ross Fortier had eight.
ID other games:
Division 3
Bulls def. the Sonics
The Bulls beat the Sonics
behind the 20-point, 12-rebound
effort of Taylor Young. Michael
Planders pitched in seven assists.
The Bulls got some good
defensive eUorts from Tony
Kirkorlan and Tom Amburgey.
J l .. en 38, Rockets 2•
Jordan Salinger had a game-
hlgh 16 points. Brian :npton
tossed in six points while grab-
bing eight rebounds. Aaron
Fitzhugh had a team-high 11
boards.
The Blazers got some strong
defense· from Daniel Coo~rs.
Daniel. Fitzhugh and Josh ua
Stone who came up With two
steals.
• ICalcltt "· LUen t' David VUndt, Reed Antarabe
and Kendell Hudson led the
Knlck.9 to a big Win.
Miiak, 31, HorMlll 21 . r 'OAyton Lean bad 12 p0tnt1
and seven boards to lead the
Magic. Mike McLean finished
with 11 points, four rebounds and
four steals and Kyle Woody
added nine pomts and three
rebounds.
Division 2
Heat 46, Magic 38
Nick Tejeda made two big
steals in the first period th at
sparked the Heat to an early lead
they never relinquished.
Michael Fitzhugh scored 15
points and added nine boards and
three steals to lead the Heat. Matt
casserly had 12 points and six
rebounds while Danny Kirkorian
added nine points an.P four steals.
Lu Castillo bad 13 points and four
assists to lead the Magic who also
got seven points from Matt Caho-
la.
Girls Dlvtslon 2
Celtics 28, Jlocketts H
Evita Castillo and Linda
Salazar each scored five points tor
the Rocketts. They trailed 19-3 at
the half.
Ra tors 29,
Founla.ln Valley (D) H
Rachel Beard led the way with
nine points and 10 boards and the
Rap tors got some good defen sive
play from Crystina Poncher,
Kathy Brainerd, Brittany H&JlSon.
and Allie and kellie Flint.
Girls Dlvtslon 1 ---
1!..t Huntington Beach 22, •
hrin20
The game was tight all the
way, coming down to the closing
nunute.
The Pacers' Melissa Vargas
scored Dine points and nttany
Candlish and Crystal Brown each
added four points. AllisOn Fmnan
put in a good defensive effort.
11abetwOIWI 29,
Pon+tn v.u.y (I) 24
CUM GaDimlll had two thtee-
pcmten to tum the game around .
J9Dn1fer Cailify tiad IOl!le big
...U and other key plays to help
... nmberwOlVes to vtctory .
.-"""' .... , ----.,,, . . ·T • ---~
I [JI' I' ~
~ ' • -· • -' -• • j
... '.
- ---
Heat ends
season with
23-4-1 mark
• Region 120 AYSO
Division 4 soccer team
wraps up highly
successful campaign.
HUNTINGTON BEACH -The
Heat, Costa Mesa's Region 120
Division 4 Plus team, season
came to an end Saturday, when
they dropped a 2-1 decision to
the Lake Forest Plus team in the
third round of the state champi-
onships at College View School.
The Heat (23-4-1) scored 113
goals whlle allowing opponents
33. They notched 11 shutouts
along the way.
Lake Forest held ·a 2-0 lead
going into the final quarter, when
the Heat's ~ Perrine found the
mark with JUSt one minute gone.
The Heat had several shots, but
could not find the mark.
In the first game of the day, the
Heat came back from a 3-2 deficit
in the fourth quarter to def eat
Santa Margarita. the Region 630
Plus team, 4-3.
Santa Margarita took an early
ead, but the Heat pulled to 2-
the hall on a goal by Antho-
Y aldana on an assist by Per-
rine.
The Heat tied the game in the
third quarter on a Michael Gar-
dine r goal (assisted by Bryce
Sheridan), but Santa Margarita
moved ahead once more, 3-2.
:rhe fourth quarter was played
a furious pace as the Heat's
defense of Devon Stephens, Zach
Powell, Ryan Denman, Kevin
Desandro, Steven TbOma.s and
Ralph Morgan tighten ed the
screws.
Perrine and Gardiner each
pushed across goats to help the
Heat advance to third-round play.
The Heat Will take some time
off until March when they bigin
anew at the Chino Claw ln
ntmpe, Ariz.
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 81
Freeport-McMoRan Classic ·
New Orleans, where Paulson s
a course-record 10-under-par 6
in the second round two years
ago.
Paulson, currently without
status after losing his PGA car
last fall, when he did not reach
the final stage of PGA Qualif ·
School, played three years on
Asian Tour, wmning the 1990
Philippine Open. He was the
1990 California State Open
winner and the 1993 Utah Stat
Open champion.
But the 1980 Costa Mesa Hi
·graduate, who bved m Costa
Mesa during tus hrst five years
as a professional and represent
ed Santa Ana Country Club
smce 1976, seemed to someho
get lost in the shuffle of area
standouts
"It's land of funny." he said.
never got much press. But I've
never been one to get exoted
about newspaper stuff.·
Paulson, who ended last
week's Newport Class1c 5-over
147, gave up goU aft~r tus
freshman year at Pasadena Ci
College. He quit for three ye
but in 1984 while at San Diego
State, an old fnend of his, Ho
Johnson, saw him one day in a
classroom.
u(Johnson} got me back into
golf.· said Paulson, who made
the Aztecs' golf team that year,
EAGLES
CONTINUED FROM 81
. ished with a team-tugh 16 points
and grabbed six rebounds.
MChris played great when he
was m there. It was defirutely tus
best game since coming back.
And when Chris was out of the
up.~
Candlish, often swarmed by I
three Hawk defenders on the
block, scored seven of the Eagles'
first nine points. -
1 Plock coolly drained two free
throws with 10 seconds left, then
blocked the would-be equalizer
to go wi1h tus four assists.
Sophomore Sam Nelson
chipped in 10 points, while Bran-
don Casillas bad the Edgles' only
then played No. 1 ahead of
Johnson (No. 2) the following
year, before turrung pro
It has been an uphill clunb for
Paulson, who didn't reach the
PGA Tour until tus runth
appearance at the Qualifymg
School Nex1 fall, he's expected
to return to the Qualifytng
School for the 11th time "Death.
taxes and the PGA Tour (Quali-
fying) School. it's always
inevitable," he said
• Ned Bondie of Triangle
Square is expected to host a golf
expo at the trendy Costa Mesa
facility in the days leading up to
the Toshiba Seruor Classic
Should be quite a barn-burner, if
you've ever attended a Thangle
Square function. More details to
come.
• Marbe lla Goll and Country
Club in San Juan Cap1Strano will
host the Monday qualifymg
round (March 11) of the Seruor
Classic, it was announced
Wednesday
Bob Neely, lntemallonal
Sports and Event Marketmg
Pres1dent, played the course in
September dunng the Byron
Scott "Challenge for Children·
event, giving Marbella offioals
contact with Neely.
Four players from the Monday
qualifying will earn a spot m the
.second Senior Classic al
Newport Beach Country Club
March 15-17.
"We've had some qualitymg
rounds for the SCGA, and we
also held the Byron Scott
Invitational,• Marbella General
three-pointer and added a nifty 6-
foot bank shot with 3:55 le.ft.
Novak's layin with 1:45
remaining made it, 46-39, but a 6·
1 Hawk surge forced the Eagles
to sweat the firull24 seconds.
The Hawks (14-8, 4-3) got 1~
pomts, from 6-7 center Matt
Hauser, including 10 in the fourth
quarter, while 6-6 seruor Saia.~
M~akaufaki bad 10 points and
Est.and• 51, ~ Hills 48
ScOf'9 by Quarters
Laguna Hills 14 7 10 17 • 4tS.
Estancia 14 8 12 17 -51'-
Lilguna Hills -Scaglione 15,
Hauser 16, Makakaufald 10, Coleman 2.
Morton 5, Brewer 0, Pham 0, ~
Bauman 0.
3-pointers -Morton 1.
Fouled out -Morton
....
Est.and• · candlish 16, Plock 7, •tt
Nelson 10, Novak 13, casillas 5,
Maraya 0.
3-pointers • Casillas 1.
Manager Larry Pope said
Wednesday. "We're a relatively
new course (5-years-old). •
• ID the Newport Beach Golf
Course men's club, Mike White
earned low gross (66), Al Schnell
won low net (55) and John
Sullivan was second low net (56)
in rounds Jan. 24 Walt Sharer
was closest to the pin on bole ,
No. 2(l10 yards), Rollo
McClellan on No. 11 (129 yards).
In flight rounds last Saturday,
Brian Pridemore (low gross 63)
beat out Jim Forgash in Flight A,
while Don Wulf merited low net
(54); Al Cranston (low gross. 66)
and Bob Forbes (low net 53) won
Flight B; and Bob Potts (low
gross 69) and Sullivan (low net
55) won Flight C.
P·r,··:·~
, "f1"
: .
Mortuary • Chapa! Cremation
110 Bl"OJldway Costa Mesa
M2-9t80
When Words Are
Not Enough
.. Specializing In
SJ1mp11thy
Flowers"
2983 Harbor Blvd
Coste Mesa
540-3135 •
'°"~ ltOUSINC O l'l'OllTUNITY
Allllll ...... ~11111111
"""""'la llllfecl 11 IN f.td·
enl hlr "9nilt Act ti tlll as ----"'*" ....... • lllttll I It MWltlst .... , jlflftfttlCI, .. uu ... -:-.rmcrrnnnn
ll&lff 11 rxc. coltc. 111i91oD,
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NU.., Ad ,..,.Del. liml·
""" " dlsclliN.U.." lllls •ews11.,11 will not
Ullwiltly ICCtJI Mf ldftr11H•
metl lor 1111 ui.te wtlkll Is In
rill«lta 11 IM llw. Oii readers
.,, l1111lly lnllr"* 11111 ...
dwtllltt l H~l'llHd ill lhll
.......... IVlilllll• Ill Ill
.... ,. '""""' llallL 11 Clflt· ... lliilcriml ..... uUHUD
.......... 1·•·'24·ISIO.. fir ..,._,., .... oc .. ap11m
cal HUD II '21·i5a
,, .. -
· -.
0 UI& DllOUH
TelepOOne 8am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
~alk-ln 8:00am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
DAILY PILOT
DIADUNll
Monday ............ Friday 5~
'
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GllllllAL
POUCY
Rates and deadliues are
subject to change without .
nottce. The publisher reserves the ript to censor.
reclassify. revt~ or reject
any classlfied advertisemmti>t~
report any emir thai may
be in yaur classified ad
immediately. The Daily
Pilot & The Indcpeodent
accept no liability for any
error in an advertisement
for which it may be
responsible except for the
cost of the space actually
occupied by the error.
Credit can only be allowed
for the first insertion.
6019
Top Dollar• P aid -
•HOUSEFUL* For Records. Jau.
Leather tofaa, alolgh Soun tr acka. etc.
bed, entertainment 11• Call Mike 645-7505. ,
moire, Victorian furnl· WANTED: G1NTAGE
lure al~ trees, coffH WristWatc:heS/Clocke
& end tables, etc. NB collec1or pays p,....
Grandlather clock. mwm ss. 044-8829
7' 4--894-9880
DOWN
1 Zoo enc:loa~
2 OPEC na1iOn 3 :rn.1
4 With enthUSIHm
5 Actress Tevtor
I Woodwortc.rng
tool 7 Polle> vaccine
ln\lanlOt
8 Pionoun 0 Clullffed 10 Fancy
11. DISflJbUllOI\
12 Small earrinsl t3 NoYel'ISt Clancy
18 Rusllan riv9f
2' Underground hollow
25 Wait< dough 27 Stage of
•Joumey 28 Humed 29 Contented
sounds
01-~F ..... ~
' 30 Wmiout rMQeel 31 Snaky curves
33 Money ·
38 CallVU lhellers 38 EQUal 4t Stringed
Instrument
44 Singing groups 45 Thdened, at
47~~ty
type of lens
49 Unmanned spacecraft
51 -matef 53 S.. captatn'I
cOmmand 55 Opera sqlg 57 P<ay opener
59 Gumbo Ingredient ..J
60-a hind
61 Hubbubs 62 Blnklng convenienc:..
for lhol1
64 Batb!e'•
boyfriend 65 Cahf. hOUrs
.... ----.....iCOSTA MESA 6124 COSTA MESA 6124
..._ ..
.. , .... N.
=r~.,.~~~11'1!~~~~~~~~~ MW "°'*°'*#UPhofo Ya, .ao,
-~ ild .,_.. NC, pwr ~ ---p......._.. ·peny DOHT OIYll UP TBS llDP
SOUTH
•Void
ti 78
OAKQ10732
... 10 9 8' . '
The bidding:.
SOUJ11 WEST NORTH EAST
3NT ... 5• p ...
60 p.., P... P ...
Openina lead: Three or•
Even when a contract aeeme
unma&able, there's no excuse for
toaaing Jn the towel. You never
know when the lie of the cards i1
such that a hopeless cause can be
aalvaged.
-r ONlte oaaa. Uni -· ,,_ ,., ....
..,,.... '2Mlt deelantr cannot aYOid ::J"'°.:"8 90!~o7~ *'*'· iiitiii. 11,:111,1 .,... °"MM 2'· laelq two club trick1. But So\lth TIDSJIOnAUOlf .....,,..9157<Ml47 •ea tiii La ~
Md ci&lMr' id-.. ud, wUh the h4lP -~ N. Ch or 1uperb techAique proved that CBIVIOl.BI 9045 new conc1. "°" n1ee. \beelamwuwabN~ 7011 IUIDll SlltVICI •11•900·4S7MMI·
Decrlanr won the lint trlek in BOATS SUPPUIS 7020 •ea •·t 0 TANG• 111 tlO 2:¥ CW id.
d with t.b L : bed ·L-• LA Z • II 4 -0 R . OrMn w/t&ll lltw, CO wruny e aina', cu w.. tM Wheler 35hpm, LOADED 28K Ml . playr, MBZ a>hn, c:hrm ace of 1padea for a heart ditcard, cover. Very clean. a.,..,...... 112.eoo 722-8773 whl1. 271C ml. Xlnl.
then rurted a 1pade in hand. A 12100. 714-722·8n3. ~ oa & t4I oa l300 ea. $23 500, oaya &73-
trump to the jack provided the 18' aleotrtc Bo•• W/ Wind~ '300, Tr•· 83 c ........ B•rltn.U. 1434 evea 83•·18ICI . entry for AAOlMF anade ruf't, and k ditlONI wOOd whHI· T·top, lull pwr, •Ir, 1·,.,..,....,.._.,,• --..-.---trumps were drawn. r-Hud.on Bay Pae et, new 122& 722·HOCI onr. Sharp. All r90ord1 ·•~ Meroed" Benz
Two more rounda of trump were ~!?.,'::;~~·,.:ix•;. S2600. Call 723-t504 190E/2 e White/grey,
pJayed otrand, aince Eut could not braaa 11u1nga, tu11y TONS OF FISH NET •~rf. 20K ~;KUna•r
afford to diacard a club, the defend· equipped wilt\ 1tet'99 S2.50 per pound. FORD m g warr. tfT obo. & exlr ... A etu1lcl Minney'• Yacht Sur· 840-1455 3-2241 er waa forced to pitch two heart.a. St&.OOO. 241•1850 plu1, 1500 Old New· W•nted :)OO TO
With five cards remaining, declarer port Blvd. 648-4192 '82 MUaTANG White/, wagon, '92·'84, aunrf, • wa.a down to one heart, Qoe trumS B•J •oat 23' Norw• r.ci. &-cyl, 5·•pd, mnrf, very clean, rvef. tan,
d tL-:.. b L•t E b glan, lap1trake, dou-0 1 ,.. an urea c,u 1, W1U e aat a bl d Vol p 1 ale. reat car , 11300 blaclC, aivr. 073-0853 '--forced down to two b·---and • en er, vo en a MARINE SUPS obo. 66&-<>188 day•,.7 ... -1 .. .," mes. ~ """.. engin•, tiller & wheel 9'" .,.. """'
three clube. Dummy retained ace steering. Two full cov-DOC!tS 7022 --------
and another heart and three clube. • r•. one-of ·a·k Ind iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii GMC 9081 '_m_s-~-• u---9-1-5-0 The atage waa tet for the <hnoue-cla11lc 645-0748 45' MOORING For iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "1nn
nwat. Sale In N • e • Ca II '95 8UBURBAH ~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii
Declarer cro11ed t.o the ace. of POWER BOATS 819·753-8801 eves. TON, 4wo, l.OAOEOI '88 Senti• w/1unroor. heart.a and ruffed a heart, reduonc 7012 1,,K Ml SLV/MET low mll••· tlnl•d wln-East and the cloeed hand too,.."':----) 80' deep Dock facea • • · dowa, 14000 obo •
b t h 1 b h A)l.,.. ... h.. • main turning pt. 124 S28,500 073·3432 548-4514 u t ree c u 1 ~ac . t at. , s. Baylront Balboa clr~~n~~8!1 ~ ~t.Thawith thde te1 nedof 32
1:feL Sun Runner laland ........... '252.1211 -1E-EP-------·---------
u ... to~t•J&e&. tenplll' exp crulMf Loaded 9110vOLKSWAGEN 9235 East into leading a club from Q 8 V 1'"'tw1 211' ·"RP'S. Balbo• Penln Sllpa iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii · to declarer bined A 9 ° vo n -... · 55' mu at S 13 per ft iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1D s com . Under 400 Hrs. A/C, All facllltlea, prlvat~ '89 Wrangler 4x4 '83 VW JETTA ~ heat, rub new canvas. kl 723 5835 hardtop. 67k mllff, r, Learn to be a better brid•e N.B. 1llp avl . $45,995. pat ng. • mint cond, new tlrff: 5·1pd, am/tm caa1.
player! Subacribe DOW to the * 714-040-4528 * Boat dock for rent 16· $7,400 obo. 76o-o590 ~fo~ oc::'~.2~~n~:~
Sout.h'1 three no trump showed a
solid minor suit, and North had no
trouble working out. which. The
five-epade cue-bid wae a grand slam
try, but South had nothing in
reserve.
Goren Bridie Letter by callin1 18' 1100 mo 675-IS095 •93 Cherok•• Sport •
. (800)788-1225 for Information. Or SAIL BOATS 7014 Boat Slip• 20-85 "· ~OOI'. 9 eye. 4WO, R~looatlng. mull Hll. write to Goren Bridte Letter, Ideal loc. Pool, lndry 30K ml, 1 ownr. blk w/ 84 Rabbit GTI. Xlnt West'1 lead of a low club was an
obvious singleton, and it might
HUNTINGTON NEWPORT
BEACH 6140 BEACH
P.O. Boa ..ClO, ChJcaco, IL ~ rm, elc. Secure Udo gray Int, top cond. con d • mu• t •••I +no. 29' Lancer 3 aalls, area. Call 723•4074. $15,750 obo 759.9507 S1 too obo. 754·7959
NEWPORT
6169 BEACH 6169
dlesel, wheel, VHF, equipped. Very clean. ""s...,.L...,.IP=---A-va-1-1-n-0 -w-3-4-_1 --------Relocating, mu1t Mii.
Owner Terms. 36', N. Balboa 111. LEXUS 9115 '84 Rabbit OTI. Xlnt
$11,000 723-4074 water & elec. 5400 cond, must •••I s1100 obo. 764-7959 WE PAY CASH 675-0494 '90 Lexue blue, gold
BETTER THAN A GARAGE SALEll
Callfornla's largest
Indoor 1wapmeet.
Over 8 football fields
****ANTIQUE-#** ••FLEA MARKET**
LAROE G SAL• SAT 2/3 8am·2pm
2 hlgttchalrs, kld1 stuff, antiques, bed set, small size ladlea
llem1. Odds & Enda ...
For good used Sabota ---------• package, fully loaded, •-M-IS_C __ A_U_T_0--9-2--"5
& boat equipment. MOTORCYCLES new tires, S22,!500 • .,. Minney'• Yacht Sur· obo 990.3164. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
plus, 11500 Old N•w· SCOOTERS 8018 SEIZED CARS FROM
alot of moneyl Dally
live entertainment.
Kids fun center now
openl Open every
Saturday & Sunday.
9am·51)m. 5555 Mc·
Fadden Avenue,
Huntinton Beach.
(714 890-1380 REE
ADMISSION WITH
THIS AD!!
•SUNDAY FEB 4* Newport Dunas
PCH/JamborH 6:00AM-3:00PM Dir/Info 714-a73-2771
GARAGE SALE Gr .. t
stuttl Saturday 8 am,
2512 Sierra Vista, (Tustin cross stroet).
Com•-6..S••J
Viet• Del Sol
Follow balloon sign•
. Ba
Dr. C.H. TUloUoa
port Blvd. 548-4192 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil _______ _
· UNCOLN 9120 $175. Poc.schea, Cadll·
Overstocked with
A call to
Classified
will help 842·5678
Dr. R.L. Q>ebna
1987 Harley David· lac1, .Chevys, BMW's,
____!!!' 1pstr, 11 OOcc at1 .. ._ .6.1 •-------..
. , owncar ey/ 4 WO'a. 'n>ur uea.
cond.. saddlebags, maroon. Exec aeries. Toll free 1-800·898-wlndshleld $5,500 call • 59K ml. $13K obo 9778 Ext. A·5139 for
631·1854 640-1455 673-2241 current listings.
Newport-Costa Mesa-Irvine Family YMCA
1~ HWt bui1d strong kids, s~tfamilies, t..T strong commun1t~
• ut&O FAMILY PROG1tt~-
111.,.\l t.O .K-12 years --.,.,,~ ,t.... • ~Q
For Ad Action Cub Scout Pack 3g Moving Sale CLASSIFIED
Getto
the basle
ABC's
Attic,
basement,
and closet
then get
some cash.
842·8878
• Bc:fore le After School Catt
• Cablina Caravan
• Swtuner Day Camp
• Parent I Child (Y·lndians)
FUNDRAISER Sun Sam, aide by side
frig, King float waler-GARAGE SALE bed, 01n1ng set & side
Saturday, Feb. 3 board, blk ent ctr, 199
9 A.M .• 1 P.M. Brandywine Terrace
can a
liiljPlit ..
AD-VISOR
642-5678 College Park Elem (Orange/Wilson)
School, 2380 Notre •--------------Dame Rd. Lois of Buy It. Sell IL Find It.
It's the resource you
can count on lo sell a
myriad of merchan·
dise ll•m•. becau ..
our columns compel qualtlied buyer1 to
calll 842·5678
2976 lristol Street
Costa Mesa, Califomia 92626 Telephone(714)546-0010 Costa Mesa
4.M-2546
Irvine Corona Del Mar
toys, clotes & misc.I Claaalfled . 838-2181 6M--0580
3910 ·sE·R·Vl-C·E---1CARcT~!:!NG CLEANING DOORS 3580 HANDY MAN 3710 HEALTH/ IANDSCAPE & MASSAGE 3830 PAINTING 3858 ROOFING
~u 3 515 SERVICES 3 548 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NUTRITI 0 N 3 7 42 LAWN CARE 3808 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DIRECTORY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii An experienced ROOFINQ carp, ,plbg, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •Valentlne•6Pffl•I• CARUANA PAINTING •THUNDER ROO,.NO•
•••••••• McPh•• CarpeWphl •WINDOW Cleanlng dependable door palntg, elec, tile, stucco. •Grief RecoveryOroup B•elc Ya.,d Malnt 2 -Full Body Mu .. ges lnVExt. Very low low For ell ol your roofing
ACOUSTIC
llMODBLING 3408
Carpel l UpholstfiY ClellWlg • Carpet Cleaning hanger, Guar work, Remodel•. MORGAN Death or Loved One. Lawn1, Cln-ups, TrH Only S60 (Reg $80) Call Pricer FrH Est: Bnd/lns. needs. Reroof/tepalr.
Prompt SeMettflat Ratn • Hardwd Firs Malnt reas. Don 521·8910 Uc'd 850·3281 Divorce. End of rela-Trim, Sprlnklrs. Aerate, 960.8444 or 841-8192 L#528484 714-963·2734 Uc 638t44848-4122
714-845·9192 Free Estl • 729·7079 Moblle #403·5365. tlonshlpa. Subslance Thatch 97M2C~ Pg-413-8142 Ask For Shawna , Rl!ROOFINQ.All Type1
Prof'I C•rpet Cleanlnn HOUSECLEANING DRYWALL C•rpenlrr"Electrlcal abuse 01hor IOSIH • TREES • Gill Ctrllfleatn A't1 Exp'2/1C lk• • Custom Painting Expert Repair• L1678356 • Pl bl •D 11• . . Prof, Clean, Ouallly Beat Val·•• Rooflnn Quallly Work•Free Eat 15 yra exp. Oood Ref. SERVICE 3584 um .ng ryw.a •Affordable Group w r1c 1 VExt & o k .. • •0 .C. STEAMWAY Own tran1. Call any· Stucco Painting Tiie for Food Concem1. T•,."•-•· La•"•· MOVING 3834 Lfllo70l4"ea 031-4°:10 •714-258·7038• CEILING MASTERS 1 -800-385-8725 lime. 241-0531 Roorlng•Jim 641·7•UM Learn to oonttol your +* ....... 751-3478
•Acouallc Removal• REL 1A 8 LE ...-SMALL JOB EXPERT CARPENTRY•Wlndowa eating In aafe env. Lawn Service. Mow/ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil _________ SPRINl<I.EBS 3921 Custom Texture-Paint --------HOUSE CLEANING DrywaJl/Plasler Repair Doors • Wood Fences Free Consultatlonl edge/aod/1prlnkl•r•/ PUBLIC NOTICE PIANO & VOCAL Uc'd. Muk 838·7300 CEMENT Local Area. Xlnl Ref'a /Hanglng;Taplng/THturt • Drywall Repair • Llo'd Th•raplat cln-up. Al 808·2718
---------iMASONRY 3526 Yolanda 831 .... 87 Comm/Res 551-5573 Line158, • Cell Bob 714·875.0894 Ive mag or call after 5 Ttie Callt Publlc Utlll· LESSONS 3868 SPRINKLER "EPAIR ... tle1 Commission RE· Valv• .. Head .. Tlm• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVICE PRO 249-8323 Pg-312-0026 --------Cire&n Scf'ne Landsepng QUIRES that all uHd clocks. 25Yrs Local &p. ANTIQUES,
ETC. JOHN DORAN MASONRY Acoustic Removal Handvman Charlie HOME r.1n,~1 /Maaonry /lrrlgfllon hOUl81'1old goods PIAHO Beg.·Advanced John 202·2831 3420 Bl1ck•Ston .. Block COMPUTERS 3556 Hang•Tape•Texture Painting carpentry ~ /Trimming /Removal• movera print their Alt ages-Teacher Cet1.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Latg9 & Small Jobs OKI liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Small Job Speclall1I plumblhg', fence bldg'. SERVICES 3760 Clean-ups • Mainltnance P.U.C. Cal T number: Entenalnment Avall. 1---------
Fln• Art a Antique Ucill88719t 031°3032 Computer Co•ch L#4ooo3o 839.e278 Local re1ld. 76<>-5044 Ll599025 850.e1o9 llmoa and chautfeura Jennifer 840-8809 TRANSLATOR/
Jewelry. Buy, aatl, For affective leamlng •---------HOME REPAIR ALZHEIMER'S C•re Landac•P• Remoclellng a>rlnt their T.C.P. num-PIANO LESSONS TUTOR 3927 ~'!.7:,'1~~·65~~~l:om _C_ERAM ___ l_C____ All app1 & aottware ELECTRICAL 3610 Plumbing, electrlcal, Giver. Top ref'a. Yatd wn. up/l'Mintenac., ber In •11 adVertl•• In your home. Flex hr1.1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Mark 675-7245 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii carpenlry, rooftnn, tlle. 1 on 1 attention. Cay landscape/8'llsllc dHlgn. m.nta. If you have • Low Rat•• All ages ••GOING To M .. XICOf TILES 3528 • Contrac:torlC27-6<M006 quHUon about th• I• · • • Pc PRO Internet. S T 838·3323 • 539-0277 +n.,,ht Carol 64"·9732 ' Ask for 01~·--721 1758 ---------1 mall Job EXPER 'V ~ Prol'I & Ethical. ~5-7605 gallty o1 a mover, limo -• Laatn Spanlan Nowl
BUSINESS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Appllcallons/Hardware Duncan Electrlc Hom• Repalr/R•""d•I Care Giver For th• PLAHT ARTIST or chauffeur, call: --------Exp'd So. An'uNlaan Tutor
SSRVICES 3488 CERAMIC• MARBLI! Re11onable home ratn. Quick RHponae Costa Meaa/Newport eldet'ly. 12 year. exp. Speclallst In existing Publlc Utllltl•• PLUMBING 3890 Su.ana e73·7409 lnltllll'n • Fabrication David at 509·2089 Local Uc. 850.-7042 25 Year• Exp. Re.Cs. PleaH call landacape/lrrlgatlon Comml11lon
20Yra Exp • Ucenae<I Llo'd Contractor Jim 831-24eo T•f".mY 714·367-9038 9d 700-9792 714•558-4181
Deektop Publlthlng 1-eoo-34e-9321 •-C-O_N_C_R_E_T_E_•.---Small Job 1pKlall1t HOMB SERVICES ...... •""GIV•R ,_u_pg_r _•-.;•·----=-t --Ottl-... --m--.-,... ....... ,-.-M-0-111-n-o' TU LOCAL PLUMaU WALL
W°'d proc. Copywrtng (HQ 8howera ~•p'd UI Fuu•Llghta•Spa Anything & everything "~l!ldv tu Ex 'd ·-·•Jamel E. Bangert Co.· COVERINGS
Graphlctl ... More Regroutfng & lnstall'n MASONRY 3557 Demand Elecl/lc 64!5·3858 Free E•tlmate. Aef'1. R:r. •. Ow~,~~. uv:.,~ LEGAL t:~;''81~:.c•t,.i:1~~~ Since l9'7 WorkSourc1 Ltlf670130 Dean 01 ma iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Mlohael 7$8-1440 °' o.iiy. T ... 644-asoe &!RVIC!S 3812 T,,11163~ ne-:s114 Ftt.ndly SeMceill·lnllaed W• gala lhOulO hang
450-2880 FAX-450-t807 a73-80e5 or lMS-8528 Brick, Block, Stone, Tla.•·f-EN--C-E_S _____ Repl.o.mient Windows 'd C x iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii I It 8 .. M Ll63298t 175-9304 together. Strip, Install.
J and t( Aeeocl•I•• Tiie • GI••• Block• Cone, Patio, OrlveW.y carpentry/Decka/Elc. Exp are -Iver for 15 •TARTS IT P I econ. ovtne acfvlce 10 lh• crazy. W.ProcesalnQ/Tranacrlpl1 Alt Around Consl'n WOfkl Fplc, BBQa. Rel. 25 Vr & DECKS 3615 Rel1. 20Yrs Exp. L7085t.1 the etdeny. Providing STOP EVICTION . Profe11lonaJ Mov.,..I ____ _....__...,. 831~1 H anytime
MSDeLRGAL•Gl!N Gd Ref'1. Reasonablo. Exp. Terry CS67·7CS94liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 80nded.Oeo<g•435·9944 tor: AH their naede. OlvOf'ce 14Hr Serv • 7-0ay Wk eDAN DAWIONe
On·1lte or P/U & Oel. Lll'B562867 536-1286 •CEMENT WORK• i1tFBNOES OAT••• Rers Janie TCS&·OCS8 S Lawaulta •Credit Help Ir Dlac/FrH Eat. lns'd PLUMBING
850-3108 Pgr 7t7·9e711 --------PLAIN/STAMPED Mw/repalr/polt r.,iaetd 24Hra 740.2919 ~~~~~o:~:~*; Water H"t"' • Df'ilna WINDOWS ·--------CHILD CARE 3536 Brlck/Stoneml•/Block Redwood • Lll578605 HARDWOOD INTERIOR LIVING TRUSTS Remodel • Repair
l"•D1H!U'T'Dy 3510 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LS41656 031-4310 Jim Whyte 042-7208 ftOOl.S 3712 DESIG~•r 3782 Probate/Conservator· --------11 r~~~:22~~~u;;~ ~":!!!!P" ~ QH 6 "' * B t p I /Q ,,... .,, ... c • S• H&O~ ships. Cal tot FREE P.auntNG 3858 p removat.' lJo .. _,... German IJN/Mom ti r Ct UI '• WOOD/CHAIN LINK CUSTOM ln•tallaUont BrochUte. 8~8801 9r4' 717·•'1ae '•emov7t!'~ ... ·.~.4 __ Nice Home & Garden. Land1cspe, brick, atone -N lob t II--------~ ....... --• Hand»menmemodel Dava/Evta/Wknds. Bl-Ling. eoncr-.eoo.n .. 100f T~w4:la:it & Aeflnl1hlng. Quality Deel9n Pro. RemOdel, ~YOUNGQUIST 1--~--'!""----i Addition•, Bath, Kitch educallon. Good b•I-Work. Malnt Av9'1able. n.w construction, or .. IU!r •·GI 3130 • • c...tr.ctor • Fire-Water Dame.ge UNIGUi i aTVLliH Uc:'d Glenn tMa.H17 Jult • wlodoW tfnt· w.JIA A..-•. ~i..~by ""'fl• E•·-. Pl••mb, & Paint anced values. 650-6533 C0tf'PD "CTOD~ 0 ... De"g t El R ...,.. .,.., ,...-...... .. n , AA l4'W ate.,rencea. n • men . •• oaene, Ucl In•
r 848·234~ 221 .. 122 and t1enctcrafted " HAUUNG ASID, c10. 9'41-tt•9 •••T ...aaua••• '" "" ... l-3305
DOORa ~#dwwe CLEANING GENERAL 3558 l•ndacape •rc:tiltect. 71....,.74019 ~*;r~;;;;;~"'f--.;;:aiE;;-.;;;;;;:a;;:-L#388~ Me-ato• 17434\t ... ch, HB ==~~·~c,:: SERVICES 3548 CPI 8UILD•R• IMO. •WMd Penoe•• .-uNK To The DUMP JIWELaY 3784 (Beach/ateter behind ~ Ma-OM7 A TOUCH Off CLASS Re1ldentlal Cc>Nt. ~.tree lldng (7t....._1 .. 2J Mobl GaaJ!tO off
T 10 Z mAv.AaN Cle&nl"". AetJCom.m Uc.1!511424elnaurfil eat1m1t11 Low pitce• Uc'd Will haul Wlfhat Tf••h Wiiiiam H * ,,...,. Sldn & ....,. C•re .. ...... .... _ ... (714) .. ~.a Mv~CON!r.11401 Man won'U H8-1882 ... ,.. '~OF,. AU l'acla.I•
IHSTAUAWACE CMINE1$ Uc/Bond.cl. f're• Eat. Liw1I C..-etnlOiJ;ft .............. _......, ..... ..._......,_., Watch l leweWJ "Pair Ma•eiagee a Waxing IOktleine, Dalhl, dOOfl, TerH• 2.82·7t43 A del9H ,-~~" C.it 11.ct(y tee..eot ~Doug 546-'2SI ••OH HOUSECL.EANINO lt1~':113 =7-:. BANDY MAH 3710 ~~ _,. ~
MIMODllLINO A·Z UcenHO·Bond9d •'Jt.._..7...... nvuuuOS 3742 • 1...-l•lili In • T"::. bOdY :'
No ,wty &Ill finl•h•d. 110.00 per hour. t.J ..... c;;;;nn P~ellll.c~el L-.. ~ _ LOene ANJM...age TMraplet "'" utlmat ... Call 7t~.0388 ..,... ...... k , ... ltuy/hl\tloan c M "Ja~u
Ralph 873-8477 ** ihiGHT ** f;:::11~ ~ fMlf Jobi Oki QUIT IMOKlllQ... Hu,., a 8on .. 7M200 · '
HOUS•CLUNINO ,. ... ., .. .,,.. ca., ....... 77 11T DAYlll
ftrot't from Eutol)4t, OOctor reconvneuded • •llllAim""•-I
8"t ~In toWnll~M=~"";-;;;;;:: 1~ Mofter bedl 11*• --~·
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3934