HomeMy WebLinkAbout1998-03-05 - Orange Coast Pilot• •
R11ling has zero eff~ct on
drug policy, officials say
•Newport-Mesa board
members say judge'.s decision
to postpone suspension of
.high-schooler will not weaken
zero-tolerance rules.
decision Monday postponing the sus-
pension of a Corona del Mar student
who is suspected of violating the con-
troversial policy, school officials said.
Corona del Mar High School senior
Ryan Huntsman, 18, was suspended
from the campus Feb. 19, after being
stopped by N~wport Beach police for
playing his car stereo too loud.
the school's administrators, Hunts-
man, who has attended Corona del
Mar since the ninth grade, was SUS· •
pended for five days and tr~erred
to Newport Harbor High School.
Huntsman and ·rus mother, Kath·
leen, took the matter to court and won
a partial victory Monday, when Judge
Robert E~Thomas ruled the· student By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot Upon searching his car, police also
reportedly found a plastic bag with a
pipe in. it. Huntsman said the· para-
phernalia belonged to a friend, and he
was only cited for noise pollution.
· eould re a del Mar--at--1-__,.
least until a March 1 · hearing on the
matter.
The school district's attorney, John
NEWPORT-lvfESA -The school
district's zero-tolerance drug and alco-
hol policy is not likely to be weakened
by an, Orange County Superior Court But whe.n the police report reached • SEE POLICY PAGE A14
TRADGEDY IN TRAFFIC
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
Hedges enters
race for county~
• ·supervisor
•The eight-year councilman and former mayor will
challenge Tdtn Wilson with a pro-El Toro airpo~ platform.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pt7ot
NEWPORT BEACH -City
Councilman John Hedges has
thrown his hat in the ring for this
year's Orange County Board of
Supexvisors race, becoming the
first to challenge incumbent Tom
WJJ.son.
•The people of the 5th .Qistrict
are not being served well by the
incumbent on a whole host 'bf
issues,• said Hedges, who
announced the news Wednesday.
•Tue major one is his underlying
approach to local governance -
we need a conservative fiscal
approach to local government
and someone who looks out for
the needs of the taxpayers of this
county."
Wilson could not be reached
John Hedges:
Will challenge
Tom Wilson
for comment.
The June 9
election is
shaping up to
be one of the
most crucial in
recent county
history, pri-
marily due to
the growing
controversy
over the pro-
posed com-
merci.al airport
at the El Toro
Marine base. With a 3-2 majority
in favor of the airport and one
supervisor on each side up for
election, a change in the lineup
could easily affect the ultima~
fate of El Toro -one of the most
• SEE HEDGES PAGE A1J. . . . · ..
~le firm gets static
on contract request-
• Media One may renew franchise ~ Costa Mesa, but
some customers complain rates raised too often.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
COSTA lvfESA -Some resi-
dents are creating static as Media
One and city officials begin for-
mal talks about renewing the
company's long-term cable televi-
sion franchise.
Media One has a nonexclUsive
franchise to provide cable televi-
sion in Costa Mesa and currently s~es about 22,000 homes, offi-
cial's said. Media One inherited
the franchise contract from anoth-
er company that was granted the
first cable rights to the city in
1984.
That 15-year franchise is set· to
expire next March, and this'
week, the City Council approved
a tentative schedule of public
hearings, town ball meetings and
other review sessions leading up
to possible approval of a new deal
this summer.
But some Media One cus-
tomers, citing two recent rate , '
•SEE CABLE PAGE A13
par
on the national media coverage of
their dty as well as the indirect
revenue that comes from ·room. tax
and sales tax.
•[1bti event) fills up our hotel
rooms, ~ple use the restaurants
and the retell lb.ops in the dty -
it's a big benefit,• Mid Mayor
Tam Edw~ who 11 a volunteer
tor u.e .siolf toUmament. ·n mo
Shows olf the dty foe toUitltl wbo
mey want to villt hen ln tb9
tu.ture ••
ltiCbard UMhil. ..--t of
the Newport BMcb 0.-blr of
Commtft9, 1114 It .. C:llllk:UJt ...
...... ..., liclllltmuda ......
-..... adlll to "tlli cttr ........................
M'elt'lllg•• ••
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-==--------_-;_-,.--. . ..._ --_-_---·~--·-~ '• :_.I'.-~--- --
A2
greer
wylder
Qosing out on
snow/Joards
S ports COmiRJ!lenl (548-
0660) is having a close-out
sale of all snowboards and
snowboard boots. You will find
new '98 snowboards with bind-
ings for as low as $159.95 and
used snowboards as low as
$39.95. Boot prices start ar -
$39.95. ·sports Consignment is
not only the best place in town
to find great bargains, but also a
great place to bring sports or
exercise equipment that you or
your family has outgrown or are
no longer using,• says owner
Sara Remmey. ·sports Consign-
ment can buy it from you, sell it
to you, or give you a trade in
value.• Sports Consignmept is at
670 W. 17th St. in Costa Mesa.
The Assistance League of
Newport MeA (645-5536) is
~aving its popular French rack
designer sale today from 10 a.m.
fo 4 p.m. The women's clothing
sale features cruise wear and
furs. The Assistance League of
Newport Mesa's Thrift Shop is at
~220 Fairview Road, just off of
the 55 Freeway and Newport
Boulevard in Costa Mesa.
South Coast Plaza has added
a JU Sander store (540-3484) on
the second level between Calvin
IOein and Godiva Chocolatier.
The German designer JU Sander
believes in options, not trends,
and her clothes are best
described as being •pure, clean
and being made of absolutely
fahulous fabrics• says a Sander
employee. Sander is very con-
cerned with the quality of her
fabrics and is involved with cre-
ating them at the mills. The store
has the spring collection of the ·
men and women lines, along
with shoes, accessories and fra-
grances. Sander only creates two
collections a year, spring and
fall.
The Sherman Ubrary and
1 Newport man to serve l on corrections board
Gardens is having its annual
Garden Tour on Sunday, April 19
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. The event
will feature six residential gar-
dens in Corona del Mar and include refreshments at Sherman A Newport Beach man has
Gardens. Tickets cost $20 and j b~n appointed by Gov. Pete
proceeds will benefit mainte-: W~on to serve on a special
nance of the botanical collections ~ advisory board for the state
at the library and gardens. If l Dep~ent of Corrections.
you'd like to purchase tickets in : Daruel B. McNerney, 45, will
advance, call 673-2261. Sherman : serve on the Joint Venture Policy
Library and Gardens is at 264 7 l Advisory Board, counseling the
East Coast Highway in Corona : department's director on matters
del Mar. l concerning inmates working
ETC. ETC. ETC (673-5321) : under the Prison Inmate Labor j Initiative to produce goods and
: services. ·l McNerney works as a senior l deputy district attorney in
: Orange County. He previously l served as a labor representative l for Hughes Aircraft and as per-
: sonnel manager for Rockwell (l International.
-----------·: McNemey is a graduate of
• 9IST 8U't'I ippeal'S Thursdays nt Sat-: Michigan State University and
urct.ys. If you know of • ~ buy, call : Western State Univenity and a Mt at S.122A. fax me at 646-4170 or : '
is a 20-year-old store located on
Balboa Island that carries afford-
able ca.sua.l clothing for women,
including linens, sweaters, dress-
es and custom sterling-silver
jewelry and gift items. There is
always a sale rack inside the
store. It's at 312 Marine Ave. on
Balboa Island.
wt'tt. me at Attn. Best Buy!, Dally Piiot, : member of the California District
130 w. e.y St.. Costa Mesa. 92627 : Attorneys Association . .
briefly in 'the news
Applications due soon
for lifeguard tryouts
The deadline for submitting
applications for seasonal ocean
lifeguard tryouts is Wedneiday,
March 11.
All registration and waiver
forms must be received at Life-
guard Headquarters on the New-
port Pier by 5 p.m. No late forms
will be accepted.
"nyouts are scheduled for Sun-
day, March 15. A class of 40 will
be selected to complete lifeguard
training, which is set to begin
April 3.
Free parent seminar
series starts today
Six free seminars for parents of
young children will be held
Thursdays through April 9 from
8:jo to 10:30 a.m. at the Costa
Mesa Head Start-Canyon Drive
Facility, 2352 Canyon Drive.
• Topics to.be addressed, in Eng-
lish and Spanish, include disd-
WfOMCAIT
LOCATION SIU
Wwdge 0.2 nw
-~ 0.2nw lllic:*._ Nnw
"'"' Jiltty (). J "" c.dM 0.2 nw ....
Light Wfndt Wiii
COfM from the
louttiWeit It 10 to
15 knOb. Wind
..... wltl Wtd to
2..,.lnthe-'W·
pline, self-esteem, child develop-
ment and drug prevention.
New participants are welcome
at any time. Call 631-6603.
Friends of Newport
library needs books
The Friends of the Newport
Beach Ubrary Used Book Store
needs donations of hardcover and
paperback, fiction and nonfiction
books to replenish lts shelves.
Books may be dropped off at
the Central Ubrary, 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beac:ho at the Bal-
boa branch, 100 E. Balboa Blvd.;
Manner's branch, 2005 Dover Dri-
ve; or at the Corona del Mar
branch, 420 Marigold Ave. Dona-
tions are tax-deductible. Call 717-
3800.
Marine electrical
systems subject of~
Orange Coa.st College's Sail-
ing Center will offer a three-ses-
sion seminar on marine electri-
cal systems on March 16, 23 and
30 from 7 to 10 p.m . at the cen-
ter, 1801 W. Pacific Coast High-
way, Newport Beach.
Marine electrician Mike
Symonds will discuss choosing
the right battery system, wiring
new battery systems, battery
types, alternative energy charg-
ing and more.
The registration fee is $49.
For more information, call 645-
9412.
Learn how to hypnotize
self in two-day course
A two-day course in self-hyp-
nosis will be offered by the
Orange Coast College Commu-
nity Education Office on March
14 and 15 from 9 a.m . to 4 p .m. in
the Science Building.
The 1.f-hour workshop is the
second in four counes totaling
66 hours of training toward hyp-
notherapist certification.
The registration fee ls $65.
Registration is accepted over the
..
...
TODAY
first low 1o:ota.m. OA
~"Wry we.It swe1t
contJnues from 1he
northwest at tbout
290 degrees. Mom-
1,pg waye height will ....
be mostly flat, but
welhouldteeen
Arlt high
2:341.m. 4..7
Stcondlow
9:29 p.m. 2.2
S«ond high
4:52 p.m. J.1
FRIDAY
1ncr ... for a lhOtt
white In thi .-.
phone with Visa or Mastercard~
or at the Community Education
Office, 2701 Fairview Road, Cos.,
ta Mesa, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m:
Monday through Thursday, from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and from:
8 a.m. to noon Saturday. Fo11
more information, call 432-5880.'
Six-week online
workshops offered
Orange Coast College's Com~
munity Education Office offers a;
variety of six-week online work ..
shops on computer-related sub~
jects, incl~ding Microsoft Exceli
web page design and Microsoft
Access.
Classwork is assigned by e-
mail. Students must have acces~
to the Internet.
The workshops are not toi
credit. The registration fee is
$49. Registration is accepted by
e-mail, at mball@cccd.edu, or at
the Community Education
Office.
Antlow
11:2s 1.m. 0.1 • "a 1 • ,., ... Al.do equipment worth S1 s,ooo w.
Arlt high
l:SSa.m.
S«Ofld kiw
10:SI p.m.
Secondhlgh
l:Olp.in. ...
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...-. "°"' • chfth 1n thit nao blOck.
• Oi UC JA Ye! A_., IM othie' PfOP1ftr ~ 12..100 ... .-tem ..... In thtJalllodr..
..................... W9''2.SOOM1~ ............... , ...... ............... --. .......... ,, ......... ...... ............ , ......
Jo r
In the land of·Plenty~
teachers go begging
I . • 'Last weekend I counted 1~ houses advertisled for a mil-
lion doll4rs
or more in the Dally Pilot's •
real estate guide.
I didn't bother to tally the
hunqteds on the market for
between SS00,000 and SJ mil·
lion. Suffice it to say, even the
most humble digs around here
are worth well into six figures.
Yet a school nurse who pro-
vides health care for 552 students
in the Newport-Mesa district bas -
to write a grant in hopes of get-
ting a lousy $250 to buy one of
the basic tools of medidne. She
needs an otoscope so she can
look into her childrens' ears and
tell whether they have a hearing
problem, or just a wax buildup.
Anybody else find that scan-
dalous?
Several teachers wrote grants
asking for money to buy software
for their new IBM-clone comput-
ers. Why do they need software?
Because the school district
switched them from Macintosh
to PCs -but didn't provide the
Macintosh software they need.
It gets worse. Some grant
applicants said they had been
switched from PCs to Macs, with
no software.
The annual grants are part of
the work of the Newport-Mesa
Schools Foundation, a volunteer
group formed in 1982. At first,
the foundation focused more on
filling the ennchment gap that
followed in the wake of Prop. 13
and Serrano-Priest cutbacks.
'But hard economic times,
embezzlement and the county's
bankruptcy dumped the once
glorious Newport-Mesa district .
int.a A basement status il W~t
used to -and still isn't. Its
teachers are among the lowest
paid, its roofs leak, many of its
classrooms lack even the most
basic tools of the teaching trade.
So the foundation began to
look more toward supporting the
basics that should have been
there but weren't. The annual
grant program has become the
foundation of the Newport-Mesa
Schools Foundation.
A
AL.DENS
fred
martin
This year, 186 teachers -and
one nurse -~pplied for grants
totaling $452:2()2.30 to help
them do their jobs better. And,
with a few well-reasoned.excep-
tions, it wasn't fancy stuff these
educators wanted.
Mostly, they wanted such lux-
uries as books 8:,Ild m.anipula-
tives, teaching aids that lubricate
the learning equipment for such
tricky curricula as math and sci-
ence.
There were applications for
the likes of a video camera,
which seems to be quite a luxury.
But when you consider it is to be
used to record students reading
aloud and making presentations,
the value becomes instantly
clear.
One teacher with a 4-5 combi-
nation wanted $323.33 for a digi-
tal camera to use on a class
newspaper. A colleague sought
funding for a scanner to use on
the same project (I later learned
it was the Lincoln Gazette, a joint
effort of eight classes involving
240 students).
.I.graded high on Jhese
because I'm biased: Tm for any-
Ullng that involves kids with
newspapers:
One grant request I rated a
perfect 100 was from a special ed
teacher who said: "Special ed
students do not learn to read or
spell through conventional meth-
ods. They must have materials to
manipulate ... a multi-sensory
system for reading and spelling."
All teaching is difficult. Teach-
ing special ed children must be
exaudAting. Can you believe
that the school district makes this
teacher go out and hunt for
$343.74 to provide the tQols
needed to do the job? Appalling.
The Schools Foundation
assembled 25 people to read and
grade the grants. There was a
cross se¢on of people that does
things in and for the community.
Evelyn Hart and Bo Glover were
there, also Costa Mesa council
members Libby Cowan and
Heather Somers, .Newport Beach
Fire and Marine Chief Tun Riley
and Daily Pilot Publisher Tom .
Johnson.
Each of us bad a notebook of
grant applications. The group I
was assigned to had 34, and I tell
you it was not an easy task.
There wasn't a single plea that
was not eminently worthy. Our
job was to evaluate them all and
select the worthiest.
After two weeks of indepen-
dent soul-searching and grading,
we gathered at school district
offices. We were divided into five
groups and introduced to our
teammates. Then we gave our
scores and began to discuss,
debate, haggle, agree and dis-
agree on the 34 applications.
ln our group were Caroline
Butler and Mary Lu Fissel from
Costa Mesa and Emily Evans, a
Newport Beach mom. There was
also a guy named Chris who sent
in his book; he had lndian
Guides.
Lori Marston, a foundation
board member rode herd on us,
averaged our scores and moder-
ated when we had to make sub-
jective judgments to apportion
grants evenly among schools.
Jn all. the f ourulatiQil is do.ling
out more than $100,000 to 100
teachers. The grants will be pre-
sented at a banquet April 23. It's
a good system and I was proud
to be part of it.
But isn't it a damn shame our
underpaid teachers have to beg
in this couununity of so many
million-dollar homes?
• fMD MARTIN'S column runs f!!1efY
Thursday and Saturday.
THURSDAY, MAllCH 5, 19tl AJ 0
·Nero won't be fiddling around .
•The Belgum Mallnois, · .
Costa Mesa police's
newest c.antne, will be
sniffing out criminals.
"'
By Christopher Goffard, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -The Costa
Mesa Police Department official ...
ly introduced it. new police dog
on Wednesday, a Belgian M~
nois named Nero, who succeeds
another two other well-loved ,
dogs of the same species who
wete also named Nero.
Nero m, a 4-year-old male
who will be partnered with Offi-
cer Mitch Johnson, will put its
nose to work sniffing out crimi-
nals whenever the occasion aris-
es.
It is now the second Malinois
on the force, joining the slightly
older Bart.
·;It's a good dog," said Sgt.
Tom Winter. "It provides a large
measure of safety for officers who
otherwise might be doing poten-
tially hazardous searches for sus-
~·"
Winter said the department
used German shepherds when it
started its canine squad in the ·
late 1980s.
"The Malinois is becoming the
dog of choice for many police
agencies," Winter said, citing the
dog's longevity, durability and its
relatively "low-key" tempera-
ment.
While a Malinois can still be
relied on to give chase and deliv-
er a bite, "it tends to be more of
a happy-go-lucky type of dog.•
Winter said.
A Malinois will generally live
about 10 years and can provide
the Police Department with four
to six years of service. Their sense
of smell is estimated to be 1 mil-
lion times greater than a human's.
Nero ill replaces Nero D, who
retired from patrol in January. As
1benew
6antneon
Ifie block.
Nero, had
bbflnt
day out on·
patrol wttb
Officer
Mitch
Jcbmson
of the
Costa
Mesa
Police
Depart-
ment.
KIM HAGGERTY
I DAILY PILOT '
for the first Nero, W>nter said the
dog hasn't been on the force since
the early 1990s.
"These names are given to the
dogs in Europe," Winter said.
·Apparently Nero is a popular
dog (name) in Belgium and Hol-
land, where the dogs are bom
and tramed. It's like the name
John Smith."
installed
North Hills Garage Doors
since 1969
THURSCAY, MAACH 5) 1998
Rohrabacher
faces challengers
• 1\vo Huntington Beach
residents enter 45th
District congressional race.
By Philip Bonney, Daily Pilot
COSTA tvf.ESA -U.S. Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher (R-Costa
Mesa) so far is facing at least
.two challengers for his 45th Dis-
trict seat -both are Democrats
from Huntington Beach.
Pat Neal, 67, a past president
of the CaWornia Association of
Realtors. said protecting the
coast and improving schools will
rank higa on her agenda if she's
elected in November.
Ned.I said she's pro-choice, an
advocate of gun control and
supports the death penalty, and
is concerned about the environ-
ment. She supports charter
schoo~.but notschoolvouchers.
"I believe that environmental
issues cross party lines in this
district because most people
• who live here feel it directly
-affects their quality of life," Neal
:Said. "They want clean water,
clean oceans to swim in, and
·they want clean air.~
And Ludwig Gerber, 87, said
if he succeeds Rohrabacher in
the House of Representatives,
his focus will be on the environ-
ment and managed health care.
Gerber, who srud he once served
as ass1stdtlt legal courisel for the
Secunlles Exchange Comm.is-
sion, ii pro-
choice and
also an advo-
cate of educa-
tion.
Rohrabach-
er represents
the dtiea of
Costa Mesa,
Huntington
Beach, Poun-
Dana, ta.in Valley,
Rohrabachei Midway City,
Seal Beach,
Westminster, Stanton, and parts
of Newport Beach, Cypress,
Garden Grove, Anaheim and
Buena Park. He said be expects
more challengers to come for-
ward in coming weeks "because
that's what democracy is all
about."
Rohrabacher said he stands
by his congressional record,
which includes chairing the
House Subcommittee on Space
and Aeronautics and spear-
heading the Santa Ana River
project. He said the latter project
has been credtted with 1mprov-
ing the county's flood-control
capability, which resulted in a
reduction in flood insurance
rates for his constituents.
"And I've managed to do all
of that and not cut so many deals
that I've lost my peispective on
why I was in Washington in the
first place -to make sure gov-
ernment doesn't tax and spend
our people into the poorhouse,•
Rohrabacher said.
a Early Years Toys
\' DeveJopmcnta.1 to~ for children b~to J.O yws.
• Quality toys with lasting and creative pla~ value.
• Personal service from knowledgeable sales staff.
642-4212
1827 WESTCLIFF DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH
.ParKs -commission votes in
favor of Boys and GirlS Club
Commlslloner Pat Beek, who
By Jentfer Ragland. Daily Pilot also serves on the ~ and Girts
, • Club board of cUrecton,
NEWPORT BEACH -The abstalned from tbe vote to avoid a
Harbor Area Boys and Girls Oub conOict of interest. Val Skoro dis-
has overcome its first hurdle in sented, &aying dty staff should
the ongoing effort to renew its meet with club offldall to further
lease of a dty--owned building at discuss the issues before the ~
Bastblutf Park. mission makes a recommenda-
Memben of the city's Parks, ti.on.
Beaches and Recreation Commis· That was also the feeling of
sion on Tuesday voted 5,1 recom: City Councilman John Noyes,
mending the city extend the who urged ~e commission to
club's St-per-year lease for the study the issue further before
next 25 years. The commission making a recommendation.
included a provision that the dty #I felt like the commission
have joint after-hours use of the could have better served the Boys
building. and Girls Cub if they wpuld have
But the club's lease, which sat down with them and d.is-
expired in July 1996, is far from a cussed joint use, so they could
done deal. Oub supporters now have made a broader recommen-
have to take their case to the dation, • he said Wednesday. "I
city's finance subcommittee, think everyone on the City Coun-
which *will take up the issue cil is in full support of what the
Monday, and Newport Beach club does -it's not an issue of
City Council members, ~ho will that. We have a responsibility to
make the final decision. look at everything.•
At Tuesday's meeting, com-City officials pointed out that it
missioners listened to lengthy is better to iron out issues such as
testimony from several club joint use and maintenance of the
advocates, including board mem-building before renewing the
bers and parents whose children lease because once signed, it
use the Eastblnff faciUty. can't be changed.
•With the opening of the East-#There is no way for us to have
bluff School adjacent to the club, a c:rYstal ball to say what the
the amount of kids using the needs of the dty are in 25 ye.ars, •
Newport club over the next 25 said Ladonna Kienitz, community
yea.rs will increase exponential-service director and city librarian.
ly, • said John Houten, Boys and. "That is why the dty is ta.king a
Girls Club board treasurer. look at what the long-term use of
"We've been good neighbors and the facility should be.•
have cost the dty no money. To r But Richard Power, executive
do anything but renew the lease director of the Boys and Girls
would be immoral." Club, said he feels the dty wants
American Electn:>nlcsAssoclatlon
Orange County Council .
presents:
An Evening with Scott Adams
Crea.tor of Dilbert
Sponsored by:
~ I Al PRIMRONDf ~ f~·'--r~J IE =:r" MHM I C~OLLAl'Y At:nmrt
----• l
Thanday, Mardi 19, 1998
5:00 p.m. ~tion
5:45 p.m. Dinner
6:45 p.m. Program
FUU..SET
• ACRYt.IC
• Acryllc w/WNl.e Tip
• Pfntc & White Powder
•Luma Gel
• Sllk Wrap
FIU.S
• Acrylic
• Ptnll
• Pink & White
• LufTll Get
• SlkWrap
Westin Hotel Cost per person is $75
. 686 Anton Bhd. St•tint is limi~ti!
C.O.U Mca, c.A 92626 RSVP by Mm:h 17. 1998 to:
8ftoda Sdaldooe, 714/~7H300
New Euro
Pedlc:ul9S.,.
Chelr A MMk:ul9
()M\.1•21
Exp! .. 5-»98
Wbem March 5th, Thursday EveninJ
(6:30. '7:3~)
Wlaerea Mothers Patio Cafe •
. (225 ~·17fo;S,.·, Coda Maa)
CAU. TO liDlaft TOua IDTa
c ... >••••••' -~· ... . . ' , ' 1,.,,. ... ...
....._ .... CAm...
(1J'MMM7
to make a profit off of the East-
bluff facility by instituting pri-
marily adult sports programs or
by increasing the nonprofit
group's rent.
"I feel good about what the
commission Cl.id tonight," he said.
l!rlc Mlller,
left.and
Nick
Armendariz,
both 10,
play on the
basketball
courts out-llde.,. the
Harbor Area
Boys and
GtrlsQub
OD VlstaDel
Oro. The
dub ls
hoplngto
extend Its
$1-pe:r-year
leaeforthe
next2S
~
•Now the City Council will have
to make a decision on this moral
dilemma. Are they going to go
with the Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Commission, or are
they going to make (the facility) a
profit center?"
~-*Y
Somma
!SF.
Check Out All Of Our .Jlt
St. Patrick's Day GOodies! ~
.. ''Irish Soda Bread"
~ ' ,------, ~ I $1()()1
More Thanjust
Great Bread.
I .. ~I
: OFF: I I
lMI :~=~~I I s100 oFF ANYPURCHASE I I OF IRISH SODA BREAD I
Expires March 17.1998 .J L-----
Newport Beachleo.m Mesa Daily Pilot
KIWANIS CLUB
The Kiwanis Club of Newport
Beach-Corona del Mar meets at
noon at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club, 1601 Bayside Drive,
Corona del Mar. For more infor-
mation, call 852-1148.
~BEU CLUB
The Ebell Club of Newport
Beach meets at 11:30 a.m. at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
1600 Bayside Drive, Corona dei
Mar. Guitarist Nonna Roberts will
feature St. Patrick's Day lbeme
·weann' of the Green.• For more
infotmation. call 548-7364.
FRENCH RACK SALE
The Assistance League of
Newport Beach presents a French
Rack Designer Sale from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. at 2220 Fairview Drive,
Costa Mesa. The sale features a
wide selection of cruisewear and
furs. For more information, call
645-5536.
CAREER NElWORK
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church offers free Career Net-
work meetings for those llnern-
ployed from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in th"8
chapel, 600 St. Andrews Road,
Newport Beach. Peter Leets,
managing principal for Right
Associates, will speak about
Pulling Together Your Action
Plan. For more information, call
574-2239.
WYOMING ADVENTURES
Adventure 16 offers a free pro-
gram. Wyoming Adventures, at 1
p.m. at 1959 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Mika Kaul shares what it'•
like to participate in a woddng
cattle roundup, retrace the steps
of early explorers and view a dog
sled race. For more information.
call 650-3301. ..
SAIUNG SEMINAR
How to Avoid Ships at Sea is
the 1itle of a two-hour seminar by
Orange Coast College'• Salling
Program from 7 to 9 p.m. at 1801
W. Coast Highw ay, Newport
Beach. The cost ls $12 per person,
or $20 per couple. Por more infor-
mation, call 645-9412. ' (
CREOO SEMINAR
The Newport Beach Public
Library offers a free program,
Credit Reports: What's In Them
and How to Make Them Better, at
1 p.m. in the Central Library's
Friends Meeting Room. 1000 Avo-
cado Ave., Newport Bea.ch. For
more information, call 717-3801.
REPUBLICAN WOMEN
The Orange County Federa-
tion of Republican Women meets
at 10 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Golf
and Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Drive. Guest speakers are
state lreasu.rer and U.S. Senate
candidate Matt Fong and Darrell
Issa, U.S. Senate candidate. Por
more information, call 529-6030.
AUGUSTANA CHOIR
The Augustana Choir from
Rock Island, Ill performs at 8 p .m .
at Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church, 798 Dover Drive. New-
port Beach. Suggested donation is
$7. For more information, call
$48-8004.
JOB INTERVIEW WORKSHOP
Effective Interviewing is the title
of a free ·workshop offered by
Carpet Your Entire Home
with Pluah or Berber
--~ s4j900 UP T03MOS.
same as cash
O.A.C.
eomm.'ClllJ. ~&1199. s.mo.
Ful line of ~. ~ AICrYWlller & Sisal (Mpebng Avallable
'1904 .....,., 8oul•,,.,.. • Coeta .....
11.L Center of.._..., & '18th StNet
~~~ .. 722·9842-•
lfon.Saf 104
Orange Coast College's Re-Ently
Cen* trOai 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
in the Re--~ Center, Room 106,
2701 Fairview Road. c.o.ta Mesa.
For more information. call 432-
5162.
CONSUMER BUSfNESS NElWORK
Tom Anderson will speak on
Customer Pocus -What are Your
Customers' Really Looking for? at
the Consumer Business Networks
meeting at 1 a.m. at The Mezza-
nine, 19800 MacArthur Blvd. The
cost is $15 and includes bre«ldast.
Por more information, call 550-
4785.
RU~MAGE SALE
The Sunshine Cooperative
Preschool pr~ts its annual 48
Family Rummage Sale Extrava-
ganza from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Ptesbyterian Church of the
Covenant, 2850 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call 540-1183.
SEARCH FOR TALENT
The Exchange Club of New-
port Harbor presents its free
annual Search for Talent at 7 p.m.
at the Oasis Senior Center, 800
Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar.
For more information, call 67 5~
9149.
SATURDAY
UTTlE LEAGUE OPENING DAY
The Newport Beach Little
League's Opening Day begins at
9:30 a.m. at Lincoln Elementary
School, 3101 Pacific View Drive,
Corona del Mar. The day includes
a camlval. barbequi lunch and
speda1 guests. Tickets. for the
lunch are $5. Carnival activity
tickets are $1. Por more inf~
tion, call 721-8748.
COMPUTER a.ASS
The Costa Mesa Senior Center
offers a four-week Saturday
IllQmlng computer class from 8 to
11 a.m. at 695 W. 19th St. Regis-
tration ii $40. Por more infonna-
. tion, call 6"5-2356.
RUMMAGE SALE
The Sunshine Cooperative
Preschool presents its annual 48
Family Rummage Sale Extrava-
ganza from 8 tun. to 2 p.m. at
Presbyterian Church of the
Covenant, 2850 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. Por more informa-
tion, call 540-1183. ....
IRA SEMINAR
The Costa Mesa Smith-Barney
office offers a free seminar, Roth
IRA: ls it Right for You? from 10 to
11 a.m. at 650 Town Center Drive,
Suite 100, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 641-77 38.
BOOK SALE
The Mesa Verde Library con-
ducts a book sale from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at 2969 Mesa Verde Drive
East, Costa Mesa. Sale prices are
$1 for hardbacks and 50 cents for
paperback books. The money
raised supports children's reading
activities and provides needed
books and subscriptions. For
more information, call 546-5274.
THURSDAY, MARCH S, 1998 AS
APPLE Cowvmt OJJI
The ~ Apple Computer
Oub meets from 9 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. in the Cbemi$1ry 8ulld.1ng at
Orange Coast College, 2701
Fairview Road. Costa Mesa. Rep-
resentatives of Binary Software
will demonstrate the latest ver-
sion of the company's utmty pro-
grams, KeyQuencer and Square
One. The first meeting ii free.
Annual membership is $30. For
more infon:nat1on, call 838-0522
or e-mail Cali.fBobR@aol.com .
SPRING CLASSIC
The Orange County Fair-
grounds presents the 1998 Coors
Light . Spring Classic Speedway
and Sidecars from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
at 88 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Admission is $9 for adults, cbll-
dren 'ages 13 to 17 and senioflf S5
for children 12 and under; cbll-
dren under 5 are free. For more
information. call 492-9933.
WATER SPORT SHOW
Inter-Shows Motorsport Pro-
motions, Inc. presents the Splash
Water Sport Show, from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. in Building 10 and Parade
of Products, Orange County Fair-
grounCfu., 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $8. Por more
information, call 582-2371.
GRAND OP£NING
NoXCuz Pltneu invites the
public.to tti ~opening from'
10 a.m. to 4p.m.at23'E.11th St,,
Suite 211, Costa Mesa. For more•
informatlon. can 6"2-5866, I
THE YOGA Pl.Aa
1be Yoga Place often a class, 1
Low Back Basics, from 1 :30 to
4:30 p.m. at 1835 Newport Blvd.,
Suite A-208, Costa Mesa. 1be
cost is $45. For more information,
call 6"2-7400.
STORE ANNIVERSARY
The Fashion Island Blooming-
d.ale's Home Store celebrates its
one-year anniversary with a pil-
low aerobics class at 11 a.m.,
noon, 3 and 5 p.m. at ?01 New-
port Center Drive, Newport
Beach. For more lnformation. call
729-6600. '
HEARTGAlA
The American Heart Associa-
tion presents its 17th Annual fjeart'
to Heart Gala from 6:30 p.m. to
midnight at the Newport Beach
Marri,ott Hotel and Tennis Glub,
900 Newport Center Drive. For
more information. call 856-3555. ,
• SEE TOWN PAGE A&:
Light Cuisine
recipes prepared lean on calories,
but not flavor.
• ChicJcen Tomatillo Enchilada
• Avila's Chicken Soup
• Light Tostadas
•Charbroiled Chicken Tacos
! Frijolcs Frescos (Ftab..-Not Re&i~)
Newport Beach Cot ta Mesa Corona del Mar
675-6855 ~2-1142 6«-TACO
F,,. ~. ·: ~ ·"··. <, · . · :: .. ~··. ~ >r·.-·:.~~-i ~ 1· .. ~ ". : -J . . . .
e I : ' ' ' I ' •
Reservations required. Call 800/514-HOAG (4624).
Unless otberulfse rioted. all classes and et>ents are free.
MlrCb 10
...... ,, It 8 ~
MlrCb 10 ..... ..,.,=-.... -
Be Prepared -American Heart
Association CPR Heart Saver Course
Learn ~ti21 life-saving techniques for adults and children. Recme
certificalion card. $25 fee, m2leri2ls included.
f.all 63 1-3623 for reservations.
Better Breathers Presents: Traveling IUlll Heollby
IMngs: When do you Need Pbysldalf l11tnaetlolll
Learn what you need to di~ widl your physidin before tnlYeling.
Presented by Paul Selecky, M.D., H02g Hospital internist and
pulmonologist
MlrCb 11 Positive Parenting
WI di ••If It 1...., Laugh as you easily learn how to parent ~ur children with l~ ~ l~
~~~~~~~~-IJ~-800-mech~~~,--SlndyMd>loiel,
mother of two adult children and author of Recipls from~'
skillfully slwes her fonnula for raising self-confident, resilient, ttSpeCtful
~-~--children. F~$5 per person. . -...--=---.
THURSDAY, MAROt S. 1998
TOWN
. .
CONTINUED FROM A6
WATO SPORT SHOW
Inter-Showa Motonport Pro-
JMtions, Inc. presents the Splash
Water Sport.Show from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. in building 10 and Parade
of Products. Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $8. For more
information, call 582-2371.
FAMILY ACTIVITY
The Parents Without Partners
Orange Coast Chapter meets for
the Family and Youth Activity
Dine Out from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at
Norms Restaurant, 2150 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 963-3305.
ATRNTION DEFIOT DISORDER
Educational psychologist Joan
Andrews offers a free lecture,
Attention Deficit Disorder
Overview, at 7 p .m. at Coastline
Counseling Center, 1200 Quail
Street, Suite 105, Newport Beach.
For more information, call 476-
0991.
TUESDAY
TOASTMASTERS CLUP
The Mesa Messengers Toast-
masters Oub holds a speech con-
test at 7 p.m. at Mesa Verde Unit-
ed Methodist Church, 1701 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. Visitors
welcome. Call 540-4446.
TAX SEMINAR
Scott Bengfort and WNC and
Associates, Inc. offer a free lun-
cheon seminar, Tax Credits -
Explained and Available, at noon
at the Doubletree Hotel. 3050
Bristol St., Costa Mesa . f'or more
information, call 619-456-1023.
BLOOD DRIVE
Temple Bat Yahm's Sisterhood
in conjunction with the American
Red Qoss bolds its annue.l blbod
drive from 3 to 8 p.m. at 1011
Camelba.ck St., Newport Beach.
For more informAtion. call 509-
1355.
ASSERllVENESS SKJUS
The Newport Beach Public
Library offers a free progr•.
Assertiveness Skills, at noon in
the Central Library's Friends
Meeting Room, 1000 Avoca.do
Ave., Newport Beach. For more
information, call 717-3801.
PROFESSIONAL WOMEN
The South Coast Business and
Professional Women March lun-
cheon features consultant Michel-
Joy DelRe speaking about The
Eight Attributes of a Fulfilled
Entrepreneur from 11:30 a.m. to 1
p.m. at the Wyndham Garden
Hotel, 3350 Avenue of the Arts,
Costa Mesa. The cost is $19 for
members apd $22 for guests. For
more information, call 472-4666.
WBP~DAY
JOB FAIR
Six local community colleges
will play host to the sixth annual
free Orange County Community
College Job Fair from 10 a.m . to 4
p.m. at the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
?vlesa. For more information, call
432-5576.
PARENTS WITiiOUT PARTNERS
Parents Without Partners
Orange Coast Chapter will meet
for karaoke from 8:30 to 11 p.m. at
The Cannery restaurant, 3010
Lafayette Ave., Newport Beach.
For more information, call 531 -
5292.
BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP
The ?vlanuscripts Book Discus-
sion Group of the Newport Beach
Public Library Foundation will
meet at 9:30 a .m. and 7 p .m. at the
Central Library, 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. Books dis-
ontessorl ·
1far6or-Mesa Schools
. PRf.scHOOL &.. ELEMENTARY
Ages 21/2 to l 2 Years
lXCELLENCE IN EDUCATION
btablbbed 1970
• Montesson Cun1culum
• e.llet &.. Cijmnutlc • ~Ing Arts
• Phonedc Reading Progrcltn
• Music • fordgn Language
· Creittve Art • Open YeN Round
• Computer Sdeocc • Fun Extended Day Care
PR.ESCHOOl
1701 West Baker St.
Costa Mesa Costa M.esa
714 549-3803
Earn Points by:
+just Shovvtng Up
+ Brtnglng a Fr1end
+Making a P\Jrchase
+ <:onslgnlng Spmg ltens
(extra poHs b shes 2. 12. 14 &.16)
•Don't Miss our Double&.. Trtple Point Days
DRAWING KUO ON MARCH l IST AT NOON ._ ............ •
st. John t<nltl • OKNV • Armanl •Mondi •Anne KJeln II •Jones N.Y.
YCMI pt 55" on Coaslp.ment Items 11J1tr·.r;: ;:-;;:=le=:•sed64& °" h.,.s ,.., 1162
(In Ml c... Cefller Near Shirley's 8-1•1 -
"Ov~r 50 Years of Fine Qualify"
CUSTO ·MADE N EW FURNITURE • DRAPBRtES
MAReH SPEC.IA ADDITIONAL 5°/o OFF Thru March gm 1998
c;ussed include •The Solace of
Open Spaces" by Gretel Ehrlich
and "Montana 1948" by I.any
Wilson. For more information, call
717-3890.
REVERSE MORTGAGES
Bob Brennan of Reverse Mort-
gage Newport SpoO.Sors a free
'aiscussion and information pro-
gram for seniors over 62 years
explaining all points on reverse
mortgages at 3 p.m, at Bayside
Village, 300 E. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Por more infor-
mation, cQ.l.l 723-0233.
JOB FAIR
The Orange County Fair-
ground presents the sixth annual
Community College Job Fair from
10 a.m . to 4 p.m. at 88 Fair Drive,
Costa ?vlesa. Ad.mission is free.
For more information, call 708-
3247.
HIGH SCHOOL DANa DAY
Orange Coast College presents
the 14th annual "High School
Dance Day• from 8 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. at 2701 Fairview Road. Cos-
ta ?vlesa: For more information,
call 432-5880.
OPEN HOUSE
Sunshine Co-Op Preschool
invites the public to its open
house from 9 to 11 a.m. at 2850
Fairv\ew Road, Costa ?vlesa. For
more information, call 540-1183.
MATH WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College's Re-
Entry Center offers a free work-
shop, Becoming ?vlath Confident,
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the Re~
Entry Center, room 1061 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For
more information. call 432-5162.
12
CHILDREN OF PARKJNSONIANS
The Children of Parkinsonians
iupport group for caregivers and
adult children of those with
-~
I
I
I
I
I
I
I r-'!"'!"'!--....,...· •
I . ------· I P'9*'* I L . ...._a1a11n .I ------------------
!House of 'Encliantment Magic Sliop
I 11tlt•1· 11.-n o\\ 1tt•1· ... hit• a1ul 111.a11a:.!••111 e•111 .
•Trieks, Puzzles, Gags
•Costumes, Bats, Wigs
•Praeitieal .Jokes
•Theatrieal Miakeop
"'•Lessons, Rentals
•We boy Used Magie
6ay •.ealle
Bo11rs: 10 to 7 Moaday tiara Sat.relay
714 515•3780
lllre a .......... or eleWll fer yoar ... t plll'ty.
.
Parkinson'• meets fJom 1 to 9 p.m.
in clulroom three ol the oa111
Senior Center, 800 Marguerite
Ave., Corona del Mar. For more
lnfonnation, call 645-3352.
BALIOA PENINSULA PROGRAM
The Newport Beach Public
Ubrary otters a tree program,
•BaJboa. Peninsula: An Overview
of Proposed Enhancements,• at 1
p.m. in the Central Ubrary's
Friends Meeting Room. 10Q0 Avo·
cado Ave., Newport Beach. Por
more information, call 717-3801.
HIMALAYAS PROGRAM
Adventure 16 offers a free pro-
gram, The "Other Side" of the
Himalayas -Inner Lad~. at 1
p.m. at 1959 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. The program includes col-
orful images and traditional music
from the Himalayan area. Por
more information, call 650·3301.
CONSUMER BUSINESS NETWORK
Sylvia Bar will speak on Kab-
balah -Is it the Latest Pad or the
Oldest? at the Consi.uner Business
Networks meeting at 7 a.m. at
The ?vlezzanine, 19800
MacArthur Blvd. The cost is $15
and includes breakfast. For more
information, call 550-4785.
TRUE WEALTH
Chapman University's School
of Business and Economics Alum-
ni Association and the School of
Education present speaker Tom
Harken on The Secret of True
Wealth at a breakfast from 7:30 to
9 a.m. at The Sutton Place Hotel,
4500 ?vlacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Cost is $25. To register,
call 744-7097.
DEVELOP A WEB SITE
Newport Harbor Area Cham-
ber of Commerce presents Learn
How to Develop Your Own Web
Sjte: The Right Way, the second of
three free workshops, from 7:30 to
9 a .m. at the chamber's confer-
ence toOm, 1'70 Jamboree Road,
Ne\VJ)Olt Beach. f or more lntor-
moUOn, Ull 64M789.
\
8lOOODRIVE
Oakwood Apartments con-
ducts tta annual blood drive from
3 to 8:15 p.m. at 880 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach. Call 573-3750.
MOTORCYW SWAP
Inter-Shows MotOl'SpOrt Pro-
motions, Inc. presents a motorcy-
cle swap from 5 to 10 p.m. in
building 10, Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Cost8
Mesa. Admission is $6. For more
information, call 582-2371.
AMISH CRAFT SHOW
Amish Country 'D'aditions pre-
sent the Amish Quilt and Craft
Show from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
building 114', Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Pair Drive, Costa :
Mesa. Admission is free. Ft>r more •
information, call 352-8305.
GEM SHOW
Gem Faire, Inc. presents a
Gem, Jewelry and Bead Show
from noon to 7 p.m. in building 12,
Orange County Fairgrounds, 88
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Adlnis-
sion is $4 for adults and $3 for
seniors. Call 708-3247.
AMISH CRAFT SHOW
Amish Country 'Ifaditions pre-
sent the Amish Quilt and Craft
Show from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
building 14, Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is free. For more
information, call 352-8305.
ANTIQUE TOYS
The Friends of Orange Coast
College's Norman E. Watson
Library presents a program that
looks at antique toys at 10 a.m. at
the private residence of toy col-
lector Ralph Tomlinson. Admis-
sion is $5. Seating is limited. For
more information, call 432-5087.
lndhrld-~roup ......,. • ..,:
Problems with love? Work? Eating Disorders! We're here to help.
Balance your life: Relationships, Play, Work. Recapture your spirit.
Animal Bereavement Group, Tuesday's 3:00-3:45 p.m. $10.00.
Rebecca Lewis, Ph.D. and Dan Eppler, Ph.D., (714) 721-5750 .
Rebecca Lewis, Ph.D.
pan Eppler, Ph.D . (714)721-5750
Ze best in · ze west!
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from France! Ooh ze designs! Ooh ze quality! Simply
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find ze best decorative hardware in ze westl
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(7l 4) 494-2264
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Visit PAPYRUS for the flnest eeleotlon of lnvltatlona,
announcements and stationery lor your wedding.
We are custom printing expert.a. Our 1klllcd staff will
work with you to create the perfect lnvltatloo.
Call tooay for a pen onal oon1ultaUon.
' ..
THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1998 A7t.
'(Jpera opens· at The Center; Creans receive .couple of year award }~-
0 pera Pacific has done it generally thrilled with •Tosca,• This put week. JobD Galm'dl.
again. The opening of some saying it was the best yet the king ol the dogs, bot dogs thal ,. '
•Tosca• at the Orange for Opera Pacific. ts, celebnted a surprise 60th birth-
Cou.Dty Perlorming Arts Center day bub under wb1te tent natu-. :
\est week WU a triumph for local ••• rally, where else but in frool ol ~I'
opera loven. Some say even Puc-Newport Beech Wienendmit7.el •
dn1 would have been proud. The Newport-Mesa's most beloved restaurant on Jam00ree Road •.
black tie-clad aowd descended couple, John and Donna Crean. Galardi opened bis very fiJst
on 1be Center Club in Costa were appropriately crowned hot dog restaurant in 1961 on
Mesa for dinner before the Tues-Sweetheart Couple of 1998 at the Padfic Coast Highway in WJlm-
day evening debut. recent Hoag Hospital Valentine's ington. In 1978, Galardi dlopped
The opera aowd. including Ball. the Der from his Wienerscbnitzel
LaUA and BW ConllD, Jeu and The Pour Sea.sons Hotel, New-because •nobody could pro-
Herb Fos, Julia and Irv Rap,pa-b W port Beach, was the setting for nounce it properly,· he mused. port. Carole and Don Lobdell, • • the annual event, thrown by the 1birty-seven years later, with
Hilary and BW Price, Barbara COOk dedicated Hoag 552. The Creans or without the Der, Galardi sells
and BW Roberti, Joan and BW accepted their honors as the more bot dogs in the world than '
Stmoaotf. and artist Chuck Jones over-sold ballroom applauded anyone.·Sixty million franks a · ,
Justino Dlaz, right. plays
Scarpta In Opera Padfic's
.. Tosca" at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center. With
him ls Maggie Murdy Lusk.
Cost Eftectlve
Le9•1 Solri.Ei
kmJ
with his loyely brl<te, Marian, all with gusto for the duo that do so year, reports his publicist, Spm-· •
shared a civilized repast prior to much for the community. Their mer Heying. . ,
curtain at The Center. generous and unwavering sup-Friends, family and bot dog
·0ne needs sustena.nce prior port of Hoag has been an advan-executives all gathered for the
to witnessing the invasion of tage for the entire community. ultimate Wienerschnitzel affair
Rome by Napoleon Bonaparte Chaired by Robert and Terry ~g Galardi at least another ,.
and bis French army,• offered Callahan, with support from oth-60 years of ruling the bot dog
one opera buff. er dedicated Hoag supporters world. Hl.s proudest innovation is
•Tosca," an Italian opera in Bob Badbam, Clarlce Lehn. Bar-the fast-food drive-though con-
three acts by Giacomo Pucdn1 bara Carr, Joel Manchester. John and Donna Crean. left. were honored as the Sweetheart cept.
with a libretto by Gulseppe Gia-Shirley Clark, Dlalia Peel, MebU Couple of 1998 at Hoag Hospital's Sweetheart Ball held Feb. 21 Now how's that for fast-food
cosa and Luigi Dllca. is conduct-Eft•kanl, Janet Curd Walsh, at the Four Seasons Hotel Joining them are Terry and Bob trivia? Congratulations Galardi.
ed at The Center by David Ann Howard. Karen Whitaker, Callahan, chaln of the ball. Newport-Mesa entrepreneur and
Agler, directed by J!anY SllveJ'-Nora Jorgensen.Johnson; Marc feeder of hungry throngs each
stein. and stars Sylvie Valayre as · Kaufman. and Victor Yack. the and admiration. schnitzel, the crowd roams the and every d~y!
Tosca. The Costa Mesa-based All evening was a financial success ••• ~mun.illlcyin support of many -----------
American Boys Cbonu; returns to in the name of the Creans. From fil~ at The' Four Sea-endeavors, causes and personal • a.w. cboK'S column appears every
the stage as well. Proceeds from the affair are sons to hot dogs at Wiener-triumphs. Thursday and Saturday .
Gathering for dessert baCk at earmarked for the Hoag Heart
The Center Club following the Institute; what better place to put
performance, theatergoers were the funds raised by so much love
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-4-. . -----------
reel critics
'live Flesh' sizzles· as a sed:u~tive Spanish IOve story.
IDf'l'Oa'S NOTE: The Reel Critics col-
umn fNtures moYie aitlques written by
community members serving on our
panel.
Film explores the ups
and downs of love
I L ive Flesh• has finally
opened in Orange Coun-
ty, and no, it's not anoth-
er Hollywood film on the adult
porn industry.
Better yet, "Llve Flesh• is a
fast-paced, intoxicating roller
coaster ride of a' movie that suc-
ceeds at being a romance, come-
dy and tragedy all rolled into one.
Based on the novel by Ruth
Ra¥ell, the story is set in pre-
sent-day Madrid, Spain, and cen-
ters around a young man (Victor)
whose ambition is to become
"the best lover in the world.•
For this purpose, Victor (Liber-
to Rabal) works his way into the
hearts and beds of two olde1-
women, Clara and Elena. Elena
is played by the stunningly
seductive Franl::esca Neri.
To complicate matters, both
women are married to the two
police officers that pinned an
accidental shooting rap on Victor,
which resulted in his serving a
four-year prison sentence.
The film deals with Vl.Ctor's
powerlul need to come to emo-
tional terms with all those respon-
·Where t
iib1e for his unjust pwlisbment.
Although the director, Pedro
Almodovar, handles cogently the
wild twist.I and turns of the plot,
the fl1m has a real problem in its
protagonist hero, Victor.
· Rahal's Vic-
tor is simply
not a com-
pelling
~ugh char-
acter to move
as emotionally,
let alone win
our sympa-
thies. A IOle
that calls for a
seducer's
appeal in
charm, wit,
Phil Ruland
and guile is instead inhabited by
a young man with a highly unap-
pealing personality.
Victor is willful, self-absorbed
and extremely infantile in his
approach to women. That he
could muster up enough charm
to win over the beaten down,
enticing Clara -1 can believe.
But to have Elena fall prey to
Victor's sexual manipulations defies
even the greatest leap of the imagi-
nation. One bas to ask how a
woman of Elena's intellectual
maturity can possibly be attracted
to an empty vessel such as Victor.
Despite this shortcoming, "Llve
Flesh" is not without its virtues.
Most assuredly is the scintillating
Neri. 1llis already accomplished
actress is entirely convindng as
Elena, a diplomat's junkie dal19b·
\af, wbo transforms ber&e1f into the
thoughtful, caring, lover of a ~
plegic police officer.
Also exceptional is Javier Bar-
den as David, who is madly in
love with Elena, and guides bil
basketball team to victory tn the
1992 Paralympics. Barden ~
deeply into his character's soul
revealing a range of emotions
true to a. man who painfully
comes to realize the woman he
loves is slipping away.
• Llve Flesh• transcends its own
fascination with sex and in doing
so brings us closer to its charac-
ters' inner lives, and this infinitely
mysterious thing we cail love.
• PHIUJP RUt.AND, 40, lives in New-
port Beach and co-<>wns an Irvine bef'le-
fit consulting firm with his brother.
Lloyd.
Forget the title, focus
on the subtitles , L ive Flesh n isn't a movie
you'll hear many people
talk about. And it's really
not a movie that I was originally
interested in. The title put me off
a bit. However, judging by the
crowd in the theater Saturday
night, it is a movie that people
are seeing regardless of what it's
called.
.
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SetinSpabi
(and subtitled),
the movie
5tarts during
the Franco
regime wttb a .
prostitute giv-
ing birth on a
bus. It then Wt
forwards 20
~tothe •
baby now Heidi Bnu1er
grown toa
young man and looking to hook
up with a girl he met at~ the night before:
Sile's not interested ut he
pursues her right into her apart-
ment. They get into a fight and
after a brief struggle a ~ goes
off and the police are ciilled.
One more sequence forward
finds five people whose lives
were changed by that gun, now
in present time. It's here that the
story (as well as the cast's
wardrobe) really takes off.
Humorous, tragic and sexy,
"Llve Flesh" is certainly not for
the prudish. It's a kind of bed-
room game of tag with everyone
taking their turn to be •It. "
More than sex though, it's a
story of betrayal, honor, love,
passion and ultimately, justice.
•Uve Flesh" was an enjoyable
romp lor me. The plot's twists and,
turns, although a bit predictable,
did for the most part keep my
attention. My ma.in problem with
AMACHI
this mcwie WU purely logistical. I sat behind someone with a big
head and reading the~es was difficult. t;
would ~IJve esh."
It's a nice departure from the big
studio releases. Just pick a better
seat than I did. .,.
• Hll)t ~ 35, Is a hair styllst
and Costa M .. ~
A 'Dark City' film with
a corny premise , D ark at.r, .• ·Ominous · Qty,• pressive
Qty,• "graustropho~ic
City,• •Forbidding City" -tfils
movie's title could be any of
these. The title I feel would be
most descriptive though is
"Bi7.arre City.•
This is one of the weirdest
movies I have seen in many
years. It has a similar dark feel "85
11m Burton's "Batman" movies or
director Alex Proyas' other dark
movie, "The Crow.•
H you want any chance of
understanding what this movie is
about, make sure you get your
popcorn before it starts. H you
blink, you1l most likely miss a
major point th.at is ~tial in try-
ing to link this madness together.
The basic premise (I thihk) is
that a group of aliens called
Strangers have built a city and
placed humans there as an
spertment to see how we
behave. Every night at midnight,
they stop tune and chmge the
physical properties of the dty as
well as the memories of a select
group of the human guinea pigs.
Then they start time again to
see what happens.
Don't ask how they can do this,
or where they
come from, or
what they plan
to do with the
supposed
researeh they
are complling,
because it'•
never
explained .•
The main
humandw:· acter some-Pete Adan•Han
how has the
same powers as the Strangers.
The movie has the Strangers try-
ing to find and eliminate him
because he threatens their exis-
tence.
If I hadn't agreed to.review
this mess, I would have walked
out within the first 15 minutes!
My pain is your gain. Save your
money. Siskel & Ebert gave it
"Two Thumbs Up.• I give it two
thumbs in its eyes. \
• PETER ADANALIAN. -43, lives in
Newport Beach with his wife and
three boys. He is national manager of
the special markets division for Vivltar
Corp.
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THURSDAY, MARCH S, 1998
.:... • ~ _. .. • ...... ---• -•. --·'· !'
Theater stciges powerful rendition of 'Cuckoo's . Nest'
ByTomTitus
I f you missed the exciting pro-
duction of ·0ne Flew Ovei
the Cuckoo's Nest• at the
Theater District 1n Costa Mesa
three years ago, the good news is
that it's back -and ev..en more
exdting.
Hardly a reprise show, the
current staging of the Dale
Wasserman adaptation of Ken
Kesey's novel features an all-new
cast in all but one instance.
,__, ......... ___ , __ ..
A.Till
VIEW
Marlo Lescot, artistic director
ol the Theater District, is back
an'd distinctly memorable as the
towering and supposedly mute
Indian patient Chief Bromden.
Lescot and his wife, Joan (who
staged the 1995 prodQction). are
co-directing this one, and they
have come up with an outstand-
ing assortment of characters -
mental patients in various stages
of psychotic disrepair.
There is a pulsating immedia-
cy in this version that even the
estimable original Theater Dis-
trict production could not
approach.
Arresting performances
abound in this wcuckoo's Nest, H
from the commanding presence
of P.J. Agnew as the rabble-rous-
ing McMurphy to the nearly
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1 Oam--4pm $95
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1.800.586.3342
Mario Lescot. left, and P.J. Agnew gtve superior performances ln "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's
Nest" at the Theater District In Costa Mesa.
wordless, catatonic figure of Joe
Koonce, rolling his eyes haunt-
ingly as the "crucified" Ruckly.
In between are a host qf highly
individualized character studies,
enhanced by the cruel domi-
nance of the pla,y's authority fig-
ures.
It is this dominance -: a legal,
socijl and psychological pecking
order -that Kesey leveled in his
'i'
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novel, and Wasserman (who cre-
atE:d another inspired rebel in
"Man of La Mancha") under-
scores in the stage version. The
pseudo-democratic patients'
council is a prime example of the
sham perpe trated by those who
have the power and are not hesi-
tant about wielding it.
Agnew, whose dynamic inten-
sity is familiar to Theater District
audiences, delivers a robust yet
insightful per;formance as
Mc~urphy, the malingering con-
vict sent to the asylum for
retraining. As he gradually helps
the other patients rediscover
their individuality, there are
forces at work to strip him of his,
and his defiance is powerfully
rendered.
Alice Ensor proves that size
•
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r-~-----------------------, I I
I f.Y.I. I I I t I
1 + WHAT: •One Flew Over :
the Cuckoo'• Nest. I
+WHERE: The Theater Dis-:
trict, 2930 Bristol St, Costa !
MeSa :
+WHEN; Weekends through :
April 4 I
+HOW MUCH: $15-520 :
+PHONE: 435-4043 :
' I I L-------------------------~ doesn't necessarily matter as this
diminutive actress gives a steely.
calculated performance as the
#big nurse" who rules the king-
dom of the deranged. Ensor's
unflinching face-offs with
McM\lrphy strike the sparks that
igrute this production.
The intellectually supenor but
emotionally castrated Harding,
titular head of the pabents' coun-
cil, is movingly portrayed by
David Rousseve Brian Harvey's
jittery Cheswick, constantly in
some sort of motion, is beaubful-
ly interpreted.
Special mention must be
accredited Landon Wright, blil-
liant as the pathetic, stuttering
Jellyfish Billy, who becomes a
man for one bri.et, shining hour.
Others contributing significa.otly
are the burly, bomb-building
Scanlon (Steve McCammon) and
the grinning, fanatidzing Martini
(Christian Holiday).
Convincingly enforcing the
NaZi-li.k.e regime in the ward are
the two sadistic aides, Joe
Massie and Denick Henderson.
Lynette Deveraux sizzles as the
outside temptress who claims Bil-
ly's virginity, while Shannon
Hu,nt offers fine support as her
flashy companion.
Vmce "Guido• Campbell is
qwte effective as the doctor at
odds with Nurse Ratched over
d.l.scl.pliRary measures. Debbie
Kissinger's bnef contributions as
the devoutly rehgious floor nurse
are striking as well, while
George Pelham is a kick as the
tippling night warden.
It may only have been three
years since the Theater District
first reached into the MCuckoo's
Nest,· but the power and
poignancy of this production
makes it a must on the local the-
ater calendar.
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Aussie dining at Outback Steakhouse
• 1
Find
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T be Outback Steakhouse is
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1 ?th Street and Newport
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The white, no-frills structure
with its wide veranda 114$ an
unassuming "down home"
appearance, occup~g,prime
space which had failed for years
and was a forlorn blight on the
boulevard.
The Outback Steakhouse has
changed all that. The restaurant,
with its warm unpretentious inte-
rior and medium-priced menu,
touched a receptive nerve with
diners from its opening days in
early December.
A "no reservations• policy,
while a major pain m the neck to
us diners, hasn't seemed to slow
its pace at all as people wait as
long as 45 minutes to get inside.
Once there, a set of swinging
doors are opened by two sylph-
like creatures who greet every
customer with a big smile and
cheerful Aussie attitude.
Bowie knives, boomerangs
and colorful posters decorate the
masculine room. There's a plenti-
ful use of wood in the floors,
walls and full-service bar:The
sturdy wooden tables and yeti-
sized steak knives send the mes-
sage that you've hit upon a place
where rugged sun-bwnt cattle
ranchers might brtng the family
to dine.
Despite the skimpy serving
plates, the portions are man·
sized and the fare is not limited
to steaks only. There are plenty
of alternatives -salads, sand-
wiches, and chicken, shrimp and
fis}) "grilled on the barbie. "
The menu is clever as lt
employs lots of down Wlder
slang and landmark Australian
locales.
Of all the "Aussie-tizers," the
star of the lot is the "bloomin'
onion" ($5.49) described as an
"Outback Ab-original from Rus-
sell's Marina Bay." A huge onion,
carefully cut to resemble a
cbrysantheomm, ls batter-fried
with each of its "petals" a crusty,
spicy spear.
It's delicious finger food and a
hand grenade of cholesterol. This
is a savory delight to share with
three or four friends.
Another caloric wallop is the
"walkabout soup" ($2.49), a
thick cream-based potato soup
topped with cheese and bacon. It
sticks to your ribs and then seeps
on down to settle around your
waistline and the same holds
true for "Kookaburra wings,"
($5.99) an appetizer of seasoned
fried chicken wings with spices
you can order mild or hot.
They're simply hard to resist.
The "land rovers" (steaks),
come in a variety of cuts and
sizes ranging in weight from 9 to
20 ounces and priced from
$12.95 for "the Outback special"
...
I f
.A ' '· I Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil Vince
Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner
Unique wlnt room It dlnlna rooms availabk ror group business mminp and prlvatf ruoctJ0111
723-0621 Please Call For Reservations and Directionll
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
Big -BQ Sunday
N'tght Special
onlf$9.95!
*Muudlw...,llc~
llMkpockrn.
*Sia w -ll• ooolled
~ .... ....... * Sn'olrJ ......... cblrk .. ...............
•ADtlletl'adltlonial
I
j : I r • • I I I ' I I
i I I I
I I I I I I • I I I I I I ' I
·--~--·----..-....... -... --., 16 ounces -priced ftom $12.99 a cheese burger each at $2.99,
: to $16.99. A choice of salads and and the •spotted dog• sundae ii
~ a baked potato, fries or steamed $1.79.
vegetables comes with the Desserts are old-fashioned
•rover• specials. extravaganzas-especially the
Fri.es are called •Aussie chips" •chocolate thunder from down
and they're sµifully habit-form-under" -with a pecan-laden
ing with the addition otthe Out-chocolate brownie topped with
back's special 16-splces. vanllla ice cream and fabulous
"Botany Bay fish o' the day" chocolate syrup. "Cinnamon
at $13.95 Is the fresh catch; ours oblivion" comes a close second
P.Y~.
was salmon;moist and fresh. with vanilla ice cream smothered ,
Served'with brilliant steamed in cinnamon apples with pecans •
vegetables, ·u was a delicate and caramel sauce, both $4.99.
treat. Deep-fried coconut shrimp Australian wines from Unde-
1 and shrimp saute are listed and man are a feature from the limit-1 s-o are imported baby back ribs ed list of California and Aus-
($13.95), smoked and grilled with trallan wines with bottles £elling ·
fries and cinna1ilon apples. at modest prices under $20.
The "Walhalla pasta" ($9.95) The staff is exceptionally
-fettuccine with fresh steamed friendly and helpful Outbaak
vegetables in a light alfredo partner Scott McCulley says,
sauce ~was a vegetarian sur-•your best chance of avoi g a ,
prise, perlectly cooked with not long wait at the bar or 'de on
too much sauce and lots of al the patio is to ani y or
dente carrots, cauliflower, broc-come in after peak dinner
1 coli and snow peas. hours."
: "Mad Max" burgers with You'll probably find it noisy,
----------------------------------------------------_. bacon, cheese and the works are but that's because it's a fair
to "the Melbourne" -a huge
porterhouse at $\8.99.
demess isn't these steak's prima-
ry virtue.
$6.95 and the grilled chicken dinkwn dinner house crowded
with Swiss cheese and more is with people having a good time
$6.49. The •Joey menu" for little di.ni.?g on rich, rugged fare. Steaks are not barbecued, but
seared, on a flat red hot surface
and those sharp steak knives
really come in handy since ten-
Of the "Rovers" list, my
favortte was oven-roasted "prime
minister's prime rib." It's avail-
able in three sizes -8, 12 and
kangaroos has a grilled cheese
Early Bird
Special
25%0FFany
Espresso Drink
M-F 6am-8am
'2..oqe,-s { c;~ ·~' /l~
Sandwich House
Sandwiches, Coffee.and
Espresso Drinks,
& Smoothies
We use a
1/2 pound
of real 'fruit
in all our
smoothies
sandwich, macaroni and cheese, • MARLA BIRD'S restaurant review
Kookaburra chicken fingers and appears every other Thursday.
Fresh Turkey Sandwiches, C ooked Daily
' Now Open at 6am
.270 E. 17th St. #17, Costa M esa • 045-2252
n ORANGE COUNTY PERFORMING ARlS CENTEB n
' ' t ' t ' ' l I i 1
\ j r 1 e I 1 ~· l
Christopher Bruce, ART1snc DIRE
Rock 'n' Roll
with Rambert and
the Rolling Stones
They've token Son Francisco by storm.
Don't miss this acclaimed company
in their Center debut!
POUR P8Rl'OllllANCISI
Morch 13 at 8:00 p.m. ·
March 14 at 2:00 and 8:00 p.m.
March 1 S at 2:00 p.m.
""--------~------"'-Pr. View Wu -.._""' te ,.rt. ... tlww• ,_,. ef ... ~ IWilllf S*'" CIJ llri ""9Vllw h. .................
.
"Stu . nn1ng ...
This was
terrific
dancing ."
-,.,. FmH:-.
Chlotllcle
Thrift tO Britain's most oC:daimeid
ensemble at the special price
. ofiutt $10 per~·
Present tt\is COUJ>9'-I at The Center's
box office to rwcleiw Vo'Jr discount.
'1
•
> CAROl LAWRENCI! •
The "Orange County Performing
Arts Cent'er presents •The Irving
Berlin Songbook, Puttin' On the
Ritz ... featuring Carol Lawrence
Thursday thro<Jgh Saturday at 8
p.m. ahd Saturday and Sunday at
2 p.m. In Founders Hall, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
lickets are $42. For information,
call 556-2122.
> SHOSTAKOVICH
lhe Pacific Symphony Orchestra
performs Shostakovich's •fifth
Symphony" on Saturday at 3:30
p.m. in the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center's Segerstrom
Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. All seating will be in the
orchestra and first tier area. Ttck-
ets are $23. For information, call
556-2122.
ART .•
)S SHERMAN GARDENS
~tlerman Library and Gardens
presents "Mediterranean Master-
works: Recent Paintings by Timo-
thy J. Clark From Sherman Gar·
dens and Provence, France •
through,#Jlonday at 2647 E. c:mm--
Highway, Corona del Mar. For
information, call 673-2261 .
> TUESDAY TALKS
The Orange County Museum of •
Art presents ·Tuesday Talks at
~n." a series of free talks at
~n by artists, critics and histori·
..
Alaska ~iallsts ,A111~~"&.. -csr. mriztM>
3933 Birch Stlwt • Newport 8Mch
14 280-0171
ans complementing the art dis-
played In the museum's J1•11eries
at 850 San Oemente Or~e. New-
port Beach. This Tuesday, Susan
Ehrlich will speak about •Who's
Singing the Blues? calffornla Art
ofthe 1930s and 1940s ... For
infol'J!lation, call 759-1122.
' >ART WORKSHOP
The Orange County Museum of
Art offers the workshop •Wtde
Ribbon Open Spine" on Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 4'P.m. at 850 San
Oemente Drive; Newport Beach.
Participants wfll leam how to cre-
ate a one-of-a-kind journal with
an exposed spine of ribbon, bro-
cade, tapestry, sllk or linen. The
cost is $70 for members, students
or seniors and $80 for all others.
For information, call 759-1122.
> 'CHILDREN OF EDEN'
The Newport Harbor High School
Drama Department presents
"Children of Eden," a musical by
Stephen Schwartz. at 7:30 p.m.
March 12, 13 and 14, and at 2
p.m. March 15. Tickets are $6, $8
and $10. For information, call
650-0242. . .
>'OUR TOWN'
South Coast Repertory presents
Thornton Wilder's ."Our Town,"
the second play in the American
Classics Series, through March 28
on the Mainstage, 655 Town Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. Perfor-
mances are Tuesdays through Fri-
days at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2:30
and 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2:30
and 7:30 p.m. Tickets range from
THURSDAY, MAJtCH S, 1998
, after hours
$28 to $43. For information, call
957-2602.
> 'OLEANNA'
South Coast Repertory presents
David Mamet's "Oleanna"
through April 5 on the Sec;pnd
Stage, 655 Town Center Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. Performances are Tues-
days through Fridays at 8 p.m.;
Saturdays at 2:30 and 8 p.m. and
Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Tick-
ets range from $36 to $41. For
information, call 957-2602.
STAGE
> ARMCHAIR ADVEN'IURE
Orange Coast College's sixth
Armchair Adventure program is
"Japan -As You've Never Seen
It Before" at 7 p.m. Marth 13 in
the door. For information. call
432-5880.
> BEST PICTURES
The Port Theatre presents AcAde-
my Award-winning Best Pictures
through March 12. Films Include
•eridge on the River Kwaf, •
.. Lawrence of Arabia,• and "'The
Godfather.• Shows are $7 for
adults and $4.50 for seniors and
children under 12 .• The theater ls
at 2905 E. Coast Highway, Cprona
del Mar. For a complete listing,
call 673-6260.
> RAMBEllT DANCE COMPANY
The Orange County Performing
Arts Center's 1998 lntemational
Oassic Dance Season presents the
Rambert Dance Company at 8
p.m. March 13 and 14, and at 2
p.m. March 15 at 600 Town Cen-
ter Drive. Tickets range from $10
to $35. For more information, call
556-2787.
lessons wery Friday and Saturday -
at 7:30 p.m .. 151 Kalmus Drive, •
G-3, Costa Mesa. The lessons will -
be followed by • half 4lour of
practice and then open dancing
with • disc~ until 11 p.m.
The price is SS and 20% of the .
proceeds go to the OQnprofit stu· ..
dlos scholarship program. For ,
i,,tormatlon. call 2A 1 ·9908. ,
UlERARY
> 11001C olSOISs.0..S
The Newport Beach Pubf ic Library
Foundation's Manuscripts Book
Olsamion Group meets at 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday in the
Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avo-,
cado Ave., Newport Beach, to dis-,
a.m 'The Sotace of Open Spaces"
by Gretel Ehr1ich, and "Montana ·
1948• by Larry Watson. For infor-
mation, call 717-3890.
the Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Adml$Slon is $7 In advance, $9 at
> DEFORE DANCE CENTER
The Defore Dance Center's fea-
tured dance for the month of
March is the waltz and offers
> WNOt WITH AUTHORS
Round Table West presents a lun-
cheon featuring authors Ray
Bradbury, Rochelle Krich and Joy
Spizer on March 13 at noon at
Balboa Bay Oub, 1221 W. Coast
Highway, •Newport Beach. Tickets
are $35. can (213) 256-7977.
,..
ORANGE COUNTY
PRESENTS
T W I N ++ P ~ l ffi -~
'98 Concert Series
Dinner concerts in the dynamic, intimate venue of
Twin Palms Newport Beach
LAT{NJAZZ
SERIES
March 6
PONCHO SANCHEZ
,.
A12 THVftSOA"l MARCH 5, ~-
husein
mashni
Speaking the
language of
learning -
T his isn't a pitch for bilingual
education or English immer-
sion. It's just a snapshot of ,!he
.
foruni
" west side readions
y ar~ our ·students leaving?
Sl~cking enrollment has
. not~ing to do with ethnicity
and everything to do with the
school administration.
By Kare Gram
when our son was advanced to geome-
try, we discovered geometry is not
offered at TeWinkle. Every day I have to
drive him over to Estancia and back an
hour later. When I called TeWmkle to .
see if there was any way we could work
something outwith a small indepen-
dent-study class or some sort of district
transportation, I was told it is strictly. a
T here has been a big knot in my · "parent problem."
gut since reading the Daily Pilot It may be that educating a small num-
article "Estancia enrollment dips ber of advanced math stttdents should
to new low." Ll.ke many parents who not be a school priority, but the way the
moved to Costa Mesa, I want our chil-administration handled the advanced
dren to experience a variety Of cultures music students affected many m9re than
at school. There are many advantages to a few. The only algebra class offered at
being able to make friends with children TeWinkle is scheduled the same period
. from different backgrounds and our old-as the band class. Many of the third-year
est son (in eighth grade) greatly benefits music students are also in algebr:a. This
from his multicultural friendships. Unfor-means that kids who have been practic·
tunately, if AP classes at Estancia are ing an instrument for several years and
lacking, the disadvantages of poor col-were looking forward to playing first or
lege preparation outweigh all otfl.er con-second chair their final year at TeWinkle file I've lived having come from a tri-
lingual home. My mother is from
Brazil and my father from the West
Bank of Israel -Palestine.
"" : siderations. had to forgo music. I first learned of this
Born in Oakland, I grew up speak-
ing Portuguese until I was 5. Even my
lctther spoke to us only in my mother's
native tongue. ...
But when I turned 5, I started
. : kindergarten at Lincoln Elementary
''School in Lodi, Calif. I can't remem-
ber much except that before long, I
WdS interacting well with all my
1 peers. I believe "Ultra Man," •speed
As a Mesa Verde parent who has situation at a meeting in December
hung tough the last seven years while when a band member came to ask if the
I've watched one family after another PTA could somehow ibtercede in his
transfer their children from· California behalf. He was discouraged because the
and TeWinkle schools, I am disheart-. holiday cone~ was coming up and
ened to fiiid myseH now considering the without their experienced players, the
same fate. Over the years there have band was having some difficulty. When
been various articles in the Dauy Pilot we asked th~ administration if some-
touching on this transfer phenomenon, thing could be done about the schedule,
but they always seem to miss a few sig-we were stonewalled. .
nificant details that need addressin~. Ultimately, a parent was told it was •8
First of all, it is important to note "tud t bl d all nl : Racer" and "Maripe Boy" helped to
~ hon~ my· English skills.
h tin t tisti din h .. en pro em , .. an re y o y . w_ el)~ ig~ a .... ~reg~ .!ill~Q.W -----___ .____ . ;..______ MARC MARTIN/DAILY Pll02..._ aH -1.()..s den "
many chil<;lren have actually "left" their-Students may feel safe at TeWtnkle School, but one parent says administrators &ts tu. ts,.~sh~hted---~ At home, we still spoke Por-
tuguese.
But as my sister, Fatima, and I grew
· older we started speaking English to
• one another. We jnteracted well with
'. our neighbors and our community.
Then in 1972, my parents divorced.
; My father took my sister and I to the
: West Bank. I was 9, she was 10.'Nei-
' ther of us spoke any Arabic but we 1 were thrust into an Arabic school
; where we bad to l~ to speak, read
: and write a langua~e that had a com-
; pletely different alphabet, vocabulary
• and grammar from either of the Ian-
; guages we knew.
There was no Arabic as a Second
language curriculum. There was no
: special classes to bring us up to par
; With our peers. We just sat and
: learned. The teachers just taught
( everyone the same way with far less
1 eloquence and compassion than I've 1 ever found in an American classroom.
: • It's true that we did have a frame-
: work to work from in that we had
already learned principles of lan-
guage in English. But we had to start
from scratch . My father and step-
mother were both illiterate, so they
never read to us.
But both my sister and I soon
excelled in our classes. I was never
valedictorian material but I never
sunk below C-level either. Often I got
the Arabic equivalent of A:s.
There were no seH-esteem classes.
U I cl.idn't do the homework, I got in
trouble. In Israel, they use corporeal
punishment and I was hit a few times.
But I struggled to learn and when I
succeeded I felt good about myseH.
nus. in spite of the fact that my
family had fallen apart and I was liv-
ing in a culture that was in the Dark
Ages compared to what I was accus-
tomed to as an American student.
Not to say I didn't struggle. I had
many struggles later. Most of my
struggles, however, were social and
emotional. My family di.dn't do their
~ht~~totr-1
was to teach me to read, write, add ·
and subtract and I did that in whatev-
er language needed in whatevel
a>untry I was in~ • -,r ,
1-believ•we.w~ be swpriled at·
how high children tU'8 able to rise to
meet the standards we put before
them. No one was worried about my
feelings. They knew I ud to learn
Arabic to fun~. And when I was
back in the U.S., I had to teem Eng-
lish to function.
1lllkillg about Atnepca't obsesslon
with sell-esteem. one Brttbh colum-
nist wrote that Americans, unlike
Brits, like to touch thelr feelings,
• which she Mid i9 akin to toucb.tng
your feet-if• llU~ and corny.
• We ling the ~me. Of the
indomitable human jprttf but then
w pad it and Protec:t lt rather than
.Id.Ck it off the c:Wt to tt would be
fotcod to spreed ttJ win9I and 1ee.m to
fly. ID twn. it D8Wf fliel.
1At the Jddl ftj.
neighborhood school, the Newport-Mesa are foresaking quality educatton· for security. response, as it cert~y affected all the
Unified School District numbers only · band stu~ents and the entire student
reflect those children who have trans-at school and run into every no,w and anything past the bare min.imwn in the body, which was well aware of how the
ferred to other schools within the district. then at the grocery store. And the exo-•way of educating or problem solving. third-year music students were treated.
Past numbers have not represented stu-dus is not because of the elementary When something comes up at Te Winkle, No doubt good reasons can be given
dents who transferred out of district, school, but because of the looming mid-the attitude is: it 'is a student problem or for the administration's actions -or lack
enrolled in private schools, or whose dle school. a parent problem. Instead of exemplify-thereof -and no doubt if you print this
families moved away because of educa-Someone needs to ask why this is. That ing respect, the school administration there will be major rebuttals. But please
tional concerns -and they have not someone may not be the press, because writes edicts to penalize disrespect. The take a good look at the bottom line: Pa.r-
refl.ected the students who left their locai parents are hesitant to be quoted poorly. students are controlled instead of culti-ents "in the know" exit just before -or '
elementary school in fifth grade in dread Also, parents do not wish to alienate peo-vated. And by the mere fact that they dwing -TeWmkle School. That says
of the middle school they would have to ple in the school district they may need to are "kids that age" the administration more than any words I could write. No
attend in sixth grade. work with. It is especially difficult for par-finds them untrustworthy. This is evi-one wants to get in the car every day and.
It is crucial to note just who is leaving ents who have children with school prob-denced in everything from the void of take their children five, eight or 15 miles
the Estancia zone and when. At Califor-lems to come forward as they may be school lockers to the way students are away ~o attend school. It is intensely frus:"
nia Elementary School, the great majori-written off as "sour grapes." My eighth-restricted from after-school socializing on trating to even have to think about doing.
ty of them ar~ parents who were very grader has never had any school trouble the campus. The administration brags so. But if tlie drastic measures the school
involved at school. The record shows, and has excelled in classes. This is not about being usafe, • but ignores what is bo,1rd comes up with are nothing more 1 every Calif?mia Elemei;itary School ~A 'because of, but despite, TeWmk.le School forsaken for security. than restricting inter-district transfers, they
preSident smce 1992, wtth the excepti~n -although certainly credit goes to some One also needs to consider that, are misreading the situation and the low •
of one, took her children out of the wonderful teachers, I think they also sue-although there are several programs to enrollment problem will not go away -;
Estancia zone before sixth or seventh ceed despite the pervading administra-support and encourage "al-risk" youths, but you can bet, one way or another, the :
grade. When I peruse old California PTA lion's attitude. there are very few encouragements for students will. l
rosters, the board member names are So what is the problem at Te Winkle? high-achieving students. In .fact, they are
memories of mothers I used to work with Basically, a mind-set that refuses to do discouraged in many ways. For example, • KARE GRAM is a Costa Mesa resident. I
J • I
CABLE
• I
CONTINUED FROM A 1
tncreues that added more than $4
to the monthly be.sic cable bill in
just 13 months, are urging dty
of.fidnls to switch channels, dump
Media One and bring in a new
cable provider.
•1 simply cannot understand
why. our government offidals -
both dty ~d federal representa-
tives -cannot recognize the fact
that the consumers are not ~tting
a fair deal with this service, Back
Bay Loop resident James Lovelle
wrote ln a Jan. 31 letter to Mayor
Peter Butta .'
Lovelle, one of several resi-
dents who wrote letters to the dty
HEDGES
CONTINUED FROM A 1
important land-use decisions to be
made in Orange County.
And the 5th District seat is w-
ticularly hot because it represents
a polar{zed constituency: Newport
Beach and South Cowity cities,
the latter containing the lion's
share of voters.
Wilson, who was appointed to
"the board in 1996 by Gov. Pete
Wilson, is a staunch El Toro oppo-
nent. Hedges, an airline pilot for
the past 13 years, supports the
base conversion.
"The just-say-no approach to
'El Thro is not serving the needs of
the 5th District,• Hedges said.
"The planning process for the
conversion of El Toro is well under
way, and the only thing we've
heard from our supetvisors is that
it shouldn't be under way. I say
_ N ew _Tea Dyed
· Samovar Collection.
Exclusively at
HEMPHILL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224
230 East 17th St. Costa Mesa
rugsandcarpets.com
5"ECIAL NOTE: w. -the onty btcbp I ldefrt ... to heve tM SemoVw Col 1 ttlo" In 0...,.. Couftty.
in recent months to complain
about Med.ta One's seIViee and
dsing rates, could not be reached
for eomment Wednesday.
But in bis short letter to Buffa,
Lavelle cloimed two of the most
recent Media One rate tnaeues
-one ln February 1997 and
another last month -have biked
rates to the point of being unfair.
The monthly rate changes
brought the cost of basic cable
from $12.36 to $16.70, and other
premium viewing pack.ages and
charges for cable box remote con-
trols also changed, officials said.
MPlease loo1c into this matter
and advise what you are willing
or capable oh4._oing to bring
(these) charges ~ control
and most appropriately ... force a
rollback of these (ridiculous)
let's plan an airport that will work
for Orange County and work for
South Orange County.•
Reactions to Hedges'
announcement were as divided as
the district he hopes to represent.
While -Newport Beach resident$
and offida.ls were ecstatic about
having a strong candidate they
could support, South ,<;ounty offi-
cials were confident their large
following could defeat Hedges.
MI think it's going to be a real
uphill battle for him," said Irvine
Mayor Christina Shea, who said
maintaining an anti-airport vote
on the Board of Supervisors is
"critical" to El Toro foes. "Tom
Wilson is definitely going to be the
forerunner in the race, I think he
will do an excellent job, and I am
enthusiastically supporting him.•
But Richard Taylor, a Newport
Beach attorney and member of
the Airport Working Group, said
he is confident Hedges could win
the race.
Select an •assisted living residence• that has:
• Qualified, Experienced Caregiven
• Oean Wcll-EqwpJ>C4 Hoines In
safe Resideptial NeighbOmoOds
• CaidU1 Su~rvision
• Quality Assurance
rates,• Lovelle wrote.
Butta ~ed to Lovelle in
writing by saying, ln effect. that
cable television service is lmgely
out of the city's band.I and is regu-
lated by the Jiederal Communic.a-
tiolll (".ommlsston.
•p1ea1e understand th.at we
hove veey limited authority in rate
regula=, • Buffa wrote. •The
dty d have a limited, albeit
very authority to regulate
the lifeline rate and the cable
franchise agreement, and we do
monitor both those items ca.re.ful-
ly:
Media One Director of Corpo-
rate Affairs .leff Davis said the two
recent rate increases came only
after the company introduced
more channels and other service
improvements.
"He knows the airports -both
John Wayne and El Toro -he
knows this issue, and be knows
what it's going to take to unite the
district on this issue,• Taylor said.
"He knows the facts and can cut
through the emotional nonsense.
I'm extremely pleased,•
Judy Frutig, a city spokes-
woman on airport issues, also
spoke highly of Hedges, describ-
ing him as a strong and skilled
politician.
"He bas charisma and a clear.
set of political values," she said.
"His entrance into the race means
suddenly things got interesting in
the 5th District.•
Hedges, a Welong Republican
and former mayor who bas served
on the council for eight years, can-
not run for re-election this Novem-
ber. He said the decision to join
the race for supervisor was diffi-
cult beoluse of his young family
but said it was something be had
to do.
Eyelld Surgery
A higher standard of care.
Why settle for a surgeon who is
not qualified to operate on your
eyes? Or. Steinsapir is fellow-
ship-trained in botli cosmetic and
eyelid surgery and is a board-
certified oph thalmo!ogist. Enjoy
our unique persona[ service.
In JanUAIJ( when the bulc
cable rate went up for the second
time in a year, Med.la One
unveiled an expanded channel
lineup, including HB0-3, the Golt
Cbnnne1, Gem.I, Home and Gar-
den TeleviJdon, the Sd-Pi Channel
and Animal Planet, offldn1s said.
Davis said the rate increases
also were prompted by syndicated
cable channels, including ESPN,
increasing bow much they charge
local cable companies like Me<Ua
One for service.
•As those costs go up, someone
has to pay for it,• Davis said.
Davis also noted that according
to federal law, local offidals can-
not even consider rate increases
or monthly charges in reviewing
franchise agreements with cable
operators.
Q UESTIO N
"Do the people of the 5th Dis-
trict want the governor of the state
to determine who represents
them? I say no, and that's why a
contested election is so impor-
tant," Hedges said.
He called Wilson a "wea.k-
kneed Republican" and said he
looks forward to debating the
supervisor on county issues.
MPeople look for responsible
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THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1998 • AU
The City Coundl can only look :
at whether Media One 111fftdent-:
ly complied wilh tb6 tenns of the l
existing franchise A9J]!e1De.Dt and !
can •meet the tutun! cable-rel.at-:
ed communtty peeds and inter-l
ests, • a dty report said. :
•from a renew,U perspective ... :
that is not a justification in and of :
itsel1 fbr either approving or deny-·
ing a .tranchise, • Davis laid.
A town hall meeting is sched-
uled from 6 to 1 :30 p.m. at the
Neighbotbood Community Cen·
ter in Uons Park, 1845 Park Atre., .
when residents can voice their :
opinions. . :
Other public hearings with the :
City Council are tentatively set
before a final hearing in August to
consider renewing Media One's
franchise agreement.
r-------------------------, : I I ; : F.Y.I. l ;
I I :
: +WHO: John W. Hedges 1 ~
I +AGE: 42 : 1 + OCCUPATION: Commercial ~
: air1ine pilot. former U.S. Air ~
1 Force pilot :
: +YEARS IN NEWPORT :
: BEAot: 12 ; • + FAMILY: Wife, Maria; : i d aughters Elizabeth, 4, a nd 1
, Mary, 2 :
: +PROUDEST ACCOMPLISH-:
: MENTS: In 1992, helped ~
: organize a petition drive to ~
1 establish term limits in t he :
: city. Jn 1993, helped lead the 1
' effort to defeat a proposed :
: assessment district. ~
I • 1...-------------------------:
stewardship of their tax money
that they are forced to pay, but
most of the time, they don't get :
that,• he said. "I'm saying it's cer-;
tainly time that they do get that.• ;
TOSHIBA
CONTINUED FROM A 1
•1ntu1t1on tells us that when
you get that kind of national
exposure, good things happen,•
he Aid.
ESPN will be covering the
event on Friday, Saturday ·and
Sunday.
The excitement kicla off Sun-
day night with a St5o-per-peT-
son celebrity party a t the New-
port Beach Count?y Club , spon-
sored by Newport Beach sports
agents Leigh Steinberg and Jef-
frey Moorad. All proceeds from
tickets and a sports memorabilia
auction will go to the Special
Olympics Orange County and
the Hoag fiospital Cancer Unit,
said Craig Richardson, director
of business development for
Steinberg and Moorad.
Twenty-six of Steinberg's
famous clients, including Dallas
Cowboys quarterback lroy Aik-
man and former boxing great
Sugar Ray Leonard, will be on-
hand to mingle with guests and
sign autographs. The athletes
then will accompany the senior
PGA players in the classic and
local amateW"S in a Celebrity
Pro-A,m tournament on Monday.
"The more we can do for the
community in which we live and
play an activ-e role in it by using
our resources as a company in
the sports industry is something
we are committed to,• Steinberg
said.
Tickets for each of the golfing
events are $12 in advance and
will remain available through
next Friday, when the price goes
up to $15. For more information,
call 515-4840.
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, ,
• Newport-Mesa bOard rarely ovettlitns zero-tolerance actions
liayashlda, told the court that if
IU.lpension was postponed,
lt was, lt would impact the
Chool dlatrict's ability to
orce its zero-tolerance policy
could infringe on a school
'"ftaa-decision.
Boartl President Jim Feny-
man said he was concerned the
decision could set a precedent,
leaving the district facing a
court battle each time a student
is expelled or suspended:
"There are aspects of the pol-
icy I don't agree with,• Feny-
man said. "But this is the school
diatrict's policy. I think this has
soot a few holes in the p olicy .•
School board member Serene
Stokes said she stands by the
policy and believes the school
district will be vindicated after
the court heaIS the district's
arguments March 17.
•The judge bas not chal-
lenged that the policy is in the
best interest of our youth,•
Stokes said. "He just has given
us time to look at it.•
School board member Wendy
Leece said she also believes the
'ourt bearing will strengthen
the district's policy.
"I don't think it will weaken
the district's policy,• Leece said.
"I'd rather be patient and wait
.ACCIDENT
CONTINUED FROM A 1
cross the roped-off area of the
crash -a blur of badges and cam-
eras and off1aal-looking people
doing a lot of pointing.
-The dark bike stanclmg in the
road didn't look hke the one her
husband rode, Phillips told a
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
l:mwroRT-MESA
Although it's not usually a suc-
cessful maneuver, the school dis·
trict does have a prooedwe in
place for pa.rents who want to
appeal the suspensions of their
dlildren.
At a court hearing Monday;
school distJict officials com~lained
that Corona del Mar Higti ·School
student Ryan Huntsman, 16, had
not exhausted all the avenues
available wtthln the dlstJict before
asking a court to reverse the deci-
sion to suspend and transfer him
to another school.
But Huntsman's attorney, TI.n:l-
othy Snyder, said be spoke with
school board President Jim FEITTy-
and see. I think. the district's
policy of transferring s~dents
will be upheld.• "'
Although he supports the
policy, Ferryman said he doesn 't
agree with the district's blanket
treatment of all violations of the
zero-tolerance policy.
"I don't think 'transferring a
kid does a damn bit of good,•
he said. "I don't see how that's
helping a kid. Maybe we should
reporter. That seemed solid
grounds for hoping he wasn't the
figure under the tarp.
If Phillips had looked closely,
she would have seen a police
insignia on the dark bike. She did
not know her husband's dark pur-
ple BMW Ac;tiveline 21-speed had
already been packed into the back
of a police truck as evidence.
One of the officers detached
bimseli from the knot of investiga-
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-'1JOLLARS .
man about the appeal process and
was told the board rarely, if ever,
reversed a dedtlon by the school
administratioli.
·1 tbld him these decisions
don't usually get overturned,•
F~an said. "It just doesn't
happen very often.• .
Tum Jacobtion, the assistant
superintendent of secondary edu-
cation. said the d1stric:t has an
appeal process th.at usually results
in a board decision within two
weeks. The school board meets
the second and fourth Tuesday of
each month.
A suspended student's family is
notified by phone and mail of their
child's suspension. Jacobsqn said.
The first court of appeal is to the
school's principal.
"The parents have 72 hours to
exclude them from sports and
other extracurricular activities .. "
But Tom Jacobson, the asso-
ciate superintendent of-sec-
ondary education, who used to
be a principal, said the number
of drug-a nd alcohol-related
violations at school events has
decreased signiflcarttly sin ce
the policy was implemented in
1991.
"We always used to have a
tors and walked toward her. He
wore shades and plain clothes. He
introduced himself as 1hlffic Inves-
tigator Howard Eisenberg.
He asked her husband's name,
and she gave it, and he said that
matched the ID found on the body.
She gave a small cry. Her body
sagged slightly. Eisenberg put his
hand on her back.
Soon COps were surrounding her
in a protective semicircle. Could
jazzprrise
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schedule a conference wtth the
prlndpat,. Jacomon laid.
Parmts also are given a leOODd
c.Nnce for a conferenCle with the
prlncipal before a student ts trans-
ferred. u parents are diaatilfled
with the outcome of their meet-
ings with the prm~ they can
appell to Jacobson and the~-
intendent of schools. •
U they are still diaatisfied, they
can finally appeal to the school
board, which Jacobton said Ul\lal-
ly handles suspension and expul-
sion cases as soon u possible.
During the time the student is
out of ~dacobson said the district p a home tutor so
students can k up on their
homework. The tutors meet with
suspended students five hours a week. .
handful of students at every
dance, game and school activity
that we would have to sencl
home because they were under
the influence," Jacobson said.
Since the zero-tolerance poli-
cy was implemented, Jacobson
said the school district rarely
has any violations of the policy
at school-related activities.
Although the policy has
reduced drug and alco}).ol viola-
they get her anything? Would she
like a glass of water? Would she
like an escort home? Would she
like to sit in the squad car?
No, no, no, she said.
"I'm just in shock,• she said, in a
moment when the police left her
side. "This isn't supposed to hap-
pen. This happens to other people.
This is what you see on the news.•
•They get the homework from
the student's teachen and take tt
to the kid's home,• Jacobson~
U the parents are still dissatis-
fied after tbe school board finders
a dedsk>n, they ~ take it one
step bigher, to the Orange Cowity
Board of Bducation.
Costa Mesa High School Prln·
dpal Andy Hernandez sald the
low rate ol. overturned ~
sions and expulsions 1$ due to the
fa.ct that the schools are very thor-
o~h a.bout uslng the zero-toler-
~ policy.
•'Jbere have been cases when
I've backed out of a suspension
because I didn't think it was solid
enough.• Hemande'L said. "Nine
times out of 10, if we don't have a
strong enough case, we don't go
forward with it.•
tion.s in the schools, Jacobson
said, many tim~s the problem
simplr moves outside of the
schoo district.
•we take care of it while
they're at school,• Jacobson
said. "Afterw~d it becomes the
responsibility of the families.
the youth clubs, the churches
and·the police to h elp . Everyone
has to be involved in fighting ·
tbi , .. s. -
Police said the investigation is
continuing and there was no evi-
dence that drugs or alcohol played
a role in the crash. By press time,
police had not said if Pigg was cit-
ed.
As he was being driven from the
scene, apparently by a relative,
Pigg offered this comment: •I
couldn't feel worse.·
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EYE·bPENER QUOTE OF THE DAY
. Sam Nelson gamers
back-to-back hoops honors
Th.ere arm "l a lol ~ glrll lbdng up
to ~ balU lhroum at tMir' /ace ... •
-NEWPOlrf HARBOR POLO aJAQI BR1AN KRECllZKAMP
When in Rome
. j~t icy finding~.
.
r~7-~--------~-----~~~-----~---------~~-~---~-----~~--------~-------------~
_,
' I
I
I l
•• ' ' I
( I ; ! I • • I ! ' l ' I : • I I I \ .. ~ I ! I '
I
I
I ..... I DON LEACH I OAR.Y LOT
1 The Dally Pllofs 1998 DJeCUD Team for prep basketball-from le ft, Newport Harbor's Dustin Dllngworth, Estanda's James Pawldns,
I Corona del Mar's Dennis Alshuler, Newp;ort Harbor's Matt Jameson. Estanda's Sam Nelson an4 Newport Harbor's Scott Archbold I
I • I
Presenting the·Daily ~ot's ;
a decent course .#
•And if you're listening
to one, well, just try to
keep a sense of humor.
Senior PGA Tour gives radio
shock-jock a challenge.
Anyone who listens to
shock-jock sports radio
talk-show host Jim Rome on
XTRA/690 knows that he has an
opinion or two.
Off ending people is
sometimes part.al his schtick
-nothing's funnier than the
"Beverly Hillbillies" melody for
.. certain" callers. ·
But when it comes to golf,
specifically the Senior PGA Tour,
Rome is clearly stuck in jail with
a bad lie and the sun in his eyes.
Among other criticisms of the
50-and-over tour, Rome has
ripped the seniors for using carts
and accused the tour of not
changing the pin placements
during tournaments.
Rome claims he loves golf and
the PGA Tour, but says the
Senior Tour isn't a sport.
See for yourself next week
in the ToSbiba. Senior Classic at
Newport Beach CoWltry Club: .
Vutually everyone walks during
the three-round competition and
pin placemeJ:!ts are changed
after every round.
"Most people who are writing
or saying negative things about--
the Senior Tour haven't been out
there,• said Tun Crosby, Vice·
President of Business Affairs for •
the tour. •rn tell Jim Rome ... if he'd
ever come to a Senior Tour event
• Estancia senior Sam Nelson is
first two-time Player of the Year
on Daily Pilot's All-Newport-Mesa
District boys basketball selections.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
E stancia High senior Sam Nelson, the
guiding light in the Eagles' run to the
CIF Southern Section Division ill-A
boys basketball semifinals, is the first
two-time Player of the Year on the sixth
annual Daily Pilot All-Newport-Mesa
District Dream Team.
Nelson, who av-J?raged 22.9 points and
nine rebounds for the Eagles (19-10), is the
third straight Eagle, the fourth overall from
the school, to claim the top honor. Former
Estancia stars Dane Plock (1996) and Jim
Faulkner ('93) were also picked as the top
player among the four district high schools.
Nelson, a 6-foot-5 Air Force
Aeademy-bound standout, is joined on the
six-member squad bSF senior teammate
James Dawkins, Corona del Mar jWlior
Dennis Alshuler and the Newpcirt Harbor
trio of senior Scott Archbold, jWlior Matt
Jameson and sophomore Dustin llling-
worth.
Estancia's Rich Boyce and Newport
Har.bot'.s.Larry Hirst share Coach of the
Year laurels, having masterfully guided
their respective squads to postseason
berths.
Nelson, a deadly three-point shooter
who also produced in the paint, scored in
double figures in all but two games in bis
third varsit}' season. He tallied more than
Rich Boyce Larry Hirst
30 points seven times, including a high
game of 38 against Cypress, and scored at
least 18 points 23 times.
Nelson poured in 34 in a 71-67
double-overtime loss to second-seeded
Bishop Montgomery in Friday's semifinals
at Redondo Union High, missing a chance
to tie or win the game in the final seconds
when a pass intended for him was
intercepted by a Knight defender, who
went on to dunk at the buzzer.
A three-year starter, Nelson st'Ored 1,440
poi.Qts in his 85-game varsity career, which
included second-team All-ClF Division ill
recognition last year and figures to produce
first-team laurels' when the team is
anno\lllced in the coming weeks.
Nelson twice claimed Pacific Coast
League MVP laurels and joins a pantheon
of Estancia greats, including Plock,
Faulkner, Matt Fuerbringer, Agustin
Heredia, Jeff Gardner and Steve Van Hom.
He has also garnered all-district laurels in
volleyball. He contributed to two PCL .
championships.
•More than being a great basketball
player, he's a great kid,• Boyce said of his
versatile star, whom he used at every
position.
Jameson, a 5-11 point guard and
three-year varsity starter, led the Sailors
(18-9) in every statistical category to earn
his second straight all-district selection.
Jameson, also an all-district volleyball
performer, averaged 13.5 points, 5.6
rebounds and 3.7 assists and also led the
Tars in steals. He shot nearly 45% from the
field and better than 72% from the foul
line, scoring in double figures 20 times.
Jameson scored a team-high 12 points in
the Sailors' 50-47 Sea View League upset
over previously unbeaten Santa Margarita
(Feb.4}, a triumph that helped the Tars
finish in a second-place tie with El Toro
(both ~th 7-3 league marks).
Dawkins, a two-time all-district running
back in football, averaged 13 points for the
Eagles, including 18 double-figure efforts
and a c~r high of 28 points in victories
over Irvine and Aliso Niguel.
A dangerous three-point threat, who
used his supreme athleticism to penetrate
and fihish, as well, he handled point guard
duties most of the season, though more
ideally suited to off guard.
Dawkins, also a talented delender, is still
attempting to interest four-year schools in
football. However, he could wind up
playing football and basketball at the
comm\lllity college level next year.
Illingworth, a 6-3 forward whose ,
quickness, aggressiveness, leaping ability
and ra,re improvisational skills allow him to
flourish offensively against bigger
• SEE DREAM TEAM PAGE B3
•SEEGOLF PAGE B2 L-----~--~----~-~---~--------------------------~~---~---~---~-------------~~
dally pllot hlg~ ~I athlete of ~ week
I"' 0 I\, I \. V \,,' '\'I I •
Pi , te
trample
Hancoc ·
•After a 12-day layoff,
Orange Coa?t storm_s ba~
to belt playoffs foe, 76-57;
Bucs meet Canyons next
with eyes only for State.
By Molly Yanity, Dally Pilot
COSTA MESA -It didn't take
long for Orange Coast College's
women's basketball team to
establish its dominance in
Wednesday night's Southern cat-
ifqrnia Regional second round
game against visiting A11aD Han-
cock.
It also didn't take long fc:»'
spectators to notice that Ani
Saraydarian, Coast's freshman
forward, was wearing basketball-
print boxer shorts beneath her
white team shorts as she went to
the free-
throw line
less than a
minute into
the game to
drop in a
pair to give
the Bucs a
J -0 lead.
While
Saraydarian
might ~Ye _ _.,.._,La&.JLL>llfr..LJ.._,,,
had basket-
balls on her
rear, she
and the rest of the OCC squad
had hoops on their mind as it rout-
ed the Bulldogs, 76-57, in the sec-
ond round of the tournament to
set up a Saturday date with Col-
lege of the Canyons, a 95-69 win-
ner over Moorpark, to advance to
the State Championships.
The Pirates jumped out to a _
14-9 lead and held advantages of
23-5 and 31-12 in the first half.
"We got out of the gate good
and that was my concern,• Coach
Mike Thornton said of his 24-9
squad that had had a 12-day lay-
off after receiving a bye for first
round action.
#We needed a rest, but not
that much of a rest. I would have
liked to have had seven or eighl
days. not 12. • :
The last Pirate contest, a 62-61
win over Fullerton, earned the
team a share of the Orang'
Empire Conlerence crown for the
first time.
The fourth-seeded Pirates 9'ot
off to the scorching start thanks bi
part to three consecutive buckets
by OEC Player of the Year Jen .. ·
oiler Ludwicki, as well as the
tenacious delense of sophomore
Becky Losbak.
Ludwicki drained the game's
first two points when Natah
Weeks won the ~p. sending tb9
ball into Loshak's hands. Losbd
turned to find Ludwicki at -
hoop for an Wlcontested layup:
Loshak then made a steal ~t .
the other end of the floor to set \Ip
a Ludwicki three.
The Bulldogs, 14-20 and ~
ed 20th, came off an upset ~
over No. ,13 Santa Monica
• SEE OCC PAGE ~ .. ...
,2
high school girls swim preview
JUMPING INfu
.-THE SWIM .
Water polo cuts into preseason for Newport ~oor,
CdM; Costa Mesa, Estancia ahn to challenQe in P.CL.
By Molly Yanity, D.ai/y Pilot
A my Murphy looks more
like a kid at a candy store
than one of the most
threatening athletes in the Sea
View League. She has a laugh
that inspires smtles from
everyone around her, and a
freestyle stroke that blows away
everyone I.fl the pool.
The delendmg league champ
in the 100 (a personal record if
1 ·56 05 at CIF Championships)
and 200 free (54 .03) will pace the
Newport Harbor High girls swim
team th.ls season.
But without a preseason slate,
due to the mcepllon of varsity
girls water polo, the Sailors'
Coach Todd Kolber believes that
dethroning pe1 erinial Sea View
League favorite Irvine will be a
hefty task.
"Last year I had such
concerns about not having a
preseason, but theiptrength in
the water is probably at a high,"
Kolber said. "Anything lost on
quality will bdlance out with
the1.r fitness level."
Kolber plans on taking the
front lllle of the league champion
girls water polo team to compose
a bulk of lus swururung lineup.
·early Wilson and Kyndra
Cox, they had really good)riatef>
polo seasons and we hope that'll
carry over," he said
He also mentioned polo
starters Autumn Mtlliken.
Jocelyn Mandenno, Diana Day,
Sara White and sophomore
Jenna Barto, who will compete m
the freestyle and butterfly.
"Hey, tbey beat Irvine and 1t
sure would be nice if we could,
too," Kolber said.
Senior Alden Moore, a
CIF-qualifying breastroker dnd
water polo standout, may not
return to the pool for the spring
season after d successful winter
campaign, however, Kolber said.
"She had some problems with
h~ shoulder last year and this
being her senior year, I don't
know," Kolber said of Moore's
·status
While uncertdl.n about the
upperclassmen, he is sure about
the qua.lJty of Murphy, JUSl a
sophomore, and freshman
Jenrufer Arrow.
·she's JUst supposed to be
super-fast,· Kolber said of the
breastroker who 1s the younger
sister of Newport's CIF-qualifier,
senior Jason
Kolber said that the shortage
of preseason training time also
limits his scouting ability as
league tea.ms dre still in the
water polo tank dS opposed to
the lanes.
"lrvme is always good and
Santa Margarita has a good club
feeder program, but I'm Just not
sure how the programs are
looking, yet.· he said.
0
One team that ls always tough
tor the Tars, though, is Back Bay
rival Corona del Mar, which will
also sport a water polo-seasoned
rostE::r
Doug Volding's Sea Kings
return a large class of seniors,
led by Kylie Cooper, Michelle
Dahn, Meagan Hardt and
Jennifer Roberts, but the coach lS
impressed with the numbers that
have turned out.
"We've got a large team. I'm
still juggling things around, but
I'm excited," he said.
Roberts replaces
CIF-qualifying Laura Weeshoff,
who was Cd.M's leading
backstroker this year.
Metl'Ddi Tucker end Jemiifer
Belli pace a solid corps of
sophomores, too, Volding Nid.
•A f~w years ago when U\e
current seniors were freshm~,
they talked about this little girl
who would be coming 'through
the ranks," Volding bega,11.
The gtr1s were talking about
Lauten Powers, who is finally a
freshman
•we're really excited about
her. She wt11 make an immediate
impact,• Volding said.
Powers specializes in the fiy
and free events. . a
In the Padflc Coast League,
Newport-Mesa squads Costa
Mesa and Estancia will have to
fight their ways into the top
three by dethroning Laguna
Hills, Aliso Niguel and
University.
·we have four or five girls
who can give their top girls a
challenge," Coach Jenny
Sheldon said. "But it's hard to
size up with teams who walk
onto our pool deck with 60 kids.
It's their depth that'll get us."
Estanda will lean "On junior
Blake Frino, sophomore Lauren
Cassity, and senior Peri Baker, as
well as freshmen Summer ·
Flatherty and Katie Menden,
who will race in distance events an,; free and back, respectively.
"" Cassity, a three-sport star,
spearheaded the effort last
spring by placing seventh in the
50 free (27 .02) and eighth in the
100 free (1:00.58) as a freshman,
just missing CIF qu¥if ying times
of 22.60 and 56.20.
This season . she will be joined
on the squad by sisters Dana and
Jennifer.
Dana is a senior out for the
first time and Jennifer is a
freshman.
Frino was strong in the
breastroke, while Baker held her
own in the· fly.
Coach Sheldon competed for
Orange Coast College's water
polo team, which finished second
in the state, in the fall . D
The Mustangs will sorely m.lss
CIF qualifier Colleen Lund, who
was third in the PCL in the 50
free. But they have a solid core
around which to build.
Crystal Whitmore's crew also
gets a late start because of water
polo competition, but Allison
Alastuey, Amy Devey and
Stephanie Lombardo should be
well-conditioned from time in the
tank.
Also the addition of sister act
Wendy and Jodie Martinovich
will add points for Mesa.
Alastuey made a strong
showing in the Mustangs'
premiere meet against Edison
with first places in the 200 free
(2:08.36) and 100 back (1:05.48.)
Lombardo could be a big
surprise in the PCL this season
after placing fifth (2:31.17) in the
200 individual medley last
spring. She also competes in
distance and breastroke events.
Lombardo and Alastuey also
composed half of the
CIF-qualifying 200 medley relay
team that suffered a
disqualification at Belmont Plaza
in the consolation final.
Alastuey also was third in the
500 free (personal record of
5:18.12) and fifth in the 200 free
consolation finals (2:00.09) at
Bel{nont Plaza last spring, as
well ·
Sara Whittaker, a junior, also
came on strong toward the
conclusion of 1997.
·She didn't get a lot of aedit
all year, but she was a big reason
for our success," said Brian
Kreutzkamp, co-coach of the Sea
View League champions, who
finished 20-7 after an 8-4
semifinal defeat to top-seeded
Long Beach Wilson Feb. 26.
"She was especially good in
the big games, like our
(le~gue-title showdown) agAinst
Irvine aqd against Los Al (which
won the equivalent of last year's
Southern Section title and was
seeded fourth in this year's
playoffs)."
So, while Kennedy isn't the
one to grill for an oral history of
the Tars' surprising laJe-season
run, her aggressiveness, mobility
and growing wisdom in the
water figure prominently in any
such a,ccount.
"Not only can she block the
ball, she steals the ball better
than most goalies can,•
Kreutzkamp explained. "She's
probably the most mobile girls
goalie I've seen and she's almost
like a coach in the pool. When
CONTINUED FROM 81
and see what it's like, we'll let
him broadcast on Saturday
(March 14) with 25,000 people
there."
Crosby added the Senior Tour
continues to establish records in
prize money and charitable
giving, but that really has
nothing to do with how the
golfers are playing on the links.
Point is, these oldies but goodies·
on the Senior Tour are
phenomenal players with a
hardcore competitive nature.
1Ty standing over a four-foot
putt on an undulated green with
$150,000 at stake and ESPN
cameras hovering over your
every step. If this wasn't a sport,
nobody would pay admission.
•Does Rome play golf?"
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• Swlnwntng
H lgh sc.hoor g Iris •
Newport Harbor,
Corona del Mar at
Caolmano Valley
Rel•ys •t Saddleback
College, 3 p.m
• Tennis
Community
college women ·
Cyprm at Orange
C.oast. 2 p m.
High school boys·
Corona del MM •t Foothlll.~:15 p.m ........
College -Bellevue
Univenlty (Nebt.) at Southt!m Clllifomia
College, 2:30 p.m.
Community
college • ace at
Riverside, 2 p.m.
• Volleybllll
High 5Chool boys -
Corona def Mar at
Ccma Mesa, 6 p.m.
Oce.n Vlf!W at EstaOO.. 6 p.m.
·~ High school • long
BffCh Jordan at
Corona del Mar,
3:15 p.m.; Marina at
Newport 3 p.m.
• Golf
High school -S.n
Clemente vs. Corona
del Mar, at Newport
Be.ch CC. 3:15 p.m.;
Newport Harbor vs.
Trabuco Hills, 11t Ilg
• C.nyon CC. 2 p.m.
• she's playing well. all the gids
rally around her: They know
she's going to b.JocJc the ball no
ma.tter what, so that allows them
to cheat o little on our
counterattack.•
Kennedy, who also mans the
goal for Harbor's fidd hockey team. said she is still learning tbe
rudhnents of protecting the
floating target roughly one-third
wider than a field hockey goal.
But her inaeasing reputation
and burgeoning confidence
provide evidence she ts
submerging any initial
misgivings llboUt becoming the
last line of defense.
"I wcmted to play in the field
when we started last season,"
said the Daily Pilot Athlete of the
Week, who totaled 18 saves in
the Tars' final two playoff games.
"But one day I switched in for
our rapid-fire drill and I stopped
all the balls. From then on, I
guess I was elected.•
Kennedy said her field hockey
experience has helped her
understand angles, as well as
grasp the mental toughness
required to quickly dismiss and
rebound from any opponent's
goal. But learning to balance
aggressiveness with the
practicality of staying home, as
Crosby added. HWell, I don't care
if he's a 10 handicap. I'll bet on •
the Senior Tour golf courses
where guys are shooting 65 that
he won't break 100. These golf
courses have never been
tougher. We'll even give him a
pro-am spot. I'm not out to bash
Jim Rome, because he's an
entertainer. But before he
(criticizes) people, he should
come out and experience it."
If Rome takes Crosby up on
the challenge, wonder which
spot he would take?, considering
all three pro-ams are sold out.
Stay tuned.
• Chi Chi Rodriguez bas
dropped from the Toshiba Senior
Classic, because of prlot
commibnents in Puerto Rico,
according to tournament director
Jeff Purser.
Rodriguez, who has played in
each of the first three Senior
w~ as developing a tolerance
for the physical demands of tbe
position, have added unique
challenges to her aquatic
avocation.
•There areri't a lot o1 girls
lining up to have balls thrown at
their face,• summed up
Kreut:zkamp, who cites
competitiveness as yet another
o1 Kennedys assets .•
•1t does hurt when the ball
hits you, and when its cold, it
stmgs even more than usual."
said Kennedy, who also battled
hypothermia in two games
played in usiheated pools. •But
in the middle of a game, it
doesn't help your team much if
you go off to the sideline and cry.
You've got to keep playing. You
learn to angle your head, so if
the. ball hits you, it's a glancing
blow. In a game, I forget the ball
bit me the second after it
happens, because I'm already
thinking about what to do with
the ball.•
A member of Newport's
accelerated Da Vind program,
whose 3.8 GPA includes several
honors classes, Kennedy, is also
thinldng about a collegiate water
polo future.
"I want to earn a water polo
sch~larShip," said the
Classics, will be sorely missed.
Rodriguez, who carded a 64 in
the second round here last year,
still delights the crowd with his
sword dance after birdies. He's -
also a humanitarian and world
ambassador.
Catch ya in '99, Chi.Chi.
• Mike HW. wbo flnlabed 20th
on money list in 1997 ($678,640),
the ninth straight year he has
been among the Senior Tour's
top 31, bas also dropped, P.urse.r
said.
• Jake Plum.mer, Arizona
Cardinals quarterback. has
pulled out of the Monday
Celebrity Pro-Am at NBCC, the
first day ol the week-long
Toshiba Senior Classic.
'lroy Aikman of the Dallas
Cowboys, however, is still
.expected to pliiiy, along with
Washington Stille quarterback
shot-bloc.king standout, who
credits Harbor coaches Bill
Barnett and Kreutzkamp, as well
as Newport youth coach Ben
Wjght, for polishing her skills.
As one of several returners
prompting optimism for
Newport's 1998-99 campaign,
however, she figures to first
provide more memorable
moments for the Sailors.
Whether she can remember
, them or not.
Ryan Leaf, 'possibly the No. 1
overall choice in the NFL draft
this year, and many other sports
stars -mostly football players
represented by Leigh Steinberg
and Jeffrey Moorad, locally
based agents.
Warrick Dunn (farnpa Bay
Buccaneers) and boxer Sugar
Ray Leonard have also
committed to the Celebrity
Pro-Am on Monday (12:30 p.m .
shotgun start).
K8nsas City tight end Tony
Gonzales {Huntington Beach
High) will also tee off. Steinberg
and Moorad are the •supporters~
of the pro-am.
• In terms of weather next week,
Crosby said "we're crossing all
l)ody parts• in hopes of dry
conditions. If Newport Beach has
desirable weather, record aowds
will be expected. For tickets:
515-4840.
B,Ri E F L?f.
CdM e
• Sea Kings boys squeeze
out narrow victory; girls
bury host Tiitons, 98-30.
CL~ME~ N TRACiC
Corona del Mar High's boys and
girls track and field teams earned
nonleague season-opening victo-
ries Wednesday at San Qemente,
as the boys eked out a 66-65 ver-
dict and the girls cruised, 98-30.
Seniors Matt Dennerline, Mike
Finn and Nick Orlich each won
two events for the boys, while
SORhomores Liz \.forse and Kelley
.Halley, as well as Arivela Kling
did all doubled in the girls tri-
umph.
Fi;nn captured the 200 and 400
meters, while Dennerij.ne topped
~ the field in the 1,600 and 3,200.
Orlich was tops in the long jump
and ~ple jump.
Junior Zach Zarrilli also con-
tributed heavily for Coach Bill
Sumner's visitors,. winning the
100 and taking second in the 200
and the high jump.
Morse, the reigning CIF South-
ern Section Division II champion
in the 800, won that event, as well
as the 1,600.
Halley swept the long jump
and triple jump and added a sec-
ond in the 100, while Kling cap-
tured the shot put and discus.
NONLEAGUE
BOYS
CoM 66, SAN Cl..EMENTE 65
100 • 1. Zarrilli (CdM) 11 .5; 2. McDon-
ald (CdM), 11. 7; 3. Bastionelli (SC), 11.9.
200 · 1. Finn (CdM). 23. 1; 2. Zarrilli
(CdM), 23.3; 3. Hadley (SC), 24.2.
400 · 1. Finn (CdM). 51.7; 2. Luciani
(SC), 52.9; 3. Pridgen (SC), 54.2.
800 · 1. Morgan (SC), 2:10.9; 2. Den·
nerline (CdM), 2:11.0; 3. Milner (SC),
2:1~.9.
1,600 · 1. Oennerline (CdM). 4:54.S; 2.
Beardslee (CdM), 4:57.3.; 3. Chapman
(SC), 4:58.7.
3,200 · 1. Dennerline (CdM) 10:22.8; 2.
Beardslee (CdM), 10:31.1; 3. Chapman
(SC), 10:35.2.
110 HH · t. Mc.Cormick (SQ no time; 2.
Atterbery (SC). no time; no third.
300 IH • 1. McCormick (SC), 46.3; 2.
Atterbery (SQ, 47 .8; 3. Brown (SC), 49.1.
400 relay · 1. Corona del Mar, 45.6.
1,600 relay · 1. San Clemente. 3:41. 7.
HJ -1. Kevin (CdM). 5-6; 2. Zarrilli
(CdM), 5-4; 3. Young (CdM), 5-2.
U · 1. Orlich (CdM), 19-9 314; 2. Goad
(SC), 17-7 3/4; 3. Young (CdM), 17.2 3/4.
TJ -1. Orlich (CdM), 37-1 118; 2. Goad
(SC), 36-1 314; 3. Morgan (SC), 35-8 314.
PV -1. Damian (SC), 10-0; no second or
third.
SP · 1. Bean (SC), 44-10 112; 2. Minkan-
son (SQ, 38-2 3/4; 3. Tappendan (SC), 35-
3.
OT· 1. Bean (SC), 14S-6; 2. Hayden (SC).
113-8; 3. Fenton (CdM). 108-5.
GlllLS
CdM 98, 5an Clement• )0
100 · 1. Ciampa (SC). 13.6; 2. Halley
(CdM). 13.7; 3. Clarke (CdM), 13.8.
200 -1. Ciampa (SC), 27 .4; 2. Cummins
(CdM). 27.9; 3. Weinstein (CdM), 28.7.
400 -1. Ciampa (SC). 1:01.7J. 2. Cum-
mins (CdM). 1 :03.0: 3. Weinsteln (CdM),
1:06.0.
800 · 1. Morse (CdM). 2:30. l; 2. Walla
(SC), 2:32.2.; 3. Yourmen (CdM), 2:35.2.
1,600 · l . Morse (CdM), S:28.S; 2. Your-
men (CdM). 5:33; 3. Blair (CdM), S:34.0.
),200 -1. Blair (CdM), 12:04.9; 2. Prid-
gen (SC), 12:S6.7; 3. Quinlan (CdM),
13:38.2.
DREAM
CONTINUED fROM 81
defenders in the lane, averaged
9.1 points and 4.3 rebounds.
The second-year varsity
player's ability to get to the rim
allowed him to shoot 58 % from
the field. He scored in double
figures 11 times and lead the
Tars ln scoring seven games,
including a 58-4 2 road loss to
Ayala in the first round of the
CIP Division I-AA playoffs.
Archbold, a 6-0 senior and yet
another all-district yeteran in vol-
100 H -L Sames (CdM), 19.3; 2.
Mahler (CdM), 19.5; 3. Grant (SQ, 20.9.
IOO H -1. Mahler (CdM), 52.7; 2. Adc-
lev (SC), 1:00.1; 3. Bames (CdM), 1 :00.6.
400 relay • Not ~ntested.
1,IOO refar -1.µrona del Mar (Wein-
s1eln. M~hlet, CWTimlns, Mor$9}, 4:20.3.
HJ • Not CQntested.
U · 1. Halley (CdM), 15-0 1/2; 2.
Oraguze (CdM), 13--8 314; no third.
TJ. -1. Halley (CdM), 31-2 1/4; 2.
Oraguze (CdM), 26-2; no third.
SP • 1. Kling (CdM) 30-S; 2. OeMllle 30-
7 1/2; 3. Dickson (CdM), 29-5 112. •
OT · 1. Kling (CdM), 61 -3; 2. DeMllle
(CdM), l')O mark; 3. Dickson (CdM), no
mark.
CdM ieads Aliso. 205-217
ALISO VIEJO -G F Corona del Mar OL
High senior Max Wallick shot k
over-par J.7 Wednesday at El
Niguel Country to pace the visit-
ing Sea Kings to a 205-217 nine-
hole lead in the first half of a non -
league match against Aliso
Niguel.
Steve Brooks (40), Craig
Brooks (41), Chad Towersey (43)
and Innes MacDonald (44} round-
ed out the top five for Cd.M.
Newport trails Oilers
GOLF SANTA ANA
HEIGHTS -Sopho-
more Kevin Olson paced the
Newport Harbor High boys golf
team with a nine-hole score of 42
Wednesday at Santa Ana Country
Club, but the Sailors trail non-
league guest Hwitington Beach,
201-219, halfway through an 18-
hole match.
Sophomore Traighe Concannon
and freshmen Miller Atkins each
carded 43s, followed by Mitch
Johns (44) and Rusty Hill (47).
Tars top Colony, 10-9
N E w -BADMINTON P 0 R T -
BEACH -Josh Yoches and Jamey
Beeson of Newport Harbor High,
swept in boys singles for the sec-
ond straight match, while Alyssa
Paul and Jordan Fredriksen
swept in girls singles Wednesday
as the host Sailors ( 1-1) nippd the
Anaheim Colonists, 10-9, in non-
league badminton action.
sec blanked, 7 -o
COSTA MESA -TENNIS Southern California ·
College's men's tennis team suf-
fered a 7-0 shutout at the hands of
visiting Hawaii Pacific in noncon-
ference action Wednesday at the
Costa Mesa Tennis Center.
NOHCONfUINCE
HAWAII PAOFIC 7, $oCAl Coli.EGE 0
Slnales • Ma (SCQ lost to
E. Sandblom, 6-3, 6-3; Ulfuebrand (SCQ
lost to Tjernstrom, 7-6, 3-6, 6-4; Johans-
son (SCQ lost to J. Sandblom, 6-1, 7-5;
Kemp (SCC) def. Lundmark. 6-0, 6-2;
Baker (SCQ lost to Lindstrup, 6-2, 6-1;
Vu (SCQ lost to Watanabe, 7-5, 6-1.
Doubles -Johansson-Ulfuebrand
, (SCO lost to E. Sandblom-Lundmark,
8-5; Ma-Vu (SCQ lost to J. Sandblom-
Watanabe, 8-6; Kemp-Frantz (SCQ lost
to Sigman-Silva, 8-1.
leyball, averaged nine points and
2.5 rebounds. He missed four
games ~th injuries, including a
three~g4me stint early in the
1eaguecam.paign.Butbe
returned from the latter absence
with a 14-point perfor-
mance to key a crucial come-
from-behind road win at Irvine
Jan. 23.
He had seven double-figure
storing outputs, including a
career-high 23 in a Daily Pilot
Tipoff Qassic victory over
Pacifica. He also had a
team-high 19 points in a 55-52
December victory over Ocean
View, which finished the season
Mesa finishes Fairmont
COSTA MESA
_ Jeff Montoya's GOLF
low round of 38 over nine holes
helped host Costa Mesa High fin-
ish out a 431-555 nonleague vic-
tory over Fairmont Wednesday at
the Costa Mesa Country Club's
Mesa Linda course.
Montoya was bolstered by
teammates Brian Jones (42),
Anthony Grubisich (44) and Don-
ny Miller (46) over the par 35 lay-
out.
sec falls to Westmont
in women's tennis
SANTA
BARBARA TENNIS
Southern California College's
women!s tennis team was domi-
nated by host Westmont Tuesday
as the Warriors dealt tl).e Van-
guards a 7-2 loss in Golden State
Athletic Conference play. sec (4-5) picked up its poins
off of doubles victories by Debbie
Fultz and Carin Crawford (8-4)
and Eden Looney and Alice
Steadman (8-6.)
GOU>EN STATE ATlilEllC CONFERENCE
WESTMONT 7, SoCAl Cou.EGE 2
Singles · Fultz (SCC) lost to Abby,
6-7 (7), 6-3, 6-1; Looney (SCC) lost to
Smith, 6-1, 6-1; Crawford (SCC) lost to
Gochnour. 6-0, 6-0; White (SCC) lost to
Sheldon, 6-1, 7 -5; Tate (SCC) lost to
Roberts, 6-7 (6), 6-4, 6-1 ; Steadman
(SCC) lost to Crist, 6·0, 6-0.
Doubles -Fultz-Crawford (SCC) def.
Abby-Gochnour. 8-4; White-Tate (SCQ
lost to Smith-Sheldon, 8-0; Looney-
Steadman (SCC) def. Roberts-Crist, 8-6.
oce sweeps Irvine Valley
IRVINE -
Newport VOLLEY8All
Harbor High product Josh
Richardson paced Orange Coast
College to a 15-5, 15-9, 16-14 win
over Irvine Valley Wednesday
evening in Orange Empire ~on
ference men's volleyball action.
Richardson hammered down
22 kills to pace the Pirates (8-1, 4-
1 in conference.)
Freshman setter Ryan Hiskey
had 48 assists, two aces and three
solo blocks, as well.
ranked No. 1 in Orange County.
Alshuler, an All-ClF
volleyball player who has now
earned six of his projected 10
varsity letters in three sp0rts
(including football), averaged 9.1
points per contest as a 6-5 for-
ward for Coach Paul Orris' Sea
Kings.
A tenacious defender, who
often drew the opponent's
leading scorer, Alshuler earned
the majority of his points inside.
Orris, however, praised
Alshuler's intangibles, such as
unselfishness and work ethic, as
much as his offensive and defen-
sive skills. ..
PUILIC NOTICES PUILlC NOTICES
occ
CONTINUED FROM 81
Saturday evening, but had a diffi-
cult time finding the hole in_ the
first half shooting just 37 %.
They didn't score their first
field goal until almost five min·
utes had ticked off the clock.
"Our transition game really got
us going. We wanted that. First to
get things going, and secondly
because it's not something we do
well, and we need to." Thornton
said. ·
With all of Hancock's misses,
the running game proved vital.
It was also sparked by
unselfish passing. as Adria Sorti-
no handed out seven assists, with
Ludwicki dishing off five.
"That was a key factor,·
Thornton said.
Coast had the visjtors m a
death grip, but Thornton said that
his squad didn't play like the
score was 0-0 coming out of the
halltime break.
"We kind of flattened out.
That's the only thing I was a little
disappointed with, but I knew
(Hancock) wouldn't be' a team to
quit"
Ludwick.i, OCC's all-time lead-
ing scorer, was the Bucs' do-it-all
player again. She scored 30
points, hit five three-pointers and
pulled down eight boards.
•She qm do everything. "
OCC't
JeuUv
t.adWldd
loob for
teammate
comln§
through
Wednesday
Jllpt agalnA
the defemlve
pressure of
Malla ;JohDIOn
of Alloa.n
Hanoock.
1be Plrate5
brushed on
what Uttte
pressure was
offered en
r()ule to a
lopsided -
victory In the
·second round
of the
Southern
California
Regionals.
--~
MARC MARTIN
I DAILY PILOT
Thornton said of his University of
New Orleans-bound star. It was
Ludwick.i's eighth outing of the
season with 30 or more points.
Loshak was the Pirates' only
other player m. double figures ·
with 10, while All-OEC selection
Weeks pullea down a game-high
11 rebounds.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAi.
SECOND lltOUNO
OMNGE CoAsT 76, Au.AN HANCDCX 57
Hancodl -Gonzales 12, Johnson 2,
Camacho 13, Espinoza 3, Franceschini
10, Melena 10, Carr 7.
3-pt. goals · Gonzales 2, Camacho 2.
Espinoza 1. Fouled out · None.
Orange Coast • Peyton 8, Rodriguer
2, de los Santos 6, Ovitt 4, Loshak lO,
Saraydarian 9, Klytta 1, Ludwicki 30,
Weeks 6.
3-pt. goals -Ludw1cki 5, Saraydarian 1.
Fouled out · None. Halftime · OCC. 41-25.
• COL LE G E MEN'S BASKETBALL
Mcintee leads SCC from the line
•Southern California
College puts Cdl Baptist
avvay, 86-78, advances to
GSAC tourney semifinal.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pifot
COSTA MESA -There was a
coming out party Wednesday
night for Southern California Col-
lege, a school with a men's bas-
ketball team more accustomed to
losing close ones, missing at the
line in crucial situations and shy-
ing away from double-digit
deficits.
Those pains were erased -
and just in time for the Golden
State Athletic Conference Cham-
pionships -as the host Vanguards
played another thriller against
Cal Baptist, winning on superb
free-throw shooting, 86-78.
As a reward, the Vanguards
(19-14) are expected to face top-
seeded Azusa Pacific, the nation's
third-ranked NAlA team, Satur-
day night in the semifinals at
Whittier College (7:30 p.m.).
For a school ranked sixth
among eight GSAC teams in free-
throw shooting (68 %), sec did a
pretty good spoof on the Lancers
(13-17), who watched the Van-
guards drain 28 of 30 from the
stripe. (93 %) -14 of 15 in both
halves.
Justin Mcintee (Newport Har-
bor High), nicknamed H Juice,"
turned to ice in the final frtgid
seconds, making two at the line
with 0:27 left in . the game and sec holding onto an 80-78 edge.
Mcintee, a senior guard, sank
two more with 0:18 on the clock,
building SCC's lead to 84-78, fin-
ishing an impeccable 14 of 14.
·we call Justin 'juice,' but I
think now we can call hlm 'ice,'"
SCC Coach Bill Reynolds said.
Adding to the suspeµse, SCC's
Terence Wilborn, who tied Mcin-
tee for game-high scoring honors
with 20 points, crashed head-first
to the floor on the play Mcintee
was fouled with 0:27 remaining.
Wilborn's injury led to a referee's
timeout, essentially a free timeout
for Cal Baptist to ice Mcintee with
only a two-point lead.
HThat's a lot of time to sit there
like that and think about it,"
.Reynolds said. •But thank good-
ness they fouled (Mcintee) and
put him at the line."
SoCal College, also led by
point guard Adam Dzi.erzynski's
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
11 assists and 10 points, mended
nicely from a 17-point deficit in
the first half. the biggest recovery
of the season, according to
Reynolds.
Cal Baptist, led by Richard
Hunt's 18 pomts and Dennis
Weaver's 17 points and four
blocked shots, raced to a 27-10
lead. But free throws put SCC
back in the driver's seat as the
Vanguards made their first nine
without a miss. sec not only rebounded from
the start, but it grabbed a 45-39
halftime lead. Three-pointers by
Dennis Keane (16 points) and
Dzierzynski helped SCC cap a
25-point turnaround by first half's
end before a packed gym, with
913 fans in attendance.
GSAC lOURNAMENT
Arst llkM.nt
SoCal College "· Cal 9llptist 78 Cal a.ptist -Weaver 17. Woods 11,
Hurt 18, Proffitt 9, Walker 5, Harvey 6,
Martin 10, Knudsen 2.
3-pt. goals · Proffitt 3, Walker 1,
Woods 1. Fouled out · None.
5oCal C.onege -Dzierzynskl 10,
Wilborn 20, Keane 16, Mcintee 20,
Scheuerman 10, Hill 4, Cezar 4,
Dignan 2.
)..pt. goals· Keane 2. Scheuerman 1,
Ozienynskl 1. fouled out -None.
Tedlnlal • Mcintee.
Halftime: SCC. 45-39.
PUBLIC NOTICES
•
lliUftSOAY, MAACH 5, 1'91
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremation&
Burial Service
Why should you subject
yourself & your family to
paying inflated prices for
caskets & servlces????
CJllToDFrtel~
SenlDI <ln¥ & Sarroadlat Coutlea
.
HUNTlNGTON REAL ESTATE COSTA MESA 2624 co····ERCIAL
BEACH 1040 EXCHANGE 1600 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "'""'
1 8r Detaohed REAL ESTATE
EMfLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT
3000 ' 5530 WANTED · 5535 MERCHANDISE 15}
EQUAL HOUSING
Huntington Harbor Lake Arrowhead Hiii Cottage• w/Patlo ••••••••• Dl.ABBTICS General Oftloe Ute •Sw1dlah NurN•
Wide Waterfront, top d"trt vtew S300K near beach. Calh1drc.1 (U1lng 11111ulln.) Old bool(k11plng. rellabll, Loving. 01p1ndablt, ANTIQUES 6010
Cuatom remodal1d Wiii exchange fot OC cell•:-' frig. Mov1-l11 ---------you know Medicare or r11ponslbl• I. exp a Xlnt Cook, Driving, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
4Br 4.5Ba, w/pool & prop. 30001f 497-1137 Speclall S875+S40~ BUSINESS OFFICE lnaurance Covert plusl Frr, Mon-Fri. ~ Ref't, 12 Vrt 1900 Oak toe aox OPPOR'T\JNl'n' . ,.... ......................
.................... FH-
... ,.., ....... Adll1 ....
.................... 1
spa. Sl ,499,000 d1p. 1548·24:i,1 FORRENT 2769 mo•t aupptlea? For 1n11rvl1w contact Exp. Llv11 Locally 19~0atcBrtak·f'rom •
Marll'ln Ke,.hner I••••••••• .-Co•l• M• .. '• Beal iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii save money, call Yolanda al 6-4&-2400 "1::1714-048·3'735c:::;i n4-MM3eO
Prudential CA Realty Jr-1br & 1br. also 2br 1 ·8 O O ·1 9 4 -8 1 1 P Mom Needs Helpl Please No D1allr1
844-e200 X 110 HOUSES/ 1 ba, quiet gated NB 3 Rm Suite/Furn Llbert'I Medlc•I Bebyalttlng needed, DOMESTICS 5540 -;:::======= tmlliiiiiiiiilill .. "~ • .., "9fertlltt,
ll•ltaUta II •l1Crl•l11llH
---------CONDOS comm, pool, tennis, phone, fax, ground fir Sallafactlon guaran· varied hours In my ea 1 y a cc e 11 1 0 1 person only.Wtstcilfl/ teed. no HMO members. Allso Viejo home S8 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil l•':""::""::::::::::~~=-~~I IAGUNA FOR RENT fr11way/b1ach/malls. Dover. $325. 646-2474 mention AOCA-00 per hour. Must be ex-Chllet Care ...... ,... .... rtt ..... . -.. ......., ............ .. ...... .,... ............ . ...... .., .... ,,.,. .. .
............. 1 •••••
Bit ,...,_,., wlll HI ........, .. .., ........ ...... ,.... .............
.............. 0.,....,. we .. ,.., 1...,... tut 111
... 111111 lftetttu• 11 ltlh
......,., .,. lftllHI• ....
... ......., ... T111et-
..... ti ""'1•11 ...... ult HUD ..... It 1.-.U4-IHI. fer
1111 ..... 1 ...... DC1r11 '""'· all HUO II 421--.
NEWPORT
BP.ACH 10481••••••••• 714-557-0075 _N_w_p_t_B_c_h_H-19-h--R-1-.-. , _____ c_A_L_·s_c,....A_N_ perlenced, caring. pa· Needed
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •---------I ffl 1 h •Fr•• Per• ... nal• tlent and dependable. For newborn twin• •---------•Cozy Studio Furn'd urn o c:e o • are. -Leave message 81 and 3 yr old rn my Views Sunound 3br Ge-.n:!DllL 2102 Covered parking, neat Amenities. avt lmmed. Training ••••Ion (714) 574-4248 Allso Viejo home . 2ba, 3 deck•. S70K In ~•a.&\ft&. · Tri-Square. No Pela. $250mo. 548-8773 with Mann~ Monday thru Friday
upgradHI $329,000 $825.mo 642·2818 714·293.SO 0 /NB Home Furnishing 7:30am -6:30pm .
1088 Nori• Str11t z I , __ L_O_S_l!_W_E_l_Q_H_T__ thore looklng for Must be 1xp1rl1nc1d,
B Ow 497·5994 ero Down home oan Newport H e ights INDUSTRIAL 2788 •hipping & receiving dependable, peU1nt & y ner Fr11 24 hour rec«dld Ar•• Beaulllul lrg 3br iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Through a aafe and per1on M·F. 650-8570 car1·ng. Referenc11 r .. msg: 1 ·868-792-7413 2ba, pvt bale. nice & scientific nutrltlonal ext 302 CFR 1 t $1"'00 540 0130 •Superior Ave. CM plan 714-557·2721 quired. $1100 per · qu • · .., · · month. Pl1as1 call
BEACH 1069 ,_C_O_R_O_N_A ____ Spao1ou1 3br 2ba,
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii gar, lndry·rm $875 +
•Harbor View HomH• DEL MAR 2122 =~~~ c~~on~~s~1~~2
1500-15,000sf, Great Office M•n•g•r locatlon. fenced, l::IW•lk Your Way to FfT for BUSY Inter (714) 574·4248
roll-ups, high celllngs, Fltneas-FHI Ilk• a Mii· 55 f 71 5 1 llonl" New guide to Net based Co. Will · ps 4-48·853 the moat popular form have many duties &
Portoflno 4Br 3.5Ba liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
BHt Location HVH Furnlah1d 2Bd 2Ba•---------•••••••••
RED. $639,900 VAC patio pool 1pa gar nr NEWPORT BUSINESS &
of exercl11 $12.95 be detailed, organ·
Money back guaranlH. lzed, aelf·starterl
Call Toll Free Windows.Word.Excel
(888)515-8222 Call (800) 728·8802 Broker 7~0-3142 bch/Faah 11. and the BEACH 2669 FINANCE ··•••••••••I 3br 2ba Hou11 on a Village S1500/mo avall liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ••••••••• HOUSES/ 800011.lot, fr11h paint, 4/1 759-3097 I•••••••• or Fax resume to
714-574-1460
Chances are
you will find
what you need
at the price
you want to pay
when you read
.'CONJ)os new c~r~tt, fp.5~ca~ •Gorgeous CdM Home 1~!lgB~;~~~n !'pts --------EMPLOYMENT '"========~
gar, cu· .. aac. o w/vlewl 4br pool 2 Ip near F••hlon laland BUSINESS l••••••••••-·fOR SALE 7l4-77e-o317 Broker Master 1uit1, S3995 2-car gar, fp, w/d hk· OPPORTUNITY
Claealfl•d
PfT Demon•trater dally •••••••••I B•'loreat 4Br 3Ba Potential purchase. upa, central air, Alarm . large home w/pool Call Krltty 720.1080 1y1, Golf course views 2904 EMPLOYMENT
& 1pa. Excellent $1850·$2995 644-0509 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii condition $589,0001---------1---------5530
Mike Taahman COSTA MESA 2124 1bd 1ba kltch1n11t1, •••••-•
Prudential CA Realtyl'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii quiet, 1 block to ocn, Please be wary of out 2 Tea Room Mod•I• GOVl!RNM•NT 844-8200 X 199 11 lncldt ut11 +cable, avl of area companies. ---------4bd 2ba lg country kit 3·15 $800. 945.9775 Check with the local W•nted In NB. Prr
l'OR•CLOSED BEACH HOMES 2.car gar awlm pool i---------e e tt e, Bus In 11 s 1 wk·day1. 1 wk·ends
GENERAL 1002
In grocery 1tC1res. Fri, ___ C5"'-4_.2._-.... s .... s_7_,8 __
Sat, Sun. $6.75/hr.
Car neceHary.
Call: 714-557·5579
Packers for 1nack
food company. M·F.
South Coa11 Plaza
Area. (714) 979-3256
Bridge
By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
and TANNNi HIRSCH
FIN~::'~
an apartment:-:;·:
through classified
.. ...
....... HomH from pennl11 Avall Nowl 28r 2Ba, apa w/d malnt. prov'd 1 Bd 1 Ba k1lchene11e. Bureau before you Strong sales exp Part Tlme-20hrs wkly
on S1. Delinquent Tu, 50 Step• to Sand. SHOO/mo 75&-1064 ull1 Incl, 1/2 block 10 send llny money lor 5'5"·5'8" pre'f. Call For successful mor1·
R1po'1, REO'a. Your $375,000 on the aand ---------ocean. Avall 4/1 fees or services. Read Brill 714-875·2174 gage broker. Experl-ar1a. Toll Fr11 From $975,000 •Lrg 3 or 4br 2ba $850.mo714-646·0705 d ence a fnustB,nuses CAUGHT IN TIU! END
800-218-8000 xH·1398 Broker 842-3850 home located at---------and un erstand any $10 Hr•FULL TIMEI Call 714·852-8822 for cunent ll1tlng1. 443 Elmherat In Big Canvon contract• before you 8am·5pm, M·F. Expe-1----------
---------1 Bluff• 38t' Twnhma College Park Area. Elegant & Spacious sign. Shop around for rlenced and takes Retell 8•1••
Bay vlrN & Upgraded 1st+11c req'd. Pis 18d, Fplc. 2-Car Oar. _.;..ra_1_••_·_________ pride In answering 10.15hr• wk, AM shlf1.
SOLD! s~nome•
f0< aale In our
~ Saturday Real E1tat1
Suppi.m1ntl
elfom••ofth• w .. k dlapla'I ad•
•tart at Ju•t $791
(Deadline Wld 5pm)
***** .Open Hou••
ll•tlnga for tlJI
(Deadline Thurt Spm)
***** ,. It pay• to edvertl11
In th• blal local
Real E•tat• SIC11on
N/p h I b Out of Santa Fe $449,000 call 429-1480 for appt • 1450.mo Avall BOOST SALE81 Pro P on11 or uay.
Qreenbelt view at to a11. Avall nowl Aprll 714·840-5034 k 1 h 1 hlgh-1nd prof111lonal at Fa1hlon laland $359,000 & S38t,oCo mar • .,. • ps you office.-Computer exp Tamara 644-053
l!aoap1 To The Sea tell producflftv]!fl a must. Call Mary Lee RETAIL SALES •---------llv• In 1br 1ba boat Call 714-434·2973 NF.WPORT 714-717-4880 Evenings a.. wk-ends ~ . furn, S950. 714-412· PROTEL PAYPHONE $8.$11 per Houri Ladv QoH Fashion ..,. BEACH 2169 2161/213·961·9137pgr RTE. 45 high-traffic and benefits. Frr & P/ Island NB 720.1996
• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NeWl'I Renovated locallons Sl 2 •500· T, Preact>:lol. lnfrrod Sandwich Maker. FT/PT PAULSON AUi.TY * BLUFFS 3br 2ba Spacloua 1Br & 2Bt Includes gaa statlona. Tutor Tlmc. Chlld Care Good Payll Af1er 2p
71 ..... IJC>.a822 1-Sty on greenbelt. From $775. No Pets. convenience atorea, In N.B.-91515·2872 250·0919 pgr anytime
BRAND NllW Upgraded. $2150/mo Newport ear Terrace hotels. Earns SlOOK/ 802·8288.
The Prlo• Wiii 844-4084 or 64+2299 1891 Mtu Drive ~er year. Limited •Admln Aaal•tant -........ ...,_ ....... .,.,.__-=--7t4-l4Ma&IJ offerlnglll . Healthy Gourmet SECRETARY/PT Amaze Youl 3br 2.9ba Twnh11 In ( 8 o o) 5 1 9 -3 2 o 1 seeks enthuslaatli: pleasant home olc In
Newport Terr, fp, w/d, Studio Apt.with CAL•SCAN detail-oriented, 1111. Balboa. Pers/Asst.
-PrudeiitiaJ
~....,
714-723-8120
$1175. Call 780-346-kltch1n lncl.utll,N/P Work at Homelll Earn ttarter. Good com· R.E. Mngt. 8·16hrt/wk,
3265 or 714-515-4290 S760mo 729-7670. $80, $120, S250 hrl puter, people, phone n /smkr, MS Word/
CALL TODAY! ........ .,,.,.
& organization. Cater· Excel/Quicken. $10.~r 99 Plu• Community •Waterfront Condo• Unique product 11111 Ing knowledge a + Fax Resume 673-<>624 ---......,...,.,..-..,...,.,...,.--2Br 2Ba Waterfront 2br 2 full tlle bath w/ 1111111 714-810.0385 Harbor View Hiiia Fireplace. $2200.mo Jae tub, pvt aundeck no/1moker. Saturday• TELEMARKETING
/ft4/1574-4252 38r 2Ba. One level, Call 714-e13-1331 w/great vu, carpor1. req. fax r11: 833·2939 Appointment Setting
great buyl ~011 to walk to beach, atore1, MONEY •·· I .. _ • S Mon·Frl. 3pm.slpm thopplng. $549,000 95 Plu• Cctmmunlty -nt 1 ..... ne a on Caaual Atmosphere.
Maxine Propp 2Br 2Ba, Flreplace rut, theater, boat TO LOAN 2914 Pretzels wants •ner· 714-723·7883
• Prud1ntlal CA Realty S 1 3 O o. P., mo n I h dock avall. $1950 lse. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii getlc, amlllng p1opl1. •---------:ALISO VIEJO 1004 844-e200 x 163 Call 714-673-1331 540-1355 673·6002 Prr. Canlt 894-6670 Wanted S15. per hour.
Visa/Muter Cardi Entertain kids with
• o----t Own-~ LINDA ISLE Blutf•·Bay View $25K +..,. Unsecured Carp•t Cleaner• SMAX products. $30 .... _. ..... ._. -3 B, + 2 . 6 Ba + FR Bad.No Credit -OKI Certified Pref. e,p.a per job. 2 hOUI• max.
• 2Br 28a Spaclou• lbqulalte 5Br 4.5Ba 53,000/mo. 72().1704 MISCELLANEOUS •800.84a-7118• mull.UH our truck Mull be very young In • Condo. Ught & Quiet. .left Arouri, Ag1nt 00 g 8 lley B k mounted unit. Clean appeatanc• and ener-
Llated al 1112,000 714-841-8881 u u ' ro " RENTALS OMV. D1pendable.Frr getlc. Contact: Dan
M lchall Lambert. Aat Newport aho,.• 2br Eaetblutf 2Br+ Oen, 25-35'W.comm434·7929 Berger 714·842 .. 013
7 1 ....... 4 • ~ ofc, 2ba, beam ceu: 2Ba, fr11h pafnt. 2-car ANNOUNCEMENTS ,__,C,,..u_•_t_o_m_•_r___,,,S_•_rv_l,...c-.-PolentlaJ 100 partill.
fireproof tile roof. garage. Avall lmmed. Frr, front d11k po1., evenlS.
: CORONA 1358.ooo em Grundy 5155o.mo 557"1382 ROOMS 2706 buay office. greeting
• Reaftora 875-e161 Panoramlo Oo••nliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ---------pt1, ached. applS, ma·---------: DEL MAil 1022 V1ew1 condo, 1 er 1 CdM 3br 2ba condo w/ ANNOUNCEMENTS ture,r11p .• compu11r EMPLOYMENT
Oen, pool & t1nnl1. 2920 1klll1 a+. S exp SERVICES 5533 • NEWPORT $1"'00.(714) 722-7226 lg patio, phone llne. ba1-.... 714.•4n.7030 -2 •8toty ~•r Condo ~ fem pref'd, S525.mo iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ....., " ..,. · 'rench dOOl'a, patio COAST 1070 719-2&41 or 5'8·2576 1_D_r_•_P_•_r_ .. __ F_a_n_c_ •••-••• . II••·-----St 0 Cla11lcal uualc ,, y. • w/apa & 2 decke. l•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •~ ................ ------.... all machl 11 e e I Pl • be a n e that NB $475/mo, no pelt. Concert Tll(. Cho,.ln, n • xp r • eaa w • High bHm cell~• Ocean & City Vlewe APARTMENTS 11t & d1p. Laundry, Brauhma. 3/8, 4pm"' Ir-enct. Top wag11 CM the llstlng1 In tills c.:.t· :~~:rr•wll~ ... n~e.~ $799,000 s .. eoR RENT private entry/bath vine Barclay Theatre 8-4P 722-6428 •gory may require you
• UU,OOO·SU&, 7 ae Ocean Ridge, 3SOO .-~ 426-4272pgr 548·3083 714-854-4848 ORIVmR OTR :~ °:~ic~ ~r~u~be~
• Natalle l'ogert'I 4Br 4Ba Pool·alze COVENANT Trans·
• Prudential CA Realty yard, 3-car garage FREE CASH port -W11t coaat charge per mlnule.
• 644-8200x1eo ~~cic:;. h~~o~!~ BALBOA RENTALS TO GRANTS! =~• ~~~P•~~~~~~·--w,.,..,.,,o""'R,_,K..,....,.IN,..,.....,Y"'"o"""u,.....,,.R-
• •A870 Pi Ciel Mar• 71._.94-0880 ISIAND 2606 SHARE 2724 College. Scholarahlps. drivers. HHltMll• In· ~oa~!y1 "r;::~c1~:i~~
• Highly upgttlded ~2.5 Bualneaa. Medical 1uranc. avallable first melll Fr11 1upp11111
: • Fam rm, walk to beh. A"'D11t•GE aal I• Own rm/bath bllla. T~1aF~.:•P•Y· day on tructc. Experl· 80~1111 Rush tong
• 1498,000 A~ner ~ 1125 Quaint 18r Bayfront Fully furn. $475.mo • n c • d d r Iv• r • SASE: Welth/3336 : FOf appt. 1000 Apt. HI-beam cilia, nu Female pref'd. Khara 800-2l8-9000 xQ.l398 1 o8 O O -4 4 1 -4 3 9 4 Harrlaon. Bun1, MT
'A ... uty 4br 3ba LI OUR a•ST LAND palnt/carpet.$1500/mo 680-8044 (voice mall) PAGEANTS FOR Gradual• 1tud1nts 59701-354-4
: -tot w /great . yard sale ever1 40 .C:re.. w/utls. Agt 723-0653 Balboa Pinn Shr 2br GIRLS 3·17. Now 1-800-338-e428. Bud CAt.•SCAN
• •ntertalnlng patio. border• SLM • •SUNNY PATIO• nr beach Ip parking accepting appllcatloru Meyer R1frlgera11d1---------
., By Ownlf $095.000 S24,900: SouthwHt 4J 2br 1ba, new paint, $850+ dep 'ca11 Alex f10f'ant.199s182.000Stat•c_!..aga.· Truck Lmes toll fr .. , ________ ...,
' 714-M0-7118 Cotoredo: FrM llat & ~t. lndry rm, avl now 4 ....... 1.,7,...7· ... 17,..,..wk -· 1-888-e87 -3 7 2 9 brOchUfl Parc*a In-$ • • .,..., • 1• .-\IV" prlz1a awarded. CAL •SCAN
: • &rona Highland• ctudld ~efront. trout t 195. Agt 84&-064., CdM Share 2br 1 b• fr11 Information
' Beautw ••r 48a •tr•am• a river can-cheerful home w/lrg 1-800·707-8220
• •1,100,000 N bl co ONA n/ CAL*SCAN • JI & p t'Y M Donald yona. 1w ca n1, R er, pet S52!5mo +
: .&~te a.,,.._7~g..9070 bordering public DEL •••'ft 2622 ut11. Prof'I fem pref'd ~· tand1. Free C19a1ng , m.IU\ Avl 3/1. 84CMM54
• •Lrtt Comer Duplex Coat• • FEB.
: 38r + 28r/N•W Roof Redatone Land 28r Deck over-looking
, Carpet/Paint. OWner/ 1 .a 0 O -e 1 4 -~ O 2 4 pool, 2 car porta, wd,
Bkr. 208-383-4121 ____ _..CA......,L ...... SC.._AN_ nu paln1/drpe, Avt 3n
NB Shr 2br 2.Gba Lrg
21try twnhm, bay vll\w
••pool, gym, tennla ..
S7SO + utll 780-3907 : •Pef'feot Cape Cod Thinking of having a leue S92!5 &40-0619
: Home Oen w'a, 40• gatage ule? 1---------Newport laland on
• wide lot, rwm for Olva u• a calll Slit your hom• Bay. Sht 3br 2ba 1750 OLASSll't•D through cluslfled. 1/2 utll, boat dock avl. • •iq>analon. Aaduc•dl eu-ee?a 842·5878 2 blkl/ocean 850-6742 • Agent 7t4-7ee-9070 '
:white Water View --------------------------~ • a.,.om 3bt 3ba home NEWPOIT NEWPORT NEWPORT
.... lot, Wlator. MO. U9 IUCB ...U89 .BEACH. • -z:;n.:U:-en~:r.;~;m-~;;
• offer• betwt•n
It ;291,00041 ,,4N,11f • Lole , ...... _.;-.p~ QA...~ -----........ ~'="=~ .. #... 1u eaoo x 130
:ar 1• -.~ ·m~" • 111,000 -~ • '114-C7M 11t
et.MM lllit .....
• •tlltdo« PoOf, flamlY
• room. lmmaoulatel
I .... e, WUI enleftaln
: offer• between u:,:~0 .. 111,111 ........ ~CA~ ••• 1100 )Ct•
-------
TAX D1duotlbl•
donation• needed for
a worthy cauH. Free
aolld teak cabinet for
flret donation over
$900 (worth $1200)
alto collector guitar
tor donation over $500
(1 only) Call 241-1712
"How to Win"
Gambll!\9 BooU. Call Tofl Ftff
1-a88·5ta-822SI
Both vulnerable. South deals. and secoad-round heart CODlrOl-a'
WE5f
•73 0 J83l o KJ6
•Q7S3
NORTII
•Jl54
o AKQ4 o-s 4"l ~ ., ..
EAST
•Q
Q 97
0 1097 3
• KJ 10862
SOUJll
•AK 10961
0 1065
o AQ8
•A
The bidding: soum WE.W .. .... .. .... 50 .... ,. ....
Opening lead: Seven of •
No good card technician likes to
rely on a SO pen::cnt chance for the
contnct. Dccfaru root advaniqe of
a favorable lie of the card lo improve
those odds to l 00 percent on this
deal
North's juqi raise was invitational
by agreement, promising I 0-12
points and four-card support. South
cue-bid botb minor-1ufl aces and
North cooperated by showing finl-
South DCCdcd '° bear to cooaw::t for it tmalJ u.m.
W CSf led a trump and. when PJlk.
followed with the queen. the f• cil
lhe lllln' del>tllded Olf toslnJ 1ICrllllCIB:"" -
than one diamond trick. At fiAt.
glance it might seem tb8l a ctianiQM
finesse woufd be needed. or an ewe
distribution in hearts, but dee · ·
found a way to improve the~
matically. . -•
Declarer captured the queen·«•
spades with the king and drew tbe
remaining trump. Aftu clearin& ..,
ace of clubs from band, declare.t"
crossed to the ace of hearu ...
ruffed the table's ~mainin& ~
Nut the king and ~o of t.rta
were cashed and, when East di-=-d-
ed a club on the tau.er, the COllirac:t
became laydown. So.lib ~
the board's remaining heart ma~
carded a djamoncl
West bad a cboioc of ways to C19-
m.it suicide. A diamond ex.it wotlllt:
be inlo declarer', im;or llemlCla.. m
&nJ.ochcc suit would pamit ~
to Nff in dUmf!1Y while_ di.scudiia-
the queen of diamonds. The ~
trict wu dccllla's only Iota'. • :
1..-na to be. beda' ~ ..u:.
erl Sabscrlbe now to lite ~
~-1: by~/.':"
Goren Brkl1• LeJ:'6 P.O •. 4410, Cblr • ; JIL "•
-~1-. .
CRQSSWOBP PUZZLE .=~ TODAY'S ~~
• PVIS 1210
u•o• ,, • ._ •at4000on1yntcm1, •·n~1e11akm1. 'Ml~OT ..,.ORAllD •--W~•rw 'MCAllllYL& ~. UIOO ... ~. 4dt, one Of. r•dllan 171K ..... Whha, lvocy. moon. 41M, ve. AT, Tow ...... ·~·, LO ml ... , AT, full WHI Mmtne ~... kind, ldnt condition THta10 ... 13k mf, root, t.ath4W. co.,,..., 90Y'A.""' power 0¥\W· . Cond. ~. cu .. u.. ilQ
atMn bo11t doCUd In 1 owner, Ji/C, am-fm rtlCIAM NSK. •'If 412 Le11ue tr~. (009911) '(:'tHJH771) lt_4.J.9" 1HK ml, Stl,tOO. n•wl (3HMA931)
Mattna. 114«U·7172 can. 11000 tlrm Al.Ito, Bleck m•&alllcl 122,tn LllXU8 VP 8"-1tN ot N>4M2 s11,te0
..... &:: -......... _ cau Ello M-J' Wpm 7t+T•t·t7U r9d Hllml WK. ••• ,. LRXU• WR8TMINSTaR •• , eeo SIC 1-ownar LOU•°" --• ..,., ~ 321 OTB 41k ml, new 1118810N vtWJO 7t4-e92 .. 90e · whl&a/"tay., ltk ml, WSITlllNSTDt
eota Ht.H. Call 0m ... W9tot. ~ anoina USK. Owner , ...... a...exua 'H GRAND EJCcet. •cones. 121,600.i--=•~"..,;.'~•1~•~·~·~ .. ~eoe.;:;.;;,_
betor. noon 14W117 matlo S•amaater llUINB SLIPS CADU.lAC 9040 wur carty on approved CH...OKU 7l4-'7:ts-1eoe •ff CAMRY L•
••ora ........ and ~= \41~ DOCIS 7022 m~.c•8:':.7~·1J .. _A_G_U_.A1 ____ 9_1...;0..;:.S 32Kml,AT.Upot1$.lt• •1a190a2.e 28k, AT. fUll poww, ::=-:o,~~ .=. T ....... ,...0 • loyt. ~~·:'l.H309> ~~::r·e.k ... ·~=: ~--=~~,L~~~,,-=~ !!,!O.:.~ -~ ~~~ .. '!! SPOITJNG OA~~.I~~O .. ~f~ '1~ ll~rc:':9'wi;r':~ POID 9075 '7• .... u., XJa -~.·N,°'T... (SMIM74) 117.HO w•L::...~:T .... _... "'' ..:-"" ---.. GOODS •015 , .. ,,..r lntatlot eek Coupe v.u Only ····-sn • L•XUS 01'
TllAK o•aK 9Mut.IM, v :e8.a'ao!.z :::;::o ml, J14K. Own9t wtll '89 Taurva atetlon 35k, H>wnet, 12500. C714J eeweoe w••TlllNIT•R cn4 ) •• ... 90• Cont.mpory, at a frao. . , carry on appt, doWn & Wagon. Raal nlct YaUowlTan 721-350el (7t4) 898-41900 '87,9,!LICA QT
lion of coet.ec>OobO. Kayak-I<••*" a adj. 81d• Tie\ for 30' Salt cr~lt .. 114-MW?70 cat. ueoo obo 'i4 Xlt2 LBXUS 9115 '84 MBZ c2eo ~;:;"MCK
71447W11i aaatt foUrk 1 or 21 Boat. Hpar foot. nr , ,. (7t4J 723·tS04 S9dan, 40, M•t, R9d, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Sllv•r/black taath•r. Cl 18•alat~•r/b, m'~'rooat.ucto0. patM>nL • new W Udp Btldga, xlnt loc. 92 laetw~d. Ful" 37k 11 (9"·38•9) O f f II " ~~,. White Qu••n else oara, 1450. 873--1853 water/•1901. 875-8128 equipped, beautllu ~ 'OS DPLORl!n XL T m "· .... v •93 LS 400 • moonroo • u (042056) 118,987
Hld .. a·b•d ror •ale own.r Royal M 38k 'ml, 4dr, '' T, lull $2:~~R JAGUAR Black Jade, full option. P 0 w •1r13 *9~~ 5 7 7 2 L•XUS
•1so. 844-1202 TV 0 811p tor 48'ft aallboat. $10,000 43 P(t,~:1':/i't1·7;;•::' 714-971·2002 MI n'. "1488 0 5 Lexu• M••••ON Vl8JO APPLl&NCES 6011 • ELECTR NICS, nr Udo Brldg•, wat•r/ u $24,8, .. 77 •• 300 MIUION v1•JO . 1.aea.a8°Laxua --------STEREO 6080 •tact, S12p•r foot, LI! S 0 •95 XJO l!iiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiil MERCHANDISE " 714-875-8128 CSEu'DOLET Wl!STMINSTllR 2..-2 coovertlbl•. r9d, Black/Ivory, 1 .. th•r, 1..aaa.aa..a.axua 1--------
Qaa f'urn•o• bw ·Y6' 7t4· 882..fStoe 28k ml, (054802) chromH, L•xua c•rtl-MISC. AUTO 9245
Pawn• 132K BTU. MISC. •OlS Cable o .. oramblar eo Mustang conv S38.995 fled. (1414o0) s2e,877 MERCURY 913SliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiii
V• rt I c I• u Pf Io w . Box $14.95. Cod• 04 MOTORCYCLES • 11 l!I Camino•• LXS.0,5 apd.Nu cltctt. BAUl!R JAGUAR LEXUS a .. Zl!D CARS
$200.obo 515·8211 FtREWOODX'lntwood •714-282-2804• SCOOTERS 8018 • 2 Ford Rancheroa brka.1 ownr 103K. 714-971°2002 MISSIONVllEJO l'rom•17s ••
Great Buyl GE 23.5Cf Burne greatl $135 a Cable TV from 1960-1987 beat 14900, 362·1950 '95 XJe t ·(888) 88·LRXUS '78 Grand Marqula Porachff, Cadlllaca.
fr1 .... Hr••z•r oft whit•, cord, any alz• load Deaoramblare offer. Own91 wlU Carty S•dan, 40, Black, 29k '94 l!S 300 4~r. Full pwr. R•al Ch• v Y •. BMW·•. ,.... FR•I! '85 XR200 $800. n•w on rifprov9d down & Bl /b aharpl 95k mll••· C tt Al J ~.water dHp. Alao, dollvarad .. •80().2tte4125• 1 1 k cr-'"I 71 .. ...,.,5779 BONDA 9085 ml, (95·3730) ~.995 ack lack, razor S2000 obo 72~1504 orv• ... •0 ffpa. Antlqu• Slng•r S.wlng To ~ur drtvawerl t rH, runa gr•at a• _, .... .,....,... •es >CJS shop. LHua c•rtlfl•d. 4WO'a. Your AraL Toll
machln• 714-788-0&46 (714)8S2.a&27 ::C,5Chrla C714> 85<>-.,..,7 .... 3.......,C,...a_p_r..,..lo-•-2-.0-,-. -v-8.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii S9dan. 40. Ork. Blue, (0074122) 120,an -----..t..---FrH 1-800-218·9000 '88 ACCORD LX 23k ml, (95-3763) '92 LS 400 ROUS IOYC! 9182 ext.A·1396 for curr9nt Kenmore Drrar·Elao O•kfr•n\ad•r-bad r.11n11GE SALar ac, P•. pb, n•w 4.c1 t fW a/ • Caahm•r•/lvorv, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ll1tlng1.
Sld•/ald• r•ler lea compl•t•. 5ft aof• ~ ~ • .. •••••••• allgnm•nt & brakH, Exc°::~c:~d~sfeooob';; 53.,.,995 , .. th•r. full optlo~. w at• r, a Imo n d . bed, oak aola tabl•, 1••·--···· 11 good paint. All Smog BAUER JAGUAR •• OOO II (1 .... 732) •'85 Sliver Spur 714-646-4380 361n wrought Iron AUTOMOBILES Equip. S2000.Flrm,--·-7_1_4·_54_8_._o9_2_7 __ 1 ___ 7_1 .. _9_7_1_._2_00_2_ 522 917m •• -Bl k/1 3Clk I
W••h•r. dryer & tabl• & ch&lra, Sony N•·WPORT D•vln 557-1020 '05 Civic ax Coupe '95 XJR •,85 SC 300 ... ;~. :.~9 Corn1:'~ AUTOS
•f 1 1 s14ot•a Cam-Cord•r. 8 pie. "" ,8 .,. SUB 2wd 34k moonrool, CO, lull S9dan, 40, Black, 46k RaJtv R9d. mint condl· Conv. 2-ton• m•talUc WUTID 9248 ~n~ ~!~~,or 646·5848 Denby Olahea & 8 pie. BEACH 6169 --------4: .. 325h 3l4ton. PQ.W•r, Ilk• n•w ml, (95-3739} $39,995 t lo~. a il ••rvlc• blu•. blu• top r9dl!~~!!!!!!!!!!!! Norltak• Chlna.l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii AC'f9G11 ,,~1d• 5 P camd, malnk· (3LETD98) $12,850 '95 XJS COUPE r•corda. (029508) 1 .. th•r 358k ml, $45K.I" 714-64~380 11 liiiiii"'iii~iiiiiiiiiiii9ii0iiiii1() 0 • core ra • qu c LEX~•S OP 20 M•t R d 33k 1 •'78 Sllv•r Shadow MOVING SALE 1• ahltt kit, new cats/ Wl!ST ... ~.INSTER ' . • ' m • s24.617 ... (95·3817) S29 995 Ll!XUS Champagna/ch•etnut,
FURNITURE 6014 ---------Quality at Gr•at Prices Urea/brakes $9,900 (714) 8""2· .. ""00 · * Care * • ...... '85 XJO MISSION VllEJO 44k ml, S25K. Own•r
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilWANTED FrVSat 8:30-3:PM $1 00-$500 714·75 ... 0373 S•dan, 40, gray, 32k 1-'888) a ... LRXUS wlll carry on approv9d 907 Al•ppo·Eutblutf I r , d & dlt 7;1' Cuatom Camel TO BUY 6019 b b 1 Pollo• Impound• INFINITI 9095 m. 5·3855) $38,995 ,.,. .. 4 •0LX Ilk own er• · back 1 "'1000 Kl g a Y tema. boya cttha Honda•, Chavrote1a, .... C_H_R_Y_S_LE_R____ B Ul!R JAGUAR ..... "" • new. '114·98 8 ·5 7 7 8 •0 a • · n iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii to alz• 5. toya, kl1chen 9050 '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; 7 1 A ..... 71•2002 SUV. Black, loaded, alz• mallr•:a/boll/ JHpa & Sfort Utilities 11 ... .,. frame Ilk• new S400. I •>UY ALL PIANOS Items, womens clthi, Mu• 8•111 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '80 020 . •---------38k ml, 100·000 warr. --------alzes 4·10, furnltur•, 4 '98 1:Jo S« 500 720-8013 TOYOTA 9210 Sacrlnce Full atereo Antlqut1-"Ual. furniture 800-772·7470 x7038 ... 1 LaBaron Light dr, auto, leather, • .. I am Pa• PI c I u r • •. .. I CD Sedan 40, grny, 27k '""7 l!S 3 I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I all comrononts $2000 1pc or hOUHful cash book•, and moral '04 LEGEND L Gray/Gray. Exc•I. moonroo. • full mll••· (98·3805). .. 00 11
(714 840·8421 paid (714) 957~133 Low mu ... Boaa, cond. $8990. call pow•s1o,C:i:237> S39,&95 ~~c~~1·~M~~ly~~~
Computer Armolre Old Coln• Gold Sliver!••••••••• IHth•r, moonroof. 759'1900 Ellt.2328 Ll!XUS BAUl!R JAGUAR C•rtlfl•d. 1135730
Ch•rry wood llnl1h Franklin Mln1, Sterling TRANSPORTATION (3ROC308) $19,950 MISSION Vll!JO 714--871·2002 SSAVE
$450 714·840·4363 Old watchH & J•welry'W••·----· L•Xlla OF 1o888o8 ... Ll!XU8 'C,0 XJO Ll!XUS Hutch 6x4 walnut, _w_._•1_coa_1t_Co1_n_M_2_.944_a 11 Wl!STMINSTl!R DODGE 9065 CLASSIFll!D Sadan 40, grffn, 35k MISSION Vll!JO
$300. Dlvld., 6X5 RECORDS/TOPS --------•714) ae2 -09oo iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lt'a th• rHource you ml, (96-3870) S37,995 1·(888)-88,Ll!XUS
3-ahelf storage rm Jazz, R&B, soul, Rock BOATS 7011 '80 INTEQRA QSR '80 Dawtona Shelby can count on to Hll a BAURR JAGUAR .,
dlvtdar S200. 96~3483 Etc ... 50's & eo·a Mlk•i'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 31k ml, IHth•r, Turbo All Powu, myriad of m•rcha~ 71 .. 871·2002 Ov•rstocked with MUST 81! LL I 845-75051~.,. D , cuatom wh••la, holl Pr•mlum Sound Sya., dla• lt•ma, b•caua••---,-.. -8-X_J_O___ stuff?
I BUY FURNITURE-----------.,1 utf1' 18 Vary (3PQV328) t171 0SO CD Play•r, All Luther our columna comp•I S9dan, 40, gr .. n, 24k A call to
Antiques All PIANOS Uaad Moving Bo••• good condition, r•c•nt LEXUS Olf' Int• r Io r, T -Top a, qualified buy•r• to ml, 139,995 Classlfltd
1 pc or houHlul caah n .. ded. Don't throw batterya, bottom paint, WESTMINSTER Garageo, Wiry Clean. calll BAUER JAGUAR wlll h.tE>
paid <714> 957~133 them awayt 963·3483 cover S9750 846-9212 • __ 7_1_4o8 __ 9_2_.e_o_o_8_ S2950.obo 54S..1554, ___ 8_4_2_·5_8_7_a__ 714-071·2002 042·S078
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
ACOUSTIC
C!ll.INGS 3408
South Co••t Drrw•ll
Acou1 r•mvtJcuat t•xt
Water Damage R•palr BHt In Quality & Prlc•
l.550011 444-45880
ADDITIONS
REMODEUNG
CABINETS
3410
OvtrttOCktd Wllh
•tuft? A call to
Clu1ln9d
wlll http
M2·1•71
•-.:~ .-....,OMO..~
Uve-ln child care.
European Au Pairs.
EOQllsh speaill~.
18-26 yrs .. I~.
culturally enr1chlnQ.
Qexlble In-home
chUdcare.
45 hrs..lwlt
800·7l5·200'l
Coap1111
l'roNellonal c...a
Can~s.mc.
~In IWlldlntlal ===-------.... -~~ad.!!!,danl Uc. 696289 In~
• l'IWAlt Ol GIOJt ~
• INftJN(TIWO WA ITMTIHC.RM'lt
RlOIM~Ol oma
7l4·5lfO~b34~
DOOIS
Sftdlng, hcurlty Door. a Wlndowt. All work guar'd . L101'4H137
·-(714) ..... 1403
,\ I .1n11lv \t.111
\\ 11I1
I ,111111\· \·,11in·,
TIMI TO BEGIN
YOUR HOlll .
IMPROVE MINT -PRM
Call a plu1tib•r. painter. handyman or any Of the ..,.
¥ten llet9d h«• In our dlractof'YI
OALL :VOUR
LOCAi. 8•1W1C•a TOOAYI
MONEY TO
LOAN
PET
3832 SERVICES
'84 4RUNN•R SAS ve. low mllH, full power, alloya. moon·
roof. (3GTX978)
$18,950 .
LUUS Of' WESTMINSTER
(714) 882-0900
TRADE
through classified
842·5878
( ,11(,,1111.1 ""'Ill\
800·643·5022
Thinking of having a
garag• •al•?
Glv• ua a calll CLASSIFIED
042sS078
3929
Antique 8paolatlat
40 yra ••P· Qual. work, lowHt pric9a.
r•fa Berni• & Nancy
H8-4S4SO
a & a Uphol since ·ea cuatom made furn, r•
upholat•ry. sllp cv,.
antique rpr S42-4812
-