HomeMy WebLinkAbout1998-03-06 - Orange Coast Pilot~
Senior PGA Tour brings :
its unique blend of talent, :
nostalgia and grace . to Newport Beach. :
~---------~ . By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot : ~....: _____ .......;;......_ ___ : . . "---•here.are-players with • -----
golf carts, and no cuts ·: •H llfM {,_.,.~I
to miss. Fellows like : .•. ..--..,, ~
Lee nevino and Gary :
Plaver can't play as : _
they on~ did,i but their crowd of : .,,A.,.._ -hs'•r "'-'
admirers has never been larger : ~ 1, U, , ..
as the enormously popular !
Senior PGA Thur takes on new : ·~~ ~ f$ ,
Ufe in 1998. •
Welcome to the tour's first of .
six stops in California, the : ,; s..itl.....t. -..-1'1-
T08hlba Senior Classic at
Newport Beech Country Club.
>.. evidence of the Senior •
.!Jbq(s path, keep in mind its :
!eading monsy winner last year : !ffa1e Irwin) earned more than • ~Woods durin_g the .. _______ _._ __
phenom's reoord-setting : with total purses of $250,000.
campaign on the PGA Tour. : 1bis year, about $49 million is at
Pans scream and holler just as : stake in 41 events. The State of
much for those on the : the Senior PGA Tour, as Bob
50-and-over drcuit as they do : Murphy said during Toshiba
for heroes on the PGA Tour. : Senior Cassie Media ~ay on
And tens of thousands of : Jan. 20, is •alive and well.•
people will come to Newport : Joe Inman, a rookie on the
Beach next week for several ! tour after turning 50 last Nov. 29,
reasons. Among them: to see if : is among th~ 18 pros scheduled
the Golden Boys of golf's : to play in Toshiba Senior Classic
pantheon still have it; and to get : IV March 9-15. •Jt's beyond
away from guaranteed contracts, : belief that I can be here,• Inman
owner lockouts, player strikes : said. •d athletes who attack coaches. : Gil Morgan, tltis year's
Whoever said life begins at 50 : leading money winner ($424,100)
wasn't kidding. For the players. : after four full-field tournaments,
some of whom are fonner : said •wtiat a great opportunity it
no·name dub professionals who : is at age so· to play on the
making money like they've : Senior ToUI.
never teen. it's a lease on file : •lbis is a second chance for
With no rival. Where else can : some of us to change our
your akills diminish, yet your : personalities,• Billy Casper,
paychecla inaease? : scheduled to compete in this , lt isn't always easy to : year's Toshiba Senior Classic,
compete, focus and analyze your : once said in a press conference.
performance. while constantly : •1 used to be known as a grouch ~g fiesh, kissing babies : and a grump. Look at me now.
84 coofronUng the truth tb4t : Wearing knit\ers and plus·fours
their game 11 barely a ghost of its : and lilly hats. I never thought I'd
.old aelf. : see the day.•
, Yet crowd.I like at Newport : Even more, these guys earn
l'eech next week will congregate : their keep. The only contracts to see them. Money continues to : are affiliated with Madison
}>Our tnto the events. And :. Avenue, not golf. Don't play,
teJfiislQQ ratings have been ! eam nothing. There's no disabled
WOJid, even though last year's : list and no revolt against a union.
decUned. ! So when Player, Dave . • alao tm..ng1.ug 1n +stockteo.~JiI&Q)lbeR, ~al,
a young star on the PGA Tour, : show up nm week, we'll know :ud 'IV ratings ~on the : that. though we haven't seen
dbW lkle, • Aid 1bn Crosby, ! them 1n a year, they haven't
"Jk» Prillldelit Of Business Affafrl : ·been mjail or a drug rehab
Sln1Clif1b\U'. ! center. -
'\ '1'BltoUtbegall ua : No, haps~lrblggest
iwo-tiourrMuDeat drcalt in 1980 ! problem ii what Colbert and 1 ! Arnold Palmer went through last
: JMI': Pl'Oltate cancer surgery. ! And Colbert. whose new passion
~;a~ aware of it, : Tueeday morning on
: the tub at • community : brMkfut. ! No matter who wins the
: :'JbsbU>a Senior Clalslc, there wUl
: be a volunteer party with the : dwriP-aMl'Ward. Two rem.
: ago wblia Colbert ..... be ! .,.. • mg putJml wtth the
: beet ntii111m tlrat w
: tbouGM ... ,,....., '° JdP lbe : ,552·0... i You..,. boW WM 'Will • c.w. .......... .
ii. =c: a 1& °'~•r.~
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r-----------------~-------,
: T H I
: NEWPOOT RENJi
C 0 U N T a Y C L U a
The 1998 field
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__ N_eWll_pon ___ Be.cblCoaa_· ____ ._Maa ___ Dmiy_·~·-P_Uot __ ·--------~·~ .. --· ~·-·-·-·----~----------------~:A:,....;...·--~--------------------------___;;__ ______ -:--FR~IO~~~~='MAR~-04---.-'~1911"""""""'~1~J~
~ D9t!!M
• • ~ • • • • l • • • t • • • • • ~ •••
MONDAY (Mmd1 9)
• Celebrity Pro-Am •
suppOrted by sports agents
Leigh Steinberg and
Jeffrey Moorad, 12:30 p.m.
. shotgun start.
TUESDAY (Mm'ch 10)
• Community B.reakf ast
with Jim Colbert presented
by The Irvine Company,
7:30 a.m., The 19th Hole
(on site at Newport Beach
Country Club).
• Zimmer Golf dinic with
George Archer, 10 a.m.,
Practice Range.
• Gillette Tour Challenge, 1:30 p.m., 10th tee (two-man
professional teams comprised of Senior Tour players vie for
$20,000 in this six-hole contest with alternate-shot ~·
• Taco Bell Junior diniC with Dave Stockton, 4 p.m.,
Practice Range.
WEDNESDAY (March 11)
• Toshiba Senior Classic Pro-Am presented by Kin~~ rtai
Technology, 7:30 ~.m. shotgun start; 1:15 p.m. ~rt.
\ ' .
THURSDAY (March 12)
• Toshiba Senior Classic Pro-Am presented by Kingston
Technology, 7:30 a .m. shotgun start; 1:15 p.m. shotgun start.
FRIDAY (March 13)
• Toshiba Senior Classic (first round), tee times begin at 8:40 •
a.m.
• Rock n' Roll at The 19th Hole, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Includes
fQOd, beverage, rock music and entertainment for...,/ .
tournament spectators .
SATURDAY (March 14)
• Toshiba Senior Classic (second round}, tee times begin
at 7:30 a.m. •
•
. • Countfc at the Classic at The 19th Hole, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m .
9tncluoes ood, beverage, live counlry mUSic ana -._.... ------·
entertainment for tournament spectators .
SUNDAY (March 15)
• Toshiba Senior Classic (third round), tee times begin
at 7:30 a.m .
•
..
.S4 FRIOAV. MARCH 6, 1998 '
•It's a blend of both. And
while you're at it, ~e how
the pros make tracks.
By Richard Dunn. Daily Pilot
Since the Casey Martin trial,
the riding of golf carts has
never been a bigger issue.
And because of comments
made on the stand by PGA Tour
Policy Board Chairman Dick
Perris, one of.the hottest topics
on the Senior Tour entering next
week's Tusbiba Senior Classic at
Newport Beach Country Oub is
this question: Do fans watch the
seniors for its competition or
nostalgia? ·
During the Martin trial, Ferris
essentially stated that the Senior
To\ir, which allows its over-50
seniors to use carts, isn't pure
competition, but is widely based
· on a •nostalgia factor."'
Senior Tour o(fidals do not
·hide thtf fact that in 1980 when
the tour was born, it was created
a--tt!IMl!lY to brlng back golf names
of yesteryear, a la Arnold Palmer
and Jack Nicklaus.
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PLOT
Lee Trevino's blast from the bunker ..• they don't come out any better now, or 20 yean ago.
Today, though, .the Senior
Tour sets records in charitable
giving, while the pUISes have
never been higher. Clearly,
FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE WITH A PERSONAL TOUCH
1 800 760-9267
DH raw.eats
$100.00 fof' ltYu hours. Gratuity ilcluded. $30.00 eac:ti addltlonel hou< . ....... ,,
$250.00 fof' three hours. Gn!tutty
Included. $50.00 eac:ti additional hou<.
AIUOaTI .....
l90.00 eoch WF1f or $160.00 l'OU"ld tnp
CMITMIOt
Some as obc:1li'e
IAllDIHOt
$150.00 eoc:h wsy or $260.00 round tnp
J.WUl&O.C.t
$50.00 eac:ti WFI(
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$75 00 fax hOl.r mtninll.m plus 20%
~
TY, VCR, CD~. 1T10011oof, an
lllWrtO' fof' yOu buSiness tnllldets who
!aloe laptops~ you go Totally
competJble fof' FAA machines, etc. This
hmo IS fully ~I
MARC MARTIN I OAl.Y Pl.OT
J.C. Snead takes his shots.
there's something to be said for
competition, because nobody
enjoys watching bad golf.
Further, what golf fans need
to keep in mind is that the Senior
Tour is different than the PGA
Tour.
•1t•s a blend of competition
and nostalgia,• Senior Tour
official Tun Crosby sai<l, •It's Don
January at age (68) playing like
he's 50. The competition has
been a large part of the tour's
success, but it's also because of
the great names who continue to
play. That's why it's Arnold
Palmer and Walter Mitty. It's
unique.•
Fact is, when the seniors get
down and dirty for competition
March 13-15, very few will be
riding goll carts. See how many
you can spot cruising down the
fairway.
•Most of them do not ride, but
overall the tour's a combination
of competition and.nostalgia,•
Toshiba Senior Classic
tournament director Jeff Purser
said. •My God, Lee '.'ftevino can ,
still play this game great Here
he's won (27) even.ts on the
regular tour and '1:1 on the
seniors, and he still drives the
ball 270 yards and still hits
miraculous iron shots. People
marvel over the fact he can still
play like that.•
On the Senior Tour, a bag and
player cannot use a cart at the
same time, according to Cros~y.
Further, carts have become
like Corporate America. Most
courses today in America are
designed with cart paths,
seemingly fading out ptddies
· and ·the tradition of walking: -
,, "The issue now is tha( (carts)
are a money thing for clubs,•
Crosby said. •vou won't see guys
anymore like Jim Dent and Chi
Chi Rodriguez who learned the
game as caddies. If you're going
to play golf in the South, unless
it's Augusta National. then you'll
be playing in a cart.•
FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1998
,I --------------------------------.~--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
:~Purser t s
• Local event is already in
the black before Monday's
opening celebrity tee shots.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
I f success 1s medsured m ...t
dollars dnd cents, then Jeff
Purser has hnally made some
sense of the Toshiba Senior
Classic.
Before dnyone on the Seruor
PGA Tour has tdken a tee shot
at NeWJ)ort Beach Country Club,
the once-struggling goll
townament Wlth a shady
financLaJ hJstory has turned the
comer with sirens blaring loudly
and become a profitable business
for the commuruty dS a whole
Four weeks before the 1998
Tosluba Seruor Classic was
scheduled to launch, the new
managing chanty, Hoag Hosp1taJ
Foundation, had already been
operating m the black Those 911
calls were answered quickly
Purser, hired by Hoag as the
tournament director of the event,
said this year's tournament has
the "potentidl" to surpass the
$306,000 a ctueved m 1996, the
single-largest contnbunon ever
made to Hoag by the 552 Club,
the hosp1tdl's fund-raismg
orgaruzation
That standard was reached
during the now-defunct Newport
Classic Pro-Am, an event
operated for 23 years by
the 552 Club. The
Newport Classic raised
more than $2 million for
the hospital, including
$1.2 million the last five
years when Taco Bell
was the sponsor.
The 552 Club, led by
Hank Adler and Jake
Rohrer, has poured its
resources into the Purser
Toshiba event, Orange
County's only PGA
Tour-sanctioned tournament.
making it an instant success
"We're well into sue figure!.,"
Purser said of the forthconung
charitable donation.
Purser, who ad.nuts he's
somewhat surprised by how
rapidly the tournament has
become profitable, came to
Ne\VJ)Ort Beach from the Semor
Tour stop at Grand Rapids,
Mich., where as tournament
director he turned around the
First of America Classic.
"The more successful you are,
the more people want to be a
part of it," said Purser, working
his 16th professional goU
tournament. "People want to be
associated with something
positive, something that
contributes to the commuruty, not
drains the community. The more
you give back, the more people
want to be involved "
The inaugural Tosluba Seruor
..
Classic reportedly broke
even at best in 1995
when it was operated
by the Orange County
Sports Association.
A year later, wherl
International Sports &
Event Marketing
managed the
tournament, ISM
President Bob Neely
said his company
plunged into its own
assets to give $55,000 to three
charities and two golf
scholarships. But by 1997, ISM
was dismissed by Toshiba, which
donated $105,000 to the same
three charities last August and
hired Hoag as the new·operator.
"Essentially, we're talking
about a new event in a lot of
ways,• said Senior PGA Tour
official Tim Crosby, whose
organization,played a critical role
m bringing Toshiba together with
Hoag.
Crosby said other events on
the Senior Tour, like at Grand
Rapids before Purser arrived,
have needed help with its
organization and fiscal bottom
lme for charity.
·But nothing compares to
this,• he said. ·And they did it in
less than a year, that's the
incredible part."
All three pro-ams next week,
including the Wednesday and
Thursday Toshiba Senior Classic
Pro-Ams, perhaps the most
important inventory for
tournament directors, have been
sold out.
Purser also said every hole
sponsorship and all the areas in
the expo center have been sold
out. "We're approaching being
sold out on the season
clubhouses badges (of which
there are 4,000), • he added.
Purser, in two years at Grand
Rapids, headed a significant
overhaul there, developing a
strategic plan that resulted in a
30% increase in tournament
gross revenues and an even
greater gain in net proceeds to
the charities involved.
•The fact that Jeff has
successfully turned around a
Senior PGA Tour event is a very
compelling factor in our
selection.• said Adler,
co-chairmen along with Rohrer
of the Senior Classic. "He brings
a wealth of experience to our
operation, jn literally every
component of PGA Tour
golf-tournament management.•
Only problem now, according
to Crosby, is filling Purser's big
shoes at Grand Rapids.
Crosby also said the
Senior Tour stop at Newport
Beach already had a strong
volunteer base from the old
Newport Classic Pro-Am, once
called, ironically, the Crosby
Southern.
• Who: Senior PGA Tour players
• Whlrt: Toshiba Senior Classic . . •Where: Newport Beach Country Club, 1600 E. Pacific Coast Highway,
Newport Beach . • WIMln: March 9-15 (three-round Senior Tour competition Is March 13-15)
• PwM: $1.1 million (First place, $165,000)
•TV: ESPN (live coverage March 13, 12 p.m. to 2 p.m.; March 14-15,
2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.)
• o.t.ndfng chllmplon: Bob Murphy •
• Fomurt: 78 pros, 54-hole stroke play (no cut) . .
• Coune designers: William Bell (1~2), Harry Rainville (1973),
and Ted Robinson (1985)
• CO&ne layout Par 71, 6,573 yards
• Newport a..ctt Cowltry Oub OWMr: everly Ray
• NllCC ~ Jerry Anderson
• NllCC ~-Ron Benedict
• N8CC Head Pro: Paul Hahn
• TowniMnent Director: Jeff Purser
• ~ ~ Hank Adler and Jake Rohrer
• 8enefldary: Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian
• Mondliy qualffler: at Los Serranos CC (Chino)
We l(lvite You
our Lundi:
Take 20" Off
the Food PdrtlOn
of Your Check.
Monday Thru Fnday
Please ~ ce4.1SX>n
~Ofderi!Jf
Offer expfts Morch!31.-1998
DINNER
1030FF
We lrMte You to Enjoy
ou f.arty Dinner and
Tau 20" OFF
the food Portion °" our Check.
~Y Thru Saturday
•fridW. Sll\Jrdey seating by 6:30
When ·ns Plcose =oupon
Qffuf.xpires 31, 1998
> Newport Bac:b.'Cotta Maa Daily Pilpt FRIDAY, MAROt 6. 1998 S7
rr------------------. . ----------------------------------------~----------------------------------------------~-------~ I . . • golden boys
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STATS, STORIES
AND FIGURES
Prize money on the Senior PGA
Tour continues to grow by leaps
and bounds, and the Toshiba Senior
Clas.sic is no exception.
This year's purse has increased
S 100,000 to S 1.1 million, no doubt
cementing the tournament's ability
to draw top-name golfers. .
In 1998, official purses on the
Senior Tour will total $45. 1 million,
a jump of nearly $4 million ov.er last
year's total and more than 400%
better than the total purses 10
years ago.
This year, 35 tournaments will
offer a purse of at least S 1 million,
with two events -the Ford Senior
Players Championship and the
Energizer Senior Tour Champi-
onship -each offering $2 million.
: In 1988, only one tournament. the
~ Vantage Championship, offered
• prize money of more than S 1 mil-~lion.
: • The par-4, hole Nd. 5 at Newport
• Beach Country dub. site of next
; week's Senior Clas.sic., Is ranked as
: the 27th toughest hole on the
' entire Senior PGA Tour circuit.
: Last year's winner, Bob Murphy,
: made par there all three days.
: while in 1996 Jim Colbert lapped
• the field at No. 5, making birdies In
; each round en route to the title.
: • The Senior Tour stop In Newport
• Beach Is the sixth official touma-
: ment on the 1998 schedule and the
: eighth of 43 total events. It's the
• fifth full-field event.
: • The Toshiba event is the first of six
Senior Tour stops In Callfomla.
After Newport Beach, the circuit
, does not return to the Golden State l until late July for the U.S. Senior
~ Open at Riviera Country Club in
~ Pacific Palisades.
; The tour them comes back to Cal-
• ifornia in October for The
; Transamerica in Napa, the Raley's t Gold Rush Classic near Sacramento
• and the Pacific Bell Senior Classic in
; Los Angeles.
' The season concludes with the ! unofficial Lexus Challenge in mid-
• December in La Quinta.
: • Charity will be this year's biggest
('Winner, as organlz~rs are antlclpat-
' Ing record receipts for Hoag Hospi-
: tal Foundation.
' Last year, the Senior Tour generat-f ed a record $9,057,245 for worth-
: Vfhile causes across the countty, a
• 20% increase from 1996. Together,
; the PGA Tour, Senior Tour and Nike
f Tour generated more than $44 mil-
lion for charity in 1997.
_ • In 1996, the Toshiba Senior dassk
~anked 34th out of 40 tournaments
r;n charitable giving, totalling
i)55,800.
:. Last year, Toshiba stepped in and ~'*>nated $105,000 to three charl-riies, ··while removing International
~ & Event MarketJng as the
•Pf>erator and signing a new thrff-
.,. ~r agreement with Hoag Hospital
:F<>undatlon.
~ Last yea~s Worst Temper Tantrum
.Award went to Rick Acton. After
maldng bogey at No. 9, missing an
easy two-foot putt. Acton chuCked
Is putter at hls bag In disgust.
That one stroke would cost him
bout $3,000, consktering his fl~
shed at 213 {taming $8, 116)
nstHd of 212 (worth $11, 171).
tn-thepr.ewlom twoyeen et~(,~
nlor Tour pt.yen used putters om the frinQeS and even fafr.twys ~;tne·ewnt.a .~to
golt~. '.:.~...a Even ~ tWi ntWt wurnn
.. COUnty, Al Gwlbliget hes
1111>1'11MICI we" here thrOughout hfs , career. •Mr. 59• tied for Second In •
I the 1961 Orange County Open, and I finished In the top 15 In the same
event In 1960 and '62, and In the I Haig Open In 1968.
I As a senior, Gelberger tJed for
eighth In the Inaugural Toshlbe
1 Senior Oassic at Mesa Verde Coun.
1 try Club (site of the Haig and
l Orange County Opens), then tied
for 1 fth In 1996 at NBCC. I Last ye. t.e tt41 off thi ptee,
I thouQt\1 ending tied for 49th.
•. Gelberget wlH be busy on Ftidey
I 8ft..-the opentng'e---1 he's scheduled fo at the
i SoUthem '-'"°""" Golf • I •the Long 8Mct'I COfMntlan ~
ltlr.MSp.m.
I Gft~~=ltent.n:
t
......... u.=:"1.111
$Df\ '*· 91MdftPGA1bur. • ..........
NBCC course record ... can it hold up?
•No one shot under 65 last
year; will this be the year a
Senior Tour pro breaks it?
1\vo years ago when Bob East-
wood crept up on leader and even-
tual winner Jim Colbert in the final
round of the Toshiba Senior Classic
at Newport Beach Country Club, he
tied a course record, shooting 64.
Last year, when Bob Murphy won
in a dramatic nine-bole playoff
against Jay Sigel, three playe~ shot
an opening-round 65 to tie for the
lead -Murphy, David Graham and
J .C Snead.
But no one shot lower the rest of
the tournament and, for another
year, the NBCC course record
endured.
Will this be the year a goUer final-
ly shoots 63 or better? How much
longer can the record hold up with
Senior PGA Tour pros firing away at
the pins every March?
The record 64, has been accom-
plished eight times by six players.
Eastwood and Jon Chaffee are
the only players to pull off the feat
twice, with Eastwood doing it the
first time in the old Crosby Southern
Pro-Am, which later became the
Taco Bell Newport Classic Pro-Am.
The now-defunct Newport Clas-
sic was operated by the 552 Club,
Hoag Hospital's primary fund-rais-
ing wing. The hospital is now the
managing charity of the Toshiba
Senior Cla~ic.
Eastwood shot 64 in 1976 while
winning the former G:rosby Clam-
bake, a tournament established for
the late entertainer Bing Crosby for
those who didn't qualify for his PGA
Tour clambake in Pebble Beach,
now the AT&T National Pro-Am.
In 1996, Eastwood shot 64 again
on the final day of Toshiba Senior
Classic II, but Colbert held him off
for the title.
· Chaffee, who played in the New-
port Classic several times, shot 64 in
that event in 1984 and '88. Bill Britton
also shot 64 in 1984, beating Chaffee
in a playoff. Chaffee won in '88.
John McCamish and Tom Lamore
both shot 64 in the '85 Newport Clas-
sic, McComish winning a playoff.
The sixth different golfer to card a
64 on the course was Lee Davis (Los
Angeles), who reportedly achieved
the feat as a guest dwing a Regatta
Tournament in July 1988.
DON LEACH I DALY l'l..OT
Bob Charles takes a look down the laJ.rways of ~CC.
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•
•• FRIDAY, MARCH 6. 1998
. classic tales I
Toshiba
.. , in the
beglnDing
• George Archer came
out of the blue in '95 to
win it all at the Mesa
Verde Country Club.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
T he birth of the Toshiba
Seruor Oassic, n.ow in its
fourth year, became a
reahty once the Senior PGA Tour
identified Orange County as a
market unto itself and not as an
extension of Los Angeles.
At the time, m June 1994, the
Senior Tour already had stops in
Ojai (the FHP Senior Classic)
and Los Angeles (the Ralphs
Senior Classic). Ric Clarson, the
Senior Tour's then-director of
administration, said the tour bad
recognized for several years the
urgency to move south into
Orange County.
But there were many other
factors that needed to combine
before the tourney's first press
conference Oct. 25, 1994.
On June 16 of that year, the
first reports of the Senior Tour
possibly conung to Mesa Verde
Country Club in March 1995
were published.
But it was National Car
Rental, not Toshiba, which was
b1ddlng for the btle sponsorship.
The Orange County Sports
Assoaabon, headed by Don
Andersen, the tournament's
original director, had agreements
worked out with Mesa Verde
and the Senior Tour. Only a
sponsor was missing.
National was'reportedly a
signature away from sponsoring
the tournament, but the
Minneapolis-based car rental
company was forced to ·
discontinue its negotiations with
OCSA because of the company's
approaching sale.
"Then, out of the clear blue
sky, Bob Neely ca.me in with
Toshiba," said Bill Wallace,
Mesa Verde's golf chairman.
Neely, who represented
Toshiba and a year earlier
founded international Sports &
Event Marketing, would strike a
deal for hls client, which had
been desiring for years to crack
the sponsorship market in major
sporting events.
With OCSA loqklng to
operate a golf tou?nament, and
Mesa Verde looking to host one,
Neely linked the two with
Toshiba -while the Senior Tour
was trying desperately to fill a
vacancy.
It was imperative to the tour
that it fill the date in March,
once held by the Vmtage
Invitational at the Vmtage Club
in lndian Wells, later to become
the Gulfstream Aerospace
Invitational. The tour had a
commitment from ESPN to
televise its event that week in
March
"The lhtrd week in March
is a key date," Ric Clarson, the
Seruor Tour's then-director of
administration, said during the
Oct 25 press conference.
·we didn't use that date in '94
and we were faang the prospect
of not utilizing 1t in '95. In that
case, we might have lost it (for
ESPN)."
Finally, after months of
deliberation, it was announced
at the Orange County Sports
Hall of Fame at Anaheim
Stadium that the Senior Tour
will indeed come to Mesa Verde
in Costa Mesa for the inaugural
Toshiba Senior Classic, to be
managed by OCSA with
Andersen as tournament
director.
It would be the..first.Senim:
Tour event in Orange County.
Prize money wU1 be $800,000,
a figllre that wU1 escalate to Sl
million ih 1996 and '97,
acaardlng to tfai
·nuth be told, we've been
working on (oomlng to Orange
County) for four yean, but we
couldn't yet all the ingredients
together, Clarion said.
Volunteers and organizen ot
the event worked overtime to
prepare for tho toumamel1t
because they had 1eu than ftve
months, an almost impossible
talk, to pull it off.
namportation and parking
~ere the biggest problems,
because Mesa Verde wu not
eble to accommodate the
~lus of vans, can and
tileYtl1on truckl Oil tb property.
Wallace, a volunteer,
And9nen and theD·Mete Verde aw*:!.= JUD Walih ma ... « ... lbllllM s.1ot I? •h
,
MARC MARTIN I DAJlY PILOT
George Archer digs his
way out OD the way to a
ttUe Jn the inaugural
Toshiba Senior Classic in
1995 at Costa Mesa's Mesa
Verde Country Club as be
rallied with a 64 OD the
final round, including a
25-foot birdie on 17.
It bu been classified as the •pertect seniors
golf course" by some members of the Senior
PGA Tour.
Newport Beach Counb'y Oub, site of next
week's Toshiba Senior Classic, hu never been
accu.sed of being too long, nor has anyone In
the past two years complained about the
course being too difficult.
•Newport Beach Country Club is set Up in
such a way that Ws easy (for the players) to
walk -it's set up real tight, not like some of
these housing developments,• said nm Cros-
by, Vice President of Business Affairs for the
Senior Tour.
The par· 71 course; which plays to 6,598
yards (25 yards shorter than last year), can
also be an ideal setting for spectators.
Since tournament management this year
expects the Senior Classic to eclipse the atten-
dance totals of previous years, here's your
informal escort for moving about on the course
and nestling in the best locations, beginning
with this reporter's top-five spots to view the·
competition: .
1) LONG DRIVER: It's the most remote from
the clubhouse, but the green at No. 4 is a great
place to sit and watch. It's the shortest par-3 on
the course, yet a well-kept secret because it's
one of the course's prettiest holes. Players hit
over water to an undulated green. ·
If properly situated behind the green, fans
can also see the fifth tee. There are plenty of
trees and limited foot traffic.
2) STADIUM: Best seat in the house could
be across the lake at the 17th green, referred
Corona del Mar
$5,400,000
·to as •stadiumseattng• by some fans last year.
Bring binoculal's for~ results.
Behind the green (if you can fin<! a spot) is
also ideal. but large trees can often obstruct
the filght of the ball, so be careful where you
stand.
From the •stadium seating,• if appropriate-
ly positioned, fans can also see golfers coming
up on 16.
Hole No. 17 is NBCC's signature bole -and
one of its most popular viewing destinations.
3) UP TIIE HILL: Walk alongside the No. 2
fairway and by the time you reach the green,
scout around, because you never know what
you'll find. The area is the highest point on the
golf course. Fans will be. able to spot four
greens (2, 5, 7 and 11) and three tees (3, 6 and
8).
As if that wasn't enough, on clear days from
that locale fans can get a glimpse of snow-
capped Mt. Baldy, Catalina Island and the
Back Bay.
4) CJ.UBHOUSE SET: While the clubhouse
space is the busiest intersection in Newport
Beach during the Toshiba Senior Oassic, it's a
classic area to move around and see the play-
en. It encompasses three greens (9, 15 and 18)
and two tees (1 and 10).
5) SEB DIE BIRDIE: The par-5 at No. 15,
the euiest bole on .the golf course for the
seniors, is a detlnite birdie and eagle hole. It's
a short par·5 and most of the players attack it
aggressively.
The 15th green also undulates and features
three tiers for exciting chips and putts. .
Last year it was the No. 1 birdie hole with
85, after yielding 69 the previous year, when
that figure was second most In the tourna-
ment. Only 16 bogeys were recor<!ed last year,
fewest in the field.
0
Another unique spot is beb1nd the 14th
green, because fans can also get a peek at
golfers teeing off on Nos. 11, 15 and 18.
And, of course, if you're lucky enough to
have a seat in one o1 the sky boxes, you can
witness the action at 18.
For those on foot, keep in mind No. 18 IS
tricky, because bleachers, corporate boxes
and the ESPN television trailer take up most of
the territory around the green. Beware.
In general, there are two rules of thumb for
watching a golf tournament: Pick a favonte
player (or group) and follow him, or plant
yourself behind a green and watch the groups
come up. You'll be an expert on the nuances
of that green by the end of the day.
If you decide to follow a player (or group),
it's best to stay ahead of the golfer. Let the
action come to you. Too often, fans want to see
the seniors tee off, then they wonder why they
get caught in a herd. ·
If you're interested in watching the players
tee off, go to the driving range, where there
are bleachers to watch tile heavy hitters.
Good hill hunting.
Emerald Bay
$2,795,000
Corona dcl Mar .---------~----~---------------..-...
$2,197,000 ..
•
'
HOT
SPOTS
Harbor Ridge 1111111•
$2,495,000
. Laguna Beach
' $2,345,000
•
. (
• •
A Daily Pilot guide for the fan who
wants the viewing ~ge.
Big Canyon
$1,595,000
Newport Beach
$2,495,000
.
\
FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1998 St
T • I NEWJl(B[•M
&: 0 M T a • 7\
LEGEND
CJ FlntAld
. (8
0 LONG DRIVEJI
.. e~SET
N 0. 1 7
MARC MARTIN I DALY PILOT
Newport Beach Cc's
signature hole, No. 17,
very beauutul, very
treacherous.
TALES
CONTINUED FROM 8
•
.. • ..
. •
-
•When 1t gets down to the
end, the last couple of days, it
star"tst to be so much fun. became
you've done all the work. You
almost Hate to see it end,•
Waijace said.
After a mad scramble and
long hours for Mesa Veroe
volunteers, the inaugural Senior
Classic became a reality on '
March 13, 1995, when the first
tee shot was launched in the
Monday pro-am.
The field for the Senior Classic
included longtime Mesa Verde
'1iUllp on g,
who play~ under a sponsors
. .
exemption. • ,
On ~ final day of the
~roWld Senief-.Tour 4Vent •
Marth 19, Oeorge=Arther-
s\JJ'J)rised the competition.
In the sunset of his~. ··•
and only two days removed friD
dec:lding to retire from the.tour
at MUC>n's end becaUM of a
degenerative hip, Atcher won
the tint Clalllc with an
11-under-par 199,~
6-u.nds 64 in the l8lt round to wm 1120,000. An:Mr
recomklered bll 1eeirement.
·1 m.cte up my mind to retn
two dayw age>, end DOW 1 md uf
wiDldDg a toUrDuliilbt. Galt II a
auy geme. You do tldlMli
ywn na1 ~ '° ..-ili6ll Arc.Mr, who .. tbe time Codd _..., ---Wdng.""" ... al lbfla dD. an , • .,, :2
Afctwt ._ __ , ___ ~---
......... i, •w ....... ,, 21.·-.... =· -:..--
J
...
110 FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1998
-. . . r----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~ golden boys ·: , I
'I I
•I I
•I ,I
•• . , :1
'I ,1
I
.1
I
.I
•I ·' I
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L-------------------------~---------------------------------~------------------------~-------~-------------------~ . . .
Senior Tour pros love hole
No. 15, but detest No. 5.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Most of the
Seruor PGA Tour pros fell in love with
Newport Beach Country Club the
moment they saw it.
Once they played it, though, it wasn't
as easy as it looked.
After two years of play on the golf
course for the Toshiba Senior Classic,
which means six rounds of gathering
information and analyzing statistics, it's
rather indisputable what holes the pros
like and which ones cause them the most
problems.
1bis year, the cow-Se will play 25 yards
shorter than last year, a total of 6,573
yards (par 71). Hole Nos. 3, 10 and 17
experienced minor changes.
' As Orange County braces itself for
Toshiba Senior Classic IV, here's a hole-
by-bole analysis of what fans can expect:
No. 1 -339 yards,
par-4: If properly
attacked, the opening
bole with a slight dog-
leg left should be a
birdie for the seniors.
It features an elevated
tee, placing a premium on the location of
the drive. Long drivers may elect to use
an iron to better position a second shot to
a deceptive green.
Last year, it ranked as the fifth-easiest
hole (46 birdies), while yielding 56
birdies in 1996, fowth most.in the toW114-
ment that year.
No. 2 -390 yards,
par-4: Considered an
easy par, or middle of
the road in terms of
toughness. The bole
has a slight uphill
climb with a large
bunker in front of the left side of the
green.
For the past two years, more players
made par on No. 2 (342) than any other
hole. The fairway parallels the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel. NBCC head pro
Paul Hahn believes the ball goes in dif-
ferent directions here.
No. 3 -532 yards,
par-5: The tee box at
No. 3 is the highest
point on the golf
course', where fans
can view Catalina
Island on a dear day, snow-capped Mt.
Baldy and the Back Bay -all from one
location. -
Long hitters are confronted with the
choice of trying to rea<$ the green with a
fairway wood or '6 long iron. Water
guards the green on the left side.
For most the Senior Thur pros, No. 3 is
a walk in the park. It has yielded the
ThirQ-mosl o1rmes 1n eacli orlhell 0
years, including 73 last year along with
four eagles -by far the most It was the
second-easiest bole on the course la$t
·year (lrailing only No. ~·
No. 4 -1•3 yards,
~3: One of the pret-
tier holes, and also one
of the most underrat-
ed. this hole averaged
2.957 motes last year
and 3.039 in 1996,
with the proe making adjustments from
one year to the next.
It rellnqu1lbed only 21 birdies in '96,
then 38 lut year. Players hit ovm water to
an undulated. green. wb:lcb adds to the
rnatler>ge. Lut year it yielded the t.bird·
mOlt pan (168), a.Dd the teOODd molt 1D
'96 (1?0).-
lt'a the abort.elt per-3 OD the c:lOWA.
f
. No., _,55 y8*
par4: Tqughelt bol9
oo the coune. Moel
...... would ddP tt ti
~~· \lpWiDd .. .. ~ ..... -
, ,.
It's a straightaway uphill hole with a
wide fairway, but second shots are
played to a well-bunkered green.
Last year, No. 5 forced the most
bogeys (83) and allowed the second-
fewest birdies (14). There were also nine
double bogeys, the second most.
It also ranked as the hardest hole in
'96, the year Jim Colbert made a living it,
lapping the field on No. 5 with birdies in
all three rounds, the only golfer to do so
on his way to the title in Tosluba Senior
Classic· II. '
No. 6 -418 yards,-
par-4: It's a fun dogleg
left for duffers, but the
Senior Tour pros have
struggled on it. There
were five double
, . bogeys last year, sec-
ond most behind No. 5.
Players will try to drive down the
right-center of the fairway to avoid the
large trees hugging the left side of the
dogleg.
The tee box is located near restrooms
and a bricked water station. where multi-
tudes gather and stroll.
No. 7 -324 yards,
par-4: Regardless of
what the golfer uses
off the tee, the hole
features probably the
toughest green on the
golf course, a large
dance floor with great undulation.
Good judgment will tell you not to hit
the ball above the pin. There were six
double bogeys shot on No. 7 in 1996, but
only one last year.
No. 8 -192 yards,
par-3: Looks are
deceiving. There's no
water, but it usually
plays upwind. The
bank to the right of
the green slopes
down and away, making a difficult pitch
to get the ball up and down for par. It is
also the longest par-3.
It's a surprisingly taxing bole, among
the five hardest on the course. Last year,
the 74 bogeys represented the second-~ in the toumamen~ ~m '96, it induced
a tournament-high 72 bogeys.
In two years, though, there have been
only three double bogeys, all coming in
'96.
No. 9 -407 yards,
par-4: The second-
toughest hole in '96
and the third toughest
last year, the hole is
hard to read, because
there's no reference point to judge your
distance to the green.
It's a blind tiogl~ right that alw~ PiiYs ug tliaiiR appears. Lirge trees-
guard both lide1 of the fairway.
Last year, Senior Tour pros made 7Q
bogeys, third most OD the~ while yie\d-
ing-ooly 1-1 ~ the fourth fewest.
AD.-J996,•it l\llNDdiind only 12
birdies, fewest OD the llnb.
It also prompted a toumainent-high
seven double bogeys in '96, but j\llt two
Jut year.
Hacken ~ n8ed to grab a cold
one at the tum after plaflng No. 9.
• MARC MARTIN I DAl.V Pl.OT
Gary Player takes his shot at No. 17, the landmark of the coune With the beauty of 't someUmes creating the Wuslon
of ease, wblch ii hardly the case. It's the second-toughest hole on the course, and perhaps No. 1 ln terms of a potential.
away from eacl) other and curve out-No. 14 -397 yards, The area near the tee box is intimate
ward. par-4: It's the third-and dose to the restrooms.
The average strokes the past two toughest hole on the
years have been 4.095 and 4.158, not far back nine. It has No. 17 -190 yards,
par-3: Maybe the most
famous hole in Orange
County, thanks to Bob
Murphy's 80-foot putt
last yeaJ to end a tour-
record nine-hole play-
from par. length and playen
No. 11 -344
yards, par-4: It's one
of the reasons why
the Senior Tour p~
appreciate Newport
Beach Country Club.
There's so much room in the fairway,
it's almost impossible to hit a bad tee shot.
The second shot into a small, elevated
green with bunkers located on both sides
makes the bole a little tougher than it
looks.
Last year, it conceded the fourth-most
birdies (52) on the golf course, after the
pros made 47 birdies in 1996 (sixth on the
list).
In two years, pros have averaged only
3.931and3.962 strokes on it.
No. 12 - 370 yards,
par-4: Another reason
why Senior Tour ~
~ithere. ............
WhUe lt'.I atrajghl
down the .fairway, the
landing for a tee shot is ~w. and the
green ls sunounded by eucalyptus. The
left side of the green ii guarded by
bunkers.
· The 48 blrdiel lt gave up in 1996 rep.
resented the fifth mOlt In the tournament,
followed by Jut year'• tOt4l ot 45, tbe
sixth most. The average uumber of
strokes for the pros have been uQdli' 'Mf
for two yean (3.931and3.9").
need a good tee shot
Prom the tee, you
look into a horizon. It's a slight dogleg
right with a big downhill. The small
green is lower than the fairway.
Last year it provoked the sixth-most
bogeys (55). It also featured two triple
bogeys -only No. 11 had as many.
Just 23 birdies were scored on it last
year, tied for the sixth fewest, with 25
birdies the previous year, the seventh
fewest.
off against Jay Sigel.
Pew holes have received as much tele-
vision exposure as NDCC's signature
hole over water. But tllere are few as dif-
ficult in the Toshiba Senior Classic, as
only 13 birdies were yielded last year,
fewest in the toumamen,t.
It ranked last year as the secon~
No. 15 -"92 y~. toughest hole in the field behind only No.
par-5: Call it room-Ser-5. There were also 11 double bogeys, the
vice birdie, because it's most of any hole.
the eo.s1est hole on the In 1996, it ranked seventh on the
golf course. toughnea chart when three tnple bogey5
Though W• a long were recorded.
uJ)Mllf ~yen~iflbete rn tWo. 1118 1>el'aUtU1 ?Jan&op auaes a
Any pro who fails to make par should two-Uered, rolling green surrounded by
oomkler another line ol work bunkers. The mounds also present a
Lut ff&? it WU tbe NO. 1 blrdi8 hoie cballimge u you mm the ,green.
Wiaa. as . .,.. ~ 68 dae ~ • For golf fans, it'• Oil• Of.th.ti..best bola& --
,...,, ~ ..... 9ntY t• bi>ge,.... lilu:~. 6
rtiCOided Jut year, frieit In the fleld.:
In 1996, there was a grand total of nine
eagles made throughout the three
zounds. 1even on um hole llooe. BotJ:l years, the hole bu b8ell ranked
u the 69l$i8lt.
'
NO: 18 -510 ,ard.i,
par·5: Great fiolshtng
hole. And the players
love lt because it
brought about Ute sec'·
ond-bighest birdie
total (80) in the tounul-
mlat lut yeu. In 1996, it ied the field in blriiWI With 13.
ID the two yean, it bas ranked No. 2
8nc1 No. 3 ~ year) oD the euiest-bole
c:btlt. 11*9 have allo been only two
dOUbl9 tiiln two yean. l'l ID hole but lti11 presents an
oppcd1 !UJ !cmv bitten to reach the
... ..... "Iba green .. llightly ·-Ydlcl ,.._._ fauway, aeatb,lg a~ :ci,l':i-. made ~.m 1996, • Ill Courie. 1hlie were 21 ....... ' .. tblrCl,.....
ldtd Of tbe fteld cndred
I ... GI .t la~ .1,JN_l IOb
===-~· ....
FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1998
THE FIRST MA OR TRANSITION FOR THE SENIOR CLASSIC
• In the beginning it wasn't all
blue chips that were being
raked in on a shaky table.
fter getting its feet wet on the
enior PGA Tour, the Toshiba
enior Classic switched ponds
. shortly after the first townament in 1995
, when the event's managing operator
and beneficiary, the Orange County
Sports Associat:ton, began seeing red.
Financial problems for OCSA would
ultimately usher ln a major transition for
the tournament, including a site change
from Mesa Verde Country Club to
Newport Beach Country Club on July
17, 1995.
The first s1gn of trouble came in late
March of that year, only days after
$ LEADERS
Kltnk Player Events Money
1. Gil Morgan 5 S424,100
~...Dave-Stodfton 5 S269.44.5
3. Larry Nelson 3 S263, 700
4. David Graham 5 $234,570
5. Hale Irwin 3 S221 ,650
6. Jim.Albus 4 $210,980
7. Vicente Fernandez 5 S206, 112
8. Ray Floyd 4 $176,536
9. Jose Canizares 4 S 138, 727
10. Gibby Gilbert 5 $126,273
11.5imonHobday 4$122,191
12. George Archer 4 $121,850
13. Hugh Baiocchi 5 S 115,305
14. Jay Sigel 5 S 111,404
15. Bob Murphy 5 $109,500
16. Bob Eastwood 5 $104,373
17. Dana Quigley 5 S 104, 170
18. Dale Douglass 4 $103,500
19. D. Eichelberger 5 $102.669
20. Jim Colbert 4 S96,0S6
21. Jim Dent 5 S9l,529
22. Lee Tr@Vino 4 $89, 190
23. Graham Marsh 5 S85,579
24. Kermit Zarley 4 $83, 169
25. Bob Duval 4 S83,072
26. Gary Player 3 S82.464
27. B. Summerhays 5 $81,460
28. John Bland 4 $76,815
29. J.C. Snead 4 $72,299
30. John Jacobs 4 $70,550
31. Jack Kiefer 5 $65,893
32. Tom Wargo 4 $63,395
33. Terry Dill 4 $55,318
34. Al Gelberger 4 $48,959
35. Bud Allin S $45,821
36. Brian Barnes 3 $43, 173
37. L Thompson 4 S41,041
38. Larry Laoretti 4 $40, 583
39. Bruce Crampton 5 $39,439
40. Fred Gibson 4 $37,795
41 . Mike Hill 4 S37,S93
42. Bob Okkson 4 $35,742
43. David Lundstrom 3 S34,230
44. Mike McCullough 4 S32, 187
45. Jerry McGee 4 $30,522
46. Bob Charles 4 $30, 110
47 Charles Coody 4 $30,061
48. Hubert Green 2 $29,480
49. Dan Wood 1 $28,600
SO. tsao Aoki 1 S26,250
51. Tom Jenkins 2 S25,256
52. Buzz Thomas 4 S22,9n
53. 0\1 0\1 Rodriguez 4 $22,875
54. DeWitt Wffver Jr. 4 $21 ,535
55. Joe Inman 4 S21,071
56. Calvin Peete 4 $19,681
57. Don January 4 $19,013
58. Walter Morgan 4 $17,360
59. Kurt Cox 4 S 13,097
60. Butch Baird 4 S 12,259·
61. Rocky Thompson 4 S 11,447
' 62. Miller Barber 4 $10,528
63. Watter Zembtlskl 4 $10,024
' 64. John Schroeder 2 $9,776
65. Jltn Ferree 3 S9, 760
66. Larry Ziegler 3 $9,665
George Archer won the inaugural
Oassic, as tournament director Don
Andersen abruptly resigned as OCSA's
executive director. It came on the heels
of the first published reports about the
tax-exempt charity suffering from debt
problems.
Jack Lindquist, the former
Disneyland president who took over as
OCSA's interim executive director,
claimed in mid-April that Msweeping
changes" were needed to ignite a
dramatic shift for the Orange
County-based charity, adding that the
debt-ridden organization would need to
start from •ground zero.•
At that point, officials from all
comers, OCSA, the Senior Tour and
Mesa Verde, agreed informally that the
event should remain at Mesa Verde, and
classic tales II
according to then-Toshiba executive .
Mike Winkler, the maiden Classic had
broken about even in the fiscal
department.
OySA claimed it lost money, while
Mes' ~erde had struggled with parking
problems, though the club's volunteers
presented a headline occasion for
Orange County.
In the aftermath of the first Toshiba
event, disputes heated up between
OCSA and Mesa Verde over #petty
things,· according to then-OCSA
finance director Bob Atwell. such as
food and beverage invoices.
After the financial discrepancies were
cleared up, the so-called "sweeping
changes· included the end of OCSA's
brief reign as tournament operator by
late June 1995.
Bob Neely, who had onginally linked
Toshiba to the goll tournament through
his company, International Sports &
Event Marketing, took over as executive
director of the Classic.
Among Neely's first order of
business was to hire Michael Carey
as the second tournament director.
Carey, a former PGA Tour official, had
once managed Michael Jordan's
celebrity goll circuit.
· Neely, who had orchestrated a
three-year agreement for his client to
sponsor the Senior Tour event,
announced that Coto de Caza Goll Oub
and Newport Beach Country Club were
the two candidates to replace Mesa
Verde as the host site in 1996.
To the delight of the Newport Harbor
Area G:hamber oJ Commerce and the
Newport Beach Conference & VLSitors
Bureau, Newport Beach Country Oub, <
longtime host of the 23-year-old
Newport Classic Pro-Am, was named as
the new address of the Toshiba Senior
Classic in July.
Neely said the contract was for two
years, and for NBCC. formerly the Irvine
Coast Country Club, it was awarded its
first marquee event.
Neely. ISM president and
self-appointed executive director of the
Seruor Classic, saJd NBCC's location and
gallery-fnendly course layout were the·_
prunary reasons it was selected over
Coto de Caza.
For $395* a month, .
it c ·omeS-With everything
under the dual sunroofs.
Four-Year, 50,000-Mile Warranty.**
4.0-Liter V8 Engine.
Permanent Four-Wheel Drive.
Four-Channel All-Terrain ABS.
14-Gauge Boxed Steel Frame.
Steel Inner Body Cage.
36 months s 395 first month payment s 4,500 down payment
s 0 securitv deoosit
$4,895 due at signing
· L eather Upholstery.
Burl Walnut Trim.
Land Rover Discovery LE
H eadlamp Washers.
8-Speaker Sound With Suhwoofer.
Central Locking With Alarm.
HomeJink• System.
Alpine Windows.
RoofRack .
. . .
• •• •• \: .
.• 67. Tom Shaw 4 $8.6l0
I 68. Biii Klng 4 $8.459
-e!." .... l>ltm.-Mti+w.tlor----,~i8,~ "----=::...:u:::::al Electric 811!!!:,o~Cs. ___ _ H eated Front Seat8.
70. Tommy Alron $7,491
71 . Jimmy Powett $7, 188
• 72. Jadt Nlddaus $6,943
73. Roy VUdnkh S6,2o40
u,~~... SS.S01 a.. Miiton SS.l06
76. Gay Brewer SS,088 n . Frri Conner $4,560
' 71; H.rold HeMlng $4,271
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11. Arnold Palmer $3,648
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acquire owner.hip rights unleu the ~rdtas. option it uerdHd. Other conditions may aoOIY, Equally competiM v.llues ava•l&ble on all OltlCIOYefy modets Reta•'-~1p.1uon ~ •fNict
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. ----------------------------------------~~~~-----------------------~ r--------~-------------------------------------1 • golden boys · · • I I
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•It's 1996 -Colbert laps the field, wins
the second Classic; two months later, yet
another tournament director in named.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
Some golf fans do not like Jim Colbert. "Too
cocky," they say. But few realize that Colbert's
unique strut down the fairways is caused by
career-long back problems, not from arrogance or
an inflated ego.
Those same fans probably don't like his
customary floppy Callaway hat, or sidestep shuffle
and ensuing handgun salute after birdies, either.
But Colbert, with his shirt collar flipped up and
his game on fire, ruled the roost in Toshiba Senior
Classic a at Newport Beach Country Club on
March 17, 1996.
Colbett, the Senior PGA Tour's leading
money-winner from the previous year, entered the
final round with a five-stroke lead and won going
away with a 12-under-par 201 to capture the
$150,000 prize. It was the first year of the
tournament's purse increase to $1 million.
"I can't play much better," said Colbert, who
won the tournament by two strokes over
bard-charging Bob East\vood, who tied a course
record at 64 on the final day.
•I had two bogeys on this golf course in 54 holes
-that's pretty good," Colbert added. ·1 liked this
golf course when I first saw it, and my game's been
coming around. I knew if I shot 3-or 4-under
(in the final round), it would be real hard for
anybody to catch me. I did say on Friday that I
could win it. I said it for just a second -maybe not
everybody heard me, but I said it."
Yes, he said it. He wasn't cocky about it, either.
He meant it.
Colbert, teeing off in the final round with a
comfortable lead, ended any suspense with four
birdies on the front nine at NBCC. He shot 3-under
68 in the final round.
Colbert needed a solid round to hold off
Eastwood, who shot 7-under 64 to tie the NBCC
course record, accomplished seven other times ...
including Eastwood himself 20 years ago in the old
Crosby Southern Pro-Am when he was trying to
crack the PGA Tour.
Bob Neely, the event's executive director, said
only hours before the tournament started that low
scores, even a course record, would probably be
the result of the excellent weather.
"There's a chance it could certainly be broken or
tied, because it is such a phenomenal field and if
the weather holds up like this, the conditions are
going to be excellent. And with those kind of
greens, the ball is going to be rolling smooth and
fast. It should be dynamite," Neely said.
For the first time out with NBCC as host, the
Classic appeared to out-draw the 1995 attendance
figures at Mesa Verde, when 34,000 people went
through the turnstiles, according to OCSA.
Neely's management team, International Sports
& Event Marketing, announced that the total
attendance was an estimated 63,500, including
20,000 on the final day.
But changes continued within the event's
framework 2112 months after Colbert's victory.
Tournament manager Michael Carey was fired
by Neely on JUne 7, 1996, which meant the Senior
Classic would have its third tournament director in
three years.
Among other things, Neely said the change was
classic tales 111.
. ·,
..
DON LEACH I DAILY PLOT
'96 champ Jim Colbert bib from the bunker on 17.
made "to make the event more progressive and
more profitable for the charities in the ensuing
years.•
Stephen Wagner, operator of a golf appeal
company in Riverside, would be announced as the
event's third tournament director at a press
conference in six days.
On that day, ISM hosted a small press confer-
ence at tournament's host site and issued $15,000
checks to each of the three charities, the National
Dyslexia Research Foundation. the Make-A-Wish
Foundation and the ALS (Lou Geluig's disease)
Foundation.
Golf programs at UC Irvine and Orange Coast
College had also been given $5,000 donations from
ISM.
Interestingly, the 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status
ISM had hoped to achieve to become a federally
approved charity, which is mandated by the Senior
Tour to run a tournament, would later become a
hot issue and help bring disaster for ISM in its
approaching disputes with the tournament site,
NBCC.
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• Murphy wins in record playoff;
'97 Senior Classic is one for the ages.
By Rkhard Dunn, Daily Pilot
H istory was made in the 1997 Toshiba
Senior Classic as Bob Murphy, only
oun before he would celebrate St.
Patrick's Day, won the longest playoff ever on
the Senior PGA Tow.
It came down to match play for nine hol~s
between Murphy and Jay Sigel, who had come
from six strokes behind with eight boles left in
regulation to tie Murphy at 6-under and force a
pla~hy, under gray clouds and chilly winds,
drained an 80-foot birdie putt on Newport
Beach Country Cub's signature hole No. 17 to
end the tour-record playoff and pocket
$150,000 on March 16 of last year.
Murphy Oipped bis putter in the air, 'knocked
off his straw hat. then placed his hands on bis
bead after making bis winning putt on a tough,
two-tiered gteen.
Sigel's great comeback would be wasted.
•1 was sort of getting dizzy, going around
and around and around.• Sigel said-0f th&
playoff, the second longest in PGA Tour history,
trailing only an 11-hole playoff in 1949 between
Cary Middlecoff and lloyd Mangrum, who were
declared co-winners at the Motor Oty Open.
• In the first full-field Senior Tour event of
.1998, however, David Graham defeated Dave
Stockton in a 10-bole playoff at the Royal
Caribbean Classic in Florida.
' "Who would have thought the eight-hole
record would stand for over four years and then
classic tales IV
we go nine holes at Toshiba and it doesn't even
last a year? Pretty unusual,• Murphy said last
month.
In last year's playoff, neither player seemed
concerned about potential darkness. When
Murphy's dramatic putt ended Toshiba Senior
Oassic m about 1:40 after ESPN's scheduled air
time departure of 4 p.m., there was enough
light remainin9 for maybe one more hole.
•we were out there so long, I thought they
moved the clubhouse,• said Murphy after the
putt, fighting throughout the playoff like a
tough Irishman, because Sigel had more
distance off the tee in the match-play format.
"1bere were two things on my mind during
the playoff,• Murphy said this year during the
tournament's media day.
•The No. 1 thing was to forget about the
cold, and the No. 2 thing was to be very aware
of where Jay Sigel was. Sigel's much stronger
than I am and consistently outdrives me by 30
to 40 yards on every hole. So I walked in front
of Jay Sigel at all times. I didn't want him to
think I was tiring. I wanted him to know I was
fully prepared for the playoff .•
Also, in the regulation round Murphy
watched Bob Charles make an identical pu
from about the same spot on the 17th gree .
"I was thin.king about Charles' putt the
whole time I was preparing (to putt in the
playoff),• Murphy said. ·1 was telling myself,
'You don't want to leave yourself a two-or
three-footer.• We both thought it wot\}d have
less break, and Bob's reaction during his putt
was that (the ball) was too low. But it wasn't.
uw
It stayed on line.•
For Murphy, it was a victory for more than
the record books, but for everyone in the real
world who suffers from arthritis. ,
Murphy quit playing golf full-time because
of arthritis, but then was coaxed out of the
ESPN broadcast booth by colleague Lee
Trevino who advised him to play full-time on
the senior Tour, which offers a physical fitness
and therapy trailer at every stop. .
M~hy won his 11th Senior Tour champ1-
onsruJ' since joining the circuit in February
1993 on Trevino's recommendation.
Murphy, who had made ~~ bogeys. on the
back nine to allow Sigel to tie m regulation,
missed a five-footer for birdie at 18, sending
Sigel hustling to the dri~~ ran~e to warm up
for a playoff. Sigel had birdied his last three
holes.
In the fourth playoff hole (No. 18 again),.
Murphy missed a six-foot putt, a ball that slid to
the left at the last minute to keep the playoff
alive. In the sixth playoff hole at 17, Murphy
missed another birdie putt, after a great tee
shot that landed about seven feet from the flag.
But then on the seventh playoff hole (the
fourth time Sigel and Murphy played llole No.
lflJ>n the day), ~urpbyin_~de one_from the
...i-v-of the fringe, about 18 feet away, to
extend the excitement.
•To make a putt like that one from the back
of the fringe to tie, eve~ th~ugb it's not ~or a
win, is the greatest feeling, Murphy said.
•That's what keeps us going."
Sigel outdrove Murphy again o~ ~e ~ghth
playoff hole, but neither made their birdie
putts, forcing a ninth -and what would twn out
to be the final -playoff hole.
s
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An
• Classic controversy; it's
a soap opera for a while,
but in the end Hoag
comes to the rescue and
takes over as operator.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
E mergency respirators and
tourniquets were necessary
to save the Toshiba Senior
Classic and pump life back into
Orange County's only PGA Tour
' event, and fittingly it was Hoag
Hospital, not far from the
tournament's host site, the
Newport Beach Country Club,
which came to the rescue.
After Toshiba Senior Classic
ill, in which Bob Murphy sank a
dramatic 80-foot putt to·climax a
Senior Tour-record nine-hole
playoff, the already strained
relationship between NBCC
ownership and the tournament
opeMtor, International Sports &
Event?viarketing, began to
intensify.
It ultimately paved the way
for a week-long public relations
fiasco that was triggered when
NBCC forced ISM to shove off.
In an unprecedented move on
May 9, 1997, NBCC ownership
issued a statement to ISM and
classic tales V
the s'enior PGA Tour, terminating
negotiations with ISM, while
creating a scramble in several
directions for weeks as the
tournament faced its greatest
crisis.
David Wooten, president of
the company that owns NBCC,
cited payment defaults and ISM's
clouded 501(c)(3) tax-exempt
status. Among the problems was
a disputed food and beverage
invoice totalling $25,000, a bill
ISM would eventually pay.
ISM, founded by Bob Neely,
the tournament's executive
director, was infortned by
country club officials that it was
no longer welcome to host its
event at Newport Beach Country
Club •because of payment
defaults which persist even
today, nearly two months after
the 1997 tournament,• according
to Woofen;President of
International Bay Clubs, Inc.,.,.
which o~ NBCC.
•NBCC believes that it is not
in its best interests to enter into
an agreement with ISM for
continuation of the tournament
because of continual defaults by
ISM under the prior tournament
agreement.•
It was move that broke new
ground on the tour. In less than
two months, the Toshiba Senior
Classic had been involved in two
records -one on the course, the
other off.
•1 don't think we've ever
gotten a letter from a tournament
site saying they don't want to
host a golf tournament as long as
we have this manager," Senior
Tour offidal nm Crosby said.
•1t•s their way or the
highway," Neely said of NBCC
ownership.
•Frankly, myself and other
executives here at NBCC are
unwilling to do business with
people who are unwilling to bold
up their end and pay their bills,•
Wooten said.
Following the acrimonious
split between NBCC and ISM,
leaving the future of the
tournament in limbo, officials of
the 552 Club, the fund-raising
entity of Hoag Hospital, were
reportedly involved in
discussions throughout the
month of June with Toshiba,
the Senior Tour and NBCC.
On June 24, it was reported
that the Hoag Hospital
Foundation would take over as
operator, giving the event a
well-established community
charity and a veteran team of
volunteer organizen>, led by Jake . \
on.
Rohrer and Hank Adler, who
became co-chairmen of the
Toshiba event.
It would keep the Senior
Classic in Newport Beach, while
the 552 Club would end its
23-year-old Newport Classic
Pro-Am. ·
The transition became official
on Aug. 28, when it was
announced by Toshiba in a press
conference at NBCC. ·
Toshiba contributed more than
$100,000 to the three designated
charities from the 1997 event,
when it was operated by ISM,
then proclaimed the Hoag
Hospital Foundation as its new
managing charity.
·vou will see a significant
change in the proceeds
generated to charity in this
event," said Crosby, who flew
out from Aorida to attend the
press conference.
The Hoag Hospital
Foundation would eventually
negotiate three separate ·
three·-year contracts With NBCC,
the Senior Tour and the
Irvine-based Japanese
electronics giant.
To cap the radical transition,
Hoag hired Jeff Purser, the
former tournament director of the
Senior Tour's First of America
Classic in Grand Rapids, Mich.,
on Sept. 19.
DON LEACH I DAILY PlldC
Jay Sigel rips a perfect drive from the rough. the gallery looking on U'
be forcea yet another playoff hole with eventual winner Bob Murphy~
• e 'leeoff.
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The Toshiba s·enior C.lassic . is coming • 1n
•
•
Celebrity Pro-Am
Shot gun start -I 2:30pm
T0p-11a111e professional athlttes from all the major sports
;oin Senior TOUR professionals and local amateurs in
this 011e-da} event.
St1pportcd by Leigh Steinberg & Jeffrey Moorad.
• lliE IRVlNE COMPANY
Hoag Cancer Center Breakfast
7:Jl);un ar the I 9th Hole
T\vo-t1111r Semor TOL'R Player of the Year
J11n Colbtrt speaks about his battle with prostate
t'r 11iformat1010
..
Classic Pro-Am presented by
<!/J;zunmer
Zimmer Golf Clinic
I 0 am at the practice range
This clinic jeatiffes Qorge Archer
and providts tips designed sptrijically
for ph)'sical&1 restricted go!fers.
Kingston Technology -Tee times begin ·at:
7:30arn -1st shot gun
I : r 5 pm -2nd sh or gun .
Amateur foursomes are pairtd with a different Senior
10(. R player 011 each day of this two-day event.
GilleHe
Gillette Tour Challenge
I :30pm at the "I 0 tee
Two-man teams of Smior TOUR
players vie for 520,000 in this
six-bolt alternate-shot contest .
..
Taco Bell Junior Clinic
4pm at the practice range
Local youths pick i.p a
few pomters from TOUR star
Dave Stockton.
Classic Pro-Am, presented
by Kingston Technology
Tee times begin at:
7:30am -1st shot gun
I:ISpm-2nd shot gun
Final round of play for pro-am teams.
Toshiba Senior Classic
Tee times begin at 8:40am
First round of play.
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Second round of play. .
19th Holt-Live Country
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Final round of play.
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Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
High school ·
transfers may
be numbered
•Newport-Mesa board of trustees will vote Tuesday on
efforts to stop hemorrhaging of students from Estancia
High School. Foes call it a 'Band-Aid' approach.
By Husein Mashni. Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -While an
all-out moratorium is unlikely,
some type of constraints on sec-
ondary school transfers are likely
to come out of Tuesday night's
school board meeting, board mem-
bers said
The school board is looking for
ways to deal with decreasing
enrollments at Estancia High
School, which is expected to come
dangerously close to having less
than 1,000 students in the next
school year. With a capacity for
2,200 students, the decreased
enrollments will mean the school
will be using about 46% of its
capacity, district officials said.
Q U E 5 TI 0 tJ
Is a moratorium on high
school transfers the
best solution to the
declining enrotlment I at Estancia High
School? cau our
Readers Hotline at
642--6086 or send an
e-mail message to dpt.
lot20earttllink. net .
school and lmllting transfer stu-
dents' access to extracurricular
activities for the first year.
Mike Riley wtth Neptune Dtvlng carries an air tank aboard The Malden, which Hilk Wednesday morning JleaJ' the Back Bay Cafe. The school district already has a
moratorium on -elementaiY school
transfers. Some of the ideas being
considered for their secondary
counterparts include requiring stu-
dents to attend their neighborhood
school for the first year of high
But any kind of moratorium
would first have to be approved by
the school district's lawyers to
make sure it is consistent with.state
and local education rules. · ...
P.ohn Christensen ga~e
her 17 years of steadfast
devotion.
He visited 75 boat yards
from Bar Harbor, Maine, to Key
West, Aa., hauling back brass
and copper and bronze to
clothe and decorate her. He
showed her off, there in the
mooring behind Balboa Island.
Nearly four years ago,
Christensen gave up the object
of his affection - a 31-foot
Monterey fishing boat built in
1912 and dubbed The Maiden
-to the stewardship of the
Newport Harbor Nautical
Museum, which used it for VIP
tours.
As a museum trustee, Chris-
tensen has in recent weeks
been enlisting local volunteers
That Seaworthiness
of The Maiden,.
nautical . ki ' SI~ ng j museum's
86-year~ld
fishing boa\
takes a Trtanic
turn for the feeling I worse.
in an eUort to return The Maid-
en to tiptop shape, with new
varnishing and painting.
On Wednesday morning,
however, bad luck came like a
torpedo. For unexplained rea-
sons, the boat sank suddenly in
its slip in the Newport Dunes.
"It's like having an aged rel-
ative that has the miseries,•
said Christensen, a retired Bal-
boa Island resident. "You know
it's not terminal, but you hate
to see them suffer.•
Workers from Neptune Div-
ing struggled through the day
to raise the vessel, muscling
55-gallon drums underneath
and tilling them with air. By
mid-afternoon, its top portion
jutted lopsidedly out of the
water, and squares of
absorbent material used to
soak up leaking oil bobbed
around it like toxic lily pads.
When the boat is raised, the
engine will be •p1clcled • -
that is, washed clean of salt
water -and the restoratibn
process will begin again. This
time, Christensen said, it will
take a lot more work and
• SEE BOAT PAGE 9
But for many parents, at least
one of whom is on the school
board, the idea of a secondary
• SEE TRANSFERS PAGE 9
Crystal Court inay
bridge the gap
• After 12 years of talks,
mall considers building
moving walkway to
nearby South Coast Plaza.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
CRYSTAL COURT -Shop-
pers weary from a long day of
pounding the pavement at South
Coast Plaza and Crystal Court
may soon get somE! hlgh-tech
relief.
foot-long motorized walkway
connecting their shopping center
with its sister mall, neighboring
South Coast Plaza.
The above.ground, covered
pedestrian bridge would span
Bear Street between Sunflower
Avenue and South ~oast Drive
and link the third-level of Crystal
Court with the western end of
South Coast Plaza somewhere
between Nordstrom and Macy's,
officials said.
Both shopping centers are
owned by CJ Segerstrom & Sons.
. . . -tJ· ----~ --> --, -• • --" Crystal Court officials said
Thursday they are in the prelimi-
nary planning stages for an 800-
The free trip between South
I
• SEE BRIDGE PAGE 8
S~nded student returns to ovation
•Ryan Huntsman fought zero-tolerance suspension
and woni trustee suggests policy should be overhauled..
..... ~_ ....... _-~-
datebook. c-----.-,---_----- ---:-------. --~~ -----~·
check it out
~ .
Getting chtldren I
! started on a l !
. sdence project ',,,:i,,I
E ven if you're a sixth-grade Einstein,
assembling a science project can be
daunting business. For help with the
task, tum to the nonfiction shelves in the
library's children's sections.
Among the finest series devoted to the
challenge is Janice VanCleve's •spectacu-
lar Science Projects.•
With separate titles ded·
icated to animals, earth·
quakes, electricity, grav-
ity, machines and more,
VanCleve provides
ideas for projects cover-
ing hwidreds of scientif-
ic concepts.
.... ,, .. ,,·. •.. .. . .. , ·;.': -".
ii-\.·_.· • • ' '~ 1 ·
Other activities that
make science fun are in
her •Science for Every
--''".V
Kid" series, focusing on such areas as
astronomy, chemistry, ecology and physics.
Ever wonder what keeps ships from
sinking, why leaves change color or where
echoes come from? Find out in •Bill Nye
the Science Guy's Consider the Following."
Along with explanations for dozens of
mysteries. 1V's wackiest scientist provides
instructions for
such experiments
as growing a
germ, building an
eye and creating a
river in this k:id-
friendly volume.
There are direc-
tions for 60 pro-
jects that explore
the natw'al world
in "Science Fair
l
Bernadette Peters finds t.ruth, ana herself, in performing on stage
By Jennifer K Mahal, Dally Pilot
I f life were a song title, Bernadette Peters said
hers would be called •And the Beat Goes
0n.·
This weekend the beat takes the wavy-haired
songstress to the Orange County Performing Arls
Center, where she will sing with the Pacific Sym-
phony Orchestra. Peters last performed with the
symphony in 1991.
Peters, who has been in show business since
she was 3 112, is best known for her work on
Broadway in such musicals as •into the Woods,"
·sunday in the Park Wllh George• and •'J'he
Goodbye Girl.•
Television viewers may have caught a glim~
of her late last year in •The Odyssey,• •What the
Deaf Man He~d" or Stephen Sondheim's •cm-
derella," which also featured Whitney Houston.
And her film credits include •The Longest Yard,"
"Silent Movie" and "The Jerk.•
Although she has been on both the silver and
small screens, for the singer -bom in Ozone
Park, N.Y. -the theater is home. nodding the
boards has taught the actress about herself.
"It's almost like being under a magnifying
glass," Peters said. "You get to know yourself.•
And getting to know who she is is important t<>
Peters. •My first acting teacher said, "there's only
one of you in the world. Be that person.' I keep try-
ing to get to the truth."
Part of the truth ~ that Peters has a gift. Her
high-pitched, almost nasal voice brings songs to
life. She has the power to make the audience feel
•
-which is exactly what she wants them to do. Singer and actor Bernadette Peten
·1 want them to performs with the Padllc Svmphony Orchestra
• have a ~ood time and 8~ today and Saturday at Ql&-Orange County
go on a Journey o Performing Arb Center.
together so that they ~D feel something they Vil ~or Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Song
hadn't thought about," she ~ y and Dance.•
said. Asked if she
Pe1ers has ~n nominated ror T6ny · -· -· pret~singtng-Webber ·
awards as many times as theater legends Mary or Sondheim, Peters
Martin and Carol Channing: four. She won once, refuses to play favorites.
•Stevets stuff has many more layers to it. It gets
you involved in the story,• Peters Mid.
Webber's mu.sic, on the other band, has a pas-
sion that goes beyond the lyrics, she said.
There are a few surprises on Peter's resume:
she is the voice of Rita the Cat on Steven Spell-
berg's • Animan.iacsi • she was nominated for an
Emmy for her appearance on "The Muppet
Show;" and she also has a Grammy-nominated
CD, •rm Your Baby Tonight• that features tunes
from Lyle Lovett and John Lennon.
•Some day," she said, •1t would be nice to play
Tennessee Williams.•
For now, lhe versatile Peters is readying for her
symphony performance. She plans to sing •tots
of Sondheim ... old songs, new songs, things I've
done.
"It's thrilling to hear that fullness,• Peters said
of performing with an orchestra. •1 [also) love it
when I do something with just a
El fVJ cello. I love that feeling
that I'm an instrument
and he's an instrument•
One thing Peters won't
have to worry about is
stage fright. The actress said
she doesn't get it. "It's more of
· an excitement [to go on
stage].•
The first half of the program,
inducting the overture 1rom -"Gypsy;--
will be led by guest conductor David Bishop.
Peters will perform in the second half. Projects, The Envi-
ronment." From finding out whether birds
prefer popped or unpopped com to discov-
ering why soda is fizzy, you can uncover
fascinating facts about a range of phenom-
ena by carrying out these experiments. Latin jazz and salsa to spice :UP Twin Palms
I
Perhaps you'd like to construct a seismo-
graph, make an exploding volcano or build
a mountain range. Perform these feats and
more with "Geology Crafts for Kids," fea-
turing 50 nifty projects that explore Earth's
marvels.
By Gordon Holcombe, Jr. .,
· II you prefer out-of-this-world enigmas,
check out "Projects ir1 Space Science," a
• slim cosmic encyclo-
pedia that brings solar
· energy, black holes·
and other space-age
concepts down to
earth.
You can travel back
· m time as a scientist
·with help from "Sci·
ence in History," part
of a series that
mcludes "Science in
Art" and "Science in
·Food.• Or, clean up in class with "Soap Sci-
ence.· featuring instructions for measuring
· your lwig capacity, making a battery and
copying newspaper pictures with a bit of
soap.
Even kindergartners may be able to test
the pnnciples of flying, create molecular art
and build a bug sucker after watching •or.
Zed's Bnlliant Science Activities," a 30-
nunute video.
The whole family can embark on a jour-
ney of discovery by viewing •The Best of
. Beak:man's World,• st.aning a wacky scien-
tist assisted by a umy assist.ant, Lester the
Rat, and a pair of penguins.
Long before facing science project pres-
• sures, preschoolers can begin to under-
stand the world around them. Introduce
. concepts about animals, nature, weather
'. and the universe with "Too Many Rabbits,•
· a picture book featwing 22 finger plays
. that will help young listeners learn why
: frogs hop, leaves fall, clouds Ooat and the
•Earth spins. •
VOL tz. NO. 54
1MOMAS M. .....
l'\lblbtw
WIWAM LDmlU.
Editor
ITIWIM•.I.
MaMglng Editor
1WllA llOllW'tA.
~ MaNglng Editor
"""~ NewaEdltor .,_CAim._
5por1I Edllar
IMICMS.Jnlll.
.... ldllllgr &..--.a.
~Jld••ie ..,,, ...•
a 1sn.dMuM"' ........... .......
AIRWlllMI. °"' ... lldill OMMf'
I f you like your Latin jazz authentic
and undiluted, check out percus-
sionist Poncho Sanchez and his
eight-piece band tonight at 1Win Pahns
in Newport Beach.
-0 Sanchez, who plays congas, other
percussion instruments and sings lead,
has been serving up traditional salsa
and Latin jazz for 16 years, playing_ jazz
festivals around the world and in the
United States.
Throughout those 16 years, the band
has kept the same salsa traditional
instrumentation -trumpet, trombone,
saxophone, flute, bass, piano, timbales,
congas and bongos -and thr~e of its
original members.
At tonight's concert, Sanchez and
company will feature tunes from their
recent release, •The Preedom Sound."
The concert will also include some fre-
quently requested tunes trom h1I earli-
er recording$, and the latter portion of
the program will feature salsa -tradi-
tional, with singing in Spanilh -in
addition to the imtrumental Latin jazz
and Afro-Cuban numbers, Sanchez
said.
Born in Laredo, Texas, in 1950,
Sanchez was the youngest of 11 chil-
dren and the only musician in the fami-+ ly. He grew...upJn.Norwalk, Cellf Iii
I I • • I I
I I I I
I
1
l I ' I
I
I I
I
I
I I M--~-M-----·----------~-------~ ear and influenced his musical devel-
opment.
Sanchez began pursuing music seri-
ously at age 12. By 23, he was playing
congas with the late, legendary vibes
player Cal Tjader. He won a Grammy
with Tjader in 1960 for the album "La
Onda Va Bien."
I.attn jazz percuaionllt and singer Poncho Sanchez performs at 1Wtn Palms
in Newport Beach today at 1 and 9:45 p.m.
•1 was with Cal for seven and a half
years,• Sanchez said. •1 still miss him."
After Tjader died in 1962, Sanchez
fonned his own band and began tour-
ing and recording. He cunenUy has 16
CDs to his credit ·Bien Sabroso, •his
second release, received a Grammy
nomination in 1984. Follow-up record-
ings ·m Conguero• in '85 and •papa
Gato• in '86 cemented Sanchez' repu-
tation as one of the foremost figures in
Latin jazz.
tening to
recordings
by Machito,
nto Puente
and other
Cubano and
Latin-influ-
enced artists.
"My sis-
ters would
dance the
mambo and
the cha-cha
and I said,
'Hey, I like
"My sisters would dance the
mambo and the cha-cha and I said
'Hey, I like this.' That music was
rare on the West Coast back then. "
-PONCHO SANCHEZ, ON THE MUSIC
THAT SHAPED HIS STYLE
•
em Mexico,
sol would
hear
ranchero
music; my
father was
from Jalisco,
sol would
hear mari-
achi music.•
But while
he liked that
traditional
Mexican
music, it was
These days, you can check in with
Sanchez through the Internet at
www.ponchosanchez.com.
this.' That kind of music was rare on
the West Coast back then," Sanchez
seealled-'!My mother wu-from--north--j the tunes his brothers and sisters lis-
tened to -which later bec.ame known
~ btin-musie--tbatreeliy caught
"My son hooked that up for me,•
Sanchez said with a laugh. "He's grad·
uating next year with a degree in
astropbyslcs. He Aid, 'Dad, you gotta
get a web page.' I told him 'You better
do it 'cause I never will.• and he came
"101he n•eue.•
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State probes unauthorized
dig at Crystal Cove park
•Soil-testing crew dug trenches without archaeologist on site in January.
State officials assess damage, but allows work to resume Thursday.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
CRYSTAL COVE -State
park officials are still investi-
gating whether permanent
damage was caused by prema-
ture digging on 12 acres ol this
National Register parkland -
in what officials described as a
communications breakdown.
Meanwhile, soil-testing
crews at the Crystal Cove State
Park Historic District -the site
ol a proposed luxury resort -
resumed digging on Thursday.
Ken Colombini, a state Depart-
ment of P8J'ks and Recreation'
spokesman, said the soil test-
ing now has proper environ-
mental clearance.
Colombini said the Califor-
nia Coastal Commission has
signed off on the digging, a
common procedure for devel-
opers before they seek final
approvals from regulatory
agencies for their projects.
State archaeologists and
p8l'ks department representa-
tives gathered at Crystal Cove
on Thursday to ensure there
were no further impacts to nat-
ural or cultural resources, he
said.
"There were some shells
found on the surface, but there
is still some uncertainty as to
whether they were already
there or if they washed up from
the recent storms,• Colombini
said. "There is a possibility that
Jthe diggptgJ did cause dam-
age. We're looking at the
whole process to make sure it
doesn't happen again.•
The tests conducted :rhurs-
day included the drilling of
seven holes, 30 to 80 feet deep
and 2 feet wide, that will be
backfilled and compacted each
day, Colombini said.
The first part of the testing,
which was done in late January
without a qualified archaeolo-·
gist on hand, consisted of dig-
ging several 10-foot-deep
trenches with backhoes. Colom-
DON l£ACH I DAILY PILOT
The small beach cottages of Crystal Cove blanket the hlllsid e
. along the bluffs. Crystal Cove State Park Historic Dlsbict ls
the site of a proposed luni.ry resort
bini said the unauthorized dig-
ging was the result of a mis-
commµnication between the
department's Sacramento and
the cottages to be restored
without bringing in a private
developer.
San Diego
offices.
Crystal
Cove Preserva-
tion Partners is
proposing to
spend $20 mil-
lion to refur-
bish more than
40 historic cot-
tages and turn
the area).ntQ a
luxury resort.
The privately
owned, 1920s-
era bungalows
Merrilees is skeptical of the
r-----------------------, I I : F.Y.I. :
I I : +·The Surfrider Founda-:
: ti0n Newport Beach Chap-l
: ter will meet at 7 p.m. :
1 Tuesday to discuss the 1 l Crystal Cove project and l l consider jQining the coall-l
: tion. The meeting will be l
: held at -'ihe Oas ls Senior :
: Centet) attn.comer-of .......1
• Fifth Avenue and Narcissus : I , , Avenue in Corona <tel·Mar. :
I I
L------------------L----~
state depart-
ment allowing
the developer
to conduct soil
testing and said
she is outraged
there was not a
state archaeolo-
gist on the site
when the dig-
ging began.
"Do V{~ want
to wake up 10 ,
years from now
and find out we
wandered into
would be made available for
public use at $100 to $400 a
night. The controversial project
has drawn strong opposition,
primarily from local environ-
mental groups.
a fantastic archaeological site
but nobody told us about it
because they knew it would
delay their project?" she said.
"The Crystal Cove historic dis-
trict is the very first recognized
8J'chaeological site in Orange
County, so of all the archaeolog-
ical sites in the county, this one
should be taken ca.re of very
carefully.•
Jeannette Merrilees, a coor-
dinator for the Coalition to
Save Crystal Cove, said the
group is actively searching for
public money that would allow
i Police make eighth arrest at
·-Costa Mesa massage parlor
By Christopher Goff ard, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -An under-
cover police operation at a New-
port Boulevard massage pMlor
led to a prostitution arrest Tues-
day, the eighth such arrest at the
location since early 1997, police
said.
Dung Kim Thi Nguyen, 32, of
Ontario, was taken into custody
around 7:45 p .m . after allegedly
propositioning a vice officer for
sex at Wiltse Cbiroptactic Mas-
sage in the 2500 block of the
street, police said.
Booked on suspicion of prosti-
tution, she was later released on
$500 ball. said Costa Mesa police
Lt. Ron Smith.
Dr. Tom Wiltse, who recently
bought the business, said he had
only been open two days before
the arrest and had not had a
chance to screen the five work-
ers he inherited from a previous
owner.
Wiltse said Nguyen will no
longer work there and he will
keep a sharp eye on his shop. He
said he welcomes j>olice scrutiny.
•vou just watch me really
close and see if it ever, ever
returns again,• he said. •I just
have to go through the process of
getting the right people in here. •r call it W1.ltse Chiropractic. If
I wanted to do anything shady, I
wouldn't use my name, would n· .
With 22 licensed massage
businesses in Costa Mesa, half of
which police suspect are fronts
for prostitution, the city is active-
ly working to shake its reputa-
tion as the county capital for the
illicit trade.
On Monday, the City Council
tentatively approved a measure
requiring massage professionals
to pass a written exam before
being granted a city perm.it.
·we're not trying to drive out
the legitimate people," Smith
said. ·w e're trying to get rid ol
the illegitimate ones."
As for Wiltse's estabfutllltnent,
Smith said, •Hopefully there was
a bad apple in the group and it's
opened his eyes, and be can get
rid of problems and do $Ome
legitimate business."
recipes p~pared lean on calorics,
but not flavor.
FRtDAY. MAltOi 6, 1991 •
~is effort; to clean up our
streets went a little too far
T his kry is true. But it isn't
pretty. It happened not long
ago on our very own island
of Balboa. Let it serve as a
reminder to those who neglect the
delicate balance between us and
the environment -the intricate
dance that ties together animal,
plant and mineral on this third
planet from the sun, the water·
planet. Had the fates leaned ever
so slightly one way or the other,
an environmental catastrophe-
would have been visited on Bal-
boa Island without precedent. peter
buff a
emment biz a "Ha.Zmot" or IJ-l.n-
ardous Materials" team.
Mark watched. fascinated. as
they donned their bright ye!low
suits, plastic hoods and breathing•
devices. This brought the neigh-
bors out in foroe. It was like a
scene from •Outbreak• with
Dustin Hottman. "Go back to
your homes, please. 1be virus is
under control Please, go back •
home."
It was just about'then that
Mark noticed that the little rivulet
of water in the gutter with the
almost visible (if the light bit it Old Testament plagues? Oh,
please. Famine, a little flooding, a
few bugs. Big deal. Krakatoa East
of Java? Kaboom. Mega-clouds o{
volcanic ash shroud the globe for
years afterward and famine rav-
ages Asia and Europe. Oooh, I'm
really scared now. Mount St.
Helens? Maybe. What else you
got? Chernobyl? OK, now you're
cooking with radon. 1bink of
Chernobyl, 'Three Mile Island and
Bob Citron all rolled into one .
That's how close we came.
I JUSt n.·ght) soapy film led directly
to the drain in the curb smack
------------dab m front of bis house. It hit tum like a tqunderbolt. Lysol
Meet Mark 'fyson and Claudia
Roxburgh, husband and wife -
smart, sophisticated, business
owners, e ntrepreneurs and long-
time residents of Balboa Island .
One recent and sunny morning,
Mark and Claudia do a little
straightening up around the
house before work, getting a
jump on preparations for a party
they're giving that evening .
There are wife things and
there are husband things. One of
the latter, as all husbands know, is
straightening up outside. Outside
in this case includes a patio
beside the dining room. Mark
equips himself with hose, broom
and dustpan and ventures forth.
He notices a few small stains on
the stonework but a bit of Lysol
does. the. trick.
ln short order, Mark's work is
done. He admires his handiwork,
gathers up his equipment and
heads upstairs to get fluffed and
folded for work.
Oaudia was the first to notice
the noise. It was coming from the
street out front -the low rumble
of large trucks, voices exhibiting a
serious tone and, shortly, the
unmistakable crackle of mobile
radios. Claudia's faithful German
shepherd, Glory, is m a state of
high anxiety and starts spinning
in place, doing that "come-on-
come-on-let's-go-see-what-it-is"
thing .
Mark surveys the street from
the upstairs bedroom and is sur-
prised to see a large firetruck
rrom the Balboa station out front,
accompanied by sundry firefight-
ers.
"Hnun, that's odd," he says.
"I'll go see what's up.•
Once outside, Mark sees truck,
firefighters and a few neighbors
in small gaggles, speaking in
hushed tones and pointing at ttus
and that. He approache! the fire-
fighter who appears to be in
charge and mquires, "So, what's
up?"
The firefighter responds m a
cordial but serious tone that
"someone spotted an oily sub-
stance being carried along by
some runoff water in the gutter.
"But don't worry,· the firefight-
er says, "the equipment is on its
way:" _ _
Odd choice oC words, Mark
thought, "the equipment." lt was
just about then that he heard a
very low, almost frightening rum-
ble from what sounded like an
M60 Main Battle Tank pulling up
at the end of the street. One of
the largest vehicles he bad ever
seen appeared. From therein
emerged what we call in the gov-
"Wait.• be shouted. "I know
what it IS. It's OK•
He ran to the house and re-
emerged a moment later with his
bnght, shiny bottle of Lysol ·
The Ha.zmat team froze in their
tracks and looked nervous, which
made Mark nervous. The neigh-
bors were at full point now. Mark
fully expected one of the Ha.zmat
team members to order him not to
move. "Put the Lysol down and
back away ... slowly. Do it now."
But in fe.ct, they said, "Oh, OK,
Lysol. But we still have to hose it
down.·
"Hose what down?," Mark
dSked.
"The street," they answered.
At wtuch point, the firefighters
went into action, running hoses
here and there and carefully hos-
mg down the entire street -an to
beat back what Mark estimated
was about half a cup of Lysol.
How long did all this take?
About two hours. Were they
bemg foolish? Not at all. They
were doing exactly what they are
required to do by state and feder-
al law. And that, VirgiDi.a. is how
Balboa bland w~aved:-----
The next time you're in Saaa-
mento or Washington do stop by
and thank them. After all. they're
here to help us.
l gotta go.
• PETet affA is mayor of Costa Mesa.
His column appears on Friday. You can e--
mail him at Ptr840aol.com .
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• FRIDAY, MARCH 6. 1998
Panel will consider
allowing treated
sewage in Back Bay
• Regional water board
will hear arguments
today from both Irvine
Ranch Water Dishict and
environmental group,
Defend the Bay.
Defend the Bay, argues that
reclaimed water carries nutri-
ents th.at contribute to the
growth of algae In the bay and
that •treated sewage" b.u no
place in a reaeation area. The
environmental watchdog group
has fought the d.1strtct's permit
through state agendes and the
courts since it was ftrst approved
By Jennifer Ragland, Daily Pilot in July 1996.
And Caustin doesn't intend
NEWPO RT BEACH to stop here. He said he will
Activists for Defend the Bay and make his case to the region.al
officials for the Irvine Ranch water board and is hopeful
Water District will square off members will deny the district's
today m a long-standing envi-permit.
ronmentaJ battle over Upper •A technical advisoI}' com-
Newport Bay water quality. mittee was established and has
The R0egional ,---------------------", ~working on Water uality , 1 momtoring the
Control Board : F. Y. I. : bay and this pro-
will consider a ' •1 ject," Caustin · th +WHAT: C.ltfomi. pemut at Reglomtl Wat.er Quel~ : said. •1ntorma-
would allow the Coiltiol BOerd meetfRn : tion has been
district to dis-~.. 1 revealed that
charge treated +WHEN:: Begins 9t : concludes the
waste water into 9:30 •.m. tOday l discharge would
the San Diego +WI-:~ ~ have a negative Beach Qty Coundl Creek -which Cham....._ 3300 New-f impact on the
flows into the •••vu~ l bay."
B k B f port Blvd. I c ac ay -or 1 omplicating
about five ---------------------.J things further is
months out of the an agreement the
year. Irvine water district struck with
Ken Thompson, director of Newport Beach officials about
water quality for the district, 18 months ago, which stipulates
said treated waste wate r -the two agencies work out a
known as reclaimed water -mutually agreeable, permanent
must be used to keep the San solution to the reclaimed water
Joaqwn Marsh irrigated d uring issue. In the meantime, no treat-
the wmter, when heavy storms ed waste water will be dis-
may clog the pump station and charged into the bay, and the
prevent creek water from being city won't challenge the permit.
pumped into the marsh. As a result of that deal,
The cheapest and easiest Thompson said the district most
way to dispose of the reclaimed likely would not use the dis-
water is to let 1t flow into the charge -permit if it is approved.
creek. Thompson said scientific While Caustin calls that asser-
study has proved that treated tion "baloney," City Manager
waste water, especially in the Kevin Murphy said he is confi-
small concentration tha t would dent the district will not renege
go into the bay, poses no health on the deal.
hazards. "I'm confident there would
While dumping the treated be no discharge even if they got
water into the creek would save the permit, based on what w e
the district millions of dollars, achieved in the interim, the
Thompson said the goal is to investme nt (the district) has
find a cost-effective way to made in this project and conver-
avoid channeling the water to sations we have had about a
the bay. permanent agreement," Mur-
But Bob Caustin, founder of phy said.
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Westar Nutrition misses city-imposed deadline
• Costa Mesa manufacturing company has until
Monday to submit plans that w ould lessen negative
impacts of business on neighbors. •we are working
as hard as we can," company offid.al said.
By Tim Grerida, Daily Pilot
COSTA MBSA-Westar Nutri-
tion has missed a dty-imposed
deadline to submit plans for
reqund changes to its property
and DOW has until Monday to get
its act together.
In January, the City Council
placed a lODg list of conditiom on
the permit bsued to the vitamin
maker, wbicb has been operating
at 1239 Victoria St since 1991.
The City Hall aackdown came
after complaints about noise, odors
and other problems at the site from
some ot the eompany's neighbors
in the predominantly residential
area sumnmding Westar.
City offic:ials requ.Ued the com-
pany to make dO'Len.S of changes to
the property to try and appea.s& the
neighbors and also ordered Westar
to stop all vitamin manufactwing
at the site in two years.
The ordered changes include:
• Placing soundproofing materi-
als around an <>utdoor mechanical
equipment storage area;
• A new master plan for the
property;
• Removing a trash bin enclo-
sure along the eastern property
line;
• Redesigning the parking lot to
add three spaces to get to the
rE!quired 100 parking spots;
• Relocating another trash bin
enclosure away from nearby
homes;
• J!ither reoeMog permits for or
tearing down some storage racks;
• And replacing a wood fence
along the back property line with a
block wall.
Westar WU gtven 30 days from
the coundl dedllon to submit
building p1anJ for each of the
improvements and 60 days from
the dedsion to complete the work.
offtdel1 Mid.
But last Thursday, when the
deadline passed, Westar failed to
submit the plans. The next day,
d.ty oflldah 1e11t a .letter to the
company setting Monday as the new deadline for the company to
~y or else ~ •1ega1 reme-
ULes.
. On Wednesday, Alsod.ate Plan-
ner Carol Proctor and two Westar
officials met to informally talk
about what is required of the com-
pany.
Proctor said the meeting was
"positive• and noted that one of
the requirements -mi inspection
of lights at the property to ensure
they do not adversely affect neigh-•
bors -was perlonned that night.
•They have told us that they
want to coopera~ and are working
diligently to do so," Proctor said.
"I'm more confident now that the
city won't be let down, but only
time will tell.•
Cheryl Cartwright, Westar's
director of distributor services and
special projects, said Thwsday her
company is trying its best to meet
the city deadlines and is not pur-
Mattress Outlet Sto
BRANC1 NEW--OOSMET'ICA11Y1MPERFECT ~
Get the Best tor Less!· .. • • ii
3165 Harbor Blvd •
Costa Mesa
One llloc:k Soutb of ~05 l'Wy
845-7168
posely dragging its feet on making
the improvements.
"We're not ignoring things,• she
said. "We are working as hartl as
we can."
Cartwright said it has taken
longer than expected to receive
bids from contractors to do some of
the work and another problem has
been a generally uncooperative
Mother Nature.
The
Westar .
Nutrttton
Inc.
bulliUng
tnll on
shaky
ground
with the
dtyof
Costa
Mesa
after
falling to
submit
dumges
to its
property
In a
Umely
manner.
MARC MARTIN I
DAILY PILOT
• O~e factor (in missing the
deadline) has been the w eather,•
she said. "In pouring-down rain,
you can't tear down or construct
anything. Everybody's going
through that right now.•
Cartwright said Westar is
"working urgently" with its archi-
tect to complete the site master
plan and other requirements
before Monday's deadline.
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FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1998 '
briefly in the news
Trial delayed for
accused child molester
lbe child molestation trial of
former Newport Beach resident .
James Crummel, which was
expected to start this month in
San Bernardino County Superior
Court, .has been delayed until
April 20.
Crummel has spent nine
months behind bars since his
arrest at his Ima Loa Court condo
" last summer. While' Crum.mel
originally faced 15 child-
molestation counts, Superior
Court Judge Shahla S. Sabet has
di.smi$Sed most of them because
the alleged crimes happened too
long ago.
Crummel will stand trial on
three counts related to two
underage Big Bear boys he
allegedly molested in 1988, said
Deputy District Attorney Denise
1Tager-Dvorak, who will prose-
cute him.
1Tager-Dvora.k said she was
disappointed with the Judge'•
decision to dlsmiss most of the
charges, but added, "We'll pro-
ceed with what we have. We
believe that he's a danger."
When the case concludes,
Crummel will be transferred to
Riverside County to face one
count of murder with special cir-
cumstances related to a 13-year-
'Old Costa Mesa boy who disap-
peared off Harbor Boulevard in
1979.
Costa Mesa man
robbed at gunpoint
A Costa Mesa man waiting at a
bus 'Stop was robbed at gunpoint
by two men Wednesday after-
noon but ~aped serious injury,
authorities said.
The 29-year-old ma.o was on
Fairview Road just north of Har-
bor Boulevard around 1 p .m .
when the men approached bun,
and one of them asked him for
the time, said Costa Mesa police
Lt. Ron Smith.
One man pulled out a mWl
blue-steel handgun and stuck it
m the victim's ribs, while the oth-
er matched his wallet and took
$300 cash from it, police said.
One of the robbers also
saatched the victim's arm while
stealing his watch, police said.
The robbers, who tled out of
sight, are described as clean-
shaven males in their teens or
early 20s, with xiiedium builds
and short hair.
Dinner raises funds ·
for Casa Teresa
Casa Teresa, a home for single
pregnant women, will bold its
annual dinner, dance and auction
March 21 at The Sutton Place
Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach.
The theme will be •A Golden
Odyssey.• Tickets are $75. Reser-
vations must be made by lbms-
day at 675-6088.
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FRJDAY, MAACH 6; 1998
around town
TODA¥
AUGUs1ANA CHOIR
The Augustana Choir from
Rock Island, ID., performs at 8
p.m. at Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church, 798 Dover Drive, New-
port Bea ch. Suggested donation
is $7. For more m.formation, call
548-8004
JOB INTERVIEW WORKSHOP
· Effective IntetVlewmg is the
tj.tle of a free workshop offered by
Orange Coast College's Re-Entry
Center, from 11 a m. to 12:30 p.m.
in the Re-Entry Center, Room
106, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa for more m.fonnation, call
432-5162
CONSUMER BUSINESS NfTWORK
Tom Anderson will speak on
C ustomef focus -What are your
customers really looking for? at
the Consumer Business Networks
meeting at 7 a.m. in The Mezza-
pine, 19800 MacArthur Blvd. The
cost is $15 and mcJudes breakfast.
For more information, call 550-
4785.
RUMMAGE SALE
The Sunshine Cooperative
Preschool presents its annual 48
Family Rummage Sale Extrava-
ganza from 8 a m to 2 p.m. a t
Presbytenan C hurch of lbe
Covenant, 2850 Fauview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call 540-11 83
SEARCH FOR TALENT
The Exchange Club of New-
port Harbor presents its free
annual Search for Talent at 7 p.m.
fll the Oasis Senior Center, 800
Marguent~ Ave., Corona del Mar.
For more information, call 675-
·~149.
SATURDAY
LITTLE LEAGUE OPENING DAY
The Newport Beach Little
League's Operung Day begins at
9:30 a.m. at Lincoln Elementary
School, 310\ Pacific View Drive,
Corona del Mar The day includes
a carnival, barbeque lunch and
special guests Ticke ts for the
lunch are $5 Camivdl actlvity
tickets are $1. For more llliorma-
tion, call 721-8748.
RUMMAGE SALE
The Sunshine Cooperative
Preschool presents its annudl 48
Family Rummage Sale Extrava-
ganza from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Presbyterian Church of the
Covenant, 2850 Fairvlew Road,
Costa Mesa. For 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,
Swte 100, Costa Mesa For more
infonnallon, call 641-7738
BOOK SALE
The Mesa Verde Library con-
ducts a book sale from 9 a.m. to 3
p m at 2969 Mesa Verde Dri\fe
E4st, Costa Mesa. Sale pnces are
$1 for hardbacks and SO cents for
paperback books. The money
raised supports children's reading
activities and provides needed
books and subscriptions. For
more~onnation, call 546-5274.
•
APPLE COMPUnR O.UI
The Orange Apple Computer
Oub meets from 9 a.m.. to 1~30
p.m. in the Chemistry Building,
Orange Coast College, 2701
Fai.rliew Road, Costo Mesa. Rep-
resentatives of Binary Software
will demon:strate the latest ver-
sion of the company's utility pro-
grams, KeyQuencer and Square
One. The first meeting is tree.
Annual membership is $30. For
more information, call 836-0522
or e-mail CalifBobR@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 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Admission is $9 tor adults, chil-
dren &ges 13 to 17 and seniors, $5
for children and children 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-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $8. For more
information, call 582-2371.
GRAND OPENING
NoXCuz Fitness invites the
public lo its grand opening from
10 a.m. to 4 p .m. at 234 E. 17th St.,
Suite 211, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 642-5866.
THE YOGA PlACE
The Yoga Place offers a dass,
Low Back Basics, from 1:30 to
4:30 p.m. at 1835 Newport Blvd.,
Suite A-208, Costa Mesa. The
cost is $40 by Fe b. 28 and $45 at
the door. For more information,
call 642-7400.
STORE ANNIVERSARY
The F~hion Island Bloorrung-
dale's Home Store celebrates its
one year anniversary with a pil-
low aerobics clas's at 11 a .m.,
n·oon, 3 p.m . and 5 p.m. at 701
Newport Center Drive, Newport
~~acb. For more infonnation, call
\9-6600.
SUNDAY
HEART GALA
The American Heart Associa-
tion presents its 17th Annual
Heart to Heart Gala from 6:30
p.m. lo midnight at the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel and Tennis
Club, 900 Newport Center Dri-
ve. For more information, call
856-3555.
WATER SPORT SHOW
Inter-Shows Motorsport Pro-
motions, 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 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $8. For more
information, call 582-2371.
STORE ANNIVERSARY
The Fashion Island Blooming-
dale's Home Store celebrates its
one year anniversary with two pro·
grams, How to Build a Beautiful
Bed, from noon to 2 p .m ., and How
to Build a Beautiful Bath, from 3 to
S p.m., at 701 Newport Center Dri-
ve, Newport Beach . Por more
information. call 729-6600.
BRIDAL SHOWCASE
Bloomingdale's presents a
unique free bridal s howcase
designed to plan the ultimate
wedding, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m . at
701 Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. Call 729-6600.
1500 ..... 11~. C:.-Me.e 540·221 t • tSSC>ol440
Arnerlean Eleell'OnlcsAssoclatlOn
Orange County Council
pmmts: /
An EtJming with Scott Adams
Creator of Dil/Jert
Sponsored by:
C l\ LEN DAR
ur. March 12
Tues. Maleh 17
wed. MMt;h 18
Education Committee
7:30 a.m. Chamber Office
new location 1 700 Adams Ave., Ste. l 01
Netoworkers Leads Luncheon
11 :45 a .m. -Costa Mesa Counby Club
1701 Golf Course Drive
Environmental Committee
7:30 a.m. Chamber Office
new location 1700 Adams Ave., Ste. 101
Man, Woman & Businessperson
of the Year
11 :30 a.m. -Double Tree Hotel
3050 Bristol St:, Costa Mesa '
Executive Committee
7:30 a.m. -Chamber Office
new location 1700 Adams Ave ., Ste. 101
Board of Directors Luncheon -DARK
Ambassadors Committee
Noon -Chamber office
new location 1700 Adams Ave., Ste. 101
Legislative Committee
Noon -Chamber Office
rift¥ location 1700 Adams Ave., Ste. l 01
Golf Committee
5:00 p.m. -Chamber Office
new location 1700 Adams Ave ., Ste. 101
90-Minute Breakfast Boost
7:15 -8:45 a.m.
Costa Mesa Country Club
1701 Golf Course Drive
After Hours Business Mixer
Stuzzi -1870A Harbor Blvd., Ste. 200
5:30 -7:30 p.m.
W ORKSH OPS FOR SMA LL
BU S INESSES
A series of wOt1<shops wiU be offered to smal buslne8S aitrepf8net.rs on
Tuesdays from 12:30 to 3:00 p.m. at National Unlveraity, 3390 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. There Is a $20 fee for each wOO<shop, and a friend may attend
at no additional charge. These programs are sponsored by the Orange
County chapter of the Service Corps of Retired Executtves (SCORE)
Association. For addltlonaJ Information regatdlng trai1ing programs or free
SCORE counseling, cal SCORE at 714/550-7369. The upoooing schedule Is:
March 3 THE SHOE STRING ENTREPRENEUR
• Starting business with very little or no money
• What you need to know to start
• What you need to do to succeed
March 10 MAIL ORDER -A DIRECT WAY TO SUCCEED
• Mall Ol'der Programs -for products and services
• Gaining acoess to llsts and products
• Opportunities for a Home-based business
March 17 HOW TO SUCCEED IN A HOME BASED BUSINESS
• learn how to start a business at home
• Find out how to find products and services
• Learn the steps necessary to succeed
March 24 THE BUSINESS Pl.AN -HOW TO DEVELOP YOUR
ROADMAP TO PROFITS
• Developing and writing a winning busineSS plan
• Undef'standing the key elements of planned profits
• Discuss the key Ideas and concems of ycxx plan
March 31 EXPORTING & IMPORTING -AN ENTREPRENEUR'S
GUIDE TO GLOBAL PROFI I EERJNO
• FlndJng Products-SeMces-Custotners and getting paki
• FWldlng Custom Brokers-Agents-Freight Forw&lders O.F.F.)
• Exporting with help from U.S. Govemment ontoes
WATER PLAN NING THE
CALFED PROGRAM
.1700 Adams Ave. Ste. 101,
Costo 'Meso, CA 92626
Pho·ne: (714~ 885-9090
Fax: (714) 885-9094
D ECEMBER REN E W ALS
43 years 1111
The Grant Boys
37 years Ill
Waste Management of Orange
County
18yeara
Costa Mesa Police Association
15years
Fairview Developmental Center
9years
MacNeal-Schwendler Corporation
&years
LSA Associates, Inc.
7yean
Back Bay Rowing & Running Club
Restaurant
Part< Plaza II, Ltd.
Amel Management Company
&years
Y.outti.fnUepceneurshlp
Nabers Cadillac/Buick
5yeara
Hall Chiropractic
McOonalds of Costa Mesa
4years
John C. Anderson
Memphis Restaurant
Dunn-Edwards Paints
3 years
Avco Financial Services
La Salsa Restaurant
Orange County Steamway
Plums Catering & Restaurant
Sea L.ar1< Motel
Time Warner Communications
2ye~
A.C. Pozos Electric •
I Love Sushi
The Mediation Center
Merrill Lynch
~SA lnllne
JANUARY NEW MEMBERS
Massimo Navamttta
Amici Trattoria
655 Anton Blvd., Suite C
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
714/850-9399
Sara Bauer -Massage Thereptst
234 E. 17th St., Ste. 212
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
714/804-8466
Jeff Shaw
Jeffrey Shaw's Diamond Jewelry
1835 Newport Blvd., Ste. D· 152
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
714/548-5626
Cartna E. OIMatteo
Mortgage Link
3701 Birch St., #200
Newport Beach, CA 92660
800/975-9755
Loma Lenk
Paulson Golf Company
858 West 18th St., Unit B-3
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
714/574-0600
Diane Sibel
Wood-Gutmann Insurance
Brokers
3100 Bristol St .• Ste. 390
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
714/557-0800
Mlchael White
Wolfgang Puck Cafe
3333 Bristol St.
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
714/546-9653
B USINESS START-UP
S EMINAR
A seminar designed for people who plan to start a business or t\ave
recently established a business will be held on Wednesday. March 25 from
8:45 am to 3:45 pm at National University, 3390 Harbor Boulev~ In Costa
Mesa.
Conducted by the Orange County Chapter of the Sefvice Corps of
Retired Executives (SCORE) Association, this program will Include
discussions by professionals on topics such as financing, record-keeping,
Increasing sales throug~ advertising and promotion, and legal procedures.
The $25.00 fee lnciudes coffee and materials.
For additional lnfonnatton on this event or free business counseling for
SCORE, contact SCORE at 714/550-7369.
~~o MORNING COSTA MESA
\: ''90-MINUfE
~ ... 'M,".~DC:AlicACT BOOST'9 Hank Panl11tt, a director of MMe~ w.t9t' '*'11Ct, lllao Co-r Y~·,1 1,~ ~ ~ :~ A
chairs • committee under the AaoclatlOn of CaJlfotnM of c.JlfomM
Watw ~ Region x to monitor,,,. CM.FED Program. The Th M' h 19 1998 foltowfng la the fftth In a series of attlcJes to updat. Costa,,..._ Ul., atC I
bUslneun llnd reskhlnt& A i: -Qne-of the mafot 00tlC6tns of Olaigeeounty busfnesses ts oouectton"Ot-..---~-.--.S!"t\J ..... ~..-.-..------1-...-----..-_.,,,._-+--H
probkms at a major source of the regk>n'• Import water auppty from .-
noi'ttiem California. A combination of federal and state agencles, CALFEO,
hu been working on an aoceptable solution In the Bay-Oetta.
Hank PaniaA.wUI Yrge tAe .... ~ CommMee al °'8rJ9t County.
f'NACO) to further action. OUMg ~.ntch the Bay-Cetta Mvit«y
Coui'lcll wlll hold one of Its rare meetJnga In 80Uthen"I Callfomla at a hotel
near LAX. Panlan la encouraging that a apecfal Orange County ~t
appear before the Bay-o.tt. Counclt to expreea Orange Cotny'1 needs
and viewpoint on this Important eource of Import water supply. WACO wtU
not meet agaJn until February 8, \999. WAC0'1 most lmportlnt
lrlvotvement to date occurred on Jenuary 9, when CAl.FEO ExecutlVe
Otrector, Letter Snow, ~Orange Cooo~ W8ltf' IMdef'I wtth an up-
date and ana1yals of the CAI.FED progrlm. Snow'I ~WU
folow·up to a WACO«tendeO pubflo forum In PiNderia duf1ng .,ty
O.cember.
The MW'Ch actlOn la the tatMt In a..-~ by PW'llwl tlnCt the
A.Moclatlon of Callfomla water~ ~ioe In Long BMd\ IMt
NQvetnber. That ccnfweoc• focUled on BAY-ta~ llilUll,
lndudlng the dtaft aoUlor1 pldaige IO ftll C..__'a ~
Sp
f MONDAY'--'-'--__,
I
: FAMILY ACTIVITY
I The Parents Without f artners
1 Orange Coast Chapter meets
1 for the Family and Youth Activ-
: ity Dine Out from 5:30 to 7:30
, p .m . at Norms Restaurant, 2150
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For
more information, call 963-
3305.
ATT'ENTION DEAOT 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.
· nJESDAY.
TOASTMASTERS CLUB
The Mesa Messengers Toast-
masters Club holds a speech con-
test at 7 p.m . at Mesa Verde Unit-
ed Methodist Church, 1701 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. Visitors
welcome. For more informatitm,
call 540-4446.
I TAX SEMINAR
Scott Bengfort and WNC and
Associates, Inc. offers a free lun-
' cheon seminar, Tax Credits -
1 Explained and Available, at noon l at the Doubletree Hotel, 3050
I Bristol St., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 619-456-1023.
BLOOD DRIVE
Temple Bat Yahm's Sisterhood
in conjunction with the'American
Red Cross holds its annual blood
drive from 3 to 8 p.m. at 1011
Carnelback St., Newport Beach.
For more information, call 509-
1355.
ASSERTIVENESS SKILLS
The Newport Be ach Public
Library offers a free program,
Assertiveness Skills, at noon in
the Central Library's Friends
·Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado
'Ave., Newport Beach. For more ~ infdrmation, ·can 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 Fullilled
Entrepreneur," from 11:30 a.m. to
1 p.m. at the Wyndham Garden
Hotel, 3350 Ave. of the Arts, Cos-
ta Mesa. The cost is $17 for mem-
bers and $22 for guests. Por more
information. call 472-4666.
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 Mesa. 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
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call 540-1183.
BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP
The Manuscripts Book Discus-
sion Group of the Newport Beach
Public Cibrary Foundation will
meet at 9:30 a.m . and at 7 p.m. at
the Central Library, 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. Books dis-
cussed will be •The Solace of
Open Spaces• by ,Gretel Ehrlich
and "MC\ntana 1949• by Larry
Wilson. For IQore information, call
717-3890. .
JOB FAIR
The Orange County Fair-
ground presents the sixth annual,
Community College Job Pair,
froQl 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 88 Pair
Drive, Costa Mesa. Ad.mission is
free. For more information, call
708-3247.
OCCJOB 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
Mesa. For more information, call
432-5576.
REPUBLICAN WOMEN
The Balboa Bay Republican
Women Federated meet from 11
a.m._to 2 p.m.JitJb.e..Balboa Bay
Club, 1221 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Cost is $20 for
members, $25 for nonmembers.
For rese.rvations, call 759-9219.
RETIRED TEACHERS
The California Retired Teach-
ers Association Harbor Division
meets at 1:30 p.m. at the Costa
Mesa Community Center, 845
Park Ave., Costa Mesa .• Certified
financial planner Ed Dzwonkows-
ki will discuss investment basics
for retirees. For more information,
call 557-8771.
REVERSE MORTGAGES
Bob Brennan of Reverse Mort-
gage Newport sponsors a free dis·
cussion and information program
for serum; over 62 years explain-
ing all points on reverse mort-
gages at 3 p.m. at Bayside Village,
300 E. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. For more information, call
723-0233.
MATH WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College's Re-
Entry Center offers a free work-
shop, Becoming Math Confi-
dent, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in
the Re-Entry Center, room 106,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Me-
sa. For more information. call
432-5162.
PARENTS WITHOUT 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.
THURSDAY
CHILDREN OF PARKINSONIANS
The Children of Parkinsonians
support group for caregivers and
adult children of those with
Parkinson's meets for free from 7
to 9 p.m. in classroom three of the
Oasis Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar. For
more information, call 645-3352.
BALBOA PENINSULA PROGRAM
The Newport Beach Public
Library offers a free program, Bal-
boa Peninsula: An Overview of
Proposed Enhancements, at 7 p.m.
in the Central Library's Friends
Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For more
information, call 717-3801.
HIMALAYAS PROGRAM
Adventure 16 offers a free pro-
gram, The "Other Side· of the
Himalayas -Inner Ladakh, at 7
p.m . at 1959 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. The program includes col-
orful images and traditional
music from the Himalayan area.
For more information, call 650-
3301.
CAREER NElWORK
The Career Network for the
unemployed meets from 7:30 to 9
p.m. at St. Andrew's Presbyterian
f. Your cery
just became heal h fo
Church, 600 St. Andrews Roo.d,
Newport Beach. AdmiJlion ii
free. For more information. ca.ll
574-2239.
AUDAY
CotfSUMER BUSINESS NETWORK
Sylvia Bar will speak on Kab-
bala.h -Is it the latest fad or the
oldest? at the Consumer Business
Networks meeting at 7 a.m. at
The Mezzanine, 19800 MacAr-
thur Blvd. The cost is $15 and
includes breakfast. For more
information, call 550-4785.
TRUE WEALTH
Chapman University's School
of BUstness and Economics Alum-
ni Association and the School of
Education present speaker Tom
Harken on The Secret of liue
Wealth at a breakfast from 7:30 to
9 a.m. at The Sutton Place Hotel,
4500 MacArthur 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
Site: The Right Way, the second of
three free workshops, from 7 :30 to
9 a.m . at the chamber's confer-
ence room, 1470 Jamboree Road,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
mation, call 640-4789.
RESUME WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College's Re-
Entry Center offers a free resume
writing workshop from noon to 1 :30
p.m. in Room 106 of the Counseling
and Admissions Building. For more
information, call 432-5162.
BLOOD DRIVE
Oakwood Apartments con-
ducts its annual blood drive from
3 to 8:15 p.m. at 880 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
mation, call 573-3750. ,...
AMrsH CRAFT SHOW
Amish Country Traditions pre-
-sent-the, Amish· Qttilt. and Craft
Show, 'from 10 a.m . to 5 p .m. in
building 14, Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Ad.mission is free. For more
information, call 352-8305.
GEM SHOW
Gem Faire, Inc. presents a
Gem, Jewelry and Bead Show
'-'
FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1991
from noon to 1 p.m. in bniJding 12.
Orange County P&rgroundl, 88
Pair Drive, Com Mesa. Adznla..
lion ts 5' for adults and S3 for
seniors. Call 708-32'7.
MOTORCYQE SWU
Inter-Shows Motorsport Pro-
motions, Inc. presents the motor-
cycle swap from 5 to 10 p.m. in
building 10, Orange County fair-
grounds, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admimon is S6. For more
information/all 582-2311.
RETIRED o~aRS
The Golden West chapter of
the Retired Officers Association
meets at 6 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Oub, 1701 Golf
Course Drive, Costa Mesa. Reser·
vations are required: 546-2'02.
INVENTORS FORUM
The Inventors Forum presents
New Ideas, Market Research and
the Web I, a seminar for peopJe
with new ideas, inventors and
busmess executives, from 8 to 10
p.m in the science lecture build-
ing at Orange Coast College,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Cost is $15. For more information.
call 253-0909.
AMISH CRAFT SHOW
Amish Country 1hlditions pre-
sent the, Amish Quilt and Craft
Show, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
building 14, Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Ad.mission is free. For more
information, call 352-8305.
ANTIQUE TOYS
The Fnends of Orange Coe.st
College's Norman E. Watson
Library presents a program that
looks at antique toys, at.10 a.m. at
the private residence of toy collec-
tor Ralph Tomlinson. Admissim is
$5. Seating is limited. For more
information, call 432-5087.
GEM SHOW
Gem Faire, Inc .... presents a.
Gem, Jewelry and Bead Show,
from 10 a.m. to 7 p .m . in building
12, Orange County Fairgrounds,
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Ad.mission is $4 for adults and S3
for seniors. Call 708-3247.
• SEE TOWN PAGE I
~ • AUt>AY, MARCH 6, 1991
TOWN
CONTINUED FROM 7
·FABUl'OUS FUOtSW
Sherman UbrAIY and Gardens'
free Week.end Gardener Series
oontinues with. Fabulous Fuch-
sias, at 9:30 a.m., at 26'1 E. Coost
Highway, Corona del Mar. Por
more infonnation, call 673-2261.
MARCH 15
GEM SHOW
Gem Faire, Inc. presents a,
Gem Jewelry and Bead Show,
from 110 a.m. to 5 p.m. in building
12, Orange County Fairgrounds,
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Admission is $4 for adults an~ $3
for seniors. For more information,
call 708-3247.
CREATING A JEWISH IDENTITY
Temple Bat Yahm Sisterhood
offers a program featuring Arlene
Chernow of the Uruon of Ameri-
can Hebrew Congregations
speaking about creabng a Jewish
identity for duldren, at 9:15 a.m.
at 1011 Cdfl'lelback St., Newport
Beach For more information, call
644-6563.
MARCH 16
AlTENTION OEFICrT DISORDER
Counselor Stephanie Silva
offers a class on communication
skills for adults with Attention
Deficit Disorder from 7 to 9 p.m.
Monday at Coastline Counseling
Center, 1200 Quall St., Newport
Beach. Admission is $10. For
more tn.fonnauon, call 476-0991.
MARCH 17
COVER YOUR ASSETS
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce presents
Tom BaY' author of wCover Your
Assets, Change Your Attitude,· at
its Busmess Referral Luncheon at
7.15 a.m. at TWUl Pabns Restau-
rant, Fastuon Island, 630 Newport
Center Olive, Newport Beach.
For reservauons, caU 729-4400.
. GARDEN CLUB
The Newport Hills Garden
:Club celebrate St. Patrick's Day
• and Arbor Day with a memorial
_ free planting at 11 :30 a.m. at the
l!nV1.rorunental Nature Center at
~1601 16th St., Newport Beach.
Weather permitting. For more
. information, call 644-5933.
TO SEE OR NOT TO SEE
: • The Newport Beach Central
_ -: Library presents a free program.
:~ow You See It, Now You Do~'t,
•at noon in the Fnends Meeting
:Room, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
:port Beach. The program will dis-
; aiss modem optometry and how
: fisual demands will change ~ the
• ae'Xt millenruum. For more infor-
• mation, call 717-3801.
ORCHID AUCTION
The Newport I !arbor Orchid
Society presents its 14th annual
Orchid Auction from 7 to 10 p .m.
at the Neighborhood Community
Center, 845 Park Ave., Costa
Mesa. Admission is free. For more
information, call 832-7700.
· $Kl LECTURE
Outdoor photographer and
• ~venturer Sam Roberts presents a free sllde show and lecture on
The Sierra High Route. Tue Clas-
sic 1rans-S1erra Slo Tour at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at The North Face
Store, Tnangle Square, 1870-A
Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa. For
more inforrnatiOn , call 646-0909.
MARCH 18
POLICE APPRECIATION
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Conunerce presents
its annual, Police Appreciation
Breakfast, at 7:15 a.m. at the
Newport Beach Sheraton, 4545
MacArthur Blvd. 11ckets are $20.
for more information, call 729-: «oo. ..
• INVESTING FOR WOMEN
Smith and Barney financial
~nsultants Adri Esnard Miller
• • and "'Michelle Plugge present
: Investing 101: For Women Only!
; twice -from noon to 1:30. p.m.
and from 6 to 7 p.m. -at 660
rNewport Center Drive, 1 Uh Floor,
Newport Beach. Admission 11
flee, reMJVationJ required Por
more infonnatlon. call 717-5422.
RNAHoH<i YOUR EDUCATION
Orange Coast College'• Re-
Bntry Center presentJ a free
worltsbop on ·Plnondng Your
Education from 6 to 8 p.m. in the
center, Room 106 of the Counsel-
ing and Admlssiom Building,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
For more information, call '32-
5162.
APNEA GROUP
An Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Support Group meets from 1 :30 to
9 p.m. at the Grace Hoag Confer-
ence Center, Room 4, 1 Hoag Dri-
ve, Newport Beach. Admission is
free. 760-2070.
MARGH 19
GOOD MORNING COSTA MESA
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce holds Good Morning
Costa Mesa: A 00-Minute Break-
fast Boost from 7:15 to 8:45 a.m. at
the Costa Mesa Country Club,
1701 Golf Course Drive. Tickets
are $12 in advance, $17 at the
door. For more information, call
885-9090.
GARDEN CLUB
The Newport Hills Garden
Club meets at 9:30 a.m . at Club-
house Il, Port Carlow Place, Har-
bor View Homes, Newport Beach.
Theo and Diane Glorie will con-
tiriue the club's herb series with
Flowers and Herbs. For more
information, call 644-5933.
YACHT AND SAILBOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc.
presents the Newport Brokerage
Yacht and Sailboat Sbow, from 11
a .m. to 6 p.m. through March 22
at Lido Marina Village, Newport
Beach. For more information, call
757-5959.
MARCH20
ARST AID
Tue Costa Mesa Firefighters
Association presents first aid
training for seniors from 9:30 a,.m.
to 4:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa. Cost for materials is
$10. For more information, call
645-2356. _/
REPUBLICAN WOMEN
The Newport Harbor Republi-
can Women's luncheon honors
Bobbi Lungren at 11 a.m. at the
Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach. The
cost is $20. For more information,
call 7 59-3086.
CONSUMER BUSINESS NETWORK
Ellen Norwine will speak on
Writing for Profit -Books, Tapes
or n at the Consumer Business
Networks meeting at 7 a.m. at
The Mezzanine, 19800
MacArthur Blvd. The cost is $15
and includes breakfast. For more
information, call 550-4785.
ANTIQUES EXPO
South Coast Shows, Inc. pre-
sents an Arltiques Expo and Sale,
from noon to 9 p.m. in building 10
of the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $5, $3 for
seniors and teenagers ages 12 to
11, and children under 12 a.re
tree. For more information, call
840-9649.
YACHT AND SAILBOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc.
presents, the Newport Brokerage
Yacht and Sailboat Show, from 11
a.m. to 6 p.m. through March 22
at Udo Marina Village, Newport
Beach. For more infonnation, call
757-5959. .
LECTURE SERIES
The Newport Beach Public
Library Foundation's Distin-
guished Speakers Lecture Serles
continues with Donna Lee
Shirley, directQr of the Mars
Pathfin9.er Project at 7 p.m. in the
Central Ubrary's Friends Meeting
Room, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. 'A light buff et recep·
tion will follow. nckets are $20.
For more inform_miPD_.. call 644:
3296.
~Holy ·smokesl
· 1/3 of our Bar Is
Cedlfted Outdoonl
3 Outdoor Pool Tablel
Atwaya H • "Your Home AY!8Y l'rom ome
"
sents Divorce: A New Beginning,
a workshop for men and women
in the process of divorcing or
recently divorced, from 10 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. at 180 Newport Cent~r
Drive, Newport Beach. The cost JS
$40. For more information, call
759-0579.
CRAFT SHOW
Miller Production Group pre-
sents a Doll, Bears, Supplies and
Crafts Show and Sale from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m . in building 12,
Orange County Pairgrounds, ~8
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Admis-
sion is $5 for adults and $2 for
children. Children under six are
free. For more information, call
708-3247.
MAKING LOVE LAST .
Counselor Elizabeth Slocum
presents Staying Toge1her: Mak-
ing Love Last, a workshop for
couples and singles, every Satur-
day starting this week from 10:30
a.m. to 12:30 p .m. at 2900 Bristol
St., Costa Mesa. Fee for each ses-
sion is $20. For more information,,
call 850-1689.
ANTIQUES EXPO
South Coast Shows, Inc. pre-
sents an Antiques Expo and Sale,
from noon to 8 p.m . in building 10
of the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $5, $3 for
seniors and teenagers ages 12 to
17, and children under 12 are
free. For more information, call
840-9649.
OfANTlNG GATHERING
The Yoga Place presents a
Chanting Gathering from 1 :30 to
9:30 p.m. at 1835 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. The gathering will
offer easy to learn chants
designed to capture the simplicity
and beauty of sound. The sug-
gested donation is $5. For more
information, call 642-7400.
YACHT AND SAILBOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co.. Inc.
presents the Newport Brokerage
Yacht and Sailboat Show, from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. through March 22
at Lido Marina Village, Newport
Beach. For more information, call
757-5959.
COMPUTER SHOW
Super Show Productions pre-
sents a computer show, from 10
a .m. to 5 p .m. in building 14,
Orange County Fairgrounds, ~
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Admis-
sion is $5. For more information,
call 838-5941.
•
COMPUTER SHOW
Super Show Productions pre-
sents a computer show, from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. in building 14,
Orange County Fairgrounds, 88
Pair Drlve, Costa Mesa. A~
sion ts $5. For' more information,
call 838-5941. ..
CRAFT SHOW
a.m. to 4 p.m. in building 12,
Orange County Fairgrounds, ~8
Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. Admis-
sion is $5 for adults and $2 for
children. Children under six a.re
free. For more information, call
708-3247.
ANTIQUES EXPO
South Coast Shows, Inc. pre-
sents an Arltiques Expo and Sale,
from noon to 5 p.m. in building 10
of the Orange County Fairgrounds,
88 Fair Drive, Costa· Mesa. Admis-
sion is $5, $3 for seniors and
teenagers ages 12 to 17, and chil-
dren under 12 are free. For more
information, call 840-9649.
YACHT AND SAILBOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc.
presents, the Newport Brokerage
Yacht and Sailboat Show, from 10
a.m . to 6 p.m . through March 22
at Lido Marina Village, Newport
Beach. For more information, call
757-5959.
JEWISH CENTER LECTURE
The Jewjsh Community Cen-
ter of Orange County offers a
lecture, Machal: 1\rolunte!!r
Fighters for a Jewish State, from
2 to 4 p .m. at ~50 E. Baker St.,
Costa Mesa. The lecture features
the youngest Machalnik in the
Israeli anny Jason Fenton and
Esther Friedman, who was a
nurse during the Israeli War of
Independence. Tickets are $7 for
members and $10 for all others .
For more information, call 7 55-
0340.
MARCH24
BALBOA HISTORY
Writer Warren White presents
"Once Upon an Island: Tales of
Early Days on Balboa, 1914 to
1941," a free program, at noon at
the Newport Beach . Central
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. For more information,
call 717-3801 .
HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR DAY
. Orange Coast College presents
the 15th annual High School
Senior Day, from noon to 3 p .m. at
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The day includes orientation to
the campus, counseling, financial
aid information and tours of the
campus. For more information,
call 432-5725.
MARCH 25
HUMAN RESOURCES-
Professionals in Human
Resources Association meets from
8 to 9 a.m Thursday at the Sheraton
Newport Beach, 4545 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach. 1ickets
range from $5 to $32.
ELECTRONICS EXPO
Del Mar 1\'ade Shows presents
the Orange County mectron1cs
Expo, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.j in
building 10 and 12, Orange
County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Dri-
ve, Costa Mesa. For more infor-
ma1ion. cal:l 108-32"7.
MWer Production Group pre-
sents a Doll, Bears, Supplies and PASSOVER WOl\KSHOP
eratts Show and Sale from .!_!_The Sisterhood of Temple Bat
• H~ is one ol~mo«common ~ ~~~. ~\.···,
•A National rnearth lbtd)' tor lodMdualt 18 and older It now bcinl ~
• ~~~the follJWiNl a DOCOll::
Yahm presents a tree Panover
How-To Worbbop, at 9:30 a.m.,
ln the temple'• library, 1011
Camelbock St., Newport Beach.
Por moN infonnad.on, call .&U-
6563.
BOAT SHOW Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc.
presents the Newport New Motor
Yacht, Sportfisher and Power Boat
Show, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at
Newport Dunet Resort Marin.a,
101 N. Bayside Drive, Newport
Beach. Admission ts $8 for adults
and children under 12 are free.
For more information, call 757·
5959.
CHAMBER LUNCHEON
• The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce holds its
Noon Networking Luncheon
featuring -speaker Jeannette
Kubacki, a handwriting analyst,
at noon at the Riverboat Restau·
rant, 151 E. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Tickets are $17
for nonmembers and members
without reservations and $15 for
members with reservations. For
more information, call 729-4400.
BUSINESS MIXER
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce offers a Business After
Hours Mixer from 5:30 to 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at Sfuzzi, lrian-
gle Square, 1870 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. For· more informa-
tion, call 885-9090.
MARCH26
ELECTRONICS EXPO
Del Mar lTade Shows presents
the Orange County Electroni~s
Expo, from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m., m
building ·1 O and 12, O~ang~
County Fairgrounds, 88 F~ Dn-
ve, Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call 708-3247.
BOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc.
presents the Newport New Motor
Yacht, Sportfisber and Power Boat
Show, from 11 a .m. to 6 p.m. at
Newport Dunes Resort Marina,
101 N. Bayside Driv~, Newport
Beach. Admission is $8 for adults
and children under 12 are free.
For more information, call 757-
5959.
LEADERSHIP HAPPY HOUR
The Jewish Natiohal Fund's
National Future Leadership divi·
sion's March Happy Hour begins
at 6 p.m. at the Hard Rock Cafe,
451 Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. The cost is $5 or fr~
to anyone who purchases a tree m
Israel for $10. For more intonna-
tion. call 558-8733.
WRITING LECTURE
Author Judith Handelsmann
presents The Inner (iame of Writ-
ing, a free program, at 1 p.m. at
the Newport Beach Central
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. For more inft>rmation,
call 717-3801.
MARCH27
CONSUMER BUSINESS NETWORK
Bill Bryden speaks on Avoid-
ing the Money Making Scarqs
on the Internet at the Consumer
Business Netw~ks meeting at 7
a.m. at The M~zzanine, 19800
MacArthur Blvd. The cost is $15
and includes breakfast. For
more lnf ormatJon, cClll 550-
• 185.
HEAUNG TOUOf
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter presents an introductory
clu.s in therapeutic touch from
9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at 695 W. 19th
St., Costa Mesa. Cost is MO. For
more informatioll., call 6-45-2356.
BOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc.
presents the Newport New Motor
Yacht, Sportfilh& and Power Boat
Show, from 11.a.m. to 6 p.m. at
Newport Dunes Resort Marina,
101 N. Bayside Drive, Newport
Beach. Admission is $8 for adults
and children under 12 are free.
For more information, call 757-
5959.
MARCH28
GUN SHOW
Crossroads of the West pre-
sents a gun show from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m . in buildings 10, 12 and
Parade ol Products, 88 Fair Dri-
ve Costa Mesa. Admission is $7 to; adults, $6 for senios and chil-
dren under 12 are tree. For more
information, call 708-324 7.
BOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc.
presents the NewpQrt New Motor
Yacht, Sportfisher and Power Boat
Show, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at
Newport Dunes Resort Marina,
101 N. Bayside Drive, Newport
Beach. Admission is $8 for adults
and children under 12 are free
For more information, call 757-
5959. • MARCH 29
BOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., lnc
presents the Newport New
Motor Yacht, Sportlisher and
Power Boat Show, from 10 a.m
to 6 p.m. at Newport Dunes
Resort Marina, 101 N . Bayside
Drive, Newport Beach. Admis-
sion is $8 for adults and children
under 12 are free. For more
information, call 757-5959.
GUN SHOW
Crossroads of the West pre-
sents a gun show from 9 a .m. to
4 p.m. in buildings 10, 12 and
Parade of Products, 88 Fair Dri·
ve, Costa Mesa. Admission is $7
for adults, $6 for senios and chil·
dren under 12 are free. For more
information, call 708-3247.
ONGOING
ACCENT REDUCTION PROGRAM
Healthtech presents a free
introductory workshop, Accent
Reduction and Cultural Adapta·
tion in the Workplace, every oth-
er Saturday from 9 to 10:30 a.m.
Wednesdays from 6 to 7:30 p.m
at the Healthtech offices, 3140
Redhill Ave., Suite 150, Costa
Mesa. Seating is limited. Fo1
information or reservations, call
751-0255.
• Put a few words to
work for you. Call the
Daily Pilot
CLASSIFIEDS 642-5678
CElEBRATE
llFE!
.:;';:. --··
BALBOA BOAT RENTALS
Otters rentals for experienced
skippers in comfort and style
aboard either a 17-or 19-foot
dual-console powerboat. Ren-
tal rates range from $40 to $60
an hour. Half-day rates are
$135 for the 17-foot dual con-
sole, $170 for the center con-
sole and $195 for the 19-foot
dual console. Rates a.re slightly
higher on weekends. Balboa
Boat Rentals is at 510 E. Edge-
water, Balboa Peninsula. For
reservations, call 673-7200.
WHALE WATCHING
UNDER SAIL
Aboard a 46-foot sloop with a
licensed captain. Space is lim-
ited. Sorry, no children or
smokers. For more informa-
tion, call 646-4005.
BONGO'S SPORTFISHING
CHARTERS
Offers private-party whale-
watching excursions every
day. The cost is $125 for one
BOAT
CONTINUED FROM 1
•many thousands of dollars.•
Christensen said The Maiden
was built at Fisherman's Wharf in
San Francisco and has made its
home in Newport for about 50
years. Arid as a Monterey, which
RYAN
CONTINUED FROM 1
the Newport-Mesa school board.
Although it is a district policy, at
least two school board members,
including the president, say they
don't endorse the automatic-
transfer provision in the policy.
In an interview Monday,
school board President Jim Feny-
man said he doesn't believe the
automatic transfer component of
the policy benefits students.
School board member Martha
Fluor also said she's not con-
IA&a
~-:r~ *3900 Insurance Accepted
w/Chlropraotlc Care.
NOW HIRING • 7-DAYS.WK
I ULTRA SPORTS MEDICINE' INC.
Dr. Gauti.r D.C.
714..979.838&
1072 S.E. Bristol St., Ste 209
Santa Ana Helahts
(Comer of Newport Bl No.IBriltol)
what's afloat
hour, six passenger maimum
and a three hour minimum. For
information, call 673-2810.
NEWPORT LANDING
SPORTASHING
Otters a low-cost way to whale
watch, weekdays from 10 a .m.
to 1 p.m . and weekends and
holidays from 9 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. The cost is $14 for adults,
$8 for seniors and children
over 12. Special discount rates
are available for schools,
churches and community
youth groups. For available
dates and information, call
675-0550.
PILGRIM OF NEWPORT
The 118-foot historic schooner,
offers weekend whale-watch-
ing trips, Saturdays from 10
a.m. to 1 p .m. and Sundays
from 1 to 4 p .m. The cost is $20
for adults and $15 for children.
The schooner is also available
for private charter. For reser-
vations, call 966-0686.
FUN l.pNE BOAT CO.
Guarantees whale or dolphin
sightings ~wing their excur-
sions or the next trip is free.
Daily trips cost $14 for adults,
$12 for seniors, children ages
three to 11 are $8 and children
under 3 are free. Groups rates
are also available for schools,
were built with canoe sterns and
clipper bows to survive the rough
Northern California waters, it
belongs to a rapidly disappearing
breed.
•The Maiden is a very unique
classic," Christensen said. ·When
you spend 17 years working on it,
designing it, building it, you have
a special attachment to it. l think I
know ahnost every inch of it.·
vinced that transferring students
is the best way to handle first-
time offenses.
"We discussed this a long time
ago and we were one vote short of
changing it," Fluor said. •1 think
it needs to be looked at on a .case-
by-case-basis. •
By transferring students to
another school, Fluor said schools
disrupt that stUdent's support sys-
tems and disrupt their education.
"I'm just not sure the automat-
ic transfer part of the policy is
working,· Fluor said. •tn the last
couple of months, we've had a lot
of second offenses which tells me
that transferring students may not
youth.I and groups of 15 or
more. for reservations, call
673-0240.
DAVEY'S LOCKER
Operates whale-watch cruises
daily through the end of
March. Operating hours a.re
Monday through Friday at 10
a.m. and 1 p.m. and Saturday
and Sunday at 9 a.m., noon
and 2:30 p.m. The cost is $14
for adults, $12 for seniors, S8
for children ages 4 to 12 and
infants and toddle!'$ are free.
Special discounts are available
for groups of 20 or more, com-
munity youth groups, service
organizations and schools. Pri-
vate charters are also avail-
able. Guaranteed sightings of
whales or dolphins or else all
passengers will receive a free
pass. For more information,
call 673-1434.
CRUISING THE BAJA
OCC's Sailing Program offers a
slide and lecture program,
Cruising the Baja on Saturday
from 6:30 to 10 p.m . at 1801 W. ·
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
The cost is $30 in advance and
$35 at the door. Call 645-9412.
Shell Smith, the director of the
Nautical Museum, said the boat
sails regularly -and wins top
prizes -in local boat parades.
"It's very hard for a museum of
our size to take care of a boat like
that," she said. "[Before the sinking)
we were trying to decide whether to
give it to another museum or to find
someone in the community to help
us take care of the boat." ..
be changing their behavior."
Fluor said she would like to see
the school district establish a
committee of parents, teachers
and students to come up with an
alternative to the automatic-
transfer part of the 4210 policy. ·rm for the 4210 policy/ she
said. ·u·s just the automatic trans-
fer part that I'm not sure of.•
Huntsman's friend Landon
Horning, 18, said he was happy
that Ryan came back but he
hopes that the zero-tolerance pol-
icy will be changed.
•Zero tolerance is a bad poli-
cy," Homing said. ·It makes it too
bard to get stoned.•
&~.sky
Somma
y
ATIENTION
TEACHERS
ENTRY DEADLINE. FOR 1998
STUDENT DESIGN
AN~
IS FRIDAY, MARCH 13
stud.a ita:~~ !J.e:= desigrilnQ OdS !;,Sin.IL in 90""~ily. V/iMing ~ wi
be I i$hed in 0 ~ial tedion W.Clnelday, May 21, 1997
CASH PRIZES ·10
I TOP WINNERSI
C~ll Us No~~
l"11'f)
.BRIDGE
CONTINUED FROM 1
Coast Plaza and Crystal Court
would likely take about two min-
utes, officials said.
Crystal Court Director of Mar-
keting Rita Redaelll-Stenlund
cautioned that the idea is still in
•preliminary discussioD.ll and that
nothing is finalized,• but called
the possibility of a people mover
connecting the two peas •very
exciting.•
"The bridge would unify both
properties in a way that they
haven't been before," Redaelli-
Stenlund said. "It's an opportuni-
ty to unite and strengthen and
create for the shoppers more ser-
vice and -accessibility."
Redaelli-Stenlund said her
center is still discussing details of
the design and location of the
bridge with engineers and tenta-
tively hope to have the walkway
up and runmng in 18 months, just
in time for the holiday 1999 shop·
ping season.
City Manager Allan ROf>der
said no formal build\ng plans or
pennit applications have been
TRANSFERS
CONTINUED FROM 1
school moratorium could present
conflicts with the rights of par-
ents.
•I think if a parent decides
they don't want to send their kids
to a particular school and the
school board says you have to
send them here or there, then
people will find ways to send their
kids to another school,• said
Estancia p&rent Sherie Hoyt.
One backlash of a moratorium
could be that parents would leave
not only their high school zones,
but the school district altogether.
· •And that wouldn't help the
• 7.k S..e"' 0.....,. e--,1 l9P CHA'S FAMILY ,...
SHOE REPAIR
G :/:f!";;.1673 lrvincAvc. #F
.. ~1.n1c..~ (at 17th St.)
fv---1......i~"9'-•'·jll -·~ 7 14-642-'1'14
submitted for the bridge, but dty
staff members have seen pirtures
of a similar moving foot bridge at
a shopping mall near Detroit,
Mich.
And at leut
FRIDAY, MAROi 6, 1998 • If bUilt, the motorized foot
bridge would be the .second IUCb
link between Solith Coast P1.Ua
and an adjoining property. ;
In 1992, a pedestrian bridge
over Bristol Street
informally, some
kind of pedestrian
connection
between Crystal ·
Court and South
Coast Plaza bas
been talked about
ever since Crystal
Court was built 12
years ago, Roeder
said.
·obvJolWly, Jt
WDuJd Improve
things a whole
bUnth onBeal
was built to COD·
nect South Cout
Plaza with the
South Coast
Metro business
office complexes,
parking garages
and theaters
across the street.
Street, partkJJJaf-
1y during the holi-
day season ... • But that bridge,
which reportedly
cost about $2.5 •
million, is a stan-
·1n fact, it was
sort of jokingly
referred to as
-All.AN ROEDER
'Schafer Bridge'
because jthen-City
Councilwoman) Arlene Schafer
actually wanted it included in the
plans for Crystal Court as a con-
dition of approval,~ Roeder said.
Roeder said any such pedestn-
an linkage would surely improve
both car and foot traffic in the
area.
·obviously, it would improve
things a whole bunch on Bear
Street, particularly durtng the
holiday season,• Roeder said
•
district's situation at all," Hoyt
said.
Mesa Verde parent Estelle
Hughes ~ it behooves . the
school a€to find out why par-
ents wan their children to leave
certain s ls.
"Instead putting a Band-Aid
on the problem, or in this case an
Ace bandage, they should take a
serious look at the problem and
try to fix it,• Hughes said. •Basi-
cally, the light looks brighter
somewhere else and parents
think their kids can get a better
education there."
Estanda parent George Cote
said if parents don't want their
children to attend a particular
school, they should be allowed to
transfer them.
aska ~ialists ,A111~"'a.. -~ IJJ35W.«)
3933 Birch Street • Newport 8Mclt
1 2f0.0718
dard bridge. not
like the conveyer-
belt model being
proposed for Crystal Court.
Crystal Court, a 600,()()().-
square-foot shopping center, was
built in J986 as part of the lint
expansion of South Coast Plaza.
But unlike its more famous
neighbor South Coast Plaza,
which is typically among the
highest-grossing shopping cen-
ters m the nation, Crystal Court
has posted more modest sales tax
figures in recent years.
•If someone doesn't want to
be there, we don't want them
there," Cote said. •students
have to be proud of their school
and proud of their friends and
they have to want to be there. I
can't see the board stepping in
and telling people which school
to go to •
School board member Wendy
Leece agrees that the responsibil-
ity lies with the school board to
make Estancia and other schools
Wlth tugh transfer rates more
attractive to families that are con-
sidenng leaving-
"The solubon lSn't any kind of
moratunum," Leece said. •1 think
it's wrong, morally wrong, to deny
people the right to go to the
school they want to."
ff1WAl\l'C:, IRVINE IMAX iHfAHH 1') lOCATf:rJ AT Tiff £DWAR[lS IRVlt.JE SPECTRUM WHU\t -..:
·, .-.. llJ·1 tRHWAY~ M•ET !;:'VINE:• (~\ll •Oto: l·R~)UP <,,\[[<, & IWORMATION 714 H.3~ IMA·
EYE-OPENER
Ex-ltrnguard dueling
the Globetrotters
QUOTE OF THE DAY
7 gt'!JO....,,.. fat AJ:ZdQ) ad thtll theyw gotng
to oorM doi.on Nn and gel UI ... •
-SCC ~HOOPS (X))O{ RUSS DAVIS
GOLF NOT ES
Jungle
• coming
to NBCC
•Shock-jock radio host
Jim Rome to set up shop
at Newport Beach CC to
broadcast live ~wing
Monday's Celebrity Pro-Am.
NEWPORT BEACH -Sports
radio talk-show host Jim Rome,
the nationally syndicated shock-
-jock whose program airs locally
Monday through Friday on
XTRN690, will be broadcasting
live at the Toshiba Senior Oassic
on Monday for the Celebrity Pro-
Am at Newport Beach Country
Oub, tournament officials con-
-fumed Thursday.
The show airs from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m . Rome is reportedly close to
sports agent Leigh Steinberg,
who is supporting the pro-am
with many of his clients, includ-
ing quarterbacks Troy Ailonan
and Ryan Leaf.
Rome has been a critic of the
Senior PGA Tour, saying *it's not
a sport• because players use golf
carts and the pin placements
aren't changed after each round.
Pin placements are changed.
It could also be an opportune
time for Senior Tour official nm
Crosby to personally invite Rome
to play the golf course.
During an interview earlier
this week, Crosby, the tour's Vice
President of Business Affairs,
gave Rome a challenge.
"Does Rome play golf1" Cros-
by said. "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 nev-
er 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 (criti-
cizes) people, he should come out
and experience it. ..
-by Richard Dunn
Aoki drops
from field
•Third at Toshiba in
'97, he is suffering from back problems.
NEWPORT
BBACH -Isao
~ Y(hO
enjoyed a TOeMlllA career year in .-...-.--....-...
1SW7 by ftnt1btng third on
Senior PGA Tour money
lilt at $1,-' 10,-'99, hu
dJOpped from the Tulhlbe
Senior CJamc because of
back problems, tourna-
• ment director Jett Puner
N1d 1bunday.
Aoki, who allo with-
drew from th1I weekend'•
Senior SJ.am. 11 the MOODd
player to ~ out of the
twd. •Mike H1ll withdrew
eattim. Lou Graham and
=.=.wm~
AOld. wbo tmj)IOY9d b.11 ~ on tlM money lilt lut year tor tbe ltxth oon-
Mt"Utml 1M100;; U.S for
tblnl in tbe 'n.llibe w t
at S-undlr 208.
·Tars' MoOre Sea View Player of Year
Nicole Huszcz. Irvine Jr.
Alexis Hanson, Irvine Jr. • Newport Harbor senior Alden
Moore is among seven locals
honored with girls water polo
coaches' all-league selections.
Senior Autumn ·Milliken and
junior Jocelyn Manderino repre-
sent Newport on the second team,
to which CdM seniors Laura Blair
and Krista Bjorkvist were also
named.
--while MtJHken totaled 23. Erin Lezak, Irvine Jr.
Christel Smith, El Toro Sr.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
Newport Harbor High senior Alden
Moore, who led the Sailors to their first
league championship, has been voted Sea
View League Player of the Year by the cir-
cuit's coaches.
Hardt, a senior who set two
meten for CdM Coach John Var-
gas, scored a team-high 87 goals
and added 56 steals and 15 assists.
Blair bad a team-high 85 steals
for the Sea Kings (9-16, 2-3) and
added 24 goals and 21 assists.
Bjorkvist, CdM~ primary two-
meter guard, posted 34 steals, 13
goals and six assists.
COMMs' All-SH View
......... girts w•tM' polo
Ashley Pyka, El Toro Jr.
Jamie Kroeze, Santa Margarita So.
Gina Gajdos, Santa Margarita Sr.
sec:ondtum
Autumn Milliken, Newport Harbor Sr.
Jocelyn Manderino, Newport Harbor Jr.
Krista Bjorkvist Corona del Mar Sr.
Laura Blair, Corona del Mar Sr.
Moore: who paced the Tars in scoring
with 69 goals and was also their primary
two-meter defender, tops a list of seven
Back Bay standouts recognized, including
fellow first-team choices Meagan Hardt of
Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor's
KyndraCox.
Cox, a sophomore, who
emerged as a scoring threat at two Aid meters for Co-Coaches Bill Barnett en Moore Jamie Pack, Irvine Sr.
Meghan Finney, Irvine Sr.
Player of the Yur
Alden Moore, Newport Harbor Sr. and Brian Kreutzkamp, finished
with 33 goals for the Sailors, who advanced
to the CIF Southern Section Division I
semifinals and finished 20-7, 5-0 in league.
Manderino posted 33 goals for the Tars,
First tum
Meagan Hardt. Corona del Mar
Kyndra Cox. Newport Harbor
Sr.
So.
Kristen Miller, El Toro Jr.
Brooke Taylor, El Toro Sr.
Rebecca Peterson, Santa Margarita So.
Kara Danduran, Woodbridge So.
BOATING
terr a nee
phillips
IS THE NEXT
50 BEITER?
WE'LL FIND
OUfSHORTLY
• Newport-to-Ensenada
race turns 51 April 24.
I t's called "Race No. 1 for the
Next Half-Century" as the
Newport-to-Ensenada Race
turns 51 this year.
Fifty-one years of clambering
on everything from Netting and
teak to non-skid laminants.
Fifty-one years with half the
entrants determined to win their
class, and the rest wanting to fill
their glass.
Corona del Mar Hlgh'• Dennis Abbuler sends the ball nearly straight down over the net against Costa Mesa lbunday night.
For some, it's their business to
win races. For others, they
compete for the sheer fun of
knocking back a few Coronas,
listening to Jimmy Buffet while
bouncing around between 600 CDM NEEDS FOUR rGAMES TO TOP MESA boats floating only inches apart.
Ah, yes ... it's hurry to Hussongs
time once again.
• Alshuler, Coon pace the Sea
Kings' attack; Lightvoet pounds
down 18 kills for the Mustangs
the duo combined for 20 kills with 10 each.
"At times our passing wasn't very good,
though,"· Conti said. "We're building our
chemistry right now, and learning how to
play at this level. •
before clinching the set, 15-6.
Ughtvoet, a junior, rattled off six service
points in that game.
•0ur attitude was'good that game. It was
just the fact that they wanted to win that
game. Once they won that game, they lost
the (good) attitude," Ybarra, who also
coached Mesa's girls team to the playoffs
this fall, said.
At 12 o'clock on April 24 off
the coast of Newport, a puff of
while smoke from the starter's
gun will set free the Tiger Woods
of sailboat racing.
By Molly Yanity, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Wrth a match of experi-
ence between them, the 1998 Corona del
Mar High and Costa Mesa volleyball tea.ms
clas.b.ed in a nonleague showdown Thursday
evening with the visiting Sea Kings coming
out on top, 15-13, 15-7, 6-15, 15-2.
In game one, the Sea Kings (1-0) mount-
ed a 14-10 lead on their own serve, but
squandered three set points and allowed the
Mustangs (1-1) to creep up to 14-13 before
senior Greg Burden put a shot down the
front of Mesa blockers.
In the second game, it was the Mustangs
who showed their lack of togetherness.
After firing out to a 3-3 tie early in the
game, the hosts committed six consecutive
unforced errors to give CdM a sweatless 10-
3 lead.
The overpowering Sea Kings stepped it
up a notch, as well.
CdM setter Kevin Hansen. who put up 22
assists, was strong, and senior Mike Pliha
served from 8-2 to 15-2 with Alshuler com-
ing up with two solid blocks.
You can see the likes of
Cheval, Victoria, Katmandu,
Orient Expre88 and perennial
entry, Roy Disney's Pyewacket.
ChiC4go's commodities baron
and balloonist, Steve Fossett, will
probably race one or both of his
water rockets, Stars & Stripes
and Lakota. However, at this But it wasn't pretty.
For CdM, which advanced to the C1P
Southern Section Division m-A champi-
onship match last spring, familiarizing itself
with its personnel is the task at hand. wThey have the athletic abilify to do
things but limit themselves," first-year
Coach Yvette Ybarra said of her troops.
"This is a team sport and they're playing as
individuals right now."
•(Hansen) is only a sophomore. Last year
he did a nice job on the JV and this ts a big
move for him," Conti said. •He did some
good things (then) but hasn't really done
them yet. But with time, practice and herd
work, be will."
time, no word from Senor
Connor.
This first starting gun is
reserved for serious sailors with
more money in their ships than
Vegu has chips. The only time •we showed flashes of brilliance and
flashes of inexperience," third-year Coach
Steve Conti said: · these sailors smile ts when they
Conti liked what be saw from bis middle
attack. With junior All-CIP first teamer Den-
nis Alshuler and Greg Coon, who both stand
at 6-foot-5, swinging from middle to outside,
Ybarra saw her team's potential shine
through in a dominating third 9.:ame when
the Mustangs, behind the match 1 kill leader
8 .J. Ughtvoet (18), exploded to an 11..() lead
Coon also had five total blocks.
For the Mustangs, setter Chris Shanley
tallied 32 assists, and Ughtvoet added six
digs.
cross a finish line, looking aft to
try and see their nearest
competitor. The further back fue
competitor determines how
broad the grin.
•Favored Vanguards to
1ace Cougars at 1 :30 in
conference tournament.
By Molly Yanity, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Going into
the season. SoUthem Celilorma
College's women'• baaketball
team waa under no pressure u it
WU picked to f1n1lh third in the
Golden State AtbleUc Confer-ence.
But now, after ~ the
GSAC title with a perfect 12-0
NCX>td. the v~ will teet
What it'9 U.U to be tbe team everybCJdY wantl to beat a.a ~
hMd into the GSAC~pcnee.eon
toum411Mmt at 7:30 tonight at 'Jbe
Plt aga.liilt AZuN Pii:iftc.
But a little qet practlce
abouJdn' hurt .. ~ (l7·
5), 'Wbo pllacl a.. ,..,... Oil
the All.a&AC .... '~wdari
AmM ...... Krt.d Wllgtlt met
These pros race 70 raters
ost Ai~ Padft~c---:--to-n-=1-gh=-t--=---inG~SA------C-t~if---r -~~ll'llMtipli nextmedd~.::::=-_ _...__
.1 commence in intervals of 10
\ 1 , : 1 f r ' •• 1 r 1 f ~ J , t 1 1 1 < , 1 · · • pumped up and it may be dJfftcult m1nutee tluough 1: 10 in the
to ihid anyone not tn &:zooe. atteriloosa. •
Player Cl the Year Elaine Wbitte-the Cougars. •They've got some •1 guess IOID.80De (at AZusa) In additlGlll tO todays demons
moie, whUe Russ Davis eamed big kl.di and some ahoodna said that they're g~ to come of speed, this ii a chance to view
the Coach of the Year nod. guard.I -they have an the tools." down here and ~ ua. '.Jb&t was the Arnold PelmeD and Jack
According to Whittemore, who Among thoae tooJ.a are ell-con· nice,• he laughed. •They're fired NlcldaUMI ot aeilboat radng.
will become SCC11 all·time lead-ferenc:e guards Amy Lemm (8 up. They wonted to play Rdgtb:ne, Newaboy,
Ing to0rer th1I evening U lhe rpg) and Kepy Speal (13 ppg, 5 (Wedneaday nlg'ht.)9 Chec:lanote and the
scorea 16 points. Cofnddentally, apg), a.a well u Pilar Surch, one of The second-~ coach added yellow·llitped ChmtJne are
she averagea 16 points per game. the QSAC'• most accurate three-that the APU atbletic office pur-names &1 prominent to boat '
Azuaa Padfic, coached by point &hooters. chaaed several tickets for the radng &1 Hogan ts to golf.
Danielle" Jo~. wu ptcked Whittemore bellevet there ii game to distribute to studenll A major difference between
to wtn tbe C:lon1enmce in tbe pre· just one way to overcome her and he 11 hopmg t!Mlt the sec goll aiid boating, though, is that
aeuon med>•~ bUt ended up aquad. though. •we have to play end Costa Mesa communttie1 a hol•tri-one on a boat am be
tS8d for fourth With a 4 .. s record IMlly, na11y bed. and be.ilc:J• Will come to The Pit and offer nautl~ D;8g•ttve. ·
and ~ to come out 16-13 you bAft .to tie mare com -wpJ*.l. The ewport Ocean Si1l1rig
ovsaD. • ttve, • tbl ~Mid. He guanmteel a ~&bow. AllOdattOn It the organl.Zing
The Cougan, hliW•••• gave Shit dted the v~· molt •It'll be a dOle gAtM. We're autbodty ol tbe race. The race la
the Vanauatdl some trouble In wt km, a 91·78 IOll at UC Sen .. dti!MI. (PIM) lln't a big fan ol open'° all ldboat ownen or
early · c Jfebruary when sec ~ hb. a. pndlat dd LUt iilgllt a want· damtlrin that .. "'MDbeD a1 •
escaped With a 61·6' win tn . (AQalDlt UCSD), we didn't ed to pnd1ce aftei' the guys' i.cogn•Md Jedal dub, U.t. ~Uthe bolts llmlt.d Wblu.-playwfda-.atb•:ct·r and W8 did· ~ J WU like, '.Amel. ... you ~ ~ tbli ~ D
more to 12 polntl. ttowever, n't &boot we.• a 1114. ~•"ft ,_.. 01Cf• o..s. 8114. c.worm. V. """•A..,.._ AlahA ~'I 11 wena dUldl )ult Milli_,,___ becli• ,_.. w .mt ID .. ....,_ or eddlb 'bttllll ••aMnm
bilbewtn. =-~~~~a...1•. ,0.1111 ~e.YwWDl"'iJ..,..dWblle
•1 tlMlf play togettm. they ca ---1 s a ..... alt OMC W1b
do --....... • 0.... l9id al Dntl mill 9alt .qu.d II 2S1 I I l .. . -n_.,. __ .._....,.....p-~~~ ~.'"'--.-~=-,-~~ ~-'~ ~._._~------~--=--="o=:::;,___~'--..
Ne~ BaichJCotta Mua Daily Pilot ... ·---~--·~ .. FRJOAV. FEBRUARY 6, 1998
HALL SPREADING THE WORD i H :.~~r r !,1 1 · •• •
~--~--...... ------------------,
I i ii l f t ' •Third-year Eagles coach
empla.ys 'neighborhood
watCh' to round up
incoming talent.
BOYS VOLl:EYBALL PREVIEW I I I I I I
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Entering her
third season as a walk-on,
~stancia High boys volleyball
poach Dale Hall doesn't have the
'luxwy of patrolling the school
'hallways trolling for talent.
· But Hall, who also coaches the
EagJes' girls team, does what she
can to attract players from her
Costa Mesa neighborhood.
•1 try to get the kids on my
street thinking about going out
for volleyball when they get to
Estancia," said Hall, whose grass-
roots recruiting effort seems to be
helping.
·we have 26 kids m the pro-
~am this year," said Hall, who is
"anxious to start building funda-
mentals with the freshmen, rather
than having to play catchup when
upperclassmen finally mabiculate
to the varsity level.
"I finally feel like I:m building
a program," said Hall, who is cau-
tious of, the term rebuilding. "I
hesilat~ to call this a rebµilding
year, because we have some
seniors and this is their last shot. "
That last shot is not without
promise, with 6-foot-5 first-team
All-Pacific Coast League and All-
Newport-Mesa District Sam Nel-
son back to add a powerful pres-
ence at the net.
Nelson, a two-time PCL and
district MVP in basketball who
will concentrate on hoops as a col-
legian at the Air Force Academy,
wavered on playing his final prep
volleyball season, but has deed-
ed to lend his ample talent to the
cause.
Senior Brad Wayman. who
HIGH SCHOO( BRIEFS
~c.DM CRUSHES
·FOOTHI LL, 18-0
Sea Kings have far too
much punch in every way
to bolster No. 1 hopes.
SANTA ANA -TENNIS Corona del Mar
High freshmen Peter Kulmaticla
and Randy Myer, making their
varsity boys tennis debut, each
contributed to winning doubles
teams to help pace the Sea Kings
to an 18-0 nOTlleague vtctory
Thursday at Foothill.
· Parker Collins, Brian Morton
and Hunter Jack swept their sin-
gles matches for the Sea Kings ( 1-
0), who are expected to be ranked
No. 1 when the initial CIF South-
e rn Section Division I poll is
released.
NONLEAGUE
ColtoNA DEL MAR 11, Focmttu 0
stngt.s: Collins (CdM) def. Kauman,
6-1, def. Barry, 6-1,..def. Goodman, 6-0;
Morton (CdM) won, 6-1, 6-2, 6·1, Jack
(CdM) won, 6-4, 6-1, 6-1 .
Doubles: Jensen-Taylor (CdM)
def. Mucha-Goss, 6-4, def. Goodman-
Godshall, 6-2, def. Zuckerman-Wilson.
6-3; Shahmardi-Myer (CdM) won. 7-S.
6-2, 6-0; Mozeyeni·Kulmaticki (CdM)
won, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2
Sailors bested, 15-3
NEWPORT
BEACH -Senior TENNIS
'John Rinek won two of his three
matches, but that was about the
extent of Newport Harbor High's
success against visiting Universi-
ty High in a nonleague boys ten-
nis match Thursday as the Trojans
left with a 15-3 decision in Har-
bor's season o'pener.
NONUAGUE
UNlvasrTY 15. NEWPOllT H~ 3
, Single.: Rinek (NH) lost to Bjorkman,
5-7; def. Calungcagln, 6-4; def. Flores,
6-4; Shieh (NH) lost 0-fi. 0-fi, o-6; Oskooi
(NH) lost 0-6, 0-fi, o-6.
Doubles: Bilbeisi-Burr (NH) lost to
Morgan-Ostermann, 0-6; IOS1 to
Freedman-Chen, 1-6; lost to
Frank-Levine, 2-6.
Doubles: Tajima-Snyder (NH) lost 1-6;
won 6-3; won 1·6; Oswandel-Peterson
(NH) lost 0-fi, 3-6, 6-6
Eagles rip La Quinta
MECS~ s TA SWIMMING
Estancia High senior Matt Hoss
won both freestyle sprints and
also swam on two victorious relay
teams to lead the host Eagles to a
101-58 nonleague season-open-
ing boys swimming victory over
La Quinta, while Estancia's girls
earned an equally impressive
102-64~urnph1Jmrsday.
Hoss' clocking of 23.0 in the
50-yard free was nearly two sec-
onds faster than the closest com-
petitor and only a second off the
CIF-qualifying standard.
D.C. Wells and Clint Calkin
were also among the individual
wirmers for the Estancia boys.
Senior Peri Baker, freshmen
Katie Menden, sophomore Lau-
ren Cassity and junior Blake
Frino all posted individual wuns
for ijie Estancia girls, while Bak.er,
Frino and Cassity all contributed
to two winning relays.
CdM wins out, 10-9
NACO~~L B~DMINTON
MAR -Corona del Mar High's
badminton team was a 10-9 win-
ner over visiting Long Beach Jor-
dan Thursday afternoon in non-
league play, keyed by the play of
Brian Katusian and Milcuto Fuka-
da, who teamed for a pair of vic-
tories in the boys No. 2 slot.
Newport toppled
NEWPORT
BEACH -Kevin GOLF
Olson's 86 led Newport Harbor
Higb's boys goU team, but Trabu-
co Hills was too much for the
Sailors as they gathered a 425-
445 win at Big Canyon Country
Oub's par 72 course Thursday.
Other scorers for the Tars (0-1 )
were Mitch Johns (87), Miller
Akins (92). l'raigbe Concannon
(93) and Rusty Hill (99.)
took last year ofi from volleyball
to swim full time, is back to ban·
dle setting chores, an addition
Hall said will help the Eagles
immensely.
"Brad has good hands, he's
quick and he's smart," Hall said.
•tte gives us the ability to run
some plays and run a quicker
offense, which will make it tough
for teams to key on Sam."
Hall said she will utilize Nel-
son in the middle and on the out-
side to keep opposing blockers
guessing, though she admits he
will get the majority of the sets.
Mike Reynt>lds, a . 6-3 sopho-
more, will be another hitting
weapon and will also contribute
to a block Hall hopes can take
some pressure of the Eagles inex-
perienced passers.
Tyson Hellmich, a 6-2 senior,
should also contribute at the net,
while Kelly Newman, a 5-10
. ' . ' . 'II a-•• J : • .. ..... __ lo. ~:
I : • ~II I "'* SI. I • •• ;-.-.1 ..... Ir. : :
., .......... Jr. ::
1 + Eduardo lnlHtl'a, So, I • • + Coach: Dale Hall : ! I I • ' . : L-------------------------~:
junior, is a returning std.rter from
last year's squad, which finished
3-9, 3-7 in league.
Junior Edgar Perez and sopho-
more Eduardo Iniestra, both 5-7.
will see action m the back row.
. . . . .
Hall, still sifting through the !
remaining varsity candidates, :
hopes she can discover some up-:
and-coming talent thdt can con-:
tribute this season, but will need a :
few more weeks before deeding :
on a final roster. :
Estancia opened 1ls season :
Thursday agamst Ocean View. ~
I I
' ' I I _____ ,,., __ ~
briefly
Newport Harbor
captures regatta·
•Sailors roll at Cardinal Regatta in Redwood City.
Corona del Mar
. . . .
REDWOOD CITY -Newport Harbor
High's sailing team dominated the CardJ-SAILING
nal Regatta, hosted by Stanford Uruversity last weeken<;l, winning by
55 points as Brian Bissel and Alison Hill captured the A Division with
29 points, while Scott Hogan and Cryssa Byers took the B Division . •
really going Harbor, last year's defending prep champion, also placed third-in
the JV race under sailors Troy 1Teaccer, Jennifer Porter, Gfay
Dougherty, Kassy Thompson, Tyler Haskell and Paige Thompson.
The performance at the Cardinal Regatta put Newport in a tie for
the PCISA league lead with Point Loma High of San Diego. There are
two more league regattas -in Santa Barbara and San Francisco. with
the top four qualifying for the national championships at the Coast
Guard Academy. back to basics Corona del Mar also competed m Redwood City plaong eighth. The
Sea Kings' satlors were Rob and Bubb Radar, Mike Richter, Jim BQek
and Brian Pentz. • Varsity softball team is
scrubbed; Sea Kings will
go with junior varsity only.
I t started out with 30 players,
15 athletes for each team. But
then something happened.
A frustrated coach, some
lackadaisical players. Suddenly,
the Corona del Mar High
softball program was whittled
down to 14 players and orie team
-the'junior varsity.
Meet Amy Tanner and Buddy
Arkangel, proud mentors of the
Sea King N squad -the only
piece of the program.
"It's going really well,
surprisingly enough," Tanner
said. "We only have 14 (players).
And these girls are really
dedicated.•
Tanner and Ark.angel made
the move from coaching at
Laguna Beach to CdM's reserve
program before they knew that
Robert Weibort was resigning
before the season even started.
•(He had) girls not showing
up for practice, coming late.
leaving early," Tanner said.
When Athletic Director Jerry
Jelnick received the OK to nix
the varsity slate and compete
only at the JV level, just three
girls decided to stick it out on the
softball field.
Those players are sophomore
Jessica King and freshmen
Mijanou Pham-Borst and
Llndsay Hillman.
Pham-Borst was a standout
softball and baseball player last
season in the Newport East Pony
League and will share time in
the pitcher's circle with freshman
Ashley Brown and King.
"They just wanted to play,
they didn't care where,• Tanner
said.
Tanner and Arkangel also
have a pair of upperclassmen.
Joanna Malo is a foreign
LIGHTWEIGHTS
molly
yanity
Orange Coasfs Gray signs with 1\Jsculum
COSTA MESA -Orange Coast College out-FOOT
side linebacker Scott Gray has signed a letter of BAL~
intent to continue his collegiate career at Tusculum College. an NCAA
Division D program in Greeneville, Tenn. .
Gray, a product of Newport Harbor High, was m1ured mucb of li,st
season, but managed to amass 19 tackles and a pair of sacks
Gray was All-CIF basketball player for the Satlors m '90, butdid aot
: piay prep football.
Costa Mesa Speedway's season opens. tonight
COSTA MESA -The Costa Mesa Speedway ...
season opens Friday evening with the 1998 SPEEDWAY.
------------• Coors Light Spring Classic at the Orange County Fairgrounds. : The event will feature '97 World Speedway motorcycle champion exchange student from Ecuador
who will play at either first or
second base.
Junior Jackie McLean will
handle the hot comer or see time
at second.
• Greg Hancock, runner-up Billy Hamill, as well as U S. champ Mike
: Faria and local favorites Bobby Schwartz, Steve Furman and Josh
• Larsen. . Children 12 and under. as well as park.mg and programs, are tree,
• while admission for adults lS $9.
According to Tanner, her
players don't bnng much travel :
ball experience to the ranks, but :
with a big group of freshmen :
and sophomores, the future •
doesn't look all that bad. :
"We're builchng for next year. :
A couple of the girls are really :
talented players. Most have just :
played Bobby Sox and are JUSI •
coming up to play. There are
some who've never played, too,·
she said.
· She ad.at the lack of experienc~~ made for
interesting situation as the
coaching staff is able to work
with, basically, a bunch of utility
players.
"They're all utility players. We
can play them anywhere.• she
said.
The group consists of
Dhanielle Declay, Mara Del.eon,
Cindy Edlund, Stephanie Lorenz,
Ashley Mcintosh, Kaylene Piazza
(who they're hying to mold into
a catcher, of course). Whitney
Rempp and Patncia Villalain.
The first race blasts off at 7 30.
Lakers advance to championship game
FUU.ERTON -The Division I boys New-YOUTH HOOPS
port-Mesa Lakers earned a berth to the
National Junior Basketball area champ1onslup game Wlth a 68-50 win
over the Brea Bulls at Fullerton High School last Sunday.
The title contest will be played thlS Sunday at 5·45 p.m at Pioneer
High against Monterey Park.
In the vi~tory over the Bulls, Nolan Clark led the way with 15
points, while Lu Castplo tallied 13 and nine rebotmds for the Lakers.
Jon Vandersloot And Dane Louvier each added 10 points, wbile
Louvier snagged a team-high 15 boards,
Justin Rowe contributed with six assists
Dodgers win in NHBA Pony premiere
NEWPORT BEACH -Jon Bass worked three innings trom the mound allowing PONY LEAGUE .
three hits and no earned runs while fanning three to lead the Dodgers
to a 7-5 win over the Yankees m the Newport Harbor Baseball Associ-
anon Pony League's premiere 9ame.
Lucas Parker led the Dodgers' offensive attack with a single, a dt1u-
ble and three RBI.
Adam Cherry added an RBI-double. wlule Taylor Gamier added o
run-scoring single. Nick McCarthy also added a key single.
NHBA's Operung Day ceremony is Saturday at Mariner's Park
Quakes seeking players 14 & under
HIGH SCHOOL SWIMMING SUMMARIES COLLEGE TENNIS
NEWPORT BEACH -Youth baseball players
age 14 and under interested m playmg on a com-
petitive club team are inVlted to tryout for the
Newport Beach Quakes.
NONUAGUW
IOYS EsTAH0A 101, LA QuwrA 58
200........, ~ • Not contested.
200 ft'9e · 1. Wefls (E), 2:22.2; 2. Colllel (E),
2:22.6; l , D. Guy (LQ), 2:24.5.
2001M • 1. K. Vu (l0), 2:15.2; 2. Graves (E),
2:36. 1; 3. N. Thorpe (E), 2:39.0.
SO ft'M • 1. lioss (E), 23.0; 2. Secrest (E),
24.9; 3. A. ludunMI (lQ), 25 5.
100fty-1. Gamboa (E), 1:06.6;
2. H. TtMI (lQ), 1:21.7; 3 A. Buckman (LQ),
1:29.7.
.Ull 1-Hoa..W. .53.l; 2 5«rwt (E)
57.2; 3. I . IHIJl/lef (LQ), M 3.8 soo ...... 1. o. Guy (lQ). 6:31 .. 2;
>.Collier (E), 6:.42.2; 3. M Thorpe {E), 7:09.3.
JOO ..... ~. 1 Emnc1a (Holl.. Seer.st.
sec needs 10 to Win
nonconf erence bout
COSTA MBSA Greg
Schrieber received a bues~
loaded walk Sri the bottom of the
ten.th i.rul1J\a to mve tJj Southern
cautoinia College a 4..J wU1 over
Bellevue in nonconre1ence
artlon Thursday. .
The Vanguorot (U ~S) gOt the
pitching win ft6Pl Kelly Lower.v,
wbO went tMte lnningt.
'
N Thorpe, OeWilde), 1:39.2.
UIO beck . 1. No name (lQ), 1 :04.3;
2. Gambee (E), 1'12.4: 3. No name (lQ).
1:15.9. too br'Mlt • 1. C..lkln (E), 1: 16.9; 2. welts
(E), 1:11.1; no name.
«Ml frw relay · 1. Est•ncl•, no time.
i.40l~E¥8Ml:
Eagles fall in five
COSTA MESA -Bstanda
High senior Sam Nelson clouted
.21 kills and senior team.mate
Brad Wayman collected 36
assists to force vtsiting OC:eOn
Vlew to earn a 6-15, 15·10, 7-15,
15·1, 15·9 souon-openlng non·
loegue b6ys VOlleyWll vidoq
1bUJ"lday nJght.
· •1 think some Of our guys
were afraid we wese going to
g aunched, to ~ were a lit·
ile IUrpriled abOut wtmUng. that
tint game,• lhtanda Coim
Dale Hall Nld. •I think tMy
rMlile now tb8Y CIA PJ.ey 'Wltb
anyone.
•Jt w• 9',9 ID tbie fifth game,
but W9 _,._ Ft ... fatig\aed .•
1M ...-nun to llCtioll
S.tuidey in the lhdvwllty "IWr· ........
(LQ), 29.42; 3. Zheng (lQ), 12.87.
100 fty . 1. u.,.res (LQ), 1:15.97;
2. L Cassity (E), 1 :16.67; 3. Shinnen (E).
1:36.79.
100 trw · 1 Menden (E), 1 :05.39; 2.
Un•res (lQ), 1:09.36; 3. Rassmussen (E),
1:15.64. 500 ft'M · 1. Y01Jng (lQ), 6:27.41;
2. Fl•herty (E). 6:42.21; 3. J. Caulty {E),
7:25.17.
200 frw Nlay • 1 EsQncia (L Cdlty,
B•kw, Mendef\, ff"ino) 1:58.81.
100 bllCk. t. Pwalty (lQ), 1:21.18'
2.....M.tYlljfl. J.;2233; ).Jllst!f CE>. 1 :23.ZS._
100 ......... 1. Frino (E). 1:30.70;
2. Smody (LQ), 1:31.04; 3. Payne (E), 1:.43.61.
....... ,...y .1.~~
~yo. J Cassity. F~ 4:46.19.
100AY
• s.te ......
community college men and women
• Ontngt Coast. Santa Ana It Rlllers.lc:l4t
Ot,y COllege, 2 p.m. ..................
Community colleve men end women
-santa Anl, CuytfNC.I at Orange
Coast, 2 p.m. .......
High flChool -NT, Harb« Elks Tournament:~· at~
Hetbor; 3 p.m.; Foothill It C«9na Ciel
Mat; 1:15 p.m. CostA M.-Toumament: coa. Mesa •t ~I p.m. . ......... ..
~~"*'.Orange Cotll Ill s.ru ..w. CC. 7 p,m.
~~ bovs . Ht\dport Hlirbor M.riWl~l.~p.m
•I 'ti# .. .:l'G":'~~ ~ 1-.JO P"" • •• GrW:ow_ ..._._or._ COliit ,....,....... ....
occ wins
COSTA MESA -Martha Gar-:
cia of Orange Coast College's :
women's tennis team blanked her :
Cypress opponent, 6-0, 6-0, to :
lead the Pirates (5-2-1, 4-1 in :
Orange Empire Conference play) :
to a 6-1 wtn over the visiting :
Chargers. :
. . •
Affiliated with the American Amateur Baseball Congress. thP
Quakes will begin spring league play on March 14. The team is com-
prised of 13 and 14-year-old players who will play a 36-game regular
season schedule with at least three additional tournaments.
Home games and practices are held at Corona del Mar High.
although players from throughout Orange County with skills at any
position are encouraged to try out.
To schedule a tryout and for further information, contact head coach
and founder John Elliott at 515-9764.
: iUillM•illl~ .. •
'
Ex-SCC guard jumps from street ball to pro ..
durlng b1I senior season u a Vanguard In
1996-97, Walker graduated with a degree iD
IOdology.
•
•Eric Walker joins the Washington
Generals, a squad that travels with
the Harlem Globetrotters.
By Molly Yanity, Dal/t/ Pilot the opportunity to hone bis skills and ama'red
that he Is where he 11.
And-then things began to happen.
He tried to get tryouts wUh proleaional
teams, but ftguted that coming out of an
NAIA program. he was shooting a little high.
However, a friend of b1i family wu
working at becoming a sports agent. Hill ft.Rt
client WU Walker. Soturday night, Bric Walker, a former
Southern California College basketball
player, felt a dream oo~e true.
Tha.t'I what It was ... a feeling.
He stepped out on to the iloor of the Great
Western Porum in Inglewood and before a
few thousand fans, he played basketball.
A native of Saaamento, Walker learned
how to play hoops on the city streeb, on
blacktop in the para.
He never played high school basketball.
•1 just played street ball, then I got noticed
and my JC coach said U I played forhiul. I'd
go on to a four-year school," Walker said.
1be~endu~pesteringtheGenerals te~ffidals and they finally granted him a
4JYout last week while they were in Los
Angeles preparing for Satwday's showdowu..
"They kept saying how this week they
didn't have time, but they looked at my
highlight tape and finally gave me a coll,•
Walker said "Then they asked U I could
leave Aprll 20th. It's just crazy."
•To perlorm at the Porum,• he sighed,
"It was so cool. It was just amazing.•
Walker played his first game Saturday
witl_l the Washington Generals, a semipro
team that travels with and plays against the
Harlem Globetrotters. ·
Monday he left for Pemacola, Fla. On
April 20, he and his new teammates will
travel to Europe to compete.
The 6-foot~ small fQlWard caught the eye
of Cosumnes Rivets James Clark. Clark
spent the time teaching Walker the
fundamentals of the game, something he
missed in the street game.
But bis talent was undeniable. Coach'BW
Reynolds plucked him out of Consumnes and
suited him up in' sec blue and gold.
Walker aspires to play professionally in
Europe or to become a Globetrotter himseU.
His first taste of the Porum crowd was
enough to sell him.
~--------~---------------------------------------------~
Walker says he is just thankful he is
getting paid to play basketball, grateful for
•1t was the best thing that ever
happened,• Walker said.
After averaging nearly 12 points per game
"You're out in front of all those kids and
you just want to be a role model for them,•
be said. •This is so great.• ·
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FU: 6295 A.P. NUMBER ~ qu••t• euthority to al Ille time ol sale the ope.n-PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC N W. WATIERS aka BENT· 1 1 •• . . treguen es ta citacion Judi· wrlllen conHpondenc• d• 8 u t t •, Er I ck• on ,
ED Of nd ... Ind nd indeOledness due In WA · be granted unleSJ an 1.i-232·11 NOTICE Of TRUS. edminieter the Ht•t• ~bid ~Y be less 1hari Ille OTICE LEY WATIERS eke BEN W adm n atrallon autl"'luty will cial usted Ilene un plazo de livered to the Cit~ Council Cow• n 1 Som• r a .
TEE'S SALE UNDER OE u er tne epe ent ilion IO cash. lhe T11.1stee PUBLIC NOTICE BSC 7070 TTEAS aka B.W WAT· tertsled person flies an Ob-30 DIAS CALENDARIOS Ill, or prior to, t • public NOES: Mon•han. Aa..
rRUST YOU ARE IH DEFAULT Admlnletr•tlon of Et· _. aooept cashier's checb NOTICE OF TEAS jectlon 10 the petition and para preeentar una re-hearing. SENT: None.
UNDER A OEEO Of TRUST, tatH Aot . (Thie euthori· d!M"I on a state Of national BSC 7084 PETITION TO .A PETITION h111 been show good cause why tho spuesta escrlta a maqulna MARY T. ELLIOTT, THE FUU. TEXT of 1,,_
DATED JanuatY 21. 1~. UM-ty will allow th• pe,.on-ba'lk, a check drawn by a NOTICE OF ADMINIS E filed by LEROY J. REIN· coun shOl.ltd not grant the en 85111 corte. Deputv Cltv Clerk ordinance ma" be read In LESS YOU TAKE ACttUl'f TO el reprHentetive to tek• state or federal aedlt union. PETITION FOR T R HARDT In tht Superior authority Una carte 0 una llamado Publlshtd Newport ' PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, many actione without or°' e chetj(~ ds m 'Ya_ state APPOINTMENT OF ESTATE OF: Court of Call1ornle, County A HEARING on the pell· teltfonlca no le olrecera Beach·Coata Mesa D 11 lht City Clerk's Office, 17 IT llAY BE SOLD AT A P\J8. obt.inlng court approv-'8defal and lo!M' p OBATI! MARCELLA of ORANGE. lion wfll bt htld on APRIL proleeclon; su respuesta a Y Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. LIC SALE. If YOU NE!O M el. Before taking certllin association s as.soda-CON:ERVATOR VICTORIA WATTERS THE PETITION requtsta 2, 1998, at 1:45pm In Dept. e1orlta e maqulna tlene que Pilot March 6, 1998. MARY T . El.LIOTT,
EXPLANATIOH Of Tl4E NA· very Important ecdons. lion °' saWig, 'i.'flk. .~ •k• MARCELLA that LEROY J. REINHARDT 703 located at 341 The City cumplir con 185 lormaU· F886 Deputv Cit~ Cl•rk TURE Of Tl4E PRC>aEOIHG however th• penional fied'tnSectJOn5t 2of~h: OF THE V WATTERS be appointed II peraonal Drive South Orange CA dades legales apropladas PUBLIC NOTICE Publiahed Newport AGAINST YOU, YOO SHOULD • . .11 b nancial Code aulhorized ESTATE Oft • representative to admlnls· 92888 ' ' sl usted qulere que la corte CONTACT A LAWYER. NoCioe rr•ePq~j~~t::"!vew:W,tic: to do buS!neSS in this ~te PEOYE JANN BECHLER •kak•MARM.Vy. WATTERS ter the estate of the dee,. IF YOU OBJECT to the escuche •u caso. ___ S_U_M_M_AR_Y_O_F__ Beach·Coata Mesa Dally
ii hefebY given It* U .S. Trull . .-Said sale WIU be made, in an kll PEOVE JANN • MARCELLA dent. I f h I Si usted no presenta su Pilot M11ch 6. 1998 Deed fl~ a Cllffomll to mterHted persons ·AS IS-condition, but Wllholrt e VICTORIA MAY THE PETITtON requests grant ng 0 1 8 petit on, you respuesta a tlempo puede PROPOSED Fm
CotporltiOn, IS ~. °' unleu they heve aMWllWll or wcwrantv. ex-MARSHALL, COLDWELL tht dec~tnt'a Wiii and rhould~ppear 81 the hear· pe<der el caso, y le 0pueden ORDINANCE sucx:esscr INslM, °' IUbltilu'9d waived notice or con-~-• reoartr~ II-PROPOSED •k• MARCELLA codicils, If any, bt edmlntd ng 1 a s~te ~our :: qultar su salarlo, su dl~ro CITY OF
rus'9ll ~I IO the Deed ct aented to the ~roposed • of ~ CONSERVATEE, to probate. Tti. Will and lee' ons °' 1 e w tten y otru cos111 de au COSTA MESA
TIUSI executed by Oetm11 G action.) Tht;t . •nd•p.en-edriess ~,, ~'1S88(j A MISSING PERSON, V~~~~RN~ C~L:1~~~L codicils art avalleble fat :~~~ ~~~rl~: ~~~ : propiedad 1ln avlso adlcio-A PROPOSED ORDI·
Plan en ul'W'nlrl19d women A&. dent ad"!'1n11trat1on of Ttust lhefeun.. CASE NO. A191089 T II hel 'be ficiarlt examination In tht fllt kept pearance may be In person nal por pa.rte dt 111 cont. NANCE Is achedultd for
CXll'ded an 02/0711991 • n. euthonty will be grented der _,,· 11~ ~ To PE a y E JANN ° a rs. ne 1 ~· by the coun. b Exl11tn otro1 requl1l101 te· adoption at the regular City SINmlnl No 91~56641 of~ unleH •n interHted encl the unpaid ~-of BECHLER aka PEGYE credit0ts, contingent credi-THE PETITION requests °fF ~~~~o~~~EDITOR ga(fs. Pued-1 que Ulltd Council meeting of March
oil RecotOs tn the dlial of lhe person files en objection !he Note T~ Saij JANN MARSHALL. 81\d tc ~~h~~/~1'fn~e ~~.~~~ euthonty to edmlnl1ttr th• or 8 contingent CfedtlOt 01 qulera llama1 a un at>ogado 16, 1998, being Ordinance
County Recorder ol Orange to th• petition end Deed o( ,,.... ....,, all heirs, bentllclarlts, the will or estate r Ot both estate und~r t~ lndtptn-the dectas~. you must lilt lnmtdlatamtnte SI no 98·8, amending Sec11on g.
Col.my, Caldomla. ere! purll*lt shows good cauae why thereon as provid.ed tn crtdotors. contingent credo· of· MARCELlA VICTORIA dent Admlmacralion of E•· your ctalm wllh the court conoce a un abogad 338 of the Costa Mtse Mu-
to Ille NobCe of Otlalft Ind the court should not ~~s0~ ~BI089; tori, and persons who may WATIERS aka MARCELLA tales Act. (This Authority and mall 8 copy 10 the per· puedt llamer a un 11rvlclo nlclpal Code to requite ap-Bedlorl to Sel MN1dar ,. grant the euthority. ...,...,.... • .-.. >f ho ruSlee otherwise be interested In v WATIERS al< M V wlll allow the l)eftonal rtp· sonat representatives-ap. dt reterenc1a de at>ogado• plicants for manage prac-
oatOad 11/17/1997 a lnlW-A HEARING on the 9[~ ~~~~y tht conserva1orshlp of the WATIERS aka MA~Y MAR: resantatlv~ to takt many pointed by the coun within o a una oficlna dt ayuda 1it1on11'1 llctnsea to pass a ment No 97~514215 of said petition will be held on ~ ~ estate of: PEGYE JANN CELLA VICTORIA MAY actions without court ap. lour months from the date legal (vea el dtrectorlo tel• written examination admln-Olfoal Racords. WI Sel an Apnl 2 1998 et 1.
451
Coon BECHLER aka PEGYE COLDWELL aka MAR proval. Balore taking c ... ol 11111 Issuance 01 the lot· fonlco). latertd by th• Costa Mau
OYl2f1991 at At tlle llaln p M in 'oe t 703 lo~et-Ill JANN MARSHALL, pro-CELLA VICTORIA COLD: lain v~ Important ections, ltrt 81 provided In section CASE NUMBER Pollet Department.
(Nortll) Entrance to t11t Countv ad ·et 3T1 · The City ' ~-' posed con1t1V11tee, a miss· WELL however, the personal rep. 9l00 of the <.:allfornla Pro-(Numaro del C•ao) THE MOTION to glva Or-
Courflou1t 700 CMc Center Drive p 0 . Box 14171 In Ing per10n. A PETITION has bten resenletlvt win be required bait Code. The ti11.e for 'U· 22 91 118 dlnanct 98·8 first reading
Df1W ~t Santi, Alla, Ce al Oren e · CA 92613_ Ii ~ 18 Y. A petition has been filed 1lled by LEROY J Rf IN· to give notice to lnlefested Ing claims will not expire The name and addrtll of c11rltd by tht loltowlng roll t:'5 A..M. at public IUClkln. to 1c.,1g by ERIC BECHLER In the HARDT In the Superior persons unleu they have before lour month1 from th urt I. (El b ~all vote: COUNCIL the l!IQhesl blddet for Clllt IDIY· ~ . -Suf>erlOJ COOft of Calil<>f-wal11t<1 noJ/Ct or consenltd he hfftl Iced e co s. nom " Y M a Ma E-.. a -A y E s lllle it the tme of ula 11 l8wful IF YOU OBJECT TO =c:b atle nla, Count of Orange. CourT of C-llifClrnta, County to lhe proposed action.) 1 ng clete not arreccTon de 11 corte ••l " 1 • 1
money of Ille Urllled Staaes), al the granting of the debt My The peulon request• that of ORANGE. Tht Independent odmlnls· above. MUNICIPAL COURT OF Bun•, Mon•h•n, Erick·
right title, and ln'8reSt, con-petition. you 1hould ¥.IN bit fof ERIC BECHLER be ap· l~~ELE~glTJO~El~eH~~~ tratlon authority will bt li~Ok~p~:yyth~~~7t ~~ CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF eon, Cow•n, Somera.
•
•
def Slid peed of Trust WI lhe end atete "/.our obJeC· of the estate ol PEOYE repre~~tative 10 ~minis-ested person m91 an ob· the estate, you may Ille DISTRICT, 81411 13th St .. None.
veyed to .-.cl now held by It un-eppeer at the hH~ng •. 0212711998 and pointed as tht conservator b: 8 ointed' 85 rsonal granted unless an Inter· are 8 person Interest~ In ORANGE, WEST JUDICIAL NOl!S: None. ABSENT:
pioperty SitUa~ WI slid~ tio!'• . or ftle . written 4 JANN BECHLER, the miss· ter the estate ol the dece-jectlon to the petition snd with the court a formal Re-Westminster, Ca. 92683 THE FUU. TEXT of tht or·
Ind StMt henlinlfllr d8tatled: ob1ect1one with the Ing person. dent. show good cause why \he quest tor Special Notice of The name addrHs and dtnance may bt read In the -
Aa men fuly delatled an Uid court before the hear· Tht pelltlon Includes an THE PETITION requests court should not grant the th• hllng ol en inventory · · City Clerk'• Office 77 Fair -Deed°' Trust. Tht 5 ing, Your appearence PUBLIC NOTICE application fOf the lndtpen· the decedent's Will and autho~. and appraisal ol estate as· telephone number of plain. Drive Costa Me11 ' l'f'f cnas Ind 04tlet common mev be in person or by denl axerclse of powa!S codicils If eny be admitted A H RING on the pell· HIS or of any petition or lilra anorney, or plalnll11 MARY T ELLIOTT \U
NllOI\, I llt'f, of the,.... your attorney YOO Nlf/! .. D9NJLT U... under atcilon 2590 of the 10 robate The Wiii and tlon will bt held on APRIL account 15 provided in without an enorney, Is: (El • • () delcri>ed aboY9 ls~ to IF YOU , ARE A DER A Dll!I) ~ 'TNJST, Probatt Code. Powers re-cod~clls ar~ available for 2, 1998 at 1:45pm In Dept. section 1250 ol the Calilor· nombre, la dlreccion Y el Deputv Cltv Clark
be 721 & 721 1 ~ CREDITOR or a contin-DilTB> #'NL. a, 1M. U... quested art: examination In the file kept 703 located at 341 Tht CltX nta Probate Code. A Re-numero dt telelono del Pub 111 h 8 d N 'w P 0 r1
AWft~ ~· gent cledltor of tho LDaYOOlNCmN:TIONTO 1· !he power to sell al by the court. ~~~:S South, Orange, C quHt for Special Notice abogado del csemancsanlt Beach·COtta Mtu Dally I~=:::=:::=::::==::::=:=:=~ :!na q~b = decHted: you '!'Ult file Fil)IB:I YOUR ,..._ :'~:.~~afr;;~t:e~al~fr~ THE PETITION requests IF YOU OBJECT to lht form la avallable from the o del demandanta que n~ Pilot March e, 1998
conednllS al .. piqieny td-your clMm with the anY, IT IMr •ICU> lf.r A tslate. Y au1horlty to administer tht granting of th• pehhon, you coun clerk. Ilene abogado, 11) F882
cha llld or. common ~ court end mllil e copy to fl\&JC UUL p YOU 2 The pow" to purchase estate under the lndepen. should appear al lht hear· Altornev for Petl• LAW OFFICE OF JAMES PUBLIC NOTICE
Nllen, ii eny, stlO'MI 1111911 The the peraonel represent• Nl!l!D M ~ ~ rtil or peflonal property. dent Admlnlstr~llon of ~s· Ing and state your ob-tloner: M. BAZE. 16458 BOLSA ----------*' lmCUlt ol tlle~tJ9. tlve appointed by the ~~~ 3. The power to txefclst :'1f~11ACl.lh{ThlS A~0tity jec:tiona °' ftle wnntn ob-COLLE~N BARNEY, CHICA ST #3l2 HUN· SUMMARYOF
mot 118 otlligabi ..:Ind court within four YOO IHOULO CCNTJICT~ ~Ioele rights and 11ock op· resent~~"' ~o~a'i:' ,;:~ lectJons with th• court l>4t-ESQ. ICS8#187048) TINGTON ··BEACH. CA PROPOSED ....,,CIRIC-by fie propetty ii be -*In months from the date l.MYl!ll NOnca ~ lions. aciions witho\11 court a ore the hearing .Your ap. RICHARD J . 926419 17141 73g.7740 St ORDINANCE .,. ...... ~·~casts. U · of firat iuueryce ~f ~ U&.2 NQ. 4. Th• pow~ to P8Y.· COi· proval. Before taking ct. pearanct may bt in person ALBRECHT, ESQ. BAR ; 103198 ' CITY OF ~MM =:: .:'-?=J.,': lett':/1 e9 1goVldrd thn 1'19t17 On Mlrdt ao, 1-::C~t~~~~~~5~r~1!~:· taln very lmp<>Nnt actions, °fFb~~~~o~cvAEDITOR ICS8'01S0406) DATE: FEB 14, 1997 COSTA MESA c.m.t.ry • Mortua1y
Ille Nodct S. • sec on o e tt 02:00 P.M.. tt h Harth d.Ots or demands upon however, lilt personal rap-at a contingent cmtttOf of ALBRECHT & fl ARNEY, RICHARD W BIQOINS A PROPOSED ORDI· ~ • er.m.toty
$392.44(1 '2 In addlllol'l IO cash Caltfornee Probete C~e. -*m to h Cawtty the c0ntt1Vatorshlp rtHntatlve will bt required tht dtcNSed yo\l.rnull folt 1 PARK PLA.2,l, STE. Clerk br 'a AR BARA NANCE la scheduled fOf
Ille Tnmee Wll ec:c:epc a c:asn: Th~ ume for fill!"Q 1aD avtc ~ 5 Tht power 10 ·employ to give notice to Interested your clelm Wlth the coun 3 O O, I Av t H E 1 CA EDDY• De ut adoption et the reguter Chy 3500 Padlo View o.tw
... c:tl8dt drl'M'I on a st.Ille°' cl84ml Wiii not expire DIM w... ........ anom•y• accountants In-persons unless they have and matl. copy lo the per· 92814 I p v Council mtttlng ol March Newport a..ctt OlllOOlf Miit. a cnedl drl'M'I by before four . month• CA In h di:'/ d llf'llll ..,_ vestment· counsel, agents, waived notlct Of coosented aonal rtpresenlatlvt ap-Pubtlahtd Newport Published Newpo.rt 111, 1998, bt1ng Ordinance .... uoo
1 stale°' federal credit union°' from the hearing date d ar.... .... al dtposltarles and employ· to tht proposed action.) pointed by th• court whhln B h·C t M D 11 Beach.Costa Mtse D11ly 98-7, amending Section 12· I .. ==~====~ a c:tl8dt drlWll by 1 lllte °' led-noticed eove. Clmcini8 "8con-fft and 10 pey lht t•· Tha lndtpend~t ad.minis· lour months from lilt datt p~ac M o~ ; 6 ;se 998
8 Y Pilot Febrvery 13, 20. 27. 59 of lht Coate Mna Mu-ff PIEIM:E mllliEll
etal llllllQS and loan aaocla-YOU MAY eiAM-~ c.omp.n,, • C.. pen11. tratlon authortty will bt of first Issuance of tht ltt· ot arc , , , 1 March 6, 1998 nl~ipel Code tltabllahlng IEU. --·--
liOfl. savings auoddon °'UY-INE the file kept by the CCllpcwillkw1, u dAttf A hearing on tht pttitlon granted unleas an Inter· te<s as provided In Hctlon m094 F819 an alttrnltt member tor .....,..,.,
(lQS ber* toealltCI in Sedlorl oexlrt If you .,. e per-"PflCltilllCI n.... undlr will be held on March 23 tsted pe<son 11111 an ob-9100 of the California Pro-the Perks, Rec:rtetlon Fa· M~ *Chapel
Sf02 of the F=inanall Code Ind son interHted in the tfllltl ~ Da8d d 1'Ult 1911B at 1:45 p.m. In De: Jec:tlon to the petition and bate Code. Tht time IOI Ill· PUBLIC NOTICE cilltlH and Parkways Com-Creinatk>n
au1horiz.ecl to dO bualntls in 11\is fftato file ....,.... by Jlrw A. partmant 703 located at· show good cause why the Ing claim• will not expire PUBLIC NOTICE ml11lon.
sl8'8 In the tNent tender~ with he you rt ":7c 81 ~ and D8llanh 0. 3"t The City Drive South. court should not grant the belort four months from 1ST AMlNDED THE MOTION to give Or· 110 ~II" !hen cash 15 8CCllCltad the t oou e orm ~ ....._.. 8'ICI wl'e a 0 c life 1 92668 • authority. tht haorlng date noticed SUMMONS NOTICE OF dlnanct 118·7 firat rtacflng Com Mesi'
TniAM may 'tMlhhold the, lslU-RequHt for Specie! ,........ on A11r11 t'onge,P: G ~nEa JANN A HEARING on the pell-above (CITACION JUDICIALI PUBLIC Hl!ARINO carried by the foUowlng roll
lnClf of Ille lrusl88'a Dead llllil Notice of the filing of an 12, 1 •~Ho. BECHLER aka PEG YE don will be held on APRIL YOU . MAY EXAMINE tht NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: NOTICE IS HEREBY call volt: COUNCIL Ma .. tlO
funds becorre IVllabll IO Ille Inventory and eppr81e.i f11IO, In ilool ""\ Pligil JANN MARSHALL: Al the 2, 1998 al 1 :45pm in Dept. file kept by the court. 11 you (Avlao a Acuudo) TERRY GIVEN that a public ti.ar· ME M 8 E RS 1 AYES: 11111•------•il ~ °' tndOr1et as 8 mdlr of Htat• HHts or of-. d Olftc:lill ~ d ht1tlng a conservator may 703 located at 34t TM Clly are a person tnterttt~ In LONDON Ing will bt held by the jf;:::::::::::::::=::::::::::::ii d right. Said sale 11141 be rnede, •nv petidon or eccount ~ .... al bt appointed tor your 11• Drive South. Orange. CA tht 1111111, you may Ill• YOU ARE BEING SUED BY Coate Mn• City Council blA Without OOYenlnl °' ..,. •• provided In Hotion undlr h= tat• Tht appointment may 92668. with lilt court a formal R• PLAINTIFF: (A Ud. I• etta' on Monday, March 111, "Affi d bl rll!Cy. uprw °' ~ ,.. 1260 of the Celifomie .. ~ atlKt or transfer 10 the tF YOU OBJECT to the quest for Special Notice of demandando) MELANIE 1998 at 8:30 p.m .. or ea or a e ~ *· ~ 01 • Prob eta Code. A R• ... It pubic alCtlon to conservator your right to granting of the petition, you tht hllng ol en Inventory LYNN GRUND£R eoon thereafter as poa. ~· to uldy fie ~ quHt for Special Notice ~ lllltdlW lllf CMh, contract 10 manage and ahould eppear at the hear· and appraisal of Hiatt H· You have 30 CALENDAR Sible. In tht Counc:ll Cham-~' ~ by Uid form 11 8Wlilable from or ct** M dWUlled .,. control property, to give Ir>-Ing and 1ta1t ~ur ob-aets or ol any pelltlon Of DAYS after lhla 1ummon1 btra of Cl1y Hall, 77 Fair Alternative" Dead .iv.aa lllf9UllCler the court derk. low, ll8\llll:lllt • 1118 ._ d formed consent for medical jectlons or file wri1ten ob· account 11 provided In It Hrved on you to me • Drive, Cotta Mell, on tti.
w1f1 iiw.a • p!Olldsd ..... : AtMu•r fw ..... ,_, ... In 1llwftll ~ d .. trtttment, to I•• place c 1 Jecuons with lht court be-MCtion 1250 ol the CaltfOf· typewrlntn rtspon11 at this followinQ lta1t:
auVl fie""*'~ btilnoe ......... ......... .... ~ ..... d Anmtca. rHidence, and to many. urt th• heating. Your •P-nla Probate t!odt. A Re-court. Elnending Urgency Ordl· D1'scount Casket of fie tc. l8CU'ld by Uid 18201 v .. a.-~.,.._or You may also bt dlaqua1 •. pe1tanc:e may bt In per1on quest for Special NOClct A lener or phone call wlll nance ~ tor tO months · '
Dead wlfl 1111n11 f*'800 • Aw .... 1190 '"9':', •to~ tied from voling It found to °iF b~6~ ~~°f'C~EDITOR form Is avellablt from lht not prottc1 you; Vo"' ly~ and 15 days regarding land
p!Olldsd " .., ,_ .... .... CA 8Zllt2 or -----bt Incapable ol completing . . court Clerk. written rtlponH must be Ult regufatlont for adult Cremation & dlllV'I n ~ 0d hi 03/06 03'°8 03112 rlatlt. Ille and ....._ an atfidavll of voter rtgls· °' a contingent cr~ilor of Attorney for the Pell· In proplf tegel loon If you buslneues;/rovtdlng tor ff.
WAee end of fie Wiii a.-d • • "°"' filld br I M adl ~ tr1tlon The judge or tht lh• deceased" you must lilt tloner: want the court to near your cens1ng an regUlallon of
IJy ..., Oetd d Tl\lll O.S PUBLIC In and to h '*Ac court Investigator wUI ex· your claim with lilt court WIUIAM J Kl!l!Ll!R cast. adult 6uslnffHt; and re-B rial Se vi 1211111• U .S. Trvst o..d NOTICE .. pniperty ......a plain to you lht nature, and r111 a copy to the pt<· ESQ 1csa105741St) II you do not Iii• your ,. pealing tt:ctlons lnconalt· u r ce ~ sMcJ TIUdle In .. _.... CGuntY.., purpoH end tllecl of lti. aona rtpresentatlvt ap-., lponH on 11 '" you may tent thertw1th
Celbr-. ~PO &o: STU'S --.11o*APN:•~ proceedings ind aniwer pointed by the court wilhln DOWLINQ, AARON & loM 1ti. case,' end your NOTICE tS FURTHER Wh h Id bj 270ll ~ !Nctl. c. ti "l»mlTA· f'IMCIL1: qutltlonl conc;.emlng ,.,. lour months from the date KEELER, 8051 N. wagH, money and prup-GIVEN lhet at H id time y s OU you SU ect
el54'T.ZTOQ (71•~Z.fffi By. ~· Lat 21 and °"'* pcw1lon d txplanatlon. YOU liAVE ol first !nuance of tti. ltl· FAES NO ST A I! I: T , trty may bt taken without and place all lnltrHltd YOU f Self & YOUf famt' )y to ~A ""1fl/'tt TIUdle SMi ' l4't l'D ol 'ftad NQ. m2, In THE RIGHT TO APPEAR ters as !)(Ovid~ In section STE. 200 FRESNO, CA further warning from the PlfSORS may ~pear and
Q'b-Hx SaiN ~. • Cly: ~-=:=:t ~ipJ~~ r~~~IT~~ ~~ g!ct~~T~l:='~O~rrfi: 93710
1 c:h.'.;e are Other legal f8-~ :erf.,!>ya~~.~~= paying inflated prices for ~ Go To. ~ • pow • ,. You nave lht rt ht to hire Ing clalms witt not expire Published Newport qulrtmenta. You may want hem. -WM! OI Cel c:ianlldln ..... PlllglCll 111 anomt of ~r choice btlore four months from Btach·Coata Meaa Delly to call an anorney right IF THE Ar'OREMEN• C3SketS & Services???? ~ 311119119 5'2 2/20, :M ~ • lncilltW d 10 rtprtlt~I yo~. Tht court tht he811ng date noticed Piiot Match e, 12, t3. 1998. away. II you do not know TIONED ACTION IS CHAL·
• ....,._ ...,., In h wlll appoint an attorney 10 above. FTh887 an attorney, you may call LENGED IN COURT. the Call Toll fttt J-888S4CASKEf
PUBLIC NOTICE • d h County ,.. reprtaent you 11 you are YOU MAY EXAMINE the an attorney r•lerrlf HMCt challenge may be limited 10 " :r d _.. ~ unable 10 retain one. You lilt kept by the court. If you PUBLIC NOTICE or a legal aid office (Hated only tholt l11ue1 raised at Suvtna Orange & Slnou.ad1ng Colntlet
,.._ • • etlOM'I on h must pay IM cost 01 that are a peraon Interested In BIO 7058 In tti. phone book). the publlc hearing de-J~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ ~ 8Mdt Lat Une •ltomey 11 you are able the estate, you may lilt Deaputa de qua It en-acribe<I In thl• notice or In tt;...-.~~':.; You have th• right 10 • Ju,Y ::!'.:",:r T~~.f~~ceR:i ,~r~~C:N°;0
..,.,,.... No.~ d tt1,;11iotr ~~ECT to the the fifing of an Inventory ADMINllTIR
Cllldlll ...... al llllld gfentlng of the petition you and appralsal of estalt 11' ESTAT• 0~1 ~=L,2~== QourCy. fllMCIL 2: ._. ~ h l... HU or of any petlUon or Ml!ALB • SHR""'B k , ...... M daaat.d II\ and ap~ar If t 1 nwll• accounl H JrOvldtd In •• •• e 8
lllf h supoe. Mt bth In l~and ;=t• vour o IC· atC11on 1250 tilt Calif or· MERLE ELLEN 8.U.IVR OAWl~~~~~· md .Y11 oLJhll t ~ .,,..wnntf't o nla Probatt Code. A R• CASK NO. A1tt 183 CirWri ........,-~ TOf T~.rtrotkt 1'1nllllt1tt, !Jlnlftefll!H;
ol eowr.a. C:O.dlalw ::_ h::t. Y:--.,.::-:; IOtm Is available from the crtdltOft, coming.nt credl-
lnd ... _.'*'• ,....... bY 111 court cl«k. '°"" and Plflont who may a In-..., II, ~ • ~ r,~U ~·A CREDI· .Attome1 for IM Petf. Olhtr#f .. be lnt.,nttd In
107 of ... ~ d c.. TOA, Of • conl=edl-tlon•ri Iha WIH or !',lat•, Of bOth, -..-d 111111 ~ ....___..,_ '"'"WU&.IMl..J K••L•R ot: MERLI! E. SHAEVE aka n. ... M1MC ol .. """•--·1 ' ,. MO.U! ELL!N SHAl!Ve -·-~'"a..-~ ~ 1ttffttd In ll'ta ol the HQ.,JCHfOIS748t) A PmTION hell btat1 ...... ....a\ ~ rnooNCI COllMfV .... , L JfQ1 Q ON & filed b; WlltlAM H .
... n -1• 1 t =-~ t:'°"'~O:I KIRUR, 1011 N. SHREW end JUUA M. AR·
..... JISJ w ... _. \Written request for IP8Clal PR•INO ITIH•T1 T!MAHO In tl'4I ''2::,..'°' -'t-"!..~ d .. not.Ice of 1M N1nQ of irwtno ITL 200, FRRSN01 CA ~~fomle, 'Y
.._. ,._ -1 al Im 1°"89 end apptaltalt of .. 83110 THI! Pl!TinoN r Ill =-"! 1 r= &alt UHtt °' of any oetl-'ubllthtd Newport \hit WIWAM H I~
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E ':t ... --.. • ~O:::>~UMAC,C Piot March e, 1z, 13, 1991. TlfllTANO be appointed .. ~ • --lof ........ ., 'Not....... FThM8 '*10NI ttptttenl1W.t 10 _ ..-.. .._... "''"' ld4"lllnltter lhe Htat• of the .... a • • EE btn 11 ~bl• from Ille PUBLIC NOTICI! dectdtnt. ,._ .. a ....... mun dttk. THE PETITION t4tquetll ..... .._ ......., ... Attemer fer the '•U. ate 1011 th• decedent'• w111 end ................... ta....rt NDTIC• 01' COdiclll, II anv. be admitted ••w I a t ., ----LAW O"'ICKI 01' PllTITION TO to probate. The Wiii And =.-:.:as$ >5~ =~·.~M--~O~~~IN, AOMIMllTU f: 1~•1,:-::.llt=
d .. .... s'f' ... aaQ 1100 Perk c-. •STATI O'• k•"' by the c°""· ....._ II: Ja1 ~ ~ I ..... aaNTLllY THI PETITION reqUfttt
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FAIOAV. MAftCH 6, 1998
PUIUC MOTICll PUlltC NOTICH PUBLIC NOTICH PUBLIC NOTIC£1 PUBLIC NOTfCfS PUBLIC NOTIC'ZS PUBLIC NOTl~ES PUBLIC NOTICH PUIUC NOTICIS PUii.JC llOT1Cll
-.WKJC IOTICI ~-L 1a ',.. • PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUIUC NOTICE ouci.o by: • corPOt~ PUBLIC NOTICE Have rov *'**' ~ Thi• b"aln•A 11 con-Tt1ia iMllfuliH ~on--... NewDolt A =· 11 1 .Uvl you lllfltd dOWlg buslnffa ytt? Yn. tJ8e dUC'led br. M lndMduail dUctM by. en~ ~ ..UP .. ~M"OP T'Ultfn. C11.1i7tc1 ~II. '1otJll04ta 8dlMM '1ctJtfow 8u-1MH Flctllloua aualneu buslnnl Ytl1Yn,1981 F1olltloua luthtHt 8e1ctl Accen, Inc, Th~ Have you ti-'" dGlr'IQ HWI yoii_...'::-' cloiri9 A»Of'IU OROIMMCa Onbeth e--.... l3'1 MAIM •tatom.nt NW lt•tomMt N..,. •tatomont Minl·Mallttt lnc:Ofl)Oftled, N•mo Statement maa J Mooto-PfetidtN tiuwwea ~HO ~~-r-· Cf1'Y Of' ....,.~.,,.. 1 The ~ peraone .,, Thi 1~ Plfl<IN .,, The following ~on• 111 Emma Happ, Control!.,, Tht fotlowlng l*IOnl .,, Thl1 ltltement nt ~*' SHl'I T Connet _ _.. ---•" COSTA PaaA ~Ave., U. IU.5, doing bualnn1 u : ~ bua!MS1 u : dOlng bullnfft u : C1'0 dol"9 t>Yt1net1 u · wl1h tht Couoty C1tt1C ol 'ttu tllltment wu Ai.cs Tl'lll ~ .,.,.. filtd ~ O .. Ol~ANCa ti .. It ~hll ?'-1'27IO I INDEPEND£NT FOA!CLO. 0uiek·Sm11h, 305 N, Hll· C11t1erock fnterprl 11, Thie tl•tement wu Mid UNLIMITED BUSINESS C>ilnge County on 2·11·M YJ1lh Int Counly Cletk of ~~ ~:..t .echeduled lo be In full duc;ted ~~!!..a_~ ~~Z SURE ASSJSTAHCE SER-bot Blvd. 1101, FIA!efton, 1927 A Hllbor Blvd. 11373, wllh lht County Cterk of S 0 LU TI 0 NS, 3 O 77 1MU74t108 Ortngt County on 2·2 ..... --..... t...:;4aS'9 ~ Ind elect ~ daym nenhl • --~ ...... VICES, 222 Fuhlon lane. CA 12932 Costa Mn•. CA 92627 Orange County on 2·24·99 Coolidge Av• . COlll Daily Pilot feb. 20, 27. 18911710075 tom Ila edopdon on Maid\ Htlw p dolna Suite 214, T\nlln, CA 92780 Unda Smtih, 504 19th SL Stwon L. Thadeut, 2450 19911710090 M ... , C~ 92620 Mat. 8, 13, 1"8 F151 Deify Pilot ""-'· I . 13, 20, o.lly Nol fet>. 13, 20, Z'I, z. 1-. and WU ~ bullnnt°" yeJ~ Jen. (. Wllllam Lewis Ml"er, 222 HunUnglon Btach, CA Newport Btvd. 1219, Co$11 o.iiv Pilol Ftb 2T, Mii 8, Samuel J Cllfk. 3077 BL N T c 27 1998 Fm Mii. .. .... '831 by ltlo tolOwtng IOI eel 91 • · • Fuhlon Lant 1214, Tustin, 92&48 M .... CA 82627 13 20 1998 F872 Coolidge Ave • Co111 PU IC 0 I E '
vote: COUNCIL 11•.. CA 112780 Anclr11 Ouk:tl, 305 N. Har· Lane• A. Devy, 2450 New-' • MH•. c~ 92826 PUBLIC NOTIC! · PUIUC NOTICE
81Rla Ai'ala luff• ~e:.r.!:t~u filtd Douatu Ali.ti Btckstrom, bor Blvd. 11101, FUl1¥1on, pan Blvd., 1219, eo.11 PUBLIC NOTICE Thi• bu11n1u 11.1 con-PUBLIC NOTICE 1 • .;;... .. "----...... ---M 1' I I II 1 with thl Col.WI C .,-1 f 18855 Hidden CrMk. Vic· CA 92832 M .... CA '2927 dueled by· an lnd1v1crual Thi ll'lnual repott of the flctltloU9 lu .. no. ,.totltleue 8uJnen
C •fta an, a' 0 eon, Or ,.~....., ty 1 o torvtlte, CA 112392 Thi• butln111 11 con-Thi• b ... 1lnH1 It con-F1ctltloua Bualnou H1v1 you 11111ed do11lQ l(ld ldenllficaUon Dlghal Nomo Statement Nam. lt•tonMnt
• "• 8 • • • • r • • 0"90 ....,._ .. , on 2·24·118 Thia bu1lne11 11 con-ducted bv: 1 11-al patt· ducted by: )olN venture Nam. ltatemont butinessJ•r? No Slt'VlcH, Inc. Founcl11Jon 11 Th• tollowlng penot1t ate The t~ PltlOM at•
MOllla None. MIUIT1 tffll7S0027 ducted by: 1 gener.i part. nerahlp Have you atOtted doing Thi to11owl119 !*•on• 11• Semutl . Clark 1vallabl• 11 the addrtH doing t>Yilnni H ! dolnQ bWIMI• u :
N9M. Qllly Piiot ftb. 27, Mar. 8, netthip Have you 1t1t11d dol119 butln111 yet? Vtt, 2·9-118 doi119 bualne1111: _1 Thi• llatement w11 flied •hown belOW, tor lnspec-P1cUic Tan Salon. ~2 RON Cootdlnatlotlt. 4801 ORDINNCI 9M amtndl 13, 20, 1998 Ft70 HIV• you 1llfted dol119 bYtlntH yet? No Sh11on L. Th1deu1 The Feed Zone, 34700 .... w11h th• Cour\ty Clerk ol lion during normal bull-S.f . !ltltlol Stt. 207, N9W> Udo Sandt Or .. N-pon leictlona U-IO and 12-42 bu1lntt1 ye!? Yts, 2-IJ.98 Unda Smith Thi• 111ttment w11 nled cUlc Coaat Hwy. SI•. 200. Orange County on 2·9·98 ne11 hour• by any citizen port Beac:h CA 92GISO 8ffch ca. t2G43 or thl Coata Mtu Munlcl-PUBLIC NOTICE William L Mllltr Thi• llalem•nl WIS flied with lhe County Clerk of Capistrano Such. CA 19088748393 who so requHll within 180 I(~· M. Kearl•. 288 E. 18th Andttw J. Rose. 4801 Udo
... , ,.,...0 Conctrnl"" I.tit Plofoloue Bualn••• Thia 1tatemen1 w11 flied wllh the County Cltrk or Ot1"9• County on 2·10.98 92824 Dally Pilot Feb. 13• 20• 27 d~ys afle< publlcallon of St. 110, Cott• M .... CA Sandi Or .• Newpon B .. cn, ..-,,_d ... wllh tht County Clerk of Orange Coonty on 2·10.98 1098S748528 Timothy M. Downe, 34700 Mar 8 1998 FS4S lhi• notice 01111 availab1Uty. 92627 CA ll:l;663 "" Of og POfClto artu Mamo ltatotnont Orange County on 2-10-98 19988748526 Dally PllOt Feb 13 20 27 Paclllc Coa.1: Hwy. Ste. · ' The K.l .D.S. Inc. This bu11ne11 11 con· Thi• builne11 Is con.
by doO lltlln9fdog walklng dolTht fbu~~ peraont are t9981748S42 Dally Pilot Ftb. 13 20 27 Mat 8 1999 · ' F83l 200, Caplslrano Beach. CA PUBLIC NOTICE Foundation, 11 located dueled by: 1n 11\dlvldulll ducted bV: an lndlvldu.i """"9. ng ....... II: Dally Pilot Feb. 13, 20, 27, Mar 8 1998 ' f83-i · ' 92824 at 2532 Croatvlew Have you 1t1tted doing Htvt you 11atted doing
TH! fl\IU. TfXf of thl Ot· EFM Racing Stable, 321 Mar 8 1999 FB44 • ' PUBLIC NOTICE Thia bualneu II con-FlcUUoua Bu1lno11 Drive Newport BHch bualnnt yet? No butlnett yet? Yn t-t-98 dlriMoo tnly bt ttld In thl Cat1lln1 Dr., Newporl . • PUBLIC NOTICE duci.ci by: an lndMdual Name Statement CA 9lzee3 (88B) 45,.: Kyle M. 1(11111 Andy Ro.e ,
Clty Clttk'• Ofllctl n F.ir tech· CAJll2663E PUBLIC NOTICE flollllou• Bualn•H Hive you stifled doing The10llowl119 iat1on1 ate 3787 • Thll •••••men• WH hied Thi• 1t1t1ment WI$ filed ~ Cotta M ' 'M'enct • dw11d1, 321 Flctltloua Bu1lne11 Name Statement buslntH yel? Yts, 10-1·96 dolng bu11neu 11· • wnh 111e County Clerk ol wUh lht COUl'lly Clerk of • nc.. Cltalln1 Dr., Newport NOTICIE Otr Namo Statement The following peraons are Tlmoo1y M. Downe Power Nu11ltlonals, 1500 Published Newport Or1ng• County on 2·10-98 0t1ng• County°" 2·10.~8 MARY T. aLUOTT, S...ch, CA 92883 APPLICATION TO The following pe.tona art doing butintu 11: Thlt 1i.1emen1 wat filed Oua11 SI Sre .150, Newport Beac;h,Cos1a Mesa Daily 19980748534 UP980748S43
Deputw City Ci.rtt :!I~ Mateult, 321 C1tlll· SELL ALCOHdLIC doing t>Yslnesa 11: 1) The Singularity Group, wllh the County Clt1k OI Beac:h, CA 92663 P1lo1 Mruch 6. 1998 0&1ly Pilol Feb 13 20 27 Dally Pllol Feb 13 20 27
Publllhtd Newp orl "Newport Beach, CA BEVeRAOES NEWPORT PARTNERS. b) The S Gtoup, 54 Lehigh Oran9e County on 2-17·98 l<lntul Corp. (~V). 10 F88t Mii 6 1998 ' f:829 M 1 6 1998 . · f-840 Beac~ta Miia Dally 112683 Date or Allng LLC, 25461 Crown Valley Allle, Irvine, CA 92612 t998874011 f S1ndllowe1 C1, Newpon · a ·
Pilot Maren e, 1998 ~w Fleld, 321 Cat111na Apptleatlon: Parkway S11. 140, Mluion Mlchatl Benl1mln Mehling, Daily Pllo• Feb 20. 21. Beech. CA 92663 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -~P"'"'U~B"'"'U~C~N~O~T~IC=--:E=---
Fl84 ""·• Ntwp0<1 Beach, CA MAA 02 1998 vi.Jo, CA 112691 54 Lehigh Af11e, Irvine, CA Mar 6 13 1998 F855 This business is con. ---------1------------------192883 To Whom 11 May Concern· Newport Partners. LLC 92812 · ' ' duC1ed t>y 1 C01po1111on Fletltloua Bu1lnHa Flctltlou1 Bu1lnHs -Fl--1-tJ--8--1---PUIUC NOTICE Thie bu~lneH la con-The Nam1(s) of 1he Af). (CA}, 26491 Crown Vallty Josh Burley, 627 Stanlord PUBLIC NOTICE Have you s1111ed doing Name Statement Name Statement et oua ui ntll ducttd by. co-partners plielnl(•) II/are· Parkway, Ste. 140, Mission Court. Irvine, CA 92612 business yel? No The following persons are Th• fotlowmg persons .,, Hamt Statement SUMMARYO' Have YOO tlll1ed doing BROOKLYN PIZZA LLC Viejo, CA 92691 Th11 business 11 con· ~lcUtlout Bu1lneu Kintzel Corp . Craig s doing business as· aoing businesa IS Tl'le lollOWlng petsons lft
ADOPTaD ORDINAHCa bullnesa ye!? YH, Feb. 4, The eppllcanl• llsttd Thie business 11 con· duC1ed by: 1 general part· Name Statement K1n1zel. Pres Ailernatives In Wood 929 Source One Records, d0t119 b1.111nest as
CITY OF 1998 above are apl)lyfng lo the dUC1ed by: Umiled Uab1hty ntrshlp The following persons are This sta1emen1 was filed Terminal Way •23, Costa 25882 Pacific Crtll Or. :d & ~ C:" ~2 Mae'Cl COS .. A Ml!IA Llwfence J. EcfWardt Oep1rtmen1 of Alcoholic Co. Have you atarted doing doing business as: wllh lhe Counly Clerk of Mesa. CA 92627 Mission Viejo CA 926112 .. ar en rove, ORDINANCE 18•5 11 This l lattment WU filed Beverage Control to Mii al-Have you 1ta11ed doing buainHs yet? No 1) AAAdvanlage Assoc1· Orange County on 2.13.99 Pa111c:k F Kachurka, 11856 Kenneth I '011111. 25682 ~I N 8662 echedultd lo be In lull ~th the County Clerk of coholie ti.verages II: 2278 business yel? Yes, 1-16-98 M. Benjamin Mehfing lies, b) A & A B1ll1ng. 427 199B074904B Ma1shall Si.. Culver City. Pacific Cres• Or, Miulon .. ~~Y ~~yenGuden
totce and offtct 30 de a 1ngt County 911 2·17-98 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA Newport Partners, LLC, This atatemenl was flied Asher IA8A, Cos1a Mesa Doily Pilol Feb. 20. 27, CA 90230 ViejO, CA 92tl92 Gt al. 1t2e4i Om ........,.......,. Y 11981749220 MESA. CA 92627 Jong C. Umb, President wllh the County Clerk of CA 92626 Mar 6 13 1998 F854 This business IS con-Thia buiineaa 11 con-ove, .
; 1e: ·;;;er;-.-. on.:;: Dally Piiot Feb. 20, 27, For the lollowl"9 type ol Thie 1111ement was filed Orange County on 2·10-98 CollHn Ma11e Williams. • • ducted by· an lnd1V1du11 ducted by: an lndhndual J!'t~ ~u~~~d ./~ua~on·
.,:. the·~ ro• call Mar. 8, 13, 1998 F852 License: 4I ON-SALE with lhe County Clerk ot 19988748544 2700 Peterson Pl. 40A, PUBLIC NOTICE Have you slatted doing H3ve you itarted dolng Hav .!.;., ltart~ doing
"'"' BEER ANO WINE. EATING Orange Counly on 2·10-98 Dall Pil t Feb 13 20 27 Colla Mesa, CA 92626 business yet? No buslnets yel? YH 2·l·98 .• •-· volt: COUNC L Ml!M-PUBLIC NOTICE PLACE 19981748524 M Y5 ~8 · ' j:84; Thi• t>uslness 1s con· F1elltloua BualnHs Pat11ck F. Kachurka Kenneth lin Davis buslnels y.r? No
••Ria AYaaa •ulfa, Published Newport Dilly Pltol Feb. 13, 20, 27, 11· '1 dueled by: an Individual Hame Statement This siaiement was filed Th11 atatement was flied ~~ ~J=~t wH tiled
Monahan, •rlckeon, flotltloua Bualnoaa Beecn-Co1t1 Mesa Dally Mar 8 1998 F834 PUBLIC NOTICE Have you s1a11ed doing The lollowlng persons are wllh the County Clerk ot wllh the County Clerk of with the County Clerk of Cowan, aomera. Namo St•tomont Pilol March 6, 13, 20, 1998 · ' business yet? Yes. 02109/ doing business as: Orange County on 2-24-98 Orange County on 2·11-98 0 C ty 2-6-98 NOl!lt Nono. A88ENT: The followl119 per1ons are F880 PUBLIC NOTICE Flctltloua 8u1lno11 98 SCREENWERKS. 871 W. 199B6749990 19980748794 r111g9 ~8~48158 Nono dol119 butlnHI u : Name Statement CollHn Wiiiiams • t5th St. Newport Beach, Daily Pilot Feb. 27 Mar. 8 Dall Pilot Feb 13 20 27 . Ord~ """·S end HOLLY ANO ASSOCIATES PUBLIC NOTICE Flolltlout Bu1lnoH The rollowl"9 per1ons are Thi• 11atement was tiled CA 92663 13 20 1998 · F889 M Y6 1998 · • ;:830 Dally Pilot Fib. 13, 20, 27, ...... am ' APPRAISAL SERVICE, Name Statement doing business as: wlln the County Clerk ol Martian Churc:h, Inc .. (CA). ' ' ar. • Mar. 8, U~99 F847
Tltlea I and 13 of the Colt• 18371 Btach Blvd. 1 131, FlcUUoua Bualno11 Thi lotlowlng persons are NfWPORT AVIATION IN· Orange County on 2-10·98 3 Sludebaker. 2nd Floor. Ir· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
M ... Municipal Code by Huntlnglon BHch, CA Name Statement dol119 bu1lness as: SURANCE AGENCY, 3857 19986748532 vine. CA 92618 PUBLIC NOTICE
making minor 1ddlUon1 112847 The ro11owl119 iarsons II• DEL MAR HOLDINGS, IJ7 Birch St. #609, Newport Dally Pilot• Feb. 10, 27, This bu~lness 1s cc.n· FlcllUoua Bu1ln111 Flctltlou• ButlntH ~ revlllonl to clarify the R9Qlnald S. Hoity, Ill, 9717 doing buslne11 as: Plaza CueSla San Juan BHch CA 92680 Mar 6 13 l998 • F860 duct&d by a co1po1a11on Name Statement Name Statement Flctltl4N9 auslnt11 aon1ng text. Touc1n Ave., Foun11ln VII· LIFETIME EXTERIORS, CaplSlrano. CA 92975 Amoid Walter Effinger, Jr., · ' ' Have you started doing The follo:-ving persons are The following persons .,. Nama ~tatoment
THE FUU. TEXT or tl'le Of• lly., CA. 92708 8912 Lawrence Ave .. Well· John C. Hall, 67 Plaza 3857 Birch St #609, New· PUBLIC NOTICE t>uslness yer? No doing business as: doing buSlneu 11: The following person• 11•
.. 1 b d In.... S•llt H. Holly, 9717 Tou-mlnSltt, CA 92683 CuHta, San Juan Clplsl· port Beach CA 92660 Marllan Church, inc., OMNI HEALTH CENTER, Orange County Gatdent d0in9 business as·
"nanco ~y • "' u .. c:an Avt .. Fountain Vaftey, Wiiiiam Phllllp Thlebert, rano, CA 92e75 Thi• buiinns Is con-Flctlllout Bualneu Jason Weslfall. P1es1aen1 97 t 3 Tu111eao11e Ave .. 600 Roc:klord Pl COiona S••••• Commumc111on, City Qtrk a Ottlc:t , n Falt CA. 92708 8912 Lawrence Ave .. Wesl· Terence L Ahlgren, 2320 ducted by: an Individual Name Slatement This statement was flied Fountain Valley, CA 92708 aet MIT, CA 9262S 1803 Monrovia. Co111 Pffle. Costa Men. Thi• bu1lnes1 It con-minster, CA 92683 Benldorm Cir .. 1103, Co-Have you slarted doing T~e following persons are w1lh the Counly Clerk of Chin C Chow, DC, 460 Karen s L ... 500 Rock· Mesa. CA 92627 • llARY T. ELLIOTT, ducted by: huaband and Tina Marie Thlebert, 8912 ron1, CA 91719 business yel? Yes, 4·96 do1119 t>Yslness as: Orange County on 2·17·98 Crestwood Ln., Walnu1. CA lord Piie•. Corona del Mat, David Rag111 Edw11ds. 228 poputr City Clorlt Wife , L~wrence Ave., Wnl· Thia bu1lne11 11 con-A.W. Effinge<, Jr. Pseudoc1pher, 12802 Tim· 19980749110 91789 CA 92625 Vene10, IMne. CA 92614
, Puttllehed Newport Have you •tatted dOtng minste<, CA 92tl83 . ducted by: a general plft· Lawrtnee J. Edwards Gen. be< Rd. Ste H, Garden Deity Pilot Fet> 20. 27, This business 1s con-nus but1nen 15 con-Thia . bu1lness Is con-
8each-Coita Met1 Dall l>utlnet1 yet? Ytt, 2·1·98 This business 11 con-nersntp Plftner Grove. CA 92840 , Mar 6 13 1998 F856 ducted by· an mdMdual dueled by· an individual dueled by: an tndrvidual ~ M h 8 1998 Y R9glnald S. Holly, Ill ducted by: husband and Have you 111rted doing This 1111ement was filed Ch r i SI op h • 1 Andrew ' · Have you s1aned doing Have you slarted doi"9 Have you slatted d04fl9
ate ' · F Thft 1t1ternen1 WU filed wile bllllness ye1? No With lht County Clerk of Jones. 12802 Timt>er Ra PUBLIC NOTICE t>us•ness ye1? No business yet? No business yet? No
885 with the County Clerk of Have you slarted doing John C. Hall Or1nge County on 2·13·98 Sle. H. Garden Grove. CA Chin C. ChOw. 0 C. Klien s LM Oavtd Ragan Edwards --PU--1-U_C_N_O_T_l_C_E __ ,Orange County on 2·10.98 business yel? No This 11aternent was filed 19980748882 92840 Fictitious Bu1lne11 This sta1emen1 was filed This slalement WIS flied This stalernent was filed
• 19981748540 William P. Thiebert W11h lh• County Clerk ot 0111 Pdol Feb 20 27 This bus mess is con· Name Statement w1lh lhe Counly Clerk ol with lhe County Clerk of with lhO County Clerk ol
FloUtlou. aualnoaa Dally Pilot Feb. 13, 20, 27, This s111tmen1 w11 flied Orange Coonty on 1·21·98 M Y6 13 1998 · •F853 ducted by: an lnd1v1dual The tonow1ng persons are Orange Counly on 2·24·98 Orange Counly on 2·10·98 Orange County on 2-10.98
Mamo Statomont M•r. 8, 1998 F839 W11h the Counly Clerk of 199B074032B IT. · • Ha~e you started doing doing business as· 199B614g997 199B8748530 1998874853~
Tho fol1owlng ptflons are Orange County on 2·24·98 0111y P1lo1 Feb. 20. 27. PUBLIC NOTICE t>usiness yet? No BISSON ENTERPRISES, Daily P1101 Feb 27, Mar 6, 01ily Pilol Feb 13, 20. 27. 011ty PilOI Fee 13, 20, 27. ~"9 buslntll as; PUBLIC NOTICE 19980750005 Mar. 8, 13, 1998 F859 Ch.11slopher A Jones 1902 S1e11a V1s1a Or. Tus· 13 20 1998 F873 Ma 6 1998 F83& MBI. 6. i99a F~
;.) MAKO Enterptlan b) Dally Pilot Feb 27 Mar 8 Fictitious Bualn•H This statemenl .was hied tin. Cal1lornla 92780 • • r · -\'Wl'ltt A Dl"9r"10tl" F.o-Flotltloua Bualn•H 13 .2() 1~ • • Fe74 PUBLtC NOJJCE Nama.Statom.nt... wilh the County Clerk of Theodore John Bisson, euauc MO.TlC.E PUBUC NOIIC1 r--....... =-~---==i
fie Proetctlon ~) "Wh•I A lfamelt•tament • I Thi followl119 persons aie t>range County on '2-T0-98 1902 srerra Visra Or., Tus= ---------M~ ,-encel" Ora Rug The followl119 person• •r• PUBLIC NOTICE FlcUUoua Bu1ln11• doing business 1s: 10981748535 tin, Ca. 92780 FleUUouJ BualnH• Flctltloua Bu•lnn• e t2W
holate 'Cr.re d) doing bu1lne1111: Nam• Statement E J H Enterprises, 1555 Dally Pilol Fr,:l . 13. 20, 27. This business is con-Name Statament. Ham• Statement
PA Dln!rencel" Toti! ThrM Seven Four Hamil· Fictitious Bualn•H The lollowl119 iarsons ar J Mesa Vefde or. Easl 126E, Mar. 8, 1998 F835 dueled by: on lnd1V1dual The tollowing persons are The lollowl1'l9 l>'f'°"' are Carpet a Uphol1tery C1t• ton, LP .. 321 Catalln• Dr.. Namo Statement doing bu1lness 11: Cos11 Mesa. CA 92626 Have you stoned doing doing business as: doln9 buslne11 11:
E
SPECT"UM Anti-Fade N-Poft Beach, CA 92863 The foUowlng persons are EMPIRE MERCHANOIS· Edward J. Hernandez, PUBLIC NOTICE business ye1? Yes, January JP'S, 504 So. Bay1ront CURVES • BRASIL• USA. M
oducti f) SPECTRUM Thrff Seven Four Hamil-doing business as: ING, 17885 Sky Park Sle. 1555 Me11 Verdi Or. Easl 1998 1102. Balboa Island. CA 612 Kings Pl. Newport It 11-fadfi TrHtmenta 107 ton. LP., (CA), 321 Calal· AMERICAN EAGLE BUILD· 11, ll'Ylne, CA 92614 126E Costa Mesa CA Fictitious BualnHt Theodore John Bisson 92662 • BHCh CA 92663 ~
h St. Newpotl S.Kh CA lnl Or., Newpo.t Beach, CA ERS, 11438 Brookhural St., Jellrty Curtl1 Hubbard, 93126 ' Name Statement This stalemenl wu llled John P. Ca11oll, 1308 Ktlsll~1 Mallf\9 lzum1ta, e
t2e81 ' ' 92883 Garden Grove, CA 92640 21211 S1llor1 Bay Ln., Thie buslneH 11 con· The following persons are w11h the Counry Clerk of Sanla Nella Terr., Corona 612 KJng1 Pl., Newport ~art< Kandartan 107 7th Tt-11 buslnHa 11 con-Frank M1rs1on Thompson, HunUngton Beach. CA ducted by: an Individual doing business as: Orange Coun• •on 2-17·98 del Mar, CA 92625 Beac:h, CA 92663 St. Newport ~•ch CA ducted by: • •mltld part-11438 Brookhurlt SI .. Gar-AdenClo Gulttttz, 387 W. Have you started doing •) IPW Product Develop-1998B74g109 This business Is con-Thia butlne11 It con. ~ e:z6a1 ' lltflhlp dtn Grow, CA 92840 Bay, Costa Me11, CA buslneu yel? No ment, b) Veslal Walch Co .• Daily Pllol Feb. 20. 21, ducted by: an lndlvldual dueled by: an Individual A~J
'Jftlt bu1lne11 11 con-Have you llll1ed doing Nathla Joann Thompson. 112626 Edward J. Hernandez, 2060 Placenlla IA8, Costa Mar. 8, 13, 1998 F857 Have you started doing Have you atll1ed doing V"" CIUt'l*1 by: an lndlvldual bullneH ytf? Yn, Oct 21, 11438 Brookhursl St .• G11· Thi• bualntu Is con-M.O. Mesa, CA 92627 buslne&s yet? No business yel? No
lQve yoU ~ doing 11192 den Grove, CA 92840 dueled by: a genttll Part· This alltement was flied Oavld Boravtnlura, 6811 PUBLIC NOTICE John P. Carroll Ktl11in1 Masako tzumlt1 ~ yel? No ThrM Seven Four Hamil· Thi• butln•ss 11 con-nershlp wilh the County Clerk ot Seashore Dr .. Newport This statement was flied This 1t11ement w11 filed ~/~t, ~ KancUtian Ion LP. ducted by: husband and Have you 1t111ed do1119 Orangt County on 2-02·98 Beach, CA 92663 FlcUUout Bu1lness with lhe County Clerk of with the County Clerk of
'ltllt atattmtnt wa• llltd Lawrence J. Edward• Gen. wlfl bus1nt11 yet? No 19980747527 This buslneu Is con· Name Statement Orange County on 2.24•98 Orange Counly on 2·10-98 ta. ~ Cltrll of Plltner Have you s1arted doing Adenc:lo Oullttez Dall PUot F b 27 Mat 8 ducted by: an lndMdual The following peraons are 19986750010 19088748538 ,. _ _...on 2•1()..N Thi• mtement wu filed bullntts yet? YH. 2·23·98 Thlt atatement wu flied Y • • • • • Have you 11111ed doing doi119 buS1ness u : Dail Pilot Feb 27 M1t 8 Dally Pilol Feb 13 20 27 A , _.... .. , with thl County Clerk of Frank Marston Thompson with lht Couity Ctttk or 13, 20, 1998 F871 business yet? Yu, 511/90 Beach Access 3333 Brls-Y • · • ' ' ' 19981748527 Orange County on 2·17·98 This ltltement wu ftled Orange County on 2·19-98 PUBLIC NOTICE David Bonlventur1 tol SI. 1 l088, Cost• Men. 13, 20, 1998 F876 Mar. 6, 1998 F837
Ody Piiot Feb. 13, 20. Z'I, 19988749221 with 111e County Cltr1c or 19988740541 Thi• 1111emen1 wes filed CA 92826 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
M•. 8, UIM F832 Dally Piiot Feb. 20, 27, Orange County on 2·24-99 Dally Piiot Fib. 20, 27 flctlUous eualnou with th• County Cletk of Beach Access. Inc .• (CA) GOOD PUBLIC NOTICE M11. 8, 13. 11198 F851 19981750015 Mat. cs. 13, 1998 F861 Mamo Statement Orange County on 2·10.98 3955 B11Ch "201, Ntwport FlcUUoua Bualn•H f;ctlllout BualnoH
Dally Pilot Feb. 27, Mii. 8, The lollowlng persons 11• 19981748541 BHch, CA 92660 Name Statement Name Statement
F1otltloua llualno.. 13 20 1998 F875 Cl11allled Is..... doing buslntsa u : Dally Pt101 Feb. 13, 20. 27, This business ls con Tht l0Uow1119 Ptt•ons are The followlng '*'°"'are ADI
, N at.t t On the move? ' ' CONVENIENT MINI-MAILERS INC 17222 Mar. 8 1998 F842 dueled by: 1 COfpor11Jon dolna buslneu as: doing buslneu 11:
Tho :W.,ig =~ .,. Call w1 htth•r111 you're bluy-t Armstrong, Irvine, CA ' Thinking of having 8 XZV2X PRODUCTIONS. GrMne & Company, 741 dolna !'--.................. ~ Sell your extra Cl lfl d ng, .. ng, Of us 92614-5720 Sell your unwanted 1201 El O°'ldo· Placentia, Ocean Front, L1gun1
:11 1.WEWORKS b) 881 e looklng, claa11fl1d has Mlnl·Mall1r1 Incorporated Items the easy wayl garage Hie? CA 92870 8e1ch, CA 92651
.
MOTHl!ALODE MARl(El'· household Todav! what you ne1<11 (CA). 11222 Atmstt0119, 1r: cl~~~!~• ~0~~11 i 1LAv• 5ussfF~~~ Sean Terry Conner. 120t Bruce Grttne, 141 Ocean Call Lf\19.• 13881 Newport A~ items CLASSIFllED Ylne, CA 92814-5720 El Dorado, Placentia, CA Front, LlgUN Beach. CA 642 5678 ~ 11345, Tustin, Cai'. In Classified 842·5878 ••2·5978 Thi• bu1lnH1 11 con-842·5978. 942·5978 92870 92651 ,._ ___ -___ ___.
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-------Deadllnes -----.......,,
Monday ........... Friday S:OOpm Thursday .. W~may 5:00pm
Tuesday ......... Monday S:OOpm Friday .......... Thunday S:OOpm
Wednesday .... Tuesday S:OOpm aturday ........... fridty S:OOpm _. ·r
JtEAL ESTATE
UCBANGI 1600 -------
~ --------. -... . ~ . -~~ -.. --.
FAIOAV, MARCH 6, 1998
coaou COSTA MESA 2124 ffEWPOltT RENTALS TO LOST • EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT
APUTIDRTS Dl1 llU 2122 llACB 2869 SHAU 2724 OPPORTUNITY FOUND 2925 5530 5530
BMPLOYM!NT
~530
POa UJIT ••••••• M••lt• rt H•l•ht• 2904 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil .......... 1 .......... 0.....-::.-~ ~.~ ... c ... ~on ••• Side C.M •• 2Br• L.:ARQE REWARD II •Admln Aa•l•t•nt Qonoral Ottlo• UI• T•L&MARKSTINQ
------
room10.1o +ton. Y'd "'i1eoo. 640-01$0 !lea-nt A 8p~lou1 1Ba, full house prlv, •-••... For pereon that Md• Healll'ly Gourmet bOOkkHping, rellaible, Appointment Sottlne
bettl a klteh, nu~ 18d, 'pie, 2..Car Oar. W/D, Great Local! PleaH be wary or out male black cat •Hice onthu1laatlc roepontlblo • exp • Mon·,tl. 3pm;.opm UllOA
111.UD zeoe ftt lell 114-Tl1.0.22 a..-1oue :aw alMt, NIP. 1410.mo Avail 1315 m ~~ + u t 11 or atH companlet. w/Whlto chHt. t.011 detall-otlentect. Hlf· P~•l1n1e"f!1:... Mconon·[:~t ca;~~/~;~:;r l:'oo lndtyofm N 7I + Aprll 714-e40-!5034 714-642·78'41 Ch.ck with the tocal elnc:e 2/14. 015-8078 •tatter. Good com· F.... •• ..... z:ne~~ Nowlv Ronov.tecl .MB Shr21>f2.5balJg 8•tt•r Buelne .. LOaT CAT blk mate, ~u!:.';.=:r.:,;. 'b~~:. VMool:d:::::e.~;~pl .~~!~:o:r Gl••at tar ~COSTA MESA 2824 Spaclou• 1Br & 28r Bureau before you yllw eyu. woailng , ~ .. _ HL...__ _ _. •---------From 1775. No Peta. 2atry twnhm, bsy view Hnd any money for Qireen halter.Rew•AOI Ing kno~ll•dge a + Baby•llllng neoClod, Enlortaln kid• wn ..,.... -" ....., • nu Newport ••v Terrac, ••pool, gym, tonnla•• f I R d C "" no/amoket, Saturday• varied hour• In my SMAX productt. Paln~1 GOO/mo 1 a r D o ta o " • d NEWPO•T t 't 1 M • 1 a o, 1 v ·, S750 + util 760o3907 ::J 0~n~·~:.f :t!i :~Y • I I 7 2 2 -0 3 8 5 req. fax rea: ~3-2939 Alleo Viejo homo. S8 per Job. 2 houra m w~ Apt ~ Cettae•• w/Patlo IUCB 2889 ft+MMtts Noar Trla.ngl• Squarol contracts before you Loat Cat on 2/25 Auntie Ann•'• son per hour. Musi be •t<· Must be very young)~
•8UNllY PATIO• neat beac:h. Calhedral •tudlo Apt.with Spacl0\11,h•""• cto1e1 algn. Shop atound for Orange Persian w/ Pretzels wants •n•r· perlenced, caring, pa· •PJMatanc• and ene1, Le 2br 1ba, now paint, c olla, frig. Move-In * • ._ c • -• rat•• gotdsn eve•. Vl~ of u 111 le uent and dependable. getlc. C.,.: Dan 8orgwt crpt. lndry rm, avt now Spoclall S87S+l400 .. anwon kltohon Jncl.ut",N/P · W/O,kltch prlv, NIP. · Newport ShorH. StOO ~· 0• •m ng peop • Leave meuag• at 714-842 ... 013 Poltl'lll-f 11180. _..,.. &48-0845 dop. tJ48.2421 1·a'3 Bedroom Apt• f 750mo '129-7&70. $350mo. 714-$48-Cl370 Amazing Money Maker Reward! 714·642·8122 tr. Catris 194.ee7o (714) 574-4248 100 partloe, evonta. , ,,,,. near 1'1aehlon laland t f 0 d · Aatonlahlng proflta L Carpet Cl••n•r• --------·••Coate M•••'• Beel 2-car gar, fp, w/d hk-•W• or ront on o• Newport, laland on with adult product• oat Motorola rllp-top c rtlfl d P r e MEDICAL BILLING'
CO.ONA Jr·1bt • 1bt, also 2br ups, central air, Alarm 2br 2 full tits bath W/ Bay. Shr 3br 2ba $~50 ehone & extra battery e e re · xp,a .;. 1 ba, quiet gated •Y•· Ootr course view• l•o tub, pvt aunCleck 1/2 utll, boat dock avl. lit time In vending le Weatclllf .Jt 17th mu1t.Uee our truck Office Manager excellent SSS, tralnl.1Q D!t MAR 2822 comm, pool, tennl•,.~s_1_e_s_o._s_2"5 __ &4_..0_5_09_ wtgrHt vu, carport, a blkl/ 650·5742 Co. Hieb. Ptr Hrn up 7 14·O3 1 -0 8 '1 5 mounted unit. Cleon FIT for BUSY Inter provided, PC/Modem ·-walk to bHch, 1torH, ocean to $4K P•r·wk S22,000 OMV. Oependable.Frr Net based Co. Wiii required. Call 7 Day•
••r O.Ck ovet-tooklng ~!!iay~~~:hi~.1~1~ 1~ 1b•bl kitchenette, rHt, theater, boat Shr Boautlful gated caah roq. 7t4·887.,.782 25·35%comm434·7929 have many duties & 800-550·8660 XI 452 ' -----
d 7 ., .. 1197--7• qu •t. 1 ock to ocn, dock avail. $1950 lse. Townhome, very cln, BOOST &ALESI Pro HEALTH & or a p • r 'I Fancy, be detailed, organ· pool, 2 car porta, w , ..-....,.,, ., lnelda utle+cable, avl 640-1355 873 800? nu palnt/drpa, Avt 317 • 3·15 seoo. 645-1775 • -Pvt bath, female pre'f marketer helpa you FITNESS 3000 all machlnee, experl· lzed, ulf-starterl EMPLOYMENT leu• 5925 840-oo19 •Cozy atudlo Furnd no/emkg. CM S500mo aall productt1vc11 ence. Top wagH CM Windows.Word.Excel
Covered parking, n"r Convenient + 1/2 ulll. 548-8787 Call 7t4·434·2973 8·4P 722·8428 Call (800) 728·8802 SERVICES SS3S1 Buy tt. Sell It. !'find It. Trt-Squat•. No Peta. ClaHlflod MISCELLANEOUS ·•Fr•• P•raonal• or Fax resume 10 ClaHlftod. seas.mo 642-2818 ____ e_4_2_·s_e_7_•__ Training Seaelon ARE YOU 714·574·1460 RENTALS MONEY with M•nn" COMMERCIAL 2914 , __ 7...,..1...,..4-... 2_9 __ 3_..a __ o_3_o_ FRIEND LY,
NEWPORT NEWPORT NcWPORT
iiBEAiiiiCiiBiiiiiiiiii26ii6ii9 iiBEAiiiiCiiBiiiiiiiiiii2ii66ii9B iiEAiiiiCiiiBiiiiiiiiii2ii66ii9 ROOMS
I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
2706
nr 11T ESTATE TO LOAN LOSI! WEIGHT RESPONSIBLE ~ Through a aafe and & CAR ING? VlsaJMaator Ca1dt
S25K + Unsecured
Bad.No Credit • OKI
• 800·848·7118.
aclentlllc nuttltional We provide plan 714-557·2721 Transportation Services
The Back Bay is in ou r Backyard.
Newly renovated spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms.
• Close to O.C. Airport, & Newport Beach Golf Course
• Newly Remodeled Interiors
• Convenient to Back Bay, Major Shopping & Entertainment
• Laundry Facilities
Sorry No pets
1691 Mesa Dr. (714) 545-4855
CdM 3br 2ba condo w/ BUSINESS OFFICE lg patio. phone llne,
to our elderly and
disabled community.
tom prel'd, $525.mo FOR RENT 27691 .. •••••••
715>-2641 or 548·2576 1• EMPLOYMENT "E
Clean & resp. female NB 3Rm Sult.o/Furn ANNOUNCEMENTS I•••••••• atS7~
lffkl nice b1/ba to phone, fax, ground rtrl••••••••• S250 onbon~ rent near bch, around 1 person only.Wntclllf/ •---------.t Part·tfme & FuJl.tbntl $400. can ... 963·3483 o 53 64 EMPLOYMENT employmPnt
over. 25· s-2474 ANNOUNCEMENTS 5530 .tPaldtralnlng~ NB $475fmo, no pets.
1 at & dep, Laundry,
p rival• entryfbat h
428·4272pgr 548·3063
Nwpt Bch Hlgh·Rlso 2 9 2 0 l:Wiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiii acqulrbll(B your furn ottlce to share. 1• • B Ucense
Amenities. avt lmmed. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii S 1 0 H '-,;. FULL ./Friendly, team-oriented
S250mo. 548·8773 $10 Clasalcal Music TIMEI 8am·5pm, M· wodtenvironment
Concert Tix. Chopin, F, Experloncc.1 and 21yearsofageorolder Brauhma. 3/8, 4pm 1,. takes pride Jn answer· RENTALS TO
SHARE 2724 INDUSTRIAL 2788 vine Barclay Thea tie Ing phones for busy. Valid CA DriYer's Ucense 714.954.4649 hlgh·end professional and excellent driving
Bal la Own rmlbath
Fully furn. $475.mo
Female prof'CI. Khare
660-8044 (voice mall)
Dalbo• Ponn Shr 2br
nr beach, Ip, pa1klng
•Superior Ave. CM
1500·15,000sf, Groat
location, fenced,
roll·ups, high ceilings,
.65psf 714·548·8531
$650 + Clep. Call Alex •••••••••
495.et97191g.1100-wk BUSINESS &
CdM Share 2br 1 ba
office. Computer exp recDd required
•TAX DEDUCTIBLE a mull. Call Mary Loe For more
donallona needed for 714·717-4880 lnrormatlon
a worthy cause. Froe •-2-T--R ___ M___ CaJl Neil
aolld teak cabinet for oa oom odele
fl t d ti Wanted In NB. Ptr 85:" -7950 rs ona on over 1 wk·days. 1 wk·Gnds .,
$900 (worth $1200) Strong aates exp. 611111Ar66JfW
also collector guitar 5.5 ... 5.8 .. pio't. Call MIWMIW6MIW for donation over 5500 , .... ., •• .. •cu . ••• (l only) Call 241 .1712 Britt 714·875·2174 .;;;;::;:=:=;:::::::::::::;:;::==.
chHrlut home w/lrg FINANCE IOST & Br, n/pet S525mo +
S8·S11 per Houri FT/PT Salea/V•cht
and benefits. FIT & P/ Party Planner out·
T. Preschool, Inf/Tod going, pe11onable w/
Tutor Time Chlld Care comp sk1llsfsalos exp utla. Prof'I fem prel'd FOUND 2925
Avl 3/1. 64<>-6454 --------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CdM Share 2br 1ba BUSINESS $1000 Rewardloat
cheerful home wflrg OPPORTUNITY watch: 14 t lex Sub-er, n/pet S525mo ~ Mariner W(HS g1ad.
utla. Prof'I fem pref'd 2904 Cl ate on b a c k
Avl 311. 640.e454 673·5975 ·---------
In N.B.· 955·2872 will train. 673·4597
SELL
your home
through classified
FT/PT T eacher Aaat
for Pre-school. Salary
neg., room tor ad·
vancement. g.12 ECE
units required. Call
Jamie at 714·650·3442
P{T Demons tr•t•r
In grocery atorea. Fri.
Sat, Sun, $8.75/hr.
Car necessary.
•••••••• PleaH be aware the(
tho llsllngi In thl• cat·
egory may require you
to call a 900 numb4r In which the1e Is a
· charge per minute. -:,
Call: 714·557·5579 , _ _..;. ______ _
Packer• for snack EMPLOYMENT -
food company. M·F. WANTED SSA
sou 1 h co aa t Plaza iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili
Area. (714) 979·3256 ¥Swedish hurs•.,
P•rt Tlmo-20hrs wkly Loving, Oepondablo1 For aucceasful mort· Xlnt Cook, Driving,
gage broker. Expoll· Local Ref's, 12 Yrs
ence a must.Bonuses Exp. Llvoa Locally
Call 714·852·8822 ~714·640·3735~
POOL SERVICE route ---------
person Nwprt & C.M. DOMESTICS 5540
area mu11 have truck, ':Wiii~iii~~iiiiiiii exp, rof'a nae. Must 1•
be reliable 546·7665 Chlld Caro
Retall Sal•• Needo&t
10·15hrs wk, AM shift. For newborn twl"-
Out of Sant• Fe and 3 yr old In my
at Fashion Island Aliso Viejo home;
T•m•ra 644-5953 Monday ltlru Friday 7:30am • 6 :30prn.
RETAIL SALES Must be expe1lenced,
Evenings & wk-ends dependable, patient 4
L•d'I Golf Fashion caring. Refo1encea ra-
lstand NB 720-1996 quheCI. $1100 per
S•ndwlch M•k•r/Klt month. Please can
Help ft/pt Good Payll (714) 574-4248
Afte1 2p 250·09t9 pgr ---------anyllme 802·8288. Classilied is .....
SECRETARY/PT CONVENIENT
pleasant home ofc In wholher you'1e buy.
Balboa. PeratAast. Ing, selling, or just
A.E. Mngt, 8·16hra/wk, looking. classified has
n/smkr, MS Word( what you neocll
Excel/Quicken. $10.hi CLASSIFIED
Fax Resume 673·0624 842·5878
---~---~
CHILD CARE 3536 CONCRETE &
MASONRY
PAINTING 3858 PLUMBING 3890 ROOFING 3910
Uc. 696289 1151~
-----
Leet;J , .... .,. .._. ... ;:======::;~I AogrQutlng & IMtall'n
U70130 .Dun of Tllo ~~°' ...... ~
CRUD CUl5 3538
WAltl'alf'
~tM#ClM,......
UtHn di1d care.
europeen Au Pain,
engflsh spuJlf nQ,
1&-l&yra .. ICQal.
culturallJ enrlchlnQ.
llaiblc ln·home
childcare.
45fui./ft.
• NM.Tl 0. <.JOI' l\IT'OIUN(; •
M'UNlT.l'oot'll ~R$9t
• AT'ICUR IOll 0. oma
DllYWALL
SUVJCI
7l4·540·b344 1---
------. ----
LANDSCAPE •
IAWN CUB 3808 -----------
3870
CLARK
PLUMBING & DRAIN
• Complete PLUMBING
Repairs
• Complete Rooter
Service· Main lines II llllliiiiliiiiiitliiiiiiliW
•Water Heater/Dlsposa
I water Gas Re In
RADIO DlSPATCHID
0 RES. COMM.
714-722-9998
-.... . r
.·-l 1 .... __,,. r ...,,, -· ..
TUTORING
•
f'onNr"T ...... .. ,.,......,
..,..,~c:Nld.
GUARANTEED'
IMPROVEMENT
$WHA
714-841-8222
UPBOLSTDDIG -;--
3131
Antique Spoolall.t
40 yra e1Cp, Oual.
work, IOWHI price ..
rel'• Bernie & Nan<:¥
998-4560
G & G Uphol alnco '61
custom made futn, rt-
uphol1tery, tllp cvr>
antique rpr 542-4812 •
•
3931
I ~' j,'\ Ii ·1
I ) 11 ~I l I \ l ! ,:·1
Can' '"m\O
get to au thoM
repair fob•
around the houM?
llDCDllDlll PU'UIT11U 1014 TIUSPOITATIOI DODGI toes .........
W•t•r~ed.Queen, I •n_ oa-ona .... ..._ ---------1 lube•. fl1ne Head---~--------1 ,. _, Bv CHARW GOREN 8010 bowd wtlh ~ BOATS ?Oll Turbe All ftower, ,
il•••iiiliiiiiiiiiiiil • t o re o e • t 1 so . Premium Sound Sys., with OMAR SHARIF CaJt '14-e3MS34 co Player, All Leather and TAHNAH HIRSCH •
White Q.aeen •IH ••1 Duttw 1a• V9JY hn~~!:.' 'v~·Tc~/~:
Hlde4obed for ••I• good condition, recent 12fl0.obo 54a..1554 S150. 844-1202 battety8, bottom paJnt.
cover 19750 148-9212 •--------
MEllCHANDJSE 1_P_O_WE_R_B-OA_T_S __ ,JlERJWU
MISC. 6015 7012 •'92 Mondl•I 12k ml,
8067
Ca rd Io .Q lld • ex er l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I
bike H6. Nordlo Old '18 V-Hull· •Port Tredmlll / Step. Outboard. 40HP. Pull·
climber I monitor 1tart lncludH trailer! 1475. Call 759-9111 ' $500.(714) 831•HJ34.
FIREWOOD X'lnt wood1---------
Burne or•atl s135 a MARINE SLIPS
cord, any 1lze load Dorvs 7022 delivered l'R.EE "°"'
red/ten S751<. •'H Te1taro1•• 13k ml,
red/tan IGSK. •'87 412
Auto, Black metalllC/
red 11 kml HSK. •'87 328 GTB 47k ml, new
•noln• 1155K. OWn•r wlll carry on apprOl.-•d
down & c,.dlt.
7 1 4 .9 8 8 .5 7 7 e
To rour drlvewart liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
(714)852·8827 CB NT ER SL I p1--------
AVAILI 40·5011 In FORD 9075
\ EACH TJUCK IN ITS TIME
WEST
•916
ti A 1098 02
•Q9863 SOUTH
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Q 52 o AQ963
•Vold
OeclatU captu.Rd East'• ki.Dg with tbe 9CO aod ukd (0 caab the queen.
Uafornu1atoly, Bast ruffed and
ftlblmed a INmp. ud dDcllrc:r could
not come to more than nfo~ tncks.
Try it for )'OW"lelf.
Soulh's continuation of the queen
of diamonds It trick two was iwve at
. best In light of P.ast's opening bid.
West's lead was more likely to be a
singleton than from three to an hon-
or, so playing the queen of diamonds
was tantamount to giving up the
ghost.
w ANTED N . e.. E ·Z a cc• 11 -liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
TO BUY Munge 729-7670 •eo Ford T-Blrd new Tbe biddin
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii6ii0iilii9 Side Tl• for 30' SaJJ eng/lran1, tlrH brakH KAST ~Ure Boat. S9per foot, nr $2500. obo 640-5C582 I o 4 • Clllllllillll1At1-•I I BUY ALL PIANOS Udo Bridge, xlnt loc. 54C>-e218 (MHaage) PMI
Antlqu11.qual. furniture water/elect. 675--8128
The winning .Play is not easy to
spot. After taking the ace of ~iamonds. dee.Iara must continue with a
low diamond! 1be best the defense
can do is for East to win aod shift to
a bump. Declarer wins in band. ruffs
a diamood with the teo of trumps and
discards a diamond on the ace of
clubs. A club ruff permits declarer to
come to band to draw trumps, and
the queen of diamonds can then be
cashed. Declarer collects six trump
tricks, two diamonds aod a diamond
ruff and the ace of clubs -the 10
tricks contracted for.
. I ~l IH. -~
.\11 tiqut ·~
1po or houHful cash , '89 Taurua Station paid (714) 957-8133 Slip for 48 tt •allboat, Wagon. AHi nice nr Udo Bridge, water/ car $2900 obo Old Coln• Gold Sliver elect, S12per foo1, c714 ) 723·1504 Franklin Mint, Sterling 714-675-6128
Old watchH & Jewelry
We11cou1 Coln 642-94481•••••••••
RECORDS/TOP • AUTOMOBILES
Jazz, R&B, Soul. Rock'••·-----· Etc ... 50'1 & 60'a Mike I' Ms-7505 .,..A_C_URA _____ 90_1_0
'85 EXPLORER XL T 36k ml, 4dr, AT, full
power, Ilk• newl
(811777) $17~50 LEXUS Ot'
WESTMINSTER
714· 892-6906 Ueed Moving Box•• needed. Don't throw liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ""e""'o,_M.,.,...u_•_t_a_n_g_C,....o-n-v
them awayl 963·3483 * Cera * LX5 o 5 spd Nu citch
Opening lead: Two of o "Ibe good book tells us there is a
time for everything under sun. To
take a trick before its time can be dis--
astrous.
No textbook will tell you what to
bid with the South band after East
opcm the bidding with ooe diamood.
South's decision to jumt' to four
aj>llda is certainly a practical solu-
bon to an 111DOying problem.
West led the deuce of diamonds.
Observe that the contract can be
defeated. If West leads a trump, the
defenders can thwart South from
ruffing a diamond on the cable, and
nine tricks arc all declarer can man-
age. $ '1 00-$500 brki. 1 ow~r 103K:
Pollce lmpounda $4900, 382·195') ----------.,,.---------.---------Hondaa, Chevrolets, JEWELRY, FURS
JHps a Sport u1111t1es -------LEXUS 9115 TOYOTA 9210 TOYOTA 9210 Muat &em
800· 772· 7 4 70 x7038 H 0 NDA 9085 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiii, .,.iii7iiiiCiiiEiiiLliiiCiiiAiiiGiiiTiiiiiii New •neae•m•nt '94 ES 300 '84 4RUNNER SR5 •
Ring for male. 14K '84 LEOEND L Black/black, razor V6, low mllH, full LIFTBACK
•ART ~ 6025
Oold, 5 Channel ct. Low mlles, Bou, '88 ACCORD LX 1hop. Lexus certlfleq. power, alloys. moon-Black/black, auto.
Coit Ml50. Sell 1225. leather, moonroof. 4·door, auto, p/w, a/c. (0074122) $20,977 roof. (3GTX978) loather, moonroof, CD
714-53a.2088 (3ROC306) $19,950 Excel.cond.$5500obo '82 LS 400 Sl8,9SO co42056) 519,9!.17 LEXUS OF 714·548-0927 Ca 1 h mere fl v or y, LEXUS OF LEXUS
Omega Watch Auto-WESTMINSTER leather, full option. WESTMINSTER MISSION VIEJO matte Seama1ter (714) 892..S908 '85 Civic Ex Coupe 86,000 miles (144732) (714) 882·8900 1·888-88-LEXUS OeVllle 14k, braceleti-,-9 -8 -1-N .... T_E_G..,RA~-0,..8 ... R-34k moonroof, CO, full $22,977 --------$1695 714-673-3432 power, llke new ,95 SC 300 •94 CAMRY LE 31k ml, leather, (3LETD98) S12i950 Lo miles, AT, full custom wtiHl1, hotl LEXUS or Rally Red, mint condl· •--------(3POV32e) $17,850 Wl!STMINSTI!" lion, all service power, casHtte, hke AUTOS SPORTING
GOODS 6065 LEXUS OF (714) 892-$800 records. (029508) n ewl (3H MA936) 9246
WESTMINSTER $24,577 S12,9~~xus OF liW~ANTED~~~~~~:
714-882-$808 MIS~~u:IEJO WESTMINSTER ri
Karak·Keow•• 2 adj. INFINITI 9095 1.,888) 88.LEXUS (714) 882·8808 •••I• tor 1 or 21---------perlOl)I. Like new w/ AUDI 9025 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '98 450LX llke new. '98 CAMRY LE
oar•. S450. 673·18531iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '80 020 SUV. Black, loaded, 28k, AT, full power,
--------'81 4000 Only 77k ml, TV ELE--ONJCS Sliver, 4dr, one of a • "'"~ ' kind, xlnt condition STEREO 6080 1 owner, A/C. am·fm
_ca1s. $1000 firm
CaDI• fieoraiiibler---tt4-72"1•1758
Box 114.95. 'Cod• 04
4 dr, auto, leather, 36k ml, 100.000 warr. cassette, like new!
moonroof, CD. full $44,500 720-8013 (3PAH211) $1~L850 LEXUS Of' power. (538237) '87 ES 300 WESTMINSTER
IL1:x8u7.7 Black/black, only 2000 (714) 892-8908
MlSSION Vm.JO ml, no OMV. Lexus -....:..-.:.-----
• · gor Not
•Tu Write Off
• <An, 'lhldu, RV'1
FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1998 15
ACROSS ~
1 ciocr.a eo 0n-. bMV
5 &tdl'• 11 SUmnwttze dlelnllllOn 13 -Frill: Altl'On8 IC) In a _... ,..,,...
14 ~ "°'" 14 CWWd the Mid 85 Came up 15~ &eHMd
18 EJIMft movemenU
17 TU!tellh oo1n fil U>c* after 18 Pulpftl 98 Seiafdlel 19 Strong wind eo 1.ow card
20 Gather
22 Squirmed DOWN
24 Grp. 1 NurMrY item
25 John'• 2 Mlecellany
aumame7 3 Wheat -
28 Used tire 4 New YOftt City,
30 Dictionary ft:lr one
maven 5 Mixture
34 Module 6 Gllttefy dolh
35 Plat•us 7 Vat
v
37 Flooring piece 8 Stale hnklV
38 -King Cole 9 Dwell•
39 T oott'I on a 10 Rec:ommend
wheel 11 SpoUn
40 Cinnamon -12 Gawk at
41 Repeat 13 Wan!
43 Lawn pests 21 Anger
45 N;;t~ Foxx 23 Mau
46 Veggie c::ooMf 2e Old NorM
48 Disputes il*"'lptioi II
50 Balbie's beau 27 P ... Into law
51 Catllbean bqoof 28 Church lax
52 Summit 29 Styt8 of a room
56 Hom><.film 30 Engaged Ill
r.1-~-.:!~'n""-
•114-2e2-2604• •-1-MW------9-0-3-0 __ ...,,C_a_b..,...le_TV_.,..,__
D••cramblere •800-211 -4125• '04 7401 Immaculate,
loaded, extended war·
ranty. Moving mu1t
Hlllll $32,500 obo
pgr714·728·7034
1 ·888-88·Lll'.XUS ~:A~,fflt:" ~n-o s ELL
'88 130T LEXUS
White, Ivory, moon· MISSION Vll!JO roof. leather, CO, new 1 ·(888)·88-LEXUS
Lexu1 trade. (009972)
·mllPiC'KuPJ Call 642-5678.
your used veh1c1e ~'{odo-Y Pl.it a few words
through classified to vvork for you.·_. $22,977
MERCEDES 9130 Ll!XUS
MISSIONV18JO
1-$88-Sa.LEXUS 642·5678 -'87 Whit• 580SL W/ ________ _._ _______ _,1...-_______________________ _,~
""WlNCES 6011 •••••••• 1--------'98 Q4S priced to Hit Gray Leather Int. Xlnt --------CADILLAC 9040 $29,995 pearl wht w/ Cond. Phone, 2·Tops,
.. GAR.AGE SAI.ES
Co90NA tan hhr Int. 24k ml. $17,000 72o-8013
Qea l'urneoe br A 1howroo!" condJ •88 58oSEL Blue, lthr
., P•vn• 132K BTU. DEL MAR 6122 •'82 Eldwedo• tran1t. mfg 1 warranty Int. iunroof, phone, 1 y • , t I c I • u p f I ow . Touring coupe, melaJ-574-2e00 owner. Perfec1 Cond. S200 obo 515-8211 lie maroon w/gray · Harbor View Hiiia leather Interior, 69k 132K ml. $15.900.
Greet Burl GE 23.5c1 Tons of 1tutt: HMhld, ml, S14K. Owner will JAGUAR 9105 644-1968 or 883-0582 -~ ott .white, collectlble1, old carry on appr. down a '81 580 SEC 1-owner
lee, water dHp. AllO, record1, Sat only credit. 714-96&-5n9liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii white/gray.. 89k ml. ~que Singer S.wlnn 8am-3pm. 994 Sand-·, ,.,.,. XJ 12 "'-cet Cond $27 500 machine 714-7aa.oe46 castle Or 92 F ... twood. Fully -...,. · · • · equipped, beautlful. 1· Sedan, 40, Met. Red, -~~7:'."'14-~723-=~1606::-::~-
Weaher, dryer & ---------• owner Royal Maroon ~k mUe•, (94-3869) '82 190E 2 .8
'°'efrlgerator $140/H COSTA MESA 6124 $10.000 432-n89 $29.995 CD. phona. leather,
Xlnt condl 845-5848 iiiiiiiiiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiii BAUER JAGUAR moonroof, like new. 1--------714-871·2002 (949474) $17,!lSO
81owout ••1•1 CHEVROLET 9045 •---..,.,,.,,,-,,~,---Ll!XUS OF Sat.Only·7am-3pm '85 X.18 WESTMINSTER Fl1h tank•. houa .. li-.iMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 2+2 convertible, red, ,7141 8 ... 2 _ .... 0 e 6014
warH,cltha & morel • 11 El Camino•• 28k ml. (95-3802) -~~~=·~-~·~-t:o1nputer Armolre 218 Alvert Place • 2 Ford Rancheros $38,995 '94 MBZ C280
... ctlerry wood flnl1h x Orange Ave & 23rd from 1960-1987 belt BAU•R JAOUAR Sliver/black leather, C/
• $450 714-&to-4383 offer. Owner will carry 714-971·2002 0 , moonroof, full
ii• _ on approved down &1---,.,,...,....,~---pow• r # O 3 5 7 7 2 J' BUY PURNITUn .. NEWPORT credit. 714-968-5n9 '85 XJO S23,H7 • AntlquH, All PIANOS Sedan, 40, Black, 29k LBXUS
tpo or houHful ca•h B'E.ACH 6169 '73 Caprice 2-Dr, V8, ml, (95·3730) S36,995 MISSION VIEJO ~paJd (714) 957-8133 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ac, P•. pb, new •es X.IS 1-888-88-LEXUS MOVING SAL• alignment & brakH, Sedan, 40, Ork. Blue, re •ntertalnment Quality at Qreat PrlcH good paint. All Smog 23k ml, (95·3783)
C:tr. Waahed oak, Fri/Sat 8130-31Pll Equip. $2000.Flrm $36,995 --------
glaaa/wood door1. 907 Aleppo-Eulbluff Devin 557-1020 BAUER JAGUAR MERCURY 9135 58x21 , 1350.obo Uke N-I 989-8204 baby hem•, boya clths '88 SUB 2wd 3J4ton, 714-871·2002
to 1lze 5, toya, kitchen 454, 325hp cam, man-•-----....,..,.,,,..--'78 Grand llarqule
llloe CoQ on whll• Item•. womena ctt.h9, lfotd, 5 core rad, quick '95 XJR 4-dr. Full pwr. Real •of• S8t.9t. Call a!zH 4-10, furniture, ah!ft kit, new catl/ Sedan, 40, Black, 48k iharpl 95k mlles.
l)efor9 noon 64W787 lamp•, plcturea, tlres/brakH $9,900 ml. (95-3739b $39."5 S2000 obo 723-1504 r.~ ..... -r and book9, and morel 714-75a.8373 •es XJa OUP• •-• -20, Met. Aec:I, 33k ml, IOYe9Ht. 2-end table• (95-3811) $29,995 i~:o.o~off:• L~'::~•a SELL CHRYSLER 9050 Sedan.'~,,.~!v. l2k ROW IOYCE 9182 seo. for pair 983-3483 ml. (95-3855) $38,99S
Tiil< oiiK BHutlful, ~Ur USed VehJCfe '81 LeBaron Ughl BAUl!R JAOUAR •'BS Sliver Spur
h I lfl d Gray/Qray. Excel, 714-971·2002 Black/tan, 36k ml, ' Contempory, al • frac· rOUQ C aSS e Cond. $8990. Calli--------$45k. •·79 Comlche »on of coat.SSOOobo. 942·5878 1se-u100 Ext.2328 '88 XJe Conv. 2·tone metamc 714-673-3112 Sedan 40, gray, 27k blue, blue top red
Run )loo.r ad In tho
NeWport ewn:-
Colta Men Delly
~-tho ~Be~
Fount.Wn~
~to
,..ch O't19f' 100.000
hOrftel, f81l UI thll
torm -~ a.dlt
omd • « ""'' with ·----' ........... ..... ...
---------, 0 .. 1&1.llYCAlt
I
I
-----~-------~ ' .--------------·:
,....;..-=... ........ -~-~~-----I C.:...,..., .. o...,.,..._• __ o_w:_o_•~-c-.w_• __ -.J •,
_,. •• ? -
mllea, (98-3805). leather 35ek ml, S45K.
$39,995 •'78 Sllv•t Shadow
llAU•R JAGUAR Champagne/chestnut,
714-971·2002 44k ml, S25K. Qwner ..... u.,. will carry on approved
_. A dOWn a Cfedit. Sedan 40, grffn, 35k 7 1 4 .9 8 8 -S 7 7 9
ml, (96-3870) '37,"5
BAU•R JAGUAR
714-•71·2002 ·--------•iixJe
Sedan, 40, ote.n, 24k
ml, '39,995
llAUaR JAGUAR
714-971-2002
JEBP ---------
Aurora Bravada LSS
DISCOUNT PRICING/
.
ING
EW
LE
K!
CUTLASS SUPREME
PLUMBERS
CONTRACTORS
ELECTRICIANS
ALL YOU HARD
..... 5
tKatella
'97 LOTUS ESPRIT
$
Combined with Price and Daily Practicality,
It's Easy to See That Nothing Compares.
We specialize in local cars with complete service records. All of our vehicles have
been thoroughly inspected and reconditioned by our master service technicians.
Our finance and lease programs are extremely competitive and although many of our
cars have a significant factory warranty remaining, we off er only top quality extended
protection plans .
• ·~ # ; • .'--~.-••• _,,,,. ~, -\
'67 JAGUAR 420G
~c:_,_grey interior, classic car, very good condition, only 43K miles.
(TXT895)
'95 HONDA PASSPORT DX
White, Gray lpterior, 5 SPD, A/C, Sunroof (3PB987)
~?u~ l~~~~sun~2~~~~1lome wheels
(2URT055)
'97 HONDA.CIVIC DX • Blue, grey interior, 5 spd, A/C, factory warranty (3VOB872)
'-96~}30
Bordeaux, tan leather.·phone,..runroof, CD/cass., premium sound,
chrome wheels, loaded; fow miles. (3PJB106)
'9S RANGE ROVER COUNTY LWB
Biarritz blue, tan leather, moonroof, CD changer, premium sound,
loaded (655700)
55,995
5 10,995
5 11,995
5 12,995
530,995
\