HomeMy WebLinkAbout1998-03-10 - Orange Coast Pilotr-•
Colbert on
top after
• • SUIVIvmg
cancer
By Nola L Sarkisian, Daily Pilot
For golf professional Jim Colbert,
life has gotten back on course since
bis recuperation from prostate can-
cer surgery last June.
Despite missing four months of
the 1997 season, the Las Vegas resi-•
dent finished among the top 31 mon-
ey winners for the seventh year in a
row, adding $558,000 to round out
the $8.6 million
he earned in
seven years
with bis 18 vic-
tories on the
SeniorPGA
Tour.
It's only
befitting that
Colbert is
returning to
the site of bis
1996 two-
stroke win
over Bob East-
wood at the
Toshiba Senior
Classic, this
year benefiting
Hoag Cancer
Center. Two
years ago, Col-.
•• bert won •
$150,000 for shooting a 201, Qlaking
tournament history with the biggest
margin of victory at 12-under-par.
Before he tests his prowess for
this year's $165,000 champioiiship
prize, be will speak this morning at a
community breakfast at the club's
19th Hole -a 9,000-square-foot lux-
ury tent that is the tournament's
soda! seat -the day after his 57th
birthday. .
•it's great that he agreed to speak
because the money we raise in the
tournament helps support the ser-
vices that we can provide to the
• SEE COLBERT PAGE 4
,----------------1 · 9Rl¥1Nfi -=FM E HA-rRem AWAY
I I r . J:I I • Woman credits her love I 1 · of God for keeping bitter-
ness out of her heart after
man sexually assaulted.
tried to kill her in 1992,
Via lido
homes to·
stay put
• Newport council approves zone
change from commercial to residential
uses for part of Cannery Village street.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -City Council members
Monday night agreed that a stretch of land on Via
Lido w'as better suited for homes than businesses.
The council voted unanimously to change the
zoning of three lots on the 3300 block of Via Lido
from commercial to residential uses, a decision that
assures the future of several homes sitting on the
land.
Patrick Alford, seruor planner for the city, said the
four condos and four-and 10-unit apartment com-
plexes were built m the early 1950s -before the city
adopted its general plan, which designated the area
for commercial uses.
In addition to changing the zoning, the council
directed staff to work out the details of a proposal by
Lido Investment Co. to demolish the 10-unit apart-
ment building and re place it with four detached sin-
gle-family houses.
The Newport Beach Planning Commission last
month recommended the council reject the proposal,
citing conflicts and inconsistencies between the pro-
ject and various city codes and land-use plans.
The commission also found that single-family
homes were inappropnate for the area and present-
ed major traffic safety concerns. Commissioners felt
the project was part of a larger commercial area and
should remain commercial, Alford said.
But council members disagreed.
·1·m in favor of the conversion to residential, but
I'm not convinced that the pro1ect before us is the
• SEE VIA UDO PAGE 4
Newport-Mesa
may give l~on
in religion
• National interfaith group considers
asking district to help train teachers how
to discuss religion in the classroom.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -The National Conference is
considering enlisting the aid of the Newport-Mesa
school board to help teach educators the role of reli-
gion and the legal gwdeltnes for discussing it in the
classroom. conference offioals said. •
After conducting a symposium on the role of reli-
gion in the public schools at Chapman University in
October, National Conference otfiaals said they saw
considerable interest among local school boards to
learn more about how far educators can go in dis-
cussing different religions and their tnpacts on his-
tory. The National Conference, formerly the Nation-
al Conference of Cbristlans and Jews, is a national
Jntedaith organization.
·Educators need to know when does the law end
and when does school policy start,• said William
Shane·, the executive director of the National Con-
ference. •A lot of teachers don't know how to handle
Ramadan [the Musttm month of fasting) or what the
rules of the game are.•
Another question that frequently comes up is: •0o
schw>ls have to equally recognize all religious holi·
• SEE RELIGION PAGE 4
• I I I I I I I I I I I L
a
!'
~
II
v
. ,.
·' (
·-
..
!
-
•Estancia zone offers
quality education,
but parents still need
a lesson or two. As I read about the flight
frOm the Bstanda zone
and become l\1riouilded
by frlendj, both in and out of
the district, Who haw their year-
ly bout of ·1s tbit th,e rt~t
school for mJe:ldf• f4'\'ef, J
started won g if I wu in
fantasyland ~d sbOWd rMMll·
uate my own attitudes.
Should I be frantically oom-
paring statewide test IOOT81 and
be finding out which school. pri-
vate or public, has decided to
Stop the madness!
T he proposal by the New-
port-Mesa school board to
put computers on school
buses and give kids cards to
swipe as they board is another
example of the government rush-
ing in with a bad idea in an effort
to Mhelp" parents who should be"
teaching their kids proper behav-
ior. Sorry to have to be the one to
state th.Ls, but kids on buses are
always going to tease, scream,
shoot spitballs and pull pigtails.
They did when I rode the bus
back in the Stone Age and they'll
always do it. Having a computer
on board is not going to stop kids
from ~ing kids, which also
means that the cards they are giv-
en are going to be lost on a regu-
lar basis. Of course, physical vio-
lence and vandalism should not
be tolerated, but if the board
insists on trying to make young-
sters sit quietly with their bands
folded in their laps, I suggest the
following low-cost, low-mainte-
nance alternatives:
1) Leg irons and handcuffs for
every kid
2) Ten milligrams of Valium 30
minutes prior to departure
(dosage varies on size of kid)
3) Straitjackets
tMcti tbe ~ c.'Wltalluln m-.. ~ eo pe ttae1r w-
dina a hMd .....-1 Am I
~ mpelf tD tba .....
....... ofibit ·~· cr1s11· ~ poMtical c.wodldete ..
~~ldiool edual-
1iOli m Orange CcJunly ICbooll, I
was able to Obt.ain a juds doctor-eta tloal a reputable tchoot My
huSblind obt4ined an MBA. IO
we have 36 yeen ol educwumaJ
eq;edence betWemi us. I dedd-
ed to really tint back to wb8t
·we lemDed end wbm and tiow
we Jeained it. Of COUl'l8f in tboee
days, no one wonted about •tree
choice• or vouchers, Cll' even
oonsidered private sthooll. IO.dB
"kids" as a different kind of four-
letter word. Mrs. Leece saw
through this madness and cast
the lone dissenting vote.
Run John run
STEVE SMITH
Costa Mesa
John HE!dges? Running for
county supervisor? Let's see,
what's the number of Tom Wil-
son's office, so I can volunteer to
work on his campaign.
SHARON BOUDREAU
Costa Mesa
Remove John Hedges
I believ.e that John Hedges will
make a wondatul supervtsor for
the 5th District. Everybo9y in the
5th District, listen to him. vote for
him, then we can get him off the
Newport Beach City Council. I fig-
ure ~t he would be less damag-
ing as a supervisor than he is right
now as a council member.
GEORGE lAMPINEN
NeWport Beach
Hedges for 5th District
of Tom Riley after the bankruptcy
fallout, the bailout of Marian
Bergeson when the going got
tough. and the appointment of
Wilson by another Wilson. New-
port citizens have been.disenfran-.
chised.
Newport must be represented
in the election process and debate,
win or lose. To that end, John
Hedges is our best choice. He is
courageous, bright. articulate, and
enviably young with a good
understanding of airports and the
issues. He also has a sense of
humor, which is something sorely
absent in all the yo-yo banter
enthusiastically inflamed by the
editorial editors-otan-oura:rumy-
newspapers (even though there
hasn't been a fresh romment in
ages).
focus on the op~ offered at school by having a
distraction-tree time eadl night.
Wbat would our ituaebbl'
aoaomplisbments look lil'8 lf we
all~ to tUrn off tbe 1V,
~games, teleJ)bone and
r8dlO for an hour or more each
~ and !Md 8ncl do home-
work with our cbildi'in' Would
that help make evsy schOol the
•perteet SchOOI•f BefOre parents
Cledd~ to abandon their ll8igb-
borhood school. I suggest that
they go take a lOok for them-
selves, instead of letting wild
rumors oveirule objective
assessment.
GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL
Costa Mesa
Here's a word of than.ks to
trustee Wendy Leece, who seems
to be the only one who sees
John Hed.,9es is not only a for-
midable Pd{ a necess&y chal-
lenger f6r,;rom Wilson's 5th Dis-
trict seat. Newport Beach needs to
be represented in this, Orange
County's version of a North-South
civil war. Ever since the retirement
With Hedges, Wllson will
know he has a battle on his
hands. Although Newport is out-
soldiered in the upcoming war
and election, South County must
know now that we will fight just
as bard as they will and we will
back our candidate just as strong-
ly. To all of you who are used to
sitting on the sidelines while oth-
ers do your battle, it is time to
speak out and stand up or you
can't complain when John Wayne
becomes the new county Interna-
tional Airport.
MIOiAEL A. GLUECK
Newpo~ch
MARC MAR™ I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Newport-Mesa's proposal for bus computers won't stop kids from being kids, reader says.
D • BEAl2£8S l:IOTUNE
642-6086
Record your comments about
the Daily Pilot or news tips.
VOL 91, NO. 57 ADDRESS
Our address is 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627.
THOMAS H. JOHNSON,
Publisher CORRECTIONS
WIWAM LOltODJ.. It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt-
Editor ly correct all errors of substance.
Pie~ call 574-4233. SftVE MARBLE.
Managing Editor rn
TINA BORGATTA, The Newport Beac:h/C.osU Mesa
Assistant Managing Editor = Pilot (USPS-144-800) Is
SftVE EAMES. !shed Monday through Sat-
News Editor ur~. In Newport Beach and
ROGa CAlllLSON. Costa Mesa, subscriptions are
Sports Editor only avaii.t>le by subscribing to
The llmes Orange County (800) MARC MARTlN, 252-9141. In areas outside of
Photo Editor Newport Be.ch and Costa Mesa.
LYNNESOlA. subscriptions to the Dally Pilot
Display AdYenislng only are available by mail for
JUDY OETTING, $10 per month. Second dau
Oasslfled AdYertlsing postage paid at Cost.a Mesa. CA.
LANA JOHNSON. (Prices lndude all -s>Pllcable
Promotions state and local taxes.) POSlMAS-
TEJt Send address changes to PMMODSHAH, The Newport BeactVCost.a Mesa
Chief Flnanc:lal Officer Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, CA. 92626. Copyright NO
news stories, Illustrations, edito-
rial matter or advertisements
herein can be reproduced with·
out written permission of copy-
right ownef.
TEMPERAl\MES noon with 2-foot Water conditions are
Newport Beach wind waves. A 3-foot Improving with
71152 swell will come from about 5-foot vlslblll-
HOW JO REACH US
Circulation
The llmes Orange County
(800) 252-9141
Advertising
Oasslfied 642·5678
:642-4321
News 540-1224
Sports 642-4330
Ne\YS, Sports Fax 646--4170
~i~lot20e.rthHnk.net
Business Office 642-4321
Business Fax 631-5902
Published by
Callfomla Community NeM. ..,.
a Tlmes Mirror c:omp.ny. W
Robert G. Mllgnulon.
President and CEO
• Judhti I. KencWI.
Vice President, Genef.t M.,,.,-
01997 Cltllf. CN. All llgl'rtl ~
Newport Coast the west. ty. However, the 71153 beaches from 48th Balboa
71152 110ESTOOAY Street to the Santa
Costa Mesa First low Ana River may still
76148 1:28 a.m. 1.4 be c.losed due to a
Corona del Mar First high sewage spill. There Is
7W53 7:28 a.m. 5.2 a very small swell
SC. FORECAST Second low out of the west-
LOCATION SIZE 2:11 p.m. -0.4 northwest at about
Wedge 0-3wnw Second high 285 degrees. Expect Newport 0-2wnw 8:28p.m. 4.3 surf to be anywhere Blackies 0-2wnw "WEDNESDAY from flat to kn8-River Jetty 0-2wnw First low high today, Wednes-CdM 0-2wnw 2:01 a.m. 1.1
First high day and Thursday.
Surfing may be out BOATING 8:02 a.m. 5.2
Winds will be from Second low of the question until
the northeast at 10 2:38p.m. -0.2 Friday when a new
knots In the morning Second high storm system Is
with 1-foot wind 8:51 p.m. 4.4 expected to hit
waves. Winds will bringing In a new
become southwest to WA1E1t swell and possible
west in the after-TEMPUA1URE: 62 ~-high waves.
. ·. . ..... ~-,7-~ •. -.,--~ ....... ~_,_ ·.· •YR..~,-v~
-' )~ ,., •• .,-. • • .-.... f ... ~~
' . .
1
I t 11 . . . . .
FAST FRIENDLY .SERVICE
\i/1THAPERSONALTOUCH
1 800 760-9267
$100.00 tor hea IWI. ~----·· .... MJda1 $30 00 tldl ~ hCll
MlllllMc ,
$!!50 00 bhu "°"" ~ .Fwrw• rlCbied 15000 eec:n ~ "°"·
NEWPORT llEAOt
• Jeth Street: A table worth $5,000 was stolen from a carport
In the 100 block.
• Nwiport c..nter Drtve: A cellular phone worth $600 was
stolen from a store counter top in the 100 block.
• Heliotrope Avenue: Someone broke into a house in the 400
block and stole $3,000 In cash from a bedroom cabinet.
• atrch Street: Three leaf blowers worth $1500 were stolen
from the bed of a truck In the 5000 block.
• Serelw..ct. Twnc:9 A compact disc player worth $500 was
stolen from the trunk of a car In the 1400 blodt.
COSTA MESA
• Anton Boulevard: A box containing diving equipment. baby
clothes, toys and party favors worth $880 was stolen from the
trunk of a car In the 600 block.
•Newport 9oulevwd: A cordless telephone worth $75 was
stolen from a nearly vacated apartment In the 2000 blodt.
• Bristol 5"-'= A t.ptop computer worth $.i,000 was stolen
from an unlocked car trunk in the 300 block.
• c:o.ta MIA Str.t: An unknown suspect entered an
unlocked garage in the 400 block and stole an off-road motor-
cycle worth $737.
• Whittler Avenue: Six dumbbells and two seat cushions
worth $737 were stolen from a weight room and pool In the
1800 block.
Ne
I
~
( ,
I
(
I
(
' l
I
I
)
r
• ~
pl
b1
fc
B~
Bt
fa
la
~c
al
9<
ill c
w
i.q
of 1~
e<
(
L
~ . ~ Q, -=
TE
SC
tl•
rr
w
IT
b1
61
fr z
v
s
s•
b
....
tE
!'-
h
p
u
b
b
i~
!!3
TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1998 Q
Qty r~jects nonresident library fee !Meet a presidellt
· ·who rose above • N~rt Beach City
Council opts to let
out-of ·towners continue
using library for free.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BJ!ACH
Patrons of the public library
here who don't live in the city
can rest easy, at least for now:
Their library p rivileges will
remain free of charge.
library ~. wbOe nonresl·
dents doli't make any direct
pa.,...m b UM ol the facQity.
liowner, UM dty does get
S1.50f0reeda~tcard
holder from state nlmbune·
ment fund.I -abOut $300,000
per year.
' While that amount is a frac-
tion of the $4 mllllon cost o(
. operating the ijbrary, it is more
than the city anticipates it
would get from selling nonresi-
dent Uttrary cards, the staff
report concluded. The dty
would automatically lose the
$300,000 if it began chlirging
nonresidents for use of the
library.
his indiscretions
G rover Cleveland was one
of our better presidents.
H~ is usually referred to
• as our most distinguished presi-
dent between Abraham Lincoln
and Theodore Roosevelt. Of
course, that really doesn't say too
much for the man.
Some of our most undistin ·
guished presidents served our
country during that time. Loom-
ing over the UniteQ States,
The City Council on Mon-
day d~cided pot to adopt a
library ~se fee for nonresi:
dents. But the council agreed
to review the policy on an
annual basis starting in
November.
Council.uian John Hedges
said the idea of charging non-
residents for library cards
should not be dismissed.
MARC MARTIW DALY Pl.OT
Coundlman John Hedges would like to see the Newport ~
Beach public library uMd by residents only. "
• Ulysses Grant, Andrew Johnson,
Rutherford Hayes, James
Garfield, Chester Arthur, Ben-
jamin Harrison and William
McKinley, doesn't necessanly
crown one wtth the mantle of
greatness. But Cleveland was
scrupulously honest. which chd
set him apart from some of the
others.
robe rt
gardner M ore than hall of the
library's users do not live in the
city. According to a staff report
presented by a subcommittee
of the library boa.rd, residents
pay about $60 per capita for
•I think the risk of losing
money is overstated in the stalf
report," be said. "The City
Council could make a cominit-
ment to put forth any shortfall.
This is going to continue to be
a problem."
One resident, Elizabeth Stahr,
said she helped raise money to
build the $7 million library and
didn't think it was fair to charge
students from neighboring Costa
Mesa or nonresidents who work
in Fashion Island a fee to use the
public library.
Newport Boulevard may get new look
So what, one might ask. After
all, Cleveland was president
more than 100 years ago. Well,
the reason for this little foray into
our nation's history is that Cleve-
land and our current president
share a certain problem. Each
was tarnished with charges of
sexual misconduct. There is one
small distinction, though. Cleve-
land's misconduct occurred
before be became president and
he admitted it. As for President
Clinton? Well ...
Blame's domestic life was the
essence of probity. So, we have a
notonously corrupt politician
with a squeaky clean sex life
running agamst an honest,
upright politician with a sexual
misadventure in his background.
The result was that the whole
campaign was run on two pnce-
less bits of doggerel.
some improvements.
As for the northern stretch of
Newport Boulevard his firm was
• Consultant gives Costa
Mesa council seven-point
plan to make the busy
boulevard more enticing
for shoppers.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Ptlot
' hired to study, consultaht Lany
Sherman said more needs to be
done to encourage people to stay
on the commercial strip instead of
merging onto the Costa Mesa
Freeway below.
lanes with numerous Mexican fan
palm trees and hanging banners to
advertise city programs or events
sponsored by area charities on
light posts along the east side of
the northbound lanes.
Officials could also weed out
redundant street signs and exces-
sive landscaping to clean up the
area and plant trees and shrubs at
the island where the freeway
splits and ends just north of 19th
Street, Sherman said.
COSTA MESA -Newport
Boulevard could be m for a major
face-Wt.
Consultants hlred by the city
tast year to d.o a study Qf land-
~caping and commercial signs
along both sides of the busy
boulevard between 19th Street
and Mesa Drive returned to the
City Council on Monday night
with some preliminary results.
The council also talked about
improving the downtown segment
of Newport Boulevard from 17th to
19th streets, which was not includ-
ed in the study but is also slated for
Sherman blamed a lot of the
blight in the area on confusing
commercial signs, mismatched
landscaping and too many traffic
signs, all of which he dubbed
"sidewalk clutter.•
"What you have a lot of is 'No
Park:irig, No Parking' and 'No
Parking,' then a red curb painted
alongside,• Sherman said. "Over
time, we can clean some of that
up."
Sherman's firm has come up
with a tentative seven-point plan
aimed al sprucing up the northern
section of Newport Boulevard.
The plan recommends lining
the western side of the northbound
Farther south along Newport
Boulevard, where the road often
more closely resembles a parking
lot, city officials informally
reviewed five options for improv-
ing car and foot traffic in the
downtown area.
The tentative plans call for
adding a fourth lane to . one or
both directions of the street,
widening which in some cases
could require eliminating the on-
street parking on the east side of
the street, officials said.
~chool board to consider Decker replacement
ly Husein Mashni, Dally Piiot
NEWPORT-MESA -At its
regular meeting tomght, the
school board will mvite applica-
tions for a temporary replace-
ment for member Ed Decker,
who plans to announce his
intention to resign from the
board.
The school board will be
accepting letters of application
from residents in the district's
Zone l, which includes Mesa
Verde and the Estancia High
School zone.
Decker's replacement would
serve until the November school
board elections.
Whoever wms m November
will serve out the rest of Decker's
term, which offioally ends in
November 2000.
Decker, who has announced
his intention to apply for the
position of superintendent of
the school district, said be will
be stepping down from the
board as soon as a replacement
is found.
Because he
is applying for
the position of
sup erin ten-
dent, Decker
has not been
allowed to par-
ticipate in any
aspect of -the
s uperin t e n ·
After a replacement is found,
the district will allow a 30-day
period for the community to
rebut the board's decision or
call for a special election. If
there is no public rebuttal, the
appointee will then exercise the
full privileges of an elected
school board m ember.
dent search Ed Decker process, to
In other business, the board
will discuss possible maneuvers
to offset shrinking enrollments
at Estancia High School. avoid any con-
flict of interest. But many resi ..
dents of the Estancia zone said if
Decker stayed on the board, their
zone would be underrepresented
in the search for the district's new
chief.
Board members have consid-
ered imposing a moratorium on
high school transfers to prevent
students from moving out of
their neighborhood schools.
THE
GREY GOOSE
Wtll Celebrate Its
-i---TENTH ANNWERSARY
on
Thursday, March 12 --1 Oa~m. to~ Bp. ,.
We wiah to thank all of our customen f'or 8upporljng us
during these ten )l8QrJ and would l<M to haw )OU stop~ and
haw some ~. take home some Aromattque ba.th
aampla. ent4R' our dl'Qwinga and generally haw" good time.
The c:lrowinfa wiU be ewry half hour' and will consist of gilta
ttorn tlwJ fOllowlnl companla:
Art to Wear-~ A Floyd • Dept. 50 <lighted piece) -Lucy Ann
WhUJ>erinl Windl • S.QIUll • BO}'dl Bean • Vera Brodley
C.R. GU>.ton • Hollon-Bums• Promel • 8cJndom House
Mld.VtMBt • Linden ClocM • 'lWo~ Company • ~
~AMO • D'El6na • NordSc Houae • CowU1y SfGIOnl
PeatlwlrboM • Caapat'l
<need noc be,,,.._,., norma.U c ~to winJ
Cake provided by TM Conf•ctlOl\Slt
Please Join Us On Thl.e Happy Oa:utont
THE GREY GOoSE. INC.
WetU:Wf Plu.a • ton lntne Aw.aue
Newport Be•cb • (114) t41·1IOS
Ho.ant M ICM IWa IH
Some officials voiced concerns
about making downtown
unfriendly to pedestrians by
widening Newport Boulevard to
squeeze more cars through.
"The faster we make traffic
flow, the faster pedestrians would
have to be to get across the street,"
said City Manager Allan Roeder.
The work to widen Newport '
Boulevard through downtown
would cost between $881 ,000 and
$2.3 milbon and could be paid by
state transportation grants, offi-
cials said.
As for who would pay for the
paJm trees and other cleanup on
the northern part of town, city •
officials are still.undecided.
The city could create a boule-
vard improvement district for par-
ticipating private property owners
to fund the palm trees and other
improvements on their own or
apply for s1nular transportation
grants for thdt stretch also, offi·
cials said.
Cleveland bad fathered an
illegitimate chtld in lus younger
years. He never derued it and
accepted full responsibility for
the act. Nevertheless, it had hap-
pened, and when he ran for
president it became an issue.
Cleveland's opponent was one
James G. Blaine, a senator from
Maine. Now Blaine was a noton-
ously corrupt politician. He had
made a substantial fortune dur·
ing his political life, especially
during the Grant administration.
His source of that fortune he
would not explain. His excuse
was nothing short of marvelous.
"Private business should remain
private."
On the other hand, Sen.
On the one hand, Blaine's
supporters chanted, "Ma,
where's my pa? Gone to the
White House, ha ha ha!"
On the other hand, Cleve-
land's supporters chanted,
"Blame, Blaine, James G Blame,
the continental liar from the state
of Maine!"
All of Uus caused George W
Curtis of the Civil Service reform
fame and a Cleveland supporter
to observe, "We are told that Mr
Blame has been delinquent in
office but blameless in private
We, whereas f\1r Cleveland has
been a model of offiaal mtegnty
but culpable in hls personal rela-
tions. We should therefore elect
Mr. Cleveland to the public
office he is so well qualified to
fill and return Mr. Blaine to the
private status which he is
admirably titted to adorn."
• ROBERT GARDNER is a retired judge
and resident of Corona del Mar His col
umn appears every Tuesday
Comcast Cable
• ts
than ever.
There's something for everyone!
Today. the biggest value 1n entertainment. information
and service is provided by Comcast Cable March 31
our Newport Beach customers can en1ov 11 new
cable networks including Animal Planet.
cartoon Network. Bravo, The Nashville
Network, ComcasTV, Romance Classics,
The Game Show Network, Prevue Gulde,
C..SPAN II, The Movie Channel and Multi·
Channel HBO.
1~0MCAST
(1-888-~2278)
• . ' • I c • . ' ! i • • " • •
I
I
!'
L.
ii
" "
"
,l
(
TUESDAY, MARCH 10; 1998
RELIGION
CONTINUED FROM 1
ctoysr
•The answer is no,• Shane
said.
Conference offidals will be
meeting with local school officials
in an effort to discuss what their
next step will be, Shane said.
•Right now this is just an
idea,• he said. •nut it's been tried
with success in other districts in
the country.•
Members of the Irvine, Hunt-
ington Beach and Newport-Mesa
school boards have expressed
interest in having a symposium or
some kind of educational pro-
gram for public school teachers
and administrators, Shane said.
"A lot of teachers are scared to
death to even talk about religion
VIA LIDO
CONTINUED FROM 1
way to do that,· Councilman John
Hedges said. "I'd like to direct the
staff to take the council's concerns
and bring a proposal back to the
council."
Planning Director Patricia
Temple said she would return the
issue to the council in four weeks.
Property owners in the area
spoke at Monday's public hear-
ing, expressing their desire to see
the area stay residential.
"The current zoning leaves us
between a rock and a hard
place," said Pam Whitesides, who
in the classroom." Aid school
board member Wendy Leeee. •1
thlnk a lot of good can come from
it if this can help clarify for teach-
ers what they can and can't do.•
Sbane said the National Con-
ference could both coDduct an
educational symposium and pro-
vide literature end other
resources to the schools. The
Conference distributes a ~
pblet titled "Religious Uberty,
Public Education and the P\lture
of American Demoaacy. • The
pamphlet lays out the legal
guidelines for discussing religion
in public schools.
The pamphlet, published by
The Freedom Forum First
Amendment Center, says, •Pub-
lic schools may not inculcate nor
inhibit religion. There must be
places where religion and reli-
gious conviction are treated with
fairness and respect.•
owns one of the Via Lldo condos.
"Insurance is more expensive as
the buildings get older, and if
they deteriorate we can't replace
them."
Converting her home to a busi-
ness would not be viable, she
added.
The only opposition to Lldo
Investment's project was James
Ratkovich & Associates, which is
buying Lldo Marina Village and
adjacent properties. Although no
one from the company was at the
meeting, company President
James Ratkovich sent a letter to'
the city saying residential proper-
ties could adversely affect the
company's plans to redevelop the
village.
around town
TODAY
TOASTMASTERS CLUB
The Mesa Messengers Toast-
masters Club holds a speech con.:-
test at 7 p.m. at Mesa Verde Unit-
ed Methodist Church, 17Ql W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. Visitors
welcome. For more information,
call 540-4446.
TAX SEMINAR
Scott Bengfort and WNC and
Associates Inc. offers a free lun-
cheon seminar, Tax Credits -
Explained and Available, at noon
at the Doubletree Hotel, 3050
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 bolds its annual blood
drive from 3 to 8 p.m. at 1011
Camelback St., Newport Beach.
For more information, call 509-
1355.
ASSERTIVENESS SKILLS
The Newport Beach Public
Llbra.ry offers a free program,
Assertiveness Skills, at noon in
the Central Library's Friends
Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For more
information, call 717-3801.
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL
WOMEN
The South Coast Business and
Professional Women March lun-
cheon features consultant
-
"1'.--•~~I ~
CllA'S FAMILY ~.
SHOEREPAJR
:/:f:::.1673 lnineAve. IP
~ ,.., .. c.~ .~~L --.... n~U11
'• ' ' 1 ·, I t ;,1
s 1U.9 ~)
Michel-Joy DelRe speaking
about •Tue Eight Attributes of a
Fulfilled Entrepreneur" from
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Wynd-
ham Garden Hotel,...3350 Ave. of
the Arts, Costa Mesa. The cost is
$17 for members and $22 for
guests. Call 472-4666.
WEDNESDAY
HIGH SCHOOL DANCE DAY
Orange Coast College pre-
sents the 14th annual High
School Dance Day from 8 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion. cail 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 Llbra.ry Foundation will
meet at 9:30 a.m. ana 7 p.m. at
the Central Llbrary, 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach. Books
discussed will be "The Solace of
Open Spaces" by Gretel Ehrlich
and "Montana 1948" by Larry
Wilson. Call 717-3890.
,..., .....
'Q19 ••zl* mugtat-Bddle
...... tM~t and
_... -tmlll ~ dnoil"t, 1'tao ..... Jt* ........ COi'• .......................
edllla
•He wme 1o Tob, ~ and
kW,• Rodda laid. •aut
became ot tbe inttrvmtioA of
Ood J)mlghty, none of thoee
thiDgs happened .•
Rodda, wbo pu~ for-
gave ber attri• and laW
bc'cNgt)t bUn a Albie m c:omt,
de&Qtbecl IW three Visits to
the qnmty jail Wbere be wu
belng held.
•t found out that he ran
away from the worst kind of
home when he was 10,• she
said. •tte joined the carnival
and the week I was attacked
was between the ·Orange
County Pair and the Pomona
Pair.
"Where would someone
like that have heard about
....... -. ...... ....
...... lalm aboat ... ~.
Mid -DOdced • ,..., ill
lWa.
'"Iba Md tiiDe I YllltM
ldpa. I IQww .... bing Md
hltrprf d. • ... MIL ~He told
.. be w .... wlth &b.e
cmpleln. He-. all the~
WU~.•
U~n Wscovertng that be
bad area~ diNbility, Rodda
arranged for e l8del of Bible
tap11 and a CUI Itta J>Jer-to
be Hat to blln.
At ~ MaadaJ ..... meet·
bJf, ROclda -Ml4 •. la.. done
wbat .... coul4 tor Bddle, but
• did ult fOr MD8 Of 1lle
men who were Involved iii
prison m1niitries to start writ-
ing him. .
"People used to tell me I
needed to get into some kind
of support group and deal with
all the USJel ~ hatred,• she
Satd. •sut I didn't have any
bitterness and hatred. By
focusing on the 'love of God, it
drives tbe hatred away."
t ~ • • "'
~) ,... l I .. /" > ~ ' I
r ~ ' ,
Since 1972
Amish Country Traditions'
•TllA##UAt
GRAFT S'HfJW
Fri. March 13, 12-8
Sat. March 14, 10-5
Orange County Fairgrounds
88 Fair Drive
Costa Mesa
Enter oft Arlington, gatn 4 or 5
Free Admissionl
Over 100 crafts people represented I Featuring hundreds of
guilts, wall han~lngs, furniture, toys, dolls, arf.J.. rugs, home
accessories and much mGre. Free Talk -urowing up
Amish, 2 p.m. both days .
*'Amish Coun~ Traditions *
fine Cnft8 From Lancuter CO\mty, PA 71'1-681-9210
&~-*Y
Somma
9?
Sale Oal9s Malm 14. 22, 1 m
1906 Harbor • 646-8603
. . J ~·
,
COLBERT Newport Beach Conference and
Visitors Bureau. herself a cancer
survivor, will be attending the
$100.a-plate function. Williams
recently completed a two-year
battle with breaSt cancer that
included surgery, chemotherapy,
radiation and a bone marrow
transplant.
CONTINUED FROM 1
public,• said Robert 0 . Dillman,
the center'• medical director and
co .. speaker,
adding that
the audience
may respond
differently to
their q)eeches.
11The general
population
pays attention
to sports fig-
ures and high-
•rm definitely interested in
bearing what he has to say about
the disease," the 53-year-old
Williams said. ·u can be a very
debilitating disease .... I have a
tremendous amount of empathy
for others fighting the fight."
ly visible pro-Jim Colbert files. They
Dillman hopes the talk will
awaken public interest in health
and spur individuals to have
regular medical checkups. He
said one in three men are at
risk of getting prostate cancer
in their lifetimes, and one in
seven women are at risk of
breast cancer.
revere them
and put them on a pedestal ...
especially if they talk about their
personal experiences."
That's part of the reason Ros-
alind Williams, president of the
Classified ads work
for you!
TiiE naily Pilot
Clac,c;1f1ed Community Marl<etplace
-Haircare for Kids, Teens
& the Entire Family
A Full Service Salon
Mank:ur• & PedJcures
Flat Top ~lal,.u • H~rt Braid• •
.,Cfooney "'" • Free Ear Piercing • Fodflt. • ~Sego Gama • Tree Ho.,. I.....,_ Atmo.phere
FIRST
HAIRCUT
$89~
Certificate f
l>hoto '
424-6350
3930 S. BRISTOL
SUITE 205
Acrou from South
Coast Plaza •
AnENTION
TEACHERS
ENTRY DEADLINE FOR 1998
STUDENT DESIGN
-AN AD OONlEST
IS FRIDAY,'tMRCH 13-s~ts in gcOd&A-1 2 wiU be
destgnt"Q ad~ fOc= businesses in the b:"mbf.~nning ortwork will w~,"~~i,~
CASH PRIZES TO -
TOP WINNERS!
'
n
I
·~
r.
I
c
r
c u
0
t
g
n
tJ s
(
\
ti
I-_ (
-11
-f\
ii
f· t c
a
v
1-
~
' r.
I ( ·E
. I!
' )
E
~I
t
l
E
. (
c ~
J
' ..
Piloc
bout
ry
a
thy
er
-,
_;;!I
' -.
r :
I EYE·OPENER
Green taking over
baseball at Bi,g Red
• Aikman easily the biggest draw
a t Monday's Cele brity Pro-Am.
By·Richard Dunn, Daily Piiot
NEWPORT BEACH -
{ Thel:e was a swarm of fans at
each hole, begging him to
pose for pictures and sign
autographs. 8 There were several high TOS HI A
school girls following him in
gallery, by far the largest in the field Mon-
day in the Celebrity Pro-Am, the inaugural
event of the Toshiba Senior Classic at New-
port Beach Country Club.
What has been traditionally a leisurely
opening day in this Senior PGA Tour event
turned to craze with the pro-am's first
group -and it wasn't golf legend Billy
Casper's new haircut.
Casper, who won 51 titles on the PGA
Tour, including two U.S. Open champi-
onships and a Masters green jacket, took a
back seat this time to his partner, Dallas
Cowboys quarterback 1roy Aikman.
"I want to· many him I" screamed stu-
dent Jeanette Oancy, who attended the
pro-am with several of her high school
friends. "We all want to marry hi.ml"
Aikman, the biggest draw in the pro-am
supported by local sports agents Leigh
Steinberg and Jeffrey Moorad, is no
stranger to NBCC, where the heartthrob
has played with Terry Donahue, the former
UCLA football coach for whom Aikman
played in 1987 and '88.
"I play a lot of golf," Aikman said being
teeing off Monday morning. "I'm a 14
handicap, and I can get down to about a 10,
but then I've got to go to training camp. I
fell in love with golf three years ago, but for
an NFL quarterback, I'm still not real swell.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"It wa. 4 bad l'l'iarrlal/'I tllt4 roe wn ju# not
on IM '°1M page ON» ltti got IM jab .•. •
-ESTANaA ASSISTANT PRJN0ML BIU WE17.BL
I'm still an embarrassment to the quarter-
back position.•
Aikman, represented by Steinberg
throughout his career, is the only quarter-
back in NFL history to win three Super
Bowls in a four-year span. And when he's
not on the gridiron, he p refers golf over
hunting or fishing,.
·1 played some golf when I was at
UCLA, but I would do it to just go out with
the guys, because I was never really in love
with the game,• Ailanan said. ·1 didn't care
how I played or what I scored, but then I got
bit by the bug, like most people do.
·1 don't really fish much anymore. Fish-
ing is only for when the weather's not good
enough to go play golf, or if you can't get a
tee time."
For Ai kman, it is as important to have
good pass protection as it is to have the
right sticks in the bag.
Aikman reportedly didn't like what was
inside bis rental bag at NBCC. •He asked
for a Ce.llaway Big Bertha driver and an
Odyssey putter," said NBCC head pro Paul
Hahn, who did not have any of the afore-
mentioned clubs laying around. •
Aikman, though, got lucky. NBCC
member and Toshiba Senior Classic volun-
teer Dee DeVaney just happened to have
those clubs in his bag in his car, so
DeVaney let Aikman boaow his clubs.
•I told nay there are no more cr6oked
drives in that driver and no more three
putts in that putter,· Devaney said. "I took
them all out.•
I
No word yet on whether DeVaney, a ?
huge Cowboys fan, has made Aikman's
short list for future Super Bowl tickets.
Aikman, who has also played at Pelican t
Hill Golf Oub in Newport Coast with Don-~
ahue, disputes his former coach's claim of 1 being a 22 handicap . "He just wants
strokes,• Aikman laughed.
PR EP GOLF r-------------------------------------------------------------------------, 'HIT-'N-GIGGLE
AFFAIR' IS THE
MAIN EVENT
FOR TODAY
Try topping
Tars' slate
•Newport Harbor High's
golf team on the move.
T his week's Toshiba Senior
Classic held enjoys the
luxury of Newport Beach
Country Club this week, and
that's hardly anything to brush
off.
But it seems mere chicken
feed compared to the schedule
for Newport Harbor High's golf
program, under the leadership of
Coach Jim Warren, a fourth-year
golf coach at Harbor.
This week's agenda?
It began on Monday with a
match against San Clemente at
the Pacific Club. Today the
Sailors are at Mission Viejo
Country Club (against Mission
Viejo High), then Wednesday
they tangle with Aliso Niguel
High at Santa Ana Country
: Club, followed by a second nine
: holes against Aliso Niguel at El
• Niguel CC on Thursday.
That's quite a mouthful, but
. it's just the appetizer.
On Sunday the Sailors depart
for San Jose at 10 a.m., and will
be practicing on the links at
Quail Lodge in Monterey in the
afternoon for Monday's duel
with Robert Louis Stevenson
High of Pebble Beach.
Another practice session
Mqnday morning at Carmel
Valley Ranch precedes their
. match with Stevenson on the
, greens of Spyglass at Pebble
·Beach.
So how did all this come
~about?
: "I just got on the phone,• said
Warren, a wrestling official with
years of wrestling coaching
experience under his belt, often
·putting together various
traveling packages for his teams
under the umbrella of a cultural
exchange.
The players will be staying in
the homes of Robert Louis
Stevenson athletes, and later, a
reciprocal package will find the
Pirates from Pebble Beach
coming south to stay in homes
of Harbor golfers, with
competitions slated for Palm .
· Springs (in a four-way meet with
·Estancia and Palm Desert April
• 14), as well as the first-ever
appearance of high school
golfers at Pelican Hill on the
~ Newport Coast April 17.
~ The Sailors have eight
' coaches dealing with 50 in a ~am,-w:bkb includes.A.
: frosh-soph team, a junior varsity
' and a girls team, as well ~ the
_V toshiba senior classic
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
S enlor pro Walter Morgan (above), with t
bis tradiUonal cigar, watches bis drive
off the second tee at Monday's Celebrity
Pro-Am: New York Giants' place-kicker
Brad Dalulso (left) blasts out oJ a bunker on
No. 5, and Dallas Cowboys star Troy
Aikman (below) lines up his putt on the
fint green as Toshiba IV gets under way.
varsity. What'~ more. thera's.AI101u.&e"---
ourney north latet, to •
SacrllIJlento.
But that's another story. . • by Roger Carlaon
' I
I · . I L--~--~--------~--------------~-~~~~------------------~---------~--~------~
ii Steinberg lends his players; some good. some not so good. it," seid volunteer Richard Orte-,
ga, the marshal along the 6rst
fairway. "One of the caddies bied
to give hiril a lesson. I don't th1rik
he's ever played golf.•
sy Richard Dunn, Dally Pilot
quarterback Ryan Leof (Wa.shing·
ton Stote).
•we only completed I tve
holes," Gonzalea said. ·we ctart·
eCl With 25 goU balls, but we lost
all of them after five hol . "
SO mudl for practice round .
'Jbe Celebrity PrO·Am, ll1io
l\apported by agent Jeffrey
MoonMt,. wu the ftnt event ol th
1blhlbt Seniot Clfak: at New·
port Beeeh Country Club. •wentc:t ounn (ol the 1Dlpa
Bay BlnlmMn) ii the want
fQlllr rve IMD-MJ\llt cbopl at
Seattle Seabawk.s quarterback
John Friesz WU part of the Wili·
ning llv some (With pro Dick
HendricltlOn), but many ol the
celebrity football" players lhOuld
probably stick Wltb football
•Some ol our (dlentl) are oUt·
~ gohn •• Stielnbtlnl eaid,
.ICllM ... .not 80 gOocl.. One Of tbe grea'81t ... ______ ol
Mondafl pnMID WU tbe tll:ICll•
..... tber.
Gillette Challenge pits 10
pros in the running for
purse netting $20,000
NEWPORT
BEACH -Walter
Morgan, the Senior
PGA Tour's Iron-
man, heads a list ?t T OSHlltA
10 golfers who will ----
compete today· i1'l
the Gillette Tofil Challenge, a
special event in the Toshiba
Senior Classic at Newport Beach
Country Oub.
Morgap enters the 12:30 p.m.
event as the leading money win-
ner ($16,000) in the Gillette Chal-
lenge, in which five two-man
teams play six holes in an alter-
nate-shot format.
The total purse is $20,000.
Winners split $8,000. Play will
start on the 10th tee.
lrailing Morgan in the Gillette
standings are Senior Tour pros
Jay Sigel ($13,250), Hugh Baioc-
chi and
J a c k
Kief er
($11 ,000
each), and
J o h n
B 1 a o d
($9,000).
"It's a
blind dra w
for the
go lfe r s,
and kind
of a hit--BOB MURPHY
and -giggle
affair,• •
Senior
Tour offi-
cial Tun Crosby said. ·It's a lot of
fun. Although they're playing for
a lot of prize money, it gives fans
an opportunity to see these
golfers in a lot less formal lighl. •
The Challenge will feature all
three former Toshiba Senior Cas-
sie champions, Bob Murphy
(1997), Jim Colbert ('96) and
George Archer ('95), as well as
Senior Tour players Morgan,
Sigel, Baiocchi, Larry Nelson,
Dave Stockton, Bob Eastwood
and John Jacobs.
"The players are relaxed and
usually w'elk through the compe-
tition, talking to people along the
way," Murphy said. •Maybe the
fans have questions. The players
will answer them. Or there's a lot
of teasing going on between the
players, which the fans love. 1t
gives fans a little more exd te-
nvmt, a Utt)e more pntprtainment •
and attracts more people to come
out to tba golf course.•
Now In its. 9eC«ld year, the .
Gia..~..-----.....
up of •S ewms acnm the PGA
Tour; 9em0r'~ iiiCt LPGA lbw, •
with a ClOIDb6ned tote.\ ol $2.1 mB·
lion in pm. money.
The Gillette Tour QutUMge
culminates in October With pay-
ers mm an three tours QOlllp.dng
In the $1.8 mitHoo c:btmpnrwblp
at the Mid Ocean Oub In kmlu-
d.a.
Morgan, the Senior 1Wn
lromMn lut .,_,. by i>1AYtDG 113
roUndl la 36 ...... and bivtng
&WI ... 36 .... ,.., ...
tM. ee'dng illD oee GI ._
bUllllt plaz~ • tour. a.. 1a .. ...,... ......
Mm~ Wtio lelWd. ~,..
~ ... us. ~(¢,,,-::.: ' .. toUn al dlalY ID 'I • P I
... :qattllllM.a,.. ..
rowaWJ,e "'~1•,... .. ., .. _..,.
"* a6ll lllawa a r __..CTll .._ e.a&u•• -"fmcl~-
I
I
r
t•
r
II ..
. '
\ '
-;
-
TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1998
Boldng great
Sugar Ray
Leonard chats It
up on tbetee
boxatNo.18
Monday
afternoon with
memben of hls
group; below,
left. senior Brian
Barnes shows hls
group how It's
done on the 17th
hole as he
knodutna
blrdlej below,
right, pro legend
Billy Casper
watches a drive
off the tee.
Casper, wtth
partner Troy
Aikman of the
Dallas Cowboys,
drew the largest
gallery of the
day.
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS
BY MARC MARTIN
C~rrasco repeats,=
field rounded out
• Carrasco qualifies again; Tuscano, who's suing the
tour, also qualifies to fill out the '98 Senior Classic.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH
-Teaching pro Ray
carrasco, an Irvine
resident who once
operated Birdie
Vision Golf School at TOSHIBA
the Back Bay Golf
Course adjacent to the Hyatt New-
porter, qualified for the Toshiba
Senior Classic at Newport Beach
Country Club for the second year in
a row.
carrasco shot 2-under-par 72 at
Los Serranos Country Club in Chino
Hills in the Monday Qualifier to
claim one of only four spots, joining
Harry Toscano (Sarasota, Fla.), Terry
Wiens (New Westminster, B.C..
Canada) and Jimmie Jones (Palm-
dale, Calif.}.
Toscano, who led Monday's field
at 5-under 69, filed a $9-million
antitrust suit against the PGA Tour
and some of its sponsors, alleging a
conspiracy that limits the Senior
Tour field to certain players.
Most of the Senior Tour players
come from the previous year's mon-
ey list,, as well as the all-time PGA
mone~list. There are only eight
spots ln each tournament field for
non-exempt players, but four of
them are sponsor's exemptions.
In Monday's Qualifier, Wiens shot
70 and Jones 71 . Carrasco qualified
last year for the Toshiba event and
opened with a first-round 70, but
then fell out of contention with a
75 and 76.
• No41howsfwthe IAligh ~
Jeffrey Moorad Celebrity Pro-Am
induded NFL linebacker Gary Plum-
mer, .who played for the 49ers last
year. CBS sports anchor Jim Hill was
also a no-show, beiog replaced by
aftl>rTO~
• The two-week layoff trom the
Senior Tour was a blessing for Frank
Conner, who injured his back dur-
ing the Florida swing and had to
withdraw from the last two tourna-
ments.
Conner, who played at Newport
Beach Country Club during the I
Crosby Southern of the 1970s, as 1
well as the Taco Bell Newport Clas-
sic of the 1990s, received treatment
for his back spasms during the time
off, but said he began to feel better
right away after seeing an acupunc
turist.
• Elmer Cote, a NBCC member for
30 years, couldn't believe how big
the clubhead was on Bruce Sum-
r-------------------------~~
I PRO CfLEllUTY :· -
I
I
I
I
I
I
I I
I
I
I
(AMATEURS) •I ··
TOP10
+ 1. Dick Hendrickson John FM .. Z (amateur1: RenH Casaou,
Mart Mclane and Han
• Rosenstein), 41
+ 2. Jose Marla Cenlure1 DHn
llasuccl (amat.urs: Tony
Cant•ll"9. Jerry Monro.-and'
Barbara Walhr). 49 (won
card-off)
+ 4. (tie) Bruce Summerhays
Sugar Ray Leonard (amateur1:
Ron Crocco, Jay kerutls and
Randy kohler), 50
+ Walter Morgan Daryl
Johnston (amateurs: Mark
llcknell, Joe Hazlett and Rick
Sender). SO
+ Orville Moody David Binn
(amateurs: Cllnt hctor, Lou
Amen and Dorie Amen). 50
+ 7 (tit) Bruce Oeylln Paul
Hackett (amateurs: Bruce
Schwartz, Robert Savage and
Jim Rathburn), 51
+ Jimmy Powell Mike Sherrard
(amateurs: kevin London. Brian
Babcock and Rl~lt Shafer), 51
+ Miiier Barber Wade Wiison
(amateurs: Lenny Thorell, Yoshi
Odam• and Jay Powers), 51
• + Jim Dent Todd Steussle
: (amateurs: Carol Chafee, Jeff
: Hansen and Paul J9rdan), 51 : •
' • l 4 L-------------------------~ I
merhays' driver. "That driver's the .
size of a m~ilbox. H Cote said. · ·•
~ Senior PG.A Tour rules official ,
'Skip WbitteL said Newport_ Beach ·
Country Club is in its best shape '. •
evtr.
• On~ of the biggest differences
this year (compared to last year's• .,
Classic) is security. Gate-crashers wiH
have a hard time sneaking into the ·
event, so don't even think about it. •
While the tournament itself
appears to have reached an all-time ..
high, the security has also been· .
beefed up. "'
Last year, this reporter snuck into ~
the event without showing media
credentials all seven days. There
would be no such effort on Mon-:,
day.
"Now we shoot you on sight. .. "
said Monday pro-am chairmar4i • -
Courtney Emery jokingly.
HONEYMOON OVER? HECK, TIIE WHOLE THING WENT KAPUT
Eagles. •After mere one-game tenure McKettrick's predictions
of a turnaround for Estancia baseball are rendered moot.
J oe McKe ttrick, we hdrdly
knew ye. Whal Estancia
High AsslStant Principal Bill
Wetzel termed a bad mamage,
ended in divorce Monday,
though annulment may be a
more fitbng descnpbon, si.nce the
tenure of the Eagles' "first-year"
baseball coach mcluded only one
game
stolen bases, and crack the
county's top five in ERA
A six-year prep assistant
(pitching coach), who had helped
Montclair Prep, Orange
Lutheran, Fullerton and
Magnolia achieve watershed
success in his previous stops, the
former reserve Pepperdine hurler
thwnbed his nose at naysayers
who believed Estanoa's glory
dayshad~e the way oi.-Ote
tugh stirrup.
Harbor, hardly a diamond
juggernaut of late and without a
single senior on its roster,
amassed six steals and thoroughly
outexecuted the Eagles in the
bunting game, a supposed
cornerstone of McKettrick's
aggressive offensive philosophy.
PREPS
Is it f~au: to gauge a coach's
expertise one game? Of
course And, to his credit,
Eagle players and new head
coach Tun Green, ~e. praised
McKettrick's tutelage of Estancia
pitchers.
harry
faulkner
McKettrick, tu.red m October,
wasn't shy with predJctions of
grandeur for an Eagle program
that had gone 5-42-1 the last two
seasons. He raised more than a
few eyebrows -mme tncluded
-by boasting the Eagles could
win the Pacific Coast League
title, lead Orange County in
He spouted preseason praise
for his team's defense and speed,
though it displayed little of either
in a 12-2 loss to Newport Harbor
Friday, which included 10 errors
and two stolen bases by the
But McKettrick's penchant for
pro1ecting his unique perception
against the face of what others
might consider cold bard reality, I
believe, also figured in the
conflict with school
admirustrators on the
lightning-rod issue that hastened
his departure: The condition and
upkeep of the Estancia diamond.
briefly
..
PLAYOFFS UPDATE
• SCC hosts Concordia Wednesday,
OCC duels DeAnza Thursday at 2.
COSTA MESA -Costa ..HOOPS
Mesa's two cGliege women's
basketball teems, Southern California Col-
l*~ 'Vanguards an"d flte eraiige Cbast COi·
lege Pirates, continue their hunts this wee k
for playoffs glory.
The Vanguards host Concordia University
of IrviI1e Wednesdday night with a 7 :30 duel
at The Pit on the SCC campus; while Orange
Coast is at Concordia Thursday for a 2 o'clock
matchup with DeAnza in a quarterfinal of the
State Community College Finals. ...
A victory for Southern California College
sends the Vanguards off to Tennessee for the
NAIA Championships. At stake for Orange
Coast is a berth in the semifinals at 5 o'clock
Friday at. UCI'1 Bren Center.
Sailors ou~ore Trabuoo
NEWPORT BEACH GOLF .
Sophomore Erin HAU earned
medalist honon wttb a nJne~hole round of 39
as host Newport Halboi' High earned an 81·
93 lead over 1\'abtlco tWb midway through
their 1S.hole ooai.au.-gtrlt golf match Mon-
day at the Newport •Medi GoJf Course.
Briana Reehl (42), SMnnoo Backus (43)
and V. Sbaptro (44) alto contributed.
f
Mustangs-take 3-stroke-lead
GOLF . COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa
Higb's Mustan~s (5'-0) took a
~5 lead over Garden Grove at
halfway point Mdnday in a nonleague goU
match on 1he Mesa Linda Course of the~
Mesa Goll & Country Cub by virtue of a 1-2-
3 finish. Jeff Montoya was the medalist with a
4-over par 39, followed by Donnie Miller (42)
and Brian Jones (47).
SoCal College outslugged, 10-8
COSTA MESA -South-
ern California College's BASEBALL
baseball team put together a 12·hit attack, but
the Vanguards (12-9) were unable to make it
pay off as visiting Northwestern College of
Iowa (1-6) co.pturod a 10·8 nonconf erence deci-
sion on the sec CAmpUI Monday afternoon.
Eric Booth responded in the nirith tnning
with a 3-run homor for the Vanguards, but
Northwestern'• five-nm eighth inning, keyed
by Brody Aalben' grand slam, proved too
much to overcome.
NONCXJM UUMI •Nof~Jitl"'W .............. ,.,"'. 10, loCll CD .... I ~«n College oot 103 ·oso 10 ' 4 SOCaf College 001 0)0 10J •• 12 .. Su11e, Trost (9) and Jager; Mdteynotdi. Vff<NI (I).
<iresM (I) and Dem. W • ~. L· ~ 1·2
21 • Dent (SC(), fntppjtr (SCQ, ..... Mlbel'J <Ni
load\ (S(Q.
'
Tarnr-mt"'SC by16 strokes
SAN CLEMENTE -Sopho-
more Kevin Olson was low man GOLF
-for-Newport Harbor High with-e-nine-ho
round of 39 Monday in the first half of an 18-
hole noftleague boys go match with host San
Clemente at the Pacific Club.
Mitch Johns, Scott Tippett, Zak La Pata (all
«)and 1\'aigbe Concannon rounded out the
top five for Harbor, which trails, 200-216 in a
match to be finished next week.
Tempe collects 40-18 victory
BALBOA PENINSULA -
The Back Bay Rugby Club RUGBY
found visiting Tempe of Arizona too much to
handle on Saturday in a 40-18 decision.
Back Bay collected Itself and made a run ln
the second half, with successful trt by hook·
er Dean Toohey and Craig Dobson. ln the No.
8 role.
Man of the Match for Back Bey was &nker
Grant Reynolds wttb a determined and
aggressiva petfonnance.
Second-game competition saw Back Bay
recording a 34-20 Win to up the record to 6·2.
1\y scorers inducted Donker Jamee ~
lock Greg Mulholland,~ 'novoy Md<in·
nay and flyhalf Neal Whhfteld. Den 2'JmobU
WU hOnoted with Man of the iMatcb laurels.
-,
In these times of depressed
athletic budgets, prep coaches
almost universally spend hours
and hours each week maintaining
their own fields, including
meticulous off-season care, to
ensure a quality facility.
McKetrrick, a walk-on with a
busy business calendar, said he
would Wt neither rake nor hose
to round his field into shape,
relying instead on a supposed
commitment from the school to
provide him consistent
grounds-keeping help.
Estancia administrators said
they were doing what they could,
but McKettrick's unwillingness to
muffle his impatience or
dissatisfaction when
maintenance, as well as
thousands of dollars worth of
new brick dust, were not
delivered post baste.
His criticism of the field -a
portion of which was published
m the Daily Pilot's season
preview -provoked at least one
top administrator's ire and led to
what was later termed a mutual
parting.
I did not dislike Joe
McKettrick, nor did l question hiS !'!
obVJous knowledge of the game. , ,
But l was supremely skeptical he
could foster the type of .,
turnaround he imagined,
especially Wlth the immediacy he
outlined.
Perhaps hls enthusiasm and
expertise could have done what
Myron Miller did for Costa Mesa
football m the nud-1990s. But I
guess we'll never know.
JC SOFTBALL ...
Coast splits, gets 18th ;~
• Orange Coast 18th in
-eam ournamenf at
Fresno; Correa sparkles
_an tbe. mound for .Bucs. _
FRBSNO .-Th Orange Coast
College softball team split six
games in two days to finish finish-
ing 18th in the 32-team Fresno
City Tournament, completed
Sunday atBucannon Park.
Freshman pitcher Sonia Cor-
rea, a Costa Mesa High product,
allowed just two runs in 19
innings in the tournament, both in
a 2·0 loss to Yuba 1n the t 7th·
place Bronze Bracket to complete
a three-game run Sunday.
OCC third baseman Stephanie
Honick. the Pirates' lone sopho-
more, was the hitting star Sunday.
She had one. of COolt'• two bitl
ageimt Yuba and wu 2 for 4 with
three RBI lri an 8-2 win ov r Oak·
land·beled Lainey, as weU as 2
for 3 with two RBI and three runs m an 11 ·0 mercy-rut trlwnph
over RJo Hondo.
OCC Coach Ride BuoD&rigo
allo praiMd Hon1dl's dettmlM
work OD lbe bot comer.
~
S Oil..BAl: L.---
Stacey Carmen went 3 for 4 wi~ two RBI against Lainey, >
agamst.which...J8WWer Phelps -
earned the complete-game victo· ·1
ry tn the pitching~.
OCC, which defeated Mon-
terey, 4-0 (behind Correa) and feij.
to Merced, 2-0, and AmericaJ\~
River, 1-0, Saturday, now has an • ~
8-8 record. .. "l
• r ~
ntl FMSHO art~ . t~ 1~ffnal ••I!\
YUbe 2. Orenge Co.Mt 0 I D
Yuba 000 100 1 • 2 7 0
Orange Col.rt 000 000 o -o 2 1
Belza and Coell; Correa and c..rmen ..
W -8elza. l • Correa, 5-2. 18 -Freed • ' (OCO.
11th-plecie .,.._.
0...,.. c.o.t I. Letner 2 t. llO Orange Coast 100 100 6 • a 11 o
L.aln.y 010 100 O -2 I :J' ~
Phelps Ind Carmen; 'Tittl tnd ~. ,
W • ,.,.lps, 4-6. L •Tittl. 28 • CMmen (OCC) 1a • Horrldc (OCC). HR • Johnton
(l).
11tlt .... •1 •111Wftiwl O......C.-11 .......... orang. Coart a 2 • ', t ~
Rio Hondo 000 0 -D 1 f",1
Cort.I ri Catmen: Ctndlc9 llil 1'16
Monka. w .. CorrM; s..1. l • Clrdta. :.rn 21 • Ots,... (OCQ.
f
cc
one'
ball•
bas.
ing t
lege
years
SpaQ
yean
•I
on
Reyt:
ment
day.
to lM
athlE
poinl
give
·1
ingI
Ri
pilee
over
DistJ
ance
H
3 titl
Nati•
it to
ing
Wisc
H
Golc
enCE
the
Yea1
• 199E
seco ..
our 1
ann<
le tic
coac
repL
ReYJ
and
0
lege
afteJ
~
ners
dwi
the
Krai
only
grar
COW
but·
I~
•I
• I
...
ey\].olds
• resigns
lat sec .
•Coaching ~eer which
spannned over three
decades comes to an end.
COSTA MESA-Bill Reynolds,
one of the most popular baske~
ball coaches in the college ranks,
has called it a career after guid-
ing the Southam California Col-
lege Vanguards for the past 17
years in a coaching tour th.at has
spanned over three decades (31
years).
•1t•s just time for me to move
on from coaching,• said
Reynolds, in a prepared state-
ment from the college on Mon-
day. •1 will miss the opportunity
to be involved with the student-
athletes, but I have reached a
point in my life where it is time to
give up the reins.
•rm looking forward to spend-
ing more time with my family."
Reynolds' Vanguards com-
piled a 354-184 won-loss record
over that span, including four
District 3 championship appear-
ances.
His 1990 team won the District
' 3 title and advanced to the NAIA
National Tournament and made
it to the Round of'16 before bow-
ing out to eventual runner-up
WJSCOnsin Eau Claire.
He led his teams to three
Golden State Athletic Confer-
ence crowns and he was chosen
the conference's Coach of the
. Year five times, most recently in
1996 when he guided sec to a
second-place finish.
•niere is a definite void left in
our athletic department with this
announcement today,• said Ath-
letic Director Bob Wilson.
"One can replace a basketball
coach, but it will be impossible to
replace the impact that Bill
Reynolds has had on our program
and our campus.• "'
One of the more notable col-
lege •walk-ons,. he came to sec
after prep stints at La Quinta and
'l)olsa Grande high schools in the
Gmden Grove League.
•Bill Reynolds has been a cor-
nerstone for our athletic program
during his tenure at sec,. said
the school's president, Wayne
Kraiss. "He has developed not
only a quality basketball pro-
gram, but has had an impact on
countless live. We wish him well,
but we will miss him deeply."
Howse, Devey
earn first-team
All-PCL honors
I •Costa Mesa standouts
top three Mustangs who
are named on coaches'
Pacific Coast League
selections for girls.
Costa Mesa High senior Cari
Howse and junior teammate Amy
Devey have been recognized by
the Pad.fie Cout League girls
water polo coaches as first-team
all-league.
Mesa, which lost In the fttst
round of the ClF Southern Sec-
tion Division m playoffs to finish
11-14, was also represented on
the second team by Junior goalie
Stephanie Lombardo.
Senior Brin Hayes and junior
Am Hilts, who led Ur.ilve:rslty ._......,,..~to the PCL aown. were Co-
Most Val\lable Players. .. ~·AW-.ctfko-t ....... =· ··-~f'n""t~.a~lit ~ Sr.
Arny'Hltts.' UoMillty
•Sea Kings have the
hmses to make a serious
challenge for CIP DMS.on I
championship, and that's
just the tip of the iceberg.
By Richard Dunn, Daif./ Piiot
CORONA DEL MAR -When
your starting lineup consls1s of
four freshmen and a transfer, it
could sound suspiciously like a
coach's preliminary cry to enter-
ing a rebuilding year.
For most high school boys ten-
nis teams in Orange County, per-
haps. But not at Corona del Mar,
where Coach Tun Mang'• squad
will be aiming to give the school
its second ClP Southern Section
Division I tennis championship in
the same school year.
The girls won it in the fall
Seems the boys have some pres-
sure. •It'll be tun.• Mang said.
•The girls are razzing the guys
right now, so the challenge is
out."
While CdM has experienced
much success under Mang in his
five previous years, going 141-36
with three semifinal appearances,
D
the see Kings have yet to wtn a
CIP tltlS. 1be IChool won six con-
secutive CIP titles from 1915 to
1980, then added a seventh
cbampioDship 1n 1983. CdM bu
not been back to the finals Ii.nee.
•we're shooting for back-to-
back CIP championships in the
same school yeor," said Mang,
who won bis first CIP title When
the Nadia Vaughan-led Sea Kings
defeated Peninsula for, the girls
Divillon I championship.
•They could do it," he added
of bis boys, top-ranked in the pre-season Orange County poll.
Junior Parker Collins trans-
ferred. from La Canada High and
will play No. 1 singles for CdM
this spring. Collins won a CIF
doubles t1tle as a freshman, so
he's not your ordinary transfer.
The Sea Kings also return dou-
bles standout Sameer Chopra
(jl,Ulior), who could play a lot of
singles this year. Seniors
Cameron Taylor and Esan
Mozeyani, and juniors Sam Shah-
ma.rdi. Curtis Ellmore and Christ-
ian Jensen, are also returning let-
termen on a team that finished
15-8 last year and reached the
CIP Division I semifinals.
In addition, Corona del Mar
will have potential freshmen sen-
I t • I
I I I
I I L-------------------------~ sations Brian Morton and Hunter
Jack. both highly touted tourna-
ment players, as well as freshmen
Randy Myer and Peter Kub:natic-
lri. Morton and Myer are from
Mesa Verde Tennis Oub.
Mang said Morton and Jack
are close, but Morton would prob-
ably get the nod at No. 3 singles
because •he's played all his chal-
lenge matches." Morton and Jack
a.re fonner doubles partners in the
Southern California Tennis Asso-
ciation, in which they were top-
ranked in the 10s and 12s.
"They've also beaten each oth-
er in singles throughout their
careers," Mang said. •srtan can
HOOL
be one of my best singles players, .
or one of my best doubles players.
Hunter Jack ts also an eu-eDent
doubles player.•
Morton, already an Ojai cham·
pion, and Jack, who said he
always knew he would attend
CdM after playing the last 1 112
yean at academies in Florida,
aren't the first freshmen to enter
CdM with lofty expectations.
Taylor Dent, C\llTently playing
in a professional satellite in the
Philippines, won a ClF individual
singles title as a freshmen in
1996.
"It's been a long time since
we've had this much flexibility
and depth,• Mang said of bis
squad. in which Morton or Jack
could play singles or doubles,
with Chopra and Collins also
being adept at both.
"That team (two years ago)
with Taylor and Boris (1\irlrich)
was pretty awesome. It was
almost six points automatically.
But this one is even deeper.
There's not any superstar material
like those two, but there's more
depth."
The Sea Kings went 19-3 in '96
and also readMM' tbe eendflMJs,
but 1\iddcb Wt ecbool f>8dy and
Dent Joined the pro drcuit. tut year, Chopra played dou-
bleS with Greg Colem"9 and at
a tQtal ol tour sets. Chopra bu
also won lingl~ titles. in the ~
14s and 161 In the War by the
Shore Junior 1ennis Tournament
at the Balboa Bay Club Racquet
Club .
With the Sea Kings' greatest
Sea View League adversary,
Woodbridge, having lost its top
three playen this year, there
appears to be a dear path to the
league title for them.
Woodbridge, which lost David
Llngm.an. Greg Levy and B~
don Shainfeld.. also competes m
CIF Division I with CdM.
Loyola. another highly regard-
ed Division I, also lost its best
three players, perhaps leaving the
door wide open for the Sea Kings
to grab their second CIF tennis
banner in a single school year.
"We only lost one (top) player
from last year -John Cappello,•
said Mang, who added that
Peninsula and Los Alamitos will
also be strong in Division I this
season.
high school baseball SCHEDULE
c
Assistant Tim Green replaces former
baseball coach after one-game
regime; departure binged on dispute
over field maintenance problems
on Estancia High campus.
By Barry F~ulkner, Daif./ p;for
COSfA MESA -The Joe McKettrlck era,
which the first-year Estancia Higb baseball
coach believed would restore winning baseball
to a proud program that has struggled recently,
is over after just one game.
McKettrick, whom Eagle players said told
them before Monday's practice he was fired for
pressing school administrators to make
improvements to a field he deemed unsafe, will
be replaced by Estancia asslstant and form.er
Costa Mesa High head coach (1991-92) Tun
Green.
Tun Parse!, Estancia boys athletic director,
said McKettrlck's departUre was by •mutuat
agreement" and had nothing to do with wins
and losses.
"h was a bad maniage and we were just not
on the same page once he got the job,• said
Estancia Assistant Principal Bill Wetzel. who
along with Parse! met with McKettrick Monday
afternoon. Wetzel, filling in for Principal Peggy
Anatol, in Japan on school business, aclmowl-
edged the condition and maintenance of the
field was a big factor in McKettrick's departure.
•His words (to the team) were: 1've been
canned,• • said Green, a finalist for the job
vacated when Paul 1roxel resigned in Septem-
ber. Green., who had been an a.ssistant under
McKettrick and has coached at various levels at
Estancia over the years, ran Monday's practice.
and will lead the Eagles today in a Newport
Elles Tournament game against host Garden
Grove High.
Green. 39, an EstandA graduate whose son.
C .K., is a sophomore second baseman on the
varsity, will coach the team the rest of the sea-
son and would like to continue to run the pro-
gram in the future. Parse!, however, said any-
MIG
t<IM HAGGERTY I DAllY PILOT nm Green oversees the Eagles' pracUce
Monday after usumlng the coaching relnl..
thing beyond this year will require further dis-
cussion.
Players reacted to McKettrick's departure
with surprise and some disappointment Mon-
day.
•1 couldn't believe it,• senior infielder J .D.
Willey said. •we were sWl getting to know him,
but we were excited about playing for him.•
Senior catcher Adam Thunnell said McKet-
trick, a former college pitcher and prep pitch-
ing coach, had helped Eagle pitchers improve
in the four months he'd worked with them.
•Our pitching was the best it's been since
I've been here,• Thunnell said. "l think that's
the biggest thing we'll miss from (McKettrick).
I know our pitchers are. very disappointed.•
The Eagles, who McKett:Tick preditted could
contend for a Pacific toast ~e title, copi-
mitted 10 errors Friday in A 12-2 season~open
ing loss at Newport Harbor. Estancia was 5-42-
1 the previous two seasons.
Green said he will slowly return to routines
in place under 'Il'oxel, who had spent 17 years
in the program, nine as bead coach.
"I'll teach the system that was already in
place, but I don't want to go away from what
they'd been learning (from McKettrick) all at
once,• said Green, who will enlist Robert
Beringer, formerly the junior varsity coach, as
his assistant.
•(Green) knows how we play and we know
him, too, so that should help the transition,"
Willey said.
McKettrick.. a walk-on who could not be
reached Monday, bas openly criticized the con-
dition of the Estancia diamond, which he said
required roughly $6,000 worth of additional dirt
(brick dust) to elevate the dirt portion of the
infield even with the grass. He also said regular
field maintenance, which he could not commit
to performing himself, was not supplied to bis
satisfaction.
·we told him we'd try to get some help from
the district and there has been someone out to
work on the field a little bit,• Wetzel said. •We
also have ordered some brick dust which is
scheduled to be delivered March 16th. We
couldn't get it any sooner, because other
schools had already ordered the brick dust.•
Green. Willey and Thunnell said the field,
though far from ideal, isn't significantly worse
than it has been in previous years.
McKettrick, had planned to play home games
at TeWmkle Park, located adjacent to Costa
Mesa High. but Green said players voted Mon-
day to play their games on campus.
.
MESA ASKED TO GET WITH . IT
First-year coach, who
guided girls to the playoffs
last fall. trying to orchestrate •
simi1ar turnaround with the
Mustangs' boys prognun.
good player,• Ybarra said of the team
co-ceptain (along with senior Matt.
Peca). •He jumps incredibly well and
he can reelly put the ball down.•
Chris Shanley, a 5-9 senior who
played inside linebacker on the foot-
baD. team. quarterbacks the attack at
setter.
•He bas very nioe an e
1eem1 to be a natural leader,• Ybaml
Mid.
TOOAY
• Swbtwnlng
High school boys and girls •
Corona del Mar at Laguna
Hiiis. 3: 15 p.m.; Costa Mesa.
Newport Harbor at CIF
Relay5 (boys) Prellms at
Belmont Plaza. 3 p.m.
•Sa.ea.II
College -The Master's
College at Southern
callfomia College, 2:30 p.m.
Community college •
Orange Coast at Santa Ana.
2p.m. ·
High school • Newport ~!ks
Tournament, second round:
Newport~ Tustin, '
3 p.m.; consolation round:
Corona del Mar at
Saddleback, 3 p.m.; Estancia
at Garden Grove, 3 p.m.
Costa Mesa Tournament.
pool play: Los Amigos at
Costa Mesa. 3:15 p.m.
·~ High school boys -Tustin
at Corona del Mar, 6 p.m.;
Mira Costa at Newport
Harbor, 6:45 p.m.
·.....n
College 1NOmen -Southern
califomia College at cat
State Los Angeles, 2 p .m.
Community college women
-Orange Coast at El camino,
2p.m.
High school boys • Long
Beach Wilson at Newport
Harbor, 3 p.m.; San Clemente
at Costa Mesa. 3:15 p.m.
• Softball
College -Southern
C..llfomia College at Biota,
1:30 p.m.
High school • Estancia vs.
Edison, at TeWinkle Park. 3
p.m.
• Goff
High school -Marina vs.
Corona def Mar. at s.ma
Ana CC. 3:15 p.m.;
Newport Harbor vs. Mission
Viejo, at Mission Viejo CC. 2
p.m.; Calvary CNpel vs.
Costa Mesa, at Costa Mesa Ga.cc. Mesa Linda coune.
2p.m.
I
e
.-
!
s
l
l
'
t
l
,, .,
0 TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1998
, • , I {
DeSHAZO,
Lllllan Helen
Born December 31 ,
1921 in Exeter, CA.
Beloved wile or 54
years to Donal~
DeShazo of Corona
del Mar, CA .. died
Sunday March 8,
1998. Lillian Is also
survived by daugh·
ters, Lynn Blllmeyer
of Fountain Valley
and Laura Culver of
Irvine: brother,
Joseph e.
Zimmerman Jr. of
E x e t e r ; g r a n d· children, Anna
Billmeyer and Olane
Culver. Their daugh·
ter, Diane FrecceJO,
preceded Liiiian If'
death. Memorfal
services will be
11 :00 a .m.,
Thured11y, March
12, 1998, at
Pacific View.
Memorlal Pork &
Mortuary, Newport
Beach, California
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremation&
Burial Service
Why should you subject
yourself & your family to
paying inflated prices for
caskets & services????
Call Toll Free 1~
Serving Onngt & Surrounding Counties
lN
Plug Into the
Classified
All .. .. -It
11111
NJ ...
111 ,,
llm
kit
IN ... .,. •• ... .. . ,..
Ttl
IN
eel
•• H cc
Ff •
GJ
ii
Ct
D
ii • I
J
'
•
c • D
i
1
I • c
TVESOAY, MAAOt 10, 1998
Index • __ ._p00ey
-... ..
Fl
ByFax Byl'hone By MaMn Penom
RatH and ~1tdlint1 att &ubjttt to ~ge wi~t ~-~
publishf'r ttSt"rvt11 iM right 10 C.f!O.SOr, recla.ssily, revw °' tt)ec::t
any da11&ifif'd advf'rtisf'ment . Pleru!f ttJ:!On an_y error that may~
in your cl&i.ifaed ad immtdiotdy. The Daily Pilot aeclepts no
liability for any rrror in 1111 advrrtisemeot for which it may~ n:i.pon~ibk t>Xctpl for tht cost of the bpace actua~y occ_up1ed by
1ht' uro~ Cl't'dit ran only bt allowed for tbt first msernon.
(7H ) 031-6594
(Pie' .... ,ncf,..i.. \OUt nanw end
pboi"' uwabtr aitd ... 111 all mu
1....1. .. iw • 11nc.-'llllllt l
• {714} <>42-5678 :330 Wri,1 81tJ. Strrl't
Co~111 Mri.a, CA 92627
\I \r•l"Jf" 8h J At 8011 !-1 ...-------Deadllnes -------
SERVICE DIREcroRY
-for Al1 Your Home Md 8uUneM Needs -
~ EQUAL HOUSING
~ITY
Allltll .............. 11 ... .................... ~
lfll fair ....... Ad ti 1• II
.................... 1
It aMrltM 011J .,.,lflHI,
ll•lltllll tf .. tcflalHllH u.-.. ""· ..... "'"'"· ............ lllllltllltllllll'
HtlM9f lltlls, If II llltte11H ....... .., "" '"'"'"''· 11111111111 .... L •111111. •
nte • ...,,,., will HI
kHWlllt'I ..... , ""'1fM.
Mii llf r11t ...... ftlctl It II
NEWPORT
BEACH
OCEAN FRONT Balboe Penn Shr 2bri---------//Order Entry PT for
UNDER $300,000 nr beach, fp, parking LOST • flower shop. Musi
•• •• • •• • S650 + d1p. Call Alex have good computer/ BANK REPO 495-61971979-1700-wk FOUND 2925 people skills 833-1883
Beach ;!'~.n;.~?39,900 CdM Share 2br 1ba iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pecker• for snack
BRAND NEW cheerful home \11/lrg S 1000 Rewardlost food company. M·F.
N 1 a r 1h 8 B 1 a ch Br, n/pet S525mo + watch: Aolex Sub-South Coast Plaza
Fantastic Low Prlcel utls. Prof'I fem pref'd Marln,r w/HS grad. Area. (714) 979-3256
~ Prudential
C:......IWly
714-723-8120
PROBATE SALE
Price Wiii Amaze Youl ,,
Avt 3/1. 84o-&454 d a I • o n b a c k ---------873·5975 POOL SERVICE route
E'ald• CM Female 10 1---------shr house, pool & apa LOST CAT blk male, yllw eyes, wearing $470mo T 1/2 utllltles green halter.REWAROI
722-8520 no/alc/smkg c a 1 1 7 2 2 -o 3 8 s
NB Shr Lrg 2t:>r 2.5ba Loal Otvmu• Camere
2atry twnhm, bay view Vic of Balboa Penln ••pool, gym, 11nnla••
5750 + 112utl 760-3907 Pier/Ferry. 252·8200
person Nwprt & C.M.
area must have truck,
exp, ref's nee. Must
be reliable 546·7865
-Bears
l1·l1•ph1111r 8:3011m-5:00pm
\tc.-"1a' _,. ndo' WaU.-111 8::l0rm:i-5:00pm
\l.111d1n-t nd.'
Monday ........... .Friday 5:00pm Thursday .. Wednesday 5:00pm
Tuesday ......... Monday 5:00pm Friday .......... Thursday 5:00pm
Wednesday .... Tuesday 5:00pm Saturday ...•....... Friday S:OOpm
9025 FORD 6010 MERCHANDISE TV, ELECTRONICS, AUDI
MISC. 6015 STEREO 6080 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii li,ii89iiiiTii!iiaiiuiiruiiaiiiijs~taiit~lonii
9075
Cardlo·Gllde exer
bike S95. Nordic
Sport Tredmlll I Step·
climber I monitor
$475. Call 759·91 11
Cable TV
Descramblers
•800·211-4125•
'81 4000 Onty 77k ml, Waeon. Real nice Sliver, 4dr, one of a
kind, xlnt condition c • r · S 2 SI 0 0 ob o
1 owner, AJC. am-fm1~_,C,;...7,,,,1.,,.,4,.,;J,_,,7..,,2""="'3-=-1=-504~r-=
cus . $1 000 firm '95 llXPLORER XLT
714-721·1758 36k ml, 4dr, AT. full
power, Uk• newl Llonhead Fountain (Bl 1777) $17t!t50
411, 2yrs old, list $500. GARAGE SALES BMW 9030 LEXUS Or
sell for $100. 515-8820 --------lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii WESTMINSTER
'94 7401 Immaculate, ..,,....,,,.._.,,.,7,,..1-4"-8,..9-2--6-906--.::---COLLECTIBLES _H_UN_Tl_N_G_T_O_N ___ , 1oaded, extended war· 90 Muatan9 Conv
60!7 s~"CH 6140 ranty. Moving must L.X5.0,5 •pd.Nu cltch--...n selll 11 $32,500 obo brka. 1 ownr 103K.
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pgr114·729·7034 $4800, 362·1950
BEANIE BAl\IE
CENTER·All slyles --------•1 '95 3251 White/tan,
Including Erin. We Lvg Estate Auction leather. xlnt cond, BONDA
also buy old retirees. 3/14·3/15 1 Oam·??? auto. 4dr, snrf $19.5K liiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!iiii!i~!ii!i.iiii
9085
vltllllM ........ Ott ,....,.
New Beach Glent
3Br 4.5Ba $639.000
~Prudential Near Triangle Square! HEALTH •·
POSTAL JOBS
$12.68 • $17.21/HR
FOR APPT. ANO
EXAM INFO. CALL
8 a m ·9 p m 7 O a y s
1 ·8 0 0 ·6 2 6 -6 6 1 8 --------
Call (818)348-3817. No early t:>lrdsl (714) 844-4744 '88 ACCORD LX
7 days a week, 100 Its-lots of stutfl 4-door, suto. p/W. a/C.
lrt Hn'J laflf9H t•1t Ill •••111111 ,.,,,..... 11 ••••
........ 11"1 lftlllMt H II
.... ........, llllW. Te_.
, ,.... tf ._t•t1.n., cal HUO
TtlMnl. 1.-...1 ...... fir
... II I .oc .. ,....
11111111•--·
c S d I •1
714-723-8120
HOUSES/
CONDOS
Spacious.huge clo11t ia
3000 W/0 ,kllch prlv, N/P. FITNESS
9050mo. 714-646-8370 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Shr Beeutlful gated LOSE WEIGHT
Townhome, very cln, Through a safe and
pvt bath, female pre'f scientific nutritional
no/smkg. CM S500mo pl1n 714-557·2721
+ 1/2 utll. 548-8787
·H·ou·s·E·~----·1 .F0.R .. RE·N·T ..... coMMERCIAL PERSONALS
Publlshlng/S•l•a
Local Reps wanted to
sell much needed
lead program to Insur-
ance agents. make
$90.00 commission
per sale. Please Call
. 213-960-7699
RecepUonlat
lmmed. positions avail
for Temp and T·H. PC
skllls a +.Up to $10/hr
W G I Solutions CONDOS REAL ESTATE 1.......... Call 714-442-0707 F 0 R SALE ---------CORONA 1• SCHOOLS i or Fax 114-442-0108
.Ja n P 's
A ntiqtu.•s
10am-9pm CAL"SCAN Chipale dinette set 9040 Excet.cond.S5600ot:>o
10 pc/Lalique orig CADILIAC 714-S4~27
WANTED
TO BUY 6019
b ox/Armolr1/Sllk •95 Civic IEx Coupe
Rugs/Louis XIVdesk/ •'92 Eldorado• 34k moooreof, CO, full
Bronze statue/48>e72 Touring coupe, metal-pow 1 r. 11 k • n 1 w
Mirror/Cleo aofa/oll lie maroon w/gray (3LETOSl8) S121950
I BUY ALL PIANOS plnglTlfny Sii t1mp/ leather Interior, 69k LEXUS OF
Antiques-qua!. furnitur• Italian s ofa SIV m1. $14K. Owner wlll WESTMINSTER
1pc or houseful cash 11 pieces of J ewelry carry on appr. down & (714) 892-41900
paid (714) 957-8133 b~~~! c:i~~~y i:i~: credit 714·968·5779 l--,8;;....,,.8-A,....;C;,..C,,,...,,.O""'R""D,....,..LX=--
Old Coins Gold Sliver Chica & Mcfaddin 40r, only 900 ml, no
·Franklln Mint, Sterling In H.B. No checka CHEVROLET 9045 OMV• Lexus trade Old watches & jewel~ ., ________ I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (019181) S 18.877 LEXUS Westcoast Coln 642·944 MISSION VIEJO
------• DEL MAR 2122 •-------INSTRUCTION 3012 Retell Sal•• -;;=;;:-;;;---:-'.;;:::;l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BUSINESS OFFICE 16'15hrs wk. AM shift. 2811 Lafayette
Ne rtBeach
• 11 El Caminos • RECOROSfTOP S • 2 Ford Aancheros 1-(888)-418-Ll!XUS
Jazz, R&B, Soul, Rock TRANSPORT"TION from 1960-1987 best·~------.....-
GENERAL 1002 A ••KA · · Out of Santa Fe . ear 4.SB• Lovely FOR RENT 2769 TBXTBOOKS & at Fashion Island
Etc ... 60'a & 60'• Mike A ·-
045-7505 ·------·•I offer. Owner will carry IKflNlTI •---------on approved down & 9095
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil view. Lrg bonus rm, l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii T • ...... 5""53 --------3-car gar no pets 11 Video School on amara ......... • 54300/Lea~e 844.148; NB 3Rm Sulte/Purn dlaplay near you. RETAIL SALES
Used Moving Bo••• ---------I credit. 714-968·5779liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii!liiiiiii
needed. Don't throw BOATS 70 l '95 Q4ST
SOLD! phone, fax, ground fir Contact us at Evenings & wk-ends
1 person only.W11tclltf/ www.abeka.com/nc1 Lady Golf Fashion COSTA MESA 2124 Dover. $325. "846-2474 or 1 ·800·874·2353 Island NB 720-1995
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Nwpt Boh Hlgh·Rl•• ext. 20 for mor~ lnfor· Sandwich Meker/Klt
WANTED them awayl 963-3483 1 '89 BUB 2wd 3/4ton, Black jade/Ivory, full
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 454, 325hp cam, man-option, only 36k ml,
Showe••• homes
lor aal1 In our
Saturday Real Estate
Supplementl
•Homo• of th• w .. k dlsplaw ad•
atart at Ju•t S751
(DMdttne Wed 5pm) .....
.Open House
lletfngs tor $51
(Oudllnl Thurl 5pm)
ANTIQUES JEWELRY, FURS •g1 Duffy 18' Very
good condition, recent
batterys, bottom paint.
cover $9750 648-9212
lfold, 5 core rad, quick Mt NT I ( 3 O 1 9 4 9 )
ahlft kit, new cats/ S27,977
tlr11/brakea S9,900 Ll!XUS
Big Back Bay 3br 2ba
fam rm/den on huge
lot, fp, 2.5-car gar.
$1595. pet(?)642·9699
fum office to share. matlon. CAL SCAN Help ft/pt Good Payll
Older Styli Furniture
PIANOS it Collectibles & ART 6025 714.759.9373 MISSION Vlll!JO
*****
NEWPORT
BEACH
Am1nHl11, avl lmmed. After 2p 25<>-0919 pgr
S250mo. 548-8773 l••••••••ll anytime 802-8288.
Small to Mid Office EMPLOYMENT TELEMARKETING
Space Avail. Npt Bch-1••••••••• Appointment Setting
Fash la area. 714-M4-Mon-Fri. 3pm-9pm
3484 xt 17 only•---------Casual Atmosphere.
2169 EMPLOYMENT 714-723·7893 1~--------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii COMMERCIAL 5530 MEDICAL BILLING
·~·T-• s.e..c.. • AAnot • OMcie ~
$$ CASH PAID $$ -pleceor--WE BUY ESTATES
•irnm.doa•~~
"WI PAY llOM FASTUI"
Omega Wetch Auto-
ma 11 c S 1am aat er ---------I CHRYSLER
OeVllle 14k, bracelet MARINE SUPS 9050
$1695 714-673-3432 DOCKS 7022 '91 LeBaron Light
BUILDING
MATERWS 8030
Gray/Gray. Excel.
Cond. $8990. Call
759.1goo Ext.2328
1-(898)-88-UtXUS
'HG20
4 dr, auto, leather.
moonroof, CO, full
power. (538237 )
s1e.aTT
LEXUS
MISSION Vlll!JO
t-888-88-Ll!.XU S
It paya to advertise
In lh• beat local
Real Eltall Section
28r 2.58• Townhme PROPERTY 2778 excellent SSS. trelnlng
2-car att gar, superb $ 1 0 H r * FULL provided, PC/Mod,m PUBLIC NOTICE: Steel
cond, Iota of atorag1, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii TIMl!l8am-5pm,M·F, required. Call 7 Oaya bldg•. never put up,
Slip for 48'ft aallboat,
nr U do Bridge. wal_./
elect, S 12p1r foot,
714-875·6128 _D_O_D_G_E ___ 9_0_6_5 Ir--------.
CALL TODAY!
L ... Rivera
714/574--4252
CORONA
DELMAR 1022
$1600.per mo Brok1r Prime Lido Local Experienced and 800-550-8660 xt 452 w/blueprlnts . sreel •••••••••I ,89 Daytona Shelby
&40-5664 or 729-7248 3430 Via Udo. S4kmo. talc•• PRIDE In an· ---------ctJJ. bldg co Is liquidating AUTOMOBnES Turbo All Power,
Harbor Velw Knoll 6 7 3 -0 8 5 3 Day a . awerlng phones for EMPLOYMENT 957 0133~ 40x31 $7, 770 now •••••••••I Premium Sound Sys., 3br 2.5ba, fam rm, 875-1469 EvH. buay, high-Ind protea-SERVICES 5533 m• 'V ~ s 3. 9 8 0. 5 0 x 1 0 0 p A I L ath
view, pool/tennis, Av1 ---------slonal office. Com-S0~8~T $18,270 now Stl,927. CO l1yer, I e er
$2300 6449648 putlr exp • must. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Other strlghtwalla ACURA Interior, T-Topa,
4-l mo . INDUSTRIAL 2788 Call Maty Lee $1000'8 POSSIBLE. a vail. Call Chuck. 9010 ~~;g~bo ve74;~•5~
VUla Balboa Luxury 714-717-4880 TYPING. 2202S.. ... St. 1·800·320-2340. 2 br 2 b• Bay view •Superior Ave. CM i&·S 11 pelf Houri Part-time. At home. S.... AM. CA 92707 '93 lnte9ra Sharp 1 ---------vaulted cell, fp, $1600 15""~1"' OOOaf Great and blneflla. FIT & P/ Call Toll Free .......,,UconMCA•11ot FEnn11nr 9067 e 1 9 2 9 9 9 9 S 2 UV" ... • T Preschool Inf/Tod 1 •00-21 9·9000 PETS •· owner, low ml, full IUVW\& • • locatlon, fenced, , , -ia power, anrf, extra• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •Corona Hlghland• roll-up1, high celllnga, Tutor Time Child Care ' Ext. T·5139 C 60l ANIMALS 6049 S11 ,500 714-&10·8g8e Beaut~ 8Br 4Ba •••••••• .e5pif 714.~8·8531 In N.B.· 955·2872 fof llstlng1.CAL•SCAN APPUAN ES 1 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiii ---------•'92 Mondlal 12k ml,
Jim a Petty McDonald AP•llW»TMENTS l!ARN $15. $35 ·-'94 LEGEND L red/tan S75K. •'86
Agents 71_..769-9070 ~ C~=l~~··~:~"Exp.a per hour • .Eaay Great Buyl GE 23_5cf s~:e~r::::.~ :;~·old Low mllea, Bou, T11taroua 13k ml,
• J M k t FOR RENT muat.Ull our truck electronic processing frlg/fr1111r off white, Male. Oecla-d. Paid leath1r. moonroof. r1d/tsn S85K. •'87 412 ;:.~.:: 158~~00~11 ••••••••• BUSINESS a mounted unit. Clean g' mt1~1c:•1 Flalm'd Ice, water deap. AllO. $750. Will sacrifice al <3Ror::i~1~~5o ~~0;1 :~1c~6~~·~!~~
Ocn9'<M of PCH. 3-car FINANCE OMV. D1pendabl1.F/T omp • 1 an ng an Antique Singer Sewing $350obol 858·5873. WESTMINST•R 328 QTB 47k ml, new ~ar. 304 Margurite 25-35~omm434·7929 leada provided. FT/PT. machine 714·788-0648 Agent 751M>970 COSTA MESA 2624 No experlenc;e nee••· •---------(714) 992·0909 engine S55K. Owner
Clerloal Poaltlon• •a r Y. Ca I I now SPORTING •ae INTEQRA GSR wdollwlcn1&rrycr~lapt. proved •Perteet ca-Cod iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii avall, S12-S18hr-NO (800)550-8860 ext. 7 FURNITURE 6014 .,,. .. -1 Br D •tao h • d BUSttn:tt!S •xp nee.I Full ben11 cAL•SCAN GOODS 6065 3lk ml, IHther, 7 14 ·98 a ·5 7 7 8 Home Oen vu'1, 40' &n~ 888-292 7091 IC12e28 ----------custom wn111a, hotl wide lot, room for Cottage• w/Patlo OPPORTUNITY • · Q OVER NM ENT c t A 1 (3PQV328) $17.850 expansion. Rlducedl neat beach. Cathedral ,ICM Dootore Otflc•~ JOBS N hi 1 ompu •r rmo re JUNGLE QYM Playaet Ll!XU8 01' FORD
Agent 714-759-9070 cell•. frig. Move-In 2904 Front offlce/ln1uranc1 $HS ooO.se:~ '~i Cherry wood finish retall $4000. 1111 WESTMINSTaR 9075
11/e~I
lie/;
tfou.
~t'te
A
GOOD
ADI.
Speclall S875+SSOO Pff, AM hours S8.00hr t.:Soo.ae'3.0B19 S45o 714-64()-4363 SlOOO.obo 51~0 714-892-41909 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
deposit. 048-2421 tlPAYPHON•Stt plua bonua. 883-0870 1>d. J-400 for current Hutch 8X4 walnut, K•w•k·Keow•• 2 adj. ••• Ford T·alrd new Call COSTA MESA 1024 •Costa Me .. •• Best Great BualMH Op-(81tw11n 10sm·12pm) Federal, County, City S275. Divider 8X5 seat• for 1 or 2 ---------1 1nQ/lrana, Urea brakn
Jr·1br & 1br, allO 2br P.ortunlly. 38 local Drlvere/Shopman & State llat1. 3·shelf storage rm persona. Uk• new w/ AUDI 9025 S25oo. obo 540-e218 642-5678
1ba, quiet gated &~ bolh ~~ & ~~~ + ~~~Id ~~~~ ~~er$175.~~li~~r~~~~~5~0~-~V~3-~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~P~l~e~u~•~l~•~~~·~m~e~a~u~g~•~~~~~~------OUPLX S210K 2·Hma
on 1 ·lot. weu kepL
Ownef may carry. Agt,
Eert Teylor &42-4722
comm, pool. tennis. outdoor phones. B::ri plck-Yp trk. & Ins En--N-O-'""E'""'X-P-E""R,,,....,..l""E""N.,..C"'"""'E M U ST S • L LI r
eaay aceesa to 8, git 1 FREElll C I gll1h,714-e45-0783 NECESSARY! $500 I BUY trURNITURI! fr1;~2::7~~11•. Nowlll 1-aog-,:~~g'~ Eaorow Coordlnatoi TO $900 W11kly Antlqu11, AJI PIANOS
FIT lmm1d.op1nlng Potentlal Proceaalng 1pc or hou .. ful caah
l!'•ld• 5Bt 3Ba +Oen Newport Height• --· fOf' buay R.E. office. Mortgage R1fund1. paid (7.1) 957-8133
Pool, epa, 1289,000 Area J'eautlful lrg 3br PIMM bl wary of out Salary, B1n1flta G Own houn. Call LIHll Bnt Ctr. Washed Open Sat/Sun t-4 2ba, pvt bale, nice & of area companlH. Bonua ·Program. Call 1-800-382·2199 ••
1SSt Orohard qulet.11300.~0-0130 Check with th• local 714-640-7888 xt 313. l!xt.&03 CAL·S~N Oak, glaaa/IN<>od dra.
Prine. Only. 860-3008 Better Bualn••• or Fax reaum1 to Jan 21dep/52hlgh/56wld•
Bureau before you at 714-e40-7141. EMPLOYME' NT '350.obo 969-8204 •'aide Sharp 1-Sty NEWPORT Hnd any money for~-""'"""~~--==---:-
3br 2ba, fem rm, 2-car f11a or 11rvlcea. RHd ••t•bll•h•d Trade WANTED • 55351--------..
gar, 1700+sf. 1229K BEACH 2669 and undll'1tand any magazine '"ka .PIT Lyt !1t1t• Auction
Prlno.OnlY !att & Judy contract• before you Editorial, Production & 3/14·3/15 10am-???
Taylor 84l.,..7'22 Agent * 8lg Canron * ilgn. Shop around tor 'ff Ad Sales. Fax A Woman of Integrity! No early blrdal
1·2-3 Bedroom Apta ratH. RMum• 714-97&-3543 Nura•.Homamaker. 100 Ila-Iola of atuffl
nHI l'Hhlon l .. and aooiT liL•ii Pro •xP·d H•• Cl••n•r• Excel cook.Own cer. Chlpal1 dinette Ht HUNTINGTON 2-car gar fp w/d hk· k h I nffdld fOf' pampered Skllled In MaHagl 1 o • pc/Lal1Qu1 orig
•••.--u 1040 .,,.;., atr Alartn mar 9ter •P• you cllenll. Engl ipkng & lherapy, 12 Yrs.exp.• t;Jo x/Armo\re/Sllk
llA'-A up1, Ocolf -··••' _.....__ ••II product/1vc:sl own trans 545-7350 Local ref1. Hrty or 24 Ru,..·'Loula XIVd••'"' ll;l-••••••iiilii•j_8Y!~-•-="•.a.a~ Call 714-434-2973 ' ' hr ah If t 1 . CALL • ., "' 1-..-_.,. $1-..---~ S•leWV.oh 71, • •• $l'Oe-,ill-J"lUI•-lla""'91.!1•72
•Dewntewn Pier A~wl lieno"•t•d Pattr Planner out· • Mlrror/Cl.o aofa/Oll Peh•te, 8paolou1 19' 1 2Br lnoom• without • gotng, per90nabte w/ ptnQ/T'lfny Stl lamp/
2ar. ftlt, vautt c:elta, l'rom 1775 . .Ho Peta. MCond Job. Your tint comp akma/ ..... -.p. DOMESTICS 5540 ltailan iota Ht/ comm, pool, Jaet ...... ,rt•-.. ...__ atep In financial wlll tr.I.In. l7M597 11 pl9"I of Jewelry 9a1nee •...-• .,...... -• ·-·--fr••dom. Call now 163411 Cambey Lane ~-et1 M ... Orto '1-l"OO..Se6-al21 et CNMCW. CiOte lltfft UoTN 'H4 Ml 4MI eAt.•acAN Pre echaolnaa&wy llH .. d Chlce a M~
--------·• •W•t•rtront CeiHli• -• 6 M n-a .•. roorn for ad-f-ot Mw'bom twins my rn H e No ch9Cu T •"'nu• 2bt a fUtl tile bath wl N•R•M..... • v~t. •11 ECE AlllO Viejo home .... __ ._. _____ _
wwrvRA tub .-IUftdeC:tc MAR ftroduot• unite reqwed. Call Monday thfu Friday IUCB 1041 eiar t ;u· carpott, Aout•lll 1100,000 en-Jemie at 71~42 7:3oam • e:3opm.1•w""'1oe--c-~--o-,ff~wn""!""!"h-•1 •••••••••I :.~ bMCh, atOtee, :='.. ~~",.~: QeweJ OMOi Ut• Must ~ ~Id, aofa tH.tt. Call Qew...e 0....-rHt, th ... er, boat IOOel ttone.a ~ to bookkMplna, ,...., .. , w/MWborn ... depend:-bet«• noon 14N7'7 aw a.a. a.Sty wlfP dOCk IMlll. lt960 19'· HMCe udUnQ ,,.. re.pontlbte~ • NP 1 abte. pauentla 0~· •Iv htow-Top
1n 1tv rm. vautt --. ~,~ e7U002 automaUo ~ ,•u•~~ Mc:;:, :r~*J:ne;:,. ~~'": ••i•r•~• Fu11-a1 ...
MlohMt ~ ~ equlPfMM, "eq'*" « p ..... oe11 ""' new. llQO, ¥etue 1140,000 ~97' 113,000 • 141,000. Yoaenda at~ 7 1 4 -4 4 a .o a O a 13SO.flrm 8'1&-tMI ..,.,...,., .• .,."US c.-tHOJft .... M iiiieM...,.... ...... ,
view• ,b, •b•, ~ CA&.1CAN ••by1lttlno ne9ded, ~w:::i =~=.oJg .UNT •• •.u. ........... '°~~~"""~uu~'!':'\.u..-.,~AOOii~,'.!l:TY'ft2. = v:~. '3 • .. -.·CllAllD·--lll!IS•llf
1 Nerte atreet lam lllWIOK IN' P9t h:_GW· Muet.,...,. ••••••••~;.:~.;.:..:..;:.:..:.::..:::;1 By OwrWt 411"'"" month P(T. HO liillnDI f*letlOed. cwtng, pa.. iOOllS Z70I not MLM. flM4utJo ti.ne Md ~ble. --------1 ~---------~-'!1 •uppoft. ,,,.. I LHV• m•H•te ., lllllQVll
minute mHHJl•· (!1"') 174-4141
1.eoGlle.OYM -. tM? QAL•KAN
STARTL
•
~Up/ ~w111 tlw IMil]Pilt!t is,--
to llllntlfllla. w IO'Ma W' ... ,""'.,., .,... ..
~.,..a"""' SF.A.Ral. """"fir,.. ••• .,,,,""'--"". timellltJtl.trip •• c.t&.r•~ n... .fc.11a .... illlrlJ
is Cllrif '*"'" ""'fiJt_,_.jd;; .-.. --· • ----c. .,. ~J#M!b.--• •fi!rJ-, ..... ..,-., .... ~,.,~
of 1M'1J!1,,,;,;,iwit111N q.., (;Jd.
l"-*I bJ•l#~Ja*w ,,.,._ a Pus.-••~· .'30 W ~~ a-,....,,,,, __ :.i ,-1111 ... (711) 642-ll21..tl•
tilil """'1•••..,,,,,.. . ,,,., ~· ,,.. ., .. ,.,., *"" ..... ""'~, ,., .. ,-.a11 ..... .,..w .... "'11• Mlilt,_ G* W ;,,Jll"' _, lui raa'
I
,
t
ol-
ve
ai-
at
lie
lls
ce
1a
es
on
ld
;4
.. •
..
LS
n
rt
d
I
y
y
:I
;,
I'
I
t
h ..
. .
TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1998
~ODAY'S
CRoSSwoRo PUZZLE
13 OfNput fS1~~ 51 Prize
IO Pote 11 F.moue IUHon 82=-83 long peftodl
IM Thlcbned. as
85 re:::...,
ee Zero
DOWN I Gymnut
Korbut
2 Pope'1 name
3 Marlhal
Wyan -
4 Squad car
5 Hebrew prophet
6 Thick piec9
7 W011t unit
28 Recorded
29 Ireland
30 Wandenw
8 CenaJn fight
9 SmaNdog
10 Agit.le 11 Neutral colofs
14~1oa
riddle
15 Goof* 20 Vlecous
31 Doctol'• helper 32 Vot• In faYOt 34 Dryguly
37 Extrwnl
40 Aide 22. Swiss peak
25 casual WHf
2e In the lead
42 LlJlll) (of ctey)
43 camera
27 Eroolete Rlc:Uy Hendet9on •
m&glllle 45 Weddlno-pege
word
ACOUSTIC
CEIUNGS 3408
South Co••t Dryw•ll
Acou1 remvl/cu1t text
Water Damage Repair
BHt In Ouallly & Price
L550017 444-8889
ADDITIONS
REMODELING 3410
L..q ............ p'cf
Uve-tn child care,
Europea..'1 Au Pairs,
EnqUsl. speattlni.
18-26 yrs .. !~al.
culturally enrtchinq.
flex1ble In-home
child care.
45 hrs./wll.
Regroutlng a. lnatall'n•-------
Uf0130 DeM of Tll• COMPUTERS 3556
l7MOCS5 or 8*U2e iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CBILD CAD 3531 -------~
Co•p••J
·~c.r.M . Cootr-.s.na.
9S!peclia11.d~ In rll6dln&lll
~-lddldaN
Uc. 6N2l9 151-M70
CONSTRUCTION
8y CHARUS GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
Md TANNAH HIRSCH
BOWNOTTO~B
' I
JAGUAR 9105 t!XOS 9115 NJSSAN .......
ledan, 40, green, 24k
mt. 129.995 llAUaR JAGUAR n ... en4002
'M •• :aoo • a a 3 0 0 Z X '97 CllLICA QT
81actilbl•ck. razor Newt,.~ 1 2197. N.w Lll'TllACK , •h~. i..11t.1• cenlnect. fuel In~ IY•· Aun• Qttl Black/black, aut~"!'
<00 ~~~t~~~ ~~-:.. f:' P'~bO 10'!! ~~or· co
C a• h m • r • 11 v o, y • Ch.vy cat.Call llaa &.aXuS
teathff, full option. ~HO M18SION Yl&IO JEEP 9110 oe,ooo mil • (144132) 1;a9 ...... LUUS
Boch wlncnble. Soutb dealt. ~-~ =.., ~ ..... ~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii S22.~~~ ac :soo lOW ROYC.E 9182 vo• •itWAGmv 9235
NOR'l'll
•AKQ6
0953
0 Jl4
•AJ7 WEST
•97 OQlll
EAST
o A95
•1'6531
SOlJTB
•152
·OAKJ o K7l •QIOtl
• J 1043
01764
0 QI063 .,
:::::ea-... l........--.~ ..._ ··-· '•3 Cherok•• Ralty Red, mini condl· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ww 1111
Wlll•COOU ... to wnptopme. Country. while, 4dr, tlon, all ••rvlc• •'8S 8Uver Spur liiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
West led a w club, won in the 4114, pw, pdl, tow pkg, record a . (029508) Black/tan, 31k ml. '7t a .. tJ• White. New
cloted ba.od. Dec~r fineued the Cb, 80K ml. 1-owner. $24,877 1451&. •'79 Comlche lnteriOf'. b<akff, 119feo • jact of clubt and, when that held, Sl I ,50CI 71.-.7eo.9li2 L•XU8 Conv. 2·ton• metatllc and •ngln•. $3800.
cubed tho K!i.k.io~uccn of •e• CRAND CHanOKii MISSION VIEJO blue, blue top red (714) 211-1111
spades. Wbta Wat on tho 4114, VS, AT, Tow at-1·(081) 18-LllXUS IHth., 358k mt. S45K. •la VW Bug Conv
tfUrd round, decluer claimed nine loy•. full powe< ,99 as 300 •'78 Sliver Shadow Black top. New crp~
tricb eve~ though 1padea did not (3HJH778) lt4,950 Full option. only Champagne/chHlnut, new chrome, run• well
divide evenly. • Ll!XOS OP 30,000 mlles. Lexu1 44k ml, S25K. Owner $3,250. 714•2r.Mt858
South announced that tho ace of Wl!STMINSTER certified. !1'094510 :~~~a~~~l~pproved '92 VW Bue Conv.
clubs would be cubed. Nut. declar-, __ 7_1.,..,,4-8,..,,....,.•.,.2.,,..,.a,..,.,,,..9_0_e_ S28,977 7 1 4 .9 e a .5 7 7 9 Black top. Now crpt, er would comcfto haad widl tho ace •ee QRAND Laxus new chrorM, run• well
of hearu and throw Wcat OD load CHEROKll MISSION VIBJO 13,250. 714-272-2851
with a club. The defender could 32K ml, AT, full power, at-t·(&BO)·BB·LEXUS SUBARU 9200 '92 VW Bua Conv.
IOOl'O two club trk:b. Soulb dilcard-loyt, like ilewl ~Rl.H309) 197 88 300 Black top .• New orpt,
iDg a diamond from hand oo tho last, L~~~: 8F 81ack/blaek, only 2000 *'92 SVX·AWD• new chrome, run• watt
bot then would have to break a red WESTMINSTER ml, no OMV. Lexu1 BLK/GREV,Tqur Pkg $3,250. 71.-.272·2858 suit for declarer. Whichever tult 171,.1892-e908 Certified. #35730 ALL Options, 83Kml,1 ________ _
Weat cboto to play would preteot SSAVE Ll!XUS Bly'ful. 714-873-2044 MISC. AUTO 9245
The biddin : .
SOtrl'B ~ NOJlTll 16 ,,_ 16
declarer with a nmth tric%. 1--------MISSION Vll!JO
Note that. at tho card• lie, if LEXUS 9115 1·(880)-88·Ll!XUS TOYOTA 9210 a If 1 z • D c A 11 s
INT ,,_ 3HT ........
()pcoing lead: Three of• declarer broacbea a red suit rat.bet 1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --------1 FROM $17•. •• '97 l!f: 300'• ...
"There arc more than enough
chaocea IO make three DO trump tfta
West ads a club Md South Wins: A
3-3 lpade break; or cithel' the queen
of hearts or ace of diamonds with
Bast. None of these posaibilitie1
existed, yet South wa able to claim
the cootnlCt at trick five!
than execute the throw-in, the coo-'92 Ll!XUS SC 400 5 lo ChOOH from. '94 4RUNHER SR5 Por•ehH, Cadlllaes.
tnld can be defeated. In the words of Red, all opts, bu-I-fut, L • x u 1 c •rt 1 I I• d . V6, low mlles, lull Chevya, BMW'S, Cor·
the Beatles' soog: "I get by with a Ut-85K mllH, $~4.000 $28,577 power, alloy•, moon-vettee. AJ10 JHplt
tlebelpfrommyfriaida." 71 ... 723-5815 LeXUS roof. (3GTX971S) 4W0'•· Vour UH? $18,950 Toll FrH '93 LS 400 MISSION VIEJO Ll!XUS OP 1 .. 00·2 t 8·9000 Lam to be a bdaer' brid~ play· Black jade, full option. 1·(888)·8e·Ll!XUS Wl!STMINSTER Ext.A-Gt,.
er! Subscribe aow to lite Corea ~2~~~ 1 1 4 6 6 0 5 --------i _...:,C_7_1_4.-) _8_9_2_-e_9_o_e_ for current ll1Ung1
The bidding it textbook. With a
minimum opening and balanced
hand, South opened wjth one club
Bride Letter by am. <-:1...,.. '9• ·~ 300 MERCEDES 9130 '94 CAMRY LE CAL•SCAN ~(or Woullilldc•. <Jr &o: Black/Ivory, leather, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Lo mlle1, AT, full --------Goren Brldae Le~P.O. Bos chromH, Lexus cent-,87 Whit •fOSL / power, cassette, like &.-OS 4410,Cblai&'OtDL fled. (141409) $28,977 • ""' w new I (3HMA936) va LEXUS Gray Leather lnl. Xlnl s12 950 w.·a_...n
MISSION VIEJO Cond. Phone, 2·Tops, ' Ll!XUS OF -.••-9248
JNFlNlTI 9095 JAGUAR
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I
9105 JAGUAR 9105
'90 020
4 dr, auto, leather,
moonroof, CD, full
power. (638237) $18,877
Ll!XUS
MISSION VIEJO
1-888.SB·LEXUS
'98 130T
White, Ivory, moon-
roof, lealher, CD, new
Lexu1 trade. (009972)
$22,977
LEXUS
MISSION VIEJO
1 ·888·88·LEXUS
•9e Q45 priced 10 ••II
$29,995 pearl whl w/
tan lthr Int. 24k ml.
1howroom cond./
transl. mfg'• warranty
574-2600
PLOOR INSTALL
UPAIRS 3820
-~ -------
'84 XJ12
Sedan, 40, Met. Red,
37k mlles, (94·3869)
$29,995
BAUER JAGUAR
714-971-2002
'95XJO
2 + 2 convertlble, red,
28k ml, (95·3802) $38,995
BAUER JAGUAR
714-971·2002
'95 XJ8
Sedan, 40, Black, 29k
ml. (95·3730) $36,995
'95 XJS
Sedan, 40, Ork. Blue.
23k mi. (95-3763)
$36,995
BAUER JAGUAR
714-971 ·2002
~--------
'9eXJR Sedan, 40, Black, 48k
ml, (95·3739) $39,995
'95 XJS COUPI!
20, Met. Red. 33k ml,
(95·3817) S29,lnl5
'95 XJO Sedan, 40, gray, 32k
ml, (95-3655) $38,995
BAUaR JAOUAR
71 ... 971-2002
'98XJ8 Sedtn 40, gray, 27k
m 11 e I , (96·3805),
S39,995
BAUER JAGUAR 714-971-2002
'90 XJ8
Sedan 40, grem. 35k
ml, (9&-3870) s:.7,995
BAUER JAQUAR
714·97t·2002
0\ I .111111\' \1,111
\\ 11 II
I .i1111I\' \'otllh·,
t ·(888) 88·LEXUS $17,000 720-8013 WESTMINSTER '~~~!!!!!!!!~
(714! 882.e9oe '93 LS 400 Black jade. full option.
Mint. #146605
$24.977 •
Ll!XUS
MISSION Vll!JO
1•(888) 88-LEXUS
'94 l!s'3oo
Black/black, razor
1hop. Lexus certified.
(0074122) $20,977
'92 LS 400
Ca1hm•~•/lvory,
leather, lull option.
86,000 mllH (144732)
$22,977
'95 SC 300
Rally Red. mint condl·
lion, all aervlce record1. (029508)
$24,677
LEXUS MISSION VIEJO
1·C888) 88-LIZXUS
PUILIC NOTICE
TM cam. ~ubk UtUI·
'88 St•tlon W•gon 1 NB owner. 100k ml,
black/black, Great
Cond (714)780·6283
'91 580 SEC 1-owner
white/gray.. 89k ml,
Excel. Cond. $27,500. 714-723-1608
'92 1901! 2.8
CD. phone, leather,
· moonroof, like nlw.
(949474) $17,550
Ll!XUS OF
WllSTMINSTl[R
(714) 882-8900
'94 MBZ C280 Sliver/black leather, Cl
O, moonroof, full
power 11'035772
$23,997
Ll!XUS
MISSION VIEJO
1 ·888.S8·Ll!XVS
luu99er painting rH
pafntlng and rettor11
tJon avea Uc 740898
Matthew 048-3041
tlM eomm1 .. 1on RI!· ------------• OUIRH that all UMc:I PIT
hOue•hold goOctl s••vtC15 3870 movtre 91lnt tt\•lr ~ •
•eo CAMRY LE
28k. AT, full power.
cauette, Ilk• newl
(3PRH211) St5L950
LEXUS Or
WESTMINSTl!R
C7141 892-8908
'87 CAMRY LE
Sage/s•g•, full pow•r. only 15000 ml.
(027458) s 18,977
Ll!XUS
MISSION VIEJO
1 ·888..SS-Ll!XUS
CLASSIFll!D
11'1 the re1ourc:e you
can count on to sell a
I u.l,l llli,1 ""'Ill\
800·643·5022
myriad of merchan-1-~.,.-------dlte Items. because Thinking ot having a
our column• compel garage 1ale?
qualllled buyere to Give u1 a caJll
CDlll CLASSIFIED
842·5878
3194
..
-r -. _,. --
e42..se7e
a & a Uphol •Ince ·ea
cu1tom made fum, r• uphol1tery, slip cvn
antique rpr 642-4812
3932
EOMPUTER
~ELP1 BVJU>ING 3580 PUINlTUU
THERAPEUTIC Poor
MA.ssAOI!
TIMI TO llQIN
VOUltHOME
IMPROVIMINT P.u.o. Cal :r number.I••••••••!
tltn09 tu'ld eheufreure ... 811ter/Det w.-.; Pftnt tMtt T.C.P. num-OelfV/()vemlaht vt.na,; bet In .. adWttl... ,..,, avl. Uo"diik>ncted mema. 11 rou have a ~ 7'4"9~ .... .,o quetdon about the ...
-.
Chane•• art
yew wm find
what you nHd
II th• prlct
yew wlt'lt to pay
wh•n yex1 read
Cleuffled
Ml•H78
·~nOR ~
AND•RSOll Conetr 1.l!lltl•P•AIR.S•••illllliia Lg Ot Sml Jot.>1. lnt'd II!
Lll440721 Local COM ........ In COf\l~lon Ett. 1921 790-t 381 6 ,.etor•llon ot furnl·
DiYWALt
S!IVICI 3584
fur• • antlqu••· Aepelf & tfllnl•htng ....,1oa
at A Place of
Health & &eauty
190 e. 1am
Costa Mesa
PROJ!Cn
Call a plumber,
palnttr, handyman
or any of the • .,. vfc•• Ii.tad h.,. In our ctlNCt~f
OALL YOU" LOCAL 8•RVIO•a
TOIMVl
gatltv of • movw, Umo __ ...._ ...... ___ _.._,
or ;~:.~~:u_.oall: =-
Convi'ltaalon 114-158-4111 _______ ,