HomeMy WebLinkAbout1998-03-20 - Orange Coast Pilotr -,
Serving the Newpo"-Mesa community since 1907
Schools need $100 million upgrade, trustee says
•After touring Newport-Mesa schools, board
member Dana Black claims capital improvement
needs exce~d district's $15 million estimate.
we're going to
have to quit
using these
Band-Aid me-
thods to take
care of these
needs.•
r.4 ,
~
"The bleachers
at Corona del Mar
High School are a
nightmare of a lawsuit
waiting to happen."
By Husein Mashni. Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA The
school board will be hinng a com-
pany Tuesday night to help it esti-
mate the magnitude of its cap1td.l
improvement needs, which one
school board member said could
be upward of $100 million.
Tued of what she calls "Band-
Aid • solutions being applied to
I the aging school facilities of New-
port-Mesa, Dana Black said the
school board needs to get serious
about fixing its schools.
"We're talking about JO
schools, and their average age is
40 years old," she said. "We're
talking about retrofitting toilets,
replacing floors that have
asbestos in them and updating
playground equipment. If peo-
ple want state-of-the-art schools,
Black, who
has been tour-
ing all the dis-
. --. ··-
trict's schools, Dana Black
said she regu-
larly sees outdated ·equipment
and structures. The district's
most recent estimate was closer
to $15 million, but Black said the
-DANA BLACK
needs addressed m the district's
review were merely the tip of
the ice berg.
"We have fleets of trucks from
The Hallock sisters, Malinda, 11, at right, and Michelle, 8,
prepare to fire up their mini drag racers on the driveway of
DON lEACH I 0.AlY PltOT
their Costa Mesa home. Both girls are licensed by the
National Hot Rod Association to drive junior dragsters.
Growing up
• Forget Barbies. These two
Costa Mesa· sisters, 8 and 11,
prefer to spend their free time
racing at Pomona drag strip.
8, can already blast down a drag strip at close to
60 mph in an alcohol-fueled junior dragster.
·I already have a driver's license,· Malinda
sclld ·A special one.·
Both girls, students at Victona Elementary
School are licensed by the National Hot Rod
Assooabon to drive JUDlOr dragsters in races
against other children their age.
With a small 15-horsepower engine fueled
by pwe methanol, Michelle's silver dragster
tops out at about •2 mph. Her older sister's dark-
blue model bas a few more porues and can go
close to 60 mph.
This Saturday, Malinda and Michelle will
take on more than 100 other young racers at the
Pomona Raceway. By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
M alinda Hallock can't legally get
behind the wheel of a car and
drive down her family's West Side
street for at least another five years.
The girls dnve l•-toot-long, 250-pound
dragsters that are virtually identical in design to
regular dragsters but are built at one-half scale.
They race over the same straight asphalt
track at the Pomona Raceway as the full-size
dragsters but go one-eighth of a mile instead of
the standard quarter-mile.
U all goes well, they'll advance all the way to
the final heat and earn points to qua.hfy for a trip
to the junior national drag races held later th.is
year in Indianapolis.
Drag racing runs in the Hallocks' blood.
But the 11-year-old and her sister, Michelle, • SEE RACE PAGE 7
Walking the plank
• City and county Aood
Control District agree to
share price tag for new
bridge linking Costa Mesa
and regional bike trail.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Sometime ln
the nezt two weeks, a long-await·
ed bridge at the western end of
Giller Avenue will likely be hoist-
ed into place. ·
But It's not the controversial
connectlon tba.t would extend car
traffl~ on GJaler over the San.ta
Ana River Into Huntington Beach.
Rather, lt'I a bike and pedeltrt·
an bridge over the smaller
Greenville-Banning river channel
that will mate it eulei for locak
to Walk. run or bib along a coun-W ncreatiOMI tran. ·~t1amajardeelJ•14ldBob aruam; a DU.ota Avenue acdvilt
Wbo bu IObbWcl fQI' ~for ,..,.. •'J"be..bddae ii _1 an
""**Yfor~dty.•
1be ~. a Jblnt pryJect
betw s m M c;tty aDd M 9faD99
C0Unty JllooCl Conttoa m.trtc:t.
"The bridge is
definitely an amenity
for the whole city."
--BOB-GRAHAM
will be the second link between
Costa Mesa and the regional bike
trail, which runs along both sides
of the Santa Ana River from Yor-
ba Unda to the Padfic:: Ocean.
A.oother footbridge is already in
place Just south of Vidoda Avenue,
where the a.rphalt bike path swit-
ches to the west Side ol the river.
After the bridge spent the last
four yean stuck on the drewtng
board, t.be dty and tbe county
agreed last year to share Its
$163,000 prtce tag.
The dty ta chipptng ln
St 12,193 lt received from state
and county ~tioo grants.
No (:tty 1undi are bllDcr, SJ*lt oa
ttae ~ ~te'Clty Bngi·
oeer CMndre Shak• Mid. TKe&CMCd~11811-WllloOt·
-W bllft 'WOOM> ~for
1D walk or .rtde an.
Ill ~ pobit. the 38-too
steel bridge will be about 16 feet
above the bottom of the cement
channel. Sha.k.er said.
The custom-made bridge will
come partially assembled from the
factory and will have to be put
toge_tber ~ worken;lHhe-Gisler
site ~ \>eing ~ink), piao&-
with a crane.
Construction aews have been
working at the site for several
months buildin=te footings, on wb.lcb the b pilings will sit.
Wb11e no tion date has
been set. the bridge parts ore U·
peeled to be delivered next Tues~
day. Workers will o.ssembl4t the
parts and Install them. most likely
duling the ftrst Week of April,
Sbabraald.
For yen, locels have been
unable to niach the noitbem MC>
Uoo ol tbe trail tram GilMr' beteuee
thi ~c·path 11 cm a vacant
strtp Of land cthat 11 unoU.Dy
ttrUided bMWW>. the Santa. Ana
and~rtrin.
The bib 'l*h runs llOQg.:tM
eut tide ot the s.nta AM. Rlwr
until just ICNth of Vktoda Av· mu.. W-.M era•• Oil~ pees..: trtu ...... to .. ~ 8..aa *Ii. 11Dd riidli8jiilililll1RiWk11M to Ila
eDcl at'-* Oout ...... ,.
the 1960s, • she said. "We have
antiquated facilities and serious
flooding problems. The bleachers
at Corona del Mar High School
are a nightmare of a lawswt wait-
ing to happen.•
Linda Mook, president of the
Newport-Mesa Federation Teach-
ers, said she's not sure how much
is needed but agrees with Black
about the urgency of addressing
the capital improvement needs.
"There's a real need to
upgrade educational facilities
• SEE SCHOOLS PAGE 7
( ) I I " I I ( I "\. '
Howshoufd
the Khool dGtrkt
finan'2 an the tc:hool
Improvements that
are necessary7
Clll our Rffders
Hotline at 6'2-6086
or e-mail us at
dpilot20earthlink.net.
Man suspected
of selling drugs
to teens arrested
By Christoper Goff a rd,
Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA - A Costa
Mesa man suspected of sup-
plying drugs to local high
school students was arrested
along with his housemate and
a would·be teenage buyer
Wednesday night, police said.
Scott Lam.bom, 31, was tak·
en· into custody around 7 p.m.
at his home in the 300 block of
Santa Isabel Avenue after
police saw him selling marijua-
na to a 14-year-old boy w~
attends a local school. Costa
Mesa pol1oe Lt. Ron Smith said.
Armed with a search war-
rant, police found four ounces
of high-grade marijuana, an
ounce of cocaine, steroid pills
and $5,500 in cash believed. to
be drug proceeds at La.mbom's
home, Smith said.
Police began investigating
Lamborn two weeks ago after
they received tips that he was
a major drug supplier to stu-
dents at Corona del Mar and
Newport Harbor high schools,
Smith said.
Lambom's ·phone number
was also found written on the
bathroom wall at Costa Mesa
High, lea.ding police fo believe
be supplied drugs to those stu·
dents a.s well, Smith said.
•SEE DRUGS MGE 7
Planners approve
Crab Shack pennit
• Mariner's Mile eatery
can continue entertaining
customers, but must keep
lid on the noise.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Joe's
Crab Shack can continue its rau-
cous birthday celebrations and
other forms of entertainment -
as long as Lido Isle residents
can't hear it.
That was the conclusion Thurs-
day of the Planning CommiSSlon,
which approved a permit for the
Mariner's Mle restaurant with the
condition that it install permanent-
ly closed ba.yfront windows.
Managers of Joe's Crab Shack
applied for a permit from the city
last month to offer its unique form
of live entertainment, which
includes US10g megaphones to
sing "Happy Birthday• and per-
forming dance skits to tunes such
as "Macarena· and "YMCA ·
In addition to the closed win-
dows, the commission prohibited
the use of megaphones and
required that the noisy activity
take place only indoors and not
pa.st 10 p.m
But restaurant officials said
unposing those restrictions would
hurt their bus.mess.
"The operator believes the
reason the restaurant has been so
successful is the windows, which
• SEE CRAB PAGE 1
I N I l l .\
·.
• ..
check it out
Maldng rnon(!y
with Net sense
B y many accounts, the Internet is the
communications frontier of the new
millennium -a resource offering
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the library offers many resources.
U you're new to the digital scene; con-
sider starting with "lbe Internet Business
-------·-
Primer,• a concise
guide designed to
help business people
identify ways their
firms can successfully
use the Internet.
Written in non-
technical prose for
small-to medium-
sized businesses, this
slim volume provides
information about
potential benefits and
pitfalls of using the
Web for mternaJ and external communica-
t10ns and marketing.
Accord.lng to Internet seer Chuck Mar-
tln, there are two kinds of people: those
who tJun.k the Web might be a really big
thing and those convinced it is revolution-
izmg the world.
ln "The Digital Estate,• the IBM execu-
tive offers a blueprint for success in an
mcreasmgly wired world, sprinkled with
anecdotes about VlSiona.ry companies that
have capitalized on digital opportunities.
Noteworthy features include "100 Rules for
Busmess Netiquette •
and an index listing
more than 100 Inter-
net addresses of fea-
tured firms.
There's step-by-
step advice for get-
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and conducting all
sorts of business on it
in "The New Internet
Business Book.·
From doing market
research and obtaining competitive infot·
mation to announcing products and malt-
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vides an overview of online commerce and
an extensive list of Internet business
resources.
Other ways to promote and deliver your
products and services through the informa-
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•
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the Internet," featur-
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creating a new
online business or
increasing sales of an
existing business.
You can learn
about Internet termi-
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and planning a web-
site in "Launching a
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mg strate91es for running a business on the
Internet, mduding how to cut costs, avoid
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the Internet •
Interested m using the Web to do inter-
national research? Check out "The Thun-
derblfd Gwde to International Business
Resources on the World Wide Web.·
Concerned about Internet security?
Study "Internet Security for Business,"
which offers a program for safeguarding
your company against the dangers of
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No matter what you're proffering, you'll
need to grab attention in cyberspace. Take
a quick course in telling your story online
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• CMECX rr our Is written by the SUff of the
Newport Bead'! Public Library. This week's column Is
by Sarah Rosenbloom.
READERS HOTUNE
642-6086 •
•
W hen be moved to New York City in 1993,
Rob Rollins Lobl never imagined what
was in store for him and his best friend.
Sam. They were determined to make an indepen-
dent film -and determined to not.let anything get
in their way.
But it wasn't that easy.
"Each time we failed, we gained so much more
experience and the perseverance paid off,• said
Lobl, a 27-year-old NeV4>0rt Harbor High School
graduate.
And that determination finally paid off. Not only
does his maiden feature, a comedy named, "The
Qefinite Maybe," compete in
the third annual Newport Newport Beach
Beach International Film ~ I :J ~=~ai!~~-bi:[ I: known actors Teri Garr, Roy . . . ·
Scheider, Ally Sheedy and '~~"*'4/ fl-~I
Al Franken.
Set in the exclusive New York area known as the
· Hamptons, "The Definite Maybe" details the
exploits of two young men, Eric and Ziggy, who
become obsessed with raising JJ.loney to buy Ziggy's
late father's h,ouse.
1 "Basically what we are talking about [in the film) is
•people who grow up around opportunity and feel they
deserve it." Lobl said "It's about being young and
ambitious and ~g off more than you can chew.•
Sheedy plays Ziggy's unpleasant stepmother,
Scheider plays a sympathetic family friend. Garr is a
real estate ageqt and Franken portrays a homeless
man.
"It all snowballed,• I.obi said. when asked how
he man~ to acquire such well-known faces for
his first . But explaining how that snowball start-
ed rolling is a longer story.
!though he had always loved the movies,
taking full advantage of his. stepfather's
Edwards movie theater passes and even
MARC MAR™ I DA.lY Pl.OT
As a teenager, Rob Lobl worked at the Udo Theater In Newport Beach. Now I.obi has returned to
the area with his movie, .. 'lbe Deftnlte Maybe," which he co-wrote, produced and dlrected.
orking a few years at the U do Cinema. Lobl did
not set out to become a filmmaker.
. He wanted to be a journalist, and went off to
Boston University to major in the subject.
His freshman year at BU, be went to play pickup
basketball at a local QYII\·
There, he met Sam Sokolow. Sokolow was a year
older, a native New Yorker from a showbiz family,
also at BU but majoring in cinema. .
The two took an instant dislike to each other.
•I bad been establishing myself as the tallest
white guy in pickup basketball. then Rob walked
into the gym,• Sokolow said. •1t was a very pugna-
cious beginning to a friendship.•
The two did not become friends, in fact. until
they were both invited to lunch by a mutual friend.
When that friend didn't show up, they were forced
to talk to each other, and realized they had much
more in common than they thought
They soon became inseparable. But even though
Lobl helped Sokolow on several film school projects,
even co-writing a television pilot, he kept studying
jownalism and, after graduation, moved back to
California.
He got an internship at OCN, but soon discov-
ered he wasn't meant for that kind of job. At that
time, Sokolow was in New York, studying acting,
and persuaded Lobl to move so they could finally
do what they had often discussed doing: making an
independent film. ·
While writing the saipt, they drew on many of
their own experiences.
•w e really examined where we're at,• Lobl said.
"We had to tackle all our motivation problems."
The next few years were full of mishaps, oecur-
ring mostly because the two had no real idea how
to deal with the project.
·we were looking for shortcuts," Lobl said.
But the Sokolow family connections helped. and
after a lot of work. p&dence and networking, Lobl got
an assistant job witb ador/director Bob Balaban.
It proved to be a twning point. Balaban, a veter-
an of film and television {he most recently appeared
as Woody Allen's best friend in •0econstructing
Hany"), became Lobl's mentor.
He offered to take a part in the film and eventu-
ally became its executive producer. With Balaban in
the cast, Lobl and Sokolow were able to attract oth-
er big names.
"He's like our godfather," Lobl said.
Lobl and Sokolow finally beqan filming last
April. The shoot took 21 days and involv~ more
than 40 locations. Production wra,Pped in Novem-
Four girls, a drunk and the
New England countryside
~ocal filmmakers premiere movies at film festival
ber, and the movie was shown for the first time a
month later-to crew, family and friends.
The movie is partly dedicated to Lobl's mother,
who died of cancer when Lobl was 15.
"When I saw (the dedication), I started to ay," said
Lobl's aunt, Sandy Rdllins, a Newport Beach resident
who had flown out to New York for the screening. "I
was sitting there sobbing -and it was a comedy.•
T he fact thet "The Definite Maybe" will have
its world premiere in Newport Beach is not
lost on Lobl.
"It's the hometown," he said.
Added Sokolow: "Rob truly had Newport Beach
in his blood. Now he gets to go home again.•
The duo's next step is getting a distributor to b\lY
the film. And that's the •definite• hope of most of
the actors and aew, who worked for virtually noth-
ing except a daily catered meal.
"They did it on faith that the movie will sell
because of the cast and they believed in the project
so much,• Lobl said. "That's how we managed to
make the film look better than an $80,000 movie.
We did it on a tiny budget and it's surprising to peo-
ple -it's a no-budge t movie that seems like a stu-
dio picture."
The film was rejected by the San Francisco Film
Festival recently because officials there said the film
looked •too commercial,• Lobl said.
"We just have to put it in front of audiences -
because the audiences love it."
A !though organizers refer to it
as an international event, fea-
turing movies from Ewope,
South America, Asia and the Middle
East. the third annual Newport Beach
Film Festival has plenty of home-
grown talent.
His entry in the film festival, a fea-
ture called. •You Are Here," is a
romantic comedy about a couple who
get lost in the New England country-
side and have to find their way back.
•You Are ttere•,is Rooney's first
screenplay, and he also produced and
directed the film.
documentary called "Drunk in Pub-
Former Daily Pilot delivery-boy
and current filmmaker Tom Rooney
left Newport Beach many years ago
to pursue bis acting career in New
York.
While he has worked mostly in
theater, Rooney became interested in
movies after playing am.an parts in
films like •w orking Gtr1• end
"Regarding Henry.•
The glittering lights of New York
haven't been llble to lure away David
· Sperling, however. That may be
because Sperling spends much of his
time in the Newport Beach Jail.
No, he's not incarcerated -he just
works there, and what may seem like
a depressing job has instead inlpired
the fledgling filmmaker to shoot a
• t ,I ... :
• . • • •I
li • c.
Aptly named, "Drunk in Public"
details the lite of an alcoholic man
who bas been arrested a record 97
times.
A lighter side of Newport Beach
can be seen in "Girl Cottage,• Steve
Moms' homage to the beach.
A graduate of Corona del Mar
High School, Morris spent several
years working on Balboa Island. "Girl
Cottage," shot on location in Balboa,
tells the tale of four cc>llege girlfriends
who rent a house on the sand.
-By Alessandra Djurtc.lou
Reclof'd your ""'«M-mo'""'~...i~-ts abcMrt
knots wtth Moat
wtnd w.ws. A ).foot
~I Mii come from
the west kl the .tt...
The swell Is taking •
v.c.at.lon this week
-cwrythlng wOI be
faff1y flat~ s.t-
URW/ and mast of
~.ttwon"tbe
until ..-Sunday
thet 1hlngs pldt up,
wtth poesibte shout·
dtr-to held-high
sw.fl. EYen ~
IUl'f QOUld aopMr
~~n...
the 0.ity PA0t or MM-
VOL 92., NO. '6
Mu41
•
noon.
-foltowild bY a 1-w~~The
~ofMlrift
·-29 mwit be ~1hoUgh,
.... to ~
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fllcfk
..
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 19tl •
The second annual Buffa Oscar Award J>icks
A cademy Awardl. Monday
night. Tb1a II the big one,
Edith. Pint. some house-
keeping.
Last wee;, I promised a full
report on my excellent St.
Patrick's Day adven~ in New
York, but I forgot about the
Oscars. How could I be so atu.
pid? Wu I born a fool or did they
drop me on my newborn head?
Yes, to both. The fall just made it
worse. So, house lights down,
music up, and we're off.
Submitted for your considera-
tion -the second annual Buffa
Oscar Award Picks -or as the
headline in Variety would read,
·PB Picks O-Pix n."
Belt Supporting Actreu: Will
be Kim Basinger for "L.A. Confi-
dential." Should be Julianne
Moore for •Boogie Nights.•
Basinger, as always, lights up the
screen like a rescue flare at mid-
night. She is a very strong
audiences, Hollywood execs and
academy voten, um, uncomfort-
able.
Bed Sapportlng Actor: Wlll
be Robin Wllli.aml for •Qood Will
Huntmg.• Should be Burt
ReynOld.s for "Boogie Nights.• tri
spite ot being one of the funniest
people the wotld has ever seen,
Williams bas al.lo~ one of
the finest American actors, and
"Good Will Hunting• shows it.
He's also wildly popular with bis
peers. Loni Anderson's •ex• was
the early favorite, but he is not
popular with the Hollywood
crowd (can't imagine why) and
made matters worse with nega-
tive comments about bis own
film OJl the promotional circuit.
However, this one will be a pho-
to finish. Reynolds won a µolden
Globe for his performance -
usually a precursor to an Oscar
-but the European press corps
is less squeamish about racy
films like •Boogie Nights.•
Best Actresl: Will be Helen
Hunt for •As Good As It Gets."
Should be Helen Hunt Holly-
wood may or not be "Mad About
You,• but they are definitely
mad about Helen -no small
actress and if she looked any
better, she'd need a permit.
Problem is, she's been there and
done that, most recently in the
so-so remake of Sam Peckinpah's
"The Getaway." It's a problem
that applies to a number of this
year's performances. • feat for 1-lli since the studio
crowd is not in the habit of rec-
ognizing, gasp, "television• tal-
ent. The critics are beating the
drums for Helena Bonham
Raves all around for Moore
and •Boogie Nights," but the
film's sleazy setting -the porno
industry in the 1970s -makes
pe t er
buff a
Carter for "The Wings of the
Dove,• but the film laid there
like a lox at the box office -
consigned to the •small audi-
ence• file of Merchant Ivory
period dramas. (More angst, any-
one?) Hunt's portrayal of a gutsy
but loving and totally lovable
single parent -complete with
seriously ill son -is a knockout.
Best Actor: Will be Robert
Duvall for "The Apostle.• Sliould
be Peter Fonda for ·uiee's
Gold.• This one is the Battle of
the Titans, and Fonda isn't one of
them. When Duvall, Dustin Hoff-
man and Jack Nicholson climb
into the same ring, it's a good
idea for mere mortal actors to
pull up a chair and Just watch
the fight Nicholson won't get it
because gi$g him any more
awards and pR!se b getting to
be em~. Thia ls bis 11th
nOlDinatton, an Oscar record.
Hoffman won't get tt because his
portrayal of Bob Bvans in "Wag
the 0og• was outstanding, but
hardly challenge for his reinMk-
able abilities. The same applies,
by the way, to Duvall His fiery
preacher in "The Apostle" is
electrifying but not enough of a
stretch tor his mind-boggling tal-
ents. But Duvall will take the lit-
tle gold guy home because he
has done a masterful job of mak-
ing Hollywood feel guilty for not
recognizing him for writing, pro-
ducing and directing "The Apos-
tle" in addition to starring 1n it.
Belt Director: Will be James
Cameron for "Titanic.• Should
be James cameron. ln any other
year, this would be a nearly
impossible decision. The other
nominees are all masters of
direction. But directing a movie
of the scale of "Titanic" is a lot
like the dog that walks upright
on his hind legs. It's not how well
he does it -it's the fact that he
does it at all. Imagine being in
charge of hundreds of people,
actors and aew, on location and
sound stages for two years. Now
figure out how to use computer
graphics, gaigantuan replicas of
a luxury liner -from the engine
room to the main ballroom -to
make a 1998 audience believe
that 1,500 people and the ship
they sailed in on are slipping to
the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.
Mr. Ouneron, please go to the
nearest white courtesy phone
and claim your Oscar. No need
to drive all the way downtown.
But Picture: Will be "Titan-
ic." ShoWd be ... Ob, forgetit.
"Titanic" is a juggernaut, full
speed ahead at 40 knots. How
can it not wip Best Picture?
"Titanic" is already the most suc-
cessful film in history, having
made some $1 billion so far -
and let me stress "so far.•
Remember, the staggering dollar
figures you've heard for "Jaws"
and ·Star wars· took years to
achieve and included multiple
runs and re-issues, soundtrack
and video sales and rentals, etc.,
etc. But •nt.onlc· has made Sl
billion ln tu first nm -at the
box office, one moviegoer at a
time, at SS to $1 a pop. Unbeliev-
able. There's never been any-
thing like it .
Is it my pers:On.al choice?
Nope. I'd give the little guy to
"The Pull Monty.• I laughed
until I cried. Here's a movie that
cost about $1 .50 to make and has
grossed some $50 million. It is
the most clever and endearing
film since •1t•s a WondeJful Ufe."
By the end, you're cheering
louder for this motley bunch and
their riotous Chippendale's
impersonation than for Forrest
Gump and his mom.
I heard a great piece of trivia
about the big boat "Titanic• is
24 minutes longer than it took
the real ship to sink.
I gotta go.
\ .. • PETElt BUffA is the rmyor of Costa
Mesa. His column appears on Friday.
You can e-mail him at Ptt840aol.com .
School district, Waldorf Settle lawsuit
11Uf~~
AVILA. CHICKE
SOlJP
• Newport-Mesa and
private school avert court
battle over Waldorf's evic-
tion from Eastbluff School.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
EASTBLUFF -Following
months of legal wranglings, the
Newport-Mesa school district has
reached an agreement on Tues-
day with Waldorf School that will
provide housing for the private
school and avert a $25,000 law-
suit.
Waldorf School will be moving
in June from the Eastbluff School
into the Marion Parsons Special
Education Center jn Costa Mesa.
Waldorf School officials said
they've obtained a five-year lease
of the site.
·we feel that the Newport-
Mesa school district was very,
very interested in helping us out,•
said Waldorf spokeswoman
Sandy Ames. "The five-year
agreement gives us security to be
able to continue with the business
of educating our children while
we look for a permanent loca-
tion."
The school would like to find a
permanent site in Costa Mesa,
Huntington Beach or Irvine,
Ames said. Waldorf has about 200
students that come from all over
Orange County. A majority of its
students live within the Newport-
Mesa district.
Waldorf has subleased East-
bluff School the past five years
from Coast CommuniW College
District, which leases it directly
from Ne wport-Mesa. But follow-
ing its annexation of the Bonita
Canyon area from the Irvine Uni-
fied School District in November,
the Newport-Mesa school district
said it would need to reopen East-
bluff to accommodate the Bonita
Canyon students.
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our Newport Beach customers can enjoy 11 new
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Channel HBO.
To do so, the district would
need to have Waldorf School
vacate the facility by June. But
Waldorf officials contended they
had a binding agreement that
they could stay at Eastbluff at
least until June 1999.
Waldorf filed a lawsuit against
Newport-Mesa and Coast in
October in Orange County Supe-
rior Court. The suit sought at least
$25,000 in damages.
Fresh chicken broth,
chunks of chicken breast,
rice garnished with
avocado, cilantro
and lime. Mama's cure for
the flu.
Great To-Go
But following Tuesday's settle-
ment, Waldon attorneys said they
will drop the lawsuit.
"It's a very good settlement
that works out for everyone,"
Waldorf attorney Ross Tyler said.
·Costa Mesa
642-1142
Corona del Mar
644-TACO
Newport Beach
675-1855
FPt )2 y,',ll" f;1mily 0-.~·11.· .i r.1mtl·; Or.-·.i•. j F ::r·:., l ,,._..,j
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8 FRIDAY, MAACH 20, 1998
Adding robotics to three RS .
. /
• Newport-Mesa's gifted and talented students show off their skills
making robots and desigJJing space stations and futuristic cities.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -Between reading, wrltiDg
and arttbmetic, the Gifted and Thlented Education.ltU·
dents ot Newport-Mesa school district have also been
designing space stations, robots and dties ot the
futme.
At an all-day fall' ThW'Sday at Harbor View Ele-
mentary school. the Uncoln and Pomona elementary
GATE students demonstrated their popcom-dispens-
ing robot and model space stations they've been
designing. The intricate GATE projects are designed
to help students use higher-level tbinldng skills such
as analysis, synthesis and evaluation. offidals said.
•There's also a Jot of team-building that goes on as
the students learn to work together to complete their
projects,• said Sandra Eckles, a former GATE director
and one of several judges who were evaluating pro-
jects.
There are about 750 GATE students in the district.
Groups of 100 or so GATE fourth-, fifth-and sixth-
gTaders are excused from regular classes twice a
month to work on projects with teammates.
On Thwsday, it was the Llncoln and Pomona stu-
dents' tum to display the projects they've been work-
ing on for the past several months.
One of those projects was a robot that dispenses
popcorn into a bowl.
One of the Uncoln teams, The Eliminators, consists
of fourth-graders Ryan Dalton, Evan z.oner, Matthew
Paul and Peter Berg. They combined their talents to
come up with a cardboard-and-aluminum robot on a
skateboard with a plastic foam container that is pulled
open to dispense popcorn into a bowl.
As part of the competition, the teams had to show
how they used at least three of the simple machines
they've been learning about: wheels and axles,
inclined planes, pulleys, gears, levers and wedges.
Using the electronics training they've received, the
students also had to use circuit boards and battery-
operated lights on their robots.
KIM HAGGERTY I DAILY PILOT
Noa Ben· Yellezkel, left, and Aledne Jloden·
hula, GATE students from Uncoln Elementary
School, dump popcorn Into a bowl during their
robot demomtratton Thursday.
•They don't get a letter grade for participating in
GATE projects, but they do get an evaluation at the
end of the year,• GATE instructor Jennifer MacMaster
said. "lb.is is such a wonderful opportunity and learn-
ing experience for them to be here.•
No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaper
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• CHANDELIERS • LAMPS • SHADES • TRACKS
•LIGHT BARS• WALL/OUTDOOR FIXTURES
• RECESSED LIGHTING • LIGHT BULBS
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GRAND PRIZE :
2 tickeu to the "WINGS .. CLOSING NIGHT SPECIAL SCREENING AWARDS GALA
at Eclwanb Lido. Thia sw-atudded evmt on Thunday, April 2 at 7 p.m. will present the
Academy Awanl-winni.og -wINGS .. -the 6nt 6Jm to receive BEST PICTURE in 1928.
Cdebritiea will be on haAd at the fative poat-pany at The Ctnnery Rataurant. Alto 4
ticket.a to the Opening Night Gala, "'The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit" and celebrity -party. . - - ----
WE'RE ALSO GIVING AWAY: * 4 sets of 2 tickcu to "THE WONDERFUL ICE CREAM SUIT" Opening N'iaht Gala. ~on
Tbunday, March 26 at] p.m. at Edwards~ Newport. Hosted_ polt~ widi Cdebritics at N~rt
8eadt Muri~ .. Pacific ~m. This · .aeerung and wodc1 ~!'*"Edward James Olinos t tdd F.aai'Mo . --.. * 5 acts of 2 ticRt:s to .MERCHANTS OF vmrus· event ICl'Caling OD Si~ March 28 at 7 p.m.
ar F.dwards 1s1and Ci.nmw. This West Coast Premiere of the Amcnc:an lftdcoe:Ddent romantic comedy
rears Mlchad York. Cdebmc with Michad (and the en~ cast aDd crew) at hii binbclq post-pany at
SpeedwaI Racaurant. * 1'5 sets ofl ric:Uts to Fox Studios Nit:ht at the Fatival ~on Tuaday, March 31 at 7 p.m. at
Edwards Lido. Prtsented by BSMG Worldwide. •
HOW TO ENTER: Fill out the enriy bdow and ICnd or fax it btck to: TackaGivawayJ.JDaily·Pi.lot, 330 W. ~St., Co.ta Mesa. CA 92627 or Fu.: 6S<M802, Attn: Promodont. l)eedline: ~ Mead. 1.6, No0n. •
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trlf affirmauon 1 uan.romuoon
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Friday, March 27 Friday. May 15
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NEWPORT BEACH INTERNATIONAL Newport Beoch . t:t :r.:: r:J FILM FESTIVAL SCHEDULE IK~fMJpf.jueW
THURSPAY
EDWARDS BIG NEWPORT
• 7 p.m. •The Wonderful lee
Cream Suit"
• "Waiting for Woody"
MARCH 27
EDWARDS ISLAND CNEMAS
• 11:30 a.rn. "Tierra•
• 1:30 p.m . "Ocean 1\ibe"
• 3:30 p.m. "They Call Me Joy"
• 5:30 p.m. "Men"
• 7:30 p.tn. "Circles"
• 9:30 p.m. "Dogtown"
ua
• 6 p.m. "Girl Cottage•
• 8 p.m. "Flooding"
• 10 p.m. "Green•
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE THEATRE
• 4 p.m. "Synthetic Pleasures·
• 6 p.m. "Misfortune's End"
• 8 p.m. "The Ride" > 10 p.m. "Glastonbury, The
Movie"
MARCH 28
EDWARDS ISLAND ONEMAS > 11:30 a.m. "Love Stories"
• 1 p.m. "Trouble on the Comer•
• 3 p.m. "Friction "
• 5 p.m. "When It's Over"
• 7 p.m. "Merchants of Venus" > 9 p.m. "Bang"
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE THEATRE
• l p.m. "Llbertarias"
• 3:30 p.m. "My Teacher Eats
Biscuits"
• 6 p.m. "Synthetic Pleasures"
• 8 p.m. • Knockin' on Heaven's
Door"
• 10 p.m. "Killers·
MARCH 29
EDWARDS ISLAND QNEMAS
noon "Short Films n· > 2 p.m. "Short Films IV"
• 4 p.m. "You are Here"
• 5 p.m. "Hanoi Winter '46"
• 6 p.m. "Nowhere to Go"
• 8 p.m. "Levitation"
• 10 p.m. "They Call Me Joy"
ORANGE CTY MUSEUM OF ART
• 1:30 p.m. "EDle in Sarajevo•
• 3:30 p.m. "My Teacher Eats
Biscuits"
• 6 p.m. "Green"
• 8 p.m. "The Refugee"
ua
• 2 p.m. "Short Films m·
• 4 p.m. "Short Films 1·
• 6 p.m. "Violent nm~s ·
• 8 p.m. "The Definite Maybe"
CAPT. BLOOD'S VILLAGE THEATRE
• 1:30 p.m. "The Duo•
• 4 p.m. "Bajo Bandera" t 6 p.m. •Rizal in Dapitan •
• 8 p.m. "Men"
MARCH 30
EDWARDS ISLAND CNEMAS
• t :30 p.m. ·uberta.rlas·
• 4 p.m. "Push! Push!"
ONBHOURn>A
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SCREENING LOCATIONS
> Edwatds 819 ;~ Edwards
Nevllport Stadium •
lOO NeWport c.nw Or~
~lffdl
> Edwards lslarid Cinemas
9999 ~Center Drive ~ adl .
640-1780 > EdWMds lido
3459 VII Lido Drive
Newport leadl
671-8350 > Oraj1ge County Museum of M sso san Clemente
Newport Beach
759-1122
• 6 p .m. •American Perfelct'"
• 8 p.m. "Moebius•
• 10 p.m. "Misfortune's End'"
EDWARDS TOWN CENTER
• 7 p .m. •Junk Food"
SPEEDWAY RESTAURANT
• 8 p.m. "A Perfect Pilch" (short) -
Free
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE lliEATRE
• 2 p.m. ·Homesick Eyes•
• 4 p .m. "YoW'S and Mine"
• 6 p .m. "Hanoi Winter '46"
• 8 p.m. "Friction"
UCI
• 6:30 p.m. "12 Storeys•
• 8 p.m. "My Arnerica ... or honk•
MARCH 31
EDWARDS ISLAND CNEMAS
•noon "Dark Side of Venus•
• 2 p.rn. "Knock.in' on Heaven's
Door"
• 4 p.m. "Moebius"
• 6 p.m. "The Man in Her Life"
• 8 p.m. ·ocean Tribe" > 10 p.m. "Killers"
EDWARDS UDO
• 7 p.m. "fmx: Fox Shorts"
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE THEATRE
• 4 p.m. "Ri2al in Dapltan'"
• 6 p.m. "Diliryo"
• 8 p.m. "When It's Over "
APRIL 1
EDWARDS ISlAND ONEMAS
• 12:30 p.m. ·ubertarias"
• 3 p.m. "Dark Side of Venus•
• 5 p.m. "Love Stories"
• 7 p.m. "Big Wednesd ay"
• 9:15 p .m. "Circles"
> Captain Blood's VT~ ThNtre
11.-0 N. Tustin Awe.
~ > UnMrtlty Of ~ia. ltvlne
Fiim Md V'6lo Centet
100 Hunwlldes lnstrUctlon Building
lrvlM
824-7418 > Edwards Town Center
3199 Part< Center Drive
c~~
751 .. 1M > 5peedway l\~urant
353 E. P.aflc Coast Highway
Newport Beach
675-5900
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE lliEATRE
• 4 p.m. "Diliryo"
• 7 p.m. "Short Films o•
• 9 p.m. "Levitation"
ORANGE CTY MUSEUM OF ART
• 6 p.m. "Girl Cottage"
• 8 p.m. "The Definite Maybe"
APRIL 1
EDWARDS UDO
• 7 p.m. "Wings•
EDWARDS ISLAND ONEMAS
• 2j.m. "Chile, Obstinate Memory'"
• p.m. "Between Marx and Naked Woman•
• 6 p.m. "The Ride•
• 8 p.m. "12 Storeys"
• 10 p.m. ·American Perfekt •
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE THEATRE • 3:30 p.m. ·nerra• > 6 p.m. "The Man in Her Life·
• 8 p.m. "Trouble on the Com er"
• l O p.m. •Junk Food•
APRIL 3
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE THEATRE
• 2 p.m. •Glastonbury, The Movie ·
• 4 p.m. "Chile, Obstinate
Memory• 6 p.m. "Ban~(
• 8 p.m. "You are Here > 10 p.m. "Merchants of Venus"
SPEEDWAY RESTAURANT
• 7:30 p.m. •A Perfect Pitch" (short)
·Free
APRIL 4
ORANGE CTY MUSEUM OF ART
• p.m. "Girl Cottage"
• 4 p.m. "Violent limes "
• 6 p.m. "Short Films V"
• 8 p.m. "Flooding•
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE THEATRE
• 2 p.m. "Push! Push!.
• 4 p.m. "Nowhere to Go" > 6 p.m. "Dogtown•
• 8 p.m. "Ocean nibe ..
• 10 p.m. "Short Films JV•
ua
• 5 p.m. "Between Marx and
Naked Woman"
• 1 p.m. •YoW'S and Mine" t 9 p.m. "Exile in Sarajevo•
SPEEDWAY RESTAURANT
• 7:30 p.m. "Songbird• (short) -
Free
• 9:30 p.m. ·nie Broken Jaw"
(short) -Free
APRIL 5
CAPT. BLOOD'S VIUAGE THEATRE
• 2 p .m . NBIFF AWARD WINNERS
• 4 p.m. NBIFF AWARD WINNERS
• 6 p.m. NBIFF AWARD WINNERS
• 8 p.m . NBIFF AWARD WINNERS
ORANGE CTY MUSEUM OF ART
• noon •My America ... or honk•
• 2 p.m. "The Refugee"
• 4 p.m. "Short Films m•
r-------------------------, I I
: + For event and seminar 1nfonna-1
• tlon, call 546-flLM or visit the New-
: port Beach International Film FestJ..
' vii website at: www.nbiff.org .
: llckets can be obteined only
• through ETM and can be purchased
: by calling (888) £TM. T1XS or by
' going to. an ETM ioc:.atJoo at Vons
: Pavilion and Hughes niai1c.ets.
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FRIDAY. MARCH 20, 1998
Sea cV.on is lean but
lively, expert says
•Although the pup seen on aoCks appears weak •
director of marine mariullal rescue 9J'9UP <:Jaims it's
in no danger of dwg. ,
NEWPORT HARBOR
Reports of the imminent death
of the sea lion pup known as
GreaSed Ughtnlng have been
gre~Uy exaggerated, experts
said.
While the ematiated pup
presents a dismal picture, lan-
guishing as it has foy the last
week on rocks and planks
near Newport Landing Sport·
fishing, experts say it~ a good
sign that it's still strong enough
to jump into the water to avoid
capture.
Newport Beach Animal
Control tried to catch it again
Thursday but with no luck,
said Ann Bull, director of oper-
ations for the Laguna Beach-
based Friends of the Sea Lion.
Many who spot tlie animal
fear it is near death. Its bones
are visible through its skin.
Yet Bull said El Nino, which
has scattered the animals' food
sources, has given many sea
lions that ~ance.
•All ~ animals out there,
just because ot El Nino, are
thin,• .she 14.id. •They D14Y not
look like people [liave seen
them) in the past. But this (ani·
mall seems fo be playing •
game wi1ii uie animal control
officers."
She added: ·1 don't e~
him to die. U this ~y sits still
long enough, we'll get hiiil in
here."
Frank Willey, the president
o1 Fidelity National Financial
Inc.. saw the story about the
pup in the Daily Pilot on
Thursday and instructed his
secretary to find out what
couJd be done for the animal.
The secretary, Joann Camp-
bell, called Friends of the Sea
Lion and was reassured they
had control of the situation.
"I felt that they were defi-
nitely on top of it,• she said.
•I'm going to call every day.
And when (the pup) is pulled
in, I'm going to go see him
myself.•
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= --- -----. _,_ __ •
• FRIDAY, MAACH 20, 1998
0
• Send yow-MOUND TOWN ttems to:
The 0.lly Piiot. Around Town. llO W.
hy St., Cosa Mesa. 92627; fo. ~110
or c.all 540-1224, ext. 333. A complete
llstlng of Around Town an ~ found .t
www.latlmes.com'pllot .
ARST AID
The Costa Mesa Firefighters
Association presents first-aid
training for seniors from 9:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa. Cost for materials is
$10. For more inf!>nnation, call
64.5-2356. '
REPUBLICAN WOMEN
The Newport Harbor Republi-
can Women's luncheon honors
Bobbi Lungren at 11 a.m. at the
Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach. The
cost is $20. For more information
call 759-3086. '
CONSUMER BUSINESS NETWORK
Ellen Norwine will speak on
"Wnting for Profit -Books,
Tapes or 77" at the Consumer
Business Networks meeting at 7
d.m. dt The Mezzanine, 19800
MdcArthur Blvd. The cost is $15
dlld includes breakfast. For more
mfonnation, call 550-4785.
ANTIQUES EXPO
South Coast Shows Inc. pre-
sents an Antiques Expo and Sale
from noon to 9 p.m. in Building 10
of the Orange County Fair-
grounds. 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Ad.mission is $5, $3 for
seruors and youths ages 12 to 17.
Chlldren under 12 are free. For
more information, call 840-9649.
YACHT AND SAILBOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co. Inc. pre-
sents the Newport Brokerage
Yacht and Sa.tlboat Show from 11
a.m to 6 p.m. through Sunday at
Lido Manna Village, Newport
Beach. For more information. call
757-5959.
LECTURE SERIES
The Newport Beach Public
Library Foundation's Distin-
guished Speakers Lecture Series
continues with Donna Lee
Shirley. director of the Mars
Pathfinder Project at 7 p.m. in the
Central Library's Friends Meeting
Room, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach A light buffet recep-
tion will follow. Tickets are $20.
For more information, call 644-
3296.
SATURDAY
EMT SEMINAR
Orange County College's
Commuruty Education Office pre-
sents a seminar on Pharmacology
and ~treet Drugs for Emergency
Medical Techrucians from 8 a.m.
to noon in room 110 of the Allied
Health Building, Orange Coast
College. 2?01 Pairvtew Road,
Cotta Mesa. llie registration fee
ts $35. For more inf ormatton call
432..5880, I
DIVORCE WORKSHOP
Counselor Maxine Cohen pre-
sents Divorce: A New Beginning,
a workshop for men and women
in the process of divorcing or
recently divorced, trom 10 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. at 180 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. The cost ts
$40. For more information call 759-0579. ,
CRAFT SHOW
Miller Production Group pre-
sents a Doll, Bears, Supplies and
Crafts Show and Sale from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. in building 12,
Orange County Fairgrounds 88
Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. Achrus-
sion is $5 for adults and $2 for
children. Children under 6 are
free. For more information call
708-3247. ,
MAKING LOVE LAST
Counselor Elizabeth Slocum
presents Staying Together: Mak-
mg L<:'ve Last, a workshop for
couples and singles, every Satur-
day starting this week from 10:30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m . at 2900 Bristol
St.. Costa Mesa. Fee for each ses-
sion is $20. For more information
call 850-1689. '
ANTIQUES EXPO
South Coast Shows Inc. pre-
sents an Antiques Expo and Sale
from noon to 8 p.m. in building 10
of the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Me~a. Admission is $5, $3 for
seruors and youths ages 12 to 17.
Children under 12 are free. For
more informatioi:i. call 840-9649.
CHANTING GATHERING
The Yoga Place presents a
Chanting Gathering from 7 :30 to
9:30 p.m. at 1835 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. The gathering will
offer -easy to learn chants
designed to capture the simplicity
and beauty of sound . The sug-
gested donation is $5. For more
information, call 642-7 400.
YACHT AND SAILBOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co. Inc. pre-
sents the Newport Brokerage
Yacht and Sailboat Show from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. through Sunday at
Lido Marina Village. Newport
Beach. For more information call
757-5959. ,
COMPUTER SHOW
Super Show Productions pre-
sents a computer show from 1 O
a.m. to 5 p.m. in Building 14.
Or~ge County Fairgrounds, 88
Fa.u Drive, Costa Mesa. Admis-
sion is $5. For more information.
call 838-5941.
"A Taste Of Heaven"
Friday, March 27, 7:00 p.m.
In the St. Andrew's Sanctuary
Jana Alayra & "Cheryl" in Concerti
• Oe.ssvt & C<lffu During Intermission
• Kid's Musit & Gomes
• Tickets -$5 00 fOf' odults •
$3.00 fOf' kids under 12
• Cell 574-2222
St Andrew's Presbyterian Church. 600 St. Andrews Rd .. Newport Beach
around town
SUNDAY
COMPUTIR SHOW •
Super Show Productiom pre-
sents a computer show from 1 O
a.m. to 5 p.m. in building 14,
Orange County Fairgrounds 88
Pair Drive1 Costa Mesa. Achrus-
sion is $5. For inore infonnatlon,
call 838-5941.
CRAFT SHOW
Miller Production Group pre-
sents a Doll, Bears, Supplies and
Crafts Show and Sale from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. in building 12,
Orange County Fairgrounds, 88
Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. Admis-
sion is $5 for adults and $2 for
children. Children 1lnd\?r 6 are
free. For more infonnatfon call
708-3247. ,
INTERRAOAL MARRIAGE
Paul Spickard presents a free
lecture, •1nterracial Marriage and
~ultiracial People,• at 12:30 p .m .
m Room 158 of the Technology
Center, Orange Coast College
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa'.
Spickard is chair of the Depart-
ment of Asian Studies at the Uni-
versity of California, Santa Bar-
bara. For more information, call
432-5725.
ANTIQUES EXPO
South Coast Shows Inc. pre-
sents an Antiques Expo and Sale
from noon to 5 p.m. in Building 10
of the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $5 $3 for
seniors and youths ages i 2 to 17.
Children under 12 are free. For
more information, call 840-9649.
YACHT AND SAILBOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co. Inc. pre-
sents the Newport Brokerage
Yacht and Sailboat Show from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m.. at the Lido Marina
Village, Newport Beach. For more
information, call 757-5959.
JEWISH CENTER LECTURE
The Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Orange County offers a lec-
ture, Machal: Volunteer Fighters
for a Jewish State, from 2 to 4 p.m.
at 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa.
The le~e ~eatures the youngest
Machalnik m the Israeli army,
Jason Fenton, and Esther Fried-
man, who was a nurse during the
Israeli War of Independence.
Tickets are $7 for members and
$10 for nonmembers. For more
information. call 755-0340.
INTEMAOAL MARRIAGE
Paul Spicka..rd presents a free
lecture on Intenadal Mani.age
and Multiradal People from 12:30
to 2 p.m. in Room 158 of the Tech-
nology Center, Orange Coast Col-
lege, 2701 Fairview Road, Coste
Mesa. SpJckard is the chair of the
t>epartment of Asian Americ.a.n
Studies at the University of Cali-
fornia, Santa Barbara. For more
infom\ation, call 432-5725.
SINGLE PARENTS
Parents Without Partners
meets for a family dinner from
5:30 to 7:30 p,m. at Norm's
Restaurant, 2150 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call 963-3305.
AmNTION DEROT DISORDER
Coastline Counseling ·eenter of
Newport Beach holds a free lecture
called •Attention Deficit Disorder
Overview" at 7 p.m. at Coastline
1200 Quail, Newport Beach. Po;
information. call 476-0991.
TUESDAY
CORPORATE DIRECTORS
The Forum for Corporate
Directors meets from 7:15 to 9:30
a.m. at The Center Club, 650
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
Raymond Watson will speak on
MBoard Independence: Reality vs.
Perception." Cost is $20 for forum
members; $30 for nonmembers.
For reservations, call 573-9720.
REPUBLICAN WOMEN
The Costa Mesa Republican
Women Federated will meet at
10:30 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Golf
and Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Drive, Costa Mesa. Tom
Nargenau will discuss the social
security system. For reservations,
call 557-6545.
BALBOA HISTORY
Writer Warren White presents
"Once Upon an Island: Tales of Ear-
ly Days on Balboa, 1914 to 1941, •a
free program, at noon at the New-
port Beach Central Library, 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call 717-3801.
HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR DAY
Orange Coast College presents
the 15th annual High School
Senior Day from noon to 3 p.m. at
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The day includes orientation to
3 Outdoor Pool Tables
Always
·Your Home Away From Home"
18.30 Newport Blvd.
Newport at Harbor
Costa Mesa • 546-8428
SATlJRDAY. MARC H 2 1ST O N LY!
the campus, counseling, bnand.al
aid Information and tours of the
campus. For more intonnation,
call -432-5725.
DIVORCE WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College's Re-
Entry Center offers a free work-
shop on common divorce prob-
lems and solutions encountered
during divorces from 6 to 8 p.m. in
room 106 of the Counseling and
Admissions Building, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call 432-5162.
PARENTS WHO CARE
Parents Who Care meet at 7
p .m. at Corona del Mar Little
Theater, 2101 Eastbluff Drive to
discuss ways to pay for college.
James Waldron of the admissions
· office at University of California.
Irvine, and Connie Cooper of Col-
lege Foundation Planners will be
guest speakers. For more infor-
mation, call 759-7655.
FLORAL SHOP MANAGEMENT
Orange Coast College's Com-
munity Education Office presents
a workshop on the skills needed to
open or manage a floral shop from
7 to 10 p.m. in room 101 of the Art
Center, Orange Coast College,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The registration fee is $45. For
more information, call 432-5880.
WEDNESDAY
INSIDE EDGE
Recording artist Steven Halpern
will speak on Harnessing the Heal·
ing Powers of Music for Health and
Well-Being at a breakfast meeting
sponsored by the Inside Edge from
6:30 to 8:30 a m. at The 1Win Palms
Restaurant, 630 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. Cost is $20
for first-time guests; $35 for others
For reservations, call 460-4242.
BUSINESS SEMINAR I
The Orange County Chapter of
CnrH011c:
P,, .r1. An1 i<J f('i
h. : ' (_,1
Since 1972
•
the Service Corps of Retired Exec.
utives bolds a seminar for people
who plan to start a business 01
have recently started a bUSiness
from 8:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. at
National University, 3390 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa. Cost is ~. Por
more information, call 550-7369.
ELECTRONICS EXPO
Del Mar Thade Shows pre-
sents the Orange County Elec-
tronics Expo, from 9 a.m .. to 5
p.m .• in Building 10 and 12
Orange County Fairgrounds, 8S
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 708-3247.
PASSOVER WORKSHOP
The Sisterhood of Temple Bdt
Yahm presents a free Passover
How-To Workshop, at 9:30 a.m. in.
the temple's library, 1011 Camel-
back St.. Newport Beach. For more
information, call 644-6563.
LYNN SCHENK
Lynn Schenk. a candidate for
California Attorney General,
speaks at a luncheon sponsored by
Women in Leadership at 11:30 am.
at the Wyndfiam Hotel, 3350 Av-
enue of the Arts, Costa Mesa. Cost
is $40 for nonmembel's; $30 for
members. For reservations, call
644-0278.
MUFON O.C.
The Mutual UFO Ne twork
Orange County meets at 7 :30
p.m. at the Neighborhood Com-
munity Center, 1845 Park Ave .
Costa Mesa. Admission is $10. For
more information, call 520~4836
BOAT SHOW
Duncan Mcintosh Co., Inc pre-
sents the Newport New Motor
Yacht, Sportfisher and Power Boat
Show from 11 a.m. to 6 p m at
Newport Dunes Resort Marina, 101
N. Bayside Drive, Newport Beach
Adnussion is $8 for adults and ctul-
dren under 12 are free. For more
information, call 757-5959.
Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil Vince
Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner
Unlqut wine,_ It 4!Alit1 l'OCMm ·~for ...... p busJ~ -~•
1 .---·-~ .. ._...o,:s IDld print~ lll~tlon.
23-0621 Pleae Call For R~rvalions and DirectJoos
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
Newpon 8etichlCc»ta Meta Daily Pilot
what's afloat
CATAUNA Tu-
• The Orange County chapter of
the American Cetacean Society
will bOld a whale-watching ex-
cursion to Catalina Island from 8
a.m. to 6 p.m. March 29. Meet at
the Catalina Flyer, 400 Main St.,
Newport Beach. Cost 1s $40 for
adults; $20 for children. Por more
information, call 615-9881.
BALBOA BOAT RENTALS
Offers rentals for experienced
skippers in comfort and style
aboard either a 17-or 19-foot dual
console power boat. Rental rates
range from $40 to $60 an hour.
Half-day rates are $135 for the
17-foot dual console, $170 for'the
center console and $195 for the
19-foot dual console. Rates are
slightly higher on weekendS. Bal-
boa Boal Rentals is at 510 E.
Edgewater, Balboa Peninsula. For
reservations, call 673-7200.
BONGO'S SPORTflSHING
CHARTERS
Offers private party whale-
watching excursions everyday.
The cost is $125 for one hour, six-
passenger maximum and a three-
hour minimum. For more infor-
mation, call 673-2810.
NEWPORT LANDING
SPORTFISHING
Offers a low-cost way to whale
watch, weekdays from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. and weekends and holidays
from 9 a .m. to 2:30 p.m. The cost is
CRAB
CONTINUED FROM 1
allow guests to enjoy the fresh air
while dining," said Don Adkinson,
an attorney for Joe's Crab Shack.
City officials discovered the
disruptive activity after receiving
several noise complaints from
Udo Isle residents across the bay.
While the restaurant now com-
plies with the city's noise ordi-
nance, commissioners wanted to
be sure the problems will not
occur again.
The commission objeru not to
the restaurant's style of entertain-
ment, but the noise it generates.
"The point is if you're not visit-
ing the restaurant, you shouldn't
have to live the experience,"
Commissioner Anne Gifford said.
Joe's Crab Shack had asked
the city to allow it to keep its
existing windows, but close them
each evening, when the enter-
tainment usually starts.
Udo Isle residents told the
S14 for adults, $8 for seniors and
ch11dren over 12. Sped.al di!count
rates are available for schools,
churches and community youth
groups. Por available dates and
infonnation. can 675-0550.
PILGRIM OF NEWPORT
The 118-foot historic schooner,
offers weekend whale-watching
trips, Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. and Sundays from 1 to 4 p .m.
The cost is $20 for adults and $15
for children. The schooner is also
available for private charter. For
reservations, call 966-0686.
FUN ZONE BOAT CO.
Guarantees whale or dolphin
sightings during their excursions
or the next trip is free. Dally trips
cost $14 for adults, $12 for
seniors, children ages three to 11
are $8 and children under 3 are
free. Groups rates are also avail-
able for schools, youths and
groups of 15 or more. For reser-
vations, call 673-0240.
DAVEY'S LOCKER
Operates whale-watching
cruises daily through the end of
March. Operating hours are Mon-
day through Friday at 10 a.m. and
1 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday
at 9 a.m., noon and 2:30 p.m . The
cost is $14 for adults, $12 for
seniors, $8 for children ages 4 to
12; infants and toddlers are free.
Special discounts are av~ble for
groups of 20 or more, community
youth groups, service organiza-
tions and schools. Private charters
are also available. For more infor-
mation, call 673-1434.
comnussion they cannot trust
Joe's Crab Shack to close the win-
dows, based on its past history of
dealing with them.
"I can't stand here and not tell
you what I and the community
think of Joe's," resident Bill Klein
said. •Tuey have been arrogant
in their approach to the communi-
ty and have disregarded the
neighbors who called to tell them
about the problem.•
John Jordan, a manager at
Joe's Crab Shack, disputed that
allegation, saying the restaurant's
employees care very much about
the community.
•Joe's is a huge asset to the
city," he said. "We apologize for
the noise that OCCWTed in the
summer, but we have ch~ged a
number of things since the~.•
CS'r. IDIS2lM)
3933 8ln:h sir.et. Newport Beech
14 2'0-0778
'
SCHOOLS
CONTINUED FROM 1
our district,• she said. •we have
moldy cla.sm>oml that flood eui·
ly and we have ceiling tiles
falling onto students' heads."
The school board will vote
Tuesday night to hire a company
to look at the district's capital
improvement needs. Once the
district finds out how much is
actually needed, it will then need
to find ways to raise the money to
pay 'for the upgrades.
Options that have been dis-
cussed include a bond issue or a
parcel tax. School officials say the
state provides about $1001000 a
year to 'the district for capital
improvements.
•If the state and the federal
governments are not going to
help us out, we have to find a
way,• Black said. •It's perceived
as a black hole when you're not
dealing with all these antiquated
facilities. I just don't see 1t being
taken care of with $15 (million) or
$20 million."
But board member Wendy
Leece said she doesn't favor new
taxes or a bond issue.
"Under the circumstances, we
are addressing the deferred
maintenance needs and we're
hiring someone to look at it," she
said. "I don't think that borrow-
ing money and raising taxes is
the way to do it."
DRUGS
CONTINUED FROM 1
Lamborn was booked on sus-
picion of drug possession and
possession with an intent to sell
with an enhancement for selling
to a minor, Smith said.
Police say they believe he has
sold drugs to customers as young
as 12 years old.
Lambom's housemate, James
Richard Quayle, 27, also was
arrested on suspicion of drug pos-
session .and possession with
intent to sell.
Both men are being held in
city jail in lieu of $50,000 bail and
are expected to be arraigned
today in Harbor Municipal Court.
The 14-year-old boy, a Costa
Mesa resident, was released to
his parents.
DON l£ACH I DAILY PILOT
Michelle Hollack, 8, checks her racing jacket while her sister. Malinda, 11, polishes her helmel
Malinda has been racing for a little more than two years. Michelle started just la.st year.
RACE
CONTINUED FROM 1
Their uncle, Bob Hallock, is a
top full-size dragster driver, and
the girls were introduced to the
sport at a young age while watch-
ing the races and helping out in
~eir uncle's pit crew.
"But after four or five hours at
the track, they were ready to go
home,• said Mike Hallock, the
girls' father. "So we got them into
junior racing:"
Malinda has been racing for a
little more than two years, while
Michelle got into the driver's seat
just last year. Because they com-
pete in different age groups, the
two siblings have never raced
against each other.
Since the girls started racing,
weekend trips to the drag strip
have become a Hallock family
tradition.
"Instead of going to the park
for a picnic, we go to the races,"
Mike Hallock said.
Unlike other youth sports like
Little League or AYSO, junior
drag racing can be a particularly
expensive hobby for parents
whose children are involved.
New dragsters cost upward of
$2,700 and new parts like a new
clutch can run as much as $800.
Add the cost of required safe-
ty equipment -more than $200
per girl for belme~. gloves and
custom racing jackets with their
names embroidered on the chest
-and fuel that runs about $3 a
gallon, and you have a sport that
can put a real dent in a parent's
wallet.
But Mike Hallock, who hangs
wallpaper for a living, and the
girls' mother, Anita, who runs a
small child-care business out of
the family home, said after an
initial investment, the cost of
racing is not ~at much.
•Once you actually own the
car, going out to play is pretty
cheap," he said, noting that most
races require only a $25 entry
tee.
The Hallock.s also have some
local sponsors like RAD Enter-
prises, which donates the engine
work on both cars, and MAJ Art
Images, which donated the cus-
tom graphics and vinyl lettering
on each of the cars.
While junior dragster racing is
a big part of the Hallock house-
hold, it is not the only thing the
girls do.
Both are active in local Gtrl
Scout Troop 1005, in which Aruta
is a troop leader, and enjoy other
nonra<.:ing actiVIties.
For Malinda, it's kick boxing
Michelle spends her spare time off
the drag strip playing basketball.
And their father said that while
some junior drivers go on to drive
full-size dragsters professionally,
his daughters aren't necessarily
being groomed for a career in
drag racing.
"'Ibis is just something fun for
them to do now," he said.
·EYE-OPENER
Costa Mesa baseball has w
forfeit three victories
QUOTE OF THE DAY
.. -ws Md """"' lhtJa titan tMm. more it!bound.J than •
them. but tH aUo /tod IMl'8 Joub o;nd fl1'n tufn(R)tU'S ••• -sec WOMENS HOOPS COAOI RUSS DAVIS
Second-half blues put sc·c out
•Vanguards shoot just 5 of 25 from three-land while No. 9 Rockhurst
cans 30 free throws to end Southern California College's season, 7 5-6 t..
By Molly Yanity, Daily Pilot
It was the second half from hell.
After clawing to a 29-29 halftime dead-
lock, Southern California College's
women's basketball team suffered through
a 20-minute excursion through purgatory
en route to a 75-61 first-round loss to Rock-
hurst in the NAIA National Championships
at Om.an Arena in Jackson, Tenn. to end a
dream season. '
There was no question the matchup
would be a battle for the Vanguards, who
closed their program's best season with a
mark of 29-6, as they went up against the
tournament's ninth-seeded team. But a
foul-plagued, poor-shooting second half
enabled the Hawks to steal the win.
•we had more shots than them, more ·
rebounds than them," Coach Russ Davis
said, "but we also had DJ.Ore fouls and more
tu.movers. In a big game, free throws and
tu.movers usually make the difference."
Less than three minutes into the second
half, the Vanguards were called with four
fouls. The Hawks were in the bonus three
minutes later.
From the charity stripe is where Rock-
hurst (23-5) made its climb to the win, sin.k-
ing 30 of 39 attempts.
Still, SCC was able to grab a five-point
lead midway through a low-scoring first
stanza when junior Kristi Wright, playing
Sara Herkenhoff Krlst1 Wright
on an injured right knee, knocked down a
jumper and then a free throw.
The Hawks denied any more of a Van-
guard run by taking advantage of trips· to
the foul line, but junior guard Alana Kemp-
ton seemed to swing the momentum back
to the blue-and-gold by nailing a three-
pointer on a fast break, prompted by
Amber Chaney's steal, to close the half.
•we did some good things ln the first
half," Davis said.
But this was still not SCC basketball.
At one point this season, the Vanguards
were the NAIA's hottest three-point shoot-
ing team. But Thursday they couldn't find
the hole shooting just 5 of 25 from behind
the arc.
•There were mental things. We never
got on track from the perimeter, and that
hasn't happened in 34 games this season,"
Davis said.
Rockhurst was just warming up, too.
"The first half we came out a little jit-
tery," Hawks Coach Maryann Mitts said.
• SEE VANGUARDS PAGE 10
r------------------------------~-------------~---------------------~------,
terrance
phillips
___...,,.....
GEARING
UP FOR
ENSENADA
•It may be a small world,
but it's a big, big ocean.
O ne month from today,
the adult beverage mix
masters of Cantina de
Hussong in Ensenada will be
stocking their coolers, filling
their bodegas and may even
feel the necessity to have two
or three truck loads of cerveza
parked out back.
Sombreros and suds will be
plentiful on this weekend of
marine madness.
The sleds will arrive prior to
the light of Saturday. The crews
on the multi-hulled bullets will
have time to take a nap before
breakfast.
The partiers will come in
whenever and the cruising class
will make it in before lunch,
albeit with a scent of diesel No.
2 on its polyester.
No matter who or what
crosses the fiesta finish line first,
one thing is certain: fun, freedom
and festivities will be enjoyed
by all that attend the
Newport-to-Ensenada
International Race.
In racing, a boat named
Merlin is legendary.
I
I
I
I
~
I I I < • I I "i < I I C ) 0 I B 0 Y S A N D G I R l S I H /\ C I< /\ l'J I ) I I !. I I >
DON I.EACH I DAILY Pl.OT
Newport Harbor's Chuck Loo (above) takes first place in the 110 high hurdles; below, left. Curt Herberts leads a 1-2 Newport
Harbor punch in the 800 meten; below, right. the Sailors' Leah Zaby edges out Ec:l1son's Jennifer Petersen in the 4 x 100 relay.
molly
yanify
Vanguards9
best season
never ends
• The emotion still rides high
for Southern California College.
!could hardly sleep
Wednesday night. There
were a few reasons for that,
including my excitement
over getting a ticket to the
Sweet 16 game between Arizona
and Maryland. But while I tossed
and turned, my mind drifted to
Tennessee and to the Southern
California College women's
basketball team.
It endlessly amazes me how
much emotion can run through a
single person in the middle of
one athletic contest.
The nerves in the locker room
before the game, the excitement
of stepping onto the court, the
fury of wrestling away a
rebowid from an opponent, the
thrill of an open three drained.
And, ultimately, the ecstasy of a
win, or the disappointment of a
loss.
The Vanguards took me along
this season , showing me their
spectrum of emotions through
the winter and it saddens me to
think of them walking off the
court after their first-round loss
to Rockhurst.
It saddens me that it has to
come to an end for them.
While talking to Coach Russ
Davis after the game Thursday
afternoon, he kept saying
something that struck me as
interesting ...
"It wasn't meant to be."
What was destined, though,
was a romp of fun, victory,
personal and team
accomplishment that hasn't
ended for those young women.
A perfect run through the
Golden State Athletic
Conference, individual
accolades, "firsts" for the
program that included a
conference championship,
perfect home record, a trip to
Nationals -those things were
great for them, and those of us
who got to enjoy it with them.
But to talk to these ladies and
their coaches, you learn that
it is much more for them, it's
something that continues.
They were so fun to watch not
because they won games or
made it look easy, but because
they care about each other and
about their God.
, ..
For 20 years, Merlin held the
nanspac record (Los Angeles to
Honolulu) in the time of eight
days and 11 hours.
This cruise to the coconuts
was to boating as Bob Beamon
was to the long ju.mp.
Davis' squad may have been ~
out of the ordinary when it shot
just 20% from behind the
three-point line, but they were
just 6actly like themselves
L ast year, 7 ,300 days after
the Camelot canoe
performance astounded the
world, a Santa Cruz 70 popped
over to the pineapples in only
seven days and one-half hour,
breaking that long-standing
boating benchmark.
Pyewacket, owned by the
gradous Roy Dimey.'1tnally-
pulled Excalibur from the stone
and achieved what every
professional radng sailor has
. ~ ~ to acoomplish 5ince
Merl1nts 1977 magical moment.
Was it because of today's
b!dmological advancements, a
better aew, more favorable wind
and tea, or was it just luck.1
•1t was my son at the helgi, •
Mid Dimey, of a famed land in •
AJ)abeim.
Hil eon. .Roy Patrick Dimey,
skippered Pyewaclret on the
'lhmlpoc wbll8 pop wu
recovering from a broken leg he
IUlfar9d in a bead-on European
auto acddent.
If that wasn't monumental
ei;aougb, pYewad<et wet on to
Mt another~ when it
averaged 12 kDoCI Jn tbe Sci
~to.Puerto Vallalta JD,
1 lt'1 hard to bdeYe ~ ~
it to P.V. In three days a.Dd 21
houri.
Heck, the Jut dlDe 1 w
tMni on vacation it toOt .
when every single one of them
J got up at 6 a.m. Wednesday
1 morning and was the only team
llARBoa's Loo WINS FOUR EVENrs II to have each player at the
breakfast sponsored by the
I Fellowship of Christian Athletes. I sec should be proud that it
1 has a group of student-athletes
I who are so clearly great role 1 I ·'. ,. , < 1 / \ f J 1 ) f 1 E 1 1 ) ') 1 J r 11 1 ~ / , 1 • 1 1 • •
_ _ _ t models.
HUNllNGTON BEACH -Newport Harbor High IOYS -..-..tAUiua.------------, ~tt-f-ilf'-1-ha ...... d-a~d .... zm--'gtr ... tet:~,-r .... awmt
• Sailors' standout bas a nice day, but it's
Edison boys, girls who take team honors.
senior Chuck Loo won four individual events, but host -~ ._ n-•cm u-~ ...... ~--.. GIM.S f her to be like a Vanguard. Ediso 00 llected 72 IH -t---, .. ,_ ,._, ~ -.._IQ, ..... Qa ~ se • d ti~ ys ~vict ~-no~gue dual track 100 -1. Moos (E), 11 Ai 2. Thorson (E), 11.6; 100 -1. Pet.non (E), 13.1; 2. Novak (E) 1 an liarbo m~.... ory d yr J.. Pope (E), 11.7, 13.2;. 3. Zaby (NH), 13.2. _Q-
r's ~ .. -sq\1a received stroD,g ilidiVtdUaf' 200· 1. Moos (E), 23.~;,.3. Thorson (E}, 24.2; 219'-1. ~U). 27.3;.2,z.by(NH),
performances from Amanda Kent, Cante Poss, Amber 3\~ (E), 24.2. 27.8; 3. NovM (E), 28.0.
Steen, Krista Dill cmd Sara McMillen, but oould not 400 • 1. Moos (E), 53.2.; 2. Quatm1n (E}, 54.3; 400 • 1. A. Kent (NH), 1:02.5; 2. K. Kent
overcome the Chargen, who claimed an 80-56 wtn. 3. Hall (E}. ss.o. (NH), 1:04.4; l . Jennings (E), 1:06.2.
Loo bested the field in both hurd.181 races, u well llOO • 1. Hefberts (NH), 2:05.6; 2. McMlllen 2:~ -1. 5::' S:::· 2:25.6; 2. Roundtree (E),
as the high jump (5-10) and trlple jump (40--'a/,). (NH), 2.'07.S; 3. Gordon (t), 2:01.a. ·, ... ; l . A (N ~ 2:30.1. .._1 Ne~ Curt Herbertl doubled ln the 800 meters 1,toO • 1. Hert.ts (NH), 4:41.2; 2. McKlna.y • • 1· fo. H), 5:43.7; 2. G"'"' {E), (NH) 4·56 6 3 Mc:MNlen (NH) 5:01 1 5:48.4; 3. Punon (a, 6:20.5. and 1,600 on a Cold, blusteiy da~ at the~· UoO ; ;~uuon(E) 1ct0ii ~ U00 ·1.Foes(NH),'12:06;2.Bum.tt(E},
oval, While teammate Bddie Clarke eclipied the 150" (NH) 10:1i 4; l ~ ( . ..; · l 12:11.1; 3. GfffWI (E), 12:50.4.
foot mark to win the dilcul with a toa o11s1-2•12. 110 ..t. ·1 · · ,...H). N • 10: 4· *" · 1. MUttee (l), 16.S; 2. ztmmon (E),
•Chuct bad a good day, it was a nlce double for -·Loo'" 15·5; 2. PoMll (E). 16.t; J. McMM1n (NH), 11.t .
Cwt and EddJe getting over 150-0 in the tecOnd meet 15 •. t; ~ McCut~ (NH), 17.S. -H -1. McMlffen (NH), 50.8; 2. Zimon CE). of th 1J real ... 1, Loo (Nn,, 41.3; 2. Powell (E), 50.t; J. MultM m. 51.2.:
e year a good performance,• Newport 41.6; a. Jones (Nft), 41 .t . 400 ..eey. 1. Newport HafbOr (MOmtll, A.
Coadl Erle 'IWett Mid. 400...., :-1. Edllon, 45.1. Kent. IC. K.nt. Zlby) ; ~.1 . I
Kant won the gtrl:I .too and contributed. to both 1 ... ...-, .1. Edison. J:41 i '·'°° ,..._; 1.1tilewpoft HilibOr (McMlllet\ 1
wtnning relaya, while Pou, a eopbOmore, eamed dou. Ml • 1. LOo (NH), 1'!10; 2. Nsctieft (kH), s..; R!Mll. Stief\ A.~ 4:12.t. I
bled bl tbe d1ttt.Dce eventl to cJaJm bar nm varilty 3. leMda (NH), w . "'· 1. «*> leldW (I) Md Mullee (E). s.~ A ~ u . 1 ... lings (E). 20-21/a: 2. Ger1lctl (NH). J. ~(NH), s.o.. I
StMD, a fniah!Nin. niriAlMd unbeaten ID tbi 800, ta.11; 1. 9itlda (NH). 1M 3. ~·~~ 15-4; 2. ~(I), t4-1t;
while OW, a IOJ)bOimore, woo the dJ.lci.il and T.t • 1· LoO (NH), *""" 2· ,.,.,~ (I), r1 -t. ,., ••• (E), 32·3: 2. ~ CNtO, A-ct
Mc:MWen ~the~ kl the 300 huidles lto-O'h; 3· hldl (NH). •7'"4 ~ J. ,._(NH), lt·'rh.
I arid bUldJ8if a· leg OD the~ 1,800 relay. PV-1· no '9Ufti. PV· 1. no .........
--... -.i.-.,. ...,,.,....... m..:l) wtD • -1. GroMnor • --J. Cleftie (NH), 9 I LIMft cm, 11 ~u 2. ~a\ I I QVW l'+ewpoli .,__,,.. '...-: NtUme acU0D ~10¥< 1 ... (NH), 0.11'b; 2f.5'i< j ~(NH). 5,.)~ .. ,-~-,._ I I ~~{¥== ~ s.. MieW ~ compea or 1. one~ 1st~lh: 2. H01 <NH>. DT -1. 0.1(NH);•J:2. Ubln (I).~ 1
1 • -t2M'h: a .•• .,. W>-t&to. 1. ~ m. tt·l. j
~--------------------~--------------------------------~---------------.-..--
Mesa forfeits three
baseb8ll victories
...,
... ..
CDM
RC>LLS
0N, 17-1
yola offers no resistance
to Sea Kings' juggernaut.
CORONA DEL MAR -Fresh-
singles standou1s Brian Mor-
and Hunter Jack were among
many who played well for
ost Corona. del Mar High Thurs-
y u the Sea Kings improved to
with a 17-1 nonleague thrash-
of Loyola.
•1 expected a better match,•
aid CdM Coach Tim Mang.
"They beat us last year.•
Morton lost just 2 of 20 games,
bile Jack won 18 of 21 to add to
arker Collins' sweep at No. 1
ies.
CdM returns to action Tuesday
t nonleague host Villa Park,
fore opening Sea View League
lay Thursday against Santa
Margarita.
MONUMM• C'.cJMMM DIL MAil 17, l.oYOU 1
...... Collins (C.dM) def. E. Smith, 6-2.
def. Bwendua, 6-2, def. Beldach, 6-0; Morton
(C.dM) .....on, 6-2. 6-0, 6-0; Jack (C.dM) won,
6-2. 6-1, 6-0.
Doulll•: Cho1n-~ (CdM) def.
Glnett.Sentos, 6-0, def. Jensen.levy, 6-2, def.
Newcomb-Rellaurio, 6-0; Jensen-Ellmore
(C.dM) .....on, 6-3, 6-2, 6-0; Shahmardl-Mye"
(C.dM) .....on, 6-1, lost, 3-6, won, 6-3.
Aliso sweeps Mesa
cosrA ti.imSA -The Costa
Mesa High boys tennis team ran
into a buzz saw Thursday to open
Pacific Coast League play as visit-
ing Aliso Niguel recorded an 18-0
victory.
Junior David nan. Mesa's No.
1 singles player, claimed a team-
high six games for the hosts, who
fell to 3-2.
•Aliso (7-0) is ranked ninth in
the county and they beat sixth-
ranked Mission Viejo earlier this
week," said Mesa Coach Joe
Havens.
MORC mAST LEAGUE Auso NIGua 18. CostA MESA 0
...... T~ (CM) lost to l.alM, 1-6, lost
to Y~. 3-6, lost to MednQ. 2-6;
Um (CM) lost. G-6, 1-6, 1-6; Kaid (CM) lost.
G-6,G-6,G-6.
Doulll• Nguyen-PNm (CM) lost to
a.lof.f«oughl. 3-6, lost to
~uttenbef'g. 1-6, lost to IC.en-E~fef.
G-6; M«tln-Klsti (CM) lost, 3-6, G-6, 1-6;
tc.azj..UJblNI (CM) lost, 3-6, 2-6, G-6.
DON lfACH I OAJl.Y PILOT
Newport Harbor Higb's Amanda Kent leads the way in the girls
400 meters ln Tbunday's nonleague dual meet at Edison High.
play Tuelday, with Harbot
~ sea View League foe
WoOdbridge at Blg Canyon
and l!ltenda visiting Pad.fie
Coast League rival Laguna
Hills at Leisure World.
Mesa edges Grove
SANTA ANA -Costa Mesa
High earned • two«:roke
advantage over the fiDa1 nine
hales Tbund.ay at Willowick
Golf CoU!le to complete a 462-
467 nonleagye boya 18-bole
golf victory over Garden
Grove.
Jeff Montoya (42) wu
Mesa'• top scorer Th\irsday.
while Donny Miller~~ Brlan ~ones (43), Steve ('9)
and MiQ 11iiJ.iiUn (52) iOUod-
ed oUt the~ w.-tory.
Mesa is DOW 4-0 ill IS.bole
matcbes.
Tarayao, Emery sparkle for CdM
CORONA DEL MAR-Corona
de1 Mar High's Kawika Tarayao
and Lance Emery each won two
individual events and swam on
victorious relay teams to help the
Sea Kings rout visitor Capistrano
Valley in a nonleague boys meet
Thursday.
Tarayao, a senior, eclipsed the
CIF-qualifying standard with a
winning time of 2:00.86 in the
200-yard individual medley, and
also touched first in the 100 back-
stroke (1:00.72).
Emery topped the field in the
50 and 100 freestyle sprints and
was on the winning 200 medley
and 200 freestyle relay quartets
that also included Tarayao.
Jason Palda rounded out the
CdM boys winners, besting the
competition in the 100 butterfly.
lb~ CdM girls were not u for-
tunate, as Capo Valley emned. a
110-59 triumph.
Lauren Powers claimed the
lone event victory for the Sea
King girls, posting a 1 :03.48 to
win the 100 fly.
Powers was also second in the
100 free, while Meagan Hardt
(200 free and 50 free) and
Michelle Dahn (200 individual
medley) also posted second-place
finishes.
NONUAGlll
llOYS
QJM 111, CANnwfo YIWl.Y 59
200 mecler relar · 1. Corona del Mar
(Tw.y.c>, Williams, Powen, Em«y)
100 fNe • 1. Wall-. (CV), 1:51A2; 2.
Krvnet (CDM), 1:53..38; 3. G,... (CdM),
1:58.90.
100 IM • 1. TWlyltO (CdM), 2:00.86; 2. Ken-
zie (CV), 2.-01.24; 3. Johnston (CdM), 2:14.63.
50fNe· 1. Emery(CdM), 22.7.t; 2. Pow.n
(CdM), 23.60; 3. WiedefNnn (CdM). 23.62.
100 fty • 1. Palda (C.dM), 59.63; 2. Fabian
(CdM), 1:00.94; 3. Wilflams (C.dM). 1 :01.34.
tOOfNe· 1. Emey(CdM), 50.51; 2.
Ktwner (CdM), 51.57; 3. Pow.n (COM), 51.17
500 .,_ • 1. Wall-. (CV), 4:56.19; 2.
Graass (CdM), 5:25.50; 3. Petry (C.dM),
5'.30.15.
100 fNe rMar · 1. Corona del M.tt (El'!lefY,
Powen, Kramer, Tarayao), 1:32.87.
100 back · 1. Tar1yao (CdM), 1:00.72; 2.
SlcXels (C\I), 1:01.32; 3. McConnell (CV),
1:11.6S.
100 ....._. • 1. Kenzie (CV), 1 '04.02; 2.
WilliMnS (CdM). 1:07.06; 3. Johnston (CdM).
1:09.53.
400 fNe relar · 1. Capo, no time.
GMLS
CAMnlMo VMUY 110. OIM 59
200......,....., ·1.Capo,2-00.10.
200 fNe • 1 S~I (CV), 2:01.95; 2.
twdt (CdM). 2:(l6.93; l. ~ (~. 2:11.21.
200 IM· 1. Kr1m« (CV), 2:20.7.t, 2. Dahn
(C.dM), 2:25.93; 3. Efutk.h (CV), 2:29.0.
50 fNe • 1. Lukin (CV), 2U' 2. Hardt (C.d),
26.69; 3. S~I (CV), 27.0S.
too 11y • 1. Powlt'I (CdM), 1 :o3 • .38: 2.
McCalley (CV). 1:03.AS; 3. Dahn (C.dM),
1:0S.75.
100 fNe • 1. St«howslcl (CV), 56..tS; 2.
Powers (C.dM), 57.07; 3. Lukin (CV), 59.95. •
· 500 fNe -1. Kawakami (CV), 5:33.-43; 2. ~(CV), 5:57.M; 3. Cooper (CdM), 6:02.97.
100 .... .....,. 1. Qpo, 1:46.76.
tOOMdl -1. S~I (CV), 1:04.17; 2.
Mc:Calley (CV), 1 '05.67; l. Tuck« (CdM),
1:06.58.
too t...t. 1. !Ct.,,_ <CV>. 1:16.37; 2.
EMlctt (CV), 1:17.97; 3. Bo«uzzl (CV),
1:20.60.
... .... reley . 1. Capo, 3:57.92
ROOM TO GROW FOR MUSTANGS
Goal at Costa Mesa is to upset someone,
anyone, in the Pacific Coast League.
-~ MBSA-WbileU.boy1 temxts reputation"
at Costa Mesa Hlqh hasn't exactly struck fear in the
hea.r1I of opponents, ~ aai. ame cballengers might
want to check their rackets i.ar boles after facing the M\IUIM1I ttdt lleUQC. .. ~
· •lb!I year.lthink we'r. .UU rebu.llcling, but tf we
upMt IOIDebO<lt in the Padfic Cout League ... boy,
tbat would be#fMt. and that'• what we're abooting
for,• .aid Me.a coach Joe Havens, who Iba.res hil
dutltil With H:Wiiry Royer.
•we were 0-10 in league lut year end we'll prob-
a~ be 0-10 again. but tbat'I tlie challenge ... we
dan't want to be 0-10. On paper, of all the teama that
beat U1 last year, I'm not aware of any ol tboee tNml
lalllijJ &DY pia~ sure. we're ~ but I
woakl bate to ~ an~ ,'·Other.Itha.D lUt pa.ca:•
At Jealt t!Mii'i'• room to~·
C01tA Meila'I 3-t Ult 11 aoy lndlalUOl:~tJ>erMIJI tb8t unccm~n PCL ltr9ak Will 8nd.. iD
1908. .
The Mustangs. who have formed a relatioosblp
with Orange County tennis guru Hank Uoyd. who
has taken over as managing operator of the nearby
Cost&MeM-Teni:U Can&e&:, willI:el¥-OIUpeed.
Sophomol91 Ken Urbina and Chris Gravis, for-
mer soccer playen wht> decided to devote their
efforts to tennis on a full-time basis, are two of the
~·· iiewcoml!n who coul.d.,,b.el~ Mesa get over
tbewinleuPCL hump. "'
While Urbina and Gravis battle for the No. 3 lln·
Jilel position. retUming No. t player David Tum. a
Junior and alto a IOCCel' lta.Ddout wtth eu:ellent foot·
~ anc1 jwrlor SWlll Khaki could give the Mus-
ta.nga their belt one-two punch tn years.
Juniors Joshua Monil and John Huang wW
return and play No. 1 doublH, bile n.w tennis
additlom JUcky Martin, a Junior, and Mnlor DemUI
Kiib; are ~ to play tecOod doubles. Jumot
PU'lbld KU1 will piay tb1rd doublei with CAVIi or
Urbina. some p14~ to wateb th1a 1euo11 mo 1ndude
MDkri Kartbid Krtihnom\iithy and WW Mon1l1o and
jumon Jonathan N~yen. 1bMm Pbam, Cid Uni
UICl DUltm P.-IOD. -by RJchard DuM
Corona del Mat falls to Garden Grove, 18-1
t
FRIDAY, MAACH 20. 1-1
Jameson first-team pick .
•
• Newport guard tops locals honored by
coaches; Archbold, Gabriel second team.
Newport Harbor High junior Matt Jameson, who
led the Sailors to a second-place tie in the Sea View
League, was named first-team all-league by the cir-
cuit's coaches.
Jameson, a 6-foot point guard, averaged 14.3
points in 10 league games, 20 over the final three, to
help the Tars finish 7-3 and match El Toro, two
games back of league champ Santa Margarita.
Newport senior Scott Archbold was a second-
team choice, as was Corona del Mar senior Nick
Gabriel, while fWbor sophomore Dustin Illingworth
and CdM junior Dennis Alshuler both received hon-
orable mention.
Archbold, a 6-0 guard, averaged 8.3 points in
league, while Gabriel. also a guard averaged 7.2.
Jameson An:hbold
Mark Wulfemeyer, El Toro
Ryan Forehan-Kelly, Santa Margarita
Chris Ferguson, Irvine
Scott Barlow, Woodbridge
Dekker McKeever, Santa Margarita
Oiarles Oark. Woodbridge
Sr. 19.3
Sr. 14.0
Jr. 16.1
Jr. 16.4
Sr. 11.0
Sr. 17.2
Santa Margarita senior point guard T.J . Williams,
was the league's Most Valuable Player.
eo.ches' All-Sea View LMgue boys bMketball
Most Valulible Player
T.J. Williams, Santa Margarita, Sr. 11.6
F1ntteam
Matt J......on, Newport Harbor Jr. 10
Second tum
Jayson Richards, El Toro
Scott Ardtbold, Newport Hwbor
Craig Rice, Santa Margarita
Jake Rohe, Santa Margarita
Matt Hardeman, Irvine
Nick Gabriel. Corona del Mar
Nick Robertson, El Toro
Sr. 10.5
Sr. a.J •
Sr. 5.7
Sr. 8.0
Jr. 5.4
Sr. 1.2
Sr. 6.5 ,
ALL-SEA VIEW LEAG~E GIRLS BASKETBALl:
Ross first-team All-Sea View ~
ti on. -. • Newport sophomore recognized by
league's girls basketball coaches;
CdM's Dwtlap a second-team selection.
Newport
Harbor High
sophomore April
Ross, a 6-foot-1
El Toro sophomore Giuliana Mendiola, who led
the Chargers to a perfect 10-0 league record and led
Orange County in scoring, was the Most Valuable ..
Player. ':
center still
learning the
game, was cho-
sen first-team
All-Sea View
League by the
circuit's girls
b a s k e t b a 11 Ross Dunlap
coaches.
Ross, who averaged 8.9 points per game for
Coach Ryan Bettencourt's Sailors, was the only local
player named to the first team, though Corona del
Mar senior guard Sarah Dunlap was a second-team
pick.
Dunlap averaged 10 points against league foes as
the consummate leader for Coach Elbert Davis.
Newport Harbor standouts Kalena Jackson, Kris-
ten Urban and Alyssa Paul received honorable men-
c.oaches' All-Sea View ....... girls ..........
I Most ValU8ble Playw
Giuliana Mendiola, El Toro So. 20.6
First tum
Kate Toman. Santa Margarita
Nicole Roberts, Woodbridge
Gioconda Mendiola, El Toro
Vanessa Ferragamo, Santa Margarita
Jamie Allred, Irvine
April Ross. Newport Hmbor
Lauren O'Hara, Irvine
Second team
Natalie Quinn, Woodbridge
Suzanne Guy, El Toro
Amy Everett. El Toro
Molly Malone. Santa Margarita
Amber Arestruz., Woodbridge
Jody Cartson, Irvine
s-.h Dwtlllp, Cof'ona .. Ms
Sr. 10.7
Sr. 10.6
Jr. 9.9
So. 11.1
Sr. 11.8
So. 8.9
Sr. 10.0
So. 9.1
Sr. 7.4
Jr. 3.7
Sr. 8.9
Jr. 8.7
Fr. 11.1
Sr. 10.0
:r.ODA'<'S SCH EDU lE COLtEGE SOFTBALL
Vanguards starts 2-0 at Ha~aii
KONA, Hawaii -The Southern California College
softball team opened the Kona Classic with a pair of
pool-play victories Thursday, topping Wisconsin
Stevens Point, 2-0, then getting past Northwest Mis-
sowi State, 3-1.
The Vanguards were set to play Hawaii-Hilo in a .
late pool-play game Thursday night
MllfQ • i,LY'-;~;f top 1 0 3 .
mGst influential
IMAGINE
Your local community newspaper devoting an entire issue to the
"best of the best" kids ln our community. A section that mentions
hundreds of outstanding examples of students ages kindergan.cn
through age eight.een. Unbelievable Kids!
A section ·focused on what's good ln Newport Beach. Corona del
· "' Mafand Costa.t.teaa. Read by yomlgaOd akl.illke~ :the kids_-...... _..."' ......... :.......... pa.rents. teachers. friends, ndghbors. ... the end.re
COMMUNITY
Show your support-dt.ldllnc b ~~ml oopy1
Wedn~. M&l'cb 25 •noon.
1998
,.
-•
sec
CONTINUED FROM 8
•we had Kim Ma.nm, who
coukl be en All·Amerlcon selec-
tion, go down (with a knee Injury)
o.t our regional championship
game. I think it took our kids a
b4lf to realize. that Kim 'a not bere
and we have to do the things that
she helps make up for.•
And the second half
began ...
The fouls hit sec
hard, and so did Rock-
hurst guard Sarah Miller.
Miller, a junior guard,
lit up for 26 points -18 in
the nightmarish final 20
minutes.
----------~ ~ ----- -
by an elbo'w and su.tterec:t a black i BO ·ATI NG eye (wb!cb wasn't ailled). i K !I
Ju.nlor SaJ1l HetkenhOff filled : •
inoptlyandledthesquedwtth 18 : CON11NUED FROM 8
points. shooting 7 o( 9 from the :
field. : Amomaic:O Alrtlnel four d4ys to
•When we got the ball tillld , : f1nd my.lugg~el
we took care of tbingt, • Oavil : It would have to be said that
said. "But we had 18 tum.oven : Pyewock•t ts the odd.I-on
and l think obout 16 of those were : mono-hull favol'ite tor tb1I year'•
trying to get t.be ball imide. : race to Emenada.
•They were sagging : Cheva.l, Magnitude, Huron,
in, but I don't think: it wu : Kotmandu, Orient Bxpreu and
so much of them doing : Victoria are not to be overlooked
that as it was us not get-! u they too can nm faster than
ting good passing angles. : Montezuma'• revenge.
We did a poor job.• : On Friday, Apr. 24, all the talk
When Whittemore : stops and the teak takes over.
fouled out with •:41 left, ! You're never certbin of a win sec was down, 57-47. : in a sailboat as the wind dictates
She finished her : who will hoist the cup.
record-breaking career ! Q
with 10 points while : I prevtoualy mentioned I •(Miller) got bot. She
hit six three-pointers!
She's ligit. But we missed Whittemore
Wright also added 1 o ! wanted to cover the race
points. : aboard a vessel. .
The Hawks who : Six wonderful skip~ c:aJlM some assignments, too,"
Davis said.
Rock.burst steadily pulled
away from sec, leading by as
much as 15 points with 3:45 left in
the game.
Davis' game plan mcluded
takmg advantage of Rockhurst's
lack of height with Martin, who
stands at 5-foot-10, out of the
lineup.
But his 6-footers, Elaine Whit-
temore and Gina Jojola, were liin-
ited in playing time.
Whittemore, after cruising
through the first half foul-free,
was quickly tagged with three
after the break.
Jojola, who picked up three in
the first, was knocked lo the floor
advance to the second ~und to ! and offered me a slot on their
play No. 8 Oklahoma Baptist : crew.
today. were led by Miller and also : I especially thank Loren of
received 18 and 17 points, respec-: Blue Dolphin Yacht Charters and
lively, from Tara Knox and Alli : Dan.a Point's John Carpenter,
Chonk both competing in Catalina 38s. 0
· I respectfully must decline
NAIA NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS your gracious irivitations, but
FIRST ROUND want you to know your kindness
ROOCHURST 75, SoCAL ~ 61 is greatly appreciated.
SoC.al College · Jojola 6, Wright 10, What to do, what to do?
Whittem\lre 10, Kempton 7, Pina 6, Well, after considerable
Chaney 4, Herkenhoff 18. 3-pt. goals -Pina 2, w right 1, ponderment, I dreamed of
Chaney 1. Kempton 1. crewing aboard a boat that has
Fouled out. Whittemore. set records.
Roddtunt · Chonko 18, Knox 17, Yes, I am pleased to announce
Miller 26, Jones 7, Pryor 7. that I have officially been named
3-pt. goals • Miller 6, Jones 1. as the 11th crewman on board
Fouled out • None. Halftime. 29•29. the record-breaking "happiest
boat on earth I"
Thank you, Mr. Disney.
• TEllRANCE Ptflu.s' boating
column appears tNery Friday.
He can be reached at 642-n91.
----------.....--. -..,-=
. . ' . ---.. -.,.
Eagles get first win, 5-3 ""'. ..
Wl!STMJNSTSR Strong
pib:b.tnci a.ad some spectacu_lar
cetchel ID tbi oUttlekt helped vii·
lUDg Eltand.a High ee.m itt 1lnt
Victory of the MUOD ~y u
tbe Baglel r1ahned a 5-3 non·
l~ softball dec:ltlon at La
<lufuta..
f?C!Jhman pitcher Joanna Dan-
ner itruck out three and dkl not
walk a batter to get the win,
which WU pre181Ved when left
fielder Stacy Barnett made a div-
ing catch and teammate Lacey
~made a pair of diving grabs
ln center field.
Eagle catcher Stephanie
Cecbola and Aliso Couh each
had an RBI for the winners, while
Danner added a base bit to the
visitors' five-hit attack.
Estancia is now 1-3, while La
Quinta fell to 1-3. The &gles host
Long Beach Wilson on Wednes-
day at TeWinkle Park. ...........
EsTANCIA s. I.A Qwn:A 3
EstanQJi OCM 100 0 • 5 5 1
La Quinta 000 300 O • 3 7 2
Danner and Cachola; Mauga, Foste<
(4) and Ibara. W -Danner. 1-2.
l "Mauge:3B -Rodriguez (LQ).
HR -Foster (lQ).
JUMOll VAltlnY
Estancia 14, La Quinta 5
Tars crush foe, 17-0
NEWPORT BEACH -Junior
pitcher Arian.a Zamora, called up
from the Newport Harbor High ~ Junlot vanity. made the mmt oi .,,
ber vanlty audition by hlir!Jng • ~
two-bit shutout In the SailorS' 11-.,,
O nonleague win over villtlng
Connelly in a game called a.ftet ..
five tnnings due to the mercy rule, J
Zamora. whom Harbor Coech •
Prank ™Jey said earned another '
varsity start, stNck out three and
walked one: Connelly man.aged
its only hits, back-to-back singles, ,,
in the second. '
Zamora garnered ample often-,
sive support, as well as the hosts .
whacked 18 bits to improve to
4-1.
freshman catcher Lisa Hunt-1
ington was 3 for 3 ~th three RBI,
while sophomore April Carroll '
had what 'Ililley termed a hat :
trick (single, double and triple in
three at-bats) to collect three RBL -:
Sophomore Kristen Smith .
went 3 for 4 with two RBI, while
junior Kristen Urban drove in
three runs with a pair of doubles.
The 18rs try to continue their
impressive pre-Sea View League
campaign today when they visit
Santiago.
NOIUAGUE NIWllOllf HAMOR 17, CorlNIU.Y 0
Connelly 000 00 -0 2 ,
Newport Harbor 164 6x • 17 18 0
Gonzalez and Delgadillo; Zamora and
Huntington, Niies (5). W ·Zamora, 1-0.
l -Gonzalez. 28 -Urt>an (NH) 2, carroll
(NH), Kinsey (NH). 38 • carroll (NH). J
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES J
PUBLIC NOTICE
CNS1173 .. 1
PMJHRIY AM>
CASUALTY • ..._,..OF TIE
~ STATEmlfT-Yw.,.... D a 31,
1197
ol USF RE lntu11nce
Co1n91ny
650 Town Center Drive, 11500. Co1t1 MeH, CA
92626 Tot1I 1dmin1d 111111: t221 ,953,862
Total tlabilltlea : '109,297,227
Aggregate write·lna tor 1peci1l 1urplu1 lunda: •-C 1pIt1 I S1ock1 : u .000.000 Aggreg1te write·ins for
other then 1pec1al surplus
funds: •··· Surplua not11: t -Grou p11d-ln and contnbut· Id 11.1tplut: •77.103.370 Un11aignedlund1 Caurplual: '32,553,265
Surplut 11 reg11d1 policy-holder: t112,856,635
Income tor the ye11:
t169.202,989
D11buraemenu tor the yt1r:
'137,424.123
W• h111by cen1ty that the
above "'"" lie Ill •ccor-dance whh 1h1 Annual
Sutement for th• year
ended December 31, 1997, m1d1 10 the lnturance
Commi111oner. 1XH1u1n1 to l1w.
JOHNT.GRUSH,Pretldent
JOSE A. VELASCO, Seer•
llry
03116. 03/17, 03/18, 03/19, 03/20
~'ti
/(el;
tfoa
lfl,,/te
A
GOOD
ADI
Call
642-561'8
-~.--. -
DAUi.MM
I•
> • • ·~ ...
"-
FRIDAY. MAROi 20. 1998
-PUIUC IOTtCU 1' PUILJC NOTtCll PUBLIC NOTICll PUILtC NOTICll PUIUC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICll PUBLIC NOTICIS PUBLIC NOTl~IS PUBLIC NOTtcEI PUIUC NOTICES
-PUii.JC IOTICI mM-. Have YoU 91at1td doing 82te3 Oudtd bV:'• Gtf*ll l*t· tM!Mta Y9t7 No PUIUC NOTICE ouci;a tioy:.., illdMClUll PUBLIC NOTtCI m by. an lrdl1dUil •UM••RYOP :!!':;.,r:r,.°'..~:: ~ y.r? Y"· Jan.
1
' ~~ti~•;:.,.'!,:~ ':.:'P you 9t.wttd doing ~~'.11~ .• AH'~:~o~:,~ '1ctltloualuetnH a =..ru~~ doing Plotltt.w.....,... ~vec?~~ ~ ORDINMC& a.y Oeftc'• Ofb 11 PaJr Andrew!. l.avaQ9 ~ bualneH yet? Ho hoOmand, Prn. NatM l'*t•IMnt a.an T. N ... l'*lff!Mftt o.m. ~ "1cOoMI UAOEHCV ORDINANCE Drive Cotta MHL• This ~ was ~ Haw YoU "*1ed OOlng MOhtn\INd Ahlaham Thi• 111tement wu filed The folowlng ~ we Thll 9tatet'l)ef'lt wu ritec1 The f0io¥MG perlONI .,. Thie •Yllllmlf'll ._ Mad ~·mlM ~~ MMY T. I W OTT, ~=on~~ ~K.~::t1... J,.': =1~ ~r~ ~~he~~ ~~:.:1 o,:~ ~~dE llU.. ~:,,;-=on c:~: ~~S,:,~59 8"°' =:~ ~..:
on Mlirch' 1 .... WU ... 0.pUtr Cltr Clet'lc 1HH710011 Todd ICMltr OfMQe Cow\ty on 3-13-M 1918975240 INO SERVICES. 272t Point 1"88780071 more Altl•, Irvin•. c~ 1.....,aa.oo
ttnd9d tor 0 "'°"""• 11 'ublllhed Newporl Dally Pt:o4 fleb. 77, Mar, f, Thia ~ was ed 1HH712217 Dally PllOI Mw. 20, 27, Del Mii Ave . Corona cs.I Daily Piloe Mat. e. 13, 20, 12112 Ody PUOI ~. 20. 21,
"•1 • ~ ~ iolowWlaco rloll ham.Costa ~ Dally 13 20 1tM Fl70 ~th \her.~ ~ .. Of Otilly PllOt Mar. 20. 27. Afx. 3 10 1998 F921S MM. CA t2e25 . 27 Ul91 F17t SUAn T. Tomuuwt4U, lie Af>f, '· 10, ,... Fm Cll vo te: CO UNO L l'lot Match'°' 1'98 Ft32 • • ..... ange ~"I on .r17· Apt, 3. 10, 1998 Ft20 . • Suzanne '· Sleinbfontf, • lrtQmor• Alw. &rvlne. CA
••11•1fta1 AY•l 1 PUBLIC NOTIC! PUBLIC NOTIC! 1HH7121t1 PUBLJC NOTICI! PUBLIC NOTICE 2121 Point Del Mar Ave.. PUBLIC NOTICE t2112 PUIUC NOTtCI
Monee.en, l t lokeon, ..,_tttlo .. • l •••l-n Daffy Pl10( Mar. 20. 27. FIAtltlou• Bualn••• CClfona d•I Mar, CA 921125 Thi• bu1lnH1 11 con-,._.,Hou• 1 ....._.. ,......_ MOll1 None. 8UllMARY Of' ...... - -..... AJH. 3, 10. 1999 fl821 Flc tltlou• aualnoH .. This bu11ne11 I• con-Fletltloua l ualnoH ducttd by: an &ncstllldual ..... t
A811r,NTC luff• • d p Name atatoinont Name ltatemenl ducted by: 1n lndlvldum Name l'*temenl Have you stantd doing N....-••••...-. COWM. n ROPOllD The tollow1ng pw10n1 we PUBLIC NOTICI Ht_~~tem.nt The lollOwlng pwson1 111 Have you ttarttd doing Th• lollowing peBOnl 111 butlne11 yet? No T1'le ~ pet90ft9 .,. ORDINANCI dOlna bullnt1t at: The ....... ..,..""' l*IOnS 111• doing bu1lnt11 u : bu1lnn1 yet? No doing bu9inn1 u : Susan T. l'omauewll dOlnG bue1neM u : U!'O~OY OADINANCI! CITY OP J3 -PRODUCTIONS, 431 P1otltloue lu.ineH doing butlnelt .. : E .f H Ent«pris,1, 1555 Suzanne F. Stelnbroner Nanny's Attlc, 1IS303 ML Thl1 ttatement wu filed Ctfillled Tr.. s.mc ... ~ amend• the CoeCa CO&TA M•IA 20th St., Cocta MtH, CA Nam. lt.tement Callfomla Elcpreaa Packag. Meaa Verde Dr~ Ea1t 126E, Thia 1tat1ment w11 flt.cl Nimbus St., Fountain Val· with !tie County Clerk of 3,.2 W. CattOf S= MIM Municipal Code u A PROPOSED ORDI· 92827 The followlng pttaont are Ing, 941 Newhall, Co1ta Costa Meta, CA 921128 wllll the County Clerk of ley, CA 82708 Ofange County on S.17·H $anta Ma, califOfnla f0119W1: amenest Table 13-NANCI! It 1Che4Uled for J1t0n Aandah John1on, doing bullnn1 •: Meu, OA 92W Edward J. 1iar111nd11 Ofang1 County on 3·10<98 Katen Slanton. 18303 ;Mt. 19988752519 CM• Curr. 27855 Naf·
30 of 8«:tJon 13-30. 1 , .. mdoptloo at the regular City 431 20th St., Colla Mua, LIFETIME !XTEAIORS, Donald Hoyt: 2049 Federal 1555 Mesa V1td1 Or. Easi 11188751711 Nlmbua S1., fountain Val· Dally PUot Mar. 20 27 rclso, Minion vi.Jo, caJI. ii ....... ~ 3 M Council mee\lng ol Aprn ff. CA 821127 8912 t.wrenc:. Ave-. Wiit· Av•·· Costa Men. CA 128E Colla Meta CA D It Pll M 11 3 20 ley, CA 92708 ' ' lomla 12691 pe 1 .._ ..... , 1 •1 t• 1998'. btlf\9 Ordinance ea.: Jonalhon Lo, 207 Spring· mlnlltt, CA 921163 12827 9262S ' 1 Y 01 arc 1 • • Thl1 bu1ln111 Is con-Apr. 3• lO, 1998 Ft15 Thia bu1lnesa 11 coll-
gardlng epeclal land UH 10, r•~lng Section 12-41 VleW, ll'Vihl, CA 12620 Wllllam Phllllp Thlebt rt, David Loyd, 28 Serna. Thi• bu11n111 ts con-27• April 3, 1998 F903 ducted by: an Individual PUBLIC NOTICE ducted by: an lndivl<fual
r1gulatlon1, adul1 bu1I· of the Cotta MeN Munlcl-John Woodworth McCray, 8912 Lawrenc• Ave., W11t· Rancho Santa Margarita, ducted by: an lndlvldual PUBLIC NOTICE Have you ttar1ed doing Have you 1ta111d doing netMlf amend• Chapter N I* Code to prohibit b1fbe. Jf., 2701 Circle Drive, New-minster. CA 921183 CA 92988 Have you started doing bUllnets yet? No '1otltlou• aualne11 bualnell yet? No
of TIU• I providing for II-c:tllnQ In City pllk1. port 8each, CA 92663 Tlna Marie Thlebert, 8912 Thi• bu1lnea1 11 con-bu1ine11 yet? No Flc tllloua Bualne11 Katen Stanton Name Statemen t Chtit CUfr
centinq and regulation of TH£ MOTION to giv. Of· This bu1lnH1 11 con-Lawrence Ave.. Wiii· d\ltttd t>y: co-par1n1r1 Edward J. Harnandu. Nam• a tatamenl Thi• 1tatement w11 flied The toltowlng perlOnl are This 11aternem wu flltcl adutt butMMiff; repealt dlnance H-10 first raldlno ducted by: a general part· mintier, CA 92883 Hive you started doing M.D. The lollowlng persons are with Ille County Clefk ol doing bullneH u : With the County Cle<k Of
1ec1lone Inconsistent ther• Canted by the lollowlng roll nerthlp Thia buelnHI II con-b4itlnett.lcll7 No This statement WIS filed doing bullntll H : Orange County on 3-10·98 STUDIO 33 DESIGN CON· Orange County on S.1S.H
with· and dedar" the UI call vote: COUNCIL Have you started doing ducted by: hUtband and ~naldta:v1 filed with the County Clerk ol Alt«nallvH In Wood, 1129 t9981151709 CEPTS, 711 W. 17tll A·1, 1N887SU4e
' lt'9f f • M •Mae R 1 c AYE g 1 bulines1 yet? V", Feb. 14 wile with'~·~~ I Orange County on 2-02·98 Terminal Way 123. Colla Daily Pilot March 13, 20, Cotta Me,., CA 921127 Dally P11ol M111. 20, '17, ~ FULL'°Ti-xr of tM Of· Monah•!'• lrlckaon, 1.:, w. McCray, Jr. ~.11':'ed doing <>fang• County On ,_1().;IS 1HH747527 ~:~;~ ~t~urka 11856 27, April 3, 1998 F'901 2~:~c:ve ~r~~~o~: Apt. 3, 10, 1998 f92•
dlf9l08 may be raad In the ::u':l-H08Ela Hone. Th.I• 1tat11Mnt wa• lllld WIJllam P. Thlet>ert t NH751713 1~a%P~:;•b. 27• M~7~· Marahall ·sL, curver City, PUBLIC NOTICE guna Nlgutl, CA 9211n' PUBLIC NOTICE ~ a.t< .. omc.. 77 Fair I uffa and with the County Clerk ol This llatemenc wu filed Dally Pilot March 1:,. 20, • • CA 90230 Thi• buslneu 11 con-•---------
D<IW, Cotta Meaa. Cowan. Ofange County on 3-1().08 with the Cow\ty Clerk ol 27 Afxll 3 HIN F!IOO PUBLIC NOTICE Tt111 bu1ln111 ts con-Fictitious Buslne11 ducted by: an lndi111dual Fictitious 8u...,.._
UllY T. 111.LIOTT, THE FULL TEXT ol lhe Of· 1"81751712 Orange County on 2-2•·96 ' ' ducted by: an Individual Name Statement H1v1 you 11a11ed doing Name ltatoment DeJMltW Cltr C1ertl dlnance may be read In the Dally Pilot March 13, 20. 1ff88750005 PUBLIC NOTICE Fictitious Buslne11 Have you started doing The tollowlng persons 111 bu11nn1 yet? YH, 1-98 The lollowlng ~ .,,
Published New~rt City Clerk's Otfrce, n Fair 27, Ap<U 3 1998 Fll04 D.Uy Pilot Feb. 27, Mar. IS, Flctltl us B al ea Name Statement bu1ln111 yet? No doing buslnes1 u : Monica M. Gia.II ~olC~~~~ 2903 Drive Cotta M.sa • 13 20 1998 F874 ° u n • The lollowlng peftont are Patrick F. Kachurka KETILEY MEDIA GROUP, Thi• statement WU filed •
Beach-Coata M... Dally MMv T ELLIOTT PUBLIC NOTICE ' PU• ILIC NOTICE Name Statement doing buslneu u · Thi• 1t111men1 was ftled 20271 s.w. Birch #200, with the County Clerk or N. Bak., 51 .. Costa Mela.
Pilot Marcil 20, 1998 F930 D .., CU ·ct k • The foUowlng PlflON are MINI-MAILERS INC 17222 w1111 the County c11r11 ol Newpott eeacti, CA 92660 Orange County on 3-11·98 CA. 92626
Pu.Uc NOTICE •l"'•ir 1 er NOTICE CW doing bullnns at: Armttrong lrvl,;e CA Orange County on 2·24·96 Richard M. Kenley 20271 19180752517 ZeUI Peleuses, 2903 N. Publlt hed Newport APPLICATION TO floUtloua Buatnesa EXECUTIVE TRANSPOR· 92614•5720 ' ' 19988741990 S.W. Birch #200, Newport Daily P~ot Mw. 20, 27, Baker St., Costa M .... CA.
IUllllARY OP Beach.C01t1 Meta Dally llELL ALCOHOLIC Na~ Statement TATION, 1691 Meta Dr .. p. Mini-Mailers tn<:<M'porated Dally Pilot Feb 27 Mar IS Beach, CA 92660 Apt 3 10 1998 F9HS 921126 lltROPOll!D Piiot Maren 20, 1998 f934 BEVERAGES Th• foltoWlng Dlf90nl at• 1, Santa Ana Heights. CA (CA) 17222 Almatrong Ir: 13 20 1998 . • Fas9 This bu1lneu la con-. • • Thi• bu11ne11 11 c~ o f Filing dolno bu1lne11 u : 112101 vine. CA 9261'·5720 • • • ducted by: an Individual PUBLIC NOTICE ducted b)': an Individual
ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE ;~~Uon· AM!RICAN EAOL.E BUILD-Fuzlah Alnun Anne Mil· This buslneu 1, con· PUBLIC NOTICE Have you started doing Ha~• you 1tarted doing • CITYOP MA.A 18 199e ERS. 11438 Brookhutlt St, stead, 1691 Mesa Or., P·1 , ducted by~ a corporation business yet? Yes. 1·1·98 Flctltlou a Bualn••• txn•ne11 yet? No
COITA MIU SUMMARY OF To Whom It Ma Concern· Qarden Grove, CA 92840 Santa Ana Heights, CA Have you atal1ed dOl"ll f1ot1Uo~ Bualneaa Richard M. Kellley Name Statement Zeus Pei.uses
A PR9 POSEO ORDI-ADOPTED ORDINANCE The Name(s) ~I the AP. Frank Ma11ton Thompson, 92707 buslneH yet? vu. 1988 Ham• Staitement This statement was tiled The loUowlng persons are This 1ta1~ment ~~
NANCE la IChedulod for CITY OF pUcant(t) ls/are· 11'38 Brookhutll St., Oat· Thi• bu1ln111 11 con· Mini-Maller• Incorporated Th• followlnq persons are wilh lh• County Clerk ol doing buslMH 11: with the ounty o
adoption al the regular City COITA MESA IVES ANA MARiA den Gr0\19, CA 921140 ducted by: an Individual Emma Happ, Controller: doing buslne11 aa: Orange County on 3·10-98 SCHROEDER ENTER· Orange County on 3-1T-H Counc11 mMtlng ol AprU If, ORDINANCE 98·7 11 IVES KEVIN Nathl• JoaM Thompson, Have you started doing CFO OMNIHEALT~ CENTER 11988751898 PRISES, •500 Campus Or., 191887152503
19H, being Ofdlnance ea-IChedultd to be In luU The appllcanlt listed 11'38 8rookhur1t St., Gat· buslneu J.iel? No Thia statement was med 9713 Turlledove Ave ' Dally Pilot March 13 20 Newport Beacti, CA 92660 Dally Pllol Mar. 20, 27, t, adding Sec:Uon 9-331.11 fOfce and effect 30 d1y1 above are applying to the den Grove, CA 92&40 Fuzlah nun Anne Mil· with lhe County Clerk ol Fountain Valley, CA 92708" 27 AprU 3 1998 f:902 Robert A. Schroeder, 145 Apr. 3, 10, 1998 F921
to TlUe t 04 the Costa M ... from 111 adoption on Mwch Department of Alcoholic Thi I buslne11 11 con-1tead Orange County on 2.24.99 Chin C. Chow, D.C .. 460 ' ' Miia Or .. Costa Mesa. CA 1---------Municlpal Cod• to 11tat>-111, 19H, and wu adopted Beverage Conttol lo 1111 al-ducted by: huaband and Thi• 1tat1ment was filed 11988750090 Crestwood L.n .• Walnut, CA PUBLIC NOTICE 92627 PUBLIC NOTICE 11th raOlpfcc.ty with the City by the following roll caU coholk: bevwa 11 at· 260 wife with the County Clerk of 91789 Thi• bu1ln111 11 con-1---------
ol Newport Beach for mu-vole: COUNCIL MEiio BRISTOL s~ COSTA Have you 1tlr1td doing Orange County on 2·26-98 Dally Pilot Feb. 27• Mar. II, This buslneu Is con-Fictitious Bu1lne11 ducted by: 1n Individual Flotltloua Business
sage practitioner'• II· BERS1 AYl!S1 Erlckaon, MESA, CA 9262S bualneu yet? Yes, 2·23-98 19988750422 13• 20• 1998 f 872 ducted by: an Individual Name Stat ement Have you llarted doing N•m• Statemont
Cll'lffl . lome,.. NOl!S1 Mon• FOi th• following ty.'pe of Frank Marston Thompson Dally Pilot March 13, 20, PUBLIC NOTICE Have you started doing The lollowlng persons ere buslne11 yet? Yes, 1·23·98 The following ~sont .,, THE MOTION to give Of· h ABS•NT 8 ft License· 41 ON·SALE This 1tat1ment WH flied 27 April 3 1998 F913 buslne11 yel? No doing business u · Robert Schtoeder doing buslne1s as. dlnance 98-9 first rMdlng an. ., : u • BEER AN.D WINE. EATINO with the County Clerk ol • • Fic titious Bualneaa Chin C. Cllow. D.C. Shepherd Publish.Ing, 2093 ':hl1 1tale1Mnt w11 filed TAlfA, 210 Lille . Lane
carrlld by the lollowlng roll •nd Cowan. PLACE Orange County on 2·24-98 PUBLIC NOTICE N St t t This statement was ftled Santa Ana Ave Cosla with the County Clerk of 1309, N-P<>'1 Beach. CA.
call vo te: COUNCIL Ord~ 98-7 •mend• Publlahed Newport 19988750015 The j:,':W. • ·~~~ .,, with th• County Clerk ol Mesa, CA 92627 ·• Orange County on 3-17-98 92663
MlllaERl1 AYl!l1 Section 12·59 ol the Cotta 81ach-Co1ta Mesa Dally Dally Pilot Feb. 27, Mar. 6, Flctltloua Bualnell doi buslne~ ~ Ofange County on 2·24·98 James T. Stout. Sr., 2093 19988752521 DeniM Michele Mc~.
Monahen, 1Erlo k1on, Meu Mun!Qlf* Code .. Pilot Marett 20, 27, Apfll :f. 13, 20, 1998 F875 Name Statement LC'i. Signatures, 452s-A 19988749197 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Dally Pilot M111 20. 27. ~~ ~U:cl;-'CA ~New-
SOflMn. NOEis None. tabll1hlng an alternate 1998 F929 The f~~'7n'.~ :~sons are Mac Ar1hur Blvd., Newport Oalty Pilot Feb. 27. Mar. 6. Mesa. CA 9~827 Apr. 3. 10, 1998 F918 This bualnn1 It con-
ABllNT1 Buffa and rMmbef tor IN P11k1. Rec-PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE mcistON M.OTORS Beach, CA 92_660 13. 20, 1998 F873 J~!d ~u~:,·~~W:~u:on-PUBLIC NOTICE ducted by: an lnd1vldual
Cowan. rlltlon Facll1Un and Par~· FloUUous aualneH 1901.8 w. 17th 51 .• Santa London Coin Galharles. Have ~ itanld doing Have you Slatted doing
THE FULL TEXT of the°'' Wlyt Comml11lon. Flotltloua Bu1lne11 N•m• Statemont Ana CA 92706 ~ch (C~, 4525NA Mac PUBLIC NOTICE busines~ yet? v .. t1/t/97 F1ct1Uou1 Bu1ln111 business yet? Yes, 1996
dlnance may be read In the THE FUU. TEXT of the or-Name Statement The following pwson11r1 Precision Automotive e!~c~r CA ~2~00 •wport flctltloua Bualne11 James T. Stout, si. Name Statement ~ .. Miehe .. Mceow:4'
C1ty a.tic'• omce 77 Fair dlnance mty be rHd In the Thi foUow1ng pefsons are doing butineH u : Group, Inc., (C~) 7815 E. This 'business Is con Name Staitement This statement was filed Th• lollowing pert?nt are ht ~tatC-nt wCJ k 'ec:
OrfWI, Co11\a M .... • City Cllf1!'1 Office, n Falr doing business H : JT Marketing Concepts, Ralnview Ct .. Anaheim. CA ducted by: a corporation • The foUowlng persons ate wltll the County Clerk of doing butlneH H : 0:.t t ·~tyn~ 3-~7~ II.ARY T . IEUIOTT Drive, Costa Mni. FRESH PRODUCE FOR 2885 FalNI-. Costa Mesa, 92808 . Have you started doing dOing buslneu as: Orange County on 3-10-96 SUPERIOR EXTERIORS, ange Deputr Cl Clerk ' MARY T. ELLIOTT, LESS & GROCERIES. 2800 CA 92627 This bu.11ne11 i1 con-business yer? Yu. 1-1·9& JP'S. 504 So. Ba)'lront 19988751707 2115116 Pelican Way. Uguna 19988752500
tr D•nutv Cl ... Clerk W. Warner Ave .. Santa Ana, J11on Cory Cohen, 2885 ducted by. a corporation. London Coln Galleries 1102 Balboa llland CA Oafly P'lot March 13 20 Niguel. CA 926n Daily P~ot Mat. 20. 27, Publlahed Newport -·• •• CA 92704 Fairview Costa Mesa CA Hive you started doing · 92662 · ' · • Lloyd Thoma• Edwards. Apr 3 10 1998 F923
81ech-C01t11 Meaa Dally ePu ~~h:d M New~oi'lyt Saleem Ahmed Sharifi, 921127 • . butln~ss yet? No '~ii J~~tes~~~~e~a:r~~d John P. Carroll. 1306 27, April 3. 1998 F905 2959e Plflcan Way, Uguna 'Pu' BL. IC NOTICE
PllOt M~ 20, 1998 F933 llc •a •ta a 9811 11th Street, #8, Gar· Travis Blegum, 240 Avo-Pree 1lon Automotive with the County C:lerk ol Santa Nella Terr . Corona PUBLIC NOTICE Niguel, CA 921177
PUBUC NOTICE Pllol March 20, 1998 F931 den Grove. CA 9234-4 cado St., #l', Costa Me11. Group, Inc., Halleh Far· Orange Co nty on 3-l0-98 del Mar c,\ 92625 Thi• business Is con· FlctlUou a Bualnesa PUBLIC NOTICE TunMm A. Sharifi (work· CA 92627 hoomand. Pres. 1998875~700 Thia bu1lne11 11 con-Flcutrou1 Buatn .. s ducted by: an Individual Name Staternont IUIHIARY OF Ing par1nar), 9772 11th This bu1lne11 11 con-Thia atatemen1 was filed ducted by· an lndi"ljual Hama Statement Have you started doing
Flotltloua Bualnen Stteet, Garden Grove. CA ducted by: a general part· with I.he County Clerk ol Dally Pilot March 13, 20. Have you started doing Tile fotlowlng persons are buslneas yet? No The following ~sot11 111 ADOPTU ORDINANCI 92844 nershlp Orange County on 3-16·98 27, A.pru 3, 1996 F907 bualnns et? No dol buslne1t as· Uoyd Tllomas Edward• doing buslne11 as
CITY OF N•me Statement This buslne11 Is con· Have you 1t81ted doing 11188752407 John p Jarroll Ne':port ea 'Terrace This statement w11 ftled Pulmo T11t. 952 Denver
COITA llEIA d~ •::..owing P".•ona are ducted by: co-partners busln111 yet? No Dally Piiot Mar. 20, 27, PUBLIC NOTICE Thi• statement was filed 1691 ·Meta drive: Sanla Witll the County Clerk ol Dr., Costa Meu. CA 926211
OROINANCE 88-8 11 a "\EA;:;~~KS b) Have you started doing J11on Cohen Apr. 3, 10. 1998 F925 Ftctltloua Buslnoaa with the County Clerk ol Ana Heights. CA Orange County on 3-17·98 ~mt'"'ta ~I•. 11~A ~~:' 1Cheduied to be In fUU l • bualnesa yet? No This 1tat1ment was tiled 0 c ty 2 2, 98 Suzanne e Goelet 15520 19989752520 '·· os esa. force and effect 30 dayt MOTHERLODE MARKET· TunlltTI Ahmed Shariff with the County Cletk ol PUBLIC NOTICE Name Statement range oun on · · Rockfield eivd Ste G· 1 • Dally Pilot Mar 20 27 Thi• bualn•11 11 con.
from lta adopClon on March INO, 131181 Newport Ave.. Thia ltalement wat filed Ofange County on ,._17•98 The following persons are 19188750018 vi CA 926111.. · • 1 .b 3 10 llKlll · •F119 ducted by: an lndMdual
111, ''"·and wu adopttd Sulle 1~5. Tustin, Cal. with the County Clerk ol 19988752522 fictitious 8u1lneu doing business as: Dally Piiot Feb. 27, Mar. 6. T~i business 11 coll-ryr. • • Have you •tarted doing
by the ~ roll can 112780 Orange County on 2· 11 ·98 Dally Pilot Mar 20 27 Name Statement ARNEL FINANCIAL. 949 13, 20. 1998 F876 ducted by: an lndivldual PUBLIC NOTICE butlnfft yet? Ves. Febru-COU.NCIL M.... Andf.w E. Sa~•. 13681 99 .... 07 · • • The followlng per1oni are South Coast Driv. Suite · tty 25, 19H vote: Newport Ave., Sui\• 18345, 1 •87-8 Af>r. 3, 10, 1998 F917 dol b 1ne . 1600 Costa Mesa CA PUBLIC NOTICE Heve you •tarted doing Flotltl 1 aualne Kamalinl Apt• BIERS. AYll& Monahan, Tustin. Cal 112780 Dally Pilot Marcil 13, 20, :{ UI II u . 92626 • buslnea yet? No ouS H This statement was ftled
Eriol!Mn. NO••· ...... Elizabeth . Savage 13681 27, April 3, 1998 F914 PUBLIC NOTICE :' N s~o~gves= GIOl'g• L Ar I !Mii F1cUUous Bualn... Suzanne e. Goelet Th~=WI.:= .,. witll the County Cltr1t ol
., •• A•t•NTI •uff• N~ Av•' Sulte 193-i5. PUBLIC NOTICE Flotltlou• Bualne11 Ana:CA. 92703 .• South Coast [;1,'f: .. Sull• Name Staitement :~· t~'c':'ty w~":, doing buslne11 u : Ofange County on 3-09-98
and c....,,, ~hi • ~·192780 1 Name Statement Precision Automotive #600, Costa Mesa, CA d~ 1:~~ :~sons 111 Ofange County on 3-l0.9S TARA, 210 Liiie Lane 19988751585 OROtNANCE _. amendt 1 ut n .. , 1 con-FloUUous au.tneaa Thi following per-aon1 111e Group, Inc., (CA), 7815 E. 92626 yz · 1309, Newport Beach, CA Dally POot Marett 13, 20. ~..:131 of the Costa ctucWd by: • geMfal pwt· Nam• Statement doing buslntll ... Ralrwlew Ct. Anaheim CA. Thi• busln111 11 con-xz x PRODUCTIONS. 19188751708 929113 27 Apnl 3 1998 Faet
.... Uurrlc:lf* Code to.-. ~Ip The fOloWt'Q penons are AMAZON COMpU~R SO-92808 ' ' ducted by an lndiVldutl 1201 El Dofado, Placwltla. Dally Piiot Marcil 13, 20, Denltt Wchele McDowel,i--' ---· -----
quire 'lpplcanta for mat-doing butlneP as: LVTIONS, 2151 Vlfllla, Tut· Thi• bu1ln•H I• COil-Have you ?ltar11td doing ~!28~!ry CoMef 1201 27, April 3. 1998 F906 210 Ube Lane 1309, New· No room letl ~ 0 th ? Newport Sal~ Cvtlnder tin CA 92780 ducted by: a corporation business yet No • port 8each. CA 92663 sage,..._ .............. llcenMt n • move 1• Ima I --Newonri Moham ad Hall Jan Have you ttat\ld doing GIOl'ge L Argyrol El DClfado, Plac.nlla, CA 'Overstocked wr'th Thi• bu1lnH1 Is con-in the garage to pua • wrtt1en exam&n. u ...,. •• ... ,,.. m m • Th11 1tat1m-:'lt WH flied 92870 f ar7 tlon ldmlnlltered by the Sell your extra Beach, CA 921163 '75 Cher~ Vim Dr., P«· Sell your unwanted with the CC>Ylty C1«k ol Tiiis bualn111 11 con-stuff? Thinking of h9Ving a or the c
Colla ....._ Pola 0.1*1· h h Id Jam" K. Goodrich, 111 rft, CA 92 71 Hema th• easy wayl Ofange County on 2-20-118 A call to gatag• sale? A •II to OUS8 0 lmt Loa Ct .• Newporl Mohammad Ahlasham. To place your 1H 88749899 Sell your home Classlll-" Give us a calll c items Beactl, CA 112683 •715 Cherry VIiia Or., Plf· cl llled ad all in d ...... CLASSIFIED cl•H lfl•d c •n Buy tt. Sell tt. Find It. in Classified Todd KHler. 402 40th r11, CA t2571 ~:2 5979c Dally P1101 M111. 20, 21. through c1u1 • · will help 042 • .se7e help Cl•••tned. SVeet. Newport Beach, CA Thi• bu1lne11 11 con-• • A.pr. 3. to. 1998 F936 842·5078 842·5878
41 FRIDAY. MARCH 20, 1998
COSTA MESA 2624 NEWPORT ROOMS 2708 nmusnw 2780 HEA1TH. !MPLOYMBNT BMP10YMl!NT EMPLOYMENT MUCllANDI§! APPUUCIS IOI
BEi.CB 2619 FITNESS 3000 5530 5530 5530 • W••h•r. e1rvtr :-a
1 • r D • t • • h • ~ Newport Mol~ht'• •• ..,...,,.. Ave. CM refrl~ratot auo/el
Cetteeee w/Patlo ale Cen--!_'!:• ownno/ baktth, ,!~ t6()0.;16,0001f, Or .. t LOH Welght-lncrH.. --~~_! c* -w -·-~!~eP9ltl'. ,"rr•"!l .. 1 G1ont~~,!!!. 0.~'1!!'e/PncTe •.,_Q..,_• •"lO >Qnt oondl 141 H4• ,,.., Mech. Oathedtal •-·· ..,.v. sm ._... .. o location fonoed, anergv and tu~r••• __ ..,_ ... .. ... ....,, t111 • ,.. .. --· .. _.. ana1 v~ vv
cella, frig. Move-In ~~r,'-to• 2s_::,c~• a1kfCH"luay7U-eo33 roti..up1, nloh celllng1. appellte. wlTRIM Part time & Full tlm• T, Ptetchoo& lnflTOd prote,,od. •t/Hr. •••••••••-----~-----
lpeclall H75+HOO Cathedral colllng : .85psl 714·548·8531 FAST·H•rbal+ Sfl.9' Potltlon• avail. 8011· Tutor Tim• Chlld Car• PIHH call en .... ooe
depQ<. a.a.a4a1 lt•50mo 8"0.503<4 VACATION 30-dav 1upp1v. Ing experience helpful. In N.a .• "ss-2e72 or P'ax RH: 875-4141
1"m Studio w/bac:kyd 2722 <71•> 1"24221 Applv In l*•on, Wed. ••·OO hr. to •l•r11 inauranc• 111 112 18th $t ..... ant oce.,, vi-l!NTALS thru Sun. 10am·2pm • Lake Malnt ~hanl-•
(do not dllturb th• PenlhOUH 2BD/28A BUSINESS a •••be>• Y•oht Club-cally lflcll'ned. Wiii R••ponM cetdl
tenant•) S&50Jmo 1nct1 w/loft. nowty r•mod· o. ~ t * ftN·•ucE EMP"OYMENT 1aoi· ••~•Id• Dr., Train. Good OMV. BJ. we are looklng for utllitle• 71•15152·8319 eled kitchen, vaulted :Ono1°uT: 1~~'bondo IM.. ,,.. C.re..-dol Mar llngual a +. Call local rep• to tell our
celling, drybar, frplc, B'/ the month. '* * * * * 714'·194-749& group Health I Lie aar 1 a• Veru Cloan t I rt 1pa l fl ., enn • cou '· • 7t4-640.5et3 EMPL0-.111NT EMPLOV'llreN'T Bunnr. Photo Starr Hda. 75'6> ret year garage, no pot. upper PoOf, gym. 12495.00 •nuo '"'._ ,....... 0 oomm111lon. C-11
nHtoccs1so+S4'00 (71•) 81a.aoo3 BUSINESS 5530 5•30 ,,,_,..,,, r"tera 1.eoo.ea1°11~0 714-241.easo •aNT·•re TO WI CrNte Ea&let Magic! --.,,,.._-..,,.,,..-..,,-.,,,,....~1 Newlw Renovated _. ~ OPPORTITNITY eoo.229-714'7 •137
•Coela Mou'• Beat Spaclou1 18r & 28r SHAIE 2724 2904 DETECTIVE·PRIVATE Mgr'• Mil needed 20.
Jr·1br & 1br, flto 2br From Snl5. No Pett. ··1&1-=-r• lrweatlgator Tralnoet 215htt. Computer 1klll1 1 ba, quiet gited Nowport Bar Torraco f:r'.~11 w c nee Faahlon laland comm, pool, tennl1, 1 8 9 1 M e •I Dr Ive 2 adr • 2 Ba C.D.M. ••• .. •-• • Good ao... all •O • Id C 720.95515
e .. v acc•ll to 714-MMalS W/D,Lg• deck,W/I Pl•u• b• w•ru ol out Administrative Assistant 714•239•1592' yro o. 1reeway/beach/ma111. cloaet, S700mo, of area co-;.,'panlH. DOCKASaT'S PIT D emon1tr ater l/
714-557.0075 •On Th• W•t•r• 876-527=-873-708" Check with tho local Entry·l•v•l p<>aldon vet Integral lo the fut· Boat rentalt/ .. IH co. Store merchandlaera
Spaclou• 1. 2 & 2br a tlful t d ~ environment Of this elccltlng aottwart 1 .. ka neat, friendly In areL Car nKellary E'tldo Pepperwood +den Apt1. Garage, ••u ga • Better Bu•ln••• deW!<>Pfnent company. AtQulrt• a poraon doc:k aHt'• to clean/ exp. pref but not req.
Apll. 1 Ltg Br+ Ba, f /d hk Townhome. very cln, Bureau before you = atlf·atarttr, eflldenll or~lzed and malnt '--··-. doc:k1, lmmed opening• call " • pet I 0 . s 6 9 5 . m 0 p, some w ·UP•· pvt bath, female pre'f send any monev for de bla, Rt1"""""-'bffltte1 ncli:ide phones, ......... 182 908-41888 C0""957 i.133 No pelt. 631-7813 Pool, private beach & no/1mkg. CM l!SOOmo laes or tervlce1. Read t rrangemehta,eustomer contact, SQmO show areaa. AHi. w/ .,,,...,.,....,,·.-=-,,-.---......,,..,,,,,......001 mt 'V
mar In•· W a I k 10 + 1/2 utll. 1548-8787 and underttand any word proceltlng and general office ckJtloe. cusl Hrv. Boat exp P 0 ST A L J 0 B S ~M8~ST Nwprt Hght• Ar•• Balboa Island! $1850 contract• before you Excellent communication akllla, knowledao of helpful. Appl'/ In per· St2.88·S17.21 / HR. SOAU Lrg 3br 2ba, pvt bale to $2800 780.0818 E'Bluff nHr CdM H.S. sign. Shop around tor MS Office '97, ability to mulU·task and fOllow eon 2-4pm /MWF. FOR APP/EXAM INFO, _
277 10th Place Share Large 2br 2ba 1 through on detallt a muat. Please send 2001 W. CoHt !1wy CALL 1·800-e28-0818 Z202S.. ..... IL s 1295. 540-0130 Rent ala Av•ll•ble Apt. S525mo utll Incl, ra ... forences Fff' Caahlor & Fff EXT 9340. 8AM·9PM, S.. AM. CA '2107
Studio, 1 & 2 Bdrms avall now. 844·9124 HBB not MLM 804Mt HardWare/IOCllt aal•• 7 DAYS. '-'od•~CA"* Call Pam at 875-4630 , • • --.,,,---.~,,...,,,,.----• .,. _______ ..
HUNTINGTON Agent No Fee I! aide CM Female to profit. 10·20K/mo. Sm. person WHkenda a Retail· P(f'
· 1hr house, pool & apa l nve1tment req'd. must. Apply at Invitation Store In 1~~~~~~-BEACH 2640 S470mo + 1/2 utilllles 1·800·995·079e x5630 1275 S. Brlatol CM c.M. Frlendl'J, Artlcu· •BEST PRICES
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil•••••••• 722·8520 no/alc/1mkg Snlckera Candy Route late & Uterate. S7hr to $$PAID$$
1 Mii• to a .. oh MJSCELIANEOUS NB Pvt Home. Lg br/pvt 50 locations. $800-ARCHITECfURE ARE YOU •tart. 714.557.7055 •ontilt .. 111.llft-
1 Br 1Ba enclosed gar, RENTALS ba, kitch, lndry. Inc $1200 per month In· FRIENDLY, Troph~ Co. tHk• FIT •1111iq111111>11CX1an
tp, laundry lac, deck, ull/cble. No amkg/pets come. Coal $2995. Awanl W'tnning architcaural firm has unique RESPONSIBLE Store Mgr. PhonH, • ..m-a,. 81 tt1 No/pet $730 498-8027 $450/mo 722·9755 Hurry thia won't last! opportunirics fur you to work on some of chc llllng & cu11omer FRED STEGMANN
1·800-963·6123 most s~· nificant commercial, entcnainment, & CARING? Hrvlce. 714·648-3141 ANTI UES We provide 27421 .. ••••••• rettll, m ti-family, and mixed-use projcctJ in the Transportation Services
1• western U.S. We arc looking for individuals with to our elderly and
NEWPORT ROOMS 2706 STORAGE
BEACH 2 6 6 9 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil NB W.Oceanfront/22nd. E'alde CM at 17th. ANNOUNCEMENTS
Pvt gar, easy acce11,1,.•••••••• Private rm, unfurn, 1hr clean & secur1 $125 •• * Big Canyon *
1 ·2·3 Bedroom Apts
near Fashion laland
2-car gar, fp, w/d hk·
up1. central air, Alarm
sys, Goll course views
$1650-$2995 644·0509
bath, utla pd, n/smkg, 8x8x18 714-497·9131 kitchenette, laundry. 1---------1 block to N.B. Pier •'aide CM Off 1treet ANNOUNCEMENTS
$510/mo. Call Sam at parking apace, uncov-2920
714-675-4808 ered, 15'X20' S100mo
(Between 9AM·5PM) pvt propelfy 49M~131 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Lawrence E. Klein M.D .. ----------------1••••••••• Inc. Gynecology and NEWPORT NEWPORT COMMERCIAL Menopause Manage·
Br"CH 2669 B~11cH 2669 ment, announces the ==i;n~~~~~~~~~&On~~~~~~~ REAL ESTATE relocation of his office
SKl.llOEO WJlllll
NIWPORI' NOlllll .AMlll'MINl'S
lrg 1 & 2 bdrm opts. 2 & 3 bdnn twnhses
w/FP, F?.OSS thru kitchens, brkfst bar & lrg_ dsts. Small ~ weloome. Prices start at $986.
Limited ofb dable housi_ng ~s available.
Cdl for details 720-87 64.
•JftC:
IRVINE APARTMENT CDMMUNfTIE5
A ltlGHCR ST ANOARO OF LIVI NG
ACOUSTIC
CEIUNGS 3408
South Coaat Drywall
Acous remvl/cuat text
Water Damage Repair
Beat In Ouallty & Price
L550017 444-8888
ADDITIONS
REMODEUNG 3410
REBUILD or REMODEL
•Home Improvements
eOffict Add1Uons
•Rea1onably Priced
•Local Co. #636318 •Stephenson Assoc:.
Uve-ln chlld care.
European Au Palrs,
ffliliSh SpeaRl1li.
18-26 yrs .. leqa!.
culturally enrichl1li.
flexible In-home
child care.
45 hrsAvl2.
C•ll 714-844-5485 --------CLEANING
-CAB-IN_E_T_S--3-49-0 SER\'ICES
Advanced Wood1y1tem1
-Custom Cabinetry·
Kitchen • B1th • Doora
Moldlnga • Mantel•
L691650 714-998-8870
CARP.i.T
CLEANING
CARPBT CLONING o.c. 8TUllWAY 1~ Ouaranteedl
(IOO) 3f5..8725
3548
COMPUTER ~tlP1
BUSINESS OFFICE
FOR RENT 2769
to 400 Newport Center
Drive, Suite 409 New·
port Beach. CA 92660
714-729-4300 Effective
March 18, 1998
Sm•ll Office Space HEALTH &
In Fountain Valley for FITNESS 3000
rent. 714-884-1 5 8 3 '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ******* II
INDUSTRIAL 2788
DBCK
COATING
LOSEWEIQHT
Through • aale and
scientific nutritional
plan 714·557·2721
demonstrated apcirude in conceprual design, disabled community.
design development, and/or development of
construction documents.
• PROJECT ARCHITECT lie JOB CAPTAIN
Exp. in Type I rommcrcial const., office, mixed·
use and cnteminm~nt projccu. and exp. in Type
V con.st., muJci-fimily, residential. Positions
require AutoCAD proficiency w/abiliry to
coordinate project, draft documents, and con.st.
admin. duties.
ATI'N1JM
•PROJECT ARCHITECI1JRAL DESIGNER
Exp. on a wide variety of residential, commercial,
resort and/or mixed-use projects. AutoCAD exp.
preferred. ATI'N1 YS
• PROJECT LAND PIANNER
Exp. on a wide variety of residential, commercial,
resort and/or mixed-use projccu. Archi~al or
landscape architcaurc background preferred.
ATfN:KN
Please send or f.u resume to Mc.Luand, Vuqutt
lie Partncn, 695 Town C:Cnter Drive, Suite 300,
Costa Mesa, CA 92626 www.mw-arc.hitcm,com
Fax: 714.549.5297 EOE
• 111 • I 111 11111 I' 1111'
./~$7~. 5250'¥" ~bonus.
./ Part-time & Full-time
employment
./ Paid training while
~)'OW'
./ Friendly. team-oriented
work environment
21 years ol ap or older
Valid CA Driver's License
and w:ellent drMng
record required
For more
lnlormatfon
Call Neil
857-7950
lfllllll •••••n •••~•<••· ••c.
All Kinda of Job• For
All Kinda of People.
ClaHlflod.
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES 5533 ........
Pleaae be aware that
the lilllng1 In thl1 cat·
egory may require you
to call a 900 number
In which there Is a
chvge pvr minute.
EMPLOYMENT
WANTED 5535
A Woman of lntegrll'JI
Nurae,Homemaker.
Excel cook.Own car.
Skllled In MHaag•
therapy. 12 Yrs.exp.·
Local refs. Hrtv or 24 --------
hr 1hllt1.C ALL
714-948·3735
Thinking of having a
garage tale?
Give us a calll
CLASSIFIED
842·5878
SELL
your home
th.rough classified
I auv FURNtTUR8
Antique•, All Pt~a
1 po or hou .. rwi cuh
e-ld (!14) n1-e133
Pluate a 11i ft, ..,_,
l'('•tchlng gt... tdp
c orree tbl, fl"'klDQ
chair•. dlnl"""''"' tbl a btJftet, 2yr otd W.tt'IW/
dryer, Ford l1pwe
ttlc:k, 13k ml. S3SOO
obo. 71 ... 1'~434
Whlteweah dlntng ~
•I" round 1o11g1 .. u .. MoP;-1111
chalrt 1375 ·~
MERCHANDISE
MISC. 608
Water Your Plants·
Twiet A Ytarl _:
Space age gro~ng
medium replace•
meH'/ aoU. Thi• grow-
ing medium abtort>a
& hold• water IU!tr a
aponge. 100 % monoy
back guarantee. Send
S5 .00 (check or
mon•v order) for a
four quart aupply to:
Oualit'I lmpr•Hlona,
P.O. Box 838,
Central Square
New York, 13038
WANTED
TO BUY 8019
I BUY ALL PIANOS
AntlquH.qual. furniture
1 pc or houa•ful cuh
paid (714) 957-8133
Old Coln• Gold SllVor
FrankUn Mint. Steriing
Old watch" & jewelry
WHtce>nt CM l42-M4a
Rl!CORDSITOP i
Jau, R&B. Soul, Rock
Etc ... 50'1 & IO'a Mike
M5-'750S
Sell your unwanted
Items tho ouy wayt
To place your
classlftod ad call
e42.ae?e.
•
C!RAMIC
TILES
"-tl:J ......... -·~ Aooroudno & ~·n Uto130 ·Deen of Th
~or 14N52t
Buy tL ... It. FJncl H. Ca...ffled.
. """""oa <XAll ~
DIYWAU.
SUVICI
Call 642-567'.8.
Put a few wor:as
to work for yoa.
ICMI =-~Rf 4189 CBEVROL!T 9045 INPINITI 901511r1i1U9 1:::;;;;~~~:;:~~::~~~iii~~~ '80Suburban ... ~30 ~ ---~--~-------------------=-
1 100 Home Gar•e• 8alel On Ford Rd.
btwn MllCMhuf & San
Miguel on Sa.I Aprll 4, 1198 la-12pm
314 T~~~·::':.~.... Bordaau>i, tan .. athet, By CHAR1.ES GOREN
Tow Hitch. flowmaat--phone, awvoof, CO/ with OMAR SHARIF ... cue, premium aound, nd •.aa...oa...o.au HIDC',.u exhaust, n-radiator, ch r om• w h • e I a, • '"""'""'" _, •tarter, rotorlbf'akH, 1 o ad • o, I o w m I
red/White with Ian ve.. (3PJ8108) 122.lHS lour Interior, "Barn BAU•ft LOTU8 MAU 1llE MOST or rr
Ooora" In rear, COSTAMBSA 104,000 well malrl-(714, M2·7700 Bod> vulnerable. South deals.
whole1ale . talned mllH. Auna ----------1
Sat Sun 9-4pm great, good cond. JAGUAR 9105
1816 Santiago Or. 16800 obo
(Cto11 St.) lrvlne A.,.. l~~~(7_,1_4)~8.4;;..;.;;~;,.;;::8~13;:;___
•'•luff Sun only 3/22 '83 C•prloe ClaHlo ::;.;.:.;;.::.~---.....;:.i 1·2pm. 12' Zodiac 5.0L, VS, air, pwr ,a; il!••-ONl"a Matte II OT with 40hp wlnd/lka, Ult, crulH,
'87420 Q
Blue , grey Interior,
NORTH • 751
0 843 o K J 10 95
•91 EAST . ill Y • Glo5'-' a """1, engine antique oak A M /F M · e a • • =0 8080 I .. de board, & much 9'3VI R1 74 16,993
mot I 2833 C S Coat• Mes• • • atalpa 1 Llnooln·Meroury
claHlc cat. very good
condition, only 43k WEST
m ll ea . ~X T 895) • J 14
BAUa•sR L~TUS Q K 10 7 6 2
COSTA Ml!SA ¢ 7 l
• K 10 9 o J9 o A8 42
.. J 10 7 6 • .:; ..... De80rambler Moving S•I• Saturday (714) 540·5830
t.1<••1•.•• Cod• 04 e-2Gm 2969 auedada, •e4 XJa
•" •J14-282·2eo.. !~1 l~o~o~h to~•:,l·C-H--RY_S_LE_R __ 9_0_5_0 Black, barley leather,
"' everything. * *** l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil mool)lool, lo m.llH, 1• ••lc cl edition war·
Moving S•lel '92 Town• Country r an ty. ( 8 9 8 o e 8)
714-942·7700 • 843
JGARAGB SALES
so um
•AQ6 3 o AQ5
0 Q6
•AKQ5
Sat.Only 81m· 12pm 3.3, lthr, ABS, pwr S22,995
417 Emet1on St , .. ,, air, Ult, rear air, BAUl!R LOTUS The bidding:
Neat Tualln & 21st roof rack, loaded 714-e42·7700 SOl1fH WEST NORTH EAST #3BCY258 $8,992 1---------I
iALJSOA ••t 3/21 8·2pm Coat• M••• JEEP 9110 l• hll '!StJlND 6106 Furniture, clothing. Llncoln·M•rcury 2NT hll
&iiiliiiiiiiiliiiiii•iiiiiiliiiiiil ::~~~~-~~e:~: and '714• 540-SB30 •e4 GRAND CHeRo: ... .....
Bar +• atool• aso, 2015 Port Ram1gate fODn KEE Opening lead: Six of Q 2 entertainment S100 a 0 ao.u 9075 4x4 , VB, AT, Tow al· The more entries you have, the
O· ·& $IOO oak, daybed • t • n 1 YI ·M •' 2 1 loys, lull power easier and more productive it is to
'"125, TV 125, Reeorda 1736 Pon Margate •ea Ford T ·Blrd new <3HJHn9) *14•550 move from hand to ttand while ·• :50 c enta, 1peaker1 Furniture In superb eng/trans, Ure1 brakes Lexus OF cJeveloping tricks. But when one a...110 6 mlie ... 1509 cond & much morel $2SOO. obo 54().6218 Wl!STMINSTER
• Abalone Pl. Utile 111. p 714-8e2.eeoe hand is powerful. the other usually is '< Sat only lam lease leave meisaoe 1---------short of entries, so it behooves you to
'84 ESCORT LX LEXUS 9115 make the best use of those that are , ... warew'• apeolalty TRANSPORTATION 9k ml AT, A/C, caas.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii available.
a Shop 313 Marin• llke new. •e2 LEXUS SC 400 With only three suits secur~I
:c.iAve. Balboa Island (130873) S8..i9SO sto......A in 8 balanced, 23.ri:"t h , ,t~1 ... 75-441U Cloalng LEXU5 OF Red, all opls, bu·t-tu•, S ~-...t u •
Bualneu • 32 yra POWER BOATS WESTMINSTER 85K mlle1, S24,000 oulh u.u an opening bi problem.
18e5·1 S.88. store 714-892-6906 714-723·5815
20 Pall
3NT Pall
Tho decision to i&nore the lack of
aoother low cliamood and plan ao
auction 1bowio1 a balanced band
with alJ suits ltopped WU emfneotly
sensible, and North hid u little as
the law will allow for the raise to
game.
West led a low heart, and dedam
cap<ured East's jade with the queen.
Since the defenders were certain to
hold up the ace of diamonds for at
leu one round, declarer could count
only seven fast winners. The only
place to develop two more lay in
spades, and to accomplish that
declarer would need to find the suit
brealting evenly and the king on side
-not all that promising, but any
chance is better than none at all.
1be first problem was an entry to
dummy, so South led a low diamond
and 'finessed' the nine, to tempt a
defender to talte the ace. East would
have none or that. but at least declar-
er was in dummy for the spade
finesse. When that suocecded. declar-
er continued with a low spade from
hand. setting up the possibility for a
later cndplay. East won and returned
a ·bean . Declarer ducked, woo the
cootinuation and then lajd down the
ace of spades. When both defenders
were It.ind enoulth to follow, declar·
a's long spade Oecame the fulfilling
trick.
fbctures, fan dl1play 7012 •e4 Mu•t•ng '85 OS 300
_ e~ea gl~•• •h•:ve~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cobra convertible, 1F~flll eopdtl.on .... L0ex9u4s 5ce1 r0· MERCEDES 9130 TOYOTA 92 10 MISC. AUTO 9 245
• ao co on ve ve $S•v• Money$ buy 5spd, lthr, CD, pwr ,,. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii moire, needlepoint Don•t•d Boatal wlnd/lks, A/C, AM/FM S27,988 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii £~VU, pearl cotton, •21' We sterner ikl eass, (158602) LEXUS '87 White 560SL w/ '97 CAMRY LE Gold/Chrome/Sliver ::and other n~ Pa· boat S3SOO •2l ' Bay· MUST SEE MISSION VIEJO Oray Leather Int. Xlnl Only 15000 ml. New Plallng system for 8;'.tetneyan a OMedecla liner Trophy 1987 Cost• Mea• 1-(888)·88·Ll!XU8 Cond. Phone, 2·Tops, Lexus trade In . autos, jwlry. etc. Sac.
•·yarn, beads, colleetlon 58400 •2e· Bayllner Llnooln·Mercury ,95 sc 300 s11,ooo 720-80t3 (042056) $17,587 5495. 909-353·2959
nHdl• point newa Sunbrldge 1990 (714) 540-5930 Rally Red, mint condl·, LEXUS ~~magazine . Patio 114,500 •31 . Untnlte1-.....:...-..;...;__;....;...;__.;._ lion all service 88 Station Wagon 1 MISSION VIEJO ~e Sale • thing• 1873 118,000 •38' ~:: ~.4~!X~!ny reeo'rda. (029508) NB owner, 100k ml, 1·888·88·LEXUS AUTOS
"'''°"'th• back room, S portlleher 1980 opti o n• to 111 1 $23977 blk/b lk, grt eondl WANTED
l>"lnolud• 2 b lk••· 138,000 YFC, Inc. (C49280) SAVE . LEXUS $11,900 760-6263 VO"v"WAGEN 9235 Y reoorda, bNdl, anti-Bo•t Don•tlona LEXUS MISSION VIEJO •e1 1eOE ww iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil !:~:::uc!°:':!7i 714-875.0588 MISSION VIEJO 1·(888)88-LBXUS Whit e , lthr, mnrf, ,58 BaJa Rag-top-snrf, ~~
" 1·(888Hl8·LEXUS •e8 450LX like new, lmmae (2UNK812) centerlines rims, off-rd O~G"-... ·---------1 MARINE SUPS SUV. Black, loaded, L~1'2u:58F shocks. suspension, o_-~,,..~ ~ORONA BONDA 9085 ~!~.5~ 100,~0-:~~ WESTMINSTER new brakes/front end, ~ ~~ ----~ -DEL MAit 6122 DOCKS 7022 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii1----;;.;..;..;--. _ __.~..;..; (714) 8e2-a808 e1c .. s2000. 549.1 101
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 8 •ea LS 400 --------'87 Bug New engine. MOVING SAL• 3-21 50' Mooring off NB 08p9~.;;~~dN ~J1~~ Full option. Lexus cer· '82 190E 2 .e Great body & I 1lerlor, Penn near Pavlllon t If 18 d · ( O 4 4 O 7 5 ) CO, phone, leather. SSK obo. Drive lodayl Furn, 880 &AJggage · runs xlnt S5000 $40,977 moonrool, Ilka new. womena 'clot h••·' Dinghy 18K e31-6895 631-6348 650-2766 ... 5 •s 300 673-6691 or 642·6691 °' 582-491.e684 .. .. (949474) $17,550 -pictures, aurfboard, •es Civic ll!JC Coupe BI a c k/b I a e k, 3 2 k Ll!XUS OF f 441 P•RNL•AI' 34k moonrool, CO, full mllH. Le>Cul eenlrled. WESTMINST~R
7100All • NOON•••••••-pow er, Ilka new (02150Q) S29.987 (714) 8e2-8808
UT 8-12 AUTOMOBILES (3LE[~~i:1c:Feso M1s~~u:ll!JO
oa2 Cortland or. weSTMINSTl!R 1·(888) as.Lexus MERCURY . 9135
cttt\ng/hHhlda/etell (714) 892.eeoe •e7 ES 300 ~--------·-..,..,,...~~~~~~;..,...
'71 Beetle White. New interior, brakes, Sleroo
and engine. S3900.
(714) 644-4246
'82 Ra bbit Convt
5sp, new top, now
tires, good cond,
51450 obo 631-0757
l.cul•l·mi.1 ~m icl\'
800·643·5022 ._...., dryer, aofa, ACURA 9010 '85 PASSPORT DX Full option. Lexua Cer· •eo TOPAZ mattreaa Ht, & White, grey Interior, t If I ed. ( O 3 6 4 3 6) GI mtscellaneoual. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 5apd, A/C, aunroof. $28,977 AT/AC, AMFM Cass, Why play Hide 'N --------Seek with chlldc11r8'?
Call Cla •altle d
lodayl 642-5678.
41A Acacia n at•~) $ LEXUS pwr a teerlng, Im-''" ... 7 •e3 lntegr• Sharp 1 (3PB987) 10,995 maeula te (642914) -Sllturday onty. owner, low ml, full BAUER LOTUS MISSION Vll!JO $3,990 yJll'd Sale Sat·Sun 9-3 power, anrf, extraa COSTA MESA 1-C888)·88·Ll!XUS Coate Me ..
armolre l300 lamps 111 ,500 714-640-89661 _ _..,.7.,..1;..4...,-8,.;,4,_,2;;;.,,.;·7_,7.,;00,,..;..-•eo LEXUS l!S 250 Llnooln-Mercury
tat>IH plcturea 110 & 'ii iNTl!ORA GSR •e7 CIVIC DX Chrome whla, lthr, AT. (714) 540-5830
$20 4SS a...,.&a 31k ml, leather, P.lue, grey Interior, cua., mint. •e5 COUGAR custom wheel•, holl b1pd, A/C, factory (129053) S9,950 (3POV3~)117 a50 wa"anty. (3VOB872) LllXUS OP 4.6L V8, air, pwr, lilt, c=u MESA 1124 L•XUS OP.. $12,995 wesTMINSTl!R eruiH, AM/FM cau,
:::: Wl!STMINSTl!R BAUER LOTUS (714) 892-8808) mnrf, pwr seat, dual
714-8e2-8808 COSTA MESA air bag a, loaded * ........... 714-642·7700 LOTUS 9123 #3MLY482 $10,995
Saturday 8am-12pm Co•t• M••• 2389 Carlton Place BMW 88 ACCORDLX 4DR liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Llncoln·Mercury ****** 9030 auto, p/w, ate, FM •e5 ESPRIT S4S (714) 540-5830 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii eua. 134K ml. brand Black, only 5k mllH, --------r~~kl•~~"do !e0.0t,r •e4 3 181 4dr, 51pd, new tran1. Really fact warr, local car-all 'e8 TRACER
_DQQ ,...,.. -"' Good Co n dition! books & records. Red w/grey, llhr, AT,
pultller MO, Flah tank anrl, A/C, a1-ca11, 42K S4500obo Call after (F63050) S51,&95 AC. cu1 whls, splr, 1
$10, 91"98 l20 & up. ml, 1 owner, Mlnll 6pm. 714-759-205:? BAUeR LOTUS ownr. only 11k ml
lat. Onlylhm-1pm Mu1t aeel S1 5,4~ PP COSTA MBSA #601678 MUST SEE
• 183 s.ni.1aabel call 714-842-0138•---------714-4542·7700 Coat• Me••
0 ING aAL• All •es 3251 White/tan, HYUNDAI 90901--·e_s_E_S_P_R_l_T_S_4_S_ Llncoln·Mercury
aonth atartl ng leather, xlnt eond, Red, 12k mllea, local (714) 540-5830
Frl-20 at 9 .0 0 auto, 4dr, anrf S19.5K 1888 M•KUR 43K ear-all book• &
Everything mui t · gol (714) 844-4744 actual mllea. Hot Slz-record• (3LVB921) -Nl-S-SAN-----9 -1-5-0 gun ufe lrg screen zllng Turbot Auxlllary 549,995 2 19 1 Ml'ner St Helicopter, 13500.obo. BAUl!R LOTUS :;-------·--1 CADILLAC 9040 Call 714-548-6179 COSTA Ml!SA '94 PICK·UP
Convenient
Cla•alfled
842·5878
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1998
•
TODAY'S I ~C~R~O~S:MS.a.:Wwo-'-'Ruwo--....r .. u~z .. z~L~E-
ACROSS
1 Avoid~ s t.bledoQ
10 Gioanllc 14 Palnt lngreclenl
15 Tatget 18Bulilr~
17 Wlldhor'M
18 Pointed k>dl 19 HewUye Slale
20 Wrtter Rand 21 Jumped trom :c=-'° 24 CounUy road
25 Char 28 Type of tooth
29 Mountaintops
32 In debl
33 Pltdl8f
Herahlser
34 It's In the bagl
37 Pool game
41 l.alglt-antlered
animal 42 Points (a
weapon)
43 Harem owner
44 Notugood
46 Naval groups 47 Taunt
49 Old name fof
Thaland SO~by
54 Brief swim
5 7 Citrus frUll
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for you.
ING
EW
LE
K! ;Moving Sale! 3122 Furn, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •--------714-942· 7700 elec, appl's, bg acrn, •---------• ca11 '°' ~au 845-•as Sed•n D• VIII• INPINITI 9095 •e7 es PR IT vs 2112 U8 Broadw•Y 48k ml, fpwr, like new liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Midnight blue, mag
XI! 4X4
AC, PS, AM/FM Casa,
alloys, lo ml, (403314)
$9,994 APR on approvel
credit· Up to 36 mo•·
(2BTL.620) S5950 •g• 04.T lthr, 3pc alloy whls, '1 MAG• SAL• Ll!XUS OF VI ., Reduced more than a 8UN 7130-W•STMINSTl!R Black Jade/Ivory, full S 1 0 K ( F 6 5 4 0 5)
4130 camera. toola, (714) ae2.eeoe option. only 36k ml, $74,200 a-.0, radio•, books, MI NT I ( 3 0 1 8 4 9) BAU•R LOTUS
CoataM•aa Llncoln·MercuTY
(714J 540.5830
-.l'ee,orda/albuma , •es Sl!VILLI! SLS $27,977 COSTA MBSA
olo t h••· b icycle . Frost belght, neutral LEXUS 714-e42·7700 RANGE -597 W. 18TH aT aha!• leather, chrome MISSION Vll!.IO
o_ a.I • ._ ... 1 .. ,.21•• wh ..... phone, lact()(}' 1-C81J8Hl8·L•XUS MAZDA 9125 iiRiiOiiVEiiiRiiiiiiiiiiii9iilii7ii7 "!""""• wa"anty. (3LSU285) e•.!'-".-·.t2~m. 1929 125.9915 ""'-the m ... va? .f>" IH~H• Ave.. ~um, 8AWR LC>TUS vu. ---~!IL_ __
t1 ckllhee, baby ltem1.... COSTA MeSA
11:2 714-042·7700
6169 CHEVROLET 9045
Sell your extra
household
items
in Classified
•ea MIAT
P/W, Pit, cruise, red/
black, mint cond.
(304913) 110,977
Ll!XUS
MISSION Vll!.IO
1.S8~8·LBXUS
•e5 COUNTY LWB a arr z ue. an
leath er, mnrf, CO
ch gr, prem sound, loaded. (855700)
$30 995 BAUER LOTUS
COSTA MESA
(714) 84a·7'100
SAAB 9185
•e2 •••b 8000 Xlnt eond, low ml, fully
loaded. Mu•t aeel
$13,000 obO1\7·1594
9200
••e2 aVX..AWD• IR.)(]QREY;Tou Pleb
AU. Options, 03KmT.
Bty'ful. 114-073-2044
Aurora Bravada LSS CUTLASS SUPREME
·---· ...
.MARCii MADNES
NEW '97 LOTUS ESPRIT
NO
Combined with Price and Daily Practicality,
It's Easy to See. That Nothing Compares.
We specialize in local cars with complete service records. All of our v~hicles have
been thoroughly inspected and reconditioned by our master service technicians.
Our finance and lease programs are extremely competitive and although many of our
cars have a significant factory warranty remaining, we off er only top quality extended
protection plans .
'67 JAGUAR 420G
~~ey interior, classic car, very good condition, only 43K miles.
(TXT895)
s5,995
si0,995
s1z,995
'95 HONf>A PASSPORT DX
White, Gray Interior, 5 SPD, A/C, Sunroof (3PB987)
'97 HONDA CIVIC DX
Blue, grey interior, 5 spd, A/C, factory warranty (3VOB872)
'94 JAGUAR XJ6
Bladt, barley leather, moonroof, low miles, select edition warranty.
(696068)
'-96
Bordeaux, tan leather, phone, sunroof, CD/cass., premium sound,
chrome wheels, loaded, low miles. (3PJB106)
'95 CADJLLAC SEVILLE SLS
· Frost bei~, neuaal shale leather, chrome wheels; plione, fact0ry
warranty. (3LBU28S)
'95 RANGE ROVER COUNTY LWB
Biatritz blue, tan leather, moonroof, CD changer, premium sound,
loaded (6SS700) .
SERVICE HOURS
7:30am-6Pm
SALFSHOURS
Mon-Fri: 10am -6pm
. Sat 9lln • 6P.n
Sun: Cosed
~szz,995
-~2;99S
_-s~s,~s