HomeMy WebLinkAbout1998-04-18 - Orange Coast Pilot:Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
County unveils four El Toro
• Three of the alternatives
assume a two-airport
system with John Wayne
operating at status quo.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -
Orange County planners and
consultants Friday delivered what
they believe is the answer to the
most crucial and divisive land-use
decision ever to face the county.
Pour different ways of creating
a commercial airport at the El
Toro Marine Corps Air
Station were unveiled to
a crowd o1 business peo-
ple, community mem-
• bers and the media.
The presentation cul-
minated a nine-month,
$20 million planning
process -one that airport critics
often argued was too secretive -
and reflected the policies estab-
lished in December 1997 by the
Board of Supervisors.
Courtney Wiercioch, El Toro's
master development program
manager, said the plans show a
responsible, economically sound
airport can be planned
at the military base,
which is slated to close
July l, 1999.
Supervisor Chuck
Smith kicked off the
news conference by say-
ing he believes the avia-
tion proposals are the best way to
tum the valuable land into an eco-
nomic engine for the courity.
•tt's our responsibility to devel-
op a plan that holds the greatest
possible county-wide benefit to
all who call this county home,• he
said. "We need Orange County to
become a global gateway rather
"First of all, it's based
in reality, not
fantasy ... "
-TOM EDWARDS
than a domestic dead end.·
The four concepts, presented by
P&D Aviation Program Manager
Ron Ahlfeldt and Steve Ross of
The Planning Center, incorporate
aviation and non-aviation uses for
the 4, 700-acre site.
Three of the alternatives as-
sume a two-airport system with
S U N SfT HOO P S
DON l!ACH I OAl.Y PLOT
iiilll~ of the be~~ by shooting baskets at sunset at Newport Beach Elementary School
District gets OK to dump troo;ted water
• Members of environmental group say they'll appeal
the Regional Water Quality Control Board decision.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
BACK BAY -neated waste
water discharged into the San
Diego Creek will not harm the
precious Upper Newport Bay
estuary, a regullltory panel con-
cluded Priday.
The Regional Water Quality
Control Board of Directors at its
monthly meeting in Corona
approved 5-1 a discharge permit
for the Irvine Ranch Water District.
The permit will allow the dis-
trict to filter the highly treated
sewage -or reclaimed water -
through the San Joaquin Marsh
and eventually into the bay dw:iDg
winter months. In the summer, the
agency treats San Diego Creek
water before the lediment-filled
runoff ends up in the Back Bay.
The water board found that the
entire project combined does
improve the bay's water quality,
said Ken Thompson, director of
water quality for the Irvine Ranch
Water District.
"This has been ahnost a five-
)'Ml' program. and a lot of work
bas gont: into doing the right
thing right: he said. "I'm really
happy today.•
llie decision comes after a long
and heated battle between the dis-
trict. the city and Defend the Bay,
an environmental group that has
taken the lead in keeping
reclaimed water out of the estuary.
•SEE DUMP PAGE A12
Youth Expo opens
at Fairgrounds
• 20,000 expected over weekend to view
classroom art projects; Newport-Mesa students
featured prominently throughout event.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
FAIRGROUNDS -David
Hidalgo was wide-eyed Priday
morning as he rolled up his right
Jacket eleeve and reached down lnto a wooden box labeled th
•5en1e Of Tuuch ~· •
Aft.er a few aecondl of rolliDg
hlJ MDd around llWde the box.
which had a pJMtic lid with a
hOle lil the iaiddle to conceal
Whet was~ the g.~
came up with a Sf\*I·
David was one of an estimat·
ed 20,000 people expected this
weekend at the Orange County
Fairgrounds for the 19th annual
Youth Expo, a collection of thou·
sands of art, music and lden<.'e
projects from Orange County
atudentl.
•coa1tlines, Kites and Starry
Nights• ii the theme of the
event, whlth ~Friday and
continues ~h Sunday.
Ad.mll1don and ,,.,klng are lree.
John Wayne Airport operating at
status quo, with one of them re-
quiring ,.~ loads at John
Wayne to el\::wd the existing cap
of 8.4 million passengers per year.
All but one alternative have El To-
ro operating as a full 1.11temabonal
airport. All four plans use El Toro's
existing runway conhgurabon.
The vision for the remairung
land surrounding the airfield
includes a mix of industndl, com-
mercial and corporate busmesses,
with retail shops, hotels and a
technology park for research and
development. Also included a re
goll courses, a regional park and
the 900-acre habitat reserve.
"I thlnk the ideas and the
development concep~ are very
exciting and provide ( avia-
tion that welleed ata that we
need.• said Peggy Ducey. deputy
o ty manager of Newport Beach.
•It also rontinues to support the
two-airport system, and I think tt
looks really promismg for the entire
Orange County community.·
Newport Beach Mayor Tom
Edwards, who also 15 a member of
the county's Citizens Advisory
BOdI'd, agreed.
"First of all, it's based in realJty,
not fantasy, and 1 think it offers
• SEE AIRPORT PAGE A 17
Attorney: Client
is 'devasMted'
• Bayshores resident
Ronald Newman wants
a quick trial 'to show he
is not guilty' of drug-
smuggling charges.
By Tim Lemm. Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Declar-
mg his client •totally innocent of
the charges,• an attorney for a
Newport Beach man accused of
conspiring to import and distrib-
ute 18,000 pounds of Thai man-
juana worth up to $45 million said
Friday that he is puzzled by the
federal grand jury indictment.
Defense attorney James D.
Riddel of Santa Ana said Ronald
Frankl.Lo Newman. 48, a Bay-
shores resident and a governor of
the exclusive Balboa Bay Club, 15
·obviously devastated • and
wants to go to tnal quickly "in
order to show he is not guilty and
not involved at all.·
Newman was among 20 peo-
ple indicted March 12 by a fed-
eral grand JUry m San Diego in
connection with an international
marijuana-smuggling ring that
operated in the United States
and five other countries. author-
ities said.
"We're wondering why he has
been pulled into this at all,• Rid-
del said. ·we're as puzzled as
everyone else.·
Newman could not be reached
• SEE NEWMAN PAGE A12
Easthluff traffic
changes remain ==
• More than 550 letters poured into City Hall.
mostly from residents in surrounding areas
who oppose new intersection system.
. ... · . .... :· .
By Jenifer Ragland, Dai/}' Pilot
E.ASTBLUFF -Halfway into
the six-month trial period for
changes to the intersection of
Bison Avenue and Jamboree
Road, local residents continue to
be fiercely divided on bow the
new~ is working.
A few of the active residents
oo either side of the dispute
spoke at a Public Works Com·
mittee meeting Friday, where
City Councilmembers Jan
Debay and John Noyes re·
Viewed a status report. The tem-
porary traffic measures prohibit
mOtOOsts friiin driving straight
~b on Bison Avenue and
from lbaki.Jig left-hand twns
into Ea.stbluff from northbound·.
Jamboree Road. :·
Newport Beach traffic engi···
neer Rich Edmonston said his
office has bee.n fioOded with
more than 700 letters and 130
phone ciills from ~le for
and against the cbariges -
with more than 550 opposition
letters coma.Dg in just within
the last week.
He said most of tbe com·
mantS ;iJ:l favor of tbe ~
came from Eutbluff ~
while almoSt 811 of tbe oppoliDg
comments come from tbqle liv·
ing in neigbb9dnq communities
su<:b as The Bl\lffs.
•1bje iil~ Of OW COIDIDU• •
Brian
Quattroc-
cbt looks
lnto tbe
eJectrtc:
balllatbe
Wiid Sd·
•• think it'•.~. WOod· en one,• Mid tbe fourth.grader
from St. ~ Blementary
SdM>OI m s.m Ana.
PeetWed are dasroom wt
pr0j4tc:tl ~ ht bekh .....
we1k9Dd b ]~. m'*-1
~by ilC:bool budl.. sa.a.,.., ud IDfoaDe-.
Hew.. •. ,
I • ... I -• ..
cindy trane
christeson
Relishing the beauty of
nature and creation
"Nature 1s a volume of which God is
the author."
-Walter Harvey
S pnng 1s hnaUy here and it seems
Like God's creallon lS waking up
dfter a long winter's nap. The
storms and surprises of El Ni:flo have
lessened while lhe hours of daylight
have graduaUy lengthened.
J am excited to exchange rain boots
for sandals. put away my colorful collec-
1.lon of umbrellc1s and start putting on
my sunblock.
Spring is here dnd lhe volume of
nature 1s unfolding lor all to enjoy.
BIIds dre singing, flowers are blooming
and bookstores like Barnes & Noble are
busting at the sedffiS with gardening
oooks
· I love nowers and gardens. I love the
smells, lhe colors, the textures and the
lleauty I love strolling through well-
marucured gardens and am thrilled
when my sweet husband swprises me
\fith flowers r love everythmg about flowers,
except for remembering their names.
How dm 1 supposed to remember
Jeng, muJll-sylla b1c words that are bigger
lb.an the buds themselves? Why can't
things be simple so simple minds like
rii.ine can ask for a red rose ? How am I
i.lipposed to remember a name like
'"double-dip delight" or "sunrise-sunset"
s0melhmg?
: What's the matter with red or yellow?
• 1 could handle it if it were just a simple
t!iijective like raspberry red or lemon yel-
lf>w. It's worked for years with Trix cereal,
Why not in the garden?
: The sad thing is 1 come Crom a long
lice of green thumbs, and great minds.
~y grandmolher was always clipping,
~ttmg and arranging gorgeous cre-
~ons a nd centerpieces.
: My relatives were famous at church
fer thetr wonderful blooming master-
Jiece s for Sunday sem ces or weddings.
l'tJy mother can go mto her garden and
With a srup, a clip, and a creative slight <V hand and emerge with not just one,
\tut several stunrung centerpieces that
twal anything professionally created.
: I'm surrounded by flower aficionados,
~t 1t Just hdsn't rubbed off. Both my in-
t•ws have an dmazmg ability to trans-
~nn a slfllple flower and some greenery
iJ'l.to a brilliant Picasso.
:: They both have creative eyes that can
~ ba.Jance and beauty, and arrange
accordingly. And they can all remember
t?iose fore1gn-soundlng names. 1 can only
~ember the quote that says, "A rose bf any other name would mean that
~u're ignorant about flowers ~
• That 1s what I am, and f've come lo
&:cept 1t, though I'm hoping there is a
~anun I can lake for this problem.
• Meanwhile. I ttunk I'll step outside,
$JOY lhe volume of nature, and try to
cre ate a beaullful bouquet by myself. Or ii it called an arrangement? I've read
tf'O insplflllg gdrderung books that my
11\·laws gave me and am hoping I can
~ly on the process of osmosis. Or is it
ctilled photosynlhes1s?
:· Even though I can't remember the
rt-mes of everything wntten in the end-
le:Ss volume of nature, I can still thank
Cod for the beauty of his creation. He
knows all the names.
;. After all, he wrote the book. And you
~ quote me on that.
'0NDY TRANE CHRISTESON is a Newport
Beach resident who speaks frequently to par-
~ting groups . • . · .
• . • •
VOL 92. NO. 91
faith
. ------------------------------------------, r------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------• I I I in the spirit l
I I I I
·I St. Andrew's Presbyterian Cfiarch !
pizza.• salad and soda. Monies from : Address: 600 St. Andrews Road, New·
PQrt li•IAnl~IA
u.s .
Year established: The church cele-
brates its SOth anniversary this month.
A special program of celebration is
planned for Sunday, the date of the
church's charter SO years ago.
~year annlverMry celebration pro-
gram: On Sunday, John Huttman, cur-
rent senior minister, and Charles
Dierenfield, senior minister prior to
Huffman, will both participate in Sun-
day services at 8:30 and 10:15 a.m. '
and 1 p.m . A social hour and light
supper, scheduled for 5 p.m., will pre-
cede the Sunday evening celebration.
At 6:45 p.m. bagpipes will lead parish-
ioners into the sanctuary. The 1 p.m.
program will offer a good-humored
glance at the past 50 years at St.
Andrew's and will anticipate what lies
ahead with the question, "What's in
me for God?" Everyone is welcome.
Tickets, that became available in mid-
March at a cost of 50 cents each, will
serve as reservations. For tickets or
further information, call the church
office.
Service times: Contemporary services
on Saturday at 5:30 p.m.; traditional
services on Sunday at 8:30 and 10:15
a .m. Church school for all ages runs
1 concurrently on Sunday morning.
Senior minister: John A. Huffman Jr.,
Ph.D.
Staff: William L. Flanagan, Ph.D., min-
ister of singles and missions; Lydia M.
Sarandan, Ph.D., minister of adult
education; Richard A. Todd, Ph.D.,
minister of parish life; James T. Birch-
field, minister of young couples and
career singles; Edward R. Snedeker,
minister of youth; Candy Baylis, minis-
ter of children's education; Daniel L.
Sharp, Ph.D., minister of music and
1 worship; Leah A. Stout, minister of vis-
itation; J . Barry Martinez, director of
junior high ministry; Mark E.
McConniclt. director of college min-
istry; Toni L. Wood, seaetary to senior
minister; Arthur R. Mcintosh, business
administrator.
Size of congregation: 4,700
Makeup of congregation: A cross-sec-
tion of the Harbor area with a growing
youth, young couples and career sin-
gles membership. The community's
leadership and service~ded are,
and long have been. a strong compo·
DON UACH I OAILV PILOT
John Huffman, Ph.D. is the senior pastor at St Andrews Presbyterian
Church. The church celebrates Its SOth anniversary this month.
nent of the church's population.
Child care: Provided for all worship
services and most other church activi-
ties.
1)'pe of worship: Combines the best of
traditional and contemporary worship,
aiming to involve both the head and
the heart. The Saturday evening ser-
vice leans more toward the contempo-
rary with music from a praise band
and chorus. The ambience and dress
is far more casual than on Sunday
morning. Sunday services are more
traditional with music from the sanctu-
ary choir and more formality in the
order of service and dress. Huffman
delivers the same sermon at all three
services.
1)'pe of sermon: Huffman's messages
are biblical and life-situational. He
sometimes preaches through a book of
the Bible throughout a period of sever-
al weeks. He recently preached on the
first three chapters of Revelation.
Recent sermon: Easter's sermon was
•Tue Resurrecti~ Myth or Reality?"
based on 1 Corinthians 15:12·22 that
states 'And if Christ bas not been
raised, your faith is futile; you are still
in your sins. Tb.en those also who have
fallen asleep in Christ are losl If only
for this life we hope in Christ. we are
to be pitied more than all men. But
Christ has indeed been raised from
the dead, the first fruits of those who
have fallen asleep.·
Upcoming sermon: Huffman will
begin a new nine-week series on the
weekend of May 2 with a message
called MThe Fruit of the Spirit Is:
Love,• based on the scripture text
from Galatians 5:22. The following
weeks' topics will be: •Tue Fruit of the
Spiritis:Joy;Peace;Patience;Kind-
ness; Goodness; Faithfulness; Gentle-
nessi and Self-Control."
Wekome wagon: Those who leave
their name, addiess and phone nwn-
ber are sent a welcome letter and
brochure about the church and its pro-
grams. Someone from the Parish Llfe
Committee telephones those who are
interested in becoming more involved.
On Sundays, there is a time of fellow-
ship around •mission donuts.• The
monies contributed for the donuts and
coffee go toward funding some of the
many missions that St. Andiew's sup-
ports. On SAturday evening this fel-
lowship is around a meal of •mission
the donations for pma slices and soda l
also go toward the support of missions. I
OUtreach programs: The churdl's 22-I
page brochure lists most of the multi-l
tude of opportunities that the church ,
provides tor the education of lts minis-l
ters and lay people and for their ser-l
vice as people of God in bis world. l
Recently, the church bas had as many :
as 300 people a.round the world in 1
missions as varied as work with_pas-I
tors in Romania, refugee center Con:--, l
struction in Croatia, micro-enterprise " :
economic development in the Domini-l
can Republic, vacation Bible school in l
Samoa, as well as in nearby Long 1
Beach, and construction of a seminary l
in Brazil. Locally the church bas fund-:
ed administered and provided volun-: t~rs for the Shalimar Street Project :
that supplies tutors to this community : .
in Costa Mesa. It sends world relief 1
through the offices of Church World :
Service and World Vision lntemation-:
al. Local support is given to SOS, the :
Interfaith Shelter and Shelter Net-:
work, Habitat for Humanity and FISH. l
The church also hosts birthday parties •
at neighboring convalescent hospitals :
and provides food, clothing and l
Christmas gifts through various com~ :
munityprograms. :
Dress: On Saturday night, dress is very :
casual and any style goes. Sunday ser-'
vices tend to be dressier, with a range
from sport shirts and slacks to suits
and ties.
Mission sta1ement It is written on
almostewrythingthechurchprints
and is stated at every service: •st.
Andrew's Presbytenan Church is
endeavoring to be a Ouist--centered,
worshiping community committed to
leading men, women and children to a
saving faith in Jesus Christ; building
ourselves in the faith; and serving oth-
ers here and throughout the world.~
Note: Huttman has been senior minis-
ter at Sl Andrew's for 20 years. During
this time, the church completed and
burned the mortgage on a $16 million
building with a 1,400-seat sanctuary.
Its annual support of missions exceed
$1.5 million. Its enduring presence in
the community and its continued
growth in numbers and in service to
the community ce testimony to a
church body that takes to heart the
practice of what it preaches and
believes. Huffman also serves as chair-
man of the board of World Vision U.S.
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l"EWEltATUMS the •ftemoon. A 3-
Ba4bo9 foot gwell wlll come
72153 from the west.
Corona del Mar
73154 l1DIS
Cost. Mesa TOOAY
75154 First low
Newport e.ac:n 9:16a.m. o.s
73154 Flmhlgh Newport Coast 1:11 a.m. 4.2 7'4155 Second low
WPOMCASY 8:20p.m. 2.8
LOCATlON SIZE Second high
Wedge 1·3W 4:53 p.m. 3.0
SUNDAY NNipoft 1-2w first low ....... 1~lw
Rtwt;Ntty 1-lw tO:ll: a.m. O.A
C'.dM 1-2 w Anthtgh
2.:3.J a.m. '-0
~low
~.JOJM". l.6
Second high
S:S4 p.ITl. , ..
"
faith calendar
The surf toct.y Mid
SPEOAL EVENtS
>HOLOCAUST
REMEMBRANa
A memorial service for people
and communities who per-
ished in the Holocaust will be
held at 7 p.m . Wednesday at
the Jewish Federation Cam-
pus, 250 E. Baker St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call 660-8525.
> CASINO NIGHT
St. Joachim Catholic Church
will bold its fifth annual casi-
no night from 6:30 to 10:30
p.m. Saturday at 1964 Orange
Ave., Costa Mesa. Tickets are
$30 or $20 for seniors and
include dinner, gambling
chips, a drink ticket and a
door-prize entry. For more
information, call 548-8841.
> CHOIR FESTIVAL
The third annual choir festival
will be held Sunday at 3 p.m.
at United Universalist
Church, 1259 Vic:torl.4 St.,
Costa Mesa. A SS donation ts
Sunct.y morning wlll
continue to be
minuscule. W. may
be~with•
~lfromtM
nott.hW9St laW 5'An-
day. although tt Is
coming In at a rather
steep Ing'-. This
coming wetlt should
t-.Yt some decent
iutf, poliibfy ~
Ing cn.t-Ngh IMfs.
Afww .........
~ln1hit
IJCMld\. thM should I
mean gOod 8'ound
suggested. For more informa-
tion, call 646-4652.
> YOUTH LUNCHEON
Newport Beach Hadassah
will hold its annual youth
luncheon at 11 :30 Monday at
the Ritz, 880 Newport Cen-
ter Drive, Newport Beach.
Llllian Heller-Conrad will be
the keynote speaker. Vocal-
ist Jan Eisen will sing. For
more information, call 720-
9246.
WORKSHOPS
> REMEMBERING SERIES
Our Lady Queen of Angels
will begin another •Remem-
bering" series of non-judg-
mental discussions for inac-
tive Catholics or those people '
interested iJl CathoJidml, tO t
be held at 6:15 p.111. Sunday, '
May 3, May 31, June t.t and
June 28, at the par.ish center,
2046 Mar Vista Drive, New.-
port Beach. For mare inform.a·:
tion, call 7214'96 .
SAnJROAY, APRIL 18, 1998
Traveling the back. roads of Colorado is well worth it
PORT COLLINS, Colo. -
Colorado is behaving badly.
:X.ast Saturday, it was 80 degrees
pere. On Wednesday, there
;were road-closing, traffic-
~narling, fender-bending
'5now and rain. It must be
!April, the locals say.
· ; My wife and I are spending
~pring break here, hoping
.to find the right home in the
)"ight neighborhood in the
:rtght town. We wish ourselves
luck.
: As is our custom, my wife
flew and I drove. I enjoy the
Jew days of solitude and new
'.experiences.
• On this trip, I drove the ~outhem route. It wasn't
)>lanned that way; it just hap-
pened. As usual, I got a late
~tart. When I reached the place
on the map near Barstow where
Interstate 40 branches off from
Interstate 15, I was three hours ·
behind schedule.
: This meant that I would
~ave to go through Las Vegas
at rush hour. Going through Sid
Soffer's hometown is rough at
any hour, but behyeen 4 and
6 in the evening, it is madness.
So Williams, Ariz., got me that
night. It is a charming, Old
West sort of town that has the
best tap water I have ever
tasted.
It's still winter in Williams -
22 degrees that night -so the
water comes out of the tap clear
1he Best Prices in Tuwn!
and cold, at least as good as any
of the stuff that costs $1.50 or
more a ~ottle at my neighbor-
hood Hughes {perhaps soon to
be renamed Ralphs?).
Instead of staying on the
interstates, I decided to invest
a few more hours and travel
the back roads and see what
I co~d. .see -a bush-league
Chatles Kuralt.
It was well worth it. ln
one day, I traveled from
bleak deserts to mountain
scenery that rivals even
Europe's Alpine nations. I
passed through' little villages,
where you knew that every
day was tough, and throug))
booming mountain towns
like Pagosa Springs. where a
sprawling new resort stands
ready to welcome summer
vacationers.
Climbing eight miles of
switchbacks up to the 10,850-
foot summit of Wolf Creek Pass
without seeing a single other
car or human being is not far
from a religious experience.
Before Wolf Creek, however,
I traveled through a comer of
the Navajo Nation -Tuba City,
Cow Springs and Kayenta.
My target for the night was
the Colorado farm town of
Monte Vista and a quirky
motel on its west~m border,
Movie Manor Inn. It is so
called because next door is
one of the nation's last
surviving drive-in movie
theaters.
The wrinkle here is to get a
room on the theater side, th.row
back the drapes, turn on the
sound and catch the night's
IXlOvie.
The theater d~sn't open
until May 1, however, and there
still were a few hours of day-
light, so I drove on. If I had
been traveling two days later,
I could have checked in and,
the next morning, stayed in
bed and watched Easter
sunrise services.
After a sleepover in Alamosa,
BROWN COW
FARM YOGURT
Non-Fat Yogmt
• Vanilla • CllOCOlate • Strawbeny
• Apricot Mango '7 =~~-~
I headed north for Poncha
Springs, then west along the
gorgeous Arkansas River to
£anon City. lb.is is home to
ColortJdo's first and ancient
prison, which I didn't see,
and Royal Gorge, which I did.
The gorge and the bridge
that spans it are amazing -
but not as remarkable as the
fact that the bridge was built
in seven months in 1929.
What is it taking for the
Arches bridge -a year or
two? A curious thing this
progress.
There were half a hundred
other little sights and experi:
ences that took only maybe
four hours longer and 122
miles more. But the excitement
wasn't over, not by a bunch.
Still to come were church
and Easter brunch with Trav
and the Brettster, our
awesomely vigorous grandsons.
Then there was my wife's
birthday dinner Monday night
at Benihana of Tokyo, a very
authentic place. The bar didn't
stock Suntory, the velvety
Japanese whisky. The chef
who prepared our teppan
yaki dinners -I think that's
the term -was named Jose.
•Jose Toyotar• he grinned.
The capper, though, was
this: U.S. West, the baby bell
that serves Colorado and the
intermontane West, has
achieved a tremendous break-
through in telephony.
Beginning in September,
subscribers in Denver. which
is area code 303, will have
to dial their own area code
on all local calls. Want to
call your next-door neighbor?
You dial -OK. press -
303, then the seven-digit
number.
Ain't progress grand?
And isn't it nice to know that
corporate idiocy is alive and
well?
• FRED MARTIN'S column is published
Thursdays and Saturdays.
• Vanilla Swiss Orange
NonDalry
Frozen
Dessert
• C..,.,.IOCioo • CllOCOlate Clip • Vanilla
• Carob • Cocoa MaJble • StnMbeny
• Carob Almond • VaniD;a Swiss Almond
• ClleW)' Vanilla
• Mint Carob Chip
•010C0iate REG. "l.39
SHARI'S
BISTRO"' RNNIE'S Nabaw'6
WHOLESOME & HEALTHY
Garden Burger
~Re&ied
Beans
• BlackBeans ~ • Pinto Beans .
REG. '1.69 15 oz.
Organic Dressings
• Green Garlic (Vinegar Free)
• Sesame Ginger' with Chammnile
·~s.29
REG. '3.15 ,..... .., 8oz.
·eJ·~·
Veg£ae Patties
• ~Medley . Fat Free
:~~ ... ~S9 • r.rdelt ~ -Fat Flit
• '3.29 '4 PaJtia
MILLINA'S FINEST
~FatFree PaSta Sauce ~toes Lasagna Noodles Organically Produced
Angel Hair Puta
• Clric Bui • 7.al,y Bull • 'lbmalo Basil {low Sodium)
• Hot Gt Spk)i • Thmalo Basil • ~ Muslwoom
• Marimra • Routed Cales .• Marinara ZinfandeJ
• Sundried 'lbmlto
• Whole Peeled in Juia?
• Crushed Tumato Puree s
• Pepper Onion REG. '3.89 REG. "l.09
ZINC ECIDNACFA LOZENGES
Great Cheny Mint 18&te ~99
48 Loteenges & 48 Free ~48 Lozen
A '13.98 Value + 48 t=ft~es
YOLJ SAVlc UP fO $11 4~,1
I!+""""' Mdtl/NJI .,•
175mg .
SUGG. '12.19
• Whole Wheat
• Tomato lemon Pepper ,
• Garlic Parsley w. ·Tomato~
• Original REG. '1.89 8 oz.
Spirulina
Certified Organic Hawaiian
SOOMG $ .. ..00
SUGG. '17.• .& v,;...;.
~· $3.2 million facility in Upper Newport
. Bay should be complete in about a year.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -With gold-plated shovels
in hand, the people who envisioned, planned and
advocated the Upper Newport Bay Interpretive
Center broke some long-awaited ground Friday.
About 25 government officials, Upper Newport
Bay Naturalists volunteers and other local digni-
taries gathered at the future site of the 10,000-
square-foot, $3.2 million center, which has been a
partnership between Newport Beach, Orange
County, the state of California, The Irvine Co. and
private citizens.
#We often don't appreciate the special places we
. have Ill our own backyards,• said John Sibley, direc-
. tor of· the county's Public Facilities and Resource
Department. uw e a.re celebrating in anticipation of
the looks on the faces of all those who will come to
enjoy Uus center.•
Funding for the center, which will include
amphitheaters. 3,000 square feet of exhibits and
offices for county and state employees, was initiated
by Peter and Mary Muth of Newport Beach, who
donated $1 million. The Irvine Co. gave 14 acres of
bayfront land to the county for the project and the
city donated 6 acres of its land.
The Muths, along with longtime Upper Newport
Bay activists Frank and Francis Robinson, were hon-
ored with commemorative shovels and loads of
praise and gratitude from five speakers.
"This is a very special place, and we can preserve
it." said Newport Beach Mayor Tom Edwards.
~Thank you to all who helped make this a reality -
you did it."
The center, which should be complete in about a
year, will be cut into the hillsides at University and
Irvine avenues overlooking Upper Newport Bay
Regional Park. Designed to blend in with the sur-
rounding natural environment, the center will fea-
ture a sod roof an.ct amphitheater modeled after a
bird's nest.
•1t's going to be a wonderful resource to show our
children where they've come from and where they
can move forward to," said Marian Bergeson, slate
secretary of child development and education, who
also presented a $1 ,000 donation lo the center. •This
has been a long day coming and it is a very special
day for all of us."
MARC MAR™ I DAJlY Pl.OT
Conner Moy, 7, gets an up-close and personal look at a stuffed coyote during the groundbreaking ceremony Friday for the Upper Newport Back Bay
lnterprettve Center. Once complete, the center wtll have 3,000 square feet of exhibits, several amphitheaters and offices for state and county employees.
• THOUSANDS OF POSITIONS
(That Make You Feel Like A Million) Spring
Special
Sale
• Sooths stress,
encourages circulation.
• Maximum enjoyment
for watching i V.,
reading, etc.
• Offers ultimate
comfort and
relaxation.
• Try It. You'll love
yourself
in the morning ...
WllEUSS IUIOTI
CONTIOI.
2 Piece Set
s9900
F1ibric Content:
R.Ryon/Cotton Blend
M4cbine Washdk -All Coll>rs
w~~gJ~:t«L
• -I . -.
3165 HARBOR ILVD • COSTA MESA
Feminine European Fashion
307 Marine Ave., Balboa island
723-9359 One Block South of 405 Fwy
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via !Jdo Newpcrt Beach
673-1340 or 673-6150
Church JO am & 5 pm.
Sunday School l O am
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3100 Pa:Wc View Dr .. Newport Beach
644-2617 or 675-4661
Church lOam
SWlday School 10 am
~ Meell1lgs 8 pn ~ MeealQI 8 pn Iii Ill~ 12 nocri
... the reti.emuti of the Ltml JM/J rd#1"lt, aJ to1IU .n"1 ,;,,p, nto
Zion; 111111~tfa!JMJJ6-"I"" thnr l#Mlz "'-1_ "1Ml obt.m tfaJIUSI ,,.,,J joy; lllU/ IOmnll aJ ""'*"'Ucf JM/J fl-"""'1-
baiah Sl:ll ti#
&IDdla atl\t Mother c:.trdl • ne Fnt a.di fl~Sdmdll • 1o11oa, M.dadb
a> COMMUNllY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
. UNITED CHURCH Of
CHRIST
To~ ii to Cn; To C.. ii to DO.
Brue. Van Blair, Minister
Worship Service 8:15 & 10AM
Ouch School 9AM Adults a 10AM Ollkhn
Child c.r. Provided 644-7400
• 611 HelioCropt Ave, Ccwona di! Mir
SAINT JA/MS crURCH ep1scopa
"'A~O.' P 1-~........... a.,..,.,_.,..,...,...,
Fr. DaYid c. And.non, rector
3209VIOUdo
Neowport 8each
71A/675-0210
7:30 am Traditional
9 am COi •iieo!CJIY. 9 am Church SchoOI
10:'5 am Chorismatic
and Wednesday noon
''Celebrate St. Andrew's
50th Anniversary''
Dr. John A. Huffman, Jr.
"50 YEARS OF POWER"
(Luke 4: 16; Philippians l :2· 11}
PREACHING TOGETHER
Saturday, Aprll 18, 1998, 5 :30 p .m .
Sunday,Aprll 19,1998
8:30 and 10:15 a .m .
Anniversary Program. Sunday, 6 :45 p .m . Dr. CharlH H. DlcrtnReld
Supper wlll be served at 5:00 p .m .
Wednesday Blblt Study. 7:00 p.m .
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church
600 St. Andrews Road, Newpon Beach, Callfomta {714) 631-2880
(attc>M rrom Ncwpon Harbor Hlp School at lrvbw and 15th.)
"Box"
Dress $9900
Thru 4/21/98
ST. MARK PREsBYTERIAN
CHURCH
"Open Arms and Open Minds"
Worship 9:30
Jamboree & Eastblulr ID Newport Bach
644-1341
I • • I • l • • i • • ~
! ~ • I
f ; • ~
I l
t
f
Newport BachlCo.ta Meu Daily Pilot
Besiglls in. silver;
pearls at EI'C
Etcetera ETC (673-5321),
located at 312 Marine
Ave. on Balboa Island, is
~g custom sterling silver 1ew~ from ~ocal jewelry
designer Robm Davis. Davis
works with freshwater pearls
and sterling silver wire. She
customizes necklaces, eaning
and bracelets with different
pearls, and beads in many col-
ors. Davis made the "Tin Cup"
necklace that actress Rene
Russo wore in the movie and
can alter it by usihg faux
pearls, cul~ pearls or fresh
water pearls. Pieces start at
$35 and up.
Bellln1 (631-2229) an
upscale infant and children's
accessories boutique is having
a Spring sale through the
month of April. All Corso and
Alexandra furniture is dis-
counted 10%. To qualify for the
savings you must bring in a
copy of the Daily Pilot ad fea-
turing the sale. Bellini has ev-
erything for a child's room
including bedding, cribs, twin
and full size beds, dressers,
armoires, and changing tables.
It's lpcated at 1822 Newport
Blvd. in Costa Mesa.
. It's a good time to stock up
on bras and panties at Kristen's
bra and panty sale where you
can buy any two bras or
panties and get the third free.
The sale excludes special
orders. Kristen's (631-7399) car-
ries a nice selection of lingerie,
loungewear, gifts and breast
forms. It's located at 1719 West-
cliff Dr. in Newport Beach.
For authentic German
~ ---
' ' .
greer ·
wylder
bakery items and lunch stop
by Costa Mesa's German
Home Bakery (540-0281)
located at 2950 Grace Lane.
Every day, fresh bakery items
are available including rolls,
strudel, pretzels, Hallall, egg
twist breads, coffee cakes
and cheese cakes.
It's fashion jewelry week at
Neiman Marcus (759-1900) at
Fashion Island beginning
Tuesday through Friday. There
will be trunk shows and per-
sonal appearances from some
very creative jewelry design-
ers showing their latest collec-
tions. On Tuesday, Marlene
Harris will be featured; on
Wednesday, Susan Cum-•
mings; on Thursday, Lee Bre-
vard; and on Friday, it's Steven
Lagos.
• BEST BUYS appean Thursdays and
saturdays. Whether you're a mer·
chant or a shopper, If you know of a
good buy call me at 540-1224, fax me
at 646-4170 or write to me: Best
Buys. Dally Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa, cat If. 92627.
More effective than
whispering in her ear.
·The Diamond Earrings of A Carat or More.
}Wit aee What A Coupl.e of Diamond& Can Do.
803 Westclift Drive, Newport Beac:b
(714) 642-3.lll
Mural
to promote
fund-ra.iser
• Artist volunteers to
create .mystery .. themed
painting to build support
for renovation of
downtown landmark.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
BALBOA PENINSULA -A
free-lance artist bas volunteered to
paint a mystery-themed mural on
the front of the-old Balboa Cinema
in an effort to generate community
support to pwchase and renovate
the downtown landmark.
The mural also will advertise
the upcoming mystery dinner
fund-raiser •WhoDunlt in Bal-
boa,• which is scheduled for 6 p.m
May 14 at Balboa Pavilion.
"I've done a lot of art work as
favors and for fund-raisers," said
artist Holly Moeller of Aliso Viejo.
"I think it's really important that we
get that theater up and running."
Built in 1927, the building at
707 E. Balboa Blvd. originally was
designed for musical and dramat-
ic theater productions. It most
recently was used for screening of
the cult movie classic "Rocky
Horror Picture Show" before clos-
ing in 1992.
But its location and architec-
ture make it one of the comer-
SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1998
BRIAN P06UOA I OAl.Y Pl.OT
ArU.st Holly Moeller sketches the image of a man on the wall in front of the Balboa Theatre Friday
in an attempt to make the building look more interesting.
stones of a community effort to
revitalize Balboa's commercial
district.
The Balboa Performing Arts
Theatre Foundation has raised
about $200,000 to buy the build-
ing from owner John Wortmann
for $550,000. But an estimated
$750,000 also must be raised for
its renovation.
"This is a real key for the revi-
talization of downtown Balboa,"
• said Sue Cannon, a foundation
spokeswoman. •So many famous
people have played here and it's a
real landmark.·
On Friday, Moeller was finish-
ing some of the sketches of figures
that will cover one side of the front
of the theater. Foundation mem-
bers will be on hand Saturday
morning to paint those figures.
"The genre we're using is col-
or by number," Moeller said.
Greater choice,
better doctors,
Foundation President Dayna
Pettit said the building will be
used for theatrical presentations,
dassic movies, jazz festivals and a
children's theater.
#It's so wonderful that Holly
has volunteered to do this for us,"
Pettit said. #I'm delighted. It's
some new energy." .
For more information about the
• WhoDunlt in Balboa• dinner,
leave a message at 673-0895.
• more convenient
You don't have to leave the neighborhood for great health care. Greater Newport Physicians· primal)
care doctors have offices close to where you live and wo rk. GNP contracts with manv HMOs so vou can
select the health plan that meets your needs. · ·
Greater Newport Physicians also includes an excellent panel of Hoag specialists. And our affiliation
with Hoag Hospital provides patients access to Orange County's #I hospital. We invite you to get to
know these fine physicians in your community:
summer Doubart, M.D.
Dr. Summer Douban is a board-certified internal
medicine pb)1sician at Hoag Health Center -Costa
Mesa (al the corner of Fain 1iew and Baker).
Dr. Douban offers extended bours for your
convenience. For more infom1ation about her
pr_actice and office IJOurs. pkase ca/1668-2500
Dr. Kathleen Boos is a board-certified
Jami~)' practice physician al Hoag Healtb
Center · Costa Mesa. Dr. Boos and ber
associates offer extended hours for your
comie11ie11ce. For more information about
her practice and office hours.
please ca/1668-2500
Kathleen Boos. M.D
Other GNP Physicians whe have offices in Costa Mesa:
Nazll Ahmed, M.D.
John Fischer, M.D.
John Granzella, M.D.
Yung J. Kee, M.D.
Peter Kim, M.O.
Raul Miranda, M.O.
Carlos X. Montano, M.D.
David Huang, M.D.
"
...... la
Barry Behrstock. M.D.
Bette Carlsoo, M.D.
Jennifer Rodriguez. M.D.
'l1le foDOwlQg lacahh plus att aftlUated with GNP: Aetna Sel«t Choice, Aetna M<mtlglli Cboic.. Aetna JI~ Cbolce II.
Mtnll EPO, Mina Sm/or Plan, 81"8Sbield11.V<YAccess Plus, POS, <An Amerlai, {.anAIMrlal 65 PW (),,,.C9W HMO), CIGNA
PrlvtlJe l'NclU» Plan, lnterYal#y Hea/Jb Plan, Ma.'dcare, OM Hea/Jb Plan, PadjiCIW Htxlltb P/ml/FHPRall«"Are. 1'rirole ll#llb
CAn~ (PHCS), PrMCareASO, PrwCareHMO, PrMCareP/us, ~Senior<:att. Sealrf Horlzon.s (~H.WO).
llnllftl lle(l/tbctlle (Melralf«JJtb), lJnlvmtd Ctn
Greater Newport Pbyslctans ...
for greater cbotce In bealtb care.
For more Information aboUI Greater Newport Pbystdans or a directory of
tl:>e GNP pbystctans In your Immediate area, please call 714/760-5769.
*Note tb'1 al'WI cod• cbangtt from 714 to 949 starting April 18, 1998.
'
SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1998
St. Andrews celebnates ~O years of ministpg
R ELEVANT ANNIVEll-
SARY: Dr. Charles
Dlerenf:leld will join Dr.
Job.n Huttman at three services
this weekend as St. Andrews
Presbyterian Church celebrates
its SOth year of ministry m the
l;larbor Area.
Huffman who has served St.
Andrews for the past 20 years,
will be joined al the 5:30 p.m.
Saturday and 8:30 and 10: 15
~.m. Sunday services by his
predecessor, Dr. Dierenfield.
Sunday everung will see a
special celebration beginning
at 5 p.m. with hors d'oeuvres
and dessert, followed by a
special worship service at
7 p.m. with bagpipes; a special
drama production, ~Thank
you,· and an original anniver-
sary anthem wn tten and com-
posed by choir director Dr. Dan
Sharp and performed by the St
Andrews chou. Happy Anniver-
sary St. Andrews!
IRRELEVANT SELECTION:
Irrelevant Week founder Paul
Sala ta is m New York City this
weekend for the annual Nation -
al Football League dfdlt. The
Oakland Raide rs have the
rights to draft Mr. lrrelevclnl,
c o
*
.. Jim
de boom
who will be the last pick in
the '98 draft at number 240-
something and who will be
honored al a week-long cele-
bration m Newport Beach June
14 to 19, 1998.
The Raiders are no strangers
to Irrelevant Wee k, having been
blessed with th ree previous Mr.
IrreJevants -Delaware tight
end Phil Nelson in 1981, Col-
orado QB Randy Essington in
1984, and University of Nevada
Reno tight end Demetnus
Davis in 1994.
1998 Irrelevant Week aclivi-
55/45 Split On Consignment Items.
(Items must be nearly new, dry cleaned and on hangers.)
Now Accepting Spring ltemal
270 E. 17th St. #3, Co stA Mes. {714) 645-1 162
S~-Up
FITNESS CEN TER
Since 1982
631-3623
IN WESTCUFF SHOf>PINO CENT£R AT IRVlNE AVE. & 17'TH ST. IN NEWPORT BEACH
Make Those Patios '1
Entries Beautiful
"CunJed entry an4 wa1h with
Herringbone pooing creates a
dynamic look ."
Let Jim Jennings
install your compl<.'t<.'
yard lanJ~ape.
• Expert brick,
scone, tilt' & ,1,11e
worlc .
• Cal} recommenJ
quality Jestgner'l
& landscapers.
•Expert Masonry
repairs, dcamnJ!
& re-grouung.
•Drainage
problems r We
solve them.
• We arutall new
drains & repair
old Jraini'i.
ties include the Arrival Party o
June t4 ot Twtn Palms, College
Night and Jrrelevdllt Week
Oly_mplcs on June 15, Disney-
land on June 16, the Irrelevant
Week's Sports Banquet on June
17 at the Hyatt Newporter, the
Salling Regatta and BBQ at the
Balboa Yacht Club on June 18,
and the Runnin' Gunnin' Golf
Tournament and the Pub Crawl
on June 19. A fun week in
Newport Beach is in store for
Mr. Irrelevant XXDl.
Thai, Hu an's, Ho Sum Bistro,
The Cannery Restaurant, Star-
buck'I Coffee, Sabatino's New-
port Brewing Company, Peny's
Pizza, Pavilions, Bluewater
Grill, Las Fajitas, Mama Mia's,
the Udo Cigar Company and A
Secret Affair.
Funds raised help to support
the Orange County Child Abuse
Prevention Center. A Special
Opportunity Tickets area will be
available with a top prize,
You can watch the Salata
announce the Raiders choice for
Mr. lnelevant on ESPN's NFL ·
Draft Coverage on Sunday (time
uncertain). Arid watch the Daily
Pilot Sports section in the com-
ing days for complete coverage
on Mr. Irrelevant and Irrelevant
Week acti-qities.
round trip for two to England
sponsored by British Airways.
Movie tickets (which include
the food) cost $35 and $50 (VIP
Seatidg) each and Opportunity
Tickets at $5 each can be pur-
chased by calling Duncan
Forgey at 723-8800.
CLUB NEWS: Newport Beach
Lion Club member Lou Nock-
bold is spearheading a move-
ment of service clubs to install
service club signs at the north
and south entrances to the City
of Newport Beach.
HOP~ FLOATS: The Annual
Benefit Movie Screening spon-
sored by the Exchange Club of
Newport Harbor is set for
Thursday, April 23, at Edwards
Lido Theater. The movie is
•Hope Floats• with Sandra Bul-
lock, Gena Rolands and Harry
Connick Jr.
Food will be provided by
Rusty Pelican, Villa Nova, Royal
We WANT To BE YOUR FIRST CHOICE!
CALL Us TODAY!
~bitt Insurance Agency
Alff() • HOMEOWNERS • HEAIJH
40 Years in Business
J& 4;J
Nnmt.>••..,....•t~ r ,
631-7740
~lOMNewponBMi.•NcwponBacb
CN-ff""C H_,;..I)
· Full & Self Service Copies
· Color Copies (Canan)
· Binding (Spira~ Vda, FDJtback. Coi/J
• Fax Services
· Oversize Copies (J6" x tv11 untthJ
· PosterMaker
· Business Cards I Letterhead, etc.
· Rubber Stamps I Labels
· NCR Busine~ Forms
· Mac & IBM Computer Rentals
·Laser Printers (Color &: Black Ink}
· Typewriter Rentals
·Desk-Top Publishing
· lnterNet Access
· Office Supplies I Office Stationery
· Laminating (shuts/roll} & Mounting
(7t4) 438-1111
17•4l 438-1180 -Fax
2955 Harbor Blvd. • Costa MfSa, CA 9262'
<Amtr ~ Hutlor Ii l*r (Nm,. tMs lilMtd)
Local, Rotary, Kiwanis and
Exchange Clubs have expressed
support and a request to do so
will be made shortly to the
Newport Beach City Council.
PAT DOUGLAS, head basket-
Cost Effective
Legal So~
~
. Fall COior 11111111 Prtllllt 1/1#,, """"' >
. llJE F-Dillal Clllr PrtltlDt
(SIC COLOR l'OSTDS)
• BiD Boards, Signs, D~lays & Banntrs,
Praeotation Charts
· Enlargements or Photos, Artwork
. Pltats M CAD I WlllHWs Alllllcatlm
· Scanning Services
· Typesetting (Fl]Cn, N•w1k11m. •tc.)
· SpeciaJty Items (C•§11 lll•p, MoutptNls, lllllfMI)
· Photo T-Shirts I Photo Calendars
• 1111 Mun Muell Monim
ball coach at U.C.I., will be the
principal speaker at the Down-
town Costa Mesa Kiwanis
Club's All-star Basketball Game
Dinner being held at the Costa
Mesa Community Center Sun-
day night.
Attending the dinner will be
the high school boys and girls
selected for the North and
South All-star teams for the
33rd Annual All-star High
School Basketball game being
played on Saturday, April 25, at
Orange Coast College.
SERVICE ewe MEmNGS THIS
COMING WEEK. Want to get more
involved in your community, make new
friends, netwoft( or give something bac.k
· to your community? Try a sefVice cl~bl
You are invited to attend a club meeting
this coming week. Many clubs will buy
your first guest meal for you.
1UESOAY -7:30 a.m. the Newport
Beach Sunrise Rotary Oub meets at the
Balboa Bay Oub to hear Dr. Isaacs talk
about medical practice in Zimbabwe.
Noon Costa Mesa Downtown Kiwanis
Club meets at the Costa Mesa Communi-
ty Center. 6:30 p.m. the Costa Mesa-
Newport H•tt>or Uons OW> will meet
Slds. 445 Old Newport Blvd. in ~
Buch for an~"'" In dining.
WEDNESDAY -7:15 a.m.. News>ott
H.t>or Kiwanis Oub meets ~ the """' versity Athletic Oub. .,..JO •.m. Soutti
Coast Metro Sunrise RoQry Oub meets
at ~ {.enter Oub. Noon Costa Mes.
Rotary Club meets at Mesa Verde Coun-
try dub. The Exchange Oub of Orange
Coast meets at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Oub. Soroptlmlst International of
Newport Harbor meets at the Santa Ana
Country Club. I p.m. Newport-Balboa
Rotary Club meets at the Bahia Corinthi-
an Yacht Club.
THURSDAY -7:30 a.m. Costa Mesa
Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Club
meets at Mimi's Cafe. Noon Kiwanis
Club of Newport Beach.Corona del Mar
meets et the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Oub. The E><change Club of Newport
Harbor meets at Riverboat Restaurant
for a business meeting. The COsta Mesa'
North Kiwanis Oub meets at the Holiday
Inn. The Rotary Club of Newport-Irvine
meets at the Irvine Marriott Hotel to
hear Lew Webb.
• COMMUNITY a Cl.UllS is published
every Saturday in ~ Daily Pilot. Fax
your servke dub's ~ing information
to 660-8667 or man it to 1743 Bayport
Way, Newport Beach, 92660 ..
JOHN BLOESER CARPET ONE
2971.s. Bristol SL • Costa Mesa ~ ~
(Y, mile south of South Cou1 Pina) Mt°~Sp-'Pm ::.~-:.:;., -7 51-2 3 2 4 CA Lie. 127~
Comfortable Spring Denims as Currently seen
in Popular Department Stores
Short
J~r OU CE
51800
Reg. SSO
·~, '/-' -·~
Dallm
Oras
OUR PRICE
52400
Reg. S68
T~~ . ~
~~LLl=~T~~~
CONTEMPORARY WOMEN'S WEAR & ACCESSORIES
University Center Balboa Island
4237 Campus Dr. , 332 Manne Ave.
(Across from UCI) (Between Balboa Ice Cream
~n 7 Days Factory and Andlamo Hair)
854-4452 675-6887
Also Featuring ABAl.DNE
And
SIONE CRAB Cl.AWS From
JOE'S OF MIAMI
-"The Best Steak Diane Anywhere" .. Zagat R estaurant SunJey
-The Premium Steak & Seafood House in Orange County Since 1922
-Noted for Superb Traditional Tableside Sennce
Ne1tpott ~ Meaa o.ily Piloc SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1998 A"'I
·Newport woman finds her ·'SOlemates'
• 1Wo men she has never met
Will walk for her in fund-raiser
for Multiple Sclerosis Society.
By Alison Murray, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BBACH -Edwina Crites
has found her • Solemates. •
~ Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in
1979, Crj.tes, 68, no longer walks or
drives, so she cannot participate in
today's MS Walk at Mason Regional
Park in Irvine.
But Joe Ferrentino and Robert Slater
-two men she has never met -will be
her Solemates, walking on her behalf in
the ninth annual fund-raiser.
They were matched .with Crites by
volunteers from the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society, which started the Sole-
mates program three years ago as a way
to let members who can no longer walk
stay involved in the event.
•There are people with MS who
aren't able to participate themselves,•
Society Spokeswoman Stephanie Fisher
said. "But we still want them to be
involved, and they still want to be
involved.•
Eighty-to 90 percent of the. people
'i'
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who walk are doing so in honor of some-
one who has multiple sclerosis, although
not necessarily through the Solemates
program, Fisher said.
•What's nice is when you put people
who don't know each other together,•
Fisher said. •1t gives a personal mean-
ing to the walk.•
.Crites, who lives in Newport Beach
with her other soul mate -her husband
of 48 years, John -is one of more than
3,000 Orange County residents who
have been diagnosed with multiple scle-
rosis, Parker said.
•1 thought I was too old to have such
a thing as MS,• Crites said. •After years
of denial, I thought I'd better get on with
my life.•
Crites calls the beginning of her
involvement with the MS Society, partic-
ularly its support groups, a turning point
in her life. The connections with other
people who have the same needs and
problems have helped her tremendous-
ly, she said.
Now she is full of life. Her friends,
who affectionately call her Eddie, have
nothing but good things to say about
Crites.
"She's one of those people with a
really great outlook,· said MS Society
volunteer Diane Parker. "It's very nice to
Perrentino, 31, bas been partidpa~
in the MS Walk for five years since 1'
finished college and law school -
He said his involvement with the MS
Society began when be was a child. His
father had multiple sclerosis and died
when Perrentino was 10.
This is Slater's first MS Walk. The
Costa Mesa mortgage broker's involve-
ment with the MS Society began aftet
his close friend, Diane Parker, was diag'-
nosed with multiple sclerosis.
"(She) called me the other day and
said, 'Bob, can you walk for Mrs. Critesf'
I said, 'I'll do whatever it takes,•• said
Slater, 44. •1 was going to walk for
(Diane}, but there are enough people
walking for her.•
More than 1,000 walkers are expect:
ed at the lrvme site, one of four walks to
be held in Orange County this weekend
and one of 600 across the country.
MARC MARTIN I DAllY PllOT
Edwina Crites of Newport Beach will have two people she has never met
walking for her during today's Multtple Sclerosis Walk In Irvine.
The money raised from the walk.$,
which have been held since 1989, is
appbed toward the soaety's support
programs and research for a cure. The
Solemates program is an effort to make
such a large event more personal.
talk to someone who has (multiple scle-
rosis) and who has a lot of spirit.•
"I'm looking forward to meeting her,·
said Ferrentino, a Newport Beach attor-
ney who lives in Orange. "She seems to
have a pretty optimistic view of life."
"In their heart, they've got someone
they're personally trying to help,· Park-
er said. "It makes a difference.•
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1Wo-year-old Taylor Thomas
her doll. The needed bottle
break came while she and her
grandmother, Laura Benson,
were taking in an afternoon
softball game at TeWinkle Park.
..
liquor store owner arrested in cigarette sting
•Costa Mesa police say he tried to buy 20 cases of
cigarettes from an undercover officer to resell them.
By Husein M ashni, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -A local
ltquor store owner suspected of
buymg stolen cigarettes and then
reselling them was arrested alter
trying lo purchase 20 cases from
an undercover police officer,
authonties said Friday.
Issa Aldayyat. 33, owner of
Southwood Liquor, 2200 Harbor
Blvd., was taken into custody
Wednesday after a month-long
investigation by police and inves-
tigators from the state Alcohol
Beverage Control Board.
He allegedly had $6,000 with
him when he was arrested in the
sting operation about 4:15 p.m.
after meeting the undercover offi-
cer at Fair Drive and Vanguard
Place in Costa Mesa, police said.
Aldayyat was booked at the
Costa Mesa jail on a felony
charge of attempting to buy
stolen property and released on
$10,000 bail. He faces arraign-
ment May 15 in Harbor Municipal
Court.
Police said they were tipped by
anonymous sources that South-
wood Liquor was buying ciga-
rettes a t half price from people
who shoplifted them elsewhere.
The store allegedly resold the cig-
arettes at their regular price.
"The word on the street was
that these shoplifters could sell
their cigarettes at Southwood,"
Costa Mesa police Lt. Ron Smith
said.
II convicted, Aldayyat could
face a year in state prison, Smith
said.
ABC investigators may seek to
revoke the suspect's license lo
sell alcohol even though the
alleged offense is not alcohol-
related because it qualifies for
discipline under the state
agency's guidelines.
•Any violation of any laws that
take place at a licensed location is
subject to discipline, tt said Phyllis
Crippen, the ABC's supervisory
investigator. "Even if it was some-
thing like a lot of fighting at a par-
ticular location, there could be
some disciplinary measures. Any-
thing a licensee does affects us."
Smith said police are suspicious
of some other businesses that also
may be buying stolen cigarettes,
but that Southwood was the main
target of the investigation.
"It's a warning to other stores,•
he said. "We're looking at the
possibility of some other illegal
transactions."
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COSTA MESA -Meta
Conaolidate<t waw Di.strict Will tM>st a re¢onal water con·
ference next Week that ~ focus on the pianrung, engi·
neering and maintenance of
water ccimpanies.
The American Water Works
AsSodation's CalifOiilia/Neva-
da section, of which Mesa is a
member, will hold its 1998
Spring Conference at the
Doubletree Hotel from ·April
20 to 23.
This marks the first time
Mesa bas hosted an associa-
tion conference, held twice a
year in cities throughout C8li·
folllia and Nevada. About 650
water industry professionals
are expected to attend.
Wblle much of the week's
activities will be filled with tech·
nical discussions of water treat-
ment, facilities management
and other woter industry shop
talk. a few entertaining contests.
and speeches also are on tap.
Oo Tuesday, Costa Mesa
Mayor Peter Buffa will wel·
come the Visiting offidals at a
luncheon. which will be fol-
lowed by the Top-Ops compe-
tition, a Jeopardy-style trivia
'
g.-tbal Jlllf W8tilr company ~ :y-:: ooe another ·
ln a a•dribMed on their Ind~~· ~,; game will
come frGm .l\iCb areas as satety,
new ~ 8Dd <;beinistrY,
With tb8 ~ teem ~ on to ~~W'1e£theasso-ciatioii'• tloce. lri addition, the 10th annual
Tap~ Contellt Will be held at
8 a.m. Tuesday to find out
which crew is belt at replacing
a oroken w* llliei.
Ma.iJitenance crews will
work on a sectiori of line With
water floWing thiough it and
be marked oil for time taken
and water lotrt in the process.
A ~ called Meter
MadnesS will give aews a disas-
sembled water meter ..... indud-
ing a few spare parts just to con-
tuse tbeln -and two minutes to
put i\ tOgether. The contest will
be held at 10 a.m. 'Ibesday.
Mesa director 'Jiudy Ohlig-
Hall h~ organize the four-
day conference by putting
together several excursions for
the spouses of visiting officials.
The district collected $4,500
in private donations from Boyle
Engineering, Badger Meters
and other businesses to pay for
side trips, including a behind-
tbe-scenes visit to the Otange
County Perfonnmg Arts Cen-
ter, a South CoMt Plaza shop-
ping spree and lunch at the
Center Club.
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TlDles they
are a
changing
By Gene Koch ~
Travel planning, whether
for a family, a group of
friends, yourself or even a
honeymoon, is a lot different
today than it was not too
Jong ago. The reason is quite
cimple -more people have
traveled to more places than
ever before, so the emphasis
is now on new experiences,
new destinations.
enrichment, adventure and
romance.
The challenge is to fulfill as
much of the image in your
mind's eye as possible by the
reality of the travel
experience. This week's article
Will look at some of the
options to consider in
planning a vacation,
arranging a honeymoon,
choosing a destination for a
reunion or just getting away
• from it all for a change of i pace and a i'battery recharge."
Africa is an experience
Yes, Africa is an experience.
· A visitor comes to feel it,
) experience the romance of it,
~ the vitality, the peace.
! Long thought of as an
• adventurer's destination, an
African safari brings to mind
the image of a long trek on
foot across vast stretches of
wild terrain, accompanied by
a great white hunter. Today,
however, the "great white
hunter" is typically a dynamic
i World's largest
! ship plans
Caribbean
intinerary .
c
naturalist guide and the long
treks are replaced by swift,
timesaving flights over the
African plains.
Accommodations in Africa
may not be what you'd
typically expect. Safari's can
combine the use of tented
camps with small, unique
bush-homes, typically Colonial
era ranch houses or cottages
endowed with exceptional
charm and hospitality and
complemented by exquisite
cuisine and an impressive array
of amenities. Most are situated
in vast natural private reserves
offering unique game viewing
opportunities by foot, special
vehicle, boat or horseback.
Meals may be served al fresco
with the elegance of the finest
restaurant. Coffee or tea is
delivered each morning and
breakfast is served on your
private covered ve randah.
Around the campfire at
night, the stars seem brighter
than anywhere on earth. A
Hon's roar vibrates the air. The
sights and sounds of Africa
envelop you, an ever changing
image of the timeless cycle of
life. Your personal experiences
will last a lifetime and each
In the rapidly expanding
cruise industry, the greatest
interest this year has
definitely been the Grand
Princess. Princess Cruises
touts her as the' largest and
most expensive ship ever
built. The $450 million
LAST MINUTE TRAVEL PLANSU BUSINFSS OR PLEASURE.
NO SATURDAY OR MINIMUM STAY* REQUIRED.
DEPAKI'URF.S FROM LAX OR ORANGE COUNIY
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NIJQCIW
photo you take wi~l
remind you of a special
moment you shared in
time. Indulge·your
fantasies and spirit of
adventure while
rejuvenating yow body
and mind amidst one of
earth's most romantic,
stimulating and
unforgettable destinations.
For more information call
Nancy or Robert at Travel
Partners, (800) 255-3528 or
e-mail at
TRAVPARTNR@aol.com.
Personal adventure of
the mind and spirit
Cultural tours are as
different from the ordinary
escorted tours as the
individuals who embark on
them with you or the
distinguished Specialists who
accompany you.
IST Cultural Tours designs
their programs to be an
enrichment experience as well
as a travel experience. Built as
rich, small group experiences,
you are taken off the well-
worn visitor's path~nto the
kitchen of a famous French
chef ... behind the scenes of a
ruo Carnival, a London's Royal
Theatre ... or welcomed into a
Beijing home for lunch. They
do this with escorts that are
native to the resident culture
and are notable achievers in
their fields -professors, artists,
. musicologists. They can take
you to places and tell you
things only insiders know
about.
All you need is a passion for
discovery -whether it is
ancient history, art, royal
intrigue or rare vintage wine.
Call (714) 759-1475 for more
information.
Honeymoon with no limit
We're not referring to cost,
but content. If weddings take
ship is registered at
109,000 tons, will carry
2,600 passengers and is
951 feet long.
Stan Jenson, owner of
Cruise Holidays of
Newport Beach, points out
that Princess has taken
care to ensure that
passengers don't suffer
from the large passenger
list. There are two
gangWays for embarkation
and disembarkation and
three loading areas for
shore excursions. There are
three separate dining
rooms plus numerous
specialty restaurants.
There are also three
showrooms (three separate
shows nightly), music and
dancing venues, five
swimming pools, a nine--
hole putting green, a two
level children's and teens'
center and a S2.5 million
virtual reality area.
Cruise Holidays of
Newport Beach has
reserved a number of
staterooms for the Nov. l S
sall1ng, including several of
the 7.10' cabins with ptlvate
balconies. The ship wUJ nslt St. Thomas ana t. ~rttn tn the Vttgtn
lilanc::IS as Well as a full day
on P.rlncess Cays ln tlie
Bahamas. But the aul.
deSttnatlon u the Ship
tlaself.
Rx~ Nancy (X. RDbtrt
l.~MWdlat
place ln parachutes in mid·alr
and in wetsuits under water,
why limit the scope of a
honeymoon to the usual
places. You are limited only by
yow finances and these can be
expanded with a "Honeymoon
Registry." (We can supply
information on how to
accomplish this). Let your
mind savor all the possibilities.
A lot of thought and planning
ahead of time wilJ pay off in
cherished memories that will
last a lifetime.
Try these thoughts on for
size in addition to the African
Safari and Cultural Tour
previously described:
Bermuda - a
honeymooner's dream, this
seriously scenic island of pastel
houses and flowering gardens
has a decidedly English flavor.
In the summer the Atlantic
Ocean waters are warm enough
to swim in and the ocean
breezes cool the blush pink
sands. Rent a moped and
cruise the winding lanes and
explore the many beaches that
dot the coastline of this very
green island just two hours off
the East Coast and readily
accessible from California.
Cruise -the ideal all-
inclusive honeymoon. Food,
entertainment, transportation,
all your costs (at least most of
them) are known before you
leave. And the choices are
legion. Large ship, small ship
or sailing vessel; Caribbean,
Mediterranean, South Atlantic,
North Pacific or Southeast Asia;
exploration cruise or luxury
Hner. Budget or luxury or mid
pr_ice. Dress-up or casual, you
choose to suit your lifestyle.
Activities are as diverse as
the choice of ship and
itinerary. Play bingo, work out
in the fully equipped exercise
room or pamper yourself with
a massage and facial in the spa.
Gamble in the Las Vegas style
casino or dance until dawn in
the disco.
When making a cruise
choice, it is helpful to work
with an experienced cruise
counselor. The cruise industry
has created a certification
process for counselors. Ask
about it when working with
your honeymoon adviser.
Incidentally, if you give us a
call at (714) 759-1471 at least
four months prior to your
wedding date, and ask for May
or Pam, we will arrange to
send a free copy of the
Wedding Pages wedding and
honeymoon planner.
Visit Fiji with
Tropical
Inspirations
Tropical Inspirations
represents a variety of
"boutique" ·resorts in the
Fiji Islands. Toberua Resort,
Naigani Island Resort,
Moody's Namena Island,
Maravu Plantation Resort,
Matana Beach Resort/Dive
Kadavu, Hot Springs Hotel
and Savu Savu. •
Each resort is unique and
provides their guests with a
range of activities,
amenities and pampering.
The sailing yacht
Illusions, based in Lautoka,
offers guests the experience
of bare boat sailing around
the Fiji Islands.
Additionally, Tropical
Inspirations ls the North
American representative
for Air Fljl.
Tropical can book just
one resort or seveial
resorts, one flight or
several flights. They can
customltt and~
Unique vacattons·to·ftt any
bud~, for lndlvtduals,
dlents or groups, weddings
or hon~oons.
While noolCal's ex~
ls the FiJl.lsfan~, their
staff Is knowl~~ In an 1195 of the Sc:iuth
PKHk.
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KENYA SAFARIS
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THAT IS AFRICA
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•
(iO SATVROAY, APRIL 18. 1998
MnOSALE
•1st. John the Divine Episcopal
Chwch presents its annUAl patio
sale from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 183 B.
B St., Costa Mesa. Books,
~ goods, household items
more will be sold to benefit
Urch outreach programs. For
re information, call 543-3279. 6J •
fllQtENTING WORKSHOP
ntTbe Community Education
Olfice at Orange Coast College
piesents an anger-control work-
sMt>p for parents of children under
12 from 9 a .m. to noon in Room
204 of the Lewis Applied Science
Building, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. Cost is $37, pll.li a $5
msterials fee. can 432-5880.
H'ANGING GARDENS
J1 Sherman Library and Gardens
pi'esents a free workshop on hang-
ing vegetable garde~ at 9:30 a.m.
at 2647 E. Coast Highway. Corona
del Mar. Call 673-2261.
b
DWORCE WORKSHOP
~·Therapist Maxine Cohen holds
a..workshop for men and women
who have recently been divorced,
or are in the process of divorcmg,
ft.pm 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. dt 180
J'ifewport Center Drive. Cost is fO· Call 759-0579.
lJND,.,_,...U.,..~J-\!
DEN TOUR
~ The Volunteer Association of
"
Sherman Libfary and Gardens in
Corona del Mar holds its annaal
tour of six private Corona del Mar
gardens from 1 t a.m. to 3 p.m.
Tickets are $20. Proceeds will go
to maintenance of the botanical
gardens. For more information,
call 673-2261.
NEWPORT BAY EARTH.DAY
Upper Newport ·Bay Natural·
ists present an Earth Day celebra·
tion featuring exhibits, demon-
strations and tours from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. at 600 Shellmaker Island,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
mation, call 640-1751.
LAB EARTH DAY
The Lab Antlmall bolds an
Earth Day festival featuring envi-
ronmental organizations and live
entertainment from noon to 5 p.m.
at 2930 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. For
more information. call 966-6661.
MONDAY
CAL POLY SAN LUIS OBISPO
An admissions representative
from California Polytechnic Uni-
versity, San Luis Obispo, visits the
Transfer Center at OCC from 10
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The college is
at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
432-5894.
CHAPMAN REPRESENTATIVE
An admissions representative
from Chapman University visits
the l'cansfer Center at OCC from
i F X lntcrn(lttOn(ll Proudly Introduces Ep1L1ght at their F c1C1ltty
,...
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W,., c1 flash of light. na yourself d
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CONVENJENTlY LOCATED IN COSTA MESA
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FINANCING AVAii.ABLE
Live Classical Music Along the Course!
Sunday~ May 17
Praenudby s---CW UllTA AllA
~gilot
9 a.in. to 1 PJIL In.the Coumellng
and Ad111111ion1 Aonu, 2701
P&irvlew ROod; Coste. Mesa. Pat
more infonnationf call 432-589'.
VACATION ADVENTURES
The Newport Beach Public
Ubraiy ollen e ftee prognun by
June Pable ol Boulevardl navel
on spedal·lnterest travel opportu-
nities at noon at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For more
information, cd 717~1.
WOMEN IN FOOOSEfMCE
The Orange County Chapter of
Roundtable for Women in Food-
service holds its April dinner
meeting at 6 p.m. at Scampi
Restaurant, 1576 Newport Blvd.,
Costa M~. Cost is $30 for mem-
bers in advance, $35 for members
at the door, $35 for guests in
advance and $38 for guests at the
door. For more information, call
665-6312.
ALLERGY LECTURE
The Medical Plaza Associa-
tion at Newport Center presents
a free lecture on allergies at 6:30
p.m. at the Health Education
Library, 360 San Miguel Drive,
Suite 206, Newport Beach. For
reservations or more information,
call 756-9000.
CANCER DISCUSSION
Dr. Patrick Lynch discusses
colorectal cancer from 6:30 to 8
p.m. at Hoag Cancer Center
Auditorium, 1 Hoag Drive, New-
port Beach. For registration or
more information, call (800)
514-4624.
POETRY FESTIVAL
The Newport Beach Public
Library Foundation presents its
second annual poetry festival
from 1 to 8:30 p.m. at the Central
Ubrary, lOOOA~o Ave., N w-
port 8eiim. Adn>!Mk>n ii S5 « $.1
for founllab members, students
and letUon. Pot more Inform.a.
tion, call 117=-3890.
~DtET
Nuttitiollilta and fitneu
~ Joyce and Gene Daoust
present a lf!IDinM oJl The Zoo.8
Diet Made Easy at 1 p.m. at the
Sheraton Hotel, 4s.t5 Newport
Blvd., Newport Beach. The
DaoustB are authors of •40...J0-3()
Pat Burning Nutrition.• Cost ls
$10 in advance and $15 at the
door. Por more Information, call
565-3068.
BOOK SALE
The Friends of Norman E. Wat-
son Llbrary holds its annual
spring book sale from 9 a.m. to
8:30 p.m. today and 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. Thursday at Orange Coast
College, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call 432-5087.
HUMAH RESOURCES
The Professionals in Human
Resources Association meets from
7 to 9 a.m. to discuss •Ergonomic
Solutions for the Workplace• at
the Sheraton Newport Beach
Hotel, 4545 Newport Blvd., New-
port Beach. Prices range from $10
to $32. For more information, call
245-7834.
FIBROMYAlGIA SUPPORT
American Fibromyalgia Foun-
dation presents a free support
group meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
Hoag Hospital Cancer Center
Auditorium, 1 Hoag Drive, New-
port Beach. For more information,
call 840-8038.
SAN BAR
Tropic.al FJ .. h t-1 Pc..•1 ..
3150 Bear Street, Costa Mesa, CA'& (714) 708-4805
lutrruatiouaJ
~abquasrtrn
Visit the International
Headquarters of TBN!
Free hourly showings at the
VirtuaJ Reality Theater,
depicting the life and
miracles of Christ and the
ministry of the Apostle Paul!
"Over 50 Years of Fine Quality"
CUSTOM-MADE NEW fURNrruRE • DRAPERIES
ADDITIONAL 5°/o OFF
FOR SHOPPING ON SA71IRDA.Y APRIL 18u, 1998
LEAGUE OF WOMEN vomtS
The ~ °' women voten of OraPge Coast meets at 9:30
a.m. et a private residence Ill
Corooa del Mu. Por more infor-
mation, call e;«.5998.
OtAMla .-xER
The Costa Mesa OWnber of
Qimmerc:S and College Hospital
Carta Mesa hold a mtxer from
5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the hospital,
301 Vlctolia St., Costa Mesa. Cost
is StO for guests and free for
members. For more infonnation,
Can 855-9090.
ANANONG EDUCATION
The Re·Entry Center at OCC
offers e free workshop on educa-
tion finandng 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.
INVESTMENT WORKSHOP
The-Community Education
Office at OCC presents an invest-
ment basics workshop from 6:30
to 9 p.m. today, April 29 and May
6 in the Community Education
Office, 2701 P~ew Road, Costa
Mesa. Participants will learn how
to read financial papers and eval-
uate investments. For more infor-
mation, call 432-5880.
EOrTOR LECTURE
Los Angeles nmes production
editor Gary Jarlson discusses fea-
ture writing, travel writing and
the newspaper production
process at 7 p.m. at the Newport
Beach Central Library, 1000 Avo-
cado Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call 717-3801.
BOOK SALE •
The Friends of Norman E. Wat·
son LlbratY hold.I Its a!U1U8\
spring book sale trom 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. at OCC, 2701 Fairliew R~
Costa Mesa. Call (32·5087.
MAnt WOl'KSHOP The Re-Bntry Center at OCC
offers a tree four-part workshop
on becoming confident in math
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.ni. today, Apfft
30, May 7!ay. 15. The col-lege is at 1 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa 432-5162.
COMMUN IXER •
The Latino Business Council
and Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce hold a mixer for busi·
ness, civic and comm.unity leaders
from 5:30 to 7:30 p .m. at Country
Side Inn. 325 Bristol St, Costa
Mesa. Admission is free. For more
information, call .&74-7755.
MEDICAL REPORTING
Bruce Vancil, cancer-contro1
director for the American Cancer
Society, speaks on evaluating
medical and science reporting ip.
the media from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at
Hoag Cancer Center auditorium.
1 Hoag Drive, Newport Beach.
For reseivations or more informa-
tion, call (800) 514-4624.
NEPAL ANO MALAYSIA
Paula Kruse presents a free
slide show on her recent trek
through Nepal and Malaysia at 1
p.m. at the Newport Beach Public
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. Call 717-3801.
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• Famlly Owned Agency
• Established In 1927
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Craig_ Brown Insurance
(714) 760-1255
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•
ElANOMA SCREENINGS
Hoag Cancer Center offers
ee cancer screenings from 8 a .m.
noon at 1 Hoag Drive, Building
1, Newport Beach. For more
ormation, call (800) 514-4624.
l(ETCH WORKSHOP
Tlle Fashion Institute of Design
' d Merchandising presents a
0rkshop on sketching with mark-
. from 10 a.m. to noon at 3420 S.
ol St .. Suite 400, Costa Mesa.
is $15. Pree for institute mem-
' , staff and faculty. For more
ormation, call 565-2800.
UW LUNCHEON
' The American Association of
J\iversity Women hosts a fashion
bow and luncheon at 11:30 a.m.
t Countryside Inn, 325 Bristol St.,
osta Mesa. Tickets are $20. For
ore information, call 760-8508.
APRIL 27
rrENTION DEFtCrT DISORDER
' Coastline Counseling Center
resents a free lecture on attention
~cit disorder at 7 p.m. at 1200
uail St.. Newport Bedch. For
ore information, call 476-0991 .
I
APRIL 28
EMORY SCREENINGS
Newport Villa West presents
ee memory screenings starting
t 7:30 a.m. at 393 Hospital Road,
ewport Beach. Reservations are
equired by calling 631-3555.
PUBLICAN WOMEN
Costa Mesa Republican
men Federated meets at 10:30
.m. at the Costa Mesa Goll and
untry Club, 1701 Golf Course
ve, Costa Mesa. For more
ormation, call 557-6545.
E BIZARRE BEYOND
Psychologist Steve Mason pre-
nts •A Critical Look at the
FULL SET
•ACRYLIC
• Acrylic w!WMe Tip
• P!llk & While Powder
• Lume Get
Silk Wrap
ALLS
:tYLEEN & JEFF EWING • : I'VE LOST IT!
~
After looking at homes in the
Newport Beach area for weeks.
you have finally found a house
that is perfect I Unfortunately
your agent discovered that it
sold yesterday. Don't lose all
hope! Your Realtor may suggest
that you make a back-up offer.
so that you will be right there
and ready if the prospective
buyers don't go through with
the purchase.
The first rule of being
"second in line" is to remain
emotionally unattached to that
house and to keep looking.
Things can go wrong with the
first contract. For example, the
prosF,tlve buyen may ~t a
aemunal ~of •buyers' jlttcrt•
back out of tho transaction
r their loan application may be
~lined. The1 may have a
ome 10 ~II anct a limited
-mna·nt of wne In whkt\, to tell
t. As the Cc)ntrect t;uytn. t~
::have 1 1trq legal fntcn:at in
l"ttte h0u1e. but if their purebue
l.alla th.iOugh, you have a chance
aitt the hOule that you lo~
just can't count on hi
Je01\ and Jeff have 26
m.nccutive ~ OI niaJ e1aatj
... llPe'.riellCe in N~ Beach.
~ ... ~ art COidwell &.nlcet'I ••
Elti.il11n11, For ptciojlionll lietVke
advice with all )'OUf real ............ 1,..... ..
(114) 644 aG XI 14.
BWUTe Beyond,• a free program
on mysterioua topics, including
the Bermuda niangle, extla.ien-
sory perception and fortune-
telling, at noon at the Newport
Beach Central Ubra.ry, 1000 Avo-
cado Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, C411717-3801.
ua REPRESENTATIVE
A representative from the
admissions office at the University
of California, Irvine, vi.sits the
Thansfer Center at Orange Coast
College, 2701 Fairview Road, Cos-
ta Mesa, from 9 a.m .. to 4 p.m. to
meet with students interested in
transferring to the university. For
more infonnation, call 432-5894.
FUTURE OF HIV
Dr. Paul Cimoch of the Center
for Special Immunology speaks
on "The Future of HIV• from 7 to
8:30 p.m. at the Doubletree Hotel,
3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. For
reservations or more information,
call 253-1512.
APRIL 30
YOUNG REPUBLICANS
Orange County Young Repub-
licans holds a mixer from 6:30 to 9
p.m. at the Blue Water Grill, 630
Lido Park Drive, Newport Beach.
Admission is $8 for guests and $5
for members. For more informa-
tion, call .475-5559.
RESTORING BALANCE
Therapist Maxine Cohen pre-
sents a free program on accom-
plishing the most with the least
amount of stress at 7 p.m. at the
Newport Beach Central Library,
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information, call
717-3801.
MAY2
COMPUTER CLUB
The Orange Apple Computer
DONATE YOUR
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HIGHEST TAX
W~fTE Off POSSIBLE
DONTTHROWYOUR MONEY AWAY.
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.
. .. ~
The JeWiSh COmmunlty Center of Orange
County presents ·~om Ha Zikaron: Israel
MemOrial oay• at 7 p.m. on Wedn~ay,
APril 29, at 250 E. BalCer .St., Costa Mesa.
sul. For more information, call 755-0340.
Club meets from 9 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. in the Chemistry Building
at Orange Coast College, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Castlewood Systems will
demonstrate its new removable -
media hard drive. The first meet-
ing 1s free; annual membership
1s $30. For more information, call
836-0522.
ONGOING
ACCENT REDUCTION PROGRAM
Healthtech presents a free
introductory '.)'Orkshop, M Accent
Reduction and Cultural Adapta-
tion in the Workplace," from 9 to
10:30 a.m. every other Saturday
and from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Wednes-
days at the Healthtech offices,
3140 Redhill Ave .. Suite 150, Cos-
Poinls
Appraisal Credil Report
Admin fee
Processing fee
Underwrilrng fee
Documenl fee
Wire fee
Tax service fee
Title Insurance
Recording fee s
Escrow fees
ta Mesa. Seating is limited. For
reservations or more information,
call 751-0256.
AEROBIC-CARDIO KICK BOXING
Body Design and United Stu-
dios of 'Self-Defense offers aero-
bic-cardio kick boxing classes
from 8:30 to 9:30 a .m. Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Saturdays at 1000
W. Coast Highway, Swte C, New-
port Beach. The cost 1s $8 per
class. For more mfonnabon, call
722-0526.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Alcoholics Anonymous mem-
bers meet from 6:45 to 7:45 a.m.
weekdays in Room 3 at the
Oasis Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar.
Call 644-3244 for more informa-
tion about the meetings.
ALZHEIMER'S SlJllfllORT
•The Alzheimer's Association
and Grtef Support Group of New-
port Villa West/Villa Rosa co-
sponsors a free support group
meeting for caregivers at 7 p.m.
on the fourth Thursday of each
month through October at New-
port Villa West Assisted Living,
393 Hospital Road, Newport
Beach. For more information, <:all
631-3555.
• The Alzheimer's Association
and Mesa Terrace, a residential
community, for people with
Alzheimer's disease and related
dementia; offers a free support
group for caregivers ,'at 6:30 p.m.
on the first Tuesday of each
month at Mesa Terrace, 350 W
Bay St, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 283-1111.
ANIMAL BEREAVEMENT GROUP
Rebecca Lewis leads an animal
bereavement group that speoal-
izes in the needs of individuals
who have sick and/or dying aru-
mals in their lives. It meets at 3
p .m. every Tuesday at 3101 W
Coast Highway, Suite 311, New-
port Beach. The cost is a donation
to an animal charity of the
attendee's choice. For reserva-
tions, call 721-5750.
ANOTHER PASSAGE
Another Passage, a transitional
support group for people experi-
encing changes in their lives,
meets from 1 to 2:30 p.m.
SATURDAY, APRIL 18,' 1998 A
BAL80A SKI CWI
The Balboa Ski Club meets .. .,
p.m. on the first and third 1b1eck1J •
of each month dwtng winter till'
the Tee Room at Newport ~
Golf Course, 3100 Irvine A~
Newport Bea.ch. For more infor·
mation, call ~-7560. t' •
fj;t
BLOOD PRESSURE SCREENINGS ~a
Oasis Senior Center a blood-pressure screenings from,_
to 11 a.m. on the first and ~
Tuesday of each month in Room 1t-i
at 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona
del Mar. Screenings also ~
available from 1 to 2:30 p.m. on
tfie second and fourth Wednesda!Jj
of each month at Mariners P~
Dover Street at Irvine AventMWc:
Newport Beach. For more info~.-1
mation. call 644-3244. )'
.Jo
BODY IMAGE SUPPORT I
The Newport Beach Psy~
logical Association offers a body
unage/moderate eating suppai,t.t
group at 7 p.m. Wednesdays at
3101 W. Coast Highway, No. 31A..,
Newport Beach. Call 721-5750 ....
•o
BRAILlE INSTITUTE .,r..,
Oasis SeniW Center offers a
Braille class to help with sight l«*J
trom 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thwsdays
in Room 4 at 800 Marguerite Ave • ...,
Corona del Mar. For more info~¥
mabon, call 644-3244. 1"'
• •
First Annual
Newport Harbor High School
Home & Garden Tour
•Thursday, May 7, 1998
• 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM
Visit charming and unique homes in the
Newport Harbor area. You will enioy lunch
catered by PLUM'S of Costa Mesa.
nckets only $30
TllCKETS PRE-SALE ONLYI
CAU TODAY! (714) 399-3401
Please join us for a FREE M~LANOMA SCREENING
AT HOAG CANCER CENTER
ONE HOAG DRIVE, BLDG. 41 • NEWPORT BEACH
Saturday, April 25tlt from 8:00 a.m. to noon
In order to participate, individuals need to meet tj)t!followtn1 criteria:
multiple moles, family history of melanoma or a personaJ history of intense sun exposure. .
Reservations are required. To schedule an appointment, call 800/514-HOAG.
All•:
On Wed .-.r. APftl 29 loln Dr. Naae, SUverber1. Hoag Hospital dennatoloetst,
as stie speaks to the community about ways to protect yourself from.the sun. She wtll
alio provtde early detection stratecMiS. H~ Health CeM• lnlH, 4870 BatranQ
Paitny, 7 "' 8 p.m. 'A reservation ts tequlred. Please CaJI 100/514-HOAG.
'
~ «12 SATIJROAV, APRIL 18. 1998
·EXPO
CONTINUED FROM A1
tional booths l8l up by public
agencies, including the Costa
I MMa Police Department.
While the Youth Expo features
entries from almost every Orange
' County school, Newport-Mesa
Unified School District students
C are featured prominently.
1 ~ Inside the Youth Building, art-
E work of students from College
~ Park, St. Joachim and Adams ele-
,J mentary schools are on display.
c Students in middle school,
D junior high and high school
p receive first-, second-or third-
place ribbons, and entries from
C first-, second-or third-graders get
a participation ribbon. ~ College Park students Kimber-
1 ly Palombo, 10, and Rachel Oins-
2 dale, 8; Davis Elementary student
E ~ura Dinsdale, 10; and Adams c Elementary student Jenny Sarris,
o 10, explored the Youth Expo on
Friday, checking out their entries
.. and those turned m by their class-
mates.
P Kimberly earned a second-
ii place blue ribbon ror· a pastel-
a pencil drawing of a dolphin she
d did for the school's Art Masters
[ program.
~DUMP
~ CONTINUED FROM A 1
~ But Bob Caustin, founding dir-
! ector of Defend the Bay, refuses to
accept the regional board's action.
: ·u went exactly as we expected
• U to, and we are appealing the
: ~. • Caustin said. ·111e record
!ii hos been developed to our end
I ~cellently by our scientists and
legal counsel. It's proven conclu-
sively in the records that their pro-
jet:t does not benefit the bay and
that treated sewage doesn't
.
1be district art program brlngs
1n professional artiatl to teach
specific tedlniques to students
and faculty. then challenges stti·
dents to do their own artwork
using the new techniques.
For her drawing, Kimberly
used colored pastel pencilJ to
draw a dolphin leaping out or the
water in front of a rainbow and
other sea anjmals,
•Then I went back over it with I
a wet brush,• Kimberly said. The I
effect is a slightly blurreq image j
that l~ like it's actually under· !
water: !
For her third·grade project, I
Rachel tore pieces of white and I
colored paper into various shapes
and assembled them to form a I
snowman amid a wintry scene. !
The art assignment forbade stu-1
dents from using pens or pencils, !
so they had to create an image !
entirely out of tom paper. Rachel !
received a third-place ribbon. !
Fairgrounds General Manager 1
Becky Bailey-Findley said she i
gets a kick out of seeing the bus i
loads of students who drive from l
near and far to see their entries at l
the Youth Expo. 1
"These kids come in and 1
they're so excited to see their ~
work on display,·· she said. "It's 1
really fun to watch.• 1
belong in the bay. H J
The Irvine water district is cur-
rently operating under a two-year
agreement with the city that pro-
hibits any reclaimed water from
going into the creek. That agree-
ment ends this October, at which
time the water district could
begin using its permit.
However, Thompson said he is
committed to working out an alter-
native plan with the city, so long as
it is reliable and cost-effective.
·u we find something that
works for the marsh cost-effec-
tively and reliably, we will imple-
ment it,• he said. "If we don't, we
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714..646.0275
NEWMAN
CONTINUED FROM A 1
!or comment Friday at his house
in the g~ted. beclc:hfront commu·
nity of Bayshores or his Newport
Beach car dealersblp. He 1s a
partner in Westport Inc., which
brokers "dream cars• such a..s
Porsche and Ferrari.
Pictures of exotie luxury cars
line the walls at Westport's small
office ln a 16th Street business
park and the desk is covered with
copies of Auto Week magazine
and auto-pricing guides. The
EASTBLUFF
CONTINUED FROM A 1
nity is at stake here,• said Mike
Bigi, a member of the Eastbluff
Homeowners Association board.
"Once our neighbors 'understand
the situation, I think they would
do the same thing if it was in their
backyard."
But Rocky Wheeler, also an
Eastbluff resident, said he doesn't
believe a •minority opinion•
should dictate the configuration
of an intersection used by thou·
sands of people each day.
"They are taking away peo-
have the reclaimed water for . a
tailback option. Either way, we
have a win-win situation because
the project is going to create
enhancements to the San Joaquin
Marsh and Upper Newport Bay."
Don Webb, Newport Beach
Public Works director, said city
officials are confident a mutually
agreeable solution can be
reached.
•we feel that even though the
permit was issued, other agree-
ottice was doced Frlday.
"H la a l~ttmate businea-
man and Is not gUilty of theta gwg , • Riddet laid.
NeW'ffi4?\ ls charged in the
indictment With helping to obtain
a van used to ~ some of
the marijuana in California, pros-
ecuton said. He also Is ccused of
obta.i.ning hotel rooms, rental cars
and cellular telephones for bis
alleged co-complrators in the
drug·smugglln·g operation that
began in 1995.
Riddet said b1s client has been
released on $200,000 bail and is
in town, but will make no person·
al statements about the case
ple's right to drive straight across
Jamboree,• he said. •1 will con-
tinue to forge forward to get more
support if that's what it takes."
At the meeting, Edmonston
presented the results of traffic
counts conducted at various inter-
sections before and after the
changes were implemented Jan.
15. The survey showed redactions
in traffic in and out of Eastbluff
.and increased traffic on Eastbluff
Drive, Caroelback Street and La
Vida.
Some notable differences were
1,500 fewer cars per day that trav-
eled on Bison and an increase of
about 440 cars per day on La
Vida, the street that accesses a
ments that the city has with (the
district] will successfully keep the
discharge from coming into the
bay,• be said. ·We feel we can ·
work with them in accomplishing
what needs to be accomplished.•
Caustin declared Friday as •a
great day for the bay," because he
said the fight is far from over.
"I walked out of there on cloud
nine because they don't know
what's coming after them." he
said. "We have a wonderful case
and we're going to win.•
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ltlon-Sat 1().6
while Wlder 1nd1ctmenl
"The real sad t.bing about this
1s it's veTf ~ugh on him and bis
family," he N.1¢ ref erring to New-
man's wife, Kbil. who ls a flight
atteod4Jit~ and three sons.
Riddet said he was reta1Ded by
Newman apedflcaDy for the crimi-
nal case and does not represent
him u his J)ersooal or business
attorney.
He would not oomment on how
or why Newman came to be ind.let·
ed on two federal oounts that each
carry a muimum sentence of life
in prlson and a S4 million fine. The
indictments were announced after
a two-year investigation by the
community park, the local post
office and various businesses.
Another area strongly affected
by the traffic ch«mges is near
Corona del Mar High School.
lraffic on Ford Road, which now
is the onl~ ae<!ess road for resi-
dents east Of Jam)>bree, is backed
up for about 20 minutes during
busy morning and afternoon
hours, Edmonston said.
Councilwoman and committee
Chairwoman Jan Oebay called
U.S. CUstoms ~ and Drug.
Bn.f oreement Ad.ministrtltiOU.
"You can gpeculate aboUt why
be was broUght into this, but tt'r
bard to tell until the ~t
turns over whatever eWJence it w." he said. •We've recetvdd
nothinq so far.•
In federal court, Riddet said,
prosecutors are not required to
immediately disclose their evi-
dence and statements from wit·
nesses but can wait up until the
day before court. 1
"It's trial by ambush,• he sai".
"Hopefully, people will keep an
open mind and let us give them J
chance to show. he is not guilty.•
for the staff to continue meeting
with school and police officials to
try to improve the traffic situation.
Barry Eaton, an Eastbl~ asso-
ciation board member, said the
board planned to take a vote of all
the association members to deter·
mine what the majority wants.
Eaton added that he was
encouraged by the traffic count
results, which showed a decrease
in cars traveling into the Eastbluff
community.
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SATURDAY, APRIL 18; 1998 A9
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Circle the square at town-center Triangle
By Alison Murray, Daily Pilot
T riangle Square is possibly
best known for its shop-
ping outlets. Nike Town,
VLI"gin Records and Barnes &
Noble are among the more pop·-
ular retailers and there's even a
grocery store in the basement.
But shopping -especially at
chain stores -can be done at
many places. lhangle Square's
charm owes more to its other
features: It is centrally located
m Costa Mesa, and it is a prime
NJ G HT
LIFE
place to relax, people-watch
(parbcuJarly as a movie ends
dnd the eigtll-screen theater
emplles), a'1:i visit with fnends.
The crowds aren't stifling, but
there are always some people
around.
I
The second story courtyard
-called the Town Square -
has plenty of tables and a
plethora of eating options. Live
music, from folk to classic rock,
is offered on Friday, Satwday
and Sunday evenings. The per-
formers are often locals but
Tony Bennett, No Doubt, Big
Bad Voodoo Daddies and Green
Day have also come to play.
MOISES SAMAN /DAILY I'll.OT
A view from the roof of Triangle Square shows the town
square, where there's a variety of night We including live.
music, a movie theater and dining.
When all is quiet and the
stores have closed, lhangle
Square IS a good place to sit I
and talk over a cup of coffee or I Square are Sfuzzi, Johnny
dinner. Among the many Rockets, Upper Crust Pizza and
restawants ringing the Town La Salsa and downstairs, Pain
Track • Bathroom • Kitchen Fixtures
ALL AT CLOSE-OUT PRICES
lSSS PLACENTIA AVE.
NEWPORT BEACH
645-7301
645-7856
HOURS:
10am-4pm
Mon.-Sat.
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•Magic Shop
•Juggling
•Gag Gifts
• Books-Tapes
Under new ownership
and management: •
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i. aw"~ I i :..c.:... I : +MOW ..at: PNe I : + MONI: 722-1600 I
I I ~------------------------~ du Monde has delicious coffee.
The upstairs space is also
open free of cl)arge to organiza-
tions that need a place to hold
• special events, from fund-raisers
and business events to dance
school performances. And more
than 500 people showed up to
an Easter service hefd by Rock
Harbor Chwch. The center puts
on its own events as well.
including a recent Academy
Awa,ds viewing party.
"We kind of like to think of it
as the town center, so to
speak," said Triangle Square
spokesman Ned Bondie. "We
like the community activities."
Parking isn't bad on the
average evening (there are
1, 100 spaces), but if a really
special event is happening,
spots can be near impossible to
find. Be swe to wear a jacket
on breezy evenings -the wind
comes right through -and rain
tends to eliminate the Town
Square as an option.
And if you feel ambitious,
I
you can always do your grocery
shopping at the subterranean
Ralph's.
LAl6E 1 '. 111A Sf'S n. Combination Menu
> PHILHARMONIQUE DE
MONTE-CARLO
The Orchestre Philharmonique de
Monte-C.arto will perform at 3 p.m.
Sunday at the Ora~ Countyfer-
forming Al1s Center, 600 Town
(.enter Drive, Costa Me$a. Ttdcets
range from S 15 to $45. A preview
lecture will be hetd at 2 p.m. For
Information, call 553-2422.
> PAOFIC SYMPHONY
The Pacific Symphony Orchestra
will perform at 3:30 p.m. Sunday
at the Newport Beach Public
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. Admission Is free. For
Information, call 717-3801.
> PAOFIC CHORALE
Pacific Chorale will present its
•voices" concert. featuring the
world premiere of a new work
by California-based composer
"James F. Hopkins, on Sunday at
:30 p.m. at St. Andrews Presby-
rian Church, 600 St. Andrews
oad, Newport Beach. Tickets
ange from S12 to $35. For infor-
ion, call 662-2345.
'LOVE mNKS'
C's Repertory Theatre Compa-
y will present "Love Stinks"
y and Sunday and April 25
26 in the Drama Lab Studio
OCC. 2701 Fairview Road, Cos-
t.a Mesa. Performances are at 5 •nd 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2 and 7
m. Sundays. Tickets are SS in
ance and S6 at the door. For
formation, call 432-5640.
. '
> 'POCAHONTAS'
The Riverboat Players will present
"Pocahontas" Sundays at 1:30
p.m. April 26 through June 14 at
the Newport Harbor Nautical
Museum, 151 E. Pacific Coast High-
way, Newport Beach. Admission is
$8; S4 for children. For informa-
tion, call 675-8915, ext 374.
>'ARCADIA'
South Coast Repertory presents
Tom Stoppard's •Arcadia,"
through May 10 on the Main-
stage, 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. Tickets range from
$28 to $43. For information, call
957-2602.
> LANDMARK'S PORT
Landmark's Port presents "The
Man Who Would be King"
through Thursday at 5:30 and
8:30 p.m. nightly and at noon
and 2:45 p.m . April 25 and 26 at
2905 E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar. For information, call
673-6260.
>'M'
The Orange County Museum of
Art presents "M, Ha 1930 German
film about a psychotic child mur-
derer at 6:30 p.m. April 24 at 850
San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. Admission is $5; $3 for
museum members, students and
seniors. For information, call 759-
1122.
1. (Colts): ------
2. (Chargets): ____ _
3. (Cardinals): ____ _
4. (Raiders): -----
5. (Bears): ------'lite Sutton <Aace Hotel
6. (Rams): ------
7. (Saints): ------
8. (Cowboys): -----
9. (Biiis): ------1998 DRAFTNIK
10. (Ravens):-----Name
11. (Eagles): -----•-------Address
12. (Falc<>ns): -----
13. (Bengals): -----h::r--.......... -----1
14. (Panthers):-----
11e IWc I 3 WI Vt# pkk of the draft which wilt C)Otne dOMilt
to the llist ~ «aftild In the teWnth ;ound on Aptl 1t.
Mr. Irrelevant XXlll (Rakters' ~
· > WATEltCOlOR a.ASS
The Orange County Museum of
Art will offer an intermediate
watercolor dass on Saturdays
from 1 to 3:30 p.m. today
through May 16 at 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport Beach.
Cost Is $50; $40 for members, stu-
dents and seniors. For Informa-
tion, call 75~1122, ext. 204.
> 'COASTAL MAINE'
The Newport Beach Publlc
Library presents "Coastal Maine,•
an exhibit of watercolors by John
Salchak. through Aprll 30 at 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport Beach.
For information. call 717-3801.
>. ISRAEL EXHIBIT
"The Oead Sea Peace,• an exhibit
of photographs by Jenni Kolsky,
and "From Israel Wrt.h Love,• an
exhibit of watercolors by
Dorothy Rice, will be on display
through May 14 at the Jewish
Cpmmunity Center, 250 E. Baker
St., Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call 755-0340.
> MANUEL NERI
The Orange County Museum of
Art presents "Manuel Neri: Early
Works, 1953-1978H through May
10. The museum is at 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport Beach.
Hours are from 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. Tuesday through Sunday.
Admission is SS for adults, $4
for seniors and students. Chil-
dren under 16 and museum
members are free. For informa-
tion, call 759-1122 or visit their
web site at http://www.ocart-
snet.orgJocma .
SATURDAY, APRIL 18. 1998 A15
I
I
I
I
I·
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
: Ryan Huntsi:nan, a Corona del Mar senior, was suspended under the dlsbict's zero-tolerance policy after
· police stopped his car because he was playing music too loud and found drug paraphernalia. The Newport-
Mesa school board voted to uphold Huntsman's suspension, but Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert
Thomas overturned the suspension Tuesday.
By Gay Geiser-Sandoval
P eer Court was moved from New·
port Harbor High School to Cos-
ta M~ High School this year,
so I got the opportunity to be one of
the attorney ad\dsers to the teen
juries. . ,..,., •
The idea bebi.a<i Pee( Collrt is to
let first-time offenders m,minor~~ •. -
crimes have a chance fu Wipe their
records clean by admitting their
crime and facJng a jwy of their peers
for "sentencmg. •
If the offender completes the condi-
tions in the time limit imposed, the
conviction will not go on their perma-
nent criminal record. U they do not,
they are referred back into the Juve-
rule Justice system for appropriate
sanctions. I worked in Juvenile Court
for a year and I know how kids some-
times blow off adults. It's a little hard.er
lo put up the facade with kids who are
Just like them.
Peer Court starts out with a real
Judge or commissioner who presides
at the school's "courtroom,• ptcldng a
Jury of about six kids. Then the proba-
tion ofhcer reads a synopsis that
explains the circumstances of the
cnme, the offender's school atten-
dance and grades, any consequences
imposed by the parents, the offender's
job or outside activities and whether
the offender says he takes illegal sub-
respon-
sibility for their actions or inaction.
Kids don't buy the parent mentality
that, •My daughter is 17, and I don't
have cOJrtiol• or, •She won't talk to
ine. • Teen juries think that is a cop-
out. •
In my <>pinion, this questioning
~is probably tbe best form of
~ent tliat can be found, and
after abOut 15 minutes, most at.th~
offenders look like they would tattier
be in a fiery pit than have to answer
~more ~on about, •How do
you tbink:your mom felt when she
saw Y9\l in baQdcuffs?• or, •oo you
want your little brothers to do th.isl
What were you thinking about when
you knoW bow they look up to you?"
or, •Just becaute your cousin told you f
to steal some~, you still knew it
was wrong, <lidn't you?" or, •How
c:oiaW y~ mn enjoy the beer when
b:tfiO ~stole it?" I ,,
el toro debate
.
I am spedffcally writing regarding Tues-
day's article about Ryan Huntsman's
victory C-Huntmwi wins,• Aprll 14).
School board member Wendy Leece said,
"Ha judge can overrule the decision of an
elected body that ii enforcing a policy it
wrote and believes in, it's a sad day in
America."
Get a life. There is no person or entity in
this world beyond reproach. It we were to
follow Ms. Leece's logic and take it a step
furlber, appanmtly the govemmental enti-
ties in the antebellum South should not
have been forced to stop slave?)' because
they believed in and wrote the policy.
Whether the school board wrote or
believes in the policy is totally irrelevant
to Judge Robert Thomas' decision and
irrelevant to whether the policy is legal
or enforceable. The fact remains that
transferring a senior student just weeks
before graduation because of an
[alleged) illegal search and seizure based
on a noise pollution stop of bis vehicle is
wrong. End of story.
MIOiEUE HANCOCK
Newport Beach
Congratulations to the school board on
upholding the suspension of Ryan Hunts-
man under the zero-tolerance policy
(MSchool board may reconsider policy,•
April 10). 1 believe the rules and iegulations
are for all the students and not for just the
students who cannot afford to buy their
way out when they Commit an infraction.
Parents should be teaching their chil-
dren that they have to be responsible for
their actions and take the consequences
when they have made a bad decision.
How else are they going to grow to be
law-abiding dti2ens if anytime they do
Wrong, Mom and Dad will bail them out?
Little Johnny will feel no repercussion for
bis bad behavior.
I do not think the school policy should
be-dlanged when it comes to the drug
and alcohol policy. It never can be too
strict. Better to stern bad habits now than
bury them later on in life. lbe message
that is being sent to an students is break
the rules and pay.
I wonder if Dana Black and Jim Ferry-
man would have the same concerns for
changing the zero-tolerance policy if this
was a poor kid from Estancia or Costa Mesa
High who could not afford an attorney.
KATHLEEN TRACY
Costa Mesa
• EDITOR'S NOTE: The school board voted April 9
to uphold the district's s~ion of Corona del
Mar senior Ryan Huntsman under Its zero-tolerance
potky. Tuesday, Orange County Superior Court
Judge Robert Thomas overturned that decision.
Officials don't care about Newport or John Wayne ·
R1chdrd Taylor doesn't think
Tom Wilson knows the
answer to Uus question: "What
will happen to Newport Beach
dlld Orange County if there is no
new El Toro Airport?•
Tom's dumb like a fox. He
knows n:wst South County lf~r ,
dents around El Toro are salivat·
t0g a t the prospect of no noisy
planes Oy.lng over them for the
fitst time. That plus the real
~tote boom will allow them to
sell their suddenly quiet homes
for big profits starting next year.
So, Let's follow his and their
tl)inking: Tom will be e1ected,
tile new El Toro will be stopped
somehow: and John Wayne will
be expanded whenever Orange
County needs it to be. When It'• •
time to call his bluff on financing
for either his "People's Park• or
for Jolin Wayne's expansion. he
hopes to be running for some
Wgher of fk:e.
about what happens to Newport
Beach, John Wayne or the rest of
Orange County in 10 years. All
Tom and that gang want to hear
is complete silence overhead,
and all they want to see are dol-
lars in their w4llets.
None of them cares one bit
what happens to Newport Beach,
El Toro and John Wayne airports
or the rest of Orange County in 10
yean. If they did. they would get
on board and plan an El Toro and
environs that work for tMUJbody.
MICHAEt STENER
COlto.MeM
Mr. Buffa, your subjectMty is
showing.
Ironic is a. word that is often
overused or ~tiled. But it ii t.Qe
lea.it attic.al wOrd l can UJe to
deecrtbe Peter Buff•'• commen-
tary that a~~ tbe Dally
Pilot on the subject of the alter·
native use pla.Ji for the El Toro
airport (Commentt ana eurto51-
tiea, •Millennium Plan hat loopy
ideas f0t El Toro," Aprll 3).
so lacking Jn evenhandedness
thot in his m=ess to be clever, the best cri of an alterna-
Uve use plan he can muster is to
say it's too idealistic and vision-
ary. I know it rnuat be a grind to
tum out a weekly column, but
C4ll't he do better than tbat1
Are we 10 eccustomed in this
COIJUnUlii~ to thin!dng smdf It's
true, the easiest path is to think,
"Let's•· an eirpOrt is there,
let's build a bigger one that's
o~n 24 houn. • 1bink about W
Here we have a lOcal mayor Criti-
dztng ~~permanent~
space, residential aDd mixed-use
areas-and~ like pro~
nentt of that View are~ in a
dream world. •
There ii nothing tn the Mlllen.
mum Pion that ii etped..aUy
Utopmi, detpite Mr. Butte's
mu:sical analogy. The want l can ..
say about it ti that It nrpr•mtl
more Of the same for~·
Co\.01tJ, l\U I'.l'dlooel more of
the Mme OMr ihall the
.ameanyday.
1be only .P8QPJe wbo are
in a new airport, and their kind
of big we can do without Of
course, their support is shrouded
in the cloak of economic devel-
opment. My view is this area is
overdeveloped already.
I am one of the few Newport
Beach residents who opposes a
new airport and lives near tbe
flight path of John Wayne. In my
36 years of life, I have 1ee11 thil
pl.ace change drutically. As my
uncle uaed to say, •1be19 ii too
much of ev8ryth1ng here" -and
that WU 15 ~ago. When I
get off & plAQe and walk through
J()hri Wayne, I think. •1'b11 ii just
the tight kind of airport for
Orqge CoUnty. • El Thro aJiport
p~ mUll have a mUch
ditfer.nt notion Of what tb1I aree
rep..--tl tbaft mine.
What um pr\XW Dil;di ij a
felr.~~of com~ pl8M that compar-.
applel to applel. We Med ·that to
occur In a~ or otber
~bile farmet. wtdlollt~
Ttien. Wilm we beY8 • ......, ' Uil Oi11D*mdtf, tmn Medi eG be ........ WllM Dae CDUD•
rother than divides.
PETER PASTRE
Newport Beach
Most of South Countf,1 eJeet.
e<l politidant and those who nope to be, like Cost.a Meso'•
Sindy Genii, will continue to
sP,Put wtutt ver i.rresponiible
nonsense wru get them el~
' Uk Tom, they cowd care J ..
I find it ironic that a cJty may-
or and weekly commentator -
tho kind of penon we·~ to
be idea.Ustlc on our b8halt~lt
::=*)f..,ibil~ nohM~~.tau ~-:.~r-
I
.J
.,
AIRPORT
CONTINUED FROM A 1
some real good possibilities for
the county,• he said.
• •1t addressed. the need for an
iirport ... and complements oth-
~ uses in the county rather than
b>mpetes with them.•
f But members of the El Toro
Reuse Planning Authority, a
)::oalltion of seven South County
titles, were not as impressed.
: They immediately assumed
µtat alternative D, which calls
Jor a high-capacity airport at El
troro and conversion of John
Wayne to a general-aviation o.ir-
port with no commercial flights,
will be the county's preferred.
,.Itemative.
"I think they really are look-
ing at a 34 million annual pas-
penger airport, and that is an
t intense use in our backyard," ~e Mayor Christina Shea
paid. "They said this was
~esigned as a railroad concept
and I agree -we've certainly
been railroaded in South Coun-
ty.•
' Paul Eckles, executive direc-
tor of the reuse authofity, said he
ls skeptical that non-aviation
uses such as a regional pa.rk and a children's home are feasible for
the end of an airport runway.
"The real plan is alternative
D/ Eckles said. ·1 don't think
they can finance El Toro without
closing John Wayne ...
, Edwards called those asser-
tions "absolutely false.~ On the
tontrary, he said alternative D is
probably the least feasible of the
four options because there is too
tnuch support for keeping John
}Vayne open.
' Ahlfeldt also discussed seven
f~condary options the county
must study because of environ-
mental regulations. Those will
examine various ways John
Wayne could handle increased
passenger demands without a
commercial airport at El Toro
and an El Toro airport with 10
million and 15 million annual
passenger loads.
Wiercioch said the Board of
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,
SUMMARY OF PLANS .
Here is a summary of the four primary
alternatives, labeled concepts A through
D, for redevelopment of the Bl Toro
Marine Corps A1r Station:
(A) -A moderately sized domestic pas-
senger and cargo ahport at El Toro, with
international service limited to Western
Canada and Mexico. John Wayne• Airport
eventually would serve about 6 million pas-
sengers per year and El Toro would serve
about 19 million passengers per year.
The airport would be surrounded with
a mix of light industrial and commercial
businesses, hotels and a hillside technolo-
gy park made up of national research
institutes and laboratories.
(B) -A full international airport and
cargo service at El Toro operating in
conjunction with John Wayne. By 2020,
El Toro would serve 28.8 million pas-
sengers per year and John Wayne
would serve 5 million passengers per
year.
This plan calls for a commercial and
industrial Global Town Center and cor-
porate business complex at the ~ont
entrance to the airport temunal.
A Gran~ Boulevard lined with
shops, restaurants and hotels would
connect the airport with the town cen-
ter.
(q -An El 1bro International
Allport serving 2' million passen-
gers per year with John WayM offer-
ing shott-d.lstanoe flights to terVe 9.4
million passengen per year.
The two commercial airports,
wb1c:b are about seven ~ apart.
would be linked 'by a $300 miDion
high-speed peOple mover and ~
entially would wotk as one airport.
The surrounding non-aviation
uses include a town center, hillside
technology park, central mall and
corporate consulate that would
house international business of-
fices and hotels.
SATURDAY, APRIL 18. 1998 A f7
{D) -The largest capacity
international passenger and
cargo airport ~t El Toro, serving
an estimated :W million passen-
gers per yea{. This alternative,
which assumes John Wayne
would revert to general-avia-
tion use only, is the closest to
the county's original reuse plan.
It is described as a high-
capacity, international trade
center with strong industrial
support and includes a residen-
tial element in the hillsides.
Life Has Enough
Ups and Downs ... 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE!
+ ~120-The El Toro AlrJ>911 Otlzens Advisory CommllllOn
r•vleW.s the S)fan at 4 p.m. at the Mall of Administration, 10 Ovk
C1nter Plaza, 5anta Ana.
+ April 21 -County supeMsc>n review the plan at their regular
lllfftli1g at 9::IO~.m. in the board """'Ing room at 10 Civic Cen-
ter Ptaia. Santa Ana.
+ .,.122 -A public outrffch meeting will be hosted ~
Superilsor 'Todd Spitzer from 7 to 9 P,.m. at El Toro Migtl School, 25ass foledo Way, Lake Forest. '"
+ MaY 11-A public outreach meeting wlll be hosted by Super-
vfsof 1Tori1 Wiison from 6 to 9 p.m. at Corona del Mar High
SdlOOI. 2101 Eastbluff Drive, NeWR9rt Beach.
Supervisors will choose a pre-approve a final reuse plan,
ferred plan sometime before which could include any of the
swnmer, when work on the envi-four alternatives as well as a
ronmental impact report will non-aviation proposal, at the
begin. The county expects to end of 1999.
•
ti~~F>
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Newport Bach
(714) 645-2930
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
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miniature children'• prdem and
floral deaian exhibit; all this and
more surrounds
towering ruim
' SHOW HOURS:
Friday, April 1 7, 1998
10 am· 8 pm
Saturday, April 18, 1998
10 am -6 pm
Sunday, April 19, 1998
11 am· 5 pm
SEMINARS INCLUDE:
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-Bob Smaws LA T rmL\
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EYE-OPENER
Ravens will pick
Mr. ln-elevant. not Raiders
' f.: P 1 t f \' r, r J r
v·J ! r f\. .'.\ X 111
Pre-draft
trade is
anything
but
irrelevant
• Ravens, not
Raiders, hope to
cash in on next Mr.
Irrelevant.
Apparently back peddling
on a previous Commitment
to Irrelevance, the Oak.land
Raiders have surrendered
the last pick in this
weekend's NFL draft in a
trade with the Balbmore
Ravens.
Ravens owner Art Modell,
still reeling from the hit his
unage sustained when he
moved the Browns out of
Cleve-
land, is
presum-
ably will-
ing to
embrace
the pro-
motional
wizardry
of Irrele-
vant Week founder and
Newport Beach resident
Paul Salata, in hopes of
enhancing a reputation tamt-
ed across wide expanses of
NFLfandom.
The trade enables the
Ravens' purple and black to
replace silver and black as
theme colors for Irrelevant
Week XXIII festivities. which
will honor the last player
chosen with a week-long
gala, a celebration anchored.
but not confined to, the
shores of Newport Beach
each surruner.
Oakland had previously
obtained the last pick in a
trade with the Super Bowl
Champion Denver Broncos,
which would have allowed
Al Davis to welcome his
fourth Mr. Irrelevant to the
Raiders camp, had not Mod-
ell & Co. intervened.
Now, the Ravens, named
for the famQus poem penned
by Baltimore native and liter·
a.ry master of the macabre,
Edgar Allen Poe, will delve
deep down their draft board
to tab the franchise's first
Lowsman nophy bcanoree.
• Estancia's restraint
after first baseball victory
of the season is cause for
admiration, not concern.
Tiere didn't have to be a
og pile. I was fine with
that. And dousing Coach nm Green with the now-familiar
ice water/Gatorade bucket
would clearly have been going
too far.
When I began, however, to
ponder the aftermath of Estancia
High's first baseball victory in 14
games this season -an 11 -8
triumph over Orange Lutheran
Wednesday in the Pride of the
Coast Tournament -I was
disappointed there wasn't at least
the gleeful toss of gloves, a high
five-fest at the mound following
Armando Ortiz's game-ending
strikeout, or a collective hoot
and/or holler the death of a
19-game losing streak (dating
back to last spring) might have
deserved.
I wondeted if, in their desire
to obey the co9.e of cool which
dictates restrai,nt in the face of
victory, as well as defeat, the
Eagles might have muffled
emotions as important to sports
participation as the tenets of
sportsmanship they dutifully
displayed.
If Montreal Expos pitcher
Carlos Perez can gesticulate over
· one of 27 outs, and sluggers
Barry Bonds and Rickey Hender-
harry
faulkner
son can begin their home run trot
with such brazen baseline
choreography, why shouldn't the
Eagles visibly enjoy a
The Ravens, who have
done little to enhance the
storied Baltimore football
tradition first estabhshed by
the Colts (who have long
sinc::e slinked off to their
domed home in Indianapo-
lis), become the 14th team to
take the final stab in the
annual Mel Kiper gab fest.
-By Barry Faulkner
Mesa Verde Country Club champion Denise Woodard uteS a little body language to help
navigate her putt on bol~ 15. Woodard won the ladies' dub title Prtday for the third year In a row.
well-earned and long-awaited
win?
But that was before I talked to
some veteran Eagle players:
before Green helped show me
the light, as bright as the raging
competitive fire that fuels every
Estancia player.
"We're all here because we
love baseball." said Green, for
whom Wednesday's win was bis
first as varsity coach at his alma
mater. ·0ur main goal is to play
the game the right way and, if
we end up winning, that's great.
Every kid in a uniform is a
baseball player and there's a lot
of pride that goes with that. You
want to excel and do your best. U
you go out there and you're
0-and whatever it is, as long as
• She wins her third
straight club title, will
enter Tea Cup Classic
for the second year in a
row this summer.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Denise
Woodard, who was once too
embarrasseq about her golf
game to join the women's club
at Mesa Verde Country Club,
captured her third consecutive
club championship on Friday to
earn another appearance in the
Tea Cup Classic.
Woodard, the first lady to
win three straight titles at Mesa
Verde since Shirley Kinder, who
won titles from 1983 to 1985,
entered the fourth and final
round with a seven-stroke lead,
then fired her best round of the
tournament (84) and finished
with an 11-stroke victory.
Woodard, who won Me!>a
Verde's dub championship last
year by four strok~. was invit-
ed for the second year in a row
to the big summer party known
as the Tea Cup Classic, which is
part of the Fletcher Jones
Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club
Championship Series.
The Tea Cup Classic, con-
tested for the first time last year
at Newport Beach Country
Club with Selby Schriber (Big
Canyon Country Club) wmning
the engraved silver tea set, IS
st.aged to determine an overall
women's club champion in this
newspaper's circulation.
you know you did your best, yeti
can be proud. There's some~
to be said for the love of the
game, which, I think goes
beyond the intrinsic value of
wins."
Est.and.a senior third basemen
J.O. Willey said the Eagles'
failure to openly emote should
not be construed as anything bOt
appropriate.
•we were happy, believe me. ·
·But it's not like we won the
World Series. Baseball is a game
of respect. That means you
respect the other team. as well-es
the game. You don't celebrate In
front of the other team. The
coaching I've had at Estancia bas
• SEE PREPS PAGE 83
ln last year's inaugural Tea
Cup Classic, Woodard shot 86
and finished last among the
four golfers, but sbe became a
crowd favorite with her late
heroics in front of an estimated
gallery of 100, making a bogey-
saving put\ at 16 and a birdie
putt at 17.
· •That was the most fun I've
ever had playing in the Tea Cup
Cassie, even though I was the
biggest backer,• Woodard said.
·rm just gl4d I was able to chip
and putt at the end.•
Wooda.rd is the second lady
to qualify for Tea Cup Classic D
this summer (at Santa Ana
Country Club. with the date to
be announced). Schriber meiit-
ed a spot when Big Canyon
canceled its women's club
championship this year because
of major reconstruction on the
golf course.
Santa Ana's title will be
decided next Friday (Marianne
Towersey is the defending
champion), while Newport
Bea.ch will crown its champion
on April 30 (Debbie Albright
defends).
Woodard, whose time on the
links has been cut short lately
because of a business she oper-
ates, Mail Boxes Etc .. made one
birdie in the final round on the
par-3 No. 3 (148 yards). She
used a 9-wood to four feet from
the flag, then made the putt.
•1 just feel fortunate ... I did-
n't thiAk I'd play well enough to
do it again," said Woodard. who
made six JMUS, including back-
..
i ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------4---------------------------------------------------.. . ._~~~~~~~~~~~
• I · daily pilot high school athlete of the week
•
•
•
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'92TOYOTA
CAMRYXLEV6
Full~. New Ltxw rradt.
(0678+f) $13,977
'96AIJDI
A4
I t • t I
'95 LEXUS
Sm'IU.E 2.2 CL. ES 300
Silvn/Grey ltather, mint, Rt4/Grey, katlwr, W1lttllt10r1itatM~q>cQi,
Lt.xw trade, onl149K Pmnium Pict .• mnr/, CD Ima · ·
Ms. (835463) cMn,tr (00301~) (0973 > $14,477 $20,97~ •23,977
MMC MARTtl I o..LY PLOT
Secoacj..place flnllher Marj Hall tries to drain a long putt on 18. •
ACHTERBERG
CONTINUED FROM 81
2A home runs in 15 games, the
guy who it supposed to get OD
bAM aod set the table is clelllng
everybody's plate. He leads the
team in round-trippers, carries
an eye-popping .956 slugging
percentage and is battinq .511
(23 for 45) with a dozen RBI.
• U I could clone him, I
would,• Emme said of
Achterberg, the Daily Pilot
Athlete of the Week, whose
sword helped slay mighty Santa
Margarita last week in a crucial
Sea View League game televised
by Fox Sports West 2.
"He's one of the hardest
working, most dedicated guys
we have, who is also a vocal
leader when he needs to be.•
Emme added, ·and he cares
about the game a great deal,
which is important to me
because I feel the same way
about il •
Achterberg, who also has four
stolen bases (five attempts) th.Ls
spring, cared enough about his
grade-point average to get
accepte4to an Ivy League school
(PrinCetOn), which will welcome
~ b5t into the lineup next year.
Achterberg, who enjoyed a
breakthrough season last sum-
mer in Connie Mac~ League and
quit football to concentrate on
baseball.his senior year, went 4
for 4 wi,tl\ two solo home runs
-_....""--=~,.·-RBI in the Sea Kings'
oc tl-10 victory over
Santa~arita on April 9, handing e Eagles -ranked
No. 4 h1 ange County at the
time -· first league loss m
seve,n games.
game that triggered Ach
streak of hitting dingenl in
straight games.
•He really is (bot),• Emme'
said. •tte's hitting the ball to
different fields, and he's r ........ .._.::11 ....
getting us going. Besides dri
in runs and scoring runs, he'
rally starter.• :
Achterberg, no stranger ~
long-ball dramatics (t~
Nate Lemmerman's home run
beat Santa Margarita), once bit
10th-inning homer to defeat
Back Bay rival Newport Hai
in 1996, one of three bombs be'-
hit that year.
Achterberg called last se
wheri he connected for four ;
home runs while batting .289
·sub-par year, and that was •
of the reason why l quit foot-:"'
ball.. :
After his junior year, A .....
chterberg caught the attenti ""'
college coaches, mcluding .
Princeton's Scott Bradley, wheQ •
he batted .353 with two home
runs in 17 at-bats during the
Conrue Mack World Series in..
Farmington, N.M .
BOYS GOLF Morse competes today at Mt. SAC
•we really wanted to win,
(and) we knew we could do 1t, •
Achterberg said. "But we hadn't
put it all together -pitching,
fielding and hitting in one game .
We had been in a little slump.
But (Matt) Larson pitched a good
game and defensively we played
an errorless game (actually one
CdM error was recorded). Finally
we put it all together, and it was
on (regional) television.
Achterberg, who has a 3.~
GPA and scored 1,270 on the
SAT, played for the Orange ·
County Dodgers, who finish
second and established a teaJL
record with 15 home runs in Tars edged
at Pelican Hill
• VlSit.ors from Napa prevail.
NEWPORT COAST -Mltch
Johns dnd Trwghe Concannon
each shot 78 for Newport Harbor
High's golf tedm, but v1s1t10g
Robert Lows Stevenson edged
the host Sailors in d nonleague
match Fnday morrung, 403-404,
at Pelican Hill Golf Club (Ocean
North Course).
Stevenson's Steve Sparohni
ea.med medalist honors with 76,
while Johns and c.e>nc;moon fol-
lowed Scott Tippett (82), Kevin
Olson (83) and RUSWRill (84) als~
scored for Newport Harbor, ')'bile"
Sailor alternates Miller Akin8185)
and Zak LaFata (86) also had hot
hands.
In acbon on Thursday m the
Tribute to Youth Tournament at
Desert Princess Country Club,
Riverside Poly won the title at
367. Newport Harbor (391) was
14th, whtle Estancia (397) tied for
16th Tippett (80) led the Sailors.
followed by Johns (81). Olson (82)
and Hill (88).
PREPS
CONTINUED FROM 81
• CdM sophomore will
try something new, the
1,500 meters.
By Richard Dunn, Dady Plfot
W AL.NlIT -Corona del Mar
High sophomore sensation Liz
Morse, a state finalist m the guls
800 meters last year, will compete
in the 1,500 meters today at the
Mt. San Antoruo College lnVIta-
tional al 11 :20 a.m.
It will be Morse's first time run-
ning the event in track and field
competition.
"We might as well try some-
thing else,·• CdM Coach Bill Sum-
ner said.
A week from today, Morse will
run the 800 at the makeup Arca-
dia Invitational, while the rest of
the Se.a Kings compete at the
Orange County Championships.
·we feel she qm beat the peo-
ple in Orange County right now,
so what we want is for her to face
W!J~lick picks San Jose State
Corona del Mar High senior will continue his golf
career as· a Spartan at coach's alma mater.
CORONA DEL MAR -Senior Max Wallick of Corona del Mar
High's golf team has committed to San Jose State to continue his
career, CdM Coach Paul Hahn confirmed Thursday.
Wallick, who reportedly is receiving a full-ride scholarship to play
for the Spartarls, applied to only two schools, Long Beach State and
San Jose State.
Hahn also played collegiate golf at San Jose State.
Wallick, who has defeated PGA Tour professional Esteban Toledo
among his many accomplishments, will play for Spartan head coach
Art Williams. Williams loses sue seniors diter this season.
-By Richard Dunn
people who will race faster,•
Sumner said. •Right now, I think
Llz is ready to go to the next lev-
el .•
Morse, who has been clocked
in 3:45 while training in the 1,200,
is the reigning CIF Southern Sec-
tion Division II champion in the
800 with a personal best of 2:12.
The 31st Arcadia Invi~Uonal,
one of the most pr track
and field meets in thi · . ;;wos
rained out April 11. Z -
TODAY .........
College
-South-
ern California College at Westmont.
noon.
Community college -Or~ COISt =re Santa Ana, noon. '
College • Southern California Conege
at Cal Baptist. noon. Women'•..,,. ..
College -Westmont at Southern
califomla College, 2 p.m.
Qww
Community college · Orange Coast
College at State Championships In
Sacramento, all day.
"R'Mll m1d field
Community college · Orange Empl~
Conference preliminaries at Mira Cost.a.
10a.m.
"I guess we have good
pressure hitters. We can hit
under the eye of the camera. In a
game like that, it's kind of like
there's no way we can come out
fiat. You just go as hard as you
can go for seven innings,
because if you (mess up) on
television, your friends won't let
you forget il •
1Wo days before Cd.M beat
1he Eagles, Achterberg werit 2
for 5 with a two-~ run in
Santa Margarita's 20-1•""1n. a
• Cypress takes it to
Orange Coast, 8-0.
COSTA ~SA -Orange
Empire. Conference front-runner
Cypress College handled host
Orange Coast Friday, with a 8-0
Orange Empire Conference soft-
ball win.
OCC's Carrie Crimson was 1
for 1 with a walk, but the Pirates
managed just three hits against
Reanna Mendoza.
Seven OCC (9-22, 0-17) errors
World Series. ~
The Connie Mack World .
Series team record for homes. •
bad been 11. Achterberg hit~:
Dodgers' 12th, a career high· ~;
~ht. ~ :
Achterberg has learned. .. • •
"Baseball can pick you up or.-
slam you down,• he said. • ·
Now, wblle bis size might
permit it, he would like to
continue ~ei,P>U&lood ~t!llJH home run i1Jig without an
ther interruptions. It might
last until the real World
ORANGE EMPIRE CONFERENCE
CVPMSSI.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE 0
Cypress 1 SO 20 -8 10. f'
Orange Coast 000 00 · 0 1·7
Mendoza and Tantardim; Phelps ~
Despalmes. w -Mondoza. 17-0. -
l -~ps, 4-1 2.
Back Bay tops No. 1 OMB~
Friday's couna
NEWPORT LANDING -
4 00.ts, 67 anglers. 16 bonito,
19 cellco bass. 2 sand t>.ss. 18
rodcflsh, 12 sculpin, 7 sheep.
head, 4 whitefish, 14 mKkerel.
DAVEY'S LOOClll • 5 boW,
108 anglers. 4 yellowtall,
39 bonito, 1 barracuct.. 34 calico
bass, 15 sand bass, 12 sculpln,
1 O sheephead, 6 rockfish,
12 mackerel, 12 ~.
• Local rugby club hosts
team from England today.
a~~~o~ RUGBYi
Back. Bay Rug-
by team. fresh off a 27-17 upset
over top-seeded OMBAC of San
Diego last week. hosts a squad
from 1\vickenha.m, England, as
well as the visitors from San
Diego again at t 0:30 today at
Peninsula Park.
Last weekend, Back Bay
aged through nasty wmd and:
to post the win behind il.G.Q.111~~
Grant and Andrew Reynolds.
Cosseltini, as well 4.5 J
Wtlk.ey, Trovoy McKlnney
Thny Mills.
Anyone interested in nA1,..•
paling in future games sboul
the Back Bay Rugby Ho ·
675-6799. naining is held a
coin Elementary Tuesdays
Thursdays at 6:30 p.m.
REC«~ATION STANDINGS
--...~..-#<•=---
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Pa.str Ads Hrrc
Pastr Ads Hrn:
ByFax
{714) 631-6594 (P~ai.e u1cf1Mk your riurnt aod
phone num.bt>r and we'll cull you
back with 11 price quotr.)
ByPhone
(714) 642-5678
--
By M8B'ln Penom
3.30 West Bav Stteet
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
Ar '.'lrwport Bh·d. & Buy Sr.
Polley ·--
RMt,.. und df•udl~ un-.. ubjt<1't to 1•h.u118f'
.. irhuu1 nmic'r. Tiw publi.,h .. r tt'M'l"H 1ht right
tu ''"""'''· f'l•d tMi(y. rt\ hr r>r tt'j1-c1 411!' rltb,ifkd ud,·,.ni1trmt>r11. Pl1·ui.r n-pon om· l'rn1r
1h111 mu\' b .. in vour do11:.ifif'd ud immrillu1dv.
TI11· Doily Pil1.r 'u1Tepr11 110 llub!lity for any itrror
in un udw•nh.emt"111 for whkh 11 muy bf
rl'1op11111oiblr C''h.'.l'P.t for the ce»r u! rht' 1>p,u1't!
uc1uullv or1•upirCJ bv thl' emir. Crl'dir cw1 cmlv •
bf' uUowrd for thr f'irs1 in~nfon. ·
----DeadllDes ---
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Thursday ....... Wednesday S:OOpm
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C:O.u Mesa CA 9l6l7
Roars
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
~ondav-Frida,·
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'.\iond.oy-F ri~y Friday ............... Thursday 5:00pm
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UBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
OUT·OP·ST.ITE COSTA MESA 2124 19Q8 Wfilcn Is u,e bUslnen ~ day before the tale dated
1pec:Jn1<1 above. -
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE
CORONA
DEL MAR
NEWPORT
1022 BEACll
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
1069 PlOPBITY 1558 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
D•ted: 2/tT/98 -cn1ta90407 /I/ OICAR WANO Harbor Vw Hom••
NOTICI! TO /I/ RITA WANO EQUAL HOUSING CORONA DEL MAR Expanded, remodoled
CREDITORS OF Pub.ll1hed Newport OPPORTUNl'TY 5br 4.5ba. $885,000.
W'aldo CM Sharo
home. Room wtbath
under conatruction
Shr bath temporary.
Utll paid. S375/mo BULK IALI Beach·Costa Mna Dally JASMINE CRl!EK Marybeth 844-6373
(Sl!CI. et04, · Pilot April IS, 1999, Alt m lat1tt"'9ftbt111a• 38r Fam Rm, Views. x181. Prudenllal CA lli•Slilllll••llil --------
ltOS u .c.C.) Sa088 "'"""' ......... F... Ocean and Greenbelt Really. EXQUJSITE3'0>9qft NEWPORT
lhorowNo. PUBLIC NOTICE N1lfllrtte.hieAct t11.,. 2Br Den+ Family .... L-ld-0--1.-1-.-u-p-g-ra_d_•_d, COUNTRYHOUSE BEACH 2 169
t ·21418-pm ~ wllldl ..._ II HMtll Room, Jacuzzi. 3br. lplc, 2 pa1to1. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Nollet Is hereby given to CITY OF 11 ,,..,, .. , .,., '"™""· Seller will entertain l LEVEL All Brick
credltore of the within COSTA MESA ON "9111111H " •IK rlalHllH OLD CDM 1 Block to o f I or 1 be 1 w • e n 40 Acres w/ Balboa la. Bayfront
MC9'1C NW named Hner lhel a bulk •EHALF OF MsM 11 race, cetlr, """"· Ocean Blvd Duplell. $489.000·S5 68.876. 8 Acre Lake 501 North Baylront
nle Is 1boul to be made ol LA •1. ~. a.11111 ...... • Alao Fabuloua tingle Hyla Bena 844-6200 3 Lg. BO 3 BA. Magnificent 4Br 4.5Ba M•llOllllAL MM the UUll ducrlbed AIRBORNE W 11111"'1 ertete. • •• lllHllM family realdence avail. x233. Prudential CA Formal Dinin~, lam rm, format dining,
Cem .... ..v. • u.v........ below ENFORCl!M&NT .. a1i1 Hf "'' ,,_.._ R aJt L Rm / F/ 2 FP's , root aundock. v • ..,., ............ , T>.a 'n·~ and .. ·-1-11 •••00c11 . • "'OUNA Bl!ACH e y. v w I ,.._ape!• ,.. _ _.ory ,, .. -·-· .,....,,.. ..... ....... .... 11111t1• • -G K' II wetbar. 5/c gar, no "'" ...,. .. ,,., addtHHtollhesellerare: NOTICE Top of the World NEWPORT OOLF orgeous nwa Tiii• ""''''" wlll 111 h b's/ I' dock. Vac $7500/m o 3500 Pacific View Drive LILY LO VALVERDE ANO INVITING BIDS 2·Sty Oce:1n View 5Br COURSI! One Level w ttc ca app s Donald Pfaff ...___. e.cti MENG CHUN LO ANO FOR HELICOPTER ._...., aca,t Illy ...._. No Stepa. 2Br 2.5Ba. Lg. 3 Car Gar, 71 ... 433 .. 528 ·e;a700 BOONNIE LEE. 590 W. MAINTENANCI! •ll flr rlll...,ftldl lsl• N.B. Magnlllcent Golf den, new white carpot 50i800ucBldg. Cold;ell "aanker 1i--------111tl 19th St., Cotta Mn•, CA. BID ITorM ,........ .... llw. °" "*' Couru View 2Br & paint. Thousands In w/ I 5' overhang
--._...... 92827 ,.. "' ••'"7 lele191M "11 Ill U d ti $395 000 NB 2bd 2ba Condo n~ ....,,...,.. The tocatlon In camomla NO. 10t8 ft1lll111 "'"""• 11 '"' pgra es. a garage , IB.L llOADWAY of the chitf executive office NOTICE IS HEREBY ......,tr .,.. 1Y1llMl1 II ff BETIY JO, REALTOR Agent 714-935-4601 (add'l 388 ams avail) Pool, Surber carpet.
of tht Seller 11: SAME AS GIVEN that sealed bids will _,__..,_._le ~ 7 eo-eeo5 NEWPORT HEIGHTS 573 765.5535 re-modeled bath's . Mortuary * .,...__nAf c· f _. ..,.,...._.., ---WHtctilf area. Avl 5/1 v.JG,..... ABOVE be received by lhe •IV o .,... .. ~.call llUD Two Elegant Family .__ ...... ___..__ ....... ;...;...o ........ _... Cremation A• 11111<1 by the seller, 111 Costa Mesa on behalf ol Ttl.ftt .. 1.-..U•·-· Fw Deluxe Catm Prime Homes For Sale By S 11 OOmo + •igned • l:l I S 11 I f • d It other bU1ln111 name1 and Airborne Law Enforcement Loo 5Br 5.SBa 3 FP, 8 u 11 de r. 5 4 8 •80 4 8 security 845·2350 ':! ,...,uy t. 0 t. In • 1 ~'°fte'::Y addrHSH uHd by lht SefVlcn (A.B.LE.) lo wit: ............. OClfa'llal gourmet kit, .. c sys. MAX MORGAN DEV •Newport Height•• ...... Cl lfl d sellerwi1hlnthrffyear1b.-The City Clerk, P.O. Box allllUOllUl-lMI S1.1Mll By Appl Only •••••••• 3Br 3Ba. w/gar, patio. .... ass e • M2-8UIO lore lht IUCh '"' WU ltnl 1200. Costa Mesa. Calilor· Judy Orushkln, Agent Nwpt Shr• 2br, olc, HOUSES/ Ip, w/d hk·UP•. very ~----=:...:..:.:...=...::...::..:...::....:._:_: _____ _.. ________ I or delivered to the bUyer nla 92628·1200! on or be-714.729.8939 VM 2ba, beam cell, newer quiet. 51600. 759•0874 ate: NONE l0t1 the hour O 10:00 a.m. • .. •••••••• Ille oof B II Grundy CONDOS
888 OBITUARY 888 OBITUARY
VICCELLIO, A.J.
87 years of age, resident of Corona del Mar
since 1948, passed away Apri l 16. He was
born on March 8, 1911 in Lake Charles,
Louisiana. A.J. was a pilot for KLM Airlines for
many years during the l 930's and 40's, flying
routes in the Caribbean and South America.
Upon his return to the United States. he
became a test pilot for Douglas Aircraft during
WW II. A.J. was a local reaf estate broker with
an office on Pacific Coast Hwy. He was the
ve»y first "Realtor of the Year" for Newport
Harbor Board of Realtors and was involved in
many transactions for over 20 years in local
real estate. He "retired" and for a decade sold
motor homes for a local dealer. He is survived
by Susan, his dear wife of 57 years and ma ny
nieces and nephews.
A.J. was admired and loved by so many
people who enjoyed his stories qf exploits as a
pilot and his experiences as a realtor. ·
Visitation will be Monday, April 20"' from
4:00pm to 8:00pm
Funeral services will be held at 11 :00 a.m.,
Tuesday. April 21st at Pacific View Mortuary,
3500 Pacific View Drive, Newport Beach. ca.
PACIFIC VIEW MORTIJARY 71 4-644-2700
888
The namu and bu1lne11 on May 18, 1998. It ahall 11 -...,...-....,.....~,...--..,...-r · 1
addressts of tht buytt are: be the r11ponslblllry of lhe HOUSES/ Jaamln• Creek Realtors 875•8161 FOR RENT
OSCAR WANG ANO AITA bidder to deliver hi• bid to CONDOS 3 br 2·5 ba Condo, View! Sea Island. Lge . Off 1ome ocean view, b 5689 ••••••••• WANG 590 w. 19th Street, the City Clerk• lee by 5525K Agt 760-8544 3br 3.5 a. ,500.
Waterfront Cottage
2Br w/ocean view
Taking app'a for 6mo
or 1yr lease. 850·9406 Co111 MHa, Ca 92827 lhe proper announced FOR SALE Amaladt er/Roppolo
The UHll 10 be IOld art lime. Delivery location: CllV Spygl••• Hiii Ocean 6 4 4 -6 3 7 3 x 1 6 5 . --------, ________ _
described In general 11: of Coata Mesa, n Fafr view 4br 2.Sba pristine Prudenllal CA Realty GENERAL 2102 NEWPORT
ALL FURNITURE, FIX· Drive, Aoom 101, Costa home. Biii Grundy VILLA BALBOA 1 BR iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
TURES. EQUIPMENT, MA· Mt1a, California 92628. GENERAL 1002 Realtors 714_675-a181 Catalina Vlewa COAST 2170 CHINEAY, LEASEHOLD IM· Bidt ltlall be returned lo Leaaea, All Areaa 1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PAOVEMENTS, STOCK IN lhe atttntlon of the City Seller Wiii Entertain $2000·17000/mo 1•
TRADE. GOOOWIU. ANO Clerk, within said llme llmll, AD NUMBl!R 21 COSTA 11.•~~A 024 Offers From: Luxury L•••lng Beautlful gated nome
BUSINESS NAME and are In a sealed envelope ldentJ. ENTER & WIN THE ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiu.;iiiiiiiiliiiiii $149,900 10 $169,876 Broker 714·552·6700 w/Vlew. 3Br 2.5Ba, located al: 590 W. 19th fled on the outside with the BKNIHANA i• SEA FAIRE 1 BR poah pallo/yrd, comm.
Street, Costa Meu CA Bid Item Number and lhe Fn•e DIN.,•• CANYON PAii .< Pool, Greenbelt Vwa. pool. $3650. 612·4888 92627 . Opening Date. Bids wiH be ..._.. -.n S 11 WI I E I The bUslneu name used put>liefy opened and raid FOR TWO 3Br He.me 72405.F. • ·~lier~ Fro~~nan BALBOA
by the Hli8f at that loca· aloud at 10:00 a.m. or as /CONT/ES,! OLor.!orcwe/.RVMuAs1cceSess111· $149 900 to $169 876 PENINSULA 21071••••••••• hon 11: GREEN BURRITO eon thereafter " p<acti· 4 UJ-4 181•8 • SEA FAJRE 1 BR APARTMENTS
Th• antlelpattd date of cable on May 18, 1998 In QOVl!RNMENT St59K Bkr. 673.e942 Penthouse View• FOR RENT
the bUlk Hit Is May 5 the Counc:U Chambers. FORll!CLO&ED E'alde Beautiful 2-Sly Catalina to Palos v. Penn Point 4br 2ba,
1998 al the offiee of THE Additional Hit of the Home• from pennlea Mediterranean 4 + 2..5 Seller Wiii Entertain 2car gar, Ip, Charmer.I•••••••••
ESCROW FORUM, 23161 epeclratlons may be ob-on $1. Delinquent Tax, detached. Built In '91 Offers From: ••atepa to beach•• ~~= Fc::::.r c~';':03!120· ~=.:i~h•se:::1s~r lh:i Repo'1. REO't . Your over 2000tf, $309,000 $194,500 10 s224,876 $2500 714·833·2142. r---------
Thtl bulk 1119 11 subject 77 Fair Orlw , Room 100. a rt a . To 11 Fro e Earl & Judy Taylor, &EA FAIRE 2 BR BALBOA
lo California Uniform Com· Colla M111. Calllornla 800·218-9000 xH-1398 Agent 7 14-642-4722 Front Row Views ISLAND 2606
merclal Code Section 92628. for current llatlnga. l!'aide Beat Deal All Catallna Island CORONA ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
8106.2. P ublished Newport 122 ... K s 8 Patio FacH South DBL MAR 21221' If ao aubject, the name 8Hch.Coata M11a Dally • I-ty 3 r+ Double MBA Sullea Large Apt 2br 1ba, Pll •-111e 1998 2Ba , lam rm. 1700+af S 8 and addt111 of the person 01....,... ' . SOLD'. Exclusive. Earl & Judy Seller Wiii Entertain lleps to o. ay, lrg with Whom ctalm• may be Sao89 Offers From: 3Br 3Ba South of deck, gar, no/tmk/pet flied le TH" ESCROW Showcaee homea Taylor 842-4722 Agent H O 3 $1500 I 72" ~633 FOAU ... 231 .. ~1 , •ke Cen· PUBLIC NOTICE S389,00P
1
o
8
a
1
to
8
cSa4121 8,876 wy. cean vu, .. p. mo yr Y ~
.., v ... for ••I• In our Lovely 4bd 2ba 3 car enl'a S2200mo. Open New Modern 1 Br 1 Ba llf Drive 1120, Lake For· F1•lltlou• &u•lneH Saturday Real Eatale gar only S279,000. MaryAnn McGuire Sat-Sun. 10-4pm. 352 a/c, w/d, micro. HI, CA 92630 Eeerow no. N 81 t t Supplement! a ll Ron Youn g/ •4• 8770 Hazel D 7721811 ,,...31 and the lllt dale for llllng •me ••men v v • r. • "' stove, d/w, patio. gar. 1 1 1 shall be May 4 The foUowlng persons are HOMES OF Remax (714) 548-0919 Prudenllal Ca Realty Corona del Mar 516oo.mo 673•3059 cam . doing bu11ne11 as: THE WEEK Okeway Realty, 438 E. Ka· Montloello townhome W.Newport on the Oceanside of Hwy.
Sell your extra
household
Items In
CLASSIFIED
tetla Ave., Orange, CA Dla play •d• atart move-In ready. Good Ooeanfront Rare 2Bd 2Ba 1ownhome, _C_O_R_O_N_A ____ _
92811 at Ju•t $781 loc. 1139,500. Bob Beach/Alley Frontage 1 car parking, remod-
Ok"1!y Development COi· Deadline Wed 5pm Coluccio 644-6373 Pacific Coaallfne, Inc. eled & upgraded , DEL MAR 2622
porallon (Nevada), 318 N. ***** x121. PrudenUal CA 714-722·t011 courtyard. 11875/mo. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii g~.~91ti208· Carton OPEN HOUSE Realty. Agent • Rob 759-3797 Very nice 2br 2ba,
Ttila bu1lne11 11 con-Llatlnga for SSI MOBlLE Olde CDM Deluxe Ip, Lndry rm. tpa, gar.
ducted by: a corporation Deadline Thura 5pm IRVINE 1044 ROMES l lOO 2Br 28a all appl, cloae to beach. Avail
Have you atarted doing ***** 1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiii fireplace. Great tor 5/1, $1500 723-0e08 bualnne}'el? No It pay• lo advert!.. 11 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil lamlM 9mo IH $1750. Otcway oeYelOprnent Cor-In the beat loc*' Reha blah d ' poratlon, Detx> Oke, PreP. Real Eatate Section Rancho 'san ~oaquln c:OC:b!:~d: ~::a~:~ 71 4--iee-<>744 ext18 •·c-O_S_T_A_ME_S_.1_2_6_2_4
denl CALL TODAY 2br. View Mason Park Ocean brffze, qul•I --------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I,:=~ ~~1~ LIM RfV8RA ~!::·~4~37~~~~t. _S_32_._s_K_1o_re_n_t_84_e._2_SM--1 COSTA MESA 2124 1Br/28r Detached
Orange County on 3-S.98 71•1574 ... 252 Prudential CA Really. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cottage• w/Patlo
tffl8711204 1-=::==:=::=::=:=:::::'. Can't teem to near bHch. Cathedral nn1ru 888 Oalty Pilot Apr. •• 11, 1e, 1· --------48" 3 aa lg fenced yd cell•. frig. Move-In
ii"'LUiiiiiiARiiiiiyiiiiii8ii8ii8 iiOiiBiilTUiiiARiiiiiiiyiiiiii8ii8ii8 iiOiiBiiiiiTUiiiARiiiYiiiiii8ii8iii8 iiOiiBiiliiTUiiiARiiiYiiiiiiiiiiiii 25, 1991 s.oee ., llG'ruA get io all thott w .. 1c1tff area. New S pec1a11 se15+S4oo
..
"" .. ..
••
Helen Pet%elt Ayres
1916-1998
~.issed from thi3 world on April 16th, 1998, In Newport Beach,
CA. Loving Wife of Harold L. "Buck" Ayres and Mother of H.
Patrick Ayrca, Grandmother to Valerie and Kr~tln Ayres. She
:a.tways gave far m0tt than she ever took.
Helen was born lo Bloomfield New Jersey and lived the fine
thJrtttn years of her Ute In Medco Oty with her mother Elena
Peudt, Brother Olrt.stopbC1' Petz.ell, and G1'21ldmotbu Ama.mcc.
In 1929 the famUy moved to Los Angeles where Elena became a
prominent Interior Designer. and Helen attended Hollywood
High School and UClA Helen went on to work •• • ~l'llOnal
OlaJ~ Scaauy tor Howard Hawks and Busby Beitccley on
IUcb movies u :•Thc Wl2atd of 0z·. "Red RJvcr•:·n v ..
A Male War Bride"; and many more. She woc1c.cd with
Caty Grant. John Wayne. Judy G\\rland, Mickey Rooney,
aod~.
On ApdJ 'Z7, 1947, Hdcn married "Buck" Ayres. bu hub.ad
of ncattr '1 yeart. lo September of 1949 ahc Pft tilidl to her
onJy chUd Patrick. fort.ht nat ~ ycart1 the Ayres'~ the ~
~Udo lpyud, ln Newport Belch. Hdcn and Buck were
• common llPt on the W.ucn of Newport and at c.atalll)a where
they boated on weekends and holidays. Since 1985 Hckn and
Buck have dJvtdcd their rctlrcmtnt between lh.tlr home In
Corona dd Mat and their Ranch ln Sdda w ac,, on the Klam.ath
JUvcr ol Northern C&Uloml:a, where they have vac:ad0ncd l>r '8 yea~ woodCrf\11 years. Helen hid been known co fftlqucnt the
btJdF and pinochle Clt:elu ind wUJ be misted by her ftit"nd8.
A aounnct cook tor all of her Uk, Helco Ml mo.t hi£ ~ tttcJidl or pam~ttn1 cocns-nr. She wae d)'
found canplJ:la la bet tinch ldtdlCJl, And •he kept Mi
ud ~ ~ wftb jluril, Jdl&Cs, ~.~.Md
many othc:r llCl&I
Hdcn Jt 1urvlvcd by.Ur b&alb9nd •&d• •of Corom dd Mat A
,. lad \la&Jg', and So.n Plttk:k, dauaJtcc.Mn-laW ~ ahd
Gnilddl'4fl&cn WlcttC tauru aod XiWt1i Li'ljb. Ill ol COiia
Mc-. .Pmtr.c sa.1ca ~
I
~ ""' rep•lr jobt paint/Window• s1800/ depoall MS.2421 BEACH 1048 around the houH? mo. (628)443·82521=,,__...,..,,,...· ______ ~
--~ ---- --------. ---------------. --
8lllboa Newport
Reelty, lno.
&tella/HHJ 1910
full S.rvtce
:,Ma='=
Mu•t Sell OcHn Front
1!1tale. AppralHd al
$2.1 Mii for 11 .5Mll.
38r 2.5Ba, 1239,000
28r Condo S119,000
71 ..... 99 -1 1 9 8
Ltl tht
Cla11lfled
Servtce
Directory
help VDU find
rttt.ble help.
M2•5878
28r 1 Ba Near O.C.C. Big Back Bav 3br 2ba Newly • re -modeled
fam rm/den on huge gar•g•. no p•t, 17•5
lot, Ip, 2.5/c gu. +$400 714·241·8850
11695. pet(7)842·9699 •Coata M••a'• Beat
L•••• In E'a ld e Jr-lbr & 1br, alto 2br
C.M. Charming 2BR 1 ba. qui e l g ated
2BR home. Gardener com m, pool, 1ennl1,
lncld, no pelt , xlnt •a a y • c c e, a 1 o
cr•dlt req'd , n/t frHway/buch/ma lla. = .... : NIWPORT l!ACB 1089 -------11350/mo. 842-1053 714-987..001'5
421and9lniet
rn-:7=14
BALBOA
ISLAND 1008 -------
Ltttt. a.-.. ,.,•nd ••• .. rtronl Dutt,.. 1151111520 Abalone Pl. nr beach on 1.1 LOle.
OUP* Ger Uppet, ,P • 88'8"9 Doctr tor 3
Hr Lower a?at.000 loti .. lo 4t fl:T. '=
Lora Vanoe·A .. llor Owner/At;Jt •·42·
.,,,...72-4082 iie oan;e;; on Ith
Little 18'M4 3br+unll fah w•y w/ltlewe.
over ,., ....... 11., Aeo•nlly UP9r••~·
wlll entettaln Ofl•r• loll., wfM ..,..,..,"
belwHn 1731,000. oUere b•tween .... 1,119. Nen Tully H 1 I OOO·HH,871,
.....a~7~ •t81 Amea 844-a13 Jt114. PNCMrietal CA "911fty P~ CA A._.
IU#J TWNWI
Hr Ila. 1to09Q.flt
ONtnbell vAew:'alM •:i, view: 844tK "~~
NBWPORt
·2aa1 IUCH NEWPORT
2889 BUCH ---------------
2889
COSTA MISA 2624 NBWPORT aooMS 2706 BUSINESS .. --..-l!lli-iil BBACB 2689-i&illiiliiiliiiiii• a •••I~• I Br 1 Ba N• W.Oc.eanfron\/2ano, PINANCli o•no•i no P•t• ...... , Kept •eor•t Private rm, unturn, lh'I••······· 1 1 ~ a f o • d w a y In Newport .. aoh" bath, ulla pd, n/amkg, SIOQ/mQ Me-3070 1 Bedroom w/g•r•o•. kitchenette, l•utldry.1 ________ _
Ocean view, balcony, 1 block to N.8. Pier BUSINESS
new goU<met kitchen. '510/mo. Call Sam at OPPO~TTTNJTY 2644 Exec~tlve amenltl... 7t<Ml75-480. &u v
11525. (114) 78~1 (Between IAM·5PM) 2904 ~--------
28r Comw of buHdlng ~ta of wtndowa, Lrg
open kitchen, pete
wetcom•. From 11130
714-788.0751
NEWPORT
BEACH 2869
•YOURPLACE
INTBESUN•
Le-l & 2 Br, ar.
Back8a7&1Gft'
coane lg. pool,
upgndr.s:
RENTALS TO SHARE 2724
2Bd 28a Female. Pool
W/D, oceaneld• In -· .. ·~ COM. $550 mo,.. utll. Please be wary of out
Dep. req'd 173-7319 of •r•• companlH.
Check with th• local CdM 2br 2ba Condo Better Bualn•••
extraordinary view. Bureau before you
$900/mo •gee 45·50 Hnd any money for
pref'd 714-673·3282 fHe or HrvlcH. Read Beet Looatlon In
Newport Be•oh
Spacloue 2Br/2Ba.
View of the Harbor,
Executlv. AmenltlH,
walk to Balboa Island.
$1 ,785. Call Now
New carpet and
more, Mii spec.
Sorry DO pds.
l!'Blutf near CdM H.S. and underetand any 1~L:.--
Share Large 2br 2ba contracta before you
Apt. S525mo utll Incl, •lgn. Shop around for
avail now. 844·8124 ratH.
(714) 789--0931
•On The Water•
Spacious 1, 2 & 2br
+den Apia. Garage.
545-WS
Ip, •O(TI• w/d hk·Yps. ·-------· Pool, private beach &
marJna. Walk to MISCELIANEOUS Balboa telandl $1650 RENTALS to $2800 780-0919
·-~~-~-~--tjB Model Hm ehr lg An •at. V•NDINQ
2br hse one mile from rte.·Muat ••II by 5·
bch. Pvt ba/garage 1 20 location•. S8K.
access. Huge bckyrd $2300 +mo. Income.
In grt neighborhood. 100% finance w/gOOd
Female pref'd $650/ credit. Pl•••• call
mo+ 1/2 utls. Avl 5/1 800·380·2631 x1505
Debbie 714·536-2098 Be Your Own Bou.
NB 1/2 blk to bch 4bd Local Vend RI• for
2ba. responsible/neat s a I • . M u • t s e 11 •
prol'I. st pkg, $600 + 1 ·800-37 HJ363 s~::• u::tal~:n.~ d4~~ dep avail 5/9 645·1440 Eern 1420 W••klv
St. no gar/pell. Lse ROOMS 2706 NB Large Home with Distributing phone
$725/mo 847·2622 room & bath. Pool, cards. No exp nee. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiii spa, Includes amen & 1·800-242-4713
NEWPORT
BEACH
NEWPORT
2669 BEACH
paid ulll. $500/mo VENDING:L.azy Pereons
7 1 4 -8 4 15 ..0 2 8 8 Dream. Few hre•btg
W'ald• CM Share SI Priced to sell frH 2669 1urnlshed home. no b r o c h u r • . C a 11 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii s mo k Ing S 4 0 0 /mo 800-820-67 82
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIO CANYON
OATBD COMMUNITY DY PA.SHION ISLAND
Beaullful 1rce·llncd s1rcc1s an<l golf course views Enjo)' l arefrcc living In your lm&c
I. 2 ()( 3 HH upanmc111 h<HllCI
• iwo.c-m ~Hmge
• wa4'hcr1urycr !'lookup~
• I 'lrcplllC'C (wood & ga-;1
• l\lr C'Ondlllonln~
• Wei l.>.'1r In 2 tu)( I I Ill<
• AlaITTI l>~'SICfll
• SI .650 lo S..! 005
PLBASB CALL (714) 6'M-0509
BATHTU8 RIQLAZINQ
& Refurblehlng, Pore.
lain, Flbergle. Sink•
Shwre Cntrs 845-1723
987 .JS/Wk+I
AllOOMING
8USINIUI•
F« HftouJ people Who WMt aerioUs WMfth,
Smttng this monthl
c.11 '°",... ....... 1.IOO.ffS.0796
CllIIOTS 3410
(714) 831·2708
COMMERCIAL
REAL ESTATE
INCOME
MONEY
TO LOAN 2914
•••••• LOAN
CALL 1-888·310·9002
PROPERTY 2790 ANNOUNCEMENTS
4 Plex close 10 South I•••••••••
Coast Metro. Good•---------
Income. s210.ooo. ANNOUNCEMENTS Dreyfus/Weir
396·8892. Prudentlal 2920 CA Realty.
0 <J1 1-l ll l I'
CONCRETE•
MASONRY 3557 --------
. ... ... ,... .......
•c.IM .....
~ ... ...
GRAND
OPINING,
~
~•A~ p~ Lu.kt f, Hc.tJ
Supreme Paint Package ... ,. ....... JVi,,,. .... ,lS-.
iiSO.
s~
j • l z
' \ I . "ll" \ ,, ''I
I \\ 1 I I 1
I I ,111 '.1, \' .1I1 I. '
3012
UNRaa•RY•D * llART•HD * AUCTION 2wk cla11, Job plac•
m•n1. "rol .. alonal
Cat Conattuctton & a artendera achool
!arthmovlng Equip. our 21th yeat, u ... n
men1,11uck• & ttall.,e. on TV. 800·743-Cln
Tuffday. April 21th.
R1ver1IC1e, CA She: --------1 809·784-4821. Call EMPLO-•eNT F°'k• Auctioneer• 1 nu;;
for Brochure
BOCM21-92M
·-...
LOST &
FOUND 2925
FOUND emall black
hound on Fairview
near Baker on 4/13
(714) 754-0457
Found small white dog
4/9. Vicinity of PCH &
Bayside Dr. 875·7748
Loat C•t $REWARDS
Male, etrlped. grey/
blk/brwn. Vicinity 15th
& Tuetln 048-4488
PERSONALS
# r
EMPLOYMENT
5530
SALES
We are looking for
people to join our
team who:
• are ambitious
• outgoin~
• self.mouvated
• have a desire to
suceed
We have a unique
sales opportunity
selling advertising to
local merchants that
otters:
• high earning
potential
• great benefits &
401k
• bonuses &
Incentives
• flexlblllty with
results
Prior outside sales
or fund·r .:1slng expe·
rience Is a plus.
Call us today:
QETCO Group
1-800·34!5·1123
M·F 8am-6pmEST .._ ______________ .,
SATURDAY. APRIL 18. 1998
ITIPIYITIP
6WKS TO 6 YRS
NAEYC STANDARDS
714-966-5264
ITEPIYITEP
6 WKS TO 12 YRS
& MILDLY ILL CAAE
714·964-7741
MOltnMI
HIGH QUALITY CHILD
CARE, INFANTS, TODS.
PRESCHOOL & Kl CALL
95~2672 FOR TOUR
IWnlTEP
LEARNING CENTER
PRESCHOOL / KGN
AGES 2~. 73 &
BRISTOL 54CH 775
CAllDllOtll:
I OFFER PRIVATE
DAYCARE FOR INFANTS
IN MY HOME.
CALL LYNN
641-9264
TO Pt ACF •n 1P
CHllD
TYM E
,•STING (A,l '>'M•o;fv
Harbor Vie#
Hunt.~
TEACH YOUa C._. •
TOBAD: --Comoltte lnatfuctlons. :
~'°"··~. 1ns11ueuons. lllmff, 118111 ,
wos. COO'dleO ~ ' noerienced teachef. •
$55.95 + a.oo a/h •
C. STROH • P.O. 798 t
Siefre Madre, CA 91024 ·•
4-6 Week DelMIJ ·:
(780)257~
SCHOOLS 8c
INSTRUCTION
574-4246 ....,uca......,.. '' CLASSIFIED ,
It'• th• resource you --------4.,~ 3012
Thinking of having a
garage sale?
Give ue a calll
CLASSIFIED
042·5878
can count on 10 sell a ;================~r: myriad of merchan· •
di•• Items, because Put a few worda : our columns compel ~ ,
~~l~llll•d buyers to to work for you.: :
842·5078 .._ ____________________________ ..,. ...
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SATURDAY, APRIL' 18, 1998
•AIJ o J7 o Kl74 •Q911
The bidding has prooec:dcd:
WEST NORTII EAST SOtmf I• Dbl ,_ INT
h3I 20 .... 1
What action do you take?
Q.4 Both vulnerable, as South you
hold:
• 3 0 6 3 0 Q 10 76 2 • Q 1017 2
Learn to be• bet1a' brklce pla1-
er1 Subscribe aow to tbe Goren
Brld&e Letter b7 ca1llna (900) 788-ll2S ror &nrormatloa. Or write to:
Goren Bridie Le_t}!!i. P.O. Box 4410, CbJcaaO, DL OUOBV •
EMPLOYMENT
5530
EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT
SECRETARY/
Admlnlatratlve As•latant
5530 5530
EMPLOYMENT
5530
EMPLOYMENT
5530
EMPLOYMENT
5530
To assist Senior
Manager In all ad-
ministrative matters.
Applicant should
have computer skills
that lrtclude Word
and Excel; strong or·
ganlzation and com·
munlcallon skills;
and the ability to
h andle· multip l e
tasks. Position Is lull
time. Excellent ben·
eflt package lnclud·
Ing 401 k plan. Drug
screenl ng/physical
required. Equal op-
portunity employer.
Fax res1.4me (Includ-
ing salary history) to
(949) 642·7667 or
mall to Tom John·
son, c/o Times Com-
munity News, 330
W. Bay Street, Costa
Mesa, CA 92627.
SlOOOWMkJy
PJOCH1lng mill.
FT&PT. For
N.B.S. M55 Adenl8 AVil, Sulle 333,
Hunl.l!luch, CA t2.S4t
Accounting BKKP/TAX OFFICE
A/A.A/P,P/A & GL exp. Need team player w/
prol .Aecon. inv. for acct exp computer smart Word. Excel & payment. Fax resume Peachtree Nice Or. 71 4-434•4745 Co. AP Ole 32hr wk 4
Babi.isltter or s days. Fax res
2pm.6pm Mon.Fri. in 2 5 0·391 4 o r Call
Turtlorock for 2 klds. 71 ~752-5228 Musi have own car. ,_C_O_C_K_T_A_l_L_S_E_R_V_E_R,
1$8-$11 per Houri 7 14-509· 1968 FT/PT Exp A Must!
~nd benor11s. FfT & Pl Beauti.i/Manlcurl•t,
f. Preschool, lnf(Tod also hair stylist for
ulor Time Child Care exclusive N.B. salon.
In busy fine dining
restaurant. Apply In
per son : 4 :30·5:30
3131 W. Coast Hwy 1 In N.B.· 955·2872 714·760·0521 I._ ______________ _
I
GZ) Oldsmobile
NEW '97 AURORA MSRP $35,995
·ALLEN DISCOUNT $6014
SALE PRIC •• + tax, lie and doc fees. One only, VIN 123824
-"EW '97 BRAVADA MSRP $30,512
ON EVERY NEW'98
OLDSMOBILE
IN STOCK! ALLEN DISCOUNT $5160
On approved credit
Up lo 36 mos
PLUMBERS CONTRACTORS
ELECTRICIANS ALL YOU HARD
WORKERS ...
WE'VE GOT
YOURTRUCKI
~~~!!!.~---' One only, VIN 720634 ~
Starcraft Classic
"King Qf The Road"
Discount pricing
on all your favorite
van converslonsl
We'll pay
your
toll! SALE!
CORONA
DEL MAR 6122 SPEED &
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '5RI BOATS
Mov Ing Bal• Sat 4/1 8 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 7016
9:30-2 Furniture, babt SABOT NEE"ED Items, comp/games, 1 ¥
kayaks, bll<H & lots Need to u~JQe from
morel 825 Rockford 4l b8'glner ' Sabot!
(Camlo Hlghtonds) Please catL "SAPI
Saturda~ 9·noon 714-e31•1584
Household, clothes,
toys & much morel -.-.11-1,,N_E_S_L_l_P_S __
410 1/2 Hellotrop• '~
Ava. (t n alley) DOCKS 7022 ••••••••
Prime Newport Harbor
slip w/ au amenities,
In exchange for use of
30'-SO' power boat.
Experienced w/ref'e
71 4·831 -0 884
AUDI 9025
'98A4
Sliver/grey, leat her.
5spd, full power
(223183) $24,977
LEXUS
MISSION VIEJO ·
1-(888)-88-LEXUS
9030
CH!VlOl.IT 9045
'Hc!JIXoY:aa White, futt pe>wer, CO,
auto. 118751)
S13,98'7 LllXUa
MIS8JON V1•.ao 1 ~aa.;.aa.LIEXU8
'" Lumln• La loa~ beauty, ah.,.
wood gr.-n, •II pwr,
C/O, ab, l38k ml, t-owner, 11 a ,100
180-0'7\2 Of 9414121
1'890 Zff-1 Y.ct.
All optloti•. tQng Of
th• hi"._.,• owner, Aed/Aed, 129,000
call 780o t l80
Mw •Id •oe• wt IOATS oornputer. keyb~d.
monitor, DOI soft
w•,. fol word proo• ·
aor I da1ab .. • mgr.
No mouH/ptlnt•r •. fC ttalnlno. d•ta .,.,y,
? . "'" to abod hOtnt. n..._.a.otot
-.___. -
l'M
BUYING
IOt5 L!IVS 8115 MDCURT 9135 TOYOTA . lll!!!•~tllll ....... ..i ... iiilii~iill ... I• .... .-._ .. 9210 VOWWAGEN 9235
•u ao :aoo ..a 8ML• A.WO. U • I cyt. 100k 0·-11 3 IL ·-"'"'' 15 k ,,.... 1-ownet, '6000 -·-·VOty. . YVt vnry D11 ml, 7t 4 ••• 840I L.exu4" ce,,lfled. pwr wtnd/IOdta, 0034415 12t ,177 (2ZOK332) • 7•••
LllXUa Coate M••• fOID 9075 MlaatON Vl•JO LlftoolrMll•rou~ --~~~.-.. liiJl__;1~·(~a;,8;8~)8;8;·L~llX::_:U::_S (714)640-~0 ._........ 'ii ii 506 i--,.-5-V..._IL_LA__.Q_U __
I CVlndar 12200 obo. WhlteJlvory, hhr, mint. GS MINIVAN caA ~t4oaa .. H74 lexua certlfl•d. 7 pa11. dual llC, Uh ****** (OH58e) $23,tn oc. am/fm cau. L•xua <SDJN729) s13,8t5 '87 :rewua Wagon M1aa10N Vl•.IO coat• MH• •~ u~ ~b2'*00• 1-t•••> aa.L•xus L.lnool,.....01oury • (714)640-8830
Tt4 •••·•7aa ·ee es 300 und•r 25k1--,r::9r::7.-a,.,.ii~"'"L'=•""o""'s--••T liiiP9ditlon XL T ml all >rttaa Including 4M, iov, VI, CO. CO ohgr Lexus cer11f, AC, Pw/pdl, ABS, Ult,
(Mt773) '30,tn 124,950, 64().4296 cc am/fm caa1, pwr
LUUS 'tn ii 300 uat, alloy whla
MISSION Vl•.10 Full option, mint cond. <943~;~t~1~~:.
1-caaaH1a.Laxua Lex u 1 c •rt 111 e d . Llncoln·M•rcury
"P'un to Drlv• (043040) S27,787 (714) 540.5830
'90 Probe GT, white, Ll!XUS
5 apd turbo. All pwr MISSION Vll!JO
:wlndow1, lock1, 1·(888)"88·Ll!XUS NISSAN 9150
•••ti, dual mlrroral liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
air, crulH, tlh, AM/FM UNCOLN 9120 '84 300ZX Turbo cau. ABS , alloy whle1, r•ar defog, rear iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Auto, i;100d cond, all wt,,.r, trlp/t•mp com· ,87 .. _ 1 , receipt a, S2900 c:ell
put..Ued dltplay. ISk ...ner ce a Cup evening 714·631·2430
mfo.1 owner-pp, $4200. adltlon, Signature '94 PICK UP XE
1-888-328-9339 .Serl••· Nautical 4X4, 41k ml, 1-owner, Colot1, White, White Leather, Navy Blue -~~t9~eel (SH65916)
HONDA 9085 Cambria Cloth Top Coata MH• iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Hklng S745o obo Lincoln-Mercury
'78 CMo Wagon 714-540-7so7 (714) 540.5830
'ff COROLLA
31k, AT, AC, Mini.
(3SCX!5:Z8) S10,NO
LllXUS 01'
WllaTMINaTaR
C7:t4) 992 .. eoe,
'97 CAMRY La
14k ml, all pwvr, AT,
(3TUT1378) 117,777
LllXUS 01'
WllSTMIN8TER
(714, 882·8900
'87 CAMRY Li
Only 1 !Sk ml, New Le xus trade In.
(42500) St 8,977
Ll!XUS
MISSION VlllJO
1·888°88°&.EXUS
'97 COROLLA
17k, AT, •II pwr
(3UMS778) $13.333
Ll!XUS OF
Wl!8TMINSTER
(714) 892·8908
'97 SUPRA TURBO
Pw/POL, tilt, CC, am/ Im cass, mull SHI
(2ESG992) Make Olfor
Coat• M••• Llncoln Meroury
(714) 540·5830
TRUCRS 9220
4 doOr, good cond, '83 TOWN CAR
amOQed, H tag1 S750 SIGNATURI! --------'78 OMC Sierra
7~4-849-2884 4.6L V8, CO changer, PONTIAC 9170 clasalc 4x4, while,
auto, now engine, 2
'88 .14'tt• QL
15" cuat whl1, new
tires, AC. (10485/
002884) S1 !1895
MoKenna 9MW
Po,.che Audi VW
714-830 .. 775
'97 Cebrlol•t
Cutt whl1/llrH, blk
•xt•rlor. ( 1874' 71
8021541 1 19,995 MoK•nna BMW
Po .. ache Audi VW
714--039-8775
'97 Jetta OL Auto, 4C, caa1,
Io w m I. ( 1 511 1/
04'8381) S13,995
McKenne BMW
Porach• Audi VW
714-83a.8775
'97 Jetta OLS
Power pkg, pwr mnrf,
olloy whls.. (16323/
004457) 115.}~95
McKenna BMW
Porsche Audi VW
714-038-8775
'97 Peasat OLX
VR6, lthr, cass/CO
ohngr. ABS. (16745/
007336) $1.5,995
Mcl(enna BMW Porache Audi VW
714-838·8775
'08 Jette GL
Loaded. Only 980ml.
( 16638/220772)
$15,995
McKenne BMW
Porac h• Audi VW
714-838·8775 '90 Accord 2-dr, ale, pwr wlnd/lock1, lthr iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
auto, Burgundy with <767769) $14,993 '92 BONEVILLE SSI!
gold package, ah .. p. Coat• Meaa 3.8L V6, tilt, cc, ABS,
aklna. Xlnt Condition. Lincoln Mercury pwr aeals, cust whls.
sets of 36 .. tires, 011 --------
road front end, won1 MISC AUTO 9245 lasll $3500 c:ash. •
$5800. 714/873-1943 _..,..,,,.,7 ,,,.1.,,,4-,.,,54,..,.,.,.0..,.·...,5,...8,....,3,,....0_ (#30FK113) $8902 71 4-9 8 9,0 580 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
HYUNDAI 9090 -------
•ea boel GI• 5·•r,d, air, new tlrea/llm ng
b•lt, brakes, recent
value Job. 11100.obo
714-950-2178
'97 TOWN CAR Coate Meae
l!XBCUTIVE L(7in1c4o)ln5•4M0~5rc:,u3ry VOLKSWAGEN 9235 4.8L ve. PW/POL, 2 to .. 10
chooa• from (668360/1 _______ _
6&3985) $24,997 TOYOT'll 9210 '58 B•J• Rag·tOp·anrf, Coate Mesa n · centerllnes rims, olf·rd
Llncoln·M•rcury shocks. suspension.
714 540.5830 '89 Cellc:a Red 4spd new brakeSffronl end.
108kml grt cond 1 etc .. $2000. 549.1101
SEIZED CARS
From $175.
Porsches, Cadillacs.
Chevys, BMW's,
Corvettes. Also Jeeps,
4WO's. Your Area. Toll
free for current fisting
1 ·800·218-9000
Ext. A ·1398
9095 MERCEDES 9130 owner $2900/obo(714)1----------------644·5991 '71 B••tl• White. New AUTOS INPINITI •i2 CAMRY LE ~~~lo~n~~~~~·· :d;~eo~ WANTED 9248 •ea Q4ST '73 450SL Conv AT, all pwr, AC (714) 944.4245 ---------Bl.OC ,,.._........., full Green w/aoft·hard top. (2ZTA043) $9,8881 _______ _
onl m-~j''J...inu '"• than 100K mllH LEXUS OF '74 vw Bug Ilk• new,
(30rlMI) 127,1577 S8500 714-831·2255 WESTMINSTER New paint/Interior/
LUUa '84 380SL Red w/blk (714) 8924S908 seats, smog legal,
MlaSION VIII.JO Int. new reg top+ hard '94 CAMRY LE sharp $3000 549.5402
1-(Ua).a&·LDUS top. Mint c:ond. orig White. AT. 1111 pwr.
owner. $14,888. Call Lexus tradel
Ep 9110 760-6640 or 996·0323 (34MA936) $12,550 JE LEXUS OF iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil '90 w1gon 64,000 ml WESTMINSTER
Lien Nie 4/28/98 10am ch1rcoaL pert c:ond (714) 8924S908 3rd Hat $21 ,000 PP•--=~~----'71 Je•p CherokH (714) 120.9479 '95 CAMRY LE
II c 3M v F 2 4 1 --------Lo miles, AT, full vln J8A17NN15104!5 '92 190 E 2 .8 power, Immaculate !
300 E. Coast HWY NB AT, llhr, CD, mnrf, (883259) $13,550
CLASSIFIED (949474) $17,777 LEXUS OF
lt'I the rHource you LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
can count on to Hll a WESTMINSTER (714) 892·8908
myriad of merchan· t714> 892•8908 •99 CAMRY LE
di•• Items, becauH -L,-.-n-,-.-1.-4-/-28-/-98_1_0-am-AT, all power, cass,
our column1 compel • 7 2 Moro• d •a Ilka newl (747865) qualified buyere to I I c 2 y K N 1 8 3 LEXUS OF
calll vln 11511510098080 WESTMINSTER
842·5878 300 E. Coast HWY NB (714) 892·0900
'78 Super·Beelle Coov
Fuel lnJ.smog legal Nu
KYB •hocks & tires
$2500 714·631·2255
'94 Jette GL
Mnrf, cass, ale. rear
spollor. (16637/
RM042803) $7895 MoKenna BMW
Porech• Audi VW
714-838·0775
'95 Jetta OL
Loaded, mnrf. AC.
"""inu:· 1& or Not
•Tu: Write Off • c..n, Trudis, RV's
• No OMV Haalc
PREE PICKUP!
~ Ca11 'toclaY
I nd,~·mi .1 ..,m il·t \
800·643. 5022
CUI, tlll. (16597/ --------05088k S9995 The Community Mc enne BMW Market Place.
Porach• Audi VW Clasalfled
714-838·8775 842·5878
SAVE UP TO $·26,690.
MERCEDES--BENZ DEMO SALE
1996 & 1997 demonstrators still under factory warranty,
with under 15 ,(XX) miles. Please don't procrastinate.
These vehicles are ready to be driven home today.
fur example:
$59,900 Qriatnal MSRP$78S)S
~ Sl320 ~ter Red I Parchment
vin 135529
$59,900
497 S320 Sedan
LQrie Wheel ba.;e
Orfif nal MSRP $67,19S
White/Orey
vin 347087
INCLUDES '3500 REBATE
··"'••hr 41 •so-. toea1 n.«t sisn.99. lesilual s11.u1.so Toi. o111111\. Slt,199.52 + laJ.. 12hi. aiMd per J9C1. .12< per Ne in tlCtsS (040231)
IN STOCK NOW!
SIS/STS AVAILABLE
'93 OLDSMOBILE CIERA
V-6, 4 dr., l1WlY pwr. fearures, new car 11a-in. (441119)
'90 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE
Silver, huwy m. 4.S V!,"trrific ¥We! (334-465)
'88 CADILLAC ELDORADO
B11n11., 11KX11rcxi, cust. wtrlb ! nm! (615243)
'90 HONDA ACCORD EX Seda..,.. mm, ai,s. a ! (049929)
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ALL PRICED BELOW KELLEY BLUE BOOK
••••••••••••••• •~• ••••••••.•••.•••••••••••••••• i •••
1998 LEXUS LS 400
Equipment:
CD, moonroof, leather,
chrome wheels. (3XSDl9B)
~TOYOTA CAMRY LE , '92 MERCEDES 190 E 2.6 $17 777 ~,full fXJWer, ausette, like new. Beauty! (747865) ............. 3 5K MI Automatic, swnpruous leather, CD, moonroof, phone, mint! (949474) , '96 CHCVROIEf TAHOE LT VB · , $ Low miles, ltather, lots of eqvipment! ( 3RTK297) .................... : •• 26, 7 7 7 ,
'92 TOYOTA CAMRY LE $ '93 ACURA LEGEND L $17 777 /{f, full~. cur~. extr~J nice buy! (lZTA043).......... 9 ,888 Low miles, leather, sound fry &se, moonroof, /uary! (3FHH576) ..... ,
'97 CHMOIEf TAHOE LT G~tdiill, ltathtr, full (XJm, morel (3UCC303) .................. 15K MI
'96 TOYOTA COROLLA $ '94 ACURA LEGEND L CPE . $19 950 31K, automatic, arrcandiaoning, mint!(3SCX528)...................... 10,888 YOll'I ~ diis 1owmne, leather, Bose, more! (3]83782) ................ ,
~~. =. \;oo ~adt in! (34MA936) .............. $12 ,550 ~ ~~ Cll!lm'lle. J(s immociJate U83897) ................ $21,950
'95 TOYOTA 4RUNNER SR5 V6 $
Low miles, fuil ~· Hinry far this Lexus trade in. (3LXUI07) ...... 18,888
'95 W'OTA P~ SIC ~get~':U:t1t this~' (;Uss9) ................................ $19,222
'97 TOYOTA COROUA $ '95 VOLVO 850 TURBO $
llK, autoT1latJC, full fmler, air conditioning, white (3UMS778) ....... 13 ,333 Very low miles, leather, moonroof, CD. It has it all! ( 184973).......... 23 ,950 !J!!J~~~~~:.~~:............... 19,555 .
'95 TOYOTA CAMRY LE $ '95 BMW 325i CONVERTIBLE $29 950 Im miles, autoTnllOc, all tlit ~ '11' need, immaaJate! (883259).. 13 ,550 It has only 34Kmiles, leather, CD, Ltxus trade (3mD823) ........... ,
~·TQYQ!A~~~~SR5. V6 lis =~! fJPRWBC:.~ .... t: ......... , ............ $23,550
~=.,_'-EXUS OF WESTmlRSTER-, . .
• ·-
•
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ALL PRICED BELOW KELLEY BLUE BOOK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1998 LEXUS LS 400
Example:
. '91LS400
-Leather,moonroof & more (2X~386)
·41-1.
Starting . Rumple:
'95 SC 300
at CD, moonroof, leather (020722)
•810,lllw
~TOYOTA CAMRY LE , '92 MERCEDES 190 E 2.6 $17 777 ~· full IXJWer, cassette, like new. Beauty! (747865) ............. 3 5 K MI Automatic, sumptuous leather, CD 1 moonroof, phone, mint! (949474) ,
'92 TOYOTA CAMRY LE $ '93 ACVRA LEGEND L $17 777 /(f, full~' air conditioning, extremelJ nice bu,! (2ZTA043).......... 9 ,888 Low miles, leather, sOund by Bose, moonroof, hurry! (3FHH576) ..... '
'96 TOYOTA OOROLI.A '94 ACURA LEGEND L GPE . .
31K, automatic, azrconditioning, mint!(3SCX528) ...................... $10,888 You'l low dUs low mile, ltathtr, Bose, more! (3)83782) ................ $19,950
IJ:~.=,T;oo trade in! (34MA936) .............. $12,550 G,!~~mshmere. lt'l immaculate 083897) ................ $21,950
'97 TOYOTA COROLIA $ '95 VOLVO 850 TURBO $
17K, auumiatic, full~. air conditioning, white (3UMS778) ....... 13 ,333 Vr:ry low miles, leather, moonroof, CD. It has it all! ( 184973).......... 23 ,950
'95 TOYOTA CAMRY LE $ '95 BMW 325i CONVERTIBLE $29 950 Low miles, autornl10C, all tht 1KJWtr ~ ned, immaculate! ( 883 259) •• 13 ,5 5 0 It ho.rnnry 34K milts, leather, CD, Law trade ( 3l.ND823) .... • •• .. •• ,
Equipment:
CD, moonroof, leather,
chrome wheels. (3XSD19Bl
'96 CHEVROLET. TAHOE LT V8 · $ Low milts, leatM, lots of tqWpment! (3RTK297) ....................... 26' 7 7 7 -
'97 CHEVROIET TAHOE LT G~.mitt, ltather,fulltKJWtr, more! (3UCC303) .................. 15K MI
'95 TOYOTA 4RVNNER SR5 V6 $ Lowmilts, fl&~· Huiry for this I.too trade in . (3LXUJ07)...... 18,888
'95 W'OTA P~ SIC ;~4'1~c::m mu~1 Siss9J ................................ $19,222
1JOY~A~~~ -And~ (3~~} .... ~'. ....... ~'..~~: ............... $19 ,555
'~1Q~9JA~~!JNNE~R5. V6 lis ~~1 ~fRwsr.:~ ... !: ......... , ............ $23 ,550