HomeMy WebLinkAbout1998-05-28 - Orange Coast PilotServing the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
\ ' INSIDE ·
i MARC MAR™ I OAl.Y Pit.OT
I
:VERY RESIGNED
I
:Bill 1\.u:pit is stepping down ;as the executive director of
;Families-Costa Mesa.
, • SEE STORY PAGE A6
-+-
' °:A CLEAN SWEEP .
'.Corona del Mar High's
.volleyball~ swept
!again, to earn CIF Division :m finals berth Saturday.
• SEE STORY PAGE 81 ........ -
~DO YOU BAVE
tHE WRITE STtJFF?
The bad news: Daily Pilot
columnist Pted Martin is retiring
to Port Collins, Colo., after eight
years at the newspaper. His last •
column will be June 27.
The good news: You can be
the new Fred.
The Daily Pilot is launching its
second Great Columnist Search .
qpen to all readers who would
love the fame that comes from
writing twice weekly for Ameri-
ca's best community newspaper
(that would be the Daily Pilot) -
f>ut aren't too concerned about
the fortune part (the pay is, uh,
~odest).
Here's what to do: Send us a
sample column (no matter bow
brilliant, it needs to be fewer than
150 words) along with a short let-
ter telling us why you'd be the
perfect replacement for F.red. The
deadline is June 15.
You can send tbe ,gtutf via e-
mail to dpilot2@earthlink.net; fax
it to 646-4170; or mail it to The
Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627.
-+-
I f J I) I ~
Ted Kennedy Jr-talks
about surviving cancer
• In address honoring donors to Hoag Cancer Center,
son of Ted Kennedy recalls being terrified after he was
diagnosed with bone cancer at ag~ 12.
By Alison Murray, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Ted
Kennedy Jr. knows how it feels to
swvive cancer.
Diagnosed with bone cancer
when he was 12, the son of Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.)
told his story Wednesday at the
11th annual Circle 1000 Founders
Brunch honoring donors to Hoag
Cancer Center.
•I remember how terrified I
was and bow horrified I was,"
Kennedy said of his diagnosis and
the re5ulting amputation of one
leg. "I couldn't imagine what my
life would be like without a leg.•
As a member of one of Ameri-
ca's most prominent families,
Kennedy said be was expected
Work conttnues on the Arches Bridge replacement project.
where half the work has been completed. Starting today,
not to cry or show emotion, but to
stay upbeat in the face of his dis-
ability.
"I felt like I had to do it all with
a smile on my face, or I would be
letting everyone down," he told
the audience at the Balboa Bay
Club.
While the media continues to
hold up the image of the "inspira-
tional cancer swvivor," Kennedy
said he now sees crying as a sign
of strength rather than weakness.
Known for his work on the
•SEE KENNEDY PAGE A10
MAAC MARTMll I OA.lY Pl.OT
From left, Sherry Haber, Ted Kennedy Jr., Sherry Abbott and
Sheryl Anderson chat Wednesday by a fireplace before Kennedy
delivered the keynote speech for the 11th annual Circle 1000
Founder's Brunch at the Balboa Bay Club.
Silva,
rivals
take on
• ISSUes
• 2nd District incumbent
pushes anti-tax record;
challengers accuse him of
being out of touch with
community, issues .
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -In their last
schedule9 public appearance
together before Tuesday's election.
three of the four candidates for the
2nd Dis-
~%~:~ 'na C ounty e 71
Board of
Supe rvi-•
sors squared off Wednesday. :
MARC MAATIN I OAlt.Y PILOT
motorists traveling east oD West Coast Highway will detour
OD Superior Avenue to reach northbound Newport Boulevard.
Bridge arches toward completion
Sponsored by the Costa Mesa
Rotary Club, the brief candidat~ •
forum featured incumbent Super:
visor Jim Silva and challengers
Sandy Genis. a forme r Costa
Mesa mayor and private plan:
ning consultant, and Dave Sulli•
van, a Huntington Beach Cicy
Councilman and retired ortho-
dontist.
The third challenger, Hunting-
ton Beach resident Ralph Silva, a
retired investigator from the dis·
trict attorney's office. did not
attend the forum.
• Midway through construction of new Arches
Bridge, locals can expect more detours, traffic delays
and noise during next six months.
By Jenifer Ragland, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -'The
city has reached the halfway
mark on construction of a new
Arches Bridge at Orange Coun-
ty's busiest intersection.
Local residents can expect
more detours, traffic delays and
at least two nights of noise in the
coming months as crews begin
building the second half of the
Newport Boulevard bridge over
West Coast Highway.
Starting today, the ramp from
eastbound Coast Highway to
northbound Newport Boulevard
wW be closed for six months,
said Dave Wanderling, the city's
College to hold golilen
commenceIDent cerelllony
•From six graduates at
first ceremony, college
will award diplomas
tonight to 1,366 students.
By Alison Murray, Daily Piiot
COSTA MESA -Fifty ~
after its first commencement cer-
emony for just six graduates,
Orange Coast College tonight
wUl award associate Jn am
degrees to 1,366 s~dentl and
certifk4tes of achievement to 609
significant oeremony, • he said.
"This ls certamly one of the cen-
ter points ol out celebration.•
ln ~ or the signifi-
cance of the commencement cer-
emony, the event will feature an
·~~Dr. WWialilTumer
of Colla Me1a, the first student
body~ol the origt-11111* tbe fatbll' of: tour C graduates.
Memben ol um·Yeat1 gradu-
ating duil, will praent 1\unet,
who graduated tn 1949, a plaque
honoriilg the first graduatfng
dui .
construction manager for the
project. Motorists will have to
take SUperior Avenue to Hospi-
tal Road to reach Newport
Boulevard from Coast Hl"ghway.
And starting Monday night.
traffic will be switched to the
new overpass, which crews
have been building alongside
the old one since September,
Wanderllng said. The ramp from
westbound Coast Highway to
southbound Newport Boulevard
also will be dosed for the day on
Monday, and traffic will be
diverted from Balboa Boulevard.
In the middle of the rught
Wednesday and Thursday, the
60-year-old bridge will come
down, dosing Coast Highway at
the intersection from 11 p.m. to 5
a .m. both nights, Wanderling
said.
He said residents who live in
nearby Balboa Coves will hear the
backhoes chipping away at the
concrete and the dty has warned
them of the inconvenience.
• SEE ARCHES PAGE A 18
"It was basically
Silva, who faced his chal-
le ngers for the first time during
the campaign, stood on his record
of anti-tax votes since joining the
board just three weeks after th~
county's 1994 bankruptcy.
That notorious event, which
cost cities and school districts mil-
lions of dollars, remains the
largest financial collapse of a
public agency in U.S. history.
• SEE DEBATE PAGE A11 ..
canceled because.L';ciMI.-•••
we didn't
have enough
contestants. "
• students. • BealUM we're In our SOlb
umtvenmy,~tt.19 to ourwrty
iooti wtl1 be 'V9'Y ..-M.. c.r-The ceremony oomes tn the
middle of the college~ gOklen
atmtv9rMfy, WhlCb ta ~ ca.
brated tblwgh o.c.Diber,
Meaaben ol tbe 50tb ADntver-...v C'OUl!!lttllt baft pat ID mta ................. -. =.-:.r:.---· dilll1lilD Jim
·11111111&h ..... be ......
Mtt tlkl.
Alt.bOugh tbe coa.g. WU
fOunded· in J~. lM7, ua.
anDmhlry • .,_. «J•bfUld ~.n.;wr;yw_~ .. ontA.11 wweBOt Wd• tbe
. . . . .
: . . . . . . . . . i .
f .
. . . . . . . .
I
.. i : . .: ~ Vintage cWthing st_Ore .owner in step With swing-dancing craze
. . .
: SHE IS
----------~ Uvtng in the pa.st and loving it.
Twin Palms
-· Restaurant
presents dinner
7nusU: concerts
• fr win Pahm Restaurant in
Newport Beach is present-
ing dinner concerts
sa;;;ugh August on selected
evenings at 1 and 9:45 p.m.
lJpcoming concerts include Paul
Evere and the Raiders on Fri-
y and the Captain and Ten-
e on Sunday. The Surfaris will
~rform Fridays from June
through August and world-
lamous' big bands will appear
l;undays. For tickets and more
~ormation, call lWin Palms at
1-8288. The Fashion Island
taurant is at 630 Newport
J:enter Drive.
, •nurrah At Last" by Richard
hreenberg is being staged
ugh June 28 at South Coast
pertory Theatre. Although I
en't seen the play, I've heard
1 a comical look at holidays
with relatives and how success
pd money play an important pe in relationships. Greenberg
was a 1998 Pulitzer finalist for t play "Three Days of Rain." A
gain performance will be
wn today as part of the low-
lrfce preview. For more infonna-
~ BACKINTIME
! Boyd. a Costa Mesa resident, said· she
~ bas always felt she belonged in the 1940s
: -a time when style, class and good man-
: ners reigned. Ever since high school, she
: said she dressed in her mothers vintage ~ clothes and always has been fascinated
: with .the-threads of that era.
: •1 think in the 1990s we have lost the i JnOrality we had in the ~Os and '50s, • Boyd
: said. •rww. we're tryipg to go back to that
: better time and I think we're getting a little
~ more of our morality back.•
: Being immersed in the 1940s was at first
: just a hobby for Boyd, who grew up in a i home of antique collectors. As she went to
: college and became involved in theater,
: she said she found more and more vintage
: clothes and soon began selling them to 1 friends, who also wmted that classic look.
: A STORE IS BORN l As antique toy collectors, Boyd's mother
: and stepfather travel all over the country to
: auctions and trade shows. Because Boyd
! was interested-in-vintage dothing, she l asked her mother to pick up 1940s' pieces
: that she found along the way.
1 Pretty soon, Boyd said she had hundreds
: of pieces of vintage clothes and her closets
: -as well as her mothers' -were bursting l at the reams. That's when the family dedd-
: ed to open Holly Vogue Vintage in Costa
: Mesa, which Boyd has run for the pa.st five
: months. The small store houses some of the i area's best pre-19505' dothes and acces-
: sories and co-sponsors a Tuesday night l swing-dancing dub called The Scene,
: which is held at Odessa Restaurant in
: Laguna Beach. l She said her No. 1 priority in buying vin-
: tag~ clothes to sell at her store is their con-
IJon, call South Coast Repertory
08-5555. The theater is
dition. While she said her mother does
most of the buying at auctions, Boyd also
purchases items brought into the store. All
of the pieces, which range from dresses to
nation. Her store came at the perfect time
for hundreds of local •swmg kids• who
began learning the classic dance steps and
wanting to dress the part.
change in the dress of these kids," she said.
•1 see 16-and 17-year-olds in suits, and the
girls are in sweet dresses. It's so much fun
and really promoting a healthy self-
image."
clothing business in the future.
oss from The Performing Arts
ter at 655 Town Center
. •swtng daddy• suits to sleepwear, are all in i ·top shape, Boyd said.
ve, Costa Mesa.
Von Hemert lnterton (642-
2QSO}, specializing in upscale
Dome furnishings, is having a
IJarehouse sale through June 7 If its 30,000-square-foot show-
! SWINGIN' TIMING l When Holly Vogue first opened, Boyd
: said she really was unaware of the swing-
. dancing craze that had been sweeping the
Now, when Boyd goel t9 local swiDg
dubs she said it is a thrill to see youngpeo-~le sporting vt111\age outfits they got from
Holly Vogue.
•1 really like the young crowd and the
After dabblb\g in just about everything
having to do with the 1940s, she seems to
have found her calling, Boyd said. She
plans to continue working in the vintage·
•&ck then. the women were more fem-
inine and the men were gentlemen -it
was a great time,• Boyd said. •By doing
this, I feel like J get to live a little bit of that..
I -Story by Jenifer Ragland.
photo by Devon Kirschbaum
m and tented parking lot at
5 Newport Blvd., Costa
esa. Furniture will be dis-
IOUD.ted 25 % to 7 5 % . Name
lrands on sale include Century,
Baker, Jeffco, Hickory White,
~gh and Henredon. Von
emert says it is the largest
nredon dealer in the county.
My favorite party store,
ere's The Party1 (722-1803)
eow carries top-of-the-line
bane stationery and, as always,
IJ>ecia.lizes in custom invitations
&-special occasions. Where's
e Party offers one-stop shop-
g ft>r party-paper goods, bal-
ns, custom gift·WTapping and
ards. The store is at 270 E. 17th ~ .• Costa Mesa.
• EDITOR'S NOTE: Do you or someone
: you know have a landmark birthday or
! anniversary coming up7 tf so, we'd like
! to Include it In our Almanac section.
: Please call the Information Into the
: Readers Hotline, 642-6086, fax It to ~
: 4170, or mall It to City Edit0r Timothy
! Lemm. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa,·CA
: 92627. You also may send photographs.
: but be sure to include a self-addressed,
: stamped envelope if you want them i returned.
BIRTHS
Most recent births as reported
to the Orange County Recorder's
office.
:-Plardo's Mesa Upholstery
't'-42-8400) is having a 20% off
.>ale on fabric and labor through
i<urday at 1998 Harbor Blvd., NEWPORT BEACH .
CQSta Mesa. The company, • Maddison E. Curtis on April 20
which has been in business for l • Christopher M. Fritsch on April
more than 55 years, offers slip-: 20
co.'vers, draperies, bedspreads, ~ • Alexander B. Campbell on
~adboards, custom-made fumi. l April 21
~e and patio furniture. : • Jacob C. Diaz on April 23
--------------~ • Jagger Godf!IZl on April 23
• IEST IUYS Is published Thursdays • M-... '--He1 R Hadd-1--d lllCt Saturdays. If you know of a good : • a.£ i.u.a en · tu.a.u on
buy, call me at ~1224, fax me at : April 23
64&-4170 or write to me at Best Buys. l • Eric R. Burckle on Aprll 24
Daily Piiot. 330 w. Bay st .• Costa Mesa, : • Sean A. Flores on April 24
CA 92627. E •Austin J. Dalgetty on April,26
VOL 92. N0.121
BUSINESS LICENSES
New business license informa-
tion reported by the cities of Cos-
ta Mesa and Newport Beach.
COSTA MESA
A Color Salon, 462 E. 17th St.,
beauty shop
Casa de Beepers, 176-A W .
19th St., electronic parts and
equipment
Computer Access, 119 W. 19th
St., computer software
Costa Mesa Audio and Pager,
826 W. 19Ur St., radio/television
communications equipment
D&H Donuts, 600 W. 19th St.,
retail bakery
Deep Muscle Therapy, 419 E.
11th St., misoellaneous personal
services
Discoteca Otomi, 745 W. 19th
St., record and rerecord tapes
Globalcomm Ente1't4imnent,
1300 Ada.ms Ave., miscellaneous
publishing
Hollywood Video, 1545
Adams Avp .• videotape rent&
Pastelena y Panaderia, 805 w.
19th St., retail bakery •
almanac
Q/fuk 2000, 3187 Airway
Ave., computer-programming
Rex Development Group Inc.,
3184 Airway Ave., management-
consulting services
Spanish Fly Productions, 936
W. 18th St., motion picture/video
productions
Stay in Touch Massage, 234 E.
17th St., miscellaneous personal
services
Therapeutic Massage Works,
234 E . 17th St., miscellaneous
personal services
NEWPORT BEACH
Air Control systems Inc., 5580
La Palma Ave.; owner: Geoffrey
Leotaud
All-Pro Cleaning Co., 291
Allen Ave.; owner: Daniel C.
nonson
Allstate Insurance -Tom Thy-
lor, 567 San Nicolas Drive; own-
er: Tom Taylor
Allure Gifts, 32 Hillsdale
Drive, owners: Shahn.az R. Ghod-
sian and Fakb.rt Valdll
Ambiance Additions, 765 St.
College Blvd.1 owners: Kevin A.
Donnelly and Margaret B.
Donnelly
American Maxim Co., 2418
Via Marina; owners: Benjamin S.
Chai, David S. Chai and Wendy c. Chai
AR Inc., 3101 W. Coast High-
way; owner: Alan Rypinski.
Armed Plumbing Contractors,
1148 210th Sl; owner: Joe Fraga
Artisan Creative Inc., 4300
Campus Drive; owner: Jamie
Douraghy
Atlantis Partners/Stride and
Associates, 4675 MacArthur
Court; owners: John Devine,
Michael Robichaud and Raebel
Goldstein
BHL Industries, 11201 Santa
Pe Ave.; owner: Stuart H. Upsett
Baroque Blondes Inc., 706
Marigold Ave.; owner: Susan
Steoca
Bayfront Cafe, 3412 Via Opor-
to; owners: Sarkis Der 'lllwitian
and Arpi Der 'lllwtttan
Beach Bound, 1045 Newport
Center Drive; owner: Deanna
Herbel ~
Mitch Aarvig Plumbing, 1246
Christine St.; owner: Mitch
Aarv1g
•
DEATHS
Most recent deaths as reported to
the Orange County Recorder's
office.
COSTA MESA
• Bernard M. Warsinger, 75, on
April 7
• Alberta D. Poppe, 82, on April
9
• Eleanor E. Blucker, 73, on April :
10
• Julie A. Baugh. 33, on Aprll 11 :
• Tawfik S. Darwich.. 49, on April '
19
NEWPORT BEACH
•Gloria A. Iglesias, 71, on April
9
• Constance E. Quinlan, 71, on
April 10 1 • Alice R. Larson, 97, on April 11 •
• Martha M. Und.sey, 90, on April:
13 •
• Raymond V. Merj.e, 82, on April '
13 :
• Duane C. Cedl, 58, on April 1.f l
• Herbert G. Scburter, 87, on !
April 18
I •
..
Working eattle ranch will leave . a -lasting legacy
V lnce Kontny looks like
your buic, ordiriafY guy.
He's soft-spoken, down-
to-eartb and, although be cer-
t:ainly qualifles, I doubt there'• an
ounce of hotshot ln him.
But there's not much ordinary,
either.
Onlinary guys don't go from
gdmy-bands laborer ln the out-
back·of Australia to president and
chief ~perating officer of Fluor
Corp., a major player ln global
engineering and construction.
. A more traditional route to the
top might have involved his
·engineering degree from the
*University of Colorado. Or
through what he learned during
,six years in Vietnam and other
hot spots as an officer ln a Navy
Seabee detachment
Vlnce took his discharge in
'Southeast Asia, globe-trotted a
bit and ended up doing grunt
'labor for Fluor ln Australia.
Past-forward three decades and
he is at the top. Vince and his
'Wife, Joan, have three childnm
.who carry on the family tradition
.of overachieving: a biologist, an ~eer and a sociologist.
: Still, something was lacking in
•Vince Kontny's life. Something
;that traces back to bis boyhood
·in Julesberg, Colo., where Vince
'and nine siblings were raised.
· "I told my dad I'd like to be a
.rancher, as he was. He said that
would have to wait,• V1n.ce told
me the other day in the study of
his condominium overlooking the
Udo V1llage. end of Newport
Harbor.
•He said, first, I had to go to
college and learn a profession so
martin
I could have a wife and children
and support them. After the
children were on their own: then
maybe I could think about
ranching.•
Vince did all that. And now he
is, at last, a rancher. And be
learned bis dad was right: It's
tough to make any money at it.
But that's not why Vince bought
the Colorado ranch that has been
bis dream ever since he can
remember.
He bought it to leave a legacy.
"We're losing an entire way of
life in this country, and it's some-
thing I believe must be pre-
served. The people who worked
this ranch, and others like it, are
the kind of people wlio built this
country. This is what family val-
ues and work ethics are all
about. We need to remember
that and preserve it."
For a guy who went from pick
and-Shovel to the executive suite,
restoring the ranch simply was
another challenge, another rail-
road to build. another refinery to
briefly in the news
Two actor,s to co-own
new restaurant
South Coast Plaza officials
have announced Plans to open a
new restaurant owned in part by
actors Kevin Costner and Robert
Wagner.
C.J. Segerstrom & Sons, which
operates South Coast Plaza, said
an application has been received
for a new restaurant to be called
The Clubhouse.
The company plans to present
the proposal to the Costa Mesa
Qty Coundl and Planning Com-
mission for review ov~ the next
few weeks.
The 17 ,000-square-foot, two-
story eatery would be situated
next to Robinsons-May in the for-
mer site of the Riviera, which
recently closed after more than 20
years.
If approved by the city, the
exterior of the building facing the
entrahce to the center at Bristol
Street and Anton Drive would be
designed with red brick and lime-
stone. The existing south
entrance to the restaurant also
would be redesign84.
Construction could begin next
month, with a grand opening
scheduled in time for the 1998
holiday shopping season, officials
said.
Bins to be placed for
old phone directories
The Costa Me5a Sanitary Dis-
trict will be placing several col-
lection bins around town where
residentS can drop off their old
Pacific Bell telephone directories
for recycling beginning next
week.
The distrlct, which manages all
residential trash pickup in Costa
Mesa, will place large bins out-
side all area Albertson's, Ralphs,
Lucky, Bargain Food Basket and
Vons grocery stores, Costa Mesa
City Hall and the OCC Recycling
Center.
The bins will be in place June
3 through July 24.
Outdated phone books can be
recycled and used for many pur-
poses, including next year's
phone directories and envelopes
used to send utility bills to resi-
dents, officials said.
put up in some Godforsaken
place.
God, however, did not fonake
Vince's place. His 400-acre
spread on the high plains at the
foot of the $a.n Juan Mountains
neer Telluride, cOlo., truly must
be the God's country people
~ays are talking about
You look at the glorious pho-.
tographs that wallpaper Vmce's
study and you know. You look at
that one large color print of the
sun ri$lng behind a rim of Alpine
peaks and you believe.
To restore the ranch to a level
matching its natural beauty,
Vmce didn't cut a single comer.
Wherever possible, the original
wood was restored and used to
rebuild. The lumber of one large
barn was too far gone, so Vmce
bought a load of timber that had
'i
ALDEN'S CARPET
has opened
anew
Area Rug Studio
Why Pay Dept
Store Prices?
ALL RUGS &
RUNNERS on
SALE.
Handmade wools,
synthetics, sisal
ALDEN'S
CARPETS, INC .
1663 Placentia Sr., cosra Mesa
646-4838
been used to build a Rhode
Island factory in 1906 and was
tom down 90 years later. •That'll
last 200 years,• he aaid.
Hinges and ~latches were
band-forged by artisa.Ds in South
Carolina. The design detail ts
re.markable. The latches on the 3
112-inch-tbick barn d<>(>l'S, for
example, were designed for
hands kept warm with mittens
during,the harsh winters they get
at 9,300 feet.
You begin to understand why
this place is called the Last Dollar
Ranch. And you know why, five
years after the ranch began life
anew, Vince still talks about it
with such passion.
He becomes animated, waxes
poetic and roams the book-
shelves that line his study, pluck-
ing out this book and that to
ahow a villtor photographs of the
ranch u tt was and u U ls now.
1be •before• shots show a
bedraggled, mud-rutted spread
with rotted, tumbledown build-
ings. Most people would say:·
•Tear it down, pave it over and
put the Wal-Mart over there.
Then we'll subdivide into 35-a.cre
ranchettes and move on to the
next hopel~ spread.•
Not Vince Kop.tny. He saw it
as it was at the turn of the centu-
ry. He saw its way of life and itS
vital industry of cattle-ranching
-both of which, Vmce believes
fervently, must be preserved.
And. board by board, it was.
As Ralph Waldo Emerson put it,
"He builded better than he
knew.• What was. generations
ago, a )Vorking ranch is now that,
and much more. It is a showplace
-and it can never be toucbed, .
never be develOped.
Th guarantee that, Vince bU:O:
protected the ranch with OODler:
vation easements, legal entitles
that aeate a perpetual environ-~
mental t:nt.st .;:
"This will always be a work·
ing cattle ranch,• Vmce said,
jumping up to get pictures of tt*
annual spring branding from 3
which he had just returned. I .-_
enthused so much that I man-~
aged to finagle an invitation to
next year's roundup.
I want to see the place whe(e,
Vince says, the skies are so Wled
with stars, •it's like a church -%
without a roof on it." •
• fltED MAR11N Is an Eastbluff resident.
His column is published T'hursmys a"
Saturdays. ....
'' "°""' ~ ~ Joe4, mJ luwe IJuJ, ~ii
1(ou~
PaiJ, 100 MuCh!
1-888-88-.l!CX'llS
Vi4ii"" 0#, /Ju,, 'kJOlllJ, 'k/iJe 'Web. .
www.lexus41ess.com 1~--..... ~-
For the record
An article Tuesday on Memorial Day services at Pacific View
Memorial Park in Corona del Mar misidentified one of the hon-
orees. He was Michael Robert Mangan.
Catering
645-0209
Join Hoag Omcer Center from June 7 to 13 for a weei of sf)«ial programs celebrating Hoag Cancer Center's l 0th Annual Celebration of Life. The
joys and cftallengts of survivorship will be explored at these events. open to all cancer survivors, thtir friends and fa'"ilies and ftealtit-care providers.
SudliJ,J•ae7
2 to 3:30 p.m.
Hoac Queer Celtter'• I Oda Aaaul
Celebratlo• Of Life.
..
Teachers may get raises up to 25%
• No agreement reached,
however, on propqsed
1
JeStructwing of Newport-
1 Mesa salary schedules.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
• NEWPORT-MESA -Under a
proposed restructuring of New-
port-Mesa's teacher salary sched-
ules, some employees could get
raises of up to 25 % , which would
bring them into parity with other
Orange County educators.
School district and teachers
union officials haven't reached
any agreement yet. But they are
nearing accord on the first phase
Of negotiations, which is intended
to equalize the salary schedule to
make it more competitive.
School officials said the district's
starting teacher salaries already
are competitive. But as teachers
move up the schedule, their earn-
ings fall farther behind other dis-
bicts. A reason for the lag: Teach-
ers in Newport-Mesa receive nlis-
es once every three years, while in
many other districts teachers get
raises each year.
Accord1ng to Mike Pine, uao-
date superintendent of b111fnrett
services, the price of equalizing
the salary schedule would be
abollt $400,000. An adcUUooal
U50,000 woul<l be used to keep
teachers •adversely affected• by
the arrangement at their current
pay level.
·we have enotJgh money to
do this," nustee Martha Pluor
said. •some people are going to
get between a 22% and 25%
raise. Some, depending on
where they fall in the schedule,
could get significant increases.
But, in some instances, they'll
only get 1%or2%. •
If, in the schedule shift, certain
teachers' salaries are supposed to
be lower than they are now, the
$450,000 would be used to keep
them at their current pay level.
During the second phase of
negotiations, the union will bar-
gain for actual raises.
Union President Linda Mook
said no final agreements about
any numbers have been reached.
•There are still some major
issues that need to be resolved,"
she said.
•Council OKs long-tenn
l~ with Eastbluff Boys
and Girls Cub for shared
use of~ facility.
By Jenlfwr Regland. Daily Pilot
NBWPORT BEACH-Acting
without discussion, the City
Coundl has unanimously
apprOYed a tentative long-term
.1eue agreement with the East-
bluff Boys and Girls Club for use
of a dty park building.
The agreement -a renewal
of a 1971 lease that expired ID
June 1996 -provides for shared
use of the building between the
club and the city. The club
would lease the facility for 25
years at a cost of $1 a year.
•Despite a bumpy start for
th8l8 discussions, and some mis-
undentandings on both sides, I
think what has resulted is a win-
win situation for both the Boys
and Gtrll Club and the dty's
reaeation programs,• said City
Manaaer Kevin MW'J)by.
Uncler the new ieue terms
approved, the club would be
able to maintain all of itl emting
programs by having exclusive ~of the building from 2:30 to
6:30 p.m . all year long. ln addi-
tion, the club would have sole
use of the facility from 8 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. and after 6:30 p .m .
June 16 through Aug. 31.
The dty wOuld have exclu-
Sive use on the weekends and in
the morning hours during the
school year, with exceptions for
the dub on Wednesdays and Fri-
days.
Both sides . have agreed to
consult with one another if
either needs the facility for hours
or days different from those
specified in the lease, Murphy
said.
Bill Welch, president of the
Boys and Girls Club board of
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directors, said be is happy with
the tentative lease provisions
because they allow the club to
continue its programs while
using the building to its fullest
extent.
•1 think in the beginning, the
reason for the sensitivity as far
as we were concerned was war-
ranted,• Welch said. •aut as we
got through the process and
each side understood each oth-
er's position, it became clearer
on a way to goJve both parties'
problems, and I think we've
done that.•
City ottictals began looking at
the Eastbluff facility after realiz-
ing their agreement with the
Newport .. Mesa Unified School
District to use the Llncoin Ble-
mentary School gymnasium
could be canceled with six
months' notice.
Officials feared that if they
lost the Lincoln gym, they would
have nowhere to house city-run
recreation programs. Also, the
city's rent for that f adllty is
expected to double ID two years.
Bec4Ul8 the Ea.stbluff lease
bad expired, dty leaders wanted
to consider all of their options
before simply renewing the
agreement. Options included
canceling the lease and moving
all dty programs to &stblulf or
significantly increasing the
club's rent.
That stirred emotions among
club supporters, thrusting the
issue into the limelight and
causing accusations and misun-
derstandings to fly from both
sides, Murphy said.
But for the past several
weeks, the staff two agencies
have been meeting to examine
the facts and craft a mutually
agreeable situation.
•What we have come up with
is a good working relationship
and a cooperative agreement
that will benefit everyone,•
Murphy said. •This is how gov-
ernment is supposed to work.•
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NEWPORT HAABOR Al.EA
CHAM BER Of COMMERCE Proposition 219
0 f th · fu · f : A proposed constitutional amenanent that ne o e maJor ncuons o • would ...... It stat 'de ""'iti ti f the NewpoJ:t Harbor Area • be pr"'11111 8WI ••. 8 ~ rom
Chamber of Commerce is to serve · Ing unevenly ~ound Calibrnaa based
1 • 1 · · • d • on approval or disapproval votes. Such a as a cg•s alive review entity an . varied lication has t ed bu
"watchdog," supporting sound, · 8PP. . no occurr • t
b • f . di 1 . 1 . . some tear it might. usaness nen y egas auon Cbambe i I
through the recommendations of r post on:
our Government Affairs Commit-· SUPPORT
tee and our Business and
Community Political Action Com-
mittee (BACPAC).
Proposition 220
• A proposed constitutional amendment to
: consolidate nmicipaJ and superior COt.Jts
· in a country upon the majority vote of
: judges.
Nine state propositions on the
June ballot were recently discussed
both by our Oo.vernment Affain
Committee and with our Board of
Directors. Themeasurcsareufol-•
low1, with the Chamber• 1 official ·
Chambe~ posldon:
SUPPORT
position. • Proposition 221
If you have any.qucadon1 re-• Apropoeedconatitullonalnerdnentthat
gardina the Chamber's position on : would allow the Commission On Judicial
tbeae ballot measures, or have any • Performance to discipline such judlclal
, other questions regarding legisla-: officials as court commissioners, subject
ti.on, please feel free to call the · toreYllwofthestateSupremeCourt. The
Chamber at (949) 729-4400. : convnlssk>n can now dlsq>llne judges.
Chamber posldon:
SUPPORT
Proposition 222
: A propolld 8taMe to hctMM h penalty
• for MCOnd-degree murdtr of a pollcl
: officer from 25 )41111 to Ht to life wfthout
• parole.
Chamber position:
SUPJ!ORT---=---.-.
RNANCING AVAILABlE
The Chamber endorses
JOHN HEDGES
Orange C-ounty
Supervisor, Stla District
Proposition 224
An lnltiatM constitlAlonll ~
that would require competitM bldcq
for*" qineert'ig ord1191 ca llrlCtl
~more than $50,000 .
Chamber poaldon:
OPPOSE
Proposition 225
An Initiative 1tatut1 declaring that
elected offlcl1l1 ahould aupport a
proposed amtndmtnt to the U.S.
constitution llmlt.lng congr1ulonal
term a.
Chamber polltlon:
OPPOSE
THURSDAY. MAY 28. 1998 A S
Restaurant manager shot in botched robbery _
. Restaurant m anager
cited for petty theft
; The new night manager of Sid's
#eakhouse in Newport Beach was
dted for petty theft after $380 was
~ported stolen from a cash register
and concealed under a bush, polioe
¥id Wednesday.
. Barclay CUdd, 42, was dted on
the misdemeanor charge by New-P<>rt Beach police after another
employee reported that the cash
Wahoo's manager as
accomplice to ~ in
$14,-000 h eist.
By Greg Ristlng, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA-The manag-
er R1_ a Mexican restaurant was
shcit'ln the leg Wed.nelday while
makjng a St•;-000 bank deposit
with a friend who police say
actually was the gunman's
accomplice in what turned into a
botched robbery. '
The friend of the Wahoo's Pish
'Jaco manager later wu arrested,
but the gunman remains at large,
said Costa. Mesa police Lt. Ron
Smith.
Wayne Alexander Gardiner,
31, of Moreno Valley was booked
at Costa Mesa Jail on suspicion
of armed robbery, carjacking and
assault with a deadly weapon.
He was being held on $250,000
bail.
Police said the incident began
at 8:1S a.m. as Gardiner asked to
accompany Terrence Nicholson,
29, a manager' of the restaurant
in the 3000 block · of Bristol
Street, as he made ·a bank
deposit.
>.. Nicholson loaded the
restaurant'• Pord ~rer with
the receipts and waited for a sec-
ond employee to accompany
him. a gurunan approached and
demanded the mQney, police
said.
After turning over the keys to
the vehicle, Nicholson told
police, the gunman fired one
shot that hit him in the left leg.
Nicholson said he tl\en hobbled
across the street to a 7-Eleven
store and called police.
Garcifner later told officers
that he jumped into a Nissan
Sentra to pursue the robber, who
had fled in a Ford Mustang
Closing ai-gmnents in Rivera trial expected
By Greg Risling. Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Attorneys
will make their closing arguments
today in the mwder trial of Omar
Coyot:zin Rivera, 19, who is
accused of killing a former Daily
Pilot employee outside her Costa
Mesa home.
Superior Court Judge Nancy
Stock plans to hand the case over
to the jury for deliberations after
the attorneys' summations. The
jury could reach a verdict by ~e
end of the day.
. Deputy Public Defender Mark
Davis wrapped up his case
Wednesday aft~oon with testi-
mony from a UCI addiction-med!-
cine speciallst, who said some peo-
ple experience •blackouts• after
drinking large amounts of alcohol
and don't remember some of their
actions.
•Sometimes the judgment. per-
ception and ability to control emo-
tions is impaired greatly by a
blackout," Dr. Max Snyder said.
•They could do something pur-
posely, but snap out of it and not
realize what happened."
Rivera's blood-alcohol level was
between 0.16 and 0.19 about four
hours after he allegedly stabbed to
death Donna Jacobson, 59, a for-
mer Daily Pilot credit manager,
outside her ·Park Avenue condo-
minium.
A neighbor found Jacobson
briefly
was stolen abool 9: 15 p.m. May 21.
Neither Cudd nor the restau-
rant's owner, Sid Softer, could be
reached for comment Wednesday.
Authorities have said Soffer
wants the district attorney's office
to prosec.ute the case. If prosecu-
tors file charges, an arrest warrant
could be issued within the next
week.
Cudd recently. replaced Gary
Monahan, a Costa Mesa City
Councilman who . worked at the
restaurant for a year. Monahan quit
his job at Sid's and took a new posi-
tion at Skewers Restaurant and
Brewery in Costa Mesa.
No injuries reported
in office building fire
A Costa Mesa ·office building
was damaged by a fire Wednesday
afternoon, fire officials said.
The blaze was reported at 12:57
p.m.. in the 1900 block of Pomona
dead in her garage Dec. 15, 1996.
She had just returned home from
Sunday Mass at St. Joachim
Church.
Rivera also was charged with
trying to rob Ann Johansen in the
parking lot of a nearby 24 Hour
Fitness Center minutes after
Jacobson was killed.
Deputy District Attorney Deb-
bie Lloyd called two witnesses,
who detailed the crime scene.
Lloyd contends that Jacobson was
stabbed several times with a 12-
' inch knife after she tried to disarm
her attack~ .
Rivera faces life in prison H he is
convicted of the maJlimum charge
of murder with sped.al circum-
stances and attempted robbery.
Avenue, said Barbara Mircosa, a
spokeswoman for the Costa Mesa
Fire Department.
Four office units were damaged
before firefighters from seven
engine companies extinguished
the fire at 1:16 p.m., she said.
One of the units sustained
extensive damage, but no estimate
on the loss was immediately avail-
able. No injuries we.re reported.
The ·cause of the fire is under
investigation. Mireoia said.
allegedly driven by another man.
He told police the driver of the
Mustang g ot out of Im car ot one pomt and IJDAS.bed the window
of his Sentra,
Oardliler then returned to the
crime scene where be wu ques-
tioned, Smith said. Police
searched his car and found
$4,000 in a black nylon pouch
and another $9,000 hidden under
the floor liner.
•He couldn't give a good
expWiaUon why he had the bulk'
of the money,• said Smith. wbo
added that police believe Gert
diner and the gunman knew
each other and may have .bad a
disagreement Mter the ro'bbery.
The other Sl,000 taken in the
holdup has not been recovered+
police said.
Graduate to a Rolex.
Show your special graduate
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CHARLES H. BARR
949-642-3310 9_,)i.V:MDr NewpartBe-
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FOR INFORMATION ABOUT JOINING
CWLA, PLEASE CALL (~).837-7374
CWLA is a nonpartisan organization dedicated to strong goals and principles. Its mission
is to bring together influential women to effect po·sitive change in the community and
government. By identifying av~nues where women leaders can make a difference, we
encourage pursuit of these paths by developing, educating and supporting women
candidates for leadership opportunities. CWLA, however, is not gender or single issue
driven: it supports the basic principles of conservatism which emphasize individual
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CWLA ENDORSES THESE CANDIDATES ·AND URGES YOUR SUPPORT
AA a founding mayor, council member,
and small business owner, l have a
proven conservative 1'9QOf'd. As your
Aaaemblywoman, I wlU fight for better
school• for a better future, lower taxes and
leu govemment waste, preservation of locaJ
control, and eater nelghbofhc>oda and
achoola. Please vote for me for 818te
Aeeembfy, 73rd Dletrtct.
I am proud of the 24 bills that I introduced
that have become law. During my third term, I
wlff continue to fight to ease the tax burden
on famNles and to reduoe the role of
govemment bureaucracy on our businesses.
Please vote for Marilyn Brewer for 8t8t9
Aee1mbly, 10th Dlstrtct.
MARILYN BREWER SANDRA GENIS
I was Identified as "the taxpayers' best friend"
by the Daily Pilot, and I stand for fiscal
responsibility, open, responsive govemment.
and protecting our l'Midential quality of life. '
P1ease vote for Sandra Genis for Onnge •
County 8uplnt8or, 2nd District.
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• Bill Turpit steps ·down
after 18 months to pursue
new opportunities as real
estate lawyer.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA-Saying be is
ready to pursue new opportuni-
ties, Bill Turpit announced
Wednesday that he is stepping
down as executive director of
Families-Costa Mesa, the
umbrella group for a dozen local
charities and businesses.
•1 set out to get it started and
it's running really well," he said.
"I'm ready for new challenges.•
Turpit, 44, was the first paid
supervisor of the group when it
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D'dily Pilot
formed in 1996 to coordinate low-
income and youth services
offered through other organiza-
tions such as Share Our Selves
and Hoag Hospital.
After 18 months at the helm,
Turpit said he has decided to
move on, Jeaving the group he
helped form. in the reliable hands
of dQzens of voluntee~ and a
small paid staff.
Turpit said he plans to return
to his previous full-time occupa-
tion as a real estate lawyer, which
he left two years ago.
His post at families-Costa
Mesa will not be filled immedi-
ately. Instead, the chores of paid
executive director will be ban·
dled by other staff members and
volunteers, he said.
Turpit's salary also will be
directed back to the group and
used to pay for the group's many
health-care, child-care and other
services.
He said while be is officially
stepping down from the leader-
ship of families-Costa Mesa, he
will remain active in West Side
issues as a volunteer member of
the group's board of directors and
with Todos Henrumos.
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"The requirements of the position of Supervisor are very demantling.
Jim Silva knows the job atid has peeformeJ it well. "
John Moorlach, ORANGE COUN1YTREASURER
SUPERVISOR
Working for us, Supervisor Jim Silva:
t/ Set aside $700,0~0 for the Wieder Regional Park
t/ Hosted the first Senior Summit for County
Seniors
t/ Secured $190 million for the Santa Ana River
Project
t/ Secured funding for improvements to the 405/73
confluence
t/ Approved millions in flood control improvements
• COita 'Mesa police stage a simulation
of a drunken-driving accident to
demonstrate to teenagers the dangers
of drinking and driving.
1 By Greg Rlsllng. Daily Pilot
· COSTA MESA -David nan never wants to be
placed 1n the same situation again.
The 11-year·old Jw>ior at
C~ Meta High S~ool wu interrogated and hand-
cuffed by ~ police officer
Wedrlesday morning in a
mock arrest for driving
under the influence. His
peen gathered outside the
school near a simulated
head-on collision 1n which a
passenger was killed and
two ~thers were Injured.
Police staged the demon-
straU.on as a graphic
reminder about the dangers
of drinking and driving.
The hundreds of high
school junion and seniors
who attended were literally
given a •crash coune" by
police about what OCCW'I at accident scenes.
It's a sight all too familiar for police at this time
of year. AB the school year winds down, marked by
.,mttdpated events such as the senior prom and
graduation. teens often let loose at parties where
lllcobol ii consumed,
Knowtng that the leading cause of death for 16-
to 2'-yeu-oldl is alc9bol-related incidents, school
.otftdall amt pc ... • faking preventive measures
to ~ awa.reneu Df the dangers.
• On Wed~~~ staged a .head-on colli-
lion between a red minivan and a 'Ibyota sedan
that Tran wu sup~ to have been driving. One
of bis ~en wu sprawled out on the street
while firefjgbten pried two occupants out of the
minivan. A deputy county coroner pulled the dead
ltudent from the street and placed her on top of a
body bag. ,
·we thought it was important for us to see what
a crash scene looks like,• said nan. junior class
vice president. •Hopefully, this ts going to affect
some of the students. If they do drink, we hope
they will get a designated driver."
Gerry Stukkie, a senior
Costa Mesa police officer,
said be has helped re-cre-
ate the crash for the last
three years.
He said he has run into
teenagers afterward who
tell him the demonstration
. gave them a new perspec-
tive on drinking. One of the
best rewards, be said, is not
pulling over those ~ame
youths for driving under the
influence.
• 1 think this makes a
major impact on their men-
tal image,• he said. •All of
the kids I've talked to said
they wouldn't risk their
lives just for a drink or two.•
One of the speakers Wednesday was Reidel
Post, who lost her twin sister to a drunken driver in
1988. Post was in the car with her sister when an
intoxicated motorist slammed into their car.
She remembers being ta.ken to the hospital won-
dering if she was going to die. The scars from the
accident may have healed, but she passes along
her frightening story to high school students so
they don't ma){e a fatal mistake.
. ·1 never want this reality to be yours," she said.
Allstate
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KIM HAGGERTY·ZVUUS I D~Y Pt.OT
Above, Costa Mesa High Sdlool student Kim
Daniels, 17, plays dead during a re-creatton of a
drunk-driving accident on Arlington Drive
Wednesday morning. Right, student David Tran,
17, puts h1s finger on hb DOie ~urtng a mock
drunk-driving test. The Cotta Mesa Police and
Flre departments, along with Mothen Against
Drunk Driving, re-created the head-on colllsion to
make students aware of the dangen of drinking
and driving.
OFF ORIGINAL R
Selected Items
·tosTA MBSA -J:ea.dng for thtsafety of his family, a Los Ange-
les 'county sheriff's deputy shot .Ba wounded a prowler on the roof
er' his home, authorities said
Wlldnesday. :'The 33-year--old deputy, whose
mgp.e was withheld, fired several
~ with his 9 mm pistol. wound-Uii the suspect once in the right
Iali,as he fled from the home in the
3QRO block of Sommerset Avenue
about 9:40 p.m . Tuesday.
Juan Ramirez-Rendon, 20, later was arrested at his home in the
block of Adams Avenue after
rting that he was the victim of
a drive-by slM>otinO; ··la.Id Costa
Mesa polk:e Lt. Rm "Smith.
lbe suspect. wbo WU kteolffled
by the deputy a tbe would-be
thiel, was booked at Costa Mesa
jail and held in custody an SS0,000
bail. He f~ arraignment Friday
in Harbor Munid~ Court
InveStigating officers said the
lhddent began when the deputy
and his wife were going to bed and
heard a~ from outside the master of their two-
story home. · '
The deputy said he saw the sus-
pect standing on his backyard
patio with his face pressed against
a window. While his wife called
911, the deputy grabbed his gun
but when he returned to the win-
dow, the suspect was gone.
mo. FREE!
Dell very
wUh
Pwt:h.cise of 5 p<;. Set w/ad.
MIDUtli im.. the muple blmd a a .. ,...,.., in the frcmt al lbiJD'
bollM. Wbm they wmt to look
outside, tbltY aw lhe ~cm a
ftnt-ftoor rod trying to get into a
recoad-floor bedroom where their
tS.mootb-<>ld m.bf lleeps.
The deputy then Gred i8Yera1
shots at the suspect and dla8ed
him as be Oed OQ a motocroas bicy-
cle, but was unable to catch him.
An bout later, police responded
to a report of a drive-by shooting
on Adams Avenue. When officers
arrived at Ramlrez-Rendoo's home,
be claimed he had been shot in the
right leg after playing basketball at
Estancia Park.
After the deputy positively kien-
tified the suspect, RamireZ-Rendon
was ta.ken to Western Medical
Cent.er in Santa Ana, where he
was aeat.ed for a hairline fracture
and reported tn stable cxmlition.
AGENTS:
Deb Anderson • Don Adams Dot Adams
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360 SAN MIGUEL DR. • SUITE 207 • NEWPORT BEACH
• SHERIFF CANDIDATES
'Young Executives of America
and The Padflc Club present a
debete on the election for Orange
County sheriff-coroner With the
two candidates, Orange County
Marshall Mike Carona and Sanb\
Ana police Chief Paul Walters,
from 7:15 to 8:45 a.m. at The
Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthur
l31'9d., Newport &ach. Admission
for nonmembers is $25. For more
information, call 759-5456.
WESTSIDE REOEVE_LOPMENT
Costa Mesa Mayor Peter Buffa
discusses the proposed West Side
redevelopment plan at the quar-
terly meeting of the Latino Busi-
ness Council of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce from 8 to
9:30 a.m. at Avila's El Ranchito
Restaurant, 2101 Placentia Ave.,
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call 474-7755.
Chamber of Commerce'• Sumet
Netw~ event ii from S to 1
p.m; aboard tbe Riverboat Angela
Louise, 630 Udo Park Drive,
Newport Beach. Admission for
nonmemben is SlO. For more
info~tion, call ?29-'400.
MEET THE MANAGEMENT
Orange Coast VU1a introduces
its new management team at 5:30
p.m. at the assisted-living centel,
2619 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa.
There will be music, oocktails and
door prizes. For more information,
call 646-671?.
ACCOUNTING SEMINAR
The Newport Beach Public
Ubrary presents •Accounting for
Busy Business People• at 7 p.m.
in the Central Library's Friends
Meeting .Room. 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. Admission
is free. For more information, call
(949) 717-3801.
AMERICAN CETACEAN SOOETY
The American Cetacean Soci-
ety of Orange County presents nm Durbin of the Long Beach
Aquarium of the Pacific from
7 :30 to. 9 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Community Center, 1845 Park
Ave.
• RSHMY
lbe Co9ta Mesa Uons Oub's
annual Pi.sh Pry ii from 7 to 9:30
p.m. at Lions Park. 570 W. 18th
St., Cost.a Mesa. Ad.mission ii
free. For more information, call
5'8-2049 or 435-0300.
SPRING HORSE SHOW
The Orange County Spring
Western Horse Show is today
through Sunday at the Equestrlan
<:enter at the Orange County Pair and Exposition Center, 88 Fair Driv~, Costa Mesa. Por more
information, call 708-1652.
COMPUTER GROUP "
The WM PC Users Group at
OCC meets trom 9 a.m . to noon in
the Science Hall. 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 662-2939.
WOMEN MENTORS
front reaeational vehicle park.
More than 150 kayaks, canoe.,
boats and other water veh1clel
will be on display to the public.
PoT more information. call (9"9)
729:0UNE.
WOMEN'S HEA.tl'H WORKSHOP
Menopause as Path of
Bmpowennent, a workshop on
women's health and spirituality,
is presented from 10 a.m . to 3
p.m. at The Hub, 230 E. 17th St.,
Suite 218, Costa Mesa. Ad.mis·
5ion is $60. For more information,
call (949) 653-2246.
BEANIE FEST
Beanie Pest 1998, a Beanie
Babies trade show, is presented
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and
Sunday in Building 12 at the
Orange County Fairgrounds, 88
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Admis-
Women Helping Women holds
a training session for women
interested in being mentors to
abused and needy women who
are moving back into self-suffi-
ciency from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 425
1~-sOFTWARlfOIEMONSTF[Alltoflr-'l""~~~~~~~~~~~il~.-rStH ., o esa. enors
The Meyers Group Real Estate
Information presents a free cock-
tall reception to introduce its new
Geographic Information System
software at 5 ·p.m. at the Robert
Mondavi Wine and Food Center,
1570 Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa.
C«ll (BOO) 639-3777.
SUNSET NETWORKING .
The Newport Harbor Area
BUSINESS MEETING
Consumer Business Network
Inc. meets at 7 a.m. in the Tee
Room at the Newport Beach Golf
Course, 3100 Irvine Ave. Parking
is free. Admission is $15, which
includes breakfast.
Montessm %Jrbor .. AftsaScftoofs
Summer &.. fall Enrollment
PU. 50IOOl L WMENTARY Aps 21/l to 11 Years
lXCUllNCE. IN EDUCATION
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DayCue
17~W~St.
Cosio Mesa Costa Mesa
14 549-3803
will work with clients on job
searches, setting goals and active
listening for six months. For more
information, call (949) 631-2333.
PADDLE SPORTS EXPO
Newport Dunes Resort pre-
sents its ninth annual Paddle
Sports Expo from 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
today and 10 a.m. to 5 p .m. Sun-
day at the Newport Beach water-
1 aser Resurfacing !~
Erbium resurfacing of the face eases the rav~ of sun and time.
Healing is renwbbly fast 1bere are no hiaden costs. But act
now, this offer won't last Experience unique personal service.
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of
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Cat Clinic
A COMPLETE VETERINARY AND BOARDING
FACJLITY EXCLUSIVELY FOR CATS
Please call for an appointment
631-1454
Diane Steinberg, DVM
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Mention Ad For
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{949) 850-835'7
sion for adult.a ii $5; children 7
and under are free. Por more
information, Call 75'--0518.
REl'11LE EXPO
Cedar Hill Reptile Enterprises
presents a reptile expo from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. today and Sunday
in Building 14 at the Orange
County Fairgrounds, 88 Pa.i1
Drive, Costa Mesa, Admissiou for
adults ls $6; youths 6 to 12 are $2;
and children under 6 a.re free. For
more information, call (707) 578-
3976.
HOME TOUR AND TEA
The Udo Isle Woman's Club
presents Hats Off To Udo, a home
tour and tea, f:rom 1 to 4 p.IJJ.. at
the Udo Isle Yacht Club Dock.
Advance ticket purchase is $25;
tickets at the door are $30. For
more information, call 675-7168
or 675-1904.
THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1998 A ..
SINGLES MD<Elt
Adventure Pu.D-Add.Lctl pre-
sents a free angles orientation
mtter at 5 p.m. at 4360 Campus
Drive, Suite B, Newport Be4cb ...
Call (949) 6e().7976.
REPUBUCAN ASSEMILY
The Costa Mesa Republian
Assembly meets at 7 p.m. on the ..
third Thursday of each month at
the Neighborbood Community
Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa '
Mesa. Call 645-5326.
REVERSE MORTGAGE SEMINAR
A free telephone help line for
seniors over 62 is offered by mort-.
gage consultant Bob Brennan at 3
p.m. Wednesdays at Bayside W·
lage, 300 E. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Call 723-0233.
e in Custom Embellishments for our Home ...
Window Treatments, Slipcovers, Pillows, Bedding, etc.!
Delightful Gifts
Fine Home Accessories
Garden Fun
In-Home Styling/Consulting
t 720-D Sant.a An.a Ave.
Costa Mesa 645-9140
Mon. -Sat. 10:30 to 5:00
• • • •
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Selected Merchandise
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=:.~SOOETY
Volunteer driven from New-
port Beach and Colt.a Mesa can
help caiicer patients get to and
from their medical treabnents tn
Orange County. VoJunteers use
their own cars or the society's
dqnated van to really make a dif-
ference tn someone's recovery.
Patients are able to get in and out
of vehicles themselves. Volun-
teen must be at least 25 years old
with a valid driver's license. Call
~6 to become an Angel on
IOYS AND GIRLS auss OF
COSTA MESA/NEWPORT BEACH
The three area Boys and Girls
Clubs need volunteer coaches
and arts and crafts work.shop
iacbers. For locations and more
information, call Dick Powers at
tal2-2245. ..
1'0UEGE HOSPITAL
!:. J The College Hospital Costa
1M9Sa Auxiliary is seeking volun-
" ..
"· ~
teen to perform derical. recep-
tion desk. gift lbop and other
duties at the bolPW. Por infor-
mation, call 6'2-n3' between 9
a.m. and 4 p.m.
DEFOIE FOUNDATION
FOR Tif£ ARTS
The OePore Foundation for the
Arts, .a nonprofit orga.ntzation
dedicated to dance at 151 Kalmus
Drive, G-3, Costa Mesa, needs
volunteers. For more information,
call 241-9908.
ENVIRONMENTAL
NATURE CENTER
Each year thousands of school
children visit the ENC's interpre--
tive Nature Center in Newport
Beach. It features 13 unique Cali-
fornia habitats where kids learn
about the center's educational
programs. The ENC needs volun-
teer trail guides to help these vis-
itors learn about their environ-
ment To get involved or learn
more, contact the ENC office at
645-8489.
FRIENDS OF THE
COSTA MESA LIBRARY
Friends of the Costa Mesa
Library needs volunteers. Call the
• Early YeaTS Toys
•Developmental toys for children binh lO 10 years.
• Quality toys with lasting and creative play value.
• Personal service from knowledgeable sales staff.
642-4212
1827 WESTCLlFF D NEWPORT BEACH
For $485 a month, it comes with
everyt · under the dual sunroofs
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0 eecurity dq>oait
DROVER
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llbr~ at 646-8845.
GlASS MOUNTAIN INC.
Vohmteen are needed to aid
diabled adwts who meet month-
ly for educational. entertainment
and IOdal purposes. Por Informa-
tion, call 179-3',1.
HUMAN OPTIONS
This nonprofit organization
shelten, counsels and educates
abused women and children. It Js
looking for volunteers to help nm
its Clas$¥ Seconds thrift store at
462-B E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa.
Shifts nm three to four hours
between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., Mon-
day through Friday, and between
10 a.m. and S p.m . Saturday.
Duties include sorting donations,
displaying mercbandJse and sales
assistance. To volunteer or
request information, call 631-
4696.
INTERNATIONAL
EDUCATION FORUM
Host families are needed for
international students who will
come to Oran_ge Coun this sum-
mer for four.:week study pro-
grams. Poi information, call
Robert Dulac at 631-3' 71.
y ..
LH1M LMNG CINTEIS MeotaDv tD' adulti rely on the
Newport a.adi center for reli·
dential houi:lng.'tt needs protes-
sional fuDd·railen to IUpJ>Olt and
maintalo th.ii r81ource. Call Jeny
Gailen at 675-1700. _ . ..,,.,,....
MARCH OF DIMES
The March oi Dbnes office in
Newport BeAch needs volunteen
to coordinate and index resource
files and create a master ftllng
system of information and referral
sources. 1b1s agency, dedicate<\ to
preventing birth detects, also
needs front-office usistJmts. Ori-
entation is provided. For informa-
tion, call 263-1100.
NEW DIREOIONS
FOR WOMEN INC.
The nonprofit recovery center
for adult women with alcohol and
other chemical dependencies
seeks volunteers. Call 548-9927
between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. or call
Joy at 548-8754.
NEWPORT COSTA MESA YMCA
The Newport-Costa Mesa
YMCA needs a varlety of general
volunteer help. Call Rita. at 642-
9990.
Under new ownership
and managemen&.
. \'1,,1, 1~: ~'I, If»':
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• THURSDAY, MAY 2a_ 1998
\
tlollywood is sending the wrong message · to society
0 ne thou.sand supporters of
Hoag Hospital turned out
recently at the Big
Edwards Newport Cinema for
the annual Hoag Hospital 552
Club Movte Premiere.
Raberl Redford's film •Tue
Horse Whisperer,• bosed on the
t)est-selling book by the same
name, drew a full house of locals.
More than $60,000 was Taised for
Hoag Orthopedic Services.
That's the good news. The bad
news was the film.
What is wrong with society? In
the not-too-distant past, millions
were captivated by Mlbe Bridges
of Madison County,• a simple
story of love between a farm wife
and a photographer passing
through town. A brief affair turns
into smoldering passion for the
woman who stays with her hus-
band and family, keeping her
secret for a lifetime.
Then Academy Award-win-
ning MThe English Patient" took
the national psyche by storm
two years ago with its story of
adulterous behavior played out
against a backdrop of sand and
time with its good-looking
young people bent on self-
destruction.
And now we have "The Horse
'Whisperer,• which begins with a
tragically graphic scene in which
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Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224
230 East 17th St. Costa Mesa
rugsandcar pets.com
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a child is1<illed and a horse is bru-
tally injured in a horrific accident
with a big rig in the snow.
The story of a mother seeking
redemption and healing for her
child (who loses a limb but sur-
vives the tragedy that c:l&ms the
life of her best friend and nearly
kills her beloved horse) leads the
mother (KrtsUn Scott Thomas) to
an adulterous liaison with Red-
ford, who plays the trainer who
will bring1he horse back from
ruin and save the child and moth-
er in the process.
Unfortunately, the child, the
horse, the mother, the father and
Redford may all be saved, but
the rest of us lose in the process.
Why does it take an adulterous
relationship to save our pitiful
souls, wbich are lost somewhere
in the rigors of daily life, the
grind of career, the doldrums of
marriage, child-rearing and
responsibility?
Hollywood cops out. telling
the public that they just give .us
what we want to see. They give
us art that reflects life. Nonsense.
Hollywood reflects life as Holly-
wood sees it. It has always been
a business)ed by a contingent of
egomaniacal, indulgent and
, often, very young individuals
without any greater sense of pur-
pose than the bottom Une and a
tunnel-vision sense of reality.
The vast majority of Ameri-
cans do not find redemption
through adultery. They .find
pain, confusion, guilt, divorce,
financial ruin, loss of children
and lies. Some marriages are
certainly better off over. Some
people make mistakes and
should move on. However, the
immature and destructive mes-
sage of our popular movies is
harmful to society.
Hollywood is not just a reflec-
tion of what is real, it creates
what becomes real. And Robert
Redfotd, playing a 60~something
stud trying to be 40, is shot most-
ly in the shadows to protect his
Benefltl';!_9. Orangewood
ChildlMn • FOUridatton
Mllilltl • Jiffe1wnce ;,. the
life of" tlaerving cbiJJ!
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Sun. May 31st
Store Boarsa
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Sunday 18am-4pm
Plus 1'Jan11 Odter DrcutkaU11
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Not to be wed with any other dUcount.
E1'piru May 31, 1998
760-6640 • 2850 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
Accepting Appointments For Su~r Consignments.
Donation& are always welcome.
image. Attracting a married and
troubled woman half his age is a
sad commentary on what we val-
ue and who we are.
And, I say, that is not really
wbo we are. That is who a small
percentage of people are. A per-
centage that includes a large
contingent in Hollywood. So,
then, such a film is a reflection of
a certain kind of life.
This ls not to say that all
movies should be made for the
public good. This is pot to say
that art, including film, should
be censored in any way. What it
does say is that we desperately ·
need movies that carry an
underlying message of hope,
heart, life-affirming values,
against-all-odds redemption and
the survival and promotion of
good things.
What are good things, you
ask? Ladies and gentlemen, the
world is not all gray; good and
evil, black and white. do exist.
· In the case of MThe Horse
Whisperer,· although not the
author's story, good might have
amounted to the husband and
the wife taking their child and
ber horse on a jowney to heal-
ing together as a family. And, in
the process, they come closer
together, attempt to solve their
personal problems and improve
their marriage and family life as
a whole. Is that so impossible to
imagine?Would that be such a
boring film that nobody would
buy a ticket?
We all have got to stop being
so passive about our societal
influences. including entertain-
ment. It's not just a movie, it's a
message. Sometimes a sublimi-
nal message, sometimes a hit-
you-over-the-head message.
Remember that entertainment is
ulti.Qlately a business for those
making and those selling. It's
not called show fun or show
charity; it's called show busi-
ness.
The cigarette business may be
affecting our national physical
health. Well, the entertainment
business may be affecting our
national mental health. We must
RIGINAL GERMAN
Rolls -Pretzels -Strudel -Hallah
Egg Twist Bread -Coffee Cakes
Cheese Cakes -Weddings -Special Occasions
Serving Authentic German Lunch
Daily Specials -Rouladen -Schnitzel
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2950 Grace Lane • Costa Mesa
PICKING UP MY
POWERFUL 8-LB.
ORECKXI:
HAS NEVER
BEEN THIS EASY.
pay attention. or tbere will be r •
more school shootings, more ~ bombings, more drugs, more
rage, more disrespect and und •
llzed behavior in sod.ety as a· -
whole. Sound like a stretch to ..cA
from one movie promoting ~A
hwnan behavior to the downfaJl
of society? nme will tell. . •t
ln the meantime, a free mar-;rl
ket economy will tell if "The ~
Horse Whisperer• strikes a
chord, pulls the heartstrings of ''!'
American audiences. I'm glad tf> ;
drew a crowd for Hoag and t•.)
raised money for the hospital. "q
If it brings in big bucks for 1" '
Touchstone and for Redford. ~'
score one for adultery. stupidi~'~"~
and callousness. You can be
a sequel will follow riext seaso
And society will continue to be.J&
pulled apart. '))
• a.w. COOK'S column appears every
Thursday and Saturday. 1 ·J
.. t>
''" ................. ,..
: Newport )i
: BEAUTY SUPPLY.: • • : d•rrn•loglOil ~ • ~ 1-f:().~ •
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261 -6788
Jamboree at Bristol
Back Bay Court
Beatty's :rapping 'Billworth' not wortny of laugh.$:
there is no way in hell she is '' , • IDl'l'Oa'S NOTI: The R.el Crttla col-
umn features movie aftlques written by
community members sentlng on our panel.
Novel idea with same
Hollywood cliches
W hen Sen. Jay Bulworth,
played by Warren Beat-
: ty, is at the cJ..lmax of his
pwtb-telling metamorphosis, he ~ces a revelation of sorts: :r'tie way to end racism in Ameri-
Da. Bulworth tells millions of pre-
~bly startled Americans, is
f'« the races to disappear
'through intermarriage.
• H America cannot bring itself to
'be colorblind, then let there be no
colors. •All we need is a voluntary,
free-spirited program of procre-
ttive racial deconstruction,• the
senator raps.
1bis ironically amusing
romantic solution to an enor-
mously complex social problem
strikes a chord with the audi-
ence, and for a moment we
believe Beatty is onto something
significant in his latest cooiedy,
·sutworth." ·
Unfortunately, every substan-
tial political issue in this mish-
mash of ,a movie is kept at an
agonizingly mundane level.
What we get instead of biting
political satire and social insight
is essentially the same trodden-
out Hollywood social critique
seen in countless films -only
this time set to the language and
rhythm of rap.
Beatty no doqbt has come up
with a novel idea, that of a fat-cat
Democratic senator who becomes
so despondent during bis re-elec-
tion campaign that be puts out a
contract on bis own life only to
chanqe his mind and plunge
headfong into black urban cultUre
and political advocacy.
~much as I like Warren
Beatty, his Bulworth is a hol-
lowed-out, completely exterior
representation that is so emotion-
ally remote to us that we care lit-
tle about his fate.
•....._.MU.ND, 40, lives in New-
port Beild't end co-owns an Irvine ~
flt consuttfng firm wl1h his brother.
Depiction of blacks
a ppalling,rich,konic
W arren Beatty probably
titled this picture ·BuI-
worth • so that critics
throughout the country would
tagline it as
"Bulworth; A
movie well
worth seeing.•
Personally, r
found "Bl.11-
worth" to be
about as fresh
8.S bull" •••
and~~as
Woolworth.
If you grew
up, or reside in
a multiracial
society that ranges from north-
east Europeans to southwest
Europeans, you mig.ht not realize
nor be oUended that the only
clich& challenged in this movie
are the ones that were propagat-
ed by Hollywood in the first
place.
Hollywood's self-deprecating
humor wears shoddily on a
FREQUENTLY AsKED QUESTIONS:
Live Entertainment?· Blues, Jazz, Rock-N-Roll
Micro Beer? • Locally Brewed Steelhead Beer On
Open for Lunch? • Daily at 11:30 am
Dancing? • Yes, Try to Stay OfT the Tables
Sid Around? • Don't Ask!!
sbame1eu sleeve When the de
facto target ol Senator Bulworth's
r&Plba Cbatrtbel turned out to bitbeltch.
Remind me again bow much
money Beatty stands to make on
this movie if it doel wellf And bow mum ot that mt:mef wm go back to the poonr black communities?
And spealring of the poorer
black communities, when will
Hollywood begin depicting
African American communities
as diversely as they do Anglo
communitiesf
Contrary to popular belief,
black. people who live in poor
neighborhoods are not all foul-
mouthed, gun-toting, women-
abusing, Ebonics-rapping finger
pointers. And when a black
woman is as articulate and as
politically sophisticated as Halle
Berry plays her in this picture,
Goodllwu
8/10/98
~Nat VlldWlth
condemned to a llf e of burger-
Oip~:t is even more amusing, if
not ironic, is that Beatty makes a,
big stand against th~ rlch's influ-,
ence in Congress, stating that if
you've goi money, you get your "
platform heard. :
None of this would have both-
ered me, however, had the movie
been funny or iJTeverent or farci-
cal or even satiric8l But it wasn't·
It was the same old rhetoric,
rehashed with the same old cook-
ie-cutter c:bamcters and situations,
Only now it's been repackaged
to shock. SUJPrlse and entertain '
the many white attics wbp have
never set foot in an all-black
inner-city neighborhood.
• 11C1N MICOtl, 35, lives In Balboa and
Is a personnel analyst for the dty of Los
Angeles and a published author.
2675 Irvine Avenue, Costa Mesa
(across from Newport Golf Course)
& ~·7~.__,,,,,,_ ~·
Where to Dine
Restaurant Directory
THE CULINARY WRAP
Fresh, healttrf i1taTlllr:ionel delaclea vnpped within a ftat rol.
Open 7 deyl a week from 11 :Cllam -9:(Qlrn. t..oaad in the HiVen Square. 250 E. 17th 9reet. (714) 54844£X3
NEWPORT RIB CO.
cnnge r.otmfs belt baby beck rile &erY8d in a frietd1 seuing.
Open 7 days 8 week Monday -Thursday 4pm -1 Qlrn, 4pm -
11 pm H'iday .-Sattn:lay and 2pm -1~ on 51.nday. loc8t8d et
2ClX) Newport 81-.d 631-<! 110.
LE CAFE/HYATT REGENCY IRVINE
Ceifomia Qisine et itB finest. Ef'1I Breakfalt. l..ooch or Dinner in
casual elegance, as )OJ dine Inside or on ou-beNifLd patio. We
f'8Btln Scrumpdoue Buffet8 througnt the day, or )OJ can crder
from Oll' bountiful menu. Located at 179D Jamboree Road
(comer d Jamboree and Mein). Phone (714) 975-1234 x6720.
Hotn~11pm.
BLUE BEET
Q'fJat food, good ser.bt, exoelln prices and ruge portions.
Ser.tlg ln:h and dims' 7 ~ a week. l.DC8tBd at 1 rJ7 21st. Place in Newpat Beech. 67~
(' -I . _, l t \
SIR ROGl:RS, LTD
~. Coffee end &Jii WO 0rtna &. Smoothie9. All OflN
breakfl8t "*"'· Cal8ring Mieble. Open Mon-Fri at 6em. Set at 7am end a., at 98m. Located at 270 E. 17dl Street.
r.oata Miu 845-2252.
GURU'S $ANDWICHES
\Ne ..... ~ & cold dell•~. TAI'•~ .. the
faa.11 triwnr Try Oii' woti flmoui mli&bil •dMch ti' Oii' del
• ~. you1 bl '.91\led" for lhl Min. -Ft;. e.m&m. Set.
1a.3pm. "-I• 1!580 ~ M . A1. (714) na.1211
Al.ChlnX: Mlxicall Food, Wllh The Ft ...... kV aielU & A
New ugc OJi&ine. Q'IB M8I \jillttM. Hotra: l.a.n::h & Dnnr. ~
Major ad Cards~. t..oaad at 2101 Placeiltia, Coate
Mesa -642-, , 42, 2EID Nllwport Bt.d.' Nllwport 8-:tl -
675-8655 and 2744 E. r.oest Hwy., a:M -6448226.
Ml CASA
llr mm. ere no# a~ ui Bail •well• Mexico. Now otramg r.ti
taal8. Phone aheed for ordn tz>ilO. Hotn: Oalv ff'(Jm 11 :Clllli'n.
Al MllP' Od Cards~. locatad flt. 296 17th St.. Qm
Mesa (714) 64!>7626
LA PALAPA
~ lll.llherao Ebih Meldcar'I Selfood. OM:tle, ~.
camao•. ~. en111t1tiel and ITu:h more. ~ 6 davl e week.
Ooaed on~· Cline In er takeGL ~It 123 23rd 9t. .. .
J,,, .... bt·-.t' Jt
,
T.HB ARCHl:S
The prilnUn ... iind liililfood to. In QoW\Di Q:uCy elnCi
1922. SrMg b'ch Mon . .ffi. 11 ::nm lad 3:(X\:rn. am.-
--rillOt ll1d 1 :OOlm. t.ac=--t on~ 9h11. Q ea. HWy"'~te.d.
867077
ROYAL KHYBl:ll
~ aJilh d lndle. ~for~ Mf 11:~ Coled for~ Sit.. a.ldlv bnn:h 11 :3>2:31 Dmr sYl9d
from 5:3Qm ~. 11'.Xll Bril&d 9t. North. Cal t'O# for ,_ ....... 752-62CD
TAPAS
The crirJ 1'911anU in 0.C. ID affw' the finest in cuisl'le from
Spein wirtt fr.ti AamellCO •artail11111't. ~ig in Paela,
etBaka, IJiled heh fiah & pelCBs. ~ for UlCh and ctiner.
Loceted at 4253 Mer1ingele Wfro/ (1 mile IOtAh d John WayrWJ
Ai'part). Meior credit c:.'dl ~· (714) 756-8194
SANTA MONICA SEAFOOD
Regarded • SotJt18m Calb'Tll'I tq> wfood ratlliler. Wllh the
lerl}llt & fineat 11l1cUoo r:I heh eeefood daitf. Aleo, e multituda
d ecn.mptb.e dlicadee auch • &ullhi, IJ'illad fish eraees. dam
chcN«ter. WI & ~. •ldwld9 and al Che fixings for a
QW1T18t 11'1181 It home. ~ 7 days e week. Loceted et 154 E.
17th St.. COlt8 ~ (714) 574-S862
THE CANNERY
liltofiC Wiiii ftOI & AlltuW't and Herber Qi.iee Cerur. Hotn;
Man . .aet. 11 :30 -2:CXllm, EU\. 10:cnm..12:(Qlrn. ~ Maia'
Qd Cllrdl. R111 'Wllllial• 9iggllta1. l..oceted It 3010 ~ lw., NMpart Bw:h, CA 9288:1(714) 675-57n Hix
6~10
CATALINA FISH KITCHEN
Git hooked on Che frmhelt ftltl 1v1:it1ble Freltl IJ'illd fish,
8llfood and c:ttick.wl, -~. ealeds, ~ ... and pe&ta
........ ~ IMn a.. week. Mon. tlnl Set. 11 am6pm;
Q.n:tey 11 wn-7pm. r...anng ......... L.ccat8d at 870 w. , 1lt't a. IGB1 Coa MMe. (Welt rl Che new T ... .b'I.) B4f>8873
THURSDAY. MAY 28, 1998
8t0opicl movie-, but wrath of 'Godzilla' warms Unc's heart
ByUndeOon
B igger than Ru.sh Umbaugh.
Louder than James
Carville. Almost older than
Stan Chamberi. Paster than an
l!ddie Van Halen solo. More
indestructible than a government
bureaucracy.
Not content in at least a dozen
previous filcks from fighting
Monster Zero,
Mothraand
' ..
dinero. He's taking a lotta people
down with him. Instead of Celine
Dion caterwauling •My Heart
Will Go On,• they shoulda bad
Johnny Rotten spit out •Some
Body Parts Are Gone.•
The latest rendition of the
monster is predictably the off-
spring of iguanas lounging
around nuclear test sites. The first
indication' Godzilla exists, other
than when he mauls a trawler like
Clinton does
the truth. is
when he comes Megalon, he's
out to lay
waste, like
Shemumto
Atlanta, to the
,;..J·/; . ' • • . ~_ .... u. ..... •'--• --
on land, leaving
footprints like
crop circles in,
land of squeegee men and third
rails: New York City.
Why New York? Why not?
Yep it's ol' •Godzilla• again.
Originally swiped from •Tue
Beast from 20,000 Fathoms,•
which was swiped from a Ray
Bradbury short story, he's back,
he's bad, and he's pregnant. No
wonder he's so crabby.
Good ol' •Godzilla• is just an
ambulatory •ntaruc. •He's big.
He's doomed. He cost mucho
of all places, Panama. Hey bud,
you're a decade or so too late for
Noriega.
Disappearing like Judge
Crater, he reappears off the East-
ern Seaboard, looking for a place
to nest.
Stepping ashore, leaving foot-
prints large enough to uncover
Jimmy Hoffa, Godzilla heads to
Madison Square Garden to lay
eggs.
A few subplots start to develop
at this time that do nothing more
GILDED CAGE
Monday Night Family Special
NOW SERVING
Country Style
With Our Sunday
Mexican Breakfast
PRllWIE ....
NIGHTI •e7s
IEV~llY THURSDAY
SUNDAY NITE SPECIAL $7 95 *Chicken, Ribs& Brl11ket Dinner*
From a p.m. ~ BBQ Chicken, Spare Ribs end Brl1ket of Beef
tnctudee: Baked Pot.to, Beena, Com on the Cob • S.ted ~
1714 Placentia (at 17th) • Costa Mesa
841-8011 831-9803
than take away from the pOlagmg
and phmdering, There ain't an
original lcell8 or word « dia1ogue
and the slow spots, especially
when the people are talking and
the monster isn't rampaging, are a
bit too frequent
More heUoopters inhabit the
skies than locusts in an African
swarm. The mayor is a clod, the
cops droolerff, and the military is
barely capable of jiggering out
from which end of the barrel the
bullet emerges.
It is possible to believe that
some hypersteroided lizard is
gonna swim oceans, cross conti-
nents, dodge lasers, eat automo-
biles and know the layout of the
dty better than its cab drivers.
But New Yorkers evacuating
without looting?
Th.at would be like believing
the Daily Pilot actually pars
money for this column.
The only actor of quality in this
flick. Prenchman Jean Reno, leads
a bunch of compatriots on a
search-and-destroy mission as
they express guilt about exploding
nukes in the ocean decades earli-
er. 1\vo-headed turtles. Three-
eyed fish. And the lizard from hell.
This raptors-on-the-rampage
• Jwassic Park• in Central Park
is probably the best film Yow
·HAPPY HOUR
MON -FRI
4:00P..m .-6:00p.m.
50¢
Tacos
$1.00
Draft Beer
Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil Vince
Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner
Unique wine room Ii dJnlQa ,_. 1va8ilble for l">UP butlna1 meetlnp and prlnle fllnc:llom
723-0621 Please Cali For Reservations and Directions
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
Favorite Unc has seen since
•0eep lmpact, •but then it's the
only film he's seen since •Deep
lmpact. • Old joke, but this is an
old column. Alld that was a
stoopid movie.
Did attempt to brush up on my
Godzilla background by Viewing
•Peter Benchley's Creature• and
•Gargantua• earlier in the week
on TV. Shoulda gone back to hit-
ting my thumb with the hammer.
Those two ersatz GodZillas were
gawdawful.
• However, with a jaw Jay Leno
would be envious of, vocaliza-
tions approaching Stallone's and,
a diving style similar to Louganis,
LUNCH
203 OFF
We Invite You to En,roy
our Lunch and
Take 20% OFF
the Food Portion
of Your Check.
Monday Thru Friday
Pledse i:xesent coupon
wtlen ordenng
Not vahd with aflf ottlef offer
Offer expires June 24, 1998
•Godzilla• is just a big ol' misull-
derstood reptile who ain't even •
looking for a government hand-
out u the local gendannes try tg.
fill him with more lead tba.D a . ~
fishing·weight factory.
The climactic chase scene
covers more road mileage than
O.J .'s and ends as Godzilla ren-
ders the Brooklyn Bridge finallf.,,:
unsellable to anyone. wJ
A sequel? You betcha. GoOllil "·
see it? You betcha. Buy the
video? You betcha. ,/
See •Godzilla"? You betcha.':
• You can e-mail Uncle Don at Your· _
FavUncOaol.com . ,'
DINNER
203 OFF
We Invite You to Enjoy
Dinner and
Take 20% OFF
the Food Portion
of Your Check.
Monday Thru Saturday
•Friday 3c Saturday
seating by 6:30
Please present coupon
when ordenng
Not valtd wittt «TY ocncr offv .
~ resJtre24 1998
•
. .
Take a walk on the nDld side at Newppri's-El Ranchito ~
• refried and the coold.ilg oil of • camaronea al mojo de a"jo •
By M4r~ Bird chcic8 II c.oo&a. ($10.95), fresh shrimp sauteed
Tbe black beani, infinitely garlic and butter sauce; and atz.
I n 1976, the Avila family
imported its zesty Mexican
food to the Balboa Peninsula
introducing a cozy, Joyful cafe
and bar where the staff, diners
and mariachi band shared the
• crowded convivial atmosphere.
The food was a wonderful neW addition to the coast, and
customers flocked in as it
became one of the most popular
dining destinations on the penin·
sula. It remains a spot where you
can satisfy your craving for a
cheese enchilada for $2.75 or a
plate full of Mexican food lo! less
than $6.
·,
I' I I -. -.~.-.... ., ~· .. ~~~'II~-.· "...c...\ j
more tasty tbali tb8 regular frl· zling lajitoa with chicken steak,
/oJe• trucO, are llinm8red 1n sbrlmp or vegetables from $8.95_
broth with pork bonel and whole to $10.95. :
g4dic tor flavor.The Avilu ftnd The best bet on the menu is-·
that these new l;igbter dishes are a delicious soup origin4ted by
a great bit with their customers, . Margarita Avila, the madre of •
but to be honest about it, some this talented resta~t clan.
items lose their Oavorful magic in Although each of the restaurants
the new versions. has its own chef o.nd its own ,
It was a depressing day for interpretations, Avila's special
this relleno fan to find her cblle soup and fine salsa are pfe~ed
relleno, an all-time star 1n the • centrally and distributed to each"
crown of Mexican cuisine, of the cafes. · ~· stuffed with Carambo/·-grilled The soup makes a hearty meal
zucchini! · of delicious breast of chicken ·
Not to worry, though. Just with rice ($5.95) in a..rich stock •
read the menu more carefully garnished with just the right
than I did, and sure enough, amount of cilantro, avocados, sal-
there's still an old-fashioned sa fresca and lime with warm tor-
cheese-filled relleno available. tillas on the side.
So are regular enchiladas, burri· All El Ranchitos serve a fabu-
tos and tacos. lous margarita ($4.95) made from
Combination plates with a a family recipe with Tequila
choice of enchilada, chile rel· Sauza. A liter is the best buy at
leno, tamale, fiautas, taquitos, $12.
ta~o o~ burrito are $5.9.5 served Service is friendly and ami·
Each of the six El Ranchitos is
owned and operated by a mem-
ber of the Avila family and Ser-
gio Avila, having recently
returned from a 15th wedding
anniversary in Indonesia, is back
in town this week overseeing the
final stages of a majc;>r remodel-
i.I}g job at his 22-year-old penin·
~a restaurant.
with nee and your choice of able and the staff is always L-----------------------------------------------------------------------------.. -----' beans. For a modest $1130·more, ready to make substitutions'e you can choose two from the list. help you out if you have any
• In November, Sergio decided
ko relocate the kitchen and the
J>ar and now the dining room is
one large open space next to the
j:>atio. It lacks the old intimate
~ex appeal of those earliest days,
but according to Avila, "the
remodeling is still a work in
progress.·
The food has experienced l
some changes as well over the
years. Since each of the locations
customizes its recipes to the local
clientele, you will find that the
Peninsula plates are more
•Americanized" than those in
the Costa Mesa El Ranchito on
Placentia Avenue.
You will also discover that the
rice and beans are very mildly
seasoned. When asked about it,
Gabriel Lozano, chef for the past
12 years, said the regular patrons
Slnlle e You're 1n Beer Heaven
~
li1-l,
J~U-JF~
Fresh Seafood
~ Ae1otk ¥· .. . . ,. ~~--.~~-~[.Ji ALlo.&un.•m.w•
r.---------------~ I 1 • Fish Tacos
I 1 • Shrimp Te.cos
I BUY 1 BBTBBlll 1 • Shrimp CocktaJls
I GJ!JT 1 BBTIUllJD • • Octopus Toste.das : FREE : • Ceviche Tostadas I!:-~~.!-~ ~.:..~!'!.6--~ :o!I. Fresh Oysters -•ma LVllCB ~ DD•aa
Thursd&y -Tueed.e..Y lO:OOam • 9 :00 pm • Closed on w~
lU asnt ~•Balboa PeDiDaaJ,a 673 868 7 ,,,.., AMI L1f'Cll'•J -
California made ..Rattan
40% off retail
WICKER RATTAN JU.RT
{'714} Mt-4248
f!fll' Men with guu ... who want ~ lose weight and keep it off.
~ Men los~ their hair ...
~o want to keep what they
have and grow some back.
t1' Men who believe golf ... is
more fun than .. x ... Who arc
• . . to make golf thdr -
iandicap . .
··x~~
like the change.
In all El Ranchitos these days,
more emphasis has been placed
on healthy dining, with low-fat
cheese arid sour cream replacing
their richer relatives. Frescos, a
group of •lite" dining specialties,
now take a prominent place on
the menu, all served with fresco
beans and a fresh pico de gaUo
salad.
There are the newer low-fat
items with "lite" dressing,
broiled chicken is used in tacos
and enchiladas and beans are
cooked without their traditional
additions of flavorful, high-cho-
lesterol lard. No beans are
AMICI TRATTORIA
PllESENTS: •
''BALERA NIGHT''
An Italian evening with food, music, and friends. Traditional
and popular tunes for listening and dancing.
Am;.c1 Tractoria proudly features recording artist "lino" and his
band. He has appCarcd with Michael Bolton, lito Puente,
Pancho Sanchez and many ochers. He will perform 7 :30 to 11 pm
every Wednesday ~ening beginning April 22nd.
To make che evening more special, Chef Massimo will prepare
specialties from che Central and Sou ch of Italy. In addition to che
regular menu, Burrata, Braciola, Abbachio, Spigola, Triglia,
Sep pie, etc ....
ARRIVEDERCI A PRESTO
{;p ~ f".n and friend• at
l!nucit trattoria
850-9399
(Be sure to request those black questions. The patio is sunny,
beans.) and casual, a fine place for a
The espedales are made to social basket of chips and a "
order and you will find carnJtas bowl of guacamole.
($8.95), tender, long-cooked
chunks of lean pork; came asada •MARLA BIRD'S restaurant reviews
($9.95), charbroiled steak; appear every other Thursday.
Meeting ·Location:
Newport Beach Central library
Friend's Room
1000 Avocado Avenue
Monday, June I , 1998
7:00 pm
For more information, ple~e call:
644-3131
,
Toni Tennille returns home
I •
With tWo performances · ~
By Tom Titus
0 ne of the singularly
rewarding aspects of cov-
e.ring the theater scene
here is watcblng local petfonD.eJJ
blossom into o.atibnally known
stars.
There was Orange Coast Col-
leg& student Diane Hall, playing
leading roles in •nie Sound of
Musk:• and "Bye Bye Birdie•
before movin~ward and
upward. Her actress Oscar
'ts inscribed to Diane Keaton.
There was Mike Farrell, star-
ring in •A Thousand Clowns,•
the first show I reviewed for the
Daily· Pilot in 1965. The world's
lV audiences now know b1m
better as B.J. Hunnicut on •M•A•S•H.•
And there was Toni Shearer, a
one-time Corona del Mar resi-
dent whom I first encountered
back.JnJhe mid-1960s playing _
the frumpy landlady in "The Bad
Seed.• Strange, since she actual-
ly was in her mid-20s and strik-
ingly attractive.
· She had quite a voice, too, as
local audiences were io discover
when they saw her as Winnifred
in "Once Upon a Mattress.•
But the biggest inark Shearer
.left on the local scene was as the
~tor (with Ron Thronson)
~ litar of South C6ast Reperto-
iy's original ecology musical .. Mother Earth• in 1970. That
~w made it all the way to
Jboadway, albeit for an abbreviat-
ed run. And Shearer followed her
••
Toni TenDD.le
star, becoming the on1f Beach
Girl in the Beach Boys tour.
Around that time, she
divorced her husband and took
back her maiden name -Ten-
nille.-With..hw-new-spouse,
"Captain" Daryl Dragon, Ten-
nille became half of one of the
w~ W:.tJT To BE YouP F1RsT CH01cE!
CALL Us TODAY!
Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AUIO •HOMEOWNERS • HFAlIH
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~ 0 -S>)__, ._.as.,...,._.
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'41 Old Ncwpon ...... Newport~
<N-... ......,
I ' I 00 00
0
,
ATrMe To
fiier.Art
~&fw
country'• mo.t ~singing
groups with numben like •tove
WU1 Keep Us Together• a.n4
•Muskrat Love,•
Tunnme bu dropped by a few
tbnel linca, Nwtlining shows at
the Orange County Performing
Arts Center and Orange Coast
College. And abe'Il be back in
town Sunday for a two-show set
(at 6 and 8:30 p.m.) at the '1Win
Palms tn Newport Center.
It'll be the last Captain & Ten-
nille performance in this area for
about 18 months, since Toni has
a new glg in the offing. She'll be
starring in a touring production
of •VictorMctoria/ stepping
into the role created by Julie
Andrews on both screen and_
stage.
Local audiences can catch her
performance· at The Center from
Sept 15-20, where they should
discover that the stellar pop and
big-band vocalist also is quite a
talented-actless-. ---
But then. some of us have
known that for a long time.
-In
I
ORANGE COUNTY
PRESENTS
.TWIH#P~Lffi~
'98 Spring into S11mmer Concert Series
Dinner concerts in the dyna_mic, intimate venue of
Twin Palms Newport Beach
May 29
PAUL REVERE
AND THE RAIDERS
TWO SHOWS .
7:00 & 9:45
SPECIAL
~VENT
' ...
' • •
community commentary
Zero tolerance:
A lesson· in intolerance
• Like prescribing morphine for a headache, zero
tolerance is often the wrong medicine for students.
BY KEVIN SHANNON
Should school officials give
students a second chance?
Yes ("Zero tolerance?~ May
14).
I am against the zero-toler-
ance policy. I don't want our
kids to cany weapons, get
booked on drugs and bomb
telephones, of course. But zero-
tolerance is the wrong tool for
the job. It is like paying the
same speeding ticket fine for 66
mph as for 150 mph. It ts like
prescribing morphine for a
headache, when aspirin or
ibuprofen might be enough. It
has unwanted side effects, like
resenbnent, alienation and aca-
demtc interruption. Worst of all,
it teaches young poople that
intolerance is the way adults
handle things.
My parents and teachers
taught me that a punishment
should fit the aime. With all the
shades of gray between black
and white, bow can a single
punishment fit all the crimes? I
am concerned that our one-size-
fits-all policy may fit too tightly.
As a teacher, I care about young
people, and this really concerns
me. I want to give you three
examples from my personal
experience with second chances
tn our local schools.
I was given a second chance
when I was a s:lxtb-grader at
Newport Heights Elementary
ScbooLMymam tmmd1nleck-or cards that I shoplifted. I was
fascinated by thole cards, but l
didn't have eooughmoney, ~I 44
Stole them. If She bad 'leDt me to
Juvenile H8ll as a aiminal. I
would have met lots of repeat
offenden, and I may have
become a real c.rtmma1 myself.
Instead, she made me return the
card.I to Gilbert'•, face the store' manager, explain myself and
Offer 10 pay for them with labor.
It was a good JessOn: I
teamed to save money for thing!
I want and live withJn my
means. I ieamed how to admit 1t
wheD I'm wrong ad apologile
wben J'v ~ IQID8008. I
IUmed the Yalue Of wort; and
I've worked at the same job for
20 years now.
I was given a second chance
when I was a freshman at New-
port Harbor High School. I
threw a firecracker after a foot-
ball game. It was stupid I tried
to do it safely, but I could have
hurt someone. I~ that now. I
was punished by fosing the prtV-
ilege of playing in the band.
Music is my favorite hobby, and
that hmt. But if they bad trans-
ferred me to another school. my
resentment at losing all my
friends would have overshad-
owed the real lesson. Instead.
the ~u:bment fit the aime. I
got to work, and I graduat-
ed with honors.
I was given a second chance
when I was a freshman at UCI.
During our first math test, my
study partner was shaking with
fear. I turned to her and said,
•Calm down. We did our home-
work. Relax and get back to
work.• At 17, I didn't realize
that it was against the rules to
tty to cahn someone down. The
professor could have bad me
expelled 1rom the university for
talking during a test With zero-
tolerance, my career would have
been over in an instant Instead,
be explained the rules and g«ve
me a second chance, I graduat-
ed with high boDm's and
became a college math teecber.
Should 1 flunk a student wbO
gets one questiori wrQDg? No.
1bet woWd be eero-toknoo&.
And it would be the wroog
thing to do. lnltelld, we have
fr~ diffetentleV-
Ooe arhuhMtrator told me
zero tolerana! ii 'right bec:lllll8 lt
works. I dlMgree wttb hit IOgic.
Shoodng the kids would work.
too, but that doesn't make it
rlghL We don't want to tee.Ch
our kldl that the end always JUI·
t:lfiel tbe meam.-.. ......... ~""-'~•
• How are wa to teach our
young people tolenm08 when
we adultl maintain a zero.toler-
ance~
I n response to the Springfield
school shooting, Wendy Leece
proposed that Newport-Mesa
schools should post the Ten
Commandments in classrooms
(MLeece: Post biblical laws,• May
23-24). Why not post the golden
rule? And why not post it inside
the children's souls?
A child who kills for no reason
or because he is ~gry or
because he needs attention is a
faulty human being. What are
we to do about such children?
And who should take responsi-
bility? We all should. Not just the
parents, not just the teachers.
Friends, acquaintances,
strangers, we all need to take
responsibility for what our chil-
dren read, hear, see and end up
thinking and believing.
We need to teach our children
that some things really ma.tter,
that life is precious, that all peo-
ple desexve regard and respect.
We need to post the golden rule
within their soul.
'Ibe Ten Commandments are
good rules to live by. But unless
our children understand from the
inside why that is so, posting
them in the classroom would
have no effect. Worse still, it
would render the Ten Command-
ments analogous to rules such as
MDon't chew gum.• And that too
would be a tragedy.
So while I commend Leece for
wanting to do something, I don't
think that posting the Ten Com-
mandmentl is a good idea.
lllWINT!RMAN
Costa Mesa
readers respond
I . ,,.... 'C"r
-I . .
Ten Commandmen1s
in the classroom
may not do the trick
read this "m~ad&. ,
I don't believe posting the Tun
Commandments is going to '
make one bit of difference in ~e
amount of bad behavior among
our kids, but I may be wrong.
And since posting them costs
very little to do, and may work. I
say, what the heck? Quite ;
frankly, we've tried it without :
them, and· our success has not :
been very good. It's time to gi~
it a whirl. ntE ISSUE: Reacting to the recent campus shooting in
Oregon, school trustee Wendy Leece suggested posting the
biblical laws as the 'easiest. simplest way to restore order.'
STEVE SMhlt
Costa Mesa
I
I
who both enforce and live those
values and who provide valuable
role models for them. Posting
words on walls won't come close
to solving the serious problem of
senseless and indiscrlminate
killing or most of the irresponst-.
ble behavior seen in schools dai-
ly.
If this ts the best solution
Leece can off er as a response to
a serious problem in our society
and schools -shootings,
killings, violence, etc. -then she
needs to be .removed from the
school board (somethfu.g I will
take action to achieve) so that
more rational, dear-thinking
individuals can make decisions
about how our schools are con-
ducted.
Leece's fundamentalist views
and simplistic normative values
are far from the reality being
lived by many of our spoiled and
deeply troubled youth. The solu-
tion begins with pa.rents and
teachera ta.king respoD.sibfilty for
the actions and moral develop-
the Ten Commandments on their
home bulletin boards or rebiger-
ators? They could start by using
the Pilot's cutout box from Page 9
in the Weekend, May 23-24
issue.
• Attach the Ten Command-
ments to the handle of every gun
with No. 5 in bold print.
Leece is correct that we
should= action now, before
Newpo esa becomes the next
Sprin , Ore.
MICHAEL A. GLUECK
Newport Beach
W e all would like, as LeecG
puts it, Mthe easiest, sim-,
plest way to restore order.• Hqw-
ever, I think it is incredibly naiye
of her to think that posting the;
Ten Commandments in clas-
rooms would accomplish it "'
I suspect each of the eeudy
troubled young people invatdi
in. ~-,~pool shoottllCP.,
know II against the la~
kill a hwnan being. Setting ih4t
constitutional issues aside, the :
causes of the recent violence in
our schools and on our· streets are
so complex.that to suggest a .,
quick fix in the form of posting e
set of rules only minimizes the 1
Leece is going to generate a seriousness of the problem. ,
lot of criticism for suggesting that P<>1ting a speed limit of 35 :
the Ten Commandments be post-mph ha.m't stopped our young •
ed in our schools. Any time the people from speeding, not bai !
line between church and state is posting the zero-tolerance~
crossed, secularists will raise stopped our young people from
their voices high in opposition, drink:lng. And between the ·
even though aoalng that line whimpers of th~ young peo~
may mean a 1<>lution to one of and their protective parents, ~
society's problem.a. Newport-Mesa Unified School
There 1s no permillion District bam't even been able t6
required for posting the follow-· enbw tbat policy.
ing messages in • daatooDi.: Pleue, ii It asking too much:
• Be spiritual. of our elected dfldals that theY,
• Don't adore aayone you lee WOrk 00 long-term priMIDtioo ,
rooms ~ down as one of the ment of their children -case in
mOlt .un~c. if not ridiculous, point. the tragic Jason
, " I .. -..__ -. m-.t+a Rausch/ Amanda Althur cue, li1
-11 WM all ~a~~ 111 "'-~ • -whicb pt1,11mtl want to blame tbe
a WhDe -oOt to menlioD tbat ft dty for the im91pQnslb1-t llctiOos
ii probably a violation Of cOaiti-of their cbildNll.
~b~.~. nm wm 'ftO more il8tii a
bled cbUd tbD ~ ... Hm-
ltl ~ tbe lnmdNdl ol
tbOUluidl GI ctm.n wbo think
that treewa~ are on-rampe to
the Indy 500. It IDight be more
etfectiVe to~ llgm tbat read,
"Mun:l8rJl_a._,.._, ntnM and
will be pmilbed to the luB
utent of the law,• or •OUJYtng
or Wdnsi ~ or other dan·
~~In Khool Will nlUlt lD Cftimlael aDd • JeQgthy
jdeentence.•
MONI ftluli are ta~ to
chlldNn by ~-ble pmmtl
on televisiQD. __ ......... _, S
• Don't"Work on ettber Satur· _... -Y ~-and
dav or Sunday:. Make it a day Of perhaps, hri~ving the ~ :z. oiJportWiiUei iii tbe d1strict -f ~~~9P;~~~~~ ............. ouMlme .... • 1 ,.. DOn'tlWeir. theln with glib, smug IOl\llDOllllt
wtthOO.t any pJali for DMJring
thetr ·~tloO ~'
CAROL IPPlllSCllN
NeWP,11\·
t ••••• ' ••
dent speaker.
iite of the old Sant.a Ana Army
Air Bae until September 1948.
Don Plentoff, a professor of
!!ngtish and tecl>nical writing and
tbe 1997-98 Faculty Member of
the Year, will give the commence-
ment address.
Biochemistry major Jennifer
Undaay wm begin the ceremony
with a perfonnance of the nation-
al anthem. while bnlinea major
Bunita Sawhney wtll end the cer-
emony with OCC's alma mater.
Gratton will present the gradu-
ates, who will be accepted by
Walter Howald, president of the
Coast Community College Dis-
trict boa.rd of trustees. Jennifer Brown, an OCC vol-
leyball player and a member of
the speech team. wUl be the stu-
The ceremony will begin at 6:30
p.m. in OCC's LeBard Stadium,
2701 Fairview Road. Cost.a Mesa.
·n
..
Hi
OCC offers summer sessions
Orange Coast College will be offering four summer sessions ~
campus beginning Monday 'for individuals interested in learning
during summer break.
The collegE!'Will otter two eight-week sessions, Monday to July
2' and J~e 15 to August 7; a six-week session, June 29 to August
1; and a four-week session. Monday to 27.
Summer school registration began this month. Eligible appli-
cants must be 18 'Or older, or a junior or senior 1n high school.
Course fees are $13 per unit. Applications are being accepted at
the college's Admissions and Records Office at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa.
Select an "assisted living residence" that has:
• Qualified, Experienced Caregivers
• Clean Well-Equipped Homes In
Safe Residential Neighborhoods
• Careful Supervision
• Quality Assurance
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r ~ ~ -_._..._.._ .....
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1 7 TH ANNUAL CORONA
SCENIC 5 • K
6:30 a.m. Re~stration Begins
7:30 a.m. Warm Up
7:4S a.m. 2 Mile Fun Walk
8:20 a.m. Men's SK Race
8:4S a.m. Women's SK Race
9:00 a.m . Kids' IK Run
L-Ocation: ~ Boulevard & Helio~ in Corona del Mar -
above the State Beach Parking wt.
Parking: Free in the Corona del Mar State Beach Parking I.Alt until
8:00 a.m. -roads will be closed at 7:40 a.m.
Awards will re presented to the top three finishers in each category and
to every Dolphin Dash participant immediately following the conclusion
of the race.
Pmters: Fifty limited edition, signed and numlmd }X)Sters are available
•
on a first~, first served bas~ for $25. Call the Corona del Mar
Chaml'er at (949) 673-4050.
R ...... ~Im a 4-rolor, 100% cotton t-shirt and a gounnet
breiliast oo ~famous "Restaurant Row."
5KRun: $18
2~Wait:$1S ~
lK Km'~ Dadl: $12
J U N E
THURSDAY, MAY 28. 1998· A f1
IAR
6 ' 1 9 9 8
CONTINUED FROM A 1
•When I ran four years ago, I
an on a
,._~romise , •
Silva said.
"Now, I have
to campaign
_on my record,
and it's one
'm very
proud of."
' ; 1 • Silva said
-· be deserves
'his reputa-Jim Silva .. :, ,ti.on as a tax
, fighter and pointed to his
~ • 0 efforts to get county trans-
l ~portation officials to fund
'1 ;-improvements to the inter-
change of the San Diego Free-
-t way and San Joaquin Hills toll
.... • .. road.
He also said while he
' • approved plans to build 1,235
'' 1 • homes on part or the Bolsa Chi-
. ca mesa in Huntington Beach,
he continues to rally support for
a government purchase of the
last 150 acres of the area still set
.. for development. . '.
. . . . ' . . . . .
Silva was a:itidzed by Sulli·
van and Genis, who said the
incumbent has failed 1n his
duties to fight for the 2nd Dis-
trict, which includes Costa
Mesa and the
rest of coastal
north Orange
County.
Genis said
Silva is out of
touch with
local resi-
dents and the
issues they
hold impor-......_......__
tant. Sandy Genii
•we· are.
the government; it's not some-
body who sits in the Hall of
Administration in Santa Ana,•
she said.
Sullivan agreed and said if
elected, he would push to move
the county board meetings,
which now are held in the mid-
dle of the day, to evenings and
also fight to get them televised
to increase public awareness of
county government.
~u·s rapidly going back to
business as usual, where the
supervisors aren't supervising,"
?~
be said.
In q\llMtiom pQsed to the
candiddli by the roughly 25
~le Ila tbe audience, the can-
dldatM outlined a few of their
platfonn posi-
tions, lndud-r--~~~----
ing the con-
troversial
plans to COD•
vert the El
Toro Marine
Corps Air
Station into a
commercial
airport when
the base Dave Sullivan.
switches to
county control next year.
Silva is 'part of the slim board
majority that supports 'the air-
port plan, while each of his
three challengers favor non-avi-
ation uses for the land.
Genis said building an air-
port at El Toro would amount to
government stepping in and
ramming a project down the
throat of South County resi-
dents who don't want it.
•Let's put it . .. where they
want it, which is in the Inland
Empire," sh~ said.
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beautJful~l
After the old bridge is deinol-
isbed, crews will begin building
tlle eostem half of the new over·
pan, he said.
In about six months, the nar-
row, aging bridge that had been
a part of Newport Beach fo.r six
decades will be transtonned into
a six-lane overpua, complete
with bike lanes. sidewalks and a
12·foot median, Wanderling
said.
The Arches interchange has
the largest traffic vo1ume flt any
other in the county, accommodat-
ing 121,000 drivers each day,
• according to Orange County
'nansportaUon Authority figures.
The S14 million repla.oeme.nt
project is the largest public works
project ever undertaken by the
city, ·said Newport Beach Public
Works Director Don Webb.
"To use the old 'A-Team' state-
ment, 'It's always great when a
plan comes together,"' he said.
•Public works projects take a
long time to pull together, and
engineers always like to see con-
struction being completed. It's a
major project for the city, and
we're very happy to have it half
done."
The project also includes a
A dinosaur discussion
group will be held at The
Dawn of Tune Art Gallery
in Lake Forest on Saturday,
June 6 from 8 to 10. a.m.
with several top paleo
artists attending.
The Dawn of Time Art
.. ..:f.f4Jlery features al
dinosaur art by Mark Hal-
lett, Douglas Henderson,
Karl Huber, Todd Lorbecki,
Tony Merrithew and
William Monteleone,
along with repllgraphs of
original oils by Josef
Moravec, a dio1ama by~ ,
Michael Rusher an~ bronze
~
calendar of upcoming road closures and detours
for Arches intersection project: I
+ TODAY: Ramp from eastbound Coast Highway 1D l
northbound Newport Boulevard doses for ttie next J
sfx months. J
+ MONDAY: Traffic switches to new Arches Bridge. J
+ MONDAY: Ramp from westbound Coast Highway J
I
to southbound Newport Boulevard closes for the 1 I
day. · ~
• + WEDNESDAY: Coast Highway closes at the inter· :
section of Newport Boulevard from 11 p.m. to' 5 a.m. 1
as demolition of the old bridge begins. l
+JUNE 4: Coast Highway closes at the intersection of : ' Newport Boulevard from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. as demo-:
lition is completed. :
L-----------------------------------~ wider western half of the bridge ments. The project is expected to
over Newport Channel, Newport be completed next spring.
Boulevard street improvements Wanderling said the demoli-
between the bridge and H ital tion schedule is subject to change
Road, new landscapmiQg-'"iianiffiflealnltfEe!TiiiSnlffiilruute.. "FOlo nJl~~,;----1
recently approved Newport call the construction hotline at
Boulevard drainage improve-574-0328. .. • ~ • ... ... ..
Plood & Lightning, a pastel original by artist Douglas Henderson .
scUlpture by Gary Persello.
Douglas Henderson, one
of the most prominent
dinosaur artists today,
shows meticulous atten-
tion to both the fauna of
the era and the correct
muscle and skeletal struc-
ture of dinosaurs through
pencil or pastel.
For the dino enthusiast
the gallery also carries
replica fossils claws, teeth
and skulls, books (such as
the new Encyclopedia of
Dinosaurs & The Complete'
Dinosaur), dinosaur docks,'
mouse pads, T-shirts, '
hatching dino eggs from
Winstone Editions and
their exclusive brand of
coffee, Jur~c Java .
•. . °'1w1J. ()f.JJmUr;t Vll/Jem-ll' .,,.
is located at 2371 O El Toro
Road, Ste. C, Lake Forest
Call (714) 586-1080.
.. • • ... .. • 'I
~ -
EYE-OPENER
Corona del Mar in (J[F Division m
,. volleybalfftria!S Saturday
richard
dunn
•No. 4-seeded Mustangs end
top-seeded Sailors' season in the
CIF Division I sem.isavith a 15· 17,
15-8, 8-15, 15-12, 15-13 conquest.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
REDONDO BEACH -If thefe was ever
a fifth-game war to be fought, Newport
Coffer's
Classic
• Harbor High was involved in one for the
: ages Wednesday night against Mira Costa ! in the semifinals of the CIP Southern Sec-
: tion Division I boys volleyball playoffs.
• In a stunner, fourth-seeded Mira Costa
came from behind to defeat top-seeded
Newport Harbor, 15-17, 15-8, 8-15, 15-12,
15-ta, at Redondo Union High.
"We are winning close ones," said Mira
·--------------------------~---!-1Gost~!MtfmH€'0ftE-'nlwch>h-fMike-eook:;whos~team(25-
• One of the best ways to
lawich your golfing summer :
is in the summer classic. ·
~Golf juggernaut Callaway
will :&'(),foot
trail8l • Jlll'awn as • the travelillQ centhr, onto
ijle site of tlie fourth annual
Sandi Coffer Summer C assie
at Newport Beach Country Cub.
What was already a stellar
event has been provided(thanks
to NBCC member Janet
Thompson) with a marquee
attraction. Callaway
representatives will offer club
fitting specifically tailored for the
individual golfer and a full
analysis of your swing, testing
dub-head speed and ball speed,
ampng other things.
· The Callaway trailer will be
on loca,tion at the June 8 event
ftom ~ a .m. to 8 p.m. This, of
coume, is in addition to the to~nt's ~ball of
~ fo~t (two flights with
a a6oa shotgun start), barbecue lunch~ ~wards dinner. There
~.~and net winners in
~'s, women's and mixed
~tegories. In other words, prizes
galore. •n•s a
§ti·
want to
Co~tay e Tawersey, event volunteer
and longtime friend of Coffer.
who started the tournament to
raise money for the National
Multiple Sclerosis Society. •
The canaway trailer, one of :
3) also needed five games to beat Royal in
the quarterfinals. "We're winning by a
the more creative and profound :
dwity·toumament ideas in the ': •
• era of luring pie Orange County :
customer to the Monday links, is :
open to the public the day of the :
event. It will operate on a first
come, first served basis, Coffer
said.
Coffer, the nine-time women's
club champion at Newport
Beach who suffers from MS, won :
two national awards after the :
inaugural event in 1995, the :
Hope Award from the national
headquarters of the MS Society
for Outstanding Volunteer of the
Year, and the Leading Edge
Award ftom the local MS
chapter for Outstanding New
Event of the Year.
The field for the tournament
is half full. Committee members
are inviting additional entries.
For a SSO donation to the
tournament, golfen can utilize
the Callaway trailer. All
proceeds go to the National
Multiple Sclerosis Society. •
To~&nt entry fees of $250 ;
include competitive (or :
non-competitive) golf on the :
course of the Tosl)iba Senior
Ousic, lunch and a spectacular
awards dinner. Details: 752-1680.
a . . • . . • . .
I I ; J '/I 'i (I ! '.
razor's edge. But we'll take it. It's better
than the altemative. •
Mira Costa, led by 6-foot-5 senior Andy
Krikorian (20 kills) and 6-2 senior Dustin
Avol (19), built leads of 10-5 and 13-8 in the
finale.
But Newport Harbor (20-1), as most of
its followers anticipated, stormed back to
tie it, 13-13, two bows and 45 minutes into
the match.
Mira Costa, seeking its fourth CIP Divi-
sion I title under Cook, went up, 14-13, on
6-5 Ronnie Ahlfeldt's kill, then won it when
a Newport Harbor spike sailed long. The
Mustang5' bench erupted. Their fans
sprinted onto the home floor.
"It was a great high school volleyball
mate&;!.-Newport Ha.F&er C-oach Ban
Glenn said. "Our guys fought hard. They
just beat us. They're a real, real good team.
.
QUO.TE OF THE DAY
·Au our JdtUrs an "'1iltglng In ,...c
and wn pa#litg well. ll1ltlda maAw mr Job ~ -· •
-CDM SETTER KEVIN HANSEN
When lt comes right down to it,
Marina, Santa Margarita, Lagu-
na. Beach, Mira Costa and us are
all capable of beating each other.
It was a tough way to end (the
season).•
• I
the same thing as Newport H4r·
bor, coming back to tie it, 13-i3,
after being down," Cook said. '
"Then we got two quickies at
13-13. We lucked out. We've ~
through the grinder the last f~
days. We bent, but didn't break.. I
feel sorry for Dan Glenn. becaui;e
I thought we would meet Ne~rt
Harbor in the finals.• •
Newport Harbor, which had
erased a 10-7 deficit in the first
game to win in extra time, went
up, 2-1, in 90 minutes and
appeared to be in control.
Senior Scott Dore led the
Sailors' attack with 20 kills, 11
digs and two solo blocks, while
senior Scott Archbold finished
with 18 kills, 13 digs, five service
aces and three solo blocks. New-
Dore was instrumental in the
Sailors' fifth-game charge, scoriilg
on two kills and posted another, -MIKE COOK which gave the Tars a side<>¢.
Archbold added four kills in tile
• run, including the one to put New·
port's Matt Jameson had 27 digs and 13
kills, setter 1Y 'lramblie had 69 assists, and
Zach Wells and Adam Hearlson each had
idlls. Wells also added 22 digs.
Mira Costa bad also blown a sizable
fifth-game lead against Royal. #Royal did
port Harbor to within 13-12. On
that play, the Sailors had three blocks to
keep the rally alive, two of which were
recorded by Dore.
But Mi:nrC~ost-a-s~om~eh..__ow1ta..._.____.d-+lthk>e~ma~gtc---
lo advance to Saturday night's cb.aB!Pi-
onship match.
...
,.
"·
COSTA MBSA-
Gnt ....... came through when the Maltlns needed It. na.u-
~ by a run with first place on the line,
Hughes hit a two-run home run in the bot-
tom of the sixth inning tO give the Martins a
7-6 victory tn Costa Mesa National Little
League Majors Divt.sion action.
• Hughes picked up the victory in relief for the Marlins, who remain tied tor first place
in the second half with the winner of
tonight's Astros-Dodgers game.
The Diamondbacks got back-to-back
IRVIN! -11'he Mustang
Blue 1'Mnl Of the Newport
HarbOr Baebd Aaeodallon won four straight game. after
u opemag rou:act lOlli to Fountain v~ No. 1 tn the
Irvine Memorial Day Tourna-
ment.
The winDing streak began
with a victory over tourna-
ment host lrvlne. The Blue
Tuam acorett three in the first
inninJ.on a two-run double by ~ Haal and an RBI sin-
gle by Denn.ls Heenan.
Heenan Jater hit a two-run
home run that gave the Blue
Team a 5""' lead. Heenan and
Davis Pemste!n held Irvine
scoreless for the final three
innings.
Heenan. Pepvteln, MnlE.,._;
lld and 11mot1rJ Ca••r .n bit. boiDe nm. HIV9 ead s.t,.... bMI tine ......
llcky Nelloa stole third
and scored on an error as tbe
Blue Team edged Moreno
Valley 1..a. IWly Mmace bad a
two-run home run ln the first
inning. In the Wth game, Pinski
pitched 31/3 strong innings
with eight strikeouts as the
Blue Team defeated Hunting·
ton Beach, 4-3. Pemstein
pitched the final inning for bis
second save of the tourna-
ment.
Charter Ow in the final
JJUD.e. JunU Dulel had two hita
In the game and~ Parker lliid • .._..,_._ ...
lbe-~~Gnly · 'haill never
lacked offense dw1ng the
toumamecrt. ICGdag.'7 nms 1n
tlft g&me9; Dal8l bad •
home run aDd a •ct-1:.!!: flnt game. Carllr
had a double end a home run
intbat~. · Cllda Lo Menso bad two
linglel and three RBI ln the
secimd game. TN Slater
pitched two hmiDgs With tour
ltrikeouts and ai.o had a sin·
gle. -.tolables from Tim Robertson and Cullen
Crom in the fourth inning. AUIUD McGuff
completed an unassisted double play at first
~.
Alex Pisarski pitched a complete game
for the Diamondbacks with six strikeouts.
O£VON KIRSCHBAUM I OAl.Y PllOT
Marllns' cat.dler Shaun Weikel tags out Timmy Robertson.
The Blue Team then
banged out 21 hits in a victory
over Dana Point No. 3.
1be Newport Harbor Gtey
Team struggled during the
tournament. but was able to
pull out an 11-9 victory over
Jn the fourth game, Lo
Menzo, playing shortstop,
ended Irvine No. 3's first.
inning rally with a diving
catch on a line drive.
CdM on the road
Corona del Mar High's
Sea Kings, seeded No. 2 in
the CIF Division I tennis
playoffs, lost the Coln filp
Wednesday morning and
will be traveling to No. 3-
seeded Dana Hills today
with the match slated to
begin at 3:15.
The Sea Kings, 21-1 and
virtually unopposed in victo-
ries over Victor Valley, Red-
lands and Murrieta Valley, are
one step away from a champi-
onship showdown June 3
with the winner of today's oth-
er semifinal between No. 1-
seed Peninsula and No. 4-
seed Woodbridge.
SOCCER
AYSO Plus tryouts
COSTA MESA -AYSO Region
.120 will sponsor the AYSO Plus
Program, a league for advanced
soccer players. as an alternative to
dub soccer.
Boys and girls under the age of
14 are invited to try out at Balearic
Park in Costa Mesa.
Thyouts for the under 14 division
will take place on Monday and
Wednesday from 5-7 p.m. Tryouts
for the under 12 division are Tues-
day and June 4 from 5-7:30 p.m.
Candidates must be registered
wtth AYSO Region 120 prior to the•
tryout date. Registration is Saturday
at TeWinkle Junior High.
For more information, call (714)
557-5620.
AYSO 120 travel team
COSTA MESA -AYSO Region
120 is forming an advanced soccer
team for girls under the age of 12
(as of July 31, 1998) that will partic-
ipate in out-of-state and in-state
tournaments dwing the spring and
summer of 1999.
Thyouts will be held on Sunday
from 5-7 p.m. at TeWinkle Junior
High. Candidates must be regis-
tered with Region 120 prior to the
tryout date.
Registration for the Region is
Saturday at TeWinkle.
For more information, call (714)
557-5620.
FMtpitch signups
Signups tor a SOFTBAL:l 16-and-under
HANCOCK
CONTINUED FROM 81
CIP Division III, and 16th at the
state cross country finals.
But despite adding to his
increasing renown_as runner last
fall, he termed his cross country
campaign a disappointment.
"On paper, it was not a bad
season, but the times were not
there and I ran slower at state.
Going to state was pretty good,
but I didn't perform the way I
expected and it was a pretty big
letdown.·
Applying the kind of
analytical mind that renders
advanced mathematics
rudimentary, Hancock examined
his disappointment and vowed
to make an adjustment.
"When people talk to me a
little too much about running.
it gets to me. I've come to the
realization that I can't make
running another one of the tasks
I have to complete. I can't run
because it's mandatory. I have to
run because I enjoy it.•
Ever since running the
neighborhood became his
routine as a second grader,
Hancock had always enjoyed the
freedom it provided. And, as his
achievement in the classroom
propelled him into the Ivy
League recruiting pool, running
supplied a mind-numbing
escape.
"It's always been a release for
me to go out and run, because
it's something I enjoy,• he said.
"For me, racing is getting away •
from school.•
Success in cross country
and track and field also helped
Hancock's social standing on
campus.
"I did go through some
pressure at school, because of
feeling so different from
everybody else. There were
times when I felt I couldn't be
myself at school. No matter what,
I've always been able to be
myself when I run.
•I have tons of friends who
know me as Bruce and nothing
more. But there are a lot of
people who know me as 'the
runner guy.' •
The latter list should only
lengthen as he continues to burn
up the track, as well as the trails.
He was second in league in
cross country, as well as second
in the 800 and third in the 1,600
on the track as a sophomore. He
shattered his previous best by
WEDNESDAY'S COUNTS
five seconds to finish third
(4:24.65) Jn the CIP Division m
1,600 last spring.
He entered his junior track
season with the sole goal of
advancing to the state meet, and
he quick:ly'made such aspirations
attainable by running through a
driving rain to clock a
still-personal-best 4:17.6 in the
open 1,600 at the prestigious
Arcadia Invitational April 25.
He won the PCL 800 and
shared the 1,600 crown with
University High rival Martin
Brix, whom he battled to a
dramatic dead heat at league
finals May 8.
Now, he must crack the top
five at the Masters to advance to
the state meet the following
week at Cenitos College.
"The top five is within his
reach,• Mesa Coach John
Carney said. "But at this point,
it's a mental game. Everyone
running now has been working
toward this all year and it's do or
cHe. Bruce has to decide mentally
that he's tougher than the other
guy. They're all fast. so whoever
is the most mentally tough is
going to succeed."
Hancock believes he can fit
that bill.
"I think a strong mind is
actually more a strength for me
than physical things,• Hancock
explained.. "I've had some pretty
bad stuff happen to me (in races)
and I've been real bummed. But
I think I've learned to simpWy
the race and concentrate on
what I'm doJng, without
worrying about things that can
happen.Iunderstand,now,you
don't have to be nervous for a
race, just ready.•
girls fastpitch team which is in
the forming stages are available
by contactling Paula Wyman at
714-548-2881.
• oav.y. Lodter • 5 boats, 69 anglers. 3 yellowtall,
52 bonito, 150 calico bass, 25 sand bass, 2 bamcuda.
5 sculpin, 4 sheephead, 3 rodcflsh.
• N.i111port Undlna -4 boats, 47 anglers. 1 bal'tecuda, 45 bonito, 50 callc.o bass,
47 sand bass, 7 rodcfish, 10 sculpin, 1sheephead,12 macbret
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICES regular bu11ne11 hours PUBLIC NOTICE from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. -------by any citizen who re-UOTICI! OF PUBLIC NOTICE quests It within 180 days A''LICATION TO ---C-1-TY-0-,---1 alter the date ol lhla publl-tl!LL ALCOHOLIC
NntPOAT BUCH cation. Bl:Vl!RAG•8 The loundatlon'a principal Dete of Fflln'" POLICI! DEPARTMENT office 11 located al 800 •
NOTICI!
USPBJJ AND JOE MOREIRA PRESENTS
1n ANNUAL KOREAN AIR BIACK BELT CHAMPIONSHIPS
K~~REANAIR
t
1 O Winners Make The USA Team To Compete In The World
Championships in Brazil from The SChOOI Of Joe Moriera, Allan Goes,
Carlson Gracie, Rickson Gracie ahd Machados Family
* 3 Special Super Fights Between allan Goes, M~chados And Gracie*
TOURNAMENT LOCATION
JUNE 4TH -
BREN EVEm (ENTER
UNIVERSITY O~ CALIFORNIA IRVINE
IRVJNE (ORANGE COUNTY), (.A 92717
(714) 824-5050 PHONE
.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
M\sTER JOE MOREIRA
JllJ-JrTSU DE BRAZIL
3928 UMPUS DRlVE
NEWPORT BfACH, (.A 92660
(714) 756-1222 PHONE
(714) 756-0190 FAX
ALSO ON THE WWW FIGHT CHANNEL COM
. . . . . ...
P\Jnuent IO Section 3381 ttv°'913385, Revenue and Taxation Code, Notice of Pow. to Bel Tu·
Oer.lllld ~ In end for Orange County, Stale °' Callomla. hu been dMd9d end dlld:lue.d to v.....,._ ne11111~ of genef9I draadon publlt'9d In fie county. A pofClon of the ... ~ In.-, °' euch ,. lpepel'a.
NOTICE OF IMPENDING POWER TO SELL TAX . .
DEFAULTED PROPE"TY
Thll a...-not6oe ltWI rMI property tax• end 1111111T111lll on the pen:ell de9cfl>ed t>M>w wll hlYe
bMrt •PM.Aled ttYll or mote )IMl'I on June 30, 1998 Ill 5:00 P.M. The pen:ell llted wll become l&Alfld
to .. .._ Coll*n power to ... on .My 1, 1898, at 12:01 A.M. by opnlon of law. The lU
Cclllclelw'I power lo Ill -9 ..... unle8I the property Is ... redNnlld Of m9dl NJied to lf'I
~.-lmnl pllr1 of~ lr6t9d u ptO\ltdld by law J)ftor to 5:00 P.M. on June 30, 1•. The
rtght to 11n lnltailmenl pl9r\ ""'*'9'91 on June 30, 1• end, lfter tNI dlde, the entlr8 .,.,_cl.le
mull be peld In ... to pr9'feftl .. of property .. publo Mdon. The lllnOUl1I In dol9r'I Md ClfU for
..... w:t'I property W oftall• dldllrecf to be IU-dtlauled II Mt fol1h oppollet II pal'Cll nuni>er
end .... not tncludt .. edla>l.i.,....... and,... which haVI llCCl\lld linoe ...... of ... .....
Md ft)Of'9 ,..,. ........ may .. be dlllnquent. Oncl the power to ... hill ........ right of
~.,,.,......at 5:00 P.M. on h !all bLU1MI day J)ftor to .. by h lb Collector.
Al ..,,.lllbi oo...,.ig ~ or the lnlddon ot 1n lnltalmlnt plan of ~ wll be
fumllhed. upon requelt, by Jahn M. W. Mooft9ch, OrMgl County,.,._,,.,_,.. Colec:tor, 12 CMc
C.W Plllza, Aoom G-58, S.U Ana. CA 92702 (714) 134-3411.
PARCEL NUMBERING SYSTEM EXPLANATION
The AIHl80i"I Perce! Nwnber (APN) when UMd to dlecfb property In lhll llt, ,....,. lo ht
• IHHl~I,,.., hoc*. .. ,JNlll ~"' l*a ao.1'9...,, ' .... -..Ind ........ ,.... ...
m1P P9QI or In h ~ A PM* nuni>er b ...,.,.. "044-383-05' would W book 44 of ht
11I111 ~· ITll!pl, block 383 (!nip pege 38, block 3) end s-"Cel 5 wlhln that block. The INipl r9'lrNd
to are sWllllble 91)( llllP9Qlol1 In the olloe of ht A11111 Cf, 12 CMc C--fltua, Room 142, Ser*
Ana.
Al property Is In the T~ South and Rengl West of San e.m..dno Bue end Mertdlln. The .
reel property ... " the tubfld of lhll noltcl .. llb.-r In "" Coooty of Orange, si... of c.llomla.
and .. dMcrl>ed .. lolows:
MONRTYTAX.ol!MUU'ID It
T1tE YaAlt 1ea POR TM
TAXU, At•U•N19 AND
OTHa CHAMll OI' TM
AeCAI. 'YUR 1llNI
H9WPORT llACH CITY
N0.603 • AP 05CMl1-0t,
SU.20, LINOA ISLE
COMMUNITY ASSN, S LINDA
IS&.£
N0..504 ·AP 4tt-011'°5, 117.ot,
NEWPORT COHOOM1NIUM
A8llN
NO.llOS • AP 475-05$..()3,
16331.11, PROSSER, DIANA
~.-S30 CAMEO
IHOAESAD
NO.IOI • AP 13244.()34.
ltll0.31, SMn'H, OONAU>
JAMEi, StO FEAHAHOO 1lT,
UNIT sot
N0.807 • AP 933*290,
11314. 12. TYREE. A08ERT JJlt 11~CT.UNrT10
NO.sot • AP ._,7.37-ooe,
'293().tt, AMEN, STEVEN P, -HALYARD, UNIT I
N0.510 • ~ '31-13-e?•.
•1101.t7, ITOCK, OAEOORV E.
72 V1UA POeNT DA
NO.ate • AP ~13,
111118.13, Pttl&..ft. EUZA8ElH
J,ET AL._. BEAR CMB<, UNIT
13
N0.527 • AP 937.e5-044,
(FORMERLY 937~.I010),
S131.14. KYMLA. CAAL J, 2510
BACK BAY LOOP. UNIT 18
N0.521 • AP 139-14-030,
1214t.U , KONDO, MINORU,
2174 ORAHQE AV, UNIT 1
N0.52t -AP427-20IM1,$31.79,
a<Y PARK oowaJNITY ASSN
N0.530 • AP 447-424-63,
.-Z.00, LEE. JANO YUP. 41
CAP08EUA
N0.631 ·AP451.012-1t.'111.71,
MAC ASSET MANAOEMENT INC
N0.532 • AP 4&1M)51-31,
133.42, lUAn.E AOQ( PARK &
RECREATION A.SSH, 19175
TUATlE AOCK OA
N0.533 -AP 413-311.()2.
138.18. TURTl.E AOCK OLEN
OOMMl.JNm' ASSN
N0.534 • AP 551-o82-oe,
l2049.10, STARY·St1EET8,
DAW> 8, 11 CARVER
N0.5315 • AP 934-44-095,
(FOAMEN.Y 9)4 44 085,5010 &
.5020), lt?a.64. MC DAME1..
JOHN 0. S ~.UNIT a .
NO.ast • AP .._M.007,
<'OAMIM.Y .... CI07.I010 I
.l020), tm.oe, POWERS,
TIMOTHY, SS IAOlE .-olNT,
UNfT7
N0.117 J AP 13t-11-1t3,
ltOtl.IO, IUTTKRFtELD,
CAALllH I. I C*PON>, UNITS
~, .... .... NO... . ~ ..... ,_,,,
11m.ot...: 'NUIC>. CNO. A"'-_, IWIMIDI 0..
H0.544 • AP 453-141-ol,
11•.1t. lfMNE ~ ••
MNVAH TREE lN
H0.1545 • AP t37-t5-011.
lt15.M, V£LDE. RICCAROA
L.ET AL. 2530 SANTA NfA AV,
UNIT t
flWIRn TAX.OUAULTB It
THI YUlt 1111 flOR THI
TAXU, AUUlllllrNTI AND
OTHllt CMMGU OP THI
NCAl 'tUlt , .......
Nl!WPORT aACM CITY
N0.541 • AP 442·214-31,
115.50, BAYVIEW TERRACE
HOMIEOWNERll ASSN
c:oeTA MUA CITY
N0.547 • AP 422-432·10,
11377.AI, URQUIZA.
RIOOBERTO.ET AL. 141
OONOAE88ST
PRONRTYTAX~ftDlt
THI YIAlt t• flOfl THI
TAXU, AIR......,. AND
Ontl" CtWM»U OI TMI
~'f'Ult , ...
COllTA fllUA OITY
N0.1541 • AP ..U.017-ot,
110.lt, CAPE CAHVOH
~MIN
P'MMIMif T~tm•
THI YIM t• '°'9 Tiii TAlll, Allllll IJITI Alllt
Onmt CtWllD OP 1"I MOM.llM-·•
IWMC/lrt
PUBLIC AUCTION
NOTICE OF SALE ON JUNE 28, 1998
OF TAX-DEFAULTED PROPERTY FOR DELINQUENT TAXES
TAX coa 1 ECTOR Sale 11348
The Amnort• PMlll Number (APN). wtten ~ID dlecrtbe property in lhll .._,.,.,.ID,. 111111 en map boc*. the map.,., .. **on,. mllPt <• lld .tN), Ind ,. lncMcMil PM* on ._ map ~ or In ._ tlloCi. A pilfcll number u lior ...... "044-3005"' WOUid..,... ec. 6t of .. Ma 111ar'aMlpe.8'cx*383 (map page 38, b6odc 3) Md PMlll I_....
I.a bloc:k. The m9P1 rwMn9d ID lt9 ~ for ii~ In .. office of
.. A 11111 co, 830 N. Broelt ay, Room 142. S.W. Ma.
The~ ... .,. ....... of ... notice.,. ......... In ONng9 CowllY. c.lbnla. Md .. dNcl~ .. tolawe:
rrlll•
111
PMCIL WT -LOCATION .._. ...... _,
........ 8-11 Cir .. MU.at 0.. IM I 7'.la0.00
OlllllllR
151 .....-Blld!Clr ..... 71 ~.A. m.JCI0.00
153 c.im .... Cir llS7•7IO-a Alm. ONoorY H. m.IOO.tlO
I o.Wy IMdlr oenelY ol l*turv, M the tot.pig II tn.. Md COtr'9Ct. /ti John ... w. "Moolfech ~ Cow1tY Trellurlt-1\a Calleaor E.wcu9d Ill~ Ana.~ Councy, Cdomla on a..y 21. 1•
lll.tlllftd Hltwpaft ~.._~Plot l'hlndly ... 21. NII 4, 11. t•CNS1.-
ANEW
Sell Y04I extra
houMhold ttema In
CLAISIFIED
THURSDAY, MAY 21.1998
.. .......... a::,.. ~--., ............. ...... ~......, .....
... of .. Y9ll'lt ... hie cftMren .__ c.o... .......... . ...... ,.. ......... ,.,..
OIAI.... A t:iraeMr,
llruOe Qlief ....
Dick lwd In Nli•pcwt BMCtl In 1945 ualll
1151 ... ~In 1880. ,
A n.noltlil MNto9
wlll be held at
8t. Marte P1~1
Church,_ .Nawport
BMCtl, • 11:00•-.m. ~.Mayq,. Memorial~
~ mey be mlld9 to
the McDowel H.a.v
Oalbnifth ~
Fund at Occld..-rtaf
College or 8'. "-" ~ce.fth.
,...~ • '.;
MC•ICwmWF
-.cMllMMM
'" "Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket, .·
Cremation&
Burial Service ·.~
... ··-
'.
Why should you subject·
yourself & your family to
paying inflated prices for ·
caskets & services???? • ~Toll Free l-88SS4CASl.ET
Stntng OnDge & Sarroand1ng Cooties
, ..
Plug Into the
Glossified section
" .. ..
..
...
.,
"
. ,.. .. ,. .. '
'
~
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All ml nllll IM!tlllei 1111111
_.,.11 IMjld II .. fH.
lrll fllf Hlnllt Ad If 1111 II
•lllttftcl ""' ...... It llltpl tt lfttnlH "HJ flrlftrtlCt,
11111111111 er .i1crt11111t111
....... rtet, ctltf, rtlltle•.
........... 111111111 .....
..... , fritll, If .. llttlltltt
It IUb .. , ud1 ,rtltrHct.
llllllDtltt•~.·
U la ltft'l'tr Wiii HI btwicltlJ _.,. .. , •Ml1llt·
... "'rul ....... la ..
tltlllltt 11 .. IN. Ow rt1Mn
lft Hrt•J 111-d thl Ill
••1lll1p 1ntr1l1d 11 r.1t
...,.,_ ltt tnllaMt .. II
..... ......., .... TtCl9-
lllalt llllllcrilllallll. aM ltUO
TtlHrtt 11 t.-..i4-t5tl. flf
lllt W.1•111111. DC -"9• aH HUO II 43-3511.
HOUSES/
CONDOS
POR SALE
NEWPORT
BEACH
NEWPORT
1069 BEACH
j
Bylilx
(714)1631-6594
(Plea!lt' if\cfu~ your namt an<J
phone number and we'll call you
back with a price quote.)
8"Phone
(714) 642-5678
By MlilMn Peniom
330 West B4!Y Street
Cost.a Mesa, CA 92627
A1 Newport Bh-d. & Bay 81.
Boars
Telephone. 8:-30am-5:00pm
Monday-Fridai_
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MES.A 2624 NEWPORT DUPLEXES · Bridge
Nley
Rn1N uu~ df.tullint• att 1111bjf(·1 10 <'Mllgt
wi1lt0111 11011tt. TI1t publiahrr ('Ht'nw rht righ1
10 rt11110r. l't'c·~ssif)·. l'f\W or rt'je<'I any
d11s11ifM"d 11d\'t'rti.iitme111. Pl1'111Jt ttport any error
thut nuw bt in )•011r d1111sifl~d~~ iu;untd.l8tt>ly. ,
TI1t' Doily PU01 at'C't'pls l•Q l.rffilli1y for any t'rror
in nn 11d\·trtilltmt 111 lor whk b ii may be
mponsibk-nree• for 1hr <'ost of the lif>&<'t'
ocmolly Of('npitCJ by rhf. r rror. Cl'fdi1 <'Oil only
bt allowed for 1he fil'61 insmiou.
--Deadllne8 --
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ....... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ............... 'qiursday S:OOpm
Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm
2169 BEACH 2669 •UNITS 2786 -----------------112Br Detaohed Walk to Theater/ By'CHARLES GOREN liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cottagea w/Patlo Shopping l.Ovely 1Br 0 The W ATTN BUILD••a .• ..1th 0llUl.aa su.a-r 3BR 2.SBA TWNHM Ooeanfront Summer near beach. Cathedral Apt• some w/gar. * n ater• a " -· -,,.._..,... Olde Corona del Mar Rental• 1/mo $8500. cella, frig. Move·ln gated comm. & deluxe Spacious 1, 2 & 2br AND INV•STOR and TANNAH HIHSCH ~c1 ~r, s42:.o~o, .!!week :2:go. ~~ Speclall 1675+1400 lndry fac. $895/mo. ,;~:,m!P!:;d ~==: 4.~:i;.·~~:d~b~iot a11s0-:~·x 1;~ er gent 4 75·5 depoalt. 648·2421 Klein Froperty Mngt. Pool, private beach & 2428Elden $540,000 llALPAWAFISNOT8£1TER
Vlewl View! View! 2Br iBa Duplx 1·Lvl 949-581-4000 marina. Walk to Joann!~ Owner/Agt Cherr~ Lake Area 2Br TWH overlooklng alngle gar, quiet., pvt, Balboa lalandl 11650 94-42·31112 North-South vutner.ble. West deals. West continued *Ith the Im of ch-
3,500 +sf 2·Sty, 4Br NB Country Club Golt on bluff near beach. NEWPORT to 12800 790-09t9 monda, dedaNr naffina witb duin-
3Ba+ 2 Half Ba, 6/c Course. $3500/mo Lu $795/mo. 84~·9699 IPICiiL ttlA +ill NORTII my' a ten and East 0~ wltb g arag e. $875.000 Amalader/Roppolo , -BEACH 2669 ... __. By Owner 852·9966 844-8200 x 1 es •Coat• Me•• • ... t MOW IN 80NU8 BUSINESS • • 10 I 6 5 the knave. Dcclaru -DO way to
P d U I CA R II Jr· 1 br & 1 br, also 2br Newport aay Terrace Q IC I 4 3 avoid losing a club lridc Tor down Golf Courae Condo ru en a ea Y 1 ba, quiet gated 28r 2•• garage, w/d Lg 1 & 2Br near Back PJNANCE ooe.
SEA ISLAND comm, pool, tennla, hook-up, balcony, Bay & gott courH. ! i ~ l The venuff hint be conaid-
One Level· No Steps NEWPORT e a a y a cc.a a a t o Hoag Hoaptta! area. Large pool, new car· WIST KAST ered t>!. luck. T--l 50 2Br 2.5Ba+ Den+ 2/c 2170 lrHway/beach/malla. $850/mo. 722~388 pet & much more. •,. • J 7 l t ._it .. a
Garage Mint Cond. COAST 714-11117-0075 B1'8nd New Modern Sorry No Peta BUSINESS • pcn:entlhot.::t.!.-.&f-=ttle
Agent 714-935-4601 E'alde Bright 3Br 1Ba 3Br 3Ba, balcony, S4tJ.485S FOR SALE 2900 Q 762 Q QJ lit Odd.a are wone tbat ltccaue
GREAT LOCATION! New Ocean View 4Br cottage, w/d hk·up, prkng, walk to beach, 0 K Q II I 7 l 0 A 6 Wat, long in di..,.,.,,_ to be
2Br 2Ba Spacious, 2· 3/car SFR In gated patio, carport, no rest, shopa, no pets. • Q It 4 • 17 6 3 sbon in spllde:I. m*iDa S... a llrOftl
Story Condo, 2/car an Campo Bello. $4750/ pets. S985. 722·1342 $2400/mo. 582·2912 MISre"" •arroUS •Dealgner Boutique SOl1111 faVCJriletoboldlbejd'ol.....,._ gar. $259,000 Broker MO. Agt 949-552-6700 ~,. Women'• Apparel; •A JCQt3 Actually, the pme QR....,_ be
949·640-5664 TRADE SELL RENTALS ESTB 23yra. Laguna Q AS claimed apinst •Y ..._•long Great View ot Lido Beach< ISOK; Call 0 t 4 3 u WetA does DOC bold.'-mill-Jack 733~317 FBB ...._ ..... Channel, 24 security, AP"DTMENTS through classified your home • KJ 5 ins trumps. ~Jarer -limply walk to Lido Village. ""' ,... h I Ill d refUle to ruff the third rOUlld ol clllt-
2Br 2.sBa S562,500 POR RENT 842·5878 uiroug c ass e ROOMS 2706 BUSINESS ~biddin1RTB: • moada. Instead, declarer ,taould
949-675-2700 OPPORTUNITY moon NO EAST SOUl1I make the loeer-<JO-loelr ~of ...
Nwpt Shra 2br, ofc, CdM Gated pvt en-20 ,._ 30 3• CMling a club from tlle~ a trict
2ba. b eam cell, newer NEWPORT NEWPORT trwice, Lrv & bright, 2904 ,_ 4• ,_ ,_ that mlgbt bave to be Iott In aey
Ille roof, $358,000 CORONA BEACH 2669 BEACH 2669 cloH to bHch, quiet, ,_ ew:at, on the tbird diamond No mM·
Biii Grundy Realtors DEL MAR 2622 patio, prkg, no peta, ........ Opening lead: Kina or() ter bow the defcaae CODtinu~··
949·675-6.161 S575/mo 720.84M Please be wary of out dedarcrcanmawuwapt..Sndflbe
Open Sat.Sun 1 ·5 CDM Ocean vu:~ of are11 cor.1panlos. Boch the play and defeiue of this club Iola" 00 the lllblC for die IC. For Sale By Owner 1 Br 1 Ba upper back furn, prlv entrance & Check with the local Mnd abou1cf be .utornatic. ffowewr, lrict..
275 E. 18th 81. unit, gar space, lndry PAIRWAY APARTMENTS patio. Avall Nowl Better Business you would be lllrpriled bow often The•-~·-.....,~~· '113r 3.5B• $375-S400K hk-up, no pets, $11 00. "''T BIG c·~oN $600.mo 714~0624 Bureau belor• you ·""-~-__ ... • ... _. .......... ~-w-_. ~, R z Bk 759 9341 "" ""', • aend any money tor Wluau llUU countef·u•ultl. uuw on ~an1 guises, of •bicb a la Prine Only 545-0449 ay . r • OATBD OOMMUNJTY BY PASHION ISLAND fHI 0( aervlcea. Read offcme and dcfeme. are mlued. aimplcsl Ind most obvious. Be awwe
GENERAL 1002 Villa Point 2Br 28• 2Br 2B• upper back BeaullfuJ tree-tined streets and golf course RENTALS TO and underaland any _..!:.e•t O~Dem. d ~~m~-~ of ha w.nce. ace it ls a play tt.t
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Upper unit, comm. unit of Cape Cod style views. Enjoy carefree llVlng In )'Ol.I' large 5ua1n1 2724 contracta b9fore you ~ two-bid -..._ can only· -i-pool & apa. No Mello duplex, Ip, lrg living 1• 2 Of 3 BR apanment hornet Aft,11\,ij algn. Shop around for railed pn:elDIJCively. Souch wa too .,...... PATRICK Tl!NORI! Rooa. S230,000 Bkr, are a, lg b alcony, rat". aood to be lliut CNI. and Nocdt t.d
Please Call & Let Us Wayne 760-5000 X195 bright & open. $1825/ • lWO<:ar garage Cdll Sk 2ba, w/d, Bam t•OOO a........,._ ... =..;.. ~-.--. ~=nb Know what Vo u r mo yrly lae. 606-8449 • washer/dryer hookl4>$ f.tA spacfous /deck • --·-"' .-..-. u.....r-..,-Needs Arel 856·9705 WATERFRONT ''V• w Ba your own bonl to game.
t ·8 o o -4 ·TENO A E Fantastic Low Pricer STUDIO, So. ot PCH • Areplace (wood a. gas) 1750/mo + utll'a. Work from home I West led tbe k.iJll of cljamonda., , QUIET. parking, laun· • l'llr condlllonlng Call John 8113--3488 800.299·5001 x81392 _... o.-. _...._ ........ --..&-L-..:._
Prud--4-1-1 dry, no pets $700& o. • WCI bar In 2 and 3 BR CdM ahr abr 1 ba h.. ... DllR .._ lllll ""'"'--UA~ ...
CULllLI Avail Now 675-4082. • Alarm sys1em huge deck & great vul •--------play by ovatMin& with tbe KC md
........... ~~-· erl S.beatM atW &e .._ ~ =· ... ~~~ Gora Brfdp ~~!.1 P.O .... ... , C'Nraaw\ -. SOLD!
Showcase homes
for aale In our
Saturday Real Estate
Supplement!
ca ' ; n1 • s 1.65010 52.995 Carport, w/d, fem pref MONEY mmuing the suit to .,.iner'a cpeeo.
949·723·8120 COSTA MESA 2624 PLEASE CALL (714) 64+-0509 S825/mo 723·"'466 TO LOAN 29141~· -------------~-------•CdM ihr 2br 2ba
HOMES OF
THE WEEK
Dlspl11~ ada ... rt
at Just S751
Deadline Wed 5pm
***** OPEN HOUSE
Llatlnga tor $51
Deadline Thur• 5pm
***** It pays to advertise
In the best local
Real Eatale Section
CALL TODAY
LISA RIVaRA
714/574·4252
---------· -----·--
:·: J ~ =~ --. . --
Balboa Newport
Reelty, Inc.
&tabllshed 1879
Full Service
Management
Lealna VacaUon Rentllll a Sain
428 32nd Street
Ne:wpc>!t Beach, CA
714-723-4494
ALISO VIEJO 1004 HOUSES/
oov•t Owned 2Br 2Ba CONDOS
Co nd o. $91,000 POR RENT
Mlchael Lambert. Agt •••••••• Premier Propertlea
949-499-8497 --------_____________
1
CORONA
DEL MAR :BALBOA
.fENINSULA l007 Harbor View Hiii•
, Absolutely 9 orgeoua
JltRIMB LOCATIONll 4Br. Highly upgraded
·VACANT Restaurant home on a huge lot
; on 2·LOTS In BALBOA w/apa, 3/c garage
S749,9K Paul Langone $4200./mo' Lea s e
949-875·8120 Kolar & Co. 378·5576 . '
tORONA
DBL MAR 1022
, DPLX JUST LISTl!DI
, 507 & 507 .5 Poinsettia
3Br 2Ba & 3Br 2Ba
: 1688K Agta 759-9070
•ijarbor View Broad·
, .moor Coming Soon.
IRVINE ----------
Townhome, 2 blk• to brn up to 11000 ~wi. W/D, glat, pvt Every time aomeon•
ant , n o I• m k /p • t r~lv" a MIP refund.
S750mo.702-383-1858. &88-640.7200 no up nee
2669 a'CM Lrg Home In NO MORE BILLS
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii iii•••ililaliliiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii nice area near Back p A V ALL OE BT S
Bay. Profl non-amkr CALI., 1·80o.387-6997
$800/mo 8...._8210 9am·9pm Mon to Fri/
NEWPORT
2669 BEACH
NEWPORT
BEACH
NEWPORT
2669 BEACH
2144 ntVllfl
i•afd• CM Unique Sat & Sun 10am-8pm
Townhome. Maater br,
w/d, gat11ge, no drug• I•••••••• 1550/mo 631...<141e ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMERCIAL
REAL ESTATE
BUSINESS OPPICB
FOIUNT 2769
-------
Creek&td• omo-Great locaUonl
phonaa, furniture,
CaU 714-430-e885
·~~otf'a"
~:~ eo..eea.-tOeDFJ~
.1'+&40-l5600 ..
COMMEICIAL
PIOPIRTY 2778
ANNOUNCEMENTS
2920 --------
FREE CASH
GRANTS I
College. Schol#Shlpa.
Buslneaa. Medlcal
bllla. Never Repay.
Toll Fr ..
800-218-9000 xG-1398
LOST•
POUND 2925
-------
Loat Volcom Back·
pack. Belga/btown/gm
at Stutt Surfer on 5/13.
School book• needed
+personal Item a
Reward '722·784t
Canl • ...,, to ~
get to al lhoM •
repair Job•
wound the house?
Let the
Clatalfled ..me.
Dlteotorr
f*Pyou find
r9lablt help.
TODAY'S
CROSSwoRD PUZZLE
1 !
•I •
•
I ' I I
0 Certified Lifeguards
needed In N.B. bay
area. $7 per hr, June·
Sept. 909·672-0605
C, • L •A
UtTlMATE
• s • s
I t
---Plea.. be aware that
the Ratings In lhla cat·
egory may require you
to call a 900 number
In which thar• 11 a charge per minute.
J\ntique11
& QJoJltdiblH
,~.i
=~ Conduc'9d
... Soreeft TV $500.
Round QtHs while
rattan la.,.., • chairs
S•OO. 7 t •-4S44-08U
Diftiili TM ~ wl I cnra, Hunt« Orn tlle
lop, wood' ttlm, $50. w .. aok Obi Jogger
atroter s1es. 542.2•21 -4i1r.:.::,,.:=-:T;;h;::0::.,.:=;;a;=r•'Jlc•••llllli••••
doing lauhd~y. f'or •ll•o F·apayed.
dataira can 399•9998 2 v" old. Friendly • (71•) 854-32•8 :
6015 F.... DOG Ml~d l•-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil COLLECTIBLES '*cl( .. b. gtGJ J W/ aeau .... Salon •--Ip 6017 klda, loveable. "Mo ng •• .. -home 714-95eiie309 used. For sale, make iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii o r r e r . 8 5 o -8 t o 7 Kitten• '"cued, h80d aeo •· 17th St CM Henr9ftdon Mint cond raised, a11ort'd col~rs
silver chHt/marble M & F, donatlo~•lfd Cltrua, Fruit, Avocado top & hutch Henry the (1~•9) 85'1-3246 ~ •
TreH (frulUng) $10. 8th coll. Can be seen WoH Puppi:iil. i
Oueen Palms Lrg 1 !5 al Allled lighting 222 Northern Timber Wt>lf.
gal, $35. Cement Victoria St CM 494·2628 (hybrid). Beautl(ul, Table/3 Benches
St99, Fountains S12!5, --------amart, lovable,_gr•at
Birdbaths s2s. Shade COMP'~ns 6018 w/chlldren. N~ dog
TrffS 8' StO. Jasmine, iiiii&ii"'iiii "~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii odor. A Wond~ ~et Oleandars, Privet $1. 1800. 54!7!3150
909·874-9422 •up topa• Only St50ll -------.-1
-
Have A
Garage Sale !
!!!.§ ---.-.. :.-;·--
~· .• r _ f , I •• JI> • -• , __ ,..,
'
. 11 • ·,,.
>\' 6l I
'I• ' ~
Brand new,
fully )oadedl
Call 800·784·7782
WANTED
TO BUY 6019
I BUY ALL PIANOS
PIANOS 8r
ORGANS
8 ' Henry F. Mllfer
Grand piano, almpst
1 OOyrs old. $2900 * S48·71tH•*!
6 I
Painting~ 't' China
Books 'W Fumltuntn--------tnrw--.:r.--;...-.~. "'y.tars
• I "'• -
Anllquu.qual. lurnltu11 GAUGE c BT 'l:C 1pc or houHful caah ~
paid (714) 957-41133111••••••••
In Newport Beach
14.673.622
• I • F
,
-~ ..
. rw;~· .
-_. c
Sell your unwarned
Items the easy way!
To place your
classltled ad call
842·5878.
• I
t
• E
Old Coln• Gold Sliver
Franklin Mint. Sterling
Old watch•• & Jewelry
Weslcoast Coln &42·9448
Claaalfte
The most comprehen·
alve and current dlrec·
tory ol goods and ser·
vices around!
• D • s -
GARAGE. SALE.~
ITEMS FOR SALE
.....
FREE '!'IL .JUNE ISTB! ....
...
NAME -----------------------------------PHONE --
ADDRESS
CREDIT CARD# ___________ EXP. DATE ________ ~
SIGNATURE
TYPE OF CREDIT CARD (CIRCLE ONE): VISA MC AE
l'rnM: (15 CHARACTER LIMIT, INCLUDING SPACES)
DESCRIPTION: (18 CHARACTER LIMIT, INCLUDING SPACES)
I I I I
COST OF ITEM: _______ PHONE# (
TREASURE CHEST RULES AND INFORMATION
DISCOVER
•
) _____ __
A) ALL ADS Wil.L PUBLISH 'fHuRsDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. No CllANOBS,
ADDmONS OR DELETIONS UNTIL nm FOLLOWING WBEK.
• 9)' •NO BOM'9t °'-RS, iftlUCKS Wll.b~E "1mOWS&.· a.MiRCHANDlS£ PlllGED-UP-~,. .-~ ' .
$500 ONLY. ONE m.M PER Aft.
C) PluvATB PARTY ADVERTISERS ONLY. No BUSINESSBS MAY PAR11CJPATB.
D) To PLACB YOUR AD USE nus FORM. You MAY MAIL rr, OR DROP IT BY OUR
OFFICE. OUR ADDRESS IS:
330 W .BAY S'l'REET
\
COSTA MB.9A, CA 92627
9v.twthlna under the • sun lncludlng .. bed-rm ••t. akla/ap p.ar el, mtn1woman clothing.
houae/kltchen wares,
fPOrt llems, mattress
• mOfel 33 V•ll•~ View Sat only 7·noon
New Stlp •Sift Tie. Will acoom Up to 50 Power/SaJe.
Euy aoceu on
Balboa Penln. Agent
1-800-24741209
BMW 9030
No room left
In the garage
for the car?
A call to
clHalfled can
help
'92 MIATA MX·S
Convertlble, '9d, black
Int, caaa, CD chngr, Al
C , only 16k ml
(315588) $10,995
BAUBR LOTUa
714oe42·7700
Cl•aamed
The moat comprehen·
1lve and current dlrec·
tory of good• and 1er·
vlce1 aroundl
'87 300ZX, 2+2, Hot--------
Red, T·Top, 1 owner, VOLVO 9230
great cond, (PP) iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
S4950. a.e-e16-6066 •es 8 so oL T
'90 Maxim• Beige. Lo ml, CD. lthr,
V8, auto, Boae atereo, mnrf, mlntl
anrf, full power, runs (3LRW419) t1~1SISO
greall $3800 718..0907 w .. W:ir:.:T•R
'98 MAXIMA ax• C714) 882-8808
31K ml, auto, full power, 1-owner
(3POL965) t1S.i950
Ll!XUa 01"
W•STMINSTl!R
(714) 892·8909
Thinking of having a
garage sale?
Give ua a calll
CLASSIFll!D
842·5878
9246 --------
----~•l cBJLD CAD 3536 CONCRETE & DRYWALL GAUGE BIUU.l'll. BEAUTY LANDSCAPE & PAINTING
SERVICE MASONRY 355? SERVl~E 3584 DOOU 3171 • JllTlflSS 3140 IAWll CJl!t! 3808
3858 .PLUMBING 3890 .ROOFING 3910
DIRECTORY . .& ... 11.._• Brick, Blockr Stone, T11.li!i~!iiii.!~~~-~ll••••••-eitrf"4rtAI~ Cone, Patio, Driveway South Co••t Dryw•ll ACOUSTIC -CNltlc-,.,.,,._ Fplc, BB01. A•f. 25Yr. Acoua remvl/cu1t text ~SANDMANN
CEILINGS 3408 Exp. T•rry 557·7894 ::~:~noJ:~~ f~~~~ ~INDUSTRIES Live-In child care. •CEMENT WORK• L550017 444-8880 ... ~
South Coast Dryw•ll
Acou1 remvl/cust text
Water Damage Repair
BHI In Ouallty & Price
L550017 444-8889
ADDITIONS
REMODELING 3410
All Home Improvements
22yr1 Kit/Bath addl·
tlon1 & more free est
European Au Pairs. ·Stamp•d Concr•t• •=~~~-:--~~-Brick/Block/Stone/Tiie Witthoeft Drywa~I Your Helghbon for
Enqllsh speablnq. L541658 831-4310 An Phan .. Sm/I.Ci Jobi 25 vtarslll Cleanl Cl .. nl Cle•nl '' 18·26 yrs .. leqal. John Doran MHonry 20vr1 Exp/Falt l/Frte Eat Top.Quality
culturally enrlchln". Brlck•Stn .. concrete U400030 714~9-1447 n--n.... R .. ..i • LO/Sm Jba•R•palrs Ok .....,,,.,. .,,_ners. e.,_,rs
flexible In-home Free Est. & Advlc• 1---------Emergency Service
child care. l.#se11e1 931.3e32 ELECTRICAL 3610 •t prices
YOU can 1ffordl
CALL TODAYI
4S hrs.lwb. CONTRACTORS
800·713·t002 GENERAL 3558
L.842559 714·533·1269 --------A.J. Pall•• Conatr.
~m•ll .lob •XP•RT
Duno•n •teotrlo
Local/Quick Re•Pon••
Service/Remodel•
Ught fixture repair
Ll2 75870 890-7042
(714) 175-7772 or
(512) to1-1t24
BATHTUB .CLEANING Pa1nt1ng•Remodellng tu!GLAZING 3448 General Contracting ""'" SERVICES 3548 450732 848-3018 BIG SAVINGSISSS HANDY MAN 3710
i&iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiilii!iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii Interior Renov•tlona Pl!TERKIN Elec:trlc •---------• A TOUCH OF CLASS Cu1tom Pr0Jec11 Prompt/Local/Clean IMPRO'~MENTS Cleaning. RH/Comm LI c e o g 4 8 4 N B AH.Com/am.Jg Jobi •P•lnt/C•rpentry• Y'"
Uc/Bonded. Free Est. M.Banks 842·8107 l.811717 800.748ot741 Drywall and moral HOME 3756
TerHa 282·71431-:L-:E=w=is=--=c,------SAVI! SSS Huntington 0sma11 Job• Oki onatruotlon N • w p 0 rt 8 •a c h •FY 845-5277
•BOii HOUSECLEANING Remodel•Hendyman El.w!c. I do It alll C•rpentry·ALL KINDS i ... -------il
----. -2tYr1 Guallty ,.lfttlnt
TOUCHUPS, TOO
Lou Tor,.• Landscape 24 Hl'9. Richard Sinor
H•rbor Ar.. 20Yrs. Uc#28CMl44 845-3209
Wkly malnt/New Install CHUNG'S PAINTING
lrrlg work/TrH trim 24Vra Exp-Or1 Prlcel CUit ralffl 848-4383 Quar Work·FrH E1t
PROWSB LAND A Uc#375802 538·1534
HARD SCAPE tMJnt. IWAiow circle Malnt.
& hlllalde cleaning PalnUng.fnl/Ext Hou1t/Apl
many ref'• 850-0605 Quality Job. FrH Ht.
The Green Qarden.r L#&89897 838-8888
Weekly rea. malnl., Ike'• Cu1tom Painting NB atea, quality work. Prof, Clean. QuaUty
FrH Ht. MO.Seas work. Int/Ext & Dock•.
Yard Cln·up, Trim 1.#703488 831-4810
I Mell91r , ....... .
WATDMIATdi
UllAllDllP.
TOUT TUii-UPi IUIWll
WI DITICTION DllAlll IUll.D
llWDllAIMI . ~~ .... tr•••· he<Sg••· palm ..,,.........,,.........,,.. _____ ,
trH•. Removal. New Ou•llt~ Care 20 year•
lawn/plant• 9894502 Fair prloH/lnt·ElCtllllllll• paint/local ref'a. NB
Area. Ron 845·2417 ---------1
Jcrueaer pdnting
ruldmtlal
paint& wood
rut4>rotlon
matthew
----
WATSU&OOI' aoonxa
Re-roofl • R.-1ra FrMlatlmetH
All 'lyPee of Roof• All Woftt Oueran-.ct
831-1088
SDPIOARDS
3923
·Cullom Surfboard• $250. 2 WHk guar.
dellv. T•am n••d•dl
Call Rich 548""4384
VPBOLSTllU1'G
3131
Q A Q UPHOLSTERY
•Ince •ea cust. furn.
upholaty, alp cvra
antique rpr 542-4812
LlcenHd·Bonded L#704773 Local RH. L#738593. "3·2411. Cabln•t•, Storage, TIME TO BEGIN 11---------~~~og.f:~3~~ •714-SS7·992S• Decka, Patio Covera uouR HOME MOVING etc ... (714) 788-8321 ,, ·
548-5481
3834 Uc. 740898 -------1WALL
•Bright HOUHCleanlng
Europt1n Prol1111onal1.
8111 In town! A1l1. Oartk
& Grace 714-857-2847
•VICKI'S CLEANING We offer THE BEST
Hou1t/Wlndow Clnntng.
1 OYr1 Exp. )<Int Ref a.
Vicki 714-888.0399
RJ A
Company
ProlmlonAI Cmefal
Conltl(tjng Sttvtc.a
Sptdlllz.lng In mldentlel
rwmodH Md lddldol1'
3869
~ ~ Oen Contr./Handyman IMPROVEMENT D!ilPI llc'd & bond carpentty PROJECn PUBLIC NOTICE _ drywalV_pllnl r•mdll/rpra Call a plumber, The Cta!lf, Publlo UtUI-•
MaM Conatr. 962·2438 I t h d tlaa CbtnmlHlon RE· '-New· ,.,; 0P,• nan•yr. of •t~•ym,!..n. OUIAl!S that all uHd CONTROL Handym.n Service• " -Plumb elec wtr htra vices !lated here In houaehold gooda
dlapoaata faucets pgr OUf directory! movers print their Bug Cleariout Special
11W1H Of 241-0137 c ALL y 0 u R P.u.c . Cal T number; Starting at $70.00 RaAIW!d.•r..tlllp. LOCAL SBRVICBS limo• and chaut(eut• Rena Peat Control
-------
----------
COVERINGS 3932
Th• Stripper
Speclalltlng In
Wa.llpaper Removal
l.5889241 983-8037
We O•I• 1hould hang
t~elh9f'. Strip, lnatall,
a vice to the crazy.
L 7359711 a31·2111
IUSINESS
DMCES
DfIA.s LEAN IN
"W lte11 ~••II~ U.11b
DEC!
COATING
·~~ •Home Rep•lr• TODAYI print their T.C.P. num· e70.aeso ..... I •ltwlft•'lft tArl1a plumb, elec, fence•, ber In all adVettl .. ---------111 . ..,..,...,m. carpentry, aprlnklera menta. If you have a PET ,.__._.~.-........ ;,,_,__, WINDOWS ~la Todd 72.2-0188 queatton abOut the I• SE•VICES ,. 3934
3488 -~-------
lankruptClf·Ch 7
1top cred i tor 's
•Jiarra11menl! Low . coat SSS 800·322·, 122
c..-r n-1frwU-Fr~ • Ffes Apiit'I
3570 •r.•Ns.a..i.•c... H0Ma_auv1cii LA.NDSCArE & gallty of a mover, Omo &'\ ...
PREE BStlMATB Anythl g & Ev rythl LAWN ,-11•e 3808 or chauffeur, call: QotdenW••t Window
Waterproof Coatlnu 7 2 2 e 7 4 7 8 FrM :aumate~ Aaf'~ ~ Publlo UtllltlH Pet llte.r/D.. Walker RO OPING 391 O Cleanfttg
--------
oeckl/Balconlea/Stalr Mlohael 7tle.1440 CommlHIC>n Dallv/Overn~ht vlalta. Sa~lafact!<>" ;uwanlMd
Ql.jallty work/RH• s P•lnt/carpentry/drywall BASIC YARD MAINT 71tl55M1S1 Aefa avt. Uo d/80nded IUl.BOA ROO,.NQ CO Uc d·ln• d eat-1881
Rn •Comm 774-100
L 1587430 722·8789 repalt. Small Joba ok. 1 CALL DO•I IT ALLI Spilt leoond 110¥tnt Oenlle 7t4-838-8870 Quality work Ouatnt'd W r I 9 ht•• w Ind ow ~-------FENCES Looal rera. Bob Staaf e31 ..... a2 Prof Mover9114Ht IN PWTEl Reroof/Aepalr ,, .. Ell cleaning 25yr• In oc
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