HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-05-16 - Orange Coast PilotI
. •
SPO TS
Get a sneak peek
at Mr. l"elevant
Serving t he Newport-Mesa community since 19Q7
a parent's .,_rspective
'Our hope for RebeCca is·
that she will be accepted' . .
• EDrTOR'S NOTE: The following letter was
submitted to the Daily Pilot In response to a
story about HarborVrew Elementary parents
concerned with a proposal to move some spe-
dal educatloo students into the school.
M y 6-year-old daughter Rebecca
is one of the Paularino special
ed students who will be
moved to Harbor View Elementary,
should that move go through.
Rebecca tested in the fourth per-
centile and did not speak intelligibly at
all when she was admitted into this pro-
gram at the age of three; today, she is
outgoing, gregarious, charming and
very communicative. Her progress has
been nolhing short of miraculous, and
her father and I attribute this to the out·
standing program the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District offers for lan·
guage disabled children.
Finding out your child has a severe
disability is a gut-wrenching, heart·
breaking experience. It changes your
perspective on everything in life, as
•SEE HOPE PAGE A13
WEEKEND
Vintage cwthing never
goes 9ut of sty/,e
Corona del Mar abloom ID flower war
• Local florists concerned farmers' market will undercut their trade, hurt their reputations.
By Evan Henerson , Daily Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -Not everyone
thinks the city's first farmers' market
will be a bed of roses.
Local florists, pointing to experiences
in other cities, claim the market's sale of
cut flowers at wholesale prices will bring
unfair competition to the everyday busi-
ness that pay rent and taxes in the city.
•Something like this could give a bad
reputation and image to florists,• said
Dean Myung, who owns Paul's Flower.
Like other Corona del Mar business
owners, Myung said the market is unfair
to local businesses that have to pay rent
and sales tax while the once-a-week
vendors are able to avoid such costs.
In one late-hour effort to head off the
flower controversy, Corona del Mar bus1-
"Something like this
could give a bczd r epu-
tation and image to
florists ... "
-OE.AN_ MYUNG
port the aty;" Morugal said •And now
we're gomg to have people who come m
and compete Wlthout having to J>dY over·
head costs. It's unfair competltion. •
Mayor John Hedges suggested the
city prohibit the fd11Tlers' market from
selling flowers. but that proposal was
voted down The market will open Sat-
urday~ -blooms dnd all
And business offioals remain womed
Luvena Hayton, a Corona del Mar
Chamber of Commerce board member, ness owner Joe t-.Jorugal attempted to ral-said florists m Dana Pomt have. been
ly fellow Oonsts agamst the farmers' mar-senously unpacted by d farmers' mar-
ket when the issue came before the New-ket m that oty Whtle the chamber sup-
port Beach City CounaJ on Monday. . I ports the farmers' market. 1t doesn't
The one-day-a-week marke t, which want to see local busmes!>es sutler.
would sell produce and dried fruit as Hayton said.
well as cut flowers. can only harm t'he
area, Monigal told council members.
"We're all taxpayers here and we sup-• SEE FLOWERS PAGE A 14
\ I I I H \1 \ I 11 < > I < 11 \ " I Newport Beach
expected to OK
mwo pact today
• The City Council meets
at 5 p.m. to take final action
on the compromise plan
that would hold off the
dumping of treated sewage
water into Newport Bay.
r --~----------------------,
By Evan Henerson , Datly Pilot
NEWPORT BEAC H -At 5
p.m. today, the City Council gets
its final look at an agreement
between the city and Irvine
Ranch Water District on an alter-
native to dumping treated
sewage water in Newport Bay.
It will be the council's final
review of the proposal before a
state agency reviews the water dis-
trict's d.lscharge proposal Monday.
On Wednesday, environmen-
talists Jack Skinne r, Bob Caustin
and state Fish and Game biolo-
gist Troy Kelly met with City
Attorney Bob Burnham to give
their thoughts on the agreement
as it currently exists.
I • I l IN THE NAME l
l OF NEWPORT BAY :
T he Newport Beach City
Council is holding a spe·
cial meeting today to review
a proposed compromise
agreement that would stop
an Irvine Ranch Water Dis·
trict's plan to pump 5 million
gallons of treated sewage
water daily into Newport
Bay dDd save the agency
more than $20 million.
... 11'e Oty c.owKil disa.aMd
this .....-ment during its reg-ua. Monday ITmting. Why
MOther mMtlng so soon7
On Monday, the state ReglONI
1 Water Quality Control Board as
scheduled to determine whether
IRWD can dump its treated
sewilge In the Back ~ay. The water
district needs a di~rge permit
from the state board ~ City
Council hopes to hammer out an
agreement with the water district
before Monday's hearing.
• tf the CJty Council signs off
on the ~ would
Mondmy's st.t. helwing still
takeplac97
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LEAH HOGSTEN I DAilV Pit.OT
Makito Kawabe, 23, of Orange, sits next to a car he was a passen ger in that was involved in a suspected hit-and-run accident
and high-speed chase Wednesday In Costa Mesa. P~lice said the driver of the vehicle, Tatsuya Homma, 20, of Costa Mesa, ran
a red light at Harbor Boulevard and Victoria Street, then hlt a vehicle during the ensuing chase. See story on Page A2.
If the agreement is approved,
four agencies would work togeth-
er to find alternate uses or dispos-
al sites for the reclaimed water
Irvine Ranch 1s planning to dump
into Newport Bay
Kelly, who cdffie to Wednesday's
Yes. •nd under the terms of~
agrttment. the crty would no
l~r oppose the water distnct\
effort to obtain the discharge per
mit. The distrtet would agree not
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•SEE PLAN PAGE A 14 :
City attorney can't do DA's job just yet
• Costa Mesa officials will
study idea of sharing costs with
neighboring cities to improve
prqsecution of local crimes.
By Tina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa may
have to join forces with surrounding
dties and 5upplement the county dis·
trict attorney's prosecution costs if it
wants to take certatD misdemeanor
cases to court.
Because of the county's dire finan-
cial $traits, the ·district attorney's office
tor the past year has turned away a
'
number of minor misdemeanor
crimes, such as gambling; disturbing
the peace; trespassing; purchase and
possession of alcohol by a minor; and
driving without a license.
Councilman Gary Monahan in
April asked the city attorney to study
the feasibility of prosecuting some of
these cases through his office. And
during a study session on Monday,
City Attorney Tom Kathe told the
council that it might be more compli-
cated tban U seems. .
In order for tbe d ty attorney's office
to prosecute these cases, the district
attorney's office would have to give
written consent And that's not some-
thing the county agency is willing to do.
•
"The DA's formal position so far lS
that they're not real inclined to give
consent," Kathe told the council.
Kathe said the county prosecutor
might consider taking on a few of
these crimes, if several municipalities
considered them·significant problems
in their areas. For example, lf Costa
Mesa, Newport Beach and Irvine
viewed gambling, racing and illegal
alcohol sales as problems, then the
district attorney's office might agree
to pr,s>Secute these cases, provided th-e
three cities supplement the cost.
The county also said it might be
willing to give the city consent to
• Sl;E ATTORNEY PAGE A14
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l \ 11 I \
MOUNOTOWN M
llST IUYS /42.
CLASSIFIED as
a:NMlHTY flORlM A 12
9fllln'AINMENT Al
POIXE PUS A2
Ml.IC tlOTICES 14
ICXllTt 'A7
11
\\ I \ I II I I\
We hod a.am• old, .ame old
forecott going,
and then Bingo/
here oomea tlM
weoCJae.rpente>n who -vs.
w. Could how lltf!W'era
todoy, "' """' .,.,
SM~ .... Aa
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-----------------------~
I •SEE IRWD PAGE A14 L-------------------------~
MAllC MAATIN I OAlV ~OT
Students at Est.and.a High School ttlter out of dul Wednesday afternoon..
Combining schools sparks ·mterest
• School board trustees say it may
be possible to merge Estancia and
Costa Mesa high schools.
By Julie ftoss C.nnon, Dltily Pilot
NEWPORT·MESA School board mem·
ben Wednelday N.kl they are Jntwted tn
metgtng the two CoR& Mesa high schools
bµt want more information and community
mpul before making a decision.
School ottidals presented the board with
infomMttion -at the request oi trustees Ed
Decker and Jun Fenyman-showmg ap ·
mated COit savings Ol St millioo per year if the
• district moved Estancia High SChool students
to Calta Mesa High and aeeted a super
J~ ICMol at the Eatanda am>pus.
· 1be abtnct cOukl allo avoid spendirig
SS.3 milliOo to i.open Rea SchOol by aeat-
lng a megJMt elementary program at n.wm-
kle Middle Scbool. which would be vateted
•SEE MERGER PAGE A11
)
THURSDAY, MAY 16. 1996
greer
wylder
A Ola's shoe purchase
helps Wolonsky family
T hrough the month of May,
Cha's Family Shoe Service
(642-4314) would llke to
help the nacy Wolonsky family
by donating proceeds from sh~
repairs to her husband and four ·
children.
If you bring in two pairs ol
shoes for repair, Cha's will
donate the proceeds from the
second pair of shoes. Cha's is the
best shoe repair shop around
ahd has recently added a key
service. Cha's is located at 1673
Irvine Ave. in Costa Mesa, a few
-doors down from 7-Eleven.
My favorite rug and carpet
. store Hemphill's Rugs and Car-
• pets (722-7224) is having a 50%
off sale on all Karastan rugs.
Owner Brett Hemphill says
his store has the largest selection
; of Karastan rugs in Southern
·California. Karastan rugs are
'made of 100% wool. machine
.woven in North Carolina and
come with a 20-year manufac-
turer's guarantee. Hemphill's
Rugs and Carpets is located at
230 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa.
For people who would like to
try an exercise program of person-
al training, Shape-Up Newport
(631-3623) is offering a six week
personal training special. The spe-
cial includes two-one hour person-
al training sessions a week, a full
physical assessment including
testing and ~nal goals and full
use of the club fadllties.
The six week special costs
$495, and there ~ no enrollment
fees or dues. Shape-Up Newport
ts bever too crowded, it's a limited
membership club. and it offers 200
aerobic classes a month including
yoga. It's located in Westcliff Plaza,
on the comer of 17th St. and Irvine
Ave. In Newport Beach.
One of my favorite clothing
stores, Bameys New York, is
having a men's summer preview
party today from 6 to 9:30 p.m.
"Bameys New York is located
on the second and third levels of
South Coast Plaza. near Nord-
strom in Costa Mesa. The sale
continues th.rough MemoriaJ
Day, May 27.
Another great saJe 1s under
way at Neiman Marcus, and this
one 1s for ladies. You'd be sur-
prised what great buys you can
find at Neunan's sales. Expect to
find discounts on selected items
marked down 40% Ln designer
and couture, sportswear and
Jewelry departments
Neiman Marcus (759-1900) is
located at Fashion Island in
Newport Beach.
Draper's & Damons (646-
5521) is having a pre-Memorial
Day sale at its Westcliff Plaza
store in Newport Beach. There is
a large selection of sportswear.
dresses, and accessories marked
down up to 60% off.
• BEST IUYS appears Thursdays and
Saturdays. If you know of a good buy
call me at 540-1224, fax me at 646-
4170 or write to me: Bm Buys Dally
Pilot. 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, 92627.
• LEAH HOGSTEN I DAILY PILOT
Art lover Jeni Dudgeon, 81, loves working with children at the Costa Mesa Art League.
.. Everything gets to be an awful ·mess by the end of the day, but it's loads of fun," she said.
JENI DUDGEON
Sketching out a life of art
SHE IS
An 81-year-old "doodler-
who volunteers with the Costa
Mesa Art League, setting up a
children's activities table when-
ever the group holds an event.
A REAL CUT UP
u1 cut out different shapes
and then spread them all out on
a table, and the kids can make
collages and pictures out of
them,• said Dudgeon, her blue
eyes sparkling. lighting up her
face as she talks about the chil-
dren she works with.
"Everything gets to be an
awful mess by the end of the
day, but it's loads of tun. The
kids are terrific. •
Dudgeon spends weeks
preparing for her events, cut-
. ting out tiny shapes from con-
struction paper and experi-
menting with other, more diffi-
cult projects for the older kids.
A CRAFlY lADY
·For the older girls, I have
bags of beads that I bring out,"
Dudgeon said. "They can string
the beads and make a necklace
or a bracelet. You know, I've got
to think of something different
for them.•
An octogenarian, Dudgeon
has lived through the depres-
sion and has learned how to be
resourceful -a characteristic.
that comes in bandy with
crafts.
"Sometimes I'll make dolls
out of toilet tissue rolls," she
said. "I'll make the heads out of
yarn and wrap paper around so
that the kids can color the face
and shirt and pants."
LIFELONG LOVE
Dudgeon developed a fove
for art early in life. Her mother
was a music major, and Dud-
geon and her five sisters grew
up with an awareness of art and
beauty. And all have held
careers in either music or art.
•I did machine embroidery
as a living,• _Dudgeon said.
"And my first sister paints and
is heavily into muski my sec-
ond sister is an art teacheri my
third sister teaches clothing
design; and my youngest sis-
ters are twins. One is an organ-
ist and the other teaches
piano." .
Dudgeon moved to Costa
Mesa 46 years ago with her
husband. She raised two
daughters, both of whom 19ve
art and music.
She's been a member of the
Costa Mesa Art League for 12
years and served as president in
the 1980s. She said she plans to
continue with her craft comer
for as long as she can. She's not
about to let her age get in the
way.
"When I turned 77, I was
telling people that I was cele-
brating my 50tb year of turning
21 ;• -Oudgeon said with a
chuckle. -People were giving
me a double take. I had a lot of
fun with that.•
-By Tina Borgatta
Officers' CPR training pays off
• Pair help save lite of 62-
year-old man who had
stopped breathing.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -When the
shift ended early Saturday morn-
ing for two veteran Costa Mesa
police officers, they went home
exhausted but elated.
Their graveyard shift included
saving a 62-year-old man's life.
At 12:08,a.m. a patron at a bar
in the 800 'block of 19th Street
flagged down a patrol car occu-
pied by police officers Jim Wagn-
er and Paul Cappuccilli.
"Someone came running out of
the Club Mesa bar and said
someone had a heart attack
inside,• Wagner recalled 111 told
the dispatcher to get the ,para-
medics and went inside the bar
with Cappucd.W. We saw the
owner of the bar, Mr. Smith laying
down on floor.The two officers
waded through the throng of
patrons, lookie loos and friends of
ruchard Smith who were gath-
ered around him crying and
yelling. 1Wo patrons were suc-
cessfully administering CPR and
Smith started breathing on his
own and gasping for breath,
Wagner said.
Then. Smith stopped breath·
ing.
The two officers immediately
took over and began administer-
ing CPR: trying to open his air-
ways and get his heart pumping.
"We worked as a pretty good
team/ Wagner said of his and
Cappuccilli's efforts. "(Cappucdl-
li) would count and I'd yell out,
'Breathe I'
"Always, in the back of my
mind I was thinking, 'Well when
are the paramedics going to show
up?'" Wagner said. The para-
medics arrived and both officers
were relieved when they "jump
started" Smiµi's heart.
•(Paramedics) said, 'Hey we
have a pulse. It's weak but we
have one,•• Wagner recalled.
"That's when we said, 'Alright!'
"l was surprised that he had
survived because even wi1b CPR,
there is a very low swvival rate."
he said.
Six years ago when Wagner
and another officer were in a siin-
ilar situation, the victim did not
sUJVIve, he said.
"When they die you \vish you
eould have been there at the
moment he lapsed into 1t, H Wagner
said. "As far as this one, 1 was there
the moment he went down.The
officers followed the ambulance
c:anying Smith to Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach. When
they arrived, the doctor on duty
told them Smith had a good chance
of surviving thanks to their efforts,
Wagner said.
Wagner checked up on Smith
on Sunday at Hoag and learned
he is in stable but critical condi-
tion.
"It was our training. We did it
and weren't thinking about it
until it was all over," Wagner
said. "It felt pretty good when we
left. We felt like we had helped
save a man's life."
Wiiiiam Lobdell. The same 24-
hout answetlng service may be
UMd to record letters to the
editor on any topic.
Dally Pilot, P.O. BOK 1560, Costa
~CA. 92626. ~ht No
news stories. lllustt.tlonf. edito-
rial matter or edvert!Mments
herelri can be reproduced wtth-
out written pemMssion of ww-
rlght OWM(.
~lURES
Newport Beach
72158
WEATHER
FRIDAY
First low ·• VOL 90, NO. 107 AQDBESS
O\.lf addrea Is 330 W. hy St., ccm. Mesa. c.111. 92627.
COMECDONS
It ts the "lot'1 policy to prompt-
ly correct all errots of 5'.lbsUnc.e.
Please call 574-4233. Thank you.
HOW TO REAOt US
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MWIC>Mm awnea otfke Ml-02, awn. ,u H1·Stol
~by .,.
~Community"""' a T1tMs Minor~ M
JilffNY I. KWft, ~llndao
• '"' c;.lff C'N. Al righb ,....,._.
Balboa
72158
Costa Mesa
74157
COf'on• del Mar
70l'58
SUltF fOMCAST
LOCATION . • . . • . • • SIZE
Wedge , , ....•... 2-3 SW
Newport ....•... 2-3 sw
81a<Jcia .•. , .. , , • 2-4 SW
ftivef Jetty , ...... 2-3 SW
CdM ••••• ; .•.... 2-3 SW
TIDD 10DAY
First low
3;.)4 a.m .•.•......•• -0.6
First h'9h
t:AI a.m .....••••••. 3.9
S.Cond low
3.01 p.m ..•.•••••••• 13
second~ 9:11 p.m ..•.•••••••• .5.1
4:12 a.m ....•....... -0.6
First high
10:30 a.m. . .......•. 3.8
Second low
3:33 p.m. • . . . •..... 1.5
S«ondhlgh
9:44 p.m... . . . ...... 5.7
WA11R ll~RATURE: .•.. 69
SwftlM W.vetrlllc
Building southwest swell
promlMS some htad-
hlgh and better waves
through tht Wffkend.
Monday, • shl~ to south
sOuthwest swelk could
trl~ some great 10-
footM. For dtlly wrf
rtpOrts Ind~
call (900) 976-SUAf. The
all COIU S1.SO,
Local man held in
suspected hit and run
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -An alleged-
ly intoxicated 20-year-old .Costa
Mesa man was arrested
Wednesday morning after he
repoitedly ran a red light, evad-
ed police in a high speed chase
and~jured another motorist
when be lost control of his car,
police said.
The driver, Tatsuya Homma
is also suspected of driving
under the influence of alcohol
and possibly drugs, Costa Mesa
police Lt John Fitzpatrick said.
Police ~overed Homma pos-
sessed a small amount of
methamphetamine, Fitzpatrick
said.
Homma exited the westside
of Norm's Restaurant on Harbor
Boulevard at 9:30 a.m. in his red
El Camino, and pulled into the
intersection of Newport Boule-
vard and Victoria Street, where
he sped through the ied light,
police said. Costa Mesa police
officer Russell Rose was at the
intersection and witnessed the
traffic violation .
With the red lights on his
patrol car shrieking, Rose
chased Homma but Homma
ignored the officer and drove
more than 60 mph northbound
on Harbor Boulevard for about
a block, police said .'
Homma zig-zagged across
the lanes with his car fishtailing
from the speed, police said. He
lost "control of bis car and struck
a gray Toyota sedan driven by
Julia Moreno, a 20·year-old
Costa Mesa resident. Moreno
suffered minor injuries in the
collision, which forced both cars
off the road, police said.
Both Homma and his passen-
ger, Mak.ito Kawabe, 23, of
Orange, also suffered minor
injuries. They and Moreno were
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospi-
tal where all three were treated
· and released, police said.
Homma was arrested and
booked into Costa Mesa City
Jau on felony charges of evad-
ing a police officer, driving
under the influence and pos-
sessing dangerous drugs, police
said. He is also charged with a
misdemeanor hit and run .viola-
tion. Homma's bail is set at
$10,000.
Pedestriari loses wallet,
cellular phone to robber -
WEST NEWPORT -A 54-
year-old Newport Beach man
who was walking on a bike path
Tuesday evening was robbed at
gunpoint by a bandit who made
off with the victim's wallet, credit
cards and cellular phone.
The victim, a computer consul-
tant, was walking along the bike
path between Pacific Coast High-
way and Balboa Coves under the
~ewport Boulevard overpass,
when a man walked up and said,
•stop. This is a gun. Tum around,
don't face me," according to
. police.
The robber, who ordered the
victim to put his wallet and cellu-
lar phone on the ground and to
empty his pockets, made olf with
the $300 cellular phone and $50
in cash. The robber was last seen
PO
running toward Lido Marina Vil-
lage, police said.
The victim walked to a pay
phone in the 3300 block of West
Coast Highway and called 911,
police said.
The victim said two cyclists
rode by during the robbery and
may have witnesSed it, Newport
Beach police Sgt. John Desmond
said. Police detectives want to
locate the cyclists and are asking
witnesses to call the Newport
Beach Police Department ....
The thief is described as a
white man in his late 20s, about 5
Ceet 10 inches tall, 180 pounds,
with dirty blonde, wavy hair and
a dark weathered tan. He was
also wearing khaki shorts and a
dark green shirt.
-By Carolyn Miller
COSTAMESA '
• 500 block of Ntton: A man left his car ln a parking structure and went to
dinner and a baseball game. When he went to A?trlew his car, he found the
window smashed and $10,420 of his property gone lndudlng a $10,000 lap
top computer and a briefcase.
• 1100 block of Brittol: A woman was using a restroom at South Coast •
Plaza and forgot her $100 cellular phone in thfl bathroom stall. When she
went to retrieve the phone, It was gone.
• 2800 blodc of Fairview Avenue: While a woman was cooking food In the
kitchen of a local church for a Boy Scout banquet, a man came in and asked to • use the phone to call one of the scoots. The woman obliged, and left hlrn alone :
for five minutes while he used the phone. When she returned, her purse was
gone. The purse was later found discarded In a pl.nter outside of the church •
with her S 12 cash, bank card and aedlt union card mlssing. The thief is described ;
as a S foot 7 inc.hes tall grungy v.tllte male about 30 to 40 years old and weigh-
ing 190 pounds. He was wearing darit pants and a multi<olored shirt.
• 2800 block of Falnri9w Avenue: A burglar let hlmself Into a house
through and open window and stole $3,500 of jewelry lnduding a 14 lcarat
gold bracelet and 12 gold rings with diamond settings. The jewelry was In a
box that the burglar moved from the master bedroom to the baby crib.
NEWPORr HAOt
• 1900 block West OclNr1 Front: A burglar snudt Into a residenrs garage
through I side door and stole a S 100 fridge and two bikes worth S 1,400.
• 200 block of Newport c.nt.r Drive: A burglar used a large rock to
smash the front window of a business and stole $25,000 worth of jewelry
Including several watches and rings. Th~ thief, who ransacked the business,
left a footprint on a table and other evidence In his wake.
•
..
Return of
park rangers
a concern
By Tina Borgatta, Daily Pilot
-.i--~~--.;;...._~~.;.._~.
COSTA MESA -lt would
.cost the city an estimated
$107,000 a year to bring back
a park ranger program,
according to Costa Mesa Parks
· Superintendent Dave Alkema
That's how much it would
cost to hire two full-time and
two part-time rangers, train
them and outfit them witi
equipment, uniforms and a
four-wheel-drive vehicle.
•nie concern that I have
is w}\ether or not it's cost
effective and better than just
as~i~g sworn police offi-
cers ro the park,~ Mayor Joe
Erickson said. "I understand
the benefit of having people
in the park. but I think we
need more than just publiC'
relations-type people.
"We need people who can ·
enforce the law.•
The OOginal park ranger pro-
gram was disrnntinued several
years ago, after a ranger ran
over a transient who was sleep-
. ing in \Wson Park and jlecl the
soone. But the dty's Parks Com-
mission bas asked the City
Coundl to oonsider bringing the
irogram back. saying residents
have exp'eSSed cooams about
. activities in unsupervised parks.
"I've had a a;umber of res-
idents who live near the
parks complain about behav-
ior that eventually escalates
to the r.;>int where they have
to call the police," Alkema
told the council during a
study session on the matter.
"I think if these people knew
there was a ranger in the
· park. they would be less like-
ly to continue that behavior."
Under the city's first pro-
gram, the rangers were part-
time ·employees who were
paid an hourly wage.
Under the new proposal,
the full-time rangers would be
· paid a salary of about $42,000,
induding benefits. The part,
time rangers would be paid $7
• an hour. And the candidates
-for the positions would Under-
go extensive saeening.
But Erickson said he won-
. ders if that money might be
_., better spent hiring more
· · sworn office.rs and directing
·. the Police Department to beef
-up its park patrols. On Mon-
day, Police Chief Dave Snow-
.' den seemed open to that idea.
"If you gave me $107,000
~ a year and said that money
was to be used to patrol the
parks, I don't think I'd have a
problem working that into
my budget,· Snowden said.
by Deedreea Rich, D.D.S.
1YING UP
• PERIODON11TIS
: The latest ucaunent being used by
-dentisu to prevent periodontitis
;in\'Olves wrapping the base of the
:tooth with a floss-like fiber coated
-with an antibiotic in hopes of killing ~bacteria dw reside in diseased gum
~ers. It is in thest pockeu that
:bacteria congregate and attadc tiisucs
•that amch teeth to the gums. As the
:pockets enlarge, the bacteria may find :their way down co the bone that holds
•teeth and ~. resulting in teeth mat
:tooecn and fall out. To prevent this
0 propasion to pcriodootiw (advanced
:sum disease), the dentist wraps the
·fiber saturated with antibiorics around
. the tooch in the gull\ eoWU beneath
:the gum ~ne. Thctt u resides for 1
:periOd of ten days, all the while
-rtleuing small amounu of :tet~ine. According to studies, thlt
:gcrm·fighti ng nme1y yields a
•apiliaJlt reduction in ~ poc:ktu :a.id blecdin1t with rcsul11 luting up to
t*mondi&.
THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996
.
Getting smart ••• it's cheaper than1 a prison bond
W hen No. 1 daughter
finally reached the last
year of her tow at
Corona del Mar High School,
she had her life pretty well fig-
ured out.
She would take photography
and field hockey and every oth-
er pushover course she could
find. Her senior year would be a
virtual vacation -and it almost
destroyed her.
Midway through her fresh-
man year at Iowa State, Diana
was in danger of flunking out.
She didn't, thanks to her deter-
mination and the sisters at Kap-
pa Alpha Theta, who bore down
on our daughter far more harsh-
ly than we ever would have.
The kid made it. She gradu-
ated in the allotted four years
(and last weekend received a
Master of Arts degree from Uni-
versity of Colorado).
Her problems were due, in
part, to a certain amount of
ufreshmanitis" and the usual
overabundance of social life.
Worst of all, in coasting
through her last year of high
school, Diana left herseU totally
unprepared for the rigors of
academics at a vePf tough wri-
versity.
11"\ 1111 11>\"I
fred .,t'
martin
But if Delaine Eastin, Califor-
nia's outspoken superintendent
of public instruction, has her
way, liigh school seniors won't
be able to design such cushy
programs for themselves.
They will be too busy busting
their buns trying to keep up
with the ultimate demands of a
far-reaching program to return C8.lif ornia education to the good
old days -when we were at
the top, not the bottom.
Here are the bare bones of it:
First, certain high-perfor-
mance school districts become
uChallenge" districts by adopt-
ing the goals of Eastin's pro-
gram .. These become the pace-
setters and models as other dis-
tricts join in. However, such pio-
neer districts will face ~ dense
jungle of red tape and educa-
tion-code blockades.
But, Eastin vows, "You help
me focus on results, I'll help you
remove the detail, the red tape,
the incessant reports."
The original nucleus of Chal-
lenge districts become the
vanguard of the entire concept.
So far, 40 districts have signed
on for the program, 83 more
have "expressed interest.•
Then come Eastin's Ten
Commandments:
1. Content and Performance
Standards. "Develop and adopt
content and performance stan-
dards at every grade level in
language arts, mathematics, sci-
ence, history-social scieni::e, for-~
eign language, visual and per-
forming arts, health ... and physi-
cal education, career prepara-
tion and applied learning ... "'
2. Assessment and Account-
ability. "Adopt a comprehensive
accountability system to mea-
swe student perfarrnance" in
grade-level expectations, with
data collected in spring 1997
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being baseline.
3. Safe schools. "Kids can't
learn and teacher's can't teach
at schools that are not sale."
4. Proper Facilities and Tech-
nology. "We need to put tech-
nology in every classroom.
Computer power is the cheapest
thing there is.•
5. Family-school partner-
ships. The objective is to get
every element of the education
universe pulling together -
administrators, teachers, par-
ents, students, local businesses
and the community at large.
6. Leaming Plans. "Eadi stu-
dent bas a learning plan tai-
lored t<> his or her needs and
that provides parents with a
clear understanding of expecta-
tions."
7. Site-based Decision Mak-
ing. Staff, parents and·students
will have primary responsibility
for key decisions.
8. Staff and CoJnl1lunity
Training. So everybody involved
knows exactly what's going on.
9. High School Graduation
Requirements. At a minimum,
these include four year-long
courses in English, including lit-
erature and wnting; three m
history and social science
(including civics and econom-
ics); algebra and geometry,~
laboratory science, foreign lan·
guage, visual or pe.rfo.rming ~
and career education. ..
10. The Test. The class of . .,.
2004 will have to "demonstra&r:
mastery of the curriculum.• In ;ot
other words, Calif omia studett
will have to pass an end-of-. · ..
course examination in most s'6C
1ects -just ~ is required of . : :
high school students in France;-
Britam, Germany, Japan and
most other leading nations.
T here is opposition to Eastin'.!,
plan from both sides of the
political spectrum. Some factol)S
don't really want California
schools to recover. But they'll . -
have to deal with a very tough
lady, first. . ....
Says Eastin: "The new patQo-
tism should be, Teach your ~-·
dren well.'" .
So, what will that cost? Not . •
much more than $2 billion,
Eastin figures, primarily for
reducing class sizes. "That's the
same as the next prison-bond ·
issue on the ballot.·
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STUART
WEITZMAI
·.,
I AJl TH\MSOAV. MAY 16, 1996
J ~omeowners not happy with F~ inactiOn
• Resident.S say they are
d~g federal agency's job
by having to notify insur-
ance companies of flood
C?ntrol improvements.
By' 1rina Borgatta, Daily Piiot
also is relying On the municipali-
ties to inform the homeowners of
the redesignation.
COSTA MESA -Residents
li&g along the Santa Ana River
am accusing the Federal Emer-g~cy Management Agency of
"Sblrking" its responsibilities by
re<tuiring homeowners and busi-
n~ss owners notify their insurance
8 COIPpanies if they want to receive
a 'cut on their rates.
"The ftood 'insurance issue is
another fine example of govern-
ment gone wrong,• said Mesa
Verde resident Nancy Palme,
whose home is pi the redesignal-
ed area. "People should not have
to tight to get what is properly
due them, especially when the
govemtnent has taken it from
them by force."
j . FEMA recently announced its
re<fesignation of the local flood
} plain to reflect improvements
~the Santa Ana Riv'er Main-
r slitam flood control project, ..f\1.ch bas resulted in a decreased rJt of flooding in the area. The
h ~ge could shave as much as
b ~e-balf off homeowners' flood
r1 ~ance rates.
c :: However, FEMA is leaving it
When a homeoW!ler sets up ~
policy, the local insurance carrier
collects a fee for National Flood
Insurance Services, which is a
federal agency. For Palme, who is
in the process of selling her home,
that fee bas increased steadily
over the last few years.
~ to the property owners to noti-
s fy-their mortgage lenders and
d irisurance companies of the
s change. And, the federal agency
b •
·Had we not been in esaow,
a
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ll ..
d : ,.
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:: MAY 16th. 1996
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• Exten"vc extracurricul111 programlli
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650-3442
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•Drain• problems? We.
lolvethem.
our flood insurance fee for this
year would have been $496,"
Palme said. •Last year, the fee
was $448. The year before that, it
was $419. So, in th& three years
since the Santa Ana Flood project
was completed, our premium has
continued to escalate, even
though we really never have
been in danger of flooding.
"We've been paying money
down a black bole for 21 years.
And in that 21 years, we had
water come over our curb once.•
Palme said she thinks FEMA
should be the one to inform insur-
ance companies and lenders of
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the change. And she's not alone.
The local buitnea community
ec:boel bar ~btl.
P.d Fawcett, executive director
of the Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commtm:e, has sent a letter to
Congressman Dana Rohrabacher,
asking for his ass1stanCe on the
matter. Rohrabacher was instru-
mental in persuading PEMA to
reassess the flood plain in this
area.
"In reading the letter that
FBMA sent to the dty in April,
informing the mayor about the
redesignation, I realized that
FEMA was just passing the buck,
making the dty and the home·
owners do all the work. They
were shirking their responsibili-
ties."
Kathleen Hollingsworth, a
spokeswQJnan from Rohrabach·
er's Huntington Beach office, said
the congressman bas been in
Washington since Tuesday and
hadn't received a copy of Faw·
cett's letter. She said she'll be
speaking to him about the issue
within the next two weeks:
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COSTA MBSA -NatioDal UrilVslltY will rek>Cate itl lsvtne camr-to Calta Mela in Ocio-
ber. &IJdnQ aver a buBding once
~by Western DJgital.
•we're going to be getting more~ footage here, and
we beli8Ve that Costa Mesa iS
just gaiDg to provide UI a bet-
ter site,• said Bill Flickbiger,
the school's director of admin-
istrative support services-.
•Right now, we're in a busi-
ness complex. We have our
own building, but we have to
share parking. 'Tbil will allow
us a stand-alone building with
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_N_.wpon ____ Beac ___ hleos __ ~~~M~e..=-:Daily~·~p~ilot=---~--------=-=------------:---------------~------~-----------------------------------------TH~U~RSO~~AY.~,~M~A~Y~1~6~,~1996~--____;A~5t • District may get transfer requests
in wake of school boundary · Change
• Some new students who attend Wilson Elementary
are now in Adams Elementary enrollment area. They
can choose \vhich school they prefer. ·
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -School
administrators are now faced with
the same challenge they were a year
ago after school board members
adjusted the attendance boundary
between Adams and Wilson ele-
mentary schools -what to do with
students who don't want to II¥JVe.
Last year, trustees extended the
filing period for intra-district trans-
fer requests from the JoAnn Street-
area children who wanted to con-
tinue at Adams instead of mbving
to their new home school -Wilson.
Tuesday, school trustees voted
to reverse the Adams-Wilson
boundary change after the U.S.
Department of Education's Civil
Rights Office threatened the dis-
tric;t with a lawsuit, citing poten-
tial racial disainlination.
Though the dedsion won't have
an effect on the 90 or so students
who decided to stay at Adams this
year, it does impact new students
who went to Wilson this year
because it was their home school,
but now find themselves in the
Adatns atteridance area.
Last year, the school board
members extended the transfer
deadline as part of the motion to
adjust the boundaries, something
they failed to address Tuesday.
School officials say it was an
oversight.
. "What we're going to do is go
through the same process (as last
year)," Superintendent Mac
Bemdsaid.
Bernd said the district will
make an. effort to inform the
affected parents of their option to
1he Hope Institute
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remain at Wll.son. He said he did-
n't know bow many students
would be affected this time.
"We will have to handle every-
thing on an individual basis,• he
said.
lhlstee Ed Decker, who pro-
posed ·the boundary change last
year, said the district will have to
make accommodations this fall
for the new students who want to
remain at Wilson.
"We're going to have to make
sure they have the choice and are
aware of it,• he said. "I think this
takes precedence over any dead-
lines we have about transfers.•
Decker said that while the
board rescinded last year's
boundary move, they may have to
consider adjusting the boun_daries
at Adams -and other Costa
Mesa schools -to make room for
projected enrollment increases.
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I LARGER CITRIJb l ~ I
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I ~ I
briefly in the news ·-• --:
Woman allegedly
stabbed by estranged
boyfriend
A 27-year-old Rancho Santa
Margarita woman's estranged
boyfriend allegedly stabbed her in
the neck with a steak knife Wednes-
day while the two were embracing
in the lobby ot a Newport Beach
office building, police said.
Police are searching for Ramon
Rodriguez, 35, who went to the
office building in the 4100 block
of MacArthur Boulevard to talk to
his girlfriend, Jodi Breedlove,
who works there, Newport Beach
police said. The two had been
fighting and had recently ended
their relationship, police said.
Breedlove met Rodrlgue'L in the
lobby to talk at 4: 10 p.m., police said
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While the two were hugging,
Rodriguez pulled out an 8-inch steak
knife and stabbed Breedlove in the
neck causing a superfidal wound,
polire said The two fought aver the
knife and Rodriguez punched
Breedlove then ran away, police said.
The victim was treated at Hoag
Memorial Hospital and released.
The couple have a child together
and were living together until
their break up, police said.
Police are asking anyone with
information on Rodrtguez to call
them at (800) 550-NBPD.
Robber hits bank on
17th Street
The Great Western Bank on
17th Street was robbed Wednes-
day afternoon by a thief who
-escaped with more than $1,000
cash, police said. .-
A man wearing big brown sun--
glasses and a brown leather jack·~
et walked into the bank.in the 200 •
block of 17th Street at 4:50 p.m. ..
and stood in line with the othef·.
customers, police said.
When it was his tum, the man •
walked up to the teller and--
showed her a note which read;v
MTbis is a robbery. Don't let me
hurt you," Costa Mesa police Sgt.
George Yezbick said. • •(•
The teller obliged and hande,d.
over the cash. The robber walk~ ,
out without saying a word o.r'
showing any type of weapoi\,
police said . No one was injured.' .. ;.,
The robber ,was desaibed os,·,
male Latino in his 30s, 5-foot-11 ~
180 JX>unds. • n
-By Carolyn MW~.
' A"6 THURSDAY, MAY116, 1996
TODAY
---~
READERS THEATRE
Readers Theatre presents
·oa.ndehon Wine" by Ray Brad-
bury at 7 p.m at Newport Beach
Central Library. 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For more
utlormation, call 499-3665.
LAW AUXILIARY
The Orange County Law Awe.-
Wary will hold their monthly lun-
cheon meeting and mstalling of
1996-97 board of directors at
l l :30 a.m. at the rutz Restaurant,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
mation, call 752-1839.
'WILD ISLE' PARTY
Newport Dunes Resort's Back
Bay Cafe wt.11 hold a fun~aiser
tropical party to benefit Friends
ln Sel'Vlce to Humanity at 6 p.m.
at the 8dck Bay Celle, t 131 Back
Bay Dnve, Newport Beach. Enjoy
live music. limbo, and tropical
cu1sine as well as a tack.Jest
Hdwauan shirt contest. Tickets
are $15 tn advance and $20 at the
door For more information or
reservations, call 729-3863.
DRAMATIC READING
· The public is invited to a dra-
malic reacting of Ray Bradbury's
'Danclellon Wmen at 7 p.m. in
the Fnends Meellng Room of the
New·port Beach Central Li brary,
l 000 Avocado Ave. For more
Lnlonnation, call 717-3801.
WRITERS WORKSHOP •
A s1X-week writing workshop
!or advanced writers will begin at
I 0 a m. at Local brounds Coffee
I louse, 3007 E. Coast Highway in
c~orona del Mar. The cost ts $125
.i'ld preregistration is essential
For more inlonndl.lon, call 760-
808h
FRIDAY
STUDENT FILM & VIDEO
• nrangP Codst College w1ll
st.:ige its 2bth annual Student
r1lm ctnd Video Festival at 7 pm.
on f\.lay 17 m OCC's Fine Arts
Hall 119 Approxtmately 100
hours of film dnd Vldeo were sub-
mitted tor review and a panel of
JUdges narrowed the entries
down to a three-hour program. A
$3 donation will be collected at
the door. For more inionnation,
· call 432-5922.
FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS
Newport Harbor Art Museum
presents "Ball of Fire", Barbara
Stanwyck 1s a Burlesque dancer
who moves in with eight prissy
professors, led by Gary Cooper, to
explain slang lo them for their
encycloped.Ja, at 6:30 p m. at the
museum, 850 San Clemente Dn-
ve in Newport Beach. J\d.m.lss10n
is $5 or $3 for members and stu-
dents. For more tnformauon, call
759-1122 ...
THE HOUSING EXPO
The Housmg Expo will be at
Orange County Fairgrounds
today through May 18 m Bwld-
mgs 14 and 16. Hours are from 1 t
am. to 9 p.m . today and 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. on Saturday. The Hous-
mg Expo offers tnformation and
education tor consumers on buy-
tn<J, selling, investing and financ-
ing real estate. More than 325
booths will be exhibiting. Ad.mis-
i.1on 1s $6. For more information,
cctU bJl-0600.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERT
Clinton Rusich plays
pop/jazz/rock from 7 to 10 p.m
un lh£> Town Square at Tuangle
Square The concert is free
SATURDAY
KINGSTON TRIO
The Kingston Tho will perform
at 8 pm. m Orange Coast Col-
lege's Robert B. Moore Theatre.
The tno's trademark lhree-part
hdrmony and clean cnsp sound 1s
~ t .4 ' >' 0 U 0 s f';.
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TOYS & ACCESSORIES, ETC.
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Behind Shell Station
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t1 ----.---r
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known to generations of music tans. Tickets are S2• 1n advance
and $28 at the door. for more
information, call 432-5880.
ARTS/QtAm FESTIVAL
The Third Annual Balboa
Peninsula Fine Arts/Crafts Festi-
val sponsored by the Balboa Mer-
chants/Owners Association will
be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the
Balboa Peninsula today and Sun-
day. The event features local arts,
foods and stores plus rides. For
more information, CA.11673-7763.
PROGRAM ON MS RESEARCH '
People who have multiple sde-
rosis, their families, health profes-
sionals and others are invited to a
free nationwide mixed-media
conference, "Progress and
Promise in MS Reseaxch," from
11 :30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at Hoag
Cancer Center in Newport Beach
Registration is required. For more
miormation, call 752-1680.
TOUR DE CURE
The American Diabetes Asso-
ciation fundraising bicycle event
begins at 8 a.m. at Newport
Dunes with continental breakfast
and registration. The event offers
three different routes of to, 20 or
30 miles. RegiJtratioo is $20 and
cyclists are asked to raise a mini-
01um of $50 in pJedges. Por more
information, call 622-7940.
5"'1NG RTMESS DAY
Corona del Mar Rehab is pre-
senting a ·spring Fitness Day"
from 9 to 11 :30 a .m. at their clinic,
2600 E. Coast Highway. The free
expo will include blood pressw-e
screening, weight loss counsel-
ing, exercise and conditioning
programs. Call 640-2121.
CENTENNIAL FARM BENEFrT
The Centennial Farm Powtda-
tion sponsors a benefit dinne r at
6:30 p.m . in building 12 of the
orange County Fairgrounds. For
more information, call 708-1619.
TRIANGLE SQUARE
Jeff Johnson plays classic rock
from 1 to 4 p.m. and Landslide
will perlorm folk/rock from 7 to 1 O
p.m. on the Town Square at 'liian-
gle Square. The concerts are free.
'TREASURE ISlAND'
Orange Coast College's Chil-
dren's Theatre Company presents
an adaptation of Robert Louis
Stevenson's. "1Teasure Island" at
2 p.m. today and Sunday in
OCC'• Drama Lab Tileatre. The
35-minute production ii an audi-
ence participation event designed
to get children interested in the
theater. nckets are $5. For more
information, call "32-5932.
SPRINGTIME IN MNS
The Women'• Ministries of
Mariners South Cout church pre-
sent an open air flower and veg-
etable market, street artists and
musicians a.s well as museum and
studio art at their "Springtime in
Paris" event from 9:30 a.m. to
noon at 1000 Bison. More than
800 women will attend. For more
information, call 854-7600.
SUNDAY ...__~~"'"2-
ART O~ DINING IX
Newport Harbor Ai1 Museum
pr~ents the black tie event, "Art
of Dining," a celebration of food,
wine and art, beghuling at 6 p.m.
on Sunday, May 19 at the Pour
Season's Hotel Newport Beach.
The event features artist Edward
Ruscha and master chef Joachim
Splichal and six of the hottest cull-
nary stars from around the coun-
try will prepare a sis-course
menu. The event benefits exhibi·
tion and education programs at
the museum. Por more infonna-
tion oneservation.s, call 759-11;l2.
BAKE a CD SALE
Saint Michael and All Angels
Episcopal Church will hold their
annual bake and Cd sale is imme-
diately following the 8 and to
a.m. services at 3233 Pacific View
Drive in Corona del Mar. Deli-
cious pies, cakes and pastries will
be available for purchase as well
as Cds, video and audio tapes. For
more information, call 644-0463.
ANNUAL SPRING FAIR
Sherman Ubraiy and Gardens
celebrates its Spring fair from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. at 2647 E. ~t
Highway, Corona del Mar. This
year's theme is "Disc~ver
Nature's Diversity." Pre-sale tick·
ets are $15 for adults, $10 for chil·
dren and indudes lunch. nckets
are $12 for adults and $6 for chil-
dren at the door and do not
include lunch. Don't miss the
exhibits, sale booths, music, crafts
and demonstrations. Pacepaint-
~
ing and c:bi1d.ren'1 aalts, too. PO-
mo .. lnforuuition: can 613-2261.· w~aMNDM~
Les Brown and bis Band «
Renown bring the dusic IOU1lds o(
the 17-plece ~ bend to Otan~
Coast College's Robert B. Moore
'Ibeetre at 4 p.m. today. Brown's
bits indude •Sentimental Jour-
ney• and •rve Got My Love To
Keep Me warm.• He and his band
have pedonned at inaugmal balls
for Nixon and Reagan a.s well as
perlonning with Prank Sinatra and
Bing Crosby. For more infonna.
tion, call 432-5880.
'PROPHETS a CO.'
The First United Methodist
Church of Costa Mesa presents
the musical •Prophets & Co." at 9
and 10:30 a.m. The lively mUSical
concerns the stories of the Old
Testament prophets who were
sometimes heeded and sometimes
scorned by their people. Compos-
er Galt MacDennot, •ttatr", is no
stranger to devotional composi-
tion and his "Prophets• music fea-
tures some homespun melodies
with a country western flair. For
more information, call 548-7727.
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economic development of Newport Beach."
MONDAY' MAY 20
Newport Beach Country Club
T N I
NEWfCEI" RFNJi COU NT •1' c ~u •
~ ...... 'i.Jl,g··· Fea"~
"Home of the Toshiba
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O I would like more info regarding sponsorship opportunities. .
Pl6as8 fill In nam6S & cl'6Ck items
participating In ...
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N~l't'pott Beach/Ccma Mesa Daily Piloc THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996 A7
~ayne Meadows to share her life's journey with local crowd
Sometime after the greal war
in harmony with the temno.:
logical boom and the baby
boom, the arid San Fernando Val-
ley began to replace it's bean
fields and dtrus groves with rows ~,( tiouses in the fashion that came
1d be known as the California
ranch.
,In the golden hills just west of
wliat was then a sleepy Sepulveda
l>ass, the conununity of Encino
evolved fTom ranch land, belong-
ing to the likes of Clark Gable in~o the nesting grounds of a ~ew
breed of celebrity -those of the
small screen.
\o. And the 1V royalty poured into
an enclave fittingly designated as
Encino's Royal Oaks.
1Wo generations later, Royal
Oaks is a monument to a fading
"Leave It To Beaver-sensibility.
The hills are still filled with elec-
tronic royalty. Their sprawling
ranch homes are now classic
examples of the good times past.
At the top of one point, com-
manding a view of all the domain
below, is the residence of a man
atid woman who.se names are
J:nexorably linked to the electronic
kingdom. Steve Allen and Jayne
Meadows were among the pio-neers who created the great Cali-
fornia lifestyle in Encino. They
raised their son, Bill, now a father
himself and a successful 1V exec-
utive, in the unpretentiously ele-
gant home that ;is filled with equal
b.w.
cook
amounts of memorx and vibrant
daily life.
Meadows is scheduled to speak
at a benefit for the House Ea.II
Institute of Orange County next
Thursday at the Sutton Place
Hotel in Newport Beach. So, we
caught up with meadows recently
at the co_uple's_ hQIDe.
Meadows, 73, answered the
massive door attired in a smart
suit of black, white and red dots -
the kind of suit that a handsome
woman would wear to her Beverly
Hills ladies luncheon. Meadows
has, in fact, just swept in from her
afternoon obligation. Her hair is
perfect. Her makeup is perfect.
Her legs are showgirl quality, a
calling card to her beginnings in
show business.
"This is a scale model of the ·
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mission that my father built in
China,• said the wife, mother, and
star, explaining the presence of a
large yet delicate model encased
in glass that is also a reminder of
the land where Meadows spent
her finrt seven years of life. She
has launched into a tour o( her
home and a tour of her life in one
instant. .
"Yes, this is Steve's piano. This
instrument has accompanied him
on thousands of musical' adven-
tures," she said.
Leather-bound volumes line the
library's wooden shelves, contain-
ing an irreplaceable lifetime of
work. Allen is both a prolific writer
and chronicler of social and politi-
cal trends. Meadows, who is his
second wife, is both life partner
and librarian.
Their home is grand in scale.
As the tour continues, a formal liv-
ing room incorpora_tes American-
designed upholstel'ed' furniture
with French fauteuils, and anti~e
colonial chests fronting either side
of the fireplace that hint at Mead-
ows early American ancestry. She
hails from "of the manner born"
East Coast society, yet was the
child of rebel parents who broke
away from the expected standard
to forge their own paths.
She explains Steve was "more
or less the abandoned cbild of
alooholic vaudevillians." Silver
framed photos boast their friend-
ship with presidents and movie
stars. Awards abo\llld, and sollp-
tures stand M a proud testament
to a lifetime of work that has pro-
duced a lifetime of accomplish-
ment and reward.
Pa8sing a formal dining room of
celadon green and gilt inspired by
Louis XV, (with the exception of a
TV and VCR set up beside the
buffet), Meadows settles in for the
inte.{View in her garden room. We
sit in a comer of the long loggia
that faces the almost Olympic-
sized pool Steve uses every morn-
ing for his swim. Jayne Duffs a pil-
low on her corner sectional of soft
pale peach suede.
"May I tell you how 1 met
Steve?-she said with her face
glowing. ·we were both working
in New York at the time, and we
were also both just dealing with
our respective divorces. He asked
me out on a date and told me he
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law in which vou excel or that holds a special
interest for you. However. for the ~tudenl
pursuing his or her JO degree. a specialty 1s
not necessary or even available. In Jddition
to the broad range of sub1er1s offered,
Western State Univer. 1ty is proud 10 help
students develop a higher level of expertise
in pan1cular areas of in1eres11hrough electives
within the basic rumculum.
While specialization 1sn·1 a normlll part of
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t
was gimig to take me somewhere
very special. We ended up at the
Planetarium. He said, some guys
may take me to dinner, others
may take me to the theater, but he
was ta.king me to the moon.~
Their marriage has been ~ed
on that kind of magic. ~It has also
been based on mutual respect,
dialogue, and of course a great
deal of love and support,• Mead-
ows said ~1 also must tell you that
1 took a back seat to Steve's
career, and gave up my own in
favor o( being a wife and a moth-
er."
She claims her non-fernirust
stance.has made her own life .
work.
nu.serable at this point in their
lives. They have failed maniages,
problematic relationshlps with
their chtldren, and all because
they made a career choice a first
choice."
With family grown, Meadows
has returned to her career. Offers
are pouring in for both film and
television, in part because of
renewed visibility on the CBS-1V
comedy "High Society. H And. s~
is out on the speaker's circuit
entertaining audiences with her
acclaimed one-woman show on
the great women of history.
Orange County will benefit
from her point of view next week.
as Meadows shares her life's jour-
ney with the local crowd. The
event is billed as "The Power of
Women.· Tickets can be pur-
chased by calling 643-9260.
"You can't have it all. At least
not at the same time,· continued
Meadows, who very clearly does
have it all, and has it in her own
way. "I look at so many of my
friends who are quite frankly qwte • B.W. COOK'S columns run evecy Thu~
day and Saturday.
42ND ANNUAL
MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES
MAY 27, 1996 ll:OOAM
Floral Wreath Presentation
• Commemoratin.£.ihose Who Served In
WWI• •KOREA
Harbor Lawn -Mount Olive
Mortuary & Memorial Park
I b25 C1slt'r A•<' • Co la Mt';.a
540-5554
~ J~~P!'T~~H~-
D on 't Forget
Father 's Day
(j1w Thr (i1fl TIMI
Only You Cm li1vC'
MOTHER
& CHILD
. SPECIAL
SAVE so-OFF
SITTINGS
T ired ot Ion ii, lines.
BRAD 'S NfW JOB Af lHf GYM HAS DONf
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Then 11\ ume w
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start JI an ,1flord-
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,. •
. • •
.
THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996
ENTEllTAINMI
MAKING
FASHION
HISTORY
; • Vmtage clothin~ is what
former history doctoral
candidate Josh Speyer
studies now.
By Carolyn Miller, Dai/}t Piiot
J osh Speyer is a large man
who looks more like a lum-
berjack in ill-fitting sports-
wear than an up-and-coming
fashion maven.
But don't let his towering
fonn, booming voice and Messy
Marvin appearance fool you.
The 25-year-old Newport Beach
resident can click off colors and
code words with the ease of a
fashion guru or a glam-mag fan.
weekend
' MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Our discussion turned to
sweater sets when he admired
the one I was wearing and
qwckly sum.med up a deeper
meaning to the whole ensemble: Newport Beach resid ent Josh Speyer, 25, was workhig on a doctorate at UC Berkeley when he
"You like that Jackil! 0 . look.
It's soft, it's feminine," he said.
decided to get into the clothing business -vintage clothing, that is. He now operates a small outlet ·
in Costa Mesa called "Stateside Garment Traders."
I hadn't thought that much
about it when I donned the set,
but who am I to question a man
who's in the business of buying
and selling clothes for tus new
and used garment trader store,
Stateside, m Costa Mesa.
And m the 14 months since
he opened the store's bright red
doors at 1759 Newport Blvd.,
Stateside has been a hit. mostl y
with the 25-and-under crowd.
who are into wearing inexpen-
sive. hip. used clothing. A sec-
ond store is scheduled to open
Saturday at The Lab.
Speyer's trail to buying and
selling togs is fittingly uncon-
-_ventianal.
As an honors history student
at UC Berkeley, he was on the
track to earning his doctorate
with a focus on 18th century
horological technology -the sci-
ence or art of studying or mea-
suring tune. •
But along the way. Speyer
ended up broke and started sell-
ing his clothes to his friends to
make a buck, he said.
Speyer's friends apparently
noticed and appreciated his
fastuon sense and asked him to
go clothing shoppmg for them at
thnft and used clothing stores.
One day, when he came in with
an armful of clothing to sell at a
trade store on Haight Street in
San Francisco, they hired him
on the spot.
~1 knew what was up," he
said, shrugging his large shoul-
ders and shoving his hands into
the drooping pockets of his kha-
ki shorts. ·1 had an eye for what
people wanted to buy.•
Knowing that there was noth-
mg like it in Orange County,
Speyer, a graduate of Corona
del Mar High School, took a
gamble. The young entrepre-
neur left his graduate degree in
limbo, took out a small business
loan and opened up Stateside,
which boasts 2,500 pieces of
clothing ranging in price from
$4 to $64.
"So much of Orange County
is corporate, stuck-up, major
label," he said, sounding every
bit like an angst-filled member
of Generation X. "People here
have style and want to be differ-
ent amidst this stucco waste-
land.
"We are the incongruity here.
That's the appe~."
The tiny store with a mus-
tard-colored linoleum floor emits
a 1970s flair. Disco music echoes
from all comers and funky gar-
ments with flapping collars and
flaring bottoms line the walls
and crowd the racks.
·Right now, the 70s (styles)
are really rockin'." said Speyer,
who studies people to find out
oo~eberrie~ • restaurant• catermg
Serving Breakfast Daily
Poppyseed Belgium Waffles with lnnon curd and fresh berries
Pou.to Pancakes with Englis.h Banger
Thick Sliced French Toast with seasonal, fruit
Frittata of the Day served on weeknuis
r-----~-------------------~
I
F.Y.I.
+ WHA'r. Stateside + WIBE: 1759 Newport
Btvd., Costa Mesa + HOim: 10 a.m. to 10
p.m. Sunday through Thurs-
day; 10 a.m. to midnight Fri-
day and Saturday. + HOW MUCH: Prices range
form $4 to $64. + PHO• 645-3497.
~-------------------------what fashions are hot and what's
not.
Corduroy pants in every color
go for about $14. Polyester and
satin are "the fabrics," whether
it's shorts, shirts or dresses. But
velour and velveteen are run-
ners-up in the form of blazers
with thick stitching, and slender
cigarette pants.
lunch
11 :30 -2:00
While some of the garments
are appealing, the dresses
resembled what the nuns wore
during my Catholic-school days:
scratchy polyester fabric that ·
hung about mid-knee, pointy
collars and forgettable buttons.
But Stateside is just Speyer's
current fling with fas hi on -
something he's not sure will
bloom into a long-term relation·
ship.
HI' d like to get out of this in
10 years with $5, $500 or $5 mil·
lion -who cares?" said Speyet,
who spends more than 12 hours
a day, seven days a week run•
ning the store. NUfe's too short
to work this hard, but for now
it's great.
"I love when someone loves
something they bought here. I
know it sounds cheesy and
greeting-ca.rdish. but it's true."
dinner
5:00pm -1 O:OOpm
641-5654
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I With this coupon, I I With this coupon. I
I buy any ciltr6e, and I I buy any entree, and I
receive the 5econd entr6e receive the second entroo I of equal or lesser value I I of equal or lesser value I I FREEi I I FREEi I I Limit one tree dinner per I I Limit one tree dinner per I
coopon per visit. coupon per visit. I Not valid with any other I I Not valid with any oll)tr I
advertised special, banquet. advertised special. banquet, I t:oliday or for carry-out. I I holiday or for carry-out. I
L Offfr nlll l/1f.S/2111f. @) 1 L °"'' nll' 1117.,,,,., [9J 1 ______ .. ______ ..
ENJOY THESE MEAL DEALS NOWJ
OFFER EXPIRES SOON!
Open 7 Oays a Week
11:30am-l0:00pm
Ph:67S-7687 Fax: 675-7597
81Q E. Balboa Blvd. N~rt Beach
(w...,.Pler)
' 11.11 Adema Aft. (714) 141.fl23
..
,, '
•
.,
,.
1 DMMA11C READING! The
~ii invited to a reading
Of Ray Bradbury's "Dande-
lklo wme· at 1 p.m. to~ht in
1119 Prtmdl Meeting Room of the
~Beach Central Ubrary,
1000 Awe.ado Ave. Information:
717;,3801.
BAND SOUND: Les
llDd bis Band of
b.ling the sounds of, -me 17-piece big bena to Orange
Coast College's Robert B. Moore
lbeatre at 4 p.m. Swiday. nck-ea: 118 in advance; $21 at the
door. lnfoo:Dation: 432-5880.
31HE KINGSTON TRIO:
Will perform al 8 p.m. Satur;
day in OCC's Robert B.
Moore 1beatre. Tickets are $24
in advance and $28 at the door.
lntonnatioo: 432·5880.
4'WILD ISLB' PARTY: New-
port Dunes Resort's Back
Bay Cafe will hold a tropical
party to benefit Friends In Ser-
vice to Humanity al 6 p.m.
tonight, 1131 Back Bay Drive,
Newport Beach. nckets: $15 in
advance; $20 at the door. Reser-
vatiom: 729-3863.
5BIG BAND SWING: Dance
to the sounds of the big
band swing era with the
Balboa BNdi BkJ Bud fna 7 tD
11 p.m. Friday at 1be om
Mesa Senior Cenler, •¥£la Street 1lckela are S5 ID4 ,.._
SAGB members. ln&q zM•
645-2356.
6 ONE·ACf Pl.ADA.--
one-act ~ys wm b8 ~
by occ s Repertory J1i9.
atre Company during U. '!ij
schools' annual Spring Qae.M:r
Play Festival at 8 pm.~
day through Sunday.
Information: 43~-5640.
• 4.::1
7 CLOSING WEEIEND: 11;; NellSimon com8dy,•~,
Blow Your Hom.• rum ?!}
through Sunday at the CCllta •to\
Mesa Ovic Playhouse, 661 ....
Hamilton Streel Tictet¥S10 :
Sbowtimes: Thwsd.ay a .I Saturday at 8 p.m. and S , ~
_at 2 p.m. Information: 650-'.J
<
8 STIJDENT FILMS!~·
Coast College will ~il-1
26th annual Student -.1i1J1: and Video Festival at 1 p.m. ru-,
day in OCC's Fine Arts Hall U~"
A $3 donation will be coUected..,n
at the door. Information: 432-
5922. 'f.. . .
9 'BAll OF FIRE': BaJbera
Stanwyck and Garv Coopt/i
star in this classic, sh~~
6:30 p.m. Friday at Newport ...
Harbor Art Museum. 850 Sen · '"'
Oemente Drive. Admission is SS
or $3 for members and students. A
~
1 0 ARTS AND CJtAPnt '' The third annual Bal~,.,
boa Peninsula Pine '
Arts/Crafts Festival sponsored by
the Balboa Mercbants/Ownen""
Association will be from 10 a.JllJ'
to 5 p.m. OD the Balboa PenimlJ,;
la Saturday and Sunday. InfOI'-•
mation: 673-7763.
Th~ Best Thai Food
10 Costa Mesa
,,
r-----------------~ 1 FREE DINNER
I
I
I
Buy one a la carte dinner entre at
regular menu price and receive a second
a la carte dinner entree FREEi
I Olne·ln oniy EXptres 5·31-96
L----!~~~~~~~---Qll& 4£ Free Drink Refllls on llunch Speaclab From SS.•
1fl9 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • <714> 645-9934
There's a soldier in the bedchamber and
a twinkle in George Bernard Shaw's eye!
ARMS AND THE MAN
by George Bernard Shaw • May.~ I ·June 30, 1996
Low-priced Prel'lews Alay 24-301
One of the world's grcalesl playwrights takes on his two
favorite subjects -love and war. Then he throws in politics
for pure delight. This is Shaw at his wittiest and most paradoxical.
You'll love every minute!
wj
Honoraty Producer. William J. Gillespie Ml1lu....,.... a..sr ~
___,,_.........,. William JI. and Barbar..i Robem '""9.
''the laughs are loud" -UlsAngMTt
.. as bizarre as it
is funny"
Orrltt/lll Cott111y NfK!sm
One or lhe runniest
pla)·wriithts in the Western
lll'mlsphere provides an
evening of sheer thewical
im.'Vcrcncc. &>c It and
)Ou'll n~er be the same!
HORRY/
CIOS4'S May 261
I I
t
I
t ~
••}ij.-pon BachlCosta Mesa Daily Piloc
.
ACTORS
AWE IGH
H
Children get into the act with
: OCC's traveling theater group
By Valerie Fugent. Daily Pilot us before. We've gone to OCC many times but this is the firSt
time they've come to us. It's a €)range Coast College's the-great pleasure," a smiling Susan
ater professor, Alex Got-Kline, founder and director of
son, first had the idea of a Kline School explained.
children's theater The excitement
company when he .--------------------~ was palpable as the
realized that 70-F. Y. I. • children took their
80% of college stu-: seats. One boy aied
dents had never + WHA~ Treasure : out, "We've got the
seen a live play Island : best seats in the
before. So this year + WHERE: Orange : house.•
he started OCC's Coast College•s Ora-~ Tue group of
Children's Theatre ma Lab Theatre • approximately 60
Company and took + WHEN: 2 e.m. Sit-f quieted down and
his show on the urday and Sunday : Golson explained
ro&.d. + HOW MUOt: SS : what participation
"I thought it was + PHONE: 432-5932 : means, how it
something we · • works and demon-
snould do," said -------------------.J strated the "quiet"
G<?}son, "We usually don't do chil-sign. The sign resembles Nixon's
dren's shows but we decided to famous peace sign pose and, sur-
try it this year and it's been fun. prisingly enough, actually works.
The response is immediate.· "Titis is sort ofli.ke Muppet
The Children's Theatre Com-TI-easure Island, ff said Golson of
pany consists of 14 actors out of the play, "But no frogs:
OCC's Repertory Company. who Then it was anchors aweigh
travel to 12 different schools and the perlormance began.
bringing their interactive, partio-Never lackin,g for volunteers,
patory theater to school kids. children were selected from the
When the group was formed 11 audience to perlorm various tasks
sent letters to~ools offering its -pirate, cabin boy, deck hand.
unique service. The response was Most were pretty good little
three times more than it could actors, a few were pretty good lit-
handle. tle hams.
While this semester's plays Those not chosen for stage
were found ~ catalog of chil-roles were still able to participate.
dren's participa'tion plays, next Singing along with the perform-
season the company plans to per-ers and acting out certain _
form its own work. predicaments such as being
"Next year in playwrighting swarmed by mosquitoes and
class we'll concentrate on chil-swaying about on the high seas.
_dren's plays and hopefully write The 35-minute play is great
r our own,• Golson said. They have fun for all and just long enough
already started on "Stone Soup,· that the little natives don't get
: a play based on the children's sto-restless.
: ry of the same name. For those not fortunate enough
1 On May 3, the troupe visited to catch ~e act at their school, the l Kline School in Costa Mesa with Children's Theatre Company will I its current play, an adaption of present two more performances at
llobert Louis Stevenson's NTI-ea-2 p.m. on Saturday and SwlCJay.
!alre Island." 11ckets are $5. For more informa-t •we never had a troupe visit tion, call 432-5932.
I
~i COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE W PRESENTS
Come Blow Your ijorn
..............
114J51.mt ........
.... fa
• DIRECTED BY NEIL SIMON
April 15 -May t 9
Tllurs. f rt. Sat -l:OOpm
Sanday matinee -l:OOpm
Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A
TRIP TO MEXICO
The lnldttlon
Continues
Since 1972
~ ~ ·.
' .
I ~ .t.;f ,\11t ~\~J
THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996 A9
.,
'-'Aih. "-1ARnt. OAll.Y PU.OT
Todd' Veneman, with the Orange Coast College Children's Theatre Company plays the part of Long John Silver in a recent propduc-•
tion of Treasure Island at College Park school in Irvine. The production, which tours local schools, will be at OCC this weekend.
GRAND OPENING
?H4~ "~ 33"
Vietnamese Restaurant
"7.ute ~ "'"C/UM"t ~"
2394 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
(714) 650-1421
~ Co ifomitJ 's argtSt {q~~
AIO>orbolz BuyorS.11 .-a..t•-
Trucks on Olaplay .~? ...
CUSTOM TRUCK SHOW
Sunday, May 19, 1996
~~.!..2 10am • 4pm !#¢bl :a: .,,,,...
camlval Atomsphere! ---Dealer1Man11hlctu19r Olaplaya
Vendor Booths
Audio Ex,ploalon
Uve Entartalnment
Bikini Contaat
24-Hr. Info:
(714) 384-1745
:~1
I_
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OFF ""'"1 ,,.., 19th')"'· I
,_-H't,c1 fc r $, 1."'ltt Qnr Adult t.drn1\,•t n
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From: Gooing Chiropractic Clrrnc
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Consultation !includes X-Rays rf Needed)
Pracoong loollly SIOCl' 1983 NM1f'd ont" of I~ TOP 27
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M -F: 7am-8pm • Sat: &m~6pm • Sun: 9am-5pm
270·E. 17TH ST. #17 • CosTA MEsA
(71 .. >645-2252
NOW SERVING
Country Style
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PRIME RIB
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~ • •
A_10 THURSDAY, MAY 16. 1996 '
American ·home-Style food a
bargain at Tue Omelette Parlor
By Marla Bird, Daily Pilot
A costa Mesa couple
dxopped us a card about
their favorite lnformal-
dining spot -and what a tip for
diners with big appetites and
small
budgets I Here are excerpts:
"For the best food at the right
price, my husband and I recom-
mend The Omelette Parlor.
The food is fresh and good and
moderately priced ... They have
· specials every day ranging from
$2.75 to $2.98. You get the
main course (a sandwich or
hamburger) with a side choice
of fresh fries, macaroni or
tossed green salad. All have
generous portions. A glass of
wine or a bottle of beer is $1.50.
We think it is the best place to
eat lunch in the Harbor area.•
They indicated that it was
near Chester Drawer's, and of
course, if you're a regular. at the
old-time bar with hamburgers
and snack food, the Omelette
Parlor next door is familiar ter-
ritory.
For the rest of us, some
directions: ll 1s in the Von's lot
~ ...... ------~---....------, I l F.Y.I.
I : •••n.On ........
I tor l • ••• m bit rntt St. ~ C-..Mlla. : ····•~tolp.m. : mily . : + HOW MUCH: Inexpensive. l + PllQN& MS0740. l _________________________ J
at the west end, where the
buildings meet at a 180 degree
angle. The sign on the eaves
proclaims: "Chester Drawer's."
Underneath ihat sign, painted
right on the window pane is
bright pink lettering, "The
Omelette Parlor.•
No contest is going on here
for gourmet food; the hamburg-
er pattiesare pre-shaped off-site
and shipped irl. The food is
mostly average, but the prices
are four-star, value plus, and
the omelettes are first rate.
Sleepy breakfast patrons get a
cup of coffee (60 cents) first
thing and a choice of ($4.25)
omelettes, a bowl of mush (75
cents)~ ~ides of curly fries, ham,
bacon or sausage ($1.95) and
more.
The highest prices on the
entire menu ($4.25) are for the
omlettes and three grade AA
extra luge eggs with potatoes,
English muffin and fruit gar-
nish. High recommendations
come for "Estancia rediscov-
ered,. a fluffy omelette con-
cealing a spike of diced
jalapenos and a cloud of shred-
ded cheddar and sour cream on
top. The •price is right•
omelette has chopped Italian
sauce, chopped tomatoes, moz-
zarella and a pinch of oregano
($4.25) with a huge pile of curly
fries and fresh fruit garnish.
· On Monday and Wednesday,
"burger madness" reigns with
burgers and a salad at $2.50.
Cheese is art extra 25 cents.
Usually burgers cost $3.15 to
$3.15. Sandwiches totry: Gob-
bleberry'($3.75) with lots of thin
turkey slices, lettuce, tomato,
·mayo and cranberry sauce.
Skip the roast beef and head
for "Margie G . Wagner's BLT
and Me," a great BLT, but who
is Margie? •My Chickadee• is a
breaded chicken breast, deep-
fried and packaged in a baked
egg bun with cheddar cheese
($3.95).
The "starving artist,• a mod.-
est meal consists of a small
spinach salad, a bowl of hot
French onion soup, bread sticks
or crackers and a generous
glass of wine, all for $2.95.
House wines are burgundy,
chablis and rose, and cham-
pagne costs $1.15 a glass.
Michelob, Heineken and Miller
Lite are $1.50 and sarsaparilla
or Diel Coke run 85 cents a
glass.
Huge photos of old Costa
Mesa and Newport decorate
one wall and the nostalgia is at
one with the natural hospitality
of the parlor. The Omelette Par-
lor and Chester's are the
province of a sandy-haired,
smilinglassnamedSusan
Adkins, who bought them irl
1983. They were already deco-
rated in 30's nostalgia style for
the former tenant, "Calabash
Landing."
MMC MAATJNi
I D.t.l.Y Pit.OT , .. 41
......
" Ill t• •
"" .. ,
. " .. ...
When you enter through old':.'
swinging doors to Chester's or ~::1
the cafe, you will feel down-,~
right friendliness as you settle
into a booth. Adkins, who
' J seems to have a permanent · •.
implant of Eveready batteries,";,
is at the Omelette Parlor no lat~ ••
er than 6 a.m. and leaves, as i\,~,
closes after lunch.at 3 p.m. ~~u
walks into Chester's and is ,. ,
there with plenty of tielp, until !·
1 or 2 a.m ., sometimes later. "
' ,
dining news hdJ
'Small bites' menu is
superb at The Ritz
A transformation has taken
place at The Ritz with live music
every night in the enlarged cock-
tail lounge .
"It's fabulous," says the ebul-
lient Hans Prager. "We are giv-
ing our patrons a chance to enjoy
sophisticated tunes and a menu
of 'small biles' at small prices in
the lounge."
Those bites, $4 .50 to $10,
include sesame chicken, dunge-
ness crab cakes, Aquavit-cured
gravlax on a warm potato pan-
cake, filet mignon sandwich with
onion straws, "The Ritz Egg"
filled with smoked salmon and
egg scrambled and topped with
Russian Sevruga caviar, and
Scandia's famous meat balls.
(And lots more). Caesar Frazier,
a piano vocalist fills the dimly lit
room with seductive songs Tues-
day through Friday and Jim Hay-
den, a vocal ringer for singer
Michael Feinstein is on stage for
weekends.
Phone The Ritz at 720-1800.
Llf e is a cabaret
Diva expands the show idea
with a monthly cabaret show,
"The Great American Music
Company." The series starts May
26 with The Music of C9le Porter.
June 30 will feature "The Music
of Duke Ellington.,. More pro-
grams to follow. The very special
prix fixe dinner by executive
chef and owner, Job.ii Sharpe is
$35 per person with seating at 5
FREE CLASS EVERY TUES., 7p.m.
tOf jH o.~ 1st \ttl
1
E ~
)! cYBE~ CAFE
• Serving Gourmet Coffee • Pastries $6
• Sandwiches • Desserts
l
--..11 ~ ISC0"t-1) IA ·•=amt Dl'TERNET AOC!GS A""'> CA>FRE Q4op
2278 Newport Blvd. (North of 22nd St.) • Costa Mesa
574-9798
RIVERBOAT CAl'IE
On board the "Prided~ ANel1>ollt. Home CJ The~ ~ Naubcal Museum lFor!.nlrtt Reuben E Lee) It ~ MOOi
1am5pm (Urit.a Mtdnlght For Plivate Partl!a. ~.i. ~ ••• ).
Reaervations Needed Drlt1 For ~ Banquets O" met.a
Penles). All Map-Credit Cerde =· LOCllUd /lit. 151 E ea.. tt.w. ~Beech, CA P14) 673-3425 Feil
873-7884
RUBY'S JAGUAR DINl:R
Claulc '40s 9;yle Diner. Trec:l!tional Hamburoare. Great Shelca & Malta. Al8o ~ Breektaet. Hot.n· ~Thor 6:~ ~ Set B:30am-1Ctirri ~. V•. Amex, 0.:. Olners Club, c.u Blench. No ~ Needed. Located"" xm w Paafic: C088t Hwy. (714) 631-7829
~.1.P. BALBOA "EeTAURANT 6 LOUNGa Hours· Moofri 11 :3Clam-11 ·30pm. Set S:OOam-12 30pm, Suo 8runch S·ClJam.11 ·30pm. M-..a111_d.,_~ LOClt9d At 127 ~.,. ' 8elbo9 ...00 (714) 87~
8111 ROGl:R8.1 ~TD. ~ -(Hot & LOIOJ ~Grocery ltemt For SM-Ful 9endwioh Men\A, Snllll 8reeldmt Menu. ~~ Cdfee, £~ OrinU. ~ brne Hol,tw· Mot'I...,, 7'CXl11m· 8'.~ S..&n 7 CXl8m4 CQwn. ()d Clt'dt Nat r=. ATM ........ A111r.,..• Not Heald. l.ocad..14 27() 17'h 9trtlt. Qma Mllllli 92827 (714) 84~
f.
ZUBIES
Menu Includes: Ribs, Cliicken, St.eek & Lobster. Pnma Rib, Pizza, C>f,lter Ber. Pnces Range From $3.95 And Up. Hours: 11 :30am ! ~ -Cocktails T~ 11' pm. D-edit Cards Not Accepted . Reservatiofis Not Needed L.oceted 8t 1712 Pleceriba, Costa Mesa
17141 S4S.OOS
GOOSEBERRIES
Breakfast. HIQh ~ And lnnovabYe Breakfast Fare. Hours·
Mon . ..m. 7:CXlam I set.&o. e·00am -12·30pm. L.ocat.ed At
2CXl Prom OrM!. [714) 57 40608
CASABLANCA BISTRO Mediterranean & Moroccan· Treditional Middle Eastern FtlOd Hours: 11 :30 To 2:30 Mon. Tm.I Thurs. lunch. Dinner 5-11 pm. All Major Credit Cerds. Resarll8tions Suggested. locat.ed et 1520 w. c.oeat Hwy .. Newport Beach (714) 646-1420
THE EMERALD FOREST Continemtl-All Amazon Raio FOf'8lt Replica. Fresh Seafood And Exotic Oinina Wdl Patio ~ Ent.ertainment Daily. Hours: 11 :00.11:1]) Restaurant, 11 :00.1:CDem Bar., Credit Cards Accepted • Amex. V188, M/~9COl/erA. Diners. Reservations Recommended. located Al. ~ Palm ~ , Suita H, Newport Beech CA 92660 (714) 723-5CXXl
FORTY CARROTS RESTAURANT
r.ontioental • ColUmi>orsrv Cuttwle. 6cJulj) Coast Plaza. 3333 S.
Briet.ol Costa Mesa (714) 556-9700. lnf'ormel And Beautiful. (}Jr
Menu Is Varied Witti A Wida Ra!lQe Of Cultllrel Fevorites. • .t Freshness,.,~~ end ~j)Gl'b SeNlce At AA Attrsctive Price value. Moo-Fri 1~11 'Set 9-Bpm_• Sun 19'6P. 'Visa, M8!t8r Card And Americen express~. ~Are Not Needed
TA PAS
§paolSh • Cuisioe From Spain Witti lMl Flamenco SOeciellll!lQ In Peelta, Steak, Grilled · Fresti Fish & Pastas. Ope~ Days Per Wflt!j.gic>sed Sun. & Mon. ~ Credit Cerda ~ located
et 4~ ~~Behm Staoles et MecArthr & Connthlan. Newport [714) 758-81 S4
AUBERGINE f1:enoh Influenced. 508 29t.h St. Cannery Village, N~ Beach. Dinner Tues. -Set 6Pffl:10om. Re9ervationl Raquasted. V11&, M/C. Amu accept.ad (714)723-4150
(
• p.m . Reservations, phone 754-
0600.
in Laguna as well. In Newport, at
2400 W. Coast Highway, phone
650-5577.
and gi:atuity included. Not to be'
missedl ... Neither Tony Roma's'
Ribs or Mezzaluna spaces, haio'e'
new tenants as yet .. . The· 23r(
annual Callfomla State Cbll,l,
Cbamptonsblp is moving into~.
Hyatt Newporter for the big con,-
test and colossal party-time
scheduled for May 23 ... And for
restaurateurs. please note: ·
Annual Taste of Newport d
bas been changed to Sept. 21-2
Crawfish festival
Hurrayl It's an annual event. Table scraps
Every Monday in May, JACK-
ahrtmp's is serving those juicy lit-
tle shell fish flown irl live that
morning from Louisiana. The
price is $12.95 for 1 1/2 pounds
and $16.95 buys three to four
pounds of the bright red critters,
enough for your table, served
with good bread, red beans and
rice artd new potatoes. Now open
Best kept secret irl town is El
Paso Canttna with fine Tex-Mex
at 1565 A(\ams Avenue, (at Har-
bor). Phorte 241-0123 ... New-
porter George Kookestedls,
owner of John Dominis, is per-
forming culinary magic at his
new, second restaurant, Cbante-
clair. A Cote du Rhone wine din-
ner is due Wednesday, at $70, tax
... l'll be back week after ne
A MACHI Susht & Sosht tD Go. ~ Bar. All Maior Oedit Clnfs. Located
At 2675 INVla ~ .. [Acro6s From~ Golf Cour9a) (714)
645-5518
CALIFORNIA Bl:ACH ROCK'N SUSHI
Japentl!lll Style Qisine And Ful Sushi Bar. A Place For Greet Klod.
Hal.rs 7 Olly9 Per Week · S·OO>m Td Cloeing. V1S8 , Mastacard,
Amex, Diners Club. Locat.ad at ~355 Via UdO, Newport Beach
(714) 675-0575
SUSHI IMARI
Sushi Ber And ~· C>Miera ~Operated Jepeneee Restaurant In Sen Fi111a1 ldo ~. Ti~Hours 11 :30em-2:~. Dinner 5:~10:CQ>nl. Al . a-edit Cerda ~. Retlervet.ions Not Necessary. 3 5 Bristol, #40, Costa Mesa (714) 644-5654. .
AYILAS l:L RANCHITO
Authent.X: Ma>tlcan K>od, W~ The Freshest l~ienta & A New l.ight Cuisine. Great Margaritas. Hours: Lunch & Dinner. All Major
credit Cards ~· [ocat.ed et 2101 Plecentia. Costa Mesa
(714) S42-1142 end 2EDJ Newport Bllld .. Newport 9eect'I (714)
675-8855
MARGARITAVILLI: Treditmel Fresh Cooked Mexlcan Food. Full Bar. Hours: 7 Devs
11 :3Q.2:CQ>rn. Mestercard. Amex, VIS8. locatlld Al. 2332 W.
Coelt Hwy, Newport Beectt (714) 631-8220
Ml CASA A Trio To Mexico. Hounl: Deily From 11 :CXlam. Prlcea Ranae From $2.~5 • $8.95. Al Major 0'8dit Carcia Accepted. l.oc8*I k 296
17th St .. ea.. Meu (714) 84!>7626
WAH00'9 1'18H TACO f1lh Tecoe, Bumtoe. Bleck Beens & Rice, Seladl, Sendwiohee,
Prloae Range From $1.85-$7.60. Hotn: Mon.set. 11;00am .
10;00pm .• Sun. 11 :CXlem-9:00pm. 0'9Cht Cerda Accepted.
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THE BARN STEAK HOUSE
Menu Includes Steak, fresh Fish, Olicken, 8u'08l'9 & Seleds.
Pnces Range From $3.75 For lunch & $8 2s""For Dinner. Hours: Mon.&t. ~n 11am For lunch. 4:p:lpm Mon.~ .. Dinner 3:00>m Set. & Suo .. Major Q-edit Cards Acceat.ad. l.ocetad Al.
230) Harbor Bl. t31. COsta Mesa [714) 541.gn7
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Menu Includes: lobster. Creb, Shrimp, Steaks, Rib ¥· Delti SDecials. Fri. & Set. Prime Rib, Fun Bar & Wine List. Caeuaf
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(714) 673-1505
THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996 A . it... -•
.Amazing special effects. overpower Twister's corny plot ·_
• llDITOR's NOTE: The Reel Critics col-
umn futures movie critiques written by
community members serving on our
panel
W at levels homes, devas-
tates cities, and comes
without warning? Right,
an earthquake. Now, what is
equally as tenifying, combines
hail and rain in a spinning, cylin-
drical mass at velocities exceed-
ing 200 mph, and roars thunder-
ously perhaps with divine force?
Right again, a tornado.
"1\vister" is the first in a chain
of summer blockbusters explod-
ing to the big screen. This movie
docwnents the swirling phenom-
enon and the storm chasers that
~their lives pursuing what is
presently unretrieved twister
-data.
Helen Hunt (Mad About You)
and eill Paxton (Aliens, Weird
Science) star as two scientists
determined to collect this almost
im):>ossible information. With a
team of experienced tornado
trSCkers and •Dorothy," an
experimental radio-transmitting
de"iice, they hope to penetrate
the inner core of a tornado and
,,; retrieve ground-breaking infor-
mation.
This is a rip-roarin', wildly fun
and intense picture. You will t>t
captivated by the awesome spe-
~ effects and the sound produc-
tion is sure to leave your senses
numb. And although the plot is
comy (a stormy love story amid
cUi appropriately violent and
stormy backdrop), the movie's
entertainment value is certain to
stand alone.
reel. critics
This is a tremendously enter-
taining film and if you're looking
for ~o hours of mindless, whirl-
wind activity, I recommend
"'IWister."
• CHRIS CANNON, 24, is a Corona del
Mar resident and superintendent for a
commercial fence company.
T alk about non-stop action,
from the opening credits to
the grand finale, they are
either rushing to a tornado,
caught in one or escaping from
one. It's a pulse racing, exciting
movie.
However, the love story was
weak and the competition part of
the m?vie was totally unneces-
sary.
But as far as special effects
and the feeling of danger, 'IWister
has no peer. It is totally believ-
able although the principals have
little regard for their safety and I
was amazed their equipment
kept working cqnsidering what it
Prices Good thru
May20,1996
I was going through, but it is a
thoroughly entertaining film.
• DICk TU0CER. 69, is a Newport Beach
resident and retired Instructor at
Orange Coast College.
l T wister" is an extremely
intense film, whose
prime focus is a tomado-
chasing crew led by Jo Harding
(Helen Hunt). The crew is
attempting to fly "Dorothy," a
device they created to measure
wind speeds in the tornado.
Unfortunately, MDorothy" needs
to be launched froni the core of
the tornado, which creates an
enormous obstacle for Harding's
crew.
Director Jan DeBont triumphs
once again, adding to 1Wister's
credibility for special effects. The
tornadoes are truly unbelievable,
thanks to crew members Michael
Kahn (editing), Steven Flick
(sound effects), Jack N. Green
(photography), Mark Mancini
(score) and John Frazier {stunts).
I Although •1Wi.st.el• is 75%
intense action, the 25% between
tornadoes tends to become dull.
The storyline isn't necessarily
captivating, however, the thrill of
the previous tornado hasn't quite
worn out by the next (which is
naturally bigger and more terrify-
ing), and the excitement is
enough to last.
A big hit at the box office,
"1\vister" brought in $37 .5 mil-
lion at a first weekend opening.
Perhaps the actual plot could use
work, but the special effects are
absolutely amazing.
•KATIE HOSTETlER, 16, is a Newport
Beach resident and a sophomore at Har~
bor High.
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~12 THURSDAY, MAY 16~
correspondence
forwll
:1 ;,
·:
1' •• •'
How about Yardley Lane? classroom. Just visit Kaiser Primary -.
the team of teachers incorporate both
and are having great success, as ·are
many other teachers in the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District.
they didn't get consent from both parties
to publish this. Can history be bought
at Davidson Field?
likes article on·
crime and alcohol
•' ,1 ,1 I 1:
P.S. Thank heavens Newport Beach
has term limits for its council.
I
'I
I 'm with New Directions for Women in1: I think that George Yardley should have
a street named after him in Newport
Beach. The Hall of Pamer comes from a
good family. My family used to know
him. I used to know his mother and dad.
Bobby and George were good friends of
mine, and I just think a Yardley Street
would be appropriate for here in New-
ANNE YOUNGLOVE
Newport-Mesa Reading Technician
Costa Mesa
BARBARA de BOOM
. Newport Beach
• EDITOR'S Nam: E·mall generat@d or received
by public employees Is public Information.
Regarding the story, •You can name
that stadium -after you" ~ay 3). I
find it amazing. You have quite a write
up here about this. You talk about this
new plan where you can rewrite history
for a few shekels. You tell everything
but who was Mr. Davidson. It already
has a name on it. Who was it named for?
What did he do?
Costa Mesa. We're an alcohol and ,
c1rug treatment program. We've been 'in'
Costa Mesa since 1977 and our outcom
studies indicate that we have a 71 %
success rate with recovering women ::
after their treatment here. :i port Beach.
JOHN STEGE, SR.
E-mail debate
should be silenced
City applauded for taldng
over ambulance service I'm reading your article on "Alcohl!ll :1
is a Factor" (May 9). Excellent articl~ •: Newport Shores I would like to say I also support <;:oun-
cilman Dennis O'Neill in bringing the
city paramedic services totally inhouse
serviced by the Fire Department of
Newport Beach.
It's amazing. History can just be
bought for dollars. What a bunch of
and I think it's wonderlul that you're ::
Don't ditch phonics, combine
it with whole language
I 'm calling in response to your article,
"City Hall ambulance debate goes
cyber" (May 8). I think it's a poor excuse
for a story to be in the local paper con-
cerning our mayor and orir city manag-
er. I think it's even worse for our mayor
to breach a vote of confidence with our
top city empl9yee.
garbage.
llONALD~Y
Newport Beach
• EDITOR'S NOTE: Sydney H. Davidson, the man
the field was named for, was Newport Harbor
Hlgh's superintendent/principal from 1929-1958.
Noting the lack of funds and a field, he became
a surveyor and his math students carried chains
and helped mane off the field with football
games beginning in 1931, and the name "David-
son Field" emerged. It remains Davidson Fleld,
but the stadium Itself has no title ..
bringing this to the forefront. :;
I'd love to have you do something ' :•
about the treatment programs the com-::
munity provides and how we're workin~
very, very hard to bring down the alcb. 1;
hol abuse and accidents occurring. :, L et's not throw the baby out with the
bath water. Whole language came,
phonics went. Now, whole language
goes, phonics stays. Why not a combina-
• oi!on of both?
• Phonics can be taught through a mul-
• ti-sensory approach like Project Read
very effectively in a whole language
This message says no city employee
should ever trust or talk to John Hedges
because he cannot be trusted.
I have always wondered over the
years why a private ambulance always
had to accompany the dty paramedics
ambulance to the hospital. It only makes
good sense to have one unit transportan
emergency case, not two.
I PETE llABBrrf
Newport Beach
Thank you for putting that sto~ on I
the front page. It's very, very important :
that everybody know what alcohol does
to our community.
LESUE WJUTUNt;q
Costa ?vie¥ ,
·.
. .
.
·'. . •' .
•'
. .
.. . .. ...
I'm disappointed in the Pilot and that
readers res~nd . .
Praise ftoni the soup. kitchen
I t is good news to hear that the "Someone Cares
Soup Kit~en" has found a new host in the Costa
Mesa Spanish ·Seventh Day Adventist Church.
However, it seems only fitting that we aclmowl-
edge the gracious hospitality The First Methodist
Omrch of Costa Mesa bu shown to the lea fortunate
in the last four years. All who arrived in need of a
meal were served .
One can imagine the impact several hundred peo·
ple a day would have on parish grounds and facili-
ties. The eXtra expenses incurred were also aa:epted
as part of this good work.
1be members ol this chwdl, under the directim ol
their pastm, Steve Isenman, have certainly home witness
to Christ's rommaoo to "Love Thy Neighbcy, • In past
years they have also partidpa.ted in homeless shelter pro-
grams that provides shelter food and showers for a week.
No, I am not a member of this church, but have
watched with respect and admiration at the good
things this group accomplished. Recogn1tion and
thanks are in order .
DAVE FELDE
CCl9ta Mesa
!don't think the Pint Methodist Church abould lie
put in the position of having to apologize for ukiDg
the Soup Kitchen to find other quarters.
ing have withdrawn the church's weekly use al their
parking lot because dt the meu the transients leave.
The Pint Metbodilt Church still often a shower
program for the homeless, a food pantry supplied by ..
our church people, and we are looking forward to
having 12 people with us for two weeb from the
Interfaith Program.
How about IOIDe other charitable organjiatiom
taking their tum?
I hope I don't IOUDd lelfisb bUt I am glad that deal fell •
through at the Soup Kitdml. he been woniecl about
it. 19th Street bas turned into a Celspool ol huge propor-
tions. n bas beoor:ve a plaCle where they ..n junk up and
down the road. Where the winm are all up and down
the road. Grafllti. 19th Stieet bu jult beo 1118 llllb.
I was once against the bridge but now I wish
ttley'd put it through so we'd have a safe, d.eeeDt
place to go where they can't have all this.
I hope the Soup Kitchen finds a suitable place. MY ,
prayers will be with them but I'm glad it's not 19tll •
Street. I'm glad It'• not that area becaUle we dma't
need an}'IDON of that. ,
.
" .. .
~ ..
MARC MAATJol /OMV Pl.OT
The Lepper family takes time out from a meal •t the Someone Cares Soap Kltcben to
look over donated dotbes for their infant daughter, Brittney, when the c:bartty wu at
In the three yean we have bolted them. we have
bad to bar all the lower parish house windows aft.-
break-ins and tbetts1 and we have bad to repair the
stained-glass window C1VS the altar where a brick WU
thro~ thro\igh it. The owners ol a nearby bank build-
lt'I awfully Nd that the WmH!D gCJmg f.bse tbatl'ft I ~l
teel1 in tbe paper widl little babiel. Wbat in .... world y
are they ckmg having a baby that tbef ma't eYm feedl l jj
They're the ODM I feel sorry f«. the little ddldr8n. J
I hope they find a place for them.
ANNa1'~
Costa Mela .. . '
the Flnt United Melhodlsl Church on llllh S-L -R-
\ • • ..
'· . readerS read
~·Decision on
;'Adams was
· out of bounds
• ' I f the decision was made by
· school district officials to
.. redraw the Adams Elementary
• School boundaries based on the
: growing number of kids that will
: need to go to Adams in the next
.. few years that live in Mesa
~ Verde, the decision should not
be rescinded.
• If the decision was made
: based on racial motivation, the
: · decision never should have been
: made. .
'· I.. ~·
SUSAN GRAHAM
Costa Mesa
; T he issue of boundaries for
, Adams and Wilson elemen-
:. tary schools should be one c9n-
~ cerned with education and not
•:integration.
•: Also, in today's world cost is a
:; paramount issue as well and a
•, struggling school district such as
., Newport-Mesa should not be
~ bussing children anywhere
~ when they can walk to school in
~ their own neighborhood.
~ Nor should we taxpayers
.. have to fool the bill for that
• transportation.
!, ROBERT G. SPICER
!" Costa Mesa
'• ,
I think the original boundaries
of the school district should be
restored because it seems the
main motivation for changing
them was racial and I don't think
.,, that that's fair to the students $ wbo are being affected by that
H they had other rea.10111
which were more in keeping
. with the things that the school is
•; 1Upposed to be doing, I could
~. understand it but it seem like the
: only reason the boundaries were
' changed wu rad41.
BlJCTIOUP
.. Colta Mela
• f
commentary
JOE BELL FANS UNITE I
I
' I I
T
om Williams denigrates Joe Bell as a
•bleeding heart liberal," so I hate to
blow bis cover as the opposite of a bleed-
ing heart liberal (would that be a Htight
ventricled conservative?") -but to my
personal knowledge, Tom shows com-
passion and kindness from tin1e to time.
What Tom missed is that Wendy
Leece wants to withhold some food and
a little medical care from kids who have
parents who aren't providing it. Yes, it's
the legal and moral responsibility of par-
e nts to provide for their children. How-
ever, if they fail to do so, it's simple kind-
ness and compassion, and good business
in the long run, to provide a meal or two
and some basic medical care to those
children who have sub-par parents.
Indirectly relevant, I offer the fact that
the cost for a year's residence is the
same to send a kid to jail or to USC.
As for Tom's obvious disgust with
"government, freeloader giveaway• pro-
grams, school lunches are just the tip of
the melting-heart-of-the-iceberg. Right
here in Orange "free enterprise" County,
he can find infinitely fatter targets of
government freeloading.
How about Ford Aeronutronics -
more than a billion dollars to try and
build a tank that never happened and
was so complex it could have con-
tributed its electronics to ... the Stealth
airplane, a disaster the Pentagon doesn't
want more of but the unlikely duo of
Saxan-wrap-heart "B-1 Bob" Doman
and Bill "furiously bleeding" Clinton
want more of them, not because they're
needed by our military, but because
they're good for the prosperity of South-
ern California, the "trickle down• theory
(which, come to listen to it, sounds suspi-
ciously like a bleeding heart).
The owners and workers at the
defense industries buy houses, food,
clothing and insurance, and we all get
some of the money. t won't get into fa.rm,
dairy and tobacco subsidies, or govern-
ment COLA pensions, all pure welfare
as much as any school lunch program is.
We all know that a great deal o( the
Hsuccess" of Orange County has come
from the fact that enormous amounts of
defense money have come our way via
Hughes, McDonnell Douglas, Beclcman
Instruments and Northrop, etc. and most
of us will admit that some percentage
between 20% and 70% of it wasn't
needed at all for our defense. The excess
is pure welfare, and any business or
individual who made money from the
trlclde-down (or up) money benefited
from a government han.dout.
I would rather see "triclde money"
spent on things more useful than
weapons even our military doesn't want,
like highways that aren't toll roads, bet-
ter schools, bridges, housing or govern-
ment-backed loans like the GI Bill that
gave such a boost to the expansion of our
area after World War ll. The money will
still trickle, even if goes from Washington
to a food service supplier who provides
lunches for kids in Orange County.
More seriously, Tom questioningly
ridicules Joe Bell's authenticity as a U.S.
war veteran, something the Pilot should
verify one way or the other for those of
us who don't know Bell's personal histo-
ry and you could print the apology I'm
sure Tom would want to submit for pub-
lication if he's wrong.
MAllK DAVIDSON
Costa Mesa
mailbox
!have just finished reading Joseph
Bell's column (May 8); and I couldn't
agree more. I'm a 67-year-old lifelong
Republican who is sick and tired of the
inept shysters who sold their votes to the
NRA, the Religious Right. etc., etc. I am
voting straight Democratic in the next
election. I
I
BE.RTHAll :
Balboa. :
!just called to tell you that I enjoy Bell's
column that's printed every Wednes-
day. I don't see anything wrong with
being a liberal correspondent. We have
an awful lot of conseivative correspon-
dents and most of them are doom and
gloom. We're kind of tired of listening to
the conservative message. We've had
them ever since the John Birch Society.
Please leave Bell's column in your
paper on Wednesdays. I enjoy reading
him and hearing a different point of
view.
I
I
'I ' DOll011fY RAY :
Newport Beach :
I
I
I
I
, I
I • I
I
Coverage of distingUished schools doesn't tell whol'e stoil'
I just wanted to express my dismay at the
leading article, "Feeling Distinguished."
There were two schools that received a
distinguished award and the article is very
one-sided. It doesn't make any mention of
the accomplishments of Corona del Mar
High School.
CANDY UCHT-M'A.RTINEZ
PTA President, Corona del Mar High School
Yow front page coverage of the Califor-
nia Diltingullhed Schools Awanl to
two of ow local MC:Ondary schools
prompts me to call and complain about a
definite blu I see in yow coverage of
D.8WIWOrthy events at Corona del Mar . {
High School
I'm proud of the accomplishments of
TeWinltle Middle School artd hope to
read about them more 1n the future.
However, I am equally proud of Corona
del Mar High School yet Corona del
Mar received barely a one sentence
mention in the article. A few weeks ago
you had a front page article and a read·
er'• response about a Corona del Mar
student's right to start a gay student
iupport group on campus y.e I haft
seen little, lf any, frotlt 1>9 coverage of
the Corona del Mar PowM:latioa'• ambl·
tiou1 and worthy effortl to ralle moftey
to help our dtcrepit J>Mt·~ 13
f
school.
Contrary to what you may ,bear, the
community does wanf to read abo,ut the
good things happening In our schools and
they want to see equal coverage of those
good llli+· ~eueprovemewrongbybegtnning
to cover good tb1ngl happening in all of
our schools with equal enthuaiasm for the
accomplilbmentl regardleu of geographi-
cal locaUoD ol lhe school Our IChOoll
Mid all ol tbe equal wt pOlltMi iappcilt
we can g1va them. They hold our futuN ID
their handl.
HOPE
CONTINUED FRQM A 1
anyone who has gone
through lt well knows. The
lnltial shock is follOwed by
incredible highs and lows, as
your child alternates between
progress and setbacks.
Recently, on picking up
the Daily Pilot, we expert-
. enced one of those lows.
, r.liow tragic it is for our
Rebecca and for children of
;_the parents that fear their
..,.<:hildren's education will
· somehow suffer if and when
our child attends Harbor
View Elementary. Switching
'Rebecca to that school would
shorten a long bus ride for
her, as she ~currently bused
from our home in Newport
Be4ch to Paularino, and then
. to after-school care in Coro-
1 na del Mar. We would feel
. 9etter knowing that she
spent her day closer to our
home and her father's office.
1. But now, we wonder if
~· that move would be best.
The community at Paularino
:!tias embraced the special ed
?.Jdds, We have attended
many events there and never
felt unwanted or slighted in
any way. It makes my stom-
ach clench to think of Rebec-
ca getting off the bus at a
school where parents have
rallied against her presence,
and where her schoolmates
have heard their parents
worry that somehow they
might be harmed by her.
Disabilities strike random-
ly and affect our whole com-
munity. Our hope for Rebec-
ca is. that she will be accept-
ed for the unique, wonderful
individual that she is, and
our hope for the "normal•
children who associate with
"disabled• children like
Rebecca is that they can
learn to look past the labels
to the child who is not so
very different from them-
selves.
As parents, we all have
the same hopes and dreams
for our children. We want all
children to live up to their
fullest potential and be given
the greatest opportunity for
growth. What a tenible mes-
sage we send to our children
and our community when we
£ategorize, label and speak
out against a group of chil-
dren who deserve the back-
ing and support of all of us.
DIANAW.~CE
Newport Beach
The ans\\'er 1s \'CS' I lo\\cvcr rhe rreat·
mcm of obesil\' or :in ovcrn·e1gh1 c..·ond1·
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Call my ofOO.· for :in appomtmcni 2nd
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cw.:t!.e:-il!':o"t.o>
·~ ~~-~
MERGER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
to Estancia.
That matched with the possi-
bWty of increasing student
course offerings generated
board interest.
•1 think the biggest thing we
have to look at a.re the educa-
tional opportunities we off er to
our students," said trustee
Martha Fluor. ·~rm grateful to
my colleagues for raising the ·
issue, and I say let's start to talk
about it."
Decker said his interest in
merging the two schools -
which have a combined 9-12
grade enrollment of about 2,150
students -grew out of concern
that too many Costa Mesa stu-
dents are abandoning local
sdlools because they can't get
the elective classes they want.
According to figures present-
ed by the district's secondary
education office, other Orange
County biif! schools with the
same enro ent as Estancia and
Costa Mesa offer about 16 elec-
tive selections per year. Colt.a
Mesa offers 56, Estancia offers
56 and Corona del Mar High
School offers 58.
•1 think it is safe to say that
the bigger the school, the more
elective opportunities the stu-
dents are going to have, general-
ly," Superintendent Mac Bernd
said.
Bernd said larger schools do
not necessarily mean larger class· ·
sizes. But the smaller schools are
prevented from offering some
advanced placement classes
~ause not enough students at
one campus are interested.
'Ihlstee Judy Franco said past
school boards have consolidated
junior high schools into low-
enrollment high schools -Costa
Mesa and Corona del Mar, for
example -to maintain commu-
nity identity.
"Maybe this is a new time
and a new direction we need to
Labels
Now Accepting Spring
Appare7
--·--
NEWPORT HARBOR
ART MUSEUM
CONSIGNM ENT SHOP
• Collectfbles & Antiques
• Crystal, China, & Siiverware
• Furniture & Jewelry
look at,• she said.
Several Estancia students,
dressed in their red and yellow
school colors, attended the spe-
cial meeting to show opposition
to the proposal, which was
reported in Tuesday's Doily Pilot
"I don't think it's right to put
two schools that are rivals
together," said Estancia fresh-
man Robert McGee. •vou have
to look beyond the size of a
school."
Bernd said district administra-
tors would present a "bow to" ·
statement to the board in two
weeks to show how to proceed
with a consolidation study. He
also will look into possible con-
sultants the district may hire to
study the issue.
Decker said he wants the
community to look at the idea of
consolidating district high
schools, including moving some
students into different zones,
before focusing on which sites
would beCome high schools and
which junior highs.
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CONSIGNMENT
CORNER
runs the first &
the third Thursday
of every month.
THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996 Ap
Beans to receive award
for human relations
Orange County community
leaders Joan and Donald Beall
will be presented with the
Amerlcan Jewish Committee's
highest honor, the Human
Relations Award, at a dinner
on May 22 at the Sutton Place
Hotel in Newport Beach.
Joan Beall is a director of
Pl~ed Parenthood and
patron of the Newport HarbOr
Art Museum as well as a
member of the board of direc-
tors of the Orange County
Performing Arts Center.
Donald Beall is chairman
and CEO of Rockwell Interna-
tional. He serves on the board
of overseers and the board of
visitors at UCI.
The Human Relations
Award wW be presented to
the Bealls "in recognition of
their efforts to make Orange •
County a better place for all of '
us," said Martin Brower, pres-;
ident of the Orange County !.
chapter of The American Jew-
ish Committee, in a recent ~ ·
press release.
Tue dinner is open to the '
community and features guest 1
speaker William Gray ill, pres-'·
ident and CEO of The College ·
Fund/UNCF and former
ma1ority whip and chairman of
the Democratic Caucus. ,
For more information, con-'
tact the American Jewish ·
Committee at 660-8525. ,.
•
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~t ~yuz""/
raided
No"' furunn~
grc;ir ~
clothes ar
constgnmenc
tt0rcpn~. cl<>S<b in
Or.mgc
C..ounty••
CONSIGNMENTS
333 E. 17th St., Ste. l 2B
Costa M~ • 646-7233
M·F 10-S •Sat. 10·3
ewport 'l(ft{s
Nl'W NAME ••• SAME' GREAT SroM
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IRWD
CONTINUED FROM A 1
~ession at Bumharn's invitation,
.faid he is hopeful the agencies
'will arrive at a compromise.
Fish and Game withdrew its
;opposition to the original dis-
·charge proposal once the water
district proposed building a
'bypass structure that would
'remove nitrates from San Diego
.Creek during the summer
:months.
, Kelly now believes the struc-
:ture should not be part of the
:inter-agency agreepient, but
·otherwise he feels the negotia-
. tions between the city and the
:water district are looking hope-
:rul.
, ~It's encouraging to see that
:we may find a:nother use for
;reclaimed water, H Kelly said.
But Caustin remains uneasy
'over a provision of the agree-
:ment which forces the city not to
FLOWERS .
CONTINUED FROM A 1
"You have growers coming in
frqm Escondido and places like
that who grow the flowers and sell
them at really cut prices," said
Hayton. "There were so rhany
protests m Laguna Beach over the
fa(mers' market that they with-
tlr~w the flower sale provision."
·The Corona del Mar Farmers'
!\1erket will be open from 9 a.m.
to: 1 p.m. every Saturday on the
cit.y parking lot at the comer of
Marguerite Avenue and Bayside
Drive.
Rick Heil, who will manage
the. market, said participating
vendors can only sell the products
they grow. Growers are not likely
to compete greatly with florists
oppose the water district's appli-
cation tor a discharge permit at
the state board hearing Mon-
day.
Perhaps the most vocal oppo-
nent of the proposed treated
sewage dump, Caustin believes
the state hearing should either
be postponed or else the dis-
charge permit should contain a
clause rendering the permit
invalid after a given period of
ti.me.
He also believes that the by-
pass structure may not be as
beneficial as environmentalists
originally believed.
Burnha.n;l and City Manager
Kevin Murphy met with water
dis~ct officials Wednesday
afternoon and will confer again
today before taking the agree-
ment to the City Council for
final consideration.
The council meets at 5 p.m.
in council chambers of City
Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
who have regular business
accounts and provide flowers for
events and weddings, he said .
A successful farmers' market,
Heil added, needs to have flow-
ers.
~Basically in Laguna, the
florists tried to micro-manage the
market, H Heil said. "Now a lot of
people who used to shop in Lagu-
na now go to Dana Point. It's not
our position to regulate free
trade."
But Myung, who wrote a letter
of protest to the city, wonders
what explanation he can offer to
customers who ask why prices at
local floral businesses are higher
than at the farmers' market.
In the end, florists will have to
bank on their skills and artistry,
he conceded.
, "We organize our flowers a lot
more professionally than they do."
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: P acific View Memorial Park & Mortuary, in conjunction with the**
American Legion Post 291, invites you and your fa mily to
*attend our 38th annual Memorial Day Service. *
* * * .This year's service will be held at our recently completed*
*•Garden Of Valor" Monument. This monument is dedicated to*
*the 4 branches of the Armed Forces, Police & Fire departments*
*for making the ultimate sacriftce for our City, State & Country. *
*Our service will start at 11 :00 A.M. on Monday, May 27, 1996. *
*Refreshments will be served. *
* * * •· * * * PACIFIC VIEW MllMORIAL MAK & llOllTUAllY '· * * FAITHFULLY l&RVINQ YOUR COMMUNITY SINC• 1919 * * SIOO PACIFIC vamw DIHV• * * NSWPORT 8UCH, CAUFOllNIA 91825 *
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PLAN
CONTINUED FROM A 1
to use the pennit s long as the terms
of the 'agreement are carried out.
About SS00,000 for a portion of
the pipeline between Irvine ~
and the Or•nge C::ounty w.wr Dis-
trict. The money would be earned
back through the sale of reclaimed
water. The city would also egree to
pay for the defense of lawsulU mwn
any citizens or groups from N~
Beach.
between Newport Beach and the
Irvine Ranch Water Olsttkt.
• tf .. .......,...nt It not tNdMd.
whllt .... ~dothe
v.no.. pertles twve7
Litigation. Irvine Ranch Water Dis-
trict will likely sue for the right to dis-
, charge treated sewage wa~r Into the
Newport BnchJCosaa ?Vu Daily Pilut
AtTORNEY ~
CONTINUED FROM A1
prosecute if Costa Mesa agrees to
take over all misdemeanor prt>se
cutions. not just a selected few.
+ What kind of compromlM .....
we tlllttng llbout7
Newport Beach, Orange County
Water District and the County Sanita-
tion District of'Orange County would
find other uses for the treated
sewage the water district Is proposing
to dump into the bay. The city would
find six buyers for the reclaimed
water, Including the Big Canyon and
Newport Beach Country Club, the
Newport-Mesa Unified School Di-strict
and the Eastbluff Homeowners Asso-
ciation.
• With .o mudt ~ to 1he bay tf the state board denies Its per-
Either way, 11 could end up cost"
ing residents money. But just how
much is something that still needs -.
to be determined. whr Is 1he ~ mit ~uest The non-profit activist
rllther thM ... vine group, Defend the Bay, would proba· •we need to figure out how much
our taxpayers are already pa.ying the.
DA to prosecute misdemeanor
crimes, before we burden them with
the cost oC doing it on our own."
Mayor Joe Erickson said Wednesday.
the fate 1he project to 1he bly sue If the discharge permit is
ltat9 board? oved ~~say they expect the regional • appr ·
board to approve the discharge per-
mit regardless of any agreement. A
compromise plan, therefore, would
be the only way to effectively keep
treated sewage out of Newport Bay.
In addition, the water district would
build a pipeline that would connect
to-the Orange County Water District's
Green Acres project, a Fountain Valley
pipeline system which funnels treated '
sewage water to irrigate golf courses
and for other lndustrial uses.
+ How much does Newport Beach
have to pay under the terms of
the llg.....,....,t7
• wtwit about.the propoMd .,,....
slon of SM Diego C...-water
Into the nurby duck ponds dur-
ing 1he S4.ll'nft'Mt7
City feeders and environmentalists
still believe this plan will benefit the
quality of the bay by removing 1 S
tons of nitrates during the summer,
but are reluctant, to commit city fund-
ing. Sources close to the negotiations
say the structure might eventually be
built separate of any agreement
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Coata Meaa
Gran
StaJnmMter
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• WhM llbout AssemblywomM
Marilyn .,.wen blll restrtctlng
whent treat.cl sew-ve water can
becMw1ped7
If passed, that bill would effectively
block the original proposal. Although
the bill has shown early promise, city
officials don't expect it to ultimately
be approved.
Newport Beach City Attorney
Bob Burnham said the neighboring
city already has an agreement with
the district attorney's office.
"They prosecute our misde-
meanor municipal code violations
and then send us a bill every three
months,• Burnham said. •And I
think it would be very difficult for
us lo do it for that price.•
The City Council meets at 5
p.m. today in council chambers
of City Hall. At least part of the
meeting is likely to be conduct-
ed in closed session.
Erickson said the matter likely
will come before the council again ·
in June. Meanwhile, Kathe will con·
duct a study o( the costs involved in
carrying-0ut each alternative.
illantcrburt! ~anor
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EYE-OPENER
Irrelevant Week has
outdone itself this year
QUOTE OF THE DAY
7t helped him (Taylor Dent) playing agaWt ~ Jamakan
kid.a. playing on center court with aU Jamaican Jana ... ,.
-CDM TENNIS COACH 11M MANG
')I I I ' I:. ~ff BF LOW
.. i . E"VmMon--..
(. I. I H ( I ( ) I. I·
richard
dunn ..
Ruling! with
a Steele fist
• Shawn Steele hammers
the competition , ag~.
only this time by just 10
strokes for men's club title
at Newport Beach CC.
S hawn Steele won by 15
strokes last time. But he
was easier on the rest of
the field this year, winning the
men's club championship at the
Newport Beach Country Cub
by only 10 strokes with an
11 ·over-par 295.
Steele, a pa.rt-time Newport
Beach resident who lives in the
Las Vegas area, celebrated his
27th birthday during the final
round (May 5), shooting a
1-over 72 for his second title in
three years.
•it was typical Shawn," said
Richard Vella, chairman of the
event. •Actually, a new member,
Al Watt, had to withdraw on the
tin,11 day because of a bad back,
otherwise I think it would've
been a good horse race between
them. The poor guy (Watt).
Every time he finished a putt..he
would have his hand on his 1
back."
Watt had a 229 after three
rounds. Jim Whitaker, the
def ending champion. finished
second at 305 (71 on the final
day), while Sandi Coffer's
husband, Dave, was third at 311
(7$).
Phil Milner (311), Vella (312)
and Dr. Richard Seberg (312)
also received trophies for top-sa
finishes. Coffer won a card-off
tor third, Seberg won a card·off
for fifth.
Shot of the tournament went
to Ted Daniels, who made an
eagle on the par-4 hole No. 1 O
with a 3-lron.
0
Breaking the S2 milllon
barrier: Hats off to the
volunteers, committee members
and sponaors of the Taco Bell
Newport Cusic Pro-Am, which
raised $306,000 this year for
Hoe9 Memorlal HOl'pital .
Prest>ytertan in Newport Beach.
With the donaUon, proceeds
h.W DOW l\U])4Ued ~.1 million
in the tournament'• 22-yea.r
• lmtory u a fund-raiser for the
~event bu raised over St
m.Ob IOI' He>eg since the
~GI a title sponsor four
•SEE GOLF PAGE 92
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UNVEILED
NBWPORT BEACH -Sam Manuel, Mr. Irrele-
vant XXJ, and identical twin Sean Manuel, who
most 11ke1y will be remembered u Even More
lrrelevant, are scheduled to arrive in Newport
• Beach at the Twin Palms Restaurant in Fashion
Island June 23.
Today the two are being presented to Daily
Pilot readers so that they may become more famil·
iar with the two and not become confused in distin·
guisbing between Irrelevant and Even More, with
game-action photos, as well as the all-encompassing black and white
•mug shots,• displayed on Page 3.
!be twin-pi:k, both chosen by the San Francisco 49ers in the recent
National football League draft in New Yo1k, will be wined and dined
in and around Newport Beach from June 23-28 as Irrelevant Week
stages its 21st birthday as the event which "Does sometb¥.19 nice for
Someone for No Reason." Sam. Mr. Irrelevant, was the last player
picked (254th). His brother, Even More, was 239th.
1be brainchild of Newport Beach's Paul Salata and perpetuated by
a number of Newport Beach citizens, the week features such items as
the presentation of theLowsman 1\'ophy at an awards banquet, Col-
lege Night. Runnin' Gunnin' Golf, a "Pub Crawl," the Beercan Re'gat·
ta and the annual trek to Disneyland.
While the two were not all that difficult to determine when on the
field playing for the New Mexico State Aggies {Sean. the defensive
end, is No. 82 on the left, and Sam, No. 40, is the linebacker defend·
ing on the pass play wearing No. 40), they can easily be 1ecogni7.ed in
the black and white photos on ,Page. 3. For instance, Mr. Irrelevant
(Sam) appears a little more subdued, while Sean (Even More),
although also 6-foot-3, weighs four more pounds than bis brother, at
least he was as the 1995 football season got under way. ·
r--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------, 1 I
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honors
I
I Simonds PCL. Female Athlete of Year
• Tiuee-sport veteran
is first Costa Mesa High
girl to earn 12 varsity
letters over the course of
her high school career.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
B oasting more bars than a
Gershwin show tune,
Mandi Simonds' letter
jacket provides ample evidence
of a standout four-year athletic
career at Costa Mesa High. •
Still, the first girl ever to earn
, 12 varsity letters as a Mustang,
: was nothing if not astonished
: when Pacific Coast League
• athletic directors selected her as
: the circuit's female Athlete of
: the Year.
: "I was completely
: surprised," said the four-year
: starter in volleyball, soccer and
• track and field. "I feel so
: honored."
: Simonds has been honored
: throughout her career at Mesa,
: which, she said, snowballed
: from one simple goal. : •1 went into it saying 1 just Costa Mesa Hlgh's Mandi Simonds daimed Padflc Coast League's Female Athlete of Year bonon.
: wanted to get three varsity PCL this spring with a leap of favorite sports, and her and Most Inspirational Player as
1 letters my freshman year," 5-0, and claimed a PCL bronze three-time recognition as Coach a senior. l Simonds explained. "1 was medal as a sophomore with a Dan Johnston's Defensive MVP, A 5-foot-8 outside hitter, she l never really thinking in terms of clearance of 4-8. reflects a significant garnered honorable mention for ! being the first to get 12 varsity Her accomplishments, contribution to the Mustangs all-league laurels as a senior.
: letters, but my soccer coach however, aren't limited to the soccer program. Simonds, who has a 4.0 GPA
: brought it up my sophomore high school scene, having taken Splitting time between right her final two years (3.45
, year. It was kind of a shock to second at the 1995 J unior fullback, center fullback, and overall), and scored 1,230 in the l me that I was the first one to do Olympics U.S. Regional even goalkeeper, Simonds SAT, said she plans to attend l it at Costa Mesa.• Championships in Las Vegas twice received honorable Orange Coast College.
: Simonds' primary attention (with a personal-best of 5-4), mention for all-league honors And, precllctably. she figures
: came from her work over the and topping the field at the (her freshman and junior to narrow her sporting interests
1 high jump bar, where she won 1995 California n ack and Field seasons). only slightly.
: four of five PCL dual meets Championships In San Diego She also took home •1 know I'm going to com~te
: each of her final two seasons while representing \he lime hardware from season-ending in track, but I will have to dedde
: and owns a pair of medals Crom Machine USA nack Club. volleyball banquets, being between soccer and volleyball.
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: successes at league finals. Simonds considers soccer named the Mustangs' Most because they're both during the
: She finished second in the and track and field her two Improved Player as a freshman same (fall) season." ,
L----------------------------------~----------------------------------------------------------------------------~
daily pilot high school athlete ~f the week
CHIP OFF 11HE OLD BLOCK
• 1llylor Dent• piling up the bonon,
as well II the ~t Oyer miles,
\. <> I. I. F Y B :\ I I.
charlie
b rand e
You don't win
without a Sawin
on your team
• Laurie Sawin is the
epitome of a winner, and
Sunday she caps it all
with another highlight.
T his weekend a person who
I feel is very special, will
take another big step in
her life.
Fonner Corona del Mar High:
Athlete of the Year Laune SaWLO
will marry Willie Quinn m
Pasadena on Sunday.
I spent some time with Laurie
at last week's China-USA
Women's volleyball match
Laurie was there to watch former
Stanford teammates, Bev Oden
and Kristen Klein, play for our
United States Olympic Team.
Both Laurie and Willie are
Stanford graduates so I kidded
with Laune about having the
right to coaching their clu.ldren.
It's obvious that they will be
intelligent and athletic.
My first recollection of Laurie
is during her freshman year at
Corona del Mar. The Orange
county Volleyball Club was
having practice at Ensign Junior-
High and Laurie bad just moved
to Calif omia from Texas. (Her
8 SEE VOLLEYBALL PAGE 82
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Carey Read of Orange Coast
College has found her own
version of a Catch-22 ... a big
winner with the goat tag.
By Jim Walters, Daily Pilot
• I n the military they call it
favorite, the Pirates were tagged with a
big goose egg. Diablo Valley held on to
beat OCC by a 40-point margin -
411..5-377 .5.
"It's weird," she said. "I got two
firsts, but I was also the only one to dq
(be' disqualified)," she said "Maybe
God is testing me to see if I can handle
it Hopefully, this will make me
stronger."
It hasn't been an easy time for Read,
who said she was so upset, shE:, cried
herself to sleep the first few nights of
the State Meet.
being able to spot potential and a
winning attitude.
And SO it WU wtth Read.
"She wasn't very good the day I saw
her, in fact. she ftnisbed la.st, but I
didn't let it deter me,• said Ratblelder.
"She bad a IDarginal stroke, but she's
6-1, and I felt that with some changes, I
could fix (her stroke). I just knew she
could do it. I was also impressed with
her. She has a great personality and I
knew she woulci fit in well with the rest
of the team.
R.atblelder attributes much of Read's
success to her mental toughness, which
was also tested at an April 12 meet at
Palomar College, where she was facing
Carlyn Pipes-Nielsen, a 31-year-old
former Division I college swimmer
making a comeback with the Comets
in the 50 breast.
Pipes-Nielsen was regarded as the
best community college swimmer in
the state and came in unbeaten ln
collegiate swimming.
·' . ·: ...
Catch-22. As the scenario goes,
any soldier who doesn't want to
be on the front lines during a
battle must be sane because no
one wants to be at risk. "I've been swimming meets since I
was nine years old and I have never
dq'd, •Read said. "I knew I had done it
But when I called her the first time,
she figured I was just trying to
recruit her teammate, Rachel Arrow,
through her. I had to convince her I
was very interested in her, too."
"Nielsen holds 15 master's records,"
said R.athfelder. "I told Carey just to
swim her race. I took her out of an
earlier race, a 100-yard freestyle, so
she wouldn't be quite as tired. The converse is also true. Any
soldier who says he doesn't want to be
on the front lines is exhibiting an
understandable predilection towards
self-preservation, which is also the
mark of a sane person.
Therein lies Catch-22.
~ Carey Read, a former product of r Newport Harbor High and a current
1 member of the Orange Coast College :r women's swim team, is not in the
: military, but she's feeling caught up in
: her own version of Catch-22.
: The 18-year-old came out of the
1 recent 1996 California Swimming and I
1 Diving Championships at Long Beach
: State as the only two-time individual
: winner for the ,Pirates, picking up
: several valuable points in the team's
• run for a seventh straight state crown.
I
I
I
I
I
On the flip side, Read was called tor
Jumping early from the blocks on her
leg of the 400-medley relay during the
first night of the three-night
competition. The same thing had
happened a few weeks early at the
Orange Empire Confere nce finals.
Instead of earning 40 points in an
event where OCC was the pre-race
·at the Conlerence Finals, but I didn't
think I did at State.
_ "As I was finishing the 100 I looked
up'and saw one otmy teammates
getting really mad at an official and
then walking away. I didn't know what
had happened.•
Instead ol letting the mistake tear
her down, Read came back to stake her
cl~ as th~ top breaststroker in the
state by winning the 50-yard sprint in
31.88 and then doubling in the 100 in a
time of 1:09.90.
"I was so upset, but maybe that's
why I did so good," she said.
"Sometimes I work better under
pressure, but hopefully I'll never do
this again."
D ead, who wasn't a phenom coming
1'.out of high school, bas already
reached times she says would be good
enough to qualify for the bottom rung
on a Division I swim team.
"I've got one more year to improve
my times, H she said. "Where I go
depends on how fast I get. I could
swim at a Division I school now, but l
Orange Coast College's Carey Read
want to be better than at the bottom."
So, for the time being, Read is
working on her conditioning by
running and competing in her Masters
swimming program in preparation for
her sophomore campaign. She'll get
back to the more strenuous five-and
six-mile a day workouts later this
summer.
When OCC Coach Jon Rathfelder
first met Read on a recruiting trip to
Newport Harbor High, she was going
through a classic case of burn-out.
Rathfelder, who was recruiting a
second Harbor swimmer, convinced
her to give it anothe r shot.
A women's college swimming
prQgram doesn't win 112 consecutive
dual meets, as occ has done, without ,
Arrow never made it to OCC, but
.Read, with some convincing, tihally
did.
"~he said she was really burned out
and wanted to get away from
swimming, and that's not unusual for
high school swimmers," said
Rathfelder. "We often have athletes
come back after ta.king some time off.
"I described the way we do things at
Coast, about the friendships she would
make, about the friends I made when I
was a swim.mer here and how many of
those friends are still the closest ones I
have. I could see her enthusiasm start-
ing to return. I felt I could rejuvenate
her."
"I wouldn't'do anything differently if
I bad it to do again," said Read. "I
haven't missed one workout. My
patents are really impressed with that.
I love weight training. I go to all my
• classes. It's just part of what you do in
order to be part of this program. It's no
problem. 1 just do it, I don't even think
about not doing it.•
"The two took off away from the
field and went all the way right with
one another. At the end you couldn't
separate them by sight."
'T'be electronic timer reveeled the .1 decision: Carey, 31.88. Pipes-
Nielsen, 32.05.
' •Jon told me beforehand not to race
against her, because I always lose
when I race against somebody,• said
Read. "He wrote 'Vader' on my swim
cap. It's kind of a team joke.
"In breaststroke the secret is all
about stroke mechanics, that's what
makes it so tough. But I d.¥1 what Jon
told me. I never even looked at ber.
When the race wa! over she came over
to.me and said, 'You know, you are the
first one who's ever beaten me in
college.' •
Instead of being upset, Pipes·
Nielsen offered Read a couple of
mechanics hints.
"She's like a sponge,• said •
Rathfelder. "She soaks up everything
we tell her. One of the reasons she bas
improved so much is tliat she listens so
well. She has a great future.•
L----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
....
·--: l
SKILLS CAMP
Ca.Hing all
baseball
players
NEWPORT BEACH -The dog
days of summer are the perfect
time to learn more about the
grand old game of baseball.
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 81
years ago. During the Newport Classic in
January, the Mexican fast-food chain :
announced a commibnent for three more years.
0
The Southern CaWomla desert was st.zzllng
with talent from the beach communities last
week in the 38th annual Desert Event for ladies
at five different golf courses over two days.
ln Flight A, Selby Schriber of Big Canyon
Country Club was seventh (157) low gross.
while Debbie Albright (150) and Kay Heaney
(151), both of Newport Beach CC, finished
seventh and 12th low net, respectively .
In Flight C, Janet J;iolladay of Santa Ana
Country Club was second (181) low gross, while
fellow SACC member Judy Almquist was
eighth (150) low net. Sharon Lloyd of NBCC
was 14th (153) low net.
the men's dub and women's dub combine for
an annual tournament, Kathryn Rizzi shot a
hole-in-one on No. 5 (112 yards} with a 5-iron.
There were three witnesses, including Bob Potts
and Hal Green.
Bill Holzgraf and Judy Bates were the
Winners, while Carl Cotton and Nina Winn
finished second and Green and Rizzi third. Rizzi
(obviously, with her ace on No. 5), and Darlene
Perry were closest to the pin for the women;
Dan McGuire and Sorin Zdrahal were closest to
the pin for the men.
0
In the men's club's regular round May 1,
Hank Lefebvre won low gross (61), Lee
Crumbley won low net (49) and Curtis Herberts
was second low net (50). Loyal Pankretz made a
hole-in-one on No. 2 and (of course) WOJ) closest
to the pin, edging out Herberts, whose drive
had landed only 1 1/2 feet from the pin.
Q
.. LI T TLE L E AGU E
One-run games the onl~r of the da
COSTA MESA -The Tigers were feeling pretty good after they ral
lied for five .runs in the top of the sixth inning to a take two-run lea
over their Costa Mesa American Little League Major Division riv
the Yankees.
Unlortunately for the Tigers, the Yankees battled back with thre
runs of their own in the bottom half of the inning to escape with a 9-win. .
Steve Errico's bases-loaded double tipped the scales. Billy Halver
son, David Boucher, Joey O'Sullivan and Aaron Caldera helped ca
the rally.
Halverson went the distance to pick up the win.
Renny Jackson and Andrew Carich had key hits for the Tigers.
In Minor A Dlvblon play:
Marlnen 11, Orioles 10
Daniel Cooper allowed only one run over the final two innings t
shut off the Orioles run at a come-back.
Cooper, Katryrul Angle, Roger Mendez and Sheldon Montgome
all scored two runs for the Mariners. Montgomery added a double.
Angels 9, lndlans 8
ln a see-saw battle, the lndians opened a 5· 1 lead after 3 11 . .
With that in mind, the New-
port Harbor Baseball Assoaation
is accepting signups for a Swn-
mer skills camp which will fea-
ture the teaching instruction of
Orange Coast College baseball
Coach John Altobelli and New-
port Harbor High's Jim Kiefer.
In Flight D, Cindy Busby of Mesa Verde
Country Club was 10th (187) low gross, while
Kingsley Brosnan of NBCC was 12th (188).
0
In flight rounds May 4, Jack Stinson (low
gross 64) and Alex De La Parra (low net 55) won
Flight A; Don Wulf (low gross 65) and Bob
Brownell (low net 54) won Plight B; and Schnell
(low gross 68) and Brown (low net 53) won
Flight c.
0 innings.
~ .
' , .
• ~· "'· ~ .. · ..... , ..
.. .
Several other coaches, which
are expected to include some for-
mer professional players, will
help create a 7:1 ratio of players
to a coach.
The First session will run from
June 24-28 wtth the choice of a
day-long session or one of two
split sessions -9 a.m.-noon or 1-
4 p.m
The spl.Jt sessions cost $75
while the all-day session runs
$125. There will be an additional
$10 fee for non-NHBA players.
A second session 1s set to run
July 15-19
The camp will be held at
Kaiser Park, 2131 Tustin Avenue,
in Costa Mesa.
Players will need to bring a
bat, glove, bag and a bottle of
water to each session. Snacks will
be provided, but all-day players
should bring a sack lunch.
For more information, call 451 •
2228 or stop by Treads and
Threads at the comer of 17th St.
and Santa Ana in Costa Mesa.
Save the date: The S.P.I.N. (Serving People
tn Need) Golf Classic will b~ July 29 al Mesa
Verde. Proceeds of the event will assist the
low-income and homeless of Orange County to
become self-sufficient and independent of
public support. Call 757-1456 for more info.
0
Following the second round of the
three -round Memorial Cup in the Newport
Beach Golf Course men's dub, Al Schnell (dub
president) is the leader with 108.8 in the 80%-
handicap net tournament. Joe Russo (110) is
second, Jack Brown (111.2) third.
0
In the club's Guys and Dolls Classic, where .
Leigh Stetnberg, the Newport Beach-based
sports attorney and agent, will return as the
Honorary Chairman of the Juvenile Diabetes
Foundation lntemational's sixth annual Leigh
Steinberg Golf Classic on Friday at Tustin Ranch
Golt Course .
Players and guests will attend a post-event "
dinner with celebrities and athletes as table
hosts. Tournament entry fee is $300, which
includes green fees, tee prizes, lunch and
dinner, entertainment and silent auction. For
more details, call 553-0363.
• RICHARD OUNN's club golf column usually appears
every Thursday.
\I 1 > I 1 > H < ) < I I "
Speedway racJng features powerboat display Friday Iii.gilt
COSTA MESA -lWenty of the top Speed·
way Motorcycle racers from ~ound the coun-
try will be in action Friday on the oval at the
Orange County Fairgrounds of the Ocean
Spray/Bruce Penhall Cup Champlonships.
The riders will compete even·up in ftve·
man heats with the top five scorers iqUartng
otf in a wtoner-takes-all 1aatch final.
American Powerooat Anodatl.on world
champions Bruce Penhall and Demm Sigaloc
will host the night's festivities wbicli will
·include a display of several offlhore radng
powerboats.
Gates open at 6:30 p.m. with rAc:tng ltartlng
at 8.
For ticket information, call .t92-9933. -----------------------------' ·-: ~-~~:VOLLEYBALL
. t:ONTINUED FROM 81
Stanford teammates would later
nickname her "Tex"). She was
interested in joining and had
pl4yed some volleyball in Texas.
While her level of volleyball
was not quite what the other
glrll bad, there were two very
d.lltlnct things that I remember
about tbat first day, Laurie's
charlsmatic mille, and the fact
that lhe could pass.
. These two qualities as well as
, ·her athleticism, charm and
4lntelligence, have taken her a
tong way.
Laurie's high school ca.reer
wu filled with accolades 1n not
only volleyball but soccer and
track. The CdM track teaJDJ
were very succeuful and she
wu a rujOr pert of Coach Steve
J<aaynald'• champtomhip teamt.
In volleyball, Laurie was a
major factor in the succeu of the
1987 CdM teem that battled
Newport Harbor iii one ol the t
most exciting CIP Finals ever.
At Marina High School, a
packed gym of screaming
volleyball fans cheered as
Newport and Corona del Mar
went five thrilllng games.
Newport's star Jenny Evans
would go on to play at UCLA
who Sawi.n's Stanford teams also
bad an intense rivalry.
Laurie was selected as the Sea
View Le~gue Athlete ot the Year
by the Athletic Directors in 1989.
ln one ot my prou(lelt moments I
was asked by Laurie to act as
"her parent• at the Orange
County Athletic Director's
presentation at Anaheim
Stodium.
Laurie's parents were out of
town but i\ still wu a great
mom nt to enjoy th.ti tpedal ttm
with her.
Laurie'• mother, Bunnie
Mauldin, was one ol thcee
parent.a that was always there
taking care ot t.bingl! behind the
scenet. Whether lt wu tbe tMm
d.ln.ner or JUlt support, Lilune'•
teams couJd alwayt munt on
B\iftnM. I'm 1W9 thet lbe'll be
taking lots ol those little things in their last dub match, we had
during this week. defeated a team which had
Sawin's Orange County beaten us in two previous
Volleyball Club teams were matches.
legendary throughout the nation. It could, and would, happen
Coupled with Irvine's Bev Oden again. I also reminded them that
and Newport Harbor's star setter. nobody remembel'I the earlier
Sienna CUJd, their teams won matches. They only remember
many national titles, as well as wbo wins the Finals.
the Junior Olympic This Sunday will be a ipedal
champlomhip during their senior day. In attendance will be many
year in high school. of Laurie's former teammates
This team also featured a including Bev Oden and Kristen
CdM championship du.ring their Klein. Unfortunately, I'll be
senior year in high lichool It also coaching at the Southern
f eatUJed a CdM junior, Danielle Callf omia Regional.a and will not
Everett, who would later become be able to attend.
a Stanford teammate of Lautie'1. Laurie knew exacUy where I
At Stanford, Laurie's volleyball would be. When she played, she
duties were beskal.ly backrow spent the regional weekends
where lhe again excelled at ball each yw running between the
control (terving, pa11ing and CtF Pinall ln track and ow
defense). She wat the captain of volleybell ch4mplonlblJ>11.
the 1993 tum which won the Durtng thei.r Mnlor year, we
NCAA National Champ1omh1p. even had to play iii the Ragk>n4l •
I remember talking to Lourie P1nali Wltbout our setter. Sienna
and Bev before the final match Curd, who had an inporta.nt
Wlth UCLA, which bad beaten debutante ac:tMty.
Stanford all }'Ml long. I lt'I that time of the year but
reminded thtim that thll wu my thoughts will be wttb WUU.
tbetr lMt college match and that and Laude on their greet day.
·~ ......... ~---
Starter Trevor Smith went out and the Angels rallied to take a 6-
lead.
After jockeying for position, the two teams found themselves tied, 8
8, in the top of the sixth.
DENT
CONTINUED FROM 81
rougher than Newport Beach,
tha!'s for sure. We get kind of
spoiled out here. I was nervous
leaving the hotel sometimes."
Dent, ranked No. 1 in the
singles finalist (losing to Jimmy nation last year in the boys 14s,
Connors in 1974) and a highly continues to make his opponents
respected teaching pro at the nervous.
Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club. Last year, in addition to
"My dad said I came back winning designated Southern
from Jamaica a more California Tennis Association
experienced player," said Dent, tournaments in San Diego,
who parlayed his improved Whittier and South Bay, Dent
game into a Sea View League erupted on the junior circuit,
title, winning four matches, captwing the SCTA Junior
including a 6-2, 6-3 victory over Sectionals title in June and the
Woodbridge's Chase Exon in the USTA National Hardcourt
semifinals d 6 1 3 1 ( tired) championship in August. an a · • • re · He hails from a family rich in win over CdM teammate Boris Turkich in the finals. tennis history. ln addition to bis
Exon had beaten Dent twice father, bis mother, Bettyann, was
during the regular season in once ranked No. 4 in the world
one-set affairs, both tie·breakers. in doubles with Ilana Kloss,
Dent, 37-10 overall and 22-3 currently the executive director of Workl TeamTennis . in league before the Sea View His stepbrother, Brett
individual championships, feels H De CJP he's a slow starter, so be doesn't ansen-nt, won a singles championship for Newport like one-set competitions. Harbor in 1990, before becoming
"For some people, (one set) is a top NCAA player under
better, because they're quick then-coach Greg Patton at UC starters," Dent said. "It takes me Irvin
if I e.
a couple of games, and start Hansen-Dent skipped his final
slow, and if I get down, I don't two years of college and entered
have enough to come back. It's the pro satellite toUJ, but
tough for me. Normally, I play struggled to make a living, then
better 1n the second and third got his college eligibility back
sets ln high school tennis." and returned to the NCAA
Dent. the 1994 champion in _ circuit at USC, where he reached
the boys 1·b at the Ojai Valley the NCAA singles champlonahip
Tennis Tournament, misled th.ti match Jut year, losing to top-
year's Ojai event because of bi.I seeded Sargis Sargsl.an of
USTA commlbnent at the World Arizona State.
Youth Cup, an experience he taylor Dent ii meklng bis own
wouldn't trade for the best mark now.
reggae band in th4I world. • H1I timlng'1 much better now
•Jt wu actually pretty cool, and he's a lot more coaftdent, •
having my bl.rth~y 1n Jamaica,• Mid Mang, ndentng lo Dent's
Dent sakt. •m fact, our USTA ph}'lical ttruggleil Mdler this
coach who went with ua Ml it up ,..,-, when be lpl'OUted mon '° J oould IDMt Dionne Warwkk, than foUJ lncbel in a year, thus
who wu downlt.aJn that Dtvbt in caU1AD9, among Otber things,
the dlD1ng room tn tbe W "" 1mM ~.
where we wwe ~· She said • •ffe'i IUll probably growing a
happy birthday, 1he IOunded llut. bit. tNt fae'I ~ to catch
v.v Dice up With hlihMlf, Tm ibob be
•. 11t w~ a btt ~ bl WM c' tug by la IDdl • t1'Q
KingstOn, ~---•_Jot __ ......... -.-'-' .... DOW on .. ll.~ ........... -.....
'I
I
11 •' Nnrpon BeacbJCotea Mesa DMl Pilot -y
r · -
..
'·
.-.
'• .
•' .
II
r
'•
·high school boys tennis
Sea Kings get a . little bonus ... travel
•Today's second-round
match in CIF Playoffs is at
South Torrance, a repeat
of last year's run in the
eliminations for CdM.
•we lost the coin flip (for
home-court advantage on
Wednesday), which is good,"
CdM Coach nm Mang said.
-Obviously, we want to play the
better teams at home; we want
the later rounds at home.•
Dent and, perhaps, Esan
Mozeyanl, who played most of
the season on junior varsity.
a spedallst of acupressure later
this week in Laguna Beach,
Mang said.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
The Sea Kings, champions of
the Sea View League for the third
ti.me in four years, breezed
through Esperanza in the first
John Cappello, one of Cd.M's
top singles players, will probably
move to doubles and team with
Greg Coleman, breaking up the
formidable Coleman-Sameer
Chopra tandem that swept Esper-
anza, 6-1, 6-3, 6-1. Raj Shukla is
expected to team with Chopra.
On Tuesday, Turkich withdrew
from the CIP Individual Champi-
onships, which begin on Saturday
at Edison and conclude with
semifinals and finals May 25 at
SeaCUff Tennis Club in Hunting-
ton Beach.
•Jt's going to be real tough get-
ting to the CIF Finals without
Boris,• Mang said. ~Maybe he'll
get tired of, watching our kids
play, and he might think, 'Hey, if I
can jump in there (and play dou-
bles), we might have a shot at
winning the whole thing.'"
round on Tuesday, 13-5, at the
TORRANCE -For the second Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club,.
consecutive year, Corona del Mar where they are expected to host
High's boys tennis team will play any additional playoff matches.
South Torrance in the second Mang said Wednesday some
round of the CIP Southern Section lineup changes will also be made
Division I Playoffs ... those lucky for today's match against South
Spartans. Torrance, a second-place team
Sam Shahmardi and Reza
Jahangirl, CdM's No. 1 doubles
team against Esperanza, are
expected to remain intact.
The Sea Kings (17-2), seeded from the Ocean League (behind
third, smashed through the Spar-fourth-seeded Beverly Hills) that
tans last year in the second round, defeated .k>rdan, 11-7, in the first
14-4, at South Torrance. CdM is a round.
The Sea Kings will be without
junior Boris Turkich, an exchange
student from Croatia who went
43-2 in singles, 23-1 in the Sea
View League, . reaching the
league individual chetmpionship
match (losing to Dent).
Although Turk:ich said be will
miss two months because of a
back injury, Mang is still hopeful
of a recovery. Turk:ich might visit
CdM has lost this year only to
top-seeded Santa Barbara and
second-seeded Peninsula.
If the Sea Kings defeat SOuth
Torrance today, they will play the
winner of Westlake-versus-Dana
Hills in the quarterfinals next
Tue~day.
heavy favorite to execute Similar Kal Miller, frustrated in dou-
damage today on the Spartans' bles on Tuesday, will play singles,
courts. ,,. joining freshman sensation Taylor
cl"\ \<II \\ll'l<>"\"'1111' HI'-.
The Cortnlldam • front row, from left. St.cey JtMs, Julia
UWaglton. Sara Anaya. Krtlll BdtangNm, Sara Ellopolm,
Rltzabeth Mone, 1Rde lfmloo, Nicole Sooa; Standing, from left,
Manager Steve Sdlwm, Megan Buddngbam. Kdltln Pippin.
Lauren Meskell. Karly Pentne, Katie Erlaon. Katie Welbomn.
JDUan Schwer, Dana Jarvis, Vanema Ce+l'al, COllda Barry 'IUmer.
NEWPORT H A RBOR B ASE BALL ASSO CI ATI O N
Change of diamond proves to be a gem of an idea
• Sprinklers get an assist in
Phillies' come-from-behind
15-14 victory over the Cubs
in the opener of the Mustang
Division Playoffs.
'
NEWPORT BEACH -Nobody could
blame the Phillies if they felt they had
received some divine -intervention in their
opening game of the Newport Harbor Base-
ball Association Mustang Division playoffs
against the ·cups.
The Phillies were trailing, 14-9, in the
bottom of the sixth inning when the sprin-
klers came on, sending both teams scurry-
ing from the diamond.
The two teams continued the game on a
nearby field and the Phils were able to rally
for six runs and a 15-14 victory.
Dennis Holland and Mat Smith each
drove in four runs for the Cubs. They both
went 3 for 4 with Smith tripling and Holland
adding a home run.
Mike Gustafson, Smith and Holland
shared the pitching duties for the Cubs,
who finished 2-1 on the week wbilP ~oring
43 runs.
Cubs 11, Red Sox 9
The week evened out as toe Cubs
topped the Red Sox.
Holland, who pitched less than an inning
all season, gave the Cubs three strong
.lnnll1~. Gustaf son pitched the final two to
preserve the win.
Holland had another big day at the plate,
going 3 for 4 while drlving in three runs
with a home run.
Colin Callahan did him one better in the
power department, knocking out two home
runs. Frank Colbeck and Gustafson each
added triples as Callahan and Gustafson
drove in two runs apiece.
CUbl ti, Angell 14
The Cubs bed 18 hits in this alugfest that
twned on the ability of Gustaflon, wbo
came on in relief and shut down an Angel
rally in the bottom of the sixth.
Gustafson also had another strong show-
ing at the plate, knocked in tour runs wbtle
. going 4 for 4 With a double.
SJD.ith had tb.198 lln.gles and he can
Ce.Dahan both bad two RBJ. Callahan, with
two doubles, joinid Chrtl White and 'fyler
Glbbl with two bits .ch.
Marllm 12, 1WtM 11 n. te<.'ODd·.,i.c. ]\#tnl la.st their ~·
Lag game of the w.ek to the third·pJace
Merlini before splitUn9 two more gamet.
Tha. 'J'wiDI took a twQ.run lead into the
bottom'bl the lilth but h.ad to watched u
the Marlins fought back for the win.
Brenden Zimmer led the Twins' efforts,
going 3 for 3 and pitching three innings.
~ 11, Mariners 8
The TWins took conunand in the fifth
inning behind the hitting of Zimmer and
Elliot Laurance.
Yankees 14, 1Wlns 12
In their final game of the year, the Twins
put together a strong sixth-inning rally only
to fall short.
Laurance, Shane Swanberg, Eddie Gal-
lardo provided the offensive power. Josh
White, Zimmer and Swanberg shared the
pitching duties.
Marlins 8, Rockies 1
The Rockies took a 4-2 lead in the third
inning on a three-run home run by R.J.
Muller.
The Marlins went ahead 5-4 by pushing
across three runs in the fourth and fifth. Tay-
lor Young and David Cowan each scored
twice for the Marlins while Patrick Heenan
held the Rockies scoreless over the final two
innings.
Bronco Division (ages 11-12)
Marlins 8, White Sox 6
The Marlins banded the White Sox their
first loss of the season, 6-4, and then the
Angels made it two straight losses with an
8-6 tally to knock the top .seed out of the
Bronco Division double-elimination play-
offs.
Grant Kidman set the tone in the Mar-
lins' win making an excellent assist on a
ground ball out to second base ln the open-
ing inning. A.J . Slater capped it by snag-
ging a long Oy ball to left field to end the
game. .
Brandon Lee picked up the win by strik-
ing out five in five innings of work. Dave
Dalmann closed out the final two innings
with four strike outs as the pair held the
White Sox to five hits.
Brandon Klaus, Paul Tucker, Lee and
Jesse Pem.mstein led the offensive attack. n.e Angell• Chris Rhinesmith pitched
on•-hit ball through five innings while strik·
tng out nine White Sox batten.
In a tight game, Blake Hanley lined a sin·
gle to center to bring home Ryan Rowe with
the tying run.
Att.r-the Angels sconfd tWice in the sev-
enth to take the lead. Ryan ROwe struck out
the side to prelel'V• the Win.
Geoff Rill had two doubles and drove in
two NDI to lead the Angeil' nine-bit attack.
'Il'avtl Moore added two ting191.
Devil Carr made two Dice Catcbel on fly·
ball outs while Devfid PMila tbNw out e run-
ner at the plate. vrt .. 12, ADlell'
With the White 9ox eUmtne*1. the Yen;
kees took advantage by picking up three
wins in this week's action.
Nick McCarthy powered out his 10th
home run of the season and pitched four
innings to pick up the win over the Angels.
He struck out five while walking three.
Ryan Heenan pitched the final two innings
to hold on to the win.
The Angels turned a triple play in the
game that started with a Oy ball to right, a
runner caught off first, and a tag-out at
home to catch the runn~r trying to sneak in
for a run.
Yankees t 2, Indians 9
. The two teams ended up playing one of
the longest games ohhe years -almost 25
hours. A far cry from the normal two-hour-
and-fi.fteen -minute affair.
The game got a late start Friday when
the umptte arrived late. The delay probably
worked in the Yankees advantage as they
ended the day trailing by four runs.
The Yankees made the best of the extra
rest, batting around and scoring nine runs
in the sixth inning when the game resumed
at 4 p.m. the next day.
Luke Swift came on in relief of McCarthy
and Heenan and struck out tWo, including
the last batter to end the game.
Adam Cherry, Heenan, Peter Dugan and
McCarthy all doubled for the Yankees.
Cherry, McCarthy and Pete Madison all fin-
ished with two hits.
Yankees ts, Marlins t
The Yankees made a clean sweep of the
week by hammering the Marlins with
McCarthy powering out his 11th home run
of the season -a three-run shot. He's the
only player in the -Bronco Division with a
dingei this season.
Madison went 3 for 3 while Cherry and
Heenan each bad two hits, including a dou-
ble apiece.
McCarthy struck out four and walked
three to pick up the win with m innings of
work.
Mustang Division ( .... ._10)
Pllllllet tS, Cubl 1'
Pony Dlvtalon (agM t 3-t4)
lncllw t 1, Welt v.-... 10
Justin Jacobc and Matt Glover Heb went
3 for 4 in lMding the lndlam to a on&-ruo
wtn over the Yankees.
. The lndMms used eight pitchers: starter
Kevln Potter, Den Searl1 ScOtt Dean., Brad
Burton. Paul Lu.cute.ri ~ Seen Ror·
den, and Dayne Pfaff.
W... Wllile. la 7, .... F 5
In ~ ~ iftod. the lndfi9m' Billy Clay·
ton bed two llnglel and drOft tn two runt
while pitching four ~ lD N1W ci( Ror·
deli.
THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996
\I I\ I I\ I\ ( I I \ \ \. I \ \. I ) I \ I "· '. 1 ' I I\ I
Mr. Irrelevant (Samt ls on the l~ Even More
(Sean) Is on the right. They're both San
Frand.sco 49en and headed for Mr. Irrelevant
Week In Newport Beach J une 23. <l l . : I
I ------------------------------------------------------~
YOUTH SOCCE R
CdM, Newport girls help
Spitfire take first crown
RIVERSIDE -They're officially known as the Tustin Spitfire, but the
girls 14 and under club soccer program, has some of its roots in the
Harbor area.
Elizabeth Morse and Julia Llvingstoo, who will be mcoming Coro-
na del Mar High freshman, and.Katie Wellborn, who shares the same
status at Newport Harbor High, helped the Spitfire claim it's first tour-
nament title at the Corinthian Spring Soccer invitational.
The Spitfire swept four games to top the eight-team field in the
weekend tournament held at UC Riverside.
In the finals, Kristy Brittingham. Karly Perrine, Dana Jarvis and \
Morse scored first-half goals as the Spitfire raced out to a 4-0 lead and'•
made it stand up.
In their first three games, the Spitfire outscored opponents 6-1 to
earn a spot in the championship game.
The Silver D1vis1on-bound Spitfire, coached by Barry Turner, fin.
ished 10-1 in league play.
AYSO Region 97 registration
COSTA MESA -AYSO Region 97 will be holding registration
for the Fall soccer season May 22 at Mariners Library.
!legion 97 , which includes the eastside of Costa Mesa and the
westside of Newport Beach, is open to players ages 4 1/2 to 18 as
of Aug. 1 of tlus year.
First-time players should bring a birth certificate.
The early-registration fee is $55 and $50 for each additional
family member.
Signups will be taken from 6-9 p .m. Late registrabon will by
June 26. For further mfonnation, call 642-6296.
D EEP SEA
WEDNESDAY'S COUNTS
D•wys Locker -5 boats,
151 anglers. 109 yellowtail, 31 bonito,
553 barracuda, 358 calico bass,
48 sand bass, 15 sculpin, 3 rock fish,
2 cabezon, 77 mackerel.
Newport Landing · 3 boats. 51
anglers. 299 calico bass, 56 sand bass,
76 barracuda, 1 bonito, 3 cabe'zon,
13 sculpin, 2 rock fish, 22 mackerel
SCHEDULE
TODAY
•TENNIS
High school bo~ · CIF Division I
Playoffs, second round: Corona def Mar
at South Torrance, 3·15 p.m.
1 ~tit ·ANNUAL CORONA dEl MAR ScENit
~k RAcE & 2 MilE FuN WAlk,
SATIJRdAy, JUNE 1, 1996
f>RE\ENfed 10
you by f~E
CiTy of
NEWpOIU
.8EAC~
CoMMUNfT)'
SEIMcB
[)(~RlMENl
~ tlu
COflONA dd
MAR ClwtbER
of CoMMERCI:
5TAllT 1iMH
RtGisfRArioN bEGiNS AT 6: }0 AM
2 Mik MJN WAik: 8:00 AM
WoMEN1S Sit RAcf: 8:20 AM •
MtN's n RAct: 8:4 s AM
locArioN
OcfAN 8Mt ANd Hdiontopc IN
CoAoNA dd MM "~ dtt
StArE. BEAclt PARkiNG lot
PAlllLl.-q •
COAST
NEWPORT ~ PllOPf ll l n '>
'""' s,o-~
..... , ..... \pU~
~ .
HEALTH
~ll'OJ.lV,,.
PMkiNG ~ll be FRE iN rltt ~ dd MM S1Atl BtAck PMldNG Lot
ui-tfil 7 :40 AM
Mwfs ...tU c&oil A1 7 :40 M
~' .
llKI ...._, .,.._,,,1
'
THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1996
PUILIC NOTICH PUIUC NOTICll PUIUC NOTICD PUIUC llOTICll PUIUC NOTICll PUIUC NOTIOll PUIUC NOTICU PUBLIC NOTICll
~::::::;::::::;;::;::::= NO 6D (IND A CfATAIN UfO,\ Nctpll IO ... an. Ml.IC ·~· , •• ' .... ....... nc1 PUIUC .. OTICI 0.-. ............. . C NOTICH QAAAQll SPACl tN IAIO l'AN-IK MACI<. 431 fll#\nlng Comrniltkln Of """ • C::.-._. PUIUC IOTICI PUIUC IO " ,.... II~...._ .... ,.
._.18LICNOTICE ~~~:".!.J"=:: ~f•••n• LHOUHTY. ~..:= "l::.~ :=.::..-=.:-"" ,,..,..1'1;i:' -"'w•i.a.• s.:•~==-= •r'.V ANO OESIGHATEO AS QA. DAVID FLANAOAH. 5200 uon.f ~ for lllN-Th9 ~ pmona.,. ........ • • ...._. 11'1 Ml.a UNl9 .-, OP AN: .a.-.11 ~ ~ .... 1.110
... ;,..i • ...__43_2_1'7 ____ 1RAGE SPACE NO. 22), AS SCOTTBAANES.S209 11\ate~ OOlf'll ~ u · TKtl-......... ._._...._, ~ Plr. •lllMtt •M •'11E ....,.....,.. ... ll N ...... UL-
• NOTICll Off SHOWN BY A Pl.Al' ~f· DANAGENI! IUACtt, U41 Thlt Ptoi.ct '-lleff\ r• nc>109y 1000, 19 f.Ch• _, .._ ._ C-. la 11P-~-~ .... ~ W ,.em-=,---.· -.-WI .. .. ~ , TACHEO TO SAID DEC[M-Publlahad NewP-Ort ~9d, and It hu .,,..,, nology, ttvlne CAt2711 ~ ... T~ ""'I -·-_., -, mnl I •Mt -C9 J21fM ..... 1117 UtTU I tAU BER TOGETHER WITH A 11 .. eh.Coe.. Mffa Deily o.tttmlMd trwt It 11 Cll· John L. O.Vrtee 7147'1 Sa. ................. d W. m.t11 ... YCU MS ll D9-\OM lllnln TMIT. M18 -1', 1.. ' =---
Nt 04 .. 1~C>-t20 RIGHH>f·WAY ,OR IN· PUotM•y 11.u.1-. evorlnlly •••mPt undff""' Rel .• Rancho Ml,.Qt, ,.,...... 0.. ... Mm ~~A1~'~ *'l~NlrlU ..... YIU TMf~TI ;;7 B "'"'~ • •. LOAN NOt GRESS ANO EGRESS TO tl\354 tht ttqu.lrmen11 of lht CA 02270 becOMt ......... to ltt '"-'• _.,... •-..... MOta IS 9'e Pllncf Yim JU llft. " -'
8M215HMJAC ANO FROM SAID APART· PUBLIC NOTICI Callfornla Envlronmtntal JtmH e. Salman 720'18 ,_.. • .., .. • • Nt-~ ~ '~-~ ,. FtdMll 0..-C llAY 11 111.D AT A ....C .._,,-.. 11; ~ «I,.: INIVAK, MENT (ANO GARAGE Ouahly Act. COfporatt WIJ., Thoutond W-of flgN. ............ "" """"'-T ,..,._ ..._... 111 (''POI:") • ~•'(OU-All llftA. -~.!
K£NNHH SPACE) ANO ALSO THE NOTICE JS HEREBY FUR· Palma. CA 92278 ..... ..,. """°"' ~ lllUY rT *Y M liOLO AT A of WI ""'*' • .,. ,, TMf U1UM Of,. H. M ...... 1•
CV RIGHT TO THE use OF MOTtC• OF THEA 01\IEN lh .. tald pub-Thi• bueln•H II eon-°' ......., .... OI ... P\aJC UU!. • YOU l lolft :taoa• c. ........ WT ltll 1----------~'t. No eo1613 HAt..LS, PUBLIC ROOMS, "'•LtCHL\fttNQ lie htartng wt»~ held on ducttd by: a llmittd ,,_n. ,...,...a. •• ,..... Nml>#l~TIONOI' ""' '**-"\IW ..oUL.o COlfQCT i
PUIUC NOTICll
' ' ' OflCE TO PASSAGEWAYS ANO AU NOTIC! IS HEAEBY I.ht 21th day of May, 1"4S, nerahlp *-• ~ tit 1ME NATUN! 0# THI""'°' ID ..... * Mir D. 1,.. a 'p~~;~:~~~ER· OTHER PUBLIC PORTIONS GIVEN Of tti. lntttl\lon of .. IM hour ol 7:00 p.m. In HIY9 you •tilted doing 9111111JY .............. _ C-..0 AOAINaT vou.. ... lot .. ~ LAWYllL Oft il·*"'-..
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT Of SAID BUILDING ANO \l'le &oerd ot t'.ducatlon of tht Council Chatno.fs ol buslnell vel'1 no and' .., .... DIM, ... YOU IHOULD COHTACT A ..... ~ .. lW .., Ml~c-A ~
DEED OF THE EQUIPMENT lhe ~·Mffl Unltltd tht Newport 8e1eh City JohnO.Vries Y1ft1CM ........ _.. ~ NoekelahlnOy -=: ("f$UC" ,. ¥~u~~R o:TEO MAY 24 THEREIN, IN COMMON School Olstr~ f NMUSO") Hall, 3300 ~pOft Bout .. Thia 1t1temen1 was flied "*'*1t•~~ lllWft '!:,.~._..Ila • ...._ NiUM CWCIM":.: *"t
11118 UNLESS YOU TAKE w ITH 0 TH e R 0 C· to hold • pat> lo tlffrlno Yard. Newport Stach, Call· wflh Ill• County Clerk Of ............ pmdplt .... OorpOf • c.llornla '*"" .... & ~ ll'llltlt "'° RIB GMM. --AC Ti ON TO PROTECT CUPANTS. upon th• eub Jtet ol fornla, al Which lime and Orange County on 440-90 Inell ....... Mlt'Ul9ll ~ Col'parlllon, .. lr\tlt8t, Of Oii .Niii 6 ,.. PldllMI lo Dfld °' Tnllll II•
~r. . -'
YOUR PROPERTY IT MAY The strHI addrHs and NMUSD'I n .. d1, futurt otact any and ell pet1one 19983881808 M6d OMd ., ...... IUCCMIO'trwlae,Of ...... llHIUMI ID 12 USC l8Ztl( eoftled lllr 11, '"'·II in.. ~~
BE SOLO AT A· PUBLIC 01her common dHlgnaUon, growth, taclllty need•, lnterelled may app .. r and ~lly Piiot May 9 18 23 1W90ft •~In alld tueedtnneee~tothe ($) FOIC ~ fSU: 1 No. 11·144211 of Oflidll Ate· ~ '..,,_,_,_,
SALE IF YOU NEED AN II any. of I~ real property IOUfCH Of rtvtnut 1Y1ll-~ hMtd thereon. If you 30 1996 • lh33' ......... dwgd and ... OMd Of Tru.t ~ bv --'!._ ... 10 1090 Oldl In tilt olfice ol lllt CoUl1(y OF THE deaenti.<S abOv• 11 pur· able to con1truc:t euc:h fa. ehall9n0t this ~ofeet In • · ,.,_. Of 1ht Jn-.. Ind °'..,. b .... Mflta, • C1i1J. on_.. • ~ol ..... ~ s. ~!~t~:~:[N~Er ~~~, ~A9tTtoH':QH~l~ W,~~~ ~~1~!.;~f 1':~-r=,~ :~li:'0::Yhose 1/:si~ PUBLIC NOTICE ~~.:._~~.-:. :::..°":1~~':1~ of':.-T r ~~~ ~65°sHOULO CONTACT A NEWPORT BEACH, CALI·'"' on rHldentlal .... ~ you or 1omton• •IH Plollllous8ualneH fllnlparlg '°~.debt llr\lrMnl No. --.S11 "" .. ....___ : ............. IUdlGll,.,;i;;r;;;;;;;., LAWYER FORNIA 92663 mefclal and lndultr-d• r1l1ed at the publlc heating Hema Statamont and Ill/ff '"'°"""°" we oo-look-'•-d OMcW r• I'll of ~ ---dll hlOhelt Oiddef kit cMll
O JU.NE G 1996 81 The unde111gned Trusl1!9 velopmenl rrojeell IOf tht dtterlbed In Ihle nollce OI Tht following ptt1ons art Uln-bl U99cf tot thll put· cota In 0-afllce ol the dlllftt ~ b ~ dl9dt dl'IWll on I smt
10 ~0 AM CAl·WESTERN disclaims any llabllllr lor purpose o IUndlng 11on· Jn written correspondence doing buslnest as: for· C!ortc.S.8.1. TNIC OMd Courey "9coldet d OrMQe by M111t1t ftlndl. -~•• ... A~ • ~drawn · · " C CORP any lncorl8clness o the structlon or r.con11Netlon dtllv•r•d to tll!I City at, or tr M rt 4570 c m· • ..u T ......... c.tllf°""' and Pllll&.lant lo Wl1t!llW. IK ·--_..., gERONVaEY~~~rauon "a: streel address and other of school tacllllfff within prl0tto,lh1p6bllc hearlng. P~:'or0 ~~!Port se:ch ~om&l~~u1; IM Noek:I d Oii** and eattducionbfOflOOlllCI, DyutattorftOe111CllditUni04\,
d 1
1' 01~1 polniea lruslee common deslgnallon. II 1he boundarlH ot NMUSD. For lnto1matl0f\ call (714') CA 92sio ' l.ofge Clrdl HunUnatDn ~ to W ._..,., !\al dettmtned 11111 0/ I dleClt dllMI Dy I Sllll Of ~Jer ~nd pursuant 10 any. shown herein. The date, llme and place 644-3200. Hoang Nguyen 190 York· 8udl. CA '121147, (7t4) t9CGfdld tl1Mll In 9ooll-. f\ltd bttlftCt of 119 11 ltdtlll llW'IOt I/Id loan lllOC!l·
Deed o1 Trust, recorded Said 13le wm bt made, tor tile hearing Is ~uelday. LaVonna M. Hat1'· town lh .. Costa MHa, CA MH1U, By: Hiney tt\all\ ha:--a8 ~ *-lfilllftO .W MM no u llOll. llWIOS lllOC*IOll. or
JUNE 2. 1978 as onSI No. DUI w11hout cov1n1n1 Of May 28, 1998, II 7.00 p.m. lau, CMC/AAI!, Cltr 92825 .(all lecrtt.y,U.S. fl'Ult ~ d Mid OMcllll IPOM ~. notce ""'1111' bl/Ill~ In StalOll
Mort~* Chapet Cr9mation
1~~y
Ma-9180 3198, tn book. page. of 01· warranty. express or im· at the Board Room of Clark Davia Caringal, 1921 N. Died ~ CJIMG: ~ w41 Sel on ln.l.4ll that IN ttCMeMP s 5102 of Ille finatldll Codi ano
hc:•a• Reco1ds tn th• ottrce ~=~o~~~~~~o~'.'e01 ~~: ~~5~S~lg~~!t~::, ·~Ir::~ pub 111 t;e d New po rt Maple Ave.. CoSla Mesa, Cll.40:r1• ~ lit. ::.:! A\c, Vie:"'~ ttl'lftllmd, ID be ffttetw IUCltOrittd ID dO ~=I~~~~~=~~~ ~R~~G~ocoin~ec~;~:i: ~: c:umbranc:es. Including Cos11.Me11, California, and Beach-Costa Mesa OaUy ~~,~~~slness Is con· Int.Im ~ 700 CMc ean. '°°": :'~ ~lff1 Of ':.;' bt~ TO ntt
CALIFORNIA executed by lees, charges and ex-at such tim• the comments Piiot May 15• 1996· ducted by: jolnt venture PUBLIC NOTICE tlf Drtve Welt. lanta Ana. tllnlllootedlDh•m:.. ~OU~ COUWTHQUll 700
GARY VALBUENA, AN UN· penses ot the Trusloe and of all lnlt<HtedJ.1rso~1 Th358 Havt you slarted doing Calfonll11t1;00PMlllpub-.. ~Hp.aidl~ CIVIC CSITUI ~E WUT MARRIED MAN of the 1rus1s er ea led by concern Ing N US D 1 PUBLIC NOTICE bualnest yet? no LOAN .1'16116 OTHER 9316079 lie ~ Co Vie hljjhelt It be INOe 111 • llld M uUTa. .. •a CA 111-...,111. lrtluno SE AT PUBLIC said Deed of Trusl, 10 pay needs, lulura oroWlh. fa, H N 20 fl.E 102087 AP NUMBER bldOtr fOf callh (~ •"" nQ ,._,,.-. •iv A~N10N L\o HIGHEST lhe remaining prlnclpal cllllles needt, tources of ORD1NAHCE T~!1'~taP.U~:1 • wa1 flied ~l1s~l~!b~ Oifeef>RiF the time °' ..... In iawf\11 wn,:: :1'~ :-.ntertll ~ !, ·~ "°; When Words Are BIOOER FOR CASH, sums ol lhe note(s) H · revenu• avallabl• to con· 0 ... 7 with lhe County Clerk of TRUST YOU ARE w DEFAll. montydhUnltedltllel~ 'ltlCI Dy ~
C ASH 1 E fl • S CH E C K cured by said Deed of slrucl luch faclllUet and N • 1 Orangt Counly on 5-3-96 UOOER A DES> OF TRUST al t1gt1C. WI and lnttrnt l'llltt ~ ~ rust 111 Ille pn:ioerty MUiied 111 Not Enol!Qh
CRAWN ON A STATE OR Trust to Wtl' $7t,OI t.08 lhe Increase In 1h• levy ol AN ORDINANCE 01' 19983882252 DATED MAACH 3. l!m Utt.E eonwyed \0 and now Mid LotvnMr. Mii Stoll J-912 Slid Couc1IY Ind S• dtactlbtll "S-'allzlng In BANK A W1lh lruerest thereon from sctiool taclltty ftn on resl• THE CITY . YOU TAl<E Act'ION to PR by I r.1ncW Mid Deed ot PO lb! ~. u:ASDESC98EDIHSAIODEfD ,,_. NAJl~N~~AWN BY A 8/01/93 at 10250% per dentlal, commerclal and In-COUNCIL OF THE Dally Pilot May 9• l6, 23, TECTYOURPROPERlY 10."A Tnnt tn tt1e propefty ... CA~~ JFTRUSTThu1r11Uddltullld SympathJI i~ A ~E OR FE OERAL annum as provided In said dustrlal dtvtlopment CITY 01' NEWPORT 30. 1996. lh337 BE 50'.D AT A PUil.iC SALE IF tuated In Mid Cow-tty and No~ ID the ltl!ft lJClltr common deSIQl\lllOn. 11 Flowers•
CREDIT UNION OR A note(s) plus cost and any projects tor tile purpose ol BUCH AUTHORIZING PUBLIC NOTICE 't'OU NEED AN EJ<Pl.MATIOli OF S.. shown on the C<M.lllty of the llC*VMhiP wilt •ny <" tilt "ii Pft10t1!Y Ot· CHECK CRAWN BY A advances with ln1eros1. ES· funding Ille conSlruclion or AN AMENDMENT TO THE NATURE OFTHE'PROCEED Auesaof"t rKOfd1 11 A.P. wi.cll M not H scnbtci abOWt Is Pllf'POl1lld to bt. 2983 Hart>or Blvd
STATE OR FEDERAL SAV· TIMATED TOTAL DEBT reconstruction of IChOOI fa. Flctltlou• Bualn•aa ING AGAINST YOU YOU No,: 062·111.()1. The prop-dlintht •ll'lfflltl'll 71 ·~ ...... IMCll. Co*ta ""'-··
0 O N S· S101 ,0l5.38 clllties wllhln lht bound· THI! CONTRACT .., SHOl.lD CONTACT A LAWYER '911yedchuand ~com-Mly9. 19111 -•• Tiit .-..i...-,,. ,.,....,r tNGS AN L A A The benetle1ary under arias of the NMUSO wlll be WITH THI PUBLIC Nema Stetem.nt Nola"~~ lhll mon dellgnlition. ran d FEDERAL . O£POStT IHSUR· Ca ,,.,... "'-:-~•
SOCIATION, SAVINGS ,:s· said Deed of Trusl hereto· heard. lnformallon con-l!MPLOVE•S The fOllo~ing persons Me R~ ~ • the rul propetty dele~ CC>RFORATION. IS Al TNSllM dlldllms any liallillly IOI 540-3 J 35
SOCIATION. OR SAVI GCS lore elleCUled and d•llv cernlng this mattlf It avail· ""llT•""-MllNT doing business as: N•W· Miiie. or succ.sa 1nlille Of ~-.. __ _. ..... ..... ... ..__ &---.... ~--& •ICMICtnell ol lllt ltr'ftl ca= 8AHK SPECIFIED IN SE • • .... nA part l'opsld• & Dive 2600 ~ tNSW p.nljft IO.,.. _...... .......... -... ..... "'._....,.,,......._,,, ..... and OClltr ~ TION 5102 OF THE FINAN· ered lo lhe undersigned a able fOfm C,atolyn Stocktr. SYSTEM TO Newpart Blvd 1211' New· d TNSt U8CIMO by L-. 3700 E.altOceln '°"'9¥#d. Oln Astoollioll. COltl ....,rns II SllOwnfltmn.
CIAL CODE AND AUTHO, WTtlten Oeclarallon ol Oe-Executive 011tc1ot of ~sl· INCRU81! THI! LCVEL Port Beach CA 92663 J 0-Aourti8 Jr TM* Corona Oii Mar, CA Clml ~~. 'lit'/, !;========:::; R11ED TO 00 BUSINESS faull and Demand for Sale, ness Services & AuxlUaty Of THI SURVrVOR Banv Watier Kluger 2600 !hi ORaurlr.t Fttrrit TruS1 UOIT l2526-3010. Thi und«· = ~ Ille wlll tit ~. bUt I TH s ST A TE WILL BE and a wrlnen Nollc:e of De-Operations, NMUSO 2985: -·, ' ~lllld 11119.'90 Recoroed °" algl19d TNltee cllclalma TtmlMons WllltOUt eowtnan Of dl1nlY. ~LO IAT THE ENTRANCE lault and Elec;liOn 10 Sell. A~·., Strati, Costa Meta, •sE~JEFIT P~OQRAM ~e:~o~ ~k~3 t!!ewpor1 )3/1311991 es lnslnlmen\ No 92· 11ny ~ fOf 11'11 lncOf· !Mna. lom Ul>llUOlllTIClileC. rtOMlino *·
'TO THE ORANGE err< The un~erslgried caused Caltlornla 92626. lntr~uc': ~~ ~;• 22~ T~I; ·business Is con· 151M~ol lhe °t! ~.;:., ": ntdneu ot the Pfopet'ty .o. Newcion lleldl-Colta Mtll oosst~.on. OI encumllllnen.
HALL. 300 EAST CHAP· said Notice of Oelaull and Dated1 May t 3, 1998 day of Aprll, 1996, and was ducted by: an Individual Orwige Co.tnty, ~lomt• Incl drea and ottllf common C~3 75n Mly 9.16,23, llldlld•no lttS, cflllVll ano
MAN AVENUE. ORANGE, Election to Soll lo be re· QOYIERNINQ BOARD, adopted on Ille 13th day ol Have you started doing ~t to the Nc*:tt ot o.tu dellanltion, Ir any, lhown 11195 expensu of 1111 TNSIH and ol
CALIFORNIA all right, 1111e corded •n the countrc where Carolyn 8 . Stocker, Ex· May 1996 buslne11 yet? no ~ EltlctlOll io Sel lhenlunOll' hefM The total amount of 'Ille INStS crtlltd by SllCS Deco ol
ana tnleres1 conveyed lo "";~~P~::."i'sls ,:=:~:· acutlva Direc tor Bual· AYES COUNCIL Sany Kruger 1111211993 111n11rumem the unpllld ~al the PUBLIC NOTICE rruSL to Wit IMO.tu.ti Wl1ll
and now held Dy 11 under • n•H service• & Auxll· MEMBERS• HEDQl!I Thi• 11111men1 wu ftltd Mo 9J-On&107 d Uld Offi obelgldon aecu1ed by tt1e .mettst theftOn trom "'"' S said Deed of Trusl tn lhe MAT I 0 N : Mon ·Fr I le 0 eraClon• NEW· • • witll the County Clerk ot Raoords W• Sel on Wl0/l996 proper1y to bl told and r.,. TRUSTEE flfO. T·25110· 7.7U~ per annum u plVWldtO
properly situated rn said B:OOam to 5 :00pm P~RT.t,.ESA UNIFIED DEBAY, GLOVER, E~ Orange Countyon4·30-96 ;,~~~Or. sonati•ulllmllledCOlb.e•·IC'llMORQA.ltMORIN L0AH 1nUIClnoll(s)OluSCC!a and lllY
Coun1y and S1a1e dt· (819) 590.9200, CAL· SCHOOL DISTRICT WARDS, WATT, 0 • 19983881843 9191 CA 11 1000 AM 11 DUbk penMSand advancetlllthe NO 2724731 NOTICE Of IOVlnCCI Wt1t1 11111t1Ut. fSTI,
scribed as: WESTERN RECONYEY· NEIL, COX Daily Pllol May 9 16 23 aicl!On IO rtie ~Qhesl booer tor time Of tne lnllW publcatton TRUSTEE'S SALE YOU ARE IN MATED TOTAi. 0£81 IAI AN UNDIVIDED 1/ ANCE CORP 525 E11I Publlshed Newport N 0 IS' C 0 UN CI L 30 1996 , lh340 nn (peyGI II Ifie,,,,. o4 Jte'" al the Notice al Solle Is: DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF UU 11711 Tiit benefictaly
28TH LEASEHOLD INTER· M I S c" p O B 8each·Co111 Mesa Dally MEMBl!RI: HONE • · . 1fOfW11t Of the VN1t<I Sl&les 1821,m.ll. en ~ \o TRUST DATED 11130/88 UN· uncle; wd Dttd ol TNS1 ht"16-
EST IN AND TO: THAT 2:0~4 '':~'c 1'. ~: PllotMay18,23,1996. ABll!NT COUNCIL PUBLICNOTICE J1 11ght,nllelWldWllnll ullh,theTNll .. wMaccefl(LESS 't'OU TAKE ACTION T01oruucuted1nddeliw110I0111t ~~:d~0~190FIN l?~E LCI~ 92 o 2 2.eoo4
1 0ie f9) Th353 MEMBERS1 NONE Flctltloua Bu•lnaH &:;0 err= ~ ~ llllOlt ~ : ~ =:=.~ PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT unOt/llOnecl untten Ottln>On
OF NEWP'oRT BEACH 590.9200 ' PUBLIC NOTICE MAYOR t J.,hn W . Heme Stattment ~...,"' saoO Couny ni St• chedt dr.wn by 1 .._ Of MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC of DtflUll and Demand for Sall.
COUNTY OF ORANGE: Dated: May 15, 1998 HadgH Th• following persons are ~o.: :i~ ftder .. Cfldlt union Of I ~~A~r~o& Ni~~ :TuE:e Ind I wnlJn Malict of °"""'
STATE OF CALIFORNIA. By: Jason L. Cotton PUBNLOITCICHl!EAROFINQ C IT y C LE R K I doing business as: ASN ~ ~ ni co.· dlecil dr_, by • 8'11le or Of THE PROCEEDING AGAINST llld a.coon ID Sel. The lltldlf·
AS PER MAP RECORDED TRUSTEE SALE OF· LaVonne M. HartdeH Consulllng, 2796 H11b0r mon ~ ' ll'f d the fedenil trllnga and loan .. YOU YOU SHOULD CONTACT A llOfltd c:alSH Uid Mo*» of ~~~~~E~~ ~~~c~g~~ FICER: JASON L . COT· GIV~~T.';a~ • ';ub7i~Rh~~~ b'(h~ enti~• I•~ ~~ a~llty· ~1;~ •• c~u~~6.J95, Cost.a ~be~~-~ ~ 11.=. "= LAYMR On THURSDAY. JUNE All Kind• of Jobe For
ltl EXHiBIT "A" AT'TACHED TON, EXT, 30t7 Ing Wiii be held by the a •• or re ew n •. Alan 's NI-on 1555 Mesa ~ 8elCh CA 92660 ..,.ctfllcl In~ 1102 d 06 1996, II 1000 AM First All Kind• of Paopte.
I I I I J
HERETO AND MADE A Published Nowporl Cosla Mesa Clly Council Clerk 1 olllce ot \he City ot Verdt 'orlvt 'easl #3l8 file~ Truste10tte1ems the FlnlncW Code and.,_ Commeroal Moflgage Com· Ct ... lt'led.
PART HEREOF Beach·Costa Meaa Dally on May 20, 1996. al 6:30 Newport Beach. Costa Mou 'cA 92626 . .,y •D-ty t0r "1'f. tflOClf'l'ICWU ol thottzed to do bUtllnHa In pany. OBA FCMC Mortgagel-----------'L---------
EXHIBIT "A" P1lo1 May 16. 23, 30, 1996 p.m .. or 11 1oon thereatter P u b 111 he tt N • w Po' t Thia buslneu 11 con, .hi property lda'es~ Sid o:ntir ltlla ltate. In the event ten-Company. as duly appolnled PUii.iC NOTICU PUILIC llOTICll
(.A) AN UNDIVIDED 11 Th35l as possible, In the Councll Beach·Costa Mesa DaUy ducted by· an Individual .,._mon~ errc:::f :0: def OChef Chan calh Is K· Trustee. by SubsllMlon. uncl•rt-;:===============-:....::=======::;-28TH LEASEHOLD INTER· Ch11mber1 of City HaU, 77 Pilot May 16, 1996. Have yoU started doing b-...ce o1 lhe 00tg11m capttd the Trwtee may a OMO ol Trust dllld 11130/86 E~~~~ ~~~T~g~ OF LOT L P~ NOTICE r::t~f:,°"!i~~t~!:Mesa, on f351 ~~~~·J:~~yes6·1·96 Sid ~:.:ibecc.sr: ~~-=·= ~i1": ~:~:t :~R~
OF TRACT 919, IN THE NOTICE OF SALE ANNUAL REVIEW ANO PUBLIC NOTICE This stalemtnt was fried UllflteS aid edYe'ICft • h ~me become avliWlile to CM ETHEL H MORIN AH UNMAR·
CITY OF NEWPORT In accordance wl\h Iha REVIStr 1 OF THE CITY· with the County Clerk ol ....... ~oll!'tel'Clllele peyeeorendof .. aaaf\'1111• RIED WOMAN ino recorded
BEACH. COUNTY OF OR: provisions ot Secllon 217~ WIDE I AAFFIC IMPACT cn•1372181 Orang• County on 5-7·96 s. ..-St 7'1761 C5 '"ICIO· t• al rtghl s.. .... wtl be 1211188 as Document 88·
ANGE. STATE OF CALI· through 21716 ot 1h• Cah· FEE PROGRAM. ftlo\IUous lualn••• 19983882529 IOCastl. lhe TNllM""" 80Cl90I mede blA ~ ~
REPORT OF CONDITION
Consoltdaung domestic subsrdianes ol the
MARINE NATIONAL BANK ol IAVINE tn the slate
ot Calrlorn1a, at the dose ot business on Maren
31, 1996. FOFINIA, AS PEA MAP RE· lornia Business tnd Proles· The Trattlc lmpacl Fee Name 11atamont ~s d'9CIC «IMI on 1 51• ot manty Upf'He or Im-6263<10 Book ..• ., Page •··•. ot
CORDED IN BOOK 29 slons Code there being Program has bHn estab-The tollowlng per1on1 are Dally Pllol May 9, t6, 23, nlClonll b91ll • "*" Ortwncr °: ptled c~dln'i tme. ~ tile OlllClal Records of ORANGE ASSETS
PAGES 31 THROUGH 34 due. unpaid storage fH tor lfshed lo finance lhe Im· doing butlntu at: St. 30, 1996. lh339 t lllle~ ~.a:: ~fednl llOf1 iif encurntaranc:.u, \o County. CaWlornia. w!ll sell at ThouHnd• of dollar•
INCLUSIVE, OF MISCEL· which INSTOFIAGE ANA· provemenlS necessary to CfP!• Shop 401 Newport PUBLIC NOTICE , Sid Os\ ~on uttllfY IN lndetltMlleaa .. publlC aucbon to Ille higllest
LA N E 0 U S lw1 A PS • HEIM ts enttlled to a lien address lhe cumulaUve Im· Cenler Or.; Sulle 9802, s IStaolllOll or .-g5 on cwetl by aMt o..ct. aO: bidder tor cash rn United States
RECORDS OF ORANGE pursuant to secuon 21702 paets ot development Newpon Beach, CA 92660 Ftclllloua BuslnHs ., Section 5102 ol the vane.ea thlfeundlf, wtlf'I Ootlals IN FRONT OF THE
Cash and balances due
lrom depository insti1u11ons:
Noninterest·beanng balances and COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, of said code on lhe goods, within Cosla Mesa and lo Crolx Knlll. Inc .. (Callfor· N•m• Statement ~ C.cda Ind ai1!0!llel IO lnt•UC aa Pfovtdld thefffl, FLAGPOLES AT THE MAIN ~TING EASTERLY Of A here1naf1er desc11bed as ensure that the standard nla). 401 Newport Ctnler Tht lollowing persons are bu-., IM stlll "lilt andthe~pnnctpll,,.._ ENTRANCE TO THE PLACENTIA LINE WHICH BEGINS AT miscellaneous household level of 1trvlc• Is main-or .. Ste. 9802, Newpor1 doing business 11• Perma, lerlderTOfflwlt .,.,, can" MeeoltheNoleaecuredby CIVIC CENTER 401·'11 EAST
currency and com ............... 8,131
lnterest·beanng balances .. ... ...... . .. ...... O
THE MIDPOINT ON THE Items. sofas. refrlgera1011, lalned on lhe Tr•rtic Circv-Stach. CA 92660 Flex 1\t5 l/2 W Ba Ave 9CCIOCld Ille o1"::1 "':. ""'= aMd Deed wtitt Int__. ~HAPMNI AVENUE IN THE
SOUTHERLY LINE OF SAID dryers, washers, clothing lalion System. Thie butlnen 11 con· New' ort Beach CA ~2663" lllll~beoOlne .::..'io Irle thefton aa provtdld In llld llJTY OF PLACENTIA ORANGE
LOf L WHICH IS LOCATED and perso~al properly. due An audit of lhe Traffic ,~, ducted by: a corporation Mare Edward lynch, 1115 or efldOlae 15 , "'"* o1 Nolt. fees, dltr~• and 1.11· county, Cahtornla, atl right bile
WESTERLY 66.50 FEET nollce having been Q•\len to pact Fee Program Is avail· Typt of Business: retail 112 w Ba Ave Newpor1 1 s.d '811 wit be m10t ti.II .,.,._. d the tNsttt and and tncerest conveyed to and
THROUGH A , C~NTRAL par11es known lo cfalm an able for.review by the pub-Aeglalrant has not Y•I Beach: CA ~2663· Mltlou1 oon\41lent 1:1 ~IV the trull• uuted by uld now held by It under the Deed ol
ANGLE OF 2"3541 FROM tnlerest !herein and lhe tic al th• Costa Mesa City begun 10 1ransact buslneu This business Is con· ss 1:1 imped reg•Qng bl~ DffdolTrust. \lt<dugoSer· Trusl tn !he real property de·
THE SOUTHEASTERLY time specified In such no-Clark'• Office, 77 Fair undtr the fictitious busl· dueled by· an lndvidual or erQllllO"SICieS o vke Corponltlon a c.IWOf· nbed LOT 11 Of TRACT
CORNEA OF SAID LOT L: lice tor _paymonl ol such Orl\le, Cos11 Mesa. ntH name or names llsltd Have yo~ stall~ doing ~ W..•ldll.*ldl•u feCut9CI °'i n1a CotpOflltlon'. u uld sc31oc. lt~asTHE CITY OF· COSTA THENCE NORTHERLY ON feH haY1ng expired Wtll be PUBLIC COMMENTS In herein ? saa 0..0 ~ 1'*'lullOllr TNllt . 121 w l.ulngtdn ""
A STRAIGHT LINE TO THE sold al publtc auction by eithtr oral 0t wi1nen l0<m Croix . Knill, Inc., Samutl ~:~•:•lei· if" 5•5•115 ind :r-'1 "~ O.~ Oltve ~ Tiwd Ffoot, MESA COUNTY OF ORANGE
MIDPOINT OF THE ARC INSTOAAGE ANAHEIM lo-may be presenled dwing p Shea . Secretary This sialr,:,cent Wat fried Nole ':::!cs by led 0eto .. 111 Gltnd* CA 11203, (t1I) STATE Of CALIFORNIA AS PER
OF THE CURVE ON THE cated at 1776 W Penhall lht publtc hearrngs. For Thia stalement was filed with lhe C unty Cl rk I '*'"' ,_ • """"'°'°,,, u.d I00-1.485' Aulomlted &.ies MAP RECORDED IN SOOK 96 STATE HIGHWAY OE· Way, Counly of Orange, lur1her lnforma1ion, tel• with lhe County Clerk of O Coo ..._~ ~ · lets. ctisves ~ er:oer11ts lint '31'11121, S ~PAGES 49NID50 OF MISCH·
SCRIBED IN THE DEED State of Ca1tlorn1a on the phone 754.5335 or visit the Orange County on 4-25-96 ra,,ge 1;':8~~SOBl8 lllttns11eesidt1 .. 1.1stsc:re'*1 rite (~f,!L Aast T ~ • LANEOUS MAPS, IN THE OF· A~COFIOEO JULY t. 1929 291h day of May 1996 at Transportation Services OJ.. 19983881382 5a<1 Deed o1 Tru'1 01180 u....,..i, N Ml FICE OF THE COUNTY RE·
IN SOOK 288, PAGE 265, 8:00 am Terms tor lhe ~ale vision 11 City Hall, 17 Fall O II Pil I M 9 16 23 Dally PUol Mey 9, 111. 23, 1996 SltrrtO R«UI~ ~~:~ ~ CORDER Of SAID COUNTY
OFFICIAL RECORDS. AS are cash only Sate 1ub1ect Drive, Cosla Me11. 30a 1Y.,.... o ay • h"~4 30, 1996. lh341 llS sad T"''* 2•8~0 ii; 8'1I EXCEPT Tt1EREFROM All Oil
CONCAVE TO THE lo cancellalton Landlord IF THE AFOREMEN· • l>7V I~ ~ Ro.a Sui• • GAS MINERALS AHO OTHER
SOUTHWEST ANO HAVING reserves lhe 11gh1 lo bid TIONEO ACTION IS CHAL· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 1eoor'22r\~~9(d!\81 ~· PUBLIC NOTICE HYDROCARBON SUBSTANCES A RADIUS OF 1550 00 Below Is a l1s1 of names LENGEO IN COURT, the . a.. Oi1n1 C... A'8st.,i LYING BELOW A DEPTH Of 500
Ff ET ANO A LENGTH OF and unil numbers chattenge may be li!T)rted to Flotlllou1 BualnH• NOTICE OF TltOIT&'I "" S102 09 16i96 R· 42876 NOTICE Of TRUITEFI SAU FEET fflOM THE SURFACE Of
194 46 FEET. SCOTT BARNES t 127 only those Issues raised al Nam• Stettment SM.! IJHDE1' De!D ~ Ttu.11n Salt llun111tr: 1114S·A 0 PROPERTY BUT WITH NO
TOGETHER WITH ANO SHANNON TOBLER. t202 lhe pubhc: hearing d.. The following persons are TitUST fie ,~.,. \.Gin. PUBLIC NOTICE YOU ARE IN DEfAIJLT UNDER A RIGHT Of SURFACE ENTRY AS
SUBJECT TO THE BEN· MAGGIE VAN LINGEN, sc~bed In lhls notice 0t In doing business as: lnClrT ~11' Othlf. ...,.., DE£1> Of TIIUIT DATED PROVIDED IN DEEDS OF REC· EFITS. BURDENS. RIGHTS t207 w1111en correspondence cs .. Tech I t382 8 II A ""· Nunlblf ~1n-OJ ....w
OF WAY ANO EASEMENTS LESLIE MCCAfHHY, 2208 livered to the City Councll •nu•no ~~~lln Cal~orn~ YOU Ml! I( Dl!JfAULT UN-NO~m=o:.:~~. OF IULK OWH1. UNLlll YOU TAKE ORD PARCEL NO •n·381 ·03
IMPOSED UPON SAID CATHERINE PRENGER, at, or prlor 10, the public 92680 • oat A DEB> Of TRUST, SALE ACTION TO "'OTtCT YOUR Tile 'Olrfft aaaress or otller
Held-lo-maturity secunttes .. ., ............... 12,681
Ava1lable,for-sale secuntles ........................ 7 .282
Federal funds sold ................................. 13, 143
Secunlles purchased undef
agreements to resell ....................................... 0
Loans and lease financing reoelvables:
Loans and teases. net of
unearned income ..
LESS Allowance for loan
61 ,910
and lease losses. .. .. .. .. 980
LESS· Allocated transfer
risk reserve .. .... .. ... .. ...... O
Loans and leases. nel ol unearned
income, allowance, and reserve . .., ....... 60.930
Trading assets ................................................... 0
Premises and fixed assels
(including cap!lallzed leases) .................... 975
Other real estate owned ........................ 2.135
Investments m unconsohdaled subSldiaries
and assoaaled companies
Customers' habtlrty to lhts bank
0
on acceptances ou1Stand1ng.. .. .... .,...... .. ... O
Intangible assels.. . . .. .................... 203
Other assets ..................................... 1,794
Total asse1s .......................................... 107.274
REAL PROPERTY ANO IM· 2252 hearing p I I I (MTS) OKtmbet ·~·...!.~. PROPERTY, rr MAY IE IOlD AT common d9Si001Uon OI Ille
PFIQVEMENTS THEREON JOHN A SCHAEFER, MARV T. ELLIOTT (U~.:t,) n2;5~on5e~~OO n~, UNLOS YOU TN<&~ (Notice '111s.UI lo UCC Ste. A PUBLIC IALE. If YOU MflD alltm rtal pro1>41rty 1$ known 10 LIABILITIES '01'1 THE MUTUAL BEN· 2274 D C C ' S ' . ' TO MOTECT YOU!t PftOP. 1105) AN WLAtlATION Of lHE us as 945 WEST WILSON
EFIT OF THE OWNERS. SCOTT A BUSCH. 3121 a~u~llsl~y d I•: 0 1 T·~~.uk:u;:~.~T 'r,11~on-~rTrcMAY le IOLD AT l«:>TICE IS HERfSV GIVEN thll NATURE Of THE PROCUOlllGI STREET COSTA MESA CALI·
LESSEES OR PARTIAL AS· LANA CARTER, 3200 u e wp r A ML!, • YOU a aulk 5Me rs aboul IO De made AGAINST YOU YOU IHOULO FORNIA Tiiis Ult Wiil be m~e
SIGNEES BY THE OECLA· LILIANA ECHEVERRI. Beach-Costa Mesa Daily ~uh~edr:~:l:l~~f(;t'1~m· NIEEDAN l!JtflUHATIONOf' The "'me(s) lllO busines COtfTACT A ' LAWYl" On WllllOUI <Xl'ltNl'lt or Wll<Tanly
RATION OF COVENANTS. 4128 Pllol May 1, 2, 3, 6. 7, 13, menced 10 cransact bull· ntE NATURE Of' lHI "'°" lddrtss OI lilt selltr{S) 1WI! °"°"" II 1:45 AM. AnOfl. expresseo or lmplild regarding
CONDITIONS AND RE· GWEN HANES. 4223 14, 15, 16, 17. 1996. ness undet \ht llC;\l\iOUI C&PNO "4NHIT YOU, r.«JNCEAU USA. INC A Cahlom NEVI EQUITY NATIOtW. COfl: nlle posttsslon Of encum·
STRICTIONS RE CORDED MARY BUSLER, 4226 W660 bu1lne11 name(•) llsled YOU IHOULO CONTACT A CorDomon. 4500 McAMJr Bl~. PORATION u AA1nt for C'TC b . to ~ the Ufl'"ld ON THE 29TH DAY OF MARY BUSLER. 4229 • LAWYEl ~ .. hlflby Newport Beacn. CA 92660 .... ranees .... JULY. t968 IN BOOt< 8674 BOBBY ONEILL. 431 o PUBLIC NOTICE obov• on. Aprll t , 1996 oiv-t""' 1.8.I. ~"'•Deed cio. busmess is fO"ftLOIURE &ERVICEI prlnelpal sum o S163,616 91 ,
PAGES 401 TO 450 INCLU· KEVIN BLACK. 4319 Pen lnllrCOMtct. Inc .. Ntewortr.. CalWomlit eorpo. . 'r.«l~EAU I & r.«JNCEAU II" CORPORATION (Trustee) 23721 plus lnlerest" provided in lhe s Iv f 0 F 0 FF I c I AL MARILYN BROWN, 4322 • NOTICI! 01' Wayne Wright, Vice Prtll· rlllton, .. CNtetl, Of 8UCCM-Al1 other bustness ,,,mt(S) Slncher 01\W, Liiie fOllSt. CA Noll secured by the Deed ot
RECORDS OR ORANGE RHET JENSEN. 4334 PUBLIC HEARING ~~ ltlltmtnt WU filed tor IN1ltll, OI .... -.cl l/ICI lddress(es) used by the 92:6.10 (714)707·5640 as Ille duly Trusl, plus an lddltlonal esll·
COUNTY NANNET'TE PIKE, 4336 NOTICE IS HEREBY with tht c ty Cl k f tN .... puraaantto .. o.d Setltr{S) Wlthn Ult pasl 'ttlru I~ T111sltt unotr and m<111'<11mount 01$8,93800 tor
(B) THE EXCLUSIVE KELLY DEE CAMPBELL GIVEN thll lh• City Council Otang1 Coun~ on +f e.~ °' TNllt eUCUlled bv T•· 11$ as. staled by Ille sellel(s) oul'SUIOI IO Ille Ottd of TNSI a4'/ances II lllY· under 1111
RUJHT TO OCCUPY A 4342 of lh• City of Newport UHMS3810597 '"'" K,,..... and e.n-. lit t«>ne rtCOl'dtl1 0113\41 u Document 19fms ol the Deed OI Trust •n<I
CEATAIN APARTMENT ON MICHAEL KENNEDY, Beach Wtll ho.Id • public D·'I P'lo M 18 23 30 lnitH................... Tile iouton '" C.loma 01 11·001UOl0fhc111Rtcord.\in lees charges ano IJ!f>enses ol
• lHI; 6TH FLOOR OF THE Sell your unwanted heanng on propo .. cs OROI· .. y i t •Y • • • wh -,,... TlfW'lta .... lhe clltel IXICUht othct OI Ille Ille Offict ol Ille Rttonltr ol Ille Truslll CrtclllS, II any. Wiii
• APARTMENT HOUSE I h I N.ANCE NO. 96-t8 (Plan-June 8, 1998 th380 corded on 1741/Htt • ~ selltr 19 821 Ettl Eme11on Or11119 County, C.trtomia, Elt· be aol)lled 1owards Ille total ~ING ON SAID PRE· te"!f a 1
1• easy way nmg Commlttlon Amtnd· Whethtr you're buying lltn.IMnl No. tM1MJI In Orange, CA 926M cu\ed by. DAVK> A. HARRISON lndeblednm al !ht llme 01 Siii • s. WHICH IS NOW cla~s'i'11!~0 .~0~~11 menl No. 845). or Hlllng Clas•lll•d toot-hM -d Ofndll,.. Tile name(s) an<t business ANO MARY s HARRISON HUS· Tile L1nder/Btn1flolaly undtr N~~~N ASANAO,,A~T~SEl~T . 842·5878. ~Mh:m~~::~'J:a~leM2! covtra all your neodtl ~~ :..; address ol the buyerts) 1s.'art SANO ANO WlfE AS . JOINT Ille Deed o1 Tru11 has signed
. p . STARTING
eour.y CllronWa. and pur r.«JHSE~ FANOUS. 21082 Red TENANTS w1N stll at public and de11Yt1td to Iha Trustee a ~---t ._, tO .. Hoke d 0.:, Mt Ctrde. Huntington Btach. auction to Int hiOl'llS1 l>l<lder le< OedaratlOn ol OtfllJll of the
fll.IR and a.ctan to 111 A cash or cawrs chtck made oollgatlOns recuttd by 11'11 Ottd
._......, ~ file assets belnQ sOIO .,, paylblt to Anomeys EQwty 01 Trust. 111d 1 Nob ol Olllull
Cllr0111• _.. toot ,..,.. nelllly dtscnbe<I u Furn"" NallOnll Coll>or1tJOn. (payable II and EleCtlon to Stl Which
.. ~ No. Q.rrtS, EQu1ptntnt. an<t Gooowlll 111e bmt of Ult and '" ICCOI· rtcOfdtd on 12/23i93. • ~ Of alld Ofnc:llll • certan Womtn lf10 Mens Oanct Wlltl Section 2924h(b) ot Oocumenl 93·0694683 Sook ···
ftacofda. .... ... on "11no Stolt tilt C.ltfomtl CMI Coclt. and • ' Pig• •• , . OI OlllClll RICOldS.
Oepos11s
tn domestic of1rces .... 98.837
Nomn1erest·beanng .51,213
lnterest-beanng ... .... 47,624
F•deral lunds purchued .. ... .. ............. , .. O
Secunlles sold under agreements
to repurchase .................................................. 0
Demand notes issued 10 lhe
US. Treasury ........................................ O
Trading habiht1es.. .... ... ... ... ................... ..O
Other borrowed money.
With a remarning maturUy
ol one year or less .
Wilt! a remaining maturrty ol more ltlan one year ..
Mortgage Indebtedness and
obligattons under capitalized
. ... , ... , ....... 0
.. 0
leases ........................................................... 0
Bank'• llablllty on aooeptanoes
uecuted and outstanding... ""'""""'"" .... O
Subordinated notes and
debentures.... .... .. . .. .
Otfler 1t1bfh1tes.. ... .. . .. .
Tola! Liabllrlles.............. .
Llmltad·ltle preferred stock,
and relaled wrplus.
"'" ... ., ........... ,, ....... 0 . .. ! ................... StM
................... 99,40t
, .. ,,, ........... , .... 0
Olla'1 ... at IN North~ , Bu11ness 11/!0Wn .. •s KCtotit>lt to Ille Trustee) It: Ille This 1111 Wiii be conduc11d by ~ to llhl ~ ~NCEAU I g WNCEAU II Mt111 (Mtrtll) £,.,1w:t It t111 QUALITY POsTING ANO PUS· EQUITY CAPITAL ~ 100 CMc ~ and 1111 located It 4600 C.Ullly Ct11ttlltlllt, 700 CIYk LISHING wtlOM address lfld ANEW
. .. .. ...
BUSINESS??. • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Tht Legal DtpanmmJ"' the IJaj/y Pilbt is pleAs«J ....
to anrwun.cr a new tmlia now availablr ttJ neiu b.aines:st:s.
~ wiJJ now SEARCH tk ~for J"U m no Dd¥rZ chargr, and S4tJt Jt1U tht
titm and tht trip JO the Court H<lf'U in Santa Ana. Thm. <( CWM, afor-tht letll'C'l7
is aJmf'l&ri u..: wiJJ fik y<JUT fictitious butinas name lt4kmml with the ~
Clerk. publish fJna a wttlt for four wrJrs as rtql'imi by '4w 111111 Ihm file Jl1I" proof°
ef pu/JbcatUm wilh the eou~ am.
PIMse 1lflP by ttJ # Y""' fo:tilU>us busineJJ stllk1Nnl"' * DtrilJ Pil«, 330 w.
&y St. OMta Mesa. If JOU amnot 11f1P b) p/Mg M1J"' 111 (114) 64UJ2J, llNI .w
wilJ make ammgmtmJS for>""' /()~this proaJutr"' mttiJ.
If you sht>ulJ havt any fanhtr qwsboN. p1Mf4 cJJ"' """Wt wi1J be min thtDt
g/aJ /() lllJiJt )'OU-GooJ Welt in Jfl'IT MU bwinOJ!
M&&-Y-'"Pilot
.. OrM w..t a.a _,... ~ Blw Newpan Stach, C..ntr Delft Wiii. IMla Alli. pnone number 11 1650 EAST
CA at tlOO ,.M. II pulllc Callleflllt ell f10l'll. lltle and FOURTH STREET ~A AHA auct9on to ... .....,..... W. Tiil ~I\ Slit IS intended tD bl int11ut corw.ytd IO Ind now CALIFORNIA 92701 (714) ~ =. ~ ::=e.= ~SC~ c:;~ htld by II l#ldtr NICI Oefd of 9966 FOR INQUIRIES. (619)
d .. Unlild .,..~ 11 Ctnl!r Ave $ijj.. 4-40 Trust tn Ille properly situittd '" 597 8222 O.ltd ~ 29. 1996 -wa and .,..... cw.. .-~ Btlth CA 92647 1nci llld Counrv. C.Wom11 TIM "'1ft FIRST ~ACW. llOftT • :.:r.:::.. ~ ..-.. • ..; ... Ju lddl1U and 0Che1 COl!lmOn GAO( COWMY DIA FCllC w.:..-:o1~: . ,;:0 ....... -·"""II Ill dtllONbO", If 1ny, of the 1111 MORJGAOI coM,MY, ..
.. ~ ........ ill llllld Tl'rl bulk Siii ti luotect to proptny dU(:llbtd lbOYI la Trustee BY. CYNTHIA I( OOU!fr ....... .....,. 1Momr1 UrtfOll'll comme~• llUl'l)Oftedto oe· 11 .. Cttk LAlll, THOMPSON VICE PRESIOENT ......... ,* "91Mn1 Mr Stctoll 61tU Ctata lilfll1 Ca '2Ht; COunty OPP 21931 6116 5123 5/lOM
......... W\ .... Died Cit Thi l\llne end ldcllut o1 thl A*atuot'S P11ttl NumC>tr. H1·1---------1 ,,...., TN~....... 110n wittt wl'IOm clltmt may be IM-14 Tiit llllCICtllQM4 TMIH ..._ _______ _,
Ind Clllw ~ ...._. 1$ DtSC<MRY ESCAOW ~ any lllbtltly for any lb\ f "'I• d 9" .... .,,... 7777 CtlW Alli tnCOntClneU OI llt ltMt .. lf'Y ._..... ...._.. la 4-40 ~""'O'OA llUcll, CA dltU and otntr common dtJIO· ~ to be:~ Incl Ille lut ~ fO< flhng lllbon. II any, lhOwn htltlll Said .,__ DIM....._. amt br ~ CMIOf WM bt ult will bt !Tiide. wlttlOUI OM• rwa. ... "t: nt 3, fQ96, Which ti th8 bull: nd Of WJ/Tlt!IY, fXP"l$8d Of rt1"1':' == . Of ti Gey bt!M llll llltelpalild lfllC)lltcl, It~ blle. potS8S· ... ..!!.... .....:-... data ·~tied~ alon, Of tnCUml)tanell, '° PlY .,. __ ., 1,'1M IN 111\patd ~ OI fie obl!Ot-
oew ~ ......... ,,., """"""""' USA INC . A CA 1iOn. rncludlnO lnPst. ~ r ~. llhowft ....._ n. 1y .JeMY Ltn\11,. Plttl· a11c1 .. otlltfchttQt• NCMd by '*' -fl .. W.-. s.le1 UICI P10Pt1tY The 6otll M*ll'll Iii =-d= , ' I ~ ': F~-=rcit•l 1111111\0MS 1iMMct Ol llt ~ ..., !:, .. ::= .... lllC'OVBIY CO•Al'I ~ 11y S11C1 Ot*l1Y end
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Perpetual preferred stock
and r•lated surplus ................................ 4 .168
Commoo atoell........ .. ......................... 3,0le
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resel"lles ......... .. .. ......................... ,. .. 679 ~I unraahz.td hOldlng ga1t11 (lou.s)
on availablt·for·aalt aocunlle•,,.. .... .. ... t02 :;:~::: ~%e~~ie<i:1;;, ........................... ., 1.a13
pr•ferred stod\, and equity ctpilal ....... \07,274
W., IM undetslgned diteetOft (ttualoel), atl••t
to the correctMu of ttila A•port of COtldrtloo (-~udlng IN suppor\lng IChtclMs) and ded&1a
lhal II hu biot\ IUmintd by UI and to IM belt of our knowladOa and ti.lief hat bMn prepatld in
oonlormance with ltlt lnltNotions l..ued by Cha appropriate federal reg\llatMy authority 1no It
truo and corteet.
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·GENERAL
POLICY
Rates and deadlines are
subject to change without
nottce. The publisher
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DAILY PILOT
DIADUNIS
Monday ...... ,;, ... Friday 5:00pm
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any classified
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HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR RENT
APARTMENT~
FOR RENT
MISCELIANEOUS BUSINES'S OFFICE LOST &
FOR RENT 2769 FOUND 2925 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT MEriCHAN FURNITURE ·~0~4
5530 I'\ DISE RENTALS Glass Top Dining
--CHIROPRACTORS Lost In Beacon Bay1________ POSTAL & GOV'T JOBS Table w 4·chrs $300.
area one go-pod EMPLOYMENT s211HOUA 1-BENEFITS ANTIQUES 601'0 New IJl::iytag ·'(ll}O Most Prominent space ) CA s 5350 Retr1g st ~n on 17th St. in CM. (scooter' upor, 5 J NO EXP WILL TRAIN Floral Sofa ~hr~· -~~~"~H~ ---------IBSALLANDBOA • 2606 iiRiiOiiiOiiMiiiiSiiiiiiiiiiiiii2ii7ii0iiii6 • (u Pacific Plaza ~~~~06~1~~00 vro:'war'~ ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii5iiiiii0 Appl · Info 7t4·647·t99t bed and coffee tat>\es
GENERAL 2102 • • Waiting Room 644.2049 1• PT Gen Ottlce Recap· S400 White can~y All 11al llllte lllwrtlslng In Ulis N.B. Room w/pV1 ont • Built-In Office S 1 OOO!a POSSIBLE. 11on, II phones. com· Top Dollar Paid! crib tor 5200 • 723·
MWq11perlalffjtC1lllllefcd· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Bal Isle 1 Br, up opl, full bath. clean quiet • 5-Treatment Rooms •---------TYPING. Part-lime. At puter skills a• inside From t800·19GO 1 6747
tralfwM1.alqAc1ol1Mlas GOVERNMENT remodel, don, adults, ~:i: ~!~5/~4~.4~i~~ s•1i:,;~1e~c;:·:.ar7~hmSt. HEALTH & ~g~;77T8olle~~e i.'s61°:f9 sales SS hr 646·2080 pc to entire estate 1-M-ls-c-.-.-. --F-u-rn-. _a_rt_w_or---k,
......-wMU!Mltsltilltlal FORECLOSED no pots. gar. Lease.--::-----------FITNESS 3000 PT Ottlce Support Paintings china, gym equip 16-pc sl\lr,
II llhlllhe "My prtle11nc1. HOMES avl 6/1 631-7752 NB BrighVAlry room. Call 714-845-3120 tor hsungs. 20 hrs woek SS hr. gtswaro. turn. etc & crystal. 733.9555
ll•llllll .. er .iscrhahullon For pennies on S 1. Lii Isl E. Bay Front, In clean quiet homo. Ind Iv, furn, 200.1450 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $35,000/Yr Income answer phones. llhng 40Yr NB Res 673-6223 Mu 5 t • e 11 Bel.g e
Hatti • IKI. ctlOf. reltgl1n, De 11 n q u en t Tax. 1 8 1 8 1 1 Pool/tennis. Walk to sq ft. Garrlen, water· DIA.BETIC? Medicare potential. Reading Call Kelly 675-4630. ""========= couch Good . cpnd .. _,..,.~•·-'II"'"'"' R • REO' Y cozy, r, a, rp • beach Fem 548 1903 f 11 · rt"'" 1 · and most Insurance b k T 11 F ) -Ml.-----usOf epo s. s . our upstairs, S1,000 yrly. · · a · airpo . .,..men lies. oo s. o ree (1 PT-Parking Lot Patrol S25 oo 19· color • .,..,, .......... -'-"" ••1111011--11 area. Toll free 1·800· S200 S1600 43"'6665 companies really do 800 898 9778 EX1 R 'y -.... -. ,,_ Avt 6/t 675·5t 10 ----------• · "" · · · · Person wkdys/wknds remote & stano ,$50 .... ..u .......... r1111 898·9778 Ext. H·5139 pay for testrng sup· t36t 1 d 1 1
.... :'~Ill." 1
• for current listings. VACATION S~~~·~~~it.s~~~n. 1~~ ~~~~! ~~II .~;~~~~~~~~1-S,-3,,......,.5-10,...0.,..00 ... r..,.JY_:-a-
1
1-:-·c-o-m-e ~~~~~~~r;.,:.~~,t~~· ""18UUTO'IOlllODIU ~e~~he:a~~~~t ~~10~
Tiiis 11ews,.ptr will not COSTA MESA 2624 RENTALS 2722 t400 s/f. Start at $1/ft. on how you can stop pote'htlal. Reading N.B. TENNIS CLUB •Ell.·i:.~Oc-. xtnt cond. sac. SGO.
.....,,'""'.., ..... fthe. _C_O_R_O_N_A _____ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Near airport. 436-6665 paying for supplies books. Toll Free (1) Receptionis t FT ~-... m 979·8r.34
intal llr raal 111111 wlllcll la In $300 1st Month New 28' motor home 800·898-9778 Ext. R· casual Npl. Beach ..-. ,.~,.~. .~ •Quality FurnltuiAI
'llllUN of Ult law. O.r IHderi DEL MAR 2122 for rent. Full kitchen, •-ecutt.ve 1398 for details. ofc. Dependable, out· •Oatllalcrmlitellalt. 2-Sofas. Brown a -,,d Clean, trg mln cabin· C '"" 1· , CGnlldtn!laL lldm:oa:s. "'lltl'IQ lllllflllld 11111 111 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii style, 1er, walk·ln ctsl. shower, TVN A. Day Full Service Suite PERSONALS $35,000/Yr Income going, start lmmod, Tape"!>try S65·S7,5. dWllllllta HftrtlHd In 11111 Nr boachffriangte Sq & wkly rates. 559-8844 potential. Reading __ c_a_11_D_e_e_2_s2_._1_6_1_1__ 20392 Bayview ·.Ave .. .,..IMlt 111 111 Older but Nice 3Br -Newport Center· C .._F.,.,.. tBa upper dplx. 1·car Sonora Apla OcH n &GardenView. books. Toll Free (1) Receptionist summer N.B all 75e-8~98
....ii91111111M11tJ111a1&. locom-gar, lrg deck. Avail Mary Ann 045-3350 RENTALS TO SSSO+ Sho11Term Avl 800·898-9778 Exl. A· job. Farmer Insurance---------ROLL TOP DESf(. -
... ~.ClllHUD May 18th. S1100/mo. E 'Slde 2Bd 1Ba. Fp, SHARE 2724 Phone/Mall·BuaSvca PERSONALS , 30021_1_3_6_1_1_o_r_lis_t_ln_g_s. __ Group D1slnc1 Olf1co. APPUANCES 6011 Full s1zo. dark pine, 7
Till·llll II 1·•·4Z4·151G. f« 875-4912 Agent gar. Enclosed patio. iiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii St SO/per month $40,000/Yr Income S. Const Corp Ctr, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii drawer. Good c~\d '~Wllll--.DC1r11,ie11t Lndry room. No pots. Kathy potential. Home CM · Ca I I Tom St95. 846-6340 ca11MUDll42'·3500. S795/mo. 642-1073 Npt Crest e~.w/pV1 t>a. 714-644-4492 MEET Typists/PC users. Toll _4_3_3_·0_1_4_1 _____ Gen Elc Range-New _S_O_L_l_D__,O,....A-K-----"--
COSTA MESA 2124 E'Slde Back Bay ~7~~ f~.r~0~:;::~: ~:J:· ---------1 YOUR Free (1) 800-898-~778 Restaurant Char·O· ~fiser ~~;e~73~;~;; ARMOIRE
1 Br, yard/polio, w/d ox T·1361 for l1s11ngs. Chicken M::inagomont Oak flush faco_-: 3 $675/Utls Inc. 642·2711 MATCH 26k • xlnl bonus. , drawers 6 t aH ~ X *2 Br, 1 Ba• gar, hkup, $645, no pots N T $40,000/Vr Income benefits 7 t4_960_1352 REFRIGERATOR , " 631-7813 * pt •r mstr br BUSINESS & 1·900·988·8988 potential. Home ---------• Whtto 18Cu fl Works 3ewide " I .,dl?OP fenced yd. dtw, w/d •=':":'~-__,,...----,~ S550 • •.6 ull 13'ctst. R II s I Very nice 5300
Incl. No pet•. t93·A E'Sld• Sharp 2Bd cath coll.pt/spa. FINANCE EXT. 2138 ~~~~swr~o~-~e~::9~~~ ~~~el g1f1as~~p ~~ ~~ fine $100 8<\0·6340 846-6340 HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
Magnolia, S1 t00 mo. w/garage. W/D Hk· crport.w/d 548·7818. S 2 9 9 /m 1 n · 1 8 • Call Lorr 549-0300 Remodeling kitchen ·~--------avt 6/1 645-t020 ups. S700/mo. Good Sorv·U 6t9-645·8434 ex T-1398 for listings ,-ext 405 buyer's dre::im1 Gour-tocahon. 546-5880 Agt •---------u~ FREE PARffilNE ACCOUNTANTS . mer k11chen top. of 111e MERCHANDISE'
MISC. 6915 '*2 Br, 1 Ba•. tented FURNISHD STUDIO RENTALS _B_U_S_l_NE __ S_S _____ ~" Financial Analysts SALES/PHONE lino brand name appll-
yd, w/d hkup, gar, No APTS All New lntorl· WANTED 2726 1·801-871-5555 ESlab S .W. firm OVER QUALIFIED?
Peta 2636 Santa Ana ors. 5517 /mo incl OPPORTUNITY 19 • tong O.st loll 10 m•n. e11pand1ng into area Looking for change, =~~~s & :i~ck s~~~~~!: liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Ave.. Unit C. 5900. ulll .. Poot. tndry fac. UNEXPLAINED seeks career·minded less stress? Poacotut from exqutste oa.,. 2·11 ' Ficus Tr•••
GENERAL 1002 _a_v_1 _s1_1 ___ 64_5_-1_0_2_0 gated. Nr Triangle Sq. Female looklng for a 2904 candidates tor fast· Boating Marina Env front home Therrn;l· 1n redwood planters
E 'Sld• Townhouse, 3 Park Place VIiiage quiet. cheery room iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii p 0 W E R ! ! ! paced office Degree1 S400 . WK, Bon avail dor dbl wall oven $200 ea. obo Also ~-0
Gov'T FORECLOSED Br, 2•n Ba. cozy & 714/040-7804 ~~2;;in~~f~ ~~rf. ::;j Lo ca I V • n dJ n g Psychic Tolls You sbt r ko n g di in an~• adl Start tmmod 723·7375 bu11l in stovo top ~~c~~451·r3e;3s1 350 IJ
quiet. lg l/r & d/r w1lh •·L--1-B..._--,---R t .,0 bl h d Things You May Not oc groun require SECRETARIAL warming oven, s1:i1n-hom•• for ponnloa rg r, one gorago. Npt. Pref. house. No ou • .. esta rs e Even want To Know"/77 Growth potential. Full 11me 8.30·5 30 Shower Bench tor t>~h·
On $1. Delinquent Tox, frpl, huge master w/ walk-In closet. No drugs. 574·4252 accts. Buy all/part 8 "00 (213)900-5575 M F loss stool hood b D bl I ""''th akyll & walk·ln. Gar pets. 5650 Avail 6't . ...,,....---...,.,....,--,...-~ 800•775•2219 1 ·900·80 .4., onday· nday in our S4,000 value. sacf tu ou o sea "" Repos. REOs. Your .. laundry, (Santa Ana/ 8 64 22 0 Responsible bual-•1575 $3.99/Por•---------1 Legat Advertising Do· s1,100 obo need to backs) which e04bles
Area. Toll Free 800· Santa Isabel) S14001--81-1Y __ 4_· __ 7___ neaam•n/teacher -M""'c""t_P_h_o_n_e_,C,....a-rd..,...,R""T""E""S,... minute. Must Bo 18•. partmont. Individual sell. 63t·6275 you to slide 011or wtlite
898·9778 Ext. H-1398 631·8097 & 7 yr old fem. lab, LOCATIONS GOING SERV·U 619-645·8434. BeebleroaHordvoordrelWns must bo extremely re· ---------s1111ng down Pei-roe•
for current listings. ---------* GAtlT * •••k• room/garage FASTI Inv. Roq. G1t>Wtn11 ~s sponslble wllh good WASHER & DRYER for anyone nocplog
QOV'T FORECLOSED W'Slde • Quiet St. unit or guest 900•709•7177, 24 Hrs. ~~~~1::" allendanco 1ecord Electric. Don 't ass1s1ance 5"19-9591
homes for pennies 3.Bdrms. New carpet. fOA IOOMITCS house In NB or vi· ---------HOTTEST 0tpe1Mimo Call now' and be able to work match but work w 0 L FF T AN.N LN 0 on $1. Dollnquont Ta)(, 51050 752.2881 Lu11~rf::nfB• clnlty, by 0 /1, PURCHASE/LEASE X X X 833-2242 well with people fine. $125 for the BEDS TAN AT HOME
Repos. REOs. Your va1.ior1mmec1.0cc:us>e<lC 875-7588 Kitchen In Orange llhii:r;MU!m1!14 ':J,'~~=~!'[3am1 Goofd dlyp lngk 11and pair. 848-8340. Buy drrect and S..l.VE
Area. Toti Free 800· ---------•WfOHk·~of'lreplac•• Reaponalbl• mature County Sports Bar. 1 -• • --• proo rea ing s 1 s a Commercial Home
898·9778 Ext. H·t361 NEWPORT 1.oc-~~-=·~ business man re-Immediate Income ~••• 1 UVE00 l ~f.:~:'tt= must 57.50 per hour. ---------units from 5 199, i:ow for current listings. VICTOIUA722•7505 quires room In with only S10k Invest· -. Physical/drug screen· FURNITURE 6014 monthly paym'l_nts
OOV'T FORECLOSED BEACH 2169 ,._ Newport. Beach ment. (714) 580-8686 900-505-5050 •·c-L_E ___ R_l_C_A_L_/F_l _L~E mg iequlred. EOE. Mi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Free color ca1~lol:J
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii a r •a a• v • r a I 800-739-4420 PERSON • M·F, 1·5, F/H/D. Please fl111 re· Call today t·BOQ..8.42· homes for pennies nights per week. 818-758-9100 busy Insurance ofc sumo to Judy Oetting 2 wood trim wing 1305 on SL Oellnquont Tax. lmmac Lido Isle 3Br•----------1 (714) 63t 6594 chairs & ottoman.
Ropos, REOs Your 2¥•Ba. frplc. 2-car ga1, HUNTINGTON (019) 751-8844 011-592-570-950 Call Sue 631·7740. . Rose Pooch print
Area Toll Frco 800· patios. t 1 t Via Eboli. Br"CH 2640 R ••Pon• I b I e IANN--Q·U·N·C·E·M·E·N·T·S DELIVERY DRIVER HSr01nC~ALS2W40HRrKEBRcnS"'11s S500 obo 675·2192 898-9778 Ext H·l361 $2300. 310.277-1583 J;A female sooks room/ Pff afternoons M·F for " ~ listings guest hse or garage. FIND THE P RSON CM pharmacy. Need On the JOb tr3iningApply 2 -H enredon Sofa's
lmmac. 2 BR, 2 BA 2Qd 1 .5Ba Apartment Trade for hsekping. ---------OF YOUR DREAMS own car. 540.89t9 your are3 800·339·6150 a· Yellow down f1llt.!d
_L_O_T_S _______ , Versailles condo, 211 Adams /12 Fptc repairs, child & pet ANNOUNCEMENTS NOW!!! DETAILER$ WANTED S~'t,~~E~\~~~~G $400 obo 5 w1510 s~k
FOR SALE 1400 gs~~~~ ~°om~.S-~~2~h Walk·ln closet Patio coro 890.0813 2920 1·9Qf!:!R .• ~1-,8988 Experienced detailers Co O\pans1on in OC s100 ot>o ~~~-:;3~
on ma st or bdrm . and iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "• • ,., t d f FIT 1 wan e or pos. a 1.11rng 33 cus1 rep ...,.,,"="__,,..------i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil N h a patio downstairs •••••••••• J h W Al pot ~8FT G I Npt ort 2Br 2Ba Sl 991,, "''" o n ayne r r pos Student schlrshp recn couch like
EASTSIDE CM condo. 2-car gar, AC, Close 10 beach. COMMERCIAL ¥tnfer11le Loving Couple 1t,.111u 181n Must be avail on call 111ierns avl. For inter· new 5175 Ple:ise c:ill
w/d , pool No pots: $900/mo · Dop. Avail seeks white surrogate. 5,,..( tt19H4~·8<1J<I for wknds $7/hr start view call 26l·0320 723·1796 C·2 Lot 50•200 with $t450/mo 640·1529 nowl Call 994-1187 REAL ESTATE Pay $20,000 plus e•· Call 714-558-0576
2 Bodroom. 1 Bath •••••••••• c 11 11 t Summer/FT $7 hr Burgundy ltallan j I d d ------------------penses. a co ec ·~---------r Drlver/Stock Clerk house wth har woo OCEAN VIEW 212769-4472 or write·-Painting & mainle· velvet 2·pc soc11on:it
floors. Needs TLC. 2BD 2BA. Poot, spa, NEWPORT Gail
0
Morse 412 West SCHOOLS& ~Zc~;~·,:uoos~ d~~~n,~ nMaunsce1·NBbeMawrrena11 $500 obo G73-33t3 $245,000 with owner tennis. $1925/mo. BEACH 2669 BUSINESS OFFICE End Ave NY NY 1002"
financing. Contact 646-1728. iiiiiiiiii~i!!ii~~iiiiiiii FOR RENT 2769 . INSTRUCTION 3012 Costa Mesa. 546·3288 groomed. a hard Ent. Ctr. solid oak v.ht
owner. P.O. 80)( 2404, ---------General Oftlc• worker. Call Ms Hor· wash Holds TV, VCR.
tor currenl
92663. · North Townhome 2 28A 28A s725tup Approx 15' x 20' GAL. Join one ol H.B. office for exp Wanted Fem, n/s. shell for turn tbl,CDs B 1,, B S 250 Rofrlg & dishwasher f 1:0T"""' 2925 $350 b 073 '"'883
t\.BC's
Attic,
basement,
and cl~t
then get -~
some cash.
842·5878-
Newport Beach, CA Outstanding Npt *18R $02 5* liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _L_O_S_T_& ______ BECOME A PARALE· lmmed. Fff position. _1o_n_6_4_2-_1_6_2_6 ____ 1 Music Sys . Pull·outl
r, v• a, gar, 1 Incl. 60x30 pool. No o fie• apace avt. • "'"u Amortca's fastest A/P & payroll person, drinker. In x·chango o o • ..,
mo., Chris 721·0950 pets. No foes. No now. $225. All ulll. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii growing professions. Comp. lit., reliable, II for rm/board Spend ---------
Wonderful Custom least. 5454855 Incl. Call 644-2270 LOST • Black cat, M, Lawyer Instructed phones. PH:960·2700. nights/wknds w/bed For Ad Action
Cal a ..., ..... Built, French Re-•-,.--------Ctosslfled Is..... declawed, asnwera to home study. Spoctally FAX:969·6871. ridden woman. Lt hso· N•wr.ort Ht• Over 55 CONVl!NIENT programs o ffered.I---------keeping. Own trnns gancy Home. 3 Br. 3 pre 28 Carport "Sport." 11 found call O Hair Dresser FT as· u Ba. s tudy. formal din-· r, ' whothor you're buy· 759-0258. P.C.0 .1 .. Atlanta, oor-alst. PT manicurist, 646·8447 or 631·2921 pool. No pell. $650 Ing. setting, or 1ust gla. 1-800·362·7070 h
AD-VISOR
642-5678
~h~re~ o ~r::'a' oP ~~~~ ,_s_3_53 __ d_ap._._64_6_·_4_86_4_ loo king, classlflod has ':'"L_o_a-:t~-9-:-I r-:1-:-, .--d-:-e-n-:-lm-i._o_e_.p._t_. _L_L_E_1e_2_.___ ~r:,;:.n~ayh'om~-~~ r~: _E_M_P_L_O_YM __ E_N_T ___ ,
port Beach $3,000 per Convenient what you need! shorts w/wallet In Buy It. Soll It. Find It. vine 8 54·8365 ask for
month. Call Barbara ClaHlfled CLASSIFIED pocket on Fernando C1aHlfled. Pat or Kay SERVICES 5533
Auna 6J1-2863 842·5878 042·5878 St. Dock. 723-7855 ·---------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 coiiA MESA 2624
QUIET 8C SERENE
Palm ~esa .Apart:l:nent:s
So near 8c yet IO far ...
Than the kding you p
when~ live It Palm
Mesa amid the lush
grcmcry o( tcdudcd
Woods & statdy palms.
• Scudiol. 1 • l Bcdroonv · Jl'I '515 ID S600
• I U &615 JD l650 · 1n. sns 11> s110 A No Pe11 A v crrical Blinds
• Ccibnt Mt A NtiW Carpa, Paint ac nk A Fimcs two.n
• 1-ta.d Pool tc Jaami
• PICb • 8alcona A au-+* Awillbk
C-.. Houss: 9:00 un • 6=.00 M-P .. 10:00 .... 4:00 pin -1111 ... Dr. • Si1D In CA
--... ........ ,..,
II -§----775
Costa Mesa's Be•t
NEWPORT VILLAGE APARTMENTS
Bring_ Ln this coupon
for 112 off 1 at
month'• rent. For a
llmlted Hme only.
• Exlfo Lorge Jrs .. l ond 2
bedrooms JR $600
1 BR $700
2 BR $860
• Sand Volleyboll
• 2 llQl'ltec:t lonnls coorts • Vertlcol blinds
• Celling Fons
• Plush OOtPUt
• fitness Room
• Huge t*'*2 pool onCI spo
• Gos B8Qs
• COvtftd Pol klllQ • Rtcttol10c 1 wtl\ DllllotOI . °'*' COmmi.nty
OMce ~ Q 00 om · 5 00 pm M..f
and 10:00 om-~ 00 pm weetcenca
6.35 Wist Bolte< Colto Mela. CA (71~ Sl7-GD71
MAKE EXTRA
MONEY! Evenings/ •••••••• Weekends. Field rep-Please be aware that
resentatlves to do aur-the listings In this cal·
veys (movie checking/ egory may recauire you
myalery shopping) for to call • 900 number
a market research In which there la a
firm. C&ll Na.ncy at 1-_c_h_a_ro._e_pe __ rm_tn_u_i_e_. _1 800-348-71155, INTERNATIONAL EM·
Nanny/Sltt•r Wanted PLOYMENT. Mak• up
tor N.B. home. Pff. 10 s2.ooo-S4,000 ' I
1vea/Wkda. Eng.-spkg monlh teaching b1111C
req'd. 714 .. 52·7300 conv1r•alional Engtrsll
In Japan, Taiwan, or
N•wereom South Korea. No
Admlnl•h•tl"• 1eachlng background
Aulatant or M!an tanguagH re-
Per1onable, org11n· quired. For lnfOlma-
IHd lull-lime new•· tton call 1·206·~71-
r o om •••latanl 3S72e11t.JBQSl4 Fee needed •o do wide Va·
rlety of dutlH In Daily ---------1
Pltot M-Naroom. Ev• DOMESTICS 5540
erythlng from an1war-1ii~ll!iii!iiilliiiiiiiiiiiiil Ing the r,hone to word 1 'NANNV r.tOCH• ng, from col-"'"•·In . needed. To ectlng turf & weather 1 /th f 3 Info to acting as ed1to-he P w • care 0
ttal llbrarlan. flun, fast children. Teaching background a ~lut paced environment Musi enaak E""'llSl'I, Send re•urrl• to: BIH .--"• l.Obd•ll, EdltC>f. Daily love chlldf'on. ti11ve e•• .. perlenca and refer· · ... 11oc, 330 w. 8ay SI . ..,~.. E11cettent pay,
Cotta Meu, ~ft M.•. ?ao.9118
the"'°"'
SiH your txtra
hoUMhotd
"'""'
"Q.Jaltty
staff 'Nith
excellent
resutts ~
'Why I
advertise
\4ltth the
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THURSDAY. MAY 16, 1996
TODAY'S
CRaSSwaRD PUZZLE
...... 1-----• SPEED t TIUSPOUATIOI 510 IOATS CB!VIOLIT 9045 MAZDA 1125
7018 1.-..-~-1111111~
BOATS 7011
-------••:a C•m•t• e.tllnena ••o llAZDA llX•
•••• •Kt •OAT 'M T·lop. Full Pc>Mf and TURSO QT • ao.ooo
5.7 titre v-e. King air. L.edle• 1•0wrMH. ml, loaded. Mutt ....
Cobra 0 /0 , tow PfOlll• Sharp. All record•. $6500 080. 241-907e.
hull, tuet Hrvlcad, $2995. obo 72!l-1504 ACfM)IS
• '""""" place • ANleatate t:~61one
Wl"~yyam ,. lihlll'MQ ~
•'7 Mocher• e1s1ers 14hlfo/~n explor9f1
20 long·larlad fOdanl 21~an ..
23 avel
24 Yaltey
2&'GIO(v 2e Migtillar 29 Vermont patriot
Allan ·
33 Sanc1uary
34 lnqullrtrve 35 Honest -
37 Henhouse
38 Chain dance
40 Havana's (DUntry
41 Sinoer Yollo -42 Honolulu s
ISiand
'3 Vote 45 Barely warm
47 O.stance
I ll(flCa t ()(
49 Zeus and Thor 51 Pans airport
5.2 Guarantee
55 Fr1gran1
blossom
5e Oulal -mouM 59 Dallght1 81 Soaach pens
83 Planted
&4 Grant
65 Pinch
68 Siclbn llOlcano 117 Steps
68 Kennel aound1
DOWN
t Rip
2 Graonl•h·blua
3 Baseball play
4 lllum1na1ed
5 Greek tatter
II Alfecllonale
7 Pap 11noor. Ton -
8 Vote against
9 Play 10 Egg 011h
t t Actor Reiser 12 Land measure
13 For fear that 19 W11d-tast1ng
22 One ol the Fingar Laila&
24 Form grasp 25 Pond dweller
26 Gleamed 27 Company of
soldier a 28 Boredom
30 Tuos
31 Monas1ery
head 32 Orderly
33 Nat1VO of
GlaSQOW
35 Cavalry swords 39 Etectncat urnts •o Sare 42 Aromas
44 In abundance 46 Large triard
48 Releases 50 Playing card S2 Church pan
53 -machine
one.'armed
t>andll
54 Slttchacl together
55 Actor -Fo ..
56 •The Clan of
the Cave Bear" author
57 Ora11 faslener
58 SollCllS 60 S1tmpy's pal
62 Be lndabl
11 12
North-South vulnerable. Weit
deal a.
WEST
NORnt
•Q72
<:?A 5
0 Q1082
4AK 93
•8
<:i KJ982
OAK8875 •• •
EAST
•K984
\:I Q lOS
O JS
• 10882 SOUTH
•AJ 105 3
<:?78• o• •QJ 75
The bidding:
WEST NORTH
·~ Dbl 40 ••
5~ P-
P au P-P au P ...
Opening lead: King of 0
SOUTH
8• Pu•
6• Pue
The cards had been breaJung nor·
mally in games at the club, and as a
result Tommy had been experienc·
mg a negative cash flow. The drea·
ry weeka were relieved by moments
such as this, when Tommy's rare
talent j\L becoming a master when
the trumps were stacked against
rum came shining through.
Only a glutton for punishment
would make a preemptive jump on
•tootrlo •oat Wanted r0t eummar
month• Call Su1an at
the £ut. card• -sm,.11 wonder 1-2-8-1-·8-8-2-0-----West puehed to lhe five·level on a Wanted 4th partner.
di1tnbut1onal a1ant Had Eaet 32' Chrltcralt twin
new conlrouer/uphol-1---------•l•ry. Great •kl boa1---------MERCEDES 9130
rut.look• grut •.. · CHIYSL!R 9050
raady to go S 10.500 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MS.9449 574-4247 '7 1 MR RC R 0 • S 1880 l!a9lo T•lon 2150C • AT, PW, Sliver/Black, loedad. 1 alarm PuH-<>ul eterao.
ownar, parf. grad gll1, Svc. ;eca. ~Ira clean.
114.541.1e2t 14000 oBo. 545"·4182.
e acrew, Kint COf'ld . ---------known Tommy better, tho futility of s1up1 8, 110,000 MARINE SERVICE
the double might have been obvi· term• ss.ooo down. SUPPUES 7020 oua. But West had opened the bid· Balance, 2 yr• no In.
ding and East expected to make at taroll. 673·8239 , .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ---------i---------
leastonetrumptrick ,so... TONS OF FORD 9075 NISSAN 9150
Wear: led the klnff of diamonds, POWER BOATS STAINLESS STEEL iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
then shifted to a l'Ow heart when 7012 Bronze 6 brass & nut• 1983 FORD
East started an echo with the jack, ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii & bolls • washer•. BRONCO 4X4 won In dummy with the ace. The 1• $8.00 por pound. In perfect cond. All
queen oftrumpa wu led, covered by 10 Meter Trolan Mlnney·s Yacht Sur-power. leather, phone .
the king and taken wil.h the ace aa Immaculate. Twin Cru· plus, 1500 Old New-low pkg. rime/tires.
W L' 11 d A h · k eade s F Fl1hln port Btvd. 548-4192 Only 80k mllH. S17K. est 10 owe . earl tric waa r · un • g. 674·4247 or 848·944f) conceded, and the heart continua-TV. Magel, plue lnfltll·
tion wu rulTed in dummy. The sev· able. Sleeps she. -.. -.11-n1NE--S----• MUSTANG •70 • Ge-
en of lrumpe was covered wil.h I.he. S49,5K obo 760-8739. uuuu S LIPS raged 28 yr1. 99,750
eight a"'nd won in the closed hand. 1848 Lyman DOCR 7022 ml, 1 owner. 14000.
When West showed out, the diatrib-Ctaulc Bay Boat. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 54 8-051 1 Xlnt cond. $3500 obo 3•• M I
'81 240 SX SE. Whtl Charcoal Int, 4-Cyl, 5·
Spd, AC. CC, PB, PL.
Tiii steering wheel.
s t e r • o /c a • • • t t a . Tinted windows. Alloy
rlms, Excalabor Alarm
Sy1tam. Electrlc seat· belts. Mint condition.
$10,500 OBO. Catt
Pager 88t·1102
ution became an open book. Call 733-9993. v oor no (C.80) wJ
I b d .d d h 11· Bw. oft Alvarado---------PONTIAC A c u to ummy provi e t e C.A. DRY SLIP Pl .. E. ol Bay Is. Call GMC 9081 9170
entry for a diamond ruff in the 101 Shipyard Way B2, (909) 397.9797 or iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
closed hand, and three rounds of N.B. 6·6·96, 11 am. (909) 626-7190 ,85 Yukon SLE 2.Dr, '89 FIREBIRD While,
clubsi ending on the table, produced Lian Sale. 25' BJ1yllne1 40, Mooring Ea.st 01 4 X4 WhVbalga, ruuy 2 tops, 5·•pd, loaded.
the desired ending. Tommy wae CF5386FU. 1983 17' P 1111 /C lo4 dad w/hvy d"ty ex· Xlnt cond. , $4400. Call
poised with J 5 of spades over Enst's We It c CF 2 6 3 1 SK . av on w oronado .. .. 54 .. 2369 9 4 and a diamond from the board Hin WELB7498M83H 25' eallboat. Two an· lras, hvy duly low. ., . chors, 9.8 marine.ob Alarm. 6·yr fact warr. '!".8:-... ~5::-:U~N:-::8:-:1-::R:-::0:---com pleted the coup, allowing MOANA long ehaf1 Vhf new Mini cond Reg lhru 117 •
declarer to score both trumps at the COMM ASSOC lnfl. 675-08S2. · 128K · 548-4808 Conv. Turbo OT. Auto, end and 11 tricks in all. 711 Udo Park Drive, ~,,....,.....,,,... ____ __,,..1 alt pwr AM/FM cau.
N.B. 8·6·98, 11am. BALBOA YACHT ---------CC, tllt, cstm tires/
Lien eale. 1963 24' BASIN ha• boat 1llpe HONDA 9085 w h t s. $ 4 4 O O. Learn to be a better bridJe Ota• cF725ocB. avail from 31 10 75 11, 873·2762.
player! Subscribe n ow to the HIN 92. $14.50/11. 673-1761 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Goren Bridge Letter by callinf l·s=-u=---RA.....,...Y_2_1 _f1_C_u_d_d_y_& .,.B..,A ... L ... B_O __ A_:_4_0_'_0_0_C_K_.1 '87 Honda Prelude---------
(800)788-1225 for information. Or trlr, 1983. Orig owner. Side Tie. Holds: Croom pulll Personal MISC. AUTO 9245
write to Coren Bridl{e Letter, Sorvlced rog'rty, many 48' Boat x 9• Wldo. car llrtle old lady In liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii P.O. Box 4410, Chlcago, ll. 60680-xtras. $6500. 646·5974 e 714·042·4914 e COM. Excellent cond/ 4410. Blttupunkl radio. Sun· Seized Cara From NEW DOCK 2 Slips roof, CC, All power. Al $175. Porschas, Ca-
BOATS, YACHTS,
t-B-ICY_C_L_E_S __ 6_0_6_0.,..C_O_S_T_A_M_E_S_A_6_1_2_4.,..N_E_W_P_O_R_T __ ____,CHARTERS 70 l3
25' ~ •· Elec/wtr/dock c. new tlros, alar,m, d 11 1ac1, Chevy•, boxs. Marcue Channel 79K mllet .. $7500 BMW's Corvettes.
$200/mo ea. 673·7353 723·4602 Also Jeeps, 4 WO's .
Up to 20' Front Tie Your area. Toll free 1· BEACH 6169 *JUST AS NEW* '52 SCHWINN Rad SAT Sam • 3 Pm · 1 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Phanlom. Completely Name brand ctothos, 1• Inflatable Boats
restored. Perfect cond. shoes, furn. 2514 Loy· E•t•t• S•I• Sat May Conelgnmant Items
$3,000 075·5770 ota Rd. CM 18th, 7am to 2 pm. BOAT BUILDERS CARS FOR $250.i--------
1222 Sussox Lona, & SAILORS ••••••••I Government seized ANTIQUES &
Newport Boach AUTOMOBILES and surplus trucks, CIASSICS 6075 HUNTINGTON GIANT Movlnn Salo A Ma11ne Membership .. 01scoun1 Warehouse •••••••••I boats. computers, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BEACH 6140 Furn. ctothlng, misc 128 E. 1 Oth St. more. Locot area. Call liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Chlc•oo Round Trip, noms. Sat May 18th 8· (Npt Bl.) 548-9818 ---------i for inlormallon. 1·800· ,70 MBZ 280 SE ~ alr~n:/2tlc~~t, LAX6/* *GARAGE SA.LE* 2 819 W 15th Sl.#4·B ---------BMW 9030 304·0134 ext 2001. Cpe. Auto, air. Lt blu. ope r urn " (& Ptacontia) Gate Hand-made aluminum. S199 645·9586 22 Family Neighbor-Code #61 650·9109 SAIL BOATS 7014 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil---------s7500 obo 8"73-3313
hood Sale. Betwoen •---------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ISUZU 9100 •-::,.-:--.....,..---'='="""......,.-Sp rl ngd a le, Steier, LIDO ESTATE SALE '78 833 CSI 2·dr, 6· ,. warner & Graham. 27' Cat•llna 1986 cyl. auto, pwr wind, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '74 Jonson Hoalo~
GARAGE SALES 01 tho ullimato collector Olosol. Furllng Jib. snrf. mlrr. Gd cdnd. Lotus twin cam. eng. LotSsatoufrdea vyeOrynthlylng! Ononu11 rugs. bdrm s111. Vory Pristine. S12K. $3250 obo 631·7149 '87 Isuzu Trooper II Sfl/hrd·toin. Runs Xlnt.
I h /d 3 8 75k mlloe. original o 1 d y 11 /btk * 8am·4 pm * so a. c rs. w . oining 436·6665 / 29·023 , 8 5 8 MW 7351 . r g con . e ow soi. pa110 set. plants. C owner• rod, $6,500 Int. S2K 838·7524 books, rocords linens, al 25 rebuilt/loaded, Brown, xtnt cond, Call 650-1769.
Oii Marcus Ava. 800·898-9778 E1et. A·
$150/mo Call Chip HYUNDAI 9090 5t39 for current list·
!$22·2301 8. 30a·6p iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lngs.
T1cnrs 9250
CORONA NEWPORT tv's. A room ol holldoy cruising/racing, $5000 auto, orig owner.
--------.....----------...----------1DEL MAR 6122 decorations. CtosolS firm. Must soot $8.000. 722·0194. AUTO PARTS
T B"11CH 6169 Coll. 723·6048 JAGUAR 9105 WANTED PETS & PE S & ...n or womens ctothos/1--------·ae BMW· 7331 Whl, •·REPAIR 9260 TO BUY 6019 ANIMALS 6049 ANIMALS 6049 NTIC y d S I hatste1ioos & Jowoiry. WE PAY CASH au10. loaded. x1nt iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii i:::cxiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii GIGA ar a e BUILDERS SALE Also garage misc. For good used Sabots cond. $6200, OBO 1• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Sat. May 18. 7am·2pm Power tools, plumbers 132 VIA UNDtNE & boat equipment. Call 640-0683. '88 XJ8 Sovereign. FOR s•L• B I Top Do llar•Pald ADOPT·A·PET FREE CAT 8moa e2150rchldAvoe tools. ladders, taddor •FRI/SAT/SUN • Ml , S ....,-,:""="o-=~.,.,....,,,....,,..,,..,.... ____ 1 Maroon. Must seal "' ... • ege For nocords Jazz. beige strpd nrtrd l MAY 17·19 6:30·4:30 nnoy • Yacht ur· 1975 BMW 5301 Bur-lmmaculant condition. convertable top option Every Sat & Sun at SAT 5 /18, 7am • acks, concreto fin. plus, 1500 Old New· N/smk Sate! $9995. for full size Ford S oun trnck s. otc PETSMART, Fountain male. Charlie. Adults Steeper/sofa. anllQue lsher tools, compres· ----S-----port Blvd. 548-4192 9undy, auto, sunrf, PERFORMANCE LTD. Bronco as seen In Off·
Cbll M11<0 6115· 7!105 V;illey. Puppies, kit· only. Shots 673·4879 dresser, frig, clothos, ~~(; Fal~I ~1ls. A Etc. M8~~~~g An~:~u!at f5.}r~~ •---------g°ao3 64s~~~;3. S2.000 Jaguor-Land Rover Road magazine. All
OFFICE
FURNITURE &
EQUIPMENT 604 7
2 o•k a11acutlva desks. 1 crodonza
c;hau~ colloo t;:ibto
:ind moro• 64~Hl506
tons and more, all •Poodle• AKC• dlshH. skis. 618 t/2 u • Bon vho. lamps. tool•. col· Can'I seem 10 -SERVICE· pans Included. 2 yr• looking for tovlng. car-Tea Cup Toy & Mini Avocado, COMt s:.;:.por~e:::9~ lectlbles,housahold 714-e50·5800 old. $250 OBO. 714·
ing homes CALL 597· $450·$950 714·751·3465 CLASSIFIED ay am goods and clothes • gel to all those CADILIAC 9040 ---------~89-4040 ext.167. 9037 for moro Info. ..,.---------t. ,.,.0 XJ8 S a al S•v• a bu sod and 11'1 the reeourco you 1829 Port Sheffield repair jobs iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil • ov r gn.1..,..,~~-==-----
Overstocked wilh
stulf?
A call to
Classified
will help
642-5678
abandonod pets Be a can count on lo sell a On the move? British Racing Graen. LIFT GATES votunieer/loster. Call myriad of merchan· S AT. 8am-2pm around lhe house? Coupe do VIII• 1987 Non/amk. Best car For Salo (3) Wallco
714.597.9037. d1so ttoms. bocause Sell your extra 1506 V1v1an Lano Let 1he Classlfled Excellent condrtlon. Best valult • Loaded. 3,000 tbs. capacity,
our columns compol household Olf furn/ equip/ supp, Service Directory One Owner S5500. S a t e I S 1 3 , 5 o O . Utt Gates. $2500 for Umbrella Cocka•oo
5Yr old, male Tame
loves women W/
qualllied buyers to TV . computor, 11oroo. leaving for Now York PERFORMANCE LTD. alt (3). For more
calll items sowing mach, c101hos. help you find May 18. Only sorious J•gu.,·Land Rover Information, please
042-5878 cage. S800. 675·5770 1---------in Classjfied camp Ing . b s kt s , reliable help. buyers ca 11 . ·S E RV I C E· call Promod Shah dilhos, etc 1---------(714) 644·7619. 714·050·5800 1-714·574·4267.
------CERAMIC
SERVICE TILES
CLEANING
3528 SERVICES
DRYWALL
3548 SERVICE
HANDY MAN 3710 IANDSCAPE & MOVING 3834 PAINTING 3858 PLUMBING 3890 TUTORING 3929
DIRECTORY •••••••••I Leaky Shower• Rap'd Regroullng & lnstall'n
3 5 84 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IA WN CARE 3 808 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -~~ii!iiiii!~~
Homo Rapalr/Ramodal liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PUBLIC NOTICE CHUNG'S PAINTING Proclao Plumblng READING TUTOR
WINDOW CLEANING ...-SMALL JOB EXPERT Cpsta Mesa/Newport Baelc Y•rd Malnt The Callr. Publlc Utlll· 20 Yre Exp. Gd Prlcel ReRalre & Remodels ,... ad0ratldal•d•TK·5 .. __
0 all/pl I R I 2 • Ye•r• •xp. Lawns, Cln-ups, Trff Guor work. Free Est Free Estimate• "'"'r en e eae .... · e Average 1 etory·S30 , ryw as er epa r ii/I ""' Ilea Commission RE· a 8 8 St hanl 723 0488 • 2 slory-s45. • H1ng1ng. Taping, Te111Ue Jim 831 ·2480 Trim, Sprinktra, Aerate, QUIRES that all used ~u_c_11_3,...,7_5e_o_2_,,5_3_9._1_53_4_1 LI 973g O D· 1 ODO •P • •
ACOUSTIC House Clo•nlng Comm/Res 551-5573 Thatch 63t-4422 Pg-413-8142 houeehold goods Oana Abrams Painting TEST PREP
CEILINGS 3408 Nowport Tito & Marble Spring Clo•nlng B&K Llc,585100 _HA_UL_l_N_G---3-7-2-0 • TREES • mover1 print their lnVExl Oval Palnl/ReasS POOL SEMINARS
LN670130 D11n ol Tile
673·8065 or 846·8528
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil F C & Reg Svc. M1nl·bllnd1, All phases No Job too P.U.C. Cal T number; Llc'd/tns'd since '76. SERVICE 3894 ino rartsmanshlp... cari;iet & noor. ViM/MC/M eml. Acoustic removal, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ro,,edlf'a•owe. L.aw111, limos and chauffeurs 989·7083 Pg·c;64·3947 EXCEL on SAT &
At Allordablo Prrces. AJ • 008-2500 etc 714·240·1158 ~ 751·3'78 print their T.C.P. num-.,..,......,...-,,,.---,,,.---1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CTBS E /W AAA ACOUSTIC
Paint-applied Romove·
patch ToAturo Int O.<t
962·5891 or 847-890!:.
CEILIN G MASTER
•Acoustic nomovol• Custom Toxturo•Pa1nt
Lie o Mark 838· 7300
ShowersJCoun1e11/Ftrs JUNK To Tho DUMP QARD .. NINQ 1 ber In all advertise-lk•'• Custom Palnllng . ve• knda Na1ur111 Stone & Marble 1------------------714-888·1882t ~ Rel able Prof, Clean, Qualify PooVSpa Svo 6 "•pair 4570 Campus Or. N.B.
F I L"'·'S 86 842 22 & Quality Work at mants II you have a Work. lnl/Exl & Dock•. Ftlter .. Pump1•Heatara Patricia O'Oowd M.S. pcs .,.. 4 · 14 CONCRETE & ELECTRICAL 3610 Will haul what Trash eosonable alH qualllon about the lo Man won'll 968-1882 red B 549r3371· 11 1 11 · Lf703468 831·4810 laland Blue Pools Consllnt GATE/Seti/Univ. TILE REPAIRS MASONRY 3557 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii :irrett • ga ty 0 a mover. mo Wkly Svc. 845·8720 CeH 873·2380
• noseat Pallo Tllo • ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Sm•ll Job EXPERT ---------Graen Scene Ltlndscpng or chauffeur, call: -=p:-::A~1=-=N=T~1N=a,..,e""7:......1.-=5'"'9""'9""'7"'1
Ponds • Fountains 11 Dunc•n Electric TWENTY DOLLAR Masonr I lgatlon Publlc Ulllltles Conscientious Crall1m1n ---------1---------Brlck, Block, Stone, Tiie " HAULER/CLEAN UP ,. Y •' rr Comml1elon OF NG WALL L<r352409 745·3954 c Quick Response · /Trimming ,1 Romovat1 _,Old·Fash1oned Pride In RO I 3910
one, Patio, Orlvoway Local Lie. 850·7042 JOHN 850·1028 Clean·uP• • Ma1ntononce, ___ 1_1_4_·5_5_8_·4_1_s_1__ Workmanship. 671·5967 COVERINGS 3932 Fplc, BBOs. Rel. 25 Yr LN599025 0 5 0 ·8108 Dlb d ' M i
3510 CHILD C"nE 3536 El<p. Torry 557·759'.' orn., o • ov ng SON'S PAINTING BALBOA ROOFING CO liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiii
AA FENCES HOME CARFJ LANDSCAPE Locat/Olflca/Storago tnVEl<t. 22 yr• In O.C. ,,Comm .1Ree /Rerool THE STRIPPER * Best Price/Quality CONSUL TANT Long Diet. Free Est. Ouallty. Sml/Blg Jobs Repair , Free Est , Refs Speclallzl~ In wallpa,ar
CARPENTRY
CHILD HOME CARE' Landscape, brick, stone 8c DECKS 3615 SERVICES 3760 18 Yoare Experlonca. TAl 181832 878·3114 Uc460559 714·537-949e llo'cl/tn1 83MS081 removal. Lie# 588924 Handlfman/Remodel Lrc.-304201056 Concrete. 800·7118-1007 l=ii~~~i!ii!iiilii~ii!iii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Brian K11tetaa 645-4635 Spilt Second Moving Pgr 1·600·616·9722 R.C.I. ROOFINO CO. * 714·983·5037 • Additions. Bath, Kitch A T 1• •-::--...,..,...,..---:-...,...-..,...--Flro·Wa tor Dumnge oberta hornlon EXPERT B •FENCES OATES• C•r• Qlvor For the Landecapa Ramodallng Prof Mover•! 24Hr Srv TOP QUALITY INT/EXT Spoclallzlng In new'-Fa rthing Interior•
flee . Plumb. & Paint 720·3969 Npt Boach *brick, con~rt. ~~u:c:"~1~ naw/repalr/poat rtplact4 elderly. 12 years exp. Yard tune up/m1lnton1ce, 70ay/Sr Olsc1T1t 7S452 Roof1/Re·rool1/Repelrs ln1tallallon, Removal
Newport areo tmmoo ---------stone. 25Yr Exp. Lows Redwood • L/1576605 Rel'•· Pl•••• call land1capa/11t11t1c d11lgn. 432·8123/P-346·5850 Very Reasonable RatHt L1704392 Bond/I ns Olacounl Wellcoverlng1 Pago 714-227·8122 Joae 5'31·7843 Jim Whyla 842·7206 Tammy 714-367·9038 ContractorlC27·604008. L648228 Jay 55<>-5066 15%011wl1d 850·107tt L1580875 873·1212
----------•CLEANING Palternod Concrete •Wood Feno••• Prol'I & Ethical. 645-7505 PARTIES & WEST COAST PAINTING •SADLER ROOFING We gals •hould hang D~~m'!~aR:~.~:H:;~:'~ iSiiEiiRiiVliiiCiiEiiiSiiiiiiii3ii5ii4ii8 Orlvewaye, patloe, repllcefrtpalr, lrH lllulir19 PLANT ARTIST Free Etl.•10 Yr• Exp LlcanHcf& Insured together. Strip, lnslall,
35y decks. Repair/removal 11t1male1. Low prtces Uc'd IMMIGRATION Speclellst In exl1tlng OCCASIONS 3840 Un~ulable Ratut FrH Est. All reroof advice to th• crazy. ~::;:~ L5e27~~2-0r~:'~ A TOUCH OF CLASS Uc/Free •.11 222-8808 Adv1111agt Constr 1174-5301 3762 landacape/lrrlgatlon Rel a. Joa 850·3433 gusrantttd. 875·5085 831·2111 anytime
Cleaning. AH/Comm 1---------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii upgradH. 780·8792 United P•t1~ Ront•I •THUNDER ROOFINO• r---------
14 to Z HANDYMAN Lie/Bonded. Frae e11· CONT CTORS FLOOR INSTALL Prol'I Landeoapa Malnt Wedding Rantot Equip PIANO 8c VOCAL For au 01 your rooting HOVe A ::r~;~eF:;1~;,Aa:'!~~. Tero.. 282·7143 RA REPAIRS 3620 u.s~;::!~::~·ro~:~" !oi~~~xrfa1· ?i~':e~:': ~,:~='·:~~~eo LESSONS 3868 needs. Rerool/Rapalr. ~ndow• oouo 545.12sa .uoia 11ousecLEAN•NO GENERAL 3558 Visa, Labor car11flcauon vicToR 457•1738 Uc 838144 e4e.4122 Garage Sole!
----..__..,,....,.,.....,.,..,..,........,....--1 LlcanHd·Bonded •QUALITY WORK• Work Permit 975·8425 Yard Clo•n·up, Trim•--------,--IA O CA"PEHTRV•Wlndowa SIO 00 par hour. L•WIS C t ti PAINTING 3858 P H Beg.·Advancad REMODELING Doore • Wood FencH 714-1548•0388 one rue on HardwdNlnyl/Caremlc TreH/Hadga/Remove/ All age•·Teacher Cert.
CloHUG1rage Organt1111 ---------RemodaleHandyman Mrble/Carpat Bnd/ln• ---------Wead, Nu Lawn/Malf'lt, Entertainment Av•ll. 8r ADDITIONS 3916 L/1281561 • Call Bob WINDOW CLUNINQ LA'704773 Local A••· L70827D 722·7332 INTERIOR 984·Ya.rd Pg-748·53715 eW.P . YOUNGQUIST Jennifer 840·8889
249·8323 Pg-312-0026 • Carpal Clunlng e714-597•59a9 • D!SIGNEIS 3782 Pelntlnt Contraclor
CARPET
CLEANING 3515
Prot'I Carpet CINning
()lly Work•Folr PrlcH
""·· Room IAHl•I •O.C . STUMWAY
• Screen R•fi•lr t .J, looU Conatrvotlon HANDY MAN 3710 LIMOUSINE Cull. pllntlng by prol'la PL'YH•fNG 3890 FrH Eetl • 729· 079 Cullom 11oma 8ulldtt1 Uc180209e. '"'· """'1
•Brl•ht Heootnlng Llc•4111 U4. Re1 ·1.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill '!19•1010~,•or~o•.•:,og!~ •. SERVICES 3814 FrH Ht. &45-3305
Europ •• n Prof'I. Beet ?t4'•7•7718 •P•lnt/C•rpontrv• " iiiii••••iiiiiiiiii -.,....,..,,,._,......,.,.,.....,.....,...,..,..._ In townl Reta SVre Exp.·---------Drywall and moral Cott ettectiv., excep. '••t··-'-'H --ar• 24y,. Outlltr Ptlntlnt .--------•I .-small Jobe Oki tlonal buying power. -• • .., • .,."" TOUCHUPS, TOO eDAN DAWIONe Orac• 281·84151 DOORS 3'580 O•ry e 48•5277 Sml/lg budo•••. tr•• Prlcad at low at Tul. 24 Hre. Richard Sinor Plumbing 848.e720 Honut•Rellab1e•Hard i e111i i.et1re4' Contreottt conaultatlon. 21Mt080 ~::~iJ A~ft~:.::: Ucil280844 845·3209 Wtltt Ht11or1 •Drain•
Working lrlah L•dlea. An OJ(porlenood Repairs, lmprovemen11, ---------QUALiTV CAR• • Ramodol e R•P•lr
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Plet .. call 848·8148 raaa. Don 521·89t0 '"IMODILI carp, p~, l••lli•••••ii ftalr I 8•5·2•'17 Ron ~===:=====~11•••••••1 =-~c:!~ f~~t':
•HOU8SCLUNING 1-0~ .. -0-R-l-NS_T_i1_L_•_ 'Tl_O_N paint, elt0. lite, •tucco..1 w1111am H•rold Jewalara L & a The r•pr RAIN80W Clrelo Malnt. lapert Dreln Cloanlnt .,RINKL•R ... ,AIR home, an ~.
115 yr• eicp. Qood A•f. " " "" rooting MO,.OAN W•lch & Jaw•lry r•P•lr & Nutrition Int/WC '•lnllno.tnl/!•t Houtt/~pt 6 Plumbing Repalrt Vtlvu•HucleeTlm• a new oocupaalon Ot
Own Ir ant. Call any• WEATHEA•ITRIPPINO Llc'd , Ptu1eeo-~ae1 Antique•,.,,. Jewelry RN/M .. Hge Ther•pltt Quality job 'r" .. t. 20
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