HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-06-06 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS
Wrapping up season
for Estancia !flrls
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
I 11 ( ) \\ I ( ) I I) I " I () ( I I ( ) l ' I) !
Lt ,.
MARC MARTIN I DAILY ~LOT
Newport Beach resident Richard Tawes says .. 'JWtster" at Big Newport theater got so loud that be had to plug his ears while watching il
By carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot the house that
N EWPORT BEACH -When Richard
Tawes went to see the hit flick •1\vister•
at Big Newport theater he was blown
away, not by the movie, but by the sound.
"I had to plug my ears,• Tawes, 71 , said. "I
don't wear hearing aids but I will have to if I
keep going there.•
roare
And Tawes isn't the only one to notice. The
Newport Beach resident said when he plays ten-
nis a t the Balboa Bay Club with his cronies, their
conversation bounces from match points to
movie theaters.
Moviegoers say theater
sound system is a pain in ..................................................................................... , ......... .
•It's deafening, especially when they are
advertising the coming attractions,• Tawes said. the ear; Edwards says it will
He went to the Edwards Theatres at Fashion
Island and discovered that there too, the previews
and especially the advertisement for the Dolby look into lowering volume
Harbor Center becoming a
ghost town, merchants say
• As businesses pull out of 36-year-old shopping mall,
owners deny there is an effort to empty out center as
part of mar.keting strategy.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Day after
day, from his jewelry store facing
Harbor Boulevard, Michael Ayres
stares out over a perpetually emp-
ty parking lot. While customers
stay away, Ayres sees neighbor-
ing merchants depart in droves
tor other shopping centers.
But Ayres can't leave Harbor
Center. He signed a four-year
lease for his jewelry store in
November of 1994, only to learn
one week later that J.C. Penney's
was on its way out. Coincidental-
ly or otherwise, after Penney's
departed early in 1995, other mer-
chants departed one by one.
lrack Auto, Don Chucho's
restaurant, China West, the $5
clothing store, BTE Deli. Ayres
and his son Arlen call it the
•domino effect."
•Country Harvest Buffet got
up and left last week,• Ayres said.
"That was the only thing left that
brought people in.•
Merchants say they have com-
plained to the property manager
representing the owners, Hi-Dap
Co. They suspect that the owners
aren't leasing space because they
hope to sell the center.
The 36-year-old center is for
sale. But property manager David
Sadigh says that prospective new
tenants are not being discour-
aged. If anybody's interested in
coming in, the doors are open,
Sadigh says.
"I can't really say that a lot of
businesses have left," Sadigh
said. "The industry probably isn't
doing as well as it should because
of the economics situation.•
•SEE CENTER PAGE A14
Stereo system used in the theaters, was booming.
The Castanon family, also Newport Beach res-
ltlenli, echo Tawes' complaints about the theater
at 300 Newport Center Drive and other Edwards
Theatres with the Dolby Stereo advertisement.
"We have been there. and when our son goes, he
holds h1s ears,• Paula Castanon said. "He is 20. We
are twice his age and he hears better than we do.·
Paula and her husband, Dr. Richard Cas-
tanon, have an ear, nose and throat practice in
Huntington Beach.
"I always kind of till my head to the side to
block some of the sound,· Dr. Castanon said,
adding that he does this mostly during the Dolby
Stereo ads. "I think H's very annoying. at the
very least, when it screams through there."
Castanon said that for older people who wear
•SEE NOISE PAGE A14
WEEKEND
Mother Goose
gets cooked
Authorities
pitch idea
of daytime
'curfew'
• Goal is to give police officers eff ec-
tive tool when they find kids skipping
school.
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -In a move to keep students
m the classroom, off drugs and out of gangs, l 1..a.
school and police officials Wednesday called or
all Orange County cities to adopt daytime "cur-
few" ordinances aimed at fighting truancy
The Orange County police chiefs, shenffs ;llld
superintendents associations have been work.ng
together for
months to devel-
op a game plan
to keep kids safe
and in school.
A local orcl..t·
na nce would
give teeth to the
curre nt, non-
e n for ce ab 1 e
slate law which
says all children
ages 5 to 15
must be in
school every
day, said Costa
Mesa Pohce
Chlef Dave Snowden
Q l . F ~ ·1 I <, ~
ISA DAYTIME
CURFEW NEEDED?
What do you think I of the proposal for a
local law to curb
truancy? Call our
Readers' Hotline at
642-6086 and leave
your name, thoughts, home-
town and phone number for
verification.
"Unless they're comnutting a crime, thE: •
basically noUung we really can do now (if ch'
dren are caught sklppmg school)," Snowden sai
"What we want to tell the kids is that there is or'
one place they should be and that's school. unle'
they have a good reason •
The curlew is one of a list of suggestions ro
maintaining safe commurubes and schools. '1
said. Other recommendations include mcreasl•(
drug and gang awareness, posillve peer pressw
programs and sell-esteem trairung for children
The school and police assooations plan to lob
by all aty counals and school boards dunng th~
summer to approve the same model curfew p0ll
cy, Snowden sa1d
"Whatever we do needs to be consistent coun
tywide, • he said. "Children need to know that
wherever they go, thls is what's going to happe.,.
to them if they are out of school.•
•SEE CURFEW PAGE A1 ~
J' • School
board
trustees Ed
Decker and
Martha Flu-
or have
announced
they11 nm
for re-elec-
Uon.
CASEY LUKSCH
I OAA.Y Pl.OT
Decker, Flllor make it official:
they'll be running for re-election
•School board trustees make joint
announcement in hopes of showing a
unified front against potential contenders.
By Julie Ross cannon. Dail'/ Pilot
COSTA MESA -ln the first shot of a potential·
ly ~tentloul school board election battle, two of
the three Newport-Mela Unified trusteel up for
re elec:tion bav. dedd9cl '° make another run
tbil f&ll
At a tonDal pre11 conference nut to the
BltaDda Adobe Wedneilday, trustees Bd Decker
and Martta PlUor Mid llwr need four more ,..n
cm Gae..-. ...-. bMrd to see some of their
Cll1gld •I gMll ~ hllkaQ,
•rm very proud of the work we have accom·
phshed so far and would look forward to another
four yee.rs of challenges,• said Fluor, who repre-
ents 'nustee Area 3, which covers northeast COi·
ta Mesa. northwest Newport Beach and Santa
Ana Heights.
· Despite the joint announcement. Decker and
Fluor said they will not nm a joint campe91.
They may recooaider if a slate of com.-vatmt
candidates tnake a run for the lchoOl bOud.
• Pive yean ego, we didn't know ..c:b Olbs.
but disccJv.end w. Md joint Conc:mll aboUt ....
cation: Mkl Decker, whO 1ep1111nb ~
Area 1 tn Mela v... ·w. _,. ..... = strides as a board. and tt • impcll'Wlt tD o
th<ile trends .•
'
SPORTS
Wrapping up season
for Estancia gi,rls
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
11 < > \\ I < l l I > I "' I ( 1 < l I c > l ' D :
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Newport Beach resident Richard Tawes says "Twister" at Big Newport theater got so loud that be had to plug his ears while watching it.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot the house that
N EWPORT BEACH -When Richard
Thwes went to see the hit flick "1\vister"
at Big Newport theater he was blown
away, not by the movie, but by the sonnd.
"I had to plug my ears,• Tawes, 71, said. HI
don't wear hearing aids but I will have to if I
keep going there."
roare
And Tawes isn't the only one to notice. The
Newport Beach reside nt said when he plays ten-
nis at the Balboa Bay Club with his cronies, their
conversation bounces from match points to
movie theaters.
Moviegoers say theater
sound system is a pain in ................................................................................................
Hit's deafening, especially when they are
advertising the coming attractions," Tawes said. the ear; Edwards says it will
He went to the Edwards Theatres at Fashion
Island and discovered that there too, the previews
and especially the advertisement for the Dolby look into lowering volume
I
Har~r Center becoming a
ghost town, merchants say
• As businesses pull out of 36-year-old shopping mall,
owners deny there is an effort to empty out center as
part of mar.k~ting strategy.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
COSTA tvmSA -Day after
day, from his jewelry store facing
Harbor Boulevard, Michael Ayres
stares out over a perpetually emp-
ty parking lot. While customers
stay away, Ayres sees neighbor-
ing merchants depart in droves
for other shopping centers.
But Ayres can't leave Harbor
Center. He signed a four-year
lease for his jewelry store in
one week later that J .C. Penney's
was on its way out. Coincidental-
ly or otherwise, after Penney's
departed early in 1995, other mer-
chants departed one by one.
1Tack Auto, Don Chucho's
restaurant, China West, the $5
clothing store, BTE Deli. Ayres
and his son Arlen call it the
"domino effect."
"Country Haivest Buffet got
up and left last week," Ayres said.
•That was the only thing left that
brought people in.•
plained to the property manager
representing the owners, Hi-Dap
Co. They suspect that the owners
aren't leasing space because they
hope to sell the center.
The 36-year-old center is for
sale. But property manager David
Sadigh says that prospective new
tenants are not being discour-
aged. If anybody's interested in
coming in, the doors are open,
Sadigh says.
•1 can't really say that a lot of
businesses have left," Sadigh
said. "The industry probably isn't
doing as well as it should because
of the economics situation."
•SEE CENTER PAGE A14
Stereo system used in the theaters, was booming.
The Castanon family, also Newport Beach res-
Jtlents, echo Thwes' complaints about the theater
at 300 Newport Center Drive and other Edwards
Theatres with the Dolby Stereo advertisement.
"We have been there, and when our son goes, he
holds his ears,· Paula Castanon said. "He is 20. We
are twice his age and he hears better than we do."
Paula and her husband, Dr. Richard Cas-
tanon , have an ear, nose and throat practice in
Huntington Beach
"I always kind of lllt my head to the side to
block some of the sound," Dr. Castanon said,
adding that he does this mostly during the Dolby
Stereo ads. HI think it's very annoying, at the
very least, when it screams through there."
Castanon said that for older people who wear
•SEE NOISE PAGE A14
. . ...,
WEEKEND
Mother Goose
gets cooked
Authorities
pitch idea
of daytime
'curfew'
• Goal is to give police officers eff ec-
tive tool when they find kids skipping
school.
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -In a move to keep students
in the classroom. off drugs and out of gangs, l 1..."21
school and police offtoals Wednesday called .or
all Orange County cities to adopt daytime "cur-
few" ordinances aimed at fighting truancy
The Orange County police chiefs, sheriffs ::U'd
superintendents assooatlons have been work..nq
together for
months to devel-
op a game plan
to keep kids safe
and in school.
A local ordi-
nance would
give teeth to the
current, non-
e n fo r ce able
state law which
says all children
ages 5 to 15
must be in
school every
day, said Costa
Mesa Pohce
Chief Dave Snowden
Ql 'F:-\TJ(>'.'
IS A DAYTIME
CURFEW NEEDED7
What do you think I of the proposal for a
local law to curb
truancy? call our
Readers· Hotline at
642-6086 and leave
your name, thoughts, home-
town and phone number for
verification.
"Unless they're comnutting a crune th~r,
basically nothmg we recilly can do now (J..f en..
dren are caught sklppmg school),• Snowden sai
"What we want to tell the kids is that there IS or.!·
one place they should be and that's school. unles·
they have a good reason •
The curfew IS one of a list of suggestions 10
mamtairung safe communities and schools, h'
said. Othe r recommendations include increasec
drug and gang awareness. positive peer pressur· ·
programs and self-est~em training for children
The school and police assoaations plan to lob
by all city councils and school boards during the
swnmer to approve the same model curfew poll
cy, Snowden said.
HWhatever we do needs to be consistent coun
tywtde," he said. "Children need to know that
wherever they go. this is what's going to happeri
to them if they are out of school."
•SEE CURFEW PAGE Alt
School
board
trustees Ed
Decker and
Martha Flu-
or have
announced
they'll run
for re-elec-
Uon.
CASEY LUKSCH
I DAllY PILOT
• November of 1994, only to learn Merchants say they have com-
,,
r--------·--------------------~----·---~---------------, I lmrd
I
I
Decker, Fluor make it official:
they'll be running for re-election
I I I
f
•School board trustees make joint
announcement in hopes of showing a
unified front against potential contenders.
By Julie Ross Cannon. Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -In the first shot of a potenti41-
1Y contentious school bomd election battle, two of
the three Newport-Mela Unlfied trultees up for
re el1 ctklli have dedd9d to make another nm
tbil fall. -
At a formal pn111 conference next to the
BltUda Adobe Wedwday, trustees Ed Decker
and Martha PlUar Mid they need four more yeen
cm ... ..._.nwnbs bMrd to ... IOIDe of their
cll'lf •• golll ~ fnlmon.
•rm very proud of the work we have accom-
plished so far and would look forward to another
four years of challenges,• said Fluor, who repre-
sents 'lhlstee Area 3, which covers northeast Cos-
ta Mesa, northwest Newport Bea.ch and Santa
Ana Heights.
Despite th joint announcement, Decker aDd
Fluor said lbey will not nm a joint cam~.
They may feCooAder if a slate of comervatlft
candidates make a run for the ICboOl boa.rd.
•Five yean ago, we didn't know eec:b olbs,
but discovered we b8d joint concerm aboUt .-.
c.tion,• said De<:k•, wbo repr11111t1 ~
Aree t ln MeM vente. ·we Mw m-. C
stndes u a boa.rd. and it ll Unpanant llD a
those ttendl .•
'•
THURSDAY, JUNE k 1996 Newpon ~ ..... Dmly Piloc
GOING TO THE GAMES
greer
wylder
r -• , ,
i-~· G~ .Q\'86~0:,.
i . 'ddte 'P~\ve~aie
I "' I
' F or great saving on kayaks, : ~ , canoes, surf skis and acces-l · sories, Paddle Power is
hdving a sale to celebrate its
sixth anniversary. Merchandise
is marked down 15-25% off.
Owner Sydney Balalis says,
"Our best best prices are in effect
through June 9. • Paddle Power
(675-1215) is located at 1500 W.
Balboa Blvd. in Newport Beach.
Young Cha of Cha's Family
Shoe Repair (642-4314) would
• like to thank his customers for
' their sympathy and help for the
• Tracy Wolansky family.
Cha's fanuly is really special.
Despite some challenges of
their own, they donated a portions
of their proceeds last month to the
.Tracy Wolonsky family. And now,
m appreoation, Cha is giving cus-
tomers 20% off on shoe repairs
' through the end of the month.
• Olympic high jumpers
and pole vaulters in
Atlanta will land on the
handiwork of a Costa
Mesa graphics firm.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Most of
Mike Hardin's print jobs
for the Cerritos-based
GOC Sport company have
been sµiall projects.
That changed about six
months ago when GOC plant
manager Scott Weber told
Hardin he had something larg-
er in mind.
Or, as Hardin reports it,
Weber's exact words were:
"This time I'm going to take
you to the dance."
In his small graphics store
on Monrovia Avenue, Hardin
would create the 6-foot-by-10-
foot silk screens which will
become the high jump and
pole vault landing pits during
the summer Olympic Games.
• • Cha's does great shoe and
tlandbag repairs and the service
can't be beat. It's located a few
doors down from 7-Eleven at
' 1673 Irvine Ave. in Costa Mesa.
When the jumpers and
vaulters fall to earth, they'll
land on Hardin's handiwork
and the eyes of millions world-
wide will be watching.
Hardin's graphics will also be
used on nearly a dozen of the
landing pits used for training.
"That's the old analogy: you
go with what brung ya," Weber
said. "Hardin's my guy. He's a
very reliable source."
MAAC MARTIN I OAILV Pl.OT
Graphic artist Mike Hardin moves the stencil for the Olympic pole-vaulting pit out of his Costa Mesa business.
For best buys on ladies designer
clothing Nordstrom (549-8300) is
: · having a sale in Collectors with
· mark downs at 40% to 60% off. All
the big names are on sale, includ-
ing Giorgio Armani, Richard TYier,
' Donna Karan, Krizia, Claude Mon-
tana, Escada and Calvin Klein.
Nordstrom is located at South
Coast Plaza.
Antiques• U (548-41~3)
located at 312 Newport Blvd. in
Newport Beach is having its
semi-annual everything in the
store sale dunng the entire
' month of June. Antiques and
collectibles on sale include furni-
ture, crystal, china, costume jew-
, elry, and estate jewelry.
Merchandise IS marked down
10% to 40°/., off.
For his part, Hardin says he
is tickled to be contributing to
an event of such historic signif-
icance. The feat has hardly
gone unnoticed. Customers
have wandered through his
shop and noticed the giant
Olympics logo which would be
shipped to Cerritos and, from
there, to Atlanta.
"They ask me, 'Hardin, how
did a little guy like you get this
job?'" said Hardin, who has
owned the family-operated
business for 10 years. "I've
been tooting my own horn as
much as possible. I'm walking
around as proud as a pea-
cock."
The job was hardly an easy
one for Hardin, who is accus-
tomed to working on a much
smaller scale. Because be does-person from next door using
n 't have a giant vacuum crane, the easiest possible persuasion:
Hardin had to tie four carts the helper could boast that he
together and lay the giant silk had helped build something for
screen across the carts. It took the Olympics.
up to four people working Securing this contract was a
together on the single screen. coup for GOC Sports as well,
"We're a little company, so according to Weber. The expo-
we had to apply our craft in a sure from this assignment
primitive way," Hardin said. could advance the careers of
"But the results were clean and both the Newport Beach
real good." ' graphics firm and the sport
When he first drew the contractor.
assignment, Hardin said he . Although, as far as Weber is
only thought about it in techni-concerned, building landing
cal terms: how do I best satisfy pits for the Olympics will be a
my customer. As the deadline tough act to follow.
date drew nearer, Hardin said ·1 really can't think of any-
he contracted a serious case of thing that would be better than
Olympic fever. the Centennial Olympic
He even tried to spread the Games here at home," Weber
disease. When Hardin needed said. "At this point, I don't
an extra hand, he borrowed a know that it gets any better."
"We're a little company, so we had to apply our craft in a
prtmlttve way," graphic artist Mike Hardin said. "But the
results were clean and real good." For bargains on CDs, Block-
buster Music (548-0320) is hav-
,ing a sale on hundreds of titles.
CDs are price from as low as
$9.99, and if you freuqenUy buy
CDs you can get a card that
allows you to get a free CO with
briefly in the news
' the purchase of nine. Blockbuster
Music (548-0320) is located at
401 E 17th St. Ill Costa Mesa.
, Neiman Marcus is having its
: "· ftrst call" sale. Although the
mcukdowns aren't as high as~the
"last call sale" scheduled
towards the end of July, the sav-
' mg are still good.
Selected merchandise for
· women rn the designer, couture
.and evening appa.llEtl depart-
A-rents are marked down up to
40%. Shoes, handbags and chil-
, dren 's merchandise is marked
down up to 50% and men's
clothing and gifts are marked
, down up to 40%.
Neiman Marcus (759-1900) is
locoted at Fashion Island in
Newport Beach.
i 8EST BUYS appears Thursdays and ~rdays. If you know of a good buy oi'lt me at 540-1224. fax me at 646-
4 tlo or write to me: Best Buys Daily
• Pilot, 330 w. Bay St. Costa Mesa, 92627.
Pedestrian killed as he
steps in front of traffic
A 26-year-old pedestriari was
killed Monday after being struck
by a pickup truck while crossing
Baker Street, Costa Mesa police
said.
Narcisco Moreles Montes, a
Costa Mesa resident, died at
10:40 p.m. at Hoag Memorial
Hospital Presbyterian. He appar-
ently was jaywalking at the inter-
section of Balter and Grace Lane,
police said.
Kirk Terrence Russell, 45, was
driving his 1984 Mitsubishi truck
westbound on Baker when
Montes stepped off the curb in
front of him, said Lt. John Pitz-
Patrick.
"Prelfminary indications are
that Montes had been. drinking,•
FilzPatrick sa(d. ... but there was
no alcohol imtolvecJ on the part of
the driver." •
I , ,
Wllllem Lobdell. '"'-..,,. 24-
hour ~no S«Vk• m.y bit
used to record letters to tM
edftor on •ny topic.
Russell, a San Juan Capistrano
resident, was traveling at 35 mph
in a 40 mph zone, he said.
The driver was not cited, but
the accident remans under inves-
tigation.
Graduating students
win Balboa Bay Club
scholarships
The Balboa Bay Club's 1221
Club recently awarded $8,000 in
scholarships to local students.
The $3,000 scholarship win-
ners are Y1,lrires Sanchez of
Monte Vista High School and Igor
Shmura.k of Costa Mesa High
School. Sancq.ez is a bilingual vol-
unteer Yor Whittier Elementary
School and Shalimar Learning
Center in Costa Mesa. Shmurak
was active in sports, school lead-
ership and was the investigative
anchor on the school news station
K-MESA.
TIM'ERATURES
Students receiving $500 schol-
arships are Nicole Letostak of
Estancia High School and
Thomas Pettit of Newport Harbor
High School. Letostak has con-
tributed many hours of commu-
nity service, visiting rest homes
and leading Bible studies and
music programs for the First Bap-
tist Church. Pettit volunteered at
CHOC, Orangewood Children's
Home, the Environmental
Nature Center, and Newport
Heights Elementary Science
Fair.
Students winning $50 awards
are Anna Sense, Costa Mesa
High School; Christina Walden
and Paul Henderson, Corona del
Mar High School; John Bnnin,
Estancia High School; and Laura
Wilson, Newport Harbor High
School.
The 1221 Club ts made up of
women Bay Club members dedi-
cated to promoting service in the
community.
t , • VOL 90, NO. 125 ADQU5$
Our addrtS"J k 330 W. Bay St.,
Cost• Mesa. c:.tlf. 92627.
Diiiy Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, co.ta
Mesa, CA 92626. Copyright: No
news stories. lllustr ltlons, edito:-
r11I matter or ldvertl'tements
hefeln can be reproduced with-
out written permls:slon of copy-
right ownef,
Newport ~.ch .... 76163
Balboa •••.•.••... 76163
8:57 1.m. . .•..•..... -0.1
Second high
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• • t ,
' , ' . • s ,_
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Publish«
W1WAM L090EU. Editor
snvt MAJalU,
• Mantging Edit«
MtS YOKOt, City Edit«
MARC MAJmN, Photo Editor
KtMGRwmt,
Director of Operations
IUDY OITY1NG,
Class/fled Meneger
LANA IOHNSON.
Promotions
' Mt.MOO IHAH. Controller
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The scholarship applicants
were interviewed and judged on
motivation in academics and
quality of communication. The
scholarship is open to ariy student
in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District.
Come bid on treasures
at Costa Mesa library
A collection of newspapers,
copies of "Life,• "lime" and oth-
er magazines, and memorabilia
from the assassination of Presi-
dent John F. Kennedy highlight
the silent auction now in progress
at Costa Mesa's Downtown
Library at 1855 Park Ave.
Bids are also being taken on
the four-volume memoir of
Napoleon by Bounienne, Coxe's
three-volume memoir of Marlbor-
ough, and much more, including
children's books.
The auction concludes on Sat-
urday at 3 p.m. For more informa-
tion, call 646-8845.
• ...,_.. NOTI: The Pollce Flies will not appear in today's Dally Piiot. They will retum next week.
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996 Al
Cyber co~ection ·linkS up lost loves fro m long ago
! H ow small 11 our worldt
Check out these e-mails
· -between Al Graps
(Sasha) ol what used to be Santa
· Ana Heights but is now -
postally speaking, anyway -
Newport Beach, and Aldis
· Andrejevs of Seattle.
. The two men. both born in
Latvia, met in cyberspace after
· Aid.is was exploring the Internet
. for anything to do with Latvia.
· He discovered a home
page established by Al's
. youngest daughter, Amara, and
· sent this message to her:
"Svoiks (Hello) Amara: It's
' great to see that you are proud of
your heritage ... It is amazirig
bow many Americans have never
, heard of Latvia.
Thanks for spreading the word.
•As for me, I am a first-gener-
ation Latvian. My family fled
Latvia in 1944 when I was a year
' old. We ended up in a (displaced
penons') camp in Germany unW
we got our visas to come to the
U.S. in 1950. •
He went on to talk about his
two daughters, a trip to Latvia, and
' his career as a civilian employee of
· the Navy, specializing in weapons.
. Amara, of course sent the letter to
' her dad, and Al replied: •
•svoilcs (Hello) Aldis: Like
you, I escaped from Latvia with
, my parents in 1944. Spent the
next five years in Memmingen,
Esslingen and Munich, Germany,
in various DP camps.
"Came to America in 1949, a
19-year-old kid by myself. I
wanted music to be my career,
' continued studying music, spent
· three years in the 18th Air~rne
-------------i
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Mon-Fri 1 o-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224
230 East 17th St, Costa Mesa
( ) ', I I I I ( ( I \ ' I
fred
martin
band at Fort Bragg, N.C. •
Al then told Aldis oJ working
his way to an electrical engineer-
ing degree from George Wash-
ington University, then going to
work for the Navy. ~
He went on to describe a
career dealing with all manner of
bizarre Naval weaponry and con-
cluded with his remembrances of
a 1990 trip to LaMa. ·n was as if time had stood sWl
since I left there in 1944. In 1990,
Russians were still in charge ...
having worked in the war indus-
try aimed at Russia all these many
years, (it) made me very WlCOm-
fortable to be in their presence
and llllder their control."
Aldis responds: "Good to hear
from another Latvian 'civil ser-
vant' I Sounds like our paths may
have crossed before. We, too,
were at Memmingen DP camp ...
from 1945-1949 ... Dzivo vesels!
Live in good health!
Al back to Aldis, •Sorry about
the long delay in response to your
message from Nov. 3. I led on a
strange pieoe ot work. like spend-
ing four weeks as an extra at Ana-
heim Stadh.un filming "The Fan•
with Robert DeNiro .... Anyway, it
looks like we were oo the same
paths in Gen:nany, separated by our
age difference. We moved into
Memmingen. DP aunp (I believe it
was c.aUed Plugkasarelle) in August
1945. My parents' and my unde's
families remained there, but I went
to &slingen's Latvian High School
"I returned to Memmingen for
all holidays and school vacations.
I had a sort of girlfriend there,
Rasma Veliks ... Laimi~ Jaun-
gadu (Happy New Year).•
Aidis replies: •My jaw
dropped to the floor when I read
whom you dated in Memmingen.
Rasma Veliks is my half-sister!"
From Sasha: "When I said that
we could find some other links or
paths, I meant something career-
wise. I did not expect such a sur-
prising link. I am sending along a
digital image of Rasma, the only
photo I have. I can tell you a cou-
ple of things ... about Rasma. She
may or may not remember ... and
perhaps it's unfair to tell you these
stories, but I'm going to be 65 this
month, and Rasma, I think, is 63,
so it really doesn't matter.
HI went to some sort of social
gathering for young people ...
and I met
Rasma. I liked her a lot. After
the dancing was over, I asked her
iet pastaigaties (to go for a walk).
We walked arm in arm to the
edge of the camp where the run-
ways were and the hulks of the
~-1 09 (German fighter planes).
It was cold and there was a lot of
~ng~lus (@uarries
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snow. We stopped, I turned her
towards me and I kissed her,
(When I opened my eyes) I saw
that R.asma's eyes were wide open
and she was looking at me as if:
'and now wbat?' Th.at was my first
kiss ... I don't know if it was her
first kiss, too. I was embarrassed
and we went back home.•
Sash.a then tells of bis last
meeting with Rasma, in the
summer of 1949.
·1 was with Rasma all
evening. Later we went to her
'house,' which was an end of one
of the buildings that h ouse multi-
pie families. Her paren"ts were
away, but she had to look after
her younger brother (that must
have been you) who was sleep-
ing in a bed nearby.
·1 am amazed at mysell at
how well I can remember some
short segments or my life from so
long ago, when other time peri-
ods remain a blur.
•Anyway, now you know a cou-
ple of segments of your sister's life
she is unaware that you know. If
she remembers these events, she
may remember them differently.
Would be interesting to find out.•
As luck would have it, Rasma
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For ~ore Information Call 1-800-331-1204
lives in Seattle, not too far from
her brother: After telling her of
the correspondence with •
Sasha/ Al, he E-mailed: •1 talked
to Rasma and she would love to
hear from you ... She still can'(
believe all this happened becat$e
of the Internet. She can't~
out why people put homepage5t
on the Net, or how it works."
I don't know how either. But ifit
can bring together people from~
a world and half a century away,
that's a pretty wonderful gi:zmo.
• FllED MARTIN'S column runs every
Thursday and Saturday.
By Janelle FWe, Hollis & As.soda/es, /rJ&.
Great Gift Ideas for MOM at YClllr
Neighborhood Shopping Cater
CAROL KLElN ~
JEWELERS 0,-I
Move' 10 Bay,1de Center J
Fonnall) located in Newport Cente(.
Cami Klein Jeweler~ 1' opening their
door' June 13th :u Ba}'side Center. Carol
Klein Jewelm ha' been family owned
and operated for over 40 years. They ha\le
grov. n in populant) and have become
v. 111-knov. n for their upper-end fine ..
quaht) Je"el~ The) use the mdst .
prec1ou' .md c\qu1s11e diamonds. color
\tone,. I ·U.t. 181..t and Italian gold. They
'pec1ahLe m wedding senings and
replacement ot an) 'tone or diamond. M
"ell a\ creaung the ~pecial piece of
Jewell) for that '-J>CC1ul occasion. It's
everything one could wish for! For sk>r,
infonnation call 760-3094. Baysi.dt Ctn/tr
ir located on Baysi.dt Drivt and Jatnbortt
Road. Ntwp<>rr Btach.
JAVA CITY 0
lNTRODUCE.5
A NEW COFFEE DRINK!~
If you're one among man) coffee lo\'Cf$
}OU must try Jav:i Ctty the place where
creativity and coffee come together. They
arc introducing a new blended ice coffee
drink for your pleasure this June. The
Ja"a fno i~ cold and creamy with a mocba
blend and lowfal too. So when you ~·
that urge for a boost with a Liu.le
creauv1t}. U) a ")tn·a Ciry Cof/tt Drialc.."
7 60-6886. Baysidt C tllltr is loctlltd 011
Baysidt Drivr and Ja111bortt Road.
,\t••porr Broch.
HARBOR VIEW
MOBIL IS UNDER
NEW MANAGEMENT!
lmprO\ements are conunuously
~mg made al Mobil Oil in Harbor
View Center. where complete al}tomoli•e
repair" their i,pec1alt). Brakes. air
condtt1onmg repair. smog inspection.
tunt'·Up alignment. and fuel LOJectioo plus
much more a~ \Cl°\ iced by only cerufied
techn 1c1an . Call for 1111 fl{IPOillltM'•'-1
640-4759 or stop by for a iisit. Htu#>ol' Vitw
CtJl/tr is /ocoJttl on Son Mi1iul Drive tllf6
San Jooq11in Hill Rood, ,\'r.·porr Btaclt.
NEWPORT H.ll.LS 6 CLEANERS GETS
THE JOB DONE!
Newpon Hills Cleaners 1s a quality
cleaner v.1th 20 )ears cxpenence in dry
cleaning. All ot Lilt clcanmg IS done on
lhe prem1-.e~. and e\ery g:ument IS hand
finished The~ are offenng a 2~
d1..count on all di) cleaning for first ume
CU,lOITlCI'. :mq off 00 all leather and
'uede deaning and 20'l off to current
cu\lome" v. nh mfnlion of thjs tcl. \\ llen
) ou \\ .101 11 done nght the first ume. come
to No •porr Hills Cltontrs! For ,,.o,..
infonnation on thtir srn•ictt caJJ 72().1024.
Ntwporr Hills Ctnttr is localtd off of Ford
Road and Son Migutl Drii·t, f't't•'p<>ft
Btaclt.
JUST ALTERATIONS ---------,
Mf-KE lT FIT :ll•l4•1ll: JUST RIGHT ______ _
JU$t Aherauon' Lal.e<> pndc in maltng 1t
fit JU\! nght tor ~ou Tiie~ concentrate on
one th mg altera11on<. That'' "h) the)
are <.o good at \\hat they do. Tiie) m
offenng l()q-oft of M) alteration
throughout the month of June with
mention oC tbb Id. Co"'' foul dtt ptr/tt1
fa! For "'ort ilt/Of'WIOlio" call 644-5518.
B«Jsidt Ctnltr ls ~ Oii BaysiM DrfV>t
alW )Olltbortt ROtl.. Nn1pon &«It.
PASTA BRAVO
HOMEMADE PASTA
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Pasta Bravo ~pec1aliu in offenng a
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fresh 10 order and c41l be qu1dJy prcpucd
and packaacd 10 go or delivered to yout '
home or office in minute . They al'° cat r
for large JfOOP' and parties. bu. int ,
lu.ocM. v.cdding • or other special '-
C\'el\ Mk tll'r,.. wiMf f#, MN tr/
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M THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996 •
Cleaning harbor isn't just for adults anymore
• Dozens of children will be
among the hundreds of peo--
ple participating in Qean
Harbor Day on Saturday.
By Marissa Espino, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Hand
in hand, sixth graders and fourth
graders are teaming up to collect
debris at Newport Harbor for
Clean Harbor Day.
Along with sev~al hundred oth-
er participants, a handful of New-
port Elementary and Ensign Inter-
mediate School children are expect-
ed to help dean up the harbor Sat-
urday morning from 8 to 11 a.m.
Lisa Miller, president of SheU-
maker Inc., and one of the event
organizers, said making children
aware of pollution probleD15 is a
good practice, particularly now
that children seem to be more
involved than they used to be.
"You would be surprised how
ecologically aware they are," she
said. "Try accidentally dropping
sometlung on the floor m front of a 6-
year-old -they will have your hide."
r-----------------------~-, ! CLEAN HARBOR DAY !
I I : + WHEN: 8 to 11 •.m. Saturday l
, +WHERE: In and around Newport ,
: Harbor. l
1 The Cannery Restaurant. 3010 1
: Lafayette Ave .• serves as a central l Clean Harbor Day participant
Susan Dow agreed local children
know the unporta.nce of keeping
the beaches clean.
1 meeting spot and will hold a bar-1
·: beque lunch after the deanup. l
"The kids really do under-
stand," she said "They have
been taught in school that it
makes a difference to keep their
environment clean. They pay
quite a bit of attention "
: + FOii iNFO: Call 644-3044, 729-: , 4408 or 675-5777 ,
I I ~-------------------------~ Ian Dow, a 12-year-old who has
been on several beach clean-up
excursions, said his experience led
him to an important conclusion.
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Excellent Solary.
The Colffomia H:C,wOY. Patrol wanfl 10U fo &«ome part ol r elite group.
DON'T JUST THINK ABOUT fT,
MAKE A DIFFERENCE.
For applications and more infonnotion contoct the
California Highw~ Patrol office at
(714) 558-4325 • 24 Hour Recordi •
"I learned that our water could
be a lot cleaner than it is right
now, ... he said.
Before picking up tra&h on Sat-
urday, Ian and his peers unveiled
their painted pollution awareness
posters Wednesday at The Can-
nery Restaurant in Newport Beach.
Dozens of other community
groups and individual residents are
expected to participate in the 16th
annual Clean Harbor Day Saturday.
Bill Hamilton, owner of The
Cannery, is alSo the "Father of
Clean Harbor Day" and started
the event in 1981. He said 350 to
Newport
El••Rluy .......
Spencer
Wood. WI,
ImDow,
Cluiala
Pave. Steven
Beck.Md
Dietz, Cua·
mie Lee
Qulnn, Kate
LynSteaf.
temand
Callie Alt-
man-Dwan
pretent tbelr
award-wtn-
ningClean
Harbor
poster.
OONLEACH
I DAll.Y Pl.OT
500 people pulled out five tons of
debris from the harbor last year.
"(The amount of trash) is get-
ting less every year, which is a
good sign,• Hamilton said.
"Clean Harbor Day is something
everybody can get behind and
they also have fun while they are
doing the dirty work.•
Part of the fun includes having
a barbecue and music for the par-
ticipants after the cleaning.
"Clean Harbor Day is probably
the one thing everybody agrees
on," Hamilton said. "It's a win-
win situation for the community.•
Dad's Two Most
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Newport Bach/Cosc:a Meta Daily Pilot
Costa Mesa seeks
Plarullng Commissioner
The Costa Mesa City Council
is accepting letters of interest
from residents who wish to serve
on the Pla.nning Commh®on.
A vacancy was created as the
result of former Commissioner
Mark Korando's appointment to
the Mesa Consolidated Water
District Board.
The Planning Commission has
the power by law to recommend
to the City Council or act upon
the regulation of fu&me growth,
development and beautification
of the city in respect to its public
and private works.
Individuals are encouraged to
submit a letter of interest along
with a brief resume to Joe Brick-
son, Mayor, City Hall, P.O. Box
1200, Costa Mesa, California
92628-1200.
Local women
nominated for
Red Cross awards
Vicki McNally, chair of the
Clara Barton Spectrum Awards
for Outstanding Women in
Orange County, announced the
1996 awa.rd nominees. The
awards luncheon, sponsored by
the Orange County Chapter of
the Red Cross, will be on Monday
at the Hyatt Regency in Irvine.
Ten-year-old art prodigy Alexan-
dra Nechita will be the featured
speaker. Local nominees are as fol-·
lows: The Humanitarian Service
Award -Claire Maglica, Newport
Beach; The Health Care Award -
Judy Franco, Newport Bea.ch;
The Cultural Arts Award -
Marilyn {Molly) Lynch, Corona
del fl.1ar; The Service by a
' I
I
Women's Group or Business
Awa.rd-All Orange County Girl
Scouts, Costa Mesa; Harvesters,
Newport Beach; Pre Surgical
Partners, Costa Mesa; The Medi-
tation Center, Costa Mesa; The
Sop histicates, Newport Beach.
The Elizabeth H. Dole Glass Ceil-
ing Awaid -Sara Barragan. Costa
Mesa; Janet Toll Davidson, Costa
Mesa; Carol Hoffman, Newport
Beach; Judy Sweeney, Cost.a Mesa.
Tickets for the awards· lun-
cheon are $55. For more informa-
tion, call 835-5381 ext. 248.
Grant given OCC
manager award
0 a v i d
Grant, Orange
Coast College's
former presi-
dent, was
recently named
the college's
first wManager
of the Year• for
1995.
The college
r o u t i n e 1 y David Grant -
names a faculty
member of the year and a staff
member of the year, but Grant is
the first administrator to receive a
manager of the year award. .
Grant retired after the fall
semester in 1995 and currently
lives in Newport Be~ch.
During his six-year presidency
at OCC, Grant mounted fund-
raising campaigns which yielded
nearly $7 million for college pro-
jects -including the remodeling
of the Robert B. Moore Theatre
and the student center and the
construction of a new Children's
Center facility.
OCC also received state fund-
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996 AS
ing to build a state-ol-ttm..art $9.6
million Technology Center, which
opened in 1994.
Grant also helped OCC inau-
gurate its Puente Program for
supporting Latino students,
establish its lransfer Opportunity
Program for assisting minority
students tnmsf er to universities,
create a Re-Entry Center and
establish an International Stu-
dents Program.
Under Grant's leadership, the
college also instituted an honors
program and the state's first com-
munity college skills guarantee
program, which guarantees the
quality of OCC graduates to
employers.
OCC Children Center
r eceives cash grant
Orange Coast College's Chil-
dren's Center received another
$10,000 grant recently for the pro-
ject's construction, bringing the
total amount raised to $2.35 million.
The McDonnell Douglas
Employees Community Fund is
the center's most recent donor.
Construction on OCC's $2.82
million facility began in March.
Established in 1969, OCC's
Children's Center provides afford-
able child development services
for children of OCC students. It
currently is located on the north
edge of campus in a series of trail-
ers and surplus buildings.
The new facility will be located
on the southern edge of campus,
and will include several cottages
under a single ·roof. It will house
six classrooms, a living room, a
kitchen, faculty offices, an art stu-
dio and a play yard.
The center currently serves
about 180 students each semester.
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Grand Opening Celebration
Saturday, June 1.st •.
]
j
Sunftower Avenue
I
!
Metro Pointe across from South Coast Plaza
(Bear St. and South Coast Dr.)
(714) 556-2333
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I
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I
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
OPEN HOUSE
The public ls IDvtted to an open
house at the Assessment and
'ITeatment Services Center from
5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at 1981 Orcba.rd
Drive in Newport Beach. For
more information, call 756-0993.
PROSTATE CANCER SUPPORT
A prostate cancer s upport
group meets today and every
Thursday tor six weeks from 6:45
to 8:15 p.m. at The Patty and
George Hoag Cancer Center,
4000 W. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. The meetings are free. For
more information, call 722-6237.
DRAMATIC READING
The public is invited to "Devot·
edly, Franklin,· a reading of an
original platform play about the
early years of Franklin and
Eleanor Roosevelt's marriage, at 7
p.m. m the Fnends Meeting Room
of the Newport Beach Central
Library. The presentation is free.
For more information, call 717-
3801
CAREER NETWORK
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church will feature John Hall of
Strategic Career Planning on •cre-
ating Your Future: Long-Tenn
Planning for Today's Workplace" at
7:30 p.m. in Stewart Lounge. The
~·ongoing Thursday meeting for the
i-... :tmemployed is at 600 St. Andrews
. ":: :~oad, Newport Beach. For more
~::information, call 574-2239.
r~· .. ~::; FRIDAY ,, ....
I';·. ~-:ARTISTS RECEPTION ~ -: The public is mvited to an
:...,. ·~ts· reception for ex.hi bi tors in
.. ~:the 1996 Spnng Juried Art Show
;~:.sponsored by the Newport Beach :::;.:.Arts Conuruss1on from 5 to 7 p.m.
: ·:at the Newport Beach City Hall ...
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• • •f.• 11~ M J ti~. "11'.1 ~l I & """'" •
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: • 261 -6788 •• , .
~ : Jamboree at Bristol :
~ • Back Bay Court :
~ ~··················
.. .
Gallery. 1be nhibit will feature
45 works in an med.J.a, selected
from 350 entries. The exhibit will
be open for viewing during nor·
ma1 C1ty Hall bours through
August 6. Por more information,
call 111-3870.
fftEE ASHING DAY
Upper Newport Bay Ecolog:ica.J
Reserve and Regional Park at
Sbellmaker Island is the site for
this year's free fishing day from 8
a.m . to 3 p.m. No license is
required. ~ods and reels provid-
ed. Enjoy demonstrations, an
aquariwn full of sharks, rays and
other sea creatures. All activities
are free. For more infonnaJion,
call 640-6146.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERTS
Decoy Acoustic performs rock,
country and folk music from noon
to 2:30 p.m. and Clint Rusich
plays pop, jazz and rock from 7 to
10 p.m. On the Town Square at
Triangle Square in Costa Mesa.
CATALINA CRUISING SEMIN.AR
"Cruising Catalina• is the title
ot a three-hour slide lecture being
ottered by Orange Coe.st Col-
lege's Salling Center from 1 to 1 O
p.m. at 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. The &eaion will
examine all of the major -as well
as little-known -coves and
anchorages that abound on
Catalina as well as focus on
Catalina history, weather, naviga.
tion and more . The cost is $12 in
advance or $15 at the door. For
more information, call 645-9412.
SATURDAY
INTRO TO AYURVEDA
The Yoga Place presents
~Introduction to Aywveda," at)
ancient Indian science of preven-
tative health and healing, and
philosophy of living, from 1 to 4
p.m . at 1835 Ne wport Blvd.;
Building A, Costa Mesa Court-
yards. The cost is $30. For more
information, call 642-7400.
4-H CLUB MEETING
The Mesa Goat Hill Go Getters
will hold their last offiqat meeting
of the season at 10 a.m. at the
Orange County Pai.rground's
Gazebo. There will be a barbecue
as well as awards presentation. Por
more infonnation, call 839...C804.
USED BOOK SAU
Friends of the Costa Mesa
Libraries will hold a used book
sale troin 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
downtown library, 1855 Park Ave.
Most hardcovers and trade paper-
backs will be $11 paperbacks and
records $.50, and magazines and
children's books $.25. For more
information, call 646-8845.
QUILT SHOW
Quilts, wall hangings, pillows
and clothing from Teni Christo-
phe rson 's book, "Patches and
Posi~s • will be on display at
Piecemakers today through July
7. There is no admission charge.
Piecemakers, 1720 Adams Ave.,
Costa Mesa. 641-3112.
NIGHT IN NAPA
The Orange County Friends of
Court Appointed Special Advo-
cates of Orange County and Child
Abuse Services Team will sponsor
$ $ $ EARN $ $ $
WHILE LOSING WRIGHT
We'll pay you $$ to lose 10-20 lbs.
'Or. Recommended. ·100% Natural.
• 100% Guarantee. •Lose Inches.
·No Hungert •Htgh Energy.
CALL 714 548-7888
30 Years Experience In Your Area
Robert C. Suder, General Contractor
80NJED 8r INSURED· UC. #8407132
l
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Music
FestilZ'al 714-998-4070
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l\unon !<anon, Ar1ulic /Jir«tor
J 6th cAmmal Seas<m
•/• J 6 2 J June J 996 •/•
S1. Mich~cl & All Angels Church
mJ Shcrnun l.ibruy at GirJc:ns
IAROQUE CONCERTOS
Su11tlay,J 1111c 16, 4:00 p.111.
ORGAN RECITAL · DANIEi. &f.RR
Monday, June: 17, 8.00 p.n1.
MUSIC IN TU GAJU>INS
Wcdnclday,Ju11c 19, 8:00 p.m.
8c Fnday,Ju11c 21. 8:00 p m.
rESnVAl!1JNAU • CBOIW. C0Nf.£Rl'
S1111<l.•y. J une 2~. •I 00 p 111.
TiclwCJ: $10 (6/l <J & ll), $25(6/16&21}
& $/0 (6/17) Mfllu <lucAJ payabl.t to
Haroqut Miu.;c Festival, CJM.
i\iil a P.O. &. IOc'I, CaM,. C4 ~
for. uiformaliU11, pMtw (714) 76().7887
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• COMPLETE CATERING
SERVICES
• Sizzling Fo jita Bar • Strolling Mariachis
~ • Margarito & Cervezo Bar
, • BANQUET ROOMS
• PARTY TRAYS TO GO
• COSTA MESA • NEWPORT BEACH • • CORONA DEL MAR •
Pick-Up at your neare•t location
645-0209
TE.NTH /\NNUAL
CLASSIC CAR SHOW
"Salute to Rolls Royce"
SUNDAY, JUNE 9TH, 1996
IOAM-4PM
HUNTINGTON BEACH CENTRAL PARK
711 l TALBERT AVE.
TICICfl' IN,OltMATJON
FOR INFORMATION
PLEASE CALL
(714) 375-5023
HUNllNCTON BEACH
To benefit the new ch11dren'1 wing
et the Huntington Buth Central
Librtry TICkttsttt 510 pet person Children under 12 fret
~FWY EXIT GOLOENWE.ST
SOUTH TO HUNTINGTON BEACH CENTRAL PARK
"Over 50 Years of Fine Quality'
DRAPERY SAiE!
Custo'ln -Window Treatments
SliuHers • Sli adH • Du«!tt~a • Blind•·
Custom S lipcovn11 • B~thpread•
Create Unlqu' StylH With
O ur FREE D~•lgnn Con•ulttttlon
I I
SO o/o ~ OFF
FUft"ITVltE Rl·Uf'HOUTUY
• wmt "'9CllMI ..... '.-c • UllOll
its first annual gala tund-r&Sing
benefit. •A Night in Napa -An
Elegant Escape,• will be held at
6:30 p.m. at the Robert Mondavi
Food and Wine Center in Costa
Mesa. The event cost is $125 and
includes a gourmet dinner, fine
wines, music, a giving tree and a
live auction.
Hot.lYWOOO POPS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
The Hollywood Pops Sympho-
ny Orchestra will make its first
Orange County appearance at
8:30 p.m. at the Jewish Communi-
ty Center of Orange County, Bak-
er and Red Hill, Costa Mesa.
nckets are $18 tor members and
$25 for non-members. Por more
information, call 755-0340.
SUNDAY
ARTIST APPEARANCE
World renowned artist Guy
Buffet will show his distinctive
collection of culinary inspired
neckwear, sportswear and gifts
from noon to 3:00 p.m. at Nord-
strom South Coast Plaza. For
Newpon Bcilch!Cosca Mesa Daily Pilot
more in/ormation, call 549-8300
ext. 1210
MONDAY
BAWtOOM/lAllN DANCE ClASsES
The Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Orange County offers six.
week dance classes beginning
today, at 7 p.m. for beginners and
8 p.m. tor those who are expen.
enced at 250 B. Baker St, Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
755-0340.
LEARNING DISABIUTIES LECTURE
~ADD & Leaming Disabilities:
Waking up From the Nightmare ..
will take place today from 7 to
8:30 p.m. at Coastline Counseling
Center, 1200 Quail Street, Suite
105, Newport Beach. A donation
of $5.00 is requested. For more
information, call 476-0991.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERT
Ted Vautrinot plays contempo-
rary folk music from noon to 2:30
The free show is on the Town
Square at the 'Iiiangle Square in
Costa Mesa.
?2.wf'~f H~f,~ Pa.tl..ll.Kic
~ :J;~..e~
1996 winner of the annual Athena Award given for
outstanding service to the community.
She was nominated for this prestigious award 1by the
American Red Cross, Red Ribbon 100 group.
We also congratulate other nominees In the Newport Mesa
area: Cathie Cardeluccl, Meredith Jones, Ruth Ko, and
Marie-France Lefebvre.
COMPLETE DETAIL OFFERS
EXPIRE
6/15/96
CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT
Don'~ hide behind
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360 SAN MIGUEL DR., STE. 207 • NEWPORT BEACH CA 92660
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Be llllOllQ the mt IO •xperielxe one rJ Oraoge Coooly's newest Pf8lTlief comes -
Coyott Hills I This Cm IMson design, In osscQilion With Payne S!bUt, feallnS 1WO
hlntfed arMI fif1y OOlS rJ beoutilft llQQed ~ • ....,. OOd Slltoms. •
Coyott lls., Mtdes o S1U!Hf"'"1 ~·cm, SCJOCious clilhouse, hi
ri• po shop, and bcl!quet foc6lllS 111111 rlltr,...." .. (Ola
Col now for adwancecl r1WV11ioM (714) 672-6800
hr .......... nl (714) 9'4·7121
COKJn: H 111.s ... _._ __
~·I ....... ., ......
.. .. Newport Beach/Cosca Mesa Da.iJy Pi.lot
Society in black and white
·~ Woman
. . of the year
Julie Hill (second
,from right) was hon-
ored with the
Amelia Earhart
Award by UCI's
• , Wome n's Opportuni-
ties Center: With
Hill are (left to
right): Slane Hol-
. . • land, Director of the
·,Women's Opportuni-
ties Center, Judy
. Sweeney, event co-
chair and Elizabeth
Tierney, event co-
chair.
• I
...
. -.
•. .. I:· .. • ...
• l .W. COOK'S columns run every
'!hursday and Saturday.
Changing of the guard
Carol Rush (left), past presi-
dent of the Committees of The
Philh armonic Society of Orange
County, congratulates her suc-
cessor, Arden Dombrowski.
Dombrowski will oversee all
activities of the committees
including the fund-raising
efforts and the development of
the Society's music education
programs. As a joke, Dom-
browski was given a rhinestone .
tiara to wear during her reign.
: ~e Your Own Nutritionist & · Personal Trainer Program
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Established In 1962
Steaks • Seafood • Cocktails
Dine In Our Ro11Ulnhc Cellar
1695 Irvine e., €osta Mesa
646-7944
lunch SeM:d Mon. thru Fri. 11 :30 • 2:30
Dinner Served Mon. thru Sat. from 5:30 p.m.
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
A heartfelt
moment
Carol Hoffman and Tom
Redwitz raise awareness
for the American Heart
Assoc1atioo at the eighth
annual Celebrity Cele-
bration at the Balboa Bay
Club. The event raised
over $13,000 for
research, public educa-
tion and community ser-•
vice programs .
Contain yo urself
' About 1,700 locals,
including Marilyn and
Jim G1anuhas (left)
Joined Sharon Tindell
(nght), executive vice
president of The Con-
tamer Store at its grand
opemng at Metro Pointe
m Costa Mesa. The
store donated 10% of
the grand opening
wee kend sales to The
Philharmonic Society
for its youth programs.
'Ed 'Bolin ~~ .Xeirin 'Pieropan
ivould like to invite you & your guests to attend
Town Square Gallery's
Grand Opening
'Featuring a Special !Appearance
by Internationally Celebrated !Artist
Ruth Mayer
signing lier newest releases
"Laguna Beach" & "Ice Cream Boy"
Saturday, June S, I996
6pm to 9pm (corrze early)
!Appetizers by Sfu zzi's , Cfiongs , La Salsa , Upper
Crust 'Pizza , ~alpfis , Jiumpfirey Yogurt ,
Juice Conn~ction & 'Pain du Monde
·A7
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
01 "
·THE GOOSE
LI ES!
h
The matri~ch of bedtime
·stories takes the stand in
=-'Mother Goose: On Trial!'
mother's loving gesture of
reading a bedtime story to
er two young children
s into a squabble as daughter
san refuses.to believe the
yrnes made famous by Mother
oose.
·! The young girl believes that
e beloved matriarch of nursery
yrnes should be sued for mak-
g up stories. Her statement
'eps into the subconscious of
E brother, nm. and as he
eeps, his bedroom transforms
o a slumber-land courtroom.
trhis is the setting for South ~oast Repertory's production of
"'Mother Goose: On Trial!," writ-
ten by Dick Gjonala.
: As directed by Craig Fleming,
Mother Goose's trial for slander
lakes as many twists and turns as
th~ surreal swirls on the floor of
lhehed-shaped courtroom. The ~al offers a few facts and a lot of
~ess, as the rhymers, who
cilant the tales as we know them,
LiYJtt witnesses, walk with canes
..... tllle chanting about the three
l>lind mice, or pop up from
J>eneath the lid of what looks like
a giant toy box at the front of the
court.
: "The challenge is to find ways
to keep changing things, so the
{ourtroom format can be redi-
•ected and at the same tune
$p1ce things up,· Fleming said. :ay interrupting the action with
rhymers and adding music and
sound e.ffects, it breaks
things up." . DON I.EACH I DAILY PILOT The prosecuting
attorney calls upon wit-Tom, the plJ>e:?'S son (Michael Cruz) serenades nunery rhymen Whitney
nesses such as Little Bo Rose, left. and Sandy SL Clair while balllU (Sean Engard) looks on. Above
Peep, the F~er's Wife left: Little Bo Peep (Katherine Bauer of Corona del Mar) la called as a wtt-
and Humpty Dumpty, as ness tn .. Mother Goose: On Trtall"
he tries to prove that
Mother Goose lied in
her stories for children.
As she takes the stand , Little
Bo Peep is questioned about her
occupation.She
confirms tha t
she's a shep-
herd, and
claims her
sheep are miss-
ing because
Tom Tom stole
them. As she
struggles to stay
awake on the
stand, we find
that Little Bo is
in fact a som-
nambulist.
"It's a cool idea, because it
twists around all the things
you've heard so many times and
makes you think about them dif-
r-------------------------, I I
I I I I I I
I I I
I I I
I
I I
I
' • I I I
I I
I
I
F.Y.t. .
+ WHAT: '"Mother Goose on
Trial·
+WHERE: SOuth Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Canter
Drive, Costa Mesa. + WHEN: 2 and 4 p.m. Satur-
day. Sunday and June 16;
7:30 p.m. June 14; 4 and 7:30
p.m. June 15. + NOW MUOt: S 10 aduhs;
$8 children.
+PHO• 957-4033.
I I L-------------------------~
ferently,• she
said. "It makes
you wonder if
what we're say-
ing about them
is real.•
Although
portraying two
ditf erent roles
takes up a lot of
her after-school
time, her enthu-
siasm for the
stage has
helped her to
overcome the
challenges of
her characters.
Portrayed by
Katherine
Bauer, a 14-
year-old Corona
del Mar eighth grader, Bo Peep
is an indignant shepherd who
just can't believe that her sheep
would disappear under her
watch.
"It's a very fun play and is
really goofy," the teen said with
a laugh. "We're making tun of
ourselves as we're doing it.·
"It's the first time I've played
two roles in the same production;
I've gotten my lines mixed up
because I thought I was sup-
posed to be asleep but I wasn't
that character," she recalled.
Bauer also performs as Miss
Muffet, who says she's not afraid
of spiders.
Additionally, her performance
as Little Bo Peep requires attire
that the teen was unfamiliar
with.
"l had to try on my hopp skirt
and sit down -it just flew up in
front,• she said with a giggle.
"I'm just waiting for that to hap-
pen onstage. •
As the cast rehearsed a few
days before the play's opening
on Saturday, there were a few
other delays as well.
"Wait -I'm getting my head
measured I~ yelled Humpty
Dumpty, otherwise known as
Michael Cruz.
Cruz's Humpty Dumpty is in
fact Richard the m, who was
ridiculed for a physical deformity.
•Mother Goose ts essentially
political commentary dressed
down for the averag e school
child ,. Fleming said.
And although the cast features
mostly children, the fun it pro-
vides can be understood by all
ages.
"We have a wide age range -
from 10 to 18, but they get along
magically,• he said. •And more
than the material, it's the fact
that the audience is seeing extra-
ordinary young people w ho are
acting, performing and experi-
encing the magic of theater.•
June at~ iAPAS ~ RESTAURANT
• Authentic Sushi Bar
TAPAS
TUESDAYS THURSDAYS
• .$1 .95 f-C C D : $1 J I [JPINK~
: l of1n J\rf1 \f
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BANDERAS
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• Lunch Buffet
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY
rrcializmq In Paella, Steaks, fresh fish, And~asto
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4253 MARTINGALE WAY• NEWPORT BEACH
!•(HIND STAl'LH AT MAcAllTHU .. -CO .. INTHIAN)
.
Jnin us 1h1s Father's Pct rnle Sole, RoAst Loin of
D.1y, June 16.th at Pork, RoAst Lea of Lamb,
The W.ucrfrnnt Chicken Cordon Blcu,
Hilton Be<lch Re~rt ... • Brc:Akfast Style Porntocs,
Occ:.1n \•1c:ws. " ~ Mixed Fresh Veact~blcs
gu1tl'r1St .mJ m<'J!I· · :-t, flnd a m,uvc:lous Pascry
crnn enhance ;1 ·~ •• .... Tnble fcnturina the
(e.ut th;it inclu.fc:, most dccalfCnt dc:ucrrs.
C;i~Ading Fresh Fruit D1spl<ly, And, llf course, i'lt · the
lmrortc.f and Dnmc: uc Chc:c~C$. Chs-mrflgne ;1mf frc: h·•qucezed
Breflkfau Brcinb, Fresh Sushi Onmgc Juice you'd like.
rrc:r .,mf with th~ .1rt 11rni O;tir of from lO:OO am -ltOO pm.
the: O rient. Sa~.1Js , Pot1c hc:d Adulu $lS.9S. Children 12
S11lmon en Aspic. Bilrnn of and under $1J.9S.
Beef CMvery, Eig~ Bc:nc:ll1ct, for NterV11t•on1, please call
Omdcth! I WnfOc St<lll<lr'I, (714)960.7873, dt. 2613.
n.~~ . ~
llHttRf'Mrt
On mrhmi Coli/OmMt't lku Rtnch
21100 r.1cif14; Co • ._1 Hwy .. Hunrtzon ~~h. CA 9264S
1
Llli••JlfMI•..... I
DttWla ~\11:'" fs.Wl)jya..•=. to-Salu:idlW,..Par... I tadlwldUal allig11 ..... Cl'I I
*'· t I ~ 'Snt'r Tbe millDI pDI ~ T~~=1 n ID Newport Beacb.1liilllfl .. S17~Digbt.St581lalas 1 Diglda; Jnfmnetion• 631-0S. I
I
I 8 ~1beJewtab t
Community CeDtllr OI
Orange County wDl pe11nt the
.O.member Hollywood Popi
Symphony Orchestra at 8:~
p.m. Saturday at the centlC. 250
E. Baker Street, Costa Mau.
lkkets: $18 for members; $25 1
for non-members. Infoanation: I
155-0340 ext. 270. . I
9 AR'.l ISlS IECEl'l10N: For
exhibitors in the 1996 :
Sprln9 Jwied Art Show :
spcmsored Dy the Newport I
Beach Arts Cmmdnton from 5
to 1 p.m. Friday at 1be Newport
Beach City Hall Gallary. The
exhibit will be open during nor-
mal City Hall hours through
August 6. Information: 111-3810.
1 0 JAXZ SBIES: 1be
tizth aDJ1\W Glen
BlleD Summer Juz
Series~ an evantng d
guttan Prtday with Strum &
Parah.et 1 p.m., followed by
Noonan Brown. at tbe Hyatt
Newporter. Doon ope at 6 p.m.
'llckets: $25. Information: 650-
UVE.
GRAND OPENING
'11t4~ "~SS"
Vietnamese Restaurant
~ tN. ?..~t .,,_,.,
2394 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
(714) 650-1421
Corner of Newport & Santa Isabel
Na
HUMPIY DUMPIY sat on a wall ...
or did he?
What if JILL pushed JACK
down that hill?
BY Dick Gjooola
PRESENTED BY
SCR's Young Conservatory Players
All yot1r f•wmle ,..,.,., ~ ... ,,,,. "°"'" tNHr un thtn IH/orel
When a doubting child quesdons, the truth of nursery rhymes,
Mother Goose goes on trial in the DreamJaod Supreme Court!
Find out the origins of her most fabulous stories -you may be
surprised. ~}'OU do, don't mm tbJs 'beblod the scenes'
look at the mmaous. dw'acters we all grew up wtthl
••
ART
ARTISTS REaPTION
T)le public is invited to an
artists' reception for exhibitors in
• the 1996 Spring Juried Art Show
sponsored by the Newport
Beach Arts Cpmmission from 5
to 7 p.m. Friday at the Newport
Bejich City Hall Gallery. The
exhibit will feature 45 works in
all media, selected from 350
entries. The exhibit will be open
for viewing during normal City
Hall hours through Aug. 6. Infor-
mation: 717-3870.
QUILT SHOW
Quilts, wall hangings, pillows
and clothing from Terri Christo-
pherson's book. •Patches and
Posies• will be on display at
Piecemakers Saturday through
July 7. There is no admission
charge. 1720 Adams Ave., Costa
Mesa. 641-3112.
GRIFAN LINTON
·niere and Then." a study
room by Christel Dillbohner is
the solo art exhibition featured
in the Main Gallery. Haddad
and Mosher are in the Project
Room through Sunday. Hours:
noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday and by appointment.
lnfonnation:646-5665. 1640
Pomona Avenue, Costa Mesa.
COMEDY
TOTAUY COFFEE
Bill Word's Killer Comedy.
1525 Mesa Verde Drive East,
Costa M~sa, 435-9367.
SHERATON NEWPORT BEACH
Reefwal.ker Lounge features
a comedy room by Bryan K.
Finner and Barry Weisenberg
Friday. 4545 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. 833-0570.
KID'S STUFF
STORY AND CRAFT HOUR
From 2 to 3 p .m. every Sun-
day, Barnes & Noble holds a fun.
filled craft and story hour for
, children of all ages. Refresh-
m ents will be setved. Barnes &
Noble is located at 1870 Harbor
Blvd, Triangle Square in Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
631·0614.
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A
TRIP TO MEXICO
The nii'llltlo"
Contllllles
Since J972
.,. 1,, I
I " ',I ··"I .. [
what's going on
Ray Charles
R~ to 1be C..W
after his Sold-out t 994 plllfar-
mance to pedGllD IUdl lib u
•Georgia• and •&om to
1me· with tbe Ray ~
Orcbeltre and tbe Raelett.,
singer-~ Ray Chad8I ii
a 12-time GR.JJUDY Awanl-
winner and an lntematkmal
star who bu been induct.cl
into the Rhythm and mu..
Jazz and Rock'n'Roll Halls ol
Fame. This speda1. OOHdght
only concert prcxnilel to be
one of the summer's most
memorable events. 8 p.m
Thursday. $284t9. Call 740-
7878 for tlckets.
'GOOSEBUMPS'
The •Goosebumps" club
meets at 6:30 p .m. Monday at
Barnes & Noble, 953 Newport
Center Drive. For more informa-
tion, call 7 59-0982.
AMERICAN GIRLS ACTTVfTY
HOUR
Read •all-American girl" sto-
ries, eat cookies and make crafts
at 3:45 p .m. on Tuesday at
Barnes & Noble, 953 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
759-0982.
UTE RARY
BRIAN BASSET-' ADAM'
The artist and writer of the
"Adam" comic strip will be at
Barnes & Noble, 953 Newport
Center Drive from 2 to 4 p.m.
Saturday. Bassett will sign his
book and answer questions. For
more information, call 759-0982.
I•
POETRY READING
Alta Coffee House holds an
open poetry reading with musi-
cal accompaniment by Neil
Miranda at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Sign-up begins at 7 p.m. for the
open reading. The event is free.
506 31st Street, Newport Beach.
Information: 564-6526.
MUSIC
HOLLYWOOD POPS
SYMPHONY OROiESTRA
In celebration of Jerusalem
3000, the Jewish Community
r . ...., -.--.. .. ~
·~ t. ..-..w,..-. ·--·~ THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996 At
reel critics
rt -~~
·'Dragonheart' misses a beat
~ .·.
r'9 ~~ IA.: • ... I
~ 4
• ' " • -
Center of Orange County will
present the 40-member Holly-
wood Pops Symphony Orchestra
at 8:30 p.m. on Saturday at the
Jewish Community Center, 250
E. Baker Street, Costa Mesa.
Tickets are $18 for JCC mem-
bers and $25 for non-members.
For more information, call 7 55-.
0340 ext. 270.
SINGLES
JEWISH SINGLES GROUPS
New Jewish Relationships
allows Jewish singles to choose
people they wish to date from
profile albums that picture and
describe singles with a wide
range of personal and profes-
sional interests. Membership
fees are $40 for six months and
$70 for a year, non-members of
the Jewish Community Center
are $10 more. For more informa-
tion, call 755-0340.
TENNIS, ANYONE?
Tennis Ladder for Singles
offers an opportunity to meet
new people while ·improving
your game. Registration fee is
$18 and interested parties ,put
their names on a list and can
challenge play~ on the list.
Call 755-0340 for"more inform.a·
tion.
OUTINGS AND ACTIVmES
JAM, singles 21-39, bolds a
variety of outings and activil1t;.
For more information, call the
JAMl.ine at 665-5048.
I have to be honest. I wanted to
like "Dragooheart." As a
young boy, I loved fantasy and
science fiction. Each week I read a
book, sometimes two, about
swords and sorcery, myths and
magic.
Heroic deeds were performed
by skilled and courageous knights
and warriors, always on behalf of
an entire kingdom and always
involving a beautiful damsel and a
whole host of magical creatures of
myth and legend.
Yeah, OK, kinda geeky, what
can I say.
Alas, though, I must confess, I
found ·0ragonheart• a bit of a
drag and it needed a lot more
heart.
Basically, the story involves a
young Prince Einon, who has
been trained in the art of swords-
manship and schooled in the hon-
or of the Old Code (a creed in the
Arthurian tradition) by his mentor
Bowen (played by Dennis Quaid),
a ,skilled and honorable knight.
While putting down a peasant
rebellion, Einon witnesses the
death of his cruel and tyrannical
father and is then himself gravely
injured. He is saved when his
mother, Queen Aislinn, begs a
magical dragon to heal the Prince
who, in turn, vows to rule his
kingdom by the Old Code and
with mercy.
When Einon recovers and
becomes a king even more evil
than his father, Bowen, believing
it was the dragon's magic that
changed Einon. begins a quest
and vows to rid the land of drag-
ons.
Fast forward 12 years and we
find a bitter and disenchanted
Bowen hunting dragons for the
less than noble reason of money. It
is then that the knight encounters
the last, and ostensibly most cun-
ning and powerful dragon (to
whom Sean Connery lends his
voice), This dragon, however, has
a code as well and manages to
change Bowen's mind about drag-
ons.
The picture attempts to be a
blend of comedy, adventure,
romance and special effects. It
only truly succeeds in the special
effects area. The dragon is actual-
ly pretty believable and the
scenes that include the dragon, or
Draco as he comes to be named,
are worth watching. As far as the
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adventure, it is only so-so, the
romance blase, and the comedy
more often than not sputters and
dies a horrible death, although a
few scenes of Bowen and Draco
are humorous, particularly their
initial confrontation.
As a kid's picture, it's not
bloody (did you see Braveheart7)
or overly violent (kind of Dis-
neyesque) and my guess is that
they'll be entertained. The toys,
which are sure to follow, will
undoubtedly be a bit. But for the
parents, I'd suggest dropping the
kids off and find another pursuit.
On the Brunette scale of "Pay
full price at the movies,• "Bargain
Matinee,· "Video Rental," •TV
Movie of the Week," or "I'd
Rather Date Roseanne Barr," I'd
rate • Dragonbeart • ·Barga.in
Matinee" for the kids, and "Video
Rental" for the adults (ONLY if
you kinda like this stuff).
• RICHARD BRUNETTE. 32, is a recre-
ational supervisor with the city of Costa
Mesa and a Costa Mesa resident
I D ragonheart" is a movie
that couldn't make up its
mind what it wanted to
be when it grew up. In fact,
maybe it should never have tned
to grow up at all.
The first half of the movie
•
rocked along pleasantly enough,
holdmg the attention and enthusi·
asm of the numerous kids in the
auclience while offering enough to
keep the adults involved.
The spedaJ effects scenes of
the gigantic dragon ilying were
impressive. The dialogue man-
aged to be snappy and "knight-
ish" witHout sounding too silly. I
found myself remembering won-
derful moments from my child-
hood movie-going, when I bad
been carried away into the
thrilling world of fantasy.
Somewhere during the second
half of the film, however, things
turned me'11-spuited. The kids in
the auclience grew very quiet The
lightheartedness of the first hall
became heavy and pompous as
the clialogue struggled awkwardly
for some sort of phony nobility
and "greater meaning" -wbatev·
er that is.
After what seemed an inter-
minable time, the film ended, and
we all filed out. I didn't bear a
sound from the kids. There is a
trust kids give to a movie. l think
this film lets them down. If your
kids want to see this film, be sure
they are savvy enough to handle a
downer ending.
I • JUNE FENNER. a Costa Mesa resident.
1s vice president of a wor1c force training
company and in her late 505.
fii COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE
'lif PRESENTS
eome Blow Your ijorr,
,., ... _....-':
714.151-5269 ........
C. ... CA
DIRECTED BY NEIL SIMON
April 15 -May l 9
nurs. frt, Sat -l:OOpm
Suaday matlaee -t:OOpm
125 E. Baker. Suite 1 oo-w. Costa Mesa
o.c.·s 1st
cYBER CAFE
En. 1961
TREAT DAD TO THE
DEST IN THE WEST
Servillg Di1mer From 3:00"/m Reservations Recommtmde 641-9777
2300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa at Wilson ----------------· I
I
I
lunch
11 :30 -2:00
dinner
5:00pm -1 O:OOpm
641-5654
S'll llri.nol • Oona Mua (llehrMD Bectbtn a: Campu)
For Re.tnaoos Ind Dim:Oons Call
723-0621
~l~~·....,....,_
• Serving Gourmet Coffee • Pastries
• Sandwiches • Desserts
a~ IS~0~1)1A
'stsit DJTEANET ACUGS ~ COFffE ~
2278 Newport Blvd. (North of 22nd St.) • Costa Mesa
574-9798
Give Dad The Ruyal Treatment
Brunch 10:30 AM -2:30 PM. Dimvr S -9 PM.
l"' '-lo A s,;.a.I Ci(t
A10 THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
Newport's Tsuru
a hidden treasure
By Marla Bird, Daily Pilot
T suru is a restaurant
described by the man-
ager as serving Japan-
ese-Chinese cuisine. It's hid-
den like a pearl in an oyster
but yo"' can find it in the
upper level of the Newport
Classic Inn facing West Coast
Highway, almost hidden by
trees.
I turne d into the Inn's park-
lllg lot one afternoon and
found a spacious dining room
with a sushi bar, liquor bar,
booths and tables upstairs,
facing Windows on the Bay
across the street. It was a qui-
et day and well after the
Lunch hour, but one table of
10 distinguished and satisfied -
lookrng Asian men lingered,
apparently unready to relin-
quish one another's comp any
or perhaps the business deal
going on.
Tsuru is open daily and
lunch prices are reasonable. A
Bento box with sashimi and
tempura is $6.95, Kung Pao
chicken is $5.50 and an
assortment of fresh fish on
special rice costs $10.95. All
lunches come with soup, rice
and dessert.
A fnend and I went to Tsu-
ru that night and had the pure
joy of good food in this choice
C hinese-Japanese restaurant.
It was prom night and three
large tables were filled with
young Asian Americans -
teenage boys dressed in spiffy
black tuxedos and the girls in
g lamorous black or white
gowns. They were ordering as
if sashimi, lobster, New York
steak, shark's skin soup and
money was no object on this
night of nights.
~This is really the very bt!st
P.lace for food ," one girl whis-
pered lo us.
We ate a generous Cahfor-
nia Roll ($7 .25) with crab
cooked to perfection, plus the
addition of salmon skin and
avocado. All ihe sushi is
accompanied by pungent
wasabi and shaved pickled
ginger. We brought one slice
r--------·---------~------, I I
I f.Y.I. I I I
I I
: • WHA'l lUu :
: +•&•DOOw.teo.t l
I H~ Nlwpatt..... •
: +WIBl:Dm~tuneh 11:30 :
: a.m. to ;z p.m. Din,,.., 5 to 10 :
I p.m. I : + HOW MUOI: Moderate : : + PUONI: 722-9248 : I I I I L-------------------------~ of it to my husband who is
house-bound at the moment.
He of discriminating palate
raved and wants more, more,
more.
We also liked the crispy
egg rolls and likewise paper-
wrapped chicken and were
too busy eating to do anything
but nod at one another. Miso
soup and steamed rice were
among our many table trea-
sures, along with a platter of
sesame chicken. It was fault-
less food.
Five days later, two friends
whose dining experiences
would fill a guide book met
me at Tsuru. They were the
ultimate tasters.
This time, we bad one plate
of dim sum dumplings ($4.50) ,
and three orders of fried soft
shell crabs, ($3.50) each. The -
little crabs were a crunchy
treat. fried a mahogany
brown. (Hard to get a grip on
with chop sticks).
The dumplings were just
the best. THE BEST! The
insides were perfectly sea-
soned and moist. We shared,
each having two, and the
gourmand exclaimed, "These
are the most delicious
dumplings l have had any-
where, including New York
and Shanghai ... wonderful!"
His wife and I thought so, too.
We had Peking shredded
pork which we wrapped mu
shu-style, and a plate of
sauteed cuttlefish and fresh
vegetables. The cuttlefish was
decorative, the vegetables ·
were fresh and al dente, but
cuttlefish has the texture of
abalone and the flavor? Where
was that flavor?
Don't forget to ask about
"specials," which might not
be on the menu -one is
baked mussels in the shell
($4.50 for six half shells).
These big shells were filled
with chopped mussels, scal-
lions, and mixed with a dab of
custard-like mayonnaise
before their romp in the oven.
Sprinkled with sesame seeds
and chives, they were almost
too pretty to eat.
Manager Erle Chen sug-
gests that you ask for him, tell
him what you want to spend
and indicate your preference
for shellfish, pork_or other
meat, and let them do their
best in the kitchen to delight
you. Chen says, "You want to
spend $20, $40? A hundred?
Just tell me and we will
please you. You will be sur-
prised."
Be prepared for casual ser-
vice; the place needs more
staff. There is a modest list of
California wines, free parking
in their lot and an elevator for
getting upstairs. Our dessert
was two kinds of ice cream in
the same goblet -green tea
and plum. Yum.
Accents open all day
Lots of changes this past year.
One of Orange County's best
hotels, Le Meridien changed its
name to The Sutton Place
Hotel and in December, 1995,
Restaurant Antoine closed and
Cafe Fleuri has become a lively
new restaurant called Accents.
The new menu is eclectic Cali-
fornian with a French empha-
sis. (A little Pacific Rim, a little
Southwestern, a little French -
you get the idea.) Accents will
be open daily with brunch on
Sunday, call 476-2001'
Cooking classes
Alan Greeley is going to show
the whole family how to barbe-
cue from 11 a .m. to 2 p.m. Sat-
urday at his Golden Trutfie
restaurant in Costa Mesa.
Adults, $55 and children, $25,
dining news
for the class, lunch, wine and
fresh lemonade. Phone 645-
9858.
V.l.P. grand opening
The old Village Inn re-opened
three months ago on Balboa
Island under new ownership
and a new name: V.I.P. It had its
official grand opening party
with tons of food, salads, sweet
and sour barbecued ribs and
great, fresh shrimp in late May
when Peter Cheng and his wife
invited all their friends to cele-
brate. V.l.P. is a perfect neigh-
borhood dining spot for the
Islanders and its bar is just the
same, a real sociable watering
bole.
Line dancing at 1Win
Palms
Every Tuesday, get your cow-
Muager
Erle Olen .,
the sualU bar
atlauru in
Newport
Beach.
\ '·
I '
.... , ....
I 1'
I ' . .. .
boy boots on and head on over
to 1Wtn Palms, where happy
hour goes from 3 to 7 p.m.,
country dance steps are taught •
by a professional dance instruc-
tor from 6 to 7 p.m. and live ·
country music keeps your toes···
tappin' till 10 p.m. Phone 721-
8288 for more information.
Slight Sizzler
changes
Orange County's Sizzlers are
not affected by the recently·
announced bankruptcy. They '
are staying open and will be
converting to the American
Grill concept with grilled chick-
en, fish and meat. Old favorites
like Malibu chicken will stay.
The new menu will include sal-
ad bar goodies priced as part of .
the entree.
-By Marla Bltd
II CURTAIH CALL DINN!ll TllEATl'.a Th~ Best Thai Food 1n Costa Mesa · SJR ~S?,§~~eLTD.
PRESENTS .
For Reservations call
(714) 838-1540
a
RIVERBOAT CAFE
Oi board ttte ·Pride c:I ~· ~. Home Of The Newport
Harbor Nauticsl Mu9eum 1For!ner'Y Reuben E. L•l le Open From 7am-5pm (Until Midnlltt fur Pr+..t.e Parbaa. ~. &.c. )
Reeerv8t:lons Needed ll'1fy For~. Banquete Ci PrMa Partlel) All Ma,or Credit Cerda~ locetad At 151 E Coest f+.¥v, Newport Beech. CA 92660 (714) 873-3425 Fax
673-7864
RUBY'S JAGUAR DINER
OeS8IC ·409 Style Diner. Tf'8dt0onel Hemburoera. Q'98t Shekel &
Mab. Aleo Serving Breeldnt Houri· ~Thur 6 30lm-SP!n ~
Slit 6:3Qam.1~. Mastercard. v .... Amex. Dille. Diners Oub,
Cetul Btanch. No ReMrV8dons Needed. Looated At 3CO) W Pacific Coea Hwy (714) 831-7929
SIR ROGIER8 LTD. ~ -(Hot & Q,k'jl Bntllh Grooerv ltA!nw For Sale -Ful Sendwictl Menu. Sm..-8realdast Menu. Otedrch'1 Coffee. ~ Qrwib, ~ lt8ml f-bn• Mon .fri 7·(X)wn. e~ s. &o 1 exllm-4«\'.>m. a. c.n:M Not~ -ATM '"'1eble. ~Not NMdld locs..I N. 270
17tti 9treet. ea.a Mlle 92827 (714) 645-2252
r----~------------~, 1 FREE DINl'IBK
i:(; TRY OUR NEW HOT SANDWICHES i:f
I
I
I
Buy one a la carte dinner entre at
regular menu price and receive a aecond
a la carte dinner entree l'RrZt
. I Dlne·ln ootv. EJCplres 5·31-96
L Not Yalld Wltt'I Arri otner Ol'fer' I ------------------~ FrN Df'klk R9fllls on llUndl Speadals FrOm SUI
1119 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • <714> 645·9934
M ·Fr 7un-8pm • Sat1 8am-6pm • Sun1 9am-6pm
270 E. 17TH ST. #17 • CoSTA MEsA
(71'4>645-2252
ZUBIES
Menu Includes: Ribs, 011clcen, Steak & lobster, Pnrne Rib. P1ZZ8. ~ Bar. Prices R8llQ8 From $3 95 And Up Hours: 11 3C8n
1 ~ · Cocktails T~ 1 f pm. Credit r.erds Not Accepted.
Reservations Not Needed. locat:8d at 't 712 Placentia. Costa Mess
(714) 645-8091
GOOSEBERRIES
Breakf8st -High Quellty And Innovative Breakfast Fare Hours·
Mon.-ffi. 7'CXJam I S8t -Sun. B·OO&m · 12·30pm located At 200 Promontory DrNe. (714) 57 4-0008
CASABLANCA BISTRO Mediterreneen & Moroccen -Tredttional Middle Eastern Food. Hours 11.30 To 2:30 Mon. Thru Thurs. Lunch. Dinner 5-11~. All Majol' Credit Cards. Reservations SuQaest.ed. L.ocsted et 1520
W C'.oest Hwy., Newport Beech (714) S'46-1420
FORTY CARROTS RESTAURANT
<Anbnental -Cortamporary Qnsine Soutf1 Coast Plaza, 3333 S. Briet.ol Costa Mesa (714) 556-97CXl Informal And Bea~ful. Our
Menu Is Veried With A Wide Ra!lQe Of cuturel Fevorit:ea. Freshness .... Qualty and Suoert> Service At. An Attractive Price Value. Moofri 1u-9pm •Set Q.Spm •Sun 1Q.6p. Visa, Mester Card And Amencan ~ Accept.8d. ReserYatlons ~ Not Needed
AUBERGINE
French Influenced. 508 29ttt St. Cannal) Vtllaaa. ~Beach. Dinner Tues. -Sat. Bpnt 1 Cbn. Reaerwt'ions R&q\J8tlt.8d. Visa M/C, Amex. accept.l!id(714)7234150 '
TWIN flllALMS
Coontry Frenche:Served In A c:ontem~ And C>,namc Y11tage_Squere . LHe E~ Ori All · a:rStand. 2 Bare: ate 400 Lunch Moo&rt, 11 :~
Dinner 5:30-10:30 ~ Niaht Bar Menu 'til Midnight. Sun Goepel
Brunch 10.3().3·00. Major C'.redlt Cerde Aooeated Locat:ad It 630
Newport Center Or .. NeWport Beech (714) 721~88
AMACHI
Suehi & Sushi IXl Go. Complete Bar. All Major Credit Carda. loc8ted
At 2675 Irvine PNe .• (Aaoss From Newport Golf Course) {714)
645-5518
CALIFORNIA BEACH ROCK'N S'-'SHI
Jepenese ~ Cuisine And Full Sushi Ber. A Place For Greet Food
Hours 7 CJaYs Per Wee/K. • 5:1lJpm Td Closing. VtSB. Mastarcard. Amex, Diners Oub. Located et 3355 Vie lido, Newport Beech (714) 675-0575
SUSHI IMARI
Sushi Bar And Dinilig. Owners Successfully Oi>erated J
Restaurant In Sen Fernando~. Tlll'Z8n8 -1-bn 11 ~ 2:00pm ·Dinner 5:00pm-10:00pm. Aft Ml)jor c.redit Card15
Aoce~. Reservations Not Nece8881Y. 3'5 Brist.ol, #40, Costa Mesa (714) 6445654.
AVILAS IEL RANCHITO
Audienbc MuiaNl ~. WIZI The fretheet '°IJ!'9dients & A. New
l.lght rusine. Greet Mel gwtas. Hours: Lunch & Dinner. All MajOr'
credit Cerda Acc:epmd. lDcatBd llt 2101 Plecentie, C.oatll Mesa
£714) 642-1142 end 2BCD Newport Bllld .• Newport Beech [714)
E375-6855
MARGARITAVILLE
Tredltlonel Freah Coolcld Muicar'I Food. NJ Bar. tbrl: 7 OllY9 11 !3Q.2:(Qlfn. Mnt.trcerd, Amex, V11a. L.oceted At. 2332 W. Cont~. Newport Beech (714) 631-8220
MICA8A
A. Tnp To Muico. ~: ~ from 11 :Clllm. Pnce. Renae $2.25 -18.95 p,, Maio' Q9dit Qirde ~· Located ~ 296 17th St .• Co.la Mele (714) 645-7826
WAH00'8 11'18H TACO
Rlt'I Teooa. Bumtolt. 8lec:k a-. & Rice, Selede~~· Prlcel Range F1'0m S1 .85-$7.!50. Hain: Mon~ 11:00wn -1(}'~ • Sun. 11 <Dlm-B;CQ>rn 0'9dit Crwdl ~
Loo-..d At 1 B62 Piece!•. ~ MIM. enc1 • :riX) ;-...:::--....i...-ao.c. MMI. 1200 Mlirl 9trllt. ~ 8Mctl (7l 4J ~
51u~
THIE BARN STEAK HOUSE
Menu lnckides Steak. Fresh Nsh. Oliclcen. B~ & Salads.
Prices Range From $3. 75 For Lunch & $6.25 For Dinner. Hours·
Mon.-Sat. _Open 11 am For lunch. 4:9Jpm Mon . .fri., Dinner
3:1lJpm. Sat. & ~n .. Major D'9dft Cards Acceoted. L.DC8t.8d At 2axJ Harbor 8 . #31. COsta Mesa (714) 641-9777
LA CAVE
Menu Includes: Lobster. Q-eb, Shrimp, Stealca, Rib frffl. Qa1ly ~· Fri. & Sat. Prime Rib. Ful Bar & Wrne List. Cesuef oresa. Hotn: UJnchea 11 ·30-2:30 -!loner Mon .sac. From 5.~. Vl88, Maatarcard, Diners Oub. Located At 1695 lrvlne ~ .. {And 17ttia) Neer BlocldMltar Ent.erta1nment Costa Mesa
(714) 64&7944
ATHER'S DAY
ft!,ne 16 is
Fa#1er's pay
St11rt Milking
l'Our
AJ,,ertUing
PIA
Love and war are waged
with delicious irony in
George Bernard Shaw's
"Anns and the Man,• one of the
playwright's funniest and most
accessible works and a supreme-
ly entertaining season-closing
production at South Coa·st
Repertory.
Shaw punctured both subjects
wtth his sharp dramatist's pen
102 years ago, and also had
some biting comments on the
subject of class differences -
probably meant more for his fol-
lowers in the British Isles than
for the people of the Balkans,
where "Arms and the Man• is
set. His soipt dwelled on a
familiar theme -that things (and
people) aren't always what they
seem.
In this glorious reprise pro-
duction (SCR first mounted the
play back in 1967), director Mar-
tin Benson demonstrates his
uncanny "feel" both for Shaw
(it's bis fifth Shaw assignment for
SCR, sixth if you count an acting
turn in "Candida") and Jor
bringing the best out in his
actors. Several of them tum in
~emorable individual slices of
this tasty pie, for which Michael
C. Smith's three beautifully real-
tzed settings serve as the
whipped cream.
"Arms and the Man" starts
out .with a bang -literally, before
the lights dim -as a Swiss mer-
¢enery captain (Harry G roener)
fighting for the Serbs takes
refuge in the bedchamber of a
6ulgarian woman (Nike
Doukas), whose father (Richard
t>oyle) and tiance (Daniel
Reichert) are off fighting Groen-
er's forces.
; When the war ends, the fun
begins as Gtoener shows up
again, this time as a peace nego-
(iator with powerful political
clout, something neither of the
warriors can muster. He's also
pursuing Doukas, but his ardor
is so subtle as to be nearly
(l.onexistent. Meanwhile,
.lleichert is showing the audience
his caddish side as he trifles with
the family maid (Alicia Woller-
ton).
Groener takes the show's
~\ ~ ~~ ..
~
' ,. 'ltcd ott' ' 30°lo .
highest accolades both as the I when Doukas blossoms in her
exhausted war role -as she
fugitive in the ,.-------------------------, realizes her
first act (his f.Y.f. l highborn act
byplay with a : isn't impressing
loose sword + WHA~ "Arms and the : her Swiss vi.Si-
hand.le at Satur-Man" . : tor; her transi-
day's matinee + WHERE: South Coast • tio~ is priceless.
was terrific) and Repertory, 655 Town Center From this point
the pragmatic Drive, Costa Mesa. on, her genuine
negotiator in + WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesday emotions nullify
the next two. through Saturday; 2:30 p.m. the practiced
His fight to Saturday and Sunday; 7:30 artifice of her
keep from p.m. Sunday. Through June earlier
falling asleep 30. . moments.
on his feet is +HOW Muat: $17-$38 Doyle settles
hilarious, and + PHONE: 957-4033. comfortably into
he delivers L--------------------------' his old warrior Shaw's rhetoric ~gnment,
with a vengeance. I playing the befuddled military
There is a beautiful moment leader neatly a step behind the
~~
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
'.1~1i ·~PH~ DAILY PltOT
Major Sergius Saranoff, right, played by Danie l Reichert. crea•s quite a stir when he embraces
the family maid, Louka, played by Alida Wollerton, in a scene 'trom George Bernard Shaw's
"Arms and the Man" at South Coast Repertory. Above left: Richard Doyle is always one step
behind the action as Major Petkoff.
I
action. Sally Kemp complements
him nicely as his wife, diligently
clinging to her newfound ~tation
of prominence.
Reichert skillfully struts and
frets like a wounded peacock as
the narcissistic officer who
gained a Victory through foolhar-
dmess. Woolerton's feisty maid
looking to move up in the world
adds a zestful touch to the show,
while Jefrey Alan Chandler
excels as a servant who knows
his place and, indeed, is proud of
it.
Smith's scenic work is magnif-
icent -two interiors and an exte-
rior sprawled out in panoramic
detail and highlighted by Paulie
Jenkins' elaborate lighting
effects. Walker Hlckltn's period
costumes complete the nchness
of the production -particularly
Doukas' parka-like robe in the
first scene
•Arms and the I'\ Ian" could be
labeled Shaw for playgoei:s who
aren't overly fond of Shaw It's a
banquet for both lhe nund and
the funny bone
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·' forwn
.. tribute
H ow do you thank retiring teacher~ and
administrators for their many years of
devote d service to the school district and local
children? It's a tough task, to be sure. So ~e Daily
Pilot aske d those who can eloquently speak for all
of us -the principals at various schools and
Newport-Mesa Superintendent Mac Bernd -to
p en their own thoughts to the individual ~eachers
and administrators retiring this year
ea
JIM STOIA
Costa Mesa High School regretfully
announces the retirement of Jim Stoia, a
valued employee of our school for the
past 26 years.
Stoia, a renaissance man of many
: skills and talents, has touched the lives
• of many students because he chose to
teach with his heart. He has been an
inspiration, advocating art as essential a
-part of the curriculum as any other area
of study. His passion for art is contagious,
as witnessed by the number of past stu-
dents who have pursued the arts.
Sometimes a skilled technician,
sometimes a gruff favorite uncle, but
always a teacher, Stoia has changed the
direction and positively affected the
lives of a large number of students.
Stoia can be found most every week-
end on the CMHS campus, firing the
kiln, working with past and present stu-
dents, building sets for our drama
department and just being creative.
Often outspoken, yet inherently shy, he
is a man who makes a difference.
Thank you, Jim, for touching our
lives. Working with you has made us
infinitely richer.
JEANITTE DEAN
LARRY CARLSON
Assistant principal
Costa Mesa High
es o
Retiring from education? Jeanette
Dean? Not quite. She'll be back in the
fall helping Kaiser teachers with new
developments in educational technology.
This is something she is looking forward
to and so are we!
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Kaiser Elementary third-grade teacher Jeanette Dean has been making a difference in schoolchildren's lives for 37 years.
Dean is a computer whiz using multi-
media, telecommunications and
Internet in her classroom. She is also
a handy "fix-it" person when the com-
puters break down. She will be back
part-time in the fall, teaching the staff
new software and keeping our network
up and running.
Dean, a third grade teacher at Kaiser
Elementary School, is looking forward to
new adventures. not only in technology,
but traveling to see family and friends.
· LIBBY CLARKE
CHRIS JUR.ENKA
Principal
Kaiser Elementary
Newport Heights Elementary School
opened in 1956, and Libby Clarke was
one of its first teachers. She has taught
several grades, most recently grade six.
As a master teacher, Clarke bas helped
train many student teachers from UCI.
In addition, she has contributed to
numerous school-wide committees and
'.projects dwing her career (e.g., school
site council, grade level leader, Drug
Abuse Resistance Education, Outdoor
Science School, etc.).
Oarke has truly touched the lives of
many fortunate students enrolled in her
classroom over the yean;. As her retirement
approaches, we are very honored to have
worked with her. Oarke has taught us all
what it means to be a dedicated teacher!
SHEL'E TAMAKI
Principal
Newport Heights Elementary
GEORGE ROBERTSON
George Robertson has always been
associated with the educational
community. His father was a school
principal. Owing Robertson's 28 years as
an elementary teacher, he has enjoyed
teaching math skills and reading aloud
several hundred novels and stories while
discussing the meaning and content
with hJs students.
~ Klllybrooke's stafl lounge has a rocker
; , cha.tr that has been re-upholstered a few
" ; times, but we could always find Robert-i son, an avid reader, either beginning or
1 ' completing another non-fiction book. HiS
: : motto -you can never read too much.
( ~ NEDHAU \ • Prind ....... 1
' • Y""' : : KiUybrooke Elementary ' . : ! MYRA SMrrH
, : : Myra Smith~ been fhe ~ Ot tbe
kindergarten program since the reopening
of Adams School seven years ago. She has
been the lead teacher in kindergarten men-
toring to new kindergarten teachPrs each
year. She gives of her time freely to share
materials. ideas, and monthly units of study
with any teachers who desire lessons.
She believes pfOviding authentic
experiences for the students is key to
building a good foundation for further
schooling.
Smith's claim to fame is the Adams
Kindergarten Circus. The ringmaster
announces all the performances of the
Big Top. There are lions, bears, tightrope
walkers, bands, perf onning seals, dog
acts. All students in the three classes
take a part in all aspects of the circus.
This truly is the Greatest Show On Earth.
Many of her former students and
their children return to Ad81I\5 School
just to say •Hi" and uThank you."
Smith's excitement for teaching has
never faltered. She rejuvenates the staff
with her enthusiasm and love of chil-
dren. Even as she retires from Adams
she is looking forward to helping her
daughter with pre-school in South
County. Myra will be greatly missed.
ED HUBBARD
BARBARA HAIUllNGTON
Prtncipal
Adams Elementary
Ed Hubbard is retiring after 29 years
in the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, all at Corona del Mar High
School (in the same room!).
Affectionately known as "Hubby" by
staff and students alike, he will be
remembered as a warm-hearted
friend, as well as a teache r. You can find
his smiling face in almost every year-
book, flipping hamburgers at all of our
student barbecues!
He has spent time each semester with
Junior Achievement projects to teach
students entrepreneurial sldlh. A local
resident, Hubb~d is retiring to live the
good life of Newport Beach ..!.... fun in the
sun.
JOAN KLAMMER
Joan Klammer has spent 31 years
~g hundreds ot stud nti to the
beautiful world of fine arts. Her gUt to
the students of Corona del Mar
High School is an appreciation of art
and culture. She if a coacll ln her clus·
room and leads students, rather than •
directing them. She brings out the best
in her students. As a result of her
instruction, students become successful,
feel good about themselves and gain
gyeater insight about themselves and
the world in which they live.
Klammer is retiring at the end of this
school year, but she has left her mark on lit-
erally hundreds of students over the years!
DON MARTIN
Principal
Corona del Mar High
JANICE R. SCHROEDER"
Jan Schroeder's hobbies are walking,
and the California Angels. She plans to
spend time with her daughter and
grandchildren in Lake Tahoe. It has
been said that she is a very patient per-
son, a quiet leader, amongst her peers.
Very dedicated and supportive of her
students and one of the most outstand-
ing teachers I have known.
DIXIE BUSS
Dixie Bliss loves golf. The faculty will
miss the jazz band that she used to lead
during eighth grade promotions. In the
1970s, Bliss earned the distinction of
having the most original Halloween cos-
tume when she showed up as a standard
white poodle. She and Jan Schroeder
have walked more than 2,000 miles on
daily jaunts before school for several
years. She's been very helpful in sharing
ideas and lesson materials. Having been
a former band director, she has much in
common with me. Bliss, a top music
teacher and one of the original teachers
at TeWinkle, seems to care about other
people. She's leaving after 31 1/2 years.
MARY ANN EHRET
Principal
TeWinkle Middle School
JO BLACK-JACOB
· Bom and bred in New York Oty, Jo
Black~acob earned her bachelor's degree
in speech and drama and art at HWlter
College, Qty UnMnity ol New York. Giv-
ing up a punising tbeatrica1 c.ereer tn
favor ot marriage, BlaCk~acob and her for-
mer husband moved out Welt to "the
wildernea, • as her faO. Called Ca!lfomiA.
PiVe Yea.rt after Mr IODf Andy, WU
born, she sutf ered e totally dllabling
aCddent and wu "out of ection • for a
year of her lite . Through prayer and
promises to God, lbe WU rebabWtated
and ·he made here tw:ber. Corona del
~
Mar High School principal Leon Meeks
hired her right out of UCl's brand-new
teacher education department to teach
speech and drama in 1967. She
remained there, teaching English as
well, until 1986, when she was assigned
to the independent study program (now
Monte Vista High School).
Black-Jacob loves working with the
at-risk students and all the other students
who have left the comprehensive high
· schools for one reason or another. While ·
pursuing her ·new" career, she also
taught at Coast Community College Dis-
bict, w here she was made an associate
professor, and still found time to start a
new life with her new husband, Ray
Jacob, a contemporary artist, art historian
and curator. In her spare time, she visits
her family in Iowa, where grandchildren
are becoming the most important factor.
CAROLE CASTALDO
Principal
Alternative Education Center
JUDITH J. ALTSHULER
After going back over the 26 years of
teaching with Judy Altshuler, most of
the older (more experienced) teachers
agree with the newer ones. Her legacy
will certainly be the three-year English
department cleanup campaign.
Every duty mimeographed, short sto-
ry or poem; every dog-eared copy of
•Julius Caesar" (Act m missing)1 and
every issue of literary calvacade pur-
chased by the English department over
the last 30 years was meticulously
perused, catalogued, filed, stored,
placed in dumpsters, or given away on
the "flea market• table in the English
office. Whenever we wanted to find Alt-
shuler, we only had to follow the trail to
Sims Hall, dust trailing from a book-
laden cart pulled steadfastly by her.
We may never find all that she
recorded and stored. (Remember the
final scene 1n "Raiders of the Lost Ark;•
a.s the aate containing the grail is
wheeled off to obscurity?) But as we
search through card files, notebooks,
hall cupboards, green cupboards, etc.,
we will remember a valued colleague,
metic:uloul record·~ and comum·
mate qUilt iriakar and wiah her the bMt
wherever life takes he.i.
DWIGHT ltOIBTS
For 11 IWIU'1HD'I, DWight Roberti
heij>ed students CIOll lhe ~ N.wda.
...
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t II
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,.
,..I . ~
. . ;
Dwight '·~
Roberts has ~
brought Jd.s
Newport
Harbor
High
School stu-
dents closer
to their
world
DON LEACH
I DAILY PILOT
,,
..
"
.. ,
His students, while learning geology
and biology, developed confidence apd
learned to deal with wilderness hard-
ships. He was academically versatile•"
teaching general science, earth scie4ce,
horticultural botany, biology, human .
physiology-anatomy, life science an4
bio-medical science. , :
BOB HAILEY
Bob Hailey has spent 36 years teach-
ing in the district. The fire department
arrived when smoke was billowing f{om
Newport Harbor High, only to find ~
running track on fire! Hailey was drying
it for the CIF or some invitational meet.
He had pour¢ gasoline au around tile
track and lit it on fire. '
He is planning to go to Australia ~
October to visit his son. '. -
BONNIE MASPl!RO
Principal
Newport Harbor High
ELEANOR ANDERSON, DIRECTOR Of
CURRICULUM AND ASSESSMENT •
Eleanor Anderson began her serviee
with the district in the fall of 1986. Prior to
coming to Newport-Mesa, Anderson : :
served as an administrator 'and teacher for
the Orange County Department of E<W,ca·
tion and the Tustin Unified School~
Anderson received her master's •
degree from Columbia Universny in New
York, NY, and her bachelor's degree from
Pomona College in Claremont While
· employed with the Newport-Mesa Uni-
fied School District, Anderson has seJiV,ed
as a leader in the revision and adoption
of statewide curricular objectives and•
testing. She has been instrumental in the
continued success of instructional devel-
opment and assessment of student leom-
ing throughout the district. •
During her career, Anderson has pro-
vided instructional training programs for
teachers, directed SIP planning pro-
grams, and trained more than 300 ele-
mentary and secondary school adminis-
trators in the successful use of the Inte·
grated School Planning Model. Since
1984, she has served as an assessor for
the National Association of Secondary
School Prtncipals Assessment Center.
Anderson leaves behind a tremen-
dous impact on the students and you1h
of the Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
communities. Her service to all mem~
of the community is greatly appreciat.d
by members of the Newport-Mesa sta'tf
and students.
MARK H. HANSEN, DIRECTOR OF SPE-
OAL EDUCATION
Mark Hansen began his service to
the students and staff of the Newpott-
Mesa Unified School District in 1961.'
His first assignment was that of a tr~-
ing speech therapist. ·:
Hansen received his bachelors aJ10
master's degrees from Redlands U~
sity and completed additional gradulle
studies at Claremont Graduate Scl1c4.
Hansen has devoted 35 ykrs of~
to the special education students an•
slAff of the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District. Hansen began bis :.
administrative career as coordinator~
special education in 1968. •
Through his efforts u a program
ad.min.isttator and SBLPA director,
Hanlen has always provided =-role model for staff memben that
the necenlty of always putting kids
when making decisions concerning I'
program. While oveneetng a ~
edUC;4tion staff in ex.ce11 ol 100 ~
and providing exceptional serv'lce tGi41
more than 2,000 students, HaDMn
always maintained bll poGUve ou
and good seme OI humor.
HtmlD'C8D .. ,.,, proud of
feet that th10ugbout b1i c... be
te1ected excepUonal ltaff "M'Dblrl
Wt1l cany oa bll belW tD dae abll•tlf
~ ......... ,, ..
annowad .. reUnlDlld • 119
tMt tD MdJ S..,1 I shir 1111.
MAC
ALS ASSOCIATION OAANGE COUNTY CMAmR
The Amyotrophlc Lateral Sclerosls
As.10cl•tlon, Orange County Chapter,
nMds many volunteers. FOf lnformatlon.
ml the ~er Office at 375-1922.
ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION Of
OA.+JllGl COUNTY
The Alzheimer's Association of Orange
County needs volunteers for Its Visiting
Volunteer Program; support group lead-
ers for patients and care givers; and for
the volunteer helpline. Interested volun-
teen can call 283-1111.
AMBUCAN CANCER SOOETY
The Orange County Region of the
American Cancer Society is seeking
office volunteers. Also, volunteers are
being sought to answer calls for the
unit's Helpline lnfoCenter. For Informa-
tion on these and other volunteer
opportunities, call Sally Carson at 261-
9446.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY RElAY
FOR UFE ,
American Cancer Society's Relay for
Ufe Is held in June and Involves a team
of runners/walkers competing against
each other to raise money. Relay lasts
for 18 hours with four simultaneous
events running across Orange County.
Volunteers needed for a number of tasks
including logistics. team captains, solicit·
i"9 corporate sponsorship, and team
participation. For more Information,
contact Sally Carson at 261-9446.
AMERICANS FOR FREE CHOla IN MEDI-
ONE
Americans for Free Choice in Medicine.
a non-profit educational organization
founded on the idea of individual liber·
ty and free enterprise, is seeking office
volunt eers .. for more Information, call
645-2622.
AMERICAN HOME HEALTH HOSPICE
PROGRAM
The American Home Health Hospice
Program needs volunteers to give emo-
tional support to terminally m patients
and their families In the greater Ora nge
C unty area. Training Is provided. For
rmation, call 550-0800 or (800) 540-
S45. _,
AMERICAN RED CROSS. ORANGE
. -COUNTY CHAPTER
The Orange County Chapter of the
Aqlerican Red Cross needs volunteers to
address community groups about Red
Cross services and to act as liaisons with
the media in d isaster and emergency sit·
uatlons. For information, call Judy lan-
1n.:cone, 835-5381, or Joan Miller, 835·
~81, Ext. 422.
I 1XMERICAN YOUTH socaR ORGANIZA-TION
'1 "Corona del Mar AYSO Soccer Region
51 needs volunteers for 1996 soccer sea-
tetl registration. Parents of bo~ and
girls ages 4 112 to 16 are needed for
c.Qrnputer input. telephones, coaching,
te'fereelng, equipment and purchasing.
Call 640-2539. ~q.~1
,,, •tiSOCATION RENAISSANCE CREATORS
\,·ARC is a non-profit group in Costa
Mesa that sponsors and supports multi·
outreach community service programs,
such as the homeless sanctuary. Volun-
teers are needed. For information, call or. Renee Namaste, 540-5803. ,, ..
BAUET PAORCA
Jhe Ballet Pacifica Guild, a volunteer
"support group for Ballet Pacifica, needs
o\ -Yolunteers for a variety of tasks. For
1 'lriformation, call Molly Lynch at 851-
9930.
•/ -, .
,., ~ BROTHERS. BIG SISTERS
Men and women over 20 years old
who have lived in Orange County for at
ll!ast six months and have been on the
!. job for at least three months are needed ~serve as 'big brothers or big sisters for
chlldren ages 6 to 16 from single-parent
~1,hornes. For information, call 544-n73
BOY SCOl/TS OF AMERJCA INC.,
ORANGECOUNTYCOUNOL
Volunteer opportunities include fund
... , Mlslng, program development and
..,,~ining to existing troops and packs. For
more Information, call Devon Dougher·
ty, 546-4990.
.. RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
Wt*9 ~Dollar Coven Morel ,.. 1922 HAlllOl llVD., COStA MESA· 5'1-T156
MBe Your Own Nutritionist &
Personal Trainer Program
1-800-979-FITT (3488)
IOYS AND GlltLS CLUIS OF COSTA
MfSA//NEWPORT BEACH
The three area Boys and Girts Oubs
need volunteer coachti and arts and a.tts WOf1cshop teachers. For locations
and more Information, call Dick Powets,
642·2245.
CENTENNIAL FARM TOURS
Volunteer docents are needed at the
Centennial Farm at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Call Ginny
Smith, 708-1517.
CENTER FOR CREATIVE AlTERNATIV£S
The Center for Crutlve Alternatives, a
non-profit charitable organization that
wo~ through the United Way, needs
volunteers. graduate level Interns or
trainees. For Information, call Karen,
642-03n.
OTIZENS FOR A SEWAGE FREE BAY
Your help is needed to stop the Irvine
Ranch District from dumping five million
gallons of treated sewage per day into
Newport Harbor. Volunteers, group lead-
ers, organizers needed. Call 722-1710.
COLLEGE HOSPITAl
The College Hospital Costa Mesa Auxil-
iary is seeking volunteers to perform
clerical, reception desk, gift shop and
other duties at the hospital. For infor-
mation, call 642-2734 between 9 a.m.
and4 p.m.
COMMUNITY HOSptCE CARE
Community Hospice Care, which pro-
vides medical and emotional support to
terminally ill patients and their families
in Orange County, needs volunteers in
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. For
information or to register, call Cindy
Laird, 978-7447.
CONSUMERS FOR LEGAL REFORM
Consumers for Legal Reform has an
ongoing need for volunteers to monitor
civil court judges. A computer and dona·
tions are also needed. For more infor-
mation, call Barbara at 854-0881.
COSTA .MESA OVIC PlAYHOUSE
The Costa Mesa OVic Playhouse needs
volunteers for ushering, backstage, mail·
ings. typing. lights and many other duties.
For more information, call 650-5269.
COSTA MESA H~ SO<Xn'
The mety collects lnfofmatlof\ pho-
tos and artifacts relating to the history
of Costa Mesa and the ~--. var.
unteers are needed for deriall casks.
computer Input and help In the lltnry.
For Information, call Olaries BMcher.
631-5918.
COSTA MESA UTERACY GROUP
The Costa Mesa Literacy Center needs
volunteer tuton to teach English speak-
ing adults to read and WJlte, or English
as a second language. All tutor training
Is provided and there Is no foteign lan-
guage requirement. Training ctas.ses are
on Tuesday evenings and Saturday
morning for six weeks. After training
tutors usually work with 1-3 students
one evening per week at a local chu~h
for a 90 minute period. Call Barbara at
832-1464 or Margery at 548-3384 for
more Information.
COSTA MESA SENIOR aNTER
The multipurpose senior servkes facili-
ty at the comer of 19th Street and
Pomona Avenue seeks volunteers for a
variety of tasks. For more Information,
call 645-2356 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
DEFORE FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS
The Defore Foundation for the Arts, a
non·profit organization dedicated to
dance at 151 Kalmus Drive. G-3, Costa
Mesa, needs volunteers. Et>r more lnfor.
mation, call 241-9908.
DISCOVERY SHOP
Discovery Shops are run by the Ameri-
can Cancer Society. Volunteers are need·
ed, and no special skills are necessary.
For information, call 640-4777 between
10 a.m. and 5 p.m.
DISPUTE RESOLUTION SERVICES
Dispute Resolution Services needs vol·
unteer mediators, case specialists and
outreach· assistants t o help in a variety of
mediation cases. Bilingual language
skills are needed for office volunteers
and for mediators. For more informa·
tion, call 250-0488.
EASTER SEALS
The Easter Seals Society needs volun·
teers for ongoing clerical work and to
help in programs for children with dis-
abilities and In speelal events. For infor-
•
'f()() ~ ti e~Me F~M
eUfitdM tlo.ftuu..r
~h Ofl!e!utd f"aJ,.,°M ,?
& 1"18/"ted118 N tku-4' I
\ ( I Hyatt Custom Draperies
c¥uialiriv ,~ CM't. Md-?i-u~t.r
ll6I Prll.ott°llrf'4.u. 'N--~c B~, &I 9266.J
(114} 646-146t l , l
.. If ..
I
I
li
matlon, call 834-1111.
EXCHANGE aua CHILD AIUSE
PREVENTION CENTER
Volunteers are needed to help families
when an incident of child abuse has
been reported and a referral made by
the county and to work with families of
high-risk victims of parental drug addic-
tion. For information, call 722-1107.
FAIRVIEW DEVELOPMENTAL aNTER
The Fairview Developmental Center In
Costa Mesa needs vof unteers, and dona-
tions are wekome. For more Informa-
tion, call 957-5114 between 8 a .m. and
4:30 p . .m.
FOOD DISTRIBUTION CENfER .
The Food Distribution Center; Orange
County's private non-profit food bank,
needs volunteers to inspect and sort
donated foods and to help with mail·
1ngs. For more information, call the vol-
unteer COOf'dinator, 771-1343.
FRIENDS OF THE COSTA MESA LIBRARY
The Friends of the Costa Mesa Library
need volunteers. For information, call
the library, 646-8845.
FUULIFE CLUB
Volunteers needed for fun and fulfill-
ing activities for entertainment and
information events benefittlng abused
children and other Orange County char·
ities. Call John Adams at 640-0355.
GIRLS INC. OF ORANGE COUNTY
Girls Inc. offers educational and enrich·
ment opportunities for girls and boys.
Volunteers are needed. For more infor-
mation, call Amy, 646-7181.
GlASS MOUNTAIN INC.
Volunteers are needed to aid disabled
adults who meet monthly for education-
al, entertainment and social purposes.
For information, call 779-3441.
HARBOR AREA AND HUNTINGTON
VAUEY ADUL'r CARE aNTERS
This organization is committed to
offering community based long range
term care programs in a therapeutic
environment structured to meet the
needs of functionally-impaired older
adults and provide respite and support·
i11e services to their families. The main
I \\as I.using
1-'ricnds Bcrausc Of
A llcaring Prohlt·1n.
I avoided social situations because
I had trouble hearing people.
Then I took a free hearing test'
at my nearby Mlracle-f.ar• Center.
The representative introduced me
to a full lineup or improved hear·
ing aids with K-AMP• circuilry, a
feature that automatically boosts
·•soft" high frequency sounds with-
out amplifying loud ones.
They helped me hear conversations
better, so social situations were fun
igain:" Find out if a Miracle-F.af-
hearing aid with K-AMP circuitry
could help you hear beuer. Visit
the Miracle-Ear Center in your
neighborhood now.
FREE Hearing Test -Call
Or Stop By Today .
~
Miracle·Ear' ... .__ .............
224 E. 17th Street
Costa Mesa
650·5990
!fABI
South Coast Plaza
850-2105
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office at 661 w. Hamilton. Costa Mesa
needs qualified volunteer receptionists.
Volunteers will receive training on tele-
phones, copying, filing and assist the
secretary with special events. Call 548-
9331 betwffn 9 a m and 4:30 p.m. for
additional information
HAT CONNECTION
The Hat Connection is a women's phll·
anthropic extension of the Chamber of
Commerce that serves Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach For information, call
Kay Walburger, 650-2144.
HERITAGE HOUSE AUXILIARY
Volunteers are needed for an auxiliary
support group being formed t>-1 Her·
itage House, a non-profit subrtance
abuse re<overy home for pregnant and
parenting women and their children in
Costa Mesa. For more information, call
646-2271.
HIGH HOPES HEAD INJURY PROGRAM
The High Hopes Head Injury Program's
Rea Center in Costa Mesa. a , non-profit
organization serving the needs of head·
Injured adults and their families,.is seeking
volunteers. For 1nformat1on, call 646-7458.
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996 AU
HOSPICE FAMU.Y CAltE
Hospice Family ea.. Is _.ing peop6e to
hetpwithemnds. vkltsand~
to temWlty Ill pMlents and theli' bmill& if
you ft aYai&ab1e 2 to 4 ton • w.k. Gii
for free hospice training. For inforrnMion.
call Larry Mariotti llt 7» 1114.
INTERFAITH COUNOl
The Newport·Mesa-lrvlne Interfaith
Council, an umbrella organizatlon for
several area servke groups, needs voluo-
teers active in IOQf congregations. For
information, call Carol BroWn, 548-3283.
JUVENILE DIABETES FOUNDATIOH
INTERNATIONAL
The ·Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
International, Orange County Chapter. Is
seeking volunteers to serve on Its golf
tournament committee and for data
entry. Also a publk relations Intern Is
needed. For information on these and
other opportunities. call Lee Powell at
553-0363.
• ntE VOLUNTEER DIRECTORY runs
periodically in the Dally Pilot. If you'd
like Information on getting your orga-
nization listed, call 642-4321. Ext. 331.
r_ .. _ .. _ .. _M~±-;-vish j;;~Ic;;.~ l
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THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
r. Decker said the pair want to
increase student acbJevement stan-
dal!ls and teacher pay.
r,;:\Ve'd like lo encourage high
, for students lo reach the
rung on the ladder,• be said.
also stressed their fiscal
'*'9rlty during their current term
~the school board.
·'Five years ago, Newport-Mesa di4 not have a 3% reserve. Under
~ present leadership, we've
W4fathered ais.l.s and (county) bank-
luftcy. I certainly believe we have
ftsCal integrity and high standards m 'our business office,. he said.
w Three trustee terms expire in
fl<?vember -those of Fluor, Decker
~ school board president Jim de
Doom.
De Boom, whose trustee area ..
~ENTER .
CONTINUED FROM A 1 ...
~practice of discowaging new
would hardly be against the
la~. In fact, it makes good business
JeD.Se, says Don Lamm, Costa Mesa's
~eJ/elopment services director.
•A property owner is wiser to sell
a center with leases that can easily
b& tenninated or with stores that
'.don't have tenants in them,· said
J.a)nm. •But the city is concerned
tb4t the property is just sitting there.
'Something good is going to
come out of this in the near future .
We just wish it would hurry up.•
A new owner has the option of
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•e4 Newport Blvd. (et Del Mer) ........... ~
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includes the Newport Heights and
southeast Costa Mesa areas, bas
said be will not seek f'&;election in
November unless the oaly. candi-
date in bis area is one supported by
the Education Alliance.
The Education Alliance is-a Tustin-
based conservative organization
whicb support school board candi-
dates who adhere to certain beliefs.
Generally, their candidates embrace
a back-to-basics approach in the
classroom that stresses morals and
values instead of multiculturalism.
They also tend lo support prtvatiza-
tion ettoris, volWltary prayer in school,
corporal punishment and abstinence-
only sex education programs.
TWo years ago, the alliance con-
tributed $1,535 to Newport-Mesa
school board member Wendy
Leece's campaign.
Decker and Fluor said they antici-
pate Education Alliance candidates
to run for their seats, but have not
heard anyone mentioned specifically.
either demolishing and rebuilding the
center -temporarily relocating the
current merchants elsewhere -or
else giving the center a major face-lift.
Harbor Center has 260,000 square
feet spread over about 25 acres.
Both the center itself and the
adjacent building which now hous-
es Marshalls are on the market, said
Lamm, and will likely be sold
together. The property could carry a
price tag of anywhere from $1 5 to
$30 million, depending upon eco-
nomic conditions.
City officials say they have
received inquiries and proposals for
the center from several well-known
developers. Although this is hardly
its finest hour, the center is Wldoubt-
edly the most valuable piece of
•1 think given what's'occwred in
the Orange County Board of Bdu-
cabon race, there's every expect.a.
tion that the group will recruit can-
didates from our area,• Fluor said.
"That's one of the incentives for
announcing our candidacy this ear-
ly -to let everyone know what our
intentions are,• Decker said.
During the county board election
in March, the alliance ran a slate of
three conservative candidates to
run against incwnbents -two won.
Decker and Fluor said they may
reconsider running as a team after
the candidate filing date ends Aug. 9.
"We will be communicating with
each other and will see as things
progress what direction we'll go,•
Decker said.
Residents who live in the three
trustee areas and are considering a
bid for the school board may pull
candidacy papers from the Orange
County Registrar of Voter's office
beginning July 15.
' property currently being marketed
in Costa Mesa, Lamm said.
"There has been serious interest
in the Penney's building,• Lamm
said. "Now thatMarshalls is moving
to the new Arnell center, there will
be lots of prime space available.•
Until th e center's ownership
changes hands, current tenants wait
and pray for business to improve.
Late Monday afte rnoon, in a
clothing store facing Harbor Boule-
vard, the store's owner said that a
customer had not come in for the
previous five hours. Weekends are
slightly better, said the store owner.
"They need to do something to
attract d lot of people,· he said "I
never thought it would b~ this
slow.•
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Newport Beach police office?S
approach kids they see outside of
school between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m.,
laid Newport Beach police Sgt.
John Desmond. Most often, they're
found lounging at the beach. •u we see a school-age kid and
he's from Newport Beach, we'll
pick him up and transport him
back to school fox: the school to
handle," Desmond said. "If
they're from outside the dty, we'll
contact their school, tell them
who they have to report back to
NOISE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
hearing aids, the sound could
cause discomfort and be unhealthy.
If the sound could be tuned down
during the matinees when many
seniors go to the movies, that
would be helpful, he suggested.
Kurt Madarlane, the vice pres-
ident of engineering for Edwards
Theatres said he gets complaints
about the sound all the time. But
not all are negative.
·For every three calls they say irs
not loud enough, one says irs too
and send them on their way.•
But the oJ'dinance would allow
police officers to dte the students
-and possibly their parents -
before returning them to school,
he said. Those citations also could
carry hefty fines for both the stu-
dents and their parents.
•Skipping school could get to
be very expensive,• he said.
Newport-Mesa Unified Super-
intendent Mac Bernd, who has
been active in the superinten-
dents association, said he would
support the ordinance if the New-
port Beach· and Costa Mesa city
councils approved it.
"Keeping kids in school is No.
1, .. ne said. "That's the bottom
loud, and one says it's great-keep
the digital going," Mdarlane said.
Dolby stereo, which has six
channels of audio with surround
sound, was first introduced about
10 years ago when the hit movie
"Star wars• came out, he said.
With the introduction of this sys-
tem the studios came up with a
standard sound level, he said.
Edwards usually stays well below
that level, he said.
With the promotions for
upcoming attractions, the movie
theater has no sound quality con-
trol, he said. That is the movie
producers' and sound mixers'
decision at the studio.
line.•
Bernd said that while New-
port-Mesa doesn't have a truancy
problem, any student out of
school is a concern.
And truant students could
mean less money for the school
district next year when Newpo~
Mesa starts receiving 1ts fun~-i
from· the state on a per-pupil
basis. Cwrently, the school dis-
trict receives one flat amount from
local property taxes no matter
how many students attend school -
The next step will be for the 1 police departments to prepare staff
reports for their city councils, who
school and police officials hope will ,
pass ordinances by September.
And when "'IWister" -with its
dynamic sound range -came out,
Madarlane said he was getting as
many as 30 complaints a day.
Edwards turned the sound leyel
down to be less than the movie
producers' setting and advised th~ _
projectionist who runs the equip-
ment at the theaters to scope the •
audience and adjust the sound·
accordirigly, Mdarlane said
"Edwards tries to take every
complaint we get into considera~ :
lion,• he said.
Mdarlane promised he would
try and lower the sound' at the tw<i',:
theaters in question, at least for ·
the matinee crowd.
CONSIGNMENTS
333 E. l 7ch St., Ste. 128
Costa Mesa • 646-7233
M-F 10-5 •Sat. 10-3
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and Accepting
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• Crystal. Chino. & Silverware
• Cotillion. Dress, Casual
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• Furniture, Strollers,
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673-2120
436 H~, CoroN del Mar
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EYE-OPENER
Olympic moment just arolind
the comer for Mck Adamson
Olympics bound
QUOTE OF THE DAY
I
• ... with it all coming down to one regatta.
that6 pre$SU/"e ... -
-OLYMPIC SAILOR MO< ADAMSON
THE PRESSURE OF A GOLDEN MOMENT
richard
dunn
Not a dry
eye in the
Whole place
• First annual Rod Carew
Cbildren's Classic raises
aoout $200,000 for cancer .
research at CHOC.
M arilynn Carew was in
tears. You could
understand. ~ast week's dinner fund-raiser
fo(the Pediatric Cancer
Re}earch Foundation at
Children's Hospital of Orange
County, followed by the Rod
Carew Children's Cancer Golf
Classic at Pelican Hill Golf Club,
W4S shock treatment for the
emotions.
.Nobody exited with dry eyes.
The dinner made you laugh,
made you cry. Stirred the soul,
tickled the funny bone.
In a first-year event. the golf
classic and preceding dinner
r~ed an estimated $200,000 for
cancer research at CHOC,
aceording to Susan Reid of Costa
Mesa, the PCRF Executive
Director. That's an incredible
sum for an inaugural event,
heeded by Tournament
Committee Chairman David
Patker, who hosted the dinner
with emcee Doug DeCinces at
the Hyatt Regency Irvine on
May 29.
Among the live auction items
was an autographed print of the
"Fearsome Foursome,• with
fonner Ram defensive end
Depcon Jones on hand to
personally hawk the item.
What followed was sheer
impact, typical of a Jones hit. It
was also entertaining, a segment
scheduled for Rpy Firestone later
in the evening, the ESPN
interview star whose comical,
singing, impersonating routine
on sports is second to none.
Jones, however, who retired
in 1975, was a suitable prelude
to Firestone.
.. I'm probably the most
vicious quarterback pass-rusher
who ever played, and I'm still
good looking," said Jones, a
member of the Rams' vaunted
defensive front, along with
Merlin Olsen, Lamar Lundy and
Roosevelt Greer.
•rm the No. 1 quarterback
pass-rusher in NFL history,•
Jones continued, •and I don't
know what to do about cancer.
~at do you tell somebody who
has cancer? What can you say?•
Jones' riveting, emotional
speech helped raise $5,000 for
the print, only 60 of which exist,
according to Jones. "A thousand
w~e made, but only 60 were
si~ed," Jones said.
• 0
"'print of baseball's "3,000
Hit Club,• autographed by every
m911ber in the illustration (only
th~e still living are in the
pi¢ture), was the most lively
silpt auction item, as Michelle
Langston and Newport Beach's
Tawy Kitaeu went beck and
foi!h, unceasingly raising the
v$e of the piece, which
in~uded Willie Mays, George
• SEE GOLF PAGE 2
• Adamson's three-year
effort coming down to
the wire as the Summer
Olympics draw closer.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Imag-
ine putting your life on hold for
three years, preparing for a sin-
gle regatta.
"That's a pressure-filled
event,• said sailor Nick Adam-
son of the Balboa Yacht Club,
the only American to represent
the U.S. Salling Team in the
Laser Class in the 1996 Olympic
Games in Atlanta.
Adamson, 27, a mechanical
engineering major from UC
Irvine, surveyed the waves off
Savannah, Ga., like no other
during last month's Olympic
Laser liials, in which only one of
I
I I ! I H < > \ I > I < >
I 11 I <, \ \I I ...,
SAILOR NICK ADAMSON
Lasers
SAVANNAH
July 19-Aug. 4
A continuing
series on our athletes' quest
for Gold
the 48 competitors would
advance to the Atlanta Garnes
that begin July 19.
Adamson, of Newport Beach,
finished first and second in a
pair of Laser Class races May 10,
protected bis overall lead the fol-
lowing day, then swept to a
fourth-place finish the next day
to earn one of 16 berths on the
Olympic yachting team.
Despite having mediocre
starts and first beats for half of
his races in the Trials, Adamson
-who battled Andy Lovell of
New Orleans for most of the
competition -was able to come
back for top-five finishes in 10 of
the 15 races
Adamson's downwind speed
was superior to everyone in the
marginal planing conditions,
allowing him to dig out of some
pretty deep positions at the first
weather mark.
Lovell and Adamson traded
the lead for most of the regatta, a
grueling competition of nine
days, with only one lay day. l\vo
races were scheduled for each of
the eight racing days.
#Just picture yourself doing
this," Adamson said. #You just
applied for a job at a good posi-
tion, and it's . something you
really love to do, and you're
willing to spend a few years
working at it while putting the
rest of your life on hold for three
years. And, for that job, there's
only oee position, while 300 or
400 otllers want that job.
"When you start off, the odds
aren't that great. so when you
get to the final culmination of
three years, with it all coming
down to one regatta, that's pres-
sure. I've never put that much on
the line for anything else in my
lif .. e.
On the sixth day of the Trials,
KATSUYA RAINONE I DAILY PflOT
Nick Adamson of the Balboa Yacht Club ls never lar from his Olympic dream.
Adamson took the lead for good,
when Lovell started to sail
inconsistently.
On the last day, Adamson had
to make Lovell score more than
four points in two races, or score
better than his own drop, which
was an eighth. ~Adamson match
raced Lovell at the start and pre·
vented him from getting off the
line cleanly. Adamson had
Lovell pinned on two recall
starts, but Lovell got off the line
on the start that went and got
third in the race, thus staying
alive beading into the last race.
Lovell had to beat Adamson
in the last race, so Adamson
match raced him againi this
time, Adamson was successful in
forcing Lovell to start poorly.
Lovell finished in 22nd place.
Adamson was going to the
Olympic Games.
·In the Laser Class, you really
• SEE NICK PAGE 82
eagle girls/ 1995-1996 ..
Henderson the· year's surprise in the shot
• Freshman shot putter
not mentioned by coach
in season preview grabs
Eagles' only PCL crown.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -While the
list of standouts in Estancia High girls athletics will be
significantly pared by upcoming
graduation, it took freshman
Shakena Henderson to achieve
something singularly significant
in the Eagles' 1995-96 athletic
school year.
Henderson, so unheralded
she was not mentioned by
Coach Joan Carlisle in the
Eagles' track and field.season
preview, won the Pacific Coast
League shot put championship
with a heave of 35-0 this spring.
By finishing atop all PCL
rivals, Henderson became the
only Estancia representative
(individual or team) to finish
higher than second in the
six-school circuit.
When it came to team
success, there was little to
approach Henderson's prowess,
as basketball and tennis
became the only Eagle squads
in eight sports to finish in the
upper division (top three).
Basketball tied for second in
what many consider the
second-toughest of Orange
County's 10 leagues, and went
on to the quarterfinals of the
CIP Southern Section Division
ID-A Playoffs before bowing out
with a sparkling 21-6 record.
But coach Russ Davis' six
PCL hoop victories paired with
the third-place tennis squad'•
5-S league mark to account for
more than half of the school's 20
combined PCL triumphs.
lndMdual accolades were
foltbcomlng, boWever, for
MDkn J-*4 Waltz. All·ClF
and the Newpqrt-Mesa Dlltrk:t
Player ot tbe Vear ln balketballi
CbmUn8 Dahle, voted by PCL
IOCCel' eoldw tbe drcuit4s MOil
Valuabl9 D"il 'IM Plays and
Jaw lbl ICbDGl'I,.....
AlbaMI of tbe YMrJ ArK't111 MerU-. tbllitbool'I ftnt ·•
LEAH HOGSTEN I OAA.Y Pl.OT
No doubt about lt. the license plate says lt all when It comes
to Bstanda senior polnt guard Jeulca Waltz.
female runner to advance to the
CIP State Cross Country
Cbampion.shipsi and Whitney
Gilllam, a PCL tennis
semifina.Ust in singles.
Junior Jill Black, the rarest of
Eagles as a three-Sport
standout, was an
All-Newport-Mesa District
selection in bUketbell and
softball. She jotns Henderaon
and a talented cast of basketball
returners among those
repretenting the future.
Here's a sport-by•sport
review: •
I 1'111a .U.: With Waltz
runiUDg tbe lbow, o..w· ftfth
and llMl ..... ~ '°" tlO only two ..... ou"6de of ..
PCL, advancing past the first
round of the CIP Southern
Section Playoffs for the seventh
straight time.
Rancho Cucamonga ended a
13-game season-opening
winning streak and only a pair
of one-point league losses to
Un1vetS1ty and arch-rival Costa
Mesa prevented them from
claiming sole possession of
secoad place.
The Eagles earned the No. 3
9"d and band.led firlt-round
playoff foe Rosary, 6t-.52. But
tbey squandered an early •
11 ·point leed at San DbDU,
bilb9 drOpplng • ?0-54
~vWdlct. Walla flDllhed • bdDiant
four-year varsity career just 14
points shy of 1,000 and with just
fewer than 700 assists, en route
to the aforementioned
individual honors. The 5-foot-8
point guard, bound for Gonzaga
University, also played in the
Orange County All-Star Game.
Black, a 5· 10 forward,
averaged 11 .6 points and 9.4
rebounds en route to all-district
and first-team all-league
laurels.
Junior guard Vivi Rodriguez
was a second-team all-league
selection, while sophomore
Amy Deming and junior
Jennifer Mccartin were also
consistent starters.
Tennis: Gilliam finished
40-10 in singles, while.the
doubles team of seniors Leslie
Najarian and Natalie Rainey
combined to post a 40-13 record
for first-year Coach Dave
Hebert.
The Eagles followed a
third-place PCL showing by
hammering Ayala, 15-3, in the
first round of the CIF Southern
Section Division Il Playoffs.
Gilliam and sophomore
Camella Jaeger swept in
singles, matching similar
doubles domination by the
combinations of Rainey-Stacey
Millhouse and Amy
Fortner-Mary Jane Solomon
A 13-5 second-round loss to
Redlands, however, finalized
the Eagles' overall record at
11-8.
Gilliam, the No. 6 seed in the
PCL singles tournament, upset
fourth-seeded Annette Kim ol
Univers1ty, 7-5, 6--1, in the
quarterfinals, avenging two
losses to Kim in league play.
G illiam. howeve1, met def eat
against top-seeded Michell,
Broy of Laguna Beach in the
semifinals.
Najarian and Rainey sailed
through the Round ot 16 at PCL
Flna.ls, but dropped a 6-7, 6·2,
6-4 quarteifiaal vei"dict to
Laguna Beach's Kim Allen aDd
'n1ni JellOt.
~Comer,: MartineZ ran
a ldlool-reo.d 19:15 on the
e.gtel' home f.tmew Park
COUl'M, U. flDilbed Mb at
PCL PlnU. teVmtb at CIP
SoUtMm Sec.11cm DMlilan m
GIRl:S TOP 10
+. t. Jessica Waltz caps
four-year varsity career
basketball by collecting
Newport-Mesa District
Player of the Year, All-CIF
Southern Section Division m and Orange County
All-Star laurels.
+ 2. Senior Christine Dahle
named Pacific Coast
League's Most Valuable
Defensive Player in soccer
and later tabbed school's
Female Athlete of the Year.
+ 3. Basketball splits with
cross-town rival Costa
Mesa, but wins The Bell by
two-point C\l.mulative edge.
+ 4. Basketball advances
to CIF Southern Section
ID-A quarterfinals, finishes
21.-6.
+ 5. Senior Araceli
Martinez earns school's
first-ever girls berth in CIF
State Cross Country
Championships.
+ 6. Tennis advances to
second round of CIF
Southern Section DivisioD
U Playoffs.
+ 1. Freshman Shaltena
Henderson wins PCL shot
put tiUe.
+ 8. nre.sport j\UUor JW
Black e6l'm all-district
bcinOn ln tiaaketbAD and
90ftball.
+ 9. Swknmen Hollie ha-
~t (••entbt. MegbM
WIMelm ... Ailem Be-
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Jl2 THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996 -..
• ----• I i Locals dominate Orange County All-Star. volleyball field ,, ..
~ • Newport HMbor and Corona
~ del Mar highs sending eight to ..
: Friday•s showcase game.
T he Orange Cowity High
School All-Star volleyball
matches, scheduled Friday
night at Newport Harbor High fVill have a very Newport
, Ji~bor-Corona del Mar flavor
!· ~th eight local players
I participating•
: , The girls match will start at 6 : t>.m. with the boys match to
: follow at 7:30. The scoring format
will be unique, with each rally
6coring a point (like ping p
bog). Each game will also be to
,• 21 points, providing continual
' ~xcitement and ma1ung every .. .. ~erve important.
The girls match will feature ,. • t ..
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the last appearance at Newport
Harbor's gym by Julia and
Jeannette Hecker. For four years,
they have been important parts
of Coach Dan Glenn's extremely
suc;cessful program, which has
collected two CIF State Division I
championships and made three
trips to the state finals.
I'm sure it will be a sad time
for the Hecker twins as they play
their last match at home.
Jeannette is headed to Loyola
Marymount in the fall, while
Julia will play for UC Santa
Barbara.
Another four-year varsity
performer will be Cor:ona del
Mar's Kelly Campbell. She also
has two CIP State Division I
championships in her resume. As
exciting as those state title
mAtches
wbere, She will
always
remember her
four Newport-
Corona
matches in the
loud Newport
gym.
. ·--~ . ~..c· ~ -.... :~ • I ...
comer and Bri-
en Colemen Oil
the North team,
sponsored by
Redsand Sports-
wear.
All five of
these playen
were first-team
Campbell
will join former
Newport
Harbor
All-American
Melissa Schutz
at Colorado
University next
charlie
brande
, All-Sea View
League and
comprised the
majority of the
Daily Pilot's
All-Newport-
Mesa District
fall.
In the boys match, Newport
Harbor's Cameron Black and
Wes Badorek will join Corona del
Mar's John Coon, Derek New-
Dream Team.
Badorekwas
Sea View Co-Most Valuable
Player, while Newcomer was
selected Player of the Year in the
Newport-Mesa District.
spring football
.. _,,
MARC MARTIN I DAA.Y Pll.OT
Costa Mesa High's offensive line will pose a formidable wall against the opposition next fall. From left Daniel Ives; Jeremy
Via; Jose Ayala; Carlos Ormeno; and Chris McBride.
Battle in the trenches
•' ..
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•
• Costa Mesa Coach
Jerry Howell confident
his Mustangs have as
good an offensive line
as anybody around .
By Richard Dunn, Doily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Up front,
where the JOb of the biggest
guys on the field is to make stars
of the more swift, explosive
players, Costa Mesa High's foot-
ball team is thnving.
"If no one gets hurt and
everyone stays eligible, our
offensive line will be as good as
anybody's, H said Mesa Coach
• Jerry Howell, whose spring
practice concludes Friday.
With projected starters Carlos
Onneno (right guard), Daniel
Ives (right tackle), Jose Ayala
(center), Jeremy Via (left tackle)
and Chris McBride (left guard),
the Mustangs believe another
trip to the postseason is on the
horizon, after missing the C IF
Division Vlll football playoffs
last season.
"They are five real big
blocks," Howell said . "We're
trying to come up Wlth a name
for them. U they punch it hard
for the next seven weeks m the
weight room, there's going to be
no one as big and strong, and
they've also developed a lot of
quickness."
It starts with Ayala, a second-
team All-Pacific Coast League
center last season as a junior,
who has quietly become the
line's leader. When Ayala (6-
foot-l , 240 pounds) moves in
practice. the rest follow.
Ives, who will be a junior, is
6-4 and "at least 250 pounds,•
Howell said. "He played a lot of
tackle last year, and he's really
improved."
Also on the right side is
Onneno, 5-11, 285-pound
senior-to-be, who has learned to
pull more effectively and could
become a major cog in Howell's
simplified offensive scheme.
On the left side is Vla, a
junior next autumn who has
apparently fully recovered from
a back injury. Via, 6-2, 275, is
quick on his feet and has
improved his strength.
McBride (6-3, 240), a junior
next season, is still growing.
"He went into wrestling last
season and came out much
more physical, much more
aggressive and a lot quicker on
his feet," Howell said .
"All five guys are real solid,
and they've worked really bard
on the weights, to go along with
their good size, so the offensive
line is really developing into our
strength.•
For two consecutive years, it
was Mesa's line that helped the
Mustangs reach the CIF Play-
offs, including advancing to the
CIF Division VIIl championship
game in 1993. It was a line that
helped running bac;ks Binh Than
and Charles Chatman break
records.
"It's the real deal," Howell
said. "We've had them on the
sled, and they're pumping away.
I've been impressed every day
with their quickness and
strength. The key is, are they
willing to keep working another
eight or nine weeks? If they
keep doing that, we'll have it
made."
Howell said the line is about
nine deep, with Chris Shanley,
Nick Lefever, Brandon Jones
and Matt Rudesill backing them
up. For now.
0
All but about four or five
starting positions are up for
grabs, Howell said, and with 50
to 55 play~ out for spring foot-
ball, it appears Costa Mesa has
a chance to return to CIF .
"We're still trying to find a
quarterback who is going to
lead us,• Howell said. •Defen-
sively, I see a lot of good people,
who really display a lot of quick-
ness. We can't stand up and stop
somebody; we've got to attack
on defense, and we've got some
athletes. U we work bard from
now until August, we're going
to be serious. We could twn it
around and go back to OP. U
they'll work bard this summer,
we'll be competitive against
anybody we play (including
Edison on Sept. 27). H
Danny Baume and Ronnie
U evanos, both of whom will be
juniors, are expected to battle
until September for the starting
quarterback spot.
0
BJYan Leahy, a basketball,
volleyball and high jnmp stand-
out at Mesa, is expected to come
out for football and give it a shot
at tight end. •tte needs a. little
weight work, but he's a 6-5, 190-
pound tight end who can block,
and he's got that winning atti-
tude,• Howell said. "If you
throw him a ball eight or nine
feet up there, a comerback's
going to have a tough time
defending him."
0
Another competitive position
is running back, where Steve
Herzog, Vince Hamade and
Richard 'JS'rice all seem capable
of becoming 1,000-yard rushers,
acco~dJng to Howell. "Hamade
is 5-4 112 when he jumps, but
when he hits people, it hurts,"
Howell said.
Herzog, a starting outside
linebacker last year u a sopho-
more, had an outstanding year
as a running back on the fresh-
men team in 1994. Price made
an athletic imped thil spring in
track and field, advancing to the
CIP Division m preliminaries ln
the 100 and 200 meters.
,• •' ,.__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~--'
•• ,, .,
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NICK
~ONTINUED FROM 81
1' I ,• take all the technical stuff -your own sails,
:: your own mast -.and it's like surfing,• AcRun-
" son said. ·u a guy gets on the same type of !: board as you, you try and catch better waves
11 and make better decisions."
:: All of the sailors in the Olympic Laser Trials
:• used the same type of vessel.
;: Adamson. 5-foot-t 1, about 155 pounds,
,, also recently placed 17th out of 134 Lasers at
:: the World Championships in South Africa,
!· alter being ranked 11th in the world. He has
:: been the top American in numerous Laser
,, events, arguably the toughest class of all in I; which to compete.
:.....=_ "Nick'1 actuallt quite mall for the Laser
, Class,• l41d Bv~·· Mike Waatten, the clu.b'•
Member of the Year in 1995, and Adamson's
secondary spol\sor lnto the club, behind his
father, Richard.
•Nick has trouble keeping on weight, so he
has trouble upwind. But he comes downwind
real well. He can m ake boats get up on the
waves llk.e a surfboard. He seems to do that
real well1 It's feel thing."
Wathen has been Adamson's drum-beater
since he began his Olympic campaign. "When
he won, I was as choked up as if it wu one of
my daughter's winning," Wathen said. •1 was
just spinning .•
Adamson'• amazing consistency through·
out the serte5 not only gave him the win, but
put him ln a position to W a medal contender.
In addition tc;> bis conslstency, Adamson'a
wind downwind gav him a dJ.stinct advan-
tage over the relt of the fl l at the 1\ials. No
matter wh rre he 1eemed to start, Adamson
wu able to grind through the fleet, regularly
~oaung from th middle of the pack and mov·
ing into the top 10 in just one leg.
Rare in the Laser Class, Adamson uses little
heel in his downwind sailing, instead keeping
the boat fairly flat.
Adamson, who has sailed since he was 5·
years-old in Rockwell, Texas, will have his
grinding work cut out for nun in the Olympic
Games, when he faces Robert ShJedt of Brazil,
the top-ranked Laser sailor ln the world.
"He's definitely the favorite, but all the
good guys are going to be there,• Adamson
said. •I've beaten all thote guys, including Mr.
Shiedt. All that matters ll this one ntgatta. All
the people went lO win a medal, or bring a
medal home, so you feel a li~blt of pressure.
But there's more pratl'UJ'e to ge7 there and get
to the finu, the Olympic:t. • •
1be dMlgnated lMlr-ldlna da&al m the
Atlanta Gimm ... July 22-25, mil July 29 aiJd 31.
On Weclwday, Ade._ returoed to
Sev~ Ga., to tndn. He ~-ttaytng
there '"-Ill tbe 0.... tu. completed.
Newcomer will set at UC
Santa Cruz. wbUe Coleman wW
play at UCLA and Badorek will
middle block at UCSB.
Coon and Bia.ck will continue
their collegiate play at Orange
Coast College in the fall.
While the boys will play for
the North team, the local girls
will represent the South, sJ)on-
sored by I Dig. When the teams
are selected, fair player
distribution factors into where
players were placed.
Newport -Corona are the "middle
areas."
The girls North team is
sponsored by TYR clothing,
while the South boys will wear
YAGA Ruby's Jaguar Diner will
cater the postgame awards
ceremony at the Newport gym
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 81
Brett, Carew, Eddie Murray, Stan
Musial, Hank Aaron, Lou Brock,
Al Kaline, Carl Yastrzemski, et al.
Michelle is the wife of Angel
pitcher Mark Langston; Kitaeu is
the fiancee of Angel pitcher
Chuck Pinley (Newport Beach).
Mrs. Langston outbid the future
Mrs. Finley with a $25,000 offer.
"I knew Michelle would outbid
me," Kitaeu said. "Once she gets
her mind set, she'll never stop .
She would've gone to $1 million."
0
DeCinces, who devoted his
services full-time to the event,
was an Angel teammate of
Carew's in the 80s. Carew's
daughter, Michelle, died or
leukemia April 17.
0
DeCinces, a Big Canyon
Country Club member, bas for
several years been on the Board
of Directors for Orangewood.
In Thursday's golf classic,
DeCinces' foursome finished
third on Pelican Hill's Ocean
Course with a 58, behind Cory
Snyder's foursome (55) and a
fivesome that included former
Ram kicker Mike Lansford and
fonner Angel pitcher Mike Wrtt (56).
On the Unks Course, the
foursome that included Bobby
Donas, veteran Mighty Ducks ,
defenseman, won with a 56.
Bobby Grich's foursome lost in a
card-off, while Garry Templeton's
foursome was third.
0
•It's the least-funded of all the
cancer research, and it's to
benefit those with potentially the
most longevity of life," said
DeCinces, a tournament
committee member, whose son,
Tun. was drafted this week by
the Baltimore Orioles in the 16th
round, the same organization in
which the eld,er DeCinces broke
into professional baseball.
According to Reid, the event
will continue each year. PCRF
works to improve the quality of
life and survival rate of children
with malignant diseases.
Cl
On the heels of last year's
record-breaking donation, the
AirTouch Cellular Golf
Tournament at Pelican Hill set
another fund-raising standard on
May 6, producing more than
$250,000 for the Orange Cowity
Red Cross.
It's the second consecutive
year that the tournament merited
the largest donation from a
single event in the chapter's
and Mikasa volleyballs continue
to support our local volleybaJl
needs u the official ball of the
all-star matches.
The event management is
handled very professionally by
McClellan Sports Manageme nt
Group with Bobby Nichols'
expertise as the catalyst. Bob
McClellan manages many of the
top beach volleyball players.
Interestingly, at this week's
Corona del Mar awards
ceremony, both Coleman and
Campbell received the Rocky
Morgan Award, given annually
to CdM's most well-rounded
students. Academics and
leadership are as important in
the award as athletics. Th.is tells
you something about Brian and
Kelly.
30-year history.
0
Newport Harbor High math
teacher Steve Dye, the school's
longtime golf coach, shot a
5-under-par 67 on Sunday at Los
Serranos Lakes Golf and Country
Club in Chino.
~It's a pretty difficult course
(129 slope rating), and I've never
played with a guy who shot 67
before," said current Sailor
Coach Jim.Warren, who played
with Dye and Tom Pickens, the
school's freshmen coach.
Dye had six birdies and one
bogey, paning every other bole.
He's gearing up for the qualifier
of the U.S. National Senior Open
at Friendly Hills in Whittier.
Six years ago, Dye shot a 68 at
Mesa Verde Country Club and
missed qualifying for the senior
open by one stroke .
0
Officials of International
Sports and Event Marketing will
present checks next Thursday of
$15,000 to each of the three
charities involved during last
March's Toshiba Senior Classic.
It is still unknown whether or
not the ISM-organized Senior
PGA Tour event made a profit in
its first year at the Newport
Beach Country Club, because no
official word or announcement
has been made.
The inaugural event, managed
by Orange County Sports
Association, reportedly lost
money at Mesa Verde in 1995.
In addition. the golf programs
at UC Irvine and Orange Coast
College each received a $5,000
donation ..
0
Costa Mesa's Esteban Toledo,
who had a two-stroke lead
heading into Saturday's final
round of the Queen Mary Open
at Lakewood Country Club, lost
to Placentia's Mike Sugar in a
two-hole playoff and finished
second.
Toledo, who played in the
Taco Bell Newport Classic
Pro-Am this year, and Sugar both
finished at 270 after four rounds.
Sugar was the Will Jordan
Classic (Costa Mesa City
Championship) winner two years
ago at Costa Mesa Golf and
Country Club. The Queen Mary
Open is a Golden State Tour
event.
Sugar, who birdied the second
playoff bole, won $15,000. He
was tied for fourth entering the
final round. Toledo, who won
$10,000, had a two-stroke lead
over Doug DuChateau of
Eugene, Ore., after three rounds.
JUcb.ard Dunn's golf column
appears very Thursday.
UNCLE B OB
A good night for sailors
Tale of the Whale, 5:30 p.m .
llAlley ... 1982
'
June 9, 1996
HONORING
NEWPORT HAR80f\ HtGH'S
IOI HAILEY
SAILORS DAOC ANO REl.D COAOi ·
1963-1919
4 SUNSET LEAGUE CROWNS
1 llMNE LEAGUE CJtOWN
1 SEA vtF.W LEAGUE CROWN
BANQUET INFORMATION: 909-244-1.t()l
r
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THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
eagle girls/ 1995-1996
• .. . EAGLES Swbmaing: Seniors Meghan
Williams and Aileen Bennett, leaders
all season for Coach Jennifer Sheldon, j~ junior Hollie Fassnacht as Eagle
reptesentatives in the championship
finals (top eight ualifiers) of the league
meet.
Fassnacht finished seventh in the
100-yard butterfly and 11th in the 500
freestyle.
Harrison, 16th in the 50 free. 10 matches and finished 4-11 overall.
Volleyball: Black, McCartin, Softball: Black. utilized at pitcher
CONTINUED FROM 81
Prelimina.ries, 13th at section finals and
34th in Division m at the state meet.
Her 19:-43 c]ock1ng at section finals
took 30 seconds off her prelims time
over the rugged Mt. San Antonio
College course and she clocked a
Williams was eighth in the 100
backstroke and 15th in the 50
freestyle, while Bennett was eighth in
the 100 free.
Otben finishing in the PCL
consolation finals included: freshman
Blake PriJw, 10th in the 100
breaststroke and 13th in the 200
individual medley; Katie Brooks, 12th
in the 100 back; senior Patty Sharpe,
14th the 200 IM; Leslie Nefis, 14th in
the 100 fty; and senior Jessica
Deming and Dahle were the top and shortstop, anchored an
performers for Coach Dave Castle, inelperienced group fer Coach Sbarm Uhl.
who resigned after the season and will Black, also a second-team all-•.
be replaced next year by former U.S. league selection, hit .349 with eight
national team and Corona del Mar RBI and posted a 3.50 ERA in 66 • High All-CIP standout Dale Hall. innings in the circle.
The Eagles swept Costa Mesa to The Eagles finished 2-14, 0-10 in
capture their lone league victories in league.
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19:-4-4 at Fresno's Woodward Park in
the state meet.
The Eagles went 2-3 in league dual
meets as other contributors included
Melissa Inouye, Tanya Perkins, Sara
Hall, Brisido Salgado and Monica
Sanchez.
Socxer. Coach Jenny Tavares'
squad mirrored the 1994-95 team's
slow start, but unlike the previous
season, couldn't rebound in league to
earn a playoff berth.
The Eagles finished 4-9-3, 3-5-2 in
league, with half their overall victories
coming in one-sided verdicts over
Costa Mesa.
Gilliam netted two goals in a 4-0
first-round decision over Mesa and
Dorl Marsh posted a pair in a 6-0
blowout over the Mustangs, which
kept the Eagles' playoff hopes alive
with two games to play.
Dahle, who will continue her career
at Cal State Dominguez Hills, added
an Orange County All-Star Game
appearance to her PCL accolades,
splitting time between stopper and
midfield.
Rainey, a senior, and junior Jennifer
Brunick earned second-team
all-league recognition, while junior
Erin Bergman and sophomore Jennifer
Porter received honorable mention .
'IRck anjlflelcl: Hend~n·s
gold-med4f performance headlined a
trio of standouts at PCL Finals,
including Martinez and Angela
Apodaca.
The threesome's standout effort
helped Carlisle's squad im{>rove upon
its fifth-place dual-meet finish (1-7, 1-4
in league) to finish fourth, ahead of
Aliso Niguel and Laguna Beach.
Henderson also finished fourth in
the discus with a toss of 99-2 112.
Martinez was third in the 3,200
meters (11:40.05) and fifth in the 1,600
(5:23.36), while Apodaca, a sophomore,
was fifth in the 300 hurdles.
Martinez, utilizing a week's worth of
speed training, finished second in her
3,200 heat (11 :35.35) at section prelims
to advance to CIF Division m Finals,
where she finished fifth.
Hendenon also extended her
season to CIF Pinals, where she
finished sixth, one spot shy of a CIF
Masters Meet berth, but two places
better than her finish at prelims.
-
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
1995-1996 GIRL'S SPOTLIGHT
Left Araceli
Marttnez wins
the girls vanity
mile at Estancia
High School
Olympics while
right (above) the
Eagles' only
female water
polo player
Alleen Bennett
tries to keep the
ball away from
Valenda's
Robert Gibson
and (below) No.
1 singles player
Camella Jaeger
returns a back-
hand en route to
a victory against
Laguna Hills.
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KATSUYA RAINONE I DALY Pl.OT
MARC MAATlN I DAllY Pl.OT
The Phen-Fen Diet
'RAGING RUSS'. REVISITED
• Basektball Coach Russ Davis provided some sparks
in the Eagles' season-ending playoff loss to San Dimas,
picking up three technicals.
Eagles tied for third, battling for a
guaranteed playoff spot.
The Eagles, who surrounded
Waltz with talented juniors Jill
Black, Vivi Rodriguez, twins Jen-
nifer and Megan McCartin, and
Katie Stapleton, as well as athlet-
ic sophomore Amy Deming,
closed out the PCL campaign
with a pair of victories to tie Uni
for second at 6-4 and prepared for
what most believed would be a
prosperous postseason.
By Barry Faulkner, Dai/'y Pilot
COSTA MESA -San Dimas is,
perhaps, best known for its "Raging
Waters• aquatic amusement park.
For those following the 1995-
96 Estancia High girls basketball
team. however, the San Gabriel
Valley locale may forever be
recalled for •Raging Russ."
Coach Russ Davis was, in fact.
• thoroughly enraged by what he
deemed poor officiating in the 70-
54 CIP Southern Section Division
W-A quarterfinal playoff loss at
San Dimas High. The upset ended
the third-seeded Eagles' season
64 "minutes and three victories shy
of their desired dMtinatlon -the
Pyramid of Long Beach State for
the diviaion championship game.
•1t wu a homer-fest." Davis
told reporters after the ~ame,
which ended prematurely for
h1m. courtesy of three technical
foul.a and the corresponding ejec-
tion with m seconds left.
But ukle from their untimely
playoft alt. the 21 ~ Eagles gave
Davil ~to smile about during
his fifth final year on the job,
wbicb be reluctantly gave up later
to becaDe bead women's coach at
Southern California College.
Coming on a IUOC8llful sum-
mer, punctuated by a teem trlp to
Hawaii, the Jessica Waltz·led
Eagles ripped aff 13 straight wiDI
to open the IMIOll.
Rancho CUcamonga ended the
wtnn1Dg streak with a 55-5 t vt.cto-
ry, and the arrival ol. tbe iugVed
Padftc Cout League cenipUgll.
feet\U'iDg much tougller oppo-
' neats than tbe Bags. bad steam•
: i'Dllecl tn tbe ..-•uan. 111•1111""'1
I -to ~ JU8t bow good • lldl .... ....U,W91.
: TM doutMn didn't b&v. to l w.11 king for an amww, • tbe I .... a,med PCL ., wttb • I s1..-s ·"'*'V Clli1111 w1ng
• ...... ~ Unhwlltf.
' ,..,.aWIOW lam tD .,_.
I ..... MrtldlD ...... JdlMipla
' L
Laguna Hills, Davis' squad
knocked off Costa Mesa, 40-36,
en route to a 4-1 PCL start.
With senior point guard Jessica
Waltz (averaging 14 points, 7.6
assists, 7.1 rebounds and 5.4 steals
per game) running the show, the
Eagles appeared to be the only
team capable of giving Laguna
Hills a run in the second round
But Uni exacted revenge at
home with a 56-55 triumph to
open the second round and sub-
sequent losses to Laguna Hills
(51-27) and ~esa (40-39) left the
Adding optimism was the out-
standing effort of the supporting
cast against Rosary, necessitated
by foul trouble incuried by Waltz.
Despite the first-teom All-CIF
Division m and Newport-Mesa Dis-
trict Player of the Year oantributing a
frWly-.....
&;iy 12 lloWI ol illlnetion
.... l*IMndllr
2 '*' ol toh•. Pro
W.0/W/8ftltftlt/Lllnc~ .............. .,. ........
··~~ Sill•• (714t .,..,,02
only one point for the first 30:55 of the
contest, Rodriguez (a career-high 24
points), Megan McCartin (seven
points and six assists), Black (nine
points and nine boa.Ids), Jennifer
McCartin (10 boards and five points),
Stapleton (eight points on 4-of-4
shooting) and Deming (eight points),
sent the \'&ting Royals packing.
•That was basically next year's
team out there," Davis said of the
Rosary conquest. "The people who
think (Estancia) is going to be doWn
next year, need to watch that tape.•
S<>BER <;R.-\Dl .. \THl\
I ....
Look for •
the new
Coupon
Book ...
premiering
Thursday,
June 20
Pilot
I I __________ ...
'
111e :lOS\\'Cf IS l\'S1 f (O\\C:l'Cf lhc 11"¢0lt•
mcm of obesi11· Of JO 01'l'C\\'e1Ahl llmdi·
uon :ilso rcq111lt'' .1ppropo.11c hfcsf\1e lh.tng~ and an 111d·1tdulhztd. ph1"im·
SU!)('f\1<ed. compr~hens1H' appro.1ch
1nch1din~ die1. bch.1VKlf nl<'d1fic:mon nd
l'Wn 1-,c For ewC\nnc.·. 11 •~ 0111 fl.$ ~1·
pl\ a mJlln" nf pushing ~nscf\~ ~~
from the 1.mle' The Ol"" dtt't pills. v.htn
~ 3dm1ni,1tn'd I'll .a pll\ ICl3ll who
~ knm.i(od~t':lble ul their lOC. on ()( ;a
helpful ad1um k1f'" ht f'C'docuoo nJ
t.ettth1 11UJmcn;mcc
tall m1 oll'IC\' ~ an .irtllllllllnlent ind
"·c cin dc1crmmc 1! 1·uu an.· 1lf :llC one ~ goocl onditbt.e roi dmg lhlYapy ror
~in Ot an °'~~ ht rood1t100 •
'«'c .1l'i0 ofkr :tltcrl\.llt\'\' pniv.llll\
Avocado Medial GftMin
1441 AvOaido Aft. Suili 'for
Ncwpott Bach, CA 926'0
(714) 720-9266
M l'tr: Diliiii9 (~~Mio)
•
•• THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
PUIUC MOTICD PUii.iC llOTICll PUIUC NOTICU "11LIC NOTICll PUBLIC NOTICll "*.IC NOTICU
con11ect i. -o.cs: eon-ment eono 1n 11n MIOW'll ~ .-.eyoroen. "°"' Cl( a.nee. 1111 tt tot ,... under""~ n11me 0t PUILIC NOTICI PUIUC NOTIC! _.. ._. fll ;::\"'.:: 11!.!.J!!ITICD •---•-• "°' - --. ---'""...., -·..., -La•• ...,,. J. ---· ~:: ~ NOTfC! _:~i3 ~ •· rtee =~ c':c~:! ., ..._ IL v.ea. lldcl1tiona1 eoun ,bwe•• ...,... aJWttll POUR, ~.1'~~1 P"4lll ':::::U:.!.=• ":=a.~;..."':9 .... 11 a f: .C
WALK THROUGH· June d9nclng trwt 1N '"'°"'*' 14. D., ChHo•fl•r, --..,.. ••llDOON 11• T• Thie t&Mttrlltil wu ftltd Tiie to11owrno l*ION.,. Th• toirowtno peitona 11• .._. 0... Ill ~~ .!!~!TTOOfta 17 10N, 11 t:oO e.rn •• INurJnee le In eltect fn the c.-t c .... unnr C... ~Gr•tld ~or Dis-...... ,, lttDIS •• I. wUl'I the County Clttk of dOl'IO t>YalneH u: el Or· doing ~neu ": Oec:or lNIL ._. ......
·-GWc Maintenance & Op. amounlt ... !of11\ In the .... Dletrlat llk:t AttomtY lnYft'lgatlona ftMltANI Otiinge COUnl)' on 8-20-H -nee County flnanclaf Ser· Walihouse, 1en Sup1rr:or, •°'*~ .......
IMO FOlll 81DS etetlont Cornplllll loe&ted ~el ciondltlont. In IN 1'ublleh1d Newport Umlled WllYet end Ae: •UVllllt 81AN Tl· 1 ... aMaa11 vie". b) Jerry O. McOlotho Cotta Mna. CA G2628 -·~---~ Dlelrlct: COAST on Mc,add•n b1tw11n ewnt of (ellUfe to~ ltWo 81ach.C01._ M ... Oally atgnment AotM"*'1a wtO\ WNI Dally Piiot May'°· JUNO, lln S..ta Cootdlt'lltor, C) Judith Q. Jur111k, 14 1'1111 ..., 111 r••• ....,.. 'la
UNITY COLLEGE GOiden Wnt SttMt and tM contract and t•eoUle Piiot JUM 8, 13, tOM. IN tMnt CompenJ R• l'ubllalled Newport t3, l0, tM th378 McOlottllln Agency, 674 Wlnde, 1-.gune Nigl.lel, CA ,..., ....... k Nf ...
Ooth11d 1714) 195-ttM Ille r~ulred docurntnta, 111389 rated 10 Clr1aln t;0unty .. h c 11 Meal Daily Anton 81vd .. 18~. Co111 92871 -Dltw. Co1e1 .._CA
adllne: July l t, BID DATE: July tt, 18915 euctl bid NCUfltY wlU be Proptr1y lntlndtd to be ~ ~:~ t9". PUIUC lfOTIC! ~.CA 92121 Thi• bualntH It con-lmf. ."':'. ""*'**'
2:00 p.m. 11 2:00 p.m. fOtlelttd. Th• Fal\hf\JI Per· PUIUC NOTIC! lNMd Faclliliee u ~ of • Th387 J«ry D. McOJothUt\, 2924 t ducted by: an lndNldual TNllle • • • .., 11111-
of Bid Receipt: Of· BOARD DATE: JIAy 24, lorrMnel 8ond 9'1111 t• the County's Rtcowry Ctr· Plotltlwe lluelftesa Gi.t\ Canyoo Dr .. lagUNI Have )'OU alll'led CIOlnQ lly flf.,, ----of
ectOf or Pun:haS· 1996 INlln In full force Ind elfect OM1 waaa tlnc.t .. or Panklp&tlon. PUBLIC NOTICI ....... lletetlMftt Hals, CA 92653 business yet? no ..... ~ ......
• ut Communlly .~ No payment ah•ll be thtougtl t"9 glJllantM ~ OFFICIAL lttma were Cqntl~ IO: Thi followlflO P9flOtl9 "' This butlntn I• con-Judith G. Jwa»lf w. •D • ''~• ~~tlrict, Bldg. 0 • made tor work °' material riod u apeClfled In the PlllOCUDtNQ8 Otr M1y n 1"8 and Junt t t NOTICS OP doing butlntN N ' engllf ducted by: an lndtllldutl Thi• etattmt(lt was tiled ..__ ~ 'Tiie ...
,...ams Aven~. Cos11 und., the eonltac1 unteu gtnetal condltlont. ltM ' ' PUSLIC 1ALS Rentals I, 278t 8ayehort Have you stll1ed dolflO with IM County Cltrll of ........ of ............ ? 112628 and unUI the Reglsttar of Thi DISTRICT rH•rvH THa llOARD °" PYtillc Hearings. The mini ttorege facility, Drive, Newport &.ach, call> bullneu yet? yet, 11183 Orano• Colinty on •·24-116 MCt_,.~......,Clf 101 ldtntllleallon Contractor• veriftH to tM the fight to rlftet any or all IUPlllVllORI OP: Ad/ournld In IMmory of ICCOl'dl to lhe provision• fornla 1128&3·Mt0 Jerry D. McGlothlin 1998388Utl tt1t cl •I •., WU9d by
Name: Golden West Col-D1sm1CT lhal lh• CON· bldl or to waive any Ir· 09'ANQa COUNTY, Jo1tph HammaJlan of Lall• of DM~n 8 or th• Busf. Emily Eaalman, 2761 Bay. Thi• statement was flied Dally Pilot May 23, 30, IN IJIRIP9tY .. M ... ,...
lege New P11klng Lot & R• TRACTOR was properly II· regularlliH or lnrormalltln CALtP:ORNIA Forest noted cttftsman In neH and Proruslont thore Drive, Ntwpo11 with the County Cltl'k of June 8 t3 1996 th361 n .., ,..., ... eo.t...
palr lo E.ltlallng Patklng cen11d at lht llme the con· In any bide or In tilt bid· lanta Ana, Calffomla violin inalNmtnls at 11•30 Code Chaplet to s.ctlon 8e~n. Callfornla 82S63· Orano-County on 6-17·118 ' ' •lll•W Md Mv_,. a
lots: Bid No. t7f7 tract was awarded. Allr. ding. A regular m111lng of the a.m. ' · 21107181 hereby gh1e1 NO· 58t0 19983813805 PUBLIC NOTICE h llM ofh 1r11111..-
Ptace Bid• ate on nte ana CONTRACTOR not 10 I· As required by Stcllon Bo1td of SuPlfVl•Of• of Or· (SUL) TICE OF 'puBL.IC SALE Rudolph Engler, 225 t t Oally Piiot May 30 June e ca8an of h ,_.cl ..
1v1llabl1 at: Office or tht ~sed 11 eubject 10 penal· 1773 of th• Calllornla ang1 County, C1llfornl1, Kathlffn E Qoodno Alrpor1 S•l1·Storage ·will 8111 Place, Canyon lAkt, 13 20 1996 ' lh3&0 Flctlllout 8uelneat la $n7.-.a, I 19,...... Physical Facllltles Coordl· u.1 under the law. 11 the 11. Labor Code. the Director of also smlng as I.he Govern-• • eonduct a public sale 01 Callfornll 92587·71124 • • Name lt•tement M at h ""' d ... Ill
nator, Ardith Richey, Coast eense clanlficatlon spec!· lhe 0eJ)lf1menl of lhdu .. Ing Board of the Olsll1cts Clerk of the Board 01 the contents of th• .,o,. Thia bu1ln111 la con-PUBLIC NOTICE Th• following persons are ...,.,. bid IN! M lllu Community College Dis· fled httelnabo111 11 that of ltlal R1l1U0n1 of lh• State and AuthOriUea g<>11tmed Su1Mrvl110ra •P•c•l•l named below Cklcted by: a general P•r1· doing buslne11 u : Thomas '*' .. _.. lndllk.._.
lrlct: tp,~ Adams Ave .. • "specialty contractor" 11 of Callfornla ha• dew· by the Board of SupeM-Pub 11 • h • d N tw Po r I with the contents t>e1n9 netshlp Flotltlout lueln .. 1 Galletles, 2033 Seville Ave., ..._ In......., ti>'*". h
Bldg. 0 • Costa Meta, defined In Section 7058 of mined the gentrllly prtvalf. eor1 was held on May 2t, 811ch.Cosla Mesa DaQy IOld to tht hlghe1t bidder, H1IVe you lllftecl d~ Name lt•tement Newport Beach, CA 92661 ,..,...... .. ecc.,c ClllNtr'a CA0f71~E432t707 ERE BY th• California Business and Ing rates of wages In t"9 t996, at 9:30 a.m., with the Pilot June 6, t996. '°' lawful money of the bualneu ~et'? Y••· 3'6·1 TM following pertons are Jeannette Loulst "tnomas, cMc*a...., Oii i .._or G~'VE~I h 1 ti H b Prolt1slons Code. the •Pl" loclllty In which the Work lollowlng members being Th3llO United States of AMetlca PEmlly atman, O~al aolng buslneu as: '! 2033 Seville AvU NewPort ......... ...._ • cl-* 1 11 I • 1 ov• clatty contractor aw11dld ts to bl performed. Copjff J>l'ffent: Roger R. Stanton, (cash) anner Power Marketing, t> e.ach, CA 9266t *.wn by a 111111 or....,...
named School District or the Con111C1 for lhls Work or lhe11 wao-rate dtt.,ml-Chairman; James w. SIN•; PUBLIC NOTICE The iaie 11 being held to Thi• statement was filed Homes Hotline, 10101 l.Ud· This business Is con· ad uinb\ or a d'9dl Orange County, CalllOfnil shall Itself consttuC1 1 ma· nations, enllUed PREVAIL· Donald J. SahartUI: WllUarn lltlsfy 1 1andlord'1 Hen and with th• County Cieri! of wig St., VIII• Park, CA duC1ed by: 1n Individual drlllMI by a 111111 or.....,..
acting by and through "' jOrity ol th• Work. In ac· ING WAGE SCALE, .,. a. Steiner and Marian ona1384H9 wiU bl held at: 3800 Cam. Otange County on ~17-911 92687 Have you started doing .... and loll\ ...oc:t-
Governlng Board, ller~lnaf· cordanc1 with the prolll· maintained al the DISTRICT Berg11on. NOTIC• TO pus ortvt, N-Pott S.tch, , ... 3 .. 3849 Valerie Jean Van De ZllVer, buslnaas yet? yes, l·ff .non, MYll'llt wa·lltbi, !rArc':.!•"~: to : D~S. 1lon1 of California Bual· olllc• located 11: 1370 Certain Pre11nt1t1on1 CR•DITOlllS OF CA. 92660 on June 21, Delly Piiot May 23, 30, to101 Ludwig St.. Villa Jeannette L Thomas Of uvtnlll llir* "*"9d In • w rece • up o, n11s and Professions Code Adams A111., Cotl• Maaa. were made. 1996 at 10:001,m. Junt 11 13 19911 lt\372 Par)(. CA 92667 Thi• atatemant w11 filed lecaOft tuaz d h ~ t>ut not later than the Secllon 7059. CA 92626, Phy1lcal FacUf. Th• following m11ter1 BULK aAl.I! AND OF AuctlonHr'a Name: K.E. • ' Tt1l1 bualn111 la con· wllh the County Clerk of cW Code Md aulhottzlld to
above·sltlld lime, sealed All Work must be com· ties Planning, and are •v•ll· were heard and approved: INTENTION TO Auction Service, PhoMI: PUBLIC NOTICE ducted by: an lndlllldual Orange County on 5·21·96 do bUllnMI In "'* lillll.
bids for lhe award of 1 pleled within 1lghly·elgh1 able to any lnteretted patty Appointment, TRANIFl!R 908·873-0744, P.O. Box Have you alerted doing 18983884081 s.6d .... wll M made, In 1r1 co~g:t f~r th• projecl ae-(88) consecutive days. upon requ11L The Con-Commendations. · ALCOHOLIC 825, Rlalto, CA 92377, Flotltloua Buelnose buslnH1 yet? yes Dally Pilot May 30, June 6. "Al r con1tlkll1, RM~
set 11· Phased work la required In 1t1c1or shall potl a copy of ~rMmentt with I.he fol· Bl!Vl!RAGI! LICENSE Bondi: t411937300640. NafftO Stat•m.nt Valerie Van DI ZllVer t3 20 1998 th382 out cownant or wwr.nty, Development 01 ap-1ccordanc1 with th• con-this document at each Job ~ng: City of Tustin fOf (Uc c Sec 8 101 The public 11 lrwlled to II· Thi following per901'18 are m. 1tatement w11 liled • • usnu or .,........ ,..,o. proxlmat1ty frv1 acres par· trect documents. Time la of site. TM ConttaC10f and Adjuslmtnt of Watlf Valve ' • • d• 8 & p tend. Terms 11• C8lh onty. doing bu1lne11 H : al with the County Clerk of PUIUC NOTICI Int • . .,.,_.....,. Of en-~~yJmpro:.~ 11
•• !!ft~ th• H11nc1. Fallure to any 1ubcon11act0t under 11 Box": Clllrant for Inlet· ·~ .. •::3• ant ) Owner raservts the fight to Shade Ent1tprl1H, b Orange County on 4-24·96 cumtlf•icn, ID ..atty the
''Ill P11 """ .,... t complete th• Work wtthln shall pay not le11 lhan lhe change Modifications on .. .._ • •seq. bid Dlr1leld1 Productlont, tOt 1t98S881081 Notlcl or Trus .. 'S Salt Ale No lndabtiedneu MCUr..t by ~=curbing, tr"f:i~ the time set forth herein specified prevelllf'IO ral" of Route 73 at Ntwf)Ol'I Co111 Etorow No. 10989-MC A ' genttal dHcrlptlon of Cabrlllo Perk Dr., S11. E, Dally Piiot May 23 30 48871 s.var GE CAPfT ' Mid Deed d T""'-tcl-"""" 'lent areas. s. will result In the lmposlUon wages to all workera tm-Drive: Callrornla Otflct of NOTICE IS HEREBY tM property being sold, s.nta Ana, CA 9270t ' ' l H t191 1112 TMUW v.-. .........,, wllfoi In-
Ing par ng "'hj '91"''~ of liquidated damages '°' ployed In the execution of Criminal Justice PlaMlng GIVEN lhat • bull! Ule of along with lhe Identity of JamH Teague, t016 C•· June 6, l 3, t996 ll\374 J8'TRl~H You •• In Cllllu ~Md the
repair •nd pate ng o ex each day ol delay, In the lhe Conltact. tor Community United ror 111e(s and a transfer of al-the Occup1nt renting the brlllo Pat1c Or., Ste. E PUBLIC NOTICE l\&aA Of Trust. dllld ~ d the Note 1stlng asphalt concrete and amount set forth In th~ .. ,n-No bidder may wllhdrew Fullerton Safety Grant eohollc beverage license Is apace are as follows: Santa Ana, CA 92701 ' under a s11'993. untea you by Mid Deed Cl(
base materials, paint-out 01 formallon for Bidders. any bid for a perlod of ahcty Pro/ec1· Dlgltal Mapping. aboul to be made. 1032 Anthony Prov-Kevin John Mautino 2257 Flctltloue Bu1lneaa =u~ to rotlet our 0~ 1'Nlt Yllltt ....,... thereon 1x~111ng ~rrklng !'1•11• and Each blO must conrorm (60) days after the date H I Inc.. tor On·Call Photo-Th• names, Social Secu· 1nzanci Shelving, Hand Carfax Ave., Long B11ch, Name St•tement arty It ml'f ~ sold It 1 ou .. pnMdad " ._, NIM,
ot1 ".P•r ~g ma~ ngs, 1~ and be respontlve to the fOf th• opening ol bids. gra"lmetry Services; Curll• rlty or Federal tu Numbers Truck, Many Bxs. Contents CA 908t5 Tht followlng persons are Ille'. 11 you need 111 elepilnlDon plua ,..., dtilf'flll Md U ·
P1 cotton o sea coat an con1rac1 documents. Each A payment bond shall ba & Associates, Inc. and Peo-and addresses of the Unknown This bu1lneu la con· doing business as: Allanlls 1111 tur ol 111• procetdlngt peneadthe 'TNltlteand Cl(
rema;klng/rrstrlplng of f~P-bidder shall submit, on the required prior to 1xecullon pie For lrvlne Community S1ller(Transferee are: 2013 TrlbblH Music hall, ducted by: 1 llmlted part· Sales & Service 3303 Har· ~a1ri'sr:ou 'you slloukl con the trUlb Cl9lllild by Uld
PlQJt r(llt• y twenty· Ille form rurnlshed wltti the of th• contract and •h•ll be Health tor Privatized MAJID J. POUR ANO SHA· Video' Machine, Stools, nerahlp bor Blvd., H·8, Co11a MHI, 1 lawjer. on June 20. t996, It DeeddTNlt. CTC~ ~~ .11 b T ty contrae1 documents, a llst In the form set forth In the Greater Avenues for Ind• HIN POUR ANO FREI· Elect. Fan, Many Bxs. Con· Have you alarted doing CA 92626 IO:OO am NortftMlt M~ an "'*-Ccrponiaac1, '~ wi • 1 wen of the proposed aubcon-contract documents. pend1nce Services: CallfOf· DOON N. TEHRANI AND tents Unknown bYslness yet? no Andrian• M. NlchOls, 5042 s.Mcn ' Inc A M_,0.Sola 400 ~ ~ Fi~'!'.?'~~r (S25.00) 1 non-tractors on this project II Pursuant to Section 22300 nla Stale Unlv1t1lty Ful· IRENE N. Z. TEHRANI, 2066, Jay Evans, ~lse. James Teague Malaga Dr .. La Palma, CA COfpcnbon aS duly appomted sv.-. 11m1 Velty, c:A re -1 paymen ''" required by lht Subletting of the Public Contract 11rton Foundation tor Pro-3601 JAMBOREE RO .. Bu Contents UnknOwn This statement w11 llled 906~ T d Deed 01 Trus ..._ Phone· (81111 ~ f°' H Ch set 01 bid ana Subconaracllng Farr Code. the contract will con-lesslonal ServlCH. SUITE 20, NEWPORT teaiher Jacket, Car Dolly ' with the County Clerk ol This builness rs con· ruslll du~ "1..any ~ auq sa..100 ut. -.... in. ~oc;:;:;nts. Ch~ck~ s~oul~ Practices ~ci. Government lain provision• permitting Amendment to Agre• BEACH, CA. 92660 2t0t, James A. Davidson Orange County on 5-t0.96 ducted by: an Individual fr:":.id ~lcola N9a N9llY'fl, torrn..aon (111) a87«ZM, • P•Y• e 0 o~s Code Section 4t00 et seq. the successful .bidder to ments: State Department of The business Is known & Associates, Shelving, 1tff3083107 Have you started doing htnballd d wtfl 11 jollit llln· lty. °"8hln Oonwjee. ~omnwnlty College Dis· Each ,Bid 1hall '?' ac· sub~ll1ute ~ecuriues fOf any H111th Services tor Aids as: BAY COURT UOUOR Comp Monitor, Desk Da'ly Pilot J ne 6 13 20 business yet? yes, 5·1·96 anti •anTMIOl to secure Truat.•1 .... Ol'llclf,
tr • . companied by 1 certified or monies withheld by the Related Services: Santa The names, Social Secu-Chair Many Boxes Con· 1 u • • • Andrlane Nichols ......., 1 ' of Trinh Dlttd· O!NMIS • •hall be .1.tc•111ed In cashier's check or bid OlstrlC1 to ensure perform· Matgarita Water Dlaltlc1 fOf rity or Federal Tax Num· tents 'unknown ' 27, 1996 th395 This statement was flied ...,.,,illons ~ ~O f1nanaai • !11r~acebo ldeb~ified h1~1°~•· bond In an amount not less ance under the contract. Prima Deshecha Landfill bers, and address of tha 2216, Halley Harker, Roll PUBLIC NOTICE wilh the County Clerk of ~~· recorded Sep-ASAP20T7tll 5'30, "'· 1113 'i'C1 It s s a e than ten percent (10"'1 or Eich bid submitted In r• Reclalrnecl water Plp111ne. Buyer(Transteree are: Away Tool Chest. Stereo Oran e Count on 5-31·96 ~3 Int rnerul--~-----~~-':,~ed 1 ·~~ pubbllcl~ .'~~ the total bid price, payable 1pon11 to lhla Notice shall Conitructlon Items were SEAN TEHRANI, 27731 Cabfnel, Guitar Case, Skis Flctltloua Bu1lneH g 189~388S074 ::i;Jo1~34o 1:' boM W page PUBLIC NOTICI ~ • • 8 ove 5 a to lhe District 11 a guaran· contain, •• • bid Item, Id· awarded and changed. MOTHERLODE COURT, W/Boo1s Many Bxs Con-N St t t . · ..,._, di I Ill &and place. tee that the bidder, If Its equate sheeting, shoring. Certain Matters were ap-LAGUNA NIGUEL, CA. tents Unknown · ame a •m•n Daily Pilot June 8. 13. 20, of 111• OH-.-recor o • &crewMo.11Q'1111W a~cordan~• t 1
1W t~e proposal Is accepted, shall and bracing, or equlvll1nt proved regarding: 92677 2279 Charles B oa111s. d~~~ f~~~j~~~.P~:.0C'h:~• 27, 1996 th39t t:'~dtr~f= ~ ~~ M>TICE TI> CIWlfTOf'I OF IW ~ g~~tra~I Co~a 05~i promptly .. ecute the method, ror the protection Human Resourcts Items. As llstea by the, seller/LI· oay Bed, Many Biis. Con· man Four, L.P .. 264·86 Park PUBLIC NOTICE blictyiucuon to hlallesl bidder IAl£ Ucon. 0300 tht District r• Agreement. rurnlah a 111ls· or Ille and llmb In trenches PurchtSlng rtams. censee, all other business tents Unknown Circle, San Juan Caplst· I: cash or c:aell'ltr'I dltct (Met,. ..... to UCC Sec.
hi h bldd laclory F1lthful Perform-and open ucavatlon, Tract Map Items. names and addreuu Published Newport rano CA 92675 Fictitious Buafnesa (PIYlbll t 1111 1lmt 011111 In 1105)
q • 1~ 1 ~ ri wl er Ifs· anc1 Bond In an amount which shan conform to ap-Modification One lo Gov• used by the Seuertucense Beach·Costa Mesa Daily Chai>man Four LP (CA) N St te e t lawful 1 1 of Ille Unltld NOTICE IS HEREBY GM.N lnll
.16n •of ~~tr~or~s ':i: not less t~ o) nef hhundrldal To place en •d In 1rnm1nt License Agr•• whithlnd t,hree yhears,. t before Pilot June 6, t3, t996. Ronald E LeGrant Gtnerai The ~;!n,; pe~o~s ere Stallt ~o:lt. c:atlllf'I c:hd a bulk ule is about to be made I h percent (1vv .. 0 I • IOI Cl tfl d ment '°' Orange County I • a I II.IC IS s was Th388 Part 26486 p .k Cl Cle ol .... . TPCS . ~.. NIOOnll The name(S) ano buslnm • at the t mt I ar the bla price furnish a Pay. ••• • Sheriff• Department u11 ol sent or dellvared to the ner. ., r • a ng .,..s1ness as: dtawn bY a ,,_ or ~ of the sellfl{s) Mii
• Call 842·58'78. Flring Ra e and Training Buyer(Translttee are: AS PUBLIC NOTICE San Juan Capistrano, CA Dlstnbu1ors. 666 Bakff St. Bank, a Stn or r.dtral Ctedll AtMO SALAM.\ ~ 10u•I ' f!Jauc NOTICES F1cllltle1 ':l Marine Corp• PROVIDED TO BUYER BY 92675 Ste. 229, Costa Mesa, CA Union. Of a Staal or Fldefll s ...._ Beat/I CA PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES B c p di 1 SELlfR Flclltloue Bu11n .. 1 This business Is con· 92626 Slvtngs and LOMI AasodallOn. llfft. ...... ...,11 . . • c~~r~nl• amp en •on, Th• asset• to be sold are Name Stlltement duded by: • llm1ted part· Kim Allan Vieira, 2124 ~ AaoaaDon. or S1v1nQs ~.~ as BUO'S
\ , ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
CITY OF COSTA MESA
~OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1har a public hcanng will be held by rile Cost1 Mesa C11y
.P>unc1I on June 17. 1996 01 6 JO pm. or u soon 1hcre.1ftcr as possible, 1n lhc: Council •~ambcn of C11y Hall. 77 Fair Dnvc, Costn Mesa, on •he following item: • )'he 1996-97 Budget for Ille C11y of C0511 Me11 will be cons1cle~d for adopuon &1 1h1s
me.line The following 1s 1hc proposed alloca11on of r~urccs in sumnwy, for 1he Fiscal
)',.. 1996-97
• 1996-97
Fund Prclnnuwy Bud&e1
General Fund
Gu Ta• Fund
Prop 172 · Pubhc Sofe1y
AQMD ··AB 2766
HOME Program
Feckr1I Revenue shnnng
Communny Oevelopmen1 Act
• Park Developmcnl Fund
: Om111gc F«s
• l.ancbcapc Assc"menr Dismc1s
~ ... Traffic lmpacl Fets
• Devclopmcn1 Tnp ChaTgcs
NilrCOl1cs Fanenurt Fund
Fire Pr0lec11on Oc•dopmcn1 Fets
1974 Open Space Bond Debi Sen-ice
191 S Ac1 Bond Dd>c Scmcc
• Measure "M" Constr1JC11on
Mra.iure "C" Construcuon
financing Au1hon1y Cons1nic11on
Vehicle Parking 01S1nc1s
Cap11al Aue1
Equ1pmen1 Replaccmcm Fund
SS7.604,760
1.889.900
416.140
.120,000
~:17.000
2.200
1,491.000
42.1,000
67.800
9.8~
114,000
66.000
620.SRO
106.200
262.080
809.6'0
2.~n.900
ll0.000
760.700
1,900
2.211.720
2,.578.220
TOTAL 1996-97 PRELIMINARY BUDGET S7M18.880
Th11 budget may be oamtncd dunng normal ""ori.1ng hours (8 00 a m ind S 00 pm I In the
Cny Clerk's Office locaccd 11 77 Fair Dove. Costa Mesa
NOTICE IS nJRTHER GIVEN thal 11 wd tune and place all 1n1eru1cd persons may appe111
and be hean:I by 1he C11y Coonc1I on 1hc aforemrn11oncd 11em
MARV T. ELLIOTT, Deputy City Cltrk
Pubhmcd Ncwpoo Beach -Cosla Mesa D111ly P1lo1 June 6. 1996
STARTING
ANEW
iB US/NESS?? • • • • • • • • • • • •
Sale of 'surplus Property· dtscrlbed In general as: The following persons ara nerihlp Vista Laredo, Newport Bank specified In secllOl1 51 02 SUS
Unl\/erllt Drive ProJsot furnllura fixtures equip-doing business as· lnClrT Have you started doing Beach, CA 92660 of Ille Flnanaal Codi 1110 M other busmess name(s)
Oran /County Com' 10• ment and stock rn' uade of Technology, t382 Bell Av· bualne11 y11? No This business Is con· aull10ttad to do buslnen In this and ldclress(es) used by thi
aatlon gs ey P a LIQUOR STORE and are enue Tualln Callfornla Chapman Four. LP, Ro· dUC1ed by: an lndlvfc,jual sta'9). at In TIMI Front Of Tiie setler(s) wiu.n the past thret Orang.Ucounty Develop-located at: 360t ·JAMB(). 92680 ' nald E. LeGrant, General Ha~• you started doing Flagpoles Al Th• Main Entry years. as stated by the se!Jer(s).
mtnt Agency Conlrlbutlon REE RO .. SUITE 20, NEW· Pen • Interconnect, Inc., PTarthl~eratatement was filed t>uK.s1nA.essViye1 t? yH. 3+96 ~tall To40Tll1 !1 tPlacenE ~~Mclll .,, T~ne1~-on n ""to-a of to County Bankru t Rt PORT BEACH CA. 92660 (Utah) 2351 S 2300 W • Im 1e ra ... n r ~ · "''~"' ,,. ....... 1 .,.1 "" cov1ry Plan. p cy • The kind of i1cenS1 to be Salt uike City, UT 84t t9 • with lht County Clerk of This slatem1n1 was lil10 Ave ~Ila. CA all rlglll 1111 tlle Chet uewove office of the
AB 8 Determination-transferred Is: OFF-SALE This bu1ln1n 11 con-Orange County on 5-21·96 with the County Clerk of and 1ntllrest conveyed lo and seller 1s 2607 Pac:ma Terrace,
Goodman Annexation No. GENERAL RETAIL PACK· ducted by: a COfPotallon 19983884083 Orange County on s.3t·96 now held by It under Slid deed MSSK>n ~eJC). CA 92692
15t to County San1111lon AGE LIQUOR LICENSE The reglatranl(s) com-Dally Pilot May 30, June e, 19903885073 ol trust_, and to Ille lolowing Tiit ~(s) and buS!ness
District No. 7. NO. 21-26006t now luUld menoed to transact buSl· 13, 20. 1996 tt\383 Dally Pilot June 6, 13, 20. ~11bed PfooertY..,sttu:•~: IOclrtSS of Irle llUYtl'(s) Mlt County Maintained Road for the premises located n111 undtt the ftctitious 27 1 996 th392 u .. a ortSlld coun., an · ROHALO N BROWN and A06·
Mileage 3601 JAMBOREE RO., business name(s) listed PUBLIC NOTICE · to-Wit Parcel 1· tot 35 of tract ERTAB BROWN, 325 W 1111,,,ra lntrod~ction of the Metric SUITE 20, NEWPORT above on: Aprll 9, 1996 Fictitious SuslnHI PUBLIC NOTICE ~L!322C 4. ~ 'r ~Of ~C:: AYll'll•.Oranoe. CA92£i66 Overlay Resolutlon for the BEACH, CA. 92660 Pen lnterconnact, Inc.. -· oun., o lllQ9. Tiie assets being sold are Envlronmental Manag• Thi bulk tale I• subject to Wayne Wright, Vice Presl· N•m• Statement Flctltloue BuelnHt of Calfornla. as I* mao r• gene~ OesCllbed a Stock i~
menl Agency and 1h1 C11ifornl1 Uniform Com· den1 The following per1on1 11e Name Statement corded In bOoei 636, PIOtt 8 Trade, Fum1u11. f1~irts. Equ1p-
County Surveyor merclal Code Section This statement was filed doing bu1lne11 es: Liberty The following persons art 111rough 12 and more compls•IY ment. and Goodwin ol a certan Selection of 0Peralor for 6106.2 wllh lht County Clerk of Flnanclal Planning, 31726 doing business as: Coast described In NICI cited OI ~sl Sandwich Sl\Op Manchesler Avenue Com· The anllclpat1d date or Orange County on 4-18-96 Rancho Viejo, #100, San Custom Wood Design, Tiie strttt address and olher Bot1ness known as · ·euo·s
pie• Parking Facllltlas. lhe sale/transfer Is: JUNE 199838805t7 Juan Capistrano, CA 92675 1963A Church Sa .. Costa common OtSlgna11on or lht SUBMARINES'·
Selection and Authoriza· 24, 1996 at the ottlce of law OHlcH of Barger & Richard Gaylord Wagner, Mesa. CA 92627 lboYt dHCrlbld '~ Is Ind art located at: 2030 Ouarl
tlon to Negollala wilh pro-0PPortunity Escrow. 1205 Wolen Limited liability 4C Phaedra, Laguna Niguel, Alastair Maciver Macken· ~rporttd lo btM: t7 ,.. 26to27~ Street. Newport Buell, CA vlder1 ror HIV Prevention E. Chapman Ava., Orange. • ant. 92677 zle, t963A Church SI., .... cit Costa ea. ""' Tiie llulksilt s ntended to be Services. Ca. 92666 Part n., sh IP. 1 9 6 o O Pamela Wagner, 4 Pha· Costa Mesa, CA 92627 0000 AHlssor's Parctl NO. consumrnll!d ~ ~ office OI
Mental Health Eatly and The 1mount of the pur· MacArthur Blvd.. Eighth edra. Laguna Nlgu1I, Cahf. Thi• business Is con· 424·521-12 TIMI un!*SIQntd OISCOVERY E'SCROW COtlPAH'f
Periodic Screening Olag· chase price or con11dtr· Floor, Irvine, CA 92715-92677 ducted by: an Individual truslel drscams any lidty tor 7177 Centrr Ave SUiit 440 noall and Treatment Plan-aUon In connection with the 2427 This business Is con· Have you started doing any Incorrectness of Ille n-111 ~n'Ong1Dn Beith CA 92647 and
Ascal Vear t99S.1996. transfer of the license and oaily Pllol May 16, 23, 30, d~ed by· husband and business yet? yes, 5·26·96 address and • olhtf common ll1e nall'ted saie dill 15 .line
Oenlal or an Appeal Ap. bu1ln1ss, $195,000.00 June e t996 th360x wile . Alast.alr MackenzJe deslanalion. If ~· sllown 24 19116 ncatlon for a Permanent which Includes lhe esll· • Have you started doing This statement was filed l'llftTn. sad All wil be maoe. • ~auagl1tUcense. mated Inventory of PUBLIC NOTICE bustness0ea?yes,4·16-9t with the County Clerk orbllt Wlllloul ~t Of war· Call~alllll~~15C:~ro:
R1d11lgnatlon of the S55,000.00, payable as fol· Richard ·Wagner Orange County on S-3t·96 tanly, expresstd or Implied Code Seco 6106 2 Santa Ana River Floodplain rowing: Flctlllou1 8utlnH1 This st•1men1 was flied 19903885089 regarding tltlt. pOSHUIOn. or Tiie na: and IOdttss of the
from Zone A to Zone A911. DESCRIPTION AMOUNT Nam. e Stalement Owlth thee County c1-;: 9601 Dally Pilot June 8 13 20 1naim1>r~~ PIY 1 ~ pef10n with wllOm d1un1 be Approval In Concept of Ir· t check $5,000.00 The followlng persons are range ounty on 4· • • • • remaining .,. • ._ sum o u•• 0 ~
vine Coast Assessment 1 demand note $85,000.00 doing bu1ln111 11: a) Etns 19983880897 27, t996 lh394 note(s) Stc:Ured by said ONd ol ~~ ~VER~ ESC AOW
Dlslllct No. 88-1 Bond Con· 1 not• S55.000.00 Rutty Group, b) Ellis Dally Pilot May 23, 30, PUBLIC NOTICE ~Sl Wiii! in~~st ~·on) ·ac1· Sule 440 ·~ft·-~r II WCA, version 14, Issue A of 1 note $50,000.00 Group Real Estate, 23 Cor· June 6, t3, t996 th386 prOVlded In ....., no-ls • • 1 • • ... .,, ..... .,...ac .
1996. It has been agreed be-pora1e Plau. Suite 240, Flctltloue Bualneu vanoes. 11 any. undtr IN 11m1s 92647 ana the last day tor f~ng
Scenic Easement over tween the Seller/Ucensee NewPort Beach, CA 92660 PUBLIC NOTICE Name Sl•tement of 1111 Said Deed Of Trust nll-dams l'J any creator sNll be
Aliso Viejo Goll Course. and the Intended Buyer/ Newco RNlty Corp., (CA), The following perions art malld lees. ch•ges and I.I· .kine 21, 19116, wllCll ts Ille RePol'I and Recommend•· Transftlff, 11 required by California Fictitious lu11n .. a doing business aa: Ou-oen• of 1111 trut .. llld ol 1111 business day belM the ll'lllO·
tlons from the Human Rt· Sec. 24073 of lh1 Business Thl1 bu1ln111 la con-Nam• Statement rango ConsultJng, 19451 truslS cnalld by llld Clltd o Plied ult cSatl speahed •l>CNC
IOIKCft Director r~11dlng. and Professions Code, that ducted by: a corporation Thi following ~s are Pompano Lil .. llOt, Hun-ml to wit Said orociertY Dated May 14. t9111l extension of Pftvisiona or the consldetatlon tor the Have you llarted doing doing buslneu as. a) New lington Beaeh CA 92648 being SOid for Ille ~ Att.£D SAL.NM. Selle<
the t994·96 Memorandums transfer of the business business yet? No Age Trends, b) New Age Marllyn Mo;tlra, 19451 PIYlllO Ille obllgatlons RONALD N BROWN. ROSERTA
ol Undef'ltandlng tor c.,. and lleenst la to bl paid Ntwco Really Corp .. Supplements, 8400 Uncoln Pompano Lil 1 10t Hun-by llld deed or llUSt, 8 BROWN, ~l{s)
taln Represented E"'ploy· only after the ttansrer has ChartH Neubauer, ExlCU· Ave .. •4204, Buena Park, llng1on Beach: CA 928"8 lea Ind QOeOMS of Ille. OllCOVEAY ESCAOW COMPANY
111. bHn approved by tt11 O• tlve'Vlc•Presldent CAto620 This buslnen 11 con· total arnoun1 of Ille u TTllC.nerA-.. Slitl'40 Revised Resolution Com-pal'lmerrt of Alcohollc Bev· Thi• elatement was filed Koll lnlernetlonal Group, ducted by: an Individual omdl>ll baltnot. In.,. fNllO/IOfOn S.11:11, CA~'
mlttlng th• County to pro-erage Conltol. wllh the County Clerk of Inc., (CA), 6400 Uncoln Have you started doing hreon, toaell1er Wiii HewOOll Buch-Oosta Mina
vtda funds to meet provl· DATED1 APRIL 22, Orange County on 5-2Ml6 Ave., 14204, Buena Park, buslnt1s yet? no sonabtf •1inad C0111. ex• CN36Wll61863SMN .lJn 6,
19983884019 CA 80620 Marllyn Moreira J*IMS llld adVMC8S 11 IN 1QQ6
Law Ofllcet of Keller Thi• business Is con· This statement was ftled ot lnltlll pubbtlon ol Ille H
Weber 6 Dot>rott, 1m0 d~::i ~~~ 1 ~:g~~ll~~ng wllh the County Clerk of r201 •• :s~r\i.S. "M*l~NI
MacArthur Boulevard. l>YslneH yll? No Orange County on 5-31·96 und«Slld Dlld OfTrustllert
Eighth AOOf, Irvine, Cllffor· Kon lnternatlonat Group, 19883885070 rore UICUlld and ~
nit 92715-2445 Inc., Kevin Koh, PrHldtnl Daily Pilot June 8, t3, 20, Ille unellf1igllld 1 Mmtn
Dally Pilot May 30, June e. Thi• statement was filed 27, 1996 lt\393 rdOn of dtfaultlnd demtnd
t3 20 t998 tt1381 with lhe County Cleric of CLASSIFIED 1111 • .,d a Wt11M nooc. o ' • Orange County on 4·24·96 • CllllUtt and tltclloll to ltl. PUBLIC NOTICE 19983881223 11 • the retource you undtf'SIOned QIMCI llld
2 can count on to 1111 a 01 Clltaill lf'ld lleCIOll to ... ~otttiou. ••Ines• Dally Pilot May 3, 30, myriad of mtrchan· dlCI _, lie IUnlW •
N•m• lt•t~t June e. 13, t9118. lh373 diae Items. beCIUH =.r: llf°'*1Y .. a::..
The following persons art The Community our column• compel more 111111 111rte mOftllt dolf'IO bYalnHt 11: Jen11n Market Place. quallfled buyert to ~ Pleil such reconlllon
Capital M1n1gemet11. 511 CIH1llled calll FOf Ille lnlormatlOn, '*-
Ftmleal Avenue, COfona 842·S8'78 842·5&78 (71•)573-1965. Fii Ho. 41171
dll Mar. Callfornfl 92625 Oa•d: MtY 24. 1M MMINlll 011n Jenltn, 518 Femllar ~ ........_ lit.,
Avenue, Corona def Mat, .,.... 3636 Cimino Dtl
Celllornla 92625 NOlll S1t19t 200 SM Diego,
Thie bUtlneae le con-921ot (619~ e· duded by:.,, lndMclu.I HOll'Me. AuGM!riad Thi regtatr9nt commenced Tum b
10 11snsact t>Y .. neu undtf WMAl1"6 the flctrlloua name or • NMll titted lboW OC'I: PUii.iC MOTICI
Mortuary * Chapel CrematJon
1~~y
942 ... , •
11x legal Department at the Daily Pilot is pleased
Apfll 30. 1"8 Dean Jlnttn Thlt ttattmenl ... filed
with the County Cltrk of
Oren~ CountY on 5-15-H to announce a new strVice nbw awilabk t.o new businesses.
~ wiJJ now SF.ARCH the name for you aJ no txhrl chargt, anJ Sl1Vt you the
time and the trip to the Cwrt House in Santa Ana. Thm, of count, aftD' the ~arch
is compktai we wiU fik your fiaitious businm name stalnnmt wiJl.1 the Onmty
Ckrk. publish ona a wttlt for four weeks as rtquired by law and thm file your proof
of publication with tht County Clalt.
Pl.ease stop by ta file your fotitious business st41mlml 111 the Daily Pi"'t, 330 W.
Bay St, usta Mesa. If you cannot stop by, p!Mse al1J us llJ (114) 642-4321 and we .
wiU mah armngmimts for you t.o hanJJe this proaduw by mail
. If you should have any~ questions, p/Mse mlJ us anJ wt wiU bt more than
thdw~~ D in~n-~Ot
COSTA MHSA
, ... 3UH4e
Lew OfllcH or Good,
Wlfdman, HegnHa l
Walley, 5000 Camput Of ..
Newport IMch. CA 92980
D•lfV Pilot May 30, JUnt e.
13, 20, 1"8 N7GX
PUIUCftOTICI
"Dog."
"Perro."
"Hund. 0
"Chien."
"Otplll
When Words Are
Not Enough
..SHC/allzlng ltt
S11mpalh11 flococn•
2983 Herbor Blvd
Coate Mesa
540-3135
cm=
Gette
t•e ... le
~'· Attit,
haiement,
~ IUMl eloilet
tllitlpt .. , .... .•.. ,.
·'
J GENERAL ....
' I • t POLICY
·--~ ..
I I -'"i ( I I . .. ~ I
--• I I 'lJ I
\ . •, I I I ' .. ~ -
~
n ...
0 USIFIED HOURS
Telephone 8am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:00am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
BY PHO•
(714) 642-5678
BY FAX
Rates and deadlines are
subject to change without
notice. The publisher
reserves the right to censor, ·
reclassify, revise or reject
any classified
advertisement. Please
~.: . .. -. DAILY PILOT
DEADUNIS
Mcnlay ............ Friday 5:00pm
IOH1to 'Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ....... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ........... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ................ Thwsday 5:00pm
(714) 631-6594
(Please include your name and
phone nW11M and we11 call you
back with a price quote.)
BYMAILORIN
PERSON:
330 West Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92h27
Comer of Newpcxt Blvd & Bay St.
report any error that may
be in your classified ad
immediately. The Daily
Pilot & The Independent
accept no liability for any
error in an advertisement
for which it may be
·responsible except for the
cost of the space actually
occupied by the error.
Crecht can only be allowed
for the first insertion.
EMPLOYMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS •E•M•P•L•O•YM--• EMPLOYMENT
2920 ENT 5530
·H·o·u·s·Es·1--· NEWPORT NEWPORT
-CONDOS BEACH 2169 BEACH 2669 COMMERCIAL liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii REAL ES TATE
· 5530 MERCHANDISi
-FOR RENT Baytront w/boat dock Npt Ht• Apt 2 Br, 1 WARM LOVING VOLUN----------tmmed openlng•t Ret•ll
fOUM. HOUSIHO loc on pvt Island. Ba, pool, carpi, $795 TEER HOST FAMILIES EMPLOYMENT Clerical, Warehouse •BRIDAL SALON ANTIQUES 6010;. Ol'l'OllTUNITY 3B0/2BA, FP, view, No pets. 738 Tustin ---------needed for High and Ass em b 1 y Leading Costa Mesa
... • ............. _1 111 1 ••1 In dry. gar. Call for Ave. 642· 7658 BUSINESS School Exchange stu· 5 530 Ca ll Omni Expr••• bridal salon will train jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiii
""" ---· 1 I n"' s ---------price/avail. 650-3683 d t S iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _,,,.,laM'iecllollltFtd· GENERAL 2102 Npt. Height• afford· PROPERTY 2767 ents rom candma-832·1800 personable. enthus1·1-------......,,.
--'fJ.u-..... , a-t _, 1a.c• •• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Beaut 5BO 4BA New. 1 able. 2 Br, 1 Ba. court iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii via, Europe, South -M-d-1-1---A-t-1--? astic person '" the ex-.... -,..... .... ., "" -America, Asia, Russia ••••••••II 0 • ng or c ng I ~ ......... --•··It lllttal blk to bch. Gour kit. yard cottage w/gar, ***Fully Equippe d D H Looking for ages 5 25 c ting world of bridal -.. .._ ._. GOVERNMENT amving August. Call .i D 11 t · Retail Exp a MUST 11 llhlftlsc ''ally "'"""'" Yrly lease. $2550. prime loc. S975 mo. Rest•urant. Good AISE 1.soo-SIBLING. No exp nee. Placmg llmllatlH ., lllscrlrnlnatlon FORECLOSED Avail 7/1. 723·8133 (310) 8 28-8248 Center. Long Lease. over so new people Positions open HOMES 1---------fT 1 A h • Accessory & Sates NIH• rxe. cellt rtllglon, For pennies on $1. •••BIG CANYON Studio Penthou•• 1 year old. Must Seet1---------w aent gents eac Consultants su.~lllllillalllalusor Delinquent Tax. Twnhme 3Bd 2.5Ba Newly furn. gated, Call David 984-273 7 LOST & mo. No photos req'd, •Front Desk·
lllilullfltlft.••llllllllonlo Repo's. REO's . Your Golf Course View. pool. gym, gar, Wik to ---------FOUND 2925 employment not guar Reception ..u.,~~•ce.llml· area. Toll free 1·800· Pool/t ennis. New bch. $850. 494-8604. BUSINESS OFFICE Training avail for fee. Please call 546-1821 llUtllf~rill,l111U111." 898-9778 Ext. H-5139 paint, carpet & blinds. VIEW VIEW VIEW C 0 F F E E no obligation. FREE
Tiiis •~'"•-r wlll nol for current listings. $2000/mo. 840.5274 2Br 2Ba, garage. !pie., FOR RENT 2769 Lost: 2 Oog•l s em• n a r tau d 111 on RETAIL SALES r r-Brindal looking dog, soon. Seating hmlted, Home Store NB Exp u..tlltly ICUJ( MJ lf¥1ftlse· lmm•c Lido l•I• 3Br St 350. 1 br 1 ba garage iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii curly tall. blk tongue & CALL NOW creativity 3·5days wk •at 11r rHl lslltl wlllcll ls 11 _C_O_R_O_N_A_____ 2¥,Ba. frplc, 2-car gar, S825. 1 ·909-698-3704 Approx 15' x 20' blonde shoperd look· Th• W••t's fastest 1 ·800-572-7052 o p e n M 0 n .s a t ..,._.,.,.,law. Our rtl4cri patios, 111 Via Eboll. office •P•c• avl ing dog. Lost 6/3 growing coffee co. Beverly Hiiis Studios C•ll 722·2488
n ...,.r.y lltlrtMll "•t Ill DEL MAR 2122 $2300. 310-277·1583 I••••••••• now. $225. All ulil. vicini ty of 16th & Is searching for Or-2950 W. 31st, #300 Fax 722-0720
•nlli191 Mwtrtisd In 11111 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Npt North Tnhm, 2 Br, MISCELIANEOUS Incl. Call 644-2270 0 r a n g e , C . M . ~~~~e~~~~!y's M!1~:gs~ ___ s_a_n1_a_M_o_n_lc_a __ 1 Sale• Dental consult-
....,.. .. lflllMll II M 2V1 Ba, 2 gar, end REWARD!! NEED MATURE MAN ant Majo de t I c -..i-..11u•-•· .... # __ 2B 2.5B• Condo unit, vacant. Clean RENTALS hecutJVe 548·8274 era. Oiedrlch's 25 year to help maintain . r n a om· _.,....._,_ ....... or Pool shop theaters reputation for qual1'ty pany needs PfT sales ....._.,...__._._..,_ ...... HUD • • • S1 350 433-9528•.......... F 11 Servi S It h d & -__ .,_, ,._ Incl: w/d, ref. 51475· I-=----..,..,.,..------,-•• u ce U • PARROT FOUND In coffee and excellent ome, yar cars. consultant to call on
111·hl•t·•·424·15!11Lfor Agt. 759·1877 Oce•n View condo -Newport Cent.... COM. Call 675-3757 & service, creates the 10 hours/ week. Must dental olflces, to sell llllWllMlll•.OCll'llplesn ---------Pe"thse 2BO 2BA.1---------Ocean&GardenVlews describe. perfec1 growth op-be handy with tools. now oral surgical
Clll HUO_IC4H·3500. 2BD/2BA CONDO p 0 0 I/spa /I en n 1 s . VACATION SSSO• Short Te<m Avl portunlty for you! Our 873·6372 product In the Orange J a c u z z I F enc h Phone/Mall-8us Sva C t /LA C
doors, w10' • Wrall/Wall $1875/mo. 646·1728. liREiiiiiiNiiTiiALiiiiSiiiiiiiiiiii2ii7ii2ii2 S150/narmonth managers receive Newsroom oun y area. ani-..--health benefits and Administrative dotes must be Hygoen-crpt, gar, pvt bch. 1---------Kathy PERSONALS agresslve benefits. 11 Assistant isl or donlal ass1stan1
Top Dollar Paid!:
From 1800-1960..,
t pc to entire estate. • Paintings, ch1ria,
glsware, turn. etc,
40Yr NB Res 673-6223
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
$1350. 721·8047 SANTA ANA 2180 New 28' motor home 714 644 44N you have a coffee Personable, organ· or have oral surgical
for rent. Full kitchen, background ano 1·2 ized full-tome news-soles exp Able to --------"" 4BO 3BA 2-car gar
$2200 mo. to mo.
$500/mo. BO/BA. No
kit. Don, 434·2737.
shower. TVNCR. Day years of mgmt exp. room ass Is I ant work""p to 2 S days 1BO w/DEN
Upstairs, gated, pool/ & wkly rates. 559·8844 .MIMSTIUMllMJCO PERSONALS 3002 Please f•x resume needed to do wide va-per week. have auto
405 FIW')'/Holt>OfBlvcl to: 260-1610 rlety of dutoes on Daily witn ins., xlnl compen-spa. A/C, carport.1---------
near s .c . Plaza. s1251 RENTALS TO ShotewlCPA. CFP. EROTIC SATISFACTION or ma 11 to : Pilot newsroom. Ev· sationimileage Fax
COSTA MESA 1024 COSTA MESA 2124
mo. 963-6757. SHARE 2724
ATTNV, 8*;. •1 a00 962 2874 2144 Michelson Or. erythtng from answer-r OS um e Io . Full Execuliw Phone & og • • lrvme. CA 92715 1ng the phone to word (770) 977·5630 Dy
Bookkeeping S8Mces Attn· Manageme nt processtng, from col-_J_un_e_1_2t_h_1_o_a.._P.._P_.ly __
E'Slde 4 Br Hou•• 2 Ba, 2 gar. giant
yard . xtra clean.
vacant, $244,900
Donald Pfaff 433·9528
NEWPORT
BEACH 1069
·---------Beautiful Balboa Ftom ................. $3SO/rno. T'ALK LIVE Recruitment. For lectmg surf & weather SOCIALWORKERS
Penln Pnt hme. Steps ......... 714·754·2480 Ii more Info call our Info to acting as ed1to· Hiring S24 Hr Benef.ls
to bch. Prof. $425+ MEET PRIVATELY Jobllne 757·9133 roal.hbranan Fun, last-On lhe JOb tra1ningApply
SOUTH COAST
$300 1st Month METRO 2186
ulls/sec. 723-4141 ,_________ •MOVIE EXTRAS* paced envtronment your area 800·339·6150 2BD/2BA upper ,-Talk lo someone on their Physical/Drug Screon-
Clean. lrg min cabln-1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii style. 1 Br, walk-In clst. 1•
Nr beach{Trlangfe Sq. Crpt, blinds. O/W. COM Responsible fun COMMERCIAL pnvatehomephone. 18+. Earn S40·S400 /day! mg required. Equal --------Bunkhou•• Apts
Jennifer 842· 1401 stove, A/C. sn5/mo. female roommate One-Ort-One C•ll 714-253•0328 opportunity employer EMPLOYMEN T
(310)838·2700 wanted. $458 • $200 LAND 2778 1-809-540-5172 $40,000/Yr Income M/F/H/O. Send ro· SERVICES 55 33
•2 Br, 1 B••. fenced de P . av I 7 /1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ChatUne potential. Home sume to: Bill Lobdell.
yd, w/d hkup, gar, No ••••••••• 1.,...,.,s,,...h_a_n_n_on_s_13_._0_14_2 __ 750sq.ft Forest Ave., 1-909-474•3172 Typists/PC users. Toll Editor, Daily Ptlot. 330 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
P•t• 2636 Santa Ana APARTMENTS HB 2Bd Condo. Across Laguna Beach. Not Men's Club Free (1) 800-898·9n8 W. Bay St.. Costa •••••••• Ave.. Unit C, $900. from bch. Pool, gated, street front. $1500/mo. ox T-1361 for listings. Mesa 92627 Please be aware that
4 Br, 2 B• remodeled, avl 6/1 645·1020 FOR RENT prkng. All amen. N/S, 494-1658 1-809-474-3173 *ATTN: Co• t • --0-F-·F-IC_E_H_. _E_L_P __ , tho listings on this cat·
Lg lo t. $274,900, 3 Br, 2 B• quiet a rea. no pet. $67~ 536-4487 1_,!_~7a4n~3176 M•••• Postal Posi-Part-time ttulble ~Jl0c~im:y9~~q~~~~~~ 20242 Spruce," NB close to schools, Lido l•I• Share 4Br ••••••••• --tlons. Permanent full In which there Is a 92660 723·6593'BKR clean $1100 mo. Call•---------2Be House. F/p, w/d. BUSINESS & Psychlc/Astrol09Y time for clerk/sorters, hours. Word process-charge per mmute.
4·9pm 559-4097 BALBOA No/smk, no drugs. 1-809-474-3178 Full Benefits. For Ing, 1110 bookkeeping. ---------$435/mo. 723·1962 FINANCE oxam, eppllcallon and flllng, must be Buy It. Sell II. Find II. Nice W'ald• PENINSULA 2607 AdultsOnlylnt'llanffsapply. salary Info call: organized. Beg July. Cl•sslfled .
Freedom home 3Brliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii M•tr BO In N.B. near••••••••• .. ------.---(708) 906·2350 Ext. Fax res ume to:1========::.1.. 1Ba. lg yrd, $1 100 •PENINSULA bch, FP, vaulted cell·---------4086 Sam 10 s pm. _7_2_1_·_8 _1_2_9_. ___ _
SALMON IDAHO Incl grdnr. 751·9103. WINTERS/Yl!ARLV Inga, bale. $570/mo. BUSINESS HOTTEST CHhl•r FT. honest/re-P!T Work F/T Pay
ACREAGE 1125
Hove A
Garage Sole !
Cal !he ~ Closshich at 641-S67
IO !llixt yw Geroge Sci Ad I
"Whitewater capital of 1·3 Bdrms Incl Ocean-1°"""P_l_u•..,....ut_n...,. _550_-e_9_s_e_. _ X * X ~ X * liable, Flex hrs .. $5 hr. 6am-12 M·F, no exp the world" where the ---------N B o s h OPPORTUNITY NTI G front. Mostly furn'd • • n ••• ore Angel Car Wash nee. $8.00/hr +comm. Salmon & Lemhi rivers HU N TON $750·$1750/mo. 3Bd Duplex. Avl 6/16 2904 J .69 llVE 650-3131 (17th St.) $300-$500/Wk. Mark In
mee1
1· 1surroundod0 by BEACH 2140 875·4912 Agent Parking & H20 View iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ...._ ••• 1 oa 1 •--c-.-9-h-le_r_/D_r_l_v•_r__ sales. Office products ma est c mtns. wn $475/mo. 848-4271 900 505 5050 B"'2..0247 your own wilderness iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PURCHASE/LEASE • -PT . Co m p et 1 t Ive ----"'-----gateway to adventure. Nice 1 Br Security, COSTA MESA 2624 NB Oce•nfront Fp, Kitchen In Orange 800-759-4420 wages/meals. Apply POSTAL. & QOV'T JOBS
Repainting?
Parcels from 8·20 pool, spa, d/W. $875. w/d , dw. Beaut hme. County Sports Bar. 818-75S-9100 at: Charo Chicken S21 /HOUA +BENEFITS
acres surrounded by pd ulll. Warner/Ed· Prof'I M/F $650/mo. Immediate Income 011·592-570.950 1 __ 4_0_1_E_._1_11_h_S_1_c_._M_. _ NO EXP WILL TRAIN
Natio nal Forest wards969-9804 •2Bd 1B• 1-car ga-+1/3utls. 850.7208 with only S10k Invest-CNA'9/C•r•Glver Appl •lnlo714-647·1991
S e rvice. $30,000 rage. 12X16 Sunroom. Nwprt Penn furn/ ment. <714) 580-8686 & Comp•nlona PT/FT Cook. Wa1t-I C •It No dogs. Please call t eo--..__. p er parce · 2144._7_1_4_.8_4_5_.7_3_3_4 un urn. W/0, FP, steps Vending•Must sell route ..,,_,_,. Transportlon • Ref's resses, Delivery per·
(907t488-4883 IRVINE .-to bch/hrbr. $500+ •20 cash accounts Cla .. lfted PT-FT 714-752-6608 son w/car. Exp. pref'd
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii E 'Slde Triplex 1/3 utll. 646-9594. •Buy all or part ___ .. _2_ ... __ T_a __ COMPUTER USERS lmmediatetyl 673-9449
---------WOOD BRIDGE xtra large 2BD/lBA. Roomm•t• to ah•re • S00-8l S--090S NEEDED. Steady TIMESHARES 1590 fn cd patio. lndry B 1 --------Poplar plan. 3br 2ba, Quiett 5845_ 673-3059 r ght, cute 2BD/2BA ••••••••• 1 Get tO work; great payl Call RENTAL AGENT new paint. S 1625/mo.1-~-.,,.--....,--..,__,.-In COM. Remod. N/S t -8()().317·9935.
TIME SHARE UNITS 714-752-2881 . •Perfect 4 right $550/mo. 760-8589. ANNOUNCEMENTS the basle CooiiSn•ck B•r M .. r For walk-In rental
ANO CAMPGROUND t•n•nt E'slde Studio/ ••••••••• • business in Corona exp. req'd. Posh Npt. M h MEMBERSHIPS. Dis·---------kltch/pvt patio. $625.•-R-NT_______ Bch Ten nis Club. del ar. Must ave
tre u sales·cheapl NEWPORT 760-0189. 548-6283.• E ALS ABC's 84.._8900 •xt.202 Califomla Real Es·
Worldwide ICllectlons . BEACH 21691--------WANTED 2726 ANNOUNCEMENTS Attic, FIN ANALVST ~~re lf~e~~~ka'!,deebk~ 8~J1. v:;;11~n~~~o;~ NEWPORT liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2920 Come on board with a e n d s .
800·543·6'173. Free 2Br 2B• condo, 2-car BEACH 2669 APl'.,, COTTAGI!, basement, rapidly growing state· Call Mr . Ring
re ntal Informa tion gar, AC, new carpel/1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii STUDIO WANTED CLASSIFIED wide firm. Candidates 673·4400
(954) 563·5566. paint, w/d. pool. No 1• by retired profeulonal I and closet for entry level should Harbor Realtv
1 51450 640 1529 •1BR $825• woman. Has returned It's the •0 utlon you're have a strong willing-,
Cla••lfled pe '· · 2BA 2BA $725/Up to aame winter beach searching for • wheth· then get ness to learn our op-========~I
Th• m091 compreher.-434 Atl•o I B0/1 BA Re trig & dishwasher rental for 24 yrs. Now er you're seeking • era lions, a nd hold a
alv9 Md CU~ dltec> HOUH. FP, $1 095/mo Incl. 60x30 pool. No •e e kl ng p ermanent home, an a partment, &Ome C88h. BBA or finance related Overstocked with
tory of good• end Mr· plus utll. On premises pe ts. No feea. No home. Xlnt referencH. a new occupation or 842•8878 degree. 647-6673. s\utf?
vtc.. eroundl dally 12noon-7pm. __ i_e_a_se_._s_4_5_-4 __ a_s_s __ 64_8-_5_4_2_4. _______ e_ve_n_a_•_tr_•_Y_P_e_1. __ --------o110en Ofc P(f for Comm A cltll to
A.e. Mag. Salt starter Classified
COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624
--------
06a HoUn: 9:00 • • 1:00 r" M·P ..... _ ........ -· 1161 ... l)r." .... Am......._ C.A
(7'14) IM••
nsszz----p p-§1
Costa Mesa's Best 1
NEWPORT VILIAGE APARTMENTS
Bring In this coupon
for 1/2 off lat month'• rent. For a
limited Hme only.
• Extro Lorge Jrs • l oncl 2
bedrooms JR $600
1 BR $700
2 BR $860
• SOncl VOllt~ll
• 2 11Qflt8d Jaonls COUftS • Vttfi'col t>llnds • celling Fons
• PIUSh carpet
• Fllnea Room • Huge hlotld pool and $po • Oo9 88Qa
=~-~ • Gcllid~
~ HQUl:9:U>am • 5 oo pm M4 ~ 1omom · •m pm '#Mt<eods
636 W.-lcht Co.a Melo. CA 01e111cs -----------
$8/hr. 9-1 Dally. Com-will help
puter/phone. 644·1155 ___ 8_4_2 ... • ..... S ..... e_,7_8...__ __
"Employee. ,
"Empl.Mdo.'
"Arbeitnehrrw!r ...
"Employe. "
If you' re looking to repaint
it, rebund it, replace it or
restore it, look in the
Classifieds to find the
service you' re looking for.
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1996
TODAY'S
=~ CRaSSwoRo PUZZLE
~.·
8'owgently ~teoolt1 ~dance &"'S-.rWars·
•.-xtq
Mild oath Obfeet ol deVO-
• tioo ~~lolhre -bean
hrtof an ad· tlress
E Glacial period
Hadon
Sw!ndle ~ Chronlcies ~Indulge oneself 81CC8SStvely
al "Ghosr star
Oemi
c ~ Individual 3e Prolessoonars
charge 99~e probe '4i Highway
-P-'oblem .a5 Ava~ onesell ol 4e Poor grade 48 Office wor1<er •• Aunt or cousin 62 Ornamental
lrutts 53 Cherry seed 64 Shakespearean
58 ~meat
58 ThesauNI
~ &4 Race pece
85 Make a apeech 88 ln-ot: replacing 69 GrNt San Lake
locale 70 Backs of nect<a
71 Houae wings 72 Challenge
73 Curt 74 FaH mo.
DOWN
1 ·oee-t· 2 Imported car
3 Unsuccesslul
4 ~:th powder s Isms
6 "llia<f' poet
7 Wene
8 Rtval
9 More exacting 10 Paving matanal
11 Weter. 10 Jose 12 Animal IOOlh
13 Border 2t Big-eyed baby
23 B1R"s partner? 25 Conoeit 27 Love, 1n Paris
28 Scandinavtan 29 Oynamrta
inventor 30 Tycoon
Onassis
32 Toconto's PfOV. 33 Volunteer
34 Eene
35 Bottle parts
40 Newspaper
issues
41 -up: exci1e '43 Squirrel lood
44 Cold weather
malady 47 Snakelike listl SO Indifference 51 Comedian
COnway 52 Most festive
55 Chemical COtT.,c>Und
56 Small earring 57 Comedian -
Johnson
58 Lounge
around
60 Bunring cheers
61 Cairo's river
62 Squeal
63 Necessary
thing
66 Cheerleader's
67 ~.address
When you're tuned into
classified
you're tuned into your
commuriity.
"sE·R·VI-C·E--·1 i~wuc
WAlll'ED
TOIUY
BUNTIRGTON MOTOICYCLIS MElCID!S 9130
6019 IUCH 6140 SCOOT!IS 801.llliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiimm lil ........ iiiil .. iii• •e3 -.rcecte. aena
W ... '!f~ .. ltHel ~. 1._ & G•r•e• aele Sat. Honda 760 N!Qhthawk 1900 Ot-V, a clualc '"~ n or.. 7:30-?, 20472 Allport New 090 •95• Blue. tot the collector.
d r • • • • r • • v • L..ne (Newland/lndl•· 3200K mllH. Helmet/ $3400/080. Call 841 .. ees napolls) Fum. baby blk llhr Jckt 14000. 873-9047.
clothH. misc., •le. MZ·7404 1"•'""9,....e..,.-....,M,.,,..,,e,....R.,,....,,C...,E,,,...,,O'""E~a PLAY rr SAFE
Nort.h-South vulnerable. North
deala.
NOR111
•AQt
i:>AK73
o KJ6
•Q32
WEST
•K863
I;;> 10982
0 8
•.J964
EAST
•J 1094 QJ6
0 Q107-4
•1086 SOUTH
•72
i:>Q64
OA868ll
•AK7
The bidding:
NORTH EAST
14 Pua
2NT p ...
30 Pus
6Q p ... p... p ...
SOtn'H
10·
34
~
80
Opening lead: Ten or Q
WEST p ...
P ... p ...
p ...
Consider the trump suit in this
hand. How would you elect. to play
it if your cont.ract is eix diamonds?
There is no way to answer I.hat
question until you know hqw many
tricks you need in the suit. And
that does not depend on the lie of
the trump suit!
North showed a balanced hand of
19-20 point.II. Note South's simple
throo·club bid on the aecond round.
In light or North's bidding, that is
100 percent forcing -there's no
way South could want to play
specifically three clubs rather than
two no trump, yet not. have raised FREE TO YOO 6022 --------• COUPE 300 9E Qd
clubeinthefintplace. NEWPORT ••••••-oond s10,ooo.
Mer a heart. lead, declarer hu llr•• to good hotn• AUTOMOBILES 714-4131.7eos no losere outeide epadee and p 0 t be I I y p 1 g BEACH 6169 •~•""7""2-3""5.,..o""a .. l...,M,.,,...e-ro-•-d"""•_•_
trumpa. If t.he apade fine11e 1uc· eve. &41-8885 Claaalc, Light blue.
ceede, a trump can be loet. H declar-Moved nHd a loving Aaalateno• L••eu• Exe. cond, 2nd owner.
er muet concede a spade, trump• home 2-pet cats wr yud sale, Hlactlon of _B_M_W-------9-0-3-0 s10.voo. 642-7404.
must be brought in without 1011, old. Very loveable & quality Items. Sat. 8/8
and the percentage play ie to pretty ~ 721·1933. 7-4 pm, Npt. Hts iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii finesse the jack. 536 Westcnlnster ,88 BMW 328 red, MltsUBISHI 9145
Having iaolated the problem, the BUILDING Or••t Stuffl 418 Signal loaded, w/1unroof, 1 solution becomea obvious. Declarer Rd. (Near Npt. Harbor owner, 1Clnt cond., 85k
should win the first trick in hand MATERIALS 6030 High) Sat. 8:00·12:00 mll $8,995 842·5704
and immediat.ely take the apade '90 8MW 525 5-1pd
•95 Mltaublahl Ml·
r•u• 2 dr, auto, ale. red, 18k mll, $6,750
909-735-6269 Coron.a finesse. When this wins, declarer STEEL BUILDINGS, ••••••••• white/tan. Crm pulf. can afford t.o loee a trump trick, ao a 40'x34' wH S6,980 TRANSPORTATION 67Kml, Sunrt. s11,ooo, _______ _ balance $3,871. c 11 d 673-0e93
safety play ie in order to guard 50'x90' was $13,760 •••••••••I .: .. /W:~:~. 642·6255 1,PiiLiiYMiiiiiiOiiiiUTiiciiHiiiiiiii9ii1ii6ii5 againat a 4-1 eplit. balance $9,460. Must 11 At trick t.hree declarer ebould Hll ask for Oon. 1· --------·•---------d N .. TS '68 Plymouth Sundance cash the king of diamon 1 . ext, 8~,92-0111 . BOA 7011 CADILIAC 9040 Turbo. 69K miles. Exe
South croaaee back to the cloeed cond In/out. Auto. All
band in clube and leads a diamond PETS ._ S C pwr. $3500. 536-1189 toward t.he J'ack. If West etarted Q 18' HO K elec bay '80 El Dor•do Blarrltz
11un.au• 6049 boat. Exe cond. 350 V-8 Auto A/C, F/P, ---------with four trumps, the defender can nA'Ull'UUN $6800 645 7673
9170 · • Good cond S 1700 obo PONTIAC do o-··•l.:ftw t.o , ..... vent declarer from 831 714""
VWUA>6 .--ADOPT•A·PET H•rdtop Shook Elec * • .. * iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii losing only one trump trick,
h th th · J ed · E~ Sat & Sun at boat $4000 /OBO. w e er e queen is p ay unme-p MART, Fountain 840-8329. ---------'89 SUNBIRD diately or not.. If West showe out, CHRYSLER 9050 Conv. Turbo GT. Auto, declarer playe the jack from dum-Valley. Puppies, kit· all pwr AM/FM eass.
my, losing t.o the queen. But. now a tens and more, all POWER BOATS CC, tllt, cstm tires/ looking for loving, car· '93 CHYRSLER Town w h I s . s 3 a o o . marked finesee for the ten hae Ing homes. CALL 597· 7012 & Country Mini-van. 673·2762.
shown up, so declarer gets back to 9037 for more Info. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Xlnt cond. 38k ml, 7/
dummy as soon as possible to lead a 1•8----b--d---d 70 mfr warranty.1---------diamond toward the nine and the •v• a use an '78 Unlfllght lmmac., $15500. 645·9070 abandonod pets. Be a many upgrades, 'Al SAAB 9185 rest is easy. volunteer/foster. Call partnership, must seel 714·597-9037. S24k obo 494-4485 -------9-0_7_5 Learn to be a better bridee ..,..,,..,.....-=--._,.-_,..,.,.,......,...._ FORD
player! Sub ecribe now to the ---------18' Boaton Whaler iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '95 S••b 900SE Goren Bridp Letter by cam.n. MUSICAL 1989, xlnt cond. 300 turbo conv., Green w/
800/788--1225 for information. Or INSTRUMENTS 6055 hrs, lots ol xtras, ~=~~~g~~4 black top, tan lthr Int.,
ri G B 'd Le '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii t r a 11 e r . S 1 7, 5 0 0 under 1 o k m 11 . W te to Oren rt ee tter, 1• 673.5551 In perfoct cond. All .s36,000 obo 251•6951
P .O. Box 4410, Chl<:aao, n. 80680-GRAND PIANO Anti· --------·• power, leather, phone, 4410. qued. Needs refinish/ 1948 Lym•n tow pkg, rlms/llres.1 ________ _
tuning. S750 OBO Classic Bay Boat. Only 60k miles. St7K. TOYOTA 9210
631·7605 Xlnt cond. $3500 obo 574-4247 or 646·!}449 1,...miii'"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Call 733·9993. 1•
APPLIANCES 6011 FURNITURE 6014 MERCHANDISE SPORTING -------•93 Toyota Tercel 4
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MISC. 6015 -SAIL--B-O_A_T_S -7-0-1-4 • HONDA 90f5 dr, 1tuto. ale. 26k mil,
Bullder Over-Stock 8FT solid Green GOODS 6065 I w ~ 11 e . S 6 . 4 5 O
b d GE El ct i h Pd $800 '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1 909·7J5·6269 Corona ran new 8 r c couc · · now PLANT SALE Cllrus-1• '87 Honda Protud<t SI ranges, 30" free $130. Call 723·1796. avocado (fruiting) 510. GOLF CLUBS Tailor WE PAY CA$H Mini cond. $7150 (!::?Kl ________ _
standing model, All ESTATE FURN: On/King palms-lg $10 made style Iron set For good used Sabots under Blue Book) A::ll VOLKSWAGEN 9235 white, sell-clea~lng Maple dinette table w/ Herbs $1 , cement $150. Mtchng ~raphlte & boat equipment. pwr, A/C, sunroof, CC, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii oven S375. RUF, The 4 chairs. Radlo/pho-fountains $110. bird (bubble) style woods Minney'a Yacht Sur· Blaupunkt radio. 79K
Model Home Furniture nograph, plays 33, 45, bths $20. 909.e74·9422 S45/ea. 964-3182 plus. 1500 Old New· miles. 723-4602 '73 VW SUPER· Store. 250-4196 a:id 78 spd. Bench BEETLE Rbll eng1 Kenmore Refrlg. and 2-dr cablnot end Antique dr••••r and port Blvd. 546-4192 -.-9-1_H_o_n_d_•_A_c_c_o_r_d new brake•, pt,
9 mos old. $400. Obo. table. 714·545-6768 buffet, many paint· TV, ELECTRONICS, EX 4 dr, auto, loaded. ahocka. $1900
714·72t-9656. Furniture Cloaeout ~nh~~a(1~0)~rya~~:,. r~:i; STEREO 6080 MARINE SLIPS 96k mil, burgandy, OBO 650·6526 xlnt, $8,950 909·735· M•Yt•g Electrlc Antique Cloaeout for appointment. DOCVS 7022 6269 Corona Dryer used. good Everthlng Must Gol 645·2100 ATTENTION ELEC· ~ cond. White $50 obo WICKER WORLD TRONIC BUFFS: Used iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil MISC. AUTO 9245 646·3292 1125 Victoria St. WO L FF TANNING VCR, TV, xlnt qu .. llty, ---------1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BEDS TAN AT HOME a 36' Mooring (C·82) w/ ISUZU 91001• Costa Mesa 548-0202 · · both need minor re· 11 ' BW off Al a d Whlrlpool 220V elec Buy direct and SAVE · v ra 0 Seized Cars From $175. dryer, gold color, lmmacul•te Furniture Commercial/Hom~ pair. Make o ller. Pl., E. of Bay Is. $14K. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Porsches, Cadillacs. oldflr but works great! Everything goes S20 units from Sl99. Low 642·4321 xt 342 or Call (909) 397-9797 or '87 Isuzu Trooper II Chevys, BMW's Cor-
$65 L d K $2500 b Ch 642·6723 eves. (714) 673 2942 . a y enmore, to o o. erry monthly payments. • · 75k mites, orlglnal vette!:. Al:io Jeeps. 4
avocado green wash· B/R sets, rice poster & Free color catalog. 50' Mooring w/boat, owner, red, $6,500 WD's. Your area. Toti Ing machine, works slelgh, formal dining Call today. 1·800·842·1••••••••• A-area, Npt. Harbor Cell 650·1769. free 1·800·898·9778
fine $95. Admiral dual rm w/chlna cabinet. 1305. GARAGE SALES s 10 ,500 675.0740 Ext A·5139 for current
temp refrigerator. leather sofa set, Victo-(d ) ---------Ustlngs. white. works fine rlan llvlng rm, grdfa· ays JEEP 9110 $100. Must sell by ther clock, plus WANTED 50'Moorlng tst row
. sunday1 848-8340 •714-220·296B• TO BUY 6019 COSTA MESA 612 end ot c st. near iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii AUTO PARTS 4 Pavllllon. A-241. '90 CHEROKEE 2DR, White wa•h•r and Queen alz:e sof• bed '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $13,900. 619-778-2663 2WO. White, TNT win· 8c REPAIR 9260 gaa dryer $300 for Ex c con d . $2 00. 1• 1• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii both. Good cond. 646-0898 Old Coins, gold, silver G•r•U• Sal• Variety . .dews, Lo mites, Runs
873.B8 80 jewe1ry, Franklln Mint, of treasures. Sat 9-2, BALBOA: 40 DOCK, greatl 1 $8300/0BO. 1880 Ford C•rgo
Good j obs
rcli:iblt sen ices
inlcrrsting things
tu buy
II\ .tll 1 her!!
every d.1y
in Cl:"'ificd
For Ad Action
Cal a
Dajly Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
Sterling flatware, etc. 1213 Las Arenas nr T w 0 S 1 de T 1 e · Must selll 549-8833 Van 52.750. 080 S . 9' and 13' Wide. teve 642-9448 days (Vlctorla/Pacrllc) • 714-642•4914 • Ask for Dlnesh Shaw,
RAMS W•nted Look· CLASSIFIED LINCOLN 9120,_1_1_4_·5_7_4_·4_2_61_. __ _ Ing for Rama Games tt's the resource you Dock, aide tie or ·~
and highlights on VHS can count on to sell a Mooring near New· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LIFT GATES Pl•ase call Steve myriad of merchan· port. Island for Lido or For Sal• (3) Wallco (818) 752-6982 dise Items, because Sabot 722·1545 '89 Llncoln Mark VII 3.000 lbs. capacity. Orig. owner. S36,600 Uh Gates. $2500 lor Top Dollars Paid our columns compel Npt Beech front tie for ml. all leather. JB all (3). For more
For Records. Jazz, qualified buyers to 20' or less boat. St 50 sound system, posl· Information, please
Sountracks, etc . calll mo. Ca 11 Ch Ip tive traction. $7,900. call Promod Shah
Call Mike 645-7505. ___ 8_4_2_·_5_8_7_8__ 522·2301 8:30·6pm Call 644·2270 1·714·574·4267.
DOORS 3580 HANDY MAN 3710 JEWELRY 3784 LEGAL PAINTING 3858 PAINTING 3858 ROOFING 3910 CLEANING
3528 SERVICES ~DIRECTORY • ________ , CERAMIC•MARBLE
3812 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
An experlenc•d •P•lnt/C•rpentry* William Harold Jewelera liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •W.P. YOUNGQUIST WEIT COAST PAINTING BALBOA ROOFING CO
dependable door Drywall and morel Watch & jewelry repair Painting Contractor FrH Est.•10 Yrs Exp /Comm .;Res /Reroof
3 5 48 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVICES
' lnstall'n • Fabrication•--------.. hanger., Guar work, Small Jobs Oki Antique+ Fine Jewelry BANKRUPTCIES Ou.al. painting by profls Unbeatable Rates I /Repair ,1FrH Eat ;Reis
Laundry & DryclHn reaa. Oon 521·8910 Gary 945·5277 Buy/MMrade 873·0365 REASONABLE Ucl602098. Ina. Ref's. Joe 850·3433 Llc'd/1ns e31·5081
• ACOUSTIC •
20Yrs Exp • Licensed
1 ·800-348-9321 Fluff & Fold • 70/1b Attorney•Prepared F " t &45-3305 Free P/U & Dellvery ---------Semi Retired Conlractori---------FrH Phone Consvnatlon r "· •SADLER ROOFING 3408 Leaky Showers Rep'd 253 171h St. Nr Winchell• DRYWALL Repairs, Improvements, IANDSCAPE & (714) 744-9272 24Yra OuaUtr Palnlln9 PERSONAL Ucensod & Insured
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Rogroullng & lnslall'n * e 5 0 .7 9 5 9 * am jobs. Ouality/lntegrity IAWN CARE 3808 TOUCHUPS, TOO SERVICE 3867 Free Est. All reroof
AAA ACOUSTIC L.41670130 Oean ol Tiie SERVICE 3584 I c11e, t<en 842·1770'=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •-MAS--S-A_G_E_____ 24 Hra. Richard Sinor iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiii guaranteed. 875-5095
Paint-applied Remove· 673"8065 or 846"8526 •--------'"" liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1• 3830 Uc#280644 54s-32o9 ---------
h T I '/ MAID TO ORDER REMODELS carp, plbg, B I y d M I t'"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii YOAU8R8P18ERTASNOTNA8L REMODELING pate . exlure. n ext.---------B&K Llol!'IS85180 paint, elec, 111,, stucco. & •• o •r • n I• QUALITY CARE•
962·5891 or 847-8905 CHILD CARE 3536 ~;~d~l~l~c;de~B~~e;~ All phaaH. No job too roofing. MORGAN Lawns, Cln-upa, Trff L & B Th•r•PV 20"-OFP W/ADI Persondl Girl Fridays. & ADDITIONS 3916
CEILING MASTER $5/offl 718·9768 •ml. Acouellc removal, Llc'd. Ph41 850-3281 Trim, Sprlnklrs, Aerate, J. Nutrition Ina/WC 20Yrs E.l(p. Xlnl workllllll\lhlp. Trustworthy & Proles· 1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
•Acoustic: Romoval• LICENSED~DAYCAAE etc. 714•240•1159 Moblle 111403·5305 Thatch 631-4422 P9"4t3-8l42 A N /L MT s 5 /0 f f Fair S 645•2417 Ron alonal. Excellent refer-•• Farthing Interior• Custom Texture•Paint Lots of TLC & Funl Hom• Repair/Remodel • TREES • massage. 722·9823 RAINBOW Clrcle Malnt. encH. 957-17015. t<ltchen, Bath, Remodels lic·d. Mark 838·7300 Pediatric CPR & 1st Aid CONCRETE 8c ELECTRICAL 36l0 c M a/N P1lnllng..fnt/£1t House/Apl Mealsfsnacks lncld. Reas MASONRY 3557 o2s5ta¥•e•sra Eexwpport To1111nlf'•••vt. La.!!'•· Ouallty Job. Free Ht. -,-IAN--0-.--V-O_CAL___ Rm Additions Visa/MC
rales FTIPT 884-1740 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • ........... 751-#,.• MOVING 3834 L#569897 830·8888 Q LIS60&75 873"1212
CEILINGS • \ ' ./
•\ ,.
CARPENTRY 3510 Sm•ll Job l!XPl!RT Jim 831"2480 L•wn Service. Mow/ LESSONS 38681--------
, --------Brick, Block, Stone, Tiie Duncan Electric edge/sod/aprlnklera/ Carl M1nlrt P1lntlng SPRINRLERS 3921
JI ffandyman/R•model CLEANING Cone. Patio, Driveway Local/Quick R .. ponH HAULING 3720 cln-up. Al 888-2710 PUBLIC NOTICE lnt/Ext•Full Service PIANO Beg ·Advancedl~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Additions. Bath. Kitch SERVICES 3548 Fplc, BBOa. Rel. 25 Yr Ll275870 9G0·7042 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Iv• mag or call alter 5 The Calif. Public Utlll-Oual•R•fs•10"-Off All ag ... r.~c:her Cert. SPRINKLl!R REPAIR ~ f'lre-Waler Damage Exp. Terry 557•7594•---------QARDENINQ Reliable llH Commlulon RE· Ll35e098 733•9 o 4 e Entertainment Avail. Valv .. •HudseTlm•
' !lee, Plumb. & Paint A TOUCH OF CLASS s'::t~;~ f0c:,nt~~:f~1at JUNK To The DUMP & Ouellly Work at QUIRES that all used CARUANA PAINTING Jennifer Mo.8889 clocks. 26Yrs L«al Exp.
j Newport area. lmmed Cleanlng. RH/Comm *Beat Price/Quality Fane•llghta•Spa (714-998-1882) reasonable ratea. household goods lnt/Etc1. Very low, low John Burr 282·2831 J • Page 714·227·8122 Uc/Bonded. Free Est. Landscape, brick, atone Demand ElectriG 8'5-38545 Wiii haul what Trash Ed Batren 848·3371 mover• print their prlcff, FrM Ell. Bnd/lna ---------r>ooRS Rtmodtl•H1tdW1tt Teresa 282·7143 Concttte. I00.781ot007 Man won'tl 968-1882 P.u .c . Cal T number; 1.521'414 71••883·2734 PLUMBING 3890 TUTORING ---------Green icen• Landscpng llmoa and chauHeura --------·•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 3929 TTlrn•Cablnets•Stucco •BOSS HOUSECLEANING FENCES Brick Block 1---------TWENTY DOLLAR •• 1 1 ti CHUNQ'8 ••JNTINQ Dtyv.11 LS62731 35Yrs ••P Llcensed·BOnded Tiie, Plaster a' BBaa: FENCES 1/T""n8'0~ry 1~" ga ~n print their T.C.P. num-20 y E>C r-.Gd p ·-I TH• LOCAL ,LUM•llR liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Jerry 842·0587 St0.00 per hour. Oual./Guarant'd. Work a. DEC•S HAULER/CLEAN-UP mm ng emova I ber In all advertls• ,. p. r ... e .. James E. Bangert Co.• Rl!ADINQ TUTOR 41 Flit $ Bllf.042·7887 a ~ 3615 JOHN 850-1028 Clean-ups • Maintenance ments. If you have • Guar work. Free Eat. Slnc• t947 Or•d•• K·5 A to z HANDYMAN 714-5 S.0388 Lt1599025 8SCMU09 question about the I• Ucll'375602 538-1534 Friendly Servlce"ntlKed ·Credenttaled Ttachef·
INSTAU./REFACE CABINETS WINDOW CLEANING Patterned Concrete •l'ENC•S OAT•S• -8-r-11r-TH--B-r-11U-TY--LandMape ReMOClellnt gallty of a mover, limo EMllRALD PAINTING Ll53298t 87"'9304 lttphanlt 723-4418 kltchen1, bllha, doors, •CARPET CLEANING Driveway•, patloa, MW/repelr'--at replaced &;on&. 1 QA Ylld tune up/tnalnlenace, or chauffeur. call: Int/Ext. WallpaperlTll• -=--,,.-..,.......,,.,.-.... -
ndows. Ooug 546-7258 •SCREEN REPAIR decka. Repair/removal Redwood''; Lf576605 8r PITN!SS 3740 l~at1latlc detlgn. Public UtllltlH Fr•• •8t/R•f/1()yre exp b~ Dr.,n Cleanlne 1---------
CARPENTRY•Wlndowa FREE ESTI 729-7079 Uc/FrH est 222-9988 ContraciorlC21-t<MOOI. OommlHlon Competitive S71Jt-103t Plumblng R•palta WALL
Doors • Wood FencH Honest•Rellabte•Hard Jim Whyte 842'7208 Prorl & fthlcal. M~7505 714-558 ... 1!51 Gene Alw••• 'aJnttne :'.Z. ftP• M ::..= COVEaINGS 3932
Closet/Garage Organlzere Working lrl1h LadlH. CQ~llCTQRS •Wood l'eno••• 9KIN A 90DY CAR• •• .... T ••TtaT Dlbern•rdo'a •• 1 1_.,.,. .... ""-··• Pa1 ... 1n•••• -liri;;Jiii"Jiiimil~g'liiii!!i!i!iJ!ii!!~~!i!i~iii •L!ll26t58t •Call Bob Avail to clean r.our n&An llf)lacllr1pelt,flttlleullng 1°"0tfAllFacltl• .... __. _.. .... ovng ,..,..,., -.. v,, .... .-rffle•Pfumblng 249.9323 Pg-312·0026 ho m •. wkly /B ·wk GENED 11r 3558 lltlmalM, Low prktt. UC'd MasugH A Waxing Specl1ll•I In Hiiiing Local/Offloe/Storage Llc'd/ln1'd a Ince '71. R•palra & Remodel• TH• STftlPP•"
(:ARPET
CtEANING 3515
PIHN call 048·9149 """"" Adv~ Conatt. t74-630t Call Becky 28e-e808 landecap•/lrrlgatlon Long Diet. Fr•• Eat. M .. 7083 Pg-te4-3047 "'" EetlmatH Speclallzlng In wallpapef
upgradea. 79CMt781 T#181432 979·~114 lke'a Cuatom Painting LIH73tl ff•tOtO ,.moval. Llol "'8924 H::P~:o•:•~:~.:.~:: ACM CONITRUCTON ---------Pref'I Lentltoe.-Malnt lpllt leoond Moving Prof, Clean, Quality * 714-te3-so37 '* ~t;:. 1~!id:~~~~7~ TLR•,•n4:10dsa1noa!1~m.: .. ~._o:;;.,R7•:o~ :i~~~NST~620 :~r:~ 3760 !o::_~~ .... ~:::::'~ f~~~::rov:::1:.~~:;; t":~~Ee'3~~~o POOL rn~:'!~!~:J.nt=~~~~aJ fol luclc•r• Carp•t •HOUS•CLEA.NINQ , _____ ... __ ... __ VICTOR 497·1'138 432·8183/P.34&-5850 PAINTl"Q ••••1•0 SlllVICI 3894 P!=~~ w:~~~7'~
& Uphol Car•24Hr 15 yra exp. Good Ref. LeWl8 Conatruotton •OUALITY WO"K* C•re Giver For the 9hene•e G•rdenln9 ALL-AM• .. ICAN Conedlntloua Craftamen lel•nd •tu• Peole We gaf1 thOuld hang
qUll ave. 104Mt OFf' wfld Own lrana. Call any· L'!~~~::3•H,a~~ .. ymAaen1. HardwdNlnyl/Ceramlc elderly. 12 ye&r1 exp. & &..ndeH~ ..... Lawn MOVH •U ... Ca.r•rully Old•"llflloned Prtde In Pool 6 ..... Wk"' Svc. together. Strip, ln•lalf, • pg.201·2751 vm~48·2•83 11 m •I 2 41 .0 S 3 1 ,... ..,... ....,.. M blt/Car ..... t Bnd/l ne Ref'e . Pl•••• call C9t9 lnetall n/Removal C04Jt1eou11V & ChNply W0111maneNp. nt-1190 AflJllr1 .... ~, '' .....
---c""1-.-.-a""u-•• -d,......_ •71+5 •7·••2•· L;ot279 ,.TJl2·7332 T•mm, 7'""307·0038 Sptlnkle,. ...... 0 1 ••e..c>21'3 T141U7 •oN•• PAINTING Add .-;-e=;•• 1~~~.\01 ~":,,~,:,~·
---------• The most comprehen-l .J. Scott Conatructlon y8ftj et.en-... Trim lnt/E.lct. 22 yta In o.o.
11ve and current dlrec-Cuatom Home ~lders ---------T...-!HedQe/AemoYe/ Oualhv. 8mVIMG Job•
tory of goocu and .. r. LIU01954. Rel'•· HANDY MU 3784 weed, Nu lawn/Mame. PAINTUfG ~11e 11...al7'94M IOOPDIG
vlc•aaroundl f __ _:!7'._!t~•~•!27~ .. !:,7!7!!1!_!9!._:_li•• .. ••••• •••••••• ...,..,.,., ~9'741-6371 t-I004t•t1aa