HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-06-13 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS
Sai,/,ors brewing up
challenge in Lipton'· Cup
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
T he Newport-Mesa Unified
School District has long
endured a reputation of
not providing equal educa-
tions to the two communities it
serves. Ask a parent in either city
whether the neighborhood school
is equal to one in the neighboring
city and the answer is most often
a resounding "no."
Costa Mesa parents point to
wealthy Newport Beach's high test
scores, additional educational pro-
grams and overflowjng.school cof-
fers. Newport Beach parents point
to poorer Costa Mesa's expansive
federal programs and grant
opportunities· that bring in thou-
sands of dollars Newport Beach
schools can't touch.
For the past five months, Daily
Pilot education writer Julie Ross
Cannon has observed classrooms
at each of the district's 26 schools
and interviewed dozens of par-
ents, administrators and teachers
on the educational front lines in
an attempt to weed fact from -fic-
tion.
What follows is a three-part
series looking at two specific
schools -Sonora Elementary in
Costa Mesa and Andersen Elemen-
tary in Newport Beach. The stories
will examine the facilities, educa-
tional opportunities and fund-rais-
ing abilities at schools within the
Newport-Mesa community. Sonora Elementary School student Karla Shuya ls eager to ask a question in her first grade class.
Five miles and worlds apart, tivo
Newport-Mesa elementary schools
struggle to meet the needs of thetr students
I t's 6:30 Monday morning,
and S\eve Pavich is elated.
A steaming cup of coffee in
hand, the Sonora Elementary
School pnncipal is almost gid-
dy showing off his campus at
dawn.
MThis is my time of the day,•
he says, beaming.
Two months ago, Pavich
would have been too embar-
rassed to walk through his
campus with a visitor on Mon-
day morning -ashamed of the
half-dozen dirty diapers, the
broken beer bottles and the
saliva-stained cigarette butts
littering the sidewalks and
playgrounds.
He routinely devoted the
first two hours of his week to
removing the health and safety
hazards -remnants from non-
approved weekend parties and
soccer games oo the school's
fiE!lds -before children could
discover them.
Now he can proudly show
off his Costa Mesa school -the
cigarette-free playground, the
freshly poured concrete walk-
way, the new shrubs planted
by parents two weeks ago.
HThis field used to be just
strewn with beer cans and bro-
ken bottles," Pavich says, sur-
veying the soccer fields behind
r-----------------------,
A Tale Of : I ·==-·g~;)I-I TWO SOtOOLS !
A ntREE-PART SERIES
• ~A look at the dif-
ferences between facilities
• NIDAY: Inside two
fifth..grade classroqms
·~Howfund
ralsing differs between
two communities
I
I
I I I
I
I I
I
I I I I I I I I I
I
~-----------------------~
the playground. "Now look at
iV
The school is spotless,
thanks to several feet of tall,
turquoise-colored gates
installed by maintenance work-
ers in April at the school's
entrance.
Five miles away at Ander-
sen Elementary School, princi-
pal Tom Carr's worries are dif-
ferent.
Vandalism is uncommon in
the master-planned Newport
Beach commuruty, which sur-
rounds the school. During the
past year, only one vandalism
incident was reported at the
enclosed, stucco and wood
school. The only trespassers
causing commuruty irritation
a.re the spattenng of skate-
boarders who practice their
skills in the parking lot after
school.
The commurtity regularly
uses the school's playground
and fields, the heart of the
long-running green belt called
Buffalo Hills Park. No district-
installed gates lock students
out of the facility. There's no
need. •nus commurtity places a
great emphasis on education
and will do what it takes to
make sure its school is a proper
• SEE SCHOOLS PAGE A8
r-----------------------
.\I \ l.I .\;\.CE ...
I I t I I I I I •
+ Andenen Ea.m.ntary
Address: 1900 Port
Seabourne Way, Newport
Beach
Opened: ......... 1973
Enrollment: ...... 404
~ .......... 14
Av..-.ge dw size: . .28
+Sonora Elementary
Address: 966 Sonora
Road, Costa Mesa
Opened: ......... 1962
Enrollment: ...... 610
Teechen: .......... 19
A~ class sm: .. 30
-,
I I ~---------------------------------~---------------~
OPINION
Readers want benefits
off ederal school grants
Library
• receives
a star
booking .
•Normally mild-man-
nered Newport Beach
Central Library will be
transformed tonight into a
glamorous movie set com-
plete with helicopters,
lights, big-name stars.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -1f you
happen to be glancmg up at the
sky over the oty's \lbrary this -....
evening, don't be surpnsed lf you
see stars. Not the kind that
bnghten the galaxy but those
who blaze Hollywood.
1f you are lucky. you might get
a glimpse of Mira Sorvino step-
ping out from a helicopter in front
of rolling cameras But Uus is no
post-Academy Awards gala that
bas trans-
formed· the
library. to
look like a
resort -this
is the ma.k-
ing of a
movie, nghl
here m
town.
The fuck
is a Walt
Disney pro-
du ction
titled
•Romy and
Michelle's
High School
Reurtion, • a
satirical
co medy
about two
best friends
who go to
"It fit an
the require-
ments of
what they
needed-a
building
that looks
modem
and has a
linear
style ... "
-GARY
OeGAUA •
their 10-year hlgh school reunion
The film stars not only Oscar-
winning SoTV1no, but L1sd
Kudrow from the hit television
sitcom "Fnends," and Janeane
Garofalo, a former comedian and
star in the recently released
movie, "The Truth About Cats
and Dogs·
"They are three of the hottest
female stars." said Joe Cieary,
Newport Bedch's film liaison,
who has been working with Dis-
ney since last week when a loca-
bon scout discovered the library
and deemed 1t perfect for the pro-
duction.
"lt ht all the reqwrements of
what they needed -a building
that looks modem and has a lin-
ear style.• said Gdf)• DeGalla, a
location manager for Disney who
spent two days dnvmg around
the county searching for an
appropnate building before he
spotted the library from a heli-
copter.
In less than a week, DeGalla
worked with Cleary and oty Rev-
enue Manager Glen Everroad to
obtain pemllSSlOn to film from the
• SEE LIBRARY PAGE A20
last week bus driver; today, national hero r----~-~---~~--~---~-~------~~~--~--
• Costa Mesa resident Bruce Anderson is the toast
of the animal rights crowd <µter refusing to hand out
hamburger coupons on bus route.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot •When people are willing to
pay the price for their beliefs, the
American pub.lie really appreci-
ates it," said Alex Hersh~, presi-
dent of the Fann Animal Reform
Movement. • tt's something we
don't do very often, so we really
appreciate it when someone elSe
does it for us.•
Even more impressive to Her-
tha.ft is the fact that Andenon ls cm everyman, cm tndividual who,
prlor to his stand againlt the
Orange County TramportatlOn
Authority, bad 118\W ~ a
blip Oil the actMlt radar ICIWIL
•J meen I'm u.pect8cl to go
Jell." Htnbalt Mid. "Here's a per·
"Here's a person
who's not a national
leader. He was a
bus dttVer who was
i-dolnglda
~ lhlllf····
son who's not a national leader.
He was a bus driver who was just
doing bit own thing "
Pired from bis job ad pre-
j>ared to fOe a laWlult tf be ii not
relnltated, Andenoft'I ~ bU
bee:<Jme a c:aUM celebtal9ill eaOll
the country. n. formlr bal drhw
ii now Nplt11Dt1d by nM9d Lal
Angeles attorney Gloria Allred.
Meanwhile Costa Mesa resi-
dent Ava Park, founder of Orange
County People for Animals, has
conducted interviews· on the
Anderson vs. OCTA campaign
with CBS affiliates m New York
and Toronto.
Because of his bus connection,
activists are labeling Anderson
the ROM Parks of the vegetarian
movement.
"Absolutely, h 's e. hero,• said
Gretchen Wyler, an actress and
the founder of The Ark nust. Inc.
•tt's hard when you have decided
to go ag~lar practice
of ea~ t W\!r~y. ~·re =•step 1 ·.~to
·a ~g)~ wheppen,
8 9EE DANER MOE AIO
I \ 11 I \
AROUND TOWN
BEST IUYS
CLASSIFIED
COMMUNITY fOftUM
INTtRTAINMENT
l'OUCE AUS
SOOETY
WEA'TliER
A10
AZ
IS
A11
A1J
A2
A11
N
A2 THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996
Women's shop c~lebrates
anniversary with shoppers
A first anniversary sale
ls in progress at At-
Eue Women and
Home (759-1985) located
above the Farmer's Market in
the Atrium Court at Fashion
Island. The sale includes dis-
counts on selected merchan-
dise from 30% to 80% off.
Zanella, Barry Bricken, Car-
ole Wang and Ralph Lauren
are a few of the designers on
sale.
Vogue Salon (752-5882) is
celebrating its grand opening
Friday from 5:30 to 9 p.m. at
1000 N. Bristol St. in Newport
Beach. Seven years ago,
Vogue Salon consisted of
three hairstylists, a manicurist
and a receptionist. Today it's
doubled in size, and has
teame d up with Making
Paces, a Newport Beach skin
and body care salon. Manag-
er Donato Bianchini says
#We've found our formula for
success. Its equal pdrts pro-
viding our clients with the
finest talents and c:1dvanced
techniques in pc>rsonc:1J care."
greer
wylder
Costa Mesa, is offering a spe-
cial coupon in today's paper.
When you buy 10 bagels at'
the regular price, you'll
receive six free. East Coast
bagels are different then
many bagel shops. The
bagels are not too big, and
the flavors don't get mixed
together. When you buy a
cinnamon r~sin bagel it
won't taste like garlic.
I've never tried George's
Mexican Food (650-6031),
Zlbber~Closet (723-1500)
located on Balboc:1 Island at
317 Marine Ave. 1s having a
sale through June. All furni-
ture and bedding wiU be
reduced 10%. Zibber's Closet
specializes in children's cloth-
ing, accessories and han-
painted furniture. Girls' cloth-
ing is available JO sizes new-
born to 12, and for boys, sizes
are for newborn to 12.
but it's back in business after
10 years. For its re-opening
celebration, it's offering
coupon specials in today's
paper. George's is having a
"kids eat free• special, and a
"buy one, get one free• spe-
cial on selected items through
June 30. The eatery is locat-
ed at 744 W. 19th St. in Costa
Mesa.
MARC MARTIN I OAlt.Y PILOT
Newport Beach Police Offlcer Mark Miller surveys damage at the old Bobby McGee's restaurant where an overhang collapsed
Wednesday when a delivery truck (background) ran into the structure. No one-was Injured. but three cars were crushed.
Too-tall truck -causes collapse of awning
If you're looking for a big
selection in beauty supply
merchandise, you'll firid it at
the 17th St. Beauty Center
located at 283-D 17th St. in
Costa Mesa. ll carries many
of the popular name brands.
including Aveda, Essential
Elements, Murad, Mustela,
Kama-Sutra and Deramlogi-
ca. And the 17th St. Beauty
Center accepts dl1 competi-
tors' coupons.
Escada (957-6800) is hav-
ing an exclusive preview of
its Escada couture collection
today through Saturday at its
South Coast Plaza store. An
informal modeling show will
tdke place from 1 to 3 p .m.
For special occasions, fashion
consuJtants can help chose
the perfect gown.
• No one was injured in the Wednesday incident on
Coast Highway, but several cars were crunched. " You figure it this is
the way my luck is
going today, I better
go home ... "
pick-up truck he bought a year
ago.
•we heard a crash. I came out
here and am quite amilZed, • said •
Gonzalez, relieved that the acct-•
dent was covered by insurance.
•You figure if this is the way my •
luck is going today, I better go •
home.·
By Carolyn Mille r, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Tom
Agnew was on his way to deliver
fresh fish to some South County
restaurants Wednesday when he
decided to stop and make a
phone call to save time.
The best bdgel shop, East
Coast Bagel Co. (650-9223)
located at 474 E. 17th St. in
• BEST BUYS appears Thursdays and
Saturdays. If you know of a good buy
call me at 540-1224, fax me at 646-
4170 or write to me: Best Buys Daily
Pilot. 330 W Bay St. Costa Mesa.
92627.
But when Agnew pulled his
white delivery truck into the dri-
veway of a vacant restaurant at
353 E. Coast Highway at 11 a.m.,
his day was ruined.
His truck was a foot too high to
clear the 8-foot-11-inch awning in
,'Pilot Wrlham Lobdell The same 24-Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa
hour answertf'lg service may be Mesa, CA. 92626. Copyright No
used to record letters to the r'le'WS stories, Illustrations. edito-
editor on any topic. rial matter or advel'tisements
VOL. 90, NO. 131 ADDRESS herein can be reproduced with-
Our address is 330 W. Bay St., out written permission of copy-
THOMAS H. JOHNSON, Costa Mesa, Calif 92627. right owner.
Publisher CORBECilOMS ttQW TO 8EACtt US WIWAM LOBOEU. Editor
STEVE MARBLE. It 1s the Pilot's policy to prompt· Circulation
Managing Editor ly correct all errol'1 of subslance The Times Orange County
UUS YOKOI, City Editor Please call 574-4233 Thank you (800) 252-9141
MARC MARTIN, Photo Editor fY.I Advertising
KIMGRIFRTH, Classified 642-5678
Director of Operations The Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Display 642-4321 Daily Pilot (USPS-144-800) Is JUDY OETTING, published Monday through Sat-Editorial Clas~fied Manager urday In Newport Beach and News 540-1224
LANA JOHNSON. Costa Mesa, subscriptions are Sports ~2-4330 Promotions News, Sports Fax 646-4170 ~SHAH, Controller only available by subscribing to E-Mail: FLn71 BOProdigy.com MtCHEUE GRAJCZYK, Pre Pr~s The Times Orange County (800)
HANK KNIGHT, Press 252-9141 In areas outside of Main Office
CAAL TOTH, Packaging and Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, Business Office 642-4321
Distribution subscriptions to the Dally Piiot Business Fax 631·5902
only are available by mall for Published by
READERS HQTUNE S 1 O per month. Second class California Community News,
642-6086 portage paid at Costa Mesa. CA. • llrnM Mirror Company. (Prices include all applicable ~ff~ s. Klein, Your comments about the Dally state and local taxes.) POSTMAS-Pr~tandCEO Pilot or news tips will be record TER: Send address changes to 0 1996 Calif. CN.
ed and given directly to Editor The Newport Beach/Costa Mesa All rights rewfWCI.
Make Those Patios &
Entries Beautiful
HAND-SELECTED BOUQUET
CANYON STONE ENTRY
THIS STONE WAS SELECTED
FOR ITS GRAY/BLUE COLOR.
Jim Jennings
CUSTOM MA80NllY
170 e. 17th St. • Swte'206
Cotca w ..
(714) 645-8512 s.c. tlcenM 1191101 •
Let Jim Jennings
install your
complete
yard hardM:ape.
• Expert brick,
block, stone, tile,
slntc &. concrete
work.
• Cnn recomm end
quality designers
& landstapers.
• Qurihty work In
Costn Mesa &
Newport Beach
ince 1969.
• Dralnaae problenul We
solve them.
....,.
~
TEMPERATURES
Newport Beach
67161 ' Balboa
67/61
Costa Mesa
72160
Corona del Mar
66/60
SURF FORECAST
LOCATION SIZE
Wedge 2-3 s
Newport 2-3 s
Blackies 2-4 s
River Jetty 2-4 s
CdM 2-3 s
BOATING
Light variable
winds night and
morning hours shift-
ing southwest to
west 1 S knots by
afternoon with 2
foot wind waves,
southwest swell 4
feet. Early moming
I
front of the building, and the yel-
low awning came crashing down.
The a~g and its four brick
columns trapped the delivery
truck, crushed three cars parked
underneath it and triggered the
fire sprinkler line in front of the
restaurant. No one was injured in
the accident, police said.
-STEVE GONZALEZ •
"I didn't realize the height,"
said a shaken Agnew. "It was
'tap,' lhen'tbere was a ·boom' like
it was waiting to com e down.
restaurants as What's Cooking
Cafe and Bobby Magee's in previ-
ous years.
Steve Gonzalez, an employee
at the Newport Auto Center next
door to the vacant restaurant,
stood and stared at the heap of
rubble on top of his red Chevrolet
Fire and police officials were
busy surveying the damage and •
gathering information about what , i
happened, when the building's •. _
owner, Russ Flute r, drove by, then •
braked to a stop,
•1 was on my way to a meeting •
when I drove by and did a double
take,• Fluter said, surveying the
damage. #I've got to call rrty
insurance. company."
#I'm OK, 1 just have to deal
with my boss."
The building has housed such
SURF
low clouds and fog. Surltine Wave-clearing to hazy sun-trak through shi ne this afternoon. Tuesday
TIDES Not much b ut
wind waves in
TODAY sight until Friday First low
2:50 a.m. -0.3 when a new
First high south-180 swell
9:06 a.m. 3.6 rolls in with 2-3
Second low foot waves at
2:01 p.m. 1.7 south breaks and
Second high shoulder:plus at
8:19 p.m. 5.8 the good spots.
By Sunday, it'll be FRJDAY
First low gone and it's back
3:27 a.m. -0.5 to wind waves for
First high the new week. For
9:48 a.m. 3.7 latest surf report Second low and forecast 5:24 p.m. 2.3 updates, call the Second high Surfline, 1-900-976 8:51 p.m. 5.9 Surf. The call costs
WATER S 1.50 and any pos,-
TEMPERATURE: 66 sible toll.
---------------------------------------------. .
NEWPORT BEACH
• 1600 block of Mariners Drive: A man's cellular phone was
stolen from his unlocked car which was in the secured ga(age
of his home. The man stated the only people who had access to
the residence at the time of the theft were employee's of West-
ern Exterminators.
COSTA MESA
• J100 block of Killybrooke Lane: A man's 1986 white, Ford
Mustang convertible top was found tom and ripped down the
middle In the paricing lot of Klllybrooke Elementary School A
police officer notified the victim, who was walking on the
school grounds with a friend. Nothing was stolen from the
vehicle, but his papers from the glove box were on the front
seat.
• JJOO block of Bristol Street: A woman's credit cards and
checks we-re stolen from her purse In an unloclted cabinet
underneath the sink at Lillie Rubin's in South Coast Plaza. The
victim suspects a female customer in her 40's took her property
because the customer was allegedly found In the employee
lounge by the sink. The victim was told by the customer she
entered the lounge because she needed water to take her
medication.
• JJOO block of ..... Street: A Robinsoo's·May employee at
Crystal Court discovered all of her credit cards were missing the
morning after she had set her purse on a dla lr In the manager's
office at her worit. Although she tana!led her credit cards
Immediately, tw.o alrtine tldtets had already been purdlased In
Irvine without her knowledge.
.. ...
.. ..
Newpon BndiJCosra Mesa Daily Pilot THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 Al
· Fending off a far-out move by the 'far right edge'
·1 can't believe I heard what I
heard, but 1 just heard it,• said
Fonest Werner when he took the
rostrum at Tuesday evening's
meeting of the Newport Mesa
school board
What the former district trustee
had just heard that he didn't
believe he heard was a long,
buzz-worded preachment by
board member Wendy Leece on
the evils of accepting federal
grants!<> fund a variety of occupa-
tional and language programs in
the district.
To hear Wendy and a handful
of supporters tell it, one would
think there was a squadron of
black helicopters just waiting to
pounce the moment the misg1lid-
ed trustees voted to take federal
funding for the widely accepted
Goals 2020 program.
Jack-booted, black uniformed
troops would spill out of the chop-
pers immediately the grants came
through. Silently the force would
deploy through the neighbor-
hoods, seizing the community's
children and readying them for
the brain washing that's sure to
follow.
1lim and stylish in a navy-blue
outfit with white piping, Wendy
lavished praise on the educators
who were •sincere in their pur-
pose• of applying for the grants.
•This is not· a personal issue," she
said.
Obviously, these well-meaning
district staffers simply didn't know
of the terrors that await those who
invite Uncle Sam into their school
district. (
The truth is, she said, these
grants will give federal govern-
ment license to control the lives of
children in Costa Mesa.
This will happen, according to
Wendy, if the district accepts a
lousy 12 grand to install career-
preparation programs at five dis-
trict schools. (And worse, $2 mil-
lion for teaching English, primarily
to the increasing number of for-
eign students arriving at Newport-
Mesa high schools).
"Do we want the federal gov-
ernment controlling selection of
careers in Costa Mesa?" she want-
ed to know.
MThere will be a lot on comput-
Not your Boring Hard Collar,
Front Pocket $9.99 GolfSbir1B.
That Everyone
Else Advertises.
Walkonthe
Wild Side
with the
Coolest
Gearon
the Tour.
50-803 .
Oft Retail
EVERYD
ON THE COAST
fred .,
martin
ers (about) children's personal
records and prospective employers
might use that." she added.
Oh good grief. Now that's get-
ting disturbingly close to the far.
right edge of this flat world of
ows.
Nol to be outdone, a blonde
lady named Cindy told the board:
#It concerns me that someone
would have your child from birth
through college." Say what?
Basically, this is simply a pro-
gram to connect schools to the
business community, and to
enable kids to learn about what
the job market will be like when
it's their tum out in the world.
As Forrest Werner said, there's
hardly anything sinister about it.
•it's really not very threatening.•
I'm concerned that we'd be
locked into something where
there's no backing out,• added
Cindy, who obviously didn't
understand -or didn't want to -
what Superintendent Mac Bernd
said earlier:
MCThere is) nothing in these
grants that requires continuance
of the programs if funding dries
up.• Nor was there anything to
do with matching funds. In other
words, the grants will cost the dis-
trict nothing.
Gay Geiser Sandoval had fig-
ured that out. One of the few in
the audience of 150 or so to speak
for the grants, she said: MThis is
money to be used to further edu-
cation, and isn't that what this
board and this district are all
about?"
Not according to David Wegn-
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Daily Lune.h Features,~
TACO $1.90ea.
w/Steamed Rice
S EAFOOD STIR-FRY
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$6.95
MARINER'S SALAD $6.95
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er. This is obvtously an intelligent
man but wow. Here he was talk-
ing about the grants being part of
"the new world order.• And how
about "the President and First
Lady bolding up their socialistic
cards" ... and allowing "the federal
government to give the country
away," etcetera, etcetera.
In the beginning. Leece was
speaking quite reasonably, tallang
about things like "concern for
accountability." But as the
evening wore on, she, too, was
dredging up the buzz words if the
far, far right: "outcome-based edu-
cation" ... socialism ... cradle-to-
grave .. .local school boards (will)
lose control,· etcetera, etcetera.
One by one, fellow board
members tersely shot Leece down
Judy Franco: "We write the
grants, not the federal govern-
ment."
Ed Decker: M Intrusion by the
federal government doesn't
wash."
Board PresidenlJim de Boom
Carpet Vi
(on documents Leece gave
trustees to read before voting):
"There are no facts here. only the
mterpretabons of a think-tank.•
As you probably know, the
board approved the grants by 6-1
margins. And good for them.
When she ran for the board (on
her second try) in 1994, Wendy
Leece was adamant that she had
no agenda, religious, polibcal or
both.
Her only concern, said th.ts lady,
whose children had been schooled
mostly at home or in private
schools, was for excellence in pub-
llc educations.
We believed that and we elect-
ed her Bad move.
Wlule I haven't always had
pw-e thoughts about th.ts school
board, they surely earned their
attapersons Tuesday night. Keep
up the good work, folks. You'll
have to
I • FRED MARTIN'S column runs every
Thuf'1day and Saturday.
Entire Home
with Plush or Berber
$
for only
00 UP" .)MOS
s.:.~.1t AS CASH
AC
ET DEPOT
WOOD * MARBLE * TILE
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1904 Harbor Boulevard • Costa Mesa
N.E. Corner of Harbor & 19th Street
~~~__, .. 722-9642 m•
lie# 649491
Mon-5at 10-6
Sun 11·5
A4 THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996
..
District does three-way principal swap
• Mariners, California and Harbor View elementaries
will shuffle their leadership for next September.
By Julie Ross CaMOn, Dally Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Three ele-
mentary schools will have new
faces in the pnncipal's office this
September.
Bonnie Swann's recent
appointment to Newport-Mesa
Unified's director of special edu-
cation services has left a vacancy
in Mariners Elementary School's
prinopal ofhce that will be filled
with a three-principal shuffle.
Callforrua Elementary princi-
pal Tammera Parham will move
to Mariners wh.tle Harbor View
Elementary pnnopal Paul Twedt
will move to Cahlorrua. Superin-
tendent l\.1dc Bernd said Wednes-
day
·soth pnnc1pals were interest-
ed m chdngmg sites and request-
ed the move, not because they
wanted to ledve lhe11 schools, but
because they were looking for
professional growth," Bernd said.
The Harbor View position will
be posted immediately for intra-
distnct applJcants, he sa.1d.
"Tlus is a case where we have
a strong field of potential princi-
pals interested in career advance-
ment," he said. "We expect to fill
1t from within the district, but if
we don'I find a good match, of
course we would consider going •
outside."
A representative committee of
staff members, parents and
administrators will screen and
interview candidates during the
summer, be· said. They will nar-
row the field and deliver a list to
Bernd for final interviews.
"We're pushing to have some-
one in place in time to plan for
next year and in ti.me to get
acquainted with the community,"
be said. The vacancy will be tilled
four to six weeks before school
begins after Labor Day.
The principals, along with
Susan Oespenas, director of ele-
mentary education, visited each
of the three schools Wednesday
afternoon, delivering tpe news in
person.
Parham, who started her
teaching career at Sonora Ele-
mentary School in 1969, said she's
looking forward to working with
the Mariners parents and staff.
wu•s such a -great staff and a
tremendous challenge to follow
such a wonderful principal like
Bonnie Swann," she said.
Parham taught at Llndbergh,
Kaiser, Wilson and College Park
elementary schools before mov-
ing up the administrative ladder
to an assistant principal position
in 1990 under Twedt at Harbor
View.
·I feel that the Ca.lifomia staff
will benefit from his guidance,"
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•Thla 'ls a caae where
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.ol potential principals
interested in career
adVancement. We
expect to tlll lt from ·
within the district ... "
. . ,a_~l.·? ~ ~' ~
l.,o~ ' \ ·;_; -MACIERND
said Parham, who took her first
principal position in 1991 at Cali-
fornia. •1 told them today that
they were like the very first class I
taught. I remember them so
weu.·
1Wedt came to Harbor View in
1990 from Ensign Intermediate
School, where he was principal.
He, too, has been with the school
district for more than 20 years,
serving most as a principal.
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He bas been on leave from
Harbor View, however, since an
April back operation. Bernd said
he attended the announcement at
the schools yesterday and will be
working with the California staff
during the summer.
Catherine Ashdown, an
administrative intern at the dis-
trict's adult education center, has
been filling in at Harbor View
since April.
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Newport~ NH& Daily Pilm
Peninsula womal) sexually
assaulted by man
BALBOA PENINSULA -An
18-year-old Newport Beach
woman was reportedly groped
by a man who attacked her
while she was getting out of her
car early Sunday morning,
police said.
The woman, who is a student
at Orange Coast College,
parked her car in the area of
11th Street and West Bay
Avenue at 1: 15 a.m., opened
the car door and was gathering
up her belongings when a
strange man approached her,
police said.
The man covered the star-
tled woman's mouth with his
hand and told her that if she
screamed he would kW her,
Newport Beach police Sgt.
John Desmond said. The I
woman told the man he could
have her car, but instead be
reached underneath·her cloth-
ing and fondled her breast,
Desmond said.
The woman screamed Cllld
the man ran away without
banning her, police said. The
man is described . as white,
about 25 to 30 years old, 5 feet
11 inches tall and weighing 170
pounds. The man was
unshaven, had dark-colored
eyes and blond hair cut short,
police said.
Anyone with information on
the assailant is asked to call
Newport Beach police at 800-
550-NBPD.
-By Carolyn Miller
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THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 AS
I
Concerns over Soup Kitchen's new location cool ·off
II Church pastor says congregation just wanted to help nearly homeless charity.
$y Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
I COSTA MESA -So far, so good.
I Patrons of the Someone Cares
Soup Kitchen have found their way
to the kitchen's new temporary
Q.ome -the Spanish Seventh Day
Adventist Church -albeit in fewer
numbers than previously.
"We're getting about 150 a day
where we got 250-300 before,"
!Wd Andy Amaya, the Soup
Kitchen's manager. •A lot of people
don't know we're still here.•
The Soup Kitchen is still alive
and functioning although it was
nearly bomel~ fiv.e weeks ago.
With only a few days before it
would have been evicted from the
First United Methodist Church. the
kitchen got a reprieve. It was pas-
tor Donald Cameron who offered
soup kitchen founder Merle Hatle-
berg what no other local church
was willing to give: a temporary
home.
Late Tuesday morning, workers
prapared the porch tables for the
lunch aowd. Inside an adjacent
small office, pastor Cameron said
he doesn't know why other church·
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DON'T FORGET
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This Father's Day!
Breads:
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427 E. I 7th St. Costa Mesa
646-1440
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• Records & Telephone ~cessones • Nm<>red Vehicles
• Novelty & Miscellaneous Items • Oetectlon & Monitoring
'The New & Improved SPY FACTORY•
Come b and see Everett & Chuck!
•
es didn't extend a helping hand.
•Maybe they didn't have the
facilities. \\{~ didn't check on that,•
said the soft-spoken pastor. ·1
know (the soup kitchen) was look-
ing around the area We thought
maybe we could help a little bit.•
The church is located on Hamil-
ton Street, ~eps away from the
kitchen's headquarters at the Rea
Community Center. While some
residents have worried about the
possib~ effects of the Soup Kitchen
returning to the neighborhood -
even bringing their concerns
before the City Council -neither
Amaya nor Cameron say they have
heard any complaints.
"Most of the area is Spanish-
speaking. 1 don't think they're
going to complain,• said the
Chilean-born Cameron. "It's no
problem.•
Before each meal, a watchman
is stationed at the gate to check the
people commg in. Amaya also
makes the rounds to make sure
that soup kitchen guests are not loi-
tering or causing any trouble.
Out of concern over possible
crowdJ.ng effects, Soup Kitchen
otfioals initlcllly agreed to only dis-
tribute sack lunches. During the
first week, however, when crowds
y Special
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"We're getting about
150 a day where we
got 250-300 before.
A lot of people don't
know we're
till h IJ s ere ...
-ANDY AMAYA
borhood. • Amaya said. "O\u
behavior reflects on us.·
The church allows soup kitchen
officials to store its goods and
I eqwpment on site, but by and
I large, the two agenaes don't hdve
much interactlon. Soup Kitchen
administratoIS set up in the early
afternoon, serve from 2 to 4 p.m
and are gone by 5 p.m.
Amaya says the soup kitchen ll>
were not a problem, the church ; sb.ll looking for a permanen~ home The three-month lease with the.
agreed to allow the Soup Kitchen Sparush Seventh Day AdventlS'
to have a food line. Church will carry through July
·we really want to keep up d "Then they'll deade 1f the\
good relationship with the neigh-want us to stay,• Amaya said.
1ll1\NI) f)l,l~NINC1!
ROY AL CIGAR SOCIETY
1 OF COSTA MESA •
etuHe se4t ~WI, o11!'"i' s~ o1e~&.A~
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• TOP BRAND CIGARS
• PRIVATE LOCKER REllTAL AVAILABLE llOW
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Costa Me~a residents say .Huntingt9n wlice slow on 911 response
• Two friends trying to help a reportedly suicidal man
say they were accused by officer of 'playing games.'
lj! lina Oamlkolas, Daily Piiot
of the call, making the officer
believe it wasn't an emergency. ..
1Wo Costa Mesa residents have
c)lMged a Huntington Beach
polioe officer with initially reject-
iag their 911 emergency call and
accusing them of "playing
SJillDles" and trying to cause trou-
~e.
Chad Nielsen and Criend Cathy
White have filed a formal com-
plaint against the Huntington
Beach Police Department. The
pa.i.r says they were rebuffed when
they called in a possible attempt·
ed suicide on June 1 and that
119llce didn't arrive on the scene
for over an hour.
Johnson added, however, that
police found enough reason to
investigate the officer's conduct
based on the pair's complaint,
coupled with a tape of the 911 call.
He says he couldn't comment on
the officer's behavior since the
investigation is continuing.
White acknowledged she
probably should have called 911
immediately alter another friend,
a Huntington Beach resident,
called and implied he· would kill
himself. But she said she was hes·
itant initially because of previous
disputes with this man, who she
said was undergoing psychologi-
cal counseling. ' •1 was very surprised and
hidignant, • White said. •ttow
~ he (the officer) call me a liar
~ .. We bad reason to believe this
pwi had tried to commit suicide ...
911 shouldn't have been so cold.•
: Hwitington Beach police Lt.
~an Johnson said that White wait-J!d almost three hours before call-mg 911 to report the incident and
lailed to articulate the seriousness
)
•Just because I didn't do any-
thing right away doesn't mean 911
shouldn't have done anything
right away,• White said.
Johnson said officer response
to the call was also slowed
because police were in the mid.st
of responding to a major emer-
gency that day -an armed man
had barricaded himself in his
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sk a ~gents Poinc resident whac the
best thlngs arc abouc life in chis
retirement communi ty and
~ answer will be the scning and the people.
Evenings and weekends find many taking
advantage of the area's diverse cultural and
recreational offerings. Whether your casces run co
the South Coasc Rcpcnory, concerts, lectures at chc
university or shopping. you'll have ready access ro
the pastimes you enjoy most.
You'll also have ready access to a remarkable
group of neighbors.
Rcsid(nCS arc friendly, wclJ-educaccd and widely
traveled. They're not onJy interesting, they'rr
inccrcsccd in th.c continuing adventure of life.
Add our lovely accommodations and three levels
of care, and you'll undcrscand why chis is chc idal
location for chc bcsc years of your life. To find out
more, wric or call 1·800.278~8898.
MAllC MARTIN /OM.¥ Pl.OT
Chad Nleben placed a 91 t call on June 1 tbat took police and
Ure units more than an hour to respond to.
mother's home -creating a police
personnel shortage.
•It made us extremely busy,•
Johnson said.
White's and Nielsen's call was
taken not by a dispatcher but by a
police officer with dispatching
experience who was helping cov-
er the emergency · phone lines,
Johnson said.
Nielsen and White said they
tried to convince the officer that
their 911 call was serious but the
officer allegedly accused White of
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•
being the man's ex-girlfriend try-
ing to cause trouble.
The officer finally agreed to
send a police unit after Nielsen
promised to meet the police at the
apparently suiddal man's house,
Nielsen and White said. But the
pair say they waited for 40 min·
utes at the man's house and no
officer arrived.
Priority 1 calls, like a suicide in
progress, Me a.us:wered In several
minutes. The officer listed this call
as a Pliority 4 call, which were
an$wered on average in around
25 minutes in 1994, Johnson said.
Police were dispatched to the
Huntington Beach man's house
about 55 minutes after Nielsen
dialed 911 and paramedics were
dispatched a little over an hour
after the call, according to police
and fire records.
Paramedics foWld a lethargic,
43-year-old man who had taken
an unknown amount of prescrip-
tion medication, Fire Department
spokeswoman Martha ~erth ~-
Nielsen, who says his father ts
a police officer, was even more
indignant than White about the
incident. "I was instantly furious,"
he said. "I knew right from the
start that I was totally wronged.
"From the time l hung up the
phone, I wanted this guy•s job."
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Join the fun at
M e$a Verde Center on
Saturday, June 22
from 11 -3 p.m .
There's fun for the
whole family
including contests
for kids. dancing,
and refreshments.
And vote for your
favorite car at the
Eighth Annual
Fifties Fling
Classic Car Show!
Conte5ts are open to kid• up to 18 YClll"I or ago Bubble 11Am and yo-yo·a ere provided
MU9t be prespnt to win door prizes Some ,_tr1ctlon1 may apply as necessnry
Entert.a.lnment, car show. and con1ost.1 are frco of char1e.
Take a stroll down
memory lane at the
CLASSIC
CAR SHOW
featuring over
loo classtc cars from the
40's, so's, 80$ and 70'sl
----
Mesa Verde
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in Costa Mesa
For more lnfOnnatton call C7 I 4t 435-IOIO .
I
{,' -.
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Piloc
F~e dep.artment urges
bike registration
With school almost out and
summer fast approaching, the
Newport Beach Fire Depart-
ment is asking residents to reg-
ister their bikes.
Registering bikes prevents
theft, and if it is stolen the possi-
bility of having it recovered and
returned is greatly increased,
according to the department.
The Newport Beach Fire and
M~rine Department is asking
residents to stop by any fire sta-
~on in the city or the police sta-
tion and get their bikes regis-
tered between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.
daily.
Fire station personnel will call
the Police Department and
check to see if the bike has been
stolen. If it hasn 't, the registra-
tion process which costs $3 per
bike, will proceed.
Once the f ~e is collected, the
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from 1he 1.lbte' llw OC\\ diet \lilts. "hen
proper!\ .1drn1nl\lt'rt'<I h~ .i phi ician v.·ho
is kll0\\1fdgt'1blc 111 1hc1r 1r;c. Clo be :i
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THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 A
briefly in the news Gunfire erupts m· Costa Mesa )
apartment but no one injured. application form is completed
and the license is a.ffiud to the
bike. U there is no identification
number on the bike, the owner
must go to the Police Depart-
ment for registration.
Registration slips are routed
to the Police Department for
permanent filing. ..
Vega appointed to
college committee
. Coast Community College
District Chancellor William M.
Vega has been appointed to
serve as president of the execu-
tive committee for the Interna-
tional Consortium for Educa-
tional and Economic Develop·
ment.
••••••••••••••••••• : Newport :
: BFAUTY SUPPLY:
: daa •11 .. DlllOii : . ~-.
: --: :£ ••••••••••••••• r:
~zoom OFF~
: Entire Purchase :
• •Exciudes Murad & Oermological & Avedil •
• ~ &'D9) • ••••••••••••••••••• • : 3601 Jamboree Rd #8 N.B. •
• 261~788 : • • Jamboree at Bristol : • • Back Bay Court • • ··~················
The colllOl'tium's mission is
to create active partnerships
between community and techni-
cal colleges in the United States,
Mexico and Cananda.
Vega earned his doctorate in
higher and postsecondary edu-
cation from USC in 1989. He
also holds an masters degree in
economics and business from
Applacbian State University in
North Carolina and a bachelor's
degree in management from
Indiana University.
Library volunteers
. and donations needed
Because of the overwhelming
success of the Newport Beach
Friends of the Library's Used
Book Store at the Central
Library, more volunteers are
required in order to e1tend
operational hours and add
another day to the schedule.
Those interested in manning
one or two three-hour shifts per
month should call volunteer
coordinator Hannah Flynn at
673-0419 .
The Friends of the Library
are also in need of book dona-
tions.
Books may be left at any of
the branch libraries or placed in
the book donation closet next to
the Book Store at the Central
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave. All
proceeds are donated back to
the library and donations are
tax-deductible.
After almost 10 years, we are
closing our doors / orever ...
COSTA MESA -A gunman
forced his way into an apartment
Tuesday night and opened fire on
the four occupants, but harmed
none of them, police said.
A woman knocked on the door
of an apartment in a complex at
432 Hamilton Street around 9
p.m., but when one of the occu-
pants opened it, a man in his 30s
pushed past him and began firing
a handgun, Costa Mesa police
Capt. Tom Lazar said.
Somehow, one of the tow vic-
funs was able to push the gun-
man out the front door, but sbo~
ly thereafter, three rounds from a
shotgun were fired through thf;'
window, Lazar said. All tht
rounds hit the ceiling, and no one
was injured. he said.
The incident doesn't appear t\>
be a random act of violence, nor tt
gang or drug-related crim~·
police said. ••
No arrests have been made ill·
connection with the inciden~.
which police are still investigat-
ing. ~
-By Carolyn Miller ..
Everything Must Go!
Upto50%off WITH TH• PURCHAS•
OP 6 llAG•LS
~ storewide ...
excluding Walt Disney Classics .
CJ<J~ooe~ CZJnie11dg
Eastbluf/Vlllage in Newport Beach
644-1474
FATHER'S DAY
FASHION SWEEPSI'AKES*
Register to win selected items from over $6000
worth of fine men's apparel. Drawing to be held
June 16, 1996
AT R•GULAR PRIC•!!
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ZANELIA • BOBBY JONES • REYN SPOONER • CUl'I'ER & BUCK
Wh ile supplies last. See store for details
Fashion Island •.Newport Beach (7 14) 759-7979
•No pwch. ~· Stt srort for details & ~ Must be 18 or older.
A8 THURSDAY. JUNE 13, 1996 A'IWeOf r:.m-llillmmm~-
TWOSOtOOLS
With the installation of two iron gales at Sonora Elementary School, Monday morning
clean-ups (above) have been drastically reduced. Below, students at Andersen Elementary
form a conga line during recess. Right. volunteers he lp chlldr~ ln the library/media cen-
ter at Sonora. ·
SCHOOLS ...
continued from page A 1
enVlfonment for learning," Carr
sa ys.
The community's focus leaves
Carr more ti.me to concentrate
on educating the 404 students
who attend his sch ool, some-
thing Pavich envies.
Sonora and Ande rsen are two
elementary schools easLly repre -
se ntabve of others in the New-
port-Mesa Unified School Dis-
trict.
They receive the same bcls1c
p er-pupil funding, acquire th(•
same student textbooks, offer
the same subjects and are gov-
erned by the same d1stnct
administrators.
Wdlk or ride bicycles to the
school , which is sandwtched
between single-family homes
rlnd high-density apartment
bulldings in the Mesa del Mar
neighborhood.
On a recent Monday morn-
ing. hrst-grader Tommy Jally
wds the first student to arrive at
school, trudging sleepLly up the
front walkway an hour and a
hdlf before the 8:30 a .m. start of
class.
Dressed in worn clothlng and
shoes nddJed with holes, Tommy
grinned shyly al his principal,
who played with the youngster's
uncombed hair.
"What are you doing here so
early?" Pavich asked.
r -
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------------------------------------------7-----------------------,
School budgets at a glance
1995-96
State provided allowance,
based on about $32. 73 per
student
'
ANDERSEN
ELEMENTARY
$12,839
SONORA
ELEMENTARY
$18,487
: 1------------------------------4---------------------------------------.............-i I
I
I
I
I
I I
I
I
I I
Lottery funds
Money not spent last year
Federal and state programs
$1,000
$14,742
$77,762
$1,000
$16,203
$241,684
: t-:::::::::::::::::::::::==:::::::::::~=:--=-----:----::----r---==-::::::==:--:----------i-----------~-----~
: TOTAL BUDGET I $277,374
I '----------------------~-------'----------------------'---------------------' I
Ne,.,.pon Bnch!Costa Mesa Daily Pi
from Anders<"n, • he says, adding
that 1nd1v1dudls who blame low
test scores on family background
and home life dfe wrong.
~To me, lhe argument of
whether family background
makes a cWference or not is not
the centrdl issue. We can't con-
trol that anyway, so I wouJd
rather explain student success or
failure on the basis of what we
do or do not do because we can
control that," he says.
Pavich agrees schools in Cos-
ta Mesa and Newport Beach
share the same goals, though
the end result is different.
"J thmk the mission is the
same·-to ·educate out children
to face their next challenge," he
says. "But in our case, that is
m.iddJe school.
"Our students need more
basic help. More students in
Costa Mesa need to learn basic
language skills. and some imnu-But that's where the s1m1ldn-
ties end.
0
Tommy shrugged, then ran to
JOtn the Janitor dragging lunch
tables from the multi-purpose
room to the play yard.
I
I ~-----------------------------------------------------~----------------' grant children have little or no
..i schooling before coming here."
Technology has become a
war cry among school teachers
across the district who want to
arm their stu dents with educa-
tional advantages for the next
century.
Built on a small parcel of ldnd
adjacent to the PauJarino C'hdn-
nel, Sonora is a cookie-cutter
school with an identical layout
to other Costa Mesa elementdfy
schools like Paularino, Whittier
and K8.1Ser Primary.
The school dlstrict's vast bus
yard and business offices lme
the campus' northern border.
Rows of nondescript homes,
many sharing Sonora's 1962
birth date, hug the southern bor-
der. ·
The school itself consists of d
series of elephant-gray buildmgs
Oanking both sides of the main
office building. A large blacktop
playground links the two sides
of campus.
Some of the classrooms are
self-contained in their own
buildings, linked to the others
by an twork of concrete walk-
ways, which flood with water
and mud during C~omln 's
rainy season.
MOit of Sonora's 6101tudent1
(_
"A lot of our families work -
both parents -so the children
come to school early,• Pavich
explained.
At Sonora, ethnic minorities
dre the majority. The school's
ethm c balance is 36% Latino,
35% white, 25% Asian and 2%
black, according to district
reports.
But Sonora has one large stu-
dent population unique to other
elementary schools in the coun-
ty. The surrounding neighbor-
hood has one of the highest con-
centrations of Marshall Island
immigrants in the United States,
presenting a challenge for Sono-
ra, where none of the teachers
speak Marshallese.
•Most Marshall Island stu-
dents do speak some English,"
Pavich said. "And we are hiring
a Ma rshallese-speaking aide."
a
At 23 years oJd, Andenen
Elementary is one of Newport·
Mesa's youngest facilities incor-
porating a on~·of-a-kind design.
Built into a gently rolling hill-
side at the nucleus of Harbor
View Estates, the school easily
melds into its upper middle-
class surroundings. Only 10 chil-
dren ride school buses; the rest
either walk, ride bicycles or ride
with their parents.
The school itself is considered
an "open school" -all of the
classrooms are inside one build-
ing, some using partitions as
walls. Because of the hillside,
the. building ascends to several
levels, with the two kinder-
garten rooms at the far right side
of the building (the top of the
hill) and the sixth grade. class-
rooms at the far left.
Carr says some teachers don't
like the school's design and
complain of loud noises carrying
through the open space
between the doorleu class-
rooms. But the design also keeps
teachers leu segregated from
their peen and allowt Carr to
keep track " whet they are
ll
doing in class.
"We have no secrets here,"
says Carr, who came to Ander-
sen ·three years ago from Costa
Mesa's Whittier Elementary.
"You don't go down to your
classroom, close the door and
become isolated. Everyone
knows what everyone else is
doing."
But for an open school,
Andersen is amazingly quiet.
Students walk from their class-
room to the 'offi~ through a
giant hallway that serves as the
school's main artery. Throughout
Andersen, the tall walls are plas-
tered with artwork and class
assignments ftom all students.
Andersen's student body ts
much less diverse than Sonora's.
More than 92% of the tu-
dents are white, while 6% are
Asian and 2% are Latino.
Eleven-year-old Anne Sewell
ts a typical Andersen high·
achiever, spending her recess in
clan 1howing students the latest
geometric shapes made on her
fatber'I computer. AbM tram·
ferred to Andersen three years
ago from a private school and
loves math.
"I like Andersen because I
don't have to wear a uniform,"
she said.
Most of Andersen's students
come from the surrounding com-
munity of single-family homes
adorned with manicured land-
scaping. Most of the parents are
high-achieving leaders in their
professions and transfer their
personal expectations to their
children, Carr says.
a
So how comparable are Sono-
ra and Andersen1
Should the district expect
Sonora's limited-Engllsh-spea.k-
ing students to produce the
same high test scores for which
Andersen students are famous?
Superintendent Mac Bernd
says yes.
"l believe that the studentl at
Sonora can learn every bit u
lnuch 4Dd .. Well• thl ltudents ~
Both Sonora and Andersen
have large computer labs, which
students visit on a weekly basis
to learn typing and other skills.
Recently Pavich purchased a .
CD-ROM computer Jor every
Sonora classroom, using several
thousand dollars from the
school's site council fund.
Andersen has two CD-ROM
computers in each classroom
expect fi.rst grade and kinder-
garten, funded in part by the
school's Parent Teacher Associa-
tion
That's where more differ-
ences come into play -inside
the clas rooms where equal
textbooks don't always reflect
equal UlJtruction.
• FRIDAY: A glimpse inside two
fifth grade classrooms -one at
Sonora, one at Andenin.
1
•
Tan k~ Francaise• Watch
18K gold.
A new collection of Tank watches .
•
'
TRADITIONAL
, I i l V f~ L F f ,' ,~
THE RITZ CARLTON: RANCHO MIRAGE & LAGUNA NIGUEL
FASIUON ISLAND: NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 721 -9010
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996
TQDAY
FOREO.OSUltES SEMINAR
Take advantage of the large
government foreclosure market at
a workshop offered today from
6:30 to 9 :30 p.m. in room 108 of
Orange Coast College's Business
Education Building. Registration
fee is $29 and a $10 material fee is
paydble to the instructor in class.
Por more information, call 432-
5880.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONaRT
Ted Vautrinot plays contempo-
.r~ry folk music from noon to 2:30
p.m. at liiangle Square's free con-
cert on the Town Square in Costa
Mesa.
CAREER NETWORK
The weekly Career Network
meeting at St. Andrew's Presby·
teridn Church presents Bob Don-
aldson of Executive Career Ser-
vices on ·Dealing With Leftovers
From the Seminar" at 7:30 p.m. in
Stewdrt Lounge. The discussion
will tdke place at 600 St. Andrews
Road, Newport Beach. For more
infonndLion, call 574-2239.
SLIDE PRESENTATION
"Ledrning About South
Africdn Bulbs" is the title of a free
slidP presentation at 7 p.m. in the
Friends' Meeting Room of the
Newport Beach Central Library.
For more information, call 717-
3801.
HOW TO SUCCEED SPEAKER
Paul Danison of the Orange
County Register will speak on
"How to Succeed in Publicity
Without Really Writing" at the
Costc.1 Mesa Chamber of Com-
me1 ce 's monthly networking
br~dkfdst at 7:15 a.m. at the Costa
J\lesd Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Drive. The cost is $10, $15
d~ the door. For more information,
oa.11 574-8780.
)
REAL ESTATE WORKSHOP
~ · fmdnce 500 offers a free work-
shop on the real estate market
lodt1y from 1 to 2 p.m. or 6:30 to
7·30 pm. at the University Athlet-
lf: Club, 1701 Quail Street, New-
port Bedch. For more information,
<:dll 251-0270.
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Ndnty Parker, the first female
1m•sitlcnt of Winchell's, will be
the keynote speaker at the Asso-
c:iat1on for Corporate Growth and
Forum for Corporate Director's
~meeting at 5:30 p.m. at The Pacif-
I Club, 4110 MacArthur Blvd.,
wport Beach. The cost is $20.
more information, call 436-
3
i"' FRIDAY
~ENTORS FORUM
A host of well-known profes-
nals will share their expertise
dll aspects of inventing at a
&:Jtlonlhly forum offered this sum-
tn:Jer by Orange Coast College's ~mmumty Education Office
rpm 7:30 to 10 p.m. in room 101
J OCC's Science Lecture Hall.
L e cost is $5 per session for
fmembcrs and $15 per session for
,.on-members. For more informa·
(lion, ca~I 432-5880. .
l TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERTS
' .Jenny Richards performs
p olk/rock music from 7 to 10 p.m.
by Deedftea Rich, D.D.S.
DENTAL IMPLANT
HISTORY
TIH· rl'St"arch that gave: rise: to dc:n1al
impl:uu rechnology was undenaken by
Swedish physician Per-lngvar Branemark
nearly 40 yc:ars ago. While studying
microcircubtion of the bone and wound
hc;il111g. he accidentally disco~rtd
O)'rnint<'grarion (the pr<>«ss by which
hi.inc' adhere 10 metOll implams). As he
pl..itcd an implan1able optical device
illto the bone of an animal 10 observe
circubtory and cellular changes in the
bone. he foiund thar the bone adhered
"'try strongly ro the device's ti1anium
housing ovc:r time. Ir is this information
tl1:u denrius now rely on when
implanting a metal cylinder imo the
jawhone of implam patients. Once the
1i1an1um cylinder ia in place and gum
tissue i~ closed over It, 3 to 6 months arc
;ii.lowed for the mea.I and boot' to bond
1~1hcr. After 1ha1. an incision i1 made
tht' gums to uncover the cylinder and
fabric.ited crown is eitht'r K~ or
cocmen1ed into the cylindt'r to crcare a
~pl.iocmem tooth.
Enjoy lhc simple plcasu~ you m;iy ~
miuing. Rcd.iJCowr comfort and
nfidcnce. Dental implanu offer a
~rmancnt solurion to missing greeth.
Our pr;micc, loured at 1441 Avocado
/\'lie , Suite 508, Ncwpon Beach.
luJa implants, crowns & bridges,
tmcl' trc;atment, u well as icncraJ
nti uy .Or tht' entire family. ttutf
ur m:th to our t'xpcrience and
""lc.:d~c. We want 10 keep you
iling. PH: 640-S680. Our in houtc
h bcilita1cs our parlt'nU time and
1ncn~n{c.
and 18d Vautrinot pJa~ contem-
porary folk music from noon to
2:30 p.m. The free concerts are on
the Town Square at niangle
Square in Costa Mesa.
THE TEAROOM
The Tea Room presents Jack
Friery on •How To Get Govern·
ment & Big Business Contracts•
at 7 a.m. at 3100 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach. The cost is $15
and includes breakfast. For more
information, call 55-4785.
SATIJRDAY
BOOK SIGNING
Costa Mesa author Jo-Ann
Mapson. ·shadow Ranch,• and
Fountain Valley author Earlene
Fowler, •Kansas 'ltoubles, M will
sign copies of their new books from
2 to 4 p.m. at Barnes & Noble, 'Ili·
angle Square in Costa Mesa. For
more infonnation, call 631·0614.
CPR ClASS
Hoag Memorial Hospital Pre-
byterian offers the American
Heart Association Card.io Pul·
monary Resuscitation workshop
from 8 a.m. to noon. The registra-
tion fee is $25. For more informa-
tion, call 644-3151.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONC.ERTS
Ted Vautrinot plays con~empo
rary folk music from 1 to 4 p .m.
and War 'n' Cocoa performs con-
temporary rock music from 7 to 10
p.m. The free concerts are on the
Town Square.. at liiangle Square
in Costa Mesa.
SUNDAY
CAR SHOW
The Cobra Owners Club of
America Orange County presents
their 15th Annual MConcours De
Nice" car show from 10 a.m. to 3
L/1 ' -.·':1! P-:. -~ -. __ J.ii
Newport Bncb/Costa Mesa Daily Piloc
p.m . at the Park Mall at the Office
of South Coast Plaza, in front of
the Westin Hotel at South Cout
Plaza. The event ii free. Por more ·
information, call-'76-7789.
MUSIC FESTIVAL
The Corona del Mar Chamber
of Commerce presents the
Baroque Music Festival starting
today and continuing until June
23. For times, dates and venues,
call 760-7887.
TRIANGLE SQUARE CONQRT
Pete Wickersham perfonns
mellow rock music from t to 4
p.m. at the free concert on the
Town Square at 1\i.angle Square
in Costa Mesa.
MONDAY
CPRClASS
The American Heart Associa-
tion Card.io Pulmonary Resusci·
taion workshop is offered by
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presby-
terian from 6 to 10 p .m. The regis-
tration fee is $25. For more infor-
mation, call 644-3151.
BUSINESS LECTURE
Forensic Consultants Associa-
tion Orange County presents
MThe Case of the Unmelodious
Missives or The Case of the
Raunchy E Mails• and •Legal
Malpractice and the Expert Wit-
ness" from 4 to 5:30 p.m. at The
Pacific Club at 4110 Maq\rthur
Blvd., Newport Beach. The costs
range from $10 to $55. For more
information, call 723-1114.
TUESDAY
LIFE ENRICHMENT
M Creating the Life You
Want" is the title of a two-part
workshop being offered this
summer by Orange Coast Col-
lege's Re·Entry Center. The
. Sailing workshop
Orange Cout College often a workshop that offers tips tor cruising to the Channel Islands
lrom 7 to 10 p.m. Friday at OCC's Salling Center, 1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
The cost Is $12 ln advance or $15 at tbe door. For more Information, call 6-45-9412.
workshop is scheduled for
Tuesday evenings from 6-7 :30
p .m . today and the 25 in the Re-
Entry Center. Sessions are free.
For more information, call 432-
5162.
UNDERWATER PHOTOGRAPHY
The public is invited to
"Underwater Photography." a
free noon program at the
Friends' Meeting Room of the
Newport Beach Central Library.
For more information. call 717-
3801.
GRAD NIGHT PREVIEW
Parents and friends of 1996
graduates and interested com-
munity members are invited to a
free special preview of Grad
Night facilities, games and
attractions from 4 to 6 p.m. at the
Coron a Del Mar High School
Gym, 2101 Eastbluff Dr., New-
port Beach. For more informa-
tion, call 759-0242.
NETWORKING
The Association of SpeciaJ
Event Professionals presents
"Networking Inspite of Yourself"
at 6:30 p.m. at the 1Win Palms.
630 Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. Learn how to speak to
people when you have nothing to
say. The cost is $20 to $25 for non-
members. For more information.
call 249-2307.
OUR CHILDREN COME FIRST
THE FUTURE IS Now
On January 11, 1996 the CDM Foundation w as created & establish ed their mission :
THE MISSION
To cre a te a national m od el of excellence in academ ic ach ievement, cul-
t ural appreciation and l e adersh i p d evelopmen t, preparing students for
the challenges of the 2 1s t century, through a d ynamic partnership with
the community.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Here is my credit card information or an enclosed check payable to: Corona del Mar High School FoWldation
1280 Bison B9-437 • N ewport Beach, California 92660.
I make a cash gift of $ I pledge $ to be paid $ per month, for months.
Name: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--:.,.-~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~
Address: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~--:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__,;.~~~~~~
Telephone: _________________ Signature:. ________________ _
[] MCNISA Card #: I l . I I Bxp: Date: __
Print your name on the above Hne ·as you would like it to appear for recognition & publicity purposes.
All donattons are tax deducltble and will be receipted by the fowidatton which Will administer the Funds.
For. niore information call: 714 -224-2366
Newpon Sekh!C04ta Mesa Daily Piloc
WED NBS DAY
RUSSIA'S FUTURE
The Newport Foundation pre-
sents "Russia's Future -After the
.Elections~ at 7:30 a.m. at the Bal-
boa Bay Club in the Bayside
room. 1221 West Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. The cost is $28
for don-members and $20 for
members. For more information,
call 224-2270.
ONGOING
CARDIAC SUPPORT GROUP
Led by registered nurse, Beth
Dunn, the Cardiac Support Group
meets every Thursday morning
Crom 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at
Shape-Up Newport in the Aero-
bic Room, 1080 Irvine Ave., New-
port Beach. The group is free and
open to the public. For more infor-
mation, call 631-3623.
USC ALUMNI MEET
The Alumni Association for
USC Newportllrvine Club meets
the first Wednesday of each
month at the USC Orange Coun-
ty facility in Irvine, 2361 Campus
Drive. For more details of events,
call 250-4USC.
DIVORCE MEDIATION
A free lecture about divorce
mediation, an alternative to the
traditional two-attorney divorce,
is offered the third Thwsday of
every month with attorney Alicia
D. Taylor and psychologist Lee H.
Solow. Space is limited, and reser-
vations are required. For more
information. call 863-9590.
PlANNING YOUR ESTATE
Legal Options, 620 Newport
Center Drive, Suite 1100, Newport
Beach, sponsors a lecture titled
"Protect Your Assets" at 10 a.m.
every Saturday. Attorney Debra
Grim.ai.la discusses bow wills, living
trusts, duuitable donations and oth-
er tax reduction strategies preserve
the value of an estate and help
avoid probate. Admission is free,
but seating is limited. Reservations
may be rnade by calling 760-8775.
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS
Overeaters Anonymous meets
from 7 to 9 p.m. every Wednesday
at West Newport Community
Center, 883 W. 15th Street, #5
upstairs, Newport Beach. For
more information, call 953-0900.
~.
BUILD THE LIFE YOU WANT
A support group based on the
book, uTo Build The Life You
Want, Create The Work You
Love,~ meets every Wednesday
from 7 to 8:30 p.m . at 2900 Bristol
Street, J-108, Costa Mesa. The fee
is $20 per session. For more infor-
mation. call 850-1689.
HOW TO RAISE TEEN-AGERS
College Hospital, 275 Victoria
St., Costa Mesa. offers a free edu-
cational workshop for parents of
teens at 10 a.m . each Saturday.
Every week's workshop starts and
finishes a new topic, so parents
can join the group at any point in
the cycle. For more information,
call Dr. Lani Martins at 704-8166.
ADULT BALLROOM DANCE
The Costa Mesa Senior Center
offers adult ballroom dance on the
third Friday of each month from
7:30 to 10:30 p.m . Singles and
couples welcome. Live music pro-
vided by the Ray Robbins Combo.
The cost is $5 or $4 for sage mem-
bers. The Senior Center is at 695
W. 19th St., Costa Mesa.
FAMILIES ON COURSE
A seven-step intervention and
mediation program for families is
scheduled from 9 to 11 a.m. every
Saturday at the Costa Mesa Com-
muntty Center, 1845 Park Ave. The
program focuses on ways of com-
municating with any out-<>l-oontrol
family dispute, anger and general
family disharmony. The cost is $.5
for adults, S3 for children 13 to 18.
Parents do not have to be present.
Call 556-8000 for more information.
CDM a.ASS OF 1986
The reunion committee for
Corona del Mar's Oass of 1986 is
lo0king tor alumni. Please send
current address and telephone
number to: Cd.M 86-Reunion
Committee, PO Box 5269, New-
port Beach 92662.
SURPLUS FOOD
Seniors and low-income fami-
lies of the Costa Mesa/Newport
Beach area can obtain free
U.S.D.A. surplus food between 8
and 10 a.m . the secon d Saturday
of each month in the rear parking
lot of the Church of Christ, 286
Avocado St., Costa Mesa. For
more information, call 631-2177.
TEEN FOCUS
The Teen Focus outpatient
chemical dependency treatment
program holds a free 12-Step
Meeting at noon Sundays exclu-
sively for teens in its offices at 567
San Nicolas Drive, Suite 201,
Newport Center, Newport Beach.
For more information, call 640-
TEEN or 640-1788.
ANIMAL BEREAVEMENT GROUP
This ongoing group specializes in
the needs of individuals who have
sick and/or dying animals in their
lives. It meets from 1:30 to 2 p.m.
every Tuesday at 3101 W. Coast
Highway, Suite No. 311, Newport
Beach. Free admission but can 722-
4588 for space reservation.
LEADSClUB
The Women's Chapter of the
Costa Mesa Leads Club meets at
7:15 a .m. every Wednesday ot
Mi.mi's Cafe at Harbor and New-
port boulevards in Costa Mesa.
The club is part of an internation-
al networking organization dedi-
cated to expanding each mem-
ber's business through quality
leads. Call 474-2225 or 975-8338
for more information.
INaST SURVIVORS SUPPORT
Survivors of Incest Anonymous
for female victims of sexual abuse
and rape and their friends and
family meets from 10 a.m. to noon
every Saturday at 760 Victoria St.,
Costa Mesa. There is no fee. For
more information, call Karen at
531-2629 or Iris at 859-3918.
DIVORCE SUPPORT GROUP
Mariners Church sponsors a
free divorce recovery support
group at 7 p .m. every Wednesday
at 1000 Bison in Newport Beach.
LUPUS FOUNDATION
A support group for younger
patients with lupus meets from
1 :30 to 3 p.m. the second and
fourth Wednesday of each month
in Newport Beach. For details,
call 536-1734.
ADD SUPPORT GROUP
An Adult Attention Deficit Dis-
order Support GIOup meets Thurs-
days from 7 to 8:30 p.m . on the first
and third Thursday and from 10 to
11 :30 a.m. on the second and
fourth at Coastline College Coun-
seling Center, 1200 Quail St., Suite
105, Newport Beach. For more
information, call 476-0991.
BREAST CANCER SUPPORT
A breast cancer support group
meets every Tuesday from noon
to 2 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.
FAONG FORWARD
Facing Forward, a support
group for family members of
recently deceased cancer patients,
meet every Monday from 6:30 to
7:30 p.m. and from 7:30 to 8:30
p.m. at the Patty and George
Hoag Cancer Center, 4000 W.
Pacific Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. The meetings a.re tree. For
more information, call 722-6237.
PROSTATE CANCER SUPPORT
A prostate cancer support
group meets every Thursday
evening for eight weeks begin-
ning tonight at 6:45 p.m. 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.
SENIORS SQUARE DANCE CLUB
The Costa Mesa Senior Citizen
Square and Round Dance Club
seeks experienced dancers to join
in from 9 to 11 a .m. every Thurs-
day at the Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter, 19th and Pomona streets. Call
545-5669 for more information.
SENIORS MEET
Seniors Actively Giving
Enrichment meets the third Tues-
day of every month at 2:30 p .m. in
the Multipurpose Room Side A,
Costa Mesa Senior Center, 695 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. Attend to
find out what is going on' at the
center and suggest activities or
programs that you would like to
see at the Center. For more infor-
mation, call 645-2356.
COSTA MESA CHAMBER
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce Networkers Business
Leads Luncheon is every
Wednesday at 11:45 a.m. at the
Costa Mesa Country Club, 1701
Golf Course Road. For more infor-
mation, call 574-8780.
YOUR NEIGHBORS & FRIENDS
HAVE MADE A COMMITMENT
Brian Tulley
Rusty & Mary Lynn Turner
on 'd & Linda Varner a eter Wall Family
aelWan
J es & Carol Ward
James H. Warsaw
Robert & Carol Warsaw
Dr. Ed & Mikelle Watson
Raymond & Connie Way
Larry & Emma Weeshoff
Michael & Denise Weiland
Carl & Beverly Wtllgerolh
Dick & Erika Williams
Karen Wilson
Greg Wohl
Shunki Vatsunam.i
Parhad Tale-Yazdi
Arthur & Karen Yel ey
The Yourman Family
Tom & Mlsa Yuen
Earle & Maria Zuehl
• THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 A11
CONSUMER BUSINESS NE1WC*
This networking group meets
at 7 a.m. every Friday in Tbe 1M
Room, 3100 Irvine Ave., Newport
Beach. For information and reset·
vations, call 550-'785.
rAJ CHI
Hoag Cancer Center spomor1
a tree t'ai chi class on Thursdays,
10:30 to 11:30 a.m. to people with
cancer and their families. 1bil
class is designed to reduce strea,
increase longevity and promote a
sense of well-being with basic,
easy to learn, non-strenuous
movements to aid in balance and
concentration. The class is taught
by Revina Lewis. No registratioo
is required and the class is free.
For more information, call 7 -
CANC::ER. Hoag Cancer Center
is located at 4000 W. Pacific Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
INCOME TAX ASSISTANa
The Oasis Senior Center offen
free tax preparation assistance fOI'
moderate to low income ind.ividu ..
aJs. The service specializes in
seniors. AARP volunteers are
trained by the IRS. For more infor·
mation, call 644-3244.
SLOW EASY EXEROSE
Arthritis Foundation instructor;
Wyoma McKinley, leads an exer-
cise class every Thursday morn-
ing at 11 a.m. at the Jewish Senior
Center, 250 E. Baker St. in Costa
Mesa. For more information, call'
513-5641.
SPANISH FOR SENIORS
The Jewish Senior Center
offers Spanish classes every
Wednesday at the center, 250 E.
Baker St. in Costa Mesa. For moreo
information, call 513-5641.
CARDS/BINGO
Every third Tuesday the Jewish
Senior Center offers various card
games and bingo from 10 a.m. to
2 p.m. A kosher lunch is offered aC
noon for $3 per senior. For more
information, call 513-5641.
CANCER SUPPORT GROUP
A free Cancer Support Group
meets every Tuesday from 6:4'5 to
8: 15 p.m. at the Patty and George
Hoag Cancer Center, 4000 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
The group provides support to
cancer patients, their families and
friends. For more information, caB
722-6237.
1
1• HUNDREDS Of FABULOUS PIECES '°j
CHOOSE FROM
•• HUNDREDS Of fRAMEs TO CHoosE I
I FROM I
•• HURRY ... SALE ENDS SOONIH I
I PIERSIDE GALLERYI
I 722·8644 I I 1671 PLACENTIA AVE I
L COSTA MESA .I -------
IRAND NEW, NEVIi
WORM, AvntlMTK
1970'S APPAIEU
• A&.1UNATM Dussr
· ANTIQUlS' (OUKTIIWI
· UNHLIEVA8ll 0..1 Of A
ICIHD ITIMsl
..1
A12 THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996
Sumnier bash ra.ises funds for CHOC
b.w.
cook
Tiey were calling it the
ouse of hope. House of
Imports Mercedes Benz
joined forces with Children's
Hospital of Orange County,
throwing a Saturday-night sum-
mer bash at the De Angelo
·estate, one of the largest private
residences of Orange County.
The affair attracted 100 local
CHOC supporters, including
Newport's Glabman furniture
family, represented by parents
Jim and Barbara with son Brian
and daughter-in-law Marla, as
well as the vivacious Mary Ann
Miller with husband, Len. Mary
Ann is busy preparing for the
upcoming opening-night pre-
view party for the Balboa The-
atre Foundation slated for the
end of June, but at the De Ange-
lo estate the talk was all CHOC.
"We're doing this for the chil-
dren,· said House of Imports
manager Ray Besboff. The car
dealer handed a $10,000 check
to CHOC chairman Tom Jones
and made it very clear to the
crowd that business and the
community must work together.
"The money does not come from
any promotional effort, it just
comes out of our account to be
used by CHOC as they see fit.•
Jones was pleased to accept,
commenting, "The need contin-
ues to grow in this region, and
we are honored to be supported
by business such as House of
Imports. May it be a long and
rewarding association for us
both."
Mike Comer, Dean MercW,
Larry Lewls, Michael
Above: Jim and Barbara Glabman witb son Brian and daughter·
ln-law Marla. Below right: Leann and David Benvenuti. Below
left: Mary Ann and Len Mlller.
O'Donogbue, Nancy Fleming,
Sam Hwang and Richard Tass
were among the House of
Imports folks on hand to cele-
brate with CHOC staff and
patrons including Newport's
David Benvenuti with wife,
Leann, Marcia and Micbael Bir-
ney, Pat and Tony Calderone,
Janet Davidson with Richard
Plat, Lin Lan with Sue Chen and
Eileen Wiley, Tina Bates, Ben
Wong, and the handsome cou-
ple, David Stanton and his ·wife,
Usa. Darrell Gales dined with
the beautiful Ruth Ko, showing
off her perfect shoulders in a
floor length, strapless white cot-
ton summer gown suitable for
the islands.
It could have been a sunset
cocktail gathering in Hawaii, as
guests wandered the De Angelo
estate, ta.king in the massive
public rooms and hidden private
spaces, watching the fish dance
in the ponds that meander in and
out of the some 30,000-foot resi-
dence with views to China (at
least Catalina).
As waiters served tropical
punch and poo poos, Peter and
Susan Carter, Terry and Marla
Mazura, Ward Munson and Lin-
da Bell, Sharon Devany, and Ed
and Sonya Greeb celebrated the
beginning of the summer social
season for a very good cause,
CHOC.
• B.W. COOK'S column runs every
Thursday and Saturday.
OPEN AT l:QO ST:J.NDAY JUNE 16TH
NOW ACCEPTING RESERVATIONS
63!1-2110
2000 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA ~SA
*Party Paks and Buckets from 10:0 a.m.
ST
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76o-664o • 2850 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
Hoani Mon·Slat JOam to jpm • ~~IM fot Mlt only
The 1996 National Charity League Debutantes are (from left to right):
TOP ROW
Sarah Michelle Sulllvan, Shannon Christine Going, Nissa Gayle Meyer, Chelsea
Marie· Carden, Courtney G.-ace Hardt, Kelly Marte Campbell, JennUer Marie Gard-
ne r, Jennifer Mtche.le Fletcher, Lori Kristine Hoffman, Kathryn Elizabe th Rice, Ash-
ley Hamilton Vodra and Lesley Maureen Hamilton. ·
MIDDLE ROW
Mary Talia Serra, Ana MUosavljevlc, Kathleen MacKusick \Voo'd, Kathryn Christine
Hawkins, Julie Anne Garrison and Paige Elizabeth Finster.
BOTIOMROW
J e nnUer Joy Groskreutz, Morgan C heri Mead, Stacey Ann Holt, Nicole Frances
Parker, ChrlsUna Jennifer Farrell and Brooke Elizabeth Bendhelm.
~t At)' 0 Cl 9 s g
*JV & ULL U8ED CLOTHm8,
TOV. a acc.8llOAIE8, llTC.
2184 N::,c:tJ::i~ Del M.,.J
er.ta Meell 1714) •31·73H
Your Source
For Local News
YOUR EYETUCK SPEC
CALL NOW FOR CONSULT
LYON EYE 760-3003 H'I .-'-. .... ~
1401 AVOCADO 402 ·NEWPORT BEACH
THANKS TO OUR NEIGHBORS!!
The City of Costa Mesa, The Orange County Fair, .Releaf Costa
Mesa, The Volunteer Center of Greater Orange County and The
Costa Mesa Chapter of the California Association of Nurserymen
would like to express their appreciation to the following sponsors,
donors and organizers which helped make the April 27, 1996
"Neighbors for Neighbors" Community and Park Clean-Up a huge
success.
Major Sponsors
Automobile Club of Southern California; Costa Mesa NRA; Diedrich Coffee;
Dunn 'Edwards Paints; In-N-Out.Burger; Merrill Lynch; Orange County Market
Place; The Recovery Center; South Coast Toyota Volvo; Starbucks Coffee; and
Taco Mesa.
Secondary Sponsors
Alaskan Ice; Bank of America; Barr Lumber; C J Segerstrom and Sons; Cove Motoring;
Crystal Court; Daily Pilot; Fairview Mobil; JK Construction; Keyser Marston Associates;
The Law Firm of Latham and Watkins; Mesa North Homeowners Association; Norris-
Repke; Stradling, Yocca, Carlson and Rauth; Tait and Associates; Thaj Spice; Triangle
Square.
Business Donors
The Acapulco Restaurant; Adult Day Services of Orange County; Al-Anon; Albertsons;
Americlean; Avila's El Ranchito; Awning Masters; AY Nursery; Ballpark Pizza; The
Bamboo Terrace Restaurant; The Baha'i Faith; Bargain Food Basket; Ben and Jerry's Ice
Cream; Bennigans Restaurant; The Boys and Girls Club of the Harbor Area; Brecht
Orchid Garden; Burlington Express; California Pizza Kitchen; Carl's Jr.; Community
Services Program; Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce; Costa Mesa City Council; Costa
Mesa Country Club; Costa Mesa Marriot Suites; Costa Mesa Playhouse; Davis Adult
School; Del Taco; Dewan, Lundin & Associates; DK's Donuts; Dominos Pizza; The
Essentials; Fair Housing Council of Orange County; Feedback Foundation; Fish of the
Harbor Area; Frazee Paints; French's Cupcake Bakery; The Gap; G & W Towing; Harbor
Towing; Harbor Trinity Baptist Church; The Harp Inn; Hi Time Cellars; Hornblower
Dining Yachts; Hughes Market; Ice Chalet; IHOP; Jack in the Box; Jackie Long; Kiwanis
Club; Knotts Berry Farm; La Puerta Abierta; Latino Leadership Council; Legal Aid
Society of Orange County; Lett-Uce Cater to You; Lil' Pickle; Lions and lionesses Club;
Lloyd's Nursery; McDonalds; Mesa Consolidated Water District; Mesa Village Liquor;
Mi Casa; Michael's Art Suppliers; t..4ike Linares; Mimi's Cafe; Monrovia Liquor; Mr.
Wok; Mrs. Field's Cookies; Natural Sun Flour Bakery; Newport Mesa Unified School
District; Newport Rib Company; Oasis Drinking Water; Orange Coast College; Orange
Coast College Intermediate Orchestra; Orange County Performing Arts Center; Otis
Brown; Price Costco; Private Stock Video Delivery Service; Ralphs; Red-E-Rentals;
Rose's Donuts; Sears; Sfuzzi's; Sgf. Pepperoni's Pizza; Shirley's Bagels Etc.; Smart and
Final; Someone Cares Soup Kitchen; Soroptomists; Souplantation; South Coast Metro;
Sparkletts Water Corporation; Speckled Bird; SPIN; St. Joachim's Church; St. John's The
Baptist Church; Stater Brothers; Sunshine Liquor; The Tummy Stuffer; Venture Club of
Newport Harbor; Victor's Donuts; Wellness Foundation; Wild Rivers; YMCA; Yosemite
Water; Youth Employment Services of the Harbor Area; and Zubie's.
'
CI'IY OF COSTA MESA
NEIGHBORS FOR NEIGHBORS
VECINOS PARA VECINOS
A Nelghborho<Xl Improvement Program
Newpon Beach/Costa Me a Daily Piloc
weekend
ENTUTAINMENT EDITOR LAURIE IUSIY: SJ
Show needs to overcome reputation, venues
By George Tapley, Daif'/ Pilot
Before t tell you what r really
thought of this year's New-
port Beach Spring Juried
Show, allow me lo mention three
favorites.
Marjorie Pesak, who recently
designed the Corona del Mar SK
run poster, exhibits a striking col-
lage, uPark.Bench Contempla-
tion, -in which four men seated
on a park bench overlook a chan-
nel of water. She's particularly
good at turning fragments of cut
paper into things like bicycles and
people.
Nancy Gasparotte's MSide by
Side, -a gelatin print of two
destroyed bicycles chained to a
tree, demonstrates a sparkling use
of traditional black and white
photography.
year was no
exception?
For one
thing, the newly
appointed Arts
and Cultural
Services Coordi-
nator, Karen
Schnell (along
with a board of
Arts Commis-
sioners and
under the lead-
ership of Donna
Kienitz, Com-
munity Service
Director) seems
desirous of
bringing New-
port Beach up to
speed as an arts
community.
And Cal Angstrom's
UWhistllng Madonna n ingenious-
ly fuses fragments of Mexican
pottery and statuary to produce a
shrine in the form of a casserole
clisb. This said (other works
deserved mention had space per-
mitted), the show as a whole
leaves a lot to be desired.
And so far a
slight movement
has been made
in this direction.
Good publicity
appears to have
attracted a larg-
er than usual
number of artists
DAVID LUCHANSl<Y I DAILY PILOT
The 1996 Spring Juried Art Show ls on display at Newport Beach City Hall.
There were 47 pieces chosen fr.om 350 submissions from throughout the county.
Let's face it. Given its past his-
tory, no one expects the Newport
Beach Spring Juried Show to be
anything other than a modest
affair where local amateurs and a
handful of professionals di.splay
their attractive but unasswning
artwork.
While the jury attempted to
include a wide range of available
mediums and styles, the e xhibi-
tion as a whole remains sadly
parochial in relation to the
breadth of artistic choices avail-
able in the larger art world; more-
over it omits nearly everything
that smacks of the avant-garde;
instead it settles for the usual mix
of realistic or stylized watercolors,
oils, and pastels along with a
handful of prints, collages, and
photographs plus some crafty
looking sculptural objects.
Subject matter also is largely
limited to those things that are
safe and decorous: fish, flowers.
animals, sailboats, cottages -bits
of the local flora a nd fauna. This
is the way it has always been. So
why am I disappointed that this
to enter the spring show.
Moreover, while the choice of
jurors has always been profes-
sional, this year's jury was excep-
tional with the inclusion of Tony
De Lap, an artist of national repu-
tation. Assuming that the jury
picked the best available art,
what then was the problem? Why
is the show so blah?
Obviously, the best artists from
Orange County are not yet flock-
ing to enter Newport Beach's
Spring Juried Competition. There
will be little overlap, for instance,
between the artists exhibiting
here and those exhibiting in
Irvine Fine Arts Center's u All
Media Show 96." Why?
I offertworeasonsforthis lack
of interest. First, reputation. In
recent years Newport Beach's
support for the visual arts has
been the pits: this is true of its
support of "big time." art, witness
the beleaguered Newport Harbor
Art Museum; it is also true of the
local art scene which has been
entirely neglected.
But even assuming the city's
"good intentions" towards the
arts are genuine and will translate
FATHER'S
DAY
BRUNCH
l)ining Room o r Waterfront D eck
C h a mpagn e Harbor Cruises
DINNER
Dinin_g Room o r Waterfront D eck
Special D essert C ruise Only $5 00
With Dinner R eservation
CALL 675-5777
111~ I ORI<. \\'ArFIU--RON"I R~AURANT • JOIO LA FAYETT'E, NEWPORT UEACll
C.111neJ) Cru1:K' Booir "ule Muje:res• Laving the Cannery Dock
Sabatino Tommy
SABATINO' s DH
For Reservations and Direction
723-0621 . ...
~-------------------------,
F.Y.I.
+ WHA'r. • 1996 Newport
Beach Spring Juried Art
Show" + WIERE: City Hall Art
Gallery, 3300 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach.
+WIEN: During Oty Hall
hours. Through Aug. 6.
+HOW MUOt: Free. + PHONE: 717-3870.
I
1 1 1 1 1
I
I
I
I
1
1
1
I 1
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1
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1 I 1 L-------------------------~
into something more than
grandiose dreams for an Orange
County Museum of Art, such
good intentions take time to real-
ize, it may take years to turn
Newport Beach's negative reputa-
tion into a positive.
Second, inadequate venues for
art shows. Neither City Hall nor
the new P.ublic Library are ade-
quately equipped for art exhibi-
tions. The Public Library's exhibi·
tion area is limited to one wall of
its lobby and part of a staircase,
insufficient space to mount a
large show. Th'e so-called City
Hall Gallery ism reality just the
entrance lobby to City Hall plus
the addition of one narrow. poorly
lighted comdor interrupted by
offices. Neither of these venues
are adequdte for a real art show.
Neither are eqwpped to handle
sculpture. Neither is sufficient to
accommodate the sort of ambi-
tious art that would make the
spring Juned show attractive to
the best artists of Orange County.
Until Newport Beacb finds its way
to creating a space dedicated to
showing art (not settling for the
available lobby) it will probably
have to forgo anything like a real
art exhibition.
• Costa Mesa resident GEORGE TAPLEY
is an artist, critic and art l'listory teacher.
HAPPY HOUR 5:30PM • 6:30PM
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LE CAFE FOR A
PATHERS D BBQ! Featuring
The Lee Harper
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Bicycles
s24 -Adults $12·-Children 5to12
Under 5 Eat Free
1 O:OOam -3:00pm
FOr Ru.rvatlons Call
(714) 975-1134, bt.1103
1 ltOo Jambona• llvd. lrVlne
Simply the Best
for Sunday Brunch
.. 7 ....... 1 .. 111 ... _1 __ .._. 2 7 a a a•
TOH
RllNGS
TODO
1 MUSIC FES11VAL: The
Corona del Mar Chamber of
Commerce presents the
Baroque Music Festival starting
Sunday and continuing until
June 23. For times, dates and
venues, call 760-7887.
2DANCE CLASSES: A num-
bet of lively Latin and
Caribbean dances will be
offered Friday evenings at
Orange Coast College from 8:30
to 10 p.m. beginning this Friday,
through Aug. 2. Cost: $45. lnfor-
mation; 432-5880.
3 'ON TIUALI': Mother
Goose is in Dreamland
Supreme Court defending
herself against slander in
uMother Goose: On Trial!" at
South Coast Repertory. nckets:
$8-10. Call 957-4033.
4 'DIAMONDS & DICE W':
The Cabaret Chapter of the
Guild of the Orange Coun-
ty Performing Arts Center, pro-
fessional singles age 30 to 60,
will hold its black tie fund-rais·
ing event featuring dinner,
dancing, casino games, silent
auction and more from 6 p.m. to
midnight Saturday at the Village
Crean, 2300 Mesa Drive in San-
ta Ana Heights. Tickets: $75.
Information: 262-5881.
lunch
11 :30 -2:00
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 AU
FAX: 646 ... 170
5'NUNSENSE': Costa Mesa
Civic Pl4ybouse presents
Dan Goggin's •NWlSellSe,•
a music& comedy. nckets: $15.
Information: 650-5269.
6JA22 SERIES: Contempo-
rary Jazz artist Keiko Mat-
sui will perform two con-
certs, at 7 and 9 pm., Friday at
the Hyatt Newport Hotel in
Newport Beach. Tickets: $15 for
the early show;$20 for the late
show. Information : 650-UVE.
7DAVID SANBORN: Gram-
my-Award winner saxo-
phonist David Sanborn
comes to the Pe rforming Arts
Center 8 p.m. Wednesday. nck-
ets: $18-$40. Information: 556-
ARTS.
8BOOK SIGNING: Costa
Mesa author Jo-Ann Map-
son, ·shadow Ranch,• and
Fountain Valley author Earlene
Fowler, MKansas 'Troubles, -will
sign copies of their new books
from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at
Barnes & Noble, 1i1angle
Square. Information: 631-0614.
gCAR SHOW: The Cobra
Owners Club of America
Orange County presents its
free 15 annual "Concours de
Nicen car show from 10 a.m. to
3 p.m. Father's Day at the Park
Mall at the offices of South
Caost Plaza. Information: 476-
7789.
1 0 DANCE WORXSHOP:
Presented in both Eng-
lish and Spanish. a
Latin dance workshop will be
offered Saturdays at Orange
Coast College from 1 Q to 11 :30
a.m. beginning this Saturday,
through July 27. Registration fee
is $45. Information: 432-5880.
dinner
5:00pm -1 O:OOpm
378 Brinol • Coata lleaa (Between Bed.hill ~ Campu)
"Easy verdict in favor of
Mother Goose: On Trial!
... clever and amusing ... "
-Los .1ngeles 7imes
BY Dick Gjonola
~liNTBD BY SCR's Young Conservatory Players
All yo"r fat'Orlle n"rsery rbynu$ ...
/Ille J'O"'ve ~r seen lbmi befo~.'
PUFOR.MANCES: ''"'~ 14. 15 •"" 16 noorrs: llOM•lts $8 Kiib $7 C""""/'S of JS or,.,,..
Final Weeiend -Call Today!
A1' • THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 ,.. .. .--.. -~ . -·--r .,_,
~~~--~
LAGUNA ART MUSEUM STORE
"Turning the Thbles," a display
of table installations by local
artists will be featured at the
museum store in South Coast
Plou through Sunday. All artwork
is available for purchase. Informa-
tion: 662-3366.
NEWPORT BEAOI CENTRAL
LIBRARY
"Journey Down the Coast" is
the title of an exhibit of watercolor
scenes by Birgitta Kappe whiCh
will be on display through June
30. Information: 717-3801.
LAGUNA ART MUSEUM
"One Hundred Years on the
Edge: The Frame in America 1820
to 1920• opens at the Laguna Art
Museum Gallery at South Coast
Plaza on June 21. The survey of
100 years of early American
frames will remain on view
through Aug. 25.
PAINTING EXHIBIT
Lenora Monahan will be
exhibiting her impressionistic
French landscape paintings on
June 22 and 23 at Rogers Gar-
dens, 2301 San Joaquin Hills
Road, Corona del Mar. Monahan
will be present both days from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m.
DANCE
LATIN AND CARIBBEAN CLASSES
A number of lively Latin and
Caribbean dances will be offered
Friday evenings at Orange Coast
College from 8:30 to 10 p.m.
beginning this Friday, through
Aug. 2. Registration fee is $45. For
more information, call 432-5880.
LATIN DANCE WORKSHOP
Presented in both English and
Spanish, a Latin dance workshop
will be offered Saturdays at
Orange Coast College from 10 to
11:30 a.m. beginning this Satur-
day, through July 27. Registration
fee is $45. For more information,
call 432-5880.
ADULT BALLROOM DANCE
The Costa Mesa Senior Canter
offers adult ballroom dance on
June 21 and the third Friday of
each month from 7:30 to 10:30
p.m. Singles and couples wel-
come. Live music provided by the
Ray Robbins Combo. The cost is
$5 or $4 for sage members. The
Senior Center is at 695 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !LOSE UPTOI • • 10 LBS . i • IN J DAYS! I
ALL NATURAL T-LITE•I
WITH CHROMIUM :
PICOLI NATE i
: K-Mart Pharmacy & Longs Drugs ;
: Newport Beach • Costa Mesa ; •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A
TRIP TO MEXICO
llG 1AHD SWING
Dance to the sounds ol the big
band swing era with the Balboa
Beach Big Band Juhe 21 and
every third Friday of the month
from 7 to 11 p.m. at The Costa
Mesa Senior Center, 695 W. 19th
Street 1lckets are SS and $4 for
SAGE memben. For more infor·
mation, call 645-2356.
SAILING ALMS
A pair of motion-picture clas-
sics about sailing around the
world, "Voyage of the Brigantine
Yankee" and "The Dove,• will be
screened from 7 to 9:30 p.m. June
21, at Orange Coast College's
Sailing Center, 1801 W. Pacific
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
Tickets: $5-$7. Information: 645-
9412.
SINGLES
JEWISH SINGLES GROUPS
New Jewish Relationships
allows Jewish singles to choose
people they wish to date from pro-
file albums that picture. and
desaibe singles with a wide range
of personal and professional inter-
ests. Membership fees are $40 for
six months and $70 for a year,
non-members of the Jewish Com-
munity Center are $10 more. For
more information, call 755-0340.
TENNIS ANYONE?
Tennis Ladder for Singles offers
an opportunity to meet new peo-
ple while improving your game.
Registration fee is $18 and inter-
ested parties put their names on a
list and can challenge players on
the list. Call 755-0340 for more
information.
OUTINGS AND ACTIVJT1ES
JAM, singles 21-39, holds a
variety of outings and activities.
For more information, call the
JAMline at 665-5048.
Jewish In Between Singles, age
35-59, offers social and cultural
events and am be reached by
calling 283-5752.
SYNAGOGUE VISITS
Meet young Jewilb slDglet and
couples for Friday services in area
synagogues. Visits take pleat the
third Prlda.y of every month. Infor-
mation: ?55-5555 ext. 551.
THE CABARET OW'rER
The fourth Tuesday of every
month, the Cabaret Chapter ot the
Guilds of the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center meets at the
hvtne Ma.rrlott Hotel. 18000 Von
Karmen at 5:30 p.m. for a sod.al
hour followed by a meeting at 6:.C5
p.m. The group ls for professional
singles, 30-60, ·who wish to sup-
port nhe Center while having fun.
Cost: SS. lnfonnation: 262-5881.
SPBCJAL
CAR SHOW
The Cobra Owners Club of
America Orange County presents
their free 15th Annual "Conco\lrs
De Nice" car show on Father's
Day from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Concours will be held at the Park
Mall at the Offices of South Coast
Plaza, in front of the Westin Hotel
at South Coast Plaza. The show of
approximately 15 cars will feature
rare, nostalgic, classic muscle
cars,including a 1996 Ford Mus-
tang Cobra and a 1996 Saleen
Mustang on display. For more
information, call 4?6-7789.
DIAMONDS ANO DICE Ill
The Cabaret Chapter of the
Guild of the Orange County Per·
forming Arts Center, professional
singles age 30 to 60, will hold its
black tie "Diamonds and Dice lli"
fund-raising event featuring din-
ner, dancing, casino games, silent
auction and more from 6 p .m . to
midnight Saturday at the Village
Crean, 2300 Mesa Drive in Santa
Ana Heights. Tickets are $15. For
more information, call 262-5881.
FARMERS MARKET
Every Thursday there is a
Farmers Market from 8:30 a.m . to
1 p.m. and Orange County Mar-
ket Place is every $aturday and
Sunday from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the
main parking lot of the Orange
County Fairgrounds. For more
information, call 123-~16.
Th~ Best Thai Food m Costa Mesa
r----------------~-~ I FREE DINNER I
I Buy one a la carte dinner entree at I I regular menu price and receive a second I
I a la carte dinner entree f'RUI I
I Dine-In oniv. Expires 6·20-96 ·' I L-~--~~~~~~~~-----~ Free Df1n6< Reftlls on II.Inch 5Pldlls From $5.99
1H9 H•r.bor Blvd. • Co sta Mesa • <714> 645-9934
LOBSTER DINNER · •9•5
STEAK & LOBSTER•13•5
N OW SERVING
Country Style
With Our
Sunday Mexican
Breakfast
CELEBRATE
FATHER'S DAY
WITH US
JUN• 18th
SUNDAY NITE SPECIAL
$ 7 95 •Chicken Ribs & Brtaket Dlnne'*
. 1/2 BBQ Chicken, ·BBQ Spare Ribs
From Spm and Brisket of Beef.
Includes: Baked Potato, BeaM. Corn On The Cob & Salad Bar
Th.a Rusty Pelican
Join us for r atlier's 'Day on tlie 'Waterfront ..
Cfiampag ne 'Brunch
•
Serve{ from9:lXJ am
!f at/ie,r ' s 'lJ ay 'lJ i nner
Servetf from 4:00 pm
'){ow Jitccepting !l(µervations
141·1411
17• II. ' I, 11
QASSKCARS
1be Hard Rode Cafe, fashion
Island in Newport Beach will hold
the second annual Summer
Cruise, an evening of fine pre-
19?5 classic, rod and custom cars.
Series ll will be Monday and the
first and third Mondays through
September from 4 to 9 p.m. 1\vo
raffles each night with a free raffle
ticket given upon arrival. Por
more information, call 721-9546.
STAGE
'CAntOUC SCHOOL GIRLS' •
Casey Kurtti's amusing satire
of parochial school life in the
1960's, "Catholic School Girls,"
will open Orange Coast College's
four-productions summer theater
We're
Puffin'
sea.son on June 20. The show runs
Thursdays through Sundays,
June 20-23 and 2?·30, in OCC's
Drama Lab Theatre. Curtain is set
for 8 P·IJl· Thursday through Sat-
urday nights and 2 p.m. on Sun-
days. nckets: $6-$9. Information:
.C32-5880.
'ARMS ANO THE MAN'
South Coast Repertory pre-
sents George Bernard Shaw's
•Arms and the Man," set in 1885
Bulgaria against the backdrop of
the Balkan war, the play is one of
Shaw's self-described •pleasant"
plays and filled with engaging,
exciting word play about love and
war. Show times from May 31 to
June 30: Tuesday through Satur-
day at 8 p.m . and Sunday at ?:30
p .m. with 2:30 p .m. matinees on
Saturday and Sunday. Tickets:
ABu~
In Your
Ear!
ORANGE
--COUNTY
C OS T A M E SA
$17-$38. Information: 957-4033.
'NUNSENSE'
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse
presents Dan Goggin's •Nun-
sense " a musical comedy. Sho~
times; Thursday to Saturday at 8 ....
p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.
through July 1, except July 4..
nckets: $15. Information: 650:" .-
5269. •t
'CAmSH MOON'
Laddy Sartin's beartwarmint
comedy of love and . friendshi
makes its West Coast debut
The Theatre District. The play
presents a unique glimpse into .,
the dynamics of male bonding!
Show times: Friday and Saturday 1
at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 7 p.m 1
through June 30. Tickets: $15.
Inf onnation: 435-4043.
Coloring Cgntest Rules & Regulations
,One winner in each C'.'99 group will be chosen. Each winner will receive 4 tic;keb to the Orange County
Foir. Winning artwot* wiR be disp~ at the Orange County fairgrounds.
•Entries must be c;omP.leted by a child in one of the age group1 list8d below. Nome, addren and age
information mu$t be filled in.
• Mail finished entries to: Orange County Fair ~iol Contest, 88 fair Dr., Costa Mesa, CA 92&26.
Entries must be received by 5 p.m., Mcindoy, July 8. r
• Entries wiff be judged by ~ri~, July 1 2. Winning entriet will be on ditplay in the Youth Building. ·
• All judged entries may £,. picl*t up ot lhe Special Cont.t Office ofter the Fair, Monday, July 29 from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Name: A'1e: _........,. ______ _
19 Group 5 & Under 6·8 9-11
~ City Zip_ ......... ---. ... ,,
Home Phone-------------POI•• Vloftc ~ /GuOrdian Signaeur9 ......__..____........_......__..;,.._....
Ne..,pott Betich/Coeta M~ Daily Piloc
reel critics
Action and suspense in 'The Rock'
EDlfOll'S NOTE: Reel Critics column features movie critiques written by
community members serving on our
panel.
W o doesn't like Sean
Connery? This is anoth-
r action-packed film
with a fine cast that keeps you in
suspense -Ed Harris plays a
marine general who is disillu-
sioned with the government for
not recognizing the special
forces that fought and died in
oblivion.
So he and a group of other
marines steal some rockets with
high-tech poison gas, they hole-
up on Alcatraz with 81 tourists
rut hostages and threaten to gas
San Francisco.
Enter Nicholas Cage, an
expert ~n rockets and poison gas
along with Sean Connery who
has been in prison for 30 years
for stealing J. Edgar Hoover's
secret files and never giving
them up but the only person to
ever escape from Alcatraz. Con-
nery must be coerced into going
back to Alcatraz with a special
fO{ce, including Cage, to disarm
the rockets. Early in the movie is
a spectacular car chase which
surpasses the famous chase in
"Bullet" -seems all great car
chases take place in San Fran-
cisco.
The chemistry between Con-
nery and Cage works well
throughout the film and Harris is
particularly good as the frustrat-
ed general.
However, the scenes that take
place in the basements and tun-
nels of Alcatraz renund one of
tbe rides at Disneyland, I kept
looking for a Caribbean pirate.
• Some of the narrow escapes
that Connery and Cage make
are a little hard to believe, espe-
c:i;illy when every one else gets
killed.
It got a little gory at the end,
which wasn't necessary, but all
ui all it Wds an entertaining
ll(ovie.
Connery was his usual out-.
standing self, Cage does well as
a guy out of his element, loud,
es:citing, spectacular explosions
and a pretty good story make
"~ock" a winner.
•
•DICK TUCKER, 69, Is a Newport
Beach resident and a retired Orange
Coast College instructor.
magine this: Yo'u•re touring
Alcatraz, looking through the
olding cells and run-down
hallways. Your tour guide invites
you to momentarily become a
prisoner at Alcatraz, so naturally
you and Y.Our tour group shuffle
into the cells and the doors are
locked behind you.
The guide continues to
explain the prisoner's living
quarters as a group of terrorists
run in and lock up your tour
guide and take over. The leader,
Frank, wants "justice to be
served• by allowing those who
have died for their country to be
given a settlemen\ which would
be forwarded to their families.
Fair, right? If you died for
your country, then you should
receive a proper nµlitary burial.
But Frank is going about this
tRe wrong way. Unless his
demands are met, he is fully pre-
pared to destroy San Francisco
by bombing the city with rockets
full of deadly chemicals.
Prjces Good thru
June 17,1996
It's time to hold on to your
seats because the ride from here
is intense. While I watched "The
Rock,• I sat biting my nails,
guessing what would happen
next.
The plot was exciting, the
characters believable, and the
action was perf~ct. To balance
the guns and explosives, "The
Rock• contains random jokes
that made me laugh out loud.
I really enjoyed the film,
despite the 2 112 hours it lasted.
•KATIE HosmtER, 16, is a Newport
Beach resident and a sophomore at
Newport Harbor High School.
H e said: Now here's a great
movie. Good special
effects, lots of action, fun
and excitement. "The Rock" is
about a Marine seeking financial
restitution for the men w.bo
served under him in Vietnam.
He and his military team steal
chemical missiles and proceed to
Alcatraz where they hold a
group of tourists hostage and
point missiles at San Francisco in
exchange for millions of dollars.
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THURSDAY, JUNE 13. 1996 A15
Sean Connery and Nicholas Cage star in action-thriller .. The Rock."
She said: Wait, Stop! Do you
really think this was a "great"
movie? First of all, the premise of
the plot was really weak. Who is
going to believe that someone is
willing to blow up San Francisco
to save the honor of a handtul of
men.
He said: You just don't like
action films.
She said: Thdt's not true. I
enfoy good action films, like
"Under Siege" or "The Hunt for.
Red October." ln "The Rock,"
not only was the plot weak, but
the didlogue seemed totally con-
trived, w1th dramatic pduses for
over-the-top patriotic speechl'S
and inappropriate jokes slipped
in while people are getting their
heads blown off.
He said: But you have to
admit that Nicholas Cage did a
bang-up job as the FBI chemical
weapons expert and you always
like Sean Connery.
She said: Cage was fine, but
what was it with the stringy hair
hanging in Connery's face? And
what about Ed Harris, would you
call his performance "bang up"?
He said: Well ..
She said: Did you notice the
average age of the audtence -
definitely in their twenties
He said: Now we have 1t!
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• ANDY and TANA MEGINNIS, 29
and 34, are both Newport Beach resi·
dents Andy 1s an information system
manager for a law firm and Tana
works for an educational publisher.
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A1' THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 f
Embark on a · culinary v~yage to Vietnam at Imperial DragQn
r---------------~-~-------, By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
Dally Pilot photographer
embarked on a three week
dventure to Vietnam last
month.
I
I
I I
' I
f.Y.I.
+HOW llUClt .....,_,
Dragoo.~ .-.u-
rant
r
I
I
I
The photos he took were telling
windows of everyday life there, its
beauty and trii!lquility seeming to
defy its napalm-clouded history:
blades of lime-colored bamboo
lined the waterways as a couple
floated to town on their home-
made craft. A woman wrung the
nver water and soap from her long
black hair. Fctrmers proudly dis-
played their fresh greens and scar-
let-red peppers.
+ ..... l03l s. 8rtstlol Street. CoN Mele +·-=open six dilys. week: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ~
5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m .. dmld
SUndays. Take out menu .v.11-
able I
~tile I WIShed I were the one
behfud the lens experiencing such
a Journey, I 111Stead had to settle
for findmg a tittle slice of Vietnam
here. Luckily, I found it in a Viet-
namese restaurant IJl Costa Mesa
ccilled the lmpenal Dragon at 3033
S Bru.tol Street
But don't let the Chinese name
of the restdurant fool you.
Ktem Vu said he bought the
restaurdnt in 1989 wi th his wife,
Huong Tho Vu, and didn't change
the ndffie for fear of losing the
customers of the former owner. Vu
sdid running a restaurant was new
to his family, who i.m.m.igrated
from war-ravaged Vietnam.
"I am one of the boat people,"
said Vu, who has an electronic
engineenng degree from Cal State
Long Beach. "We came to the
Uruted States in 1978. It is impor-
tant to preserve the Vietnamese
cwsme -that's our identity. n
The menu IS the work of Vu's
SISier, Tan Lien Lien also learned
to cook Chinese food from the for-
mer owner dlld there is a selection
of Uus on the menu as well. But
we ordered Vietnamese dishes
which were presented colorfully
+HOW MUCH: i~ + Pl IONE: 54().2066
I I
I I I I I L----~--------------·-----~
and boasted meats, shellfish and
fresh vegetables that would have
made the farmers in the photos
proud.
After scouring the menu where
the dishes were written in both
English and Vietnamese, my two
dining companions and I decided
on rice noodle soup ($3.95), barbe-
cue shrimp vermicelli ($4.25), a
combination platter of minced
pork, pork cake and barbecue
beef rice ($4.50) and chicken with
hot spicy and lemon grass ($5.95).
The various dishes arrived
promptly in waves of spicy aro-
mas.
The first was the chicken dish -
thin slices of the poultry smoth-
ered in a red, spicy sauce with
onions and specked with red pep-
pers. The lemon grass offered a
twinge of tang and sweetness that
blended deliciously. It was accom-
panied with steamed white rice as
are most the dishes.
The steaming soup was savory
with its light broth, much like
chicken broth, and abundance of
ingredients: t.}sty slices ol pork,
chicken, sb.ririlp, wontons, green
onions and rice noodles. Fresh
bean sprouts, sprigs of cilantro
and green peppers were served to
GRAND OPENING
~"~fJ33"
Vi etnamese Restaurant
u74dte ~ ?cct4'ttMct{, ~,.
2394 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
(714) 650-1421
~
STEXK HOUSE
Est.
1961
r/Jl/~~iT DAD TO THE
/J/!J"',4'T I N THE WEST
• ,i.,'t1rl'i11g Dinner Fro1n 3:00pn1
/le.-.er11nlio11 ... Recon1mended
641-9777
:!.'JOO I/arbor Blvd., Costa A1esa
at Hll.'ton
Give Dad The "Royal Treatment
. 880 Ne
Brunch 10:30 AM -2:30 PM, Dinner S -9 PM.
lnduJa A Sf)«.1111 C1{r
~@~
a r~10111on lfr<LWlC a11s1nr
rt unter D t, Newport B h (714) 720-1800
garnish the soup.
Next came the barbecue
shrimp vermicelli which is much
like ·a salad. Vu said in Vietnam.
barbecue is served mostly at wed-
dings and engagements. This dish
had a sprinkling of chopped
peanuts over plump shrimp that
were red from seasoning, mixed
with cilantro, mint. bean sprouts,
cucumber and carrots tossed in
with shredded lettuce and vermi-
celli noodles. The noodles are
made from rice and are a tradi-
tional Vietnamese dish, used
much like we use pasta, Vu said.
The combination pork platter
had a slice of pork cake, which
had the texture of meatloaf, but
was soft pork meat mixed with
green onion and spices. This was
unusual and enjoyable. There was
fii COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE 'Ii' PRESENTS
Rml~ER~E
A Musical Comedy
June 6 -July 7
Tllurs, f rl, Sat • l:OOpm
Suaay matinee -l:OOp•
Ile Almosl Summer (igar
Smo~er
~l onJay. June 17 7:00 p.m. •
June 17 is •lie Jay a{lrr ~a.l1er0s Day,
wl1lc'~ males •l1is dim1er a perf ed gift*
\\fe'll C\'Crt give you a lmmlsome nof.e
•o give l1im ln Hme for f.a llu'r's Ooy.
Im \J.•ot. l1Mt.. f ), lur tlotlf I""' •H 111H11 f,., ul 1f1 1 lu nf tM.tW' fl •• f1 ·, •
..... , 1 ...... 111 .. 1 ...... I ...... ! 'l •• L. ,, "" ""'"''' ... 1~ 1~ .......... I), 11 ..
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11 ...... ,l.1! .. l .... ,I.I,, .... I.!
TWIHttP~lffi~
630 NEWPORT CE NTER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH
71 4·721 ·8288
~ ~.,.Hqnl! .. 0.-.
9-" ;..&-fine n!)919 f,..
N.wi,on Toi,.•
U. ... .Ji
md.1.;l ~Ho11
a four-n:ml'e '"e:nn
rn-al ... I by 11.ef Ton11
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1n111H1111"
OFFERS HEAL THl,1 CUISINE
also a delicious, thin slice of
minced pork that was a deep red
color from the barbecue.
The entire lunch was appetiz-
ing, not to mention affordable. _
Klem Vu. rtgbt. and
Huong-Tho, owners
of tbe Imperial Drag
on restau.nmt on B
tol Street tn Costa
Mesa. bold up egg
roll appetizers and a
vermJceW dish d
the lunch hour
Wednesday.
KIM HAGGER'TY I OAK.Y PILOT
This is a dining experience that ·
not only pleasurable to the palate
but it made me feel like I was on
step closer to Vietnam in appetite
if not in person.
oo~eberrie~ • restaurant• catering
Serving Breakfast Daily
Poppyseed Belgium Waffles with lnnon curd and fresh bnnes
Potato Pancakes with English Bangn-
Thiclc Sliced French Toast with seasonal fruit
Frittata of the Day served pn wee/tends
Specialty Omelette weekdays w/Toast
Brealtfast from
7:00 To 10:30 Weekdays • 8:00 To 12:30 Weekends
200 Proltlontory Dr. in Promontory Point
Ojf Baysuu and P.C.H. • Ampk par/ting above the be/.ow nstaurant
574-0608
INVITATION
ROYAL KHYBER's
FIRST
CIGAR DINNER
Tuesday. June 25rh, 6:30p.m.
FeaturlnR these FINE CJGARS '
CACJQlJE-Apache. DON MARCOS· Torpedo, ,-WO •3
CHAMPAGNE
1st Course ·-TANDOORI TuJ-bits
C.h/1 ~ .... , Tlkl..'tl lomh J;,.Jx,,,.. amt F/\11 Tillku
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Clh1lw1!ffl•ll' Ci1/ifiomu1 Clx1rrl11111lflv. Sa11vlg11011 Blum
2nd Course -.. Chicltm Khormfl •M Aloo Gobhi
Cho/to• 11/ fl•ll' C11/Q11rmt1 Cht1rtln111iay. ~111>/Rmm 8/11m
3rd Omf"\e ,,,,. IGtrahi Lamb •ntl S.Wt Ptlnen-
.St•n•,/ u~rh °'"''""' Rl<t·
N1w 0 1/1j11r11k1 C.1/wr11t>1jo111111111111 '" ,u,..t .. 1
4/b Courw •••• K~n-+ltlNu (Ritt Ptu/Jinz)
prl!f>Ored fn saffron
Sintk Miik Wbislty-
7lot ,..,,.;,.,.·, s.....6itr twi. UIJ.00'" r-. AMMln_,..J~
R.ESERVAnON: (71'1) 752-5200 .
ROYAL KHYBER -1000 N . BRISI:<JL. NEWPORT BEACH
Newpoct BnchlCosta Mesa Daily Pil0t
COMMUNITY
Members from St Mark Pres-
byterian Church in Newport
Beach endowed their partnership
school, Glenn L Martin, in Santa
Ana with $20,000 at Martin's
Jntemational Day Assemblies on
May 10.
The donation will be put in a
trust fund to be used to provide an
extra study trip for all the students
for years to come. St. Martins also
donated 40 books from its library
1 to the school.
Newport Beach-based Orange
County Sports Celebrities donat-
ed $13, 100 to five Orange County
The Girl Scout Council of
Orange County presented KaUe
Shields ot Costa Mesa the highest
honor in Girl Scouting. The girls
who won ·earned their awards
through achievement in skill
development, leadership, service,
career exploration and the com-
pletion of service project of each
girl's own design.
Christopher Ortiz of Costa
Mesa placed third for his Rasp-
berry Honey Ale at the Rena.is-
Newport Beach and a 1981 grad-
uate of Estancia High School,
~cently received the Alr Medal
while serving with Carrier Air-
borne Early Warning Squadron
123 embarked aboard the aircraft
carrier USS America.
Navy Ensign James H. Martin-
dale, a 1990 graduate of Newport
Harbor Jjigh School, recently
completed the Basic Navy Supply
Corps Officers course in Athens,
GA.
Newport Beach resi·
dents Al ud Kia Row-
land are tbe inaugural
recipients of the Orange
Coast Assod4tion of
Realtor's Pride of the
Community Award for
the eiceptional design
of the couple's Newport
Beach home. The
Mediterranean-style
•villa,~ which is located
on Lido Isle, was select-
ed on the basis of its
architectural design,
landscaping and an
interlor style that closely
echoes the home's exte-
rior design.
Army Reserve Pfc. Ammone A.
ly completed basic training at
Ma,rine Corps Recruit Depot, Par-
ris Island, S.C., and was meritori-
ously promoted to her present
rank.
Marine Cpl. Johnny Ospina,
son of Julio and Olga Ospina of
Costa Mesa, has returned to his
home base in Camp Pendleton
after completing a six-month
deployment to the Persian Gulf
with -the 15th Marine Expedi-
tionary Unit embarked aboard the
ships of the USS Peleliu Amphibi-
ous Ready Group.
Marine Cpl. Alan D . Crowe,
son of Danny Crowe of Corona
del Mar had retwned to his home
base in Camp Pendleton after
completing a six-month deploy-
ment to the Persian Gulf with the
15th Marine Expeditionary Urut
embarked aboard the ships of the
USS Peleliu Amphib~ous Ready
Group.
EDUCATION
Mr. and Mrs. David Slocum of
Corona del Mar are pleased to
announce the graduation of their
daughter Deanna Joan Slocum
from Southern Methodist Univer-
sity with a Juris Doctor degree
Slocum is a graduate of Corona
del Mar High School and the Uni-
versity of Cahlornia, Santa Bar-
bara.
during the program's annual Stu-
dent Exhibit of Drawings anq
Paintings at the University of
Southern California last month.
Mr. and Mrs. John Gamson of
Newport Beach are pleased to
announce that theu daughter
Amy Elizabeth Garrison was
named to the dean's list for the
spring 1996 semester at Duke
University.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Jameson
of Newport Beach are pleased to
announce that their son Todd Stu-
art Jameson was recognized wtth
high honors for the spring 1996
semester at Vanderbilt University
in Tennessee.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pralle of
Corona del Mar are pleased to
announce that their daughter Kim
Laura Pralle was named to the
dean's list for the spring 1996
semester at Vanderbilt Uruvers1ty
in Tennessee.
Dr. and Mrs. David A. Walden
of Corona del Mar are pleased to
announce that their son Kevin
Edward Walden was named to
the dean's list for the spring 1996
semester at Vanderbilt University
in Tennessee.
CORPORATE
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. has
opened a new office to serve the
investment needs of the commu-
nity in Newport Beach at 800
Newport Center Drive, Suite 500
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 A17 ...
cia1 representatives selling Kem-
per mutuaJ funds and annwty
products.
C o s t a
Mesa res1-
d e n t ,
Michelle
Voigt, recent-
ly joined
oberts,
Mealer & Co.
Advertistng
and Public
Relations .
Voigt will be
responsible Michelle Volgt
for managing
costs and the scheduling of d1J
printed materials.
International insurance broker
Johnson & Higgins has appomted
ShatTon Dowts as manager of
Insurance Brokerage Services at
its Costa Mesa branch. ~
ln her new position. Dowis 1s
responsible for implementing
property and casualty brokerdge
services for the finn's nuddle mar-
ket c!Jents.
Res 1 -
dent of
Newport
B e a c h
Robert
Lingenfel-
ter of
Crevier
BMW was
recently
named to
the "Hon-
ors ft sales Robert Lingenfelter
level, the
:-youth sports organizations_1o pur-
chase much-needed uniforms and
equipment and make faculty and
field improvements.
sance Pleasure Faire Annual Eliz-
abethan Homebrewing Competi-
tion. Nationally known as the
largest bomebrewing competition
of its kind in the United States,
this year's event drew 132 entries.
MILITARY
Raddavong, daughter of Khan
Raddavong of Costa Mesa and a
1992 graduate of Costa Mesa
High School, has entered basic
military training at Fort Jackson
in Columbia, S.C.
The Newport Harbor Montes-
sori Center has expanded its pro-
gram and added three additional
classrooms. The Center, wtuc;h
has an enrollment of 60 children
ranging in ages two to six, offers
extracurricular clas~es including
French, dance, gymnastics, music
and computers.
Daniel Horgan of EVEREN
Securities Inc., m Newport Beach
is one of several hundred finan-
cial representatives from across
the nation to be named to the
Kemper Executive Councu, an
exclusive organization for finan-
company's highest level of recog-
nition for sales dchievement
Selecllon for this prestigious
award 1s based on the volume of
cars sold, customer saustacuon
and more
•• • ..
•• f
' .
The 25-year-old organization
donated $4,000 to the Southeast
Santa Ana Little League, $3,400
to the Orange Little League,
$2,700 for boxing equipment at
the Save Our Youth Community
Center of Costa Mesa, $2,000 to
the Santiago Little League in San-
ta Ana and $1 ,000 to the North-
west Santa Ana Little League.
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class
Daniel D. Bosse, son of Roberta L.
Walters of Corona del Mar, is cur-
rently halfway through a s1x-
month overseas deployment to
the Persian Gulf aboard·the guid-
ed missile frigate, USS Reuben
James
Marine 2nd Lt. James E. Bot-
trell, son of James A. Bottrell of
Newport Beach, recently graduat-
ed from The Basic School. During
the course at Marine Corps Com-
bat Development Command,
Quantico, Va., newly-commis-
sioned officers are prepared for
assignment to the Fleet Marine
Force .
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bollen-
bach of Costa Mesa are pleased to
announce the graduation of their
son Ryan Bollenbacb from Ash-
land University with a bachelor of
science degree in sports commu-
nication. (o RIVERBOAT fJAFE~
Newport Beach resident Mar-
greta Klassen has recently had
her poetry published in the book,
"The Best Poems of 1996. • The
poem is titled "Easter Sunday"
and it is about the reflections on
the aging process. Klassen bas
been writing for 32 years and
enjoys writing about the human
experience.
· Navy Lt. j.g. Kevin M .
McLaughlin, a 1986 graduate of
Corona del Mar High School, is in
the Western Pacific Ocean ne'r
the island of Taiwan with Strike
Fighter Squadron 146 embarked
aboard the wcraft earner USS
Nimitz.
Navy Lt. Geoffrey G. Herb,
son of Marjorie J. Smith-Meyer of
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class
Michael K. Scburb, son of Karen
E. Kelly of Costa Mesa, recently
departed on an eight-month air
show season tour with the Navy's
Flight Demonstration Squadron,
better known as the Blue Angels.
Marine Pfc. Reina Rodriguez,
daughter of Carlos and Elva
Rodriguez of Costa Mesa, recent-
Ms. Paula Carabelli of Corona
del Mar lS pleased to announce
the graduabon of her daughter
Emily R. Wing from Emory Uni-
versity in Georgia with a bachelor
of arts degree.
Bettina Lengsfeld of Costa
Mesa, a student from the spnng
1996 session of The Herbert D.
Ryman Living Masters Program
art classes showed her artwork
SIR ROGERS, LTD.
Sanc)111ich H nu.1e * TRY OUR NEW HOT SANDWICHES i:f
JOIN US FOR FATIIER'S DAY
SAVE MONEY!
SAVE TIME!
With the
Newport Harbor Nautical Museum
( Fu,..,11rrlr Rl'Nbn1 £. Lu I
RESERVATIONS (714) 673-3425
~"'r" Nft f'.irkm1, ··~ f.i, •h• < • 1 H•.ch"1
&tu .tn [Jc>•~ .1tt.l fo11~"'1rtr .:1 1lv fi.1. • 8.ti Bnt1.'
1\1 E. C°l14,f Hl\.tf'I" • """''Rl Bl"" c "'l!bbO
• Authentic Sushi Bar
• Elegant Dining Room
~~
:JB ~
Sushi To Go ~ -
'tr New !Ork Steak SanfJwicb $59S
'tr Roa.JteJ Eggplant SanJ1vicb $59S
'tr GrilktJ Reulun on Rye $59S ...,... iiJI'
Daily Pilot
2675 lrvme Avenue Costa Mesa
(across lrom Newport Golt Course)
RIVllRBOAT CAl'll
• Lunch Buff et
• Complete Bar
0
On boerd the "Pnde of ~Aiverboet. Home CJ The Newport Harbor NeVbC8I Museum lFo Reuben e Lee) ts~ From
7am-5pm !Until Midnight For P8rtiee, 'Madclel:!gs, Et.c I ~Needed Only FOi' ~Banquets CF PrMlte ~J.:.~~~ 92s00i'7f~~~1F; 673-7864
RUBY'S JAGUAR DINER
Cassie '40I 9t-;1e Diner. T~ Hemburaers, Great Shekes &
Mata, Alla ~ 0reakf8st. Houra· ~Thor e 30am.9pm Fn-
Set 6 Xlem-1 Q)ni MMtercerd. v ... Ameic. Dile. Oioers Cub.
C..C. 818nch. No~ Needed. Located At~ W
Peclfic Coast Hwy 1714) 831-7829
n --0 CLASSIFIEDS -0 ,-645-5518 ~
645-5519 ~ M -F: 7am-8pm • Sat: 8am-6pm • Sun: 9am-5pm
270 E. 17TH ST. #17 •COSTA M ESA
(71-1>645-2252
('")
0 /. 0 CALL 642-5678
LE CAFE/HYATT REGENCY IRVINE
Cehforrna Cu1Stne/Med1te1Taneao-Styie Brunch Our ScrumpbOus
8n.Jnch conS1sts of several MedltemMleall-Styte Salads and Appetizers, •snnmp, •Pancakes Oscar and an •Omelette Stabon
Locat.ed at 179CXJ Jamboree Blvd. Irvine (714) 975-1234 x2103
Hours. 1 Oem-2pm Reservation recommended but not necessary.
ZUB1ES
Menu Includes Ribs, Chicken, Steak & Lobster. Pnme Rib Plue.
0yst.er Bar Pnces Range Fn:rn $3 95 And Up Hours. 11 30am
1 Q>m · r.ockta1ls 'T ~ 1 f pm r.red~ Cards Not Accepted
Reservations Not Needed. Located et 1712 Placentia. Costa Mesa
(71 4) 645-8091
GOOSEBERRIES
Breakfast -HIQh ~ And lnnowt:M! Breakfast Fare. Hours
Mon -Fn 7 00am I S&t.&n. B·OOam • 12 ~. Located At
200 Promontory Onve. (714) 574-0608
CASABLANCA BISTRO
Mecht.erranean & Moroccan· TredltXlnal Mlddla Eastern Food Hours· 11 ·30 To 2 30 Mon. Thru Thurs Lunch Dinner S.111!!}
All Ma!O" Credit Cards. Reservations SuQQested Located et 1520 w Coast Hwy . Newport Beach (714) 1)4'1).1420
FORTY CARROTS RESTAURANT
Contlnentel -Contem1>0f'8!'Y Cuisine. South Coast Plaza, 3333 S
Bnstol Costa Mesa (714) 556-9700. Informal And Beautiful. Our Menu Is Varied w~ A Wide ~ CJ Culu'el Fevorites.
Freshons Oualty and §upei1:) Service At Ari Attrllctive Pnce Value Mon-fn 1(}9Pm . Set 9-epm_• Sun 10.Sp v ... Master Card And
Amencan EicPress Acoept8d ReseNatKri ~ Not Needed
AUBERGINE French Influenced 500 29th St Cennery V1lla_ge. ~ Beach
O.nner Tues. -Sat. 6~10om. ReaervatlOns Requested. Visa, M/C,Amex.acceptAid(714)7234150
TWIN PALMS
Country_ French =Ser«! In A Contempor'!fy And ~ Vt! ge Square A U... Enter'ta!nment Ori An
::rStand, 2 Bars· 400 lunch Mon:Set, 11 ·~ Dinner 5.30-10:30 e;;,;-Ndlt Br Menu 'tll Michght. ~ Golrpel
Brunch 10 3Q.3 00 .M.ior Credit c:.rd9 Aoc«Qd loc.&ild • 630 Newport Cent8' [)-.,Newport 9-:lt'I (714) 721-8288
SABATINOS RESTAURANT & SAUSAGE CO.
Pasta C.aesar Salad. Homemade Sausage Veal Lamb. Vegetenan
Otshes. Wtne. Beer. C.appuccino & DesSert. HolX'S 7 Days A Week Serving Sat & Son Brunch From B·3G 1 00. Son Thurs. 11 am-1 Cbn.
Fn . ..sat 11am-11pm Aft Major D'edit Cards Accepted Located At :151 Shipyard~. ~rt Beach (714) 723-0621
AMACHI
Sushi & Sushi to Go Complete Bar All Ma101" r.red¢ Cards Located
At 2675 ll"ll!ne Ave . (Across From Newport Golf Course) (714)
64S.551B
CALIFORNIA BEACH ROCK'N SUSHI
Japanese Style Cuisine Arid Fun Sush• Ber A Place For Great Food
Hot.rs 7 Days Per Week • 5 CU>m 'Tai Oosong Visa. Mastercard
Amell. Diners Oub Located at ~355 Via l.idO Newport Beach
(714) 675-0575
SUSHI IMARI
Sushi Bar And Dining Owners Successfully Operated Japanese
Rest.aurant In Sen Fernando Valley, Tarzana -Hours 11 :30am-2:CXlpm • Dnner 5·00pm-10:00pm. All Ma)Or Creel~ Cards Acee~. Reserv8b0ns Not Necessary 375 Bnstol. #40, Costa
Mesa(714)644-5654. \
AVILAS EL RANCHITO A~tlc MelCICan Food. Wrttl The Freshest lngr'fldre.nts & A New l,ight Cuisine Gr.at Marger'ltBS Hours Lunch -& Dnner All MejOl-
O'edlt Cards Accepted Located at 2101 Placenba, Costa Mesa
(714) 642-1142 and 28Xl Newport&<!. Newport Beach (714)
675-6855
MARGARITAVILLE
Traditional Frosh Cooklld Mexican Food Full Ber Hours 7 pays
11 :30-2 ex»n Mastercard, Amex. Visa. Located At 2332 W
Coast I-My, Newport Beach [7141 631 8220
Ml CASA A T~ To Mexico HOln Qai>t From 11 (O)m Pnces Renae From S2 25 -$8 95 Al Meior' 0'9dit Cllf'ds Accept9d located k 296
17th !;l., Costa MeM (714) 645-7626
WAHOO'S l'ISH TACO
Filh TllCOt, Bumtoa, Bledt Beens & Rice, Seled9, Sendwlclloa. Pnoes Rellge From $1 65-$7 .50 Houri Mon.&t. 11 OOem
10 ~· • Sun 11 CXJam.9.(Qim ~Cards~ l~ At 1962 Pleoenba. eo.ce M.l.i. end • 3Cri) ::;'~~....i-.. Colta Mlle. 1200 Mlw1 are... lb1ingcon 8-=tl 17141 ~
NEWPORT LANDING
Waterfront Om1ng Set & Sun Champagne Bcunc:h Donner MPnu
$13 95 $19 95. ()r.;ter Bar Menu Served A' Dav Hours
10 OOam 1 1 30pm Ame~ Mastercard Visa Dinner
Reservations Recommended Located at 503 E Edgewar.er
Balboa (714) 675-2373
PACIFIC FISH 8c SEAFOOD
Reta•l/Wholesale Fish market And Restaur-'3 ~ Luric:n Ont, Hours
Mon .sat 11am -6 pm Visa & Mastercaro ac<:epU!d Loca~'CI
At 2620 Newport BM:l (714) 650-0130
THE BARN STEAK HOUSE
Menu Includes Steak Fresh Fish Oiden Bi.rgers & Salads
Pnces Ranije From $3 75 For Lunch & $6 25 For Dinnl?l' Hours
Mon -Sat Open 11 em For Lunch 4 CXlpm Mon .fn O.nner
3 cn>m S8t & Son Ma,or r.red•t c.aros Accepted located At
2300 Harbor 81 131 Costa Mesa (714) 641·9777
LA CAVE
Menu lndudes Lobster Crab. Shnmp Steaks, Rib eye Daily
Specials Fn & Set Pnme Rib. Fon Ber & Wrne List Casual
Dress Hours Lunches 1 1 3().2 30 -[)nnr Mon Sat From
5 ~ Visa Mastercard. Ooners Oub Locat.ed At 1695 lrl/lne
/JNe • (And 17ths) Neer 8lockbustar Ent.ertatnment Costa Mesa
(714) 646-7944
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AW THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 • Ntwpon Be.ch!Q>fu Mesa Daily PiJoc
letter of I the day I !
TheIRWD
nightmare: Will
it never end?
We recently returned i
from a pleasant trip, fut -l ly expecting to find that
the insanity of the Irvine
Ranch Water District
threat to dump sewage
into the Back Bay would
have been resolved and
ended.
But, shockingly, we
learned that this idiotic
beat, actually, goes on.
Holy smoke! What is it
with this crazy, Alice in
Wonderland world?
In sifting through the
Pilot we have learned
that this IRWO has actu-
a lly placed the "lead-
e rs" of Newport Beach
on the defensive and
has succeeded in a strat-
egy which had that
bunch of soft-headed
wimps actually contem-
plating whether to gb
along with the IRWO's
outrageous demands to
I .Jke responsibility for
their pro1ected crime.
But let us be fair -
and place the players
where they properly
belong by reflecting on
the wisdom which has
finally received a bit of
spotlight.
Kudos to:
Assemblywoman
Marilyn Brewer for her
attempt to legislate rea-
son and logic.
Bob Caustin for
screaming like a ban-
shee (but why did he
give consideration to
any kind of "agree-
ment?).
Jean Watt for
attempting to give a
wake-up call to the
Newport Beach City
Council (and it's nice to
know that Hedges is
back tn town and now
applying his unique and
sensible logic).
Fred Martin for his
excellent metaphorical
representation (May 18)
of the relationship
between "Irv" and
"Newpy."
We noted that, in
addition to the saps on
the City Council, along
comes Silverado Con-
structors, which con-
eludes that Newport
Beach bunch will roll
overforanyonesothey
also want to dump
their nitrate-laden
waste water tn'o the
bay.
And all this time
what the devil is going
on with an "agency"
which has been estab-
fished at state level
(surely, at great expense
to .the taxpayers) to pro-
tect our waters from
contamination but
which will even enter-
tain thoughts of hear-
ings on this, so-called,
issue?
Has our world gotten
to be so dollar-driven
that felonious behavior
is subject to severe
penalty unless the buck
is at an adequate level
to make it excusable?
What is the charter ! of the state of Califor-i nia Water QUALITY i
Control Board? ! j
What kind of black-l
mall has that Irvine ~
operation managed to i
apply to Newport !
Beach? I How soon can we
fire the above 7 i Something $Mells I ~rotten In •par-! a<flse" (like SEWAGE ). tt !
IOotcs like the tJme has
come for some good old ' ring of the REAl facts.
l SHIRLEY ANO DEL
KAHAN I
Newport Beach ,
'
FAX: 714-641-4170 •
gains
PROJECT STOP
Andres Barrios, a top-notch student at Estancia High
School, was recently honored with a $500 scholarship.
Barrios is credited with continuing the efforts of Roy
Alvarado, the Costa Mesa gang counselor who passed
away last April. .
THE COASTLINE
The chances of an oil-drilling platform sprouting up
off the Newport coast just vanished after a Senate sub-
committee, at the urging of Newport Beach officials, vot-
ed to continue a moratorium on offshore oil drilling.
SUMMER RENTALS
Good news for the local towism industry. Local real-
tors report summer rentals in Newport Beach are enjoy-
ing a 15% boost with many families opting to spend
their vacations here. Perhaps it's all a sign that the econ-
omy is continuing on an upwards trend.
losses
VEGETARIANS
Bruce Anderson, a strict vegetarian, was shown the
door last week by OCTA officials after he refused to
hand out coupons for a fast-food burger restaurant
because of his beliefs.
BAGEL LOVERS
Fans of the round, doughy treats are mourning the
loss this week of Shirley Merrifield, a S\lCCessful local
bagel merchant who lost a battle with cancer.
BRUCE SUMNER
forutn
I "-. I ' I ,.. \ I I \ '.
Homeowners in this normaJ.J.y idyllic community
showed how they felt about the recent squabbles that
have beset their association's board members by throw-
ing the rascals out, including respected jurist and former
Assemblyman Bruce Swnner.
DON LEACH I DALY Pl.OT
Estancla's Andres Barrios ls a role model for becoming a top student and earning $500 scholarshp.
best of the readers hotline
OUT OF CONTROL?
Most readers disagree with Wendy Leeces stand on schools' federal grants
Editors note: We asked our readers if
they agreed with school board member
Wendy Leece's view that the school dis·
trict should refuse to accept federal
grants. The board agreed Tuesday to
apply for the gra17ts under Leece's objec-
tions. Here are sotne of the readers com-
ments.
I continue to be dumbfounded
by Leece's pos1llon and her opposi-
tion to assistance from the federal
government for programs that are
worthwhile and beneficial to
needy members of our community.
I don't understand what Wendy
is opposed to and I think it Is time
for her to move away from some
real vague generalities like accus-
mg us of not understanding what
the bigger picture is or telling us
that we are going to lose control or
that we are selling out.
Wendy, what is the bigger pic-
ture? What IS it that we would be
losing control over? These are just
some federal guidelines on how
our school system should work.
Who are we selling out to? This is
our own government, our own rep-
resentatives.
I think our schools should be
wide open for anybody who wants
to take a look at them.
Again it is unbelievable that she
would be opposed to these kind of
programs.
STUART WEEDN
Costa Mesa
The federal bilingual education
grant is not free money. Washing-
ton will reorient our e fforts away
from English competency and
toward ·cultural maintenance."
It will graft bilingualism onto
our district so that five years from
now when the grant runs out we
will not be as free lo reject this
money as we are now.
On the contrary, the programs
and personnel will be established
and we will go to Washington
beseeching them for funds where
upon they will issue new
demands. This is the process by
which Washington comes to domi-
nate local education.
Districts which went down this
road earlier, like Los Angeles, tried
to cast off these counter productive
programs but find themselves
hooked.
NED MCCUNE
Costa Mesa
Is there any truth to the rumor
that Wendy Leece is going to bring
in a troop of Freemen from Jordan,
Montana, to help her in her battle
against the evil and foreign gov-
ernment?
PAULEKLOF
Costa Mesa
Newport-Mesa Unified should
approve the federal grants. These
grants will provide opportunities
for the children and young people
in our district to achieve academic
and vocational goals.
Leece and her ilk are up to their
ideological antics and a.re more
interested in promoting their nar-
row, political philosophy than
doing what is right for our stu-
dents.
I urge the school board mem-
bers to approve the grants.
MARTIIA KILLEFER
Newport Beach
I believe the Boa.rd of Trustees
definitely should accept that mon-
ey for these special programs. l
think Wendy Leece is very, very
wrong in her insistence that this is
somehow going to lead to federal
control.
These things, as Serene Stokes
suggests, can be looked at closely
and if it so happens that there is
some attempt to take power away
from the board it can be rejected.
I think her position is nonsensi-
cal and I question her judgment on
that matter.
Bll.L CLAJUCB
Newport Beach
l fully support the school disbict
accepting this money because it is
not encroaching on the district's
control or local control in any way,
but rather it enhances the educa-
tional program for those students
who a.re most in need of extra
help.
MARILYN MATIHEWS
Newport Beach
I have two ltids in the New-
port-Mesa School District. I think
local control of schools is impor-
tant. The federal requirements
that Leece's talking about for
accepting these grants are really
not that unreasonable.
They are really there to pro-
tect the government, which is
ultimately us, the U.S. taxpayer,
from local fraud. Our local
schools need all the help they
can get, especially in California.
While again I can agree with
her idea of seeking volunteerism
to help the schools, I don't think
we should rely on that solely
because it would just benefit the
wealthier schools and not the
poor schools that these programs
are primarily directed at.
In my mind this issue is just
another example of the "all for
me and none for you" philoso-
phy that seems to be so popular
now. I think we have to realize
that we are all in this together
whether we are talking about
the community, the state or the
nation.
What helps one at Costa Mesa
High get a better education and
succeed in a chosen career will
eventually help all of us by
increasing the tax base or crimi-
nal prosecution in jails, taxes
and everything else.
HM MCROBERTS
Costa Mesa
Leece doesn't get it. She
needs a dose of reality training.
Thank God for Serene Stokes, an
educated critical thinker with
logic and reason.
They should remove Leece as
a school board member when
possible.
PEGGY CALHOUN
Newport Beach
Why not do both"'?
And by that I mean developing
encouraging local ties and accept-
ing and seeking other money
available to students in schools.
Schools and California students
are under funded; thus we should
be doing all we can to bring funds
to the district to benefit students.
Also perhaps board member Leece
does not understand Gov. Pete
Wilson's School to Career Plan.
There are no ties with that plan
as Leece fears. She apparently has
fears regarding ties. Perhaps she
needs to go over Wilson's plan
again to understand it. I think
combining programs such as Wil-
son's and federal grants to supple-
ment money to help students suc-
ceed should be our goals.
My concern also with board
member Leece is that she is sug-
gesting it is not really our goal as a
society to assist students to be able
to succeed and move forward in
their life. I don't understand this
board member's views.
Isn't the bottom line for us to be
helping students to be successful
in society? Each of the programs
that she is attacking is set up to
assist students, so perhaps what
she needs to do is step back and
view this and understand she is an
elected board member, who
should assist students, and also to
encourage and develop the ties
that would bring more funding to
the district and that is to do both -
local ties and federal.
DIANEUSI
Newport Beach
I've never understood the illogic
of sending-dollars to Washington,
D.C ., where they spend an expen-
sive night or two on the town and
then come back to us in the form
of pennies.
What we need to do is refuse to
pay the federal government tor
these grants so that they don't
have them to distribute.
DAit.RY ZANCK
Newport Beach
i write your reps
I
j PRESIDENT
1 Bill Clinton, (D), The .Wtiite House, 1600 •
1 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, 0 .C. •
l 20500. Hotline (6 a.m. to 2 p.m.) (202)
1 456-1111.
1 VICE PRESIDENT
l Al Gore, (0), The Capitol Bldg., Suite ! 212. Washington, D.C. 20500.
1 GOVERNOR
; Pete Wilson, (R), State Capitol, Sacra· ! mento, 95814, (916) 445-2841
l U.S. SENATORS l Barbara Boxer, (0), 112 Hart Senate
1 Bldg., Suite 112, Washington D.C., l 20510, (202) 224-3553 or 2250 E. Imperi-l al Hwy. Ste. 545, El Segundo, 90245. l Telephone: (310) 414-5700. Dianne
•
l Feinstein, (0), 331 Hart Bldg. Washing-
; ton O.C., 20510, (202) 224-3841 or
l 11111 Santa Monica Blvd., Ste. 915, Los • j Angeles, 90025, (310) 914-7300.
j HOUSE Of REPRESENTATIVES l Chris Cox, (R), 47th Dist., 4000
l MacArthur Blvd, East Tower, Ste. 430, l Newport Beach, 92660, (714) 756-2244 l or 206 Cannon Bldg., Washington, D.C. ~
! 20515, 202-225-5611. (Represents most
l of Newport Beach.) ·
l Dana Rohrabacher, (R), 45th Dist., 16162
j Beach Blvd., Suite 304, Huntington
1 Beach, CA., 92647, (714) 847-2433 or
l 1027 Longworth Building, Washington •
1 D.C. (202)225-2415 (Represents Costa l Mesa and West Newport Beach.)
STATE SENATE
Ross Johnson (R), 35th Dist., 1B5S2
MacArthur Blvd. Ste. 220, Irvine, 92n 5,
883-0180.
STATE ASSEMBLY
Marilyn Brewer (R), 70th Dist., 18952
1 MacArthur Blvd., Ste. 220, Irvine, 92715, ! 833-0180.
j ORANGE COUNTY BOARD
l OF SUPERVISORS i Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center
! Plaza, Santa Ana, 92701. Jim Sliva, 2nd ! District, Costa Mesa, 834-3220. Marian
: Bergeson, 5th District (Newport Beach, l Santa Ana Heights) 834-3550.
I CfTY OF COSTA MESA l Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, ! 92626, 754-5223. Mayor: Joe Erickson: l Peter Buffa, Sandy Genis, Mary Horn-i buckle and Gary Monahan, council j members.
i l OTY OF NEWPORT BEACH
i Newport Beach City Hall, 3300 Newport
i Blvd. 92663 644-3309. Mayor John I Hedges; John Cox. Jan Debay. Thomas j Edwards, Norma Glover, Dennis O'Neil,
l Jean Watt council memben.
j NEWPORT MESA UNlflEO I SOtoOt. OISTIUCT ! District Office: 1601 16th St., Newport ! Beach, 92663, 760-3200. I Superintendent Mac Bernd, President
1 Jim de Boom.
Additional layer Qf local government unneeded
A fter the Costa Mesa City
Council voted to support the
Orange County Council of Gov-
ernments proposal, Mayor Joe
Erickson, as quoted tn the May 22
Deily Pilot, argued that the add!·
tional layer of government was
needed because: "the county gov-
emm nt, meamng the ~rd of
Supervisors, has given greater l v-
elJ ol entitlement to developen
hke Th~ Irvin Co. and the build-
t
ing association, and the surround-
mg dties haven't had any say."
Erickson also speculates that
the Building Industry Allodation
would prefer • ... all planning
approvals and entitlements tn the
county areo1 to be controll.by
the county government' since the
county'• ltand.arda are a •much
easier avenue for developers.•
Ericklon's comments are specu·
latJve and tn error. The county's
estobllshed planning process is
alreody lade n with a multitude of
current plannJng rules and regula-
tions. Anoth• layer of pem-
ment wiD only complicate an
alreedy complicated process.
Unfortunately, and more lmpor·
tantly, the e<;>naeqUences of adding
more time to the conmuction
process will ultimately add to Ule
cost of a new house. And, u
reported on numerous occasions
by the press, housing is already
out of reach for many dtlzens. Is
an inaeased cost of housing the
desired gOal of the League of
Citiesf
What's also troubling, ls that
while the organizers clftim the
Coundl of Governments will not
be involved in land use pla~g.
·Erickson uses th land use plan-
ning rationale for supporting th
Council of Governments.
f ..
Mayor Erickson's comments are
precisely the reason the Building
Industry Association bas asked
dtles to clarify the scope and
authority or the Council of Gov-
ernments. Your article helped
illustrate our point
CHRISTINE Dd!Mn
Executive Director/
Director of Government Affairs
BuUding Industry Astodatioo
of Southern Califomla, Inc.
Newport~ Mesa Daily Pilot
Chronic letter writer
misses point again
In a recent response, chronic
letter writer Barry Zan.ck once
again did what he does best: he
missed the point.
He attacked me for being
attacked for accepting what
appears now to have been an
improper donation to a candidate
by that candidate's sister, and
suggested that now we should
forget Scott Baugh's felony crimi-
nal trial coming up in September
for interlerence with the elec-
tions and for the cover-up.
Zanck is wrong, of course.
I believe that the concept of
"personal responsibility" is more
than a clever campaign slogan,
and that it applies to more than
just single mothers on welfare.
I made a mistake. I admitted
it. I accepted the consequences. I
didn't hide what I had done, and
I didn't blame other people. The
facts as we understand them
have been reported to the proper
authorities and they will do
whatever they believe is war-
ranted.
On the day that Curt Pringle,
Dana Rohrabacher and Scott
Baugh stand up, admit what they
did and agree to ta.ke the conse-
quences, 'instead of calllng every-
one else names and accusing
everyone else.of doing what they
themselves had done, maybe
Barry Zan.ck can make compar-
isons.
Until they do, be can't. '
So, you tell me, who's the hyp-
ocrite, Barry?
JIM TOLEDANO
County Chair, Democratic
Party of Orange County
Sen. Johnson helpful
to Newport Beach
In Tony Dodero's June 3 col-
umn, state Sen. Ross Johnson is
ta.ken to task for not supporting
AB 3344, the state legislation that
would prohibit the proposed
Irvine Ranch Water Dis1rict pro-
ject. Let me mention that the
Daily Pilot did not allow Sen.
Johnson the opportunity to clari-
fy his position on AB 3344.
Rather, the article stated that he
was "said to be against it." I
would have expected that the
Pilot would verify a statement as
significant as this before printing
it.
~#"-. .. •• ~..._
~--. , .. -. ...,.,...~
bonuscorres~ndence
I have had the opportunity to
work closely with Sen. Johnson
over the past six months and my
personal experience is that he is
very responsive to his Newport
Beach constituency. At the city's
request, he is sponsoring .SB
1410, a bill to fund a methane
gas mitigation system along West
Pacific Coast Highway, that if
successful, would permanenqy
correct a long-standing problem
for nearby residents and busi-
nesses. Sen. Johnson is also
assisting the city on its library
non-resident use issue and my
experience is that he not only
responds to Newport Beach
requests, be also seeks our direct
input on issues of statewide
importance.
In my opinion, Sen. Johnson is
a responsive, hard-working legis-
lator and I look forward to work-
ing with him in the future.
TIIOMAS C. EDWARDS
Newport Council member
Local government fine,
but fed-up with feds
I gotta admit I get a kick out of
Joe Bell's articles appearing in
your paper. He is certainly biased
and doesn't mind letting you
know it. But although I'm sure he
didn't mean all the bad things be
bad to say about people who real-
ly don't trust their government, be
might have done a real service to
the community ("Government's
bark is worse than its bite,• May
1). And I'm pretty sure he didn't
mean to reinforce the feeling that
most people seem to have is that
one of the worst things you will
ever have befall you is to have
someone say, "Hello, I'm from the
government, and I'm here to help
you.•
In the article, he uses about 36
column inches describing gov-
ernment in action helping citi-
zens ... on the local level. I think
we all know that 11 you have a
neoee-nr.e""-CK
D*ndlllt a GrOWh1a
lil This Posl~
~a Nurturing
Environment!
11 \111 1>11 \11 \'\l'l H \\I, 1>11\1< l<>H
(.ill I 111 '"lil 11 11 ' .'•·"I' I•:_, I
-~~ I -S '> ('-' I
valid case and present it at a
meeting of the Costa Mesa
Parks, Recreation Facilities and
Parkways Commission, chances
are that you will get a fair hear-
ing and a sensible decision.
But to be-fair you also ought to
read the horror story of what the
federal government -the federal
Department of Education's Office
for Civil rights -did to a local
agency, the Newport-Mesa
School Dis1rict Board of nustees,
as told by John Hedges, the may-
or of Newport Beach (May 27).
It is reminiscent of what HUD
did to the Costa Mesa City
Council a few years ago. In case
you don't remember, the council
had the audacity to pass an ordi-
nance to the effect that city tax
dollars would not be given to any
organization which used the
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996 A19
money to give support to illegal aliens. It didn't lake the feds long
to let the council know that if
they did this honible thing, all
HUD funds to Costa Mesa would
be cut off.
And as I recall the City Coun-
cil backed down in about five
minutes because they just could-
n't lose those·federal funds.
Thanks, Joe, for pointing out
the fact that local government is
quick to respond , listens with an
open mind and usually does
what is best for the majority of
citizens. And, John, that the fed-
eral government is a huge
bureaucracy that takes a law
passed by Congress, then writes
and enforces its own rules pretty
much as it sees fit.
Pim.JP E. AJlNOLD
Costa Mesa
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THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996
.
CONTINUED FROM A 1 .
•So those are some reast>ns we
like to support these things,•
Everroad said, adding that Disney
is a reputable company the city
would like to continue doing dty and the nearby residents in business with. Everroad said he
Corona del Mar. 1 also received about 20 letters
Then the necessary perm.its, from residents who [avored the including those to park a dozen
eemi-trucks and six trailers for the filming.
aew, bad to be secured before Prior to filming, there are hours
ftlm shooting could commence of preparation work, which will
after nightfall tonight and Friday shut down the library tonight at 6
night, DeGalla said. p.m. instead of the usual 9 p.m.,
But such inconvenience pays Everroad said.
off for the city. Starting at 6 p.m .• the library
The city will net an estimated will be transformed -using potted
$20,000 by the time the two plants, sod and stone siding -to
nights of production are complet-look like a resort in the In.d.ipn
ed, Everroad sdid. T\lis sum, Wells area. ar?und Palm Spnngs,
which goes into the city's general where the inside shots f?r the ~
fund, comes not only from the I were taken, DeGalla sa.id.
$18,000 locdtion fee Disney ffi "The filming will be completed
paying to use the llbrary. but from by Saturday morning and the
tax revenue from local hotels library will be the same old
~here the crew and stars are library everyone knew and l,oved
staying and from their various by the end of the day Sunday,•
purchases, he sd1cl DeGalJa promised.
Find 1t fast 1n your hometown newspaper
NEWPORT BEACH • COSTA MES.A
Saturday, Jw 15 lOa• 4p• en. Dad Q Gift
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Caribbean Daze Tanning Kitchen Design
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•
, I DRIVER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
I'm pleased that it's m~ peo..
ple think. That's all we can ask
fo~• I
When qu'estioned; animal
rights activists easily listed others
who had held to a principle
rather than do something that
contributes to the mistreatment
of animals. Plight attendants
have refused to hang up fur coats
-or even to touch the garments.
OtheJS have lobbied for vegetar-
ian meal lines in cafeterias.
Inspectors with the U.S. Depah-
"
ment of Agriculture have
resigned their jobs rather than
continue to work for a govern-
ment which endorses atrocities
to animals.
PARM's Hersha.ft says that
typically, the animal rlgbts move-
ment has not been known for
dramatic stands. Animal lobby-
is~ are known for their altruism,
Hershaft says, not for being radi-
cal or destructive.
"To most of us, animal rights
is something we're willing to get
uncomfortable over, but not
something we're ready to lay out
our lives for," he said. "This
movement deals with protecting
other beings, not ourselves.•
To date, OCTA officials have
, .. t. ••••• , ....
held fast, refusing to employ
Anderson as long as he refuses to
comply with the company's
direction. More often than not, in
similar examples, the company
bas backed down Ul the face of
an ethical stand, said Ingrid
Newkirk, national director of
Washington, D.C.-based People
for the Ethical neatment tor Ani-
mals.
In ]'iewkirk's view, Anderson
is heroic for "sticking up for the
under-cow, as it were," but also
for holding to his principles.
.. Anyone who will say, 'I Will
not prostitute my ethical beliefs
just to get a paycheck' is an ide-
al," Newkirk said. "That's a per-
son you want your children to
Newpon ~Mesa Daily Pi.lot
look up to. What a role model.•
And Dr. Lorin Lindner, Cali-
fornia director of Psychologists
for the Ethical 'Ii'eatment of Ani·
mals, hopes to see Anderson par-
ticipate in the March for .4nima)s
later this month in Wublngton.
O.C. If he goes, Anderson will
take lµs place among a aoss-
section of animal lovers -some
who have taken stands, others
who simply love the companion-
ship of a pet. ..
"Wliat's courageous and hero-
ic to me is each of these peopl~'s
efforts ill the face of a corporate
mentality that calls us terrorists
for wanting ·to protect lives,"
Lindner said. "I believe each of
our efforts is quite heroic.•
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EYE-OPENER
Battle of the 1ltans
at the Upton Cup
QUOTE OF THE DAY
·11 could be a real shootout ...
(Dennis) Conrier doesn 'i come to lose ... •
-MIKE WA'n/TJN. BYC MEMBER OP THE.. l'E4R
LET THERE BE WAR
richard
dunn ·
'A Ray
of Hope'
atNBCC
• The Sandi Coffer
Summer Classic takes
hold as grass roots golf
tournament to benefit MS
S andi Coffer said it was "one
of the best experiences of .
her life." Rarely does a golf
tournament sell out so quickly,
and with so little fanfare.
There's no ballroom dinner in
a fancy hotel, no title sponsor
from a nationwide company to
beat the drum. It's done
in-house. Run by club members,
virtually the same group of
go-getters who volunteer for the
Toshiba Senior Classic and the
Taco Bell Newport Classic
Pro-Am.
It began with a grassroots
flavor, straight from the
community of the Newport
Beach Country Club.
Tom Deemer, the Yankee
Tavern restaurant owner who
frequently hosts Monday Night
Football charity events on the
top-floor entertainment room of
bis Newport Beach home, sort of
pushed Eoffer into a golf
·tournament to boost the
contributions to MS.
Ii Thia weekend~ Upton Cup Chall~e
showd be Bbale~ spedaJ Wlth two of
yaChttng's heavyweJghts, Dave U1ll'lian
an·d .Dennls Conner. huldiig bl the arena.
. £-t ORONA DEL MAR -ID
\:...., the defending CCll'Del',
weutng tbe lialil lnidll,
ii Daw UDman of fae · Balboa
Yacht Club, and 1k1PP8r G( boJt
owner John CaDer'& Butteralp.
. In the ch~ comer,
weaiing the dart trucb, ia Den-. ms Conner oe tbe &m Diego
Yocht Club. 6nd lldpper of
WJnga, owned bf DllDml end
SbaronCae.
Yes, that Denni.I Conner.
Winner ol foqr Amedca'I CUpl.
The two yacht1Dg heavy-
weights -who are frleDdl and
foes are "~-~ ..... -
Llptoa CUp ewtty day ID tb8
ccmfolt of tbelr own fal;ility. Ull-
man iDlde tt happen. o.m. WB1 anmttldl week-
end to get it back for SDYC.
,tJllman and Conner, of
ClOUl9e, are ~ two ol 16
lkippen apeCtid to compete
with DIDe-!Dmlber crews tn the
UptonCup.
BUt don't be IUl'priaed if tb8
jlYe-nlC8 ...-ccmes down to
UllmaD. Newpmt Beach .. pride
and joy. and tbe Upton CUp ..
four-time defending champ&oo.
and Conner.
•Tbiiyaer,
expected to con-
tend for the
prize and create
quite a sttr Sat-
urday and Sun-
day in the Lipton
Chall~ge Cup
Regatta off the
Newport Pier, a
prestigious
Pacific Cout
u I wouldn't b~
surprised to see
Ullman and Conner
use match-racing
tactics on each
other ... "
we've got tbe
San. Diego
Yacht Club
pulling out all
the stops,
because they
want the cup
back, and
Dennis Con-
ner is their
skipper,. said
event hosted
each year by the
defending
champion, in
-MIKE .WATHEN,
BYCMEMBER
M i k e
1 Wathen,
BYC's Mem-
ber of the
Year in 1995, this case, the
Balboa Yacht Club.
Jn a nutshell. Sir 'lbomas Up.
ton donated a championship
sailing cup to the San Diego
Yacht Club in t903, one of four
cups he seeded in the United
States for the plirpqse of West-
ern sailors challenging for it
each year.
Thus, the Upton Cup was
born.
Por the past four years, how-
ever, members of the BYC have
had the privilege of viewing the
• and the Upton Cup's race direc-
tor on tbe course.
"Conner bam't driven in a
Upton Cup In the last four years,
because he'• too busy with the
America's Cup or whatever. But
it could pouibly be a real
shootout between him and Dave
Ullman. because Conner doesn't
come to lose.
"I wouldn't be swprlsed to
see Ullman and Conner me
match-racing i.ctics on each
other, like before the start. They
could chase each other around
... and tack. tack. tack on each
others' wind. Guys don't single
out each other that much, but
when you're stacking up, those
two will be very close in proxim-
ity and they will keep them-
selves right on top of each oth-
er."
Cooner, former SDYC Com-
modore, said be bas won the
Uptan Cup •eeveral times,• but
bun"t competed since the race
went to a one-design boat, the
Shock 35s, about seven or eight
yeanago.
•The Upton Cup used to be
raced in size or Tiiting of the
defending yacht club's choice,
so if you bad a good Cal 32, you
would race Cal 32s, or any other
kind of boat that you might
think would be faster,• said
Conner, who won an America's
Cup most recently with Stan &
Stripes in 1988. .
"The Upton Cup is a big
deal, because it's not very often
you get that many yacht clubs
participating in one single event
in a one-design boat. It has· a big
history, one of the oldest trophies
raced for on the West Coast."
Ullman. a 1964 Newport Har-
bor High graduate, is con,.sidered
one of the best sail makers in the
country. Conner's Shock 35 will
probably be Uling Ullman Sails.
•we will be sail testing
(today) and Friday to decide
which sails we like, because we
also use North Sails,• Conner
•
. .
One Monday night, a
Deemer-hosted event helped
raise $19,000 for multiple
sclerosi.s. That's when the idea
was suggested to Coffer, who
suffers from MS, to launch a golf
tournament to benefit the
National Multiple Sclerosis
Society.
r-------------------------,
Coffer, after all, can golf.
Eight times, she won the
women's club championship at
Newport Beach Country Club.
That's like Jack Youngblood
playing in Super Bowl XIV with
a broken leg, Kirk Gibson
limping to the plate for his
game-winning World Series
home nm in 1988.
So Coffer, who recently
placed second in a Women's
Soqlhern California Golf
~ociation championship event,
started "A Ray of Hope," the
Sandi Coffer Summer Classic at
NBCC.
"I can't believe how generous
people are," Coffer said last
Monday night, following the
second annual Swnmer Classic,
in which an estimated $100,000
was raised for the National
Multiple Sclerosis Society.
The event has sponsors,
naturally, but it couldn't be run
without a sensational core of
committee members, many of
whom made the Senior PGA
Tour event in March such a
success.
Last year, the inaugural
Summer Classic netted in excess
of $70,000 for multiple sclerosis.
This year, the tournament's field
of 128 golfers was filled by last
month.·
As a result of the
tournament's accomplishment
lut year, it earned two awards:
The •Hope Award" from the
national headquarters of the
Multiple Sclerosis Society,
naming Cotter its Volunteer of
the Year: and the "Leading Edge
Awa.rd,• which was presented
by the local chapter for the
outstanding new event of the
year.
0
Add Cotter ••• Sandi Coffer
and her husband, Dave, won the
NBCC Couplet Champtonsbtp
for tbe lowth year ln a row. They
are aJlo memben of Bermuda
DuDes Country Oub, where
they've won the couples tiUe two
straight years.
0
· HSe'I bow u.. SMdl Coner
Suln.-Cl.uatc ftnlshed on
M9dday: Pllgbt A low groa
•SEE GOLF PAGE 83
musb!"9 girls I 1995-1996
Should it be Katie Mesa?
• Grogan, who earned
Costa Mesa's Female
Athlete of the Year
seemed to be in two
places at one time -and
she often was.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
C OSTA MESA -Costa
Mesa High girls athletics
won 12 Pacific Coast
League contests during the
1995-96 school year, but senior
Katie Grogan was involved in
20 PCL triumphs.
Impossible you say7 Well,
there is a twist.
Grogan, the school's Female
Athlete of the Year, was a bas-
ketball starter for five PCL vic-
tories and collected five more
combining track and field and
swimming this spring, often
alternating between her events
in both sports in the same after-
noon.
But Grogan, a member of the
U.S. national women's B team in
water polo who will continue
ber polo career at the University
of Massachusetts, also took part
in the CIP Southern Section
Division II water polo team's 10-
0 PCL campaign.
She also led the school's
inaugural girls water polo team,
whi9' competed as a club sport.
References to Grogan's
exploits would indeed crowd
any time capsule preserving the
Mustangs' 1995-96 athletic his-
tory, but several other individu-
als would warrant inclusion, u well.
Senior Mandi Simonds
became the only female athlete
in school bl.story to amass 12
varsity letters (four eech in vol-
leyball. soccer and track and
field), which provided an
impressive enough re1wne to
earn PCL female Athlete ol the
Veer laurels.
Junior Colleen Lund won
tWo PCL gold n>edall in IWtin·
ming, while senior sprinter
Margaret Grover claimed one.
Basketball, led by junior
point guard Koo Kim, was the
only team to advance to the CIF
Southern Section Playoffs, but
third-place finishes in swim-
ming and track surpassed bas-
ketball's fourth-place status in
the final PCL standings.
Here's a sport-by-sport
review:
Basketball: A roller-coaster
season ended in 'the first round
of the CIF Southern Section
Division ill-A Playoffs as No. 2
seeded Nordoff eliminated the
Mustangs with a 62-51 triumph.
Second-year coach Len
Whitacre resigned after three
league games and his replace-
ment, assistant Shontel Sher-
wood, held things together to
pull Mesa into a three-way tie
for second place, heading into
the final regular-season game.
The Mustangs (14-13, 5-5 in
league), however, couldn't get
past league champion Laguna
Hills and had to settle for an at-
large playoff berth and a first-
round road trip to Ojai.
Kim averaged 14.1points,4.5
rebounds, 3.6 assists and three
steals per game en route to first-
team All-PCL and All-Newport-
Mesa District laurels.
Post players Grogan (7 .1
ppg) and junior Chanel Ander-
son (nine points and 5.3
rebounds per contest) earned
second-team all-league recog-
nition, while Anderson was also
an all-district selection.
The squad split with aoss-
town rival Esta.nda, which kept
possession of the perpetual Bell
'trophy for the second straight
year on the basis of point dJffer-
enttal.
SWlaamlng: Lund surprised
even henell by topping the rest
of the field ot PCL P1na1s to
claim gold medals tn th• so.
yard freeltyle (25.67) and UM 1eo becbtroke c1:02.1•>·
Grogan sett.led for aecond·
plac:e ftnilhea Jn the SO and I 00
freelfyle 9Ye0ts, joining Lund In
repru111t1ng Co9ch Matt Wbit-
more'I Multug1 at th• CJP
Southern Section Dtvllkia D
DON LEACH I DAlY Pll.OT
Senior Katte Grogan Just about dJd lt all this season to earn
Costa Mesa'• Female Athlete of the Year bonon.
Pinals. .
Grogan wait seventh in the
100 free and eighth in the SO at
CIP Finals, where Lund was
ninth in the 100 backstroke and
14th in the 50 free.
Lund, Grogan and sopho-
more Allison Alastuey wen! also
on the 200 and •oo freestyle
relay quartets, wbicb finished
aecond and ttUrd. re1pectively,
in league and seventh and 15th,
r•pectively, at CIP Plnals.
Jamie Smith rounded out the
200 relay. while Blaine GrOgan
wu the fourth member ol. the
400 relay.
Alutuiey, a tophomore, WU
Mwtb in IMgue tn tbe 500 he-
....... ~ ~ 200 he, Wbtle 'lhcr"Xtllt ,.,. ....... tbe 100
backstroke and Amy Howse
was seventl\ in the 500 free and
10th in the 200 free.
Freshman' Stephanie Lom:
bardo was eight in the 100
breaststroke and ninth in the
200 individual medley at leagu
final.s, where Smith (50 free)
and Elaine Grogan (100 free)
each finished 10th.
Coach Matt Whitmore's
squad finished 2..3 in league
dual meets, but wound up third
at PCL Pina.ls.
Tncll Mid leld: Coach Jobn
Camey'I tMm won Its tint three
PCL dual meets and talked ol.
contending for the top spot. It
. dropped itl f.tnal two regWar-
•SEE MUSTANGS PAGED
I
SCC's Munroe !
still in coma
•Freshman catcher
still has not spoken
since July 16 car
accident in Modesto.
~y Jim Walters, Daily Pi/or
MOO ESTO April
Munroe, a starter on the
Southern CalJ.fomia College
softbaU team, remaias m a
coma after bemg in1ured in a
July 16 head-on collision.
Munroe. who suffered.
severe internal mjunes and
head trauma in the accident.
has stabilized enough to be
moved from Doctor's Hospital
to nearby CentraJ Cal.tfonua
Rehabilitation Hospital She
has opened her eyes at tim"es,
but has not spoken smce the
accident, according to her
brother Nathan Munroe.
The Sonora native 1s
breatlung freely on her own
after being removed from a
respirator. She's being fed
through intraveneous tubes.
An MRI taken two weeks
ago did not reveal any per-
manent nerve damage, but
there still has been no de,er-
mination of the sev~ty of the
head injuries, Munroe said .
"I think she knows we're
here," he said. "The other
day I was here and said 'April
this is your big brother
Nathan,' and she looked ·my
way and squeezed my hand.
WEvery day she is doing
more and more. The doctors
say it is just a' matter of time.•
·1 was up there two weeks
ago and be looked ii.k she
could Just tum over and wake
up at any ti.me,. said sec
softball coocb Beth RenkOllil.
·Her face 1s a. little swollen
and so is her leg, ol c::oune,
but it looks like· ah could
tart t.uang like she does.
'Hey guys, what are you
clomgl' It' kipd Qi fruatrat• tng.. •
Munroe w a pa••: in a car that lost amtlOI
a heavy rain siorm and Cxlllkl·
ed With • 'pickup trUdt ....
IUlf..s • br6Un 'ba two O'ded ribs ind be.a ....
I
I I • I
I
I •I I I
I
I I I I r I I I l ·: 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
I I I
I I I I I
I I r •
1 I
I
•
•
82
~·· r .
(11
s '.
r. •
11"' -' .
;t"
·t ...
THURSOAY, JUNE 13, 1996
Fortner sq11i1·rel reachiilg top ·branches
• Newport Harbor High
product Jeff Thomsen will take
a new attitude, and a JC
singles tennis title, as he heads
to the Univeristy of Oregon.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Jeff Thomsen
was kind of a squirrel in high school.
His claim to fame was a tennis match
he lost.
But Thomsen grew up in communi-
ty college. Learned ho~ to focus. during
an entire match, not 1ust the first set.
Went from shady temperame nt to
Orange Empire Conference champion.
"My freshman year, that's about all I
worked on, the mental side of the
game, H Thomsen said. . .
The nund is power. This year, in his
second year at Golden West College,
Thomsen won the conference champi-
onship in men's-singles, finished sixth
in the state -losing a close quarte rfi-
ndl match 111 the state championships
-and earned JC All-America honors.
Thomsen, 6-foot-4, 180 pounds,
signed last week with the University of
Oregon, meaning the former Newport
Harbor High standout will probably
face his old Sailor team.mate, Geoff
Abrams (Stanford), in the 'Pacific 10
Conference.
Thomsen had the big serve in ~gh
school and the ability to play a strong
baseline game, but lived in Abrams'
shadow in 1993 and 1994, when
Abrams won back-to-back Sea View
League titles and advanced, respective-
ly, to the quarterfinals and sem1finals of
the CIP Southern Section individual
singles championship.
It 1llomsen who Abrams beat in the
league finals m 1994, 'Ibomsen's senior
year.
"Jeff always worked hard, but he
was kind of a squirrel,• said Charlie
.Bleiker, Newport Harbor tennis coach.
·aut he put it together and be really
came on to become a good ballplayer.
You like to see those kids change and
come along in the real world."
Thomsen, a Palisades Tennis Club
regular, went 28-3 this year for Coach
Morio Parker's Rustlers.
H (Parker) really helped me out.•
Thomsen said. "He's real lcnowledge-
a ble about the game. I got the most I
could get out of his coaching, and now
I'm going to the next level. He took me
to the level I wanted to get to. He's real-
ly with me mentally, and that was prob-
ably the biggest fa\llt in my tennis
game.
"My freshman year was almost a
wasted year, because the mental side
of the game is all we worked on. When
we got done with that, we could work
on other parts of the game I needed to
work on."
Thomsen, ranked No. 2 in the state
at the midway point in the season, won
the OEC title, then lost in the quarterli-
nals at the Ojai Valley Tennis Tourna-
ment in a draw of 128 community col-
lege players. Thomsen was eliminated
at Libby Park, the center court of Ojai,
in the quarterfinals to Jorge Aguilar of
Chabot College (HaywardJ, 7-6, 7-6.
"I kind of choked," be said.
But at Ojai is where Thomsen made
his impression.
' "At Ubby Park, that's where every·
body is -there's quite a few coaches
there," Thomsen said. •The Oregon
coach had expressed some interest,
and the Pac 10 is what I've dreamed of;
you're playing all the big ones -Stan-
ford, UCLA. Maybe I'll run into
Abrams at Stanford."
During the OEC season, Thomsen
lost his first match to Saddleback's
Kevin Springer, but then Thomsen
returned the favor by defeating
Springer for the conference champi-
onship, 6-7, 6-1, 6-4.
"He's 25-years-old," Thomsen said
of Springer.
In the Southern California Region-
als, Thomsen won two matches to qual-
ify for the state championships, in
which he won in the Round of 16. He
also played in the recent Adoption
Guild Tennis Tournament in Uae men's
open division.
No longer is Thomsen blind to the
nuances of tennis.
"I would get down on myself for just
missing a shot, H Thomsen said. "I
couldn't keep focused for a whole
match. I would stay focused for a set,
then lose it. Maybe in the third set I
would try and get it back, but in the
third set. it's so much harder to get it
back. Once you get on track, you've
got to really focus to stay on track. It
was huge to learn that. And I just
learned that this year. That college
experience really helped me, and next
year I won't go in blind to how they
play."
With his ears and eyes wide open,
Thomsen is indeed prepared for the next
level.
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Former Newport Harbor High tennis standout Jeff Thomsen is off to the
University of Oregon after two ~ars of maturing at Golden West College.
.... '---------------------------------------------,
0 •
1•.J' ...
spotlight on mustang girls/ 1995-1996
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Assistant Coach Shontel Sherwood, who was named head coach midway through the
season when Len Whitacre resigned, had no trouble getttng her point across.
Do you want to win?
• Mired in a four-game losing streak,
Sherwood found the magic question
to help the Mustangs make a final
push to second-place finsih in the
PCL and a CIF playoff berth.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -As halftime talks go, Costa
Mesa High girls basketball coach Shontel Sher-
wood's Jan 30 monologue at Aliso Niguel bor-
dered on bonng.
She didn't send objects flying, raise her voice
above a calm, conversational tone, or invoke the
type of dramatic license typical of most locker
room lore.
But the Mustangs, leading only 27-22 at the
time and ndmg a four-game Pacific Coast
League losing streak, seemed to get the mes-
sage.
"I basically posed the question to them," said
Sherwood, who opened the season as an assis-
tant, but asswned the helm three games into the
PCL campaign when Len Whitacre surprisingly
resigned. "I said the responsjbfilty for whether
or not we were going to win this game was on
them and I asked them if they were willing to
respond."
The players' response was a 19-1 third-quar-
ter run that triggered a 62-32 blowout, then sub-
sequent upset victories over Estancia (40-39}
and University (49-.47) to pull Mesa lnto a thre~
way tie for second with one regular-season
game to play.
The toll of a tumultuous season, however,
seemed apparent in e hard·fought 41 -29 loss to
league c:hamplon Laguna Hills, as well aa a 62-
51 fil1it-round
CIP Southern Sectlon DMsJon IIl·A playoff
(
defeat to No. 2-seeded Nordoff, finalizing
Mesa's record at 14-13, 5-5 in league.
It was the Mustangs worst record since an 8-
15 season in 1988-89. But, considering the
amount of adversity this team was dealt, it could
be deemed an admirable achievement.
For starters, two-time All-PCL center Corri
Lurmann left the team before the season began.
The 6-foot-1 senior standout did return after
missing the first 10 games, but appeared in only
nine contests before turning in her uniform for
good.
Junior point guard Koo Kim ran the show
with junior post Chanel Anderson leading a bal·
anced lineup that included senior post Katie
Grogan, junior guard Kristina Watanabe and
sophomores Kelly Chapin and Julie Collett.
Kim and Anderson each made the All-New-
port-Mesa District Dream Team, while Kim was
a first-team All-PCL choice. Anderson and Gro-
gan were second-team all-league picks.
A rugged preleague schedule produced an 8-
7 mark. but the Mustangs carried a four-game
winning streak, including a 50-47 triumph over
Newport-Mesa District rival Newport Harbor,
into the first of two meetings with arch-rival
Estancia.
Whitacre, losing his voice and battling a.
trlple'"(tigit fever, watched the Eagles prevail,
40-36.
He reslgned four days later, saying, •1 simply
never felt at home while coaching at Mesa ... I
felt like an uninvited guest, or an odd uncle, per-
haps.•
Losses to University and Laguna Hills, the lat-
ter the school's first-ever victory over Mesa, fol-
lowed, before a shocking 56·S.. loss at Laguna
Beach put the Mustangs at rock bottom.
But displaying the type of tenacity that.has
made lt one of the county'• most consistent pro.
grams, Mesa ans~ered its coach and ~ other
detractors with tu stirring late-teuon •ume.
MUSTANGS
CONTINUED FRO M 81
season meets, however, and had
to settle for third at PCL Finals.
Grover, however, settled for
nothing less than a gold medal in
the 200-meter dash, clocking a
time of 27 .30. She also finished
third in the 100 (13.57).
Versatile Ha Dang collected
three medals at PCL Finals, fin-
ishing second in the 100 hurdles
(17.47) and third in the 300 hur-
dles (52.91) and triple jump (32-7
1/2). .
Sophomore Gegi Van De
Walker was second in the 800
(2:24.67), while Simonds was sec-
ond in the high jump (5-0) and
Tawny Bayes third in the discus
(101-10).
No Mustang advanced past
the CIF Southern Section Division m Preliminaries.
Softball: The Mustangs
opened the season with a 28-1
blowout of Liberty Christian, but
the similarities to the high-scoring
Mesa squads that made the CIF
Playoffs each of the previous
three seasons faded quickly.
Sophomore Julie Collett, the
Newport-Mesa District Player of
the Year as a freshman, was once
again all-district. Junior pitcher
Niki Montgomery made her third
straight all-district squad, while
sophomore outfielder Kim
Daniels was a all-district selection
for the first time.
But losses to graduation and a
coaching transition from departed
Rick Buonarigo to Carrie Nelson
combined to result in an 8-16
record, 3-7 in league, and no post-
season invitation.
Collett, who moved from sec-
ond base to shortstop, hit .356
with a district-leading three home
runs, 22 RBI, 21 runs and six dou-
bles.
Montgomery earned seven
pitching victories and hit .404
with 15 RBI and five stolen bases.
Daniels hit .394 with nine RBI,
seven stolen bases and 20 runs.
Soccer: Injuries made it a sea-
son that could have been for
Coach Dan Johnston's squad,
which finished 6-14, 0-10 in
league.
Senior Jessica Schroeder
missed the season due to a bro-
ken leg sustained training for
cross country and junior Shirley
CASEY LUKSCH I DAILY PllO
Point guard Koo Kim goes around a defender as she lookS for an
opening In the lane or for an open teammate.
Blassman, who amassed six goals
to fuel a 5-3 start, went down with
knee trouble.
Senior forward Heather Brack-
ett provided leadership through-
out, earning first-team All-PCL
recognition, ~hile junior Lisa
Steele wingback and senior
sweeper Suzann Timmons
received honorable mention.
Freshman goalie Erin Van
Hom accounted for four of the
team's five shutout victories, with
Simonds posting the other in a
fill-in role.
Cross country: Freshman
Jamie DeNoewer earned all-
league recognition by finishing
ninth at PCL Finals with a time of
19:53.
Van De Walker was 20th 'at
league finals, docking a 20:30
for Coach Joe Busi's squad,
which finished sixth in league.
Volleyball: Seniors Bayes and
Alida Harber were second-team
All-Pacific Coast League picks
for Coach Dave Sorrells, the pro-
gram's fourth coach in four years
who will end that string by
returning next year.
TOP 10
Despite Sorrells' preseason
optimism, the Mustangs
ma.tched their 3· 11 overall record
of 1994, including an 0-10 league
mark. + 1. Senior Mandi Simonds
named PCL Female Athlete of
th8 Year.
+2. Junior IWimmet Colleeil
LuDit wtm pair of gold medals
at Pad&: Cout League Finals.
+3. S8nior Margaret Grover
w1D1 PCL gold medal in 200-
mats daib.
+&. S.-Katie-9rogan eam:t
pm al lllvtl medall in fr••--...... PCl. emaia. ..,_..Ha~ Wilil lllvet
a..a--~-...S.lletPCL ... ~ ..............
..... Koo Kim Ab4
Cl.II Aaft?lllll nllNd to
All-Newport-Mesa District ·
Dream Team in basketball.
+7. Softball standouts Julie
Collett, Niki Montgomery and
Kim Oanlels make All-New-
port-Mesa District Dream
Te4ni.
+8. Senior Heather Brackett
named first-team All-Padflc
Cout League in IOCCer.
+9. Gegi Van De Walker,
StnioDdl ind 18wny Bayet Win
JMdeJI at PCL 1Yadt and Pteld
Pmall.
+10. Belketbell beoGmel only
Mala team to make CIP South·
.. 8edlOD Playdfs.
'
Tennis: Doubles pertners
Annie Do and · Myra Dilnsoo,
both freshman, were the stand·
outs on a young Mustang contin-
gent, which took its lumps in
league while learning the ropes,
fmishlng 0-10 in the PCL.
Water polo: Completing its
first season as a non-CIF sanc-
tioned club team, Coach Crystal
Whitmore's Mustatigs were led
by Grogan, who emused 65
goal • 46 assists and 58 lteall.
The CIF Southern Section
approved girls water polO tlill
spring u a Winter tpOrt, begtn·
ning next December.
• •
c
I
It's It's that that time time of of
the the year year again! again!
Irrelevant Irrelevant Week! Week!
Mr. Irrelevant
JUNEll
JUNEll
ARIWAL PARTY
ARRIVAL PARTY
TWIN PALMS RESTAURANT
TWIN PALMS RESTAURANT
3 P.M. 3 P.M.
NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT BEACH
PUTS PUTS OUT OUT
THE THE
WELCOME WELCOME
MATI MATI Even More
BANQUET INFORMATION: 263·0727
r-------------------------------------------------, I
Irrelevant XX1 l
I
DOUll.E 'l'ROla.E
Double 1\'ouble in the National Football League is
rare, but Mr. Irrelevant 21 Same Manuel and his
twin brother Sean, both drafted by the San Francisco
•9(ml, aren't the first twins to be picked in the annual
lottery by the same franchise.
The then Los Angeles Rams, who
also then played home games in ~dllJI Los Angeles, drafted both Mar-
lin McKeever and his late
twin brother Mike out of USC
35 yea.rs ago in the 1961 cattle
roundup.
Marlin. a member of the Bal-
boa Bay Cub Hall of Fame and
also inducted last year into USC's
Hall of Pa.me as one of the great tight
ends and linebackers in the school's storied football
history, was a lofty No. 1 selection by the Rams in the
first round while Make, sidelined by injuries his senior
season with the 'Irojans, was the LA club's 13th pick.
M8rtin had an equally brilliant pro career with the
Rams and the Washington Redskins. One season as a
tight end for the Rams, he led the team in receptions.
Another season as a linebacker, he led the Rams in
tackles.
The irony ts that Marlin McKeever by himself meant
to the Rams what both Manuels could mean to the
49ers as Sam is a defensive end-linebacker while
Sean ls a tight end. Marlin did all that in one body.
L-------------------------------------------------
LIPTON
CONTINUED FROM 81
the SDYC, the team manager of
Wings, six of the nine members
from last year's SDYC crew are
returning for this year's µpton
Cup with Conner at the helm.
BYC beat out SDYC last year in a
series that came down to the last
race.
Mlbey really do have a rivalry
going,• Kelly said of Ullman and
Conner. •They sailed against
each other in the Etchells class,
they're both former Olympians
and each of them bas been a
major force in Southern Calif or-
nia saillng as long as I've been
involved.
•Dave Ullman is obviously a
past master in this (Shock 35)
class, he makes the best sails and
he's a major presence in the class,
so it should be interesting to see if
relative newcomer, like Conner,
who hasn't sailed in the Lipton
Cup in 20 years, can catch up to
Dave's big lead in the class. I
know Dennis is taking it serious-
ly, and he respects Dave as a com-
petitor.
•But there will be some other
teams that will be pretty good. It's
not just San Diego versus Balboa,
and everybody stand back and
watch them slug it out. California
Yacht Oub has some good sailors,
and Del Rey .Yacht Club is always
well-respected. Newport Harbor
Yacht Cub will be well-repre-
sented. When I first sailed the
Lipton Cup, Newport Harbor won
it, and they've won it a number of
times throughout the years."
Local clubs BahiA Corinthian
YC and Udo Isle YC will also
compete.
Ullman's aew includes Cazier,
Cbuclt Simmons, Clarence
Yosbikane, Greg Trudeau,
Michele Maeder, Alan Andrews,
Jack Franco and Tom Wtlson.
"It should be a special week-
end,• Ullman said. "We've pretty
much had the same group for four
years (in the Lipton Cup victo-
ries), and we've done a ton of sail-
ing together in other events. But
this Lipton Cup is going to have a
little extra (with Conner). He bas
purchased our sails and we think
that's what he's going to use. At
this point, it sounds like it is."
Ullman, who owns 16 sail-
making facilities around lbe
globe, including one in Newport
Beach, agrees that the SDYC des-
perately wants its trophy back.
MThat's why they got (Conner)
and prepared very thoroughly,•
Ullman said. "That's fine. Any
time you're racing against Den-
nis, you've got to have your best
effort. lf you don't, you get beat.
That's the way it should be.•
According to Wathen, Ullman
"figures he can beat (Conner)."
"In the last year, Dave Ullman
has been about as hot as you can
get," Wathen added. "There have
been clubs that have won the l.Jp-
ton Cup five or six times in a row,
but never in this era (of the Shock
35s). Everybody is quite con-
vinced that no single skipper bas
won it five times in a row. Dave
had thought about somebody else
(repr~enting BYC), but that
changed when the word started
to trickle down that Conner
would represent San Diego. We
knew be could do well against
Conner, and he has an excellent
chance of beating his boat, but
he's concerned."
For locals, considering there's
no America's Cup this year, the
Lipton Cup represents perhaps
the most competitive one-design
sailboat race on the West Coast.
There will be six to eight spec-
tator boats going out each day.
For more information, call the
BYC at 673-3515.
ROWING
Learn all about rowing
NEWPORT BEACH -New-
port Junior Crew Coach nm
McAteer will be running a
summer camp for boys and
girls ages 14 -17 who don't
have any experience, but are
interesting in rowing.
The camp will center on
teclmique, using video tnstruc·
tlon, land work and coune
rowing.
Rowing ll a non-impact
~ that workl all the major
mialde groupe and ii an ucel·
lmt way to ltey lD IMpe.
Tbe camp wU1 run from
Monday-Friday, July 8·26,
between 1-3 p .m. at the New
port Aquatic Center.
The NAC Junior Crew com-
petes ln several rowing events
over the year. They'll be tak·
ing several boats to Nationals
in SyraCUH, N .Y., August 1...C.
Some of the competitors
headed to Nattona.11 include
Califomla State Rowing cham-
pions Brlca Swe11on, GU
ReeM, Rao Herrick and Cyrus
MondanlOu ol Corona cllil Mat
Higb and Jemmah Mum,
Gr.v Parker, and Mkbelle
Jacklon ol Newpol1 Harboi'.
GObF
CONTINUED FROM 81
winners were Deemer and Lee
Davis; second, Mike McOwen
and Bob RaWff; third, Frank
Merhar and Jim Whitaker;
fourth, Ed Rieu and Dave Coffer;
and fifth, Ken Jacobsen and Pete
Stulik.
Flight A low net winners were
Tom Wells and Larry Wardrup;
second, Stan Brekbus and John
Martin; third, Dan Coyne and
D.C. Graham; fourtll, Bruce
Olson and Bob Minder; and fifth,
Loren Brink and Mike Roy.
Flight B low gross winners
were Bev Wells and Margaret
Darnell; second, Russ Frank and
Doug MacLennan; third, Chuck
Crookall and Bill Piercey; fourth,
Jeff Prettyman and Bob Adams;
and fifth, Fred Sparks and Bob
ht B low net winners were
a and 01ck Sheron; second,
Riqard Berg and George
H~; third, Barry Jaynes and
Opszell King; fourth, Lee Gale
an Joe Ciraulo; and fifth, Joe
Gto and Ed Meserve.
.adies' teams low gross
Wiilers were Sandi Coffer and
~anne Towersey; Janice
S.ter and Nancy Curci won the
!Jies' low net. Joe Stafford and
P«l Higgins won the couples'
la gross, while Francesca and
Sn Rehnborg won low net.
Q
Speaking of the Toshiba
Soior Classic, Don Andersen,
fcmer tournament director, was
s>tted last week during an
lelevant Week rally.
Andersen recently completed
aleal to run the LPGA Los
Ageles Women's Championship
net Feb. 10-16 at Oakmont
()unt:ry Club in Glendale, a
$650,000 event. AG Sports, Inc.,
a Japanese marketing company,
is under contract for three years
to underwnte the event.
Andersen, the event's
producer and towuament
director, said Sweden's Annika
Sorensto.m is expected to play.
Sorenstam became the LPGA's
best in only her second year. She
was No. 1 on both the LPGA and
European Orders of Merit last
year.
0
Costa Mesa's James
Knickerbocker shot a 71 and
finished second earlier th.is week
in the 97th Southern California
Golf Association Amateur
Championship Local Qualifying
at Brookside Golf Club in
Pasadena.
There were 94 golfers vying
for only 15 spots. The SCGA
Amateur Championship is July
19-21 at Santa Maria Country
Oub.
sea kings spring football J.
THURSDAY, JUNE '3, 1996
Cathenne Martin and
Mel<~ Glasgow of Corona del
Mar High played in the girls
CIF/SCGA Individual
Championshlps last week at the
Members Club in Rancho
California. Glasgow shot an 87,
Martin an 89. Both are juniors.
"They didn't play that well,•
CdM girls goU coach Dick Monis
said. "They were disappointed,
but they played their best. It was
a pretty hard course. They
played much better in the
qualifying tournament than this
one.·
Glasgow, whose older sister,
Jenny, won the CIF title last year,
shot an 82 m the qualifying
round at Mission Lakes Country
Club in Palm Desert. Martin shot ..
an 8.4 .
• RICHARD DUNN'S club golf
column appears every Thursday.
Sea Kingswill be looking for answers
• Mike McClellan will be
doing his best to step in as
Corona del Mar's starting
quarterback this season.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -Will
Josh Walz be missed? Most cer-
tainly. That's like ·asking if the
Bulls missed Michael Jordan, if
the Lone Ranger missed Tonto.
Among other things, Walz
played defense -broke up pass-
es, intercepted passes, generally
caused havoc for opposing quar-
terbacks.
Quarterback is also where
Walz played, finishing 1995
among the best in CIF Southern
Section Division V circles, leading
Corona del Mar High last autumn
to the semifinals, in which it lost
to Servite after a valiant come-
back effort fell short, 21-16.
Walz, the CIF Division V Co-
Player of the Year, was a double
threat, passing (1,452 yards) and
rushing (797) for a single-season
school record in total offense
(2,249).
Most of the time, Mike McClel-
lan watched. While Walz was
guiding Corona del Mar to its
third-greatest victory total (9-4) in
34 varsity seasons of football,
McClellan paid attention. Close
attention.
Sometimes, he even played -
early in games, in fact. Not just for
mop-up duty.
Against Garden Grove, for
example, McClellan came off the
bench in the second quarter of a
pre-league game and directed the
Sea Kings to a touchdown and a
34-0 halftime lead.
In the fourth quarter, he threw
bis second of two JO-yard scoring
tosses. completing 4 of 4 passes
for 82 yards in the game. Darren
MacDonald {second quarter) and
Tyler Stonebreaker (fourth)
caught McClellan touchdown
passes, as CdM went on to post its
best season since it won back-to-
back section titles in 1988 and '89.
M After two years of backing up
Josh, McClellan has develo
real well, and he'll do well,• sai
Lyle Lansdell, CdM offensiv
coordinator. "He'll set all th
passing records if be continues t
work hard. lf he doesn't, be won'
play.•
McClellan, considered CdM'
first pure pocket passer sine
southpaw Todd Kebrli (1991)
appears ready to step in and
Walz's massive shoes.
"He threw about 20 varsi
balls last year, but before that, ·
the summer, he and Josh were ·
,---------
l the passing leagues -they
dit time," Lansdell said.
McOellan, 6-foot, 170 pounds,
ill certainly nqt· enjoy the com-
rts of an imposing offensive line
tth which to work, as Walz did,
it wide receiver George Sumn-
~ a deep ball threat, and running
tck Tom O'Meara return next
iason on offense to give McClel-
n some experienced targets.
•He has educated himself in
e timing of hitting receivers,"
m sdell said. "Personally, I
!lieve the quarterback position
played intelligently through
part is going to catch up.•
CdM head coach Dick Free-
man, following bis team's spring
practice that concluded on Tues-
day, believes that sophomore-lo-
be Denrus Alshuler will be ·a
dark horse" behind McClellan
M For a couple of years,• Free-
man said, "McClellan took a lot ol
abuse being a JV guy. We would
send 12 or 13 guys to a JV game,
with five total linemen, and
(McClellan) did a good job and
hung m there. So be has paid lus
dues."
While C dM's JV linemen
KATSUYA RAINONE I DAILY PU.OT
Starting quarterback Mike McClellan will be trying to fill the
b lg shoes of Josh Walz for the Sea.Kings this season.
physical ability, and that's what
Josh did real well. He understood
the game and let his physical tal-
ents take over.
•Mike has worked real hard in
letting the intelligent part of the
game come, and now bis physical
-~------, '::II'• ••
IS -Look for
the new
Coupon
Book ...
premiering
Thursday,
June 20
I ----.J
played both ways, the offensive
line would tend to weaken late in
games, thus forcing McClellan to
run for his life. •
"It's gomg to be different for
hun this year," Freeman said. "He
knows. He's been bit. He does a
good JOb of hanging in there."
Alshuler, meanwhile, a 6-foot-
4 starter as a freshman on Coach
Steve Conu's Cd.M boys volley-
ball team, bas been switched from
wide receiver, where he played
on the freshman football team. to.
quarterback.
"He's on a fast pace of progres~
sion." Lansdell said of Alshuler.
"He's got all the tools, and you
don't let a 6-4 guy sit around too
long.•
Freeman. who replaced Mark
Schuster as head coach early in
the season last year, watched as
team records fell week after
week, spearheaded by an offense
piloted by Walz. ·our guys put in a lot of tinie, •
Freeman said. MThey lift weights
four days a week, and some of·
them are here at 7 a.m . (Winning)
doesn't just come; these guys
work really bard for this. That's
what we had last year, a bunch of
guys working hard. If there's one
guy not contributing, be really
sticks out. He could even be a
good athlete, but if he's not doing
it, he's easy to spot.·
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996
night o~t with the Angels
• ANAHEtM -1n an effort to
•'CUt the cost lam.Ill have to
• ~y for tldt ts, the Callf omia . :-Angels have announced a new •program called "Angels Kids.•
Starting June 13, kids 12·
and-under will be able to buy a
Pavilion ticket for $1 with every
full-price ticket.
Ticket.s must be purchased
the day of the game at the Spe·
cial Progr4mS Booth located at
all Angel Stadium gates.
a
Tuesday, June 18, will be
another good night to go to the
ballpuk. The Chicago White
Sox will be in town and resi-
dents from Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach will be able to
buy discount Pavilion seats for
$2 apiece as part of the club's
"Cities of Angels• promotion.
Residents, with valid identi-
fication, can buy up to six tick·
ets at lhe Advanced Ticket
Window at Gate 1.
SENN,
PROVIDl?NCE, R.l. -
seM etid Chris Gentry,
of Costa Mesa, will be c •
pef1n9 tn skateboarding la
this month at the X Gam
Providence.
The X Games, created
organized by ESPN,
expected to attract more
400 athletes competing in
off-beat sportin g eve
TRY TO X GAMES
inc.lud,lng 1kysurting, wake·
boarding, bWlgy jumping
and ln·llne skating.
The week-long event
starts June ~ at the Newport
Yachting Center in Newport,
RI.
. Senn, named the 1995
Skater of the Year by 1brash·
er Magazine, finished fint in
the street competition at last
year's Extreme Games.
SO fv this yeor, Senn ha.~
finished sooond tn street C()m·
petition at the Thmpa SPOT
contest and third in the street
competition at the Vancouver
Slam Qty Jam.
Skating since 1985, Senn
was declared World Champi-
on last year after winning the
street c9mpetition in Ger-
many.
PUILIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTIC!S PUILI NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICl!S PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
e(leral oon<11t1on1 HUNTINGTON BEACH lo-PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTIC S.ach, CA 92Ge1 l•tt•,. •• s:irovid9d in ~ ._., • d-* clellon SIYings Nsoclallon or l1l'ttt lddresS "' OUW common PUBLIC NOTICES gTh• DISTRICT ·,HeN•• cated at 7471 Warner Ave. Thia bu1lnH1 11 con-1tction 9 100 of the dr..n bJ • ..... or....,.. SIWIQs bilk spedlled In sec-dtslQNlllon 15 tlloWn. dllldlofll
the right 10 reJect any°' all County of Orange. Stal• of cne1381287 FloUtlou hllne ducted by: 1n Individual Cefffornl• Probete Code. ad union, ot a dlldl llon 5'102 of tilt ANnclll Code to Ille ~ of IN ~
PUBLIC NOTICE bid• °' to waive 111y If· Calilornla on the 27th day Flolltloue aualnes• .,..,._. l tatem.n Have you 1tal1ed doing The time for filing cll.wn bJ a ..... • ......, llld 1111horllld to do bllslnlss In miy bl obQined by MlllfrlO a
---------• regulatitles ix lnfixmalltles of June t996 at 8:00 am. Nam41 l tat•in.nt The folloWlng person e buslnff1 yal? Y••· 1·96 clalma will not expire ~ and 90lll ~ Ills s~ll In tilt event finder wrillM 19QUeS110 IN~
NOTICE TO In 111y bid• or In the bid-Terma for the 181• are cash TM fotlowtng s-aon. .,1 doing buslnff• 11: ,. Jeannette L Thomaa before four monthe ...,,.. ....-... • 1 .. olher ~ cash Is acceplld, the #llflil 1141ys of .. dlle d lint CONTRACTOR I ding only. Siie aubject to c.n-doing bul!MSI .,. Luctly anga County Financ1 r· This 1tatement wu lli.d t h ... _ ri d ot ~ .... _... ~ 11VStte may Wllhhokl the 1$SU· pub1itabOn a1 • Hob" 5*. CAL.UNO FOR BIDS Ai . required by Section eelfatlon. l.and!Old rfflfVH t..undlf1and, 2180. Ha1bof vices, bl Jerry D. M • with the COYllty Clerlc of rom t • ,..,a ng ate ledlar'l 1112 d h ~ Wll ol lht IJus ... 's died un DMI: .i.e •, 1• EllC1l1'M
School Olllrlct: COAST 1773 of the Callfornla tn. right to buy. Below 11 • Blvd., co11a Meaa, ca. lln Salff COordlnator ) Orange County on 5-21·96 notioed above. dll COde and........., to IUnds btcome l'taable to lhe TIWIT& lllMCll. llC. 15455
COMMUNITY COLLEGE Label Code, the Oltector of Hst of names and unh num-92629 McGlolhlln Agency, 5 t8983884081 YOU MAY EXAM-do..,..,_ In 11111 ...._ payttOfllldorsetaa !"'""of SAN F£fVWIXI YSSION Bl.VO
DtSTAICT tile Dapattment of Indus-berl. Thau T. Dao, 323 N. Moun-Anion Blvd., 1850, Ca Dally P1IOI May 30, June e, INE the fh k ept by the !*f .... ~ ..... ln111 rlahl Said sale VIII be made, bl.I SlJTE •20U ISSKJH HUS CA Bid Oeadllne: July 11, lllal Ralatlon1 of the State Renee M. Ptlnz. A0038 talnvlew SllHt, Santa Ana. Mesa. CA 92626 13, 20, 1998 th382 court. If you ere • _,.r-'Mr con-"\ llut ~ wl'llloul ~t Of WllTllllY 91345 81 .. 311.... RlcK 199e at 2:00 p.m. of Cahfornla has deter· Brian LAS.lie~ ca. 92703 Jerry D. McGlothlin, 2 1 Mn lnter99t9d in the • CIOll•M or ~express or rmpled regarding SHOl<E lRUS1U SALE OfFICE1' n:-: 8~~ ~r;iui:~h~: ~n~1~': grr::::. p~~~ =:·c~·.:;1.,1!: ~~~g ~UC M~~a~1.:h~'1r!.~ ~t. ~'2':'ss Dr .. La PUBLIC NOTICE =~~:.rt ":ro~ ::::. :'a~. ar '"" :-~~= : 1n::te"J czut• &13. &20. &'17, 1188
Ing, Cout Community Col-locallty In which the Work Tim Gabrial. A0785 Santa Anll, ea. 92703 Thia bualnen 11 CHetntlll Requnt for Special cu1aw~ to llllllfY .. ness securld by said d"d ~· Ol1trlc1. Bldg. "O", Is to be perlormed. Coples Naney VrHland-Ballan, Thia bu1lne11 11 con-ducted by: an lndMdu NOTICE Of Notlo• of the flltng of en lridlMadrw aecurad b¥ adVances 111ertundtr, w!lh
1370 Adama Avenue, Costa ol lheH wage rate detennl· AOn7 dueled by: an lndlvldual Have you s1atted PE iOil TO lnwntory end 11PPral1el uld Deed d TNlt. -'" lntlftst • provided llMrtln, llld
Meu, CA 92626 natlon1, enOUed PREVAIL-James Fania, A0792 Registrant has not yet buslnesa yet? yes, 1 111 of a.tate .... i. or of VMCeS ~. ,,,,., ~ Cllt unpaid prindpll bllanct o
Project ldentlllcatlon ING WAGE SC.CU:. are Payton Chacalot, A0855 begun 10 1tan1act buslneaa Jerry D. McGlothlln ~J!IOFI ltft •nv .,.\ltion or account ~ and ._ lht no• secured by said d .. d Name: Golden WHt Col· maintained at the DISTRICT Cindy Halt, 80005 under the fictitious name or This 1tatement was _,.. : .. Ylded In H ction ur1Mlld f1I ._ Noel Wllh lntlfest lhtreon as provided
lege New Parking Lot & R• olflce located at: 1370 800Paclflc Auto Broker, names ll1ted herein. with Iha County Cler f llELVll A. Mf??• u&>'°ot the Caftfomie by uld Deed d In said noll, leas, charges and
pair to fJll1tlng Parking Adams Ave.. Co1ta Masa, 25 Thau T. Dao Orange County on 5-17 CASE fllO A 182925 19rob Cod A R TNlt wlh ......,_ ~ txPtnses of the trus'9e and th
Lota; Bid No. 17f7 CA 92826, Physleal Faclll· Rhonda Curry, 80083 Cue Bach Thi Phan tff83883 To all heir• benefl.. ... s.,.!;e1 N ti• 88 poyldlCI In Uld Noel, 1tusts created by said d9'd o ..flaee Bids. 11e on Illa and tlH PlaMlng, and are avail· t•clfle Auto Brok.er• This 1talamanl was flied Dally Pilot May 30, Ju clerlet, or9dlto;., oon-ro: ,:r available 1ro: peua ,..., ~ ........ Trust. dated. 06/0511996 Fl
available at. Offiee of th• able to any Interested party :?ft8~ 1 S rt C03t wllh the County Clerk of 13 20 1996 l tlngent or9dltore end the rt oferk ~.!!_~ ._....,d 11111,.....111 Trnl o.td lelY· ._,.teal F1elllti11 Coo1dl· upon request. The Con-e ae lewa • 4 Orange County on 5-20-98 ' ' ho ' the oou • lhe tru-... _ .,, Uld lce1 as ui. T..-. A Cll ..
..i_pr, Ardlttl Richey. Co111 tractor 1hall posl a copy of Cynthia Hottman. C0349 19983883955 PUBLIC NOTICE P4!r•onb• WI mav~ .. Ir· A-..Wterfllllll••· Deeddl'nllt. CTC~ 1on1la eo,,.rau.a 24005 COmmunlty College Dis· this document at each job Gary Allen Bleile, C0460 Wiit e nterHt... n ......, L Ullllt ... 9"W:lea Ccarpcnlb .. VenlUra Blvd SUlfl 100 Calaba· ...,...; 1370 Adami Ava .. 1111. The Contrector and Eric Grlmsley, C04n Dally Piiot May 30• June 8• Flctltloua BualnH the will or Htat•. or ........ Ullllta 400 ~ W.W. sas, CA 913fi2 (818} 223·322
Bldg. "O", Costa Men, any subcontractor under It Stephanie Rhines, C0493 13, 20, 1996 th37e Name Statement both. of: MELVIN A. ~ ~ ..._ av.-. Simi ~. ~.BY. Lisi/I Lao.gin Prtsld1nr 'CA; (714) 432·5707 shall pay not Iese lh111 the Jaime Debereaux, C0505 PUBLIC NOTICE The following persona MERMIS 4000 "~,.... ...... 930ll. ~ (1111) 79245 6113, 6J'ZD, 6fl7/96 _NOTICE IS HEREBY specllled prevalllng rates of Raymond Blanco, C053e doing buslnHS as;) A PETITION hff .... 3000 UIMiOO ut. ....... ir..1_.__ ______ _
"'9f'/EN that lhe above wagH to all workere am-M!k• Stapp, N0056 Ftotltloua BualneH Pow et Marketing, ) been flied by JUDY ...__,.....,.CA fonnllian '9'1) "7... PUBLIC NOTICE
nemed School District of ployed In the execution of Mika Stapp, N0058 Na~ ltal•m•nt Homes Hotline, 1oto1 . CA.MIEN In the Superior .,.... By: ~ OoMllla9.1---------
0fange County. California lhe Contract. Westley Schlmpl, N0605 The following s-aon• 1118 wig SI.. Villa Park. Court of California, 08/13, 08/14. 08/20 Tl'ultiMa ..._ Olllew; T.I. Nt. l'tf.21161-C LaM No. Mortuary* Chapel
•Cilng by and through 111 No bidder may wlthd1aw Melissa Santucci, NOe20 doing bualnen as· ~ter 92667 County of Orenge. Dlbct: Oll'tlr'll IONtoOA02 NOT1CE Of TftUS. Cremation
Governing Board. her~lnaf· any bid for a period of 1lxty Robin Mareus, N0634 Rental• 1. 2761 eayshore Valerle Jean Van De Zl THE PETITION r• PUBLIC NOTICE ASAP20711C ll/30, .... Ml TE.Fl UU YOU AN IN Df.
..rafarrad to 11 DIS. (60) days after lh• date set Richard Gallardo Jr., Drive Newport Beach Call· 10101 Ludwig St. que1ta thet JUDY FAULT UNDa A OEfD Of 110 Broadwesaay T", win receive up to. (or the opening of bids. N0672 067 lon\la 92Ge3-5610 ' Park, CA 92667 ' CA.MIEN be appolnt9d NCJTa ~ musTEE'S PUBLIC NOTICE TRUIT MTED ..,H1 IHIWI Costa M not later than lhe A payment bond shaft be John Read, N 4 Emily Eastman 2781 Bay-This business Is a1 peraonaf repr•••nt• IALI T.&. No. • 842 .. UIO
above-1tatad time, aealad requited prior to axaeutlon Wiiey Miller, N0875 I ho re Drive ' Newport ducted by: an lndivldu tive to 9dmlnieter the ••U-=oNV..C Loan No. Loan: 461 YOU TAU ACTIOM 111 PflOTECT ••••••••-bid• for the award of a of the contract and shall be BPu~t-Clahed MN•wrooi't Beach cam<>fn1a 92663-Have you started d est•t• of the dec9dent 1176111 Tllla Order No. 501288241/9502891BDV Other YOUR A"'°"11TYT a .. _ • .,.rr.~Y 11EF eonttact for the project d• In the form aet forth In the eac 01ta esa a ly 5810 ' business yet? ye• THE PETITION ri-OIOt017'7 ll'llJutodnturw 766288·35 flle. 95·11612·C I OLD " r u. ..... ~ ~bed 11: c:on1raet documem1. Piiot June 13, 20, 1996Th3 Rudolph Engler. 22511 Valerie Van De Zl!Yer uesta the dee.dent'• No. 1llOIMl7 N't4 No.: Number 458-663·13 Notice 0 YOU NEID AN fXl'LANATlON Of
Development of ap-Pweuant to Section 22300 97 Bast Place Canyon Lake This statement was ~Ill nd odl 11 If ~YOU liM. .. DE-Trus&M's Sile undar deed o THE NATUAE OfntE PMCEfD.
Oldmately live acr11 par· of the Publlc Contract PUBLIC NOTICE Clllfomla 92587-7824 ' with the County Cler : .3m1:J· t MULT UtCJ1R A DB!D ~ trust You are 111 delaull under IMC AQAINIT YOU, YOU
lmp1oved 11ea Into Coda, the contract wlll con-Thi• buslneu Is eon-Orange County on 4·2 anybat •The W1LL J n.usr, 0.111> Oll't21M. Deed Of Trust. dated July 24 IMOUU> CotlTACT A UWYER.
parking area with taln provisions permitting NOTIC• OF ducted by: a general part· 19983881 pro e.. . a UN..l!SIVOUTN<EACTIOH 1989, unless you lake actlOn ~ A plllllic: audlon Ule to the
iconetfl• curbing, trffs and the suecenful bidder lo PUBLIC SAL• nerahlp • Dail Pilot M 23 eny cochc1la are avail--TO flftOT8CT YOUR MOP-piolec:t your praperty. II may highest bicldtr 1or cull. cashiel's
lrrlgafed plant ateu. fJlist· substitute 11curltles for any The mini storage faclllty Have you ltarted doing Jun: 8 13 1996 ay • able ~or •kx..-nlnabdon.: M~twf K:MA.Y •SOU> AT sold al a public sale. II you nee check dtawn on 1 Stltl or na· ~ parlllng areas require monies withheld by the according to Iha provlllw bullness yel? yH. 3-6-1996 • • the le ept V t A SALL F YOU an explanation of lhe nalUre o llonal bank. dleck drawn by 1 l'tlPalr and patching 01 •x· District to ensure perform· of DMslOn 8 or the Busl· Emily E'astman, General PUBLIC NOTICE court. NEB> AH EXP\.ANATION Of' the proceeding against you. Y stm «federal r.redll untOll, or a
l11ing 11phalt concrete and anca under 1he eonttacl. nus and Prol ualon• Pat1nlr THE PETITION r• ft9 NA'l\N orr THI!"'°' should conlact a lawyer No dl8Ck drawn by a state or ftlleral b111 mater1al1, paint-out ol Each bid submilled In re-Code Chapter 10 Section Thia atatement waa flied Flctllloua Buslne queat• authority to C&!DINQ N»/lm YOU, ls hereby given that first lnde _,Wigs and IOan USOCiaCion 0<
exlttlng p11klng 111111 and sponse to this Notice •hall 21707111 hereby givH NO. with the County Clerk of Name Stal•m•n edmlnlater the H t•t• YOU IHOULD CONTACT A pendent Trust Deed Services. av! USOCillion ,.
06her parking m1rking1. •P· contain, 11 a bid Item, ad· TICE OF 'PUBLIC SA1.E. Orange County on s-17•96 The toUowlng petson under the Independent LAwtl!ll NoClce ts hereby cattromla Corporadon, as Trus ~k°s ihtd in Se~= plication of 11alco11 and equate sheeting, 1horlng, Airport Self-Storage will 19883883849 doing business as: AU Adminlitratlon of Ea-atwrt tlMlt CTC foredolur9 tee. or successor trustee . F'!~lal ,...,. • ......, .......... ~ .. ~ruarklng/restrlplng ol •P· and bracing, or equivalent duct bli ale f Sales & Service 3303 . tates Act CTN• author!· ...._ ~.. .. subsUIUled trustee pursuant I Ille .... nc """"•iv ..,M..,.,,....
· PfOxlmately twenty-five method, lor the prot.ctlon ;~;' conte~t/~1 t~e :10,.:. Dally Piiot May 23, 30, bor Blvd .. H·S, Costa , ty will ell~w the peraon-dA6y lflPOlnlec) w.. SQ• Ille Deed 01 Trust executed to do busl11ess In this.state will be 11!,1•. of Ille and limb In trer:1ehes spaee(s) named below, June 8, 13, 1996 lh372 CA 92626 el repreaentatlve to t ake ...,... to the Deed d TNll Wiiiiam C. Rlllil. as trustee of held by lht dul'tlPPOinted IN~tee ;_~re wlll be a Twenty and open excavation, with the C:Ofllents being PUBLIC NOTICE Andrian• M. Nichols, 2 many aotiona w ithout uecullad by IWnltl'I Wat.-Rlng Family Trust dared Octobe as S!W>wn below, of lit rlght.1itll. ~ -dollar ($25.00) non· which 1hall conlorm to ap· sold 10 the highest bidder, Malaga or .. La Palma, A ob taaning court approv-a. • 11rig1a fnlfl, cS-.t 27. 1983 recorded o and interest COIMyed to and now
;tef\lndable payment re-plleable aafety ordere. lot taWful money or lhe flctltloua BuelneH 90623 el Before t aking certain iiifVM and rlCOrdad 08/0211989 as Instrument No held by lht trusltt in the here1n&f~
®Ired for eaeh HI ol bid Oovemlng Boerd United States of America Name llatem•nt This business Is very Important ectlona Clll2illM. a lnetrurnent No. 89·407951 In book page o ter deacnbed PIOl)er1Y under and
PLOWIH
When Words Are
Not Enough
"SpeciaUzlng In
Sympathy
Fl""'ers "
2983 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa
540-3135 CIC•• dd:umants. Check• should By Wllllam M. Vega, (cash) The lollowlng peraons Ille ducted by: an lndivldu however th• •r•on.i NO:ll7a'I, ., '°'* ~ Page official records In the olfloe o pursuant to a Ottd of fl\ISt ro::~lfyayC~~e~e Co~:~ Ed. D., Chancellor, The iale 11 being held to doing "buslneu 11: a) Have you started repret1ntatlve pwill be ~~~ ~gfyu'(:'X11{~~d~do~~r:ai descnbedbelOw. TheulewlQbel----------~ Cout Comm1.nlty C1>1• ~Usty 1 landlord'• llen and Shade Enterprises, b) business yel? yes, 5-1· required to give notice • =eouncy ltlltia to the · NoOO: oi Default an made, but wllhout CCMNnt Of :~Ids ahall be raceived In leg• Dl1trlct will be held at: 3800 Cam-Oatkllde Productions, 1016 Andrian• Nichols to lntereated pertone d wm· .ii on elecilon lo seU thereunder ,. wanan(y. exprrsud or llllC)lied,
lne place Identified above, Publl1hed Newport pus Drive. Newport Baaeh, Cabr~Park Or., Ste. E, Tris statbment wCls unleaa they h ave Oll'JIWll • :00PM,11 the eorded 12/12/1995 In book rt~ bllt. PQSSUSIOn. or
and those bid• 1hall be Baaeh-Co1ta Mesa Daily CA. 92660 on June 21• Sant ·CA 9270l wth the ounty e waived notice or con-Nol1tl front -*-a. to tt1e page as Instrument No 9 encumbrances, to pay the rt·
Opened and publlely raad Piiot J e 8 13 t996 t996 at 10=~ a.m. Jame Teague, 1018 Ca· Orange County on S. 11nted to the propoaed County Courtttoua, 100 0553922 ol said o11iclal records m.lining ~ sum of Ille aloud at the above-stated un . . .th389 Auetlonffra Name: K.E; brlllo Park Or., Ste. E, 19983885 ection.I The lndepen-CMc C.W Di1¥e w.t, win sen on 7/2'1196 at In Th note(s) secured by the Oet4 OI
time and place. Auction Service, Phone#. Santa Ana. CA 92701 Dally Pilot June 6. 13 . dent admlnietration llntaAN.CA•pulllcauc-Front 01 The Flaapoles Al Trusi. Wl1h inttrest and late
In accordance wl1h rhe PUBLIC NOTICE 909·873-0744, P .0. Box Kavin John Mautino. 2257 27 t996 t ) a thority will be grant9d .._ to lhe '1: bidder M8111 Entry Atea io The Plactn ctwvts thereon. as PIV¥lded in I · f c 1 1 825, Rialto, CA 92377, Cartax Ave.. Long Beaeh, ' u . _., ( ) ~ ........ .... prov •ions o e 1 om11 Bondi: 146637300640. CA 90815 PUBLIC NOTIC unle11 en interested fcf Clllti ot u de-llil Civic Cenier 401 ·411 E the noCI ', ..., ....... s ......... r M ..
Publlc Conlraet C~e See· cna t 3 87070 The public 11 Invited to II· This business Is eon-per1on filH an objection 8Cllled below, pa)llllle In Cll~an Ave PIPnlla. CA a IC1111$ of the Deed of Trull, ~:.:~·1 1~! b?~~~~tpb~ NOTICE TO lend. Terms are cash only. ducted by: a limited pan-Flctltloua Buslne to the petition and Ml II 9ne d ... al ~ ~ h' ~ :1 ~~I~ ~IJon I -:rest tnere~ J:~ ~
1111 the fOllowlng clas· CREDITORS OF Owner reserves the r1ght fo nershlp Name Statemen 1how• good oauae why • Sid __,.. conveyiad 11 ab~ e: 111 tUne 1 sale a upenua ( ~sttt ~ lllk:atlon of contractor's Ii· BULK SALE bid. Have you staned doing The following person e the court ahould not to Sid now heed by• undw 1a':fi a a 0 Ille total amount 11 u~ tNne "' ~ al the time lhll the (SECS. 8104, A general dese1lption ol business yet? no dolfl9. business es: s grant the eu\hority. Uld Deed..!'.~ In~ Sia~!) m~n~hto~lle~nd U1~~r Ille ntial pubjc.itJon ~~~~
contract Is awarded: con-8105 u.c.C.J · lhe proe!r1Y being .•old. James Teague , Ois1nbu1ors. 666 Bake 1. ~HEARING on the ~-In -estcoo' ed!Dandnowhekl olSale)reasonablyhun ....... to tractor: General Building B l!acrow No. 11084-CS along w11h the Identity of r:t'ls statement was filed Sle. 229, Costa Mesa.IA petition will be h eld on and.:;:..-:;! it unde~ld deed ol tr\ISt In be set lotth bt1ow The amount
: PUBLISH: June 6, t996 Notlea Is hereby given to the Occupant rentl~ the with the County Clerk of 92626 July 18 , 1998 et 1 :45 moN property slluated In said coun may bt oruter on the day of
and June 13. 1996 • creditors of the wllhln space are., follows. Orange County on 5-10·96 Kim Allan Vieira, ~4 P.M . in Dept. 703 looat· = The lb..t ':.:and Slate herelnalter dtserl 5*. TRUSTOR. ANTONIO AR·
WALK THROUGH: June named seller that a bulk 1032. Anthony Prov· 19803983107 Vista Laredo, New;t ed at 700 Clvlo Center andodwconwnondetlgna-As more fully desalbed on RIETA B AND OHERVI. K. AR·
17, tll96, al 9:00 a.m .. eel• I• lbOUI to be made of T~~~knoM.;yh~~~~gCon~:~~ Dally Pilot June 6, 13, 20, ~~ch. ~A ?2660 I r· Or. w. Sant• An•. CA tb\, 'any, d the ..... ~ deed ol trust The prope RIETAl1T10uVElyTRApooiolfUmE ldERTVrulCstuEI: GWC M1lntanance & Op· the nuts desctlbed u k • 27 1996 th395 1 ui ness . s 92701·4079.., wty daa1bad above JI addrm and other commo DfC •
eratlon1 Complex located below. n nown. • dueled by: an lndivldua IF YOU OBJECT TO pwpoc1ltd lo be· m St\111-deslgnahon II any of the rea INC. Recorded ~M1 as In·
on McFadden batwHn Th• names and busln11s v~g~~· TMbab~~~n~us~10~~~· PUBLIC NOTICE bHay• you t?starte~ 1 d~ the grentlng of the mar Di1¥e co~· Mesa. CA property d'escrlbed above strument No. 91-31UH in 8ooll
Golden West StrHI and addrass11 of the seller are: Elect. Fan Many 'Bxs. Con'. Fl tltl 8 1 K~s n~s~n yes, • • petition, you ehould t2127. n; Undafslaned purported to be 2821 SetUn • page ol Otticlll Reconls in the Gothard(7t4)895-8t58 CACOS INTERNATIONAL 1 1 u k• c out uenH• m · era appellr at the h earing Ttwtae dtldalml any labl-SunD1lveCoronaOel Mar.C oll1ceollheRecot11erol OfWIGE
BIO DATE: July 11, 1996 INC.. 3 MUSICK. IRVINE, e26:8 n J~~w1vans Mlse Name Statement T1~~s t~tat~en~ w~1' 1 end •tate your objec-lty a any lntotrectnesa d 92625 The underslQoed Trus County, Cahtomla. ~te o1 Salt: at 2:00 p.m. CALIFORNIA 92718 Bxs 'content• U~known' The following p11r1ons are w • un Y er tion• or file written ._..,... actdrusand other disclaims any llabnlly lor an 7MI eU :U AM Place of Silt: BOARD DATE: Jul)' 24, Th• loc:atlon In Calilomla Leaiher Jacket Car Dolly • doing bu1ln111 as: Chap· Orange County on 5-3 objection• with the common~ 1 any Incorrectness ol lhe proper AT TME MAIN (NOtmt) EN·
11196 ol the ehlef executive office 2101 J ·A 0 Id man Four, L.P .. 2&488 Park 199838850 b f h h ahown hlrelri. The ~ address and otner commo TRAHCE TO TME COUNTY
No payment 1hall be ol tht uller ls: 28021 & As'so~~~=• · S~~lvl~ Clrcle, San Juan Caplst· Dally Piiot June 6, 13, , ~ogurt v!~re9ptp:ara~'::; amount f11 lhe urlClllld W. deslQnaUon. 11 any, sho COURTMOUIE lOO CIVIC COi· mad• for work or material Scheffield, Ml11lon Viejo, C M It 0 iii rano, CA 92675 27 1996 th in • ancawlh......,_dier'eottd 11erein The tolal amount or n• DRIVE w'EIT 1 .. n A .... under the contract un1e11 CA 92692 omp. on or, es Chapman Four, LP (CA). ' mey be In per.on or by unpaid balance of the obliQado " · "'"' ......,
•nd untJI the Reglltrar ol A1 Usted by the seller, all fh~r,U ~any Boxt1, Con· Ronald E. LeGrant. General PUBLIC NOTICE your ettorney. :: =: ~ rl!. secured by ltlt property 1o =RNIA ~ of ...,u.~
Contrac:1ore ver1n11 to Iha other bu1lne11 name1 and ens n nown R Partner, 28488 P11k Clrele, IF YOU ARE A 'llbla ..arn.tlld COllb. sold and rmonal>ll estimate ano ' "'-""s.
DISTRICT that the CON· addres111 u1ed by the A~16• T~1i:n'!~~k9$t.,:! San Juan Caplltrano, CA Flctltloua Bu1ln•H CREDITOR or • contln-=.;;Sid ad\llnCaS lit costs. expenses 1nd adVanoes 1 $264,053 31 Strut ~s or
TRACTOR waa properly 11· seller within thtff years be-C ~ G 11 C • S 92675 Name Statement gent credlt6r of the lhe ._ d lhe lnltill ~ ll'le 11me ol 1118 Initial publlcallo othtr common dtslQNlion of eenHd 11 the time the con· fore lhe da .. such 1111 w11 wi~ M ., Base, c::! This buslneu 11 con-The following persons t decHaed1 you muat file Cllllon d.,. Nolc9 ol ..._ ot Ille nob ol Slit Is IH I PfoPtrtt: 121 CORTEZ
trae1 wu awarded. Any 1ent ix delivered to the tentaunicno!:Y xi. duciad by: a llmlted part· doing business as: Cof your cle1m with the lell2'7.-.altapoalble S512.16651 ln1ddldontocash ITMET COITA MESA. CALI·
CONTRACTOR not 10 1r. buyer a.re: none 2279 Chws B Davia nershlp Cusfom Wood Oealq oourt and mail a copy to tlMlt I& lhe ._ d .. lhe the truslM wt• aooepta cashier FOIUllA 12121-5122 APN #'.
A
GOOD
ADI
Call
642-5678
cenaed Is 1Ubfect to penal-The names and butlne11 Day Bed Mfny B~• con'. Have you started d 1983.4 Church St .. Cot the pereonal repre1tnt• Ol*""9 bid may be .... check drawn on a Stall 141411-04 The undersigned tin und• the law. II the II· addr11111 ol the buyer are: tents Unk'nown · business yet? No Mesa, CA 92627 tive appoint9d by the tharl ._ .,,... ~ NadOnll bilk. a Chtd( drawn Trustee dtsc:Uims any ~ lor ._ _______ ~
cen1e claullleatlon •peel· CHARITY G.AVAZA 6131 Publlahed Newport Chapman Four, LP, Ro-Alastair Maciver Macke oourt w ithin f ou r dUa. lnad!montocut\the a Stall or Federal Ctedll Un lllY ll'ICOITIClness Of Ille slttet
fled herelnabove Is lhat of WESTVIEW, ORANGE, Beach-Costa Mesa Dally nald E. L.eGrant. General zle. 1963A Church S month• from the d•t• T"'*8 wtl ~ Cllfllafa or~ check drawn by a Siiia lddrtss or Olller common duio-1---------
a "1pec~ c:onllactor" u CALIFORNIA 92607 Pll J 8 13 1...,.., Panner Costa Masa, CA 92627 f fl 1 f ~--._ Federal c..,,;.,,.,s 111d Loan Ass ........ 11 5hoWn aboW If no dtflned In Section 7058 of The u1et1 to be eOld ate ot une · · ....... This 1tatement wu nlad Thi• busln111 11 cq 0 irat Nuence 0 ,....... ,._, on a ..._or '''"'"11 ,......,,, • • ·
the Calll01nla Bullneu and d"ctibad In genera.I as: Th386 with the County Clerk of ducted by: an Individual
Profelllonl CO<M, the •i» furniture, flxtuie1, equip-PUBLIC NOTICE Orange County on 5-21-98 Have you started doll clalty contractor awarded ment, le .. e, tenant Im-19H3H4083 bualneu yet? yes, 5-28-91
the Contrae1 fOI thl1 Work provernent, goodWln. trade Flctllloua 8u1lnet a Da~y Pilot May 30, June 6, Alastalr Mackenzie
•hall hlelf con1truc:t a m.· name, coven11nt not to Name Statement 13 20 1998 lh383 Thi• 1tatamen1 was m•
lor11Y of the Work, In ac-compete and Inventory of The lollowlng persons are ' ' wllh the County Clerk
cordance with the pl'Oll+-•tock on hand and .,. lo-doing buSln•H u : I) Ellls .PUBLIC NOTICI! Orange County on 5-314 1lons of Celifomla Bull-cated at: 3 MUSICK, IR· Really Group, b) Elll1 t9H38850ei
ne11 and Profa11lon1 Coda VINE, CALIFORNIA 92718. Gtoup Real Estate, 23 Cor· Flctlllo11e a11etMH Dally Piiot June 8 13 ~
Section 7.059. The buslneSI name wed porate Plaza Sulla 240 Neme lt•t•ment • '
All Work mu1t be eom· by lhe Hiler at that loea· Newport S.ach, CA 92660' The lollowlng persons ate 27• 1996 lh3
plated within elghty .. lght Uon 11: "CACOS INTERNA· Newco Realty Corp., (CA). doing bullne11 u: Ut>erty PUBLIC NOTICE
188) con11cullve day1. TIONAL" cautornla Financial Planning, 31726 --------•I
Phased WOfk 11 required In The antlclp1tecl date of Thia bu1lne11 11 con· Rancho Viejo, •fOO. San Flctltloua 811eln•H
acc.ordanc• with Iha eon· lhe bulk aal• i. July 1, ducted by: a corporallon Juan Capl1tt1no, CA 92875 Name Statem.nl
• lract documant1. Time 11 of 1996 at the office ol OP· Have you started doing Richard Gaylord Wagner, The followlng pet1ons II the Htence. Fallure to POATUNITY !SOROW, buslne11 yet? No 4 Phaedra, Laguna Niguel, doing buslneH 11: ci
complete the Wortc within 1205 I!. CheprMn Ave., Or· Neweo Realty Corp .. Calif. 926n rango Consulting, 'Y4
the time NI torth herein ange, CA 928". Charle• Neubauer Exec:u-Pamela Wagner, 4 Ph•· Pompano Lrt #f01 H win rHult In the lmpolltlOn Thia blMt Nie 111 subject uve Vlce-PrHldent' edra, Laguna Niguel. CaJll. ungton Beaeh' CA 929.48
Of Nquldaled damagH lor to Clllfornla '-""10fm Com-Thi• ltatement w11 filed 112977 Marllyn Mo;elra 194
tach d~ or cM!ay, In the marolal Code Section With Iha County Clark ol Thi• bualne11 11 con-Pompano 1.n 1101 H
amount HI forth lri I.he "In-110l.2 Orange County on 5-2HHI ducted by: husband and tlnQton Beacti' CA 928.48
rormatlon 1or Blddera." If eo eut>tect th• name 19983884019 ~I• Th'la bu1ineu 11 c heh bid mutt eonlorm and lddf•N GI the pereon Law OlncH of Keller. Have you tlartad doing ducted by: 1n lncfMdUll and be ~ to the with whom dalme may be W•ber & Dobton 19900 butlne11 yet? Y"· 4-16-91 Have you atat1ed doll conttect doeumenta. Each fllad la OPPORTUNITY ES-• Rlchetd 0 . WIQnef tMlneu ye(1 no -~1
blddef ahell tubmlt. on the CAOW, 12oe !. a,.pman MaoAfthur Boulevud, Thia s .. lemem waa flied Marilyn Moreira
fOfm tumltMd whh the AV9., Oranoe. CA 928" Elghth Floor, trvtne. Callfor· with en. County Cllfk of Thia ttatement was fll
contract documentl, ..... 11\d 1"9 lall( del• for llllng nil 92715-2445 Orange County on •22•941 Wllh Iha County Clafk t
of the Pf'OPOMd IUbcoft. cWnta lhal be .11.wle 2e. Deify Piiot May 30, June e. t9"3HOlt7 Orange County on w1 ~ °&y ~ ~.~ 1tM = l~tha .::=: 13, 20, 1908 lh381 Dtilly Piiot May 23. 30, 1tM3NIO
and ~bcontt~.l ~ above. PUBUC NOTICE June 1• 13• 1"' th3ee Oaltf Pilot June I. 1s, , Prdcee Act. ~ D•t•dt .lu ne 10, PUii.iC NOTICI 21. 1991 ttt Code 1ect1ot1 4100 et eeq. HM Flolltloua llualneH NOTICI bch llcl INlll be ae> CMARm GAVAZA Neme ltat9f'Mftt l'IOttttew ._...... ,UBUC · ==~ ~:r'1'orfladtfd ,.,bll•h•d Newport d~ 1~1~,.:: n!'~ltetement FloUtloue ..._ ..
bof'Ct In .,, amount not .... l eacfl.co.e. Mete DlllV ~ Menagerntnt. 111 dolfta ~.~N: Na ................ "*' ten per09nl (10.) of Piiot Jljne ,a. 1tH. Ftmlelf A~. Corona Age 'Trencta. b) New Aoe The IOllOWlnO pettona
• the tote!~ pevable Th39e del Mar, Callloml192825 su.,.,..,_.tt, IMOQ Unco1n ==~nu: ~ "'!. ... --::.,~., II PUii.iC NOTICI O.an ~. 518 'tml911I Ave., 14204, Buena Perle, Colta M.M CA t2G2t -.,_ ... , • AV9nUe, COfONt del Mat, CA 90820 ' propoeel Iii eooepted, ahell Cllltornla 92&25 Kot! lnlemetloMI 3::; Judith 0. J\nlell, 14 F ~romptly •••cut• th• lfOnotl OP SAA.• Thll bualna11 Is co,,. tno ~CA) 9400 ' 1~· Laguna NlgUef, -eerneot, turnlah • l&tle. In 80C0fdance with the ducted by• 1n lndMclull A~· ,.;,J • •·-· ,.,.. &V•' factory 'el1hful ,lffOml. cMtlOna of Section 2t 100 The regl.itant c fiA'foltiow.. .....,.,. "' Thia bu~lneta It co
.,. ~ In .,, ernount e:,c:;,. 21111 of the Call-to tranNC1 bu•lr='= Th•• b\ltlnt .. 11 con. =:i by. an .=®11o1
Mt ,... "*' one hUnclr9d torn1e ll.lllnet• and Prof ... the flollllou1 name or duC:ted b'ft a corporMlon bUllM9Y~ d ~1~ ttr ~ ::' ~ :• ,~ na!MI U1ted above on: Heve ~ 11Wd doing .Ndlth ~ • .iur.:1c
mane .,.;., In en .,no:.. -lHST~:rr MUN· ~an 30~ tM,ltlneN p41 No ~ tle1"'*'1 Wll ft "°' ,... than flftY perctnt TIHOTON HACH It .,.. Thlt .....,,._,. wee fllad ::!.' ~~~o:r· ~ -r~ty ~~ <I"~ '°4al bid pttce, titled .. a ._ Plft&*'ll IO wtltt the C;unty Cltftl Of Thlit Malamenl _,. flled v<Mge .__ft, on ..__.
• ... cer1111C .... Mo ..ctton 1110I °'Mid coo. Orange CcMHy Oft l-1Me wtltt .. COunly Qarlc Of , ..... ,., •ts:tMt IM teQlilfed on ttie ~ ...,..,,.,,., , ... JMll41 e>r.,..CouneVen 4-Mel DellV .... May n.. • le In effect In .. denrll>•d .. M llceli-uw Offlc .. Of QooCI HIHlltlU June •• ,,,,_ • -b1tl In .,. """"' .... hold ...,,,. • : • 11 condlllooa. 1n the IOfal, ,......,_,., •• WlldmJn, Hegneu a Dally Not Mli; n, 30, W IOTICI
• i*'9 of fellure to enc. lnlo «•. ~ and ..,__ Weley, 5000 C.,..ue Dr .. June 1, 1J, ,_ Nn ~-ii••••i
• ~,.act Md .. ecw propertf. Due ~= Newport INch.. CA .__, · PIO.HI -.111 I H ~ doeUmente. "" ...... ...... • DelW .... Mer •• .An.. ~With ........... . '*9 ~ Wll b9 ..._ .. .._ M IS. .. 1M N1'1C etuf1? 1"' __... ...,_
•
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?? • • • • • • • • • • • • •
The Ugai Department al tht Dail.y Pilot is plased
to announce a new snvict no11J ttUlJttbk fQ new businesses.
~ wilJ now SE:ARCH the name for you aJ no extm chargr, and save you ~
time aw.I tht trip kJ the Court House in Santa Ana. Then. of COUl'1e, afar the search
is~~ wiJJ fik your fa:titious businl!.SJ Nl1M lt4lnnml U1ith ~County
Clnlt, publish tma a wet1t for four Wttlts as requimi by law anti thm file your proof
ef ~n with the County c:krlt.
PiMse stqp by to file JWT fotitious business Sflllmlmt at tlN Daily Pilot. 330 W.
Bl!] 54 Ont Mt!llL If you cannot stop II, plM# aJJ us at (714) 6424321 anJ wt
Will""*~ for you kJ haN& this pro«Jurt by maiL
If you s1"""'1 haw ll"J farther questU>ns, p~ oJJ us and wt will k mwe ~
""",. aist JOI'-Good IMdt in JOUI' naJJ buanas! D ' ('Pilot '°'""'"" ~~":: :=:i:~-aa,~ =,.., Hide 'N A MI to ~l .. ;;r:;_~~ =.:~m C•ll 1\'e::t:::'l C1e11•1d ~~ '*' M W1 ~ puttllo t.r _IN I ..._,. rn. l!~~~~:_:•:::: .. ~=z~1.,_._ ___ .._ _____ "!'l""'_~-----~5--!o.------------------:_.J ' . i ~ i
GINlllAL
POU CY
- --
aus•&HOURS
Telephone 8am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Rates and deadlines are t
subject to change without , .'t'
, I -
'
nottce. The publisher ·~ reserves the right to censor. _.
reclassify. revise pr reject !_Ill.'
-
-, I ' .._" -
Walk-In 8:00am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
DAILY PILOT
DIADUNll
Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ............ .Mol¥1ay 5:00pm
Wednesday ....... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ........... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ................ Thursday 5:~
BYPllO•
(714) 642-5678
BYMX
(714) 631-6594
(Please include your name and
phone number and we'll call you
back with a price quote.)
BYMA&OR•
PDSON:
330WestBay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92fJ27
Comer of Ncwpcrt Blvd &: Bay St.
any classified •
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report any error that may
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GENERAL 2102 CORONA RENTALS TO BUSINESS PERSONALS 3002 EMPLOYMENT APPLIANCES 6011 JEWELRY, FURS GARAGE SAJ.iS
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DEL MAR 2622 SHARE 2724 OPPORTUNITY 5530 & ART 6025 -----· -GOVERNMENT liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii 2 904 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii K e n m o re R e fr I g · ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ',, ..
-FORECLOSED 408 SEAWARD Room $335 mo. + .---------1cuatomer Service 9 mos old. s4oo. Obo. Scott Kennedv COSTA MESA 61A
tOUM. MOUW HOMES 2Bd 1.5Ba Fplc, lg sec. Non-smk, Costa AMAZINQI 101 Free TALK LIVE Clerk Wholesale 714-721"9656· Serigraph. Artists A
Ol'l'OllTuNin 6°r11Pennies on S1. patio, comm pool. No Mesa. Com). loc. Gov't grants & loans lumber oo. looking for Washer/Drver Gas print. "Hana Dickman Moving exec .d~.
AlllUl.-.Mwfllllntilllllls R:po·~.q ~~~!s. T:C,~; pet. $1050. 832·4618 M/Fem. Dan 842·8695 to finance your small MEET PRIVATELY energetic, well organ-Stove & Frig $145/ea B5oatyard." 45"x 64" hshld, microwave,-~
__,,,.,lasMjtcllla.tkd· area. Toll free 1-800-business. For more Talktosomeoneonthelr lzed person to assist 714-646-5848. 800 497.201g of mtscl Sat'· 'W
lfllfllr ...... Ac1tl1MIH 898-9778 Ext. H-5l39 COSTA MESA 2624 G11n11GES lnfo call916-689·7479 privatehomephone.18+. customers In will call Whlrlpool Washer 21330range.A
f A4'.ft Qne..()n.One · office. Cashier exp heavy duly, xlnl cond. BUILDING .....-w1111ct111111nlllllqal or current listings. FOR RENT 2740 lrvlne baaed Firm needed. Prev cus-White $175 General PARKING LOT
11 ..,...... ''Illy ,,.em11c1. Great advancement 1-809-540-51n tomer service helpful. Elec. Gas Dryer, MATERIALS 6030 Antiques, tum. boo .
ll•l<lH tr .aactl111IH ll011 $300 1st Month potential. For Inter· ChetUne M on·Frl 7am-4pm. s5o, runs well. west-1724 Tustin at 1~ 4 •
..._ • llCI, ~ llJltlon, CORONA Clean, lrg mtn cabin-~ar Oarage view call 266-0678 1-809--474-3172 Call Marta 25g.1100 Ing house Refrlg. All Steel Bulldlngs Fri, Sat 9-5. Sun? .. -~ m.~ lll11llbhUtu11r DEL MAR 2122 style. 1 Br, walk-In ctst. Plus storage shelves. Local Vending Rte-Men's Club Exp'd Horse Rider (used 3 mos.) white Nover put up, with • "
llllilul-'-"",••,.....11 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Nr beach/Triangle Sq. COM location. $450/ Cash Income. Over 1 '"""' .. 7 .. 3173 Ad II t t .... "·10y $275 721 9145 -H-UN--TIN-._G_T_O_N--" .... .:~:i .. _ BunkhouseApta mo. 714-833·2704. 20prlmelocatlons. .....,.....,... u o ea .... ..,.. r -Blueprints. (1) 40x20 =n:1a::: .... 1 ~llllm11ol·1 3~~1 ~~:11:~5~~~~~: Jenniler 842-1401 800.87S.HS83 1~~76 o8aa~m:·t1~2:pr~m~.~17e5h1~~5~3~1:7: FURNITURE 6014 ww1oaarsssiS2645ici'°5.0(,Ww) l,',',4o!s;e;l•I BEACH 6~-M>
............. •• 1-car gar. W/0 hkups. $517 low Income, lurnl••••••••• PEPSI/COKE ROUTE. D--&..1~1~ ........,._..,lftlrtiSe. Agent 640-7000x301 studios. utll Inc. COMMERCIAL 45 local, established ... ,.......... Full-time Personal for $3900 Open ends, Oarage Sal• Fucn-
.... llr Ital"**-"'' 11 la Clean, modern, sec. REAL ESTATE sites. Earn $2,500 1-809--474-317 Asst for prominent CUSTOM: Cherrywood Ca n O e 11 v er . ture, clothing, aprt4-
ftllllll9 11 UlllN. OlrrtlNn 4BD/3BA. 2-car gar prk. pool & spa. weekly as your own AdUlls Only lnt'1t1nlfs IPPIY senior woman. Ideal Bar, Brass rail, lights. 1 ·800·292·0111 puter. Sat. 6,110 ~--· .. '*'llr IMenllt4 11111 111 $2200 mo. to mo. Jackie 642-8226 boss! Top of the line applicant would be liquor storage cabinet, --------3pm. 322 3rd St.~
........ , MftftlMlll la 1111, $1699 3BD/2BA. 2 gar -1-b_d_M_o_b_l_le--h-o_m_•_• machines. 1-800-3 11·~--------1 organized, respon-stainless steel sink. PETS•· (between Olive a#d • 17"11 .. ......._Ill• $500 BO/BA. No Kit. $495 & up quiet BUSINESS OFFICE 7632. slble, flexible & able and also a 2nd liquor llll! Orange) • •: • Don, 434-2737 secure no pets. MEMBERSHIPS to carry out a range ol storage cabinet w/ ANIMALS 6049 _______ ............. . =~'::C,.~=:= 19g1 Newport blvd FOR RENT 2769 3018 tasks In order to run a lights. $2995 854·97l3 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LAGUNA "'/ ....... ., .•. a ... 5111.for COSTA MESA 2124 848-8373 ANNOUNCEMENTS household. Xlnt refer-Furniture ~· Discount Pure bred chocolate e.'.''l(,.
11111 Yftt t I ,,.,,DC .-.1 ,. • .., E'slde trlplx spacious Art Studio Space• encea a must. Lv msg High Quality Wicker & lab, 8 weeks. Family BEACH ,,.'AP c.llHU01U21·3500.. sunny 2BD new paint 2ea. 50011. $220/$240. BALBOA BAV CLUB for Interview 673--0777. Ratten. See us Lesli raised, Finest dogs. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillli
•2 Br, 1 Ba, hs•*· fncd patio lndry/hk up CM area. Avail 7/1. Full Membership $4K General Office For WICKER WORLD 494-0148 835-4242 QIQANTIC CHUI! 1:1
fenced yd, w/d hkup, Quiet! $845. 673-3059 845·5485 LOST & Save SlK 4 9 7 ·5i25 Advertising Co. $8/hr. 1125 Victoria St. RUMMAGES
gar, No Pets 2636 , Phn/compuler skills. Costa Mesa 548-0202 ••••••••• SAT JUNE 15TH ~ ... ~
Santa Ana Ave .. Unil E Sld•·BIO Clean 2bd CANNERY VILLAO& FOUND 29251 .. ••••••• Call Ernie 722·2841 Moving Sale aofa GARAGE SALES 976 S. COAST Hp,., c 5900 645•1020 1ba. Gar. Lndry room. Attractive 311t St. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1• LAGUNA BEACH. • . $775. 120 Albert Pl. oHlces $315 $730 EMPLOYMENT QROWTH opp•yy queen bed, dbl drsr * Iii
Exec townhome 3 Br, 548-1703 or 720-8081 Roy Jackson 673-3733 DOQ FOUND Mon· Newspaper sales/ Iron tbles/chalrs , •••••••-Sat. 0/15 9-4prn. ·:t08 •••••••••I 2•h Ba. avl. now. rovla/19th, CM • small phones/computer barstools, rattan Mertie St., Lag~.
S $1350 •Office •P•c• 11x13 It brn shepherd mtx, · ch airs + +. All Items--------w • I th 1, HOUSES/ orry no pets. NEWPORT 1518 NP blvd, C.M. rope collat. 536-8480 ~::.;;4gomm. Sara like new. 840·8111 BALBOA elry0~,~~~t~r~. :.~'. 1~· mo.+ dep. 642-9304 Great toe & atmosp. PENINSUIA 6107 • CONDOS BEACH 2669 $175/mo. 553.1 115. LOST DOQ Thurs. 6/6. EMPLOYMENT Office Help PT, 2_3 Queen sz bed• $200.
FOR SALE --------Near Cliff & lrvlne. 5530 days per week. Gen Sofas $75-$400. Pin~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil •. , •••••••••I NEWPORT Small Maltese female. comp phones filing Ent ctr. $2200. Prlnlc HUOE Remodel Sale SELL·_ . .,'' BEACH 2l69 •1BR $825• !xecvtfVe 91bs. REWAROI Needs Irvine " 250-8075 $50-150, Dish washer Sal 8·2 Appl, cablnels,
2BR 2BA $725/Up Full Service Suite medication. 631-3358. $40 000/Vr Income S 1 o o 7 6 0-8 1 7 7 doors & w indows. Refrlg & dishwasher t ti I H 0 ft I c • R • p/ +like nu toys, stroller, your used Vehfcle.-0
8 B ltlcl. 60x30 pool. No -Newport Cent-po •n • • ome Customer Service --------• 1 1 & through classified < BALBOA
ISLAND
2 r 2 a condo, 2-car pets. No lees. No ~~ ~~~= Typists/PC users. Toll In COM. No exp. nee. MERCHANDISE ~~~h;:~l~eko(sPenTno~~)! 642-~678 ,•w -
1006 gar, AC, new carpeV lease. 545-4855 PERSONALS Free (1) 800-898·9778 State Farm 723·4000 MISC 6015 iiil -paint. w/d, pool. No1..,...-=-..,-_,......,,,..----PhonetM.il-B .. •Svca ex T·1361 for listings. 20-40 hrs week. • ________ ....._ ______ ......,_
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil pets. $1395 640-1529 2 Bd, 1 ea. 1 car S1SO/per month
Prime Balboa Isle 3br 2ba Bluffs Tnhm. gSarl-1 St$d11,000. Kathy Advertlalng Entry-POSTAL&GOV'TJOBS PLANT SALE Citrus·
So. bayfrn1. 3BD/4BA. exc cond, 2·car gar, b~:c h ~ s:~~: 714-+4M492 _P_E_R_S_0_N_ALS ___ 3_0_0_2 level position In real S21fHOUA +BENEFITS • ~do (fruiting) s10.
Share pler.Ownr,agt, nopet/smk,$1575/mo •75.23• ... At estate advertising. NOEXPWILLTRAIN Qn/Klng palms·lg $10
brkr, co-op. 873·7647. assoc. pool, 720-0307 H.. b .... R, gl t • Great growth poten· Appl+lnfo 714-647-1991 Herbs S1 . cement
a r or •a V C.M IMSttfD M8Mf CQ EROTIC SATISFACTION tlal. Writing, computer PT/FT Cook & Delivery fountains S 110, bird
---------1***BIO CANYON 673·4400 405Flwy/Hort>or81vd. *1•809-404-6462 or real estate expert· person w/car. Exp. bths $20. 909·674·9422 BALBOA Twnhm• 3Bd 2.5Ba Npt Hts Apt 2 Br,• 1 Shore w.{)PA. CfP. ~~~= g:ol:~~re::1c~!'. prel'd.
4
1mmedlatelyl -g-• x_1_2_•_s_T......,.O_R_A_Q.,.......E1
PENINSULA 1007 GP olf11Cours1 e VNtew. Ba, pool, carpi, $795 ATINY, elc. Please fax resume to 6 7 3 -9 4 9 SHED • XLNT CONDI
o o t en n s · ew No pets. 738 Tustin Full Executllle Phone & $200 845 119g paint, carpet & blinds. Ave. 642•7658 Bookl<eeplngSelvlces HOTTEST Kelly Edwards, Sm a 11 w om• n •
$2000/mo. 840·5274 ---------F $•...,.~ 714-720-0373 owned whlesle co. Antique Iron bed Beat Buw High assurn· VIEW VIEW VIEW rom ................. ......,,...,, X * X * X * Computer data entry, misc floral supplies,
able, 1st, flve·plex, •Bluffs 3 Br, 3 Ba, 2Br 2Ba, garage, fplc., John ......... 7l4-754-2480 Cashier/Driver PT. gen ott, well spoken, 11 0 we r c 0 0 1 er .
Balboa Pen, Income highly upgraded. $1350. 1br 1ba garage J .69 UVE Competitive wages/ phone manners, 875·8177
S3,500, Hurry, asking $2,500 mo. avl. 7/20 $825. 1-909·698-3704t----------. ........ 1 oa 1 m eals. Apply at: Iv msg 875·0432 Proform Crosswalk
479,000, principals •2 Br, 2 Ba $1500 900-505-5050 Charo Chicken, C.M. SOCIAL WORKERS Treadmlll Dual mo·
only, BO enterprises Mo. ~lso for sale COMMERCIAL 900-739_4420 722·8400 Jeff/Oreg Hiring 524/Hf Benefits. llon, Incline adjstmt
673·8660 $169k LH ass. loan. LAND 2778 Barbara Sanregret MJSCELIANEOUS 8111-758-9100 CNA'a/Care Qlver On the Job traJnlngApply $280. Sierra doghouse
Realtors 644-0195 RENTALS Ol 1·592-570.950 & Companion• your area 800.339·6150 med. $50. 55gal Hexa·
CEMETERY LOT/ 750sq.ft Forest Ave., Transportlon • Ref's gon salt H20 tank sys-
BLUFFS 4 Br,+ bonus •••••••• Laguna Beach. Not PT·FT 714·752·6608 EMPLOYMENT tem w/custom wood CRYPT 1225 rm, grnblt, cul-de-sac, street front. $l 500/mo. cab. $475. 642-1405
nr tennis club/shop-4g4-1858 ----------------SERVICES 5533 WHEELCHAIR Top of
ping. 1 yr lse s2100 RENTALS TO PERSONALS 3002 PERSONALS 30021"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii the line. x1n1 cond. 4 Cemetery Plots mo. + sec. BROKER 2724
1• s s 95 (together) H arbor 780-3142 SHARE ........ New s5oo ell 1 ·
Lawn. S975 each BUSINESS •· Please be aware that Ca 11 5 4 8 ·8 7 9 5
Cypres section . lmmac Lido lale 3Br B k B h a ••••••••••••••• the listings In this cat-(11 :30am-1:30pm)
(9<>9) 883 205 2V•Ba frplc 2-car gar • 0 • ~ 0 m • • FINANCE egory may require you w o L F F TAN N 1 N o •7 patios: 111 'via Eboll: beautiful area. 2 rms • Your Soulmale • to call a 900 number BEDS. TAN AT HOME.
Paclllc View Mam Pk $2300. 310-2n-1583 :~~ule~i3po~1 P-;::; • Could Be Anywhere • In which there ts a Buy direct and SAVE.
Nwpt Bch plots ABCO Ocean View condo 454-3404 64s.5540 • • charge per minute. Commerclal/Home
Lot 188 ocn vu S1700 Penthse 2 BO 2BA. BUSINESS Can you list all your good CRUISE SHIPS units from $199. Low
Heh. Nearly 1/2 price. P 0 0 I /a Pa /t 8 nn11 CDM $575 per month. • qualities? Write a personal ad • .-.IRING monthly payments.
g1 .... 42-2818 $1875/mo. 646-1728. • Hardwood floors, FP, FOR SALE 2900 • to a nationwide database and • Earn up to $2,000+/ Free color catalog. yard, lndry. Near month working on Call today. 1·80().842-
beach. 675-5217. • Imagine how many people you • cruise ships or land· 1305.
•••••••• ••••••••••---------Poloaon, MT Cafe, CDM share sunny 2 Br, Ice Cream, Gifts. All • COUid meet. Call nowt • lour companies. No --------HOUSES/ APARTMENTS 2 Ba apt. walk to bch, equipped. Consider • t (900) 9006003 ew .. 8 .. 3,. experience necessary. WANTED
CONDOS FOR RENT fem. pref. $530+ uttl. lea1e. 700 ft. Lakelrt. uv-" 01 01 For Information call 1·
6019 avl. 7/1 721--06315 Call 714 64().7210 • $2.99 per min. and 18+ • 206·971 ·3552 Ext. TO BUY fOR RENT rvl C8Sl514• Fee. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiil
1-------·1 Irv. Mstr Ste w/pvt ba. Pool bua. owner • CUstomer Se Ce. • l·l-N,..T,..E,_.R-N""'A""'T'""1o""N,_A.,..L-""'E"'"M~-Look Ing for a --------View Wllllam Mason retiring supply, • Serv U (619) 645 a.\34 •
-
_____ ....... __
1
CORONA Park. BHutlful twn· malnt, retail, routes. • PLOYMENT. Earn to costume, rhinestone, hme W/d e BO Pool ................ $2 ,000-$4 ,000 + 1"choker necklace. GENERAL 2102 DEL MAR 2822 /Ten~ $500/,;,o. · + \It $BOOK/gr-up 20"' last ...,. /month teaching basic Old or now. Largo &
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii utl. 1·909-784--0780 2Y"1 1-80°'288-6623 conversational English s ma I I s t ones . In Japan, Taiwan, or 873·5848
---------------------C COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 South Korea. No Old Coln•. gold, silver COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 OSTA MESA 2624 tHchlng background J•we1ry. Franklin Mint, or Asian language re· Sl•rllng flatware, etc.
QUIET ~ SBllBNE
Palm ~esa Aparbnents .
C-. ..._: 9:00 • -6:00 cM·P.
lilillO:Ol•·4icGOpmz1 • Jiii .... Dr ..... ,,_ H~ CA ......
quired. Call 1·206-971· Steve 642-9448 days r:i ______ - _ - -- -5-, s - s s p a -1 3572 ext. J89515. Fff. Wanted: Quality, uaed,
Coata Mesa's Beet I• .. ••••••• chlldren1 clothes, In 1• good condition Wiii
NEWPORT VILLAGE APARTMENn I MERCHANDISE ~~t:::;a:,1~· .. call
Bring In this coupon
tor f/2 off lit
month's rent. For a
Hmffed time only.
• EXIYO Lorge Jrs • l and 2
bedrooms
JR $600
1 BR $700
2 BR $860
• Sand VOiieybaii
• 2 llati'ed tiannls COUl1s
• Velbl blinds
• celling Fons
• Plosh C(Jrplt • fir.sRoom
11 • Huge tllCltld poo1 cm epa • • Gol 88Qa
I • 00\.4tftO PGfllli'IQ
I • ~ Wlltt billtcwdl
I • Qalld Oommld/
I ~~9:00om -5:Q)pmM-f
I and 10:00 cm .. too pm u 11l11ndl
I ~ Wdec. CGllD Mm. CA o•••..,.
6010 fREE TO YOU6022
Moved need a loVlng ._ _______ ,. home 2·pet ctl4s lyr
Top Doff•r .-.1cu
fir om 1100-1110.
1 pc to •ntlr• "\ate. Paintings, china. o•tw••· tum, etc. 40Yr N8 ~ 113-8223
old. Vwy loveable &
pretty <? 721·1133.
MoW'ln91 Can't K..,.t 1 \It Yffl old f•male
C.I, 2 • 10 Wfft( Old tlhten• (m8'"). aox trained. Pleytul, F•
mal• cat lndOOt/out·
d00t.• Call 045-1011.
JIWILIY,PUU
•Alt IOZ5 ............. .......... ,,.,.,.,
near oolorl•••·
Matqul1, •PINel ltl.000 .,.. .. ,,.
,... ......
•• , •• , ..... 1 • ._,_. a• . .. , ..... ,.... ...
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Plug Into the
Classified section
to find Services
· from electricians
and plumbers to
landscapers
& pointers .
lo
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lliURSDAV. JUNE 13, 1996
~s
i = __ ,....,
FOO!bd• -Campbell ~oelh fl Site of wedding ~ 1~1dirty 11):-rlgld
'9 BtOlhet'• child ~Finey
~Water tanks
2" EaayH-
29 Whfflpart ~ ~rport Info 28 T ennlt-court • dvlder
29 Railroad
terminal
G1 MllciUevous one ~'Place ~here
. colleQlan1 live? 37 Woo<twondng
tool
41 Roman goddess
of love 42 Yoong boy 43 Raise (horses)
44 BIQfool's cousin
415 Clfru1 lru1ts
417 Deer 49 Celebrations
SO Monk's hlle
13 Use a crowbar
55 Accelerate (an
engine)
se Subllde
59 Drew I "'°'*' ot 82 Muslim lemple
&4 Writef Chekhov
85 Comic Johnson 67 Otpoae
68 Contract
69 Dnzzle
70 Eal sparingly
71 C1nc1Mali
baseba• player
72 Vtltsln's negative 73 Church area
DOWN 1 Fable writer
2 New Zealand
native 3 Sea water 4 Earthenware
lar
5 \toucher
6 Long. long -7 Bath powder
8 Acior Albert
9 M1rnature
cllteken
10 ·1 caonot ten-·
11 End of a boat
15 Teen bane 16 Rommnder
21 Low cards
23 CommotlOl'I
26 Cash: slang
29 Celtic priest
30 Nasal tone
32 EINel Tower '46 Hot-plate coll
site '48 Thought 33 Climbing vine SO Young horN
34 Kind ol 51 Old NOrse
neckline 1nscnptlOl'I
35 Toronto's prov 52 Rose oil
36 Author -Allan 5" Wish tor
Poe 56 Supply
38 Lion's home 57 Commuters'
39 Alphabet ender vehicles 40 Sutt1van and 58 Actress Davis Asner 60 Forfeit
43 Cheer at the 61 Sturdy cart Met 63 Fountain dnnlt
'45 Sea bird 66 Dead heat
.,...""l'!!'--P.!!90-..!!--'l1-~r-""~1~,-
Both vulnerable. Sau.th deala.
WEST •J8
<:)Q985 ¢KQJ8
•Q105
NO.Rl'll
•Ai&l <:) 7 8
OA878
•All
EAST
•Q107•U
r;:;l 8~
¢ 1095 2
•J7
80Ul'll
•K8
O AKJ IO<t
O <t
• K 98-''3
The bidding:
SOU'lll WEST
10 p..,
2"' p ... a. P ... •o p..,
NORTH
l•
20
lJNT p ...
Opening lead: King of O
How you play one suit more often
than not depends on the number of
losers you have in othera. Here is
an example first reported by the
late Terence Reese.
South wisely decided that the
hand would play better in a suit
contract than three no trump. Five
clubs is actually the best game eon·
t.ract, but four hearts ia not unrea·
sonabl e if declarer is an accom-
plished technician.
Suppoee that South were to win
AUTOMOBILES
the opening diamond leed in dum·
my and immediately take the bean nn ..... Thai 10Mle, and a diamond
continuation (orce1 declarer down
to the ume trump Jencth u Weet.
Now declarer can't draw all the
trumps or ei.e. when South turren·
dera 1 dub, the defenders can cuh
at leaat two diamood tricks. No
matter what South does, the con·
tract *1JI go down to defeat.
-------------
Correct technique ii ror declarer
tint w teet the crucial side suit to
ftnd out how many tricb muat. be 1 ___ 8_4_2_·9_8_7_a __
loet tben. When both de(enden fol·
low to the ace and king of eluba,
leavina declarer with juat one loser
in that suit, South can afford to con-
cede two trump trick.I. All declarer
bu to do la caah the ace and king or
heart.a and, when both de(ender1
follow, the contract can be claimed.
Declarer abandon• trumps in
(avor of aurrendering a club. The
diamond ret\lrn i1 ruffed and
declarer simply eontinuea leading
clube. The defenders can ruff when·
ever they pleaae, but there ia oo
way they can get more t.han two
hearts and a club.
Learn to be a better bridfe
player! 8ub1cribe now to the
Goren Brtdp Letter by callin1
(800)788-1125 for information. Or
write to Goren Bridie "Letter.
P.O. Box 4410, Chicap, IL 80680-
4410.
9100
Run your ad in
the Newport Beach
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
Independent to
reach over 100 ,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card # or mail it in
with a check today!
Run for a week! If
your car does not
sell we'll run it
Overstocked with dn the move?
atuff?
A call to
Clasalfled
wlll help
842·1178
Sell your extra
household
items
In Classlf!ed
------·-----·---·····-----D YES,SEU MY CAR
City
Zip
Phone
Credit Card D MC DVISA DAM X
• Op--
Moil To: DAILY Pll.OT
330 W. 8ay Slrwt, Cotio M.a, CA 92627
171'16'2·5671OrMX(11"163 l-6.$9'
'""""* "1tty '*' Pl.aw Oted PwfiMnt aa-
IW-Mallt--M«IJ---l'ra -
O 4 C,..., 0 ,,._,ts.a 0 Jo.wl ltt.t o ...., o,._,,..... o r....wa1ou a ..... ._ o ,.._,~ o ~c-. o•..-O "'-~ p ~.,, os..-0~-O W!re_.....,.
0 "" ~ 0 °""" C-.1 0""" _.....,. O...,_ C C-D C-~ o,,,,,.._, o ~w o.,,. ... w .....
• $10 For 4 lines, $1 .00 eocft odtJitionof line
TRANSPORTATION '88 16 •h FT Wahoo
(B. Whaler) 70hp-VRO
Johnson. EZ loader
VHF Finder, etc. tmmac.
TRADE
through classlf fed
842-5878
'80 El Dor•do Blarrltz
350 V-8 Auto A/C, F/P,
Good c:ond S 1700 obo
• 831·7149 * RENT for another week
FREE! All for $1 o• ·-----------·--------------
through classified $5950 875~0901~---------
Buy It. Sell It. Find II.
Cleaalfled.
CONTRACTORS PLOOR INSTALL HOME CAUi LEGAL PAINTING 3858 PERSONAL ROOFING 3910 •sE•R•VI-C•E--• ~~IC
DIRECTORY
CLEANING
3528 SERVICES 3548 GENERAL 3558 REPAIRS 3820 SEIVICES 3760 SERVICES 3812 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil SERVICE 386 7 l~iiiiii!iii!iiiiiijliiii~iii
•W.P. YOUNQQUl8T ULllOA ROOFING CO
ACOUSTIC
CEWNGS
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Cl!RAMIC • MAABLI! Houaeoleaner Ref'1,
tnstall'n • Fabrication Exp'd & depedable.
20Vrs Exp • Llcenaed Apt'a $35. Bl Wkly &
ACM CONITRUCTON *QUALITY WORK• Ca,.<::IQlver F« Elderly. BANKRUPTCIES PalnUng Contractor YOUR P•RSONAL ~~:P~~ J~~.:· t.~i~C:,!
Tennant Improvement HardwdNlnyl/Ceramlc 10Vra Exp. Local Ref1. REASONABLE Oval. painting by prol'I• ASSISTANTS llc'd/lna 93,.5081 Remodel• • Com/Rea Mrble/Carpet Bnd/ln1 CDrhlvlng/SI tlhop/Good Cookl AF ttorn•w·cPrepared Ucl602098. Ina. Personal Girl Frldaya. •••"'LER ROOFING 1-800-34fS.9321 Wkly. Imelda 648-92n L#41570I 549·9770 L708279 722·7332 r • n• 648-3735 rff Phone onaultaUon Frff Ht. 645-3305 Truatworthy & Profes· .....,
3408 NB BUILDING CONT (714) 744-9272 aional. Excellent refer· Ucensed & Insured le~ Showers Aep'd i--------.. 2'Yrs Qu8llty Pelntlnt encH. g57•1705. Free Est. All reroof iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil R utl & 1 11· 47Yr1. DHlgn & Finish 011.rfty ...... " 3710 LANDSCAPE• TOUCHUPS, TOO teed 879 9099 L~~~13':oaann::•Tll~ Laundr, & Dr,clean Can I help you? on.iui m.A4't IAWN raoe 3808 MASSAGB 3830 24 Hra. Richard Sinor guaten • •
AAA ACOUSTIC 873·8065 or 8'48·6526 Pluff & Fold • 70/lb C.l. Kirchner 723·5090 . ~ l=;jjj~iii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii Uc:#280644 845-3209 •THUNDER ROO,.NO• Palnt-applled Remove-Free PN & Delivery 1111 ......,,__,,......,..~-...,,,...,~,,...-1 PIANO • VOCAL For all of your roofing
patch. Texture. lnVext. _N_e_w_p_ort_T_l_le_&_M_ar_b_le 253 E 17th SI Nrwtnchtl l .J. lcott Con1tructlon •Paint/Carpentry• •••lo y._,d Malnt L & a Therapy QUALITY. CAR• LESSONS 3868 n••d•. Reroot/Repalr. 962·589t or 847·8905 * 8 9 o .7 9 5 9 * Cuatom Horne Builder• Drywall and morel La Cl T" & Nutrition Ina/WC summer Speolalal Uc 6381'44 848-4122
Cl!ILINO MASTER ~~neAtf~:~~~a~r~~~: --------Llc#481954. Ref's. Small Joba Oki Tr1:"'spr1nk~p~.t~ RN IL MT s 5 /0 ff 20Yr1 ElCp. Xlnt workm1ntNp. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
-.Ac:ouatlc: Removal• Showers/Coun1er1/Flrs ___,,__ ___ ...,,....,_____ 7 14-975-7789 Gary MS.S277 TNtCn831,....Z2Pg-41M142 massage. 722•9823 Fair I Ron-84ts.2417 PIANO Beg.·Advanced REMODELING
Cuatom TextureePalnt Natural Stone & Marble MAID TO ORDl!R l enil Retlfecl Contl9etor • TREES • All ages-Teacher Cert. Llc'd. Merk 838-7300 Fplc1 L64S488 842·221'4 tna'd. Oecadea 01 Expl Repairs, lmprovementa, MOVING 3834 RAIN•OW Clrcle Malnt. Entertainment Avail. •ADDITIONS 3916 Speclallzln~ NB/COM DRYWALL sm Jobi. Ouaftty/lntegrlty Te""*"-"•· ..._., Painting-Int/Eat Houae/Apt Jennifer 840•8809 liiii!~iijiii!iii~iiiiiiiiii
SS/otfl 19"9788 SERVICE 3584 I care, Ken M2·1770 ·•*•~ 751i'f'78 : ~~::~eJ~be:e~:a;:S Farthl119 Interior•
CARPENTRY 3510 CHILD CARE 3536 WE CL BAN: Onlw RIMODELS carp p1bQ, Lawn ~ervloe. Mow! PUBLIC NOTICE PIASTER Kltch«i. Bath, Remodel•
Vacant Propertl••· 8&.K uo.,989180 paint, elec, Ule, 11~. & edge/1od/1pr1ru11ers/ Th• Calif. Public uun. Carl Manlrt Painting Rm Additions Vlaa/MC
H•nduman/Remodel LICENSED"'D'"YC'" .. E Incl: Carpets/Wlndowa All phaaH. No job too roofing. MORGAN ClrH.lp, Al .... 8718 tlea Comml11lon RE· lnt/E>et•Full Service REPAIR 3880 L415&0875 873--1212 A<ldl k>na, Bath, Kitch v " _. Minor R1:alra & Morel eml. Acoustic r•moval, Uc'd. Pht18S0.3281 Ne meg or call att•r 5 QUIRES that all uaed Oual•Ref1•1°"-Off
Flr• ~r Damage ~:~at~~~~ t 1~~~d * 714-30-2883 * etc. 714-24().1159 Mobile tl403 .. 38• 6:i'g~:ft~QW~~:ab~~ ~~~!~:o~~lnt~ot~:1~ Ll358098 733.9049 PIHter/lt"'oco Patch SPRINJa.ERS 3921
El9c, Plumb, & Paint Meal1/snack1 lncld. Reas Home Rep•lr/R•tnod•t reaaontJibl• ratea. P.U.C. Cal T number; CARUANA PAINTING ·Serving So Ca 25yr•·11i!i~iiiiiiiiiiiii&iiiii
.R•w ort a;;71~me~ r11es FT/PT 904-1740 CONCRETE ar ELECTRICAL 3610 Co1ta Meaa/Newport Ed 8al'ret1J -....3371 llmos and chauffeurs lnt/ElCI. Very low, low Llo#328884 24Hrs SPRINJ<L•R R•PAIR
Pag• 714• • 12 MASONRY 3557 a• v-ra •:z; print their T.C.P. num· prlcet. FrN Eat. Bnd/ln• 7141·994·7831 Valve .. Head .. Tlm•
OR ~Hardware -CL-1:!-11.,-,1-N-G____ amall Jo .. •xPeRT Jim 831·24 Gr,/..-.Maao•noryene./Llndl-'-~pngon ber In all advertlae-l52M84 714-983·2734 clocks. 2ev,. Local Exp . Trlm•C1blnet1•Stucco ~" "" .. ._tlon ments. If you have a J h B e92 2a•1 Duncan mlectrlc: ,/Trimming /Aemoval1 question about the le-CHUNG'8 PAINTING nUMBlNG 3890 ° n urr • • • .Orywtt L.582731 39Yr1 erp SERVICES 3548 8rlc:k, Block, Stone, Tiie L.ocal/Qulc:k Re1ponae BAUUNG 3720 Clean-upa e MllnleNinc:e gallty of a mover, limo 20 Vrs Exp. Gd Prlcel
Jerry 842..0987 Cone, Patio, Driveway L#215870 eae>-7042 L1115990215 89CMS109 or chauffeur, c:all'. Guar work. Fr•• Est. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii WALL
N Fplc, BBOa. Ref. 25 Yr THIE LOCAL p U 11• .A to Z HA DYMAN A TOUCH 01' CLAS8 Exp. Terry SS1'·7894 LI 'd C nt t LandHape .._...llnt . Public: UllllllH Uct11375802 836-11534 L M n cou-aDtNGS 311!'1132 .-rAWREFACE CABINETS Cleaning. Rel/Comm Sm~ll t>-:, ~~r~11t JUNK To Th• DUM, Yetd tune ~.=menace, CommlHIOn IMlliLD PAJNTINO ·a Jame• e. Bangen Co.· y ~ " ·«Mchan1, baths, doors, Uc/Bonded. Free Eat. •C•MaNT WORK• S (714-.... 1 .. a) lllndtcape( deelgn. 714-558-4151 Since UM7 .inc!OWI. oOug 546-7251 TerHa 282·7143 PLAIN/STAMPED Fan a~ ht ee pa Wiii haul what Traah Cotilfae10f#C27..eo400t. Dlbe d ' M vi Int/Ext. Wallpapermle Friendly Servlc .. lnaured TH• 8TillP,.•R
Brlck/Stonemle/Block Oemend 845-3eS8 Man won'tl 808-1882 Pron & ,.....__. 64.._7105' rn•r o • o ng Free •9'/Ref/tOyr1 exp Ul532911 175-9004 s---i.n.i.... In wll"'",... e1fiPINTAY•Wlndow1 OSS "-· ,,. Looal/Ofllce/Storage CompetltlY9 S 71t·20:le ..-..-.. ·'V ,...,....... t>oe>r9 . Wood FencH •• HOUSECLEANING L.541858 821-4a10 TWENTY DOLL.AR PLINT Dtllt Long Diet. Free Eat. Li*i Drain Cleanlnt removal. Uc:lll awa•
·Qote1/0arage Org1nlzer1 Uc:enHd·Bonded 8 PINC!S HAULEA/CLEAN:.UP Speolall1t In exlatlng T#181832 979·3114 &NM& ..... P.alntlnt A Plumbing Repair• * 714-982•903 *
L#2811581 • can Bob ~~~~l:;.J';99 * Ht Prlce/Quellty • D!Cl(S 3815 JOHN e90-1eaa landao•pe/lrrlgauon tpllt aeoe"d Movtnt I~ ~ Pelnt/A~ll 20Y11 np. All work ~ Ferthifte int-.IOra 249-8323 Pg-312-0028 =:,~'1:ir~ upgrac1.,. 790-978• Prof Moveral 24Hr Srv Lio d/ln• d 11nc1 71. ltewe 14M2tl 1,,-11a11at1on, Removal
WINDOW CLllANING I•••······ ihane'• ·6a;a;ftlfli 70ay/Sr Ol1c/Tl171452 M•TMI P;-ee4.:t947 ji..-olM PiuMblna Dlacount WallcoverlN
---------1 •CARPET CLEANING •11XPaRT1 Blk wane, ~= Bl!ALTB, BEAUTY la Lattllu., ..... Lawn 438·9113/P-3418•5850 lk•'• Custom Painting Repairs a Remodels Ll5I0875 •73•1•1
CAJtP!T •SCREEN REPAIR brick, c:onc:rt. etucco a Redwood • L#157eeol • FITlflSS 3740 care l,,....'n/Aemoval ALL::Aiii•iUCAH Prof, Ci.an, Quality ,,.. Eatlmatet We gal1 9hould hang Cl!ANJNG 3515 FREE ESTI 72 .. 7079 1tone. 25Vr Exp. Lowt Jim Whyte 842•7208 Spt1Mler9 M9-U01 MovH·U ... Carefully Work. lnl/EJct A Ooc:ka. LIH7H8 M .. 1090 t099ther. Strip, ln1talf,
..... iiiiiiiiiiiiiii •Bright Haeolnlng Joa• 831·?~ Courteouf!Y I Cheaply L170:M88 •~1-4e10 acMce to the crazy.
''of'I Ctrptl Cl11nlng European Prot'I. BHt FBNCii, Brlc:k, Btock, •WeoCI Peno"* •K:~·~~=· L!GAL 8 4 9-02.!13 T141227 PAINTING 28 ... 190 •31•2111 anytlm•
a Rm•. Hall $991 In townl Rel• 6Yra Ex~. Tiie. Plaater • 880.. ==-~ MHMQff. :::z SllVICIS 3812 Contcltntlout Cttfttm•n POOL Ovtratocked Wfth
.o.c. STEAMWAY· Orae• ••1·9498 Oual./Ouatent'd, WOfk ~Conatr.t14-530t tall ledly •• ·~~~=~=,.,.flP•AI·m··"·G--3·8·5·8 -.... Old_..f_NhloMd ......... .._,.._P_ride __ 1~n1 S!JtVICB 3894 atufl? 1·800·38S.a729 ~--...,,,...---~-"* I Blll·M•·T .. ., Wodementhlp. ~INllO llliiil _____ _ 9'!1~~:':"!'===-=---I HonHt•ftell•ble•Hard
Working ltl.lh Ladi.e. P•tt~ Cow••• PtOOl INST'BYY BOMI r•••I The rnoet oomptehen-::.t play Hide 'N nar COAST PAINTING Avau to ci..n your Drlvewaye, patio•. aw. _.._, 9've end ourrent tllt9C> with c:hlldc:ete? 'r" E1u10 vre Exp
hom•. ~~':f-wk decka.Repelr/remova!UPAllS Jl20SllVJCU ·toryOlgoodaandMt-Call Claealfled UnbHta~I• AatHI
Pie ... cell 148 Ucl'ree ett ........ Im••••••• ••ll!l••••~.1~"~1oee~~·~ound~~t -----todayf 842·M79. Ref'•· Joe eeo.M33 ........................ ...._ ___ _