HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-07-11 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS
Corona del Mar cyclist
geared up for Games
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
MOVE
City officials see new
law school as asset
Home-sale. surge~
Back Bay· development ·
Farmer's market
coming to Pier area
• Irvine Co. 1 By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
officials 1
b = NEWPORT BEACH -Over the din ol her sons credit ro :ust i playing in the back of her Suburban, the young
economy for 1 Newport Beach mother clicked off two reasons
i why she wanted to move from her older Corona --'----'21"°"'"&J...L~ t-de · ne one m ar :
sales at l location and price.
Newporter i And there are plenty of l~ prospective i home buyers who share her sentiments. North site. l Buyers clamored last month to the new l "Promenade" development, on Jamboree Road i overlooking the Newport Back Bay, before the
l model homes were even completed. In the first l weekend the 23 single family homes were ! released, they sold out, according to officials from
Gamblers'·
rehab home
comes to
Eastbluff
• Residents say they have
been in the dark about
what their neighbor was
organizing at the home
on Vista Entrada.
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
EASTBLUFF -After rumors
rumbled and questions brewed for
weeks, residents finally learned
thJ.s week that a group care home
for compulsive gamblers has
moved into the neighborhood.
"As long as they are not going
to set up any Las Vegas opera-
bon, it's not something that is
troublesome to me," said
Sherylen Voll<, who lives on the
same street as the group home. "I
could be in a residential area."
Called the Heartskober Manor,
the home will house a maximum
of six clients who must pay
$10,000 each for a 28-day pro-
gram that will include the Gam-
blers Anonymous 12-step pro-
gram and confidential treatment
t.bat addresses the psychological,
etuotional and physical aspects of
the disease, officials said.
However, no clients have
enrolled m the program yet, they
added.
•SEE NEW HOMES PAGE A14
MARC MARTIN I OAJLY PILOT
Construction worker Anthony Mejia sorts through cedar
limestones at one of the model homes in Harbor Cove.
I '• IJ I\ \'\..(,I ( ()I '\.. I ) I \I H
• McFadden Square mer-
chants in Newport Beach
hope fresh-produce mar-
ket will bring in customers.
By Carolyn Miller , Daily Pilot
NEWPORT PIER -A flock of
farmers will be displaying their
fresh produce and flowers in a
new market to open soon in
McFadden Square.
The City Council approved an
agreement Monday to allow a
weekly certified farmer's market
in the parking lot at McFadden
Place and West Balboa Boulevard
each Tuesday morning from 8
Yolk is among several residents
whose uncertainty has fermented
because The Bluffs are attached
townhomes which offer commu-
nal living. And until recently, the
home has been •shrouded in
secrecy," residents said.
MARC MARTIN I DAll.Y PILOT
Biologist Bryan Carey lets Millie the m.llllpede take a walk over his band outside the Bug Barn at the Orange County Fair.
What began as a neighbor's
friendly greeting to the newcom-
er on the block tu.med into a tor-
rent of questions over what
would occur behind the
strange r's closed doors.
"It was like, 'Hi, I'm the new
neighbor and who are you?' and
she couldn't disclose who she
was,• said Doug Sulley, a resi-
dent in the Bluffs for 24 years.
Sulley, a board member of the
Bluffs Homeowner's Association
which represents more than 600
resjdences, was describing what
happened in early June when a
resident went to welcome Susan
Marchese, who is renting the
• SEE REHAB PAGE A 14
Bloomingdale's expands plans
for Newport Center departments
• Upscale department store's
home furnishing department will
set up shop in Atrium Court.
DotiT LET 'EM BUG You
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Don't
feed millipedes crickets.
Don't put a fake rock in a
centipede's aquarium without
a lid on top.
And most of all, don't wait
to destroy a black widow's egg
sack.
These important entomolo-
gy advisories are brought to
you by the employees at the
Orange County Fair's newly
! Leave the spray I
I athome-the J
I i I creepy, crawly !
. insects at the I I Orange Q>unty I
l • i Fair are there I
1 ror eduaUim and I
I entertainment I
establiShed Bug Barn, who
learned some of these lessons
the bard way.
The Bug Barn, born out of
the 1996 fair's salute to bugs, is
slated to be one of the main
educational components of this
year's fair, which opens Friday.
The barn will feature several
hundred bugs -everything
from butterflies and ants to
scorpions and tarantulas.
Biologist Bryan Carey has
• SEE BUGS PAGE A 13
a.m. until noon dunng the sum-
mer, and 8 a .m. until 1 p.m dur-
ing the remainder of the year.
The Newport Pier Association
requested the farmer's market -
which will be next to the Dory-' . .
year to increase business activity
in the area that is all but dormant
once the tourist season has passed
Although no sales tax will be col-
lected directly from the farmer's mar-
ket sales, the hope is that it will pro-
mote community spirit and encour-
age consumers to shop in the area.
The Corona del Mar Farmer's
Market h&s been open for six
weeks, on Saturdays from 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m., and is running smooth·
ly, according to a city report.
Oregon
woman
to lead
atOCC
• Margaret Anne Gratton·
will fill presidency vacat-
ed by David Grant, who
retired last year.
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA-District trustees
on Wednesday settled on Margaret
Anne Gratton as the replacement
for retiring Orange Coast College
president David Grant
·we are delighted with the
selection of Ms. Gratton," Nancy
board, stated in a prepared state·
ment. "Her experience and
background will provide her
Wlth the tools necessary to lead
Orange Coast College into . the
next century."
School officials originally had
hoped to have a new president
named for the 24,000-student col-
lege last March after narrowmg
its list of 16 prospective presi-
dents to five.
But unhappy with their final
thr~ choices to replace the pop-
ular Grant, the trustees scuttled
the first crew and reopened the
search in February.
That search led the board to
Gratton, dean of instruct:lon at
Mt. Hood Community College m
Gresham, Ore, and the sixth
president in Orange Coast Col-
lege's 49-year history
Gratton was chosen over
Christopher O'Heam, Orange
Coast College's vice president of
instruction, who was the other
finalist to succeed Grant.
Since 1968, Gratton has held
several positions at Mt. Hood
Community College including:
dean of humanities, director of
community education and assis-
tant to the president. She also
taught composition and literature
at the ·community college and
orgaruzational systems at Port-
land State University.
She has bacbelots and master
•SEE OCC PAGE A1J
~2 • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996
.·
'.
greer
wylder
Good deals on
gear for guys
summer sale over the next
few weeks.
· .. There are great bargains at
POSH, including $85 ties marked
down to $9.99, shorts for $10, and
sports coats for as low as $89.90.
Merchandise is marked down
from 20% to 60% off. POSH is
.....located at Fashion Island in New-
-port Beach. . -.
At-Ease is also having its
I annual sununer sale with men's
l clothing marked down to 70%
off. c; Name brands on sale include
~lo, Cutter & Buck, Reyn Spoon-
. Bany Bricken, Mondo, Ken-
• th Gordon and Ike Behar. At-
Ease (759-7979) is located at ~Fashion Island in Newport Beach.
~== ~ : Newport Children's Bootery
•{o-44-2464) is having its biggest
• shoe sale of the year. Selected
... au.Idren 's shoes are marked
"'-~wn to 70% off. Newport Chil-
~~n's Bootery carries shoes in ~ for infants to boy's size six, ... .. "'iOld women's size eight. In busi-
~s for the last 27 years, it's
~~ated at Fashion Island in New-
~ Beach.
----... TSE -best known for its cash-
mere clothing -is having a 50%
off sale on its spring collections
. ..for men, women and children.
;i·TSE also carries clothing in 100%
~ cotton, cotton and cashmere, and
~ silk and cashmere blends. Tue
• South Coast Plaza store does not ~ ~ nightgowns, pajamas, and
blankets from its home collection
!~t they can be ordered.
: ~ The store is located on the
• ·lower level between Macy's and i ;Nordstrom. The sale ends July
: ~l. Its phone number is (800)
: :801-8873.
j ~ , .
: ;is looking for a good window f :cleaning service. Cal's Window
1
1 :Cleaning (722-7167) located in
•Newport Beach does great work I ~and is very reasonably priced.
: ~-Owner Linton Weiss has been in
: ~usiness for the last 16 years and
• '-Can give estimates over the
j ~hone.
I~ ... : 7 Britt of Brttt Ltd. (675-2174)
1 ,.located in Newport Beach -the
: ~ventor designer of the Scarf
: P"Vand and Wud-U-Wanna -has
: =:recently picked up an exclusive
'~e of jewelry called "Catnip" ~ \oWhich features one-of-a-kind I 11.· ._band-made Y necklaces and ear-._ .. \.nngs.
~ Jewelry designer Shannon
'Shea says, "Our biggest draw is
, t that we specialize in 'themes' and
' :--CUStom orders." ! t The prices are moderate, rang·
• ~g from $10 to $40. Britt Ltd. is j 2""ocated at Lido Marina Village at
, ' 24 Via Oporto No. 102 in New-
rt Beach.
• BEST BUYS appears Thu~ays and
aturdays. If you know of a good buy
II me at 540-1224, fax me at 646-4170
or write to me: Best Buys Dally Pilot. 330
. Bay St. Costa Mesa, 92627.
CASEY LUKSCH I OAllY Pl.OT
Barbara Van Holt taught theater to students at Estancia High School for several years. Now tn her retirement, the school's
theater wlll be named after her .
HER NAME -IN LIGHTS
School board
renames
Estancia High
theater after
popular dra -
ma teacher
Barbara
Van Holt
OCC student wins top
machining award
By Julie Ross Cannon, Daily Pilot
M ention the word "drama"
at Estancia High School
and the name "Barbara
Van Holt" is sure to follow.
The English and drama teacher
has become an acting icon and role
model al the school since she wel-
comed her first class 29 years ago.
And though Van Holt said
goodbye to her classroom last
month, her devoted students have
fought to have her honored in a
way no one can ignore -by nam·
ing a theater after her.
"Within the walls oi Room 405
and the Estancia Forum, Ms. Van
Holt has educated the future's
leaders and touched the lives of
many, many teenagers," student
Keith Anthony wrote in a May let-
ter to school board members.
·As this will be Ms. Van Holt's
l~ year teachffig at Estancia, 1 can
fully well-deserved than naming
our forum after the greatest direc-
tor to ever shape the plays within."
School board members con-
curred and unanimously agreed
Tuesday to rename the Estancia
High School Forum, where the
school's drama productions
appear, the Barbara Van Holt The-
ater.
Van Holt, who retired but will
return part-time to the school next
fall, said she was surpriSed by the
unusual salute.
"I am so honored,• she said.
"How do you say thank you for
something that means so much
that you do with all your heart?"
Van Holt said she was tluilled
that her honor included the room
where she spent so much time
helping her students grow.
"It means a great deal .to me
because it's such a magical place,"
she said. "My students walk in as
children and walk out as adults.•
A former actress and voice-over
artist, Van Holt said she always
e ntered graduate school and
learned her true calling -teaching.
briefly in the news
#I just fell in love with high
school kids," she said. "I left once
in 1977 to be an actress, but it was-
n't as fulfilling as teac.bing."
She returned to Estancia to
teach advanced placement Eng-
lish and to direct her budding per-
formers in everything from William
Shakespeare's "Macbeth• to Ten-
nessee Williams' "Rose Tattoo.•
1hlstee Ed Decker, whose four
children went through Van Holt's
drama program, said the respected
teacher deseives a momentous
honor.
"What impresses me about her
is when I think of the qualities of a
good teacher, first you want some-
one who is intimately knowledge-
able about their subject matter.
She is that," he said. •Second, you
look for the ability to communicate
all that inf onnation to their stu·
dents. She does that.
··And what you hope to get is a
person who cares for bis or her stu-
lives," he said. "Barbara has all of
those qualities and more."
title in the ptecision machining
competition.
money two years ago for the pro-
ject and has accumulated $2.6
million to date.
and Mazda Motor of America
($20,000).
Oraflge Coast College
Larwin represented the state of
Callf omia at the national compe-
tition. A mold maker apprentice
for AMA Plastics in Corona, Lar-
win will earn his tooling certifi-
cate .of achievement at OCC this
fall.
Construction on the center, to
be named after Harry and Grace
Steele, began in March 1996,
and the center is expected to be
ready for occupation next spring.
Get your strokes in
during two-mile swim machine technology student
Garth Larwin scored top honors
last month in a ·
national preci·
sion machining
competition.
Larwin, 27,
brought home
the national
gold medal at
the 1996
National Lead-
ership Confer-
ence and Skills Garth La.rw1n
USA Champi-
onships in Kansas City, Mo. He
captured the gold medal in the
statewide competition earlier this
year, giving OCC its fifth straight
Child care center gets
$250,000 grant
Orange Coast College's Chil-
dren's Center is rapidly
approaching its goal of $2.82 mil·
lion to construct its new building
on campus.
The W.M. Keck Foundation of
Los Angeles recently awarded
the college's foundation a
$250,000 grant to support the
children's center's construction.
The foundation began raising
Established in 1969, OCC's
Children's Center provides com-
prehensive child development
services for children of OCC stu-
dents. The new facility will be
located on the southern edge of
campus off Merrimac Way.
Other major gilts for the cen-
ter's construction have come
from the Harry and Grace Steele
Foundation ($100,000), the
Weingart Foundation ($100,000),
the National Charity League,
Newport Juniors ($30,000), the
Max Offenberg Family Trust
($30,000), Union Bank ($25,000)
The Newport Beach Ocean
Llfeguard Association is sponsor-
ing a two-mile swim from the
Balboa Pier to the Newport Pier
on Sunday.
The annual ra~e raises money
for the association. Sign-ups are
at 9:15 a.m. at Tower M, near the
Balboa Pier. The race starts at 10
a.m. The entry fee is $15.
~bL~ot William Lobdell. The same 24-
hotJr answering servke may be
used to record letters to the
editor on 1ny topic.
Mesa, CA 92626. Copyright: No news stories, Illustrations, edito-
rial matt~ or advertisements
herein an be reprodvced with-
out written permission of copy· right own«.
WEATHER
llMPEMtUMS 9:04 a.m ............ 3.7
VOL 90, NO. 155 ADDRESS
Our address Is 330 W. Bay St •
Cosu M"' C.llf. 92627.
COBBECDONS
It h the Piiot's policy to prompt-
ly correct all errors of wbstance.
Please c.all 574-4233. Thank you.
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11DU
lODAY
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First high
8:19 a.m. . • . . • . . . . . 3.5
Second low
1:0l p.m. . . • .. • • • , 2.1
second high
7:25 p.m ...••••••.• S.7
PllDAY
Ftnt tow
2.-40•.m. ••.••• ·~ ••. ..0.01
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Second low
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Second high
8:02 p.m. . .......... S.8
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T8!£ IMW: ...... 66
SUR
COSTAMllA
• 200 lllodr ol VldlDfM Street: A.
Super Nintando video ~ system
was stoi.n from • bedroom.
• 1700WocllolS.....AM~
Various items valued at '\570 were
stolen from • home. Among the loot
was a camera, lenses. lmulln ¥inges,
Uquor and a knife .
• 2000 blodc of Newport ......
v..t Four cases of beer wece st<*n
from a liquor store by four men. The
si.npects were last.seen on Bay Street in
a' red pidtop truck. ·
• 2100 blodc of .,..,. c.5p1 ........ • .. -.-:-
Two bkydes were stolen from a todced
garage. The Items were valued at $700.
• 200 block of c.mel&. L.-.: A
purse was stolen from beneath the
front seat of an unlocked car.
• 700 block of West 11th StNet: A
pullout stereo was stolen from beneath
a rear car seat. The suspect broke the
car's window.
Intruder entered a woman's home
while she was resting on her bed with
her baby. The Intruder walked In, spot·
ted the mother and dllld and left. A
wallet was stolen from ariother room.
• 700 blodt of West 11th StNet: A
tailgate was stolen off of a truck. The
part was valued at $250.
• 115 ~bin Street: A diamond
bracelet valued at $1,350 was stolen
from a home.
NEWPORT BEAat
• 100 block of Newport Centw on.
ve: A woman put her wedding band in
a car ash tray before having the vehlde
washed. After her car was deaned the
ring was gone.
• 400 blodt of 43rd Street: Twenty-;
seven compact discs valued at about ·
S425 were stolen from a bedroom. :
They are engraved with the Initials BJE
• 2500 block of IMCOn Street A ·
crate of liquor, containing brandy, ·
bourbon, scotch and other spirits was·
stolen from a home. Thieves also took
a telephone.
• 600 blodt of DllhHa Street A
painting of sunflowers valued at
S2,200 was stolen from a sport utility:
vehicle. The owner of the painting was
in the process of moving It to another
location. :
• 3500 blodt of Irvine lkM.tlevard: •
Someone broke a convenle~ store '
window with a brick, reached in and •
stole several bottles of liquor. .
• washlngton Strwet .t the beadt:.
A woman left her purse on the beac:tr
while she was swimming In the oceari..
She returned from the water to find •
her purse stolen. '.
• 1100 blodt of Newport C....-•
Drive: A woman from Scot1and left ·
her duffel bllQ ~ a reruuant. n. atong '<Vfth $200, WI~ stblen. , ;
• 1800 WDdc of 0gve strwe A su.--
pect broke Into a commercial office ·
and stole computer equipment valuetl
at S4,600. A scanner. hard drive and ·
laptop were among the i1ems stolen ..
• 2900 block of Catalpa Street Vari·
ous items were stolen from a residence
Forty compact discs, cash, binoculars. a
watch and a ring were among the
stolen goods.
•JOO block of J.4th Street A surf·
• Swhon Drive at W.lnut Street
A 1992 Honda Civic valued at $13,000
was stolen. The car was equipped with
an alarm.
• 2700 block of S..vlew Avenue:
Various items worth $604 were stolen
during a vehicle burglary. The loot
included a cell phone, camera and tele-
vision.
• 200 block of~ Avenue:
An oven and a cook top were stolen
from a home currently under constnJC·
tion. The oven is valued at $1, 7000. The
cook top's value is $800.
Correction
tf signed by the gowrnor,
the state budget will provide
school districts with $650 P9!
student If~ reduce dall
sizes to 20 students '*
teacher. A stcxy in •N9c1ne-
day's O.Hy Piiot Nd thl
wrong monetlry lmCMlftt.
., --ewpon BHchlCoeca Meta Daily Piloc THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996 AJ
Facts . didn't sway water board from preconceived ruling
"Roscoe and Evelyn
~are patriotic folks.
1be oouple bas flOwil an a:1can flag outside their Mesa bom.e OD the * block of UDian Street t..bout a decade. Roscoe
Speak hung the fl4g from
the~ of the house every !MY before picking up the
~per -·until Satur-
day.
Thieves nabbed the
S1ars and Stripes some-
.. time between 9 a.m. and
' noon, Costa Mesa police
reported.
· ."I can't imagine any-
body stealing the flag,"
Evelyn Spea!c said
Wednesday. ·
•• The Speaks, Evelyn, 10,
' and Roscoe, 16, said they
moved to Costa Mesa in
1949. They've been at the
house on Llllian since 1969.
They flag has been
replaced with a spare.
-By John Canalls
r...,._
B> JD ~ -. ·-
T he Regional Water Quali-
ty Control Board has ·
approved the rape of
Newport Bay.
The score was Irvine Ranch
Water District 97 -Everything
Else 0.
The outcome was as pre-·
dictable as the 1919 World
Series. The fix was in. It was a
done deal a long time ago.
Evelyn Hart, one of two
Newport Beach residents on the
board, was the lone dissenter.
"The moie evidence I heard,
the more ·opposed I became to
the project, H Evelyn says.
Former Mayor Hart, a long-
time water-quality activist, also
resented IRWD's party-line ref-
erences to the community as
"misinformed."
•People in this city are
smart, "·Evelyn says. "They
don't just jump oh something
without becoming informed.
ference and Visitors Bureau, the
Chamber of Commerce -all of
them studied this issue carefully,
then came out against it. I
assure you, they were very well
informed."
Regional Board member Jer-
,ry King, the other Newport
Beach resident, voted in favor of
the IRWD plan.
Afterward, be said that, if
the dumping turns out to be a
mista.ke, "we can shut it off in
minutes." Considenng the diffi-
culty of establishing reliable
baseline data for monitoring,
that could well be too late.
If fish or birds or plant lite
die, if a kid in a sabot or a boat-
bottom cleaner gets sick; it's too
late to just "shut it off."
If people don't rept those
damn little blue fishing boats,
it's too late.· If they don't go out
and party on those double-
damned big Noseblower yachts,'
it's too late.
Nancy Skinner and others
are convinced that, had King
voted othenvise, it might have
turned the Regional Board
around.
u1 was really surprised. I
thought he might opt to delay ...
If Jerry and Evelyn had both
v~ted negative, the outco~e
ent."
J ean Watt, another longtime
salvager of the bay, agrees.
"Jerry could have helped
us," she says, "but he didn't."
Then Jean adds another ele-
ment to the enigma.
"If there was anyone out
there who could have helped us
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Malte 11. differoence in the
lift of a deserving chi/JJ
' '
./
fred
martin
-should •have helped us -it's
The Irvine Co.," Jean said.
"They have taken all the good
out of Newport Beach, and they
don't appear to care much about
what's left." ,
For whatever it's worth, Jerry
King is a lobbyist who, on occa-
sion, counts The Irvine Co.
Nancy Skinner brings up
another curious' point. Despite
eight near-solid hours of both
sides presenting hugely com-
plex scientific stuff, regional
board members asked few
questions.
"They're not marine biolo-
gists," she says. "But they hard-
ly asked a question. They
reminded me of the O.J . Simp-
son jury. They just sat there
silently, then brought in an
almost instant verdict. Obvious-
ly, their minds were made up.
,With so many serious questions
unanswered, wouldn't you at
least err on the side of caution?"
Yes, and I might have given
serious consideration to the
more than 900 letters from Cos-
ta Mesa and Newport Beach
residents protesting IR~s
invasion. Clearly, the letters -
your letters -were shrugged
off as the rantings of "misin-
formed" know-nothings.
0 nee again, screw the peo-
ple. What do they know?
Obviously, more letters won't
do any good. As Bob Caustin of
Defend the Bay puts it: "IRWD
and others who view Newport
umpmg groun are
celebrating ... We can let the
IRWD dump, or we can fight ...
Will upstream neighbors ever
respect the bay as other than
(an) outfall?"
Of course they wonl
Defend the Bay hopes to
fight the decree of the Regional
Board on three fronts: (1)
Appeal the decision to higher
authorities. (2) challenge IRWD's
Envirorunental Impact Report.
(3) "Encourage" the Environ-
mental Protection Agency to I .
establish maximum limits on
pollutants. allowed to enter
Newport Bay (which, by law, '
was supposed to have been
done 17 yea.rs ago!).
All are, as we are wont to say
these days, doable.
But it takes money. Lots.
Maybe $100,000 ultimately,
even though Bob has expert
environmental lawyers working
for a genuine pittance. But for
now, Defepd the Bay needs
about $25,000 to prepare for i~
three-front battle.
ul feel very sad I couldn't
change it," Evelyn Hart told me.
But maybe you can. Any-
thing from a hundred grand o~
be cheerfully accepted .
Send a check to Defend th~
Bay, 4 71 Old Newport Blvd:,
Newport Beach 92663. And get
that fat lady gargling.
• FRED MARTIN's column runs every
Thursday and Saturday.
ofm £. 'BCom -
ITO 108/o!
ON FINE GENTLEMEN'S CLOTHING FROM
HICKEY-FREEMAN • SOUTHWICK • SAMUELSOHN • CORBIN
BARRY BRICKEN • GITMAN • IKE BEHAR • ROBERT TALBOTT
ASHWORTH • PATAGONIA • AND MANY MO~E.
Suits
Sport Coats.
Trousers
Dress.Shirts
Sport Shirts
Sweaters
Neckwear
Regu larly
$395.00 to $1,100.00
$295.00 to $595.00
$55 .00 to $225.00
$6'5.00 to $ t 50.00
$50.00 to $170.00
$80.00 to $495.00
$45 .00 to $100.00
STORE HOURS
SALE
from $149.90
from $89.90
from $19.90
frOm $19.90
from $19.90
frOm $29.90
from $9.90
Monday & Tuesday 10·6. Wednesday-Friday 10-9, Saturday 1()..6, SundaJ 11"6
561 Newport center Drive, FaShion ISiand, ~ --~
PhOne (714) ~10
A4 THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996
..
Water board to ask for
.waiver from Pringle bill
• Having already expressed its opposition to agency
.merger proposal, the water district will draft formal
;tequest tonight to be exempted.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Ever fearful
that st~te legislation will force
them to merge with a larger
governing agency, board mem-
bers of the Mesa Consolidated
·water District may formally
request an exemption from the
legislation's requirements.
The wat~r district and the
city of Costa Mesa have regis·
tered opposillon to the bill,
Assembly Speaker Curt
Pringle's effort to force the con-
solidation of water dlstncts and
approved, Mesa would be
forced to merge w1lh either the
city of Costa Mesd or the Irvine
Ranch Water District.
Water clistnct officials say the
bill has not sufficiently explored
all options -including the
option of leaving the district as
it is. By forcing a consolidation
with a larger dgency, the bill
takes the decision-making
process away from water rate
payers, Mesa Consolidated
ddministrators have said.
"The maJonty of agencies
are opposed to this bill,• said
Mesa board chairwoman "ftudy
Ohlig. HThe citizens constantly
say, 'No, they don't want it.' It's
just not the way to go.• .
But Heather Somers, a fre-
quent critic of the water district,
believes that consolidation with
the city makes sense. She says
the district board members are
resisting the bill out of an
unwillingness to give up their
independence.
"We could cut a lot of man-
agement costs and probably
save the rate payers a few mil-
lion dollars,• Somers said.
state several assembly subcom-
mittees and will likely reach the
senate Appropriations Commit-
tee in August. Although the
board still opposes the bill, dis-
trict administrators will likely
now ask to be exempted from
the bill 's jurisdiction.
Up to 25 agencies have been
targeted for consolidation.
Mesa's resolution, which the
board will consider tonight, sim-
ply asks that Mesa Consolidat-
ed be dropped from the list.
"Mr. Pringle has that author-
·we could cut a
lot ot manage-
ment costa and
probably ~e the
rate ¢yeTB a Jew
iitllllon dollars ... •
-HEATHER SOMERS
•
ity," said Mesa Assistant Gener-
al Manager Diana Leach. ~The
governor also has that kind of
authority if it gets to bis desk.•
According to the draft resolu-
tion, Mesa Consolidated does
not fit the provision ol the bill
largely because the city of Cos-
ta Mesa has twice resisted
efforts to bring the water district
under the city's jurisdiction.
Matthew Sarboraria, a leg-
islative aide to Pringle, said that
the Speake~ is still ~g input
would consider exempting
them if the situation is appropri-
ate. Debt-ridden agencies, for
example, would not be good
candidates for consolidation,
Sarooraria said.
uone of the speaker's inten-
tions in amending the bill was
to give the Local Agencies For-
mation Committee the flexibili-
ty to deal with districts on a case
by case basis," Sarboraria said.
The board of the Mesa Con-
solidated Water District meets at
7 tonight at 1965 Placentia Ave.
A Whale
of A Tale
Meet
NBC TV's
Children's Bookstore
gs4-g2gg
A Bookstore for kids of all ages
418'7 Campus Dr .. Irvine Marketplace, Irvine
Visit the store
everyone is ta lking about. ..
' Featuring:
• Over 50,000 books • Educational
•Author visits Toys & Plush
• Special events • Brio & Thomas
• Storytime the Tank
• Great Teacher
Resource
Weathercaster
Christopher
Nance
Booksigning & Reading
Saturday, July 13
11·1 pm
Whittier Law School's arrival in
Cost.a MeSa is hailed as signipcant
•New campus will take up spot on Harbor Boulevard
now owned by C.J. Segerstrom & Sons.
School h4.s always been to pro-
vide mW1 cl.asses,• FitzR.andolph
said.
By Evan Henerson, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Labeling its
arrival the most significant educa-
tion-related event since the open-
ing of UCI, city officials and
developers· welcomed the first
American Bar Assodation-
accredited law school to Orange
County Wednesday.
Whittier Law School plans to
open its new campus at 3333 Har-
bor Boulevard in August of 1997,
in time for the fall of 1997 school
term. nie 15-acre site at the inter-
section of Sunflo)Yer will include
a law library, classrooms and
office space.
He Se erstrom, whose firm
. . egerstrom & ons will sell
the land to the law school, said
Whittier will anchor an area
already rich with lawyers.
•There are more than 500
attorneys practicing law within
500 feet of where we're speak-
ing,• Segerstrom said Wednesday
at the Orange County Performing
Arts Center's Center Cub. MWhit-
tier Law School will be the epi•
center of the legal community.•
In relocating to Costa Mesa
from its current site in Hancock
Park, the law school more than
doubles its current space. "The
Costa Mesa campus will enable
the 21-year--0ld law school to offer
classes and services which the
school currently is unable to pro-
vide, said law school Dean John
FitzRandolph.
A total of 675 students current-:
ly attend Whittier Law School.
Althou h the Costa Mesa campus
· like y attract new a un
professors, the student population
will remain fixed, FitzRandolph
said.
•The mission of Whittier Law
The law school will move into
buildings currently occupied by
Brunswick Defense, which will
move elsewhere. Although some
demolition will be required, no
new build.IDgs will be construct-
ed. The law school will need to
obtain a conditional use ·permit,
which will likely take place dur-
ing a planning commission hear-
ing in August.
Neither Segerstrom nor law
school administrators would
reveal financial details of the
transaction. The sale of the land
will be complete by August of
next year, they said
And as happy as his family is to
bring the law school to Orange
County, Henry Segerstrom made
it clear that this was very much a
usmess ansa .
whether his company was in fact
donating the site to the law
school, Segerstrom just smiled.
MNo sir,• he said.
DANIEL'S LUGGAGE It $!1_Ql1.R~~~_R
• ~t
• Doo< Panel & Dosh
• Leather, Cleon &
Condition
reg.$69.95
·Now: $59. 9S
GRA\D OPE~l~C
LO\\hT PRIC f\ BP1T 'llR\ I(~
Men's Full Sole,
Hffl1&Shlne
Top Siders Soles &
Heels & Refinish
Men's Heels
100°~ Hand Corwash &
Prof es~ 1or. ol ._)(•f ... 11/m<J
reg.$69.95
·Now: $59. 95
I \ : FREE LADl~11AEE.LS I
1 With any Men's full set order. 1 I Thru 7fJ 1/96.1'1 ::.-------: 1'IJIMT I
:: FREE ·: , ,
Buy New Heels on any 2
pair of shoes, Receive 3rd
pair FREE Ladies Heels.
Thru 7/11196 .•
O~er SpralJ Remo~al
* (By Request) It Color S.ndinf
(By Special AgnMNnent)
i
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I .
I
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t
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• • I
I
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I i -
i
I
THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996
.
My assign:Qlent: Exposing the
sordid world · of teen alcohol sciles
volunteer directory
AMERICAN RED CROSS, 0MHGE
COUNTY OW'TU
The Orange County O\lpter of the
American Red Cross needs volunteers to
address community groups about Red
Cross services and to act as liaisons with
the media ih disaster and emergency sit-
uations. For lnfonnation, c.all Judy ~n
naccone, 835-5381, or Joan Miiier. 835-
5381. Ext. 422.
DISCOVEJtV SHOP
Discowly Shops AN run by the Ameri-can c.ncer Society. Vol""'9en .. need-
ed. and no special skllls .. ..-...y.
• For lnfonnatlon, call 64<Mm beit\wen
10 a.m. and 5 p.m.
K eep thll under wrapl,
I OK?
. I went undercover last
I week. Plew below the radar.
·Did the •Mission: Impossible•
gig without all the masks,
-explosions and confuslng plot
.points. .
, The stealth assignment was
· to tag along with Costa Mesa
police officers and cadet decoys
during a sting operation aimed
' at nailing people who sell alco-
: holic beverages to teenagers.
Even though I was on board
• as a reporter, I had to pose as a
~ shopper in order not to blow
the cover of the cops and young
. decoys.
_ It was a difficult task in my
· line of work since I had to
, abandon the role of observer
. an apate in order to get
• the story. Despite what people
• think, journalists almost always
identify themselves when
they're on assignment. It's con-
sidered the ethical thing to do.
But in this case, saying •1
•work for the Daily Pilot• would ! have blown a police operation
:'planned for months.
• I had to go inside the stores to
: get If good look as the teens who •
•
john
canalis
tried to buy booze from unsus-
pecting clerks. But I didn't just
want the information. I wanted
the whole sto the details.
My mission was to answer
questions like these for our
readers: What kind of booze did
the decoys buy? What flavor
was the beef jerky at the
counter. How many people
were in line for Lotto tickets?
(In~ you're wondering,
here's the answers~ wine coo1ers
and beer; pepperoni; plenty, the
jackpot was $30 million that.day).
Posing as a shopper. l typi-
r:-------19.i!ii·i :i!ltt.1114.1~1-------,
BRETT'S BIG 24 exp
;PHOTO I $9.!' ~PRESS VALUE. includes """ slt!l
: .. DRIVE-UP 2 Sets
•I
• • • : ANTIPASTI $5.95
·~'°~ • Grllkd ~ fresh chopped tomatoes,
• bell roestut pepper, gtWtic, cepm
: Coue In lllnCo
• StM1'lCd rrussels, .....tiitc wioe, gtWtte • ! PASTI $7.95 .
' UnsuN ......... : ScaHops, onions, lLltistl axry, thyme
• ,.ilollnl Atllntldc
• t.Usets, cl.tms, broccoli, besil, Calilornie
• ctwdo11111y • PeNMc:on..
• na pesta. l\N fi$I\ G1U1t o1r..es. capers,
• 1IOmlllO sauce ': ~
PISCI (ftSH) $11.tJ
Pac• llenco '+srlco
'Mllte fish, belsiwl1tC ~. oliYt Oii, Italian
patSky, ...... le wine
Pac• lllnCo ~
Wt1ite fish, redicc:hio, raisin, whk tinfandel
'h4a llWlco IV
Biby salmon. artichoke, IStOCI wild fmel
seed, gertic
'h4a ContllCIM
~salmon.~. hertls, ~
1infllndd
cally picked the most obvious
place for a journalist to hide,
the magazine rack. I watched
the action by peering over
copies of "Hot Rod,• "Guns
and Ammo" and the other fine
literature offered at the reading
racks of convenience stores.
No one seemed to detect me
bedecked in jeans and a white
button-down shirt. Then again,
before I pat myself on the
back, it's pretty easy to pose as
a liquor store shopper since
the places attract just about
everybody.
There were some close calls
when clerks spotted the photo
journalist's cameras, beard the
cops' radios or saw the
reporter's notebook sticking out
o m back ket d ad ·v -
aways that we weren't there for
Chablis and pork rinds.
!played along, too, buying
Cokes and bottled water
when I tliougbt store clerks
were hip to my presence.
At other stops, and there
were many, I posed as friends
of the undercover officers, dis--
cussing, for example, what type
of com chips are worth chomp-
Soglk* VctlutN
Solt wilh stwnps, crab meat. lobster sauce
POLLO (CHICll~) $11.95
Pollo AJ MWule
Boneless mast satud with rntnllla
nuhtoom sauce
Polo AJ LIMoM
Boneless tnast, tanoo, i:x.ter end~
....;ne seuc:e
'\ ;
•'
---------
GllU.S lllC. Of OMHGE COUNTY
Girls Inc. offers educational and
enrichment opportunities for girts and
boys. Volunteers are needed. For more
ing. Our conversations went
something like this: ·1 like the
barbecue flavor but ranch is
best.• Reply: "Let's get Cracker
Jacks instead.• If the view was
good, I would watch from a pay
phone outside, pretending to
make calls.
AMERICAN YOUTH SOCCER
ORGANIZATION
Information, call Amy, 646-7181. •,
·' Corona del Mar AYSO Soccer Region
57 needs volunteers for 1996 soccer sea-
son registration. Parents of. boys and
girls ages 4 1/2 to 16 are needed for
computer Input, telephones, coactiing,
refereeing, equipment and purchasing.
Call 640-2539.
GI.ASS MOUNTAIN INC.
Volunteers are needed to aid disabled
adults who meet monthly for educa-
t.ional, entertainment and social purpos-
es. For information, call n9-3441.
HIGH HOPES HEAD INJURY PROGRAM A nd though I wasn't trying
to take sides in all this, my
heart raced after each sale as
tll'e cops rushed the counter,
shoved their badges in the
faces of the suspects and made
the bu'.sts. Though the crimes
were misdemeanor offenses, it
was still a rush to witness live
police work that didn't involve
me getting a speeding ticket.
ASSOCIATION RENAtsSANCf CREATORS
ARC is a non-profit group In Costa
Mesa that sponsors and supports multi·
outreach community service programs,
such as the homeless sanctuary. Volun·
teers are needed. For information, call
Dr. Renee Namaste, 540-5803.
The High Hopes Head lnj~ P,-ogratn's
Rea Center in Costa Mesa, a non-profit
organization serving the needs of head-"
injured adults and their families, is seek-•'
ing volunteers. For information, call 646-
I did feel a little sorry for . . ,
ly .because I figured they would
lose their jobs, get heck from
their bosses or pay a steep fine.
Then again, as the teen
decoys noted, the booze could
have been sold to kids with cars.
And we all know what hap-
pens when those three ele-
ments mix.
• JOHN CANALIS is a staff writer.
Here's 'how lo get lo Orange
County's best kept secrwt:
• 5 Fwy. North exit RedhiH-tum right.
El Camino Real-tum IJt Main-tum
, ht on .
• 5 fwy. Soulh-exit Newport Aw. ·tum
left, Moin-lum left, 3 blocks on lhe
left .
• 55 Fwy. Nor1h exit Mcfadden • Slay
right, Newport Aw. ·tum lelt, Moin-
lum left,3 blocks on the left.
148 w. Ma.in, Tustin
(714) 832--8466
Resort
Wear
for
Mm&Women
BAUfT PAOACA
The Ballet Pacifica Guild, a volunteer
volunteers for a variety of tasks. For
information, call Molly Lyncti at 851-
9930 .
OTIZENS FOR A SEWAGE FREE BAY
Your help is needed to stop the Irvine
Ranch District from dumping five million
gallons of treated sewage per day into
Newport Harbor. Volunteers, group
leaders, organizers needed. Call 722-
1710.
7458. .
SUSAN G. KOMEN MEAST CANCER
FOUNDATION .
Volunteers are needed Immediately '
for a variety of position.s for the •1996 . .
Island on Sept. 22. For more informa-
tion, call 224-0290.
NEWPORT BEACM CONFERENCE ANO
VISITORS' BUREAU
, , The Newport Beach Conference and
Visitors Bureau is dedicated to the pre>-
motion of the city to potential visitor$. If
you have extensive knowtedge of New-
port Beach and would like to volunteer.
call 722-1611.
Carpet Your Entire
w ith Plush or Berber
· foronly A<Alwltlmd~FCI s4990 UPT03MOS
SAME AS CASH
--·--O AC
CARPET DEP.OT
VINYL * WOOD * MARBLE * TILE
Commercial• R••ldentlal Sain •Service
Full hne of WooA, Woven Axminster & Sisal Carpeting Available
1904 Hatbor Boulevard ··Costa .....
N.E. Comw of Harbor & 19th StlMt
~~~~ .. 722-96 •
Uc# 649491
DICK'S LAST RESORT
PRESENTS
Mon-Sat 1D-6
Sun 11-5
~60% OFF
WOMENS
•. Dresses (long & short)
• Skirts • Sarongs
• Blouses • Resort shoes
• Hllwallara shbts
MENS
• Hawaiian shirts
• ShOrts • Pants
• SWlm ]banks ~--=.·-Pents • Resort lbou
TOP NAME BRANDS IN RESORT WEAR AT DISCOUNT PRICBSI
That's what makes the Island Hut at Qafys Rack
Different £n>m other discoUnt stores.
...
. . .
THURSDAY. JULY 11, 1996
TODAY
~·.C....,..~.,_
GOAL SETTING •
The Newport Beach Junior
Chamber of Conunerce is proud to
present Suze Baez who will be
addressing *Goals and Goal Set-
ting" from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the
Glendale Federal Bank in Fashion
Island. You must be between the
ages of 21 and 39 to be a member.
For more infonnation, call 451-2178.
COAST UPDATE
The Orange County Coast
Association presents *What's
Happening Along the Coast:
Updates on Three Coastal Devel-
opments" at 11:30 a.m. at the
Newport Beach Country Club,
1600 E. Coast Highway. The cost
1s $20 and the reservation dead-
line is July 9. For more informa-
tion. call 548-4942.
CREATIVE WRmNG
A 10-week creative writing
class starts today from 1 to 3 p.m.
a t Costa Mesa Senior.Center, 695
W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. A variety
o 1ction an non-ction wn g
techniques will be discussed. The
cost is $30. For more information,
caU 645-2356.
NETWORKING
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce welcomes Eileen
Klein who will speak on "How to
Deel With Difficult People• l\t
7:15 a.m. at La Salsa Restaurant,
1870 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
The cost is $10 to $15. Por more
information, call 574-8780.
SUDESHOW
Adventure 16 Outdoor & navel
presents Dan Braun's slide show
and discussion of his adventures
in the High Sierra at 1· p.m. at 1959
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Por
more information, call 650-3301.
CAREER MEETl_NG_
The CareefNetWbrk meeting at
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church
will include a discussion on ·Earn-
ing ~eferrals" at 7:30 p.m. in Stew-
art LoWlge at 600 St Andrews
Road, Newport Beach. For more ·
information, call 574-2239.
SATURDAY
PARK FUND-RAISER
Come celebrate "Bath-Stille
Day• at the Costa Mesa Bark
Park and help raise the necessary
funds to open Bark Park, Jr., the
propose m
a.m . to 3 p.m. at the comer of
Arlington and Newport in Te Win-
kle Park, Costa Mesa. There will
be a vendor fair, other activities in
the park and for $8, co,mmunity
members can get their dogs
washed. For more information,
call 754-5041.
.• Early Years Toys
• Developmental toys for c;.hildren hirth to 10 years.
'I Quality toys with lasting and creative play value.
'I Personal service from knowledgeable sales staff.
642-4212
1827 WESTCLJFF DRIVE. NEWPORT BEACH
Make Those Patios &
Entries Beautiful
Mcmufactured Used Brick Pool Deck
Free flowing, You Feel Like Your In a Park .
t •
CUSTOM MASONRY
170 E. 17th St. • Suite 206
Costa Mesa
(71 4) 645-8512
State License #392707
Let Jim Je nnings
install your
complete
yard hardscape.
• Expert brick,
block, stone, cile,
slate & concrete
work.
• Can recommend
quality designers
& landscapers.
• Quali ty worlc in
Cosca Mesa &
Newport Beach
since 1969.
• Drainage
proble ms? We
solve them.
tM~laat
lOOO's
of cuatoMen for owr 27 ,ears.
The Video Otoscope is a mtniacurized camera that
displays an exceptionally clear picture of your ear
canal on a full ,color monitor and then prints out a
color photograph.
So You Can See For Yourself If
There ls A Wax Probl£m , Or
If You Need Further Testing.
~!' ---· . ~ ... --·' ~
•~:....... '----"Lo.~~~·-.:. •• t-~
NAlURE PROGRAM
Upper Newport Bay Natural·
ists presents the nature topic
•Marsh Ufe• from 9:30 to 11:30
a.m. at Upper N~wport Bay
Regional Park on University
Street across from the YMCA.
The cost is SS for children and
free for adults. For more informa-
tion , call 610-6146.
SENIOR EXPO
The OASIS Senior Center will be
holding its free fifth annual Senior
Res;ources Expo in Corona del Mar
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar. The
expo is an informative day for
seQ..iorsand their families to find out
about community resources. For
more infonnation, call 644-3244.
T·BALL
The Newport-Costa Mesa-
Irvine Family YMCA will begin a
T-ball league for children ages 4
to 7 from 9 to 11 a.m. on Saturdays
at 2300 University Drive, Newport
Beach. The cost is $25 for a six
month membership and $35 for
more information, call 642-9990.
FREE FOOD
The Church of Christ distrib-
utes free food to those in need on
the second Saturday of each
month. Low income and senior
residents of Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach can pick up
U.S.D.A. staples from 8 to 10 a .m.
at 287 Wilson, Costa Mesa. Bring
picture identification. For further
information, call 631-2177.
COMPUTER CLUB
Orange Coast College's next
Whmers Computer Cub will meet
from 9 a.m. toinoon in room 116 at
OCC's Pine Arts B\!Uding. The club
is open to anyone interested in
Microsoft Wm.dows and Wmdows
applications, including bcginn~.
Armual membership f~ is $20. For
more information, call 542-0468.
REOTAL
· The Newport Beach Recital
Series presents Levitsky's Pro-
teges in Concert, Young Artists
Platform at 4 p.m. at the Pad.fie
School of Music and the Arts, 151
Kalmus Drive, G-1, Costa Mesa.
' tion, call 640-6276.
30 Years Experience In Your Area
Robert C. Suder, General Contractor
BONlED Ir INSURED• UC. #8407132
714-998-4070
Free Estimates
"Over 50 Years of Fine Quality'
DRAPERY SALE!
Custom
'Window Treat:ments
Shutters • Sh ades • Duettes • Blinds
Custom Slipcovers • Bedspreads
Crude Unittue Styles With
Our F~E Designer Co,,sultation
50°/n * OFF
,,
~~~
FURNITURE
RE ·UPHOLSTERY
FACTORY 8c SHOWROOM
1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
642-8400
' \lllTl4 PUllCHASC Of llOTl4 FAllRIC 6 ~
SUNDAY
DANq AUDfTION
The Jimmie Def ore Dance
Center is looking for dancers
between the . ages of 17 and 30
that are proficient in ballet and
jazz, tap dance is a· plus, 'for the
semester of Aug. 1 through Jan.
31 at 151 Kalmus Drive., G-3,
Costa Mesa. Por more .tn.forma-
tion, call 241-9908.
COFFEE HOUR
Meet the leaders of Temple
UC Reform ~ynagogue at a cof·
fee hour in Costa Mesa at
11:30 a.m. at the home of Andi
and Greg Simonoff in Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
545-1330.
FREE ICAYAklNG
Paddle Power offers a free
kayak..lng d~monstroUon day
trorn 9 a.m. to noon at the The
Newport Dunes. No experience
ts necessary and single and
double kayaks are available.
For more information, call 675-
1215.
GARDEN PARTY
The Society for Huma.J)istic
Judaism will celebrate the forma-
tion of a new chapter in Orange
County with a reception for new
members and for unaffiliated
individuals who identify with the
history, culture and fate of the
Jewish people from 4 to 6 p.m. llt
the Newport ~each> ·residence of
Phyllis and Alan Jacobs. For more
information, call 644-2712.
\l'TO l\Sl I~ \\CL S \LL
CALL FOR QUOTES
Effective • Knowledgeable • Friendly
441 Old Newport Blvd. • Newport Beach
(near Hoag Hospilal)
631-7740
I •. •
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Clutter
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Your Neighborhood Health Club For Men & Women Since 1982-
CORNER OF E. 17TH & IAVlNE IN WESTCLIFF PLAZA .
CALL 631-3623
FASHION ISLAND
1065 NEWPORT CENfER DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 759-1622 GARYS SALE HOURS
MON.-FRI. 10:00 TO 9:00
SATURDAY 10:00 TO 6:00
SUNDAY 11 :00 TO 6:00
Fashion Island · Newport Beach
. ,
'f . '
' .
" ,· .
'• . . .. . •• ,
f •• ,• Sale Starts Thursday,
July 11th, 9:00am -9:00pm 1
and Will Continue
Through July-21st
TO .~
OFF ~ ~
THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996 A1
weekend
' • -;o-• t;AX: 841 4170
H.ERE .COME THE JUDGES
Ing ceremonies at the
I*" entrance.
h All American Boys' Chorus
Ell l*'form, and a car show-
bute to the 100th anniversary
the automobile will continue n the main entrance until 4 t:u.. . funlor pouttry judging (until 3 .
•• m.) -Small Animal Tent.
I
1:JO P.M.
Street Jazz Band -Melody
~.=.Cima -Clrws
• ~P.M. :; Magk Show -Bijou Magic ,. fMeca.
+4P.M.
c.ntlpede Stomp -Youth In
Motion Building
Kim's Academy of Martial Arts -
llmes Heritage Stage.
•+4;JOP.M.
: •entertaining With insects• by , •aug Chef• l\on Taylor -Crafts
•iand Cooks Gallery/Home Arts
•aulldlng.
+•P.M. I~ Spefling Bee -Kids Potbet:r pig judging -l.M-
'stodt .,.,..
, .......
t~=:~·
Suzy the Knockouts -
Mddows Stage.
• What does it take to judge hundreds of cakes,
rodents and marine life? Veteran Orange County Fair
judges fill us ll1 on their secrets.
BY MARISSA ESPINO. DAILY PILOT
Every year, hundreds of
competitive contestants get
busy baking their tastiest
desserts, primping their pet rats
and mice and sprucing up their
fish tanks for the Oran e Coun-
au s many contests.
Sue Jeffries, Karen Robbins
and Marty Kendrick are a few of
the dozens of judges who get to
pick the best of the best from
these particular categories.
Each of them devote a whole
day to judging more than 100
entries, using their know-how
and experience in particular cat-
egories .
How do you rate a rat or
mouse? Do you gain weight
after trying all those sweets?
What makes a fish or reptile a
winning contestant?
does take experience.
"People come by and say 'I
wish I could do that' or 'How do
you get to be a judge?'" she
said. "We have training in foods
and nutrition."
Not just snake food
Karen Robbins, a veteran
judge of rats and mice, has not
only been judging the competi-
tions for the last 20 years, she
also established the first rats and
mice competition at the fair and
is president of American Fancy
Rat and Mouse Association.
You can judge for yourself
whether it's worth the time and
effort the following judges put
in for the fair.
Robbins critiques 75 to 100
rats and 30 to 50 tpice every
year, looking at tlie length of
each tail, the proportion of each
body and the color of each coat.
rr tin th t t b els "It just takes training and
.l es g e as e u seeing a lot of rats over the
MARC MARTIN DAILY PILOT
Manny Diosdado (left) ls hopeful one of his entries will please the judges at this year's Orange
County Fair. He and bis wife brought 16 entries to the Home Arts and Crafts building for judging.
Fair employee Judith Franc (right) tags one of Diosdado's entries.
Schooling in foods and nutri-years," said the 36-year-old.
tion has paid off for Newport As a child, small furry critters
Beach resident Sue Jeffries. Car-were always her favorite. Rob-
rot cake, cheese cake, pound bins used to show rabbits at
are like having a small dog or
cat."
cake, take your pick ... she gets competitions and after her sister 1 to eat them all. brought home two pet mice, As a partner in a custom
It's in the fins
Although she has been a Robbins was hooked. aquarium, installation and main-
baked goods judge for more Robbins first pet rat was tenance business for nine years,
than 15 years at the fair, her almost her sister's snake's food Marty Kendrick knows enough
concentration this year will be before she decided to save it. to determine when a fish and its
unlayered cakes and salads. "One of the baby rats was too tank is a good catch.
"Some of the cakes that you cute and we gave it back to \he Part of his job is to observe
think a.re going to be the neatest mother rat until it was ready to the colors and markings of the
taste the worst because it is too be away from its mother,• she fish, the sha pe and length of its
salty or whatever and some of said. fins and the aquarium tank dis-
the less attractive ones taste the Although Robbins said she play.
best," the retired home econo-has beard her share of negative "It is inte resting to see bow
mist said. comments about rats and mice, other people are doing things,·
Jeffries said appearance and she thinks people are increas-the 39-year-old Westminster res-
taste are her ma.in focus when ingly interested in them. ident said. "It gives you a differ-
judging and she drinks watet •People don't realize pet rats ent perspective and it's interest-
with lemon juice to make sure are totally different than wild ing to see what people have
her taste buds are impartial rats,• said the Winnetka resi-done from the previous years.•
when tasting each cake entry. dent, Kendrick has judged approxi-
"Wben I first started judging, "Kids love them and they mately 130 fish e ntries every
tan.ks at the fair for rune years
Although he is not competing
this year, he will have a 400-
and 560-gallon tank on display
at the fair for fish enthusiasts to
enjoy.
As a fish fan himseU,
Kendrick entered shows as a
teenager and even belonged to
a club, so it's all fun for the
judge.
"As you get farther into it,
your standards go up and you
appreciate what is well taken
care of," Kendnck sa.id.
Also having a personal inter-
est in reptiles is whet led
Kendrick to be a judge fo r the
ne w reptile competition startlng
this year.
Some 27 people have entered
the reptile competition in hopes
that their turtles, snakes and
Lizards will have the most
impressive na~ural habitat dis-
play and best-looking scaly skin.
I used my college text books," don't need a lot of maintenance. year over the last few years. He
1 --::::::,,.r:-'91....,._!P-M--~J:e~ff~rie~s~, ~65~1~s~ai:d~. ~·1~d~o~n~·t~d:_:o~th'.:a:._t___;:;;Th:;;e:;;y;::ar~e!;v!!ery~aff=e!!cti!!. o;;;n;;;a;;;te;;;a;;;n;;;d==h=:as;;=also:;;s:;;h:;;o:;w:;e:;d:;;o~ff~his~· ~o~wn~~;--11~..:L:A::;R~G~E 1 6 n PIZZA r-anymore. It has all become sec-
falo Bend Ba~. Because the judging process
takes only one day, gaining .+ t P.M. weight is not an issue, but she
•Uttle Texas-Arlington Theater did recall having an uncom.fort-
:A11ey cats -Tlmes Heritage able evening one year.
: Stage. •A couple of years ago, I had
'+ ALL DAV a very upsetting afternoon with
, Embroldety artistry by the my stomach," she said.
•Embroidery Guild; Techniques Jeffries admits she h as admir-
ln China Painting by California ers and bas several inquiries on
•China Painters Art Association. bow she got her job, but said
although she has a good time, it
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Al THURSDAY. JULY 11, 1996
I ~ Mil MME-The Orange,County F•lr : I ap1n1 Friday for a 17-day run at the
f~ In Costa Mee. I
2' 1HI Wini Sl'Uff-A 10-week aeatlve
Writing ca.. arts today from 1 to 3
.,_.... • Costa Mesa Senior <:eMer; 695 W.
19th St.. Costa Mesa. The cost Is $30. For f"0'9 Information, call 645-2356.
3 GRM 1ltE 11SSUES -Brian Frlel's tear-
fllled comedy about two couples.
"LOWR. • opens tonight &nd runs through
July 21 as part of Orange Coast College'S
summer theater season. Show times: =through Saturday at 8 p.m. and
• 2 p.m. Tidcets: $6-$9. tnforma.
tion: •32-5880.
4 VIVA LES POOCHES -Come celebrate
"Bath-Stille Day" at the c:ost. Mesa
Bark Park and help raise the necessary
funds to open Bark Par1<. Jr., the proposed
alt.ematiw park. This fun event Is from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the corner of
Ar11ngton Drive and N~ Boulevard In
TeWlnkle Park. Costa Mesa. There will be a
Vendor Fair, other activities In the park
and, for Sa. community members can get
their dogs washed. can 754-5041.
5 STUFF FOR SENIORS -The OASIS
Senior Center will hold Its free fifth
annual Senior Resources E)(J>O In Corona
del Mar from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday
at 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona def Mar.
The expo is an lnformatiVe day for seniors
and their families to flnd out~ com-
Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A
TRIP TO MEXICO
The~ltlon
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Since 1972
' " '
I' .
' ~ • 1 r. t ..., • • t :~ 1 )
7 l'W WI -In honor of the 100th
...wirilfY. of U.S. Selling, the NM-
port HafbOr,NIUlbl Mweunt ~ ~
unique uhtidon ~ "1rophlel: Tribulmto*1tina "10a.m. to
5p.m.In1he Gr.nc:f Sllon I~ 151 E.
Colst Highway. Newport leech. 1he I
exhibit nn 1tWouah Nov. I. For more
information, alft ,.,3-7163. ·
OANOtOM AWAY-On that: nalitbl
Onote ... the ftrst exhibit In the Gin
Salon Gallery of 1he Newport Hlllbor tQu-
tic'al Museum doles~ 10 this is
your last weekend to check out a ~on
of paintings and sketches and memorabil-
ia from the life of maritime artist Wiiiiam
Alexander Coulter. 151 E. Coast Highway,
9 STORY SESSIONS -Barnes & Noble
book stores at Triangle Square In Cost.a
Mesa and Fashion Island In Newport
Beach both present stofy hours for chlJ-
dren on Sundays. At the Triangle Square
location, kids get crafts as well as stories
from 2 to 3 p.m. And kids gathering at 1
p.m. at the Fashion Island slte enjoy an
hour of Imagination and excttement as
"Bill" reads stories. call 631-0614 for the
Costa Mesa store; 759-0982, for the New-
port Beach store. . I
1O ARMOWRTRAVEL-Adventure16
Outdoor & Travel presents Dan
Braun's slide show and discussion of his
adventures In the High Sierra at 7 p.m.
today at 1959 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
For more Information, call 650-3301.
t
Prices Good thru
July 15, 1996
...
You won ,t just have
buttelj'/i,es in your stomach
• 'Bug Chef' Ron Taylor will seive up some unusual fair food.
And he believes insects are the answer to world hunger .
By Kathleen Haney, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -The Orange County
Fair will cook up some mighty tasty crit-
ters this year ... literally.
"This is the first time I've done a show
like this,• said Ron Tuylor, the fair's resi-
dent chef. •You might say I have butter-
flies in my stomach.•
Tuylor, christened the
"Bug Chef,• is not your
typical culinary master.
Using mealwonns, wax-
' be giving demonstrations
on how to cook tasty
insect dishes on . the
Home Arts Department's
Cooking Stage through-
out the 17-day rair.
Along with preparing
such delights as Insect Thall Mix and
Wonn Oatmeal Cookies, Taylor will be
ed~cating the public about the role
insects could play in battling world-wide
hunger.
Taylor, a Yorba Llnda resident and
head of HIV services in the Orange
County Health Care Agency, first
became interested in insects as foOd dur-
ing an undergraduate entomology
course at San Jose State University.
He remembers the first insect recipe
he ever tried.
"It was hied waxworm J..pvae, • he
said. "1 thought it was ~tty good
myself.• . · •
In honor of the Orange County Fair,
Taylor has prepared a whole •Bug•
menu, with dishes ranging from Worm
Balls with Pasta to Critter Fritters with
Plum Sauce.
Insect ingredients are
being ordered from com-
panies who specifically
sell insects wholesale to
shops, he said. Taylor
estimates that he'll cook
approximately 135,000
meal-worms, waxworms
and crickets during the
fair.
"It's best to use fresh
insects in the dishes if possible,• he said,
•but for the fair, I'll be using frozen
insects so they'll keep better.•
While Taylor gets much of his notori-
ety from cooking and eating ~ects,
there is a far broader purpose at work:
public health. His interest in batUing the
growing problem of global fa.mine is an
extension of his personal work.
"The pictures of starving children
with swollen bellies is a symptom of pro-
.... ACl"tl°d DAME (Ill W1 I C9 UY IN-11)
The Bag Chef Ron Taylor will be c ,
cooking up some dellcades during •
tbU year's run of the Orange County
tein deficiency,• he said. •The protein '
extracted from insects could be added to :
native foodstuffs, such as tortillas, bread-'
and beverages, to help stop this prob-
lem." "'\I
Taylor, who will appear every day al
the fair, will give demonstrations at O
p.m. on Monday, Tuesday and Wednes-
day. On Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays
and Sundays, he will provide demon'l",
strations at 2 p.m. and 4:30-p.m.
He encourages everyone to stop by .
and try an insect goody or two. · ~Anyone who dares to sample will ..
receive a ribbon that says, 'I ate a bug af
the Orange County Fair,' for their brav·' ''
e~· ' . ..
ACROSS THE
SEA1rTIME
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• I
I
THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996
Celebrate 'Independence Day' at your local cinema .
Don't be the last of your liends to see the movie everyone
• talking about. It wouldn't be
ght to miss possibly the best
'Olovie of all time. "Independence
Day" is humorous,
action-packed,
intense and
adorable. It is
filled with hope,
courage and a
demons tr8ted
dedication to this
country.
This is the first
movie I've seen
that had a plot
that WC\S strong enough to bring
the entire world together to work
as one for l! single cause. Clever
' we can all benefit from.
• "Independence Day" teaches
us to love, laugh, and value what
we have, because some 8fe less
fortunate than us 8lld everything
can be taken away in a single
second. If you haven't already,
make plans to see "Indepen-
dence Day." Be a part of your
country.
• KATIE HOS1£T1.ER, 16, Is a Newport
Beach resident and a junior at Newport
1-iarbor High School.
'Star Wars, on
steroids
They could have called it
"Star Wars Meets the Aliens.· I
expected Sigourney Weaver and
Princess Leia to show up at any
time. If you like explosions and
flying ca.rs, this is your movie.
It seems this summer, special
effects have taken over: the bi ~
The story is about aliens with
buge spaceships the size of dties
that hover all over the major
ByDlck
Tucker
ple killed.
cities in the world
and demolish
them spectacular-
ly. However, . I
didn't particularly
enjoy watching
Washington,
D.C., with the
White House and
Congress being
blown up and
thousands of peo-
The heroes played their roles
tongue-in-cheek. joking at criti-
cal times as they figured out a
way to stop the aliens. The finish
was so far-fetched I doubt if Cap-
tain Kirk or Mr. Spock could have
done it.
One scene in · cular
the top gun pilot (Will Smith)
ejects from his plane, the alien
fighter spaceship crashes. The
BW Pullman as the president (center) helps save the-world
against an alien lnvaslon ln .. Independence Day."
pilot knocks the alien out and
drags him acros~ the desert ~til
them up and take them to a
secret base where a downed
spaceship had been studied for
40 years by a wacko soentist
with long hair and poor gram-
During the autopsy, the alien
comes to life and kills the scien-
tist. Then, the top_ gun flies the
40-year-old spaceship along with
the computer whiz (Jett Gold-
blum) into the big mother space~
ship wherl!'-they release a com-
puter virus so all the airplanes
left in the world can destroy the
space~bips. Every Nintendo
player in the country will love
this. But the special effects are
outstanding.
Bill Pullman, who plays the
president, sheds his robes and
becomes a fighter pilot leading
the raid along with Randy Qup.id.
who plays an old drunk Vietnam
fighter pilot who turns into a
kamikaze, do a creditable job.
With all the hype this movie -
has received, you should proba-
bly see it, particularly if you like
soence fiction. As for me, I give it
an A for speoal effects, a C for
acting and story.
• DICK TUCKER. 69, is a Newport Beach
resident t1(ld a retired instructor at
Orange Coast College .
Travolta movie isn't exactly a 'Phenomenon' shy but determined
George ~d Lace, a
young divorced moth-
er of two who has
obviously been badly
hurt and now wants
only to be left alone.
,,. r ~·
..... --~· r A. deja vu experience
"Phenomenon• stars John
navolta as a single, likable and
a~erage guy who, after witness-
~ a strange flash of light in the
night sky, mysteriously turns into
a genius with telekinetic and
other abilities.
Travolta's sta-
tul as the small-
town Mr. Nice
C4y is established
eltly on in the
•by the ca.re he
<\t.Jlonstrates for
aaimals and his
9'lrden, as well as By Richard tJt the friendly Brunette
uir:raction he has
~tb town residents and his
fllends, who throw him a birth-4Y party at the local bar.
i lt is also quickly established
t he has an attraction for a
tty, stngle mother with two
CliJdren who is, at best, tentative
ctout dating him, and at worst
~terested.
~ I don't know what it is about
tile movie industry and sequels
(i.e. "Friday the 13th" Part 28,
etc.) or remakes and revisions of
hits from the past (how many
movie versions of "Huckleberry
Finn and Tom Sawyer" do we
need?). The sequels almost
always aren't good and remakes
seldom live up to the original.
navolta is perfectly accept-
able in the lead role, as are his
supporting co-stars, Robert
Duvall and Forest Whitaker.
Their performances show
warmth of character, they easily
display honest affection for one
another and there are several
moments that are quite funny.
For the most part, I found "Phe-
nomenon" enjoyable and I think
that most people will like it too.
However, I felt that the last
third or so of the movie was long
and that the love story portion
was uninspired .. I also thought
that sadly, the film developed
into a totally tired and pre-
dictable plot, with navolta's
newfound abilities drawing fear
from neighbors and intrusion
from the government.
How many times have we
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seen this theme before? Holly-
wood, il you're listening (read-
ing, I mean), it's old and it's bor-
ing. 1 also felt the movie stum-
bled in its attempt to provide a
philosophical and higher mean-
ing of how we, as humans, have
the potential to be much more
than we are.
For these reasons I find it
hard. to award my highest rat-
ing. However, on a Brunette
scale of "Pay Pull Price at the
Movies," "Bargain Matinee,"
"Video Rental," "TV M<>yie of
the Week," or •I'd rather be one
of those dudes on the old Star
°Il'ek TV series that you've nev-
er seen before, is in an opening
sequence but has no speaking
lines, and is wearing a red secu-
rity officer's uniform (because
that guarantees he'll die
painfully and very soon in that
episode)", I rated "Phenome-
non" a solid "Bargain Mati-
nee."
• RICHARD BRUNETTE. 32, is a recre-
ational supervisor with the city of Costa
Mesa and a Costa Mesa resident.
Cynicism under warm,
fuzzy coat
There are many things to like
about "Phenomenon." It's hard to
imagine a more lovable, endear-
ing leading man than John na-
By June
Fenner
volta in the role of
George Malley, a
small town auto
mechanic an
ordinary man who
is suddenly pos-
sessed with extra-
ordinary intelli-
gence and mental
powers.
The Eric Clap-
ton music perfectly
suits the laid-back, gentle rhythm
of Malley's home town. The lush
cinematography endows every
tree, barn, and kitten with
enchanting beauty.
Supporting roles -played by
Kyra Sedgwick, Robert Duvall
and Forest Whitaker are wonder-
fully done.
The best thing about the movie
is the gentle romance between a
So, what is it about
this movie that bugs
me?
What bugs me is
that once I bad
laughed at the many
hUDlorousscenes,and
cheered George's
wonderful, heroic
actions, and grown
teary over the truly
romantic, but heart-
breaking finale, I was
• • t . ~
-.. ,_ ,_ ,,#!/ , 6-"' :,
I,
.
John Travolt. (left) and R
star 1n .. Pbenolllenon." obert Duvan
t . -.... J =
• ... .,
left with these mes-
sages:
· 1. Don't be too intelligent, even
if you only use your intelligence
to help everyone. No matter how
lovable you were as a not-so-
bright mechanic, people will be
resentful and suspicious of you
once you have a brain.
gentle farruly film, a •feel-good"
movie. Somehow neither of ~
film 's messages sound very warrcr-
or fuzzy to me.
2. Watch out for the real bad
guys -agents of the American
government. They won't just be
suspicious of you. They will want
to destroy you.
This movie is billed as a warm,
I can't go so far as to say I did-
n't like this movie. But I can't
shake the feeling that the warm,
fuzzy exterior covers a core of
cynicism. Where 1s Frank Capra
when we need him 1
• JUNE FENNER, a Costa Mesa resident
in her late 50s, 1s vice president of a work
force training company.
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LE CAFE/HYATT REGENCY IRVINE
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8runcti conSISta of S8Yer8I Mediterrenea~ Selads and Appetizers, •Shnmp. "Pancakes Oscar and an •Omelette Station.
Located at 17EO:l Jamboree BM:! • Irvine (714) 975-1234 JC2103
Hours 1Clam-2pm Reservaboli recommended but not necessary
ZUBIES
Menu Includes Ribs. Chcken. Steak & Lobster. Pnme Rib. Pizza, Otster' Bar Prices Ranae From $3 95 And Up Hours· 11 · 30em
1 ~ . Coact.alls Iii 1 f pm. Credit rads Not Accept.ad Ae8eNabons Not Needed lacated l!lt , 712 Plecent&a. Costa Mesa
(714) 645-0091
GOOSEBERRIES Breakfast • High Quality And lnn<MltlV9 Breakfast Fare. Hours:
Mon . .fri. 7:00am I Set.&n. B:OOern • 12:30pm. Located At
!00 Promontcry DrMt. (714) 57 40608
CASABLANCA BISTRO ~ & Morpccan • Treditional Middle Eastern Food.
Hours: 11 :30 lo 2:30 Mon. Thru Thura. Lunch Dinner 5-11 f!!!. All Major Creer( Cards. Reeerwtione SuQoeetad. l..ocat.ad at 1520 w. Cont Hwy., Newport Beecti (714) EJ46-1420
P'ORTY CARROT8 RllSTAURANT
COl1t11191"9!. ~ ~-~Cont Plaza, 3333 s. BrilCal COlta Me.a (7_1~)_~700. lnformel And Bealdul. cu Menu 11 VWied Wtii A Wide a..-Cl ~ F..-crtes.
Fieetli-~end SuJ>n~ flk. An~ Price VlkJ8 Moofrl ,~-,Set 9-8pn_• Sun 106p. \Ala, Maltel' Qin:! And
Americen fJcPrea Accept8d. ~ \lllbOl 11 Are ~ Needed
AUBlllltGINll French lnftuenced ecE 29th St Olnnery \fte.ge. Newp9f't Beech.
Oinn1r Ti.a. -9" ~1Cbn RIHFM.iOne ~ Ville, MIC. Atn.. ecx:epcecl (714)723.41ecl •
,-l< ,,, ,:
-0 645-5518 i'5J
645-5519
M -F1 7am-8pm • Sat: 8am-6pm • Sun: 9am-5pm
270 E. l 7TH ST. # 17 • COSTA M.EsA
c: 8 :z 0
SABATINOS RESTAURANT 6 SAUSAGE CO.
Pasta. Caesar Salad. Homemade~. Veal, Lamb, Vegetanen
Dishes. Wine. Beer. Cappucono & OesS8rt Hex.rs: 7 Days A Week. Ser.1ng Set & &ti. 8nR:h From 8·:n1 ·00. Sun ·fur.; 11 am-1 Cbn.
Fn. -Sat. 11 am-11 pm Al M!p-D-eck Cards Acce$X8d located At ~51
St-.pyard Writ. Newport Beach (714) 723-0321
AMACHI
Sushi & Sushi to Go Complete Bar All Maior a-edit. Cards. Located
At 2675 lrvtne /we . (Across From Newport Golf Col.rse) (714)
645-551B
CALIFORNIA BEACH ROCK'N SUSHI
Japanese Style Cuialoe And FuA Sushi Bar A Place For Great Food
Hours 7 Days Per Week · 6:00Dm T~ Dosing. VIS8, Mastercard,
Amex, Diners Oub. Located at 3355 Via Udo. Newport Beach
(714) 675-0575
SUSHI IMARI
Sushi Bar And OinillQ. Owners Suocessfulty Dper8t8d Japanese
Restaurent In Sen F8mando Val~. Terzana • Hoors 11 :3CJem. 2:~. Dinner 5:~10.00pm. All MaJOI" Q-edit Cards
Acc:eptlld. Reservations l'b Necessary 375 Bristol. #40, r.ost.a
Mesa(714)6445654.
(71 .. >645-2252
NEWPORT LANDING
Waterlront Dining, Sat & Sun Olampagne Bn.mch Danner Menu
$13 95 . $19 95. C>fster Bar Menu Served All Day Hours
10 CXJam · 11 30pm Amex. MasterCM:l Vose Dinner
Reservabons Recommended Located at 503 E Edgewater
Balboa (714) 675-2373
PACIFIC FISH 8c SEAFOOD
Retatl/Wholesale Fish mirlet And Restaurant Lunch Only HOIJl"S
'Mon -Sat 11 am • 6 pm VIS& & Mastercard accepted Located
At 2620 Newport Bllld (714) 650-0130
THE BARN STEAK HOUSE
Menu Includes Stealc. Fresh Fish, Olden. B~ & Salads
Pnces Ran_ge From $3 75 For Lunch & $6 25 For Dinner Hoors Mon.-Set Open 11am For Lunch 4{Q:wn Mon .fn . Dinner
3·00pm Set. & Sun Maior Credit Cards Accepted Located At
2300 Harbor Bl #31 . Costa Mesa (714) 641-9777
LA CAVE
Menu Includes· Lobster, Crab. Shnmp. St.eeks. Rib eyec!'J
§peciala Fri. & Sat .Prime Rib. Fua Bar & W1na \.Jst
Chu Ho\rs ~ , 1 30-2 30 -Dinner Mon.&t. From 5;~. Vl98, Mlstercard, Diners Oub Located At 1695 lrwle
/we., (And 17tha) Nw Bloadlllstw Entertannent Co!lQI Mesa
(714) 646-7944
A10 THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996
Fas~on Island Mexican eatery co¢d_use some spicin'· up
By Carolyn Miller, Daily Pilot
0 ne of the few good things
about Tacos & Co. was the
bad boy.
No, not a screaming, naughty
child who makes you lose your
appetite and glare at the parents
Wishing they would do something
•tO end the misery.
• I'm talking about a double dose
'of charbroiled steak {minus the
"gristle), topped with cheddar
cheese, homemade salsa, fresh
avocado and lettuce all wrap~
up in a flaky flour tortilla.
This ~bad boy burrito" ($3.99),
as the Mexican eatery calls it, was
an eating experience that not only
didn't quake in my stomach after-
wards, but proved ·to be this
eatery's saving grace.
Ta~os & Co., a Mexican eatery
chain, is the newest ad,dition to
-Eas · d's Island Terrace
Food Court, conveniently situated
for movie-goers and shoppers
seeking a quick meal.
It opened a month ago and
offers a fast-food Mexican menu
that is healthy, but consequently,
lacks sizzle and spice.
The menu boasts robust salsas
made daily from fresh-picked pro-
~------~------------------~ I I
I F.Y.I. I I I I I : + WHAP. Teem a Co.• Mejd:. :
: can Mtllry : l + ..... Fashion ls_lnl. :
l Island T...-.c:e Food Court. :
: Newport c..nter Oriwt : l +tam: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. :
: Mondlly-s.turday, 9 1.m. to 8 :
: p.m. SUnday l
I + PRICE: fnev--k-I
I ....... --I : + FOOD: Mexican fest-food :
: that offers healthy selections :
I ' I '-----------·---------------..1
duce. The chick.en is boneless,
skinless and marinated in white
wine, fresh lemon juice and spices.
No lard or tropical oils are used
and chips and tostada shells are
prepared with canola oil.
These sounded like ingredients
I could eat virtually guilt-free and
the rice was ri ht. I decided to
put their take-out to the test on a
recent afternoon and ordered four
dishes to take home.·
In addition to the •bad boy bur-
rito" I ordered the fish taco with
Pacific red snapper ($1.99), the
"bllrrito Newport" ($3.39) and
enchiladas rojas. in red sa:t.ice,
($4.29).
In less than five minutes the
cooks, working in tandem with
deft prec:isio11i had the food piping
hot, boxed-up and ready to go.
They sent me away with a smile
and I didn't have to ask for silver-
ware and napkins.
So far so good. I arrived home a
few minutes later and laid out
what I hoped would be a satisfying
feast that would take my palate
south of the border. No such luck.
Well at least I didn't get what I
would call an authentic: dose, in
fact I got the mild, Americanized
version. However, I had to remind
myself this was fast food and
accept it for that.
I first opened one of my favorite
Mexican dishes; the enchilada in
red sauce. The last thing I was
expecting was an entree that
looked more like a wet towel and,
no surprise, tasted like bland, dam .
To further my disappointment,
there was just a splattering of red
sauce that tasted canned and left
my taste buds dormant. Arid
searching for the cheese filling
was about as futile as planning
your financial future around win-
ning the lottery.
This entree came with rice,
~
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Qr caring ~ae~ 10 }'Q.ll"tl!althcaremxk. We~ behirdoor
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We catirue 10 a:ki to oor list of tahh plans. To iJqJire al:x:u yoor ooverage, crto
make an awcii~ 1 lfnl, plealecall ~ Warml<ind Qnerrm;tcaweniert to yoo.
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Ol!la Mesi. CA cnti)fi
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~'11 Oeid\ CA '11ff1' (714) 72n.19"1
MEDICAL WEICHT
CONTROL
As featured In Allure and Reader's Digest ma~zrnm;1 Similar to a 4-vear m~~tto~~r r:i~ t~~;;, r~~Cfls. Acupunctur~ Included In co~ out Is optional. omouterlZed buuv fat ana ysls Is Included.
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Forever sllm weight
toss program
Program cost only
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(714) 263-2563
Newport Beh.
beans and a salad. The black
beans were delicious and tasted
healthy and homemade, but the
mini salad was forgettable. The
orange-yellow colored rice bicked
••••••••••••••••••• : Newport :
: BEAUTY SUPPLY:
: dannaloalOil : • . ~. . . -· : :£ ............... ¥:
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• 261-6788 : • • Jamboree at Bristol : • • Back Bay Court • .................. :
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
you into thinking it would be spicy,
but instead, was bl.and and sticky.
Unfortunately, the rice was the
main ingredient in the burrito
Newport, which sounded delicious
with the charbroiled chicken. 8-·
when I sunk my teeth into a bite /I
the burrito, all I tasted was rice. ;.
I bied again, and got the ~
results. Finally I opened the bunt·
to in pW'SUit of the polio. I found
some pieces, but hardly enougli t6
be satisfying or warrant the ~
billing of filling for this buntto. But
the chicken I did score was tMtV
and spicy, there just wasp"1
enough.
The fish taco was made Wjth
fresh Pacific red snapper. The ~
wasn't camouflaged with batter,
dressings and garnish. It was just
the fisli, some red cabbage im.4.
cilan\J'O, which complemented~
savory flavor of the fish inst~ 9'
hiding it. .
The menu is vast and al$o
includes breakfast, coffee includr
ed, served from 9 a.m. opening
time until 11:30 a.m. The breakfMt
burritos huevos rancheros and
Mexican omelette may be wo
giving this eatery a second chance.
In addition to a wide variety· ot
tacos and burritos, there are also
combination plates and Mexican
favorites such as nachos.
·For those in a huny, the food is
prepared quickly on spotless
premises and people are friendly .
Kristen's Summer Sale
Lingerie • Loungewear • Gifts • Breast Forms
Sale Starts
Thur~day, July 11th
\
Save on selected merchandise
throughout the store.
· Westcliff Court
631-SEXY (7399)
17 19 Westcliff Dr. • Newport Beach
MEMBERSHIP DICWDFJ:!
•New Man~ Oritnmlon • lS-Yatd Haud Pool • Ult o( Pitt
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THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996 A 11
c It was a night for the opera extensive Broadway credits. He
used his wit and charm to
enhance the auction portion -0f
the evening, helping to sell off
everything, including trlps to
Aspen and Italy. ®pera is a way of Ufe for
those who cherish the
experience. In Orange
'fpunty and around the world. ~usiast.s have created a
1HG5tyle to complement their pas-~ for the a.rt fonn that has sur-~ed hundreds of years of cultur-;»~ormation. The message of
;
ra transcends baniers of lan-
age to deliver an emotional
pact that often is based on the
~P.I_D.InOn denominator known
'.qlµte simply as the triumph or
~gedy of love. 1" For the love in opera and 'for
hie love of opera, supporters ral-W<i in Orange County to cele-
:rtr~te summer with good friends. tt was •An Enchanted Evening"
at the Peacock Hills Estate of
'h&ts p._m and Terry Niles as the
Opera Pad.fie Society of
PM:mders joyously unfolded their
11-0th anniversary Founden Gala
bonorin the la
Ctbson, founding chair of The
Opera Pacific Society of
flounders. ,
1•dKind words for Gibson flowed
:like fine wine in homage to her
dedication. Robert RJchenberg
.88id it best. *Though not of aris-
.tocracy, she had a regal air. Not
a,aogant, nor boastful, but with a
.quiet flair. The Opera Pacific
Company saw this lady at the
'
fore, as the enterprise was intro-
duced to backers, and what's
more, she started Opera
IFWnders with the help of hus-
d Bob, and worked with calm l istence, perfecting this big ·
I· " ·J
.. And a big job it was, over the
t decade, creating and per-
' ecting an opera company from ·~atch. Today. Orange County
1 can be proud that its own compa-
1 nf ranks among the finest in the I nation. With David Di Chiera as
general director, Opera Pacific I -rs;:
!gtA•)' OU9sg
t I BUY c •ELL USED CLDntE8,
, rove c ACCee110Atea, ETC .
• t 1984 N•wport Blvd. (tit 0.1 M•r)
• a.hind "'*' lkedon con. Mm. (714) 131-7313
I
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1 I
I
I
lH ·\ 1 I \ 11 l li' I
Lf ·\l'i\ ]( 1 IT .;1
I L.
0 FREE CLASSES
Juty 11 & 18 • 7:00 -8:30p.m
Thul"ldays
Costa Mesa Church of
Religious Science
2850 ~csa Vn& Dr. !!.tit
c.o.ta Meaa, CA 92626
.IUllVATIONS llQUlllD
l'l!AM CAU.
(714) 754-7399
b.w.
cook
has become the envy of many
communities.
With unwavering support from
citizens such as the Gibsons, Ellie
Faber and Mary llaymond, co-
chairs of the Society of Founders,
and Bogumlla ~ and Eve
summer event which raised in
excess of $100,000 for the Opera
chest, it is very clear that opera is
alive and very well in Orange
County.
Guests Ruth Ding, Richard
Deary, Catherine Thyen, Nancy
Sorosky, Margaret Price, Charles
Paap, Michael Lawler, Zee
Allred, Carol and Kent Wilken,
Gayle Wldyolar, Craig Brown,
Sigrid Hecht, and Nora and Jlm
li·osi··u·p·;:o: • •
Jobmon enjoyed a marvelous
summer alfresco dinner of chilled
gazpacho and rolled chicken
breast stuffed with spinach and
wild mushroom. Sped.al guest of
honor Karen Morrow visited with
locals amidst the verdant gardens
of the Giles estate. Morrow is set
to appear in the upcoming Opera
Pacific production of ·oie Fleder-
maus" this coming November.
Also in the crowd, the talent-
ed Charles NelJon Reilly. who
will direct w Die Flederrnous"
starring Morrow. Reilly, perhaps
best known for his comedic talk
and game show appearances in
the '70s and '80s, is an accom-
plished actor and director with
For Men
Allen Edmonds • Alden
• Bruno Magli • Sperry
• Sebago • Clark •
Mezlan • Johnston Murphy
• Walk-Over •
HEMPHILL'S SHOES
In Westcllff Court 1727 W.atcllff Dr., NB 650·6856
Underwriting for lbe affair
came from Jeanette Segentrom,
Geraldine and Walter Schroeder,
and the Gene Wlddlcombe fami-
ly. Corona del Mar's Marilyn
Bean on hand with the Lewis
Barbes of Balboa Island, the
Peter N.S. Annands of the New-
port Coast, the Robert Dlllmans
of Newport Beach, Goe Gaster in
from Beverly Hills, tedge and
Ginny Hale, James and Margaret
Hamilton and the Honorable
Betty Lou Lamoreaux.
Bravo I
• B.W. COOK'S columns run every
Thursday and Saturday.
North Carolina deep discount II
prices at a
Southern Ca lifornia address.
·HEMPHILL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224
230 East 17th St.. Costa Mesa
: 1 o· LBS : -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --- -- • : • : I I • • i IN J DAYS! I : :
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by Deedreea Rich, D.D.S.
GET THE KEY
Three ouc of four adults have
bacceriaJly infected gums. A milky
buildup of bacterial plaque
produces toxins that cawe
infecccd gums and bad brt"ath. ln
time, the ms uU awa from
t e tee to orm p ecs t at 1
with more plaque and tarcar and
eventually detach deeper at the
bone. The good news is that
deaning around llnd beneath the
gum lint regttlarly is the luy. To
prevenc infeccion, clean with
brush, floss or other aids 3 to 5
minuccs. The typical American
brushes for 37 seconds.
• . • dlsmunt Drices.
I 1 Exd~ Awda, 11erma10gtca, I
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WITHTHIS
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Gala chairs Eve Foussard (left} and Bogumlfa Basu at the Gala
with company director David DlChlera. 1b1s year's event cele-
brated Opera Pacific's 10th anniversary.
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(,,,_ ,.,,,,. a r ~ MM4i ...... /w
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Residents arc friendly, wcll~ucaccd and widdy
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...
,
POOR QUALl1Yi ,,.
A12 THURSDAY,. JULY 11, 1996 ORIGINAL:
forwn
FAX: 7t
. ,
• IN
We asked Daily Pil.Ot readers what they thought Of the T-sbiit diSplay at the Fun & Sun store
.,, at the BalbQ? Fun Zone. Here are a few of their responses:
~' T here is no doubt in anybody's mind
· " that it's lewd and ridiculous to
show that kind of thing in a store
• front ~when just up the street a
ways at the 7-EleveD they have to put
a break and be happy that some tax
money is being spent into the dty. The
whole place there looks like a dwnp
'anyway so who cares what the T-shirts
say. I've seen those T-shirts, people are
wearing them and enjoying them.
to take them by that place Deca\119 tt
degrades the whole place. More tmpor-
taJlt. I take my niece's to the tun ZGDe
every time they come over to take
them on rldal and I amge'.,_, time I
see children looldDg ai tllole T4ditll: • their Playboy magazines behind the cor-
ner so the little kids can't read it and any·
-thing on the front cX Playboy doesn't hold
SUSAN CLADU!BORN
Newport Bea.ch
Justa coUpl8 d weea•I wasa...
w1th my Diec:m Bel tbim-.. a mjpe
• •
· shirts in th.at shop down there.
The thing that saddens me the most is
that you ran an article a.bout it Because
When you do that, he rubs his hands
together down there because people .
come to see what kind of filthy T-shirts
T he T-shirts have been in that window
since l have been in high school
which was about four years ago. I think
they should be taken out of the window
and out of view of children's eyes beca~
them is so much out in the world aheady.
were pointing and taDdDg end tlytng to
read what the T-shirts wae saying.
They are just ablolute!y dilQulting
and they are displayed right at eye kw-
el for children. I'm not a prude, there is
a place for that stuff and even U it is
inlide the store, they don't bother me I
just don't believe they should be dis-
played where there are children and a
-be has and be just makes more money.
So we haven't really accomplished
anything by running the article, but
since you asked my. opinion, I'm giving
it to you.
LEO DEMPSEY
Balboa
They don't need to go down and
enjoy the beach and see stuff like that in
the window. It is about time they take it
out If they want to sell it, go ahead and
keep it in the store, but in the window,
put another display. It is kind of lewd.
lot of children all the tii:ne. · •
It's just really out of line.
SUZANNE BLOOM
&lboa Peninsula JULIE KINLEY
Costa Mesa
I t is my opinion the T-shirts are very
lewd and they should be removed
from the window.
T here is absolutely nothing wrong
with those shirts, they are laughable. nus is another example of the merchants
down in Balboa wondering why business
in the downtown looks like it died.
It is because they want people to send
their money by mail and stay home. It is
time for those people down there to real-
ize they don't own the wqrld. They want
the money, but they don't want to give
people what they want.
JEROME SNYDER
Costa Mesa
I tbink the T-shirts should be removed
from the display windows, but if they
wanted to sell it imide their Jtore, t
SUppole that would be all ~ht. But I
do think it is poor taste to have them
displayed in ~windows.
I
I
If the shirts were lewd, than they
wouldn't be selling. Give this poor guy
. gains
INDEPENDENCE DAY
Once upon a time the Fourth of
July spoke of violence more than it
did peace and freedom. But those
days in Newport Beach seem to be·
history. This past Independence Day
was another perfect example. No
major problems. No civil disobedi-
ence. A few arrests to be sure, but
that's to be expected when an extra
140,000 people try to squeeze into
presence, revelers had nothing but
praise for the cops. "The cops are
really being cool,· one local noted.
THE JURY'S IN
Costa Mesa scored a legal coup
of sorts when the Whittier College
Law School agreed to move here
from its current headquarters in Los
Angeles. The school, which would
become the county's first fully-
accredited law school, had toyed
with the notion of moving into
Irvine. Significantly, city officials
billed the school's pending arrival as
the area's biggest education devel.
opment since the founding of UCI.
ONE MORE TIME
Joe Erickson, Costa Mesa's popu·
lar mayor who had hinted be mJght
pack up his political bags to invest
more time with his family,
I 'm just so happy that somebody else
has picked up on this and is trying to
do something about it. We live in a very
beautiful place, it's a resort type setting.
When I have relatives come from out
of town. I am absolutely embarrassed
OUR VIEW
MltS. VICl'OR YACK
Newport Beach
I bave been to the store before -I was
standing there with my two grand-.
daughters, at the time they were 1 and
Good news for
local residents:
very few lnd-
dents during
the Fourth of
July holiday
celebratton
(left); and the
Orange Coun-
ty Fair (below)
ls ready to fiy
beglnning Fri-
day.
announced this week that be will
seek a second term. ·ru never be a
great Little League or soccer coa~.
This is the best way I can try to fit
in." While welcome news for his
vast fan club, the announcement
could put a chill on some hopefuls
who've been eyeing a run for coun-
cil this November.
in kindergarten through third grade.
The elementary ratio in Newport-
Mesa is currently 29-to· 1..
IT'S BACK
Good news. The Orange County
Fair -the 104th version -opens Fri-
day.
Cl.ASS SIZE
Yes there is a nice local applica-
tion to the adoption of Gov. Pete
Wilson's state budget. School dis-
tricts such as Newport-Mesa will
have a financial incentive to reduce
class size to 20 student per teacher
correspondence
Not too happy with library board appointment .
I• t used to be that whenever there is
• an opening for the Library Board of
' li'ustees, or any city committee for
that matter, the Daily Pilot would pub·
lish notification of the opening with
etccompa.nying details for application
and the deadline.
• That ls bow l found out about the
library board opening to which I
JlPPlied in 1995. I was not chOMn for
en interview in 1995, but received a
nice letter from the city suggesting
that J try again at some futwe date.
: When I WU notified of the 1996
~g by the dty. I updated my file
~d th1I time was selected to be lnter-
Viewed. Out of 17 applicants, six of us
were chosen tor interviews and of
piose six, Joanne Lombardo and I
were nom1nateCl by the screening eommtttee to the City Coundl.
J wu thrilled and at the same thne
Jlumbled to be nominated for 1uCh an
~t position. t wu pleued that
aiy academic, profenional and com-
munity resume had moved me to the
flont of tbe group. Though I have nev·
m m.t Lombardo, I bow ol her WOik
CID the • biQ trailt comm'tt ... "
• I can only UIUlll8 that the wOuld
kDOW of me~ my efforts u Vice •
president of the Citizen's Budget Advi-
sory Committee for Newport-Mesa
Unified School District. The field
seemed pretty level, and t looked for-
ward to the best lady winning.
1 made my telephone calls, met
with and sent letters to members of
the City Council end then flew \o
Boston for a two week business trip.
Being out of town, I miased the
June U City Council meeting. So,
this morning 1 went off to Mariner's
Ubrary to read last week's Daily
Pilott (llbrarie1 being bandy for back
newspaper issues) to find out who
•won."
l cannot describe my surprise at dis·
covertng that someone who hod not
even been nominated at the ctty
Coundl'• June 10 meeting bad
recetved the appo11itm41Jlt.
While I would have gradC7\llly
"lost" to Lombardo, loslilg to Jim
Wood ii anno~q.
Apperently being a tenund profes·
10t at Orange Cout College, ntdplent
of t.hte8 national teedUng' awardl, an
inductee In the 1991 •Who's Who
Among Alwkw'I ~ •••• JMID•
ber and oftlCer of tbe •ementiOned
commlttle, and a...., VOlUDteer for ,
three yea.rs was simply not enough.
I lacked two important albeit
unmentioned qualifications necessary
for appointment to this board: wealthy
mends and political connections.
Had I understood this I would not
have applied, for this or any other dty
committee. It ii obvious, at least-to me,
that there is no system set by the City
Council based upon merit to be fol·
lowed and honored.
AppolntJJlents are simply a matter
of who knows who.
SUSAN L SMl11I
Newport Beach
The two women Unalllta nominated.
for appointment to the Newport Beech
Public Ubra.ry Board ot 'nulteel were
ignored by four members of the Ctty
Coundl in favot of 4 lalt-mlnute dHl
to malte yet another Poundatlon board
member a nu.tee ol tbe Ubrary.
Who ii numlng th1ngl in ow dtyf
Can the City Coundl and library be
bou9.bt1 It I time the UIU81 .,.....,. and
lhuen• moved over to give the ..i
of UI 8 cl>anc:e.
9. We were jujt looking at the sblrti
and] got IO einbur81Md whim ttMJf
were Nllding what I wu.reading wbeil
I realised wbat it WU .
I tblnk It ii very otfemive and lt dOM
not belaDg tbere, espedaDy in line With
Ula mrnm.l aeationl that are there.
CbOdrea ere all around and I would
M Y husband and I would like to see
tbe T-shirtJ that are olfensive to us
and others to be taken out d the window
at the Pun and Sun. We have Jong felt
they showed the wrong idea ot our city.
Put them in the adult-only section
inside the store so that children and
visitors espedally will not be subjected
to them.
BAJlBARA MACADAM
Newport Beach
T hese days talent is so rare that
comedians act as if they JJ1USl resort
to lewd and even obscenely suggestive
topicl in order to be successful.
That is nonsense; smut is' not true
hwmor. The Fun &. Sun owner .states
that the T-shirts account for a larger
part of his profits and that bis store's
business declined SQ% when he
stopped selling them for a weekend
and then sky rocketed when the Tl
shirts were back on display.
Ume to put it 1D JOU{ paper.
I find nothing oftemive with mw· ·
cb.andise in any store window up and
down the peninsula or on Balboa llland ..
-business is business. The only peop'8
who complain are the people who haft •
been locked 1D their homes too kqJ
and they are afraid of other peopl8 :v
making some money.
DENNIS HOOlttJM •
Newport BMdl
I work in Ne~ Beach. I think tbe
'{·shirts are inappropriate. We are
talking about a.n area which is villled
by young people. If you are oaiy deal-
ing with adults, maybe that seme OI
humor is a bit low and that maybe ftDa. ~
But my feeling ii that we don, need ID
expoee our cbildreD to enymore lewdr sr
or vuJgadtyr there is plmty d it mound
00 the media. 'Ibey lboukl pit I In ....
back. Newport bu a name and ieputa-
tion and I think it sbouJd be kept up.
MONICA Dl!Tl'-8Eltl.I!
Mission Ylejo-
readers respond
Keep up the fight
• Readers say stopping treated
sewage from being dumped into
the bay should be high priority.
Wake up folks. The state water
board's approval of the IRWD's
treated sewage water plan was a
forgone conclusion.
Time and again local, state and federal . . .
public interest sell us out to favor busi-
ness interests solely focused upon maxi-
mizing profit.
The IRWD issue is a microcosm of
what's happening throughout the world.
In Southern California, in order to pro-
tect a narrow agribusiness interest, we've
seen thousands of people repeatedly
sprayed with malathion, a pesticide of
questionable safety. People protested
and cities filed lawsuits to protect their
inhabitants as there was ample evidence
people bad been made ill and the pesti·
cide hadn't been adequately tested.
And the taxpayers? They were paying
for the choppers and pesticide that
placed them at risk as well as the legal ·
effort mounted to stop itl
So what can we do in the face of these
overwhelming odds? Sure, we can hold
protest meetings, solicit public support
and otherwise make our voices heard,
but in the final analysis we don't pack the
lobbying clout of corporate interests-We
have to fight smarter rather than harder.
Here is a suggestion ... why don't we
see to it that our legislators introduce (or
use the initiat,ive process it necessary)
legislation which will compel all state
agencies which make decisions with
environmental impact do the following:
Incorporate within the agency a suitable
body of environmental representation
that is independent of the agency but
which has the power to review and
approve or disapprove agency decisions.
If a decision is disapproved it's back to
the drawing board. In this manner the
public's general lnterelt, lacluding health
and safety, will be protected against the
corrupting influence of the miqbty dollar.
Modem technology with all lts bless ..
ings also bu the potential for massive
pollution or outright deltruction. The
public risk ii \oo large to have faith lil
corporate c:la.bm ot safety or to depend
upon agendel such u the water board.,
Agriculture Depanmem or Department of
Health Services, etc., to~~
Costa Mesa
ram a bur ~tot the JRwo·.
J)len ot dumptng treated MWage into the
Newport Bay. I think it ii ~lame ot
theiD to put water into the bay that ii pg to affect envtronmental ecosys·
telnl. Le. the tresb wets wow.t c;heDge
tbe ldnity ID the.._ decttng ~
biill; bird .... and iUd1.
-=~:i~~
ID ~dle---~::I: ~ ,,.
'(,
.
the water into a gray water project to mq
gate the golf courses and such that are • •
being built right now. :
In the area of Irvine itself, l think ~
Irvine needs to take a look at bow they ..
better plan their future growth and wheie
that water is going to go. I think that a Ji!
of people don't understand that 5 milli~
today is going to be 50 million or 500 me
lion at some point in the future once wa. t
·ve them the n Ii ht. ••
e o ave to think about health
concerns with the dumping of the water ..
Why not doing it all year round? I think:·
that bacterias and especially the hepatt91
organisms that are out these days. I ~
they are afraid to dump it in the summer.;.
They will tell you that they are takinf•
the algae out of the water and making :
the bay more palatable for the tourism: t:
but in effect them dumping it in the winit-
ter because other stonns are going to
coming in and help diluting those org
isms and such and that is also when th<
ba.y is not in use. •
I don't think they appreciate what ~
area has to offer. I don't think they ......... ..._
should have the final say. I think the
community itself should have the flnal •
say for what is good for the community.
Let's bring politics back home w~
the results are better realized by better •
people with better minds with the inf or
mation that it takes to make those ded • ..
sions that affect the area like this.~·
JEFF HO
&lboa
The dty of Newport Beach and ....
Defend the Bay must continue the fight,. •
against IRWD's sewage.
l spent a frustrating eight boun on • ~ •
Monday Ustening to the clear, cogent :
presentations of world-dus ldentilts ac (
they delineated the dangers of dumping ( ·~
treated sewage into our bay only to bav~
the regional board vote dedslvely to . :
ignore their testimony and approve the • S
project. ~
Since the law requires that any suc:h: '
projed lbow beneftt to lhe bay I would ·
have believed that wordl of such hJgbly •
acclaimed men and women cond~
. the project in its poor ldence would ba1'
swayed the votes of the board member. r
Unfortunately, it did not. lb give up ·
now ii to concede the bay u ad~
ground for IRWD. Tbe line must be •
drawn In the sand now or not at all. SUSAN~~
• l am bavtng l8riOuJ thoiaghtl aboUt
our Cttl' CouDdl. WhJ la Jeen Wiit ...
Ing to stand UoDe wblD .. Npl JI •
the major and Che maptty ~ IM\t\Dwd
OD du. IUbjedf
It c:au1d \9.IM aty cwlll(.11 ..._, pu
lilbeCI aD tbat II lmowl aDd tbly 1mOW
IOiDeddDa l don't Dow, ..........
M .tbef,J.mim.dt..v.• till*
lboald ··•••to ... n...-.. m9tDtielbelllClll .... __ .,
9'1tDdM9.I_, ... _, ·&I ....... ..,.
BUGS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
been aa:unn!lating the insect speci-
meri.t-botb alive and dead-b"the
p15tstxmootbsinms m1e $bug oocr-
diniltt fer the fair: It h& not been
without cmualties.
His first days on the job, he
noted a sick African millipede
that had been purchased by
another employee at a local pet
store weeks before.
"The store bad told them to
feed it crickets, but millipedes are
vegetarian," Carey said. ·It was
starving to death." ..
The large millipede was the
Bug Barn's first fatality, and
Carey said be still feels bad about
the loss. The current millipede,
nicknamed an original "Millie,•
receives a diet of lettuce and
potato slices.
Most of the Bug Barn's live
exhibits are not poisonous, Carey
said, noting his selection of whip
scorpions, which have a non-poi-
sonous whip on their tailS instead . .
I
ons, which look like scorpions on
steroids, but have little poison.
"That's one of the reasons I
chose them, so no one would be
dying on the job, most of all me,•
quipped Carey, who plans to
study entomology at UC River-
. side this fall.
Carey is no stranger to scorpi-
on bites, though.
While working as a tour guide
at a butterfly garden in Mon-
teverde, Costa Rica, last year,
Carey was stung twice on the
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J\LIGNMENT
..
back by a desert hairy scorpion.
Neither sting left any damage, he
said:
But just to be sure none of the
fair's tiny culprits escape and
wreak havoc ,on the ,rest of the
lair's festivities, Carey locks the
tops of all the insect cages behind
the front wall facade.
It's a good thing, or a long cen-
tipede. with poison front claws
could be scaring the bejeezus out
of some busy fair workers.
A few weeks ago, Carey was
~orking to re~ate temperatures
a tough job considering every
insect has different requirements.
He tried placing a heat rock in
the centipede's glass prison just
as he had done for several of the
spiders.
But centipedes have more of a
vertical advantage than spiders,
as Carey discovered ·the next
morning when he looked in on
his critters and discovered the
wile centipede hanging on to the
mesh lid upside down W,ith its
legs. ·
And while the~. cen-
tipede and hissing ~ches
are sure to draw crowds, many
more interesting exhibits lie in
waiting in the back room behind
the colorful displays.
•1 have back-ups for my back-
ups, just in case some of them
die," Carey said, noting his
spineless guests' short lifespan.
Carey's water display was sup·
posed to include three water bee-
tlet. That was until the male bee-
tle died leaving two females
swimming around a pink castle in . .
goldfish.
Normally a male insect's
untimely departure wouldn't be
that big of a deal, except this par-
ticular male water beetle was
carrying eggs on his back, like
male water beetles are supposed
to do. ' ........__,.
"I'm looking into whether the
eggs are still viable," said Carey,
standing over the dead beetle
floating in the. water. "The eggs
don't get nourishment from the
males, so · they may be able to
·Newport
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THURSDAY. JULY 11, 1996
batch later."
-One egg sack did hatch thil
week, surprising Carey with NV· I
eral hundred unexpected~·
Carey had captured a biaclt 1
widow under a crate on the aide ot the barn weeks ago for an
ahibit to educate Orange Coun-
ty residents about dangeIS lw'k-
Vl9 in their backyards.
But much to Carey's surprise,
the spider spun an egg sack
which hatched before he cotlld
destroy it. The plastic prison's
walls were left covered with baby
black widows, each the size of a
tiny tide.
Though Carey said be will
.destroy the mother and her poiso-
nous newborns, he already has a
back-up, discovered under Q(( another wooden crate, for the
educational exhibit.
Project/Part-
ners of the
Americas and
the American
Association of
Women in
Community
Colleges, to
name a few.
· And that's what he hope$ to CONTINUED FROM A 1
accomplish with ' interesting bugs -education
"Maybe some kids get inter-
ested in collecting, but hopefully
what will happen is after visiting
us, people won't take out the
insect spray and try to kill every
I •
"Maybe they'll take the time to
. look at the bug and. see if it's a
good bug protecting their gar-
dens or a bad bug eating their
plants."
I
•• HUNDREDS OF FABULO~S PIECES I
TO CHOOSE FROM
•• HUNDREDS OF FRAMES TO I I CHOOSE FROM I
•• HURRY ... SALE ENDS SOON!!! I
I PIERSIDE GALLERY I
I 722-8644 . I I 1671 PLACENTIA AVE I
L CO~AMESA ..I -------
degrees in English from the Uni-
versity of Portland and a master's
in organizational development
from Pepperdine University. Grat-
ton has also been involved in
the Consortium for Institutional
Effectiveness in the Cmnmunity
College, the American Association
of Community Colleges, the Inter-
national Community Education
Gratton will
L. Mcilwain,
OCC's vice president of adminis-
trative services, who has been fill-
ing in as interim president since
January.
That's tuned
into you.
If you've got an interest, Comcast Cablevision has
a channel for you, like: ftrSt-dcm drama and
biographies on l&E. The intriguing on TH
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technology on Dlscevwy 0.. 11. Commertial-
free family hits on n.. ~ a ... , -now
on Standard Service! The fos1eSt news on CNN
and much more.
THURSDAY. JULY 11, 1996
CONTINUED FROM A 1
nie Irvine Co., which owns the land.
,, And in the Castaways, across the bay on
Doter Drive, .waiting lists are filling up even
though construction on those 119 homes has-
n't even begun. The Irvine Co. also owns this
land and is offering an Eastem-seaboard-
looking ho~e that will start in the high
$500,000's.
It's · been years since the company has
enjoyed such rapid sales of a newly release<l
home development, said Rudy SVTcek the
5ellior vice president of sales and marketing
fQr The Irvine Co.
Svrcek credits this success to a healthier,
improving economy where there is job growth
and a recovering real estate market, plus the
novelty of a new product in a mature city.
Harbor Cove, also known as the Newporter
North site, and the Castaways are the last two
undeveloped land parcels in the city. The
Newport Coast south of the city is still unin-
corporated although the city hopes to annex it.
"This particular location compounds the
demand because of the lack of supply of new
housing in Newport Beach and this one of
kind location," Svrcek said.
live within a 10-mile radius of the develop-
ments -had no reservations about plunking
down a portion of the half a million dollar
price tag to secure them a home in Harbor
Cove slated to be comple ted this fall.
A second phase of the Promenade homes
will be re leased next month and there are no
worries they too won't sell as fast as mid-court
Lakers tickets.
r .
While some may question the affordability of
a home that ranges from $400,000 to $500,000
for as much as 2,727 square feet, there is no
argument about the beauty of the Harbor Cove
development at Jamboree and Arch Bay Drive
which overlooks Newport's Back Bay and faces
the city lights of Newport Center.
The Promenade, which will offer a total of 87 . .
er product also in Harbor Cove called #The Pal-
isades.• These 62 homes, which off er a closer
view o1 the bay, range in prices from $500,000
to $800,000 for 2,500 to 3,370 square feet.
.The entire development, built by Standard
Pacific Homes, has a Mediterranean flavor
that boasts houses in colors of terra cotta, mel-
on and wheat, topped with Spanish tiles.
Although the houses in both developments
seem dose together, high ceil-
The new
Irvine Co.
homes in the
Harbor Cove
development
are beglnning
to take shape.
MARC MARTIN
IOAILY PILOT
ings, reoessed lighting, and broad windows fram-
ing the natural beauty of the bay below are easy
selling points.
The Palisades offers luxuries like fireplaces
in the master bedrooms, generous walk-in
closets and spacious kitchens that flow into
the family ~~a make for comfortable dining
"No this isn't a basketball court, it's a mas-
ter bedroom," said Svrcek, stepping into the
unfinished room and sweeping his arms like a
game show host exhibiting a prize.
"Let's go out there and have a glass of wine
and some cheese on the balcony, dear," he
said, pointing to the frame of a master bed-
room balcony overlooking the bay as if he was
the new owner.
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6:30 a.m. -6:30 p.m.
(714) 971-5533
WE WILL SOLVE YOUR
FLEA PROBLEM ••• GUARANTEED
The Breakaway Cat Flea Collar ~ects your car
from fleas to< 5 monfhs Thrs colkv haS a safery buckle
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Everything Must Go!
Up to 60% OJ/ Storewide ...
Annalee -Hummel -Hagara -Dolls
-Memories Of Yesterday ·~
While most of our fixtures and antique furniture pieces are
for sale, some may not be available until the final week.
Sale excludes the Walt Disney Classics Collection.
Final Two Weeks!
Closing 7I1 8 /96 !
9Vrteuert . CZfkl ettds
Eastbluff Village In Newport Beach • 644-1474
--
REHAB
CONTINUED FROM A 1
three-bedroom home at 2177
Vista Entrada.
lmtead of exchanging the usu-
al pleasantries and offering infor-
mation, Marchese told the inquir-
ing neighbor that she couldn't
disclose who she was or who
would be living there. ·
The Bluffs association, along
with help from their attorney, a.re
seeking answers as to whether
this type of business use is legal
in their neighborhood and what
rights they have as homeowners.
David Moreh ead, program
director for eartskober Manor,
said gamb · g is one of the fastest
growing a dictions in the coun-
try. Mor ead describes the
potenti clients, or patients, ~
"high ctioning people" such
as stock brokers and bankers.
The pricey recovery progtam is
not covered by insurance, he said.
"This is a. group of people who
can afford it. The are ve .
responsible people trying to deal
with a problem," he said. "It
would be a quiet environment -
no electrical shock treatment, no
one running in the street a.i:id no
la*8nla ... ; ... $12
~ ......... ~~ ....... ....,,
one held against their Will. U they
want to leave they can.•
The Heartskober Manor -
which applied as a mental health
facility -was granted a bUSiness
license by the city in May. How-
ever, businesses licenses raise
revenue and do not have to g
through an formal approval
process, said City Manager Ke
Murphy.
In a group care home. as long _ ,
as the ntimber of paUents, or :
clients, does not exceed six, the •
city cannot do anything to regu-
late it, Murphy said. A few years
ago, despite opposition from the
city, the state took over local con-
trol of such facilities, be said.
The city has received inquiries
from several residents and plans
to investigate the care facility and
insure that it meets state stan-
dards, Murphy said.
Several state agencies -
including Community Care -
Licensing, the Department of· "'
Social Services and the Mental '
Health Department -had no -
record of a facili licensed under
t name. owever, e state
Board of Behavioral Science did. ; .
have records of Marchese as a
licensed associate social worker
in Long Beach.
~ •............ ~(,
DHLP+f' ........ $10
~ ........ ~~()
flD tOlb, 6 .-tOts....,,
• -
..... _ ....... ,......., ... 22 .........
. ~ .!· ... , -~ ~ ............. :· .... : : ? f ~ :
f" I
7. -~ . . _,/
EYE-Off EN ER
Costa Mesa American All-Star
Major little Leaguers bounce back
b arry
faulkn er
.Prime rib
Corona del Mar resident
set for fifth straight
Olympic Games
. co~petition.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
C ORONADELMAR-
Connie Paraskevin-
Young was bom
patriotic. And for the
fifth consecutive quadrennium,
she will be mar~g with .her
Opening Ceremonies.
Paraskevin-Young, who
turned 35 on the Fourth of July,
qualified for the 1996 Atlanta
Games in women's sprint
cycling, her third consecutive
trip to the Olympics in that
event.
Paraskevin-Young
made the U.S. Winter
Olympic team in 1980
and 1984 es a speed
skater, before going to
the 1988 and '92
Summer Games as a
sprint cyclist.
An 11-time national
champion, as well as
the '88 bconze-medal
winner at the Seoul
Connie
Games, Paraskevin-Young
qu~ed ~ year by defe~ting
Wis., in the match-sprint final
last month in a competition of
two-sport standouts in the U.S.
Olympic Cycling Tuals at the
Lehigh County Velodrome in
'Irexlertown, Pa., where only one
American advanced.
Paraskevin-Young, of
Corona del Mar, won the
best-·<>f-three competition
in consecutive sprints,
coming from behind in
the first race and holding
off Witty in the second.
Witty, also from the
speed-skating industry
-she won the World
Cup speed-skating sprint
championship in
February -has looked
up to Paraskevin-Young for
many years.
Olympics in Barcelona, where
Paraskevin-Young was
disqualified, Witty house sat for
her mentor.
-Paraskevin-Young, who has
said this will be her final
Olympics competition, is
--
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"'You cant reall/J P'J# up w OllJfmpla In your°""' ~
11U tbM. l'm "'°"" to bring ltoma tM gold ...•
-C't'CLJST aJNN1E MRASKEVIN-}f)(}NG
coached by her husband, Roger
Young.
"Erika (Salumae) and I are
the old ladies (on the circuit),"
Par~kevin-Young said of her
·Olympic swan song, while
referring to the 1992 gold
medalist from Estonia.
Salumae was the first
Estonian to achieve such an
Olympic feat since the country
became independent from the
former Soviet Union.
•You can't really pass up the
Olympics in your own country,• . . . .
time, I'm ready to bring home
the gold."
Following Paraskevin-Young's
disappointing result at the
Barcelona Games four years ago
• SEE CONNIE PAGE 83
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Women's
sprint cycling
All.ANTA
July 19-Aug. 4
'96
A continuing series on our
athletes' uest for Gold
~-------------------------~
canm.~ ...
the best
of friends -----------------------------------------------I . • -----------------------,
•South All-Stars get a
big boost from benefactors
as they gird for Friday
night's big showdown.
B onding is an important
occurrence for any football
team, but an abbreviated
all-star alliance usually renders
this process problematic for the
North and South squads in the
annual Orange County
showdown.
South Coach Mark
Cunningham, however, ·has tried
to accelerate this process with
the help of three Balboa
benefactors.
Cunningham, his staff, and
his players were treated to a
prime rib dinner and harbor
cruise Wednesday night, with
Mike Kim, the owner of
Dillman's Restaurant in Balboa,
Bob Black, associated with the
Catalina passenger service and
Ray Felix, a local philanthropist,
picking up the tab.
•In talking to some ]>Mt
all-star coaches, they told me
they would have liked to have
found more ways to get the kids
together off the practice field,•
Cunningham said. •Any time
you can get people together and
have fun, it's going to build
camaraderie."
Cunningham praised his
along, but admits additional
social interaction might just be
the difference in corning out on
top Friday night at Orange Coast
·College.
"One coach told me about his
experience coaching in this
game, when the players all got
together for a party and there
was a big fight,· Cunningham
said. "The players all came to
each other's aid and nobody was
hurt. But the coach told me the
incident really brought them
together." a
lbings hardly came together
for South offensive lineman
Sherif Pepic during his senior
campaign at Newport Harbor
High.
Coming off All-CIP Southern
Section Division V, first-team
All-Sea View League and
All-Newport-Mesa District
recognition, not to mention a
t 14-0 CIF championship season
• in 1994, the 6-foot-2,
240-pounder admitted the
Sailors' 4-6 season last fall was
as disappointing individually as
it was from a team standpoint.
"I didn't play to the level I
expected of myself,• said Pepic,
who did earn first-team
all-league and bis second
~aight all-district selection. ·1
was never able to pinpoint what
it was, but for some reason, I just
never reached my peek.•
Pepic, added to the South
roster after Irvine's Joel Sugg
opted to compete in the Shrine
· . All-Star Game, Mid he
appreciates the second chance
to finish hii pntp career on a
positive note. •
•After lut season ended, I
told myself I would never let that
happen again. For as long u I'm
able to play football., I'm going to
I
37th orange county ~II-star high school football game
South All-Star Josh Walz moves out tn a passing route during Rebels' pradlce session.
Walz ready
foran · g
that comes
• Corona del Mar's ·Mr. Versatile will apply his wares for the
final time before hometown crowd at the 37th All-Star Game.
By Barry faulkner, Daily Pilot
H aving mastered rushing
and passing, Josh Walz,
the catalytic quarterbaC.W
out of Corona del Mar
High, will tum his considerable •
athletic talent to receiving in Friday
night's 37th Orange County All-Star
Football Game at O~e Coast
College.
Or, maybe thaJ's just what South
Coach Mark Camlingham would
#I'm having a lot of fun at
receiver, but they've got a couple
plays lined up for me at quarterback,
anlt a couple gadgets where I'm
throwing the ball," said Walz. whose
pass-catching opportunities last fall
came only at the expense of
opposing quarterbacks as a
ball-hawking comerback.
#Hopefully, I'll have a chance to
make an impact.•
Impact was not an expansive
enough word to describe Walz's
contribution as a Sea King-senior,
when he amassed a school
single-season total offense record of
2,249 yards, threw for a school
record-tying 12 touchdowns, rushed
for 11 more, and returned one of his
four interceptions to paydirt.
A three-year varsity starter, bis
first full season at quarterback
~~..-----~·-~,~-... ·---~--' ~
I
' : they've got a coUple l pJaya lined up for me
: at quarterback, and a
I : couple gadgets where i I'm throwing the ball. i
f Hopefully, I 'll have a f
resulted in 101completionsin174
passing attempts for 1,452 yards. He
also rushed/scrambled for 797 yards
on 125 carries. His 3,285 career
yards of total offense left him just 65
shy of the school record and his
myriad skills
helped the Sea Kings produce a
school single-season record 366
points.
CdM's nine wins in 13 contest
was also the third most in school
history, as the Sea Kings pushed
favored Servile to the brink of
elimination before falling in a CIF
• SEE WALZ. PAGE 84
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. •
l\fillen is King of the Mountain once more
• Newport Beach's Rod Millen
cashes in again at Pikes Peak,
averaging 15 mph up 12.42-mile
course, but comes up short in an
attempt at the 10-minute barrier.
By Jim Walters, Daily Pilot
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -Pikes
Peak is one of the world's natural woiiders
that has continued to capture the
imaginations of innumerable generations
extending back into the earliest known
realms of Native Ametican folklore.
Count Newport Beach's Rod Millen ~ among the throng that bas been unable to
' resist the mountain's allure.
• _ _ Unlike most who come to experience the
_ beauty and the power of Pikes Peak, Millen
-looks at the monolith as a gravel-based race
, -cowse to be conquered. It's a test of ~ precision and speed that traverses 18
, switchbacks, with 157 turns, rising
. .
precariously from it's 9,930-foot starting line ~to the 14,110-foot summit where an errant
ng y .
There's no brick wall barrier like at Indy.
There's only wide-open spaces and gravity.
"You're driving a one-ton, four-wheel
drive vehicle with 800 horse power on a dirt
, road on the side of a mountain," Millen said.
• u Believe me, your eyes are big ahd wide
open all the time."
Over the past 12 yea.rs, Millen has been
one of the best at walking the
tightrope on this truly unique
raceway, winning again this
past week in the unlimited
class despite the mystical
10-minute barrier eluding his
reach.
Millen, who set the record
of 10:04.06 in '94, finished this
year's International Hill Climb
in 10:13.64.
"I never really thought
about the 10-minute barrier:.
but after everybody started
putting importance on it, I said
'Ok I'll try for it this year,"'
Millen said. "I think it will
happen, but the mountain will be the one
that decides when."
Millen reached top speeds of 129 m.p.b;
in his Pennzoil/I'oyota Celica GT, averaging
a good freeway speed of about 75 m.p.h.
over the 12.42-mile course.
"The course was faster on bottom. but it
got slippery on the top part of the mountain
so you really needed to concentrate to keep
the car on the road," Millen said. "I made
•That's a lot of bar~ work. It's all gravel '
and very slippery. As you might guess,
balance is extremely important."
Millen finished second in '95 to Nobuhiro
Tajima. The pair flip-flopped this year with
Tajima finishing second in 10:21.88.
"Every year is a new challenge," he said.
"Last year, the weather was so bad they had
paved track."
Of an his races, Millen said the four-day
Hymalayan Off-Road Rally is probably the
most challenging, aossing some of the
highest mountains in the world. averagbig
40m.p.b.
"Speed isn't as big factor as at Plk8I
Peale.• be said. "There, It's flnitlhtno tbe race.•
r
li~le league _..
I l
I • Perrine fillS the bilL
I
. Costa· Mesa American i
• I I : . . 10 5' i npsW~r, -1
• I ~ • Little Leaguers will go with their ace, Nick Cabico,:
! today at 5 in a do-or-die contest against Seaview . • . . . . By Barry Faulkner. Dal/}' Pilot . .
: W E S T -"M' 1. ~-•. ! MINSTER -.....,..~
: Even with its ace in the hole, the
: Costa Mesa American Major
: Division Little League All-Stars ! managed to display a winning
: hand Wednesday in the champi-
: onship semffinals of the District
: 62 Tournament at Johnson Mid·
: dle School.
After seizin a 4-0 lead in the
: p o e esa anager
: Larry Cabico elected to with-
: draw flame-throwing right-ban-
: der Nick Cabico from his sched-
: uled start on the mound, opting
: instead to swap his standout
: hurler for second baseman Greg
: Perrine.
: And while the maneuver
: likely cost the younger Cabico
; one of his allotted weekly pitch-
: ing innings, he'll rested and
: ready when the locals meet
: Seaview Little League tod~5 ! p.m. aftErr thumping W · -
: ster, 10-5.
: "It worked out the way we
: wanted it to,• said Lany Cabico,
: who was able to implement his
: conservation plan thanks to a
: quick-starting offense. ·
: •we had talked about possi-
: bly holding Nick back if we saw
: that we could take care of (West-
: minster), so it was an easy deci-
: sion," Larry Cabico explained.
: •And our other pitchers came
: through."
: Perrine proved more than a
: capable Plan B, taking an 8-1
: lead and a no-hitter into the
: fourth. . I
: Pen\ne yielded only three
: hits, two of which cleared the ! fence, before tiring in the sixth
: and giviilg way to Billy Halver-
: son.
The impromptu starter struck
: out three and walked five, utiliz-
: ing a solid Mesa defense to frus.
: trate the hosts.
· : Halverson, whose two-run
: homer in the second (his third of
: the season) jump-started anoth-
: er four-run frame, needed just
: three pitches to record the final
: three outs, giving Mesa a
: rematch with Seaview, which
: defeated the locals, 6-3 Tuesday
: behind three homers.
: Larry Cabico praised all
~ including the· aforementioned
: defense.
: "Our defense was excellent
: again tonight," he said. "And I
~ think we're getting the bats .
going. These guys are learning
how to hit curve balls."
Defensive gems were turned
in by right fielder Nathan
Hunter and center fielder Bryce
Sheridan to help Perrine pre-
serve his no-no in the early
going.
Jared Jenkins broke up the
no-hit bid by rocketing a solo
homer wa over the left-field
ence with one out in e o
and Pat Bristow went yard the
opposite way with a runner
aboard to bring Westminster
within 8-4 with no outs in the
fifth. .
P~rrine, however, buckle4
down to retire the next three;
before Jenkins singled to open
the sixth and a walk followed a.ti
error to load the bases.
Halverson then took over,
inducing Oscar Gonzales to rip a
one-hopper toward first, which
first baseman Mike Gardiner
deftly scooped up, tagged the
runner heading toward second•,
and stepped on the bag· for an
unassisted double play.
Gardiner once again did the
honors for the third out, igniting
a mild cele bration from the
Mesa players.
Nick Cabico did his celeb'ra~
ing with the bat, ripping thr~
singles and walking once to up
his all-star average to .667 (6 for
9) with his second 3-for·3 perfor-
mance in three games. He als9
stole one base and terrorized
Westminster with his speed,
amassing 15 total bases.
Cabico gives Costa Mes*
plenty of optimism tonight
A victory would force a Satur~
day rematch in the double-elimL
ination tournament, in wbi~
Seaview, the def ending District
62 champ, has yet to sustain a
loss.
"Seaview does have a goo4
reputation, but we've playe4
them tough two years in a row
now, losing 5-3 last year and 6-3
(Tuesday}. -
Halverson added a single to
the nine-hit Mesa attack, whicJh
included singles from Gardiner,
Perrine, Hunter and Lund.
Costa Mesa American 10
w.tmlnst9r 5 '
Westminster 100 121 -5 3 -.,s
Perrine, Halverson (6) and McGuire;
Gonzales, Berumen (2) and Michel.
Bristow (4). W -Perrine. L -Gonzalesi
HR • Halverson (CM), Jenkins f:W),
Bristow f:W). ..
j ...._ __________________________________________________________________ ~"~------------------....... ------~
Nine-run sixth proves:
( r the olympiad series fatal .f Or Costa Mesa
;,~.-~ ---
. ~ .• J"t&.1 . . ...
FAULKNER
"SQNT1NUED FROM 81
giv)i\ 100 percent."
a
Though between them. they have
represented four Newport-Mesa schools in
recent years, South teammates Josh Walz
(Corona del Mar), Sky Conway (CdM and
Newport Harbor) and Chuck Johnson
(Estancia) have been teammates before in
the Newport-Mesa Junior All-American
program.
•1t kind of feels weird being the only
guy from Estancia, especi,ally when you see
some schools have two or three guys out
there," Johnson said. "But at least I knew
somebpdy, having played with Josh and
Sky. H
a
Conway (a starter at' Newport as a
junior, before transferring to CdM) and
Pepic said they had both taken the
13-10 overtime victory over Foothill in the
1994 Southern Section Division V
seini.finalstofonnerKnight standoutand
South teammate Nick Sveslosky.
Pepic, however, said such good-natured
ribbing was cut short by Sveslosky's reply.
"I bad to quit pretty quickly, because as
soon as I brought that up, (Sveslosky)
pointed out they beat us pretty good this
season (28-14)," Pepic said.
Pepic added he has enjoyed similar
bragging rights bandied about in practice
among South teammates.
"Just before one blocking drill a San
Clemente guy (Brad Baker) started
repeating '23-17' to the Mater Dei guy
(Kevin McLean} he was paired off against.
That was the score when San Clemente
beat Mater Dei last year. It was pretty
funny."
0
Standout football players often share
the "psycho" label associated with the
on-field fervor necessary to compete at an
elite level.
But in the South camp, Mater Dei.
linebacker Ryon Holland was singled out
by players and Cunningham alike for his
singular brand of lunacy.
·u·s not that he goes around grunting
and yelling, but he just likes to hit people,•
Cunningham explained. "He figures if you
have a football uniform on, you're
supposed to hit and be doesn't seem to
know how to back off. He's caused a few
problems in practice, because be goes 100
percent all the time."
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
South linebacker Sky Conway of Corona del Mar and linebackers coach Brett Paton share some light .
moments during practtce for Friday night's All-Star football game at Orange Coast College.
Said CdM offensive lineman Nick
Schaumburg: "You better be prepared to ·
hit when (Holland's) around, because he .
won't let you go by without taking a ·shot. •
·CONNIE
CONTINUED FROM 81
~disqualified in the first round on
a controversial call -she is
preparing for one last hurrah.
"(Only) to myself do I have
. som.ething to prove," she said. "I
took some time off (aftP.r
Barcelona), and I had never
done that in my life. I had never
been out of shape like that, so
it's been a good challenge to get
myself back to where I need to
be competitive ."
Since 1988, Paraskevin-Young
has been among the top sprint
cyclists in the world, but at her
age, she's no fountain of youth in
the fierce competition of the
•Olympic Games.
But it's Paraskevin-Young's
attitude that could elevate her to
the gold-medal stage in Atlanta.
"It's an explosiv~ event, and I
·think you need that kind of
.,personality," she said. •Most
good sprinters are more
·~losive. They are not
necessarily the real cahn,
,mellow, easy-going types.
,They're going to be out there
l}lld be explosive. It's two simple
words: Explosive personality."
• She entered the Barcelona
,Games with confidence, "with
,.n>.e true capability of medaling,"
.~esaid.
She was shocked when she
, found out she had been
,.,(lisqualified because of a slight
{and •totally normal") movement
near the pole position. No flag· ' was thrown initially, but the
• Oc>ach of·her French opponent
llPpatently has some influence.
• Pollowing a vehement discussion
6etween the French team and
'Ute officials, ParaskeVin· Young's
'tlctory had been overturoed.
' • She was aushed.
~ i.. • t wasn't sure if 1 was going
to compete after 1992, because I
•WU SO dilgrtmtled wtth the ·fptem,• lbe ... d. •But you
• IMlly can't pass up the Olympics
. tn the U.S., in your own country.
.. •0ne tbiJ19 l've always liked
about match sprint cyding ts • q:.at you win or loee under your
own power. Whoever ts tint to
;cnm the line, wins. It'• not like
figure 1katb19, wb8N you're
.judge:d. So tbet'I very appeelirig '° JDI, biat that's Uio why lt llrUck me In UM fec.'9 (at
~). beCi\99 I reellZed m.,. not 1n mfttro1."
YOUTH SOCCER
Ameba 12s at Hawaii tourne
• Ameba under-12s venture to
Hawaii for Big Island Tourney
in first major trek in 10 years
for SO-team competition.
BALBOA ISLAND -The Ameba under-12 soccer
team will heading out this week for the Big Island
Cup.
The Ameba, representing California, and the
Extreme from New Mexico, will be the only U.S.
teams in the 50-team field for the four-day tourna-
ment starting July 18. ·
This will be the first time the Ameba dub bas
traveled to an out-of-state tournament since win-
ning back-to-back championships at the Rocky
Mountain Invitational in Colorado Springs back in
1985-86.
The Ameba's Pacific Rim team will be facing an
uphill battle with a lineup that features two 10-year-
olds, nine nine-year-olds and one eight-year-old
against teams made up of 11-year-olds.
Despite the age mismatch, the Ameba are a well-
seasoned bunch. They have competed in 16 dub
and all-star games over the past five weeks an<:[
have come away with five tournament medals.
The Ameba open pool play on Thursday against
Leeward Island with games against Kona on Friday
and Hilo on Saturday. Championship games are
scheduled for Sunday morning. All the games will
be played at Honoka'a County Park. Honoka'a is
located 40 miles northwest of Hilo and 60 miles
northeast of Kona for anybody needing directions.
The Ameba players making the trip are Charlie
Auerbach, 'JYler Byer, Jessie Forsythe and Matt
Sauter from Newport Beach; Brian Campos, Mike
Richardson, Warren Junowich and alternate Joel
Walk.er from Costa Mesa; and David and Alex
Ramos from Santa Ana. The team, coached by Jim
Noonan, will be joined by Patrick Noonan Stern of
Kona and Daniel Norris from New Zealand.
CORRECTION
DEEP SEA
WEDNESDAY'S
COUNTS
Newport Landing
S boats, 94 anglers.
368 barracuda, 62 sand bass, ,
· 11 calico bass, 12 sculpin,
A photo in the July 4 edition
was misidentified. The Newport
Pony League All-Star infielder
a waiting the throw was Mickey
McClung.
2 sheephead, 2 halibut, 1 sargo,
15 mackerel.
Davey's Lodcer
-no report.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC. 1~cm~1·56
STEAM
CLEANING
AVAILABLE
THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1996
a
Cunningham cited Fountain Valley
quarterback Mitch Ryerson. bound for Iowa
· State, as the South player most capable of
pursuing a professional career.
·u·s a long shot for any high school
player tO' play on Sundays, but he has the
arm to do. it, Cunningham said.
. a
On the subject of vnftnlMe«J bn•l=e11,
there was a sizable portion of my June 22
column on unsung heroes which, due to a
computer malfunction, did not appear.
Here is the missing portion:
Instead of trying to recant snippets from
the long highlight reel preserved on my
mind's eye, I've chosen to single out
athletes from each of the four
NeWport-Mesa District schools who 1
believe epitomize what makes high school
sports such a redeeming cultural ritual
These four boys and four girls were not
the most decorated of their peers, nor the
most talented. Their names were often
more apt to be found in agate type than in
head.lihes, but their contributions were no
less significant.
Some, in fact, were all-league and/or .
What they share most, perhaps, is that they
will always remember high school as the
pinnacle of their athletic lives. I remember
them here:
Tim Goode, Corona del Mar: The Sea
Kings' football program listed him at 5-11,
190, but lesser exaggerations are frequently
featured on the covers of supermarket
tabloids.
However, this smallish, but snarling
guard proved to be as much a royal pain
for opponents as his beefier brethren on the
Five Crowns offensive line.
"I don't know how to describe him, but
he's not normal, w fellow crown Nick
Schaumburg said of this undersized
overachiever, who weighs in heavily on the
personality scale.
Ryan Taylor, Costa Mesa: He played
three varsity football seasons with a junior
varsity physique (5-foot-11, 165 pounds},
but his sense for the game was as keenly
developed as Greg Lloyd's biceps.
Most notable as an outside linebacker,
he played quarterback, receiver, running
back, and anywhere else Mustang.coaches
needed things done well.
Furthermore, opposing coaches talked as
much about the quality of his character as
the scope of his talent.
Nick Novak, Estanda: Circumstances
conspired to limit this resourceful
role player to just one varsity basketball
season and, even then, he was relegated to
the shadows cast by fellow seniors Dane
Plock and Chris Candlish.
Eagle coaches eventually had to order
him to shoot more, after the soft-sell
approach failed to inhibit his unselfishness,
and his subsequent offensive outbreak
allowed his productivity to become as
noticeable in box scores as it was to th<>se
who saw the Eagles play.
The Phen-Fen Diet
The answ('r as 1-cs' 110\\'t.'\.'Cr the treat·
mt'nt of obes111· or :an overn't1gtll 1..'0lldl·
1100 also rt'qtnn.•!> .if)flroprtuc lifestyle
changes :in<I an nKhvldualizrd. physioan·
su1>emsed. comprchcnsh•c appr<XlCh
Including d~1. l>ch.wioc modificuion 3nd
exercise. For C\'Cl\Wlt'. ii is 001 IUM Slfl\·
ply a m~uer ol pushmg thct~ ff11Y
from the t.'11*1 The new d~ pills ... ~
properly ~m ni. tered by a physician who
IS k~ in tl)CI( U$C. can be ~
helpful adjunct fof \\~ht reduction aM
t.'Ctgh1 nuint~
Call m~· office ror an :ippo1n1nlCOI and
"·c an detcmllnc if l'W :II\' or arc .no<
a good andKlate for drug th<.., fof
obesity or :u1 O\-·mvc1Sht conchnon .
We :tl~ ollCr •lccrn.:it1\'C pmst:lm\.
THUftSOAY, JULY 11, 1996
E wbol:e plan to throw the ball f.bou)d
be weJf-IUited to the M, 2S5·pound
Colorado State-bound ScbeumbwtJ'I
forte .. paSI protedion.
exrttM about.,_..,•
Pel*; did ... 101Da time at
ctefliDIMJ 8nd u • ~ but. :
J)liiDty al him on tape. He's uadfy what I :
lliiouQbt And ..... b9caUl8 be .. alCb • greet ..
kkl He'll It.ad at Nt'8tYw ad be'l lbown us :
NUED FROM 81 plncbed nerve m !ill Deck inidway : CONTINUED FROM 81 we can ai.o ... hlin at COl'Mf. And be very :
well coWd play~ in~ <ii . ..
•All-CIP as a junior, bas worked
to make the difficult transition
ter.
CbaAge ls a theme that WW follow
John.ton and Pepic nut year to
Golden West College and Orange
Coast, respectively.
through the MUOI>. 8Dded tiis :
two-way tour. ! Southern Section Olvilion V semifinal,, 21-16. lit1)etiOOI. He's~ a wonhorfe." ~
AddttimaDj', Wm Mid be 11 on the punt
~well .. tbe iwrve kicltOtf return
Both Peplc and Johnson soy their : Walz. who will continue his career at
umburg, who like Pepic •There wasn't really one sped.fie
reason I chose Golden West (over
OCCJ, but I think I just needed a
change,• Johnson explained.
"Almost all my friends are going to
Coast. I'll still have them as friends,
but I'm looking forward to meeting
new people at Golden West. 1 also
really liked (Golden West) line
coach, Rob Flory."
new all...W paattoas allow them to • Georgetown Uo.lversity, likely needed a
utilize their qu'cknea, an attribute • wbeelbanow to ca.rt ol1 his polt.SeUOJ1
which coacbes baw praise<t in both. : owardl. Among them: CJP Divtsion V
unit, be'I annous to answer
~ All-CIP Division V aedentials, ~'I lreqUeDt calls.
•I JUlt want to be on the field, because
that's where all the fun is," said Walz, who ls
still uncertain where he will contribute at
Georget~.
"I told Coach Cnnntngham fd • Co-Player ol ~ Yeart Newport .. Mesa District
never played center before in my : Most Valuable Player; Daily Pilot Sea View
'OCCUPY bis famWar tackle spot,
where be distinguished himself the
last two seasons as a member of the
Sea Kings Five Crowns front wall.
• Pepic has been a very pleasant
surprise,• said Cunningham, who
added the former Sailor will likely
back up Santa Ma.f9arita's Brian
Berg in Friday's 7:30 p.m. contest.
·He's stepped into a center's role
and done a really good job. He'll
probably be the first lineman off the
bench Friday.•
Johnson anticipates playing guard
in college, but Pepic will tum in bis
offensive playbook for a chance to
punish ball ~aniers as a Pirate
outside linebacker.
life, but be told me I'd probably be : League MVP1 and Sea View League Coaches'
uncovered (the North is not expected : Offensive Player oC the Year; not to mention a
to employ a noseguard), and I said : veritabl~ windfall a~ the CdM team ~et.
that was all I needed to bear," Pepic : Walz 5 v~tility, which allowed him t-0
said. "Having nobody over me, I ! start at quarterback, fullback, comer and
think works to may advantage." safety, as well as return punts and ld~offs as ' . . a Sea King, came in handy for Cunnmgham1 J~hns~n also SAld he pref~ who plans to give the bulk of the signal ~asmg linebackers to wrestling-calling chores to Bl Toro's St~ve Krupp and
"I'm the only quarterback in the recruiting
class, but moat likely, I'll play on defense u a
freshman. At some point, I think they'll give
me a ~ce to prove I can play quarterback,
though. I definitely enjoy offense more than
defense.•
Cunningham also projects
Johnson and Schaumburg in reserve
roles, after Schaumburg missed
three practices last week while on a
previously-planned trip to Mexico.
• ·I never really expected to play
offense at Harbor,• Pepic said. •I
played defense my freshman and
sophomore years, but they asked me
to move to offense when I was a
junior, because they needed a
tackle. I did it because I just wanted
Wlth tackles. . , Fountain Valley's Mitch Ryerson.
All three ~ocals ~d they ve •(Walz) might do a little bit of everything
enjoyed the ~tellSlty r~ed to for us,• explained Cunningham. who heaped
compel~ .against the elite all_-star praise upon the second Walz (older brother
Walz, who celebrates bis 19th birthday
today, said he is thoroughly enjoying leaving
the cumbersome mental preparation of
quarterback to his talented teammates.
•Johnson is holding bis own and
Schaumburg has dc:ine well. when
competition and all are lookin~ J .R., now a decorated rimning back at Holy
forward t~ the challenge of.faang Cross, played for the South in 1993) to play in
f.he Norths top trench wamors. th~ annual county showcase for seniors.
"It's my last high school game, so "I've seen him play four or five times,
I've got to play my heart out," Pepic including when we (University High) played
"It's kind of relaxing when you don't have
to think of a million things on every play.
That's the way an all-star game should be.•
The North, however. isn't likely to
experience any similar leisure, as long as
Walz keeps emerging from the South huddle.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES I PUBLIC NOTICES I PUBLIC NOTICES
must b9 filed wUh the FOf lnformatlon call (714) namH lilted above on ducted by: an Individual ·u 77 Hnen Ave .. k111Cbo STREET COSTA MESA, ~case No. (Numtro dtl caso) ......C llOf'ICI
above de,lgnattd court 644-3200. June 1, 1996. Have you started doing Cucamoctfa, CA 91730. (909) 12tZI APt1 ti: 1H·ot2·05 The C24383 SUMMONS ~ITACIOH
PUBLIC NOTICE within 20 day1 alter Hrvice LaVonne M. Hark• ARV A1Boosl1ted PUving1 • Inc., bDu1ln~11 yel?MYFes, 1-1·91 945-,.,1 We ue U1b1ina unelerslQntd Trustee diselllms J~WIA8LA~,.!IOTI~} dOE)f EPNA· ..... ,. 8ullnlll
or this Summon• on you. If I••• CMC/AAI! Cltr John A. ty, realaent oug as C. c erran Bcncficiary io colloa a debt ll'IY llabtlity tor any 11\COr!'tctness o .... ,; ... o a ...... sa o • llw ae.ei ... nt ---------1 you tall to so rHpond the Cl k City f N 'wport This atatement was flied This statement was flied aod any informalioo we oblain of the street address or olher CIFIC F URT£E"N LTD .. a CaN· The followtng penone .,, SSC 528 t court may enter Judgment 8 er h 0 • with the County Clenl ol with the County Clerk ol will bf u..a for IM& purpote common designation ii any 1 tornla limited Partnership and dOlllQ bullnMI ... LM Av-
PUBLIC NOTICES
-NOTICE OF agalnll you as demanded eac Orange County on 11-14·96 Orange County on 5-30-96 whcdlct received orally or in shown abOvt 11 no 'st1eet ad• DOES 1 through 10, lndustve enuee 11 Hllltdai. Dr
-PETITION TO by the Plalntlff(s) In the Published Newport 19083888828 19983884075 wridna. •tF AVAILABLE, d the. de . • YOU ARE 8£1NG SUED BY Newl>Ort BleCh CA tzee0''
• ADMINISTER Complaint. Beach-Costa Mesa Dally Dally Piiot June 27, July 4, Dally Pilot June '21, July 4, TltE l:XPECTED OPENINO t res~ or~ ~':ns ~~: PlAINTIFF; (A Ud le est.a de-S.-. LM c#r, 1t ~ r:-:ESTATE OF: A copy ol the Complaint Pilot July 11, 1996. 11 18 1996 th413 11 18 1996 lh415 BID MAY BE OBTAINED '°" s 1,.. tht " Ill bt mandando) RANCHO WEST· dale Dr Newport e..cti ls sorved with this Sum· th427 ' ' ' ' BY CAWNO TII! FOL-locabOO "' property ay WOOD VfLLAGE CONOOMIN· CA e29eO '
ANNA MARIE mons. II you wish to seek . PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE LOWING· T£LEPHONE obtained by undi1"9 a Wf!tttn IUM ASSOCIATION.I a CINlornla ~ A. Can 11 Hllld.ie
• POWERS the advice or or represent•· PUBLIC NOTICE NUMBERS ON ntE DAY !!quest to the beneficlaty Within non·prolll corporauon You have Dr Newport' 8Mch. CA aka ANNA H. tlon by an aJtorney In lhls F1ctltloua Bualneaa NOTICE OF BEFORE lltE SALE: 10 days of the cllte ol first publl-SO CALENDAR DAYS alter this i2iec)
• ·POWERS aka matter, you should do so cna139t888 Natne ltatement APPLICATION TO {71•)480-5690 TAC: c.llk>noftllisNotlceofSale.Dall: summons is served on you to Thia buelneu la con-. ANNA POWERS promptly 10 that you writ· F1ctltloua BualneH The lollowlng l*IOOI are SELL ALCOHOLIC •29373c PUB: 6-27. 7 .... 1· J11tr 03, 1111 EXEC file I typewrll18n response at this ctuctld by: hUlbllnd and
CASE NO A 1 B3317 ten response, II any, may Name Statemant doing buslnt11 as: Matsus· BEVERAGES 11 TRUmE I EIMCH. INC. 1 court A le!tel O< Phone call wlll wtf9 ·
To all heirs: beneficlllles. b9 filed In tlmt and other The following persons are hlla Avionics Sy11em1 COf· June 24 1008 SAN FERNANDO MISSION BLVD not proleet you: your !ypewrlnen H8YI you atal1ld doing
ertdhors, .&onlingent credl· legal rights protected. doing :=lness as: Clay-porallon. 18289 Laguna To Whom it May Con-PUBLIC NOTICE SOOE .1208 MISSION HILLS, response must be In proper bUllnela ytiC? yee, 1 M*Y
iors. and persons who may An appropriate written r• ton, WI & Sherwood Canyon Road, lrvtne. CA cem: ULLOA. Ivan, ls(are) 91345 818-361·4488 ltgal '°"" H you want tilt court 11911
othlHWist be Interested In sponse requires compll· Property ement Joint 92718 •rptvtng to the Department T.I. Nt. Gll-31022-C LOM No. SNQl(f TRUSTEE SAi.£ Off to hear your case. II you do not .I.ck A. Can
ll'IO 'fYlll or estate, or both, anthct wlldthhAuleA 1,o(a)(1f)Canlvdil Venture, 800 N-port Can-Malsuschlta Avl•ont lcs (DSy~s· o Afcoholic Bewtagt Con-30-32tl 1M NOTICE Of TRUI· CZ41Z17 7111. 7/18, 7125. 1996 ~~!!".f.?"~~n ~Cl 'yyouour Thia tiltalWmlnt wu lllad ot: ANNA MARIE POWERS o er a o u es o 181' Drive, Suite 400, New-tems orpor I on E • ltol to sell alcoholic bever· TEFI 1ALf YOU M£1N Of. .. _, ..,,. """ .._, ... wtth the County Clerk o4
altl ANNA H. POWERS aka Procedure and shall also port Beach. CA 92660 22333 29th Drive S ... ages al 744 W. 19ttl Street, fAULT UIU>IR A DHD Of PUBLIC NOTICE wages, money and property rTllf Orange County on 541.ee ANNA POWERS Include: . Clayton, Willlams. & Sher· Bothell. Washington 98021 Costa Mesa, CA 92627 with be laken Wltf'IOUI IUnher wwnlng t•lllll41CMSa
A PETITION has been 1. Tht till• and number ol wood. Inc., 1 Nevada COf· Thia buslne11 Is con· • .. 41.. On-Sale Beer & TRUST DA'!!,!!"4·_!!!!,! NOTICE TO AU lNTBEITB> ·from Ule court There are other' n..11u Plot u .... 28 June 4 liled b)' KATHERYN CHRIS-this case. P«•llon 800 Newport Cen-ducted by: a COfporatlon Wine Pub Eat Pl II-YJJU TW _,,_TO rnv'"'' ,MTIO OFTHETOMUIATIOM legal requirements You mtlf .._, ,..., ' ,
T!CilE O'AMICO In the Sup• 2. II your response Is an t81' Drive Suite 400 New· Have you start.cl doing cenae(s) · · YOUR "'°"""· IT MAY IE OfntE PAllllltOUQH want lo.call an attorney right 11 , 11, 199e, amended
ribt Court 01 Cahlornla. Answer lo the Complaint, ii port Bea~h. CA 92660 business ytl? YH, 1-1·95 Publlihed Newport IOlD AT A f'UIUC IAlE. IF MCBVBlltlftOf a'Wf II you do not know publlccUon .Aly 11, 1988 ry or ORANGE. must contain admissions Of Williams Capital Group, Matsushita Avionics Sys. Beach-Costa Mesa Dally YOU NHO AM EXl'LANATION Of llVOLY ta.LI IAWlll attorney. you may call 11'1 anor T313
E PETITION requests dtnlals of the separate al· Inc. a Calltornla cor· tems Ce<poratlon. Hlroyukl Piiot June 27 July 4 11 THE llATUllE Of ntE PIHICEfD· AllHOAllASSOCIATIOll ney referral seMC'e or a teoall!._..i----------4
KATHERYN CHAIS· legations of the Complalnl poraUon, 800 Newport Cen-Kawabata. Vlce-PrtsldenV 1996. • • • Ill& AGAINST YOU. YOU IEVBU.YllLU CAURINIA ulflce (listed In the thane boolt)
T'IME D'AMICO be •P-and other defenses you ter Drive, Suite 400, New· Treasurer th409 &MOULD CONTACT A LAWYEll NOTICE 15 HEREev ~ lllat Oespues de QUI entregu
polrutd as personal repre-may claim. port Beach CA 92660 This atatamtnt was flied A Pllbllc auction ule lo the esta cltac:lon Judicial usted tie
•fl"l•Ove to admmllltr the 3. Your signature, malllng Sherwood 'Newport.Capital w11h lht County Clerk ol PUBLIC NOTICE ~hist bidder tor casll ~shler's 1111 F«lefll ~L )Insurance un PlaZO de SO DIAS CAl.Ete
a.ate.of the decedent. address and telephone Group, Inc.. a. California Orange County on 5-28-96 dleck drawn on 1 stite or na· Corpornon (':Fote IS It· DARIOS para presentar un
ltiE PETITION requests number, or the signature, corporation, 800 Newport 10983884725 NOTICE OF lllUSTEE'S tionaJ bank. Cheek drawn by a cewr la< Btwity ~s SWngs respuesta escrlta a maqulna e
authority to administer the malllng address and tele-Center Drive, Suite 400, Dally Pilot June 27 July 4 SALE T S N 123ll.S3 Unit state ltdttal cl!dll nton or a and Loan Assoclll~~· 8ewt1y esta cofla. Una carta o un esfate under the lndepen· phone number or your al· Newport Beach, CA 92660 11 18, 1996 • th417 Cockl · · 0· Lou clltck ~ ..., stat u t 'deral tfts., .cai.roma ( 1111 Re· Ramada telelonlca no le otreoer
dent Administration ol Es· torney. This business 11 con· • IFER API . rawn ~, a e or . e cer~r ) inlllndS Ill llmlllll its proleccion· su respuesta Ha'I
tatts Act. (This authority 4. Prool of malling or de· ducted by: a Joint venture PUBLIC NOTICE ~,09~1l~~ll/P FtRST FED saV?nos Ind '°:'". associatMll!• or recewrsllp ltr. ~d 1nsti"t1on a maquloa Ilene que oumpllr con Cemet~ •Mortuary
.....i allow the personal rep-Uvery or a copy or your re· Registrant has not yet SERVICE CORPORATION savtrlG' assoc1ati0n, or saV1ng1 (' ·11111nst"•on ). las lormalldaoes legales apropl· Chapel • CrematOty
reilntallve 10 take many sponse to Ptaintflfs' al· begun to transact business Flctltloua Bualneaa d 1 appoinf-4 T ~ bank specified ln Section 5102 of The Federal Sl\llngs and loin adas SI usted qulere que la corte
aefi!jns without oourt ap-torney, as designated under the flctlUous busl· Name St.tement ll '11 , ......... ~ Deed the Fl!Wlcial Code and authonltd Insurance CoipotlOOntSCUche su caso. SI usteel n 3500 Pacific View Ol'IV9
pcoval. Belore taking cer-above. ness name Of names listed The followlng pereon• are ~ ;~-";ILL SELL AT to do business In lllls.state wlll be ('·FSLIC.') was appojrnd as presenta su raspuesta a tlempo Newport Beach
till) v.,-y Important actions, 5. Tht nature of the claim herein. doing buslnell as: Nation-PUBLIC AUCTION TO TltE htld by the duly IPC)Ointed trustee llCelWr tor 1111 tnn"tlon on A'1t" pueele pereler el caso. y le -===~=-=1=7~00==~ ho'jw'tver. the P8f"Of18I rep-19alnst you la fOf breach of Steven J. Sherwood. Pres. wlda Bancorp, 25301 HIGHEST BIDDER FOR as shown bttow, of all tight. title, 23, 11185. and assets and fid· pueden qultar su salarlo, su I --
'"entlltlve will be required conltact. CWS, Inc .. a Nev. corp., Cabot Ad .. Suite tJl105, La· CASH (In the fonns wtlldl sre and tnlertstconveyed to and now Ms of tllt tnA"'°'1 ~ as· dlnero Y Of!as cosas de su rJ1UtV1;
10 give nollCI 10 Interested To determine whether you Byron L Wllllams, PrH. guna Hiiia. CA 92653 lawful lender .ill tbc Uniled held by the truster in the htrwinaf· IUmtd I>/ an.ity ltls Ftdel'll propledad SHI avlso acllclona IEU. llGADWAY persons unless they have must ~Y • filing fee with WILUAMS CAPITAL GAP.. l>tnnla A. Shea. 25291 Ar· Sma) utdlor die caslUer's ter described ptOPerty under lndjSNngs and LOan Alsoollion, por pane de la cone. Exlstan ~ notice or consented yOYr rtsponst. contact the INC .. Steven J. Sherwood, cadlan Ave., Mlsllon Viejo, cenirlCld or ocher c:hecb pu11uant to a Deed of Trust 8Mrty ..-s. CA. U~n ID otros requlsllos legates. Plied Mortuary * Chapet t<ri.. "'9 proposed adlon.) Clerk of tht abov..,..amed Pres. Sher, Newp. Cap. CA 92691 -11W1 in· Civil Code Scic· descobed beloW. Theule Wiii be ~ ~ lfld que usted Qultra ~ a un er,ination TM independent admlnls· court. Grp., Inc. Terry J. Ro11. 108 Via ..,-;:.:::; . made but WIUIOiJt cownant oriaubl>IO~ ~11 rt-abogaelo lnmtdlatamen• SI n
t ion authority Wiii be WITNE~S 1MY al~•"& ~ This statement waa flied Candelaria. Colo de Cua, :::' ~~ !:1:~ '0 ~~ wanaiicy ap19ssed 01 irnc>lltd INllll<S in 1111 llCIMIShP F\ir-::ioce a un :iado.,.pued 110 Bro11dway ed unl811 an inter· the sea o s s with the County Clerk or CA 92679 . ·c ) al.I riibc "de --~ ~ sion • IUll'( ID 12 USC 18211(a)(5) 11 a un serv o •re ren Costa Mesa
person "'" an ob-Court lhls 1' day or March. Orange County on 6-24-96 Thia bualntu Is con-a . ompall)' ed ~· ~ ··--.,, . pouu • or FDIC IUCCffdld f'Slx: IS l'!CIM!de ~dos o a una ollclna d M2·1t90
,.ct.on to the petition and 1996MIC .. "'""L FISK -t0083887404 ducted by: an Individual :!. ~byco:•~IO sud. =-:~::: '::: onAllQust10.1lll!G ~~lco al tV: e~~~~d ---------snow good cause wl'ly lht ~ D~'ty p·101 J 1y 4 1 t l8 Have you slar1ed doing ,..._. r T · ... _ ,... __ .. "--· no a-.."•~ --cQS.111 lhouid nol gran1 the CLERK O F T H E ... ' u • • • business yet? No ~ o NII m. --.P~ nott(s) secu~ by the.,_. ot _,. ·-...,, -Yaddress ol the court Is (E
aUlhority. COURT 25. 1996. Terry J Aou beteUt.allcr dCICribcd. US-Trust. Wdll ir«ertst and la1e l'IM betn .-... to tile Rt-nomt><e y.direoclOn Cle la C0'1ll
A HEARING on 11\e pelt-Br: Jani• M•H tMl9 This atatomtnt was flied ~!RoC:~Rlfii:ii := cl\atvCS thereon, as Pl'OVlded in C*Wf, ":, = :' su~ es) Muniapal Court ol Callt°'n
tton Wiii be held on AU. Attorney for Plaintiff: PUBLIC NOTICE with the County Clark of RCIARY· ARST FEDERAL the note(s). advances, under the :,:s'r!:, deblholdlrs ol 111191~~ .. r.,rkeley Fulle<teld on. Cl 15. 1996. at 1:45pm Otange County on &-5-98 · l.O terms of the Oted of Trust. ,.,,.., .. e namt, a ress an Dept 703 located at 341 ALLEN R. DERR, Eaq., 19983885520 SAVINGS AND AN Interest thel!on lees cNivtS ~. The Aeclrwf 1111 telephone number Of plalntlll'S
Ila Crty Drive SOU1h, Or· 200 Nor1h 3rd, Suite 8 , D II Pit t Jul 4 11 18 ASSOCIATION OF SAN and expenses oi Ille Trustee la< dettlTllned thll 1111 COllOl\ledattorney. or pialntllf without an
•• CA 92668. P.O. Box 1ooe, BolH, 25• 1Y""" 0 y . • . ~~A~INO ..,0 199, the tocal amount (II Ille time of bsttncl ol,,. ***""P Wllattorney. Is. (El nombr•. • """· ......... rc1 ...... 1111e " • u . . Conse-dlrea:IOo el numero Cle Ille·
ranung ol the petlUon, you 342·2874 Bc>ok· · f Offi · 1 Rec-of Sa~ l!UON~ estimated to • you 111 •
hOutd 1ppear at the hear-pub 11 • h. d New p 0 r I OF THE CITY OF PUJSLIC NOTICE ords m P;!C o~rice or Ille Re-be set lortn below. The amount rteelvtl'St.p sf\111 bl lllTl'lnalld. ~~:~ d~d~e~all~!1" ::r~o
. and state your ob-Beach·Costa Mesa Dally NEWPORT BEACH, corder or Onn&t:County: said may be oruter on Ille Clay of to be efteent no sooner tllln Be.'111 161, 56 . ~ LA~ OFFICE Cl:~~: :11:'~:~~~~ ~~ Piiot Juty 11. 18, 25. 1996. CALIFORNIA, F1ctltlOUI IUllMH Deed of TNll dCICribcs die sale. TRUSTOR: TRUNG c. =.,. llllf lf1I ~.~ 11'1~ OF ~ONA1o lo ROUP 23101
8 the heerlng. Your ap-Th423 ADDING CHAPTER Th:~=w~\ate"!~~: are followina: ·LOT 16 AND II HUYNH AHO HOA TRAN. HUS· comment~ tilt lelT!'llll· Lake Center Ortve. Ste. 310 Lake
earance may b9 In peraon PUBLIC NOTICE 8.08 TO NEWPORT d 1 .... 1 ng '*'. N ti IN BLOCK 431 OF CORONA BAND ANO W1FE Duly Appointed •on of tilt 11ee1wr1t1~ suc11Forest. California 92630 r b our attorne BEACH MUNICIPAL o ng ""'' neas 81· a on-DEL MAR. IN lliE CITY Trustee: EXECUTIVE TRUmE ' 714M2·2377 ~IF Mu ARE A C~EOITOA NOTICE OF CODE PERTAINING R'dd• ~~ri:·1,~:01 ~a~,,°~ OF N~P?RT BEACH. SERVICES. INC. Reconle<l ~4 :om:::~~':.:"~~~-: Oate (Fecha) OCT 25 1995 Clerk,
"Specializing In
Sympathy
Flowers"
2963 Herbor Blvd
Costa Mese
f:
a contingent credltOf ol PUBLIC HEARING TO FOOD HAHDLING Hllii, CA 92853 ' g COU-:ilY OF ~AJ~~~f as Instrument No. 14·03711211n dill of Ills "°'ce to: f'tdelll (Actuarlo) by MILA LUCAS. De&·
e dectased, you muat flle NOTICE IS HEREBY BUSINESSES AND Dtnnla R. Shta, 25291 Ar· ~A SHOWN ON A MA; BOOll • page ol Officlll Records DtPoSll Insurance ~. ~~J~~~d~O~W2ff~~Ct k
our clilm with the court GIVEN that tht Clly Council HEAL TH cadlan Ave .. Mlaslon Viejo, niEREOF RECORDED IN In the office of the Recorder of Alllt"'on Cynllli1 Clsty, Miii a e '--==~==-~~1r;iall9a C:t.Y 11~11th,e ~~ ol the City of Newport SERVICE~ FEES. CA 92691 BOOK J PAGES· •41 AND ORANS G_E.r~.nty. ca,.!"sDl!'~·.,P~t S~ J.O.B. PO Box 7549.~;.~r g:ir!·nlas:26id?>so~: ~ r pr n v ,. Beach wlll hold a public Subject ordinance was Terry J. Ao11, 108 Via 42 OF MISCELLANEOUS of ale ... ....., II ... -r,...e Newpor!Buch, CAQ265&.7549 Tnl ;118 Jfl.S 8/1fd6 ---------lnted b1t th~ cou~ wlJh:n htarlng on the application Introduced on tht 24th day Candelarl1, Colo de Caza, MAPS RECORDS OF SAID of Sale: AT TIIE MAIN (NOflnt) 0.-0 ~ne 26, 111'i16 • ·
r mon s om • • • of Pacific Bay Homta fOf ot June. 1996, and adopted CA 92679 ORANGE COUNTY· EX· EJITRAllC( TO TIIE COUNTY FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSUR·
Hove A
Garage Sale!
[!'1 :r: 1:~~~;~ f~ ~':ti: Ordinance No. 96-26 (First on the 8th day of July, Thia bualne11 la con-CEPT niE NORTHEAST· COUltTIIOUIE. 700 CIVIC COi· AHCf COOPORATION On the movef av.r.t= with 'oo ol the California Pro-Amendment lo Develop-1996. ducted by: co-partners ERL y u FEET OF ntE 1U DRIVE wm , IAMTA ANA. A.a Reclr'M ot 11Mt1y ""Is
It Cod• The Um• fOf fll· ment Agreement No. 8) A y E. I c 0 u N c IL H•Y• you .tarted doing NORntWESTEJU.. y 67 .6 CALIFORNIA Amount of unpal<I Sh• and LOlll Assoaltlon, Sell your extra CAIA~l!!>.. Dalli' ,~ eJlot tl(I cialma will not •~plre and Amendments to the MEMBERS, O'Nell, Ed· buslneaa ye1? No FEET OF SAID LOT 11. balance and olher cflarVes· SMiiy ttas, Clll1ofTU 1 h h Id -•19'1
teJOfe tour months lrom Atronutronlc FOfd Planned warda, Debar, H9d9H, Terry J. Aou YOU ARE IN DEFAULT IZOl.111.71 Street Addrtsi or NewponBeacJ'l..COsta Mtu 1 0U88 0 wlll help fl• htarlng date noticed C 0 mmun11 Y < Z 0 n 1 n g Cox, Q1over, end Watt This atatement wu flied UNDER A DEED OF lllUST olher common deliOnation of CH373716 8E'MUS ~n 27, .kll tt8ma M2 1878
l bOvt .Amendment No. 848). on NOES COUNCIL with the County Clttk of DATED 61Um.UNL£SS rtal PIOPtrty: 11H IOWA 4t1 111'i16 In I tfl ij •••••••••
Cleutfted M2·H'18
~WU .MME~MmE h ~ ~~~ 1~~ It • ~~Countyonll-•M WU T~ ~~ ro~-~~~·---------·-·------~~~~~~--L---------11• ke 1 b the court II 1~ 2300 Jamboree Road. MEMBERS, Non. 19H388552t ·PROTECT YOUR PROP· ~e ap rk intlfeat~ In Amendment lo Develop-ABSENT COUNCIL Dally Pilot July 4, 11, 11. ERTY. IT MAY 8£ SOLD
e et.:te ma flle menl Agreement No. 8 and Ml!MBIRS, None 25, 1998. AT A PUBLIC SALE.IF YOU
"1th the oou::'1onnli R• tha District Regulatlona MAYOR, Joh n W. th422 NEED AN EXPLANATION"
'uett IOf Special Notice .of consistent with General H9dgH •Of lliE NATIJRE OF TIIE
f:e filing of an Inventory ~~) ~omrn:r:,•.~I aN~id~ C IT Y C LIER K , PUBLIC NOTICE PROCEEDING AGAINST '
nd appraisal of Hiatt ... tJon ' tn tilt number ol aJ: LaVonne M. HarkleH •1otltl • I YOU, YOU ... ~HOULD. C_?N· els Of of .,.,., petition or THE ENTIRE '""""' IS r ou a ua neaa TACT A L.AWYEJl. •36 account al''provlded In towed dwelllng unit• fro~ '""'' ,....,. Statement CARNATION AVENUE ~ctlon 1250 of the Callfor· 500 lo 450 whhln Area 4, AVAILABLE FOR R711EW The followlng peraon1 art NEWPORT BEACH, CA
a Probate Codt. A R• change ArH 4 permitted IN THE CllY Cl.ERK S OF· doing bualne11 aa: Qolphln 9162' ... (If a llleel ltddrcu
HI lor Snat-lat Nollet UHi from lndu•trlal/A• FICE OF THE CllY Of' Enterprl... M7 Jo.nn SI or COIM\Oft dai&DIUon or ,...~ search and Development to NEWPORT BEACH "~t M ' CA "'2."7 ·• ..... • .... m la available from the AHldenllal u111· tst1bllsh . ......,. I eaal.i • -prqpa1Y. is. --..,..ve, no Jour1 clerk. dtvelo ment 111~.,da tor Publlthtd Newport Michael J. Ille, 28152 IA warrancy 11 alvm u to i'!
1 Attorn•r for th• P•tl· Area 4~ ealabllih •It• plan Beach-Costa Mtaa Dally ~~; Minion Vle)o, CA ~:,:i:; ~~
,1oner1 rtvttw and Ult ptt'mlt r• Piiot July 11, 19". Cuyt R Wllhmytr M7 Ottd • f Trwl by nuoA or
DUANI! s. LINDSEY, quirtmtnta for apeclfled th428 Joan st..' Cotta MHa, CA bread! 0
0, defwlt lft die obi~
llO. (CS81 113481) uaea; talabllah private PUBUCNOTICE 92827 Ioele ...,. ~ • ltENDRIX & AllOCI· llrfft llandarda; and to H· Thi• bu1lne11 11 oon-C:::tore u lC:Ulld 11111 delJ;. ·
&Tl!S t 300 BRISTOL tabll1h iptelflc llgn stand· t .. 81 .. •e ducted b~: I general part· end to Cbt .--.....w.....e a TRE~T ORTH 1 1 arda and criteria one ,. -I'll -...-of "" N • T • Notice Is her·eby given F'lotltlou9 8u•lna•• '*' P WTt.I DedamiDll
'
a 0 • N I! W P 0 R T that all significant enYlron-Neme ltetetn9nt t!:,~ yoy 911itttted doing 0Dcflull aad DallW Cw
EACH, CA 92080 mental concerna lot the The fOllowtng P1ft011e are Mic= J Ulllr:> • Salt. ud ~ _.. of
t Publlahtd Newport ~oHd proJtct h1ve dOlnQ buslneu u : OtMn-Thi• 1tat9ment wu filed~.:,'.,.°" z.eJ: _:
&11ch-Co11a MHa Dally •ddrHUd In a pr9VI-baum and Katt 3't Sen with the County Cler'll of -IJ':iid, ll6d ~llot July 10, 11, 11. 1998. ousty cenlfled environ-Miguel Ol'M. ~ 300, Orengt Countv on w 1,M :=..,~_......_ . ...,.
' wth714 mental document. The City Newport BMcft, CA t2tlO t ... HllOll . t ~ c-1 .... 91cice 1 of Newport 8elch Intends Greenbaum end Gt..,,. ft.Mu ,, .... June 21 . """ , f ~ ....... of..._ • 11t ' PUBLIC NOTICE 10 UM aald docUman1 tor bun. (C.tltomla~ san __., ""' · -1 • 0 - -the 1bov9 noted ptoftCC. Mlguel OrM, ' 300, 1t, 11. 1"8 tMl2 ·~ 12, 19" •
... , -IN_T_H_•_D_l _l _T_R_IC_T_1 end fUr\hef thM \Mr• .. N.wport INcft. CA t2l4IO --·auc -TIC '-· .. Ho. ltNOl l lo:Mla
tOURT OP THI THIRD no additional ~ Thlt butlne.. It con-rv ""' I loolt ':: ~ ._':
JUDICIAL DllTRIOT ~~·..:; ::J;'1: ~~~ P1otltteue8 ... eM ::.•oro..,.CO-,;Saill
D THI STATI OP COfWldltld In ~ &o trMMCt bU11neM under ....... ae.t.....e Seit of~ will lie ....
AHO, IN AND POR With Mid ptOfect. ~ of the rtctltlout neme or eTha ~. . ~ la ... 1a· . CIOlll1illOll .....
H I c o u N T V o P the ptt'llloully prepared en-"""" lated tbov9 on S-1· •~ ,.., -llttK ru: 11...,. C0¥9WI& L"!.*''!:!.:....t!: AMI Wonrnenlal document .,. II -...,.._, 'l. v-,._ ot ~· .__
f AL v IN Ro I I avaltable let publlc ravlaw Oreen~um and 01..,,. Ill\ rWltco It., f'CM#Uln iidl I a 1161 tr _.
1CORKY'' KRIG8AUM and lnJpection .. the~ beutn. Mtttln a, Gr...,. ~ft~ 17811 ~ ... rt
•nd IHIRUY ANN nlnO ~m:--~ ~·=WM lllld Sen r~8t.,;CMQ!n ~.r;;;,t.-:o.1 fUQ8AUM OIRNY, =::~d. NftOOtt _..,, the ~ Cltftl of Vahy, CA t270I of T,.., _... • •la
tlffa, , callfOmll tH5I-0r.,. County ~ •1..... Thi• buaU\Ne la con-..., -,......._ .,._, n.. 11M(714)~ t ... HeMll duc:ted by:tn~ jt_,, ...... _.,_.
THOMAI IDWIN .NOTIC! IS HEMBY ~A-o.lt't Plot My 4, u, 19, .::..r"ytiC?~ C:: :r· ·o1~':'1"'j
JUD end DOii I, II, :~ ~ ~ a, 1.... 1191 _. ;" .......... 111
Ill, Defendente. Ula l2nd Clay o4 JVty 1'" • tM20 ~ ft. lar.<lt _.. o..t of n.. 'SIN •
.... CV M 004M flt the ~ Of 1t00 p.m. lri PUIUC llOTICI Th'-....-,... ..., wUI 11t MM Oil! ·Jtilr 17•
IUMMOMI the counct1 Chambart of ~ Count; Qettl Of IM.• J:GD •·•·• .. NOTICI: YOU HAVI the NftOOtt ~ C11y ._._..,... Cowllf Oft .a.. S, .... • .. --of UN I UID IY THI! Hall 3300 Htwpc)ft ~ ... 1MHH 1• tlMMllllO Ori1191 Orit0 -C-, IOVl!-HA~l!D ftlAlff. ¥trd ~ IMch Cal-PIOtltltUI ......... 011iV Piiot ,,._rt, ... 4, I. Cilfma 0.-. CA0
•
"IS). THI COURT MAY ~ et "wnlch 11,M and ..... ............ 11, 11. t• IM14 .... of .. lllilll ...... N Tl A JU 0 0 MI N T Ol!ot _,,, end .. pen1on9 The tolCMq "'90M .. .. of ... --. 4il -
YOU wmtOIJT lniilfteited mey 11PPMf tnc1 dOlrlll ...,... ea: TN -of ... ...... ITH!R NOTICI UN-be n..d """°"' " you, ... ~-WOOd~ ... I I of .. u wts _.. ., ·you AH,OND ............. Jtt ,...., ~ °''· ,... •• Ill ............ .,... IN lO DAYS. MAD tourt, you rf*t M ·llftllild MIM. CA llw ... ll•HI !'Ml _. .__. -.
HI IN,OAMATfON to,...~._.--/llfN ~~Inc .. 11'e ~~·fllr'-•---. _. ...._ · you et aOlft•OM .... I C .. os• OOIPOf .... 1, .... -0.C. all.1Q Jf • II W . THOMAI IOWIN ,..._,It tf1e f1Ma ~ M ,..._ ...... 0.1, Mao R c.,...,, 41'1 .. a .. tm of lilll """'DOU I. ...... D,.., In ........ CO.. ....... GA-r.~~~ct =~ N...,«t ~I x II: In Mtllft ~Fa: TNt , ... -II IM' CA _ 1111 ... ,_
Ml HIMIY "°"" ..., .. _.ID Cf;i. • 11 po • i'!c. ....... m ,
""' In order .. ,. ,... to .. ~=·· If... ~T-: .... ...... .. -. .. ·----. .... ,..,. Wftllaft .. -.. ...L:l: ___ .-m-==-~~~~!.;;J
•
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?? • • • • • • • • • • • • •
TIN Legal Dq>artmmt at the Daily Pilot is plbmd
to announce a new snvia nmu IUklilable IQ nrw businesses.
we wi1J nmu SEARCH tJN nttme for you aJ no txtm chargr, and saw you~
time anJ tht trip to the Court House in Santa Ana. Thm, of <:oUnf! afor tJN ~
is annpldtJ wt wi/J fik J"lll' fictitious business Mmt sta1m1m1 with tJN cAunt,
CJm, publish ona a Wttlt for four wttlts 111 rrquirrd by '4w anJ thm file Jf'I" proof
of pub/iatlion with• OnmJy Cl6lt.
Plea s1flJ' by to file your Jictitiw.t busiMSJ sllllOnml"' the Drlily Pilot, 330 w.
Bay SI, Costa Mesa. If you amnot stop by. p/tdse aJJ us Ill (714) 642-1321 4"" we
wiO mttM amtngmlDll1 for""' IO haN& this proaJutr by mttiJ.
/f JllU shou/J haw llllJ farther questions, p/tdse aJJ UI and Wt wiJJ ~ ~ thtln
g"'4 IO AISist pL GooJ IMc/t in!""' new~ D ' ~'Pilot
C."O~A ~
..
..
I I ..
• f ,
I
Newpon ~h/C.Oata Mesa Daily Pilof
.LO\IAI. HOllllNQ
Ol'l'OATUNIT'I'
All Ital UUll lhefti'1111 In Ibis
......,.,., Is llllljeCI It Ille fed·
"11 fair HMsh1i *tel 116111 ......n .......... " .......
It lftlrtlst "lllJ "'*""'" ll1111t1U111 " lllscrlml111llon
Nslll ·111 race. color. 111111o11,
l&I, "-tllcap. tamillal sll!US Of
...-.. "'91a, W • illltalkMI IO ,... .., ..a. "'*'nee. llml·
tlUoll • .iacrimlalllell."
Tiiis 11wspap11 wlll nat
UtwllltlY aca,i.., lllwrtist·
• 111111 llf fUI estate wlllcll Is 11
Yllllllel Of till In. OW rtMtrs .. lltf!'J ,...,_. a.11 all
llwtlHa11 lllwrtl&tll In Ibis ....., .... , ..............
........ , •• ..;11111a.11cem-
,.. .. ..,t.1111M,CllHUD Tiil·•• 1·•·4Z4·19G. fot tlit Vai 1N ...... DC .. , ,i1111
cal HUD ll 421·3500.
Walk-In 8:00am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
DAILY PILOT
DIADUNIS
Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm
Wednesday ....... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ........... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ................ Thursday 5:00pm
BYPllO•
(714) 642-5678
BY FAX
(714) 631-6594
(Please include your name and
phone nwnber and we'll call you
back with a price quote.)
,
GINlllAL
POU CY
Rates and deadlines are
subject to change without
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reserves the ri~t to censor.
reclassify, revise or reject -
any classified
advertisement. Please .
report any error that may
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immediately. The Daily
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accept no liability for any
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for which it ma be
.. . . •. . •
. . .
IRVINE 2144 COSTA MESA 2624 RENTALS TO LOST & PERSONALS 3002 EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE COSTA MESA 6124 ------
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SHARE 2724 FOtmJ) 2925 5 530 MISC. 6015 TRANSPORTATroN
Turtle Rock Twnhse •2 Br, 1 Ba, hse•liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SING ~ •Neighborhood
Newly remoa 2br/2ba. fenced yd, w/d hkup, Newport Heights Lrg $1000 Reward .~f' P/T W k FIT p PLANT S ALE Cement Garage Sale•
Bright, cath cell, gar, No Pets 2636 airy apt. Own room/ Flame·polnt .Persian l'lewElilelJpocole Of ay table, 3 benches Compliments of hrdwd firs. Ital tile Santa Ana Ave., bath gar $510/lncl cat "Oscar", lost COM lnttoduclionS.rvice 6am·12 M·F, no exp 5150, fountains SllO. Audrey Savopoios, BOATS
baths. 2'car gar, Unit·C $900 645·1020 util. ~mk ok. 722•6059 since May. 547•2244 Meet 0..01!zA1tfOdr..e nee. $6.00/hr +comm. bird baths 520. Citrus. Coldwell Banker. Lots iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
7011
hkups, patio, A/C, on E 'SIDE Quiet . garden FOUND Girl's bike left Single•.io'fn ,:;:~ $300-$500/wk. Mark in avocado (fruiting) $10. of Great Stuttl 1973, 8' DINGY Montgon\ery
greenbelt, 2 pools/ apt. on Broadway. --------A ~ sales. Office products Herbs, Junipers, Vines 2oo4. 2017 Arnold, Lapstreak. Teak tclm, spas, wlk to tennls/ 1 BO, gar, 5700/mo. RENTALS in backyard on Balboa ..,romamg.-7(,.es\llU 852-0247 $1. 909•674-9422 567 w. Bay. 656, 649 w/coYer and dpll.Y .
park.Wlllconslderpet Avail8/1. 673·2726. W" .. ~0 2726 Island. 7/5/96 Call & Blw~Ht&.Calilot,.io Part Time Effort, Bev Do.ollttle's Beach St .. 661 , 644 $550 714-43S-03Qi~
w/add. dep. Avail 8/15 .ruu.,;; identify. 073-3059 10· 57. 11 Full Time Integrity "When the wind had Cove St., 676. 690 or 9/1 . $1300/mo. E'slde trlplx Xtra lrg LOST Cockatlel Bird s 1 E Capitol 2159 Meyer I) cho.o s: arn sub· wings" $225. Plus 2188 'Puente, "'1 "4.· Incl ut'll. 858-9080 2BO nu palnt/crp HELP Resp male w/ Grey body, yellow VB stant al e ta I o e ' ' fncd patio lndry/hk up t I d I bl d h d h k "I: 'E t 1 x r nc m many more 722-5634 2173, 2179, 2202, ra ne soc a e og ea • orange c ee s. I i offering TSA's & · ·
Boston Whaler
BOAT TRAIL2R
Curren·t registration,
$135. 714-435-0~ NEWPORT Quletl S845. 673-3059 looking for room In LOst 6/10. Reward! ..__ Insurance products to Complete Vllleroy & 2210, ,2240 Raleigh,
ES Country Woods CM/NB area. Around 548·3854 TQ A school employees. Boch basket pattern 640, 646 Ross, 661 BEACH 2169 2 Br·splt lvl, stdy, frpl, $400/mo. 201·8739. ----L0-5-T---\1 C" Full training & support service for 12. +serv. Seal, 652 Surf, POWER BOATS .:·,·
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $875, no pets, 180 21 Gold link bracelet w/ r_lfTE" r provided. Call Laura pcs. $4500 value. 2203 Wallace, 675
2 BD, 1 BA Beach St, 646-1164/645·9543 small charm attached. ,,. 'I I.! _., (714) 572·2883 $3000/0BO 673·2786. W.Wllson, 566, 588 7012.,
I York s h Ire. Saturday iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif3' Cottage $1200 . Triplex Unit C. 2br COMMERCIAL REWARD· Sentimental .~CH C Receptionist N.B. Jacuzzi $125 Upright J 1 3 h 7 5 4 BO, 2 BA (Magnolia 2ba, patio, college value. 720·9489 ~~DI ~ Salon. Full·tlme. Freezer $100. Portable uy ~6~_74~3-pm. 13' Boston WhaJe,,
& Newland) $1 350. park. ger. $850/mo. REAL ESTATE PARAKEET FOUND f A Tues-Sat Punctual. color TV S75 646·5648 Super Sport SS 40~ ..
675-2369, Agt. Harbor Agt 818-981-4783 I••••••••• Small, green. Santa •900•868•410v friendly, thorough. MOVING SALE 50-70% 3-Famlly Sale Sun Yam. Trailer, ccw+f.
Realty 873-4400 Ana Hts. 851 -5966 XS344· Will train. 873·4188 OFF Retail Store Fix· 9-4pm. Cllhe:s. sport-blm top. Uke ne)'o'. ..
Sale. A sslocl.te lures. Clothing racks, ln2g2 gdRs,ochhoussteewraSrets. ~7500 675-1708,, 2 Br twhhome, near NEWPORT BUSINESS ope1cE LOST CAT Siamese 6 --Fash. Isl., 2-car gar, BeBCH 69 ~ · mix adult neut. male. ~3 991 Exp'd. China, Silver & hangers, mannequins, • ATTN: CLASSt.C
new carpet, A/C. no ....n 26 FOR RENT 2769 70496 Seashore/51 st, '~ • MIN. Crystal Store in N.B. wood/glass shetylng, Movl~g S~le Kinkade BOAT LOVERS ••••
pets. $1350 640·1529liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NB. Cataract on left ,,. .f-S~RV-lI Hrly+Bonus 640·6986 slatwall, showcases, St Nick Ctr canvas, el-1a· Packet. Restore!jl.~ •1BR $825• .:...•.. more!! Continental egant Country French Teak decks. New d(t-1 2Bd 2Ba Seafalre CANNERY VILLAGE-eye needs medication. 61 _ .. 6~ -G4.":J4 Secretary Accot,tntlng, Near I Y New . furn, & more! Great sel engine. Electrk:•
Condo. 5 Years old. 28R 2 BA *725/UP Attractive 31st St. Rewardl 722-0729 computer exp, F{T, 2324 Auburn Blvd., deals. 646-4843 bay boats are capjet Amen. N/smk, n/pets. Refrlg & dishwasher office for $730/mo eves nice office on the s t thl b t 642-50.,.'I $1500/mo. 831-3486 Incl. 60x30 pool. No water. 875-2179 acramenlo. 1 ·800· o s oa . .., . pets. No fees. No Roy Jackson 573.3733 BIALTB. 339·3545. NEWPORT Cl1tsslc 19' Bq~
2br 2ba Condo. Gated lease. 545-4855 •Off1ce space 11x13 -&!~ 3000 EMPLOYMENT TEACHER Loving, Rattan stand w/glass bbat 1955 Sou~:
comm/upper unit. A/C 1518 NP blvd, C.M. a-&&n~ energetic caregiver to shelves $25. Weber BEACH 6169 Coast. Lapstrake:
W/0, OW, micro. Pool/ ••LAROE 2Bd 2Ba Great toe. util lncllli•••••••• co-teach w/infants & BBQ $25. Crib $75. $3900. Blll 673-5912''
Jae., 2-car gar. No"pet. Condo Downtown Balboa $150/mo. 553·1115. toddlers, accredited 2-0011 cradles $10/ea. Sofas, tv's, refrlg·
;... N/smk $1395 873·5884 2-<:ar gar. 418 Harding CE EMPLOYMENT program UCI Campus. o· h ··p T ii" t A ti --------BuUSES/ · $1295/mo. 970·2893 WATERFRONT OFFI Irvine exc working is es oppy ra era ors, n que SAIL BOATS 7014.
3br 2ba Bluffs Tnhm, NEWPORT HEIGHTS In Lido Peninsula, IUlHOUTOLOllllllllT 5530 c 0 n d be n e f " ts S50 a set. Large fold· Wedgewood stove. di· CONDOS exc cond, 2·car gar, 1Bd 5475 2Bd $800 727 sq. ft. Plus Deck. peqiltr•«llhliowtS8MXISlliolA advnc~nl oppor, ECE Ing rocAkl7ng chair S20. nette sets, P!'lio furn, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
PO. C!•T 'I! no pet/amk, $1500/mo · · Fireplace, restroom ~....,..nl._... iol! units & exp preferred. 714-64..-605. tamps. tables_. clothes, Cal 25 rebuilt/load..::. ~ usoc:.pool,737·1449. ~~~~noope/t."64~~~ w/shower. Xlnt water ":&P,~~--$1000's Poaslble 854-6030 WOLFF TANNING pots/pans, silverware, cruising/racing, ss®Q. •••••••••I Lido luxurious water· view. ASAP 675·1808 'NllD!tJ':;r.•~tuo. Typing PT. At Home. BEOS. TAN AT HOME. etc. Sat 7am-5pm. firm. Must seer ,.
front condo l.arge Steps to •and 1bd ................ .,,,__... 1 800 898 9778 "ev1 1--.--------Buy direct and SAVE. 4809 S19ashore Call 72"'-.,,.,,.8
280, den. 3BA, sec:. 1ba. d wnslrs s775 & cm714 ii7iii T:139S tor Ustings ". EM.PLOYMENT Commercial/Home 722-0824 . ...-~ .._
boat slip avall. s2,5501 studio dwnstrs $650/ SERVICES 5533 units from $199. Lowi--5--------'--------............
mo./leue. 551-a554 Incl utll, yrly tse, no BUSINESS & •Rental Staffon Avall* monthly payments. ell your home through classlflecf .•
GINDAL 1002
GOVERN,,.. ENT
FORECLOSED
VERSAILLES pets, 24th st 847·2622 FINANCE -3~02 For exp'd stylists, Free color catalog. 642·5678
STUDIO PENTHOUSE'•••••••••!••••••••• PEISOKAI.S u Newport Beach area. Pleas:~:·::,:,. thal Call today. 1·800-842· ,.__ ------------HOMES
For pennl.. on $1.
Delinquent Tax,
A 'a, REO'a. ·Your
Beaut furn & re-I• *844-1570* 1305.
modl'd. Pool, gym, MISCELIANEOUS ~~eo~s';;:~: ,~"q~7:! ~~~ --...------•
0 a rag•· S 9 0 0 · n ... •-·• to call a 900 number WMED
898-e778 Ext. H-6139 2904 . MEET PRIVATELY
for cu~ llstlnga. •••••••• •---------,,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii f.llk to someone on their
puter/phone skills typ-
ing, organized. Pay
II Pl'Mte nome phone. 18+. ________ ,APARTMENTS ROOMS 2706 Local Publlsher Ska 1~809ne:oJ'.~. commensurate w/exp. I••••••••
Resume: 1650 Park MERCHANDISE
Old Coins. gold, sll11er
jewelry, Franklin Mint,
Sterling flatware, etc.
Steve 642-9448 days BILIOA FOR RENT s25-16ok. 2s.300"' rtn ~;,'~ -~wn • 1007 ••••••••• Room & Board for pt Moblllty/Eqty Opt/lnt'I Party Une
Newport 317, N.B.
Ca. 92660 !••·-----i~---&niii'iJvlii ..... iiiiiiiiiiiil help w/1·1h & 3yr old. Mass Mrkt 543-2369 011·237·7m·11
CM area. Small salary. L 0 0 a 1 v • n d 1 n g Chat Une AT EASE In Fashion 1--------
lsland has opening for ANTIQUES 6010
f ull·ll me ope rations/ '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii receiving manage, & 1•
Top Dollars Paid
For Records. Jazz,
Sountracks, etc.
Call Mike 645-7505. C ~~-~... :.!: BALBOA 873-8886· 645"8356· Route 20 eatabllshed 1-=~~~:'5
home. 4 Br,+ tam rm, ISLAND 2606 VACATION accts. Buy all/part. HI09·537-o720
4 Ba, 2 oar gar, cua-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 800·775-2219
tom built, entertmner Bal Isl• 1 Br, up apt, RENTALS 2722 PEPSI/COKE ROUTE. ~~~
frtendlyl Reduced to remodel den adults 50 local sites. Great PSyehlC/AStroloOV
part-time evening American Oak Library
sales assoc·s. contact Table w/carylngs and
Steve at: 759-7979 paws. !=-nglish oak
WANTED
Old Blcycles
Runni ng or not!
$10-$200. 574-0600
7am-5pm or 673-6210 $870,000. 780.()821-Bkr no· pets'. gar: Lease'. way to earn $2,500/ 1...,,.563•9899 avl 6/1 631-7752 It k weekly. Call 1•800-AduluOnly.lnt'ITariffsApply.
frame mirror 642-8151
BOAT SKIPPER w/
CORONA
2622 DEL MAR 1022 CORONA
iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiimlDELMAR
A aklp to big beach iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
. 3 b r 12 b a , f o rm a I So. of· PCH 1 br 1 ba,
dining, 40tt R-2 lot walk to bc:h, $695.
$585,000. Corona Del 5 13 1 /2 Begonia.
M a r P r o p • r t I e • 723-0970
lMMOT LA IS 211-8363.
Luxurious Condoa
• Pool • Spa • Saum~
• In 7he Pines •
f:lear Great Fishing
Su1110•1a SpEciAls
1-800-462-5577
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
2920 873-8494
_C_O_S_T_A_M_E_S_A_2_6_2_4 RENTALS TO MAKE MONEY IN CV· _NE_W_P_O_R_T___ SHARE 2724 BERSPACE. Advertise
BEACH 1069 $ your Bualneas or 300 11t Month N .B . upaoale furn Products on the Inter·
CIHn, lrg 1Tttn cabin· 2BO apt. Own BO/BA. net. Reach 40,000,000
•Pl!l!K-A·BOO VIEW atyle, 1Br, walk·ln clst. Tennis. pool & more. for pennies a dayl
4br 2ba, 2-car garage. Huge back yds, Nr No pets. 760..9123. . Easy aet-upl Free In·
S4S9K. Open House beac:h/Trlangle Sq. f o r m a t I o n I C a I I
exp to operate a 75· 1--------Sportflsher for owner · Top Dollar Paid! --------•
& guests. Good w/d• From 1800·1960. PETS &
trolt diesels, electron· 1 pc to enllre estale. ANIMALS lc:a, water makers, Paintings. ch ina, 6049
genys, plumbing, etc. gtswete, furn, etc.
Peter 645-4222/Wkdys. 40Yr NB Res 673-6223 Loving Iguana 3'. With cage. stand & heat
QRILLMAN Exp for l~=======~ rocks. $200. 721·8968.
high output operation. w e s t H I g h I a n d
3yrs exper required •DSC.T ~ ,,...,~ Terrlor Male, 3 mos.,
DATA INPUTTER ~I ~..,.., xlnt family dog. Hse
AP/AR. EOO output. Ant1q·-lo 't:r\.. ~ trained $500 640-4363 Fax resume to: -· 'l\JI
873-2248 or call •Est.=dlllllibuy: Julie G lem at .... _ e,Pllr09
873·22:44 ~cth. ~.
MARKETING old COIUne Of h
Support position. w/ )lwllry.:::--Un.,
some administration petlodl
BICYC~ 6060
Large frame Batavus
racing bike. Shimano
600 gear. S250.
759.59~5 duties, computer skills dlcolllht otJt9c*,
a must. 875-S8H •One lllm or...,. 911111
Sun 1-4 1021 w. Bay Sonora Apt• NB Prof'l/qulet N/S • CC&Company 1-800-
Agent 725-8263 Mary Ann . 845-3358 roommate to share 230-0369. Ir--..-..... _.._._.-.....,
---------1517 low Income, furn 3br, 3 sty condo w/i---------atudto•. utll Inc:. owner. prlv. ba, 1 hse LOST • Clean, modern, sec. from beach, W/0
prtc, pool & • spa. $850+ 'Al utll 873-392t FOUND
Jacki• 842·8226 . iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CEMETERY LOT/
CRYPT 1225 2925
Paclnc View Mem Pk ~1v;~1.:~~:r0:1~}: COSTA MESA 2824 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624
price. Handle by mall.
e1 .... 4a.ae1e
Paolno View Memo-fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiil
rlal Partc N.8. 4-lotl
13,Q_OO/lot ... 0.8.0,
714· 738-3648.
ROUSES/
CONDOS
POR JU!NT
COIOIU
DBL Jill 2122
. I a011 M~a• to
l>Cf'I, .,. main
hte, auMy, .,.,. W/D,
retng lttd. TH-0878.
Grtte H fl~. oiW.
Sundeok. 11 llO/lftO,
AvaM 1/1. ?IMHl-lvee . .a.;nM9-08yt.
QumT ~ SBBBNB
Palm ~esa Apart111ents -
HOTTEST
A*.l*li* ''"'' ...... ,t I\ .... 11
1.69 UYE
Mrate7 Shopper• • Colild111W'A••--
S 9 . 7 ~r + Part •Eltlel ... ~
Time. Now H iring •"""*lllltCllh
For Local Stores. 1JA "'4~ ~711 Free Products . ,. .........,. ~ ..
1413·984-eOO 1
SPORTING
GOODS 6065
Conc•pt II Rowing
l!rgomet•r hrdly
used. Paid $700. Now
$300/obo. 759-5055.
..... , .. 1 ..
900-505-5050 800-7a,..••o a1a.7s .. 9100
e11.a9a.170-9so
P~ .. ~:a~th Ins. Exp a APPLIANCES 6011
must, self·motlvated, fliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ••••••••II
reliable. NB S42-66e& Washer/Drv•r 1140/ G•D11 .Ge SALES ea. Retrlg S 100. nAR u
846-5848.
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY OPPORTUNITY PUIOOTUU 6014 CORONA
2904 2904 DEL MA.lf 6122
•••••-•• Drexel deek mlwor. iiiili•mliiiiiiiiiiiiiil
-----------------. t ab I e I . 0 t I ant a I MOVING &AL• E11ery-·-Fibre Channel Seminar screen, pictures. fan, thing goest Ful'.J). anu-• -r.c:orct•, tape•.l... books, que•. p1~1•, •bor, &
t·vien by . misc:. 4T•Hae country co1tect11;>1es.
b I lxeo tiOllOfop desk, Sat onty w . alley 704 Fi rec onne Group oak. xln~ cond. $'400 Mar?gold. &'40.117'
Infinity CommStor., -f Assoc. oao. H.5-112t Multl·l'amnr •••e ' ~" LIKI tilW s-pc "•"-•n Antique l)IM, dWnv Ginnbit .. --1kit PrOl.81Cl..l..--a 1vQ ..tm MC. .mtt.wash "' 6 morel •12 .sat ·•-•UUll _._,. flnl•h, saoo s1111 711s. 3tO ffemte.f
Techndogies -Methods . ptant• ''°· ?21.ee&4
Business ~·nities WW&w Wiltfi I ...,. COST& lllSA 1124 "t'r"" "" Nweye . car... V.lutl
W.CJne1dayJuly 17, 1996 ·THCWM7.50&11P ------· ~ Of Wkflter Tool 1:30-11&30.... . ttt&vtctorte lt1m Oranp County Alrpe;t .,..... o... • .. DHa
for r:-gillration canfad:
The~~
phone 805 376~~
1 .. 800 793-162A
hue80537~1
cMinca ..
10" .. find
wt.et yt&t Mid
tlNPilOI
youWlihllO~
.... Wo'I ..... , ....... .., . .... ,.
I )·
)
I
i ~
Plug Into the
Classified section
to find services
from electricians
and plumbers to
londscopers
& pointers.
..,
THURSDAY. JULY t1, 1996
~oa:r:., ~Ctwieten 1 ~ lOllnot around ., UooriCe-llke
l!eVOtlng ,.,., f!ollow orders 1'1. Competent
ia.Glve ~SeatripS 12 ~dded • \easonlna to
23 ·-Ooubi!ire• 24 Altac:k on a
c:aatle
21 Traveler'•
document WReagan's
"lckname 2t ,Ac~hor Wiide
33. Offer
34 Laundry need
37 Masklng -38 Actreu
• MaoGraw
3$ New England
footbaH player
41 Coffee server
42 Trudge
4' Caloile counter 45 Turf
46 Pacific Island group
48 Grand -Opry
49 Stove rt
57 &cunllone :=:r.= 116Mr.~ ee Vanegaled
Mone
87 Thel-.tore
88 Ultle klda &9~
70~0f
medicine
DOWN
1 Cettaln Europea.n
2 Tramp
3 Friend .. Soarldea
5 Marathons and
derbies
8 Bueballer
7~~r
8 NY hrs.
9 Brief 10 Lottlest 11 Border on
12 -out:
distribute
13 Stared at 19 Shakespearean
vlllaln 21 Clutch
24 Reddish-brown
horses
r up
28 Country estate
27 Common
expression 28 Proponions
30 Bring about 31 Cook's
garment
32 Split
33 Freshwater
fish
35 Yoong boy
36 Weed the
garden 40 rt could be
k
SO~red
52 Ore lesl 53 Tricks
54 "Out, Tabt>VI"
55 Singef Guthrie
56 Type of house or yard 57 Sarge's pooch
58 Oetectlve Wolfe
59 Jokes
1112 VJ)J.ISWIGD 1235 A1JTOS
'H l•----•I•----------• WUTID 1246 -----------!'-----------------•7a ON• w...,. v-e. 1 eaT ••ntl•f • •n au..,..ua Red/·~~~ll!ll•lii& lly OMllLIS GOllN Auto Trana. FUii rtwr. •••,eoo.. •...,.r on White convertible. w •D Donation or wfttl OMAR SHNllf A/C, C/C, AM/,M .... II, .. v le•lh•r Showroom c o nd . vehlcl• tor l ocal __ .................... H-~ 11188. 84a.Ga'7e •nt., flH!'t..: Gr••t ssooo. 84~·9574 realclen1. •TIMl894 --,,,,...~ ~" • ..-. e7 ... a32 •----------
AVOID DD PROBLEM .... roiiiiiasiiciisiisiiiiiiiiiii91ii7ii5 VOLVO 9230 MISC. AUTO P245 Cao't s .. m to
1• g .. to all those
Both vulnerable. West deala. rounda. '75 Ponche 914 '87 780 TURBO Blk/ Seized Car• flroM 1175. repair fobs
A cornplicaUnr factor was the 2 Liter, w/M~• 11 Bra b I k 1 t h r f u I 1 y Poreche•. Cadlllaca, around lhe hOuae?
po.aibility that, should . East gain Convertible 7 3-6824 equipped. enrf, gd Chevys, llMW'e Cor· Let the Cl•Hlfled NORTH .,
QVold
OK J87&
•.J 108 7854
h l d d I h 1 b cond. $6500 844-8710 vettea. Also Jeeps. 4 t e ea an jay anot er cu • RENT WD'•· Your area. Toll Service Dlreotory declarer woul have to gueu the Sell your home frH 1-800·898·9778 help you find trump poeition. To ruff low ran the lhrough clas1lfied. Ext. A·5139 tor current riek that Eaat could overruff with __ th_r_ou_g_h_c_la_ss_lf_ie_d_ 842·5878 llatlngs. reliable help.
the 'ten; ruffing high made it likely iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii~jiii~~~~~!!i'!iiii]!!ii]!~iiiiiiiij
that the ten of trumps woul d be C>YetttocJcedwlth AUDIO WOR.KS EAST WE8T
•A 1015
~108 64i
0 94 3 •AK
•SJ
<::78 7 88
OAQ108
•Q9S SOUTH
•KQJ 9 878 OAKQ J
0 2
•2
The bidding:
WEST NORTII EAST SOUTll
l" PaM ll:;l 4• P ... p.,. P ...
promoted. to the setQng trick. For ltUtr?
matance, if declarer led the k,ing of A cell to
trompe from band, West could win, Ctaaalfted
cross to Ea.st with a diamond and wtl help
the queen of clubs would complete 842 ... 78
declarer>a cliacomfiture.
Declarer found an elegant solu· CLASSIP'IKD
tion to the problem -a loser-on· lt'a tti• eolutlOn you•,.
loser play that was not easy to spot. "arching for • wh.eh-
After ruffing the king of clubs, er you're eH kfng a
declarer entered dummy by sport-home, an apartment.
l 1 .1:-~ th f a new occupation or ing y ea~ e ace o hearts and 9Vef\ a ~ay pet.
trumping it on the table. Next came•--------
the jack of clubs, on which declarer
AUTOS • BOA!S • YACHTS
. Custom Installations
Enclosures • Mountings • Alarms'• Hidden Units• Theft Deterrent
lnstollottons • Special Student Discounts • Mobffe Service
stuffed the losing diamond! (Dis· 1.---------•--••
carding a diamond on t~e .king of --------------
Opening lead: A~ of •
As declarer there are some tricks
t at must e oat no matter what
you do. You may, however, be able
to cont.rol when you lose them to
turn adversity into an advantage.
With heart.a bid and raised, four
spades was a practical solution to
South's bidding problem. That end·
ed the auction.
cards, but might not if East held
the ace of spades.)
I nstead of losing a diamond,
declarer lost a second club trick.
But now one trump trick was all
the defenders could collect.
West led the ace of clubs and con-
tinued with the king in response to
East's signal with the nine, ruffed
in the cloeed hand. Declarer's prob-
lem was simple. South could afford
one 106el' in trumps, not two, so the
ten had t<t come down in three
Lear n to be a bet ter brid ge
playerl Subecribe now to the
Goren Bridp Letter by callinlf
(800)788-1225 fbr information. Or
write to Goren Bridge Letter , TMUu Pilot P.O. Box 4410, Chicago, IL~ ¥~1.~ ....... 4410. ,._ ________ _
Put
BUIC~ 9035 FORD 9075 MERCEDES 9130 a few
'88 Reg•I Limited
Orig owner. Beautiful.
$3500. 044·8240
CAD ILIAC 9040
1983 FORD ' 7 4 M • r c • d • 8 d BRONCO 4X4 450SE one owner, W 0 r S
In perfect cond. All 1 OOK mlles. $5000.
power, leather, phone, Must aeel 675-3246 tO
tow pkg, rlmsftlres. '78 280 SEDAN Very
Only 60k miles. $17K. c I ea n . $ 2 6 O o .
574.4241 or 646·9449 641-1869 WO rk •-.-8-8_5_0_0_S_E_L_W_h_lte-/ .. ______________ _.
'80 El Dor•do Blarrltz --------ta h h I 9085 n. c rome w ee s,
350 V·8 Auto NC, F/P, HONDA 1 owner, mint cond, ---------u
Good cond $1800 obo iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $19,500. 875·3005 * 631-7149 *
FORD 9015
···-·······--·-···········-. . .
I D Yl$,$1U. ~y CAR :
Zip " .._
C-" Cad O~ OVISA a.AM X
• t,,..
Mof Te. QAAY ..OT
l30 w ... -c..-u. tij,27 (1141 Ul-,J6n CHAil (T1'1 '1 l-6JJ•
,,.._IWI)'~
,.,._"-*~ ....
-------"-~ o•r.-o-..-o ... .., 0... o--0--0 ... -0 -O -C-0 0 1-0 .... ,,_ 0 -.. 01..-o .......-a.. c -.""'-' o,,._ oow.~ o..,_ o--o~ oo---oM-0 .... W 0 .... --
• $10 6'r4t,,,., Sl.00-'i""'°""""11iM ·····--····················
• •
•sa-DVJ_C_E ___ ! TCIELERAMS IC COMPUTERS 3556 CONTRACTORS FLOOR INSTALL HOME cAREI MASSAGE 3830 PAINTING 3858 PLASTER SPRINKLERS 3921
5A 3 5 2 8 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii GENERAL 3558 REP AIRS 3 62 0 SERVICES 3 7 60 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil REP AIR 3880 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
DIRECTORY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Maaaage Therapy 24Yrs Qu111tw Pllntlng iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SPRINKLER REPAI R .·------11 TILE REPAIR 20Vrs Com••.terConaultl"" ACM CONSTRUCTON *QUALITY WORK• C•r• Giver For the In Chiropractic oltlce. TOUCHUPS, TOO Pl t /St p t h ValveuHeadseTlm• "'"' "• $1 o Off 1 t VI ft 24 Hrs. Richard Sinor aa. er ucco • c cloctcs. 26Yra Local Exp. Patio Ille resealing. Sltwre/Hrdwre Install Tennant Improvement HerdwdNinyl/Ceramlc elderly. 12 years exp. s s Llct11280644 645•3209 ·Serving Sd Ca 25yrs· John Burr 202·2831
.ICO'O'STIC
~GS
Fountains. Waterfalls, Upgradea•Repalr• Remodela • Com/Rea Mrble/Carpet Bnd/lns Ref'a. Please call Most Ins. Ace 843•8053 Llc#326864 24Hrs 1-........ -----=-----
Ponds.Uc'd 745.39 5 4 Prlnt•Scannlng Svcs Ll415708 548·5770 L708279 722·7332 T•ml 714-367·9038 THE VELVET TOUCH RAINBOW Clrc le Malnt . 714·55'f.7831 SPAINKLl!RS are my
3408 •714-378·8801· LEWIS Conatruotlon •hHr. s:io Stress Rellet Palnllng·lnt/Ext House/Apt on I y bus In e• s .
8 8 VI a/MC/AE Quality Job. Free est. --------Timers•VaJves•Dr1p Sys CHILD CARE 3536 Remodel•Handyman HANDY ••1111' 3710 JE"reLRY 3784 am-pm• s L#S69897 6 3 &-8888 PLUMBING 3890 Charles 722·7824 MACMEDIC • Care for L#704773 Local Rea. m nn "~ Sophi• 650·2273
-----
OBILINQ MA8T8R
• •~couatlc · Removal• :.t;Ustom Textur .. Palnt
Macintosh Computers •714-55 7•5825• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •BISHOP PAINTl .. O iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1---------
Debble'a D•~care In your hme/otc. Low/1--,,.,..---,-,,,,.--.---•P•lnt/C•rpentry• William Harold Jewelers _Ml_S_C __ ...,,..___ Prompt Oual Svc. A'e11 S THE LOCAL PLUMBER TUTORING 3929
Dlt4. •"' aaa.7300
A place you can Trust hourly rat1. 073·8818 Newport Beech Drywall and morel Watch & Jewelry repair .. Tuturlng•Wallcoverlngs -a Jamts E. Bangert Co.-l=jjjj~iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiii
Uc'd Home Environment Building Contractor small Joba Oki Antique • Fine Jewelry SERVICES 3831 Reis. l704332 969-2407 Since 1947 'sAT PREP Summer
Nr F~i:,.;, A~~~:177 47V~.Ee~fr~~~.::nlsh O•ry 8 45-5277 Buyfsell/lrade 073·0385 CHUNG'S PAINTING Friendly Servlce•lnsured Seminars w/Patrlcla
CUPENTRY 3510 Ent . Snaakln .. •Loulng AftAIA.~ U~'6d. 723-5090 842°7003 Semi Retired Contractor 20 Yrs Exp. Gd Pricer LAP532981 675•9304 O'Dowd Jana M.S. ,._ • • ~W lUW.~ A 1 1 1 *AUDIO WORKS * Guar work. Free Est. '""'E""'x_p_e-rt_,,D,...r-al,...n-,C""l-ea-n'""ln-.. -Registration '873·2360 Affordable•Nannlea s I" R v ) c E l .J. Sc ott Conatructlon epar1, mprovemen S, LANDSCAPE a AUTOS . BOATS Uc#375602 538·1534 • ... ----•model ;Exp'd/Mature/CPR ~ -Custom Home Bulldera am jobs. Quality/Integrity w ll'WN CARE 3808 Cus1om Stereos•Alarms & Plumbing Repairs TUTOR Teacher wlll ,_, .. _.,~ Miss Poppins 833 9 171 • Sys••m Soft'""-• Llc""481954. Ref's. I care, Ken 042·1770 ~ EMERALD PAINTING 20Yrt Mp. Alf work guar. tutot your elementary Addltlo,,., Bath, KJtch • .... "..... ,.. Mobil• Svc•Dlecounts lnVExt. Wallpaper/Tiie Steve S4M298 age .chlld In reading,
Flr•·Water Damage •Virus• Debugging • 714475·7788 REMODELS carp, plbg, B•alo y'•rd M •lnt DJ Bean VM-413·8802 Free eaVRert1 o~rs exp th t 031 2458 Elec, Plumb, & Paint CLEANING Back Hard .1 • paint. elec, tile, etucco, & c tltl s 7• 203... Preol•• Plumbing ma • e c. • Newport areL lmmed • up' unvcs ' rooting. MO ROAN Lawns, Cln-ups, Tree ompe va '" • • Repajra & Remodels
Page 714-227.atu SERVICES 3548 'Sysicm Rebuilds • DOORS 3580 Llc'd. Ph#850·3281 Trim, Sprlnklrs, Aerate, MOVING 3834 Oen• Abram• Painting Free Eatlmatea WALL ..
---------· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • Upgrades• lntemct il\<ilAlls. Mobile #403·5385 Tilalch 631 ... 422 P~l3-8142 lnVE~ Oual PalnVRt11$ U 8873ta ee•1oeo COVERINGS 3932 ~ A to z HANDYMAN •DTPinJapancse• • TREES • Llc'd/lna'd since '76. INSTALUREFACE CABINETS A TOUCH OF CLASS • Purch~ advice• An experl•nc ed Home Repair/Remodel ALL-.AMl!RICAH 889·7003 Pg-&>4·3947 --------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Kltch1ns. baths. doors. 5~,~~~~~d~;~~~o~= ~:ifg~~.d~~:r ~~~~ Co~;:~::~N:::.ort T•""-"' .. •••· L .. "11· Moves·U ... Carafully Ike'• Custom Painting POOL
windows. Doug S4&-7255 Teresa 282·7143 RICK.ER'S RF.sCUE reas. Don 521·8910 Jim 831·2460 •••--n 14!'70 Courteously & Cheaply Prof, Clean, Quality SERVICE
eQRBBN MASTERS 549•0223 T141227 Work. lnVExt & Docks. CARPENTRY•Wlndowa •BOSS HOUSECLEANING 714-891·0190 ST I! pH ANS Landscaping & ~alnt. Dibernardo'• Moving Ltl'703468 8 3 1·4810 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Doors • Wood Fence• llcensed·Bonded D1tYWALL .!Home & Office Work's TrH Trim • Removal Local/Office/Storage lal•nd Blue Pool•
ClonVGa11g1 Organlzera $10.00 per hour. ~ Oan41'al Repair: ,/Paint Gardening Svc. M1·55t2 Long Dlat. FrH Eat. ---------1 Pool & Spa Wkly Svc.
l*261581 • Call Bob 714-948-0308 SERVICE 3584 /Rocf/Tll• 714-581·7981 ' Ttll181832 979·3114 PERSONAL Repair: fll11rt/pumpl/htra
3894
Farthing lnterlo,.
lnslallatlon, Removal
Discount Wellcovertnga Ll580875 873•Ult2
TH&STRIPP•R
Speclafltlng In wallpeper
removal. Uc# 688924 * '714-••3·•037 • 249·8323 Pg-312·0028 i..ndllOape & Gardening. SE c· Acid WHh 84.8720
WINDOW CLl!ANINQ CONCRETE 8i Yrd crn-up•Lawn•Trff Spllt Second Movtng RVI B 3867
--------• •CARPET CLEANING BAILEY'S 142-5971 HAUUNG 3720 Plant•Prune•Sprlnliler Prof Movers! 24Hr Srv iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil--------We gala should hang CARPET ~R~i~~~r ;:::.';i78 MASONRY 3557 R"}ci.nt1a1 & Commercial Fmtt11teyr 43 .. 1118 101y1Sr 011c1Tl178452 4 Your ~onv•n••nc• ROOFING 3910 together. Strip, lnatall, CLEANING 3515 Uc d•Bonded•lnaured JUNK T Th DUMP Landeo•-Remodellnt 432·9123/P-346·5850 We run err111d1 tor youl advice to the cruy. COMPL•TE HMcl .. nlno Br1 8 o • -For all your nHda A-Z 831 ·Jl1 n anytime •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Flre*Carpet*Wlndowa ck, lock, Stone, Tiie LOW .COST L#585180 (7t4-981J.1882) Yard tune 11p/m.alntenace, PUBLIC NOTICE Ref'e. Jetf 721•9187 IALIOA ROOFING CO aCUM S UCKBRB Kltchen•Bat h"Stove Cone, Patio, Driveway Cuatom Drywall/Pain Wiii h•ul what Trash landacape/artl1tlc d11lgn. Th C flt P .11 U 111 /Comm .IR .. /Reroot'---------
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