HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-09-26 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS
Herzog, Sumner
players of the week
SeMng the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
Mao are the 183 _.,..
Important people la
our communl-
tyl Find oal
Prtclay In the
Dally Pilot's
fourtla mnual
.. ,. M..e fllhlat1a1• u.t.
.
Rapist~murderer Victims hope for death sentence
I
•A jury recommended
death for Eric Wayne Ben-
nett; a judge will decide
his fate in December.
By Christopher Goffard, Daily Pilot
to the plate ~does what the jury murder.
recommended," said Christine "Real life is different from
Hougan, daughter of slain New-debating it ii1 a dassroom." she
port Beach secretary Marie Powell said. "Until you've bad something
Evans. "I'm attempting to maintain this horrific happen to you or to
my faith in our system and that someone you love, you don't
judge." know."
Praising the jury fo~ ~-Bennett raped and bludgeoned
mending capital punishment; she the 50-yea.r-old Evans to death on
For the surviving victims of Eric said, "I'm very happy that-th@y had Oct. 13, 1994.
Wayne Bennett, the Costa Mesa the courage to make that decision. "If he gets life in prison without
handyman convicted of rape and That should definitely. be the sen-parole, be can still have Thanks-
m~er. it will be a grueling wait tence imposed. It brought . some giving dinner, watdl TV, see
L-~.llD.til.Jlec~L-~~=--~_:__~-4-...CletsWre..lOLJ.IS.-UY:as...:ll.e[V-Jl~lleC&.-+-W·ilee~,-wMk-ou't, and-talk to bis
Thafs the day Orange County (though) obviously nothing can family," Hougan said "And I nev-
Superior Court Judge Kathleen E. change what happened." er get to talk to my mother on the
O'Leary will decide whether to Though sbe recalls debating the phone again. I'd give up every-
approve the jury's recommenda-question abstractly in college phi-thing I have to be able to talk to my
tion earlier this month to put Ben-losophy classes, Hougan said she mother again."
nett to death. never took a finn stance on capital For the Corona del Mar woman
"I just hope the judge steps up punishment before her mother's Bennett raped only a few weeks
I I I I 1 · I • . 'I I
NEVER TOO OLD
C harlotte Hammon, 89 (above), eyes the basket Wednes-
day as Orange County seniors -55 and older -compet-
ed in modified-Ol¥mJH:e-srtvle4Efa!De!-fltHthe-0~roE:
County Fairgrounds. The games included baseball, basketball,
discus, softball throw, soccer, target shooting, wheelchair races,
horseshoes, bowling and volleyball. Right: Carolin~ Grostephen,
m---t----l~t;-ils-conicrnrtutated by volw1teer Clare Kna11er after hitting a
ball off the tee in the baseball event.
before Evans' murder, however,
the possibility of his execution
induces more ambivalent feelings.
"I'm very tom about the death
penalty," she said. ·we've got a
woman in a grave, and we've got a
man we're going to march into a
room and kill. It's just bard for me
to picture calm. cool government
~---~------------,
1\1)1 \. I
' t ' ' • '
The o:MginaJ
gentleman smoker
Skipping
c~won't
come cheap I
! Henry Schielein is a cult figure among cigar lovers.
By Julie Ross Cannon, Dai/'t Pilot I I
The Balboa Bay Club executive is credited with
launching 'smokers' before they were even hip.
' By Wendy WeNe, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -He can
smell a good dgar a mile away.
He can also smell a bed one. And,
he knows the difference between
tbe Mt.carena and • Ma.ceoudo.
Henry Scblie)elD. widely re<:og·
1m..d u one ol Orange County'e
foremolt cigar ambuledon. wu
c:ultiv~ dg.r aunendene
allnolt. demde.,.... Marvin
Sha-~ 0g&r Aldcmedo
~ ttoUcl the dpr c:rua
In 1902.
NoW jiMtal llP9Mger °'the
~ .... ..,Club.
Sditrl* II blilt llmwD IDr Gligl·
Datlag die •Op,,..., ....... ••• ID 1983, Wlll9 di mw ID bal
poiitionu
g~eral
manager of
tbe RJtz
Carlton
Hotel in
For more on toe.I
dgM lounges. see ,.., ..
8oltan. S<.'btel•n lbocked guem
in the hotel's NNurent by light·
1ng up a cigar an.-dbmer.
"I rememw tbe outgomg gen·
efal !l\ANgWWbO J WM~
with saying to me. 1iemy, 1 don't
tbink .... to9d td.a fGr tba D9W
~ "'"'eo-to bit~· upadggta~·· SclJ '*
NCIDa. •So I pul tt ouL lid• J
kioad nmd tba 1009. IMd a
tbougbt .... ,.... oCbili' ....
iayill mlglll Mlio-.or ...... . ........
PM' "tog tbil h*i Md DO
..... ..... for .......
officials march-
ing a man into a
room, laying him
down, and giving
him a lethaJ
injection.·
t>abies to convicted child molestors,
I don't care if he's dead,• she said.
I •nus guy is pa.st redemption. We
don't have a clue what made him
this way, let alone how to fix it.•
I She adds: "I'm positive he
would have killed me if I hadn't
escaped.
After painful
grappling with
the question,
though, she says
she thinks Ben-
nett ought to die.
"For the longest time, life Ito
prison) seemed better to me
because (Bennett) has two baby
boys,• she said. But then she noted
that Bennett sent pictures of lus
children to a convicted pedophile,
who told the court about this dur-
ing the trial.
The woman said she's written a
360-page book detailing' ber
painful ordeal -the rape, the police
I line-up, the trial, and the honific
hallucinations she suffered for
months.
·In the middle of the night I d
wake up sweating and a man m
black shorts would materiali'U! m.
my bedroom and I would just be
paralyzed,· she said. ·(Writing the
book) was so cathartic. and I'm
·u he's sending pictures of his I hoping it would be marketable to
other female victlJns."
Sex trial witnesses
say accuser is lyin
•Coach Mark Schuster is
scheduled to testify today
in his trial on charges he
molested his adopted
daughter.
By Christopher Goffard, Daily Pilot
SANT A. ANA -Painting a
picture of his accuser as a con·
genital liar, friends and relatives
of Mark. Schuster took the stand 1
Tuesday to defend the former
Corona del Mar High School foot-
ball coach against felony sex
charges. '
On the first day of the
defense's presentation. a stream
of character witnesses testified
Schuster appeared to have a nor-
mal relationship with his 19-year-
old adopted daughter. who accus·
es the Balboa Island resident of
molesting her since she was 12.
Defense attorney William Wat-
son maintains the daughter fabri-I
cated the story that Schust~r
demanded sex as ·payments" i.'l
exchange for favors and shopping
sprees.
"(The daughter) has a lot of
problems telling the truth," test.I·
hed Candace Uhlir, Schuster's Sl.S·
ter "She lies so often about ,.,.,
many dlfferent things that shP
bebeves everything she's telling
you.·
Other witnesses struck a sim1 ·
Jar note.
"She wasn't truthful most c.1
the tune,· said Schuster's 21
year-old daughter. Kristen.
"Sbe lied a lot," said Schuster's
22-year-old son, Craig.
And Della Nunez, Craig's girl-
fnend, said: "Everything she
would say, she'd make up a stoC)
for ll ... She always did what she
had to do to get her way.·
Newport Beach detectives
captured Schuster using the word
"payments" on the phone with
• SEE COACH PAGE A 16
Police~ firefighters,
city reach deadlock
• •
•Negotiators plan to
meet today to hammer
out agreement on salary
contract.
Administrative Services Director
Denpis Danner said the city over
the past eight months has sent the
uruon two proposals. which work-
ers have rejected.
The city has reached tentative
agreements with other d
an e po c:e an
management uruons, Danner said.
NEWPORT BEACH -Salary Citv employees and police and fire
negotiations between the city and dePartment managers are taking a
rank-and-file police and firefight· reduction in benefits for an
ers unions have reached an I mcrease in salaries.
impasse and will go into mediation The police management is trad-
today. m off some benefits for $74 200
. o m raises over the next two
the police officers' union and the years, Danner s&d. He did not
firefighters' union will meet today I have figures available for the costs
with a mediator with hopes of
drafting an agreement. City •SEE SALARY PAGE "1&
• -=--·--~--·--~~------..&-.-""'It~---~-~
.
I
SPORTS
Herzogl Sumner
players of the week
Sefvlng the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
Mo are tbe 113 .-
Important people ta
our coauaunl-
tyf Find oat
Prtday In the
Dally Pilot's
fourth annul
••• Moll lal911t11• • Usl
Rapist~murderer victims hope ·for death sentence
I
• A jury recommended
death for Eric Wayne Ben-
nett; a judge will decide
his fate in December.
By Christopher Goffard, Daily Pilot
handyman convicted of rape and
murder, it will be a grueling wait
until Dec. 13.
That's the day Orange County
Superior Court Judge Kathleen E.
O'Leary will decide whether to
approve the jury's recommenda-
tion earlier this month to -put Ben-
nett to death.
"I just hope the judge steps up
to the plate and does what the jwy
recommended,• said Christine
Hougan. daughter of slam New-
port Beach secretary Marte Powell
Evans. •rm attempting to maintain
my faith in our system and that
judge.•
Praising the jury for recom-
mending capital punishment, she
said. •rm very happy that they ~ad
1bat should definitely be the sen-
tence imposed It brought some
d~ for us. I was very relieved,
(though) obviously nothing can
change what happened.•
Though she recalls debating the
question abstractly in college phi-
losophy classes, Hougan said she
never took a firm stance on capital
punishment before her mother's
mwder.
•Real life is different from
debating it in a classroom.• she
said "Until 'fOU've bad something
this horrific happen to you or to
someone you love, you don't
know.•
Bennett raped and bludgeoned
the SO-year-old Evans to death on
Oct. 13, 1994.
parole, he can still have Thanks-
giving dinner, watch TY. see
videos, work out, and talk to his
family," Hougan said. •And I nev-
er get to talk to my mother on the
phone again. I'd give up every-
thing I have to be able to talk to my
mother again.•
For the Corona del Mar woman
Bennett raped only a few weeks
I I I I I ' I • • I I I
N EVER TOO OLD
harlotte Hammo~, 89 (above), eyes the basket Wednes-
day as Orange County seniors -SS and older -compet-
County Fairgrounds. The games included baseball, basketball,
ow, soccer, ge s oo g, w ee arr races,
horseshoes, bowling and volleyball. Right: Carolin~ Grostephen,
103, is congratulated by volunteer Clare Knauer after hitting a
ball off the tee in the baseball event.
before Evans' murder, however,
the possibility of bis execution
induces more ambivalent feelings.
"I'm very tom about the death
penalty,• she said. ·we've got a
woman in a grave, and we've got a
man we're going to march into a
room and kill. It's just hard for me
to picture calm. cool government
Skipping
c~won't
come cheap
~--~-----------~-~
I \ I l I \ The o~naJ
gentleman smoker
By Jutte Ross Cannon, Dail'/ Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -He can
smell a goo4 dgar a mile away.
He can also smell a bed one. And.
be knows the diff~ between
the Macarena and e Macanudo.
Henry Schie1ein, widely rftcog-
nlzed u OM ol Orange County's
foremolt dger em baa14on, WU
cultlvating dger camaraclede
aJl.noit. --.,.,. Marvin SbanlilD'I Ogiu' Aft&oedo
~ aDcl tbedgar aue
In 1882.
Now glDlnl =ams gm OI the
wwablll ... .., Olb,
Sddsl .... ii.._ lmown tar Gdgi-
nalinl .... -~ .. Slnok· •••
position as
general
manager of
the Rita
Carlton
Hotel in
For more on toc.f
Cig« lounges. SM ,.., •.
Boston. SchW8in shocked guests
in the botel'I reltaurant by light·
ing up a dgar after diDnar.
•1 remember the outgoUig gen-
eral IJMIDll99I' whO 1 WU dtning
wtth saying t0me. 'l"femY, I don't
think trl •good kill for tbe new
gemr-.l~to _..,..,..
\IP I dglr ID~·· s. u '*
nalll. •So I pul tt out. lllt •I
IOObd Wllld tbii roam. I Md 1
tbougbl 1hlt ~ olMir' ....
..,....._. .. ..., • IDa.dgo . .,... ......
R•t ''*O .. w bltd DO
• ......... for 1 lmoldng
officials march-
ing a man into a
room, laying bJ.m
down, and giving
him a lethal
injection.·
After pai.nlul
grappling with
the question,
though, she says
nett ought to clle
·For the longest time, life (m
prison) seemed better to me
because {Bennett) has two baby
boys,· she said. But then she noted
that Bennett sent pictures of his
children to a convicted pedophile,
who told the court about this dur-
ing the trial.
"If he'~ sending pictures of his
I babies to convicted child molest~.
I don't care if he's dead." she said
"This guy IS past redemption. We
don't have a clue what made him
this way, let alone bow to fix it•
She adds: "I'm positive he
would have killed me if I hadn't
escaped·
lbe woman said she's wrttten a
369-ge book detailing' ~er
· e-up. the trial, an the honific
halluanations she suffered for
months.
"In the middle of the night 1 d
wake up sweating and a man m
1 black shorts would materialitt m
my bedroom and I would just be
paralyzed,· she said. "(Writing the
book) was so cathartic, and T'm
hoping it would be marketable 'o
other female victims."
Sex trial witnesses .
say accuser is lyin
•Coach Mark Schuster is
scheduled to testify today
in his trial on charges he
molested his adopted
daughter.
cated the story that ScbustPt
demanded sex as "payments• m
exchange tor favors and shopping
sprees
"(The daughter) has a lot of
problems telling the truth,· tesn-
hed Candace Uhlir, Schuster's 515·
ter •She lies so often about so
believes everything she's telling
SANTA ANA -Painting a you."
picture of his accuser as a con -Other witnesses struck a sin11-
genital liar, friends and relatives I lar note
of Mark Schuster took the stand ·She wasn't truthful most ci
Tuesday to defend the former the tune,· said Schuster's 2 l
Corona del Mar High School foot-year-old daughter, Kristen.
ball coach against felony sex "She lied a lot,· said Schuster's
charges. 22-year-old son, Craig.
On the first day of the And Deha Nunez, Craig's gul-
defense's presentation, a stream fnend, said: "Everything she
of character witnesses testified I would say, she'd make up a sto .
Schuster ~p~ed-to ~ave a nor-for it ... She always .did.what she
maI relationship with his 19-year-had to do to get her way.·
old adopted daughter, who accus-Newport Beach detectives
es the. Balboa !sland resident or captured Schuster using the word
molesting her smce sh~ ~as 12. • payments· on the phone with Defense attorney William Wat-
son maintains the daughter fabn-I •SEE COACH PAGE A16
Police·, firefighters,
city reach deadlock.
• Negotiators plan to
meet today to hammer
out agreement on salary
contract.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Dally Ptlot
NEWPORT BEACH -Salary
rank-and-file police and firefight-
ers unions have reached an
impasse and will go into med.Jation
today.
Admirustrative Services Director
Defl1US Danner said the city over
the past eight months bas sent the
uruon two proposals, which work-
ers have rejected.
The city has reached tentative
agreements with ~ther <=!ty
the police officeJS' union and the years, Danner said. He did not
firefighter.;' union will meet today have figures available for the costs
with a mediator with hopes of
drafting an agreement. City •SEE SALARY PAGE A16
ENRIQUE JESFEN .J _Be on alert for carbon
monoxide poisoning It's a toµgft job -tluit's no garbage Jbe Newport Beach Fire and
Marine Department wants to
remind all residents about the
dangers of carbon monoxide poi-
soning.
greer
wylder
Blooming deals
to be had on orchids
Richard Moriarty of Green
Systems lntematlonal says the
fall orchid bloom is on.
"We currently bfve thousands
varieties on sale from 20% to
40% off our regular low prices.•
Green Systems orchids start at
$14.99 and with its •ortbid
hue.es" trade-in policy it's possi-
ble to have blooming orchids
year round for as little as 50
cents a week.
The orchid bucks system
works as follows: As long as you
bring in your orchid in its origi·
r al pot, healthy, disease and
i 1Sect free with good roots deter-
r.ti.oed by Green Systems you
can have SS off on your next
crchid purchase of equal or
greater value.
Green Systems International
(756-1211) is at 20362 Southwest
Birch St. in Newport Beach. It's
open Thursday through Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 4p.m.
My favorite carpet cleaner,
Knightsbrtdge Carpet and
Upholstery Clean.Ing, is offering
a late summer special to Best
Buys readers. The cleaning spe-
HEtS
A 37-yea.r-old Peru native
and now an Anaheim resident
wbo bu worked u a garbage
hauler in Cot14 Mesa Disposal
for five yeen.
He was born in a poor 15-
member family, and his father
was the only one who worked
to support the family. Jesfen
was once a prolessional soccer
player in Peru then came to the
United States at the age of 22
in 1981 for a better job opportu-
nity.
He now plays in a soccer
league and practia!s soccer
FROM OUST TIU. DAWN
After changing his T-shirt
and shorts to his brown uni-
forms, Jesfen drives his 10-
wheeler to the route for that
day at 6:30 a.m.
He moves fast, opening con-
tainer lids and tossing can con-
tents into the truck He repeats
the same action hundreds of
times for about 375 houses
every day which can bring up
to 15 tons of garbage.
When the load is full. he dri-
ves to Stanton to dump it.
"You can't atford to take the
time,• he said. "Believe me,
don't think it's an easy job.
When you do hundreds every
day, it's tough. My body would
get tired.
"Sometimes (I) would stop
and say to myself, 'Wait a
minute. Wbat:s goj.ng on with
me?' It's a hard job, but some-
body has to do it.•
VCRs and lamps.
So, does he ever look into
the trash and pick up anything
for his use?
•nie rule says you're not
supposed to look into the trash
or pick up anything. You have
to dump it out I've seen a lot of
(cans), you can collect them
appreciation for bis se'rvice by
giving bim a soda to drink.
•This is a good thing for the
job," he said. •Some people are
nice, and they give you $10
tips."
And this coming Christmas,
Jesfen ~he will receive
sox,ne gifts and cards from
J-__\,J"'-.JJ. u.u..u.w:::; .steam cleaning .ui.__-1-
all traffic areas and removal of
troublesome spots and stains for
A UTTU HEAVY urn G
The excessive heavy con-
tainers makes it tough, Jesfen
says. They contain everything
from rocks and trees to fertiliz-
er.
•
allowed to do that.•
Sometimes he would run
into something unexpected.
his work.
LESSON FOR KIDS $45 (add $10 for stairs.)
There's a second special avail-
" ble for the whole house that
1 sdudes all area~s for just
~ 5. "As always, all cleaning
, mes with my personal w~
t which can be verified by the
t iroonials received from Bat
I • ys readers in the past,• says
t .. ner Mike Dunkley.
If you're a big Isaac Mmah1
b •1 you c~ see his casual line of
I., hes clothing called llaac today
l't Neiman Marcus located at r "shion Island in Newport
liPach. An Isaac trunk show will
r ice place trom 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
i the Leisure Sportswear
< '·partment, level 1.
Through Sept. 30 you can
purchase made-to-mea.sw-e
1• ·•n's clothing for the same price
t off-the-rack clothing at
l menegtldo Zegna (444-1534),
J ated on the second level of
uth Coast Plaza, :dear the
J icy's Mens Store. Ermenegildo
; <ma can make any made-to
J asure garment you need
i luding formal wear, trousers,
E ts, jackets and dress shirts.
A Salldard can holds up to
50 pounds of garbage, and he is
not supposed to pick up any-
thing heavier. This Is when be
usually receiv4f5 COllll>laints
form the residents for not pick-
ing up the trash.
He has also seen valuable
goods, such as beaters, 1Vs,
•0ne time when I was
dumping the trash," Jesfen
says, "this 10-inch rat jumped
out from the trash. 1 was scared.
So I backed out, and it jumped
inside my shirt. Jt eve4 wen.t
around f.uidi •Y ,aiid. Oh my
gosh, my body was shaking
because I was afraid it's going
to bite me,•
Neighbors often show their
Jesfen supports a wife and
four young children who range
in age from 1 to 10 years old.
Every once in a while. Jesf en
regrets not listening to his
father's ce when he was
young.
•After I fin1shed high school
(in Peru), I just wanted to play
soccer," he said.
•My dad told me, 'If you
Cultural festival
scheduled ~t OCC
The Native Am,erican Stu-
dent Organization at Orange
Two road-up~ade
plans OK'd, one stalled
Coast College will host an on-NEWPORT BEACH -The
campus cultural celebration City Council is asking for county
Saturday and Sunday in Cos-road-improvement money for
ta Mesa. two projects and has put off sub-
The event will feature lee-mitting a third funding request
tures, an art exhibit and a because it might require 'cutting
powwow. into private property.
Doreen Sanchez, a mem-lbe council voted at its Mon-
ber of the club, said the fes-day meeting to ask the Orange
ttvities will promote ind.ige-County Combined 'lb.nsporta-
the highway.
1be Widening would cut into
property owned by some busi-
nesses along that stretch in the
Mariner's Mile business district,
Councilwoman Jean Watt said.
nous culture from both the tion Funding Program for $1.2
Caffe PanlDl 675-81011._a nited States and Mexico. -+--'.._..-on..t.o :widen Jamboree Ro&d
J pular lunch spot for Italian The celebration will restart to eight lanes at Ford Road. It
Watt, whose district includes
the area, requested the
Mariner's Mile citizens' commit-
tee review the funding proposal.
After the review, the dty can ask
for fUDdlng--ior e project in two
s.sndwiches, is now open.for din-will request another $1.2 million years. · •
• IEST arts appears Thundays and
~turdays. If you know of a good buy
, .. 11 ,,,.at 540-1224, fume tit 646-
• I 70 or write to m.: Best Buys Dally I . , 1 l()t, 330 w. Bay St. Costa Mesa. 92627.
~lw'Pllo !L~fc!-t
VOL IQ, NO. U1
-HOW m llACff us
CJr?11: TN,,,_ Orllhge County .-.m .. 141 ........
OlilMICf l42..v71
~6U..Q21 ...... .._,_,DI
Spor1S 142-4.DO
....... "*9 ,. W-4170
(-Mil:~ ... a..
lullnlilOftb M2-u2t ....... •• .,,.902
~.., 1111'""9
~oa • ....._..._ ......
·----~ -,... .. .._,. 'f ••ao ..-.a; ....... ""'"' ,, ......... ~" .... ~.CILlll...,...._,_
ments could begin in 1998.
Cities can apply every two
years for Orange County 1\'ans-
portation Authority funding for
improvements on interseqions
fDd traffic lights.
WflGMCUT
LOCATION •••.••••• sat
\Vlldgt .•....••.•. .2-l •
NewpcM1 •.•••••••• .2·11 lladtJes ....•••••• .2·3 •
"""' ~ ........ .J.J • ~ ••••• , .• , •••• .2•3 I -....
Arlt law .. •• . ......... :~.t ""'""" -1:11 a.m. ......•••.. .J.I
~--=-................. A1 ....... ..... t:JJ p.m. ........... .S.1
-By Jennlfer Armstrong,
Dally Pilot
PllDAY
Flnt low
3:A1 a.m ............ .0.2
Flmhlgh
· 9:51 1.m •••••........ 6.0
Second low
4;11 p.m ............. o.o
Second high
10:19 p.m •..•••..•••• 5.4 ..... ~ •••• .61
Each year 1,500 people die
from accidental carbon monmide
poisoning and another 10,000 are
injured, according to the Journal
of the American Medical Associ-
ation.
Carbon monoxide is invisible
and odorless. It can come into a
home as a result of malfunction-
ing fuel-burning fumaces and
appliances or as a result of dis-
connected, cracked or clogged
exhaust systems and chimneys.
All fuel-burning appliances,
should be checked to make sure
they are in good working order.
The Fire and Marine Depart-
ment suggests purchasing an
Underwriters Laboratories listed
carbon monoxide detector with
an audible alarm.
If no one feels sick, turn off the
fuel-burning appliances and
open the windows. Then call a
licensed repair company or qual-
ified technician to help locate and
fix the carbon monoxide problem.
Holiday cooking classes
to benefit local charity
Chefs from three local restau-
want to play soccer, you are rant favorites have joined Robert Mondavi Winery to present "The going to face the consequence.' Sharing Clefs," a series of holi-
U I Usterled to him, I may have day cooking classes benefiting already got a degree or became a lawyer. But I didn't like (the Share Our Selves, the Costa
idea of going to school). Mesa-based non-profit organiza-
•This is going to come to my tio~amous chefs inctude Ben
boys. I always tell my boys. Ford of Wmdows on the Bay,
'Hey, look at me. You like doing--1----=-Pi.;:.;. e=r.::;...o Pierattoni of Ristor . . Hey, I ean-b tl 'll Mamma Gina and Reyes Gallar-support you, u ater on you do of Riverboat Cafe. The menu see; later on you're going to have children, and then you selections embrace international
will have to support them.•• tastes beginning with an Ameri-
·we were poor people in • can 1banksgiving Feast at Win-
Peru. We didn't have 1V, and dows on the Bay on Sept 30, an
no nice clothes. So I told my Ital.i.an Christmas Dinner at Ris-
kids, 'You're here. You got nice torante Mamma Gina on Oct. 21
clothes and everything. But I and a New Year's Eve Fiesta
have to work hard to get all Mexican at the Riverboat Cate on
this.'" Nov. 18.
Tickets are available for all
three dinners at $150 per person
or individual dinners at $60 per
person. For more information, call
• -Story by Stephani& Wong
-Photo by Don Leach
640-2617.
COSTA MESA
• MO blodt of .,..,. Street: A $75 baby c.ar seat was stolen from a parked
car. The window of the car was shattered.
• 2200 block of hdflc Drive: A racco0n trap worth Seo was stolen from
the back yard Of I resldence.
• 500 blodt of Anton loulevwd: Lap-top computen of undetermined val-
ue were stolen from a business. One of the windows was shattet'f!d allowing
the culprit or culprits to reach through and open the door. '
• 1MO blodt of Whittier Awnue: A color television worth $200 was stolen
from a mobile home. It was apparently taken by an unknown man the victim
hired to dean her bathroom because she "felt sorry for him."
NEWPOKT llEAOI
•JOO bloc* of Promontoey Drive West: A $ 100 cellular phone was stolen
from a car. lhe driver's side window was smashed.
• Comer of~ Avenue Md Superior Awnue: A wallet worth $1 SO
and containing $5 cash was stolen from the front seat of a c.ar parked at a gas
station. There was no sign of forced entry.
• 400 block of Dahlia Avenue: $5,500 worth of sterling sifller flatware was
stolen from a'resldence. The front door was left unlodced because the hcMM
Is for sale and was bel ·
· . Change in landscai»e doesn't always m~an the view's be~r ·
T he times they are a<hang-
ing. And not necessarily for
the better.
If you can stand watching
Clarine! 28 during its seemingly
endless funding drives, you might
have noticed Ralph Story's new
shows Abouf things that aren't
there anymore in LA and envi-rons. .
It strikes me that a lot of things
aren't around these parts any-
more, either.
the first that comes to mind is
a whole industry that left Costa
Mesa high and dry, so to speak.
Prom the '50s into the '80s, Costa
Mesa was· the sailboat-building
c.apil4} of the world
. There were Columbia, Cal,
Ericson, Islander and Ranger, to
name the biggies. Jepsen Marine,
which built the Cal and Ranger
lines, left Goat Hill -and their
identities and superb quality -to
become part of a conglomerate
fonned out of the corporate ashes
of the Bangor-Punta Railroad.
By Julie Ross Cannon . Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -School
board members Tuesday joined a
10-agency collaboration aimed al
easing access to social and medical
services in Westside Costa Mesa,
but not before one school trustee
voiced her objections.
A ~p of local service organi-
zations, which includes Todos Her-
manos, the Exchange Club, Share
Our Selves and Save Our Youth,
initiated the collaboration earlier
this year in memory of community
activist Roy Alvarado.
The group was seeking the
involvement of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District at Tuesday's
board meeting, but trustee Wendy
Leece said she was concerned with
j:>ossible intrusion into people's
lives.
•I think this is spoon-feeding
people with the help we think they . . . .
munity activist Bill Tu.rpit about the
coalition's goals and funding. •1
cannot support using taxpayer
funds for this.·
1\.upit, a Todos Hermanos board
member, said the coalition has
received a $145,000 grant from
Orange County Social Services in
· order to link the non-profit, social
service groups in Costa Mesa to
provide quicker and more compre-
hensive aid to families in need.
•Even though all of these agen-
cies bave oeen in the community,
there has never been a concerted
effort to work together," Turpit
said •1nstead of a family receiving
one type of service at SOS, for
,instance, and not having their oth-
·er needs~ now SOS will be able
to reter them to a case manager or
.other collaborative partner."
Other coalition members
btclude YMCA Community Coun-
seling Services, Hoag Memorial
'.Hospital Presbyterian, St.
\Joachim's Church, Orange County
.Community Congregations and
. Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter.
· The school district will be
responsible for only those services
.it already provides, said Superin-
,tendent Mac Bernd, particularly
1he gang counseling program and
·---...........,"National Boss Day"
N auo021 Boss Da
Bays Haroski, Deerfidd. II.,
~stercd it with the Chamber of
COmmercc of the United States.
She bcF. the custom of
~u.ing her boss by taking
him to lunCh.
Haroski ~ Boss Day to
improve the Rlarioruhip Dctwttn
cmplo):'CCS and their boSscs. She
chOsc Oct. 16 because it was her
fidtUs birthday and ~use she
believed he was an cxcmpluy
boss.
One million National ~ Day cards wiU be given
nauonwidc. accorcling to HMlmark rcsca.rch. ffallmark
offm' 32 Bots Oar card designs.
for male and female boucs.
Hallmark Dilbert TM cards and
lifts arc cxpea:cd to be popular Tor Bou Oily this year.
fred
martin
Soon they were just gone .
Ditto Columbia, which was
sucked up by another anonymous
conglomerate, Whittaker Corp.
Ericson, which began life when a
couple of entrepreneurs literally
rescued two cast-off molds from
the trash heap, struggled the
parenting skills education. The
program would target mostly fami-
lies with students at Wilson,
Pomona and Whittier elementary
schools.
"They will be cooperating with
the other partners to make sure
resources the school district has are
available to families in greatest
need, H 1\upit said.
But Leece was unconvinced.
"That area has high student
turnover," she said. "The interven-
tion will be wasted when people
leave."
She also questioned whether
longest, even resc.tmg to trying to
build boats in Mexico.
The ooly survivor it an upstart
Mmed MacGregor Yachts. A
quarter-omtwy ago, Roger Mac-
Gregor looked at the escalating
oost of keeping a &mall sailboat in
the water and envisioned a boun-
tiful future in easily trailer-bound
sailboats.
Some of the early ooes were, at
best. ordinary. Then Roger aeated
a system of using water for ballast
You let the water in when you
want the weight for sailing, let it
out when you're ready to go back
on the trailer.
Roger designed this into a 26-
footer and bas built 35,000 of them
in his remarkable plant on Placen-
tia Avenue. .
Though there's hardly a short-
age of restaurants and saloons
hereabouts, some wonderful
watering holes have also disap-
peared.
Sure the Warehouse is fine, but
it can never replace Jim Beck-
lbire'I place. You go Into the
Warehouse, you get 101De decent
food and throbbing music.
But when you went into Berk-
shire's, you could often find that
most eloquent ol actors, John Car-
radine. emoting ~or
Bogey and Bacall. or OiCk Powell
crooning to June Al1isoo.
Also gone: The Castaways on
the bill. Ken Niles' Villa Marina on
Bayside Drive, the Hurley Bell in
Corona del Mar and the greatest
of them an. Christian's Hut on the
Peninsula.
A medium-rise condo building
stands now in the place where
Marsbail the manager kept a joint,
with awesome potential for rowdi-
ness, as calm as a church social -
well, almost-and Jim the bar-
tender ma.de the world's most
deceptive tropical beverage, the
dreaded Lapu Lapu.
The most surprising restaurant
disappearance, t think. was
Reuben's. But then oft-changing
corporate ownership had allowed
service ne
the agencies would be referring
women for abortions as part of the
medical intervention.
Tu.rpit said he was unsure since
the collaboration has not discussed
the concern.
•That falls under medical case
management in the area Hoag
Memorial Hospital will be involved
with,· he said. ·u the school board
wants to explore it further, we
should involve Hoag.•
Tu.rpit said he wasn't surprised
by Leece's comments, given her
prior objections to social services in
local schools.
·1 think some of her fears aren't
applicable to the program we're
talking about," he said.
Other trustees bad no problem
with joining the collaboration and
approved the venture 6-1.
· 1hlstee Martha Fluor even sug-
gested the group seek out mem-
bership from the Assistance
League of Newport-Mesa. which
aids needy families with dental
care and clothing.
Lynne Bloomberg, the district's
drug, alcohol and tobacco preven-
tion specialist. will represent New-
port-Mesa on the group's 10-mem-
ber board.
food, service and swroundings to
plummet At the end. it was just
another dwnp.
Certainly no dive was Ka.ram's
on 30th St in Lido Village. Jimmy
Karam made it into Newport's
most.elegant reAaw"ant., but whao
he went, so chd his place. It bas
been many things since, none
· even a shadow of the original
Only a few of the"truly leg-
.endary spots have survived.
namely Dillman's in Balboa, the
Arches on PCH.
No longer among us are the
various banks that bad Newport
or Costa Mesa in their names, and
the cracker-barrel-style hardware
stores like Balboa Hardware (the
store and name are still there, the
hardware ain't), Forgit's and Jim
and Audrey Moore's ABC Lum-
ber.
Service stab.ons, of course, are
an gooe, and., .. JD01t ot lbe •
gas ctatiom, MY favorite was aa
the p..nimuJa. ft WU owned by a
wonderful guy mmed Bob. who
also rented mom.y~ «Od
pumped, I think. Flying A~ -,. :
Wbidl ~bow long ago"""· was. •:
Until Tuesday evening when ; ·
my friend Tom Stadlinger caDed. I•;
hadn't dreamed ol including the .. ·
East.bluff Pbmrwy In this far-• : ,.
from-complete roundup . •
Sadly, this ftne, friendly neigh-
borhood bnsbr· now joins the
ranks of things that aren't here
anymore -just as its emwhDe
neighbor, Eastbhdf Unocal, did a
few years ago.
The big kids 8fe killing cif •
mom and pop, and that is neither
ben!thy nor is it ping:ress
When you need to know ...
rind it fast in 'JOOf hometo.Nn newspaper
COD FROIVI
AROUND THE VVORLD
ALL ON ONE ISLAND.
Edo of .Japan
Fresh Jepenese food eklttfully ptepered right
in front of y0u I
_Mat:dls
Mediterranean Cuisine
You'll enjoy generous Mrvl~ of the hNhhiest food
et the best prices thit tide of ltte Medlten'eRMn.
M cDonald's
Good ol• Amerieen fut end friendly Mrvice
you've come to expect from S.m till 1 lpm .
Panda Express
Feat. fruh end hNhhy gourmet ChiMM cui1inel
We couldn't b .. r u1lng MSG.
S 'B arro's
You would hlW to fly ell the wey to ltely to gee
frNhef lt.iien food than thlal
You'll think thi1 city i• pretty cool 1fler trying
one of their smooth lei,
chlllen "" ftevored lemonedet.
Subway
Hop on the 1ubwey for ulede end hot end
cold undwlche1 mede with freah·belled
breed right In th• store.
Tacos & Co.
No need to dMh to the border when Y°" hew the
belt ~ food right "-·
I S · L A N D
• FOOD
T E
ENTER · TO WIN A T RIP
F OR TWO TO THE
H AWAIIAN ISLANDS
OltOP THIS ENTRY •ORM on IN THE
IS LAND TERRACE FOOD COURT
ADD 111. e I
CITY
IT ATI
W'1111n .,11 lie <Hll<tt4 • llter !1111
WtMts4ty, O<ttllef t. ~rllltliee ... II ~ty.
O<* 4 tt t I'-& blYllls _, .. II JMfS
ef • mi. hlaM, ib sttm .. _,...,.es
,,.....-.-n. .... pwll<l
,.,.. ~"' ........ f..-.s ti
N<AI ., .... tfit'lt " ...... OMs tf ~ ...
'" '9 llMI """" .. ,... .... ....., .1
"lr;ils r•<1M4. Dtcisiees ef fttilel ..., '"
..... lllNltn .... Mth4" ... .Utf .................... ,,.... ......
lillit -· -"' "'*.
111'• •
I
I I I
I
I I
t I
I I
TILll'll ONI ' I
I : ~------------------------------------------~
RR ACE
..
r
I I
I : I ,J. ,-\
I _.-·_· "-~ ta..-~,
...,-.'°"8WJMIU ....
Orange COllll Colege G1lllw a
10.bOur ooune thel t;;;d;. tbe tm
~ outs ol nmning a twtn diel8l
paws boat from 1 to to p.m. today
8nd 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aiday at
OCCs Sailing Cent.er, 1801 w.
Coat Highwa~, Newport Beem.
~fee is-St98. For infor-
madnn. call 645-9' 12.
STORM STRATEGY
Orange Coast College offers a Jecture on •Storm Strategy• from 1
to 10 p.m. Priday at OCC's Sailing
Center, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Registration fee is
$23 for singles and $39 for couples.
For information. call 645-9412.
GLOBAL POSIT10NING
Orange Coast College offers a
seminar on ·understanding the
Global Positioning System• from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m Satwday at OCC's
Sailing Center, 1801 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach. Regis-
tration fee is $35 per person and
$.55 per couple. For information.
call 645-9412.
MARINE DtESEL MAINTENANCE
Orange Coast College offers a
class that teaches marine diesel
maintenance and troubleshooting
techniques from 7 to 9 p.m. next
-/
N!!_I' /1111 ()utltl 1
JUST ARRIVED!
• Casual denim, rag,
leather, hooked and
chenille rugs.
• More Tibetan rugs.
I HEMPIDLL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224 tL 230 East 17th St., Costa Mesa
'Ml....,,. llnNagb Nov. 'D, • ~--!!--.. c.... 1801 w. Collit .._..,. ......,... a.eta: .............. .a., Pw lilfar •
....,.,.,., C8ll ~12.
ONE EVENNG 11tMMG cotllSE
PlotiJle 'D ol the U.S. Cout
Guard Aindliary will teadl you
bulc boating procedUl"el and
respoosibiJ1tie 1n a special three-
boor training ooune fer penone1
waten:raft opera.wn at 1 p.m. on
Oct. 3 at the Newport Beach Har-
bormast.er Facility, 1901 Bayside
Drive, Corona ~ Mar. The cost ii
S1 and registration is required one
week in advance. For inlonnatlon.
call "72-2254.
MUlJ1HUU. SEAMANStw»
WORkSHOP
Orange Coast College otters a
seminar for sailors who wonder
how auising or cba.rtering a multi-
hull differs from that of a monobull
from 7 to 10 p.m. on Oct. • at
OCC's Sailing Center, 1801 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
The workshop will focus on sped.f-
ie techniques related to soiling,
anchoring, reefing and navigating
today's modem-performance mul-
tihull sailboats. kegistration fee is
$23 for individuals and $39 pet;
couple.
DIESEL POWER BOAT HANDUNG
Orange Coast College offers a
10-hour course that teaches the ins
M IOAT MONG
Q-ange Cout C.ollege'a Sailing
Program will imroduca Milon to
big boat racing aboUd the ClOl-
)ege'I beautiful 6'-foot ahpnlnum
sloop, Volcano, and 47-foot sloop,
Saudade, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
Oct. s, 6 and 12. The coune begins
with the basics of racing rules and
strategies and ends with a compe-
tition in the Bank~. 1be course
tee is $2"5 for persons ·aboard
Saudade and $295 for those
aboard Volcano. For information.
call 6'5-9412.
BAREIOAT OwneaN<i a.ASSES
Orange Coast College's Sailing
Program offers a pair of courses .
that teach intermediate-level
sailors the skills to operate a mid-
sized amil.iary auising boat from 9
a~ to 4 p.m._on.Oct. 5, 12, 19 and
26 and from 9 a.m.. to 4 p.m. on
Oct. 6, 13, 20 and 27 at 1801 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
Registmtion fee is $198. For more
infonnation. call 645-9412.
Quality Legal Services
at a Reasonable Price
. $125/hr
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
BUSINESS UTIGATION AND TIANSACTIONS
Corporations, partnerships, n1ef8eJS, acquisitions,
buy-sell agreements, contracts and collections
REAL ESTATE LITIGATION AND TRANSACTIONS
Evictions, foreclosures, easements, title disputes,
worl<-outs
ESTATE PLANNING
Trusts, Wills, Probate Administration
LEGAL =OPTIONS
ATTORNEYS A.T LA.W
A Whale
'of A Tale Janet S. Wong
Author of
I
I
Children's Boo~
854-8288
A Bookstore for kids of all aqes
4137 Campus Dr. Univerat\j Center, Irvine
Monday, September. 30
3-5 pm
Special Presentation
Janet S. Wong was born in Los Angeles,
the child of a Chinese immigrant father
and a Korean immigrant mother. She
gradua1ed from UCLA summa cum laude
with a B.A . in history and then ob<aincd a
J.D. from Yale Law School. After
prac1ing law for a few years. she decided
to devote her time to writing instead.
ROTATE & BALANCE
I • C0MPUTet 5Pfll 8ALANCE 1 • 0£<)( BRAKES & PRESSURE
I Additiord dagt lor tpart wt.la ---~------
A Suitcase of Seaweed
(I C<>lkmon of ~l\'.Cplive, I011Chll11• Oflcn amusin1 pt>nnS)
&
Good Luck Gold
(poems reflecring
her experience
growing up as a
multicultural
Asia-American
Child)
Be creative •
Write a Bil"thday
Poem for Janet'•
!3rd Birthday!
WhataS~
DOIY "511116 RUJ'
Get to tbe Newport Pier/Mc-
Fadden Square euty to watch tbe
fleet retum with the frelh catdl ol
the day. 'the fish ii prepared for
sale at the open-air market
RSI INi TiaPS
Plsbing supplies and boat char-
ters (open party and private) are
available at Newport Landing
Sport:fisbfng, 309 Palms, Suite P,
675-0550; Palco Ashing Charters,
832-7708; aud Davey's Locker, 400
Main St., Balboa. 673-14.34.
MORE SAIUNG LESSONS ANO .
. IOAT RENTALS
Sailboat rentals and private
terons are available at Marina
SaWog in the Balboa Pun Zone.
Advanced classes indude naviga-
tion, big boat, power boat, intro-
KAYAI< a.ASSIS
Beginning wkaya)dng, rolling
cliDicl and private lesions are
olfered. Kayak and .. ski ft!Dtals
are allo available. Per more infor-
matioa, call Paddle Power, 1500 W.
Balboa Blvd., 675-1215.
KAYAI< TOlMS N#D RENTALS
'I\vo-bour kayak tours begin at
to a.m. every Sunday from New-
port Dunes. Cost Is Sl5 per adu.it.
$10 per child. Kayak rentals and
classes are also available. Call
729-1154.
~,,.
life of 11 tlaervin1 cbiJJJ
Ungaro• Anne ·Klein •DK.NY
• Escada • St. John
and more!
END OF MONTH SAI,E & CLEARANCE
·Fri. Sept. 27111, Sat. Sept. 28r" & Sun. Sept. 29"'
Houn: Mon-Sat toam to Spm • Sunday Sept. 29th 10am-4pm
760-664o • 2850 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
Now Accep~ Appoint~nts For Fall Coruignments.
Donatwn.s are alu1a • welcome. ·
.
briefly in the news
Record funds raised
for breast cancer fight
The fifth anniversary Race
For The Cure, held last Sunday
in Newport Beach, Tailed
approximately $155,000 more
than last yea.r's event, race orga-
nizers said.
Although final figures will not
be available for weeks, organiz-
ers estimate that the funds
raised will come very close to
their $500,000 goal.
According to a press release,
a record-breaking 15,000
attended the SK Run/Walk, with
10,500 men, women and chil-
dren participating.
The course record of 15:52
was broken by Costa Mesa resi-
dent Valerie Vaughan, with a
. :J
Soutfi Coast
Thrift & Loan Association
time of 15:51. •
Seventy-five percent of race
proceeds go to local Susan G.
Komen B~ Cancer Founda-
tion programs aimed at eradicat·
µtg breast cancer as a life-threat-
ening disease through educa-
tion, screening, community out-
reach and treatment. the press
release stated.
'IWenty-five percent goes
toward research grants.
The 1997 Race For The Cure
is scheduled for Sunday, Sept.
28, 1997.
Session will addres.s El
Toro airport proposals
Community members can
learn about efforts to turn the El
Toro marine base into a commer-
d.al airport at an Airport Work-
ing Group meeting Oct. 9.
The group is bo)din g ill annu-
al meeting at 1 p .m. in the main
ballroom at the Balboa Bay
Club, 1221 W. Cout Highway.-
Newport Bea~. Anyone can
attend, and admission is free.
•It's a very aitical issue to
every Newport Beach resident,•
grou p spokesperson Bonnie
O'Neil said. •A lot of people
don't quite understand bow
important this is .•
Newport Beach Councilman
Tom Edwards and county Super-
visor Marian Bergeson will
s~a.k, followed by a presenta-
tion by the El Toro Redevelop-
ment Agency. The audience will
have 45 minutes to ask questions
at the end.
Call 224-5504 for information .
Non.stop from Orange County John Wayne Airport
. f.. 'I. At' One Cell Doea It AHi
t ~ Air • Room • Comps .. lndudes: P1m·1 • Room .. HMnlhe Lav.-
. r.am ==~ • &coltld Tripe
;_ • ...r..~~ COll'BTm =~~'°~:-~:~ ~S t'E'V',.. . how to get CMlno complm•n••
Free Rooms For Qualified Players
Depart Saturday Noon -Return Sunday PM
Every week starting Sat. October 5th
$99 ppdo Gold+ Rate .
$149 ppdo New Player Rate
Call for reservmtons Now
1 800-5.JUNKET or 1 800-SSS-8538
721.-91 n • 2 Park Crest, Ne rt Coast
Your 9 real Y7reafs '.lJeserve
· Y7real & Ytsh 9ro.m 7he !Ranch
C7 / (\ r Or.ty.tnal .9ru.tne !J(anp.h Jne J~ew !Jl(ar.£e1
7n--ihen Jo'"& }OeRaymon s recreating 11\eRanCh, they were etemun lJl/ ~~ bring on}y the best back to Irvine. In our meat case, you'll find only
Manning's Beef, the natural product from pure bred, cattle, raised, hormone-free
(jn vitamin-enriched co~ wheat and hay. From lightly marbled Porterhouse Steak
to the leanest Hamburger, the meat from the Ranch raises any meal to a prime din-
ing experience.
When the feast turns to fis~ you'll find ours to be so fres~ beautiful and
bountiful, it conjures up a work of art. From delicate halibut to ri~ red salmon to
shellfish the seafood you take home from the Ranch is simply the finest from
any ocean.
Local Pid u d
White Com
3 for $1.00
Banana..
3lbs. $1.00
Manning's Tri Tlf>
Roast
$3.69 lb
--·--------·------------------~-------------------------------------------------------
VILLA GE CENTER
A Village
o f V a r · I e t y I
•Fun
•Elegant
•Smart
•Sophisticated
•Friendly
• Convenient
Designer Consignment Boutique
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720-1555
Eastbluff Village Center, Newport Beach
• 200/o OFF ALL HAIR SERVICES!
CAU foR Appr: (714) 644, 1570 I\
'fii'sttime ~ ~ --st~~-+ opita 10/'23/96
/\ .. -<_ ··-<-.. -<_ ··-<-.. -<_
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2Mt EAITa.U'1 ORM • EAITa.UPf Vl.LAGI CtNm. N.8.
~
644-9521
OY•• t 80 L0c.AT10flt8
MODEL SEAROt .
The Structure men's clothing
store's Underwear Model Search
will be at Fashion Island from 4 to
7 p.m. at the Structure store. A
team of Structure model scouts
will be looking for males who are
well-spoken , health conscious,
style conscious and hard-work-
1 ing. For more information, call
,800) 945-1010.
Warehome: 882 West 16di
DNOltCE TALK
lbe Law Offices ol Lisa A.
Ciancio offers a discussion on
·Dtvorce -What to Rqw:t. How
to Proceed• at 6:30 p.m. at the
Casa Del Sol ,Clubhouse, 881
Dover Drive, Suite 300, Newport
Beach. The cost is $10. Reserva-
tions are required. To RSVP, call
574-0866.
SEWNGSIOW
·Women In Management offers
a dinner meeting on •Selling Your
Boss and Other Creatures• at 6
CAltMl. rur.t.
The Doctors Speakers Bureau
offers a free d.ilcussion on Carpel
Tunnel Syndrome from 6:30 to
7:30 &;: at 2850 Mesa Venle Dri-
ve Suite C, Costa Mesa.
Learn bow to prevent the return
of •arm or wrist pain.• For more
information, call 662--0670.
FREE WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College offers a
free workshop that examines
changes cwrently being made in
government benefits, •surviving
Government Changes in AliDC
and SSI, • bom 6 to 7:30 p .m. in
~·
JOHn LEOnHRD'S
• o 1.. r • • •"'
----COSTA MESA
1-------+==--. DESIGNER OUILET
Discover Ctira~ao Now
And Save Up To $500:00
With The Discover Cura~ao Now Card,
YI>" can --· do men arid pay lea wtch ..-cl.ti dltCOIHllJ on c• iwull, Ofle-OH·kind
anractlom. specl<y boutiques, hotel1 and in.tirn11lon1I cuitlne to name a lww.
It's )'OUf'l free ...._,, "°" book \Qlt nett JW-f!Mld
vaalloti to On(.t<>. Out of ~ hl.mc:ane betl, ...,,_
drenched c~ thlhet wlCh tecluded cow bNctm, colorful Ouldl
ll'Chl~. ncltins nltht life end 111w1,. aslnol. Fcx mQl'e lnb>
maclon, call 'fOIH trallel lfll'll °' •~en 7'16.
s days from •765.t939*
~ .................... «eOINlllllllooll, ~ • ......,
................................... ttww-.
o...~ ............... ~ .. ._..
...,.,..
. Tbe Newport Beech Central
lJbrary ofterl. a free plOgl'Bm on
•0twrce MediatlOo-A Belt Kept
Secret• at 7 p.m. iii tbe Prieodl'
MeeUng Room at 1000 Avocado
Ave. Call 117·3801.
TONYIENNm
Tony Bennett, legendary per-
former and accompliabe4. painter,
will be available to sign copies of
bis book of paintings, •Tony Ben-
nett.: What My Heart Has Seen,•
from 12:30 to 1:30 at the Rizzoli
Book Store at South Coast PW:&
in Costa Mesa. The book of paint-
ings presents the artist's best
work bom pendl sketches on
hotel sta.tionery to his beloved
SMAU. IUSMSS
Tbe Consumer BnstDd!lf Net-
work pre9ellts Jan Noonan uid
•'The Press and Small Bust,,..,,•
at 1 a.m. in tbe lea Room at 3100
lrfine Avenue, Newport Beach.
The cost is $15. Call 550-4785.
CANDIDATE FORUM
Tbe Newport Harbor Republi-
can Assembly presents the free
1996 Candidates Night Forum for
the Newport Beach Oty Coundl,
Newport-Mesa School Board and
Refuse Collection· Charter
Amendment from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at
the Newport Beach City Hall
Coundl Chambers, 3300 Newport
Blvd. Call 645-9127.
MODEL SEAROt
1be Structure men's clothing
store's Underwear Model Search
will be at SoUth Coalt,... from
'-to 7 p.m. at the StrUduN ltln.
'A teem OI SbUctunt DMlel 1COU11
Will be IOoldng f« ~ WbO a.re
well-spoken. beilth comdous,
style oootd0\11 and baid-w«k-
ing. Call (800) 945-1010.
FAMLYFAlt
The Pamiffes at the ()qnge
Cout Interfai~ Shelter pl'8lentl
the "Old Fashioned Family Pua
Pair and Shelter Shower,• gather-
ing items for more than 100
homeless cbildren and their par-
ents housed at tbe shelter, from 1
to 4 p .m. at St. Mark Church, 2100
Mar Vista, Newport Beach.
Events include ~v ~y, magic, games, clay fun, -
painting and more. The COit is 10
per family ol any size plus one
unwrapped shower gift from the
Shelter's Wish List including
clothes, school supplies and baby
accessories. Call 376-9141.
FEED BAHN
• Feed • Tock • Pet Supplies • Pet Food • Free Delivery
~
I NH OYAf l Y ' I'l l r ooo s
The Natural for Today's Pet
• No added chemical
preservatives
• No artificial colors, flavors. --·
sugars or dairy products
• Natural pet foods for a
healthier dog
TM Origi0.1I Uinb & Rice
Diets For All Stages
Of Your Dog's Life
SALE STARTS SATURDAY, SEP!. 28. l 996
2300 Newport Blvd. • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 on the corner of Newport & 23rd St.
548-3151
. • Renew Your Youth
• Remove Wrinkles
• Restore Sun Damaged Skin
• State-of-the-Art Tru Pulse Laser
• Minimal Down Time
• Affordable Fees
Ml.CHAEL V.
Ei:AMM.D.
COSMETIC SUAOERY
CALL TODAY
FOR FREE CONSULTATION
(714) 7.21-1113
I I
I I
RAGFOOTIAU.
Tbe Newport Be.di Onnnu-
Dily S.tka~cft8Da
ftve-weet ..... "'• lmtrudkiDal Clinic. ctestgrwct to iDlroduCe ftnt
ind M<XIDd griMM glitl and boy.
to nag football from 4:30 to 500
p.m. CJD Pdda,. at a.e c:ammum-
ty Youth C...... at Grant Hawalill
Park on fifth Street and 1ri1
Awnue in Ccnma del Mar. Regis-
tration fee ii S25 and pnll9glstra-
tlcm ii required. Par' man infor-mation. call 6"-3151.
LEGAL SIMIWt
Jobmon and Higgim, an inter-
1Ultional tmurance broker, often a
free teminar to review the legal
requlnmMmta on CIOIDIDUDicatklm
regarding the family and Med-
ical Leave Act. Calilorma leave
laws, and IDOl8 from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. at 695 1bwn Center Drive,
Costa Mesa.. For man Informa-
tion., call •35-8411.
•sponsor • bon for Neigh-
1bon: a cmnmunity cleanup tn ltt1e El Nido Senior Mobile Home
fPark from 9 a.m. to noon at 1640
MAGNETISM
Newport Blvd., Cotta Mesa.
Between 75 to 100 volunteers are
needed to help beautify the dty The Harmony, Unity, Balance,
A Moll u...l Glt,,_
Moofri. • 9-6:30
Saturday • 9~S
2610 San
NEWPORT HILLS
QEANER5
• 20'1. Off NfY DRY CLENeNQ ORDER OF $20.00 OR MORE
• SHln'S $1.26 wmt It~ DIV CLEANINQ ORDER
• WE ALSO DO AU. KINDS OF ALJ'ERA110N
• AU. WORK IS HAND FINISHED
• 15" OFF LEATHER NG SUEDE CLEANING
~26 San Miguel Dr.~ Beach
7f4) 720-1024
LOCATION·,
Ii I
LOCATION,
llilili
LOCATION,
Loc111on 11 M',ttv. w w11tt en" ~-owr5,500cawlin ATM kJCltianl ~ h Wiit m
dWDI tan. ,,. ._.,..,.. . .., ...... ... ., ..... ............... _ ...
sq, ti, bily '° ap9'191 ltQllft. am.
""•'"Pitmnl .. conw.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
1~cm!1r\',56
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBEJt 26, 1996 A7
a ~ danoe from 8:30 to 1 t
p.m. at Jimmie DeFore Dence
Studio, 151 Kalmus Drive, Suite
G -3, Costa Mesa. A dance lelsao
will be presented from 7:30 to
8:30 p.m. Tbe COit ii SS for USAB'-
OA members and S8 for non-
members. C.aJl 898-1713.
CD SAVERS
Orange Coast College offers a
workshop on •Conservative
Investment Alternatives for CD
Savers,• from 9 a.m. to noon in
room 204 of OCC's Lewis Applied
Science Building. Registration fee
is $19. Call 432-5880.
SUNDAY:
"
Hall. the Police and fire Depart·
mentl and the Sc:bool Diltdd.
1lckets for lunch oo9t ..
POWWCNI
Orange Cout CoDegie prll I! nts
the free, ftftb annWll Pow Wow
from DOOll to 7 p.m. Oil OCCa ~
cer field. Califomla IDdiaD arti-
facts will be on dilp)ay mm 1 to~ •
p.m. in OCC's Art Gallery. For
more biformation. call 432-5162.
ROYAJ..WAU
The M.S. Phoenix pretents •A
Royal Hawaiian Luau,• a dinner
and show auise, from 3:30 to 9
p.m. boarding at the Balboa Pun
Zone, 600 Edgewater Place, New-
port Beach. Tickets are $35. For
more information, call 673-0240.
CALL NOW TO
BUY, SELL, OR QUOTE
COMMERCEBANCORP
ORANGE BANCORP
HARBOR BANCORP
PLEASE ASK FOR JAMES ALEXANDER
(213) 687-8400
1-800-540-ALEX p. Ala..-;,,~, ~-.
!523 W. 8 ™,Los ANGELES, CA 90014
Do You Know Where
Your Cords Are?
..
f
I
.
. THE. BAD AND THE BEAU]lfUl IN BALI ·
By Susan Seely, Daily Pilot
pool and a quiet beach. 1be
hotel also featured. Balinese
dancing on Friday and Saturday
nights, so we got to add some
different dances to our viewing
repertoire.
Our sbabbat weekend experi-
ences have definitely changed
since we left Boston.
Prom there we bad to go back
to Padang Bai on Sunday mom-
BAU -This is the last chap-ing to catch the feny to Lombok.
ter to our Ba.li-Lombok stoey. The ferry was a giant rust-buck-
The day after our snorkeling et, jam-packed with locals and
trip to the Island of Pulau Men-tourists set to make the 5-hour
jangan (better than the Great journey to Lombok.
Barrier Reef I), we continued our The worst part was when I
Bali travels by exploring the east . had to U.se the "facilities" -truly
coast of the island from Lovina to horrible. We managed to find
Padang Bai. seats on the side that provided a
Upon arriving in Padang Bai, nice view and something of a
where we had planned on breeze -did I mention that it
spending a relaxing Sbabbat, we was stultifyingly hot and humid?
discovered that it was a real At least we were not traveling
. area on Lombok) that wu u.ted
in our book as a "much better
value" -than wbAtf Arie went
off in search of a better place,
which he found a few blocks
away, so we happily moved and
spent the night at a nice hotel
that rarely gets English-speaking
visitors.
The next day the real adven-
ture began -we set out to rent a
car for touring the island. We
finally found a place that had a
little Suzuki Jimmy to rent-
never mind that you could see
through the floorboard to the
street below o.r that the windows
didn't roll up all the way apd
were covered with some wrinkly,
purple tinting film.
Jn Lorilbo.k, there are DO wide
roads and one iJ constantly
dodging an· enormous array of
moving obstacles, e.g. dogs,
chickens1 oows, bikes, motorcy-
cles, buses, trucks. bemos, ddo-
mos (borse--drawn •taxis"), .
women with loads of wood or
bricks on their heads, men with
baskets of vegetables banging
off poles balanced across their
shoulders, and finally, groups of
students practicing their march-
ing drills in the middle of the
street at all times of the day.
We finally made it up to our
destination for the night (with
Arie white-knuckling it and act-
ing as navigator), located up in
the "mountains" in the village of
dwnp and told our driver for the in "first class," which was in an day tollle us ba-cJC~to.,,.-..,..Bann~-,-a--1--en--.cl,--os-ed--o--roo__,_m_wi~. ~a ~o-t-of~--
Beach, a quiet fishing village that smokers and a violent Indonesian
we had passed on our way in. movie.
We ended up staying for a We finally arrived in Lombok
wonderful couple of days at the after a very uncomfortable ride
Balina Beach Bungalows, in a lit-and ended up at a run-down,
tle fan-cooled bungalow set in sm~lly hotel in the town of.
lovely grounds with a beautiful Mataram (part of the "big city"
~~tA•J-ouvsg
BUY 8 BELL UllED FUANITUAE,
TOYS a Am:880RIE9. El'C.
2584 N9lllfPOl'l llhld. (et Del M.,.) .......... ~ eo.ca-. (714) 831·7383
a Early Years Toys
• Developmental toys for children birth to 10 years.
• Quality toys with lasting and creative play value.
• PersooaJ service from knowledgeable sales staff.
642-4212
1827 WESTCLIFF DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT
2043 Westcllff Dr::.. Ste. 103
842-07a7
LAGUNA NIGUEL
27932 S. La Paz Rd.:: Ste. G ••a au ..
llMNE
14220 Culver • 889-9941
HUNTINGTON BEACH
10034Adams ••• 8882
BRAND NEW, NEVER
WORN, AUTHENTIC
1970'S APPAREL!
ALTERNATIVE DRESS!
• ANTIQUES' (OLLECTllUS!
• UNIELIEVAIU ONE OF A
klND ITEMS!
VINTAGE CLOTHING AT
VINTAGE PRICES
SToP IN FOR YOUR
FREE Gin!
'Top Dog" Fashion ~";
Come Join the laughs at this
" / ' " .: hilarious event! Dress up
· ' yourself or your kids with
•. ~ :. the family pooch and
.... <----J enter to win prizes!
\~ ..., { Fun for the whole family!
~lt:i-
...._., .... "9nM ........ c .... , ...... :
Formal Wear, Casual Wear. Lingerie/Pajamas. Swim Wear.
Best Halloween Costume&. Moster/Pet look·allke
................... --c ...... ,,
-4 ............. ,.., th• ....... ...,., .,...
Saturday, October 26, 1996
Check In by 10:00 om
SS per dog (pre-registered by 3pm October 25)
S 1 O per dog to register on the day of the event
Carpet Your Entire Ho.me
w ith Plush or Berber .
-DMllfFOI s49'°'°"9/y 00 UPT03MOS.
SAME AS CASH
0.A.C
Full llne of Wool. Waven Axminster & Sisal Catpeting Available
1904 H.,.,_ lloulevard •Costa .....
N.E. Comet' of Halllor a 19th St...t •
i.....==~-""----1 .. 722-9642 ••
Uc# 64.9491
Mon-sat 1D-6
Sun 11-5
Free ·Corian or Kohler
Kitchen Sink
With Any Kitch¥ Cabinet Purchase
• Coriafl Sink #872 Of' Kohl« Executive Chef Sink.. OfJar BU 1()(17/il8
n=~=====~ • &pat in-home deRpi c:oruulwioo • Do-ir-~ or instillation propn
• l..iip ideaion ri brand IWllt stock ~ • Planned CX>lllpkrc homt l'Cll<Mtioo
fully cu.mm designer abMry in O.C. specialist
• Custom Conan ~ grmilr c.ounrmops • (.ompuirivr pricing. •
Showroom: 848-5009 S
6836 E. Edinger Ave. (Next to Home Depot) CCR~
Huntington Beach
FINE CABINETRY GENEROUSLY DISCOUNTED
prices.
Unique J ewetery
and Gift Items
"We've
raided
e es
closets in
Orange
County"!
Thtebatu.. · where O\ltside of Ubud), ligDI ot
spirttuality and God were always
around us, and it made us think
about how we in tbe West rarely
incorporate those elements into
our daily lives, or do so in a w ay
that is not necessarily as beauti-
ful and inclusive.
We bad picked up several
words of Bahasa Indonesia and
enjoyed 1eamiog more -Arie
was particula.dy impnmive,
espedally when he was bargain-
ing.
little did I know that my new
husband is such a keen haggler! As a result, we are also able to
appreciate those things that
make Judaism special and rele-
vant to our lives. We are learning
a lol
Although we did not find a
Jewish community in Bali (our
frlend Randi now t.ells us there
was actually a synagogue some-
.
r--------------------------~-, . I • ·, I I I ::I I ··va ::I I
I D E T A I L ·1 N G I · 1 r 645 Supei:ior Ave • Costa Me.a I
I 574-7474 I
I I
-1 $5 00 HAND CAR-WASH-! e OFF COUPON•
I Coupon exp. 10/12/96 Val~ Sun.·Fri.
.I
I
• Good '°'II..., llMI cwtomen only, '°' OINt band COi' WllM
WASH INCLUDES:
lnteriOI' dUd I vacuum, Whffl• cleaned &
fire• dreued, camubo .,way__ wax, axe••• -wafW Wowft -off;---
We are the original Steve's which has bHn touted
by the Wall Street Journal, FQrtune Magazine
People Time, Road & Tracie, Car & Driver & BMW Journ~ as the highest quality shop in the nation .
We look forward to serving you .
S1IVI & JONI MAaCHISI
I OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK · BAM TO 6PM L-------------~--------------~
_ The sing e dose mo thJr _
flea control for your P,et •
100% effective in one day.
Lasts 4 weeks ·As seen on TV. ---
@-auv llfltiotlMI HERE
The Flea Egg Killing Pill You Give \blK Pl't 01j Once A Month
CAT
FVR+CP ••••.••.••• $8
. Leukemia •••••. $1 2
Mv ............ .
f4 ...,. supplyJ
Program .••••.•• $30 ,. ...... "'"'
..
DOG
Hoag competition reels them iri
R ldlilrd ~ recently
accepted the memorial
Gene Dawn Perpetual Th>-
phy as the 1996 Hoag Memorial
Hospital Presbyterian ntg and
Release 8Wfish Champion.
Stodda1d. fishing aboard Los
Prtlao9, reeled in the coveted
cat.ch. The eighth annual event
attracted 120 anglers capturing 13
marlin in the Newport waters.
Bertram Yachts sponsored the
two-day fishing expedition on
behalf of one of this region's most
important community resoW"CeS,
Hoag Hospital. Other champions
included Carl Eisman in second
place, and the indefatigable and
pretty Lynn Cathcart in third. Bob
Pemec:ky's boat El Sueno took
the •mgb boat• award for boats
less than 30 feet, and for craft
more than 30 feet, Jim Edwards'
•intermission• captured the hon-
. on y~
another very successful chapter in
the eight-year history of Haag's
Billfish Tournament.• said
ltkluu'd Berg, Bayshores resident
and chair of the event. "We had
fun and raised a good deal of
money for Hoag."
b.w ..
cook
Al the conclusion of the·two-
day townament, an awards din·
ner unfolded at the Newport Har-
bor Yacht Oub. Some 200 guests
applauded as Stoddard accepted
his honor in the name of the late
GeneBawa.
tee, led by Berg, established the
trophy as a tribute to Baum, a
great supporter of the fishing
event. Baum passed away in
June, and Berg said. •He was
working on this tournament up
until the day he died.•
The proceeds from this year's
A PARTlAI. TREATMBl11
AA ECOlA WI hM 1111 righC 1191111*11 Of combllllllOll ol n.tments IO CIOl1Cl'OI drywood 9tlmillL Ott. ..niic. Oflt
im mlcrowM 1rU11Mn1S WI 11M ~ ~ -IOme lblllons. but• can llrwe ~ ~ ...-...cl ECOlA °""1 you Ille dlOlce ol the El.ECTROGUN (1fNdl c:111 .. loclll drywoocl ~ IUMlll~
mlcrOWM ~ llld tint fl#nlglliOns.
1WO Vf.AR WRlllEN WARRANTY THAT CM BE FOFNED AHNUAUY FOR Tl£ UFrnME Of TME PflOPERTY. CALL M TERMITE EXPERTS AHO CHOOSE THE BEST TERMITE CONTROL PROGRAM FOR
YOUR SPECIFIC tEEDS YOU NOW HAVE A CHOICE.
Loally llftHd
•nd op•,.tffl
Celebrt!ting the Art t!nd Science of Medicine
Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science
and
Arrowhead Mountain Spring Water • prY•lfl 1be 6th Annual
Saturday. October 5. l 996
•Curtis Mayfield & The Impressions
• H.B. Bamumfealurlng Lou Rawls
"JAZZ AT DREW"
Legacy Music Series
& Cultural etplace
-f!!Dri
Saturday. October s. 1996
a tribute to
Curtis Mayfield &
Sunday, Oclober6. 1996
an All Star tribute to
Dizzy Gillespie
• Nonnan Connors&. His Starship Orchestra
• Art Davis Quintet -featuring Horace Tapscott &. Ravi Coltrane
•Bobby Rodriguez & The HMA Salsa/Jazz Orchestra
• Ronald Muldrow Quintet
•Blay Ambolley &. His Afrikan Jaz.z Band
•Al Williams Jazz Society featuring Barbara Morrison
Sunday. October 6. 1996
The Event of the Year"""""""
"" All St• 'T'tiMIU to Jola• Blrkl "Dizzy" Gil~
~rfoi; , ... .,..,
Lalo Schifrin • James Moody • Art Fanner • Jon Faddis • Bamy Oolion
Slide IWnpton •Jimmy Heath• Al Orey• Melba Liston• James WilliMU Lona John Olivia • Bil Bleck • Chlrti Pcnip • Pde Candoli • John Lcie
Paul West • Mm°cUI 9d1nvc • Ernie~• fun.my Withenpoon
Al McKibbon • diimcu Brown • Bobby Bryant • Jeckie KdlD
P1as John.on • Billy llooe,;• Lury Smith • Art O..is • DouaJu Purviance
Oeorac Bohanon • Mike Lonao • Sim.my Owcnt
event are expected to top $50,000,
and will benefit the renovation ol
the hospital's operating rooms. •
In other nautical quarters,
nearly $65,000 was raised under
an enormous white tent erected
bayside for some 300 deckedeOUt
locaJs supporting the Newport
Ha.rbo.r Nautical Museum's sec-
ond annual gala.
Organizers included museum
director SbeU Smttb. event chairs
Rear Admlnl Davll .James and
bis charming wife, Donna Dnis,
and committee members JOUD
Bedltolcl. Lee Bledlo&, Dawn
Bnwater, Lorenza Donahue.
Robert Pon .. nma, Debonla Hes-
ter, Nancy Irvine and Teena·
Lutes, Mrs. Colorado 1994. Funds
raised will assist planned museum
improvements inc1udiDg the cre-
ation of a children's center.
~ 1894-1996
Four Generations
102 Years!
All Room Sizes
REMNANT
CLEARANCE
50960FF
NOW OPEN
SUNDAYS
from l l-4p.m .
ALDEN'S
CARPETS. lNC.
lti0 .. 1 Plac'enlla SI . COSla Mesa
646-4838
NautlcU Mmeam'1 •Soiree a
Monte Carlo" feltlve commit-
tee memben (from left) Victo-
ria Pena. Kimberly Walsh.
lo~Donahue
and Teena Lutes, Miss Col-
orado •94, whoop It up. LYON EYE 760-3003
l401 Avocado 402 • N rt Beach
Beautiful Hair!
Pmn « Cut $50 Reg. S75
Wave &: Cut $50 Reg. S85
Men's Cut $15 Reg. S20
· w6 ll1nl · Laac Its £lln · litw t\mOnlt • ~ \ol llcbltd
I Wt llf .. ,... ... .i pnftds: Coidlo"tll t Rtdktn
• Paul Mitcbdl • Nauls. ~ • fl'¥ntSI
Offu Eipra 9f.WJ6 • Bring this Id
Reach
consumers
most likely to
shop in your
location
For additional
information or
a quote, phone
(714) 965-3030
Crop of cigar ·
.lounges
illustrates
sto!fle style
By Wendy Werve, Daily Pilot
Johnney Bee puffs away on a stogle tn the Udo Cigar Room on Monday night
wrhfs is the kind ot viSiially spectaeiitar
season-opener ... at which SCR excels."
-Orange Counl)1 Register
..... something to see, the perfect
pre-election 'debate."
-Los Angeks Times
"Wilde play still ideal today."
-Daily Pilot
DAW> FERDIG I ON..Y PLOT
•agar lounges are like coftee
shops,. said crattoo, who fre-
quenll Cost.a Mesa'• Royal Cigar
Sodety. •People will go wherever
they feel most at boine, where
they have your favorite dgar,
where the people are friendly,
where the owners mow you and
. .greet you by name. Uke
'Cheers.••
While patrons may not get their
own barstool. they can have their
own humidor space. At many
lounges, patrons rent wooden
lockers inside walk-in humidors
so they can properly store their
tavorttt: smokes and spirits. Since
alcohol. patrons are invited to
bring in beverages to enjoy with
their cigars.
Local lounges' humidors house
impressive smoking selections -
Arturo Fuente Hemingway,
Punches, Avos, Macanudos, Hen-
ry Clays, and Partagas (sorry, no
Cohibas}, to name just a few.
. ' Mo8t louDgel sell tbeir dgan f(J"
anywhere from 95 ~~-~
upwarcb of $20 a piece, ~
ing on the quality. But you cah
also cb.oole to bring your own cig-
ar from home to smoke at •
lounge.
The lounges provide a pJetbol'a
of other aa:outennents, indud.iDg
stacks ot Smoke and agar Afl-
donado maguinel, st.at&«-the-
art air filtration systems and t&e
must-have guide, •How to Judge
a Good agar,• co-wrltten by loc4l
dgar connoisseur Henry
Sdllelein
While most cigar smokers don't
of nicotine and ammonia in tobac-
co cooks off during fennentatioa,
lovers of the leaf are not immune
to the health risks associated with
tobacco use.
However, Gaynor said the threat
of mouth, throat and stomach can-
cers hasn't yet deterred cigar
smokers from partaking of a
UJNCll •DINNER •CATERING •TAKEOUfr •'
f,
BUVONE
ENTil'E REa1VE
50"/o OFF SECOND
Eoln:e tX equal or lesser' value.
M111t pramt coupon.
'-'-IOIJJM
THIS IS I
,..
r-----------------------------------------------------1 : FACTS WORTH INHAUNq
I' • Mltar\ Berte P-'d Mred • More than 2-000 do8i'
Dunhlll's of London Ntw.en evenings were hosted through-: SIDO Md S 1,000 in 1960 to . out the U.S. last yur.
: IMka the humidor he gM9 to • Adrea Demi Moore\
: JFK• an~ gift. fllYOrite smobs: CotYba
: Mervin~ bought the Panatelas, MontmcriltD ~ _,..._..,.humidor at.the Sothebys Cohtba No.1,r Montllcrileo No. ! auction for $575,000. + Cuban cigars we still illegal.
, + Sit'o 1991, prnwn cigar +Tobacco was introduced to 1 Yles have Increased 68.6%. the United States by ~ 1 + Unit sales of premiwn cigars Americans. 1 \Wnt 170 million last year. Pre--Comp/I«/ from U.S. Tobac-
' Cuban embargo sales of preml-co Reporter and Cigar Afidona-i wn cigars were 185 million. do ~lne. .
L-------------------------------------•----------------~
·Partagu or delighting in a
Davidoff "Double R •
•The therapeutic benefits of
smoking a cigar far outweigh the
"'health hazards,• claims Don
Leadbetter, 36,
wbobas
. smoked cigars
regularly for
more than a
aren't about
smoking,
they're about
-1aldng time out
for yomself to .relax..
Health concerns have done lit-
tle to curb the cigar smoking
trend, but recent anti-smoking
legislation has no doubt IIlAde it
more difficult for smokers of all
persuasions to light up in public
~·
Facials
Weaves
Color
l'I European Facial. ........ $15 I up I
:._ Baci Facial. ............... $18.00 I
~ Manicure ..................... $5.00 :I Pedicure ...................... $6.00 I
I Eyebrow/Arch Waxi~ .. $5.00
. C ""'"AW"SC Dl Of I
,I ADv~W.Yct9eM98Y 1
2 JOO Hor hor a:vd
C · , ._.,, CA Q2o'2'·
-.. I ,, .-_ 4 5 I 6 1 6
PbUG IN
4 •
While niany cigar lovers are
irked by the laws, few are really
worried. Christina Paris, co-man-
ager of the Royal Cigar Society's
Costa Mesa chapter, pointed to
the rapid
inaeue in cigar
consumption as
proof that
smokers aren't
boot the che-
root.
•The laws will
actually make
places that cater
to cigar smokers
more popular even after the
trend fades,• said Paris, an occa-
sional smoker herself.
•People can come to smoke
without being asked to put it out,
and they can enjoy a good cigar
without being hassled.•
Costa !Mt.so Civic Pf.ayliouse
~"~ ,,
L1t ~1ttielt1t
PlllWOIY ~ '"'C111tf1fciHS
lllKTfD IT .l11rr'I Vl'Mts
--M-...--. 12 • October 13
~.F-tnl~d8:00PM
~d2:00PM
hr ... nd ....... (II
714.650.5269
, ......................... ,
Plug iuto the-Not-Classified section to find ~~hrmfA•
electronics and plumbefs, to landscapers and .painters. UIUJ.1 l1IU\
• • ( ' ' t ,I ( ,, I '• •: •'
Orange County Perlonn-
ing Arts Center will close
tts 10th anniversary season with
a time capsule ceremony at 6
p .m. Sunday. Filled with special
memorabilia from The Centers
history, its support groups and
the arts organizations who have
performed there, the time cap-
sule will be buried at the base
of 1be Center's Grand Portal
John and Kay Brown from 2:30
to 6 p.m. Sunday at their Bal·
boa home. Performers and lis-
teners with a cJaaical music
interest are invited to partici-
pate. For reservations, call 898-
9099, OT 673-2223.
8 PAltALLEI. UNIVERSE -
Performers play multiple
roles and there are two
SONY PICTURES cuss1cs-PRF.S.ENTS
Bayou bounty: No need to head to NeW Orleans
By Md Bird, Daily Not
A t hmdl time, many bull---~
atfioes 8lOUDd ot Dell{ the
food court at Birch Street and VCJO
Kannan Avenue bead straight for
cutrs Ragin' Cajun and get in
I I . ' .
I· I . I I
line for authentic Cajun food for
SS or $6 a plate.
Owner/chef Oiff Huffstetler's
entertaining gift of gab comes .
free of charge.
Huffstetler cooks great bayou
food including Cajun gumbo, red
beans and rice, alligator,. aawfish
etouffee and two or three kinds of
delicious rice-based jambalaya.
Po'bo those · · southern
hero-style sandwiches, are filled
with Louisiana sausages or cat-
fish. Etouffee means smothered,
said the chef, and yes, 'tender
meats and fish are smothered in
the trinity of Cajun cooking:
onions, peppers and celery, plus
tomatoes, garlic and spices.
Speaking of spices, the food is
pleasantly hot but if you want
extra fire power, there are a
dozen or so varieties of hot sauce
in bottles right next to the paper
napkins.
Jambalaya with chicken and
sausage or shrimp and crawfish
'
'-It l l\ll\ '-l'-1! \I
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Bryan Hemphill
• Q/
HEMPHILL'S SHOES
presents ecco· Shoes
ECCO C•R•OeS•S Shoe
for Women and Men
"I) . . I' ".. • • ' /, • / ..._ • { l f ~ 1 , • -. • I ' l
,·"' ' / j / \ ' ~ '"
In Westdiff Court
1727 Westcliff Dr .. NB
650-6856
tails are -outs. y
fried strips of catfish go quickly as
well. but one of his most popular
dishes has nothing to do with
Cajun. It's nostalgic and tradition-
al; a bowl of mashed potatoes
topped with tender chunks of
fresh-baked turkey, brown gravy
and a plop of cranberry sauce
with a thick slice of homemade
bread ($2.99).
Huffstetler is mindful of fat
content, so the fried foods are
drained to crisp dryness. Instead
of bringing in pre-cooked blocks
of flavorless turkey meat, eight
ig g poun
each are braised or roasted every
day and carefully stripped of fat
The surprisingly good white meat
from alligators is inspected too, for
any extra fat. The tough tail meat
isn't shipped in or used at all.
If you are a Ragin' regular and
have pigged out on true country-
fried (batter-fried) steak, Southern
fried chicken, fried catfish strips
or baked pork chops, you may
want to order a simple plate of
steamed vegetables, or a fresh
salad. -1 spent95% of my life in
• Louisiana, but met my bride,
"Ofler 50 Years of Fine Quality"
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I
MARC MARTIN I
OAl.YPl.OT
y,ng ere ge
County," said Huffstetler, who
hails from Denham Springs, La.
and used to be president of the
Sheet and Metal Workers Union
in Baton Rouge.
"I plain hated that job -the tie
and briefcase and all. but I purely
love what l'm doing now ... Cajun
and home-style cooking," he said.
Huffstetler is a happy man,
nice to be around and so's his
wife. He's a talker, so if you want
to hear some deep South swamp
stories and get the inside info on
alligators, plan to come in after
DININGNEWS
What a good ideal Chefs will
share recipes and tips and then
serve up a first-class dinner using
the same for a fund-raising series.
Sponsored by the A-Team of
Share Our Selves, the first of
three holiday dinners will be held
Monday at Windows on the Bay.
at the first of ,the events to be pre~
sented in the next seven weeks.
On Oct. 21, ow,ner/chef Piero
Pierattoni of Ristorante Mamma
Gina will follow suit with an Ital-
ian amstmas Dinner theme and
on Nov. 18, Chef Reyes Gallardo
of the Riverboat Cafe will give a
New Yeat's'1!ve fiesta MPJinma.
Tu:kets are $60 per person for
each event; $150 buys a ticket for
all three. Proceeds will go to SOS
for food. medical. dental and
financial aid for those in need For
iDformatioD. phone Georgette
Gaglio, 640-2617 .
•
Sutton Place Hotel. a trendy
innovator with. their monthly
•Tour de Beers" dinner series, is
repeating a favorite: the "Beers of
Great Britain" on Friday at 7 p.m.
Comish pasties, oxtail soup,
and all those traditional foods that
Brits seem to love are on the
menu along with choice ales of
Dinner is priced at $35 per per-
son plus tax and gratuity. Phone
476-2001, ext. 2194 for reserva-
tions.
Dark TslanalJre-Mast CIWi
Featuring
oseberries
Cui~in~
Serving Breakfast Daily
7 AM To 1 lAM Tue.day-Friday
SAM To 2PM Weekends
CLOSED Mondays
1099 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach
760-0221
TRYING TO FIT IN
Racial andfamily discord t ake center stage in new play
By Tom Trtus, Daily Pilot
G etting along in a strange
new environment was
never the easiest of tasks,
but when you're )>lack in a pre-
dominantly white neighborhood,
and it's only five yea.rs after
World War D, and your widowed
father marries a white woman -
a German, no less -well, then
you've really got problems.
Those problems are beautiful-
ly articulated by the cast of South
Coast Repertory's new produc-
tion, Lynn Nottage's "Crumbs
From the Table of Joy,• currently
in residence on the Second
Stage.
Nottage draws us into a world
in which segregation, even in the . .
very much in vogue, but we
experience it through a black
perspective.
Primarily, we experience it
through Nonage's character
voice, the teen...age Ernestine,
who perfonnsln and narrates the
story -as well u giving us an
occasional glimpse of how she
would have liked her family situ-
ation to be.
These flights of fancy give the
production a delid.ously light
Walter Mittyish touch, which
proVides the essential element of
balance.
start her own adult life.
Dorian Harewood. a cbar&der
actor wlw'S appeared mmOtiOl:l
pictures, gives a strong rendering
of the strait-laced father, a disci-
ple of the charismatic Patber
Divine, who devoutly resists the
advances of bJs wile's sensual
sister (Ella Joyce}, who has
moved in with the family as a
worldly counterpoint to their own
mundane lives.
her heels beautifully in one of
f!rneldne's fante .. 89 she
plunges intO a Stirring Interpreta-
tion of Madene DiWich.
Not only
does Ernestine
guide and con-
trol the ploys
I I I I \ I I i Harewood
strives for an
elusive goal of
Joyce, as the tippling lister-in-
law, scatters a few diches around
the stage as she establishes her
loose-living character, but her
performance is strong and well-
defined. Susan Pattenon is quite
good as Ernestine's shy, giddy
y0unger sister.
Director Seret Scott moves the
episodic play smoothly, blending
one scene into the next with a
skilled hand The all-pwpose
setting of Michael Vaughn Sims
works well. as do Paulie Jenkins'
fine lighting effects.
· I \ I I
action, she is -as superbly
interpreted by Karen Malina
White -its focal point as well.
Ernestine's traumatic coming
of age is one of the story's key
elements, and White delivers a . .
mance -culminating with a
moving final scene in which she
details the future for the play's
characters before moving on to
righteous purity,
limiting the dimension of his
character, but his single-minded
pursuit is impressive indeed
As the widower's white wife,
in a case of art imitating life,
Nancy Harewood is marvelously
in a strange land determined to
make the best of her life and her
curiously platonic marriage. The
playwright allows her to kick up
•crumbs From the Table of
Joy,• in its West Coast premiere
standing of the black experience
a generation or two ago as it
unfolds a touching and intriguing
story.
w.4'fllm
We Cater Fleatas
JCareaMeltee
Wbbe.(dlM)
and Mr Allllill ..
Uly(Ella
Joy~ClliMt..
slrtkeapOM
.. ..... Ene&.
na(S..Pal·
tenoa) loc*9
oa.laS"6
COMt ..........
ry's West
Co.st .-.
miere of Ly.a
Notlllge .. ·cnmaa..tram
HENRY DIROCCO
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Robert Bums.
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~ Bar. Prices Range From $3 95 And Up Hours· 11 :Xlaln
1~ ·Cocktails T• 11pm. Credit Cards tU Aa:eptad. ~ tU Needed. Loceted & 1712 Placenba. Costa Mesa
(714) 6458)91
CASABLANCA BISTRO
Medita t 81 lelrl & Moroccen • Tredlbonel Mlcidle Eaatam Food.
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Al Mafoi' ()'edit Cardi. Aewveborls Suggested Loceted l!t 1520
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!.
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. Mt THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1&
forum:
No leSs than zero
Many believe school district should not back down from its zero tolerance policy toward· alcohol
• EDITOR'S NOl'E: We oontlnue to
receive many responses to rea!nt ques-
tions that have been raised ewer the
school district's zero tolerance policy
since an Estancia High student mounted
a legal Challenge to the rule.
I appreciate William Lobdell's
article: "I beer plus 1 student
equals zero tolerance• and . . your common sense view you
'fook. I was a high school admin-
.lstrator at Newport Harbor High
§chool and Costa Mesa High
School when the zero tolerance
~sue was deb~ted.
• I was.one who fought hard to
put the policy in place. The
drinking problem was so bad
that it caused my wife, who vol-
unteered to chaperone school
dances, to quit after several
experiences of girls so drunk on
the bathroom floor that they
cQuldn',t stand up or even roll out
pf their own vomit. Thanks Mom
•or the $300.00 prom dress.
: Readers may remember the
-the bus bust" incident at New-
port Harbor High School a few
·rears ago:
I was appalled at the parents
·eaction to the suspension the
:ms load of students l caught
wiving at a school dance with
~ight large coolers of assorted
~coholic beverages ranging from
beer and wine to Jack Daniels
and Vodka.
Comments like "I'd rather
have my child drink and use bus
transportation, than drink and
~ve."
• Oh that's a good one! How in
the heck did this parents think
that their son's and daughter's
were going to get home after the
bus dropped them off at the
house where the trip originated
AND 25 student-owned cars
were parked? There was enough
~ze on that bus to drown the
sorrows of the entire student 6ody.
Thank God the zero tolerance
policy went into effect, because
teenage drinking before, during,
~dafter school events was (and
rurrently is) out of control with
some students.
: If, in the tutur-e, ~the vocal
community suggests a change in
the school district's zero tolerance
policy, they had better have an
unproved code for required stu-
Oent behavior.
• We all live by rules, and in the
iecent situation at Estancia High
$chool sounds like the same old
story; rules are fine ... so long as
\hey don't effect my child. Par-
~nts who express that opinion
aeed a wake up call, and l hope n isn't a call from the local hospi·
tal or police department late
some Friday night after a school
dance or football game.
STEVE PAVICH
Sonora.School Pnna
Costa Mesa
If the zero tolerance is not
enforced against the Ferryman
&ild and the Mccartin child, it
Will have no meaning.
~gainst all of the students whose
parents are not municipal judges
sr school board members without
i{uestion.
: H it not enforced against the
children of those people then all
will lose respect for the zero tol-
erance rule. It simply must be
~nforced in these circumstances.
JIMGERIAK
Balboa Peninsula
pone reading Joe
: Recently one of the articles by
{'*:Ph N. Bell in your paper of r!r.· 4, came to my attention.
It was the first time that I had
policed one of his articles and it
ivil1 be the last one ot his that [
Will read. All I need to say is that
t>J.1 ettort at sa.AIUm is really
UUlellting. He ts a.pperently try-
Jng to be cute or funny in aiticlz·
ing the acdom or opinions of oth-
en, but ln ~ eo be ends up
.._,ay out In Mft field.
• lll\llN C. CHAPMAN
ColtaMesa
n~that
mo diairibe
Your recent coverage of the those connected from follow students, but not be able to play in the What better way is there than to
zero tolerance issue and the com-affected might be in the best teachms, and coaches who might next three games or perfor· say, "You know what, I don't
m~s reaction has caused my position to determine what be able to help that student mances. want to get kicked out of my
~usband, two daughters and I to woilld work among their peers. when they are the most •messed • Attj';pd coiJnseling, where school I want to be able to stay
considet and discuss our position. Our other concern is that all kids up." Likewise, the student that appropll'ate. at my school and play sports and
We, too, believe high school are different and circumstances is already struggling in class will · There are no easy solutions. do what I want to do and have
kids should not drink alcohol or are different. Maybe one stan-have a much harder time being We hope the Daily Pilot and the· some control of my life, and if I
do drugs. They should also not dard consequence is not the best uprooted with a new teacher school board will keep the dia· drink and flse, that CQuld go
have sex, but it is likely that at method for all students. who could be covering different logue going. away."
least some kids will do some or During my 10 years as a pros-material at a different pace. That GAY SANDOVAL 1 think they ought to random an ot these ·things in high school. ecutor, I spent a year in juvenile student, who may already be Costa Mesa drug test every kid in school. I
whatever policy the school court. The goals of the juvenile having transportation problems, think that having this just for ath-
invokes. justice system are to deter crime, ~ay resolv~ the problem by ~~p-In the big argument about lete's and cheerleaders is totally My-remJlectimrwro,11g1:::--f~~~~~~~~~~a--ti:~~~~~~~~~~~ro-tcmmmc~.-i-hlllve-9ee!ft"t'l~-t~a~~7fiie~&l~iirem;m.~~-1
nally zero tolerance meant drinking because he doesn't feel answer to the most important to get their peers to say no.
expulsion;-50 a change in conse-crimes. that he belongs, uprooting him question. In fact, the question That's what half o1 drug and
quences for first offenders would The judges and lawyers that I may only worsen the situation. hasn't even been raised: alcohol use is about, it's about
t ecessaril chan th worked with thought the best We suggest the following con-Where and how did a teen-no n Y ge e zero way to prevent crime was to get " sequences for those. who are peer pressure. If these parents
tolerance message. juvenile offenders going to under the influence of alcohol or =t!~reg:ethd:m~ she don't take a hard line with their
Our goal was to figure out school and get them into sports a controlled substance at a school The matter of zero tolerance is kids and say this is against the
well known to all the students, law, then are they the ones who
and they all must obey it no mat-are going to come back and sue
SPORTS
\'fl/l'porf gir{S Prtd
12().g<JRUJ win strmk
William
tobdelt
1 boor pill'> 1
~1udent equals
zero tolerance
I u .u:am t ,...t" 1, .... ? ... ,, '" hi.Vh _..boal t:.a.~MU.t' •1t• I tflu\ UJ~l\ Aa.d I nl4\ I·•~• t ~ n
'"ftdllld "f> .. • ~t'-tD •J"""'. ~ t
No • .,_.~tmg the h>-o.r. h I ..,II
~WI._ Rn.an• M'! tt twu -""" ~. ,, l ~ ·~·Jh ...,, ... ,...., .......... ~,,
, ..... u ... ~ ..
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Judge denies student's
challenge to zero tolerance
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what policy and consequences
would best provide for the three
goals we believe the school dis-
s po cy s o meet: con-
sequences that would deter stu-
dents from ever using drugs or ·
alcohol in high school, (2) conse-
quences that would deter a stu-
dent who did it once from
repenting the behavior, and (3)
education to stop the behavior,
i.e., get the kid to think about
what the worse case scenario
could have been.
We believe the community
should consider whether the pre-
sent policy best meets these
goals, and if not, what policy
would. We believe that open dia-
logues should be taking place at
all of the high schools, since
correspo~dence
parrol:s President Bill Clinton's
fatuous bridge to the future,
when facts clearly show the
opposite.
Clinton clings to the failed
socialist practices of Europe,
while Dole supports renewal of
growth, prosperity and Individual
freedom, by cutting our tax bur-
den. 1\vioe In the letter, the typi-
cal Democratic ay of gimme,
gimme, gimme, I want it now,
namely the Medic:Me ripott, ii
evJnced.
~ AriMdca Md. budget
surplul to 1965, PrWdent Jolm .. '°° cynlalJlj' ated he would
buy voe. by llgnfn9 the
Medkiue Jn. AppuentJy it
wortm for ba Democratic fold.
Plftws ,_..,later, like all IOdal-
tlt ....... Mdcare IWted going
biQlia. II amnot be &eel
SCllM ~ fOr cummt
Nlllw .Ii necmary, but the next
~
1l,._ Ol!Ut tw_. •p .. .11 k.tU·
and activities. Kids that were
connected to their schools had
ad~t eyes watching over and
Kids that weren't going to
school or left school right when it
was over, had plenty of time
without adult supervision to
drink the family's alcohol supply,
do drugs, or to commit thefts or
burglaries. Therf! is nothing quite
out to exhaust that student and
let him know he better behave or
else. It is for these reasons that I
am concerned with our district's
policy of taking a student away
from those teachers and coaches
that would best be able to evalu-
ate whether "Suzy" is continuing
to use drug~ or alcohol. Instead,
the district puts them in a new
school where the student is dis-
generation deserves better, and
Dole supports this progress by
way of self-directed medic.al sav-
ings accounts coupled with cata-
strophic insurance. Again, OinJ
ton clings to the past failures of
nationalized health care.
As for choices, abortion and
drug use have been with man
since the dawn of time, and will
stay with ua until five billlon
years hence when otu sun bumJ
planet earth to a cinder.
No polltidan will change
human uture. ~ tbe witter
dabDI Republiew look down
on tbe littll p.op1e• ~neww m
the hiltory ~ um nattqn baa a
president surrouri<te<t himle1I
with lDdk:ted felons for his
(7C)lliel, with such arr.ogaoce that
his beb4vtor wW be igDored by
the voter tn ex~ for• few
handout.I.
event:
• Three days suspension.
• VlSit the ~orgu~ t? see
alcoholics.
• Attend a MADD meeting_ of
those who have lost a loved one
because of a drunk driver.
• Attend Alcoholic Anony-
mous meetings.
• Read recent articles about
killed or paralyzed their friends
while driving under the influ-
ence.
• Write an essay .about what
your life would be like if you
were facing murder charges for
killing your best biend in a car
accident while drinking and dri-ving. .
• Attend all practices for your
sport or other school activities,
ter who they are, or suffer the another kid that was driving a
consequences. car that kills their kid when they
But, providing beer, wine, or are all diirilang?
hard liquor to an undel'-age per-• It's absurd to tell kids it's OK
son at any time is a crime. ~ fact, to break the rules and I am going
I believe it may be a felony. to be here to help you.
l)!d this young lady drink the Well they made a choice.
beers at home with the knowl-That is what life is all about,
edge of her parents? making appropriate choices and
Or, did she go to a party they made the bad choice.
where beer was served? U so, the JANETA ZOLLEJl
adults in charge of that party Newport Beach
were responsible, and should be
held accountable. They are cul-A well-known Newport Beach ·
pable. sports attomey was arrested for
Actually, there seems to be a driving with a blood alcohol level
tolerance among some Newport 250% of normal.
Beach an9 Costa Mesa parents To bis credit he said as a role .
that it is OK to serve beer or oth-model he intended to take •
~JltpaJ:tiej they resp_QJ\Sibility ~ actions (PilQ~
allow their children to throw. In Sept. 21).
fact, I know of several such That is certainly admirable on
fathers who may have made a bis part, however, there are other
trip to the ·liquor store to lay in a issues to be considered. For two
supply of beer before their sons week.$ readers of the Daily Pilot
hosted a party in their homes. strongly debated, over the Pilot
Another possibility is that sev-Hotline, the issue of zero toler-
eral high schoolers got together ance to alcohol use for students
and bought six-packs on their at the local high schools.
own. H any store sold the beer to The vast majority of printed
under-age customers, the law iS letters strongly supported this
very clear; they are culpable. concept It's hard to ask students !
We must keep the zero tt.,ler-not to drink when their •role ;
ance rule in place to help pre-models" gets an:ested for o DUI. _:_
vent teen-age traffic deaths, MICHAEL GLUECK•
fights, rapes and other conse-Newport Beach:
quences of drinking; but at the •
same tllne, we must crack down
hard on tlte true offenders -
those culprits
who provide minors with beer,
wine and other liquor. Let the
chips tall where they may, and
show zero tolerance for the
adults who are ultimately respon-
sible for the crime.
STIJART WILLIAMS
N~wport Beach
I find it so offensive that the
trustees say that they decided
they had to take a really hard
look at this because it was a
judge's daughter.
Why would that make any dif-
ference in the world?
' judge just now taking offense to
this order? His dau hter has
a eyon .
Do they only think that it's
unfair when it's their child as
opposed to someone else's child?
When are these parents goipg to
take responsibility for their own
behavior and teach their Children
-to take responsibility for their
behaviorf
These kids need some reasons
to say no to their peen 'When it
comes to drinking and using.
I am amazed at the ignorance ;
of'some J>arents who actually feel:
justified in defending the ilfegal ;
actions of their children and the •
willingness to fault the school ·
district for enforcing well-known :
and established rules.
To some extent I can excuse ,
the children for their complaints. ~
They're young, inexperienced
and likely don't recognize their
actions for what they are.
Anyone under the age of 21
who drinks, at least in this state,
is abusing alcohol.
As a parent, I find that activity"'
,unacceptable and have kept con ..
stant vigil on my own children to
revent it. Whether or not the
have ei:erimented with alcohol
without my knowledge, they
will know that behayiour is for-
bidden and will be punished if
discovered.
Also~ a parent, I take offense>
ents quoted in recent articles,
effectively defending their chil-•
drens actions.
Finally, a word to the school
district. Please continue to
enforce these rules.
Our kids need to know there
are consequences for these
actions.
V.ADDEMAN
Costa Mesa.
• TNE ~ D•CTORY runs HERITAGE HOUSE AUX1UMY = 1n aw o.11y Pilot. If you'd Volunteers .. needed fot an Ndllfy
lnfonMtion on getting your organ!-support group being fotmed brt Her·
zadon listed, call 642-4321, Ext. 331. ttage Howe.. non-profit~
... nlCOYelY home for~ and pwenting women and ttH in
HARBOR NfE.A NID HUNTINGTON Costa Mesi. For more infooNt.lon. can
VAlllY ADULT CARE <ENTERS 646-2271. . 1hls organiDtion Is committed to HIGH HOPES HEAD INJURY offering community based long range PROGRAM term care programs in a therapeutk
~meetthe Hod-injure4 acMt ~desperate-
needs of functionally-impaired older ly need volunteers to help them Wlllk
and complete exercises tNlt will llllist adults and provide l"e$pite and support-
iYe services to their families. The main their physic.11 and cognitNe re-training.
office at 661 W. Hamilton, Costa Mesa lns.tructors provide on-site training at the
need5 qualifled volunteer receptlonlsts, Costa Mesa facility for volunteers of all
volunteers \Ntll recehle training on tele-ages. with no compulsory number of
phones. CQPYing, filing and assist the sec-hot.rs required. The students train Mon-
rt!t1llY wtth special eventi. call 548-9331 day through Thursday from 8:30 a.m. to
between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. for addl-3 p.m. at 661 Hamilte>f\ Suite 300.
tional information. Phone 646-7458 If you can spare any
amount of time. HAT CONNECTION
The Hat Connection is a women's phil-HOAG NEEDS VOLUNTEERS
anthropic extension of the Chamber of . Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian eommerce that serves Cost.a Mesa and is in need of volunteers to WOfic in vari-
Newport Beach. For infonnation, call ous areas. Some weekends Md
Kay Walburger. 650-2144. evenings are available. cau the Hoag
D 0 L 0 R E S 0 Tr T I N G .
Your Voice For:
• The Residents
• Community Policing
• Citizen Participation
• Fiscal AccouRtabilUy
• Fair Business Opportunities
THE PEOPLES CHOICE 759-3086
P8id for by Committee to Elect Dolores Otting N.B.C.'c.
For 1-,.. Street
Advertising
eontact-
RoN KATDIAN
S74-4Z~6
tYtT+:s..w.tTtTtT
Has gone ftshlngl
for fish tacos
NOW OPE ·N
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r:::J Offb, Jt0.2264 _,..,..,aw needed. For lnfomwdon on 1hee and ~ 9 a.rn. and noot\, ~ ottw~ call a..,...... ~~foran~Md S5.J..CD63.
lnformltJon.
HOSPICE FAMl.Y CARE ICIDS CANCBt CONNECTION
The l(Jdl Canmr Cori~ Is dediatt-= F.wly C... ls~ pee>Pe ed to the efnodorlill, educ.ltioNt and
to with errands, visits and ~ flnlncW needs of chlkhn afftic1ed with =.: temhlly Ill patients cane& Vob-.s ... needed. For lnfor-
1heir Mes. If C'.s .-e 16 °' older and INltion. call as1-m•.
av.a.hie 2 to 4 • week. call for
free hospice tra~ daytime and SUSAN G. KOMEN mlEA$T.
evei•~ orlentMtioia CANCER FOUNDA110N
Yokmeers ... needed lmmediNly for ~In 6. For men lnfomwidon,
cal Llny Mariotti at 730-1114. a variety of positions for the • 1996 Ria
for the c..n• to be held at Fashion INTERFAITH COUNCJL Island on Sept. 22. •Men for the c..n• Is
The Newport~ lnteffalth seetting n,.ie volunteers for a host of
Council, an umtnlla organiDtion for activities tf\at wttl Involve them befofe
several area service~ needs YOlon-and during the race. For~ lnfor-
teen actiYe In local congregations. For mat.iorl, call ~4-0~ to •Men for
Information,. call Carol Brown. 548-3283. the ewe,· phone Bob Butdler at 48!0-
4812. JUVENILE DIABETES FOUNDATION
INTERNA110NAL MARCH Of DIMES
The Juvenile Diabetes Foundation The March of Dimes office in Newport
International; Orange ecx.rty Chapter. is Beach needs volunteers to coordinate
se81ng volunteers to tefve on -its gott and Index resource files and aeate a
tournament committee and for data master filing system of Information and
entry. Also, a public relations Int.em ls refel'Tal sources. This agency. dedicated
New ort Harbor
Montessori Center
"Academic Excellence
in Harmony with
Young Lives" ·
PRESCHOOL• KINDERGARTEN
Fall Time • Part Time • Year Reaad
Ages 2-6 • 7:00am to 6:00pm
• Experienced, certified Montessori
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• Individualized academic instruction
• Exte-mtveextra:curricularprograms
• Hot Juncb~s
• Potty Training
650-3442
425 East 18th Street • Costa Mesa
Costumes • Helium Rentals
• Invitations • Thank You Cards
· . • Announcements
• Confetti • Custom Banners
• Trick-or-Treat Decorations
llon·Sat .... Swl.1CM
270 bat 17th Street, Sult• 12A • 7 2
Now featuring
brand new a~latvery
affordable
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THURSDAY, SEPTE .. Bt 2'. t• AW
to prweiltlirig bir1h deNcts.. .aso needs.
front office a.ilt.Mls. Orietttltb\ ii
~ c:ionwnunMr dllfwp .. 1S to100~to .... ~ ......
pnMded. For inforrNdon, call 26). 1100. Senior Mobile home ........ '*'I:
9a.m..1tww.1tw9helphr ., MAS111t OtOMl.E OF ORANGE city brt pictJng up trait\.= .... COUNTY nurnbering ~ ..,._ ••• The perfoi 111ing .-ts organiDtion seniors' homes. The dty wm p'CMd9 needs~~=~ lunch for the~-. 21-.n-. 1kbting. filing and phones. teen. Dor.-,, 11$ of food,. ..... Cllft ... For inforrNdon, a.It suppfies .. -., needed. To-.-. °' ~ infomMltior\ phone .. MUSOJlM DYSrROftfY
AS500ATION • mr~ hodne 111
Assist the MusaJlar ~ As5oda-754-5140.
tkwl of Orange County . TrMling is NEW DltECllONS FOR WOMEN sometitties aYllllable for YOiunteer
helpeB. Phone SSCM>.161. The non-profit~ mnterfar
d.tt women with .aa:.hol and otts
NA110NAL CAT PROT'ECTlON chemiall depe ldendes Sftb voknwl.
SOOETY can 548-9927 betv1een 10 .. m. and 6
The non-profit~ flf)ds loving p.m. or call Jot at 548-8754.
homes for owner-(eflnQuished cats and NEWPORT BEACH CON BtENa kittens and maintains a retirement cen-
t.er for older arts. Volunteers are needed AND VISITORS IUltEAU
to brush the cats and t~ them a little The Newport Bad'I COf tfelera .-d
extra ll.C. For more in ormation, call Visitors eureau 1s dedicated to aw pro-
65()..1232. motion "' the dty to potentW vllltors. If
you haw extensNe knowtedge of New-NEIGHBORS FOR NEIGHBORS port Beach and would like to~
The dty of Costa Mesa's •Neighbors for call 722-1611.
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Open Tues.-Frl. 8:30-5, Sat 9-4
250 E. 17tfi-Street
646-7899
"A Cut Allt1'1e Tile Rest"
Michele A . Weaver
Owner
fiul6111
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s)
a
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26. 1996
TRUANCY
CONTINUED FROM A 1
education.
C\lrrently the board leaves
truancy -discipline matters to
the individual schools, but
trustee$ said IUe"saay they
want district administrators to
pen a formal policy to spell-out
truancy consequences and pro-
cedures.
Jacobson classified the dis-
trict's truancy problem as
#mild .•
Of the district's 18,900 stu-
dents, 97-99% attend school
daily or have excused
absences. Every day 200-575
students are truant or have
absences which are considered
unexcused - such as ski trips
or other vacations.
As a -revenue limit" district,
Newport-Mesa now receives its
funding from the state based on
average daily attendance. An
avera e of '"400 unexcused
a sences y wo cos e
district about $2 million in one
school year.
\Vhile truancy figures
haven't gone up, it continues to
be a "nagging" problem,
Jacobson said.
-1n this district, it has been a
kind of nagging issue," he said.
"We know it's there, but it's
hard to resolve. We feel like
we're getting-the uppef hand,
then we feel like we've lost it."
COACH
CONTINUED FROM A 1
CummUy schools publish
attendance policies in student
handbooks and mail letta.s
home to puen.ts. When stu-
dents are not in school. parents
receive an automatic phone mo. he said.
But when applying disd·
pline, school principals have a
variety-of options including
parent conferences, detention,
Saturday work days and sched-
ule adjustments. On some
occasions parents are asked to
a~ dAss with theb' dUJd.
~Jjitually truant students,
may be referred to a school
attendance review board,
transferred to other district
schools or referred to a county
community school.
Jacobson said a formal poli-
cy would help the community
focus on the issue. .
"A formal policy raises the
level of importance of an issue
and shows the school district is
placing its attention on this," he
said.
Jacobson said the state Edu-
guidelines and recommenda-
tions about potential penalties,
which includes working with
the state Department ()f Motor
Vehicles to suspend driving
privileges of habitually truant
students.
"That's one that caught my
eye," Jacobson said. "Knowing
how kids love to drive, that
would probably get their atten-
tion.•
"In the context that I under-
stood, it was house chores,"
Roelle said.
Craig Schuster agreed, saying,
-Basically the chores were the
bis daughter during a covertly payment ... Clean the room -that
taped call on Sept. 18, 1995. The would be a payment. Wash the
prosecution cla.llns Schuster and car -that would be a payment."
his daughter used it as a code The son also said he heard
word for sex. Mark Schuster's ex-wife, Debbie,
SMOICER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
spadl figures, polllldans and Qth-
en who lbared his appredalioo a 1ne dgen-eo orEtftk the
newly renovalled 'll"'Jli ... lounge.
With 50 invitees in attmdance
(Sen. Ted JCenMCty ud House
Speaker 1lp O'Neill J8Dl regrets),
a selection of fine wtoes and
cognacs, and of course, a bevy of
piemium cigars, SchieJein's first
black tie "Gentleman's Smoker"
was an instant succea, spa(Jdng
national and intematiOnal media
coverage.
When he tramferred to the Ritz
Cartton, LaguQ4 Niguel, one of
Schielein's first orders of business
was to mimic the "Gentleman's
Smoker" idea. His first Orange
County smoker event in 1988
drew celebrities such as Milton.
Berle, James Coburn and George
Hamilton.
1Wo years ago, with his signa-
ture event in tow, Schielein joined
the Balboa Bay Qub. He orga-
nized the club's first "Gentleman's
the dub celebrated its second
annual smoker, donating a portion
of the proceeds to the Make A
WJ.Sb Foundation. The $200-a-
But defense witnesses said the threaten him during their divorce
"payments" actually referred to by saying she would tell the
household chores. police Schuster was molesting the .-~~-Rnm~-'1......,.,__-0neHe!i,~l'tfl1trt-d_a,u~h~te~r~.::::i:-=:-::r.=-i'-="'~.....-:r::..-,,--~-1---=~t__~..C:.~
worked with Schuster as a foot-ar us er aces e ony
ball coach at Corona del Mar counts of lewd conduct with a
,.
·-
minor, including statutory rape
High, said he heard the word and oral copulation. H convicted,
"payment" used twice between he could face a maximum of six
the father and daughter. Roelle years in prison.
testified he thought it meant, He is expected to take the
"Clean the house in some form." stand today.
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RF.SCUING TE.ETII
WITHEIIT
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However, encouraging news comes from a
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more than 40,000 posr mcnopausa.I women
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ticket. lnvitatioo-<mly eyeat drew
a ootede d tM load bnnirwiM
1bme are always 1DOle people
wbo want to come than we can
NXXUUDOdate, •
Sddelein said. '"We seat every-
one at one big tabie, and when
the table is full. it's full."
A cigar enth\lliast since be
smoked his first 42 years ago at
1Wo Brothers Bar in Havana. -Cuba. Schfelein is amued stogies
have become fashionable.
•1t seems like everybody is
smoking cigars,• said Schielein,
who estimates that be has smoked
more than 1,000 diffenmt types
over the yeers. "Men, and women. everywhere I go I see it."
As for the boom in cigar
lounges and businesses that cater
to cigar smokers, Schielein pre-
dicts there will soon be a shake-
out
"The good ones will stay and
the not-so-good ones will disap-
pear," said Schielein. "There is a
lot of interest right now, but not
everyone will prosper. The staying
power is in the quality of the
establishment and cigars they
stock:"
"Beach with Carol, bis wife of 31
years. Their son, Ryan, is a pre-
med freshman at UCI. Schielein,
th~ oldest of three boys, was born
,
in Bavaria and ndMd in MunK:b. Germany.
1l1dned in the ftnMt hotels
througboul Europe; mainly ID
Germany, Swttzatand and Scan-
, dinavia. Schfthin begm bis botel
career in the United States In 1957
at the Los.= HDtoo. stnce then. the · bat worked for
Hilton Intematiooa1 in Thailand.
Hong Kooq and the Philippines.
~ bas i1so served as general
manager at several five.star estab-
lishments tnduding the Pfister
Hotel in Milwaukee; the Ritz-cart-
ton Hoteb in Boston and Laguna
N1gueL Before coming to the Bal-
boa Bay a ub, Scbielein was pres-
ident ot the~ Wailea Resort
on Maui.
Today, the SO-something cigar
connoisseur,-with a penchant for
good food and fine wine, stays in
shape by fast walking for an hour
each morning. He also bas anoth-
er obsession. ·
·111e secret to staying young,"
the ebullient Schielein confides.,
"is to go kayaking at 6 a.Jll .. eyery
day on the Newport Bay."
SALARY
CONTINUED FROM A1
of fire managemenrs or city
~· tmde-dfs. Citj employeel' ..a.nes
blcreued 3% .. of July 1, be Mid.
Danner said be didn't know
why 1be umoone)eded the pn>-
posals.
The police union m. May hired·
labor relatiom consultant John
Adams, based in Lake Forest. as
its negotiation representative.
Adams said telks stalled because
the formula normally used to cal-
culate salary increases was not
used this year.
The police union's contract
expired in January, and the
group's salaries have not
inaeased this year. Danner said.
Newport Beach Firefighters
Association President Rich
Thomas c:Ould not be reached
Wedn~y.
GRAND OPENING
Now in Progress
Custom Gifts & Speci~lity
Florals Antiques Furniture
25o/o OFF·
FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS
Excluding Custom Arrangements
Expires 10-1 S-96
369E17th St., #13 714-646-6745
Westport Square • Costa Mesa
..
• ' . ..
' • .. .,, -
..
' . .
"' .
• •
IYl·Ol'INllf
Te11flic-didate two
football players of.the week
Newport Harbor's Sailors and the Tartars of Torrance are similar
in many ways, but Torrance linemen have size advantage.
By Bany Faulkner, Daily Piiot
NEWPORT BEACH -Not since the
1993 CIP Southern Section Playoffs has
the Newport Harbor High footl)all staff
used such detective work to uncover the
g a u: an mmg oppo-
nent from outside Orange County.
But even with two complete game
videos with which to dissect Bay
League visitor Torrance, much sur-
rounding tonight's 7:30 nonleague
matchup involves elements of the
unknown.
"We don't know a lot about them,•
said Sailors Coach Jeff Brinkley of the
Tartars (1-1), who further cloud matters
with a no-huddle offense featuring up to
six substitutions-per play.
. ,~~; ·-"2 ~ .•..
Additional intrigue lies in the person
of Jeff Thompson, a Torrance sopho-
Thompson, not listed on e program
roster last week, according to Brinkley,
was rushed into his prep football debut
in the fourth quarter of a 20-0 loss to
Redondo, when senior starter Pete Gay-
lardt went down with a neck injury.
"Inevitably, we started going back-
ward," said Torrance Coach Rock Hol-
lis, a walk-on heading an all-walk-on
staff, whose squad defeated North Tor-
8 SEE NEWPORT PAGE 82
•
QUOTI 0, THI DAY
~ 5().() & nae_, OIP """' .... -IJSTANCJA FO<J11JAU <XJADI JOHN l.Jl/BHMX)()I)
DADY IUDJ' SEASON IECOJtD
109%(11or8)
Wair
'n
Hare
•Corona del Mar's
quickness gives the
Sea Kings a slight
edge in Friday's game.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Piiot
r--------------------------------------------------------------------------, r~
Mustangs
take their
shots at
NEWPORT BEACH -Embell-
ishing slightly on the time-hon-
ored fable, the matchup in the
trenches for Friday's nonleague
football game between host
Corona del Mar High and
Canyon might be titled ·The
Walrus and the Hare.• daily pilot football co-players of the week
CdM'S
George
Sumner
•Garden Grove's
secondary still reeling
from the onslaught of
Sumner, and his five
touchdown catches.
lly ltkhM'd Dwtn, Dally l'llot
L. Higb's secondaiy : W hfle Garden Grove
didn't exactly :
include Deion •
Sancte:s, CQiona del Mar wide
receiver George Sumner didn't
euctly expect the Red Sea to
I 'Jbere was more daylight 1 between Sumner and Garden
: Grove def~ backs than a
a do\klless week tn July.
I "We bad two guys out
I there," pM football coach 1 Dick :Fieem.an said, "and they
: paid .attention to one."
1 Ob' the first play from
t scrimmage in CdM's 54-0
t nQll,league romp over Garden 1 drclve a week ago, Sumner
: blluled in a 65-yard touchdown
I pe.ss from quarterback Mike
I McClellan. with Sumner
I running a deep pattern in the ~ middle, catching McCleUan's
. • . • • . . . . . . . . • •
MAAC MM™ I OAl.Y PlDT ----Mares Dally Pilot High School Football Player of Week honors.
H •
Mustangs' mighty-mite played like a mighty-giant with four
touchdown scampers among his 278 yards against Coronado.
By a..yY Feulmer, Dally l'llot
C osta Mesa High fpotball
standout Steve Herzog
likes to say he's "5-foot-7
onag y, as
utt,ering 5-61/2 ~ould n~~ssly
Henog, however, did begin
to ponder playing varsity
football for Mesa as a
wide-eyed sixth-grader,
ta al.on with older
brother Wayne, a future
All-Pacific Coast League
lineman. to the Mustang
weight room and practice field.
•t went to some of Wayne's
~man practices and I was
in complete awe," Steve
Herzog recalled. •At that time,
it looked like college football
to me. I saw that and I thought
'Wowl I want to do t.bif.' "
'Iben an elfish S-4, 120-pounder, Herzog
decided his road to j>rep stardom would be
peved by pumping iron.
•Jn seventh grade, I WU the anallest and
skinniest kid on tbe team." he Mld "I WU)ted to
• ·································································································~···············
\I \I . .
•Costa Mesa has a date
with Edison Friday night.
HUNTINGTON BEACH -It
was Edison High which won last
year's nonleague meeting with
Costa Mesa (14-7), but, ironically,
it's the Chargers who may enter
Friday's 1 p.m. rematch at Hunt-
ington Beach High with revenge
on Uieir minds.
"We're as good as they are,"
declared then 1first-year Mesa
1 coach Jeny Hpwell, following
1 last fall!_ firs_!-ever meeting, in
I which the Mustangs battled the
I heavily favored Sunset League
: representative to a scoreless tie
1 through three quarters and just
t missed tying the game on a last-
t gasp Hail Mary pass from mid-
i field. ·we played them bard and 1 we stuck 'em.·
: Edison Coach Dave White
I likely posted the newspaper clip-
1 pings with Howell's pronounce-
1 ments somewhere in the Charger 1 locker room this week, where a I
I
I
I
I
I
8 SEE MESA PAGE 82
"Canyon is huge and we don't
have much size, so. hopefully, we
can keep them from overrunning
US,. CdM Coach Dick Freeman
said of the first-ever meeting
between the two schools, set to
kickoff at 7:30 p .m at Newport
Harbor High.
The biggest size differential
up front will occur when the
Comanches (2-0) have the ball
Canyon's offensive line averages
234 pounds, while Mesa's front
four weigbS in at 1 per man.
The Sea Kings (2-0), however,
have run around what they
couldn't push through, thus far,
with speedy senior defensive
ends Tom O'Meara (five sacks)
and Nick Hood (two) leading a
pass-rushing relay.
·0ur speed at end has given
people problems,• Freeman said.
•eanyon is primarily a block
down-kick out team. But with us
coming hard with speed from the
comers. it Jllay hove to adjust
some of that.• 0
Freeman also thinks supreme
conditioning may help his smaller
charges eventually win the war
over weary behemoths.
".lt'.s cu:onditio.n.ing thing ,... .... ..._-1
us," Freeman explained. "We're
not only going to ping you early,
we're going to ping you at the
end of the game, too.•
There wasn't much pingin_g or
knocking from the CdM offanse
last week, as the Sea Kings-put
up 54 points, the third most in
school history, against a hap1ess
Garden Grove squad.
O'Meara, an All-Newport-
Mesa District and All-Sea View
League tailback who be_gan
•SEE COM PAGE 82
' Doug DeCinces, the former
Angel iX>":er-httting third
baseman tumed·goJt
course designer, plans to break
. groW)d on Strawberry Fanns
Golf pub in Turtle Rock~
OcL 15.
Details between,DeCinoes,
who owns a real-estate
devel.opment company in Irvine,
and 'l'be Irvine Company are
being ironed out, and it appears
four years' worth of time, money
and effort for the rookie designer
is finilly coming to fruition.
De€inces, who played 15
years in the major leagues and is
fifth on the An els' all-time
home tun list, has been an avid
golfer for years. He's a member
of Big Canyon Country Club.
Strawberry Farms will feature
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM 81
ranee, 15-12 in its opener.
Hollis said Gaylardt's mJwy
was not serious, but he definitely
won't play tonight, leaving
Thompson as the first option, with
senior receiver-running back
Brendon Breese in reserve.
·(Breese) played a little quar-
terback last year and he quarter-
backed the freshman team," said
Hollis, who compares the Tartars'
offensive philosophy to that of
Newport.
·we don't have the personnel
Newport Harbor has, but we run
basically the same offense," Hol-
lis said.
Brinkley verified the similari-
ties, but pointed out Torrance's
size a vanfage in fhe trenches.
"They're bigger than we are,"
a chellengtng, 18-boJe public
Jmb With tbe tlaftl GI & COU111!Y
Wm. 1b9 ooune la-.~ to
eventually «cpJnd to 'D Ida.
DeCincel hiJed noted golf
ooune an::bltect JDn Upe, the
senior designer for Jack
Nicklaus-built COUl'IM, to work
~tly wltbblm.
DeCinc.I, • Corona del Mu
resident. bit 30 home rum far the
Angell in 1982.
There'll be n6 oondomintums
or houses lining the Strawbeny
Panns fairwa!J, and it should be
interesting to see how Strawberry
Parms competes with Oak Creek
Golf Oub, which opens to the
public next week.
frvine-based Oak Creek is
operated by the same people
who run Pelican Hill Golf Oub
at Newport Coast Tom Fazio
designed both Pelican Hill
(Ocean and Unks courses) and
Oak Creek. a
Speaking of Big Canyon. one
of its top senior players, Mike
Drucker, will play in the
said Brinkley, while
Hollis singled out two-
way tackle Matt Tupuo-
la, a 6-foot-3, 275-
pound junior, to prove
Brinkley's point.
Brinkley also believes
Torrance running back
Anthony Jones is some-
one to be concerned
about.
CIF 'lbp 10
DtvWonV
1. SeMte 2-0
2. El Toro 2-0
3. Kennedy 2-0
4. S. Margarita 2-0
5. Tustin 2..0
6. Foothill 1-1
7. Loara 2-0
&.Irvine 1-1
9.V\lesteni 1-1
10. ..... port 2-0
Others.: valenda. 2-0; eoron. .. Ms (2-0).
county this fall
Senior tailback Ray
Ohrel, eighth in
Orange County with
283 yards on 27 carries
(a 10.5 averag6}i leads
the ground game,
while senior All-New-
port-Mesa District
quarterback Josiah
Fredriksen triggers a
potent aerial attack.
Fred.riles en has
The Tars, 2-0 for the
eighth straight season
and ranked No. 10 in the
CIF Southern Section's Division V,
have presen~ Brinkley little to
be concerned with thus far, dis,
mantling Orange, 48-14, and
Marina, 36-13.
completed 25 of 46
(54 % ) for 336 yards, with four TDs
and only one interception. His
favorite targets are senior
receivers Danny .. Pulido and Brad
La Bass.
No less than six different
Sailors have scored touch-
downs thus far to fuel the 84-
point output, the second-best
after two ames in the school's
66 varsity seasons an e
highest two-game total in the
Pulido (10 catches for 74
yards and one TD) needs five
more receptions to surpass
George Greenwalt as the Ta.rs'
No. 2 all-time receiver. Green-
walt liad career cat es,
while all-time leader Mark Craig
nu.. being OCC"I tint
women's golf COKb. among the
more, uh, ltazardoua jobs In the
cmununity college lfllem.
Among Pitzel's players include
Natalie Cohen, a UC Santa
Barbara graduate with a degree
in marine sdence, and Pat
, a eaoron
sabbatical from Coastline
College. Cohen and Candelaria
are Fitzel's two best playeri;.
...
·~; ..
,. j
Clarke Dorlsh
•Natalie just lo98I golf •• fllM1
llld. •Sbe came bKk to ICbool • .., '°"' --.. ac:ademk-umts and three P.B.
units.·
ADOtW golfer, Heeth.-
O'Darrow, is a fomM!I' uatianal
cbampioo mo4ocnla rat;ar.
Pitzel's team mmpetes in the
South Coast Conference.
0 ID._ Newport Beeda GoU
Coune men"w dub, matd:a-play
blowouts were the item ot the
day Jut Saturday, al
sweet-swinging Alex De La
Parra defeated Joe Russo, 8 and
6, in the final of the President's
Cup.
· Dan McGuire beat Don Wulf,
3 and 1, in the Vice President's
Cup, while Neal Tacblld
defeated Bob Dearborn. 7 and 6,
in the neasurer's Cup final
In flight rounds, De La Parra
ow 60) and Crai Jensen
ow net won
Sharer (low gross 64) and Ron
Greene (low net 52) won Flight
B; and Jim Bates (low gross 71)
MESA
CONTINUED FROM 81
foul mood already pervades fol-
lowing a 34-0 trouncing at the
hands of Capistrano Valley.
1bat loss knocked the Charg-
ers out of the Orange County Top
10 (from No. 7), but White's squad
is still ranked ninth in the
ad lob Potts (low oet 55) WOil
fllgbtC.
~I W.~ laUDdl;
Waynt\ ..tad won low P*
(67), out two golfen wUb limDar~ ~.Parma (law
Det 5') ad Curt Herber1s (net
56) cia s.pt. 18.
Y-..rclay. Herberts won low
gross (66), winning a tie-bleater
agatmt Al Cranston (low net 5').
0 omct••• of Saw Our Yoatla
(SOY), tbe Costa Mesa·bued
group cteslgned to keep at-risk
youths oft the streets, wlll1losl11S
golf tournament on Monday at
Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Oub, a needed fund-raising
effort that features several
donated prizes.
What a great concept Play.golf
and help keep the dty's streets
sater. Call Joe Rogers,
tournament co-director, at
252-1085 (daytime) or~
• RIOIAM> DUMrs dub golf column.
appeM'S f!V«Y Thursday.
The Mustang deten90, keyed
by senior linebackers Jeremy
Lefever and Julius Vasquez,
must contend with a veteran Edi-
son offense.
The Chargers return-six
starters from a squad that out-
gained Mesa, 312-112 in total
offense last year.
·Junior quarterback Jeff Grady
earned his starting spot in last
hauled in 131. CIF Southern Section -----
year's Mesa game, com-
ing off the bench to com-
plete 6 of 8 second-half
passes, including the 16-
yard game-winning
touchdown to fellow
returner Brandon Boem-
er with 36 seconds left.
Brinkley said Torrance's Division I poll.
aggressive 4-3 defense will make "Our kids would like
pass protection a priority for to give Edison another
offensive tackles Ian Dorish and tough game, but it would
Eddie Clarke, guards Phil Bal-be an upset if we won,•
tazar and Dan Otting and center said Howell, who will
Phil Warther. give Dan Baume his first
"They blitz about 80% of the ~~ r:f!C:g ~
time and they bring their sec-junior Ronnie Llevanos.
ond rig~t ~in your_fa_ce~.1--Mllum& will be asked Lefever
an use a rot o man coverage, to break Mesa's two-
Brlnkley said. game streak without a comple-
Grady bas completed
25 of 47 for 314 yards this
fall, while Boerner, a
junior wideout, leads the
team with 11 receptions
for 136 yards.
...-------------------------. tion, which includes a combined 0
Vince Catani. a 5-fOdt-10, 175-
powid senior who caught four
passes last year against Mesa, is
the leading rusher with 136 yards
and three touchdowns on 29 car-
ries. His three TDs fueled the
Chargers' season-opening 28-13
win over Paramount.
< I> \ t
No.....,. Ht. WI. a. ....
12 Mike McOellln 6-1, 115, SI'.
8 Tom~ 6-1, 206. Sr.
22 Domlnk RkaboNl. s.e. 160, SI'.
1 RyMt Coop., s..11. 167, Jf.
18 Geol'ge Swnner. '"°· 175, Sr. 88 Tun Trn.rman. 6-6, 230, k .
r1 'fy ~ f>-1r 2Dl, So.
51 ScottWOen, 5-10, 220, Sr.
55 8r.cty Colton, 5-10, 18', Sr. n Matt ~. s-10. 200. Sr.
66 Richard Salmonson. f>.3, 230, k .
QI ..
Kl
W'A
'Ml
TE
LT
LG c
RG
lllT
..... 1\1\(((\ ..... '\. I \\ I ' 1 1 I\ I " I \ H I I I\ "
AZ•
OM HERZ-06 predecessors, is willing to share been producing.•
the glory with the liorses up Said Herzog. •My goal was to
CONTINUED FROM 81 CONTINUED FROM 81
moonlighting on the other side of change that. I started lifting
the ball only this year, has rushed weights with my brother in the
for 282 yards on 37 carries. seventh grade. Maybe I stunted
Sprung by the surprisingly my growth. but by the time I was
efficient work of all-new often-a freshman, I was the strongest
sive linemen Ty Harper, Scott kid on the team. I went from a
Wicken. Brady Colton, Matt Per-guy who got pushed around out
ry, Richard Salmonson and Justin there to a guy doing the
Shea, as well as tight end nm pushing.•.
Thurman, O'Meara has extended Despite his humility. Henog's
hls 100-yard-plus streak to six strengths don't stop with a
games. He ranks ninth in Orange 325-pound bench press,
front. rush for 1,000 yards this season
"The line did such a good job and with 278 last week, I guess
Friday night, anyone could have you could say I Have a little
run through those holes," he insurance. I know there are
said. "It wasn't me, as much as it going to be games when its
was them." • going to be tough to get 100."
Costa Mesa Coach Jerry Mustang rooters realize,
Howell might disagree. however, its unwise to bet on
"Steve has good speed, not Herzog coming up short.
great speed," Howell said. "But
more than anything, he has an
instinct for the hole. And when
be gets in the open, he's shown
his moves are as good as
anyone's. He's hard to pin
down." County in rushing this fall. 345-pound squat. and 225-po~d
Like lhw defemiv~ teaiin--+~weit..deai1..J1dliic:b...raI1ik..llim..in.-jL~:ei::z:og.m:wd..fiou~1'-3:L-~~ilrjl$m~~
mates. the Sea Kings also rely the team's top two. yards as a sophomore, after
u n finesse on Against Coronado, he took netting more than 1,000 and
49, 29 and 1 yaid.s.
"I didn't realize I had moves,
until I saw the Coronado tape,•
Herzog said. •1 don't know
where those came from,
because I never had them
before."
Herzog, like his Mustang
SUMNER
CONTINUED FROM 81
on a 9-1 freshman team. He
started at outside linebacker as a
varsity sophomore.
But Howell said his value
defensive involvement this
season.
·1n his heart, I'm sure he'd
like to play defense, and return
punts and kickoffs. But he also
realizes if be did that. he'd be too
beat up, punched out and dead
tired to produce the results he's
scoring pass. Sumner had already broken the
28-year-old school record of three scoring catches
set by Doug Young (against
Pacifica). His final reception tied him
with Kennedy's Rick Parma (19'15)
for the Orange County record.
And it put Swnner lnto the
plateau ol Deily Pilot Pootbell Player
of the week bonon.
On the See Klng1' leCODd i:::oo -only their lowth play ~ -Sumnerbagg8d
another touc:bdown. this time a :f arc1 pea from McCWlan. wbo
called an aUdllle at tbe MM
.... 'POCtiut1 • GlldlD GIOft
delemtYe bllck pllllytng up a..
•MjM ... ~ ...... lldd .• , JUlt
(Id ...... "'tlle llld..
IDtbelet'lnl....,_,91.,,,.. ...
wmt cllMp 5Jn'IMM'61."Gar· clllll<lloN'I n. ......... ,_.bat It ID 8"1 11"1
.... ti'. ·~ -~·n. ~ ........... billlil l*bd aa. bUIA=~K • ._. 11111.-a tpitbllDagc:MMlglabl,MMd "
for 9 with three interceptions.
Any play-action passing suc-
cess will help ease the defensive
focus on Mesa junior running
back Steve Herzog, the No. 4
rusher and No. 3 scorer in the
county with 401 yards and five
touchdowns on 40 carries.
Mesa (1-1) needed nothing but
Henog and a bruising offensive
fronl seven to wear down Coron-
ado last week, auising to a 36-3
win that snapped a five-game los-
ing streak.
.those were 39 in the first half last
week to Cathedral. a Los Ange-
les-based all-boys school with an
enrollment of around 400.
Cathedral which ust ha
to run e ou e wmg, put
•Their quarterback throws the
ball well and they run good, deep
quick routes," said Howell, Who
had high praise for the Edison
defense.
•They're tough, mean. strong
and quick and they fly all over
beck,• Howell said. ·
" I \ I\ I I I~ "
together five touchdown drives senior receiver Zak Davis has before intermission against Cal· vary. Bach of which featured a averaged16 yards on 10 recep-
play ol more than 50 yards. tionsDef. ns1 el 0 .... _da 1• · Calvary's Eagles, whole stand.. e veiy, ~\Gil a.a ~
outs include 6-foot-2 220-pound what banged up, with starters
junior center and lin~backer Josh Jose Arroyo and Wilson Argueta ~· ~= :'n~o=-:J:::.. ~!ty ~e1~1: :::
rent Anaheim Pinmha.s 1. cewtn1 2-0 sidelines with a pulled
executive Rich Sault 2. l.aguN Hiiis 2-0 groin.
have managed to put 3. Aliso Niguel 3-o Senior All-Pacific
lfami 4. Padflca 2-0 Coast League imkte up soma o . . ve 5. Sunny Hiiis 1-1 linebacker John n~, including 34 6. It AIMnftos 2-0
points. 1. sou.t\ Hills 2-o Romm (b.roken leg) ~ Danlel a. Mayfair 2-0 could return al IOOll
Mwrieta. a 6-2, 185· t. ..._,.. 2-0 as next week, while
pound junior, hu 10. t.a Mirada ~2 fellow insider 'becbr
thrown lex 403 yardt Andy Galida .W
and two toucbdciwm (27 ot 46 likely return Prlday after.:=
with jult one iDllMC9Ptim), but 141t week with a hyper __ _
mo.t of amt bila came fD.mc.::b·up elbow.
mode b fti'lt·~ coeCb BW Eltanda., wbldi bu ouDcond
~ ·. Calvary in two pnMOQt IDMt· .-.... runmng back RXo 1ng1. 55-25, bu a ~
A .... bu 21$ ruabiDg Didi ICOiipg record ot 49 paints, ..t In
ad tbaie 'l'D9 on U caniel........ 1970 agem.t 8Ueoa Pan:. ·
;
'
!
1
l LOc8.ls take it on the chin •
r-: . .-~--\~,. .. ~~. - -,' ~--=· --
1be WUdcats continue-to improve
each week. coming closer to that first
win in this their tnaugural aea.son in the Newport Mesa J\lllJ« All-
Amerlcan Football League.
The Wlldcatl dropped a hard-fought 13-0 dedslon to the Buena
Park Eagles Saturday, but continued to show improvement. u did the
other local teams who also fell.
John Gothard made some nice plays 0n offense for the Wlldcats,
including a key block to spring Ricky Nelson for a 50-yard gallop.
On defense, the Wildcats' Jordan Alcazar was the standout while
Matt Hauser, Brice Stillman and Jamie McGee put a monkey wrench
into Buena Park's passing game. The Eagles got both of their touch-
downs in the second quarter.
1rv1ne2s,..._1
The two teams were knotted 6--6 at the hall, but the second hall
offense belonged to Irvine.
The Bruins' spirited defense of Brandy Arnold, Collins Armstrong,
Michael McDo11ald, Chase Presson and Ryan Turrey kept the Bruins
off the scoreboard until the final minute of the first hall.
The Bruins' running game behind Presson and Matt Enc:.ini.as was
effective, but several plays called back due to penalties and turnovers.
Encinias had a 38-yard reception on the Bruins' scoring drive which
was capped by a run by McDonald. ·
Garden Grove •• lrllh 0
AJ. Fernandez intei:cei>ted three passes, but it wasn't enough to
shut down a stubborn Garden Grove team.
Alan Saenz anchored the defense, delivering some crushing blows
that were heard across the field. ·
Ah offensive line led by Paul Lancaster and Jim on ug
quarterback. Jacobi Rapids some needed time. Nathan Huibregtse ran
for 35 yards, canying two or three def enders on almost every occasion.
South Orange County 41, ~ 0
Some fumbles and missed snaps on punts put the Thojans in an ear-
ly hole. -
Parker Hardt, Jason Kraft, Paul Jones and John Hayes all played
well on defense for most of the game, but the Thojans just weren't able
to overcome some early miscues.
Cowboys absorb 20-6 setback
T b e POP WARNER Midget
Cowboys stayed within striking
distance most of the way Satur-
day before finally falling to the
Long Beach Rams, 20-6, in Cost
Mesa Pop Warner football action.
Three other teams typified the
Cowboys' fine efforts, but also
came up short in the win column
this week.
Despite some costly penalties
and three lost fumbles, the Cow-
boys trailed only 12-6 late in the
fourth quarter. The Rams put the
game away with a long runback.
Quarleroac1' Matt MOOre
scored the only touchdown for the
Cowboys with Scott Scheppens
and navis nimble doing a good
job in the trenches. Sean Biggio
also added an interception.
The Cowboys will travel to
meet the Laguna Beach Light-
ning Saturday at 3 p .m.
In other games:
a..kewood Eagles ll
c.dll..aso
The Mighty Mite Cardinals
came up with several tackles for
loss, but were stung on three long
scoring plays (including a double
reverse).
Shane Bolin, Junior Bay and
Richie Molina spent most of the
game in the opponents back.field.
Rick Wedgeworth and Kyle Gilli-
gan performed well on offense.
The Cardinals will play at
Long Beach at 11 a .m . against the
Blue Rams.
Saddleback Valley Gold Bear 14
Chalr9*J 0
Although shut out, the offense
bad several drives deep into Sad-
dleback. territory only to be
turned away.
The defense led by Cody
Forsythe, Joe Wall, Jerry Molina,
Doug Anlburgey and Joey
Mueller put together an inspired
effort.
The Chargers will be on the
road in a 1 p.m. game against the
Saddleback. Valley Blue Bears.
canyon Hills H.wkeyes 26~
Chiefs 1 .
The Chiefs won the battle in
the second half of their game with
Canyon Hills, but lost the war this
time.
After Canyon Hills ran up a 26-
0 lead at the half, the Chiefs'
defense stiffened and did . not
allow another seore the rest of the
way.
The Chiefs scored on a nice
scoring pass fTom Kasey Peters to
Blake Preste<i.
Blake and Kasey also com-
bined to make 20 tackles -40%
of the team's tptal. Cris Weiss;
1}'ler Dillman ahd Collin Calla-
han all played well on both sides
of the ball.
The Chiefs take on the Bull-
dogs in .an 11 a.m . at Laguna
Beach.
Pacific Coast Rip Tide drops two to Los Altos
The Pacific Coast Rip nde lost a pair this week-SOFTBALL
end, 13-0 and 10-9, to Los Altos in fastpitch softball
play.
After being barn.mered in the opener, the Rip Tide battled back from
a 10-2 deficit in the second game to pull within one run.
Kristen Smith gave herself a birthday present with a three-run home
run while nttany Miller added a two-run single.
Lisa Huntington walked twice and Megan Hess had a single and
was hit by a pitch and scored two runs. The Rip nde are off this week.
2-t decision at Palomar
SAN MARCOS -Ryan Hoover scored a )(EN•S SOCCE&
seco -,
enough as the Orange Coast College men's soccer team dropped a 2-
1 decision to Palomar.
Hoover, a Newport Harbor grad, halved Palomar's lead midway
through the ~~ond half on ~ 25-yard free kick into the right s~de of the
Vanguards contribute to their own loss. 4-t
SAN DIEGO -The Southern California
College men's soccer team scored the first MIN'S SOCCER
goal of Wednesday's game, unfortunately it
was into the Vanguards' own net.
The goal got UC San Diego, a Division 3 caliber team, rolling on the
way to a 4-1 decision.
Peter Schumerth scored the only goal for SCC (3-4). Jason Cozart
had four saves.
• 13-and-under boys now 4-0.
COSTA MESA -The Heat picked up YOUTH SOCCER
Division 3 Girts
Big Red 0,
lWist.rs 0
AYSO REGION 97 1 scored the other goals.
Kevin Gowdy, Robert Andrews and Shaun
Kietzer were the standouts on defense.
Leopards vs. Eagles -a pair of ·1-0 victories this past weekend to run
their record to 4-0 on the season.
Fittingly a battle between Big Red and the
Twisters -two undefeated teams in girls
Division 3 -ended with both combatants
walking off the field with their records intact
after a 0-0 tie.
Eric Holland scored two goals while.
Zachary Osadche and Scott Sherman bad the
others for the Leopards who dominated play
with the Eagles in a Division 7 game.
-' The Heat, an under-13 boys soccer te am
from Costa Mesa, beat the OSC Santos FC on
Saturday and then topped the FCI Landsharks
on Sunday.
Josh Martin found Michael Gardiner mid-
way through the first half to beat Santos FC.
Goalie Louis Day made to big saves and Ralph
Morgan came from nowhere to block a sure
goal and preserve the win.
Scott Wade, with an assist from Charlie
Hirst, beat the Landsharks with a second-half
effort. ·
The Heat's offense led by Greg Perrine,
Drew Bystedt, Billy Lund, Zach Powell and
Danny Krikorian kept the pressure on from
the opening whistle, taking a 10-5 shot lead in
a scoreless first half.
Defense was the key in the second half
with Ryan Denham, Brian King, Devon
Stephens-and Steven Thomas denying the-
ball.
The Heat, a member of the South Coast
Soccer Club, will face SCSC Sonbc Saturday at
Edison High in Huntington Beach.
Big Red goalkeepers Kate Rader and Wlut-
ney Conover posted six saves and swvived a
second-quarter penalty kick in this Division 3
match up in Region 57.
Strikers Diana Hossfeld and Katie Reynolds
had two good scoring opportunities, but
lWister goalies were up to the task.
No Fe.-4, Galaxy ]
In a battle of unbeatens, No Fear came
back from a 3-2 deficit in the third period to
pick up the win over the Galaxy to sweep a
weekend double header.
Chris Rasch picked up his third straight hat
trick as No Fear improved to 3-0.
Goalkeeper Steven Arthur made two out-
standing saves as the defense anchored by
center fullback Adam Pinkerton scoreless in
the-final peri.OG.--
ln Saturday's game, Tom Yacko Clrilled in
two goals to lead No Fear to a 5-1 victory over
the Grass Sharks. Tom's brother, Andrew
Yacko, Andrew Na.hin and Kenny Rakestraw
Janue Barth and Wade Hatton both played
excellent defense along with Christian Ander-
son who played the whole field.
Hattan, Daron Amqld and Cole Chris-
tensen put together good efforts with Sher-
man being the most aggressive on the field.
Rip cwts 5, Strikers 3 ·
Fernando Vu-AYSO REGION 120 lanueva had two
goals to lead the Rip Curl to victory over the
Strikers. Both AYSO Region 120 Division 3
teams from Costa Mesa played hard through-
out the game.
Pablo Perez, Bryce Sheridan and Justin
Lund scored the other three goals for the Rip
Curl (2-0).
Other standouts were Mike Armstrong and
Chris Teregis on defense, Mark U~derwood at
forward and Cliff Glacy in goal. _,
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS TENNIS DEEP SEA
... _
Sailors rip Normans behind Godbey, 14-4
BEVERLY HILLS -Vanessa
Godbey continued her dominat-
ing style Wednesday, giving up
only three points on her way to
three wins as the Sailors defeated
the Beverly Hills Normans, 14-4,
in a nonleague match.
The No. 2 doubles team of
Audra Adams and Kristein Case
proved to be one of the big high-
lights for Harbor, sweeping all
three of its games, battling back
from 1-4 in a tie-breaker against
Beverly Hills' No. 1towin7-6 (7-4).
The Sailors, 6-0 and ranked
No. 2 in Orange County, host
Edison today.
VOLLEYBALL
Comrnw\lty college women
Long Beach CC def. Orange Coast.
15-8, 12-15, 15-1, 15-2 (JMnifer Fish,
OCC. 10 kilts). Orange Coast falls to 2-2.
Mira Costa def. Corona del Mar, 15-7,
15-5, 15-8 (Jordana Havriluk. CdM,
GOOD NEWS FOR
""""""' nn111rnl' bUUU un1vcn'1
Newport 14, 8evertv Hills 4 ~ V. Godbey (NH) clef Nguyen.
6-2; def. Gordon., 6-0; def. Saadat. 6-1;
Canright (NH) lost 1-6, won 6-1, 6-0; E.
Barker (NH) lost 0-6, won 6-0, 6-0.
Doubles: Nelson-Case (Nii) lost to
lnsha·Rosenberg, 6-7 (5·7); def.
Silvanskaya-Barzarian. 6-2; def.
Kline-Gardner, 6-0; Palm· Adams-(NH)
won 7-6 (7-4). 6-1, 6-0;
C. Godbey-<:ollopy (NH) lost 3-6,
won 6-2, 6-0.
Mesa wins again, 10-8
WESTIMINSTER -The Costa
Mesa High girls tennis team (2-4)
left Westminster seeing doubles
Wednesday in the Mustangs' 10-8
nonleague win. Costa Mesa's
doubles teams of Phuong nan
and E.J . Hartloff and Kristin
Chisholm and Emily Wells.
Lisa Steele at No. 2 singles
took two of three to help the Mus-
tangs to their second straight win.
Costa Mesa 10, Wwbninster I
Singles: Sandoval (CM) lost to Tang,
0-6; lost to Tieu. 2-6; lost to Torgerson,
0-6; Steele (CM) lost 2-6, won 6-1, 6-0;
Ueu (CM), lost 0-6, 2-6, 5·7.
Doubles: Whittaker·Oimson (CM),
lost to Munser-Ngo, 2·6; def.
Nguyen-Le, 6-3; def. Kim-lee, 6-0;
Tran-Hartloff (CM) won 6-2, 6-1, 6-1;
Chisholm-Wells (CM), won 6-0, 6-2. 6-2.
Make Those Patios &
Entries Beautiful
A Mixrure of Stone and Used Brick Let Jim Jenninp
insra ll y ur
complete
yard hardscape.
• Exrcrt brick,
bloc.It, tone, ulc,
t.l:at~ &. concrete
woc&c.
• C'..an rteommend
qualuy ~us
&.I~
• Qualq> wOd. en
CAQ·Maa&.
NfTt'POI' Beach
ilnce 1969. •On.an. ~l'Wt t0twme...
.lbe_Phen-Fen Diet
Are There Safe
And Effective
Appetite
Suppressants? e (jl_ ~
Q
n1e 11b\\C'r ·~ \"\: I llCIM'\'t'f the lre:ll·
rntm of oix''>tll nr .in 1l\\•rne1gh1 l'nl1
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from tht IJhic' TilC Ol..1\: diet (lllls... •bei\ r~ ~11\JOl'lt'R'Ci hi a ph\~&;itl1' • •
i: kri1td~ 111 1br1r use. an hr 1 •
hdpful ;irl1unct b "~ht tt'lfuctlOn and ..
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3 ~I 11dl1l1rc roe dNS thl:~ t
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'«'r 1..n~11 mu1i\ep~
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any cochclls are available Pilot September 19. 28, Oc. ,. TNAlle wl ~ • No ~7&4 of Oftlc:lel •wa. 1Cltt0 fW1ancial code and authof·
fOf examination In lht !tie lober 3, 10, 1996. Thia bu1lnt11 11 con-CllhW'l cf-* dmiw'I on • ReCords In the Omo.°' the ized IO do business In INs S.. end I Wltlln Nc*:e d ......... tokURlllGmldV. kept by the courL th529 Fictitious Bualneaa ducted by: an Individual .... or nll1iolW '**. a da:tl County Recorder of Ora PUBLIC NOTICE state will be held et lht en-°"81.t Ind Elldlon eo S8I. Ill....,... 8lllf\ CA t1llD. The
THE PETITION requests Name Statement Have you llarted doing drMn by a ..... er ..... County State of c.w:r': trance lo the O~ City The undn9*f called said •••..tTn.Mllt....._miy
l'ltJtnortly 10 administer the PUBLIC NOTICE The following persons art business yet? No ad lnOl'I or a cf** drMn UICU4id .... Jame F K NOnCE Of TIWl1U'I IAlE Hau 300 EaSI Chipman Nc*Jt d °"81.t lflCt E'lldlor'I ~-lf'Y~ICllllltdlwofh estare undet the lndepen· doln!l buslneH a1: Ee-All Rounaghl by a "* or tedlrail IM1gs .,., 1 e<n UtlOUI DEEi OF 1WUIT f1U: A ' o c llfom IO Sell eo bt l'ICOldld In ,. ~ ...._ nl a11w -oent Adm1n1stra11on of Es· SUMMONS centric One Designs, 3124 This etatement was flied and loen ......... uWva Ind Trudi Mlc:hel Ke<n, hUI· 1161 A.,, 1111111111: 141-0N· venue. tange. 1 ~ OOU'lly~ .. Allll IJl'QPll1Y -j w•\ If any, .,_
tates Act (This auth011ty (CITACION JUDICIAL) Taft Way, Costa Mesa, CA with the County Clerk of ...xllb• or ..viv. benk ~nd !and ;:e 1H =I len· 100UWltOlfAULTUIDa ~!:~ ~~a~ndOO:''t:~ is 1oc1teci For Min lnroima-,.._ The tllilll ..n of lht
will allow 1he personal rep-NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: 92626 Or1nge County on &-14·96 loedfled in Sedion 5102 ofltle 1 1 • pu auc--A DHD OF TUT MTtD JtMll ,..v r tlon: Mon-Fii 8:0Qlm.6:()()pm i,...w ...._of h .......
resenta1111e to take many (Avlso a Acusado) LINDA Shane Galltskl, 3124 Taft 19893982938 Fin1fw:i11 Coda end dlcflzed tlonatl lo :1 c:t!:"'ctrw!: 11, 11N UMLEll YOU TAU ~~.~=~rty°:u'!t~ ~= C.wastem .....Si¥h'""*"IDlll_, a~lons without court ap-IZZO. DOES 1 TO 10, IN· Way, Costa Mesa, CA Dally Pilot Sept. 5, 12, 19, ID do~ in f1i8 ...._In : a'S:t ~lonal ba k ACTION TO f'IOTKT YOUR in said County and State Corp. 525 nl _...... ......... ciom.
Pfo11a1 Before toking cet· CLUSIVE 92626 26 1996 1996 th505 1t1e 81181t .,.... atw tt11n e or · n • rAOl'Em rT MAY IE IOU) A East M1111 S111M1t pO Boll ..,._ nl ...,_ 9 h""' ,.,n •ery omponanl actions, YOU ARE BEING SUED BY Darin Cartson. 788 Violet ' ' · • Check dt9Wl'I by I stale or A PUI · • descnbed as: completely • offle...., ~ ofh lb
riowever. the personal rep· PLAINTIFF: (A Ud. le esta' Lane, Orange. CA 92669 PUBLIC NOTICE ~ ~ ::.:.-: federal credll union. or 1 AN ~rio: y= ":described In said ~ 01 2200' El Cajon. CA 92022• lea of Wt ls: St.tS\«IUD. In r~senta11ve wlll be required demandando) KAREN A. This business Is con-.. _, chedt drawn by • attte or trust The street ovuress g()()4 (9'9) ~ o..d _....ID Clll\, h T.,,._ w11
to give no11ce 10 Interested RHYNE dueled by: a general part· Fictitious 8ualne11 ~~ "'11 ~ federal aavlngs and loan as-~~OF 11tE rROCEEOINCI and ~er common deslgna-Seolernber 12. 19911 TNSlee _,.,CllllHlt'tdlldl*-°"
pe1sons unless they have You nave 30 CAL!NOAR nenhip Nam• Statem9nt -90CiMlon; -UYlncn nlOda• __ ._YOU .. YOU .iiOllriMny,-of ~.al-~op.. Sala Ollac Juoo..L Cdlan. a -illltiiill ......... do
waived notice or consented DAYS af1er this summons Have you started doing The following pereons att orendc:nee•• ,.,....of.~ lion, or U\llng1 b.nlt •e>ed· COtfTAC~ A lAWYlll Notice Is eny described 1b0ve ii pur· llC. 3017 Slf12:1~.2&'DS R· °'' -•
to 1rie proposed ecllon.) is served on you lo file a business yet? no doing business ea: Helm. s.ldlllt_.~~ fled In section 5102 ot the llMby OMn INt R&R MCOM· poftedtobe:28Sand0ollar <48029 • =~•==---:.a:::.
The independent admims· typewrlnen response at this Shane M. Galltskl 1824 Newport, Costa Mesa,~~~ flnanc:lal code and authof· VEYANcf, INC~ A CAUfOIUllA Court. Newport Beach, CA PUBLIC NOTICE °'..._._.,.nlllllll~ tratoon authoroty will be court. This statement was flied CA 92626 or ••..-• .__,. -. !zed to do business In lhls ~TIOll. as lnlstee, 92663 The undersigned llb\ _.,.. _...
granted unless an inter· A letter or phone call will wilh the County Clerk ol Myron Lee Miller, 1792 Ori· p:1111eion orencurtnnca or state w11 be held al the en-succeuor lnlSllt, OI SllbStituttd Trustee dlscla11ms any llabll· &crow MD. ll02U-EH 1nga ..,. .,.... In :::=;
ested person !oles an ob· nol protect you; your type-Orange County on 8-27·96 ole, Costa Mesa, CA 92628 ~~dlol~ '° Uliiltly 1tle lfance to the Or1nge City tnmet punuant lo the Dttd of kV tor any incorrectness of NOTICE TO CJIEDfTOM OF llJt.l 51~ ofh Rr..-. Code nl • 1~1on 10 the pellllon and wrotttn response must be 19993884048 This business Is con-....... aeand by uld Hal 300 East Chapman TNst rUCIMd by Will¥n the Slreet address and other SALE floltlld ID di» ..._ Ill Ha
snow good cause why the In proper legal form If you Dally P~ot Sept. s. 12, 19. dueled by: an Individual . Deed d TIUll. 8dvancea A'*1ue. Orange, Callfomil Wunsch *'Cl Bwerly Wunsdl commoo designahon, If any. AMD1lf INTBmONTO TRANS· Illa Ill h -c "'* af9
court should not grant the want the court to heat you1 26, l996, 1995 th508 Have you started doing fllr'IU1dlr. wtll in9lr8St • 11 rtght. lltle and lnllfllt husblnd llld Wiit RtCORted on shOwn herein Said sale wiM FO ,_ Clllh 11 lllClll*d h Trume
autho11ty case. business yel? yes, July pnMcild ~ IWld IW conYey9d to and now held "'2t1tt4 u lnstNrn8f'll No be made. but Without cove· ALCOHOLIC IEVEMCE LI· ......., h ..._of h
A HEARING on the pelt· II you do not file your re-PUBLIC NOTICE 1989 lrciald ~ d IW no1e by a undlf Mid Deed of N~NIU of Official Reconb nant or warranty. express or CEMlf(S) ;::....o-1 ... ._..._
11pn w•ll be held on OCTO· sponse on time. you may Myron Miller ~by Slid Deed d TIUlt Trvet In the PfOP"1Y slluated in h offlCI of the r.ounty Re-implled. regarding title. pen· (~ S.. 1105 It se,. w _.....to,._..,..«..,_
BER 31. 1996. at 1:45pm In lose the case, and your Fictitious Bualn•H This 1111emen1 was fii.d di ....... hreon • In said County and Stale COftlfr of 0.Mtt eour.y Cai-sesst0n condition._ or en-l&PSec.240711h-..) ••...,of• Slid .. _.
Dept. 703 located at 341 wages, money Ind .prop-Name Statement with the County Cletk of pnMcild ii Aid Nca. tees. descrfbed u · oompletety lomia end puruant 911 IN ·Notice cumbrances. 1nc:IUding tees. NOOOE IS HERfBY G~ lh.11 lie ..._ llloC wlllOl.t _..or
The City D1111e South. Or· erty may be. ta.ken without The following P9fSOns are Orange County on &-27·96 clWgaa and ~ d .. described ., Nici died of of ottu *'Cl ElediOn Charges and e~nses of 1 bulk Sale DI assets and 1 trans· _...,, ..-°' -...i ,.
aag,e,CA92668. further warning from lhe doing business as: B & l 19883984047 NAllelndd,.lrustsaeMlld ltusl. The "'"' llddlesi m Sd lheTrustee andoflht trusts ltr ol llcoholie lleYtf1Qt h· ........ ...,...... • -
IF'-YOU OBJECT TO the court. Di stri buting Co., 1491 Daily Pilot Sept. 5, 12, 19, byald.DeedotTl\lll wa .. andOchercommondeaigna· thtrtvndtf llCOlded M/26'1ttl created by said Deed of censt(S)ISabollttobelNOe o '&Gil to f///llllf h
granting ot the petlUon, you There are other legal re-Baker SI., Suita 1, Costa 26, l 996, l998 th506 illtii•IS*U ID oolect I detJt Ind lion 111 of the real prop-u. lnsltumtnl No. ll-2tt4U d Tru~. to pay lhe rema1mng The name(s) Soo• Seain1Y II i 11 •w .....S bf .,..
shOuld appear at lhe heir· qulremenls. You may want Mesa. CA 92626 WP/ llrla11iillkln -atGil wl erty' ctnciibed above Is pur-Uid Offic:llf Reconls, wll sell on ~I sums of the note(s) or Ftderal 1.X f*llTIOlrs *'Cl Dlld, .._ ......_ •
ong and state your ob-to call an attorney rlghl Scientific Health Care Inc. PUBLIC NOTICE be i..s tor lhlt JUPOl8· pofted 10 be· 2701 Island 1.,VltH 11 AT TMf MAIN secur~ by said Deed or bu s ldclress 01 tile ..._. • ,..,......, ..., 11111
1ecuons or Ille written ob· away. 11 you do not know (CA) 1491 Baker St 'suiti 9lmrldlnS Tf\111 Deed SrAce · (llOfmf) OOUJICf TO TME T wit Sl24 098 8-4 Sines ....... ......,...._ofh
1ect1ons wolh the court be-an attorney. you may ~all 1, cOsta Mesa. CA 92626 FlolltkMI• lh11lnHa eompeny, • TNallae 21100 ~ c~· le~ ~ COUNTY COURTHOUSE 711 ~st l~~rest -thereon from =rt~~IK rHOt ~ Mall__... bf_, Dlldwlll ~
tcwe the hea11ng. Your ep-an attorney relerral servtce This business Is con Name Statement s..nw.t DrtYe, 5'*' JOO, r. om · CMC CEJITDI DRIVf WOT 6IO 195 ,.. 7 25014 · .,.. ..._..•~Iii .-S
ptiarance may be In petSon or a legal aid ottlce (listed dueled by: 1 corporation • The following person• are Concont, CA M520, (510) undlfslgned Trustee dis-IANTA w . CA 11 t :U AM 11 1 • ovided ~ a~ Suptnor #AS, CoS1J Mesa. CA 111111. 1111. ct..-Md.,.._
or by our anorney. In the phone book). Have you started doing doing business as: Oevlan ~. : Vetank:a c:lalms any llblllty ror 1"Y puC>llc llldloll, m the lllghesl ~m 5
85 : cost and S:ny 112627 "''"""B of h w.-. Md h tiUlll
R€ A CAEOIT Dffpues de ss y pMy. 251 hlMew St.. ~SillUUS_ ~
or a contingent creditor of lreguen esll citaclon judi· Scientific Health Care Inc Laguna Beach, CA 92651 Dllld· OWZS/11 RSVP 1'6M lddrlla and othlf common time ol sale In lawful of noes n 91es S· SANDWICH ,_ Alom •I! a~.•
the deceased. you must file cial ustecf tiene un plazo de 8111 Woo Treasurer • ·• David Edward VanLaeys, ow:zsiie, 'CW3111. 111Nw dea~llon. If 1ny. •hOwn the United Stllls) all ~ hmated t~al ci,rbt M ollltr busuiess name(s) lllill T • .,..., ,.,..:...
your claim w1lh the court 30 DIAS CALENDARIOS This statement waa flied 257 Fairview St.. Laguna hlfeln. Said, ule will be ind ineel1st. ,,..,,:_.d '° .id S l 38,466.50 ,..11_9.. .. be1n~ tel· ano ld<ltess(es) used by the 5!.:'* Jl1Q, ...._ CA
and mall a copy to the per· par a presenter una re-wilh h c nt Cl rk 1 Beach CA 92851 PUBLIC NOTICE made. but without covenant -···•· ary under said ..,.,,,.. 0 rust sellet(s}11censtt(s) Wltfln the 11 "11t ._... -s~al representative ap· spuesta escrita a maqulna Oran~e •cou~'tv ~n &-~.S: This ' bu1ine11 Is con· or -rranty. express or Im-now htkl by It under Slid Offd of ~retofore executed and de· past thtee years, as stated by the 121-t fCllbnll ~ ey. 'jj;
pPtnled by Iha court w1lh1n en esta corte. 18983984478 ducted by: an lndlvldull CNS141623a plied. !'9\)lrdlng title. po1-lNst In 111t propelly ~ In lrvered to the un~rsigned I sellel(s)ltcensee(S), '""' (rf "' Olltle. Aalllmc ~.
roar monlhs from the date Una carta o una tlamada · Have you started doing aeaslon, condition, or en· Uid County Ind Stile htttlnafttr wntten Oedarahon of De-none. so tlltll Noiie o...t; ..._ ASAP22JldO
ol first issuance of the lel· telelomca no le olrecera Daily PUot Sept. 5. 12, 19, buslne11 yet? no NOTICE OF cumbrances. Including fees. delCllbed: AS MORE FUU Y feull and Demand for Sate, TIMI name(s) Soa• SecunlY tnJ. lftl. n
ters as provided In section proleccion; su respuesta 26, 1996, 1996 th504 David Edward VanLaeys PElll ION TO charges 1nd expenses of DESCRIBED ON SM> DEED Of and a written Notice of De· or ftderal 1.X f*.lmbers Ind
91 oo of Iha Callfornla Pro-esrita a maquina Ilene que Thia atatement was nled AOMlaSTER the lrvllee and of the trua1s TRUST. NOTE: ntS IS A SPUT fault and Election to Sell IOCll1SS ol 111e•----------
bate Code. The lime for hi· cumphr con las formah· PUBLIC NOTICE with the Coun1y Clerk dt ESTATE OF: J. created by said Deed of N>EBm>NESS. PlEASE Al.SO The undersigned caused lllyet(s~(s) 1~ IN
ing ·c1a1ms will not expire dades legales 1propiadas Or1nge County on 8·27·98 ROBERT SPRmGER Trust, to PllY the remaining REFER TO TS: 8652 The piope1ty said Notice of Oefaull and SOOK LEE 1no MYONG SOOK OBITUUY
before four monlha from sl usted quiet• que la corte Fictitious BualneH 19H3994052 CASE NO A 184372 pMclpel sums of tht nott(s) ldcll1u Ind Oltier CGlnll'lon Elect.ion lo SeM to bt re-SHOO. 15GD Supenor. #A!J, Costa --- --- ----
the . hearing date noticed escuche su caso. Name ~tatement Daily Pilot Sept 5 12 19 T ell h . b fi secured by said Deed of dealgnlllon. I MY °' IN fUI eo<ded in the county wl'llre "4m. CA 112627 above. St usted no presenla su The following persons are 26 1996 • ' • so9 . • o tNre. ene • Trull to Wit 11e2.201.n ~ de1Cl1blti lbow la the real pr()99rty Is localed The assets being sold 111 IOWRlllQ
¥OU MAY EXAMINE the rtspuesta 1 tiempo, puede doing business as: Surf· • • 1996 th ~1er111. credi.tort, con-wllh lnlerell thereon from '° be· HJ WlllMll For sales 1rtlormahon Mon· oenerally cltscntled as LUStl'lOld C••••ndr• Ann
fole kept by the court "Jou perder el caso, y le pueden side Auto Sales, 2436 N-· PUBLIC NOTICE tingent creditors, end 4117195 O 11 ~ pet an-= 1 lldl, C. tZta The Fn 8:00am lo 5 ()()pm 1mpnr;ement. ftl$Jf't. ~pmelll. a 1 30 died
a1e a person 1n1ereste In qu1ta1 su salarlo, su dmero port Blvd.. Costa Mesa. person• who may other· num 11 provided In said Ider'",,: Tllllltt disdlims (619)590-9200 Cal-WHtern rumt.11, gooc1w111 lrldename ~~'!!,. _ •18'18 In
11)8 •stale. you may file y otras cons de su Calif. 92627 YOU ARE w DEFAlA. WiH be interested iFI nole(s) plus cos1 and any 11 _, Ret:onveyance Corp . 525 eovtnani noc lo Comoeie and --·--.
with the court a formal Re-propiedad sin avi10 adicio-Alfredo Gomez, 2361 Cant lN>ER A DEED Of the will or Htete, or actvanon With Interest Es· lllr ~ f« MY lncomctntu East Main Street. P o Box ABC license Springfield, Mla9out1.
quest for Special Notice of nal por pane dt la cc:irte. Lobina, San Clemente, CA DATED 10i103llCI. both, of: J . ROBERT u.n.ted totil debt of the Pfl)Cltl1y.addrtss llld 22004 Et Cajon CA 92022. Incl •»rt loclled at t Surviving famlly I•
the folong of an inventory Ex1slen otros requls11os It· 92673 . YOU TN<E ACTION SPRINGER $193 629 83 The beneflci· eorMlon designalion, I llf'/, 9004 (619)590-9200 Dsted Su #AS CoS1J Mes c husband 01'9Q Gant,
and appraisal of es1111 as· gales. Puede que usted This business !s con· PROTa:T YOUR A PETITION has tty~ 11id Deed ot Trusl shown ~· The totll Wl'tounl September 26. 1996 Trus-~~or 1 and two daugtrtetS,
sels or of any pelltlon or qulera Uamar 1 un abogado dueled by: an indhndual PROflERh' rT MAY BE been filed by MYRA A . heretok>rt elelQU1ed ind de· of h unpaid balwlCt of 11'11 tee Sale Officer:" Jason L The ~Pl Of llCtnst to De Jamie and Cheryl.
account as provided in 1nmed111lamen1e. Si no Have you started doing SOLD AT A 'PUBUC SALE. F SPRINGER In the Superi-llv9red 10 Iha undefaigned • obligltion MCUltd by lhe ~ Cotton. 9Jd 3017 9129196. nnsf rreo $-'a OH SALE BEE Slaters, Debbie Lynn
secuon 1250 of the Calllor· conoce a un abogado t>uslness yet? yes. Sepl. YOU NEED AH or Court of Californie, written Oecllr1tlon of De-tl1y to be sold *'II IUSOnlllle 10/03, tOl96 R~95\ g ~ Licfl.s1 NO 41.HllQllO and Ter•••• Lee,
noa Probate Code. A Re-pued1 llamat a un serviclo 1995 EXPlANATION Of THE Couhty of Orarlge. fault and Demand for Sile. Ulimlled COiis. CllPlftHI *'Cl UIUC "'"T''"~ now issued for Ille r::nmsas brother Kenneth
quttt tor Special Nolice de reletencla C'8 abogeo Allffdo.Gomez NATORE Of ~ THE Pfl'l'ffON-,.. and 1 wnnen "Notice of o.. •lllCH 11 llt-llmt ef~ -~~ locaieo ll Same ~ Retcll.~ form 1s available from the o a una oflcina de ayuda This statement was flied PROCEEDING AGAINS quHt• that MYRA A. fault and Election to Sel Pllbllcation of IN Nolicl of Slit NOTICE Of TRUSTEE'S The bulk Ind 1 o1 Wllllam R. Bowring
coun cletk. leg~I (vea ti dlrectorlo tel&· with lhe County Clerk ot YOU YOU SHOULD SPRINGER be appointed The undef'slgned caused Is S114,W.ll In lddllon lo SALE TS. No 807188 """' the lllcoholic ~ ~n!~(S) and mother Otana R. Attorne~ tor the Pell· romeo). Orange County on 8·27·96 coHrACT A LAWVER. H personel repreaenla· said Notice of Oef1u11 Ind CISll, h TNlltt wll accept a 458 222 °' Loen No· nit intended to~ consum-Oney. Servtce9 wtll be
lloner: CASE NUMBER . 18993984048 NOTICE Of TRUSTEE'S tive to edminiater the Eleetlon to Sen to be re-whitr'1 check dllwn on a s11tt 10002t!i27 fW' Sl*net JM. ~ ll the otlict o1 rvv ES· held •• Hlghatreet
JAMES L. RUBEL, JR., (Numero del CHO) Daily Pilot Sept. 5, 12, t9, SALE UNDER DEED Of eatate of the decedent. CXl'ded In the county where « natiOnal bank. I checll dnwn PORTANT NOTICE TO CROW COWl'ANY 89-C2 GWfn Baptlll Church
ESQ. (CSBl025079) 98HC3958 26. 1996, 1996 th507 T Loen No. 1 HE PETITION re· the real P'oPe'1Y Is localed. by I state or ftdefal ad union PROf»ERTY OWNER: YOU GRM lllw Ste. 207 Gallien 900 North Eutgate
A LAW CORPORATION, The name and address or 10011t111Gndn T.S. No. queete the decedent'• For ulea lnlor!Nlllon. Mon· Of I c:htcll drawn by I lt1tt or ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A GRM CA 92.64~ and tilt 1~a-Rd. Spt1ngfteld,
5 CIVIC PLAZA, STE. Iha court Is: (El nombre y PUBLIC NOTICE CcMMlo71 A.P. No.~ WIU end cocllclla, if Fri 8:001m lo 5:00pm (619) teclefll UYinO• and loan uaoda· DEED Of TRUST, DATED pated' Siie dlte IS OclOOer 31 Mlaaourt 85802
3 2 o , H E W p O R T direccion de la cone cs) NOTICE OF NoClcot la heteby gNeit thet eny, be admitted to 590-9200 C1l-W.1tern Re· lion, llWlol allOdltlon or OCTOBER 1, 1115. UNLESS UM . Friday afternoon
BEACH CA 92890· MUNICIPAL COURT OF NON RESPONSIBILITY Standllld TNet DMd Servlcl probate. The WILL end conveyance Corp .. 525 Etst SIW!Qs 1>11111 specified In Stdlon YOU TAKE ACTIOH TO The bulk sale 1s sut>tect to 417 ... S 800
5925 ' THE STATE OF CALIFOR· Nol'. I he tby given • W... eny codicil• are av•il· Main Street, P 0 . Box 5102 of lhl Flnanclal Code W PROTECT YOUR PROP· Callloma U111tonn Commertial
Published Ni wporl NIA, 4801 JAMBOREE that t~C:: u~der!lgnld wlll IOCC8llOI' trulttle, able for examination in =c::;,;t;'.~ ~2:.2~: ~ U: ::':r "'a:: ~TY. rT MAY BE SOLD AT CoaeSecllon61062 1----------
Bilach·Costa Mesa Daily ROAD 1104, P.O. Box not be responsible for 1ny ~d-==::: ~~~rtfile kept by the Se1l4ember 18. 11198 Trus-111an ·cas11 Is eccepClld the TNI· N~ ~~~ .~~1~=::,c:,~:"::
Prtol September 25, 26, Oc· 14169. NEWPORT BEACH. debts or llabllltits con· H. Oradln, ., THE PETITION re· lee Sale omc.r. Jason L let may wlO'lhold 11'11 iisun:ie of Of THE NAl\IRE Of TH£ ol lhl OUSlnus Ind lllnSfcrot
tobe< 2. 1996 CALIFORNIA 92660-2595, :~c:,c~e~ s~rf. :::V::11e~~~r~ unmerited"*" RecxWad on queet• authority to Cotton. ext 3017 ... Tlllltet'I Ottd unlll luncll PROCEEOING AGAINST hcenst IS Int sum of $36.50000,
Wth880 ORANGE COUNTY HAR· d t y 17, 1990 .. ~ edmlnllter th• Htat• 9119,29, 1003196 R..c6243 beComt ..... to the PtY" or YOU YOU SHOUlD CON· 1ndUt*ng ttMl'llOry ISimated
---------1 BOR JUDICIAL DISTRICT 0 9
19<1 hi 12 d 1 July 11().651312 ot Otldll Recadl under the Independent tndcW$t8 u a mlltlf of rlQlll TACt A LAWYER On 1150000 wtllell COl\SISts ol the PUBLIC NOTICE The name. address. 1nd 1~ t s ay 0 ' fll olrc:e of fll ~ AdmlnletratJon of E•-PUBLIC NOTICE Slid Sall _.. be ,,,_, but C>aober 3, 19'18. tt tooo tOllowlng
•
1
SUPERIOR COURT telephone number ot plain-Davelrnn Engllah R.airdlr of ~ ~. tatH A ct. (Thi• euthori-~ COoMWC or wamnly, AM . ~ Raccnvey-~s 1m• deposit 1 ·~ OF CALIFORNIA urrs anorney, or plalntllf 2855 PlnecrHk or.' Nc*JtdO::r-:::.~ lV wlU effowtti• per1on-NOTU 0# n.usTl!l!'l llllWU orimcllild ftOlldlnolille, enoeCorp~aC....c:orpo-ewow·S3.IXX>OO
OUNTY OF 0 ...... 0 E wilhou1 an attorney, Is: (Et 103a5 Costa M•••' ~ ... ._-A-~ '° al representative to take SM.a T"""8 Slit No.. pouaa.lon., tneumtwancls. m "'°" • cMv IAJClll1'ld WI-PllOr to SubmSllOtl Of 225 ,.._.. nombre la dlrecclon el ' 1 ,_ ·-....... ._......._. on men action• without -..,21112-A Tiit ordlr No.. Milldy tl'll lndtblldnal llCUl'ICI tee under end ,,.._.,. '° °"1l. of ABC · $33,500 00
..
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS(?. • • • • • • • • • • • • • 7« Uf111~111t1. ~Pil#a pJ.,.J
IO /ln1f()lll'I« II Mll .,..0 lllllll ,,.;/cW, Ill w INsinaJo.
Wf will now SEARCH tl.1*11W far JOI' 111 no°""~ """"""'you tht lime""" tht tri/> JO tht a-, HoP;,, S.S.. AIM. Thm. tf DIJlll'le, ,pr /k lml'CIJ
is~""' uAIJ jilt,.,,~ bwna """"lllllt:,,rml willJ tht Cowdy
Cltr4 ptJHisl1 (Jn(Jt. Wltlt "'faw1111Jth 111 l'lllf"ilsl by""" ilNi thm file"""""""' II{~ wil/J·~a,t
P/Mw "'!/ "7 IO fi/t Jllfl' /di* I .... _, Jfsmt •• ~ PiJM. 3JO \f.'.
&IJ ~ a.r,,,,.,, ,,.,, MlllW=~atll .. "' (114) 604J2J lllilJ.,.
will .... •*••=-,,,,..,. .. ,,. 'ff 61 ,,.,,;/. Jf ~J.JJ .. ~~, .... ,... .,,,, .,. .,. ., ,,, ,,,.,, ,,_,
""'-... ,.. GMJ /d /II Jll!!l'W ·--, I ~ ~ -
\
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE -----1
GENERAL 1002
Real Estate
For Sale? ••••• Weekend
Open Houses? ••••• The oanv Pilot Real
Estate Tab which Is
published each Sat·
urdar, Is an effective
and nexpenslve way
to showcase that
special property.
Call our Classified
Department Todayll
GENERAL
BAI.BOA
PENINSUIA 2107
1 2 o o . O O C a 11 : PENINSUIA
9H.0145
2607 aMklng female to ahr
3 -+ 2 HH. Mint Loe. 800.mo 310-880-7830
Find out th• value or NEWPORT 90' to a8tld, gar. f/p. CdM 2br 3ba. prof.
your homa by review· BEACH •3BR, 2BA C.M. male/female. n/pata.
Ing up to 30 recent 2169 home, S1295 648-9668 Jim, 844·1870/hm
••I•• or home• In iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •••oh Side Studio 833-1933 •JCt.206/Wk.
aut • ..._
'leJqilone~S:OOpn
M<nlay-Friday
Walk-In 8:00am-S:OOpn
Mooday-Friday
DAILY .. LOT "
DllADUllU
Mmday ·~--·-Fridays~
Tur.sday __ ..Jdcmday S:OOpn
Wt.dnemy ____ Tur.sday s~
llusday-~S:OOpn
off Brlatol In Santa
Ana. on Aug 30th.
Pleaaa call 557·5227.
only ~S-4117. Drug
teat mandatory. EOE
your neighborhood. 2bd/1b• s1eoo S565mo S300.dep, CM Private RM. In nttSOJIUU.S
On th• Internal· s ma It p • t o k . nice quiet hH. Share 3002
CNA/HHA lmmad.
opening. In-home
care. Advanced care.
258-4919
Lido 1•1• 3bcl/3b• 1.,..-._._1"9 .... ,...r--iCrvatal Cove Sh•k• Lrg lot, •e• $2500 _________ 1.,.....,....,...~....,,----Shack Dependable
3bd/3ba Beyfront Ni 38R, 3BA N/amkg 0 T 1 BHt loo, bch S6500 CORONA f emale. Oar, w/d, H T E8T . Wffkand help, mmd COSTA MESA 1024
ft .. IDI•
(714) 642-5678
ffMX
(714) 631~94
(Please include yoor name am
phone m.unber am wen call yoo
back with a pice quote.)
ftMA&Olt• ·-Diis 330 West Bay Street
...6.. Wwdows 95, MS eQa.. ...6.. -"P PINte aft (714) 721-2100, .i. 346. ..,.. .+ .+ .+ .+ ... .+ .+ .... .+ Grundy Rltr 87!~·6161 DEL MAR 2622 pool/apa. 1450. Nr t *,l,t..I t . hire. 11a-4p, 497·98ee
2 Hou••• on 1 lotl P'aah laland. 844•9812 -•---• Dellv•~ Driver
e·arde locatlon. Alley 8BD/18A Gal• guard, !"iwpt •••o .. 'Nprt Hta .ff LIVI! Mon & f'rl only. $6/hr. P.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ acceaa. 2 ••P yarcla. p001, tennla, HC prkg Coaw upatalr• atudlo N ... ...., ,.. I -+ $2 per delivery. Both 2 bedrooma. gar, I••••· no pets. In Cd~, no kitchen. Neat/clean/qul•Vtwnh Own car. Healthy ,229 000 Call for s1450/mo. Agent Utll Incl. S525/mo. prlv beth. prkng. "49!5 900-HS-HSO Gourmet. 933.2929,
detal11' t.aoo-728·1518 840.7000 ext.300 Avail 9/27. 222·5775 + 1/2 utn 850-3325 _..., .........
Cod•#2081 .... .,...,1.
Liv• neer •••0h COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 •t t.Sn-a'J .. He By Ownr 4br 2ba HH Cnr R2 Lot Allay Aca -------~ ------.
5289K/Trade 8so-eea~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii~
MOBILE
HOMES
-------1100
•IHMOY&..tN•
•38A, 211A dblwd,
1750/month rent.
•t8R, 1BA •ngtwd,
S650lmonlh rant. llolh
avall w/1.. optlona.
11•1 Pomona #3,44
• 71 .... 90-4 ••••
TRADE
ttwougt1 cimtfl!d
842-5878
llUIG WJlll5Sl,ll ,,,,
TO A GREAT CAREER
with
Montgomery Wsd
GINDAL
POUCY
Rares and deadlines are subject to change without
DObee. The publisher
raerves the ripu to censor,
reclassify, revtse or reject
any classified
advertisement •. Please
report any error th.al may
'be in your classified ad
immediately. The Daily
Pilot ct The Independent
accept no liability for any
error in an advertisement
for which it may be
responsible except for the
cost of the space actually
occupied by the error.
Credit can onl be allowed
or on.
WANTED
TO BUY 6019
Top Dollars Paid
For Records. Jui.
Sountracks. etc.
Call Mike 645· 7~,
FURNITURE
Put a
!!SUN ONLYlf 8-2
Mens cllhs, TV/Sier-,
houslthld, linen~~
plant pots. BaJboa & I.
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
few
wor
o wor
for you.
642-5678.
----
"Perro.''
"Hund.,,
"Cl&Un..,,
~ •Old •---.....
10 -....... 14 ~
15~-s.r.... 18 WMt Geol'ge
oouldn'tlell
17 Nof1tlem
Scandinavians
18 PMdler
Hershilef 19 Flar*
20 Climber's
challenge 21 It aocomparnes
a resume
24 Avoid capture
26 Wheel parts
27 Paddled
29 Mist 31 A -apple
32 Break
34 Zero
37 Star in Cygnus 39 Fiery
40 Sleep l'lOIS8 42 Droop 43 lt"lditterel"ICe
46 Elevator piol"leer 47 Headl1oers
48 Farthest
50 Beer mug 52 Foxier
53 Spice
56 Actress Luptno
31
37
2
29 Pholos
30 Core
33 Scorch
C 1-. ~ F-Syndlc8le
49 Harangue
34 Scandalous
35 ~llower 36 For fear that
38 Oye1og
technique 41 Alaskan cny « Primitive Wll"ld instrument
45 Christmas 47 Piece ol a
circle
50 Lazy animal
51 Sample food
SC! Trtts
53 Affiance
54 Dutch
cheese
55 Soulh American
coul'ltry
5 7 Spanish lady
58 Legal eagle:
abbr. 62 Musical ootes
Norlh·Sout.h vulnerable. Wewt
deals.
WEST
•Qt04
NORTH
•8531
O Q7 3
OA J42
•K 4
EAST
•J976
0 9
o KQ9866
• •0 53
06
0 7
•AQJ9782
SOlITH
•AK
O A K J 1085•'2
0 103
•8
The bidding:
WEST
20
Pan
Pus
NORTH EAST r.... r a1111
50 t PaH
Pue Pau
Opening lead: King or o
SOtrrH
4 lj
6 \7
the recent Summer North Ameri-
can Championships held in Miami.
Is there a legitimate play for six
hearts?
West started the auction with a
weak two-diamond opening bid.
Since South's four hc:irts, at lhii;
vulnerability, hnd to show a 11trong
hand, North made a slam try by
cue-bidding five diamonds. South
was happy to accepl.
W..&. led the lune of dlaMonch. Ja
ihere any hope? Yet, if the urde
are distributed as above. Trumps
muat. divide l ·l, F.aal must hold a
t1inglet.on diamond and West must
not have mo~ 1.han three apades
and no fewer lflan two.
Win the ace or diamonds, cash
the ace and king of spades, then
lead the jack of hearts, overtaking
with the quoon. Ruff a spade high,
lead I.he t.wo of trumps to the t.hree,
then play the last spade from dum-
my but, instead or ruffing, discard
your loeing club.
Jn with the fou rth spade, 'East
has a choice of losing options. A
11pado rc:Lurn, if possible, allows
declarer to discard the losing dia-
mond from hand while ruffing on
the table; on a low club, declarer
di11C11.rds the diamond and the king
win11; nnd thl? nee or clubs only
delays the finnl denouement.
Declarer ruffs high, crosses to t.he
seven of trumps with t.he low trump
so car~rully preserved, and di~cardll
clubs. S imple, when yop think
about it.
Learn to be a better b ridge
p layer! Subscr ibe now to the
Goren Bridge Letter by calling
(800) 788·1225 for information.
Or write to: Goren Bridge Let-
ter, P.O. Box 400, Chicago, Ill.
60680.
NEWPORT
BEACH
SAIL BOATS 7014 MARINE SLIPS
6169 DOCKS 7022
•Calvln'• Yard Sale
Furn, antlqs, bks, etc.
Sat 8·4 Sun 7·3. 540
Redlands Ave.@ 15th
St. Newpt Hgts.
•Garage Sal•• Sun Only 8·12
•Santana 20FT•
Red sail boal $2400. 1977 with 1railer·
cushions, full set of
class sails, fast boat-
many 1st Place races.
Call Doug 540-5885 OR John 850-0768
50' Mooring (Or less)
Great Bal Pen toe.
Steve 723-5883 S1 2,500
2~,~~1~~;~~C: MARINE SERVICE
PRIVATE DOCK
30ft. + Side tie. Elec-
tric & water. Newport. $250. 675-9742.
Unde r A r ches
Movlngll Sat Only 8·2. SUPPLIES 7020 Bridge Private dock
Roll-Ip desk, bks. nght up to 25'. Power.
stands, lamps, etc. *YACHT SURPLUS• s11s.·e50.a145
1735 Port Charle• 5000 lbs Brass,
Bronze, Copper,•••••••••
Stainless Steel, Alu-AUTOMOBILES mlnum Boat Parts &
Rigging .50 cents/lb. ••••••••• •
1500 Old NewPOrt Bl. 1---------C;M. 5 48-4192 CADILLAC 9040 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 40 yra cum ulatio n liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I•••••••••
*M o ving Sale • of everythin g SAT ONLY «SAM • 'l TRANSPORTATION S at/Sun 8·1 Patio 234 Hiii Place Antlqs, tum, appls, ---------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
furn, plants, bikes, (Santa Isabel) tools, & much morel1tl••••••••• MARINE SLIPS '9 2 STS Fae cert
lamps, crafted ilems. __ F_ri_Js,....a_t_8 .... a_m.,...-4_P_m...,..--5782 Raphael/Slater •---------DOCKS 7022 38k ml. mint, whVtan
448 Sevllle (ti Balboa LAWN SALE S at/S u n ---------POWER BOATS Bose co. chrm whls.
•Sat-Sun* 8·5 Clothing, jewelry, NEWPORT $21.900. 844-5833 h X 7012 2 Newport Bay 9·5, turn, kit items, ousewares, mas items. 2048 Pomona BEACH 6169 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Moorings 1 shore/1 and plenty morel! Ave. (near 191h St.) bay for 50' boat.
307 Fe rna ndo ==-=~!:.!!~~:.:..;~::.I;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• 20' DUFFY ELECTRIC Close to Pavilion/gas CHEVROLET 9045 S torage Move @ lllMOVING!ll S a t 8·2 To1ally restored. S15k docks. S15,000 forliiii _______ ii
_C_O_R_O_N_A---..,--t Everything Must Gol Couch, dishes, crafts, Invested. Sell for both o Bo.
1930 Placentia Ave. etc. l806 Glenwood $9000. Glen, 574-0990 J oe, 4 39.2080 '94 Suburba n V-8.
DEL MAR 6122 Unit A·8 Sal 8 ·2 Lane by Santiago ......,,...-~------automt. NC, full pwr, DUFFY ELECTRIC Classlfied is..... AMJFM stereo cass.
PATIO SALE Sal Only
7:30-4. 4515 Roxbury
Cameo Shores/PCH
22 yrs of treasures! II
Overstocked with
stuff?
CLASSIFIED .-U-AY-UUATS• CONVENlENT Very clean. $23,900
ti's the solution you're Two (2) Edison 18's. whether you·re buy-548·3988
A call to
Classified
will help
642·5678
searching for -whelh· Beaut cond-1 w/new ing, setting, or Just ---------
er you're seeking a surry 1op, cushions, looklng, classified has '98 Blazer LXI 4 x4
home, an apartment, etc. $5995. $3995. what you need! Wht/grey lthr Int.
a new occupation or Duffy Boats Showroom CLASSIFIED Loaded! Xlnt cond.
even a stray pet. 845-6427 842·5878 12k. $23,900 552·5306
-----• CERAMIC SERVICE TILES
CLEANING
3528 SERVICES DIRECTORY
ACOUSTIC
Newport T ile & Marble•---------
iiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Fine Craftsmanship ...
CEILING MAST ER
•Acoustic Removal• Custom TeX1ureePainl
uc'd. Mark 838-7300
BUSI NESS
SERVICES
At Aflordable Prices. Shower s/Counlers/Flrs
Natural Stooe & Marble
Fptcs L645486 842·2214
CARPENTlY 3510 -C-T-e11-.. 'IN_G ____ Brick, Block, Stone, Tile ~" Cone, Patio, Drlveway•---------
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil S~RVICES 3548 Fplc, BB01. Ref. 25 Vr ELECTRICAL 3610
Semi Retired 50yra of Exp. Terry 557.7 594 liiiiiiii•iii••iiiii sat11f'd cusl. Ors, plmb
heat. elct, nra, drywH
Uo'd. Jerry 842.0587
A TOUCH OE CLASS
Cleanlng. Res/Comm
Uc/Bonded. Free Est.
Teresa 282.7143
•All Ceme nt Work• ·Plain 1 Stamped·
Brick/Stone/Tiie/Biock
Coner Orllltng/CutUng
L541656 831-4310 CARPENTRY•
Country furn•Cablnet1 Re••Remod•L694144
554·2138 Pg-248-01511 ·•0~,~.~~~~;;=~Na ·-~-a-.-,t-,-,-,-c,-/Qu--•-lltJ-
Lnd1cap•. brick, atne c:oncr. 800-71 .. 1007 s10.oo per hour.
A to Z HANDYMAN 1'14-548·0388
Small Job •XP•RT
Duncan Electtlc Local/Quick Respon ..
Ll275870 850-7942
fHSTAWREfACE CA8INETS --::~~~-:"7--,.~-•EXPERT: Blk walle, l<Jtchens, balh1, doOra, •Bright Haeolnlng brick, concn, 11uoco ... P-LOO--R-T-u5"'t_ALL __ _
wlndOWI. Doug 54f.72a8 European Prol'I. Seat Rpra. asvr i;.p. LdW8 "" In townl Refs 5Vre Eltp. p 0 CARPINTRY•WlndOW9 Grace 2 51-9455 JOH 531 •7M~ U AIJlS 312
Doore • Wood ~nee• NllW LIEAP CIOHl/Oaraga OfOsnlzert c;u1tom HH C leaning LanctscaJ>9 • MUQNY
L,,261581 • Call Bob D etelled S e rvice t>aalgn/Build/Remoc:l.t 24M323 Pg-312-0026 Rel/S mall 8 u1lne11 U 1 748~87 Laur1• 873-8012 c .. ne. -
CARPET a.UNING
---------
.. 3 Aooord &• Fully Loaded, Xlnt Condi
29K ml. 118,500. Call
Rlok M5-4M21'
RENT
through classlf ied
SELL
your used vehicle
through classified
842·5678
Run your ad in
the Newport Beach
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
reac over 100 ,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card # or mail it in
with a check today!
Run for a week! If
your car does not
seil we'll run it
for another week
FREEi All for $1 o.•
QUINN18 PAINTING
32Vrs ExpeBest Prices
Hclme Repair. I do my
own work. 846-8094
--------------------------D YES,SELL MY CAR
Nome
City
Zip
Phone
Credit Cord D MC OVISA D AM X
Moe1 To: DAILY PILOT
330. W. 8oy Slrwl, Codi> Meta, CA 92627
(71'I6'2·$678 Or FAX (714/ 631-659'
("""°'8 Porty Only/
l'feme Oieclc Pw1inent SoK.s
1'ior--Mal.~~-Madt/~~-hice ~
06~ O,,.,_~ O N>l/iool o l'J O ,,.,_""""° o r....,J °""' O..._,._ 0 -.............. OW"-'C-.
0 1..,,1 a-~ o......,..,
0 s .-0 AMhM Slaw 0 ~wt.It
D IW~ D O...e-.1 DM.rwi..I. o._..._ o c.-oo-r~ DNI~ D~lool O ..... W~
~ • ff O 10(-41ines, 11 .00 each oclcJitionafline :
·-----·--------------------·
3919
laland Blue Pool•
Pool & Spa Wkly Svc.
Repair: fllter/pump/htr
Acid wash 845·87281--------
3929 P•radlea Cova Pools TUTORING
Quality PooVSpa Svc. Repair • .t:IQaealde TUTOR Maaters
Acid Wash 540·2849 Degree ln Speclal Ed. All Ag81 • Subjocts
Ref's. 714·5384030
••
~ t997 ITSU ISHI ECL-IPSE SPORTS COUPE OUTSELLS ALL
OTHER CARS IN ITS CLASS •• ~.COMBINED. IS IT ANY WONDER??
. , ·. "· ...
r . .
. . . . . .. -
58K miles.
Must See!
(#0254~
Clean & white
Third seat.
(#352232)
Low miles.
_Third seat.
(#078987)
WE LOCATE
HARD TO
FIND CARS
••a ••o•RID
All the right
-equipment1
(#271339)