HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-11-30 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS
5'f'vlng the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
O~e Season begills .. •••
• Shoppers came out in
droves Friday to kick off the
holiday shopping season at
local malls.
By Susan Deemer, Daily Pilot
. w hen motorists start stalkin~ shoppers tn the parking lot,
bundles and bags outnum-
ber purses, the men are shopping in
. the ladies department and women
are shopping in the men's depart-
ment -local malls begin to look a lot
lilce Christmas.
Although this weekend · is the
busiest shopping time of the year,
with thousands of shoppers hitting
the pre-Christmas Day sales and
bargains, it's the week before Christ-
mas and Dec. 23 that result in the
most purchases, said Jo Ellen Qualls,
vice president and store manager at
ntt~y's in South Coast Plaza.
"In the next couple of days it will
quiet down," Qualls said. ·nien all
of a sudden people realize there's
only 10 days left. That's when the
real excitement sets in. It's the best
time of the year to be' in retail."
Fountain Valley City Council-
woman Laurann Cook decided to
brave the post· Thanksgiving Day
crowds to go shoppin~ with her
daughter, Allison, 20. The two man-
aged to hit both Newport Beach
Fashion Island and South Coast
Plaza before noon.
"The secret is to come early, do it
quickly and then get home," Cook
said.
Beverly Simpson of Huntington
Beach had to stop and put down her
DON LEACH I DAllY Pit.OT
After jolnlng the shopping morning melee, Rochelle Tran (right) and her mother, Tuyet Lee, look over new
items brought during the day-after-Thanksgiving sales at South Coast Plaza.
packages SQ she could check out her
Christmas shopping list of 27 people
before heading for Nordstrom at
South Coast Plaza.
"No impulse shopping,· she
insists. "I can't afford it this year.•
have replaced the usual horses on
the carousel, Santa sits on a green
velvet throne with gold leaves and
about 635,300 Christmas lights cover
trees, lamp posts and aisles.
in Costa Mesa, Metro Pointe at
South Coast.
Newport Beach's Fashion Island
dresses the trunks of its palm trees
with thousands of tiny white lights. It
At South Coast Plaza, reindeer
For outdoor shopping, cross the
street to the newest shopping plaza a SEE SHOPPING PAGE A 13
••• And another ends
• Irish invade USC country as fans arrive to support their favorite college team.
By Christopher Goffard, Daily Pilot might be in the crowd, hoping to tip the scales
for the all-important game. USC has lost the last
I 3 confrontations.
NEWPORT BEACH -Mention the name O'Brien and Heinz flew all the way from
"Fighting Irish" to Marty O'Brien and Larry I Washington to catch the game and brought their
Heinz, and they'll unleash an instant barrage of children.
superlatives. For them, the Notre Dame squad "It's basically been a love-affair since child-
means not just a football team but a
time-honored code of honor, loyalty,
and fair play.
Growing up on the Same block in
Spokane, Washington in the 1950s,
O'Brien and Heinz remember hud-
dling before an old Philco radio to
hear the team's exploits.
And lilce dozens of other •sub-
"We've seen every Notre Dame game in
Southern California since 1988, and we're going
to try to see every game until I go under ... "
-MARTY OilRIEN
way alumni" who never attended the school but I hood.• said Heinz, 49, a high school football
who count themselves ferocious fans, the men coach. "We've been planning this for a long
stood on the field at Corona del Mar High time. I want my son to be part of it."
DON LEACH I DAll.Y PILOT
Notre Dame football fan Francis Gauuppl gets
an autograph from a Notre Dame player at
Corona del Mar High School where the Irish
practtced for this weekend's game with USC.
School Friday afternoon as the team ran practice O'Bnen, 52, said his family catches every
formations in preparation for the -dash today Notre Dam& game they can get t~. _
with long-time rival USC. "We've seen every Notre Dame game in
For much of the hour-long practice, pbotogra· Southern Caillornia since 1988, and we're going
phers were forbidden from snapping ~ots on
the field. Word went around that a USC spy •SEE FOOTBALL PAGE A13
Transfer .
policy serves
as student
magn~t
• Rise in students from outside New-. . port-Mesa attending local schools
means more money for the district.
By Michelle Terwilleger, Datly Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Irvine resident Suzanne
Johnston was willing to do whatever was neces·
sary to get her son to 5.tart high school at
Estancia, where she teaches English.
She wanted her son, Morgen, to take advan·
tage of Estancia High School's academic and
water polo programs. But Johnston -who chairs
the high school's Engllsh department -said get-
ting a student transferred into the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District wasn't easy since ,
the district then had a dosed-enrollment policy. ;-
"I had to push really hard." Johnston said. '
"They weren't real lenient. l practically bad to
sign m blood that I would be moving."
But the 40-plus students who have trans·
•SEE TRANSFER PAGE A14
~-----':-.------------------------------.,
F.Y.I. I I
I
' ' ' I
+ The number of students who have trans-
ferred to Newport-Mesa schools between
Sept 10 and Nov. 15.: I I I
I Newport Harbor High School ......... 9
Costa Mesa High School ............ 10
Corona del Mar High School ......... 1 1
Estancia High School ................ 6
TeWinkle Middle School ...• · ......... 2
Alternative education ............... 1
' ' I
' ' I
' ' I
' I
I I L------------------------------------J
School building
contract attrac~
glut of architec~
• Prime spot for an elementary school
has drawn offers from 20 firms.
By Michelle Terwilleger, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Apparently lured by the
scenic locale, an unusually high number of
architectural hrms are competing for the job of
deSigrung the future Newport Coast elementary
school.
"We had a key number because of the pres-
nge of the project,• said Newport-Mesa Unified
Supenntendent Mac Bernd
The dlstnct solioted proposals from 48 archi-
tects that had expressed interest m the project.
and received 20.
On Tuesday, board members mteTVlewed four
firms that had been ranked at the top by district
offiaals. Staff members rated the firms based on
•SEE CONTRACT PAGE A14
I \ I • I \ C )l_D MAN AND TH
I
Harry Noonan and
his Ors have become a
QuWarw; tradition in
Newport-M~
By O\ristopher Goffard. Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -In this dty,
• one thing is as certain as Ouist-
mu: Hmy Noonan ~ be in
town peddling h1J t:reea.
Since HMS, ac:ross a span Of
yean that coven 10 American
pNlldentl, four wars, and the
careill'I ol coun.,.. dty coundl
~. the WYominil native
bU ... eettlrlG'.up his fir·fUMd
lots Oil Newpori~ard.
rt.sh trom World War ll,
when he took wapnet t.n the liip
dwtng UM allied lDvuloft OC Nor-
mandy, NOiOM" ••NWM.d hii ftnt ~ ID s-ta AM in 19«,
wb8n tbe traM COit tO c:eta. H •
WM ... ~-·P.IJatlr ud 1 A "8' &Mir be ctime to C.-. 1wct1l1 ~1 aiid ·~ w-M--.; ,....... be't ma -....
latng to •• ._.. .._ bollday o.,.t ~ trftd9 md llldlly IOy.afQI. •
MlllClll wt.a tia• II WU alcnf. loWtlil•
35 years. "Christmas wouldn't be
Christmas without Noonan's
Christmas trees."
Noonan, who estimates he's
sold at least a quarter of a million
trees in his time, is now an effable
74. The war wound and a bad
knee force him to walk with a
crutch. He carrtes a pocltetful of
ogars.
•The old man likes smoking,•
be said. And he wears a badge
that reads ·otd Man Noonan.•
1bls distinguishes him ftom the
other Noone.ns on the lot. his IOU
-Harry Jr., 45, and Doug, « ..
Noonan plans to leave the lam·
Uy business to his sons, who haw
al.rMdy taken over the cbol9 ol
bauling the treee and tying tbmn
to car tops.
•1•m bfffldng it ln for the
l>Oyl,. NooPu Mid. ..
On Pridey, the day .......
trMI went OD ... b lbm 111119'
HAri'y Jr. Wll OD tbe lilt • ' ' tlMID wllunow.._ •11ee' 2 1 •
.... &:l=..t:.: ,, ........... ..
A2 " SATURDAY. NOVEMBER JO, 1996
greer '
wylder
Spotli,ght on Metro
Pointe theaters
T he new Edward'• Metro
Pointe Stadium 12 Tbelltre
is celebrating its grand
opening through Sunday with
the showing of Dlmey'1 '"101
Oalmatlans" on five giant
screens. The theater is Orange
County's first all-stadiwn-seating
megaplex, and features Edwards
"luv-seats~ with retractable arm-
rests and cupholders.
And during the grand opening
you can purchase popcorn for
only 12 cents. The Metro Pointe
Center is located on South Coast
Drive in Costa Mesa.
Christmas is just around the
comer and South Coast Plaza.
Crystal Court. and South Coast
Plaza Vlllage are prepared with
the addition .of 12 seasonal stores
that provide holiday decorations,
glft wrap, and gifts. A few of the
new stores include: Chrtltmu
Everyday, located at South Coast
Village, carries handcrafted holi-
day items for home decor and
gilt giving.
-On the third level of Crystal
Court you can find a big selec-
f1on of unique candles for the
aolidays at The Candle
8outlque. On the second level of
~stal Court, Once Upon a
ehrtstmu sells one-of-a-kind
llandcrafted decorations and gift
items, and specializes in person-
Wed ornaments and gifts.
t;ocated on the first level of South
~oast Plaza, Harry and David
features custom $Ji.ft baskets, gift
tvrapping and mailing sel'Vices.
•Annual event is •
designed to bring atten·
tion to animal cruelty.
By Susan Deemer, Dai/'y Pilot
Local animal rights activiats
delivered their annual holiday
message Priday, to several furri-
ers in Orange County including
Bloomingdale's in Newport
Beach Fashion Island, ExclUJi-
furs at the Westcliff Plaza in
Newport Beach and at SOuth
Coast Plaza. on Friday.
Newport Beach police Sgt.
Steven Shulman said protesters
staged a peaceful demonstraUon
at the new ~Uoomtngdale'1
department store in Pa1h1on
liland.
•About 40 protesters were
bUied in and they stood outside
for 20 minutes," Shulman said.
"They were peaceful. They
boarded the bus and left.•
But Ava Park, founder of the
Orange County People for Ani-
mals said three fur protesten
were handcuffed, roughed up
and held temporarily by the
store's secwity guards prior to
the police's arrival.
After the group began chanti-
ng •purls Dead," and playing an
audio tape recording of a fox
caught in a leg bold trap, the two
were released.
... ~
·we told tbemwe ~
playto.g our tape for abappefl u
soon u they released our peo-
ple," Park said.
Bloomingdale'• offidall say
they would not comment on the
inddent.
At Bxclusifun, the protesters
filed into the muill ltore, played
the 1udfo tape and debated With
sales staff and the owner about
the ruffertng animall undergo
before becomJ.ng fur coats. The
store had been forewarned by
another store that the group was
onitaway.
•Th.iJ ls •pur Pree Friday• so
they usually try to make a state-
ment,• said Lari Blatter, a sales-
person at Bxcluslfun. "They
•
Usually don't bit nnaJJer fUni· promt..ct not to hold damonltra-
tions. • Park laid. · .....
Park said the store owners
were very calm and cooperattve,
they listened to what the demon-
strato~ had to say an4 stood
their ground.
•we have always had a real
good working relattomhip with I.
them," said Suzanne Blallot,
director of marketing for South
Coast Plaza. ' •we don't generally (bit
.smaller furriers), but we felt we
left them out of the loop for the
last few years,• Park said.
The animal rights• group did
not play the tape recording or
demonstrate at South Coast
Plaza, but set up a table and dis-
tributed filers to the public in a
peaceful way.
·we mad~ an agreement
three y.ears ago, if they gave us a
information table inside we
COSTAMUA
The animal rights group wi1J '
allo be banding out literature at
Edwards Cinemas in Metro,
Pointe at South Coast Saturday
during the premiere of Disney's '.
"101Dalmatians." _ ;
Park said the movie may:
prompt people to nm out and.
purchase the dogs for their chil-.
dren and they want to inform the
public about the hazards of own-:
ing the canine.
• 1100 blodl of Kerry Lane: A $100 cordless
telephone was stolen from 1 residence with 1
sliding glass door unlocked. ·
• 2100 block of lrlstol Strfft: lWo $2,000
bench seats were·stolen from a van while getting
repairs at an auto shop.
• IOO block of Victoria Street: A dresser and
hutch worth $850 were stolen from 1 garage.
• 500 blodl of 8emard Strfft: A compact disc
player, four plllows and two flannel jackets total-
ing• value of $210 were stolen from an unlocked
ca~ .
• '700 blodl of Onnge Avenue: $400 worth of
costume jewelry •nd a S20 flag were stolen from
an antique shop. A window on the front door
was allegedly smashed.
· NEWPORT llAot
• IOO ttlodl of Dov• Drive: lWo wheels and
two hubaps worth $500 were stolen from a 1993
Honda Civic. The car was allegedly left standing
on cement blocks.
• 1000 block of S.nckasth Drive: A snow-
board, three pairs of boots and a duffel bag
totaling $700 was stolen from an unlocked car
that was parked In front of a residence.
• 1000 block of S.ndcutle Drtvem· l1 settes, a compact disc, radio and res e v":1.ra 7..-·7
stolen from 1 car. There was no sign
entry.
• 1500 block of Seacrest Drive: A person
was found peering Inside a victims house whlle
she was sleeping. Once her dog began barking,
the victim got up and saw a person look
through a glass panel In the door and then
w1lk away.
: You can save 20% on holiday
mopping while helping a charity. '1aef'• at South Coast P1AUl is
Oolding a "shop for a cause•
event on Wednesday from 10
a.m. to g:3o p.m. to benefit the
tfabltat for Humanity a non-
ptofit housing ministry dedicated
CD eliminating poverty housing
!Vorldwide. Shoppers can pur-
Ghase $10 tickets to use for shop-
}.'Jing, and Habitat for Hwnanity
will keep all money raised from
ticket sales. For more informa-
Qon , please call (895-4331) for
more information.
Canyon Park leader issues community challenge
: The Newport Center Ortho-
pedic MedJcal and Surgical Sup-
J)lles (644-0065) is a specialty
~re where you can purchase or
i:ent items a patient might need,
illcluding beds, walkers, knee
braces, exercise equipment,
stockings, and more. It's currently
l;laVlilg a sale on all mastectomy
products, incl uding bras and
1997 swimwear, at 20% off. And
patients who have recently
Feeeived a prosthesis can receive
a free bra.
-The store also claims to have
Q:te largest and most unique
~election of canes In Orange
County. They range In price from
$8 to $400 and get as intricate as
t hand-carved cane from Kenya.
This medical and supply store
was the first retail store to open
tn Newport Center, preceding ~obinson's by 10 months in 1967.
i 9EST MIVI •ppean Thursdays •nd Sat-
wtmys. Call 540-1224, or fax ~ 170 . .
•
•, •
T AKJNG A YEAR OFF:
Mary Pewel, editor/pub-
lisher of the neighborhood
Canyon Park News, announced
in the November/December
issue that she is taking a year off
from all neighborhood activities;
she's burned out.
Pewel has been involved in
the reopening of Victoria School,
the community Halloween
Parade, the yard sale, Home and
Garden Tour, the Neighborhood
Pimic, the Pa.int/Plant/Clean Up
Day, the 19th Street Sidewalk
Committee and a whole lot more
in the Canyon neighborhood.
Fewel challenged the Canyon
Park News readers to step up to
the plate and take over the lead-
ership spots she bas filled so ably
during the past six years.
"There are about BOO homes
in the neighborhood,• she wrote.
"I've set a bench mark of 10%
(at lea.st SO .replies) to make it
worth my while to pass on my
experience to some new people
and to return to a more active
role in 1998. •
Here's hoping the neighbor-
hood responds ap.d keeps the
spirit that Pewel built in the
Canyon Park area.
WELCOME BLOOMJNG-
DALl!'S: It's great to see the city
of Newport Beach relax the
tough banner laws that prohibit-
ed the commercialization of ban-
ners bung from light poles
throughout the dty, as Blooming-
dale's was welcomed to town this
past week.
The ban went into effect after
the invasion by Snickers candy
bars blanketed Newport Beach
with advertisements during the
World Cup Soccer tournament
held at the Rose Bowl. In trade
for the banners, Snickers rented
a few hotel rooms and left town.
Bloomingdale's grand open-
ing, as reported in the pages of
the Daily Pilot. raised $115,000
for Children's Hospital of Orange
County and sales over subse-
quent days out-paced expecta-
tions. The Newport Beach tax
base is better for BlOQIJlingdale's
being a resident of the dty.
Hopefully the relaxed policy
will bold for other businesses. As
Seymour Beek, owner 01 the Bal-
boa Island Perry and Balboa
Ia.land Marine Fuel, says, the
banners sure would have helped
to launch his new fuel dock.
SISTER crrY Blll!AKPAST:
The Newport Beach Sister City
Association will hold it.I annual
Christmas Breakfast Buffet on
Thursday, beginning at 7:30 a.m.
-...
.... low
'~ ~-. -. ~
l '. •''
~ : . .a I • ~· 1 '.
11 r .. -......
!: . . .
" ....
ti ... 'I\,: I• ... ,
jim
de boom
•
at the Newport Harbor NauUcal
Museum's Riverboat Cafe. Cost
is $15 per person. Reservations
can by ma.de by calling Karin
Schnell at 718-38?0.
WELCOME TO 1HE WOJlLD
OP SERVICE CI.QBS ... Stuart
Prtectm•n, sponsored by Charlel
Markel, who joined the Costa
Mesa Downtown Kiwanis Club.
Mlcbael Maguire, Class1fication:
Business Signs, sponsored by
Jerry Reken, who joined the
Newport-Irvine Rotary Club.
Tom Xeyt, who joined the
Bxchange Club of the Orange
Coast.
SU!eAY
Flnt low
7:08 1.m. . ......... .J.1
First high
2:JO •.m. ...... ~ ... 3.8
~low
1.-00 p.m. ..••••.••• .O.t
SeciondNgh
12:.26 p.m. . ........ A.1 .... ~ •.... 57
~ ........ ~ ..... , •• .J.O ..,... hlgt_\
t:J4a.m. ••••.....•... 1
sec..dlOw 1:0I p.m; .......... .o.•
s-.1~ tt:JOp.m. ............ ,
•t the hhla Corinthian Yadrt Oub. 6
p.m.: Newport Balboa Rotaty Cub ·
meets at the 8ahlai Corinthian Yadrt
Oub for a program by ~ Gladstone
on "Promoting Rotary Through Com-
~ Sefvlce. •
CLUB NEWS: Costa Mesa
Down.town Kiwanis Club mem-
ber Brian Meek presented the
Athlete of the Month awards to
Estancia High students Brad
Wayman for water polo and Amy
Deming for v~ball, and Costa
' Mesa High School students.
AV -7 1.m.: Costa Mesa-
Orange Coast Brukfast Uons Club
meets at Mimi's Cat.. Noon: Kiwanis •
Julius v~ for football and
Myra DI.mun for tennis.
Out> of Newport Beach-Corona. del Mar me.it at the Bahia Corfnthl•n Yacht r
Oub to he•r Suzie Baez on •Oh v.s,
SEJ1V1CE am w1w na
COMING WEIK: Watrt to gst more
involved In your c:ommuntty7 'Aslt • ser-
vice club this week. Guests .,. wekome ~ mo5t dubs wlll buy 'fOOI mMI on
your first visit.
TUESDAY -7:30 a.m.: Newport Buch
Sunrise Rotary Oub meets at the h~
boa Bay Oub. Noon: The con. Mes.
Downtown Kiwanis Oub meets at the
Costa Mesa Community Center. 6 p.m.:
You Can.• Costa Mesa North Kiwanis .
Oub meets at the Holldlly IM for a pro-·
gram by Dee Pritchard of the American · c.nc.r Society. The Excha.nQe Oub of
Newport Harbor meets at the $hatk
Island Y.cht Oub for a ~MIS meet· •
Ing. The Newport~ "'1tary Oub
rnMts at the IMne Matriott Hoe.I to
hur from Judith Prather, Ph.D. on •AA :
~In My BadcyWd."
Cost.I Mesa-Newport HMbor Uons Oub,
the Ftsh ~ Oub meets at thf Costa
Mesa Ceuntry dub.
WOlllM lllPIAlWG ... ff'Om the
Klw.tnls Oub of~ 8uc:tKorona
del Mar newsletter. You are grown
up on the dly you haw your first re•I
l1ugh -at yourself.• WIDNBDAY -7:30 a.m.: South
Coast Sunrise Rotary Oub meets at the
Center Oub. Newport Harbor Klw•nls
Oub meets at the University Athletic
Oub. Noon: Costa Mesa Rotary Oub
meets •t Mes. Verde Country Oub. The
Exchange Oub of Onlnge Coast meets
• C:O ...... fTY. a.Im Is published •
every Saturday In the D•lly Piiot. ~ax •
your service dub'i meeting lnformat.lon :
to 631-5851 « mall to 1743 Bayport ,
Way, Newport ee.ch, 92660. :
Quality Legal Services
at a Reasonable Price
$125/hr .
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AT LAW
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Corpoc:ations\...partnerships, mergers, acqul11tions, ouv.-sell agreements, contracts and collections
IEAL ESTATI LITIGATION AND TIANSACTIONS Evictions, foreclosu~, eaaements, tltJe disputes, work-outs
ESTATE PLANNING · T~ Wiits, Probate Administration
LEGAL ~PTIONS
AllQANIXI Al LAW
(714) 760-87.75
•
LPc..al arts groups .
commemorate
'Wr> 8 -Ba~x . ·~
By Usa O'Neill, Daily P11ot
Lights will be dimmed, operas
will be performed without music
and works of art will be shrouded
with. cloths.
As the nation commemorates
World AIDS Day OD Sunday, local
arts organizations will participate·
in these and other symbolic ges-
tures as a way of remembering
the contributions of those who
have been taken from them and
their community.
"It's really sad because we're
losing an incredible amount of
very talented people,• said lrini
Vallera-Rickerson, profesfor of
art history and gallery director at
Orange Coast College. "The arts
has very much been impacted.•
Twenty-six local arts organiza-
tions are participating in •Day
Without Art" this year, marking
the fifth year the groups have
come together to observe World
AIDS Day. Commemoration
~es various forms: Some groups
will hand out flyers, others will
collect food for AIDS organiza·
tions and some will use their own
art to express their loss. The pro-
grams, organizers say, are meant
· to focus attention on awareness,
prevention and control of the dis-
ease.
For the first time in its 10-year
history, the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center will dim its
Firebird sculpture as a tribute to
those who have died. In coopera-
tion with Opera Pacific, the cen-
·ter will offer readings of operatic
and art song lyrics without the
~usic •to symbolize how this
particular disease has ravaged
the artistic community,• said
J-.::r-Greg Patterson, spokesman for
the center.
: The public is invited to the
~eadings; audience members also
will have the chance to read their own selections. "It's both a trib-
ute to the artists and poets and (a
nietaphor for) the loss we would
tiave suffered had they not been
here,• said Opera Pacific's Tuno-
thy Dunn.
Vallera-Rickerson's gallery at
OCC will be dark Sunday. But
the art professor gave a lecture to
a sold-out crowd recently to raise
funds for the Laguna Shanti, a
nonprofit organization that pro-
vides meals and vital services to
people living with AIDS.
Assisted by Doug Jackson,
Vallera-Rickerson raised $4,000
with her lecture, •Art and Archi-
tecture Around the World.• The
majority of the money is going to
the Laguna Shanti;.$1,000 will be
used to establish an art scholar-
ship in the memory of artist
David Torosian, who died in 1995
at age 33.
Torosian had an exhibit at the
gallery in 1993 that touched
many people, Vallera-Rickerson
said. •He has given so much to
the community,• she said. "As a
person, he was incredible.•
Vallera-Rickerson gave the lee·
ture before World AIDS Day for a
No matter what you're doing,
your ~etown newspaper
R1S IN... Daily Pilot
The Story of
CH RlSTHAS
Sc1domTo1d
THE LessoN
• Bow Cr9tion Werb
• '"'-~ to S-1 "-'>PineM
• How 'lb Neutnlillit Thi Neptt ...
.
~-------------------------~ I • " I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
I I
i : I I : I
I I I I
I I l I I I I I I I I I L-------------------------~ reason, she said. "I want to make
a point that this is an issue that
should be an issue 365 days a
year, not just one day.•
At South Coast Repertory,
educational flyers will be insert-
ed into the programs for Sunday's
performances of "A Christmas
Carol" and "Collected Stories.•
Curtain speeches will remind
theatergoers of the significance
of the day and will direct their
attention to the flyers, said
Cristofer Gross, theater
spokesm~. Today and Sunday,
SCR will collect non-perishable
food items that will be donated to
the Food Pantry at the AIDS Ser-
vices Foundation in Irvine.
"We've lost associated artists
every year and some key per-
formers in the last 12 months,•
Gross said. "We need people to
do their part even if it's just to be
sympathetic."
.
SATURDAY, NOVEM BElt 30, 1996 AJ
' Oijver's eyes said it all: 'Ifs tim~, boss'
.M Y wife and I have been·
• manied for 38.37
years. Por more than
t-d~ ~ en.uy na pe .
loved them all.
We have cared for them,
cleaned up after them, paid
their sometimes astronomical
vet bills. We bad one Siamese
cat, Clyde, who ran up a $1,500
tab -and this was more than 20
years agol -with the feline
equivalent of Hodgkin's Dis-
ease.
Clyde made history. His case
was written up in the veterinary
medical journals and his pan-
creas resides -perh~ps to this
very day -in an honor jar at the
Ohio State University vet
school.
As things turned out, it was
money well spent. Clyde lived
another 10 years, a decade of
vigorous, albeit celibate, life.
We had two other Siamese.
Charlie Chan was the original
among our family pets, the
pathfinder. I gave him to my
wife for a gift on our first wed-
ding anniversary. Charlie lived
to be 15, despite being shot
with a .22-caliber rifle and
being al.most electrocuted when
he jumped into a fully decorat-
ed tree during his first Christ-
mas.
Actually, all our cats lived to
15. Clyde's sister, Bonnie -what
else? -made it despite break-
ing a leg. It was set by a vet on
the hood of his car in the park-
ing lot at Don
Jose's in Hunt-
ington Beach.
tit 11>~-11":' .
with a\?6i1-
hanger, went
back to his din-
ner and fixed
her up perma-
nently the next
morning.
eat.
We took
to Dr. ~~'lljlalr'
Charlie
Chan had been
Wted to that
great litter box
in the sky
fred .
feld at Dover
Shores Veteri-
nary Center for
one last try. A
couple of days /
later, the
phone rang
about 6:30 ~m.
It was Dr. 8;
hehadoome
in early to
check qn sev-martin
when we
acquired our
first dog, a Brittany named
Many Fields Bandee's Damon.
Our daughter, Diana, who had
campaigned mercilessly -"It's
un-American to grow up with-
out a dog named him Sandy,·
and to this day cannot explain
why.
Sandy was a dear fellow, but
virtually untrainable. We hired
one of the best-known dog
trainers in the business to come
to our house and work with us.
He quit after a month. It took
three years before Sandy was
fully housebroken. Somehow,
he -and we -lived through it.
Sandy only made it to 12.
Toward the end, he was so
weak that we fed him wherever
he happened to be lying. We
had to put a mix of stewed
chicken, rice and broth on a
regular <tinner plate because
Sandy couldn't lift his head to
eral patients,
and found
Sandy had died during the
night.
It was merciful, really. The
dog had no quality of life,
except he still loved us very
much and would lick any hand,
foot or face you happened to
put near him.
Still, we should have had
him put to sleep long before he
died. We didn't because we
were thinking of ourselves
more than the dog, and that
wasn't right.
I write all this, because we
have come to the crossroads
with yet another pet -one that
will not die of natural causes.
We found Oliver when he
was about 6 weeks old -his full
name is Oliver Twist -up on
the Big Sur highway, 15 miles
from anywhere. He was soaked
and shivering and covered with
mud. What's a body to do?
We didn't really want another
pet then, let alone a puppy. Two
Siamese and a daffy Brittany
you. e put an aa unno1r111...-.
to You• in the Pilot classifieds.
"What's his pedigree?• callers
inevitably asked.
"He's a mutt, an American
R.andombred, ·we'd reply, and
they'd bang up. Oh, well, w~t's
another one.
That was 16 years ago come
May. Now Oliver is deaf, can't
see much better and he runs in
circles in the living room at
three in the morning. He can
walk at most 30 yards and
whatever mind be bad just isn't
working anymore. Sometimes
he just topples and falls down,
like the lady in that old com-
mercial: "Help, I've fallen and I
can't get up.·
And though Dr. Nancy Hauer
says his vitals are remarkably
good and be could live for
years, we agree that what he's
doing is not really living. I
wouldn't want to exist that way.
Oliver had the biggest,
brownest, softest eyes you ever
saw on a small dog. But the last
week or so, he looks at you with
those eyes and they say, Hit's
time, boss.•
He's right, of course. But it
sure didn't make what we did
Wednesday any less traumatic,
any less teary.
• AtED MARTIN'S column runs every
Thursday and Saturday.
M SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
TODAY
LEADERSHIP TALK
The Parvin Institute for Peace
Creation offers a seminar on lead-
ership programming and leader
making from 11 a.m . to 2 p.m. at
t~1e Cannery Village, 412 31st St.,
Nf'wport Beach. For reservations,
CdU 723-0405.
mEE KAYAKJNG
A free kayaking cliruc is being
t>lfered by Paddle Power from 9
n..m. to noon at the Newport
Uunes in Newport Beach. There
will be a variety of single and dou-
hle kayaks available. For more
111tonnation, call 675-1215.
THE ZONE
A free local support group
111eets at 2 p.m. to discuss •The
Zone,• the nutrition plan devel-
oped by bestselling author Bany
!)pars, at Country Store Nutrition,
1775 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Cdll 673-3588.
CRAFT BOUTIQUE
The public is invited to a craft
boutique from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
20082 Bayvie w Ave, Newport
Jkdch. The boutique features a
variety of Christmas decorations,
gifts, things for the kitchen and
<'very room of the home, clothing,
MONDAY
SWIM PROGRAM
Orange Coast College offers a
Master's Swim Program designed
to promote life-long fitness at 6:30
a.m. Monday through Friday
beginning today through Dec. 20
in OCC's gymnasiwn pool. The
class is designed for swimmers
ages 19 and older. Registration fee
is $40. For more information, call
432-5880.
ADO TALK
Coastline Counseling Center
offers a free lecture on ·Attention
Deficit Disorder: The Big PictureH
at 7 p .m. at 1200 Quail St., Suite
105, Newport Beach. For more
information, call 476-0991.
TREE LIGHTING
The annual public Christmas
tree-lighting ceremony will take
place at 6:30 p.m. at the offices of
South Coast Plaza, 650 Town Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. The event
includes a live concert of holiday
classics performed by the All-
American Boys Chorus, followed
by the tree-lighting ceremony and
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THE GREY GOOSE
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Newport Beach
Telephone -642· 7803
Hours Monday Saturday: 10:00 to 0:00 pm, Sunday: Noon 5:00 pm
As •lw•ys, shipping •nd compllmMt•ry gift wrap •t1all•bl1
THE GOSLING
a child's bouttque
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THE#l GAME ROOM SPECIALISTS!
Let m help you custom-design your
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Real Slate Pool Tables from $1199.00!
SALES • ACCESSORIES • MOVING
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( "I I " I ' " • I \' \ ,\ \11 \ I" I 'I ; \\ ' • ~ ~ - -I \11 \ " I ' ' I I . " I I ' II II II ii 1-
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The hottest "new" gift
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Regularfy sold.for $25.00
Now on(y $1499
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9616. a.m. to 6 p.m. at the entrance to
OCC'• Student Center. Prices
begin al SS and 20% ot the pro-
ceeds will ~o toward the purchase
o1 equipment for OCC's Ceramic
Oub. For more information., call
-432-5515.
rnuRSDAY
SEWNGVALUE
POTTERY SALE
The Newport Beach Public
Library offers a free sales work-
shop on •Selling Value" at 7 p.m.
in the Friends' meeting room,
1000 Avocado Ave. The program
will focus on increasing value
rather than lowering price. For
more information, call 717-3801.
Students enrolled in Orange
Coast College's ceramics classes
will conduct their 20th annual
Christmas Art Pottery Sale from 9
... Kelli cl Mallory
Christmas in November
Excellence in photography
for50 years
PHOTOGRAPHY ~
24-0 Newport C.cntcr Drive, Suite 110
Newport Beach
Currently scheduling
Holiday Portraits (714) 644·6933
South <:oast l(epertor~ ·s
.\'11/J/Jor/ i 11..f!. (,'11s/ presents
UJ~ng bow to gel tbe holiday off
to a glorious start!
Join Supporting Cast,
SCR's lively group of
young professionals in
support of theatre at
their annual
oliday benefit!
Iring the entire family and enjoy a pre-
perf onnance lunch at The Westin South Coa!t Plaza
. AND
a matinee performance of the Charles Dickens
classic A Christmas Carol at South Coast Repertory.
n~ on sale now for .A Mt"clwu p/a ~
~ $4S Children $25
A wonderful aflemoon of ho~ fesdvlties!
Call (714') 9S7-2'i02, ell 219 for ddcaS liicl lilfonnldoa.
IUSINESS MEETING designed to assist individuals
who wish to return to school fol-
lowing .a break in their academic
careers. For more information,
call 432-5162.
The Orange County Republi-
can Women, Federated will hold
its monthly meeting at 9 a.m. at
the Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
There will also be a fashion show
and carolers from Golden West
College will provide the enter-
tainment. Registration beginf at 8
a.m. and the cost is $35. For
rese1¥atian11, all ~~37. "'-~ ~ ~ ... ~r_ , .... 'h
I :r J I ' -C,., • "V;,.J ~~"'""41iii.+.•4: POmRYSALE
t , • • ~ •
Students enrolled in Orange
Coast College's ceramics classes
will conduct their 20th. annual
Christmas Art Pottery Sale from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m . at the entrance to '
OCC's Student Center. Prices ·
begin at $5 and 20% of the pro-
ceeds will go toward the pur-
chase of equipment for OCC's
Ceramic Club. For more informa-
tion, call 432-5515.
TGP BROKERS
The Business Development
Association of Orange County
offers a holiday luncheon on
·0range County's Top Commer-
cial Brokers• at 11:30 a.m. at the
Wyndham Garden Hotel, 3350
Avenue of the Arts, Costa Mesa.
Admission is $40. For reserva-
tions, call 832-5741.
OPEN HOUSE
Orange Coast College offers a
holiday open house for OCC's
Re-Entry Center from 11 :30 a.m.
to 1 p.m. in the college's Faculty
House. The Re-Entry Center is
HOLIDAY SANrTY
Women in Management pre-
sents Driving Ourselves •Sane•
For The Holidays, a dinner meet-
ing at 6 p.m. at the Sheraton
Newport, 4545 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. Cost is $35. For
reservations, call 692-2519.
HOUDAYTEA
The Orang!? County Law Aux-
iliary will be holding its annual
Holiday Tea at 11:30 a.m. at the
home of Mrs. Patrick Flannery ui
Costa Mesa. Charity donations
will benefit the Children's Cham-
bers in the Juvenile Court in
Orange. For more information,
call 548-6419.
FRIDAY·
CHRISTMAS CONCERT
The St. Andrew's Sanctuary
Choir and Orchestra presents its
annual Christmas concert at 8
p.m. at 600 St. Andrews Road,
Newport Beach. Admission is $6.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996 AS
Childcare is available by reserva-a.m., 1 p .m . and 4 p.ili. at 901 G: more mrormlition, call 755·0340.• call ~061, _.,. :-~·---~----u
~·· tion only by calling 574-2283. For South Coast Plaza Drive, Costa
information, call 574-2253. Mesa. For more information, call
HOUDAv·cONCERT •
Musica Angelica opens its fifth
anniversary season with a Holi-
day Concert of Carols and
Canons from the }9th to 20th
centuries at 8 p .mf at the New-
port Harbor Lutheran Church,
798 Dover D(ive, Newport Beach.
708-0800.
COMPUTER aua
The Orange Apple Computer
Club will meet from 8:45 a .m. to
1:15 p.m. in the chemistry "build-
ing at Orange Coast College. A
representative from Intuit Corp.,
publisher of the financial man-
-NASA ASTltONAUT
Sally Ride, former NASA
astronaut and the first American
woman to travel through space.
will be at Launch Pad signing her
two books, "The Third Planet•
and •voyager,• frolJ) 11:30 a.m.
to 2 p .m. on the third floor at the
Crystal Court, 3333 Bear St. Cos-
ta Mesa. For more information,
THE ZONE •
A free local support group
m~ts at 10 a.m. to discuss ·ne
Zone,· the nutrition plan devel-
oped by bestselling author Barry
Sea.rs, at the lnstitute for Holist;ic
neatment and Research, 4019
Westerly Place, Suite 100, New-
port Beach. For more information.
call 251-8700.
t is $6 tOJ,-f4l.~~or
sen.tofr-' \tncl-'~"for""g'~
admission. For tickets, call (310)
478-1258.
ag~~P-£~ and i~~~~~~;;;;;~~~~~;;~;;;;~;;~~~Sll~ QuiCIC B&)ic;~ atur~ fi
presenter. The t meeting is
free and annual meml;>ership is
$30. For more information, call
836-0522. DEC. 7
WINTER FAIRE
Orange Coast College is stag-
ing a Home and Hearth Winter
Faire to raise fund's to support
construction of the new fiarry &
Grace Steele Children's Center
on campus, from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m.
in OCC's new Technology Cen-
ter. Events include a holiday bou-
tique, various international foods,
holiday music and a ·raffle. For
more information, call 432-5749.
SAILING EXTRAVAGANZA
Orange Coast College offers
an evening of slides and stories
called the •Adventure Sailing
Extravaganza• at 7 p.m. in OCC's
Science Hall. Admission is $6 in
advance and $8 at the door. To
register, call 645-9412-.
BOW MAKING
The Container Store will offer
free bow making workshops at 10
HOURS:
MON.-SAT. 9-6
SUN. ff-S
CHRISTMAS FESTIVAL
GREAT ·GIFTS
AT GREAT YALU.ES
Country Store Piecemakers is
having its annual ~tmas Fes-
tival from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 1720
Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. Admis-·
sion is free. There will be 165
booths of handcrafted items for
sale and live country music, food
a nd entertainment. For more
information, call 641-3112.
WINTER FORMAL
#222
Heritage Tin
The Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Orange County presents
MEnchantment under the Sea,• a
winter formal dance for students
in grades nine through 12, from 8
p.m. to midnight at 250 E. Baker
St., Costa Mesa . The dance
requires semi-formal attire. Tick-
et prices are $38 per couple or
$30 per person for Center mem-
bers and $45 per couple or $35
per person for non-members. For
Christmas Blend Coffee is Back!
AwolloMe Only At H!cbry Fonm.
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RUFFELI.'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
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759-1137
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17th St. at lrvine
Newport Beach
642-0972
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•
SAT\JRDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
·''Trek' series.Jives long and prospers~---
• IDITOlt'S NOTE: The Reel Crftla col-
umn features movie altlques written by
community members serving on our
~net.
"First Contact• because it bas a
spark the others lacked: the
Borgs.
1\'ekker fan, but I have seen a
few movies in the •star 'll'ek•
series and each was serious and
tense. What I wasn't expecting
from •Star 'lrek: First Contact•
pendence Day" previously
released, •First Contact• is no
comparison in terms ol acting
and plot line.
"Star nek: First Contact, " the
eighth film in the series, finds I.he
¥\,~~'*traveling to 2QfP L~ &a1i1f-1He 'WllbinollS Borg over'·
With their bum.an aharaderis-
tics mixed in with large amounts
of metal, these aliens are the
worst ever. Because of their drive
was a comedy. • MEGAN 8EAL. 15, Is a eosu Mesa
That's not to resident and'a sophomore at Mlddle
third piano
concerto, or by
a combination
of both, is nev-
er clear. Nor,
for th.at matter,
is the real
~~~~~~~-:~~ JAY. theO! Coll~)~i~h ~~ -:."9")i• "'"' "~ ..,_.......,,.._ t". • ~ "'-
cause of bis =r:lo ......i..!a ..... IKI
quibble about Earth~ future. ' •
Make contact with
'First Contact'
C apt. Jean-Luc Picard lies
strapped to an operating
table with a screw twisting
toward his
eyes. Just as
the screw
crosses his
eyelid, the
dream breaks
up. But as he
leaps up and
looks into the
nurror, Picard's
cheek bursts
open and
web-like veins Melissa
pop forth on Richardson
his face.
So begins the newest install-
ment of the "Star Trek" dynasty.
With the major characters of
"Star The k: The Next Genera-
tion" back on the big screen,
"Star Thek: First Contact"
appears to be just another clone
in the long line of Thekker
movies. But don't give up on
attention to anyone they aon't Confused about the references
consider a threat. But when there to "Star 'Irek" characters? Do
is a threat. the Borgs become you think that you will just pass
immune to weapon fire within on this movie because you're not
minutes. Finally there is a fonni-a 'Irekker? Don't.
dable foe for the experienced That's what I thought until I
Enterprise crew. saw the movie. Forget the "Star
Data leads the cast in humor. Trek" connotations and just go
But be doesn't have a monopoly see it for the action. It's just as
this time. As the movie turns to a fast-pa£ed as "True Lies," but it
war-ravaged Earth, the tension also includes amusing scenes
caused by the conflict between that appease those who don't
the Borgs and the Enterprise appreciate the non-stop a~vity.
Crew loosens with the comic When looking for a movie this
actions of a drunken Zefram holiday weekend, go see •Star
Cochrane, the man who began lrek: First Contact," especially if
the Star Trek program but is it's your first contact with Star
unwilling to take the profusion of lrek!
compliments that bombard him. -----------
A al P • MELISSA RtotARDSON, 16, is a Cos· s ways, atrick Stewart is ta Mesa resident and a senior at New-
wonderful as the cool, calculating port Harbor High.
commander of the Enterprise.
But Brent Spiner steals the show
as the android Data who is trying
to become human. Spiner works
wonderfully opposite the talent-
ed Alice Krige. The horrid,
hideous, conscienceless Borg
Queen becomes a driving force
in •Star Trek: First Contact"
because of Krige's skill. Nonethe-
Film has unexpected
comedy
W hen I walked into· the
movie, I was expecting
an edge-of-your-seat
kind of film. I am not a huge
penseful parts.
In one of my
favorite
scenes, Capt.
Jean-Luc
Picard, Worf
....____._ ___ _, and Lt. Riker
are walking on Megan Beal the outside of
the U.S.S.
Enterprise. At the time the ship is
still moving so the three men are
in the vacuum of space. They are
able to stay stuck to the hull of
the ship by way of magnetic
shoes. While on the outside they
begin a fight with the Borg (their
enemy). This fight scene isn't
only gripping but also outstand-
ing in graphics.
Unlike the previous "Star
lrek" movies, this one had one-
liners throughout the dialogue
and one hilarious scene that
involved a bar and the ship's
communication advisor.
For moviegoers that like bigh-
tech thrillers, this is the film for
you. The graphics have the
same sort of idea, but .vith "lnde-
less, James Cromwell totally bal-
HODSON LICiHJINCi
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Height:
Diameter:
Lamping:
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Available in various finishes
MURRAY FEiss9
~~~~~~~(i) ~e ~~ ~ .. ~The Children's Bookshoppe ~ J ~ v 1--') 1660 Santa Ana Ave. '{, a... I'~ Costa Mesa (Btwn. 17111 St & Ogle) ~
I Open
Courtesy to the Tr/Uk ._ Tues.·Fri, 8:30-5, Sat 9-4
1510 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa• 548-9341
~ ~/"~ Look for the American flag! ~
¥-(fl~ ~~s ~Hours: Tues, Thurs & Sat Only Noon-4pm ~
or by appointment 646-1943
"~~~~~~~
Tuftday9, 9am -lpn
Newport Pier
Fresh Picked, Locally Grown Produce
Honey, Nuts, Fruits, Vegetables
Bread, Flowers & More
Sponsored by the Orange County Farm Bureau
573-0374
Now Serving Beer & Wine
675-8101
2333 Ean Coan Hwv
Corona del Mar, CA, 92825
2 doors south of Ruby's
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 7e.....:lpm
*Thuredey, Fridey & Seturdey 7•~10pm
4j!, An
American
Cafe
Great Homestyle
Traditional &
Contemporary
American Fare
462 East 1 7'h Street • Costa Mesa
Open 7 Days A Week
~· ·-----·-----·~
~WE'RE OELEBIUTING~
:JfinARS
IN COSTA MES! I
Join us at The Barn Steak House for
SRYBB OOLLAB DlIS
Dec. 5th -Dec. 10th
Drawing for Prizes • Specials .
2300 Harbor Bl., Ste 31
t Harbor Ir Wiison (behind Thrlfty's) .
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED
641·9777 '
ll!VI ! HAPPY BOLIDilI
"Shine" tells the true story of
Australian pianist David Hellgott •.
who was driven to madness as a
student at England's Royal Col-
lege of Music .
Love of music seen
and heard in 'Shine'
W hat a special holiday gift
this movie is. U you have
ever loved music, or
even wondered why other people
loved music, see this movie.
Whether David Helfgott was
driven by his father's oppressive.
demanding love and ambition or
by his own obsessive determina-
tion to master the almost impossi·
ble challenge of Rachmaninoff's
June Fenner what might be
missing from
this superb story that bas so
much to give.
Sublime music is matched by
outstanding acting. David Helf-
gott is played by three fine actors:
Alex Rafalowicz as the child
prodigy, Noah Taylor as the
young i;nan, and. most spectacu-
larly, by Geoffrey Rush as an
adult.
The adult Helfgott is an amaz-
ing man. In spite of the cigarette
that never leaves his lips until he
replaces it with another, he is still
able to produee a nonstop stream
of words that actually make some
kind of strange sense.
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, I,.• , •.f
..... ~ :. l' ·~
c ,\ I I fJ () \ 'J I < l !-? H l \ I I ( • I\ Y 'd I\ I < H lf > I• I '' r " ~· ',
LUNCH • DINNER • BRUNCH
630 LIDO PARK DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH
675-FISH 3474
Now on the Water in
Newport BeaJJ
A tradition of a truly
Florentine cuiJine
contilu.u.JI
~/,e
~g/,,na
SERVING LUNCH & D~R --
• Happy Hour • ~iano Bar Nightly
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
reel aitics after hours
-Prone to sudden bouts of
nudity and extremely fond of
running water over the tops of
sinks and tubs, he iS, neverthe-
less, a source of joy and elation
to all who come across his path.
Lynn Redgrave plays a woman
who is so enchanted by Helf-
!~~~ th• r t. ffesupport anti' td'Ve o'f .;/
astonishingly BRIAN GOULD
talented child Pianist Brian Gould, Who has
pianist. His JAZZ. auB won international acclaim for h1s
father (Annin The Orange County Pe:rform-brilliant artistry, will perform
Mueller-ing Arts Center presents The with Orange Coast College's
Stahl), who is Jazz Club featuring Jacky Ter-Philharmonic Orchestra at 7:30
the moving rasson and his 1\io at 7:30 and p .m. Sunday in OCC's Robert B.
force in his 9:45 p.m. today.Jn Pounders Hall Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview
~~:iJl~~~~~sw~~are ~~~~r~~~#.arl~~_:-:c
walks the mation, call 556-ARTS. door. For information, call 432-courageous woman clearly
played a. major part_ in Helf-Elaine England gott's ability to reclaim his
rightful place on the concert
stage.
fine line 5880.
beautifully. BEATLES TRIBUTE
Not since -My Left Foot"
have I seen a film that so pow-
erfully celebrates the triumph of
the human spirit. And Helfgott
is still triumphant, as his bril-
liant piano performance on the
film's soundtrack attests.
• JUNE FENNER. a Costa Mesa resi·
dent in her late SOs, is vice president
of a work force training company.
Film captures the
'human experience'
'I s hlne• is a remarkable
film. It has a wealth of
human experience -the
edginess of madness, the exhil~
aration ~f music, the pain of
love given and withheld and
the magic of friendship and
love.
David HeUgott (played by
Alex Rafalowicz as a child and
Noah Taylor as a teen) is an
Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTALIRANT
Hu gone fishing!
For fish tacos
White fish served on a soft corn
tortilla with our -special"
white sauce. cabbage. cheese.
guacamole and a slice of lime.
Like they serve on the
coast of BAJAJJ
Our meals are a trip to BAJA
as well as MEXICOll
We abhor his methods but feel The Orange County Perform-TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERTS
his pain of separation. ing Arts CeJlter presents the Free live classic rock perfor-
Scott Hicks, the film's direc-Classical Mystery Tour, a tribute mances are scheduled from noon
tor, and writer Jan Sardi keep to The Beatles featuring four to 2:30 p.m. Monday through
us slightly off balance. Th~y original members of th~ Broad-Friday; frnm 7 to 1 O p .m. Friday
never resort to the emotional way sensation "Beatlemania• and Satu.rda d f 1 t A performing live in conceit with a y; an rom 0 .. uquick-fix." It was as if they 48_piece symphony orchestra, at p.m . Saturday and Sunday after-~~~:s it~a'"no Con-8 p.m. today at 600 Town Center noons in the Town Square at Tu-
t>rive, Costa Mesa. Tickets are angle Square in Costa Mesa. certo No. 3 is an integral char-acter and plays well. You learn $15 to $45. For information, call
the anguish and joy not only of 740-7878.
the performance but the prepa-MUSIOANS' FESTIVAL
ration. Geoffrey Rush portrays the More than 350 musicians will
adult David Helfgott _ no, he is come together to present the
David Helfgott, the heart, body 26th annual Orange County
and soul. Musicians' Festival, The Bash
There is so much good and '96, from noon to 10 p.m. Sunday
positive among the characters,, at the Red Lion Hotel, 3050Bris-
story, so1:111dtrack and scenery. tol St., Costa Mesa. The event is
This movie will "Shine" and the musicians' way of celebrating
you will be forever enriched. their diverse talents while raising funds for music scholarships and
• ELAINE ENGLAND, 65, lives in
Newport Beach and owns a gift-bas-
ket business she operates out of her
home.
an emergency relief program for
musicians in need. Admission is
$20 in advance and $22 at the
door. For information, call 546-
8166.
~~_LAS_' __
EL~CHITO
HOLIDAY FIESTAS
Complete Catering Services 1
Sizzling Fajita Bar • Strolling Mariachis
Margarita & Cerveza Bar
Banquet Rooms
Available in Many Locations
Party Trays To Go
Pickup Arranged at
L6cation Nearest You
For a Fiesta to Remember,
Call
645-0209
HOLIDAY SHOW
Pacific Coast Gallery invites
the public for art and good cheer
from 2 to 5 p .m. Sunday at 2801
E. Coast Highway, Suite B, Coro-
na del Mar. For information, call
675-1995.
Compare our prices.
See our selection.
Experience oar
customer. senlce.
HEMPHILL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
Mon-Fri 10·6 Sat 10-5 722-7224 l = 230 East-17th St., Costa Mesa
THREADS ~ Gallery in Newport Beach, the
The Newport Beach Public Newport Harbor Nautical Muse-
Llbrary offers •Threads,· an um will present ·M~tague :
exhibit of interwoven, three-Dawson -His Life and Worts•
dimensional materials by artist through Mardi 9 at 151 E. Coast
Dru Cottrell, from Sunday Highway, Newport Beach.
through Dec. 31 in the foyer of Ad.mission is free for members,
the library at 1000 Avocado Ave., $4 for guests, and $1 for children. ~~$;~~~ch~. Call nJ}-3801. Por information, call 673-7863. •
JUDAISM '·· ~s~~G~ -~-~-·-=,~..-.""
The Jewish Community Cen-Gregory Gallery presedi a
ter of Orange County presents an special exhibit featuring one ot;a
exhibit from Mordecbai Rosen-kind Christmas stockings with •
stein, who creates limited edition dogs, cats, couples, golfert-and · •
silk-screen prints of award-win-more through Dec. 31 at 3'06 ..
ning, original pieces that reflect Via Udo, Newport Bea.ch. For
the traditions of Judaism, more information, call 723-0887 .. •
through Thursday at 250 E. Bak-
er St., Costa Mesa. For informa-
tion, call 755-0340.
MEDIA ART
Tunbuktu -Folk and Tubal
Art presents •secrets and Sins,·
mixed media art from three
artists, closing today at 1661
Superior Ave., Costa Mesa. For
information, call 650-7473.
MONTAGUE DAWSON -
In conjunction with the 25th
anniversary of Vallejo Maritime
ALL
REVLON
ULTIMAII
COSMETICS
40%0FF
REGUUR TICKET PRICE
MIXED MEDIA
Orange Coast College pre-·•
sents a mixed media exhibition ,
through Dec. 15 at OCC's Fine •
Arts Gallery, 2701 Fairview Roa~.
Costa Mesa. For information. call~
432-5039. I
VESPAILAMBRETTA
Gallery Paradiso Exhibits pr~
sen ts •Principles of Recognition.•
an exhibit of work by Dean De
Cocker, on display through Dec.
11. Call 650-3690.
•Holiday~
Catering
Specialists ~
Remember we
cater boats &
charters "in your
home or in our
dlnin .. groom ...
BUNION CORRECTION ••• NO HOSPITALIZATION also on sale: Charles of the Ritz, Elizabeth Arden
Umitcd to stock on hand.
ALL FILM DEVELOPING 12, 24, or 36 Exposures
lllM-ONRATM
CALL
NOWI
-
$2.99
FEED BARN
• Feed • Tock • Pet Supplies • Pet Food • Free Delivery
THE FEED BARN IS THE
PERFECT PLACE FOR
PRESENTS FOR YOUR PETS
FOR THE HOLIDAYS
$200I UM a ........ ...... ".,_. --------Dog Sweaters
Full Line of Pet Toys & Treats
Puppy and Kitten Starter Kits .. _,,... .... ..
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Bunny Cookies
Horse Treats
Something for rt.very •
J-fouseliold <pet from your
:Hamsters to your :HOrses
SA1\JROAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
1.ir J -• -• ~ :-..--: • -• : ~_.
it .. . . . . . . ' '
l• ..... ..
+ CHURCH NAME: Harbor guage of members of I.a Puerta
• Christian Fellowship Abierta Is Spanish. Harbor Christ-
+ ADOMSS: 740 W. Wilson Ian Fellowship is the oldest •
Street. c.osta Mesa Assemblies of God church In Cos-
+......,_:Voice: 631-ta Mesa.
n"JO; fax: 631 -n32; e-mail: sei-+ otlLD CARE: Provided for A-A~~ ~services and activitJ ~ v· , :'IVllS·~emm~
• l>§lm'1~~~ • ~~~~~ . " ~-m-worsn1p 1s c ar s n -
biles of God temporary, with an emphasis on ·~ + YEAR OIUROt EST.AB-praise and worship. The services
USHED: 1955 are informal and mdude con-+ SERVICE TIMES: Sunday -gregational participation. The
10 a.m. worship service, 6 p.m. service begins with a call to wor-
worship and Bible study ship. Seiden extends a welcome + SENIOR PASTOR: Jerry Sei-and a church member reads the
den ri\ission statement. other read-+ PASTORAL STAFF: Bill ings are from the Old and New
Gartner, youth pastor; Jim Testaments followed by prayer
Hewitt Christian education pas-and praise songs. Members par-
tor ·ticipate in a time of sharing + SIZE OF CONGREGATION: w hen they can speak about
100 their spiritual growth, their + MAKEUP OF CONGREGA-struggles and God's influence in
TION: Members come primarily their lives.
from local neighborhoods near + TYPE OF SERMON: Sei-
the church. The congregation is den's messages are usually part
frequently mistaken to be the of a series. They are life-oriented
same as the congregation of La and are inductive rather than
Puerta Abierta, which leases its deductive. Each Sunday, notes
meeting and worship facilities and an outline related to the
from the Harbor Christian Fel-message are induded in the bul-
lowship. But each congregation letin. It is an interactive outline
has its own pastors, services and with fill-in-the-blank sections for
mission statements, and the pri-members to complete during the
mary language of the members message. Seiden also givfJS a chil-
of Harbor Christian Fellowship is dren's message each week.
English, while the primary Ian-+ RECENT SERMON: Seiden's
,,,>
CI.ASSES/
WORKSHOPS
A COURSE IN MIRACLES
Life's curriculum includes
lessons on receiving miracles. A
Course in Miracles deals with
their meaning, lliusions of Ego,
Healing and Wholeness, Lessons
of Love and more. The course
meets every Wednesday from 7 to
8 p.m . at Community Church, the
Newport Beach Church of Reli-
gious Science. It's located at 901
Dove St., Suite 145, in Newport
Beach. Call 646-3199 for more
information.
RJLL DISCLOSURE
Revelation, The Seven
Churches, will be the topic of a
four-day seminar at Costa Mesa
Seventh-Day Adventist Church.
Bill Llversidge.presents this Bibli-
cally-based series, talring place at
the following times: today, 11 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m.; Sunday, 9 a .m. to 5
p.m.; and Monday, 7 to 9 p.m. The
church is located at 271 Avocado
St., just off the Costa Mesa Free-
way. Call 548-6596 for further
details.
JEWISH SUNDAY SCHOOL
The Jewish Culture School is
offering Sunday school classes for
children, ages five through mitz-
vah program, as well as an adult
seminar. The 10 a.m. to noon
classes usually meet at the Jewish
Community Center twice a
month, but some sessions substi-
tute a field trip. This chapter of
the Society for Humanistic
Judaism sponsors an adult semi-
nar during the Sunday school ses-
sions for all its members. The cen-
ter is located at 250 E. Baker St. in
Costa Mesa. To leani more about
the chapter and registration,
phone Deborah Holland at 559-
6726.
MENTAL GEAR SHIFTING
From 10 a.m. to noon today,
take part in an Art Day beginning
with meditation. Shlfting to our
right brain allows the spirit to
work through us to create. At the
same time Dec. 7, Science of Mind
Year I draws on text by Ernest
Holmes to learn more about our-
-TRADITIONAL EPISCOPAL
trust In Him.
St. Matthew's Church
A parlsh of the Anglican C8thollc Church
1723 Weetcllff Ortve, Newport Beach, CA 92660
[facing Shertngton, behind The Pizza Bakery)
714-646-1152
Sunday Holy Communion, 8:00 a.m. & 10:15 a.m.
IUnday 9dM>o1. 9:00 Lm., lor ~ & chlldf'8rl of II ages
Tueea¥. Bbl llody, noondly & 7:30 p.m. (cal lor IOcallOn)
Thunday, 9:301.11\., ltcfr CcmnM.nlon
Women'• Fallowahlp, Tl'Uldly, 10:30 a.m .. prayer. collee a 111.11t1
Tredltlonal E worahl • Child c:.,.11 o"1ded.
... IO bl you nwy IMlftow will hope ~flt~ of the Hdy $piil. ROC'IWlll 15: 13
METHODIST
Costa Me.a NEWPORT CENTER
MESA VERDI UNrTID MEnfODIST CHURCH
UNmD METHODIST CHURCH 16<tJ~~~'J.t1ve.
1701 laker, C.M 644-0745
Wonhlp la Church School Worship at 8:00AM & I O:OOAM
1:30 and 10:00 a.~ Children SUndfSY School I O:OOAM Dr. Richard 979-823.4 ~--J_r._&_S_r._H_.ii4g .... 1h_S_:O._O_PM __ __,
LAGUNA
United Method~ Church
21632 Wesley Dr. Lar~
Sunday Morning Worsblp & Cht1stien Eck.tcitJon 1 OAM
Mln18tens David Beades & Vlfglnla
Wheeler
I • I • I I • • : I t ' I ' ' ' • ~ ,, I 11
]
AR!Olt LA
HRISTIAN + PutRTA
F ELLOWS tUP A BttRU
lill·mo G50•S136
current series is "Our Spirttual
Journey," about the individual
path God has for each of us. Last
Sunday he spoke on "Seeing
with God's Eyes," a message
about faith and why we need it. + UPCOMING SERMON: The
"Our Spiritual Journey" series
continues
+WELCOME WAGON: The
congregation welcomes visitors
but tries not to make them
1..mcomfort.able by making a fuss
over them. The bulletin extends
information to guests about
child care, communicating needs
or interests to church staff, offer-
ings and a fellowship t ime after
the service. + OUTREAOf PROGRAMS:
The church's outreach is primari-
ly recovery oriented. Weekly
activities include 12-step support
groups to benefit those who
struggle with overcoming addic-
tions, eating disorders or Atten-
tion Deficit Disorder. Other
weekly activities indude: Mon-
day evening, adult Bible study,
"In the Word," from 6:45 to 8:15
religion calendar
selves, our relationship to God,
spiritual laws and the power of the
mind. Love offerings are accepted
on both occasions at Community
Church, the Newport Beach
Church of Religious .:icience. It's
located at 901 Dove St., Suite 145,
in Newport Beach. Phone 646-
3199 for more information.
HEALTH DAY
Instructor Janet Brosan leads
People With Arthritis Ca:n Exer-
cise classes from 10 to 11 a.m .
every Tuesday at the Jewish
Senior Center of Orange County,
250 E. Baker St., CoSta Mesa. The
class includes health education,
joint-protection tips, relaxation
techniques, pain-control tech-
niques and socializing. Call 513-
5641.
PARADIGM SHIFT
The Newport Be ach Baha'i
Community allows participants to
hear and experience "Paradigm
Shift: A New Way -A New
World " at 7:30 p.m. every Friday
at a private residence in Corona
del Mar. Together, they explore
such questions as: Can racism
and prejudice be eliminated?
What is the new world order? Can
conflicts be resolved without
force? Are women and men
equal? What's the spiritual solu-
tion to our economic problems?
Music and food are included. For
directions, call 759-0999.
LECTURE SERIES
DHARMA SOOETY
Newport Beach Higashi Hon-
ganji Buddhist Temple's Dharm.a
Society presents a lecture and dis-
cussion series Dec. 8, and on the
second SUJ].day of each month at
the temple, 254 Victoria St., Costa
Mesa. Call 722-1202.
SINGLES
ASK THE RABBI
Rabbi David Rosenberg will
field questions dwing "Singles
Evening" on Dec. 13 and every
second Friday of the month at
Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach.
A special Oneg Shabbat (fellow-
ship hour) will follow services
honoring single people. It all
takes place at 2401 Irvine Ave. in
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
· FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Udo, Newport Beach
673-1340 or 673-6150
Cburcb 10 am l 5 pm,
SUnday School 10 am
Wedneldaf Meetings 8 pm
SECOND CHURCH OF
Clll<IST,SCIENTIST
3100 Pac:Wc View Dr, Newport Beach
644-2617 or 675-4661
Church lOam
Sunday Scbool 10 am
Wednetlday Meetings 8 pm l lst Wednesday 12 noon
Be not overcome of evil. but overcome evil with good.
Romans 12:21
Branches or The Modler Chard>• The Fina Church or
PRESBYTERIAN
St. Andrew~ P~byterian Church
Saturday, November 30, 5:30 P.M.
Sunday, Dtccmber I, 8:30 and 10: 15 A.M.
"THE HARVEST IN
UNEXPECTED PLACES"
(Joh.n 4:1·42)
ReVttflld Edwlltll R. Sntdclr.n Cbrlttmu Concert
l'tadl!llC Friday, December 6, 8;00 P.M.
600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach, California (714) 631-2880
(acr0'8 from Newport Harbor High School at Irvine and 15th.)
~ Counlell~.Center S8rvloet Avallilble CONGREGATIONAL
m COMMUNllY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
. UNtTEO CHUROf OF
CHRIST
ST. MARK J>ilFsBYTERIAN
CHuiCH
"Open Anns and Open Minds 1
' w..,,. .. ................ ~ ...
~1341
-........ To c.n; fo c... ... 00.
lt"c• Ven 81.ir, Minister
Sund.v Worthlp 8:15 & 1 OAM ~· ~ 9AM Adutt-9;45 °"ldren
Child c.. Pro~ 644-7'400
6H lldaeiope-., ~Dill Ms
e.m.; Wednesday evening, and the Holy Spirit to change
Youthl" for 13-to 18-year'"°lds our lives. the lives Qf others. and · at 6:30 p .m.; Children's Church to strengthen our rilatlonshfp
from 6:•5 to 7:45 p.m.; and with God. In the hope that CiOd
•spiritual Life: Training and Sup-might use us to reconcile people
port," at 6;30 p.m. The church to Him. we agree to support
hosts an annual week.end con-these-ministries which best fer~mce on ADO and Is plannln~ Reach, Teach and Keep people. ::~uth~~--.ll\NSf'CMIA_un.:w~~!1~~ -~r '>
books on ADD and has also ways. TherefOii.~ri'i~~ ·~,
revised and rewritten other trum of ministry at Harbor Chrfs-
titles on the subject. These, and tian Fellowship, there are many
other 12-step and recovery culturally diverse ministries
books, are available at the Har-which are intent upon Reaching,
bor Christian Fellowship Book-Teaching, and Keeping children,
store. The church is also the cen-teens and adults.,.
ter for food distribution to fami-+ INTERESTING NOrE: Sei-
· 1ies in need. den characterized the church as + DRESS: Casual ,. recovery friendl}t." His calling. + OIURot DESIGN: The card reads, •A safe Place to Flnd
church is currentJv being repaint-Hope." He mentioned that peo-
ed from its old, bluish-gray color pie often like to quote John .
to light, beige tones like those 3:16, "For God so loved the
on its sign In front of the build-world that He-gave His only
ing. begotten Son, that whoever + MISSION STATEMENT: befleves in Him should not perish
"Our primary purpose is to love but have everlasting life,,. but
and worship God in a Spirit-that often they don't go on to
filled, family gathering of ser-the verse that follows, "God did
vants of our Lord Jesus Christ: not send His Son into the world
Through our desire and calling, to condemn the worfd, but that
we seek the opportunity for the world through Him might be
growth and accept the challenge saved." Seiden -also mentioned
to share the love of God. In ser-that a special service, conducted
vice to Christ. we strive to meet by theJouth of the church, will
all people at their point of need. be hel Dec. 8.
We accept the power of prayer -Michele M. Ma1T
Newport Beach (Back Bay). For
information about the time, call
548-6900.
SERMONS
INNER WORKINGS
The Rev. Gail Miller exposes
uThe Christ Within" on Sunday
at Community Church, the New·
port Beach Church of Religious
Science. The 10:30 a.m. service
follows meditation at 10. The
church is located at 901 Dove St.,
Suite 145, in Newport Beach. Call
646-3199 for more information.
SPIRITUAL RECOGNmON
Dennis W. Short exposes
•God's Divine Attention• on Sun-
day during the worship service at
Harbor Christian Church (Disci-
ples of Christ). The sermon,
beginning at 10 a.m ., will draw
from I CorinthiCUlS 1:3-9. Church
school for children will take place
at the same time, and adult Sun-
day school runs from 8:30 to 9:30
a.m. The church is located at
2401 Irvine Ave. in Newport
Beach. Contact the church at
645-5781.
The Story of
CttRlSTMAS
SddomTold
THE LESSON
SUNDAY, DEC. 1, 8:30 -9: 16AM
TOPICS:
• How Creation Works
• The Secret Lo Real Happine1111
• How To Neutnlile The Neptive
• An.awera That Relult ID Action
Costa Mesa
Church of
Religious Science
BO Meea Verde Dr. E..r
eo.ta Meu • (714) 714-79
Love <>«-Uc • All Welcome
"o .... •ic
LUTHERAN
CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH
Pastor William Hemenway
"We love children, youth, young adults, career
adults, seniors. We love to care, to reach
out, to meet needs, to
answer_ questions·
• Sunday StNices -8:00am, 9:30am, 11 :OOam
• Sunday School & Bible Studies - 9:30am
760 Victoria Street • Costa Mesa, CA 92627
(714) 631 -1 611 • (714) 548--0800 (School)
RELIGIOUS SCIENCE
RE~ SCIENa NEWPORT IEACH
SCIENCI Of MN> EDUCATION CtNTBI
(Comer or Dove t Quall -In o111ot Bldg.
OCf08I fl'Om Atlctltf Jones)
901cow1145
Olllce: M, Tu. Th (714) 848-3199 Dr. J...all !VIit. .. ....,
EPISCOPAL
SAINT JA/t\15 crURCH ·ep11eopa
.. .. ~ ... t , .. ~.,., ..,,,.. .... a.w • ....,,.., ......
Fr. David c. And.non, rector
3209 V'IO Udo
Newport Bead\
71A/675-02l0
II 7:30 am Troditional
9am~ 9 arnefwrch
l 0:45 om Chorismotie and , .. 'edne.day --tt IWI •
In'1ite the raidcnu of Newport Beach, Corona del Mar
ti Com.t Mesa to )'OMr place of worship
'
_Newport Bach/Costa Mesa Daily Piloc SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
·Group makes it its business to . promote the arts
I .1' I The union of art and cul-ture with business ae-r •
, ates o..synergy that
: enriches all of our lives," said
1 David Coulter, chairman and
-. chief executive otticer flt• ~ it
: BankAmerica Corporation.
1 Coulter was in Newport Beach
1 to address the prestigious Busi-
: ness in the Arts Committee at its
! 'lJlPUal awards'J>resenta.tion din--~r~~
' Restaurant in Fashion Island, was
: chaired by George Argyros,
• chairman and chief executive ! officer of Amel and Affiliates,
and organized by Betty Moss,
cook
many worthwhile organizations. jects bas made a lasting differ-
The crowd applauded Prager, ence for us all.•
and the event was underway. ~egerstrom was joined by his
Curt Lyon, president of Lyon elegant wife, Renee, attired in a
Studios, a local communications chic suit of faux leopard, and
business that has supported Mark Johnson, chairman of The
many local arts organizations Orange County Performing Arts
through the production of videos Center in applauding the other
designed to promote various winners: Keith Johnson, presi-
efforts, was one of the first-time dent of Fieldstone Communities,
award recipients indu~e? into Inc. and Llfetime Achievem.tnt
iv. Lv«lliw:ttellllei;EWi~ilfit;:f;;;ilil-J1'J;IJlleClp,tei_ . C\i~i·~ ~·
wife, Wendy, parents Leon and Resort Development of Disney;
Molly Lyon, his business associ-Barbara and Jim Glabman, of
ate, producer BW Wiles, and Glabman Furniture; R: David
Wiles' pretty blonde bride, lbresbie, publisher of the
Donel. Orange County Register; Grego-
"That's my boy," whispered ry Undstrom, partner at Latham
Lyon's proud father as bis son and Watkins law firm; John
: founding executive director of
Orange County Business for the
Arts. The power brokers of
Orange County business turned
out in force.
The pre-awards cocktail
reception was held inside a white
tent erected adjacent to Paci.fie
Mutual headquarters. There,
Coulter emphasized the philoso-
phy of his company in supporting
the arts.
They include Bob Brown, presi-
dent and COO of Toshiba Ameri-
ca Electronic Components, Inc.;
Robert Grant, managing partner,
Deloitte and Touche; Douglas
Am.merman, managing partner,
accepted the aystal award from Evans of Wells Fargo Banlt; Carl
Argyros. Lyon nearly dropped McLarand, president of
the heavy token of recognition as Mel.a.rand, Vasquez and Part-
he thanked the gathering for the ners; and Dean Tanji of Abra-
Jennifer Van Bergh joins David Coulter, chairman and CEO of '
BankAmerica Corporation, at the Business ln the Arts Commit-'
tee annual awards dinner.
"BankAmerica has a long-
standing involvement with both
a.rt and education in the state of
California," he said. "In addition,
we try to be very supportive of
our employees' interests and
commibnents in th.is regard.·
The very young and very
powerful financial executive has
risen through the ranks of his
company during a 20-year career
span. As one of the most influen-
tial men in the arena of global
finance, Coulter joined some for-
midable honorees of the 1996
Business in the Arts Awards.
MERCURY
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distinguished Thomas Sutton,
chainnan and CEO of host com:
pany Pacific Mutual Life Insur-
ance.
An abundance of serious navy
blue and gray business suits did
not hamper the spirit of the
evening. The tone was estab-
lished at the t<>p of the awards
presentation as restaurateur
Hans Prager of The Ritz was giv-
en special recognition for his 15
years of sponsorship of the din-
ner celebration.
"I would like to thank the
committee for giving me the
chance to increase the price of
the dinner after 15 years of ser-
vice," said the affable host
known community-wide for bis
generous and gracious support of
honor and said: "I follow in the cadabra Presentation Graphics.
tradition of my parents who "Now there's a great company
established a path of support for name,· said Argyros, presenting
the arts in this county many the honor to Tanji. Following the
years ago. I am very proud to awards, about 300 guests saun-
carry on the Lyon family legacy." tered down the Fashion Island
Henry Segerstrom, managing sidewalk from Pacific Mutual to
partner of C.J . Segerstrom and the Ritz dining room, where din-
Sons, accepted the Award for ner conversation flowed almost
Lifetime Achievement. He as fast and freely as the wine.
echoed the Lyon sentiment with Margie and BW Snyder were
an even more personal message. in the crowd with Debe and ·r would like to recognize the Steve Baileys. Joan Gladstone
entire Segerstrom family as I attended with husband Edward
accept this award,• he said. GWow, and the. dynamic and
"However, in doing so I would
like to give special attention to
my mother, Ruth Segerstrom,
who has been a r.ole model in
this community for more than 70
years. Her care and involvement
with so many worthwhile pro-
personable couple Lynne and
Jim Doti of Chapman University
mingled with Jennifer Van
Bergh, local BankAmerica busi·
ness development vice president
and her husband, Richard Van
Bergh. Pretty Ronnie Allum-
baugh was there with her food
chairman mate, Byron, of Ralphs
Foods 4 Less. Also attending
were Ralph and Joyce Allen,
Arlene and Roger Cralg, David
and Jeanne Tappan, Vicki Hes-
ton and Chancy Lott, John and
Elizabeth Stahr, Gayle Wldyolar
Twas a month before Christmas
And all through the store
FINAL DAYSI
9%·80%0F
NO
REASONABLE
OfffR
FUSE
Hanging from rafters
Were flannels galore
Cozy and comfy
These gowns are the best
You be the Santa
And we'll do the rest!
Look for our new
Lanz cart now at
Fa•hion l•land
Kristen's
631-7399 • Westcllff Court
1719 WestclJff Dr. •Newport Beach
• Soft Wa•h I •
•· Sealer Wu 1 •
• BuJB CORAL Foam Wu 1 •
• A.tr l"re•he-1er 1 •
• Wheel a: Tire Cleaning 1 •
I •
and David Scott with the new
general director of Opera Pacibc
Patrick Veitch and development.
director David Griffiths.
The gathering was certainJy
the right place to get a stock tip. ·
but more importantly, it sent a
loud and clear message that
business profits most when it
gets involved in the community
through cultural projects that val.:
1date hwnan.ity. The bottom line ,
is so much sweeter when the
profits of some can improve the :
existence of all.
. ...
Your ,
Newport Beach headquarters•
for
o(,~1~ ,1
For Children and Adults ,
Sleepwear • Robes • Slippers
AiO SAnJROAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
Red lion Will be· roaring with
the soun~ ofmusic·Snnday-·-
By Nancy Cheever, Daily Pilot ~1-•"*~~ll!l!!'t1~~ <Al.S~.uw~-1 -
: •rm doing a lot of wliting, I doing the masters, and working
1 with people who are trying to get J there themselves,• he said.
: -lie is also enjoying a more
\
M ore than 400 musici.ans
will gather at the Red
Uon Hotel in Costa
Mesa on Sunday to celebrate the
spiritof live~us _:r .. ~l 'V:'8bsb "JS.....,. ·-ether-·' : ~~.l~~~ est~{
I ~~ea "tlian ·o~-· I ers.
'I
the finest musicians om Orange
County and the surrounding area
to perform a variety of music for
the public on six d.itterent stages.
Costa Mesa's Jack Reidling is
one musician who hasn't missed
a Ba.sh. The pianist has per-
formed at the festival every year
since 1970 and plays everything
from classical and jazz to big
band and swing.
Reidling has made a lifetime
career from playing music, some-
thing most musicians only dream
about.
1 Reidling spent years perform-! ing in a trio at Disneyland's Blue
, 1 Bayou, but when the group w-------------------------..1 dwindled to just him, he decided
main lounge; then with Karen to quit.
Gallinger in the jazz room; in the •1t got lonely up on that bal-
classical room with saxophonist cony,• he said.
Leo Potts; with Sy Zentner in the Reidling is also on the Orange
Big Band room; and will finish off County Music Association's
with the Great American Music scholarship committee, which
Company in the jazz room. decides what students will
The 59-year-old is probably receive funds from the proceeds
the most well-known and most of the Bash.
Mlt's all I've ever done," he
said. MI raised a family; raised
four boys doing it."
sought-after pianist in Orange Other musical styles at the
County. But be says the populari-Bash include Dbdeland, rhythm
ty of live performance is dwin-and blues, chamber, Caribbean,
STAAA CAAAOU I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Pianist Jack Reidling relaxes ln his .. music room," w here he composes, practtces and Instructs the
art of music.
Reidling spent most of his life
performing live at local restau-
rants, clubs and dinner theaters
a%Kf doing studio work.
dling. fusion, country-western and
"The way the business is now, more.
there's not as much work for All proceeds from Bash '96
acoustic players," be said. benefit the B. Douglas Sawtelle The Story of
CttRlSTMAS
Seldom Told
T HE L ESSON
: : On Sunday, Reidling will play
ip five different groups, starting
~ff with a bebop band in the
Reidling now spends much of Music Scholarship Fund and the
bis time accompanying music Musicians' Emergency Relief
students from Cal State Fullerton Fund.
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•
1WO llAPPIFSI' ~ L HOIJDAY 'IREATSI "
~ "A Festive Southern A ~ • .. California Tradition"
}J,p. . -Drama-Logue
CHRISTMAS J 1$1'CAROL I
by Charles Dickens
adapted by jerry Patch
D ecaprure the spirit of
ftan old-fashioned
Ouisttna5 with ~'s
beloved annual Slaging of
this timeless Dickens
da.5.5ic.
December 1 -24
"Another tradition
-with a Spanish accent -
a joyous event indeed"
-Dally Pl/()t
* by Octavio Solis
music by Marcos Lo~
A)'OUng girl's )oumey or dlllcovery, renewal and
ttt1nlon will fill the hea11.1 ol every family widl the
glory ()( ChristmL'I. *
...................... • December 8. 24
LO'W·PIDD Pltf.vltlt'S DeaM8fJI 6. 7
........ _...._._._. ~~ Wllt.IMllttl'7.HMK\~
·~ ..... ~~flliml(MllftJM .......... nMIT ..........
Newport 8eachlCosta Mesa Daily Piloc
. ----SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
A LIITLE BIT OF EVERYTHING ..
, From postcards to glass figures to
.dollar-dance money, Costa Mesa
resident collects it all
By Nancy Cheever, Daily Pilot
You could call Pamela Brody
something of a pack rat. But
glass. I guess rm more of an
accumulator than anything."
Among the impressive array of
more than 1QO of the tiny sculp-
~~~~st,-~~~ es~ ...,-. • ·~Y ... a ec usw .. Mesa women's
condot She has
everything
tucked neatly
away in their
respective nooks
and crannies.
"Most ~ople keep
stuff cujd just throw
i t m a .'drawer then
with horses, a
lobster from
Cape Cod, a
complete ship
with masts, a
Cinderella slip-
per and a plane
from Kennedy
Space Center.
Brody has
saved memen-
tos, games, Bar-
bie dolls, maga-
zines, postcards,
buttons, ticket
stubs and coins
all her life. She
saves every-
thi.rig, from her
nametag at
Carl's Jr. when
she was work-
ing her way
later they go
through and clean
them out and throw Brody has
also saved every
postcard she
received since
she was a small
girl. In the
1960s,her
grandmother
and grandfather
everytJiing away. I
keep everytlij.ng, it
becomes
sentimental... "
-PAMELA BRODY
• took a trip cross-
country in a car
and they sent through college to labels from
tomato soup cans.
She even saved the needle her
cat swallowed, which the doctor
had to push through the pet's
throat, thread and all.
Brody also has a ticket stub
from Disneyland in 1979, when
they charged $5.50 to get in, not
counting the E-ticket rides.
She even kept all the dollars
from her dollar dance at her wed-
ding.
But she does have some pas-
sions. Her most complete collec-
tion is of miniature hand-blown
glass figurines.
The bubbly thirtySomething
got her first piece when she was
11, and has gathered them ever
since. People constantly give her
the delicate figurines, which is
OK by her.
"It's an easy one for people
who are buying me something,"
she said. uThey know I collect
~tAt)' 0'1V·s g
9UY a ALL utlED FUANrTVAE, TOY8. ACQ[.....a, l!TC.
Jl!584 N::z:' mhd. (a o.I Ms) ........... eo.. ..... (714) •31-7383
her ~ postcard from every state.
"We got one almost every
day," she said.
Some of the more unusual
cards are a black-and-white one
of a lake in New Jersey, and two
embroidered postcards sent from
Spain.
"There are pictures of places
that don't even exist now," said
Brody, pointing to a postcard of
Waikiki back in the 1960s, when
only a few hotels dotted the
beach.
"If someone sent me a post-
card tomorrow, I'd stick it in back
and look back in 10 years and
remember it."
She said she likes to save her
trinkets so she can look back and
have fond memories.
uWhat's fun is that time will go
by and you rediscover the stuff all
over again," she said. "I'm the
keeper of family history."
:. . :. . .. : · ...
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Celebrating the Yuletide Spirit.... ~
With a wonderful col1cction of home & garden
items ... many done exclusively for
Swec'Pea by local artisans. Stop byl
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7 I 4·645·9140
Brody is also quite a crafts per-
son. She has entered her crafts in
the Orange Cowity and Los
Angeles County fairs since 1982
and won a ribbon every year.
She won many awards for
quilling, a 13th-century. tech-
nique in which cardboard is
curled into intricate designs and
made into flower baskets and
other ornamental items.
"My husband said, 'You
picked that because nobody else
does it,'" she joked.
Brody sums up her collectibles
this way:
"Most people keep stuff and
just throw it in a drawer then lat-
er they go through and clean
them out and throw everything
away. I keep everything; it
becomes sentimental."
• oasESSIONS featUres local collectors
of anything from Depression glcm to
paper dips. If you would like to be fea-
tured In Obsessions, please call Anastacia
Freeberg at 574-4258.
The Phen-Fen Diet
The ;mswer Is \'CS' llO\\'t.'VCr the treat·
mcm of obesllv or an ovt:rn-e1ght concff.
non .ilso requires ~ppropriacc lifcs1~1e
changes and an lllthvlduahwl, ph\'s1oan·
supcMscd. comprehensive approach
indud1ng diet, l>eh.1vioc' mochficorioo and
excrcl5C For evcnonc, ii is nor jum s1m·
ply a matter of pushing 1hemsdvcs away
from the uiblc' The Ile\\' d1tt pills. "'hen
properly administered h)• a plwsician who
Is knowlcdgeablc in 1hc1r use. can be a
helpful ad1uoct for \\'CtAht reduction ;rnd
wclgh1 numtcnancc.
Call my oflkc me an appounmcn1 and
\\'C an determine: I( \'OU nn: °' arc noc
11 good andicbrc for drug 1hctapy for
obesrry °'au °"-ern'Cfght cooditioo
We :ilso olJcr altc~tl\'C progr.11'1\S
A~ Medical Group 1441 A'f'OC9do Ave. Suite 702"' Newport Beach, C.A 92660
(714) 720-9266
(\'/-.~~ 't.o)
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Rabbitt Insurance Agency
Since 1957
AUIU • HOMEOWNERS• BWE CROSS
~ & ~ S r)_,,
~om~-•4f'M(f'> r ,
631-7740
4-41 Old Ncwpon BMl. • Newpon Beach ~ "--Hoopi..0
-
.. ··
Pam Brody ha ''
more than 100 ' -
glass sculptures br I
her colledion. 1
which she started
when she was t t -
years old.
MARC MARTIN I DAllV PILOT ~
INSTANT CHRISTMAS CASH FOR
USED SPORTS GEAR
',
FIRST CITY In SP.ACE
" : . ~ ·.· ;. '
BIG .. .' ., .. ·. .
NEWPORT ~1 ..• ··~ •• , •JI· ~o
f\ 12 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1996 -... -----,=-----.. . ••!!!!! Aili
S<ll '\I> Bl l'L
gains
emotel
and hotel bu$in.ess NEWPORT HARBOR • _ Grant Wiese saw a need to beef
~~~~~ i¥!. ( . . ' . ·~~~ <·:'~~==~ . mQiiliill an n'tldt went into a full-time fund-raising
1 • mode, and so far has netted more ol Costa Mesa 1B than SJoo,ooo for the school that he
t . n t ch. 1.1 hopes bis children will one day rytll~ 0 ange . attend.
People go to hotels
to have sex, and
~they go for three or
four hours. That's
the motel blisiness.
. It's been happen-
. · . ing throughout
history ...
-DON WARD
Owner of the Newport
Bay Inn
THOSE IN NEED
Once again the kind souls who
run the Someone Cares Soup
Kitchen, Share Our Selves and other
charities pitched in to make Thanks-
giving a good day for those less for-
tunate. For those folks who are
always willing to give, we are thank-
ful.
SHOPPERS
For those who find South Coast
Plaza too intimidating or too crowd-
ed, there may be a bit of relief in the
Metro Pointe Shopping Center.
CHILDREN
LE TTER OF I THE :WEEK
Police officer Rob Adams says
children need toys for Christmas, so
he's devoting bis time to the annual
Toys for Tots program, which encour-
ages people to donate toys to chil·
dren who otherwise wouldn't have a
happy holiday.
ZERO TOLERANCE
After much debate over its fair-
ness, Newport-Mesa school board
members upheld their zero tolerance
policy, which mandates tough sanc-
tions for students who use alcohol,
drugs or possess a weapon.
i
I "It's unfair to
·close the book
: on homeless
I
'.using libraries
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Grant Wiese ls raising money to Improve Newport Harbor High School, the future cam-
pus of his two daughters.
losses
MAYORAL MUSICAL CHAIRS
Norma Glover's proposal to start rotating
the Newport Beach mayor's position among
City Councilmembers failed the first time
around. But Glover, who wants to be second
in command this time around, didn't take no
for an answer. And she tried once again to
replace the current system, in which the
council elects its leader. And once again she
failed.
MOTELS
City officials are determined to rid Costa
Mesa of the blighted motels and inns that in
the past have attracted prostitutes and drug
dealers. So they have launched an all-out
effort to keep a watchful eye on several
local innkeepers.
community commentary
-
correspondence
Increased
·speed revs
I was amazed by the article I
read in the Daily Pilot regard-
ing the change in speed lim-
its on certain streets.
I live on Port Seaboume Way,
one of those streets designated
for the increase. Port Seabowne
is a steep-hilled residential street
with an elementary school on it.
Just last month, I presented a
petition to the city of Newport
Beach. More than 50 families
signed a statement that Port
Seaboume Way was unsafe, du.e
to speeding vehicles. A traffic/
division representative and a
sergeant from the Newport
Beach Police Department met
with 20 homeowners at an asso-
ciation meeting. We were told
that our concerns were warrant-
ed. They told us that speed
humps were not feasible, but
that many alternatives were
available to slow traffic.
Then I read today that their
solution is to raise the speed lim-
it. My family and my neighbors
a.re dismayed. The city is not lis-
tening to us. Right now, our fears
are for our children who already
cannot play on their street. Now,
with an increase in speed limits,
our neignborhood will become
more dangerous. Please recon-
sider and lower the speed limits.
KEVIN KELl.DMAN
Newport Beach
-I n Costa Mesa it seems
some would not only
keep the homeless from
our street corners, parks, and
shopping centers, but now
even object to their using
our libraries. {Daily Pilot,
Nov. 13) It's also ironic that
this story was published the
week of Veterans Day, for
one of the homeless men
described and quoted in the
article served in Vietnam.
It's not midnight at the OASIS
It is estimated 25% to
30% of the homeles.s are vet·
erans, yet not only are they
' not honored, but services for
' them in Orange County are
1 hard to come by. There are
less than 30 detox beds for
indigent alcoholics in all of
' Orange County, and during
the bankruptcy, the program
for the mentally ill homeless
was eliminated -with the
1· funds diverted -and is now
I
only partially restored. And
· the two national guard
armories that have been I' housing the homeless most
nights during the winter will
be closed after this year.
In Costa Mesa and New-
:port Beach, the city trees are
, nicely trimmed, and the r streets periodically repaved
~ and swept clean weekly. We
f can look out from our com-
fortable houses and most of
the time not be bothered by
-the homeless. And if we
: complain enough, perhaps
•we won't even have to see
• • • • .. .. . .
them at the libraries.
FRANK AND JEAN
FORBATH
Costa Mesa
• Unfavorable light cast
on senior program.
T here is a danger that Mayor
John Hedges' recent col-
umn regarding city-funded
support for the OASIS Senior
Center will give the general pub-
lic a very misleading impression
of the services provided by the
OASIS Senior Center and their
actual cost to the city.
Of the more than 100 programs
offered by the center, Newport
resident seniors pay the full-cost
fee for every single one that can
reasonably and logically be so
charged.
In this regard, non-residents
pay the full cost of any program
they use. The majority of the
OASIS cost to the city is for
salaries and benefits for the three
professional staff members, and
one maintenance man.
Other city costs are mainly for
absolutely minimal facility and
van maintenance; for water and
telephone service; for totally inap-
propriate pro rata charges for
overhead support from other city
functions; and a reserve for van
replacement.
Not mentioned by the mayor in
bis article is the money and vol·
unteer time contributed to the
center by the "Friends of OASIS,"
th& volunteer support group for
the center. A recent analysis
showed that total volunteer time
was the equivalent of 18 full-time
employees.
Incidentally, the study referred
to by the mayor implied a city·
cost of more than $5,000 for pro-
viding home-bound, seniors
which is totally erroneous. This
service is provided 100% by vol-
unteers and is not govemment-
managed as implied by the may-
or.
Additionally, donations
received last year from the 5,000
member "Friends of Oasis" sup-
port group paid for nearly
$100,000 of necessary capital
improvements to the center build-
ings, which should have been
funded by the city.
Lacking city funding support,
the Friends have assumed fund-
ing responsibility during the next
fiscal year for further essential
building improvements.
1bis fiscal year the volunteer
Friends organization also paid
more than $50,000 in salaries and
benefits for the drivers of the
Care-A-Van and shuttle vans, a
fact apparently not recognized by
the study referred to by the may-
or, which cited city-cost of
S70,000, or S7.00 per ride, for van
services.
1bis year the Friends also con-
tributed $32,000 toward the
majority cost of a new van, yet the
city has not credited the city
OASIS budget for the city cost of
the item I)1entioned above called
van replacement.
According to the last census,
seniol'$ represent more than 20%
of Newport's population. The
majority of whom, in their active
years, contributed financially and
otherwise in various ways of mak-
ing Newport the great city it is
today.
It's safe to say that if put to a
vote that taxpayers would over-
whelmingly support the city fund-
ing of all costs of building
improvements, full facility mainte-
nance, and for every service pro-
vided by the center for which it is
infeasible to charge a fee.
In this regard the new City
Council should, when reviewing
the OASIS fiscal year 1996/1997
budget, authorize an additional
person for the OASIS staff to sup-
plement its current overworked
and underpaid-members.
PHll. SANSONE
Corona del Mar
Former Newport councilman and
mayor currently a director of the
Friends of OASIS
I am astounded and disgusted
with the ignorance shown by
Mayor Hedges in his recent col-
wnn.
He obviously knows nothing
about the needs of our senior citi·
zens. Had he ever asked, we
would have been glad to enlight-
en him as to the problems we
encounter at OASIS and how we
make evety effort to help the
elderly. Many are without families
or anyone who cares for them. I
have letters on file from families
who live far away from here and
write thank you letters for our
being so kind to their loved ones.
I am confident that the majority
of the City Council does not share
his distorted views. If they do,
many of us volunteers who have
devoted thousands of hours to
OASIS, would resign immediate-
ly. We are here to help enrich the
lives of seniors and if that is no
longer possible, we shall go else-
where to volunteer.
NORMA GU.CHRIST
Newport Beach
President, Friends of OASIS, Inc.
As a member of OASIS, a
senior citizen organization in
Newport Beach, I read with dis-
may Mayor John W. Hedges'
recent column titled "Local gov-
ernment does too much."
Although he names OASIS
only once, the organization is cast
in unfavorable light by the gener-
al tenor of his statements.
OASIS (acronym for Older
Adults Social Infonnation and
Services) is a nonprofit charitable
organization established under
the laws of the state of California,
and is subject, as in the case of
similar organizations, to examina-
tion by the stale attorney general.
It may be useful, in the context
of Mayor Hedges' statements, to
first point out what OASIS is not.
lt is not a welfare organization,
as that term is generally under-
stood. It does not assume
"(r)responsibility for children and
elderly adults.• And it does not
purport to do the work of "private
social service organizations and
churches."
On the other hand, OASIS
does provide an attractive center
to which its members, now nwn-
bering considerably more than s.ooo. can come for arts and crafts
and fellowship. In special drcum·
stances, the organization does
come to the aid of the elderly who
are in urgent need of help, but
this is only one area of a much
larger field where OASIS meets
its statutory •charitable purpose"
requirement.
While it is true that OASIS
receives partial support from
Newport Beach, it can hardly be
said that the organization is the
object of •massive government
intervention." .
OASIS members are engaged
in many ongoing fund-raising
programs, in addition to sums
received in the form of member-
ship dues and gifts, to help defray
a considerable portion of expens-
es not covered by city funds.
In the final a.nalysisr OASIS
ought to be viewed as an inclis·
pensable institution in Newport
Beach, of which its mayor, as well
as its residents, can be justifiably
proud.
DAVID NAHM
Newport Bea.ch
r-----------------------------------------------------------------------~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------,
• I
•' I
H Got a beef with vegetarian bus driver's settlement I
'. p. ::Was Mom right all along?
: She always told us kids
~; to •Eat your vegetables.
~' They're good for you.• r • We didn't believe her, and ~ : here we are 30 years later. If t : only we had listened.
~.. The Orange County nans-t portation Authority paid $50,000
I ·last week to Bruce Anderson, the
vegetarian bus driver fired for
: insubordination for refusing to
; give hamburger coupons to bus
•riJen.
: Glori.a AD.red, righteous attor-
1ney for the oppre sed, said "Tb.ls
•sends a message to other
empJoyen that they can't dia-
Crtminate."
Also, in passing judgment, the .u.s. Equal Employment Oppor-
., tunlty Comml.ulon made the
:sanc11monioUJ statemat that
Andenart WU unlaWfully df.I..
l;rlmJnated against becauae ot
•strongly beld moraJ and eth-
ical beliefs,• and because his
views were held •with the
strength of traditional religious
beliefs .•
This is the same agency
which, unW Congress prohibited
the practice, was sanctioning
employers who allowed Bibles
on employee desks.
The more attentive among
you will recall the predictions I
made last June 27:
"What is felllMkable about all
this is that we accept as valid
such ranting and deviancy as
some twisted exerdle of the llb·
ert1e.s we enjoy in this country. If
the driver's 'belief system' IMlly
exists on a par with that of rell·
gion, he wUl surely Joie bis cue.
•Anyone who bu ta.ken the
bus lately knows that bt.d rlden
lllOlt ol all could Ute a free ham-
burger. They are not exactly the
most atth.Mmt of 0\11 IOdety.
W•'v. not bMrd mm them.
john
hedges
• And you. tbe taxpayer? Get
reedy to shell out. J predict that
ID <i'cs. to MW legal f .. , tbe
OCTA WD1 bUf Off tbe driver a.ad
h.la J.awys. ,.,., bOtb know it .•
1t &em't .a ... imow1-
~ at tbe WOrtdng9 at public 8IJlndM or corporate boudi to
realize this kind of settlement is
the rule rather than the excep-
tion. It's made all the easier in a
case like this because of bow far
removed the OCfA board is
from the money.
The OCTA boa.rd is not
directly responsible to anyone. It
is composed of elected dty and
county offidals from throughout
the county. No one is d1rectly
elected to OCf A.
The Mlient point, though, ls
the WustraUon of how 5uffocat-
tng federal power in the name of
equallty and dJvemty plunges
our~ ever downward into
o cea of deviancy. Whet
only a few years ego would ~ve
been dismilMd from the courta
u a frivolous acUoo ts now treat·
Od mon leriOulty then munler
bec=aUM ol ~federal
~and tbe IUpeNlgell•
d• cn9tiild IO tmp"mlnt that
~
There is little indignation on
the part of the public. Uke so
many sheep led to slaughter, (or
to be politically correct. like so
many mushrooms to the cutting
boa.rd), we meekly acquiesce to
the aberrant and abswd while
the federal bureauaacy governs
by fiat.
By any measure, the OCTA
has the resources to defend itself
and, ultimately, to settle. As a
public agency, 1t hat nearly limit·
less rMOUtteS.
But what of haplea small
bustneu owners who slmil4rly
tind theiDselves in the ugbb of
nattoriAL ehfol'C81Dent egendeil
It'• not unmmmon for them to be
put neatly out ot bullriea when
regulred to defend e.n fil-deftned. even inadver1ent. VtolaUon of
IOID9 oblQri regWatioo.
~for1rls~ dedlnd, •J ~ 'IODMltbtng
that's Important not only for
myself, but to all vegetarians and
other employees at the OCfA. •
Apparently that's why he's look-
ing for a bus-driving job in Santa
Cruz.
Allred, who said she took a
penonaJ interest in the cue, is
pleased with the settlement. and
noted that "it's an excellent
result.• She got $20.000 of Mr.
Anderson'• SS0,000.
So I have a suggestion: Join
hands with me as we kneel at
the Saae<l Shrine of the Bleed·
ing HH111 of Romaine. We will
pJay (though not in IC.bool and
not in public) that the grMt
tumJp god wtll lhowW UI wt.th
her b) I r:r: of boullttful 'Ng•
etablel tbaJP 1Awy9r,1.
Ai:ad nut ttiDtf ru lniil to
my mother .
l~-...-p-----------------~------------------------------------~----------------------------·----~-------~~---~---·----------------------------·------------~-------------·-
/1 • • ' ' -.
•
'N.-pon~ Mesa Daily Pilot
SHOPPING
CONTINUED FROM A 1
boasts the largest outdoor
Christmas tree at 110 feet with
15,000 omctments and lights and
a miniature train ride.
At Russos Pet Supermarket in
Fashion Island, a 9-~eek-old
FOOTBALL
Dalmatian puppy like the ono in
th~ popular Disney movie •101
D8.lmatians .. is hard for children
to resist. But 5-year-old Garet
Whipple's grandmother, Rose
Anne Hall of La Habra,
explainett to him it wasn't such a
good idea.
"Kids are all going to want
Dalmatians,• she said.
Sales of apparel and jewelry
The Home & Garden Co.
Vintage Patio Furniture
Unique Garden Accessories
Monday-Saturday
I l am-Spm
!across from Ralphs)
369 E. 17th Street, Suite 16 •Costa Mesa, CA 926Z7
(714) 645-4635 • Fax (714) 645-6390
..
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996 AU
.~)..,
I I I 1 I
I
I I I
I
I
L----------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
spaces tum over seven times a mas shopping over with," Ter-
day during peak traffic times, jenian said of her first post-
customers still vie for the· closest Thanksgiving shopping trip.
through the holiday season.
Both South Coast Plaza and
Fashion Island offer customers
shuttle service and valet park-
ing.
spaces. South Coast Plaza is expect-
Nazila Terjenian of Irvine was ing about 55,000 shoppers a day
cruising through the parking lot · behind shoppers leaving South ==!!!11!==:!!!5!!5!::=:=:=:!!!:5:=!!:!!!!!::!=:=:==::5!':5!e::===::===:==::::!!!!!l!!i!!::==:!!!l!!m!5!!i!i
Coast Plaza. It took her about
two minutes to land a spot near
Robinson's May department
store.
"I just :want to get the Christ-
~~~~
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volunteer diredory CONTRACT
• ntE VOUINTEIR DlllCTOllY l'l'l\S ~~ In the Dally Pilot. If you'd
flke Tnformatlon on getting~ org..
tk>n listed, call 642-4321, Ext. 331 :•
HtSTORJCAL soanv
The soc.lety collects Information, pho-
tos and artilacts relating to the histOty
of Costa Meso and the harbor area.
~unteers are needed for derlc.al tasks,
CQO'lputer Input and help in the library. ~ information, call Charles Beecher.
111-5918.
volunteer tutors to teach nglish speak-
ing adults to read and write, or English
, as a 7nd language. All tutor train-
·TRANSFER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
•ferred since the district opened its
borders on Sept. 10 don't need to
make any pronuses about moving
to the area.
"We're accepting students for
almost any reason,• said Tom
Jacobson, director of secondary
education.
The most common reasons for
students transferring lo the dis-
t.ric:9.nclude parents working in
, lhe '"Mea and child-care programs,
Jacobson said.
--The district is not marketing
itself t<>' draw more students, but
Jacobson said his office regularly
receives inquiries about transfers.
He expects the number of trans·
fers to lump at the beginning of
the spring semester.
Ing is provided and there Is no foreign
language requirement. 'O'alnlng claues
are on Tuesday evenings and Satu~
morning tot six weeks. Jltfter trai,,lng
tutors usually wolt( with 1·3 students
one evening per week at a local dwfCh
for a 90 minute period. Call Barbara at
832-1464 or Margery at 548-3384 for
more information.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER
The multipurpose senior services faclli·
ty at the corner of 19th Street and
Pomona Avenue seeks volunteers for a
variety of tasks. For more iJ;lformatlon,
The district abandoned its
closed-door policy because of
changes in district funding.
Instead of collecting property tax-
es as it had for the past eight
years, the district now receives
money from the 'state on a per-
student basis.
Because the district receives
$3,503 for each student, it is to the
district'!> advantage to accept out-
side students to fill its under-
capacity schools.
The biggest percentage of stu-
dents transferring into the district
live within the Santa Ana Unified
District.
A total of 135 students attend·
ing Newport4Mesa schools live
outside the district. Jacobson said
96 of those students attended
Newport-Mesa schools before the
district switched to open enroll-
ment. All had special circum-
stances or were attending New-
port-Mesa schools before the dis·
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their experience working with
slate agencies and school dis-
tncts, the engineers' school
design experience, cost or past
proj~cts and the quality of thek
presentations.
•The top four are substantial
firms with a gyeat deal of school
experience,• Bernd said.
Perkins & wtll, one of the
firms interviewed by board
members Tuesday, works only
.~~~~a. ~-~ .ann
prin p '
•
lrict tightened its transfer policy.
There are 223 students living
within the Newport-Mesa district
attending schools in other dis-
tricts. lrvine Unified and Hunting-
ton Beach school districts take the
largest percentages of Newport·
Mesa students.
Although it is much easier for
parents and students to choose
their schools, the transfer pro-
grams do tu1ve limits. Newport-
Mesa's elem~ntary schools are
near capacity so the district may
deny out-of-district primary stu-
dents, Jacobson said.
Transfer requests may include
the school of choice. put adminis-
trators can assign students to a
different school, Jacobson said.
ln addition, school districts can
stop students living with.in their
boundaries from transferring after
3% of the student population has
enrolled out of district, he said.
"There are some real sj>ecial,
exciting thir!gs about the pro-
ject,• Christopher said. •1t•s a
beautiful site in a nice communi·
ty.•
Christopher said the Newport
Coast campus should take
advantage of its oceantnew. The
district wants the school to
include energy conservation
NOONAN
CONTINUED FROM A 1
at least 4,000 trees in his time.
Harry Jr. said selling Christmas
trees is important to his retired
father.
"l think it gives him something
to look forward to," he said.
Doug goes a step farther.
"It keeps him alive," Doug
said, noting his father loves ¥the
companionship of his customers."
"Il you take something away
from somebody at that age, that's
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measu1es, Cliii.stopher said. ,.----.. ---·--------.. -----·.,
The project is worth about : ~
$400,000 to the chosen archlt~ • : ]
ture firm, satd Carolyn Stocker, : j
executive director or bu.sinesit : l
services and auxiliary opera-1
tions. 1
The district purchased the
10.87-acre Newport ~oast par·
eel {Of $7 .1 ..million in June.
Griding for the buildings will
begin in March or April, Stocker
said.
Board members will inter-
view the other six top-10 archi·
tects at 7 p.m. on Dec. 11 at the
Harper Conummity Center, 425
. ~ n1D™WU~
to seek suggestions for the name
of the new school cpld applica·
tions to sit on the naming com·
mittee. Requests from individu·
als who want to sit on the com·
mittee should be postmarked by
Dec. 1.
Requests should be sent to:
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, 1601 16th St., Newport
Beach 92663.
like saying they're worthless,• he
said. "You want to keep it where
they can keep doing something."
Noonan lived in Costa Mesa
until five years ago, when he
moved to Henderson, Nevada.
He returns to Costa Mesa from
October through Christmas to sell
the trees. Asked how he spends
the rest of the year, he said, "(I) sit·
around with this stupid knee and
don't do much."
Here, he said, "You meet so
many nice people. So many, many
nice people."
He adds his wife died of cancer
suddenly three years ago, and he
I
I I I I
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I I I I 1 I I L------------------------J
makes special-order caps to pass
the time.
"When you've been married
49 years and 10 months, and you
lose her . .. well, you've got to
have something to do," he said.
Put a few words to
work for you . Call the
Daily Pilot.
CLASSIFIEDS 642-5678
FEATURI NG:
Abercrombie & Fitch
Diedrich
Esprit
Express
Gap
Jessica McCli ntock
Judy's ·.
Structure
San Dlejto (405) FfV!Y. at JJl 3 Bear St.,
"Costa Mesa GA 92626 (714) itlS-2160 (800) 782-8888
r
. • 0 ..,_
. .
High school l>oys soccer begi,ns Monday
and Estancia has its best-ever outlook
ouo
~~us ... •
-NEWPORT HARIJOR FOUl1J.AlL COAQI JEFF BRINKLEY
,• Bu~ there was no qu~stion, the
hill was much steeper~ ~e .
around against talented Foothill
Knights with aid of an 8-0 edge
in tu.movers department; Servite
awaits in semifinals next Friday.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Newport Har-
bor High football coach Jeff Brinkley said
Friday night's 27-18 CIF Southern Sec-
tion Division V quarterfinal victory over
visiting Foothill had a much different
tempo than what the Sailors are used. to
of late.
"Guys were moving quicker and hit-
ting harder," said Brinkley, whose fourth-
•
seeded team (11-1) advanced to Friday
night's semifinal clash against top-seed-
ed Servile (11-1), which the Tars bested,
20-15, in the 1994 Division V title game.
Servite, which will host the semifinal,
likely at Cal State Fullerton, handled Sea
View League at-large representative El
Toro, 47-34 Friday to avenge a 27-17 loss
in last year's section title game.
"Foothill is a very good football team.
. . ' I I \ ' \ I ( I ( ) I Ii \ I I ' I I \ I : I '
game winning streak, coughed up eigh t
turnovers (four interceptions and four
fumbles), while the Sailors had none.
"Turnovers helped us," admitted
Brinkley, whose squad converted no
points on the first four turnovers, before
finally cashing in a fumble on the third
play of the second half with a four-play,
38-yard touchdown drive to break a 6-6
halftime deadlock and take the lead for
good.
sive play, senior quarterback fyler_ Leng.
found junior Matt Hall alone behind the'
secondary for a 66-yard scoring toss~
plays later to put the Sailors in a 6-0 hole.
The ensuing conversion attem(i, like
all seven on the night (five kicks, a rul}
and a pass) failed, allowing the hosts to.
sort out a few things offensively ageinst
an imposing five-man Foothill defensive
front. ,.
They have some specimens over there.
Those are some real guys.•
Brett Baker intercepted two passes, as
did Greg Werbnan, while Pete Hogan
(two), Baker and Erik Runfola recovered
fumbles to eliminate the Century League
champions from the playoffs and propel
Harbor to its third semifinal in five years.
ter "tempo" in practice all week.
But seruor tailback Ray Ob.rel. who
romped past Steve Brazas' school smgJ.e.
season rushing record with 157 yards on
29 carnes (giving hun 1,810 for the year),
sparked thlngs with a 29-yard punt
return to the Krughts' 39 midway through
the second quarter. The Sailors used some real big plays of
their own, most coming on defense, to
help get past the Knights (9-3) for the
fifth time in the last five years.
"Our kids stepped up and they
deserve this win," continued Brinkley,
who said last week's lackluster 29-6 first-
round victory over Anaheim led to a bet-
Despite four first-half turnovers, how-
ever, that tempo appeared to be suiting
the Knights just fine.
"That punt return was huge,• said
Brinkley, who Wdtched quarterback Josi-
Foothill, which came in on an eight-
After Runfola forced a fumble recov-
ered by Hogan on the ~sitors' first off en-• SEE SAIL RS 83
A fter Newport Harbor's Danny Pulldo (23) punishes
Foothill High runner Lawrence Mariner with a
Jarring hit that forced the fumble, Sailors' defensive
back Greg Wertman unloads with the finJ.shlng touch in
,Friday night's CIF Division V Quarterttnal football
·collision on the Sailors' campus. At left. Sallon
quarterback Josiah Fredrlksen (8) sends and aerial
downfleld behind the blocking of Phil Baltazar (54) as he
fends off Foothill's Seth Davenport (99), while Jordan
Raybourn (63) slips through from the left to apply the
pressure. Newport pulled away from a 6-6 halfUme
• stalemate to advance to next Friday's sem.Wnals game
against Servite with a 27-18 victory. The No. 1-seeded
Frian wl1l be the host school, the site most likely Servtte's
regular season home site of Cal State Fullerton. Servtte
advanced with a 47-34 victory over El Toro ln another
quarterttnal Friday nlghl
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
• %
Ohrel's 29 carries, 157 ·:~ -I • yards send him into
another plateau in the -
N~wport Harbor books :-
• His offensive line gives him the edge as he ;
snaps Brazas' single-season rushing record.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
&
NEWPORT BEACH -Uke snowflakes and h~d prints,po
two holes are identical in football's rushing game. ~
But some openings look suspiciously similar when New-
port Harbor High's offensive line is creating gaps for senior
tailback Ray Ohrel. who became the greatest single-sea.son
rusher in ~ch.ool history Pdd.ay night, gaining 134 of bis 157
yards in the second half.
•You're not going to get the same
block all the time. because that's just not
going to happen. but (Ohrel) ca.n cut back
and make something happen," said New-
port Harbor senior left tackle Ian Dorish. a
first-team All-Sea View League selection
by the Daily Pilot this season.
Ohrel. behind a durable line, kept the
ball in Newport Harbor's bands in the sec-
ond half, as the host Sailois (11-1) defeat-
ed Footbill. 27-18, in the CIF Southern
Section Division V quarterfinals.
•Our little guys are a little green on
defense, so a good back is going to break
some tackles against us, and (Ohrel} did," said Foothill Coach
Tom Meiss, whose program lost to Newport Harbor for ~e
fifth time in six meetings, including two in the playoffs.
Ohrel carried 29 times for his 157 yards and one touch-•
down. giving him 1,810 rushing yards in 1996, breaking St(We . ·
Brazas' 1983 single-season standard of 1, 738.
Ohrel, a first-team all-league choice, rushed for over 100
yards for the ninth time this season.
•I've been trying to go for (the record) the last three games,
but didn't get it," Ob.rel said. •rve got this game ball waittrig
for me, though.•
Ohrel didn't bust out until a Sailors' drive began in Ole
thini quarter with 4:.$5 left and the hosts leading, lS.12.
Behind Dorish, left guard Phil Baltazar, center Phil Wartber,
right guard Dan Otting, right tackle Eddie Clarke and tiglat
end Peter Hogan, Ohrel broke through Footl\ill's defensi9e
line for 18 yards to the Knight 39-yard line, the first play in-e
seven-play series that finished with a Newport Harbor toudl:
down.
Ohrel bad carries ol 12 and 13 yards in the series to break
Brazas' school record.
r---------------------------------------------------------,
I \ I t l : ' ... I
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f.'ii~t SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
, Ex-Mustang
;;(lrabuco. HiJJs)
~Allen may keep ,. .
:M~!~~eins µ~~l .~
1 • New Costa Mesa boys basketball coach loves to
':run, but vows to do what is neceflary to compete.
' '
•Bstancta's No. 10 la.be!
in Orange County based
on eight returning starters.
Woodbridge anlt Newport Har-
bor.
Clear-cut favorit~ to re~t as
league clwnpion, Estancia tea-
tures one of the top plak4:i 1n
Orange County (junior on
Garcia), a returning first-team ~;;;:;::::;:;;::::;;::~.:-.::-:·~::-;:1i;;:~. ~~Ya'ymef~!ftml .. '
. tat\on and an attitude, Estancia scorer from last year (junior
High's boys soccer team could Miguel zelaya) and a pair of sec-
. dominate its competition from ond-team All-PCL performers
years, but the coaches decided to
~~.~e.llonor to~ stlP@f, ~'h _ :. ..; S01Shom6re forward '" t1iID:i
1 Romos, junior forward Jose Quin-
tana and senior defender Arturo
Vivar are also returning starters.
Senior Jose Rangel and junior -:•~·~-~ .,,. ~~~~ ,··~·~--.;..-JM::.m
~y Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot I' I~ I \ I I \\
beginning to ep.d this season. (seniors Fernando Lara antt
The Eagl~. ranked No. 10 in Armando Qumon4111). • •
the Orange County preseason The Eagles also enter this sea-
poll, get an early test when they son with a reputation of physical,
host pere~al power El Toro, hard-nosed play. Some opponents
ranked No. 2 in the county, on have. even accused them of dirty
Monday at 3:15 p .m. in the season play.
Junior German Diaz, who did-
n't play soccer the last two years
because of a football injury, will
probably start at defender. •Diaz
is a very strong player who grew ,
up ·in the local Mexican leagues
with Ramon, Armando, Fernando
and Arturo," Crenshaw said. , , COSTA MESA -Having
played and coached in the
Thabuco Hills High program,
1 which calls its teams the
Rynnin' Mustangs, first-year
GOsta Mesa High boys bas-
»tball head man Erich
·~en has been involved in
his share of 100-point perfor-
. mances. ..,.
Inheriting a team with
only two returners and one
starter Crom last· year's 4-21 .
-season, however, the 25-year-old Allen realizes a run-and-gun
emphasis with these Mustangs would be akin to introducing
Mesa's football team to the fun and shoot.
"I love the three-pointer, the run and gun and the 'let's score
100' mentality," explained Allen, named in May to replace Jason
Ferguson, who ctied of cancer Jan. 21 at age 24. "But realistical-
ly, that may not be the best strategy for us to win. I'd love to play
a running game, but we'll have to see how we match up against
teams. We'll do different things against different teams."
opener. . "Soccer's always been a physi-
Estancia returns 10 players, cal game,~ said Estancia Coach
including eight starters, from an Steve Crenshaw, addressing his
aggressive team that finished 12_ team's aggressive play. "AYSO
5-2 overall, 8-l-l in the Pacific obviously is a very sterile form of
Coei$t League. soccer. It was never intended to
The Pc;L champion Eagles, be a dirty game. It's a gentleman's
however, lost to Canyon Springs game, but there are physical
in the first round of the CIF South-aspects. There's nothing illegal about a good, hard shoulder to em Section Division m Playoffs. bump a guy off the ball, or bump
Estancia, which was moved you off the ball. '
down to Division JV this season "I've discouraged (dirty play)
because of its student enrollment, from the day I got there (last
also finished undefeated in the year). I'm against anything ques-
Fountain Valley Summer League, tionable toward the laws of soc-
going 8-0-2 while defeating Sea cer. Nobody on our team goes out
View League powers such as there and attacks somebody. It's
been lcind of a Inisconception
about Estancia soccer.•
Crenshaw, who believes his
squad has a good chance to win a
CIP Division N title, also has a
transfer from Costa .Mesa (junior
Silvio Alderete) and a freshman
(Cesar Terrones) who will start in
the midfield.
Garcia, a sweeper, was a first-
team All·CIF Division ID selection
last year, one of the primary rea-
sons why Estancia did not give up
a single goal in PCL action last
year.
According to Crenshaw, Gar-
cia "'as voted PCL Player of the
Year~ freshman and sophomore
Zelaya, who led Estancia with
a dozen goals last season, is wait-
ing for paper work from El Sal-
vador to become eligible.
"He's going to go right at you
and around you," Crenshaw said
of Zelaya. "He'll beat you in a lot
of different ways; whatever he
has ,to ~o to get the goal. That's
one of the things that makes him
such a strong scorer. "
"He comes hard at you. He's
very intimidating, a very physical
player."
Crenshaw believes there are
times when his players are "prO-
voked" into becoming more phys-
ical. Regardless, the rest of the
PCL should watch out for the
Eagles this season.
Mesa's offensive output, in fact, figures to resemble Princeton
more than Kentucky, much like last season, when Mesa's four
wins came over opponents who averaged 45
points in those games and didn't once top the
50-point plateau.
'Rolls~ Boyce does it again Eagles'Kirby, . . CdM'sDow, Mesa forfeited three additional victories
last year for using an ineligible player, adding
a footnote to a tumultuous campaign that saw
the critically ill Ferguson coach several games
from a wheelchair, before succumbing to his
year-long illness midway through the Pacific
Coast League campaign.
Allen, who played collegiately at Orange
Coast and Division D Western State College in
Leahy Colorado, before guiding Thabuco's sopho-
' . more team the last two seasons, said his team
,will need to scrap and 'tplay bigger than we are," to compete.
· "We're feeling pretty confident and we like our situation, but
we have a lot of newcomers," said Allen, who will count on
6-foot-4 senior Bryan Leahy, entering his third varsity campaign,
to lead the team. "His experience is going to be needed."
Leahy averaged 12.2 points per game as a junior, including a
39-point season high. A back injury ended Leahy's football plans
~ fall, but Allen reports no problems thus far in practice.
. Leahy will be utilized inside, once again, though 6-6 junior
newcomer Todd Hylton, a recruit from the water polo team, could
provide a more imposing presence in the paint.
_ "It's been a while since Hylton has played orga.nizeg basket-
ball, but he's a bright kid and he's picking things up· quickly,· ~en said. "He should contribute quickly, but I'm not sure that
~be in a starting role just yet."
~;.Jon Payne, a 6-2 junior, is the other returner. He figures to
~. though Allen would not pin down a lineup, hoping to keep
-, practice competition heated. Payne averaged 3. 1 points off
~jfte bench as a sophomore.
,.. Matt <:;haisson, who scored six points in four varsity. appear-
!mlces. will run things at point guard, where he toiled for the
~o~ varsity most of his junior season. "He's a quick, crafty guy
:l~o is a very good passer," Allen said of the 6-0 Chaisson.
•• ""Sophomore Rovinn Sou, who can also play the point, will like-
ly start at off guard, where his ability to drive and shoot with
1 -tliree-point range 'l{ill be better featured.
! Senior Tuan Do and Brian Weir will also contribute, according
: to Allen. who gets his head coaching baptism in Monday's Mis-
: sion Viejo Tournament opener against Tustin, followed by a pool-
' play contest with Santa Ana Valley.
: Scott Dickerson. Eric Nelson, Travis Rice, Luis Sandoval and
t Juan Carlos Galdamez round out the roster.
i Allen cites making the playoffs -where the Mustangs have
not ventured since 1991-92, when all teams qualified -as a real-
. l:Stic goal.
: . "But I'm staying away from those crystal ball things,• Allen
; s.aid. "This is my first season, so (head coaching) is new to me. I
: want us to . give everything we have, learn together, develop
, these guys into basketball players, and build a program that is
'_Successful year in and year out." . . -
... ~
• Corona del Mar High
product is named the
Mountain Pacific Sports
Association Player of the
Year after leading the
Huskies to top seed in
the NCAA Tournament.
J ason Boyce, who has been
doing it all for the University
of Washington men's soccer
team jhis season, did it again this
past Saturday.
The fqnner Corona del Mar
High standout ended the longest
game in Huskies' history by
scoring on a sud.Aen-death chip
shot with 4:31 left in the fourth
overtime period. His eighth goal
of the season lifted No. 1 seed
Washipgton to a 2-1 victory over
Santa Clara in the opening round
of the 32-team NCAA tourney.
"Jason provided a special
moment,• said Washington
Coach Dean Wurzberger. "It was
all the more dramatic with the
sudden death.•
Earlier this season, Boyce set
the school career mark for
assists, passing John Klein's
mark of 29 (1981-84). And Boyce
is only a junior.
This week Boyce was named
Player of the Year in the
Mountain Pacific Sports
Association's Mountain Division.
The Huskies are 15-2-1.
0
Sophomore tailback Charles
Chatman picked up 85 yards on
22 carries in Golden West
College's finale to become the
first Rustler to top the 1,000-yard
faster than her (previous best).• today.
,.. -~It";')-, ... .. .
I t • • I 't ~ ( :
~. • .... JI ~
jim
waiters
mark in a season since Blaise
Bryant in 1988. ..
Chatman, who graduated
from Costa Mesa High, finished
with 1,010 yards on the season to
earn All-Mission Conference
Central Division first-team
offensive honors.
Orange Coast College
sophomores Chet Walker and
Jeremy Cohen were
second-team picks on offense.
Walker played in only five games
this season, due to injuries, but
rushed for more than 100 yards
in three straight games. He
finished with 445 yards,
averaging 6.7 a carry (second
best ip the conference). He also
scored six touchdowns behind
the blocking of Cohen.
Comerba.ck Craig Nosse was
tabbed as a second.:.team choice
despite playing on the worst
defensive unit in the conference.
Cl
Kathryn Jlice was named to
the secon4-team All-Ivy League
women's volleyball team this
i\llCFALL In the first mile, McFall started picking
off runners in front of her gradually, then
began getting close to Garritson in the
second mile while trekking up a small hill.
McFall caught, then passed Garritson to
shock coaches and fans along the course.
Newport Harbor qualified as a team last
year.
~CONTINUED FROM 81 ...
"I heard some encouraging words after
that, and I had another 200 meters to go to
the tunnel, so I started sprinting down
lliere," she said. "But we still had another
300 meters to go around the track."
Garritson's kick in the end prevailed,
but McFall made a lasting impression. "I
was trying to pass her, but I just couldn't
keep it up," McFall said.
McPall's time was 15th overall in
combined marks with all
divisions.
"I think Alicia was
within two or three
seoondl of about five or six
other girls in the other
divisions, i1 you CX11Dpare times,• l\vett M.id. •'Jbe
key thiDg in her ~ ii
that she did eVerything
ahe had to do. Sbe started
back tn about 10th place,
moved up m the race and
sfMt had a chanCie to win It.
You couldn't ult f« much
more than that.•
McPaD, whO 1Ut
autumn worked her way
into Newport H&rbor'I No.
1 l)Olltkm u a fi'MhmAn
following ltintted 1t•mmer
training, will make bef
teCODd •tate"JllMt
appearance in tWO yean
In track and field last spring, McFall
qualified for the Masters Meet in the 3,200
meters, after placing second in the C1F
Division Il Finals.
"She's got talent, p~us a competitive
nature,# lWeit said. "We just need more
from her in the summer \raining program.
because she hasn't had the type of summer
most really good runners have. So for her
junior year next year, we want to improve
on getting her an earlier start . .,
McFall, still, wasted no time making an
impact this season, winning the
sophomore-division race at Dana Hills this
year, another fut track.
She followed that ,up
with an outstending race
at the Mt. SAC
Invitational tut month
(18:"5), aossing the tape
ln sixth place ~ a
Otv1lion m race that
included some of the
belt runnen in the ttate,
many of Whom McPall ii
upected to face again
·today.
Then McPlll ftm.bed
tbUd m w vnty l'8Cl8
at the= COUnty Cham 11)9 (18:36)
.. Imm legtoNJ Pa.
bifcri ~at tba
SM Vlllw ~ PlnU
and oamtng hick for a
=~enceat
~.
fl
week as she and her teammates
at Brown University earned the
school's first-ever bid into the
NCCA Division I
Championships.
Rice, an outside hitter, earned
all-tournament honors at the
Harvard Invitational as the Bears
(20-13) posted their first winning
season in five years and their
first 20-win season since 1984. •
NCAA pairings will be
announced on Sunday.
0
For the second straight year,
former Newport Harbor High
standout Tina Bowman was
named to the first-team
All-Orange Empire Conference
women's volleyball team.
Bowman, who is a sophomore at
Golden West, was among the
conference leaders in hitting
percentage at .343.
OCC's Amber Ambrose and
Kati French were both named to
the second-team while Nicole
McCuistion was an honorable
mention pick.
Cl
The Golden State AthleUc
Conference released its
Academic All-Conference teams
this week and tour Southern
California College athletes were
on the list.
The selections included: junior
Caren Anderson, women's cross
country, .3.82 GPA in liberal
studies; senior Brad Bentley,
irien's soccer, 3.80'CPA in
marketing; senior Karajean
Stephenson, women's volleyball,
3.97 GPA in math: and junior
Chrls'tina Fox, 3.93 GPA in
sociology.
Mesa's Allen
debut Monday
. The high school llOOPS
hoop season tips
off Monday for a trio of NewpQrt-
Mesa District squads, including a
head-to-head girls meeting
between Estancia and Corona
del Mar. The Eagles and Sea
Kings, who open the coaching
eras of Paul Kirby and Zellie
Dow, respectively, a.re set to
square off in a nonleague game
at 1 p.m. at Corona del Mar High.
In boys action, Costa Mesa,
which also features a first-year
coach, Erich Allen, begins pool
play in the Mission Viejo Tourna-
ment with a 5 p.m . contest
against Tustin at Mission Viejo
High.
SCHEDULE
SAJumAy ..........
College men -Southern callfomla
College at Utah State, 7 p.m.
College women -George Fox at
5outhtiTi California College, 7 p.m.
Community college men -College of
the Canyons at Orange Coast, 7 p.m.
Community college women -Victor
Valley at Orange Coast, 5 p.m.
• 0..0DW'ltry
High school boys and girls • State OF
Fl™tls at WoodWard Pa~ ft9Sn0. Costa
Mesa and Corona del Mar boys (Div. IV),
8:30 a.m.; Coron• det Mar glrlf.(Dlv. M,
9:30 a.m.; Newport Harbor girts (Alida
Mc:f:all) (Div. Ill), 1 :30 p.m.
• Soa:ler
Community college women -Southem
Callfomla Regional Finals at cal State
Fullerton (Orange Coast vs. Cypress), 7
p.m.
Newport Be.ch/Cotta Mesa Daily Pilo<
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM 81
"He's good to us," Oorish said
of Ohrel. "He doesn't act like he's
above us. He's one ot us."
In Newport Harbor's next
series, Obrel carried four out of
five times, gaining 3~ rards on
OD.& ,Uy to the -p~~~-~-~Niit••n line, setting up his own 1-yar.,d
scoring run that gave the Tars a
27-12 lead.
"We needed to keep the ball in
our hands, get first gowns and l'!iilii~~~~~~~~!'1on
of the ball, and we did that. In the
first hall, I think we came out a lit-
tle intimidated . Our minds
weren't set on the game. But in
the second half, we came out and
did our job; we played with heart
and the line blocked great."
Ohrel had a 20-yard run in
Newport Harbor's last drive, a
draw play on third-and-18 that
gave the offense a first down with
under four minutes left. ·
"Our best defense is a good
offense," Meiss said, "and we
didn't do that tonight. After a
while, you're defense is out there
too long.
"I said the game would come
down to twnovers (Foothill had
eight) and injuries. We thought
the quarterback. (Josiah Fredrik-
sen) might be hurt, but he turned
out OK. But turnovers did hurt
us."
For Newport Harbor, it was a
chance to see what it can do
under pressure.
"We had played some teams
and we were easily getting our
points, so we really hadn't found
our level," Dorish said. "Tonight,
I think we found our level. We
weren't really hitting people in
the first half, and in the second
hall we really had to stick on our
blocks. That was the difference.
"We pretty much (expect
Ohrel to gain 100 yards). We
opened some good holes for him
tonight and we were getting a
good push off the ball, that was
the key. When we can move peo-
ple back, that's key."
When Dorish & Co. are moving
opposing defensive fronts back,
that's when Obrel checks into his
office. Blue-collar ~le, of course,
with bonuses to everyone.
~v.\~ . . .. •.:;: . -~-~": ~ . . . -. ~. ~/;, .. •. ,. ~ .... .-::..1" ... ' . ~ . . , f .,,
•
••1-4•" . . • ----......6 ·-
Newport Harbor 27. Foothlll 18
5c.of'9 by QM.rt.rs
Foothill 6 0 6 6 • 18
Newport Harbor 0 6 15 6 -27
F1rst QuMtlr
FH -Hall 66 pass from Lang (kick
failed), 4:52.
5ec:ond Qu.rter
NH -La Bass 17 pass from Fredriksen
(kick failed), 5:36.
lhlrd Qu.rter
NH -Fredriksen 1 run (run failed),
9:32.
NH -Johnson 25 FG, 7:51 .
FH • Haynes 98 kickoff return (kick
falled), 7:37.
NH -La Bass 14 pass from Fredriksen
(kick blocked), 2:22.
Fourth Qu.rter
NH · Ohrel 1 run (kick failed), 10:46.
FH -Lang 1 run (pass failed), 5:27.
Attendance: 4, 700 (estimated).
INDMDUAL RUSHING
FH -Haynes, 14-79; Ruelas. 4-27;
Mariner, 1-7; Newman, 2-6; Lang, 8-5.
, ... , ...
NH -Ohrel, 29-157; Fredriksen, 9-28;
Urban, 1-13; Hakes, 2-11; Baker; 1-0.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
FH ·Lang, 11-21-4, 189.
NH -Fredriksen, 8-22-0, 112; Gorman,
1-2-0, 11.
INDMDUAl RECEMNG
FH . Hall, 4-103; Haynes, 4-54;
Mariner, 3-32.
NH -La Bass, 5-58; Pulido, 3-51;
Ohrel, 1-14.
GAME STATISTICS
FH NH
First downs 14 15
Rushes-yardage 24-159 38-187
Passing yardage 189 123
Passing 11-21-4 9-24-0
Net return yardage• min-10 52
Sacks-yardage 5 -35 4-34
Net yardage 303 328
Punts 4-33 9-43.2
Fumbles-fumbles lost 6-4 1-0
Flags·net yardage 2-20 · 9-71
lime of possession 22:02 25:58
"Punt returns, interceptions, fumble
returns
Index
II ...... ,.
r1.J ..... ,.
Cl ,._. ...
SERVICE DIRECTORY
-For All Your Home and Business Needs -
By Fax
(" 14 ) 11:i I -<>:19-4
ft•h-,...,.. Int ho"' \uur lldHlf" .i111I
1J•otK 1111111hrr 1ou11I ,,. II, ,.u \ou
..... l ""''. , ..... ····~· )
ByPbooe
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By MaMn Person:
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\t •• ,,i., I n•t..• '°' .ilL. 111 X .Wam-i OOp111
\lot11Lo t n1l.t\
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1996
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Newport Harbor's Joe
Urban (above) bowls
over Foothill de fender
Franklin Haynes for
some key yardage in
the first h alf; a t left,
Harbor's Erich Schader
moves in to nail Knights
quarterback Tyler Lang
as he looks for a
receiver, Jason Deere
(66) Ls in the
foreground.
u(Ohrel) is
good to us,
He doesn't act
like he~ above
us. He~ one
of US ••• II
-ALL-LEAGUE
OFFENSIVE
TACKLE
IAN DORISH
••
SAILORS
CONTINUED FROM~B1
ab Predriksen, two-way starter
Joe Urban and Obrel all stnJggle
to the sideline after big ootUaom.
Senior star Danny Pulido was
also slow to get up after getting
the wQ(ll of some a>nto.ct. in.tlle second"lfaJt. " "" .. --
Ohrel carried twice for 9 yards
after the punt return, before
Urban, jumping off ta.ckle 00 a
dive play, rumbled for 13 forihe
first down. ~~»-~~~
gimpy right ankle sustained 1'111
the first of his four sacks, hit Br4d
La Bass on a 17-yard out on the
next snap to tie the score with
5:36 left before intennission. -
Fredriksen did the bonprs
himself after Runfola fell on a
Foothill bobble the third play
after intermis-
sion, as the
Daily Pi.lot's
Sea View
Offensive Play-
er of the Year
plunged in
from 1 yard out
on a sneak two
plays after con-
necting with
Pulido on a 30-
yard crossing Baker
pattern to the
Foothill 10.
lbtee plays later, defensive
end Reed Johns, who was in on
four sacks, held up Lang, while
Hogan stripped the ball, recov-
ered it and returned it 12 yards to
the Knights' 15.
Sophomore Eddie Johnson
booted a 25-yard field goal four
plays later to up the lead to 15-6,
giving the partisan Newport
crowd of 4,700 cause for celebrii-
tion.
It didn't last, however, as
Franklin Haynes bolted 98 yards
with the ensuing kickoff to make
it 15-12.
Obrel ran five times for _. 7
yards to set up a 14-yard scoring
connection from Fredriksen to La
Bass with 2:22 left in the third and
Ohrel. who had 134 rushing
yards after halftime, capped
Newport's 54-yard, five-play dri·
ve on its next possession with a 1-
yard leap to paydirt.
Lang, who threw for 189 yards,
rolled into the end zone with 5:27
left in the game to keep things
interesting, but a Wertman inter-
ception ended the Knights' final
possession.
Polley
Rall'• and dP11dli1u•, Uf'f' •11Ujl'1·1 to d111nlo{r w11h11111 11otkt'. Thl'
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-------Deadlines ------~
Monda) ............ Friday 5:00pm Thur.da,. \\t><lnt>:-da) 5:00pm
Tue:.da) ......... ~onda) 5:00pm Frida) ......... Thur-da) 5:00pm
Wedne~da} .... Tui>sday 5:00pm Sa1urda' ........... Frida) ;):O<)pm
~ ... ---.
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$16,988 '95 CADILLAC ELDORADO s39 988 White pearl, low mi., V-8, nortlrstar alloys! (607494)
$20 988 '96 CADILLAC ELDORADO •37988 O~y 148 miles! Used at recent senior golf event. (619533)
s22 988 '96 CADILLAC CONCOURS · •37988 Only 4W miles! Polo green, tan lthr., C.D. (284794)
S24,988 '96 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS s41,988 Only 173 mi., used at recent senior golf'event (838 147)
All vehicles subject to prior sa le & credit approval plus tax, lie., doc. & smog fees . Pictures for illustrative purposes only. Expires Sunday after publication.
. -
Conveniently
......-Located South of ...... --
the 405 Freeway ·
•
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1996
HOUSES/ SOUTH COAST ROOMS 270& IUSIN!SS omCE
-CONDOS . METIO 2186 POa UNT 2769 EMPLOYMENT C.M . 15th & Orange
-FOR RENT Dela.ut• 2bcl/2b• Mal• pref'd. N/S, Ma OM.. :zoo.q 1t • .i~ HOU...o Encl gar w/d hkp Share bath, lndry, New car~ & paint' --------
01>1to11Tu1un dwnstr u~it, no pets: llghl kit prlv. S290/ btlght, great 1oc.iion' EMPLOYMENT
""Allu,....:Asatl llfllllMa ~vall 12/7. $776. •hare utll. + dep. '225.00 723·1883 5530 ~ .. ...,_, ... ,...GENERAL 2102 974-0747.290-84'23. Ken,842·1770 11••••••••1~==~~~~~~ lfll '* ....... ti 1111' '* CM prl~te rm, tr~ __...... ........... --.. ~leto -able qUl Avll•'• l!I Ranch Ito
---Great F•mH~ Home! ' "' ' ' BUSl1'.9ESS a. "...,.. ._,......, • AP'"nTM female pref. $425. n Q NOWHIRING1
h•llatte• "flseti.lattl• Spacious family home ~ ENTS 850·1939 FINANCE •Cooks 1tCuhler• for rent In Fullerton FOR a~T¥ •Bartenders Mid .. llU, '9ler. 1111tltft, with 3BR, 2BA. R.. ~n& E'Sl de CM Clean/--------•Server• SELL
.... ~1M1111a1.-a • modeled b•th • & quiet. N/amk, n/pelt. N.B. & COM locatlona .-...ilftllll.••....... kitchen • all n ew S350, utll Included. --------Apply at: 2744 E. PCH your home ...,...,_.......,_.,111111· kitchen appllancH. 548·5058 BUSINESS or 2800 Newport Blvd , __ th_r_ou .... g;...h_c_la_s_s_lfi_ed __
........ ..,......... Tiie noor In entry, din-BAI.BOA N .B . Oceanfront & OPPORTUNITY ~:',."':~:! ~~re~ ~!t,~h:~r~~o: PENJNSUIA 2607 ~~~~rn.st~h:~ ~':~ · 2904 . SI'"* wtikll la I wllh large yard and Ulll paid. N/S pref. I-1 ........... ~r k M.~_l.25 ~F. O~T 2bd/2ba Kitchenette In room. AN AMAZING OPP.
t , 11' ' "WltW'-tM ., ~p'f'R~....,. ..... t;\~~gllQ,,, r\tf1.c.\1,.:_D19g~~·--'1! .~~~"" .......... M....Ultd Ill 1111 w II y • 2· "''PD . <>UJ, ctoeec . pbrt· ,.,.,, ~. ~ ~~'11 ,....,,_, .. .....,... (714)870·9093 avall,nopets.$1 600/ Ce11Sam 875-4808 Ff'ae In.t o all ........ mo yrly. 873-e840 1·800·321·7890 ..-100 l$dtf lllllL llcem-U • NB bright/airy, clean Visa/MC approved _.._..., ........ UllHU CORONA PP•r 3bd/2b• quiet home, kit, w/d. -------'-.;._ __
l1IM111111·•-424·191. DEL MAR 1 h•• lo beach. Yrly. $450.lncl utll, 8 blks Internet Co Ille'?' 'Ir• DC••• 2122 $1495/mo. 2·car pkng. to baachl 548·1903 I _ _..HUD II cn:)500. Call Jim 87~089 Area coo rdin ator s
,... T COM .., 1---------needed. Opening ISP •rr•0 •• • 1~ew Upet•lre Duplex O/H VACATION allH. 80CMHM>·SITI! carpet, paint. 2bd/2be. Sat 12 to 3 3BR 2BA Sell now . Agent Lg Patio, F/P. Yr Ls RENTALS 2722 •VENDING ROUTE•
844-9070 ext.125 913 1/2 E. B•lboa liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •All cuh•20 existing
$1750. (213) 877·2326 K•u•I Oc••nfront ·~:~~l1~~~·
Condo. Pool, spa, ten. --------Golf, shop, rests close V I! H DI N 0 : New. 2169 COSTA MESA 2624 by. Lo·ratesl 240·3197 exciting, and most ol
•............... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1·--,,,,....,...-----all profl t ab l el •P•lm Spring•• 1-800-820-4353
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
NEWPORT
BEACH
GENERAL 1002
Real l!atate
For Sale? ••••• Weekend
Open Houaea?
***** The Dally Pilot Real
Estate Tab which Is
published each Sat·
urday Is,. an effective
and inexpensive way
to showcase that
special property.
Call our Classified
Department Todayll
842·5678
Thought you needed
money lo buy a hm?
Try this. SO down. SO
closing costs. AgVBkr
543·"90
4bd/2·•Atb• llv/dln/fam B'alde 1bd cottage PGA WEST. 2bd/2ba
rm• fplca, galed pool, style w/gar w/d hkups. condo on fairway . .--------
on Skylark. $2600. Clean & quiet. $695. Pool, Jae, Golf, Ten. PalSON WANTED
Atao opt lon/AITD C•ll 842·7819 Reas. rates! 644-2694. lbown"opercemail poulbte. 848-8592 5 H candy shop In Costa ~ m . omey Back Bayi--------area. t.ow lnllestment.
BAYFRONT Twnhm. studio Incl stove, ref, RENTALS TO For lnfonnatlOn al Mrs.
Lg :Zbq, 2.5 ba, fur· uUI, cable. $500/mo. ~ Gourmet nlahod, wht tile floors, 548·7578. Ref req. SHARE 2724 ~ny. oaaas, ~ndy
counters & car pet. '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $2500/mo. Share rentl---------1• 972 991-8239 poaslble (Submit) Call NEWPORT Backb•v Twnh•• Pvt ._ ______ IZllll
A 760 bd & be w/balcony gt. ·5000 ext.123 BEACH 2669 rotroat, lomate prof'd. --~~ ..... ,....,..~ ... ....,
B•vrldge Condo 2BR, $500/mo 515·9694 TAXES TOO HIGH?
2BA, Ip, gar, pool, * 1 BR $825 * B•yfront Townhome Unwio~Jds for ConstMlonll
spa, gated, $1450/mo 28R 2BA $725/Up Lg 2bd/2.5ba. FP, ls~for1
(818)980·7878 A fl & I I I ti h .Become1....tof erg dshwashor ovey pa o, w t -· Cl•••V Bayfront Incl. 60x30 pool. No carpel, Ille firs & thls n.tionlleffort l!CM
t own ho m • 2 b d/ pets. No fees. No lse. counters. Fully furn for 'f'JI ~.Fret Wo.
2.5ba, fully furn, Incl * 714-545-4855 * Incl maid service & on lllCIO cassette.
maid bl-weekly. No utllltles. No pets/ 71 747-487 pets/smkg. FP, wht 1 bd New carpet, paint. am k rs. $ 8 7 5 /mo, s--..:.::.:.;;.:.;::~~~....J
Ille firs, counters & frldg•-;4~~j~05 $665. 042·7327, Agent
carpet. $3000/mo. CDM 2br 2ba, female ............... . 842·7327, Agent Qre•t Upper Studio pref furn/unfurn
H•rbor View Hom•• Pvt ant, Ip, pool, ten. n/smk/pelS. $550. 41 l ANNOUNCEMENTS
4bd, 2·•hba, beaut Steps to bch. N/smk. Polnsoula 675-0902 ............. _
remodeled. $3000/mo. $800/mo. 642·3162 CdM 3BR HOME Lrg
The Los Aqeles Thna Oraace County Edition
has an exciting opportunity foe a PART-TIME
OtrrSIDE SAL.ES REPR.ESDITATIVE.
You will contact potential subscribers at their
homes to sell subscriptions to the Times Orange
County. The individual must be able to work
Monday-Friday, 4pm·9pm. Current openings
arc in Fullerton and Garden Grove.
THE SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATE WILL HAVE:
• Sales or customer service related experience
•Good oral communication skills
•A professional appearance and demeanor
• Cold calling experience is a plus
The Los Angeles Times offers a com"perilive
compensa1ion and benefils package. Qualified
candida1es may apply in person, by mail. by
fax, or by e-mail ar:
THE Los ANGELES TIMES
Consumer Marketing South East Sales Genter
5555 E. Inland Empire Blvd.
Ontario, CA 91764
FAX (909} 481• 8277
E-Mail jennifer.mccreight@latimes.com
For more information call 1-800-568-2387
Equal ()pportaMy f.mplo)a'
BULTll•
3000 PITIOSSS
Agent 80().892·7158 LIDO BAYFRONT br, share garage, w/d. _L_O_S_T_& ____ _
COSTA SA 2 Lido l•I• B•yfront 3BA, 2BA, 2 Car pkng $500 T utll. Blks from ilijW Mj f;W lil lililililllJ ME 10 4 2Br/2B• new on aandl $2800 (818) 282·7733 beach. 873-4879 FOUND 2925 · W•
Lndry. f/p. S3SOO/mo. ( 818) 282-4071 iiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
P·T Secret•rv
for Insurance Otltce
In COM. Flex hours.
723-4000
P T 8 e o r • t • r y/
•T•leoom •••••• F(T, high earning po-
lentlal. Call Jodi,
(619) 862·9933
Bookkeep•r 16·20 --------
flex. hrs/long term. EMPLOYMENT
Computer up nee, SERVICES 5533
M a c he IP f u I. Fax iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii resume 073-8797
Receptlonl•t PC,
Data entry. Apply at:
Amerlcorp 6000 W.
PCH, N.B. 574.:'7701.
Busy phones, lou of
mail, faxe1. vi$ilon. etc.
M~ be e111husiutic,
have prior phone
experience and
computer skill• -Word
!. EllccJ S plus.
Fa-ICZ..m ...... ,en.
·-·-Pl•••• be aware thal
the 111t1ng1 1n this cat-
egory may require you
to caJI a 900 number
In which there Is a
charge per mlnule.
Top Dollar Paid!
From 1 800·1960.
1 pc to entire eslale.
Paintings, china,
glsware, furn. e1c.
40Yr NB RH 673-6223
Sell your hom•
through classlfled.
842-5878
EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT
5530 5530
For 8•~• By Own., 1yr IHH. 587·3305 Oc••nfrnt w. Newport FOUND Diamond ring. We Can Help Solve Your
two R2 • side by side Nwpt Hgt• Lrg 2br 3bd/2ba. Yrly, fp, gar. COMMERCIAL Uttle Balboa Island. Indoor Air Quallty Froblems
must sell, take over 2ba, 2-f/p, lsg back $1975mo. Property 875-2031 REDUCE #1 HWTH THREAT l'ro uctitln A11ist•nt ~h;52 9.,.~~t1\~0~ (!fn~~~ yard, pet okl S1650.1"":"'.H::-o-u':"!s_e ___,,...0_4.,..2_·_3_8_s_o REAL ESTATE FOUND Female kitten ./Smoke
ramlly) 3br 2·V•ba, Avail 1/1 84e-9083 •studio 5 door• tol•............... approx 3mos. old. ./oust Mites For National 1V Production
detached garage. beach, pvt patio, prkg Grey w/orange 1pots. ./ Mold-Miidew Company in Newport Beach. Fun
MERCHANDISE
MISC. 6015
El•ctrlc Golf C•r1
Clean, good condltiorr
fenced yd. $204,525. NEUn)ORT on private road. $600.1_B_U_S_JN_E_S_S_O_F_F_J_C_T:!_ 1 'h8 on Roxbury Ad. ~ ~~~~~~:raes job; loads of client contact; good
• 3 6 6 H am 111 on "~ T utlls 548-4224/Eves -'" 721 ·8882 ./ Pet Odors (dupl ex> 2br 1 ba. COAST 2170 FOR RENT 2769 ___,LA""""""R""'a""'E""R""E=w--AR-D,,,__ computer skills and snappy repartee SELL
detalched gar, fenced iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ................. l:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Lost wallet, pix, appt essential requirements.
yd, f/p. 2br l ·'Aba Q d C I' 1' bk @ V /B I t I attatched gar, fenced •t• omm 2bd/2ba MISCELIANEOUS CANNERY VILLAGE ons r • 0 • 5 .. 0 your used vehicle Y d s 2 o 2 8 1 o condo, all applncs. 2· Office/art sludlo S.A. 8/30 557·5227 FAX Resume to: -.v-0302 through classified
Ren.ts/year. Sl6,000: car gar. pool/spa, pvt RENTALS s2701mo. LOST 'Paco' 4 y/o or Phone: 645-9139 642 5678 ~:f:~~d '::.~~t~~~n~~ loc $1750. 497·2494 •••••••• ___ 8_7_3_·3_7_3_3__ :,~~· c:ltu~ra~~=~~~ liiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii~:::;:;;;;;;;;;;;&~iiii~~-~~~-
needed Orly. b -Orange/16th. 642· I
WEVE GOT SUCH
GREAT DEA' S •••
THEV HAD TO OPEN
A NEW TOLL ROAD
FOR YOU TO GET
HERE EVEN EASIERI
DO NOT DISTURb COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 8584, 707·9416pg 848-4878 -L-.0 ..... S_T_c_a_t_, -,-'T..;..ro.;;;.p_h_y_,"
NEWPORT
BEACH 1069
One Fine F•mlllf Hm
1 615 Pon Charle• Pl
4bd/3ba, FP, format
dining , plus bre1kfast
room & family room
o ft kitchen. Approx
2900 sq.It. ol gracious
llvlng avail lmmed.
5649,000
Shown by appt.
842·7 3 271 Agent
BUILDING &
CONTRACT 1150
D••ler Canc •ll•·
tlon•lll Steel build·
Inga • Garages-Shops:
20x22: 2Sx34; 30x30.
Savings up to 50%.
Farm Building• •
40x46, 45x60, 51x60.
Why pay more. buy
lactory direct. 1 ·800
CLASSIFll!D
ti's the solution you're
searching tor • whelh·
er you're •••king •
home, an apar1men1,
a new occupation or
even • 11ray pet.
----------.
QUIET a: SBRBNJJ
Palm ~esa Apartments
So near & yet so &r ..
That's the &icling you get
when you live at Palm
Mesa amid the lush
grccntty of scduded
wood,, & stately palms.
• srucr-. 1 a 2 Bedroonw • JR& $S9S TO $.600
• lBR $625 TO $&iO
• 2BR $725 TO~
&No Ptts
• Vertbl Blinds
& c.eiinc Fans
& NEW Carpet. Pllnt & Tile
•AMllRoom
• Hated Pool ! Jacuzzi • Pltiot' Bala>niel A Glr.-Anillble
Oft'xx Hours: '9:00 am · s::,b!:·F
and 10:00 am • •:OO pm
1561 Mesa Dr.· Santa Am Heights, CA
(714) "6-9860
whVblk, striped tall @
HarbOrvlew Hiiis 11/23
Reward. 640-7782
Loet male miniature
Pl nc her, ears/tall
clipped, blk/tan.
576-7130pgr/851·9391
LOST male pl1bull mix
wearing brown collar,
no tags. Vlclnlty of
Nwprt Coast RdNlsta
Ridge 11/21. 497-7462
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair Jobs
around the house?
Let the
ClaHlfled
Service
Directory
help you find
rell:lble help •
642·5678
Overstocked with
stutt?
A call to
C1assltled
wlll help
642·5878
"I .ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY PILOT'
-Robert Matthews,
General Saks Manager,
South Coast T~ota
1South Coast VOivo
"In the automotive busi ness it's very important to
reach everyone in the community. Advertising in
the Daily Pilot has helped me to do just that.
"South Coast Toyota/Volvo is and will continue to
be the number #I Toyota outlet in volume and
sales through its continued commitment
advertising in the Daily Pilot. ..
"Thanb Dallv Pilot for making my job & South
Coast Toyota succcssfu1 today ...
(At least that's what we like to think!)
<??Bravado by Oldsmobile.
•
V6, console w/ tr:ip computer, digital compass, outside temp, storage &
universal garage door opener, 2 auxilary power oudets, CD, tow pkg.
Plus tax, lk. and doc. fees. 3 to choose at this price. VIN #'s 70449'1. 702611, 703735.
VS "Northstar" englne, auto, security system, sport Interior with
leather seadng, driver side memory seat, power lumbar support.
~ Plus tax. lie. and• ffts. 2 to d\OOle at this pritt. VIN #'s 62QCXM, 617834.
~ CAOILI.AC. CREATING A HIOHE R STANDARD•
A
lt
:1 •• :~
• I • • I • • I
·I If •• •• .,
·~ •• ••
'
•
8 No, In
II~
expecftlon 10 Ties
11 Gawtt 12 Type of houM? 13 Actor Parltef
21 Star In Cygnu1
23 Earty-:
morning
25~1 27 Fragment
28 Temporaty
halt
C(\>LLECTIBLES PETS a TICllTS 6075
6017 ANIMALS 6049 l~ii!iii!ijiiiiiii~iiiiiiii
iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiil iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii USC·Notre Dame (2)
Reff al Copenh•e•n IGUANA looklng for t 1 ck et.• I NOV ·3 O Chrtetmae Plate• more attention. "I'm 50 yd-hne, $200.each
The perfect gift for a happy. healthy and 818-447·1492
apeclal home. Com· weigh 11bl" lncludlng 1 _______ _
p1eta Ht t90tl-1996. 50 ga1 g1u1 tank w/ TV ELECTRONICS
St. Matthew'• Church wooden ltand. light sn' REO 60801
M&-1152 and heat rock. $75.
540-5988 --------
2 Spe•kera Mfaafon --------Model 70. 75W. Sacrl-WANTED
TO BUY 6019 SPORnNG nce $90. 760-6576
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilGOODS 6065 1~~~~~~
... .rther 1IHper 101a & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii&iiii CHRISTMAS e halr, dinning aet, (tell SNOWBOARDS
) frfand l) 721·1735 Holiday Clouout BOtrRQUES 6092
•-rop Dollar• Paid Sala. New/U19d. M/F liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
1 All make1 models &
ountrack1, etc. or Records. Jazz. sizes $50 to $279 MEET
Call Mike 545.7505. Call 875·8048 •
dbreeoua young male
~bla ahephd. Beautl· Jul temperment. s 975-1 1 18
Buy It. Sell It. Find It.
ClaHlfled. someone special
through classified
.
" .. • • • ~ STARTING
•
. ..
• • .. ,. .. ANEW
~~BUSINESS?? ,_~ •••••••••••••
AUTOllC>mll• f1JIOID--illlll-ml1 _________ .._
-~-------------------------911•••••••• •ei T......,. LX ltht •a3 atans• ••Pd •ee ...... TWM at, 9y OMRLES GCMllN am. eow 1'11. ab•, au 2-dr '*'=hbaek Aun• ac, pb, tllt, od. doy•. wWt OMAR SHARIF - -ll)eg, io.cMdl tHOO. good ~latertd for •m/fm •teteO, tans. IMW 8030 Peifect for ~&f\dmal '97. t700. 131·7149. South Co• Toyota
Md TANNAH HIRSCH I••·----944•4•• 799 • .9000 •n ·-.3.. • ••• ........ AC, PS, '99 Teroef Id. 90. pe, WDKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Chrome wtt•• Auto 97 Kllplr/aJqHl/T~ _.It, Stereo Can . pb am/fm atereo · · Huge dlaC/lnvntd ..,.. South Cout Toyota ' ' ..... Loaded. "'nut In DI--L ~ .... -?U•aoc>G caM, altoyt. • • Q, l ~ Both vulnerable, ai South
you hoid:
Oii Oil.I M ii
'Ibe biddin« hu ~ed:
NOR1'B IA8T 80tml
INT P .. I •
,. P8M ' What. action do you take?
Pcrtner opena the biddlnt with
three bea.rta. What do J'OU re.pood?
Q, I • Neither wlnerable, u
South you hold:
M Q .J oQlO oAKIU •K81
townl MIH lon V1efo ._. 4 _....... • South Coa.t Toyota
Land Aovw 3$M7SO (714) ..-.1at 70·1000
•i4 iW ••i OUJSllOllLI 9155 '93 Twoel p1, pb,
Local lo mil.age. 291<. BONDA 9085 atereo caaa, great Pampered oar. All tran1 . $9995 .
book• & re cord•. '83 Old• v-e Tan •'Id/ South Coast Toyota Mu•t Hel Mlealon •aa Ch,lo $9595. bl'Ol¥f\/lnt Pwr wndwa/ 722·2000
Viejo Land Rover South Cout Toyota 1t1. Must aall nQWlll •97 Land Cr&d/4-Run
The bidding bat proceeded: 38e-a7SO 7294000 11200 OBO. 429-181 t Huge dlic/lmmed dal
soure WEST NOR111 BAST , ••• D•L TA aa Direct Leatlna 1 0 P... 1 • P-BUICI 9035 ISUZU 9100 Rov•I Brougham 1714) e4e.121,, Q. I · Neither vulnerable, u f Fully loaded, V6, dark
South you hold: What do you bid now? , , ~ w~f~~:I---=::--------~ ~•_,.oAt71J ~1',!l'· . .,, :&th~.~~ ~~;& .,~ -., b k ~.000'"'"0 1r-;;n.°f.fmiiliiiiiiaiiifliiiiiilili
younofcl: .:;r-~'t"~" .-..--..,.-iome o wor ' 714 574-4287 '83 •nge Rover
Partn th biddi '•h · 11800/obo. LWB. Low mileage er opens e ng w1~ one 31<>-43 .. 5422
diamond. What do you respond? •K 10 ta <:?K & OQ a 1u .q" a CHEVROLET 9045 , 8 0 T r 0 0 P e r PORSCHE 9175 ~~~r•~ias':nat vf:J~
Q.3 • Both vulnerable, u South The biddina hu proceec!ed: ,70 CA.MARO VS Red ::~~. Co~1~2::=liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Land Rover 365-8750
you hold: NORTH l:ABr SOUTH WEST convrt. catm paint. •ae 944 Turbo '94 Defender 90 1 O Dbl ' New top, trans. Run1, South Coal! Toyota ' Vary low mllea. Too What action do you take? greatl s32915 oeo. JAGUAR 9105 S9995. 722·2000 many option• to 11111
Look for sntJWers on Monday.
SarfOYs only. 915().5058 130,995. Ml11lon Viejo Land Rover 385-87150 The bidding has proceeded:
80trl'H WB8T NOR111
IQ P... S•
IQ P... INT
' What action do you take?
Q. 4 • Both vulnerable, as South
you hold:
•741 OA4 OAK.J 8 54
Learn to be a beUer brtdae playerl Subacrlbe now t o t he
Goren Bridp Letter by caJJJ.na
(800) 788-1226 for information.
Or write to: Goren Bridae Let·
ter, P.O. Box 4410, Cblcap, Ill
60680.
•'93 S UBURBAN• *'88 Jaguar XJ8* SAAB
1/2 ton 4x4, fully One owner. Low miles iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii equipped. Orig owner. with records. $9250
9185
$23,9!50. 831-3118 841.0800
'97 iub/Tahoetrrka '81 9005 at, ac, pa. Hyge dlK/lmmad dal -,-'l:YY-,S----9-1-1-5
1 pb, tilt, sunroof, morel Direct Lt11lng ~"' South Coast Toyota (714) M&-1217' $9995. 722·2000
CHRYSLER 9050
'80 LellCUa l!S 280
A/C, Auto, PS, PW. SU'7Ynn 6cyl. ABS. All service ""'~ .9205
'95 Dlacoverv
Auto only 13k mllH. Balance of factory
warranty. Beaullfull
Mf11lon Viejo Land Rover 385-8750
'88 Range Rover
4.8. Pampered lo mile-
age luxury. Rojas me-
tallic. Own the flne1t1 Ml11lon Viejo
Land Rover 365-8750 record 1. 19600/obo. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
•'H Le8aron• · 881-4138 '88 Samarl 4·WD•--------CHRISTMAS BALBOA CORONA Conver tlbla . O ne _. _______ , 51pd w/tW br. AM/FM/ VOLRSWAGEN 9235
BOUnQUES 6092 ISLAND 6106 DEL MAR 6122 owner. 54.ooo mil••· LINCOLN 9120 cua. 70k m11. s2ees.1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SS,!500. 841 .09 00 7 59•8514 691 •3240pgr I• '71 VW VAN
A Xm•• Boutique to Sat/Sun 8am-4pm SAT 7•m·12 90 ,78 Contlnental $850/obo.
Remember! In the •Furniture, china, 807 V. Begonia FORD 75 Clanlc, iunrf, all TOYOTA 9210 434-0576. 434-0266. Garden Room. Follow crystal, area rugs.• •Moving Sale* '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii L h 2157 Mira ma r White 1leap aofa,1• accell. •at er. axe iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil--------g'!la~.7~1 :~~~: tablH, bookcases, '88 Thunderbird cond 11200. 650-2815 •ae 4 ·Runner Afr.
233 Costa Mesa St., _C_O_R_O_N_A_____ Iota of mlsc/bhsehld, ~~~m ~~s~~oPo~;; AM/FM/cus. Loaded I
Apt-C 831-4714 queen man w ox1pg. windows. Exe cond. MAZDA 9125 80k mla. $8900.
CLASSIFIED
DEL MAR 6122,________ Muat 1911 $1850. 759-a514 691"240pgr I•-----• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii COSTA MESA 6124 788·8198 GARAGE SALES •---.,..,,.8""'a"""T,...e -m-p-o--'88 Maada RX? GXL '87 MR2 Slvr 5-1pd,
New rebuilt eng W/ 1nrf, A/C, AM/FM warranty. New clutch/ ca11. New lfrH, eng,
Loaded. Sunroof. ECU,. brks. $3495.
11·1 the resource you can count on to sell :i
myriad -ot merchan· alse ilem1. becau!le
our columns compel
quallflad buyers to call I RENT AllKlnd1of JobsFor 75k mllH. Re-built All Kinde ol People. engine. 13000/obo. through classified c1a .. 1tled. 875·8034 $3500. 832·3842 Under warrnt.724·8905 '--------
842·5878
IF .WE'VE GOT Y.OUR NUMBER!I
YOU'VE GOTA
SADDLE BACK
NEW CAR! Sales
Leasing
Service
Parts
"Buy, Lease Or Browse"
Come See ~Why Orange County's Auto Dealers
Are Number One In Customer Satisfaction!
IRVIN& AUTO
CENTER
1-800-831-3377
714 380-1200
CJ & • "DRIVEN TO MnaFY YOU" CHEVROLET.
CREV•ERIMW SllJlll COAST TOYOTA /VII.VO COllEll CHEVROLET
Santa Ana Auto Mall 1966 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
Edinger at 55 Fwv 831-3171 722·IOOO 548-1200
at l\l'Slfl\ ra a -OIAHGf (;OAST
JE!P/fAGll/OlDSM08U A1US ClllYUM'LYMmn'H ATLASDODG• PON11AC. GMC TIUCI(, MAZDA 2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meu 2925A Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa
54e-18M 8441·1934
BALBOA
ISLAND
CORONA _ COSTA MESA 6124
6106 DEL MAR 6122 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * M ov In 9 • Curl o s .
•Sa t 7 •m• Bronze•. Franch
Clothes, hou1ehold MEET Bombes, Aug1, Clola-ltams, bolts of fabric. sonnet, 8' fl1h tank,
118 •h Marine Ava someone special entry tabla1, 4' ValH,
•
(In alley) through Cfasslfiled mirror•, Ivory, desk•, Iota of mlacellaneou.
Sundav ontv 10-8
1130 Paularlno
Sat 8 ·2 1ottware, kid
clths. toys, 1kl a1uff,
mlnl-bllnda. kit ltem1 .
etc II 1 OOS Begonia
NEWPORT
BEACH
Moving Sale S UN ONLY8·3 Everything must gol
Peaohy/whl bdut,
antlq1, bronzes, chan-
dllers, blk 11hr sofa, blk marble corttbl, fine
china, oll palntlnga,
cryatal, etc.
28 S ea leland Dr
Ford/Jam boree No Early Blrdt
~524 Harbor 8Mf, Cosio Meta
•••·8023
~ L UNOOI.N MERCURY
I LINCOLN
~MERCUR Y
COSTA IEA LmcatJI lmlClllY
2828 Hlrt>or Blvd., Cotta M-.
940-8830
!\ \ I ~ I I{ ~
~ -~IOK
llA8ERI CADILLAC IUICll
2«Xl Harbof BNd., Costa Mesa
M0-9100
I LINCOLN
~ME R CU R Y
IEACH LJICDLI MHCUIY
16800 Beach Bf'vd •• Hu1tlngton 8elctl
848-7739
Tk Legal Departmmt at the DaiJ, Pilot is pleased
•. to announce a new snvia ""'" amilable to nmi businessa.
TRANSPORTATION
• \% will"""' SE'iRCH tk 1111m1 for you aJ no l!Xtnt charf!, anti saw you the
;time anJ tk trip to tM OnlrtHot« in Santa.Ana. Thm, of tYJUne, afor the search
... ~ is cumpl&J wt wilJ fik >""" jiaitious businos 1llDM sllllmlmt with tlN °"""J
Clnlt, publish ona 11 WtJt for four u.wis as wquitrJ by "6ul 4"" thm file your proof
of pub/iattion will1 tht ~CW.
. l"-e""' bj "'Ji# :/!!fl! Jictitious ""1iMss lllllemmt"' tht Dttil] Pilot, 330 w. ~. ~ ~ a.ta Mad. If~ alllllOISIUp bJ ~MB"' 111(114) 642-4321 mJ wt
wi8 '1fllM d>filhpntllll fol: '1"" IO htlnt/JI this 1'«""1r ,,, 1'lltiJ.
JfJOI' s/10IJJ btaJr ~ Jinho-~,... Ol/J NI liilJ I« WiJJ /Je morf: thiln
~llfJ --~ Yiliil: .... ~,..., ,,,_,_ . ~' .
BOATS 7011
1~' WHAL•R Wheet eteerlng, 40HP,
Tohet1u elec 1tart, tHk aeata, 12500. NVS, T•a .. aoo
SAii. IOATS 7014 . ., ........... .,, '
aalla, AtomlcM 9ft9,
red I of' capt" ftncMi'. ••·e~· '· 11100, . ., ......
llUDllWPS
DOCD 7022
ae••oeat•e NI ............. l••••n. nw ~l'ILIOO oeo. ~ .. ~
·~E•R•VI-C•E--•I CLEANING CONTRACTORS GARAGE HOME CARE/ IANDSCAPE & MOVING 3834 PERSONAL REMODELING WALL
!RECTORY SERVICES . 3548 GENERAL 355& DOORS 3678 SERVICES 3760 LAWN CARE 3808liiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVICE 3867 & ADDmONS 3916 COVERINGS
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PUBLIC NOTICE iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil --------11 A TOUCH OF CLASS Ken.nedy'a Conatr. ***~75 • 18X7•* Houae & Pet Sitting Ttie Callf. Publlc Utlll· ERRAND SEf'VICE Cleaning. Res/Comm New Realdentlal Includes hallway, By Famous Author ti .. Commlselon RE· Grocerys·Clianera Farthing Interior•
Kitchen/Bath/Remodel
Rm Additions Visa/MC
" ., . ..,, ...
3932;
~~'Jf:l~i~~~liJlil~lF.'U~c~/Q.o~n~d~e~d~. ~F~re~e~E1•1t.f Custom Remodel weathe!,:1ylp, Install•· Mutual Respect & QUIRES that all used Secretary Svc·Shop
er .• ;I .• 1 ~lw:>.A tfb~'~p6&dl:tQ~~;·~~~~-~~~lia~m~rJ t\.Ou•~Q;ld ~ Meal'9 -248 9Q'l.2 c Repairs. LcielT'"'9fn~e ~ .. / • ' J.-Am·-· ~ · 'Jr(l'Oyer~ ."Pn ~ ..... '."°':>II'~ • . ' .. r~'"\
n/R Licensed-Bonded 1976. Lb324307 Houaealttln Svea & Landscaping. Lawn P.U.C. -Cal 'T umber: """" <=-'*' ~ "h H::d~==· BaT;'~lt~~ $10.00perhour. 714-848·7888 HANDYMAN 3710 Offered-COM/NB care lnstall'n/Rtmoval llmos and chauffeurs PLASTER
~~~~~&~~11f;i;iii~~~iflfti .. a.::i~
SPRINnERS 3921 714•548•0388 • Xolnt Local Refall Sprlnklers 548·5801 pr)nt their T.C.P. num-REP"''R Flre·Water Damage -..,.--------LEWIS Conatruotlon Kimberly 723·9113 btr In all advertl.:se· .n& 3880 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Eltc, Plumb. & Paint •Bright Haeclnlng Remodel•Handyman •P•lnt/C.,pentry• •YARD CLl!AN·UP manta. If you have a iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii &PRINKLl!R Rl!PAIR 1---------.!~·
Newport area. lmmed European Prof'I. Best L.#704773 Local Ats. 0 II a d I Tree Trimming/A•· question about the le· Plaster/Stucco Patch Valve1•Htad1•Tlm• WINDOWS r·t.t. Pag. 7 14·227 .. 122 1 t 1 R f •y ex •71 .. ~••7.•"'2•• rywa n more JEWELRY 3784 moval Lawn Service 11 f ~ -n own • • <# rs p. ......... .... '"' Small Jobs Oki • ga ty o a mover• limo -Serving So Ca 25yrs-clock1. 26Yre Local Svc. l"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'_ .. ~~
CAAPl!NTRY•Wlndow1 Grace 251•9 455 Qary 845·5277 960"5164• 748"5375 o r chauffeur, call: Llc#326864 24Hr1 John Burr 282·2831 1• £
Doors• Wood Ftncea HOUSECLEANING1----------,.,.--~-,....,,,,..---,,...,.. Publlc Utilities 714-554-7831 American Wl.nclo~o:.
e1o .. voarage Organlurs Vac-Dusllng-Kll·Bath CONSTRUCTION Home Repair/Remodel William Harold Jeweler MASSAGE 3830 Commission Sausfa~~~n~~
Lt4'2S1581 • Call Bob Exp'd-Rels-Own Trana BUILDING 3560 Costa Mesa/Newport Watch/Jewelry Repair 714·558.-4151 TUTORING 3929 Guaranteed!! • •• 249--8323 Pg-312-0026 Nohemi 434-7712 25 Year• Exp. Antique •Fine Jewelry iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PLUMBING 3890 • Dave 222.23••~
Confu.ed., 842•0 •87• -=~..,,.....,,,..,..--,----Jim 831·2480 Buy/sell/ltade 873-0385 L&B Sport• Ther•pv ---------.1 .,_
,,,. T & S Cleaning Svc Quellty Remodellng ---------All body care to relax PAINTING 3858 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Accept Tutorial Svc •--------"-,,,,..
Jttry. Semi-retired. 50yrs Personalized/Ref's •Also Home Repairs •HOMI! REPAIRS• ---------& rejuvenate. RN/LMT THE LOCAL PLUMBER All Math subjects.
ol eatlsl'd cusl. Or1/1cks/ Free Est/Reasonable •Reasonably Priced AnY1hlng & Everything IANDSCAPE & CM 722-9823 24Yrs Quallty Painting ·a James E. Banget1 co.-Grade to high school
repairs drywall/s1ucco. 547-0519-227·7191pgr •Local co. B636318 Alao Stained Glass IAWN CARE 3808 Taylor (outcall) TOUCHUPS, TOO Free Estimales Blanca 847-4407
•Stephenson Assoc. JAMES 845·2917 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii p lvate massage by 24 Hra. Richard Sinor Friendly Service•lnsured C II 7 8 5 85 •---------r Reading, Math K ·12 COMPUTERS 3556 a 14-44· 4 Home R11toratlorVRemodel Ucensed Mrr. Uc#280644 645-3209 Ll532981 675-9304 Reg Ed/Spec Ed
Tiie/drywaii/woodwork Basic Yard Malnt (7141 852-0720 RAINBOW Clrclt Malnt. Expert Drain Cleaning 15 1 Fence1/decks/room add. L.awn/cln-ups/tree trim Palnling-lnl/Ext House/Apl & Plumbing Repairs yrs exp a c7a5ss0r9oo0m2
CARP BT
CLEANING 351 S iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •-------
No room left
In the garage
for the cat?
' ' . ' --. • -j • Roof./general repair.. sprlnklr/aerate. Thatch 1---------teacher. v • 631 4422 p -413-8142 MOVING 3834 Oulllity job. Free est. 20yrs exp. All work guar. -• Comm/AH. Refs Free Est • g L.#569897 836·88B8 Steve 545·8298 •Spanlsh·Engllah• Cll I llfled C8ft • '
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Fr•• E·Mall Account DRYWALL Instant lnternet@Lab SERVICE •SPOT REMOVAL• Dlscordl4 CyberCafe
Aoell to
3584
Bleach/red apota. 2930 BrlStol 427·5855 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Complete clean & dye E I • LI • o
John 847·5520 • TREES • CHUNG'S PAINTING Bl-lingual Teacher help :-·'l
HOME SERVICES ..I ..I 23Yrs Exp-Grt Prlcel Precise Plumbing Private Classes-Home ~
Fr .. eat 979·2098 MACMEDIC • Care for nn s • c d rywall Macintosh Computers & Painting. Acoustic/ Topped/Remove Lawns 0 the move? Repairs & Remodels or Office. 844-8487 .... Anything & Everything se>rnklfs-clnup 751~76 n • Guar Work-Free Est Free Estimates •--------.....
In your hme/olc. Low/ Wallpaper Removal.
hourly rate. 873·8819 Patchwork 240·1159
Free Estimate. Ref's. L.ic#375602 538-t 534 L1887398 989·1090 Mich••• 758·1440 Landscape Remodellng Sell your extra CERAMIC
TILES ·---------3528 ---------Full Service & Repair Semi Retired Contractor CONCRETE & ·Acoustic Removal· Repairs, Improvements, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Paint Avail-Excellent sm Jobs. Quallly/lnlegrlty
Yard tune up/maintenace, household
landscape/artislic design. items
Contractor I C27·604006.
Prof'I & Ethical. 645·7505 in Classified ·---------Leaky Showers Rtp'd MASONRY 3557 Refs/Mike/842·1197 I care, Ken 842·1770
RegroU1ing & lnstall'n iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii UGBTING
L870130 Dean of T iie ---------·---------OUTDOOR
673-8065 or 846·8526 6~~~c~1~~~o~'8~:~~~~ ELECTRICAL 3610 HAULING 3720
UGBTING
3813 OUTDOOR 3813
Newport T iie & M arble
Fine Craftsmanship ...
At Affordable Prices.
Showtrs/Counlers/Flrs
Natural Stone & Marble
Fplce L645486 842·22 t 4
Fplc, BBQs. Ref. 25 Yr iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ............... ~ ... ._._._,_._._. .. _,.
Exp. Terry 557.7594 Small Job EXPl!RT JUNK TO THE DUMP
* B t P I /Q l•ty D uncan Electric (714-988-1882) es r Ce U8 I Local/Quick Response A LE O L..ndscape. brick, sine L#275870 850·7042 AV ILAB T DAY
concr. 800-786-1007 -----------____ 9_8_8_-_1_8_8_2 __
Patterned Concrete Peterkin Electric TWENTY DOLLAR
---------• Driveways, patios, Prompt & Low Ratesl HAUL.ER/CL.EAN·UP CHILD CARE 3536 decks. Repair/removal res-com/sm·lg jobs JOHN 650·1628 Uc/FrH tSI. 222·8866 CSL618717 748·5255
Back to Work Moms ---------•------------------
Call Grandma Barb CONTRACTORS GARAGE IMPROVEMENTS Next best thing to
home • 722.1199 GENERAL · 3558 DOORS 3678 HOME 3756
3548
•ASBESTOS•
Remov•l·TeatJrig
EPA ACCREDITED
800·827·9804
•$25 Service Cell•
RepairS/Serv/Opan'era
All Make•·Models
Uc'd 650-Serv-(7378)
MSM Conatructlon
Remodels & Repairs.
Painting lnt./Ext.
L.1698327 982·2438
•
Gene Abrams Painting Right Ratea-Plumblng
Int/Ext Oual Palnl/ReasS Heating, Rooter Disc.
L.lc'd/lns'd since '76. 30 yra Exp/A·Z Ser
g59.7093 Pg·664·3947 262-8988 pager
Home Improvement
Painting Holiday ---------•
Special! Quality Work! POOL
L726577 847·7669 SERVICE 3894
I k • '• Cu st om Painting iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Prof, Clean, Quality
Work. Int/Ext & Docks.
L#703468 831-4810
Petera Painting
20 Years Experience
Froe Estimates
Island Blue Pools
Pool & Spa Wkly Svc.
Repak: lilter/pump/hlr
Acid wash 645·8728
Interiors and Exteriors ROOFING Referral. 854-0512 3910
WINTER SPECIAL iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
30% off·20 yrs exp Pro Built Roofing
Quallty·Neat·Reliable Beat Anv Price!!! Plaster-Stain-Varnish Reroofs/24hr Repair
•310-433·1813• 20 Yrs Exp L.326693 540·5906 470·7684pg
BALBOA ROOFING CO
Quality Work Guarnl'd
Rerool/Repalr Free Est
Lie/In• 831 ·5081
GARAGE SALE
HINTS
Before your garage
sale, determine what
items you wish to
sell. Make sure
eve~ing is dean
and repaired.
\-
CJJearCfriends: Cf hank <you.
Over tfie past year, you , our customer fiave enabled Soutfi Coast 'Toyota to grow into one of tfie largest dealerships
in Soutfiern California. We are tfianliful for your support and patro nage and at Soutfi Coast 'Toyota,
our customers will always be respected and appreciated. We wisfi you and your family
a very safe and fiappy <Tfia11fi.sgivi119! Sincerely, ~I /44~
IEICELS
1eee·HAR
"D ,.,,,
. . . ~ ' .
THIS WEEK'S HOT PROPERTIES • NOVEMBER 30 -DECEMBER 6, 1996
Cover. .. Cannery Vl,llage Realty
2. Map 11. Ell1t lleal~ Group
3. Cold•ell Banker 13. Fred Saaicli
Newport Beach 14. The Pnacleittial-Jon
4. Coldwell Banker 1bDouttliadCo:..i_1 J · Newport Beach 15. e Pli• enu.u-on
S. Star Real Estate l6. g:a::toeo.
6. llllil Realty Group 17. Cannery V'lllase Realty
7. Ellis Realty Group 18. Coast N~rt Properties
8. Ellis Realfy Group 19. Cout NeWport Properties
9. Ellis Realty Group 20. Coldwell Banker
10. Ellis Realty Group Calta Meu
2L Coldwell Banker
ColtaMesa
23. Piotnontory Point
25. Newport Ridge Rentals
26. Mortgage Rates
27. Homes of the Week
Open Home Guide
28. Prudential-Jon
Douglas Co.
f •I. I I I I
OPEN HOUSES 1-4PM
SATURDAY'S INVITATIONS
THE BLUFFS
308 Encina
2458 Vista Hogar
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
208 Albert Place
HARBOR RIDGE
$299,000LH
$215,000
$389,000
Sandy Long
Ginny Anderson
Renee King
18 San Sebastian $1,275 ,000 David Prince
SUNDAY'S INVITATIONS
THE BLUFFS
265 l Vista Om ada $439,000
CORONA DEL MAR
230 Goldenrod $789,000
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
2678 C lub Mesa $303,500
HARBOR RIDGE
7 St. Tropez
LIDO ISLE
900 Zurich Circle
MESA VERDE
2014 Phalarope
SPYGLASS HILL
20 Morro Bay
NEWPORT BEACH AT
MARINER'S MILB
$659,000
$1,699,000
$389,500
$749,000
BALBOA ISLAND
673-6900
Carol Allison
Bruce Miller
Kevin Kanda
Linda Field
Kay Polovina
Jeannine Stake
Joyce Olson
NEWPORT BEACH
6.+4-9060
Daily PU« &..i.l!nare • N~ ~. 1996
MARY Lou KIEHLER
63 l .-l 400'x23 2
675.-2700 RES.
CHANNEL, NEWPORT
BEACH & OCEAN
Gracious living with Z4-hour
security and doorman, walk
to Lido Village shopping,
restaurants and beaches. z bd, 2.5 ba
TRULY A N!:-WPORT LANDMARK
NEWPORT BEACH
BAYFRONT ON
28TH STREET MARINA
2 bd, 2 ba, luxurious master
suite, gourmet kitchen, wood-
buming fireplace, interior laun-
dry area, view balcony, walk to
neighborhood rcataurantl
RIQHT ON THE BAY!
Comegys and Peterson receive
ColdY1ell Banker designation
Real estate veterans receive
national certification
Top ranking sale' ru,,oc1ate!. Betty
Comegy~ and Nancy Peterson of the
Coldwell Banker Newport Beach M:uiner's
Mile office recently received a national
Coldwell Banker Relocauon Services
Certified Corporate Property Specialist
des1gnat1on.
Comegy!' and Peter.\on. accomplished real
estate veterans with more than 20 years
ex perience, were required to attend a
Corporate Property Specialist training
program and pasi. a challenging exam before
receiving certification.
Other requirements included
demonstrated competence in marketing
Iii.tings. an aptitude for detailed reporting.
completion of certification course work. a
recommendation from management and a
written commitment to quality customer
-;crv1ce. As specialists in marketing
corporate properties, Comegys and Peterson
will perform an inillal evaluation. develop
marketing strategies and oversee vacant
properti es.
One of fou r relocation-related training
programs offered through Coldwell Banker
University. the course offered an overview
of corporate relocation management
services. Hi&JlUghts included developing
matketin1 strat.egies, wotking with Coldwell
Noncy Peterson ond Betty Comegys
Banker Relocation Services managing
suppliers and selling vacant properties.
Other topics included the offer and counter
offer processes. expediting bills and
invoices. the closing process and
minimizing overall expenses.
As Previews• Property Specialists,
Comegys and Peterson are part of a
comprehensive marketing program
established in 1933 which is geared
exclusively to marketing luxury homes.
For all your nal utal• needs, c11/I Bea,
Comea1 or NfllfCJ Pd•non "' Coldwell
Bollhr Marllur11 MU. N•wpo" B-.cle Ill
(71') 631·1«>0. Or, N«ll Colitlw•U BaUr
Olt t/N f lflnrUI
ltltp://www.~•Iaahr.coa
DECEMBER 1sr
A truly u ue blend of ca5Wll Calffomla e~nce and early twentieth century
colonial Hawaii has 11 ate.d In thi& 17eautlful NOl"th ~urui reeldence. The archi·.
tectural s~ has 11een fu enhanced with a manlcure<J part-like landecaping th.at wlh
thrill and excite the vi5U81 u of mo5t arry pa~. A few amenltiee of tnie fll1e
property Include three l:learoom5, W and one·half 11ath5, a 6epa111U 9Ut5t 6Ult.e, ~
or offiu. new kitchen and 11athrooms and &fMndk:I ocean views. Offered n 000
Mark Mitchell
(714) ~99-1320 Offict • (714) 494-1520 Home Offict
~1~1 PCH • L.llgu11a 6each
Comoartv .. Equal Houelng ~· All.Olllcle ~ldlnlly Owr* llld °'**9·
Winders named branch
manager of ColdY1ell Banker
Costa Mesd
He has an extensive
background in management
and sales
Danny Winders, top ranking real estate
leader with an extensive background in both
management and sales, has been named
branch manager of the Coldwell Banker
Costa Mesa office.
For the past three years, Winders
successfully managed the regional office of
a major real estate firm located in the Los
Angeles South Bay area. After launching nis
real estate career 12 years ago. he rose
through the ranks to rate among the top two
percent of sales producers. He also acquired
experience as a specialist in REO properties.
"I'm excited about joining the leading real
estate company in California and having
access to the best products, services and
educational opportunities ln the industry,"
Winders said. '1'm also looking forward to
expanding our presence into Huntington
Beach, which is enjoying a lot of growth."
A native ~ifomian from the Los
Angeles South Bay region, Winders has a
bllcbelor'a degree in early childhood
education frotn California State University
DomillJUCZ Hilla. He has a wife. Kathy UJd
Donny Winders
two children. Kelsie, age 7 and Molly. age 3.
In hiJ leiluie time he is active in the PTA for
hia dtugbtet'a school. Wl.Dder's bobbies
include akiing aod ICUba. diving.
F• 911'>fll' rMl -ll#tb, ellll
~1 ...,,..,., Ill dN CollwU Baku
COllll Mua ojfk1 Id (114) U&-9333 or
reoclt Colilw•U /JfutUr 011 IM l""'1Ut al
ltltp:llwww.colllw•lllNulhr.c0& Tit• iarrltl
rniM"""1,..., ,,,.. C0111pt1111 "'
Cc4/°""4, Coldw•Jl &ufUr llOW .,.,.,,UI
251 oJfk•• .., ,,_ •"""1 1,000 Mia
••odtlln """'""""
aALIOA 151.AND
Top-quillty remod ~· White kit MN w/olc
&. dect. 2&R tpt OolU 2-ar P ·······-··$719,900
LIDOISU
Uelt strftt to s11eet lac. HI.we MN downstts.
2 wry lg M &. deck ~ So pdo .... $~
UDOISU
Rernod kit, 48R. 38A &. Ubr.ry plus sunny cen-
ter ctyd. .40x88 lot In good loc ........... $695,GCIO
CORONA DU. MA.a
fi!Uous SOUit\ d hwy loc. w/ocn view. 3U
2BA mnod kit, &ml 0.. fttnch On ...•... $719.000
CORONA DU. MA.a
V1c:ton1n beluty blt ine ·ao· s. 3Bl. Skylts. 2 1p1cs.
lg. cln rm. Spildolls I Ill. ipt. ................. S6.J9,000
CORONA DU. MA.a
~ SFR oo R2 lot w!cg flln rm. ldr1l 5b!e
IWll, \*, neir.e FAU. 2-c.w 81A91! ......... $3St,900
cc:>aONA DU. MA.a
~ 'lllew. neat Oft c:c,...e. 3M 28A Ind
MN w/2 bolllc &. lpk. Liv rm w/"6c-.-$M,OIO
HILLTOP VIEW
Wonderful & spacious 3BR. 2BA home with recreation room, cozy fireplace,
high ceilings. Enormous windows overtook Bay and mountains.
Gisela Burmeister
$599,900 Code 70217
THE VIEW GOES ON AND ON
BeauUfuMy customadeelgned home ,... in endless OC8ll! ... European
decor, grand ftreplace, kltdlen "1th sub-zero. Sedate Yll'tf wfth spa.
Maxine Mink
$854,000
BLOCK TO BEACH!
Grand estate on vast lot with peek m the oceml. Boasts warm ftreplace, com-
fortable decor. Trim brick patio wtth spa & 880, Ideal location.
Kathy Granieri
..
NEWpORT Buch OfficE ~
2J COllpOllATI PIAu, Suin lfO 644,6200
ELEGANCE ·
PERSON IRED
Glamorous 2-story, SBR
esbde with beautlful Interi-
ors, limestone & granite
ftoor1ng, fireplace & library.
Lush yard, spa & exquisite
ocean views!
Ann, Ted & Suzanne
$2,950,000
Code 70867
ULTIMATE LUXURY
Gorgeously crafted .aR, 4BA custom estate with ftoor plan
for comfort & entertaining. Large, private guest suite, hard-
wood ftoors, French doors. Lush fruit trees.
Michael Smith
$670,000 Code 71007 $399,000 Code71487
FABULOUS EASTBLUFF
Perfect 68R, 4BA custom home with extra big dining area.
family room, & kitchen. Hardwoqd ftoors, skylights, French
wtndows & doors. Spacious yard.
Sally Shipley
BAYSIDE COVE CHARM
Enjoy Newport Beach llfestyte In this 28R, 2BA condo.
Gated community with boat sJlps, pool, spa, & pnvate
beach.
Dick Dickson
Code 70007 $419,000 Code72627
PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW
Thia beautiful 38R. 38A. 3 stofy home • ~ alop =-8elct\. Very pftvat8 with 3 finlplaces. Mottvated
PIQyttarwy
Code 72347 $475,000
MAGNIFICENT
ESTATE
Custom Mecltemlnean
home with M1Y lumy. Set
on a oorgeoua **" m bayfront wilt a dude for a
70ft. vessel.~!
Kent McNaJghtix1
~~
•
PENiNsulA Offic1 ..
2001 W. 11.d.boA Blvd. 72J.-8120
270 C8gney, 1213 Sun $204,000
14 Rue Grand Vallee Sun $759,000 JoAnn Kenton
2515-Bamboo Sun $589,000 Ame Petersen
7 Carmel Bay Sun $865,000
.
ON THE GREEN CONCORD HILL GEM
Very mottvated seller offers outstanding condo wtttt giant An outstanding 3BR home with spacious family room & a
master suite & loft Just steps to the fafrwayl 2 car attached garage.
Mark Jackson Bernard Towers
$178,900 Code 1son $249,ooo Code 75007
NIGHT SKY VISTA
Bayfront penthouse wtth unique ceilings, antique fixtures,
excellent tile work, endless style. Romantic spa tub In
master suite, rare mountain and bay views.
Stephanie HoughtOO
$575,000
PERFECT LOCALE
wonderful 58R, 2.SBA Hart>or View Hills vflla located on
greenbelt with Pacific views. Open ftoorplan & spacious
Linda Oeth & Lois Jacobs
Code 71967
STYLISH MANOR
cellent ~-style 4BR, 3.5BA home wtth leaded
windows & doors, 4 tlreplaces, tile ftoofs. Great
tlo with flleplace. Perfect for entertaining.
Bob Coluccio
GREAT LOCATION-GREAT POTENTIAU
Beautiful view of Cherry Lake & Back Bay from this spa-
cious 5BR, 3.5BA custom home with fireplace, wood
ftoofs, wide staircase, new decl<s.
Jo King
Code 75097
-. ABSOLUTE PERFECTION
Describes1hts 3BR. 2.SBA lone wttt panoramic ocean
v1ews.. vaulted beamed ceilings hardwood nocn. French
doofs ~ windoWs. lH/ely briCk JJlb, separate guest apartment
Pam Ball
$859,000 Code 715Z7
INSPIRATION POINT
Unobstructed panoramas of beach and shore line grace
this SBR, 4.SBA home. Ugtrt lntertor, fireplace, prtvate
guest house. Room for 9 car par1<lng.
MaJIGuftedge
Code 71067 •1,685,000 Code 71187
CAPTIVATING VIEWS
wmldel'ful 48R, 4.SBA Custom home wtlt 180 dQee
views. Gcumet'l'*'-1 wllh plltl~ for-
dlnilg, lmelbll ftocn. tlreplace, 3 Cll' garage.
. t.llnl '&1c Shaw
Code72467 I
Daily Pi.lot Real Estate • Nov~O'lbtt 30. 1996
LMiJ!!b.-____.
CUSTOM MANOR
lmlslstible 58R, 38A, spacious home wtth custom detailed interior, new carpe~
marble entry, expert lighting.Gorgeous yard with fruit trees.
Nancy Barfield & Tom lovenitti
CONTEMPORARY DOVER SHORES
Customized 4BA home with European flair located on an oversized lolAccefrted by
a private pool, rose gardens, grassy areas & well-lit patio.
Ted Jarvis
LOVELY GARDEN HOME .custom brid( hardscape & COOOb'y gmden wtth fruit trees stmlUl'ld charming 2BR
home. Hardwood floors, IJeat master, private Income producing studio.
Dana Black & l.ouAnne Rtttey
~
:
I
'
-NEWPORT BEAClt OfficE
L"r~.-----' 2J CoapouTE PluA SuiTE 190 644..-6200
SAlly
SlliplEy
SENiOR
MARkETiNG
CoNsulTANT
644.--6J7J ExT. 114
~07 AVENIDA LUCIA $299,000
SpAC'1c;>us ~BR £Nd UNIT ovulook1NG A lu41 ~RHNbdr. SedudEd &
QUI! I IOCATION NEAR ~Rks & sliQPS 0wNCR l1AS bErN IRANSlrRRld
R1 due 1 d HBRINC OFFER"!
Roy & MARY
OsTERltouT
644.-6007RH.
Baokut/Ruboa
Gi·sEIA
BuRMEiSTER
644,6JJJ DT 12A2
4JO,J670 P.-qH
~Happyft.
Holiday~
to youJ ·
~, tAe tli~e4.
OvER $7 MillioN
Sold iN 1996
FiNd OuT Wlty!
• WiR SpREcltEN DEuTsclt •
CAll ME FoR YouR FREE
MARkET EvAlUATiON
BoNNiE
BARRiNGTON
644.-6J7J OT 146
644.-04f 2 aES.
REDUCED TO S7t9,000 OPEN SUN 1 ... 4
IMMAC\JIAT£ 1BR + DEN, 'BA TovmhoMl: wtrlt EXJ>i'NSIV£ VIEW of
me I 8rlt fAiRWAy. PirivAn Poot
14 Ru1 GUNd VAllH
TodAyl .. --..--.-·~·~·~··~·.;.;.·~·~·~,·~~---·,~·-·w·~·~··-..·..-···~·w·~·~··~--llW.i~~l:iiii:~~~~~~~~~~-=-=-:.-;~:.m;~~~~~
r
s
. AVE bt:dROOM -To1f.!ly CusrOMlud
INC11Edl~ Im I PuniNG GREEN I PAHOAAMic ViEWS.
$2, 9 'J0,000 Fua.NishEd
l.ARGEsT PIAN , Fou11 BEdROOM I ' bArlls,
PfivATE .S~ -CAnd CoMMuNhy 5>1 'J,000
TAkiNG CARE of YouR
MosT IMpoRTANT AssET
72~~~126
DdiGhrFul ThREE BEdAOOM TOWNltoME
Uk£ NEW I CAnd COMMuNily
$JJ9;000
ANN
~~•'J ~oliboljj
&om Pt Ts
We have the best buys all wrapped
up and ready to put under your tree
TED SUZANNE
NEW Th11n BEdROOM Cus10M I ON rhE 804RdwAlk
SuN, Su11f, SAN<! ANd Fu~
$99'J 000
Fou11 BEdROOM "Po1n RoyAI" I COMM. Pool & TENNis
Cily LIG)i1 ViEWS I GUARd Cued COMMUNIT)'.
$499,000
,
> ,
N EWpORT BEAClt OfficE
2J CoRpORATE PIAZA SuiTE 190 644 ... 6200
Claudette Blanchard
644-6373 Ext. 117
SPECTACULAR OCEAN, BAY & CfIY LIGHTS VIEW
Exclusive guard gated community. 5BR. 3.5BA. 3 car garage. Family room.
38 16 sq. It.
$7 19,000 .
7 Carmel Bay Ori~• Open Sunday 1-5 $865,000
Execurivc home. Front row views of ocean, bay, city lights, 4
bedroom. 3 bath. Bonus & f.unily room. 2 fireplace. Owner
finance.
Ju.st Reduced $S89,000
4BR. 2.SBA Eastbluff home w/lush, Tropical Koi Pond &
cusrom pool, spa & BBQ. Newer roof. marble, leaded &
stained glass!
Dana
Black
729-8296
LouAnne
Ri 7 17~~7
Tltis WEEks BEST Buys!
INCOME PaoduciNG
STudio
NEAR MARiNERS EIEMENTAAY
f4NTASTic V4luE foR
youa Doll.AR ,
BiG HoME, BiG loT.
WE JtAV£ lisTiNqS AVAilAbl£ iN A
wide RANGE of piticES IN EAsTSidE
CoslA MESA & NEWpORT BEAdt.
CAii fOR doAils
Pam Ball
644-6373 Ext 218
631-430i Res.
Fantastic remodel.
280, 2BA large lot.
Remodeled kitchen
& baths, air cond.
Won't last. Lease
purchase available.
$269,000
Move in perfect.
480, 2.58~ with
French doors,
skylight, hardwood
floors and island
kitchen. Across from
Mariners Park.
Library and
Elementary School.
$469,000
Linda Oeth Lois .facobs
760--8184 721--0116
CRASHING WHITEVJATER VIEWS.
PRIVATE STAIRWAY TO BEACH BELOW.
$2,400,000 .
SPECTACULAR 4BR CUSTOM HOME ON ExlRA
LARGE LOT. PRICED TO SELL.
$869,000
PANORAMIC OCEAN & CAIAUNA VIEWS. SPACIOUS 48R,
J.SBA. 0UIET CUvDE ... SAC. PRlvAJE BEACH ACCESS.
$679,~
"WE ltAVE A hETTER WAY
TO sELL youR ltoME"
rE ll i S RE~~~up• 1
L11Pk~.--
PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEYt'S. ELECANYNO IN\llTINC.
SPACIOUS OCEAN VIEW PATIO. GAIEo CoMMUNllY.
$617,JOO
1 80° OCEAN, CATALINA & Golf COURSE VIEWS.
STUNNING TOlAL REMODEL, 4BR, 4BA.
$99~,ooo
5BR OCEAN AND GREENBEU VIEWS. EXCELLENT
LOCATION, GREAT OPPORTUNITY. MAKE OFFER!
$729,000
WESTCllFF 8RtGHT & l.JGHT 2BR, 28A, fRONT &
BACK PATIOS. A CiREAJ DEAL!
$129,JOO
•
Carefree and elegant living at Harbor Ridge Enjoy
panoramic ocean, Catahna, city and mountain views from this Harbor Ridge townhome.
. This two story. four bedroom, three bath home lies behind a private gated courtyard
featuring a circular brick fountain and charming garden plus gardens at the rear of the
home. Well appointed for indoor, outdoor entertaining. There is a fonnal dining room
and living room. Decorator finishes are prevalent such as taupe marble and African
hardwood throughout the home plus designer furnishings add to the sophistication.
Other features include a large loft with view and designer mirrors. Set in the midst of
custom homes with nature trails and parks plus community pools, spas and tennis.
Offered at $790,000.
For more infonnaJion, call Mali Gulledge of Ellis Realty Group, 23 Corporate
Plaza, Ste. 190, Newport 1'each, (714) 644-6200.
Build your dream estate Located in the prestigious community of
Lemon Heights this custom lot with panoramic views of the city lights has recently
become available. The property is surrounded by million dollar estates and is on about
three-quarters of an acre. The lot includes plans for a very large custom estate and has
some foundation work done. With plans the lot is offered at $530,000.
For more injonnation, call Kent McNaughton aJ Ellis Realty Group, 23 Corporate
Plaui, Ste. 190, (714) 644·6200, ext. 125.
. ' ..... • I t • t I • .... , I -I ••••
Behind the gates of Trovare Located in the Newport C<>&t
development of Trovare is this Plan C. Palermo model. This spacious two bedroom. two
bath condominium offers I 0 foot ceilings, woodbuming fireplace with glass door enclosure .
raised-panel interior doors and a formal dining area. 1be unit is a lower, single-level
residence with private courtyard entry and private patio off the master suite. The master
suite has ceramic tile countertops in the master bath, frameless clear glass shower doors and
a large walk-in closel The lcitchen has a General Electric white-on-white self cleaning oven.
microwave, four burner gas cook top with sealed burners and a potscrubber dishwasher with
quiet wash feature. Additional amenities are air-<:onditioning, a security system and an
oversized two car garage. Trovarc is a gate-guarded neighborhood of only 168 courtyard
villas and boasts a recreation center with old-world style tower, swimming pool, spa and
outdoor stone fireplace. This property is listed for $229,000 and the sellers are extremely
motivated as they arc leaving the area.
For more iliformalion, caU ATS, Au, Ted OIUl Suz.mute of Ellis ReallJ Groap, 23
Corporate Plaz.a, Su.190, Newport Beoeh, (114) 644-6200.
National housing turnover
rate expands
The average American home
changes ownership once
every 12.6 years
After two consecutive years of
improved national turnover rates, I 995's
rate expanded to 12.6 years, from 1994's
rate of 11 .8 years. This means that the
average American home changes
ownership once every 12.6 years,
according to the Chicago Title and Trust
Family of litle Insurers' annual study of
housing turnover rates. The housing
turnover rate is calculated by dividing the
total number of owned housing units by
the total number of home sales in a given
year. The Chicago Title study focuses on
home owners and purchasers and does not
take into account renters and their moves
to new apartments, which would
significantly improve the turnover rate.
Nationally, the number of owned
housing units increased 1.5 percent last
year, with the addition of 972,000 owned
units, while total home sales decreased by
262,700 (4.8 percent). According to John
Pfister, vice president and marketing
research manager, Chicago litle and Trust
Co. (CT&T), home sales were down last
year due to higher interest rates during the
first half of the year.
"Fixed, 30-year mortgage rates peaked
at about 9.2 percent in early 1995 and
then dropped to a level just under 7.2
percent by the end of the year, but the
year just wasn't long enough to fully
recover," Pfister said.
Arizona led the list for the second year
in a row. Rounding out the top I 0 were
Nevada, North Carolina. Tennessee, Utah,
Colorado, New Mexico, Idaho, Arkansas
and Oregon.
"Arizona continues to prosper due to
Phoenix· s reputation as a prime retirement
area and its flourishing economy," ffister
said. "Employment growth has been in
excess of four percent for the lruit two
years, which is at least double the U.S.
average."
CT&T expects turnover rates to
'substantially improve in 1996. There have
~y been several record months for
homes sales during tbe first half of 1996.
ClaW-Ko 1ilk tuUI Trust Co. ii IM
panlll co11tptU11 of du Cllk«go 71tU and
Tnut F"""'1of7Jll.. l111unn, du
ndon ~ ""8181 titN UulUUCI
orgaiultion, witlt alUUll nit1nu«1 In
uce11 of $1bUUon4lld more t""1a 4,000
locaJWns nalionwU/1.
Newport Proper
... IMIBTLY OWlmD a ONU1ID
featuring fine properties from condos to castles
SALT SPRAY
E•perlentt tbe exbJlart1tloa of llvlna rlpt on one or
L.ptu1 '• loYeUell .,_..._ IJve la OYer .... 8q.ft. ol lmury
wtda private ltepl lo bacb aocl 45' of moorlq for 7acbt.
Call for featunw lllt. ~000 LSI
llOllllY Ill YOUR POCKn'
')ft -Tllw b'Mntl ..-..... • ,. .. 38A. w:ll leftl .... ........ ~ ............. ,..._. ....... -....ao.to .. ,,,, ,_.-.... taM,000 wll FSl
s~ ~ ~4bta, 1969 1100 Ncwpo.t c:--DE., s.-110
viding superior
· ce to Southern
·a since 1969 ...
Manager opportunity available
To schedule an appointment
ask for Lois or Judy
PICTURESQUE CHANNEL
Watcb the boats sail by In the Newport ChaDDel, eqJoy I.be
warm sumieu aad ocean views from tbll prtTiite .._ hi
Corona Dd "ar. 211ep1tnte .nap wtda cimRr 'OOClud. $3,4H, MSO
LIDOISU
Walk to tbe q ...... Lido \IUlace from ddl elepBt lilcme wlda
peek·a-boo laarbor Yiewa altd spedal ca.stoa feahlrel
lndudJa1 hardwood altd marble Doon. Lase epdoa -~ t750,000 vso
111co•conacaa eesy ...._...,... aa. DA. nrm .. ......_ nrc,.... ..
...... .-.5 ................... IWW~ ...... ......,. ta• u
r
for Information on these and other R...._ropertles: Call{714f I 644-7111
http://www.zow.co1n/coastalpropertl•• Ill "I
, ........ , .... ..
Loe in CdM apx 100 sq ft of ooasttine. Beaut 480, 4BA
hm w/pano white water, ocean, harbor & Catalina view.
On front row of Ocean Btvd w/pr1vacyt '3.500.000
.... • lllUI' •
1 oo· of frontage on AJamltos Bay. Privately owned
Marina for 27 boats. 50' turning basin within Marina.
State-of-the-art dock, built in 1991, has 10 year wanan-
ty. minimal maintance required. $2,500.000
...,., 1 1aca1a
Comer of Anaheim & Gaviota, plus R-4 land for 13 con-
dQs & 2 warehouses, total retail center Income. 1st
1 BOK, 3 packages for one low price. *2.-.-
A mlf BJ
Versaille Plan has been remod & modified to perfection.
Courtyard entry, patio w/pool, spa & cabana.
Tremendous use of marble. 680, 6.SBA. $1,115,000
• •a 3 car garage, separate laundry room, hnch door, dutch
door, high voliume cellngs, rock fireplace. Garden win-
dow In kttchen, mln'ored wardrob In both bedrooms,
plantation ~era. ~
....... -.. Clllf Fabulous 3 bedrooms, ptan c, home wtth panoramic
views. Enjoy the pnvacy of •AL.TEZZA• & the newport
coast llfesttyte .s....-
1 a.a•• a Close to Bay-Ocean apx 3, 100 sq. ft. R-2 lot two one
bedroomoob. ~ .._..
I l I I I I cm a Ii
Resldentla.I view lot apx .5 acnt In Pratlgloua Cowan
Heights. Owner may carry. 11JS.W
On double lot w/ pvt. bch. 680,68A, main houee hes pvtgar-
dens, & ftag stone patio wlbtack bottom poof, spa, wat9ffall
ovet1ooldng the coasttlne, GH. ~
·---... -New cust hm wN+f1fl d OCMI\ & dfl!j. 580, Moh with
adjoining bath. Gout'IMt kitcNr\ ... gt'lribt countera.
Extra nn for otncelllb. LuicUrloua mstr •· tl.-Jl 11
PR ... ·-.a.
Gated Harbor Hll oS*' fir ptn ~ c:lngil. ap.dotJS
light hm. Dramatic llv rm, fM'I rm, wJl\pc & wet bar, lrg
eat-tn ktt, FDR, DownetMa Raty .,,,.,,...fn booklwe.
All BO haw.,.... own BA; Mltr •on vt.w t.a 2 ...--
rate BA......_ Lwe lar 14,700 per Mo. '1,14i;l 1 I ---·--· l.euehold e..... on ...., i.ge .._. clpdc pa utile :
580, 4BA. 2 mmn «r ~. rm for ...,wch. '1Jl•u11 I
+
Buy a home through The Prudential • Jon Douglas Company
• use our affiliated financial services and get a
roundtrip companion ticket on United Airlines.*
....... Ar .. ,.._i_...1tc111111t1,......._t1n.,....+ i.01""5c....,.-a.r.-..c..-.. WT•,.-.,._.._ .. ,....,.... ... .._...,. .. .., ... 11¥111w,..,_ .. ....,nut.,..
-111f11,.-.t11 ... ..._Ck*l,l"'_.......,...._,S,'l'ffil.-•--1t .... •••---.... ,.-.11-W•1..-.-.......... .W.,...MIW.._ .... m*-• .., .......... , .. _.__. ... .._. ..... _....._ ·c $ I ..................... ., ...... .,~., ....... f.-il41-.U~~-......... .
···~-~-........... c...._fcbll .................................... ~~·----"--· .. -·---..-... ..... c.-...-............. _ .............. ....-.. ~ ................... ....," .............. Clll-«NW3S6111 ____ ...... ........,o.. ..... ...
t.-.... C....,tl 'llll l'llWll 111111 &11111--Ille.
.$775,000
$775,000
$1,449,000 &11
1 ...
1 ...
1 ...
$1.385,000 &l'I
$1,795,000 &l'I
The Prudential • JOn Douglas Company
Would Like To Wish You
'A Very Happy
Thanltsgiv ing
-.
.,
Balboa Peninsula Point
Oceanfront Home
~~Z'Md,~~
Th is Traditional family home is situated on a 39+ fQC>t wide
lot that is 97 .5 feet deep. With a spacious patio locatM on
the sand, great informal entertainin6 really comes
naturally. Also voluntary membership in the Peninsula
Point Homeowners' Association provides access to the
private bay beach and boat launching ramp.
Four bedrooms, large walk-in closets, three and a half
baths plus an extra shower in the laundry room that may
be accessed f_rom the beach, family/dining den, upstairs
media room, and the dining area off the living room, all
contribute to the family lifestyle most only dream about.
When you visit this home, from the low traffic street
serving only six homes, to the lovely gated entry garden
you feel it is a place safe and fun for the entire family. Stop
by this Saturday or Sunday between 1 pm and 4 pm to
experience the serenity this home offers.
~ w ~-4t/M.,, ~ ~·~. Mlt:
J
1354 EAST OCEANFRONT•
$1 ,095,000
Call Vince Mayell at Cannciy Village Realty for a private showing.
673-3777 ...--.
HomeAid kicks off construction for homeless shelter proiect
Artist's rendering of Phase I of Mary's Shelter pro;ect
Phase I begins fo r new oour residential care tor pregnant minors
who are homeless or in a crisis situation.
faci lity for Mary's Shelter According to HomeAid Orange County
Constructi?n is underway for HomeAid
Orange County's 25th shelter project, a
new facility i or Mary's Shelter in Tustin.
HomcAid, a non-profit organization
established by the Building Industry
Association that builds and renovates
shelters for the transitionally homeless,
recently kicked ()ff Phase I of the
$500,000 project.
Orange County's only walk-in shelter
for pregnant girls under the age of 18,
Mary's Shelter is currently a six-bed
facility that provides comprehensive 24-
board member Lee Rogaliner of
Bassenian/Lagoni Architects, the project
will be completed in two phases to endure
that the shelter remains opezational
throughout construction. Expected to be
completed in March 1997, Phase I of. the
project includes a new six-bed, 2,700
square foot transition house that will be
able to house six girls up to six months
after they give bir1h.
Once Phase l is completed, residents
living in the existing shelter will move
into~ tra.nsition house. H&meAid will
then begin Phase n of the project with a
demolition of the ourrent facility followed
by the construction of a new 4,800 square
foot main house. The main house, due to
open in November 1997, will include 12
beds for pregnant girls throughout their
pregnancy.
"The age group that Mary's Shelter
serves -children under the age of t 8 -
ID4kes up about SO percent of the 15,000
transitionally homeless people cummtly
living in Orange County," Rogaliner said.
California Pacific Homes has come on
board as the volunteer HomeAid builder
captain to oversee construction for Mary's
Shelter, with Richardson. Nagy and
Martin providing ~bitect\U'lU services.
Since its establishment in 1989,
HomeAid Orange County has completea
23 shelter projects which have added more
HomeAlcl Otcmge Counly
recently btolc• ground for Iii.
MW foeifily for Mot)''~ Slt.h.r.
P"ldlnd from Wt: Doi.
M.reclit#t, Nt'llor vb ,,,_;dent
and clivislon inonagw for
Califomia Pacific Hom.1; Jel1rey
Slavin, presicl.nt ol Collfomio
Pacific Hom.s; Paul ,...,
Pf*id.nt ol Moty's Sheller
board ol diredors; LN
Rogoliner, HomeAid board
tnMlber and va pt'ftidenl and
9fM9'CJI manager ol
Bossenian/Wgoni Architects;
and LC. Bob AlberbOn,
preJident ol HomeAid and
Presley Homes
than 450 shelter beds to the county for the
transitionally homeless. The transitionally
homeless are men, women and children
who are without shelter due to reasons
beyond their control sucH as catastrophic
illness, sudden loss of job, spousal
desertion, abuse or abandonment and need
30 days to 18 months to get back on their
feet In addition to Mary's Shelter,
HomeAid is also working on a new
facility for Casa Teresa in Orange and
Orange County's first AIDS Care
Facility/Hospice, which will be located in
Santa Ana.
For,,,,.,..""°""""°" 011 HOllNAl4
Oran1• Cout,, ecll (11') SSJ..9510.
PENINSULA POINT OCEANFRONT
Great family home on the sand . .4+ bedrooms. 3.5 baths, family, den, upstairs
media room. tow fireplaces, wet bar, great patio on the sand! 39+'x97+' lot.
"Quiet" street serving only six homes. well maintained, move-in condition.
Built in 1967
1354 East Oceanfront• $1,095,000
Call Vuace Ma ell 673-3777
Spacious 3br 2ba w/ x-large family room that could be 4th br. Beautiful beach
and city light views. Nice grassy area and patio on the beach.
1211 E Balboa Blvd.
REDUCED $995,000
Call Chris Brigandi 673-3777
NEW TRADmONAL BAYFRONT
Corona del Mar to be built. Highest quality custom home approx 5300sf .. 5 br
6ba, family and media room. 3-car garage plus extra parlcing. Oversized
bayfront patio and large boat dock that will accommodate 2 boats.
1407 Bayside Drive • $2,600,000
Call Russ Fluter or Chris Brigandi
673-3777
Take advantage of this great bayfront tri-plex with bay and ocean views. This
property makes a grc.at investment or tum into a single family residence and
enjoy the sunset as the boats go by.
447 Via Lido Soud • $995,000
Call Chris Brigandi 673-3777
•
•I
BILL FEENEY
in association with TIM CARR and LANCE BOGGS
Lido Isle Estate
Remodeled home, 6 Bd. 4.5 Ba +bonus room on 52.5' lot
Prime street-to-street location at eastern tip of island
$995,000
Belcourt Tuwnbome
3 Bd. 2.5 Ba Sophisticated tum-key townbome
French doors, crown moldings, adjacent to pool & spa
ue,ooo
. . .. . ,.
717-4744
BAYFRONT VALUE!
• 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Remodeled Home
• 60' of Frontage on the Bay
• Large Private Dock
• Sunny Southerly Orientation
• Quiet Cul-de-Sac LocaUon
• Owner PurchaSfd Another Home!
$979,000
Udo Isle Bay View Home Lido Isle Double Lot
5 Bd 4 Ba Pride of ownership! Highest quality materials
Marble, gnulite., French doors, aown moldings. 3 fireplaoes
$799,000
3 Bd. 1 Ba beach house, prime 60' street to street lot
Build nm homes or a large home with yard, pool, etc.
$769,000
Newport Heights Barpin!
3 Bd. 2 Ba. beach cattaae on prime comer lot
Hardwood floors, 3 car garage, pool
*"'•
Bayfront Lease
4 Bd. 2 Ba + family room. Fresh paint + new cmpet
60' OD bay with pal views, dock for SO' y.c.bt
$3.Wper ......
..
EXCLUSIVE AFFILIATE OF
SOTHEBY'S
International Realty
•
..
•
•• $195,000 HUNT. BBACH 55+ $112,000 SUPER H.B. LOCATION $199,900
Approx. 1800 sq.ft. home with approx 900 sq.ft. New Light & bright Newport model 2BR, l.75BA. Well maintained 3BR, 1.75BA "Dutchaven"' home. Steps
Granny unit. Seller spent 701t upgrades Near shopping, Huntington Landmark, ocean breezes, pools, spas, tennis, to part. & achoo!. Pride of ownership neighborhood.
'l(.·h11ols is Blue Ribbon. Sdkr wanb ro mow #66HAZ greenbelt & more. #89BIS Inside tract location. #ISBEL
$204,000 GREAT SINGLE STORY $159,500 ALMOST NEWTOWNHOME $175,000
So.Coast Metro. Huge 4BR., l.75BA, 2-story home in Super Clean 3BR, I.SBA home in Anaheim, formal dining 2BR, 2BA, 3 year old condo. Just a mile to the bcaeh.
the Republic traLt. fireplace, family room, l.irge Int. Great & extra large fumily room. Huge private yard, good area Gourmet kitchen, ceramic tile entry, light and bright
pric.e. #29SPR #20WIL throughout, l car garage, pool & spa. Immaculate. #33ATL
COLDWELL BANKER
COSTA MESA I HUNTINGTON BEACH
714.668.9333 I 714.846.9094
http:/ /www.cofdwellbanker.com
COSTA MESA
3464 Fuchsia
'i.indv Adam.ik
1651 Iowa
Jim Mahaffy
Ol'I \: ll<ll \I \l :\ll\\
ANAHEIM
2135 S Vern St
Sand~ Adamak
COSTA MESA
2476 Santa Ana "R~
Jim Mahaffy
2403 College Dr.
Jerrie Mahonev
).4
$265,000
12-4
$204,000
1-4
$195,000
1-4 s 184,999
1-4
S215,000
$97,900
Great 2BR., I .75BA wuh garage in the popular
Hunangton Landmark 55+ community. Comm. pools,
spas, tennis & events. Beach dose. #89BJS
PRICED TO SELL! $105,000
Great 2BR., 1 BA, end unit with prestigious Mesa Verde,
has own direct access garage plus car port! Low association
w/community pool. #16fOW
AFFORDABLE MESA VERDE $108 500
2BR., 2-story townhome with attached garage Lus~ patio.
Light unit with gray carpeting. Vertical blinds. Ceiling
f.rns Low asso with pool. #I 6IOW
WHAT A BARGAIN!!! $139,887
Cure 2RR, I BA, house with l'irealtfast nook & great yard
with lot~ of Rowers! Call now fur more info! #55HAM
NEWPORT LANDING $139,500
Popular 2BR, 2BA w/2 car gar. Vaulted ceilin~, upper
unit. Fireplace, show light & bnght. Comm. pool & spas.
#23VAN
SEE THE BLUE PACIFIC $154,900
2BR., 2BA., 3RD story condo in downtown HB Cathedral ceil-
ings. Mirrored w.ardrobcs. B~nk owned & ready to go! #321..A.K
HOME SWEET HOME $155,000
3BR, l .758A New ext and int pa.int. New carpet and
flooring New stove and oven.Mirrored wardrobes.
lntenor tract location. #23RAM
READY TO MOVE IN $159,500
Super clean 3BR, l.SBA home in Anaheim, formal din·
ing & extra large &m.i.ly room. Huge private yard. Good
area. #20WlC
DESIRABLE LOCATION $169,900
Spaciow 3BR, 2.SBA. 2 story townbomc with att. 2ca.r
gar. in quiet complex. Balcony off master & 2nd BR.
Pools, spas & tennis.Call now. 62SEA HUNTINGTON BEACH 55+ $112,000
Light & Bright Newport Model 2RR, 1.75BA,
Huntington Landmark & ocean breezes, pools, spas, ten· BEACH CLOSE $175,000
ms, greenbelt & more. #89BIS 2BR., 2BA, 3 year old condo. Just a mile to the beach.
GREAT STAR.TEil. HOME $129,900 Gourmet kitchen. Ceramic tile entry light and bright
Grat bnlc mrcr home in Santa AN on boarder w Founuin Valley. throughout Car garage, pool & spa. Immaculate.
3BR on huge lot. Well rmintai.ncd & priced to ICll. 11 lHA.R #83ATL
SPACIOUS & GRACIOUS $184,999
Beautiful 2BR, 2.SBA. 2 story Easts1dc townhome.
Vaulted ceilings. Brid fireplace, 2-car an. gar. & more.
#24SAN
GR.BAT CUL-DE-SAC $189,900
3BR, 2 Full BA. Newer home for this tract. Nicely dee·
orated, many fruit trees, cute quiet cul-de-sac. Street
close to fwy & shopping. #93Wl8
BACK BAY VILLAGE $19•,soo
~duded Cape Cod style complex on the Eastside spa·
cious 2BR, 2.SBA, 2-story townhome with 2 car attached
garage. Low assn. Co!l'm· pools & spas. #25BAC
.
SANTA'S --.. __ ,_.-
COMING
TO OUR '
PLACE!
OIM Cd!MI ...._ Colpnlion. An~~~ ~ HoUlllng ()ppol\lnlly. Al Olbl .......... 0.-S nf Opll.-d...._...., "C..... .._" 0... ... °'c..dl ... ...
+
t -
$189,900 BRING THE FAMILY $359,900 FEEL THE OCEAN BREEZES $209,900
3BR, 2 Full Barhs. Newer home for this tract. Nicely dee-Great f.unily home in executive: area of Mesa Verde. SBR, Large two-story home with 4BR/2.7SBA and 2 master
orated, many fruit trees, cute, quiet cul-dc:-sac street. 3BA. 3C an. gar. 2-story over 2760 sf. Family room, for suites! Formal step-down living room with brick fireplace.
Close to fwy. & shopping. #93Wl8 ma! dining, cc:ntnl air, sec. syst. Close to golf course: & Secluded f.unily neighborhood only a bike ride: from the
parks. #18HUN beach! #l8PAR
235,000 ATRIUM HOME 219,900
Just built 3BR, 2.!iRA, Eastsidc: townhome. Pick our Spacious 3BR with den.Mesa Verde: State sm:c:t home:.
your own carpet & flooring. Private front courtyard -Vaulted ceilings. Southwest JClents. Custom oak & rile
large master suite skylight ·white appliances. #l80RA a..:cents thru-out cul-de-sac. Fruit trees. #33MAR
POPULAR "THEME" TRACT $279,000
Perfect l O! Huge 4RR, 3HA with family room. 2 fire-
places. New root~ tn-lcvcl home. Upgraded great neigh-
borhood. Ocean brcc:.tcs. # l 6CI lA
COLDWELL BANKER
COSTA MESA I HUNTINGTON BEACH
714.668.9333 I 714.846.9094
http:/ /www.cofdwellbanker.com
IMMACULATE HOME $195,000
3BR, 2BA with family room & 6rcplace in living room.
2-car attached garage, added .. granny" unit in bad for
inlaws.#66HAZ
GR.BAT CURB APPBAL $195,000
4BR, 2BA, with huge &mily room. Awchcd Two-car
garage with built-ins. Nice size yard for kids, pct, hob-
bies. Single story. Probate Sak. #21VER
HUNTINGTON BEACH $199 900
WcJI maintained 3BR, l.7SBA, .. Dutchaven" Home.
Seeps to park. & school. Pride of ownership neighbor-
hood. llWde tract location. #15BEL
GR.BAT PlllCB $20.,000
So. Coast Metro. Huge 4BR, l .7SBA 2-story home in
the Republic tract. Fireplace, family room, large lot.Great
pricc.129SPR
THBRB'S NO PIACB UKB HOME $215,000
Lovely 4BR, l.7SBA, home.~ & upgraded thru-
out. ~am.ily room, vaulted ceilings, 2 custom fireplaces.
Brick drive. cuJ-de-sac. #l3HAL
ATRIUM HQMB ' $219 900
Spaciou. JBR M'Ui den l6esa Verde Sute Street
Home.Vaulted ceilings.Southwest accents. Custom Oalt
& tile accents thru-out.Fruit tries, cul-de-sac!. #33MAR
r
MESA VERDE DREAM HOME $225,000
Great 4BR, (or 3+ Den) 3BA, 2 story f\ome.Vaulted
entry to fonnal living & dining roo~1 _!lreplace.Ltrge
yard. Poss RV access. Cul-de-sac. 133MJ\K
BASTSIDB CHARMER $234,000
VeTy private 4BR, l .75BA, custom home. Original own-
ers! Family room with fireplace. Excellent landscaping
includes private spa. # 21 Wes
2 STORY TOWNHOM.B $235,000
Just Built 3BR, 2.SBA, Eastside townhome. Pick out your
own carpet & Oooring. Private front courtyard -large
master suite -skylight white appliances. #l800RA
DESIRABLE FAMILY HOME $235,000
38R, 2.2SBA with approx 1884 sq.ft. of living space.
Marble entry. Plant.anon shutters. 'Firq_>lace, formal din·
ing. Family room opens to covered paoo & inviting spa.
Bonus room too! fl OVIS
THE HERITAGE $239,000
Rarely on the market. Private cobblatooe street leads to ele-
gant spacious home. 3BR, (2 masters) plus den, 3BA, Fttnch
doors. bay window, fOrmaJ dining, cmy fireplaces. t22HER
GREAT FAMILY HOME $258 900
4BR, 2 .SBA Fonnal dining room. Fireplace in &,;;ily
room, bonus rm. Beautiful Ficus trees boarder entire rar
Malibu & flood litcs.#!3CAR
RV ACCESS $265,000
Expanded & Remodeled. SBR's, 3BA, (2 mast:er bed·
rooms)One up & one down. Fireplace and Bay window in
Living room. Kitchen completely remodeled. Corian coun·
ters. Marble & tile Ooors. Approx 2250 sq.ft. #34FUC
GREAT FAMILY HOME $279,000
Perfect 10! 4BR, 3BA with family room. 2 6rcplaccs.
New roof. Tri-level home. Upgraded. Great ncighoor·
hood. Ocean Breeze.. # 16CHA
6-PLBX $286,000
Reduced Thousands! Well maintained in great area of
Hollywood. 2BR house+ 4 I BR + Studio. Units on huge
comer lot. 3 enclosed gar.ages, with parking. Owner
Moovated!!! #lJNEW
BASTSIDB LUXURY
Reduced! ·
suita w/
r.atcly as co
Square, New
$37-4,000
t bas 3 master
be sold scpa-
to Triangle
EXECUTIVR. HOME $359,900 Great &mily home in executive area of Mesa Verde. SBR: 3BA.
3c att. pr. 2-srory over 2760 f. family room. Formal dining.
Ccntnl air. sec. syst. Close to golf course & parts. 118HUM"
SANTA'S
COMING
TO OUR
PLACE!
•
\
I/
Daily Pilot Real Estate • November 30, 1996
Mary DiTullio closes $4. 1
million in sales ·in 30 days
The Coast Newport
Properties agent specializes
in coastal properties
Veteran real estate associate Mary
DiTullio, Certified Residential
Specialist (CRS), had a busy 30 days
closing $4.1 million in sales recently.
[)iTullio has been associated with
Coast Newport Properties for two
years and a real estate professional for
15 ye<..rs specializing in coastal
properties.
DiTullio dese!"es special
recognition for her accomplishment in
receiving the designation of CRS.
This is awarded by the Residential
Sales Council of the Realtors National
Marketing Institute, an affiliate of the
National Association of Realtors. To
receive the honor, DiTullio completed
the required courses and demonstrated
specific expertise in applied
residential real estate marketing and
volume of sales. Less than three
percent of all Realtors hold thjs
M.ary DiTullio
national designation.
DiTullio started her real estate
career in 1981 in Park City, Utah,
selling resort properties, then moved
to the Newport Coast area in 1986.
Mary DiTullio can be reached aJ
(714) 644-1600. Coast Newporl
Properties is aJ 4 Civic Plav:J, Ste.
260, Newport Beach.
Great opportunity in family neighborhood
This appealing home has been expanded and remodeled with the finest quality
throughout. Located in Newport's premier family neighborhood, Harbor View
Homes, the home features three bedrooois and two baths. The kitchen has been
o.Ipanded and features top-of-the-line Jenn-Air appliances, custom cabinets, custom
tile counter tops and imported ftaJjan lite floors.
Other amenities of the home include designer faucets and fixtures, revef'SC
osmosis water filtration system, wood windows throughout, custom wood railing in
entty, recessed lighting throughout. sccurily system, built-in vacuum system and
Cllllarged master bathroom.
This is a rare opportunity to purchase a home at this price in this condition.
Offered at $499,900.
For more information, call Susan Scanlan or Sara Hinman aJ (714) 644-160().
Coast Newport Properties is aJ 4 Civic P/avJ, Su. 260, Newpon Beach.
j_·
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·~
Golf course view lot at Pelican Point Located in the
Newport Coast development, this Pelican Point home site commands panoramic
views of the coastline and sits on the 12th green of the Pelican Hill Golf Club
Ocean Course. This nat lot features 13,474 square feet and includes plans for an
8,000+ square foot JtaJjan influenced custom home designed by Ed Lohrbach. Just
steps from the ocean, this home will offer the calming sound of the surf breaking
onshore along with views of stunning sunsets.
Pelican Point ~ an exclusive guard gated commurnty located in the master
planned Newport Coast development. Fifty-five custom home sites and newly
completed homes share the seaside setting of this private neighborhood. With direct
access to the sand, sea and surf of Crystal Cove State Beach, Pelican Point offers a
unique lifestyle found nowhere else. Offered at $1,595,000.
Contact Marlene Hassel and Wayne Heck of Coast Newport Propenus aJ 4
Civic Pla:r..a, Suile 260, Newport Beach. Call (714) 644-160(). .. - -
Ocean close gated condo Great opportunity to live in the gated
cof!UDunity of Villa Balboa in Newport Beach. Located just a short stroll to the
oceanfront. This two bedroom. two bath luxury condo has extensive use of mirror
treatments, light plush carpet, tiled flooring, bleached oak kitchen cabinets, marble
tiled fireplace and extra large master bedroom with walk-in closet. The amenities
include association pool, spa and tennis courts. Offered at $169,000.
For lffM'e iltfo""""°n, c"'1 Mory Di1Wllo at (714) 644-1600. Coan Newpott
Propertin is at 4 Civic Plat.a, SU. 260, Newport Beach.
•
+
If you would like to submit materials
for publication or you have an
intaating story idea, contact Julie
Vaktt, tt.al e81ate editor at (714) 574-
4242. fax (714) 650-4802.
To reach u by mail: Daily Pilot Real
El&lfe., 330 W. Bay Sl, Costa Mesa, CA
mrr.
Call for Winter Rate Incentives -Up to $1200 Off!
• The Jewel of Newport Beach
• 1 BDR from $1350, 2 BDR from $1485
• Spectacular Ocean & Harbor Views•
• White Washed Beamed Ceilings*
• Health S_pa and Tennis Courts
• Million Dollar Clubhouse
• Fireplace and Skylights*
• Private Garage with Remote*
• Conference Room & Private Library
• French Doors on Private Terraces•
• Walk to Balboa Island
Promontory Point Villas :...~-Ii
200 Promontory Drive.
• N
Newport Beach
(714) 789-1644
·~c::: llVINE APfHITMENT COMMUNITIES
A HIGHER STANDA RD OP L I V ING • Available in some Villas
..
Harbor Hil.1: Custom _homes_and coastal vieYls
BOUNDARIES:
Located off San Miguel Drive and
Spyglass Hill Road in Newport Beach,
Harbor Hill includes streets Hillsborough,
Belmont and Windsor.
BOMF.S:
Forty-one lots, some with ocean views,
were originally for sale with ooe buyer
purchasing two adjacent lots and building
ooe home. One lot was developed outside
the gate. 1be cu.nom homes DOW sit OD
lots ranging &om about S,000 to just
uodcl' 21,000 squue f cet. All lots, except
one, have been built out
I•
STYLE:
Individual custom homes.
DEVEWPER:
The Irvine Co.
AGE:
Lots were fint sold to the public in the
early 19808.
. •• .
This home is n<:N1 listed in tbbor Hin
SALF$:
1be big~ sale recorded in Harbor Hill
was $2 million for an ocean view property
of about S,800 square feet on a lot of
nearly 12,000 SQ\WC feet.
NOW LISl'ED:
There are nine homes for Ale ranging
from $899,000 to $1,694,000. Tbe6e
homes are divene in style and amenities
..,!Jld some have ocean views. One home is
offered for lease at $4,700 a month.
COMMUNITY FEATURF.S:
Harbor Hill residents pride themselve on
the indivuduality of style& of their ~.
A gate bas been provided for residents to
have direct access to San Miguel Part
without having to exit OD Spyglass Hill
Road.
SHOPPING:
Harbor Hill is only a few minutes from
Fashion Island, which offers a wide
variety of shops. resta.urants and
entertainment options.
SCHOOLS:
Children attend Andersen Elementary
School and CorQoa dcl Mar High School.
Also within walking dis~ is Harbor
Day School, a private K-8.
SOURCE: •
Sandy Mittman of Prudential -Jon
Douglas Company Newport Beach office.
Call (714) 729-7271.
I/ JOI' wOfl.ld lih to su.it 41
co.-•"1profikof:JOI"1--.,.., A.
~follow du doN/ontMI tllM
ellclo1• 41,,,.,, owtlUN (no.u GtliMJ •f
tit• ana alo111 willl • plttllo of• CM.rrYld
listbt1. n. 4ncriptiolt of tM,,.,.,,
foel ""'"'",,,. .,..., li.UMI• l«tiola. ~
~""to: Jiil# Yila; rwl --.,.,,.,
Dttil1PiJol,330 W. S., St., Co,,. Mn.,
ct, 92621, (11') 514-4242.
'
..
I
J
" :
r
I . '
Orange Coast Assodation of REALTORS
1997 INSTALLATION BREAKFAST
BALBOA BAY CLUB
I>ecentbertt,1996
8:30 a.nt.
1997 Officers and Directors
Gil Foerster, President
Jackie Handleman, President-Elect
Bernard Towers, Treasurer
Bonnie Turner, Secretary
Tom Brunson, Director; Doug Hockett, Director;
Tom Iovenitti, Director; Claudette Mann, Director;
Julie Schmiesing, Director; Steve Sutherlen, Director
Dave Wong, Director
$ 15 per per.son
Includes a full breakfast, juice, and coffee
Tables of 8 can be reserved -----------------------------------------
Please register me to attend the 1997 Installation Breakfast
Enclosed is my check in the amount of$ __ _ for ___ reservationsat$15perperson.
Name(s): ____________________________ _
Company: _________________ Phone: ________ _
Pleasechargetomy Visa/MasterCard (circle one) Account# _____________ _
Expiration Date _______ Signature ________________ _
Mail or fax to: Kimberly at OCAR, 401 N. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, 92663, or Fax to 642-4105.
-
3 8:45 a.m .• Affiliate meeting
· 4 8:45 a.m .. GPA Committee meeting
9 a.m. -noon. Ethics
1 -4 p.m .. Agency
6 10 a.m. - 2 p.m .• Brokers Preview
MLS Book delivery
Hanukkah
9 9 a .m .• MLS Committee meeting
10 2 -4 p.m., Take the Mystery out of Buying a Computer
11 8:30 a .m .• Installation Breakfast
9 a.m. -noon. Foreclosure
1 -4 p.m .. Paper Troll
2 -4 p.m .• Internet class
12 9 a .m .. Grievance Committee meeting
2 -4 p.m .. COMPASS Beginner class
13 10 a .m. -2 p.m .• Brokers Preview
18 9 a .m . -noon. Probate
1 -4 p.m .. Appraisal
2 -4 p .m .• Take the Mystery out of Buying a Computer
20 10 a.m. -2 p .m .• Brokers Preview
21 Winter begins
2A Association office closed
25 Christmas Day
Association office closed
27 10 a .m. - 2 p .m .• Brokers Preview
31 New Year's Eve
Some Apamnenis Meet
The Orange County Mndcr:ate 1 Rem Level. · -
NEWPORT RIDGE
Luxury Rental Condominiums
(7 14) 789-1677
1 Whitt C11p Lant • Nt'Wport Coast
• The only Renw
Qpportunity in Newpon
<:Oast
• Private Garages
w/ Automatic-Remote
• In Home Full Capacity
Washer/Dryer
• Gourmet Kitchen
w/Refri~rator included
• Multiple Phone, Fu and
Modem lines
·~c::
• Controlled Access G2ted
Community
• Small Pets Welcome
• Reson StVle Pool & Spa
• Health dub Quality
Fitness Center
• Resident Business Center
• Elegandy Appointed
Clubhouse
• Private Entry and Large Patio
• 1 BdrmFromSl,175-Sl,3 10
• 2 Bdnn From $1,365-$1,765
llWM INlll'IMNf COMMUNnHS
A HI 0 H II II s T A .. DA II D 0" LI \1 1110 h1tp:h•·ww.rcntnc:tf<lirect1n""llortrid~
Respected Realtor searches for '
best buys for clients
Bob Selinger travels to the
San Joaquin Toll Road on
horseback
in finding lhc right home and neighborhood
for his clients. He was recently honored by
PHH Relocation for selling the top property in
Southern California.
A consistent top producer and real est.ate
industry veteran, Selinger is a member of First
According the FIJ'St Team general m.nnager Team's Exclusive Hall of Fame.
Bill Plattos, everyone knows that FIJ'St Team "I began selling real estate because 1 myself
Realtor Bob Selinger always looks for the best had to relocate my family several times and
buys for his clients. He has built a large therefore can empathize with all the emotions
reputation andfD .ever-expanding referral associated with lhc experience," Selinger said.
business on jusl that fact. ReoentJy Selinger "My personal belief is that being a family's
was found searching for the Realtor is a very special
right home for his clients near job. My responsibility
the San Joaquin Toll Road on far exceeds lhc specific
his horse. Irvine Taupe. We nuts and bolts on a
napped a picture of this purchase or sale. The
creative Realtor as he stopped opportunity I have on
to pay bis toll at the Newport each transaction is to
Coast exit attend to my clients'
An expert in residential reaJ neech. fears and desires.
estate, Selinger was a recent Being able to make
recipient of the Certified buying or selling a
Residential Specialist (CRS) pleasure, instead of a
designation from the National horrible thing is a great
Association of Realtors. The gift to me; I genuinely
CRS designation is held by Bob Selinger on horseboc:k at the appreciate being able to
less than two percent of II help my clients."
Realtors in the United States. Son Joaquin Hi 5 Toa Rood An active community
PHH Horne Relocation Service. the nation's volunteer. Selinger is a resident of the Newport
leading relocatioo company bas officially Coast where he lives with bis wife, Jean. The
recognized Selinger as a Certified Relocation couple have two children: Aaron and Michelle.
Specialist. At. a lerVicc to relocatin& lb melt Bo6 s.liltpr, ctlll Finl
executives apd their famllicl, Selinatt worts THIM!Nft90'f"' (11') Uf-JSJ' or Finl
with PHH and many other reloc.tioo agencies n..11"'1N "'(114) '51·1111.
. . ..
'.
...
..
v
...
RAttM •of Nowmbw ZT, 1991
Abacus Financial Group
American Savings Bank
Bank of America
California Federal Bank
Chase Manhattan
Coast Federal Bank
Detrick Mortgage Group
Downey Savings
Emery Financial
Fidelity Federal Bank
First Federal Bank of CA
Fleet Mortgage
Glendale Federal Bank
Great Western Bank
Home Savings
NahonsBanc Mtg. Corp.
Newport Coast Financial
Omni Financial
ProFed Mortgage __ _
Sanwa Bank
TLC Financial Svcs.
Union Bank of CA
Weyerhaeuser Mtg.
TYPE PttOHE
A (800) 938-9393
s (800) 562-6272
B (800) 642-22«
s (800) 225-3337
K (800) 900-6062
s (800) 300-5626
R (714) 759-9692
s (800) 336-9639
A (714) J29.9200
s (800) 232-2309
s (800) 672-.4332
K (800) 700-5650
s (800) 560-9000
B (800) 492·7587
s (800) 975-5051
K (800) 685-0001
A (800) 808-5626
A (800) 644-6664
K (800) 68&3756
B (800) 237·2692
A (800) 801 ·7300
B (800) 453-1288
K (800)669-6747
KEY LENDERS AND RATES
7.125%
7.375%
7.250%
7.375%
7.125%
7.550%
7.250%
7.375%
7.125%
7.625%
7.500%
7.250%
7.375%.
7.275%
7.200%
7.125%
7.000%
7.625%
7.375%
7.500%
7.375%
7.500%
7.500%
30.yes fixed
5
20
20
20
20
20
5
20
5
5
20
20
5
20
10
20
5
5
20
10
10
20
10
2.250
2.125
2.250
2.250
2.500
2.000
1.250
2.125
2.000
1.375
1.625
2.375
2.250
2.200
2.250
2.250
2.625
0.000
1.875
1.625
1.375
1.750
1.750
LOCK· ..
15
30
45
45
30
10
·15
30
15
10
30
30
45
30
30
30
15
15
30
45
13
30
14
A.PA
7.390
7.630
7.517
7.644
7.416
7.795
7.412
7.630
7.364
7.804
7.704
7.530
7.644
7.537
7.466
7.390
7.301
7.661
7.604
7.704
7.552
7.718
7.718
ff'f'BllES'f
RATE
5.950%
3.950%
5.375%
3.875%
4.125%
2.950%
3.850%
2.950%
3.950%
3.950%
2.950%
5.500%
2.950%
3.950%
3.950%
4.000%
3.950%
4.500%
4.250%
5.750%
5.500%
4.750%
3.950%
5
25
20
20
20
25
20
20
20
10
20
20
10
20
20
20
20
5
20
10
5
20
20
1.000 7.591 300,000 ~.700 110 6M
1.000 7.392 600,000 2.450 110 1M
1.000 8.128 207,000 2 .875 1TS 1Y
1.000 7.442 207,000 2.500 110 1M
2.250 8239 207,000 3 .000 1TS 1Y
1.000 7.234 500,000 2 .300 110 1M
1.000 7242 750,000 2.300 110 1M
0.250 7.407 500,000 2.550 110 1M
2.250 7.296 600,000 2.225 110 1M
1.375 7.481 207,000 2.500 110 1M
1.250 7.360 207,000 2.400 110 1M
2.125 8.149 207,000 2.750 1TS 1Y
1.000 7.724 207,000 2.250 L1M 1M
1.000 7.392 207,000 2.450 11D 1M
1.000 7.578 500,000 2.050 1TS 1M
2.500 8.594 207,000 3.000 L6M 6M
1.125 7.405 600,000 2.450 110 1M
0.000 7.717 250,000 2.875 110 1M
1.000 7.570 400,000 2.625 110 1M
1.375
1.500 2.750
8.224 207,000 /rs 1TS 2.750 6M
8.083 207,000
1.000 8.023 207,000 2.625 6CO 6M
1.250 7.468 207,000 2.500 110 1M
Both Rxed & adjustable programs are 30l30 cooYentk>rlal rnortgegu. Type of Lender Is: B • Bank; K • ~ ti.nk8r: R • mof\11Q8 bloMr; S • MWlnga & loen. Mot1glgl t."'-1 arid bloMrl -llcensed by lhe Cellbnla
Oopartmenr ol Real Estal• as elthef II bloMH Of corpo<atlon For lnfoonauon adl CUI. ORE 81 (918) 227-<>1131. ,,,.... Rnt lof ~ • .,, ~ rai. '°' .. "'1aactuAnenl period. Dolr1I P.yment II amount of Cl.Sh (%cl
SilleS pnoe) paid IO l9fldet pno< IO sqwng mortgage contract Pointe 11re % ol loen belW1ce pMI IO lender at bme of loen doting. Loc114' ls the_.,., ol dllys lerdlf ~ ,.. priot to doelng. A.PA ii lhe llVltlll peioentlge rate
wtlten is an ubmeled annual cost ol lhll loen to the borrower Al A.P.R.s ere calaAatld by~.....,,. Co bued on• $207,000 loan wnount. lie polnCa shown 8'1d S700 _,... IMs. The A.P.R 1 ere Included In ll"is chatt lot~
><>n only. When applying tor 11 IOlln, F!ldefal Trutn.in-L•ndlng law requns lende!s IO celaJtate en A PR spec:lfic: to MCtl loM ollet. Mulmum loan 1$ lhe maximum lendtr ••loan under g1YW1 lerms. AJ fixed rate progreiN i. ... • ~
"'um of $.207 .000. M•rl1fn (In %) •s lenders prof rt: metgln • index • &earal rale aller first actJstmenL Index Is lhe basil tor Mlbng an ~ustebl• rate (Matgln • lndu • New Raw). 110 • I 1th OlsL Cott ol Funds, ITS • 1 • Yeat Treesury
81U LSM • 6·monlt1 LIBOR, 6TB • 6-month Treuufy SIU. 6CO •&-month eve,. certificate ol oepoeit. Adjuetm.nt fl9qUll'ICJ II th!! period between adjustments,. 1M • 1-Month, 6M • 6-Motlthl, 1V• 1 Year. Al ral8S lt.Oject to
ct1.111gc Verity rate and ierms priot to applylng fOf e loen AJI leocle<s provide loat\1 with dllferenc ratu 11nd lem1S lof dilferent lo!ln emooru The Information preserud is not an ofter to rhaka a loan. For• consunw ~on how ID shop
lor a moogage, send o $4 50 cheok payable 10 Mortgage News Co., 1810 E 17th SL. $\Jlte 100, Santa Aile, CA 92705. (714) 836-11n COPYRIGHTO 1998 ~ge News Co
Home security starts at the front door
Quality locking products
make a difference
Hume burglary is one of lhe moltt
common types of crime in lhe United
State:. today. According to lhe most recent
Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform
Crime Report, a home is broken into
every 12 -;econds in this country. These
crimes affect more than six million
hou~eholds a year, and some of the-;e
situations could have been avoided if the
homeowners had paid attention to security
issue~.
Although no residence is burglarproof.
lhere are ways to make homes safer.
Appropriate levels of lighting. alarm
systems and organized neighborh®d
watches are good places Lo start, but one
of the e.asiest ways to improve home
security is by instaJling quality locking
products on exterior.doors.
Having a good lock on the front door is
especially important because intruders
enter lhrough the front door in nearly half
of all home burglaries, according to the
National Burglar and Fire Alarm
Association. Experts at Baldwin Hardware
Corp .. the leading manufacturer of quality,
solid forged brass door hardware. have
developed the following tips on how to
improve home security.
/
• Choo<;e deadbolts. Burglar~ are likely to
move on to e~ier targets instead of
wa~ttng time trying to break through doors
with deadbolts. Deadbolts wilh a one-inch,
saw-proof throw, combined with an entry
lockset or lever are difficult to penetrate.
•Select quality locking mechanisms and
materials. Locking products constructed
of solid forged brass
off er maximum strength
and durability. Lock
functions should include
a speciaUy designed
security strike
constructed of high
grade steel for added
strength. The security
strike should be mortised
into the wood jamb and
anchored to the
structural components of
the opening with three-
inch steel screws to prevent a thief from
prying it off. Concealed mounting
fasteners and reinforced strikes also help
prevent against theft. All of Baldwin's
deadbolts and locksets are made from
solid forged brass construction with a
hardened steel insert for maximum
protectlon and security.
• Ptjake sure products meet leCW'fty
standards. All products manufactured in
the United States are rigorously tested.
When purchasing a deadbolt. make sure it
mec1s Grade 1 requirements -the highest
sLandard for security and/or durability. All
other locking products should at least
meet Grade 2 requirements.
• Install quality locks on all doors.
Deadbolt locks should be installed oo all
exterior doors. Burglars may try another
entrance if the front door is well secured.
so don't forget to put
deadbolts oo back doors
and garage entrances and
other doors leading into the
home.
• Seek lllttime
parantees. To ensure that
security is not
compromised over time, it
is important to buy locking
products from
manufacturers that offer a
Jif clime wam.nty against
any mechan.icaJ and/or
material defects. Lifetime guarantees
provide added confidence regarding
product quality and offer more assurance
than shorter-term mechanism guarantee.~.
•Don't sacrlftce eatbedcs. Although
security is of utmost importance, there arc
a wide variety of locking products that are
both stylish and safe. Today's entrance
haodlesets and keyed entry locksets are
available in a variety of styles and finishes
that can enhance the exterior look of your
home while a.lJo protec:tibg againat theft.
Baldwin offers various finishes such as
antique brass and oil -rubbed bronze which
a.re available in a variety of designs. The
Lifetime Finish™ from BaJdwin• is also
available on all bright brass exterior
locking products to guard against
tarnishing. flaking. pitting or discoloration
for the life of the product.
• Comkler door quality. Even the best
lock wilJ not keep out a detennincd
burglar, especially if it's installed on a
weak door. Doors should be metal or solid
wood and be at least one ~d three-quarter
inches thick. To binder a thief from
pulling or kickin'g down the door, the
frame mi.1st also be made of hardwood or
metal.
• Talk to 7our home property imurer.
Insurance companies frequently provide
premium discounts to consumers that take
special steps to secure their homes.
However, agents don't know to offer these
special advantages if homeowners don't
teU them bow they've made their homes
more secure .
Burglary is a problem that will continue
to burden homeowners. However, a few
smart, preventative measures -like
installing quality locking products -can
help make a diff emice. With aix million
homes being broken into each ~. it pays
to improve home security. •
For...,.,,.,.,..,..,,,,~""'
mil s.llMlt IO/lflw •..... ,"'-
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I ' I O I ,f +I I
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•#1 SHOREVIEW•
NEW CUSTOM HOME
Golf Course • Ocean View
Broker Coo ration·
Sot & Sun 124pm
Address required for gate entry 1. David· Bradburne J
474-8191
I • • .,., . " .. \ !
. "' -, --N
Ju&t 15 min. from N6 to t..aeun• Niguel,
with cle•n •Ir and grc•t troye. 6ullder
uy& <Her 1250 9(\· feet In thle town~
with du•l·rrui&tere and p•nonimlc Yiew&.
Attached 2·car 9Jlr'a9t· Next to lieach
tnlil. Tenn!&, pool&. ~ieyti•ll •nd more.
ALL THIS FOR $179.0001
BALBOA PENINSUIA
1354 E. Oceanfront
r...y \1llp laity
Vino! Mayell
&73-3m
1707 E. lay Ave.
C..-.ry \1llp Rally
613-Jm
506 ~Slreet
c •• ., \1llp ltalty
i~Jm
SIR 5ltl5can 1-4 $1,G95,000
711 ~ 1-4 $3,950,000 ,..
311 s.t/Sull 1..S $1, 100,000
..
• -wo.1· . ~-...-T _,..-;-. . • . .
'-.t.L~....., ... ~-.... --· -·-. -
HARBOR COVE
PROMENADE
1611 Arch lay Dr.
Mire Abel-Owner/Asmt
642·3217
l8ll Sit 12-4/Sun 1•1 $679,000
NEWPORT COAST
SID W'Sun 12-4 $2,950,000
474-8191
..
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