Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-03-05 - Orange Coast Pilot• > 1999 SENIOR CLASSIC There's fl bucketfi~ •Here's the key: Look for the unexpected. RJatARD Dl N IWy"" NEWPORT BEACH -nying to pick a winner in the $1.2 million 'Ibshiba Senior ClasSic is like tryilig to forecast next'"""~--·~·· year's weather. You never know h ow it's going turnout. You'd think Halo Irwin w ould · • be right there at tho e nd, the defending champion and all. You can't say Irwin's not a contender because he hasn't w on a tournament yet on the Senior PGA Tour thiS year. Look what happe.ned tut year. No, when Irwin and tho rest of tbe Senior Tour's My· and sixty· IQIDetblng crowd tee it up for the l180,0001lm·place check, it will be anybody"s roll of the d1ce. Irwin shot a course·record 62 in the final round last year to • capture the Toshiba title and blaze a personal 1998 streak of seven 'tournament titles, in which he finished as the tour's leading money winner for the second consecutive year ($2,861,945). Irwin and Gil Morgan, along with the tour's other top money winners, are the obvious picks. But this year's Toshiba champion could be a rookie on the Senior Tour, like Bruce Fleisher, who won the sea.son opener at Key Biscayne, Fla., then captured the following event at Sarasota, Fla. • It could be a veteran, a fan favorite like Gary Pla~r or Lee 1\'evino, who finds the i'olll go~ their way at Newport Beach Country Club, the par-71, 6,598-yard layout that will hoet the tournament for the fourth ,atralgbt year, aftar the inaugural 10lblbe WU played et Mesa Verile Country Club. It could be no-name gOUer who wtns, one of those former club pros who earn their <'ard at the se.ntor PGA Tour QUalifying School. Remember last ~r's fii'st round of the Tushlbaf Three of four teeden (Mike McCullough. Bun Thomas and D6vld ~. you·d~heard Of. Maybe Jay Sigel, who enjoyed a big year in '98, taking fourth on the money list ($1,403,912), will get his justification from two years ago, when Bob Murphy and the luck of the lnsb beat him in a thrilling, rune·holo playoff, whicll, at the brne, was a Senior 1bui record. Murphy' 80-foot birdie putt on No. 11 ended tho overtim iil a playoff celebrated in Senio1 Tour lore. It's wide open. Furthermore, when you factor in the poa annua green s (dominant throughout southern California goU co~). it chang the ga.m a little for the players, who amv h re after a four· top Flonda swing and are n't quit u'sea to th grc ns. •('Th gr ns) are tricky," tour v t ran DaVid Grahllm said, after leadirig th first round m 1997 with two others. J.C. Snead, who was alsO a first·round leader in '97 with Crabam and Murphy, has tnaggled with the subtle N "}>Ort Beach CC greens. •You n ver know what's . going to happen.• Snead once said. •Sometimes your bdll goes in, and sometimes it doesn't. But these greens are dlfficull because of the poa annua in them. The ball oounces all over the place. •Tue greeruo are very difficult here. You get afraid or them. It was real tough for me here (in 1996)... ,.. Tour veteran Bob Eastwood, w ho twtce shot a course-record 6' a t Newport Beach (including once in the old Cr~by South m) before Irwin shattered it ta t year, ts bewildered by om of the breaks. •(Putts) all go towaid th ocean," a former tournament director once said to Eastwood. "Yeah," &-twood replied, •which ocean? Th Pac:iflc or the AUantid" With the crazy boun in the history of the Toshiba senior Classic-who can forget Irwin's Hved·by-the-bUnkef.ra~ ahOt on 17 ll&St yeart -it's best to aq>ect the unexpected. .. . . .. .... , ·= S2 • ... ... .. .• . . . .. '· .. ~:O: ~c. 1fon AAA· 1taleslan ow, 15 PGA E~nTour. one PGA Tour, one HJ)anese Senior and five Senior 4IGA Tour ... Str• of lhr• ~ With • lit IMlt one Ser1ioi I I I ' I I I I ' • It is a tour of nostalgia and}sn't easy to break into if four name doesn't flash in fans' memory (or ont<? the game of golf's an.:fune money list). I t i~ d tight fraternity, a golf tour celebrdtlng its 20th dnniversary this year with some of the same players it fedtured when skinny ties aod punk rock were hip. It 1s d tour of nostalgia, designed for names of ye~teryear to comf)f'te tn three-round toumdments with the use of golf carts (1f they desire) and no cuts. Guvs hke Miller Barber and Don Janudry have been teeing it up on tht> Seruor PGA Tour since the ongmal days. · It 1s d.lso a tour for golf's late ·bloomers living the impossible dream, the thousand-to-one shots (Le Robert Landers a few years bark) who earn a spot among the> world's richest and most competitive fifty-something players. There is something special, almost magical, about the tour, which has long had its own qualification polloes that conunue to be challenged by some, including Harry Toscano. Toscano passed out flyers last year at the Toshiba Senior Classic, leaving the pro~ganda on car windows in the parking lot at Newport Beach Country Club, trying to promote his case. But while Toscano continues to argue that the tour's qualifying policy isn't fair and the tour has its own "private show," the bottom line is that few in their right mind would buy a ticket to watch him play golf. Toscano, whose case against the Senior Tour is reportedly still pending, filed a reported $36 million antitrust suit against the tour and its sponsors last year, alleging a conspiracy that limits the field to certain players. Nothing personal, Harry, but tens of thousands of customers will roam the grounds next wee k to see Gary Player, Chi Chi Rodriguez, Hale Irwin and Lee Trevino. In a way, it's a Catch-22 for players like Toscano trying to crack th'e field, but the tour, which provides the act at each stop, has a right to make its own policies and give open invitations • I to its lifetime achievement award winners. Sure, there's room at every tour stop for four Monday qualifiers, four sponsor exemptions and the top eight available players from the Senior PGA Tour National Qualifying School. But the bulk of the 78-player field is made up of the top 31 players from last year's official money list and the top 31 available players from the all-time PGA Tour money list. Pans purchase tickets to watch those guys, to see if the Golden Boys of golf's pantheon still have , .. I I IOYS it, to see guys Irwin's age set a course record and bring back memories of his U.S. Open days. "Frankly," said Jeff Purser, tournament director for the Toshiba Senior Classic, "the PGA Tour has the right to determine its competition and it bas been effective and successful over the long term. The Senior PGA Tour is a great mix of long-term stars and new players. "The field has room for quality players who prove themselves out of the Monday qualifiers or the National Qualifying School, and if you can't get through those, you're not good enough to come Friday through Sw;iday. "For those eligible because of their lifetime earnings, that's largely impacted by how you play year to year. Those wllo are good enpugh to play their whole lives have earned their way tO do this, they've earned their way onto the tour, and from a spectator standpoint, you want to see the guys on the all-time money list. .. •it's nice to have some newcomers, but if you didn't havP guys like Lee 1i'evino and Gary Player, you wouldn't sell many pro-am spots, sponsorships and tickets." The pro-am events during the week are the lifeblood of the Senior Tour, which mandates that each tournament set up a non-profit organization and operate the event as a charity with 501(c)(3) status. Amateurs pay large dollar figures to participate in pro-ams and rub elbows with the Irwins and nevinos of the world. Would you pay $5,000 for a spot in a pro-am and go 18 holes with an occasional Monday qualifier who could live next door? "Irs a blend of competition and nostalgia,• Senior Tour official Tun Crosby once said. "The competition has been a large part of the tour's success, but it's <Us<> because of the great names who continue to play. That's why it's Arnold Palmer and Walter Mitty. It's unique." The Senior Tour is different than the PGA, LPGA or Nike tours. You feel Toscano's pain. Who wouldn't want a new lease on ·life at age 50? For the fan, there's a price tag for nostalgia and that's what has kept the Senior Tour alive and well for 20 years: . I . I' Daily Pilot ! FACTS Toshiba Senior Cassie • Who: Senior PGA Tour players • What Toshiba Senior Classic • Where: Newport Beach Country Club, 1600 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach • When: March 8-14 (three-round Senior Tour competition is March 12-14) • Purse: S 1.2 million (First place, $180,000) • TV: ESPN (live coverage) March 12, 12 p.m. to 2 p.m.; March 13, 3-430 p.m.~ March 14, 2:30-4 p.m. • Defending champion: Hale Irwin • Fomult: 78 pros, 54-hole stroke play (no cut) • Cowse designers: William Bell (1952), Harry Rainville (1973), and Ted Robinson (1985) • Course layout Par 71, 6,598 yards <. • Tournament Q\ainnen: Hank Adler and Jake Rohrer • Tournament Director: Jeff Purser • Newport Beach CC President Jerry Anderson • NBCC Superintendent Ron Benedict • NBCC Head Pro: Paul Hahn • Benefldary: Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian • Monday qualifier: Los Serran~Golf Course (Chino Hills) ·. TRYING TO BEAT EACH OTHER • ) . MARCH ~14~ 1999 TOSHIBA •• ·~. 1't ' ~ MARCH 8-14, 1999 NEWPORT BEACJl_~~···-----~~~---­ C OUNTRY CLUB When the greatest senior golfers in . the world arrive at the Toshiba Senior Classic, they're guaranteed to come out swinging. Defending champion Hale Irwin, Lee Trevino, Gary Player, Gil Morgan a~d Chi Chi Rodriguez are among the 1 e g e n d s who will battle for the $1.2 niillion purse in Orange County's only PGA TOUR event. And all that money they're playing for won't he coining out of your pocket. Advance-pu~rchase daily · tickets are just $12. Week-lon,g badges start at $45, giving you .a front-row spot for everything fro:rn the Monday Celebrity Pro-Am to the pressure-packed final round on Sunday. So get youi: tickets today a'nd come witness the action. It's sure to he a hit. J For Tickets Visit e.Pacific I PCS Sto {participatiD6 Ml!mfiie. . \ j ...... l 1 f I ' l I I • 54 Friday, March 5, 1999 . ... ' •Newport Beach Country Club features a new look for the '99 Toshiba Senior Classic, but same classic finishing holes are there. RICI Will DUNN Oo1y P'llot NEWPORT BEACH -For spe- aal effects, the goll course host- ing the Toshiba Senior Classic for the fourth consecutive year has scored the first ace of the tourna- ment. Although the reconstruction encompassing holes 3, 4 and 5 is located in the outermost comer of Newport Beach Country Club, it will be worth the walk in the park for fans to see tlie $300,000 pro- ject during the Senior PPA Tour event March 8-14. In addition to a stately, 42-inch rock retaining wall in front of the . . . . . fourth green, the hole features a new cascading waterfall and updated irrigation system. . The old lakes between holes 3 and 4 have become one, a deeper basin with a liner added to the bottom of it. Players attempting approach shots to the third green now have more water to fear on the0 left. Local wildlife seemed to quick- ly favor the improvements to the lake, which has been heavily inhabitea by geese, ducks, coots and Egyptian swans. The remodeled comer of New- port Beach gives the course a spe- cial feel, but fans can only tour the area or plant themselves in a chaif . early in the day and hope for a high-demand spot, because space is limited. No grandstands, hospitality tents or food and beverage kiosks are planned for the site because of narrow passageways. During the Toshiba Classic, . . Orange County's only PGA event, play in the renovated comer will also be cmnple!ed early in the day, further dismissing the need for food and beverage setups. uu•n be a nice walk in the park (for the fans) and (the area) is going to look really good for the Toshiba, H said Jerry Anderson, NBCC President and Director .of Golf. The majority of the cost for the project -delayed about a month because of additional permits required by the city of Newport Beach -is for the lake renova- tions and rock retaining wall. Included in the vision of golf course architect Ted Robinson Sr. are colorful flora planted on the mound bordering the third fair- way and fifth tee box. Five mature palm trees are on the mound, as well as bougainvillea and lan- tana. To construct the mound, which reaches 7-feet, more than 20,000 DISPOSAL CO., INC. ROUOFF •Industrial• Residential• Commercial • Recycling Services • Mini Bins /VQl(t.f to eolf/"'atu.lo.te the City of Newpostl'Nd> a.a.d ,.. ~OJPlcal /.-~~· Seiiior Toshiba Cla.Uc COMMERCIAL , IOYI yards of dirt was moved. r Other improvements-include a new cart path at the par-3 No. 4, a change to .the landing area at the par-5 No. 3, and rebuilt tee boxes at 4, 5, 11 and 12. Anderson, a member of the Southern California PGA Hall of Fame, said Newport Beach Coun- try Club intends to improve the course every year as long as it hosts the T'Oshiba event. TI1e project, he said, turned out better than expected, but the real challenge of the goll · course remains the same -the last five holes on the back nine, which have cr~ated exciting finishes the last two years. "Despite all the turmoil behind the scenes, the tournament itself has always looked good and been exciting, and I think the golf course directly helps create that excitement," Toshiba Classic co- Chainnan Jake Rohrer said. "I mean, where else can people MOI EY ...... ~,... ·1. Brue. Fleish«, l 2. Larry Nelson. 5 ] . Allen Doyle, • •· John Jkobl, 5 s. o.ne Quigley. 5 6. \l'Qnte ~z. s 7. IMO Ao«~ 5 8. GrlNm Mar'G'I, 4 9. W.tt.r ... ,~ • 10.Rav~• ,, . J.C. SnHd. s 12. Bob Oicbof\, 5 ll.Bruce~S "· Jim Colbert. 3 15. George~ 5 t6. Leanird ~ s 17.Jlm~· 18.Jim= 19. HUQI\ • s 20.Bo6~ ' 21. Gil MOflflll\ S 22. lAe Trwino, 4 23. JoSI MM• C8nlur-. • 2'. Hale lrWln. 3 258~n~S 26. John Ii.net, • 71. T04!1 W.wgo, • 28. Jim Albus, 5 29. Gibby GHbert, 5 30. Bob aw-. 5 31. o.vld Grahlm, S 32. Hubin Grttn; 5 33. .tohn Meheffe.t, • 3'. !Ml'Y Zllgler, $ 35. Bob Owal. 4 36. W•tt.r Morgan, • 37 MilteHill.• 38. Joe lnn\M\ 5 39.0 .... ~5 '°· Gaty ,..ye<, 3 • '1. Tom Willsllopf, 3 42. Strnon ~. 5 43. Bud Allin. 3 ... o-Stockton. 2 '5. Al Geibet'ger •• '46. OMlle Moody. • •7. Ml~ MtCul!Ouah, • 48. ~troble. 2 : '9.Jfty 5 50.~ 4 51. Tom a $2.43,SlA $218, 1'5 $176.fi11 $172,800 $167,204 $167,050 sm,560 $1'5.&25 $1"2.,545 11'1, ,,. 130, lrl $123.751 $111,106 ls~a:: 10&C1158 1~ 104,•1 10MIO $91.• S97,• 1::: $13,191 SI0.100 S7f.1'5 S7l.1'7 n.1• ,, ... , 390 SID 5'.'12 5-091 Sl.595 52,383 50,711 t:::: $44.IOS S:«l,515 $39,3" $39,24) 1 $= 31,112 Jt,7'0 30.57• m:: '• shoot 62 (like Hale Irwin last year in the final round to set a course record), or have a six on (hole) 1 n · ·nus tournament has really had some incredible finishes, and those finishing holes tan create a lot of excitement. There are a lot ol birtlies at 15 and 18, and }4, as well, while 16 and 17 are holes on the golf course which help create excitement. We have been lucky with that in this tournament.•~ Irwin's course-record perfor- mance last year in the final round was helped by a bunker rake on 17. His tee shot landed on the green, but it rolled off and headed for the water. The rake saved it and Irwin made par. In 1997, to win T<?shiba Senior Classic m, Bob Murphy made an improbable birdie't)utt ,from 80 feet to beat Jay Sigel in a then- record nine-hole playoff on the 17th green. Only great holes can be made famous. LEADERS ................... 52. Tam M"t<itnnis, • SJ. r.ry Dill. • • 5'1. Frri Conner, • · 55.Ed~2 56. Dal/Id LUndlCrom, 1 57. BatlOv Nichols, • =~=~· eo. Butm llMd. • . 61.BMTMY~• 62.Bob E~.l 63. T~ Mon; • M.How.id~· 65. Jim Holtgrlwe. 2 "' ,,.. Gtion. • "· "'"Fwr9'' • w.it.r z.nDtlkl,. •.CNOll~2 70. "'-CtlftlP(an. 1 71.Tom~4 n. Mrrl M<Gee. 4 7J. DeWitt ---"~' 7'. Miiier ..... 4 T7S. CNrtes ~ ] T1S.~.) n.1uu 2 79. H.-old • 79. Alb«to ~. 4 IO Gene Uttler, l '• . 11.~~2 12.JolWI~ 1 ~c.1¥1n ....... 2 ... Jinw'IW P'owtll. ] IS. Mlle Miione. 1 "· t.. llder. • rl.Bob~.1 •.Amold~2 8 .0onllel.1 90.0on~l !11. Jim ..... ' !12. Wiiiy Wiiii.;,.. 1 9J.lob~1 M.Rldl~1 1'5. Dldt Rhvlln. , T95 Robert !1"'"'41f'!Nr\ 1 T!l7. Didi Andil1ol\ 1 T97. Tom 9tolwy. 1 199.Gey':'~ l Ttt. Jerry~ 1 101.~hnd\1 102. lllly ~ , 103. Dol,g Slndln. 1 . ~· JOHn LEOOHRD'S eOLP eMOP J. At "1i ,.,,,,.,.,. 8-J, Gt!l"C... Daily Pilot '99 FIELD TOSHIBA SENIOR CLASSIC •>J1M Alsus + GEORGE ARCHER + ·HuGH BAIOCCHI + Burat BAIRD •)DON BIES ·:· JOHN BLAND ·:· GAY BREWER + lARRv ·LAoRErn •:• RAY CARRAsco • (• BILLY CAs~R •!• FRANK CONNER ·:· CHARLES COODY ·:·JIM DENT •> Boa DICKSON •!+ TERRY DILL •:' DALE DOUGLASS ·:· ALLEN DOYLE •:•Boa DUVAL •!• Boa EASTWOOD (•DAVE EICHELBERGER (•LEE ELDER •) JIM FERREE •!• BRUCE FLEISHER + AL GEIBERGER •:• ALBERTO GIANNONE •> FRED GIBSON + DAVID GRAHAM •> HUBERT GREEN + WALTER HALL + DICK HENDRICKSON •) HAROLD HENNING (•DAVE HILL ·>TOM JENKINS +JOE INMAN ·:· HALE IRWIN (• JOHN JACOBS ·:· DON JANUARY •!+ LARRY LAoREm +GENE lmLER ·:· JOHN MAHAFFEY (• GRAHAM MARSH + GARY McCORD f f I l I I ,. I + MIKE McCULLOUGH · + JERRY McGEE + ToM McGINNIS • ORVILLE MOODY +GIL MORGAN + WALTER MORGAN - +Boa MURPHY + lARRv NELSON (• ik>BBY NICHOLS +CALVIN PEETE • GARY PLAYER + JIMMY POWELL .• DANA QulGLEY +CHI Ctt1 RODRIGUEZ +TOM SHAW +JAY SIGEL +J.C. SNEAD + DAVE STOCKTON ., + BRua SuMMuttAvs + BARNEY THOMPSoN + IB>NARD THOMPSoN + ROCKY THOMPSON • JIM THORPE + LEE TREvlNO · + HOWARD TwmY + TOM WAllGO • + Di\Vm WIAVIR Ja. : +WAIJIRZWISKI + L>..MY ZllGLIR + MoNl>AY QUN IFB + MONDAY QUAI IMI + MaWY QUALll &l ... .,.~Vt~.-. • • Here are some of the best p laces to watch the action a t Toshiba and enjoy the b jl:die vision . RIOIARO 0UJl.N iblf Pb NEWPORT BEA~H -As a general rule, there are two ways to watch a golf tournament: Select a favorite play.er (or group) and follow him, or situate yourself behind a green and watch the groups come ·up. You'll be an e'Xj>ert on the nuances of that gr~n by the end of the day. Some fans stay along the fair- ways and some stand behind the tee boxes and watch members of the Senior PGA Tour air out the driver. Some like to walk the golf course and get a glimpse of as many players as possible m an afternoon's roam. Whatever your style, watching the Toshiba Seruor Classic at Newport Beach Country Club (March 12-14) can be exciting and pleasurable. Unlike the title of a certain book, it is not a good walk spoiled. If you decide lo follow a player (or group), it's best to stay ahead Of the golfer. Let the action come to you. Too often. fans want to see the seniors tee off, then they won- der why they get caught in a herd. If you're interested in watching the players tee off, an alternative might be to go to the driving range, .where there are bleachers to watch hitters pull out their dri- vers. While some on the Senior Tour have. S{lid Newport Beach Coun- try Club is the · "perlect seniors golf course," the par-71, 6,598- yard golf course could also be considered ideal for spectators. In addition to the numerous cozy spots to park yourself, there's plenty of free bleacher seating on the course. 'The locations include: At the practice range; behind the first tee; at the eighth green, a tough par-3; at the 9th green, the tough· est bole on the course last year,.at the 14th green, where pros face a tricky downhill approach· shot; and at the 18th green, a par-5 where pros gun for birdies. The par-3s are always excel- lent-spots to set up camp because you can watch the entire hole played out. The 17th hole, the most famous on the golf course thanks to Bob Murphy's remarkable 80-foot birdie putt to end a then-record nine-hole playoff in 1997 and Hale Irwin's saved-by-the-rake shot last year, ranked as the toughest on the course last year (along with No. 9) and is popular with fans. The course has never been accused of being too long, nor has anyone in the past three years complained about it being too d.il-. ficult. But the greens are tricky. For the fans and players, it's an easy-access course. "Newport Beach Country Club is set up in such a way that it's easy for (the players) to walk - it's set up r~al ?gh t, not like some of these housing developments," said Tim Crosby, Vice President of Business Affairs for the Senior Tour. . Another good viewing spot is behind the 14th green, because fans can also ,get a look at golfers . teeing off on Nos. 11, 15 and 18. Be careful around 18, where bleachers, corporate boxes and the ESPN tele~on trailer take up most of the territory surround- ing the green. Here's your informal escort for moving about on the golf course and nestling in the best locations, or, at least. it's one reporter's top- five spots to view the competition: 1) It's the most remote from the clubhouse, but the reconstructed fourth green is a great place to sit and watch. Jt's the shortest par-3 on the course, yet a well-kept secret. It is one of the golf course's prettiest holes. Players hit over water to an undulated green. If properly situated behind the green, fans can also see 'the fifth tee. There are plenty of trees and J I IOYS limited foot traffic. 2) Anywhere above the 17th ·green is golf heaven. But one of the best seats in the house could 'be ~ across the lake from TOSHIBA the 17th green, r e · ferred to as "stadi- u m s e a t • ing" by some. If you plan to sit there, you Legend should consid-• ~I Grand I GrMdstand9' m Resbooms er binoculai-s for the best results. " Behind the green is M Fint Aid B Concessions ideal, but large trees can obstruct the lli~ht of the ball. so be careful where you stand. From the Mstadium seating,• lf appropnately positioned, fans can also see golfers coming up on 16. Hole No. 17 is NBCC's signa- ture hole -and one of its most popular viewing destinations. 3) Walk alongside the No. 2 fairway and, by the time you reach the green, scout around - you never know what you'll see. The area is the highest pomt on the golf course. Fans will be able to spot four greens (2, 5, 7 and 11) and three tees (3, 6 and 8). As, if that isn't enough, on clear days from that locale fans can get a glimpse of snow-capped Mt. Baldy, Catalina Island and the Newport Back Bay. 4) The clubhouse area is the busiest intersection at Newport Beach Country Club during the Toshiba event, but it's a classic section to move around and see the players. It encompasses three greens (9, 15 and 18) and two tees (1and10). Friday, Morch 5, 1999 ~ .. S) The par-5 No 15. the easiest hole on the golf course the past tlfree years. is a defuute birdie dlld eagle hole. It's a short pd.T-5 and most of the play- ei-s attack 1t aggressively The 15th green also undulates and features three ller<> for exat- mg chips and putts. Though it's Jong uphill, players should ge( · there m two. Hole No 15 y1eld0ct a tournament-high 88 brrd1e~ l~t year, dnd led the field Wlth 85 an 1997. Last year it also featured toU{Il8.ment-leading six eagles • These Senior PGA Tour players played other sports; golf wasn't their only bag of tricks. RIOIARD D UNN !kif Pb N WPORT BEACH - Golfers have sometimes been accused of not being true athletes, but several mem- bers of the Senior PGA Tour dis- pel that perception with a sport- mg background beyond the links Golf will be on the minds of fans and players in Toshiba Senior Classic: V at Newport Beach Country Club, a $1.2 mil- lion event for a field of 78 players in a 54-hole, stroke-play event (with no cut) to be televised live by ESPN. But some in the field could lut the fa.c;tball as well as putt, shoot jump shots as well as chip, and whack slap shots as well as drive. • Take, for example, Frank Conner. Though Conner has won over $2.5 million in his professional golf career, he's one of only two men to have played in the U.S. Open in golf and tennis, joining the late Ellsworth Vuies in a dis· tinctive group. Conner was a three-time All- American selection in tennis at ninity University in San Antonio, Texas. • There's J.C. Snead, the nephew of a golf le gend (Sam Snead) who spent nearly four ·years playing minor league baseball in Wash- ington Senators' farm system, before becoming a pro golfer m 1964, . • Many don't realize that the Toshiba Senior Classic's defend- ing champion, Hale lrwin, was an unusual two-sport star at the Uni- versity of Colorado, winning the 1967 NCAA golf championship while twice earning All-Big Eight Conference as a football defen- sive back._ Conner, Snead and Irwin are not alone. Many of their peers on the Senior Tour also enjoyed and excelled in other sports. • JI.In Colbert. the Toshiba Senior Classic champion in 1996, the first year it was played at Newport Beach Country Club, earned a football scholarship to Kansas State, but had a limited gridiron career and turned to golf. Colbert is a close friend of Kansas State football coach Bill Snyder and a big supporter of the school's athletics programs. He played a large role in helping Kansas State build its new golf course (Colbert Hills Golf Course), which is home of the men's and women's teams and will house a First Tee facility. Colbert (so~ness from recent knee surgery) has withdrawn from ~ year's Toshiba event. • David Lundstrom, one of four first-round leaders last year in the Toshiba Classic, was a standout basketball player at Bradley Uni- versity. ln fact, Lundstrom, 38th on last year's Senior Tour money list ($451 ,979), was the first Bradley basketball player to score' 100 points, grab 100 rebounds and dish out 100 assists in a sea- son. 1011 Also a golfer at Bradley and a member of the Peoria, m., school's Athletic Hall of Fame, the 6-foot Lundstrom was once a teammate of former Boston Celtic Steve Kuberski. • Dick Hendrickson, the Senior Tour's tallest player at 6-foot-7, is a former hard-throwing baseball pitcher nicknamed the •Red Menace.• Hendrickson had a try- out with old Philadelphia ~s in 1952, then turned to golf at age 18 112 when he realized that fair- ways were much wider than strike zones. • DeWitt Weaver, Jr., whose father coached football at Texas Tech, played quarterback for Southern Methodist University and was a 195ij prep 'All-Ameri- can in football. Weaver enjoys an exempt status on the tour as part of the top 70 on the all-time mon- ey list. • Jack Kiefer, who played in just "-a dozen Senior Tour events last year before being diagnosed with cancer in late spring, signed a professional baseball contract with the Detroit Tigers after col- lege in 1961, but left three days later and took up golf. Kiefer is a former club pro .. • Tom Wargo, also a former club pro, never played pn the PGA Tour. In fact, he didn't play golf unW he taught himself at age 25. Some of his jobs prior to golf included iron worker, assembly- line auto worker and bartender, but Wargo was also an accom- plished bowler who once thought his career would •roll• in that direction. • Jim Albm, an All-Middle Atlantic Conference baseball out- fielder at Bucknell University, ~ played basketball and was an intramural boxer at Bucknell, before he was coaxed into golf by fraternity brothers in college . Albus, who batted .421 in 1962, is Buck.Dell's eighth leading hitter in school history. • Walter Morgan, a highly deco- rated Vietnam veteran who played baseball uritil age 25, is the cousin of Baseball Hall of Pamer Joe Morgan. • ·Allen Doyle, a Senior Tour rookie tlus year, is an ex-college hockey player who has been named to the Notwich, Vt., Uni- versity Sports Hall of Fame as a hockey player. Doily PilOt Another new ·store, another · good reason to ~tay .ljome • -Newport/Cost• Mesa 1880 Newport Blvd. 949-6J1-1J81 Exdusively Gt LA. Gym Equipment Quality Products Fn>m on Experienced Leader Theradyne already welk'espected for its medieal and professional rehabilit.ation equipment, proudly introduces the new leader in the performance treadmill category. Simple Elegance You Can Afford! Every survey shows that while exercise fads come end go, treadmills have consistently remained the most popular exercise equipment cat.egory. These treads are highly styled, easy to use and built to last. Before their engineering design team ever began their work, they listened to what people said: •Don't: t:ry ta fool ua wlt:h fanay het:uree w. don't: need and falH prom.._ •boUt: pea formenae. W. w•nt: • trudmill that --=9c• Nllebly •nd eimpty, •nd ~ _ cl!n,:t !'!"! !' r.J !"!'!!9_"'!' ~-ii!'~ !-!. '!: ._ -- -- - - -- -- - - - I. I I i r . . . Doily Pilot Friday, Morch 5, l 999 fi r I • •The R ecord 62 ... It w as a figure which .1 i~~~e?0;0~d>C::~~r:1~!:;%~1 ~~~t?·o~ ~~~:1~e~~ . r e p resente d more than home runs las ear. "aie,. said Irwin, who went on to .. Proba y a. t on the 'bac'K. .. . 18 consecutive top-five ftn. rigb.l1 • RIOJAJ\D DUNN ~lodn ~et le h. t t iabes and aver9ge $130,088 per It was a In the li(Jht difec.-Oatt Pb . . on ?w ?w 0 ~u start. bon last year Irwin. who col- WPORT BEACH - ef ore Mark McGwire aunched 70 home runs and John Elway won his second straight Super Bowl, Ii.ale Irwin went where no goller had tr~ed before. lf gol(. is tradition and the Senior POA Tour is nostalgia, then the Toshiba Senior Classic is record-breaking. A year after Bob Murphy set a then-tour record by defeating Jay Sigel in a nveting nine-hol.e play- off at Newport Beach Country Club, ·Irwin broke the course record with a final-round 62 -a rather symbolic figure for 1998 sports fans. For Irwin to call it "one of my most memorable final rounds" is like Baryshnikov saying he loved dancing in your theater. it m pe e, said lrwm, for N~wport Beach Co lected another r$:anl g total whos~ t Ne~rt Beach Club, finally there' a course in prize money ( l, more wa~ hi Int seven m 1998 a~ he record that isn't so compleX. than Tiger Wo , .again and cap. sec~nd straight The previous record (64) had David DuYal. Se oney title. been accomplished elghl differ-Irwin also mo o won three U.S. ent times by six different players. Norman to beco 29-yeai: PGA Tour Last year in the Daily Pilot's leading money wmner-tn proleis- e 10 dies, one cial section for the Toshi!>a s1onal golf. It w a coune rec<*il (OD No. 8). broke the · . the question was a;;ked, for the ages d strokes and WW · be the year someone "It's like what B · Barnes unf?rgettable carda a 63 or better? And, how said it only ix>b you can JlllCMle.on 7, when his tee shot I1VICh Jonger can 64 hold up with shoot 62 o this olf course,' .......... -.• tbe green but rolled off Senior Tour players firing at Lhe Irwin said, •eut u need to be '•fwl toward the water, pina1 real car On this kind of 1:>01-. • er rake stopped it Irwin answered both. course yqa got to hcrve some ...... Irwin ~o make par. • Irwin's lo bogey came on the pati . lbe"te's a prem.iwn on WM trategically placed, par·3 No. 8, when lus 3-uon shot pu ball in play and k~ •Md last month, when l ed right of the green. A poor lt ~play. You can't try to over-tetum1911 to Newport Beach pitch left · with a 10-foot putt pow the goU course." as the defending for par, w hich be rrussed. The last player to sh Vliid cham to promote Toshiba But that was the only ble · · the record) was ·or tour Senior ~ V. on Jnrin's card. He budied 3, 4. pro Bob Eastwood in 1 in the The autographed by 5 and 7, then stayed on a roll on 1i • Irwin and din the ·c1ub-the back nine, making four putts Eettwood alsosbol64 a t New- house -se ' fate for a fJ'Ql1\ 10 feet or beyond. port Beach 20 'years earlier in th!! • DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT ~ "I don't know when I've ever come from that far baclc and passed that many people,• Irwin said after winning last yea-r's Toshiba, coming from five strokes behind, after starting the final round with 11 players ahead of course record fueled the way I Irwin took over the le4d (pus-a1d CJ'QI '®th Pro-Am. to another sensationa1 season, ing Hubert Green) and finished 1 Eastwood and Jon Chaffee were which included finishing among with the record when he birdied the only two players to shoot 64 the top five in 20 of the 22 Senior the par-5 18, a pitch from 65 yards twice. Bill Britton, JQhu Tour events he entered. setting up an eight-foot putt. McCorrush, Torn Lamore and Lee LHale Irwin hits an approach shot to No. 14 on the way to par in '98. No Down , No lntereet a No Finance Charge FREE I • Installation with a Lifetime Guarantee • Deluxe Padding I• Haul Away Why ~~If H CARl=ET&TILE? (B' JO DAY HO QUI~ ASUD WAMAKfY II,..,_, 111!• II W. VIM ""ti«• • IMPORTED CERAMIC 77LE A.SLOW 14.a& AS ~· Installed LAMINATE ON SALE/ o ·:iginal ... PERGO. Sq. fl. loatalled "It was an exceptionally well-"Do you get anythmg special Davis also once carded a 64. - Hi-Time WIN15 C e I ·I a r s Con~atulations to Th e City of Newpo rt and Hoag H ospital for your involveme~t in the Toshiba Sr. Classic - 250 Ogle Street Costa Mesa Ca 92627 (949) 650·8463 (949) 631-6863 fax www.hitimewine.com Providing the Fin est •Wines • Spirits •Beers •Cigars • Stemware • Champagries • Chocolatier • Wine Tastings · • Wirie Classes • Gift Baskets · . • Accessories .. I •, ~ Fridoy, Morch 5, 1999. •Although this is only the fifth year~ it has been a tournament steeped with history. H1111 \Jiil DllV\I. !k'"'v Piol NEWPORT BEACH -Let's tilce 1l Tht To-,hibd Seruor Cldssic has h1slo1 y It isn't all the kmd tournament officials want, but r~rlht>lc'>s the Senior PGA Tour ..;(op di Nc•wport Beach Country <;:lub ha'> loads of 1t '• In four vcdr>, there have been ~me radJCdl revisions, al bmC's JOll- ri)CJ llldfldCJPnwnt of the touma- rt•ent like a vv1lcl day on Wall Street · On lhP golf course, lhe tournament Wds popularized by ...ensat.Jonal I 7th-hole dramatics, t)w off the greens 1l was darkened Ir> changed department head'i ••dch of thf' hT'it four yedf') As Orange County prepare'> for Toshiba Senior Classic V, it can t;esl assured th~ foundation Is 1ptact and the managing operator, Moag Hospital Foundation, isn't gpmg anywhere for a long tune , The Toshi hd Seruor Classic has l}C\"er been on more solid ground P't>rhaps the• fourth time was a ~~ann · i.!.-. When fans consider Bob Mur· phy's unbehevable birdie putt from 80 feet Lo beat Jay Sigel in a then·record nine·hole playoff and Hale Irwin's course·record perlor· mance last year in the final round with a bit of magic Crom an inno· cent bunker rake, the Senior PGA Tour becomes more than noslal· gia and the Toshiba event becomei; more than a scriptwriter. It becomes an event rich m golf rustory. Tens of thousands of fans will come to get a glimpse of stars like Lee Trevino and Chi C hi Rodriguez as the gates open Monday for the week·long parade of pr~ams. parties and plugs for the Japanese electrorucs giant that will put up $1.2 million for a field of 78 players in a 54· hole, stroke·play evenr (with no cut) to be televised live by ESPN. Jn its fourth y~ at Newport Beach Country Club, the Toshiba Classic expenenced some turbu· lent times away from the fauways before Hoag was sdlicited by the Senior Tour m May 1997 to take T_..,._, ,..,...,......, ------... ~ ... -· -------~-.... -· --·-·- 17114 NEWPORT llE • COSTAMESA ~ -• over the eirent as the manag· ing charity. .There were problems between coun· try club owner· shlp and the former operat· ing chanty, rn t~rn a ltonal • • . ""* :~ T . '-. ..t.£.1 "' Sports and Archer, •95 Event Markel· ing, but following an acrimonious split, Hoag came to the rescue and turned the event mto one of the most prosperous on the tour. Behind tourname nt director Jeff Purser and volunteer chau· men I lank Adler and Jake Rohrer, the Toshiba Senior Classic was honored in 1998 as the Seruor Tour's C harity of the Year. Purser, the tournament's rust dJiector to return the foUowmg year, stabilized the event last year by selling all of the pro·am spolo; m advance, securing a booming beginning for the new charity, which received over $700,000. . Purser lS m the second year or a three·year contract with Hoag, the benefioary of the former Newport Classic Pro·Am, before officials of ............... k ....,. ________ _ ____ ........ _ .... ----- .............. ,......, ...... -. .... .,. ........ __ ..,...._.., ____ ,... ____ ,_.., ...................... --- IOYS that event (Adler and Rohrer) were contacted by nm Crosby, Vice President of Business Affairs for the Senior PGA Tour. "I've been I l around a lot of Colbert, ,96 golf touma· men ts, and from this one we expected pretty good things, but I think 1t was a year ahead because we d.Jdn't ~ (such a large donation to charity) U'l'ltil '99, • Crosby said fol· lowing lt1.$t year's tournament. "I sure hope the people in Orange County know what they've got• Toshiba Senior Classic IV drew betWeen 42,000 and 47,000 fans for · the th1ee days.. mclud.Jng about 20,000 for the final round , when Irwin made history Wlth his course·record 62. On the ~ame · hole (No. 17) Murphy made famous it} Toshibd Seruor Classic ill with h.ts long birdie pull to end a playoff marathon, lrwm got a break from a bunker rake. N 0 TES Trtvta Ume: Of the four first.round leaders in last year's Toshiba Senior Classic, all but one were virtual unk.noW'ns (Mike McCullough , Buzz. Thomas and David Lundstrom). Who was the veteran to join the quartet atop the leader board? (answer below) Of the 50 toughest boles on the Senior PGA Tour last year, none were from Newport Beach Country Oub. On the list, Riviera Country Club, which hosted the U.S. Seruor Open, placed six boles in the Top 10 and 11 total in the Top 50. His tee shot landed on the green, but it rolled off and headed for the water with no brakes. The rake saved it and Irwin made par. ·nus is one of my mo1e M h '9? me m o r a bl e urp y, final rounds,• Irwin said that evening. ·1 couldn't believe the ball rolled down the hill at 17. My ball was even on the green, and at that point I couldn't believe it would roll like that, then I couldn't believe it agdin when (the rake) stopped it. It wa~n't that bad of a tee shot to be in the water. I had a fortuitous rake there l guess.• Irwin's final round of 9·under 62 broke the previous course record of 64, accomplished eight tunes by six players, most recently by Bob East· wood in the 1996 Toshiba event. George Archer won the inau· gwal Toshiba Classic in 1995, when the tournament was played at Mesa Verde Country Club. Jim Colbert led wire to wire and .. Doily Pilot captured the · title 1996 (the first at Newport Beach}, then Murphy sank the unsinkable just before dark in 1997. Eight weeks after Murphy's putt, the tour· nament broke Irwin, '98 new ground -• •• ••• ...... ... ... again when club ownership ter· m.inated its agreement with ISM reportedly because· of payment defaults and a clouded 501 (c)(3) tax·exempt status. •1 don't think we've ever got· ten a letter from a tournament sfte saying they don't want to host a golf tournament as long as we have this manager,• Crosby ~d at the time, referring to the cone· spondence from the club that st#· ed Its desire to sever ties with the tournament operator. On Aug. 28, 1997, Toshiba announced that Hoag would takf' over as operator, while mdny~f the longtime volunteers of e Newport Classic would JOm for s with the Toshiba event. The rest ls history. .J CHARnY BEGINS AT Ho~ • Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian was the r winner last year, earning tour's Charity of the Year Awa ~ NEWPORT BEACH •• PGA event),. Rohrer 'The crowning moment of "We were pleased in last year's Toshiba Senior meantime, because we Classic wasn't H&Je Irwin's _ _ two more succes ful y course·record 62 on lhe .-~ wilh the Newport final day or the bunker rake (inducting a toumam on 17 that stopped hls ball from record $300,000 donttllon rolling m the water. 1996). The tour knew who It was the donation to charity. were and what we were dol With the Senior PGA Tour and that we could raise money event at Newport Beach Country charity. Club operated for the hrst llme by ·we were ready to talk to them the I loag Hospital Foundation, (in May 1997), but the redson i the tournament raised over took so long (to Sign a contract) $700,000 for the Newport Beach· was because we needed to h based charity, making it one of sure of ourselves. We didn't wan The Toshiba Classic wtll be the sixth official tournament on the 1999 Senior PGA Tour schedule and the eighth of 45 events overall. ' the most successful stops on the to put lhe hospital at risk, and w Total prize money on the tour jumped from over $45 million last year to just over $49 million in 1999, a 267% increase since 1990. The Toshiba Classic purse increased this year by $100,000. Answer: J C. Snead (who was also a first·round leader m 1997 with DaVld Graham and Bob Murphy). lour. had to . study the contrac The Hoag Foundation, which obligations. took over management of the "We had to get a contrdct event on Aug. 28, 1997, received the tour, we had to get d con the tour's inaugural Chanty of the with the country club, we had Vear Awdrd, which included a get a contract with ESPN, C donation of $25,000. lac and the title sponsor. Thcr Hank Adler and Jake Rohrer, were a lot of obligations behln chairmen of the event and foun· the scenes, and that's what too dalion volunteers, accepted the us to (Aug. 28 of 1997 t award m November at the World announce the agreement).• Golf Village m St. Augustine, Fla., Before Hoag's arrival as th during the annual Awards Dinner managing charity, the Seruor To for the PGA Tour. event almost fell apart after onJ) nu was Uke the Academy three years. Awclrds," Rohrer said. uThere Jn May 1997, there was were 600 people al a luncheon, acrimonious split between th an orchestra, bright lights and group that owns the golf cours pretty ladies in black dresses. We and ISM. were presented with the award The country club owncrsh1 on stage cl.nd then whisked off the group temunated its agrl..>emen back of the stage -1ust like at with ISM, citing paymen the Accldcmy Awards • defaults, along with ISM's cloud The money raised ldst year ed 501(c)(3) true-exempt status. was by far the largest generated That's when the tour mtflr in four years and elevated the vened and came knocking o chanly to elite status on the Rohrer's door. Senior Tour m terms of giving, Adler and Rohrer had bet• tour official Tim Crosby said. longtime chairmen of the Nt>w But it was no secret Hoag and port Classic (to benefit Hoag) its core of volunteers could pull and their large volunteer bds off a proud event in less than six had b<•on firmly in place with sol months, Ix-cause the group bad id expcnence, making il a. smoo been intact for years OJ>('rating transition the N ~wport Classic Pro·Am (for· . For 23 years, the Newpor merly the Crosby Southern, Cla sic had been an institution h named after the late entcrtamer, Newport Beach, ral.!! ing millton Bing). for Hoag. Most of the pros wcr With Adler and Rohrer as th" futm o PGA Tour players, so1xtf key lifJUI for the I loag Pounda· minor l ague stop alonq the 8Y tion, th Senior PGA Tour con-Tho event brought ln or Utctcd them m May 1997 and than $200,000 each yeor for Hone allked U th charity would be ·m th• hnal five year , mt r ting ln talfing over µtc Bing Crosby had av s1on m th tournament, y..-hlch had been early 19709 to expand hi famou managed by lntcinatlonal Sporli P bbl€' Beftch Clambaku Pro A and Event Marketing. ond cr€'atn a aatelllte ovt•nt fu TI~ tow had OOeh iril f tc<l profe>Hlonals WhO didn't mak in Hoag two years earlier, but the c:ut at the loumatnt'nt know ISM gained the contratts with todty as the AT&T Pebhl"' B act Toshiba and the senior PGA Tour. NattoMJ Pr'O"J\,m. *We always thought we'd get ln 1975, the Cr by Southmt another Chance (to manage a Clambake wu bQm. 1"0MAS H.JOHNSON. Publisher WIWAM LOWLL. Editor 5'EVE ~ Managing Editor ROGER I CAM.SON. Sports EdltO{ MARC MARTIN, Photo Editor LYNNESOlA. Display ~ng LANA JOHNSON. Promotions APPRESS Our address is 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627. Sibts (949) 574-4223 Published by Times Community News, a Times Mirror Company. 01999 n,,_ CN All rlOhUr--...d IOYS p l R K I N G - I \ "' Friday, Morch 5, 1999. SI --. A O. __ _ .,,. __ C~fi"tAlilc'......,-...-. ..... GOLDEN BOYS WAREHOUSE PRICES Toshiba Classic SJ?ECIALS ·: ·97 Edna Valley Chardonnay ·97 Acacia ·caneros" Chardonnay • '96 Chateau souveraln Merlot Mon 1 --Sat 9:30-7:30 Sunday.11-4 950 W. Coast ·Hwy, Newport Beach ' (acroSs from Balboa Bay Club) 949•6 1 · 12 teatOn ·- Dl*i"t = ~ h= • 25 h• Altaccom- PI l·s he d bowter ... Was disquali- fied from 1996 Toshiba a.nk beCMM he t.llid to sign hll card after 1 reunct .. ... II .. of PGA Tour stw D 1 v Id D UVl I, Whothota finet-round 5t at the lob HclP.t CIMlic and Is ....... ludlng ~winner ..• A fcwii{e_r dub pro in ~ contin- ued tie~-=- season and fin· lshed 17th on money list. a jump of 11 spots ... Teammate of Hubert Green at Florktl State In IRi 60s ... age 52. .. H• played mo r • Seniorlbur events than any o t h • r player (491.nter- lng 1999) ... Nobody has wed It up more ttWI 450 times on tour _,. llNke shot hlug. last yeM, fir- ing (ii ·-Holds tour r,awd for most consecutive years /Nlt.Vi.llfNA:/ ff oo~ • . • for ~ iJ,.JlivUIWA-/ ~ Amrico floors o(Ter the widest range of ~tterns, colors, texrurcs and shapes ' and, wich Amtico's unique cutting capabilicic , we can help you create the floor of your dreams. Come to our howrooms to find out more. i l .... " I I I :. • I .... .. .. .. : ,• ·' .• . s 10 Frid:<JY, Morch s I 1999 , , . . ' , Fine ·Golf, Te13nis & · Res'?rt Appafel · · .. . .! . Rancho Mirage • N~wport Beach • • . . r . . . . . . L .ILY'S OF BEVERLY HILLS, LTD Walter· Genuin·Italian Shoes RANCHO LAS P ALMAS SHePPING CENTER RANCHO MIRAGE (760) 733'-4949 FASHION ISLAND -ATRIUM COURT NEWPORT BEACH · (949) 720~ 1966 . . visit our website~ at www.ladygolf.com and www.palmsprings.com/golf/ladygolf r ·· ' SERVING TI-if NEWPORT -MESA C01'AMUNmES SINCE 1907 '• FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1999 .Ne'YPort eyes CQronado city .~anager • Homer Bludau is council's . top pick to replace Kevin Murphy as head of city staff. JHf..1FER RAGL.AND ~Pb NEWPORT BEACH -The City Council's No. 1 candidate for its vacant city manager position is Coronado City Manager Homer Bludau, the Daily Pilot has learned. The Coronado city manager will meet with Oty Council m~bers in a closed' s~ssion Monday. ·Although he has not been offered the job, the council lfias .. picked Bludau as the top candldate from the three finalists intervie~ed last week . Bludau, 52, shares a· similar experi· ence with Newport Beach's previous city manager, Kevin Murphy: They were both popular administrators whose ouster launched a storm of controversy in the community. Murphy was forced to resign in August by a 4-3 majority of the City Council, an action that infuriated many N~wport Beach business and civic lead- ers. Although their reasons for wanting Murphy gone were never publicly dis· closed, council members said privately that he was too aggressive and didn't take enough direction from the council. In Septem~r 1994, four Coronado council members niet in closed session and fired Bludau with no public explana- tion, said former Mayor Mary Herron Sbe was out of town on city business while what she called tile #dastardly deed" took place and was shocked to hear the news when she returned. At the time, Bludau questioned the legality of the firing and considered pur- suing a wrongful-termination lawsuit against the City Council. But after the November election shift- ed the balance of power on the panel, he agreed to forget his plan to sue and was rehired on a 3-0 vote in December. #I was livid, because I found b.im to be outstanding," Herron said. #We I Newport .Beach for more than 20 yeors. launched a campcugn called 'Bnng The small, upscale beach communitj Homer Home ' And we did just that " on an island m San Diego Bay has mant According to published accounts of tSSues similar to those in Newport Beach. the inodent. counal members who fired mcluding water quality, tourism, eco- Bludau said privately thllt the dec1Slon norruc development and traffic. was based on their desite for a stronger Bludau's fnends and colleagues in leader. Coronado described him as kind man Newport Beach council members have and a competent manager. remained tight-lipped about their pre-"There's only one word that describe$ ferred candidate for city manager, but Homer Bludau, and that's 'decent,'" said news leaked out this week that it was former Coronado Councilman Bruce Bludau. He could not be reached for Williams. "He's a great human being, iii comment Thursday. addltion to being a great city manager."• Coronado is where former Newport Herron agreed. City Manager Robert Wynn worked ~ ... 11!111~ .-.~r:::-=:::--~ before he was hired. Wynn served in SEE BLUDAU PAGE A& • t BETWEEN A ROCK AND A. WET PLACE El Toro support ! fun din OON LEACH DAll.Y Pll.OT Two fishermen try their luck near a rock outcropping Inside Newport Harbor as twilight approaches. Calm,. sunny condJUons of the past few days have made for decent fishing condJUons inside the harbor. Today should bring more of the same, with weather conditions turning cloudy and cooler Saturday. Keep .businesses on West .Side diverse, residents say at Latino council mOOting • Panel heard variety of suggestions for revitalizing neighborhood in Costa Mesa. Eu.i,c .. GI.in tbl{Pb COSTA MESA -Partiopants in a Latino Business Council meeting on rebuilding the West ~ide made varying requests Thursday night, from main- tillning the dlversity or the businesses to cutting back social services. Business owner Prank Gutierre~ said he wanted to make swe that some businesses on the West Side continued to cater to the Spanish-peaking com-... munity. Maria Elena Garcia, who is a busi- ness owner and longtinle resident of the West Side, agreed. She said the population has continued to grow since she ~ed in 1975. several dther residents and bUSl· ness owners cited the diversity of the businesses on the· West Side as an advantage. Latino Business Council member Bill Turpit said that although the diver- sity of the West Side was a strength, it also highlighted a weakness: the inability of some Latino busine to make the crossover into mainstream culture. Turpit said ho patronizes several Latino businesses on the West Side - such as El Toro Bravo for its fresh tor- tillas, salsa and chips -but he said he ls also aware that some whites are uncomfortable using Latino busmess-es. • •I think what needs to happen for Hisparuc people is to figure out how to cross the barriers like someone like Taco Mesa has done,• Turpit said. • Resident Pat Doman said that although small Latino busine should be maintained, there was a need to introduce larger cham busi- ne cs into the area as well. :Brtng in the big guy (but) not to SEE WEST SIDE PAGE"' 72 ••••• MILLENNIUM MOMENT ' Irvine Co. chairman spreads the wealth through projects With an estimated net worth of more than $2 bil- lion, Donald Bren is one of the richest men in the world. As chairman . of The Irvine Co., the Unda Isle resident is a master b'Uildcr whose projects include Newport Coast, The Donald Bren Colony luxwy apartments m Newport Center and the expansion of the Imne Spectrum. Th former Marine al.so is a big donor to UCl and Caltech. M1lleM1um Moment cMbrates the peopi. who made a FN}or contribution to tN Newport· Mew commutu\Y d\lflng the p.st centufy •· .-g gets QK • Subcommittee of the Newport Beach City Councilrecomnlends giving $275,000 to airport alliance, 2 other groups. Jf'll<lFER RAGl.AND NEWPORT BEACH -The City Counal's airport subcom.I uuttee has recommended fund- mg the Orange County Airport Alliance and, to a lesser e:xterit. the Alrport Working Group and C1b.zens for Jobs and the Econo- my. The latter two pro..airport groups appeared with last- minute proposals for funding at the subcommittee's first official meeting Wednesday, called to hear the action plan of the newly formed alliance. The Airport Working Group asked for a $575,000 grant to continue its grass-roots efforts m sup- port of a com- meraal airport Key El Toro .. airport suppo.rter ~ bows out. A ~j ... ,. A'-. at the El Toro Marine base. Oti- zens for Jobs and the Economy asked for $650,000 to continue its strategy in the fight. which ID4in· ly consists of direct mail 'C&ID· • paigns. Councilwoman Norma Glover made a motion to recommend the council.. grant each ·group $500,000. She later amended the motion to start them out with only $50,000 each for specific activi· ties. That was passed unani· mously by the committee, wbidl also includes Mayor Dennis O'Neil and Councilman G&!'f Adams. · O'Neil said he supports giving sub tantlal grants to these~ but felt the committee did .oat have enough tune to review tbi two proposals before actmg Oil them. • 1 had thought that the com rruttee was meeting in order to SEE AIRPORT MGa •• INDEX ClA\'RI , ____ ......., ....... ____ _ fU1118 _....,._ ...... Ml ... "8.. __ .....,.. .. ..is ____ ....,.,. . ! I h l l- l, ... " [; G h .. ,, ,, I( ? ., I' J ... . i ., r. ? I/ i. " " c e CIECI IT 011 " 'athftnders to pilots: women :~-who 've changed the world F rom those who forged paths through untram- meled territory to others Who excelled in traditional feme.le fields, women have made significant contributions through- • O\ltthistory. Many of their stories are .. told in children's selections · tpropos reading for ~bra ting W6Jnen's Hi$tory Mo12th in MArch . ,. ,S:our-to 8- year-olds · shoul<l en1oy -··Seven GREAT ~~ l~~n,• in I wllich a young girl recalls the lives of her , female ancestors from Revola- : tionary War days to the Vie.tnam I era. Dreamy illustrations comple- 1 ment these portraits of quiet per- severance that reveal how women shaped history through ._ creativity, imagination and ; courage I · For preteen and young-adult , readers, the 120 biographical • sketches in "Herstory" illwni- : ndte the lives of famous and : mfamous women, from Cleopa- ' tra to Mother Teresa. Showcas-! mg those fiho influenced the • drts, polibcs, science and medi-• • one -from prehistory to the : present -t1us is a fine tribute to • • ~ women whose accompl.Lsh- • ments have : sometimes ; been ignored ) ... iQ history ~ks. .,· .: Jhe sto- nes of 15 feisty hero- ines who . defied con- ventions of their times are told in "Outra- geous Women of the Middle Ages." A playful approach to profiles of such in.spired women as Eleanor of Aqwtaine, the queen who led women on the Second Crusade, and Lady Sbik- ibu, who wrote the world's first novel, make Uus fun reading for young teens. Numerous volwnes concen- trate on women's contributions to specific fields. Prom the early protests of Susan B. Anthony to Jeannette Rankin's election to the U.S. House of Representa- tives, "Women Suffragists" examines women's struggle for voting equality. Similarly focused •American Profiles• works explore the achievement of female inventors, pioneers and scientists. Ten .women who composed m\lsic · from the 17th through the 20th centuries are highlighted in ·women Music Makers.• Details about the obstacles they over- came to get their work published and performed are covered in this collection about such lives as Clara Schumann and Florence Price. From 19th-century bicyclists to today's track and tennis stars, HWinning Ways" surveys the achievements of female athletes and teams who have made headlines in the world of sports. Included are more than 100 photos that dis- play the exploits of Babe Didrikson, Mar- tina Navratilova and other super- stars.· Engaging illustrations and profiles of exemplary role models iI1 "Tech Girl's lnt~met Adven- tures" will leave no doubt in girls' minds that women play key roles in today's world. This guide to exploring the Internet features more than 200 Web sites select- ed for their appeal to girls ages 8 and older. · There are more than 600 titles of books starring creative, capa- ble and intelligent females in "Great Books for Girls.• From such old favorites as Ramona the Pest to real-life admirable women like Eleanor Roosevelt, these confident heroines may inspire today's girls to become women who will mdeed change tomorrow's world. • CMEOC rT OUT Is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Publk Library. This week's column is by Linda Kline. Schubert comes to I ife C arl St. Clalr, Pacific Symphony Orches-# tra's music director, will bring to life the spirit of classical composing with a pre- liminary talk about contemporary music and the life ahd sounds of Schubert. St. Clair will then lead the symphony in Schubert's Symphony No. 6, "Unfinished," and Composer-in-Residence Richard Danielpour's "Concerto for Orchestra" at 3:30 p.m. Sa~y at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. The performance ts part of a three-concert Classic& Connection Series. The 70-minute perforinance incorporates a live orchestra with a personalized narrative, delivered in front of a larger-than-life portrait of Schu~ I Written in 1995-96 for the celebration of ~e PittSburgh Symphony's 1 OOth anniversary, 08.nielpour's •Concerto for Orchestra" will be thaking its debut on the West Coast. Also ~ "Zoroastrian,• Danielpour's concerto Unit.ates the playfulness of Mozart's riddles u !leans til the cairi.l.vals of Vienna. date book Daily Pil Costa Mesa student performs intricate work of legendary composer at OCC concert: ERoN 'Bl!N-YEHUDA ~Flot olfgang Amadeus · Mozart played the harpsichord at age 3. Costa Mesa native Jennifer Potter, the featured soloist with Orange Coast Col- lege's Philharmonic Orchestra in a concert this weekend, began playing piano beiore she started kindergarten. The two musicians come together Sunday when PQtter performs the legendary Austri- an's 20th Piano Concerto in D minor, whicll the 20-year-old considers one of the most chal- lenging pieces to play. - Mozart's music doesn't let you hide behind "busy work" like. the compositions of Fry- deryk Chopi:p and Ferencz Liszt, she said. "With Mozart, there's no fluffing," she said. uwith Mozart. everythihg is out in the ' open, everything is exposed." To bring the music to life, you have to be more than tech- nically accurate, she said . "I hear some people play like a typewriter," she said. "It just doesn't move me. You have to convey emotion to show you understand the music.• The remarkably poised young woman has been prac- ticing the concerto for. the past · 1 112 years. "You need to have the story laid O'\Jt in your mind -the sto- ry you want to tell with the music,• she said . Potter's story begins at the age of 4 when her parents pushed her to play piano. But she was simply too young to understand the music, she said. "It just wasn't happening," she said. Her knacl( for playing devel- oped three years la ter, although her love for the piano didn't blossom until juhiQr high school. By age 11, practicing was no longer a chore for her. "It was something I wanted to do,· shesaid. "Whenever l would get nervous about some- thing, I would play. It always calmed me down.• The piano still takes her mind off her troubles. "It's not something I have to Jennlier Potter smUes after practicing a compostUon at Orange Coast College. The 20-year- old pianist will perform Sunday at the college's theater. JENNIFER POmR , + WHAT: Solo performance of Mozart's 20th Piano Con- t certo in O minor + WHERE: OCC's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa + WHEN: 7:30 p.m. SuncfaY + HOW ""1CH: $6 in advance,; $8 at the dOQr + PHONE: (714) 432-5880 . sit there and th.ink about doing,~ she said. Despite her natural talents, Potter has had to work hard to hone her skills, which often meant sacrificing the time she could spend socializing with friends. Growing up, Potter felt peer pressute to give up her instru- ment, which wasn't •coot• But after landing her first gig playing at a fashion show for ..560 at the age of 12, she decid- ed "the heck with what my friends say.• "It was so easy. so enjoy- able,• she said about the per- formance . High school, an awkward~ time for anybody, was espe~­ ly diilicult socially for Potter. ·spending time with my instrument was more fulfilling than spending time with my friends," said the Costa Mesa High School graduate. And the school offered no musical challenges. "I felt that I was stagnating," she said. But Potter was used to going her own way and began taking classes at OCC. She stayed at OCC after graduation because the faculty made her 'feel special. •y was a big fish in a little sea," 11he said. Along with practicing two to three hours a day, Potter con- tinues to study classical and jazz piano at OCC as well as at Chapman College in Orange. She also privately tutors 10 stu- dents and has written some music, a minuet and pop songs with a •jazzy progression.· The most annoying part of learning to play the piano is hitting "technical walls." •Your hands just aren't cooperating with you," she said. Her greatest fear is injuring her hands. "I'm avoiding all closing of doors this week," she said with a laugh. Potter plans to continue per- forming and teaching while attending graduate music school in Europe. Her advice to those itching to play the piano is born out of her own experience. "If you really love it,• she said, •make sure you spend time with your instrument.• Former front woman of Missing Persons makes comeback with new band, new music JOUSELTEN Ocif Pb A resurrection of the quintessential missing person has occurred. Dale Bozzio, queen of the 1980s techno-pop, plastic and flare-band MisSi.ng Persons, is back in action, with a new band and a timely sound. Performing March 12 at Hogue Bannichael's in New- port Beach, Bonio is awaken- ing from the hiatus she took to rllise her children to take her place back on stage in bo~ of retaining he1 once- glotial folloWing. Before her public d.isap· ~ WHEN: 9 p.m. March 12 + WHERE: Hogue Barmichael's at 3950 Campus Drive, Newport Beach + HOW MUCH: $15 In advance, $25 at the door + PHONE: (949) 261- 627.0 major claim to fame dS the singer in a worldwide, smash· hit band that was formed in 1980. of music. Missing Persons became the bapd of the MIV generation. reCognize9. and remembered moSt1y for bei see-through; plastic dothirig, big bangle eanings, and bot- Pink hairdos. However, a band known more for its looks UWi for its SOWld could not outlast the falling of the New Wave era of pop. Around 198-4 the elec- tronic age of music began' its descent, and the band broke up, as did her marriage. .. Tickets can be pm-chased at the Orange ~ounty Perfonning Arts Center box office for 24, and ail ncketMaster outlets. For more , t pearance, Bozzio had a color- ful resume consisting of Play- ooy Bunny, backup singer for· Frank Zappa, solo artist 5igned to Paisley Park, (owned by the Artist formerly known as Prince), and her With hits like "Words," "Walking in L.A." and "Desti- nation Unknown,• Bozzio and drutru'n.er ahd former husband Turry Bozzio, changed the look Two marriages and two grown children later, Boizio has ye\ another addition to her Wustrious resume. With e new R&B/dance sound end avant-garde voeals, Bomo will combine her skills as singer/songwriter/conceptual· isl to the music of a new band, end hope to be at the right place at the right time. information, call (714) 556·ARTS. I , READERS HQTUN£ news stories, illustrltlons, edit~ (949) 642-6086 nat matter or advertisements herein c.n be reproduced wrth-Record your comments about out written permlsslon of copy-the D•ilY Pilot or news tips right owner VOL 93, NO. 54 AP PRESS HQW IQ BE6tH US Our address is 330 W. Bey St., CC>SQ Mes.I, CA 92627. Orculadon THOMAS H. JOHMON, CQBRECDQNS The Tlmes Ofenge County • Publisher (800) 252·9141 ' It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt-• WIWAML~ ty correc:t all errors of substance. Advwthlng \ Editor aassifled (949) 642-5678 \ Please cell (949) 574-4268. \ STEVI MAR8LI. Oispley (949) 642~21 ' Menaging Editor fYl Edttori1J • \ nNA M>RGATrA, The Newport Beectvcosta Mew News (949) 642·5680 . Asslsunt Menaglng Editor Oa~ Pilot (USPS-144-800) Is Sports(949)57""422l ANASTAOA FMDaG. pu lshed Monday through Sat· NeM. Sports Fax (949) 646-4170 Oty Editor urdly. In Newport 8Heh end Costa Mese, subscriptions ere E-mail. dallypdotOe•rthlink.net SllVI IAMES, evallable only by subwibt'(I: Mein Offk. N.ws Editor 8U1inesa Office (949) 642-4321 ROGl'lt~ The Tlmes Ortnge County ) 252·9141. In.,_, outsidt of 8usm Fex (949) 611-7126 Sports Edftor Newport Be.en end Costa Mesa, MNIC MAllT'IN, tubscriptic)n5 to the O.lly Ptlot • Photo Editor tv•lable Oltt'f .. by rNMI fo( Publistltcl bV .,,. LV.ao&.A. s 10 per month SecOnd d.sl Tim.~Ntwt. ~ Otsptay Adwfttslng post.199 ptld It COIU MeM, CA. a TIMel Mirr& ComplnY IUOYOSITING.. (PrbS tndude ... applicablei ~ Adlltttlslng Jt4* and loc.ll 1.Ua) POSTMAS-~ G. 'Mlf"l*'\ LWJOl•Oll. Tfft: Send..._~ to ~•ao Pfbmodcn :The Neiip:Ort IMcM:oAi Mesa ..,.._ ......... MUtaDllWt,. Deity~ .. 1560. Cott.t Yim,,,..,.."' 0...11 MtNgef Olllf ~ ()ffk., MtN,CA ~No .,,.. """" Ol All rW* """"" -:vi WE AT HER- TEMPERATURES TIDES BalbOa TODAY 64146 First low Corona del Mar 64147 4:48e.m ........ 1.0 Costa Mesa First high 66147 10;46 am . .•... 4.3 Newport Beach Second low 64146 4:56 p.m .••••... 0.8 Newport Coast Second high 64147 11:14 p.m ...... 4A SURF FORECAST LOCATION SIZE SATURDAY Wedge. .••... 2-Sw Ftrst low Newport •.••.• 2-4 w 5~31 a.m ••.•••• 1.1 Black..s .•...•. 2-4 w First high Rfver Jetty .•••. 2-4 w 11:26em ..•.•.. 3.7 CdM ......... 2-4w Second low IOATING 5·21 pm .. , ••••• 13 Morning windi out . Second high of the south It 6 to 1 O knots becoming 11;45 p.m ...... 4.l southWest«ly at 10 to lO knots by the •ftemoon. SURF The swell is out of the west every 13 seconds for waist· to .shoulder-high sets. Waves at the points and reefs will be higher. The swell will fade by Saturday. The northwest wind swell starts to bedc ~today. Wttet . Visibility •nd condi· lions art poor. We hw. f*tly clOudy skies. end the sun MU at 5:52 p m., POLICE FILES COSTA MESA • 9tbtol Street: A palm computer worth $400 was stolen from a buslne5s in the 3000 block during the evening of Feb. 25. • 9tbtol Street: A porse and Its contents worth $415 were stolen from a c,ar In the 3300 block between 1 end 2 p.m. Feb. 26. • Harbor mouieverd: A cellular phone worth $300 wu stol«I from• ctr In the 2100 block between 4 and •:30 p.m. • Tbwne Street: A cellular phone end a compact disc player worth $400 were stolen from a ctr In the 800 block during the evening of March 1. • Wiiton Avenue: A compact disc player worth $250 WM stolen from a car In the 700 block at 9;50 p.m. Feb. 26. NIWPOKT IUOf • INlne A~: A wellet and it's contents Worth S80 were • stolen from acer In the 1100 blodt betw.en 9:~ and 11 p.m. Marth 1. • Niwport C..... Df'tft: A tettulir phoM Wot1h S690 wes st<*n frOm a CM In the 900 block et 4:30 p.m. March 2. • • _...,. M•1Ue; A coat wOrth $525 wm stolen from 1 home 1n thi 1 eoo btOdt dur1no the tvtNn9 of Feb. n . • , .... 8'llMt: A~ worth JoiOo WllS,.,..,, from I CM In the 100 bfodl ctunng tht night of Feb. 21. • .... ~ A jokl rtng and 10me c.eitY Worth $1, 16J wn stoliin from • hOn'9 In "" too blodl betw'e•n t , :JO a.m. end 12!'5 p'" ~ 3. \ . . . :\ \ . Friday, March s. tm·AS . . lfyou want speed,-go to the 'ER ' on TV . · occ hit with claim over death E rnergcncy room. Strong image, isn't it? Doctors and nurses racing through the hal.ls. G\lllleys crashing through double doors. People shouting thin~s like •code blue," •stat.~ ·"we re losing him!• Exciting. Dramatic. Lives banging in the balance, George • Clooney, Julianna Margulies, etc. Highly trained professionals, standing at the ready to snatch life from the jaws of death. Let me offer a slightly differ- ent view. In real life, the ER is the OMV with beds. • How do I know this? One, a lot of doctors in the family. Two, recent experience. In the past few months, the home team has had a lot of players on the dis· abled list. Ergo, we've spent a lot of time in emergency rooms. Here's what I've learned : ·Emergency rooms are good places to find medical attention, as long as it's not an emergency. Astronomers say that black holes are the only places in the uni- verse where the closer you get, the more slowly time passes. Apparently, astronomers have never seen an emergency room. First, you check in. Remember the Mllce Nichols -Elaine May routine where he drags himself into an emergency room broken · and bleeding, and she makes him go through an admissions form, line by agonizing line? Nichols and May were 30 years ahead of their time. It's not nec- essary lo have every last detail of your health-care coverage on the tip of yollf tongue. But if you don't, you're·gonna die. • You'll then be asked to initial two pages of single-spaced, 6- CO.MMENTS & CURIOSITIES peter buffo point type in eight places, then sign and date it at the bottom. Think of it as closing escrow - just keep initialing and signing until they say stop. The form would be impossible to decipher even if you weren't dying, but basically it says you are responsi- ble for everything, especially whatever your insurance won't cover, and they are responsible for nothllig, including amputat- ing the wrong thing. You'll then be asked to take a seat until your name is called. Magazine? Take your pick. There's a Popular Science with a cover story on the DeLorean, and this month's Urology Newsle tter. Within an hour or two, you'll get to see the triage nurse, whose job it is to see who needs imme-• diate attention. He or she will take your vital signs, which are fading, and ask questions. The answers are irrelevant. It's a test. Based on your ability to mouth words and hold your head up. the triage nurse will place you in one of three groups. Patients who need immediate attention are assigned to the 1Wo-Hour Group; serious but not life-threatening problems to the Four-Hour Group; and the least serious to the Sunrise Group. The triage nurse will ask you to return to the wailing area. Do not expect to see.that triage nurse again. Sometime in the next hour, another triage nurse will call your name and ask you what seems to be the problem. Eventually, you will get into the ER its~lf. It's hard to say exactly how long that will take, but, by now you'd be hard pressed to remember what day it is. After about an hour of lying behind a drawn curtain, an ER nurse will jerk the curtain open and ask you what seems to be the problem. II you have been a really bad person and God wants to teach you a lesson you won't forget, the nurse will tell you they need some tests and X-rays. She will call a lab technician right away. After about 1 1/2 hours, a lab technician, who is from some- where at least 10,000 miles from the U.S., will jerk the curtain open and ask you to roll over on your stomach. If you ask him to state his intentions, exactly, he will give you an answer that you can't understand, and you wouldn't like it anyway. Even though he does things that re ally hurt, you decide the lab techni· cian is your favorite because he is the only person who didn't ask what seems to be the problem. By now, you're only one hour, two at the most, from seeing a doctor, who eventuaµy intro- FREE REPORT reveals what the insurance companies don't want you to know. Was your car injured? You may be too!! It may be weeks, months or even years before you experience pain, stiffness, headaches, even arthritis! Don't settle your case until you rea~ our free report. Paradise Alley -' ~ Classi Show. ~"l.J~ u~ • FREEADMISSIO ~ 'ft Rock Out to the Surf Music of the TORQUAYS LIDO MARINA VILLAGE 3400 Via Oporto • Newport Beach (949) 675-8662 M-F 9:00 a.m.~iOO p.m. duces himself, looks over your records, studies the test results ' and asks you what seems lo be the problem. After poking a few things, listening here and there, asking you to breathe in, breathe out, again --; that's good -your adventure m the ER is done. Total time with doctor? Six minutes. Total time with nurses? 1\velve minutes. Total time at the hospital? Six-point-five hours. My, how time Illes when we're having fun. II it's drama you're after. watch •ER." It has nothing to do with reality, but 1t only takes an hdur. I gotta go. • PETER BUFFA is a former Costa Mesa councilman. His column appears Fri· days. E-mail him at PtrB40AOLcom. MEXICAN RESTAURANT ~ ~ OURMEALS ~ ~ 41tr 4 -r"'' ro i i MEXICO i • • • g96 L 17TH ST. COSTAMESA• 645-76~6 COSTA MESA -The B. Becker of Huntm~n mother of a young man who Beach, Marlow charged that died at Orange Coast College the college •failed to provide ~ August bas riled a claim reasonable care and asjis· seeking unspeofied financial tance" at the time of her son's damages from the college over collapse. She also alleged that its handling of her son's death . the locker-room area was nee· -Daniel Edwards, 20, a Cresh-properly supervised, leadlnl man who hoped to play on the to an madequate response '4. school's football team, col-Edwards' &ollapse that ulti- lapsed and died in the locker mately resulted in bis death. • room alter picking up his prac-The college's board · 91 tice gear Aug. 3. After an trustees voted -unanimousi.y autopsy, the corone r deter-Wednesday to deny Marlow'$ mined Edwards died of d heart claim. Vice Chancellor John condition called myocan:ti~ -Renley said the claim would On Feb. 1. JUSt days before be turned over tQ the cout .. the statute of lmutauons Community <:;ollege District.' ... expired, Edwards' mother, insurance comp~r· wbk'h Ruthie Marlow, tiled a cliilm I would make a dOCISlon about against the college. whether to pay any damag . Through )ler ldwyer, Todd . -Jessie.a Garrison ~ "Where pastabilities are endless" · • Cuisine with a homestyle flair. . • A comfortable, ca ual dining atmosphere, .. -~. OPEN FOR DINNER AT 4:00 p.mi~ s~!~~.!~.~~1:1'!ooa_~.m. ~~ _.. (949) 548-0099 • Fax (949) 548-8468 r.\ 2000 Newport Blvd. • Costa Mesa u·. , Cash for Your Old Jewelry ,.. It may be wort h . . .. more than you thin k! Chances are you have "buried treasure" in your jewelry or safe deposit box. What's collecting dust could be collecting cash for you! For two days only, Charles H. Barr Jewelers will have as our guest Mr. Mark Ebert, an international buyer of antique, estate, and Hpreviously owned" jewelry.· ... -- Mr. Ebert is a former instructor of the Gemological Institute of America. He is also an author and lecturer to the trade on antique and collectible period jewelry. He will be ,available Friday and Saturday to consult with you on the di screet di sposition of your jewelry for the highest possible cash market price. Dispose of a single piece or an entire collection. Two Days Only Friday, March 5 ........................ 10 a.m. to 6 p.m .. ; Saturday, March 6 .................... 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. , : · or. by appointn1ent upon request - CHARLES H. BARR I i I 1 l ri t h l, ,, t I• 11 .. •I .. I :J el victims relive past heard testimony ff.Ol'.D 3 men who say the · ort Beach man Illtl~ted them when llat1 fib ANTA ANA -One by one, tbl!Y were called into the court· room and asked to relive their s~eful stories. And !hey did so ill~t of the man who they say s~part of their childhood. ... "Qe last tune they stared into eyes homJied, they were clllldnm Their boyhood glow has been replaced by gray hairs, lines and aching backs .. of the three men claim w ere vtcbms of James Lee ......,_UJel, :-"nle lrial of the 55-year-old c~cted sex -offender began ~ddy with the tesb.mony of three men ·who Sdid Crummel ~ted them when they were t~gcrs ...... . - Their expenences, spanning almost 25 years, painted· Crum- mel as a serial molester who took advantage of young bo~ from Wisconsin to California. But the most stinging te5tlmo- ny is expected to come from J8.901l Jule, a 19-year-old former patient of c ruminel's housel'n.ate. Dr. Gordon Burnell Forgey. Jule claims be was drugged and forced to have sex with the two men at Porg~y's Newport Crest condominium several times between December 1994 and May 1995. ·Crummel faces to counts of forcible oral copulation and sodomy in the Newport Beach c:ase. Defense attorney Bob Chatter- ton said he plans to strip away Jule's credib1fily dwing the course of cross-examination. Chatterton said the alleged victim changed his statements to police about the incidents and was the only person who made the claims against the two men. "Nobody other than Jason (Jule) said anything occurred sex- ually with Mr. Crwnmel an<i Mr. Forgey,• he said. •On eight difter- ent occasions o! interviews with Jason, he Introduced vanous accounts of what happened. l think we need to assess his credi- bility.• Some of the men who testified Thursday told jurors that Crum- mel threatened to kill th& if they told anyone about the sexual activity. None of the victims gave their last names in cowt, to protect tbeir anonymity. Steve S., a -45- yea.r-old physician, said he was picked up by Criunmel on a Wis- consin highway in 1967 and tak- en to a secluded area near Lake Michigan. Crumm.el allegedly bound his wrists with rope, saying it was a magic trick. The victim was pushed to the ground, and Crummel allegedly performed oral sex on him. He was 14. James M. was 15 when he met Crummel on a bus headed for a youth camp in 1962. Crumm.el lured the now 52-year-old man to a trailer, where he allegedly was forced to fondle the defendant for five to 10 minutes. Cnunmel was tried and court-ma.rtialed at Fort Wood, Mo.. for molest:ihg James M. and two other youths. · The day's testimony ended with John M., a 2?-year-old man, who sai(I he •partted• with Crummel in Big Bear City d uring the late 1980s. The victim said that five tir.1~ he got drunk and smoked marijuana with Crwnmel -an activity that led to roolesta· tion, usually after the youth had passed out from intoXication. There was one instance when Crummel-allegedly took pictures o! the then-15-year-old naked boy and performed oral sex on him after pouring chocolate syrup on his genitals. The victim said he oruy protested once during the course of the molestlltions. However, he said he wa.S concerned Crummel would carry out his threat to kill him. "I was afraid, and I didn't know what to do," he said. •He bad a crazy look in his eyes. He,_ looked serious, so I figured he was." Key El Toro airport supporter bows oUt after 24 years ·: JI 1\lflJ( RA<..l.A~O llat1 Pb N'EWJ>ORT BEAC H -After rQiOfe thdn 20 yedrs m the trench- -a! the El Toro airport war, ~ce Turner said he's giving ~ ~ role as commander. ''The former mayor and long-...... time airport activist abruptly resigned We dnesday from the Airport Working G roup, a grass- roots organization of El Toro sup- porters he helped to form. Although .Turner last week clashed with the City Council over its new direction on the air- port issue, he said the recent 10•1o Dhrnunl valid ror ... •ervicn except alf'elldy dJKounted pec:bpe. retail producu or in ronjuncdon with any other di.tcount. IG BUILDINGS, LOTS OF PEOPLE .•. -.: .. YOU ARE NOi' ALONE. These are Q)mmOn issues for families rching (and soul searching) to e the belt choice of care for their ~derly love one. Many get t Jri.tstrated that when they choose a -~facility and give up some of the ~l touch. Othen. choose a -.0 home and give up the ~d~ lru pired by a felliOnal care m.magement team. CX>S VERY PERSONAL, lSTED LIVING SERVICffi. tnd of housing rcstd cnts in a ..-e, institutional bullding, we have re tha.n J 50 senJors livi_ng among a 11 group o( friends in lovely -hqm in residmtial neighborhoods. ~ .cnlor l't'Ct'iv~ personal care • offered from the hearts of our care management team. This genuinely kind group of professionals consists of trained elder caregivers supported by care managers and senior care spt'clailsts. WE FEEL rnJS IS THE BFST WAY 10 HELP SENIOa5 AND THEIR FAMILIES. We know it is going beyond the boUndaries set in the care industry.~ do 1t because it is our calling You are invited to come by and see how we are pa lonatcly committed to changing t}l(> way America cal'l'S for ib elderly. To visit a home in your area, please caU today. @ AUTUMN R OSE •pilOH ~~IONAI A~MS 11 l> I IVJN<. tN l'll.IYAI I' li0"'4£.\ IN YI lllR l'H lf,tlllOll.llOC)(l" (949) 852-5100 'MDttint IO lfn assuttd l.1t1ing homt am IH wry srary t0 "1mi6" rwn u1hrn it is t'1t btsl thmgfor thml. H,lp thnn with tht tntn.si1i~1r ~ .J"1ucin,t tlJmJ to p11rtkipau in W tkciJions kint mMk. ,. kkhant A to•lt Ph.D.· Chairman of Autumn R ' events are not what caused bis decision. ·This has been coming for some time," he said. "I've been involved for 24 years, and I have other pursuits. There are new people who are in charge, and they should be in charge." Former Mayor Tem Edwards, also a founder of the Airport Working Group, said Turner is an irreplaceable asset in the El Toro fight. •He's probably contributed over $1 million. to the airport effort,• Edwards said. •He's the backbone of the entire issue, and people look up to him. He will be sorely missed.• · Mayor Dennis O'Neil said. he was surprised at the news. • "I believe that he is one of the primary people responsible for the base closure and for the progress that we have made to date in the whole El Toro airport effort,". O'Neil said. •He brings stature, credibility and a great deal of experience and continuity · to this whole movement.• JOHN BLOESER CARPET ONE The Oldest Carpei Company in California ~ Celebrating ·• ~ Our 120th Anniversary Houn: 2927 S. BRlsToL ST.• C-osTA MF3A •• Moo-Fri t-S:JOpm (~ mile south of South Coast Plua) S.t8tSun10-4pm (714)751-2324 ............ CALic.'212tlJ CERAMIC • DRAPERY • VINYL • TILE • BLINDS • WOOD --------------------- -SHIELDS &YARNELL 8 PM • F:RIDAY, MARCH 5 SIDE STREET SfRUTTERS. 8 PM• SATURDAY, MARCH 6 DOYLE'S IRISH CABARET from Dublin, Ireland! 8 PM• SATURDAY, MARCH 20 .. ' OllTUAlllS Carrie Barnwell Covey DailY Pil Longtime Costa Mesa resident Carrie Barnwell Covey died Wednesday morning of pneumonia at Sl Edna Convalesa!nt Hospital in Santa Ana. She was 97. Mrs. Covey was born Oct. 6, 1901, near Decatur, Ark., the sec- ond of six children. At a very yo\lllg age, she was taught evety- thing about hoU$4!keeping and fann chores. Her grandmother taught her a rhyme that she nevek' forgot: •once a task you have begun never leave it till it's done. Be it great or be it small, do it well or not at' all.• She seemed to take that as her lite motto. She became a Christian at about age 15, and soon after married Herbert Covey. They had seven children. Mrs. Covey was a member of Greenville Country C?:\urch in Santa Ana for mo!e than 30 years, attending ~d serving faithfully. When she was no longer able to go, she con-· tinued to send her contributions. Carrie Barnwell Covey Mrs. Covey was preceded in death by her husband, three sons and one daughter. She is survived by one daughter, Juanita Riley of Hesperia; two sons, Leslie of Mira Loma and CbarleJ of Santa Ana; 16 grandchildren, 27 great-grandchildren and a nllfllber of great--great-grandcbildren . Services will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at Greenville Country Church, 3501 S. Greenville St., Santa Ana. VJ.Sitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. today at Brown Mortuary, 204 W. 17th St., Santa Ana. Burial will be at Paci.fie View Cemetery in Corona del Mar. Lucy Pinkley To say the community benefited from Lucy Pinkley would be a . vast understatement. The wife of one of the city's founding fathers was a generous and active woman·wbo devoted her lite to civic organizations. • . Mrs. Pinkley died Monday ill St. Joseph's Hospital m Orange from advanced cancer. She was 89. Her death comes less than three months after her husband, Alvin •Pink• Pinkley, died from cancer Dec. 10. He was 89. Mrs. Pinkley was a leader in the connnunity, organizing and founding some of the area's most prominent organizations. J "She made one contribution after another," said Hank Panian, a member of the city's historical society. •Whenever there was a need in the community, she was there. She was a true pillar of the community." . . Doctors Qb::overed a cancerous lump behind her lung last week, and she was experiencing the first stages of dementia, said her son-in-law, Max Adrian. He added that the loss of her husband also contributed to her decline. Mrs. Pinkley was born July 14, 1909, in Enid, Okla. Her fam- ily moved to San Bernardino in 1912. . She entered a training program for nursing and married Alvin Pinkley in 1928. They had two children, Vrrgll and Lucy. They settled down in Harper, now known as Costa Mesa, in 1933. She was an active member of the Costa Mesa Women's Club for more thi41 60 years, the Daughters of the American Rev- olution and the Harbor Womens' Club. Adrian said his mother-in-law's biggest joy was tending to the couple's pharmacy -Pink's Drugs -on the corner of Newport Boulevard. She enjoyed serving sodas to the neighborhood kids and helping them select candy. When Pink's Drugs closed in 1980, Mrs. Pinkley saw the evolution of candy prices go from a cent to nearly a dollar. She is survived by her son, Vugil Pinkley, and ber daughter, Lucy Adrian. Funeral services will be held at 11 e.m. Monday at the Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary, 1625 Gisler Ave., Costa Mesa. !SJG)!J ---.. ~"IHU' Mattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW · COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! 11 3165 Harbor Blvd. Cqsta Mesa One Block South of 405 Pwy • • I . 545-7168 RUFFLES 1~ u ·PHOLSTERY Where Your Dollar Covers Morel Club Sofa $10000* OF'F Chair $5000* OFf;, I *With a purchase of Fa bric & l,.abor til 3/12199 New Location Same Street 2 blocks North 1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MEsA-548-1188 ME.ET OUR. MEMBERS Maatbu for: 7 year• Oc.cupedon: Mother of r.~ & a hu,ba.ndt 'Whr did you joln Sh.,,..lJpt "Shape-Up 1$ 1 loal neighborhood gym. I don't like the big cioWdcd ht.alth ~Tubs, and Shape· Up haJ C'VCt)'lhing I need.• eo.&.. To suy fit fut l1f'e. What an yoat tenalt11 ·St.rcngih training hu gi~n me more ddinluon and more endurance: for the a~ru l lovt -{tennis. nowboardio18c slUing).• W1w do ~ UU .a,o.t ~Up •t like thtar SPINNING dassa, Ptnonal TrJinen and nrcngth ua.ining cquipman. Shape-Up bu great Kmce 8c a friCndly atmosphttt. I ftke itt amall ""'"? feel.• Daily Pilot ANY ~ ... PURCHASE AT THE RIGHT START® COSTA MESA . . Expires Marcli 31, .1999 This coupon must be pre~nted to receive discount. Limit one coupon per customer. Coupon may not be combined' with any other offer. M..o'f not be used for the purchase of Gik Certificates or on Catal~ orders. Not valid for prior purchases. Void if copied or transferred. ~ . Redeemable only at The Right Ska .... Coita Mesa Code: GO 154 .... •· l• I r· .. I ll CONTINUED FROM A 1 :ireview the proposal and action • plan of the alliance,• he 54.id. "I : needed further time to get infor- : ation, primarily to see what , of a budget we have.• : full City Council will vot9 ·on the subcommittee recommen- . . ' dation Monday. The Airport Working Group will use the $50,000 to {:Onduct surveys it hopes will gauge atti- tudes of people in different Orange County communities. Cit- izens for Jobs and the Ecpnomy will use at for local and federal ~BLUDAU : CONTINUED FROM A 1 "Newport Beach U? very fortu- nate to have Mr Bludau under consideration,· she said ·He was an outstancling mandger here, is well-respected an the held dnd has evolved our city into a par- aclis<> •. ShNry f lam1lton, execul.Jve director of the Coronddo Cham- Qf Commerce, said she will be to see Blucldu go. t" hctd a very good working relat10nsh1p with I lomer, • she sdJd. •He's al!.o bPe>n a vdlued Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner lobbyi,ng. Part of the recommendation was to have Glover .Jt on the board of Citizens for Jobti and the Economy, and to have Adams sit on the Airport Working Group board for communication \and oversight. • 1n a separate action, the sub- committee recotnmended the council give the alliance the $173,000 needed to complete the organization's prellmlnary six- month b1,1dget. Newport Beach ls one of five members 9f tl_le alliance, whic)l also includes Ana- haim, Los Alamitos, the Orange County' Business Council and the Airport Working GrouP.. The $273,000 QUdget community member here.• Coronado council members said Bludau's management style is fair, orde rly and with a bottom- up approach He has an ability to engage the staff, which is why many a.re heartbroken he may be leaving, council members said. Former Councilman Dave Blu- mentha l, who was elected in November 1994 and was ,one of the negotia tors who brought back Bluda u, said one of his strengths is letting the staff be involved in the direction given by the council. "You cdJl't set policy as a city manager, and 1 lomer recognizes that a nd never attempted to do that,· he sd1d. "H<> dl ways unde r- PRNATE PARTY ROOMS 1/EREST A MacGillivra_y Freeman Film I ·. ___ .._.., Udd&I&• ........ m#flJ,..., " Ufl•IUlfRl(Pl·111 L/00 •·' . . . . ., ., ,. ........ $100,000 oLw}lich will come from Anaheim business groups -will be used to hire Hill & Knowlton for continued public outreach and economy-related studies by the stood that be was not a policy maker and that he canied out the policy .• Coronado Councilwoman Pat- ty Schmidt was one of the four council membel'S who voted to fire Bludau in 1994. But she said that is all •water over the dam.• "He's a very good city manag- er, a very nice person and very capable," Schmidt said. "I can't say anything but good things about him." ln 1994, Bludau was making about $120,000 as Coronado's city manager, according to published accounts. Newport's position advertised an average salary of $140,000. RECYCLED RAGS ( lutht·' 1!11111 lh1 11.1rd111f11·, 111 :h, 1111rld' h1·,f dn·"t•d prnpl1 OPEN EVERY DAY! 2731 E. Coast Hwy Corona del Mar (949) 675.5553 ....... .:m't1 •• a. ..:,~-~ WI ..... t• unu ... I It•• • • , buainea council. But beceUJe tbe aWance's pro- poiel did not include an allocation for stliff to run the day-to-day operations of the rtew group, the city's action drew some criticism from other pro-airport activists. •There's some frustration by people that the aJUence hasn't been able to come into being -0vemight," Adem.s said. "lt'.s my understanding that recommenda- tions for staffing will follow. It's something that needs to get done quickly, but the first order of busi- ness was mapping out the objec- tives and getting the request for funding." O'Neil, who sits on the alliance board of directors, said the.group wW decide daffing iaues at a meeting at tbe end of tbe month. Only one proposal for an execu- tive director came in. It wu not voted on, he said. •The board will receive pro- posals, • O'Neil said. •1 think we've done quite a bit in the short period of time that we've been alive.• But Tom Naughton, president of the Airport Working Group, said his group ls giving the alliance a certain amount of time to begin implementing the pro- grams before he considers pulling out of the alliance altogether. "U it falters after a given point in time, J don't want to waste any of our people's time and !Uort by condnuing to go to meetin Naughton Mid. •The wordl music look appropriate, so condnue. But it's not the plan the iµlplementation. • Bruce Nestande, presiden Citizens for Jobs and the E my. Said his group never has funded by the city; He said $650,000 the group request not its entire budget but enable the organization to ste its efforts. "I think obtaining some s money is very positive," tande said. "In my mind, wouldn't give $50,000 to s activity if they weren't goin pursue "it further, because woU!d be a waste of money.• 1 WEST SIDE I ·CONTINUED ftcOM A 1 including the Vista Center. They said the litter and filthy appear- ances of some businesses made it uncomfortable for them to patron- ize. think it's very very dangerous, it's not like that." Overall, participants descri visions for the West Side rfilniniscent of an Ernest H way short story. When ask give brief statements about vision they bad for the West S numerous people asked fo clean, well-lig~ place wi Spanish theme. i i j I ~ I I I ! : the exclusion of the small guys,• be said. Another theme of the discus- sion centered around social ser- vices on the West Side and the perception that homeless people tarnished its image. Property owner.Joann Reinbolt complained that the concentra- tion of social services such as the Someone Cares Soup Kitchen and shelters served as a magnet for the homeless. Numerous participants criti- cized the upkeep of some busi- nesses and residential areas, Resident Hildegard Gonzalez said she has stopped shOJ>ping at one business in particular because of bow much it has dete- riorated. •u it's that dirty outside, I don't want to go inside," she said. Some businesses could be cleaned up, but Taqueria El Gren- jenal owner Robert Maldonado said it would be harder to fight other perceptions about the West Side, particularly ones about safe- ty. •It's not like people think,• Maldonado 54.id. •Some people Thursday's meeting will pr bly be the last of ~e small m ings to gather input on the Side until a larger worksho held March 22, said consul Cynthia D' Agosta. Residents and property o will be invited at that ti.me to in and respond to more sp proposals for the revitalization SERVING THE LIDO PENINSULA SINCE 1961 WRY SHOP ANYWllERE ELSE r--Easter Coupon·-, ; 20°/o OFF ; I Any one Easter item I I One coupon per customer. Some rcsrricuons apply. See tore for details. I Prescnpuons not included. Can not b« combined with any other offers. L Expires 4/4199 ..J ---------~-----,. For Prescriptions ·• Remember Insurance Co~Pays are always the same regardless of where the prescription is filled. Why put up with the hassle. We fill most prescriptions in 15 minutes or less and offer FREE Delivery* •LimJttd area, S« non for detaUs. Transferring your · prescriptions to Via Lido Drugs is easy. Call, or bring in your prescription bo~e from Rite Aid, Thrifty, Payless, Long~ . or SAV-ON .' •• Our pharmacists George Kridner, Bill Mansour, Linda Desbrow will do the rest! ilot Doily Pilot Friday, Morch 5, 1999 A 7 rflrlefs steal $3,000 ~from Head Start office Deft Pill COSTA MESA -For months, the children at the Costa Mesa Canyon Head Start program have been looking forward to their end-of-the-year field trip to Adventure City in Buena Park. But the trip may be called off. On Tuesday night, someone broke into the school, which serves 102 low.income preschool children, anq stole a secunty box with $3,000 in it -all the funds parents had painstakingly raised through candy sales and other fund-raisers for the trip. "I am really disturbed,• said parent Paul WerdeJ, a volunteer at the center. "It makes you want to cry sometimes. They took these kids' money. It's just appalling.· What's worse, school officials sdy, is it's not the first time d.D area ... we school has seen hard-won dona- tions vanish into the night. The Waldorf School of Orange County, next aoor to Head Stdrt, has been hit twice µi the past three months, said Waldorf administrator Justine Howard. As with Head Start, the thieves slipped into the building in the middle of the night and cut the wires connecting the aJann sys- tem. Police have not said whether the incidents were related. Even so, Howard said she has asked police to step up patrols in the area, which is next to Estancia High School and a nature park. "It's dark and remote back here, and these thieves obvtously know exactly what they're doing,• Howard said. ·1 can't believe this has hap- pened,• said Lynn Bach, Head Start director. ·It's like stealmg from the kids.• • 7 New Sandwiches • 3 New Salads • Plus Our Entire Dinner Menu · • Business & Birthday Lun~hes • Take·out Avallallle All Day, • Open Dally 11 :30 a.m• 10 p.m. • Private Banquet Room (w /TY, VCR, Microphone) Seating for 90 • Full Bar with 2 TVs • Warm, Comfortable Booths • Reservations Accepted NEW LUNCH MENU ITEMS INC:LUDE: • Apple Smoked Bacon, Turkey Club • • Swordfish Reuben • Pulled Pork • Build Your Own Burger • Homemade Soup & Chili • BBQed Chicken & Artichoke Salad • ~ Famous Blacken8d Chicken Pasta 1 • MARCH 1999 .... .• ,..,... . . 6 ye .... , COftdlHled .......... .... .,, llllG9 • ......,,._,.,, Education Committee 7:30 a.m. -Ch(lmber office Enwronmental Committee 7:30 a.m. -Chamber office Networfctrs Leads Lunchffn Group 11:45 a.m. -Costa Meso Country Club 1701 Golf Course Drive E.recuthie Committee 7:30 a.m. -Chamber office Board lunch -dark Ambassador Committee Noon -Chamber office W.d•••d.,r lleldt 17 St. Patrick's Day W1dne1..,. ~ 17 Legislative Committee Noon -Chamber office • l'llwideJ, Mlilda 1a 90-Mfnute Breakfast Boost 7 am -8:45 am Costa Mesa Country Oub 1701 Golf Course Drive· W•••MJ, ll9ftlt 24 Muer wHI be held on Thursday, March 25 ,._.,, Milfdt U Tri-City Chamber Mixer Costa Mesa, Irvine & Newport Beach Hosted by Newport Beach Chamber 5 -7 p.m ., The Sutton Place Hotel 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach COSTA MESA CHAMBER AND TEWINKLE MIDDLE SCHOOL TEAM UP FOR Box TOPS FOR EDUCATION The Costa Mesa Chamber has partnered with Tewinkle Middle School to participate in General Miiis' BOX TOPS FOR EDUCATION program. Box Tops for Education allows students to earn cash for their school by collecting box tops from General Mills' products. General Mills cereal packa~ flaps bearing Box Tops lqgos can be redeemed for 15 cents. All other General Mills snacks, Yoplait multipack and Foodservke products bearing the Box Tops logo can be redeemed for 10 cents. There are 60 General Mills products included under the program and schools can earn up to S 10,000 by redeeming box tops. · The best thing about the money eamed is that the school can spend It on anything desired. There are no strings attached. The program has just begun and will continue until June 2000. All businesses and residents are welcomed and encouraged to participate. Box Tops for Education may be mailed to the Chamber office at 1700 Adams Avenue, Ste. 101, Costa Mesa 92626 or to TeWmkle School, Attention: Box Tops for Education,. 3224 California Street. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Or they may be deposited directly to a special collection bin located at the Chamber office. Box tops will be redeemed periodically. The Costa Mesa Chamber is committed to the education of the youth of the community. This is one more way in which businesses and their employees can have a positive impact on our schools. MEET AMBASSADOR WENDY REID Wendy Reid is a local who grew up in Newport Beach and lived in Costa Mesa for nine years until her recent migration south to Laguna Niguel. She began attending Chamber functions and became active as an Ambassador soon aft$r joining Golden West Financial In 1997. As an Ambassador she wears many hats. One of her most notable hats Is that of Breakfast Raffle Prize coordinator. If you are one of the hearty souls who attend the monthly Chamber Breakfast Boost, don't be surpnsed if She asks for your • donation to the raffle drawing. And be sure to buy raffle tickets because she is very effective at her job -the raffle prizes are plentiful and worthwhile. As the Fleet Manager for Golden West Financial, a 22 year old financial services company in Costa Mesa, Reid is rMponslble for &Ssisting small businesses with managing their vehicles ... whether they have two or 50 vehicles. Her experience as the Fleet Manager for a loal cable television company, running a national fleet of more than 1, 100 vehicles, has proven valuable to her current clients. By utilizing her ex~rience arid contacu small business owners are able to manage their company vehicles witt16ut having to actually do it themselves or hire someone on 1 full-time basis to manage costs. "Most small business owners are exPfrts at what they do (dry deaning, sign company, Insurance, etc.), but they don't have the t1m• or elC.perience to decide what Is the best vehicle value, lease \l!o, pure:~ etc.," Reid said. "We buy hundreds of vehicles every year tttMr from ~ stock or through fa<:tory orders. Our vehicte-s ere sold, fin•nced or INwd •t 1 faff, not greedy pnce. ~ deti'lef the vt-hldri to oor cltenU home or offi«.. sp1rl<hn9 clean, with 1 futl tank of gas."' Golden West 1lso extends the same .seNkes to ~ of their businesi clients ind 6tMt consumers Offettng them an opportUnlty to pure.ha~. finance or ltase YehteleS ~t grut Pfkes and extremely competitive rat~. G6'dm West Fln0ttdol.Jttts dnc dlflslom. auto ......... ••If...., Ottd iftll ntott hMdng illwl k l«otld _, JJOJ ...._ IW~ 0..2 ~ _, rhf 40S lwy). Slelp In Olfll _, ,_. t.> AfRINnsodlw ~ llW. Holiday Inn Costa Mesa 27yeanll Vista del Lago Apartments 18yeanl Southj!rn California Bank 10yeanl Residence Inn of Costa Mesa South Coast Repertory 9yean , Canon Business Machines, Inc. 8yean ArnelManagement Mesa Verde Plaza Park Plaza II, Ltd . 6 years Costa Neuporte Hall Chiropractic MGE ~PS Systems, Inc. McDonald's (Man..Cal, Inc.) Chris Magee Steel, 11 4 years • • Custom Laminating lava T'Go ' Plums Restaurant )years Bertolini's I Love Sushi Golden West Financial Goodrich & Thomas, CPAs Cooing Chiropractic Monahan, Cary 2yean AZ. Mfg., Inc. Carwash of America Resinart JANUARY NEW MEMBERS ltfellne Chiropractic Brian J. Stanton, D.C. 3010 Harbor Blvd., Ste. B Costa Mesa, CA 92626 714/662-2142 voice 714/662-2144 fax NEC Group Paul Curtis 7650 Haskell Avenue, Ste. A Van Nuys, CA 91406 800/644-7469 voice 818/779-8911 tax PDS Technlcal Services DJ Englert 150 Paularino Avenue, Ste. 290 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 °714/540-7900 voice 714/540-8092 fax Wffkenden USA Pamela L. Apodac 439 S. Westridge Circle Anaheim Hills, CA 9280.7 714/283-0678 voice Anaheim Angels Baseball Club Michelle Kahler 2000 Gene Autry Way Anaheim, CA 92806 714/940-2122 voice 714/940-2206 fax Ulube Sara Hundley 3599 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 714/966-1647 voice 714/966-1077 fax Signs Royale Roy McQuoid 1914 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, CA 92627 949/645-74.1$6 voice 949/645-2259 fax Wotverlne Environment.a Marl< Drollinger 24461 Ridge Route Drive, Ste. 200 Laguna Hills, CA 92653 9"49/470--4505 voice 949/470--4501 fax Weldorf School of OC Diane Kastner 2350 Canyon Drive Costa Mesa, CA 92627 9"49/574-7775 voice 949/57-4-7740 fax Coste Mesa Dental Office Liang Ren, D.D.S 11 75 Baker Street, Ste. A-4 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 714/545-9880 voice 714/545-7108 fax Coite Mes• Honda-lnflnltl Craig Shearer 2888 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 714/436-5050 voice 714/540-6527 fax St. Joachim C.tholk Church Maureen Schardt 19~ Orange Avenue Costa. Mesa, CA 92627 9"49/57-4-7"400 voice 949/57-4-7407 fax I • S Automotive Joseph Speigel 785 Newton Way Costa Mesa, CA 92627 949/722-2.5o4voice Beginning in the next few weeks, Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monah during one City Council meeting each month, will recognize an ITTdiiV' tcmaH:I who is outstanding ;n his or her contribution or ~rvice to the commu There is no set criteria or regimented method of selection of each reci "I believe it is imPortant to thank those individuals who so consis give of themselves for the betterment of the community," Mayor M1nn1 .. •M relates. "There are so many good things happening in Costa Mesa. I t~ this is a great way to individually recognize a few outstanding people.•~ Each recipient will be invited to a City Council public meeting to rK'llliltte'~ his or her recognition along with a thank you from local businesses in form of a gift basket or gift certificates -something djfferent each rTV'llj,__ There are a couple ways in Which residents and businesses in Costa can help Mayor Monahan with this program. First. if you know <nri~,,... who deserves to be recognized, briefly write to Mayor's AWllf'd, City of Costa Me~, P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa, CA 92628· 1200 ur by FAX: 714f!54·5330. If you operate a business In Costa Mesa and wish to contribute a gift to be given to the Mayor's Award recipient. please con Rose Quinn at the Costa Mesa Chamber of Comme~e at 714/885-909 . ~ . . Cosb Mesa Country Cub 1701 Cotf Courw Dr. $12 p~id resen·ations • $17 at the door Phone reservat1ons accepted with Cftdit card payment Speaker: Mark Mitchell "How to Betvfit frortt th' 'Dlrhlmtt of a.a_.., r--------... --------------------, ..... ...,.........____._.... ____ ~~~ ......... -------~ lcaMfWfY·~ ....... -----..:._----J"M*._ __ _.... _____ ...i IVll!i.MC----.-.....-::'"""""~----~----~~--~ L----------~_.,. _______ .,, .. .._ ... _.. .. Mlll11r.C01UW.~olOar T a:o . l700Aclaml lcft .. O....._,CA .. formcnlNcw• tDll•to .... "aa I I • cllU cntt-....1u en.--.-. / -:--r. . . ~-- :;, .. A~BRIAN •IUOJ JOHNSON l!Ot · ~~wport H~bor •He was the Tars' CIF Player of the Year from a ,, 1 , t~f1).n (14-0) for the ages. :;;, • BARRY FAUUCNl:.R ~ ' lklttflb nrian Johnson needed Ill only eight games in the fall of 1994 to climb into the pantheon of NPjl.tport Harbor High football. i.,1t<1tarted simply enough for t!lfii~toot-8,.l ?~under. But by ~~e his eventful senior s~n was over, he bad ~ended to individual heights 'n~~ attained before or since ui'.'~ seven decades of Sailor football. ;~ppe of several catdlysts in a l4Mrcampa.tgn whlch produced ~.~hool's only CIF title, J~on was named CIF Sol1tllem Section Division V ... ... Player of the Year, a fiist for a Tar. He was ' also Sea View League and Newport- Mesa District MVP . . Though he was a two- year starter on defense -a t J6brison outside ,,. " linebacker as a,}unior, before being shilled to cornerback as d senior - JOhnson's star status was hardly denned six games into '94. ~,While he sparkled at . comerback, he had rushed for a ~re 181 yards on 31 carries as a ~rt-tune tatlback. Coach Jeff Brinkley, however, he.pqed the rems to lus running game to Johnson the rest of the ~~ and the result was 117 rU5htng yards per game. 'fohnson, whose strength, determination and deceptive speed helped him take advantage of sizable holes created by his offensive line, exploded down the stretch, en route to 1, 119 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns. He amassed 508 yards and six Tl>s in four playoff games, including the overtime fourth-t1own garne-winn'er frO'J;ll 1 yard out to cap a 13-10 semifinal win at Foothill. Defensively, he collected a rt-Mesa-District-leading interceptions, displayed ker-like tackling skills on run support and also returned Pu.Dts and kickoffs with aplomt:>. ~ "He's a great athlete who has I t of tools,· Bnnkley said g the monument.al senior paign. ee problems -most notably Ila tendinitis -kept Johnson playing for the South in the r ge County All-Star Game also ended his hopes of tibuing at Orange Coast ege. ohnson, who also started two ons as a fullback for the NIAIArrl.nrt Harbor soccer team, Ule only two snowboarding qtests be entered in 1997 and, l~ wtlllng, is interested in resliming competition in the last-growing sport very soon. Still pursw.ng his studies at OCC, he plans to transfer to a four-year school, posstbly Long Beach State, to obtain his college degtM. _301dl,s. •Life on America Thie an experience of a lifetime. K ia Ora from Down Under. I arrived only five days ago and believe New Zealand is the best kept secret on earth. The scenery, sunsets, islands, excitement' and enthusiasm a.re all fabulous. However the friendly, positive attifude of its people is even better! I met Dawn Riley, skipper of the American '1Tue campaign out of San Francisco YC. The Conner camp sits next to AT and was sans Dennis, a boat, people, equipment and other gadgets that one mtght think prudent to have here by now. "It's definitely an advantage to be here early,• said Riley. The Royal New Zelland Yacht Squadron (a yacht dub) played host to the Coca Cola Cup Invitational Youth Match-Racing Regatta Feb. 25-28. Newport- Harbor High products Brian Bissell (Georgetown) and Jamie McCormick (USC) tea.med with NeYiport senior 'Iroy Treaccar to represent the U.S. in a {ield of 11 international teams. That evening 1 asked Sir · Peter Blake, winner of the '95 America's Cup, the Whitbread race and the leader of New Zealand's 2000 America's Cup team. who would be the toughest competitors? Terrance Phillips only to fall behind by five boat lengths at the finish. Their second race was against le dE/i of France, which also defeated AT, which had troubles from the start with three crew members leaving the team, qne with a broken band, one with a very enlarged ego and one for no apparent reason. With just three hours ~f practice in unfamiliar boats colled Elliott 5.9s and a slow start in the series was costly and they just missed the semifinals. •Any one of these teams could win it,• responded Sir Pete. "You can never count Dennis out. He's always going to be competitive. Italy, Cayard, Riley, France, they're all tough. The level of competition is far superior at~ this Cup than in past campaigns." The America's Cup Regatta Series began Tuesday with AT getting a jump on Prada of Italy, The America nue team is run by Chris Coffin of Newport.. SCIOOL d • Shea has watched some big games from sidelines as a senior, but ~turday's CIF title clash won't be one of them. Tiere are few things Justin Shea tolerates ess gradotisly UiaJl losing, but watching in treet dothes 81 hls teanunates lose is certainly 9ne of them. Even when the Sea Kings have won during Shea's unscheduled sideline stints, the 6-foot-4, 230-poWJd football and basketball standout isn't likely to be the life of the postgame JMUty. So, it is with special reverence thiS snake-bitten senior iS savoring S4hiiday'S 9 a.m. opportunity to Win a ClF Southern section Division ID-A basketball champ1qmblp against top-seeded Ghaminade at the Ariowbead Pond. •You always hope your ~yers get the opportunity to show what tbeY <:an do, •_CdM Coach Paul~ Mid. "We've bad =~t get that chance due to injuries over the y ~ and I've really felt badly for them. Justin struggled some With sickness and injwy, tfut he's really hung in.there; Having to sit out jtist kills anyboc:fy that ~ttVe, bee8use they can't . do anything about the outcome of the game." · Shea missed both CdM 'Yictories over Woodbridge m Sea View League play. Bedridden with the fiu the fust Woodbridge game, he tried to come back two nights later against Back &y riva.J Newport Harbor. But, still weakened and wot>bly, he played sparingly and did not score ii\ a loss to the Sailors. A hypere.xtended knee sidelined him for the second WoOdbridge encounter and limited his • effec:tivene11 bl tbe su~ent Newport game, another letbiadt. Shea, a two-ttine all-league and All-N~-Meta Dist:rtdlineman and thtee'-year varsity football starter, suffered a dislocated kneecap the final nonleague game, which kept him out for the league ope~er against -you~ it-Ne~rt Harbor. "Defini~ miaing the HarbOr football game was a big ~t. • said the player oriis ~fyi<ills •e.rn ·Boss· and who played the rest of the food>Ul seeson With a reltridive an(t. heaviJ:Y tapedibee btace. ":Then whm J ge,t·~ (in January), I thought, 'Oh God, tldl ls a cune.' • Weakened ligaments and atr6pby ~. sUrTOunding leg mUscles have requtr8d hlm lo tape the mee tor support in baSketb411, as well. But Biter Alting out bis j\lnior basketball seuon to concentrate on Uftillg wetghts before his final football~ Shea wasn't about to mid his last dWM:e '° compete as a prep. , "l misted bultetb411," wd Shee, who was encouraged to NtUm to the program by hiB ~rs and ~e<I heartily by Otril. • •He w .. 't·lonieOne we were counting on, bUt be'I biaD a huge surprise,• Orris Akf ol h1S bnP<>Sfn9 starting c:Mter, who has chopped an a~ of S.8 points -and at least u many meDadng IWes -on oppQnentl this wtilter. And tbenllbere are those wayward elbow$. "I try not ~,Play with a footbell mentality, but 00N LEACH I DAl.Y Al.OT CdM's JUsUn Shea. powerl.Dg through trafftc. I always end up domg il, • said the uniformed embodiment of the toughneSs Orris adril.ires more than any beautifully back-spi.n$g three-poi,\lter. "I think I have to thank my brother (Ryan, now a 21-year-old San Diego State student) tor that, beca~ we used to fight at everything," Shea said. •1 guess I've learned how to sneak a couple elbows in there without getting caught. (Opposing players) get mad at me, but I try not to think about it. I'm tall, but I'm not center-type tall, so I have to use whatever edge· I can in there. Scoring lSn't noimally my thing, but I try to do oil)er stuff.• Shea displayed his intensity m a more Vlsible way toward the end of the Sea Kings' 61-46 semifinal win over Nordhoff, Ha scored the first six points of Ule fourth qu8rtcr, the final four of which endoo an 8-0 Nordhoff run aJ'ld sparked a 10-2 CdM spurt to finish the game. He (X)]lected four of h.is five rebotinds in the Jinal periOd, u well lll two steals and an assist. His 14 points matched Alec Hanson for le4111·high honors and marked his second-bi~gest teoring output of the season, his fifth time m double figureir-,. "He does a lot Of the bluc-colllu, ugly work that ii n9cessary for the glrunour boys to gel their reiAArd, so I was glad to see hin1 get th& chance to receive a llttl recognition,• Orns said Of Shea•s semifinal perlormanc;e. •The matUrity level aild toughness he's brought have really ~a plus thiS year. Without Justin, we would have beeri an entirely diff ent team.• Shee said be wasn't conremed ebOut a potential pr~me calamity be.fore Saturday. "I can't thln.k about (a recurrence of such nusfortune). l'm trYing to enjoy thl • I'm going to remember it th rest or my lit . • . 'PIAYBAIJ~ J ., C1111t Mill•(• raMCI " ..... ,. 1 l'lll rylng to • tis. I'• ...... , .... it .. r15t rA "'I la ... • J.-tln ShM. CdM basketball player ... Friday, Morch 5,.1999 •Spotts Editot Roger: Corft0n • 949-57U223 r Beach and a 191' .graduate ot Newport Harbor High. C.Offin certainly operates Uie . most friendly and accessible campaigns in the field and has funded much of the financial needs of the AT personally. "It was always a dream of mine to som~ow get involved ln an America's Cup campaign,• said Coffin. "I sold a business I owned i.ck Ed\ so the timing was righ..t. I looked at all the teams and felt my services could benefit America nue the most. and here we are.• Coffin is both bwnble and unassuming, a trait that seems to be laGking in some of the other camps. Wednesday Coffin invited me to ride on the AT chase boat. Once on the water he offered me a positioll'as the 17th man on board AT during the race against Team Prada. This was a race of a llf etime as the boats came within inchesof one another on several occasions 11 -protest flags fiying, umpires • blowing whistles and the Italians Ii yelling some select words of " foreign tongue with colorful 1 meanings what would have ~ surely embarrassed Mama Gina. In any event, AT won the first race with a five-boat margin. In the second race AT led by three · • lengths after rounding the final mark, only to allow Team Prada to catch up due to a tangled jibe set. It was dead even for the next couple of miles-with AT winning by a mere thin slice of pepperoni (five seconds). America nue led after Thursday with four points1 France with three. Italy with two. The Challenger racing nms through Saturday with the winner advancing to race Team New Zealand on Sunday. Then, it's back to reality. ~ ' • 1ERRANa PMIU.S' bOatlng column appears each Friday. He can be reached at (949) 645-4566. BRIEFLY Toshiba: Ferree in, Aaron is. out • Larry Laoretti, Tom Jenkins replace Jim Colbert, lsao Aoki. Jim Ferree has replaced Tommy Aaron in the Toshiba Senidr Classic at Newport Beach Country Club March 12-14, tournament director Jeff Purser said Thursday. Larry Laorettt and Tom Jenkins have also replaced Jim Colbert and lsao Aoki . Larry Laorettl and • Tom Jenkins have also replaced Jim Colbert and Isao Aoki. In high school action TJiursday: Costa Mesa High junior Jett Montoya shot a 3-over-pa.r 39 in the second half of ari 18-hole nonleague boys golf match in which he earned medalist honors against El Modena. Thursday's ninEf-hole portion, at the Green River Golf Club's Orange Course, also featured Mustang scorers Donny Miller (43), Bryce Sheridan (48), Brian Jones (48) and Steve Perez (48), though El Modena completed a 416-431 victory. Montoya's 18-bole score was 79 ... Estancia High sophomore D.J. Glacy rallied to claim a 6-4 singles win over El Modena 's Jett Schwartz. but host El Modena won 17-1 in nonleague boys tennis ... Estancia IUgh golfer Tom Rausch finished with a two-day total of 83 as the Eagles completed a 420-460 nonleague loss to Dana Hills in the second round at El Niguel Country Club, par 72. Pete Anderson finished with an 89 for Estancia (0-1) ... Mitch Johns shared medalist honors for nine holes and his Newport Harbor HJgb boys golf team was five strokes better than nonleague visitor Aliso Niguel at Big Canyon Country Club. But the Wolverines, riding a big. advantage in the first nine boles · played last week a t El Niguel, prevailed, 417-431, in the 18-hole match. Johns' round of 37 was 1-over-par, while other Sailor scorers included Daniel Kush (40), Scott Tippett (40), Miller Akins (44) and 18gue Hurley (46). Rust}tJtlll ~hot a 39 for Harbor. but playing as an alternate, his score did not count. according to Newport Coach ~ Jim Warren •.. It was a rough day for the Newport Harbor 1 1 lngh tennis team an 18-0 viC'timi.o.> of University in nonleague actiOJ\,.. ... Matt Singer, Travis Uhl and WlU McRorte played well for th&• Sailors (1-2) despite the shutout ... The Corona deJ Mar lngh boys volleyball team, competing without three players still contributing to the basketball team, dropped a season-opening nonleague match Wednesday at ' Capistrano Valley High, 9-15, 15-8, 15-8, 15-6. • In community colleg~ spor1s Thursday: Santa Ana College banged out 17 hits in a 14-2 victory over host Orange Coast in an Orange Empire Conference baseball game. Ryan Clark was 3 for 3 for Coast (9-8, 1-1 in conference). Adam Anderson had two hits and an RBI. Brian Wahlbrlnk also had two hits and scored. a run for OCC (3-7, 0-2) ... Monica Bustamante, Kell John.son and Jessica Seely each had a hit in Orange Coast College'• 8-0 loss at Cypress in Orange Empire Conference softball action ... Orange Coast College's Shannon Gibson won in singles, 6-2, 6~3, but it wasn't enough as the Pirates lost to Marym.ount, 5-4, in a nonconference women's tennis match at Palos Verdes Country Club ... four baseball leagues have -~ng Ceremonies Saturday. men ts. The national anthem will be sung at 10 a.m ., followed by the Little League pledge and ceremonies to corruncmorat the opening of Lincoln Fi Id No. 2, the majors field which was remodeled this season. YOUTH llSEBI LL Opening Day ceremonies begin at 11 fielder Jay Johnstone. There will also be a.m. with a parode and the commemora-skills contests and food. lion ceremony, which will indude an Through the morning, there will be a appearance by Costa Mesa Mayor Gary sUent auction featuting itemS donated by Monahan. There will also be special area busine . All proceeds will go to JA.~ Htu. The new fleld lndud : a drinor wall; a redone infield and oulfiold1 covered dugouts, foul pol s and new bullpens with an Astroturf svrfa.c:e. Lcagu Presi· d nt John Oclla Grotto also noted there will soon be a n w bar cu lslond o.nd n w batting cag . The commencem nt c n?IllOni will includ a ·~ ~ a pronunent, mt • nation4lly known 1ports bnty. Aft rward, Ulcre will be a carnival. with pnx going to btiild the bett)e. cu and batting C'Jg , until 3:30 p m . Tiie cart'I Jr. trudt will serve (ood and f the Coca Cola company has donated the beve1ciges. At 2 p .m., the s~ason wUl got und .. r· way with an exhlbttion wmatch of lost year's majors champion hip gam between th Red and th Gi4nt.5. Co ti M National L gue • Th Outb4ck St alt J louse will once again sponsor opening Aay at TeWinkle School at 11 a.m., kicking off th 1999 on. Festiviti t>eg'11t at 10 m with a clas· ·c car how. A number of clo ic cars ere ~~oo to be on di ploy. 111 who wish to .participate can t.ftU lbe l gu office at (71'4) 966·2655 and I ll a m • sage. entertainment between 12-1 p.m. the NHBA. Outback Steak House wU1 bO serving COtta Meu Aulertcan IAa~e 'The its World Famous Hamburger, with chip CMALL has a different approach for and a oft drlrik All proceeds wtll go to Opening Day. The leag'w.9 wUl start at 9 the league. a.m. Wlth th commencement core.o10ny Rcgi.stration for T·ball and the Parm and the announcement of contest wiii· D1v1sion WU1 also take place for those still ners. 1be ooremony should be completed int tad tn gning up. in one-half hour. After that, teams will ta.Jut the field Newport Harb« BMeball Aaoda· and start the season. lion -The NHBA will show of ltl new OutbaCk Steak House alsO ~ tocihti wh n Openbig Day oommences the CMALL ud wUI be at dod.:!~Ct dey t Mariners Park at 8 a .m. llltet ... year. Tbe CMAU. and CMNLL Th parado and ~rung oeremony are ...,ate leegu•, but Will ~y tan at 10 a.m. and will lnclud a apeec:b 9lnlt MCb OCher In tn..._ag\19 puy from form r U. ~ ~~out __ • _11111~_...-. • • " . [)Oily Pilot ' . . , ....... I I MDC NOnelli1 I ...ucllOllCll I f ...UC.,. I t~ MOllCll 11 PUIUC MOnCll I Ne'#l)C)l1m.CA82'890 1u11r1ng 81o1:*1 Home unleu an mleres1td oer· wu llld In Or1noe eounty tw d9C9denta Wjjj ~ 15 1181 llelllO ~ Thia bullr!ess la con· HMIC'1 ~.Inc, Oreg .an 1111 an Objection to ltle on • 1 ·••. FllE NO. eodkll. Uny, Dt tdmttted 91 2. emencJ•na Table dUclled by e COfJiOfilllM Te~ FIMldet ~ end .stiowt good F8t43t5 10 P!dJ&I• lhl W• and 1Ut in TIUa ·13 ol ,,. Ha~ Y'Ol.I etarted doing l'hll' 1~t wa& tied caiM why the coun ltlould DUn Pendarghaat. 21 $ any codcilt a19 availlblt Cost• Mesa Murudpal bUllr}ns yet? No wllt'I lhl County Cleltl al rlOI gttnl the aulhollty E. Oren~thotpe Ave . lat e11811'*\1tlon 1n the Ille Code conoemng very IOw The Bennett Orcq>, Inc-. Orange County on 2 11•09 A HEARING on the pell· f285, Fultl'\on, CA 92632 !&-'~tile oourt ltllfc UMI 'in 1he oom Peter K. Bennett, Prwalden! 1"817127" Uon Wiii be'hlld on MAACH Tnia buaJneas Ii con· · THE PETITION requests merciaHHIOanlfal la~ lhtt statement wea tiled Daily Plk>I Fab 12, 19. 25, 1999 II 1 45 PM in c1ucted bY an lndMdual ~to adminiller the use delionltJOn wilt\ the County ci.1t ol 28 Mar & 180» f770 Dept L13 localed II 3-41 Dean Penderghelf ..._Under Iha lndepenct-THI; MOTION to gNt OI· Orange Countv 0n 2-9-99 Flcildo~• luilneu The City °'" South, Or Thia 11.11ernem w flied enc AdnW\ist111tJon Of Ea• cM8nc. 99-2 lltSI f'NdlnO 1"91782737 -enge, CA 92888 w.111 d'le County Cle"' of 11te9 Ad (Tti1 AIJlnonty c:amed oy the IOtlOWVll1 rol Dally Pilol Feb 12, 19, NlfM Stat.ment .IF-.vOU 08.JECT IO lhe Orange Coufttyon 1·27·H wtl.-OW1tle peqonet rep ca vote 26, Mar 5, 1999 FT74 The followlng peisona granting of the petitlon, ~ 10998781W ,..antat!V91 10 take many COUNCL MEMBERS: Fictltfous BualMH ere 0,0.~~l~E· RE il'lould appear at the he•r'· Dally Piiot Feb 2e, Mar ecoona w11hout ~ AYES: Monahan, Cowen. Nime Statement P E~B738 w '7th SI IA. Ing anct •tate J'i:r ~-5, 12, 19, 1999 F804 court epl)rovel Belori Erickton, Ol110ft. HOES: The fotlowlllg peraons ~I MeH, CA 92627 ' :l:: !:t~1':wiw C:~ =~ . F1etltJous Buslnus IA~~ ~ve'7':. N~ ~~J'Wx';>:~ are CIOlng business 11s. Edward Wllo11ew•kl, the hearing. Your •P· Nam• Statement reonat ripresentei1ves ordlnanoe may be ••&d 1n Unique Brands, 127 112 2550 Columble Dr , Costa pearal'l()Q m01y be 1n person "The following persona u ba required 10 g.tve no-lhe City Clertc a OHIQe, 77 E-Bay ·Front, Ball>Oa 11· Mesa, CA 02626 or by your attorney ere dolnQ bu•lne11 u tloe to Interested pereons Fair Dr1ve, Costa Meu. land, CA 92662 Thia buslnen ,la QOO· IF YOU ARE A CREDI· NetWoilt Capita! • unleaa they have waived MARY T~ELLtOTT, Rlchifrd LaPorte. 127 t/2 dueled by. en lndlVldual TOR or contingent creditor 1800 Deere, Santa Ana. notice or consented 10 lhe D9PUtY Olty Clerk E. Bay Front. Balboa Is Have you started doing of the deceased. you must CA 92705 1 proposed action.I The In· Put>f1sh-ed Newpo11 land, CA 92662 ..... bus1ne11 yar? No me your claim with the Netwoftt Ventura Corpo· dependent adrn nlstratlon Beacn--Costa MoN Dally Franoes L. Oaoos, 127 EdwerdWltoalawskl oourtandmailaoopy1othe ra110n, (CA). 1800 Deere, aulhonty Will be granted Pilot Mardi 5, 1999 1/2 E Bayi.f ront, Balboa This atatement w~• filed personal tepresentatlve Santa Ana, CA 92705 unleu .;, Interested per· F811 Island, CA v-.c662 with the County .Cletk ol apPolnted by the court This buslneu 11 ooo-aon !Ilea an objection to the This t>oslness is con· Orang, county on 2·09-~ within lour "'°"'hs lrom the dOcted by· a a>rpo(allon peutlon and shows gooo BSC8129 ducted by c:o·partners t91H782772 date of the first ~uance ol Have you started doing c:aoae Why the court sttoukl NOTICE OF Ha11e you started dOlng Da~y Pilot Feb HZ, 19, ieuers as provided in Pro-business yer> No no1 grant the authonty PETmON business yet? No 26. Mar 5, 1999 F780 bate Code section 9100. Netwotll Venture Cor!» A HEARING on lhe pell· TO ADMINISTER Francu L Dabbs NOTICE The tlme lof filing claims ratlon, Dean 0 Cooper/ uon will be held on Apnl 1, ESTATE OF: This statement was ttlod will riot ellpire before lour ..Presldenl 1m at 1 45 p.rn lo Dept with the County Cterll ol INVmNO BIDS months rrom the 1'198./1n9 This staiement was flied L73 localed el 34 t The City THELMA REDA Otange county oo 2·10-99 The Orange County San· date nobced aboYe. With the County Cleltl of Onve SOUth. prenge. CA C"'SJEONHON.S...0 1 N 96076 10996783209 llation District. Calilomla, vou MAY EXAMINE the Orange County on 2·t0-99 92868 " " Deity P110t Fjtl) 19, 26, Wiii r8CAllW bids untJI Ille kept by the court 11 you 119t87'3200 IF YOU OBJECT to the To all heirs, beneh· Mar. S. 12, 1909 F782 Tua.day, Metch 23, 1999 ere a person interested In Dally PMot Feb t9, 26, grantlng of the pehllon, you ciar'tes, credlt•r•. cont· Flcthlous Buslneu at 11:00 p.m. Bid$ must b,e the estate, you rnay Ide Mar. S. 12. 1999 F784 Should appear at the hear· ingent creo1t0fl!I, and pet· Name Statement received a1 the District 1 will'l U... court a Request for ActltlOus Buslnea• Ing end st1te your :e· SQRS who may <>INl!WtM The lollowi persons Purchasing Otta by the Special Notice (loon DE· Name Statement uons or lite wrinen • be interested In the will or are doing buS~ as dale herelnabove fft lorth, 1$4) of 1tle flllng ol an In· Tile lolloWing pel$00$ tlons with the court be°"' estate, or bottl. of Peninsula Commercial et ~ time they 1~~ ~ ventory and appnllsal of are doing business 115 the hearing. Your ap-THELMA REDA Services. 2414 Newpon ~·~ .. '!.nc:1pe~~s'1n'""' Ota estate assets or ol any Coast Business si,:· pearancemeybelnperson JOHNSON B I d N t ""' uost .... , ur...... g • pelltlOO 01 account as 2•0 L S • • °'by your ettomey A PETITION FOR PRO-ou ever • ewpor lice, 10844 E»1s Avenue, provided In Probate Code temi. 1 .. ogan t . • IF VOU ARE A CREDI· BATE has been flied by Beach, Calllomla 92663 k Fountain Veltey, Cat1lom1a, section 1250 A Request Costa Mesa, CA 92626 TOR or con1lngen1 credrtOf TERESA L JOHNSON in B~ Boat Ylfd, (Ga • lor tile lollOwing IOf S I Notice lorm Is Sea Coast Copier, 1!1'=: ol the dectlased, you must the Supenor COUrt of CIW· fomla), 2414 Newport Bou· FURNISH AND DELIVER ava11ft:'\om the court (CA), 1240 Logan St., M · Ille your elalm With the tomla, County of--OR· lilvard, Newport Beach. 3COM SUP ERST ACK II clerk Costa Mesa, C-A 92626 rt and mall a copy to the ANGE Ca~lornia 92663 EQUIPMENT ' This business Is COO· coo 0 FOR This Q_us~ Is con-SPECIFICATION Attorney for the duoled by a oorporatloo pefJOO&I reprasentall\'es THE PETITI N Cfuaea by: a oorporatlOfl NO 18..,,..,.1.. P•tltlonar: Have ""'' slarted dOlng • appointed..i.__b_y_ me court PROBAtE requesta lt\a1. -ft" OOI • •-• E. Gena Craln, Eaq. •--t? y .ga w1ttlln fourmonths from the TERESA L JOHNSON be Have you. -&tart.,,.. ng Sealed bids rnust be (CSBt030859) business ye es, 11" 1 dill of thA flr&t Issuance of appointed as personal rep. ~lness yet? vqs, Janu-submllled on the form sup· A Profualonal Corpo-Sea Coast Copier, Inc., len:rs Js-provided In Pro-resentatlve to administer 29. 1999 plled by the Olstncl In ac· George N. Kenl, President 00 deCed t alboa Boat Yard Arthur d 1th 11 retlon, 5030 Campue This atetemenl was filed bate Code section 91 -the estate ot the en L ... p Id • co r an c e w a Drive Newport Beech 1... h c Cl t1< 1 The time lor filing claims THE PETITION requests ElmS, res ent provisions of the speclll-CA 9l660-2120 ' w '" 1 e ounty e 0 ill not uplre befOfe lour the deoedent's Will and This statement was llloel cations Spe't:ihcations, bkl Publlshed Newport Orange County on 2•15·99 ~ths from the hearing codlclts. If any, be admlHed with the County Clerk 01 blanks and further lnlorma-Beach-Costa Mesa Dal~ 10998713184 date nollced at>o11e to probate. The Wiit and OrangeCountyon2-t699 tlonmaybeobtalnedatlhe Pio F b 26 Marctl Dal~ Piiot Feb. 19• 26• YOU MAY EXAMINE the any codk:lls are avalleble 19996713185 above address. telephOne 5 1 1~9; ruery ' ' Mar -12• t999 F7BS 111 k 1 b the court II you IOf examination In the Ille .!a~ ~2'°' ~: 19F72:J (71~) 593-7583 · FTH793 Fictitious Bu1lneH a~ :Ppe~ interested 1n kept by the court r. · • 1 Publlshad Newport Name Statement the 81tate you may rite' l'HE PETITION requests FlctJtloue Buelnees Beach·Costa Mesa Daily Fictitious BuslneH The IOllOWlng persons with u... coiitt a Request for aulhOnty 10 administer the Name Statement P110t March 5, 1999 Name Statement are doing business as· Soecial Notice (lorm DE· estate Ul'lder the lnctepend· The I01tow1ng persons F8t2 Tile loltowlng persons Deslona,by Laurel. 3085 1$4) of ttte hllng of an in· enl AdmintstratJOn of Es· are doing business as Fictltloue Business are domg business as Tyler fNay. Costa Mesa, ventory and aPQra1sal of tates Act (This Authority Farlalllna 19881 Name Statement wee &ASSOCIATES. CA92626 estate assets or of any willat1owtheperaonalrep- Brookhurs1 Street. Hunl-The lollOWlng persons 2001 Harbor, Suite 220, Lin Sue Gata. 3085 Tyler petition or account as resental!Ve IO take many ingr.on Beact1 CA 92646 are dolllg business as Costa Mesa, Ca 92627 Way, Costa Mesa, CA provided in Probate Code actlOOS wrthou1 obtaintng Barolo tfaid1ngs, LLC. NITRO CARPET CARE, Pen-Chau (John) Wang, 92626 section 1250 A Request court approval Belore (CA), 666 Baker $ireet, 19796 Le Mans. vort>a 854t Naples Dnve, Hunt· This boslriess IS con-tor Speclal Nolice form IS taking cetta1n very lmpOt· Suite 405, Costa Mesa, CA Linda. California 92886 lllgtoo Beach, Ca 92646 dUC1ed by an 1ndMc1ual available from the court tant 8ctlons, hoWever, the 92626 Raymooo Allen Petty Jr . This business Is 000-Have you started doing deltl personal representative This business Is con· 197ge Le Mans. vort>a ducted by an 1ndN1dual business yet? No Attorney for 1he Wiii be required to give no- ducted by Limited L1&b1lrty Linda, Cahlon11a 92886 Have you started dOlng Un Sue Cale Petitioner: tioe \0 interested persons Co This business 1s con· buseness yet? No This statement was hied BRUCE S. COLLINS, unless they have waived Have you started doing ducted by an indrvldual Pen-Chau (John Wang With the County Clerk of ESQ., (CSBI 74270) oollCe Of consented to !he btJSif\eSS yet? Vas. 2·5 99 Have you s1arted dom9 This statement was hied Orange County on 2·16-99 4 o o o BARR AN C A proposed aot10n.) The in-BarolO Holdings, LLC, business yet? No Wllh the COUnty Clerk ol • 19998783115 PKWY., SUITE 250, dependent adm1nlS1ratlon Bnan L Cheesobofov Ray Pony Orange County on 2·23·99 Oalty Pilot Feb 19L...26, IRVINE, CA 92714 authonty will be granted Its. Managing Member Thfs statement was tiled 19996783978 Mar. 5. 12. 1lt99 t-186 Publlshed Newport unless an interested per This statement was filed Ith the County Clerk of Daily Pilot Feb 26, Mar. Flcdtlous BualneH Beacti-COsta Mesa Daily son hies an ob19coon to the with the County Clerk of OrangeCount~on2-25-99 5.12.19.1999 F794 NameStatement P1totMarch5,t1 ,12,199!l petition and shows good Orange Count~-9-99 19996784294 NOTICE OF The lollowing persons FTh806 cause why the court sholJld 1 827« Dally Piiot Mar. 5, 12. 19, APPLICATION TO are doing business as escsi42 not y_.rant the authority. Daily Piiot Feb. 12. 19, 26, t999 F8t4 SELL ALCOHOLIC Crazy Angers Designs, NOT1CE OF 11! .r~1:kl00~iz,~~: 26, Mar 5, 1999 FT70 Fictitious Business BEVERAGES 1891 Mesa Dr. Apt 0·7, PETmON 1999 81 1 45 pm tn Dept Fictitious BuelneH Name Statement Date of Fiiing Appllcatlof'l' Santa Ana Heighls. Oell!or-TO ADMINISTER L73 located at 34 t The City N St te t The following persons FEB 17, 1999 nia 92707 ESTATE OF· Drive South. Orange, CA ame a men are doing business as To Whom It May Con· Alisa Crystal Evans..1. _691 RIE 92868 The lollowlng persons Independent Realty cem: • Mesa Dr Apt 0-7• ::>ante ANNA MA IF YOU OBJECT to the are Clotng business as. Capital/Newport, 3700 The Name(s) of the AP· Ana Heights, Calllornla MULLINS ak• granting ol the pehtlOf'I, you Marshall International, Newport Blvd 302. New-ptlcant(s) Isl/are. 92707 ANNA M. 'MULLINS should appear el the heir· 315 North Ster Lane. New· port Bttach, Calllornla llARUJ LLC TNs bualneH ts con· aka ANN M. MULLINS Ing ancl state your :· po~ :::~dl, gA :,~ 315 92663 The applicant' hsted dlJc.ted by an tnc!Nldual aka ANN MULLINS t1ona or Ille written -N~h sia":' Lane uNe~rt Jim Fox, 162t/218th SI, above are appMng to the Have you 7stNoart.ed doing CASE NO. A196079 lion$ with the court °"' Beach, CA 92650 Costa Mesa Cehlornla =rtme~ol ~~ ~/1~~~1 Evans To all heirs t>erieh· the heanng. Your •P· 'This ooslness 11 con· 92627 c:onoli~veraoes 11. 900 This 5tetement was hied ciar1es creditors. cont· peararlCe rnay be In person ducted by an lndrvidual This business IS con· BAYSIDE OR. NEWPORT With the County Qaltl ot lngenl credrtors = per· "'1r' roor ~y CAEoi. t>t!!fr:'s~r:t~~:,' J:'?. m:~ b:C:ns:~:S:.ng BEACH. C,A 9i66o of. Orange Coun~~~=2 :":,,:,':,~~~ the :C: TOR Of ooot1ngent cnditor 999 bus in• ss ye I 7 Yes • For I.he 10lk>Wino type 20 estate or both of of the deceased, you must 1 01-02·e9 License 47 O~·SALE Deity Pilot Filb 19, • ANNA. MARIE MUUINS ftle your dalm with the ~~~ ~;:i:a~ ltled James Fox GENER AL EATING Mii S, !2, 1999 F79 l aka ANNA M. MUUINS court end mall a oppy to the th ~a Coo Cieri< 01 This statement was hied Pl.ACE Fictitious BualneH aka ANN M MUUINS personal reptesenta11ve Orange Counfy~ 2·9 99 With the County Clertl ot Published Newport Nam• Statement aka ANN MULLINS appoinled by the CXJUrt 1"96712742 Orange COUnty on 2·25·99 eeacn-costa Mesa Oady The toflowlng persons A PETITION FOR PRO· within four months trorn tile Daily Pilot Feb 12 t 9, 10996784336 PilOI FebNary 26, March S. are dolllQ buSlnesS as BA TE has beef'I tiled by date of tile first 1Uuance ol 26 Mar 5 1999 F771 Oa~y Pilot Mar 5, 12, 19, 12. 1999 F795 AIRPORT WINE & SPIR· KAREN PAGE1n l:le Supe· letters as provided 1n Pro- F•I tltlou' s ""uslnese 26. 1999 F815 LEGAL NOTICE rrs. 4255 •A Martingale rior court of ca.rlfomia. bate Code seciton 9100 c D I NOTICE OF Way Newport Beach. CA County o1 ORANGE. The lime l0t f1lln0 dairnl Name Statement Flctltloue Bua nesa PUBLIC SALE g266o THI: PETITION FOR wiU no1 eJCl)lre before lour The folloWlng persons Name Statement OF ABANDONED McO Group. Inc , 52515 Ave PROBATE requests that months trom the hearing are doing business as; The lotlowlng persons PROPERTY Del Sot. Laguna Hills. CA KAREN PAGE be ap· davte0 noooedu M•Y ~~MINE ...... Prudenllal RB Allen are do4ng t>os1ness as 92653 pointed 8111 personal repre-.... ,;""' u ... Commercial Real Estate Southern Callfom1a Re· Notice Is hereby g1v9!1 This bUslness Is con sentatlVe to adl'nlnlSter the file kept by the court II you Servloes. 695 Town Center ally, 2043 Weatcllll Drive. that the undersigne<f win ducted by a corpo<allon estate ot the decedent. are a person interested 1n Drive, suite 110. Cocta Sta 202. Newport Beach, sell at p\lbhc auction, pur-Have you started dOing THE P,ETITION requests the estate, YOlJ may Ille Mesa. CA 92626 Calilomla 92660 auant to Section 21700 of bullnesa yet? No authority to adm1nls1er the with the court a ReQu,st tor R. B. Allen GrouP-, tnc DelLarsonOevelof)ment the Buslnesi & McO Group, Inc .. estateunderthelndepend-Special NotlCle (form DE· (CA). 695 Town Center Corp, (CA), 2043 Westcllff Professtooal Code, tile lol· Mldlael L. McOueeney, ent Admlnlslretlon ol Es-154) of the ming of an In· -.f ridoy. March 5, 1999 Al ' -'-• - ~._-.-:., ... = ST., mllil? 1aoo. ,-. CA ..n·~ PubHa8'ed Ha•1llWil~­~ ..... o.iir PiloC.._,.$, U . 12 Ullf. l 8SC8137 NOTICE Of PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: EDNA 0. RINDE aka EDNA RINbE CASE NO. A196080 lo all 11ttrs, benell· Clarie' c(ed1tors cont· W194lf'll CTedrtO<S, and per· '°"' wno may olher.IM be Interested in the WIH Ot estate or bOlh. ol EDNA 0 RINDE au EDNA RINDE ~ETITION FOR PRO-BA 1 1: has been fled by R08ERT J RINDE In IM ~rlOf Court ol c.lllof· nil. County o1 ORANGE THE PETITIOfll FOR PA08A TE 19qU8SIS lhat ROBERT J RINDE be a.p- pointtld as pe~ HnlatMt'to administer !he estate ol N decedent. THE PETITION requests ~ deoedent's Wilf and oodiells. It any, be admitted 10 prot>ate Tile Wilt and any codlct!s are available lor exeminetlon in the Ille kee>I by the court tHE' PETITION requests authonty to administer the "8$tate under ttle lndJpend· ent Administration ot Es· tales Act (lll11 Autttonty will aHow the personal rep- resentatl\le to lake many actions Without obta1nioQ court apptovel Before ta.king oertlin very impof • tant ectl0n$, hoW9119r, the peraonel representative win be required 10 give no- ~ to int9l'ffled persons unleSS they tiave waived nouoe or oonsenlltd 10 the proposed actlon ) The In· de9efldent admlnistrauon evthonty wi• be gtan&ed unless an 1n1erested per· son Illes an objecllorl 10 the petition and snows good cause wby 1tle court should not grant lhe lllJthooty A fiEARING on the pe\I lion w1h be held on Apnl t, 1999 at 1 45 pm 1n Depl L73 IOceted et 34 t The City Onve South. Orange. CA e2868 IF YOU OBJECT to tNt grantJng of !he petrtlon. you ahould appur et the hear· Ing anct stal' your :e lion$ or file written - lions with the oourt be ore the hearing Your ap- pearance may be In pet'$()(\ or by your attorney IF 'WU ARE A CR~DI· TOR Of contingenl creditor of the deceased, you must Ille your dallTI w\Ul the court ancl man a copy to ttie personal representative appointed by the court within lour months lrom the dale of the first issuanoe of !titers as prOVlded 1n Pro- bale Code section 9100 The 11me '°' fthng dllims will noc eJCPl(e bef0f8 tour monff\s from the nearing date notac:S above YOU MAY EXAMINE the me kept by 11'18 cxiurt II you are a person mteresred In l'1e estate, you may file "<Ith the oourt a Raquesl lot Specl8I No(lca (foon DE· 154) of ttie ming of en in· V9l'llOl'f and ~I of 9$1818 essall or al any petition Of account as prolllded In Pfobele Code MClk>n 1250 A Request for S~I NotlCll form Is avaftable from Ille court deltl AttorNY for the Petitioner: I ' u. NOTICE cw l I Pl!T1llOH to ADMINtlTEA' ESTAn! CW:: NORMAN CATE ELUOTT CASE HO. A 1 '6098 To all l\.i,-., belleli c1arle1, credltOf&, COf'lt· lngent credi1!0fa, ffind sons WhO may be lnl•tuted in the wtl e&tale, Of bOCtl. °'· NORMAN CATE EWO'n A PETITION~ BATE hm 1 ~ j RICH>.RD _,. In IN Supenof Court ol C-1\.· • =~ County of ORI'! THE PETITION ,Offi PR08A TE requaalS llM RICHARD JNi ~!!,! be appointed .. pe~ represenCall'le IO adl'Nots· ter d'le asaate "' the dece- dent. THE PETITION f9QU8st1 IN decedent's ~ OOOiclls, II any, be to plOt>ate. The WI any codds are for examtnabOl'I In the kepi by the court. • THE' PETITION r9CM1Sls authoftly to edtninister 1'* estate under the lndec>eOd· ent Adminlsiratlon ct-I;.$.· tates Act. (This Autl'IOrffy will allow the pelSOl"lel1'~' resentetiYe to take ffl1¥1~,,.. actt0ns witnout obtalllihg court approval. Mfote"' talung certain very ~ tant actions, howelle!~ ti.·, personal reptesen19f1Y9'• wlH be reqolred to ""9f•) tKle to 1nte1eS1ed pe~ unle$S ltiey NM! watvecl notice or consented IOH i proposed &<:lion.) Tt\f i!rft dependent admlnlstiatlOtl-i au1horlty will be gtMtect utNs5 an Interested W 1c. son hies an objection fO the petition and shows cause wtty ltll oovrt not Of8nt the authaflty" "' A HEARING on~ t1on wil be held on 1 1999 at 1 45 p.m In L 73 loceted at ~ 1 Onve South. ~ 92868 # IF YOU OBJECT Ml.Mle gren11ng OI the pe~ 1h0uld appear Ill the Ing and state your tlOns or ltle written lions wilt\ the c::curt the hearing Your-I · peerance may be In P9Pff\ t or by your atl()r'My IF YOU ARE A CREDI· TOR or contingent c:redllor of the deceased you tfluit I Ille your dalrn Wilt\. 1t)e court and mail a copy to Ula personal repreaentetlve appointed by the m<xt wtthln lour months lrom fl4I date ol the first 1ssu.nc» of lehers as l)f"OVIOed In Pro- bate eoc:te s.c::tion 9ioo ... The lime !of l11nQ dall'ns W1I not eJ($)1re befOfe tour n monh from Iha heating date noooed eboY9' YOU MAY EXAMINEt,... r11e kept by the ooun "you " ere a persoo intetested Jll the e.state. you may ,.. With Ile court • RequellJcJt • 5pedal Nolie. (lonn DE· 154) of the flling Of an In- ventory end ~ d " estate asseia ot ol "' petlllon Of ec:count as 0 ~ tn Probafll CCldlJ se«:Oon 1250 A ~J tor $pedal NollCe lorm la .... available trom the coun Clerk. Petitt-tn Pro II«': RtCHARD J, ELUOTf, ESQ. (CSM 7070) 11119 VALLEY UOKTI• DRIVE, EL CA.JOH, CA , 02020 Onve, Suite 110, Costa On11e, Ste 202, Newport lowing descnbed property President tates Act. (This ,Authorlty Vll'ltOly and appratsal of Mesa. CA 92626 Beach, Calllornla 92660 to wlt This statement was fned 1#111 allow the personal rep-estale auets Of •ol any This buslnesa is con· This buslnoss is con-BYRON HARDY UNIT B9 wilt' the county Clerk of resontatMI to t•e many petition or Keount es PALMIERI. TYLER, WIENER, WILHELM & Published Newpc:Srt •· Beed'l-Gosla Mau Dally. • Ptlot Marcil 5, 11, 1 ~ ducted by· a oorporaUon ducted by. a COfl)Oratton STEREO, SKIS, ROLLER Orenge County on 2·17·99 actions w1th0ut obtalnmg ------------------Have you started doing Have you started doing BL A 0 E S. WE I G H T 1 "98713448 court approval Before business yet? Yes. buslnen yet? Yes. BENCH AND MISC Dally Pilot Feb 19, 26. taking certain very l!Tlpo(· ------------------, l·Feb-99 t 1/01/t975 ITEMS Mar 6, 12, 1999 F788 tant ac:tJonS. however, the R e Allen Groop, Inc Del Laraon Develof)ment Sale will be by( 11com· Flctitlou Buslne.. personal repr81!1entallve Aex B Allen, Prealdent Corp, Del F Larson petitiVa bidding w tten 1• w~t be required to gNe no-Thll statement was hied Tills 1tatament WfS filed sealed bids may be Name Sta1ement tloe 10 interested persons with the Counly Cl«tl: ol With ltie County Clerk ol sut>mmed in advance) ON The loltoWlng persons untess they have wailr'ed ,,...,..,... ... ---.-!'!'""'~ Orange Coonty on 2·9·99 Orange Goun~ on 2·16-99 THE 12TH OF MAA .AT are dOlnO business es nohCl8 or consented 10 the 19998782740 191MMS7S3291 9.AM AT THE PREMISE GRINGO STAR RE· oposed BCtlOn) The In· 1-.1~1~~:-:~~ Dally Pllol Feb 12, 19. Delly Pilot Fob. 19, 26, WHERE said property has CORDS, 509 Seventh ~pendent edMln!stration I~ 26, Mar 5, 1999 F772 Mar S. 12, 1999 F790 been S10f'ed ancl which 1$ Street. Hunlino100 Beactl. auttiority Yrllt be granted Fictitious BueineH BSC8090 localed 81 AYRES SELF CelilOfNI 92648 unteu an lnterosted per· tmiiiiiiiiiiJii ___ ...,-1 OTICE OF STORAGE, 1880 WHIT-M~LOUlsSotorz.ano. sonlllesenobjectiontolM PACIFIC VIEW Name S~tement N TIER AVE • COSTA 509 SeYenth SUMI. Hunt· petition and shOwl good IAL MRK The loltowlnO persons TO PAETTTIOMINf!SNTER MESA. CA 92627, (949) ington Beach, C.Momla C8UM wtiy tne court shlMd MEMOR are doing buslne51 as • 650· 1282 Len<llonl re· 92648 not grant the authority Cemetery • Mortuary G lnlom\ation S.rv ESTATE OF: serves lhe nght to bid at This OOS1nea1 Is con· A fiEARING on u... ti Crema \oes, 1011 Bnoso Onve, SYRAINE c. the sate Purchases must ducted by an lncllvidual lion wia be held on ,.J: 1 Chepel • tory 11 to. Costa Mesa. CA MARCHBANK aka be made by cash and paid Have you started CIOOg 1999 et '45 Pm in l)epi 3SOO P.:iflc vie. Ori'18 92627 537 SVRAINE KATHRINI: IOf at the time ol purchase buSIOGSI yet? No L73 locatedet 341 TheCrty Newp<>f1 Beech Peter M. Ptacoy, . All purchased goods ere Mldlael Solotl.ano South O C~ M4 2700 Newport Center Dr1vo. MARCHBANK elm SOid as Is and moat be re· This stO\emlWll was tlleel ~;:S ' rang.a, •••••.••••111111 1281, Newport Beach, CA SVRAJNE K. moved at Ume ot sale Saki with the County Cletll ol IF vou OBJECT to Iha .... ~ 92660 1 MARCHBANK aka ts subject 10 canoeltatlon In orange Coun!Y on 2·17-99 granting ol the petitJon you IBL-•-av This business s oon SYRAINE R. the event ol settlement be· 1999178"41 lhould t the heat· __ .. ,., duc1ed by an lndtvld\Jal MARCHBANK ika tween tandlord and ob· Delly Pilot Feb t9, 26, ana8":::' r = Mortuary* ChaPGI Have you started doing SYRAINE ltgated party. Publlshed on Mar 5, 12, 1999 F7@1! ~. or Ille wftt:'n • Ct'ematlon bUsiness ~t? No MARCHBANK 02·26·1999 & 03-05·1i99 tlona with the court ba ore Peter M. Placey CASE NO. A195968 AYRES GAOUP Flc1ltlou1 Buslneu the hearing. Your •P· 110 Broadway Thia st~~!'.'!"' weCles ... ~ • To all l'lelra. "--nell· BONO NUMBER Neme Statement pearance may be In parson Costa Me.a "Affordable Alternative" Discount <:a&ket;11 Cremation& Burial Service Why should you subject yourself & your family to paying inflated prices for caskets &·services???? ' Call Toll Free 1-888-S«.ASDT Smlnj Grage I SWroWilg f.olltrid with the __..,ty "' o .,.. 5-400-1684 The foflowlng per1001 or by VoUf attomay. 842 91150 Orange County on2-51-99 clarlta, credttor11, COOi· AyrH SeH Stooge. Resl· are doing buslne&s as IF' YOU ARE A CREbl· .......... -.. ___ llL---------------~~ 1991171273\ lngent credhcn, and per· dent Managers TechniCll Event Coordt TOA or contingent creditor Dally Pilot Feb 12, 19. IOlll who may otherwise Publlahed Newpor\ nation Services, 710 W. of the dec:eased, you m\1$1 26, ~r. 5, 1999 F733 be lntereste<I In the Will or Beach.COSta Mesa Deity Provant11I Ot. Apt C, nte ••nur olalrn with tn. FTCiltlous Bua Inns estate. or both, of Pilot February 26, March 5, Anat\etm. CA 92806 coun'onct melt• oot>Y to the Name St1tement SVRAINE C 1999 F700 Ditti Steven Bening. 710 personal repre .. nt1tlvt1 The tonowtng persons MASY~~r::J.~NE w. Atovenllal Or A9• C, appointed by tho COUl'1 are doing bu11ln4ita as FlctltlOu• BuslneH Anlhelm. CA 1?906 within tour rnontha from the c.....,r Slvoy lnterna• MARCHOANK atca Heme Statement Thia bualneaa II oon date of lhe llrst \5$uanoe oC ~l.789 w f8th Streat, SYRAINE K dUC1ed by -" lndMduaf lell•n. .. f)<OYided In PR>-11..C, COit• Meta, ca MAACHSANK aka Tiie IOl!o¥ring pef10nl Have you &tarte<I dollr1g bete Code seaion 9100 92627 SVRAINC: A es:l.re ~~~~~ling bumaU vet? No 1lla llm4I k>r filing daitne Ismael Angel Conea. MARCH8ANK. lka SeMoas 0111c a.tling w111 not el(J)lre befor9 tour 7851 W HJlh StrMt. 11 ·C. $YRAIN MARCHeANK twate ' Inc ' Tn.. 118\emenl W8I flied monlll lrom ft)G helMQ --------------------------==::----, Col .. Mesa. Ce 92627 A PETITION FOR PRO• b) PFlG, Inc., c) PPOC, With the County atf1I °' dale notioed lbOY s T:4.RT1NG 8,. w BATE hit '*"' lied by Inc., 215 E OrangiltltiOl'Pe 0ra.-,. ........... on 1~9" ···v E"'"' .. IN'-' lhe Roger A. Pintoi.. 7 " • El.AINI! FOX In th• S~· Ava .• 1285. FulNton, CA ..... ..,.,.., .. , YOU..... ,.,,.,,.. .. 18th su .. 1. '""'·Coat• r ...... eoun of CAt•fornia. ~'\2 11t1nt• fl1&1t.1P4bylleCOU1t 11~ .. A.A ca 92627 ..,, PFG I (U\') ... ......_ o ty Piiot Feb 26, Met. .,. • peraon '" ,.. ad tn A NEW 'lWi buSlneN II gon. County ol OAANOf! nc. .... ... ~ 5 12. "· 1999 FtoS the ..... you may .. ctucted.,.. '""'MnM pen· THE PETITION FOR W t Spttng Mounlllil\ Rd BSCiiff wllhlltcourtaf'eque6ttor nerahlpv' .,.. PROOATE ,.qve It tl'lal f00.24, LU Vegaa. NV UftTICE OF lpecial Nola (form OE· Havt ...,., ltart~ dlJlnO ELAINE FOX b89Ppolr\i.d 89102 ~ 1&.ill) 0 o1.,,-. ftlll'lg of*'..,.. BUSINESS?? busiM..'~t? No at pef10MI ~ Pf Mlntatllle Th11 ~nett It con· ~TE.. v.ntory and 8PPt !Ml ol 1em•al 'A.1get CorrH, '° admtnlti1er the ••tale a( 0~.': ~ ==·~ T~:rATE Of•" Mtate II °' OI any e e • G~1r11!1~=~1 wet lilea tn;.~ttON requetta bullne .. yet? Vu, H ·Of MARV H. STAffORD r:=,: P="bo: e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e with the County Clal1c rJ the doOltdenl'I WtW and er~.t.~' :::' Pend CASE NO. A1tlOll Mt11M 1.2M>. A R_,.91 Ottlnge Counly on 2-0·t9 cedlelll, 11 any, be ldfTlllled fhll statement was tiled To ell h Ira, benell !of SIMldal Not.~ form II 1totl1an4 IO pf'ONI The Wiii enC2 with U. Col.Int'( Clerk Of c:lllitl Cf9dlt019, 0001 • twlllilble from Ina OOUt\ Dally Piiot Feb 12FI~ r;Y e=!.:i• in"~~ t.~ Ofange Coun~~~7·09 lngtflt 'md1torW, and si-· Glt11c 26, Mar 51 1899 ipt by the court 1 1at '°"' #IQ may C#le""'-' AMtMY fof.,. '1ctliki"1 IUeineH fHI! PETITION '9QUeati D•llV Plot F9t> 26 Mar be~ te<J In 11\e ... or ,_looMr. •-IV"l•ft• N.-• 8•.....__t a·• .. ·...-11" 10 -""-'-""ter 111'8 5, 121.19.1999 F.803 t1ltlle Of be>lfl, ol. w.aY 6 --~ Trwt "1~·;.:.00. .ii.~ uOd.r~·;;;.peod s-rlttUINT OF W.AV ... SlAF'fOAD ... 9NITCM. ., .. 91'!. are Oolng Mfniu.. •nt Adminl•11at100 ... ~ E•· A8ANDONM!NT OF a:T~~~OA~ ::,.coaTA .-aA. C4 8l.llldlr'G 8k>dcalh .,~rte, t le H'-(Thlt ...,.l'\Ot11f US! OF RCT1110US OCIHAlD r STA Publlthed Newpor1 Home Ae.i _, .. ..,.. • Wlhllowlhe p0monal t-c>· 8USIHE89 NAME ltld BEVlRl't' A 8liAOE BNtn.ce»w ~ OelY 4100 CW.~ DI-,.,.,~ re ntaM to i.e "*1Y Tht ~'~I) In N ~ ~ C111 PllatMard'ltl, It, '2. 1999 2."°· HtwfiOft a.di. A :~•=I ~':i hU ~) abi;idorl4ld h ~ 0ouNy of Oft FTMl10 926e0 .. '-'->;. Homil ..... ....., OINln !mpOf" UM ol lht ~ tMM• ~ ~ {CA), M~ , ~.mt neu '*'"' •) M 111 0.-.l?! ... TEP'EllTION ~ 4100 campus Or,. 8ulW per1onat rapment•Uvt T~AP ""°" OON'Al.o F:wl=ra; ,~ Nr#pOn BHch, CA wll btt ~ '° OfW "°' :r.::oAll tn ON ~ Md IEV'EN. Y I\. 81.M>E t 008 IO int•m4t0 pe!'IMI ~ E. Lii ,,...... ~ ThiS bUtinMa !a COO' uNr If~ llln'tl ~ /IV.. fl> A,,...,,,, CA :,.=..-:, ~· C2u<lted by • OOfllOJ•tlQn l'IOliCI! °' ·r:b..,,.., h 2907 •r th!! e d 1M H11Yt you "*1itd doing ~lld ) Tr. In ~ _, ~ 'Ytll? v De IMll'n•l\!Mr9IOll nie f".c:tllkMI ~ _,.."........, -... Clf'l\tlll , .., 'Mii ...,,.. refen9d kl illllCJft '~ ....... • ~ .__.... L I ··-· I • 1• ..... , .. ....... ...... , ., ... ,. IOlllAll UIAGI MLI SERVICE DIRECTORY -For All Your Home and Business Needs - ............ ......, .... Uf.)N wftlr (4 ..... mitt. I • c.11 Mmtr G:t EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY • .. 1tal trlltt tfftlttsltt II lhll • lltllrqll'tf 11 11•1td t1 IN Ft•· 1111 Fair Houlnt Act ol 1161 11 11111ndd •-lch makta II 1111111 lo ••ortln ·uy ,11111uce. lhnlltllo~ or "•crlmlullu 10 HOUSESICONDOS FOR SALE COSTA MESA NEW HOMES EAST SIDE COSTA MESA 3 br. 2.5 bl. lrom builder, ap- prox 1750 sf!, hi cei. AC. walk· In closets (Open 5al·Sun 12-4) 2 car anacll gar. RE Exe11ange $285,990 9'49·722·8120 (GREAT LOC) near NPB & 1hop ctr, 111y Fwy accea, btau c.!>llllo 2br 1ba, trplc, • u11• 11 mt, color. 1111110.. vault cill'i, pert cond. Very , "' h11•1c1,, llmlll1l 1t11u or bright, patio. Grnbelt, low n1llon1I trltl•. 11 H l1t1nllo11 . e11oc. S152K MG-6-46-8221 • le.1111h 1ny m• ,11111enct • MESA V~DE open Sun 10-4 "~ lt1ll011 " .i1crlmluH01 • 2032 Phalerope Ct. 4br 3ba, nit 11w1'''" wlll HI cozy fTplc, form llv & dlnrm. • bnl11ly ""'I Hf 1nlf1l11· One ol Coat• Me11'1 rnenl ltr 1111 11tal1 w•lcll 11 11 premiere neighborhood•. •ltl1llt1 el Ille t1w lllf 111•111 $390K Ownar 714-4'44-146'4 111 ,.,,., l1lore1 .. lhl 111 E SIDE CM IMMACULATE • •nlll•t• .. -.1111.. 11 t'l1 3br, 3.5ba, 2 story twnhm, 1,.1,1,11 .,, "'"'"' 111 H bulh In 1190. 2 car attach gar, , ,.._1 .,,.mt•lty Nall Tt ,... Iola morel $269,000 ,t111 et -.mmlNlltn, caN HUO (~ ES.::'r~ ~) ltR lttt 11 1-IOl-424 as• flf Kathleen McN-Bkr Hit W.Ollt!t1, 0C 1111 ,..... 714-814-1101 -cdHUllll 421-35el E 'SIDE 48 RM 2 .5 BA .. ' £ I (1) BONUS : -~= ~-i:..~.~ -QIN!RAl; . 949-64S-0449 ---S~O~l..,0~1-1--MARGE LEA REALTY ,, ,, • • • fl Showcue Homu for Sate In our S.turd1y Reel E1t1t1 Supplement! Homes of the Week Display Ads 51811 al Josi SW Deadline IS Tuesday 81 SPM ()pen House Us11rigs $15' . Oeadhne Thursday 5PM : It -P1y1 to Adv1rtl1e In the But Local RHI Estate Section CALL TODAYll LISA K. RIVERA 949-574-4252 ANNE WILLEY 949-574-4249 FllEE O.C. HOME HOTLINE BUYERS & SELLER 24·HRS 94M72·14'4 Hosted by Mllul Kllllk Unit• con1emporary. steps 10 • btach, 4Br/3Ba. over 2000 a I .AIL. b8clc unit w/ocn view Each ol'lll can be sold seperetly S 1.108K Agent Kalerina 310-271-2229 Ext 518 VACANT TWNHME LOWEST PRICED 38dml In COiona del Mar ru of l{la .... , Ny& I $Ell IT TOOATI Ltg 38drm & ~~ room neecll wOf1< btJI 'PR ICED 1 OOO'a LESS thin 1U1 .nit S319K Make Oilart !\OLAR & CO. &49·37&-5578 C11ARMING CAPE coo ~ ula1e on luSh canyon. ~ OC9lf'I view Open Sun iN 00 320 Hazel Can add on qr build ntw S825K (;hat Vllut At/. IM9--759·9070 COM'i iESf BUY 38dfiTI • lownhomtt, 2.58ltt1.1.._2c gar .,...._ aome work. w19,000 ~ 949-37&.5576 -~• a FOOT WiO£ Lot iOPef\ Sun 1 .. ) 709 Jumlne lllf, tba, cozy, qldet cottage, .... ge Pll!O, 1850,000. Call Jim Lindberg taland RE Mt-72J.1H3 94M7S.1'74 JOH USTtb 51l C.mallon Ave. lbr Ube pr ~cf\, !Mm, llbnwy, I IJ')IC. prof llndlclped, incql -112•~· ftefnaJ Mt-mm OHNA00$E FAl>AY 1~2 lfMNE TE1'MCi 2007 IAIAIMA TERRACE 11,uo,000 .,.,ows MMOMOIAY ..... 000 •Pruenta E Sides BISI Buy• 3br 2.Sba, ONLYI $289,500. COSTA MESA BUFFS 2br Zb1 ONL YI $179,sop. Call Marge 949-722-0620 OPEN HOUSE FRIDAY 1().2 MESA VERDE 2785 ALBATROSS DR. $364,000 EASTSIDE 2576 WESTMINSTER $379,000 PRUDENTIAL CA REALTY 949-644-6200 113~t REMODELED 38R Flt>Ulous new ltltchen, Pano ocean view wtlh lalge Ital lol, pool With flagstone, 1he home Is waled and gated $1,100,000, John . Al/o 949-497-6496 MUST SELL THIS WEEKll 4Bd!m 28alh, yard, upgraded! $260.000. Laurie, Agent 9-49·717·1954 32 HOUSESICONOOS FOASALE NEWPORT BEACH BAYSIDE COVE 2 Bedloom Townhome, Frplc. prlYate beach, COIMlUllllY pool & spa Wa/11. IO beach, fialboa Island. maltlet & shops $398.000 Ownel/Bfoklf S.9-376-5576 ABAHbOffED Buch 2·Siory 38dlm 2Bath and Balcony Under $500 000 Agent 9-49-723-8 I 20 PENfiiOUSE VEllSAILLES Nr Eich Hid Gated. $154,575 OCEANFRONT PENntOUSE Belboa Pen 2·~ $398,000 FRENCH NORMANDY, UDO 3·Bd/ba Upgrd Marble $865,500 Arthur/Brian Prudential. 675-2694 TERRIFIC OCEAN YIEW 4Bdlln 3 SBalh, 4c pelld~. Comple1ely Remodeled. 300 " patio, 12x12 balcony looks dtrecuy at water Thia Unit 11 150 rt From The S1ncl. Gfeal btach house POO. Is $BOOK Owner. 949-548-8048 Itel a. LIV ot Forevlf Vltw. 4Br lnclds maids QUllllll and 2 ~ $759,000 :n;: ~IH23-8120 IAANb HOME 5tX11m . SWlh, 1¥ rm, lam nn. powder room. 41/g dacks, 3C g11, 1M Pillo. Maple hardWoOd "°°"· 3.7S3 I I Bo1 Grunctii • Rtllolt 949-875-f f 81 INWSfOAs 3 i 4 PUXD f'ollll\tt Cllh Row and Appreciation Pottntlal Ooten Vltws. 94M4o.140t ILUffs 1.1g 3& 2 58i fllOt rernooMd ~. 11111 rm, MP dn rm , Ilg p11lo1. $459,000 ~ illngrll Rtl'IOI 94!H44-0195 OPEN Uf & SUN 1'4 U04 FAIRHIU. OAIVi 38drm 28&111 on Laige lol. laul. rwnodlltd. eukll llC loclllon RedUcecl to $455,000f 14H42-0l73 A!1MI 1.y,., New End Unit· Townhou• In ptlmt 1oc111or1 38r 2 58111\, $299,000 Agenl Malt JfClMon 948(723.fj 28 Ell! 101 S2 HOUSES/CONDOS FOR SALE NEWPORT BEACH NP Helghll (VHll Siena) 3br 2.51>1, 1650af, built In 11, fTplc, plllo, gat pltk, AC, hdwd tire, dellgn carp, wd bllnd1. Owner '329,900 Oya 94~722-7224 IVI 6'44-4311 OPEN HOUSE FRIDAY 1().2 HARBOR COVE 1438 Newportar Way $730,000 HARBOR VIEW HOMES 11152 Por1 l.111111111 $6411,000 SEA ISLAND Ill OCEAN VISTA $5411,000 SEA ISLAND 35 SEABROOK COVE $599,000 PENINSULA 1429 W. BAY AVE $7511,000 PRUDENTW. Cl REALTY MH44-6200 1 33=-1 'NP COAST' "EllatHI. Slngle level bull! In 'tS, 4br, 3be, 2500lf, hdwd ftra, 3 cat ger. ProfHtlonally landscaped With 11111. S799K By OWner Ml-72i-Ml1 Open Sun 1_. • 34 Uarleol Brand New! 48r 381 Home otc. Ion, tormal din rm. 2 5c garage, guard gated 5579 900 Agent 7f 4-634-7500 x 232 Ill \'\/\ B"'"'' \II I \I .I ~ J ' I ' ' ' ~STORY SILVER CRFSTTOWNHOME Available fto11t $112t000 $.AVENOWI 55-+ Seniors . Doublewlde 1..t>edroom, 1.0eth, like new carpet, linoleum & roof $8,996 Complete (9491723-4045 WATERFRONT 2-bedroom, 2-bath Cabana home Newport Beach 151,995 Spaoe Rent IJ.650 ~rh bttg twm ._J (949 723-4045 175-==ul CM Triplex, Att: ln..,.-1otl Good corid. by shops.~. Ml "*I. nevet vlalf'll $34SK olllce 94H31«I11 Homa 949-54&3350 Jaclcll Gin 1 Retltor I· =ir~I CM 2-S'TY OfACE CONDO wf warehouse. GrNI 2600 sf, llC o4c: ¥1'1000 st wlhouH wArudt doof, ~e & strOIQI. $2291< By Ownr 941-722-0155 110:-Aaj l.ov•IY 3 bdrm 2 bllh, lower duplu, itlnt locttlOI\, fflg, w/d, wet bar, no p•I•, StlOOll'llo 941-72'"5902 New Sunny 18' 1 la lJi)ltili'1 ale, wld, Ing, &IOVelmictOWIVt, hk*ll, ptlio decil. s 1600hno Y!*'Y. IMM73-3059 11& liif 1611; .,.111 IOC, nall yllrd, laundry taelllllM. NOOmlO. • No ..... ~ 011111, fltt. MM)t..011 II ~·-· rm ' (JASS •• ~ By Fax· ('>4'>) 0:) J-<,.>'>4 By Phone 10-11J) M:!·:"M17H By MaB'ln Penon: (1'1.-.... it•,,.,, .. )'""'"'""'"'"' 1"11"1" llllttdlt'f •1Mf .. r 11 tnll 1t•I 1 ... l ,.ith ~ l"ino 'I"'"") 3:)0 w,.,, Un' St rc1•1 (;O-.lll \f 1•,11. (.,\ 1)21~:!'"7 \1 \,.,.I""' llh •I ~ IJ.o "' -Hours T1•h11liu111' 8:. JOum-."i OOp111 \l1H•la•-fn1Ll\ \\'ulk-111 8:.)011111-.'}.00pm '"""'••-~n•b) llf-s:Bj BEST LOCATION IN NEWPORT BEACH 2Bdm\I 1.681 T ownhome Villll Qlll.19'· Newly Remodeled kitchen, large dining area. S1970. W~ll 8-12mo Is 888·783-8786 SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW PENTHOUSE 28dmV28ath Dual MastAt plan wtlh a Iott, Two Baloonies with remalk: Ocean view. Fire- place. Study' Vaulted Ceilings S3576. with 11 12 mo. tease. 888-783-8786 \ Newport Marina Apartments Bayfront community with prinle beacll & marina. Walk 10 Balboa Island. lBR, 2BR and 2BR widen $1200-$3600 Wood burning fireplace & private garage. Sorry, no peta. P1eue call1 (949) 76()..()919 ' • I 1~°"111&-rs~I ELEGANT OCEAN VIEW PROMONTORY POINT PENTHOUSE 2Bedroom/ Vlll.A APARTMENTS 2Ba1h +Loll Ocean View, The ttaQ1lon ot Newpolf Beach VlllA!ed ceilng, dryblr, Fire-awaits l°"' The breathlaklno place, leMs courts, spe, gym, OoelWl Harbor bay ~ will pools. $2&4 5. 868-78:Hl786 rellX you! Our t Bedrooms are st8111ng at $162500 1 Bedroom ~ Loll slalllng at $173000 Our 2 Bedrooms are starling 81 $1870.00 2 Bedroom+ Lon Stalling at $2645.00 SOme units Include 11erage, tireplece. vauiled cellingS, & newly remodeled kitchens Cal 888· 783-6786 FAIRWAY APARTMENTS AT BIG CANYON GATED COMMUNITY BY FASHION ISLAND Beautiful tree-lined streets and golf course views. Enjoy carem.. livlng In your large 1, 2 or 3 BR apartment home! • lWo-cw gwege • W..,_/dfy« hookupe • Flreplac. (wood & gel) • Air conditioning • Wet ber In 2 end 3 BR • Alarm eyst9m • $1,050 to 12.995 • PleaM a.II (949) 844..QS09 SOny, no pets. Q/V~&. A French villa high on the hill with city, canyon views, plus cool ocean breezes. • Private garage • Washer/Dryer • Refrigerator • Gated community • Fitness, Business, Entertainment Centers 0/1(~ San Joaquin Hiiis at Newport Ridge Drive Limited Time On ili LIVE THE LIFE STYLE m The Terrace Apartments ac An Exclusive Opportunity for Waterfront Living on ewport Bay • Limited availability of Studios, 1 & 2 Bedrooms $1400-$2600 • Gym,~pa & Pool • A Village unto itself with Meeting Rooms, Rcstau.rant, Cocktail Lounge, Entertainment & Room Service • Private Guard-Gated Entrance 24-Hour Security & Switchboard • Private Beach • Membershlp Req~ To chedule your private showing, please call (949) 645-5000, e t. 539 .. mmm ShORT TERM RENTAL Avail di June 1. Spacious, deluxe. 2Bdrm 2ba. fully tum, close lo belch, 2c gar. 949-675-7130 1119==1 n1 AVOCADO s.nocas11e, Top Floof View, 2Bdlm 2Balh. 2c garage, Fum/Unlum Pool . & Spe. Of>EM SAT 1~PM Corona del ... Propertlt1 MM7M494 1180~1 'E SIDE• 3tlf 1ba, hkupa, Qa!, yd, gerdentf, small pet·Ol lmmacuattl 11400/mo. 714-nS .. 670 182 HOUSfE>N,l,W NEWPORTsEAcH WE HAVE 60 HOMES IN NWPRT BCH.llCOSTA MESA From $1500.·$6000. Per Monlh No Fees Broker 949-642·3850 'Newport Height•' 2br 2b1, 2 car ger, wllfg bf over gar., hug• yd; oldlr but na • great l~lon, garcStnlng fnc~ min to bell. P9ta Ok. $2500 Call 94M62-9745 Vil.LA BA.LBOA FULL OCEAN & CITY LIGHT VIEW! 2BR 1.58A HIGHLY UPGRAOEO, UTE & BRIGHT! AVAIL 3/1. $1500/MO 714-4~3153 •NICE• 3bf 2ba houa, Wliii 1 br cottage tlouM on lwgt lot. Ava.II 4-1. $3000fmo, No peta. Evea M•722·1617 or Deya 941-84~7000 X301 LUXURY WNliront hOmia for rent or INM, an Mmla, •• alna , eU prlce1 peta ok. MW9Mln •8AYRIOGE' 2br 2ba, lower Condo. Pool, .,,., gated, S11001mo. Agent 721-1575 PVT BEACH COMM'TY yearly untum, nice 21>1 2ba, 2 bloclcs to ocn, 2car 811 gar, lg Mslr..Sr, walk·ln ctosettlibo<Yard gar· <lener. N/smkr IS/. Agent f225Mno 9-4 1-1038 seaFalre UnobSITvded View Al Nev.port Harbor Ovelslzed Studio MaryAnn McGuire 646-6770 Prudential Ca R~ ;.,. ocean view ·~1in' 2bd1mf2bl, lrplc, sec:unty. ~~'='=r'° PANORAMIC VIEW CompleWy temOdeled home " OoYer Shores 6200 II, lllllble tlocn. Luxurious JAslr. granite ~. """ rool. pt1vllt pool UriQl»ll $7SOO'l>lt mo HANU REDDY REA.&. TY (9-49) 5594388 recently mt0vated, nur mlJ0t Fwys & au:ractJ, 0C FaltsJ'ounds eontge. bchs. shoppl"' m"11. 24hr 01 desk. Free 1180. RSPN, ~. 00 phones. spa & pool. First wk spcda.ls on nglu 8c dbls. $134+ Tax. C.M. Motor Lnn. 2277 Harbor Blvd. 949/645-4&40 Polley U:i11· .. nml tl1•n1lli11r~ 111r .. 11hjt·c·1 1111•l11.111~c· "'itho111 umlc-t•. Tfw p11l1fi.,l11•r l'l"·~·n ,., tf w 11;:111 10 1c11i.or. n•rl111-i.i(~. rr,·i~•· or "'J•·1·1 :\II\' rl11~~ili1•1 f Ut" ,., , il'>l'llH'lll. l'lru,r n•por t IHI\ l't'IUI' I ho1 11111~ 'I(' i11 \Ullr """!>tilu·d utl 11111111•1li1111·I~. Tlw Ouil\' J'ilol lll'l't'fll' 1111 l111f11lil\" (or"'"' 1•r111r ill tlll t11h ·rrtt"l'flll'lll f(1r whic-h it lllU\ ht• n·i-p1111~ihh• ,.,;.l'IH for ifw (t1~1 l)r tlw 11pnrc ur111ufly <l('<'lll'k1I h' 1h<-1·11111· C11•1fi1 1•11 1111111~ ftr olfmH·.I fur dw f'ir,,1 imc11io11. ----Deadlines ___ _,... Monday ............ Frida y 5:00pm ThtJ~ay .. Wednesday S:OOpm Tuesday ......... Monday S:OOpm Friday .......... Thursday 5:00pm Wednesday .... Tt1esJay S:OOpm SaturJay ......... .".Friday S:OOpm BALBOA IS. Cute 2br Zbe, lg CM 40 FAN YO SALE. SAT dplx. upper level, llorep. MARCH ITH llfn.1pm. 180 E Fem roomrna19 1625 + utll, 23rd et. (CalYllY Ctlurcl'I) Avan M.y 111. .. 1-875-3123 comtr of Orange Ave. • HB,,.., oowntown & oc;an, Benefftl Boy Scout• Troop Share 2br epl lg rm, '390 + 90. Camp~·· clothH,etC dep. Avall lmmed. Cheryl CM. 4i FAMILY fiOMAGE 714-374-1659 ,SALE March $ & 6th\ Fr0111 '"'New""""PO""""'R ... T ...,,e""EA..,..C"""H,_.,..,w'""alk....-lo a.2:00. at 2150 Fall'vltW Ave. beach. 1 Bedroom W/bllh, 111 &unlhlne Colop preschool. amen Security, ISi & last + Collector 1tamp1, 68Seb8ii utiltlie$ S55Mno 949·646-3735 basUlbaW & lootball cards, CM bouncy aenlOr sSIF Sht clolhina & tumlstlinaS 5at·Sun big new gated, poo~ cat1, 8-3 7o8 Lltllspuf C<IM In llley. 2br • s1so, 1br • 1550 *GARAGE SALE* 941-831·2111 'RH ElemlnlllY School Sl1 Hemllton o Ca.ta MIN I ~ OFPICES I Sat 319 from l:OOMI • 3:00pm FOR R11::UT11 •&el Moving Si'· After 25••} • ~ "~ • Fumilure, misc. some! IOI large EJKUtlW Oftlcl1 everyone E\'ll)'lt*lg go! located lf'I H~on BMch, Ma/Ctl 8, 8-2pm Sal~ 2304 $300 per monctt "Cd Ron 11 LI Linda Place (Bldt Bay) NB • 11......,m1 * uoviHO ULElh p h ya I ea I Th., 1 p I a I l ELECTRONICS, CHRISTMAS Chlropnictor 2000 s1 bulldng. AROUND THE WORLD. nr Hoag ~Just S270Mno CLOn.ES, ETC-. Bob P""""'. 949-248-SM6 11140 MT. HllTCHINGS, •1·-FOUNTAIN VALLEY, CROSS hlne by OC llrpott. S Win· STREETS WARNER/HAR· dow offlc:a + atorage, tuu BOR. 7AM·HOONI SAT 316 a.vice avail Flu ierma, xlnt HPi (Baycrttl) rate. 949-75&-5250 1706 TradeWlnd1 Ln. 1219 Prof gentlemen 52 ... king lhlte rental nr OC altpM, wllllng to help tiouMlyd work. Have 1 cat. Wllllng to 1ub1t1ntlal rent for right 11tu1tlon. 941-223-2156 4'0 yr expel aecurlty apec:illlat de91rea to MC\ft Mtatef home In llCl\angl for low cost llvlng. local fob ltebll- lty 20yra, Clrl -bonded 81 yn, no amoldna angl no pell. Mr. Billa. 7f4~f.1MI .UEST BEANIE• PAICE& www.beanlMfofyou.com • Relief from ln"ell'I • AntWlfl to DA'• • ModiflCltlon of •upport F••efftce .. ,_al IUll11•11111t1r1 '911J!978·7- IM8J al0·17U liYi11g or J"l'lll peft!!l, tpMlll:t Of ~ who ncccL ~. i..\11g cwt ud goOd mul• Sp.00.. mom.t aftiltble ill my bomc oa • 5 acn buu1ifally maintaiMd uta.tt In Htmn.. The m .. tllly ltt b $2,500 each, c.upla wdQoee. Pica. ~nucc me, s..iiar. Duncu, 909-6~·9104 and call for .dditioa.al iafol'lll:l1ion. ' SAT 7:301m. ·1pm. Sluff n' Thlnp, clothlng, houllhold, furniture- NP8 Fundrlleer Set & Sun a.s. New Prom drHw• or bridH meld, dellgner ~ r1c:1, boullqua llema, yam, radloa, I tteck tapaa + new atereo tapes. 1215 Pembroke Lane. 8etWMn Irvine • Dover off Marln«1. NPB 006 ISLE SAT March 61h f..3 220 VI~ Ithaca LOTS OF EVER· '<THING SA' e-1 456 GAVOIOTA, NB. CWVARO SAL'f Sat·Sun, 8A·3P 268 22nd St. Bini houses, cloehes. bbq, misc. 9IC 1~--=1 ~l'lmenl conltm lrdldes smal llec:lrbl blender, ~ croll Pol 8'C cal IOI p!lces 714"'84&-0548 Brldlt to be-. Wedding dress Slllll Vl'hite dellgned by ~ Lhrllll pelflc:I ex>nd. size 8, blellh ~ eleglnl. purchased II Morw Mil. Coll over S 1700 sel S850 used 1 949-718-0517 otl Computer Pentium 100, 16MB-fllll. IT' COior monilof 56K modem, Wln 95, IOllded wt aoltwar• 71"·241.oA1 GOii big (new) Dllwa 941-720."63 •-tt•tt•tt•tt• 1448 ~1 I BUY AU. PWK>SI AnllqlJls-Oulllly llumn OIW plec. OI whole houlllull1 Ctsll p.lld 800-64M922 TRAIN YOUR BODY TO BURN FAT! Find out tM top tnlntr's bnt kept secrets! WHY PAY UP TO $500 FC>tt A FITNESS MSESSMENfJ 10110•6SIONAl rms1HC1.uo1i • % Body fat-V02 Max • Save tirrlelmoney -no w«ial eqµIR: -f·Z 2 use! • Customlie lor ur uni ue metab6/1sm J , ' r SI g g .......... MIW Ff/Fr~ ciia" Per Hour ~~ =~ ·=---...... ....,_ 8'Ublilhcd bl 1989 c.o '::' :.:.."Ll 1.a&N1M744 llANAOE1' AlltSTANT HEWRVll!OtT STOR40E Oood ,...,.. WOIUr, rudy to tllcel II CUSlornef MNlce 11 new storage 11C1dy In OC coastal llH Must have ~ Wld be wiling to IMm new tk.11 In operatioll lfld meillllllQ d our "Fnt a."tN & 8-~ ,.. SOil Must ~ WO~ wfltl our ~ts llnttsc8plng. Some Compulet, olfice ex· ~ tequltld Sell·Slolege a plus Musi be ~. ~Mld, ~ chectnl~ •be Pllfonned tty to $1 Olt1r ~on b&c:$gnG'exper. F11t resume to (714) 841-7699 Of mall to· Mg. p 0 Box 7108 ::.:rri a.cti. Ct 92615 8Mch Cd need• CMl'lllr Frr • PfT $1.00iht will train to.2,2.oou *Q·~•t1•'1't• REAL ESTATE SALES F~ llln&'Part-llmt UC'd Of l10l ti.mg Now! ERA RaftMy & l.JoyO'/HB pays tor your req'd course and ~·d lree !rei ning, 00-5391 &I 119 ~ 2 positions • Deli Mgr hlghly exp'd WtM paying cmll posll(lll • Sefvll SOt.nd 1111> req'd MMl3-4«2. NEWPORT BEACH CONFERENCE 6 VISITORS BUREAU RECEPTIONIST Wt are seemg 111 IOCMc1lal wno Is pleasant, ~ onen- led Ind Jcnowledgeable llbou1 N:i:! 8each, to~ lfle rtau to the Ind vWrlQ JU*:. ~er profi· dlttw:y ~ed Ple9st lax NIUne 0 Kllhy Stleridaf'I 9<1H22·t612 HOTEL Portofino in NB ••ti Fff & Pff • Night Shift ·Front De1k • Oe.k A.gent • Maintenance .... Mft'111·7030 EJt. , ••• 10::30. ..... ~~-~ ,''&r':,1'1.3 ... I-., I II\/' ~ ., .. • l I • I ' t '. . , .• :-r r -3' t ~ ....... ~ • fAtAIN • IRS Ponetlonl .......,. Al'W\Jlt'AP CYr. 14-540-122 """"' ~~-.. ltld1en. lad\. Ooot• ~ ......... UMIMO 714-MMI07 ~,, . . ' ' ,. · . •• ··'. :..:Ul . .,.,.,. ..... RITM.IM9 MAX MARA Soo1it CWT PlAz>. Htgh·end Italian Women's Boutique needs prof esslonal salesperson with lots of energy and enthusiasm. Can earn up to $2l5/hr if good . APPLY IN P!RSON FINIACIAL PROBLEMS, BAD CREDIT. WE CAN HELP. • 1-800-411-3572 * 692 SUPSIDOCKS /MOORINGS LOOKING for Side Ile or moonng on Balboa Island Prefet NolTtl Side Cal Lee 909--948-3030 HORTH u60 1sif ="' Atdel's Marina.) sai·pow41r boel to 4511 949-815-'79n NH silP '9lllal IOf 4CMSft Slllboll. $12 per fl ptr Mo. 94t-n2·2860 Uk !of Joe. Slot TIE IOi a 26 'h sailboat Good loc. wallfltllc. Doclt Box Cloll to belch & resw- ll/1CS s 10 .per ft 949-G'Ts-6128 SUP FOR b ·a6AT ELEC· TRICINATER, 0000 LOC , CLS TO UDO ISLE BRIOGE $13 PER FOOT. N9-675'6t28 3S iooc N8 iiOOMi Off 1 Sttl SI. ueoo.oo MM'TH2M 45' Moodng In Nt:g.: BMCh n front o1 .,,. ~ 112.000 '621·281·7914 •"ttto~tt uroClrorfe~ w::tHC1U.Wil·*""8 =SM)NAU~ OiOICATIO't 71434l-O 71'4 437-2 F-~~ ;"'•·-~ .. ·-· '. ~ • ••• • • ,1 I ' . -~~-LIXUI TIR ·=· ~r.1i:-., . ·...n.v8'41 ... .. ~.10."1 (114~ Maii 'li~~. tillfm,11111~. ... pwr ~ 12811 lnl, $4200 UCllb S3200 NN31-0732 cADLIAC DiWUI 'Ii IM•eculllt, 1111 lllllH, Ptff9ct COl'ldlttoft $11 ,000 ' MM1M74S cHtW s1o allttA 19t ~ (107583)$15.898 F WESTMIHSTOI ('714)HHIOI CiWJliif fown a Count~ • ., L~06542) Sl 1,98 ••• , BISHI MOTORS {!14)54$.1700 ' FORD CONTOUR GL '95 I.ow mllesl (2462476 $8299 MITSUBtSHI M TORS ('714)54$.1700 FOfd EiiilOiW Utiili i7 W,915 -4303 BAUER JAGUAR ' (714= FOAOM~t6 I cyl, IUIO bans, AC, hM pwr, II pwr Miis, bfakes, windows ~. W!Hm $l8f90 CISS, ctllise, Q.IStom 111'81 " whls, $13,500lobo 714-842·7830 FORD TAURUS GL V6 '96 ASS, ~Bt\112218t $11,982 MITS ti MO ORS (714~5-1700 HONOA Accord COUpt '97 Lo mies (VAOt 1563.JoS14.995 COSTA MESA NOA !!14)436-5050 HONDA ACCORD ()( 4r>R '95 Pw.cass ~SA0658m $11,995 OOST MESA ..aNOA ('714 )4•5050 HOnda Accord 1"3 Loeded, 82k, while, 2dr. $7500 949~75-1649 Of 94~160-0820 Jo HONOA CIVIC OX CPE 'ts 2d, 5 ~ (RH503099~S9999 CO TA MESA HO DA (714)U8-5050 HONDA CIVIC OX '97 Sdn. 40r (VH5tS968) $13,995 COSTA MESA HOHDA • (714)435-5050 HONDA DEL SOL S '94 Cpec 2dr. (R~ $9,999 OSTA MESA NOA (714~5050 HOHOA DEL SOL '93 CD ~ (00331~,437 MtT 81SHI MO RS ~14)54$.1700 Jaguar XJS 191 Cr~ Greal ccnd, .. new, m ml, *'I roct. 4dt. s 1 .500 cau 94M40-1210 JAGUAR XJS CONY. 'M $39,9115 116-4211 BAUER JAGUAR (T14)MS-4800 AGUM ICJs Vi 2 'i4 --144170 8AU£1' JAGUAR 714-953....ob JAGUAR iii SEDAN 40 •93 $17,1115 .,.... BAUER JAGUAR T14-t53-4IOO LEWIS CONSTRUCTION ~·~ Uc ·™ . Local Flnldeft 714-557·5925 .---~~ I• • • .. , . ';.. . ..... -~ •. t1. . • .. ..,. "" .. ~ ... . ; . All ph11u/an1all/lg 1ot1t Cl£AHI ~ !tat. M -IM00030 714G-t447 ~~ '""' .· . J~u,r U VMdlnl 'M $39, tMOl1 BAUER JAGUAR !714)953-4800 I J1guat jji '"' ~ml. new llfes, CID te, 112.500 pnvale ~ MM73-0411. IJAUAR 93 XJS2 DOOR COUPE, SllMool, 17k ml S18,M5. movl~ outol atatt, mutt ... MM 4-7555 JetpC~'tS 2~. llAo. Ill'( 113.998 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)892-Gtol JEEP WRANGLER '97 vi..rc1ean~4t42&CI s12,9n SU SHI MOTORS (714)545-1700 LEXUS LS 400 '94 Auto, elr, llht~527) $19,895 WUS OF ESTMINSTER (714)891-MOI • LEXUS 't2 ES 300 Whitt, '°"flllu, mint concl moon roof, $13,IOO. 94 .. 721-1380 UNCOlH CONTINENTAL '95 Auto, lir, llh<.~99353) $17,998 WUS OF STlllNSTEA (714)192.aol MERCEDES BENZ 300£ 91 SON, auto, 4 dr, 8 cyl, fuHi loed9dl Low ml MM40-415 US.218-3031 Mtfcecltt 500 SL~ 1991 Sliver Yfllll/ rare loaded, wood aeemg wheel s11itef. CID c:hangef, voice acwated phone' Halagon 19lls, pan-oramk: top, new tires, HCellenl shape, Ilk rni, $89.900 firm or llkt over lease, 3 yeat 20I< ml, $1731 pef rnonlll tall Bob at * 760-5~76• MERCEDES 450 SL 74 NOW tires & soll lop, custom rims. Slel'80, low ITV, 2 tops, S6200 obo ..... 723-4549.. tllilicury Gilfid MaurqUli '92 = t lk m~est Loaded. Falher passed away, ,000 firm 949-75t-763S Mhaubllhl EcliPtl GS:T 'ta ~, IUlo.(01~1.898 SOFWES STER ('714)n2-tl0t MITSU81Sff OALAHT ES '97 Moonrooll (010288) $12,900 MITSUBISHI MOTORS ~1700 li1ts GiUNf s '116 28,~11&4~10.870 Stl rroRS ('714)545-1700 MfTSUBtSHI IMAGE LS 'ti All~73:Jo $12.950 II ~S ('714)54$.' 700 · ....... , .... ~, .. ~ . ~ .. • ,_..,. ; -1T1 ,• 1' ...-r . ~ -. . . ' .. • I' l .. ,,T"" ....... , .. ,, ... ,.. • J • • ' \ I, I , '' ·;-, • 1T' ' .. lly CHARLES GOltEN \Nlth OMAA SHARIF -"' TAHNAH HllUOf THE RIGHT DISCARD Both "ul~rablc. North deal•. A~a1nst ti\fC: ;p~s. We£t led the ten ol J1anll.JCMi, East ovcrtool> \lrlth the Jiiek. cuhed the ace and contm· uec.l wnh a third round for l:d. of nnything beuer to do. Declarer, to avoid having to !ak,e the club fines-;e. rouunely d1sc:iroeo a club from hand lb West let go of a heart. After ruffing 011 the Ulble, clccltU~r d~1dtd to get to hand to draw mnnps via a heart ruff. The ace of he.artS wb cu!.hed and a hean was continued Becau~ of the fre3k nature of the deal. whether declan:r ruffed hl£h or l9w West would h:lve to collect a trump trick 10 dcfcnt the contract NORTH •K 1 'V AJ842 0 74 •A KJ S 2 WEST •87653 'V 7 5 EAST • Voi(t ~ K J0963 O AKQJ9S3 •8 0 106 ... Q 10 7.a SOUTH •A QJ 1094 2 ~Q 0 82 • 963 1llc b1ddan2: NORTH ~ST 1~ 20 SOUTH WEST 4• ~ Pa 50 Pass ~ 5• P!W Pass Puss Opening lead: Ten of o It is true that declarer can ge1 lo hand 'with 3 club ruff, but that cer- tainly looked more dnn~crous. But there was a ~1mpler way 10 ~ure a rclauvely safe entry to draw trumps On the third round of diamonds dt:clarer should discard the queen of he.arts from hand' h 1s alv. ay~ ~1er to pla) o hand when all the card~ arc exposed. However '.here arc precautions avai I· able that ~ill ~•mphf> your chances of l.mdmg the contract. Consider this deal. In a competcllH· auc11on, Nonh- StM!th readied a contract of fhc -.des. Looking 01 all four hands. there 1s no problcm.,Even look.mg at just two. declarer can v1nuall) claim the hand. After ruffing v. nh the king of .!>padci.. declarer come) 10 hana by ruffing a low heart. leaving the ace on the tnble Declnrer then dr.aws trump) and crosses 10 the kcng of clubs 10 discard a club on the ace of heans and claim tht: rest of 1hi: mckl>. making livt:·odd. 695 CARS/TRUCKS NANSISUVS MITSUBISHI Mirage DE '97 Ver; nice C811 (026 f46) $8973 MITSUBISHI MOTORS 714-545-1700 MltSii6iltllM~S 'll6 Sedan. e/C (00~ 1) $8.272 MtTSUBISHI MOToRS (714)54$.1700 MITSUBISHI 1992 EAGLE SUMMIT. gr9ll buy $1000 below blue book Red l\atctt- back. $3900 949-642·2940 NtSSAH KiHO CAB 't7 Red (319230) $12,999 CONNEU. NISSAN ('714)751-3383 NISSAN KING CAB '97 Gray (321073) $12.999 CONNEll NISSAN (714)755-3333 N1ssAtj KING cu ·u Blue. (322168) $12.999 COHNEU NSSAH (714)75S-~ NISSAN KiNQ CAB '97 S/fve<. (337067) f12,999 CONNELL NISSAN ('714)7SWS33 NiSSlH idHO CAB ·e1 WHll. (328709) $12.999 COHNEU NSSAN (714)75WSQ NISSAN KlNO CAO 'N Sspd, rM (344550) $12,999 CONNEU.. NSSAN (714)75S-~ 695 CARS/TRUCKS NANSISUVS NISSAN KING CAB '90 55pd. stvr J344559) $12.999 CON ELL NISSAN (714)75$-3333 NiSSAH KJNG CAB XE '95 SSpd. ~ (424603) $9999 CONNELL NISSAN (714)755-3333 NISSAN PICKUP 1990 AIC, SHEU., AWAI CASS. XLHT COHO. ltK Ml, $4500. 949-6421777. NISSAN REG CAB XE '97 5spd, !)'~~) $9999 CO U.NSSAN (714)755-3333 NISSAN TRUCiC XE ·97 55pd,grn. (378043)$9999 CONNELL NISSAN (714)755-3333 OLDS EiGHiY EIGHT ·gs Au1o. ar, lltv (824736) $13,998 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)8t2-H06 Pl YMOUTH Hlghlint Sdn ·es Amllmcass. (0121789) $7999 COSTA MESA HONDA (714)438-5050 * Plymouth van 192 • looks 4 nn greet loaded. must see, ~ OYlnef, S6000 or make dlef 515-7416. P6Nf1Ac suNFtAE s£ 'ts Ct>e. 40lr. (4BW0599) $7999 COSTA MESA HONDA (714)436-5050 PUBLIC NOTICE The C1lll. Put>llc- Ub'bttes Commission REOlllRES thlt an used household goods movara print their P.U.C. Cal T ~ mmos and chaUflers print their T.C.P . runber In .. ecMrtts· ment• " you hive • qU8Sltot'I about the itgallfy of a mover, &mo Of dllufltt, cat Puet.IC urtLmes COMMISION 114-5~151 695 CARS/TRUCKS IVANSISUVS PORSCHE S6 CARRERA 911 TAAGA Chrome wts, St8.SOO trade oil as partlal ~· pnvate pally 949-87 t I SUBURBAN 84-¥• TON 4X4 dltMI, turbo, Irena, cooler, $5200. firm. Trever trailer 1vall1ble. 949-644-1342 SUZUKI SAMURl'88 Slue, 4X4 COOYI. 55p 1 OOk ml $2700 949-75~·6883 TOYOTA CAMERY LE 1996 29,Sk ITll, (ll9 owo:J:J:!. lactoty wan lully • power ev~. 10-CD. r:Jc, &'C. 411. $18 500 obo M.nl Condiuon Must Seel c .. Bob. 714·241·9075 TOYOTA CAMRY '97 Auto.llr,cd ~$17,998 LEXUS OF HSTER (714)892-6906 T~lt Tacoma Xtra Clb '95 .C • AT. (Z05867UJt3,99S. COSTA MESA NOA (714)43MOSO TOYOTA TEJiCE( OX '93 ~. 4dr. ~5785)$8999 COST MESA HOHOA (714~6-5050 tiUUMPH iut tiia off fnme reatotwtlon, wtilte, lmmaculett Condition S14,MO. MMS4-T$5S , TOOAY~S . ACAON ee V°'lfS' 1 ~· ~ C'OfW.,..,. ... .,ICM.._ 5 Clim!) • IOIPbOll 80 Albright °' films to seop up et -. ..so« 14 s.i.d·bOwl 92 Pfelend:I wood e3 OI Of coal f5 E~QtMn lot ~ 16 '"Clan ot ltie r~ Cave Beal" 65 ·1 didn 1 i.M heroine ~t· 17Ph0'1and MD's DOWN 20 "So longf' I Taite a -at 21 Ol¥1ng biros (tty) 22 Fable Wfllor 2 AW•s Lamarr 23 8nef 1w1m1 3 Root part 24 Sweet tubers 4 AltllS • 26 In a genfle lr¥ay 5 FIU, as a chalf 29 Sient 6 Smells bed 30 Duck's too4 7 leeks on • 33 ~ ot "Shane" 8 ~ 34 Reel matenet 9 PreviOUs 10. 1n 35' Dismiss w11hool poems notice 10 Is concerned 36 Complete t 1 Soap.making surptlse IOQfadten«s 40 Away 12 81ead ~ead 41 Subject 1or 13 React to Ptutarcn shocking news .C2 Squeal 18 Fl098r part 43 Harem rhamber 19 Bet 44 loNa "rty 23 Acodent resuh 4'5 E!lplodes 24 Mongol 4'7 Strorig haulers <;1welf1ngs 46 Aristocrat ·' • 25 Bombay 49 "Alfie" star nursemaid 52 Hero.c tale 26 FC>lbtdden 53 Meadow 27 Audibly 2~ 0 "" ~,-..,...... .. l ' 28 Medlteffanea11 <47 :ratulTHlf A¥aw nation 46 T 11g ' 29 AoUf1d rooes 49 Farm Wsr;:/. , 30 Tom Jones' 50 ·-Ben .: ' land Adhem" ' • I 31 Leap for joy 51 Where GW~ 32 HltS the hom lwlded -~· 3" Group of • 52 Parched ~ Wltehe• 53 -Netlll 37 Stntw~ 54 Soul~ 38 Frost Jlmes 39 Polar eicplorttf 55 Helper (abbr / 45 Hollywood 57 EapntSSlon o 46 ~~-58 ~t!ne Mountains 59 Attomey s held 695 CARS/TRUCKS IVANS/SUVS 685 CARS/TRUCKS NANSISUVS Daily Pilot val VG MO '91 Aul0, 111, atw (089771) $21,898 LEXUS OF W£STMlHSTER (714)892-'908 Volbwegen Camoar 71 Wh"-. rebuilt engine. One OMW!' for 2l'tfl. $2700 flnn. Cell Pa11t It 114-662<6932. Sell your extra household items In CLASSIF1ED · VW WESTfALIA 77 tamp«, yellow, wn·fm cus 4 •• 2.0 erig. aJetpa 4. $3~obo. t4N7W566 <JRCO l'l l 1MHING VOlkawaoen Ciblfolet 11115 Convertlble blue, 5lpd ilc.e new. MW lores & breab. CA smog $2550 714·569-0169 Call 642-5678' lndiv/Grp H~p All Levels l1"" 9'9&*1 '*~a G • G UPttOUltJft Slnoe 'al CU9tOlll ~ ==·~~~