HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-02-06 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS .
aon BA$KETBAU.
Estancia 57, Costa Mesa 45
Woodbridge 86, Newport 58
Santa Margarita 78, CdM 53
:s.Mng the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
OPINIONA TEO
Surf contest drives
wedge between them
I .
1Darts, skiing ~d Clint Eastwood-hi the land of ice
' .
»rad Avery
I'
By Brad Avery
Brad Avery, director of Orange
Coast College's Sailing Center, is
sailing aboard Polar MW -
launched from Newport Beach last
July-from Puento Arenas, Chile
to the Antarctic.
Avery's e-mail dispatches are
being sent via satellite.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5, 1800 GMT.
ARGENTINE ISLANDS -After
. . • • . . • . .
Qur climbing expedition, we spent
the riext day at Galindez Island in
the Argentine group (65-158 south,
64-16 west). The British Antarctic
Survey began operating the Fara-
day research station here in 1934.
Working with another station, Fara-
day scientists were the first to dis-
cover and report Antarctica's sea-
sonal ozone depletion. The base is
now operated by Ukrainian scien-
tists.
We tied four different approach-
es in a narrow rocky channel
'.A D VENTURE
behind the base. We then loaded
five pairs of cross country skis in
the inflatable and hit the slopes like
any family. On top of the broad
dome high above the boat, we tra-
versed and did some downhill
while ta.king in the beauty of
Lemaire Channel and the Graham
Coast Range. The afternoon was
clear and warm, and it was incredi-
ble to be skiing on an island sur-
rounded by icebergs.
That evening, Julie Evans, Bob
Kayset and I visited the research
base, now named Vemadsky. The
facility is large and high-tech, its
exterior studded with antennae of
all types.
several years ago, they snapped it
up and proudly opened their first
Antarctic research facility.
Inside'Vemadsky Base it
appears as if the British have
been vaporized and replaced by
Ukrainians. Besides British and
American equipment, the decor
consists of photos and mementos of
British adventure in the Antarctic.
Signs in English now have hand-
written Ukrainian subtitles.
After the disintegration of the
Soviet Union, Russia claimed all
Antarctic research, even though the
Ukraine had always been at the
forefront of Soviet polar stUdies.
When the British Antarctic Sw:vey
offered the base to the Ukrainians •SEE POLAR MIST PAGE A12
Israeli leader's
visit postponed
by air tragedy
•Shimon Peres was scheduled to
speak at Temple Bat Yahm Sunday but
sends word he is needed at home in
wake of fatal military helicopter crash.
By Michelle Terwilleger, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The Tuesday collision of
two military helicopters that killed 73 lsraeli sol-
diers sent shock waves throughout the world -
reaching even to Temple Bat Yahm in Newport
Beach.
Shimon Peres, former Israeli prime minister,
was scheduled to speak to 1,000 people Sunday at
the temple, located at 1011 Camelback St., but
had to postpone his plans ·
because of the national
tragedy.
The congregation hopes
to reschedule his visit for
Maye.
Mlt's a disappointment to
us, but it's a small issue com-
pared to the tragedy of the
families involved," said Dr.
Ted Greenzang, the lecture's
event chairman.
The two Sikorsky CH-53
transport helicopters collid-
ed m midair Tuesday night, Shimon Peres
sending one down in a fire-
ball in the upper Galilee
community of Shaar Yeshuv. There were no sur-
vivors in the crash, the worst air disaster in Israel's
military history.
to priesthood when the church
didn't take a stand against the
Vietnam War.
And then there's that little mat-
ter of Newport Beach's only strip
club .
Temple Bat YahJn received a fax Wednesday
morning, stating that Peres, as the opposition
labor leader, needed to remain in lsrael for the
time of mourning and to attend an emergency
Monday meeting of the Knesset, the country's leg-
islative body .
: Ron '™mo is far, far from He then moved aaoss the con-
tinent to Orange County to
become a lawyer defendblg a
laundry list of Catholic night-
mares: from gay dandng at Dis-
neyland and women's rights to
enter abortion dink:s without pro-
testers' interference.
Talmo's n.ame bas become syn-
onymous with the Mermaid after
three years of doing battle with
the city on the club's behalf.
Min Israel, where everybody knows everybody,
this is not only a national event, but it's an extend-
ed family tragedy," said Rabbi Mark Miller. MOur
heavy hearts go out to all the families."
: where be began.
: He started his adult life in the . • • • • • • • • • . • • • •
early '70. in a Delaware IAJJ)tnary,
poised to beam.a a Catbotic priest
to cany on the religkJul valuet
infused Jn bit childhood. But a
year later, be abandoned the path
With his sharp nual voice, he
serves u mouthpiece for bis
•SEE TALMO PAGE A12
In preparation for Peres' talk, the temple sold
900 lecture tickets for $12 to $36 and sold out a
pre-lecture $250 dinner ·at The Ritz restaurant in
Newport Beach .
U.S. State Department officials checked out the
•SEE PERES PAGE A12
Minister,. councilwoman
~gamer .chamber's top honor I \ 11 ' \
AROUND TOWN .•.... .A6
aEST I UYS .......... .A2
•The Rev. Jose Corona-.
'do, a former drug addict,
;and Mary Hornbuckle
:named Costa Mesa Man
.and Woman of the Year.
;By Susan Deemer, Daily p;fot
a.ASSIFIED ••••••..••• 84
COMMUNITY FORUM . .A 14
INTERTAINMENT •... .A16
ON THE COAST ....... .A3
POLICE Fil.ES ••••••••• .Al
PUil.iC NOT1C£S ....... 13
..
..
~ ..
A2 THURSDAY, FEl"UARY 6, 1997
0-~, ~' .. :-r. ..... -.
I ' I' f•1• -,., ._,~•·..r.. ---
greer
wylder
See the Cirque du
Soleil for free
A free outdoor performance
: by the world-famous
Cirque du Solell orchestra
:and singers will be held at Than-
•gle Square" s Town Square on
Satmday at 11 a.m.
· They will perform selections
.from "Quidarn," their latest pro-
:ctuction, followed by CD signings
·and a chance to meet the cast
members inside Vtrgin Megas-
:tore. Virgin Megastore and BMG
Records have made the show
possible, and expect a bigger
crowd this year, so it's suggested
. to come early for best seats. Th-
angle Square is located at the
-end of the Costa Mesa Freeway
in Costa Mesa.
Nordstrom Rack has made a
.move from Santa Ana to Metro
Pointe in Costa Mesa. A grand
opening celebration is scheduled
Friday, and at the opening one
lucky person will have the
chance to win up to $1.000 worth
of merchandise during the "Race
For VaJues. • The drawing and
race will be at 8:45 a .m. and the
person must be present to win.
Included in the festivities will
be the Side Street Strutter J azz
Band, which currently performs
weekly at Disneyland. The new
store is a 50,000-square-foot,
one-level location where you can
purchase shoes, clothing and
accessories for the entire family.
Quality brand-name and design-
er merchandise is reduced 30%
to 70% off regular retail prices.
Up to 30% of the merchandise
will l;>e shoes, including such
brand names as Cole-Haan,
Amalfi, Rockport, Nike and Doc
Martens.
Men's apparel designers will
include Joseph Abboud, CaJvin
Klein, Hugo Boss and Jbane
Barnes. Women's apparel design-
ers will include Karen Kane, Bill
Burns, Max Studio and Kenar.
Nordstrom Rack (751-5901) is
located at 901 South Coast Drive
in Costa Mesa.
Across the way at CrystaJ
Court you can attend the 17th
annuaJ Orange County Cymbtdi-
um Society Show, otherwise
known as an orchid-lovers
dream, starting Friday and run-
ning through Monday. Admission
1s free. All three levels of Crystal
Court will be transformed into an
orchid greenhouse that highlights
the exotic blooms.
The Fascination of Orchids
brings together many of the finest l
orchid growers in the United l
States,including 40ofthe
nation's leading professional
growers, nurseries, society mem-
bers and hobbyists.
As a gift for Valentine's Day
.you can purchase orchid bou-
t{Uets and orchid corsages that
are available for sale at the Cor-
sage and Plower Arrangement
Booth. CrystaJ Court is located at
3333 Bristol Street in Costa Mesa.
For more information please call
{435-2167).
-BEST BUYS appean Thursdays and
Saturdays. If you know of a good b4JY i
call me at 540-1224, fax me at 646-4 i 70 ;
or write to me: Best Buys Dally Piiot. 330 !
W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, 92627. l
Newport to Ensenada: new games for ol~ party :
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
The 50-year--old Newport to Ensenada.
yacht race promises to give even old-timers
a fresh experience this year with the addi-
tion of new events -including an RV cara-
van that will run parallel with the boat trip.
A Wednesday gathering at West Marine
on Coast Highway, the race headquarters,
kick ed off preparations for the annual
yacht race, scheduled for April 25.
The Newport Ocean Sailing Association
presented a check for $3,000 to sponsor the
evenJ, and West Marine donated $8,000
worth of marine equipment. Union Bank of
•
Callfomia is also sponsoring the race.
The 125-mile annual yacht race, touted
as the world's largest, ii expected to attract
about 600 boats at the $22.50 entry fee.
One event that will definitely distin-
guish this year's event from previous years:
an •av rally.• For a week before the race,·
recreatiolial vehicle owners will gather at
the Newport Dunes Resort -then they'll
follow the race on the toad from NeWJ>Ort
Beach down to En.senada, Mexico.
Organizers expect about 200 people
from around the oountry to participate in
the "land version of the yachts,•
spokesman Ralph Rodheim said.
On the water, a cruising class category,
~w la.st year, means •any boat can go,•
Rodbelm Mid. And charter boats will take
spectaton to watch the yachts push off
from Newport Be4ch.
Also for the first time this year, a week's
worth of special events will lead up to the
race:
• Saturday, April 19: The Newport Har-
bor Nautical Museum, 151 B. <3out High·
way, will host an open ho~ the weekend
before the event with classic wooden boats
and classic cars on display.
The museum will also run a special·
exhibit on the race's history. ·
•Sunday, April 20: Children can partic-
ipate in a regatta at the Udo Isle Yacht
Oub, 701 Via Udo South.
• Monday, April 21: International SporU
Mark8tl.ng will spomor a charity golf tour-
nament, which ii still in the planning
stages. ·
•Wednesday, April 23: A codrtail rece~
tion at the nautical muaewn will lalute the
race's honorary skipper, Roy Disney, a for~
mer race partidpant and Walt Disney Co.
vice cbainnan.
• Thursday, April 2': The skippers lun-
cheon at the Hyatt Newporter, 1107 Jam•
boree Road, will feature local dignitaries,
with 180 reservations open to the public:
That night. Bahia COrinuuan Yacbt Oub in
Corona del Mar will hold a pre-raee ~·
's obituary
Veteran scou t master.
Van Wig dies
Memorial services are sched-
uled at 1:30 p.m . Saturday at the
Mesa Verde United Methodist
Church in Costa Mesa for Ralph
W. Van Wig, a decorated veter8Jl
and longtime volunteer with th~
Boy Scouts of America .
Mr. Van Wig died last Satur-
day of a sudden heart attack. H~
was75.
A resident of Huntington
Beach since 1972, Mr. Van Wig
was involved with the Boy Scouts
on various levels all over South-
ern California for 63 years, even~
tually earning the group's highest
honor for adult volunteers, tht!
Silver Be4ver Award.
Since his father, KW. Van Wig;
had previously ea.med the same
award, the Van Wigs are the onlY.
father-son team to earn the covet.&
ed Boy Scout awards.
Mr. Van Wig, a Los Angele$
native, is survived by his wUe of
50 years, Virginia Van Wig, seveq
adult children and 12 grandchil .. dren.. . :
The family asks that dona.;
tions, in lieu of flowers, be sent tct
Eagle Launcher, Quest Beyon<t
the Eagle, Boy Scouts of America,
Los Angeles Area Council, 23Ji
Scout Way, Los Angeles, 90026.
BRIAN P08UOA I DAILY Pl.OT
Bill Ackroyd, also known as "The Bubble Man," creates a large bubble for a crowd of people In front of the Newport Beach
Pier. Amazing what you can do with soap, a string and a lot of lmagtnatton.
Stolen property
r ecovered after arrest
Two men, alleged to have
stolen guns and cash from the
headquarters of Crystal C ove
State Park, were captured in a
stakeout at a Newport Boulevard
motel Wednesday morning, a
Costa Mesa police spokesman
said.
Police nabbed the two men,
Jason Patrick Whipple, 21 , and
Daniel Matthew Bvansen, 23,
both of Costa Mesa, after a maid
at the Best Western motel report-
ed seeing a shotgun in one of the
briefly i~ the news
rooms, police Sgt. George
Yezbick said.
Officers checked the room and
discovered the shotgun was one
of three taken in a burglary of the
CrystaJ Cove State Park ranger
headquarters Tuesday night.
Also stolen in the burglary
were three rifles, four radios, 15
qandguns, handcuffs and other
law enforcement equipment,
including badges, and $2,500 in
gate receipts, Yezbick said.
After receiving the call from
the maid at the Newport Boule-
vard motel, officers staked out
both the suspect's rooms and the
room across the hall. When Whip-
ple and Evansen returned to the
room they were arrested after a
brief struggle, Yezbick said.
Yezbick said except for the
$2,500, all of the Crystal Cove
property was recovered.
"The state park people were
happy," he said.
Both Whipple and Evansen
were being held in the Costa
Mesa Jail on suspicion of bur-
glary, possession of stolen proper-
ty and resisting arrest, Yezbick
said.
No bail was set for Evansen,
who Yezbick said bad violated
parole, but Whipple's bail was 5et
at $10,000.
Burglars hit school
athletic buildings
A series of burglaries at three
high schools last month cost the
Newport-Mesa School District
more than $15,000 in damage
and stolen property.
In each incident, the campus'
physical education building -
which houses the gym and locker
rooms -was targeted.
Costa Mesa High School was
broken into Jan. 23 and Estand.a
ond Newport Harbor high
schools were vandalized over th~
Jan. 25 weekend, said Eric Jetta,
of the district's maintenance
de partment. •
Several doors were damaged;
keys were stolen and ~television: telephone and radio equipment
were taken. :
Jetta said none of the b •
ings' security alarms g~
gered by the break-ins -leading:
ottidals to believe the burg~
were familiar with the campuses.-
District offid.a.ls filed crim&
reports with local police dePart'
men ts.
·~.~ot REAPERS HQTUNE
642-6086
~ CA. 92626. Copyright No
news stories. lllustrltlons, edlt1>
rial matter or ~
h«ein c.an be reproduced with-
out written penniBlon of copy-
right owner.
',~ --;r -----. -. . .
VOL 91, NO. ll
ntOMAS ... JOHNSON.
Publisher
WIWAM LC>eOIU.
Editor
S1"IV'I M.4MLI,
Manlglng Editor
llnYOKOI.
Oty Editor
10NY DOOllM>,
News Edttor
llOG8 C.-. lotlll
Spotts Editor
MMCMMT'IN,
Photo Editor
LYNN llOt.A.
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Na'ICMllWN.
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__,POMCAST
LOCATION SIZE
Wedge 2·3W
Newport 2-3 w
Bladcles 3-4w
~Iver Jetty ).4 w
CdM 2-3w
llOATING
Morning winds of 10
to J 5 knots from the
nonhwest will
become south to
~~
W9"91 Wll bUld to
two f9lt lrid ...
foot swell will come
from the west.
P•tchy morning fog
wlll be the •JllCePtlon to sunny skies.
TIDES
TODAY
First low
1:32 a.m. 1.3
First high
7:43 a.m. 6.5
Second low
2:41 p.m. -1.4
Second high
t :o1 p.m. 4.5
fMtAY
'1nt low
2:20a.m. 1.0
Flnthtgh
1:29e.m. '·S Second low
3:21 p.m. -1A
Sec:Ondhlgh
t:Jt p.m. 4. 7 -" --SI
The high tlde's
kllllng the brMk so
there's no point In
running ovt of the
~ thh momWlg.
But If )'OU Gin wait
• Nw houri. tome
fun stuff may be
eveNabtt.Acouple
of ellmtnts ..
lrtt8r8Cting -the
~ofwet
end~
ground Mell Ind
the~
wind .... Dlpln6-
lng on Wlw. '°" go, loot for waist to
he9d-Ngh WWI
~~ thil blit CJOfldhb•
wtl ... "'""" .... lut ., ~
tlnlelrtgh\thire\ no.-.,.,.,..-. •oc..-...._
,
Yeah, it's loud, expensive~
·and just plain fantastic
So, about this Cirque du
Soleil.
The wife and I went last
Thursday night. It was a sellout
piow which, we soon learned,
was a benefit for ChildHelp USA.
, The perfonnance overO.owed
with. wit and wonder, style and
substance. The Cirque people
call this edition • Quidam, • which
they explain as •A person who
Uves lost amidst the crowd in an ·
all-too-anonymous society.•
• Frankly, all that was over my
bead. I didn't get into the philo-
sophical subtexts of the show
because there was so much other
wondelful stuff going on.
Having said that, you should
also know there is a lot not to
enjoy about Cirque.
First, it is expensive. We paid
$45 each for our tickets and were
banished to the third row from
the back. That seems to be our
destiny. I have always tried to get
the best seats possible, but each
time we have ended up at or
near the top of the bleachers.
What I wonder is, if I'm paying
lop dollar for a good seat, where
tlid all those people in front of me
~ome from? And what happens to
those who pay middle or _b4>ttom.
aollar? Closed circuit 'IV?
There are more taps on your
)Vallet. Parking is $5 ($10 if you
take your limo) and a program is
~· It is a very beautiful program,
unencumbered by ads, so I guess
that's OK.
To get to the huge blue-and-
gold tent (Go Bruins!), you have
to go through one of two small
lents and run.a gauntlet of ven-
dors politely hawking T-shirts,
CDs, tapes and other souvenir
gewgaws.
If you want a soft drink. that'll
be $2 per can, please. Designer
water is $2.25 per banana-sized
)>ottle. A dinky box of Cracker
.. -, • •• -j
~ . . . ._, ~ ~
L:... . ~ - -·• •
fred
martin
Jacks (with no prize yeti) is also
$2; at my neighborhood Hughes
market. the same box is priced at
three for $1.19.
The seats are bard as sheet
steel and were obviously ~
designed for slim-hipped acro-
bats, not adult-size men. And if a
tall person plops down in front of
you, good luck.
· There's more. Let's say you've
splurged on a can of that $2 soda.
Halfway through the perfor-
mance, a law of physics begins to
make itself felt. At intermission,
you fight your way through the
crowd to the Cirque's only lavato-
rial option: A long array of blue
outhouses.
Now, as outhouses go, these
are the Bentleys of the genre. But
outhouses they are. It was a won-
drous and chucklesome sight to
see so many beautiful women
and handsome men standing in
so many outhouse lines as at the
Child.Hope benefit.
But enough carping.
How was the show, and is it
worth the expense and hassle? ln
a word, damn right it is. Beg, bor-
row, buy or steal whatever tickets
-YOU need. But go. Cirque du
Soleil is very close to the enter-
tainment of a lifetime.
How can I desaibe it?
Resplendent, sensuous,
enUghtcming, joyous, brooding,
literate, glowing, scintillating,
funny.
Surreal, garish, evanescent,
vivid, meteoric, alluring, nimble,
sassy, glowing, dazzling.
Happy, melancholy, refined,
wild, intriguing, provocative,
intense, brilliant, charming, Wus-
trioU$.
Mystical, magical, obstreper-
ous, literate, esoteric, far-out,
breathtaking, incomprehensible,
frenetic.
And loud. Ferociously, shock-
ingly, numbingly, shatteringly
loud.
Inside the tent, the blasts of
thunder and lightning, the grind-
ing din of drums and electronic
bass sounds, are merely part of
the show.
You are in as much awe of
them as you are of the man and
woman who twine themselves
into unimaginable knots, or the
guy who rolls around defying
gravity and everything else in the
German Wheel.
But if you live across Fairview,
on Princeton or Columbia or Yale
or most of the other college
streets, you are snarling mad.
You will remain so until March
30, when the Cirque folds its
enormous tent.
And you have every right to
be. There must be a better
Cirque site around here some-
where. Because even a relative
handful of citizens shouldn't have
to put up with this kind of noise
attack ever again.
Cirque is big time, and one
hopes the city will find a proper
site for it -that won't drive the
citizenry nuts.
• FRED MARTIN'S column runs every
Thursday and Saturday.
THURSDAY, F£8RUAAY 61 1997 AJ
m student likely didn't catch
meningitis from Kori Erner
• Health official says the_ two..students were infect-
ed with the same strain of disease, but probably
caught it separately at school, not from each other.
By Mlchetle Terwilleger, Daily Pilot
Both seventh graders at Cos-
ta Mesa High School struck with
meningococcal infections . most
likely contracted the disease at
school. but not necessarily from
each other, a county health offi-
• c:ial said Wednesday.
Laboratory tests show Kori
Emer, the 12-year-old who died
from the bactertal infection last
Thursday, and another seventh
grader who remains in critical
yet improving condition at Cbil·
dren's Hospital of Orange Coun-
ty, share the same strain of the
disease, said Dr. Hildy Meyers,
director of communicable dis·
eases for the Orange County
Health Care Agency. •u they have the same strain,
it was probably transmitted at
the school,• Meyers said. There
. are five different strains of the
bacterial infection, two of which
do not occur frequently in the
United States.
However, the girls who
became sick within days of each
other probably did not give it to
each other because the disease's
.incubation period causes a two
to 10-<iay delay between con-
traction and symptoms, Meyers
said.
"The time in which they had
initial symptoms was no more
than 24 hours apart.• Meyei::s
said. •1t is unlikely they caught
it from each other."
The seventh grader who has
been hospitalized since last
Thursday remains in the pedi·
attic intensive care unit at Chil·
dren's Hospital. Her name has
not been released. at the request
of her family.
The two girls shated several
classes, bu\ were not good
friends and did not spend signif-
icant time together, Meyers said.
No one in either girl's family
has exhibited symptoms of the
disease which is spread through
close contact, such as sharing
food and kissing. There have
been no new ~rts of Costa
Mesa students with meningitis,
either.
•The longer we go without
having another case, the better
the outlook is," Meyers said.
Meyers added that a study in
the Feb. 5 issue of the Journal of
the American Medical Associa-
tion showed that of the few cas-
es of U.S. student meningitis,
usually no more than two stu-
dents at the same school con-
tracted the disease and that
there was no increased risk of
future cases at those schools.
r-------------------·---,
I I I I I
I I I I
I
I I
I WMt ts 1Hftlfteltls7 :
+ M1nil9d1 ls Infection of
ilnd lnfllli'nm8don of ~
br.-ttwt Hne the lnlide of
the ... aMll the brain Md
splNI cord. + Outmmes: The becterial
type =ri CMI ~ menl Infections
which (Ml be fatal. t.11&8
serious brein derNge. duf-
nell and bNndl ... + Rat. of menlngococcal
infec;tlon: 1 in100,000 Amer·
k.ans.
• How it is spread: ~
hokt contact, saltv1, mucus,
sharing food and drink and
k.lsslng.
• ~:stiff neck, high
fMr, headache. nausea and
vomiting. sensitivity to bright
light. lnaeased fatigue, con-
fusion, shrill ay In Infants
and small children and dras-
tic change in mood.
+What to do ff~ has
symptoms:Seektmmediate
treatment.
I I I I
I
' I •
I I I
~-----------------------J
"' ·It's pretty good news," Mey-
ers said. "It looks like we don't
need to bo? afraid."
Four other cases of meningi·
tis -including another death -
have been reported in Orange
County in the last month.
Your 9real 2/(eafs Veserue
2/(eal and !Ji.sh fi'om I.he !l<anch
7£e Or1jinaf
~vine Y?andh Y7rar.kel
7/1 )hen Jo & Joe Raymond started recreating the Ranch, they were determined
W to bring only the best back to Irvine. In our meat case, you'll find only
Manning's Beef, the natural product from pure bred cattle, raised hormone-free
on vitamin-enriched corn, wheat and hay. From lightly marbled Porterhouse
Steak to the leanest hamburger, the meat from the Ranch raises any meal to a
prime dining experience.
When the feast turns to fish, you'll find ours to be so fresh, beautiful and
bountiful, it conjures up a wotk of art. From delicate halibut to rich, red salmon
to shellfish, the seafood you take home from the Ranch is simply the finest from
any ocean.
Body of miS9ing
woman waShes
ashore in
NeWport Beach ·
•Authorities believe UCI
stu~t committed suicide.
By Christopher Goff•rd. Daily Pilot
. NEWPORT BEACH-County
coronen have identified the
COl'J>H thal washed up on the
beach here Tuelday evening u
Melissa U, the 22-year-old Foun-
tain Valley woman who disap-
peared from her home Jan. 27.
Dental records on Wednesday
matched the. UCI honon student
to the badly decompoMd body,
which wu discovered near the
~th Street jetty by a beachgoer,
l'-:Jewport Beach police Sgt JobQ
Desmond said.
. An autopsy revealed she died
by drowning, Desmond said.
·we're looking into the possi-
b1llty of suicide,• Desmond said.
•That's what everything looks
Wee lt's leading toward right now. Il's probably not accidental, (and)
<!eflnitely not a homicide.•
• U's Toyota twas found aban-
doned and illegally parked ln a
rul-de-sac in Sunset Beach on Jan. 28. Her parents said they
fl!ared U, a devoutly religious
C::hristian, might have walked
futo the sea believing Jesus
•ould return for her Feb. S birth-
day.
: Still, those who knew her
~ggled Wednesday to recon-
cile the person they knew with
the likelihood she killed herself.
: •She was an unobtrusive, qui-
et, bright and attentive student,•
Sa.id Jim Huang, UCI linguistics
cJepartment chairman, who
taught two classes she attended.
~e was always smiling. I can't tJli.nk of anything that would
have led her to make that deci-
sion.•
· But he conceded the apparent
sUictde might have resulted from
~the wrong interpretation of a
~ligious vision," and noted, ·she
inight have gone to do this with a ..
very peaceful mind. We don't
know.
. ·1 don't feel there was any evi-
dence that she was suffering from
something and trying to get away
from it."
Describing her as a •pertect
student• with a triple major ln
English, social sd.ence, and lin-
guistics, Huang said U received
an A or A-plus in all but one of 16
linguistics classes she took. Pro-
fessors routinely described her as
one of their best students, he said.
He said he knew something
was wrong when she missed
.multiple classes just before. she
disappeared.
•She was never erratic,• he
said. ·u she eve1 missed a class,
she would always1.explain and
apologize ... lf you turned around
and looked at her she was always
looking at you or looking at the
.blackboard. And she was always
kind of half-smiling.
•Remember, there are only
good things to say about her.•
Valentine's
Day
Valentine'• Day i1
the leCOfld mOlt
popular card 1e11d·
ing oocuion in the
United States.
Hallmark predicts
that 925 million
valentine1 will be
exchanged this year.
Your Hallmark Gold Crown ltore
,oflen the worid'1 larcett .election of
valentine cards, rue;"' in price Crom
Int than a dollar to more than SS for
valentinel that are a Cift u weU.
Approximately half of Hallmark
valentina are between $1 and $2.
People prefer the Hallmark brand-
apeci.aly for Valentine'• Day. The
Gold Crown eea100 the'**• o(
cnvelopa purchued at your ltore
•JI your CUICOmen care and demand
cinly the bat.
Approximately two-third• o(
Americalll ,;ve at leut one valentine
MMI more than half &ive a eift.
P .S. L«1 tlw# um"' ""1J If,..,.
,.. • .,.~ ... If ,W. ..,,.,,, ,.
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ITRTIDllBI/ .. tf·•-·4...
117011.lallSSt.
C.-lllD
Environmentalists fire another salvo at Nevypqtt €oast
• Local groups file a second lawsuit in an effort
to stop construction of homes closer to ocean.·
and Stop Polluting Our Newport
filed the .Wt Jan. 21 to amplify
clwgee In a Nov. 27 .Wt.
making the decllion without
enough evidence to support tt.
The Irvine Co. agreed In 1981
to matntatn Tl% ol the 9,500
aa'8I u open lpec8.
plan. •ytnj tbal though lt abiftl •• .,..,..,. ca.to the ocean.
tt a.p. habitat areu cloler
NEWPORT BEACH -Three
local environmental groups filed
a l8CODd laWIUlt recently In tlietr
continuing quest to stop changel
in Newport Coast development
plans. l 1be ... l\llt agalmt the county,
the 1t4te Coastal Commilllon
and The Irvlne Co. says plans to
shift Newport Coast housing
clOler to tbe ocean violates state
law. Oumge1 approved by the
county and state, lt says, would
allow The Irvine Co.'1 upscale
developments there to invade
~Uve habitats and obscure
ocean views.
The Friends of the Irvine
Coast, the Laguna Greenbelt
The group1 are uklng to .top
the proposed changes and
reduce the denlity of the hOUMI
planned. Mid Pem Pirkle, prell-
dent of Priendl of the Irvine
Coast.
The proposal came before the
Coutal Commilsion Oct. 11 u
an amendment to a 1981 plan.
1be IUlta accuse the commtuton
of violating the state Coutal and
Environmental Quality acts and
A Rivenide County court will
hear the cue, which wu filed In
San PrandKo, where the
Couta1 Cornmtqlon is bued,
lbe suit's defendants asked for
the location change.
Irvine Co. spokesman Larry
Thomas said the suit will not
likely affect plans for Newport
Coast. He defended the new
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the South Coast Plaza
Shopping Center
1280 Bison B-S • Newport Beach
(Coner~ I Biloll) .
720-1041
HAPPY
~~the develop-
ment pndMly to be Jespom1ve
to the mvtnJomental coamtUDi· ty,. be Mid. .
He 1tressed that the pro-
poied changel do not tncreue
the number of ho\lling unitl
planned. He Mid lt does, how-
ever, place them dOHr togeth-
er -which means higher den-
sity.
Speciafizing in
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NEWPORT NORTH•
CENTER I
• THUkSOAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1997 A'S
'.Mesa tries ·to do one better than IR
I
I
I
; • Water districts are now in a bidding war to take over
: the small Santa Ana Heights· water Co.
: By Susan Deemer, Daily Pilot
SANTA ANA HEIGHTS
. The Mesa Consolidated Water
rights on its side.
Mesa General Manager Karl
Kemp says Santa Ana Heights is
wit.bin its sphere of influence and
worries that U Irvine Ranch is per-
mitted to march in, it would be
able to tap into the area's ground
water, weaken-
Heights residents.
Irvine Ranch has a plan, one it
claims will result in lower water
rates for Santa Ana Heights resi-
dents and a generous buyout for
the tiny water district's sharehold-
ers.
It also has an agreement that
would force Mesa or anyone else
interested in snapping up San~
Ana Heights to pay Irvine Ranch
$250,000.
Under nvine
District -once content to tum up
·its nose at the thought of taking
. over the tiny water district here -
. is now scrambling to get back in
·the picture.
Even with its outdated pipes
and decaying infrastru~. the
Santa Ana Heights Water District
has emerged as the prize in the
water war between Mesa and the.
much-larger Irvine Ranch Water
District.
ing Mesa's own
water supply.
"If Irvine
takes water. out
of there, we get
less," Kemp
said.
"They get our money
and have no
responslblllty ... "
Ranch's plan,
every sharehold-
er in Santa Ana
Heights would
be paid $1, 100
per share. Every
property owner
in Santa Ana
Heights has a
share; or at least
The ground
water in Santa
Ana Heights
appears to be
worth fighting
-ROGER SUMMERS
In Santa Ana Heights, the two
water districts see cheaper
ground water and the opportunity
to seize territory that stretches
from John Wayne Airport to
Dover Shores,
Irvine Ranch clearly has the
upper hand in the battle -with a
signed deal offering tidy buyouts
to Santa Ana Heights sharehold-
ers and lower water rates -but
Mesa believes it ~ territorial
over. With imported water going
for $431 an aae foot, the ground
water can be brought to the sur-
face at roughly $150 an aae foot.
Still, if Mesa has a plan for tak-
ing over Santa Ana Heights, it
hasn't detailed it, let alone
explained what it might mean to
its own cust<;>mers and Santa Ana
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a portion of a
share. And some, such as the San-
ta Ana Country Club have many.
shares. The golf course, for
instance, has 271 shares, meaning
it stands to collect $298,000 out-
right.
In addition, Irvine Ranch is
offering for the next four years to
lower water rates in Santa Ana
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Heights from St.SO to $1.35 per
unit. After that, the rates would be
switched to Irvine Ranch's com-
plex, tiered payment method that
bases the rate on water comsump-
tion.
The one hitch is residents in
Santa Ana Heights -for as long
as 20 years to come -will be
paying rates far in excess of their
counterparts in Irvine. Those
higher rates will effectively pay
ot1 the $4.3 million that Irvine
Ranch is putting up to buyout
share holders and improve Santa
Ana Height's aging water system.
The buyout plan also rubs
some residents the wrong way.
+ The Irvine Ranch Water District has signed a deal to take
over the Santa Ana Heights Water Co. The highlights:
'
• $1, 100 for each share (homeowners generally own one share)
• A 10% reduction in current ~nta
Ana Heights water rates
• $1.2 million in improved infrastruc-
ture
• Deal financed by current Santa Ana
Heights water users who will pay 71
cents more per unit than current
IRWD customers
• If Santa Ana Heights backs away
from deal, it loses $250,000.
The Irvine Co., for instance,
owns 239 so-called "unlocated"
shares in the wafer district that
aren't tied to any land. The quick
translation is that the develop-
ment company stands to make
$262,900 while local residents
and businesses will effectively
foot that bill through their water
bills.
L-----------------------------------------------------w~
the Irvine Ranch Water District,
said while Santa Ana Heights res-
idents will pay approximately 71
cents a unit more than Irvine resi-
dents, it will still be a decrease
from their current bills. Plus, he
added, they will become part of a
more efficient, reliable water
company. #
Mesa Consolidated, which
charges its customers a flat $1.T.J
a unit, bas been supplying water
to the Santa Ana Heights Water
District for 37 years. '
"They get our money and have
no responsibility," suggested San-
ta Ana Heights resident Roger
Summers.
Dave Ferguson, spokesman for \\ ~: l l ', " I ) l: I Ill I ) "\I
, 1111l .ti I 11u11l ul 11"" "I:
M~ll Lynch cordially invites you to attend our free seminar.
Spend your noon hour at th.is comprchens~e overview of personal
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Q &A session.
TIME: 12:00 Noon -U :'4S p.m.
Every Wednesday
PLACE: Merrill Lynch
650 Town Center Drive, Sui~ 500
Cost2Mesa
For more information and reservations, please contact: Lance
Jencks, Assistant Vice President and Senior Financial Consultant, at
714-429-2805.
Soft drinks will be provided.
The difference is Merrill Lynch.
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lft1'6S fltlOGMM
., The American Cen"81' Society
o8en a four-week lifestyle fttoea
program from 6:30 to 8 p.m. today
and every 1bunday in February
at the Newport-Costa Mesa·
IMne family YMCA, 2300 Uni-
venity Drive, Newport Beach.
'nlptcs include basics on cardlo-
~ exercise, strength train-
tng and diet and exercise. Cost ls
S\O per workshop or $30 for all
f~ur. For more information, call'
642-9990.
ESTATE PLANNING
The Law Offices of Usa A.
~do offers a free seminar on
Do I Need Estate Planning? Pro-
tecting Your Assets Through Wills
and 'IhlSts" at 6:30 p.m. at 881
Dover Drive, Suite 300, Newport ~ch. Reservations are required
al 574-0866. ,.
CMEER NETWORK
' The free Career Network
meeting at St. Andrew's Presby-
terian Church for those unem-
ployed will discuss ·winning the
Interview and Staying Connect-
ed" at 7:30 p .m. in the Stewart
oounge, 600 St. Andrews Road,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
J:D.Btion, call 574-2239.
TAX TALK
: Courtlandt Financial offers a
r workshop on ·successful Tax
ategies • from 1 to 2 p.m. or
0 to 7 :30 p.m. at the University
thletic Club, 1701 Quail St.,
ewport Beach. For more infor-
;iation, call 251-6901.
•
if4SIDER POUTICS
:~ Women in Leadership offers a
~eption on "Insider Politics: Has
¥ything Really Changed?" at
J,1 :30 a.m. at the Pacific Club,
~110 MacArthur Blvd., Newport
&acb. Cost is $30 for members .• •
• •
..
PSYCHODIERAPY
QROVPPOR
SECOrlD IVIVBS ~eglnnlng Feb., 12th 7:00 pm -8:30 pm
$60 for 4-Week series
Pre registration required
Sue Li•/Jm11n, LCSW
LCS 18128
714/851 ·9613, 2'
and $40 non-memben. Por infor-
mation. call 675-1550.
POUSHED "'°'°5Al.
Newport Beach Central
Ubrary of:fen a tree program on
•wnttng a Polished Propoul to J.>eddle Your Boot• at 1 p.m. in
the Friends' Meeting Room, 1000
tor California Federated bpubli·
can Women. u the keynote
lpeU• at the annual Uneoln
Day hmchean at 9 a.m. at the
Co.ta Mela Golf and Country
Oub, t 701 Golf Course Drive.
Registration beglnl at 8 a.m. Colt
ii $30. For reservations, call 546-
1429.
I I • I
I
• I L------------------------------------------------------~
Avocado Ave., Newport Beach.
For more information, call 717-
3801.
ELEGANT WEDDINGS
Orange Coast College Com-
munity Education Office offers a
workshop on "Economical Ele-
gant Weddings" from 6:30 to 9
p.m. at OCC. Registration fee is
$35 per person and $59 tot two.
For information, call 432-5880.
REAL ESTATE
Business Development Associ-
ation of Orange County offers a
seminar on the "Inside Story" on
Southern California's real estate
matket at 11 :30 a .m. at the Wynd-
ham Garden Hotel, 3350 Avenue
of the Arts, Costa Mesa. Cost is
$40. Call 832-5741.
REPUBLICAN WOMEN
Orange County Federation of
Republican Women features
Helen Lazar, legislative advocate
HEART DtSEASE
Hoag Heart Institute offers a·
free lecture on •Conquering
Heart Disease• from 7 to 8 p .m. at
the Grace Hoag Conference Cen-
ter, 301 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. Reservations are required
at (800) 514-4624.
FRIDAY
BUSINESS WORKSHOP
Newport Area Chamber of
Commerce offers a free workshop
on "Where Do You Go When Your
Bank Says -NOi : from 7:30 to 9
a.m. at 1470 Jamboree Road,
Newport Beach. For reservations,
call 640-4789.
ORCHID SHOW
Crystal Court presents •Fasci-
nation of Orchids," the 17th
Annual Orange County Cymbidi-
um Society Show beginning
today through Feb. 10. at 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. All three
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Physician owned and supervised (24 hours on·C4ll) / . .
Office visits on monthly basis (No additional charge Cf seen more often based cm medical need)
Average fee including medication '9000/month (less than •22"°/weeli)
Full refund of office visit charges if not satisfied i~ 3 months
Free initial body fat an.alysis (Tanit.a analyzer) cs1 s1~1 11alue) .
l>f. 511w,..1iy h.u bttn • (all1flr Pr•akt phy.ldan for av~r 2.11 Y"fl h) Oran~ Cowlty and la a "'tmbn Am~rlu11
Ex . Sodtty of JIWtfl< Ptlnkianlk H~ wa• lfl« Jlro1 phydda11 In 1~ ~ ..-tll IO ln'°rporaJ~ 111« profocoh pllblldled penence by Mith-I Wdt\l~ "O IUnlfttJll}'. oC~tr) ..-Ing 'l'M11·"n a4 ao adjU11<116 bla ~lchtfoH practltt~n
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J:b Joun LEOOARD'S •••••••• li .............. GflfC...
lentls ol Crystal Court will be
turned into an encbenttng Orcbki
greenbouM and tr. Ml'ftlnan
and damtmlttadam will be ....
Mllted throughout the weekend.
For more lnlormation, call 435-
2167.
INVENroM FOltUM
Orange Coast College often
an inventon forum on •Profit
Through Inventing" from 1:30 to
10 p.m. tn room 101 of OCC's Sci-
ence Lecture Hall Registration
fee ls SS for members and $15 for
guests. For more information, call
432-5880. .
SA1URDAY
VALENTINE CRAFT'S
Environmental Nature Center
offers a children's paper making
and . Valentine crafts ·workshop
from 9 a.m. to noon at 1601 16th
St., Newport Beach. Registration is
n!quired and the cost ls $32. For
information, call 645-8489.
PET FUND-AAISER
Costa Mesa Bark Park presents
the ·valentine's Day Photo-Op
and Fund-Raiser" from 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. on Arlington Aven~e at
Vertical Blinds Pleeted SMdes &
Cellular SMdes
Custom Draperies &
Mint Bhnd9 CUstom Toppers
'ntWlnkle Park ln Colt4 Mela.
Pbotol can be taken ol your ape.
dll came VaJeatt• Ill flm " a
unique back.dlQp. Colt It StO and
aD pcollll wtD go ID nPmlth the
Bark Park operating fund. Por
more tnforma&o. call 7~1.
IUlaE fB11VAL
Launch Pad presentl the Bub-
ble Festival. showcutng the
unique talent of 'Rm Noddy who
will aeate a 12-sided jewel bubble
and other aeatiom at 11 a.m. 1
and 3 p.m. in Crystal Court at 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. After each
pedormance, visiton can partld-
pa.te in "ma.k&-and-t.ake" actlvtties
such as painting with bubbles, cre-
ating geometric bubble wands,
ma.king string and straw bubble
blowers and experimenting with
bubbles and dry ice. Admission is
$3.25 for members and $5.75 for
guests. For reservations, call 546-
2061.
UNIQUE TAX LAWS
Orange Coast College offers a
workshop ~t examjnes unique
tax laws designed to give public
school employees a break. from 9
to noon in room 203 of OCC's
Lewis Center for Applied Science.
Participants will learn to take
advantage o1 govwam.t cxan-
butiom .to finance a cblld'a elb.im·
tlon. pin far i'lltiNmmt Gr mab a
dowD peymmton a.._, 811 wttb
tu-free money. Regiltratlon fee ii
S25 and $39 for two. Call 432-
5880.
cowuraa.ua
Windows U1er1 Cub meets 9
a.m. to noon in room 116 of the
Orange Coast College Pine Arts
Building. The dub ii open to any-
one tnterelted in Microloft Win-
dows and Windows applications,
including beginnen. Annual
membership fee for the dub is $20
ahd includes a newsletter. For
more information, call 6«15782.
INCOME TAX HELP
Orange Coast College offers a
free program designed to provide
income tax assistance to· low
income, elderly, t!lon-English
speaking and/or hanaicapped per-
sons from 9 a.m. to noon in room
104 of OCC's Business Education
Building. Interested taxpayers
should bring this yea.r's tax pack-
age, a wage and earnings state-
ment, interest statements, a copy
of la.st year's return and any other
information concerning income
and expenses. Cell 360-2094.
Shape Up Now!·
A MAiion Dollars worth of
Rejuvenation for $99.
Please call 631-3623
for your complimentary
SPINNING Class, Aerobic Class
or Personal Training Session;
Experience The Difference!
Offer Good Till 2·28-97
S'4F1f:e
FITNESS CENTER
1080 Irvine A~ (WFSfCUFF PLAZA) u IniM Ave. 8£ F..t 17th Saut,
646-1440
WE. 17th Smet• U>lta Maa
(OD I~ Scrttt by WhcrdtOUS( Rt:cords)
GAS AND WASH
ONE STOP
CONVENIENCE!!!!
only·S4•9S
Full Service Soft "1'aah 8t Sealer
"1'az with any gasoline fill up
(Texaco CleanSystem.3)
Not oalfd aoftla C1RJ1 other dt.count. ~l,_ 2/28/97 .
AGING PARENTS
Care Options offers a seminar,
"Caring for an Aging Parent,•
from 9 a.m. to noon at Our Lady
Queen of Angels Parish Center,
2046 .Mar Vista Drive, Newport
Beach. Cost is $10 per person and
S15 per couple if paid in advance
and $15 per person and S25 per
couple at the door. For more infor-
mation, call 644-0368. ..
TAX yvoRl(SHOP
Orange Coast College often a
~ workshop ort "Small Business
Tuxes and Recordkeepmg• from 9
a.m. to 1 p.m. in room 206 of
OCC's Lewis Applied Science
Building .. Registration fee is $39.
For more information, call 432-
5880.
OCC 'cvBERCAFE
Orange Coast· College offers
"Saturday Morning Cybercafe, • a
hands-on workshop that includes
a cup ot coffee and an easy-to-fol-
low "topic of the day~ cybertour,
.from 9 a.m. to n.oon in Hi-Tech Lab
Room 201 of OCC's Technology
Center. The topic of the day will be
"Career opportunities, on-line
searches and resumes:"' Sessions
are $29 per class or $25 each when
signing up for three or more class-
es. For more information, call 432-
5880.
TEAPARlY I
South Coast Storytellers Guild
offers "Will you be my Valentine?"
stories and crafts from 10 to 11:30
a.m. at the Guild House, 1551A
Be¥et St, Calta Mesa. for more
information. call 496-1960.
TAX STIW'EGIES
Courtland.t Pinandal often 1 a
free worbbop on "Successful 1U
Strategies• from 10 to 11 a.m. at
the University Athletic Cub, 1701
Quail St., Newport Beach. for
more information, call 251-6901.
TREE PlAN11NG
If weathel' permits, ReLeaf Cos-
ta Mesa ii looking for volunteers to
help plant 70 trees at 9 a.m. in the
neighborhood of 21st Street and
Santa Ana Avenue in Costa Mesa
For ip.ore information, call 43'1~
'5874.1
BAY TOUR.
Friends of Newport Bay offers a
free guided, two-hour walking
tour of the Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Reserve anytime
between 9 and 10:15 a.m. at the
comer of East Bluff Drive and Back
Bay lload. Small tour groups will
_start every 10 or 15 minutes. For
more information, call 646-8009.
BUBBLE FESTlVAL .
Launch Pad presents the Bub-
ble Festival, showcasing the
unique talent of Tom Noddy who
will create a 12-sided, jewel bub-
b}.e and other creations at 11 a.m. 1
and 3 p.m.. in Crystal Court at 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. After each
performance, visitors can partici-
ARM 9 IRE u pWw!J lo pte4l!AI
Ota
pate in "make-and-take" activities
such u painting with bubbles, ae-
ating geometric bubble wands,
making string and straw bubble
blowers and experimenting with
bubbles and dry ice. Admission is
$3.25 for members and $5.75 for
guests. For reservations, call 546-
2061.
WHALE WATotlNG
The American Cetacean SoCi-
ety presents a fund-raising whale
watch auise from 8 a.m. to noon at
Davey's Locker, 400 Main Balboa.
The cost is $14 for adults, $1 for
children. For more information,
Call 6'15-9881. I
MONDAY
HYBRID FLORA
Sherman Library and Gardens
offers a lecture on the develop-
ment of new "hybrids" at 10 a.m.
in the Central Patio Room at 2647
E. Coast Highway, Corona del
Mar. Cost is $15. For more infor-
mation, call 673-2261.
LEcnJRE SERIES
Newport Beach Public Library
Foundation presents noted novel-
ist Wilton Barnhardt who will
commence the next uManu-
scripts: Literary Lecture Series• at
7 p.m. in the Friends' Meeting
Room, 1000 Avocado Ave .. New-
port Beach. Cost is $5 for Founda-
tion members and $8 for guests.
For more information or to regis-
ter, call 717-3890.
. . .
. ..
FOREIGN POLICY
St. Mark Presbyterian Church
offers a discussion on "Russia's
Growing Pain" from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
at 2100 Mar Vista, Newport Beach.
Cost is S5 for members and S8 for
guests. For more information, call
644-1341. •
' AnENllON TALK
Coastline Counseling Center
offers a lecture called "Attention
Deficit Disorder Medications: Psy-
chostimulants" from 7' to 8:30 p.m.,
at 1200 Quail St., Suite 105, New-
port Beach. Cost is SS. For more
information, call 476-0991.
WES DAY
SURFRIDER MEETING
The next Newport Beach Chap-
ter of the Surfrider Foundation will
take place from '1 to 9 p.m. at the
Hard Rock Cafe, j451 Newport
Center Drive, Newpbrt Beach. For
more information, call 631-627~.
PATENT WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College offers a
workshop on how to "Write a
Patent Application and Protect
Yourself Against Infringement"
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at OCC.
Registration fee is $39. Call 432-
. 5880.
LEGAL JUDGMENT
The Newport Beach Central
Library offers' a free program on
"Collecting Judgments" at noon in
the Friends' Meeting Room, 1oo0
THURSDAY, FElltUARY 6, 1997 Ali
Avocado Ave., Newport Beach.
The program will diacuss bow to
tum a legal Judgment Into money.
For information, c.all 71 '1-3801.
CAMERA WOIKSHOP .
Orange Cout c.ollege offers an
introductory workshop, designed
to help students develop and
improve both v1mal and mechani-
cal skills with a 35mm camera
from 1 to 9 p .m. today and Feb. 18
in room 101 of OCC's Art Center.
Attendees will study photography
as a means of oommun1cation and
personal expression. Registration
fee is $39. For more information,
call 432-5880.
ATTENT10N TAUC
Coastline Counseling Center
offers a lectme called •Making
Friends and Socializing,• for peo-
ple with Attention Deficit Disorder
and other interested participants,
from '1to9 p.m. at 1200 Quail St,
Suite 105, Newport Beach. Cost is
$20. Call 476-0991.
BLOOD DRIVE
Temple Bat Yahm will hold its
annual blood drive from 3:15 to 8
p.m. at 1011 Camel.back St., New-
free lecture oo •Winoing Menus -
A Cooking Dea¥JNtratioo• from 7
to 8 p.m. at tbe Grace Hoeg Coa-
f erence Center, 301 N~
Blvd., Newport Beach. ReMIV&·
tioos are required at (800) 514-.,
462'. ·-= .. ~
BUSINESS UJNCHEON I ~
1be South Coast Business ~'
Profession.al Women offers a lwr,
cheon on •Effective Publlc ~
tion.a on a Budget• at 11:30 a.m. ~
the Wyndham Garden Hotel.;
3350 Avem,ie of the Arts, ~
Mesa. Cost is $17 for members,
and $22 for guests. To RSVP, callj
472-4666.
CAMERA WORKSHOP
Orange Coast College offers ~,
introductory workshop, ~
to help students develop and•
improve both visual and mecbani:.
cal skills with a 35mm cam~;
from 7 to 9 p.m. today and Feb. 1IJ•
in room 101 of OCC's Art Center.~
Attendees will study photography
as a means of communication ~
personal expression. Registration
fee is $39. ·For more information.
call 432-5880. .
port Beach. Call 6'13-6502. •Send your AROUND TOWN items to~·
WINNING ME.NUS The Daily Pilot, Around ToWri, 330 W. B~"
St., Costa Mesa. 92627; fax 646-4170 or: Hoag Heart Institute offers a call ~1224, ext. 333.
Just in tinie
fop Valentines!
As everyone who bas ever attended one of our sales knows, ·
our sales ~ truly SALF.S. No tags cbanged...no marking
up to mark doWD-a truly righteous sale...
.r. and when it's over, it's over!
Come early for best selection.
CHARLES H. BARR
p.w.J'~W-DnH
Use your: VISA, Mastercard, Newport Beach
American Espress, Dl8cover Card (714) 642-3310
Q U R .2 4 -H 0 U R C A R D I A C T E A M
N E V E R M I S S E S A B E A T.
JUST IN CASE YOUR HEART D 0 ES.
Most people don't consider where to go
for cardiac care until tnere•s a.n emergency.
Probably not a decision you should make in
the desperate .minutes during a heart attack.
In orange county, the choice is easy.
Hoag• Hospital is the only Orange County
hospital with its own dedicated on site
of cardiac surgeohs.
Hoag Heart Institute is ready for any
I
cardiac procedure, from diagnostic heart
examination to the latest inter~entional
procedures including angioplasty, stent
placement and heart surgery. In fact, we ~orm more heart ·
surgeries than any other Orange County hoapital.
And when Medicare evaluated Hoag'• perforaanoe, t hey
etitute'e survival rat•• bigber than the
national average, ranking us one of the top
performing programs in the country.
Even the feedback from patients is highly
complimentary, with 98\ rating their care
excellent.
Hoag accepts nearly every health plan,
whether it's traditional, Medicare, PPO
or HMO.
To learn more about Soag Heart Inati~ute,
or to receive a free heart j.mprovement hand-
book, contact us 't 800/Sl4-SOAG(4624).
There is simp~y no other
hospital i~ Orange County that can match
our numbers. And when you're dealing with
cardiac care, they're not just
numbers. They're human lives.
GPSCOUltSE
Orange Cout College'• aall-
ing program often •GPS and
Beyond," a course that provides
an in-depth look at the new rev-
oh!Uonary Global P011Uon1ng
System, from 1 to .C p.m. on Feb.
8 at OCC'a Salling Center, 1801
W. Cout Highway, Newport
Beach. Registration fee ls $23 for
singles and $39 per couple . Por
more inform.aUon, call 645-9412.
IAREBOAT CHARTERING
Orange Coast College offers a
course that teaches intermedi-
ate-level sailon the skills neces-
s4ry to operate a mid-size auxil-
iary cruising boat from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m. on Peb. 15 and 22, and
March 1 and 8 at OCC's Sailing
Center, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Registration fee
is $198. For more information,
call 645-9412.
BIG BOAT COURSE
Orange Coast College's Sail-
ing Program offer a course for
sailors with small boat experi-
ence who wish to move up to big
boats from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Satuntays,Peb. 15through
March 15 at OCC'a Salling Cen·
ter, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. laugbt aboard
OCC'l .(7-foot ocean racer,
Saudade, the coune ii designed
for people with intermediate
shields skilll. Registration fee ls
$98. For more information, call
645-9412.
WOMEN'S KEELIOAT
Orange CQUt College offers a
pair of non-credit keelboat class·
es designed for women who
have been on boats but are
beginning s~ors at OCC's Sall-
ing Ce11;ter, 1801 W. Coast High-
way, Newport Beach. "Keelboat
I" meets from 9 a .m. to 1 p.m. on
Sundays Feb. 16 through March
161 "Keelboat ID " meets from ·
1:15 to 5:15 p.m. on the same
Sundays; and "Keelboat Il" will
meet trorh 1:15 to 5:15 p.m. on
Sundays May 4 through June 7.
Registration fee is $135 per class.
For more information, call 645-
9412.
BAREBOAT CHARTERING
Orange Coast College offers a
four-day cruise course that
teaches advanced-level sailors
: the skills, knowledge and equip-
OP~~~~flse
11 :00 a.m ... 4 :00p.m.
Join 'Us !For Our (j rana Opening
Free Drawing • Refreshments
'Dress-up 'Tea Parties for:
Birthdays for Young Ladies
Bridal Showers • Baby Showers
Inquire about our Etiquette WMlal\ops for boys and girls.
!AU partiLs are given in an elegant 'llictorian setting at:
Littk 'Wormn
~ 191 E. 16th Street • Costa Mesa, CA 9262 7 ....
,~ (71 4 ) 646 .. 7212. •Fax (714) 646 .. 7832 ~'
PA.ss1s·rBD
LIVING
At Sunridgc, we do more than
just care fot our rcsidenu ... WE
CARE ABOlff THEM. In face,
we treat them like family. And
thac's che besc kind of caring
cherc is.
Our dedicated 24 hour
professional nursing staff provides
not only extra care, but quality
care. For those of our rcsidcncs
who may require special
ancmion, we can help take the
difficulty out of such tasks as
drcs.sing or bathing.
At Sunridgc, adjacent to a
scenic park ·and lake, our
residents appreciate having privatt rooms furnished with their
personal belongings. Everyone loves the three delicious meals we serve
activities such as current events, discussion groups, bridge and bingo.
Residents arc encouraged to join w in a daily exercise program and, if
they choose, for weekly religious services. We also take interesting
uips and provide transponacion to doctors and for personal errands.
Physical therapy and massage therapy arc available right here at
Sunridgc. Our award winning Skilled Nursing Fa~ty. Windcrest is
also a part of our campus.
.
Call U s Soon to make an Appointment
for a Free Tour
Sunridge At Regents Point
19191 Harvard Avenue
Irvine, CA 92612
1-800-2 7 8-8898 • •
ment Deeded for succeuful ott-ibore aulaing beginning at noon
on Peb. 17 and ending at 5 p.m.
on Peb. 20. The 100-mile c:ru1se
will include anchorages at
Catalina and other harbon and
illands. Students will meet at
OCC's Salling Center, 1801 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
Registration fee ls $375. For
more information, call 645-9412.
OCEANOGRAPHY
Orange Coast College offers
an oceanography course on how
wave refraction indicates land-
falls and how wave patterns hold
clues to approaching weather
systems from 7 to 10 p .m. on
Peb. 20, 27, March 6 and 13 at
OCC's Sailing Center, 1801 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
Registration fee is $45 for singles
and $80 for couples. For more
info~ation, call 645-9412.
SAILING SEMINAR
Orange Coast College offers a
sailing seminar on •Priorities for
Confident Cruising" from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. on Feb. 22 at the Sail-
ing Center, 1801 W. Coast High-
way, Newport Beach. Tickets are
$78 per person and $146 per
couple. For more information,
call 645-9412.
lll•lllel 1111111•r
~TRUING
Orange Cout College often a
week-long Grantman•hlp 1\'ain·
ing Program from Peb. l4 to 28
at OCC'1 Salling Center, 1801 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
Sessions will run from 8:30 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and
Tbund.ay1 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Wednesday and 8:30 a.m. to 1
p.m. on Friday. COit ot the pro-
gram ls $595. For more informa·
tion, call .C32-5583.
HANOS-ON TRAINING
Orange Coast College's
. Marine Program offers a compre-
hensive five-day "live:-aboard"
class called "Power Yacht Own-
er-Operator 'lraining" on OCC's
new 69-foot power yacht. The
course is fast~paced with lectures
broken up by under way prac-
tice, guest speakers, demonstra-
tions and exercises. The consecu-
tive courses are slated for March
5 to 9, March 26 to 30, April 9 to
13, May 7 to 11, June 4 to 8,
June 11 to 15, Oct. 1 to 5, Oct. 29
to Nov. 2 and Dec. 3 to 7. Week-
end courses meet April 18 to 20
and 27 and 28 and Oct. 11 to 13
and 19 to 20. Registration fee is
$1,495. For more information, call
645-9412.
Buckingham
Chandelier
Finished In Platinlum
JGln. D x 261n. Ht.
Available In other sizes
. Repairs & Ught Blubs · I Open Tues.-Fri. 8:30-5, Sat 9-4
1510 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa• 548-9341
DAVEY"S LOCKER
Davey's Locker often whale
watching through the epd of
March Monday through Prlday
at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. and Satur-
day, Sunday and bolidayw at 9
a.m., noon and 2:30 p.m. at 400
Main, Balboa. Cost ii $1.C for
· adults, S8 for kids age .C to 12,
senior citizens 62 or older pay
$12 and children under age 4
are free. Reservations should be
made two weeks in advance.
For more infoim4tion, call 673-
1434.
FISHING
ASH SCHOOL
Fishing classes are offered
Monday and Tuesday of each
week. Classes leave the Balboa
J>avilion at 6 a.m. and return at 4
p.m. Cost is $125 per petson.
For more information, call 673-
28l0.
DORY ASHING FLEET
Get to the Newport Pier/
McFadden Square early to watch
RSI •G J'RIPS \ :\ •
Rlblng IUJ>pliM and b<Mt ( "'A
. clwten (open puty and private) ')I\
are available •Newport laDd· '" .U
ing Sportftlbing, 309 Palms, SUite,ow
P. 675-05501 Pala> P1lbinO Char· 1n\ '
ten, 832-77081 and Davey'w . '' n
Locker, .coo Main St., Balboa,
673-1.34. ( ~8
. SIX-PASSENGER SPORTAStMG ·11al
CHARTERS ' •' ''i.sl
Day and night flshing char\en
are available for groups or iin-!'J..
gles. For more information, call ~
Bongos Sportfi.shing Headqum ... '
ters on the Balboa Peninsula at '
673-2810. '·1X9
•lfi
P.61
LESSONS AND IOAT RENT~ · noJ
Learn to sail or wind..sw:1 at ,10::>
Resort Watersports. You can . 1 also rent windsurfers and 14-...,w
toot sailboats at $15 per hour. . , Hf
For more information, call 729-. 'iill
1154. ,' '-+W
You Wint Th• Job Done Right?
W• C1n Do It For You/
ECOLA SERVICES
Of OIANGE COUNTY ·•• r.aoo-55H:101 ..
Loc•l/y owned
ando,.medl ·
• .
· ·South Africa: Same· hotel different attitude
Here'I Ute Jatut m.tallment l:tJed by
N.wpott Beat:lt nattve Su.tan Seely and
her new hUlband, Arie ICafl, during
their y.Grlong Mrleymoon around the
worJd. You c:an reach them at their
Internet web de addnawww.fwoon-
nectlon.com.
JM.25,1"7 c.pe Town,~ Africa
After returning from our week on
the Garden Ro~e and in the
IQeln Ka.roo, .
Arie and I spent the next few weeks
exploring greater Cape Town itself and
the Western Cape. Taking full advan-
tage of the strong dollar-to-rand conver-
sion rate, we had an opportunity to
experience some of the amazing attrac-
tions that the Cape has to offer. We also
took some time to find out more about
Cape Town's Jewish community.
Por a special honeymoon treat when
we first returned to ~e dty, we stayed
two nights at the wortd-famous Mount
Nelson Hotel. I had spent nearly a
week's time at the Mount Nelson for
work in 1995, but it was really great to
stay at the hotel with someone I could
be romantic with (not that my col-
leagues weren't great in their own
Waf ). The downsi~, of COW'8e, was tl\at
I was not on an expense account.
Now I have memories of relaxing
an<l reading in the beautiful gardens,
swimming in the pool with the amazing
view at 'Illble Mountain and having
High Tea (decadent and tasty) with Arie
~d of running around like a loon
answering phone calls, receiving too
many faxes and organizing schedules
and receptions.
The service at the Mount Nelson is
incomparable, and for that real • colo-
nial• feeling, it cah't be beat. The
tAount Nellon 11 also interesting from a
Jewish hl9tory perspective u the hotel
bu on i1I property the lite of the first
organized Jewish prayer group (Ben-
jamin Norclen's hOUM). The hotel is also
quite clOle to downtown attractions
such u the government buildings,
museums and Company Gardens as
well u the Great Syna$JOgue on 84 Hat-
tfield Street, which Ari~ went to early
one morning for services.
As the cost of going to the theater
here is negligible in terms of U.S. dol-
lars -about $10 for the BEST seats -·
we decided to take advantage of it and
went to see the opening night of .
•Queen of the Opera.• The show was a
fabulous tribute to Freddie Mercury and
the music of Queen. It was an extrava-
ganza with imaginative costumes and
.design sets and often superb choreogra-
phy.
It was great fun and very entertain-
ing, if a bit poignant at times; it made
one sad to remember that somebody
with that kind of joie de vivre and
chutzpa has left this world.
After our two day stay at the Mount
Nelson, we returned to Arie's cousins'
house for a few days from where we
further explored the city .. (We could
have just stayed in the house all day
enjoying the view of the ocean, but we
forced ourselves to get out.) One Sun-
day evening we ate a picnic dinner at
Kirstenbosch Gardens while listening to
a perlormance by Winston Mankuku,
probably the most famous tenor saxo-
phonist in South Africa.
The lawn area was packed with' an
incredibly diverse crowd -there were
blacks, whites, "coloreds" (the South
African term for people of mixed race
which would technically seem to
include nearly everybody), gay, straight,
young and old. And everybody was sit-
ting happily grooving next to one
••
Susan Seely and Arte Katz
another in fairly tight quarters. The
view from the lawn area was stunning
-above the stage Devil's Peale and the
Constantiaberg Mountains loomed
through the clouds while over a bit to
the right the North-Eastern suburbs of
Cape Town sprawled in the distance. It
really was a blast.
..,._, Another time, we bought picnic fix-
ing$ from Giovanni's (a great Italian deli
and balcery) and went to watch the sun-
set from atop Signal Hill. Together with
Table Mountain and Lion's Head, Signal
Hill frames the backdrop to the city and
affords some spectacular views of Table
Bay and the Twelve Apostles. Although
the scenery was gorgeous and the local
guinea fowl were friendly, the wind
picked up so much that we finally end-
ed up eating the rest of our meal and
watching the sunset from inside our car.
The wind and the rainy winters are the
price you pay for living in this paradise.
During this time we also went look-
ing for information on Cape Town's
Jewish community and resources to put
on our web page. We attended services
at a few orthodox synagogues, includ-
ing the Green Point Synagogue which
is reputed to have the biggest congre-
gation in the Southern hemisphere. At
one point we met with Rabbi Kaplan,
bead of the reform community in Cape
Town, and attended a Friday night ser-
vice at his shul, Temple Israel, where
the new Arch-bishop was a guest
spealcer. As we had only been around
people who affiliate with the SQuth
African orthodox movement (there is
essentially no conservative movement
in the country), we knew very~
about the reform movement in South
Afrlc.a. •
Unfortunately we found out that the 1 f,
reform Jewish community here ii • apa-.. " ~
thetic. • There is no move toward •Jew-.. v~
ish renewal• as we know it in tbe It, '..!
states, nor is there a plllh toward egali-• '{IJ
tarianim1 and women's partid.pation in ~ •~
services and Torah learning.
The interesting thing is, however, ,,...
that people who affiliate with and c.all
themselves orthodox here, would not 'iA'a
generally be considered so in the states >
(it is estimated, for example, that of the ,~.,
80% of Cape Town Jews who c.all them· ~
selves orthodox, only 5% keep Shab-
bat). · ..
It often seems to be more of a social ' ~
affiliation rather than an ideological or .~t
theologic.al one -in other words, the .: ~
leaders of the orthodox community have ? i
made it clear that orthodoxy is the only '1 ~
•rear Judaism and Jews should affili-"'
ate themselves with orthodoxy as the :,.ci
ideal, even if their practice in reality
falls far short of the orthodox tenets. ._,, 1
It's a very confusing situation promot-• ,:t.
ing an "all or nothing" attitude that 1 --~
tends to alienate people {particularly
women) who might be inclined to be -==
more participatory given some viable
options.
It will be interesting to see what hap-.•
pens to the Jewish community in South •
Africa as the younger generations · .:~
grow up and have families of their own. : : :
Already, the once vibrant Jewish : •
communities in towns like Port Eliza-: j
beth, George and Durban have disap-l i
peared or become nearly non-existent ! :
(or very old) as the younger people emi-'
grate or move to Cape Town or become
alienated from Judaism. It makes us
appreciate very much the pluralism and
options that we find in the.United
States.
• •
I ' J ' " •• . ' •• • • : J •• HI
' . •• . ' . , . .._
•••
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by
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251 East Pacific Coast Highway Newport Beach
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Appetizer
Meua
Houmes. Mutebel. Taboull. Spinach Pie, Meat Pie&.. Lamb Pie
E.ntree
tntrees served with nee, vegetables &.. salad
Choice of the following:
· · S~warma A La Kief
8arbec.ue lamb and chicken a la brochette
Seafood A La Brochette
~ Jumbo shr1mp and seabass
Hassans Delight
Lamb ftlet on a skewer. chicken kebob and musaka (eggplant)
Dessert
Cheese Cake, Baldawa
~-'
I ' , ·,
Amore .... Sfuzn
for Valentines Day.
DINNER FOR lWO. · ·
To include: Stuffed Half Maine ~er
and Roasted Rack of Lamb Wtth
Qorgonzola Mashed Potatoes and
Summer Ve~tables with a
Bottle of Wine
Only $90.00 per couple
~~~ru~)
Call for reservations
714-548-9500
r our )J1 tual · und Portfoli ~ Mal in~ the Grade? ..
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548-5626 Blvd D-152 • Cosu Mesa 1835 Newport ~ Cou.rtyanh •Behind Mimi'• Cafe Harbor at Newport • ea...
••
I I ,_ -\-/ I
• Uward
ROYAL KifvBER
Vaknline ~ fJJa Fe~ruary 14, 1997. ~
Spec1a/ 4 court1e D . .
$23..95 per pert1'::zner
m-~2~!; !<ffYBE
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GIFT WRAP
n:el heart-shaped
orP"iates, truffles
Qf l
M)C4:Mille truffle roses.
i-.. ... e Olft.s for
~dOnes.
•tlng chocolates
Cl~
·I
lftD1'J'l chocolate
h~late shops
• T
and shopped at
Men's a Wooleo's F"llSl OlOict For Swfwear
KAYAKS
WEEKEND WEAR
DAVID YURMAN
@>
-
TRADITIONAL
• RANCHO MIRAGE & l..XlUNA NIGUEL
:nt& am =-=·ISLAND: NEWpORT BEACH
• (714) 721 ·9010
POLAR MIST
CONTINUEQ FROM A 1
Base commander Gennadi
Millnevsky and three of his 12-
penon staff gave us a tour and
briefly explained the research
they're conducting in climate
8dence and the upper atmos-
phere. The scientists are focus-
ing their research on ozone
depletion and ionospheric prop-
egation. Other areas of research
Include geomagnetism, meteo-
rology, and glaciology.
It seemed amazing to us. On
this remote, barren islet is a
highly-organized, 20,000-
aquare-foot f acillty complete
with computers, radios, high-
tech electronics, big diesel gen-
erators, and even a desaliniza-
tion plant. A new big-screen TV
b supplied with hundreds of
recent American movies. We
were glad to see that base
favorites include Clint East-
wood's "High Plains Drifter"
and "The Good, The Bad, and
The Ugly.•
The base is also home to a
'
Re
Painting ?.
If you 're looking to
paint or repaint, rebuild
it, replace it or restore
it, look in the Pilot
Classifieds to find the
service best fitting your
needs.
Daily Pilot
',.,.,,f,, d < 1111111111111ty M.11kPtplo1cP
. ---
cozy British-style pub, complete
with knotty pine panelling, Eng-
lish beer taps, a pool table and
darts. Considering where we
are, this seemed quite a discov-
ery. Our Ukrainian hosts have
adapted well to the pub. Rolling
up their shirt sleeves, and light-
ing cigarettes, they quizzed us
about America and let us beat
them in a few games of darts
and pool.
Besides Heineken beer and
various whiskeys, they offered
their own special Ukrainian bev-
erage, an opaque liquid brewed
on site. We tried it. 'Nuf said!
As twilight faded around the
base, we said our goodbyes.
Leonid, Sergi, Roman and Gen-
nadi escorted us past the hum-
ming generator plant to the
dock. It seemed surreal. Citi-
zens from a brfakaway country
have taken over an ultra-mod-
em installation' on an island in
the middle of nowhere.
As we arrived alongside Polar
Mist, we agreed that Vemadsky
-in a more sinister world -
could easily pass for a secret
base for nuclear submarines.
$ JB. 0%.1os.
WEEK.LY a MONTHLY
RA TES AVAILABLE
TALMO
CONTINUED FROM A1
media-shy clients, Mermaid
owners An and Olivia Ngy\Jen.
He bu spoken for them on plans
to open a second club in Newport
Beach, accused police of milmn·
duct in a prostitution arrest at the
club and, of course, answered the
city's ~egal challenges to 'the club. Tbls week, the club is cele·
brating a year of keeping its
doors open in Newport Beach.
On Feb. 13, Talmo will argue in
Orange County Superior Court
that the city should be forced to
reissue the restaurant's permits,
which it revoked last year.
"I've always handled -cases
from my political views," says
Talmo, a 15-year Santa Ana resi-
dent. "I have to be politically in
tune with the case to take it."
And he says he chose his
clients because of -not in spite
of -his Catholic upbringing.
Talmo, 45, looks decidedly
regular for the guardian of a strip
club in a fight sexy enough to
land itself on the "CBS Evening
News" last year. He wears his
gray-brown hair and beard well-
PERES
CONTINUED FROM A 1
temple Monday and Israeli secu-
rity was expected to arrive Friday,
Greenzang said.
Peres was expected to arrive in
Orange County as the first stop
on a U.S. lecture tour to describe
his experiences as an Israeli polit-
ical figure, which he also details
in his recently published mem-
oirs, "Battling for Peace."
Miller said refunds would be
available for ticket holders who
could not attend the rescheduled
date.
PERSONAL l'RAJNING
Al.SO Av AJLABLE
119 E.18tb St. Costa Mua 714•645•6110
MICHELIN : KELL y l(S TIRES
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I 195/60Rl 5u10 ............. 57.99 11 195/60R15 ................. 77.18 11 185/65/,5 ................. 75.65 I
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I .0 MU WAITED WAllANIY
..
groomed ud tpOlta a de with a
train Oil lt. Hit purple drell lhirt
Jenda a tltgM edge to bil otber-
wile ~~· After ltudytag IOdology at tbe
UDIYWllty. o(o.laware, be aban·
doned bM heme ltate for Orange
County to attend Pepperdine
Unlvenlty Scbool of Law.
He now pnctk:el law part·
time and bu been teaching at
Westem State University Col-
lege of Law in Pullston for 12
yean. In both capadtlel he con-
centrata. on comtitutional law.
He argued on comtitutiona1
ground.I in 1984 for gay couples'
right tcr'dance at Dimeyland and
last year for O.J. Simpson's chil·
drens' right to closed guardian·
ship hearings.
He also used the Constitution
to back his 1985 court fight
against "ladles day" discounts at
car washes and bars. ·
And he's been using it to
defend the Mermaid: the
dancers' free speech right of self.
expression. the club's equal pro-
tection right to be subject only to
the same regulations as other
restaurants.
"NeWport bas never consid-
ered itself part of the nation or
the state," says the onetime
Newport Beach resident. "If they
_have, they've daa8tt1.a1~.
And ...., bne IDODlf to ~
anytbjna • Me ·~upwtlhtbe~
~~tn~~'C
former hddy Murphy's, Wbk:b
~WM a1rwty l!IPflllllting.
"I came wtth the property,• be
says.
Desptte hla Commudon-wav-
ing in the Mermaid cue, be N'fl
he doesn't think tbe cue will
make it to even the state
Supreme Court. But with more
than 70 dtiel flling brlefl to back
Newport Beach, be .ays, the
case will have an impact.
"I don't think you can legally
close us,• he says. He hints that
rumors of a second Mermaid tn
Newport Beach may become
• reality-but be won't say where
orwheJ).
"It's a profitable business,• he
says. "It does no harm other than
its existence.•
He says his wife, Corinne,
does not object to the extensive
hours he spends defending a
strip club -in fact, she helps
him as a legal secretary. His 17-
year-old daughter, Ellery, is
away at boarding school in Con-
necticut.
Thro.ughout his work with' the
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~ 1' (:) Sugar Free Chocolates
.)
• ._ (:) Flowers & Balloons
(:) Customized Gift Baskets
(f./') Wine, Champagne & Many
~ Roman~c; Gift Items
250 Ogle Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
(714) 650·8463 •FAX (714) 631.S863
SIDE CE N ·T
CAROL KLEIN
F .. J N E J E W E L R Y
• For Valentine's Oay, Treat Your Swecthcan To Our•
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1028 Bayside Drive
Newport Beach, California 92660
714. 760. 3094
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We l.m1e to H11J1e Our Ctutomen
in Sritehesl
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~ • *'
',// Valentines Day 1 ~ friday. Februery 14, l<mj
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for Vale11tine's Day. So pkase lNvite t'ose
loved ones in four life ...
Your ,ost, s.e Newioort~ CA ~
00
·;qo
~
10-•
'~
AMEllCAN ASSOOA110N OF
llETIRID PERSONS (AARP)
New volunteers receive free Intensive
lns1Nctlon to help taxpayers with Fed·
era1 end State Income tax retums. The
MICP Tu-Aide Program provides free
tax ,,,.....atlon esslst.nce Pflmarily to
older •tts In our area. The Pf<>gram
Is dHPonsored by the Internal Rev-
en.• S'entke with Input from the C.11-
fon)la Franchke Tax Board. Tax assis-
tance ts provided wtthout regard to
MU metf'benhlp, And last year, near-
~ local citizens received aid. Vol-
contribute at least four hours
per week during the filing season.
ThOM Interested In helping should con-
tact local coordinator Larry White at
675t5066.
M4EftlCAN CANQR SOOElY
The Orenge County Region of the
Amlrlun Cancer Society Is seeking
office volunteers. Also, volunteers are
being ~ht to answer cans for the
unit) Aelpff ne lnfoCenter. For lnforma-
tkm on these and other volunteer
opportunities. call Sally carson at 261-
94461
AMCRICAN CANCER SOOElY
•LAYFORUFE ~ American cancer Society needs ~ for a number of tasks. For m0t:e Information, contact Sally Carson
at 261 -9446 ..
AMEIUCANS FOlt FREE CHOICE
INMEOIONE
Amltlcans for Free Choice in Medicine,
a non-profit educational organization
founded on the Idea of Individual liber-
ty .and free enterprise, Is seeking offtee
W>lunteers. For lnore Information, call
645-2622.
AMERICAN HEART ASSOOATION
The American Heart Association Is
looking for volunteers to perform vari-
ous general office dutm. These Include:
~ng1 typing, llght computer war-. al well as preparing large mall-
lngs and other various clerical duties
from ·9 to noon or 1 to 4, Mo~y ttw°'Gh Friday. Call Teri Brown, volun-
teer f>«.dinator. at 856-3555 for more
lnfon'nation.
reg.
AMERICAN HOME HEALTH
HOSPICE PIOGA.4M
The Americ.wl Home ~ HolpQ
Progr1m needs ~ to glYt emo-
tionail support to ~ Ill patients
end 1heir ~In"'-grHt9r Orwige
Coooty .... lhllnlng Is provided. For
lnfonMtlon, cell 550-0800 or (800) 540-
2545.
AMERICAN ltED CROSS.
ORANGE COUNl'Y CHAPTER
The Orange County Chapter of the
Am«ian R.t Cross r,eeds volunteen to
address community gi'oups about Red
Cross MfYk:es and to ~ as liaisons with
the media In disaster and emergency sit-
uations. For lnf0f'1'Mtlon, call Judy Ian-naccone, 835-5381.
.AMERICAN YOUTH socaR
ORGANIZA110N Corona del Mar AYSO Soccer Region
57 nf19ds volunteers for 1996 soccer se•
son registration. Parents of bovs and
girts ages 4 112 to 16 are needed for
computer Input. telephones, coaching,
refereeing, equipment and purchasing.
can~2539.
ASSISTANQ LEAGUE OF
NEWPORT-MESA
The Dental Health Center, Operation
School Bell and Kids on the Block serve
the children of the Newport~Mesa Uni-
fied School District. The Assistance
le89"4' 'of Newport-Mesa funds these
projeets through Its Thrift and Consign-
ment Shops. To volunteer In any of these
areas or get Information on the league's
next membership event, leave a mes-
sage for Ann Marie Alford at 645-6929.
ASSOOATION RENAISSANCE
CREATORS
ARC Is a non-profit group In Costa
Mesa that sponsors and supports multi-
outreach community servke programs,
such as the homeless sanctuary. Volun-
teers are needed. For information. call
Or. Renee Namaste, 540-5803.
BALLET PAOACA
The Ballet Pac.ifica Guild, a volunteer
~ group for 8~ Pedfica. needJ
YOlunteers for a v.n.ty of tatb. For
lnfomwltlon. c.11 Many lynch ~ 851·
9910.
llG IROTHEJtS. llG stSTEltS
Men and women ewer 20 )'HI'S ok1
who have lived In Or.nge County for at
lust slJ( months and have been on the
}ob for at least three months ate needed
to .ve as big brothers or big slsten for
chlldten ages 6 to 16 from~
homes. For Information. call 544-7n3
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA INC.,
ORANGE COUNTY COUNOL
Volunteer opportunities lndude fund
ralsl09, program development and
tralnl09 to exlstjng troops and packs. For
more Information, call Devon Dougher-
ty, 546-4990.
BOYS AND GIRLS CLUBS OF
COSTA MESA//NEWPORT BEACH
The three area Boys and Glrls Clubs
need volunteer coaches and arts and
crafts workshop teachers. For locations
and more information, call Dick Powers,
642-2245.
QNTENNIAL FARM TOURS
Volunteer docents are needed at the
Centennial Farm at the Orange County
Falrg.rounds In Costa Mesa. call Ginny
Smith, 708-1517.
aNTER FOR CREATIVE
ALTERNATIVES
The Center for Creative Alternatives, a
non-profit charitable organization that
works through the United Way, needs
volunteers, graduate level interns or
trainees. For information, call Karen,
642-0377.
CENTER DOCENTS
If you love the arts, become a Center
Docent. It enables you to see and be
Involved In the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center as few are able. You'll
frequent backstage and below stage
areas giving public tours of the Center.
To learn more and apply, call the Sup-
port Groups office at 5S6-2122, ext. 218.
JV~~~
---Automobile, IOat & RV Detailing--
If Your Car Is Not Becoming To You,
Then It Should Be Coming
To Us!
O'TIZENS FOR A
SEWAGf..fal IAY
~ help 15 needed to hetp ~
Newport Harbor as an unpolluted
resource. Vdunteen. group ~ and
organlMn ate needed. C.11722-1710.
COUEGE HOSPJTAL
COSTA MESA HISTORICAL
SOOETY
THUttSOAV, FElflUMY 6, 1997
COURT APPOWTtO SP£0AL
ADVOCAm Of COUNTY "°'unteen are needed to nWIM a two-~commitment to lefve • ~· for .t>used. neglected ~ ~)
children. Outing the two-year period.
volunteers wonc one-on-one wtth a child
for three hours a week. For information,
The Colleoe Hospital Costa Me1a Aux.11-
lary Is 5eftlng volunteen to perlorm
derlc.al, reception desk. 91ft shop and
other dtltles at the hospital. For Infor-
mation. call 642-2734 between 9 a.m.
and4p.m.
The society colleas Information, pho-
tos and artifacts relating to the hlstcwy
of Costa Mesa and the harbor am. "°'.
unteers life needed for derlc.al tds,
computer Input and help in the llbrary.
For Information, call O\arlei kecNf;
631-5918.
c.all 935-612A. ! 4
CUDDll. INC. Q
COMMUNrTY HOSPtCE CARE
Community Hospice care, which pro-
vides medical and emotional support to
terminally Ill patients and their families
In Orange County. needs volunteers In
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. For
information or to register, call Cindy
Laird, 978-7447.
COSTA MESA UT'ERACY COUNOL
The Costa Mesa Uteracy Center needs
volunteer tutors to teach English as a
second language. Free Laubact. training
requires no foreign language skills and Is
being provided beginning Jan. 14th at
7:00 p.m. In addition to earning certlfl.
cation, graduates will be assigned a stu-
dent at a nearby teaching center. A tax
deductable $30 l'Nterials fee provides
everything needed to lead a student
through two skill books. To register qr
for more Information, call 548-3384 or
548-6584.
Provide support to abused and aban-
doned children • a Cuddle, Inc. hotOne " 19 specialist. Answer the toll-free number'..,..
at your own horpe during a 12-.hour~
shift one or two ct.vs per inonth. Con-T
tact Debbie Magnusen at 432·9681. Jt
CONSUMERS FOR LEGAL
REFORM
8 FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS
The Defore Foundation for the Arts. a. CJ
non-profit organization dedicated to b
dance at 151 Kalmus Drive, G·3. Costa
Mesa, needs volunteers. For more Infor-
mation. call 241-9908. Consumers for Legal Reform has an
ongoing need for volunteers to monitor
civil court judges. A computer and dona·
tions are also needed. For more Infor-
mation, call Barbara at 854-0881. COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER
DISCOVERY SHOP q I
Discovery Shops are run by the Amerh
can cancer Society. Volunteers are need--
COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE
The Costa Mesa Ovic Playhouse needs
The multipurpose senior services facili-
ty at the corner of 19th Street and
Pomona Avenue Seeks volunteers for a
ed. and no special skills are necessary.""
For Information, call 640-4777 between-'""'
10 a.m. and 5 p.m.
.
20%
OFF
STARTUP
FEES
DP.2115197
Travel Partners
485 E. 17th St.
Andante Travel
120 Newport Ctr.
Costa Mesa Newport Beach
631-5240 759-1471
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Orange County Top 20 Travel Agencies
~ I onu \ I< > \ I I \ I \ l I \ I I \ I . I \ I' 11\ I "" ~ ~ ,1..,' q-;-
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_CJ) omctlmcs there attn't enough days in the
CJ/ Yittk. Providing ror our parrots or
!<Md ones Isn't something we planned for
and sometimes It seems as though ~
just can't do mou&fl.
_rvf t the Rossmoor Rcgcnqwc
~ hM a plan -our hl&fl~
tralntd staff ~Ill show you how our
Full-Scrvtcc Rcllrtmml Communll)' wlll
gtve yoot parents or kMd ones the lndc-
pcndtnl lifcstytc they~ MUI g!Yc JOU the
time and peace ti mtnd thM comes from knowing
you·vc made the right choltt.
..
_vr ~ Rossmoor RttmC)' offers scnloo Jn
<d/ elegant 11rcsty1c with all the amcnitio
and services one could M'f need Evt11
Assisted LMl\g ScMccs arc :r.-ailablc
around the doct In the prlv.ICy of thaf
own aptmmt.
omc vi ll the Rossmoo<
Rcgmq. view our mockl
apartment. ~ our ta®~llc gr~
and mttt t.1tlsfled ttsldcnts ~ bM
~ made lhc choice lO enjoy an ctepnt.
.... ~---ndc-1-11 II~.
Call ror an appointment nowt (714) &O-a>s7
1
I
' I
I
I
•
TH~Y, FURUMY 6, 1997
#
THE ISSUE: A Huntington -Beach man is trying to organize a body-board contest
to take place at the Wedge, but he's run into opposition from local body surfers.
I would be against the contest for
many reasons. One being that I am a
longtime resident in Newport Beach.
I have been in the ocean since I was
probably 2.
I have always felt being into the
water is something for fun, and contests
clo lose that even though people do like
1l. I see the problem of congestion and
what not being really bad because you
never do discuss last year when it was
really congested because of all the news
media and everything.
What would have happened if a resi-
dent down there would have had a
heart attack or a house caught on fire,
etc.? Emergency vehicles never would
have been able to get there. I do agree
with the people down there that it does
'tOt need to be exploited anymore.
TED DEMOND
Balboa
I think we ought to just let everybody
10 for it, a free for all at the Wedge. I
lon't see how this small group of people
, an think they own the place.
I think it is everybody for themselves.
I think it is public space and nobody has
nore of a right to any of it than anybody
dse. We've got to share everything and I
think we ought to have a lot of contests
10 bring in revenue.
Sorry guys, but you can't have the
.-vhole place to yourself.
MARK KELLY
Costa Mesa
I believe he has every right to hold a
contest. I have lived in Newport, near
the area for 36 years. I have been surf-
ing for 25.
When I started surling, it was a broth-
~rhood thing. We all went out there. We
111 enjoyed the dolphins, the whales, the
waves and nature. At no point, do I
think, anybody has any right to say one
group owns the ocean.
The last time I checked, this is Ameri-
ca . Everybody should be free to enjoy
the ocean and share it. Nobody should
own it and nobody should have a right
to say who can and who cannot enjoy
Mother Nature.
DAVE ADAMS
Costa Mesa
I don't think that the residents around
here would like it. Parking in the sum-
mer is already a nightmare. And this
gl)y thinks he is going to shuttle people
around, well that is ridiculous.
We already know public transportation
doesn't work. Nobody is going to use that
When they had the big waves in July, I
work down here in Balboa, and if I had to
go to a hardware store or somethlng and
back and forth, it took me three hours to
get back to my boat to do some work that
normally takes me 15 minutes.
Having that contest is just going to
bring more people, which we don't
need, in this town. Esped.ally down
there. It will publicize the Wedge and it
will just bring more boogie boards
which we don't need.
BDl.SEJLER
Balboa
I can't see how they can come up
with any sort of plan that won't lead to
congestion and mishap for the people
who live down there.
U you look at a map, it is at the end of
the peninlula, there is not a lot of
through traffic there and there is no
place to park. Having people shuttled in
probably isn't going to solve anything
since people are still going to come
down by car.
So they don't seem to have any plan
around that works because they aren't
going to be able to build some sort of
parking overnight. It seems like a lot of
grief to go through for the body surfers,
who don't get enough support and the
people who live down there.
There are other places they can do
contesll. It can very easily be ruined as
a place down there to hang out and for
people to swim at. It does not need this
sort of a ttention.
DANIEL RO'Jll
Corona del Mar
Heck yes, body-boarding contests
should be held at the Wedge and the
Wedge should be open to them for a
contest.
The body surfers who try to restrict
anybody but them to use the waves are
totally ridiculous. I wish these guys
DON LEACH I DAl.Y I'll.OT
would open up and give some respect to
other people who want to use the
waves.
The waves are not theirs alone.
PAUL BALDWIN
Newport Beach
I would have to say I support it
absolutely because I believe they have
just as much rights as body surfers do.
Just the fact that they are on a board
doesn't separate them from having the
right to be out there in the water with
the others.
JONA1HAN COLWELL
Costa Mesa
I was a body boarder for many years
at the Wedge and now I am an avid
body surfer in Ne~ and the Wedge
as well. It is true there are about 15 guys
who essentially try to have these restric-
tions. For example, the seven-hour black
. ball instituted.
They are really trying to lCeep that
area to themselves, which you can't
blame them for that. But the whole Spirit
of wave riding, in my opinion, is to Jet ,
everyone enjoy the water and to allow ·
people to exhibit their skills in a contest 1
such as this proposed body boarding
contest.
It just seems very restricted to me for )
these guys to really try to stand in the 1
way of a contest such as this. It would
be a breakthrough for body boarding to
ever occur.
It sounds like this guy really has his .s
act together as far as taking ca.re of all
the things 1hat need to be tiken cate
before the contest. For example, the
shuttle coming from Hoag, the security,
the permits, this and that and getting
the word out and including everybody.
lbat is what surfing is, it is a sport of
inclusion not restriction.
BRIAN MARTIN
Newport Beach
I don't believe there should be a boo-
gie board contest down at the Wedge. I
have been surfing the area my whole
life and especially at the Wedge where
it is kind of a nice little area with an
influx of more body boarders and people
who have no respect.
. Not just body boarders, but outside
people. There is a lot of graffiti on the
ground, sw:fboard wax. bottles, beer,
trash, stickers on every sign and every
house. I don't think it is a good idea.
The Wedge is a body-surfing beach.
It is just a sple sport and it is a sole
beach and having it exploited is not
right. I don't think it will be a good Idea.
ROBERT OTANEZ
Corona del Mar
I think it would be a serious mistake
to allow an international body boarding
contest at the Wedge. An influx of hun-
dreds of people on the Balboa Peninsula
Point and West Jetty Park and adjacent
areas would only make the problems of
traffic, noise, parking, trash and the
Police Department worse.
T.F.CLARXE
Balboa
I feel they should not ha.ve one. I feel
the traffic would be too congested.
There is no restroom fadlities, there is
no parking, no hot dog stands. Emer-
gency vehic:lel would be hard to get
there. I feel it is not the right location for
something like that
•
STAN KING
Balboa Peninsula
Wake up Joe B.~11, Neyvt is or:ie. Of the g~~d ga~s
• r
STA1'I ASSIMkY
Miuilyn Brewer (R), 70th
Dist., 18952 MacArthur Blvd.,
Ste. 220, Irvine,' 92115, 863-
7010.
srm COASTAL COMMISSION
'5 Pnmont St., Suite 2000,
San Prandlco, CA. 94105, (415)
· 904-5200. Regional office locat-
. eel in Long Beach, (310) 590-
5011.
OMNGE COUNTY
~OF SUPEIMSORS
Hall of Administration, 10
cnt.c Center Plaza, Santa. Ana,
92701.
Jim Silva, 2nd o;mtct (Costa
Mela) 834-3220.
lbamM Wilson, 5th District
(Newport Beach, Santa Ana
~) 834-3550.
OIWtGE COUNTY FAIR 80NU>
88 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa,
708-PAIR.
Board: Pnsident Jim Und-
berg, Vice President, Gacy
Hafakawa. Randy Smith, Emily
SeDfarct, Doy He,nley, Marian
La PoD&tte, Buck Johns, Don
Willet
OUNGE COUNTY
IOMD Of EDUCATION
200 Kalmus Drive, P.O. Box
OTY Of NEWPORT IEACH
Newport Bpch City Hall,
3300 Newport Blvd. 92663. 644-
3309.
Mayor. Jan Debay
Council: John Hedges,
Thomas Edwards, Norma
Glover, Dennis O'Neil, John
Noyes, Tom Thomson
\
COAST COMMUNITY
COUEGE OISTRJCT
District Office: 1370 Adams
Ave., Costa Mesa, CA, 92626,
432-5898.
Chancellor: William M. Vega
Boarcl: Walter Howald, Sher-
ry Baum, Paul Berger, Armando
Ruiz, J~ Patterson
NEWPORT·MESA UNIRED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
District Office: 1601 16th St.,
Newport Beach, 92663, 760-
3200. Superintende nt: Mac
Bernd
Board: Dana Black . Judy
Franco, Ed Decker, Jim Ferry-
man, Martha Fluor, Wendy
Leece, Serene Stokes
MESA CONSOUOATEO
WATER DISTRICT
1965 Placentia, Costa Mesa,
92627 I 631-1200
Board: 'Iludy Ohlig, Hank
Panian, Mike Healey, Fred
Bockmiller, Dana Haynes
COSTA MESA
SANITARY DlsntlCT
P.O . Box 1200 Costa Mesa,
92628-1200. 154-5043,
Board : Jim Ferryman, Art
Perry, Nate Reade, Arlene
Schafer and Dan Worthington
Fred Martin hits the
right chord
Fred Martin's column on Jett
Schwein and Crown Hardware
(Daily Pilot, Jan. 19) struck a per-
sonal chord.
l have had the pleasure ~d
privilege of knowing •'Jeff
Schulein far about 14 years. Dur-
ing that time, Schulein bas made
himseli available to help me
solve many problems, both per-
sonal and professional.
Schulein open door and his
guidance were instrumental in
. the success of my business, now
more than 3 years old. I truly
believe that without his input, I
may. not be in business today.
Schulein is honest and fair. He is
a mentor, which is one of the
highest compliments I can give.
True to form, Schwein does
not seek headlines.
His gracious wife, Linda, is
deeply involved with the commu-
nity and is one of those rare peo-
ple who derives pleasure simply
from the good that is accom-
plished by a deed. Although I
have never asked her, I believe
she would say that she has a duty
in life to help those less fortunate.
I once beard a man say one
measure of people is bow they
treat you when they don't need
anything from you. J,eff and Lin-
. da pass this test with flying col-
o~. .
The Newport-Mesa communi-
ty is fortunate to have the
Schuleins in our midst. I thank
Fred Martin for devoting an
entire column to them and Crown
Hardware.
STEVESMllH
Costa Mesa
Salary article doesn 't
tell whole story
I am a taxpayer of the city of
. Costa Mesa and appreciate arti-
cles like the recent listing of
police and some fire department
salaries. The numbers quoted
were in some cases excessive!
Howeve r, there was no expla-
nation of the items included in
those Hsalaries." I assume that
Social Security, medical insur-
ance, vacations, pensions and
2983 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
(Corner~ Barbor and Baker)
2275 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
(Corner~ Ne~ and Fllmew) .
'lit ~313S Fu 957-8289 Tel. 64Si4»246 Fu 645-2588
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1997
corresponden~e
other fringe benefits were added
to the base pay, as well as over-
time.
If that assumption is correct,
then your article should have so
stated. In.stead, it inferred that
the numbers quoted were take-
home pay.
Furthermore, when considera-
tion is given to the continu~
study and training required by
the police, the continual risk tak·
en in normal and regular duty,
your paper does a disservice to
the community with such an arti-
cle. ·
HER.BERT J. KANDEL
Costa Mesa
Norton a good pick,
Gary Norton
Gary Nor-
ton is a won·
derful choice
for interim
pnnc1pal at
Newport Har-
bor High
1 worked
with him when
he was assis-
tc.nt principal
at University
High, prin-
cipal of Irvine
High School and as an officer on
the high school's attendance
review board. He is caring, intel-
ligent, witty and will do a great
job for staff, students and parents
at Newport Harbor. This was a
good decision.
SUE CLARK
Irvine schools counselor
En couraging stories
of dealing with loss
Thank you Marshall Ferguson
for your letter to those who sup-
ported you dunng your suffering
and loss of your wonderful.
inspiring son, Jason.
Thank you LlsaBurroughs, via
John Hedges, for your opinions
regarding Mchoices'' and abor-
tion.
How thoroughly gut-wrench-
ing to read both of these articles
juxtaposed on the same page ...
both so full of loss ... one chosen,
one certainly not.
KRISTI DeCINCBS
Newport Beach
Hang on to those
party hats
Why write a letter at 11 :30
p.m.?
Because we just ret\Ulled from
an absolutely fabulous party. It
was the Hoag Hangar Happening
at the El Toro Marine Base which
was held in the most impressive
structure that we have ever expe-
riencad -the blimp hangar.
This evening's pa:rty, which
was a fund-raiser for Hoag, cod·
lesced all of the elements that a
party should have. Taco Bell dlld
all of the support groups made the
evening very special.
Congratul4tions to all of the
many volunteers and supporters
that made this tunp-raising event
so wonderful. Again, we had a
smaslungly good time.
NANCY AND
JACK CALDWELL
Corona del Mar
Squirming over the
worm
Dennis Rodman, front page! -
You either have too many
reporters with nothing to do or
are flat out of touch.
I'm a soccer coach and I'm
wondenng why the editor could-
n't find ~omeone who the majori-
ty of readers might look on ·as a
little more deserving of local front
page news. I know 1 could, many
-times over. Try me sometime.
BOBSMITH
Newport Beach
g'zcelknce t .H J// edclt:11 ,J?/1(1fr;r mji It l/
/6-1' /il X!/ea Jtj
:;'fp; aY"nrlurk or:111 '# ll«ffl[l(')il(jlll rYr11, 11,q /
FEBRlJARf CARPET SALE!
THURSDAY, '°"UAAY 6. 1997
•
Nick's Cucina a hidden gem in ·Harbor Shopping center :·
Nick and Usa Fodera welcome customers to Nick's Cudna Itallana.
ta Early Years Toys
• Developmental toys for children birth to 10 years.
• Quality toys with lasllng and creative play value.
• Peri.onal service from knowledgeable sales staff.
642-4212
· 1827 WESTCLIFF DRIVE. NEWPORT BEACH
Carpet Your Entire Home
with Plush or Berber
·-• '"""o"n ''"' s49foron900 UPT0 3 MOS ..ii] SAME~C~H !' __ ._. OAC
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In these turbulent economic times,
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l\[1.Pr aU, when it comes LO the mu>S
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• Over a Century ot
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• Evening a nd Saturday Cluaee
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'PLUG IN
OAILY PILOT ALE PHOTO
' I t'I not a miragtt, tt'1 an Italian
Nltamant
Nick's CUdna Itallana, better
known u Nk:k'I Pizza, baa been
a COit.a Me1e tradl-tloli since 1968.
· Located at the rear
of Harbor Center,
Nick's ii one of
those restaurants
you stumble upon while driving
around the beck parking lot
looking for the hidden Marshalls
clothing store or pondering a
movie at the Edwards Harbor
1Win anemas.
"It's become spooky here,•
owner Nick Fodera said
•There's nobody around•
Wrth no street-front signs and
a location at the rear of a once-
booming mall that has turned
into a ghost town, it's a wonder
how he stays in business, lake
one taste of Nick's "World
Famous~ pizza or pasta and
you'll figure it out.
Using fresh vegetables and
herbs grown organically at the
family ranch in Temecula, Nick
and bis son, Joe, serve up some
of the best-tasting Italian dishes
this side of Sicily.
"Over 50 Years of Fine Quality"
C USTOM-MADE N EW FuRNITURE • DRAPERIES
FEBRUARY SPECIAL
ADDIDONAL 5% OFF m
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FLOORING DEPARTMENT . •Carpet
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-We ~CllP*&~
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-Wea... & Wax Wood Roors
-We Rl*llllh Wood Roors
• Vinyl
•Marble • rue
Nick, a Sfciltan native who
came to America in the 1960s,
said becaute of the poor locatton
most of his liusineu come1 from
word of mouth and repeat cus-
tomers.
"People come from Palm
Spttngs to eat my
pizza,• he Mid.
When he tint
opened the restau-
rant it was as a tiny
take-out place with
a few tables. Gradually expand-
ing into three other business
parcels, Fodera turned the pizza,
joint into a full-size restaurant in
1990, when he added a huge
dining room that's now ~eked
every Friday and Saturday night.
Cooking with old-fashioned
recipes passed down through the
family, Nick.runs a tight ship
with Joe as his first mate.
·1 sent him to Italy to get edu-
cated," Nick said. "This will be
his restaurant some day."
They cure their own olives,
make their own sausage, cook
with sea salt and use imported
pasta. Those are just a few of the
extra touches that make Nick's
one-of-a-kind.
And there's more than just
good food.
~~A• J-0 UV s g
8UY a BELL UMD FUAMT\JAE,
1'DV8 a ACCR980AIE8, ITC.
ISM NMlllPOl"t Bhd. (et Del M er) ....... ............. ea.ca ..... (7141 H1·7Ha
The atmOIJ>here Is cbarmlng
and roomy with a nice color
scheme of turquoise and black 1
and a checkered floor, mirrored
wall, statues and a fireplace. And
Nick bJ.msd is a fixture you can't
miss. .
When my friend Gordon and I
came in for lunch last week, I
asked Nick -cordially, I thought
-how he was doing.
"The same," he said.
Then I asked what the special '
was.
"E\terything. The whole .
menu." . ·
He smokes, cracks jokes,
speaks loudly and uses those
familiar Italian band gestures
that made for an entertaining
afternoon.
Gordon commented that Nick
seems to really care about quali-
fy and "looks out• for his cus-
tomers.
"We use our hearts when we
cook,• Joe says. ·we cook like
we are cooking for ourselves.•
We started ~lunch with a
bruschetta appe'ti.zer ($5.25). It
was warm and crunchy with
angle-cut toasted bread. topped
with fresh tomatoes, fresh basil,
garlic, olive oil, a Sprinkling.of
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parmMan and'chunka ot.Gor-
giamola cbe ... It WU a great
start.
Next we tried the pizza. The
•tutura • -a hoUH apedalty-
wu fant.utic. Nick said he calls
it the •tutura" becaUH •tn the
tuture no one can 'eata' the .
ch881e anymore,•
1b¥ p1aa ii sped.al because it
. ta.Itel rich but it's healthy and
light. I didn't even realize there
wu no melted cheese on top
until my a1ice wu half gone.
. . I think the vegetAbles, herbs
and spices make it IO tasty: fresh
tomato, olive oU. garlic, basil,
onion and oregano.
•You can eat hall a pizza and
not get th.at 'full' feeling," Tony
said.
pizza. whi'ch was also topped
with artichokes, olives and fresh
mushrooms.
Bu.t tl,lere was lots of melted
cheese on the other half of the
"It's nice to have so much
cheese without ordering extra,"
Gordon said.
Performing Arts Center the Santa Ana High School Audi-
torium for the 1997 Imagination creates De~ grant Celebration's presentation of
The Orange County Perform-"Pepito's Story," to be performed
inJ,~ Center and Mark Chapin at the Orange County Performing
Jo on have established a Art Center.
$150,000 ~enge grant to raise From 9 a.m .. to 5 p.m. Sunday,
additional money for the center's local students will have the once-
annual fund. in-a-lifetime opportunity of work-
. The grant -named after ing with the Emmy-winning
Johnson, the center's chairman-choreographer/director Debbie
will match on a two-to-one basis Allen, who teamed with ·famed
any individual gifts to the center jazz trumpeter Arturo Sandoval to
Fneen $50 and $25,000 create this children's musical.
ved before June 30. The auditions, to be conducted
'The center's operating budget by Allen, will be for boys and
1s about $22 million a year. Eighty girls, ages 7-18, to fill 50 dancing
t of th.at total is paid furi~i-filleS.../
ffice receipts, with the rest Auditions will take place from:
ed by community dona-• 9 to 10:30 a.m. for girls ages
. 7-10
For more information, call 556-10 30 t 12 30 ' • : a.m. o : p.m. 1or tl122, ext. 247. girls ages 11-14 i . • 12:30 p.m .. to 2 p.m. for girls Children can audition ages 1s-18 .•or musical • 3 to 4 p.m. for boys ages 7-12
• 4 to 5 p.m. for boys ages 13-
18.
"''""'IUAlu. CAl.t DINND TQATa
Plilml
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widuhiud until 2115/97
..
I l uked Gordon to come along
becauae ol a comment he made
about.the •structural integrity" of
pizza austi something I found
tntrtguing. He said you have to
order a medium ($15 for the tutu-
ra) to 1ee how the aust st4Ddl
up. It should be firm and dry, not
doughy and like cracker-thin, be .
said.
•Pretty good," Gordon said, u
he held up a slice at 1eye level to
prove his theory.
Gordon also noted, and I
agreed, th.at in general Californi-
ans focus too much on fancy top-
pings and not enough on the
crust and sauce. Not true here.
Nick's crust was light and
crunchy, thick and airy. Cooked
perfectly, not greasy or doughy,
the puffy shell was perfectly
crafted.
The tomato auce came up
througb the cracks of the llices.
And the toppings were actually
put under the cheese, keeping
the ~t and~ moilt.
Gordon loved the big chunks
of meaty au.sage on the small
MUMge and pepperoni pizza
($11.75).
During lunch, Nick bad us '
captivated as he came around to
our table with photos of his
home-grown eggplant and cauli-
flower. He greeted all the other
diners, too -a nice touch that
made us feel at home.
We also tried some of the pas-
ta dishes. The raviolini fantasia
($7.95) came with chunks of gar-
lic, sliced zucchini, green onion
and mushrooms sauteed in olive
oil and sage. The ravioli, hand-
made by Nick, were filled with
briefly in entertair-ment
"Pepito's Story" will be per-
formed in Segerstrom Hall at the
Performing Arts Center from May
6 to 11, and is about a little boy
who lives on the storybook is~d
of Padingo and loves to dance.
Children should arrive 45 min-
utes early to register and should
bring dance shoes and proper
rehearsal attire.
Santa Ana High School is
located at 502 W. Walnut, Santa
Ana. For more information, call
556-2122 •. extension 209. ~
'Plus-size' author to
visit South Coast Plaza
on Saturday
Catherine Llppincott, a "plus-
size" model, will sign copies of
her new book, "Well Rounded:
Eight Simple Steps for Changing
Your Life ... Not Your Size," on
Saturday at noon in the Lane
Bryant store at South Coast Plaza.
The book -targeted for'
women who wear a size 12 or
larger -offers advice on accept-
ing body size with practical tips
on health, well-being and fashion.
Kiss and tell us
Do you have a love story that
took place in Newport Beach or
Costa Mesa? If so, we'd like to
hear about it.
Either fax your tale to 646-4170
or call our Readers' Hotline at
642-6086. Responses will be
printed in the Feb. 14 edition of 72
Hours.
'Sound of Music' to fill
campus theater
The Musical Theater Acade-
my of Orange County presents
Rodgers and Hammerstein's
classic ·sound of Music" at the
Lyceum_ Theater at Costa Mesa
~-------------------------, 11 Month Unlimited 1
I $ I 1 tor two-$9 1
I w/coopoo. ~expires 2-15-97 . L-~------------~-
C.11 fOr An
Appointment I
I 474-9740
THURSDAY, FEBltUARY 6, 1997 ~a.
ricotta and parmesan cheese.
Mmmmmmm.
The carbonara ($8.25) was
tossed pancetta (cured ha.con),
bow tie pasta and parmesan
cheese in a custard hue. The
dish wu a little salty and butt~
for our taste but good nonethe-
less.
1be garlic bread was great:
toasted only on the bottom and
loaded W!th chunks of garlic,
herbs and parmesan cheese. It
w.a.s·llght, and not Sliturated with
butter. .
The eggplant parmigiana
sandwich ($5) was outstanding. It
bad sliced, fried fresh eggplant
battered with bread crumbs,' and
the melted cheese and sauce on
the crusty bun made the sand-
wich melt in our mouths.
Even the balsamic vinegar
High School.
The production features :32
children, ages 6-18, from through-
out Orange County. Performances
are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on
Saturday and Feb. 15; and 2:30
p.m. on Sunday and Feb. 16.
was superb: sweet and thick.
aged and delicious. ,
The portions were excell•t -
huge in fact. The small pizza
looked like a medium, and the
medium is gigantic. •ae hungry when you oome
here," Gordon said.
The Foderas also serve up
soµie Italian staples lilce pasta
fagioli, Chicken cacciatore and •
veal marsala. Th~y also make the'
popular matarocco, a cold dish
with' raw ingredients that Nick
said they had to put on the menu •
because so many people asked
for it. .
Nick's wife, Lisa, makes all
the desserts herself, but we were
too full to try any. The restaurant.
also offers Italian and California
wines and lunch specials.
And try the cappuccino -
trust me.
Suggested donations are $8 for
adults and $6 for seniors and chil•
dren.
Costa Mesa High School ~
located at 2650 Fairview Roa~
For tickets, call 646-6624.
Join Us For
. Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch • catering Available
For Reservations and Directions Call
723-0621
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
South ~t Repertory Presents a Valentine to Orange County ..•
7.be season's mos/ roman lie comedy/
f 11H \11 ll t ii pr t \I'\,'
lq' fl 1•11
\ 1l1 1t11o' ... 11
I 1 lirn.11 1 I t _'.11
6y /l,(lrre Jll"ariuau\ adapl<!d 6y 'J6~/,ard ~i"'e116vrt;
r/11-eclud 6y Jll" ark 'li'uder
FEBRUARY 21-MARCH 23
This 18th Century comedy, adapted with 20th Century mischievous-
ness, ls directed by NewJ>9n Beach's own Mark Rucker, who
brought audiences to their feet with last season's hilarious staging of
The Taming of /be Sbrew. This time his delightful cast of charac-
ters explore the wonders-and dangert-<>f falling in love and
prove that whiJe h~ still break, they atso mend, and laughter
goes on forever.
11 \ I 111 \I I\ \I I Cl\ II ' I \I. I
"THE PERFECT l~CK COMEDY
o( po1t-Cold W1r Soldltta Callfomia. ..
a cuanlogly crafted triuatplt."
-Orange County Regis/er
'I \\1 I !11 11 \1 II
I f ' I I ~ 'I -
"Strelldl writa COMdl' ... is FRaH AND VIGOIOUS. .• ttEVEI AND ELBGANT ...
-/.()$A~ 71mes
~-THURSDAY, F£8RUAAY 6, 1997
South Coast Repertory's
.Fab Five team up for 'BAFO'
.... -
By Tom Titus
' The t1oys have been play-
ing together fOJI 33 yea.rs,
first as college thespians,
then as part-time actors with a
day job, and finally as profes-
.$1onals for the past quarter of a
century. And they've always had
the same business address.
_ Now, South Coast Repertory's
five founding actors -a.lphabet-
~cally, Ron Boussom, Richard ~oyle, Hal Landon Jr., Art
~oustik and Don Took -are
")oining forces for a world pre-
puere in roles of approximately
F<JUal weight for the first time
~ince "Glengarry Glen Ross" a
decade
"r. H E '.A r E R ago. And
the audi-1l E V I E W ence is
the bene-
ficiary of the years of together-
ness.
In Tom Strelich's "BAFO" (an
acronym for "best and final
offer"), the tive musketeers are
engineering types preparing a
bid for a new defense contract.
But the industry is downsizing,
minorities are preferred and
they're going the way of the
dinosaurs.
This premise itself makes for
s·ome sizzling satirical comedy,
and the first half hour of the 90-
m.inute, no-intermission show is
hilarious. But then, they learn
that one of their number has
"gone postal" and is methodical-
ly taking out the entire company.
Even with these grim overtones,
it's still a tremendously funny
play.
Director Martin Benson, who
cofounded the company in 1964
and has worked with these
actors ever since, paces the
show splendidly and, since Stre-
lich wrote the play for these five,
each has his golden moment.
Make that "his or her" since
.Susan Patterson completes the
cast beautifully as a black per-
sonnel worker with an attitude.
The second line of tpe play is
a riotously ramblmg monologue
as Landon -in answer to
Doyle's "What's the threat?" -
proceeds to calmly spell out,
chapter and verse, just exactly
what these aerospace workers
and their company have to fear.
Landon plays his humorless
Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Has gone flshlngl
For fish tacos
our meals are still a
trip to Mexico • as
well as the coast of
Baja. It's a trip
worth taking.
The 'n'adltlon
Continues
Since 1972
South
Coast
Repertory's
founding
actors Ron
Boussom.
Richard
Doyle, Hal
Landon Jr.,
ArtKousttk
and Don
Took, left,
take to the
stage in
Tom Stre-
llch's
"BAFO."
nunibers cruncher perfectly, Marines prepares her well for
right down to the pocket protec-dealing with a hostage situation.
tor. Her performance is a delicious
Doyle excels as a retired mill-counterpoint tb all the impotent
tary o~cer (ostensibly from the whinir.g.
South) who's still fighting the Finally, Took arrives looking
Cold War. His matter-of-fact ready to take San Juan Hill.
account of a son dying of AIDS Beyond his Rambo-like armed
in a hospice is chillingly deliv-and crazy character, he's a dis-
ered. armingly liter-
Boussom's r---------7'----------------, ate fellow, I highly caf-1 FYI much like Ted-' feinated office 1 dy in "When
manager is a : +South Coast Repertoryeb:e-You Comin'
vibrant. robust l sents •eAFO" through F : Back, Red
performance, at l 23 on the Second Stage at Ryder?" who
times dominat-1 655 Town Center Drive, Costa demands his
; Mesa. Performances are Tues--ing. His bunker day thrnunh Friday at 8 p.m., captives' "best mentality per---~ and final offer•
vades the con-Saturday at 2:3o and 8 p.m.. 1
1
before he dis-and Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30 ference room in p.m. Tickets are $26-$39. For : poses of them.
which the !~formation, call 957-0433. l Took's quirky workers are : grins and prob-
trapped, and his 1 ing intellectual-
constant brain--------------------------• .J ity contribute to
storms are each more putlandish a top-notch perfonnan:ce .
than the last. "BAFO • is certain to appeal
Cowering on the floor with a to a large segment of Southern
wastebasket -which he puts to California theatergoers, those
good use -Koustik exemplifies victims of aerospace industry
the over-the-hill employee downsizing (Strelich himself was
moments away from the pink an engineer). It's a black comedy
slip and scared witless at this with the emphasis on "comedy,"
new threat to his security. one of the fwutiest shows South
Into this old boys' club comes Coast Repertory has produced
Patterson, a young, vital woman recently, despite its menacing
whose former stint in the theme.
CAT
FVR+CP ........... $8
Leukemia ...... $1 2
Advantage ... $.14
14 months supply!
Program ........ $30
16 months supply!
DOG
Rabies ............. $6
DHLP+P ........ $10
Adv1ntafe ... S J4
Ito SSlb, 4 months supplyj
Program .... ~ ... $30
Ito 901b, 6 months supp1y1
..................... pet urrW .................
\(;'[ STC LI FF
1 71~ 6)0 3S20
----COMBOS To Go ONLv----
0 VEG ET ARIAN NON-VEGETARIAN
2.95 3.95
30 YEARS OF CATERINl.-0 WINNING HIGH CLASS
RESTAURANTS a0NooN ENGLAND.
I
•
r . , - ---- --r -1 , ,, I .a ' . . .,..._ •..
r •...:.... _ , •' _ .. M
Terpsichorean show on tap for
Corona del Mar High group
+ SHOW: "A Night on Broad-
way" + SOtOOL: Corona del Mar
High School · + STORY LINE: Orchesls. the
~hool's dance troupe, will per-
form $tudent-choreographed
dances to music from "Fame,H
"Cats," "Grease," "Rent" and
contemporary songs. + ADVISER: Sharon Trager + FEATURED DANCERS: Katie
Aakhus, Jennifer Amster, Erin
Bettingen, Carissa Butler, Kyl ie
Cooper, Amber Engll}h. Erin
Etchogoyen, Allison .Hilt. Kristen
Janssen, Katy Lewis, Nicole
Lewis, Catherine Martin, Gilian
Ostrowsky, Ashly Phillips, Leah
Seminario, Amber Sharp,·
Mandy Streiff, Jamie Tanzer,
Sarah Welland, Katie Wiedeman
and Kayleigh Wilson.
+WHEN: Today through Satur-
day at7 p.m. + WHERE: Newport Harbor
High School Auditorium, 600
Irvine Ave., Newort Beach + cos~ $6 presale; $7 at the
door the evening of the perfor-
mance
For more information, call
Trager at Corona del Mar High,
760-3320.
.,
11
I
Corona 1 'I deJ Mar's 11 Ordlesls !
dance pro-•
ductton
memben
include,
kneeling,
from left,
Glllan
Ostrowsky,
Katy Lewis
and
Kayleigh
WU.On;
sitting,
from left.
Sarah Wei·
Butler, ·•
Erin Bet-:
Ungenand ~
Kylie ~1
Cooper. fl
·' ~· BRIAN POBUOA
I DAll.Y PILOT
L-----------------------------------------------------.------f!
RUFF ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
Where VOUI' Dolor Coven Motel 1922 HARIOR II.VO., COSTA MESA -5"-1 156
NO INSURANCE? PAY A FINE
Rabbitt Insurance Agency
Since 1957
AlITO • HOMEOWNERS• BLUE CR~
.~ ~ ~ S r)J
41"11T, ..... ,.,.~.~·.,._ r ~
631-7740
44 J Old Newpo" Blvd. • Newpon Badt (~l ..... H_,i..O
-----------------------------
1 7tl1 St. BEAUTY CENTER
essential
elemenrs
~·
Neapon ~ Mna DUiy Piloc F-I
THtMSOAV. FEBRUARY 6, 1997 A•
. fCirque, ·Childhelp have a big time under the big top
I : c lrque du So1eO., the. avant-
1 garde drcul ~its lat-• est production. Quidam ••
I under tbe b6g top at the Orange
: County Pairgroundl, opened last
I week to capacity aowdl.
I •Quidam, • a Latin word, trans-
: lated means •a nameless penon
, who puses by." Cirque du SoleU
I producers felt the image of
: •Quk!am• was appropriate for an
1 opening night marriage with the
'Orange Co\Dlty Chapter of Child-
: help USA, turning the big top into
1 a big tick.et fund-raiser for the
I abused chlldren assisted by
1 Clllldbelp, one of the nation's
pargest children's cbarlties.
1 ••Quid.am' is each one of us,
1 and he is all of us. W~ must reach
tout and communicate with each l other so that hope lives in the
1 children,• a circus spokesperson
I said. Qrque du Soleil generously ! donated all 2,500 seats in the tent
t to Childhelp. The organization is
1 expected to raise more than
; $200,000 from the event planned
• and executed by Barbara Gauhl
• · Henry and Rene Segentrom l served as honorary chairs, with
, big top support coming from
...... wl Geolp Artnr-. J)oa.
.... JGMC.-.1'i9~ ._, ........ .._II.
......... ,,_DI).~ ................ -..-....
Dkll Mma.I wl Pltldlla
Moore.a.u.,wlMk'Mel ... ~ ......... ::::::. ~ -:.:.-=, Hm-
&aym.
Donors gathered for a .little
pre-drcua dinner at Mondavi
Wine and food Center in Costa
Mesa. 1be French doori ot the
chic California-contemporary edi-
fice were wide open to let in the
balmy evening air as some 200
Ch.Ddhelp fans lined up for an
early evening buffet of Mondavi
delicacies.
' Event committee members
who WOl'ke.d long and hanl to
ensure the circus sell-out were
Janet BroWn. Pam Amen. Carol
Packard, Jana Shuler, Nancy
Wbltlock. Salle Wbltlodr. Mary
Allyn Dener, Gbml Valley,
Natalie Tabb, Julie W111oa. IJ.ncla
BowllDg and IUdlard Hamblin.
Following the early evening
repast came a few heartfelt trib-
b.w.
cook
utes to and from hlll l!ctwardl,
Child.help Chapter president, over
dessert aild coffee. Then an anna-
da of high-priced metal began
streaming out of Mondavi Center,
m aking its way down Harbor
Boulevard to the big yellow-and-
blue-canvas encampment that bas
some of its Costa Mesa neighbors
up in arms over noise.
The crowd seWed into the
comfortable seating in the tent,
awaiting the magic created by cir-
cus director Pnmoo Dragone. As
the tights dimmed and the
Prencb-Morocx:an gypsy beat set
the tone, aaobets started flying,
mimes mimed and dawns in drag
with knobby knees downed
around. Magiatl. mystical, ae.-
ative, bizarre, thought-provoking,
whimslcal, silly, and strange were
SOll).8 of the desaiptlons uttered
by the captivated crowd.
A few Childhelp sponsors, like
Mark and Barbara Jobmon,
brought their chlldren to the cir-
cus. lt is not a production for
young children. There are no ele-
phants with bejeweled riders, and
Bozo is definitely not part of the
program. This is a circus nouvelle.
What goat cheese has done to
dining, Cirque has done to Rin-
gling Brothers.
It's not that there is anything
offensive to'children; it's just more
of a circus ior grown-up children
who remember what it was like to
be 8 years old under a big top
with clowns and animals and the
Flying Promazi Brothers. The man
across the aisle asked his date, ·1s
it so important to be cutting edge?
I miss the tigers and their trainer
in the cage. But I must say, this is
very aeative. • .
The creativity continued into
the night after the last ad ol
Cirque. The aowd ahifted from
the fairgrounds to Crystal Court
for a celebration underwritten by
South Coast Plaza md its restau-
rants, including Antonello,
Bangkok Pour, Darya, Diedrich,
Gandhi, Garden Bistro, Birra-
poretti's, n Fomaio, Pket's 'D'atto-
ria, Spiga and Wolfgang Puck
Cafe. Champagne Veuve Cliquot
flowed as the after-circus throng
compared notes on their favorite
moment under the tent. It was all
just another slice ol life on the
Orange Coast: a tribute to the
respect and dedication ot people
5\ICb a5 QlMhJ and Edwards. and
the generosity of organtuttom
like Cirque and South Coe.st •
~ In the end, it ts neither the
circus nor the sodal scene that is
most important, it ts the health
and well-being of the children
assisted by Ch.Ddhelp. More than
$200,000 goes a long way to mak'·
Ing a difference in their lives.
• LW. a>OK'S column appears every
Thursday and Saturday.
,._, Efo.., It All
Call Now For Tuck Consult LYON EYE 760-3003
1401Avocado402 • N rt Beach
I
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VALENTINE'S DAY
SPECIALS
Gift Wrapped
1 Doz Roses $18. 99
1 Doz Carnations $9.99
L obste r D inner
Steak & Lobster
Prime Rib
$14 .2 0
$16.20
$9.20
STAltT 1997 ay TAKIN6 CA~ OF fOUltSEl.F
CALL FOR AH APPOINTMEHT TODAY!
.. SUPER LOW PRICES OFFER D ON ••
FANCY COLOMBIAN ROSES & FRESH CUT FLOWERS
*Complete dinne r including salad bar
SPECIAL HOURS: ~--~
FEB I3 .. I Oam-?pm SUNDAY NITE SPECIAL LAURA HUANG. O.M.D .. L.AC. M.D. IN CHINA
3170 REDHILL AVE
COSTA MESA
23361 EL TORO RD., STE 105
LAKE FOREST REGULAR HOURS
FEB I 4u. 8 :3oa m 1-... to,.=_.._ ....... .__.-4 $ 7 9 5 * Chicken, Ribs It Brisket Dinner *
From 5p.m. 'A BBQ Chicken, Spere Ribs and Brisket of Beef • 429-t90t 8SS-393t MON. • THUS 10AM·5:30PM
FRI. 10AM-6:30PM ~. SAT. 9AM-3:30PM --.i
lndudM: Baked ltoteto, ... n•. Corn On Th• Cob• Salad Bar
1714 Placentia (at 17th) • Costa Mesa
We Brin Wellness To All Our Patients VISA & MASTERCHARGE ACCEPTED ...........__..........., _ ___.__, MS-8091 831-9803
RIVERBOAT CAFE
On boef'd the "Pride of Newport" Riverboat, Home Of
~~~~~=~~Reu-Sat
Sun Brunch Sam (closed ~1 Reservations Need-
ed Only For WeddiOQS, ~eta ()' Privet.a Parties). Al ~~'1:::ch~~~iru2~ 87 7864
AN AMERICAN CAFE
located at 462 East 17th Street in r.osta Mesa. Open 7
dir,41 • week. Mon • .sat. 8am&m Sunday till 3pm. Serving breekfast, lunch & dinner. Made from scratch pies, salad
dreaainga & soups. 548-3066
CHARLIE& CHILI
L.ocad It Mcf9dden Place (next to Newport Pier) in Newport
Beld'I. Holn: Moo-Ths 7:00am-12 ~ ~ 7:<Xlllm-3:00llm. Amex-4 Vu, OieocMr, Drler'a Club. No
A11....011 Needed. (114) 675-7991
N•WPORT BEACH
Bll•WING CO.
A f\AI ~ reDnnt with fresh beer brewed here.
CUdDor ~ & DlentY of free ~.·How's: Mon.-
Thu. 11 :30am-11 :~. Fri 11 :Xlafn-1 :CXllm. Set 9:~1 :OOam. Boo 9:~11 :3Q:>rn. Vlae, ~.
An9, Olner9 eocepted. Aewwtiona: party of 8 or more. 2920 Newport Bt.-d .. Newport Beech, CA
828113 (714)875-8449 zu•••• Mnl lr'ICllUdlll: Albe, Olicken, Steak & Lobat8r. Prime RI>. Pim. ~Ber. Prlcel R8nae'Fnlm $3.95 And ~· Hluw: 11 :30lrn1~. Q>CIWI 11 11pm. Crd ~Nat;,,::. RalieMCbll Not ,., •• lied. loolCed
llt 1712--, ca.. Mlle (714) 84&«J91
, ..
81.ATa AVL JPOUNTAIN VAU.EY (714) 4M-19'7S
JAVA CENTRALE
A E~ ~coffee caf&. Located et 3420
Via Lido in ~Beach. Open 7 days, M-f 6-1 ~
Sat 6:3Q.1qxn Sun 7am-9pm. 673-5310
CAFFE PANINI
Located at 2333 East Coast Hwy. (2 doors south of
Rubys) in r.orona Def Mar. ~· Seafood, Pasta, Gourmet Pizza, Mocha & Juices. 7 ~ a week.
Th 7am-3pm & Fri 7am-1C¥n. 87 101
GOLDEN SPOON YOGURT 8c
SMOOTHIES
Locet.ed et 488 East 17th St. Costa Mesa. SlPER
I-EAL.THY TREATS-Besides the popular testy, a-eamy, fat
free yogurt, t.his Golden Spoon loceCion now Offers deli-
cious sinoothies, power yogurt & yogurt ~ from 7 am.
Stop by on yc>ur way to Worlc or for dessert. 7 am-10 pm
weekdays · 10 am-10 pm weekends. 548-9147
DISCORDIA
The prerr1ier ~ caf'e. www.d caf'e.com. Located t.he
the lab. 2930 Bristol io Costa Mesa. (714) 427-5855
SZECHWAN KING
Al1 you can eat lunch & dinner buffat. DinEHn or tek&out.
Free ~with $15.00 min. ~· A le carte. Mon-5at Lunch 11-2:30, Dinner 5-10. Closed on Sunday.
Reservations recommended for large parties. Master-
card & Visa accepted. 512 W 19th St. Costa Mesa.
548-2000.
SFUZZI
New ltalieo -Eleaant 'f'!I. ceeual (located in Triangle Square, Costa Mela). W'ed -H8PJ!1 Hour. Earty Bird ~u Available
Every day. Holn: Lunch 11 :3Qam.4:~. Dimer
4:CQ>rn-:10:30. Reeervation8 acceotad. M-.cerd. V188,
American eow. l..acated • 1 e7Q.A Harbor BMt. (714) 548-9500
OSTERIA ITALIA
Auchentic bliln -c.'81-Homemede .. -Homemade
S.mge ·Cappuccino & De nart-11.n:h, dinner. cataWlg,
talcecU-~ TU&Sun 1 :~.m. -10:30 p.m. • Coeed on
Mond8y. ,. major ord C8f'dl eccepc:ed. t..ocad It 110
Mc Fadden Ptaoe (croee 211t ~). N9wport Beech
(714) 723-41(1).
IL fl'ORNAIO
~~r:e.~~~~ Oinnir Olly, AmlK, , M1bag& DlmMr. All9fw.
tiorw Alcxll I••• did. LOC.--1 1 \V'I Klmwl ""'·, irw. (7141 281· 1444: eeo An1an Blwd. lNW 9cdh Collt Plaza) r.oa Mam (714) 88&C&ll
ANTONUCCl'S
LOClllld •B7CXJWll&O..~~~· Linh dlnrw. ... IQ....... . .......... w..-ton Maft .• lhft . .com-1 1pm, Fri . .S.. 1tm-11 pm, a..;
1 , tm-1 Opm. 831-31582
..
SCAMPI
Fine Family Dining. N~ Remodeled. Open 7 Days A Week
for OiMer Only. 5pm-10:3(4>m. We Cater Privat.e Lunch P~
ties for 15 PeOple QI' More. All Major a-edit Cards Accepted.
Reservations Aecepted. Located et 1576 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa. 645-8560
SABATINOS RESTAURANT
8c SAUSAGE CO. Past:'&· ~Salad, Homemade ~. Vesl, Lamb. Veg-
etanan Dishes, Wine. Beer, C'.aOPUCCino ~ Dessert. Hours:
7 ~A Week. Serving Sat. g '&in. Brunch From 8:3(}
1:00, &in.-Thurs. 11em-1Q>m. Fri.&t. 11em-11pm. All
Major Credit C.Srds Accept.ad. Located At 251 Shipyard W~.
Newport Beaoh (714) 723-0621
GREENLEAF GRILL & BAR
On t.he send et Newport. Monday to Frid~y 4:30pm to
9:~m Saturday 4:~m to 1 O:~m aosed on Sun-
day. 105 Main Street in Balboa. (7~4) 723-6643
AVILAS EL RANCHITO
Authentic Mexican Food, With The Freshest Ingredients
& A New Light c.uisine. Greet Margaritas. Hours: Lunch
& Dinner. AD Major Q-edit C.Srds Accepted. Loceted et
2101 Plecent.ie, Costa Mesa (714) 642-1142 and
20CO Newport Blvd .. Newport Beech (714) 675-6855
Ml CASA
Our meals are now a bip to Beja es well as MeXJco. Now
offering fish tacos. Phone ahead for orders t.o-go. Hours:
Daily From 11 :OOem. All Major Credit C.Srds Accepted.
Locet.ed At 298 17t.h St., Coste Mesa (714) 645-7626
AMACHI
Sushi & Suahi to Go. Complete Ber. All Major Credit
Cards. Located At 2675 trvlne Ave-.i (Across From
Newport Golf Course) (71 4) 645-5018
LE BIARRITZ
Eabiehed in 1974. Located et 414 N. ~ etvd.
~ 7 ~-Mon-fri 11 ;OO -9:~ and Set-&Jn
5:00 -1Q:~. Al mlfOf' cndit cards~· AewwrJona ., ecoepted (714) 645-8700
l,_ I
( ~ { •• f ' • ' 4 '
CA8A8LANCA BISTRO
Mlcbt•_, & Malaaa111 • ~ Middle E81t8m
Food. Hcua; 11 :30 to 2:30 Mon. Thru Tiu-8. Lunch.
Dinner 5-1 1 pm. Al ~ Crd c..dl. Rteerwtion&
SuggMt'ld. LOCIC8d • 1520 W. eo. HWy .. Newport BeiOt'l (714184& 1420
\
TAPAS
The only restaurant in O.C. to offer the finest in cuisine
from SDain with live Ramenco entertainment. Specializ-
ing in Paella. steaks. grilled fresh fish & pastas. ()pen 5
days per week, closed Sun.& Mon. Located et 4253
Martingale WB'f (Behind Staples et MacArthur & •
c.onnt.hian). Major credit cards accepted. 756-8194
THAI SPICE
Voted byt.he Register readers. as appeared in the best of
Orange County section as "The Best Thai Food In Orange Cou~. ·Lunch, dinner. catering & takeout. 615 W. 19th
St. Coste Mese 5484333
THAI WAVE
Dine in or tekEK>ut. Fast & free delivery. Serving lunch &
dinner. Located et 211 62nd St. ~ Beech. Open
7 days a week. VIS8, Mastercard & American Express
eccepted.645-3057
THAI TOUCH
Located et 2618 Sen Miguel Dr. in ~ Beach.
Open for llJ'lCh, ~ . .fri. 11 :30em-3pm, dinner seNed
Sun.-Thurs. S.9pm. Beer and wine seived. Catering end
take out also available. All major credit cards ecceP.f;ed. 6400123 .
THE CANNERY
Historic Waterfront Restaurant end Harbor Oi..tise Center. Hours: Mon.-Sat. 11 :30em -'2:0Jam, Sun.
10:CDem-12:~. All ~ Credit Cards. Reserve-~~.· ~6~ 3010 Lafeyett.e Ave ..
(714) 675-5777 Fax 675-2510
NEWPORT LANDING
Wacerftont Dining, Set. & Sun. Cllemoaone Brunch, Din-
ner Menu $13. 95 -$19.95, !)r.Jtef Bafll.enu Served All
Qay. Hours: 1 O:OOam -11 :3Q:>fn, Amex. Masten::ard, v •. Dimer Reeervatiofl8 AecOmmended. Located et
503E.Edgeweter. Balboe(714)675-2373
THE BLUEWATl:R GRILL
Casual Mtafralt ~ • the former • of Ula .
ic Sea Shant.y and D111ney'a. FeCrina freah ~ ariled eellfood, ~ blr 8nd ,..... r.e, merbt. rw
6ar. aa.-em· . Oring f*io. Al major Clrda. a..•in availabit. : . 8rTMll Modli 9Cely pjced ..
edet600Udo D'MnWUdo;;;.~·7
days. lunch and clnnir. 87SRBH.
.....
mNN15401~ OICHl'STIA
Tbe Orange County Pbilhar--
Sodety p"9MDb the Min-
..... """' Orcbmtra at 8 p.m. Satur·
y at the Perfonning Arts C..
, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa
. 1lcketl COit $10-$48. For
ormatton. call 553-2'22.
MCONCERT
Orange Cout College presents
Poahek, cJ•ssical gu1tartlt and
ding artist, who 'will cele-
ate the music a.Q.d cultures of
tin America at 7 p.m. Saturday
OCC's Pine Arts Recital Hall,
01 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
vance tickets are $11, advance
unt tickets are $10 for OCC
ents, senior dtizens and chll-
under 12, and tickets at the
are $13. Por information, call
5880.
i>LOREOTAL
, The Orange County Philhar-
nic Society presents planist Ivo
orelich, who will perform a
solo recital a\ 3 p.m. Sunday
the Peiforming Arts Center, 600
wn Center Drive, (;osta Mesa.
ckets cost $10-$38. For informa-
n, call 553-2422.
ENNEsECAFE
The Orange County Perform-
Arts Center presents a "Vien-
e Cafe Concert" at 11 a.m.
$mday in Founders Hall, 600 J>wn Center Drive, Costa Mesa. ft. coffee-and-pastry hour and free
~e~ew talkpreced~theAustrian
Bnsemble's Concert of waltzes, IJolkas and other works. Tickets
•e $24. For reservations, call 556-
ARTS. . • ... ~SINGER
• 1Wo-time Grammy-winning
d:>ntemporary jazz singer Diane
lchuur displays her versatile .. • ~
. Ge~ interrogated
over a salad.
. . • ,. .
Cilll 714-6l1·CLUE for ram,
The Marriott's Mystery Getaway,
Corporate Parties, Gift Certificates
Jl1ue0
\ M~ lo lhe Moqic Ilion Ifie Mir""'i
~ ~Cllfit'-eMned•~ ~f)JI :::.::.°'the...._,.......,
• ClT.I' ·Tom Titus, Theetet ""-w, 1997
vocal paws wbeD ab9 perfonm
at ' p.m. &mday 1a·.-.. iobelt B. Moen ,,...... at Ormge Coat
College, 2701 Pairvtew Road,
Costa Mma. Advance ~
tk:Uts are 122. advance cti9c:ouDt
ticba are 119 for OCC studmtl,
senior dtbem and childten •
12 and under, and tk:bll .at the
door are $25. For information, call
432·5880.
FREE MUSICALE
Tbe Newport Beach Central
Ubrmy presents a free mntdnlle,
•Songs ol Life and Love,• IJ>OD•
sored by the Newport Beach Pub-
lic Ubraty Foundation, at 3:30
p.m. Sunday in the Priendl' ~t
ing Room. 1000 Avocado Ave.,
Newport Beach. Tbe program will
feature pianist Brian Kehlenbach
and mezzo-soprano Bonita
Nahoum Jaros. Por information,
call 717-3801: .
11UANGLE SQUARE CONCERTS
Pree live classic rock perfor-
mmices are scheduled from noon
to 2:30 p.m. Monday through P.ri-
day; from 7 to 10 p.m. Friday and
Saturday; and froin 1 to 4 p.m.
~turdayandSundayaftemoon.s
in the Town SquarE: at niangle
Square in ~Mesa.
ART
MIXED-MEDIA COJJ,AGE
"The Outsidei Within" is an
exhibit of mixed-media collage
paintings by Newport Beach artist
Mia Thv~netti on display through
'UV'Ew.&·
Orange Cout Collage pr• mtt
artist • Nancy Mlnor1 · •Uve
WU.,• an nNNtion ot tl¥,t dil-
UncUve beads ol faJDOIJI people
and otben m Uf.me wtre 1a11p.
ture, through Peb. 14 in OCC'I
Pine Arts BnQdtng, 2701 Patrview
Road, COit.a Mesa. Por more
information, call 432.5629.
A8STMCT AICf
The Orange County Museuvi
of Art pretents Joe Goode'• ahi·
bition of Post-Painterly abltract
art ttitough April 13 at" 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport Beach ..
Por information .• call ?ss.;1122.
VIDEO INSTAUATION
The Orange County Museum
. of Art presents the internationally
circulated video installation work.
•The Theater of l'ytemory, • by
contemporary artist Bill ywia at
the Musewns's Installation
Gallery through June 1 at 850 San
Oemente Drive, Newport Beach.
For information, call 759-1122.
ACRYLIC PAINTINGS
Laguna Bea.ch artist Pila Bar-
nett's bold, colorful aaylic paint-
ings will be on exhibit throughout
February at the Jewish Commu-
nity Center, 250 E. Baker St., Cos-
' ta Mesa. Call 755-0340.
'BAU IMPRESSIONS' •aali Impressions,• a mixed-
.HEMPHILLS SHOES
•
20-50%
OFF
._,$f:w. j uAd9P'"on1~ j,
Sebego, Ecco, Sperry, Clark,
Alten Edmonds, Mezlan, H .S .
Task, Bruno Magli, Selby,
\ and more.
1727 Westhill Drive
Newport Beach
650-6856
GROWERS
•• ACCEPTED
Prtca Good ttwu
216197-2110/97
Gourmet Wt
' Ava//ab/e n~~
mA DE.HA NOOUCTS, FltESH GIOUND PEANUT amD, NUTS A EMO FlllT, FIESH f\OIAL .
IOUCUTS, 1tANCH !GGS, GIN>WXJI OWN~ CUT• ICM mAD DILNUID flESH DAD
2016 Ne~r.t Blvd., Costa Mesa • 642-6025
Store HoUn: llOndq ~Sat: 10:00 am 1b 8:00 ~
m8dia nbtNt ~. lt.alian-Amert-
cu ~pbiir Prank
Lcmtmdt, wtD be QD dllplay at ~ · Nft'pOrt Beach Qty Hall
GeD8ry through March 4 at 3300
Newport Blvd. Por information,
call 717-3870
EOm'l10N
Tbe Robert Moodavi WlDe and
Pood Center preeentl the work of
pbotograpber/artbt Menitt A.
Vincent, "Beyond The Sprocket
Holes,• through April 1 at 1570
Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa. Por
more b:dormation, call 979°"'510.
\NICKED .
Gallery Paradiso'& Exhibitions
presents "Wicked -The Aes-
thetics of the Ubldo, • a display of
photography, assorted medla and
inltallations, through March 19,
with a reception Friday from 6
p.m. to midnight at 1~38 Newport ·
Blvd., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call ~0-3690.
MONTAGUE DAWSON
In conjunction with the 25th
anniversary of Vallejo Maritime
Gallery in Newport Beach, the
Newport Harbor Nautical Muse·-
wn will present •Montague Daw-
son -His Life and Works" through
March 9 at 151 E. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Admis~on is free
for members, $4 for guests, and $1
for children. For information, call
673-7863.
LIMITED ED"10NS
Gregory Gallery pres.ents· a
special exhibit featuring new
Orange Coast College presents "'Talk Radio," a dark come-
dy about Barry Champlain. Cleveland's most popular and
controvental talk-radio host. at 8 p.m. Fridays and Satur-
days and 2 p.m. Sundays this weekend and Feb. 14-16 ln
OCC's Drama Lab Stud.lo, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Tickets at the door are $5. For lnformatton, call 432-5932.
I originals and limited editions by I well," through Feb. 28 at 3406 Via
Gene Francis, who is known as Udo, Newport Beach. For more
the "Modem Day Norman Rocle· information, call 723-0887. ·
• LOSE UP TO II STROUS ON YOUR HANDICAP!
• GAIN UP TO 2t YARDS WITH YOUR IRONS!
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CONWJ"lll'XT Call Today! .... ,
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1111 ll 'l•\'11 '1 \I
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PARK PLACE 10 ~; ~1: .. ; 1~0·0,e~
T1R PllT CN-11}
•LIVE -.. (N-111 ..J.l'lf; .. 11) .-y ...,
IAllll'l&S111 ITMWMI ITMWMI ..... YC-1 •lMOQ
WIST~·
"Pint lmpnillom: The Lagu-
na Beach Art Alloda&n • ii at
the Orange County MUMUID ol
Art South Cout l*laza Gan.y
~June 15. •Pint lmlJr'm-
liom features ~ Califor-
nia •p1em u• paintingl aeated
by the founden of the uaodation
from the Orange County MUl&-
um ol Art.
NAUTICAL MUSEUM
The museum features the
Grand Salon for spedal exhibi-
ti01111 the Model Gallery, featur-
ing a world-class assembly of
ship models; and a rotating dis-
play of the museum's permanent
collection in the Corridor Gallery.
1be museum is at 151 B. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach. For
information. call 673-3377.
ORCHID SHOW
Crystal Court presents •Fasci-
nation of Orchids,• the 17th
annual Orange County Cymbidi-
um Society Show running
through Monday at 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. All three levels of
Crystal Court will be twned into
an orchid greenhouse and free
seminars and demonstrations will
be presented throughout the
weekend. For information, call
435-2167.
SAFARI BRUNCH
A Safari Sunday Brunch
Cruise is available aboard the 54-
foot Emerald Forest 11ki docked
in Balboa at the Fun Zone from
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Sunday.
The cost is $25.95 per person and
$15.95 for children under 12. For
reservations, call 673-0240.
FARMERS MARKm
Every Thursday tbere is a
farmers market from 8:30 a.m. to
• 1 p.m . at the Orange County Fair-
grounds. The Orange County ~Market Place is every Saturday
~and Sunday from 1 a.m. to 4 p.m.
;in the main fairgrounds parking
lot. For information, call 723-
: 6616.
• Every Saturday there is a
• farmers market from 9 a.m. to 1
• p.m. in the municipal parking lot
at Bayside Drive and Marguerite
•Avenue in Corona del Mar.
-rHE PRICE'
The Newport Theatre Arts
Center presents •The Price,• a
play that examines the relation-
• ship of two long-estranged broth-
• ers who meet after many years to
dispose of their late father's
belongings, at 8 p.m. Thursdays
through Saturdays and 2:30 p.m.
Sundays beginning Friday
through March 9 at 2501 Oiff
•Drive, Newport Beach. Tickets
are $13. For reservations, call
631-0288.
,. AMERICAN BALLET
The Orange County Perform-
; ing Arts Center presents the
American Ballet Theatre, which
• will perform the world premiere
of a new full-length ballet, "A
Suite for Human Nature," at 8
p.m. Tuesday through Saturday
.. and 2 p .m. Saturday and Sunday
from Tuesday through Feb. 16 at
• 600 Town Center Drive, Costa
11 Mesa. Tickets are $18 to $59. For
.. information, call 556-ARTS.
'BEST AND ANAL OFFER'
: South Coast Repertory pre-
sents •BAPQ• through Feb. 23 on
the Second Stage at 655 Town
.. Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The
•performance schedule will be
Tuesday through Friday at 8 p.m.,
Saturday at 2:30 and 8 p.m. and
Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30 p .m.
, Tickets are $26-$39. For informa-
tion. call 957-0433. ·• 2 'SOMETHING'S AfOOT'
•
The Costa Mesa Civic Play-
house presents •Something'•
Afoot" at 8 p.m. with Sunday
matinee performances at 2 p.m.,
ending this Sunday at 661 Hamil-
ton Ave., Costa Mesa. Tickets are
$15 and $12.50 for senion. For
information, call 650-5269.
'GOLDEN CHILD'
South Coast Repertory pre-
sents •Golden Child• through
Sunday on the Mainltage at 655
Town Center Drive, a.ta Mela.
The performance ICbecluJe wtD
be 1'lelday through Pl1day at 8
p.m., Saturday .. 2:30 and 8 p.m.
and Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30 p .m.
Ticketa .,. D-$41. Por more
lnformatkm. call 957-C033 .
,,
fteed To I Bus ness
tll Pleasure?
Whether it's a grand ocC:asion, or a simple gathering,
we'll mak~ your shopping experience a festive event .
New Valentine and Spring Items
Arriving Daily.
Stop in fo r a Visit.
THE GREY GOOSE
WESTCUFF PLAZA
Telephone -642-7803
Hours -Monday-Saturday: I 0:00 to 0:00 pm, Sunday: Noon·S:OO pm
•
Vale ntine Tradition
23e 71 c50Jee/£ear/. ..
~<.w Jf ele.n 9.race Choco/ale.s Mis Vale.nline.r 'lJay
Choose from our
selection of
heart-shaped
boxes of rich
Belgian
Chocolates, truffles .·
and much morel
•featuring long
stemmed
chocolate truffle
roses.
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
1124 lrvlle Ave. Newport Beach
(71 1-8700
We offer over l 00
different chocolate
speclaJtles at our
chocolate sho~
BREA MALL
(7141880-3022
•Great selection
of Valentine Gifts
for
friends,
Teachers et
Loved Ones.
What better gift
than the best
tasting
chocolates from
Helen Grace
r~ THE GOSLING
a child 's boutique
·~Presenting Our Spring Collections
~Annual Sole In Progress
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
1058 Irvine Avenue • Newport Beach
(714) 642-6619
Hours -M-S, I 0·6 • Sun:, 12·5
Girls: newborn to 12
Boys: newborn to 7
FREE
HYl>I ~nu.1 1 & 1 IU tl\\.
\o\N FR.\ "CISCO
Image Siu 30" x 24"
Sugg. Retail Framed $975
..
.. ... --.. .. .. ... ..
.t
0
s
• HONOREES
many tbousand• d people ud
helped tbam wtthout gettlDg ., aedit..
Brickson. who wu the 1995
Man d the Year, says both Con>o
Dado and Hombudde have bMD
Uletl to the.community in differ-
ent ways-Hombudde as both a
volunteer and a dty of:fldal and
Coronado fot his work with
young people in the community.
Hombuckle reUred from the
City Council in December, after
12 years at the dais. She remains
. active in the community and
works as director of St. Mark's
Presbyterian preschool in New-
port Beach.
And last year, the mother of
two fi.niahed up her studies and
got her bachelor's degree in orga-
nizational business administra-
tion at Southern California Col-
lege.
Her award counterpart, Coron-
ado, 45, also attended Southern
California Colleg~ -but took a
much different path. ·
Coronado says his troubles
with the law and drugs began at
the age of 12. He didn't care
whether the glue he sniffed fried
his brains, nor whether the heroin
he ingested killed him.
But after recovering from his
addictioo, attending college and
discovering the Lord Jesus Christ,
Coronado opened a street min-
istry at Shalimar Drive and Cen-
ter Street in 1979 -DOW called
La Plmta AbMltA -.The Open
0oor· -c:liurdL 1be MeDcan immigrant
198dMI OUt to help otben, indud-N 4rU9 addlictl ud ppg mem-~ ·fx1::•
•t leamecl ttiat from my mom,•
Coronado said. •To help otben
L-------------·-------••••~
and do everything I could to help
others. So that stays with me.•
Coronado says yo~g people,
who are involved in gangs and
drugs, can relate to his experi-
ences and listen to him.
•niey can see the evidence of
my own life,• he said. •God did it
with me and he can do it with
them as well I talk to them on
their own level.•
Ed Fawcett, the chamber's
executive director, said Coronado
"doesn't follow the same mold" of
previous Man of the Year recipi-
ents.
"He's not in the mainstream,
but he's demonstrated his own 1 contribution to the community -
head and shoulders above others.
He has exemplified himself as a
role model.'"
BRIAN P08UOAI DAl.Y Pl.OT
TeWlnkle students (left to right) Janeth Pimentel, Noe Estrado, Operation Clean.slate Executive Director Mlcbael Howard
0 and Jacinda Schot paint a light box near Baker and Harbor Wednesday morning to kick off their ~ti cleanup project.
i..
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~EAUTY SUPPLY:
: d• •t •lalllOll • .:r • .... "ll .
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BRAND NEW-COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best tor Less!
• •• 3165 llm1>or Blvd •
Coeta Neala
One llloc:k s-t.11 of 405 Pwy
545-7168
CHEZ EW in Eastbluff Village
Cent.r has fabulous recycled womens
wear. Come pick that special outfit for
VALENTINE'S DAY.
• • • • • • • • • • • • t' • • • • • • • • •
LA SALSA in Westcliff Plaza has daily
LUNCH and DINNER SPECIALS. La '
Salsa's food is made with no lard, only the
leanest cuts of meat and fresh homemade
salsa.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Need a very special gift for
VALENTINE'S DAY? Just around the
corper at Bayside Center, CAROL
KUIN JEWIURS has the right gift for
your Valentine.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Looking for that special...something? Try
COUAOl In ... wport Hiiia Cenlw
for picture frames, throws, pillows and
speciaJcy items.
Classifted ads work
foryoul
1'y_ll1i ( h1tlct
'
North Carolina
Discounted Prices
at a Southern
California address
HEMPIDLL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
...-------.--. • CL!AlllNG PLANT ON PRDlllES ~··='=Ttb::;--&_t. --r.::-1 • WE ACCEPT COMPETITORS' COUPONS .. I . IXPIRT ALTERATIONS
~ ffl-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224
230 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ,___ ' 71 4 -650-8225 Mention this Ad
Offer Expires 02·15-97
Jn a bnll1ant display of color
Crystal Court Presents
The
Fascination
of
and bloom, the 17th annual Orange County Branch
of the Cymbid1um Society of Amenca Show
Orchids
wtll be held at Crystal Court, Friday, February 7,
Saturday, February 8, Sunday, February 9.
and Monday, February 10, 1997
Rated among the top·five ordud
shows m the country,
•The Fascination of Orchids;,
brings together the nation's leading
I orchid growers, nurseries, society
mempers and hobbyists. The
show will feature an array
of arust1c displays, exhibitions,
demonstrattons, seminars and
competitions officiated by judges
from the Cymbidium Society of
America and the American Ordud
Society. A variety of intemaoonal
orchids, bouquet arrangements and
corsages wtlJ be available for
purchase throughout the weekend
and just in ome for Valentine's Day.
C ome see.all three levels
of Crystal Court transformed into a garden
of orchids. Adfl'.\ission is free:
And the fascination w1ll lan foreve r.
For more information
please call (714) 435-2 160. e
t
1997
February
7 8 9 10
' 1,
EYE-OPENER
Edge on the tees doesn 1t really even
anything out for the la4Y !JOlfl.!rs
• ' I ' I I ' " I I I " ' ' . .
Sailors hold onto their Sea View lead
•Newport Harbor battles to a scoreless
tie with Woodbridge; Sailors maintain a
narrow first-place margin over Warriors.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
IRVINE -Since last they met, the bt>ys soccer
teams from Newport Harbor High and Wood-
bridge had been streaking in different directions.
Those streaks continued Wednesday at Alton
Park, as neither managed a goal in a scoreless tie
that helped the visiting Sailors retain their Sea
View League lead on the second-place Warriors.
The deadlock extended Newport's league
unbeaten skein to five games, since the Sailors
(7-3-2, 4-1-2 and ranked eighth in Orange County)
blew a 2-0 lead in a 3-2 loss to the seventh-ranked
Warriors Jan. 20.
It also made it four straight g~es without a win
for the explosive hosts (12-3-5, 3-1-3), who were
I I l I \ ( ' ' I I I
richard
dunn
T c
•Even from·red tees,
ladies finding it tough
to stay out of the rough.
A s long as LPGA Tour
-professionals are willing
to play in the Taco Bell
Newport Classic Pro-Am, and
withstand the conditions of
playing against males in one of
the most unique mini-tour events
in the W<>rld, officials will
continue to welcome them with
open arms.
shut out for only the third time in 20 games.
•we're happy to have come away with a point,•
Newport Coach Ziad Khowy said. •Now, we need
to keep on taking care of business (in their three
remaining league ~ames)."
Among Khowy s postgame business Wednes-
day was some mild aiticism ~ected at officials,
whom, he said, severely hurt Harbor's chances.
The most crudal whistle came in the eighth
minute, wbeit an offsides call nullified an apparent
goal by Sailor senior Jesse Cortez.
Cortez headed a Tobin Junowich cross into the
upper right comer of ~ net for what might have
been the game-winner. But one of two officials
roaming the goal line, ruled Cortez was offside.
"It was impossible for him to be offside, because
he was running 3 yards behind the defender,•
Khowy said. "(Cortez) just beat him to the ball.•
Cortez had two other quality chances, including
a looping kick from 15 yards in front, which had
•SEE SOCCER PAGE 83
For the second year in a row,
LPGA golfers played from the
ladies' f'ed tees at Newport
Beach Country Club, while their
PGA and Nike tour competitors
played from the blues.
But for the second year in a
row, the ladies were out of
contention by the second day of
the tournament.
• NelSon scores from
everywh;ere to match
bis jersey number.
Of the four who played in the
Newport Classic this year, no
one shot under par either day.
Kim Saiki shot an even 71 the
second day, the best LPGA
round of the tournament.
"It's really hard to set up a
golf course where men and
women can compete on a level
playing field,• said longtime
pro-am c.ha.innan Jake Rohrer,
who will continue to listen to
suggestions from players and
tinker with ideas to improve an
already extraordinary charity
tournament
By Richard Dunri, Daily Pilot
Wetly, Sam Nelson
scores. With grace for
ouch at the perimeter,
and -given leaping ability
at the post. no Estancia High,
or even Pad.fie Coast League,
basketball player is more
dangerous offensively.
· Erle Werner goes up for head er;
Warriors' Jeff Jensen defends.
.. .
triple-double last aeason.
Even more quietly, Nelson
bas ~me the early
front-rimner for PCL Player of
the Year honors, on the heels
on last week1s back-to-back
effort against University and
Laguna Hills (24 points), in the
former coming within five
points of lying the school
single-game record set by Jim
McCloskey in the fourth game
of the 1915-76 season.
Scott Clements' 41 points in
1986 is Estanda's second-best
all-time, while Nelson's crusade
stands third now.
•it just seemed like a normal
game,• Nelson said of his
40-point petformance, in which
he scored U by the
intermission. •1t seemed like '
every time I cut, I was open.• What didn't help the LPGA
pros this year was the rain,
which made NBCC play longer.
Even though the blue tees
Very quietly, you see,
without any media fuss, Nelson
posted up last year against
6-foot-O big body Chris
CandUsh every day in practice,
then Dane Plock. today's Cal
State Pullerton two guard, was
Nelson'• cbief competitiop. on
the outslde for double trouble.
What transpired for Estancia was a double
threat, imlde and out.
Nelson drained three three-pointers, hit
seven free throws. But his biggest damage came
underneath off screens, scoring eight layups.
. played at 6,598 yards and the
reds played at 5,796 yards, the
female pros were several strokes
off the pace.
It's virtually impossible to set
up a golf course that is equal for
both females and the young
PGA Tour pros who regularly
cruSh the ball in the 300-yard
range off the tee. •u we had aenlon and LPGA
players competing, it would be
easier to set it up fairly, but with
these young guys, it's tough,•
said Rohrer, who played With
Newport Cluslc champion John
JobafOI\ the second day, when
Johmon shot 5-under 66.
•'(Jebmon) bits the ball a long
way, ao qui8IUen about it,•
Robiijt a.ided. "You can't push
the teel back far enough for a
guy like that."
Corona del Mar High product
Brlc Woods, a Newport Clullc
v at1ran wbo, gNW up playing
~· lilld Uds ·bef~ teeing
•1 tblnk~ llMcb ii E'~"f ..,•.::t::-,. .... Pei ... lt'•
~ .,...., aa FU coune .
..... .....,. ....... lt'I~
•(Nellon) is probably the hardest guy in our
league to guard, because he has the total
package," said University Coach Mike Dinneen,
wha.;e team was blitzed for 40 points the other
night by Nellon. In the same gymnasium.
ironically, as Eagle teammate Brandon Cuillas'
•When they told me after the game I had 40
points, 1 was shocked. because it didn't seem
like that much,• said Nelson, who shot only
50% in that game from the free-thro~ line.
• SEE NELSON PAGE 82
L------~-~----~--------------~~~-----------------~-----~
Barnett 'satisfied' with effort
•Newport Harbor coach gives his team.
a good report after 12-4 rout of CdM.
By Jim W•tters. Dill/y Pilot
• J
QUOTE OF THE DAY '"''re hoppg "' htwtJ a»M 4UHlll U1ltlt a ptJltd. Now. we Med U> Ir.Hp on taking can <f'~ ... •
NEWPORT HARIJOR SOCCER COAQf ZIAD KHOURY
• " I I I \
Chatinan to Kent Sta~
KENT, OH. -Standout running back Charles Chatman of
Costa Mesa signed a letter of intent Tuesday to play next season
at Kent State in Ohio thi5 fall.
Chatman, a two-time All-Mission Conference selection ot
Golden West College, rushed for 1,010 yards last Sea.son, ~
ing the first Rustler running back to top the magical plateau in
seven seasons.
Chatman was a standout at Costa Mesa High, rushing for
2,319 yards in bis last two seasons with the Mustangs. He was
chosen the Daily Pilot Newport-Mesa District Male Athlete of the
Year as a senior -also garnering a first-team All-State.selection.
-~ -• •.
I
EAGLES -BOUN CE::
BACK WITH 57 .. 4 .--
1 •
WIN OVER ME SA :
• Estancia leads by 25 in the
third quarter, before cruising
to 27th straight victory over
cross-town rival Mustangs.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Prior
COSTA MESA -The Estancia High
boys basketball team released a little
pent-up frustration Wednesday night
against a team that has experienced
more than its share of same. ,
Rebounding from their first Pacific
Coast League loss to Laguna Hills Fri-
day, Coach Rich Boyce's Eagles faced a
6-5 deficit, before outscoring host Costa
1 Mesa, 31-5, during a stretch that
spanned more than 13 minutes.
The result was a 37-12 lead midway
through the third quarter, which led to
a 57-45 PCL triumph, extending the
"'*J"'-"' I • '• Estancia at Aliso Nigue •
University at Costa Mlllll ;.
Laguna Hills at Laguna Beach _
Eagles' winning streak over their cross-•
town rival to 27 games, dating back to 1982. •
"Our defense is what hurt us against Laguna Hills (a 65-59 r~d
loss),• Boyce said. "But we picked it up in that department tonig?.t.
(Senior point guard) Selwyn. (Mansell) did a great job defensively;ID
the second quarter and that sparked us. We missed some easy st.ts
early, but once we got it going, it just snow-balled into a huge roll.
Boyce also credited the renewed intensity of senior Brandon Casil-
las, who parlayed what Boyce termed bis best two practices of the s¥-
son (Monday and Tuesday) into a game-high 15 points, including eight
of the Eagles' nine in the opening quarter. •
"I felt like I had to ~ep up my game,• said the 6-foot-6 Casillas, 'Who
added six rebounds, four assists, two steals and two blocked shots.
Mansell had 12 points during the 31-5 surge, while Casillas had
eight, James Dawkins 11 and Sam Nelson eight.
Mansell (four rebounds and three steals) and Nelson (eight boards
and four steals) each finished with 13 points, while Dawkins (six
8 SEE EAGLES PAG~82
""I .. . ...
THUJtSOAY, FalWAltV &. 1997
GOLF
~UEDFROM81
long."
Add wet condltiom, and it
w~ even wane.
''Rohrer said ax to eight LPGA 'ii mostly thOM livtng ln ornia, will continue to play
ture Newport 0an1a. ~· Cathy Moc:kett. Peart · and Muffin Spencer·Devlln
have played two years ln a row,
·W~ Mockett (Newport Harbor
:J!l).gn ) is the only female to play
~years as a pro.
. ~,~ockett, the tint female pro
. ~pete ln the event in 1995,
, :yed from the blue tees in the
· fa'flj' that year. That's a difficult
~~to break ground, but
.!ilfftcilett wUl always be
remembered for her legendary
*.~h.
• !'t Q .... ~_ ~ -:m one of the m ore algnlficant
pto-ams affiliated with the
Toshiba Senior Classic (March
10-16) at NBCC, the National
9.fslexia Researsb Foundation,
~of the event's designated
-Carities, will host a tournament
Q.n St. Patrick's Day (March 17).
1--i ~ ~ach participant plays nine ;Wes with a member of the ~hiior PGA Tour and nine holes ~ a celebrity in a shotgun
~· while playing on the
~e. exactly the sai:ne way it
~!!}?Jd out the previous day pn
~N for the Toshiba Senior ~sic.
.-. 'fhe cost: Only $100.
~, ·But here's the catch: Each
Ail\oteur must pl~dge to provide
~um of $1,000 to the
ty -through small ~ritributions from friends,
•\vorkers, personal funds, or a
itunbination of the above. ~·'hie charity will pay 15 Senior ~ pros to stay an extra day ~playin the unique pro-am. 11\t'ie local pros will be added to
~g the total to 18. -;.,,.~Amateurs will also be invited
.ql! private party on LidB lsle the
night before with jazz pianist
~e Kole as the
~tertainme~t.
.... 1) 'betails: Call 642-7303. . a
.;;,.,~ou Instructor Dr. David ~right, a PGA Tour psychologist ~.~ instructor, will explore golf's
~ptal side Feb. 15 in a half-day
clinic at Pelican Hill Golf Club ~ed MMind Under Par."
;v-the clinic is tailored for
. ~us golfers interested in lb~er scores.
~:S a 22-year member of the
cal faculty at the USC
.$dJool of Medicine, Dr. Wright
~lieves in a hands-on approach
Wapplying mental strategies.
Space is limited. The cost of
'$.100 includes lunch, tex1 book
~i#'tU other materials. For info: ·.saia 460-8982. ;;-., Q
·~, .,: Volunteers are being sought
lQt'Ule Toshiba Senior Classic in
tp~. areas of player and event
Ylospitality, transportation,
marshaling, VIP services and
·Qtner needs, according to
$\ephen Wagner, tournament
~or of Orange County's only
~event.
~We want county residents to
take ownership of the Classic by
1<=!,vely participating in the
~ament's success," Wagner
·said.
;" ·Those interested in learning \·mwe about the 40
118Price-oriented, volunteer "4t~ories or advance ticket ~tion should contact
'J!'lDnament officials at 646-9007.
.-~ .. .
~D DUNN's club golf column
ars every Thunday. .. d,.
~I
-:tJ..W ATE R POLO
'>"1 r
''L ¥ • HIGH SOtOOL GIRLS : .... ~Harbor 11, QN 4
;ch el Mar O 1 2 1 • 4 Jl~rt Harbor 2 4 4 2 • 12
Q t•~· Hardt 2, Nalbandian 1,
~ 1. Saves: Gentry 5. •:--"srport twbor · Manderino 4,
, Swain 2, Cohen 1, Miiiiken 1,
1. Saves: Kennedy 9.
· Mela 12. L119'1M Hiiis 7
ills 132 1 ·7
esa 1 6 2 3 • 12
HHls -Kim 3, Shu~ln 2, M. ~li'lel 1, Kazemi 1.S.ves,BoukAl6.
~ lt•
Mesa • Alastuey 4, Grublskh 2,
A. Howse 2, C. Howse 1,
1. Saves: Lombardo a.
• QELSON
• Woodbriqge's Burgess & Co. too much for Sailors in
86-58 Sea View League victory on winner's floor; Tars
still have solid shot for third, but it may take 3-0 firiish.
point.I. Warrlor guard ~ Stovall
(uncommitted to a mPege) ICOrecl 21 nahlbi.
All three had i1aml ln Woodbridge'f1;ii:t
opening nm.
•When we play tbat poorly, we let a good
team look tea1ly good.• Hint Mid.
IRVINE-It was cWficult for Newport ~
bor Hfgh's boys basketball teem to mix a
one-night reality with tomorrow's long-
range playoff plans, especially with Wood-
bridge's Warriors whamming and slamming
Wednesday night.
"Once we get into the open court,"
Woodbridge Coach John Halagan said, "we
can be a ldt of fun to watch."
The host Waniors had slam dunks in
three of their first five baskets, by three dif-
ferent players, an early sign of things to
come for Coach Larry Hirst's Sailors, who
concluded on the bad end of a Sea View
League blowout, 86-58, but remain alive for
a postseason berth.
"We've got to go 3-0 the rest of league
now," said Hirst, whose team (12-10, 3-4 in
league) never experienced a lead against
the Cb.ris Burgess-led Warriors (19-3, 7-0), a
school ranked No. 2 in Orange County and
No. 1 in CIF Division ll-AA.
Tbe Sailon play Corona del Mar, Irvine
and Bl Toro in their final Sea View contests.
They need to win all three to make th&'play-
offs .
"(The Sailors) I think will make the play-
otts out of our league, because they have a
great shot at going 3-0," said Halagan,
whose team shot like champions from the
floor, draining 16 ot 21 in the firSt half (76%)
-including a mllllled slam dunk by Burgess
-and 34 of 48 for the game (71 %).
"It was a Wednesday night, and the gym
wasn't full, but we still came out with a lot of
energy,• Halagan added.
Though Hirst was frustrated with his
team's lack of execution, it was Burgess who
took the Sailors out of it early.
Burgess, Woodbridge's 6-foot-11 Duke-
bound senior center, scored 21 points and
had 10 rebounds, five blocked shots and
three assists. His teammate, Cal Poly San
Luis Obispo-bound Brandon Beeson, had 14
"These are the gameti, as a coach, you
really love sometimes, more than the mar-
quee games, because, let'• face it, Newport
Harbor has played well lately," · Halagan
taid. "l was real surprised by (the outcome).
It we let them luµlg around, they're going to
give us a ball game."
The Warriors didn't let them hang
arQund. They built huge leads near the end
of the second and third ·quarters, 42-13 and
64-30, respectively, but the 'la.rs closed the
gap each time when Burgess, Beeson and
Stovall rode the ~ch.
Danny Pulido 'of Newport Harbor, the
team's 6-5 senior who earlier in the day
signed a football letter of intent with Ore-
gon, scored 17 hard-earned points, beating
Burgess around the rim on two occasions.
Matt Ceiley had five fourth-quarter
rebounds, Matt Jameson added eight points
and three assists, while Scott Archbold
scored nine for the Tars.
Twice in the fourth quarter, Woodbridge
built a 36-point lead, but the Tars came back
with Burgess & Co. sitting on the bench.
·EAGLES
CONTINUED FROM 81
rebounds) joined a double-figure
quartet for the winners (17-6, 6-1
in league) with 10 points.
Mesa (4-17, 0-7) outscored the
Eagles, 33-20, in th"' final 12:16,
but the deficit proved too large to
sustain its upset bid.
·we just couldn't stop their
run,• said Mesa Coach Erich
Allen, whose squad battled
Estancia to the wire in their first
meeting, a 51-47 verdict Jan. 17.
"Give Estancia credit, (it) real-
ly got it going. We were keyed up
to play and I thought our effort
was there all night.. But we got a
little frazzled there in the first
half." I
fy1esa committed 11 of its 19
turnovers during the Eagle explo-
sion, before settling down.
Mustangs leading scorer Matt
Chaisson, held scoreless in the
first half largely due to Mansell's
blanket coverage, busted loose
for 11 of his te~-high 13 points
in the final quarter. He also had
five steals, five rebounds and two
steals.
Bryan Leahy led Mesa with 10
points and added five rebounds.
PACJAC CoAsT UAGUI
~ 57, Cost.a Meu 45
Score by Qu.rt.r..
Estancia 9 20 12 16 • 57
Costa Mesa 7 5 9 24 -45
EsUnda • casmas 15, Nelson 13,
Mansetf 13, Dawkins 10, Simpson 4,
Toboada 2, Rainey o. Buonasslssl 0,
Rahimi 0.
3-pointers • Caslffas 2, Dawkins 1.
Fouled out -None.
Technicals • Coach Boyce.
Costa Mela -Chaisson 13, Leahy 10,
Do 8, Weir 7, Hylton 4, Galdamez 3,
Payne 0, Dickerson 0, Rice 0.
3-polnters • Do 2, Weir 1.
Fouled out· None.
SU VIEW UMiuE
Woocbldge 16, fMwport 58
Score by~
DON LEACH I DAILY Pl.OT
Estancia Hlgh's Brandon CuWu puts some defense to the face o f Costa Mesa's Bryan Leahy,
who gets off the shot despite wearing bis defender's skin. The shot went a wry and no foul
was called. to the apparent chagrin of the Mustangs, who dropped a 57-45 PCL decision.
Newport Harbor 9 10 17 22 • 58
Woodbridge 25 17 22 22 -86
Newport tt.rtMw -Cunningham 3,
Jameson 8, Pulido 17, Heartson 4,
Archbold 9, Wertman 4, llllngworth 6,
Gaiber 2. Sense 3, Kenney 0, Ceiley 2.
Sea Kings dropped, 78-53
• Second quarter does in Corona del Mar as Santa
Margarita pulls away for decisive Sea View victory.
RANCHO SANTA MARGARITA -The Corona del Mar High
boys basketball team is still looking for its first. Sea View League
win of the season after dropping a 78-53 decision Wednesday to
Santa Margarita.
The Sea Kings (4-19 overall, 0-7 in league) were in the ball game
early with the Eagles, trailing only 17-13 after one period.
CdM also played Santa Margarita virtually even in the second
half. The second quarter was their downfall as Santa Margarita,
outscored the Sea Kings, 22-5 to take a l9-18 lead at the half.
"We were right in the contest ln the first quarter," said CdM
Coach Paul Onis. •0ur defense got a little lax and they started
shooting the ball extremely well. That's a bad combination."
Brad Glogar scored 21 points to lead Santa Mar~arita, which
improved to 14-6 overall, 5-1 in league, to remain not on Wood-
bridge's heels.
Tun Thurman scored 12 points to lead the Sea Kings while
Cameron Conover and Nick Prlend added eights points apiece.
STANDINGS
•Woodbridge (19-3) 7 0
Nt>wport H,ubor ( 1.2 10) J 4
lrvinr ( 11 1J) 2 5 .,
• Clinched CIF Playoffs berth.
Woodbridge 86, NM'Pllft 51
5anta Margarita 78, cAAt 53
El Toro 70, Irvine SS.
Nelson scored half of his 2.f points in the
fourth quarter as the Eagles pulled to within
63--59 in the waning seconds.
•1 was just finding a way to get (the ball),
and either shoot lt or drive it," Nelson said.
"We just had to get baskets."
Quietly, Nelson'• game will be inspected
by gads of college coaches in the upcoming
months becaUle of basketball camps,
beginning lo March with the Adidas/
Rocldish Spring League in Culver City.
Nellon, who spend.I counUea boun in the
off-aeuon working oo hll shot. planl to
attend ~ with academk:s in mind tint,
boope W'Olld. Hll 3.6 grade-point average ii
a teltlmOny to his work ethic.
•ffe PMYI u bard u anyone out there," BoYW Mid. •PQr a bi4Jb ICbool kid. be can do
lt all. and he'I probably one ol tbie IDOlt
coecMble Idell rve been aroUnd. He llltw to,..... JOU My l:Dd be1l tmpa.nent WbAt
~t1111111m.· •
3-pointers • Cunningham 1.
Fouled out • None.
'Woo6ridge ·Burgess 21, Beeson 14,
Stovall 21, Tilton S. Martlnelll 2,
S. Bartow 3, P. Bar10w 3, Thomas 3,
Green 4, Sills 2, Delaney 4, Ozca.klr 0,
Stevenson 1.
3-polnters -Burgess 1, Beeson 1, S.
Bartow 1, P. Barlow 1.
Fouled out • Ozcakir .
SU V-LEMiul
SMta ~ 78, CdM SJ
Score by~
Corona del Mar 13 5 18 17 -53
Santa Margarita 17 22 17 22 -78
COron. .. Mar -Conover 8,
Friend 8, Peyton 4, Muckley 0,
Alshuler 4, Patterson 3, Franice 4,
Gorlty 2, lllurman 12, Cooper 6.
3-pt. goals -Cooper 2, Friend 1.
Fouled out none.
~ ~ -Palmer 7, Smith 5,
Williams 8, Rice 12, 5. Gloger 2,
D. Glogar 21, Kramer 4, McKeever 1,
Forehan·Kelly 18.
3-pt. go.ls • Forthan-~ 4,
0. G6oglr 1, 'Mll*ns 1, 1, Palmer 1.
Fouled out none. ,
....,. -~ --
I I' • ' . ' .. -- --j
<>range Coast
absorbs 95~1
hammering
at Riverside
•Riverside CC runs away
in second half to put Bucs
away in OEC basketball.
RIVERSIDE! -Six
players scored in
double figures for host Riverside
Community College, as the
Tigers bombarded Orange Coast,
95-61, in an Orange Empire Con-
ference men's basketball game
Wednesday.
The ngers drained nine three-
pointers, five by freshman guard
Michael Sutton (15 points), as
they blow open a 13-point half-
time advantage by outscoring the
Pirates in the second half, 51.JO.
Sophomores Jovan Robinson
and Duane Curtis scored 15
points each for Orange Coast (10-
14, 2-7 in conference), while
freshman Carlos Reyes had 12
points and Corona del Mar High
product Brian Fracalosy added
nine. Riverside improved to 17-
11, 5-4 in conference.
Rlvenlde CC 95, OCC 61
Or ... eo.t-C. Reyes 12,
FracatosY 9, Robinson 15, Curtis 15,
Moss 6, Hiii 0, Downs 4.
3-polnten -C. Reyes 2, Curtis 2,
Fracalosy 1. Fouled out· None. 1
IUwnlde • Sutton 15, McKinley 6,
Owens 4, Sampson 10, Faoner 16,
Richardson 18, Betham 11, Mart 2,
McKee 13. 3-polnters ·Sutton 5,
Betham 3, Owens 1.
Fouled out -None.
Halftime -Riverside, 44-31.
Pulido Ieam OCC, 66-59
RNERSIDE -WO
Dianne Pulido
scored 17 points to lead the
Orange Coast College women's
basketball team to a 66-59 victory
Wednesday at Riverside CC .
The Pirates (18-9 overall, 4-3
in the Orange Empire Confer-
ence) had three other players join
Pulido in double figures. Arlyn
Ra.mbayon had 16 while Traci
Nakamura and Norie Nakase
each scored 10 points.
Lori Pickering and Katie
Glenn both tossed in 18 points for
Riverside (11 -13 overall, 1-5 in
conference). occ ... ltfwnkte 59 Or..-c:o.t · Nakamura 10,
Nakase 10, Ovitt 0, Loshak 4,
Rambayon 16, Pulido 17, Takemoto 9,
de los Santos 0, Ringbjer 0, Grey 2.
3-pt goals -Nakamura 2, ~akase 2.
Rambayon 2. Fouled out -none.
Rlwnkte -Franklin 9, Pickering 18,
L.alonda 8, Glenn 18, Ybarra 6.
3-pt. goals -Pickering 3, Lalonda 2.
Fouled out: Pickering.
Halftime -OCC, 41-30.
Vanguards edged, 6-5
CARSON -The Southern BASl!BAu.
California College baseball team
(0-2)committed five errors
Wednesday, including a throwing
error in the bottom of the ninth
that allowed host Cal State
Dominguez Hills (1-0) to steal a
6-5 nonconfemce victocy. DofNnftuez Hiiis &. SoC.aJ Col .... 5
SoCalCo lege 201 000 110 · 5 10 5
Dominguez Hills 000 202 011 -6 7 O
Bailey, Taylor (6), Lowery (8). Steele (8)
and Pegg; Palka, Peinado (6), Wakefield
(8), Ramirez (8), Fimbres (8) and Mectr.
no. W ·Fimbres (1-0). l -Steele (0-1). 2B
-Newton (SCO. Figueroa (OH). 38 -
Newton (SCO. Pegg (SCQ, Koepke (DH).
Ace for OCC's Walters
COSTA MESA -
The Orange Coast
College men's golf team started
the season on the right foot
Wednesday, besting both Otrus
College and Mt. San Jacinto in a
three-way dual meet at Mesa
Linda.
OCC shot 377 to finish seven
strokes ahead of Citrus (384). Mt
San Jacinto shot 389.
Keith Achman and Brlllldon
Thompson tied for medalist hon-
ors for the Pirates, shooting 7•s.
Greg Walters and Dan Orris
(the son of Corona del Mar High
boys basketball coach Paul Orris)
carded 76s. Walt.en also knocked
in a bole-in.one on the 130-ya.rd.
No. 2 hole .
Steve Nonies rounded out
OCC's team sooring with a 17.
I
SOCCER.
CONllNUED FROM 11
tiMtli Woioidbddge goalie Doug Allen.
Waniar fuDbeck Jetf Jemen. however, drded
beNnd ADln to Med the ball away j\IR before it
<n••d the goal line iii tbe game'• 12th minute.
C.aMI aJlo poked e Chril WaldQ:i earner-kick on
Dlt iD tbe 18th minute, but a dtving Allen got a piece
of tbe tdt offering, then pounced on the rebound to
prewve the deedlock.
It wu one of four saves for Allen, while Harbor
tMpea> 1.acb Weill made five fairty routine saves. . •\Vben you play a quality team like Woodbridge, J!RI bave to capitalize on the cbanoes you get,•
KbOUly jaid, MWe didn't do that today, but that'• &oc-
«*'. •
Woodbridge Coach Jon Szczuka, whQSe squad
WM without the services of leading scorer Ylgal Ker-
aenbaum (12 goals) -sitting out his one-game sus-
pension due to a red~ ejection from Friday's 1-1
tie with m Toro -said both teams had their chances. •rm disappolnted to an extent, but considering
the way we played, I think it was a fair result,•
Szczuka said.
Newport defenders Scott Tackaberry, Eric Werner,
Brett Baker and Lee Hernandez helped keep the
Warriors at bay, while senior mid.fielders Garrett
Jansma and Junowich provided typically strong play.
PUIUC NOTICES
BRIAN POllOOA I OAl.Y Al.OT
Tars' Manuel Oropeza kicks away 1n close quuten.
•
Eagles gain 1 ~ win over Mesa ~ •
• Quintana's goal llftl Eltlmcla to a critical PCL win.
COSTA M2SA -The boys high school soccer teams from
Bltu.da u>d COit.a MeM locked horns In another tight ane
Wednelday,·finaDy WOil by the Eagles, 1-0.
-.,--·n•rr,=-
-:• ... J~(·_
Eltand.a (1'-.4 overall. .$-2 tn Pad.fie Coast League play) got
a goal from JON Quintana early in the second half and made COSTA MESA _ Tbe I
it stand up. Eagle goalie Brad Wayman stopped two shots on _...., Mesa High gids water polo
v1; the other net. Carlos Loza made 14 saves as Estanda topped t6e visiting Laguna • peppered the goal Hawk.I, 12-4, Wedneld•y to ..
"They UIUal.ly play us tough so this was nothing unusual," second place In the race f~.,,.
seJd EJtandA Coach Steve Crenshaw. •we took a lot of shots, Padfic Coast League tWe. ···-.
but not a lot of quality shots." : Tbe Mustangs (9-lO ~. I
With, three games remaining, Estancia is still in the hunt for : tn league) will play Dene '
a PCL title, but the Eagles will need some help to catch front-: Tuesday in a ~onleogue
running Laguna Beach. : before taking part Ina~
Mesa fell to 1-14-3, 0-7. : ing, 32-team tourney next : day, which will include
Sea Kings, Santa Margarita in 0-0 tie :.·. Harbor and Corona del Mar .. •• . Allison Alastuey scoTii!i{'~
RANCHO SANTA MARGARl1"A -Wednesday seemed to : game-high four goals in~~
. be the day for scoreless ties, as the Corona del Mar High boys ! tangs' win over Laguna~~~.
team locked up with host Santa Margarita. • Costa Mesa used a six~
The tie was the Sea Kings' eighth of the season -their serond period to break OAfll a
fourth in Sea View League play. 1-1 tie and propel the~
Ken Brown made eight saves as CdM improved to 7-7-8 lo victory. .. ... 1'
overall, 0-3-4 in league. • Game summaries/Page 82. : ') ~
~··('
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publishrr rt' rrwi. tht' righr to <'<·n~or. rt>rlosi.ify. ,,-d.,r or t'f'jr1•1
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Uitbilit y for nuy 1•rn1r fo nu ud\'rrtiSt'mr111 fi1r v.•hid1 it mu~· bf'
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ANTIQUES
.. -Beat E'ald• L4Ca11on Compare our Prlctt iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiii=miiiiiiiiiiiii ,,. ______ _
,I).. Bawcreat Fam Home. Near Trl·Squar•. R•lax Living Well I• * 1i X ·I ti t -a R • •---------$ 1000'• Poaalbl• AD S G Receptlonlat Top Dolla r Paid!
, . ~~~"~~ 4 bed, 3 balh. S447k. ;i':·ri:•tr Br :.::It••, The Beat Revengel 2 poola, gtd, tr .. ANNOUNCEMENTS Titplng Part Tlme. Al YERTI IN Travet Agency. Fun From 1800·1960.
6010
Nii.II 844·6373 u t 1552 • ec s. gar. now. Spectacular ocean c•bl•• nr b••ch. 2920 Home. Toll Free Dlaplait Job, great benefits. FT/ 1 pc to entire estate. II*~ Ellla Realty Group $1040./Lse 640.9408 and harbor vlewa MJI •pee 842-5858 1·800·898·9778. Ext. T•l•m•rketlng PT. Call 714/963·8747. Paintings. china, ., .., :.:.":!:'::..'-! ..,,9,...•-1t-•""ld...,.•-C~o-ve-S4-0-9-k.•-c.,...MJ_N_w_p_t_H_t_•_3_B_r_2_B_a available. Amenity-rich E.Sld• iielght• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, • .,.T..,,..·..,,..1..,,.39.,..8-lo,..,r.,,.u,...1,,,,11..,,..n...,.g.,.• . ..,.....,. a~I~~ ~:i1=e ov~~a~~~ _R_•_c_p_t_n-/S-.-0-r-.-,-.-r-y glsware, furn, etc .
.....,.._......,.ll illqal .2bd, 2ba. Bay view. Home. 2-car gar. Fplc, community with mil· 2Bdrm Front Duplex. HAPPY 81RTHDAY ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE telephone to bulld CdM Mortgage Co. 40Yr NB Res 673·6223
11.....,... . ...., "'*'"" 9 44-837 3 x 1852 nice yard, w/d hk·ups. lion dollar clubhouse, Oulet & Sale. $850. Forget on• lately? HB ad firm •r.eclal· new business. Anawer Clerical skill!', friendly,..._ _______ ~
e ll •.... 1,,,1,..1111111 Ellla Realty Group $1690/mo. 631-1680 health scpa. f tennl1 Call 845·8445 Never forget another I zing In bu1 ne11/ Incoming calla and 10. hard wo r k Ing . ---------.. • courts. on erence apeclal occasion restaurant guld••· •73 ... e •4 Q • t .._ -.u.i--E'a lde 3br 1ba h•• i t llb licit new busln•as v ... v • r n FURNITI1RE 6014 11 IXt. c-..... -. Big C•nyon VIII•• · .. · room, pr va • rary. again, guaranteed! seek1 outside 1ale1 -~IMll&&lldltuar 2/3Br/S•l••IL•••• Fp, dbl gar, RV pkng, Fireplaces & skylight•. NEWPORT Sp•clal limited time rep. Mu11 be aelf moll· through proactive tele· S•I•• Aasoc lor fine iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
.-.. ..... • • ....... 11 Open S•t/Sun patio, hkups. Sm pet Promontory Point bonua ofl•r. can now vated and organized. phone canvanlng af'd chlna·cryslal NB store. 7 C h S ti 1
.... -.-. -·· linll-Maaon Elll1 Realtors ok. $1385. 775-4335 VIiia• BEACH 2669 1~ d1•·111 714·288·3960 Xlnt comml11lona. Fun rHearchlng compeh· PT. salary ~ comm. pc ouc , e.c ona -• -.. --OR "' .. live publlcatloru. L•nore 840·8988 Apprx 12 ~ x ~ Good lltlM••lwt•i•tM-." 759·7700 E•at S ide lBdrm Ulla 1 B from S1350 hardworking environ-• Must work well cond, needs sltp cvrs.
-U lt....,...., wtll 111 Bluff• IE·Plan End paid . $500/mo. Cat 2 BOA from 51550 •18R From $975• menl. Send rHume: under deadline pres· T e lema rket Prr $250 548·0872 .._....,..,...,aftlrUM. Unit, Full Bay View, ok. Please call Agent/ CP en th 0 u ~ e 5 & 2BR 28A From $795 LOST 8r J..A. Whitney sure. Flex Hour1-0aytlm• B••c hwood Wall Unit ............... ~la.. Lg 3Br +Fr, Princlpal• Pam 548-5880 c orlporate ~u1tes av~ili D/W Incl. 60X30 pool. FOUND 2925 8855 Atlanta Ave. • Excellent oral and Only. $6.Hr +Bonus 31" lV. Blk sleep•r rill,...., IM la OW mftn Only. 720.1704 bkr ~ 1 nowt 0~8:~~~ No pets. Carport. '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Suite 300 written communication 714-225•9525 sofa, chase lounge, .. ..,.., ...,_. aut Ill w 7,!1~~a:sart · 1 Vlata Del MeH ·1• 0 H.B., CA 92647 1kllls. Wanted Flt-minded Ottoman. Creme bdrm
.. ..._. .. _1, • ..._.. ..... la t•I Fabuloua 5Br 4.5Ba HUNTINGTON Commpul)llmleesn •545-4855• FOUND: Par•k••t** r Fax: 114·960-0551 Str I d I h ·--_,.....,,... • ong sa ea, pre-peraon Mkt unlqu• r e s s er , 2 ·n g t
_,.,. .. ...,.... 11 • Oceanvlew, pool, spa. HARBOUR 2142 In the vlclnty of San Adm Alll aentatlon and aervlce health & beauty prod· stands. King a.i bed.
11111111,.,,....,...._ .,.c.n-Principal• On lit Por t St r • • t • Joaquin Hiiis Rd., NB Boat Salea/Rental akllls. uot, g reat money, Frig, BBQ, Mlcrowav•,
..... ..,1 , tlr calltUO Asking $700.000 Seawlnd 3bd/2ba w/ near Spy G lass, Co on water seeks • Minimum one year oppty. PT. NB oll & Plants. 675-3373
M ·lllUl1·•·U•'.-.For 955-1212 580·8779 W•terfront Beautlful vl•w. Totally remod'ld MISCELIANEOUS toward the new d•vel· neat, friendly ant 1alea exp•rlence. shwrm. Call 515·0595
Ille¥' 'I ••a OCllU,.._. F•buloua 5Br 4.sea 3bd, 3ba, d•n, dr, gar. flawless! S2550/mo. RENTALS gpment of 7~;._w~~rt w/poa attitude 10 help • Ability to think ere-
CllHUOlf42l:J511. · Oceanview, pool. apa. Dock av! poola. furn. Bkr 729·7248 ••••••••• oaal. 1 2 w/oatmr avc, •ales atlvely and wortc In a---------Prlnc lpala Onlit $3450. Agt 675-95051-S.--p_•_c_t_a_c_u_l_a_r_B_a_e_k LARGE REWARD procea1, r•ntals, light team environment. EMPLOYMENT
E le gent wall unit. Ivory
/mahog trim, Incl bar,
entertainment, china dlaplay. Gorgeous!
$750. 497-0415 Ask ing S7oo.ooo,_________ book1 , •tc. Frr •Detailed ori.nted. SERVICES 5533 ,-Bay View. 4bd, 3.5ba. ---------Loat .wallet, w/•x· Wk d FX • Self Motivated and
955-1212 580·8779 LAGUNA FR, All amen. $2600/ ROOMS 2706 lr•m•ly Hnllmental ~14t84~:2oe to: goal orfent•d. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Eat•t• S•I• Leather
C •t•d Community BEACH 21 48 _m_o_. 3_1_0._a_o_2_-7_oo_o_ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pictures. appt bk <&1---------Salary plus comm11• ••-•••• recliner $95. 8' couch .. Newer 3Br 3Ba w/2 Spec tacular Hom• CM E'ald• room, pvt Vona/Brlstol, S.A. 8/30 Admln. Aaalat•nt alon. Excellent b•nellt Please be aware that $75. Wingback chair
ear attached garage,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim On Sand 2ar+2 Mstr hom•, furn, s275. Please call: 557·5227. Bookk••p•r PT. packag• Including the llstlngs In this eat· $85. Maple end table
laundry rm, FP, com· Oce•nfront Condo Br, 3 Ba, 2 lps. s40001 n/p•ts, male pref. 'Fl•x hra. Compul•r 401k plan. Phyalcal/ egory may requir• you & coffee tables $25/ •
munlty pool/spa, and Spectacul•r View mo/lse 873·4858 714-842·5439 I••••••••• skllls r•q'd . Fax drug screening to call a 900 number ea. Lrg mirror 5 100. morel Low a1soclation 2br 2ba, pool, private LO NT resume lo: 850.9509. required. EOE In which there 11 a Misc dressers $25. S ES/ duea. No Mello Roos. steps to beach $1900. Sp•ct•cular Ocean CM/Nwprt Hgt• Area EMP YME Fax resume t o : charge por minute. (Vanity dresser, 2 end Os $259,000. 844·6590 or 646·8635 or 499·6035 and Channel Vlewa . Male pre I'd. N/S . I••••••••• Overstocked. with J . CroH tables , dbl head· 760-5000 Ext 112 Luxurio us 1br and Share bath , lndry, stutr? (714) 965·7 174-Fax board ) Mahogany
l
.F, SALE 01.ana Prosser, Agt lbr+lott with 2 1pa· llght kit prlv, $31011---------A call to Or Call (714) 965·3030 DOMESTICS 5540 dHk $200. Anllque
•-•••••••!Great Valuel VIiia NEWPORT clous balc onies. ahare utll. +d •p. EMPLOYMENT Classlfled C ciock1. 847·2411 Abun dant walk In Ken, 842-1770 . wUI hel~ AUTO ME HANIC Maple Table 40x30.
' -Balboa. 2bd, 2ba. Ilk• BEACH 2169 clout and atorage. Pvt lntrance, N.B. 5530 •..a2.1• 8 Newport Tire MPortohe1·1.'',• ..... Hh•t l~serwork, Fold down. Two 11"
!
'G9ERAL new cond. Sl89·000. Gas and t Id 1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -v 3000 E. Coaat Hwy -v " ... I II Ip 1002 Elll1 Realty 5~3271 . wa er pa . all amen, f•m pr•f, •• , __ ......;;...;.;;--..-..;."""---Coron• del Mar child care & flex hra. • ... en1 on1 a w ad1.
,,.llliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 2bd/1b• 112 blk to Walk to Balboa Island w/d, pool, Jae, se50 SD:J:la:a:a:z::icr;:a:::ax:JCZ:la:D:xla::r.w 714-844449• Mr1. Lanting 675·831SO 4 matching chalra.
t• •Newport Height•• beach. Garage, W/0 , and ~h• b•ach••· mo. Incl ulil. 645-1354 •SALES* " $350. 5~7888. Low Down Paymenttl Pvt patio. $1200/mo. Pre1t1glous r•aort •VALENTINES DAY• Teak Furniture
3br/3ba, den, pool, 1-800-978·2443 Jiving with 1tunnlng ---------Corporate Ae•nt We are open 11 nlghll So
1 .i-t. Attention
,...om• Owners
mini ocn vu. S525K aunsets and cool RENTALS TO Immediate hire, work from home. F(T, Min 5yrs •xp•r. you ean dance the night Direct from Importer
Grundy Alt. 675-6l8t 3 b r /3 b a Condo br .. zes. Apia 1tar1lng Newport Beach Sabre 1wayl Call for detalla: Whol•••I• Prices $2450/mo. Oealgner at $1350. 78SM84S SHARE 2724 We train. NOT MLM. Sell the beat Agency. Good aalary/ Teddy BHra & Love By eppt. 544-7288 I ""!'9 &
_ R.E. Agents!!
Showcase those
special properties In
O c eanfront Triplex Furnished 225.18111----------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii selling telephone equ~· ment in the b enefit package. Child Care L#3042010701 ________ _
Sl.295,ooo. 4620sq.lt. work 854.2781 .home Studio/Br VeraalllH 2 8 2B NB a-country•! M .. ·•e i'n the SA by Lu•"•nt Fax resum• 757·1229 ~714·549·2144~ MERCHANDISE s 100,000 Income. ---------Condo. Super clean. r • ..,.t .. u ""' or call L.lsa 752·5655
1 our Homes of the
· Mtek & Open Home
747.7795 B•itrldg• 2bd/2ba, Pool/apa. Prkg garago $350 + Yl utllltlea. Technologies. Receive qualified MISC. 6015
2·car gar. $1400/mo. $800/mo. 963·5037 Refer~n;;~1':~ulred. leads. Car & IBM comtotihle . HOTEL ''iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
d e published
Heh Saturday In lhe
Aeal Estate Tab. It's
Lease. Elli• Realty w/modem 8 MUS . r T~'!YBCALLUBBOA MERCHANDISE 1• ACREAGE 1125 844-41373 x 1552 CdM 1 block to beach. -••••••••• Wolff Tanning Beds
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2br 1 ba, pool, n/1mkr. Commission + benefita ! incentives. I • I o o k I n g f o r : Tan At Hom•
a.. effective and ~ ~rnfxpenslve way to
reach homebuyersl
9a11 our Classlfied
Feb 20 • M•rch 31 APARTMENTS neat. All amenltlea. FAX RESU ME •Front Desk Agent Buy Direct and Savel REDLANDS•Corner 8 obo N.B. 2br Ex~ S450/mo. 673-8139 • Clerlcal Support' ~~ ~ low Monthly Pmls
Ac C-4 Nat'I Fut condo wllh view FOR RENT to Each position 11 Frr ~• ~"""' Fr•• Color Catalog
Food•New HI Sehl furnished, FP, alarm,•••••••• CdM 3Br 2Ba Hae T.C J 209 571 1669 .and requires prevlou1 ~tlqunlo'50t Mod.... Call 1·800-71t·0158
• 'bepar1ment Todayll
• 842·5678
s • I l /J v • o w n e r fax, pool, spa, '93 Very clean. Fp , w/d, ltl:ZJCJ:ll:XI• J:l'::xl' CZ:D:.:l:lc:C.Ci:iiZ:l~a:dl exs>«lence. A 1ttong
•714-5 48-8309• Jaguar postlblt., ---------$575+ dop, 1/3 utll customer 1ervlc• •=dllllrsbuy:
$500/wk or $3,000/ CORONA Aval now. 723-e10t .------------------background dHlr•d "* ~ mo. w/car. Call Gisela I ' 844-e192 phone/fax DEL MAR 2622 •COM• Furn 2bd/2ba ncluding good phon• pollry,
•---------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii home In Harbor View and computer 1klll1, dd COIUM OI h Qorgeoua, New 2+2 Hiiia. Oul•t, pvt, cw1 neo1 ud1 and proles· =·bft:lnm.ftln ..
corner unit In Back Dwnatra Studio, new aecure. Gar & utll Incl. • ona emeanor a ~ B I/ 1 muat. W• maintain a ay w/large window• carp• pa nt. no kit. $925mo. Jim 644-6869 drug·fr•• workplace dlcol1lllwt and high c elllng1. S495. lnclda ullls, avl .,..,...,,,.... _ _,,,,~...,...,..,---Pl Onellem«"*'.,. Pvt gar, w/d, fp, frig. now. Erenl• 222·5775 N.B·** BEAUTIFUL Umbfng a nd perform pr• • • ;t..~icameo Shor•• G•t•d Community 3Br 2.5Ba Latg• kltch, employment eub· •Colldll.,..,..ae ~ S•c rlfloelll This w .. kend Only! Stu dio Aval 3/1. $750 fp, pool/apa, garage, Knocti Berry Fann ~ an experienced Mmunance llance abuH testing. • &ellt .... ~
·.r...:fW 3Ba pool horn• CORONA S1345. 789·1748 nrro. Lots ol cloaet/ w/d. S600 497""485 Superv1_.coO'l'ef1uovrP1umbk11Shop. Addioonal For .an appointment. ·~Cllfl
"oh th acr• lot. 3 prl· cab apace, poss 1mall NB lg Val f ibW pl1 call 845-5000 •·521 'FIA "\An 'l·711 ·~~t• bHChH. Back· DEL MAR 2122 Lido I• Bayfr1 4Br 3Ba kitchenette. Utl Incl. 1 br h ry, um, un· respons. •ties win include super'lllsln& our machine I~.,.~ _I\: ~'td openi to prlvat• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Dock aval. Avail now. per/no pets. 759-0665 furn, w/d. S450 Incl~• shop and pnp opentions. Ml!DICAL
• t ,1 ...
"·-----.HOUSES/
·eo!ONA CONDOS
·DBL MAR 1022 FOR RENT
COLLECTIBLES
6017
WYLAND Palnllng1
3 Orlglnals. Call Tony
714-722·9918
MEET
someone ~ through classlfted
-411 Furn/unf rn k/mo"'r utlla. Clean & ;ol•I Back office poalUon. ·.,· park. 3 car garage. 3bd, 1 ""/4 ba 1/2 blk u ' w '' near bch. 548·1 3 -65"-2300 •5"-3700 We're loolll"• ~ a multi-skill· .. 1· .. ividu•I wi·" at Spanlah bl·llngual w/ • ~9.000. 760·5000 to b•ach. Quaint, cozy .,.. u "' ... ""' "" • '" •------------------., •• f:xt 112 or 644-6590 cottage Olde COM. By LIDO ISLAND COSTA MESA 2624 Ni/81uffe Mature Fem ltast S ,.an hanch on experience in.P'umblna that up. 71 .. ·5"8·2273 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT .8 ~-Diana Prouer, Agt appo intment only. 3Bd 2Ba House. 2-car Br/Oen/Ba. Gar. Avl 2· Includes all phases from lnsullu lon to repair. O t f S I' l 18. S600/mo. uua Incl. " 0 •nt• • SS 0 5530 • •unnw & Bright 1BR $2500/r'no. 875-6434. garage, appl. Lg patio s•ftft Move In +$300 dep. 644-0263 A rlt knowf""' In Faahlon latand haa &iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii .. !lllndca1t1e condo by EXl!C TOWNHOUSB $1960/mo/IH 675-1811 v•• wo Ins e,..e of machine shop miftln1. l11hes aalea po1ltlon1 In our
-lM:b, FHh Isl. LH opt Larg• 2bd/2.5ba, fam Udo lale 4br, 3ba. 35' Cln, lg min cabln·style, Nwpt Hgte Exec hm, and drill pres.ab p<eferred. u Is mi&. da· arc and II' o utdoor jewelry l<Joak. '1!'PGI•· Pool, spa 1179,500. rm, 2 FP'a, 2.car gar, lBr, wlk-ln clst, pool, new 2·bdrm1 avt, lple, w/d, wtldina elCf*'lenc:e.AHt re~ experlenc. Is aho a h rly +com m . C a ll -OPRN SUN 1-4130 pool/t•nnl1. S1"'00mo. lot. New crpVpalnl. Nr carpet, nr bch, TrVSq. yard. S500./S600. + plus. kequires at least 3 -... ..... ........&.,_ n,_.ence. Poppy at: 844-1813 ~-1888 a.. t • clbhH. S3000/mo yrly. Bunkhouse Apt• 113 utll e•-AAaa ,-·...,...... ··-·, ..., ..
-,;;:,-_,_. •.._en MO-oeea Grundy Ritt 67., •1•1 Pat •'"2·1401 ~--·-..,.------·-. ...,. " . ..,.. "" P\eate Nnd resume with ubry his....,.. to: ICfM)tt'I RECIE.,TIONIST Ooean view Yrly. ·-·· 1 1 Fl 1 1 eo ' Front door 1 o slept to ltafnft1, Altftl "M-Drl, I03t hach llvd., rv ne nanc a ·
1'fOsTA MESA 1024 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 ~~~0~1s:%~':i1 ~11 ....... ,.art., CA tNlO. ~.!u2,,,0.~ 1"7~S:~
V I ~, ........ ~ .......... Wt,.......
! ..... H20 l•W .,.....__,,,_. _,....,,,,,,.. ..,.,.,.,_ ........... ~1 k Bay i:ondo. 2bd/
••• •· FR, pool. •pa QUIBT ~ ss-~ BUSINESS • JC! ..,1 !fnnl1 W9k. Jacki• -. -.ic.~''UD
A LASK A JCR ':.1 : ............. , .....
...... tclllallt. ClllllCP I t -~ .... _ ~,~;r.:;1;~;1 1 Pa•m .l\t:esa Apal;t:m.ents PJNANCE ---o-H.L. __ _. •1'·~home. eelt""buy, ~ Cal7 ....
~l!'ald• Coat• Meaa. So near 8c ya IO &r... --""-' ~. 2.a BA. flf•ptaee. 'That>s dx c-a;...~ -IUSINISS •
..... · .
... • J.. • • •
• j1bOI, 1pa, private •--. et~ 0PP011'lJNln •• Hrage. $158,000. , whcnyou liYc et aim .~ ~ (714)54N838. Maa amid the lull\ 2904 ...... . ol-*tded
GTON
1040
=" aedy p.lma. ITOPI eteoct.'Wlltw WOttdnt from holMI Xlnt Inc ome oppt • ............ ~1·::.c: ' .,
T AKE Us
FORA
llIDF.!
......... ~ ......... .
Knou's Rcrry Farm, Anlcrica's bc:st
known :ind tn~t succC$$fttl independent
theme p;trk, h:t~ opening." for:
Ride Operators
Ucsidcs worki ng irt a fun RtlU<)fla,hcrc,
you 'II have the ch:u,cc to earn free
tkkct~ to '"" park and ~ct ,rear
diKmmts on Knotr"J nlCrchandiM:.1\11
c:andidata must be at lc;ut l 8 ycan of•· Appij in pcrM>n at
tf\c Employment Office: 8039 &Mii ••IL• • ...,.. Prtrt,
,.,. ,. 4,., "'·· ,.,.. '"· Or, ,.,,
(114) '9-ICNOTI'.
ACROSS
1 ~cotored
7 AwflA 10~y-
14 Mai UMd for
15~
18 Dutch cheese 17 Infant's wear
18 s.ize
1t Celebration 20 I toepltal
vdunleer
23 Oef9c:tlve vehicle
26 Cheerleador s
27 ~salon
29 Done
2t -P•n Alley 30 "Norma -•
31 Greenet'f 33 SCarlet
3" Patelll or
Whitman:
abtw.
• \37 UK, part 38 • -lolly to be w1ae·
39 Unretumable
MfV9
40 Militaty add! 41 Hwv.
42 Ma~e lace
43 Quest
45 Nourished 46 IASmonlh
47 Actress Archer
14
WANTED
TO BUY
48 Fout resin 6 t Slreel In Paris
52 9eflind
53 MutYlmy In "The se~ 57 Weddirig
58:i~nfy atr
82
83 Armed Conflict
64 Presaed
65 Anllered animals
68 CQ111C>OSer
Gershwin
67 Fr11nz or
HOPt>Gr
DOWN
1 Cushion
2 Aclreas Ml'ICGraw
3 Genetic:
mateoal 4 Parachute part •
5 Sha,.'1 home
6 ·-Between Two lovers·
7 Tree ol lndla
8 F10oded 9 Mortgage, e.g. 10 Sineft .
11 Expert
12 Provide lood
13 Manicurist's
board
2t Most arid
22 Ubraiy user
23 Sweetheart 24 Oocaslon
25 Combine 29 Gr~ of three
30 Happen again
32 says
33 Descend a cliff 34 Scfawny
35 Speek one's
36~en.al
limes « Paella
Ingredient
45 Fencing moves
'46 -boreelia
4tl Ovettlead 49 Iman, e.g.
50 Edge 51 Airplane
tracker
52 BumlnQ
SC Green-lleshed
fruit
55 Roman poet
59 Lodging Dlac:e 60 Luau garland
61 McMahon and
Sullivan
JEWELRY, FURS JEWELRY, FURS .
6019 & ART 6025 & ART 6025
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Sold Out Print• 'rO MY VALENTINE!¥
-
Nonh·Soulh vulnerable. We•t
deala ..
WEST
•QJ94
c.::i AJlO
OJ78
•QJ7
NOB111
6A 101 ~KQS
OK10 8
•AKl3
EAST
685
c:>7 5
OAQ8431
•984 80l11'H
6K732
Q8 8 84 2
0 5
• 10 C5 2
1'11e bidding:
WEST NOR111
INT Dbl
PaM •o PAM
Opening lead~ Sill or o
It i11 not only the Seabees who •do
the impouible." Accomplished dum-
my playett frequenUy do t.he aame.
Thia deal cropped up in a local
lour nament in England, where
Eaat-Weat. were playing 12-14 no-
trump opening bids not. vulnerable.
East.'11 jump lQ three diamonds over
the double W08 preemptive a nd
South's free bid of three hearts
could charitably be deecribed a11
'imaginative.' North's raise lQ game
cannot be faulted even if t.he king of
diamonds proved w bo worthlcu,
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1997
MARINE SLIPS CHEVJtOLET 9045 M!ICED!S 1130 U4
DOCltS 7022 1-illlll-iiillli!!I••
iiiiiiiiiiii••liim 8t' Ca..._. 49tt orig '7• 480S L 811(/blk. ..t "--~
80' 80AT aL.l~ ml. ShOMm cond. AJC Full chrome trim, llmae.d Hunl4W ,..-
N.8. HatbOt. Pflce Blk/Blk. Mu•• SHI whit, • .,., •. Both loP9 = : ~~
negotiable. Terf, $5500 720.t 1185 lmmac. All re rd a since S 2 1, teo. Ml
(3t0) 28 ... 890 new. A collector1 catll Vlelo Land
80' AVALON MOORING CHaysr 1::n 9050 O n 1 Y • 1 t • t 5 ° 1 •38tMl7S0...._1
lneld• location. $375K A ~· 854-2009 ltiiii"'~;;;~~~;liiir
West led a low diamond and the Private P.ny 548-9338 , '•3 180E 2.6 engine. 081.~ ~~~~c::'•9,.
ten lost to Eut'a queen. The eiahL For Sa le 2 Newport 8 9 LeBeron Conv 52k ml. 1 pok ml. prlttln• con!2ii, •
o( 11padea wae returned, and dum· Bay IT100flng1·1/thore Red w/Blk top, AIC. ••tended warr. Full loaded, etc.
my'• ace captured Weat'e jack. l /bay for 50' boa1. Am/Fm, Loadadl 36k power, black, exc Mlaalon V1• ...
Declarer came to hand with a dla· Nr pavllllon/gaa dock. mllea.$6000. 530-1941 cond. 120,500/obo. ""•' 3e.s;..a.,..:.:
mond ruff and lf!d a trump lQ the S 1 5 k /b 0 t h 0 b 0 pp, 799•9995 '93 LW•
queen, which held. The king of dia· J~ 714-438•2090 DODGE 9065 818-444-9 5•1 Only 42k. Ab~
monde wu covered by the ace and S llp for 42' + boat iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 11•w 1e'•1 E..v n $t3.00 per 11, easy ---------sheepskins ruffed, and Weat was now marked acceu, 111nt location. '92 llt••lth 40k mis, NISSAN 9150 Mlaalon vi.IO
wilh eve~ ol.Jter miuing hjgh card. 714-875-8128 mint cond, 5·tpd, tint, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Rover 385-8
Weet did ae wcill aa poaalblo by w ht w /b I k bra . · · wi''-h fh h $11,900. 875·3291 '84 Quea t OXE '94 Count~ 0 n111ng w1 t e ace o ea.rta on l e ~PERS, RV'S, Loaded. Xlnt cond. ml. Black, ' next round of trompe and returning XI t f 11 b d g 111
a heart to the king. When declarer LERS 8014 FORD 9075 s1~.ooo.8 ~4~.9i~r1. m~~n:oof, ~tc.
ca11hed the ace and king of clubll, • Mlaalon Vl•IO
West could Me an endplay looming. 1U Suncreat 27' 1 Rover 3 8 5-8
Hoping par tner held .the ten of ownerl lmmac, N/smk/ '80 Ford Courier P/U OLDSMOBILE 9 155 •95 Defen cJube, Weal correcUy unblocked the ,p11. Generator, A/C, 5 spd, calm whit. Soft top, only
queen and jack. Unfortunately, TV, VCR. CB. On bed. Given 1011 of TLC. Grill guard. A
declarer held the ten and, when Lo·mla. Many xtraal Very economical '87 Cutlasa Ciera Running bo clube broke 3-a, the table's long club Ore deall Reduc ed transport. Must seel 4dr, 4cyl, 'pwr atr/brk, Yellow. 1 32 •
Wftll ealabliahed. Declarer exited to 13 2 • 750 OBO. Sl .SOO. 788-0552 A/C, AM/FM. Grat carl MIHlon V1•IO Land 894-2770 •88 Mer kur Xratl $2700. 979·2703 Rover 38tMl2M.,, with a low spade, and the queen of 1 spadea wu the third and lasl trick Red, AT, •nrf, full pwr, 1988 DEL TA 88 '98 4 .0 SI!
(or t.he defeoden. AIC. stereo; new Ira, Royal Brough•m 7600 ml, 81"k • AUTOMOBILES tmg belt. Car c:over. 4 Fully loaded, V6, dark beaullful. Almost~ Note that if Wesl does not jetti· cyl. A beaulyl Muat blue with light blue In· •FLAWLESS•
son the club honore, the defender see. $2700. 786-0552 lerior. 94,ooo miles. Mlsalon V1•IO ~
will have to win the third round of I---------, 9 1 F ·t 5 0 x LT $3,000 or best otter. Rover 385-8790 1
clubs. Now a lead away from the ACURA 9010 Truck, vs. at, 4.spd, 714 574-4267 '98 4 .9 Rio.IA 1
queen o( spades will allow declarer ac, alloy whls, lull Metallic beauty• on~
to win the Len of 11padea and long 1 pwr. $8500. 963·0876 15k ml. Every ooncel..,. club in dummy, and the king or '9 0 ntegra Xlnt cond, PLYMOUTH 9165 able option. lllaalo" 1 owner. A great value d R spades in hand for 10 trick.a in all. (ii $5,595. 281·2520 HONDA 9085 VleJo Lan °vep" •385•8750• t '9 2 L • g • n d LS '89 Voyager LE 6cyt, ---~----• Learn l o b e a b ette r b r id ge Coupe D2k twy ml. , auto, all power, am/fm •9e Dlacoveryi,
p layer ! Subscribe n ow to the Xlnt cond. loaded. 9 5 Civic DX Blk stereo, cc. AC. 57k auto. ABS, tow •
Goren Bridge Letter by c.alUng $19,900. 673·0981 Coupe. 22k ml, atereo ml. $6975. 760·6580. 11
1
411k· CmClle' sletc5.2 .
(800) 788-1225 to r Information. cass. at, 111n1 condl
Or write to: Goren Brldre Let-'9 5 lntegra GS·R Ad/ $1 1,995.obo 644-8623 ---------MIH lon VleJo ... p 0 Bo .... 10 Chi JU blk lthr Int, loaded! PONTIAC 9170 Rover 385-8 _ .... ...,r, • • K.., • ca(o, • Mini cond. 10k mis.---------._
60680. Alarm, S 18,500 OBO. JEEP 9 110 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1------::;:a:-r •-----------------~--------• 552-0888 '94 Sunblrd Coupe VOLVO _......,
•••••••••• .. •••••••• ---------'98 Gra nd Cherokee Mell blu, V6, AIT. factliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PETS & 11 BMW 9030 _Blk, automt. loaded I warrt. 19k mis Im mac. ' 9 2 v 0 1 v 0 8 9 o
ANlMALS 6049 GARAGE SALES TRANSPORTATION Xlnt condl $25,500. .57500. 4 98·2823 W•gon One owner, local car, books & liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '80 3201 Sunrf, White Only 7k mis! 559·5926 '9 5 T r•n •·Am GT rec ords, 3rd seat,
AKC Lab Pupa 10 ---------BOATS w/tan leather. 5-spd. Gr•nd Chero kee Grn T·top , automt. leather. ABS. sunroof.
wks. Papers. Cham-BALBOA 7011 Runs greall $1750 Laredo 4114. loaded, CO, lthr Int. Loaded! alloy wheels. Hard
pion line. $350 to IOV· ISLAND l•••••lll••iil~o~b~o::_. ~·~7~1~4~-6~5~4~-6~1~0!,!7 like new, all records. lo-ml, custm trs, whit , Io I I nd I XI n t
Ing homes. 875-3037 6106 19 4 8 3 3 CSI Full pwr. $16,500. 845·1418 uhaust. Xlnt cond. condition. $17..,8~. =iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii 523 900 272 8103 Mission VlaJo L~JI Coc ker Spanlel 1 yr 1111 Xlnt cond. Must see. • • Rover 305-87181: o)d puppy, great with Moving Sale Furn, OR All ave rcds. $7000. LINCOLN 9120 children. very gentle. aet, end tables, JIOBU 759·5598 TOYOTA
neutered, all ahota clothes, art. plants TAart'SISll'.M iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 9210 VOUSWAGEN 9U5
current. Irvine tags. 800 Balboa Ave i:A • 1 __ ,.... BUICK 9035 '89 Mark VII LSCliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillii 714-78e.4119 Sat. only 7am "'1u1~' ........ nonr 1• &. R~rs lmmac ~ond. loaded '88 Coroll• 4·dr, '87 Cabriolet, ~-~. Sunday Only 8 ·2 Rcsronnoru& 42k miles. $8,500. 5spd, Blue In/out, red/wht top,• (6w
TV ELECTRONICS Furn, rug1, bed/bed· lt<nO'+'l1ion1 '83 Century Blue 844-8933 85k ml, 53250.obo miles, eek, Xlnt .-41
• 1 dln.g, TVs, clthg. Cash ScMdukd Main1cnann grey. Good running E 844-2822 ...
STEREO 6080 only. t28 Opal Ave rrognnu condition. Sf.200. ---------.,.._v•_•...,..........,.......-...,.......---SS300.obo saa ... 1127
M.,incl'lumb1ng 884-5808 MAZDA 9 125 '88 4 x4 P /U w/ahell.1--------· "-.....
rrofcuional Captain 5 spd, AM/FM casstt, ~tvicn CADILLAC 9040 '82 Mazda RX7 QSL tint. cstm whls, lift kit. * CABLE TV * CAPT. RICKA 1 55900. 963·6194 Deecramblers Everything muat 901 DARBAROSS1 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 5 spd, llhr lnl, snr · Lowest Price a! Furn. cloth Ing, misc. U'iCG Merchant Masttt '90 Sevilla v-s A/T. new eng. trans, clutch . .,.., ""'9"""2,..-....,,c,...o-n-v-•-r-t...,l..,.b...,I-•
1 Year Warrant1 SaVSun 7:30am-4pm 847-0•70 Full pwr. lthr Int, CO, lots of xlras. ><Int Celle• AC, 5spd. all
Visa/MC/Discover 340 Cabrlllo • ., tint, A/C. Low mis. condl 52•950 OBO. power, am/Im cass. $12,000. 842·7088 ....,,..,,,..,,.,,..,..,7,.,,8,,,.e..,,..4_2_2_7 __ 1 CC. Car phone. C.0 .0 . 30 day trial Huu• 4-Famlllf Sal• •90 MIATA $13,500. 760·3146
COSTA MESJ\ 6124 Can't seem to
all th .. ,.,
get to ~ ....
repair joba .. ''· around the hou_,. ...
Let th• ":I
C....tllecl ·'. ~· PIANO CM Playhou1e
needa good u1ed
piano. 842· 1900
Limited Editions
Roger Tory Peterson,
"Scarlet Tangier";
Robert Bateman.
"~g Horn Sheep". Signed, w/museum
1·800·211·4125 Saturday 8am-3pm '91 Deville Brgndy t.ovely ¥Personallzed * * * 917 Junlpero 1---------1 llhr Int. l mmac, Good cond. Normal
c;:1 KEY CHAINS <::;i 'HllDTNE SLIPS II R d c --------Heart shape w/namel========~ ---------Ha.n&U loaded. Only 20k mis. m es. e onv. 4X4 9221
.. ,.. -.: .. ~
DlrectOfJ .-....
and rose engravings. Cable Convertera/ DOCKS 7022 $14,500. 498-2823 Make Offer. 760.1900 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii help you Ind . •
...llable help.
942-M78
T op Dollar• Paid For Records. Jazz.
Sountracks, otc.
Call Mike 645·7505. quallly framing.
Reasonably priced.
Please leave messg,
(900, 985-2007
Send S8.75·(shlp Inc) Deacrambl•• SELL '92 MX3
check or money order Starting @ $200. *Private Doc k* CHEVROLET 9045 Full~ Loaded '89 R•ne• Rover To: Hearts & Rose• Why rent when you can 27 n / • S8 ft / Immaculate! Only 75k local ml. ---------
P.O. Box 614 own! 1-616·785-3433 yourusedvehlcfe +· +· $11,800. 740-1262 Fully aervlced
W I C 9 9 th h I 'f' d Ez aces dock,ahp,bch '95 Corvette Grn w/ w/books & records. JEWELRY, FURS r ghtwoOd A 23 7 Whether you're b4Jr,lng roug c ass1 le *Al, 875.0040 * ---------RENT •• ART 6025 Or call 1·619·249-3006 or ••lllng Class fl-" 842·5878 tan lthr, 4 apd auto, urRCEDES 9130 S 17,450. Mlaalon Ul '"' • ""' Buy It. Sell II. Find II. loaded. 1 owner, 25k uu; Viejo L•nd Rover
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml ________ _l _________ j._:.CO:.v:.:•:.:.r•:..:a.::.11.!.y.:o.:ur:_n;.:.ee=d=SI •---------~---C_l_a_a_a_lfl_•_d_.__ mla. $27,500 760-1408 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil_ __ *_3_8_s.8 __ 7_5_0_* __ ---------
CONTRACTORS GARAGE ·sE·R·Vl-C·E--·1 ~;L~~uc
DIRECTORY
CLEANING
3528 SERVICES 3548 GENEML 3558 DOORS
•••••••••I Leak~ Showert Rep'd Regroullng & lnstall'n T & S Cl•a nlng Svc
Personalized • Ref'•
Free Est•Reasonable * 714-547.0519 * ACOUSTIC
CEIUNGS 3408
CEILING MASTER
•Acoustic Removal• Custom Te11tur .. Palnl
UC'd. Mark 838-7300
~ET
CLEANJNG ----------
L670130 Dean of Tile
673·8065 or 846-8526
Pager-227· 7191 Newport Tile & Marble
Fin• Cran1manshlp ... At Affordable Pr1ces.1_C_O_MP_'_l'l"'l:_a _s_J_5-5-1:.
Show.,s/Counlers/Flrs "'A~ Y
Natural Stone & M11ble lii~~====!iiiii Fptcs L.645486 842·2214
Farthing Int•'*" Kitchen/Bath/Re~ Rm Additions Vi-....C
l#560875 873·Ult18 -.
For making us the #1 Lexus
& Custonier Satisfaction In All of 0
Why?
Because we offer you our $500 ~~lt l!i>w P~~ 1,<?~~ "I~'~ eas_y.
You bring in your best.deal 0n ·a car wit 'lt .i~ Same M:S.R.R
•
and we'll beat it or pay you $500 cash!"
. .
Why? Beoause We Ate Tl1e Leader!
Only 10 Minutes From Newport Beach On Th£ New San Joaquin Hills Toll Road
F.S 300 ·