HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-02-26 - Orange Coast PilotSPORTS
Estancia boys falL
68-60 in CIF
LISTEN UP
Quesaons answered
in all lwnesty
. SeMng the Newport-Mesa communtty since 1907
uGo .and cut
carefully, but ·
cut. Cut deep
enough to
remove cill
the fat. Cut an
the frills. Cut
carefully. Do
not make us
bleed ... u
-TEAotER
BARU..llA WAGNER
DON LEACH I DAILY Pl.OT
Approximately 200 teachers of the Newport-Mesa Unlfied School District and their supporters fllled the school
board meeting room Tuesday night to fight for pay raises for educators.
__ Out iil force
NEWPORT-MESA
Approximately 200 teach-
ers, parents and others filled
the chairs C)Ild doorways of
the school board meeting
room Tuesday night to show
their support for teacher
raises and frustration with
proposed cuts of programs
to pay for salary increases.
•Tue negotiations team
itself acutely feels its grave
responsibility and the build·
ing pressure to resolve the
salary crisis,• said Linda
Mook , president of the
Newport-Mesa Federation
of Teachers.
•Tue lack of an ade-
quate salary increase over
the last four years has forced
us to rely on dedicated, con·
scientious teachers to carry
the burden of the district's
financial recovery,• she
said. •we must all realize
Some 200 teachers, parents urge board
members to take prudent course on
pay hikes and budget cuts. Trustees
vote to close Monte Vista school
8 Y M ICHELLE TERWILLEGER1 DA ILY P ILOT
that cannot contin-
ue.•
..-----. voted unanimously ~ to close the Monte
Barbara Wagner,
a biology teacher at
Ensign Middle
School, presented
trustees with a pair
of scissors.
~ Vista High School
site, which houses
an alternative edu-
cation program, but
postponed any
n. ..... _ ....... restructuring of the
"Go and cut care-
fully, but cut,• Wagner said.
·cut deep enough to
remove all the fat. Cut all
the frills. Cut carefully. Do
not make us bleed.•
Despite protests from the
audience, board members
.. program until April,
when the district staff will
give a report on alternativ~
education.
Several parents and
teachers had spoke in
defense of the distri~'s
alternative education pro-
grams at both Monte VlSta
and Back Bay high schools.
"U Back Bay students
had to return to the schools
they came from, they would
not, they would dropout,•
said Margaret DiVall, a par-
ent of an alternative educa-
tion student. "Take our land
if you need to but don't tear
our schools apart.•
Elimination of Monte
Vista's independent study
program was among pro-
posed budget cuts to pay for
a teacher salary increase.
Teacher Ellyn Olander
encouraged board members
not to eliminate elementary
physical education or music
programs to bankroll
teacher raises.
"A music teacher bas the
ability to bring a soul to a
• SEE RAISES PAGE 4
Residents
say pick
not poison
•Some in Westcliff neighborh ood.are
concerned that chemical spraying to kill
weeds will prove harmful to their pets.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
WESTCLIFF -Aggie Skirball spent most of Tues*
day morning doing anything she could to stop city
workers from spraying weed killer near her house:
She called city officials. She complained to the
workers themselves. She rounded up a few neigh-
bors to stand in front of the workers to physically stop
them.
•If we don't scream, nobody talks for us,• she said.
•1t•s a shame I have to spend this time supervising
this thing .•
And her tactics did, in fact, get some city attention.
General Services Director Dave Niederhaus, after
getting an angry call from Skirball, ducked out of a
staff meeting to calm things down at the spraying
scene in Westcliff.
Skirball, whose house sits next to the problem
weeds, and her neighbors said Tuesday marked their
second run-in with the city over what they call
"spraying poison.•
• SEE SPRAY PAGE 4
Irvine Ranch . .
to explain
buyout plan
• Water district will hold informational
meeting to outline acquisition for Santa
Ana Heights Water Co. shareholders.
By Susan Deemer, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -The Irvine Ranch Water District
has scheduled a community meeting tonight in an
effort to clearly explain its proposal to purchase the
Santa Ana Heights Water Co.
A competing proposal by Mesa Consolidated
Water District has confused Santa Ana Heights
Water Co. shareholders who are now unsure which
district to sell to and what their assets are actually
worth.
·we want to make our offer as dear to Santa Ana
Heights customers as we possibly can,• said Dave
Ferguson, Irvine Ranch spokesman.
Ferguson says Irvine Ranch offioals want the
small water company's shareholders to understand
the Irvine Ranch offer is the only legitimate offer on
• SEE MEETING PAGE 4
Faith healers ·of sorts I \ " I I> I
Pastoral care
volunteers administer
a dose of spirituality
for the sick at
Hoag Hospital
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
• 1lCN ~ ff»tlY Pt.OT
Pa.._. .. eo.g Memom1 Helpltal Pr•yterta caa eoant on
comfort Ira. Ile plllanl .entcee ol, lroaa left, Jeume Toban..
tbe Jin. DOD Oliver, Cbita Hall ud Martna ltlballlerg.
I \ It I \
ALMANAC 2
CLASSIFIED 9
PUBLIC NOTICES 8
SPORTS 5
LISTEN UP 3
WEATHER 2
\\ I \ I 11 I I:
If you're in the mood
tor a siesta today, you
may want to
head for the
beach. Enjoy
1he BODilitnQ
sounds of the surf
while dozing oft
under warm rays ot
sunshine.
s.ew.....,,...2 cam ,... 1oa11 NklOll ...................
plllCli In .. Ml. s.a
Ainlrtfa N• Int held
lilt Wiik in'°"' ......
1
Sailors Out
Sports
Newport Harbor's
Chapin Kreuter,
right. and Santa
Margarita's Josh
Davis chase down
the ball in the
Sailor's 1-0 loss to
the Eagles in CIF
action Tuesday.
SeePage 5
• WEDNESDAY. FE89'UARY 26, 1997
'.
THE SPIRIT OF COMl"ETITION ..
Costa Mesa's Nicol Paul, 60, ~njoys 'middle age' with zest -
and that .includes competing for the Ms. Senior America title
A fter she was named the fourth
runner-up in the preliminary
Ms. Senior America Pageant,
Nicol Paul shared her bQuquet
of flowers with her friends.
"Everyone who supported me, I give
one rose," said Paul in a thick Czecho-
slovakian accent. Paul barely qualified
for the 60-plus pageant,
red gown with a slit in the center, cov-
ered up too much, she decided.
"I just wanted the skirt to be s'ee-
through," Paul said, giggling. "You have
a long dress, but you still snow your
legs."
For the talent portion of the competi-
tion, Paul read the role of Irina in a
monologue from the play
turning 60 on Feb. 7.
Paul, who lives in Cos-
ta Mesa, is one of three
Orange County women
who will go on to compete
STORY BY SUSAN DEEMER "Gorky Park."
"I am happy with my
performance," she said.
•Some people had tears
in their eyes. I like drama,
•!•
PHOTO BY MARC MARTIN
in an upcoming state pageant.
The pageant supports seniors who
actively celebrate life in the "Age of Ele-
gance." The 13 contestants were judged,
among other things, on their elegance,
zest for life and valuable philosophy they
shared with others.
but I can do comedy too."
A Czechoslovakian native, Paul came
to the United States nine years ago seek-
ing political asylum from the former
communist country. How she arrived
here is a story straight out of a dramatic
movie:
r-------------------------------~ ! NICOL PAUL i
: .... : I I 1 +Mla1'~son~n. : fhm wftl'I hll wife Nlfm Md IGft I -.;1.1n1re11. . . :
+UMM•WFll'W': •Mygr.rid-:
mcilts .. tDbe1•-..... ~ :
Sllld Mt hllf • triUCh • r." went to : 8nd work Ma. twd. I I -------------~-----------------J as a memento. "I would never be able to
do that again. They shoot at' me. They
have to. I was lucky. Nobody knows
what to expect."
"I am lively," said Paul, who went
skydiving on her 55th birthday. "My
grandmother lived 108 years. I plan to
live longer. l am exactly in the middle of
my life. Life is fun."
The Czechoslovakian government
had issued her a temporary 10-day pass-
port to visit only Yugoslavia. With that
limited passport in hand, Paul decided to
flee her country.
Paul eventually found assistance at
the American Embassy in Vienna. She
spo~e no English when she came to the
United States, but she did speak five
Europeanlanguages.Shesaysherdesire
to achieve many things in her life drove
her to leave Czechoslovakia.
Although this was Paul's first time
entering a Ms. Senior America contest,
she won five awards earlier this year in a
contest sponsored by the International
Modeling and Talent Agency,
Nicol Paul placed fourth In the Ms. Senior America Pageant Sunday In Long
Beach. 'lbe 60-year-old Costa Mesa resident sewed her own dress for the event.
Paul is a statuesque blonde who has
designed dresses her entire life. The
white silk and organza dress she made
for Sunday's evening gown competition
was the second she made for the
pageant -her original creation, a long
She drove solo through a barricade
across the border to Vienna, Austria,
ducking bullets from border patrol offi-
front of her television set in the living
room of her East Side Costa Mesa home.
"It's not only fun, but it's an accom-·
plishment, • she said. "If I didn't have
this trophy l would go home happy. I was
disappointed with ones who didn't get a
trophy and disappeared ... in competition_
you should be happy for everyone.~
cers. '
"Things like that only happen once in
a life," said Paul who keeps the passport
An experienced extra in films and
commercials, Paul recently donned a
blue leotard in a Power Rider infomer-
cial. The exercise machine is poised in
Paul plans to dream up a. new dress,
study a new monologue and win a big-
ger trophy at the next Ms. Senior Amer-
ica competition this summer.
• EDITOR'S NOTE: Do you or some-
one you know have a landmark
birthday or anniversary coming up?
If so, we'd like to include it in our
Almanac section. Please call the
information into the Readers' Hot-
line, 642-6086, fax it to 646-4170, or
mail it to City Editor Iris Yokoi, 330
W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627.
You may also send photographs. but
please be sure to include a self-
addre.ssed stamped envelope if you'd
like it returned.
BIRTHS
Costa Mesa residents Clndy and
Andy Parsons announce the birth of
their third baby girl on Nov. 6, 1996.
At 1 :23 p.m .. Emily Andrea Parsons
joined the family at Hoag Memorial
Hospital Presbyterian. She was 20.5
inches and eight pounds, 10 ounces.
DEATHS
Most recent deaths as reported to
the Orange County Recorder's Office.
COSTA MESA
• Mary J. Thomas, 82, on Jan. 1
• Nadia Shkop, 54, on Jan. 3
East Coast Highway
water pipe approved
A new water pipe should be in
place by summer at East Coast
Highway and Jamboree Road
after the Newport Beach City
Council Monday approved buying
the pipe for $126,080.
The pipe that runs under Coast
Highway between Jamboree Road
and Promontory Point Drive broke
on Nov. 1. City crews then
replaced a 5-foot section of pipe
but found that the old pipe had
corroded.
The city must find the new pipe
and replace it by summer because
the state won't allow road con-
struction during the summer. City
staff reports said the new pipe
almanac
• Mario G. Durante, 76, on Jan. 3
•Esther E. Hartman, 91, on Jan. 2
• Julie M. Kaneaster, 75, on Jan. 2
•Kristin M. Ollie, 17, on Jan. 5
• Frank W. Iskra, 73, on Jan. 8
•William F. Koste, 91, on Jan. 1
• Anna M . Martucci, 68, on Jan. 4
• Dave B. Peacock, 70, on Jan. 4
• Kathleen A. Presley, 89, on Jan. 6
• Angela M. Berry. 48, on Jan. 7
• Fern M. Hart, 92, on Jan. 8
•William L. Kistler, 57, on Jan. 7
• Manuel A. Borba, 90, on Jan. 7
• Charles C. Collins, 56, on Jan. 6
•Diane M. Denoia, 37, on Jan. 10
NEWPORT BEACH
• Arnold J. Silvennan, 71, on Jan. 2
• Robert M. Hauck, 70, on Jan. S
•Ann M . Ryan, 91, on Jan.•4
• Doris M . Sessions. 76, on Jan. S
• Hugh M. Baker, 77, on Jan. 6
• Reginald F. Hayward, 79, on Jan. 1
• Lowell D. Knudson, 82, on Jan. 5
• Arlene L.S. Corey, 76, on Jan. 5
• Angie E. Anderson, 100, on Jan. 4
• Michael J. Ashe Jr., 76, on Jan. 8
DUI ARRESTS
The following people were arrested
recently on suspicion of driving
under the influence. These people
hav~nly been arrested on suspicion
of a crime, and, as with all such
crimes, they are innocent until
proven guilty.
NEWPORT BEACH
Robert H. Campbell, 18, of Seal
Beach
Kelly M. Rychlec, 40, of Mission Viejo
Christopher P. Barr, 24, of Costa Mesa
Wesley R. Granger, 65, of Orange
Stephen Finkenauer, 44, of New
Mexico
Travis M. Sproha, 24, of Garden Grove
COSTA MESA
Victor Cordero. 28, of Costa Mesa
Arturo Depaz-Elias, 27, of Costa
Mesa
Erasto Flores-Madariaga, 28, of Costa
Mesa
Jaime I. Sanchez-Cruz, 24, of Costa
Mesa
Ricky A. Bryant, 22, of Costa Mesa
Alexandra Baez, 24, of Costa Mesa
Ascencion Ura-Jimenez. 34, of Costa
Mesa
Richard K. Vann, 28, of Costa Mesa
Diego M. Velasco, 24, of Costa Mesa
Carey E. Call, 22, of Costa Mesa
Susan M. Olson, 35, of Cost.a Mesa
Anthony S. Martinez. 36, of Costa
Mesa
cityside
should be in place by March or
April.
Transfers limited to
students with siblings
Parents of elementary students
may not apply to transfer their
children to a different school
within the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District for the 1997-98
school year unless the studeµts
have siblings at other schools.
School trustees voted to contin-
ue the moratorium on intradistrict
elementary transfers at the Feb.
11 meeting.
Parents may request transfers
for elementary siblings and sev-
enth through 12th grade students
before April 19.
The Newport-Mesa Unified
School District will notify parents
by May 15 about the status of
their transfer application.
Lifeguard registration
deapline nears
Those interested in working as
lifeguards this summer have until
5 p.m. on March 3 to register for
tryouts at lifeguard headquarters
on the Newport Pier.
Registration forms can be
picked up at headquarters or at
City Hall on 3300 Newport Boule-
vard. The tryouts, which will be
held March 9, will include a 1,000-
meter competitive swim and a
1,200-meter competitive com-
bined run and swim.
REAQERS HQTUNE
642-6086
Mesa, CA. 92626. Copyright No news stories. illustrations. edito-
rial matter or edvertlsemems
herein can be reproduced with-
out written permission of copy-
right owner.
VOL 91, NO. J9
ntOMAS ti. IOHHSOH.
Publisher
, Aecord your comments about
the Dally Pilot or news tips.
AO DRESS
OUr address Is 330 w. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, <:allf. 92627.
CORRECTIONS
It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt-
ly COf'Te<t all errOf"S of substance.
Please call 574-4233.
Hpw TO REACH US
~.
The Tlmes Orange County
(800) 252•9141
~ a.lfled 642-5678
TEMPERAn.5
Newport Beach
65147
Balboa
65147
Costa Mesa
69143
C«on• del Mar
6"4146
Je5us Garcia, 30, of Costa Mesa
Francisco Cuevas-Salgado, 39, of Cos-
ta Mesa
Colleen J. Price, 30, of Costa Mesa
Shin Tamakl, 23, of Costa Mesa
Newton W. Kellam, 32, of Aliso Viejo
Jason C. Wilkerson, 27, of Anaheim
Lino Adame, 24, of Anaheim
Ramon Cardenas, 30, of Anaheim
Gregorio Cordero, 23, of Anaheim
Michael R. Yocum, 37, of Anaheim
Hills
Alexander N. Tyler. 23, of Huntington
Beach
Bernard A. Romej, 28, of Huntington
Beach
John F. Sparkman, 49, of Irvine
Joseph W. Ross, 33, of Lake Forest
John W. Emme, 33, of Newport Beach
Todd L Bacon, 36, of Newport Beach
Rochelle S. Leonti, f9, of Norco
Gabor E. Tarr. 32, of Riverside
Robert M. Martyanik. 37, of Rochester
Pedro P. caicedo, 37, of Santa Ana
Robert Brito, 28, of Santa Ana
Maurice A. Silas. 26, of Santa Ana
Alexander D. Nelson, 34, of Santa Ana
Rigoberto Nava·-Gamka, 22, of Santa
Ana
Francisco Renteria, 28, of Stanton
John J. Touhey, 26, of Westminster
Steve J. Christie, 37, of Yorba Linda
Natalio Flores, 26, of Costa Mesa
Those selected for lifeguard
training must attend weekend
clas~ throughout April and May.
City looking for a
few bad streets
A city-commissioned study will
tell Newport Beach officials which
streets need the most help and
which should be left alone.
The City Council Monday
approved spending $77,814 on a
consultant study to compile an
inventory of the city's 190 miles of
public streets. It will include street
conditions, past maintenance, his-
tory and traffic data.
The information will help offi-
cials prioritize street repairs, a
staff report said.
llllMIDAV
Flntlow
6.-00 a.m •••••••• _ •••. 1.3
First high
1:48 a.m ............ .3.4
Second low
5:34.p.m ..•.....••• _ .1.4
Second high
After Midnight
WILLIAM LomB.l.
Editor
JllWMMlll4
Managing Editor
• IRIS YOKOI,
, t CJty Editor
m The Newport BeacM:osta Mesa
O.lly Piiot (USPS-144-800) Is
publiihed Monday through Sat-
~. In Newport Beach and
Costa MeM. subscriptions are
only avaflable by ~09 l()
The Tlmes Orange County (800)
252·9141. In area outside of
Newport 8e«h and Co.ti MeM.
subscriptions to the o.lly Piiot
only are .wall.t>le by mall fot std' per month. Second &di
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(Mees lndude all applbble
tt.1te end toe.al taxe.) POSTMAS-
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MARC MAll'1N.
PhOtO Editor
LV.llO&A.
Olspley AdwrtJtlng
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ftublw..ctby ~
Clllfomll.,Communlty ....
• l1mes Mirror COtnplny. ~
..,._, s. KWn. ~and ao
Mldll. .....
Vb~Gen«al~
IOM Clrtflld\ Oht1lor of Oplratlona
01"1 Cllllf. Ck All ""'* ~
WedQe •••••••• , .1-2 SW
Newport ......... 1·2 SW
llac:kies •.•......• 1-3 SW
River Jetty ........ 1-3 sw
CdM ............ 1-2sw
TIDB
TODAY
flntlow
5:09 a.m ..•........•. 1.2
first Noh 11 :02 a,m .•.•.•..•... 3.9
~low
5:CJ6 p.m ••••.•.•••••• 1.1
Second high
11 :32 p.m •••••••••• , A.3
EJq)t(t fair to poor surf-
ing condltlom today.
Gusting windl out of the
north will probably btow
out the small swells com-
ing In. A wind swell out
of the Witt will blend
with that from the touth-
ern htmfspheN with
resuttlng MtJ hfttlng
ebout waist.._Jgh.
obituary
Computer pioneer H.V. Hilker dies
H.V. "Pete" Hilker, a Newport
Beach computer pioneer, died
unexpectedly 9f probable heart
failure Friday in Chile while cele-
brating his 50th wedding
anniversary on a cruise with his
wife. He was 71.
· Mr. Hilker started his own
computer company, Decision
Control, in 1959 in Newport
Beach. The company later
became Varian Data Machines
in 1967, before Mr. Hilker retired
in 1974.
He was born June 19, 1925, in
Hamilton, Ohio. He earned a
degree in physics from Kalama-
zoo College, then married Norma .
Harris in 1947.
He is survived· by his wife;
daughters Caryl Hilker and Laura
Holmes; and granddaughters
Kristen and Brittany Holmes.
Memorial services are sched-.
uled for 3 p.m. Friday at St. -
Andrews Presbyterian Church.
.Correction
A recent article provided
incorrect information about the
ownership of Newport Station
nightclub in Costa Mesa. Eliza-
beth Helguero applied for an
entertainment permit and is in
escrow to purchase the night-
club. Costa Mesa Oty Council
members denied Helguero -
not the current owners of the
club -the entertainment per-
mit.
COSTA MESA • NT, loulevaird: A radar detector, cellular phone and a cellular phone
microp one valued at $620 were stolen from a truck in the 2200 block. The
right front window was smashed.
• Adams Avenue: A stereo and cellular phone valued at $350 were stolen
from a car in the 1300 block. There was no sign of forced entry.
• None Avenue: Several sprinkler heads and pipes worth $70 were stolen
from a front yard in the 2400 block.
•Bear Strwet: A cellular phone and credit card processor valued at $2.100
were stoletl! fronra car parked in a gated storage facility in the 2900 blodc..
There was no sign of forced entry Into the car.
NEWPORT BEAot
• Oub House tto.d: A corClless phone and 68 compact discs valued at S 1, 170
were stolen from a residence with an open window in the 600 block.
• Wlndwn Lane: A $55 briefcase was stolen from a car in the 2100 block. A
window was smashed.
• Y.cht 1nMnt: A $6,983 sterling sllver set. a $250 jewelry box and several
articles of jewelry worth an unknown value were stolen fTom a residence in
the 1900 block. A kitchen screen window was allegedly removed and the
crank window was opened.
• K"I Drive: A cassette player, two compact discs, a handbag and a rain coat
worth a total of $134 were stolen from two unlocked cars parked inside a
dosed garage In the 1400 block. There was no sign of forced entry.
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Newpon ~Mesa Daily Pilot
Yeah ~ut, is it worth a night
·in the Lincoln .Bedroom?
I n letters and phone calls from
readers and conversation at
various public and private
functions, variations of certain
questi9ns come up repeatedly.
Well, at least twice. As a public
service, I have maintained a file
of these questions, and periodi-
cally in this space I will synthe-
size and answer them.
Q: Recently, all of Orange
County's representatives in Con-
gress voted to return Newt Gtn-
gridl as speaker of the House of
Representatives. Then a week
later, all but one of them voted tb
reprimand and fine him for using
tax-exempt organizations for
political purposes, then lying to
the House ethics committee. Do
you see any inconsistency here
or fuzzy thinking on the part of
our congressmen?
A:. Not at all. They have their
priorities absolutely straight. The
only thing that mattered was get-
ting Newt back in the chair, and
to bell with a few million bucks
worth of hanky-panky. Once he
was secure, they could take the
high moral ground and throw in
with the majority on the vote to
reprimand. Well done.
Q: The Southern Baptist Con-
vention recently voted to urge its
16 million members to boycott
the products of the Walt Disney
Co. Do you think this will have
any impact on attendance at the
Anaheim Angel games?
A: Only if the Angels finish in
last place again.
Q : A recent study showed that
prisons for the first time in Cali-
fornia history now command a
larger slice of the state's general
fund than education. Do you
consider this a positive trend?
A: Absolutely. We need to get
tougher. There's going to be a
big surge of students in our pub-
lic schools in the next few years,
and if we can't build more
schools, then we need to cut
down on the student population.
Send everybody who smokes a
marijuana cigarette to prison.
Pass a two-strike law. If neces-
sary, we can always convert
some schools into pris9ns.
Q: What with your constant
shilling for the Democrats, have
you ever been invited to spend a
joseph n.
bell
night in the Lincoln Bedroom at
the White House? ·
• A:. No, but there are reasons. 1
was a Young Republican when
Ll.ncoln was president, and he
slept in the room himseU. My
first real opportunity came with
Clinton, but I didn't have enough
money during.his first term to
merit an invitation. I still don't
have enough money, but the
question is moot now since Clin-
ton has switched parties.
Q: The Supreme Court has
just ruled that abortion protesters
have a right to confront and .
scream obscenities at pregnant
women entering abortion clinics.
Should the pregnant women
then have the right to hit the
people screaming at them?
A: No. The screamers have
God on their side. If you doubt
this, call Operation Rescue and
listen to the recorded prayer. The
pregnant women who are
already agonized, frightened and
confused deserve whatever
blows the protesters, without
regard to personal danger or
such weaknesses as compassion,
can rain upon them.
Q: Do you see any parallel
between the flap over the current
movie •Tue People vs. Larry Fly-
nt" and local efforts to close the
Mermaid?
A: Well, yes and no. I doubt if
either Latry Flynt or the girls at
the Mermaid ever gave a lot of
thought to the First Amendment.
But for those of us in the journal-
ism business who do, it's a lot
less comforting to think of being
in bed with Larry Flynt than the
girls at the Mermaid.
Q: The new GOP state chair-
man Michael Schroeder of Irvine
ls reputed to be a really tough
guy, so tough that -according
to the llmes -he threatened to
have his mother thrown in jail
because she refused to turn over
some business documents to him
and also sided against him in his
divorce. Do you think this is a
smart move by the .GOP?
A: Well, first of all I think
Schroeder's public image would
be better served if it were his
mother-in-law he threatened. But
otherwise, he seems to fit in very
nicely with the current GOP
leadership. He should be able to
very quickly rid the party of all
moderates and thus keep the
Republicans out of power for a
very long time.
Q: Congressman Rohrabach-
er's campaign chairman pushed
a demand through the state GOP
Resolutions Committee that
Orange County District Attorney
Michael Capizzi should step
down because "he has misused
the power of his office." Do you
think Capizzi should quit?
A: I certainly do. Any public
servant who prosecutes Republi-
can lawbreakers as well as
Democrats in Orange County
should be drummed out of office.
Q: Some conservative Chris-
tians have expressed deep ·con-
cern over the Rev. Robert
Schuller's recent clubbiness with
Hillary and Bill Clinton. Do you
consider this a legitimate.fear?
A: 1 do. I think the woman
parishioner who called and
asked when Schuller was plan-
ning to install an abortion clinic
at the Crystal Cathedral was on
the right track. 1llis notion that
God's children can be found in
many walks of life -even the
Democratic Party -needs to be
exposed as dangerous nonsense.
Orange County isn't about to put
up with such heresy, and the
Rev. Schuller is going to have to
search his soul and decide if it is
worth a night in the Lincoln Bed-
room.
•JOSEPH N. BEU lives in Santa Ana
Heights. His column appears every
Wednesday.
Senior citizens' art to be part of.showcase
COSTA MESA -Artists
ages 50 and older are being
r sought for the first Orange
County Showcase, which will be
held May 17.
"lllis is the city of the arts and
we want to salute the seniors,•
said Laurie Smith, executive
director of the Costa Mesa Senior
Center.
The event, cosponsored by the
senior center 8.nd the Costa Mesa
Art League, . will feature artists'
from throughout Orange County.
Artists can submit up to three
pieces of art in all mediums
except CD-ROM or installation
art, Smith said.
Admission will be $2 for spec-
tators. Those submitting pieces
will be charged $5 for each sub-
mission and are eligible for
$5,000 in prizes to be awarded in
three categories: amateur, inter-
mediate/advanced amateur and
professional.
Those chosen to showcase
their work in the exhibition will
receive 50% of the selling price
from their works that sell. ~e
other hall will be split between
the senior center and the art
league for their ongoing pro-
grams and costs.
The exhibition will be held
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday
May 17 and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on ·
Sunday May 18. Also an invita-
tional reception ($50 a person)
will follow the Sunday show
from 4 to 8 p.m. For more infor-
mation about how to enter the
exhibition call Saundra Abbott
at 645-5090.
-By Susan Deemer
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1991 •
MARC MARTIN I DAl.Y PLOT
A surfer slices his way along the face of a wave off 31st Street ln Newport Beach recently under
sunny sides. Stable waves continue to attract surfers during these warm winter months.
~riefly in the news
Officer did not
suffer heart attack
It was not a heart attack that
drove Costa Mesa police Officer
Larry Fetis to the hospital last
week.
Tests revealed the 26-year-old
policeman, who was rushed to
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presby-
terian after he complained of
chest pains at a traffic call, was
only suffering from a bruised
sternum, said Costa Mesa police
Lt. John FitzPatrick.
Fetis may have suffered the
injury during a fight with a sus-
pect that week, and it never had
a chance to heal properly, Fitz-
Patrick said.
u It progressively worsened to
the point that it caused a lot of
tightening around the ch est
area,• FitzPatrick said. "I think
he maybe just tore a muscle."
Fetis, a four-year veteran with
the department, has been
released from the hospital and
will take the rest of the week off
to recuperate.
Natural gas garbage
truck plan discarded
The city of Newport Beach
will be sticking with regular
diesel-fuel garbage trucks
instead of going with its original
plan to buy cutting-edge natural
gas trucks.
The City Council in October
approved the plan and accepted
a $500,000 grant from the Air
Quality Management District to
help pay for it. But Volvo was tak-
ing longer than expected to make
the trucks, and costs ballooned
more than officials had expected,
officials said.
So the council voted Monday
to pull out of the plan and pro-
ceed with purchasing eight new
garbage trucks, all of the diesel
variety.
Month-End Sale. House Of Imports
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• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26-1997
~ ------;------,--------
THE LAST WORD ON CAPE TOWN
Here'a the lateat lnatallment
• filed by Newport Beach native
SUllClll Seely pnd her new hwt-
band, Arie Katz, during their
. · yearlong honeymoon around
· the world. You can reach them
at lhelr Internet web alte
• address www.fwconnectlon.com.
The Dally Pilot plans to pub-
lish periodic updates of the trip.
By Susan S..ly
, Feb. 3, 1997
Johannesburg, South America
During our last few days in
Cape Town we decided to
explore a bit of the more arid
western side of the Western
Cape, as well as the Waterfront
and the Constantia region.
At the start of the week we
drove north for three hours up
to Bushman's Kloof, a private
game reserve on the Boontjies
SPRAY .
CONTINUED FROM 1
· The residents object to spray-
tng of chemicals because they
believe it will poison their pets.
They want city workers to pull
the weeds out by hand instead of
using the poison.
: lb.is time, their complaints did
get the city to stop -at least for
now.
· The disputed spraying also
cuts dangerously dose to a sore
~pot for Skirball and other Blue
Gum Lane residents: The weeds
to be executed grow next to the
~hite cement wall that separates
their homes from thetr nemesis,
lhe soon-to-open Castaways
home development.
Neighbor Jim Chapman said
he was relieved Skirball had
~aught the sprayers before they
did their work.
City workers are scheduled to
return in a week, but residents
said they'll look into filing an
injunction to stop the work.
Niederhaus promised to address
the residents' concerns before
workers come back.
· Next week, Niederhaus said,
lhe workers will use sprayers
that keep the fumes down and
will post signs warning passers-
b y that the grass has been
$prayed.
Niederhaus described the
spray as Round-Up weed killer,
"the same stuff you buy in the
grocery store.•
; He said the weeds can't be
pulled by hand because the roots
are too deep.
But Skirball said she is
opposed lo spraying anything.
She walks her dog on the bicycle
path next to the weeds, she said,
and she worries her pet will be
poisoned by the spray.
"We djdn'l buy our property
here to have to be worrying
about stuff Like this," she said.
RU Ff ELL'S
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Where YOUf Dob Coven Morel
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River just east of the town of ·
Clanwilllam in the rugged Ced-
erdbelg Mountains.
One ol the reasons we came
to this new reseive was to view
some of the well-preserved rock
paintings on the property and
learn a little about this fascinat-
ing and mostly overlooked
aspect of South Africa's history.
But the first thing we did after
settling into our cozy and cool
room overlooking a small lake
was head off on a fantastic
game drive around some of the
reserve's 7 ,200 hectares.
With the help of our guide,
Donovan, we saw rare cape
zebra, bontebok, springbok,
wildebeest, hartebeest, black
eagles and all manner of birds
and bugs. The reserve also has
plenty of indigenous fynbos,
including rooibos (from which a
MEETING
CONTINUED FROM 1
the table at this time. The district is
encouraging shareholders to ask
questions about the agreement it
signed in January with Santa Ana
Heights Water Co. board mem-
bers.
Irvine Ranch officials previously
refused to discuss their proposal at
a Feb. 19 meeting attended by
more than 300 Santa Ana Heights
shareholders. Irvine Ranch and
Santa Ana Heights officials
declined to attend that meeting,
believing it was orchestrated by
RAISES
CONTINUED FROM 1
child," Olander said.
Leslie Scow, a physical educa-
tion teacher said: "Let there be no
question, Newport-Mesa teachers
deserve a raise. But elimination of
the elementary P.E. program is
not the way to do it."
Board members on a 4-3 vote
decided not to use the interest
from a $5 million Irvine Co.
endowment fund to pay for the
elementary music program.
liustees who voted against the
Ml CASA
MEX ICAN 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 nadltlon
Continues
Since 1972
(0111 Celebrate Our
3°' Ytar An1iversary! E1ioy •! ori9i11I
ta .. 1s dllli dishes at ori1l11I sixties prim.
Clutrlier NEXT To NEWPORT PIER
Wli 67 5. 7991
Susan Seely and Ari Katz
popular tea is made -we drink
it all the time here) which they
harvest and sell (as a aop it's
called •green gold").
We set off to another area of
the reserve for a three-hour ·
bush walk to various sites of
ancient rock art painted by
bushmen 1,000s of years ago.
We were lucky to be led on the
walk by Stephen, an expert in
r-------------------------,
F.Y.I.
+Tonight's Irvine Ranch
informational meeting
begins at 7 p.m. at the .
Monte Vista Attemative Edu·
cation Center, 390 Monte
Vista Ave., Costa Mesa.
Refrfthments will be served.
I I I
I
I L-------------------------J Mesa Consolidated officials.
Mesa, which plans to make its
formal offer on March 3, presented
its preliminary proposal at the Feb.
19 meeting arranged by members
of the Santa Ana Heights Redevel-
opment Agency Committee, to
motion argued music education
should be paid for by long-term
general fund money.
Bo Glover, the administrator of
the Environmental Nab.Ire Cen-
ter, along with other community
members, told trustees that the
center provides an invaluable sci-
ence and social studies program
for district students.
H (The Environmental Nature
Center) may not have four walls,
but it is a classroom," Glover said.
•Let's place (it) on a pedestal as a
jewel of the Newport-Mesa dis-
trict and coµtinue its funding."
The board did not take action
concerning the center Tuesday,
the fleJd -after our walk. he
showed U1 a documentary made
about his endeavors to save the
rock art in South Africa.
1be art and history of the
bushmen were particularly •
interesting to Arie and me as we
had seen some Aboriginal rock
art in Australia. and could com-
pare the outback styles and
themes. .
After a great brunch, we left
Bushman's Kloof and drove to
the fruit producing region of the
Cape and stayed the night in
the town of Ceres.
One of our guide books says
that Ceres is often called the
·swttzerland of South Africa"
-the writer has obviously
NEVER been to Switzerland It's
a cute town anyway and Arie
was excited to actually drink a
little Ceres juice box in Ceres.
help shareholders better under·
stand both proposals.
Arthur Cencel, president of the
Santa Ana Heights Water Co., has
e.ncouraged his company's share-
holders to learn about both offers,
but warns that the Mesa offer is
not formal at this time.
Mesa plans to present a fonnal
offer at a 7 p.m. meeting on March
3 in Building 14 at the Orange
County Fairgrounds. The gather-
ing is open to all current Mesa cus-
tomers and Santa Ana Heights
shareholders.
The Irvine Ranch offer of $1,100
per share will expire March 7.
Mesa plans to offer $1,200 per
share.
but it is on a list of proposed cuts
to pay for teacher salary increas-
es.
In other action, trustees gave
unanimous, preliminary approval
to revamp the district's high
school graduation assessment
system to prevent average to high
achievers on the state's standard-
ized test from taking district-ere·
ated tests covering the same
skills.
The proposal would also con-
solidate the district's three ·social
studies tests into one multiple·
choice test and make some of the
assessment tests part of the regu-
lar curriculum.
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VOLUNTEER
CONTINUED FROM 1
H.n visited '5 patients this put
Monday, just to let tbem ~
chaplain program WU there tf
they needed it Hall. benelf a
Protestant, v1litl any patient ot any
faith -just u many ol tbe volun-
teer cbaplaim do.
•0ne ot the things we don't do
ls proselyti7.e,.. said the depart-
ment director, the Rev. Don Oliver. •we just want patients to grab
hold of what faith they have to get
by."
but be Mid pastoral ca.re bu
a!Waya been hll true c.alling.
'D'lllniDO I« holPtal mlniltry, be
said, requirel extra study in psy-
chology u well u theology.
• 1be department bas covered
several dMnniMtiom foe most oC
its exiltence, Oliver said •putorar
care bu always been ecumeni-.
c:aI: he Mid.
1be oo.pital was founded by:
Presbyterian ministers and funded
by the Hoag family, some of whom·
were Catholic, Oliver said. Volun·
teers have always visited anyone
from any denomination and the
department recently expanded to
include Jewish
volunteers. Many of the
volunteers, like
those in any oth-
er area, got
involved quite
by accident - a
friend asked
them or their
church needed a
representative.
When Jeanne
Fobes was asked
to be a Eucharis-
tic minister,
someone who
•0ne of the uµngs
we don't do a
plOlle)ftDe. We
juat want ~ttenta
to grab hOld ol
what lalth they
have to get by... •
like any job,
the volunteers
said, their work
encounters some
practical stum-
bling blocks.
Fobes, for
instance, must
make certain
her Catholic
patients can
take foOd And
Steinberg has
encountered
-THE Rl'4t DON OlMR
delivers commu-
nion to patients,
she felt over-
whelmed. She thought the spiritu-
al opportunity was •almost too
awesome," she said.
She has been administering the
sacrament to patients every
Wednesday for 11 years, and her
mother has been coming with her
for the past few years. "It seems
almost like a family visit this way,"
Fobes said.
Since 1970, one Catholic volun-
teer each day has been visiting the
approximate one-third of Hoag
patients who practice that faith.
Marina Steinberg, a nurse, vis-
its patients as a representative of
Huntington Beach synagogue
Adat Israel and Jewish family ser-
vices group Bi.kW' Cbolim. She
also occasionally calls on cancer
center patients.
Oliver said the best thing about
the program is the "collaboration
between clergy and lay people.•
Oliver took over as the depart-
ment's director only five years ago,
• some ultra-
orthodox Jews
who didn't want
spiritual guidance from a woman.
Oliver once scranibled to find a
local Armenian congreqation to
talk to a patient the deparbnent
thought spoke only Armenian. But
when the patient got on the phone
with the Armenian pastor, the hos-
pital's Catholic chaplain, the Rev.
James Curran, realized they were
speaking Spanish.
But no matter what happens,
the volunteers said, they never
argue with patients. And they nev-
er push any kind of spirituality on
them.
Many of the chaplains give
patients a small paper booklet on
PsaJm 23, which Hall said applies
to most denominations and applies
to most patients' needs. ·nus one
fits them all," she said.
It begins, •Tue Lord is my
Shepherd: I shall not want. He
maketh me to lie down in green
pastures: He leadeth me beside
the still waters."
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r--------------------------~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------~--~
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·LOCATION.
LOCAllQN,
LOCATION
Any pro will tell you that's the
bottom line, and it was all the
edge Palisades TC needed.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
N EWPORT BEACH -Location,
location, location. That was
one factor. 1be other was Ken
Stuart. energetic ownei of the Palisade
Tennis Club. ,
According to Russ Oine, promoter of
the Davis Cup quarterfinals between
the United States and the Netherlands
April 4-6 at the Palisades Oub, those
were the two prtinary reasons why the
Newport Beach facility was selected to
host the match over about a dozen oth-er hopefuls.
"The players wanted to come to
Southern Callfornia,.that's the first fac-
tor, then I met Ken Stuart and his can-
do attitude," Cline said. "He's as much
a promoter and salesman for the com-
munity as he is a tennis manager."
Cline was given a short list of possi-
ble Southland clubs to host the Dam
Cup by Bob Kramer, executive director
of the Southern Calif omia Tennis Asso-
ciation and the son of tennis legend
Jade Kramer.
•Portunateiy for (Stuart), fbe players
wanted to play in Southern California,"
said Cline, werating his eigh1h Davis
Cup for the U.S. Tennis Association, his
sixth in the U.S.
Stuart, who purchased the facility
Aug. 1, 1995, bas desired to bring a
Davis Cup or Federation Cup match to
Palisades since the acquisition.
In late November, Kramer made his
short lilt and gave it to Cline, a list that
included Pa.liHdes, Riviera Country
Club, Indian Wells, Sheraton Industry
Hills, La Costa and th~ Los Angeles
Tennis Club.
It came down to Riviera and Pal-
isades, according to Kramer.
•eonsiderlng the early ticket sales, it
sounds like we've got it at the best
place possible," said Kramer, referring
to the bombardment of in-house ticket
reseIVations at the dub.
Newport Beach Tennis Cub, which
hosted the 1977 Davis Cup when the
U.S. played South Atrica -the only
other time the Davis Cup was played in
Orange County -was on the original
list of potential dubs, Kramer and Oine
both said Tuesday. But NBTC could not
·accommodate the parking demand,
dub owner Ron Pfahler said.
Stuart said be checked out Cine and
his Kansas City-baaed company shortly
after answering the initial letter.
•1 sent (Cline) a letter saying if you
come and use our facility and do a lousy
job, it's going to reflect on Ule Palisades
Tennil Club that it did a lousy job,• said
Stuart, who requested a half dosen 181-
eres;aces to investigate Cline's firm. all of
wbk:h nllpODded favorably.
On Jan. 27, Stuart t8C8lved the news
that bit dub wou)4 bolt the Devil Cup
quuterflnals if the U.S. be4tl .-uD in
the. nm round. which Jt did.
D avis Cup
Captain Tom
Gulllkson (left)
has that "feeling
good" attitude
Tuesday as he
held court at the
Palisades Tennis
Oub in Newport
Beach at the Davis
Cup press
conference.
The quarterfinal ls
against the
Netherlands and
singles star Jim
Courier {above)
has already
commited to the
United States
team. which will
becompettng
April 4-5-6. There
are some questions
to be decided for
the balance of the
team, but all ·
things considered;
GuWk.son believes
he Is sitting with
a wtnnlng hand.
By Richard Dunn, Dally Pilot
N EWPORT BEACH -
Only 25% of the Unit-
ed States Davis Cup
team was announced Tues-
day at Palisades Ten.nls Club,
site of the quarterfinals April
4-6 against the Netherlands.
+
•
Jim Courier, who provided
two crucial singles wins in the
U.S. victory over Brazil earlier
this month in Ribeirao Preto,
including the clincher, was
the lone player scribbled on
the "definite" list for U.S.
Coach Tom Gullikson, a move
reported in Tuesday's Daily
Pilot.
While all four members of
the U.S. Davis Cup team
were expected to be
announced at a press confer-
MARC MARTIN I DAILY Pl.OT
Davis Cup promote r Russ Cline points toward
courts which will transform into 5,200-seat
arena for the April 4-5-6 Davis Cup match.
ence, only Courier's name was adver-
tised as absolute because of injurie.s.
Todd Martin's surprising right elbow
surgery Tuesday flung Davis Cup offi-
cials for a loop, while Andre Agassi
(sprained ankle) and MaliVai Washing-
ton (left knee trauma) are still cons.idered
questionable, Gullikson said.
Martin, 9-2 in his Davis Cup career
under Gullikson, withdrew his name late
Monday night.
"That was a big blow when we found
out,• Gullikson said .
Agassi, who has
played only sparingly
on the ATP Tour since
the U.S. Open, will test
his ankle this week at
Indian Wells, Gullikson
said. Agassi is the lead-
ing candidate to fill a
singles spot.
• (Agassi) said he
wanted to play and help
us out," Gullikson
added. "He will need to
play some good match-
es and regain his confi-
dence. Assuming be
gets healthy, Andre is a
very attractive possibili-
ty. You know he has
won 14 straight Davis
Cup singles matches."
Gullikson also con-
firmed that Pete Sam-
pras and Michael
Chang will definitely
not play because of
scheduling conflicts. Sampras has com-
mitted to the semifinals and finals.
Gullikson said Rick Leach of Laguna
Beach, a longtime Palisades member,
and Jonathan Stark, currently the No. 2-
ranked men's doubles team in the world,
are the leading candidates for the Davis
Cup doubles team.
Alex O'Brien and Richey Reneberg,
who played doubles for the U.S. in its 4-
1 win over Brazil Feb. 9, are also avail-
able.
•A lot of good players have conup.it-
ted," Gullikson said. "Technically, we
have until 10 days before the match to
announce the team, and we're going to
get the best possible team, but you need
to give the players enough notice."
Gullikson also said Richard Krajicek
of the Netherlands, defending Wimble.
don champion, is rumored to miss the
Davis Cup at the Palisades Club.
Gullikson said he would not commit
to Leach and Stark as his doubles team
yet, "because you've got to explore all of
your options.~
It may be possible the team would
need a player who can play both singles
and doubles, depending on the avail-
ability of others, such as Agassi. Wash-
ington, for example, is primarily a sin-
gles player.
O'Brien and Reneberg, according to
Gullikson, are at least both ranked in ~e
top 40 in the world in singles,· which
could make them stronger candidates,
unlike Leach, whose
singles game is limited,
though the former USC
standout would be a
crowd favorite.
"Russ Cline (event
promoter) is trying to
get the crowd electri-
fied for this Davis Cup,
and I told him if you
wanted to have an elec-
trified crowd, get Rick
Leach there," Palisades
owner/operator Ken
Stuart said. #The crowd
would go crazy."
Courier, a Davis Cup
veteran who won five
titles in 1992 and
became the 10th player
in history to be ranked
No. 1 in the world, was
the only player Gullik-
son could confirm Tues-
day.
"Courier has done an unbelievable
job for us in Davis Cup play," Gnllikson
said. M I've never seen bis mind so dear
and focused, not since he was No. 1 in
the world four years ago."
The dream for Palisades to host a
Davis Cup match was realized when
Courier clinched the first round for the
U.S. in a riveting tiebrea.k that ended 13-
11 in his favor, capping the win over
Brazil.
Courier won a decisive Davis Cup
match for the third time in bis career
with a piercing Brazilian crowd against
him, defeating 20-year-old Gustavo
Kuerten, 6-3, 6-2, 5-7, 7-6 (13-11). in typ-
ical Davis Cup fashion.
Courier needed five match points to
put Kuerten away in the· fourth-set
tiebreak, just the kind of action Cline is
hoping for at the Palisades O ub in April
•
..
L~-------------~------------------~----------------~---------------------------------~---------------------------~
< (l\l\11 '\.11' I 11111 <,I 11(1'\.<lh'.'
• 1
• Pirates' Dianne Pulido is named Orange Empire
Conference's Women's Basketball Player of the Year.
By Motly Yanity, Dally Pilot
COSTA MESA -Dianne
Pulido is a familiar name for
local be.sketball enthusiasts,
and tt is alsO a name that bu
become quite fa.mWar around
the Orange Empl.re Confer·
ence. '
1b illustnlte: Pulido, who
. wu a standout at Newport
Harbor High SchOol. earned
tbe or~ ~ Confer·
ence'a Player of the Year honor
Tuesday to highlight a career
aeason at Orange Coast Col-
lege.
The 5·foot-t0 forward bas
plUteNd her name all over the
confermce't top lO lilts.
PUlldo am be found at the
top Of tlie iCCrtDg category as
she bu averaged 20.t points
per rcmt.lt.
She ii aecond in ftild goat
• 8EE PUUDO AV.IE I
I ' I I ' : I ' ..
Sailors ran=
in OT, 1-0
)
' .....
' ....
• • ..
.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1997
• Bucsin
playoffs
•Pirates' women will host
Grossmont Saturday night.
COSTA MESA -Orange
Cout College's women's basket-
ball team hosts Grossmont Satur-
day evening at 7:30 in the first
round of the 1997 Southern Cali-
fornia Regional Playoffs.
1be Pirates (19-10), led by the
Orange Empire ·Conference's
Player of the Year, Dianne Pulido,
would advance to Round 2 on
Wednesday against No. 4-seeded
Victor Valley (24-6) if they can
get put Grossmont, which enters
with a 14-14 record.
Ventura (31-1), the defending
state champion, is the No. 1 seed,
followed by Canyons (29-4), LA
ljarbor (22-6) and Victor Valley.
PULIDO
CONTINUED FROM 5
percentage with 52.4 percent,
and third in free throw percent-
age as she has canned 68 percent
of her attempts from the charity
stripe. Her naibe can also be
found in the rebounding, blocked
shots and steal columns.
She has also been a vital force
in the Pirates' 19-10 season,
which continues in the Southern
California Regional Playoffs
when OCC hosts Grossmoot Sat-
urday.
Pulido also owns a name that
opponents have come to fear. Her
aggressive style of play limited
her playing time last season as
she often found herself in foul
trouble and on the bench. Her sti-
fled playing time resulted in just
over four points per game. TI1is
season that aggressiveness has
pulled down over seven
rebounds a game and made 45
steals.
Pulido wore a Sailors' jersey
before she donned the Pirates'
blue and orange and was a big
part in Newport Harbor's trip to a
CIF and state regional final in
1994. That season, Pulido eamed
a second-team All-Sea View
League honor and led the county
in shooting percentage.
JC HONORS
Pirates' Curtis
all-conference
in basketball
Duane Curtis, who led the
Orange County College men's
basketball team with over 18
points a game, was the Pirates'
only selection for the All-Orange
Empire Conference Team.
Curtis, a 6-foot-4 sophomore
from Pasadena Muir High
School, ranked fourth in the con-
ference in scoring and also pulled
down 5.3 rebounds a game while
averaging 2.1 assists.
OCC tallied a 5-5 conference
record while posting an 8-22
overall mark.
Riverside bumps off
Orange Coast, 12-2
• Riverside puts together
three three-run innings.
cos TA BASBBAU
MESA
Orange Coast College's baseball
squad dropped to 1-1 in Orange
Empire <:;;onference play with a
12-2 loss to visiting Riverside Col-
lege Tuesday.
• The Pirates sacrificed a run in
tha top of the first on a two-base
error, but took a 2-1 lead in the
second . inning on Bobby
Calderon's single and a run-scor-
ing single by ll'avis Cutter.
OCC was unable to score
again off Riverside's Cody nuk,
though, who upped his ma.rk to 3-
0 in the complete-game effort for
the Tigen. Darren Chandler went
2-for--4 at the plate and scored a
run for the Pirate..
Riverside put together 10 hits,
including a three-run home run
by Juon Bowring tn the ltxth :iDnlng.
OCC'1 Bric Turner (06') lllf·
fered the pitching lOA U the
1lgen Mill three pltchen to the
mound. ......... 12.gc...a2 ...... ..,
RMnlde 10J JOJ -12 10 2
Orenge Collt 110 000 000 -2 • J
Cod>/, 1hlk Md s..g.; l\.lmef,
SdYUSlffl (5). Alktlf {I) end ~ • ,
0...,..,, Cl). w . n--. J.O. l " TUmtr.
M. 21 -Leel 00, Nkttenon (OCO,
tetw.; 001 KJtfty oo .... -lowrlng ~.
~
Pirates men, women, sec women all romp past foes; 9-0j
FUU.ERTON -Orange Cout College's
women'• tean1I team swept tJirough tbe
Pullerton College squad dropping juat one
let ln a 9--0 shutout ot th8 lioinets that
upped the Pirates' overall record to 5-1.
Cam1 Etiklon took No. 1 singles, 6-1,
6-0, ~ Whitney Gilliam handily took the
No. 2 singles match 6-3, 6-1.
Other lingles winnen for the Pirates
were Martha Garcia, 1\isha Steelman, Van
Nguyen and Amy Portner.
Fullerton fell to 1-3 on the season. Ot~ c.o.t •• Fullerton 0 ~ • (OCO def. Drake, 6·1, 6-0;
Gilliam (OCO def. Handoyo, 6-3, 6-1; Garcia (OCO
def. Balazat, 6-3, 6-1: Steelman (OCO def. Salazar.
.
6-2. ~ V. Nguyen (OCQ *f. C. ~. 6-J,
1-1: Fortner roco dirt. o. GenNNro1 ~· 6-1.
o.•111 • Eridaon-Gila.m (OCO cwr. Drake-Kent. 6-1, 6-3; Gatda-SttM!rMn COCO dirt.
~BPur, J.6, 6-J, 6-4; M. ~
(OCO def. Gerrmnaro-GerrnlNto. 6-1, 7-S.
OCC men b ump off Hornets
COSTA tv1ESA -In men'• tennis action,
Orange Coast College defeated the villting
Fullerton College Houiets 9-0 without
dropping a single set.
Clem Albrecht clinched the No. 1 sin-
glet duel with a 6-3, 6-4 win. Scott Stewart
nailed down No. 2 with a 6-1, 6-1 victory.
Adam ICennedy, Don Radm, Nham nuong. and Andy bbulio-Roogelo round·
ed out tbe vidon in linglel play.
OCC evened ti, oooferenCe mark at 1-1
with the Yictory, and owns a 3·2 overall
mark. The Hometl ~to 0-2. Ol• .. CGM 11'1Dn0
..._. -Altw.drt (OCO def.~.
6-3, 6-4; St.wart (OCO dirt. Rodriguez 6-1, 6-1;
Kennedy (OCO def. Hltthcock. 6-0, 6-4;
Rad« (0CO def. <:arrlllo, 6-2, 6-0; T~ (OCQ
def. Ray, 6-3, 6-0; Rebullo-Pangelo def. Cong-.
6-2, 6-0. .
.,_.,. ·Albrecht-Stewart COCO def.
S\lttortmort-Rodrlguez, 6-01 6-4; . .
Kennedy-Rebulio-hngeto COCO def.
<:arrlllo<.onger. 6-0, 6-1.
SCC women t.oPPle Btola
LA MIRADA-Southern califomla Col-
lege's women't teDnil teem rolled to a 9-0
GokleD State Athletic Conference victory
. ot Blola College Tuesday afternoon, paced
by the play ol No. 1 l1ngJes standout Sere-
na XJe u the V.= iml>roved to 6-2. SoC9I ....... 0 ~ • Xie (5C0 dirt. , 6-1, 6-0; Crawford <SCO def. Nav..-ro, 6-2. 6-3; T.mplln (SCO def. B.vtlett 6-2. 6-0; Olim (SCC) def. Stauffacher. 6-0,
6-3; Tate (SCO def. Swendler. 6-2, 6-0; White (5CQ
def. Couden. 6-3, ).6, 6-0. ~Ill -Qawford-T.-nplin (SCC) def.
Stauff~ 8-0; Xie-Tate (5C0 def. Roy-Navarro,
~2 Ollm-Whlte (SCC) def. Chua-Bartlett,, 8-3.
r----------------------------~---------------------------------------~--, I
I
I
I
I ..
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL
CIF DMlloN If.A QuMIWl!W.
Selwyn Mansell WU Momln•kJe II
one-b.alf of Estanda'• 1·2 : bt.MClll to • Score by Qumun punch Tuesday night : Morningside 12 16 11 29
wtth a 20-polnt outbunt, : Estancia 18 9 12 21
• It was razor-close through three quarters
(39-39), but Morningside races away with a
68-60 victory over Estancia in CIF ill-A.
By Barry Faulkner, Daffy Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -A three-pointer here, a defen-
sive stop there, an official's call the other way, a couple
more free-throw conversions.
That's how close the Estancia High came to upsetting
second-seeded Momiogside Tuesday in the quarterfinals
of the CIF Southern Section Division m-A boys basketball
playoffs at Corona del Mar High.
•we had a good chance of winning this one,• said frus-
trated but proud Estancia Coach Rich Boyce, after the vis-
iting Monarchs held on for a 68-60 verdict that ended the
Eagles' season at 20-8.
·we didn't make that one play we really needed. But I
tell you what: We played bard and we played greaL That
was -a. great way for our seniors to go out. They played their
hearts out."
The fired-up Eagles, feeding off a vocal home crowd,
seized an 18-12 lead at the end of one quarter, then rallied
from a 10-0 Morningside run to pull even at 22, the first of
seven ties in a contest that also featured eight lead
changes.
•1t was a tough game ... very stressful," said Morning-
side Coach Carl Franklin, whose teams
have now beaten the Eagles four times
in five postseason meetings since 1992.
Both teams were up to the challenge,
however, as the visitors clung to a 28-27
lead at intermission.
Despite extending a field-goal
drought to nearly eight minutes deep
into the third period, Estancia gained
ground on the Monarchs (20-5) at the
foul line, sinking 8 of 10 during a span of
2:19 to pull even at 35.
A Brandon Casillas layin put the Nelson
Eagles on top with 1:39 left in the third
and junior Sam Nelson's layup-ended the third-quarter
scoring to forge a 39-39 deadlock entering the final eight
minutes. ·
As he predicted Monday afternoon, Boyce saw the team
which executed best down the stretch advance to Friday's
semifinals.
Morningside hit 8 of 11 from the field in the final quar-
ter, including a huge
J oe Myers three-pointer with 2:50 left. Tue Ocean
League champions also drilled 10 of 12 fourth-quarter free
throws to hold off a valiant Eagle effort.
"We shot better in the fourth quarter than we had all
game long," Franklin said. •w e knew Estancia was a good
team. But we showed we could operate in a difficult envi-
ronment."
Nelson and senior point guard Selwyn Mansell, who led
the Eagles with 20 points apiece, hit an inside bucket and
a field goal, respectively, to keep the hosts close with 5: 13
left.
And, with the Estancia defense tightening up and limit-
ing the Monarchs to one shot, Casillas dropped in a pair
from the line to pull the hosts even. 45-45, with -4:44 left.
But Jonathan Estis, who bit all five field-goal attempts in
the fourth quarter for 10 of bis 16 wints, scored in.side 33
seconds later and the Eagles never got closer than one the
rest of the way.
The aforementioned three-pointer gave the visitors a
53--48 lead with 2:50 left and the two teams traded points,
until Morningside hit 5 of 6 foul shots in the final 15 sec-
onds to eSCApe.
Nelson, the Pe.cific Coast League MVP, added 10
rebounds to match Casillas for tee.In-high honors, while
Ca.sillas, in an inspired prep swan song, chipped in five
assists and two blocked shots.
Junior Ryan Simpson, who along with Nelson and
• Dawkins form a solid returning pucleus for next sea.son,
: collected seven points and three boards. Dawkinl finished
: with five points and five rebounds.
: •we played ha.n:if it just wasn't our night,• Boyce said.
• 68 : Estancia, which converted seven three-pointers in a
lbarlng ht.I team's . ! Morningside · Denmon 25, Hubbard 14, ...... h wtth Sam • Estis 16, Myers 9, Wesson 2. Burton 2. Yeargin o, sco • ...,, onon : Cheon o, Dow o.
• 60 : first-round win over La Quinta, made only one field from
: beyond eight feet Tuesday. The PCL champs finished 20 of
49 from the field (40.8%).
Momingside shot only slightly better (-41.9% on 62
attempts from the field), but hit 1• of 20 from the line, to the
Eagles' 19 of 28.
Nelson (who allo had 20 : 3-pointers • Myen 1. Fouled out-None.
polnb) but tt wu not : ~ -Nefson 20, MMIMll 20, Simpson 7,
en ...... to •-•-th : Casillas 6, Dawkins 5, Tat>o.da 2, Rainey o, o.._.... con...... e : Salas o, Castellon o.
Mornlngllde Monuchl. : 3-pointen • Dawkins 1. Fouled out -None. • \ . Lee Denmon pe.c.ed the. wionen with 25 points, while
Jonathan Hubbard added 16 reboWlds to bis 14 points.
r
L -----~---------~----------------------~--------------------------------~
..
C O LLEGE H OOP S
Vanguards
staggered
• Point Loma runs away and
hides in the second half, 80-59.
COSTA MESA -South-MEN
em California College's 1
Vanguards, the streak team of the
Golden State Athletic Conference
which opened the season with three
straight losses, then reeled off eight
consecutive victories, were upset vic-
tims for the second straight time Tues-
day night at The Pit where Point Loma
Nazarene staggered the Vanguards,
80-59.
The Vanguards, up by a 32-29 mar-
gin in the first half, were outscored, 51-
27. in the second half. The only sec
players to score in double figures were
Rod Scheuerman and Justin Mclntee,
each with 11 points, while Point Loma
had four players in double figures.
The loss drops sec to 8-5, 21-9,
with Saturday night's game at West-
mont rounding out the regular season
schedule.
Gol.Da StAn Anunc AssoaAllON
flolnt Loma,.......,..'° Southern Callfom .. College 59
Point Loma ,....,..,. • Psilpoulos 7,
Clinton 12, Mad<enzle 7, Urie 13,
Amo Amo.15, Cameron 0, Pearson 7, Bruce 0,
Lee 11, Moote 8, foley 0.
3·pt. goals · Amo Amo 3, Pearson 1,
Psiloulos 1.
Fouled out • none.
So<AI College · Dzierzynski 7, Watson 3,
Rose 6, cartson 4, Walker 8, Proffitt 2,
Fetuli 0, Perez 0, Scheuerman 11'; Mcintee 1 1,
Dignan o. Wilbom 7.
3-pt. goals· Mcintee 1, Watson 1,
Dzlenynski 1.
Fouled out -none.
Halftime: Socal College, 32·29.
Vanguards fall, 85-84 in
overtime GSAC decision
So;~:!A ~~mi; "OMIN
College's women's basketball team
sent their Golden State Athletic Con-
ference game with visiting Point Loma
Nazarene into overtime with a driving
layup by Blaine Whittemore with just
0:08 left on the clock, but a Cinderella
finish was not to be.
ned at ?• going into the overtime
session, Point Loma responded with an
85-84 victory as the host Vanguards
could not connect on their final shot
after pulling to within the one-point
final spread
The Vanguards had five players in
double figures, led by the scoring ot
Carrie Burt (20) and Whittemore (19).
Also in twin figures were Amber
Chaney (16), Alan.a Kempton (12) and
Gina Jojola (11).
The wlDnen were led by Suzanne
Knight, who connected on 5 of 1 three-
polnt shots en route to a game-leading
Vanguards split with Dominguez Hi11s
24 points. • .
The verdict drops Southern Cali.for ..
Dia College to 5·1 in the fin.al GSAC
standings, while Point Loma Nazarene
improves to 6-5 with one game left. • SoCal College avenges setback
with nightcap win behind Brandt.
COSTA MESA-1b9 So\lthem CallfomJa
CoDeae IOftbd equed managed a split in a
doublebMdlr 1\Mlday .n.moon with vtlit-
Jng Cel State~ HWI.
The 9'mtl = out to an early lead
OD VaagUrd Jta HOUltom when
tMf Kllftd tbr'9e na JD the third lnnlng
8ncf wmt OD to wtn 4·1.
SCC'I NoeDe SturvtD went 2-f~3 and
Raebel c.nw 8dded two hits.
The ICOl9d tbett only run
when Houston knoclied in Dawn David.Ion.
In the nightcap, sec avenged th.e 1ou
with a ~2 threshing. The bolts pounded out
16 hitt and took advantage of five
Dominguez Hll1I erron.
GtetcbeD Brandt picked up the pitching
victory allowing just one earned run IDd
ttr1Jdng out a SU also helped her caUM
with three h1tl md two ND1 betted in.
Carver, antlna Blackemblp, Mlcbelle
Mum, Jenntfs Mllkov and Katie K.oy
added two~a . The Vi ' record ii 3·10-1 wbll9
Domin.gun ltandl •t 10..a. ..
(
~ lwl Anunc Gali Cl )
DOIM1-=r.:c.. CGl 111 1 ~MVll OOJ 010 o · 4 9 1
SOCAI c.ottege 000 100 O -1 I 0
Pu Ind ~Is; Houston, Merrow (6) end
Murie. WP · A. ,az. lP • Houston, o-638 -Hemendt.z <DH>. P'tppldekts c~. .. ........
leCal C1l11 1 I, D•• ·-tml J .~Hlfts 001 010 O· 2 S S
Soc.II College )()it JOO 0 -9 16 2
~,.,A. Pu (1) Ind~ lr.ndt encl Murte.
W-lr.ndt, 2-2. l • 1. '91. 21 ·~(DH). Mwte
(KC) ••• ~ IP").
GculJt l'IMI AMnc Cla •••Cl ..:a : .... =a;..
Pollwt "--" •• -llllodt 7, Hltl 7, =·J:c~=u:!~2..
3-pt. pis -s, IWodc 2, Hall 1, wtl!Wni 1.
fouled out· none.
I.a.I Cl:'":· Ow'9y 16. ~ 12, lurt 20, ~--1t, JOfoll 11, Sim 2,
Minot 2. ~ 0. 1hombUrg J. GINlo 0.
~----o._4~1 . FOulli GUI· ftOM. .......... w LOnW Nia• .. 41·•
R19Llllllan: H-M.
·. ~, .. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1997
SAILORS
CONTINUED FROM 5
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT
Newport Harbor and Sea View League dval Santa Margadta
collided one more time Friday; below, Newport goalie Zach
Wells matches a comerldck out of the air before the Eagles'
Cbrls Pritchett can get a head on the ball. The Sailors lost.1--0.
ta Margarita once in league and tied the Eagles a
second time, en route to its first league title in 21
years, the geographically aligned postseason put the
two teams together once again.
This time, it took more than regulation to decide
it.
Santa Margarita (14-7-4) posted the game's lone
goal 3:45 into the first 10-minute overtime period,
then hung on to advance to Thursday's quarterfi-
nals.
•1t•s really too bad," Santa Margarita Coach Curt
Bauer said. •This should have been a final. How
' great would it have been to have this kind of game
for the championship? This game had everything: A
(Santa Margarita) goal scored and called back; a
(Newport) shot off the goalpost; and a call that
should have been a (Harbor) penalty kick, but was-
n't.
•I
· "But that's regionalization. It's not fair to Newport
to have to play a team three times in the same sea-
son. It's hard as hell to beat a team three times.•
The Eagles, who finished third in the Sea View,
extended their unbeaten streak to 10 games ·and
notched their sixth shutout in the last seven games,
during which time they have yielded just one goal.
"Our goalie was huge today," Bauer said of Byron
Foss, who made nine saves and owned the air space
in and around the Eagles' goal, consistently soaring
over and through Harbor attackers to punch the ball
toward safety.
Harbor had its scoring chances, however, includ-
ing the aforementioned blast off the goalpost in the
18th minute of regulation, and another that slipped
through Foss' gloves, only to be recovered by the
retreating keeper.
Chris Wakim, Joey Schloss, Garrett Jansma,
Tobin Junowich, Brett Baker, Jesse Cortez, Austin
Ahlgren and Scott Tack.aberry all created and/or
cubninated strong scoring chances for the hosts (10-
4-3).
Both teams took turns controlling play, but New-
port had the majority of the offensive opportunities.
It wasn't, however, until sophomore striker Bran-
don Mee.ks pushed in a pass by senior co-captain
Matt Moses in ·the 84th minute that anyone pro-
duced a goal that held up.
Several sideline observers claimed Foss saved a
Newport shot behind his own goal line in the first
half, and a hand ball by Mee.ks nullified nm Pierce's
diving header into the net in the 17th minute.
In addition, Newport Coach Ziad Khoury, most of
•Estancia boys soccer team goes 0-2-1
against Laguna Beach, exits CIP play.
By Ridwd ow.n. DWJ Pilot
Sailor rooters lining the southern sideline, and even
Bauer, believed the referee ignored an Eagle
defender tripping a Newport attacker inside the 18-
yard box, which would have created a penalty kick
in the 39lh minute.
"One call could have changed the whole game,•
said Khoury, who was more eager to praise Santa
Margarita's effort than lament his team's misfortune.
•t don't want to take any credit away from Santa
Margarita," Khoury explained. "We played well.
This was a good soccer .game between two very
good teams."
It was also the last game for Harbor senior starters
Jansma, Junowich, Walcim and Cortes.
•It's hard saying goodbye to those guys," Khoury
said. "But I want to reflect on a great season for our
team. We won the league championship, which,
honestly, not a lot of people thought we could do.
We lost to a great team today, and we went down
fighting all the way to the end. I think we surpassed
all expectations."
Eric Werner and Chapin Kreuter joined Tack-
aberry and Baker to anchor Harbor's defensive effort
in front of sophomore goalie Zach Wells (five saves).
...... .
Community college men -Golden
West et Or.,. Coest. 2 p.m.
Community ~ women -Orange
COllt M Golden Wist. 2 p.m . .......
~-~-RwN> ~ M Orilngl CoMi, ) p.m.
Community oohge men -El
(Mnlno. c.Tftol, Orlf9I COllt M
COltt -.. Goff • ex. "°°"·
HIGH SCHOOL G IRLS BAS K ETBA LL
•Tars must deal with
1Toy tonight, or there is
no Satwday night dance.
By Bany Faulkner, Daily Pilot
~RT BEACH -Taking
one game at a time didn't
become a cliche because coach-
es thought it sounded clever.
There are much more cre-
ative and entertaining ways to
discuss the principle of not look-
ing past an opponent. Just ask
former Notre Dame football
coach Lou Holtz.
But, as much as media mem-
bers abhor the six-word com-
mandment, it should not be
ignored by participants from
even the most prohibitive
favorite.
Newport Harbor High girls
basketball coach Bob Dukus,
who has adopted the phrase as
his postseason mantra, said he
believes his players have ta.ken
it to heart.
The Sailors' conviction will
be ,put to the test by visiting
Thoy in the second round of the
CIP Southern Section Division
ll-A Playoffs, tonight at 7:30.
Though Thoy is 22-3, champi-
on of the Freeway League, and
riding a 17-game winning
streak, there is still the tempta-
tion to look ahead to a potential
quarterfinal clash Saturday at
top-seeded Brea Olinda.
"I think this is a tough sec-
ond-round game,• said Dukus,
who didn't have to work hard to
make that sale to his 17-10
squad, which has won 7 of 9
home games this season.
The Warriors, coached by
highly-respected former La
Quinta High and current
Cypress College women's head
man Kevin Kiernan, have, how-
ever, not played one of the more
rigorous schedules in the sec-
tion. Their losses are to El Toro
(55-52), as well as solid Hunt-
ington Beach (53-44) and
Estancia (39-32) outfits.
Eight of Harbor's losses, on
the other hand, have come
against teams ranked in the
Orange County top 10.
"Now is the time our schedule
has to work for us," Dukus said.
"We've had to play very high-
level competition all season. U
that dciesn't help us now, then I
don't know why we did it.#
The Sailors, led by All-Sea
DON LEACH I DAJ.Y Pl.OT
Newport Harbor Hlgb'1 BreiUllY Badorek, known as
•Socks,• for her playing atttre, puts the pressure on
Woodbridge Hlgb'1 Cathy Joens ln Sea View League
acUon. She11 be trying to apply the same tedmlques
tonight when the Sallon host the Troy Hlgb Warrton
ln the second round of the CIP Dlvtslon n-A Playofls.
View League seniors Breanna
Badorek, M.E. Cayton, Colleen
Eadie and Desiree Talley, have
won four straight, including a
71-36 home trouncing of Valen-
cia in Saturday's first round.
Badorek is averaging 15
points and nine rebounds per
game, while Clayton, like
Badorek a 6-foot post player,
chips in 12.5 points and 7.2
rebounds per game. Eadie, the
p<>int guard, is averaging 9.7
points, 4.5 assists and 3.6
rebounds, while Talley, the
defensive stopper, averages 9.2
points, 5.9 rebounds and 4.9
assists.
Thay, which got past Savan-
na, a team that finished behind
Valencia in the Orange League
standings, 50-36, Saturday, is
keyed by. 6-0 junior Heidi
Hardeman.
Hardeman, the daughter of
Thoy boys coach T.J. Hardeman,
averages 20.1 points and 8.2 .
rebounds, though Dukus said
she plays primarily on the
perimeter.
Sarah Spencer, a 6-0 junior
forward, averages 10.2 points
and 7 .5 rebounds, while junior
guards Tammy Yanamine (7 .5
ppg) and Kim Erlenwein (6.5
ppg) are also vital to the attack.
"I'd say their strengths are
their tenacity on defense and
their ability to execute well on
offense,· Dukus said.
Dukus said emphasizing
pressure defense. transition
offense and solid execution in
the half-court game, will be
Newport's focus.
"No matter who we're play-
ing, we have to play our game,•
Dukus explained. #We need to
be confident and we should be.
Hopefully, we'll have a big
crowd come out and support us
to give us another intangible.•
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce would like to thank
everyone who helped make the 1996 Newport Harbor Christmas
Boat Parade Awtzrtb Dinner & Auction a great success. ---CHA•ll• Of COlllMflCI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Auction Chair
Bob Black-Balboa Pavilion/Carolina Panenger Serviu
Auction Committee
Mary Andre-The Hyatt Nrwponer Resort
Roger Alford -Hausmaninger Btnot Lang & Alford
John Blom-John L. Blom Custom Photography
Henry Schielein -The Balboa Bay Qub
Sponsors
Ware Disposal Co., Inc. • The Irvine Company
Auctioneer
Jim Dale-Past NHACC Chairman of the Board
Entertainment
Jim Roberts-Balboa Btach Company
--
Newpotc BndlJCoN• Ma. n.111 PiJoc.
PUIUC PUii.iC I01'ICll .
•l! -:ii~
.:_ t ,LJ'
I . •
' 1\ I, -'
Polley
Ra1r .. and dl'adlinr-. 81'f' ~ubjM·I to c·hnugr
wi1h11111 11oti1·~ Thr p11bli,,hrr "'""""" tht' ri~I
IO t'l'n .. or. n>..Ju .. .,ify. rl'\ ...,,. nr n>Jt'•'t any
1·l11 ... ,jft1·d ndHr11.,l'lllt'llt Pll'uM" rrpon llny error
th111 mav hi• in you r dui..,iftl'd od immt>dirurly.
Tiw Doily Pil111 u1·1·1·pt:. 110 lfobilit~ fur an~ l'mtr
iJt a11 adHrli-.t"m1·111 for ,,.·tii.·h i1 111<1\ bt>
II
By Fax
(714) 631-6594
ByPhone
(714) 642-5678
By MalJJln Person:
330 \rest Bav ~ trt>et
f.osta ~esa. GA <>2o2?
"''P4111 iblt> f'\1·1·p1 fur 1lw 1·0 .. 1 of 1h1; i.parr
1u·11iully 111·1·11ptl'd b,· tlw c•m•r. Cn·di1 1·11n only
lw ulluT.1·d for ilw fiM i1M'ni1111
(Plt>a'>f inrludt' \'cmr naml' and
phonr 1111mlwr ai1d \\'t''ll l'1tl1 you
b11rk 'l\'ith u prin· q1111tr .) At ~ .. wpnn Bl\'d. & R11y St --Deadllnes --
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Hours Tue day .............. Monday 5:00pm
'I Hf phom· 8:30am-5:00pm
~fonda\'-Frida,
Walk-In 8::-J°Oam-5:00pm
~1111day-Fnd11y
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ....... Wednesd ay 5:00pm
Frjday ............... Thursday 5:00pm ,..,, ..... Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm
OUT-OF-STATE COSTA MESA 2s24l•B·u·s·1NE-·ss_& __ LOST & EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT ANTIQUES 6010 TV, ELECTRONICS, BMW
PROPERTY 15 58 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii f OUND 2 92 5 5 530 5530 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil STEREO 6080 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
9030
IOUAL HOuSIHO
Ol'l'ORTUNlfY
$599 Move In FINANCE iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ------.. 1
Fin• Arlzone Cln, lg min cabfn·•tyfe, Lost Cet REWARD! $1000'• Poaalble MEDICAL Top Dollar Paid!
Property 1Br wlk·ln clst pool new Male blue eyed Typing Part Tfme. Al Back office position. From 1800·1960.
160 acres from $295/ carP.t, nr b~h. T~l/Sq. -8-U-S_I_NE __ S_S____ Siamese w/blue colar Home. Toll Free Spanish bl-lingual w/ 1 pc 10 entire estate. * CABLE TV * AllNllnllll~t lll lbls acre. Limited avail· Bunkhouse Apts vicinity of Oemion 1·800·218-9000. Ext. exp. 714·548·2273 Paintings . china, Descramblers
... ,.,.lasMjedlltller.11· ability, no qualifying. Pet 642-1401 OPPORTUNITY Lane at Ellis In HB T·1361 for Listings. Receptionist glsware. furn, etc. Lowest Prices!
lf'll F* ltwlillt kt., ttU u Beautiful Oatetand, AZ ---------954·1550. 40Yr NB Res 673·6223 1 Year Warranty -..MlfMQllUU1Ullt" •h hour East of Yuma. Cozy 2Br +Ger w/ 2904 ""L--t -C-A"""T_•_R_E_W_A_R_D Admln. Asst./Bkkpr Big opportunity Visa/MC/Discover
11 ....,.... .. ..., ,nteft•ce. Clean air, panoramic· opener, dwshr. new 0 • • Exp'd. PT. Flex hrs. with busy leasing --------""! C.O.D. 30 day trial
U•UlllN "lllsc.rl•lutl111 views, electric avail. decor. Prvt patio. STOP! $1500/Wklv T~n. siamese, calico Cmptr skills rcq'd. Fax companyf 723-4580 ---------1 1·800·211·4125
C a I I A r I "•• 5900/mo. 545·3229 , mix. In the vfclnlty of resume to: 650·9509. FURNITURE 6014 Miff • rKI. cM, 1111flel, " working from homel San Miguel/Spyglass ---------Resteurent * * • aa.~lllllillah&ll•ur Tres Realty, Arizona E'sld• 2bd/1.5ba 2·car Xlnt Income oppt. NB. 2111. 760-6680 Advertising Co. Hostess/Hos!(Servers iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil"'---------'
'90 5351 Blk/blk, alt.
Perfect shapel Trds
OK. Fin & warrt aval. $15,950 776-1152
'91 3251 Blk/blk , a/I .
Runs like new. Trades OK. Fin & warrt aval.
$11 ,950. 778·1152
'92 32515 Wht, a/I.
showroom cond. Trds
OK. Fln & warrt •val.
$17,950. 779·1152
..._...,._,••lllllllllllllD Land Wholesalers gar, fp. stove, hkups. No gimmicks. Lost Traditional Ebel Cash Delly No exp. Day/night. Apply : Clean Futon Blk & -----------.... __ .. .--.,. .. u-•. 1·800-700·9117 sm. patio/yard. 9985. Serious people cell: PT/FT. Start Today! 3·5pm Wed/Thur/Fri Fisher Stereo Gtss ---------_, _..,. __ -1·80"370·42""'2 Ladies Watch vie-Our h 37• "4"' BLUEWATER CRILL print. $1 50. Bfk 6 cbnt, turn tbl. dual CADlLLAC 9040 ................... --.......... Avail 3/8. 645·5862 .,.. • L d o f Heat er ..,.., •1 drawer dresser. S225. _ ·--·---a y ueen o Angels 530 Udo Park Or. NB cass. 5·CD. 2 spkrs, ,"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lllb....,.,., win Ht ••••••••• Light & Bright 2BD •Grow Eerth Worma Church In COM Auto CAD Operetor 969·2891 after6pm. $400. Fender bassl• ~.,aft1111u. HOUSES/ Attached carport. In your own backyard. 714·644-8866 Architect's office. SALES Creem lacquer bdrm amp 160wlt, $400 .
...i llr fUI Ill* wlllU 1111 Large yard, no pets. Awesome profit! I'll 2 yra min exp. FAX HIGH Commission I s e 1 & k 1 n g bed. Yamaha electric bass,
Wil&auM.,tatllw.OWIUllet1 CONDOS 5825/mo. 722·1342 teach you! 532·1663 _H_EAL __ T_H_&____ resume to: 548·6981 FT/PT Bonus Program $450.obo 675.3373 $200. Matt 675·3090
.. MIHr ......... lhl all FOR RENT Mov•ln Special •VENDINQ ROUTE• -=a,_u_n_n_y--=H~e~lp_: __ M_a_ll /Comm only. 650·5779 ::.e:-.:. :-',.!:!;•~: ••••••••• ~:~~ 0~0::~ymo~~~ •2;>p~1~~ t~rc~~fc~s• FITNESS 3000 g~~~~~~~·kp~s~ot~~~: StoikT~.:c;:rr:N MERCHANDISE
_..,,,.....,.,......11cem----------furnished 2br 1ba apt. sale•B00-711 ·4381• DIABETICS (using In· N.B. 800.229·7147x137 Furni t ure Store MISC 6015 TRANSPORTATION
... .,....,11' ..... alHUO CORONA Verticals, enclosed1---------sulln). Did you know CLERICAL Call 648.2400 iiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil•••••••••
l1IMl9l1U.-..i•·-hr DEL MAR 2122 garage, dwnstrs, lndry All'ElNATIVE EDIONE Medicare (or Insur· we are recruiting for Styllat, Faclallst. Dlebetlcs Save money---------
lllY' 1tf ... 1,DCllU,._, room, small pet okl! ''"""f•dlr/f•llOOfr ance) covers most qualified receptionists, Stallons available. on supplies. Medicare BOATS 7011 CllHU0114.Zl·JSll. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $720. 908·8088 kaU.e.,iowtft/rH11t-. supplies? Save money office clerks. data· Newport Hair Salon. pays If you use tnsu· 3bd, 1 ·3/4 be 1/2 blk r ...... , 1.11,.,. -"tit.a •r Call: 1 ·800·633·2001 entry operators, secre· Bonnie, 750-0493 lin, we bltt for you. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
to beach. Quaint, cozy ----------doctor ,.,.J lioH •lot ...,. Liberty Medical. Sa tis· tarles. Long/short-term TELEMARKETERS Men t Ion 2 6 1 6 1 2.
cottage Gide COM. By NEWPORT ,,._ 1-.. u CAN 2. o,., faction guaranteed. p ositions available. Immediate openings 1·800.833·2001
appointment only. BEACH 2669 ,_,..,.,;, •-1 ..... ,i.w.,u. N~e~~~ ~;;1~~r~ Beat T•mporery N.B. area $7/hr + __ O_l_d_H_•_n_d_T_o_o_l_a_1
$2300/mo. 675-6434. '"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii rh USA. C.JI C.o,.11J11. Servlc•• O 11 (714, 54 ... 2197 comm. 310-407·233 Fishing gear, ladles
Deslnner condo 2 -t-2 BR F ••so ·u~~~UJ.~~'-~::llSl:.Jll•••••••• ..... 11 11 548 9832 Fully furn. Turn Key. *1 rom •v * •· •--~__,--..,....----Weatway Expresa sma ems. •
*DUFFY* Electric Boets
New Duffy 21 · S225mo
New Duffy 18' $181mo
Bos Whaler 17' Eldras '94 Mere 100
•7g ELDORADO
rebuilt trans. good
cond, good running
c ar . $1700/0BO
714·957·0883
'83 Blerrltz Best '83
Cad in US! Avg 6,300 mis pr/yr. Real show
piece. S5k. 675-3391
'89 Eldoredo 2·dr, pertoct, loaded,
O r ' a c a r /B e v e r I y
Hills. 39k ml. $8000.
759· 7835 after 6pm.
'93 Devlll• Sedan, VS.
lthr Int. full pwr. cr1:1lse
ell, cass. wire whls.
$1 5.500 854-7817
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
GENERAL 1002
Pool/spa. Lrg yd~ 28R 28A Fron1 1785 •---------•EMPLOYMENT Contrectors Inc. now hiring expe. Wedding Gown Sz·7 patio. S 1750 w/lse. D/W Incl. 60x30 pool. Highest profit. Fastest rienced OTA Drivers. Veil/shoes. $400 obo
$1950 w/o. 759•7028. No pets. Carport. CREDIT 2907 ••••••••• growing area In con· Up to 0.30 CPM start· Wetsuits $125 675-3373 Vista Del M••• crete repair . Get Ing base pay 0 .0.E.,
Upgraded Twnhs• •545--4855• $Debt licensed • apply plus up to .06 cpm
Seve 1200011---------
Bos Whaler 15' $5.295 CHEVROLET 9045
2001 W. Coast Hwy '"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Wolff Tennlng Beds NB 945·8427 1•
Attent on
HomeOwnora &
End unit 1900s.f. 2bd/ --2-b-d/-1-b-e-Pr-lv-a-te--Consolld•tlon$ EMPLOYMENT Concrete Polymer bonuses. Top pay,
2·5ba, attach 2·c:ar patio, walk to beach. Cut monthly payments 5530 ~~!!~· H~;~e In'::,~~~ benefits and equlp-
gar· Av a I I 3 11 · •518 35th St, N.B.• up to 30%·50%. A•· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii menl. Now leasing S1850mo. 675·8045 $995/mo. 675·5205 duce Interest. St,..,. •--------companyc. Cati todayl Owner/Operators. Per·
Tan At Home '84 Corvette Rebuilt
Buy Direct and Sevel ---------eng/1rans {Ooat cam)
Low Monthly Pmts POWER BOATS spoilr, new tra +many
Fr•• Color Catalog new prts/. Great cond. Call 1·800-711·0158 7012 $7500. 842·0859 -.-STRU1 TCRET£ centage or mileage
collection calls. Avoid 1·800·257·7838 contract. Minimum ---------•
A.!. Agentatl
Showcase those
speclal proper11es In
our Homes of the
Week & Open Home
Gulde published
each Saturday In the
Real Estate Tab. It's
an effective and
inexpensive way lo
reach homebuyersl
COSTA MESA 2124
•A.lmoat Beechfront
Spacious 2Br 1 Ba
Carport. Near park.
$1200/mo 310·545·1384
bankruptcy. FREE FLATBED DRIVERS 18' Cl I L Cryatel Cove Sh•k• down Truck Leases COMPUTERS 6018 ••• c ymen confldenllal help. Top pay planll Sh k FT PT available on new'97. $1200 080 or goes to .----------. NCCS, nonprotll, 0-6 mos.+ $.24 •c / · Great h ll 3/3 673 5452
Call our Classified
Department Todayll
842·5678
CM Townh•• W. Bluff 2·1g bdrm's, 1.75' ba.
2·c:ar gar, wd hlc·up, fp I•••••••••
s915 + dep. 642·5524 MISCELIANEOUS
E'•ld• Coq Cott•e•
1BA/1BA, lovely yard 1.RE.NT-·ALS·----lnc:1 water. S895/mo.1s
548·3959
11 c ens e d /b o ('Ide d . 6mos. -S.28 to S.34 summer Jobi 49~·9666 No credit check I Mao Performs 836CO c ar Y . .
1-800·955·0412 Great benefits 1130a -3p, 7dys/wk. Call Chuck James I 20 A M 1 8 • Du ff y 1 9 7 7 1·800-880·9244 mon lor, mg A · Double-Ender. $4500. Fr•• Debt and bOnuses. Call Dentel Asslstent Ext 201 500 HO, 14.4 mOdem. Counsellng J .B. Hunt Flatbed needed In Corona del s 1 ,200. Paul, 650-7880 or Trade for Whaler.
Low cost debt repay· 1·800·325·1087 Mar ore, 4 day weeki---------714-875-0120
ment. Many major ' 714·844·7182 ·EMPLOYMENT ---------1
creditors lower pay· ~~~~~~~ DRAFTSPERSON SERVICES 5533 WOANTED -MARI--NE-S_L_IP_S __
ments, reduce Inter· •Dock Aasistant•• Flexible, P/T. Need T BUY 6019 Doc•s 7022 est. E •tab 11 s h • d Boat rentals/sales co re a Id en t/a r ch It e c , liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~
---------ROOMS 2706 1980's . Non·protll. skills·, kitchen tile & ·---• o c iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii HUNTINGTON Cons mer Credit •eeks neat, frlondty Please be aware tl'lal Id olns Gold Silver HARBOUR 2142 Co u II Se I es doc:k assts lo clean/ bath design a plus; the listings in this cat· Franklin Mint. Slarllng 80' AVALON MOOfllNG
i
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CM Hou•• Quiet. 1~~~~-~\e.222~ smha
0
lnwlalnabreoaasts .. dHoc:eklps1• ~~~:lnp~an~r•:ne:t~•i:; egory may require you Old watches & Jewelry tns1tde location. $375K ~===:::;::==;::=;:::=~! happy. Non·smoker. 10 call a 900 number Westcoast Coin 642·9448 Pr vate Party 548·9338
-GOVERNMENT Weterfront Beautiful $300 plus utllltles. ---------customer svc. Apply Call S·5• Tues/Wed I hi h h I T O 11 P Id
3 MORTGAGES •· In person 3.5 daily. Regine, 759·0606 n w c I ere s a op o •r• • FORECLOSED 3bd, 3ba, den, dr, gar. 556·6 78, leave mssg. g 2001 w. Coasl Hwy, NB •---------charge per minute. For Records. Jazz.I••••••••• HOMES Dock av! pools, furn,1 ________ T.D.'S 2918 Driver• Sountracks , etc. AUTOMOBILES Pennlea on th• St. No $3350. Agl 675-9505 n11::NTAI.S TO $1000'• Poss Ible Allentlon Speclalfzed Earn. s1ooo W••kly Cati Mike 645·7505. ~ Typlnn Part Time. At Drivers! New 1997 Stuffing envelopes at money down govern-HOMEOWNERS • h N I ment 1oan1 available SHARE 2724 H<>ma . Toll Free Pay scalel Glass or ome. o exper ence. ---------•
now. Homes/Condos. NEWPORT How to cut 10 years 1·800·218·9000. Ext. heavy haul divisions! ~ree aupplles. No ob· FREE TO YOU 6022 ---------
Loc:al llstlngs 1 800 BEACH 2169 off your Morlgage T·1398 for Listings. 3 yrs OTA w/1 yr hgatlon. Send SASE: ACURA 9010
669·2292 Ext .H-4017. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Beeutlful, N.B. 3Br without rellnanclng. Cl• slfl d Flatbed required. ACE. Dept 503 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2.5Ba Lg kit, hi cell. Send $9.95 Check or • • Class A·COL required. Box 5137 Lovable Cocker Spaniel
---------1 Beeutlful Home On Berber crpt, fp, patio. M.0 . 10 Yale Publish· The most comprehen· Combined Transport Diamond Bar, CA Mix. 1 yr otd. Mate. '93 lntegre Black.
BALBOA beach 4 lrg bdrm•. w/d. pool/spa, prkng. Ing, 1300 Adams 120, sive and current dlrec· 1·800·837·4407 91765 Neutered. Alf shots. auto. LS, tan Interior.
PENINSULA 1007 3ba. 2 FP's . s4ooot $525. Erin, 497.4495 Costa Meaa, Ca 92628 ~~:J,1o~1~~°n~~ and ter· C•H•ndre EASY WORKI 786·4119. 848·8302. :~;,::'.· A::~~r~8:t~
mo. lease. 873-4958 CM 3Br 3B• S335,l••••••••• li;ii;ii;ii;m;m;;;;;;;;;; •Grand Opening• Ex c 811 • n t P • Y 1 ---------• speller. AC. cc. mini Monewmeker older E'Blutf 28r 2Ba Split \l'l utlls + S 100 dep. AN O Need 25 people for all Assembcl• product• at JEWELRY, FURS cond. $12.500/0BO.
Oupt:ic needs work. !vi twnhse on grnblt w/ Own ba. FP, ow, N UNCEMENTS positions. We Train. home. all toll free: & UT 6025 720..9289
Ocean close. Harbor balcony, 2 car gar, pl. micro. 848·10281••••••••• Cell 588·1569 1·8~~~·::88
Realty Fran 873·4400 s125o. 75 9•9479 CM 3Br Twnhme w/cln, ---------•r1L A AK! Jave Central• GET p•1D TO ·HOPI Rolex oar.on• Stain· BMW Lido Is Bayfrt 4Br 3Ba quiet. no 1mk. 2blks ·-ANNOUNCEMENTS ~ W Now hlrlngl We offer ,.. • IHs Stee. orig owner ---------• Dock aval. Avall now. to Back Bay. $440/mo / fun environment, flex ~Ilk• 5347 weekly 8~ 30 yrs. Keeps xlnt iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CORONA Fum/unfum, wk/mo/yr 1/3 utl. Steve 645-5386 2920 IF YOU RESN80 hr• & tr a In Ing. Mystery Shopper time S8995 Call Ed '84 •33 CSI F 1 1 •pply In Person for local 1tores. Check · · v ul pwr. DEL MAR 1022 850-2300 650-3700 CM W'Sld s B MAKING ~ for appl. 873·9330 Xlnt cond. ••ust 1ee. • hare 4 r 3420 Vie Lldo·NB frlendllneu, cleanll· 1 dm S8 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Lido l•I• 4br, 3ba. 35' 2Ba Hsa. All amenl· $ • FR I! I! CA S H BUCKS A DAY Mon.Fri 1Oam·l2pm ness. Shop fOt TV't, A I svc re •· 500.
DUPLEX lot. New crpVpalnt. Nr tlH. $350/mo lnclda NOW$$ from wealthy or 3pm.5pm clothes, morel We P•Y MACHINERY 6045 7 5e.5 sa9
3Bd 2Ba +Studio. clbhse. 53000/mo yrly. ullt1. 650-9070 famlllea unloading CALL KATIE A fOf II. You keep Ill '88 7351 Black. Nice
Fixer Upper. Qen• Grundy Allr. 875-6181. N.B. ahere 3bd, 3ba MILLIONS to help FUN L f'&~T Leborer• Earn up to 313-458·5300 Ext 11 car mull, .. , TradH
840•9,45 Speotaouler Ooeen luxurious townhouse. minimize their taxe1. • ~ $GOO Weekly Long (Calla refundable)Fee Sln:.•r upholuery weicomel s 9•950.
end Chennel Views Garage. fplc, lndO WrlleWINlmOFmA•LdLISately: &BT CO. dl1tance phone com· NO llXPERll!NCE • ewlng machine 776-1152 ftft I pany ts 1eeklng peo-111G158 w/rev $650.
HUNTINGTON Luxurloua 1 br and $850/mo. 75Q.581 39-10 63 St. 111219. pie to Hrvlc:a stOf• NECl!SSAAYI •Cushion flll•r $75. '89 5251 White, alt.
9030
WHAT
HAP,EIS
'' rou
0011'1
ADJEl11SE1
NOTHING.
Call the
Classifieds
(714) 642·5678
B~"CH 1040 1br +loft with 2 •P•· NB $465 Room for renl WoOdslde. NY 11377 ,,.~&.l~A~lllllll rront promollonal box SSOO to S900 weekly Ru11els Upholstery Absolu1ely a perfect
.1;n clout balconlea. II route. 1-800-354·7331 potentlal processing Call 548-11 58 car. S13,950. 776·11 152, ---------Abundant walk In Ulla pd. Full uae of mortgage refund•. -
3br 1.5b• Condo
Perf starter homal
Pool, park, tennis.
S87,500 759·1877
Jeok Ch••hlr• bkr
closet and ltorage. houH. Non/1mk. Walk ~ ~ ....c......A Own houri.
Gas and watlf' paid. to beach. 875·3009 'W ~ ~ 1.aoo.382·21ff
Walk to Balboa l1tand NB Lg 2Br 2ea Fum ~ ~G.sfi ' l!XT 803 and the beach••· apt. $815 + 112 utls. .
Pre1tlglou1 rHort Prefer N/S female. <j n 'Tour.
llvlng wllh stunning BSCMS313 Cfi / DOMESTICS 5540
Ocean Pointe Giant w/ sunset• and cool ---------' It srn ' Ocean Views I 3 + 3.5. brHzea. Apts starting NB Prof male •••king •T/0111tr Sliow
3 frplcs. Shows Ill<• a at 51350. 789'-tMS to share your hou•• :Mny, •. 2 2, t.·' ... 7 Model Home $415,000 ---------rental. Pl•••• call .. .,.,
SAIL PROP•RTIES Studio/Br VerulllH 497·3392. ? 'Rtsm~1liu11 ' 714·88C>-4441 Condo. Super clean.
PooVspa/gar. No pet1 .. •••••llll•• &> lm1 11irits • Paolflo Rench 2·slory s 795/mo. 963--5037 •• ..t:.tuora
Twnhm• w/vlews of COMMERCW. ' ' , Bubbling cr .. k. 2 + THI! 8LUl'FS .''.\f 01111fi1111
2.5. fp. gar. $177,000. Lovely 3br (2 • den), REAL ESTATE 7,4 ·b·44.,,3,I(,,
SAIL PROP•RTll!S alngl• i.vel, •nd unlt I•••••••• l' "' 7t4-9'8C>-4441 home, 11750.1•• _,__,,.._,. _,__,,..
Haetln•• t. Co "·•· ~ ''W' ?t .... 40-sseo ,_l_U_S~IN-ES~S-0-P-Fl_C_E-:-~~~~~~• NEWPORT
BEACH ViLU UUiOX FOR 91tU'I' 27 ft 1069 1.tg 1br+ct9n MC:Ut'lty ~-.. &. LOST A
Condo M/4ba, fp, POUND ------
llAYCR•aT :a'*'• 2ba w/d lncd, pool, gat. •904900Ml.ft. efo•·l••··----w/mother·ln-law add. Ave II 3/5 s 1175. Harbot/Adame, C.M. l'OUND Kiit blk Elll• R••lty "447.000. VILLA R•NTALS Larry. 444-0110 /Whit \llclnl·ty"'sent 844-e~7~ ... 1882 714 .. 75-4912 :,,. A-;. a MeM Or~
1_.w; c..,. S397k. COMM!JtCW 2-22. M• a4e4
abd. al:NI. vt.w, poo1.l•---•-•lra·or•...., 2778 Loif lildll boat allpe. 144-6373 APAJtTMBNTS a.\&1 Imo. old. N•wport
•0611. l!MI• Realty BAR UNT Nonh condos, 2·tt. ... .....,. Aeltihh• """ ....,.. ......._..... Bl~rown a white.
L.ow 0own Paymentll C.M. 1000, 1000. Natned "Aego6e". Cal
3brl3ba. den, poof, '°°°· 4'()()09q.ft. eio-owner am Madd•n
mini ocn vu. HHK n• avall. Low ratM. eae.4100 Grundy Alt, 87M191 Lany. 444-0t to OA ........
2122 loiT CIT NIWAA01
•
___ lliii .. ilJ Gr.-,. -. a tan _.
llflped ,..... wlbNI
collw. Vlolnltv Oranae I 1111 81: I /ft . .....
\
.
~ Mesa typchowc nttds dctaiJ
oriented. autive people obemed with
accuncy to ~part of our ad building
team.
Debbi•'• D•rc•r• In CM has openings.
2Yrs + Fhc hrs. M•il•
" Lots ot TLC! • S4s.e177
MBRCHANDISI!
ANTIQVBS
Results I
"Adtu•· · cwilla
die Daily Pilot. me._...,.,
maid~ e'1llr --.n.e-
~-..... (1 .... ..... _
G WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1997 -l&TUlll tlM VOLVO I TODAY'S
CROSSWaRo PUZZLE • .....,.. ve-.t1'•• •••••• ao• ... 8400&. , .. ,.... Melt blu, YI, A/T, ~. 1.000 Mllet lftrf, UV. Orea&_,. warn. 111e ml• lmmac. 114,HI. T.,... ef UIOk ""9. ~u .. ...a
17500. 4ea.•ea~ Hunt........ 8effh UtOO 080. t71-t7'2 Tt .... ., ..... AClllOM ,~
t PMMd OU1 the
09fW
47 Fat oft ... "' 50 Craltt WOl'ller
53~ 8Wtrt!BING TRICK.8 Room•,
•pattmenta,
homH
Cluaffled
can aatlsfy
your
hou1lng need•.
SUZUIQ 1205
VOWW&G!N 123S
se Hunted • 10 Core 14~r .. 16 Fonner...._. 57 Qlr1I EUMood Both wlnerab&e. W.t deala. r.nn,ht«l play to land the pme. Moel deela,.... would ha._ rulred
the apMe ie.d, drawn &.rumpe and
UMm pae ~ diamonde by caah-
ing the ace and ktn1 -• H(et.y
play to fUard aplnst a doubleton
queen with E811L When F.ut pined
lhe lud with the queen of dia-
mond• on the third round of the
suit, the marked club ahi~ would
net the defendcra two lricka (or a
on~trick set.
On th• move? •eo P'OX GL ..,
"*' SleY9nlon , • -8-1\ Adhem
17 Next k> uc:ti othitr 19 v ••
20 Some fenc:.
materilllt 21 Qesloner items
23 Stageole
24=rrull 28Wide1t1. 28 Green alone 29 Cut Into cube•
33' Vapof
3' Matdllog gtoups
35 a.ntJe bl'eete 38~Yolco -37 Fair grllde
38 ~flsh-
lowl
39 Otllahoma town 40 Bo<* enthusiast
•2 Phoenl• b81ket-ballera 43 Bite 4• PoPfar 45 -one·a ume· wait
48 Novellat James -
09C*-wlnnef' 80 Realty unit -
81 Bug°"' 82 JtJla Veme'1
captain
83 Fie• 8"4 Hay 65 0.V.te>p
DOWN 1 Crush
2 WrlterWiesel 3 Leather
c!Nnaer
4 Attacks on a
c:Qtle
5 Calendar boxes 6 Asnerand
Sneed
7 "The Greatear
8 Edinbufgrl boy 9 Rows of seals 10 Edible root 11 Sacred bird of
Egypt 12 Painted tinware 13 Shades ol color 18 Plead 22 Sea ducks
24 Ho1ers price 25 TV spots 26 Greell marltel·
27 ~8:1oppers
28 yell Intuits 30 Conversion 31 Singer Gorrne 32 Wrndow covering
34 L11ndscapes 35 Region 38 Wearing not a
at itch 41 Made lun of 42 Pose for an at11st
•5 Old-luhloned
hat
•6 Broadcasllng
48 Heavy
hamme"-49 TraM behind
50 Jezebel'• husband 51 Paddy crop 52 Seabird
53 Wont gang 54 Note 55 Winter preclpllatlon 58 Distant 59 Eggs
NORnl
•KQI 0911
OAKJ 109 •a• WEST •7 OAKJ854
¢63
•AJ76
F.ABT .,
OQ 1078
O Q87 •Q 1053 2
ROUTH
•AJ 1086432
ovoid
¢842
•KB
The bidding:
WEST NORTH
10 20
I 60 6• r ...
F.AST 80\J'nt
20 ••
Pua P ...
Opening lead: King ofc;?
•F,xtraordinAry hand," remarked
the kibitzer. "Ueclart>r made lhc
contract by conceding a lrick in a
AJit in which he had no loser!" This
wn11 lhe dc11l that oc:caaionrd the
kibiL7.cr'11 admirAt.lon.
A" often i11 thf' c&Re when freak
hAnd" crop up At lhe t.Able, the auc:-
lion WA& wild 11nd no one was sure
whn could make wh11l. EMt-We11t
1c:ould have Hved a few point.a by
11ac:rific:ing at 11i11 heart.A, but neither
was sure that North-South's con-
tract wa11 makable. Indeed, it took
DATSUN 9060 FORD
Unfortunately for tne defenders,
declarer found an even be~r safety
play -diacarding a diamond from
hand on the kinr of heart.al The
defenders were helpleea.
The heart continuation was
ruffed (cHhing lhe ace of clubs
would hRve 11nvNI a trick and would
he rorrecl et duplicate), trump11
were dr11wn In one round and the
ace and kinR of diamonds were
cashed. When both defenders fol-
lowed, the rest was a pianola.
Declarer rulTed a diamond to set up
two winners in the suit., cl"088ed t.o
dummy with o trump 11nd discarded
two clubs on the good diamonds t.o
score an oven.rick.
Learn to be a ~tter bridge
player! Subacrlbe now to the
Goren Drid«e Letter by calling
(800) 788·1225 for information.
Or write to: Goren Bridge Let·
ter, P .O. box 4<410, Chicago, Ill.
60680.
9075 MERCEDES 9130
'78 810 Sedan, 8/1, AM/FM cass, new trs.
Runs great! $850
OBO. 75k orig mis.
'87 FORD VAN Conv. '90 190E 2.8 A steal!
540-5995/754·4455
FORD 9075
V-6, A/T, P/S, NC, Trades ok. Ftn & ~arrt
Low ml. Orig. Ownor. a v a I . S 1 1 , 9 5 O . $5,495 obo 120-1122. 778·1152
'90 R•nger XL T
4x4, ac, ps, toadodt MERCURY 9135
$1 0' 4 95. T Olf O t. 0 f iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Huntington Be•ch 714-847·8555 '9 1 M ER CUR Y
'78 F350 P/U 4 dr -----=-----CAPRI CONY. w/svc bed, ladder '93 TEMPO 5-spd, ac, ps, white, rack. Very strong 460 auto ac, ps, must seel sporty. clean conv
CID. New radials w/ sa595. Toyot• of $4995. Toyota of
alum rims. Great work Huntington Be•ch Huntington Beach
truck. S 2 9 0 0 714-847"8555 714-847-8555 540-5995/754-4455 '95 ESCORT LX
Sharp Car '84 L TO 4dr mid-size. 511 ,995. Toyot• Of NISSAN Power, like now, one owner. records. $2000 Huntington Beach iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
060. 723·1504 714-847-8555 '88 '12 HardbOdlf P/U
9150
'88 Taurua 75k mis, 1 owner, new
Sell your extra
household
Items
In Classified
Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain Valley
Independent to
reach over 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card# or mail with
•aa ao ..... rel eonv.n.
R•d. Clatlon at•reo. Leaving coun1rv.
S2500 080. 873-8384
POW« 81..,lng •
15995. Toyoto of
Huntlnttton •••oh 71..a47.e599 •
D YES, SELL MY CAR
0 VISA 0 MAX
Pie.-CtiecJr ~t Bons
'WW Melle Model ____ _
0 e ~ 0 -.is.a Os... Roal Pnoe Dv.f O _,,,,_ O~OI.-----
0-1.-o-~-c-. D•Sc>Md o-~OL-.lap 4dr, 2.5 liter ~ng, a/, MERCEDES 9130 batt/trs. Very clean.
I u II P w r • o m II m • iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii R u n s g reat. S 2 7 00 OBO. 831·1180 w/cass. good running '84 500SEL Euro Call 642-5678. a check today!
Run for a week! If
your car does not
sell, we'll run it for
another week FREEi
All for just $10-.
DsSi-d OAM'FMSt-o--0 ""CondllQW o o.-Col'ollol o""'°" .. _ 0 IMlhl<........, 0 c-io Oc..tom ~ or .. -Q YlnylRool 0-*'lla.:--
• $101«4
iw-.s1 MCh addltlonel line cond, good tires. Wht!Tan, Must See '93 SENTRA
Put a few words
to work for you.
recently amogged. This Beauty. 58500 5 speed, air, ps, $1500. llrm 548·5178 economloal car .
SELL
Firm. 631-6754 58595, To)fota of
MEET
someone special
through classifted
Huntington Beach
714-847-8555
.... tel Diily P!tol 330 W. Bly St. ~la M9a. CA 92627
,.._, (71 4) 642·5&78. , ... (714) 531-essM ...
------!CARPENTRY 3510 COMPUTERS 3556 DRYWALL
SERVI CE iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVI CE
HANDY MAN 3710 HEALTH/
3584 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NUTRITION
IANDSCAPE 8c PAINTING 3858 PLUMBING 3890 TAX
3742 LAWN CARE 3808 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PREPARATION 392S DIRECTORY QUALITY CRAFTSMAN -------·•I Custom cablnets/crown1 __ C_O_M_P_U_T_E_R_ vSMALL JOB EXPERT
•P•lnt/C.,pentry• 24Yr• Quality Painting
Drywall and morel PERSONAL TRAINING NEW LEAF~ TOUCHUPS, TOO
ORCO PLUMBING
& Drain Cleaning
7Days/Wk•Fr•• Eal. Ll727705 780-8170 molding/Ille/marble/Misc T R A I N I N G Drywall/Plaster Repair repairs. Charles 557-7684 , Hannlnn,fT1plnn1Tutur1 • Windows 3.11 /95 • • •
Small Jobs Oki Diet/Exercise Program Landscape & M~ry 24 Hrs. Richard Sinor
O•ry 845·5277 TONE YOUR BODY DHlgn/Bulld/Remodel Ucll'280644 645·3209
ROOF REPAIR • & R I P P E D • A B S ---------
* IT'S TAX TIME * Call early tor appt.
Joonno H•re E.A. Retired IRS 673-8905 ACOUSTIC
CEILINGS 3408 CERAMIC
iiCiiiiElml.mlNiiOiiiiMmAmSmTmERiiiliiTimLmEmSiiiiiiiiiiii3m5m2m8
•MS Office/Quicken Comm/RH 551·5573
• Hardware/Software
ON SITE • 70AYS 714-721-0252
•Acoustic Removal• --------.J Custom TeKture•Palnt Leaky Showers Rep'd -,,,.----,.,........,......---
ELECTRICAL 3610
• Train w/one of So. Ca. Uc.fins. 748-0487 RAINBOW Clrcle Malnt. ---------. • Ceilings painted P1lntlng.fnVEJt Hou11/Apt • Expert Electrical Best Trainers in New· Sh•n•'• Gardening Quality Job. Free HI. •Carpentry & More port's Finest Private & Landacaplng. Lawn L#569897 838•8888 22Yra Exp. L#535977 Facility. Very Reas. care lnstall'n/Removal
7 1 4 .5 3 O ·1 O 7 2 Ratesl Call Mike Now Sprinklers 548,5801 CHUNG'S PAINTING
eDAN DAWSON• PLUMBING
Water Heaters • Dralns
Remodel • Repair Faucets • Flxturea
Ll554722 • 646·6720
TAX RETURN/PREP
I Resolve Tax problems -Jerome Stoll In NB·
Since '85 Fair RalH
•714-250-8888• R 1 & 1 11· Computer Tr•lnlng Llc'd. Mark 838-7300 egroul ng nsta n Affordable-Personal L670130 Dean of Tile
Sm•ll Job EXPERT
Duncan Elecitrlc Local/Quick Re1ponse
L1 275870 050·7042
BREWER'S TV·VCR 1·800·735·5882 VICTOR'S Prof'I Land-23Yr• Exp-Ort Prlcel
S Guar Wotk·Free Est & Homo Services scape Malnt. easonal Ucl375602 538·1534 Pgrll'717·5729
APPLIANCES
SERVICE 3426
APPLIANCE REPAIR
·REASONABLE·
• 848·5848.
673·8065 or 846-8526 One-on-One Training
Newport Tile & Marble 1-c_R_B_A_d_m_in __ e3_,_·4_2_5_81--P-e-te-,-k-ln_E_l_e_c_tr-lc-
Flne Craftsmanship ... Home Com Put• r Prompt & Low Rates!
At Allordable Prices. Start-up. From Ground res-com/am-lg jobs
Showers/Counters/Firs Zero To The Internet CSL618717 748-5255
Natural Stone & Marble HCSZ 714-891-4755 1~--------Fplc1 LS.5466 842-2214 MACMEDIC • Care for FENCES
Maclntoah Computers
In your hme/olc. Low/ & DECRS 3615
Under $300. UE73660 IMPROVEMENTS Color. 10Yra Exp. Xlnt --~--~--1
Accept M/C & VISA HOME 3756 Refa N.B. 457·1739 Ike'• Custom Painting --------
C.M. Dale 831·1818 YARD Clean-up, Tree Prof, Clean, Quality---------
Trlm/Hedgea/RemovaJ Work. lnVExl & Docks. POOL
Too buay for t••••? We wlll come to you.
30 Years Tax Exp.
1 ·800-834-9790 H•nd!fm•n Cherne
Painting, carpentry,
plumbing, fence bldg.
Local res. 780·5044
LIKl!·NU CONCRETE
R e m o v e o I l/r u s I
llalns, crack rpr. Re-
New Lawn & Plants. L#703468 031-4810 SERVICE 3894 880.5184 P9·748-5375 Peter• Painting 1---------
20 Years Experlenceliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii TUl'ORING 3929 nu wood decks & seal1---------
Free Est. 780·8427 MASSAGE Free E1tlmatH lal•nd Blue Pool• '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Home Repair/Remodel Interiors and Exterior• Pool & Spa Wkly Svc. 1• Costa Mesa/Newport Referral. 854-0512 Repair: fllter/pump/htr SPANISH·FRENCH
3830
hourly rate. 8 7 3. 8 8 1 8 j iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 25 Ye.,• Exp. INSTRUCTION3780 L&B Sporta Thar•py Acid wash 845-0728 llallan-Engllah. UCI *Wood Fences• Jim 831·2480 All body care to relax •SON'S PAINt'INO• Prof MA. Xlnt RHulta
-BA_T_H_TU_B ___ CHILD CARE 3536
REGLAZING 3448 LICENSED ~ DAYCARE CONCRETE •· Replace/Repair Low S HOME SERVICES & rejuvenate. RN/LMT 20 Yrs Exp. Rea/Comm. ---------Tranel. 497.3973 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Lots of TLC & Funl ui Free hauling/est. Llc'd Anything & Everything I GOLF LESSONS I CM 722·9823 lnVExt. LICl460559. ROOFING 39101 _______ _
Pediatric CPF\ & 1tt Aid MASONRY 3557 Advantage Const 974·5301 Free Estimate. Rel'a. Fun & Effective 537·9496 or 80CMl8-1722 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Meals/1nack1 lncld. Reas liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Mlch••I 758·1440 8 Yra Exp. Low Ratel " WALL
r1111 FT/PT 984-1740 •----------------Tlm;PGA Pro 548·0569 liMiiiiiOiiVINiiiiiiGiiiiiiiiiiii3ii8ii3m4 PET BALBOA ROOFINu CO COVED'NGS Brick, Block, Stone, Tiie FLOOR INSTALL MSM Conat Carpentry Quality Work Guarnl'd &U
S2S.OO OFFI Cone, Patio, Driveway REPAIRS 3620 Orywll/Pnt/Plmb/Elec --------SERVICES 3870 Reroof/Repalr FrM E11liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Tuba/Showers{Tlle CLEANING Fplc, BBOa. Ref. 25Yr. Ramodel•Sml/Lg Joba. JEWELRY 3784 PUBLIC NOTICE Lie/Ina 831-15081 l'iiirthln9 lntorlora
Refinish Like Newl E•p. Terry 557·7584liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii L698327 982·2438 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The Calif. Public Utlll· ROOF LEAKi ONLY lnalallatlon • Removal Repalra 044-1835 SERVICES 3548 S•l•••Svc•lnat•ll _Q_U_AL_l""'"TY_C __ RAFT __ __...5 ... MA_N_ Ilea CommlHlon RE· Pet lltter/Dq Walk•r All di 1 & OlacOYnt Wallcoverlng
BATHTUB Refinishing iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * Beat Price/Quality HardwdNlnyl/Ceramlc C1rpentry•Cablnet1 WllUam Harold J eweler QUIRES that all uaed Oally/Overnlghl vl11t1. rep~~ 2;\n.":J':a2 Ll560875 973·1212
,1Porcelaln/Flbergtaas $10 off 1st Cleaning Lndscape, bflok, atne Marble/Carpet Bnd/lna Electrlc•Plmbg•Doort :~:~~~J:~i~iJ::J:.j~ houaehold good a Refe a111. Llc'd/8 onded OWEN REPAIR SVC The Stripper
,1Shower1/Countertops Hou111, apt1, offlcH. concr. 900.79e.1oo7 L708279 722·7332 Misc repalrs557·7884 8uy/Mll/lrldt 873-0385 mover• print their Deni" 714-935·8870 ~.,...,,,..,,,.,,.,,.,..,....,,,..--....,..__ Sp• c I a II z Ing In
Llo'd MS.7723 Excellent ave; great •CEMENT WORK• ·~--------P.U.C. Cal T number; ROOFING Sorvlcoa Wallpaper Removal
P Ices 57 .. 3230 St d c ·-Semi "•tired Conlract limo• and chauffeurs ·••pert Repolr•· L5889241 983·5037 •1MODl!L. 4 LEll SS r · • ampe oncret• GARAGE Repair• Improvement• ..._ h I TC P PLASTER f " Brick/Block/Stone/Tiie ' ' LANDSCAPE •· P•ml 1 • r • • • num· Rerools or New Roo 1 Wo O•I• •hould hang Complete rellnlnlshlng A TOUCH OF CL.ASS DOORS 3678 am Jobe. Ouahty/lntegrlty ui ber In all advertl•• aepatR Llfl728292 Aak for
& RH1oratlon HrvlcH Cleaning. Rea/Comm L541858 831-4310 I care, Ken 842·1770 lAWN CARE 3808 menta. II you have a ~ ~ 3880 Brian 842•7875 together. Strip, Install,
New Shower Doors Uc/Bond~. Free Est. •J.R.Q. MASONRY• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii queallon about the le-advice to the crazy.
Uc/Ina 283·0779 Teresa 282·7143 Block walla, at\Jcco •S25 Service Coll• ---------•••lo Y•rd Molnt gallly of a mover, limo Plaater/9tuooo Patch 831•2111 Anytime
CABINETS -St90 ••Oii HOUSECLEANING concrete, brick. Lows Repal11/Serv/Openers HAULING 3720 Lawn/cln-upl/trff 1rlm or chauffeur, call: -Serving so ca 25Yll· REMODELING
LlcenHd·Bonded L#730089 531·7043 All Makoa-Modole iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii aprlnklr/ .. tate. Thatch Publlc UtlllllH Llctlf328184 24Hra •ADDITIONS 3916
510,00 per hour. Llc:'d 850.Serv·(7378) JUNK TO TH• DUMP 831 ... 422 Pg--413-8142 Comml11lon 714-Sl4·7B31 Can't aeem to
Advanced Wood1y1ttm1 714-548-0388 coU'l'D•croRS ••1475 • 18X7•• C71 .. M8·1882J • TMEEI • 714-558-4151 get to all thOH .Custom Cabinetry-iu&\A lncludu hallway, AVAILABL• TODAY A A ALLOAMihiciN f'orthl"9 lnterlore r•palr fob•
Ooors•Copper Celllng •Bright H••clnlng GENEUL 3558 weather-strip, Install•-88a.1au ~ .. ~-Movo...U..... PLUMBING 3890 Kl1chen/8ath/Remodel •.• ound .... houN? Moldings • Mantel• European Prof'!. Beat tlon & tax 945.5704 _ _,,......,__......,...,.....~--~ 151..;Mrv c f 11 c rt .iv •••••••••I Rm Addhlona Vlu/MC -u1 L891850 714-998-8970 In townl Refs 5Yre Exp. 120 HAUL•R idRllNMASTiR. & a~~,~~ R°:ht -;:~~ Llseotll'S 873-faH lAt the
Grace-251·8495 AJ PALaS Cenatneot*' CLEAN-UP•FREE EST Landacaplng & Malnt. Tl1111977 -49-0223 T ... LOCAL PLU ... ft Clualftecl Addltlon••~lnQ GENERAL JOHN 150-1128 TrH Trim • Removal Split looenil Mfti"" -aJarneaE.aanoertCo.·1--------te-.toe L.!1=;:' C~.c~1'a S!ltVICES 368 Gardening Svc 841-551~ Prof Movers! 14Hr Srv Fr" Elllfnat91 SPIUNJQ.IRS 3921 ~ TH/ WitilCDI LIGHTING 7D•y!Sr 011c/fl1'11452 [~=~e:~~= •••••••• OlreotOfY
A to Z HANDYMAN -~1=~~=--1.0. 61ViLOPMiNT A D y a " T I a • HEAL 3742 Low voltage sys1em1. 438·9Ul3/P-348·5850 -=--~......,....-.--.,..--18PIHNKUA ... PAIR help YoU find INSTAWREFACE CAllNETS ;z·ri~ Cualom home & ternod.i. y • I .. I NUTamON Beeullflcallon/Secutlly Two ., .. ..., • ...,,."" lllqtert Drain Cl•anl"9 V•lv81•HHda•Tlm•· rebble help. 1<1tchen1, bathe. door•. ~ M.m No FH charged until our •rv 00
0 ow B•• th• difference. Moving Todau? No & Plumblng Repair• doctla. 27Yra Local svo. 94._..71 wlndowa. Doug &"48-1258 l~~~ c,:; f~ lnt~c!tku!i;;'~P::lal *" y p Mt 0 • 1 8 Uc:147311M ....... Problem I Llc'd' a In• ~,. ••P· Ai work &;1· John Burr •••·a831 •---------
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