HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-08-20 - Orange Coast Pilot. r:·
Gl.OIAL TAUS
South Coast
Repertory
summer players
exercise their
talents in
"Wind of a
Thol.Mnd Tales."
See Datebook.
Page2
SERVING THE NEWPORT-MESA COMMUNITIES SINCE 1907
N A T u R A L L . I G H T
Workers have gulled the lnsld~ of the Balboa Theatre as part of Its
renovation. With work well ahead of predicti011.SJthat con truction wouldn't
get started until 2000, there was plenty of interior debns for Alfredo Felix to clear
Thun;day. The 8alb0a Performing Arts Foundation is leading the renovation and
has raised more them $750,000 -half its goal. The renovation includes making
ERIC SANTUCCI I OAltV Pll.OT
tho theater earthquake safe and remodehng the mtenor. The theater, on the cor-
ner of Balboa Boulevard and Mam Street. was built m 1919. Onginctlly, the the-
ater featured vaudeville acts and was a meeting spot lor Holl}"''ood ~tars. It
closed its doors m 1992. Last year, the oty purchused the theater to help its re<ll'·
velopment. ·
Businessman, historian -and now heS famous
Corona del Mar resident has
become a media darling, for the
moment anyway, thanks to his
revisionist look at Richard Nixon.
JF.:t>ICA GAI0050~ -... .
: : CORONA DEL MAR -Overrught, Irwin F.
~Urnan has become the histonan's ariswer to
RM:ky Mtlrtin.
=:The Corona del Mar resident and former full-
U¢te real estate developer has gotten there by
living his own ver..ion of •La Vida Loca. •
•:-He spent tho last four years buried in the bow-
e1' of the Nixon Library & Birthplace in Yorba
Linda, patiently and passionately reading
'lhJ'ough thousands of Nixon's pnvate papers.
Along the way, he became the Allergan Profes-
sor of Modem Amencan I hstory at Chdpman
Uruvers1ty, his first scholurly JOb since he quit
acadenua to go into shopping-mhll development
two decade::; ago.
When Gellman emerged from the archives, he
sat down at his desk and wrote, •Tue Contender~
.Richard Nixon, The Congress Years, 1946-1952/
which the Free Press published Aug. 8.
The book argues that Nixon's early career was
marked not by Red-baiting, crooked fund-raising
and the general smamlincss for which the dis-
graC'ecl president was exconatcd..__but by: a •sen-
sible anti-Conununist course against the excess-
es of McCarthy and other extreme nght-
wmgers. •
Whether this book, and the many 'more vol-
umes on Nixon which The Free Pre s has con-
tracted Gellman to wnte, \\ill change the way
Amenca Vlews its most controversial leader 1s an
open question.
There ts no doubt, however. that it has
changed Gellman's lite. Since the book's publi-
cation, Gellman's days have been filled with
radio interviews. Newspapers arc filled with
· reviews of his book, most of which praise its
carefuJ research. •
This would be heady stuff for most history . .
SEE NIXON PAGE 9
RON SOtlMAN I OAllY fl.OT
Irwin Gellman ts the author of the bestselllng book on Nixon
entitled "The Contender"
72 HOURS MILLENNIUM MOMENT
abo<trd the tra1rung
ve sci Bldck Stiver.
The crws , d 1gned
for culors with at
least Lot nnc<l1atc-
. level skill , begins at
9 a m. Saturday and end at 5 p.m .
Sunday. Fee is $249. For mor infor·
mabon, call (949) 645·9412.
300111 IOMI SILUllRIAU:
Sirius Theatre Company will •
pNMDt Shakespeare's •Romeo
ad Juliet' at 4:30 pm Sunday at
Mela V.rde United Metbodilt ONrcb. 1701 w ... St., Cotta
Mll9. 8ltlg a c:bMt Ot bllnMt for
I'*' ........ llnnl. Adanllrtoa ii
~-1 11 · t,cd('PH)
Working hard to stay young at heart
W h en she turned too, Lu<'.y Marty wa honored by the
Costa Mesa City Goundl and Chamber of Commerce.
In 1975, she received a surp11se u1rthd1ty card from
America's favonte moVle star, John "'Duke• Wayne, that made
Marty, then 108. bubbly as a teenager.
The Costa Mesa resident lived alone, managed to tend her
Y'9etable garden, kept house, and did Mr own laundry and
ironing well after 100th birthday. Marty wolild actually wake lacy Mll1J
up iNlCh morning refrahed by tbe ODDCiltunlty to do 00.. Siie Wat bOrn in ado Oils.pl. 10: 1•1, and U '8 cbUd. tra~ to IC-.. in a cv•..a ..._She IMllilld.t 23 9'a "--Md ber hulbmd .... t.i emt may-« al "b1fa 111. Colo. He died at 1be agtol 92. .. ~-aoc-....1ww•••· n.o.ta ........ ...,. ..... tlllM -~ ...... 11 ....... ..,.. •• 1111 ........... ..., ......... ...
..... 19M .... at•
DCMEDUIY
lalrd Hayes iS a
side 1udge in the
NFL. and half of
OCC's soccer
coaching legacy.
See Sports.
P.age 10
FRIDAY, AUGUST 20; 1999
More
, ' than a
wall
The day-care center
. is safer, parents and
teachers plead; but what
if wall endangers drivers?
.l:u ... 1 (;11
COSTA MESA -Destroy the
reinforced concrete blocks at
Southcodst Early Childhood
Learn.mg Center and you de tro}'
mote thC\n a wdll parnnts and
stdff told oty ofhcials Thursddy.
Yon <le troy a still fraqile sense
ot 5 >curit}' struggling to thnve at
the day-care center tha Steven
Allan Abrams plowed hb Cddil-
Jac mto May 3, killing two chil-
dren.
Nearly 100 parents and staff
members gdve hours ot tedrful
and emotion-laden testimony a
they implored City Manager
Allan Roeder not to repeal an
e ncroachment penrut he granted
the center la~t month
SEE WALL PAGE 9
Arts and
education
'concept'
exciting
•The idea of a $12 million
facility paid for with
private money is a good
one say Newport officials.
Octtl'ii
NEWPORT BEACH -Cit)
otfJoal greeted an idea to build
a $12 million, 22,000· quare-foot
arts and education center be.hind
the Central Library \\,th exate-
ment Thursda}. • rv ccn the.:plan. and so ..far
1t look!; gr at," ... 1ud Councilman
SEE LIBRARY PAGE 9
INDEX
CUSSIAEDS ----12
DATIBOOK --·----·2
POLICE FILES .. -·-··-.... ----2
SPOm ----· ... -.......... _.;...10
SURF --.. --2
2 fr doy, August 20, l 999
~
CHECK IT OUT
Clues for finding a
great mystery
I t's no my tery thttt a good ·
~ge-tumer can smooth pas-
sage through the dog days of
August. If you're hot on th(• trail
for one. here arc some award-
wmning suspects.
"A Cold
Day In Pai:-
adlse" -
Recogruzed
as a ·•Best
F1ISt Novei-
with both a
Shamus and
an Edgar
Award, Steve
Hamilton's
thriller stars
ex-minor
league catch·
er, ex-cop dnd currPnl pnvdte
investigator Alt•x t-.1cKmght.
When the Oldntdc who killed his
partner and sidehm•d Alex from
the Detroit Police 1Jepc1rtrnent 14
years dgo re'>urft1re'>, a gnppmg
double> mystPry unfokls, replete
with unpreclicldblt• twists.
"Boobytrap" In BLIJ Pronz1-
ni's latPst ShdnH1s Awt1rcl-winner,
a fishing Vd<dllon turns deddly
when the cilWdY" unhdmed, rarely
outgunned Sdn Francisco pnvate
detecbve l<lils mto the revenge
scheme of d mdd bomber. F.ac.ing
him down takes Ndmele~
through a hatUt• ol wits. leading
to an emobonal turmng point that
may help him hnally overcome
the su1nc!P ol Ins partner.
"No
Colder
Place" -St>t
mNew
York's dark
underbelly,
S.J Roldn's
Anthony
Awctrd-wm-
mng ""Best
NovP.J" sends
unlikely
detective
pctrtners
Lydtd Chm
and Bill Sm1lh to <1 tro11hlccl
building site In a compt>lhng
t«lc, what at hrst dppcars to he a
simple casP involving trooked
construction workNS becomes a
complicated story of twisted fam-
tl~ rdatJonsh1ps
"Dreaming of the Bones· -
Deborah Cromb1e's romc.mhc
yam wcts honored with a MdCdV·
lly Award c1s last year's ·"Best
t-.tystery Novel · Set m Enghrnd,
the complex tale of su1e1cle and
murder wedvcs tugt>tlwr the
idyllic days before World War l,
the rebellious student culture ot
the '60s and academic Cam-
bridge in the present.
"The Killer's Cousin" -The
winner of this year's •Best Young
Adult" Edgar Award is a ternfy-
mg psychodrama by Nancy Wer-
lin about a teenager acqwtted of
murder in bis girlfriend's acci-
dental death. When he moves tQ
live with relatives to finish his
senior year of high school, 17·
year-old David Yaffe is thrown
into a hostile envuonment m
which he's forced to realize he
shares a complicity in mwder
with a young cousin
"The Doctor Digs a Grave" -
Robin Hathaway's Agatha Award·
wiruung "Best First Novel" intro-
duces cardiologist Andrew Fero·
more m a suspenseful caper that
sheds light on the plight of the
Lenage Inell.
ans. The
action takes
place in
Philadelphid'S
posh~ety
Hill, where
the doctor
anda
teenage side·
kick stumble
upon a
coipSe while
burying a beloved cat.
"Mr. White's Confession• -
Robert Clark illuminates the rela·
bonships between truth and fie.:
lion while exploring the nature of
faith and memory m this gnpping
Edgar Award-winrung •Best Nov-
el.· The action revolves around
poqce Lt. Wesley Homer's mvesti·
gation into a showgirl's brutal
murder. culminating in finding
prime suspect Herbert White -
dil cccentrtc who spends his days
wntmg gushlng fan letters to Hol-
lywood starlets.
"Mystery Reader's Walking
Guide to Washington, D.C. • -
Dubbed "Best Nonflction• m this
yeclr's Agatha Awards, this travel·
er's gwde for mystery fans offers
a fdsonating way to tour the fic-
tional side of the nation's capital.
Eight walking tours dc~cribed by
more than 200 acclaimed mystery
wnters feature maps, recom-
mended restaurants and places of
interest along the way.
• CHECK rr OUT is written by the staff of
the Newport Beach Pubhc Library This
week's column is by Melissa Adams, in col·
laboration with Sosie Lamb-Hubbs
date book
Young actors take children's tale all ov~r the map in South Coast Repertory production
Aur.x CcxxMAN
Id( fllci
Julianne CaiUouette was absorbed in a
'mysterlous drama. Her arms waved around
her like flags In a circling wind. Her voice
sounded a rhythmic chant, forceful and
beguiling.
"Then came Ute hour of the rat," she
intoned. "The deepest and darkest hour of
the night. Kikushyo was startled from h1s.
thoughts by a frightening sound."
Julianne paused in her delivery. Her
anns continued to undulate somewhat, but
a lllcker of doubt ran across her face. Alter
a moment of silence, she began to snap
her fingers impatiently.
"Line!" she called out.
Someone at the edge of the stage gave
her the beginning of the next sentence. "A
cold chill .... "
"A cold chill went down h1s spine!"
Jullanne resumed, her body suddenly
reanimating. " ... and then, as though the
wind itself were singing, Kikushyo heard a
strange and beautiful music."
. '
Julianne, a 13-year-old Newport Beach
resident, plays the part of Nushi, the
Japanese Wind, in South Coast Repertory's
production of "Wind of a Thousand Tales."
which runs on the second stage this week-
end. She and the rest of the cast are stJll
working out a few last details, but lhe feel-
ing at a recent rehearsal was strikingly
assured. The actors, who range in age
from 8 to 17, went through the paces of
thetr program with tremendous noncha-
lance and professionalic;m. The directors, ·
who are adults, weren't too badly behaved
either
MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I DAILY PILOT •
•our group is doing a really good job,"
said 13-year-old Farrell Roth o1 Costa
Mesa, who plays the part of Kiyonu, ~e
silver bird dancer. "My director says I'm
doing well. He says it's coming together.•
Farrell and Julianne are working on a
third of the musical for children, which
tells the tale of Kimberly Kay, a young girl
who isn't interested in storie . Swept away
by the wind produced by all the bedtime
yarns ever told, Kimberly Kay is treated lo
fairy tales from Europe. Mexico and Japan,
thereby coming to a deeper understanding
of what storytelling means.
"It takes three different cultures and
blends them in one tale that's tied togeth-
er by d thread,• said Steve DeNaul, who
is directing the Youth Players m the MeXJ-
can story.
The play is the work of SCR literary man-
ager John Glore --the first piece, in fact, that
he ever wrote for the stage. "Wind of a
Thousand Thies• was originally released in
1988 and has smce gone on to be a staple of
children's theaters nationwide. .
"It does a wonderful job of showing that
every culture uses theater and dance and
music to tell stories that have a universal
theme,• said Patnck Williams, who is
directing the Japanese story. "Every smgle
culture uses theater, dance and music to
Laura Muehl, right. and Jessie O'Neil, practtce for John Glore's "Wlnd of a Thou-
sand Tales,,. a production by South Coast Repertory's Summer Players.
'WIND OF A THOUSAND TAI.ES'
• WHERE: South COast Repertory,
655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
+ WHEN: Saturday at noon and 2
p.m., Sunday at 2 and 4 p.m. + HOW MUCH: $5
"> PHONE: (714) 708-5555
express those ideas. And I don't know if
everybody's aware of that.·
The drama of the proouction, for the
directors, lies in keeping the actors concen-
tratcu on oncl excited about theu material.
"The challenge of f working with kids)
. ~t this age is having them retain their
focus," said DeNdut. "When you're doing
a show that has a lot of lights an<;l lot of
music rues, ... they do climb the walls."
Williams was worried about his seg-
ment for an additional reason: the Japan-
ese story deals with some turbulent emo·
tional material. There's enough love and
death ln his section of the play that one
parent actually pulled her child out of the
production.
Williams dealt with the situation by
establishing a very serious tone from the
outset of rehearsals. Additionally, he
encouraged his actors to reach a deep
understanding of the material by develop·
mg thel.J' own gestures and blocking.
"The hnal r~sult is m large part created
by them.~ Williams said. "It isn't anywhere
close to how I originally imagined it, but
it's really good.•
The actors, who have to satisfy both
these directors and -of coun.e -thelI
own artistic sensibilities, have meanwhile
been working hard to find the techruques
that will make the play come alive. New-
port Beach resident Alex Sw(UlS()n, 8, wbo
has the role of an old man named Pepe,
denves some benefit from a cwly white wig
and a battered bowler hat. But he finds
additional elements of theatricality neces-
sary to pro1ect completely the es~ence of his
character. ,
• l use an old voice." Alex noted. •And I
kmd of hunch."
Alex Scholnick, 11, of Corona del Mar,
plays a blind man. He trained for the role
by wearing a blindfold aroWld the house
for a day, and can recite a long list of the
objects he crashed into during the course
of this exercise.
"The dresser, the TV, the rocking horse,
the table,• he said, ticking off a few of bis ·
· more significant collisions. "Other than
that, I was fine.•
But if the physical aspects of the role
posed some challenges for Scholnidi, the
leap mto the psychology of the stage
proved to be without problem.
·1 have to fall in love witll every girl I
see,• he explained. "It's a good part for
me. I do that anyway."
None of the actors in "Wind" has less
than a year of experience, and many have
worked on prior SCR produc:tlons.
Exami nin g· hi s essence . "
David Sanborn gets back
to basics as he plays
selections from his newest
album, 'Inside.' today at
the Hyatt Newporter
Smee that album, though. he
bas undergone numerous trans·
formations, constantly seeking
new avenuec; of mu' JCal expres-
s1on. From records like 1992's
hip-hop tinged "Upfront" to the
more orchestral "Pearls" (1995),
and m more than a dozen other
solo efforts, he has managed to
be both accessible and uncon-
ventional. popular. but not n~:>
sarily predictable.
final element of the composition
was later added by Cassandra
Wilson.
not of whispering winds, bab-.. •
bllng brooks and elevators but of : •:
AID ((.'OlMA.'11
S axophorui;t David Sanborn
plays today at the Hyatt ,
Outdoor Amph.ilheater m
Newport Beach to c:upport his
new record "lnstdc. • The
album's name is not one San-
born adopted on a whim: he
recorded almost the entire
rrcord m the home studio in his
New York City apdrtment.
Sanborn took a s1.milarly
eccentric tack in putting togeth-
er the tune "Ain't No Sunshine."
on which Sting appears. The
saxophom.st happened to be
watchmg a broadcast of an old
televi ion program m which he
.and Sting had pla~d the ong.
The performance caught San-
bom'11 unagmation, and he con-
tacted Sting about rerecording a
few of tllP-parts. Those alter-
ations made, the cut went
tra1ght to the album.
The point of adopting such
strategies, SanbOm says, is to
avoid an excessively produced
sound, one that smothers the
vitality in a record.
DAVID SANBORN
+ WHERE: Hyatt Out-
door Amphitheater,
l 107 Jamboree Road,
Newport Beach + WHEN: 8 p.m. today + HOW MUCH: $35 + PHONE: (949) 729-
f 234
DaVid Sanborn per·
form5 tonight at the
Hyatt Outdoor
Amphitheater.
Sanborn's roots as a spontaneous • ~ •
player who 1ammed with Stevie : : :
Wonder and David Bowie. •!•:
Sanborn describeS the process : : :
of creating this new record as -:·
one of delicate self-deception. • •:
He trted to persuade himself that ~ •:
everything he recorded was only • •
a demo, thet the goal was not • :
perfection but rather an ener-
getic rawness.
"You have to kiJld of ambush
yourself psychologically,• Sa.n·
born has said. •And once in a
whUe you come up with some·
thing that is JUSt magic."
Whether or not Sanborn Will
manage to ambush himielf m
concert remains to be seen. But
Kathy Williams, director of sales • . Sanborn is a musician known
for the d.tversi.ty of his approach-
es to his art. He ts coru,1dercd
one of the main populanzerl:I ot
fusion muo:;1c, his 1975 recording
"Taking Off Sanborn/· huVUlg
pdved the way for mainstream
acceptance of tho genre.
"Inside" follow~ m thi"-tradi-
tion of idi0!>7-ncratic creativity.
Sailbom collaborated extens1ve-
ly with producer/songwriter
/musician Marcus Miller m the
creation of the album to retam
the spontaneous feel of early
demo tapec;. The two frequently
exchanged recordings of rough
ideao:;, gradually fleshing out th
production of songs and resort-
ing to studio musicians only
when necessary.
To create the cut ·oaydream-
lng, • for example, Sanbom and
Miller recorded everything et
home except the vocal hne nus
Such a concern became a pn-
orlty for him Mfer the release of
1996:.S "Songs From the Night
Before," an albwn that cntics
enjoyed but one that worned
Sanborn becau e its production
became so involved. Listerung to f
ttie final version of the tra<'Jfil ()n
"Songs,• Sanborn wa ·occasion-
ally surprised to hear that he
pref erred tlle sound of the fU'Sl
takes he had recorded.
With "Inside,• Sanoom feels
he captured the Soul of h15
music. The album has a sponta·
neous feel, an unmediacy that
hearkens back to his earliest
days of playipg ln St. Lows jazz
clubs. The li<>tener iS reminded
and marketin~ for the Hyatt ...
Newport«, tbinb the signs are • •
auspicious. ..
•we're delighted to have such :
a ~t performer;" Williams
soid, noting that Sanborn's show
here last year was great•
.. . . •
ail¥ OOot 8EADEBS HQIU~E news stories. 1llustra11~ ed1to-WEATHER SURF POLICE FILES
{949) 642-6086 nal m.tter °' edverttMtmen1S
Rt<Ol'd your COl'T'lmenu abOut ~rein C¥t be r~od..nd with-
out wntttn P91'm1uion of copy· TlMPUAlURES TIDES After some patchy COSTA MESA
,.
the Daily Pilot or news tips right owner •
TODAY .
ADP8ESS Balboa Felt Drtve: A stereo faceplate worth S 150 was stolen from a •
VOL 91, NO. 194 .HQW.IQ.1lEACHJI. Fm low fog th!~ morning. •
Oor •ddrtm Is :330 W S.y St~ 7JJ62 c.ar in the 400 block between Apnl 10 and Aug. 6.
Con. Me<Ji, CA 92627. Om.ilatlon 12:18 a.m. 1.3 the sun will come H...tM;r ~ About $523 was stolen from 1 business 1n .
THOMAS H. JOHNSON, The Times Ofange County Corone del Mar First high • tQB.REOlO_M tM 1800 block It 5:30 pm Aug 9. •
Publtshef It IS th• Pilon policy to prompt· (800) 252·9141 70r'61 6:58a.m. 3.l out revuhng fa r. 2· •
wt.UAM L08DIU. ~ Second low HartMw moutwtlrd: 1Wo canons of cJg.rettes worth $60 were •
ly cooect all errors of subrtanct COS1a Mesa to 4 foot surf. The t
Editor PIN~ call (949) 574--4268 Clawfled (949) 642-5671 11.06 a.m. 2.8 stolen from a stOf'e 1n the 2500 bl«k Aug. 12. •
80t'6S • STIVI MAM4.&. Display (949) 642-4121 Second high Man.tg1ng fd1tOI' ~Newport Bea<M:osu Mesa fdhotlal. Newport Beach southwtit swell con· ~ Awnue: A vide<Xaswtte recOJdet and s.veral pieces of •
5:)7 pm 48 TINA IK>RGAnA, Oat!ri Pilot (USPS-1~) Is Ntwi (949) 641 S6IO 7~2 unues to build, Jewelry worth $2,620 were stolen from 1 home In the 1900
AtdsUlnt Managing £d1tor pu lshed Monday through S.t· Sl)Qf'U(949)57~ block during tti. day of Aug 10 s.J.CAHN. Ufday, In N.wport klCh and Mewl, Spor1t Fu (949) 646-4170 Newport Coast SATURDAY bringing pouiblt
Oty fdftor Costa Mes., subscriptions are E·m11I; dal~rthllnk.net 72162 Fini low 11th ~ A mounuln bike worth S 1,400 wat stolen from 1 DM -.., av•lle~ only by sublUlbl'I: hNd-hlgh or bett«
NeWS fdrtor Thellme. Ot.nge County ) M.inOMCI 1:10•.m. 0.9 home In the 200 block tMtWMn 4:)() Ind 5 p.m Aug 1 O
.-CMUOW. 252-9141. In ... outlide of BUlinell Office ('49) 64.1-4121 Flflt high w.ve •t eicpoMd
Sports Editor Newport leech and cou MW. IUilna F• (949) 6)1-7126 W POMCAST 7:50•..m 3.5 ... °"'""°' subt(rlptlons '° the ~ ""°' IMllCIMll'IWl .. ~ailable ~ for ~ LOCATION Sill Second loW brHkl. The water Mii.., .... ._ A 1-Honda KOOt9' Will stolen In the IGO
"'*ldltaf' s 10 .,., month. dllS Nlllltwd~ Wldgt 2•3WIW 12·1~ p.m. 27 """"'~~ ~ tems.lturt condn-btOdt Mttdlln Aug \)Md Aug. 1S. Nllf•ttW = peid ~'°"'Mesa. CA. Second~ o..w~ lndudt .. """" ..... • """"Minot~ Nl\'PCJ'"t 2 ... WM -...... 1111111•• A..._ ...... hclldlrworth _..
&MIAJGll•• utt.ndloc'M-..)~ ....... 1:21 p.m 50 Ull 10 howr In the
TIA:Send ... ~to 2·)WWt ., .................... °'~'°' ,.onaddn Thi...,,, Miii ........... ...,...._ 2·JMW mld40I. n."'" • ........... • ...... '-C>. .. ~C... Vlcll,. !f1ie. ............ -Ml JlrtClilmlW ..... A1•Pcl'd"•• ·---~ .... -Ofllcllt ..... Of. ............ CdM 2·SMW • ... ,. .. pa. .._ ............. MUl.-.,11. U-.CA .... OI" ND
I I
D6ily Pilot
= olution isn't out there, it's inside each of us
"' L a t week, I wa playing
with two small children,
Rachel and Danielle, m a
living room hundreds of
m:iles away from the North Val-
lej Jewish Community Center
w)1en we hetlrd ahout the
sh~ting. '
~ache! and Danielle, 4 and
cilmost 2, are tmy dark-haired
si.slers who are almost thP. same
si4!1 despite their difference ln
years Rachel. smart and obedi-
t;nt and a tad bossy, t~ small for·
hei age, and Danielle, merry
an?! independent and slightly
ch,p.bby, is Qig for hers. l can
Cii!f'Y them both at the same
wie, which makes them giggle..
l spent four days on vdcat1on
in~olorado last week with the
girjs. the nieces of my partner,
Andrea. Yes, that would be my
gi.il!nend, my s19mhcant other,
m)! lover, my domestic. partner.
Wl)ich made us two lesbians
Jll,?htng a J>.C!.lr of strol._,_.Ie,"'r.::..s _ _.__
areund with Andrea's family,
w!io is Jewish.
:1\ll in all, we madP up a nice
co~ection of targets for those
wl!<> hate Jews and gay people,
blacks and Lcitinos. and all the
otlier millions of people who
aren't straight white Chnslians
Who didn't think, when they
bee.rd about the victims of the
rampage dllegedJy CclfriCd out
by'"...a deranged white c;uprl'md-ost. "Tbdt could have heen
m&.' Or, at least. thdt could
have been someone you love.
I hope you love at least one
pet son who is not the sdme reli-
gion. the same sexual onenta-
ti , or the same race a~ you
anl. If you do. think about that
pe,son. Those people.
:Remember that most of them,
whatever god they worship or
lo\ter they embrace or skm they
bathe. want pretty much lht•
same things you wdnt. A com-
fottable home Sdfety for then
ch dren. A Sf>cur<> job Love.
It is easy to forget what pt•o·
pl lrave in common m a world
.that emphasizes dilferences. We
EDITOR'S
NOTEBOOK
sue
fox
tend to rank ourselves accord-
ing to a bewilderfug mix of
social markers, from what
schools we attend to the color of
our eyes.
And just because we wmd
up near the bottom on som
scales of bias doesn't mt:?an we
won't be the first to point out
that we're at the top of others.
Consider my friend Dave's
mother, a white Catholic
woman who married a Jewish
man and was ostracized by her
family as a result. Despite her
own searing experience with
prejudice, she refuses to accept
Dave's longtime girlfriend, Lisa,
who is black. .
Or look to the parents of little
Rachel and Danielle, who are
growing up with a lesbian aunt.
Rachel is old enough now to
understand boyfriends and gul-
friends, daddies and monurues,
but no one has told her that
sometimes women pair off with
women and men fall m love
with men.
She thinks that Andrea and l
are sisters. After all, she always
sees us together, just like her
and Danielle, nght? Her parents
have yet to correct this impres-
sion
And there, m the silence of
discomfort and uncertainty,
another seed of bias is planted.
il
Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil Vince
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Beginning to look a lot like
·christm.as?
Are we out.of our mind5?
Another child b taught that mg over what can be done to
being gay LS different, so differ-prevent such V10lence. Maybe
ent that it can't bo mentioned. we shoi.lld ban assault weapons.
So different that it must be Crack down on bloody movies.
wrong. Teach tolerance.
There is considerable dis-Yes, maybe. But there is
tance between ubUe homopho-something else we can do, nght
b1a, unspoken rarum, all the now, without passing a single
othl'f prejudices coursing law.
through our society -· and the We can look at our bves, the
uct of fiong a gun at people people we are close to a nd the
who are unlike you. But bias people we ore far from. Wo can
leads to barriers, barriers lead choose to root out the painful
to separation, and separauon grains of bids that chafe us all,
leads to ignorance. . that have been there so long we
Where there is ignorance, don't know how they got there.
' fear and hate flourish. And We can challenge those
somewhere in this scary world, anctent biases. We can hgure
where we're all so busy trying out why we're afraid of outspo-
to make sure our home is com-ken bldck leaders', gay men
fortable and our kids are safe raising chlldren, Jewish centers,
and our job is secure, there is feminists, homeless people,
sure to be someone who isn't immigrants, and everyone else
qmte getting everything he who somehow threatens to hp
thinks he deserves. Someone the balance of power m this
who looks around to see who unbalanced country.
he can blame for gobbling up Prejudice is learned, as sure-
llial piece onOe p.:::;1'""e....,...,e,,......~~s-::--15--+-.-y-a,,..s....w-a-c..,.ieT anaDamelle earn
rightfully his. to walk. Only whe>n we search
Someone like Buford 0 Fur-out our,unexarruned assump-
row Jr, the neo-Naz1 who con-tions, danng to banish igno-
fessC'd to shooting children at ranee by carmg about people
the .Jew1<,h Conununity Center who are not like us, will we
and to k1lhng a Filipino Ameri-stop tedctung 1t.
can mall earner
This week, thoughtful people
aJJ over the country are agoniz-
• SUE FOX 1s City editor of the Pilot's
sister paper in Sherman Oaks
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frldoy, August 20, 1999 3
BRIEFLY
School's in at Wilson
Elementary
COSTA f\.ffiSA -It may still
be swnmer for every oth11r school
in the Newport-Mesa district, but
at Wilson Elementdl)' ,Jl"lun.day, it
was open for business.
•it went very smoothly, and
we had a lot of smile:,," said
kindergarten teacher Glenda
Munson.
· Wilson h~ d different sched-
ule from cill other distnc.1 schools
because lea.chcn. and <;tUc1Pnts
don't want the school's pnrru rily
COMMENTS
&CURIO SITIES . ..
peter
buff a
Peter Buffa is on VdC"ut1on I !is
1 column will return next Fnday
Spanish-speaking students to go
too long without speaking Eng-
lish. So studf>.nts tart earlier. end
later, nnd tak a longer winter
bf ak. •
R use Wilson is the ft.rSt
schodl to c;tart this yeilf, it's also
th" {IJ'St to c.xpenenre the won·
de.rs of mc1ller • Kindergarten
<111 1• , which will cornl' lo
schools acr~ the district on~
g when wt the 1est CJpen .
Mun on aollld not C"ontain hex ·
t!Pllghl aboul th rnaller r.lc.1sses.
#It wa !.JI Cat." "h" scud
-Jessica Garrison
SETTING · IT
STRAIGHT
A woman u pP.cted of
emunzzhng about $69,000
from a stQF' in Fashion Island "o rnisid ntilled m Wedn -
day's edition Th• uspect'i.
rne t:)•yeuf"Old -€~tttti.i----'•
Ma.xheld
A h adline m the Aug 3
1 d1Uon of the Pilot mlSStal~
plans for Udcpools flt Big
Coronn An aquanwn is not
thu focus of the plan
It is U1e ~ot's policy to cor-
r et t en ors or c;ubstaoce
promptly Call (949) 574-4268.
4 Friday, Augu~t 20, 1999
Residents raise concerns
about Hoine Ranch project .
•Possible mcrca~e in traf-
fic lrom the proposed
develqpmcmt would ruin
neighborhood, they say.
medium-density residential and
industrial uses, Sege1strorn
would Uke that zoning ch<1!1gcd
to allow for rrtore development.
If the general plan amend-
ment is not granted, <lt.•vc>lop.
ment on the property would Ul"
limited to the' two-story 300,000·
square-foot IKEA s~or~ th<1t ts
pla.pned for the soutnwest rotnP1
( o~ T \ tytESA -Residents of the property, SPgerstrom
who llvl' near the proposed spokesman Paul Freern<t n ha:.
I lo111t· Ranch development said .
Px4u1•s.,ed fpors Wecln~sday that Under maximum density sl<1n-
fh(> prowct rnuld worsen already dards, traffic could mcrease from
s1qruhcant traffic probl<>ms for 9,365 average da,ily trips to
1h1 m 33,845 dally trips, according to
Tlw meetmg wt1s held to gath-staff reports.
··• c <1111muni1y input for a report However, Freeman has said
nn tltt• f'nVH'Oftfllt"fltttl lfUpd~l n~ ~R l<.t-
IJPllH! pr.-1>i11c<I tor tlw 93-dcre propose the mdximum butlcl-oul
(HOJI'< I horcll'l Pd roughly by the that could be allowed Whdt the
Sc1n l>1P!J11 Fn•pway, Fairview developer is proposmg in addi-
Rndd, S11nllowt•r Avenue and tion to the IKEA store is nf!a rly 2
~ l<11hur Boull'Vctrcl million square feet ot ofhce and
( .J SPqPrstwm & Sons 1s ask-retail buildmgs, whteh would he
11111 trn .t Gt>ne1t1l Plt1n Amend-no more thdn nmP storws lt1ll.
1111•111 lmlll ltH' < 1ly lo 1ncrPc1se the Current zonmg allows for build·
,H11nunt of dPV<'lopnwnt current-ings up to five stories tall.
f\ ,Jllm\'f•d Armed with horror stones of .
Thi• lctnd I!-. now wned for close calls dnd speeding lrctfhc: m
Beautiful Hair!
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• 2981 Bristol St. #B3 Costa Mesa (Baker/Bristol)
' the1i' neighborhoods, residents exit would come off a future
who hvc near the project were offramp of the San Diego Free-
adamant Wednesday that they way that would start approx.i-
did not want to see any increases. mately at the current South
. Bob Sterling, who lives in The Coast Drive ~xit nnd end at l lar-
Woods, said that the combination bor Bouleva1d.
of traffic generated by the Auto-Res1dcmt Gilbert Cbllins said
mobile Club of Southern Califor-he thought Segerstrom's propos·
nid, Metro Pointe, the Office al is much better than th~ 32-sto-
Buildiugs at South Coast Metro ry high-risq proposed by the
have takt•n their toll. Sterling company for the same site more
suid he expects the ·remodeling than a decade ago. That propO'i·
ot the former Crystal Court and al was opposed both m the courts
the proposed Home Ranch pro-and pohllcally by rc:s1dents.
wc:t will only make 1t worse. Collins, howevCT, did rnise
Kirstie Macintosh, who also concerns about a 150-foot illurni-
h\cs near the proposed pro1ert, nated sign by the freeway pro-
sdtd she worked with the city in posed by !KEA. Collins and
the past to improve traffic issues many of his neighbors opposed
~fH\ef-Ae~~GUll-OOG.------1-<llll-~·fOOt-llarbor ~ul~vard of
"Now I see this project and I Cdn, sign proposed last year tmd
f1>PI hke calling a real estate said they would definitely
agent <1nd sctying, "Get us out of oppose anything higher.
here quick.' " she said. The initial study and notice of
Se9erstrom plans to· build an preparation for the project will
off rump from the San Diego be available for rf'vtew through .
Preeway to Susan Street, which Sept. 7. It 1s e'xpectE>d thctt the
lhe d<>veloper estimate would . draft environmcmtul impact
cl1vcrt betwC'en 3,500 to 4,500 report will be ready in October
CMS from rairview Road and with pubhc hC'tlrings bcgmmng
Hdrbor Boulevard each day. The in November.
No mcltter what you're. doing,
ynur homE '"""" n~per
FITS IN •.• Daily Pilot
Black-ball flag comes
down on Wedge museum
. • The home of the surf
spot's preservation society
will become, once again,
a home to just a foinily.
STACY BROWJI>
lhlt Plot
BALBOA PENINSULA -Mar-
. naqe and a bdby have dccom-
plished what El Nino could not:
they closed the-•museum" whcm
body surfers meet for wild pdrtie
and late-rught wave riding.
Kevin Thoman, whose home on
the peninsula was transfonned Ulto
the Wedge Preservation Society's
museum dnd hangout 10 years
~go, is taking down all the photos
and memorabilia that decorate the
place. ·
Thoman married last yedr, and
his-wife is QXJ>eC"tmg th n>upllil'~
first child Jater this year.
"We've had wild parn~ and
late-night celebrations here, but
now it's time to make it a nonnal
house again," Thoman said
Despite the pictures of ~ach ol
the more than 100 crew member>
hanging all over U1e house and the
numerous surfing mamordbllitl,
Thoman said, the fun hdd to even-
tually end.
r
Among the mol>t memorable
momenllt ln the 1 O years the home
served as a museum was the start
ol black-ball season and El Nmo
"This 1s the last hurrah,•
Thoman said. •ws sad but neces·
smy.•
His crew will toast the mU.s'e-
um's end tonight with a barbecue
and party.
The Wedge Preservation Soci-
ety was formed more than a
dn<"ade ago. The ~oup hel~d
kc 'P graffiti out of the area antl
dlso cl£>..arted the beach. •.;
·Last year. they were succei.sful
m gettmg black-ball season
extended. TI1e rite of pass~ge
dllows body urfers the freedom.. to
nde the-waves alooe between Hl
u.m and 5 pm. through the end of
October.
The Newport Beach City Coun-
cil had previously adopted the pol-
uy after the iO(;I ty-Plcaded or
sole use of surf during peak hours
Thoman sdld the usual slide
show, capturing highlights of bod}
surfers, will tak~ place tonight, ai.
well as the uc;ual cons~ption of
beer
"Our motto lS that it's not a par-
ty unless we have at least two
kegs," Thoman srud. •tt's been a
long, fun ~nd good run, but th£
house> is coming down."
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fridoy, August 20, 1999 5
Report says violent prison gang got start in Costa Mesa
• • • Local authorities dispute connection, but acknowledge
white supremacist group has members h ere.
°'*'~ One of the fastest-growing
gangs in California prisons first
came to attention earlier this
decade in Costa Mesa, accordmg
to a report released Thursday by
the Anti-Defamation League.
The Nazl Low Riders have
mushroomed into a dangerous,
jail·based gang of white
• supremacists accounting for 8Q%
of violent acts in state prfsons, the
report says.
I lowever, Costa Mesa police
dispute the report's findings that
some of the gang's origins can be
traced to Costa Mesa and that the
gang continues to flourish in the
area.
"The Nazi Low Riders is a
pn on gang that wasn't born nor
was it fostered m Co:,tcr Mesa.•
said an emphatJc Police Chief
Dc.\ve Snowden. ·we, like other
CitiC'S m Orange County, have
had incidents with the gang.
"We have taken an aggressive
stance against hate crunes here
in Co:»ta Mesa. Thdt type of crime
just won't be tolerated.•
T.he report, which was
released at the Orange County
J.ail, said the gang is part of a
growing, hate-filled menace to
the public. Although the number
of gang members remains a few
hundred strong, ome people
foar the power that an allegiance
of white . supremacist groµp~
could harness.
"The p_otential threat of the
[gang's) alliance with other white
supremaast groups is alarming,•
said Sue Stengel. the league•i;
legal advisor for the western
region. "The anger, hostility and
raosm of NLR's members make
then perfect candidates to act as
foot soldiers for the racist agen-
das of these (other racist) orgaru-
zations." Costa Mesa police
maintain they have taken steps
to monitor and eliminate activity
arnon9 white swpremaasts here.
There were at least five incidents
between 1996 and 1997 involv-
ing the Nazi Low Riders in Costa
Mesa. ln one incident, five
Patients support chiropractor
charged with sexual battery
• They say his technique
is unorthodox, but they
have never had prob-
lems with him.
GREG Rlsw..;G
~Pb
NEWPORT BEACH
Patients. of a chiropractor
charged with inappropriately
touching two women in his office
are supporting their doctor'While
he awaits trial.
Steven Wesley Lovell was
arrested Aug. 12 on two counts of
sexual battery. Lovell has J>9Sled
$25,000 bail and returned to his
practice amid the allegations.
Several women who spoke
wtth the Daily Pilot said they
were shocked when the charge.
were made against Lovell. They
sajd they have never had any
problems with Lovell, a man they
descnbe as professional and
respectful.
•He never ever did anything
out of line while I was a patient
there," said Mary Stephens, who
lives in Oceanside. Stephens suf-
fered from chronic back and hip
pain and saw Lovell at his New-
port Beach office eight months
ago-. •1 can't beheve he would be
part of someUung like that. I'm
very surprised."
1\vo women drum that Lovell
touched them in a sexual nature
while they were being treated for
back injuries. Lovell allegedly
sexually gratified himself during
the VlSlts. The two incidents hap-
pened seven months apart,
police said, adding that the vic-
tiins do not know each other.
Ricki Blustein sdid it's possible
the victims misinterpreted
Lovell's •hands-on• therapy. She
has visited Lovell more than 50
times and said he never once·
touched her mappropriately.
Blustem, who said she herself
had been a victim of a violent
crime, sciid she would be aware
of any such touching.
• 1 think J would notice some·
Uung strange if it happened," she
said. ·or. Lovell IS a person with
a lot of integnty and he is dedi-
cated to his work •
Blustein said the charges may
be damaging to Lovell's profes-
sion. Lovell may be subjected to
another investigation, this one by
the state's chiropractic board. A
board official srud the board has-
n't received a complaint to date
but should an investigation
ensue, the consequences could
rnedD the loss of Lovell's license
Stephens said her chiroprac-
tor should be praised for his work
not critic:iZed for 1t Sht> remem-
bered a fnend who twisted lus
back and couldn't get out of bed
She said Lovell brought a
portable table Wlth him to the
Criend's house where he worked
out the kinks m the man's back.
•Lovell went over to my
fnend's home several days lat-
er to check up on lum," she
said. •He took tune out of his
busy d<ty. That is the kind of
person he is."
the waterways, Over the past
thircy years Duffy
owners call, write,
and stop by to share
their DUffy
experiences. Building
relationships is the
common thread
laughing, hugging,
·..------1111111-.---~ .. dancing, sleeping, e~ti~g, drinking,
s1ng1ng,
daydreaming, and
always smiling. That
simple surrey top
brings out the best
in people.
. among many stones.
Whether personal,
business, or family,
these boats have a
special magic about
them!
Relaxing,
annfortable and
uiet. Duffy boating
UQly an art. We
•DIOI•~
-c.-.., • ., ............ "' ..............
•
Grab the ·wheel
and fee l the magic!
teenagers reported to be associ-
ated with the gang attacked a 12-
year-old Latino boy with a metal
pipe while he was playing a
video game in 1996. The · five
were sent to Orange County
Juvenile Hau .
Unlike Latino gangs, white
supremaast group:, don't cla.un
•turt• 'and are more transient,
pobce said, adding that there are
a handful of "low riders• still liv-
ing in Costa Mesa. Authorities
know their whereabouts. •
According to the report, the
gang traces its roots to the Aryan
Brotherhood, a loosely knit white
·supremacist gang that got its
start in state pnsons. The Nazi
Low Rider name 1s derived from a
common slang phrase for Latino
gang members.
Although relatively few hate
cranes here eem to have ueen
spawned by the gang, the
VlClousness of r.ach attack is hor·
rendous. Membcr9 have been
mvolved in a number ot brutal
crtmes includmg one tn which a
machete was used on two
Alncan Arnencan teenagers rn
1995 and another m March when
a Wal-Mart employee ~as blud-
geoned with a htmuner. .
"What we are talking about
are small groups that aren't redl-
ly prevalent." ss1d Rusty
Kennedy, the executive director
of the Orange County Human
Relations Comnusti10n. •But theu I
acts are really .potent ... the.most
Vicious attdcks you can unagine.
1 Their mtent is to dnve out and
terronze entire. populations.•
While th raCJSt ideology
one of the gang's comerston ,
authonties sdJd the ga.ng also
manufactures metbamphetamine
and attempti; to rccrwt new
members.
Where Ute gctng has gamed Jts
notonety is with Its presence in
the c;t.ate pnson ystem. Prison
of hoers have given the low nders
a "disruptive ganq status" tag
because of their influence on oth·
er white suprernact t groups and
the amount of violence they •
cauc;e within the prisons.
"Their ideology is white
supremacy," said , Joyce
Greenspan, regional director for
the defamation league. "It's cled.J'
theU' mission is to have only u ,
white world, no matter what the
co~t.·
Businesses force city to Jimit _parking~
• New lot on 18th Street will have restrictions, largely in
response to property owners' refusal to help maintain it.
Eu-.r Grr
°'*'Nol
COSTA MESA -ThankS' to
one holdout, four other property
owners on Newport Boulevard
have refused to share in mainte-
nance costs for a new city park·
mg lot on 18th Street even
though their employees and cus-
tomers will be allowed to use it.
But they won't be able to park
there as long as they want. On
Monday, the City Council
approved a motion made by
Councilman Joe Erickson to lim-
it parking in the lot to three
hours at a time and to close the
lot between midnight and 6 a.m.
"It's a disappointment that
the property owners couldn't
come to an agreement to help
Wlth this,• Erickson said.
The city paved and land-
scaped a dirt lot at 18th Street
and Park Avenue this year. The
55 spaces will provide parking
for the-police substation, the
Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall
and Lions Park. But businesses
located m front of the lot such as
Condom Revolution and Mainly
Seconds on Newport Boulevard
will also have dccess to it.
Because of that, city staff has
been negotiatmg wtth the prop-
erty owners for the last year try-
mg to get them to pay part of the
$7,400 yearly maintenance cost.
Four of the property ~owne~s
were willing to shcile m the cost,
said Matt van der Linden. dty
engineer. However, Denm
Hoaglund and Daruel Pietenpol.
who own the property Mainlr
Seconds sits on, refused.
Hoaglund and Pietenpol
could not be reached for com-
ment but van der Linden said
they did to want to share m the
cost because ther had Uteir own
parkmg spaces and claimed the
city had been unresponsive m
the past.
Other business owners at the
property said Mainly Seconds
. would actually be the largec;t
user of the city parking lot and
should share in the mainte·
•
nctnce costs ..
"Four property owners did
ay they would help p9y. e said
dnother property owner, Mike
Crossley. ~only one said be
would not, and th:at particular
busmess is going to be the mam
user of thal lot.
"And ::.o the re t of the prop-
erty owners were JUStified m
saying 'Hey, we're not going to
pay for him if he's not gQmg to
help,' • Crossley said.
Erickson had raised concerns
m June when the fir..t .report of
the negotiations was brought to
council. He aid that it wasn't
fau to taxpayerc; to pay for a lot
that would be used by busmess-
e::. and urged statf to try to get a
contnbution from the property
owners.
"I think it's a public parking
lot and I would like to facilitate
as much public use as pos::.i-
ble," Enckson "aid.
Enckson made a motion,
which. council dpproved Mon-
day, to limit pdrking in the lot.
~u·s a disappointment that
the property ownt!rs couldn't
come to an agreement to help
with this,· be said.
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(714) 542--6222
Orange County
CDMCA:
(562) 493--5438
SedlBeoch
..,.....,..._ ..... ••tt• .... -
Ofter good fOr rWN1 CUllOn'tM In~ O*a. k.9& cettteelaf\ 9'*I .. •to NID
FtM t«> orO....gaodtcwltwlpimCIVOUW e>nWandYDl,_U ... toa.•••• ~totall90dM ... dH ... ~dlllr.°'9--Ml•i--.
.~
.. --• around town . . ,.
6 Fndoy, Augu$f 20, 1999 Doily Pilot
• Send AROUND TOWN items to the 0 •
ly Pilot. 330 W Bay St., Costa M~
92627, fax them to (949) 64~170; or
call (949) 642-5680, Ext. 228. A complete
llst1n9 of AROUND TOWN may be found
at d111/ypilot.com
TODAY
Seniors Against Er Toro will bold
a meeting for Orange County res·
identis at 7 pm. m Heritage Park
in Irvine. County Supervisor Tom
Wilson is scheduled to speak.
"Take Charge ol Your Health," a
work hop on vitamins and i.up-
plemen~, will be held al The Lat-
Thing Teachmg and Meallng
Center from 1 to 4 p.m. The class
i:. $15 with advdnced registration.
The Latest Thing 1s at 270 I!. 17th
St., Costa Me£a. To re91:.ter or for
more information, call (949) 645-
6211.
Orange Coast College's Salling
ProgTam offers a weekend excur-
sion to Catalina today and Sun-
diiy aboard the tra.uung vessel,
Black Silver. The crnise is
designed for sailori. with at least
intermediate-level skills. The
cruise begins at 9 n.m. Saturday
and ends at 5 p.m. SWlday. Fee
for the weekend trip is $249. For
more information, call (949) 645-
9412. -
$40 tor the worta hop that will be
held at 180 Newport Center Dn-
ve, Newport Beach. For more
infonnation, call (949) 644-6435.
A seminar UUed "Growing Beard·
ed lns m Southern California•
will be pTi entP .. d by John Shous-
tra of Greenwood Daytiiy Fanns
at 9:15 a.m. at Roger's Garden ,
2301 San Joaqujn Hills Road,
Corona dcl Mar. Shoustra Will
share up~ on growing bearded iris
in Southern California. For more
in.formation, call (949) 640-5800.
A free Internet seminar Utled
.. Tools and nicks" will be pre·
se'nted at 10 a.m. in the Newport
Beach Central Library's Friends
Meeting Room, t 000 Avocado
"Herbs and Scented Gardens" ls Ave. This coUJ~e is designed for
kayak hop, Paddle Power, the
trip will begin with an introducto-
ry kayak lesson and will continue
with a program designed as an
exploration of the Upper Newport
Bay Ecological Reserve, home to
thaw.ands of migratory waterfowl
and four endangered species ot
bud . The fee is $40 and reserva-
tions • are reqwred. Northstar
Beach is at 1 White Cliff. Newport
Beach. Por more information or
reservations, call (949) 675-1215.
A computer show will be held at
the Orange County Fairgrounds
in Building 14 from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. Admission is $5 The Fair·
grounds is at 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more inf orm.dtion, call
(714) 838-5941. •
Participants may purcha e Uckets
at 3300 Newport Boulevard
l'or more information, call (949)
644-3151.
TUESDAY
Gwyn Havens will teach the class
"Meet Your Spuit Guides• at The
Latest Thing Teaching and Heal-
ing Center from 7 to 8:30 p.m. The
~e for the class is $35. The Latest
Thing is at 270 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. To register or for more
information, call (949) 645-6211.
A free seminar t1Ued .. Natural
Solutions for PMS & Menopause•
WllJ be presentr.d Crom 6~30 to
7:30 p,m. at the Patio Cafe and
Mother's Market and Kitchen,
225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Reservations rcqwred. For more
information, call (800) 595-6667. .
Dr. Stuart Silverman w1ll speak on .
"Fibromyalgia· A Multi-Discipli-
nary Approach• at the Fibromydl-
gia Support Group at 7:30 p.m. in
the Hoag Hospital Cancer Center
· Auditorium, One Hoag Drive,
Newport Beach. Admission is
free. To register or for more intor'
mation, call (714) 840-8038
Albert Taylor, author of "SoUl
Traveler: A Guide to Out-of·Body
-Expenences and Wonders
• est Thing Teaching and Hculing
Center from 7 to 9 p.m. The fee is
$10 with advanced registrallon.
Nila Keith of Nutrition for LiJE>
International will gwe miorma-
tion on life-changing products
and provide personalized nutri-
tion qu1des The Latest Thing is dt
270 E. 17th St , Costa Mes.i. To
registc>r or for more mfonndtioo,
(94Q_) b45-6211
tho title of a program offered at newcomers to cyberspace and Slrtus Theatr_, Company presents
Sherman Library and Gardens at will concentrate on how to use Shakespeare's •Romeo and Juli-
9.:10 a.m. Kathern Jennings, own-search engines and other et" at Mesa Verde United
Pr of Kate's Scented GardPns, will resources on the Internet. For Methodist Church at 4:30 p.m
discuss the many typ~s ol scented more information, call (949) 717-Admi~s1on is free. Bring a chair or
herbs dlld geraniums and their 3801. blanket for yow space on the
Whole Foods Market Costa Mesa
offers a free lectw'e, •Preventing
Cancer -There is Only One "Ihle
Cause." from 7 to 8:30 p.m. with Dr.
1n E. Moon. Whole Foods Market is
at 1870 Harbor Blvd. U1 Thangle
Square, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (949) 833-8989.
Free seminar and book signing
for "Prostate Health in 90 Days"
will be presented from 6:30 to
8;30 p.m. in the Patio Cafe at
Mother's Market dnd Kitchen,
225 E 17th_St., Costa Mesa.
Reservations required. For more
information, call (800) 595-6667.
Beyond." Wlll speak· on the sub-
ject at· the Inside Edge bredk!ast
meeting at the University Club,
UCI. Included in the meeting an~
a full buffet breakfast, interactive
table discussions, informal net-
working and professional enter-
tauunent. The cost is $20 for first-
time guests. $35 for repeat guests.
Jior reservations or more Turorma-
tion, call (949) 460-4242.
culturnl requirements in the gar-lawn. The chwch is at 1701 W.
den Tlus program is part of the Sirius Theatre Company presents Baker St., Costa Mesa. For more
Wtt:kend Gardener ~oo--t"· H-~~~&i~ ":-t«>mE10-<lMW\.lll-.+.-J.1.Qformation.-calL(2.1A)A37-9663.
free cUld open to the public The et" at Mesa Verde United
Audltions for OCC's dance team
get nndcl"\'\JdY ttt-noon-m-th
school'" Ddncc Studio B 2701
f-a1rv1ew Road DANC"N ETC.
perform!'> hip-hop, ballet and
modern numbers and JS looking
tor ddnct!rs and tlCtors. Partici-
pdnti. will receive three umts of
coUeqP necht For more mfonna-
tton, cdll (7141 432-5506.
Sherman Llbrary 1s in Corona del Methodist Church at 4.30 p·.m. MONPAY
Mar. For more mformallon, call Admission is free. Bnng a chwr or
(Y491 673-2261. blanket for your space on the
SATURD Y
Patty Paul, author of .. A New
Spmtucthtv Beyond Religion" w1U
tPdC h the cldss "The Amazing
Crop Cm les Messages for the
New l\hlJPnruum~ at The Latest
A computer show will be held at
the Orange County Fdirgrounds
in Building 14 from 10 a.m .. to 5
p.m. Admission is $5. The Fdir-
grounds is at 88 Pair Dnve, Costd
Mesa For more information, call
(714) 838-5941.
A divorce workshop hosted by
I\ 1axme B Cohen will be held
from 10 a.m to 12:30 p.m. Cost 1s
RUFFLES UPHOLSTER
Where Your Dollar Covers Morel
WE'VE MOVED 1 BLOCK NORTH
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'With a purchase of Fabric & Labor til 8/27 /99
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lawn. The church lS at 1701 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. For more
information, c<1ll (714) 437-9663.
SUN PAY
"Birds and Kayaks: Touting the
Upper Newport Bay" will be
offered from 10 a.m. to ·1 p.m. at
Northstar Beach. Guided by a vol-
unteer naturalist from the Califor-
ma Department of Fish and Game
and an instructor from Newport
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1
The Ronald Reagan Center for
Pubhc Affairs presents the Rea-
gan Forum with Rep. Christopher
Cox (R-Newport Beach) at 11 a.m.
at the Reagan Llbraiy in Simi Val-
ley. For more information, call
(805) 522-2977.
Celebrants Interested In welcom·
ing the new millennium -at the
Toumdment of Roses Parade on
JcUl. 1, 2000 may purchase tickets
beguuu.ng Aug. 23.
Tickets for the New Years Day
event. are $80 for Newport Beach
residents and $90 for nonresi-
dents. The ticket price includes
grandstand seating on Pasadena's
Colorado Boulevard, coach trans-
portation, coffee, 1u1ce and
donuts.
Anne McAlpln wiU host a free
"Padang Workshop• to teach the
secrets of packing techruques at 7
p.m. at Adventure 16. l'vJcAlpin is
a world traveler and packing
expert and recently appeared on
"The Oprah Winfrey Show."
Adventure 16 is at 1959 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (949) 650-3301.
WEDNESDAY
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce hosts a Business Alter
Hours Mixer from 5:30 to 7:30
p.m. at Robert Mondavi Wme &
Food Center. 1570 Scenic Ave.,
Costa Mesa. Tickets are $10 for
potential members, visitors are
welcome. For more information.
call (714) 885-9090.
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW-COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less! I
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
• One Block South or .\OS Fwy
• (714) 545-7168
THURSDAY
The Cros roads Appaloosa Horse
Show will be held through Aug.
29 at the Equestrian Center of tht
Orange County fall'grounds. The
Fairgrounds is at 88 Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call (760) 726-914~.
The Newport Harbor Area Cham~
ber of Commerce's Swiset After
Hours Mixer will be held from 5 to
7 p.rn at Bnstol Farms, 810 Avoca-
do Ave .. Corona del Mar. For more
information, call (949) 729-4400,
AUG. 27
Explore Cry~tal Cove State Park
with naturahst Simon Fellowes on
a full moon hike from 7:30 to 9:30
p m Hikers will meet at the El
Morro VlSltor Center. Crystal
Cove Stdle Pdrk is at 8471 E
Coast Highway, Newport Beach
The hilce is approx.unately threa
miles on dirt roads. This is a mod-
erate hike, although some parts
may be difftcult Not recommend ..
ed for children under 8. Weac
good shoes, a 1acket and bnnef
water Hikers will be looking an<L
listerung for bats, owls, coyotesi
raccoons and other nocturnd1
creatures. For more information
call (949) 497-7647 .
GOODWILL INDUSTRIES
of Orange Courtt:y
~ew Donation Site
ill
CORONA DEL MAil
St. Michael & All Anpls
Tax
Receipts
Issued
Ep~· Cbareh
3233 Pacific View Drive
Call 1-800-~·GOODWILL
(800-446-6394)
For Additional Donation Cenrer locations
Open Daily
Attendant wHl
assist you
•••••Ill t•alUt!U ..............
Your taxifdeducuble donation or cloth1~ and ot~ usable goods helps provide education,
1ra1n1ng; and employment services for people with dlsabllnleS and other barriers
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Classified ads work
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. .
Daily Pilot
~ home remodeling and decorat-
mg show will be held from noon
to 8 p.m. m Buildings 10 and 12 at
the Orange County Fairgrounds.
Admission is $5.75 for adults and
i3 tor seniors, children under 12
are free. The Fairgrounds is at 88
Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. For more
inlomlation, caU (818) 909-9963.
Krista Kirkwood wtU lead a two-
hour discussion on "Death in the
New Age" from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
at The Ldtest Til.i.ng Teaching and
Healing Center. The fee is $10.
;The Latest Thing is at 270 E. 17th
St., Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mabon, call (949) 645-6211.
AUG. 28
J\ complete garden planning sem-
inar with Cristin fusano will be
presented at 8 30 a.m. at Roger's
Gardens,, 2301 ~an Jodqum Hills
Road, Corom1 del Mar. Fusano
will discuss what to add to your
garden palette frorn September
through JanudI)'. Learn how to
prune, chvide and fertilize. For
more m.formatJon, call (949) 640---"5Hil8'00:-
A traditional Italla,n Midsummer
festivdl will be hosted by Stefano
Albano, general manager of Tutto
Mare restaurant to benefit Child-
Help USA at 6;30 p,m ·in Bloom-
ingdale'!i Courtyard m Fashion
l~land. The event will feature ltal-
ltm specialties, music and danc-
ing. For more information, call
(949) 476-9009.
A home remodeling and decorat-
Ulg show will he held from 10 a.m.
~o 8 p.m. in Buildings 10 and 12 at
the Ornnge County Pairgrounds.
..
Admission is $5.75 for adults and
$3 for ~entors, children under 12
are free The Fairgrounds is at 88
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. FOr more
information, call (8 18) 909-9963.
A Full Moon Ritual will be held at
The Latest Thing Teaching and
Healing Center from 7 :30 to 9
p.m. with S~mdra Sauer. The fee ls
$5. The Latest Thing is at 270 E.
17th St.. Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (949) 645-6211
The RN Sea Explorer, a research
vessel for the Orange County
Marine Institute in Dana Point
that ·runs educational programs
for the public on• weekends, con~
tinues to spot blue whales off
Dana Point. Those interested may
join the Orange County Marine
lnstitute's mdrine biologists
aboard the RIV Sea Explorer's
"Great Blue Whale Safari" from 8
a.m to 4 p.m. Aug. 28. For more
information, call (949) 496-2274.
AUG. 29
A complete garden planning sem-
arwill be presented~(} . .
at Roger's Gardens, 2301 San
Jo~quin Hills Road, Corona del
Mar. Pusano will discuss what to
add lo your garden palette from
September through January.
Learn how to prune, divide and
fertilize. For more information,
call (949) 640-5800 ..
A home remodeling and decorat-
ing show wiU be held from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. m Buildings 10 and 12 at
the Orange County Fairgrounds.
Adnu.ss1on is $5.75 for adults and
$3 for seniors, .children under 12
are free. The Fairgrounds is at 88
Poe~
Plumbing, Heating
& Air Conditioning
Celebrating 45 years of
sel'\fice in your community. ·
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• F dw • tasl*p • Sporu Tbtrarr • Body Wnpe • Hydrothttapy • Body Polish •
• Pffh •Vichy Showf.n • Stum ROottU • WHin& • Elf<'ltOiy •
• Pre & J'o11 u1trTbenpy • H1tnd & Foot Care• PHlt •Gift Ceftl6q1es •
10% l>iuount valld for aU terv1c.-Hnpt al,..ady discounted pad1agH,
retell products 01' In coqjnncllon with any oth•r clbcovnt.
Yo Quiero - -
·costa Mesa Florist
Which Means
in Any
Language,
"IWM/t
COSTA MESA
FLORIST"
·around toWn
Fair Dnve, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (818) 909-9963.
SEP't4
The Scooter Serles Hunter/
Jumper Show will be held at the
Orange County Fairgr9unds
today and Sept. 5. The event will
take place at the Equestrjan Cen-
ter. For more information, call
(714) 708-1662.
Mariners Church CbrtsUan Sin-
gles will host a tow of the Getty
Museum. 1ravel by luxury bus,
make new friends and enjoy the
museum and gardens for $18. The
bus leaves the Marmers parkmg
lot at 8:30 a.m. and .returning at
3:30 p.m. The last day to register
is Aug. 29, To register or for more
information, call (714) 536-4863.
SEPT. 9-11
The grand opening of Adult Day
Services of Orange County, a
state-of-the-art center speoaliz-
ing in Alzheimer's and dementia
care will be held from 2 to 5 p.m.
Adult Day Services of Orange
County is at 9451 lnchanapolis
Ave., Huntington Beach. For
more information, call (714} 593-
9630
.SEPI 16
The Newport Bea.ch Central
Library's Parent-Son Book Club
meets at 7 p .m. Boys m 5th and
6th grades ·are invited to partici-
p&te along with a 'pdrent or
guardian. The club meets the
third Thursday of every· month
The Newport Beach Central
Library ls at 1000 Avocado Ave.,
Newport Beach. To register, .or for
more information, call (949) 717-
3807.
SEPT. 17
Tai Chi Chih classes wlU begin at
the Oasis Senior Center from
. .
from 9 a.m to noon at more than
ijOO sites on Cahlofuia beaches,
bays, nver;, ere< ks, parks, road-
sides and highways. To volunteer
or for more informdtion, call Mdtk
Patrick at (949) 509-6684.
A Make Your Own Fossil Work-
shop will be held at the Museum
of Natural History m Aliso and
Wood Canyons Wilderness Park
in Laguna Niguel from 11 a m. to
2 p.m. Learn about the fossils
found in Orange County and
make your own plaster of Paris
cast. replied of d fossil to take
home. The fee is $2 for Orange
County Natural H.1Story MtJSewn
members, $6 for nonmembers.
For reservdtioru. or, more informa-
tion, call f949) 831-3287. •
"Colorful Natives for the .Home
Garden," tt · program ofCered at
Shermdll Library dOd Gardens in
Corona del Mar, will be held at
9:30 a.m. David Songster of the
California Native Plant Society
will shdre his knowledge of Cali·
torrua native plant growing. Tilis
Friday, August 20, 1999 7
program is part of the Weekend
Gardener Series which is free and
open to the general public. For
more infonnation, call (949) 673-
2261.
The Republican party of Orange
County will host the Orange
C9unty Pro-Life PAC Break.fast at
8:30 a.m. at the Hyatt Alicantc
Hotel in Garden Grove. The guest
spedker will be state Senator Ray
Haynes. For more information,
call Pat Fanelli at (714) 692-2003.
SEPT. 21
A class for parents f<>Cusing on
building relationships, disopline.
positive moti\:'.ation, conflict res9-
lution and dealing wifb tan~
will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. ·
The class, H Why don't you listen
to me?': is taught by a~licensed ·
· clinical social worker and costs
$85 per person or $105 per couple
for the five-week series. Preregis-
tration is re([w.red. To register or
for more information, call (949)
253-5701
A craft and sewing festival will be
held from 10 a.m. to 5 p .m. in
Building 10 of the Orange County
Fairgrounds. Admission is $7 for
adults, children 12 and under are
ree. For-more -information; -e
(801) 463-1200.
10:30 to 11 :30 a.m.Tai Chi Chih is
the-gentle-way-t~fitn~~~~~~~~~§§~S5!~~~§!5~5§~~~--·Slow flowing, nonstrenuous
SEPT. 12
"A Brass Fanfare," featuring
musicians from the Pacilic Sym-
phony Orchestra's brass section
will launch the Newport Beach
Public Library's la te summer
through spring Sunday Muskales
at 3 p.m. The Newport Beach
Central Library is at 1000 Avoca-
do Ave. For more infom1ation, call
(949) 717-3801.
PREMIER
movements that can be done by
anyone .of any age or physical
ability. No special equipment or
~ttire is required. The fee is $43
for this eight-week class. Regis-
tration is ongoing. To register or
for more information, call (949)
644·3244
SEPT. 18
The 15th annual California
Coastal Cleanup Day will be held
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VOLUNTEll DllECTOIY
DON LEACH I OAJl V PILOT
Young sailors on a catamaran set sail tn Newp0rt Harbor as
reOectlon from faraway window lights the way.
• VOlUHTEER DtRECTO«Y runs peri-
odically 1n the Daily Pilot. tf you'd hke
Information on getting your organiu-
tion ltsted. call (949) 574-4228
AUHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION OF
ORANGE COUNTY
Helpline asl>istants and group
leaders needed. Training ses-
sions are available. FoJ more
mfom1ation, call (714) 28J-1111.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
The Orange C'ounty Region of
· the American• Cancer Society
seeks office volunteers. The soci-
ety is also Sl'cking volunteers to
ans~r ralls for the unit's
Helpline lnfoCenter. For more
information, call ~49) 261-9446.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
DISCOVERY SHOP
The American Cancer Society
Discovery Shop needs volunteers
from 10 a.m to 5 p.m. Monday
through Sdturday at 2600 E.
Coast H1ghwdy, Corona del Mar.
For more information, call (9~9)
640-4777.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
ROAD TO RECOVERY
This transportation program
needs volunteers to drive cancer
patients to and from medical
treatments free of charge. The
required commitment 1s a few
hours each week or month. Dri-
vers need d valid driver's license
and m~mrance, and must be at
least 25 years old. Volunteers
may use either their own vehicles
or American Cancer Society
vans. For more information. call
(949) 261-9446 or end e-mail lo
scomef@cancer.org.
AMERICAN HEART ASSOOATION
The American Heart Assoctdtion
is looking for volunteer::; to per-
nn various gencn1l ofhcE' duties
in the main office and implement
educational and fund raising
events through Orange County
No experience ncces~ary, train-
ing will be provided. For more
information, call (949) 856-3555.
AMERICAN HOME
HEALTH HOSPICE PROGRAM
The Amencan Home Health
Hospice Program needs volun-
teers to give emotional support to
terminally ill patients and their
families in the greater Orange
County area. Trairung is provid-
ed. for J.n.formation. call (114)
550-0800 or (800) 540-2545.
AMERICAN RED CROSS,
ORANGECOUNTY~HAPTER
The Orange County Chapter of
the American Red Cross needs
volunteers to address community
groups about Red Cross services
and to act as liaisons with the
media in disaster and emergency
situations. For infonnation, call
Judy Iannaccone, (714) 835-5381.
The Daily Pilot and The Cannery Restaurant ·
cordially invite you to celebrate in a fond farewell to
The Cannery, which is closing its doors, Sept. 12.
ASSOOATION
RENAISSANCE CREATORS
The Costa Mesa group sponsors
and supports outreach conununity
service programs, such as th~
homeless sanctuary. Volunteers
are needed. For more infonnation,
call (714) 540-5803. .
BIG BROTHERS, BIG SISTERS
Or-.QAANGE COUNTY
Men jand women over 20 years
old __pho have lived in Orange 1
-County for at least six months and
have been on the job for at least
·three months are needed to &erve
as big brothers or big sisters for
cluldren ages 6 to 16 from single-
parent homes. For information,
call (714)_544-7773
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA INC.,
ORANGECOUNTYCOUNOL
Volunteer opportunities include
fund-raising, program develop-
ment and training to existing
troops and packs For more infor-
mation. call.(71.4} ~6-4990.
BOYS & GIRLS aues OF COSTA
MESA-NEWPORT BEACH
The three area clubs need volun-
teer coaches and arts and crafts
workshop teachers. For .locations
and more information, call (949)
642-2245.
CENTER FOR
CREATIVE ALT£RNATIVES
The organization works through
~=>:J~c=-====~-=---=--
Jo in us for no .. host cocktails and complimentary hors ~'oeuvres in The Cannery's
upstairs lounge overlooking beautiful Newport Harbor on
Tuesdays, Aug. 17, 24 and Sept. 7
5:30 .. 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 31 -Daily Pilot Realtors' Night
(try invitation only)
The Cannery is taking re ervations for Restaurant and Cruises
for groups of 30 or more.
To book your party, call (949) 675.,.5777
.... . ,
the United Way and needs volun-
t rs, graduate level interns or
trainee>. For more infonnation,
call (949) 642-0377.
COUEGE HOSPITAL
The College Hospital Costa M~
Auxiliary is seeking volunteers to
perform clerical. reception desk,
gift shop and other duties. For
more Ulfonnation, call (949) 642-
2734 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.
COMMUNrTY SERVICE
PROGRAMS SEXUAL
ASSAULT VICTIM SERVICES
OF ORANGE COUNTY
Volunteers needed to provide
assistance on the crisis hotline and
al the hospital. There is a special
need for bilingual and bicultural
volunteers. For more information,
call (949) 756-0677.
COSTA MESA OVIC PlAYHOUSE
The playhouse needs volunteers
for ushetjng, backstage, mailings,
typing, lights and many other
duties. For more iiiformatiOD,CalI
(949) 650-5269.
COSTA MESA
HISTORJCAL SOOETY
The society collects information,
photos and artifacts relating to the
history of Costa Mesa and the har-
bor area. Volunteers are needed
for clerical tasks, computer input
and help m the library. For more
Ulformation, call (949} 631-5918.
COSTA MESA
LITERACY COUNOL
The Costa Mesa Literacy Center
needs volunteer tutors lo teach
English as a second language. A
$30 matenals fee provides every-
thing needed to lead a student
through two skill books. To regis-
ter. or for more information, call
(949) 548-3384 or (949) 548-6584.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER
The multipurpose senior services
faahty al the comer of 19th Street
and Pomona Avenue seeks volun-
teers for a variety of tasks. For
more information, call (949) 645-
2356 between 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
COSTA MESA
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Seniors age 55 and up are being
sought to help staff the westsiCie
substation. Volunteers would be
asked to work two four-hour day-
time shifts per week and would be
responsible for answering phones,
bicycle registration, fingerprint-
ing. data entry ani:i assist with oth-
er otyw1de pro1ects. Bilingual
seniors m Sparush and English are
also needed. for an application or
more information, contact Senior
Volunteer Fred GaeckJer dt (714)
754-5208.
COURT-APPOINTED
SPEOAL ADVOCAT£S OF
ORANGE COUNTY (CASA)
Volunteers are needed to ~e ~~
advocates for dbused, n~
and abandoned children. Volun-
teers work one-on-one with a
child for three hours a week. For
more information, call (714) 935-
6124.
CRISIS ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM, INC.
This nonprofit organization LS
seeking volunteers for its expand-
ing trauma response program.
Volunteers would assist law
cn(orcement, fire fighters and
emergency-type responders oy
providing emotional first aid and
support to mjured or traumatized
people. Other volunteers would
provide dispatch and office sup-
port. No experience is necessary,
training will be provided. FQ.r
more information, call (949) 588-
1414 ..
DISPUTE RESOLUTION SERVICES
Volunteer medidtors, ease special·
tsts and outreach assistants need-
ed to help m a variety of media-
tion cases. Bilingual language
kills are needed for office volun-
teers and for mediators. For more
information, call (949) 250-0488.
EASTER SEALS
The Easter Seals Society needs
volunteers for ongoing clencal
work and lo help in programs for
children with diSabilities and in
spcaal events. For more informa-
tion, call (71•) 834-1111.
ENVIRONMENTAL
NATURE aNTtR
Volunteer trail guides needed to
help visitors learn about their
environment For more informa-
tion, call (949) 645·8489.
EXCHANGE O.UB CHILD
ABUSE PREVENTION QNTER
Donate new school supplies or
beeome a volunteer to help cbil·
dren victimized by child abuie.
Volunteen work with county
nfmU to .... higb-dlk vldlml
d .,.. ..... drug eddktiDn. Diop
off ..., •• at the Cllld ~
CeilMi' Ollce in c... Mma ..
Ml2 ~ lhd., No. " • Ullaa ..... Nliwpmt .....
·-....... DIM. eel ... na.1t0flar._ Mii S 1 I
LIBRARY
CONTINUED FROM 1
.John Noyes, who represent the
district where the focihty would
be bwlt.
The concept -which the
Newport Beach Public Libmry
• ·Board of Directors considered
WednE"...sday night -is still far
from becoming reality. It must
undergo feasibility studie'>, pub-
Uc hearings, and ultimately a City
Council vote.
But the board's funding plan
may make it even more attractive
to the voting powers -it would
be paid for through private dona-
tions.
•conceptually it's a good
idea," said Mayor Dennis O'Neil.
· •And any time you can get pn-
vate funding, it's a great thing.•
The center would be a single-
story, moderate-s1zed complex
housing a 400-seat auditorium,
·-wAtt .
CONTINUED FROM 1
Howard Denghausen, who
lives six houses away from the
preschool at 300 Magnolia ~treet,
pas filed an appeal of the permit
granted by the city for the wall
Which encroaches up to. 6 feel of
city property.
Denghausen said the wall,
while protecting the children, is a
traffic hazard hecause it blocks
• Vlsibility for residents trymg to
exit from an alley onto Santa Ana
Avenue.
Denghausen and his neigh-
bors were clearly outnumbered
and unpopular at the meeting
where parent after parent got up
to speak about the safety of their
children. Roeder had to quell the
audience a number of tunes as
they booed or grumbled w~e
6,000 quare-foot reception hall,
public art gallery, three class·
rooms and administrative off1 ,
said Jim Wood, chairman of the
Newport Beach Public Library
Board or Trustees. A two-tiered.
underground structure would
accommodate parking, and a
pedestrian bridge would link the
center to the extSting ·5-4 ,000·
square-foot library. A patio area
and a sculpture garden would
dress up the outside of the build-
ing.
The auditorium could serve as
a venue for homeowners associa-:
tion meetings and other events.
But Wood said it wouldn't com-
pete with larger arts and enter-
tainment venues such as the Per-
forming Arts Center, the Barclay
Theater or the Orange County
Museum or Art.
The proposed method of fund·
ing, however, was initially met
with skepticism by the library
foundatj.on, which is trying to
raise a $2.5 million endowment.
Denghausen_and others spoke.
Llsa Westerhout, whose son
was in the playground the day
Abrams drove into it, said the
wall is more than a physical
structure, it has given her son a
restored sense or security.
"That wall is a big Band-Aid
for him,• Westerhout said. "If you
were lo ask my son about the
wall, he would tell you no bad
guys can get in now.•
Pamela Wein:,;tein, whose 3-
year-old soft. Brandon Wiener
was killed by Abrams, struggled
to speak through tears and apol-
ogized for the long pauses she
needed to take while regaining
her composure.
·1 just feel in my heart that a
wall is going to protect the chil-
dren,• she said as day-care own-
er Cheryl Hawkinson and anoth-
er parent held her to show their
support.
Hawkinson spoke about a
On Wednesday, Lucille Kuehn, a
former board member, openly
questioned whether trustees
hould undP.rtake ~uch ct project
and cxpr~ed concern that fund-
raismg efforts fOYthe new center
would mtcrfere with the founda-
tion's efforts. But the board
wouldn't begtn raising ttie mon-
ey until after the endowment
goal has been. met.
The endowment has raised
$1.2 million to date, and founda-
tion chairman Dave Carmichael
said the $2.5 million goctl should
be rettchcd by next spring.
Ml am stttisfied that the endow-
ment 1 will not be affected,"
Canruchttel said.
The proposed center would
occupy a 3-acr~ sitE! between
MacArthur Boulevard and Avo-
cado Avenue -land the Irvine
Co donatep to the city.
At one point, the city consid-
ered allowing development of
affordable senior housing there,
but city and Irvine Co. officia~s
child who walked around the
school after the acodent Wi er
hands held over her ears to shut
out loud noises. The wall has
been therapeutic for the children
who are encouraged to touch it,
push it and talk about their feel-
ings, Hawlunson said.
It was hard to speak up
agamst those sentunents, said
Ruby Wilbur who lives next door
to the preschool. But she said she
didn't want the emotion to cloud
the issue at hand.
Another neighbor expressed
her sympathy for the parents and
children but said they should be
concerned about everyone's
safety.
•rm not against the church,
the children, the preschool or the
day-care,• said Catherine Smith.
"What I am against is people get-
ting hurt -children, adults, any-
body."
And il the wall stays, that's ..
"Celebrating the Arts"
•
.,:-,,
''The Best Art Shopping
in Southern California''
The Sawdu t Festival is a breathtaking vi-
sual event with more than 190 talented local
artists displaying their fine art and quality
crafts, entertainment and an workshops.
· Open Everyday
July 1 -August 29
lOAM-lOPM
Art Auction
12-3 on Sunday, August 22
935 J...aauna Canyon Rd, Laguna Beach, CA
949.494.3030
http://www.sawdustartrestival.org
. "·· ..• Re lins Sale
Crystal Chandelier &
Wall Sconces.
Uariou·s Cases. Fixtures
& Miscellaneous
Gift Items
\\
TRADITIONAL
'
couldn't ayree on some aspect of
tho cteal, which pu hcd the plan
off th tab1e.
If thls plan is approved. the
facility wowd be owned by the
Newport B ach Aro; FounddUon,
which· would lt>a')e the land for 50
years at $1 a year.
The city would mamtam, staff
and op rate the center on a con-·
tractudl basis, and the Aru Foun-
datwn Boa.rd of Directors would
provide ov.crsighl.
"What WP would have to con·
sider ls the long tenn as far as
how much it would cost to staff it
and other Uungs, • said Council-
man Gary Adams,
But Wood said the center I
would be wt"ll worth the cost.
"This ·is a place where we
could have homeowners assoda·
tion meetin9s. civic gatherings
and oth~r things,• he said.
•Newport Beach is a city where
72,000 people live, and we don't
• have a pubbc auditonwn: he
said.
what will happen, said neighbors
who complained ofliavmg lo pilll
out mto the street before they
could s0e oncoming trttffic
Roeder said he c>xpects to
make d dcc1s1on by early next
week. Whatever decision he
makes is expected to be
dppedlf>d to the City Council, but
Roeder rt•mdmed optimistic that
d solution could be found. At
letlst om• solution ottered at the
meeting Thursday involved
putting up stop signs CJt Santa
Ana Avenue and Magnolia
Street. ·
·1 think there are other ways
to solve the problem other than
taking the Wdll down," he said.
NIXON
CONTINUED FROM 1
professors at small regional uru-
versibes such as Chapman, but
Gellman, seated on ~ sunny, cat-
ha.ir-coated couch in his mam-
moth Harbor View home, said
that while he is shocked and
pteased by all the attention, he's
taking it m stride.
"To me, it's JUSt what I do,•
said Gellman. the author of three
previous books on Franklin
Delano Roosevelt's adnunistra··
uon. His words, however, are
belied by a wild chuckle and er
booming enthusiasm when he
lists all the radio shows th.at h4ve
contacted him for mtemewi;. .
Kevin Starr, the California
State· Llbrandn, said Gellman i
right to laugh proudly at hi;
accomplishments.
•Mr. Gellman is a very inter-
esting man,· Starr said. ·A busi-
nessman with a PhD, dOd u pit
bull of a researcher."
Starr added that, 10 his book,
Getl:uran harmade Nixon •a
more sympathebc figure"
The book's ma1or strengths,
said Starr, are the rounded por-
trait it gives of Nixon's early years
m Congress and the way that it
explains how Nixon, with only six
years 10 Congress under his belt,
was chosen as Dwight D Eisen-
hpwer's vice presidentiaJ nomi-
nee In 1952.
Friday, Augu:.I 20, 1999 9
•J tNnk tb1s book 11S Ulc begm-
rtlng of a hard-headed f\\;O;:,;~
ment of Nixon,. to tak him out
from under tho htidow of Watcr-
gat~ and how him m lhP. cont xt
of J>O$t-World War 11 Amenc , •
Starr said.
Ml1Ily Ntxon-hater don't quite
it that way. however, and
Gellman.er Republican who says
ho k~cp::. his work as obJectl\ e as
po sible, hal> been on the rec 1v-
ing end of qwtr! a few diatnbCS
from talk-radio land, !;OmPthinlf
which he also takes m stride. ·we knew 1t would h.tppen, •
said Gloria Gae Gellman, lrwm's
wife.
The id d for the book wa
actually Glona's She, dlld not her
hlisband, once met Nu:on, back
m 1968 in lndidna. She found him
•chanrung.•
And it wai. Glond who
'dragged her husband away from
work on a book on the Holocam;t
for a lunch and a tour of Uie Nixon
library 10 Yorba Linda.
He got hooked and wrot~ the
book, but Glona edited every
word. '
lttshe,h~~
appeanng on all the rad10 sho\11~
Gellman had thrne alone on
Thursday~Around noon, he came
up the stairs chuckling at the
react.Ion of callers m Dallas to hls
book.
#The fir~t thmg ther try t.o clo is
defme me is a Nixonophile or d
Nuconophobe," hP said, dud1119:
MI am neither. 1 om a h1i.;tortan."
' . EYE-OPENER
... 133 days.
I 0 Doily Pilot
' . ' .,., QUOTE Of THE DAY
•1•ve l1Mf playtd one second of soccet ii my Me. Over the years,
I've been an i1tense student of the game •• :
Laird Hayes, OCC men's soccer coach
Friday, August 20, 1999 • Sports Editor Roger Canson • 949-57 44223
Olson reigns as the national junior sabot sailing queen .
• nurteen-year-old puts ·
big field away in Newport.
Tirteen-year-old AdrteMe
lson is the epitome of the
All-American teenager.
With good looks (check that),
great looks, an excellent student
(straight A's), and living in the
sailing capital of the wortd,,
she's tanned, tiny and tenacious.
She's also the 1999 Junior
National Sabot Sailing
Cbamp1on
On Aug 12, 120 sailors
gathered in Newport Beach to
detennine who would become
the national champion m a boat
that has been the trdmmg vessel
for almost every Corinthian and
rofessionaJ sailor-tn the country.
The Naples Sdbot, an
eigbt-foot dingy with ample
freeboard for persons tht> size of
Adnenne Olson (5-foot-2 and 87
pounds)
J:iowever, this sdme craft has
diminishing freeboa.rd for her
5-10, 130-pound brqther,
17-year-old Greg Olson, who 1s
reaching the size where the ~PJ
420s dre quite a bit more
spacious.
Adrienne, an eighth grader at
Carden Hall School, mqy be tiny
in stature, but she's a giant on · .
the water
That's wby she's. won the Joe
Wells Perpetual Jr. National
Sabot Champion.ship First Girl
lo Finish 1Tophy for the lasl two
years. In last year's Nabonals,
Adrtenne came in sixth overall.
She is also the recipient of
Newport H"rbor Yacht Club's
prestigious James Webster
Outstanding Non-Calm Sailor
lrophy the past two years as well.
Her brother, Greg; a juhtor
with a 4.0 GPA at Newport
Harbor High, brought home sixth
place honors in this year's
nationals, even though his
athletic emphasis has shifted to
playing third base for the Sailors'
10111111
terrance
phillips
baseball team.
Adrtenne, sitting .in her living
room surrounded by trophies
almost as tall as she is, Sa.id, ·rrs fun oul on Ute a e·~r.-=an:-::=-::.-t
I guess that's why I like sailing.''
I asked her why she felt she
won first pldce over so many
competitors (boys, and girls
compete in this regatta). ·r was
really 'on' during the two days,"
COASllRS
•He's a side Judge in the NFL and
half of OC'C's !>occer coaching legacy.
l'o\'\ \J I OIJH 11
Dmy Plot
I f you're d student ctl
Onmqe Codst College
Wdlching a Natiom1J
Footbcill League> uume
on the tube some
Sunddy afternoon and an
official blows d call agamst
your favonte team, be cdieful
what you say.
You might be m one of rus classes.
Laird Hayes, OCC men's ..;occer co-coach
also moonlights as a side Judge in tl!e NFL.
Entenng lus hf th season m the •bigs•,
Hayes has an endless dmount of stories about
his Sunday JOb.
·1 was on the held the game of the
Detroit·Plltsburgh Thanksgiving game last
year where the new com toss rule was
established,· Hayes Sdid. •And before you
ask, I was on the sidelines so I didn't hear if
he (Jerome Betlls) called heads or tails."
So whdl 1s a side judge? "Basically, I'm
about 20 yards downfield taking care of the
sidelines,• Hayes said. ·1 keep track of the
pass interferences. hands to the face, out of
bounds plays, traps on punts, thmgs like
that.·
In honor of his solid work, Hayes has been
named to the playoff officiating crews the
past three seasons and looks to make it four
in a row this season.
"If you make it to a
playoff crew, that means
that you get to keep your
JOO the following year,
Hayes said. *We get
graded on every play of
every game, so you have
to be at your best every
single minute you're out
there. You start wandering
from your focus and bad
Laird H things st.art happening."
ayes Hayes got into the NFL ·
just like a player wouldi by
eamingtt
After spenchng time in the high school and
community college ranks, Hayes spent 13
years m tbe Pac-10 Conlerence m the NCAA.
"I never even thought about the NFL,"
Hayes said. "I was content doing the NCAAs
when someone asked U I had ever applied to
the NFL. I ended up applying. and I was
fortunate enough to make it,"
~There's not too many pure goal scorers out
there and we had a few dunng that tune.
They were a hard-nosed group that hated to
lose and would not accept losing.·
she said. Ml was .mhng really fast
and I guess I was juitt in the nght
place al the nght lime."
Brother Greg added, •Jn light
winds, the lighter crew has a big
advantage. The sabot gets slower
as the kids gel bigger, that's why
most kids start movmg up to the
FJs, which is the boat used in
high school sailing."
Adrienne plans to join the
Newport Harbor sailing team
when she becomes a fre ·hrilan
next year.
Congratulations to another
Newport national champion
-Adnenne Olson and her
coach, Scott Pruett.
• I had several positive
comments re,gardin_g last week's
column warning boaters with
weapons on board, while
traveling into Mexican water.
One boater, requesting to
remain anonymous, said he's
been fishing Ba1a for yedrs,
always having a pistol and nfle
CAAL HIOAtGO I OAJlY PILOT
What Hayes is bclit known for around
OCC, however, is the ucces that he and his
c<H:oach Maunao Oawe have generated for
OCC's men's soccer team.
A Santa Barbara native, I Ia yes graduated
from San Marco High in 1967 before
receiving his degree from Princeton
Uruversity in 1971. .
• Aug. JO • Ceriito5 (home), 3
There's only one small problem.
•J've never played one econd of soccer in
my We,· Hayes admitted. "Over tho yean;,
I've been an inteme tudent of the game, o
I have the strategies and X's and O's of the
game, while Mauricio has tho years of
playing experience.
•Mo (Mauricio) is ju tan unbelievable
roach for us," Hayes continued. •Jte grew up
with the game and he hket competing with
the guys dunng the practices, while I try to
heb> out from an overall sideline pers~ve.
It teally works out because the players see
our pbllOlophies from two dttferent angles.•
Pemas-one of the mo1t dOJIUnaftl eru in au of community college athletics came from
2988·91 When Claure and Hayes guided the
Buct to four-straight conference titlel,
four-ltralgb& State payoff appearances and
two ate dWbpAcWblpt.
rwe mc1 • bUld °'PY!'°" .,.. ctubt 1'116 a.w bOW ~ ..... ,..,. Mid.
Hayes furthered his education with hlS
Master's degree from UCLA in 1974,
followed by eamlng h doctorate from UCLA
in 1976.
Hayes and his wife, Magute. also have
two athletic children. Katie, 17, i a Juruor at
Newport Harbor High and compet m field
hockey, while Andy, 8, plays soccer. nag
football and baseball.
Hayes ind Claure's record is 135·82-471
with eight state championship tournament
appearances.
However, there hat been a drOught Ot
playoff appearances for the Piiates tbe lat
few years, 90ID8thing that tbe coec:bel have
addre1111J ·The eulest thing m the World'° ao ii blame the players,• Hay• Mid. •MW
JUt ~· dilapp06ntlng .... W9 911t down
ud llgul8d out dMll we n11ded bllP aa our
,,,....... .... tD ........ " ........... =:=:siz:a..=c; -
• Aug. ~1 • RJo HOrMk> (home), 3
• Sept. 1 • l,ong lffCh cc °'°'"'), 3 • SIPL 7 • M Mt San Antomo, 2
·-9. Sin Diego-. et.amt>. 3
·-11-12. HlnCDdc Toumlr .
•• •S·atlA,._ J
·-17.,..,.., (home), 4 ••22-•&CeMnQ.4
•
on his poat, but never mabzed he
was in jeopardy of going to Jail.
He said, #Luckily, I hdve only
been boarded once and that was
to check to see if we were
poaching lobsters from Mexican
traps close to wqere we were
fishing. We were not poachmg
and the Mexic;an authorities
were very pleasant and polite.
I wonder if they bad seen the
guns if they would have done
something. An'fY'/ay, they're
(weapons} off the boat now."
For what it's worth, it's
unclear if the boat has to dock
at a Mexican port to violate
Mexican law, or, whether haVlng
weapons on board while cruising
m Mexican territonal water, is
dlso considered a violation. ----In any event, I strongly
suggest that you don't press the
issue and if you desire to have a
gun on your boat while.in
Mexico, contact the Mexican
Consulate office in Los Angeles
and obtain a pemut. Adrienne Olson
SPORTS HALL OF FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
BRYA
LUXEMBOURGER
COSTA MESA
" •Former Mustang football standout endured an
injury-plagued college career, but he has no regrets.
BARRY FAll.kM·Jl
Tirn cartilage, 11111
ruptured ligaments, a 1111111
chipped bone, as well
as vanous other tattered tissue.
would hardly be considered
precious mementos of one's
college experience.
But for Bryaq Luxembourger,
the most decorated-football player
in Costa Mesa High history, the
aforementiC'ned maladies did Llttl
to sour him on his four years at
Villanova University.
•Even if I had to go through
exactly the same things, I'd still
do it again," said the former
Wildcat linebacker,
whose promising
collegiate gridiron
career was d erailed by
enough calamity to
convert the most
passionate poSltive
thinker.
•1t was tough and
there may have been a
point where.I wondered
return his redshirt Junior season),
Luxembourger spent a year
working for a commercial film
rompany m Philadelphia.
But, a desire to be closer lo his
family, most notably his
18-month-old niece Renee, lured
him back to Southern California
last month.
"I'm doing the job search right
now and I'm looking at a number
of fields.•
Luxembourger, 24, enjoyed his
film production work and would
like to do more of the same in
1 lollywood. "I would eventually
like to be a producer," he said.
Producing was his stock in
trade for the Mesa football
program, for which he
was a three-year varsity
starter
I le was All-CIF as a
guard his JUnior year,
then spearheaded what
most considered the
pr0gram's benchmark
season as a seruor in
1993.
if I was doing..:.
60methlng wrong, .....
Luxembourger recalled
of his myriad injunes. Luxembourger
With Luxembourger
opening holes u~ front,
the Mustangs scorea a
then-school and district
record 400 pomts and
Wlllgback Binh •But I saw a Jot of my
•Runaway• Tran motored for
more than half of bis 4,333 career
rushlng yards, till a
Newport·Mf'sa record.
It was on defense. however,
teammates get injured too,
including one who lost a shot at
the .NFL when be blew out his
knee my sophomore year. When
you see things like that. it's hard
to feel sorry for yowself. Football
didn't work out for me, but I look
at the things I d o have, like an
education from an mcrediblc
school that I wouldn't have had
the resources to a ttend without a
scholarship. And I have a Jot of
where the 6-foot-2, 220-pound
Luxembourger made hi.$ biggest
impact, hteraUy. He repeatedly ~
removed opposing ball carriers '
from their upright position and his
penchant for big hits created more
than one !>elf-inflicted concussion.
lifetime friendships."
In addition to his
communications degree,
Luxembourger, thanks to
rclentle s rehabilitation, somehow
managed to return from the
suburban Philadelphia campus
with hiS health.
Between the time he captur d
CIF Southern Section Oivt ion
VlII, Newport-Mesa District and
Pacific Coast League Playei of the
YeM honors as a senior offen 1vc
guard and middle linebacker, and
his college graduation, he
-endured two knee surgeries,
another on his shoulder, and a
deb1litattng h.mg infection. And
those were just the major
mallunctions,
•Every time football sea!IQn
came around, it seemed like
10methlng wu hurting, or I was
llni9¥11ng With some rehab,· he
Mid. My body juat didn't llffm
to wat to coopmat.e. • Pftm*llW to .... bll llMI
l88IOll ol etigtbllity .tter the mott
ledOul or hll ln)Wiel (tom
anterior audm and medial
d Ir '!:r8**• •Illa medlAl =-·.:..'":=up cmwllleltla+ht••lrl*
His domindnce between the
hash marks helped the Mustangs
earn the school's only outright
league championship. With
Luxembourger tattooing his No.
64 to anyone with a differe nt
colored jeriey, Myron Miller's
Mwotang won three playoff
game:-. en route to the Cir
Division VUJ title game. They
were defeated, 44-6, by PCL
runner-up lrabuco Hills in the
champ1onsh1p game to fuush
9-3·2. But the three playoff wms
equaled th total the school had
produced in 33pr •vious
campaign~.
"Those were wonderful times,~
the latest member of the Daily
Ptlot Sports Hall of Fame recalled.
"Our seniors had played together
moe we were little and we had
aome talented juniors who filled :In
1<>me gaJ>I"
Luxembourger's 11 one of two
footbd _Jelley numbers retired at
Meea (!"an_'s_ No. 1 11 the otber),
but IUCb atbletic aCt'Oladel don't
gamer his greeteet ~don.
•Getting • tCbolarlblp epd lt.. eduallkle .. tlae l'Wdaaeaadtbe
of wbti:b ...... pniud..
.. 1114
• . '
• '
Daily Pilo1 Sports
HirSt, Tars, making long-range travel plans
• Without ClF travel restrictions, Newport Harbor's
boys bac;ketball pll yers may become frequent fliers.
P--laymg boy uaskntball at while we're there."
!"eWJ)(lrt Hathor High I! not Hir1if esb.mated there were
111st an cxtrac:umcular about nine or 10 cities named
activity: ll's an udvcnture Newport in the United States.
Of, at lea~t. Coad\ Lany I Iirst But a check of one Rand
1s domg whet he can to bee that McNally atlas revealed 19
lus players experience road Newport listings across the
games which reqmrc luggage. country, includmg the
l hrst hils olrC'ttdy taken teams dforementioned Rhode Island
to Newport, R.J. and L<1s Vegas locale.
dnU when the Ctr Southern Depending upon how many
SN:t,ion voted last ycclI to remove actually have high school
ult rc~trict1ons on travel, Hirst basketball teams {six Newports
PREPS
borry
foulkner
outs de Chicago.
• One byproduct ol Hirst'
Wdndcrlust would be lncr d
exposure for h1 players. Hu t
expres cd tru trahon uv<>r th<! ·
lack of ~enou recruiting mter"s1
m Jnmeson, a four-year &tarter .
who, by nece :.tty, Wd planning
to walk on at Thldne, uefo1e
Mia.nu coa~es saw him ol fl
couple summer an:s11u
tournaments and rolled out tho
Red(hawk) carpet -also known
as a full scholar~h1p.
Hirst said programs nuhon·
Wlde appeared di interested m
Hl15t theorized thdt colleg
coacheio may have stereot} d
f undc:tmentally ound, nonfl hy
Orange Courrty players as mr nor
to players from the mne r dty
"Mayhe all those QObr.he ar
trymg to find the big hsh, or
1mvollshed gem, who can tllm
the whole progrnm around,"
·1 hrsl said.
• Newly hlred Costa Mesa HJgh
hoys basketball cof!ch Bob
$orven hked what ht• SdW from
his Mustangs over the ..,ununcr.
Am(mg the highltghb WNI'
hQ,gan combing the Internet to were listed with populations of
<iccel~rate his gldnd travel plans less than 1,000), Hirst could
J~meson' credentials, but he
Illingworth. will visit Las Vegas was particularly bewlldered b} a
for a December tournament complete lack of mqume about
• I 0 three-potnlers in d wm ovE!r
El Modena by c,enmr Ry<1n Ne If
Natl averdged 6.1 pomls t11r
lhe Costa !\1e-..a varsity a a
sophomore, b\lt played ld!>I yea•
in Georgia after his tanuly
fl>r the progrnm. spend the rest of his career •
~My qunst is to pluy all the making annual treks to Arizona, •Boys basketball Isn't the only Jamei;on from local four-year
Harbor program making hotel programs. Newports m the counlry/ Hirs.t Delaware, f'lorida, Indian~ ·
:<>d1cJ. "We took cam of Rhode Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, reservdtions. Coach Dan Glenn's "The local schoob 1Cal St11t~ re lo< at Pd. lie"s back fo1 h1 ·
senior sedson, ho\\ ever, and
apparently pnmed to take a
Nshot" al thl:! ~t!\en -.myle·ganlt'
three-pointers made by Mesa'
I land and, two years from now, I New Hampshire, New Jersey, girls volleyball team is Ul Hawaii Fullerton, UCI. Long Bcdch
this week defending its State, etc.) didn't call, send a want tu go ti> Newport, Ky. North Carolina, New York,
That's about 40 miles South of Oregon, Pennsylvania, championship at the lolani postcard, anythmg," Hirst said.
Oxtor<l. Ohio (and Mianu Tennessee, Vermont and Invitational "Mdybe lhe word wai; out that
University where recent Harbor Washington to battle namesake The reigrung CIF Southern. Matt wanted to go away to 11ke Montoya (1996) and
Lt.ancta.'.s.J>et.er.Andf'r:sen y1 u li.itaU ... ktme on 1s playmg on ~ls.----Section and.state .champmns .are-i-'>.l...ut..cul. b.ut !hey didn'.L evcn_give
:-c holtsrship), so the plan is to Hirst's 1999-2000 team, led also planrung to V1s1t Dlinois later him an option, 1t thost> plans {last season), behc v<'cl lo be thr> Ne:v.~ort-/\1esa Di lnrl rec:ord dove up and s<>e (Jameson) play by returning starter Dustin Uus season for a tournament didn't work out."
JC S P 0 R·T S
OCC kickotr barbecue
• Ove1 500 ~xpected to attend.
COSTA MC:SA-The Orange Coast
C 'olle!w department of physical educa-
tion and dthlehcs will host a season-
k1r.kolf bdrbecuc Wednesday lrom S-
h :lO pm. <1t LeBrtrd Stadium.
.. uache:. c1ncl players representing
cac:h of OCG's athletic teams will be
invited lo rtltend.
In addition, local media, college
<lnumstrators and the Assooated Stu-
rlents uf OCC ofhc1aL'i are IDVlted
The As-.nt·1ated Stude nts are co·
ponsonng the event and more than 500
people dre E'Xpected tO"dltend.
YOUTH HOOPS
NJB season approaching
•Fifth, sixth-grade girls needed.
NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport
Junior Basketball (NJB) All-Net Basketball
League will be conducting evaluation tryouts
for fifth and sixth-grade guls on Satwday,
August 28 from 9-10:30 am and Sept. 3 from
5-6:30 p.m. at the West Newport Commuruty
Center (883 W 15th St. m Newport Beach).
Qualifying girls from the Newport-MeS<S
area will be assigned to the All-Net League to
begin the upconung fall season. Player. are
asked to come dressed to play and expen-
ence is recollUilended
For more information, call John Durkm at
(949) 722-7518
DEEP SEA
Thursdays counts
Newport Landing -
S boats, 128 anglers.
82 barrawda, 6 calko
~SS. 577 sand bass,
212 scutpin, 1 white
seabass. 2 sole.
45 mackerel
D•v•y's Lodterf • 7
boats, 194 angle!l.
4 albacore, 8 yellowtail,
737 sand bass,
93 barracuda,
24 cahco bass, 2 halibut.
1 SO mackerel.
HIGH SCHOOL TENNIS
Locals battle it out at Main Event
• Costa Mesa Tennis Center Sept. 1-6 site
The thud dnnudl Qmks1lver f\fdm Event and irldlS H1qh
School Tenrns Champwnsh1ps will take place SeptembPr
1·6 at the Costa Mesa Tl~nms Center.
The champ1on'>h1ps \' 111 tea.lure top ranked pla} er., ages
14· 18 dDd winner., will rern1ve a des1~ed Qu1k.,1lver tro·
phy, sports appan•I dnd $1,000 to be donated to the high
c;chool tennis program of their choice.
For the lust tune, Quiksilver has added a Kid~ Ody Clin-
ic for youngster~ 14-under, which will be open to the pul>-
lic starting Sept. h di 10 am.
Top locdl player competing m this e1; ent include Natal·
1e Bravennan ot Newport Harbor High and Cameron Rall
and Bri..in Morton lrom Corona del t-.f~r High
For mformallon. call 1714 J 889-4332
• Ft day, AUgu'1 20, 1999 11
IASEIALL
Harper on outh
All-tate team
• CdM product one of 20
lect d from over 600
schools m the southland.
CORONA DEL MAR -TY
liorper m<1y be a freshman al 1 Golden We t College, but . .he 1s
still r "i'iplng the rewards from a
stellar l 9~q basebrtU sea. on and
clltee1 al Corond <lel Mar High
J larper wa one ()f 20 seniori.
nlerted to the 1999. California
flac;+•ball Coaches Assoc1f\Uon's
S(1uth All-State Term.
SemorS from lhP-Sa!l Diego,
southern dnd Lo» Angele~ Sec-
tion were cligihle for this team
that repre-..ents over 600 South·
em Cahforn1d high school ba:.e-
hall teams fielded in the 1999
S<1uth All-Stdte
" , 1 t a cl ~ure on a stel·
Jar pr€.'p carePr at CdM
The three-time AU-ClF !>elec-
llon hdll d .50.:> with 12 bome
run and 37 RBis as. a leadotf hit·
ter for the D1v1s1on IV champion
Sen Kiny:.
I hs 12 home run~ tied team-
mr1te Ent \'\'1Pthorn for the school
dncl 1hstnr-t ..,ingle-sca<;on record.
As ll p1lthe1 tor C<if\1. Harpe1
~d" equuUy eftecltve, goiny 7-1
with tv .. o u\e!> and a 2.81 'ERA.
In h1 three-year varsity
c<arcer, J forper hmshed with a
51 4 career hattmg average, 54
extra-base hiti;, co runs scored as
w •11a-.a 9-4 pitching record w1lh
lour ~aves and d 3 04 ERA m 110
213 total ummg<;.
The player<: wNe ,,.elected
from nonunallons subm1tt ~ b}
thclt re..,,pecU\ e CBCA member
coachc m thP. thte" CIF !Sections
that compTL"-e the South region
I PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE OF PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
EStATEOF:
I PUBLIC NOTICES I ' I PUBLIC NOTICES I I PUBLIC NOTICES I PUBLIC NOTICES I PUBUC NOTICES
WILLIAM H.
GOODWIN JR.
CASE NUMBER:
A198051
To all heirs. beneh· Clanes creditors, cont·
lngcnt creditors, and per·
son~ WflO may 01he1w1"
be !lltenasted In Ille w II or
estate. or both, ol
WILU.t.M H GOODWIN
JI'\
A PETITION FOR PRO-
BATE "81 been hied by
DARCI GOODWIN
In tne Supenor Cour1 ot
Ca lomia County of ORANGE THE PETITION FOR
PAOOATE r9QU8"~ tnal
DARCI GOODWIN
be appQinted es persOflal
r11PJesentattve to 1dmln11·
ltir the estate ot 111e dece·
ucnt
THE PETITION r9Queil=>
authonty lo adm11u:;te1 the
e'ltate under the lndepcmd· ent Adm1n1str111ton ol es:
l<ites Act (This authority
wlll allow lhe pe11onal rep·
u1'entallve to take many 11r11ons w11hou1 Obtaining
court approve! Before
u1k1ng cer1aln very 1mpor·
tanr actions, hOwever, the
pers<>n111 repre1enta11ve
wtll be required to give no-Clce to ln18reS1ed persons
uole s they have waived
11Gt1CXJ or consenled to ltie
I~ IC\100) Tile In·
d pendent adm•~tratlon
autllorlly w1 be granted
unloss an 1nterested per· son mes en ot>)eCUon IO th•
pctJ!JOn and 5hoWI good ""f CN~ should
not grant tile autnof\ty
A HEARING on the pell·
tiOn be tleld on Sep1embe1 16, t~
111 1 45 PM In Dept l73
loctited at
341 THE CITY DRIVE.
ORANGE, CA 92613
IF YOU OBJECT to lhe
granhrlg ol lho l)ehl•on. you
hould &!Jpear at the hear·
11111 and s111e your ob1ec·
lioni or file written obj4'C·
uons with lhe cour1 t>elore
the hearing Your ap.
pearance may be in person
or by your a1tomey IF YOU ARE A CREDI·
TOR or oonungent creditor
of the deceased, you must
tile your cialm wilh the
court and malt a oopy to tho
personel representative
appointed by the coun wi1hin lour m<>Nhs from the
dale ol l•rtt ls$U&nce of let·
ters as plOlllded 1n Pmbete
Code MCbon 9100 Tile
urra for filing claims -wlll not
expre before tour months
lrom the hearing dale rw.>-
llcld •bov• YOU MAY EXAMINE lhe roe kept by the cour1. tr you
are a person inlarested in
in. estate, you may Ide
w1fh the court a Request fOf
Spec1a1 Notice (lonn
DE·154) or the flllng or an
Inventory and appraisal or
estate asseta or of any
pe111100 or account as
provided 1n Probate. Code section 1~50. A Request
lor Special Notice loon la available from the court
clert(
Petitioner:
DARCI GOODWIN,
~I • SURF ST., COSTA
MESA, CA 112827
Publ1shod Ne~rt Beach·
Co$ta Mesa Daily Pilot August 13, t6, 20. 1999
FM~7
Fictitious BualneH
Name Statement
The fallowing persons
ere doing business es
HOll VWOOO NAILS,
218 E 17th Street. Costa
Mau. Cal IOn'lll 92627
Enoo Kim ~w,1 13232 Amlrillo Of . W9Slmln$ter,
C81ifomia 92683
This busineu 11 coo-
dut1ed b~ an 1ndllltJua1
Have you started doing
buSlneSS yet? No I E14tn Kim Luu
Thll itatamen1 waa f~ed
with tile COunty Cle111 of
Orang• County on B-2·99
11198A01062
Dally Ptlol Aug 6, 13, 20, 27, 1999 F043
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
·to work for you.
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS??
•••••••••••••
"Affordable
'
I
' (
(
t
I t
f
a
l e
ff
ti
Nwpt Hght• A,. •. Greet Loe
2 houses on large-lol Boll\
move-In cood 6llOws beaullful ~II 1nl •tll11 tfmttsltt I•'" fall Taylof. AOI 949 042·4722 ... .,.,., 1• •v•Jtcl It •~• ftf
tnl flit Ho11l111 Act ti IHI at CYN 9LUFFS3br 2.Sba
1mHf1f wa1c• MPH 11 lll•t•I twtlmt. b1C11• up lo natUflJ
•• '''''"" •uy ,,.,.11110, park. x1r1 lg bra, Iola of up, 1111111111.. ., •imtmlullo gr8dea' Smtll comr,;x on
•111f '" me, celw, rtlitltt prlv ti Owner 310· 72-6339 t\191 , au •1111e1,, lt11111i.1 ital••., '3 YHfl New single deiatdled
1at111111 1111111 11 H l1te11t1 2 Sty :Jar • lull, 2 58a. 2c 911.
tt 1111k1 IJIY ••c• •n•11111C1. approx I 700SI On Pacific AvP
111n111t1t .. rdlml1INlllM • S252.000 Maggie Bkr.
n11 llWOl,11 wlll HI 94~ .... 976
btw11Jly acceu '"' •f•lf1•1t· E SlOE MODEL PERFECT
1n111 ltf tut. 1*1111 w•tcll Is 11 380 USA 2-STORY
W11l1h11 ti lllt l1w O.rr11fm $335,000 AGT. 94"'723 .. 120
.,. •• ,.,, ,.,., ••• ,.,, II LEGAL TRIPLEX
fwelll•tl tfffrllttf 11 '" 309 Femlecsl I Block to
MIUJIJtt 111 na~ai. •• 11 Ocul. Pride ol ~ '"''' '"°''••ilr hilt 11 '°"' $689,000 John Kenney
''''" 1l llwtmlul111, call HUO Balboa Newport Realty
Till '"' It 1-IOI 4tU5" ftr 1149· 72J-44!M '~' wau1..,to11, oc ., .. ''"" OPEN HOUSE-SAT 11-4 call HUO at 4H 35111 NEWPORT RIVIERA CONDO.
---------.I 336 SANTA ISABEL, C.M. Brian Edmondton, Agent,
94M50-1828 1 HOUSES/CONDOS
FOR SALE GENERAL:
SOLD!!
Showcase Homes for
Sale in our Saturday R11I
Estlle Supplement!
Homes of the Week
O.~~dy A~ Siar! a1 Just $75'
Ot-d llint. ~ Tue!.day 81 5PM
OJien tioosa Ul.t•"'J\ $15'
Oe11\lline T hursdav 5PM
It Pays to Advertise
in the Best Local
Retl Estate Seclion
CALL TOOAYH
LISA I<. RIVERA
949-574-4252
ANNE WILLEY
949-574-4249
H OMESELLER
F orr<J OU1 wit/it Ill<! hom OOwn uoe suee1 SOid tor Receive a
COii :'lll~r ZOO {>I 1110U1()I1ecet I
a••-a I'< ~·11e s os ilt\CI Q;rrl!OI
lrst;ng~ m111100 l(J vou al NO
COSl r t111liy~lt0n Call (4h1~
I 800 &14 Sl'lll4 ' entm ID •1041 lo te:m1ame~go111
dcJllOfl\I whlll1 ~tretl$ you
""a' 1nlo "'' (l;<U. lo no one)
BANKREPOS
FREE LIST
HUD • VA REPOS FREE UST
FANNIE MAE • FREDDIE MAC.
ZERO DOWN AGENT
714·964-5415
•V.A.•
SO DOWN • SO MOVE·IN
FREE rounSEl l~I('.
FREE LIST(!~ HOl.tES
HUD 1/A REPOS 1.aoo. 123.ses 1
VETERAN REAL
ESTATE
ORECLOSEO HOMES
low or SO Oownl
Gov'1 & Bonk Re~
Being Sold!
financing Avo1loblel
800·5011777 X6057
NEW HOMES E Side
°FROM BUILDER••
2527 ThrOUIJl 254 t 5anla Ana
Ave 4br. 2.5 ba, app10~
I 800·2000 sqlt 2 car garage
Starling 0 $356.900
949 646 7ll01 • 949·722·8120
E aide CM <>p.n Fri 10.2
233 Flower (2 on a loll)
3lx 2l>a main hse w new paint
& carpel Rental u04I s a lb1.
Iba ""fwlal prrv yard Mark
Cardelucct RE 949-720-1760
REDOCEOI R·2 ZONE
Ctusic E'Sldt Home ?Br
18a $259900 Ed Van~
Bossclle Bkr 949·650-0943
13 HOOSE$.'CONOOO
FOR SALE DANA POINT
CONVENIENT TO
OP HARBOR OPEN SUN ,_.
33606 C1RCULA CORONA
REDUCED TO $i3JK
38R • den Z 5t>a 2 car gar
t 752r.I new decor comm pool
\pe lllMI$ 760 721·9591
19 HOUSES'CONOOS
FOR SALE HUNTINGTON BEACH
SOUlH EAST 3 · 2. 1 level
9erci.n lownhome. 112 mile
to belChl Pool, 1ennls, MC.
S225,000. 714·960-1065
22 HOUSES/CONDOS
FOR SALE IRVINE
TURTLE ROCK lo""9st Pflc•
"Open SUN t·S"
12 MeMon home In Suomt
#i 3 ltli 3 lrplcf., ~ bUl!I t99S 3 ca1 gar aprox 325~
ol PY Ag! Pt!'} 949-632·5n3
26 HOUSES/CONDOS FOR SALE
LAGUNA NIGUEL
Leguna N19uel 2512t Sanorla
()pef1 Suo 1·5 • '.lbf 2 Sba Soanng ec1r ~ lrptc N91111
Ranch prlv awam win schools
owner ~21i9.900 !MQ·'.Vl3.a190
LAGUNA NIGUEL
Open Fri, Sat, Sun tl-5
'---·-------. 25311. Via Piedre Blanca
FOR SALE
BY OWNERS!
Flat fee of $500 to put
your home .n Multiple
L1st.rg Sel'\'1ce
A t 714·215·5158
1 HOUSES/CONDOS FOR.SALE
CORONA DEL MAR
Looking I« I Duplex Of
tnp!Ni .S,.C~ln C4lM
Chns Edwltda. Firlt Estate•
Prop COM Mt-llt-t20t
Harbor vllw Hiiis Eic Home
OPfN SAT-SUN 1-5
3500 Sauullto. Panor "270
3bf 1 'V4 ba add·on tam vu 1m
k•I rflmod. dlntm bo~I ms. vauit
•vrm, lrptc, IQ slilt cov patio.
$3651( Owne1949·249·1639
32 HOUSES/CONDOS
FOR SALE NEWPORT BEACH
ARE YOU LOOKING for a luxury Condo undet $300t(.
Close to Bc:ll. Manna lhops'I
Chi E<twdrdS F11'$1 Estates
Prop COM 949 389-9209
ABANDONED S.CI\ Cottage
S39i,IOO. lM lSA.--AGENT 949-723 .. 120
FRONT ROW BEACH
PRIME CORNEA AXER
S950,000. AGT 72W120
~u o1 Oen. C•lllina. m1n1 2 •THE BLUFFS• story, Sbf, lbe, appx 3200sf 3
car gat. Huge mltr br Ile,
lamrm, fl'om ralMd din rm, aplral atslrcue, beam ~n·a,
bricfut nook Owrw pool,
191. 11,395,000 Mt-721-119'
NEW TOWNHOMES
Orig lllN 3bf 2ba totaly reoone. P11t1ticll ES1ale
~qutc1att0n p!IC8d to sel
I~!\ $31~000
Agent t4 ... 0-S5e0
309.S .&-gonla $514,000. EASTBLUFF 3BR 29A 2car
John Kannty, Balboa New-g.11age, ntlfll?t 1111~. slate
po'1 ~Illy, 94t-723-4494 • noor. newer calJ)GI Beaulilul
Sptctaculli 4Sr 2 Mia home 5:!08.000. Ag1 949·581-3897
has ju$t *'1 remodeltd ltllide 'BAYVIEW COURT CONOO' & 001 Fot prtvale strowlnO C*t 2'-.. • 1 fom Sartoro, •Ill Crane l ""• .. ba new cwpet P• nt
AssOCltltes II 7f4871-8t00 1350 st, 2 •Ing c1r pr, 1 lttacll. Comm pooVape. LMga Townhomt SO 0/ PCH PRICE REDUCED TO
$61BOO 1244,900. Owner Wkdljl CdM D\lp1t11 Cottaoa "'/Oulch 909-272-'700 x225 door• & tc>t1 twe~I . $755,000 BAYVIEW H • COMMUNITY
.lo<'f Kolat, Bkr 9411·376-5576 OPEN SAT-IUH 11-5
OLD COM OPE.N tuN 12.. • 300 [COAST HWY •26
IU tmal Of, OCft Vu On Cyn 2br 2bl lrplce ~Ol'Y hM
t lllk ,_'?..,. tlCh ~7,.,. 000~• ~,:S ~ ': L ... ':=
2br I......,, lrplc • .... 7 S6t.OOO • 94!Hi7S-9264 All ~HSHo o BIG CYN cONbO JNC111iiic:;;;1i 1 oSiory • 2Br t OPEN IUN t 2-' Oen. lgl1 & bi~, bollUfltul I Canyon lllefld • 421< 2b1 i~r'~.'94~5070 ~~J11:1~S: ..--------•Newport view Fixer 481
1
10 *211 I ~ ::" :!t..bonlltn:::
NQ¥'90f'T ADJACENT 48A 2M tmmec. cute irtlf1«,
UH,000 Mull S..I 112 bUI lo ~P8 A~ t49-Ht41tt
B!st Ir IN TOWN 2 N'ICE HOOSH R·2
.,E•ch 2 8drt wly1rd1 ..... excel~ Et* L.oc:.
.,Mariner .tMrbor High
6chool9 t>'A"tO''UMr or Inv•~
S*,000
.. Agent (Mt) 21•2441
~c.
AorM'ecl 10 $719.000 Join
llulll•. ~ 949 759-9314
6H£ FORD Ao
• Thundefblrd Dr.
Of>EN SAT SUN t I 4
lb( 3 6tla hl!Qt mill br on 111 ru.. Ctildrn Ooou. rm, ~ rm 3 Cit oat NEVER 8E(N
OCCVPIED No mt:low Roos
Wil Cotop bkrs $1 ,295 000
Owlw IM9 729 01 tll
33 HOUSESICONOOS FOR SALE NEWPORT COAST
Specious 3Br 2.58a, gatod comm, hldf.ld firs. goutmet !<JI
OVtrSIZed ylld $429 000
JtAj KOiat. 8kr !M9·376-5576
47 HOUSES/CONDOS FORSAlE
TUSTIN
Honn l uttln Hiii• ctnlom
~oew home on lush picturesque
cul-de-sac grounds Wonoer1\f
upg1ades, Bonnie Gausev.111,
SeVen Gables. 714·544 7173
75 INCOME PROPERTY
/L1NITS SALE
E'SIOE CUlE LEGAL Tf!l-PLEX. All 1-STOAY.
$335,00<WOFFER
OWNER/AGT 94M42""6t
80 COMM.IRET AIL
JINDUST SALE
2·STORY OFFICE Condo w/
Watehou... AOProx S84 per SF Reduced to $219.000 Bro~er Coop, Owne118k1
949.n2-0155
104 APTS
BALBOA ISLAND
BALBOA ISLAND 3000 '1
Duplex 1"0 So. S.yftont
2Br Den J8a P1*9. ~"Mo
yearly 949-152·288,
Bright l buu, all like new,
1 br fully tumlstled, 1 block lo
beKI\. S1200lmo lnc!udta
utll. 81&-50MSS3
Open HoUM Sii 11:31>-3:00
204 tf2 Collins Ave
105 APTS
BALBOA
PENINSULA
1 Bdrm 1 Bath tmmac:ulata In a
Bay tront bldg F resl1ly panted
N!W cspet, no ~I IM'lll\g
S8SOlmo y1ly 949-673-1043
OCEAN FRONT ON SANO
S11115 yearly, 1br lully turn,
TV, patio, BBQ, 1aund, neat p•, pel1Clng, 94H4H221
Step1 to Oc .. n lb! Iba 1550
Mif1mar new carpe~pernt new
lull ball\ Lg tv~ rm wibal eltc
Q8I $1000 ~9·548·5038 x333
1~ APTS
CORONA DEL MAR
•THE•
SHORES APTS
I & 2BR TOWNHOME.S
Starting al $109~mo
Monltl 10 Monltl lear.e We
are I pel COIMIUlllty fl
blocks llom buch
110
949~64'·2611
APTS
COSTA MESA
* COST~ MESA S BEST * Junior 1 bed1oom and I bedroom also z bee!toom 1
bath Ol•el gated communty
PQol, lems. euy acceu lo
lreeway. beach & milts 714-557.()()75
E SIDE Costa MIN
OPEN SAT-SUH 11·3
t & 3br, wunw. frplc,
b81cony, garcs.tl kt· ·~Sl154't~
MgronpnmlaH
20432 Senta Anl Ave
The Aent11 Canter
714-141-'203
APARTMENT HOMES
Experience Isla nd Living
At Its Finest
• Heated Pool • 24 HR Security Gate
• 24 HR F'itness Center • Clubhouse Facility
Limi~d Availability In I or 2 Bedroom Plans
I BRJD;en -S 1845 00 • 2BR from $1995 00
~ Washerto,.Yer Gas Fireplaces
Intrusion Ar.urns 9'Poot Ceilings
Gourmet Kitchens Condo Specs
Elevator Access Assigned Parktni
Full Concierge Services Included
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT ILAC"
l-888-222-6924 ~-~-~
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
GATED COMMUNTTY BY f~HION ISLAND
Beautiful tJM-llMd streets and golf course
"'9wt. Enjoy carefree Mvtng In your large
1, 2 ot 3 BR apartment home!
• 1Wo-c&t g#l!ljle
• Wa.h«/dryw hookupe
• Fite~ (Wood & gu)
• AlrcondltJonlog
• Wet bW In 2 mlCI 3 BR
• 1;1.880'°$3,100
• Sony, no pets.
Pteue call (949) 644.o509
Another Euex Community
132 APTS
NEWPORT BEACH
159 HOUSESICONDOS
FOA RENT
CORONA DEL MAR ,...Sludlo S600lmo .. utl•
3Brl1ba S145~o.
Properly Ho u11
94H424*50
145 APTS
SOUTH LAGUNA
Jumlne creeJi single $ICiiy. 2Br Oen, V1fY cletrt, nu
prl'l&!e yard pools & tennis
S24SOl'Mo A,,... 949-759-5070
3Btf2Ba ea House. FP~ 911,
11IW" pill ICIClpet t2050/lllO
Ten Ey'k R.E.
949-390-9'92
182 HOUSESICONOOS FOR RENT
NEWPORT BEACH
3bl :lbl Condo hplc. pool, 'Pl ctubhouse. pr.-na1111 bh llOOI
property FIA ocean v\1¥1 On 2nd l 2 baleon(S unctergd
pk!tlQ IOI 2 cars. C>.llad co111m
OPEN SAT. SUN lhl• wund bttWff!'I 9-12 noon. 102
Scholz PlalAI 1228
$2100 .. clep. 714-957 .. 711
S11tgu.,d P1'ef*1Y Mgmt.
2.s8i 281 (M<lln nn, FP, new carpet & pmnt, refrtg W/O, cVw,
bacli ya1d 2c gil, rvpet.s1smk9
$16SOIMo 9411· 722·9799
LUX' 2BdrmhBath FP. gated,
nr Back Bay, new crpc. fc !J'r,
rv~ts/$/!Jkg S 1700fmo (yrty
Isl) + St700 MC dep • Cllldil
en.ck ~9-646-5758
UOO TSl£ 4Bd8i Spac.iOUI
Mlg rm tormal dn, 2 1111WICf
sun dleu upr.tllta 2Cll 911,
$875.000 841 Gnmy ~-'°" ~9-675-6181
EXEC HOME F~ LEASE 4Bl
Pr&tina condtlon l.alga y.,d &
""' teneola ~me Cout N"POrt Propettles
CWy Ward IM9-75e-3724
'WEST cllfF· EUte, quill
bulllttUI 2bf 2.Sbl WIO net111
ctrptt. 2 c• gar, club houM, pool, $1650 pp 9()().34HOOt
Rel\lfbiahld 1 Br 1 Ba Ape w/ 8"ctt floot119e, Seut!Ol'e gar•ge In f1180 community Dr. fully tum 2br 2ba duple1,
t~~1 ·-c:~::. S , 268 1 e11 gwage.
Walk to s~r•~ 9 mo winter ren\11 S14~mo $710 ptus $425 cMoposll Wkday111M4H"4
MAPLE APTS 9'Ml1-4000
1Br OUplex nnr Tnengle 1154 HOUIESICOfl)()SI ~r~ lncis 1~ w1d. FOR AINT
patio & yard ;~sr'n! to mo l~ BALBOA Ill.AND
1199 wlS75 dt8C IOI 12/mo La. c11arm1no Coct191 on Llnlt i~spedl:,;i~9'?;J=2 B1lbo1 l1l1nd. 2Br or 1B1 w1 --'~-...;.....;....; _ _;.._..;. • d8rl wld 1119, l/p, I .car garllQe,
IC, wiyard. 1800 sf, 2car ga.
WALKING OISTAlfCE TO
NEWPORT PIERI St4751mo.
AOT 94M&H707
OCEANFRONT HOMES From $3000 Per Monlh
A.nnulll Lta•. Many OthlNI
Ptoper!( HOUM 949-642-3850
B1utf1 aer lb• f ownhOfM new Ille & krtclien, pvt patkl,
near IChOOI. 2-ca1 garege
$17.50.'rno lease 9"49·759-9205
182 HOUSES/CONDOS
FOR RENT NEWPORT BEACH
29r 2Ba ~.11 Moe.
2Br IBa Bty 11'0!11
$6000/MO
Othef Lido lslt Homes Avall
Biii Grundy RNttOfS
94M75-6tl1
183 HOUSES/CONDOS • FOR RENT NEWPORT COAST
F1nta1t1e TO'lll-nhouM, 2bl
3bl,~C81' .,., den, nr. pllca, comm, . s . 949-711-3520
Summit 2br, 2b• UPS* unh
lldwd flOC)(l/nice carpet, Wit
hlwpa, 2 car 11ar, MC gatec Staso blu 9lN62-11'5
SANCERE 4bf 2.Sbl beaufrfu urwt, 2 car garage, gated
OOfl'mlnrty S3250hno AliJI
9411-862·9745
1202
Motel
ROOMS I FORREHT
·coSTA ·MESA·
MOTOR INN
1 ST Wk Special
On All Rms $134.00 Tax features· 24·hls
lronc de&ll, D D phones,
11111 HBOIESPN/Ol$CT
loc chenn; pooUhealed
jac Guest 11\#ld Nrby
Fwys, 405 & S5 mn
eway lrom oc F8Jl'.llrda
CollQge, Shop malls txnl. rest A member oc
Clld Hotet'Mofel nn Harbor Blvd
9'9-045-4840
Pll'k Newport • RtSOf1 Style Living guest 1oom pvt phone
tine evall. cable · 1Ms incl
S550fmo 94~1.
204
. RENTALS
TO SHARE
ROOMMATE NEEDED Pron
non·smoket seeking same to
share 3bl 2t>e OUiWI front
bNch hOu$e Master avail
SttOO t 112 ulll 949-631-8428
GdO Isla Condo shalt .,111 ptoC
non smoke!, ltm Plef 2br 2t>e
lrplc. 2 cat gar Min llom bch
$775 ~ Ir.I u1• IM9·723-5651 ~OUS '3bf 2bll house &JM prr,,l l_lern pr~td Wld ger
$7t8 ~ .... 911
949-640-82 IS 1949-758· 7535
CdMIM111 Br• 1n garage, in
3br 2t>1 Hot1se 7 I 5 o.dld
S700 • S900 sec dep Avail
Sepe tor aoone1 N'5mk1. pion
p1el 714 410-1001
208 OFFICES
FOR RENT/t:EASE
Cost• M111 1m1ll office
•pace to rent Stifling II S150>$300 Incl all utll. Near
OCC, nice quiet loc. Lots of
p1tkln9. 71 .. 540-3666
'BalbOi• otfki at ttw beach,
400 aqft, prtv entry a bL
Newly redone, xtnt toe.
SSSQhno 949-7eo.ot29
1400 ANNOUNCEMENTS I
MEET WORLD CMAMPION
BRUCE PENHALL!
llACt< TO-SCHOOL SALEtt
Tee Stlt15 P•ll badl5. Shoe Salell RalUI Piil• alld Motel l"'Conw ol 111111Pomona
SATURDAY ONLY, 1-211
I GLOST a FOUND I
LOST B'-Ck l wfllta long
haired ca1 female, vlcll'lty
Short Cliff COM. Ple•M call
REWARD 9.ct-760..0781
LOST ORANGE CAT ma11
cal, lrlendly, no l&QS, Rtwerdll
Vlc·B•lboa lalen"!I.
949·723·5511
474
TllVlll&Y I nllll I .. "" f,. llTUIMY ........
Loolclng IOI' l\ouaekMpln
poejtlona. Alt8' wOlblg
Nev;port Beach k>I t 3 yrs owner has passed eway IVll&Y&w•a..
Call lmeldl t4M31..-i32
«Matta 94W1WS'7
1404 PERSONALS 11446 ~I
Melaine Grunder;;:::;;::;;;;;;;;;;.
Where are you? Call Al
714-432·0937
420 GARAGE SALES
Balboa la SAT 21ST, &-1:00
& SUN 22ND 9-1 ·00
SOt N. Bly Front, Moving
Sale. Lott of great stuftl
ESTATE SALEI SUN ~AM
4192 Calhoun Dr.
Huntington Hll'bor
(WamerlAlgonqu1n) appls, tv, bedroom turn, detk,
dllha1, pan1, toolt, clothH.
Garage saie s11 M HOilse
holcS goodes pectut6'. doflel & much morel 2054 National
Ave CM off Placenti.V1C1011e
•-'1 GwegeSate •tr Sal er.ti, 7..noon Furniture
llOuSuhO!d & boil rltll'\$, bikes.
Wlrldsulfet & much morel 5408
ANer Ave NB CrOliS Sh
Rlv8' Ava & Balboa Blvd
HUGE ESTATE SALE
HooseCUI of Elcqu1slle Fu1Mui1
& Collectlblea, Includes
Limoges, Laltque, Walerlord,
Qale, B<onzes desks chairs Miro Picasso, Oii PQ11111ngs,
lie 1729 IMne A~e • N B
949·548-8791 Fll-Sot·wn 9·5
Huge SlleH Sat & Sun 71m
1 I07 H ighlan<I Or. Newpor1
Beach. Loi• or Glut Stufftl
• Mult Come and S..I •
N;ijht>omood aarav• sa1et1 Sat. l1tn·? • No Early Bltd1 •
iv room I of!IC8 lum dolhng
mt1t llems IComlf ot RMotw
T ustinl fUSt oll al ltWw AVfli Sarca lsebel Follow ll'le slglls
NP coast Sat-Sun w
take Ocean Ridge Or oft NP
Cont Of lo .0 C«al RMI In Clvtg. Boollcatn, lanlpt,
IPPli~. glattw.,e, loya.
clOthe" mite. * 2 LerrS•lesftl • 5411 269 Bay S1 CM
Sal&Sun24t1 E t6tt1St NB
Furnture HoulehOld. Misc
J FamUy Ga111g1 Sall CiOlhes
llovsewa1111. beanMt babtel &
mucn morel Sat 8 30 3pm
285 Magnoll1 (In alley) CM
440 MISCELLANEOUS
FORSAl!
(FISH TANK) .. gallon,
comu wltlotlt. 1tMtd, neat• It 3 tlltn. I larga OICW fish, 3 large cleenlng tllh. 1225
714-$40-5995
Oerwal Houtthold Good•
EltctrOACS, Sporting goods
and toots Call for Info
949-646-3896 Garage Site
August 21 & 22 2260 T uctlfl
Ave. Nftpof1 Belet\.
TIRES-1 NEW, $40.
S HALF USED, S15..aectl
19Sf75 R14. 84M7S4391.
woi:Ff' TANNING eeos
TAN AT HOME BUY DIRECT ANO SAVEi
C0'4MERCIAUHOME
\#'Iii' trorn $199 oo Low MontNy Paymenc
FREE COior Cetaloa
Cell HI00·71t-0158
1446 ~1
I BUV ALL PIANOSI Arrtiqde-~ one piece or MlOle housetuttt
~h paid 800649:.t922
WANTED
ANTIQUES
Older Style Fumitute
PIANOS ti CollectlblH
•Al/lfll~ ... T ............
-~--··-·~~ $$ CASH PAID $$ _.,.....,.,..,.....,..
WE BUY ESTATES
• lmmedlote tn.ndly-•
"WI PAY MORE fASmr'
CONSIGNMENTS
C1n11911mrnl1 l•krn 411ly
I. ul• II .,Kllln •vr•y
1'114nos••v •I ~P••
Fer rntarm•h•n c .di
11141151121~
452 BICYCLES
APPOLi'DIEM'
SEl'IDS
Ff/PI'da~ egi2'!820
Per Hour
Top-riroducen 6-tghcr
• 11..W.. Dra&&I ._
MENS BIKE, K.2, MOUNTAIN : ~~
BIKE. Large Alumlum frame, • ...,. tt1·1u......,_
full luptnllon, MYer rKed, l!at. In 1989 ln
26 Iba, w/ex1ra Ml of racing C-OlllA Maa-
wflMI•. StOOO. 714 .. 29-0755 and=
145-4 FURNITURE I li!!!!!l!!1~iiii!iorii18-4iiil741iillM'I
ELECTAOPEDIC LA TEX
BED New $1550.
Never Utedl Make Offerl
9491632·7573
Fntm11c &11u cefYtd French
King 5 piece bedrm tuhe,
cost $9,000, .. ~~i snoo. Liu New. 94 9119
.Rou .. F1111 Of Fumhure
Ctieny WOO<! S«relary dMk
$350 IOltd rol lop de$k
S650 obo 949-400-3564 OI'
714~342
ltlllan llathlf aola f. low.
Mat. new 11111 wrllPi)ld. very
soft, top qu.i1ty WH UOOO
1acnflc• $t90 t4HfH9U
N1t111/ln Th• Wrapper 7ft couch w-hlte CIOVU. Grut
..... Of allppld $350 080 94~o.tSOI
TEAK WOOD DESK
30 X 60 no mar top, file
dr•-5 other cr1WWa. S75. 94M42'3242
7ft Couch S150 ma!Chlng
coftft table $75, 2 end tabla
SSO each Karen or Miehael
94U4Z·981J5 must sell ASAPI
1458 PETSAJVE8TOCK I
R1re exotic wlld-looklng leopard tpottecl CFA oclca1
klt11n1 tot pl'IYlllQM In S2200lmo 949-475"-6229.
WINTER RENTAL i8r 2ea, 132 APTS furn. nlsmkGfr>et•. SUOl!t'Mo. NEWPORT BEACH Summer Avl '1124. S170CllM. --------1 EllUbeth, 94M7H700.
1 1·~1
raga, comm PoOI evall 915
S 1850/Mo 949-64s-7S53
UsTSIDE' c.M. 2BR 2eA
Fenced yard, DOG OK Lots ol
wlndOws. huge IOOmS VtfY
clean with new pa111. ltoo11ng.
vettlcill$ tnd •Pi>l~. lncldl
OIW. Wetetllrasll plld Coin
laundfy, (2) 8Sligned parkrlg s 1100 + $500 deP $100 pet
Cal 714-545-044~
ALL UTIL. PAJO.USTSIDE
C.M. 2811 tBA DUPLEX.
Fenced yard, DOG OIC (2)
USogne1l P•tk1ng COln•op
IU'Oy lolS al wtndo!N$ l.t•new wlltl llllh pen,
caip81Mnyl Vlr1ielts lfld ~AvPI~
S500 ~ .... S300 Pit deJ> $1100fmo Cal 714-545-0442
I M2::rs1 _1_12 NE-~--=°" .... '~-~-oo_s , 1n :JS I .
$4StVS500 94M4M'473
Getto
the .. sle
PENTHOUSE WITli Vl~/N8
$t42Wo IB<~den WO,i'p
rl1ng 9111d fllne'5 ctr r>O<N
spa dOUbie gar 949-720-2078
NEWPORT HElGKTS
,...tB1l1S. &Jnpalow S9951Mo .... 28"1181 Ha~ tloor$,
belmed Cei15, s I 900'1Tlo
NJPtti Uldsay 949 m~m
· ewport Marina
Apartm~nll
llayfrunt com1111.111JIY
with pnviu" karh
& rMnna. Walk lo
Ballxia l1lanct
l..ar&e WR
from
t2100
\\'ood burning
fireJllM'.~ & 11nv11e
garagri.
Sony.no~•·· .
Plellltle ea1;
(9'9> 760-0919
1-8d 1-h tu• klchel\, t clOor
to And no geiage 21\ E.
Balboe Blvd. long Tttm
'9SOIMO. lllr M~
UOIT UkUIUAL
2 .stOIY F aml!y Homtl MJ1, FamlfV 1<>0n1 lilla1h, ~. Pi1kil Ortw by 81)6 N~. I Cll! Ut To Seel
S300l>Mo !Sooy NO Dog$)
~...... ""' JIMe S\" .. "· q.l·IU#
1'1IHl•••J
TURTI.£ ROCK, ,,._ ritw,
t*lgll IMI 2bf den 2ba
2 Clf l1lecMd git lfrllc, WIO,
h!g. S2m'mo 949'854-1339
..
ABC'•
,-,., •· r 6T a 4
' . ~ !L. ·~ " ~ . ·' -· )I • '
IEIR.w:
It NOCISS CC>a'<>ttAnoN
: Al 1 lftder In mfg premium quality ~inU. ~ and ".-nlthn for ov• SO yrs, CM.Ir com.,.ny
:a-rently has the foll0¥dng ~ion open1t1gs
SHUTTLE DRIVER
Responslble for transporting raw m1terl1l1, ~pllft l contllnen to & from fnfgJ clstrlbutlon ~ltes conducting daily nfety equep. Inspections,
..and ioad/unlo1d ind po11tlon freight on tr1llefs for distribution.
The lde1I cand1d1ote should have 1 d1S1 A Uc. wl,th a HAZMAT endorHment, clHn OMV
printout & 1 min. 2 YN driVlng exp. 11 req'd. Good
communle1tlon skills a must. Sl\lft ho11rs 11 pm-7:30 1m, Sun .• Thurs.
BEHR offers 1n xlnt benefit pkg In 1 qu1llty
wortc envlro th,Jt lncludos life, med, dent. Vision,
LO. <401~) profit sharing & quarterly bonus aftef' 6
1T101. of svc. Send/FAX res & 111 hl1t to: BEHR
• staffing, PO Box 1287, Santi Ana, CA 92702. FAX
:1714) 241-9735. We support 1 drug·free work envlro & perform pre-employment subst.ance -.buse testing, EOE,
AUTOMOTIVE >" General Ottie. Clwti ·~ Rtcepllonllt {Weell8tldl) So!Jlll Cout T oyoll ha&
mmedalt QPtnnlJS &~enl ~ lor ~ancemenc
• WOrd l E•cel exp e '*'5' $Mv • 10 stan plus benel.U C ..
: ~II 941l'722·2000 ll·&SS
HAVE FUN WORK
QARYS ISLAND
lrvlne $pecll\lnl I 1890rt
.. 8f etohng 5tOle f'J(
men, women & kidS ii tu
F1PT aa1e1 pos lnlervtew
.Ctll Enc 1Mt-450-0H5
"l<lnd•111rten I Two's" tffwport Beach Pre·~hool netdt FIT teach<>r5 Great n~lng envlrorvneot. medical fl + dental iand educeuon
.... blnel•I$ 949-955-2672
Mus• Thiiepllt nNded
1'1so R1eepllonl1t w/5eat
marlctlflg slciJ f()( Ul\IQ\IO
~t'jcenter94D·51S-4
Med fion1 offl~. PT Hex
)leull, good comm SIYI!$ tnsu1
'biflog, phones, lyplnO. dlll emy & ~ c .. M-F be-
lwWI 8.30-Spm 949-722·'7101
Ott~ACCOl.l)llng Piltson
~ lllJUtlnO Pie~
"4y1llCI software ~
MP Call: KeUy et "°" H""9n Inc. 14M42-20SO.
Pit1 tlml ' Driver Wanted
S9.22 per hour plus
mileage.
Naedtd Mon thru Sun
t:4S.m to 5:45pm. Addi·
tional wolic may be avail·
able.
Must have tnick' or Van, lltblllty Insurance with
proof or p1yment1, drlv· «• Ileen••, social aacurlty card, 1nd clean
D.M.V. print out.
6 Acc.tptlng 1ppllc1tlon1
Mon to t:hru Fri from
.a:001m to 4:00pm.
P1"H bring all required
itlformaUon.
Tlm .. Orange County
Attn: Pim S.Ckingham
' 2901 Glfl'Y Avt.
Slnta Ana, Ce 92704
714-549-8548
80().933-4080
. ·--~· ~ 1' • • • ·, ,. ·~
4 ·~. / 1i
• • i\.f ·t~--• I ,. • .
TRAVEL USA Our Nan pub
Siiia oo (LSLI can now piece t8-23 sllatp, ~ lndN
Mio 11e lree 10 l!IVll lhe en1n
U S We olfer 2 Wk .. expense
peld tr~ .. 111 .. ancl locll>-ino llJrllilhid, 111\m gllll ....
you art 18 • act.-eniurous Ind can slatt todlV Cll loll free 1-an-802-4795
WINDOW CLEANER FIT
No> Exp Nee w• TrM"I Mu\t Hl'fe GOOd OMV. $Mir
PU Beniillls MMU·o0335
$$ WORK AT HOMES$
Ale you chained to you dellt7
We may have the key Call 24hr
recotd mesa 1-800-686·7418
4$0 BUSINESS
OPPORTUNmEs
PIMee be wiry of out o1
area compenltt. Check
with the local Bel*
Bualntsa Bureau before you eencl any money or
1111 for 11nlee1. Reid
and underat1nd eny contract• before you
1lgn.
,. CM Ealab BARBER SHOP for nit, 40 yr buatneaa,
j)(eYloUI OWMf Will help.
CIU Harold IMM42-31?0
I ro-LENW#=~ I
FtnlftC•al dlfhcultln, mean crd, smlll busness
start upa' We C111 help'
1 .. 77-217 .. IJ01
GOOD CRil>if ·BAD CREOfT NEED HELP?
T.S.H. HELPS
CAU.1..Q8..76"t05.
690 POWER
BOATS
Duffy 20ft with powe1' lift,
MW bltlttiM Ind COvet,
V«Y good eondltlonf * 94M41-15'7 ..
181 ELECTRIC BOAT.
Ualntllnld., Mutt WI
SSOOO M.......oHt
11' SflOCk PKIUi U5oo.
LootclnG tor a l>ufly ?? can NN4s.11n
WANTED. IMO' IUP IN ~HAMOll ColNMrdl'Ot~ Cllllcotl,MtltlllM
ACORA llotHo CPE 11
I tpeed 1 OWNfRI
White, ,,.., """ sms, 94g.553.11n
BMW 135CSI ·n Whfte/lan
1Hlhe11n1. 1r wheels, low ml.
lmmec. $1k down U&Uml
$10,950 pp 9411-673-04 t I
8uiCk LE SABRE LTO '112 3 8 V6, lttv. ABS, noo-emoker
(5116786) $12.988
NABERS
(114)54H100 •
BUICK PARK AVENUE 1112
Lo ml. 1111". 3 B VS. mn cond I (~4) $10.1188
NABERS
(m)54o.t100
CADILLAC CONCOORS 'i7
Lo 2tk ml,'blk. llht, Cd & moret
(202240) $29.988
NABERS (714)540o-t100
CAOilLAC OEVlUE ·iii
Lo 13k ml. lllf VI. N~W
(746753) m.saa .,._, Olclamoblle CtdUIK
JU..5'0-9100
CADILLAC ELDORADO ·go
Lo mi. bllr. llhl, guper cond !
(606838) $9,988
NABERS
(714 )54CU100
CADILLAC SEVILLE '111 Lo miles. ltlw, 11r big ABS
(802869) $8.988
NABERS (714)540.9100
CAOILUC SEVll(E SLS '97
Low 29k mi, YIM• pear tan llhr.
"" cond (832162) $3t,968 NABERS
(71 4)S4o-t100
CAbiWc SEVILLE sts '111 Lo 25k ml. 300 H P NOl'lh$1er (8f9821) $33.988
NABERS {714)541).11100
CAOIUAC SEVIU.E SfS 1111
6.200 mi loaded W1mnr1, cd
(900865) $43.988
NABERS {714)54C).9100
Chevrolet lstrovan LS 17
ltJI. I'#' wn1oQs. till Clase
(111509) $17.595
CONNELL CHEVY
(714)54&.12.00
Chmoiee AatroVlfl LS ·ii
All. ~r WIMOdcs. till. Ct\l!lie
(I tSSSn $15.51'.15 CONNELL CHEVY •
(714)541-1200
Chevrolet Blaur LT 4x4 '95
AJl. pwr YriMocks ft. CruGa
(151688) $18,795
COffHELL CHEVY
(714)541-1200
Chewoiti etaut Ls '115 •xi
4dr, black, 101dad. AJC,
St 2. 600 ttade ok PtlYale party
949-673-04 ti
CHEVROL£'tCAVAUER 111
Auto, Ill pwr •Mocks "" (250651) $9,795
CONNELL CHEVY
(714 }54&-1200
CHEVROLEf Eit Clb PIO 113 J.J.NJ. pwr wn'locks, WI
(257263) $12 895
COHNEU. CHEVY
(714)546-1200
CHEVROLET METRO "81
A6 ... cir lflVllll cGMlll
(7206391 S&.395
CONNELL CHEVY
(714)S46-1200
a-'11 COllhetl.ll
• c..tcmHocmt
Addldoaa
BomdedA~
Hmlll a ae11•
Major~
TeSl>owat
WSIOlta
. ---• I .
1 1110~1
CHEVA()l£T $10 Plctup 'IT
M cond , lllltm I mo!'8l
(t42580I St0.995 C0HNru CHEVY
(714 )541-1200 """CR...,tv .......... ROl .. tT i10 £:111 Ce iJ
W . We. PM flMoc:b. 3td dr
It 1161 S17,&i6 ~LLCHfVY
{714)54&-1200
CHE'IROLtf i10 £11 &I CS
'97. ale: stiea Std cloOr (lia<l!oO) $15.995
COHNEU CHEVY
(114 )Mf.1200
ChevrOlit xpfMe C1r90 Van '99, 1u10. l/c, 11ereo
(020921) S17,996
CONNELL CHEVY
(7' 4 )541-1200
FOAO:SJO VAN 'M DOO<I ~res, clean, IOw mills, radder• recka, $1500
714-632-0338 . Ford Aeplie 18$
Auto, AIC, •Sn11>11, 5Sk mUH
SO down Htume UllSO
prlva patty MM73.o411.
F0td liionco 11 'ii: 4 ...,. dr.
It.CO. IC. 53k n)i 1 owner, ps
pw1 brlkes, AMlfM SterllO
SSOOQ.lotJo !MIJ.642-0189
FOAO EXPLORER XLT '117
Llhr Roof' (A91446)
Ke1t1 BIUe Book Stys $23.220 SS81e Price St9 813
COSTA MESA MrTSUBIS ..
www.cost1metemlte.c0fll
714-$45-1700
Font Uua1q GT COiiYtCt ·94
Bliek, 5'pd, ill 9C)Wllf. llhr IOI
St2000 obo Lee~ message tor Pece 94&-675-5130
FOAD iAuSTANO ·gs
Sharp, loaded! (206512)
KeWy Blue 8ook S1_Y5 $ t 3.035
$Sale Pnce S 11 935
COSTA MESA MITSUBISHI
www.co1t11Mtemlt1.com
714-545-1700
HONDA ACCORD LX '87
Lo 11•, elc. t~t. stereo.1. allOvs (VA02484) i13,99S
COST A MESA HONDA
71 '-436·5050
HONDA ACCORD Li 191
4 dr, eU!o, ale. Cl\llSI, II•
(WA036691) $16 995
COSTA MESA HONDA
71•·436·5060
AOiloA ACCORD &ON 1111
4 dr IU10, pe, Wt enVlm Wt
(WA024076) $13.995
COSTA MESA HONDA
714-435·5050
H&iDl Accord Sdn LJ( 1117
4 dr &t, Ill '*'°· alovt (VA007693) $15.995 COSTA MESA HONDA
714 436-5050
HONDA CIVIC OX CPE 'tS
2 di IUIO, IC, p.w di ~
(SH544098l sms COSTA MESA HONDA
714-436-6050
liOHbA ciVlc EX COUPf'D4 Wl'lllt'grey 5 IPd ·t1c. mntf
anVlrn cass (5ID143J S9 99S
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTal
{714ricll2-4IOI
HONOA CtV lfuctlbck '81
llf oondltionng lll'vnlcula1ot
(WHI08633) $9996 COST A MESA HONDA
7t 4·4J6 5050
RONDA cwic ex sbH ·111 4 dr. ac. pt/w/rJ, anVlm CASI
(TL002935) St0.995
COSTA MESA HONDA 714~·5050
HONOA OESOL S1 Cpe 'M
2 Cir IUIO Md, IC lfl'l/lm Clll (RS007806) $9995 COSTA MESA ti()NDA 714·~5050
..... .,,, .. ~ "·~ ''· .. #4' . ' . '4 . • . . -
,. • • •• 9 ., • ' . . .
fndoy, AUgu~ 20, 1999
By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
•nd TANNNf HIHSCH
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
Sl E.LLAR DEfF.~sl-; I Filtl bsl s Haveon
Nuuh .South \Ulnetahlc Soolh J al . 9 Pe)'Che pat1I
of four hcast5 wa re lic:J 12 ~ 11
NORTll
• K J 4 2 0 3
o KQ.ISJ
• Q JO II
f\'Jnin found lire ~ular lintlcr· ...
lead of the c of ....,,i...... Di.>elarcr 13 Fable wi llf ,~.. 15 DIA: llang played low from du111111) and. haJ 16 "The King end 1
Ell t ri :n with lhe queen, 1he hanJ ..aing ¥.ooh.I ha\c been over there und ll'lr:n t 7 Ram. be!Qw
W~I'
• Atf6J '\) Q7
O A87 4
• KJ 6
EAS'I
•Q97
0 J64
0 962
.. 8753
Dut Eu I did rwl im gme We l held abbol
the acc. and lll&k 1hc 001111111 rtay ot 18 ~the
the nine, hup111g pit1 tncr h;iJ k'd from 19 City bui!Cd by
1h..: ten. v~v1u1
After Cl.L'ihing the ac.:<; 1111d king uf 21 Knew hea11~. South lc<l lhc ten of dhunonJ~ bel01ehao0
SOUTH
•HI 5 c::>AKH),8Sl
0 10
Wc~t found 1h only Jefcn~ lo give ~~:::bird
H.l\t· West a chan\:C • .Aftcr ming with 25 St FrallCls'
' the oCl' of diamond!>, Wci;I coolly ·birt,hplace
· contin~d with a loW'\pade! Declarer 28 Color of.building
'hould ha\c ~hot up with the king. blocQ?
hut elc~l\:J lo in~rt the ,·ad, inste:id. 33 Stage 34 AnhUr -
• A4 2
E1M'~ 41ucen won and, after ca&hing Sul~r
the jock ol hearts. hilled lo o. club. 35 Tng luncto0n
ni~· b1ddm1.1:
SO\ Ill WEST onm 1 ''' I \:1 PllSS 20 ~ That en un:d lhc ddertdcr;; 1>ne 11ick 36 AC« Holbroolt Jv Pa 3• p~ in each u11. 37 SkimUh 41:1 Pass Pa.u Pa Tal.c a look at tlac beaut} ofWe~t's = =:.~
Opc11i11tt lcoo: n1rce nf • OP'!ning lead of a lo~ \pacte. faen 1( ,1 Minerals
declarer should nsc with the king. It 42 Bolld
Uuod Jefensc often need\ ncnc\
of steel. Walch MidlCI Perron at
"-Ork for France in the World feam
l)l):lllf)lili.J
Suu1h·, jump to three hcam
showctl a suit thal could play oppo-
s11e a singlc1011. Ille normal conlracl
remo11es 1he only fast entry to the dia· '4 Obiecled
mood . Although a d1fTcn:nl 5aho 46 Cold llNIP'
could lOfce declarer to guc padcs, 47 Bakary buy
mo\t com~tent Jcda~r·s would 1 3
lt:1'd ttJ the ic.mg. -ft I~ mnpl).' 8 m3ttef'
of which wai. more brilliant -
Perrun's <lpcning lead or the subse·
695 CARSITRUCKS
N4NSISUVS
HONDA Pulport EX 117
Sport Utility, 4di, auto, 2WD
(V4409608) s 18.995
COSTA MESA HONDA
714-436·5050
JAGUAR XJS v12 Covertlblt
'14 MetallC Reel 40K mi.
MUST SEU.I $25,000lobo 114MSO..n~3
JagllW' lCls 2 • 2 Con11t '91
$311,19$ 116-4574
BAUER JAGUAR
714-153-4800
Jeguw XJ12 s.d1n 4Dr '96
$41,M 16-4$45
BAUER JAGUAR
714-1153-4800
Jagu11 XJ6 L SEOAH 40 '117
$39.905 DNS43
BAUER JAGUAR
714-!l53-4800
JAGlJAfi x:ii L SEDAH '117
$39,1115 17~52
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
qucnt defense!
695 CARS/TRUCKS
NANS/SUVS
JAGUAR XJI ''6 THI blue, t•n IHthtr, chrome whelf1, HK ml,
nrvlc:e rec0td1, great concll·
tlon, my11 '"• $61100. PP.
1411-'49HSl7
J19u1r XJ6 19' 49'1 mtlfi
alloys, nvu1, while/oatmeal
1ntel'l0f tK down assume
$18.500 PP ~9.073-0411
Jeep Grind cheio11ae n
4x4 Sunlool lojacll CJO. lull
p..w 591< ml garagtd show· room conCI belara ol Wit·
ranty St3 900 94!1'72G-1S65
LExUS [SlOO '117
10155941 S24995 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)192-&llOI
LEXUS ESlOO 1117
(033130) S2tl.995
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)1112-&IJOI
595 CARS/TRUCKS
NANS/SUVS
Mercedee Btnz 300SL '!It
2 doora 2 tops1 .mtc .. pal00'14no lnlenor 80k mt, Ot1\111181 owner
$31.500 94§.64()..1656
MITSUBISHI Ecllp11 Get Spycl« '!14 L.o Mllesl (416483)
Ke•y Bill<! Boak Says $20 100
SSal<> Price St 8 ~ MITSUBISHI MOTORS
Wtf/W.COllln\Hlmft.l.COITI
714-545-1700
~u=t~¥~r7
l<ely Blot BOOll Seys $17 850
SSale Puce $16 408
MITSUBISll MOTORS WWW.C08tltf\eNITlllt.Com
7t4-S45·1700
MITSUBISHI GAUNT LS i4
local Tr ado' (098234 l Kely Blue Book Says $10.185
6Sa1c Pnce ~ 337
MITSU81Slt MOTORS
WWW COIW!MNmllt.c:om
714-545-1700
DOWN
1 Insect 2 Hodgepodge
3 PaCl\et of p;.tpor
4 City in ToMH~ee
5 El"-
8 S~y 7 "-lways t>lly • •
8 ~ 24tlndlng
II 'SeWl9 '4ghts
10 Alt ll'IOYemenl
11 Revue 14 VO¥<
15 ShlnMS
20 LOOMn 22 Bird of ta 25 Plant paraslle
26 UMt • razor . 27 Oregon capita
PMMOUI PVZZLI 90LVID
28 PllC:klged
COtfOn •
29 Oelf bfMdS
30 Ceremotllti 31 Pau as 1 bllr
'32 Fender :w~:
37 Sonmeto noon
40 Scartd81e, '° Manhattan
42 Pedodt
'3Cur*s
13
.Mlg111r XJC sea ... 40r •ii ss..tts 116-4541
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953.ctOO .
LEXUS £$360 ·115
(081838) $t7.995 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)192o4ll06
LEXUS ES!lOO 'H
(173140) S22 995
MITSUSISll GAL.ANT ES 'fl One Local Owner (063257 I
Kety 8lue Book 5a)'S $1 t.D7S t Sale P11Ce S 10.737
695 CARS/TRUCKS
NANSISUVS
695 CARSITRUCKS NANSISUVS 695 CARSITRUCkS
/VANSISUVS
JtgUlf XJ6 SEDAN 40 '87 •
'3U95 117...u44
BAUER JAGUAR 714-IJ53-4800
Jag111r XJS SEDAN io 1111
SU,"5 97_.554
BAUER JAGUAR
74 4-1153-4800
Jegutr XJ6 SEDAN. 4D '97 '311,tllS 97-4565
BAUER JAGUAR 714-IS3-4800
Jaguar XJi sEbAR 40 ·11
SU,1115 17-4570 BAUER JAGUAR
714-15"4800
;i.g11at XJI Sedan 40r Ill
Sl3.99S IM5111
BAUER JAGUAR
714-85MIOO
1304 I tw.1 INGJ
JUNK TO TIE OUMPlll
714-IA-1112
AVAILABLE TOOAYI
IMM7WS66
~• ~ --• "J..X .. , .:·..,,,, ...
' ..... , . •·' ~ ... , ...
ClnilMfnto _.., ....... ...... ........ ....,
&Al ... ,. •1•
.. 1111 .. ala I .......
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714 )1112"'906
LEXUS LSioo '9$
(009599) S30.99S
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)192-6llOI
Llf'ICOln Cont'*it&l Martt v
711 Gold watner Int cllSllC
5howloom oond. S2895 ooo
94M6Q..ll15
iliifcec1e1 e.nz 450 SEL 171 Black, c:luf.lc body $1.,W ,I'll running condltlon. comolQte
rteofdl $2950 949-642-2639.
Uercect.1 UOE 115
24k '" clllrr'(}'lan, lealtlef Chrome wlia new IN alatm CO, orgl OWOO/ $31,000
!M 9-26 t ..go 13 day'\
Gd· 759-S:m evenmQ
f aie l.AN09CAPING J
* OAROENIHG • Rllebll & Qua w Oi'k at ~ Ra!Al5 call Ed
BllTtlt at MM41-33T1.
Yard clHn·up, fnnvnmg.
TVITRTn't, TTUS;-w.duH~
Pllm TIMS New i.aWIYPfiRs
714-9e0-8502 714-964 YA~
PUBLIC
NOTICE .
The Caltl Public·
• Uti t es Comm!sslon
REQUIRES that M
U$ed hOUS tlold goods
tnov11a punt ll'l11r
P U C Cal T number.
Imes and dlauffera
print their T C P
numbtr all aavtrtls·
"*1IS II you have 1
~lbollilhe ~Cl• mover. ~~ CCNISION
714W"4151
Ml TSUBlSll MOTORS
-.Cot1Mftteamlt .. com
714-$0·1700
MtfSUBISHi Monlefo SR ·111
16K '"""' (002814) Ktt( Blue BOOk Says $31 240
SSale Prtce Si&.990 MITSUBISHI MOTORS www.col111T1111mlt1.com
714-545-1700
iliiYSV8iSHI iOOOGT 115 One lady O'Mlel {025408)
Kely Blue Book Says $ 16 310
SSale ~· $14 990 MITSUBlSlt MOTORS
www.hbmftau.com
714-37S.9493
330 MOVING• STORAGE
~
Oldsmobile Eiohty E1gt11 'M
39k mMI. lltlr illO'fS "'-ll ~ (82'7199) S8 988
Naben Oldamoolll Ctdltllc
114-540-9100
Plymouth Voyllgtf 193
Only S21ii mllet, V• good
1htpt, all powet. $8000
14N's.721J1
PORSCHE tii '71
(4 CYL) 2nd OM*, 111 pep« _._ u It. Good cOtlditonl
StSOO t4M97·2244
RANGE ROVER 192
VI, All Power, CC, \lll, l'llf'eo
casutte. CO. 111nr1, lnOCllVf.
LOA.OEOI~ Mint Cond, 1t111•t
s.111 S11.000/obo
94M4W03S
1354 PLUMBING I
DAN DAWSO .. PLUMBING
Repa r R~ R '1lDe
Or&!l1$ 24rlr seMce f.xpfrt
985 sysiem re:llleS u SS4 '722 · MM>twno
TOYOTA AVALON lLS II
AlllO air, mnr1 0JYt. ltv
(Onm)S17.~
LEXUS OF WESTMl~ST£R
(714)192-lllOI
TOYOTA CAMRY LE 15
Vary sharp (318343)
K 8IUfJ ~ Says $14.300
$SalO l>rioo s 13222 .. -ww~con
COSTA MESA WT1U81Slt
7 4-545-1700
CUSTOM
SLIPCOVERS
0 & Q UPHOUTtRY llnce Ill CWtom f.anlh.n,
11phol11lty, •llP CO¥efl,
antlq\11rtpelr,114442.ctU
TOYOTA CAMRY SE CPE 'M
VG 'fifltli~ey ltv. llJIO, mrvt
e1ys .tn'1m (Otn69) S13 995
I.DUS OF WES'NINSTER
(714)1112<G806
VOLVO 244 '7t
Auto, P$, c:allll1'
--'m .-.0. 11100
71 .. st:MIOt
~
Sell yot.r extra
househotd
Items Jn
CLASSIFlED
Cell 642·5678
Have A
Garage Sale !
. .
Friday, August 20, 1999