HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-09-18 - Orange Coast Pilot..
SERVING THE NEWPORT -COSTA MESA COIYMUNmES SINCE 1907 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1999
el gets 60 y~ars to life for molestation .
•Former Newport resident also faces m urder
charges in 20-year-old Costa Mesa disaJ;>pearance.
Datt "11
SANTA ANA --Repeat sex
offender and former Newport
Beach resident Jdmes Lee Crum-
mel was sentenced Fnday to 60
years to We m pnson for molest-
ing a Costa Mesd boy in 1994 and
1995.
"That sound'> hk<> dn dppropri-
ate sentence,• said Newport
Beach Police Lt. Doug Fletcher of
Crummel's sentencing Friday.
Crummel, 55, now faces tnal,
and possibly the death penalty, in
Riverside County for the murder
of another Costa Mesa boy,
Jamey Trotter. The 13-year-old
disappeared off Harbor Boule-
vard in 1979, and Crumrnel says
he discovered the boy's bones in
1990 while hilting in Riverside
County. ~
·we've been waiting tWo years
to get our hands on him,• said
Kevin J. Ruddy, supervising
deputy district attorney of River-
side County. He added that pros-
ecutors will decide whether to
seek the death penalty -
because Crum.me! is charged with
murder with the special arcum-
stances of kidnapping -within
the next few months.
Crummel's attorney could not
James Lee
Crummel
was convicted
be reached for
comment.·
Crummel
bas a long
criminal lusto-
ry. He was hrst
convicted of
child molesta-
tion m 1962 in
Missouri and
was also con-
victed in 1967.
-In 1998, be
again m San
Bernardino County. And in An-
zona in the 1980s be was convict-
ed of killing a. child, but that con-
viction was overturned on a t(>Ch-
rucahty.
•Tue guy is evil personified.
He's every parent's rughtmare, •
said Orange County Deputy 015-
tnct Attorney Ted Burnett
Burnett prosecuted this latest
case against Crummel, which
resulted m a conVlction March 17 1
on two counts of forced oral copu-
lation with a minor
Crwnmel was sentenced to 25
~E>ars to life for each of the two
counts, dnp Judge Frank Fasel
piled on 10 more years under the
•three stnkP.s law· because Ot
Crummel's prior conV1ctions. •
•Hopefully, now, he's molested
his last kid • Burnett said, adding
thdt he h1mseU may have prose·
cuted his last sex crones case.
Burnett left the urut Friday.
• 1 have had enough," he said .,,
SEE CRUMMEL PAGE 9
~_..:... ____________________________________ ~--------------------------------------------------~----,------~--------------~~
'They are just like any other child'
Group home directors say youngsters are not a threat, many lead seminormal lives
By Jessica Garnwm
After onh -.1x ddys ol .,,chool teacher Bill
KloostP.r. sct1cl hi' dlrc>ddy feels tremendously
protechve of the ho)'s in his class.
Ten of the I 1 student-. 10 Klooster's special day
class. which he rn-tedcht>s with his ~ife, Conrue,
dre dmong mort> th<1n 150 students in the l'\Jewport-
Mesa dred who hvt• not with their parents but m
<,tdtt•-funcl('(I qroup homes.
Kloosh11 ..,c11d tw lt'<11s thdt nsmg commuruty con-
cern ovt•1 llu• nutnhP1 of group homes in Costa
J\1Psd will < c111 ... 1 • 110..,llhly towdrct hie; students, who
live rn <1 N1•\\ port B1•uc h rt• ... 1clt>nlldl tre>atnwnt cen-
IPr lnr s••-..:Prt•I) c•111ut11mctlly cl1-.1urlwd children.
\rcorclmq to 11 11t\' rP(llllt rPll'd<;f'd f\londay,
tlw1t• <lit' Hb ... 11111•-ltc 1•11-.1•cl honw.., m Co-.td l\.1f!sc1,
S<'rVUHJ t1 wholt• -.pt•c llum ol ..,oc tl'l~ 's unwdntecl -
Imm lhC' cll'Vt>lop11wnlctll\ cll'>ohlP<I, 1 Pc ovenng
c1dchc h c11HI l1<1111Plt"·"' to l>o11t1•11•d v..onwn. -.1•n1or cit-
tzPn.., ,ind lo..,lt•r c h1lclrt>n
Cn-.l<1 l\IP"•l. lht> lt'JHHl 11'\t•rilP<i hc1'-l<1r more
qroup hrn111•-; pt 1 100,000 lf''-lcll'nt ... th tn , ny other
<rt\ in < >rt111Clt' C "011nt1 Armed \\ 11 '1 , 1 <:>lcitlsti(,
soml' rl's1cl1•nl.., hc1vl' cc1llt>cl tor the l ti\ to hm1t the
numhPr of q111up huntPs 111!0\\l'd
Klooster, <1long with othPr school officials and
group home ducctor.;, sd1d people should be more
accepting of c'h1ldr£>n Ill group homes, many of
whom hdve h(>en abu.,,ed dnd dbandoned by their
pdl'ents
And some? hdVP contmued to suffer once 10 the
relahve sdJcty ot a group home. In one infamous
CdSe, a young mdn bving at New Alternatives Inc
group home rn Costd l\.1esd was sexually abused by
hts psych1atnst, BumPll forgey, and the psychta-
tnsl's roommc1t<•, ronv1ctt>d Sf:!X offender James Lee
Crumm<'!. C1umnwl wc1s s£>ntenced Friday to 60
y<.'dr-. lo hit> m pn-.on for thc1t crime.
''Tho'>l' ol u-. who ar£> on lhf> front lmes. wllh
lhPsc ch1ldrPn don't hr1vP the c;c1me biases toward
th{•m," K1oo.,t<'r ..,<11d
I hs stuclc>nts with ttw1r shy. polite srrulec; and
theu bdqqy pc1nts -ctrc• Jlht LikP normal teenagers.
he '>did
lnsPC ure. Vulnt-rc1hle Cdpc1hlt• of hedrtbreaking
sweellw~~ ont' minute dnd temble errors of Judg-
ment the> next
But mdny p<•opil• f<'ctr thPm, he said, m part
hl'CdUSP of whc1t thry rPprP<.;Pnt c1hout soaetv
·our sont>ty 1s 1h•lPnordtmg twc<luc:;e of a loss of
ldnulv vc1lt1C'">, • Kloostf•r sc11cl "Thc>-.e kid~ ar(' svm-
bohc: ·of thdt. Thl' hrt•dkdown ot fMrul\. 1s to mdny
people the br£><1kclown of ">O< 1ety."
Bonrue Swdn, the distnct's head of speqal edu-
callon, sc11d most rh1ldren who live in group homes
sbp unnoticed into the stream of activtties at distnct
schools.
They go to cldss Many play on lhe football team
at Costa Mesa f hgh School They generate average
daily attendance morues for the school distnct.
There are things they can't do, however. The stu-
dPnts in Klooster's clac:;s dre shepherded onto a
school bus at the end of each day, and then ushered
behind lhe dosed doors of their facility. They are
not allowed to wander thP streets on their own.
Many group homes don't allow their charges to
attend slumber parties, or stay out late on Friday
rughts, or watch television for hours on end.
A sizable minority of group home residents a.re
special education students, Swan said. And there
are students who educators believe cannot handle
regular school For tho~ students, the disbict offers
special classes, like Kloo~ter's, or sends students to
speoal school.-... bke one that South Coast Children's
SEE HOMES PAGE 7
MILLENNIUM MOMENT
ERIC SANTV Cl I DAl..Y Po..OT
Teacher Blll IOooster at Monte Vista School in Costa Mesa, instructs children who live in
group homes.
Costa Mesa may seek more
control over group homes
• Councilwoman is concerned that
f actl1ties are changing the character
of residential neighborhoods.
ri.bt Gu
lkltt Yb
COSTA MESA -Now that oty offioals
have df1 inventory of group homes, the next step
may be for them to go to the state or federal lev-
el to gain more control over the facilities.
The City Council received a report this week
that revealed Costa Mesa has more group
homes per 100,000 residents than any of its
muncd!a.tely t1djacent cities. The council ask ed
for the report after two group homes catering to
recovenng addicts and alcoholics applied for
cond!tiondl use pemuts.
Councilwoman Linda DlXon raised concerns
that the number of group homes m the city
were changing the character of residential
neighborhoods because of the increased.traffic,
noise and parking issues usually associated
wtth them.
She is pushing for more local control of the
faciltt1 s, but state law limits how much regula-
tion cities now have. State-licensed group
homes with six or fewer r idents are exempt
Crom local regulation.
INStDE DAT£BOOK
There are 86 known group homes in the oty
for the developmentally disabled, foster chil-
dren, recovenng drug addicts and alcoholics,
the homeless, bcltlered women and seruors,
according to the report. Alc;o, the city estimates
that there are 20 sober-hvmg houc;es within the
oty.
Dixon has attributed the high numbers to
what she calls the city's uheart of gold" and
soaally responsible attitude Some residents
have long complained that Costa Mesa has an
unfair share of the county's social service orga-
nizations.
NdDcy Clark, who runs Recovery Center on
V1ctoria Street, said Co ta Mesa also makes an
attractive }ocation tor group homes because of
low rental costs, .accesc; to trd11Sportation, job
opportunities, proximity to freeways and the
city's general livability.
Clark h as a conditional use penrut for her
37-resident facility. 'However, Heritage House,
whlch operates soc homes between 2212 and
2218 Placentia Avenue, ts not required to get
conditional use penruts because each of its
facilib how c ix or fewer residents.
"I'm concerned ahout an overconcentration
10 areas and about the !roOlll r pon. 1hillty ot our
community and what we also need to ldke into
SEE CONTROL PAGE 7
IN DEX
Making it easier for stud nt.S Fnday cores:
OASSIAlD to attend college Estancia 20
Westminster 7
COMO DATOOOK ..
Pomona 18
For compl t lory, Me COMIDlS
Page Bl.
At ngbt EStandats Matt
PCM.Kt FllS
M euller ls taken doWn SIOm by Westmmster
Millenntum Moment celebrates the people ~ rNdt a ~ con-defense m the first he.fl
ulbution to the NtWpQrt-M& community during the pliSt ~"'Y of Friday nightts game ....
Suspect
sought
• m rape
•Police say 26-year-old woman
was attacked while walking home
from wrn k Thursday night.
Cdt liol
COSTA f\ IESA -PohCL' are lookmg tor a man
suspcctPd ol taping d 2t>-yPar-old Costa Me-.a
wonldn Thu1 dt1y mqhl while ~he was walkirig
home from work n"f!I I larhor Bottle\ ard and Wf>..st
Bay Strecl '
The c:u p ct 1 dP-Scnbed as 3 5-\ ~ar-old white
mc1IP, 5 fO(>t, 10-mchns tall and 180 pounds, with a
bun: haurnt and , lhmc-day growth beard. He
was last s "en w >anng a black plaid 1ackel, a black
T-shIIt and blu Jt'!ons
The woman wa walking north on Hdrbor at
about 10 30 p.m Thursda} ,..,hen the susmt
approached her, threatened her ''1th a· knife and
forced her mto his nearby car, according to police
reports.
He then drove h~r to the parking lot of an
apartment complex m th 2000 block of Maple
Street and raped her msttie the Cdr, police said.
The suc;pect then fled the cene in his car, whidi,is
descnbed as gre>en and looking smillar to a two-
door Hondd Dt>l Sol. 1t
Lt. Les Gogerty aid a compos1te of the sm.~
had not hcen completed b\' Fnday attemoon, "O
he didn't know 11 po ... ll•r.> would be put up during
the weekend.
Patrol oHicers hav ~ heen bnefed on the
description ot the su,pecl and his vehicle and will
be on the lookout tor him, Gogerty said.
The last rape reported Ul co~ta r-tec;a was-
February, when d wonldn m her lat~ 20 wus
attacked while on an early morning walk m
Fairview Park Her a-. a1lant, who has not yet
been found, reportedly dragged her mlo a clump
of grass anct raped her.
Authontie.." \\Bmed women to tw aware of thelT
urroundmg and di ... romage them from walkirig
alone m dimly lit area:,.
A fa fe
of Newport
The 11th annual Taste of Newport wi8
continue today and Sunday at FaShion
Island on (ltewport Center Orl'{e. llle fest).
val of food, drink and entettainmen\
includes sampling of appetizers, mai•
courses and desserts from more than 35 oK.
the area's best restaurants. The Pointer
ten will hHdtlne tonight~ tntertat•M-...,,:.
at 9:30 p m. Md REO ~eechwgon Wiii
fonn at 4•JO p.m SUnday. 11ckm
admission .. $10. Md children uncl9r
are free lnformatK>n (Ml) 729 4400
WEATHER
811
l'rJlfly doudy _15 skJl5 make Irr o
8 .,.,,. ,,..,.
2
2
•• A 2 Soturdoy, s.p.mber 1 a·, 1999
MOIAL Of
THI STORY
. . ' ' faith Doily PifOt
. Jews celebrate High Holy Days with reflection and atonement
cindy trane
christeson
Picture the paSt and
hope for the f u tu re
"There is no surprise more magical
than the surprise of being loved. It ls
God's finger on man'a shoulder."
· -Charles Morgan
T 1us past week I watched the ·
back-to-school scene played out
as I passed different schools. But
this year I am playing a very different
role in the beginning of the school
year. Tius is the weekend that my
husband, Jon, and I leave our
youngest daughter Am¥ at .college.
, My morning jog o~ten takes me
i$ilst the preschool in Corona del Mar
~t both my daughters, Kelly and
Amy, attended. I remember the first
day of school. each of them qwetly
reached up and grabbed my hand as
we walked m. I always took their pic-
tures as they stood next to their teach-
• ers. Then they hugged and lossed me
and held my hand dS they walked me
to the door Then I let go and walked
out I tned not to look bdck
My mommg Jog dlso often takes
me past their elementary school
Every year on the first ddy of school.
we usually walked inside hdnd m
hand There were years, though,
when we d1dn't actudlly do so phys1-
cally. but I st.lit fell vPry connected
emobonally.
For the nine years edch of the girls
were there, I al'>o took thel! pictures m
front of the big school mailbox. It was
. a trad1bon they allowed me to keep.
Some days I Jog past their high
sehool. Yes, I did take their pictures
the hrst day, but I did so m front of our
house. Yes, I did drive them. but I clld-
n't walk them in They would squeeze
~ hand, slip out of the car and into a seo of teenagers.
l prnyed every day for God to gwe
them the gwdance and strength when
tbey needed to swim dgd.lnst the cur-
(\t I guess I couJd have taken ptc·
ti.tres m front of the flagpole, as a sym-
bol of standing hrm and upnght m the
world
The hrst time Kelly dnd Amy drove
emselves to school, I took a picture
of Uiem m our big, old Suburban in
Ctant of our house Then Jon and I
pod on the comer and watched unW
ttiey were out of sight. We were qwte
tM picture.
When we first took Kelly to college,
l tQok plenty of pictures. When it was
tlnle to leave, Kelly let go of my hand,
and gave me a loss and a hug.
Then as she turned to go her way,
and I to go nune, she said, "Don't look
back mom, and I won't either.·
Last Sunday I sat next to Amy m
church She must have sensed my
emotions because she reached over
&id held my hand the rest of the ser-«e.
iTh.is weekend I will lake plenty of
~ctures Maybe I'll take one of Amy
in front of a globe, as a symbol that a
Whole big world awaits her Then 1t
will be time for her to go her way, and
me to go nune. I will try hard not to
(QQk back
Kelly and Amy will be out of my
S!~t ror awhlle, but they'll be near to
JM in my heart. 1 will conbnue to pray
(or both girls every day. I'll also be
dldng God to hold my hand as I slow-
tylet go of theirs.
And you can quote me on that.
ONDY TRANE CHRISTESON is a Newport
hech resident who speaks frequently to par
C[l~n9 groups. She can be reached via e-mail at
~thegrow.com or through the mail at
,.0 Box 6140-#505, Newport Beach 92658
Alf)( COOLMAN
~fib
The Jewish holy day of Yorn Kip-
pur begins at sundown Sunday,
and local Jewish org~tions
are preparing to host their largest
crowds of the year.
The special events connected with
Yom Kippur include a full day of ser-
vices Monday, the Sunday-night
singing of Kol Nidre, a prayer that
addresses the failure to fulfill vows,
and the saying of Yizkor, the prayer for
the dead. The day attracts many Jews
who do not attend seivices at other
times, said Rabbi David Rosenberg of
Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach.
MI sometimes won't see people for a
whole year and then they'll 'show up,•
Rosenberg said. M I'll say, 'Where have
you been1••
Yorn Kippur is the final day and cul-
mination of the High Holy Days, which
began with the Jewish new year of
Rosh Hashana on Sept. 10. The High
Holy Days are considered a time of l-
reflection and atonement, Rosenberg
said, when Jews consjder both the man-
~er in which they have spent year that
has passed, and the manner in which
they will spend the year to come.
In contrast to the celebratory feeling
of Rosh Hashana, Yorn Kippur is a holi-
day with a deodedly pensive tone.
"Rosh Hashana is a happy day,"
Rosenberg said. MYom Kippur is a
solemn day."
He said the attitude Yorn Kippur is
desigried to create m worshipers, who
spend the day fasting and praymg, ts
one of awe and reverence before God.
"It's as lf we're standing in front of a
judge in traffic court," Rosenberg said.
"You get in front of the judge and you
say 'Please don't fine mel'"
Beth Slavm, spokeswoman for Tem-
ple Bat Yahm of Newport Beach, said
the combination of the extensive ser·
Vlces and the singing or the temple's
choir creates a powerful at:mosphere
for attendees.
"This is a period in our lives that is
very awesome in meaning,· she said.
"You don't take it for granted."
Much of the Yorn Kippur service,
both Sunday evening and Monday. is
sung. Temple Bat Yahin choir conduc-
tor Thomas Madarlane compared per-
forming the ample liturgy to singing
three operas m a row.
Jewish groups have been stnVUlg to
BRI EFLY II FAITH
St. Mark to begin abuse,
divorce recovery programs
St. Mark Presbyterian Church is gear-
ing up for its fall series of special pro-
grams, including a divorce recovery pro-
gram to start Oct. 3 and "Love Without
Honor," a Monday-evening support group
for women coping with domestic violence.
Jim Smoke, author of the book ·crow-
ing Through Divorce," will be a featured
speaker of the divorce workshop, while
group facilitator Vera Vlss will lead the
domestic vtolence program.
The church is at 2100 Mar VISta Ave.,
Newport Beach. For more information,
call (949) 721-8079.
St. Andrews to host
workshop on divorce
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church will
begin d six-week series of Thursday-
evening workshops on divorce recovery
beginning this Thursday.
The work.<ihops, which run through
Oct. 28, are inte nded to help partiopants
make a healthy transition through Uie dif •
hcult aftermath of divorce. The final four
workshops are also open to children.
The cost for the-workshops is $30. St.
Andrew's is at 600 St. Andrew's Road,
Newport Beach. For more lnJormation.
call (949) 574-2214.
READERS HOil.INE
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E.dltor '--._.....
Meneglrlg Editor
Mer< Mer1in,
Dir'9(tOr of Photop.piy
ShlnMll~
Senior Editor, Copy Dell
eltltftMO. ,,,,..._
make sure that the High Holy Days stay
relevant for the lives of today's Jews.
This JS a tricky task, Rosenberg said,
simply because the extended prayers
and restrictions on activities like eating
and dnnking that are the most chal-
lenging aspects of participation m the
ceremonies are also centraJ traditions.
•It's gotten shorter over the years,"
Rosenberg said, explaining that Yorn
Kippur services flre now several hours
brief er than they traditionally helve been.
"The rabbis like to say we're a little
weaker today,• he said.
At the Jewish Community Center of
Orange County, in Costa Mesa, Yorn
Kippur services lasting a little more
than two hours will be given at 10 a m.
and 5 p.m. The center hosted a discus-
sion in August designed to help Jews
find meaning in the High Holy Days.
The Pacific. Community of Secular
Hurnanisti~ Jews, which advertises its
servtces as •A Yorn Kippur for Y2K,"
plans a program for Monday that will
address the challenges Judaism races
SPECIAL EVENTS
MEETINGS FOR THE UNEMPLOYED
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church hosts
an m:1going series of Thursday evening
meetings for the unemployed, with
speakers on various subjects. The meet-
ings are free and open to the public. St.
Andrew's is at 600 St. Andrew's Road,
Newport Beach. For more information,
call (949) 574-2239.
ISLAND MUSIC
Orange Coast Unitarian Uruversalist
Church hosts an everung show of steel
drum music by • • PANic All Stars" at 5
p.m Sunday. Suggested donabon is $8.
The church is at 1259 Victona St., Costa
Mesa. For more informabon, call (714)
639-9301.
JOHN WAYNE IMPERSONATOR
Internationally known John Wayne
impersonator Gene Howard will speak
at Liberty Bapbst Church at 11 a.m.
Sept. 26. He will recite poems and give
a talk titled •"Freedom and Sacrifice"
while decked out in cowboy regalia.
The talk is free. The church is at 1000
Bison Ave., Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 760-5444.
CLASSES/WORKSHOPS
BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP
For adults in all stages of loss of a loved
W EAT HE R
TEMPOATURES
Balboa
79163
COfona def Mar
78163
Costa Mesa
80/63
Newport Bt"h
79163
Newport Coast
79163
~FOMCAST
LOCATION sizt
Wldge .• , ••• 3-5 SW
Newpor"~, •• , 2~ SW
Bladties ••••• 2-4 SW
RJvtf Jetty • 2-4 SW
CdM •••••••• 2-3sw
TIDES
TODAY
first low
10·43 am .•••••. 3. 1
first high
6·55 • m ••••••• 3.4
Second low
after midnight
Second high
4;45p.m .••••••• 44
541NDAY
first low
12;27a.m ....... 1.0
f 1rit high
7:28 a.m ..•••... 3.7
Second low
12:03 p,m ...... 2.9
Stcond high
SS2 pm ....... 4.6
Temple Bat
Yahm cantor
J onathan Grant
conducts a
cholr rehe arsal
In preparatton
for Yom Kippur.
CONRADlAUf
DAILY PILOT
ln responding to the complexity of the
contemporary world, according .to the
group.
In Jewish tradition, Yom Kippur rep-
resents the day on which the gates of
heaven are closed and the worthy are
inscribed in the book of life.
withm the gates -that the day of Yorn
Kippur focuses so intently on the con-
sideration of personal limitations and
the importance ot right behavior.
"The gates are open, they're going
to close,• Slavin said. It is for this rea-
son -the pressing need to hnd a home
Rosenberg noted that almo~t all
Jews should be able, theoretically
speaking. to slip m before the gates
clank shut.
•As long as we come clean, you
know," he said.
F AITH C A LE ND AR
one. The group helps participants to
share expenences, receive support and
learn ways to manage feelirlgs of sad-
ness and loss. Hosted by Jewish Family
Services. For dates, times, fees or other
uuormation, call (714) 445-4950.
YOU AND YOUR AGING PARENT
Jewish Family Services hosts sessions
for adult children who carry some
responsibility for the care of aging par-
ents. The group addresses issues of
communication and relationships with
aging parents, finding resources, defm-
ing responsibilities and managing prob-
lems For dates, times, fees or other
inforrnation,call(714)445-4950
NEW THOUGHT WORKSHOPS
New Thought Community Church hosts
a vanety of workshops from 10 a.m. to
noon Saturdays. Juanella Evans and the
Rev. Gail Miller will speak today on the
topic ••Ask Your Angel." The work-
shops are free, and are held at 1929
Tustin Ave , Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 646-3199.
RE-MEMBERING GROUP
Our Lady Queen of Angels hosts a senes
of meetings on Sunday evenings for
Catholics who feel spiritually homeless.
The Sept 26 meeting features Father
Vmcent Gilmore, parish priest of OLQA.
The event is at 6:15 p.m. at the parish
center, 2046 Mar VtSta Dnve, Newport
Beach. For more mformation, call (949)
548-3844.
WEEKLY EVENTS
QUAKER MEETING
The Orange County Friends, a Quaker
group, holds meetings Sundays at 10
a.m at the Whittier Law School at 3333
N. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (949) 786 7691
BIBLE STUDY •
His DISClples Fellowship m Costa Mesa
irlvites the community for a study of
God's word, food, bJn and fellowship at
7:30 p.m. FridaySt All ages welcome. For
more information,, call James at 650-
2589.
KNOWING GOD INTIMATE~
On Mondays, people of diverse back-
grounds and different churches gather
at St. Mark Presbyterian Church to pur-
sue a one-on-one relationship with God.
The One Heart Christian Meditation
group tedchec; and practices the spiritu-
al steps that can make that inbmacy a
daily reality. lt meets from 7 :30 to 9:30
p.m. at 2100 Mar Vista Dnve, Newport
Beach. For more mlonnation, call Ester
Behilam at (949) 040-6213 or Kathy
Townsend at 551-5339.
S UR F POLICE FILES
The SOUthwest swell
will pack one last
punch today for
waist-to should r
high ~ before
dropping off Sunday.
Sets may go head· .
high plus In NtwpOrt
end Huntington. S.b
on Sunday wm be
jUJt about ~Jst
higt} Expeci partly
cloudy skies
ttwoughdut the ~v
tOdly Tht sun will
Mt It 7;06 p.m.
COSTA MESA
"-bor loulevllf'd: A purse, Social Security card, and cash was
stolen In the 2200 block betwoen 6 45 and 7 p.m Sept. 2.
Bristol Str'Mt: A leather coat worth $2,395 was stolen 1n the
1300 block between noon and 1 p.m ~pt. s.
NEWPORT IEACH
Newport ~ent: A vehklt was keyed wtllle PMked in the
2700 block be~n 8.30 and 9.55 p.m Wednesday.
Grand C-t. A su~ bfoke a window pane In ao upstairs
bedroom In the 100 blOdc between noon and..1 p.m Wedn&
ct.y
Via a.no.: A 3 foot tall statue of a dog hofdlng a tlfWd bal·
ket of ftowen In hls mouth was stolen from a front potth area
of • m ldtnce 1n the 200 block ~ 2:00.enct .ct)o •-"'
Wedi~
......... A dutt.J ~ ketate pidl, W'llfom\, PNteonlC
~ (J) ~ •• ctll phone ~ ... f*IOnll d'9dc
W0'1h h05 war. llOltn between l :JO Md 0-.)0 pm.~·
..
I Doily Pilot I ' , . Sofurdoy, $9ptember 18, 1999 A ... • •
~
Trying to karn to live with kss Ctt school Hundreds will
Walle for Peace
T he first time 1 heard the
phrase HLess is more!" it ·
was a concept described in
a manic appearance by •Prof es-.
sor• Irwin Corey on the old
WHIT'S UP
"Steve Allen Show,• not to be
confused with the "Tonight
Show" Allen used to host. Corey
was magnificent in his tuxedo,
sneakers and wild hair, using a
chalkboard and his special ver~ ...
sion of mathematics to prove his
point. A decade or so later, a st eve
smith
rather interesting gent named
Jerry Brown used the "less is
more" concept to become gover-
nor of California. Audiences
laughed at both men, but in
Brown's case, it didn't help his
career.
Now, there is a local mom
who is testing the "less is more"
concept out on the parents at
Victoria Elementary School. This
time, it's serious business and no
one is laughing.
Mary Fewel is the new PTA
president at Victoria. Addressing
her constituents in a flier sent
home just prior to the first PTA
meeting Mond~y. Pewel, who
has been cranking out the
"Canyon ParkNews" for several
years, proclaimed in a headline:
•PTA Goals for This Year -Less
is More.•
ve·ah, right. And pigs fly and
· advertising on campuses is a ·
win-win situation. But Mary i~
serious and she began her com-
mentary with an olive branch to
returning parents. "We're not
going to sell ANY1HING this
yecnl" reads the newsletter. Fine
with me. While I've never been
an advocate of simply writing a
check for a lump sum to avoid
filling the neighborhood with
hundreds of short candy sales-
people, this year has been one
for the books. Between the fund-
raisers for Little League, Indian
Maidens, AYSO and school, we
weren't tapped out, we were
burned out. It was simply "fund-
raising overload," ·
So, this year, this courageous
board will make do with about
30% less money than last year.
They will try to replace the mon-
ey with the one thing parents
can't buy more of: time. .
•As parents,• Mary told me,
uwe need to.help our kids focus
on their class work this year by
supporting our teacher's ~s-_
room and homework policies. by
reading with our kids and turn-
ing off the TV and by havihg
mofe classroom parent volun-
teers." ,
My guess is that the other
PTAs in the district are similar to
Victoria's. There are about two
dozen very active parents who
are helping to make a difference
and the rest are too busy with
their lives to do much. Mary
acknowledged that the policy
may only mean a break for that
active handful of parents. "I don't
know if this will translate into
higher parent involvement, bu{ I
do know that some of the parents
who spent a lot of time fund-rais-
ing might be able to use that
time with their own kids. We
want our PTA meetings to be
something fun to do. We don't
want any more drawn out analy-
ses of small problems. We've got
activities lined up and we have
teachers who want to do their
part. too. We have to compete
with what's on TV.• or course, Mary is right and
only time will tell if the new plan
will work. But I've always
believed in the concept that
something that is not working
must be changed or ditched
immediately in favor of some-
thing else. And if that doesn't
work, something else is tested.
And we keep trying until we get
it right.
TQe past fund-raisers have
made some important contnbu-·
tions to the school. We now have
a big beautiful patio cover under
which the kids can eat lunch,
and the new marquee· in front of
the school was the result of a lot
of hard work by that.Ji,mdful of
parents.
But the truth is that our test
scores could improve and more
parents need to be involved with
their kid's education. So if Mary's
plan works, it will be a model for
PTAs across the countiy .. If it
doesn't, 1 am confident that Mary
and the board will try something
else. Either way, it's the start of
· an ~port.ant message, one ~at .
has yet to be learned by many
people controlling the education
purse strings throughout the
state: All the money in the world
can't make up for parents who
neglect their child's education.
Perhaps the "Professor" was
right all along.
• STEVE SMrTH is a Costa Mesa resident
and freelance writer. He can be reached
at (949) 642-6086 or by e-mail at dailyp-
ilotOearthlink.net.
COSTA MESA -Hun·
dreds of pe<?ple are expected
lo participate in the 6~
4Jlnual Walk for Peace toda~(
at 1iiangle Square.
· The walk will hPlp v~no~
religious congregations an
youth and commuruty group( •
raise funds for their orgaruza-,.
tions as well as increas •
awareness dbout ongom9
efforts for pcdce. • ·
The walk will begin at 11
a.m. and will be followed by
addresses by Costa Mesa
Mayor Gary . Monahan and
Newport Beach Mayor Den:
rus O'Neil at noon. The even\
al'so will !~ature · exhibitor
booths, multicultural enter-
tainment and door prizes.
Peace Walk sponsors
include the Newport Mesa .. ,
Irvine Interfaith Council; i
Bahais of Orange County
and Amnesty International.
Triangle Square is at the cor--
ner of Harbor and Newpor1
boulevards.
21ST A llT'NJ"ERS' ARY CELEBR' ATJON' 11:00 to 3:00 pm At the Costa Mc."'11\lothcr's Store -, :~·,,.I'. , rt 1 n , • ITi'•.F()Ol>•~lt:Sll'•l\STI NCF,\ll<E/111..;.<11Hil-']"11.'Ciu/.,
SEI 1 EMBEH 25, 1999 -SATl RDA\ ll:.·lrel'.~muilc!."uhilc!hcu!c1.-;tatall :'l(l//u:r.\/,J(lttiun.'i..'
WEST SO£
Juice Bar
A NM-Dairy 1Jknd of Ml/ura/ Juice
& Orfianlc Sag Beverage
30 Tunes More Calcium 23 MG
& 25% l.e$S Sugar of lsoOawoes
•Apple Splash
•&nylllost
·~'IWist REG. '3.19
NATURADE®
YOU SAVE UP TO $8 .96!
I Mixes&silg I TOTAL SOY jGreat7asting l
The Ultimate Meal Replacement
• SOY PROTEIN • 17 grams per serving
SUPRo-Brand Soy Cootalning a 1)'pical Range of lloftawoa
• Good Source of Calchnn, Sapooim & Pl\vtonutrienb
• AD Natmal • NutritiooaQ.y Balanced .
•Slnlwberrg Creme • French Van/Oa
• Bavarian Chocolate
2.4POUNDS
SUGG. '27.95s1r SUGG. '13.95
FARM FRESH PRODUCE
FannFresh
Chiquta
LUNDBERG
Organic Whole -Grain
Rice Cakes
• Plain Wrth Salt
• Plain No Salt
• Mochi • Wild $
• Multigraht
REG. '2.69
Alfajuice
&ch capsuk supplies
550 mg of se.nn 'Nf::tuice ~
SUGG. -10.48 180 caps
[Mothers ]
Fresh Baked Breads
Sunflower
Breads s
REG. '3.55
KASHI G
Cereals
,.... Wllh Saea lf1aolt Cndnr &
.... toEolor~45~
•Apple Spice • Cheny VaniOa
•Banana Almond $ ~ =~Peach ._~
REG. '2.79 &6•5 oz.
Lunch Special
Mom's Rice Bowl
A bowl full of brown rice. tofu.
broccoli, carrots, snowpeas, green
onions, & mushrooms sauteed in
ginger-garlic, tamari & sesame oil
with gomashio on$ 9S
Served All D
Organic
Cheese • Mozzarella . .
• Mild (JI' Shmp Cha/dar'
• Monterey JackuSZ&ft
• 'Jbmato&&s' ~
Reg. '3.49 8 oz.
WHOLE SOY
Cream)' Cultured
Soy Yogurt
• S'1aWbm:y • Raspbeny • Plain
•Peach
Reg. tj .19
1be Original
Boca Breakfast
low Fat
Choksfl!rol Free & Meat Fre£
•Breakfast Unks ~99
• Breakfast PattieS 8 az. Reg. '3.99
SUGG . .,2.98
. ,
A 4 Saturdoy, ~!ember 18, J 999 ' . .. . .
• St
. . T he U do Marina Vlllage is
havmg a sidewalk sale
today starting at 9 a.ni.
There will be special savings on
outdoor and indoor patio furni-
ture, antiques, fine consignments
and accessories. Included in the
sale are Kteiss, Drexel and
Brown Jordan Designs. The Lido
Marina Village is at 3400 Via
Oporto in Newport Beach.
New Man, a Paris-based cloUi-
• \rlg boutique, Ji.as long been a
Javorite of Europeans, and it !\as
now made its West Coast debut at
South Coast Plaza. Often referred
to dS the. turopean Banana ·
Republic, the sophisticated
French retailer focuses on casual
~portswear for men and women.
The company is known for its fine
fabncs and styling. All of the mer-.
('handise in the new 1,900-
squclre-f oot store is designed and
manufactured in France.
Qualrlne Washable Furniture,
d,l (949) 723-7435 and at 3636 E.
.Coast Highway in Corona de!
Mar, offers slipcovered furniture
that's available in a large selec-
tion of fabrics -prints and
solids What customers love
about the slipcovers is that they
are all constructed for home
machine washing and drying,
they're hot washed before cut-
ting, all stress points are rein-
forced, and they're sewn with
100°1,, nylon thread. There are
also d lot of customizing optioTlS
that include covers that can be
llST IUY
greer
. Wylder
designed using multiple fabric
combinations, choJce of springs,
25n5 European silver goose
down, choice of skirt styles and
choice of over 50 frame styles.
Frames can be shortened to a 36-
incb depth or lengthened to 45-
inches in depth.
One of the best carwash deals
in town is the $6.95 hand car-
wash Sundays at Beacon Bay
Auto Wash, at (949) 833-0660.
The hand wash includes a free
foam wax, and Beacon Bay's
motto is that they're not satisfied
tmtil you are. It's at 4200 Birch
St. in Newport Beach.
Robinsons-May, at (714) 546-
9321, and Bridal G\lide magazine
are hosting a Bridal Fair at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the South Coast Plaza
location. The event will feature
Which of These Costly HomeseUer
Mistakes Will You Make -
. W hen You Sell Your Home?
No •\\ port Uc•dr h -A new report has
·1u-.t ho•l'n rPled'>!-'d which reveals 7
1 u:-th 1111stdke~ that most
hnnH·own1•r'> 01ake when !>elhng
th1·1r hom1• <1nd a q Step System that
• • l"dll h1•lp ~011 !>C•ll your home fast and
for th<• mo-.t amount of m6ney.
sellers make 7 deadly nustakes
lhal cost lhem hteraUy lhousands
of dollars. The good news is that
each and every one of these
mistakes rs enhrely preventable.
. . • This mclustrr rpport !>hows clParly
how llw trad1twnal way!> of selling
bomP'> hovP lwcoml.' increasingly
h•'>s dtHI lf'-.s plfect1ve m today's
rnarkl"t Th<' lrlcl of the mailer 1s that
lull} thn:e quarters of home sellers
don t qet what they want for their
honw dnrf bl•come d1s11lus1oned and-
In answer to this issue, mdustry
insiders have prepared a free
special report entitled "The 9 Step
System lo Get Your Home Sold
Fast and For Top Dollar.·
• worsP·financrdlly disadvantaged
•. ~hen thc>y put their home on the •
To hear a bnef recprded
message about how to order your
free copy of this report, call (800)
884-5984 and enter ID#1000 You
can call anytime, 24 hours a day, 7
days a week.
Call NOW to fmd out how you
can get the most money for your
home.
•• markf'I
: A~ lh1s r<'port uncovers, most home
•
• I
..... ------------llllllli!l----------llli!lllmmlll!I ............ • I •
.. ..
t'
NC111 •.rel.end, ~ember 24, H, lti
'II. Andr~·· rheologian on RC$Mkn«'
Dr. F. Dale Bruner
Prof~wr of Rd1g10t1 Emcnru.1, Wh11•onh U>llcac
~''""" Fnd~). '' 10 P.M. anJ S.htrdtt 8:30 A.M. • 12:00 P.M.
\\or•hop: S.11urday """"'',,_ ~,10 r.M. or Sunday rnoroiJiw 81.JO 8' lOclS A.M.
"News From The Eagle"
(auo.u from ~<,..pon H•~ tr.p Sdlool at lrvm« Md Uch)
t.Oll '>r Amtrn1>; Ro~J. "ltvrpon ~~h. ~hic>fm~ 91663·532.S (~'16Jl-U80
[.\Mil inf~•n.dmvspt«S.Ofl WC& WWWMtndff\\'\J'f'CS.of11
SAINT JAMES CHURCH ~Sain Mi·L··) "' A1l Antt0L EPISCOPAL ~ t Wat a. ,~~JS
"A~°"'"'*d_,'-':19ond ~crite & Paci6cVlew
s.wv..-.arwc.wlordond!cMar" Corona dd Mar • 6"«-0463
FIRST CHURCH OF
'CimIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Lido, N wport Beoch
673-1340 or 673-6150
Chwch 10 am & 5 JXD,
SUnday SchoOI 10 om
W«1mv.1<1y ~a pa
Our PNrpost 11 tO hlwt Chrut liw ;,. us 111
ortl" thtlt in Christ ux m41 Uw farthfol dntl
proJumw Chrinum Lim
The Rtv'd Peter 0. Haynes, Rector
.
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRIST. SCIENTIST
3100 Pacific V'.liW Or, Newport Beach
644-2617 or 676-4661
Church tOom
SuMay School 10 am
~~IPTit(: ~121VX1l
1iJt1 btid to yo11r11/H.1, t/1111 Y!'~ ht11rt b1 not JNnHtl, .,,J Y' turn 111iJ1, Alld 1erw oillfif pJJ, '"'" wonJ,;p ""-"
°"'uonom1 l h16
Bralltbts tllhe \fnthtr ChurrJI • llt }'lf1t CMld ol Orlllt Stinldi!l • llMCll, ~I•
Daily Pilot •
'alk to savirigs tatino c9mrilunity
urged to sign up bridal registry experts and an
engageme nt to honeymoon fash-
ion show featuring Ian Stuart
bridal gowns. Also, during the
event you can register to win
"Kissing Doves with Flowers"
Liadro figurine and a six day and
six night Tahitian honeymoon at
the Outrigger Hotel in Tahiti.
If you want a bargain on furni-
ture, check out Furnishings
Direct, which carries mostly fac-
tory overstocks tha t come from
majo,r upscale· retailers. The
showroom is filled with desks,
lamps, handmade rugs, enter-·
tainment centers, arJllOires, ·
upholstered sofas and sleepers,
leather sofas and chairs, and
accessories. Since there are new
shipments arriving weekly, if
you're looking for a particular
piece it's best to stop by fre-
quently. Furnishings Direct, at
(949) 515-4450, is at 2035 Placen-
tia Ave. in Costa Mesa. It's open
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday
through Monday.
You can help support New-
port Jfarbor High School by par-
ticipating in the upcoming 13th
annual Harbor Heritage Run
scheduled for Oct. 2. The two
races are a 5k run and a 2k
fun/walk run. The entry fee
includes a·custom T-shirt and
post-race refreshments. For more
information, please call (949)
645-5806.
Another way to llelp support
Newport Harbor High School
and Mariners Elementary PTA is
to purchase a TAR card. The card
costs $10. It's a bargain smce l
you'll save a lot of money I
throug hout the year at local busi-
nesses in the ,Newport Harbor
community. Examples of past
TAR card merchants that offered
discounts are Koo Koo Roo
Chicken, Pasla Bravo, Dairy
Queen, Togo's, Where's The Par-
ty?, Taco Bell, E-Z Take Out, Ice
Chalet, Subway, Pizza Hut,
McDonald's, Culinary Wrap,
Theds & Threds, Frank's flowers,
Kona Cleaners, Pick Up Stix and
Sunflour Natural Bakery. To pur-
chase a TAR card you can con-
tact Lisa Boler at (949) 642-9429.
Ramsay Photo Imaging, at
(714) 556-2632, is known for its
top quality services including 30-
'minute photos, one-hour reprints,
black & white, advanced photo
system5, custom enlargements to
30x40, color laser copies and
slide services. Other services
available that are not as well
known are its ability to archive
your image~, documents and files
on a CD, and photo restoration,
alteration and retouching. Ram-
say offers free pickup and deliv-
ery and volume discounts. It's at
2905 Redhill Ave. in Co,sta Mesa.
• BEST BUY$ is published Thursda~ and
Saturdays. If you know of a good buy,
sehd a fax to (949) 646-4170 or write to '
Daily Pilot, Best Buys, 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa 92627.
How does your child's· school measure . up?
Imagine your child experiencing
the joy of the Montessori Tradition ...
.. NEWPORT HARBOR
MONTESSORI CENTER
Acadnnic &ullniu in Harmony wit/, Young liv~s-
425 E.· l 8th St. • Costa Mesa
(949)650~3442
ST. MARK PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
"Open Arms qnd Open Minds"
Worship 9:30
Jamboret & Eastblulf In Newport Beach
N.-wAort Harbor
Luth81'an Church
798 Dover Dr. Newport .. •ch
Tradltlon•I Lutheran
Wonhlp .. rvlc• with
Hoay Communion
Sundtly 9115 am
Chf'l•tl•n •.-ucatlon for ell Ag•• 10:30am
COMMUNllY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
UNITCO CHURCH Of CHRIST
Is IO Cn; To C:... i. IO DO.
8ruc• Van Blair, Mlni1t.,
Worship Services
"8.'00lm
9:00MI Adult ChiKch School
•1 O:Oeltn\-Sundiy SChQol
-Chlld C... Provideij
61 1 HMope Ave, Coront dtl Mw
6"-7400
, .
9 HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH .1. (Dtsctples of Christ)
2401 lrvlne Ave. at Santa Isabel
Newport Beach
Sunday Worship -1 O:OOAM
First United Methodist Church
of Costa Mesa
420 West 19th Street, Costa Mesa
Fe~tival of Worship l O:OOam
Richard L. Ewing, Pastor
Cburch School 9:00am & JO: I Sam
949-548-7727
Costa Mesa
MESA VERDE
UNmD METMODIST CHURCH
170 l Baker, C.M.
Worship & Church School
8 :30 ond 10:00 o.m .
Dr. Richard George 979·8234
NEWPORT CENTER
UNITED METHODIST CHUltCH I 60 I Marguerite Ave. Corona del Mar
644-0745
Worship at S:OOAM & I 0 OOAM
Children Sunday School I O:OOAM
Jr & Sr High S.OOPM
NEW Tl totJCH r C H URCH
Scienc,e of .Mind C'.enter
S1111d.1y Mt tht:.itmn I0.00.
1
I lit• S.tc1rd l'.uh
Rl'\, G.111 M1llc1
Nr1Kh1"•1h1JO<l ( 0111111111111y Ct·11tC'1,
HWi P,.u ~ \H' .. <..mua P.kaa.
\\C'd flc.1h11l( Sci v1Ct Ill 30 ;un,
t!.l'...'11 lu~tin ,\H•. Cm1a \frii.1,
I ~Ofbhop • If). n llflOll llotlilll<ln
• \~L \our \ngd• •
Call ('>49) Mt>-!l t Q!.l
for info rmation
for health benefits
• About 1,000 families
expected to attend
educational fair at St
Joaquim's Church.
EUSEGEE
Dcif "°' .
COSTA MESA -Health out-
reach workers hope to encoll{age
the immigrant Latino community
to sign up for federal-and state-
subsidized health insurance at a
Healthy Communities Fair on
Sunday.
Organizers at the Orange
County Congregation Communi-
ty Organization expect l ,000
families to attend the health fair,
which will take place at St.
Joaquim's Catholic Church in
Costa Mesa. A number of ser-
vices and screenings will be pro-
vided but the main objective is to
get families to enroll in health
insurance programs.
Immigrants applying for green
cards and citizenship have slued
away from public aid, including
health insurance programs,
because of a fear that doing so
could hurt their chances, said
Alma Vergara. health outreach
coordinator for the Orange Coun-
JEFF & LYLE~N
EWING
N0-RISX LISTING
You have decided lO move, but
you are afraid to put your present
home on the market until you have
found a new one and completed
purchase negotiauons. You h1n·e
found thaL most sellers are reh1cttm
to finali7.c. offers from buyers who
must include a contingency that
e2lls for the sale of a cur~nt
residenre before settling on the new
one .
The first step j., to cnntact a
profesi.iooal Realtor, if you are in
such a dilemma. The agent can
show you ho" to list your home
without the risk of d1sruprmg you
and your fumily. \.\'hen you have a
fi'rm contract from a qualified
buyer, you will become much more
attractive co selJers, and when you
do find the' perfect home, you will
grently increase your chances of
being able to buy it.
Jeff and Lylcen have 27
consecutive years of re.ii estate
experience in Newport Beach. They
are Coldwell Banker's #1 team. ..
For professional .. service or advice
with all your real estate needs
call the Ewings at (949) 718-1514.
ty congregation.
"Unfortunately, & lot of our
people don't have· health insur-
ance,-Vergara said.
Instead, Latino immigrants
often choose to go to Mexico for
health care or limit their treat-
men,t to over-the-counter med-
ications when they should really
see a doctor, Vergara s~d.
Alt.bough cash welfare pro-•
grams might hurt d p~rson's .
chances of getting a green card,
health care ·programs SUfh as
Medi-Cal and Healthy Families .
Will not, Vergara said. 'Also, a
person cannot be denied U.S.
citizenship for lawfully receiv·
ing benefits, including cash
welfare, health care, food pro-
grams and non-cash .programs,
she said.
lo addition to health care
enrollment, the fair will feature
screenings for blood pressure,
dental health, hearing, hemoglo-
bin, vision and immunization.
Families who take part also will
be familiarized with local hospi·
tals, clinics, and other health ser-
vices in the county.
The Healthy , Communities
Fair will be held from 9 a.m. lo 3
p.m. Sunday at St. JoaqUlm's
Church, 1664 Orange Ave.
.• Stt us for all your Color questtons
• Senior cic1zen discounts on Sundays
• All SJles people are licensed hairdressers
?PPEEF Fil
'
rW1t7iiii/Scoiip'On I
., ~ .... .,.awllfft
I &""*-'*"'~. I ....... ~c:....,
L--~-"'!?'-_ .J
',' ' ' . . . -.. : ~ :
:~ ~ \. , -,,_ • • ·: .-...:~ ~.~ ... ..:...!-:: ..
No matter what you 're doing,
your hometown newspaper
FITS IN ••• Daily Pilot
$15 :ia~ Do l ars t o $15 ~'3-$7 500 tp.<1.r. ,.._rz,rz,~ purcha.s~or more Q' .;> _
4,~ · with t \U"''Certificace . "2.
$15 FIFi EEN KAYA K DOLLARS $15
Bring .in Kayaks Dollars!
Ex . 9/30/99
t . . . . .
Daily Pilot ..... ,,
I t• IWI
Remdters on camp.E
fir 1hlnd8r Day
RecrWteR fr6m more than ·
80 public and private col-
leges and universltiet nation-
wide will visit OCC from 1 O
a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 28 for the
IChools annual 1\-ansfer Day.
Representatives from Univer-
sity of California and Califor-
nia State Univen;ity campus-
es will be on hdnd for stu-
dents to 1peaJc with. Repre-
i5f!I1latives from independent
Galifomia colleges and uni-
versities and ·out-of-state
institutions also· will be par-
ticipating.
An admissions off ice rep-
resentative from San Diego
State University will be on
hand from 1 to 3 p.m. to talk
with students interested in
transfemng.
OCC students, other com-
munity college students and
high school students can talk
with representatives about
transferring to their campuses.
OCC is No. l out of the
state's 57 community col-
leges in tr an sf erring students
to four-year schools.
Recnuters will be sta-
tioned at tables in the quad.
Students can pick up litera-
ture regarding transfer
requirements, educational
offerings, admissions, proce-
dures, scholarships, fees and
expenses, C'aJnpus envuon-'f
ment, student housing, ath-
letics, fmancal aid, special
programs, services for the
disadvantaged and ROTC ·
programs.
OCC is at 2701 Fairview
Road. For more i.nfonnation,
call (7t.4) 432·5894.
OCC publishes
booklet on classes
OCC recently released a
24-page booklet listing non-
credit business-oriented sem-
inars, customized training
and online classes tho school
will offer this spring. The free
booklet u; tiUed •Economic
Development and Communi-
ty Education• and can be
picked up in the school's
Community Education Office
next to the library on campus,
2701 FalJVlew Road. Bookie~ will be nuiiled
upon requesL
For more infQrmation, call
1714) 432-5916.
, R.1hhitr lmur.lllll'
-@__
AtITO • HOMEOWNERS • BLUE CRO~
.~· ~ -~ (_. ,;j ""'""'•t.,~lldc , rt\ / r · ,
949-631-77 40
441 O&d Newpon 8hd. • Ncwpon Bach
(Near Ha.s He11pical)
SAT, SEPT. 25
Orange Coast College
2701 Falrvlow, Costa Mesa
(714) 432-5880, ext. 1
•
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visit our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
r
United Way volunteers do in one day what
normally takes weeks at Boy Scouts Sea Base
and Friends in Service to Humanity
awareness, after you expenence
this, of the need that's out there,•
said David Herwood, an area
manager for Enterprise. "It brings
it to •ttey this is something you
should do for society all the time,
not just through work.•· .By Elise Gee Spirits were high as the volun-
teers created a virtual assembly
line with runners who fetched
pasta toppings, bags of cereal and
canned fruit for others to pile
neatly into brown paper bags.
For the Boy Scouts Sea Base, ·
the Steelcase volunteers did in
hours what it would take a week
or more to do, said David O'Hara,
sea base ranger. For Friends in
Service to Humaruty, the volun-
teers increased the usual work
force by sixfold or more.
M ike Marvin traded in his
computer keyboard Fn"'!o-
day in fjtvor of an aerator
and lawn reseeder at the Boy
Scouts Sea Bas.e.
Marvin, a technical services
manager at Tustin-based Steel-
case, was one of hundreds of vol-
unteers who stormed dozens of
Orange County nonprofit orgaru-
zations as part of the United
Way's annual Day of Caring.
•Hopefully the next ti.me l dri-
ve by this lawn will be green,•
Marvin said surveying his morn-
ing's work.
About 10 other of his co-work-
ers were assigned tasks from
restripping the parking lot to
planting jasmine bushes to plac-
ing bumpers on a plastic dock at
the sea base. The United Way
Day of Caring is meant to instill
awareness in the community
about volunteering and the social
needs of nonprofits.
The Day of Caring coincided
with the United Way's kickoff of
its annual fund-raising campaign.
The agency hopes to raise $23.8
million in the next year.
In addition to the sea base, vol-
unteers were sent to Friends in
Service for Humanity to help pack
and deliver meals to the home-
bound.
A group from Enterprise Rent-
A-Car worked feverishly to pack
dozens of grocery bags wiµt food
and deliver them to needy mdi-
viduals and families in the area.
Some even made friendly 'Com-
petition out of paclang beans and
rice in plastic bags. Enterprise has
volunteered at Days of Canng for
more than a. decade.
F~r some employees, Day of
Canng served as a springboard
for more volunteer work. ·u creates a tremendous
But both agencies need vol-
unteers year-round. For more
information, call Friends in Ser-
vice to Humanity at (949) 642-
6060 or the Boy Scouts Sea Base
(9A9) 642-5031.
PHOTOS BY ERIC SANTUCCI/ OAllY PILOT
Diana Castro of Costa Mesa, left, receives food from United Way
volunteer Kathy Highstrete during the United Way's Day of Car-
ing. At right, volunteer Larry Burchfield repaints lines at the Boy
Scouts Sea Base in Newport Beacti.
I
Sal\Jrdoy, $eptember 18, 1999 AS
care
Put a bug in
someone's
ear. Call the
. Daily Pilot
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
ENEW
2000MODELS
• OUTSTA.'l>~G ClSTO\fEl Elt\1CE • \0Ll'\t£Sf.UCT10~ •CR.EAT PRJCTS CUU.\UIJ> •
~ HERE, WE MAKE DINING·
MORE THAN A MEAL. Cocktails
Phone Ahead for
Food To Go CLASSIFIEDS WE WELCOME LARGE FOOD. ORDERS TO-GO.
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949-645-7626
" Food " Music " Tasting Faire
September 25, 1999, Saturday, 11·3pm.
~ At the Costci Meset Mother's Store .,
.... Drawi19 for Bieycles ~
•10000 Motharts Shopping Spree (s;ft oertiflcate)
Cmtom 8katebolwd I Much More!
I (entry tonne ............ Mohn locUc:ll IS) ,. ~-.......___ ____ _
~ " Ible by "tha~I ..... " Btee,I ~Sri
" Pony Rldee for the Kklll ~ ~
"~ l=w ,......,c.,1o-....
'
REAL SERVICE FROM REAL PEOPLE.
THAT'S STATE FARM.
Trust one of these State Farm agents with your car insurance:
Just ask one of these good neighbor agents:
CO TA ME A NORTH
Buddv Bearbower
2B50 Mesa Verde Dr. East Ste. P
(Adams & Mesa Verde)
714-546-1701
lie 0196112
Matthew Kennedv
891 w. Baker st. Ste. A-a~·
(Baker & Bear St.)
714-957-6666
he 0731154
Mike , chearer
1551 Baker St. Ste. B
(Baker & Harbor)
71 "·435-0300
lie 0645331
COSTA ME A EAST
Geor~e Elsom
350 E. 17th St. #21 1
(at 17th St. & Newport)
949-646-9393
lie 0872182
Ken Dille\'
2482 "Newport Blvd. #10
(in Sea Coast Village)
949-63 l • l 080
lie 0490103 ..
DOn Julien
474 E. 17th St. #203 .
(at Irvine, above Diedrich's)
949-646-4&8
lie 0256186
COSTA MESA SOUTH
Pat Md.eod
2651 Irvine Ave. #138
(next to Farmer's Market)
949-63 1-108~ lie 0492147
J l•rr:y 1ilrdie . tSf~ewport.Blvd.
(New port Blvd. & 15"-Street)
949-.553-1115
• lie 0515017
CORO A DEL 1AR
Jern Estabrook
i.711 E Coast Hwy #C
(PCH & Goldenrod)
949-6 7 3-8643
lie 0486862
Chip ta. 'el
3810 E. Coast Hwy
(at Poppy across from 5 Cr9wns)
949-7 2..l-4000
lie OC08488
'EWPORT BEACH
Wavne Ireland
·4500 Campus Dr. #505
(at Campus & MacArthur)
949-852-8573
lie 0618494
Dennis Ro.· ne
2610 Avon St. #C
(near the Riverside Ave. Post Office}
949-645-6000
lie OB63316 .
Bob Sullhan
227 20th Street, Ste. 103
(one blk past old
Spaghetti Factory on the bay side)
949~73-9.\91
lie 056733~
Dian Rov
2406 W. Coast Hwy #1
(next to Jack Shrimp)
949·6~' 1.5530
lie 0563198
Jeff l.on_g
2633 W. Pacific Coast Hwy.i St~. B
(2 blocks So. of Newport B vd .
between Riverside & Tustin Ave.)
!'74-9200
lie 0724779
' Like a good neighbor. tote FtUm is th~IY .•
~S Saturday, September 18, 1999
I
Doily Pilot
elping yi~uc. ...... Jlillers
. 'Reach for the Stars'
Get ready to walk for peace t9day
Wrfilt
COSTAMESA-~-flve
Orange County young motben
Will pUsh aside the diaper bags,
bottles and jul~e drinb for seven
hours today so that they can par-
ticipate in the "Reach for the
Stars• Teenage Mother Mentor
Program in Costa Mesa.
"It is going to be great,• said
20-year-old Griselda Avina, a
mother of two. "The day will be
focused on us, and we don't
have to worry about anything
but ourselves."
The Orange County Child
Abuse Prevention Center estab-
lished the program this year
mainly for teenage mothers in
order to provide them with
e ncouragement and motivation
in a chosen career field. The
women will be matched with
professional Orange County
women wbo will act as mentors-
for-tbe-day.
The young mothers will be
tt ted to lunch, snapping bags
foll of goodies and a series of
•
=.Topia will include
for suc::cea. ftmeSs and
....... relief. bow to get a job,
Nllter"1 i:igbts and bow to over-
ccme obltacles.
·1 am going to tell the girls
bow important it is to have pos1-
ttve sell-talk and not to listen to
the negative things people say,"
Mid Holly Pineda, owner of The
Athletic Club for Women of
Newport Beach and a program
pdttidpant.
Program mentor Gwyn Blan-
ton, who works at Delmtle &
Touche, said the duy will ~
devoted to helping the young •
mothers figure out what they
want to do for a career so that
they will have one less stress in
their lives.
"My life is a lot more difficult
with kids," Avina said.
The program will be held
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Deloitte & Touche Conference
Center, 695 Town Center Drive,
10th Floor. For more information
about the Child Abuse Preven-
tion Center and t~n mom pro-
grams, call (949) 722-1107.
W ALK FOR PEACE: The
Si.Xth Annual Walk for
Peace begins at 11 a.m.
today at liiangle Square in Costa
Mesa Three hundred walkers
Crom all over Orange County are
expected to circle the square at
this event sponsored by the
Bahais of Orange County, the
Triangle Square Merchant Assn.,
Newport Mesa Irvine lntetfaith
Council, United National Assn.,
Veterans for Peace, Whole Foods
Mdfket, Witnes!i. for Peace,
Amnesty International, NAACP
and Alpha Grdpbics Print shops.
The day begins with exhibit
booths at 11 a.m., walk warmup
by Reliance at 11 :45 a.m. a.nQ the
walk begins at noon. At 1 p.m.,
civic leaders will address the
walkers and prizes will be
awarded. How do you participate
in the 1999 Walk for Peace? Just
show up with comfortable
clothes and shoes and join in the
expression of peace.
ROLLING ON TIIE RIVER-
BOAT: The Newport Harbor Nau-
bcal Museum and the Newport
Balbod Rotary Club have teamed
The Tcimala1 Family ·
BROKEN DOWN AGAIN!
Should I spend more money on
my outboard motor? It's smells,
makes noise and is in the shop
again. Hundreds of moving
parts, there must be a better way
to cruise the bay ...
ELECTRIC MOTORS
HAVE ONLY
ONE MOVING
PART A Duffy Electric
Boat is THE answer for
boating enjoyment.
Easy to operate, low
maintenance ... tremendous
value on the baY.I
JUGGLE YOUR
SCHEDULE, AND
VISIT DUFFY! Our
prof ession,1 staff will
make your lloat
purchasing experience
very enjoyable. Need
·-=~··;' a slip on the water, need financing, or want
a special boat for the
Holidays •.. we can
make it happen
vou·ve EARNED
ITJ The most popular
boats In southern
California for many
reasons. Join the
"Duffy" club. A tremen·
dous way to enjoy the
beautiful waterways of
Newport Harbor! Let us
bulld .Omething sPec:lal tor you.
More T~an a Boat ... it's a Lifestyle
200 l W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach, CA .
Generous Trade-Up Program !
949.645.6812
COMMUNITY
& cl u •. s
llm
de boom
up for an evemng of Riverboat
gambling, food stations, silent
auction and live entertainment
Oct. 2 at the museum.
From 6 to l 0 p.m., guest will
dine on food provided by the
Riverboat Restaurant and do a
little wagering on the profession-
ally operated gaming tables,
from which winner will receive
paints for a special auction.
Silent auction prizes include
weekends at a variety of Orange
County and Las Vegas hotels,
dlnner for two c1t local restau-
rants and a variety of merchan-
dise. Tickets at $40 per person
are available by calling (949)
660-8665, Ext. 2 .
WELCOME TO 1llE WORLD
OP SERVICE CLUBS: Roberto
Jara, owner of Roberto's Auto llim
Shop, who joined the Costa Mesa-
Newport Harbor Llons Club.
SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS nus COMING WEEK; Want to
get more involved in your com-
munity, make new fnends, net-
work, or to give something back
to your community11Ty a se~ce
club! You are invited to attend a
club meeting this coming week.
Many clubs will buy your first
guest meal for you.
TUESDAY -7:30 a.m.: The
Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary
Club meets at the Balboa Bay
Club. 5:30 p.m.: Soroptimist
International of Newport Harbor
meets at the Santa Ana Country
Club for a program on •ttands
on Service.· 6:30 p.m.: The Costa
Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
Club meets at the Costa Mesa
Gou and Country Club.
WEDNESDAY -7:15 a.m.:
The South Coast Metro Rotary •
Club will meet at the Center
Club. Newport Harbor Kiwanis
Club meets at the University
Athletic Club. Noon: The
Exchange Club of Orange Coast
meets at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club. G p.m.: The Newport
Balboa Rotary meets at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club for a Craft
Talk by member Bob Thayer.
THURSDAY -7 a.m.: The •
Costa Mesa Orange Coast
.Breakfast Uons Club meets at
Mimi's Cafe for a business meet-
ing. Noon: Kiwanis Club of New-
port Beach-Corona del Mar
meets at the Bahia Corinthian.
The Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club
meets at the Holiday Inn. The
Exchange Club of Newport Har-
bor meets at the Riverboat
Restaurant to hear retired Judge
Bud Franklin. The Newport-
lrvine Rotary Club meets at the
Irvine Marriott to bear Andrea
WooU on effective listening.
• COMMUNITY & CLUBS is published
every Saturday in the Dally Pilot. Send
your service club's meeting information
by Fax to (949) 660-8667, e-mail to jde-
boomOaol.com or by mail to 2082 S.E.
Bristol, Suite 201, Newport Beach, CA
92660-1740.
' -./
Can you really buy a car over the Internet?
Yes You Gan!
www.lexuswest.com www.beachlexus.com ----------
-----
ON THE WATER·FRONT IN NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA
STAR ~AT 9:
3400 Via Oporto •Newport Beach
Call for directions 949-675-8662
fltug intO the Pffot Classified secdon to find setVkes from
piinters
'
Qpily Pilot
!Ji
,lrlOMES
a;NTINUEQ FROM 1
Society operates 'In Newport
Beach.
Swan said she iS glad New-
port-Mesa is such a welcoming
place, although she sometimes
wishes the city of Costa Mesa
could warn the school district
when a new group home
Qpens, so the dlstrict can get
teady for the children.
"lt's a sad place to be, in a
group home. Even a good
group home,• saiq South
Coast Director Richard Sewell.
South Coast also operates four
group homes in Costa Mesa.
•Tuey are wonderful kids
They are just like any other
child, but they've been put in a
position, not as a fault of their
own, but as fault of their par-
ents.•
angry. But educators say they
are a small mmonty.
Not everyone agTees.
Many, from Planning Com.mis-
sioner Katrina Foley to resi-
dents speaking at City Council
meetings. have suggested that
the children -who are wards
of the state -can be noisy,
obnoxious and a threat to prop-
erty and even neighbors' per-
sonal safety.
Sewell said sadly, he is
accustomed to the discrimina-
tion his children face.
"I know a couple of occa-
sions where our children have
come home crying from school
as a result of being teased
about.th,eir living situation,•. he
said.
But he added that, in gener-
al, Costa Mesa and New'port
Beach are ideal locations for
group homes. .
mcnt. Quality school&. Shady
streets."
And, he said, a school sys-
tem that welcomes and sup-
ports his children •Newport-
Mesa is really exceptional,• he
said. .
Peggy Young, who operates
six group homes for foster chil-
dren in Orange County, includ-
ing one for severely emotlonal·
ly disturbed girls in Costa
Mesa, said the proximity to
social . services in the city
makes it an ideal place to open
a group home, .
Young added that she her·
self would feel some trepida-.
tion abo\Jt living near a group
home for adults, but that
homes for children are an
entirely different story.
Many girls have graduated
from her program and gone on
to college, and even to gradu-
ate school, she said.
Group home hdties licensed by the s1ate
in Costa Mesa and surrounding cities.
' DSS Minors (C>-17 yrs)
Number of facilities
DSS Adults (18-59 yrs)
Number of facilities
DSS Elderly (60+ y~)
Number of facilities
.
Alcohol and drug ntc:1Dvery
Number of facilities
Total number of facilities
Saturday, ~bef 18, 1999 41
IN NEED OF HELP
Huntington ~ • Beach Santa Ana
CostaM~ •
• 16 7 1 17
6 2 0 59 .,
42 31 7 32
•
9 1 4 10 ·
86 42 12 .1 21
It is true there are children
who live in group homes who
are violent, disruptive and
·Titis area offers children
opportunities that could be dif-
ficult to find in other areas of
the county,• he said. •Employ-
"You don't hear the good
stones," she said. •You only
hear the terrible stories."
SOURCES: STATI Of~ DEPARTMENT Of SOCIAi. SERVICES, (~I"' •
• •
.
CONTROL
I CONTINUED FRO.M 1
consideration for our residents.''
Dixon said at a recent meeting.
Diane Gomez lives near the
Yellowstone Womens First Step
House on Bay Street, which has
an application pending with the
by GrevorJ It Glens. D.D.S.
NEW WEAPONS
AGAINST GUM
DISEASE
The treatmenl ~l10'tlfl as 'scaling and rOOI
plan111g' IS ollen used 10 combal h advaooed
form ol peoodOOlil (~m) dtSelSe knov.1'1 as
pe11odonllhs Al elledrve as Ille 1rearment Is in
removing batter~·laden mateoal below the
gomhne. three new mediC31ions may irrorove its
effect1YeneSS even further Alridox (do~hne
hydate) ts 1 gel that 1s Introduced in10 !he
periodontal pockets bcMcll tOOlh and gum.
wtiere 11 releases its ant•mlcrobial IQ8llt lor ~
7 d3yS lo destroy lhe borteria 8S$0Clal8d w th
pcrl0dollt1l1S Pef1oChtp IS~ gelatin SIJlj)
co nlng chloltlcxid ne digluconale lhal IS
lnsefted lll!o pen~ poct;ets. As Its ve
(flgred:ent Is releaSed POCkets str•nk PetiOdStal
ns ~ antlbioti; 40-~1ne, Cf1 blOCks
the prOlllctJOn DI enzyme (COi )
desttO't' too!li-stJppol\ng liSSlm
We prl1f quallly and prO!essiOnal~C
denslry let us help YoU lhi!l ful smit
V. 'r IOCll!t'll llt 400 ~~DI , Su
,~ NewpOrt 8eadl "1ietl" sttlve to tml'
YOU good oral riyg tn lhl !Ong run you I
have denial Good expe_r th
~are based on ftJllkll\O Ille rlQhl Cho In
1 iam.1y ~ and In ta ng teps to taop dentll
COStS at a m1nlroom through n care 11 hOmB
llCtwecn VI$ ts we reoommeno reo11at
ctiecklJpS, pertodlC ctean no , ana x ~ tit1en
needed ll$W detit.11 care one o1111e
~you w I 1Tllk
PS The ultiJTW goal 0111 lat
perlOOOIMll dlsem Is IO PIDM ltie
STATE Of CAl.IFOftNIA DEPARTMENT Of ALCOHOL At£J DRUG~ •• 06/1~ ••
city to legallze a home for up to
14 residents to stay 10 days.
"They're trying to do a good
thing and we're not tr,ying to shut
th.em down," Gomez said. ·
Rather, Gomez said she would
like to see the number of occu-
pant~ limited to six or seven.
Residents have complamcd of
traffic and parking problems and
noisy support group meetings.
F'AA~ F'UiiJll t-,. 11~k~ 161nc-M. ()~. ~ Tuscany
Crackle
Yellowstone also would like to
hold open Alcoholics Anony-
mous meetings once a week.
"My problem with their applica-
tion is they want to put 14 people in
their home for up to 10 days,"
Gomez said "U you do the math it
translates to up to 500 in one year.
Anyway you look at it. no matter
how goOd a job they do, it's got to
impact this neighborhood.•
Oftenlimei., group homes
aren't battling just complaints
about traffic and noise -they're
battlmg public perception about
the type of people they help,
Clark said.
Clark Said it was an uphill bat-
tle for her when she applied for
her conditional use permit. To her
surprise, she wd surrounding res·
idents expr ed fears aoout being
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130.EAST 17"' ST. • COSTA MESA
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EL TORO BRAm ToRTUJ.AS ANI> Ct1TPS Ol:!UVDlJ> PllESH DADY.
murdered in their beds and some
neighbots didn't want to let their
chifclren out in their frontyards.
The collective result ha!> been
the driving underground of many
sober-living and recovery homes
because of their unpopularity,
Clark said. She also said she sus-
pects there are more sober-living
homes in Costa Mesa than the
oty was able to find out about.
How~ver, Clark said she 15 not
neces!>aril)' dgamst more l<><liBJ
regulation lf 1t medns better qual· ·
1ty homes for people.
~u you're doing what you're
doing well you should not be
averse to scrutmy • Clark sa1<L
"But until you get beyond ·we •
don't want you h~re,' ulen pe<>! •
ple are going to continue to oper-..
ate thc'e underground.• • '
Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil
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JJS Saturday, 5epee(Tlber 18, 1999 community forum Doily Pilat
llllOlllL
fl f Beach Access ·story clearly defines ridiculous
t I
'· W e might not be able to
define ridiculous, but we
know it when we see it.
And the situation between
Dr. Laura Schlessinger and
Beach Access owner Thomas
Mbore is ridiculous.
Rathel than get together
and work out a simple apology
-by both sides dt Uus point
·-the latest course of this
argwnent seems to be headed
for a certain court date.
We can forgive -
Wlderstand even,_
Schlessinger's per-
sonal reaction to see-
ing a Larry Flynt
publication. We
won 'l argue whether
it was pornographic,
dS she believes. She
had the right to walk
out of the South
Coast Plaza store and
her how to run her show
or what to say. But after
Moore admitted it was a
mistake to hdve the
maga1.ine Big Brother,
she should have let the
issue go and applauded
him for Ws admission.
exploded, bef oi c any peace
could be found, into name-
calling
It's awtulJy cWldish for a
radio personality known for
giving parents ddv1ce.
Moore, too, bn't innOCl"'nt
here. Initially, he said Sch-
lessinger's comments had hurt
his business: But after other
radio show hosts l Iowdrd
Stem clild locdl Tom Leyk.is . ·
came out m support of Beach ·
Access, that sprral down
turned around. You know
what they say· There's no such
thing as bad publicity. People
aroWld the country now know
of Moore's store.
Little wonder, then, lhat he
seems willing to take the mat-
ter to court, as well.
After all, wouldn't it be a lot
simpler to annoWlce a press
conference, stand up in front,
of the microphones and televi-
sion cameras (after all, tWs
whole Uting is media driven at
this point), say alJ has beel)
worked out and bring t.Ws
farce to an end?
Dr. Laura
Schie singer
That never bap-•
pened. Instead; the war
of words kept escalat-
ing, even as the two
· But does this weekend
shopping trip turned ugly real-
ly, need to ct.iJ.minate in an
attorney-on-attorney battle?
Can't Dr. Laura and Tom
Moore just get along?
It's either that or an eventu-
al, inevitable visit Crom the
Hustler publisher hiinself. And
you can be certain the cam-
eras will be there for that.
new~r return.
It didn't need to be this way. And we're not yomg lo tell
sides were meeting quietly to
work out a settlement. And it
WEii IN IEVIEW FEEDBACK
aRANo NEW OPENINGS
1rus year's first day of
school was a real fust at East-
bluff Elementary -the first
dt\Y for all 1ts students and
staff.
The best news was how
smoothJy everything went,
both at Eastbluff and through-
out the district as the school
year began. Although the dis-
trict faces a number of issues
-from refurbishing campus-
• es to the district's zero-toler-
unce policy -it was a good
" first sign that the district's
• most important JOb oC tedch-
, ing our children got off to a
' solid start
• 8REAKING GROUND
Hot on the heels of East-
• bluff Elementdry, the d1stnct
• tlield a groundbrc<.1k.ing for
~ Newport Coast Elementary,
which is set to open somet1111e
• MARIANNA DAV MA!>SFY I DAllY PILOT
suit against the South Coast
Plaza shop owner, the root
cause of the ruckus -Hustler
publisher Larry Flynt -
stepped into the fray, promii..mg
to help Moore m any legal
fight against Schlessmger.
NO MORE PARKING
PANDEMONIUM
It'll be none too soon when
the Newport Beach City Coun-
al makes changes to ease
parking congestion on the Bal-
boct Perunsula -a nightmare
every sunny weekend. The
council got a first look at the
Balboa Perunsula parking man·
agement plan this week and
are expected to vote on the
specifics sometime in Novem-
ber.
Editor's 'second thoughts'
column gets rave reviews
J want to commend the Daily
Pilot for the article that I read
regarding the second thoughts
about the proposed building for
the space next to the library. I
think 1t is absolutely wonderful
that a newspaper would say,
"We should look into this fur-
ther."
That is beautiful and makes
me have trust dlld faith in man
again. 1 redUy think it's just won-
derful that the paper has the
cowage to do this. Jt has to be
looked into and the whole c:Ys-
cui.s1on Vlewed from mdlly cW-
f erent angles. I am delighted •
that this 1s being looked into :
Hurray for our newspdper. Hur-:
ray for having courage. •
BARBARA KLINE
Newport Beach
• "'!lext yedr The chstnct prom1s-
es ~he school wlll be stdle of
the drl, dOd much o( the mon-
Grant Garrett sports hJs heart nametag In his Kindergarten class at ~astblufi Elementary.
imagine, the swnmer of
2000 It's warm. The water's
clean And instead of crawling
dround for 1 S minutes or half
an hour looking for parking,
you find a spot m five minutes
or less. Maybe it won't happen
quite that quickly. but some
unprovements need to be
made, and it's good to see the
council getting ready to do so.
I want to commend Tony
Dodero for wnbng tJus column
on the proposed art center dnd
auditorium in Newport Bedch
behmd the library. I'm glad that
he wcis able to see another side'
to the whole l5sue. • ey will come from the lrvmP
Co. The sedrch for ti pnnc1pal • could begin as early dS January I-plenty of time to mdke sure I GETTING PAST WORDS
the school is ready to go when Tho war of words between
its doors finally open racho P,ersonality Dr. Laura
Schlcssinger and Bcoch Access
owner Thomas Moore contin-
ues. Alter Schlessinqer hled
I
ADELE MANN
Newport Beach . ... • -. .. . .
Countcrinitiative article
was speculative
I do not undt•,...,tdnd whv column spdo~
IS WdSlt-d Oil 'rJWC Wdtion, ( • Auport roe ...
humn9 ovN possible new uul.Jdl.lve"
Sept. 8} • Po:.!.1 hlE• • new irulial.lv<> i.dys 1t
clll lnstPdd of rt•1>0rtmg on spt1culdllve
matter... wh} not cl«>vote dll enllre issue of
U1e Pilot lo lhc Safl• dild I ledlth} Com
mumties mcdsure thdt will acludU} he on
the ballot m NovPrnl.wr(
Cdn we hedf whttt the pros and con.,
are regarding the> nll'd'>Ure' I low dhoul
interviewing lh<' c1uthor of the rnedsure,
dnd then mtervwwmg the per.on thdt
will bE> wntmy th£> ll'buttal7
ThPn for qood rnt•d<,ure, ('>me e this 1s
our communtl) pt1pl'rl. ml<'TVH'\\ some-
one from thP Ll'ague of Women Votf'rs,
as to why theu orgaruzt1t10n cdnw out
agdmst the m+>d..,ure? Fdcls, please• 1
ANNWATI
~antd Ana Heigh~
Cox should see El Toro
airport is needed
Reprei.entaUvp ( hris Cox (R-Newport
Beach) 1.S all over the map on the El Toro
dll'pOrt issue He's certmnly out of tunE>
with the maJonty of voters m O rdnge
County He goes on rerord to back t»e
antiairport uutiatJve. I le upholds the
n&row vtews of a group of social, puhhc
artlvi.sts who df£> spPndinq dn exception
~.amount of tune, money and energy on
anticipated outcomes as opposed to
. ecving the best interests of all the !)('O-
p)e of Orange County. Ht> 1s takmg an
Alftibusme~ stand. He and tus support-
91'} are on a •no-growth• track and are
h'aaded toward turmng Otange County
!IJlO a suburb of Chautauqua.
Rep Cox, SupNvii.ors !Tom] Wil on
and [Todd) Spttz~r JUSt <dnnot !>Ce the
value and cnhrnl net!d for a more ade-
quate airport m Orange f'ounty and are
wanbng to lead Orange County down a
dangerou path of NIMRY1sm.
But I believe the ma1onty of the peo-
pie of Ord.Oge ColUlty, when push comes
to shove. will not tall ror 1t, nor will they
be blindly Jed to self-destruct1on.
l believe the ma1onty of the peoplP. m
Ordilge County understdnd that ~-ience
dnd technology 1.s bursltng out all over the
world. They dd not want to depnve U1E'm-
selves of partinp<tb.ng. They ft•d -.trongly
that air transportdllon at El Toro 1s
extreme!} cnbCd.l lo Orange C'Olu1ty's
healthy econonut yrowth dllcl PSfx•c1dlly
needs to be linked compPIJhvcly with the
global mdfkel pldn• They bt•lww thic;
lx>cause Uus means growmg employnumt
opporturuties and p1ospcnty for Lhou-
Sdllds oJ people whose IJvPlihood
depends upon paymq rent .md putting
bread on the tdbte ft'.., 01w thu1q to httv<'
the Ju.xwy of playmy ldwn l>owlmq with
your brne. It's cmothe1 thing to put kids
Uuough schoob and colleges. Theu quali-
ty of We de1x•nd!> upon a robu<,t t'Conomy
VICTOR H. JASHINSKI
Corona de! Mar
Readers don't have
sympathy for Or. Laura
It seems to me that Dr. Laurd's crusade
to protect children from unswtahl , matc-
na.l would bepiuch more effcc:ttve iJ 'iho
went after Lhe largest source of unsuit·
able maleridl that children hdve unbrnit·
ed access to every day: TELEVISION.
(Hustler publish<•r.J Ldrry Flynt may
not be the most popular guy, but h • ts
right in his offt>r ot hnancidl ttld to hPlp
Bedcb Access in theu dt•feri...e and ulti-
mately the First Amendment.
MAXINE MACHA
('o,.ta Mesa
Evidently Victona Cubeiro d0< · not
shop because while m the checkout line
we all have lo look ut the Glohc. U1 •
Exanuner and maga7.mes with offen 1v •
matemtls on their cover (•A tin ck On Dr.'
Laura was out of lme, • Sept 14), Doesn't
she think U1at kids who want tu -. Pict)·
boy, etc. will find 1l c;ornchow, somP-
where? Banniny omethmg only mttkl
r-------------·-·-------------~-·---------------------------------, I • ' I ! quoteoftheweek :
I I
I \ "" : f I
MAILBAG
Restaura1zts conie and go, btlt Canne1y memorie. will remain
Recently, me and my wife enjoyed our last dining
-experience at the Cannery Over good food and
a bottle of our favorite wine we talked about many
of the memorable experiences we enjoyed during
our patronage through the past 26 years
For us, the Cannery was a great pla(e to take out-
of ·town guests and gather with relative~ to cele-
brate. The water location, inside ambience, good
food and above all, a wonderful staff that always
knew, and acted like, they were truly in the hospital
ity business and enjoying their profession.
Two occasions come to mind of particular signifi-
cance First. a few years back just prior to Father's Day
LffiEROF
THE WEEK
we apprOd<hed my wife's father
who was bQttling cancer and asked
where he'd like to spend Father's
Day. His Indication wa!I that he did-
n't want to go anywhere, but when
we said let's go to the cannery he said "OK " We sat
outside on a warm June morning an he really enjoyed
being with his family, and in an atmosphere that
• brought back fond memories. Little did we know at
the time that this would be his last restaurant expen·
ence One week later he was no longer with us ..
OON lEACH I DAlY PllOT •
Cannery restaurant owner Bill Hamllton, middle, recalls past
and present times with Merel Coe, left, and Glad}' Brown, as
they look at old photo and tell torle about the landmark
resaurant
A couple of years ago, our Uncle Loren, a South real good time." Dakota wheat farmer m his late 70s, visited and we gath-
ered the family together to celebrate one of his infrequent
California trips. We had a lot of laughs and a great time
together When the check came Loren insisted on picking
up the tab for the 12 of us who enjoyed dinner He looked
at the check and rather dryly said, "Sure is more expensive
than back home, but I gues!I it's worth it because we had a
Restaurants come and go, but few will ever hold the
memories that the Cannery does for us It was much more
than a good place to dine ... it was a great place to enjoy
friends and family. • • •
1l more enticirig. and css for Or Ldurtt, I'll
pa on that ·
LYNN MERLES
Costa Mc <J
Group homes issue
spurs debate
Councilwoman [Linda) JJtxon·~ corn·
mcut that nmghbonng utiei> should "l
t.."'«!Ual}y IC ponsible• rC!JilTdtng group
hom•, seems shallow ( •costa MP " ha
high number of group home , report
them. They just want d place to eat,
le• •p <1nd .pldy bingo. The same with
the d •wlopmPntally disabled. None of
Uwm dnve 01 cause dlcoholic pollubon
L ts get our pnonllc straight.
ANNE HOGAN-SHERESHEVSKY
Costa Mc a
Cell phone antenna has
no plat>e on cross
• [OfTOtt'S NOTE: The following is an Ope!'\ let•
ter to the members of the Lutheran Church In
N wp<>rt Beach,
JOE MYERS •
Corona del Mar "'
mankind and of the great gift o( hiS son,
Jesus, to and for us. The cross represen~ ..
the only hope for mankind in this world
and in th<.> hN •after. You must not prosti-
tute the cross of Je.us Christ by renting out
space above 1t, b<>low 1t or assoaatcd with
it in any way. ll must '-land alone, unal-
tered and WladuJt rated
You, a a congreg4tion, must stand
up to whomever m your leadership •
decided to allow Pac Bell to take a place·
along •de Ute cros and .;top the dama
NOW. Rcaliz you made A very dehnitG
mistake, repent l>efor God and teU Pu~
13ell thPy ctumot hare the ~pace Wlth :
the crosi; ot J u Chrl t our Lord anci
Savior. Tull Pac Bell the cro s of New· •
port 1 t1uoor Lutheran Church ' NOT
FOR SALE! Tho cro must stand ttlon
I "I hav n 't had a drln1< of haid llquor m my Ule
-J'm SouUaem ,,.,,.,. "
ys. • Sept. 1-4}. Challen91• other c1h !S
to tcp up to the plate, then do what 1t
tak to ensure that such let< 11lt1t'!S iU •
properlylegulated to prov1d a al htu·
hor for residents and nct~hbors <ihke
Enforcement of uxisunu t<x1 nttt} w1-.11
do the trick And tt!mcrubei 'ti hott r to
love thy neighbor than to hun them
l rec nUy re<1d th • art1de m the Dcidy
1ifio1 r~ardinq th~ msta.llabon of a P<t<:• Rell
tmh•rma along ide or within tht• stru<.'turo
oJ th oo s thut i1doms your churrh ("Thk-mu cell pho11 to 6 higher level," Aug a e sacred ymbol for hnstuuts in the
Jcx:al <:ommunlty ll!I well as tor Chnc;ua4s au over tht• world, You hove tho Op}Xlr-:
tunny to oorrrct ft grnv • nor in Jlldg·
moot befor It l too late. c orrcct your :
mistake, deal JUtiUy with th who •
mad thi5 mistake and re tor th cr
I
I I I I I I
I I I I
I
I
I I I I ' ~·----------..... ----
AMY LITTON
• ·o ta Me a
The Costn Mc ll City ounciJ is con·
c.wned bout group hom w1U1ln city
llmits Why bunch drug and elcoh<>Uc
n>JlabWtaUon centers with nior rd
(llld care hom ? lb a mors don t
drive don't 1use dtunken behtvl
even bother young t nt living near
31 J Tht• nrt1de 1 eported that your c:hwch
h d M:lded to rent the top SJ><t • o1 th
c oss to the telet>hon company.
top tight then1,
Stop and rnfloot upon what the Cf'O!lS
mean The <.T055 reminds us Uictt C.od sent
U!I the promi9ed m h, J us Christ, who
pold Uw penalty for your sin5 and my Ufii
with hi! YP.r) life by dYihg on a It ii
lhe MCi'ed symbol Of "Ood'1 greet &ewe ..
to i sol and rightful place of honor
atoJ> of your church
•
.tDaily Pilot Saiurdoy, s.p.rnbet 1 a, 1999 At
•
end IO fu ia die ..,
Newpolt 8eada n.._.
ever to be the ~al
M~•1 Law, wldda
Nfl\liNI ......... to ...
DOtifted when ._
THE CRUMMEL FILE YOLUITIEI DlllCTOIY
"'!1 ... cw get to yoU
.... wblle.'!
Cnammel'• .n>c>llUDAle
..... partner-iD-atme, foi'·
--~Burnell GardaD Porgey, 82, pJaad·
9d guilty to ftv8 counts of cnf mpUJation ln July.
Polg.,y WU sentenced
to lime already terved -
about two years -and ta
DOW .living confined to a
-'-k:hair.
Prom 8ecember 1994
to June 1995, Crummel
and Porgey, who have
known each other since
tbe 1910., driagged and
then molested a Costa
Mela resident. wbo was
then 16 and h patient of
Porgey's at New Alterna-
tives, a Costa Mesa group
hoDie for troubled adoles-
cents.
The man later won a
civil suit against Forgey
and Crummel.
Crummel was the first,
offenden JDO¥e Into the
area.
When nef9hbon
learned in 1997 tbat
Crummel WU Jiving wMb
Porgey i;ll a Newport cr.t
condominium, they
responded with a fury of
protest and pickatlng.
When Cn•mmel
refused to move, Daigh·
bors also picketed
Porgey's office.
Carolyn Rooey, a New-
port Crest resident who
spearheaded the prOtelta,
believes the picketers'
efforts led poUce to start
inv~tigating Forgey and
Crwnmel.
•That's when they
found him, when ~e start-
ed picketing his office,•
she said. •rm just glad it's
finally over. Thank the
lord ... and boy, another
sex offender better not try
to move in here."
...... ..,.., ,. .... .., ... .
-....... -#Ill ...... .,., ... ., ......... ,...,...
•JP. .......... ,,, ..... _Dlllpp11 9d
, ....... ~6.....e-llvlng on
............ -. ind Ml beer1 ........................ c... a v.go. .. of_ANNlm HUii-~
ttl1 ............. lnthe
RMdt ... of l'arnaN. Ctummel
-............. time but ..... "" alibi. The murder Ml ~ etttlbut8d to I ~
kHler who hei llnce b9er'I execut9d. but
PomoM polQ ~be reopening the CISe.
• ~ lrott8r, 13, of CGltl Mell -Dit-
ippfft9d 1979. He INS found deld by
Crummef t t ,..s i.w. Crummef d1ims he w• hieing if\ aev.lanli NltioMI Forest
when he CMM ICJ'Oll chlrred. frlgmented
hUlnln bones. Just lllt Yff", the bones were
ldetttlfled • Jlmey's. Authorltiel Slid ~t in
1979 Crummel lived 1bout a mile from
where James dhlppHred.
Crummel Mio Ms been ln'ested or tried
fof' the following:
• 1962 -Whfle In the milltafy, he was con-
victed of committing lewd Kts on two bOys
~ 1 gtrl and sentenCed to four yeMS in
LelWftWOf'th.
• 1967 -COnvicted of kidnapping and
molesting a teenage boy In Los Angetes
County. Eight months later, he was convicted
NEWPORT ·COASTAL PODIATRY GROUP, INC.
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Dr. Vihmen can help relieve pain-through nonsurgical methOd .
• Bunion correction-No hospitalization • Ingrown toenails
• New treatment for fungus nails • Specializing in the treatment of
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Or. Vihincn utilii.c~ computerized gait analysis to help eva102tc and diagnose di orders
of the lowei-extremities.
I· n ·t· I imih'd l11i1ial I '·""
Preferred provider for mosr insurances including Medicare
307 Placentia, Ste. 207, Newport Beach
24 Hour Emergency Care 949-645-6544
We are the authorized dealer for
[\I\ l [ .(. . ! l .. \ l J. ~ , .<
.. ' . .
Lowest Prices Guaranteed
of __ ,.,..,.,.., Ind Nlf1¥eted -.uft
........ WoU"9 bar. .. tifne In Whton-
.. ~hew• •arad to four ,..,s.
• 111J -Crutnmel WM Kqui~ of
cNfges ~the~ I CoSU Mesa boy
at 1 ftllloween .,.ny. Howtver, he w.s sen·
Wad to 200 dayt In jlfl for falling to regfs·
ter M I sex offender,
• 1983 -Tried for the 1967 murder of a
Pima County, Ariz., boy, but the judge over·
turned a conviction ~ordered a new trial
saying his defense hid not been· properly
conducted. He then p!Nded guilty to a leu·
er charge of kidnapping.
• Allegedly dlscOYerS body of Trotter, who
disappeared In 1979, while hiking In San
Bernardino County.
• 1995 -Arrested 1n connection with
molestation of three under• bOys in Big
Bear in 1987-88. Released due to statute of
limitations Issue.
• 1997 -Arrested again in connection with
molestation of under• boys in Big Sear due
to statue of limitations modification.
• 1998 -Convicted In July on two counts
of oral copulation In Big Bear case. Sen· •
tenced In August to 10 years in prison.
• 1999 -Convicted of 10 counts of oral
copulation for crimes committed with Bur·
nell Gordon Forgey at Forgey's Newport
Beach condominium. •
• y<>UJ~Elt DIRECTORY runs peri·
odic.ally 1n the Daily Pilot If you'd hke
information on getting your organl~·
tlon listed, call (949) 574-4228.
ALS ASSN., ORANGE COUNTY
Of APTER
Tue Amyotrophic Lateral Scle-
rosis Assn., Orange County
Chapter, needs many volun-
teers. For information, call the
cbaptei office at (714) 375-1922.
ALZHEIMER'S ASSN. OF
ORANGE COUNTY
Helpline assistants and group
leaders needed. Thaining ses-
Sions are .available. For more
information, call (714) 283-1111.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
The Orange County Region of
the American Cancer SOClety
seeks office volunteers. The soci-
ety is also seelong volunteers to
an~er calls for the unit's
Helpline InfoCenter. For more
information, call (949) 261-9446.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
DISCOVERY SHOP
The American Cancer Society
Discovery Shop needs volun-
teers from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Saturday at
2600 E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar. For more information,
call (949) 640-4777 , •
If AMERICAN CANaR soaETY·
ROAD TO RECOVERY 1•,.
This transportation program
needs volunteers to drive cancer
patients to and from medical
treatments free of charge: The
requir~mmibnent is a few
hours ea"bh week or.month. Dn-
vers need a valid driver's
license and insurance, and must
be at least 25 years old. Volun-
teers may use either their own
vehicles or Amencan Cancer
Society vans. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 261-9446 or send
e·mail to scomer@cancer.org.
AMERICAN HEART ASSN.
The American Heart Assn. is
looking for volunteers to per-
form vanous general office
duties m the main office and
implement educational and
fund-raising events through
Orange County. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 856-3555.
In All Of Southern Callfomlat
..-...o-~( tUltiB92~)
DISCOVER Family o~Md and
•MICm COUSTY operated for
2 0 0 0 3 generation. arnl into the
next mUlenium
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Jlll:IDI( . . . Tltl ClowD WHllND WANDllER
TOYS TOYS TOYS • Toy fanatijJ will meet for the Ultl!Nte Toy and Collectlt>aes'
Expo thit ~kend at the Orange County Fairgrounds. On
hand WI~ t>e the hottest In new and desired toys. Including
Pokemon, Beanie Babies and more. Jim liefney of Halley's
Comics Is I n exhibitor at the expo.
B.W. Cook takes us on • Y«lt.M>le
social adwnture In this week's The
Crowd. From fund-ratSefl to soirees
honoring Women of Oistinct!Ot1.
Cook explores all that's good In the
Newport-Mesa c.ommUll_lty.
Sff p..,_as See P-e-86
..
• Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223
E gle intercept four passes and
turn:'away several Llon drives deep
in own territory to stay unbeaten.
I
WESTMINSTER -The Estancia High
defense may •nex, • but, as it proved in an
imJ1ressive 20-7 nonleague football triumph
Friday at Wesbnlnster High, the Eagles are
far/less likely to break this fall.
)Estancia intercepted All-Golden West
Lqague quarterback Kelly Coburn four
times, including two in the end zone and
another at its own 2-yard line, to help come
within 124 seconds of becoming only the
second team in school history to open the
season with back-to-back shutouts.
Westminster capped a six-play, 35-yard
touchdown drive after· an 8-yard punt to
finally de.nt the scoreboard with 2:04 left in
the game. But not bef orc the Eagles stuffed
Uon ballcarrters short of the goal _line twice
after first-and-goal at the 6.
·we're playing defense,· said Estancia
second-year coach Dave Perkins, who saw
his Eagles surrender 318 points in 10 games
last fall, fourth-most 111 Orange County.
This season, howevel) veteran assistant
Bob BrOckie, who has worked with Perkins
previously but is in h1s first year at Estancia,
has installed the flex scheme and bas his
charges executing and believing.
•Bob has the kids in \he right place at the
right time and they've really bought into
what he's asked them to do," Perkins said.
•rm real thankful to have (Brockie)." .
Coburn, a senior, will be thankful not to
HIGH SotoOL F0018AU.
+Corona del Mar falls short. 18-0/83.
•Sailors reflect on Thursday's 21 -21 tle/83.
• Mustangs sitting pretty after 47--0 wir\183.
see secondary standouts Marshall Hen-
d.Jicks (two 111terceptions to double his sea-
son .total), Andy Romo (one interception),
Freddy Rodriguez (several passes broken
up), and linebacker Fahad Jfthid, among
others, this fall.
Jahld, who was also unprcssive al full-
back, dropped 111 coverage to collect the first
pick of the game on the Lions' first posses-
sion. He returned it 20 yards to the West-
minster 39 and the Eagles (2-0) were rolling.
Jahid then capped the eight-play march
'with a 1-yard plunge up the middle and the
first of two John Alderete conversion kicks
. High'• Estancia
Manhall
Hendricks (2)
picks up k ey
yardage as he
evades the threat
of WestmlJister
defender Vincent
Laurel (29) ln
Friday night's
nonleague
football game.
The Eagles
stunned the
favored Uons
with 20. first-hall
points and went
on to record a .
20-7 victory to
Improve to 2-0.
STEVE MCCRANK
I DAILY PILOT
I •
gave the visitors a 7-0 lead with 3:41 left in
the first quarter.
Westminster drove to the Estancia 9 with
the ensuing kickoff, but a dropped pass m
the end zone on fourth down gave the
Eagles possession and they went 91 yards on
14 plays. ·
Hendricks highlighted the drive, which
sapped nearly seven mlnutes from the clock,
with runs of 14 and 13 yards. He also also
caught a quick slant pass from Kenny Val-
buena and raced 29 yards up the middle.
Jeremy Valdes, rotating at quarterback
with Valbuena, found the end zone on a 3-
yard bootleg with 5:19 left in the half and
Estanda's opporturustic defense came up
big on Westminster's first subsequent snap.
Linebacker Cesar Romero recovered a
fumble at Westminster's 21 and Hendricks
took JUSt one play to cash it in, sprinting
around left end for a 20-point cushion.
Hendricks fmi.shed with 74 yards on 12
carries to give him 217 all-purpose yards,
while Jahid added 58 rushing yards on 13
attempts. .
Tb.is one, however, was not about offense
for the Eagles, who limited Coburn to 12
completions in 34 attempts.
•we could have had a couple more inter-
ceptions,• Perkins said of several Coburn
offerings dropped by his defensive backs.
Josh Veach and Ivan Garcia each had
sacks for the wmners, who also received fine
defens1ve play from Matt Mueller, Kyle
Westman, David Rodriguez, Sean Freeman
and Alderete, among others.
•we're trying to get a little better each
week,• Perkins said. •we got better this
week and we'll see what happens (Friday at
Garden Grove)."
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOO ~
ATHLETE OF IHE WEEK
•Corona del Mar newcomer has
already made·a big impression
RARR'I FAUlMl:R
!kif Pb
Tiough her te nnis resume includes
epeated top· 10 fintshe in
national 1un1or tournaments,
Anne Yelsey entered Corona dcl Mar
I Ug h this fall as an unproven freshman.
So. while her on·rourt re~oire
includes the type of shot-makihg skills
coaches covet, intimidation was also
expected to be part of the picture every
time she um:lpped her racket cover.
A little more than on week and ii:
t vldorlel into her career, however, lt
hu become clear that fear of the
CompetWon alreedy resides on the
SEE VELSEY Mal M
Take a trip into the a r as reporter
NOM Glazer goes para-sailing
atop~ Harbor.
See PAGE 87
QUOTE Of THE DAY
•Absolutely ... {any Sailor) who feels good rifrt now,
needs to reevaluate what 1hey're al about .. :
Jeff Brinkley, Newport Harbor football c.oach
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
Orange Coast • • ,. .. A man for all seasons, his hand has touched more
victories and accomplishments than can be counted.· ·
RrOWID Dul\'N
Y ou wouldn't find
him dancing in the
end zone or pitching
last-inning miracles, but Leon
Skeie has collected more saves
than any athlete at Orange Coast
College.
Skeie, whose name became
synonymous With OCC athletics
in 1973, would get more
high-fives than the top home
run bitter, more office Visitors
than any coach on campus.
Wh~n JOIDts and muscles got
sore, and ankles needed to be
taped and arms required iang,
OCC athletes relied on
Skeie to mend them.
Those who never
had a sports medicine
class seemed to learn
as much, or more,
about the art of
training-room etiquette
than they did in theJ.T
r~ar classes.
A friend to every
visitor, Ske1e healed
wounds, fixed aching
All-Amencan halfback Dan ""• ..
Duod.Jidge (Costa Mesa High)
"Thanks for the 1,000-yard ••
season,• it reads · •
When former U.S. Olympic
volleyball gold medalist Steve. •
Timmons spgke at the !
Comnussion On Athletics H~ •••
of Fame once. he saw Skeie in•
the crowd and acknowledged•··
lum, saying •1 still use his stuff .. •
and techniques."
r While teclmology bas
advanced, the world of sports ..,,.
medicine has kept its foundatiOO
of ice, heat and ultrasound iota¢
The best remedies of the late ,
1950s are still the best in the l ..
90s. ·u hasn't chang
a lot,• sa.id S~e. w •
started a health dull:
for women in 1983, •
operating it for nine •
years. and added a
second (coed) facility •
10 1988 called the •
Cahforma Coast Club,•
which has since been•,.
sold.
"There weren't a
bodies and promoted Leon Skete
good nutrition, weight
of health clubs to ~t.y\ •
off with when we ~
a new venture in thet ...
training and fitness.
•It's been really fun to see
some of these kids, though
they're not kids anymore, in your
Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame
(to celebrate the millennium),
because I've taken care of so
many of them,• said Ske1e, the
latest edition to the locals-only
Hall of Fame.
Skeie, the Pirates' head
trainer for 12 years from 1973 to
1984, was voted the Commuruty
College nainer of the Year m
1980 and '84, and named the
nation's top first-year strength
coach by the National Teachers
Hall of Fa.me in 1974.
In bis 27th year as an OCC
physical education professor,
Skeie is director of the school's
Fitness Specialist Certification
Program, which was launched m
1980 as the first in the country.
Today, there are about 180 •
students in the program.
Skeie, whose open-door
policy made ttte OCC Sports
Medicine Center one of tho most
attractlve features on carnpu for
student-athletes, turned down
everal offers from prof~ 1onal
sports teams 111 the early-and
mid-80s to remain at OCC.
•1t was an unport4.nt time m
my life when tho e offers came,·
Skeie said, •but I would always
have this dream that I took
another job and hated 1t, and
when I'd call Wendell Picken to
see U I cou1d get my old job
back, because l didn't like this
job with the· pro team, h 'd
always say, ·sony, we lllreody
hired someone el .' Th n I'd
w~ke up m a cold sw t and
wish l was there with the
tudents.•
Skeie. who lov t <'hin~ and
de veloped a pecial bond Wllh
OCC's athletes when h served
as heed trainer, sWI oversees the
Sports Medk:ln Department.
• whlch has beeom ·one of th
ftMSt fadlities on any campus ln
the nation. and Ex nee
Lab, which teerur..
Ne.of ·the-art equlpnlenl
But wbet k~ Skeie at OCC we l*'Ple, .
Par GampM, dailre'I • ~ .....,. nm 1971 JC
early 1980s," be sai~
Skeie, a native of Ames, Iowr,r:
graduated from Iowa State, • •
where he played football and Wl
in love with sports medicine •
when he first saw the school's'°"
enonnous facility. •
·1 thought tramers were o
for horses.• satd Skeie, who
attended a small lugh school
Wllh only 23 in his graduating
class of 1960.
Skeie graduated from Iowa
State m 1967, after servmg tw&,
years in the U.S. Mannes, the
worked as the Cyclones'
a tant athlebc trainer and
strength coach for four years. • •
The author of the flexibility "
book. "Hang Loose and Stay • •
Happy,• Ske1e amved at Cor~
del Mar High as the athletic
tramer in 1972, but lasted onl14 .
one year after )VOrking close!~•
with Sea King football players •
Rhett and Travis Tucker That'
bcC'ause their father, Dick, w
head football coach at Oranget •
Coast, and, when he found out
how much Ske1e helped his soaa~
in the trairung room, Skeie
suddenly became a blue-Chip
recruit for the Pirate$' p~~
•o•ck Tucker just c~~-~ asked me tot ch and tram a'
Orang Coo t, • ~d Sk.eie, who
didn't h itate wh n be realized
what a great opportunity it
·wowd bccom .
• kci and his family !Wlfeted
a nre In 1985, wheD he wa~
consist nUy experiencing
h dach . It was discovered
that Sk • bad a brain tumor and
later h underwent a su<:eessfUl
c-raniotomy. •twas very
fortunate, because the tumor w•
benign and not m the brain. bQ\
behmd 1t, • he said. ·AS 10011 u
they got at out. at was quite •
relief. All the headadMll w..
gon ••
Thtwe days, Skaie 11 going
strong and ts one of OCC'a Ii
beloved lnelWktuU.
He Uv,. In COIODA dlil Ms
wtth hll wife ol 36 ,...._a.ii .. =wtwoMa-• .. a. ....... ~t'=:. "'°.-•••' ......... f~r~ saa.,..st1 ••
•
I' ..
•
. . . .
·.
-
. . . ..
The Futitre is Now.
Go fOr it! .
,
''~J~E::;a.ct, ... 1.· ... ~··
MISSION VIE J 0
The future is now. What's next ... ?
t
1
28400 MARGUE RITE PARKWAY, 5 FREEWAY, AVERY PARKWAY EXIT. TF..t. 949.364.0664 • www.lexu 41e s .com
• • • • •
• l . ,
CJafty Pilot
CH -Frustration
the night Friday,
del Mar's 18-0
loss to Pomona
~ J-lJgh.
hat to say after a
Sea Kings Coa ch
d. "We were very
ense all night. We
ustments, but you
only do the right
e.·
1 yards of total
(,ast downs, Coro-
itayed in the game
defense.
ood job for us, but
there most of the
said ·we need to
istency on the other .
as referring to the
jon, which Pomona
es more of, causing
ens~ to wear down
,
I • I ' SpOrts
1111 SCIOOL fOOlllLL
BRIAN P08UDA I DAILY PILOT
Corona del Mar's Eric Snell returns a kickoff 25 yards as Pomona's Deobick Colemen (24) pursues.
near the end of the game. "They have some talented guys other team that you can advance on
Neither team had a lot of consis-over there," Freeman said . "We their nine-man front," Freeman
tency ,in the first half, producing 84 tried to keep it out of those guys' said.
yards combined. hands, but we couldn't do it and 1t ··u you can't advance, they'll
Leading the way for the Sea came back to haunt us." keep brtngmg nine-man fronts. We
Kings was senior Grant Esldbrook, Schwenke was 10 for 18 for 117 were constantly pressured the
who rushed for 78 yards on 23 ca:-yards and three touchdowns, while <'ntire evening•
ries. Verdon, on top of playing stingy Both ledJTls httd trouble handling
The only points in the hrst haU defense. also caught four passes for the ball, combining for 10 fumbles
for Pomona (2-0) came courtesy of a 5 1 yards, including a 16-yard touch· on·tbe mght, five for each side.
Sea Kings fumble near midfield down early in the fourth quarter "Except they recovered all of
with eight minutes remaining in the that practically iced it for the Red lhetri, • Freeman was quick to point
second quarter, one of two lost furn· Devils out 0 The held doe pick up mo1S-
bles on the nlgbt. ~corona del Mar's best chance to turc dunng night games, but we
The Red Devils' top player, sale· score cume when junior defensive never hdd that kind of trouble
ty Jimmy Verdon recovered the l>ack Charlie Al.shuler interc~pted a before.''
fumble and raced back 47 yards to Schwenke pass and returned it 43 Pomonr1 finished out the scoring
the Sea Kings' 2-yard-line. ydrds to the Red Devils' 17-ycUd on the final drive of the rught when
Three plays later, quarterback line. Schwenke hit wide receiver Kenny
Oscar Schwenke found Hamza However, from there, the Sea Hall with a 13-yard touchdown
Abdullah in the back of the end Kings could not even get a hn.t pass
zone for a 2-yard touchdown pass. down and gave the ball back to HConsistcncy and the> big plays
The kick failed and the Devils led, Pomona are what killed us torughl, • Free-
6-0. HYou have to be able to show the man Sdld.
:.t~......,.._,..a no match for Costa Mesa
Sc:oN by Qullrtws
Costa Mesa 13 20 7 7 • 47
Boise Grande O O O O · O
First Qullrt.r
CM -Zuniga 29 run (Avalos kkk), 9:12.
CM . zun1c =ed>. 1:26.
CM • Ferryman 12 pass from Weir
(Avalos. kick), 11 :03.
CM • Franco 8 pass from Weir (kick
blocked), 7:44.
CM • Fenym~ 32 pass from Weir
(Avalos kick). 1.42.
11tlnl Qu#ter
CM -Grubisich 1 run (Avalos kick). 5:34.
Fowth~ CM -Day 19 pass from Hulllger
(Avalos kick), 10;01.
Attendance; 400 (estimated).
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
CM -Zuniga, 12·118, 2 TDs; Grubls1ch,
7·69, 1 TO; Stewart, 5-23; Weir, 4-22;
Hulliger, 1-mlnus·1; Nguyen. 2-minus·2.
9G -Pineda. 7·33; Rodnguei. 14-20;
But, 4-19.
tNOMOUAL MSSING
CM · Weir, 7·13·2, 127, 3 TOs:
Hulliger, 1·3-0, 19 yards. 1 TO.
IG ·Guadarrama. 141, 3; Orozco,
2 8-0, 8.
INDMDUAL MCIMNG
CM -Ferrymtn, 4 72, l TOs: Oay, 2.:n.
t TO; Martinez. 1-33; Franco, 1-f.
IG ·~re, 1·9j Bui, 1·3; o.
Rodriguez, 1 minus· l · GAMI STAnsna
CM llG
First doWN 12 6
Rinh&yardage 31 229 23·72
PMSing ~rdage 146 i 1
PesSing 8 16-2 3·12·2 ~ twturn y~• 49 46 =~ l,: 7 -~~
Punts 2·33 s.28 4 ~fumblei Ion 2 1 1-0 F~~ MS 2·20
Tlf'rie of PoMwhn 233, 26 29
if\n,...., lllll!l'Qif)tb' ~ rtUT'&
was 7 for 13 for 127 yards and three
second-quarter touchdowns, two to
6-3 S)1aun Ferryman and one to 6-0
Willy Franco. .
"Dave has been really passing
the ball well for us as of late,• How-
e ll said.
The Mustangs' special teams,
led by Ferryman's two blocked
punts, kept Costa Mesa in Matador
territory for most or the game.
The first of Ferryman's blocks
gave Mesa its first possession inside
Bolsa Grande's 40-yard line.
Four plays later, running back
C.J. Zuruga scored his fU'St of two
touchdowns on a 29-yard dash
5cof'e by Quatten
Estancia 7 13 0 O -20
Westminster 0 0 0 7 • 7
First Quart.r
Est -Jahld 1 run (Alderete kick), 3:41 .
s.cond Quarter
Est -Valdes 3 run (Alderete kick),
5:19.
Est -Hendricks 21 run (kick failed),
4:59.
Fourth Quarter
West -Chamberlain 2 run
(P. Jentdns Kick), 2·04.
Attendance: 900 (estimated)
INOMDUAL RUSHING
Esta -Hendricks, 12·74, 1 TO,
Jahid, 13-58. 1 TO; Mueller, 8-34,
FrMman, 5-26; Valdes, 4-minus.-5, 1 TO;
K. valbuena, 2-minus-S.
West -Laure~ 8-45; Maldon..00, 4-43;
CNmbertaln, 6-36, t TD;
J. Jenkins, 5-21; Coburn, 3 min~
INOMOUAL MSSING
Est . K. Valbuena, 3·9-0. SO,
Valdes, 0.1-0, 0. w.t ·Coburn, 12·34-4, 209
INOMOUAL MaMNG
1st • Hendricks, 1 ·29; Romo. 1-15;
Freem.n, 1.0. w.t ·laurel, 5•111; Hollins, 2·37,
P. Jenkins. 2·31; Slof91e, 2·19;
Colunga, 1-11 .
GAME STATISTICS
l9t w.t
First downs t 3 17
"~•rdage 43 187 2~144
P•lng yardage SO 209
Pnslng 3 1~ 12·*4
Net rl'tUrn yardage• 31 12 sac~~ard.t.ge ' 5 2 .,
Net yttdaQe 265 m
Punts 6-21 2·31 5
fumbles fumbles lost , .0 2 1
Flags-Mt ytrdtge M5 .. ,, Tlme6f~ 31:11 16:49
•Punt rttumt, lnterceptlc>ns. furnt*
retuml
through the Matadors'
defense
ll got worse for the
Matadors (0-2), on their
next punt attempt, as Fer-
ryman again came up the
middle and '>ent the ball
backwards.
The seruor showed why
h e was an All-Pacific
Coast League standout
Leading the defensive
bdrrage wa outs1de line-
bdcker Todd Duddndge·
w1th two bone-crushing
sacks against 5-5 quarter-
back Alex Guadarrama.
Costa M a put the
game out of reach in the
second quarter.
Starting in Bolsa
last season, recovering his Ferryman
block and taking the ball
Grande temtory every
po&l>Clli on of the quarter,
thP. Mustang!> shortened ·
to the 1-yard line, before
finally being topped.
Zuniga slammed 1t in on the fust
play from scnmrnagc, giving the
Mustangs control of the game with-
in the fin;t four minutes. 1-Je finished
with 118 yards on only 12 carries.
·Despite dctually controlling the
ball longer than the Mustangs, Bol-
a Grande did little with the time as
Mesd continued to apply constant
pressurP to the Matadors
In fact, 14 of Mesa's tackles
occurred behmd Bolsa's line of
scrimmage, including seven sacks.
·we have an aggressive, attack-
ing-type of defense,• Howell said.
·we really picked it up torught."
the held and took advan-
tage wtth Weir's thret~ touchdown
passes.
With "a 33-0 lead at halftime,
Mesa, once again, used its size,
Wtth 260-pound fullback Antony
Grubisich, wbo rushed for 69 yards
on seven Cdrries, includmg a 1-yard
touchdown run in lhe third quarter
Mesa closed out the conng on
its flJ'St posse.'>sion of tPe fourth
quarter <ts backup q uarterback
Pathck Hulliger threw a 19-yard
touchdown J>il c; to Louis Day.
A much tougher test aw&ts the
Mustangs on Fnday night at 7
. when they travel to Westmmster
High to take on the Lions.
£"1.orona
"-.;'del Mar's
Taumata
Grey (45),
Nick
Pro sei (56)
and Scott
Blgg (59)
get bunched
up looklD9
tor the loo!te
ball (below):
Harbor'
Mikel\Jnney
(below, left)
and Andy
~ Langsdorf
j (85) put the
~clamps on
Marina
fullback Ray
Mletklewtcz
~on a short
i galn. .
Soturdoy, s.p.mber 1 e, 1 m Bl n
Defense deserved
a far better fate
• Whopping 17 flags, costly turnovers, leave Newport
Harbor frustrated with the 21-21 standoff with Marina.
BARRY F'AULKN£R
~Plot
WESTMINSTER -When New-
port Harbor High tootball coach
Jeff Brinkley said he'd like to see
the Sailors clean up some first·
game sloppiness, heading into their
second nonleague game Thursday
against .Marina. he didn't exactly
hdve laundry in mind
But laundry, of the yellow penal-
ty flag variety, is what Brinkley and
his team saw a clock-stopping 17
tunes to he lp re ward the host
Vikings with a 21-21 tie at West-
minster High.
Newport Harbor's charity didn't
stop with tts 141 yards in penalties,
however. The Sailors also fumbled
the ball out or their own end zone
for a second-quarter safety and sur-
ren<lered a 61-yard interception
return to its own 1-yard line, which
led lo a touchdown. The visitors
also had a punt blocked, which set
up a four-play 6-yard touchdown
Hdrive• that g,ave Marina (1-0-1) i1s
only lead, 21-15, with 2:42 left in
the third quarter.
Newport (1-0-1) answered with
.an impressive seven-play 61-yard
procession lo tie the game with
11 :33 left. But the ensuing conver-
sion kick 1ust missed -wide left -
and both teams stumbled through
the rest of the contest without scor-
mg.
Brinkley made no bones about
the fact he considered the tie, his
ftrSt m 14 seasons at the school, a
loss
·Absolutely," he said when
posed the quesboo "(Any Sailor)
who feels good right now, needs lo
reevaluate what they're all about:
Brin.kley was not pleased with
the officiating, which prosecutPd
rune Newport infractions m the fU"St
qu.uter alone, three or which result·
ed in Vtkiog first downs. But he
went out of his way lo steer blame
away from those wearing anything
but Newport blue stripes.
~I thought the (line judge) on our
side was going for a CIF record (for
penalties called)." Brinkley said.
HBut the penalties aren't why we
didn't win tonight. We thtew an
mterception. had a punt blocked
and fumbled the ball out of our end
zone. We set up just about all their
scoring and you can't wm that
way.•
The f'larbor defense easily did
enough to earn the victory, Includ-
ing limiting muscular Manna full·
back Ray Mietkiewicz to 71 yards
on 18 carries. Mielkiewicz, a two-
time All-Sunset League tandout,
had dveraged 121 yards per game
in his distingwshed varsity career.
But. with Sailor rruddle line-
backer Alan Saenz keymg on the 6-
root-l , 235-pound battenng ram
and m eeting him near the line on
most of his veer option dive
attempts, Mietkiew1cz picked up
more than 5 yards just four times.
His longest run was 13 yards, he
was stopped for no gain once, and
pummeled once for a 1-yard loss.
The latter was only the second time
he has been stopped behind the
hne m 40 carries this fall.
Saenz also recovered a
Mletkiewicz fumble at the Sailor 25
to halt a threatening Viking po es-
sion with 3:55 Jett
•we did what we had to do,·
Sc:oNby~
Pomona O 6 O 12 • t8
Corona del Mar 0 0 0 0 • 0
S.c:ond QuM'tw
Pom • Abdullah 2 pas.s from
Schwenke (kick failed), 6:52.
Fowth Qullt'tW
Pom -Verdon, t 6 pass from
Schwenke (pass failed). 10:4S.
Pom • Hall 33 pass from Schwenke
(kick fatled), 0:12.
Attendance: 1.000 (estimated)
INOMDUAL RUSHING
Pom -P. Atkins, 22-'9. Schwenke. 3~
Calderon. 2·9, Hill, 2-0.
CdM • Estabrook. 23-78;
Mute, 6-17.
INDMOUAL MSSING
Pom • SthW'lf"lkt. 10-18-1, 117. 3 Tt>l
CdM ·Moen, 4 ·11-0, 26
N>MDUAL REaMNG "°"' -Caldefon. '2·16; Hall, 3...q, 1 TO, Abdull•h. 1·2. 1 11),
Vefdon, 4-51, 1 TD.
CdM -cooper. 2·10, Sdvulk. 1-19, Hayes. 1·7.
GAIM STAMncs
Pom CA9tt
flnt dawns 10 4
""**~ 2M2 2MS Pnslngy~ 117 26
,.~ 10.18-1 4-11-1
5 -f9tUm y~· 75 4) i Slckl yWdlge ().() 1 -6
Ntitylrdege 274 158
~ 3-)0 ~JU ... ~~ s.o s-.2 i== ~ 2~
I ~ ...... ~-~ .. bMlte ..... .
Brinkley said or containing Mari-
na's No 1 opbon. •puruor quarter...-·
back Beau Bl'Own) made a couple
of runs, but we JUSt put the defense
in a bad ~ibon too often:
Brown broke free on a 36-y
option keep to key Marina's
sconng dove late in the first h
and he scored lWlce after fa.king
Miet.k.Jewicz from the 2 and the 1
after mtennission. The latter came
on fourth.and-goal to make it 21-15
late m the third period.
Nose g\1cud Andy Kalanz
appeared to get a hand on Marina'
ensumg conversion lock attemp
·which went wide left.
It w~ the second botched P
for the hosts. who fatled to conv
after thelC fll'St·hall TD when Br
fielded an errant snap and w
tackled"by Justm Jacobs trying t
scramble dround ngbt end
Manna r.pecial-teams snaf
were a consJStent theme, as
muffed punt recepbon and a rough-
mg-the·kicker penalty helped Har-
bor turn two would-be punts into
stx-nunute-plus scoring processio
capped by Andie Stewart's 1-y
spnnt around the left Side with 3:3
left m the fust ~er.
Chris Bargas toed the PAT.
The Tars then answered th
safety and a su~quent
punt with an e1ght-pJay, 60-yar
drive whlch junior quarterbac
Chru Manderino capped by loftin
a 21-ydrd scoring strike to Bill
Clayton
Andy Rankin ran tor the two
point conversion on the Sailo
trademark swinging gate and th
visitors led, 15-2. with 4·44 left ·
the hall \
Stewart l22 cames for a caree
high 147 yards) and fellow seni
tailback Ryan Brill split the seve
play TD dnve which finalized
score Stewart ran four times for
yards, including the 16-ya.rd ca
per. Brill ca.rri.cd three times for 21
Mandenno, who played all b
three plays of the final three ,.,,,~.r'I"!'•
ters in"relief, threw for 51 yard.,•
including a 14-yard strike to Jaco
(four catches for 47 yards) to giv
the Satlor.. a first down at the M
na 3& wtlh less than 40 secon
remaining.
After three mcompletlons, M •
denno scrambled for 13 yards an
what would have been a fJ.rst do
with five seconds left. But a hold.in
call brought it back and the su.~!f'.:l:
quent fourth-down desperatio~
pass fell mcomplete mside th;:;
Marina 10.
"The only thmg we did was ba
tie with them,· md Manna Coa
Mark Rehling. who bad lost his foUC::
prevtous meetings with Harbor b=
an average 32-11 score. We got J
enough big playr. to stay in the IXIJ'I,• ..
game, even though they dorrunat
us phys1cally. •
Sc:oN by Qullf't9f'S
Newport H~rtx>r 7 8 0 6 · 21
Marina O 8 13 0 · 2 t
First Quarter
NH · Stewart 1 run (Bargas kick), 3:21.
Second Quarter
Mar -Safety, fumble out of bounds
In end zone, 1031.
NH · Clayton 21 pass from Manderino
(Rankin run), 4 44.
Mer • Brown 2 run. (run failed), 1 04.
Third~.
Mar • M1ttklewicz 1 run (Sommerfeld
tckk), 8 so
Mat • Brown 1 M'\ (kick fAtled), 2 42.
~~
NH · Stewart 16 Ml (kicldalled). 11:33.
Attendance 1,200 (estimated).
INDIVIDUAL llUSllWG
NH • Sttwal1. 26-147, 2 ~
Bril~ Ut; Manderino, 3-minus-1;
Gaeta. 1omtnu. ti
Meir · Mtetkiewkz, 18-71, 1 TO;
Brown, 12·51, 2 Tt>s.,; Engleman, 3-19,
Thornton. 2 mifu.11; Rodriguez.
2 m nus-6; 'Ntobef. 1-mtnU5 s
INOMDUAL MSSING
NM · Mandeftno, S·t3 1, St, t TO;
Gaett.) ~. ~1. -.r. erown. 2 6-0, 44 leMDUAL MCB--.... ,__-
Mt -JKobl, .W7; o,yton. 2·26,
2TI>5;1 Craig.1-1;~~ M . --~ t~2l.Scnooitf.1.21 , UMI ltATISnCI .. ...,
First dowfll 17 JJ "~ 37-216 37 117 =~ .. ,~ 2.::
.... l'9tUm ~· 13 74 S«b ,....... 2 -27 , ~
.... ,.,. -2JI ""* Wl.J ~J ~-a.1 1.a =~c:r:, ,~ ~
............ ,, .... t:k--
·-
•
84 Saturday, September 18, 1999
Bragging rights on the line .Fotre puts away
• • Bucs, Saddle back enter J ~ titl
-with t-o m~rlcs tonight. 0 I l ·I I I C 0 11 T ensen 1.0r e
To~YAl lORllJJ ANDREW * DUSTIN
,-
1
' I
i ' ' I
I
4 t
i t l
i
COSTA ME:"" On pdper, 1t MEDLEY . DAVIS
looked like Mt. San Antonio Col-
lege's footbdll team had its way
with Saddleback's group Jdst week.
That's why the gtl.ID~ 1 played on
the field and not on pa pc r On the
held, where it counts, Sat1•lleback
came from behind to ki.,,..., off the
nationally-ranked Mounties on the
road, 26-23.
For Coach Mark Mcelroy, he
became the first GauchQ head
rnach to win hi!> Saddleback coach-
tng debut
Five Mt. SAC turnovers, a Cour-
1mnute olfensJVe explosion and a
'itmgy fourth-quclrter defense pre•
... erved the win for Saddleback,
whlch will duel Orange Coast Col-
lege torugbt at 7 at OC~
Before thdt four-mmute span m
lhe third quarter, Mt SAC was
leadU\g, 15-7, and U\ conlrol of the
game.
All of a !>udden, a 62-yard touch-
down pdSs from backup quarter-
back Adam Hoover to Chris Wein-
rauch. a fumble on the ensuing
kickoff, re~ultmg in an 8-yard TD
from Hoover to Brandon Runk and
d 41-yard interception return for a
touchdown by Chad i larris, and
Sadclleback hdd a 26-15 l<'ad.
f.\fler giving up 20 lhtrd-quarter
T he · 6-3, 245-
pound sopho-
more linebacker
recorded eight
tacl<.Jes (six unas-
sisted), including
a sack. He also
returned a fwnble
30 yards for a fourth-
quarter touchdown. •
points to Mt. SAC and clinging to a
26-23 lead, the Gaucho defense, led
by Harris and linebdcker Tu Ander-
son, kept the Mountie oH the
· scoreboard the entire fourth quarter
to preserve the win.
Despite the win again t Mt SAC,
the Gauchos allowed 437 yards of
total offense, including 263 on the
ground. ·
Iii adclition, SaddJeback was last
in the Mission Conference in pass-
ing offense and passing defense, so
look for the Pirates to try to take
advantage.
Like Saddleback, the defense of
OCC also made the big play when
it was needed and Jared Flint and
the offense showed signs it can take
'T'he 6-0, 205-
.l pound fresh·
man linebacker
had three sacks,
a forced fumble
and eight tack-
les (five unas-
sisted) in the
Pirates' 31-24 win
over Fullerton . •
over a game following the P.irates'
31-24 wm over Fullerton.
Pitdte Coach Mike Tuylor sees
sunilaribes between last week's
game and tonight's game.
• ·1 see this game coming down to
the end, like our game with Fuller-
ton," Taylor said. ••Just like any
game, if we keep our mistakes
down to a minimum and we stay
disciplined against Saddleback 's
Fly-T offense, it should be dose."
Saddleback is coming off a 2-8 sea-
son last year, including an 0-5 mark
against OCC's Mission Conference,
Northern Division.
The Gauchos lead the series, 14-
9, and have played OCC each sea-
son since 1976.
~We have j\JSt made a special out .. of .. state
purchase of 4 2 new 1999 c .. c1~ and
E-Class Sedans, M-Cla&5 SUVs, and
SL Roadsters. This is a great chance
to save on a new '99 before the 2(XX) models arrive.
FLETCHER JONES
M·O·T·O·R·C·A·R·S
N E W P 0 R T D E A C H
3300 Jamboree Roal ~ 800 927 .. 3576 •
, 10AM·6 PM • www.fjmercedu.com
, T
• Pacific Southwest Senior Tennis Championships
continues at Palisades Tennis Club.
BE~!H w ! ~:wT_ -.,-1·1·1-1•sr
port Beach's Vincent Fotre and
John Jensen went head-to-head in
men's 75 singles for the champi·
on.ship ~t the 73rd annual Padfic
Southwest Senior Tennis Champi-
onships Friday, and it was Fotre
pulling out a 7-6, 1-6, 6-0 decision.
Also claiming sin9les crowns
were John Hillebrand, Roger Hing
and Jacques Hunter
Hillebrand, of San Pedro,
claimed a 7~. f>.1 victory.
Fountain Valley's Hing defeated
Saul Snyder, 6-4, 1-6, 6·41 and
Hunter of Orange topped Robert
Stanford of Apple Valley, 6-6, 7-6.
Qu.wterfinah
Men's 40 singles: Nell Levinson def.
Walter Mitchell, 6-1, 6-3; Jay Gardner
def. Thomas Derenze, o-6. 6-3, 6-3;
Matthew Barker def. Dan Cllngo, 7-6, 6-
1; William English won, 6-4, 6-2.
Men's 40 Singles: David Austin def.
Mlchael La~ry. 4-6, 6-3, ~; Kim Vieira
(Newport Beach) won, 6-1, 6-3; Dung
Nguyen def. Robert Delgado, 6-t, 6-3;
Bill McQuald (Costa Mesa) won, 6-1, 6-2.
Men's 50 slngl": Terry Ehlers def.
Paul Mullis, 6-1, 6-2; David Erickson def.
Mike Walters. 6-1, 3-6, 1·5: Dean Corley
def. Vincent Desalvo, 6-2, 6-2; Frank
Zebot def. SttWC!n Barasch, 6-2, 6-1.
Men's 50 singles: Robyn Ray (New-
port Beach) def. Dave Margelith, 6-1, 6-
2; Lance Alloway def. Steve Kasn~r. 6-4,
6-2; Byron Smith def. Jerry DeAinza, 6-2,
6-1; Mike Wojemberghe won, 6-3, 6-0.
Sailors slay pair
NEW--------
p o R T VOLLEYBALL
BEACH -Newport Harbor High's
top-ranked guls volleyball team
swept aside Marina and Thousand
Oaks m pool play of the Dave Mohs
Memorial Volleyball Tournament
Friday, posting 15-6, 15-3, and 15-4,
15-4 conquests, respectively, and
will host Redlands East Valley today
at 8 a.m.
Tournament play continues
today atEdlson High in Huntington
Beach with a match at noon, fol·
lowed by play at approximately
1 :30 and 4 p.m.
lf all goes right for the Sailors,
who were ignited by the perfor-
... mances of Brenda Waterman and
Krista Dill in Friday's victories, Har-
bor wouJd advance to Monday's
title game at Edison at 7:30 p .m.
Rusty Pro-Am
P No E Rw + ,.s .. u"l .. #111111l "'A"'d...-
aEAcH -The seventh annual
Rusty Newport Pro-Am surf contest
continues through Sunday in New-
port Bedcb. Besides Pro-Am com-
petitions in men's and women's
division, the event is also o~n to
elementary. middle and high
school students. There is also an
open division for men and women.
Contests start at 7 a.m. at 54th
Street. Registration ls on a first-
come, first-serve basis. To register,
call the Newport Beach Communi-
ty Services Department at (949)
64-4-3151.
OCC in second place
PALM DESERT -------Orange Coast Col-G 0 L F
lege women's golf
coach Gorcbe Fitzel has his team
four strokes off the pace at the
halfway mark of a seven-team invi-
tational hosted by Cypress College
at Woodhaven Country Oub fol-
lowing Friday's fust 18 holes
The Pirates trail Mt San Anto-
mo College, with Robin Shaft (84),
Jennifer Tu.nzi (85), Jan Cheng (85)
and Gloria Pemesz (88) forming a
tight pack in 106 degree beat and
slightly windy conditions.
CdM drops 10-5 tiff
CORONA DEL
MAR -Foothill Hlgh's P 0 L 0
Knights recorded a 10-
5 nonleamie boys water polo victo-
ry at Corona de! Mar High Friday
afternoon, keyed by four-goal
spurts in the second and fourth
quarter.;.
Garrett Gentry and Ryan Jetton
were CdM's only scorers, Gentry
with three and Jetton with two
goals.
NONLIAGUm
Focmtiu. 10, Cot1oHA oe. MM 5
Foothill 0 4 2 4 • 10
CoroN del Mar 1 2 2 0 -S
CdM ·Gentry 3, Jetton 2. S.ves: Kim 6,
Nethetton 7.
JUMOR VNdlfY
C.oRONA OIL MM 4, foon.&. 2
Foothill 1 1 0 0 • 2
Corona del Mar 1 0 O 3 -4
CdM -Cuyler 4. Saves: Brundage 8.
~
COIM>M oa MM 1J, TUSTWt O
Corona del Mar 5 2 S 1 -13
Tustin 0 O 0 o -0
CdM • Artie Oofr 3, MichHI March 2,
John Mann 3, John Monty 1, ~rcello
Ptntullano 1, Brlln Rfblftt 1. Sitves.
Matt Mfyer 1, All Katten 1, 8eeu
Stockstill :Z •
~
CalioM -. MM 7. trocm..L S
Corona del Mar 3 t t 2 • 7
FoothtU O 1 2 2 • 5
CM • MMcello Pantu11.no 3, MMtt
Marett l, ~ iMtMngef 1, J6hn
Monty 1, Mte OOn' 1. Saws CdM, 5
Ill
fedCqtaday
STANPORD .__ ~
Beach's Undley 'OaYeDPOrt rankec1 No. 2 in the world
md the raiGning quem ol
Wlmbledoa. leadi tbe umtecl
.st.tel women's teams team
i:D tbe 1999 Workl Group
Pinal -aainlt Russia today at
Stanford University.
Venus Williams gets 1l
started at 1 p.m. against Rus-
sia's Elena Ukbovtseva, and
Davenport follows it up with
a match with Elena Demen-
tieva..
Sunday's play finds Dav·
enport going against
Lik.hovtseva, and Venus
Williams will follow with a
duel with Oementieva.
Doubles wraps it up on
Sunday, with Serena and
Venus Williams up against
Dementieva a nd Elena
Makarova.
Coast men fall. 2-1
COSTA ME·
SA -Palomar S 0 C C E R
College withstood a strong second-
half rally by Orange Coast to win
on the road, 2-1, in nonconference
men's soccer Fnday.
The Comets (4-0-1) remain
unbeaten, while Coa!>t falls to 1-8-
2.
After Palomar took a 2-0 lead
early in the second half, OCC lost
goalkeeper Carlos Loza to a shouJ-
der injujry. but the Pirates but
played inspired soccer the balance
of the game
Striker Geno Vitale-Saososi
filled in at goalie and made two
saves, and his replacement at for-
ward, Arrash Saidi, scored a goal in
the 73rd minute.
Eagles score, 13-11
ANAHEIM
Estancia High's Brett P 0 L 0
Hellmich scored all three of the
Eagles' goals in double overtime
Friday at Loara High, lifting
Estanda's boys water polo team to
its first win of the season in three
starts, 13-11 •
All of Estancia's starters shared
in the scoring column and D.J .
Glacy backed them up with seven
saves out of the net.
Hellmich led the WdY with five
goals, and Phillip Westfall ch1pped
in with three scores.
NONLEAGUE
ESTANOA 13, LOMA 11
Estancia 4 1 4 3 2 1 -13
Loara 3 1 2 4 1 0 -11
Estancia -Hellmich 5, Westfall 3,
Collier 21 Thorpe 1, FGerner 1, C. Glacy
1. Saves: OJ. Glacy 7.
OCC women fall, 2-1
C 0 S T A -------MESA S 0 CC ER
Orange Coast
struck first with a goal by Lindsay
Myers in. the 33rd mumte, but visit-
ing Palomar responded with two
second-half goals to pull out a 2-1
nooconference woemn's soccer
decisioq Friday.
Amanda Bell had seven saves
for the Pirates, who fell to 2-5-1
overall. Palomar improved to 5-0.
OCC falls in four S A N ._ _____ __
MARCOS Y 0 L L IE Y I A L l
-Orange
Coast fell in four gamei. at Palomar
in nonconferencc women's volley-
ball Friday, 15-9, 15-7, 6-15, 15-10,
to drop to 1-2 overall Palomar
improved to 3-0.
The Pirates were led by Beth
Waterman's 19 kills and Missy
Jameson's 32 assists. a
SATURDAY SCHEDULE
• footb911
Community college • s..ddftback It Orange
Coast. 7 p.m.
• 00. QMlntry
Coti.ge men and WOmM ·Vanguard
Univenity It Arttc lnvlt1tl0fl8l S.tt>o. Pirie,
Sin Diego, 8 a.m.
Community coflq men 1nd women·
Orange Com C<>Nege 1t Orange Empire
Confef91let Pr~icw It llVI~ Park. 10 I m
High school boyt and g•rls ·Cost.I Mese,
N.wpott Harbor It Woodbfidge tnvrtat1onal,
8 1 m.; Corona del Mir at Sonof1 lnviUtk>n-11, 81.m.
• Wllltwpolo
Commun!ty c.ollege !Mn -Or&nge Coan at Cuesta Tcx.1mament. all dly
High IChool boys• Newpoh Harbof
at CorOMdo, 10 am~ ccm. M$ ¥S MarlN
at Ntwport Hafbor. 6 p.m
• SOCICIW
Cpllege men -The M1sten at Vanguard
Unlwntty, 7 f m. ...... .,....
Community <bllege WO~• Or~
Coast at SoUthWeltern, 1 p m
High Khool g1rk ~t Harbor,
Coron. del M• It Dave ~ Var'Jlty Tournament
YELSEY
CONTINUED FROM 81
opposite side of lhe net
"I've always been competitive,
I love Wlllning atd I can't stc\nd
losing/' Yelsey $4id. •rm going
against oJder platers no~ and, for
some people. thal might be
mtimidating. Buttny coaches and
my parents have \aught me never
to be intimidated. '
They taught her well.
"She'll go toe-b)-toe with
anyone," said first;:-year CdM
Coach and Costa ~esa Tennis
Center instructor J\ndy Stewart,
who h~t with Yelsey for years.
"I've been looktlg forward to
playing older girls.' said Yelsey,
who lust turned 141 ·1 get to play
them now. but they kind of have to
play me."
Woodbridge Hi 'Veteran
Susanna Llngman, e reigning
Sea View League smgles
champion, couJd attest to Yelsey's
amval onto the prep scene, after
Yelsey rallied from · 5-2 deficit to
wm their set, 7 -6 (7 -1n the
tiebreaker), to help 4 Sea Kings
defeat their former Sea View
League rivals on games Sept. 9.
Yelsey also dISpatched her other
fwo Woodbridge foes, 6-0, 6-0. to
earn Daily Pilot Ath.I of the
Week recognition. 1 · '.
Shesweptthree~es
agamst Dana Hills Tuesday, 6-3.
6-2, 6-4.
Don't be fooled by Yelsey's
confidence. For, though clearly
capable --she is ranked No. 8
nationally in the 14s after finishing
fifth in singles at the claycourt and
hardcourt nationaJs (third in
doubles at hardcourts}last summer
-she is dilything but~ky.
"I would really like to turn pro
and be a top pro playe«, but it
takes so much hard work,,. she
said.
Yelsey bas worked ha.rd on her
game smce age 7 and is currently
tutored by PhlJ Dent, a former
Austraban Open doubJes
cbamp1on.
The result is a polished
all-around game, keyed by an
unusually strong net presepce.
"She's mostly a baseliner, but
she is very good at attacking the
net and her volleys are the best m
her age group,• Stewart said.
"She's not super powerful, but she
can hit winners, she's real smart
and tenacious and ~he never qwts
She has all the shots, but volleying
is whd1 sets her apart. She has
great hands and a great feel.
When she comes to the net, she's
f\lways cl threat to win the point.·
Yelsey said Dent's successful
doubles background has been the
genesis of her vicious volleys.
"Phil was a really good doublru.
pUsyer and he JUSt really likes to
volley,• Yelsey said. "So,
whenever we have 10 minutes left
m a lesson, we JUSt volley."
Yelsey was forced to make a
more dramatic return, however1 when a back problem sldelinea
her for eight months (September to
May). .
"I thought it was a muscle pull,
at first, but tt was later diagno;;ed
~ a stress fracture in my lower
nghl bdck," Yelsey said. "For fow
months, I couldn't hit at all, then it
took me more than three months
to get back into tournament mooe.
When I was out, I had almost
nothing to do with my time, so l
WdS basically annoying everyone
(at home)" ~
Yelsey can now, as she has
already shown, concentrate on
being a nuisance to anyone on the
Sea King ·schedule . .. , '. lllTlllY
c. ............ Nit'i ....._er._WI-' .....
r-----------------·---·~ ! t '' 11 1r : I I
I I I I
I I I I L-----~--------~
to •
~
t
JI . ,
11 ti I•
Ii
. ,
r·
I r
..
c. Hectors looking for the
·~-
~ .... . \
N xt Big Thing will Converge ·
this weekend's toy~eXpo
By Alex Coolman
ith
wide eyes
and jittery voic-
es they nervously bargain for
the precious merchandise.
Wrinkled wads of money fill
their hands -they will do
almost anything to buy what
they need. Many of them,
shockingly, are mere children.
' .
Daily Pilot 15
. .
-.. til •
..
' ..
"' • ..
ilf .. • .. -.. .. ... .. E SANrVC I 0 'f I'll.OT •
Jim Tierney, above and left, owner of Halley's Comics in Costa M esa, :
will be an exhibitor at the Ultimate Toy and Collectibles ExpQ at the
Orange County Fairgrounds this weekend
'"' .. • ..
They are toy collectors, people in the
grtp of what Pamela Campos, owner of
Nick Nack Gifts in Costa Mesa calls ""
•the frenzy• -the overwhelnung,
feverish desire to acquire complete sets
of Pokemon cards, Bearue Babies. fin-
ger-boards, and •crazy bones• games.
And they are assembling by the hun-
dreds this weekend at the Orange
County Pa.irgrounds, for ~The Ultimate
Toy and Collectibles Expo."
The event, which will feature more
than 100 vendors of things collectible
and a raffle to benefit the American Dia-
betes Assn., looks certain to induce tits
of rampant buying. Children, their par-
ents and their disposable income will
come face to face with the hottest toys of
the moment dJld a few contender.> for
-.. ..
the crown of the Next Big Thing. •
Campos is co-promoting the event:
along with Klm Barlow, the owner of :
the .Costa Mesa-bclsed company West;
Coast Trade Shows Campos is partiC\1'-
larly excited about Tattoo Bears, plum
creature whose chests are emblazon
with a disbncllve logo. The bears are:
sold w'ith a matching temporary tart~
so that the owners can mark them-""
selves to match thei.r toys
Ml can't believe how many people '"
dre asking about those," Campos saidi
• Agmn, here's omething new that wi
JUSt barely heard of and all of a suddE!b
eve.rybody wants 1t. • ----SEE TOYS PAGE B9 .. .. .
l •
Lunchtime turns literary at Round Table West • •
• ...
OJ
Featured authors to include Richard Paul Evans,
Janet Fitch and Diana Douglas Darrid
!Wtflb
When Richard Paul ~ans was an
.,, unknown author canyilJg around stacks
I of a book called •Tue <tfuisbnas Box,"
he came to speak at Refund Table West, a
·lunchtime program ~f terary presenta-
tions held in Newport each. At the
time, Evans was so ure of himself that
' he thought he would expected to give
his stories away, said arilyn Hudson,
the executive dircctci' of the program.
I t
I
Today, Evans hacfsold more than 10
million copies of ~books -best-sell-
ing works like "Tb Christmas Box,"
•nmepiece· and • e Letter" -and
been translated~ almost 20 lan-guages. On Thu ay, Evans will read
again at Round lo Wost, an event he
still enjoys. l
•it's actually a personal thing 1 do now
-to kind of keep m touch with my roots,•
Evans said ·1 actually make time for it.•
Evans will share the spotlight with
some writers who are fairly famous
themselves. Also scheduled to speak are
Janet Fitch, author of the best-selling
novel "White Oleander,• which was ·
Oprah Winfrey's Book Club selection for
May, and Diana Douglas Darrid, ex-wife
of Kirk Douglas and author of the mem-
oir •in The Wings.•
Hudson co-founded Round Thble
West in Los Angeles with Margaret Burk
and the late Adela Rogers St. Johns in
197?. Though it moved to Orange Coun-
ty after a few years of meeting at L.A.
hotels, the fonnat tor the event has
remained the same for 22 years: three or
four writers speak for 20 minutes or so
each, and the lunch audience soaks up
'
• WHERE:The Balboa Bay Club,
1221 West Coast
Highway, New-
. port Beach + WHEN: Thurs-
day at noon + HOWMUCH:
$40
• ~(323)
256-7977
the culture ..
Janet Pttcb
The events frequently feature very
popular writers, people like Dean
Koontz and T. Jefferson Parker, but tal-
ented, lesser-known faces, like the
Richard Paul Evans of yore, also make
an appearance.
"We're qwte proud to feature begin·
fllfllllC f IYI
ning authors as well as ~blisbed
ones,• Hudson said.
Fitch, who comes to Round Table
· West on the crest of a tidal wave of pop-
ularity, ScU.d she was caught off guard by
the sudden prommence of "White Ole-
ander.•
•rve been writing for some time, and
I was just glad to be published and to be
published by a decent house,• she said.
"(Little, Brown, Fitch's publisher) were
very excited about the book, and that
was the sum total of my dream.
"The rest,• she said, "is completely
W)expectoo.•
Fitch didn't write her novel with any
deliberate plan to make it a huge best
seller. In fact, she said, she wasn't even
suro what she was wnting when she
began.
·1 dQn't plot my novets,• be said. •t
Just let one thing lead to another, and
what tl does ~ it lets me get to stuff that
l didn't even know was there. r didn't
know 1 wa concerned with fo t r chil-
TUESDAY
""' .,.,..... ... Cha1tenolnl, ~ ~
...... end ......... oplfW .t the.
....... COM........., 7:45 p& ..-, Md
w•allli'Ott. :Mo "M«sfer .. ._ n .,. ........... -..c-..
Dr-. r.il MIU. Jo; nMft II~ Cllll
(7t41'1 ...
dren, but once the mother m the nove
g<>e!> to 1a11. I knew that's what would
happen (to Astrtd, the foster-child pro.,.
tagorust of the book].• 11
Evans profes..,ed a hlnillar lack of c •
culation m his work. •
·1 wnte from deep inside.~ he srud."l
do not know how to wnte a best -.eUerrI
1ust know how to wnte omethmg thafr
connccLc; with myseU." •
Evans says he plans to read his new:
children's story "The Dance· at Roun
Table We t. It take him only three mta-
utCJ> to rcote the tale, which touche <ti
the cyde of hfe in a manner rerruru t
of Shel SilvCI6t m' "Giving n ee,• b _
Evans says •Tu Dance• packs a lot J
power into a few pages. •"
Evan dcscnbed re ding the <:tory t
a group of women inmates at a jail an§
watching th worn n bolt out of th, :
room to g t roll of toil t paper to mOJl!
thClf t • ry cy H • ha also read the
story to gathenn of banking ex u·
tiv , with mor or-I "lmiliir result
WEDNESDAY
The °""le~ flllrformlng NU C.....
~to.-.tw!Chdmemcn.,... ....
Mitt I --· hM noan to, p.M. .. ~--....,.. OllMrv.
c.. " •• --c....,,.... ....... __. ..... ,. .....
... ...... ~ .. (714~
•
Saturday, September 181 1999 date book Daily Pilat
Late-summer gatherings benefit c~arities 11111 ••
T he Soroptimist fntemation-
: al volunteers will converge
on the Crean Estate in
N wport Beach this evening to
honor six women of distinction.
The Soroptimists are a service
orqanization consisting of profes·
1io11al women in the local com·
munity who assist o variety of
wprthy causes. Their party at the
Vi.Dage Crean on the Back Bay is
'being billed as M An Evening
Under the Stars" and will pay .
tribute to Jaquelyn Hanson,
•Wendy Hug tad, Isabelle Kras··
~ney, Toni Lansing, Karep. Santa·
@z and the I lonorable B.arbara
:'.T. Schumann. The women are
the 14th annual Women of Dis·
tlnction representing the best of
the best in the world of the
Soroptimists.
•
Further south .on the circuit,
cthe Oaks International Grand
Prix Equestnan Show Jumping
Competition and dinner begins
at 3 p.m. today With cocktails
and a preview of the course.
The grand prix begins at 4
p.m. will) the gala charity dinner
set for sundown at the Oaks
Blenheim Outdoor Showpark in
San Juan Capistrano.
The Newport·Mesa crowd will
be on the Santa Ana Freeway in
droves as more than 1,000 guests
arc expected to attend this year's
event, which benefits seven local
cbanties
Benefactors mclude: Boys &
THE CROWD
b.w.
cook
Girls clubs, Drug Use is Life
Abuse, Mission San Juan Capis·
trano, National Witter Research
Institute, the Reeve Irvine
Research Center at UCI, Fran
Joswick Therapeutic Rlding Cen·
ter and the Rancho Mission Viejo
Land Conservancy.
Created by Joan lrvtne Smith,
this event has become one of U1e
most celebrated on the late·sum-
mer calendar. In addition to the
impressive turnout of humans, .
more than 900 magnificent hors·
es will be showcased. Anything
made by Hermes would be the
appropriate choice of attire. • Today is also the date for
Shaqtacular 4, the massive event
produced by Athletes and Enter·
tainers for Kids at Universal Stu-
dios in Hollywood.
More than 100 film, television,
recording artists and professional
athletes will participate in the
daylong games that ~ benefit a
variety of causes. Sports staIS
from our own Mighty Ducks and
Anaheun Angels will participate
along with Newport locals decli·
cated to helping children
through poSitive role models in
athletics.
Howard Gordon of the
Cheesecake Factory and George
Grays of the California Insurance
Department join Alynander
Bear, Starr Allumbaugh, Diane,
Barber, Tlm Burkart, Debbie
Patillo, John Sullivan and a host
of other business leaders in spon-
soring and promoting the ulti·
mate sports team extreme expe-
nence for kids.
Sbaqullle O'Neal will be
joined by fellow atltlete Tim
Brown of the Oakland Raiders,
race car dnver Patrick Long, for-
mer star atltlete and Fox NFL
broadcaster Howle Long, and
model·actress-fitness guru Kathy
Ireland for the festivities. Among
the charities benefiting from the
fun ts Big Brothers and Big Sis·
lers.
•
Coming up next week, the
Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer
'Foundation hosts a cocktail
reception at the site of Marriott's
Newport Coast Villas on New-
port Coast Drive Thursday
evening. The event will honor
patrons and sponsors of the
upconung Sept 26 Race For the
The Long Beach Coin d Collectihlu Expo
Pruenl:J Tbe 151• Annual Fall Expo
Sepfemher 23-26, 1999
LONG BEACH CONVENTION CENTER
/(}(}So. Pint• Al'e., Lm1g &ach, Cal~/. ( Rnfrtllln' e-1 Parkin.'/ On Pine A Pt.}
Shouvite phane(562) 436-1616
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HOURS: THURS.SAT 10am-7pm. SUN 10am-3pm
Coins • Stamps • Sportscards • Phone Cards • Collectibles
• Jewelry • U.S. & Foreign Coin Auction
FEATURING: Auctions by Heritage Numi mastic Auctions, Ponterio
& Associates, and George Frederick Kolbe' Fine Numismatic Books
0 Plus LO DEX 3 '99 {stamp section.) Featuring the •t, PS l~sue: I lonoring Tho e Who ~rved" Stamp.
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OF LIFETIME CARPET
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Cwe in Orange County.
The reception 1S underwritten
in part with generous contribu-
tions from Marriott, Ayi;ta 101,
West Coast Productions, Califor-
nia Cheese and Butter Assn., and
Gallo of Sonoma.
The race itseU, with registra-
tion planned for Sept. 25 and
early morning Sept 26, will be an
all-morning event that will
include a women's Sk run/walk,
a coed 5k run, a coed 5k walk,
and a family 1 mile fun·
run/walk.
The Costa Mesa-based breast
cancer organization will be spon·
sored lhls year by JCPenney, and
a host of corporate underwriters.
For more information, call (714)
957·9165.
•
From running shoes to gor· ·
geous gowns, mark your date
book for Sept. 29 as Nordstrom
South Coast Plaza joinS forces
with the Orange County Per·
forming Arts Center fo'r what is
being billed as •a dazzling exhi·
bition of 100 gowns" Crom Milan,
New York and Paris to kick off
the social season on the Orange
Coast.
The event is being planned by
Newport's Dottt SUllweU and Pat
Ryplnskl with assistance from
Penny Newman of the Nord-
strO!Jl designer salon on behalf of
the Winter CandleUght Concert,
which benefits the Center.
For more informdbon, call
(714) 850·2512.
• B.W. COOK'S column appears every
Thursday and Saturday.
A benefit concert for the Balbpa Theater Found t1on was
staged last weekend on the BaJboa Peninsula. tured.
are members of the theater's support group, the lvas.
Top,' from left, are Sue Cannon, Melinda Luthln ritta
Pulliam and Patti Tomaselli; above are Michele oberge
and Steve Bromberg.
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~
ROLEX
' . · datebook .
Fulfilling a childhood dream of flying over seas
ANuruw Gl.AZfJt ..
I 've wanted to wa-sail since I
was a wonny 9-year-old on a
beach in southern Mexico.
I was lying on my back, look-
~g at clouds, when I saw a
human kite fly by. I convinced
my reluctant father to send me
up into the air.
But the man driving the boat
,_ which tows people harnessed
to a parachute high into the sky
-said that my 65-pound frame
was too light and would be stuck
floati.itg in the air forever.
: Disappointed, I
WEEKEND
WANDERER
walked away, fil-
ing the activity on
my to-do list,
somewhere
between finishing
tile fifth grade and kissing a girl.
Seventeen years later, with
the other two items on my list
completed, it was time to para-
sail.
I booked a ride with Marina
Watersports in Balboa. An 1 1/2-
hour boat ri<ie, with 10 minutes
hanging 400 feet in the air,
would cost $45.
Myself, my friend visiting from
New York and a couple who won
the tide in a raffle, all met at
Marina's doc.le.
The four of us sat shivering in
the morning fog hoping we
wouldn't get wet, while we wait-
ed for our crew to get the 27-foot
speedboat ready for the journey.
•Captain" Mike Perrin, who
wouldn't give his age but looked
to be in his early 40s, dove mto
the harbor and splashed around
for about five minutes.
His clean-cut deckhand, Bran-
don Johnson, 19, fiddled with
harnesses on the boat's deck.
As soon as we were called to
board the boat, Perrin began his
shticki. While we pulled out of
the Newport Harbor, he cranked
up the boat's radio -"Oh, Mick-
ey you're so fine, you're so fine
you blow my mind" -and
gri:niled at the apprehensive 40-
something couple.
"It's really a pretty safe deal,
as long as we're paying atten-
tion,• said Perrin, letting go of
the steering wheel to lay the
punch line. Johnson laughed,
apparently not yet tired of his
companion's routine.
•He's my favorite deck.hand
because he laughs at all my
jokes,• Perrin said.
Perrin told us that the para-
saillng ride would be more of a
tranquil float than a thrill ride.
"That's why it's only 10 min-
utes. Otherwise you'd get bored,•
he said.
After pulling out of the harbor
into the ocean, Perrm warned
everyone to hold onto their cam-
eras. Seconds later, he pushed
the throttle and leaned the boat
into a bard right, raising my side
of the boat and splashing our
Family
Portrait
Special
(Ellpll'\:S 9{30f)9)
NIA-
SAlllG _._
+WHIM:
Marina
Water-
~ 600
Ave., New-
~h.
+·HOW
MUCH: • S45
+PHONE:
(949) 673-
3372
Reporter
Andrew
Glazer
takes to
the sJcy on
a para-
Salllng
adventure
out of
Newport
Harbor.
photographer as his back was
only inches from.the water.
We sped around the ocean,
Blondie blaring. Perrin at the
helm smiling and Johnson, who
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teeth -was so overtly Southern
Californian that I felt like 1 WdS
in a French commeroal for ,a cig-
arette called Amencan Style. .
After a 15-mmute nde, John-
son began putting a ham Sl> onto
the raffle-winrung husband, who
gave thumbs up and let out a
few hoots.
One end of the harness was
attached to a wide, multicolored
parachute, while the other was
fixed to a large, m0£haruca.l spool
of steel cable.
Johnson lifted the parachute,
allowing it to fill with air. Theq
he turned on the spool, wluch
gradually let the parachute and
man dnft higher and higher mto
the air, until be was so high thdt
he looked like a spider hanging
from a rainbow-colored web.
At one point, Pemn killed the
boat's engine and allowed the
para-sailer to fall gently toward
the ocean until his dangling feet
kissed the surface. Then Pernn
accelerated, raising the para-
chute back into the air. '
As I watched the other three
passengers float, I was anxious to
lift off. I just moved to this area
two months ago and couldn't
wait to get a view from above.
As l was stepping into my har-
ness, "Tainted Love• came onto
the radio. I stood on the padded
back seat of the boat and slowly
began to soar, just as the singer
said "I want to ... get away ... ."
The boat began to shrink and
thank.fully, the music started le
fade. After a few seconds, all Iii
could hear wal> the wind blo~
ing, the distant hwn of the boat''
motor d.lld my own laughter.
Amazingly, l could still see John-
son's shinunenng teeth. · '
The harness was rigged to reel
Uke a bench. The sensotion was•
the same dS riding on a chairlift
o\ller water instead of snow. I
µoatcd by the Balboa Pier and , :
could see hshennen gazing out
to thP sea. • :
I looked for the dark shadows
ot shdrks or large fish, but·on}y, ,
saw the· ndg~ texture of choppy
water.
When I heard the drone of the
motor stop, I knew to expect a ·,
foot bath. l swung my legs back
dnd forth and waved to the boat
as I sunk toward the ocean.
My big toe touched the icy • •
Wdter. I was glad that would be
the OrU}' part of me getting wet. •
But as I kept sinking deeper, I
began to wonder. The water
raised to my ankle, then knee
and then my wrust.
Wet drid shivenng, l glared at
Johnson dnd Pemn as I began to
fly bdck mto the air. Everyone on
the boat wa" laughing as the
mdchine reeled me back onto the
bOdt 1•
Apparently my fnend had
dsked Pernn to get me soaked.
Thdt's the lill>l time I'll invite her
anywhere.
y~ l INSllll/J
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• r -B 8 Saturday, s.s-m~ 1 e, 1 m date book ..
..
Farcical comedy 'Moon Qver Buffalo' rises and fallS )
.
B ack.stage comedies have
become a favorite genre of
local theater groups, with
plays such as •PooUight Frenzy,"
"Play On," •Jitters" and others
penodically dotting the area's
marquees.
In this tradition comes "Moon
O\ter Buffalo," a wacky exercise
in excess from Ken Ludwig, .
whose "Lend Me a Tenor" enter-
tained audiences on several
fronts recently. It's the opening
salvo in the Newport Theater
Arts Center's new season.
"Buffalo" makes the frenetic
"Tenor"
seem like a THEATER REVIEW drawtng
room com-
edy by comparison. Its slam-
bang, in-one-door-and-out-the-
other farcical foolishness is an
extremely demanding exercise in
the broadest of comedy, a formi-
dable challenge to both actors
and director which is only par-
tially overcome on the Newport
stage.
Ludwig's play is set in d
regional Buffalo, N.Y., theater in
1953 (why this long-ago period is
open to question) where a hus-
band and wife acting team holds
forth. offering "Cyrano de Berg-
erac• and "Pnvate Llves" in
repertory. As nught be expected,
there are ldrge, Uuck slices of
ham on the theater's menu.
Director Ken Rugg tackles the
tricky project Wlth great gusto,
placing a great deal of emphasis
on broad, physical comic bits but
scam attention to details such as
making actors hold telephones to
their upstage ears or "aging up•
youthful performers playing old-
er characters.
The primary guilty party in
the latter instance is Davis Mejia,
playing the skirt-chasing, ego·
centric leading actor of the
troupe. Mejia does yeoman duty
as the primary farceur, excelling
in a rip-roaring drunk scene
which would only be effective in
a play of this style, but he's far
too young for the role, which
damages his credibility.
"Moon Over Buffalo" is
known as the p lay that brought
Carol Burnett back to Broadway,
and Llnda VanDine is ·a near-
ringer for the TV legend as
Mejia's contentious wife and co-
star. However, VanDine lacks her
character's requisite comic punch
and comes off as merely
shrewish rather than comically
sympathetic.
Sophie Areno turns in lhe
most totally realized performance
as their daughter, who's trying to
exit the family business only to
be pulled back for an emergency
fill-in -the obligatory scene
governed by Murphy's law.
Areno, who seethes and sparkles
slDlultaneously, shares the role
wit.n Deborah Garrett in alternate
performances.
Race for the Cure 5K
Sept. 26"'-register here thru Sept. 21 ••
A
a lance
tieWfff~
Sh !! ~ •• 'dth
C949l 720-1 602
~ .· :~ . . . ~ :. . . . .
NOTICE OF
UNSCHEDULED
VACANCY
It
'the City of Ncwpon Beach is currently accepting applications 10 fill
Wt fo llowing unscheduled vacfl1lcy:
ARTS COMMISSION (ONE SEAT)
l'be newly appointed member will serve until the expiration of
tbe current tenn (June 30, 2001 ).
The deadline for fili ng applications is 4:00 p.m. on Thursday. October
~· 1999. The appointment is scheduled to be made on Monday,
November 22, 1999. Application blanks and additional infonnalion abou1
the Art~ Commission can be obtained from The City Clerk's office, 3300
ewpon Boulevard. or will be mailed to you by calling 644-3005 . •
110r more infonnation contact 'The City Clerk's office at 644-3005
Shawn Berry also makes a
fme impression as her fiance, a
squansh TV weatherman who,
inexplicably, turns up as Gen.
Patton in the panicky perfor-
mance scene. Jack Millis will
take over in performances Thurs-
day through Sept. 26.
The hard-of-hearing wardrobe
mistress, and also the mother of
VanDine's character, is given a
salty touch by Leslie Holland,
whose constant repairing of
Mejia's costume is a nice running
gag.
A delicious bit of eye candy is.
Carolyn Pears as a statuesque,
red-haired ingenue tutored by
Mejia on the casting couch.
Mark Herron is properly stiff as
the staid swtor hoping to take
VanDme away from all the
insaruty
'The newly expanded and
refurbished theater also offers a
revolving set -designed by
Corey B. Holst who also super-
vises the lighting-which turns
to form the "Private Lives" bal-
cony. rt gives the community the-
ater a professional touch,
"Moon Over Buffalo" is an
uneven production which, never-
theless, offers slices of splendid
farcical comedy. It's particularly
attractive to those in the theater
who have experienced moments
like these themselves.
• TOM TTTUS reviews local theater for
the Daily Pilot His reviews appear Thurs-
days and Saturdays.
m
+ WIBI: Newport
Theater Arts Center,
2501 Cllff Drive, N~rtBeach
• N: Thursdays through Saturdays at
8 p.m., Sundays at
2:30 p.m. through
Oct. 10. • + HOW MUOt: S13 . + PHONE: (949)
631--0288
Davis Mejia and
Unda VanDlne play
a scene from "Cyra-
no de Bergerac" in
"Moon Over
BWfalo" at the
Newport Theater
Arts Center.
• Mildew Removal • Power Was~ing •
Steam Cleaning • Aci~ Was~ • Sealers ., , , ···:
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'7he New Taste Sensation in Chicken, Steak & Seafood"
11lhe aromas of garlic
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conversation hums
at lnko Grill"
-lA TIMES
• Kevin Ives '98
"Serving some of
~e most innovative
foods around.,
{OSTAMESA
OA/lY PllOT
LIVE MUSIC FRIDAY & SATURDAY • 7PM
23600 ~ockfie~ • loke Forest 260 Bristol • Costa Mesa
{949) 587·9008 (71 4) 444-4652
Entertainment schedule m v
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Specializing in the foil owing:
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CONTINUED FROM BS
The phenomenon of Tattoo
Bears' sudden popularity 1s one
that is fari\.iliar to toy collectors
who have weathered prior
waves of enthusiasm for clis-
tinctive stuffed animals, dolls
and card games Campos, for
one, is able to discuss the cpm-
plicated fluctuations of the
Beanie Baby mafket with the
kind of subtle reasoning more
commonly associated with
stock trade rs.
"They retired some of them,
and that's what made them more
collectible,• said Campos, refer-
ring to toy companies' common
practice of withdrawing popular
prod\.lCt.S from the market to
increase their dE>sirability.
In some cases, Campos Sdid,
certain Beanie Babies were over-
produced, whiCh has prevented
them from becoming valuable as
they have aged. The Beanie
Baby known as Chocolate the
Moose, in particular, hdS suffered
from being in supply in ex~ess of
demand.
"Chocolate the Moose flooded
the market,• Campos said, a
note of regret in her voice. "He's
still only like $6. •
Jim n emey, who owns Hal-
ley's Comics in Co~ta Mesa,
plans to do major business ot the
expo selling playing cards for the
Japanese game Pokemon. Poke-
mon, Tiemey explained, is a
game played with hundrE'ds of
colorful cards, each of wtuch
describes the power of a fantasbc
creature. The rules of the game,
which has both a Japanese and
an Americari incarnation, are
~flingly complex, and the mar-
•. llet for the cards is correspond-
lllgly Byzantine.
• nemey sells ordinary Ameri-
ain Pokemon cards for as little as
-cents apiece, but rarities like
a;tapanese version of the card
f~ the character • M yu • sell for
~ l~ times that ctmount. nemey's
most expensive card, one for a
c'ceature called •chanzard," sells
out as fast as he can put the $60
price tag on it.
, Between the extremes of
fJnancial child's play and the
qtore serious business o( th e
high-end market are countless
gradations of Pokemon pricing.
C:ards are classified by uemg
rltre or normal, Japanese or
i1.merican, shiny or n ot shiny,
~tired or not retired, and so
an
•1t•s convoluted almost on
'flOCU .. ----
datebook Sotvrday, September I 8, 1999 ~ ft
• WHIRi: The orange C~ Fairgrounds. 88 fair
Dri\le, Building 12, Costa Mesa ' + WHEN: Today and Sun·
day from 9 ~.m. to 4 p.m. + HOW MUCH: Early bird
admission (9 to 10 a.m.):
$7, general admission $5.
Chil<:fren 5 and under free. + PHONE: (714) 754-0518
! i i I
MUSIC
BRIAN BAARETI"/
JASON WILKINS TRIO
The Bnan Barrett/Jason Wilkins
Thio will play 1azz at That's Aro-
md from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sun-
day and Sept. 26. That's Aromd
is at 1870 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Por more information, ca.ll
(949) 548-7999
! RAYMOND GARNER ! J;:oncert organ\st Ruymond Gar-
. ; ner will perform • "t.'Orgue Mys-
• f llque by Toumemire, Sonata No.
purpose, with various distinctJons · 14" by ·Rhem berger dlld selec-
down the road as a marketing lions by· Franck, Vleme, ~dor ·
ploy," nemey sdid. For the chil-and Scott Joplm at a p.m. Mon-•
dren arid parents who are cupti-d ay 'at St Andrew's Presbyterian
vated by the toy manufacturers' C hurch in Newport Beach The
tactics, the busmess of collecting church is at 600 St. Andrew's
is no laughing matter. Adult Vlsi-Road. Newport Beach. The sug-
tors to Tiemey's store on~ recent gestod d onauon 15 $10. For more afternoon spent brne solemnly discussing with their children the information, call (949) 631-2880.
economic viability - or ldck
thereof -of their Pokemon pur-
chases.
Campos noted lhdt mdlly par-
ents whose children are collec-
tors will buy several cop1es of
toys so that the investment
potential of an item isn't ruined
by that destructive activity
known as "playing.'
"(Parents) could hdve one for
themselves,-lhei.r kids could hdvc
one, and they could have one ...
for collecting,· she said.
Tiemey was philosoph1cd.l
about the.extremes to which col-
lectors go for the toys they love.
"The whole phenomenon 1s
nothing new,• he said, likening
Pokemon frenzies to tho e gen-
erated by Barbies dnd Hula
Hoops. ·n JUSt seems new
because of the novelty ol thP.
new thing."
In addition lo p11rt1culdTly
trendy items, the expo will dlso
feature exhibits of vmtdge.
bdseball cards, classic Stdr
Wars action figures and other
playthings of earlier genera-
tions. A special paintbttll exhib-
it will be availttble for those
who hke truly high-impdrt
diversion.
HANK SHAPIRO ANO .
JOE FRIEDMAN
I lamioruca ace Hank Sbap110
will appedr with keyboard.1st Joe
Friedmdn a t the Jewish Senior
Center al 12:30 p .m . Thursddy.
The Center is at 250 E. Baker St.,
Costa Mestt. Por more inionna-
tion, call (714) 513-5641.
PIANIST GENE HARRIS
Jazz pianist Gene Hams will per-
fotm at the Jazz Club at the
Orange County Perfomung Arts
Center on Fnday through' Sept.
26 Shows brnes are at 7:30 and
9·30 pm Friday and Saturday
and at 12·30 p.m. Sunday. Tick-
ets are $36 and $42. The Orange
County Perfonning Arts Center is I
dt 600 Town Center Dnve, Costa
Mesd.. For more information, call
(714) 740-7878. . .
Pf ECEMAKERS MUSICAL
The Piecemakers· sing~rs will
pr<'sent the musical ""Life on the
Muddy ruvcr" dt 7 p.m. Sept 25
outside the P1ecemakers Country
Store A $5 donation is request-
ed. The store 1s at 1720 Adams
Ave . Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 641-3112.
CAR ACCIDENT?
You may have questions:
• Do I need treatment?
• Where should I go for care?
• Do I need an attorney?
• Should I settle with my insurance company?
• Can my Injury lead to future health problems?
.•. and more
Call Toll.Free 1 "888·616-9679 to receive my FREE report with valuable 1nlormation.
which can save you TIME and get you back on the ROAD TO RECOVERY
24 Hour Toll Free Recorded Message .
Live Entertainment Nightly at 9pm
Rich Fauna i/!12_~~
Sunday-Wednesday ~ -
.;: "-. Mis behavin ' ~
· Zuble's Proudlv
Serving 30 Years!
414 Old Newport Blvd.
N~rt ·Beach
645-6086
lflll
GLENN MIUER TRIBUTE
OCC will host a ~bute to Glenn
Mill~r ut 4 p.m. Sept. 26. The
event, lo be held in the Robert B.
Moore Theatre, will feature ex-
Glenn MilJCJ li<IXOphorust Tex
Beneke along with the Moder-
ndires. Tickets dTe $27, with dis·
counts available for OCC stu-
dents, senior.., and children wider
12. OCC .i.s at 2701 Fairview
R0<1d, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 432-5880.
STAGE
'MISS SAIGON'
IOUIS
The South Coast Rcpenory will
hold a gala ball Saturday to raise
funds for ScR. The event will be
from 6:30 p.m. to nudrught. For
information, Call (714) 708-5525. ..
DEATH DEFYING ACTS
OCC presents "Death Defying
Acts," three one-act plays by
Elaine May, David Mamet and
Woody Allen, Thursday Uuough.
Sept. 26 arid Sept. 30 through
Oct. 3. Show times are at 8 p.m.
Thursday through Sdturdays und
at 2 p .m. Sundays. Tickets are $6
to $9. OCC is at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. For morP
mform~tion, call (714) 432-5880.
FRANK GORSHIN .
Comedian and impresslorust
Frank Gorshin will perform at
OCC's Robert B Moore thedtre
at 8 p.m . Sept. 25. Advance tick-
ets are $25, $22 for OCC stu-
mote mtorm tion, tall (714) 43~-
5880
SAN FRANOSCO BAU.ET
The Orange County Perfomung
Arts Center presenb the San ..,. ..
Frnndsco Ballet in ·Giselle• ~.
6 through 10. Shows fim~ dle at
8 p m. Wednesday through Sat-..
urday and Saturday dJld at 2 •
p .m. SWlduy Tickets drt' $10 tq ..
$68. The Center IB at 600 ToMt
Center Dnve, Costa Mesa. For 1
more mformation, cull (714J 740-
7878
LITERARY
OPRAH BOOK CLUB The Broddway musical "fvtiss
Saigon• will be featured at ·
Segerstrom Hall through Sept.
25. Set in 1975, the plot revolves
around the Jove story of a young
Vietnamese glII and an Amen-
can GI. Tickets are $41 to $66
a nd are on sd.le at The Center I dents, seniors and children under
12. OCC lS at 2701 Fal.J'Vlew Box O ffi ce and by phone through Road. Costa Mesa. For more
Tlu club mef'~ th third Thur<>·
ddy ol every month at 7 p.m to
d1scu s Opr<1h's most recent book
select.ions at Barnes & Nohle
Newport Beach. Barnes & Nob6e.
Newport BNch 1s at 953 New-
port Ce!lter Dnve, Newport
Bet1ch. For more 1nformation, call
(949) 759-0982. • ·Ticketmaster dt (714) 740-7878 or mfonnation, call (714) 432-5880.
(213) 365-1500. Tickets are abo
avcnlable onlme a t www.ticket-
mdsler.com For more mforma-
t1on, call (714) 556-ARTS
'FIVE WOMEN WEARING
THE SAME DRESS'
Alt1n Ball'!> play #Five Women
Wednng the Same Dress· runs
lhrough Oct. 2 dt The Theatrn
D1stnct, with perfonndnce<; dl 8
p m Fndays and Saturdays and
ell 7 p m. SunddyS. Tickets for
Fnday 4nd Sunddy shows are
$15, $20 for Saturddy shows. The
Theatre D1slncl IS at 2930 Bristol
~t . Costd MeSd. For more mlo1-
mcttton. CdlJ (714) 435-4043.
SHAW'S 'PHILANDERER'
South ( 'odst Repertory opens its
] gqq.2000 SCdSOO With "The Phi·
landerer" by George Bernard
Shaw. The pldy, a comic look at
the dvo1dance of mcmiage dncl
the culbvatlon of "charming
friendstups," will nm through
Oct. 10 SCR ts dt 655 Town Cen-
'ter Dnve, Col.Id Mesa. Tickets •
arc $18 to $47 and mdy be pur-
chased by calling (714) 708-5555.
PLAY ON GALA BALL
DANCE
'LES BALLETS AFRICAINS'
The prerruere tounng dance
company of Ainca, "Les Balle~
Af .ricams, • will perlorn1 at OCC
dl 8 p.m. Oct. 1. Tickels to the
event are $29. OCC is at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For
LEONARD BERNARQ READING
C'oron<1 del Mar chi.Jdren's author'
L<•onurcl Bernard will sign books
dt the To} Bodt Tor S!ore Sept
25 from noon to 3 p.m. The store
1s dl 3331 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mdr. For more mfo1-
rndtron, rail 1949) 673-3791.
ROSEY'S AUTOBODY .
You Have the Right
to Choose Your • Repair Facility
Insist on the Best
Lifetime Warranty
Full Service Collision Center
Insurance Approved Shop ~
(949) 642-4522· . ~. .
121 Industrial Way • Costa Mesa
•
I B 10 Saturday,~ te, 1999
• Send ~ 1QMlll items to the
, o.Jty Pitot, 330 W. hy St., CosU Mes.
92U7; fa•~ to (949) ~170; °'
call (949) 642·5680, EJct. 228. A complete
listing of AROUNO TOWN may be found
at&11ypllot.com. • • TODAY
Tbe Department of Flsb and
Game and the Orange County
Harbors Beaches are the main
sponsors for the estuary cleanup
day from 8 a.m. to t p.m. at Upper
Newport Bay on the comer of
·Back . pay Drive and Jamboree.
Students, families and apy inter-
ested community service groups
may come and })elp clean up the
bay. Lunch will be provided, and
transportation to the sites around
the bay will also be available. For
more information. call (949) 640-
6746.
A workshop ttUed "Divorce: A
New Beginning " will be present-
ed from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at
the offices of Maxine B. Cohen,
180 Newport Center Drive, Suite
180 A, Newport Beach. Adinis-
sion is $40. For more information,
call (94 9) 644-6435.
"The UlUmate Toy & Collectible
Expo" will be presented from 10
a.ni. to 4 p.m. today through Sun-
day in Building 12 at the Orange
County Fair & Exposition Center,
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Early
bird entry is at 9 a.m. and early
bird admission is $7. Re gular
adult admJssion is $5. Children 7
and under are free. Proceeds from
a raffle will go to the American
Diabetes Association. For more
informallon, call West Coast
ltade Shows at (7 14) 545-6270.
A computer show will conUnue
through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. m Build.tng 14 a t the Orange
County Fair & Exposition Center,
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Adnuss1on for adults is $5. For
more information, caJI Super
Show Productions Inc. at (714)
&38-5941
A "Make Your Own Possll Work-
:.hop" will be held from 11 a.m. to
2 p.m. at the Museum of Natural
History m Aliso and Wood
Cdnyons Wilderness Park in
Lagund Niguel. Learn about the
fossils found irl. Orange County
and make your own plaster of
Paris cast replica of a fossil to take
home. The fee is $2 for Orange
County Natural ~tory Museum
members, $6 for nonmembers.
For reservations or more infonna·
tion. call (949) 831-3287.
•eoJolful Natlvel for the Home
Garden,• a -program offered at
Sherman Ubra.ry and Gardens m
Corona del Mar, will be held at
9:30 a.m. David Songster of the
California Native Plant Society
will share his knowledge of native
plarit growing. nus program is
part of the Weekend Gardener
Series, which is tree and open to
the general public. For more
information, call (949) 673-2261.
lbe Republican Party of Orange
County will host the Orange
County Pro-lile PAC Breakfast at
8:30 a.m. at the Hyatt Alicante
Hotel in Garden Grove. The guest
speaker will be state Sen. Ray
Haynes. For more information,
calf Pat Fane at (714 ) 692-2003
lbe Newport Beach Publlc
Ubrary will bold a free seminar,
•Using the Ubrary: Tools &
Tucks,• at 10 a.m. at the library's
Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avo-
cado Ave., Newport Beach . For
more information, call (949) 717-
3801.
otta will present a work-
ed Managing Stress With
from 10 a.m. to noon at
The Latest Thing bookstore, 270
E. 17th St. Cost for preregistration
is $20. For more information, (949)
645-621 1.
The Costa Mesa Histor1cal Soci-
ety will hold an open house from
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Diego
Sepulveda Adobe on Adams &
Mesa Drive. The adobe is consid-
ered the oldest structure in Costa
Mesa, built in the early 1800s.
Docents will be available to
answer questions. Cost is Cree. For
more information, call (949) 646-
1274.
Salomon Smith Barney will spon-
sor You and Your 401(k) Rollover
Worksh op from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.
at 19000 MacArthur Blvd. at the
Penthouse, Irvine. The event is
free to the public. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 955-7562:
SUNDAY
A bird fair will be presented from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. m Building 10 at
the Orange County Fair & Exposi-
tion Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admission is $5 for adults,
STAGIGOAGB
LUGGAGE & GIFTS Nlm,.q
SOJ· ...... ,
Presented by
"1e;rf~/ .
/effe,,,,d,er 71
at
Costa Mesa Community Center
1845 Park Ave, Costa Mesa
7-10pm
11lzes eve 1 /2 hour.
l,
around town
The 15th unul California Coastal Cleanup Day will be
held Jrom 9 a.m. to noon today. The BU Bay wW be one of
more than 600 sites around tbe state tbal wUl ~t a Well·
deserved spruce up. Volunteen wW be workillg on 11Ate
beaches, bays, rivers, creeks, parks, roadaldes and higb·
ways. To volunteer or lor more Information, call Mark
Patrick at (949) 509-8684.
$4 for seruor5 and $1 for children
under 12. For more information,
call the Orange County Bird
Breeders at (714) 828-2607.
Dr. Bunni Tobias, an educaUonal
psychologist, will cliscuss atten-
tion deficit disorder at 2 p.m. at
Barnes & Noble, Fashion Island.
Tobias, who speoalizes in finding
solutions for children with learn-
ing a nd behavioral difficulties,
questions whether attention
deflot disorder is always the cor-
rect chagnosis for children with
these symptoms. For more infor-
mallon. call (949) 759-0982.
MONDAY
The Republican Party of Orange
County Centrdl Committee will
hold its genernJ meebng at 7 p.m.
at the South Coast Plaza Westin
Hotel, 686 Anton Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Admission 1s free. All
Republicans are welcome. For
more information, call (714) 556-
8555.
A workshop on "Natural Preven-
tion of Osteoporosis" will be
offered at 6 p.m. at the Moss Fam·
ily Chiropractic, 1617 Westcliff
Dnve, Suite 200, Newport Beach.
For more information, call (949)
722-1955.
Hodson Lighting
Open Tuts.·fri . 9-5 S•t. 9·4
1510 Nfwport Blvd , Costa Mfscl
Quality Li1h1ie1 ~r•ict for 30 Yun
(949) 548-9341
TUES PAY
A class for parents focusing on
building relationslups, chsd pline,
positive motivation, conflict reso-
lution and dealing with tantrums,
will be held from 7 :30 to 9 p.m.
The class, HWhy 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 fireweed series. Preregis·
tration is required. To register or
for more infonnation. call (949)
253-5701.
Paine Webber wW sponsor a sem-
inar on "How to Select a Mill.ion
Dollar Institutional Money Mdll-
ager for your $100,000 Plus Port-
folio " at 6:30 p.m. at the Four Sea-
son Hotel, 690 Newport Center
Drive. The event is free. To make
reservations, cdll (949) 717-3915.
The Newport Harbor Area Cham-
ber of Commerce will hold a busi-
ness referral breakfast with
award-winning journalist Jan
Norman at 7:15 a.m. at 4110
MacArthur Blvd., f':lewport
Beach. Norman ts also a columnist
and an author. Her column
expl9res solutions to everyday
problems faced by small busi-
nesses For more information. call
(949) 729-4400.
4200 Birch St. (at
Newport Beach
8 3-0660
$6. 95 Hand
and Free Foam Wax
not sa
ii yo
Adventure 11 wUI bclll a lree pre-
sentation on the teaetl of Zion
National Palk at 1 p.m. at 1959
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For
more inf onnation, call (949) 650-
3301.
Tiie Orimge County chapter of
Roundtable for Women in Food-
service will bold a dinner meet-
JJ\g at 6:45 p.m. at the Daily Grill,
957 Newport Center Drive in
Fashion Island. The meeting will
feature Bob Spivak, founder of
Grill Concepts and owner of the
Daily Grill restaurants nation-
wide. Spivak. Will talk about the
early days of •nie Grill on the
Alley: restaurant in' Beverly
Hills. Networking will precede
the d,in.ner at 5:30 p.m. Cost for
members in advance is $30, $35
for guests and· $15 for students.
For more information, call (949)
798-8779.
The Newport Harbor Orchid Soci-
ety will bold its 14th annual
Orchid Growers Thank You Night
from 7 to 10:30 p.m. at the Neigh-
borhood Community Center, 1845
Park Avenue, Costa Mesa. On
this night, the Orchid Society will
say thank you to all the growers
who have donated to its auction
throughout the year. For more
information, call (949) 640-5440.
WEDNESDAY
The Home-and Small Business
Alliance will hold a meeting on
"Affordable Office Strategies"
from 8:30 to 9:45 a.m. at Mimi's
Cafe, on Barranca and Culver,
Irvine. Small business owners ar~
invited to attend. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 786-0030.
"Senior Games" will be present-
ed irom 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Build-
ing 10 at the Orange County Fair
& Exposition Center, 88 Fair Dri-
ve, Costa Mesa. Admission is free.
For more information, call (714)
650-6727.
The American Cancer Society
will hold a "Coping With
Fatigue" workshop for cancer
patients and their caregivers from
1. to 2:30 p.m. at the Hoag Cancer
f:enter auditorium. Cost is free,
bnt space is limited. Reservations
are requited. For more informa-
tion. call (949) 722-6237.
lbe Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce is sponsoring a busi-
Dai~ Piiot
ness after-boun miser train 5:30
to 7:30 p.m . at the Wyndhtm a.;.
den Hotel, 350 Avenue of tbe
Arts. Memben are free. COit for
potential members ii StO. VWims
'are welcome. Por more tnforma-
tion, call (714) 88>-9090.
Newport BeKb .C-mltf 8--
vices is sponloring a teriel et
drawing and painting workibops
from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Wednesdays, begirln1ng today, at
the Vince Jorgensen Center, 2005
Dover Drive, Newport Beach. The
series of classes will feature indi·
vidual instruction for beginner
and advance<l students in m.ized
media. Cost for residents ii 163
and $68 for nonresidents. Por
more information, call (99) &«-
3151. .
lbe Inside Edge PoUDdaUoli lof
Education of Costa Mesa will bold
a breakfast forum from 6:30 to
8:30 a.m. at the University OU, uc1. Lost nancos and East Pelt.a-
son Drive, Irvine. Rama VemoD.
an international and global peace
diplomat and founding president
of the Center for lntematiooal
Dialogue, will speak. Cost is S20
for first-time guests and $35 for
repeated guests. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 460-4242.
The American Flbromyalgta
Foundation Inc. will hold a free
meeting at 7 :30 p.m. at the Hoag
Hospital Cancer Center Audito:ri-
um, 1 Hoag Drive, NeWJ>Ort
Beach. For more information, call
(714) 840-8038.
.THURSDAY #I -lbe OASIS SQtor Center, 800
Marguerite, Corona del Mar, will
hold a used book sale from· 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. on the patio. Coffee
and hom emade cookies will be
available for a small donation. For
more information, call (949) 6«·
3244. • • 4
Merrtll Lynch ls holding a praen·
tation on estate planning 0
HUnique Strategies for the Affh.~
ent Investor" 0 at noon and 6
p.m. at the Center Club, 650
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
Dean Jackson and Jeff Russel,
both senior financial consultants,
will serve as the keynote spealc,-
ers. Lunch and dinner will be
served. For more information. call
(714) 429-2801.
Offering Unique Dnif!U To Enhanrt Any Dtcor. ,
Ch/l.drm "" wtlcomt.
Custom Upho/JtfTJ
Quality Homt hrniJhintt
Bali Imports
Custom Wintlow Trratmnrts
lland·f>11intt1J Oirw111 Muwds
ft1tli1m Imports
HandwrdpptJ Si/It Flonz/s d-Trtn
Custom &dding tf 7itb~ Lin1111
Fint Chin4 d-F'4twllrt
Custom Art11 Rugr
ArrtJsorits
Hunter Dou~lm d-Gr111Nr Blinds
l'.tlho Fumihlrt
3000 Sq. Ft. Showroom
949 • SlS.• 1125
Wmdifl' Pim. I 044 tmne Ave., Newpon heh. CA
I
.1
i
..,
• Personalized Attention • Trained Mediator
1 • 15 Years Family Court Litigation Experience
DIVORCE AND RELATED ISSUES ONLY!
(Slldlng FM Scala Avaflabla)
JJ LAW OFFICES OF
GARY P. LEVINSON sboo Birch Street, Suite 4000, West Tower, Newport Beach, CA 92660
(949) 476-3676
Vllrt our wlblllte at h ~ Jt«I
Saturday, ~ ~ e, 1999 Ba I
She ••• .
ECTO
Prtfmtd Owntr Pr~am lncli.u.ln
• Complimtruary Car W11sllts • Loan Cm1 r Al1J>ort Parking & Shuttlt • SL Hardtop wragt
.and mi.ch llWl't
Buy or ka.te a Mvcttks Bent IOOa:Y!
•
1""1 ... 1;1
I ~' i ' I "' . \ 'I
·······-····· I ' ' '' I .....,1 I l l 1 '
LES TUR ER, LUTCF
Exclusive Agent
Auto-Home
Allstate Insurance Company
901 Dover Dnve, Suite 250
New~rt Beach. CA 92660
Bus (949) 645-6868
PAX (949) 646-7592
CA Lie. #0703798
AllSIBle:.
-(ii
MonJay ................. Friday 5:00pm ,.
.... 11
Tues~ay ........ : ..... Monday 5:00pm.:>
I
Wedne~day ......... Tue~day 5:00pnl' • ,
Ratrs nud drndlii\r~ ur(• uhj<•rt to change
wlf hout notic1-. Tiu· puhli~hrr re~l'rvcs the
rift ht to t'('11sor. rcdns~if y, n·vi"" or rrjcct
any ~1&11sifit•d odwrti~t·111t'111. Please report
61\,Y rrror 1hu1 mul IJ,. in your dai.!>ifieJ ad
ilnmrdinrrly. The Daily Pilot ncct>pb no
liability for n1w error in an ad\1t'rtbemrm
for \J. hich it rnity lw re ponsiblr f'Xc<•p1 for
the COSt of tlw pnet 8('(UOlly O<'<'Upi1•d by
t11e error. Cmlit can onh be allowt'd for the
By Fax
(9-+CJ) <>:l 1-u:l9i
(Plr11...-111l·f111J •. )Ollr 1111)111· a111I
rl11•llt" 1111111ll<'r 1111d ••· II 1·all )00 .
harL .. ith 11f'fll"11u111r.)
By Phone
(9-+9) M2-.)b78
By MaWID Person:
:3:30 W,•.,t Bn\ S trp1·1
Cthtn \h•..,n: <;\ <>2<>27
\1 '""l"'n llhol ~ D11\ ..,,
Hours
T<'lephn11c 8:30tun-:>:00pm
\lo111la\-I ritl8\
·u l Thun;day ....... \\t•dne::.da) 5:00pm ..
Friday ............... Thur.-.da} 5:00pm~ ~
fir t insrrtion. ·
II
1. as
.
... ,,
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremation 8c
Burial Senice
Why. hould you subject
yourself & your family to
paying inflated prices for
caskctS & ecrviccs????
fMI ToU PM 1488-5tcASKIT
Sert11i OrMp I Sii r 11 If• fMUies
I
220·398
..
I I ..
"" '(l.. - --
400. 412
I PUBLIC NOTICES
#C, Tustin, C111torn1a
92780 Th11 bu 1ness 1s con·
ducted by an 1nd1Vidual
Have you started dOlng
business yet? No Albert C Johnston, Ill
This statement was hied
With the County Clef1( Of
Orange County on 8·28·99
19996803145
oaay PllOI Aug 28. Sep1
4 11, 18, 1999 Sa242
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN PURSUANT TO
CALIFORNIA LAW ,
THERE BEING DUE AND UNPAID, WITH ADDI
TIONAL COSTS ANO EX·
PENSES FOR WHICH
THE UNDERSIGNED IS
ENTITLED TO ANO/OR
HAS A LIEN ON THE
GOODS HEREINAFTER
DESCRIBED ANO DUE
NOTICE HAVING BEEN
GIVEN TO THE PARTIES KNOWN TO Ct.AIM AN IN·
TEREST THEREIN ANO
THE TIME SPECIFIED IN
SUCH NOTICE FOR PAY•
MENT OF SUCH, HAVING
EXPIRED, NOTICE IS
HEREBV GIVEN THAT
THESE GOODS WILL DE
SOLD AT PUBLIC
AUCTION AT LOCATION
9201 JERONIMO RD ,
IRVINE, CA 92818
AUCTION DATE · SEPT 28th AUCTION
TIME· 10 00 AM
LIENH<X.DER· RICHARD JOSEPH BAT·
TAGllA, 3366 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT OEACH, CA
92663 PH 941> 723-8900
1'HE FOLLOWING LISTS
ARE A DESCRIPTION Of'
THE PAOf>EATY TO BE
SOLD GRAPHICS EQUIPMENT
ANO TOOlS
t RHltrgraphlca 6400
CAO Mtlehlne 2 XEROX
Blueprint Ptlnttra 2 Oras fl
Lam1natDfl• 1 HewltU
Packard DM14et GOO Plot•
ter·• MUltldrawer 01alt1ng Ceblnete (81oeprlnt Onlw
era) Delta Orll Prt1s· 2 Miller M wtldara MitCI'!
M let' Saw Ryobf M ter
Saw•Jtl 8tll Sand r
Ste'"1"W.Y S~ Cleaner 2 Lathll Delta RIP Saw..,., 20-Sotoll
Gaw-4 Gl11ity ~ 0:utY
Vacuuma-Oratttman Ali
tlllll Arm S.W~H
BenCI s.w ~ °"' Pr .. a·Aockwall labia ~w.Pottef <:MM Tal>ll
.... r'8tlnlli ' cen In•
\
Index
420
--
, . I• .
' I
_.6"'11'_
I PUBLIC NOTICES
dus1rial Paint Sprayer· Craftsman Roi Away Tool Boic·TCM 5630 Fof1(1111
(propane)·Pallel Jack·
urge LOI Heavy Ware·
houM ShelY\ng·10lt "l
Shaped Paint Booth·large
Loi Plywood Molding,
Paint, Plywood Forms.
Rolls Paper-25 Large Roi·
Around WO<k Tables-urge
Lot Hardware
OFFICE EQUIPMENT
15 Workstations-4 Minolta
Copla1$·13 Olla Oeaka·
20 Othce Ctla•rs·Merldian
14 StatlOl'I Phone System· 6 Compla1a Computers
(various brands)-Con·
feranca Tabla and 8
Chalrs·Mlnolta Fa>c-2 01·
11ca Couchee·Scan)el
Scanner·Power Converter·
Poatal Workstalion/W Scales·Large Loi Metal
Shelving, Vertical FUes, Ot·
hoe Cabinets, B09kcases,
Credenzas. Adding Ma· chinas, Typewriters,
umps, Pic1ures, File Cabl·
nets
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
W1Sher and Dryer·
6 M1crowavaa·Retrlg·
erator-Water Cooler
AUCTIONEER • THE
AUCTION S6RVICE. PO BOX 825, RIAL TO, CA
923n
PH 909 873-0744
CA BOND 723-41·19 Published Newport BNch•
Cocta Mesa Daily PilOt
Sepl mbef 18, 2$ 1999
SA246
ORDINANCE
NO. 99-23
AN ORDINANCE OF
THE CITY COUNCIL OF
THE CITY Of' NEWPOAT
BEACH, CALIFORNIA
ADDING SECTION
1108010 TO CHAPTER 11 08 OF THE NEWPORT
BEACH MUNICIPAL
CODE PERTAINING :rO
OBSTRUCTIONS ON
PUBLIC BEACHES Subie<:t ~ was
lntrodoQtd on Iha 23fU dtly
d Augu'1. 1999. and was ~eel on the 131t\ day of ~· 1999 Ml~l~DAlll ,
OLOV!R, THOMION, DllAY, fUDOIWAY, NO= AND im~ COUNCL QITUI~ .. lllft: MDIII llAYOR:.,..... 0 .....
430. 468
I PUBLIC NOTICES
CITY CLERK: LIVonne M. Harkle11
The en11re test Is 1'1811
able tor raY11w 1n the Coty Clef1('s ollice of the C·ty cf
Na~ Beacti Published Newport Beac!h·
Cotta Mau Daily Plot
September 18 1999
Sa247
1 HOUSESICONOOS FOR SALE GENERAL
•V.A.•
SO DOWN · SO MOVE·IN
FREE
FREE · · "
. , •1' r
1-800· 723·6857
SOLD!!
ShowcaH Homtt tor
Sala In our Saturday Rael
Etlatt SuppltmenU
Homes of the Week
~lly Ms Start al .AISI $7SI
Otdrlt 11 T uesd.ly II 5PM
()per\ HOU$t l.lS1ingl SI 61 °"*-TMWif 5PM
It Pap to Advanist
In th• Beet Local
Rael E1tat1 S.Ctlon
CALL TOOAYll
LISA K. RIVERA
MIM74-4252
ANNE WILLEY
MW74-424t
. --.. .........-..-.....
~ · .. :__ ..1
.. .
lllld'81dt. ........ Jll ~---n.~---'°--:.:.., •
•
\\ ulk-111 8:;l0run-"5:00pm
\t .. nda~ -1 mla\
.. -.~ . . . .'...J.: Cl
• ' I I • 70. 478 ... >~"-~
1 HOUSES/CONDOS FOR SALE CORONA DEL MAR
OCEAN I BAY VIEW VllU
IRVINE TERRACE·SINGLE
LEVEL COLEEN BR~AN AGENT. 71W12-4MS
HEW TOWHHOMES
609.S ~ SSJ4.000. ec.an llW clectl.. ,_:r.111 John te.nney, 1&n M
110~1
SPAC TOWNHOME 38R 2 58A 0.-. 1600lf Latge
mstr br, hi 'llUI eel's S249.900
/!1. Benle ==SW RE 714-962·
E 11dt cosfA MESA
OPEN FRIDAY 10.2 :m FJoww (2 on a lotl)
3br 2tMl IMll\ hie w/nn paint
& carl>('1 Rtnlal \Ill\ • a 1 bf I bl wllml• j>lfY yard. Mail( CatdlMlci RE $429,000
94~720.1760
iBt 38a ~ pool I $pl. remodalld gouimtt lut hard-
wood eoora, s:m.ooo ~
O'Ro\Kk.t, ~· 310.91a.71 •
310-37&-•7 Ext 191
10 HOUSESICOHOOS FORSALI COSTA MESA
• Meu Verde Baeuty • Vacant $271,000
• 2Sr 2.SBI T ownhome • 2 Mitri, gw, pooll $151,000
• 1-St~Br 1 t'• Bdllt. owr 1 eq.ll $265,000
• mmC:::la 3Br 2aa. fr
hTi ackywd, $219.000 .......... net .
• 714-201·7153 .
•E IJdl CM• 2615 Redlands• S•.Sun 1-4
2 blocb from Baell Bay
Al lelurb 5br 3ba .... CIJkt&.
UC. Newpotl t.4tM schOol <llt <>Ml« S39et< IMI), n2-8196
HrFlliVllw M '2ml10 lid\ OPEN SAT 10-4
2175 PACIAC AVE
2 slry twtlml. 2 msrr br, 2 5bl
1325 •• pool.~· $214 950
8y °""* 94 ·574-SS5l
LEGAL TRiPilx jig FemlMI
1 9look lo Oi:ean Pride °'
Ownership, $689,000 ~ JoM Kenney, 949·123-44
IJl)Ofldld 281 1 S/481 'TWii
Ficrtr• yaro, pool l*IO.
8'IClad f: ,.... new llfll*,
carpel. • $206.900 = No His RMl!Y IMU43-
Lt:.~. . ~ r· . .
""1"".:" ••• •,·
\
atur<lay ............... Fm.la) S:OOpm ' '
I ,.,,...,~
• • '1 I.
I '\.,;
I 4, l I _ .....
1 32~1
•NEWPORT HEIGHTS•
IOW!'lholN 2br 2bl greal Poot
plln, w.it to bCtl l ratullllS
Owner!Ell\1 94H4s.6345
$299,000 prtnc ~
8lG CYN Vil.US
TOWNHOME EXCEUENCE 105 8ordef1ng 819 Cyn Gol1
Couf-. 2-3tn ~SunH FOOD AD PAOf'ERTIES
94• 75&-7700
NPB 2 on a loC Naww 3bf 2ba. In bta • olW lbt, tba.
JltTa lg loC, IUllllMti'wfnt., ,..,... pcMntlal. frt "-hat
bMll newly i.-. I c~ 8utT Miiie A1y. MH 830
BEST PFllCEOI OCMnfronl.,....
Ofelt Locllain
Wh"9 .... Vlewl .,.r' IN
M9-72M494
MNH 1101
LI VE ·IN LUXURY
.-.._A PARTMENT HOMES
~ ---.......,.
Exclusive Fashion Island Lifestyle
"'"' • • Concleree Service i4't ,': • 24' HR Fitness Center
• 24 HR Security Gate
•Cl ubhouse Facility
- -1 . Bed {tom $1795 2 Bed from $2385
2 Bed/den from $2210 1 Bed/den from $181 5
Washer/Dryer
Intrusion Alarms
Courmet Kitchens
El~vator Access
Gas Fireplaces
9 Foot Ceilings
Condo Specs
Subterranean Parltina
Custom Home Design Program Available
\I' CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
1-888-222-6924
Wooded Newport Luxury
~teps To Fashion Island
OCEAN BREEZES, CllY CONVENIENCES,
ORONA D EL MAR LOCATION & CHAR , t Vaulted ceilings, frplcs • Heated Olythpic Pool f. • Country kitchens• Fabulous closets/storage
: • Wooded landscaping• 11-acre nature park
·: Walk to shops & dining • Dogs Iii cats welcome
'• Select Location
·.. 1 Bedrooms from $1185 .. 2 Bedrooms from $1410
J Bedrooms from $1775
THE BAYS
of Newport &«h
MacA,J,w & San ]OlllJuin Hills
1-888-219-0754
OCEAHFRONT
BAY FllOHT MNTALS BALBOA
t Veatly Rerul. F lllllAoul Ocean VteW,
281 + Olhce. S3800IMo
t Wlnttl Ocelll Front,
28r, Boll\ l.lp9et & Lqwtt Avallallle $17~
•Bly fronl 8al>oe Cove 38r28a.S3200t'Mo
OTMER WINTER I
YEARLY RENTALS
AVAILABLE
BNR 94~723--4494
NEWPORT HEJOHTS AREA.
38' UBI 11150fmo.
No 1*1, Ylfd, ftrwoi.e., calf~ .... 117..CflS
38R 2al Upttan 6Up111
2 Patio Oeckl, 1 Bloclt 10 Sllld
3c ~g tp. yrty renlll. aval Oct
15 $.2200tMO 562-943-2860
8Hutlful 28r 281 plu1 otllce
wfyard, w/d, garage • 1, I bl<
lo biy. 1 bl< ocean. $1600t'mo
yearty MMS0-9421
-V111Balboa'2 Mitr bi's 8Nu
condo, steps to bcMlarbor. All reson amen. WIO 1r1g sins. Avall 10-1 • 714·*-72.22
38i 281 OCEANFR6NT 6Plx
POfch on ocean, FP, ttnnlll
111cquetbd courts. tier. Avail 9/17 $245MM 949-650-8443
FOA RENT, SALE OR LEAS~
OPTION! Llka new H#bof
Rld119 3bl' 2.Sba 1IO • view.
Marble kitchen, bath• &
mor•ll S4500'mo or 1729,000
~na Pro ... r Mt-644-"22
1'83::m&il
•SANC£RE• Cbl' 2.5ba, ntc. unh, 2 cat
P-999. g•td communhy.
$33SOlmo Apt MMl2·9145 THE SUMiiif 11
Gattd Wfpbol l apa. 2br 2be,
flrepllU, 2 car gw, & more ••
Avail nowt Diana Pro1Mr .. ~
MIKE
Gail Ille C«Oftl dll L Hl8HE1T PRICES PA10 P9clllc Dr. • AcecJe.. Sat fo ...... __ ..._ .... ..__
Sept 181h st 9afn. AtllquM & f -·--· WI""-· IUmiturt MUch o1 ~! Jewelry, gold, lilwr.
FAI. m. s~ WE TOP All OFFtRI
1920 Church Sl. huge multl WORLD ESTATE JEWELRY
perlOll ..... Nie. VlfUte NEWPORT llld modem furn, tippllnc:ea, BEACH ~Ind motel 949-675-1585 ~ sail Sit l Sun l'--W-A-NTt0--1 OU>--C-OIH--51--'I
8-2pm. Fumll\Jre, linens, col-Gold & ... _ F ......... leCIOf fQ!eS, 11\#ly miSC 2112 • ....... ,....... mini,
E Ocean BIVd Balboe Penn 51er11ng Oki WlldlM & ~.1·
Gar1191 Salt Sit only 7-12 WEST'COAST COINl42-144
Fumrture. babV Items, cloCrlet. LOCI ol QOOd Wf!l 1319 Ox1ord
Lint, "Newport Beech olf H~ Drive & W8$1C1111 •n•n•tt~-tt
GIANT GARAGE SALEI
Don't MIS& This One1
MANY THINGS HEWI
Ten of books. videos,
IO'fS, games, Odlgner
Clothls, (rnensfw0men5)
lhOH, pursts, IC·
celSOOM, electtlc type.
Wiiier. ~er decora·
IOI hems & rooch mo<el
FRl·SAT·SUH. 8AM-1PM
1824 PORT WHEELER
(in Hllt>or View, H.B.)
MOVING SALE! Set/Sun.t1t11
Great stuff! French Porcellne, lum, ciolhlng, bakelcook ware,
utenslls, Nordi Tracie, plants, cd<>kbooks/computer books,
olher bOOks!, signed 11\hos,
2552 Greenbrlenlt.M.
NPB UTi-?
200 BLOCK GRAZIANA
ON UDO ISLE
1440 ll&Cl~ I
BRUNSWICK 4X8 POOL TABLE
S1000.0BO 7f4-154-S2,15
knh Kini knitting machine w/nbber, I~. end all
allaehrnelts ong cost StOOO
aslong $299 949-72 Hl078
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
TAN AT HOME
BUY DIRECT ANO SAVEi COMMERCIAl.MOME
UnilS from S 199 00 '-::~~
NANNY AVAL a dtyllpw Miii, hu own
c1r, t xctlltnl re•'•· IMM42.e348
1 471 ~1
"ADMINISTl'ATIVE ASST' bUfc clttlctl ·dutlet. Full time, Mon-Fri, •s:oo. For
S11et Ofltc. rettaun1nVctttr· Ing In NP8. C1ll fof' ipPt.
94M7W425
AUT081S'm0 now tiring
mature. oouneoos stalf tor al posl1ions starting 11
$7 2Slhr plus mtdlcal btnefu, tiorws & stock
oplon ' Pf ogl'IWTI Salary ~ <lepeldng on exp.
Pttase 1uve meuaoe 949-833-1408 ext 13
BANQUET SALES
For Susy ltUlrl dl1'I house In
Newport Sales. rtstaurlnl and
computer upellence lllC85· wy Fax Res 101149-642-0674
".~: ' .. " ..
*41•·· }.l·· •. >. 4'•. • 41'. ..
PUN OUTDOOR JOBI
ORANGa COUNTY PAlllGltOUNDS C....Met.
Now ..... ~ Pwt-Tlme
Parldaa Dlrecton
EXCJTING EVENTS EVERVWEEK
GREAT ENVIRONMENT
FLEXJBU: HOURS
REQUIREMENTS:
POSITIVE ATTITVOE
GOOD PUBLIC RElATION SKILLS
~MORIENTEO
RESPONSIBLE
C.-(11•) 708-16" to Mt-41p lf'l inteMew
Dmerlfvmllure Dellwrltt 6et1c11'0 FIT txp'd dr!Yer/
lumitura watehcue PlfSOll WI
dean OMV prlnout. Cal MM
MM42-2050 VON HEMERT INC.
FUNOfiAISiHO biRECTOR Work with School PTA's, coacllel. tttehefa, and yoiAh
groups f()( money.
813-788-8846 -.~nol
&ntf11 BOAT SHOW
Temp FUIVPT Tldlel takers.
generll olflce. maintenance.
Must l\IVe valid Calf Oltvers
Uc Call 949-757·5959 x202
•Rll1mll'k cera Shop•
Lead person FT., 35-40 hours
per v.t Sales Associate PT
15-20 houri per week.
Newport 8each IMH31-8888
RECEPTIONIST FUii bme ll$O
Receplionlst pan bmt fOf bUSY
RMI estate olfic:a WI Newpcllt
Beach Fax '"""' to Joan 949~().1429.
RETAIL • EKP'd stiMl*iOn
to sel lades~rel at uplCale 5lOfe II NB OOU1W Saial'f + comm J MM52..at
CAFETERIA
WORKERS/
FOOD SERVICE
Requires excellent com· llUQllon slclls, lood ltl'ViCle
exptrlelice ~· Knowledge ol saMalon and lood saltly
j)f9lened
NUTRmoN
ASSISTANTS
Must have exctltnl com-mtneallon slcls Wiil '11 ebhy to lllldion In • last ptOed
INMronment Food .W:.
eicpenence preltrrtd.
SERVICE CARE
TECHNICIANS
Requires strong conmMlk:a· tlon ~Is. customer $lllllc:e abilllles Must be nexlble and a
team player
HOUSE KEEPER
Requires preYlous house llNP-
1 ng experience. hospital
preferred. FT/Evenings and Pet clem'Varlable
RADIOLOGY AIDES
Good corrvnunk:8tlOn sldlts,
able to transpon patients,
pertorm datkloom duties, =~· pelfonn
CLERICAL
Varilty d dertr. rOlt$ lnducklg PT registratlOn, IChtdulir1g
fding. data antty. phoMI.
clatms proc8$Slllg Must be
able to type 35 wpm. Prater some Mowledgt ol mecflcll termnolagy. •
NOUll ICHJllMIR ,_AY, M j(lf EXEC In Oce9I Fronl HolM. GtNI Pey,
EduCIMCI Fl. El'Gdla. Non
lln*r, Good DtMif. Fu "" .me or Lv0i3 714-t40-S41 I
um ' ""'°" "' IOll'll np ~· Avtll lnlMd Cal MM73-t310 Ilk
1or Tom llttWMl'I a...2Pftl l'lrttii;t •
Driver Wanted
tt.22 ptr hour plue m11M9e.
NMd9d Mon thru Sun
2:.aam to 5:45pm. Addi.;
tlonal work mey be evlll-
ebft.
Mutt have truck or Vin,
llabUity lnaurance with
pl'OOf or payment•, drlv-
ert tie.n.e, toel1l
a.eurlty Clfd, and clean
D.M.V. print out.
Accepting 1pplleatlon1
Mon to thru . Fri from
l :OOem to 4:00pm.
PIMM bring 111 required
Information.
Tim .. Orange County
Attn: Pem Beeldnghlm • 2901 a.rry Ave.
SMte Ane, C. 92704
714-MM541 80().93MQ80 •
STAJITYOUA
OWN BUSINESS!
Set your own ectltclJle
Control your own
Income Sal from YOOt
homt, I .I WO/IC, tlVough
lllodrt!StfS Bt an Avoo
Represenlatlve Call
(888)56 t-2866
TllChert Attlltanta needed tor aflemoon daycare. 3'6Pfn Mon-Fri, ECE units required
94MSO-M42
Vec:uum repalf per1011, no exp nee AflfkY In pers0n 11 FV
Vacuum & Sewlna 11141
Doily Pilot
lkootltlutlt St FV. flo can a.
NoW:r,63: ~~:iR Fit r 1-"Bl f
~US1 HIVt Good OMV. S&'HC • _
Plus Btntrrts MM45'03)S Lldolaltdocll loual~ b WOfUC AT HOME u JMr bolt. Aj)fOX 3CMOft WI
Nt you dlatntd lo you deek? btwn of 1211 Xinl secu1llv...,.
We may MYI hi Uy Cll 24hr enlrlnCI, ~. 949-673-7877
rlCOtd mess 1 ·aoo.ea&-7419 40fT SUP AVAA. NOW! '
633 Udo Palk Dr. $15 peflod .. 1 ·78 ~I ~-:.tJ,~:o-·~~
Irvine Apartment Communities
Newport ;:: Ridge
I ~ f..80().711-0158 FO== 1448 ~1
BOOKJCEEPER FIT I Pri Ouldcboolts tiq>erltnce a plusl Flelc hours Fu Retume to 94!H4().6003
CASHIER/ATTENDANT
Days• Evea aval. Newport Ctr Ch8vroo' Fashion Island Ult
lor Jot 949-844-7933
RETAA. HELP c:t111i!1 o1
cosmetlClbeauty stOfes
wtil Orange County
Good bentlllsl Fu Res.
to 949-752· 1887
Olher jObs also IVlllablt'I
Job h (948)760-673\
Hoag on81'5 exceaent benellls
lnCluding 28 days PTO (p8ICI
time olf). a m¢tling 401(k)
plan, OMile Childcare Cenler
and paict hNllh benefits
Plta•beawwelhlltht 1-~1 · 1"1'"9• In thlt cMe9orY • ':1 . : may reqvn you to call a 8MW 120I ·12
000 number In wtilch S apted, 1t11..fm CSU, runt
thtr9 la 1 ch.-ge per good. Prlva oertY $700
Motel
tCOSTA MESA•
MOTOR INN
l · Exclusive Gated Community I ATOP NEWPORT COAST
I ' . • Enclosed Garage
1"1 st Wffk Special
l"All room• $134.00
Tax, teatores 24·hfs
front desk, D D phOoes
Free HBOIESPN/Dlsc +
local chann, heat pool/
}IC Gutst laundly lllby Fwys 405 & SS min away lrom OC Fugds.
Colege. W>pl malls,
baaclll. restuarna •Alarm System
' L ,.. • Washer/Dryer/Refrigerator
,..._• F1mess, Business, C lubhouse Centers
A member ol CUI
~ ..
2ZT7 Heft>or 81Yd
94M4So414G
ONE AND Two BEDRCXJM 204
t APARTMENT HOMES FROM $1370 I I ''
RENrALs I TO SHARE.
N8 2.lr 291 to ahn. Own beh, ..,. & COIM1 W/pool,
gym, I.,,,. rm nMt & consid
S620/mO t-Ulll 94~93n
. San Joaquin Hills at
Newport Ridge Drive Frea room & GOard for a
compahble person female
Pfef'd In e•Chlngl for hoUse
dutitt In NS (Most ike doOS)
eel today II 949-574-8312
1~~,.1
ewport Marina 11'° IO~l!JSll Balboa Penln. Sf)aclOlia •
. Apartments · ~& o.1u ... 1new.1Utt;tum'd,21>r 2bl. 2c gar. ¥<Id, WC, nlDets.
Bayfront communlt)' with~tc beach 8t E.ASTSIOE HEIGKTS quiet. ds IO bch 941t-67S-1130
I W:iml~ Tropical landsca · · Lanai pool & 3Br 281 Giant Lot. RV I ~ I "'. un deck 'Walk to~ shops parking. VACANT. S1900IMo. 208
:::·:· Minutes from Fashion Island Agent. 94"'713-6074 FOR RENT
S,...,.i,,. 28R ·-... OPEN HOUSE 1·5 • • -• y ....... vUS aiiu 2BR &: den apts 2644 E~N AVE tA2 N.812.STORY GARDEN Style
r • • Pnvatc pWos or balconies E'Skle Townhome 3& 2 S8a Prof'I Medlcel Dentel 9ufld. •• Wood burnlnYgas fireplaces ""'an 2c gar. pnvete rear pa!IC) Ina tor LNsa 800 SF IMI 1400 ... Print ~ loc, ~ cond1ion No st Avuable PleaMJ Call F« • C garages pets/non smokers Yrty tease Mote lrdo. N/. 949-797....000
•• • 8o:1t lips available et Sf&OO'rno 949·718-1520 • 2SOO SQFt. .! • $2050 · $3600 Sotry No Pw E'SIOE 38r 2B1 !amity room NEXT To J.W. AIRPORT. ,,.. Pleue call 949 760-0919 !tp pool spa ~ 1M street OFFICES LOCATtO In RID .=.=.~" ,~==I f~-1 llaeh,ocean~.whlt.Ule& ~1 AUTO REPAIR FOR LEASE/
granite. small paflo • -C.M on Newport Blvd. New 714·390-3308/949-363-1508 Irvine NorthWood, Buildlng-4 81ys. $3000 1 s Wakafleid A~. 3bl' 2bt l:qent wta Co-op 94M-42·9699 1 156.;....i:..:.L.i~7-:, V«Y nic. hovM. $1795/mo.
• ~VRUUti IH•Stll Cell Mon-Fri
1 CORONA~'= tam-6pm J1M70-0244 400 ANNOUNCSIENT'I I
COM RENfAL SPECIALIST 1174 ::m. _ I 100 people nHded •CHRIS EDWARDS• we t.•y r.u to ION
Flrtt E1111 .. Proptflll• wtl t. Se • & naturelly
MW.9209 cell phone 111 888-280-8905
Condo, 4bf 3bt, frptc, 2 car C01;J Chennet In the VHlllt, 24 hr recorded mHl891
f~~~~io :. aunny :: ~= =~n:~ •MEMBERStlPe -
13275/mo 941-212·1839 Windows. r\lstllksrP«a 115115 '°' ylCht club In pra11gl0ue LOOKING? inc:adl Ulls 94g.1lH630 Corona Dtl Mar FKlllly .
• 712 LI~ 381128• amtlLO BAY •1~1•
I gaiaga, WIO llc\IP $21 !IS Ctl8lll*lg 48' 2 58a. 0c.an * 7 f 3 LI~ 38tf28a VieW Home. lrepl.tel, tVI 10!1. I/Nill pee OK, $229!1 S5000l'Mo 94M~9!17
•Newpoll Coell-Ocn Vul 2• Jen 2c ~. '3195
Laura ROIM>ld
8kr94M ....... 1
'WINJER" AU AVAll'
1,2 S, I WS RANOIHO FflOM
11HO·l2t00. Apt MM'24707
CLOSING SALE
2M0%0PF
Clawrll • ~ .a.; Atd~·-94~
FEW.DAYS ~INQ
'AOLMCG UDO MANNA VUAQI
tOn PMLMC>N COURT
IDMI PUM. M8Y fUMC. INTl .. JAINlllNf lCfR.i
CREATlYI MIMORllll ITOCIC e OOlf. llilUOff,
lllUCff, llOMiln
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
alter 30 yr$ Clearance sale 1111
end ol Sept Severty & Partnef
Antiques 1800 W Coast Hwy
Newport Sch 949-548-7187
l BUY ALL PIANOS!
AntlQues--Oualrty turnilure one pilCt or whole houseful11 casn pa1d 800·&49-4922
SIGNED UTHOS caider,
Coma Kent Dall, Jeblonslu,
Cl\ao31. Ollglnal Thal T emplt. RUbblnllS • AU FRAMED 714-7"'°579.
NEFDCASH?
$$MONEY fOR $$
~
.............. -•S.....•A.AOI·~~
.. CASH PAID$$
-~---WE BUY ESTATES
·~~....._
"'Wf PAY llORE FAITEJr'
1~ 81CYCL£8 I
IU. MOUNTAIN BIKE Full
6Uf9, XT comps. 8ontr~ ..... ,.. &Int cond. wl1h
elttM $750. 71 M2M755
I • FURtlTUAE I
eARMOlllEe
Solid llrth wood, IO'' high.
4T' •Ide. 24 ' deep.
11 iOOr'OIO. 149-75 .. 1201
CuetOfll seotlOnet sOl1 Pila
S2.300 • AC al S800 Oek rall lop desk. 1250 • Oki fashioned
Oek '""° wlsWIVel )Op, $100 Call 114-9$8 41329
l
CRUISEUNE
Enlry l..eY9I On Boatd Poaltlons
Available Great Ben1111t1
323-644-2103
CuatorMr S41iVICikllflCal ~PIT()( FfT customer
servlct/clerlcal person,
e•peritnc:e prefd, Yoil 1181'1
Clll Miki 94Ml'2·2050
VOH HEMERT INC.
•DRIVER AND•
•MOVE" HELPERS•
wanted for movlna company In Cotta ...... ruiwr pot
evalL ~per.on Ill 195 Blvd. « Cell M 4371
Rt1all Poatal Store. Retat exp prel'd
FT/PT 3535 E Coast Hwv
Corona del Mar 949-673·2936.
Salea/Aclvef11alng
Expanding community newspaper group seeks
Inside salts reps Phonee "'9e txperlence a plus.
Great oppol1\Jnlty Base • commlulon. 'Physlcatl
drug ICfMIWlg req Fu rnumt lo
Markey Daniell e
94M31"5t4
-EOE·
Apply 11: Human R11ourcH
Hoag Ho1ph1I One Hoag nnve Sox 6100,
Newport Beach, CA
92658-6100 ED.E.
• ~ ....
mlnut.e. 714-238-1510-
Pi.ue bt nry of out of
area compan .... C'*-wllh the local Belt•
lualnna Bul"ll\I before
you Mnd any money or
,... for ~tc.L Rud
1nd uncs.retand eny
contr-.cta Nlofe you
alfn.
BMW 3Ult 187 BllCk w/blacll leatt)lf,
5 tpttd. Uka new cond.
SH,000 Ont owner. All
achtd malntenanc:e "" to dlle. MMtS-3715
8u1C11 ceniury spedil Sdn
'94, 4dr, IC, am1nl 12WIO, till.
pw(dl (~9649) $8,988
Sonny'• Omc Pont~ Buick
11.:=20:"
BUICK LE SA8RE '87
3 8 V6, ltlv ABS non-~. lerldlc 1111ue (595786) s1 uaa.
NABERS
(714)64Mf00
Look for the newly designed an·d
unique automotive section with
tod~y' s paper .
You'll find great deals-
and even some. fun things to do!
\
Pilot ..
T I ~Y'S
cROssWaRD ruzzLE
... ,..
8y CH.~ES Go.IN
#WIOMM~
and TANNNf HUlSCH
CADIUAC DEVILLE 'ff
Lo 14k ml, While, '*' llt\(, V8, Nonhlt11, bll ol WllT
(7<Cen2) $28,988
,.,.. OldtmOblle c.dllllC
714-54().9100
1 ~ADIUAC ElJ>OftAOO 'M
t.C1W mies, th many Xlfas. bal oC wan (8011183) $25.988
NABERS (714)!40:!100
CADILLAC ION DEVILLE '83 Blue , 4.9 VI, good
()Otdllon. tllW w lrldH\J =:!1otctWllOblle c:= 7f'"MHf00
N hlll, AMac:e ~ Kltchtn , 8ath, Doota I
WlrldoWs ~ 71444t-7'251 HIHlll iieclellatl AH lypee~Of """'· Remodel-~ . Orlll!)f ~
lot. 33 r-s 8orid1ll ~ .,, .........
----
.~·;-,.
. .,. .
28 T4lldge
29 ~maze 32 Wager '
33 Saints' plc:t~
34 Preaous ointment 35 -Bovary
36 ·-otlhe
D'UltleMhs" 38 Evaporate 39 Adam'•
42g~
43 Moister
45 Frightens
~ Fetctltd 47 "Excuse mer
48 One more time
49 Ronstadt or
Evana 5 t Good dirt~
52 Harveat-
53 Fuel
54 Nomerlcal
prefnc
65 Mell
58 Gunk
eC> P()fl(•
FOLLOW THE BOUNCING BALL
Bodi vulnerable. South deals.
WEST
•J873 'V J 952
¢ K863
•JO
NORTH •AO 0 A ~74
0 102
•AK75l
SOUTH
.. 1092
'V Q IOJ o AQS
,• Q984
EAST
• K654
ti 86
0 J974
... J 63
The bidding: ... SOUTH WESI' NORTH EAST
l• Pass Pus .,,...
JNT Pall 3NT Pam ,.. ,..
Opening lead: Three of •
Every card has a tale ro 1ell. Cover
up the East and West hands and see if
you can maximize the outcome.
The game is duplicate pairs, so
overtricks are crucial. The auction is
simple enough, and West leads a low
spade. You try the queen from
dummy. but it loses to the king and
the four of spades is returned 10
dummy's ice. Obviously, you are
going to start on clubs. Does it make
any difference how you tackle the
sutt7 "
Very much so. Jf clubs arc 4 0, you
can brinj in the suit without c~cd ·
inJ • tnck only 1f Wesl tw afl IJle
m1s!iing clubs, so you must begin by
leading a club to the queen. Both
defenders follQw, and you continue
with the nine of clubs 10 the king. on
which West discards a diamond. On
I.he final round of clubs. you pitch a
diamond from hand as Wesc agoni1-
ingly leis go of rwo more diamond\
and a spade. What do you know
about the hand?
West. who has a singleton club .
elected to lead a padc from four to
the jack. Thal is 10 unlikely lead if
West holds a looser suit, .so that
defender's distribution mu t be 4·4-
4-1. Obviously, West has been
reduced to the jack of pades, one
diamond and four hearts.
West's remaining diamond is irrcl·
evant since 11 tricks arc now assured.
After l~ing to the diamond ~. you
can eiut with a spade to force a hean
return, sccurina four tricks 1n the suu.
But when the ace fctcbei the di•·
mood k.ing, you cash the queen and
all West can do is discard the jack of
spades in the hope part~r holds the
1cn. Now you ha~e 12 tricks. Well
done.
Learn to be a better bridge_play-erl Subscribe now to the Goren
Bridge Letter by callina ~800) 788-•
1225 for lolonnation. Or wnte to:
Coren Bridge LeJ,!!!'rA P.O. Box 4410, Chicago, Ill. OUCMKJ.
ees' CARSITRUCKS 895 CARSITBUCKS
NANSISUVS
DAEWOO LEGANzA '" Lo111 1 Ok miles, llhr,
many xtias, bll ol wan
(189877) $13,1188
NABERS (714)5*t100
DOOdE CARAVAN '13
Grand, dual ale, loaded
(9950ll.'804290) $7,995
MC«EHNA VOlKSWAGEH
71W42·2000 oooot HEOH 'ii
A•Ao, 4dr, AC
(99505l341544) $10 995 MCKENNA VOl.KSWAGEN
714-142-2000
NANSISUVS
CHEVY ASTRO ~. Wgn '97
V6, 4 3l hls,f1<iutput, HI pass,
dull u. am'hn, ps, X1ra clean
t:.,«74) $14.977
y'a Grnc Pocltlac Buick
~~~com 71 200
Ctwyafar eoncotc1e Sdli ·es
4dr IC, pw/d, 111. cruise. ttW
Im cass ~) $10,999 Sonny'1 PonllK Buick
www~com 71 200
HYUNDAI '87 Runs well, 4 speed, sunroof, $1500.
714-545-1150
JAGUAR XJS Y12 Cowrttble
'N M81alic Red 40K mi,
;
Jaguar XJS S.CSan 4Dr '116
$32,DSS tl-4IOO
BAUER JAGUAR
714-1153..tlOO
J~uar XJS S.CSan 40r ·ii
$33,llS lll..te01
BAUER JAGUAR
71 4-tss-4IOO
Jaguat XJi sedan 40r '116
S32.•5 tMto4 BAUEA JAGUAR, 714-ts3-4t00
Jaguar XJI Sedan 40t '117 $37,DSS '7-4602
BAUER JAGUAR
114-tn..aeoo
Jaguw XJt Yanden Plaa ~40rll6
• FORD 8A6Nco 'ii • Eddla hutr Edit, wtih/1111,
io.ded, mint cOnd, 4X(, CO
,,...,..,, only S71c m~ Stt,ISO
695 CARSITRUCKS ... 080~~~tf~~1 cetl
N ANSISUVS ll':fO'"R:'-0:-2C~RO"'W"'N::-iv~ICT"""o'lrlRl.4~U
MUST SEll,J $24,SOOfobo MM50.7733
Jagu• XJ12 s.dan •Dr iw
S!t,1195 tMSOJ
BAUER JAGUAR 714-953-4800
Buick Riviera Coupe 2dt '115
AC, am'lm '11fl0, lilt, rrw/d,
abf. l1hr ($471112.22) Sl1.m Sonny'• Omc Pontfac Bulcit
www.cmgm.com
714M4-620CI
CADllilC DEVILLE '117
LOW mies, llhr, V8, NOlthslal 1
bll ol W&l1 (21n48) $24.988
Nabtra OtcbmobDe C.CSllllC .., t 4-540-tl 00
CAOIUAC SEVILU SLS 17 low 43k ml. SIDie blK, tan lllv. Ult Cllfld bit/ • of _,
(635797) , I $24.988
NABERS (714 )S4o.t100
CADILLAC SEVILLE SlS '117
Low 2511 miles, 300 ll p
Notthstat. pristine cond
(819821) $31,988
NABERS ' (714)540-~00
Clldlllac. V 1r1 COilwrtJOll 'i4 Bubble tOp, tv, vet, V6, d'tl
coodltloo ( 163455) s 10.988 Habif• OldtmOblle Cadillac . 71"'540-9100
CHEVY ASTRO Ext. Wp 'et 1/6, 4 31.1'9\~ 7~ pm. ~ .., lril/lm, ps, lt1rl dMll
(8227421) StS.177
Sonny'• Gmc Pontiec luldl
~
FOR EXPloliEA xlt 103
2 WO, white, MIY lo.tded, 73k m~ one ownar1 •11 main-tained, good condition. $97~· 1411•712.f425 oiliC Lf•I Ext W9n 111
1/6, 4.3L high OUlpul, 1;1 pass,
cl* ... anvim. i-. 'lltfa clean <Bs1294n s1e.m Sonny'1 Omc Pont• Buick
't2 r:ua power. factory u .
5411 mi. real 51\arpl '6500/obo 9-Ct-7~1504
llWWW.cmtlft.com 71~200
HOndl clvlC Li 'i5 Auto. NC, pt>. pw ps, am.Im caseen.. en-. coterol, Sl500 Nt.a3-tt41
$41,1195 116-45"5 BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
JAGUAR XJ6 L SEDAN '117 '3Ut5 n-4352 BAUER JAGUAR
71~1153-4800
• JAGUAR XJ6 ( SEOAN '97
$40,1195 117-4553
BAUER JAGUAR 714-15:Mt00
J~ XJ6 Std111 40r 'M
$33 9'-4541 BAUER JAGUAR
71~
JAGUAR XJi SEDAN 'II "2,1195 tM572 . BAUER JAGUAR 714-~
mus £S300 ·w can tor currerc Dllcin!I
LEXUS OFWESTMINSfER (714)192-'906
LEXUS ES300 ·97 can ror cunen1 Pncin9 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)192-'llOI •
LEXUS lS:Coo '90
Blactllgtey, MW Ina
IMNACUUTEll , $13,500.
pp 714-775-2802
L.£Xus sCioo 't2
Call lot eu11en1 DflClna
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)192..eeoc
Llius sC400 'i3 c .. '°' CUfTS111 pocing LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(71•)112.-ot
.... 6' .,;~ . ·•·c...~
RICK BLOCK STON TILE
Concrew, PlllO. ~eway, Replace. 880'1, Rats
2sy11 exp T~ 714-557-759-C
*BRIC WORK•
Sma• lobl end repair~ Calf DOUG HARLINE·
MM4M762
r~--,..-.· ···~ \ ' ' . ...· ' ,t "-'. . •\ • . r ....... "•" .. , .
,f-
l.
,~ . , . . .... ,·
. '
. .,
. .J ..... ' ,., ..
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Cahf. Publtc·
Ulthlles Commtssron
REQUIRES that an
used hoosehold goods
movers rrint their
P.U C. Ca T number;
limos and chaulfers prtnt their T.C.P.
number In an aclvettts·
ments If you hive a
question about the
legality ol a mover, nmo Of chauffer, cell:
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION n ... SM-.. 151
.. .. ( . '" .... t,·---·~.t>u-~l
il1£RCEOES 5iOSEL 'M
OrHt condition, load.cl,
"'"' •Intl 17500. Of beat ott.r.M~
11\ticury &and Mlrquli Li
Sdn 4d '116 VI, 4 6L, M:, ps,
~ pd, 1111, OC, am'lm lier (111646365) s1un
Sonny'• Omc Pontlle lulclt
WWW.Cfllllll.COlll 714-444-5200 •
lilftUllSii i)l(MAN'ft '" Ale auto, ..,..,,m cass. cc.
(005989) $249 lllf mo. MfTSUBISll MOTORS
I -.coetame..mlla.com
714-SU-1100
MITStiiiSli ECiJSSt RS '00 l.eaM lo! s 199 pet morll
MfTSU91Sll MOTORS www.~com
11-.54s-1100
MlTS08iSHI ECUPSE 1t7
Auto,cass CCI ac. alloy.~
(994321155269) $12.995 MCKENNA YOUCSWAGEN
714442-2000
MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE RS '1111 A/C, ~m cd, alloys, spoiler
(080025) $139 per mo
MITSUBISHI MOTORS
www.costameeam~om 714-545-1700
MITSUBISHI <lALANT OE '911
A/C, auto, amllm cass, pwr v.in
& doors (1.A6758)$1•9pe1 mo. MITSUBISlfl MOTORS
www.co1tameumlt1.com
11-.545.1700
Mlteubl•lll M1u1ge OE Cpe
1999. lie auto. am1m cass
(052661) $99 per mo MfTSUBISHI MOTORS www.coatemeaamlta.com
714-545-1700
M1taublahi Montwo Spo11 LS
1999 IUIO &'c lm1rn ed. CC
(098898) St99 pet mo
MITSUBISHI MOTORS www.cottam.aamlta.com
714-545-1700
MITSUBISHI 30000T ·n
A/C, llTWlm C8$S ed. cc. tloys
(0026341 $289 per mo
COSTA MESA MITSUBISHI www.coltllllffllllha..com • 71 .. 575-1700
Mustang GT 'i3
BlaQ; 1dn1 COOd ne111 A/C &
radlalOI heavy Cilty <iJ!ch,
$6000 hrm 9-C~-63 H 549
Otd1moblle Cierra
8rough1m Sdn 4dr 'N 6 C)i,
tun pwr. auto. am'lm stereo (J939080l) $5,,95 Sonny'a Gmc Pontiac Buick
-~,,;·com 71 200
PLYMOUTH Yoyagar LE 'iO Auto. rear u , lul pwr pkg am/ Im cass. supet sharp. lo mi
(209463)CaD lot CUllent priang
LEXUS OF WESTMlHSTEJf
(714)1112"906
Pontiac Grand Am Se Sdn
96 4dr_ 4 cyl. 2 4l. ac. ~
JtMO. lo mi.(C757024} S8.995 Sonny'a Gme Ponllac Buick
-~=="
• •
"1Ndl ikMM '12 va,.-...... cc.-. ......
CllMllt, co. NWt, lllMIOIWt, LOADIOll Mini c.M, ..., Selll 1111 000/ollo. .........
i-koTA AVAlON XL ..
st( Ii. wtwlt, ed. "".J: pkg
339856)Caf '°' CU{renl ptlc.t)Q LEXUS Of WHTlllfSlllf
(714)112..,.
TOYOTA CAMRY LI sbH 117
4dr,4cyt, ac, 111l,MMl,..,..,,m '*'°· cass. dual w blOI (U806972) $1017
Sonny'• ~ Pontiac lulctl
71 ........... 200
TOYOTA CAMRY LE 't3
Auto. lk. --PWf pkg, mnrf (162145)Cll I« CVITe'1I priQng
LEXUS Of W£STIIHSTE.ff
(7!•)192...,.
,,...,..,I. . . . . •·:"' .. . ~ .... .
UMOOE, IHOWN IY Af/IPT OfU. P100
.... 7'2MIOI w; cllAiO OL 111 s .. apd, ale, Ill\ cd (111158CW04893) • $15,995
lilC1(ENNA VOUlSWAGEN
714-142·2000
THROUGH CLASSIFIED SEIL. YOVR USED VEHICLE
642-5678
Run your ad In the
Newport Beaco-
Costa Mesa Dally
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain valley
Independent to
reach ovef 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your ored1t
card # or mail with
a check today!
Run for a week! If
your car dOes not
sell. we'll run it for
another week FRIEi
All for JUSt $10'.
.-' If.. . •••
• , ,l' ~ ..
~
I t' .. ., •. ·• . ,·
I,_
I .-.,..
----------., 0 YD, SEU. MY CM
':::--------------------------------1 c..,
I loll , ....,. 'I Oden Owe o~ o,..x
fltug Into the
Cltdied section
to fiOO semces
horn electriOOns
~pUnbwsto
k>ndscopers
,
LIVE IN LUXURY
l !'' __ · ,_J
APARTMENT HOMES
Exclusive Fashion Island Lifestyle
• Concierge Service
114 ,': • 24 HR Fitness Center
• 24 HR Security Cate
•Clubhouse F'acility
-I Bed from $I 795 2 Bed from $2385
;.,_~ l Bed/den from $181 5 2 Bed/den from $22 I 0 ,...
Washer/Dryer
Intrusion Alarms
Gourmet Kitchens
Elevator Access
Gas Fireplaces
9.Foot Ceilings
Condo Specs
Subterranean Parking
Custom Home Design Program Available ...
C A LL FOR APPOINT M ENT
1-888-222-6924
Wooded Newport Luxury
Steps To Fashion Island
OCEAN BREEZES, CITY CONVENIENCES,
.bRONA DEL MAR LOCATION & CHAR f Vaulted ceilings, frplcs • Heated Olympic Pool
: • Country kitchens • Fabulous closets/storage
: • Wooded landscaping • 11-acre nature park
~· Walk to shops &-dining• Dogs & cats welcome
'.. Select Location
\ 1 Bedrooms from $1185
' 2 Bedrooms from $1410
J Bedrooms from $1775
THE BAYS
of N~ort Beach
MacArthur & San Joaquin Hills
1-888-219-0754
OC£AHFROHT
BAY FRONT RENTAL.I
BALBOA + Vtaltf Rental,
FlblJIOUI Ocean VllW 28r+Office, ~
• Wloler Oceen Front,
281, Bo4t1 Upper & Lowe1
Avdlble 117000il<>
+Bay front Blllbol CoYt 38r 2Ba, 13200Mo
OTHER WINTER l
YEARLY RENTALS
AVAILAltLE
8NR 949-723-4494
NEWPORT HEIGHTS AMA. 38r 1.581 S1150imo.
No ll«J. ywd, tnoi.c., Call Llndtay Mt.11N716
3BR 28A upttQt Duplt1
2 Pado Dlcka. 1 BIDC:k 10 SIM
3c plllg 1p, yrly rental, am Oct
15 $2200'MO S62·M3-2880
UDO 11&.E 28ft 28A
Sunny~
moMlo.
OtlMf Udo .. HoNI AVlll
Biii Onlndy....,..
MM1M111
S.1utltul 2Br 2Ba plua onie.
wlyttd, w/d, garage + I , 1 blc
to bay, 1 blk ocean, $1600/mo
yearly MM50-M21
'Vlia eO!bOI • 2 MSir b?t-Beau
condo. steps to betvhart>of Alt reson emen, WIO IM s1ns
AVlll 10-1 '714~·7222
3Br 2Be OCEANFRONT DPl•
Porch on ocean, FP, tennis/ recquelball courts. gar Avail
11111 • 450/Mo 949-650-8443
FOR RENT, SALE OA LEASE OPTION! Like new Harbor
Rldot 3bt 2.Sba 180 ' view.
Mllble kitchen, bathe l mortll S450Mno oc snt,000
Diena Pro ... r MH44"622 I t83::nrl
•SANCEAE•
4bf U bl, nlct unit, 2 cw
gwage, g81ed communltY.
$335<Vmo Agt MM12-9'7'5
THE SUMllifll Glltd w(pool .. '9L 2bf 2ba, fir~, 2 car gar. & mOfa.
Avail nowl Diena Proaw •
M~22
Eli.a 18' cotone dli I& H18HOT PNCO NIO !>Kiiie Or, • ~le. Sat s.pe u11n 11 9am. Attlques 1 for dllmondl, waldlea.
IUIT'rllU1'9 t.lllCtl ol everyttlngl Jewelry, gold, lllwr.
FRI, SAT, SUH M WE TOP AU OFFtRS
1'20 Church St, hull muttl WORLD ESTATE JEWELRY
peqon ~ Nie. Vfnllte N llld m um,--·· EWPORT BEACH clothing and morel 949-675-1585
Cllfage SM Sat l Sun 1-------......1
.. 2pm. Fumtture. linens, cof.. JeclOf plalaa, tnarfi llll8C 2112
E Ocean Blvd Balboa Penn
dlliijie Lie S81 only M 2
Fumiturt, baby Items, clo(hes,
LOii ol good 5Mf t 1319 OJCIOld
Llllt, Na#i>Ol1 Beach off ~ onve & Westddt
·~'l)·'l)·'l)·'I)
GIANT GARAGE SAUi
Don't M1$$ This Ontt
MANY THIHGS NEW!
Tons ol books, videos.
IO'JS, games, Oulgnw
Clottlff, (rner6'womens)
•hoes. purses, 1c-
c:e5SOlles, tlecttlc type.
Wrllllf, ~tl, decola-
10! •ems & much morel FRl-SAT·SUH, IAM·1PM
1124 PORT WHEEL.ER
(In H¥bor View, H.B.)
MOVING SALEI Set1Sun·9am
Grell stulfl French Poroeloe,
tum. cloll'ing. bake/cook ware,
utensils, Nordl Trlci<, plants.
cookbookslcompu1er ~s.
Other books!, slQ(l8(! lilhOS.
2552 GrM!lbrltnlt.M.
NPB SAT 9-f
200 BLOCK GAAZIAHA
OH UDO ISLE
1 440 ~1
BRUNSWICK 4X8
POOL TABLE
11000.080
714-164-5215
Knli King 1<nhtl119 mechtne
wlnbbef, 111>arat11 and all
•ttactvneru ong tos1 s' 000 asking $299 949-721·9078
WOiJF TANNING BEDS
TAN AT HOME
BUY DIRECT ANO SAVEi
COMMERCWJHOME
ul1ICS hom $199 oo
AUT081STRO now hlrlno
marure, couneoos stall
IOI d f>Ollllons st•rona 01
$7.25/hr plus medical btnelflts, borall & ltoek
E progtlm Sllery
depen<lng on exp
lelYI meaage
949-833-140&.xt 13
BANQUET SALES
~"'-.... . . ~·
..... • l"
•l.J '--~ . . • .....
PUN OUTDOOR JOBI
OltANGa COUNTY PAlltGllOUNDS eo... .....
Now Hiring v...aound ...... Tlme
Pm"Jdaa Dh'ectors
EXCITING EVENTS EVERY WEEK
GREAT ENVIRONMENT
FLEXIBLE HOURS
R~QUIREMENTS:
POSmve ATTITUOE
GOOD PUBLIC RELATION SKILLS
TEAM ORIENTED
RESPONSIBLE
c.11 C11•) ?Ol-1699 to set-41p an lntlMew
FUHOIOOSiNO biflECfoR
Worlt with School PTA'a,
coaches, IMChtll, end youth
gtoups lor mooey,
813-788-8846
www.£>UCO-¥nol
Gtntral BOAT SHOW
Temp FIM>T Tloket 1akers.
general off Ice. malntenanee.
JAus1 hlVe valid Ctlll OrlvetS Uc can M9·757·5959 t20'2
t fflllinlik Clid1Shop• Leed pt<son FT , 35-40 hOUl's I* wit Sllaa Assoallt PT
15-20 htoo pt( week
Newport BNch 949-631-8888
RECEPTIONIST F~ llmt aso
Rtcepllonls1 pert timt tor busy
Aetl lltlle ottace 111 Hewpol1
Bead1 fU ltwnl IO Joan
949-640-1429
RETAll • EiP'd Sl!Mp«aon
toMl laclOl=upscale 510tt at NB
+ comm J MMs2:l
Just blocks hom the PICiftC Ocean, Hoag Hoepbl 1111 ="~~ tomet ~ aklls In the lol-
lowltlQ areas:
CAFETERIA
WORKERS/
FOOD SERVICE =:=, excellent com· slcas. loodw.Q
"':"'""'urita ........ ICt ... don ~ t!s~
preferred.
NUTRmON
ASSISTANTS
Musi h8Ye ucellanl corn-
llU'IC81loo sklls wlfl the 8blily
10 tr.incton In a fist peced envlrorment Food ser'o1ce
experi«lce preCerrtd.
SERVICE CARE
TECHNICIANS
Requires strong corntTll.W'iiCa·
tlOn skills, customer S8IVlol abi~tlts. Must be 11eldtlle and 11
team player.
HOUSE KEEPER
Requires previous hoose keep-
ing e>Cpetlence. hosp1111 prtferrtd. FT /Evenings and
Per dem'Verla.ble.
RADIOLOGY AIDES
Good commYnlcadon _,,
Ible to ttanspor1 pebenlS,
pel1om\ diWIOom ~.
l$SISI tachnolOglsts. peflorm
delieal UlctlOns
CLERICAL
Vallely of c:Jelk rQie.s lncWng
PT regislration. SClltduWlg,
f~~ da1a entry. phonel,
dalrM proce5$lng MUSI be
Ible to type 35 wpm, Prtl8f some knowleJdgt o1 me<kll terminology. •
HOUll UIPllllOIR&. ,_.Y, M lor EXEC In Ootm'I F ronl Honie, Grett Pay,
EcM:tt8CI, Fl. Enolalncl. Non Smkr. Ooocl OMf, f'li All
WPICOfLVc:i3 714-M0-3411 IUT I NMdN WT
IOll'lt 8111> lllCllllfY. A"" llMlld Cll MH73-&310 Ilk
tor Tom blt#Mn lem-2pm
PWtttme Driver Wanted
H .22 per hour plu1 ,,. ......
NMdtd Mon thru Sun
2:45am to 5:45pm. Addl-
tlonel WOftl rnay be 1118'1-
a~.
Mutt have truck or Van,
llablllty lntur•nc9 With
proof or paymentt, drlv·
tr• llctn&t, eoclal
MCurlty cwd, 1nd el .. n
O.M.V. print out.
Ac:etptlng applleallon1
Mon lo thru Fri ftom
l:OOam to 4:00pm.
,,.. ... bri119 '" required infonnatlon.
Tlmtt Orenge County
Attn: Pam Bteklngharn
2901 Garry Ave. Santa Ant, Cl 92704
714-S4H548
8()C).933-4080
START YOUR
OWN BU5iNESSt
Set your own echedUle.
Conlrol your own
~ Sell t1om your
home, at ~ 11\tougll
lundtliHra Be an 1-von
Represen1a1lvt Cell
(888)561·2866.
Tatel'llfa Aaal1tent1 needed
tor enemoon daycare. 3-6pm Mon-Ftl, ECE units required
MM50o3442
Vacuum repeli person no exp
nee APr*f In person 11 FV Vecuum & Sewing 19141 Btooktunt SL FY. ~o calla.
Daily Pilot
. . .. . ' . . ~ ~ ....... :... .. ,
VEHDiNO: Luy pe11or1t
df..n Faw holn • Good S P~ to Ml FIN b«letlrra
1 ·800-820-6782
••
No~=~~:," FIT 1-aaem: I t,tust Heve Good OMV. SMif • A9Qlllf Plus BenelO M~S !o-:U":"'do"'!' ... ~~~~:..:O..J" ii WORK AT HOiliE ii dodtlonalboa~
Al• you chlr.ed 10 you disk? ~ ~1~ ~ *" Wt may htVe the key Cell 24hr entlWlCe, ~ 949-673-?6T7
l1ICOf'd mess 1~74 18 40FT SUP AVAIL HOWi .
833 Udo Pat1C Dr $15 P« toot ..
1478 EMPLO~ I ~-:.~~2800x ~ ~
Irvine Apartment Communities
Newporl ;::-Ridge
1202
L~E~~ I c.111..aoo-111-01 FO== , ... ~1
f ()f Susy 11*1 dlrllf house In
Hewpon Salas. ltclluf'lfl end
~ expenence ,_. sary FIX Res 1094!M42-0674
BOOKKEEPER FIT l Prl
OulclcbooQ eicperlence a ptusl
Flex hou1I Fu Raeume 10
9411-64<HIOOO
CASHIEA/ATIENOANT
O.ys & EYM evd . Newpolt Ctr ChevrOIV Fashion laland ask
tor Jot 94H«·7933
RET All HEU> chlill of
cosmet!Clbeeuty stores
wtlllln Orange County
Good bentlftsl Fait Ra
to 949·752·1887
Olher lobs also IVllllblell
Job llne (949)760-5731
Hoag afters t>llC8aer. benefits
lncWng 28 days PTO (paid
time oll), a ma1Chflg 401(k)
p&an, onslle Childcare Center
and paid health benefits.
1 -~1 PfetM be awwe lhet the
lletlnge In thla calegory t ? :
'"'' requn you to tall• · BMW 320I '12
IOO numbat' In wtllch 5 tpetd, tm..fm cue, runt
there le 1 chwge per good. Pr1vtlt petty $700
Mottl
f COSTA MESU
Exclusive Gated C ommunity
AT OP N EWPORT COAST
MOTOR INN
..,1st Wffk Special
..,All rooms $134.00 Tax. lea tu res 24 hrs Iron! clel.k, O D phones
Free HBO/ESPNIDlsc+
local eham. heal pool/
llC Gu~1 lllundlY rvtly
Fwys. 405 & ~ mm
away lrom OC Faargds.
Coltge, 5llOPI malls,
btlchl 1'1611JaMS
' . • Enclosed Garage
•A larm System
A rnerlDf ol CIM
L,.. • Washer/Dryer/Refrigerator
_ • Fitness, Business> C lubhouse Centers
~· 22n Hlf1>« Blvd MM4s;.4840
ONE AND T wo B EDR(X)M R!HTALS I TOSHAA~ , A PARTMENT H O M ES FROM $1370 r . . San Joaquin Hills at
Newport Ridge Drive Fr11 room i bOlf'd tor 1
compahblt person, 1em1te
prerd In exchlnge toi hoose
duties In NB (Must •ke dogs)
Cal today al 949·514·8312
ewport Marina
Apartments
Bayfront community wath!ij" tc beach ct
.Troplal landscaping·L WW pool &
~.' •. sun deck. Walk to Balboa shops
• Minutes Crom FaWon Island
-• SpaCIOUS 2BR and 2BR & den apts
..... • Private patios or balconk$
• Wood burning/gas fireplaces
• Pnvate pr.ages
•• • Boat slips available
.. • $2050. $~Sorry No Pru
,.., Pleate call 949 7 60--0919
l ~~A=I
1
180·"°'. 3011 · . Balboa Penln. SpKiOUa
0.IUH d new, !Ulty lum'd, 2br 2be, 2c gar, W/d, A/C, rVpets,
E.ASTSIOE ttEJGKJS QUlat els to bch !MHJS-11~
381 2.Ba Giant Lot. AV I di I perle'lnv, VACANT. S1too1Mo. 208
Agent, Mt-73W074 FOR RENT:
OPEN HOUSE 1-5 • • 2644 ELDEN AVE I A2 N 812·STORY GARDEN Stylt FSldl Townhome 3Bt 2 58a Prol"I Madicel Dlntll Bufld-
'Nat1 2c gar povata reat patio lnQ IOI lease 600 SF f1IU 1400
«pet loc. XlrC conditJOn No st Avalablt Plea.t Call Fot
pets/non smc*8rs Yrfy Lease Mor• Info. A" 949-797·4000
at SUIOOr'rno 949·718·1520 * 2600 Sq.A.
E'SfDE 3Br 281 t.mlly room NEXT To J.w. AtRPOftT.
1/p. pool spa. dlw, ~street OfACES LOCATED In R & D
Grea1 locallan' Nex1 1~ PARK C.11 714-557.Q51.
~a;:.J F~~•1 l::!!!J
11.ra nl 1 t . 1m1 ti P• 11 o .... -C.M. on Newport Blvd. New
714-390-3306 1949-363-1506 '"lne NotthWood, Buitdng-4 Beys $3000 1 S W1kefilld Ave. 3br 2b1 Agent ~I Co-op 849 642·9699
I 1aa ~1 ""'I nice houM. $1795/mo. • .,. leea.'Sen Cati Mon.fr! I
1 CORON:~ MAR 9tm:!f>m st0-470-92.. ~ 400 Atl40UNCEJIENTI •
1
11•::.1 100 people needed wt pay r.u to Iott
wtlghL Sa • 6 naturally
~~--""· 115 .. _ .. -_, Call 888-280-8905 Coiy etwmet In the VllleQe, 24 hr recorded me ... ge
1 bit to bch, rWM ~ 1Dr. •MEMBERSHIP•
den w/FP, bellTi «*s. fttndl tor yacht cwt> In prmtglolle
'IMdows, ~pele S1S85 Corona Del Mer FaclllJ. h:ldl utls . M9-117 8630 EMERALD 8XY .,._..."'071
Chal1'l*1g 4Ek 2 58a, OcN'I
VllW Home. •eplace, IYI IOl1.
~ 949 .... 9-W997
I I "• I I . '. l ~ l. , .. ·.
a f)
OCEAfffOHT
AHO OCUH CLOS! 1-ldl'lll ttwv Hdnn
$900.44000
Bier NM424'$0
"WINTER ALS AVAll'
1,2 S. l 4bt'S
RANOINO FROM
ttalN2900.
Aplt4Me2"°107
CLOSING SALE
2M0%0FF
Oowrll • ~ i'*"9y RieO....,. Ollll
04~ FEW DA~~
'AGLMCQ UDO IWllU VUAQI
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
al1er 30 yrs. ClearMCe sale 1111
end ol Sept Beverly & Partner
Antiques 1800 w Coast Hwy.
Ntwpart Bch 94g..54s-1187
I BUY ALL PIANOS!
An11ques--Oualay lurnllJle
one piece or whole houselun! Cash paid. 800-649-4922
SIGHED UTHOS Caldel
Coma Kant Dall, Jablonslcl, Chavat, Of1ginal Thal T 8l1lCJle
Rubblnos · Al.l FRAMED
714-75'"°579.
NEEDCASH?
$$MONEY R>R M
~a
Older Style Fumltur•
PIANOS i Colfedlbles . ........,_.T_
•SfW90il•~·O-C.~
.. CASH PAID$$ ____ ........
WE BUY ESTATES
·~Me<d.r_.._
"'WE PAY MOM fAITDr'
I
so~8AsT
22t2 ......... ..... AMt CA 12111 llot>dtd S lt<-CA 121'
HOUaa '11" Of Furnlt\119 W100ll"4 Iron poller bid
wllnJNd box ~ttr $360 7WG-4342
CRUISE LINE
Entry Level On Board Posltlooa
A\·aflable Grea1 Benet11s
323-644-2102.
Cualomer S.rvlCtkltflC.i Setl<lng PIT Of FIT customer
servlce/clerlcet person,
experience pierd, wil train
Call Mike M ... 2.2050
VON HEMEAT INC.
ibRIVER ANO•
ellOVEA HELPERS• wanted tor moving company
In COIU Men. F"ulWf pot
nail. ~peraon .i 1H Blvd.
otC.1114 ~71
Rt tell •
Poatet $lore. Re1al exp Jl'et'd
FT/PT 3535 E Coast Hwy
Corona del Mar 94H73-29~.
S1lea/Advlf1l1lng
Expanding community
newspaptf group aetlcs
lt\$1C18 Slla reps. Ptlones
seltt exper1ence 1 l*Js. Gr11t opportUnjly. Bast ..-
commtii1on. 'Physlc1V
df\19 ICrtOIWlg req.
Fu re11HMto
Markey Oenlela e NMa1~594
-EOE·
Apply It: Hum1111 Raeouret11
Hoeg Ho1pl11I
One Hoag Drive Box 6100.
Newport BMctl, CA
92658-6100
E.O.E. •• pA4.fa~...Q
minute. 714-~fS10-BMW 32818 ·97
1-~1
P\e.,. be W1fY of out of .,.., compenlea. Check
with the local Bttttr Bualnen Buruv befcn you l«td any rnoneJ or
t.ea tor aervba. Reed end underatend eny
contract• b9toi'e you
•ltn.
Blacti--,~ack leather, 5 apeid. like new cones.
SU,000 One owner: All
sctled melntenence up to
date. MM95-Sn$
eulCk century Speclii Sdn
1M, 4dl. ac, em'lnl storeo. th pw/<'A (R6469649) $8,988
Sonnf• Qmc Pontiac Buick "WWW.cmgm.COM
714-444-6200
BUICK LE SA8RE-'i7 3 8 VS, l1ht, ABS, non-smoker
i.mKc v-. (596786) $11.988
NABE'1'S
(714)54o-t100
Look for the newly designed and
unique automotive section with
today's paper. .
You'll find great deals-
and even some fun things to do!
'
Pilot
ACR088 , Oodl IO&flCf
5 Alllln IW\ny ea..... t3~· 11 PMip0!1
OOl11PiM QI It Vet11e ,
17 Pldlanlmal t8 Ad/of SNrW
19 FOfd or Llncoln 20 ...... doll
•
21 Hockey'• Gordie DOWN 23 ~ 1 Meg&zine .. ,
,.... debuted In
25 Command9d ~ 1898 26 Mote Intimate 2 No{ buay
'l7 Took tor granted 3 Related OfOUP
30 Budclllsl 4 Kipling novel prldk:e S SWOta
31 VllfY v.,y e Wonlleea
32 HufMfY '*" ~ 37 Gloomy 7 Quiet -mouse
38 SWllVll 8 lnoftanalva
40 Arrived 9 Zoo lavol'ltes
41 Unlnlormact 10 Avoid capture
45 FrlghteM
43 What early birds 11 Sorlnkle
ca1ch 12 Blizz.ard maker
28 Trudge
29.Amue
32 Wager
33 Selnta' plctur11 34 Pracloul
4& Fetched
47·~semer
48 One more IJme
49 Ronsladt or 44 01'1 addrMI 14 cait>baen'1 -
45 Sc:hadlMI lslllnds ' ointment Evans
47 F«C9ful wnnan 22 Poem bY
.... ultt Sheley SO Aaelly offerings 24 Charged
51 More llugglsh 1>81Ucle• ~ Marahal Dlllon 25 Donkey
35 -Bovary 3e ·-ot the
O'UlbeMlles" 38 Evaporate 39Mam'1 ndson •
Q g~et rl'#lew
43 Moister
51 Good dirt 52 Harvest-
63 Fuel 54 Numerlcal
prefix
55 Meh
58 Guric eo Port<er
S3 POl1able bad 26 R'*'-" rulilf '
58 AlgefWI ~ 'l7 Volkswagen kin
.--eo~--n-
j • ~ j 115 c'JC:'J~8~ 1195 c~~ I
CADIL.UC OEVILU 'It lo 14k ml, wtvlt, ,., htw,
V8, Nolttwtet. bal al warr rmm) s2uss
,..,.,.. Old~ Ctdlllae
714-$4H100
c~ EU>ORA.oo • Low mill. lttr, IT1lr1Y xtraa. Oil. oC wan (801183) $25,988
NABERS
(714 )540:9100
CADIJ.AC IOH DEVtUE '93
Blue, 4 t ye, goecl
condldon, ""' Cit 1rlde-ln. (265119) $8.9811 ,....,... Oldtmobllt Cldllllc
714-540-tt 00
B'llck Riviera Coupe 2dr ·es
AC, llTV!rn st11eo, 1111 pw/d ,
abl. lthr 154719222) ~11,m
Sonny'• Gmc: Pontiac Buick
~::
CADIUAC DEVILLE '97 Low des. 111¥, VB, NOl1hstar,
bif o1 watr (21n..a1 S24,988
Nlbtrl OldtmObllt Cedlllac
714-540.9100 •
CADIL.UC SEVILlE SLS '97
Low 43lt mi sllble tll!.. tan lltw,
me conc1 • be• °' ~" 1835797} • $24,989 NAB~S
cm)540-1100
CADIUAC SEVILLE STS 't7 Low 25k miles. 300 h p
Nottlwllll. p~ cond (818821) $31,988
NAB~S (714~'100
c.csi& v., conVWi!On 'i4
Bubble lop, IV, Yer, V6, 0-.
condllJon (1634SS} $10,988
Nabtt1 Oldtmobllt C.CSllllc
714-54o.t100
CHEVY ASTAO Ext. W9n 111 \16, 4.!ll high~ 7~ pell, ~ "' llMm, p&, ldra dllf'I (8221~211 s1s.en
Sonny'• Gmc Pontlec 8ulcll
71~="
.. .. ... , .. . .
Ir OtMUS GOllEN
With OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HINSCH
FOLLOW THE bOUNCING B~LL
800\ vulnerable. South deal Very much so. If clubs are 4-0, you
can brinJ in the suit without cooced-
inJ a track onl7 if West has all the
massing clubs, so you must begin by
lcadina a club to the queen. BOlh
defenders follow, and you continue
with the nule of clubs to the king, on
which West discards a diamond. On
the final round of clubs, you pilch a
diamond from hand as West agoni1-
ingly lets go of two more diatnonds
and a spade. What do you k®w
abOut Lhe hand?
NORTH
•AO · c::>A.lt14
0 102
•AK752 WEST
•J813
17 J952 o K863
• 10
EAST
• K654
17 86
0 J974
•J6J SOUTH
• 109 2
0 Q103
O AQS
• Q984
~~din~ NOR'fH EAST
West, who has .a singleton cluh,
elected to lead a spade from four to
the jack. That is on unlikely lead it
West holds a lon~r su11, so lhat
defender's distribUtaon must he 4-4-
4-1. Obviously, Wesf has been
reduced tO the jack of spades. one
diamond and four hearts. Pua Pim •• Pas,,
INT Pua 3NT Pass West's remaining diamond is irrel-
evant since 11 tricks are now assured.
After leading to lhe diamond ace, you
can cJtit with a spade to force a heart
relum, securing lour tricks in the suit.
But when the ace fetches the dia-
mond king, you cash the queen and
all West can do is discaro the j.ck of
spades in lhe hope partner holds the
fen, Now you have 12 tracks. Well
doue.
Pua Past
Opening I~: Three of •
Every card has a tale to tell. Cover
up the East and West hands ond see if
you can maximize the outcome.
The ga~ is duplicate p.iirs. so
overtricks arc crucial. 1be auclion is
simple enough, and West leads a low
spade. You try the queen from
dummy, but it loses to the king and Leam to bt a bttur bridge~play
the four of spades is returned to tr! Subscribe now to tht Goren
dummy's ICC. Obviously. you are Bridge Lttttr by calllna 1800) 188-
going to start on clubs. Docs it make 1225 ror lnformalion. Or wnu to:
any difference how you tnckle the Goren Bridge Letter, P.O. Box
suat7 ' 4410, Chkago, Ill. 60680.
DAEWOO LEGAHZA '99
Low 10k mllu, lthr, many was, blj. ol warr
(1898n) Sl3,988
NABERS (714~9100
'bOOdE CARAVAN '93
Grand, dual lie. loaded (~) $7,995 MCKENNA VOUSWAGEN
714-142·2000
000d£ HEOH 'ii Auto.~0 AC
(89505l341544) s 10,995
MCKENNA VOl.KSWAGEN
714-142-1000 * FOfib 8A6HCo 'M * Eddie B111tr Edit. wtlltW1111,
loaded, mini cond, 4X•, CO plqet, only '7'11 m~ tfUSO 080. 714-754-0737 or cell
pholw 714-47M001
FORD EiPUSfiEA xu 193 2 WO, .tltt., fllfty loaded, 73k tnl. Olll O'#JW1 Wtb maJn.
tefned, good condition.
St1Wobo Mt-7'52·1425 Giie Lfli1 Eii Wgn 'tt
VS, 4 3L ~ outiiur, 7~ pass,
dull lit' anvlm, pe, )drl clean
(BS1284n S18.7n Sonnf• Ome Pontiac Buie:« www.cmgm.com
714-444-5200
111 cARSlfAucKS f e95 CARSITAUCKS J NANSfSUVS _ NANSISUVS .
CHEVY ASTRO Ext. Won '97
VB. 4 3L Ngh output, 7·8 PISS. duel llr, am'lm, ps. JCtra clean (811~74) $14,977
Sonny'• Giiie Ponllac Buick
'7.4':'l:=" ctVY& concora; san '65
~. IC, fM/rJ, ti\, CNISI, arr/
fm can (H64027'2) $10,999
Sonny'• Omc Pon'Ulc Bllfck
~:f~·com 71 200
HYUNDAI '87
Run1 well, 4 epe1d,
1unroof, $1500.
714-545-1150
JAGUAR XJS V1% Cowrtlble ''°* Mtlallc Red. 40K lflj, MUST SELLJ UUOOlobo 14M50.m3
Jegu• XJ1% Sedtin 40r 'M
S41,tt5 IM545
BAUER JAGUAR
714'953-4800
JAGUAR XJ6 L SEDAN '97 Ut,995 97-4352
BAUER JAGUAR
714-95~
JAGUAR XJ6 l SEOAH '17
$40,995 17-4SS3
BAUER JAGUAR 714-9$3-41()()
1 J1guw XJe Sfdan iOf 186 S3Uts IMS41
BAUER JAGUAR
714-~
JAGUAA iii SEOAH ... W ,tts IM572
BAUER JAGUAR
• 714-t5S-4IOO '
J19uar XJ8 Sedan 4Dt 'M
$32,WS 86-4600
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
Jaguw XJi Saden 4Df 'M
$33,99$ 96-4t01
BAUER JAGU~
714-tss.4800
Jag"•' XJ6 S«ian 40r 'K $32,995 tM604 BAUER JAGUAR.
714·953-4800
JtgUlf XJ6 Sadan 4Dr '97
$37,.195 97-4602
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953...00
Jaguar XJ' Van~ Plu
Sedan 40r 'M
$39,895 8M503
BAUER JAGUAR
714-tU-4800
LEXUS ES300 16
Call lor c:urrn Pl1thl LEXUS OF WESTMIHSfER
(714)'92..QO& Lexus ES300 ·97
Call for currenl P'bnO
LEXUS OF WESTMIHSTER (71')192..QO& •
LEXOs lUOO '90
Bladr/g,.y, -tlrta IMMACULATI:ll , $13,500.
PP 714-nS·2802 mos saoo ·n
Call lor QKrtnl Pllang . LEXUS OF WESTlllNSTI:R (714)192~906
WUS SC400 'iii
Clll lor CUff8lt pricing
LEXUS OF WESTMIHSTER
(7'14)812.-oe
....... ·' "M·· 't ... ,. .. . ~
' -,
iiEJicEbd iiOStl 'ii Gre•t condition, loecMd,
NM lint! S7SOO. or but
olf9r.t4N4f.403Z
Utfcury Giind ii•quli Li
Sein 4d '96 VB, 4 el. rJc ps, pw, pcl. Ilk. cc. ll'Mm 5'er
(TXll46365) St3.!ln Sonny'• Gmc Pontiac hick
www.a'llQl1\.COftl
714-444-6200
ililftUBiSii OfAMANTE' 'tt Ne. auto, anvtm cass. cc
(005989) $249 per mo.
MITSUBlSHI MOTORS www.costameumltt.com
714-545·1700
MiTsuliiSt1 EtUPSE hs 100
l.etlA l0t $199 per monfl
lllTSUBIStl MOTORS www.CClltarlltNrnkcom 714-$45-1700
iliiTS081s111 ECLIPSE' '.97 Auto,cass. cd, IC. alloy.: tu~ (~432/155269) ~12,Q95
MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
714-142-2000
.. itsva1sHI ECLIPSE RS 'ft NC, am/Im cd alloys, spollef
(080325) $139 per mo
MrTSUBISHI MOTORS
www.eostlmflllllltt.com 714-545-1700
MITSUBISHI GAL.ANT DE 'It NC . IU1o, llTV'lm cass pwr Wiii
& doors (146758) S149 per mo
MITSUBISHI MOTORS
www.c:o9t1lllflll!llt1.com 714-S0-1700
Mheublehl Mirage OE Cpe
1999, lie. IUIO, enVlm C&SS
(052661) $99 per mo
M.ITSUBISHI MOTORS
-.w.cottMntumlta.com
714-545·1700
Milaublthl Montero Sport LS
,999, auto. ale. am/Im ed. cc
(098898) s199 per mo
MITSUBISHI MOTORS
wv/w.co1tame11mltt.com
714-545-1700
MlfSUStsHi soooat '99 NC. llMn cas. cd cc days
(002634) S219 P'f mo
COSTA MESA MITSUBISHI www.cost1metam111.com
714-575-1700
Mu111n9 df 193
8'ack mt cond new NC &
radiator llUt'y lll!y ~ SSOOO tum ~9-63\.1549
Oldemoblle Cierra
Brougham Sdn Ur 'ti 6 c,1. luU pwr, aUlo, am/Im 1tereo
(J9390801) $5,495
Sonny'• Cine Pontiac Buick
rn~r:=
iS(yiliOU'fii Voyagtf LE 'tO
~o. rear • ~ pwr plcg. flrV Im cass. super shall>. lq mi
(209463)Cll tor currant p11oog LEXUS OF WESTMINSTI:R-
(714)192"906
Ponllac Grind Ail\ Se Sein
96 4df .c qi. 2 4L. ec. mMtl
11treO ID mi (C757024) $1.995
Sonny'• Gmc Pont'-ci Bulcll
~~~l::.com 71 200
' .
MW ii YI, All,_, CC, ...... ~.CD, uwf, IMOM,
LOMllOll 111111 CoM, """' hlll 111,000/obo.
14114llOM
TOYOTA AVALOH XL. 'M 51< Ml . .t'ilta. cd, tul pwr pkg
~·· . · . .. . .,.. r.&..'~ A'
vw 'II
UtlQUE, IHO'MI IY AW? ONLYPIOO .... 72MIOt vw eAIAIO &: 111
YWCIOU'W (=i:.r.:,
1'41a-,
~~~I (714)112..,.
fovofA clilAY Cl sbH 'i7
40r, 4 qi. IC, a, CIUIM, llMn
ltlfao, cass. °""' • Nol (U806972) $14,917
s 1pd, ale, ult, cd
(9956Ql80CB93) $15.995 MatEHNA VOUtSWAGEN
1'14-142-2000
Sonny'• Qmc Ponlltc lu1dt 71~200
TOYOTA CAMRY LE '13
Auto, aw. ~ pwr C*Q. mrwt
( 162145)Cel tor curienl pndnQ LEXUS OF WESTllltSTI:fr •
(714)192.-ot
VW JETTA 'Ill
5 ll>d. AC, CISS. pw, pd 111
(0722 I 3199427) $11 995 MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
71"42·2000
THROUGH CLASSIFIED .. -SEl,L-YOUR USED VEHICLE
Run your ad ln the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Dally
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain valley
Independent to
reach over 100,000
hOmes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card # or mail with
8 Check today!
Run for a week! If
your car does not
sell, we·n run it for
another week F1llSt
All for JUSt $10'.
642-5678
---- -... - --, 0 YES, SEU. MY CAR
I r,
I !I've
:( o..c..OwcO~ OA111
,~o...~c:.~~;;;~====~"'~--;:====~ .... a.a .......... I._ __ .._ illlclll---
1
-====~=--~~-I "------------
t•·--1 1-~1 f 311 UHOSCAPINO I 1340 PAINTING J l_ .. __ PL_u1111NG __ J
POU CY
tt 1r1 lltort to ollef Ill bM1 tetW:ie poaibll IO OClf , .... rd~," wl reqlkl Ccwvaclors who l<l'ltc1ise In
lie Sel\1ce Ovactoty to lncllde
their Contractors Ucen11
runber In ttltlr lldVertlsement Your ~lion Is gt91tly
ipplldlllld
N lnstll, Atftce Clblntll,
Kitchen, Bath, 00011 & ~ Doug 714-546-7251
•RDlHI lpecliilau XII """...:.....u.!!.:~ ~ ~ 3.1-~i:wao:.. CW'lly tlaY~ '11.......,IM ----... I
-.•
·--....
LEAKY Stlowwt npalrtd.
ltlagrout#!g and lt11t1 ... lon. Ul101to o.n or Tiit.
14M7W065 714-14W526
1-~=I * HEACUlES CLEANING • Aoora'Mldows'blndl'liAchtn
bllh 'lhlme>OO ClrptlS 'ol!lces
I00-21M8&1/71 '"'554..S"4
• PrOliHIONI • HoUM Cltanlng 8y Lucy
l2 Yll/$ ~":rn Ref renctl 14 70. ViCiCY·s cwfiNO
Wt olltt THE BEST
Houle and Wlndo" Cleanlna 10~~ . .rir.rel'SI
VICKY'S 71~1$
. -~,,---,~~ ), . . ' J
ll , ~ I a . . ~ ) , .. -, .. ~ ... , .. ~
. ,· . ! ......... .
HOUt RESTORATION
RElllOOEUNO + FREE EST. ~ Otcbf'ft)M/ ~~. Ctwil 714-40HIOS
. , ....
1 ..--r •I ~ , .. , f • ,, ..... ,.
AVMMU TOOAYI ......,....
YARD CLEAN UP CtiUNG S PAJHTINO TrH Trimming Hedges. 2• Y11n &p • Grtll Pnct!
Palm Trees !Wnovll ._.. Guwlnl• Work· Fr .. Esl. ~ & PIWlll 71'-960-8502 L1375802 714-53&·1534
330 MOVING A
STORAGE
PUBLIC
NOTICE
RAINBOW C1RCLE MAIHl.
P1rt1ng-ln4/ext Housel~
QOIJlry job! Fret .ti Lt569897 &Je-8681
==~=~ Otc:o P~ WISIWlg LU!M350 ~~3006
Pager 949-580-~ 2iYRS OOAOTY p ING
TOOCHVPS TOO 24 ~ • Aichar1I Sinew
Ln'°'44 14MSM"2
The Calif Pubhc·
Ut1l1ties Commission
REQUIRES that an
Used household goods
movers rr1nt their P.U C. Ca T number,
limos and el'laulfets
print their T C P
number In all adver1il·
ments It yoo have •
question about the
legality of a mover,.
llmo or dlluffer, call
1-rui\m 1 ·J:.:lO.;;JYniflT'Ylri.
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714·558-4151
• • I "\ ~ c .,.
' ' .
Pl..-/$tucco Patch SIMnO S<Uhem Call 2Syq L'3268M 24 hoolll
714454-7131
! I
TM Lo<ol '9umMr
·~" .... ......._. .. ... aoc.uwe
&IC'l'llOMC 9'M LIM .,..,.,..
~ ......
67S-9aot
U'1•24"1 ...._,
t· ,,--. .,. ..•
I ,_ .• :.' • •
1 '' . ..,. . .. . ..
• f. .. •• ,, • ';" ••• ,. . . • • . .
HERE NOW ... TEST DRIVE TDDAY!
'92 $C400 (017872) ..
'95 ES300 (081836)
'96 ES300. (1 73140)
'96 ES300 (1 78208)
'98 ES300 (018944)
~6 LEXUS GS30Q
Low Miles, Moonstone, Leather, Moonroof~
Alloys, Full Power Package (168469)
FIED!
'95 SATURN
SCI
. . .
« *<>II
« =· •r-r-EJS• •t
I *r-i• =i• ag
'90 PLYMOUTH '95 SATURN
VOYAGER LE SL2
..
'~6 SC300 (034546)
'99 SC300 (005327)
'~6 LS400 (067246)
'97 LS400 (069262)
'97 LS400 (071287)
~5 LEXUS GS300
Black, Mooruoof, Leather, Alloys,
Full Power Package (101245)
CERTIFIED!
'93 TOYOTA ·
CAMRY LE
Automatic, Air, Tilt, Low Miles
(282392)
Automatic, Full Power Package, Rear Air, AM/FM
Cassette, Su r S , Low Mi {209463)
Automatic, Air, Full Power Package, Alloy
Wheels, Real Nice! (395568)
Automatic, Air, Full Power Packaae,
Hard To Find, Moonroof (162145) ..
'95 BUICK
PARK AVENUE
Automatic, Air, Leather, Alloys, Power
Pa (613952)
'97MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER
'98 TOYOTA
CAMRY LE
'96FORD
EXPLORER XLT
'98 VOLKSWAGEN ~
PASSATGLS.
Automatic, Air, Full Power Package, AM/FM 3lk miles, White, Leather, Full Power, Tilt, CD, 4 Door, Premium Wheels, Automatic, Air, Moonroof,
Cassette, ABS (1328481 Facto Allo , Roof Rack, Privacy Glass (A60668) Power Pa This Is a Beauty (073773)
'97 VOLVO '99 TOYOTA '98 CHEVROLET
BSO GLT SIENNA LE TAHOE LS
All Wheel Drive, Automatic, Air, CD Stacker, ABS, Automatic, Air, Full Power P~e,
Leather, Moonroof, Allo Wheels & More 023796) Moonroof, Leather, Allo (364lb5)
Automatic, Air, AlJoys, Rack, Full Power Low Miles, Leather, Full f.!ower, Much More.
~9 FORD EIPEDltlO
EDDIE BAUER 414
Packa e, Save$$, 9,000 miles (126018) Priva Glass, Facto Allo , Roof Rack (306141)
'95BMW
. 140iL .
Automatic, Leather, Full Power, Power Seats, White/Black. leather, Automatic, Air, Chrome Allo
Allo You Name Id 8,000 Miles Al6671 Moonroof, CD Chin r, Full Powtr Pak 51641
\NE BUV USED CARS -PAID FOR OR NOT!
F
13590 BEACH BLVD
(7.14) 892--6906
J ..
I