HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-07-01 - Orange Coast Pilot'
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SPORTS
MlBA battles in
the playoffs
Serving the Newport·Mesa community since 1907
THE VERDICT
Memories of
Ernie Pyle rewld
Mer1naid seekers feel -waves of regret
•Lunchtime visitors to nude
nightclub express surprise,
disappointment at its closure.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Piiot
NEWPORT BEAC H -First came
five dark-suited men in a beige Mer-
cedes. The car slowed just enough for
thelll to see the Mermaid's wooden
doors 'w ere shut. Actually, it was more
like a pause, really -like they
weren't actually planning to stop at
the nude restaurant, like they were
just kind of curious because the nor-
mally propped-open doors w ere shut.
A red Chevy Blaz~r re peated the
maneuver -pause, nec k-crane, drive
on nonchalantly. The n a blue C adillac.
And a black Jeep.
One by one they found out: After
years of legal battles, the city had
finally shut down its nemesis, its only
nude club, the Mermaid. An Orange
County Superior Court judge Friday
ordered the closure of the restaurant,
on Martingale Way near John Wayne
Allport
Six guys in a beige Ford Windstar
were particularly bummed. Dressed in
purple polo-style shirts, the y hopped
out of the minivan in the near-empty
parking lot Qnly to find the Mermaid's
doors locked.
They said they we re visiting on
bus iness from Vrrginia and had a sked
a guy at a stoplight where to eat lunch.
They declined to reve al their names or
their employe r -a common pracllce
for folks visiting the M e nnaid .
"What kind of a city is thls?" sajd
one guy upon hearing officials had
won a court case to shut the place
down.
They ate at the adjacent Trophy's
restawant instead .
Mary Ste lla and T.odd Zanow, who
did give their names because they
were not heading. for the M em1a1d,
had never gotten the chance to go
inside the restaurant that sits next
door to their office at NMC M ortgage.
And now, they said as they walked
through llie parking lot, they we re d
little sorry to see it g o.
-11 looks like a cute resta ura nt -I
didn't everi know it w as a nude place
at first." Stella said.
Zanow sa id h e d idn't really care
•SEE MERMAID PAGE 4
0 .. :fie
' . 1 .....
,•
There were
plenty of park-
ing spaces In
front of the
Mermaid
today as a
court order
shut down the
adult ent.er-
talrunent
lounge.
MARC MARllN
I OAJLV Pll01
El Toro airport
ruling cheers
Newport officials
•A ppeals court deals South County leade rs a blow
and uphold s ba ll ot measure to build internation a l
airport at soon -to-be closed Marine base.
By Jennifer Armstrong , Daily Piiot
NEWPORT BEACJ I -Off1-
oals are Oying h1~1h after d ~1on
day court rulJny backed a ballot
measwe in wtuch county voters
endorsed m a king the El Toro
Marine base d conlmeroal a ir·
port
Monday's decision by a Sdn
Diego Court of Appedls upholds a
lower court's ruling u1 favor of
Measure A, a 1994 1rutia t1 ve. And
local offi cials, who have spent
years fig hting John Wdyne A.1r-
port e xµa11sion, are thrilled to log
another legal victory !or plans for
a second county airport
"Obvio usly, W(' believe<.! dU
along that ~1easure A was law-
ful.· City Manager Kf'v1n Mur·
phy said
Sou th County c111es , leanng
the noise and poUuuon an airport
could b ring, fil ed tht> lawsuit
challenging the measure Their I
attorneys argued that 1norf' stud -
1es should have precedPd the bdl·
lot uullallve Pro-iilrpOrt attorneys
contended the voters could estab-
lish policy before the count~
~pent n1oney drafting pldns
San Franasco-based anomev
C lem Shute, who represented
Newport Beach and other North
County cil.Jes, called the ruling
"deferential to the 1n1t1at1ve
process
South c·ounty CllJC'S Cdfl 00\\"
ask the court to reconsider lhl'
case or appeal to the CnhJonuo
S upreme Court. bu! the state
Supren1e Court tum!' down most
cases. he said
County s upervisors voted in
!Jecern ber to pursue dlrport plans
along with a backup non -airport
option. South County cities filed
another lawsuit after that d ea-
sion, cha.Uenging the report that
recommended an airport -but
lhd\ won'1 go to court for some
t1n1e
• SEE EL TORO PAGE 4
Proposal could end CIBS
testing in Newport-Mesa
•Gov. Wilson wants childre n in grades 2 through 11 to
be tested by one standardized lest
By Michelle Terwilleger, Dady Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -A pr:>-
, posa1 by Gov. Pe te Wilson to have
all California se cond through
11th-graders take the same stan-
dardized test could spell the end
of the C ompre he nsive Test of
Basic Skills locally.
The Newport-Mesa Unified
School District has te sted stu-
dents the past two school yean
using the multiple-choice test
under the state's Pupil Testing
Incentive Program that reimbun-
es local school districts for admin-
istering standardized \ests.
U the $83 million mandatory
statewide test proposdl gets the
stamp of approval .from the state
Leadership Committee, comist-
ing of the governor and leaders
from the state Senate and Assem-
bly, then the state Board of. Edu-
cation will choose oae from 63
available , standardiaied tests
including the Newpor1~Mesa
adopted eras test.
The 523.6 million from the
•SEE TES~ IW)E 4
Llst of sex offenders now o -----.,., OM·
• Disks listing the names_.
Of child molesters, other ~mlnol~ to be -;,vailable
111 local pqlke ,111iions.
By 9# GOtfltd, Dtlly Pilot m:: I
NBWPOat-MllsA -Tho ==-""~;:-: ...,. ___ ...... ,
, J s '-ii=i'l!IE11Ma ...... r-··-'"'• =I--.:s
• TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1997
I •
ACT OF KINDNESS
Rachel Hertzberg was having a bad time at a restaurant. Then
a stranger brightened up her day with a bouquet of flowers.
By Sarah O'Rourke, Daily Pilot
Every girl's romantic dream begins with a
tall, dark and handsome stranger arriving
on the scene, giving her Ilowers and making
all of her troubles go away. For one lucky
girl, this dream came true.
Sort of. •
Rachel H~berg. 7, was celebrating the
beginning of summer and her sister Maris-
sa 's bL"thday at La Salsa restaurant in West-
cliff Plaza with another family.
While enjoying her Mexican favorite, a
bean and cheese burrito, Rachel ended up
being the object of another child's cruelty.
•Beans were dripping down my hands,•
Rachel said. •rt was kinda messy but the
child kept making fun of me, telling me it
was gross.·
Nobody likes to be made fun of and
Rachel was no exception. Her feelings were
hurt and rightfully so. Rachel could not han-
dle the teasing any more and left the table.
Reluctantly, Rachel rejoined the party,
still bruised by the bwtful words.
Then he appeared -the tall, dark-
haired stranger who was in his early 20s car-
rying a bouquet of pink carnations. He pre-
sented them to Raebel and softly said, "I
know bow it feels to be teased. You are a
lovely girl. Don't worry.•
The ~dness that Rachel was feeling
quickly subsided and a beaming smile
appeared on her face.
"It all happened so fast: said Maxine
Hert2berg. Rachel's mother. "Seeing her so
happy made me cry. It was such a sweet act
of ldndness. •
After composing herself, Rachel's mother,
went over to the stranger, who was eating
with a friend, and thanked him for the flow-
ers and for cheering up her daughter.
The Hert2bergs never got the name of
the stranger but would like to thank him for
his kindness.
• 1 was oying and went to the other
table,• Rachel said. ·My mom came over to
talk to me and I went back to the other
table "
"When he gave me the flowers it felt like
getting all A-pluses," Rachel glowingly
said.
Even if the man never gets his A in kind-
ness, Rachel will always remember the
ldndness of tlus stranger.
MARC MARTIN I DALY Pl.OT
Rachel Hertzberg, 7, h~lds the carnations given to her by a young man who saw her being teased by
another youth while dining at a Westcllff Plaza restauranl •
briefly in the news
Flames engulf vintage
clothing store
A fire ravaged the rntenor of a
vintage clothing store rn Newport
Beach early Monday morning
before firefighters could extinguish
the blaze. authorities said.
Firehghters amved at Front End
at 324 N. Newport Blvd around
1 :38 a m to find the building full of
smoke. and forced their way
through the front door Wlth a chain
saw, saH.l Newport Beach Fire
Departmeot rnvesagator Michael
Macey
Smoke or hrP destroyed all of
the store's merchandise, and the
owner estunated the loss at
$200,000. but no one was hurt,
Macey Sdld
Macey saJd there hdd been a
party and car show m the parking
lot Sunday afternoon. with a band
and displays, and the side of the
building was covered Wlth gra.fflti
sometime after the party ended.
Macey said that is cause for sus-
picion, but dogs have not sniffed
out any flammable ilqUids or mate-
rials in the debris that would point
to arson.
"It seems pretty coincidental
that there you have gratfia, and
then you have the fire m the build-
U1g, but we're still sedJ'ching tor the
cause of the frre," Macey said.
Macey said the fire department
IS mvestigallnq the vandalism with
lhf' police
Fire damages Costa
Mesa cabinet shop
A hrP devoured a cabrnet shop
at I 9th Street and Placentia
Avenue on Sunday afternoon,
causmg thousands of dollars in
damage, hrehghters said
A passer-by called the Fire
Department at 5:02 p.m . to report
smoke at Ziething Cabinets, 1922
Placentia Ave., Battalion Chief
Jim Ellis said. No one was inside
the building when it caught fire,
and the cause of the blaze is
under investi.9ation.
It took firefighters about 20
minutes to control the fire, Ellis
said. Owing that time, authorities
blocked all tr atfu: on Placentia
Avenue.
The fire sparked in the shop's
'(
paint room, where several flam-
mable liquids were stored, Ellis
said. He estimated the damage at
$1 5,000 to $20,000.
"It was fortunate that the fire
broke out when it ctid, • Ellis said.
"U it had been at 2 or 3 in the
morning and we had a delayed
alarm, the damage could have
been much worse.·
Boat engulfed by
electrical blaze
An electrical mallunctJon
apparently caused a hre on
board a 28-foot flstung boat at
sea about a half-mile from the
Newport Harbor entrance on
Saturday morrung. authonlles
SaJd.
Emergency crews responded
around 10·30 a.m. and contained
the blaze to the engine room of
the #Cazador, • said Newport
Beach Sheriff's Harbor Patrol
Sgt. Karl Von Voigt. He said
there were no injunes. and no
damage estimate was available.
Get patriotic at church
concert on Thursday
Come and listen to the musk of
the St. John the Baptist Parish
MU6ic Ministry Department while
picnicking on hot dogs, apple pie
a nd lemonade on Thursday
beginning at 6 p .m
The second annual Patnot.Jc
Concert will feature the 15-piece
Southern Calilomia Cavalry
Band, the church's handbell choir.
the children's choir, brass choir
and the parish choir. The program
includes patriotic and early
American folk music with a med-
ley of Stephen Foster songs
The picnic and concert are free
and will be held at St. John the
Baptist Roman Catholi<: C hurch in
Costa Mesa.
For more information, call 549-
9619.
Summer adventures
on the Pilgrim
The Pilgril!l of Newport is
offering summer sailing adven-
tures on board the Revolution-
ary-era schooner replica.
The 82-p9senger ship offers
R£ADQS HOJUNE
642-6086
VOL 91, NO. 145
Record "lflA" comments M>out
the Dally l'llot °' news tlps.
ADDBE$$
Our MktrWll ls 330 W. Bay St..
CosU Mesa. CAiif. 92627.
1"DMAI K. JOl•ON,
P\Abtlsher
~La...J
!dttor
.• .. ·. ...1•,, ...
It Is the Paors polky to prompt-
ly c.otrect an enon of~.
,,....c.1157~.
public and private charters and
will be adding a Pirate 1Teasure
Hunt, coastal sails and a sunset
dinner cruise to its repertoire.
On the treasure hunt, passen-
gers will search for a treasure
chest off Corona del Mar from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
Saturday. Coastal sails will take
passengers for three hours past
Corona del Mar, Newport Beach
and Laguna Beach Monday
through Sunday. Sunset dinner
crwses on Friday nights and
brunch cruises on Sunday mom-
mgs will include buffet meals
along Newport Harbor.
Call 966-0686 for more infor-
mation.
No Newport trash
collection on July 4
The city of Newport Beach will
not collect residents' trash on July 4.
Areas scheduled for Friday
p ick-up will have their garbage
collected the following day. Street
sweeping has also been canc.-Ued
for Friday.
For more information, call the
city at 64.4-3066.
Put the Pilot in your
vacation plans
We'd like you to include the
Daily Pilot in your vacation
plans Here's how
• Take a photo of you holding
the Dally Pilot . . on China's
Great Wall, inside the Statue of
Liberty, outside Buckingham
Palace -you get the idea. We'll
publish the photos as we get
them
• Give us your best vacation
picture. It's now an annual end-
of-the-summer tradition, when
we tum over our pages to our
readers' best vacation photos.
• Send us an e -mail postcard.
lf you bave access to a computer
on your trip, send us a short story
about the people or places you're
visiting -the more exotic the
locale the better.
Have questions? Call City Ecti-
tor Tula Borgatta at 574-4233.
Wm basketball
camp scholarship
~
Would your mini-Michael Jor-
Ta.IRATURES
~Beadl 7<Mi
Newport Coas1
76157
S.lboa
70t461
Costa Mesa
81'60
Corona del Mar
69'461
da.n love to attend -for free -
the Brent Aarry Basketball Camp
this summer at Newport Harbor
High, which features hands-on
instruction from NBA slam-dunk
champ Brent Barry and special
guests Tyus . Edney and Don
MacLean?
Then have your young hoop-
ster (boys and girls, ages 7-17)
write the Daily Pilot and in 100
words or less tell us why he or she
should win a spot at the week-
long day camp, which takes place
July 28 through Aug. 1.
Entries can be faxed (646-
4170), e-mailed (dpilot2@earth-
link.net), vllice-mailed (642-
6086) or U.S. mailed (330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa, 92627.) The
dead.line is July 7.
Awards luncheon
tickets on sale.
The Cosla Mesa Chamber of
Commerce presents the 33rd
annual Public Safety Awards
luncheon July 11 at the Westin
South Coast Plaza.
Tom Hatton will emcee the
event that gives the community
an opportunity to honor tbe
1997 Officers anci Employees of
the Year for the Costa Mesa
Police, Fire and Communica-
tions l)epartment.
The cost per person is $28.
For more mfonnallon, call 574-
8780.
Ce lebrate Bastille Day
in Newport on July 12
Volunteers for the Bastille
Day Celebration scheduled for
July 12 in Newport Beach have
raised $122,000 to run the event,
which will benefit Second Har-
vest Food Bank of Orange C oun-
ty.
That means more than four
times the funding for the event
last year, when volunteers raised
only $26,000.
The celebration is set for 1 to
9 p.m . July 12 at the Koll Center
Newport. It will include an SK
masters race with a $5,000
purse, a SK run, a wheelchair
race and a 25-mile bike tour.
for more information. call
288-9080.
Second high
7:43 p.m.. ............ 6.1
..-sl>AY
Antlow
2:5J a.m. . .......... -0.5
Flnt high
9~13 a.m ............. 3.8
Second low
2!05 p.m ...• ,,_... ..... 1.8
Second high
l:U p..m. •.•••••.•••• 6.1
WA'tm ~ ...•• 69
obituary
Beloved Newport Harbor
teacher Dudley Smith dies
Dudley Gene Smith, retired
chemistry and biology teacher at
Newport Harbor High School,
died June 27 from prostate cancer.
Mr. Smith, 66, lived in the unin-
corporated area of l'rabuco
Canyon.
Newport-Mesa staff remem-
bered him as a popular science
teacher who always had time to
tutor his students.
•tte was available for the mul-
titude of kids in the community
that needed tutoring outside the
school setting,• said retiring
AssisUmt Superintendent Robert
Francy.
Tom Jacobson, director of sec-
ondary educabon, was Mr. Smith's
principal for a nwnber of yea.rs,at
Newport Harbor.
"He was one of the all-time
great ones,• Jacobson said. "He
was loved by kids, teachers and
administrators alike. •
Mr. Smith coached basketball
NEWPORT BEAOt
at Newport
Harbor and
after his retire-
ment, he
helped his
wife, Myra,
with her
kindergarten
classroom at
Adams Ele-
mentary.
Dudley Smith He was also
an active
member in the Mormon Church.
Mr. Smith is survived by his
wile, Myra; his father, Herschel;
his daughters, Kristan Anderson,
Kimberley Gardner and Karin
Baker; his sister, Sue Tanner; his
brother, Jerry;. and 19 grandchil-
dren.
Services were held Monday at
1Tabuco Ward Latter-day Saints
Church and he was buried at El
Toro Memorial Park in Lake For-
est.
• University Drive: SSS (ash w.as stolen from a gym locker In the 2300 blodl.
• w.stmlnstw Avenue A clock and other property worth S248 was stolen
from a busineu in the 400 block. The window was smashed.
• c..gn.y Lane: Computer equipment golf clubs and other property valued
at S 7,065 was stolen from a home in the 900 block. The door was pried open.
• N9wport Plam: A 'ellular phone worth USO was stolen from a car partced
in the 4100 block. The window was smashed.
• a.ywood Drive wMI AJdet wood Drtv.: A 1996 Acura lntegra was stolen
from near the intersection.
COSTA MESA
• ..._ 5tnet: A briefcase. checkbook and paperwork worth $60 were
stolen from a car parked in the 600 block. The door was pried open.
• P'lw~ Drtwt: cash and a credit card worth S 1 SO were stolen from an
unlocked home In the 2800 block.
•&st 11th StrMt: $450 In cash was stolen from a business in the 100 block.
The door =ed open.
• twt.of' ..-d: A cellular phone worth $799 was stolen from _, unat-
tended shopping cart In the 2700 block.
• lristDI StrMt: 5ultotses, compYter equipment and other property worth
$4,325 was stolen from a car in the 300 block. The window was smashed.
..
=Mgvfilg
:-iewara
recovery
• Injur~d teen Amanda
: Arthur talcen to Meridian
NeuroCare rehabilitation
facility on Monday.
. By Michelle Terwttleger Daily Pilot
Crash victim Amanda Arthur
may suffer a few setbacks after
· being taken Crom Western Med-
ical Center on Monday, but in
the long run her new home may
hasten her recovery from a
coma, her mother said.
Amanda, 17, who was one of
10 Newport Harbor High stu-
dents in a Chevrolet Blazer that
overturned May 23, was taken
by ambulance from the Santa
Ana hospital to Meridian Neu-
. roCare in the unincorporated
. county area of Cowan Heights
on Monday afternoon.
· The rehabilitation center will
: provide increased stimulation
for Amanda to exercise differ-
ent parts of her braUl, her moth-
. er, Chris Maese, said.
"She's entering into a level of
_recovery,· Maese said "She
TODAY
LEADS CLUB
The Newport Coast Leads Club,
a.O organization providing an effec-
tiye marketing approach -W
increase business through net-
working, is having an information-
aJmeeting at 7 D.m . at tvlimi's Cafe,
1835 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
For infomM!tion, call 722-6160
ATTENTION
Coastline Counseling Center
offers an attentior. rtefial d.lsorder
workshop called ·I'm Up, I'm
Down, But ... I'm Never ln The
Middle" from 7 to 9 p.m. at 1200
Quail St., Suite 105, Newport
BMch. Admission is $20 .. For
more information, call 476-0991 .
PARKS MEETING
·The Parks, Beaches and Recre-
ation Commission of lhe aty of
Newport Beach's next meeting is
at 7 p.m. in Council Chambers,
3300 Newport Blvd. For more
information, call 644-3151.
WEDNESDAY
BREAKFAST FORUM
: The Inside Edge offers a
t>reakfast forum on •Bridging the
Power Gap: The New Technology
fur Empowering People After
Change• from 6:30 to 8:30 a.m . at
Scott's restaurant, 3300 Bristol St ..
Costa Mesa. First-time guests pay
$20 and others pay $35. For reser-
'iations, call 460-4242.
: " THURSDAY
-"-'
O'REER NElWORK
· The next free career network
iheeting at St. Andrew's Presby-
telian Church for those unem-
J)lCJyed will feature •Winning the
Interview and Staying Connect-
ed • at 7 ;30 p.m. at 600 St.
Andrews Road, Newport Beach.
POr information. call 574-2239,
Doctors hope that Amanda Arthur"s move from Western Med-
ical Center will belp 1n the teen's recovery.
needs to start having sensory
stimulation.•
Doctors have told Maese that
Amanda will probably regress for
two weeks from the move, which
could mean more sleeping or
sickness, she
said.
Amanda a scholarship for her
first three weeks.
Maese said she had prayed
about her rehabilitation center
decision and that the scholar-
ship was •just the icing on the
cake."
·-rhis is a
real traumatic
thing for
Amanda hap-
pening right
now,"~ Maese
said.• 'I know
God will pro-
tect her."
"She~ entering into
a level ·of recovery.
At the same
time, leaving
West~[Jl Med-
ical where
Amanda has
Meridian is
a small facility
that is offering
She needs to start
having sensory
stimulation ... "
-CHRIS MAESE
•
· been for more
than a month
will be tough,
she said .
·r ve moved
in. I wear my
slippers to the
cafe~ria. •
time ago. Daily Piiot-....
Ullllllst Pred Martin
wrota a column abQut Ernie
Pyle, the greet Wodd Wu D cor-
respondent. Strangely enough, I
had ~e ol contacts with
Bmie during that war.
While Broie made bis name in
; the Buropean Theatre, he came
to the Padflc Theatre on two
occuioQI. I met bhn each time.
The first time was on the
island of Saipan, which bad
become, after its occupation. the
headquarters of the B-29 pro-
gram that was busily engaged in
burning Japan to the ground.
Although I was a naval officer,
I was temporarily assigned to th~
staff of Gen. LeMay, the com-
manding general of the B-29 pro-
gram.
I was living in a large tent
with some war correspondents
when Ernie joined us. We lived
together in that tent for about a
week. During· that week I
became the buffer between
Ernie and the top brass on the
island.
Ernie had made his name
writing about the enlisted men.
He didn't write about admirals or
generals or heads of state or
grand strategy. As he said, he
wrote •trom a worm's eye view. n
Thus he became a hero to the
enlisted men. On Saipan they
crowded around our tent every
night just to see the great man.
When word got out that Ernie
Pyle was on the island, however,
every general and every admiral
wanted to have Ernie for lunch
'
robert ·
gard!'er
or dinner. Ernie would have no
part of it. He was the.re to talk to
and write.about enlisted men.
We had a phone in our tent
over which the brass were
extending their invitations to
lunch or dinner. It became my
job to answer that phone and
explain to general so-and-so or
admiral so-and-so that Mr. Pyle
was sorry but he couldn't accept
the kind invitation because he
was doing something else. Just
what that something else was up
to my tertile imagination. While I
WC).S lying to the top brass, Ernie
would slop some whiskey into a
canteen cup, go down to the
beach below om tent and write
his dispatches.
The next time I met Ernie Pyle
was during the invasion of Oki-
nawa.61ltis time I was· on the
staff of Adm. Richmond Kelly
Turner, commander of the I amphibious forces for that opera-
around town
District presents The Parent ProC
iect, a parenting skills series for
parents of strong-willed or out-of-
control teenagers from 7 to 9:30
p.m. on Mondays beginning
today through Aug. 4 at St.
Andrew's Church, 600 St.
Andrews Road, Newport Beach.
Workbooks will be available for
$20. For reservations, call 760-
3404 .
. ONGOING
SMOKERS
The Nicotine Anonymous fel-
lows.hip wants to help men and
women who smoke to qull and
remain smoke-free. Call 650-2713
for the local evening meetings
nearest you.
HELP LINE
A private telephone consulta-
tion is offered at no charge Crom 7
to 8 p.m. every Monday. Talk with
a professional about difficulties ln
your We by calling 759-0357.
NElWORKER
The Tuesday Morning Net-
worker group shares leads from 7
to 8 a.m. every Tuesday at Mimi's
Cafe, 1835 Newport Blvd .. Costa
Mesa. For more informat10n, call
215-2903.
SURPLUS FOOD
Seniors and low-income fami-
lies of the Costa Mesa/Newport
Beach area can obtain free USDA
surplus food from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
the second Friday of each month
in the rear parking lot of the
Church of Christ on 740 W. Wtl-
son St., Costa Mesa. Bring picture
identification. For more informa-
tion, call 650-8236.
MESA EMERGENCY
Mesa Emergency Service
Amateur Communication offers
the opportunity for Ham Radio
operators to participate in the
city of Costa Mesa's Radio Ama-
teur Civil Emergency Service
organization. Weekly nets a.re
held at 7:20 p.m. on 147.060
mhz. Monthly meetings are beld
on the fourth Wednesday of the
month at 6:30 p.m. at the Costa
Mesa Police Departntent. Por
more information, call 754-7°'5.
p.m. on the first Tuesday of each
month at Mesa Terrace, 350 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa. For more
information._, call 283-1111.
MOMS SUPPORT GROUP
Group process focuses on
work, success and parenting
issues every first and third
Thursday from noon to 1:15 p.m .
and 7 to 8:15 p .m. at 2900 Bristol
St., Suite J-108, Costa Mesa. The
session cost is $15. For more
information, call 850-1689.
REPUBLICAN ASSEMBLY
The Costa Mesa Republican
Assembly meets every third
Thursday of the month at the
Neighborhood Community Cen-
ter, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call 645-
5326.
COED SUPPORT
• The Newport Beach Psycho-
logical Association offers a coed
support group every Thursday at
7 p.m. at 3101 W. Cpast High-
way, No. 311, Newport Beach.
The support group requires tree
pre-assessment before jommg.
for more information, call 722-
•588.
• The Healing Comiection
offers a coed relationship group
at 6:30 p.m. on wecm.cs.11 at
4425 Jamboree Roed, 180-A.
Newport Beach. Pot men tilf<ll'·
mation, call 261-8003.
Presbyterian offers a free
•Relaxation and Imagery" work-
shop from 10 to 11 :30 a.m . on the
fourth Wednesday of every
month at the Patty and George
Hoag Cancer Center, One Hoag
Drive, Building 41 , Newport
Beach. To RSVP, call 760-5542.
DIVORCE MEDIATION
A free lecture about divorce
mediation, an alternative to the
traditional two-attorney divorce,
is offered the third Thursday of
every month with attorney Alicia
D. Thylor and psychologist Lee
H . Solow. Space is limited and
reservations are required. For
more infonnation, call 863-9590.
lOASTMASTERS CLUBS
• The Newport Beach Distin-
guished Toastmasters Club 1300
meets every Tuesday from 7 to 9
p.m. in Sgt. Pepperoni's meeting
room, 2300 S.E. Bristol Street,
Newport Beach. For reservations,
call 7l<F36?t.
• JoiA Mesa Messengm Toast-
master Club 691 in Costa Mesa
for their ~tings at 7 p.m. Tues-
days at Mesa Verde United
Methodist Church, 1701 W. Baker
St., Costa ~. Visitors are wel-
come.' For more information, call
540-4446.
• The Blue Flame Toastmasters
Club 2717 meets at 7 a.m. every
Wednesday at the Village Farmer,
South Coast Plaza Village, 1651
Suilflower Ave., Costa Mesa. The
meeting is free for first-time visi-
tors. For more information, call
855-4308.
•Toastmasters Club 231 meets
at 7 a.m. every Monday at The
Irvine Co.1 550-C Newport Cen-
ter, Newport Beach. For more
information, call 733-2209.
• Harborlitj:!S Toastmaster Club
1927 meets at 7 a.m. every
Wednesday at the Nautical Muse-
um, 151 E. Coast Highway, New-
port Beach. For more information,
call 854-4580.
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS
Overeaters Anonymous meets
from.'7 to 9 p-lll. erery Wednesday
at West Newport Community
Center, 883 W. 15th St., No. 5
upstairs, Newport Beach. For
more information, call 953-0900.
WOMEN'S SUPPORT
• Th& Hope Institute, a center
for recovery and family educa-
tion, offers a women's support
group at 7 p.m. every Tuesday at
2900 Bristol St., C-206, Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
432-0020.
• The Healing Connection
offers a women's relationship
group at 1 p.m. on Tuesdays at
«26 Jamboree Road, 180-A,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
mation. call 261-8003.
FREE HOUR .,.,. ..
don. Jl WU Oll~~·~~~1.11.:-.4~ that I met EiDle for tbt ttroe. 1'lu. tbip, ... 0 9
tiohs ahlp, WU the bmllia tar ..
the WU <XllJ~ll. 1'1119
BW"Opean war WM WiadlDll
down, aiid a good~-..
European~ts
covering this operatioil. Blbiit
was among them.
.Whan we met. Ernie regaled
the othei conespondents wi1b
the story of my career u bil
social seaetary on Satpan.
I was with Emie when .be
went ashore for the invasion ol .le
Shima, a small is1a.od ol1 tbe
coast of Okinawa. I rernemhiw
our parting so well because Ernie
had a tenible cold
Ernie was killed on le SMmA.
He was riding in a Jeep wtth an
enlisted man when they came
under fire from a Japan,ese
snipet. Ernie jumped out and Jay
on bis back in a shallow depres-
sion in the ground. He ra&ed his
head, and the 'Sniper killed him.
I've always wondered about that
Ernie was too old a band to raise
his head out of curiosity. Mafbe
he just sneezed. Lying OD his
back, that would raise bis ead a t
few inches. No one will ever ~
know.
Ernie Pyle was a nice, quiet.
unassuming man. and a great
writer. He didn't care diddley
about generals or admirals, but
he did love enlisted men.
• ROllEKT GARDNER is a mired judge
and a r~ident of Corona del Mar. His
column runs Tuesdays.
ANIMAL BEREAVEMENT GROUP
This ongoing group special-
izes in the needs of individuals
who have sick and/or dying ani-
mals in their lives. It meets from
1.;30 to 2 p.m. every Tuesday at
3101 W. Coast Highway, Suite
311, Newport Beach. Free admis-
sion, however call 722-4588 for
space reservation.
MENTAL IUHESS SUPPORT
• The Alliance for the Mental-
ly ID of Orange County provides
education and emotional support
for families dealing with mental-
ly ill loved ones. A free support
group meets from 6 to 1:30 p.m.
every Tuesday at Oran.g.e._Cauntt.
Mental Health Oinic, 3115 Red-
hill Ave., Costa Mesa. ~ S«-
8488 for details.
• Also, St. Andrew's Presby-
terian Church offers a support
group for families W'ith loved
ones with serious mental illnes5-
es. The group_ mee~_$unda~
from 6:30 to 8 p .m . in the
church's Stewart Lounge, 600 St.
Andrews Road, Newport ae.ch.
The group is open to the commu-
nity and committed to confiden-
tiality. Por more information.. call
631-2880.
SERIOUS IUHESS SUPPORT
A free support group fOI' indi-
viduals facing HIV/AIDS is beld
at 1 p.m. every lUesday and •
cancer support group meea at 1
p.m. every Wednesday in tbe
Institute for Holistic ~
and Research, 4019 Westerly
Place, Suite 100, Newport Bes±
For more information. call 251-
8700.
CONTINUED MOM 1
-• thet980i"'_._"'L-:"~~
bennecf their W..
Th1I year the dty *'* •8
perm1tl to Mil Mfe-ud·tane ftre-
worb to local hlgb tchool eervkle
organJz.atiom and afhletlc tMma.
up from .0 pennlts llsued Jut
year, Cotta Mesa Fire Manbal
Thom.u Mac:Duff Aid.
MMC MNmf I OAl.V PILOT
So don't forget to bdng in the
doggies and kitties, becalDe
Independence Day prom,... to
be nolly. &pedally with ftre-
worb such u a Colifornia
favorite dubbed •Quake, the big
one.• It's loud ftreworb like this '
that are bound to tend a few
mutts out w~rlng into the
street, dty ottid.81s say. * -Coaa MeA 18 one of oiafy five dttn tn Orange County that ltl1l 1ella llreworkl, wtalch wt.ll go
•Anything that shoots in the
air is Wegal, • said MacDuff, who
bu mixed feelings about
whether any fireworb should be
permitted. "Safe-and-sane fire-
works (are the kind that) do not
shoot in the air.•
OD Nie tOda)' at DOOD thJ'ough July 4.
On !'.ionday, local nonprofit
organizations were stocking their
booths so they would be ready to
sell early Tuesday morning.
Estanda's instrumental music
department was among them.
Audrey Buck, whose children
have since graduated from
Estancia, has volunteered her
ttme· to sell fireworks evezy year
since 1983 at the 2300 Harbor
Boulevard site.
·1 am just a die-hard volun-
teer,• said Buck, who estimates
the organization raises about
$3,000 in funds over the four-day
period.
CD-ROM
CONTINUED FROM 1
Neither Costa Mesa nor New-
port Beach has anyone cui-rently
living in the city who falls into the
"high risk" category, comprising
those with m,ultiple convictions,
police said.
Newport Beacp Police Chief
Bob McDonell said there are 24
sex offenders in the city. Fourteen
fall into the "serious• category,
but two of them have already left
EL TORO
CONTINUED FROM 1
Most ol the local fireworks
stan(fopetaton say the fireworks
sales are their No. 1 fund-raiser.
The money raised helps pay for
\Ulifo~,1equlpment and tourna-
ment fees. MC>SJ booths are open
from 9 a.m. until 10 p.m ., but par·
ents and coaches camp out to
guard the booths during the
night.
'The Estancia basketball
boosters set up a stand on 17th
Street 1n front of Ralphs, where
they .expect to earn about $6,000,
parent Tom Nelson said.
"Usually as fast as you can
hand them out people are buying
them,• Nelson said of sales on
July 4.
Costa Mesa High School's
aquatics department has one of
the largest booth~ _erected .in
or are planning to leave in
response to Megan's Law,·
McDonell said. .
"We don't have any high-risk,
but this is a fluid thing,•
McDonell said. uwe could have
one arrive any day. Frankly,
Megan's Law is going to prompt a
lot of relocations."
Citing the publicity surround-
ing the law, McDonell predicted
an initial surge of people eager to
view ffie CD·ROM.
"There will be an initial rush, I
think, and then it'll subside," he
said. ult's like anything new.•
urm certain that had the deci-
sion gone the other way, South
County cities would have been at
the county supervisors' offices
tonight demanding ETRPA
become the land reuse authority,•
Newport Beach 07. Coundhnan
Tom Edwards said. I'm happy the
The El Toro Reuse Planning
Authority, a group of those cities,
now wants supervisors' pennission
to plan the county's non~airport
options for the 4,700-acre base
near Irvine.
_ decision went our way, but I'm sad-
dened by the fact that South Coun-
ty has been at this for three years."
MERMAID
CONTINUED FROM 1
whether the place stayed open or
not because, he emphasized, he'd
never been there.
"It should be an option,
though,• he said. "It's adult enter-
tainment -adults should have the
choke ~o there.•
City .. dals, of course, feel a lit-
tle ditierently. They've fought the
dub since its inception more than
two years ago, pulling its permits
as 100D as lt logged city code viola-
tiom. The oourt agreed that the
Pboae eds ud letters written oo your
beball. Documeots reviewed for rroo. Retain
11 attorDey tor IJie entire year for only $90.
v ..... i.t Prmltn 1.-..uw 1
club, operating for about 18 year
now without pennits, can't stay
open.
Restaurant owners An and
Olivia Nguyen obeyed the court's
Friday order and shut the Mer-
maid's doors. They'll still ask the
judge whether they can remain
open while they appeal the deci·
sion, attorney Ron Talmo said.
"We're very pleased that finally
front of Harbor Center, but par-
ents wony that sales may be
down this year.
"Last year they opened a lot
more stands in Costa Mesa,• said
pa.rent Sharon Hylton. •we usu-
ally make $8,000 to $10,000. •
fire Department offidals who
Issue the permits agree that sales
have not been as good·they were
in past years.
"We seem to get more every
year, but not all of them made
money last year. Some lost mon-
ey," MacDuff said.
The cost of fireworks ranges
from 25 cent hand-held fire ray
guns to bigger stand-alone pack-
ages at $17 .95 each. There allO
are kits with about 300 pieces for
about $200.
In Nov~Jll.12er_ 1990, Costa
Curious citizens can find out if
a sex off ender lives in their area
by searching by zip code, name or
physical desa1p_tion. The listings
will feature a photo of the sex reg-
istrant. a name, a generic descrip-
tion of his or her aimes, and a zip
code, but no street address.
Police said there are more than
3,000 convicted sex offenders in
Orange. Councy, and more than
62,000 living in the state.
Smith said the Costa Mesa
department will study the offend-
ers who fall into the serious cate-
gory and decide if any of them
Edwards, a longtime activist on
airport issues, said he hopes the
court's decision forces anti-airport
cities to give up their "ob.5trudion·
ist" role and/:!:,~ the rest of the c;:ounty in p · g for the base's
fut\ll'e.
•The fact that they spent all this
money on this lawsuit and lost mis·
es the issue of the credibility of
their judgment,• he said.
the court has seen what we've seen
all along,• City Manager Kevin
Murphy said "They've been flout-
ing the City Council, flouting the
decision of the cowts, and now
hopefully they're closed for good"
Mesa residents took an advisory
vote on whether to continue to
allow 1tate·certified H.fe-and-
sane fireworkl by nonprofit orga-
nizatiom. The result: a 50/50
split, MacDutt said. However, the
sale of sparklers and ground
snakes since have been banned
for sale.
It's illegal to set fireworks off
public parks, out MacDUif
says most residents put together
a block party and fire them off in
their driveway or the street.
"We have got a lot of calls
from people who live out of town
asking where they can set them
·off,• he 'said. "It's illegal to set
them off in parks ... the only
place is in front of their own
house."
Although local firefighters
warrant community notification,
such as filer-posting.
"We're going to do a case-by-
case risk analysis," Smith said.
"We're going to look at what
crime they committed, how long
ago it was, who their Victini was,
and the chances of recurrence."
Police posted fliers in May
warning Ney.rport Crest residents
about James Lee Crummel,
describing him as a high-risk
off ender with multiple convic-
tions who preyed on boys
between the ages of 9 and 16.
Police ai:rested him in late May
Ml X ICAN I{[ \TAUIC1\N r
OUR MEALS ARE
~ ATRIPTO
MEXICO
n.. "fradltlo
Continues
Since 1972
Tinder Box I 3rd Annual · Pipe Salel
Premium Cigars
• Arturo Fuente • Ashton • ~vo • Butera
• Credo • Davidoff • Diamond Crown
• Dunhill • Fonseca • Griffin • Macanudo·
• Montecristo • Padron • Partagas
• Playboy • Santa Rosa • Zino
~to lb: fttes dunng la.11 ~ Pourtb of !July celebra-
tiona, tbere were DO lt.r\ldunil cJ.fjliA~ reported, Mad)utf
liidd. In the~ five yean, most
Of tbe &es rej>orted were located
In gru1y &rfft or 1n trash blnl,
be Aid
.However, MacDutt said that
lilt year the Pint Department
responded to a call about an
aploeion when a man wbo was
manufacturing Dlegal firewoda
sutfered minor bW'DI on t>.iS face.
when the powder splashed.
The annual pre-Indepen-
dence Day fireworks show held
last year at Fairview Develop·
mental Center was caused by an
errant skyrocket that ignited a
blaze at the nearby Mesa Verde
Cquntry Club golf course. Pire
crews spent nearly four hours
putting it oul 'This year, Fairview
is taking steps to avoid a repeat
perlonna.nce, MacDuff said.
1n 1995, a 17-year-old boy
whose mother was selling fire-
works at a nearby stand acciden·
tally ignited a fire in the garage
of his home at 1699 New Hamp-
shire Drive.
The teenager set off a device
then disposed it in a trash can
where it caught on fire, causiflg
about $9,000 in damages to his
family's garage and a car parked
there.
Huntington Beach Fire Mar-
shal Duane Olsen said since
Huntington Beach banned the
sale of fireworks in 1987, there
have been fewer incidents
reported. But he said it would be
better if all cities banned them.
•1t creates the transport of
more fireworks into the city,•
Olsen said.
on child-molestation charges, and
be faces an unrelated allegation
of murder with special circwn-
stances. The man who employed
Crummel as a •caretaker,· Dr.
Burnell Forgey, was recently
evicted from his condo after pro-
testers picketed the property and
his.Avocado Avenue offices.
•I'm just glad they're out of
here," said Nicole Christie, 24,
who llves next door to the condo
and said she had trouble sleeping
with Crummel and Forgey so
close. "It's been quiet, finally.•
1i.te tncenttve piogrcn that
encourages dlltridJI to chaose
their own tell woWd go toward
· thenew~
Secretary ol Education M4rian
Be?qz~~ govemol'Wants one teat to deter-
mine how individual clistrids and
the entire state is doing teaching
skills. .
"We can use it as a diAgnosis
tool,• Bergeson said. •This is
accountability. We need the infor.
m.ation now.
N'wport-Mesa education offi.
da1s have mixed feelings about a
state standardized test.
"Gov. Wilson is making a big
mistake.. Leeoo said .This is def.
initely not local control of educa-
tion." ·
Leece said different districts
choose to teach skills at different
times and that it woV]d be impos-
sible to find a test that accommo-
dated all school distrl.cts.
·we are not one-size..fits-all in
California," Leece said. "I think
we should be able to use what's
the best for our district if we show
success each year.•
Bruce Olander, a sixth-grade
teacher. at Andersen Elementary,
said he thought standardized tests
were overrated and that they
shouldn't be used to evaluate
teachers or districts.
•Just because reading scores
are low for two years doesn't
mean kids can't read,• Olander
said, • • ... I
Superintendent Mac Bernd
said he favored state standardized
tests even though he understood 1t
could cause some difficulty if
Newport-Mesa had to change
tests.
"Of course we'd want it to be
the ems, but if it's something
else, we'll work with it,• Bernd
said .
nustee Serene .Stokes also
favored the proposed change.
uwe really need to hold teach-
ers accountable for what should
be taught in the classroom,#
Stokes said. "I think.it would be a
benefit to the district."
Stokes said with one standard·
ized test, Newport-~ could
compare its scores to Qther dis·
tricts with similar populations.
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722-0420.
BAIBOA CARm MIW, INf..
629 Terminal way, l20 • Costa Mesa
~1974
' I
Newport Beach resident
Rod Millen has been
king of the hill; he mes
foJ' 8:11o~er record to the
top of P.Utes Peak on the
Fourth of July.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
PIKES PEAK, Colo. -
Preparing for Pikes Peqk,
considered the greatest hill
climb race in Western
civilization. is like planning a
lunar mission or a Mt. Everest
excursion. Every detail is
c6refully studied.
The pass4ge leading to the
top has the usual Rocky
Mountain road signs, but there
are 'few highways -yes, they
call it a highway -with names
for the sharp curls and hairpin
turns.
There are names like
"Ragged Edge,• "Bottomless
Pit" and "Blue Sky," illustrating
the drama (and stunning views)
a vacation driver experiences on
the winding road to Pikes Peak,
an access made up of loose
dirt and gravel. It has no
guardrails.
For daredevil off-road racers
like Rod.Millen of Newport
Beach, there is no rush parallel
to the incredible challenge of
competingJ.n--the Chewolet
Pikes Peak International Hill
Climb near Colorado Springs,
an event Millen has mastered
so well it could be renamed
"Millen's Mountain.•
. "There's no other race like it
tQat I know,• said Millen, whose
mission in the ?5th renewal of
the celebrated Pikes Peak hill
climb on Friday is to break the
coveted 10-minute barriert an
eye-popping feif considenng
the difficulty of speeding up the
1-4,110-foot moun~ (12.42
miles) with 156 turns.
Unlike Indy and NASCAR
events, drivers in this race who
qualify first prefer going last,
arutthars the tacttc Millen plans
to take.
"The road conditions are
typically best when all the other
race cars ahead of you have
· already gone up the mountain,
because that tends to clean a lot
of the loose gravel off,• said
Millen, 46, a five-time champion
who set the Pikes Peak record
in 199-4 (10:04.06).
Three years ago, talk of
bnlaldng 10 minutes didn't
exist. But Millen's pwpose-built
Toyota Celica. from the B.P.
Goodrich tires to the
four-cylinder, 2.1-liter engine
crafted by the Costa
Mesa-based Toyota Racing
Tham, ts a special packa'ge
capable of beating 10 minutes.
In addition, the weather
plays a factor in the race,
•
because at varying elevations it
could change in minutes, from
90-degree temperatures to start
the race to snow at the finish.
Engineers at Rod Millen
Motorsport in Huntington Beach
designed and developed what
Millen calls "an inverted
airplane" effect that forces the
car the down. because a\ 130
mph on portions of a road that
tourists navigate at less than 25
mph, the boost is needed to
keep the Celica from Oipping.
"To give you an idea, at 100
mph. it creates its own weight,•
Millen said. "It gives 2,000
pounds of down force, which is
the weight of the car. It gives
you more traction on the
comers. We had to step away
from how race cars were built
•Newport Harbor falls as Whittier nine r,
rallies with four runs in seventh inning.
.auto racing
traditionally.•
Pikes Peak features
breathtaking drops and
first-gear comers, but Millen is
prepared to a ccelerate.
"I've been around
motorsports for nearly 30 years,
so I don't look at it as ~g
dangerous -it's challenging to
get a machine to the top as fast
as possible,• he said. "Over the
yea.rs, I've spent quite a lot of •
time with a lot of other drivers,
talldng about different setups
and different approaches.
There's also a method of
reading and learning the road
-as you can imagine, that's
extremely important .•
Millen, younger brother of
fonner auto racer, Steve,
believes patience is the key to
..
breaking 10 minutes.
"We know ~e history of
racing there, and the weather
conditions change every year,"
said Millen, who won last year
in 10:13.64.
In May, Millen tested the
road with his Celica, but be
coulc:fl>nly get about two-thirds
the way up the mountain
because of snow. One focus of
the two-day study was to
experiment with the various
tires B.F. Goodrich designed for
this year's effort.
"Tb.is year we hope to be
ready with a new, harder
compound. in addition to the
previous softer material,• said
Gaty Blalock, a tire company
offidal. "Since weather
conditions can vary from day
Newport ~'s ROd Millen.
and h1I personal highway ln
the sky, the ever-foreboding
Pikes Peak raceway up the
slopes of Colorado's fabled
14,110-footbmnp ln the roaU.
He11 be trying to break the
10-minute barrier with his
customized CeUca.·
to day and from the bottom of
the course to the top, it's to our
advantage to have a choice of
tires on race day.•
Millen, who made the trip to
Colorado last week, will run
today in the third and final day
. of practice for the Pikes Peak
climb. Qualifying rounds are
Wednesday.
Millen, who grew up in New
Zealand reading about Pikes
Peak, started getting serious
about racing while he traveled
his homeland's back-country l'-
roads to find the beaches with
the best surf.
•1 came to enjoy sliding my
car around on those dirt roads,•
he said. •Pretty soon, the
&wfboard and roof racks came
off and the wider tires and
sporty suspension went on.
Since then, I have been hooked
on racing.•
Millen's other racing venues
include the North American
Touring Car Series. He
competed June 21 at Portland
International Speedway in a
support race for the PPG CART
World Series, and the final two
races of the 11-race series (at
Vancouver and Laguna Seca).
In America, Millen began
competing in select Mickey
Thompson Stadium Off-Road
1hlck Series events in 1986. In
1988, he won two races, earned
three top qualifying times and
. finished third in the driver's
points championship.
Since joining Team Toyota in
1991, Millen has ~ed a total
of 12 main event victories, 15
top qualifying times and
became the only driver in the
12-year history of the series to
win three consecutive Grand
National Sport 1hlck titles
(1992-94).
RI--.,,, .... ,. -, . ..
•. • 11'1 .,
-.. ~ ... --
Schriber,·
Holstein ....
winFli~t
A crowns
•Big Canyon Country
Club once again h osts
its notable Balboa eVent
By Richard Dunn. Daily Pilot ~
NEWPORT BEACH -Selby
Schriber, women's club
champion for six consecutive
years at Big Canyon Country
Club, won Flight A low gross
with her partnec and memb.!r
Sally HoJste.in won low net in tbe
26th annual Ladies Balboa
Townament on Friday, a
two-day member/guest with 108
golfers in a better-ball ot
partners format
Schriber teamed with Karen
' " ... dysm {Ve La veagano shuo(-Cl"............_ -b.
154 gross, while Holstein paired '
with Sue DeMille (Santa Ana
CC) and fired a 138 net.
Here's how it all'came out
(with the Big Canyon member
named first):
Second gross in Plight A was
Cindi Zellner and V1Cky Taylor
(Newport Beach); second net,
Kathy Bransford and Helen
Wllson (Old Ranch); third gross,
Unda'Maggard and Margaret
Dameel (Santa Ana); third net,
Diane Osgood and Tommye
Steinmyer (Mesa Verde).
In Flight B, Carol Berg and
Colette Taonnina (PGA) won low
l
gross with 178, and Twyla 1 Martin and Gypsy Pulliam r
(Newport Beach) won low net at
138. Second gross, Pam Holtman 1 a.nd Melva Breitenstein
(MorninoStde); second net, 1 Charlene Jmmell and Shari J
Esayian (Santa Ana); third gross,
Suzi Suercek and Gina Watkins
(Santa Ana); third net, Robin
McDowell and Allan Thme
(Santa Ana).
In Flight C, Pat Banta and
Karen Gilbert won low gross
(186), while Joyce Snyder and
Renae Ashwill (Santa Ana) won
low net (135). Second gross,
Vicki Mortis and Cathy Ryan
(Santa Ana); second net,.t:edle
Lyon and Jean Kelly {Marbella);
third gross, Heidi Klm and
Margaret Malouf (Old Ranch);
third net, Ellie Faber and Nadine
Leyton (Newport Beach).
The tournament. with its .
theme "Cruise the British lsles1:
featured Waterford aysta1 as
prizes and English tea pots as
tee prizes. The event began with
a bagpiper in kilts playing his
instrument
The event also featured a
Derby (14 teams) after tbe llnt
round. Winners wen HclateJn
and DeMille, followed by
runners-up Osgood and
Steinmyer and third place JaAnn
Hertel and B.J. Reel (Vldcd.a cq.
.
d, 8-5
>
f
l .
I
I
11 111
I ii II( J l 1 l'quc:Sl>
, J, 1 • /t'1ll anct
I 111 I ;i•J1T11llOd
'• J 1... '11111 and
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
PETITION TO
ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF:
Rita S. Roaenberg
CH• ~o. A 187884
To all hoirs, benaflclarles,
STATEMENT OF
WITHDRAWAL FROM
PARTNERSHIP
OPERATING UNDER
g · II , ... , ... .. ...... a .... ., .. . liiil
.,~, ..
II ~ ByFax
(714) 631-6594
ByPlleae
(:7 H ) M 2-5678
PUILJC NOTICU
By MaMa Perwu
MUCNOTICU
Polley
Rates and drodlinei. are :.ubjert to change wil)iout notice. TI>e
publisher rf'l>t'rvt"i. the right to .censor. reclassify, revise or reject
any classifird udvenisunen1. Plew;t rt.'l>Qrt an_y_error that may be
io your clas~ified ad inunediattly. TI1e Daily Pilot aettptB oo
liability for II.fl)' error in an ad\'tnil.t-ment for which it may~
responsiblt urept for tlil' ro~t o( the ~pa,.e actu~y ocrop1td by
the·error CN'dit ran only bl' aUowtd for the first in~rtion.
(Pka.r 1,,..l11J;. "Ill' 11a111<' anti
pboot uumlirr anJ "r U rall '"" 1 ..... l t.ith ft l>Nr lllJ<•lt )
330 Wr11t Bay St rt'<'t
Co,,tu Me..a. CA 92627
At '""'V"'1 tllwt ~ 811\ "'" ---_·_ .Deadllnes ---...
Boan
ll-l1•ph11111· 8:30usn-5:00pm
\~111da1-FriJa,
Wulk-111 8:30wn-S:00pm
\~•Kb1-Fn.l.i1
Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm Thursday .. Wednesday 5:00pm
Tuesday ......... Monday 5:00pm Friday .......... Thursday 5:00pm
We<{nesday .... Tuesday 5:00pm Saturday ........... Friday S:OOpm
CEMETERY LOT/ NEWPORT BUSINESS SEEKING EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT ANTIQUES 6010 WANTED CAMPERS, RV'S,
CRYPT 1225 BEACH 2669 OPPORTUNITY WOMEN 3004 5530 5530liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilTO BUY 6019 TRAILERS 8014
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2904iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiim~m2mWtmNmN~E~BA~G~Oiiim
P•olflo View Sunt1H Unique 1bclrm 1bai H•ndaom• Altom•" AHl•t•nt M•n•e•r Retail Top Dollar Paid! .Roller Blad•• J n
...-~ OPPOllTUIUn • • c ti on . s 2 4 o o. w/IOft cpodO JIVI• apL 6.ucoeaafuJ Home SHka very attractive ltrom 1800-1960. decent condition, •iz• lndlan, 22 foot mo-
844-8441 Vaulted cellfnga, light B•••d Computer allm wht f•male 26-3' HIPPIES FEDCO-SuperstorH, 1 pc to entire estate. womens 8? &42;8533 torhome. Low mU.., .................. 11111' ..... , ............ ,. .. ·--------............ Act.-1111 u
& airy walk through Graphlca co. Mul1 r-. t0< dating.• 360-4947 a leader In the South· Painting•. chUla, Top Doll•rs P•ld ~~t~~~ ~=
kitchen, large walk-In loeat•I 880-1994 WITH THE FLOW ern California retail glsware, furn, etc. For Record•. Jazz. shape. S5,eoo obo .
._.... ......... ....,HOUSES/ closet, d lahwaaher,1------------------Tired of having spare Industry has on-going 40Yr NB Rn 873-(1223 Soundt ra c ks, etc. (714) 9&4-7414 °'
private extra large SCHOOLS 8r 'Change after your pay employment oppty'• -..-------•• Call Mike &45-7505. 580-9809 pager ~-·~~CONDOS patio from living room. AOCfll'CREDn'CARDS/ JNS'P'DUCTJON 3012 check• been spent on tor the following: additional patio otf of ATM CAim U\ blllt?
bdrm w/outalde ator-HIP ART POSTER CO. eMaln Checkout age apace. Vertical • f1lfZ EQUll'M!HT l152 Seek• career oriented Personnel ._. •-.-.. ••· POR RENT BUILDING
MATERIALS
MOTORCYCLES ...................... -------· ....................... blind• Inc luded .~fiomnw.· PATIENT TUTOR p•ople who enjoy ... e SalesAssoclate 6030 SCOOTllS 8018
throughout, akyltgh\ In fOl'IOOnt! •Math· (Arithmetic Music, Money, Travel e Cart Runners .... _,_., I &t.11111· ---------
..... .., 1 t " CORONA .
TMI ·-;•;• wtn. HI DEL MAR 2122
......,...,.., ......... =iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..................... -..._ ........ a. .. ...,, S1295/Mo. Le•a•
.. ...., ...._. llll .. 2bd, 1ba, gv, lndry.
living room, ·unique MDQIAHT. thru Calculus) & Casual Dress. •Early A.M. Stock
bathroom/ vanity/ • llEPS NEEDl!D POil • Statlatlc:s •Chemistry No • xp needed. Replenishment
drHslng areal Neutsal Pl.AC!MfHTOfCREDIT •Physics • T•rm Papers S350/Wk To Start. carpet throughout! cAROiATM mMDIALS •Reading • Teiat Prep For lmmed Interview We offer full-tlm•
Carport stall to ac· ~~..&;~ (CBEST, GAE, s~n call 754-5858 l!xt.3 hours, excellent ben-
commodate 1 vehicle TOU-FllEE Study Skills. For free C•n't Find Work? •fits and exc•pllonal
All Steel Buildings '79 auaukJ RM·12$N . 40X2G was $4880 now AJ1 orig. New motor,
$2980. 40x57 was completely redone.
$8918 now $5818. $500. 840-38~ Other alH• avallabl•.
Included. Vary btlght 88&-557-2347 Information call: growth opportunity . .Chuck 1.eoo-320-2340 I•••••••••
-.. .......... ,_ tMt 807 112-Jllarcluua .. __ •WWW• R~ 772·1811 X291 a I 5 • ......_ • • ~..,,,...=--.....,.-,.----
and open Uvlng areal --------Jim Mltdla 541·MATH You can't be looklr\g We ask that you b•
Call now, won't IHtl ----------1 too hardf WANTED l5 bright, energetic and ' s147o. 789-0931 TUTOR 30yrs up. people to fill varloua have the ablllty and
------..,..--AUTOMOBILES
PIANOS &
.... OS ,,....._ _ _.. 819 Begonl•. 3bl' 4ba
........ ,' 7 alMUO Duplex, gar, laundry'••••••••• 1111-1111•1---·-far patio, Ilk• new.i•
1199 "41 ,DC .. ,.._ Avail 7/1, John-Owner MISCELIANEOUS
..... -..... 714-832-8188 RENTALS
Rag/Spacial Ed. Rea(S. positions from war• d 1 h 1 1 MONEY ln"'Math. All aubfects. houH to manag• es re to e P g va our ,... -t 20 cuatomers a satisfying TO LOAN 2914 Mra. LH ee2. 4 ment. No experlenc• shopping exp•rlenc•.
necesaary. Call Now, Please contact our _ Tutor-College English Brent (714)891-5784. Personnel Office at Quick ll••Y Qualltylnt Teacher. Teat prep: _.._,... ............... -----1----------1 Slmpl• 1pg appflc9tlon GED:SAT;TOEFL. ESL CASHIER . PT the followlng locellon.
ORGANS
Pl.ANO Young Chang
Upright. Won on game
show $3500 obo. New ~ 74-0122 /848-4686
llOUSES/
CONDOS
POil SALE
For IUrthet lnlo call Mra. 8ladmon• 720-1388 M·F 1pm-6pm. Near APPLIANCES 6011 11~14-3950 · Faahlon Island. Call 3030 Harbor Blvd •••••••••
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii RENTALS TO TUTORING C•lla at 714·750-1872 Costa Mesa, CA QE WHh•r, s .. r. GARAGE SALES
COSTA MESA 2124
Twnhae 2br ~.!Iba. su•ee 2724 CredanUaled T.-cher C•ahler FT, Benefits FE:DCO, INC. Elec Dr"er Xlntl ·--------carpet, drapH, 1-car DA1UO 11vuoUN,..e.reV"l'5 Moat Subjects-ESL. Delivery & Stock PT. s2so COM &44-9539 gar, rtlo, $975.00liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .n.HH ~16 Math-Read-Spacial Ed HI-Time Wine Cellars EOE
7.t 78CMllJM .., ta. 3Br 2Ba HOtJM. Remediation 644-0325 250 Ogle St .. C.M. •-R-E __ T_AJ_L ___ S_A_L"""'• .... s___ ":~:~ntgr~~:r1g:,r~:: CORONA Annual leaH bag 7/15
1
_________
1
..
G!NBUL 1002 NEWPORT fem, n/• $1300/mo ••· avuott1l1rW1...iNTS •••••••• CHA Full-lime, In Adult For chain furnJture good for iar8'J•· S85. DEL MAR 6122 ••••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Call 1·2~72·7300 6M11H vn~ EMPLO~NT Day Care for elderly. store. Salary/Comm/ 714-8 0-2770 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifl
----------1 llACB 2189 COM -Sh.,. lg 3br 2bll 2920 I &B5 54&>9aa1 Benefits. Call Al or Whirlpool Heavy duty Moving Sal•S•t 9-2
c Counter Help, PIT Klmberty at 47w 3e:t. Washer & ••ec dryer. household Item•. Attention
Home Owners
' R.E. Agents!!
Showe••• tho•• apaclal propartlea In
our Hom•• of the
Week & 'Open Home Gulde published
NCh Saturday In th•
AMI Eetate Tab. lt'a
an effective and lnaxpanalve way to
reach homebuyeral Call our ClaHfned
Department Todayll
h .. , fp, W/d. Nr .,. c 2yra new S400 toola, furniture . Newp..-t Creat 38r nation Parle. Av1 7·1 Swecflah atudeftt &' ---------In OM. Phones and 8 A L I! 8 e31 7SOO . 3Ba Condo, Bch Cl•. 875-6695 or 873-8393 other Scendlnavlan. EMPLOYMENT customer service. *WHAT IF?* • 3830 C•tallMAnin
Ten.olL_Comm Pool, Na aet 2ea. ~k ·'° EuroP-ean, South Tony 71'14-673-8123 Miiiionaire wanted to ---------1 s 1 7 o o . p • g g y beach. $450/month + Amerrcan, Asian, -5530-Cuatomer Set'Vloe traTn Tpaopra what he Fl7RNITURE 601'( •••••••••
831-2778 UtlltlH. Avail ASAP Russian exchange atu-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Fortune 500 Company did, to achieve what iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil TRANSPORTATION
Penthou•• Condo Kim &42-&0ie &:~~m!"l~ni:i:; •ATTNi Co•te M•-· Heklng motivated he has? Health Co. Llquld•tlng eoooa.f. ·------··11 Ocaanvl•w. 2000af, NB Pool, tennli, walk Host Famlly/AISE. Poatal positions. lndlvl~ual w/ml~ 1
1Jr * 714..ee&-3934 * home of Immaculate
frplc, 2Bdrm 2Bath to beach N/S, W/O, 1-800.SIBUNQ Clark• and eorters. No exparenca 0 prov • SALES fumllure. 220-1005. -...--------11
11895.mo 262-1148 top r•I•. S500. share •Fxp req'd .• ~!,n•nt•d· ~u:~om:~ ~e:~~ 1 tt~ *FLY 4 FUN* New Ivory allpcovered BOATS 7011
w/2 men. 848-8473 or exam, fA-,. • an 0 r g a n 1 z a t 1 0 n a . Health Co. needs 3 sofa. 011eralzed chair iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
LOST. teatln~matlon call (20-30hra per wk, people SSS motivated and ottoman. S1700/ 14' Whaler Uk• new. AP,119,...•~NTS FO~ 2925 ::1508, 8!::1:!.. t•mporary Juty-Oec.) & A+ altltude for n•w OBO. 875-9188 Bullt~n fuel tank.
ft&'UYUO RENTALS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .,,.. Call Of send rnume to: olc. Train avl 66&-3634 50HP Johnson. $5000.
FOR RENT WANTED 2726 FOUND BIRD MHa Account• P•yabl• Entert•lnmenl-STUDENT$ W•nted MERCHANDISE 844 8441
• co
" co
It).
I ·N .:J· ~ ~CD ).. .--en ._·'ii
'C 0 .(.) ....... •••••••••liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Verde Area 9/28. ·Call Plywood & Lumber Co Publlc•tlon•_, FT/PT Will Train. Earn MISC 6015 18ft Duflleld, Electric looking for FT. NP 1151 Kalmus fl'J,. Money While Having • 1"""1-AJI new Interior, Quiet tem•I• N/S, no to deacrlbe. M 2•1574· clerk, $11/hr! AHl•t Costa M•sa 92628 Funll Ricky 1537-3347 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil "'"' ---------pata looking fO< placa1"F""'O_U_N __ D_L_o-ng_h_a""lr-b-lk controll•r w/malntaln-Attn: Ms. Lauren BARBIE CAR 5225. with low coat secure
to al\are In NB or cat, white atar on Ing the overall acct'g at 662-2020 •TELEMARKETING slip. SVSOO. 5<'8-8408 COM 72 .. _,..58 Burl•" Bike Tr•ll•r
~o ~~
142-5878
Aak about our BALBOA current apaclalal
area. •....,.. · cheat, male. Found In ayatem, good problem O.C. Fireman• Assoc. $325. Combl Stroller ---------
March Eut aide CM. •olvlng ablliliH a •DRIVERS.D•ll-ry Have fun making $$$ $75. Call 631-2431 POWER BOATS e5G-4198 muat expar necanary Have fun whD• •amlng $10/ hr Jay 537-3:M7
Send reaum• toa up to s12/hr. Call Joa 7012
FR•• KITTENS Personnel, Box i045 * 537-3347 * COTT~~nLES To Good Homea. ~\.&U>
882-e858 Tustin, ca 92781 Medloat Aa•t· PT EMPLOYMENT 6017 89 Expr••• C""--
Lo.T' Blu. nylon ACT NOWI Back Office. 20hr• pw SERVICES 5533 iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 32ft. OAL AOO hrs. wk. Buay NB Internal Twin VP271·Brand nu wallet, poaalbly on ORANGE COUNTY Medlclne/Endocrlnol-HAWAII.AN STYLE paint, proleaslonatty
Balboa la. or C.M. FAIR ogy. Salary DOE. •-••-• BAMBOO PICTURE decorated Interior.
R.WARDI aso-se79 Help Offdad aelllng MfS..8855 Pleau be aware that FR~MRS. Cuatom Loaded with •>CtrMt
R•w•rd Loat g rey tropical plants from R••I Kahll• PT Aaat. th• listings In this cat-mad• to f11 your •iz•. $49,900.obo 7ec:M83'7 24 P..W. Untta Coat& Paralan. Newport Ju"' \1th-27th-Dally 990fY may ,.quire you Call for Info 21 a..oe3 ---------Me•a near Shopa, North twnhmaa Sat .,. · for top producing N.B. to call a 800 numbet ---.-.T-~-S-UPS ___ _
CORONA· Theater•. 1430,000 8·21 . PIHH call B1~~o~•ga1~•:1•.:00 ~g~LP~g~rR~~~ In which there I• a COMPUTiRS 6018 ~,._ DEL MAR 2622 Dwn Bkr, MS-1343 Jennna 759-1377 July 9-10, 10am•2pm 780-9000 x101 charge per minute. D~ 7022
WNoEcaP!~YpWleEnL•L RICIPTIONIST FT1--------3H IBM Compatlbla tt•r 1h Apt• Upper INDUSTl.IAL 2788 BE.AI.TB. " Sml NB firm. Gen otc, E~tov..eNT wtth VOA MonhOt, Dot 40ft lllOOIHNO oar~. No/pet•. Avail • .. ..__ WORD 1 '~ • JnQ .......... Printer S400 otf Udo. Inc~ new •-~===:. .. 7·1 1000/mo +dep PITRESS 3000 AdJuetlng "'"" In •• P•N .. , • catua W'•~ft 5535 ... ""' . . 110Awooed0 25, .. ,. POR 8Al.S110,ooo.. N.8. IHk• reRable 9fWmt. LY mag fO< lmd'liiiiniiiiniii&~-----__ 1_1 ........ 2e3-__ 3MO __ X2_40 _ _,,,. zo;~a:· .. ·:&~~bo
_.... 1~1 ........ ___ --.·• ..__.,...... Individual• '° tilt 2 FT In~ ae2 .. 3u,, M•olnt••h 32 MB,1 ..... -..-....... -....... -~-• __ ..;_-._~------_-_-_ --~-·---Produc:tloft Pfaoe N.B. -..,.. __..,_ .,.. & 2 PT po&ftlona ft. 8e•uflful velu-Ram w/17'" co10r NEC Doo£ >CIM LOC'4111an. Olvtttble 9ob c.U.tsn ***~OPP*** tenlng to lmPo"ant lleoepUonl•t PIT. tuoue wom•ft to Monitor a printer. (WfY ..cure), ...,,.,
Bkr ' 7...,_"7 SS~~ :"*tg:::-al live bredca!'..._~•ta. :"0;.:,•d,:::.r t!.-: take cat• of older >Clru 11195 54...o90 eleCL •'13-1'977
0 ., -"•·b M .60/her w,............ anaw•rlng phone• man, careglv. UoOd •
rMt ,._... ...... Call 71M777 today and "•n•ral office cook rafa. Christine -W-,-.---.,.-----1 ~·~f~.~~ for.,, IM~. dulle:. Hhr. Pax <::>714"4Me-373•<::> an&G.11 CAllPllS. l'rS,
~o CD~
.... 0
as~
=====::::1PENINSULA 2607
------ ----------. ---------------. . --••••bo• P•n Point co-.rn•,.YllY Very Large 2Br 2Ba .wu~~~
1900 1544 Miramar Or n11n1T ESTATE
Yearly 87S.135a11~••••••••
•Studio $125.•
New paint/carpet. frig, NT utia 1nc1d, yrly, n1pat•. APUTME 52750
7G0-1713"0t 875-9205. -------
-----------
.__... w_._. c... ••tllllLIRI Reaume: 951-ee1a or TO BUY 6019 tunm IOlt
...._.. --... cell "4-7240. ·-----·-iil•llll•• .. ·····~-------........ New 'orrnulatlon. Witt '1tlln. You cenl10'i9l'fli5i'iY'r.'iir. DOlllSTICS 5540 .. Recluoe .. ony 117..95. earn up to 1100 I
9ume fet, cetoriea. WHkly aHembllng 9'.E. C.., need9 nlll••······ ·---------....,;-~~---~---'"""'l!!'----111!11 ....... ..... loM an'9 ~ algrHlp ~ M-tr. U..IO/hf. * llOUSaMll. STARTL~G 1-4 lb• we•lltv. bolC.._ 1~1s.J1 flax ,.,a: 714~7U 1 y..,. EllP. CMM a
• • Q U a r a ft t • • d \ ' mali\taln IWge hQfnell. 100. ..... Unned ----------_ ...... ......, ............. _.. __ Outdoor dutlH, .. .. ~~~u· · IMPl.OYllDT lllPl.Onwn' c:are. pet e ..... cll'Mng, A -Jl~·TE'tw
tcOP'•Ha• .. d) IUO 1530 ~C:-.:!· ~ J,:~£ _W (
BUSINBSSlf
I
ll
•r
!-
c.l
u
11
II
t,
0
d
e
e
e ;
1
1 l .
'n Flower part
29 EJCOttc fruit
30 Inch to attack
32 u... the lfbrary
33 Actresa Bvrltyn 34 Zoo linlmal
3e Just uy no
40 Some 41 Kind
4<4Hlt 47 Ulce an operallng room
49 Skltt pelt
51 Slits
53 Tiffs ·
55 Tumplk" 58 Bueben t11ma 58 Frencti friend 598e11~ 61 Lett1m111n s ttval 62 Teamcheef 63·eom1n the -·
64 Bashful 68 Pug or poodle
NOR'l1I
•487411 .~
t>4JU
0 414
•4
I I
BA8T .,.o. 0 •• ,
o.t11a•
•IOI
80t1J'H •• <::> Q 10'784
0 8
•KJ1841
The bidding: .
NORTH BAST
INT P .. t• p ...
8HT P ... IS' p ...
80lml
10 a.
4.0 . ...
Opening lead: Kinr ol o
One of the weaknee1ee of atan·
dard bidding method• i1 the wide
nnge of the openlq bid of one ln a
IUit. One of thi1 continent'• leadinr
theoreticians, Dr. Georre
koaenkranz, devised waya to plug
t.hia gap and incorporated them In
the Romex Syatem. Now he has
-published a simplified version of
the 1111tem well within the grasp of
the average player, with quizzes
and interesting hancla showing ~
it all worka. (•Qodfrey'1.Bridge
Challenge,• by Dr.. Oeor1e
Roaenkranz 6 Phillip Alder. 159
pp., paperback.. Available from The
Bridge World, 39 Weat 94th Street,
New Yotk, N.Y. 10025. $9.95 plut t2 ..... handllnc.)
No1th,• openinf bid w.-a the
D1naallc No Trump, 1howlo1 • ttfonr, unbalanced hand -a tey
eleownt lo ltmJUnc \l)e atrencUt ot
a one-bid. 8~th11 rHponaa
pnalMd at leut 8 polnaa, and the
reat or the auction wa1 oatutal.
Since North did not bid heart•
whenAthe opportunity wae avail·
able, aouth hid to have a five-tan!
auit to lntroauce it at the rour-level,
hence Nonh .. raia to aJam.
'n\e N~-South handa qontalo a
lot of hlth carda but few entriea.
There •ere two Jeeitimate linea to
try for 12 tricb - a crouruff', or
1ettin1 up the 10111 1lde ault. The
latter wp clearly the better propo6-
t.ion. . .
........... c ....
A 8a lft4N ftf Jewl
WN wlt/Nny new blk
... Powetf\11 It. ~ fftado ...... 14M379
'87 Polio VAN Conv.
.a AAllQa ROV.
BftG. On• owner •
Load~. ChfOMM. lo
lo• mil... (828000)
'MDISCOV8 .. Y V-4. Alf, fl/8, A/C, low ml. Orig.· Owner. 14,SOO 720· 1722
1 local owner. Perl cond. Loaded. lo _._. _____ ......_ .... ,~ .. ~!1!!11~ .. -·ilj
mlJ••· (095158) •ea•aco,.T
Aulo, AC, Cui. Only 38k mtlH. (3BGY813) Hu~ Only te, 791
•EACH MOTO .. S Tt4-842 .. 998
•ea •XttLOR•ili •ao' 4808LC lmmao. 4X4 One ownltf. XIII Blk/Palamlno, t5K,
L .. lher. Etc. loaded. -----~--. ...... ...-......_., 2nd local owner, chrm (E06998) '94 DISCOV•RY SI! whls. cd, MloheUna. 7 Passenger. Loaded. $8,900 75 .. ~480
LAND .. OVl!R Lo mllee, (083882) --------
Mis.ION VIB.10 . '88 580 S"L Gold, 1 •ee DISCOVERY SI! owner. Exe cond • 7 t+3 e ... a 7so Black. Load•d. !front $12,000. 851-4898> 'M MUSTANG LX Bruah Guard. Afr, ,
CONVERTIBLE (181847) Lo Lo Mlle.I 01 LMoBLoZ M30011ea·.•L White, Auto, Chrome•.
N•w LHUS Trade. LAHD ftOVl!R BI a .o-k B •• u t, I
1'103879 ttfJ,777 MfSSION Vfl!JO (0193.09) . HURRYI
LllXVS 714-38f5.9750 LAND ROVER .
MISSION Vll!JO MISSION Vll!JO
t -aoo.eest-1s3ea LEXUS 911 s. :114o~es.a75o --------
L•xua MISatON.vt&IO . MtOOee ...... ..
1MC•LICA 4
Super olo•I Aut~ matlo. (3GVV4$7)
on1iata,H•
.... u.-u ..
Lo mll••· ll•clc BHuty. (nlM417)
Onl~ S~8,887 ~
•BACH MOTOR•' 7t+e42•Mee
Declarer won the opening lead in
dumml and caahed the ace and kl. •-·-U th ~ 1 'H ·MERCEDH C220 DI 0 wMl&IP1t revea nr e ... HONDA 9085 '02 Ll!XUS LS 400 Sllv•r/~rey . Onlyl--------break. After unJ)l°!!!:J the ace of Sedan. Immaculate! 1 o,ooo local mllH. 4X4 92Z 1
clube, declarer fin the ten of liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (N0102084) Factory warranty.1;i!iii!ii~ii!!!i!i~~iiilil-. bean., d~ the lut trump, then 'Ot ACC08P l!X MONSDR SALEI Many exttas Prl1tlneJ~ .,.2 TOYOTA ,, 4 caahed the kln1 of dubl. Thia line 4Dr, CJD, Moon Roof, Hurryl •t9,97S I (347573) s2e,eoo ·e...... Cab v· N"·o· would work whenever dubl were 3-W h It e . ti o 7 2 7 1 1 '"' v._ ,
3 or when either the ten or queen of St t ,577 '02 Ll!XUS 8C400 LAND ROVBR CC, Trailer Hltcn. 'm
the llUit dropped doubleton, 110 all COUPI! . MISSION VIEJO Ml. 112,500 8~~ 11 here '04 ACCORD EX Super Nlcel H\,lrry On 7t4·385•8750 pgr.JI 81CM301 . --
.wuAnwe · booL"' Blac~/Blac:k, Full Sale Thi• week-enlyt ..-....--------intere1ting "1rom many Power. tll018146 (0020911) 01'580 SEC Blk/Bll< _V_AN_S...;. ____ ....
pointe of view, well ~orth a read. '-151977 Only $18,987 Immaculate & Loaded. 9225 \J Cstm Signature Whls. iiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiii1
Learn to be a..better tirid1e LEXUS . Bl!ACH MOTORS $32,950.obo 283·1777 '80 DODQI! CARGO
player! Subecrlbe no. =the MISSION VIEJO 714·842·8888 VAN 318.V8 PIS, "1f!I Goren Bridft Letter bf s 1·800 .. 80·5398 , 1 Auna great! 'St®O
(800) '788-lfta for Info atlon. •01 CIVIC LX ~~adse~~o~OK Fu~I~ MERCURY 9135 OB0•714·8154.e10'J
·O;rwrt.tetoi Goren·BitdpLet-Power Eq. A/C, Xlnt oondl $29,000 '91ChevyAstro"-'
ter, P.O. Bos "to; Chlca,0, m • Sedan. Super Nlcel 909·593-6896 ,78 Grand Marqul• 4.3 liter, high outS'':'t,
80880. Hur.J~VOD78i~,495 39k orig ml. 4dr. full)" loaded, f/pwr, •• LOTUS 9123 $2995 840·8070 rear ale, roof rack.
BEACH MOTORS ·• ~aoC~g. ~~~~
7t4·842·8988 '9.5 ESPRIT 54• NJSSAN 91501-------...
BMW 9030 CADILIAC 9040 CHRYSLER
w h I I e. Magno II a iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' VOLVO 9'l~
9050 Ji; EP • 9110 Lea the r. OZ racing ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilfiVViiiil . f" _ wtleel•. 21< miles. '93 Plck~p Xtra cab,1•
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ! (F63116) $ 54, 905 tint, ac, cass, chrome '03 VOLVO 240 --'87 BMW 3215 Red, • 7 8 a• v 111 • 2nd '015 CIRRUS LX 'l'..7 CJ7 VS, soft top, ··-.. pkg, 5spd, only 381<. Super creanl Awa. alarm, 6 cyl, 5apd, owner, xlnt cond, Lo ml. Super Cleanl 331n tires, Smitty Bill .•95 ESPIR'T $99<1Q/obo. 631·2878. lmmac. (3GST161)
AC, all pwr, 1unroof. rebullt eng. New tran1, Loaded. (3PPV864) • bumpersL xlnt condl British Racing Green --------Only $t5,888 $7!95/obo. 64C>-4ll88. custom wire whls, Only $141288 $4000. 9W·593-6896 magnolla leather, co. '94 PATHFINDER LE ,97 BMW 3 2• d/ $2950/obo. Need to OZ racing wheels, lthr, low miles. full BEACH MOTORS -"" re ••Ill 888·0277 B••cH MOTORS . to 84k M 7 •e black, 5apd, CD ..._ IANDROVER glass top, 4k> miles warr. · any t...a42-8v •
Player, AC, PS, PB, 714-842·8888 (F63076) $54,995 xtras. Champagne.1-..,.,9~8..,--,8-5-0-T--U_R_B_O_·
9113 $22,500. Flawless. w•o -· PW, POL, •nrf, 1 ownr, CHEVROLET 9045 --------BAUER LOTUS 750-9113 ft exc: cond, $6000/obo. DODGE 6 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii C/D, Power Eviiy..-714-722·12158 9o 5 '83 LWB COSTA MESA '94 PATHFINDER thing! 3rd S .. \,
•eo 3251C Aed Conv. '88 CORVl!TTI! Lo miles. Books & 714•842•7700 Loaded SE w/Leather. 111185102 $29,'!9!
--------------------------Loadedl All pwr, 5spd Stingray Coupe. '04VIPl!A Rec9rd1. Roman---------• Lo lo miles. Aulo. alarm, cd, alloy whts, YeJtow. All booka+ ROADSTl!R Bronze. Flawless. MAZDA 9125 (23068) FLAWLESS! LEXUS
MISSION Vll!.IO
1-eoo-eeo-s3U ot
Put a few words to
work for you.
Call 642-5678.
· air bags, dOK. Low record•. Remember Black Beauty. Only (634760) s29,850
M S Ill Yesterday! Musuem 17K MllH. Loaded. LAND ROVER iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Blue.book u•t • Oualltyl Priced to sell A/C. Etc. Flawless! MISSION VIEJO '00 MAZDA MPV
s 14.000/flrm ll73-4.2D2 (101 429) 102on) $45, T14-38S·8750 Auto7'" All -~er,
'95 BMW 3251 Must Seel (2TOW660)
40r, Whlte/Oy1ter. 3Qk LAND ROVl!R LAND ROVER Can't.seem to Only SB,0015
New Lexu• Trade. MISSION VIEJO MISSION VJEJO ' (i'EZ0561) $24,088 __ 7_t_4-_3;...8;...5-8;....;;._7.;;.S.;;.o_ 7!+385-8750 get to all those
G od l b repair jobs
'08 BMW Z·3 ° 0 s around the house? Bll</lvory. Only 7k. CLASSIFIED reliable services
lllB76341 $27,077 It's the rHouroe you Interesting things Let the
can count on to sell a to buy Classified Ll!XUS
MISSION Vll!.10 1 ·80().880·5308
Whether you're buying
· or 1elllng. CIHalfled
myriad of merchan· 9 I dlse Items, because erv ce
our columns compel Directory
quallfled buyers to help you find
calll reliable help.
'03 MAZDA0MIATA Lo Miies. 5 Speed. A /C, C-a s 1 et t e
Only $1 t ,077
Bl!ACH MOTORS
7t 4-842·8888
·RENT .._ _______________________ _. covers all your needs!
tS42·5818 through classified
·sE·R·Vl-C·E--·1 ~l~~uc
DIRECTORY
BUSINESS
SERVICES
LAND ROVER
MISSION VIEJO ...
714-385·87!ra ANTIQUES &
•95 Pathfinder XI! CLASSICS giso
Bii<, V6, 2WD, Alrm, 1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii All PWA, New Tlres, 1• Lo Miies. Xlnt Condi '73 MaMretl Cltn>wl
$18,500 obo 640-8370 Showroom Orlglnal
l>ONTIAC 9170
37k ml, $13,IJOO. or
Trade! 998-5212 .. we·
SELL ·~
your used vehicle ..
through cfa$slfled Ma·M78
3911
Mobll• Sor .. n .. tit. New a R•tcrMnlng
LlC:.#181173 Bond~ Roger 'J14+tl48.08'l0