HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-10-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-r:-. .
1
SERVING THE NEWPORT -~SA COt-AMUNmES SINCE 1907 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1999
Student reports, COII1I1:Ients don't match up
•School district officials say a computer software glitch put . TeWin.kle. "It had comments like
·~ong information on progress reports for three Schools. . ~;?rk habits and excessi9e
OA. ... LITI. Gouurr
NEWPORT-MESA -An appar-
,. ent glitch in the school district's
computer software CdUSed parents
~ Qt students m at least three schools
~ tti received progress reports with
;: in.correct information on them.
.. The comment section of reports
• fh>Dl Te Winkle Middle School,
• Newport Harbor High School and
Costa Mesa High School contained
comments that didn't match the stu-
dents named on the reports, said
Sharon Fry. prtndpaJ at TeWinkle.
This first progress report of the
year had calls from irate and bewil-
dered parents fi.llmg up teachers'
voice mailboxes as soon as Friday
morning.
"My daughter IS a straight-A stu-
dent,• said Kathy Miller, whose
daughter is in the sixth grade at
The most perplexing thing about
the report, she said, was the con-
flicting information.
• 1t had an outstanding m citi.zen-
ship -and next to it was poor work
habits," Miller said.
The grades on the reports were
correct, explained Jaime Castel-
lanos, assistant superintendent for
secondary education.
But comments entered for stu-
dents from the first school in the
TERROR IN THE -FRONT YARD?
computer system were then printed
on-progress reports for every subse-
quent school. .. • .
A stay-at-home mom, Miller got
her mail at l O a.m. and began fran-
tically calling oth~r mother!> asking
il they had received any thing or il
she had the only misbehaver.
Llewelyn Smith had no idea
what she was talking about -her
mail doesn't come until 2 p.m. But
when the mdll came, Smith couldn't
believe 1t. "We get glowing reports
SEE GRADES PAGE 6
Council
·resorts
to other.
plans
•Residents are unmoved by
developer's off er to pay for
moving the Legion Post.
'o \"-1 ~""'""rt.
NEWPORT BEACH -The City
Council on Monddy decided to con-
sider propo:,dJs in addition to the
Sutherland Talla resort suggested for
the Manna Park
Mob1le Home
~nd Amencan Council
makes vote
to continue
SEAN HILLER I DAILY Pit.OT
After transforming the front lawn of his Costa Mesa home into a Halloween graveyard, Ryan Rankin, 9, makes some minor adjust-
ments to one of his monsters.
Clinic lobbies for tobacco settlement money Well spent1
•Share Our Selves founder Jean Forbath stresses need for
funds to aid people with chronic illnesses.
Orange County during the next 25
years as a result of a national settle-
ment of a tobacco lawswt.
How do you
think the 'oun-
ty should
spend its
tobacco wind·
~Plot
COSTA MESA -For someone in
the business of caring for others, it
can be torture having to close your
door on a chronic diabetes or emphy-
sema sufferer because you have no
room.
and, in pcUticular, Share Our Selves
founder Jean Forbath, are playing
integral roles in the movement to
invest tobacco settlement funds in
health care.
Forbatb is one of the founders of
the Health Alliance to Reinvest the
Tobacco Settlement (HARTS). The
group was founded earlier this year
and is leading the orgaruzed e ffort to
lobby the county board of supervisors
to set aside for social services part of
the $912 million being funneled into
The Health Alliance to Reinvest
the Tobacco Settlement is made up of
more than 50 social and health care
agenoes, some of whom implored the
board of supervisors in a workshop
last week not to spend the settlement
on paying off the county's debt and
building a county jail.
#I've been testifying at county
budget hearings for probably 20
years as~g for an increase in health
fall? Call our Readers
Hotline at (949) 642·
6086 or send e-mail to
dailypilotOlatimes.com.
Please spell your
name and include
your hometown and
phone number (for
verification purposes
only).
Duo to a lack of resources, staff at
Share Our Selves medical chnic must
make that choice all too often
Co ta Mesa health cdre leaders SEE MONEY PAGE 6
---~ ·" 'glnnoo, -. . -··-·--·
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~----
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Changing lifestyles
Life was simple in Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa at the tum of the century.
No \Kl Sc.ttwAJt r1
ldyPb 111 t 'S tylt "• the time -was used to traclc
lumber and merchandise m
exchange for gram and other
A lmost a century ago,
when Newport Beach wn still a fish·
ing port and Costa Mesa was primarily
fannlnnd, life was r latively lmfettercd and
si_mpl .
N wport Beach, known to me as the
Promised Lond -and to the less-reverent,
<")()SJ>el Swamp -was Sparsely ~puloted
~d dotted with r idents traveling the
town's dirt roads on honebe~k.
The ~adden brothers' steam lblp -
James McFadden owned IJlOlt al the Wld at
I
. farm produce. Mcfadden Whftlf
was th town center.
And despite the rowdy tmag of 9Mf arln9
folk it now has, Newport was a •dty town
eOrly in the decade. lllat is. it could not legal·
ly have a NIOOn or sell liquor.
But thil didn't stqp th tourti who came
to ~ to swim ex rent rowboats Other
villtc:n would go to Rocky. Point (now Corona
&el Mer) to gather abalone end explore
°""" It Wat not until the Red can of the 'Padftc:
Electric tram reached Newport m 1905 that
the <;tr\lggling conunuruty finally gamed a
linJt W1tll th out. ... id world. The amval of the
trains hastened the demand for sClf-govem·
m nt and inrorporation m 1906.
Costa Mesa, on the oth r hand, wa 1
oetiv a patchwork of agnculturaJ rommu·
mti , mdudmg th boomtown of Failvi w,
the village of HalJlef and the famung com·
mUnity Paulanno, where n duster of peopl
from Boston had tUed.
Eadl community pnmarily con 1sted of a
few sc&tterl'(l farm hou , e1nd there wM n
post office, a public school bulldUlQ and ran.
road taoons. Th first conun raal building ln
Harper was th two-.story. Ozment stomi built
In .1908 It corned everythlog from groceries
to yard goods to ohlckeD :fee(}
Legion Post 291
site on the Balboa
Perunsula.
Council mem-
bers srud the pro-
po~al would force
them to make a
hard dec1s1on,
weighing city
annexation
of Santa
Ana Heights
See story on
page6
revenue tlgainst preserving New-
port's standard of liVll1g.
•As much as we love this city
there are seven people up here that
have to pay the bills,# Council-
woman Norma Glover said.
While the city needs money it also
needs to pre~erve open land, Mayor
Denrus O'Nell added.
SEE COUNCIL PAGE 6
Temple starts
• expansion
fund-raising
• Project will add a chapel
and classrooms to Temple
Bat Yahm, creating a
'campus' environment. ,
NEWPORT BEACH -Temple
Bat Ya.hm this weekend offioally
began an ambitious $5-million
expansion pro1ect.
"From the heights of this everung
we have a v1c:1on of our children
dimbmg up after u.:,, • said Temple
Bat Yahtn Rabbi Mark S. r..tiller. "I
am very humbled by the opporturu-
ty to help fulfill the promise of this
blcs. mg."
About 250 Temple Bat Yahm con-
gregants C'CJebratcd the oJhcial start
of fund·r(t1smg Sunday night with a
candlelight V1gtl on I.he site of the
planned construct1on, which is
behind the temple
SEE TEMPLE PAGE 6
INDEX
amtAEOS ---' COMMUlfTY fOllMI . 7
P\llUC NOOOS ,.. • ..... I
SfOm 1
THE VEIOKT -----...2
2 TU!!day, October 26, 1999 community forum Doi~ PikJt
POLlllCS ASIDE Looking at College Park from another angle
s. j.
cahn
Genis was not
aneto beat
aroitnd the bush
Things are pretty quiet in New-
port-Mesa politics this week.
Bob Doman has missed, by a
mile, his self-imposed deadline for
jumping mto a race against Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher, good news for
Huntington Beach's congressman
and bad news for people (including
journalists) look.mg forward to an
interesting. possibly bitter, fight.
In Costa Mesa, the most inter-
esting news turns out to be 1ust a
rumor -and a false one at that -
according to its subject, former
Mayor Sandy Gems.
Word was that Genis was think-
ing seriously about running for lhe
seat be ing vacated by her former
colleague. Joe Erickson. Total rub-
bish, Genis says She nught one
day consider such a btd, but not
unW she's old dnd grdy -and she
isn't nedfly that
From JUSt about evPry newsroom
account. it's Costa Mesd's loss that
Gerus tSn't redlly gomg to run. She
was a strdlght, outspoken member
who told 1t Wee 1t was a charac-
teristic laclung m most poliucians
and elected offic1dl!. Although it's
impossible to say she> would have
been the best cdnd1datc without
knowing the rest of thP held, 1t ts
safe to say she would have brought
some needed Cdndor to the dC'bate
as Costa Mesa tnec; to fill some very
big shoes with Enckson lt•c1vmq
M y children have attended
College Park ElementM}'
School for the pa.st five
years. During that time I also became
concerned about the balance of
attention between the higher-~chiev
ing and lower-achieving students. I
feel Principal Kathy Sanchez has
been very open to my concerns, and
in fact has worked hard to implement
programs that benefit students of all
achievemenl'levels. Extracurricular
science programs, such as Science
Adventures, have been added, which
benefit all students. Art Masters is a
terrific program that allows students
ISSUE OF
THE WEEK
to-study various artists
throughout history.
learning a bout their
artistic styles, and cre-
ating art patterned
after that style. But I
have also felt it is my
. responsibility to go beyond dropping
my child off at school. When my son
expressed a desire to have the oppor-
tunity to play chess at school, we
donated some chess sels' to bis class-
room to allow him that opportunity.
Principal Sanchez has been very
open to any suggestions tha t
enhance the scholastic experience of
all students.
But perhaps the item that surpris-
es me the most in the article is the
criticism of College Park Elementary
School's emphasis on reading. I
could never have imagined anyone
criticizing a school for emphasizing
such a fundamental skill. Reading is
the foundation upon which all other
scholastic skills are based. Personally,
1 do not believe that reading skill
development can be overempha-
sized. As to the criticism that the
tugher-achieving students are not
being challenged. I can only draw on
the expenence of my family. My
daughter's ranking on standardized
testing has ranged from the 94th to
the 98th percentile. I believe this
MARIANNA DAY MA.SSEY I DAILY Pl.OT
First-graders, from left, Guillermina Duarte, Marla Munos and Nicole
Dinatale listen to their teacher tell a Halloween story at College Park
Elementary School.
qualifies her for the high -achiever
category in anyone's ranking s}'stem.
Our experience with each of my
daughter's teachers a t College Park
Eleme ntary included a willingness to
create challenging opportunities for
her education. We could not be more
satisfied with our daughter's teachers
d uring her time al College Park Ele-
mentary. The result of her experience
at College Park Elementary has been
a well-rounded, complete education,
coupled with a confidence in her
abilities. I believe that oftentimes
parents of high-achieving students
are so concerned their child be chal-
lenged, wanting them to be the best.
they dnve them until they fail. I'll
take a well-adjusted fourth-grader,
confident m her abilities, rather than
a neW'Otic fourth-grader struggling to
do seventh-grad e math any day.
Lastly, J would like to address the
"white-Oight• issue. People can say
they are changing to Newport Beach
sch ools because of the principal, or
district officials, or the emphasis on
reading, but let's look at the situa-
tion. They are not transferring to the
next-closest school in their neighbor-
hood, they are transferring across
town to a school with m uch different
demographics. Ideally, College Park
Elementary would be a ble to estab-
lish a foundation like the wealthier
schools and fund extra staff positions
internally. But the ideal and the reali-
ty are very far apart, and the College
Park staff has worked very bard at
doing the best JOb they can with the
resowces available to them. The
irony m the parents' apparent dis-
comfort with the cultural mix at Col-
lege Park Elementary is the contrast
with the article in Wednesday's Los
Angeles Times 1·changes in State's
Ethnic Bal-•
ance Are ••
Accelerating,•
Oct. 20).
According to
theTime's
~~eei!peula-:'
tion of Cali-••
fomia will
drop to 50% •
by next year\· •
College Park •
Elementary ts.
simply follow-·
ing the trend '
in the state of
Calif ortl.ia. • •
What the
Daily Pilot
article does not accurately portray,
however, is the openness to other
cultures being developed in the chil·
dren at College Park. Although the '
article states that •white and Latino
students tend not to hang out with
each 0th.er in social groups,• that has
certainly not been the experience
with my children. My daughter has
always had friends whose names I
could not even properly pronounct! .
(much to her amusement). and m y
son works to find ways to make bis
friends' parents understand his invi-,
tation to events. A cliff erence in cul-
ture to them is not something to be
divided ove r, it is simply a hurdle in
communication to be overcome. We
parents have much to learn from our
children in tenns of multicultural
acceptance.
I would like to thank Principal
Sanchez, and the entire staff at Col-
lege Park Elementary for their dedi-
cation to the students, and for the
flexibility and creabvity they show m
performing a difficult job, in a less ••
than ideal situation. Keep up the
good w ork .
• aoa SNYDER. 39, is• lifelong Costa Mt!j8
resident and parent. His son attends College
Park Elementary and his daughter went
there through third grade before moving on
to Davis Elementary School.
Gerus' brand of slrtught-shooting,
as unusual as it 1s on the loccil scene,
has JUSl about (usappec\Tl'd dJTlong.
our national leadt>rs, dS two recent
U.S. Senate votes mach .. cl~ar.
MAILBAG Differing Views on Heights annexation
The first, two weeks ago. cdme
on the ComprehC'ns1ve Test Ban
Treaty. Largely along pctrty Imes,
the Senate re1ected the treaty
which would mandate an end to
nudear test.!.
In the second. dt lhe end of last
week, the Senate passed a ban on
late-term abortions. but not by the
two-thirds ma1onty needed to
overturn a prorrused veto by Presi-
dent Clinton
Both of lhese votes were on sub-
stantial poltaes But you wouldn't
know it from the rhetonc spewing
out of Washmgton. lnsledd, these
important -literally life and death
-issues were immediately turned
into nothing more than poltbcs·
Democrats promised to make the
nuclear J:reaty an issue in next
year's election. and Republicans
plan to counter the Democratic
opposition lo the a boruon ban
It appeared as tl they voted the
way they did 1ust to c:rrate elec-
tion-year issues
Whe re is their concern for the
changes these two proposals would
have made?
Apparenlly. they don't care.
From their own words, we can ~mly
conclude that our senators are far
less 10terested m making s1gnif1-
cant c:hanges to our laws and cul-
ture than they are to stmply ensur-
ing their place on Capitol Hill.
It's no wonder that thl.J'd party
candidates contJ.nue to be popular.
l.J.ke Gerus, the Pat Buchanan's,
Jesse Ventura's and Dondld Trump's
of the world will tell 1t like it 1s, no
matter how it plays in the polls
Of course, with the exception of
Gov. Ventura, they've been about as
successful as Genis was when she
ran for the Costa MeSd Water Board.
• SJ. CAHN 1s city editor of the Daily
Pilot. He can be reached at (949) 574-
4268. His e-mail address is
dalfypilotOlatim~s.com.
Gifted program has
helped pave road ahead
W hile it is early yet in the school
year, I pause for a moment to
reflect on my mcredible journey to
stxth grade.
The road bas not always been smooth
sailing. and occasionally l have stumbled
on a few road blocks However, it has been
memorable for me. I am thankful to all of
the mcredible teachers I have ever had and
know that I would not be half the person I
am today without their support and gwd-
ance.
1 have come to know and appreciate the
awesome staff at Kaiser Primary and Kaiser
Elementary schools, in particular the last
two years of my schooling.
And now I am certain this one, as well,
will stand out the most. l have been so for·
tunate to be a student involved in the on-
site Gifted and Talented Educallon pro-
gram at Kaiser Elementary. This program
started three years ago and is now really
catching on My teachers are trained in lhts
area of educating gifted children and make
learning fun and exciting. I love the oppor-
tunity I have to switch to different dass-
roorns, different teachers, and worlong at
an accelerated pace m math.
Most of all, I really dig the challenge set
before me to be the absolute best I can be
and then always take 1t a step further One
of the interesting aspects of the on-Site pro-
gram 15 still being in a dass with other stu-
dents that are not m the gifted program. I
still gel to be with all my fnends where
everyone is made to feel special.
I know that Kaiser is the stepping stone
to my future in learning, and from here, I
can take a giant leap ahead, knowing that I
have been well-prepared for the road
ahead.
HARRISON M. BROWN
Sixth-grader,
Kaiser Elementary School
Costa Mesa
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mission of C09Y"ight owner
VOL 93, NO. 250
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e""9 '"'°" OC M ---
• AT ISSUE: Should Santa
Ana Heights be annexed
0 into Newport Beach
or Costa M esa or stay
unincorporated?
I am offering, herewith, an
opuuon of what I believe are the
issues regarding the annexation
of Santa Ana Heights, EastSide.
First off. we should all recog•
nize and agree thal the current
READERS
RESPOND
proposed annexa-
tion is and can only
be the Eastside,
wblch is clearly sur-
rounded by Ne w·
port Beach and
clearly meets the defirution of
sphere of influence.
The following conditions
would gather the support neces-sary: .
1) I believe that the voters on
annexation of the Eastside will
strongly support the annexation
mdependently of the West.side,
but it would also endorse the
Westside a ddition if it can be done
through the vanous agencies and
cities. One would not have to be
continyent on the other.
2) No new taxes or special
assessments or service tees would
accompany or be a result or
anne~ation.
3) Assurances that the city has
ado pted the Santa Ana Specific
Plan in its current form.
4) The city will pledge top~
v1de services consistent with oth·
e r areas of Newport Beach.
5) Acknowledge that the city
and Santa Aila Heights re.idents
have a common goal of $\lp_port
for an airpOrt at El Toro an0 no
expansion of John Wayne AlrpOrt.
In addition to the above. the
city could offor a voice and Q'Uid·
ance as to making sure the Santa
Ana Heights community is get-
ting the maximum allocation of
tedevelopµient funds, (which are
subltantfal and contiriutng). with
which to fund capital improve-
ments in our neighborhood,
lf lbe at>CJVe 6imple format is fol-
IOWed, I believe the annexation
efforts would pass overwhehriiogly
and Without delay. To try and bring
up a lot of petty issues will most
likely be destructiVe in the move
for annexation at tbiS time. Person·
ally, I could definitely leave the
area as county land, but 1 beJieVe
there will be pressure on the city
from the Local Agen~ Formation
Com.mission in the future to annex
our area. Also. at this time, as b6tb
the community and city have rec-
ogruzed a possjble gain, it is proba.·
bly the time to move forward.
DAN DEMIUE
Santa Ana Heights
I think we need to have an
mdependent attorney rep~ting
the Santa AnC:l Heights residents
re vtew the Newport Beach annex-
ation proposal m order to make an
mtelligent, wonned decision
regarding our future here.
We need to know both sides of
this LSSue, not JUSt the one pro·
posed at the pep rally last Tues-
day night at the Crean's estate.
Annexation may be good for us or
not, but we need the facts.
Why not ask each Santa Ana
Heights resident to contribute $25
toward legal fees and have the
Santa Ana Heights Planning
Advisory Committee hire an
attorney for us? Pretty good
investment.
PEGGY. CALHOUN
5antn Ana Heights
1 am totally m favor of New -,
port Beacll annexing Santa Ana
Heights. I do own horses a.nd
goats and Chic.kens and so on .
And Newport will ret4l.D the na-· ·
vor of this neighborhOOd. And I
think other people are putting
out mistruths ab'out what New-
port will come and do.here. The ~
neighborhood will stay the
same. I am in favor or Newport
Beach annexation. The county
services offered today are totally:
inadequate.
JEFFREY HAMILTON I
Santo Ana He ights· : ....
In a true democracy those of
us living in the Heights would
be given a choice of staying in
the unincoiporated county or
being mnexed by Costa Mesa
or Newport Beach. Howeve.r, it
appears that the local Agency
Formation Commission will ulti-
mately make that decision for
us.
The thought of having (Costa
Mesa or Newport Beach City
Cowicil members) making gov-•
ernmental dedslons about my
neighborhood makes me want to ,
send out an aldTDl to my neigh-
bors to circle the wagons. I pre-
fer to remain in the unjncorpo· •
rated county.
JEFFREY UTTEU
Santa Ana Heights
1 oppose Costa Mesa's annex·
atlon of West Santa Ana Heights
and support Newport Bea ch's
annexation of all of the Heights.
Keep the community together ..
DAVIOPUSCO
Santo Ana Heights
;,
I
WEATHER AND SURF
r-~~~ ........................... ~~~-,:
POLICE FILES
TEWUAtuRE.S
Balboa
84/SS
Corona def Mar
8~
Costa Mew
86156
Newport 8ecKh
85/5S
Newport Coast
84155
a. PORICAST
Th swell tn<re.HeS out of
the wtst •nd southwest
today for sets In the waist•
to dle$t high •ea. Stu will
ma)( out at the points and
reefS. Sun sets It 6 07 p m
LOCATION SIZE
Wedge ••••••• 2 s~
Newpor1. • • • .. :J.-4 Wllw
Bl«ttle ••••••• .2-4 ~
Rivet Jetty .••••• .2 ...-WSW
~ .••••.•••• 2-4"111M
TIDIS
TODAY
First low
4• 13 •.fl'I ~"'"""""'-'"""' 1 2
flnt htgh
10:25 a m ..... """'"_ ........ 6.2
Second low
s 19 p m. ............ """"""'-0.6
Second high
11~ pm ...................... 44
WIDHUDAY
Flrn low
4:54a.m ..... "'""'""~'" ..... 1 .7
Ant high
.1109am ........................ 6A
S«ond low
6.15 p.m. .. .... . .... .. ... -0 6
stcond high
--midnight
COSTA MESA
• 1risto1 Street: A car stereo wonh S200 was stolen In tht
3300 blodt between 10 • m. and 1 p.m. Oct. 13.
• 9rMOI Ser.et: Several Items of clothing Worth S300
were stolen from• store In the 3300 block t>ttween 10 am.
and 5 p.m. Oct. 17.
• NftdpOrt ....., ... A compa« dlK pl1yw worth S150
WM stolen from • CM In tht 2600 block duting the tvtning
of Oct. 12. .
....awJIUQf
• l.-dlluff Dmrit: A cellular phone worth S 1 so was stolen 1
from ICM in the 2100 block at 10·15 • m. Oct. 15,
• ~ l1net: A cellular PhOM wonh n 19 wa1 stoi.n
ffOm •CM In the 100 block tit 10:30 am Sltutday
• hrtl Newpert Drtw: A cellu~r phone ~ $250 was
stolen from • car In ~ 1200 block during the wtnrnsJ of Oct. 19 •
• ,... View DrM: TWo decOf lttc>N worth scs wiare
l10ttn frOm •~"/in the 3500 bled~ JuM J
MdC>a.21.
• 21tt ~ A~ end ftl cont9frtl worth S 100 Wife
9'o1en jf\ b 100 block .... I 1 Mcf 2 P.ftl Qa_ 21.
. . ..
--Oo~J-i~~P_il_m ____ -:-------~---------------~---:------:-=---------------------------------------------l~~~$do~~Odober26,1999 3
Attempts at being bilingual left him red-faced
A t the conclu ion of
World War II, a new
crop of commuruty
leaders came into town Ob,
much of the old guard
remained -Paul Palmer,
Theo Robins, Laney Sher-
m~n, Walter Spicer, Harry
Welch, A.B. Rouselle, Lew
Wallace, Lloyd Claire -a
truly remarkable group that
had dragged our town
through the Great Depres-
sion and a World War, and
had changed that town from
a ~onky-tonk summer tesort
plµs a small fishing village
into a highly desirabJe com-
munity surrounfilng the fore-
most yachting hatbor on the
Pacific coast.
Then, at the conclusion of
World War II, the new group
arrived, people like Dean
Bradford, Moose Lagerlof,
Ralph Hoyle, Van Hayes, Les
Blakeslee, Harlan Erickson,
Bill Lester, Ralph Holden ...
and Joe Collins. Joe, and his
partner Bob Ingraham, built
more than 300 fine houses on
Lido Isle. They put together
the Jamaica Inn complex -
restaurant, bar and motel.
Joe and I were friends and
neighbors. AJso, we were
both into skin diving. We
heard that a new road had
j~t been put into San Felipe,
a village in Baja heretofore
TIJE VEIDICT
robe rt
gordner
accessible only by boat. Joe
and I and Bill·Silzle together
with wives and children
decided to be the first people
to dive in San Felipe. It was a
long drive, and when we got
there we discovered that if
there is something smaller
than a village, this was it. We
drove through the cluster of
houses to camp on the beach.
On our way we noticed a
small cantina perched on the
edge of the bay. Joe and I
decided to go back to the
cantina after everyone· else
was bedded down on the
beach.
. We have all seen in the
movies a group of Mexican
bandidos -dirty, unshaven,
With crossed bandoJeros. In
SETTING IT STRAIGHT
r. The artide, "Intersection
may be roadblock for Dunes
project" in the Oct. 22 issue
of the Daily Pilot inaccurately
descnbed changes dt the
intersection of Marguerite
Avenue and East Coast High-
way. The DUnes project will
not create sufficient addition-
al traffic to require widening
of the intersection at this
time.
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CHARLES H. BARR
lal w.ecll'I Drtn =r::=
the cant.ma was a group of
guy:. who only needed
crossed bandolcros to be
bandidos. Instead they aJJ
carried machetes. Btg differ-
ence.
As we entered, 1t was
obvious we were not wel-
come They began to pu<ih us
around yelling, "Rojo! Rojo!"
This was u word I knew
because my daughter \lad a
horse named RoJ.O. Joe
Collins 1s a redhead. I told
him they were talking about
his red hair. He asked,
"What do I do?" I said,
•Agree with them." He said,
•How?" t soid, "Just say, 'S1.'
That's yes in Spanish. That
will show you agree with
them •
Not one of my more bril-
liant ideas. The bandidos,
who had been JUSt pushing
us dround, now began to
beat up on us, particularly
Joe. We made a run for it,
the group followed. We got
to my car. They tried to turn
it over, but we finally got
away
We went back to our camp
on the beach and spent a
sleepless night waitmg for
the mob, but no one came.
The next dciy we discov-
ered that our trip was a
waste of time, anyway. San
Felipe is too close to the Col-
orad o River, and the water
had the visibility of a Ch(>CO·
late milk shake.
On ow way through town
we passed a shrimp dock
and stopped to buy c;ome
shrimp. An American ran to
the dock. He said, •Are you
the guys that caused the not
at the cantina last mght?" We
had to admit we were an
involuntary part of 1t, but
were in the dark as to the
reason.
The man laughed. He said
that right then Mexico was
having some kind of trouble
with Russia. He said there . •
was a rumor to the effect Uiat
a Russian submarine bad
landed a Russian spy in the
area. The locals were all
wary of the Russians, whom
they called •reds.•
As the man was telling hlS
story, Joe's hedd slowly
turned toward me. He turned
to the man. "And if someone
mistakenly said he w~s 'red'
that meant he was a Russum
and presumdbly a Russian
spy?" The man agreed.
So much for my feeble
efforts at being bilingual. Joe
and I did quite a bit of skin
diving in BdJd alter that, but
he never agctin asked me to
interpret for tum.
• JUDGE GARDNER is a Corona del
Mar resident and former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil Vinl'c
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MlllENNIUM MOMENT
A long line of service
C oi.ta Mesa politics have long
been influenced by the efforts of
Arlena Schafer, who started her
dnl semce career on the planrung
commjss1on m 1974. She served both
as a city councilwoman and as mayor
through the '80s and was exPcutive
director of the Chamber of Com-
merce. Schafer was the chamb<>r's
"Woman of the Year" m 1977.
Schafer's activity in the community Arlene Schafer
has, it anything, increased with time.
She now serves as the vice president of th~ Costa Mesa Sani-
tary District, the president of Mesa Pnde, the chdlf of the rede-
velopment agency advisory comm.ittee, and as a leader of or
contributor to numerous other orgunuallons. ~ • .
•1 sit on 19 boards nght now, so l'm killd of busy." ~' · lfer
said.
• MIUENNIUM MOMENT celebrates the people who made a maior co.1·
tnbution to the Newport-Mesa community during this century
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. '
4 Tuesday. Oc:tobet-26, 1999 Daily Pitot
Tide . pools 'between a
rock and a hard place'
No clarity 9~ West Side conflict of interest
•The Costa Mesa Planning Commission again
delays a vote on development moratorium.
three of them had potential
conflicts of interest.
A consultant has been
studying the West Side for
more than a year and gather-
ing public mput to come up
with a plan that would clarify
awkward zoning codes and
improve housing and services
such as shopping.
West Side . Davenport said I
Wood's infonnation was not
absolutely definitive and that
commissiOnet$ should proba-1
bly have time to consider their
positions. .. I
• Newport Beach has
helped put out a
brochure designed to
teach students how to
protect Little Corona
tidal area.
lkitfb
CORONA DEL MAR
Miss Manners meets Mother
Nature m a brochure on tide
pool etiquette the city co-
sponsored to prevent the
destruction of the dQlicate
habitats
COSTA MESA-The Plan-
ning Commission on Monday
delayed a vote on whether to
put a temporary halt to West
Side development. The delay
will gtve three conunissioners
more time to decide whether
they have conOicts of interest
because they own homes
there.
Also, Commissioner Katie
WilSon was absent and· the
commissioners wanted to
make the deosion with every-
one present. ·
~ The commission had been
working for a month on a plan
to stop certain types of devel-
opment on the West Side until
the City Council approved a
revitalization plan for the area
I west of Harbor Boulevard and
I south of Wilson Street. But at
the last commission meeting,
1 commissioners realized that
I
A moratoriwn would
enable the city to avoid having
businesses or other structures
built that would contradict
codes ultimately approved
· under the revitalization plan.
A report submitted to the
commission by Assistant City
Atty. Tom Wood said the three
commissioners would have
conflicts of interest if their
votes had a foreseeable bene·
fit of $1,000 or more on any
property in which they had a
direct or indirect interest.
Wilson, Chairman WaJt
Davenport and Commissioner
Chris Fewel own homes on the
Also, Wood added in l;tis
report that his advice does not
protect the commissioners
from being prosecuted under
the Political Refonn Act of
1974. In other matters, the
commission discussed revising I
remodeling guidelines for sec·
ond-story construction to
homes. The discussion was j
prompted after a· home on
Samoa Drive caused contro-·
versy in the Mesa Verde
neighborhood for its bei{;tht I
and size.
City staff plans to draft ~an I
ordinance that would mote I
clearly define what constituf~s
an attic and a story. Corrurii~
sioner Katrina Foley at~o l
asked that donners 1n attics pe I
given specific size limits. '
Both items are expected.Jo
go before the City Council 'qn
Nov. 8.
t i
The Orange County Coast
Comrruss1on debuted the
brochure, tltled •Between a
rock and a hard place,· at a
recent CoastaJ Corrurussion
meeting The brochure is
meant pnmanly for teachers
and students and will be sent
to every school in the county.
"People are walking on tide
pools and turning over rocks."
said Patti Schooley. the coun-
ty's parks district manager.
·All that 1s decunating tide
pool!>, and there ts not going to
be muC'h left 10 years from
now "
MARC MARTIN I DAILY PU.OT
The county hopes educating visitors will help preserve the
blodlverslty of the tide pools at Uttle Corona State Beach.
Bo~d to hear more about improvements :
• Disbict staff checked liSt of improvements that the recommendation will be dont!
1 The nty has been attempt-
mg to hnd a sQlution to the
problem of the rapidly disap-
pecmng tide pools for about a
yedr, since local researchers
found that visitors trampling
the pool'> were contributing to
a s1gru11cant drop in the drea's
qudntity and diversity of sea
life. Last November, environ-
mentalists began pustung the
city to restrict public access to
tide pools Cll Little Corona
State BeC1ch.
Although the city hasn't
adopted such restrictions,
Mayor Denms O'Neil said the
council has been workmg on
finding alternative ways to
alleviate the problem, such as
helping to produce the coun-
ty's brochure.
It advises that teachers
schedule trips to the tide pools
in advance, warning •J.! you're
not scheduled, you could be
turned away."
More than 100,000 teachers
and stude nts visit the tide
pools each year.
Other •marine experi-
ence" options are suggested,
such as trips to aquariums and
places like Big Corona, with
•wide open beach, plenty of
space for young groups."
Deputy City Manager Dave
KJ.!f said that the city is not try-
ing to discourage schools from
taking trips to the tide pools,
but it is trying to encourage
well-planned visits with gu.id·
ed tours.
·our reaJ problem is unan-
nounced visit~ when, we don't
"I'll
change
the way you
think about
cable."
Check out what you'll get
wlth Comcast Digital Cable:
committee wanted district staff within the next month. •" send a person out there to lead '· up on schools to find to consider. •Tuen we can go ahead
a tour and say look, be careful out what renovations •The stalf has been revisit-and do what needs to bl!'1
where you ste p,· Kiff said. ing all those properties,• Fine done,• he said. "
Nancy Gardner, co-founder 1 are most needed. said. ·we're out filling in the · The initial estimated cost ol
of the local Surf rider Fomtda-1 OA.'1I.'TI'R Gouurr blanks, U you will." repairing these crumbliii~:
tion, said the brochure is a On the second list were dassrooms was $127 million. 1
step in the right direction llotf Pb questions about the earth-Once the final reports are m '
quake-readiness of schools, the board will have 8 mo_:.' toward preserving nature. NEWPORT-MESA -The u::
•It's a wonderful idea," Newport-Mesa School Di.Strict about putting air-conditioning precis·e estimate, Perryman'
lin has made itS liSt of needed in all cl~, and about said. ''1 Gardner said. "My fee g is whether teachers were happy Fi , ffi will be ·
bas the condition [of the tide school improvements, and is with white boards, instead of mes o ce giving a, '
poolsJ improved over the last i literally checking it twice. chalk boards, 10 the class· verbal progress report to th{\
year? No ... But has it 1 Earlier this month. the dis-• · boa.rd tonight
improved m terms of aware-trict's facihties committee, roo~~ committee also asked boarAlsod mate~~~ee~g·='·:,
ness? Tremendously." which was created to deter-staff to check whether •wJ<=H•
The brochure is not only mine what improvements are improvements on the list may the possibility of add.mg a,
helpful to children, it lists a needed at deteriorating have been made dwing rou-portable classroom to Wlutber
few standard rules that can 1 schools, gave school officials tine maintenance, said school ElemenW"f School. 1)le esti-
help everyone from loving tide I two lists of recommendations. · board member Jim Ferrynum. mated cost of the cla.ssxoom,
I The first was a ~ of things Once all that information is whicll has already been bud-pools •to death": never that needed t6 be done at each in, Ferryman said, the commit-geted, is $33,800. The class-
remove anything from the tide I school, said Mike Pine, assis-tee will make a formal recom-room al.so would be used for'
pools, never pick up the a.ni-, tant superintendent for finan-mcndation to the school board. adult ~ducation in the
mals and take care not to step ci.al services. The second was a Ferryman ~d he hopes the evenings.
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' I
Do;ly Pilot
..
.:Nautical Museum
.hires new director
,• San Clemente's
· .. G. Wayne Eggleston
: will take over floating
Jnuseum, look to
·secure its future. I.
I NEWPORT BEACH
J\,fter asking its fonner
d
executive director to step
own from her position in
July, the
Newport
Harbor
Nautical
Museum
has found
a replace-
ment.
G .
Wayne
Egg l e-
ston, who created a G. Wayne
' successful Eggleston
I heritage
: ~useum in San Clemente,
i will now handle the day-to-
' day operations at the nauti-
<:al museum. Eggleston, 54,
4ves in San Clemente,
, where he also sits on the
• City Council.
"We are very pleased to
have him on board," said
Dave Grant, president of
the nonprofit museum's
• board of directors. "At this
point in the museum's life
he's a very good fit.• '
Eggleston was heralded
for the inception of the Her-
itage of San Clemente
Foundation, a musewn ded-
icated to the city's history.
Started two years ago, the
foundation has 500 mem-
bers and has incorporated a
visitor center, art gallery
and a tribute to the U.S.
Marine Corps in the muse-
um.
Those who worked
, closely with Eggleston said
the Newport Beach muse-
um is fortunate to land the
community-oriented coun-
cilman.
"The nautical museum is
v~ry lucky to find him,• sait.l
Bill Koelzer, who is presi-
dent of the San Clemente
foundation. "I suspect he
will do the same there as he
did here."
Eggleston replaces Shelli
Smith, who left over the
summer. Smith was instru-
mental in bringing H.M.
Bark Endeavour, a replica of
Captain James Cook's tall
ship, to Newport Beach.
The weeklong Endeavour
exhibit attracted more than
15,000 visitors.
Despite the success of
the Endeavour, Smith was
asked to step down. The
museum's board of directors
and Smith agreed not to dis-
close reasons behind the
move.
The new dire~tor will
have a plateful of issues to
resolve in his tenure. Most
importantly, the future of
the museum remains uncer-
tain. The museum occupies
the wooden boat Rubin E.
Lee and its lease expires in
2006. In the interim, the
board of directors must
decide whether to keep the
museum in port or try to find
another location.
"We are limited in space
on the boat, N Grant said.
"It's hard for us to have per-
manent collections. But
there is a possibility to add
on to the museum with a
land-based site.•
Eggleston said he is look-
ing forward to his new job
and has already met many
of those j.nvolved with the
museum.
"I hope to help enrich the
exhibits and create rev-
enue-producing enterpris-
es, N he said. "We want to ·
make it the best possible
museum."
..
c0-,,·1 ...
r · .... 1 A~. ,1 • ••
f I • (;
Honoring
Santa Ana Police Chief
Paul Walters
Westin South Coast Pl aza
Thursday, October 28, 1999
12 Noon
Luncheon Chairman
Mike Capizzi
Supervisor Cynthia Coad
. Supervisor Jim Silva
Mayor Miguel A. Pulido
Supervisor Charles V. Smith
go. !TioketJ.•
Contact Cristin Poda at
A.'.14-5 46·499 0 ext. 147
SplCe Provided by
• ' I I
' • I I ' I , .-' I
Tuesday, October 26, 1999 5
Students help yacht company with ad ~paign
• Photographs of
gondolas in Newport
Harbor, taken for
company's contest, are
on display at nautical
museum.
Oolyl'iot
NEWPORT BEACH
Four OCC photography stu-
dents have won an award
from a boat charter company
for its cidvertising campaign.
Officials from the Newport
Beach-based busmess Adven-
tUres at Sea were searching
for photos that "ould be used
for its promotional campaign.
They approached OCC pro-
fessor Rick Steadry, who
teaches an advanced photog-
raphy class, to create a possi-
ble partnership.
"We told the class what
our wish was and to see if
they could capture that, H said
Kathy Leek, the company's
spokeswoman. "Our original
project was a thcl.Dk-you card ·
for our clients but we got so
many great photos we used
them for other thlngs."
Students were challenged
to capture exquisite shots of
the company's gondola cruis-
es in Newport Harbor. The
four students that walked
away with the Art in Adver-
tising Awards are Wendy
Birnbaum, Justm Hollar,
Chuc Nguyen and Eric Ham-
mond.
Hammond, a 39-year-old
Huntington Beach resident,
decided prior to shooting his
pictures what he wanted. His
wmning photo showed a
close-up of an arch on the
bow of the gondola
"1 wantPd it to be really
PERSONAL INJURY ATTORNEY
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Phot h Eri H DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT ograp er c ammond sits near Gondola photography exhibit at Nautical Museum
featuring local student photographers. Adventures at Sea honored the winners who sur-
passed thelr expectations to create photos for a thank-you card. The photos became a
museum exhibit.
simple,• he said. #1 wanted to I
get the forms and the lines of
the boat This is reau1 a good
achievement for me.·
The pictures weren't 1ust
used for the business. Some
of the photos have been pub-
lished in Westways maga-
zine, the 0 .C Metro's Dming
Gu1de and are displayed at
the Newport Harbor Nautical
Mu~eum.
"This .bas been wonderful
because 1t turned mto several
projects," Leek said. "The I and provided an exemplary
class just ran with the idea product. N
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6 TUMday, October 26, 1999
COUNCIL
CONTINUED FROM 1
The developer of the pro-
posed resort, Steve Sutherland,
wants to build a 156-room lux-
ury hotel. It is estimated that
the Italian-style resort would
produce $2.8 million in city rev-
enue annually.
While Sutherland's proposal
allows the Neva B. Thomas Girl
Scout House, which also occu,-
pies the property. to remain
where it stands, the mobile
home park and American
Legion would both have to
move. The leases for all three
facilities expire in March 2000.
Threatened by the proposal,
.. 60 peopte-many representing
the park and legion -showed
up to defend themselves.
•[Th.e hotel) will upset the
fragile balance of the commu-
nity," said community member
Tom Hyans, adding that the
city should not prioritize city
revenues over residents.
•There are locations more
suitable,• he stressed.
t f I
Legionnaires protested
plans to move their hall, saying
that the organization for .U.S.
war veterans is very active
within the community and
helps residents remember the
freedpm$ they enjoy.
Other objections to the
resort revolved around keeping
the property's tennis courts,
playground and water front
open -something that resi-
dents feared they will lose if the
hotel is built.
Sutherland countered that
he plans to expand the tennis
courts, improve the playground
and keep the beaches open.
These would be available to
Newport residents free of cost,
he said.
H~ added that he was also
interested in offering the
Legion $500,000 to rebuild or
relocate the building on a
waterfront property.
"I am very understanding of
this situation and went to nego-
tiate with tbem -not to put
them on the street." Sutherland
ed ~ N6.i....
Glover. • Ju.t --.irn
looking at• ..............
n't meu all Ille pall• _.
come to the table.•• ....,,
the council bu no ~ to
pUU all ~the fltlgbtS-tba
city's fold, MaY* t>t&nm.
O'Neil said that U ti:. 1811l·
dents were succenful ln lob-
bying the state eommmton to
become part of Newport
Beach, the council would gtve
it serious cimsUltratioll.
·-No9ld Schwm1z
said.
Despite the concessions,
community representatives
seemed unmoved.
In the end, the council
decided that they will accept
other proposals for develop-
ment including ones from the
American Legion and Marina
Park. ______________ .........,._....... . ... -............... ·--··-···· .. --····--·-----_ .. ___ , ___ ................ ___ ......... .
BRIEFLY
Costa Mesa officers
roll to first place
The Costa Mesa Police
Department took home first
place honors last weekend at a
regional competition in San
Bernardino for motorcycle offi-
cers.
The department beat out a
handful of teams for the team
award. The officers represent-
ing the department demon-
strated their superb riding
skills to lay claim to the title.
Officer Angelo Morgan was
second in individual competi-
tion and Officers Mike Cohen,
Bob Coash and Gerry Stukk.ie
placed third in a separate rally.
More than 100 officers from
various agencies in Riverside,
Orange and San Bernardino
counties participated in the
annual motorcycle competition.
-Greg Risling
Hitting the trails
Shoes in Multiple
Width Sius
MONEY
CONTINUED FROM 1
care funding," Forbath said.
"Before the bankruptcy, the
county was spending $41 mil-
lion for health caie, which was
the second lowest fof .all coun-
ties in Cali!omia per capita.
After the bankruptcy, it was
$28 million. It's now up to $34
million."
That $34 "million isn't
enough to meet the health
c:are needs, particularly for the
working poor in the county,
she stressed. .
"We have been turning
away chronic care patients for
many months now," Forbath
said. "We would love to
expand our clinics to Saturdays
so we can serve Inore people,
Victoria School
Fall Festival
Saturday • October 30th • 12 -4Pm
1 025 Victoria St., Costa Mesa
-Instead Of s Candy Sales -
Let•s Raise Funds In One Afternoon!!
.
Silent Auction
Gift Baskets & Crafts
Kid·s Korner
Kid's Items Clothes Offered For Sale
Donate Items (n Box In Multipurpose Room
PumPkin Patch
Choose Your Pumpkin And Decorate It For Our Contest
Costume Parade
For All Kids In Co~tume
Haunted House
Food
Cotton Cand.Y
PoPcorn
Games & Prizes
l?ut unfortunarely the mor~
people we ser\fe tlle more
resources we need."
The medic~ portion of
Share Our Selves. opened 15
ye.ars ago after the county hos-
pital closed. Even though it's
open about 60 hours a week
and offers staggered sched-
ules for patient convenience,
there are still people whose
needs are going unmet, said
Karen McGllnn. the center's
director.
Clinics have basically
become the county facilities
for caring for people without
insurance and health care.
The burden beca'me heavier
when two clinics in Santa Ana
were closed in July.
MThe closure was immedi-
ate and dramatic for us,"
McGlinn said.
Since then, Share Our
Selves began to see many
more patients suffering from
chronic illnesses.
Forbath said she is some-
what encouraged by last
week's workshop in which
dozens of health care leaders
confront.ad the board about
the need for funding. Paying
off the county debt and
building a county jail are
defined as priorities in the
county's strategic financial
plan.
The board has previously
promised $1 million next year
to clinics to help expand hours.
she said.
"But that money's a drop in
the bucket when you have 13
clinics," McGlinn said.
The supervisors are expect-
ed to vote on. a conceptual
plan for spending tobacco
money Nov. 9.
Newport Dune6 Re6ort'6 7th Annual
'Top Dog:• .. . ~)
ashlDR Sho ......
Benefit for the t1CSPCA and Com anion Pet Retr~at
'~· SATURDAY, OCTOUR 10, 1999
••• at Newport Dunee Wateriront Resort at 11 a.m.
•• ~· Inter pur pooch to wlnl
• A Year's SUpply of FRll Dog Foocl
••• ~·
._ NTCO awarded to the -rop Dot9
lntw ~Dot In any of these cata9o;W:
CHual Wear • Swim Wear • Lingerie I Pajamae
H.all~eon Coet.ume • Formal Wear • Ma&ter I Pet Loolc·Alilce
!ntty fee I&$ 7 por dog If r~leter~ lief-ore 3 p.m. Octollcr 29.
FREE
PRIZES AWARDED FOR EACH CATEGORY
ALL PRIZES DONA TED 8Y NTCO
to wa tch
the ehowl
CALL TO INTlll YOUlt DOO TOOAYI
C949> 729-3863
NEWPORT DUNES WATERFRONT RESORT
11~1 6aclc 8ay Drive ,,, New ort 6each; off Jamboree Rd . .and P.C.H.
l
..
Daily Pilot
TEMPLE
CONTINUED FROM 1
A slide show, com-
plete with violins, daz-
zling desserts, and a full
moon. depicted the C:om-
pleteq blueprints.
Groundbreaking for
the construction is sdled-
uled for next year.
Temple Bat Yahm,
which means • daughte.r
of the sea," was foundetl
in 1973 by eight Newport
Beach families. Now with
674 families, the Refo~
congregation has out"
grown its current facility.
by more than 250 fami.,
lies and .is seizing an..
opportunity for growth,. ·
said longtime congregan~
and expansion campaign.
vice chairman Bernie
Spiro. Temple leaden;
anticipate further•
demand at the temple, ,
· the largest in Orange
County, as developments ·
continue in Newport
Coast. . ·
"Tilis is not an ·expan-
sion as is traditionally•
done," Spiro said. "Ulti·
mately this will become a
campus.'• '
. The temple haS'
already raised $2.5 mil••
lion in donations and will
continue collecting moo-·
ey throughout the year:
Fund-raising efforts will•
be led by the Temple Bat·
YahJn 2000 Campaign ·
committee.
The expansion will sit.
on a 1.5 acre plot of lantl ·
the temple purchased'·
this land from the Irvine'
Co. two years ago. The
temple still has to get
approval from the city ih ·
OTder to begin construc-
tion. Plans for the projed
include an exp~ded
sanctuary, a small chape\
for weddings, Bar Mitz-"
vahs and Bat Mitzvahs,
meditation gardens, an
outdoor amphitheater,
eight new religious
school classrooms, class-
rooms for adult educa-'
ti.on, renovation of the
preschool, a library and
media resource center, a
comp~r center, a youth
lounge and a recreational
area for sporting events. ...
Miller first began
planning for the expan-.
sion more than two years
ago.
He emphasized Sun-
day that the project was
not just about tbe build·
ings, but was a project .
that would benefit genet-·
ations for years to come.
"All of this building is
a means to an end,"
Miller said. "It is to create
a meaningtui and rich·
Jewish life."
Once completed, the
campus will serve as an
educational tool for Jew-•
ish and non-Jewish resi-
dents throughout Orange' ·
County. The campus will'
be open to visitors to
teach about Jewish life,
religion and culture.
I I
GRADES J ..
CONTINUED FROM 1
every week,• said Smttq,
whose daughter Kasey attendf>
TeWinkle. "I was looking at
the worst report I'd ever seen.t
Both mothers called th~
teachers. Smith said sh~
intended to go down to thi
school if she didn't ..som
answers. Once parents learite
of the error and were a sured of their children's
behavior they said they w
both relieved and amused.
But what about those B ents who would not get th ·.
mail unW after the school w
closed? ·
"What's really going to·•
bad is mothers and fathers wh
get this at 6 p.m. when they get
home from work -they b!v
no recourse," Smith said, pon
dering how many chUdre
were grounded unjustly for tM
wee ken(\, I
Pry si.ld the staff at TeWin·
kle planned to call paren1'
Monday and that eech ~d
would be given a note to take
home.
CuteD&nol Mid each h
in tbe dtltriCt will ll1lo
receive • correction In
mall ·1 ,... bed -J
throuGtr the gre~vlne thenl-·~e ltUdenU cUid
pllMd over this.• he Mid.
. .
... '6days.
9mfttw&.OIFMa __ .... _
, October 26, 1999 • Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 9 .. 9..57 4-4223
.,
~at the best will be '
, wearing this year.
•'
First of all, after watching
Cerritos College
Falcons and their
Jtj}anta Falcons-esque
emblem on their football
helmets, I noticed that's right
wliere the resemblance ends
between them.
Because on the held, if the
t
'Aflanta Falcons and Cerritos
Falcons got together, it
would be no contest.
• ' My money would be on I Gerritos.
, I would have loved to
have seen Palomar and
Cerritos battle in the season
opener, which was won by
Palomar, 24-10.
, U they were to play again,
perhaps in an upcoming
bowl game. I would bet the
farm on the Falcons.
, , Sure, Orange Coast
College managed to put up
SQJne outstanding offensive
mµnbers against the Falcons'
defense, but let's look a little
q0ser at the 40-17 Cemtos
victory.
1 Once OCC reached the
F1¥cons' 30-yard line, which
they did five times in the
I game, guess how many
YC\fds the Bucs gamed?
I' A whopping 15 yards on
I nine plays for three points.
'I'm not counting the two
fqurth-quarter touchdown I dtjves, when Cerritos was
1 playing everyone but the
I cheerleaders and the
mascot. i Though looking at some·
1 of theu cheerleaders ... nab,
: I won't go there. I Speaking of rah-rah-rah,
, the Falcons have to lead the
, conference m pure
: voltage and dance moves
1 before and during a football
I 'ga]Jle. . j I gtiess when you're 5-1
, a.M nili.ked among the best
: in the country, you're
allbwed to tum the football
, field into Studio 54. 1 l haven't seen such quality
: choreography since the
1 Laker Girls at the Forum. I
I
: With Halloween Just days
: away, I've been trying to
• thlnk of what some of the
: locals and some non-locals
: will be wearing this year.
: Pirates' quarterback Jared I Flint should dress up as
1 Superman, because only
: someone superhwnan can
: take the beatings he's been
• taking and still be
' successful.
: He should NOT. however, I dress up as Randy Moss
• or anything after his
: touchdown catch last week.
: Let's not get crazy
• For longtime coaching· I legend and Daily Pilot Hall Loi Farner Paul Briggs. a
combo costume. The Orange
Coast assistant coach bas
the voice voltage (without
CO LLEGE S
benefit of a microphone) for
Michael Buffer (•Let's get
ready to RUM-BLE!ll)" and
the intensity of •Mickey"
from the Rocky movies.
For head coach Mike
Taylor, }le can dress up in
anything he wants. I still
have to interview him for
the next four weeks.
Pirates women's cross
country sensation Zoila
Gomez bas an easy choice
of two: Forrest Gump for all
that ·ruJUl·ning, Jenn-rue•
or the Energizer Bunny
because she keeps on going
and going and going ...
H she goes with the Gump
outfit, does that make Coach
John Goldman •ueutenant
Dan?"
Going out of town slightly,
for those who were not at the
CCC-Cerritos game, let me
tell you about Falcons
backup linebacker Jason
Buasen.
He's 5-foot-zero, 165
pounds.
That's right. 5-foot,
NOTiiING, a buck sixty-five.
Finally, someone my
mother can have an
eye-to-eye talk with.
I had the opportunity to
tower next to him and
believe me, he's built like a
tank.
But, he's 5-foot
NOnnNG1 a buck sixty-five.
l had the feeling if I
laughed ~ presence, he
could reach up and rip my
leg right off of me; from the
knee down. of course.
He's dressing up as Notre
Dame's "Rudy," if he can fit
in the uniform.
For my buddies, the
winless Golden West
Rustlers, who are taking on
a nationally-ranked Palomar
College that's fuming mad
after losing last week.
The Palomar players can
all dress up as the Bulls of
Spain while the Rustlers can
go as the Pamplona residents
who are just trying to avoid
getting gored in a sensitive
area.
I'm obviously going as the nn Man, because I have no
heart.
And if anyone just feels
like running around looking
like an idiot, find a mask of
NBC's Jim Gray. H you do,
be sure to take some
p~otection of some sort.
HAllOR
JUSTIN
JACOBS
NEWPORT
ANDRE ~
~;STEWART '9
A 6·foot. 165-r\.J> o u n d
two-way
starter, be
bad an wter-
c e pt 1 on,
caught a pass
for 6 yards and
returned a punt
25 yards to help
defeat Laguna Hills
ISTAICIA
JOHN
ALDERETE
1liOMAS It CORDOVA I O~Y Pl.OT
Orange C oast football coach Mike Taylor shoots for two.
COSTA
C.J.
ZUNIGA
ME SA
DANIEL
HUNTER (4.
T he 5·fOOt•
10, 185·
pound 1unlor
rushed 29
times for 25 t
yards and
hve touch·
downs had 32'1
all·purpose at
def n11ve C:nd
COIOIA
BLAKE
HACKER
A 5-foot-9,
1 9 5 -
pound 1wlior,
be bloeked
well at full·
back and
contributed
bis typically
solid play at
defensive tackle
DEL MAI
STEVEN
WARD
. .
, ............ a.. (Ion) ..... i.Amk "-
......... "''' ~ 11111 ...... --....... ferwd ...... _.
- A former teammate of Daity Pilot Sports Hall of Famer
Doily Pilat 7
tit Ill
SPORTS HALL OF FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
Newport IJarbor
• Few can match his impact, and he remains one of
the most popular figures to ever grace Newport fields.
Af ost five decades 1111
ave passed since 1111111 e days of Eugene
(Gino) Boero and the Newport
Harbor High Sailors and yet he
remains one of the all-time
favontes from the ranks of the
Bluejackets.
Some have reflected back
and consider Boero as the
onginal "refrigerator,"
long before the grid
world ever heard of
Wllliam Perry.
superb cecord of 8·1. The '50
team won sue and lost three,
while the '51 outftt won two ond
lost seven.
Boero said, •What spirit we
had on that '49 team. l loved it.•
One of the most emotional
moments for him came through
the rruddle of the '49 season
when senior guard John
Kmgston ran on the fiel,$1 and
I hugged him. Kingston had
suddenly learned that Boero bad
Just earned enough
playing time (quarters)
to win a varsity letter.
Dunng Harbor
High's fust 25 yeMS of
football, Boero and
"Big Al" Muruz (250
pounds) in 1948 were
the two biggest
linemen who had ever
taken the held for the
Sailors.
With the passing of
years, Boero would be
the hrst to note that
big size is not so uncommon.
among the preps any more. But
in his days cind tune, he was a
stalwart in Harbor's line and has
enjoyed an ever-growing status.
Boero first came to
Harbor High football in
1949 as a 15-year-old
sophomore guard
weighing 240 pounds.
He was born in Italy
and found hiS dad,
"Papa Gino,"
prompting him to start
baking exquisite bread Gino Boero
when he was 9 years ·
old.
Even as a sophomore, Boero
was solid as a rock and rivals
were often stressed out trying
to move tum off the forward wall.
Despite lu.s age, he often
looked like a starter for the
USC Tu>jans.
One former teammate said, • 1
used to laugh with delight when
Gino would catch a halfback
from the other team. He'd pick
him up off the ground with a
bear hug, stopping all forward
motion, but the ball-carriers
often kept peddling their feet
while a foot off the ground."
He added, "Then they'd try
ramming their fullback at Gino
up the middle and bog down on
the line of scrimmage."
Boero served on three Tar
tea.ms in 1949, '50 and '51. The
'49 team scored 323 points for
one season and chalked up a
Always a 1ov1al one with a
positive outlook. Boero said, ·we
still had great spllll in '51 Wlth
the likei of Rex Bell, Rolly
Pulaski. Jun Pascoe and others.
I en1oyed all the great guys I
played with m those three
memorable years. And Al Irwin
was a tremendous coach."
Boero was also a tremendous
boxer all through lugh school ·
and often shocked many of the·
senior mates who would drop by
his basement in Corona del Mar
for a few tough rounds.
Gino Boero, one of kind in the
Long Gray Line at Harbor, and a
true champion among the Daily
Pilot's Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating the millennium.
....... April 17, 1971
·• ~ 5-foot-9 W. .... L 15J
Sport: Men's socc.-
flllli: Det. Ider
1'Mr: Ffdmln
..... sdlOGI: nine
c...t.:LMd~ --= Ufideddld. ............ Gunlbo.
.. ........... Abln
WOii ......... .
... 11911111* um -"!urine ~q ...... .
M .... ., .. ... ......... ..._ln•M••-"4lidlonMl!lr•t.
~ ..., ...
Olklat ... ~---
8 T~. October 26, 1999 Spotts ..
Mt. SAC may prove out to 00 the ignition poin .. ~
. --•It was a good day all around
for cross country standouts.
~-~.-•• -.-s~c~.~,-,-L~C~.-,~.~.-c-o·u-.-,-.-,~-~ ·~~~~~~~~ ~d-~re~e~w~~~~ m the Division rv sweepstakes race, 3.l·mile course. ,
High school cross country is in the
stretch run this week followmg di.Stin-
gw.sbed efforts from several points at
last week's running of the Mt. San
Antonio College Invitational, with a
Pacific Coast League crucial at Uni-
versity involving Costa Mesa, Corona
del Mar and the host ltojans of Uni-
versity Thursday, and a Sea View
League meet on Friday at Wood-
bndge Htgh, where Newport Harbor
will be flexing its collective muscles
as the preps gird toward next week 's
league finals.
place effort tn the overall finals
despite the loss of an ill Uz Morse,
were dominated by locals. including
Corona del Mar's boys, Newport Har-
bor's girls and Estancia H.lgh's boys
and girls. Among the highlights:
man (20:56), Becky Cumnuns (20:59),
Tess Maguire (21 :55) and Jessica
Hoopis (25:59) al.so repr~ted the
Sea Kings.
paced by Luis Segoviano, who fin-Melendez (10th in 21:59'.
ished 45th in 17:01. Humberto Rojas Cahuantzi (1 tth in 21:59), ArrO'fl!
(52nd in 17.07), Mike CcUlllas (6 lth in (14th in 22:20) and Aronson (20th',ijt
17:18), Danny Vargas (69th in 17:26), 23:09) preceded Hernandez (23rd in
Abe Inouye (71st in 17:27) and Jordan 23:36) and McNeil (34th m 25;15). '
FlSscl (19:36) also competed ror Coach Segoviano (17:25) paced the boy!t
• Amber Steen and Sonya
Mechkor led Newport Harbor's girls
to a second-place finish in the individ-
ual sweepstake race.
• Estancia llQlahed l Ctb I.Ji the
same Division IV race, as Uz Huipe
(19:40) was ninth overall.
Charlie Appell's Eagles. victory with a fifth-place finish, wtul ..
Estanda's efforts came on the heels Casillas (10th in 17·37), Vargas (12th.
or a strong outing Oct. 16, when the in 17:48), Inouye (13th in 17 :52) an<!
boys and guls teams each won titles Lopez (16th in 18:09) also scored. ,.
at the Cuesta Invitational at Cuesta Abel Flores (1~: 13) was 17th and -
College. Rojas (18:35) was 24th, despite having-~ Steen finished 10th overall and had
the fastest time for the Sailors with an
18:42. Mechkor was 20th and ran a
19:35. Lynn Rinek, at 42nd, and Erin
Friedman was 49tb.
Other Estancia contributors includ-
ed Janet Cahuantzi (67th in 21·51},
Maria Arroyo (14th in 22.12), Katelyn
Aronson (18th in 22: 17), Stephanie
Menendez (22:55), Carmen McNeil
•The CdM boys team was seventh
in the Division IV sweepstakes race
Friday, paced by ltavis Beardslee
(fourth in 15:53), Josh Yelsey (10th in
16:00), Jud Heitbrink (17:29), Dustin
Hodges (17:49), David Mittman
(17:53), John Grod (18:08) and Mark
Pomerantz.
The Eagles guls needed a to stop due to severe breathing prob·
tiebreaker lo prevail, after fmishing lems.
deadlocked. at 57 pomts with Notre Coach Appell's boys finished with
The Sea View varsity girls ~tart at
3·25, dnd the boys follow at 3:50.
Saturday's endeavors at Ml. SAC,
wtuch were lughllgbted by Corona
del Mar High's girls' sterling second-
, • Another group of Cd.M girls ftn-
lshed fourth in Friday's Division IV
sweepstakes race, led by Jennifer
Long (19:31). Jean Garcia (20:30),
Keelan Cuyler (20:56), Lindsay Your-
Dame of San Jose. 47 points, besting Taft (52), P~r
Estancia's sixth and seventh run-(73) and Mendota (85)'.
ners, Erika Hernandez and McNeil, Appell said all his runners pick_ed •
each passed Notre Dame runners in up the pace after Rojas dropped Cram
the late stages to secure the crown for the leaders, gaining at least four
the Eagles, who were led by Huipe's places per man fuel the victory.
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• VoUeybllU
Coll~e women -Vanguard
University at Westmont. 7;30 p.m.
King of the enforcers ·GAMEIUSTERS
Last week's high school football plays
of 30 yards or more
High school girls · Costa Mesa
at University, 3:15 p.m., Est.lnda
dt Laguna Beach. 3:15 p.m .. Newpon
Harbor dt Laguna Hills. 6:30 pm.
•Newport's Harold Van De Walker will always be
remembered for his loyalty to a classmate.
• Watet polo
Community college men Santa Ana
at Orange Coast.. 3 p m
Community college women -Santa
Ana dt Orange Coast. 4 p.m
High school boys Newport Harbor
at El TOl'O, 3 p.m
• Soccier
Coll~e men -Vanguard University
dt Fresno Pacific. 3 p m
Mumber of old mates
om Newport Harbor
gb days drove out
to San Jacinto Thursday to
pay their last respects to the
late Harold Van De Walker,
d versatile athlete during
the mid-1940s.
That amused him and be
thought it would pass.
Unfortunately, the last h.it
was severe and didn't
escape Tars Coach Ralph
Reed, who called Van De
Walker as.ide and ordered
him to visit the Santa Ana
bench and apologize to
Daniels. He did reluctantly
and tus pals laughed about
it, while he fumed.
Community college men Orange
COdst at Fullenon, 3 p.m ..
Community college women ·
Fullenon at Orange Coast.. 4 p.m.
•Tennis
High school girls · Estancia at
Corona del Mar, 3 1 S p m
• Field hockey
High school girls -Edison vs
Newpon Harbor, at Harper
Community Center, Costa Mesa, 3 p m
~Golf
High school girls -Woodbridge vs
Newport. at Big Canyon CC. 2 p m
Van De Walker, Class of
'45, was d long-wne friend
of gridders Hordce Suva
and Joe Mun12 dnd d firm
defender of Georqe Yardley,
who advdnced to become an
All·American and an NBA
Hall of Farner, m prnp
basketball days.
YardJey onJy stood about
su-feet tall Ul tus 1uruor and
seruor years 10 basketball
and was not a heavyweight.
Rivals knew that and some
would take advantdge of it
be bullying lum around on
the court.
Van De Walker, a
landscaper who died of Lou
Gehng's disease, is SUTVlved
by his widow Delores, and
their two sons. Grant and
Glenn.
RANKINGS
CIF DIVISION VI FOOlBAU
1 Mayfair (7-0); 2. Newport
Harbor (6-0-1); 3. la Mirada (6·1);
4 Tustin (5 3; 5 Loar a (5 2),
Although Van De Walker
was talented m basketball,
he was also skilled in
football and track.
Van De Walker entered the
Navy in 1945.
6 Irvine (4-2· 1 ), 7 Villa Park (5-2);
8 Woodbridge (5 2), 9 Ocean View
(6 1), 10 Laguna Hills (4 3)
CIF DJVJSION IX FOOlBAU
1 8on1ta (7-0), 2 Valencia (6-1 ),
3 Brea Olinda (6-0 1 ), 4 Western
(4 2 1 ), 5 Pac1f1ca (5 2); 6. South Hills
(5-2); 7 Fullerton (5-2),
8. Coste Mesa (5-2); 9. Estancia
(5-2); 10 Troy (5·2)
DEEP SEA
One of the worst offenders
was a Santa Ana guard
named Chuck Darueb, who
also starred on the Hl45 CIF
champ football tedID. He had
a habit of runrung down the
floor against Newport and
suddenly shouldering
Yardley roughly on or off the
floor.
Reflecting back on the
1942 All-CIF football team,
it 1s mteresti.ng to note that
Harbor High's first-stnng
fullback, Harold Sheflin,
was on the first string along
w1th Glenn Davis, Bonita,
who later became an
All-American at West Point
and blocking back Norman
Veeb of Tustin.
MONDAY'S COUNTS
Newport Landing 1 boat.
12 anglers. 64 sculpin, 4'sand bass,
6 rockfish, 1 whrtefish
One day it inflamed Van
De Walker and he took off
after Daniels and did the
same Uung, only rougher.
The only other Newport
player on the CIF squad was
Manuel Muniz, second-team
tackle.
CNl1741327
NOTICE OF PEllllON TO
ADlllWISTBl
ESTATE OF: CHARLES
WIUJAM RANBt CASE NO. A199383
To all helra, beneflolariet, oredl-
to rt. contingent
credltor1, and per·
1one who may other·
wiH be lnternted in
th• wiU or e1tate, or
both, of: CHARLES WILLIAM RANEK
A PETITION he1
been filed by ROB-ERT BRENT RANEK
In the Superior Court
of Cellfornia, County
of Oran~•· THE PETITION
requHtl that ROB-
ERT BRENT RANEK
PACIFIC V1EW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • MOttuary
Chapel • Crematory
3!.00 Peclflc v-Onve Newpcl1 BeeGh
844-2700
l'tERCE IR011fERS
IEll IROADWAY
MortU3rY * Che?G: Cremation
11 O Broadway
Cost~ Mesa
642·9150
be appointed H
per1onal repre1ent•
tlve to admlnl1ter
the ettate of th• decedent.
THE PETITION reque1t 1 the
decedent'• WILL and
codicil•. if any. be
edmltted to probate. The WILL and any
codicil• ere available for examination In
th• file kept by the court.
THE PETITION
requHt• authority to adl"Qlnitter the utate under the Indepen-
dent Admlni1tratlon
of E1tetH Act. CTN•
authority will allow
the per1onal repr•·. aentetlve to take
many 1ctlont1 with-
out obtaining__ court app1ovel. aafore
tak.lng oertAlln very
Important ectlon1, however, the per·
•on• reprHani.tlve will ba requir.ct to
give notice to lntar-
Hted pet9one unleH
th•Y have waived notice or cone•nted
to the propoHd 1c1lon.1 TM lndtpen-
den1 admlnl•ttatlon
euthority will b• grented unl•H an
lnteruttd p1r1on
fllu en obleotlon to th• petlt on • and
1howe good oeuH
why the OOUtl 1hould not grant the
authority.
A HEARING on the petition wlU be
held cm December 2. 1991 et t :46 ft.M.
In Dept. L73 locettd
"Affordable
Alternative"
DJscount Casket,
Cremation &
·Burial Service
Why hould you subject
yetur elf & your family to
paying inflated prices for
ca kc. ts &~rvic s???7
callToUF.-1.ass.~
5mflC or.ge a~ C.l*'«I
I
at 341 The Cclty Driye Orenge A
9263-1669. IF YOU OBJECT
TO the lilranttng of
the J•titlon, you 1houl appear at the
hearing end •t•t• your objectlon1 or
file written objtc·
tlon1 with th• court
before the heering, Your eppeerance
may be in perton or
by your enorney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a contingent creditor
of the deceeHd, you
mutt file your claim
with the oourt and
mell a oopy to the pereOMI rep,...nt• tlw ~nted by the
ooutt wltHn four
monttie from the dMe of fltet leauMCa
of a.tten n pro\llded
In MOdon 1100 of
the California Pro-
tMte Code. Thi time
for fling a9.itna wllt
not expire tMfore four month• from the heath'CI date node.cl above.
YOU MAY EX·
AMIN! the flle kept by ... ooun. tf you
.,. • P•tMn lnterut· ed In 1ht MU'te, you
mey fh wtth the
oowt a fonnal R•
quHt for lpecllll Notto. of the Nina of an lnwn~ ana llPIH.,.., of estate ••919 Of of .ny ~ddon or ~nt
.. proMtd In '"'" don UIO of the
Callfotnl• Probate
Code. A "•quatt for I~ NOUoe fofm
le wahbla from 1~ court oferk. Aca..yter ........
U.OM.-.. ....... I. .....
709 ... °"'*" A.-...~
-I
0 CA•1203 10/H, 10/27, 11102
\
1on1 who may other-wiH be lntereeted In
th• will or Ht:::•t 1o~ both of:
JEAN LASP1NA AKA
BETTY J . LASP1NA
AKA BETTY LASPINA
A PETITION het betn filed by_ ALEX·
ANDER SCOTT In
the Superior Court of California, County of
Orange. THE PETITION
requHt. that ALEX·
ANDER SCOTT tM :rpolnted at .,.nion-
reprHentative to
administer the Htate
of the decadent.
THE PfTTTION requeet• the
decedent'• WILL and
codicil•, If eny, tM admitted to probate. Thi WILL tnd any
codicil• are aveilebM for examinatton In
th• file kept by the
court. THE PETITION
requ .. tl euthorlty to
edmfnleter the Htate under the Indepen-
dent Admlnleuatlon
of E1ta1e1 Act. (Thie authotlty will •low
the peteonel repr ..
tentative to teke many eotJon• wfth-
out obtaining_ court
approval. lletore taking certain very
lmponant aotione,
however. the per-
aonlll reprHentatJve will be required to
glv• node• to Inter·
1111d per1on1 unlH• they heve waived notice or coneenttd
to the propo11d
ecuon.I The Indepen-
dent admlnltttation
authority will be granted unlH• an
lnteretted perton
flit• an obleotfon to the petition end
lhoWI QOod CIUH
why the oourt
thould not gfant the authority.
A Hl!A"INO on
th• petition. '!IWUI be
h.,d on December 2. 1111 et 1:415 r .M.
In Dept. l73 located
at 341 The City Drive Orertge CA
t211i-oot7.
IF YOU 01.JfCT
TO the Dfll""na Of the iMtfdon, you
ttlould . .,.,.... •t the Mering .,., •t ...
YMW Obfeetlone er lie wmt.n..,....
done """' o. eoun befOM N hMftnt.
Your .., .. ,.no•
mey be In perton or
by your attorney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a ooncina-ni Cteclitor
of the deoeaetd, you
mu1t file vour claim with the oourt and mall a copy to the per.ontl repr .. ente-
tlve eppointed by the
court within four
montht from the date of flntt lteuance
of lettare at provided
In 1ectlon 1100 of the Cetifornia Pro-
b•t• Code. TN time for tiling clelme will not upre before four montht from
t~ hearing date
noticed ebow. YOU MAY EX·
AMJNE the flla kept
by the court. If you are a penion lnter11t·
ad In th• tit.ate, you
mey flit wfth the court a formal R•
quatt for SP!Clal
Notice of the flllflil
of en lnwntory and
eppral•al of 11tat• • .. •t• or of any pethion or eccount
.. provld.ct In 110·
don 1250 of the
CaHfotnl• "Obit• Coda. A Requeet fct
Speol• Notice form 11 evallabf• from the
court clettt.
Attorney fer ........ ...... .,. TOOClh
117•W•• ...... .-no Lot,., .... I CA
IOOa 10/21. 10127,, 1/02
RESS Old!W No e..-
A.P. hllbef IJ17 .... ~ or Tr11t1111 Sall
lJndlr OMO QI TNIC You
/.II ln DllllAI Undlt A Oetd or T 1U1t <CWld ~ 19 ... lM-
... YOU Tiu ldt//tl To Pl'altc:t y cu PtOOlr1Y •
.... 81 )Old Al " Pilllllc S. II YOll Need NI&· '*'*'°" or The Nltlft OI Thi~---~ You YOU Sllould' CVftild A L1Ww*, HO TICE IS .eav~11111111 u-.•. 11IMA.a .... &.:.. .. .... ~:=-... ~= ~ .,.. ...
---~ ... ......... c.,.'lllny. c...... C.'-8nlet • • ..,....,,,,....llft.
-~.:;,-''!! ,,.. ·-..... 0...tl ,.. ...
~.:r'-t ;~..,.... ..
( ;
SIDELINES
lWoothermembe.rsofthe
champ '42 team blocking
back Lorrie Langmade and
Dick Freeman, tackle, were
named to the CIF squad,
second team. in 1943 and
1944.
· The only other Harbor
High gndder to make
All-ClF was Bob Thompson,
second-team, an end on the
1948 football team.
Prior to the All-CIF slate,
there was an All-Southern
California program. 1\vo Tars
were named to that program,
second team, in 1939 and
they were quarterback
George M1cklewait and encl
Frank Shellin.
It is fair to mention that
Harold Sheflin, Frank's
brother, was also named to
the tlu.rd-team All-CIF ~ -
in 1941 and was first string
All-Sunset League all four
years of high school.
• 77 -John Alderete (Estancia) interception return.
• 61 -CJ. Zuniga (Costa Mesa) kickoff return.
• 63 -BWy Clayton (Newport Harbor) TD pass from Chr1s Manderlno.
• 58 -Marshall He.ndrtcks (Estancia) TD pass from Jeremy Valdes.
• 48 -AndN Stewart (Newport Harbor) run.
• 47 -Blake Hacker (Corona deJ Mar) touchdown run.
• 43 -C.J. Zuniga (Costa Mesa) run.
• 32 -Andre Stewart (Newport Harbor) pass from Chrts Manderlno.
• 32 -John Alderete (Estancia) pass from Jeremy Valdet.
• 31 -C.J. Zuniga (Costa Mesa) touchdown run.
• 31 -Freddy Rodriguez (Estancia) mteiception return
• 31 -Kelsey Peterson (Newport Harbor) kic.koH ren1lll.
• 30 -Sean freeman (Estancia) run.
Gamestoppers
Last week's bjg hits and defensive plays
COSTA MESA Inside linebacker Shaun Ferryman had a big stop lnsl~
the 5-yard line in the second quarter ... Outside linebacker Dave Weir and
end CJ. Zuniga combined on a stop for 1-yard gain inside the 5-yard line
Inside linebacker Jason Rankin partially blocked a punt. had one sack,
intercepted a pass and had two quarterback hurries on one series.
NEWPORT HARBOR -End Nldc Langsdorf made back-to-back stops for
no gain to force field-goal attempt then had a sack on s1,.1bsequent series ..
End Garrett 'n'oncale had a sack, deflected pass, two pressures and recov·
ered a fumble ... End Brad Rothwell had a sadc. a pressure and caused an
incomplete with a big blindside hit on the quarterback .. Comerback Justin
Jacobs had one interception. nearly a second, and broke up a third pass
with blanket coverage . Safety Dayne Phiff and corner Andre S~
each broke up passes •. Nose guard Andy Kalanz had a sack ... NaUuln
Caldwell's punt was high enough to allow good coverage and Brad Oalg
recovered a muffed reception to set up a touchdown drive. ..
ESTANOA Outside linebacker Andy Romo stopped a Laguna Beach •
runner for no gain on the opening drive ... Cornerbadc Marshall Hendrlcb
lnterceptoo two passes, both of which led to touchdowns . End David ,_
Rodrigue-z forced the Laguna Beach quarterback to hurry his throw. causing
the second Hendricks' interception Inside linebacker Fahlld Jahid plugged
the running hole auidcly on a first down run .. Outside hnebacker s..n
Freeman came up with a big hit on the Artists' running back for a 3•yard loss ... Cornerback John Alderete stopped an Artists' TD threat with an
interception and raced n yards deep into Laguna Beach terrttory ... Inside ,...
linebacker Cesar Romero sacked the quarterback for a 6-yard loss ... ..,.
Freeman intercepted a Laguna Beach pass the gave the Eagles excellent field •
position .. Nose guard Josh Veach and llnebacker Matt COiby teamed up ••• for a quarterback sack near midfield Alderete came up with his second <u•
lntercepuon, deep 1n Eagles' territory.... ·-..
CORONA DEL MAit • Outside linebacker Nidc Prouet' blocked a
<cnversion kick . End Jay Bottom got a sadc on a two-pomt attempt and
nsrfy disrupted a punt... Outside linebacker Blake Heck• had numerous
tackles at the ltne of scrimmage ... End Scott Biggs administered some
crushing hits ... End Mike tt.y.s ~overed a fumble ... Safety Enc Snell and
corner Steven Ward each broke up passes in the second half .. ComerbadC
Charlie Alshuler also t ipped a pass and was involved In numerous tackle1 ...
Tackle Biiiy M<Ardle almost recorded a safety by stuffing a running play
Pilot
.... -~. """' Al .. ted by !tie .... r. ..,...,._, .. ot.r ~ nllrY*
petl()C\I Ind eddre ... 1 UMCS by
lr1eu ... !tie .... , Within ltttee
• 9321 years before the a.ii.
Cencllewood Of,. lilJOI• luctl llst WU tent or de·
lrllOt BMdl, CaJd<imla ~Aid to the buyer ere: 984&-4725 SAME
~ Richard Lord, The name• end buSI· _., candieWOOd Dr . nesa addmae• of the H1.1n11r1aton Beeeh, 'tali· buyer e111: TAM VAN ~ 02e46-4725 TFfAN, 9300 Mc:FAD-llllMrk:le Lyn Lord, 9321 DEN, WESTMINSTER, Cencllewood Ot., Hunt· CALIFORNIA.
lrlalor\ Beech, C&llfomle The aSMts 10 be IOld 9fM6 .,. delcnbed In general
ltlll txlllne18 11 COO· 11: ALL lurnllure1 di.did by: husband and tixture1, equipment ana
wife trade name, of a certain
Haw you started doing business and ere located ~II yet? No at: 1703 MONROVIA,
This statement Wat COSTA MESA, llled wtlh the County CALIFORNIA a.lie of Qfange County The business name
ort1o-8-99 used by the seller at that 1999180n15 location Is: "AERO·
0ally Piiot Oct 19.._26, COMM MACHINE
Nov. ~. 9, 1999 1121 SHO~" The anttdpated
~•1748007 data or the bulk seJe Is
, NOTICE TO Nov. 12, 1999 at the ol·
-eorroRS OF fl<le of UNIVERSAL "'" TITlE, ORANGE BULK S~LE ESCROW · BRANCH, '(U.C.C. 6104, 1205 E. Chapman Ave.,
u14105 el seq.) Ot:anoe Ca 92866· '
Eacrow No. I Thi• btAk sale Is sub-
' 12379-CS lec:t to Califomla
Notice la heraby given! \Jnllorm Commercial
IO creditors of tile wtthln l Code SediOns 6101.2. It named seller that a bulk so subject, the name and
ofsalehels about to be m~ =re~ C:~~ ~ assets desert.,.,.,, be filed Is: UNIVERSAL
The. names and busl· T J T L E • 0 R A N G E
ness address of the ESCROW BRANCH,
seller are: JEFF LEE, 1205 E. Chapman Ave.,
1703 MONROVIA. Orange, Ca. 92866, and
COSTA MESA CALI· last date tor fillng claims
FORNIA. The toCatlon In S~ll be: Nov. 10, 1999
C 111 1 f th ..... I r which Is the business day a om a 0 8 "'' e eJC-before the sale date ec:u'ive office of the seller specified at>ove.
Alf tttl Wit lfttntshl1 la lltla
_,.... .. lftltd" ltlt ~ ..
tnl r11t lteelllt Ad ti 1 ... H
-"" wtlkll ...... " l11tfll " ... llttl ..... , •••ttrtlCI,
ll111ll1llH ti .. tctlMIHllH
lint• M ,Kt, Hiit. lllltlM,
.......... 111111111 """"
.....,, ""''· If .. ltllffllff le .... tllf He• •rtltlfltCI, ....... ~.·
1'11 •••••••" wlll 11t a-1 .. ly KUJI .. , tbetllst•
...... "'lttt "''" ,,.. .. .. fltQllM .. h t1w. °" ...... ,
tit hff•f 111-.• •1t Ill
ftttU... 1•u11t11• 11 t.it
..... ,.,. WI Hllll"t ft H
..... .,,....., hilt. le Ufll•
... ttMtcrt-...... All MU0 ..... .., .. 1-teMl ....... ,.,
1111t ........._DC ... ,ieut ;;;;;;iiiiiii~pijii!iiii~iiiii!iii llllHWllUl.ale.
********* •• • • : a-SOLD-a : t . SHOWCASE t
•. HOMES * t FOR SALE t * In Our Sat * * * • Real Ettate • t 6'9>P..lomentt : t HOMES OF:
: THE WEEK : • * : Dleplay Ads •
• Start at $751 t
: Deadline :
: '{uesday SPM :
• Open House •
: Listings ! t Only $151 t * Deadline * t Thuraday SPM t
: tt Pays to :
• AdVertlae * t In the Beat t * LOCAL * : Real Ettate ! t Section : t cau Today!! : t USA RIVERA •
• 949-574-4252 :
: ANNE WILLEY %
: 849-574-4249 : ••••••••••••
~ . -
. ;,
..
,., •. ~ •"m"r.'
clllGlld. Hly, bliilt In '02. "381 f.581, 132'1,500. AgenC&
Eerl a Judy Teylor.
...-...Z-4122
•
LAKE TAHOE AREA riv·
ertront ranch 100 AC·
$295,000. NIJW to market.
Spectac:Uar open & WOOded acreage w~amous I.rout rtver
wlnclr1g lhru Ill T oos cl
browns & rainbows. !M wa-
ler tov.i & wlldlfe galofet ~ NeYada's quality ol life
lncludlng exc:ellenl c:lmlle &
no taxesl ldealv located In
Ille Skm Neveda's )uSI 1 hr
to Tahoe & Reno. County rd.
honl1ge, utilities, ample =81' • An lncfedible
to own pi1rne riv· e ront in en exclllslYll loat<
tionl Financing avlhble.
Cell owner now
775-483-0048 ext.4101
(C4L-SCAN)
THE SHORES
APTS
1 & 2BR
TOWNHOMfS
$300 Oft:
MOVE-IN
Selected Unite •••••••••••
Starting 0
$1095/mo.
MotoMoleue.
**We are a pet ..
community.
8 block•
from the beach.
94M44-2811
• 4 f I .,. , ,· . 11·-, \, '
r-~ ..-... -,..-TtTT" ~
ITRllT28r, Frplc, 111'1 llfW ~. St08Slmo (no
'*5). lee& tMne Avt fl C.. Oentl IM9-720-IM22 EJd 203 .
..
• . .... -.·.i · ..
Ffcililou• BU81,... Name Stetiement
The lollowlng pel'IOOS
art*NNU: a) LOI I County
Golt b) OI Anoelff
Goll, c:) San Olego
County Golf, d) Phoeril11
Golf, el Bay Area Golfl f) ~ra Coaal Golf, 9) In· land Couney Goll, hrFUv• er11de GQll, 1800 E.
Garry, Ste. 215, Santa
Anl, California 92705
John Robert L~.
3 TwillOht 1-ane. Rancho Santa Margarita, Califor·
nta 92688
Enc Damon Marao'n,
1800 Orangewood Drille, B~1 ea11tom1a 92866
1 nis buSlness Is con·
ducted by: a general
partnersh"tp
Have you 51aned doing'
business yet? Yes,
to-i&-99
Jonn R. Lyon
This statement was flied with the County
Clerk of Orange County on1~·99 19996800129
Deity Piiot Oct. 26, Nov.~. 9, 16, 1999 T724
Flctltioua BualneH
Name Statement
The followlng persons
are doing busliless as:
Halloran & Sons An·
ttques, 3800 E. Coast
Hwy., Corona del Mar,
CA 92625 '
Patricia Halloran
. '
,•,,!:·:_1'-c? .. '' •• ~
~·~( ., ~-......... !·.'I . . .
··~ . . .. ~
ct• ~n Wheeler
Tru1t, 1208 Colony PlaU, Newpott BMdl,
CA926e0 Thie bullOMa 1$ con·
dUCt9CS by: Family TNlt
H9w you •ta!Wd dolno
bullMlt r.t? Yea 198-i Patric a Halloran
Wheeler Thia statement waa
filed with the County
Clerk of Orange County
on 1<>-&·09 18"M0'T703
Daly Pilot Oct 12, 19,
26, Nov. 2, 1999 T714
FICdtiou• Buelnna
Name Statement
The loltowtng persons
1111 dolno business as.
C&H AU'tO BROKERS,
114 Oxtoid, Irvine, CA
92612
Heidi Olsson Sink. 114 Oxford, lrvlne, CA 92612
This business Is con·
ducted by: an lndillldual
Have you started doing
business yet? No
Heidi 0. Sink
This .statement W$1
filed With the County
Clerk of Orange County on 10-6-99
18996807719
OallY Pilot Oct. 12. 19,
26. Nov. 2, 1999 T717
Flctltfou• Buelnne
Name Statement
The foltowtng persont
are doing business aa:
Newport Beach Cos· tom Cabinets, 2932
Corte POr1oflno1 Newpon
Beac:ll, Callfom1a 92660
Jeffrey S. Balfty, 2932
COrte Portoflno. Newport
Beach, Calllornla 92660
Beth A. Bailly, 2932
l ..c... ~· ~.\ . . . . . .. . . .. ·-·--...
T uadoy, Odobet 26, 1999 I
j.. t' .
..-;~.1(···.' •.:
. . ,.,: : -. . . . ~ . .
t •If• '""':"""":'I"'\ : . ~ I I l • I Anaheilll • lSilironiO!ii • • I e..c.n. CA Y2948 I • -lfhtftl •• Beldti Cellfonw 9 I 92807 ' Mell. CA 92927 And'" A Mlrzaotl. ..._ lQI 1lieltld ~ lled with lie c::ounry Thll buelneaa 19 con-This buslneas 11 C:00· 1 Dan Cunningham, 222 8 3'd Str"'· Hun!· bullnna yet? No Clerk of ()fanpe ~
dUCted by. hU&band and dueted by. an lndlllldual 2160·D Harbor BMS ., ngtOn 8-d\, CA 9264' Bijan HoeaeiN on 10-1-81
Wiie l'iave you atened doing I COsta Mesa, CA 92627 l'hls bUSlneU la con-Tllla 1te11men1 \IJ&S tteMI0?1M Have you 1t.1rted dOlng buSinff• yet7 No Thia busirleaa 11 con· dueled by an Individual llled with the Count) ~ PllOI Ool, s. 12, ~S:.Y~1 No Wi':: "::=ant was :.,~,:i,:tp • general b:si:~er:ic,ed clOing ~~~ ~ '~cttil~= 8ua1r!~1
Thia statement was hied wlll\ the County I Have you 1tart9CS dOlng An<JrM R Mlrzaotf 1 HUI01702 HMM Swtement
l11ed wlll'I the County Cle"' of Orange County bu6ineas yet? Y .. , Thia statement wu DaUy Piiot Oct. t2. 19, The tollow!nO P8™>'11
c1er11 ot Qolnge County on 9 14-99 10/1/1999 filed with IM County 26, Nov. 2. 1999 T713 I are dotl~ business u: on 10·1·99 1otMI05395 Aaron Mlttsteln Clerk ol Oraf'l99 County Flctr;I 8 c:= WE PEA Ul"\A•E 1"96807t76 DallY Pilot Oct. 12, 19, This atatem.nt w•i on 10·9·99 "oua ut..--a a) S · ._ •
Dally Piiot Oct 12, 19, 26, Nov. 2, t999 T718 filed Wrth the Couniy . 199MI07777 • Name StatletMnt bl KEI Kl, 1720-0 Sanl4
26, Nov. 2, 1999 T111 ActJ•·lout BueineH Cler11 ol Orange COUnt( D~llol Oct t2, 19, Tlla toltow111g personE Ana Ave · CO.ta Me&&, ~ o 99 26 2 999 T7 0 are doing buslne11 as; CA 92627 FlcdtJOua Bueltliie Nam. Statem.nt on 1 + · · 1 1 West eo..t trneinet Keely Stanoel Kay. 360
NanM Statement The followlng persons 1"9MO'JIOM FtctltlOut 8ualneH SolutiOnt, 886 Beker, E 10th St., Costa Mna
The following pel'IOOs are doinQ business as-0~ Piiot Oc:1 5• 12• Name Stat.,.,_nt Suite 301A, Coeta Mesa CA 92827
lre doing buslOess as: MERCEDES SALON, 19• • 1999 YOA The lollowlng persons CA 92660 ' Thl$ buslnest Is 11()()1\·
Style Clothlng Com· 1000 E. lmpertal Hwy., FfctltToue BualneH are doing business as James p Tayto( 1t14 ducted by: an ind111idual
pany, 2932 Corte #A1 , Brea, CA 9282\ 1 Name Statement GA Alr Cond•lloning GOldentocl Ave., Corona Have you started d01ng
Portollno1 Newport Fred Boose Millar, l The fOllOWing persons Heatlno Service, 3131 det Mar, CA 92625 business yet? Yea. ~~
Beach, Call omla 92660 3610 So Gamsey, Santa are doing t>uslneu as· Canadian Dr , ·Costa This buSlons Is oon· Keely Stengel Kay
Danny J. Prosser. 2932 Ana, CA 92707 Atomic Tan, 103 E. Mesa, CA 92628 dUcled by: an Individual This 11•1ement was
COrte Portollno, Newport This bullness 16 eon· 17th Street, Unit 7, Costa Garo A. Yogurt)lan, Have you started dokig IUed with Iha County
Beach, California 92.660 dueled by. an Individual Mesa, Cahlornla 92627 3131 Canadian Or , 1 business yet? yea, Cte11t of Orange COunty
Beth Robles, 2932 Haw you started doing John Steven · ~oe. Costa Mesa, CA 92826 1 07/1999 on 10· 1 ·99
COl1e Portollno, N8WPOl1 business yet? Yes, 605 Thames Way. Cos\8 This business is COl'l· 1 James P Taylor 10tt6807060
Beach, Callfomla 92660 10-10.99 Mesa, Calilc;>rnla 92626 ducted by an 1ncll\lldual This statement was Daily Piiot Oct. 5, 12,
This business Is con· This statement was This business Is con· Have you started doifl9 filtd with the County 19. 26. 1999 T702
ducted by: joint venture flled With the County ducted by a genera> bu11ness yet>? No I Cle(1< ol ()range County Fictitious euslneu
Have you started doing Clert( of Orange County partne111hlp Garo Yogurtj\an on 10-8·99 Name Statement
buslt!ess yet? No on 10-14·99 • Have you started doing This statement was I 1""80n10 The follow
Danny Prouer 19996808330 business yet? No filed with the County Dally PllOI Oct. 12, 19, l/'lO persont •
Thls statement was OaUy Piiot Oc:1 19, 26, Jonn s. Joyce Clerk bf Orange County 126, Nov. 2. 1999 T716 are~ business as
filed with the County Nov. 2, 9. 1999 n21 This statement was on 10-8·99 Flctltloua BuelneH Pl~. costa ~~:
Clerk of Orange County FJctltloua Bualness hied with the County . l9996&0771)4 Name Statement 92627-4002
on 10-7·99 Name Statement Clerk of Orange County Dail~ Pilot Oct. 12. 19. Tile lollowtrlg petsOnS Willlam Ryt>acek. 994 . 19998607676 The lotlowlng persons on 9·20-99 26, ov 2. 1999 T71!! are doing business a•· Grove Place. Cos11 ~:I~ Pll~ ~ 12n\9i ara doing business as: D .1 Pilo 1~5~: Flctltloua Business OUTLAW OFF ROAD· Mesa, CA 92627-4002. · ov. · Costa Mesa Pizza 81 Y 1 · • • Name Statement .COM, 2431 s Anne This business Is con·
FlctJtloua ButlneH Boys, 2180·0 Harbor 26• Nov. 2• 1999 T709 The lotfowing pel'$00t Street, Santa Ana. CA ducted by· an lndlVldual
Name Statement . BIVd. Costa Mesa. CA I Acdtloua Bualnen are doing business as: 92704 Have you started oomg
The lollowtng persons 92627 Name Statement Newport Spec:lalty CO. COnnor Giimer, 1•11 j t>us1ness yel? No
are doing business as: Aaron Millstein, 2160·0' The fOllOWing persons 6308 West Oceanfront, Eas1 Wiison Street, W1Ulam·Rybac:ek
HEAVENLY COMPO· H11rbor Blvd., Costa are dotng business as: Newport Beach, C,. Cosla Mesa. CA 92627 . This siatemem was
NENTS, 5071 E. Challc:e Me$8, CA 92627 a) M.A.S. INTERNA· ~2663 This business Is con· tiled With ltle County
Ln •• Anaheim Hiiis. Call· Jason Bates, 2180-0 TIONAL. bl MARTIAL Bl@n Hosseini, 630e ducted by• an Individual Clerk ol Orange Countv lomla 92807 Harbor Blvd., Costa ART SPO~TS IN W. Ooeanlront, Newpor Have you started doing on 10-t·9919996807058
Gina Mane Mendell, Mesa, CA 92627 TERNATIONAL, 222 B Beach, CA 92663 business yet? No DaPy Piiot Oct. 5, 12,
5071 E. Challc:e Ln., Phuc Nguyen, 2180-0 3r0 Street. Huntington This bu$1ness Is con-Conno1 Giimer 19, 26. 1999 Tro3
DESIGNER CLOTHING 1 209FOA~1 WAREHOUSE SALE AT
118 EllPLOYllEHT
Of'PTYS
• Wood-bum.Ing/gas fiteplAces • Pnvatc g;iragcs
• South Coast Metro t Ptlme Baker/Bristo! IOcatton,
200-1600 sqft. Also avail
WHOLESALE AND BELOW
PRICES. THURSDAY 21 ST TO
FRI 29TH ONLY· 9AM-5PM
•BARBEQUES•
GALORE
•FROHT OFRCE•
Mon, Wtd, Fr1PT1Pfl'l·1Pnt
For Physlcal Ther~ office
in H8 F'ax res 714-968--4220 • Boat shps available f:J(ec: Suites 714·957·1959
'STOHEMfLL DESIGN CTR
Prime airport loc1tlon,
datkl tnd offlc:t spec.,
fully equipped. MO/MO
NOW HIRING! Now t,.e':ising l BR and 2 BR
Sl300-S2100 -1639 Monrovia -W<>fk In 1 f1.1n s•
tnvironm1nt. Some
.... tJ(ptf natded.
FT, 10lm·7pm. S1at1 $7/hour up (D.0.£.)
Btntt ptg tv•ll. Apply
Gar89f Door Tedi Fill Of
Pff service or 1\$1alatlon.
c>pene(S, MCI doors, tpc
Lido Doo!s 94H42-3786 Sorry No Pets
:. Please call (949) 760-0919
• PERFECT VIEW OF CHRISTMAS 8ottt PlrMe l All 81y Actlvltln • MmltfA.IP.P« ur41 In best B«Y frpri loc:ati()n, elCCellenl
coidtlon wtoarage pailcilg, W/D, and alf emer.ltst ~1-80().247-8209 vllW 18driilf.
speclaculat lloor plan w/FP, two patloe, Resort Stvte U\1-
lngl $t600, 888-783-4786.
811utlful Oct1n View
Spec:iolli 1 Br+ loft. luxufloos
upgra<les, resor1 style
amrilell NA Nowt $1886.
888-783-8786.
Walk to Balboe IL Beautlful 2 + 2, Oen View, Gorveous
gour kit. specious throughout
Pel Frlencly, Won't 1..ast.
$1943 888-?83-8786
PenotnlC Vliiwtl Hean Oi
Newport 24-Hr gated, FP. roman II.tie. W/O, Conci«ge,
949-706-9696
CDM Rantll
Salea Sptclallat
t CHRIS EDWARDS t
Fh1 Eat'* ProperUtl MW8N208 c.a phont
E'lldl 8aCt hY 28t HouH Ff, gtNI yerd, No pets
$ 195.+ dep.329\JIW~ IS.l.IMl,M~ ll
E'Sldi Cut• 28r 1 Bi
Ho\IM 2c:w ger $1400/M•. Av1lflbla ff/f 5, Agent,
tM9-72W121
'
• rental. 714-436-9179 ••
1211 ~11~=.;11 416 ~11m-mj
Pron milt looklng fof coom TOP $$$'RECORDS! ADM~ ASST
• Bartlequtt Gllcn nsa Hlrtlof &Mt., eo.tl ....
(On-altt lntll'Vltw)
to rent In NB, CdM. l!W18 Jazz R & e. Sout Rocle, etc FIT &cellent Cusl SVcl
3BR 28A Ul>otr OplL ll8lt area. Quiel, private bait!-N'Ef.P CASff? SO'S & 60's phone sldas, MS Ofllce, 3Vrs BOOKKEEPER Pff
aeeshofe, 3C ~. Y88ltf room prerd. 7'14-74Wn4 &$ MONEY fOR $$ MIKE 949-645-7505 olfloe ~p. '°' busy water-experlalc:ea llld responsllle
AYllA Nov 15 124 46U'I 51; I I ~ hrn~.-COAST COIN NEEDS frontoffice.StMimmed.Fax ft>r N8 reslauranc staltinO $2200t'M0. 562-943-2860 .M!!!!I..,....,. """1"'1""7 OLD COINS! Gold, snver, f851Kfle (949) 642-0674. ASAP Deily cash rec:onc» studlO octan vilW, 'l8l'f • _..._,., • Boo1CS jewelry, watches, antiques, AUTOMOTIVE MECJIANIC latlon llld Mi Faic resume
clean, 1·2 oeoote, trig 4 sofa DfVORCE $le5.00. Prop-Co c°'8c:tibles 94H42·94A7 A,ppfentlce, W11 wl)d( IMtll a to (949) 642--0674.
R:I. Aval Nov' 1• Sl.aolmo trty, clllldren, missing ~ ~~~~~~and~ 800kt<EEPER PT 120 hr1 no/smlc/pel 94H45-0801 p ,.._ ""'" ,_., ....,...... per wk more Of less) Quick. E'efufi 4er 3aa. n!:aded spOuse <>K Bankruptcy ~ , .._~ I English ~ In person at bookslcomputer friendly ~ .....,.. to FREE Call llld ask usl Stop pNl"l"ruv ••¥ 20tO Placentia Avenue' N~ Beach toe: Fax 1'15 • .,.,.... gat. eredltOf catts. Bam·8pm v• '""'' • ,.,6 ., & back bay. 2104 Mon·Sal(ti00)688-3lS8 J ~ ColtliMtM,NoPtionecalls. to 4r 7.r5188 or caM
V1'11 Lll9dO Open Fii-Sal (800)99().9835(CAL'SCAH) ''"""TO 2 Phi b t C Customer Sttvlct Imme<! 1-80().896.2727 Dol1erle l~3p $2500. 31~43 CALL NOWI $1,000 Airline ffoumtOLD Bost! ~mer,, C:'~ opening w/small 0C seMce Bookkteptf!Secttt~ lldO 11, 48f 38i, Sf)ICiOUS dl9c:ount coupons FREE. '3901291 1-800-201-1141 Co. for org&Med indlV w/ FT./PT. 50vlJJm, gd ll'lllh. lving rm, lormel din, 2 Nal>Onll advertisers seelllng .. ,,. strong cormullC8IJOn skis. NB prop mgr nr PCH. Fax
exterior SlW'I dtcb up$1airt, d i ""'years PltlM call 94$-SU-5550 tlS Alln lJZ 949-252·2190
2c gar, $875,000. Bl GnM/ ~ ~· ~°' t11948New873porr ~ I I Eliciting Ailw.1illng Sale• .. CUSTOMER SERVICE "
Reelt«S; IM9~75-616t detalled inlOfrlllllon laj)e. • •"'-4 474 WOllt position In establlshed Motivated people pt(SOll.
..................... (CAL'SCAN) WANTED tenitO/)' Ill the Daly Plot mt c:ust svcAnslde sales.
• • Halloween Costumes , ... &A.__ l&Ul'ee 1 . Eltpenence a plus, but not . ph and C0111)1Jter ~.last
•. ,ococ~•NNFAC~ONTSE •. (25'4 OFF WITH THIS AD) """"N"r~ '\1Lovlng Swtdlah Nur... required DNg sc:iMnllll>' I ~.!...~Sal •detailed ""' "" 11M3 Atoonciuln St. HB. Aid hour1y/24hrs. Good ~ requlrld EOT: """'_, 's req ltNIUly • 1.adnnthN Mklrm • otfWlnW 7't4-47t-3014 WMhtl'lDryw$1SOtldl. cool(, dtMnQ, 15yfs exp, tei tU to: Sain Po.itlon I GowrtMll Fu,.. a Nla'J
: SllOO.· $4000. • • Rtfrlger9tor $225 local ret's. 949-646-3735 949-642·7667 hlltory MMU-nlt
• Bkr IMM42-3850 : f.~ I L-• 1 * 94M46-SM8 *
•••••••••••••••••• 1VQI
4br ~8: ~~·even FOUND 14~ FURNITURE J
lmmed, minimum 1 ~ FOUND SMALL DOG, • -llt$4500imoMM-.4114 BAYVIEW SANTA AN4 Contempor1ry b~toom
HEIGHTS AREA. CALL TO M . De.rte rMWood Wllayed :~ ~!~r = DESCRIBE MM7S-1118 ldno llead-bd, 2 r1gtUlandS, ""'"""' • 'f"l'V•· • I vatity mlrrot mens CheSt ~tO~~ 1~ CEllEJfRY I . 949-s.48·5133 •
Av .. 1111 949-631·2798 1"f1'· a;ors D1yMd $175 . manren
28r 2e1 VtrMllttOcean excluded. Willie antique
V!IW, nu carpet, fresh pejnl.12 DUAL CEMETalY LOTS 9 .. 9. 7 I 9. 0 6 3 6 I ea v. •tt. blllill & lkf, wnen, P-* View MerTlOllal P"' ~· c:astl ~ $1600 ~·1 949-!i88·3063 toc;aoon· Meado~awn Sooth Dlnfu9-rm 11t. ChtrTy Glaves E & F $3500 NCl1 wood, 92" dbl pedestal, 2
714·750<9557 714-544-392A =:9c18 ~~· lffl I ma~er, stll bOxed,
L ~ =~'=:Z:.:C wo(/F TANNNG BEOS Mat, ntw 91111 M'llOPtd,
TAN AT HOME Wtt'f IOft, top queltty; WM
BUY DIRECT AND SAVEi $2000 Ncrlflc•. $110.
.... Attention!
Gener•• Atwa S1t1ty 15 new positions no eJCp9118nC8 nee. FT/Pl eam
up to S6SQlwt( 949-<t65-9907
VREST AUftAHT
GEHEAAL MANAGER we
sW. a ~ qualiled llAI stMce restaurant G M fOf oor Mission \llefc> ioU11on
Restaurarc is part ol a grow-
ing Ul)SClle family dlM1 con-
cept Exc:elenl CiUltllf1I oppf Y
with gtowth otenttaf
~10.9729 ax
Resume to , 10-5566
GREAT JOB Of>PTY
0 • P.O.S.H.• FasNon ISiand NP Bdl line mens doltllng store ~ tor PT sales
assoc xirc btllel cau
Kevin MM40-Q10
MANAGERS '
•SPECIAL•
1154.00+ toWk~ t-m:r~ SiWted on belulMy
~~~
Lobby/Direct dl•I
pl'loneSJFrtt H80.
ESPN a OWJPool a
Jlleual, Guts\ laundry
CloM 10 405 & 5$ ~ Min's from O.C F~. C01tae end bCtll WIM'lg clltftlt
IO ellOOI & .._Intl.
COMMERCIAl.MOME M•M1...U
urlts from $199.00 iun 10:$1 172i trVIM Ave,
Low ~ Paymenl N.8. Wortd Wt1 II Rickshaw, ~J~~= ~. bfonzes.L tablal, Mert>le~ lvoly. 23 t lJl'Ol)eln WOLff TANNiHO 8EO$ Oii P"111'1os, IOlas, Cuno.1 T '°' 11 homt. Buy Clfte.1 llld Chinl cdlets, toes mOfe
Savel Co111me1ci11/Home 949-55M105
urils from S19900 Lows "'-pc:-Fortftl-.... i-~_,..--..,
monthly p1ymams. Frn dl'*1g room Ml 42lt72 g1au
colol ea111og Ctl !Oday top DeldVoold ColOfl. · P8tf
I00-842· 1310 (CAL•SCANJ coOd. $400 '114-640-315.1.
I
The Newport Beach/Costa M,esa
Daily Pilot presents you with a
GREAT OPPORTUNITY to ~
promote an.tiques & collectibks.
COSTA M(SA
MOTOAINN nn ""'* 111re1 "'*-t•IM4HO
'·. 4 • • -:
"·' ........ ,_ ....... '-~
,., I' ', • .-•• '' f.
: If ' ' ,. . ...... , .~ ......
l -•
-;.<>.. ,... . ,..-.-f' i . ·... . "· }! ~ ~, .. ' '-""._:_, ,·.
' ...
. . .
--._ , .... ,; .....
'
Perfect for shops, dealers, auctions,
bookse/krs, decorators, shows,
re.finishers, art galleries -develop
. your business with us!
SPACE DEADLINE: OCT. 22, 1999
CALL MARKEY FOR MORE INFO!
949/574-4246
...... -y--''Pilot
~?GIT IUCJI IJllTA ~
•
• • 10 Tuetday, October 26, 1999 • ·
PART TIMI MARKETING
POSIT10N
flltttllll9
Driver Wanted
St.22 per hcM.tr p1ut "'~·
Nteded Mon "'"' Sun 2:45am to 5~45pm. Ad-
dldONI wOttc m1y be
•~Hable~•
Mutth•vt'truokorVan, start yow own &lllMMI lla~Uty lnaurance wtth 5el yo1K o.n ~ Con-
Proof or p1yment1, lrol yocJf own Income. Stll
dtl,,.,_ llc.nM, IOClal ~OUf home, • WOfl<,
Hcurlty c1rd, ind Avot1 ~=-81 c:l
cle1n D .M. V • print out. (888)942"'4053 (CAL 'SCAH)
Mon to thru Fri from Nll8 Acc.ptlng 1ppllc1tlont I -.. I
8:001m to 4:00pm. 1 111ES
Plea•• bring 111 r• 1
quired lnfonn1tlon. .
Tlmts Ortn99 County
Attn: Pim Becklngh1m
2901 G1rry Ave.
Santa An1, Ca 92704
P1H• be Wlf'I Of out of erta compenle1.
Chtck with the local
8ecter lklllnt•• 811·
fNU b9fcn you Mnd any money Of ,.., tor 114-54MsU . v...-~~~ 800-~3-4080 ·~onl~wntlm
MIYlcM. Read and
~eny con·
tract• before you •'9n. --• ~ Computer Technician , Go.of i.:.......;_ ~ Private lrvlne echool leelcs -.. support pe1son lor IS
• ,.......... pl>-......... ')' Includes 1·2An I* dly
MF.~ 1aooni-.
f.all w l'...J .. 949-250-
1 HJ GI 6°'S f ................
direct supeMsion ol middle
IChool siuderes carddlte
should hlYe kno\llledoe ol
M.ictOIOft HT, Word, Excel.
Ind Front PIQI ~
ol Mlclosoft BKlc Ottlce,
netWOfll lnlr~IH and
Hebl'ew langulQI preferred.
Submit resume including
salary r8(JJlfement to· TVT
5200 Bonh1 C11nyon Dr.,
s100.ooo
RRST Y£AA FROM HOME
Not Earrq Whal Vou'ra
Worth? FI T·P I T 888-9»8597
COKEA:iPfotWEPSI
Roule. 15 high trefflc loal· tlons! Can earn S750-S 1,000
weekly Free video
800-387-9<118 (CAL'SCAN)
HOUSEKEEPER Corona dll Mer senior
couple seeks hOusekeeper,
caretaker. live In prerd NlC8
separa1e QUlllers Must be
good Amellcan cook No
children, pets, 6moking or
~QUOf MUS1 be clean neal &
good d11ve1 Our car Call
Mr Taykx Day PhOnt MM-44"'4110
evening 94M75·7957
lrvlne, 92612 Dept AC or I I l1x to: (Ml)ISf.2400 484TO i·ruNW~~
Recepllonlat Pit for F'itness w;n"""""' ii;u Club In Newport Beach Momngs and Weekends FlNANCIAL PROBLEMS?
Calf Mt-642-3215 Millemium blOWOUla. Cradll * JANITOR PfT * Receptlonl1tJEucuUve r8f)elr, big°' small bUslnels SEND REPLY TO; Aul.tint Front otllce pos start.ups, or personal We
P.O. BOX 8226, N.B. 92658 • wllasl piced des9I limi can help you 888-656-i066.
LITTLE PEOPLE & ME I assls~presldent w/multl-' BAD CREDIT OK •SHOE STORY• pie & adrnlrvs118tive ConsolidatlQn. Personal
A Upscale Chtldrens & Wom· I duties ~oanizatlonal and ~. Low lntet'llt rain,
ens shoe boullQUe ts now I computer ~II 1 must. S25K no up front lees Call
hlnng F /PT sales pos Mon per year + benelllS '°' right Strallord 1-87NlS.HI002
Sal 9 30 5 30 Son 930·1 30 person Fax resume to
Pleat• Call MM'S-1355 714-445-9202 C'J( Pll1mnel
•MAGNOLIA CHARUEe RECf PfiONiST
a Children~ ctothtng Weekend Recepbon position
boultque. Batb.Ja island 1n busy Newport 8eectt Real
needs a howv, ef'l"'<getlc & E5ta1e Olfic. tor mo11va1ed
outgoing sales person loves S&l ·starter pogsesq
c.hlld!eo 3<>-40 hr 'per wll communicatlOfl skllts and
Gal Kaien 949-673-0066 pron presence ~
MOTEUHOTEL Now Hiring expenn:e helolul Part-wne
'FrOOI Dl'sk ·Millnl ·ublrty S8 OOlhovr f:ax resume,
f:PT posr11<~, Costa Mesa Alln Human Resources
Mc1or lrvt, '0.77 Hart>or Blvd 949 721 ·8«7
rR=e=TA~l~L~-E~X~P~'O.,-~Sl~L~e=s
POWER I BOATS
2311 GRADY WHITE 'ti
Gultstreem. 250 Yamaha.
lul eledrorks. t•sh ready
eiu:elel1l tondillon, $55.000
949-515-9071
30 FT SEARA Y ·79(97
•SPORT FlSHER•
XLHT CONOITIONI
714-2U.9376
NB Synagogue needs
an a!>-"><Stant lo arrange
11... sa~uary tor the
serv1Ces $9hr refs
11iq d 949 548 G900
S11etpe11on 10 se1 lades apparel 11 upscale stoie at
i NB yottcourse Saleiy + 692 SUPS/DOCKS l comm John 94M52-8689 /MOORINGS
RETAIL-RETAIL·RETAIL
PIT Eves/Weekends.
Eleqanl Gitt S101e ALSO
PIT DELIVERY DRIVER Apply tn Person. 3445 Vta
l IOO N B 949 723 5858
I THChert A11 l1t1nH
needed IOI afternoon Olr/· Lido 111e Dock tor sa• boaV
care 3-Spm Mon-Fri, ECE low pwr boat Aprox 30-40ll
unils reQUlred. 94MSG-3442 I max t>eem Of 12 w xlnt sec.
Let the Cleaaffled side entr uti 949-673-7677
• rvt Direct 40ft MOORING • ce ory near Newport Beach Jetty
help you find I wllh 1986 Cataltna Sloop
rtfloble help. _94_9-_n_s-_9_a_15 ____ _
lllidi .. DI ... ...., ...
Low ,_.. rftlel. 5 1 VI ttll
wtlMI drl¥t. bll ol Win
(421112) 117 ... NAllE"t {114)14M'100
ciCILC EJdOf9dO lllnii ... 92K ml, txtrl dMr't loadld, dalk IM. aAtlm\, OltQ °"'* $4800 9"H44·2790 cXbiillc cXttAX 'tt
Lo 10k ml. white. Utl WWIOf,
!Mii ol wwr.{074938) $19,988
NABERS cm)540-J1 oo
cidllleC concoure 'it
Low mllel, beige, tan 111\r. moonrool. c<I & moral
(206321) • $25.988 NABERS
(714)540-9100
CADiLLlC DEVILLE ·it Lo ml, lthr, VB Northl1ar, bal
ol warr ~tn48) $21.988
Nlbtr• 71'"s.tO-I100 clbiLLAC DEVtltE 199
Lo 1<1k ml, whte, tan le&thef,
VI . Nolh1ar bll of WllT
(7"4n2) $27,988
Habet'I 714-540-f tOO •
ClDIUlc EtbOAXbO •9i
TOUllng. 300 HP NOl'll$tar,
whltt pt1rl, ten lthr,
gorgeoos! (604157) $32,988
NASERS
(714)54°'1100
CHEVROLET Astro La 'ti
Low mies, I~ power &
"'°"·auto. Wt.~ .it, 11-tovs Cd tor cuntnl C>ricirlo
L£XUS Of WESTMINSTEJI (714)02-1906
Chevy BurtloettWCamaro
·12 ve, auto, AJC. ps, eaovs.
smoged. excellent condltlon
$1400 obo 949-631·3852
FORD AEROSTAR VAN 191 Extended, very low nlllelQI,
fully loaded, ltn·lm CUHll8, tr1P computer. 17500 080
714·540-599571H &H118
FORD ASPIRE '1f
Auto, ec. cass (21806/
210185) $4,1195
MClCENHA VOLKSWAGEN
714.1142.2000
FORD EXPEDITION '99
Edcle Bauet 414, auto. *11,
lull pwr. Jl'Wf $811S, dova.
8K ml (A1667 1)
Call for current prong
LEXUS Of WESTMINSTER
(714)192-6906
F~D TAURUS '93
Auto, Ill Jl'Wf w/Wl11e llllY
ltlw lneer. oomplelefy lotdedt Keyless tnlty, CO SUIVool
Brand new eng with 4K m1
$9500 714·903-5262
HONDA c1Vic '95
Au1o, ac. c:ass. pi (8405 71
OtM091) S9.995 MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
714.842.2000
JAGUAR XJ6 L '17 SEDAN 4D
$37,915 97 .. 352
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
Jaguar (.J6 Sed•n 40r 116
$33,995 96-4704
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
Brltr
8y CtwlLES GOMN
wkh OMAa SHARIF
and TANNAH HU(SCH
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACAOSS
1F.'r1 m:M c;m.ss 1 Duk• Of be!Ol'I
8 Latch-get 10 Notre-
NOKJll
.. (> 3
.I ... \I ..
•Jl072
• QYSl WF. T !\AST
•J954l •AQ7
<:>10 7 .\ ~J852
0 1\H.\ O Q64
•AH •J 76 SOUTll
• K IU8
'1 AQ6
<:> K95
·•KI04J
'11ic: h1ddlll!' ~OU 111 \\f-'il NOM m F.A~n'
I • 1•.i ' t 0 .,ass
I NT P11 l'ass P
0pcnin¥ lcJd· Foo1 or •
14 F•f1'1'1 mtelUI .. 15~plant 18la~e-
17~ed
18 Catch IH\'vcnt 11 holdup ol ti~ ru1•n.11d1 19 8'oad
)cdurcr wou ~tlh the l.mr. k•l ~ 20 t~lt
d ub 10 ti~ QWl.'O 11J, wh.:n 1hat hdJ, 22 Closet freshener ~lurnec.I 41 cluh, lint'\\ing the ten 24 Scr1troh
In w11h the lk:Cl of duh>, Wr.:~t 129 Ft• • ~
revcttl'C.f ¥l 0 low raJc, LKt min~ 27 ~u:nlOU• .
With lhc .K:e .. Ilic JUtoni.tttc pl.ty 3t Hear" gesture
would he tu 1.'Untlllll\' ~1 .. 1tlc~. but lhal 32 Wall dimbtfs would ~IVC Ileen the end ur the 33 Tangy
Jclcni;c once Wc\t dc.m:J 'P•ltlc,, 38 ~ear end
<;outh wovld h,1\C t;C\'Cn tricks YIU ~g ~Ty
one rude. lhl\'c heum .ind llncc: .a1 Blanch
clubs. 42 Reply: llbbf
TuJdcal the c.:ontrac:t, Wc\I would 43 Olivt-glttnblrd
huvc 10 hold l'llC of the IWO reJ lkC~. 44 Swttlen«
IP 1t wa~ the llCC of hcun~. there w:i~ :: ~i-.:'
no gu3rJntee 1h:i1 the Jcfenr,c could 48 Sell..defena 1111
come tu seven trick,!, \0 Elht ~hrltcJ sY Set (down)
to a luw diamond. (orcrna dl-clam tu S2 wt-round
DOWN
I .Humotout pc>el
2 Elgtlt (Pftf )
3 Boat 4 Fiiiing period s Somenetw.
Alulc.anl e WlHone •
7 One of the IJdaa
8 Slnotng~
9 Remnants
1 o Elllttged
11 Toltlate
12POM t3 Jug
21"1none -•• :
23 Sellof'•
25 ~article
27 Type size ,
28 Coemetlca company
29 Pen polnes
30 SocieCy gal
34 12131,eg 36'88~
site
PJrtscorc conlracts seldom find
their woy into new)pnper column~ •
mostly ~cnuse they lack dramn or ~(lu'>( or pace COii l nunts. Howev-
er, this unc is 100 lnscinaung o<>t to
rcron.
guc ~. l>tclan:r l..ncw that En~I Wll~ 0 perllClplnl
J'xxl defender. ond woukl unl~~rtat· ~ =: MCOnd
1ngly lead away from.either 1he o.t:e or eo Isaac'• aon queen or dtaJTI()OOS in this pos1t1on. 62 Cherish
Arter much 1houah1, dl"Clarer elected ,,,,-..,..--...,.-..--
to rt)C with the ktnf, anJ the l.lch:n<l-
cl'$ quickly took three more ~p.rJc)' m-4'-~-1--1-
ood the q~n of J13monds for a 011c-N11nh.Sou1h found their way to
one ll<l 1rum11 simply cn()ugh. end
Wc,1 maJc the nunn:il lead o( the
1nd, SCI,
1-~1
Jeguar XJ6 Sedan 4Dr '16
$33,995 16-4659
BAUER JAGUAR 714-953-4800
Jagu• 'XJeVMdinPIH 196 131,995 96-4665
BAUER JAGUAR
714-153-4800
Jegu• X'J6VandenPl111 '96 139,995 9M503
BAUER JAGUAR 714-153-4800
Jegu• 'iii Van~ Piu.
Sedan 4Dr '97
$41,995 17-4651
BAUER JAGUAR 714-153-4800
Jaguar XJ6 Vandln Pi•
Sedan 4Dr '17 145,995 97-4661
BAua. JAGUAR
714--953-4t00
J19uar XJ6 '86
Vtry dean, well maarnined, ,_, tires CID Slacller, 92k mj,
S5995Rldl1149-723-1586
JAGUAR XJ6 'N VANDEN
PLAS 4-<lr, tua pwr, sun root wire wheels, 1 owner. re-
oordS, real clean, S6500'obo
949-723-1504
LEXUS ES300 '116
CaM tor cunent pricing
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)192-6906 '
LEXUS ES300 '95
Cell tor current pt1cifla
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)892..a906
~c~
LEXUS ES 300 '95
Low mites, beige, tin
leather, mint condition!
(090927) St7e988 NA ERS
(714)540-1100
LEXUS LS400 '17
Call IOI' currel1 ~ LEXUS OF WES S ER
(714)892-1906
LEXUS LS400 '16
Gal for currenl ~
LEXUS Of WEST IHS " (71")UH90I
Lfius SC300 '16
Cal lor cooent ~ LEXUS OF WES ER
(71•)812-49(11
Mercedes-Benz SLK230
Rold*'« 20 '9'
$36,985 IMU7
BAUER JAGUAR
714-95>-4800
MERCEDES BENZ do SEL
1 IH tul power, IYltY •XU..
9911 m1, 1 owner, "* blue, f,8Y tl'lleriOr, lrMllaJlllel 12,500 9"~-4044
Matcede• 5320 '97
Cha=ntlcream beige ·~t • loaded, 58k ml,
$42,000 714-504·8800
MERCURY COUGAR '95
v.e, /1l:l condition. super
value (636692t $5.988 NAB RS
(714)540-1100
* NISSAN MAXIMA •96
I ...OR power, air, auto, sun
root, pnone. spoiler. A Red
8Nu!y' and only $4400'obo IM9-7~3·1504 I
NISSAN 300ZX '91
2+ 2. T·Top, 2nd owner,
Petti whl1t, 99K mllet,
great earl 114,500.
Mf.642·2702
oidamo6he cltf1 Wegon
1996. lo mtlts, beige, ltd
H it, aqutaky cl11nl (360019) 19,918
NABERS (714)54~9100
OldllJIOblle Cutlaal '15
VS, white, blue lnlanor, IUPlf
dlanl (307345) $6.9811
NABERS (714)540-1100
PontliC Bomevhll 'et
New t1res/ba11erylpaln1
Alt power, am-Im C11SS. runs
greatl $2495 714·969· 7507
SATURN SL2 '95
Automatic, air, lul power
pacllage. a/loyal (395568)
Cal fOI current ptlclnQ
LEXUS OF WESTMtNSnR
714"892-6906
TOYOTA AVALON XLS 'M Auto, aif. lealhef. chrome al-tovs Call tor current Priclncl. LEXUS OF WESTMINST'Elt
(714)112-6906
Toyota Ci11Ci GT '84
6cyl. auto, IJC, luU pwr, ps,
pw, &Ill-Im, cass, $1750 obo
949-729·1525
vw. 8EETlE Ill
Aloys, IC. C89I 11829&'03nen 118.1195
MCKENNA VOLl(SWAGEH
714-842-2000
VW CABRIO GL '97
5 spd, ale. bit, c<I
(44752/804893) $14,995
MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
n4-MHOOO
SEIL YOUR USED VEHICLE THROUGH CLASSD'7ED
HOME, HEALTH AND BUSINESS
~ ... ~
I 220 ACWUNll«l I
POLICY In an eHOlt to otter the best
service possible to our read
BIS and advertiselS, we will
require Contractors who
adVert1se In lho Servtee
Oor!IC\ory to include thel1
Contredors Ucense nomber
111 111e11 ad\lertlsemont Your
co-operation Is g1r!1llv app1eoated
FARTHING INTERIORS
Kile.hen I Bath . Rernode'
Room Addltt~ VISalMC
Ll 560875 9<19~5-9325
FOLGER HEATING & AIR
lnstalation & rtpe11 on II
tirand5 Low Rates/Free Est
l •763312 714-215-9011
HOME flair
Bathtub R,.;JIUi1t.x
Reglare/Rl'furbrsn
PorcelJrn • f 1!x>rgl.t\s
Sinks • Showe1\
Countc~
949-6 45-7723
1290 CE~I
LEAKY Siio-. R191lred.
Regroutlng & lnatallatlon.
Lt670130 Dean of Tiie. 94M7M065 714-&46-t526
·'W6RI( OF lRT''
Mnt., Tiie & Granite Slab Speclall11I U6557t
Call tor Free E.stlmate
ll\1 I' ( ltllll ( \IU
tool Au ~lff Progr.in S«big
~hired H<-11 r a"'1lfl'\
Cu-urJ:ty Eni.dt~ Ht!irblt.
I tyl. 4ShNwk. Many AAJ
Pairs to choo<e from
AottfolJt' COSI S241)'wt
Call 800-71 3-2002
www.tur.tupair.com
~Pilot
1212==1 ANDERSON ConttructJon
lalgl or Smell Jobs, lns'd
L18""0725 Local C<IM
Est 1928 714-273-4723
LEWIS CONSTAOCfiON
Aemodeling * Handyman Uc• 104n3 Local A9$10on1
714-$57-S125
274 COMPUTER
SEfMCES
MFORDABU. FMT,
RW.ULF.., Pl.RSO.'VAI
SEltVIC£
SURFSIDE
INTERNET
All Di&ital S6k Ccmttll
•frttl M•tb!
blpF'm!
• V ttcl Attm!
• l«a1Atm1 PtlW ~.
All for S96 00 eqlUl io
$6.86 per month!
When you "Jll up on l!lit at
www.surfaslde.net
1&600 r>b1n 11tt1 •m
I l11nt11\gl(111 Rcacll. CA 9 Z64B
l "7SURJ'SIOE
(1-177-873·7'lJ)
, \ , t 'P l l I 1 I\
, I' •If-
Ntw C.ntc./RmoiW
Rm Mdkloe • Ttulll llllf
• S"C/Mfccr llppd~
• !Wwv.
•t,..w~i a
Rqair•hoj/ PA
• l.e/OntMr Lia. r.. • Ntw Waiiw • C...
FU£ ESTIMATE
(9491J~478
NATURAL VIAGRA
OIWWCM.. ...... ,,_,... _ IDr ._...."
,_,for 9IMlft l ~ Ody'" for )0 .. ,..,
r.ALL HOWi t4t 11...Sltt
Call 642-5678
P.!Uf~pjlot
The Cald. P\Jbllc-
Utllilies Comm ton
REOUtRES that al
uHd household
gooda mover1 print
ihllr P U C Cal T number; lllTIOI and
Cheufftrt pllnt lhtlr TCP. number In al
1~1rtisment1. II you
have a quullon
•bout.the legallfY of a movor, Amo Of dlauffer, can
PUBLIC UT!l.ITIES
COMMISION
714.W.'161
HANDMADE OlD
WORLD PAINTS
INTF.RIORIEXTf.RIOll
l"'ff'ttJ from A1Ut'rtllil
UM£ WASH
BON COTE
FRESCO
MILK PAINT
For Estmtilft1 Omta.n
ROBERT ISBf.U.
COMPANY
Prof ni,.TtAI P. ;,, tint
l.M: .... '4J!r0
Td. 9'49.~.~
Pv. 9'9.S80.9626
nt!E1t Sm.ill ~ O.K
,:., l'rwlatt 1".fo
l18.61U394
r~ .~ ..... <-._,. ... ;<t ..... .,.-,
WllfPlrBI_.
·Pl ... ~
·19fma7111111 ......... ..............
141 -141 . 1!11
DAN OAW1JON pt,UMBINO Repair, Aemodal. Aippt, Orlll'll 24hr MNICt expen
gu system rtplpu
U55"722 94M4M720
bi1int cteftd. Milli hi
$75 w/cltan out. other drllne
S52.50 For alyourl)lumblnQ
needs ctd 1t4 ... Wlt l
EiPEM bfiln clMi'llfii
Plumtling "'*". 20'/fl •xi> All WOl1I p r11nletd STEVE 71H45-8298
PAECiiE PLUil18iNO
RIPlll'S&~
FAEE ESTIMATES
U687391 714 981M080
Al_ T,,,_ .fa.-• ....... .......... C..-0.W
548-0769 -""
1-~1
0 6 0 UPHOLSTERY
Since '681 Custom hunture,
uphol5ttry. &lip COVl!.IS, .,_IQUe ref)alr 714-5·U-4\12
1-.;,.1
THl STWP£11t
8pecNllzing In
walpliptt r-.r!OYll LIHUA1 71WQ.6o:l7 wr 01L1 sHOOCo RAAtl
TOOiTHUl. Strip ln&tal ... tllr.w Pti*1G. edva lo
th• ciuy l.1135176 Me-&31 ·211 t