HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-09-10 - Orange Coast Pilots'Po R rs ·
OCC coach begi,ns
49th year
servtng the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
I
LISTEN UP
Di,ana, baseball are
two sensitive topics
ilomeless -~nistry sent packing from lions Park·
•Parks commission says groups
can no longer feed the needy on
weekends.
By Susan Deemer. Daily-Pilot
COSTA MESA -Homeless residents who
depend on a Santa Ana-based ministry for
their meals over the weekend may go hungry
Ulis Saturday unless a new location is found to
distribute the food.
The city's Parks, Recreation Facilities and
Parkways Commission ruled last week that
the ministry can no longer feed the homeless
in Llons Park because it violates city ordi-
nances.
School
Supplies
hot ticket
in stores
• Favorite items sell out as
Newport-Mesa students
head back to school today.
By Michelle Terwilleger, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -A bit of
advice to studentless households:
Stay· away from the school sup-
plies section of your favorite store
and watch out for those big, yel-
low buses.
Newport-Mesa Unified School
• Distrlct students head back to
school today, much to the relief of
local parents and to the benefit of
retailers.
"She's been to Macy's. She's
been to South Coast Plaza into
Nordstrom,• Vonna Harnmer-
Back to
school
ltl
schmitt said
of her 14-
• year-old
daughter,
Kari.
Hammer-
schm.itt said
she was hap-
py to see her
daughter going back to Corona
del Mar High School today.
. "I'm so glad to know she's
Ot:cupied from 8 in the morning
'to "3 in the afternoon,• she said.
Jim Dow felt the same way
about his two sons returning to
~sign Middle and Newport
Harbor High schools, although it
Will make their family lite more
'hectic.
"The extracurricular sports
ond things start kicking in," Dow
said. "Soccer will keep us busy
on Saturdays. (My wife's) job is to
bus them around now."
For Sherry Hoyt, co-president
of Estancia High School's PTSA,
school starting me8DS more than
sending her kids back.
• SEE SCHOOL PAGE 5
The commission also denied a request by
Narcotics Anonymous to hold weekly Thurs-
day night meetings at the park.
"The city has to realize that hunger does
not stop on the weekend," said Richard
"Sarge" Grisham, 45, a homeless resident
who is upset about the city's decision.
Grisham and other homeless residents
have come to depend on Ule weekend hOO\d·
outs from the ministry h.eaded by Gary Alan
Purkey, as well as the counseling they recelve.
Among the city's concerns are increased
illegal activities in the park.
Also, the Police Department believes more
homeless and needy individuals will be
attrac;ted to the city ;,t food is given out on
weekends.
A report written police by Lt. Alan Kent
also expresses concerns about trash, the smell
from urine and cigarette butts in Llons Park.
There is also concern that these individuals
will bed down after they eat instead of moving
on.
But the committee did grant both groups an
additional two weekends to hold their meet·
ings until alternative solutions can ~ found.
Also, the city is actively helping to find
another location for the ministry. to setve its
meals.
About 20 members of the non-denomina-
tional church group known as, Isaiah II: the
Call to Intimacy, have been bringing food to
about 60 homeless and needy people in Llons
Park during the weekends for more than two
• SEE HOMELESS PAGE 5
ago. •1 know the city needs businesses,
but tbef need residents too.• smce its bumble beginnings 24 years
a90-when Jngard.ia Bros., started as a
small retail produce company -busi·
nf11 bu skyrocketed. Now brothers
Sam and Joe Ingardia supply their
Wbolieiale se6food and produce to large
Jocal restaurants, small diners, dells and
convenience stores.
1be facility is planning to further
~ its warehouse capacity to adja-
cent pOperties.
But tbe Ingardia business may have to
grapPle with neighbors who say they me
tmmented by the foul odon and noisy
~loading trucks. .
• SEE GROCERY PAGE 5
Homeless
Vietnam
veteran
Richard
"Sarge'"
Grisham is
upset that local
food shelters .
are no longer
permitted to
deliver food to
Lions Park on
the weekends.
BRIAN POBUOA
I DAILY PILOT
Newport Coast
annexation
closer to reality
• City officials consider the takeover
of Irvine Co. land as well as Bonita
Village parcel in Irvine.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Datly Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -U the city ends up
annexing Newport Coast -an idea whose
time has nearly come -it will likely get a 51 °10
cut of what the county currently collects in
property taxes from the pricey area.
City staff members have negotiate~ tenta-
tive agreements to take over the Irvine Co
land from county offioals. The City Council
Monday heard a report on the agreements dur-
ing a special meeting on oty goals. They'll
deade whether to put those contracts in wnt •
ing at their next meeting, Sept. 22.
At Monday's meeting, council members also
gave a nod to pro-
ceeding with taking
over a piece of Irvine
land known as Bonita
Vulage. The land
swap will align the
Irvine-Newport
boundary with the
San Joaquin Hills toll
road.
"It still looks
like we will not
be in the red. "
-PEGGY DUCEY
Major terms of the preliminary agreements
for Newport Coast include:
The county now takes 6% of the total prop-
erty taxes m the area. U the annexation goes
through, the city will get 51 % of that 6%, and
the rest will go to the county. For that money,
the city will take care of road maintenance, law
enforcement, planning and bwlding services .
and other local government tSsues. The county
will maintain the area's three regional parks.
• The county will hand over 100% of the
library district funds, which is 1.8% of the total
property taxes.
• The city will take over the Newport Coast
fire station -designed and paid for by The
Irvine Co., now staffed by the county. The
county currently uses 13% of the area's proper-
ty taxes to run the station, and the city hasn't
finished negotiating for its portion
The drafted agreements mean oty staff
members can start figuring out whether the
annexation will benefit the city finanaally •Jt
still loojs like we will not be in the red," ASSlS·
tant City Manager Peggy Ducey s&d, "but a
final financial analysis still needs to be done.•
A host of other issues must still be worked
• SEE ANNEX PAGE 5
School board p~s budge~;
settles intQ refurbished digs
• On paper, district shows
it will spend $3.81 million
more than it takes in, but
official said the deficit is
actµally only $1 .~ million.
• IDll'ml NOl'a: Do you~ Of SOf'MOOe
you know haw 1 llndmlftc ~or "'"'-'-Y coming -.1 If so, we'd llce
to lndude It In cu ~ tldlon.
...... call the lnfonMtlon Into the ~Hotline, "'2-tOl6. fu It to "'6-
4170, °' m11ll It to Oty Edit« Iris '1bkoi,
JlOW. Bay St.. Cost.II Mesa, C..llf. 92627.
You mllY •ho send photogtllPhs. but
please be sure to Include • self. addressed Sblmped envek>pe ff yo4/d
Ilk• It ret\M'ned.
DEATIIS
Most recent deaths as reported
to the Orange County Recorder's
Office.
COSTA MESA
• Susan L. Brockway, 46, on
Aug.8
• Sushila Gupta, 82, on Aug.
16
• Bentley M . Harris, 74, on
Aug.9
• Clifford F. Perldm, 84, on
Aug.9
• Geraldine E. Edwards, 74, on
Aug. 15
• Emily K. Mathews, intant, on
Aug. 13
• Thomas M. North, 41, on
Aug. 16
• Frances J . Martin, 62, on
Aug. 13
• VU'gil F. Rose, 88, on Aug. 8
• Ruth H. Donoghue, 74r-on
Aug. 16
•Mary P. Galitzen, 87, on Aug.
18
• Ana L. Rodriguez, 67, on
Aug. 20
• Sharon L. Mamon, 62, on
Aug. 20
•Joan D. McDonough, 75, on
Aug. 19
NEWPORT BEAot
• David R. Rash, 50, on Aug. 5
• James W. Allen, 59, on Aug.
13
•Nancy L. Kiger, 60, on Aug. 12
• Miriam 0 . Martin, 72, on
Aug. 11
11
18
• Gracia K. Linden, 80, on Aug.
• Karl H. Kemp, 75, on Aug. 12
•Vita M. Olivo, 90, on Aug. 17
•Thelma Henner, 95, on Aug.
• Vern R. Luce, 43, on Aug. 12
• Maria Becker, 56, on Aug. 18
• Elizabeth D. Beza, 97, on
Aug.18
DUI ARRESTS
The following people were
arrested recently on suspicion of
driving under the influence.
These people have only been
arrested on suspicion of a crime,
and, as with all such crtmes, they
are innocent until proven guilty.
NEWPORT BEACH
Manuel Rodriguez, 29, of Gar-
den Grove
Gregory S. Johnson, 39, of
Orange
Suzanne Pike, 34, of Santa Ana
Kellie Downey, 30, of Laguna
Beach
COSTA MESA
Laurie R. Garnett, 41, of Costa
Mesa
Nikolas K. Vigil, 19, of Costa
Mesa
Martin R. Dominguez, 31, of
Costa Mesa
David D. Graves, 26, of Costa
Mesa
John J. Frid.rich, 46, of Costa
Mesa
Terry L. Carson, 52, of Cerritos
Mary E. Scott, 31, of Irvine
Daniel P. Barrett, 41. of New-
port Beach
John S. Santo, 56, ot Newport
Beach
Kelly M. Cheney, 21, ot
Orange
Norma E. Borja, 22, of Redon-
do Beach
Genaro B. Rubio, 30, ot Santa
Ana
Mo.t recent ~ u
repartied to tbe Orange ~
Recorder's omce. .
COS1AMESA
· • Ronald W. Dedmon Jr. and
Helen C. Uang, manied on July
13 in Laguna Beech
• Cory J. Prilch and PKMbeth
A. CbrisUanten. manied on July
12 in Costa Mesa
• John IC. West an4 Jamila S.
Harm, married on July \8 iii SD·
ta.Ana
• Juvenal Ocegueda and Juba
_Madariaga, married OD July 18 In
Santa Ana
• Gregg M. Perrah and Julie i
M. Lynch. married on July 19 in I
Newport Beach l
• David N. Stevens and Juarita j
R. Shinn, married on July 21 in i
Santa Ana i
• Abraham Meza and Mari.a D. I
Rivera. manied on 1uly 21 in San-I
ta Ana I
• Orlando Mendizabel and I
Marla D. Moreno, married on i
July 21 in Santa Ana !
NEWPORT BEAot
• John J. Cartelli and Jill B.
Fuller, married on July 11 in
Newport Beach
! ! l ! I I
• Barry c . Irvine ~ I
D. Janes, married on JU'iierin .
1 Newport Beach .
• Scott D. Miracle and Gina b.,.
Wmger, married on July 12 in
1\vo Harbors
• Behn.am Saebi and Shabnam j
Sarhangpour, married on July 17 1
in Santa Ana • '1
• Charles G. Phillips and
1 Michaela Kaluzova, married on
July 21 in Santa Ana I
• Daniel L. Murrav/.fr. and I
Karen S. Paulitschek., &ra.rried on i
July 19 in Santa Ana j
• Christopher J. Seiber and j
Joanne M . Nielsen, married on 1
July 19 in Stanford j
I
REAL ESTATE SALES i i
Recent real estate sales as I
reported by the Continental I
Lawyers Title Co. in Santa Ana. 1 (OST~ MESA I
160 E. 22nd St. I
$232,500 !
678 Senate St. I
$171,000 !
1785 Capetown Circle I
$230,000 i
2440 Duke Place
$216,500
1111 S. Coast Drive
$117,000
1743 Iowa St.
$235,000
! !
! i
I i i ! :
3050 Kittendale Bay
$139,000
100 Aspen Lane
$166,000
NEWPORT BEAot
2221 Arbutus St.
$515,000
519 VlSta Flora
$335,000
I Man arrested Mier threatening to··:
lj11mp from hi~Way oyerpasS
i • All lanes of Costa Mesa police to close the road for more northbound freeway on-ramp, exact same spot and threatenOO:
1934 Port Locblelgh Place
$605,000
I than an hour. said Lt. Al Kent said. to jump before police neqotiatorsl Freeway closed for more Authorities said Richard Foster, Poster wu eventually talked managed to talk him down bY.
than an hour. Mo~day's 37, of Costa Mesa, climbed over down from the overpass by police offering him a cigarette. •
. "d t third tt t an 8-foot fence along Newport at about 1:10 a.m . and was arrest-Then, on Aug. 20, Posfe~ mo en was a eiµp : Boulevard at about 11:50 p.m. ed on charges of interfepng with returned to the same utWty line
reported in nine weeks. r and.walked out onto a utility line a police officer, trespassing, overpass and threatened to junu>;: t that spans the freeway between throwing a lighted substance onto but police again talked him down ..
_By_Tl_m_G-·e-nda,--~-.,, -.. p;-'--t --"""'! the Victoria and Bay street over-a road -a cigarette he was Monday night's incident w~
• --r rv passes. smoking -and canying a con-the third time Foster has threat"
COSTA MESA -A man with
a history ol threatening to jump
from an overpus onto the ~
MeM Freeway positioned~
again Monday night, fordnq
The utility line is about 50 feet cealed weapon, a martial arts ened to jump from the same spc>L
above the road. ~wing star he bad in bis pock-in nine weeks and on all thre.
Police, usi.sted by the Callfor-et. Kent said. occasions, police have had tcti
Ilia Highway Patrol. blocked traf· Traffic on the freeway was block traffic ln both ctiredlGal at:
fie in both dhedioal al tbe free. reopene,d a few minutes later. the Costa Mesa Pteeway fot
way at Vktorta Striet ilid the In July, Polter stood in the between one and four boon. • 11 : ~ . " . ~
..... _ ..... _. __ .... ... . . .......... ~------·-· ........... _ .,.._ .. _......,.. __ .--.. ..... .---·-.......
WEDNESDAY, Sf PTEMIER 10, 19'7 •
'J
Baseball or rpi,ana? Those are sensitive topics
MARC MARDI I OAl.Y Pl.OT
:Glenn and DotUe Lewis fought to not bave a sewage pump
statton built next to their Balboa 1sland llome. Their efforts
may have paid off th.ls week at the Qty Council agreed to
explore reworking the e:xistlng pump station on Jade Avenue.
City's Park Avenue
:pump station plans
·may be scratched
• Officials instead consider revamping existing
~acility on Jade Avenue.
:ey Jennifer Armstrong. Daily Pilot
LfITl..E BALBOA ISLAND
·-The bayfront end of Park
Avenue may be spared from
the pile drivers after all.
es and into the bay if we have a
power outfige," Webb said.
After meetings with the Lit-
tle Island Property Owners
Association, city staff members
settled on Park Avenue, which
is three times as wide as Jade.
The association backed that
plan as the least of all evils:
Other plans would've meant
closing Park Avenue for
months.
M y wife was visiting her
lilter in Sacramento
When Princess Di was
killed. She cailed me that night. I
was wat.ching the Angels get
bombed on 1V and reading.
"Do you have the news on?"
she asked.. I thought a little
querulously. .
1 allowed as how I bad the
baseball game on and -as she
well knows -never watch the
late evening news.
•Princess Di was just killed in
a terrible accident in Paris,• my
wife said. "I'll hang up so you can
tum on the news.•
That's when I blew it the first
time.
•rm watching the ball game,•
I told her. "I'll read about Princess
Di in the morning paper."
There was a heavy silence on
the other end. Then I heard her
tum to her sister and say in sepul-
clual tones, as if acknowledging
she had made a dreadful marital
mistake: •He's watching a ball
game and says he'll read about Di
tomorrow." Her sister said some-
thing I couldn't hear in a clearly
incredulous tone. Then my wife
returned to me.
"Don't you care?" she asked.
The Angels were mounting a
mild rally. "Of course I care," I
told her. "I care about all the peo-
ple who were killed in auto acci-
dents tonight."
It was not the politically correct
thing to say.
She said, quite stiffly, "Well, I
really care, and I don't want to
talk to you any more. I'm going
back to the news."
It didn't get any better when
joseph n.
bell
she came home. When we were
alone, she rather elaborately
ignored the subject with me while
immersing herself in multiple
accounts in newspapers and on
television of the arrival of Diana's
body in England, arrangements
for the funeral, and then the
funeral itself at some ungodly
hour in the middle of the night
(the following afternoon she and
my youngest daughter watched it
all over again on tape}. When we
were with other people, it was the
only subject of talk between
women. The men were generally
detached.
When I suggested rather mild-
ly to my wife that this was clearly
a male-female phenomenon in
which the female psyche was
much more deeply engaged, she
told me she had run into sensitive
men at work who felt very much
the way she did. She lingered
unnecessarily on the word "sensi-
tive."
About as close as we came to a
meeting of mind.5 was on Friday
when -ever the risk-taker -I
suggtilt.ed she read a column
written by the Los Angeles Tunes
Paris oo)umnjst, Willi.am Pfaff. It
wu, l thought, a rather even-
handed assessment of the quite
remarJcable worldwide reaction to
Diana's death. My wife read it
and said, "Under other circum-
stances, I might agree intellectu-
ally with a lot of what he wrote.
But that isn't where I am.•
Exactly. I don't think there are
very many men who would deny
that Diana used her exalted posi-
tion to call attention to pressing
social problems in exemplaty
ways while also using that same
position to enjoy the highest
perks of wealth and privilege.
And I suspect that a great many
women -like most men -
regard Britain's royal family as a
severe pain in the anacluonism
that lived out its usefulness sever-
al centuries ago and increasingly
spawns vapid and ineffectual
men like the one Diana married.
The difference is insensitive
males like me allowed their
bemusement, bordering on con·
temgt, toward the monarchy to
considerably reduce their interest
in Diana while she was living, an
attitude that probably carried
over when she died. And women,
on the other hand, from the
beginning were emotionally cap-
tivated by this well-born woman
-not a •commoner" -who
crashed the royal family and m
the process of trying to make a
positive difference in the world
also exposed the decadence of
British royalty.
at a glance
None of this is said with any
lack of respect for Diana u a per·
son or a positive force In ber
world. Only with a great sense d
wondenneol a.t the depth and
breadth of emotion.al react:\Qp to
her death -especially tn.fubtrast
. to the much JDQre subdued reac•
lion to the death a few days later
of Mother Teresa.
I read this colwnn to my in-
house shrink. Dr. Joseph Purscb,
in our back yard over the week-
end. He wa.s a little more cautious
than usual about reacting
because the women in our group
had just explained, with consider-
able acerbity, that Di bad two
basic appeals to women: first as a
D\Qlher, and second as an outsider
who refused to play by the stuffy ·
rules of royalty and went her own
way mstead.
Pursch put it this way: •All of
us are flawed, meaning Jiu.man.
We differ only in degree and how
well we cope. We've always
resented copers like the British
royal family who perpetually
keep a stiff upper lip. Then along
comes Princess Di who, even
though she is beautiful, is one of
us because she is also flawed -a
school dropout, insecure, buleinic
and a poor judge of lovers. So
when she ·prevails over people we
hate and envy, she makes us not
only as good as them but even
better.·
On the way out, he patted me
on the shoulder and said, •rught
on.• My wife isn't in that place
yet. but this, too, will pass.
I
• JOSEPff N. BEU.'S column appears
every Wednesday.
Residents who live just feet
away from the proposed site of
a new sewage pump station
caught a break in their fight
against the project Monday,
. when City Council members
•agreed to explore reworking
~the existing station at Jade
:Avenue.
"This site allows construc-
tion to be 10 feet farther from
residents," Webb said. "We
feel that this is the best loca-
tion."
Progress on city goals weighed by council
. Public Works Director Don
: Webb suggested replacing the
·SO-year-old system at a cost of
· $1.6 million.
Under his plan, crews would
:work for 8 112 months to
:increase the capacity from
· 1,500 gallons to 41 ,000 gallons.
: Maintenance vehicles have
: a tough time getting to the cur-
:rent station at the end of the
;20-foot-wide Jade, and the sys-
• tem needs much greater capac-
: ity to hold wastewater in case
:ot a power outage, Webb said.
: City staff looked into putting
:the new 41,000-gallon system
•in the same spot as the current
:one, be said, but that idea
: pumped up costs to more than
: $2 million.
: •niere's a potential for ~e
;wastewater backing into hous-
FINE CARPETS
AND CUSTOM
AREA RUGS
SINCE 1866 I
HEMPHILL 'S·
·RUGS & CARPETS
'Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224
• 230 East 17th St Costa Mesa
But island resident Dottie
Lewis, facing the Jlrospect of a
sewage pump station in front of
her longtime baytront home,
collected 7 5 signatures on a
petition opposing the project.
"This is a very big pwnping
station for a very small commu-
nity,• said Terry Lewis, Dottie's
son.
Council members, in the
end, moved toward accommo-
dating such concerns and vot-
ed to ~d the next 45 days
investigating putting the same
size station in the same location
with backup generators to use
in case of a power failure.
"It's going to be difficult to
do,· City Manager Kevin Mur-
phy said. "It's an alley versus a
60-foot street."
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -City
Council members Monday
reviewed their progress in nine
priority a reas, wading through
a weighty list of topics before
the regular council meeting.
Here is a rundown of each of
the broad issue areas and the
specific progress made in the
last three months:
• AIRPORT: City officials
have continued supporting the
county's plan to make the El
Toro Marine base a commercial
airport and have been rallying
s upport from other cities. A
city-hired team of ~onsultants is
working to build pro-airport
support in the business commu-
nity and to get more pro-airport
coverage in local newspapers.
The Long Beach
Coin iJ Collectih/eJ Expo
September 11-14, 1997
I ( ) '" ' B I \ ( I I ( ( ) ' \ I '\, I I ( '' ( I ' I I I\
• ECONOMIC DEVELOP-
MENT: City committees have
embarked on a long-term plan-
ning process to build out New-
port Center, including an
expansion of the Four Seasons
Hotel. Plans for upgrading the
John Wayne Airport area may
be on the horizon, and a park-
ing management plan is under-
way as part of a Balboa Penin-
sula revitalization.
• EMPLOYEE RELATIONS:
The city finally struck a deal
with rank-and-file police offi-
cers after nearly two years of
tense negotiations. Officials
also drafted contracts with city
employees' groups.
• FISCAL FORECASTING:
Staff members are now finaliz-
ing long-term financial projec-
tions and reviewing the report
with City Manager Kevin Mur-
phy. They'll next present the
predictions to the council
finance committee.
• CRIME PREVENTION:
The Police Department's new
crime prevention specialist is
meeting with other cities' offi-
cers and continuing he r train-
ing. She is looking into present-
ing crime prevention programs
on local TV and is organizing
Neighborhood Watch programs
throughout the city.
• NEWPORT COAST AN-
NEXATION: The council will
consider agreements with the
county on how to split up the
area's property taxes if annexa-
tion comes to pass. Staff mem-
bers will continue to meet with
homeowner associations in the
area in question, which lies
south of Corona del Mar, to
address residents' concerns.
• TIDELAND ADMINIS-
TRATION: Officials are now
studying all tidelands within
city limits, categorizing them
by ownership -federal, state,
county. city or private. They'll
eventually hire a consultant to
prepare a report and map of all
city tidelands.
•WATER SERVICE DELIV-
ERY: The city is finishing up a
water master plan as well as a
massive project to tap into the
groundwater supply under
Fountain Valley.
• UPPER NEWPORT BAY:
Local officials lobbied legisla-
tors for months, ending up with
$2 million from the state and $1
million from U.S. government
toward the long-awaited bay
dredging. Also, staff members
are working on an agreement
they hope will mean the Irvine
Ranch Water District won't
dump reclaimed water into the
bay for years to come.
....
t' ·,.,-.. ~,,~--. . . ·. : .. · .. -'" .. -. ~
ADD lECTUltl
1be Metro Pointe s.m.. &
Noble hOltl a tree talk called A
Non-Drug App.roach for Attention
Defidt Disorder with Michael Un·
den at 7 p.m. at 901 B South Coa5t
Drive, Costa "Mesa. Por more
information. call .CU-0226.
SELf EmEM TALK
The Paahion Island Barnes &
Noble hosts a free talk c.alled Car-
ing for a Woman's Body: Effects of
High Self Bsteem at 7 p.m. at 953
Newport Center Drive, Newport
Beach. for more information. c:al1
75~0982.
TEAotERS ASSOOATION
The California Retired Teach-
ers Association Harbor Division
No. 77 hosts a free luncheon at
12:15 p.m. at Harper Conununity
Center, 425 E. 18th St., Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
968-8253 or 549-0229.
CANCER DISCUSSION
Hoag Cancer Center hosts a
free educational presentation
about Colorectal Cancer: Who
Gets It and How You Find It? from
7 to 9 p.m. at the center 4000 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
For more information, call 800-
514-4624.
CPR ClASS
Fitness Concepts, Inc. offers a
CPR class from 6 to 10 p.m. for
heartsaver and healthcare
provider levels at Hoag Health
Center, 1170 Baker St..-Costa
Mesa. The cost is $27. For reser-
vations, call 631-3623.
BREAKFAST FORUM
The Inside Edge Foundation
for Education hosts a breakfast
fonun from 6:30 to 8:30 a.m. at
Scott's Restaurant, 3300 Bristol
St., Costa Mesa. The topic is
Understanding Contemporary
Art. The cost is $20 for first-time
guests and $35 for all others. For
reservations, call 460-4242.
CRIBBAGE CLUB
The Newport Beach Cribbage
Club hosts its annual barbecue
and mini-tournament at 5 p .m. at
the Oasis Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar. All
skill levels are welcome. For more
information, call 642-0i76.
FREE USDA FOOD.
Free USDA food for low-
income families and seniors of
There will be
ash priza for
the best gnd
sculptonl
Sunday
September 14, 1997
Big Corona
State Beach
1 Oa.m. -3p.m.
INVl5TMINf WORKSHOP
Smith Barney halts a tree
lnvestmeDt ~ for wcaen
called How to Get Started Invest·
tng from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at tbe
Smith Barney office, 660 Newport
Center Drive, Suite 1100, New-
port Beach. For reservations, ~
117-5310.
YOUNG EXEClmVES
The Young Executives of
America hosts a morning recep-
tion with Roger. W. Johnson, for·
mer government administrator
and Portune 500 CEO, from 7 to 9
a.m. at The PaC:ific Club, -4110
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. The cost is $15 for mem-
bers and $25 for non-members. To
RSVP, tall 759-5456.
CAREER NETWORK MEETING
The 1997 Career Network for
those unemployed meets at 7:30
p.m. in the Stewart Lounge at St
Andrew's Presbyterian Chur&,
600 St. Andrews Road, Newport
Beach. The topic is: Strategic
Planning for Your Job Search. For
more information, call 574-2239.
OCCA LUNCHEON
The Orange County Coast
Association hosts a luncheon at
11 :30 a.m. at Newport Harbor
Nautical Museum, 151 E. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach. The
topic is Orange County's Econo-
my: A Never Ending Growth
Cycle? The cost is $20 for associa-
tion members. For more informa-
tion, call 548-4942.
CORPORATE GROWTH
The Association for Corporate
Growth meets at 5:30 p.m . at The
P\JdfiC Club. 4-110 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach. The topic
is IPO -A Business Perspective.
The cost is $20. For reservations,
call 862-9644.
FRIENDS OF OCC LIBRARY
The Friends of OCC Library
presents a lecture called •Salling
in Antarctica Aboard the Polar
Mist" at 7:30 p.m . in the Lido Isle
Clubhouse at Lido Isle Yacht
Club , 701 Via Lido Soud, New-
port Beach. The lecture is free for
Friends members and $5 for non-
The 36' Annul
•l<JNG Of THE SANDCASTLES•
NEWPORT BEACH ·
members. For more information,
call 432-5087.
CAREER WORKSHOP
OCC's Re-Entry Center offers a
free two-part career workshop
from 6 to 7:30'p.m. in room 106 at
the Re-Entry Center at Orange
Coast College, 2701 Fairview Rd ..
Costa Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call 432-5162.
FREE LIBRARY PROGRAM
The Newport Beach central
library offers a free program
called Government Contracts at 7
p.m. in the Friends Meeting Room
at the central library, 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information. call 717-3801.
COMPUTER FRIENDS
Computer Friends meets at
1:15 p.m. at the Oasis Senior Cen-
ter, 800 Marguerite Ave .. Corona
del Mar. The cost is $2 at the door.
For more information, call 556-
8923.
THURSDAY MORNING CLUB
The Thursday Morning Club
meets from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast
Pracntcdby
~..__.,,.,.
CHAMUi Of COMMllfl
Highway, Newport Beach. The
cost is $20 for lunch and enter-
tainment. Reservations are
required by Sept. 7. For reserva-
tions, call 546-2244.
FASHION AND FINANCE
Nordstrom and Smith Barney
host a free presentation Fashion
and Finance at 7 p.m . in the
Designer Salon at Nordstrom
South Coast Plaza. Call Heidi Sam-
mons at 717-5462.
NEW BUSINESS WORKSHOP
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce hosts a
free Business Assistance Work-
shop from 7 :30 to 9 a.m. at the
Chamber office, 1470 Jamboree
Road, Newport Beach. For more
information, call 640-7489.
ESTATE LUNCHEON
Smith Barney Newport Beach
hosts a free luncheon at 11:30
a.m. in the large conference room
at Smith Barney-Fashion Island
660 Newport Centet Drive, New-
QUMTIR HORSE SHOW
1be Orange County Pair &
Bxposition Cente.r hOlts a free
Quarter Hone Show sponsored
by the Pacific Coast Quarter
Hone Show Aoodation from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Equestrian
Center ot the Fairgrounds. For
more information, call 708-3247.
JOB INT'EJMEW WORKSHOP
Orange. Coast College's Re-
Entry Center otters a free 90-
minute workshop called Bffective
Interviewing from noon to 1:30
p.m. in the Re-Entry at OCC, 2701
PaiJview Rd., Costa Mesa. For
more information, call 432-5162.
AIRCHAIR ADVENTURES
The 1997 Ain:hair Adventures
series at Orange Coast College
begins with a film on Hawaii,
•America's Polynesia•, at 7 p.m.
Tickets are $1 in advance and $9
at the door. Season passes are also
available. For more information,
call 432-5880.
WESTERN ROUND-UP
The Newport Harbor Elks
Lodge presents its annual West-
ern Round-Up, a fund-raiser for
disabled children, at 4 p.m.. at
3456 Via Oporto, Newport Beach.
The cost is $20 in advance or $25
at the door. For more information,
call 673-6110.
QUARTER HORSE SHOW
The Orange County Fair 8t
Exposition Center hosts a free
Quarter Horse Show sponsored
by the Pacific Coast Quarter
Horse Show Association froll) 8
a .m. to 5 p.m. in the Equestrian
Center of the Fairgrounds. For
more information. call 708-3247.
TEXAS GUITAR SHOW
The Orange County Fair &
Exposition Center hosts the Texas
Guitar Show sponsored by Texas
Gutlar Sbowl. IDc. fiam 9 a.m. to
6 p.m. ID ;:312 at tbe falr-~. ~~mil$10. ,.. mGre .aa. olll , 108-
3241. .
CDAST ~ Ml1'V
1'M ~ ~ Pair '&
BrpotMion Cena bala the~
~Party spomcnd by Air-
bnulb Adkin. Inc. flan 9 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. in Building 10 at the
faliQroundl. Admltttoo II S6 for
adWta and children 12 Uld under
are tree. For more Information,
call 702·3247.
UPPSt NEWPORT IAY TOUR
Paddle Power of Newport
Beach often a three-hour excur-
sion into the Upper Newport Bay
Ecological R8lelV8 from 9 a.m. to
noon. The day also includes a
--brief kayaking lesron. Space .is
limited and reserv~tions are nec-
essary. The cost is $40 per person.
Single and double kayaks are
available. For more information,
call 675-1215.
FASHION SHOW
Bloomingdale's hosts a free
back-to-school fashion lhow at 2
p.m. at the Fuhion Store, First
Floor, Bloomingdal•• Fashion
Island, 843 Newport Center Dri-
ve, Newport Beach. The show
will feature local high school
cheerleaders. For more informa-
tion, call 729-6600.
BROMEUAD PROGRAM
Sberman Library and Gardens
offers a free program about
Bromeliads at 9:30 p.m. at 2647 E.
Coast Highway, Corona del Mar.
The program is part of the Week-
end Gardener series. For IllllKe
information, call 673-2261.
QUARTER HORSE SHOW
The Orange County Fair &
Exposition Center hosts a free
Quarter Horse Show sponsored
by the Pacific Coast Quarter
Horse Show Association from. 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Equestrian
Center of the Fairgrounds. For
more information, call 708-3247.
TEXAS GUITAR SHOW
The Orange County Fair &
Exposition Center hosts the Texas
Guitar Show sponsored by Tex.as
Guitar Shows, Inc. from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m . in Building 12 at the Fair-
grounds. The admission is $10.
For more information. call 7Q8-
3247.
~~///~: ... ~~
~~
• •
ORANG ollEGE
• ON T~EiR . NIVERSARY
Your photo ~re• f'\Aa YOUlt MESSAGE IH THE OFFICIAL
50TH AHHIVUSAlY ICIEPSAICE EDITIOHI
___...@ __
Actual size 4 inches x 2 inches
A Name/Year of Graduation
B YourM~
Name
Address
PUIUSl•eG
5m'IMIDM4tt
al5eh 1H1H1
. DAl1 Pl.OT.
ALSO AVNLAILI OM
THI O.C.C. CAWUS.
'Tl RACE' FOR~ CURE
1 The Susan G. Korn.en Breast
•Cancer Foundation is looking for
·;t:l:Zri-=° ~ ~ =R.c. for tb8 CUre a stagger-
ux:eea Musldam, voc.alilts,
t and otban are asked to ..... th* dine to one ot Calif or. "ma .. mg-. SK nm/walks. The
frvmt allo needs ~ with
tpre-race events and r¥e day
-activities. It tak• more than 1,200
""ohmteert to operate the Newport
Beach event at Fashion Island. U
you'd like to help with the Sept. 27
Saturday Expo or the Sept 28
raoe, call 224-0290 and volunteer.
AlS ASSOOATION ORANGE . touNTY CHAPTER
The Amyotrophic Lateral Sele-
~ Assod.ation. Orange County
Chapter, needs many volunteers.
For information, call the chapter
office at 375-1922.
,\LZHEIMER'S ASSOOATION OF
ORANGE COUNTY
The Alzheimer's Association of
Orange County needs volunteers
• 1\:>r either of two services -
~helpline• assistants at the chap-
ter office, or support group lead-
erslco-leadeB in the community.
Helpline training sessions begin
Aug. 19 and support group leader
training sessions begin Aug. 21.
The day-long trainings are free
and include a light lunch. To reg-
ister, call 283-1111 as soon as pos-
sible.
AMERICAN CANaR SOOETY
The Orange County Region of
-the American Cancer Society is
'-seeking office volunteers. Also,
· tolunteers are being sought to
"answer calls for the unit's Helpline
·lnfoCenter. For information on
. volunteer opportunities, call Jane ,
Tackett at 261-9446.
AMERICAN CANaR SOOETY
. ANGELS ON WHEELS
· . Volunteer drivers from New-
• part Beach and Costa Mesa can
·help cancer patients get to and
from their medical treatments in
·Orange County. Volunteers use
-1betr own cars or the Society's
donated van to really make a dif-
ference in someone's recovery.
Patients are able to get in and out
of ~des themselves. Volunteers
uu~.-~ at least 25 years old with
a valid driver's license. Call 261-
:0«6 to become an Angel on
Wheels.
· Licensed P sychologist
"Will meet in your home or office.
Mott intmrance accepted.
. Lawrence A. Ho•ard Ph.D.
• LI PSTl5006 7 l 4-ISM70 I -
HOMELESS
CONTINUED FROM 1
years. After being told they could
no JOoger serve food in tbe park.
dWrch gmup memben obtained
permits to hold pJcniCI, but they
were again told it was a violation
of dty oJ'dinAnces.
Other local nqnprofit groups -
such as the Someone Cares Soup
Kitchen or· Save Our Selves -
tba-i serve food to the needy and
bomeless ue doled on weekend.I
so Purkey'a m1nktry wanted to fill
that !fap_.
• (Purtrey) is a good penon,"
Grisham said. •He tirings us
be41thy food and talks with peo-
GROCERY
CONlJNUED FROM 1
The city bas already given the
company a list of noise reduction
suggestions, including no
whistling, singing, throwing pallets
or dropping crates.Joe Ingardia.
co-owner of Ingardia Bros., said
while he admits there is some noise
and smell, it is not as excessive as
neighbors claim.
Ingardia has even ~ered to buy
some of the homes as a good will
gesture and to quell neighbor's
complaints. He rents one of the
homes he bought to employees.
"We own one home back there
SCHOOL
CONTINUED FROM 1
·we have a dance phmned on
Sept. 26, • she said •That's just a
start. I've been very busy the past
few weeks.• And local stores say
their school supplies are mobbed
by back-to-school shoppers.
"Everybody comes in the first
couple days of school• said Jeny.
Abraschinsky, operations manager
at Kmart in Costa Mesa. "They go
·in and get all their little lists. Every-
body has to get everything at the
same time."
Thoy Jackson, store manager at
Office Depot in ~ Mesa, said
sales were going through the roof,
but the store managed to keep
everyt,bing stocked except one
item: "Protractors. ·One of the
basi • cs.
29500 complete
. Call Toll Free
888-271-4567
Don't Oday, Avoid Probate!
David Pawlowski
Attorney at Law
pa. and lft'f'I for them.• ~·s p~ for being
~ be ~ ~ thei'e.; It's not only ~ to
~ at tbe job center or movmg feed tb.oM who are huogry, be
tumlture, Grisham said there are explained. but to build reJation·
otbln wbo have young childreD ships with lhe homeless that
or are not able to land work. might enable them to get off the
•vou don't take someone's streets.
foOd away ftom people who need ·we build relatfonih'P' With
it,• Grtsbam laid. •1 fought for people to move them through
th.ls cowitry. As a Vietnam veter-whatever is keeping them from liv-
an we have rights to have some-ing their life to the fullest,• he saM:1.
thing to eat.• Grisham said the dty, by deny-
"'il the~ministry is unable to find ing a pennit to the ministry to
a nW10cation by this weekend serve food, will only make mat-
they plan to buy gift certifieates ters worse If the min1ltry is unable
for McDonald's or another fast to find another location.
food retrtawant so that the needy •0o they want the homelea to
will not go hungry for even one st.and in front of the markets and
day panhandle because that is what is . . t h • h --·..a "The But Isa1ah D director Mark Fer-gomg o appen, e -.w.
rel said that would defeat half the I city is taking away our food.•
and are trying to buy another one,•
Ingardla said. •Tuey coinpla.ined
-so we bought it.•
Tom Schaefer, a neighbor who
is negotiating to sell his home to
Ingardia, said he just gave up the
fight.
"We are selling the house
because I am tired of this stuff,• he
said.
•we have no choice.•
Other residents, however, said
moving would create a hardship.
City officials acknowledge that
a noise and odor problem exists at
the produce company, but a study
conducted July 3 shows the facility
doesn't exceed the city's noise orcli-
nance standards. But that dbesn't
mean those levels are not disrup-
tive to residents, city officials cau-
tioned. .
"Singl~-event noise levels, such
as those generated by .a truck pass,
a pallet drop, a whistle, etc., were
clearly audible,· the study report-
' eel.
The repoJil--Ollls for replacing a
brick wall that separates neighbon
from the business with a sound-
absorbing noise barrier. But the
city has yet to order Ingardia to
make such changes.
Other suggestions were to
install noise-absorbing materials
such as leaded vinyl curtains in the
loading dock and warehouse area.
Planning Manager Perry Valan-
tine said the city wants Ingardia
Bros. to have a chance to address
these issues before allowing them
to further expand.
We Have 1be Most
Taps on Record In
Orange County!
• 46 Import Beers
• 41 Micro Brewen
We feature over ~ single-malt l!c
blended Scotch Wh.lskeys as well
as many top-of-the-tine
bourbons, tequilas and brandJes.
llMRY ,, llARKY'S
GOAT HILL TAVERN
1 8~0 Newport Blvd.
Newport at Harbor
Costa Mesa
(714) 548-8428 ••• CARDS A
Beautify Your Yard!
~ia-are
unmatched.
~wt>tolll
take care of all .
your landscape
and masonry
rw.ds .
• Land8cape
Dctltgn
• Slone-A-ork.
PatJoe& BBQ&
• Wateriillls.. .
Pool &Sp.
• SprtnJda
~C'IU
• l.ud.8ctipc
l..lgllt1nfl
.
• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. 1997 •
ANNEX
CONTINUED FROM 1
out before the annexation is
complete, including whether
the Irvine Ranch Water District
wtl,l continue serving the area
and whelher the city takes
over the area in one chunk or
piecemeal as each rubdivision
is built.
If Newport Coast does
become part of Newport
Beach, it will be the city's 92nd
annexation, City Manager
Kevin Murphy said .
M the actual annexation
nears, the city's current resi-
dents are getting a httle
uneasy, especially in Corona
del Mar, which bOrders the
possible new land. They worry
the move coUJd make ~ewport
too big an.a · wonder whether
it's worth the trouble.
·we need to make sure that
all the information gets out
there,• said Councilman Den-
nis O'Neil, who represents
Corona del Mar.
Coundlman John Hedges
urged bis council colleagues to
scrutinize the annexation pro-
ceedings and pick through
every part of the agreements
and contracts involved.
•tt's important that the
elected officials in this city be
very, very close to these nego-
tiations,• he said. •This is
where we have to watch what
~NCE SABATINO'S 1864
Restaurant & Lido Shipyard Sausage Co.
FLAVORFUL & DELICIOUS L UNCHES
DINNER •S UNDAY BRUNCH
Unique wiM room & dining rooms availablt! for group
busiMss muti11gs and privatt fwtctions
CATERING FOR ALL EVENTS
FUD aoa.-et Italian cooklng including fish
apedels mad many'homemacle favorita
Classified ads work for you!
THE Daily Pilot
Cl.is~1f1Pd Commwuty Markt•tpl.ict-
1997
11th Annual Harbor Heritage Run
RUN NEWPORT! 51 FEA1URE RACE • II FUN RUN/ WALi
Kids' Klasslc Race and Free Fitness Fair
• ... (' ... . ~ .
SAT.URDAY
OCTOBER 4, 1991
Newport Harbor High SchOol
16th St & Irvine Ave., Newport Beach
·. EYE·Ol'ENER
Jn 61 years as a playffr, and coach.
Paul Briggs has never missed a~· • •
•It's not simply a matter of years
in the profession that puts Briggs
in a category of hiS own, rather,
it's the conquests and honors ,
that came with it which clearly ·
define him as a 'One of a Kind.'
By Jim c.mett. Special to the O.lly Pilot
F or 46 years, his pregame
routine has reillAined the same.
The 77-year-old Orange Coast
College defensive line coach
awakens on football game days
with butterflies in his gut. He spends
mornings going over the defensive
game plan and reviews films.
When the team is playing at home,
he arrives at the stadium three bows
before kickoff and meets with coaches
and players. About 90 minutes before
the game, he goes off by himself, takes
a walk, then saunters up to the top of
the stadium bleachers to enjoy a few
moments of solitude.
"I look out at the goal posts and
consider how lucky I am," he says.
•Then I look up at the sky and say to
the Good Lord. 'Thanks for another
one.'"
Now entering his 49th season as a
coach, Paul Briggs has gone through
that ritual more than 500 times. He's
looking forward to the 1997 gridirpn
campaign -bis 49th -and plans to
continue on il1to the 1996 season, his
50th. If bis health remains sound, be
may go beyond that.
Briggs' 49th campaign comes at the
opening of OCC's year-and-a-half-long
50th anniversary celebration. Next fall
when Briggs savors "Season so,• OCC
will commemorate the 50th anniversary
of its first classes.
"The college and I, we're products
of the same era," he said.
Briggs unapologetically lists four
principles that have guided his life for
the past five decades. He strives to be:
1. the best American he can be;
2. the best husband and father
imaginable; 3. the best teacher and
coach conceivable; and, 4 . the best
possible respecter of his creator.
"I've been blessed," he said. "For 49
seasons I've been able to coach a game
that I love, and work with thousands of
wonderful young men. If the Good Lord
allows, I plan to be back next season
celebrating my 50th year on the
sidelines."
AC'~ player and coach, this is Briggs'
.:Jt>lst season in the sport. And here
is an astounding stat that boggles the
mind.
In fact, it probably can't be matched
by any other person in the history of the
sport. In 61 years, as a player and coach,
he bas never missed a single practice.
Allow that to sink in for a moment.
His teams have been involved in
countless thousands of practice sessions,
and he has never missed one.
That amazing record was placed in
severe jeopardy three years ago. ~ a
74-year-old OCC assistant, he was
clipped on the sideline by a Mt. San
Antonio College cornerback charging
full-speed with an intercepted OCC
pass. Briggs had turned his back on the
play -it was a third-and-long situation
and he was getting his punt team ready
to take the field as he was coaching
special teams for the Pirates thAt seuon.
"I wasn't prepared for the "
interception," he said. "I was right on
the sideline. The guy came up behind
me and clobbered me. He broke three
bones in my ankle.•
· That was Saturday night. Monday
afternoon he wu out on the practice
field.
•My wUe of 52 years, Sally, informed
me Monday morning, 'Paul, you're not
going to practice this afternooo. You're
tn no shape to be there wtth thAt cut on your ankle, I.
•The bell I'm not,• Briggs bellow.cl.
•1 haven't mfned a practice lD my entire
career, end I'm not ltarting today.•
...
He can wind up and unleash a
fusillade of creative utterances (but not
CW'SeS ••• be never uses profanities on the
sidelines), each staccato phrase
escalating above its predecessor, and
ending in ear-shattering crescendo,
better than anyone in the business.
With Briggs on the field, one can sit
in a closed press box in a noisy stadium
and hear his distinctive .. Humpta dittie,
baby I" (It's a phrase of exhortation,
without exact translation) above the
crowd, seeping through the cracks in
the door and window jams.
"The Briggsian larynx must be the
eighth wonder of the world," mused a
Bakersfield columnist in 1970.
1\venty-seven years later it still amazes.
Briggs, a 6-5, 282-pound two-way
starter for the Detroit Uons, spent 37
years as a head football coach at the
high school level, racking up an
incredible 244-99-12 record for a .711
winning percentage .
He's beginning his 12th season on
the OCC staff as Workman's assistant.
In his dozen years at Orange Coast, he
bas coached the running backs, special
teams and defensive line.
•1 do whatever Bill wants me to do,"
he said. •When I was at Bakersfield
High, l looked at my coaching staff each
season and made certain that they were
working in their specialties. Then I'd
take whatever was left. I've bad a
chance to coach every aspect of the
game."
He began his coaching career by
spending two years at Rocky Ford High
in Rocky Ford, Colo. He then coached
for two seasons at Natrona County High
in Casper, Wyo. before taking the head
job at Bakersfield ln 1953.
H~e Drillers to 13 CIP Central
on championships, and
captured four CIP titles in a row. He bad
four undefeated teams -in 1958, 63, 64
and 67 -and, at one point, enjoyed a
27..game unbeaten streak.
Nine years ago, Briggs bad a flag
flown over the White House in honor of
bis <40th season in coaching. He's been
Inducted into the California Coaches
Hall ol Pall, into the National Coaches
Hall of Fame, and, in l986, became one
ot tbe first penoha named a Vlnoent T.
Lombardi Poundaticn Olampioo..
He WU honored by bil alma mater,
the UnMnlty of Colorado, by belnO
placed in that imtttution't NauoDal Han
ol. Koaor. Paw Briggs bu 1oftCl footbell for
almOlt u kmg u be Ml bMil alive. •Paul ii a throWback. he's an
ameztng gut,• OCC HMd ~Bill
Workman Nld. •t1e'I a prodUd ol the
19'0s and SOI. He~ tn bud
A~-ODCl9
I pmwt. ..... )-~116
bOuD ~ daj. 365 d8yl,. yar -366
~alilll)year.• ==~ :!,.~:' bODd. •Ki'I got aboUt a mQMan war ltClrs.
-aDd be Wli --°' tbllm Oil the pnd:lm fleld duitl:ig • alYWD 11 IWm '
-bul w. loN hMdDG ... , ... And be
FD••••• om·Gl ib9 la.ld9lt "'*-cm .. ,......
•()ne JldnU18 be CID be ~.a
lr:ld -bill tbi .. bd...., tow
1 .... ,.. HI ION 111111 "'ml_.,. ·~ "= ,,, ... .,._ ~----··· t'. f
...... ten lD loYe wttb tM game at
•rm tbl prodµct o1 a bl'OUn home,
Del 1DJ IDCllD IDOftd UI blto Ul ................ °'
A0t•t n ce IJ. wblil I w 16abl-MY .................. ~~·
......... ~ .. ;> ...... ~.... = ..
MARC MARTIN I DAllY PILOT
Orange Coast College assistant football coach Paul Briggs goes over a game
plan with defensive lineman Marco Munoz prior to the Pirates' scrimmage
with Santa Monica last week; below he's recording the hang Umes on punts.
we lived next to the stadium and not the
mafia headquarters.•
Briggs believes in heroes.
"Everyone has to have a }\ero in life.
It's a must. Mine has always been Notre
Dame football coach Knute Rockne.•
Briggs was 11 when Rockne's plane
went down lD an Iowa cornfield in 1931,
snuffing out the life of a greet moUvator
and brllli4nt football t.adldan.
•1 WU devastated ... but I had a dream.
I dr8amed that the Lord pt.eked Knute
out of the wreckage of the aash an<:{
sa1d. 'Don't worry, Knute, I've got the
num to follow you. Hil name ii Briggs.•• A nogantl Not ii you know Paul
:t':'\Briggs. Uke Rockne ln bit day,
Briggs ii thoroughly devoted to bit
pusion -coaching football
•When I went in foe my flnt beo.d
QOaddng Job lntarvt.w at Enolewood
>figb. SchOOl ln Engl8Wood... Colo., I'd
D8WI' coedMid a qle ~· • he NcaUi WUb ....... ·1 told the
~tendeilt lmlniewtng me that I .
.. gcMng to.,. .. Dlillt Kia* ltoCJr:M.
He ............ at,,..,.,....,. He
..td. • ._cm yau ..._ !"f Clibb. .
~ ....... ..-CIJdeta~· ., Nlll!ldl~---~ . ~-............. ,... ..... .r.a._., ...... ~ ..... , .. ;a• M 1111 iidliDal ID IOUr Oi8" • IWClllllll••ae•t•W'.-•
-PAUL BRIGGS ••
Briggs played four years of high
school football at Grand Junction High
in Grand Junction, Colo. and was
named to the All-State team as a junior
and senior. As a senior he was 21 .
•in those days, you had high school
·eligibility until you were 21," he said.
•1t was a common occurrence. Five of
our 11 starters my senior year were 21. •
He then played a season at Mesa
Junior College (now Mesa State
College) in Grand Junction, and bad
four years of eligibility remaining at the
University of Colorado.
·At that time, you could play a year
of junior college ball and still have four •
years of eligibility available at a
university."
A member of the Navy ROTC at
Colorado, he played freshman and
sophomore football during the 1941
and 42 seasons. He was commissioned
a naval officer in 1943.
•My ROTC commander at Colorado
told me that I could remain at the
university and coach football as part of
my naval assignment,• he said. "l told
him, 'Sir, I'm a naval officer, not a
sideline stomper.' He smiled at me. Four ·
weeks later I was standing on a U.S.
Navy destroyer off New Guinea, being . ·
chased by five Japanese destroyers."
H was involved in every naval • • ~gagem.ent for the remainder of ·
the war from New Guinea to Tokyo. He .
served as ail assistant gunnery officer
and spent the last few months of the war
fighting off Japanese ka.m1k4ze attacks. ·
He earned a Bronze Star and Purple
Heart for radar picke t action off Iwo
Jima and OkinAwa.
His ship was a screening destroyer for
Gen. Douglas MacArthur after the war. . ·
He holds a retired permanent rack of
Commander of the U.S. Naval Reserve.
•1 bad to stay on active duty for a
while after the war was over," Briggs
said. ·1 got back to the University of
Colorado just in time for the 1946
season."
He started for the Buffaloes as a
junior and senior and was named to the ·
All-Big 7 Conference team both seasons.
He was also a UPI All-Amertcan. He · .
played in the East-West Shrine Game of.·,
1948, then was drafted by the Uons.
He was also drafted by the New York
Yankees of the All-American League,
but opted for the NFL.
As a 27-year-old rookie, he went both
ways as tackle, averagip.g 51 minutes
per game. At 6-5, 383, he was one of the ·
bigger players in the league. •
•Actually, there were quite a number:
of big players in the NFL in those days,•
he said. ·we opened with the Chicago Bears and that season they weren't : 1
called the Monsters of the Mldway for
nothing. Their line averaged 275 or so. • ·
•auJldog" 1\uner was 275, and.Neddie• :
Ed Sprinkle wa.s 6-foot-9, 290 poµnda. .
•Today NFL teams may be Co11ectiveiy ·
bigger. But you have to remember that .
we had only 21 men on our rotter, and •
most of us went both ways. Today teams, ·
have 48 on their roster pl\11 a taxi squad. ·
of 1s.· ..
'Driggs, however, doesn't think pb}'lical
J:lsiZe is as important u lt'I cracked up
to be.
•Size isn't that audal. • he says ..
•Stonewall Jaclaon, who wu routtDetr r11
outnumbered and outmatcbed ~ tM ~•
Union Anny, once Mid. 'Big II ~ aDd
potmtlal strength ii wciid9lfu1 ... bUI • .d•
you can't move tt. you ca't Ul9 ttl' ·"'
You',,. got to be able to~ on tbe 'J:
fleld. Speed and qukkr111 w. man I'!
~t· •
·,r1Wbile PMY~D~i iD tM llalt•W.a O'
SbrlMO..~ .......... ._,
Notre 0... Ill I ,,. 9UJll! 0 •ill !.,
................ 11:9ild
--o1111n111 ......... ...., j• 8MGl'50far• I.,., ....... 6'
~~·--A = ..... ~ ...
~·*•·~Ill
' I
I • f
.-
f -
I•
Newport ~Mna O.Uy Pilol
BRIGGS
CONTINUED FROM 6
In 1948.· :iCgnno"E· d edUp()D one \.: we
on lllfl liy andoolli
up pointing-Into the
'"stands,• he recalls. •When we
were going up over the film& the
following week. my coach
informed me that I wa.s fined SO
Ip/ ,mY, Oii~. H•noid,
tbti be(:lc were you, and
rs dq)ng oi#-fherer
.., ~ wfd N1l1• 'As We got our ~ close together, Connors
nim.ed to me and said, 'Paul,
>«here's Sally sitting today!' I
~d, 'Right up there,' and
P.>inle\1 to section of the stands.
Connors was just being friendly,
he pointed and waved.•
After losing the final game of
the 1948 season to Philadelphia,
Briggs returned to his home in
Colorado. The following spring,
be sigµed a record contract with
the Llons that included a healthy
salaly increase. The package
was worth SS, 700. Buf%::'.'9 was the
·1 knew that if I was going to
become a high school coach, I
had to get out of the NFL. There
was a bias among high school
superintendents and principals
against hiring professional
football players as coaches. We
:were considered bad influences
on young men. They thought
we'd teach dirty techniques to
high school athletes.·
A friend got him the interview
with Englewood High in the
spring of '49, but it proved to be
a disaster. A few weeks later,
however, Briggs was called, out
of the blue, by the Rocky Ford
superintendent.
·1 was signed and sea.Jed for
the Detroit Lions for a second
season when I got the call," he
said. •nie· superintendent said,
'You've been recommended to us
and we think you'd ,mdke a good
football coach.' I went to visit
him.
·1 told him about my
conversation with the Englewood
superintendent. He said, 'It's not
what you've done; it's what you
want to do.' He asked me to
coach football, wrestling and
track and field . He also offered
me a $7,000 contract. I grabbed
his ,hand and eagerly shook it. I
said goodbye to the National
Football League."
Briggs left Rocky Ford to
coach at Natrpna County High in
Casper in 1951 and 52. With an
enrollment of 1,600, it was a
Coaching plum. He bad a healthy '
stock of players from which to
choose. -
In 1953, Briggs followed
coaching legend Homer Beatty
to Bakexsfield as the head
football coach. He became only
the third bead man in
Bakersfield history. Beatty later
led Santa Ana College to a
Junior Rose Bowl championship,
and was head coach at L.A.
State.
•r'd bad two successful
seasons at Natrona and really
wasn't looking to move,• he said.
·1 was working for a great
superintendent and principal,
and they were extremely
supportive of my program. We
were winning and I was happy.
"but when Homer announced
he was leaving, Bakersfield
began to look for a split-T coach.
Someone told them about me. I
went to Bakersfield to interview.
The school had a tremendous
football heritage.•
Briggs had never before
visited the "Garden Spot of
the Southern San Joaquin
Volley."
"The only thing I'd heard
about Bakersfield was that if you
tried to drive through town in Ute
summer, you'd blow up your
radiator. When I Visited the
campus I was sold immedlately.
They had •.800 students and six
football teams that each ployed •
nine-game schedule. I was told
that I could hire my eotile stall.
lbls was Utopia!" ·
He left Wyoming With a heavy
heart, but never looked boCk.
•1 never nigretted my ded&lon
to go to Bol<enlleld: I span! 33 woridedul yeon there.•
• His tint seuoo. u a coach of
tl)8 Orlllerl WU ieSI than
llerlil>g. 'Ji.. -logged Its first
loolng -· 4·5. Prlndpal Lei Hedge lold. him. •We don't want
too DWIY IOl!ng YMI'·' Briggs
took the -to .....,. Hla
-iwpo'adod with -lb~=::::-,:: ...
blgll odlaol -_ ...
Son JoequlD v.-. _,., Bllggl ... _ .... _
~·1'' ?,,, ... ...... .,__....aa...,.c 't
CM !Miii ....... ptll'f?Saf tbe_ol __ ,,. ··•'11'•'1 ..... ..
•
Paul Briggs (above, top left) with Bake·rsHeld HJgh ottldals and
Frank GWord 'lower right), a former star tor Bakersfield, and
the University of Southern Calllomia; below, Briggs, a 6-foot-5,
282-pound two-way starter at tackle tor the Detroit Uons ln 1948. ----. -=--= ---
XIIJ.
tJie
For the past
11 years, a small
band of
Bak&sfield
faithful have
ma.de the trek
south to Orange
County to follow
Briggs and
watch Orange
Coast play
football.
Dave Marlon ... "The,
greatest single
afl,around player I
ever coached ... "
But the
greatest player
be ever coached
never made it
beyoad his
sophomore
season.in
college. Tears
still well up in
Briggs' eyes
when he recalls
the exploits of In 1972,
Briggs was named the National
High Sch6ol Football COacb ot
the Year. He received th'e honor
at the 53rd annual Colorado
High School Coaches Association
Clinic in Pueblo. University of
Nebraska coach Bob Devaney,
who just weeks before received
College Coach of the Year
honors, was on hand to
congratulate him.
·we shook hands in front of a
bunch of photographers,· Briggs
said. •Bob's Comhuskers had
beaten Alabama in the Orange
Bowl for the nationa.1
championship. He said to me, 'I
feel proud to shake hands with
the No. l bigh school coach in
the country.' That statement put
me on Qoud Nine.·
Four years later, Briggs was
inducted into the High School
Football Cqa.ches Hall of Fa.me.
He won the Lombardi Award in
1986, his first season at OCC.
Briggs bas CQached several
thousand football players in 37
high school and 11 community
college seasons.
•1 get phone calls all the time
from former players and, I must
say, it really warms my heart. Not
one of them ever calls me. Paul or
Mr. Briggs. I'm still "Coach• to
th~ and some of those guys
are now in their 60sP'
·ne game of football is
something 1 treasure, but it's the
relationships wit4 players over
th.e years that have meant the
ma&t to me. The Lord saw fit to
bless Sally and me with one
child.. our dauQhtet Paula. But he
knew exactly what he was doing.
He probably sold to bimseU,
ibis old man is gonna have
4,000 sons in his W'etime. I'm
going to gtve him a daughter.'•
Briggs sent countless
Bol<enlield playen Into the
college rankl. ~en actually
~de it lo the Pnl\· Those
• players Included Jett Siemon
(Minnesota 'l/Wng•J, Theo eeu
(Plt:taburgh Steelers Md Tampa
Boy llu<X:.,,_,), toule Wright
(Denvw S-J, Willie $impt0n
. (Oekland raldenj, Jorry Totr
(Qenvv-J, =-M=-(W-~J anti w-Mm.. ~-1..Mgue.)
Many--od tl>e
co.chtng ~ •cm. . ....=r-:-... ae..~sc.= .,. ,,..,....,..... ....
am ';~~ .. ...... .....
•
Dave Marion.
-Marion was a prep
All·American who played varsity
football for Briggs from 1957-60.
•He was the greatest single
all-around player I ever
coached,· Briggs said. •tte was
recruited by Bob Devaney in
I 961 when Bob was still at the
University of WyomincriJie
played for two years f0r Dbb,
and Bob told me that he bad
the potential to be the next Jim
Thorpe. He rould do everything.
He was a hallba.ck, fullback,
quarterback, punter and return
specialist.•
As a Wyoming sophomore,
the six-foot, 205·pound Marion
ranked second in the nation in
punting with a 42.9-yard
average, and was sixth in the
nation in punt returns with a
27.1 average. He had a 6.5-yard
rushing average.
Immediately following his
sophomore campaign, Marion
was shot in the neck by a
team.mate in a dormitory
accident. He was rendered a
quadriplegic and confined to a
wheelchair. He died of
comPlications from the accident
10 yean: later at the llge of 30.
Briggs keeps a picture of
Marion in his scrapbook,
ta.ken when he was playing at
Ba.kersfield. It shows Marion
breiiking through tacklers going
for the goal line. Briggs wrote the
following caption underneath the
photo: "This is the way I will
always remember Dave
Marion ... eyes looking ahead to
the {Joal line, with three
1lpponents trying to take him to
the ground I• .
"Dave had the best attitude of
anyone I've ever MnOWllt • Briggs
...said. •As a.Player, there wasn't e.
more ferocious com~tor. After
the a.cddent, he neVt'r got dpwn
on life and be didn't give up. I'll
never f~et one day, after a ,
paitlculal1y bod proctlce, I was
driving aa'oss town and sow
Dave lilting In hll w1-lcbelr ot
a gea ttation not lor from bll
h<>m<!. He hquently Mt-·
I pulled the car lo Ibo cwt> and
got out ID ~ollo.
"ll•ld. -!bot -my -forblm-'Sbeg.-
ye dolnT Tm )Ult~ c-i., ~IN .,....r-1111 Nply. I
IOltl, .......... •Mllll-..,._,,, ....... -.... _ ....... ...... _..... .....
°"" °' r-.O
jook1ng-MY blglM!J than my petty
probleml. If• taugblme • lesson.•
Brlg!JI got wold of Marion'•
death from the former player's
father. He was honored to be
asked to speak at the funeral..
•oaVe had one requQst j\llt
before be died,• Marion's father
told Briggs. •He wants to be
propped up In the cosket fadng
you, and he'd like you to deliver
orur last halftime pep talk before
he en,ten the Kingdom of
Heaven.•
lb.ere were 1,500 people in
the church, and Briggs didn't
disappoint. He delivered one of
bis patented rousing motivational
speeches. The audience
responded with clapping and
hails of ·Amen. "
lllree of his former
Bakeysfield players were killed,
two injured, in the 1960 plane
·crash that took the lives of 22
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo football
players near Toledo, Ohio. Those
players had been the nucleus of
Briggs' first Co..lifomia Central
Section Big Schools
championship team.
·Losing those guys was a
huge tragedy for Bakersfield and
for our high school. I was also
personally grieved by it. It was
an incalculable loss ...
Briggs retired from his
Bakersfield post following
the 1985 season. He and Sally
moved to Santa Ana to be closer
to their daughter and her family.
That's when he received a call
from Workman.
·Bill asked me if I wanted to
keep my hand in coaching. I said
I did. He asked me to work as an
adjunct assistant at OCC. It was
a miracle from heaVen. I told Bill
I'd be happy to help out. ..
Brig'gs has spent more than
500 games on the
sidelines ... whicb cane be a very
hazardous place for someone not
equipped in pads. He's been
injw-ed on three occasions in his
career. The last was bis broken
ankle.
Early in his career, his
Bakersfield dub mel Fresno
High in a rivalry game filled with
emotion.
"During the game, an official
came to our sideline to get the
kicking tee. He hurled it up the
sideline toward another official,
but t turned at just the wrong
momeat and caught it right in
the center of my chest. I went
down like a shot, clutching my
chest. I think everybody in the
stands though Coach Briggs had
suffered a heart attack. I ended
up with a badly bruised sternum,
but I didn't leave the field.~
Several years later, while
playing in a double-decked
Bakersfield College Stadium, he
was hit by a bolt, which bad
been pulled from a seat on the
second deck and chucked to the
field by a fan. It happened in the
final two minutes of the game.
·Tue fan, as I understand it,
had pulled the bolt from a seat
and decided to hit the bass dnun
with it. The band was right
behind us on the sideline.
Instead, the bolt hit me on top of
the head. Blood immediately ·
spurted from my scalp and
flowed down my face. An official
ran over to me and offered to
have me quickly escorted off the
field. J told hlm J was fine. I
wrapped a towel around my
head, then went and got stitches
llfter the game was over. I wasn't
about to leave the field."
Brig{Js' 49th coaching season
officially gets underway Saturday
13 when OCC travels to Cerritos
College.
•vou know, I'm just as anxious
to get this one ilarted as my first
one in 1949, • he said
enthusiastically. "When l park .
my car in the campus lot, &nd
step out between the hedges
onto the practice field each day,
the bells start going off in my
head, the blood begins to swge
through my veins and the hair on
the back. of my neck stands up.
I love what I'm doing.
•My goal is to complete this
s&ason, and the next, giving me
SO years of coaching experience.
I'm not sure if anyone else can
top that. After the '98 season?
Well. I'll Just take them one yea.r
at o time.•
One nigbt recenUy, as be and
Sally were preparing IO foll
uleop, they began to reinlnlsce
obout hll c:oocblng COJeer. ·r Mid. 'Remember, Sally,
wlMlo I took my flnl job u •
-et Rocky Pore! Hlgbl I
......-}'O\l tbot rd spend""'
-50 ,..,. ()(my life u a ___ 1...uy-·1
....,....., tbough 1-1 mwlt
-11aun1111-~ abll.1 .. 'tdllbe~
"'Woll.·· -• -P<ldo =•mr-'llhlMI ,.. .... Lljull .. ... ........ _ ... ... , ,,,_ .. &: I
WEDNESOAY. SEPTEMBER 10, 1997 •
youth soccer
Soccer season
under way with
multiple success-
• • .
• Orange Coast United
/South Coast Roundup -
, Op~ning Day·Results.
ORANGE COAST UNITED
SOCCER CLUB
GOLD LEVEL
•Slammers (Boys·14) 1
Alta Loma AneDal 1
Michael Munoz tabbed the
game.tying goal with the Alta
Loma Arsenal, the No. 1-ranked
Gold team in the age bracket in
the Coast Soccer League. Other
Slammers are Andy Almquist,
Kevin Campos, Josh Cornett,
Kyle Dixon, Diego Figueroa, Sean
Iliff, Ian Kratter, Brett Luchesi,
Spenser McDonalS: David Peel,
Chui Ramirez, Robert Shur,
James Towers, Tyson Wahl and
Ryan Wolfe.
• Upland ·Celtic 2
Slammers (Boys-13) I
A hotly-argued penalty in the
game's final minutes resulted in a
Celtic score that meant the differ -
ence as the Celtic took a 2·1 win.
Jason Cassidy had three shots on
goal for the Slammers and netted
the only goaJ. Adam -Uhl, Eric
McGowan and Sasha Kljestan
each got a pair of shots off, while
Blake Dillion and K.C. Rawlins
lx>th had one. Alex Northridge,
Brian Bauer, Joseph Salinas, Jeff
Reed, Joey Bendetti, Jordan Feld-
man. Tim Iliff and John Rogers
Contributed to the midfield and ·
de fense, while goalkeeper Will
Johnson held off several Upland
attacks.
•Slam.men (Glrls·10) 1
Orange Wlldcats 1
Allison Gibbs notched the lone
Slammers gOal with a hot shot in
front of the goal as the locals
worked out a tie with the Wild-
cats. ~we were a bit nervous and
tentative in our first game today,"
Coach Wa.lid Khoury said. ·we
are capable of playing much bet-
ter and l'm certain we'll show that
as we gain experience.•
Sil.VER LEVEL
• Riptide (Glrls-11) 6
PVSC Breakers 0
Goalies Mackenzie O'Brien
and Katie Doran shut the door on
the Breakers as an offensive
charge led by Kara Jenkins (two
goals) resulted in a 6·0 victory ..
Kelsey Ching, Katy Carter and
Elise · Carroll each turned in a
score, as well. Melissa Swigart,
Shannon Causgrove and Brittany
Martin played strong offensive
games, while the defense was
paced by sweeper Lauren Scurr,
stoppers Leah Gelsinger and
Janella Godoy. Fullbacks Elyse
Avila and Lisa Feucht turned
away the Breakers' offense
throughout the game.
• West Coast Exiles 3
Rush ll (Glrls· 12) I
A slow start limited the Rush Il
as the Exiles went on to a 3-1 win.
However. stellar performances by
-the locals were turned in by
Amanda Wittman, Frankie Kelly
and Delanie Ferguson, as well as
lsabel Montano. Montano played
for injured sweeper Haley Miller.
•Sting (Boys-15, 2
Torrance Blue Ughttng 1
The OCU Sting took its first
game to the wire, but clinched the
win when Brenden Fenno turned
a pass from Andrew Hong into a
goal in the game's final few min·
utes. Brian Henry acco\Ulled for
the first goal on an assist from
Kevin Yaches.
• Slammers (Glrls-13) 2
Torrance 0
The Slammers' midfield, made
up of Elisha Morgan, Lauren
Birchfield, Jennifer Long and TH-
•
cia Orth, dominated its oppo-
nents and managed to shutout
Torrance in a 2-0 win. Alivia ..
Mazura and Lauren Sbeperdson
tallied the Slammers' goals. Hold·
ing Torrance to just a single. shot
on goal was captain Amy Burling·
ham, Cathi Dragna. Nicole John·
son, Kacey Palfreyman and goal-
keeper Arianna Criscione.
BRONZE LEVEL
•Mutiny (Boys·14, 2
Fountain Valley Wollpack 0
The start of the Mutiny's sec-
ond season was successtul with a '
2-0 blanking of the Wolfpack. '
Gabe Schneider accounted for ,
both ol the Mutiny's goals with
assists from fellow striker Joe
Skoby. Goalkeeper Caleb.
Bennudez tallied three spectacu-
lar savei;. Coaches Todd Stewad
and Paul Caicedo singled out Joel
Furman and Tyler Curtis for their
hard play. Andy Newsom, Matt
Heitzmann, Patrick Wood, Bran-
don Powers, Dane Holmes, Geoff
Leech, Brett Kersten and Tucker
Graham also played well.
•Wildcats (Girl.5·14) 1
San Juan Sborebreak 0
With a roster that dwind1ed to '
just 10 players due to injuries, the
locals still prevailed in a tight
game thanks in part to the excel-
lent defense contributed by
Courtney Conwell, Lauren Loe,
Kristen Nahln and Meredith Pot! '
ter. Andrea Gruber nailed the
only goal of the game off an assist
Liz Lord. Keeper Amy Mudd pre-
vailed at the cage, and strong
performances were turned in by
Jana Luebke, Lindsay Thayer
and Aiden Oeeland.
• Hotspurs (Boys-12) 3
Founta.J.d Valley Wolfpack Blue 1
Jenit Thi:tyer scored twice for
the Hotspurs with both assists
coming !Tom Alex Orth. Dominic
Rubino made a perfect header off '
a pass from Suarabh Gupta for a
score, too. The defense was
paced by captain Danny Marin·
Finn, Bryce Novoa. Jordan Sim-·
monds, Cory Azzalino and goalie
Jesse Forsythe. Forward Barrett
Sprowl, Warren Junowich and
Parker Ferguson contributed
offensively.
•San Juan 4, Assa.ult (Boys-11f 2
San Juan beld a 3-0 lead at the '
half and, despite second-half
scores by Mltcb Solks and Gor·
dan Yould, the Assault could nol
muster enough ammunition to
overcome the early deficit. Jack ' , ·
Llcorish, goalkeeper, made a p&ir
of outstanding saves, and Logan
Condon contributed offensively. ••
SOUTH COAST SOCCER"
CLUB
Sil.VER LEVEL
•Heat (Boys-1215
Manhattan Beach Hurricanes 0
Ferocious defense supplied by '
Matt Willis, Steven Thomas, ·
Devon Stephens. Ralph Morgan,
Br\an King, Zach. Powell, Ry,n"
Denman and keeper Louis D~y ·
led to a shutout win. A hat trick -
three goals -were knocked in
by Greg Penine. Jason Millward
and Michael Gar.diner also
chipped in SC'ores for the win.
•Heat (Boys-12, 2
JUSARangenl
First-halt shots by Scott Wade,
Chris Crockett, Charlie Hirst,,'
Danny Krikorlan and Billy LUnd
failed to find the goal and the"
Rangers held a 2-0 lead going'!
into the latter ball of the game.''
Perrine accounted for two goals,~
though, to work out a tie.
The He\.t travel to Mission
Viejo Saturday to face the MVSC
Blue. ••
-By M olly YonJry ~ ..
BRJJ!FS
• Eastbluft' basketball signups Sept. 27 •
CORONA DEL MAR -Ant·
t'OID.e, flrat-eerve sign.ups for tbe
llutblull b<endl ol the Harbor
Area Boys Club'o buketboll
Jeogue ... -Sept. 27 Jrom 10 o.m.-l p.m. •I Ibo 14'dllty ~ .,,.... Doi Clro) -CdM
.-.,:;.;,.,... .; gi-. 3z8 will -
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STARTL
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Sell your extra :
household
Items In
CLASSIFIED '
Call 642-5678
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llyhx
(71 4) 631-6594
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1.I • .,,,. nwnlirr aoJ •? U raD ""' '*' •hh. pnN' llOO'd
lly.Pla•@
(714) 642-5678
By .........
330 WrM Ba_y Suw1
Coi.ta Mf'sa. CA 9'.2627
~1 '\"'1""1 lllild . ., Ba, SI. ....
T1·l.-pho1w 8:30am-5:00pm
\l<Hl(la,-Frid•I\
Wulk-111 8:3'0am-S:OOpm
\Cooda~ -t'..W.1
Pelley .
Rates and deadlines are subjttt to change withour notice. ~
publishtr re~n-es the right to ctru0r, retilaa ify, tt\'~ or reject
any clusified ad"ertilement. Pleai.e reeon any error that may M
in your classified ad ~diattly. The Daily Pilot accepts no
liability for any error in an •clvenii.ement for which it may ~
resporu.ible u.-ept for the cost of the space actualJy occupied by
the f'rror Crtdit can only~ a1Jo,,..ed.for tbt fmt inSt'nion.
-------Deadllne8 -------
Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm Thursday .. Wednesday S:OOpm
Tuesday ......... Monday 5:00pm friday .......... Thursday 5:00pm
Wednesday .... Tuesday 5:00pm Saturday ........... Friday !i:OOpm
® NEWPORT NEWPORT RENTAlS CREDIT 2907 ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMliHT FURNITUltE 6014
-BEACH 1069 CO.AST 2170 WANTED 2726 liiiiiiii~~iiiiii 2920 5530 5530 5530 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiii liii•liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DEBT liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cuatom Bullt corner .&~ MOUt1No SllA ISLAND The Moat on the HOUS• OR APT CONSOLIDATION• * * * * * Driver, E11porlenced well unlt/d reuer. oioioollTueiin 38r 3Ba _ MINT Co•atl Prtvacy and 28R N••D•CHI Cut monthly payment•1--------• Security hlghly skllled driver Thinking of having a All wood construction .
... _ .............................. 111.... Mov .. ln Condition nafk9.. you deHrv• It In Corona del M•r up to 30-50%. Reduce VOLUNTEERS f c 1 E garage sale? VERY VERY nice 11.~ ....... Ftd 4 , W 10% alll Secluded ·lu>eurri orLegun•B-oh ""' ... Flltl F·"'R 1ve usacell plecel $1000/obo. -,_ ___ ...... , -$5 5 000 0 C .. -lnt..,est. Stop coll..,..· ~ or orpora • xec. o· I
.......... __,... -• 71 "'8 lion call•. Avoid bank· N*E*E*D*E.LD aps u me. ...,. eiume CLASS
1111 ,..,.._..ac.1111111, ...-35"4801 gated community. Al C•thv 999-8938 rupt cy FREE • llsllng quallllcallon• IFIED 714-549·1101 .....-.~Mlll .. Ulepl THIE BLUFFS apt. homH feature Reaponalbl• UCI 1tu· conlldentlal help ·--·+--& prevlou1 driving 842•5878 MaUr•••/Boxaprlng
" .....,.. • ._, pntltt1C1, 3Bdrm 2.5bath, Famlly W/D, fridge, garage, dent looklng for NB/ NCCS non-profit, AMERICAN CANCER WE HAVE report to 71 4-648·0981 _R_e_a_I B_e_a_r_d-ed_S_a_n_ta_?_ Oueenalze .. dbl plllow
h•lllllH., dlacrllllHllH room, Bay view. Just alarm & morel Penln1ula room/1hare. llcenied/bonded. DRIVER·,,1 warm, jolly, luv kids top, 2 weeks new. pd ~ •,.., ,...,, ltlltlee. Reduced! Mutt Solll Pay up to $300/mo. 1 .. 00.955.()412 SOCIETY SECURITY FLATBED Carrier. Earn $5K at Xmas. s 1 100. sac. $275.
m ."'-...Walllalls0t H•atlnga & Co. 1BR .... S1280-S1455 l!rlo 714-223.-0101 (TPP) CAL•SCAN ..... JOBS Up 10 $48/k lat year. 800-229-7147 e11t 14e , __ 7,,,,1,..4---::-5_2_2,,,,-o,.....,.7_0_3_ -714-M0-8990 2BR .... $149S-S1850 DISCOVERY p I II ·-M I s I .............. illlllllll" DaBT SHOPS all over a d bene 11• 3yrs Racept NB Law Office ov ng • • ..... .,_.....,_.,lilli-W•tertront HlehrlH NEW= RIDGE CONSOLIDATION. O Q OTA. 1yr. flatbed. FT, phone1, llte comp. Spectacular yet tradl-
llllM• .... •' d!ea." Condo Sec. bldg. COMMERCIAL Cut payment• 10 50%. Pl~C~~fin~~~~;'77 RAN E Clan A COL req. front olc manner & tlonal Thomuvllle
TMa ....,.,., wW IOI 2bd, 2ba. Boat 1pace. 714-7 t.1879 Reduqe or ellmlnate COUNTY Combined Transport. style. SS.hr 76().1400 King bedroom 1ulte. .......,._.,lftlrtiw. •4001q.lt. $249,000. •some apti. mHI REAL ESTATE Interest. Same day ap-________ _. Driver• are ti 1. Solid Cherry wood &
By Owner. 85<>-8881. the O.C. Moderate prov al. Non-prof II, World Cl••• writers, Part·tlme 1·800-937-4407 REC E p TI 0 NI 8 T brass hardware, llor· .... llf ml 11111t "'*'Is Ill 1 rent level. Full·llm• CAL •SCAN Gen Ofc/Erranda age In headboard. 2 ...._.,IMllll,Olf11M111 Credltg•urd of HI•• & public rela-10221 Slater Ste 115 ---------• for busy R.E./Prop. tide cabinets with 3 .. '*"'..,.... 11111 Ill ACREAGE 1125 ·~:i!:'u~~mel••"t BUSJ•n!rs OF'l:!ICE .... America. tlon1 ••rvlcea. No lat Fountain Valley DRIVBRS... Mgt. Co. on Balboa drawers & 4 shelve• ... IMllt• lftlfUlld la llllf iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "~ ~ 1·000·228-9398 retainer. By the Job, LOOKING FOR a Pen. 2 position• avall each. Top bridge btwn .....,.. FOR RENT 2769 CAL•SCAN wkly or monthly svc1. CA 92708 new career path? M·F 10•3 & Sat 9•5. / di 11 &
... ,.,... • •• IDAHO NATIONAL I••••••••• Dlaney, Del T•co, Jl14) 993·9879 Want to haul materials Non-smoking. $7/hr. ~re: ng gh:• _..,,,,..,--.la_. FOAl!ST *IRS* 20 AP,119...._•ENTS ---------MoOoneld'a, Nord· · e are an EEO Co. u:iat •re more mentally Call Joan for appt. ac board m rror · -11-1 'l'lee,CllHUO Acre• • $29,000. ™'&™ N.B. 7501.t. Prime MONEY •trom Storea, FAO Vlall our website at challenging and get 7141975.,..932 Also large malchlni •·••1·..Z•·-Ftr Inventory Reduction fOR RENT ofc 1pace for Planner/ TO LOAN 2914 &chw•rll, J.M. P•· http:twww.apslnc.com paid approprletely? ---------~~ .. f~/u;~=1utl~!ui
lllW 11 ti oc1111..-Salo requlrH mort-1••••••••• Landscape De1lgner/ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii tera Co., Llfecycle,1 ___ *_*_*_*_*__ Team avg. S.44/Solo Recreetlon L••der .... HUDll421·-gage• to llquldate1• Oraft1por1on. Fr•• Anheu••r·Buach, avg. S.39. Take truck PT 20-25 houri/wk. now for S5000+tax. valuable acreage 351_________ parking, utll, malnt. N .. d a buslnHs part· lno., (partlal ll1t),1---------home for earned time Evenings & weekend•. No mattress or frame.
HOUSES/
CONDOS
POR SALE
mtle1 north of McCall ST Cloae to OC airport. ner? Free joint venture Impeccable refer-ACCOUNTING off. Full medical and Good people sklll1. Alto really nice ledln
Idaho. Luah Alfalfa CO A MESA 2624 S750mo. Fax 844-e7C>e Info. eoJ.78&-2358 Fax ences. Press release1, Corporate head· rellrement. Min. 1-yr. Artistic ablllty a +I cherry desk. Perfect
fleld1, perfect tor Ph. 644-5050 Ella eoJ.786-2313 7 dya corpora t • b Io a, quarters of retell OTR, 22 yrs. old and P•rk Newport for bedroom. S350.
horHI and cattle. 3br 2be · Beautlful,1_________ fHturH stories, In· pharmacy chain has COL w /Ha z Mat . Ap•rtmenta 7141873•2334
New road accea1, upatalrt, lrg patio. IND 1tore promo•. mah Immediate opening 800-289-8768 7 days-714-944-4864 W•aher, dryer 2
underground utllltlH, $875.mo + $500.dep USTRIAL 2788 ATI'Na promo a, brochure•. for accounts payable week/24 hours-day Retall Shoe Store 1~ 1olas w/ottoman1.
1urveyed. Direct 2288 Canyon #4 HOMEOWNERS preu kits, printing, poiltlq[I. Mull be EOE. CAL*SCAN Costa MHa. Manager/ twin mattress. corner
dHded accHI. Na· 714-MS-1482 10 000 SQ f'T BonvwSl51C..$lOOK graphic arta. Call detall oriented. Fiii In th• Bl•nkl Sales, full-time. E1Cper desk w/hutch, antique
tlonal ForHt, Little l!'ald• 2bd 1ba apt. BUILDING,.., S•I• TooM.Uly&IW Theriot & Associates organized and have Employersl Reach the req'd. 310/393·24H. chaise. Good prices,
Salmon River. 28 Xlnt cond, new crpt, Produotlon Pl. NB •Payoff.hil!liinmac 714/548·8625 computer e>eperl· m 0 s 1 qua I I I I e d 714/376-5727, eves. must Miii. 673-2250. GENl!JUU. 1002 parcel• told on 11t paint, ow, patio, gar, Can 1plll. Store your crcditCatds ence. Pleasant employees you need
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii come bHll . Financing lndry. 5850/mo.+dep. Toya/Cara. Mfg/or • HorM~u 1mok•free environ-by placlng a help --------.. ••~RCHANDISE av a 11 ab I•. Ca I I *5 48-1709• LeaHd lnvHtment. •Applyby~d24ht LOST & ment In Newport wanted ad In the Dally Roger's Gardena "'""
GOV• RN MB NT 1 ·8 O O ·2 e 7 ..O e 5 2 Bob Ceuatln Blu ~ FOUND 2925 BHch. Call Sttaron Piiot employment MISC. 6015 f' OR• CLOS I! D • >C 11 4 0 8 BX G ---------714-722-8777 •NoF.qwcy ~~1 (714) 94S.0970 section. Call our Is now hiring for
HOM•S pennies on Property. CAL*SCAN NEWPORT •-N-wp--t-B_tv_d_@ __ 1_S_t_h c.JJ'Pbda~s'i'r: Classlfled Dept. at ~~~~:~~gc:,0~:~~:, 9' Seotlonel &of• L· ~D.'~ti!;~~ •. ~';; tOn BEACH 2669 St. 12x12. 1175. (~~o!,, ,.~U~~ro~:m~;,d ~~ ACE PARKING 942·5978 gift tales, carryout•, 1hape, off white, good
money down govern-POI 1111 t400liiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiii 5 5 3 ·1 1 1 5 ·(day) Mall dHcrlp11on to Hat lmmed. openings FIR I! FI Q HT ER S security guard and cond $1 00 760·3675-E
ment loana available ,. •18R 1775• or 873·1943·(•v••) p . 0 . Box 1 5 6 o •C•ahl•r• No • )( P • r I • n c • gift wrappers. PT & Butcher Block, 100
now. LocaJ 111t1ng1. IBR 211A 1900 Co11a Meta 92827 •Reoeptlonlata n e c • 11 a r Y · Pa 1 d FT available. Pleaae ~r• old. 30"x36" S265.
DAIJ 1 1 .,.. ..... ,.. 1 JNCO ... a /o Lo I L t C"--k PT/FT training with excellent f ax r • s u m • t o win bed Id ale Toll frff , .. nc · vv.._. poo · """ MORTGAGES & c rra ne * 0 •....,V•I••','• benefit•. High 1choo1 (7141640-7528 or & more 1tsutt 0650·s5c662
• 1 .. 0CMS99·2282 No NPe•wpot1. rtC•a•r~ort. PROPERTY 2790 F d G llxt. H-4000 • T.D.'S 2918 oun • lasses. •Shuttle Drivers diploma required. apply In perton at 1 MADE issoo -------
CAL*SCAN Terreoe ''iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii•liil tinted peracrlptlon OMV printout required Agel 17-34. U.S. cltl· 2301 San Joaquin •9415-4888• 1'cM .. PL.:EX ....... ,000 gla1ae1 I n case. f d i 1 11 zens only . C all HlllsRoad,CdM. In one week, I'll 1how ... ._...,. ''CASH" Immediate SS Vic of Bay S1 In CM. or r v ng poi 1 ons. 1·800-345-e289, M·F. You how · ho m •
_._ -----------·-. ---· I -' - -
- -I -· --N.8. R••ltor wlU give
20% commla1lon 10 your favorite charity
when you buy or Mil
a home. Cory 84().1408
SOLD!
lnYlt• over 40,000
people to read
abotlt your home for
1alo each Saturday
by 1howcaalng yoUt
property In th•
Hom•• of th• Week
& Open Home
Gulde. The bHt
local Real E1tat•
Section aroundl
Reach th• be11
quaJlfl•d homebuyo
ere on the coaatl
Call )'OUf' AdVertlslng
Ropre1ent•tlve
Todayll A1k about
our current 1peclal1I
Lia• co .. nll• 1574-4249 u .. Rlvere
574-.252
--, -----. . --NEWPORT HBiOHTI 9"' DOWN. S313,000 for 1tructured 10ltl• 574·182!5 or 760-1701 Apply 9am·Noon CAL"SCAN baud, not M LM 8tvr ~~~o~~~a= ~~ ;~~ ~:::~1: ~~n~:.:~: :r~T~~~ Aak for sunny. 4sfo°:!:i~1~8c1 .• =F=R..,..1e=N==o..,..~"'"y,....,,T""o""v,...,.s.,,......,• •• s:~:,::;!t1>f!r~r~t~~! i~~~~. ~~r ~~;i1:i:.;
R.NT .. LS mo. Call 154e-.ea.. J.O. wentw4Srths LOST Eyegl&HH StN••'?_.~C8a•m•pcuhs), GIFTS store In o .c . E11p 1nf 0 rm a 11 0 n A 1.a8 9 231 5375 ~ .. ~. has Immediate open-pref'd. 574..0351 1..eoo-331 •2 092 Coeta Mp• • • On OcHn Blvd. In 955-2037 Job holllne lngs In your area. CAL •SCAN -l••••••••I BUSINESS 6 CAt •SCAN COM. 720-94e9 . Number one In party Seo'w PTtl>erm -..... ttooo UTrl-eTT ·~onis ••••••••• ·---------AVON SALl!S, EARN Team Player. Comp Power Tool• For Sal• ~ Al.W"'5&oWMU• u . PJNANCE Loats 4 mo. old kitten. EXTRA SSS'a. Start plan: Toys, gifts, !Iterate. Health ln1. •11" Band taw s1oo ,_, w/,_,, tt.OO tHIVPHr ,,.••••••••l•uuowftfr~llW!U'l'S Slame1e colored. In now for Chrl1tmu1 No Christmas, home Exp. a plu11 642-6868 •Compresior $85. ••lll't 'p b AMOR HU~ •• nnn vn~u th• vicinity of North door to door required. decor. FrH catalog e8X48" Belt lander $125. I••••••••• Meaa. Children very Minimum age 18 Y"· and Information. t;;;ITIEACHIEAS<::> eCut-oCf miter uw uo. ........ & ,..._ l0$nrnrr aad. PleaH call c;:;i To '501' commlHlon. Call 1 ·8()().488-4875 NEIDllDI Toddlert & -.............. , ___ 0_0_11$ ____ 2_7_0_6_ orroRT'Umn ANNOUNCEMENTS 540-5995 or 545-2628 Call Independent CAL·SCAN p~;t":&~ ;1~~~2 ·;:;t t,rro~ur• •pray
~7~1~4-:ti7~231t;:=4t=4~1Mr:.41i~~~~~~~ 2920 LOST: 9wk old Bo>eer S • 1 • • R • P · IRVINE BARCLAY •Homellte chain nw $50. iii 2904 typ• puppy. u brown 1 .. 00-874-1899 THEATRE ee" Jointer s1so. c:::= ... oh w/wht markings. Goe1 .CAL*SCAN EMPLOYMENT 714-845·9127
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FORUNT
A 22nd St ................... Ml. 8RAZILJAN by "Paxton" In the vi-BANQUBT Hiring PT Concestlon SERVICES 5533 ·ST JbHNS WOATll Prtvate room unfUm, STUDllHT I I . COORDINATOR Employee1. If you are
ahln bath. Utl paid. :~-:.:-:o~p~I~ 8CANDINAVIAN, ~E~::-:~•t~~;~ p T ·Ne 1ta 11 an 21 or older. good with iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '°tf.~°sk.o ~lob~ ~
No tmoklng preferred. Check with th• locaJ German, European, RNlaurant 673-9500 the pobllc & would ....... . Kitchenette In room. Better Bualn••• South America, Asian, RllWARDI Jockey 281 •· Coaat ttwv like to bring In a llttle Pl .... be aware that 1 •t orderl Beat Laundry. 1 block 10 Rua1lan exchange Statue, red/black •>Ctr• money, IBT 11 the Ustlnga In thl1 cat· Depresiion. FDA AP-
Newport Pier. '490. ::,:a~yb~c:,'~y YfC:: atudenta .arriving. w/Whlt• trou1er1. BllACOUSTYM-OLOQIST • d d Ing to It • egory may require you ~~~ 01~,an~f°i:°!,°gry. Cd Sam 8am-lpm at R Become a holt famlly/ Meaa Verd• ar..C.M. .. • conce11lon part-time to call a 900 number
875"4808 f ... or •ervk:••· •ad A IS E . ca 11 No qufftlOns asked. Prntlgou1 COM Hair employH1. S7 per hr. In which there II a Herb • Avallable.
---------•----------.,.and underatand any 1-800-SIBLING 714-435-4040 Salon hat rental 4 hr. 1hlft1. Eve. & wk· charge per minute. 1.aoo-24e-4090 v:•'"'•DOK contract• before you www.albllne.org 1tatlon1 for prof'I hair end1. Fle11lblllty In $ a Dept. 2 . CAL•SCAN BALBOA
PENINSUlA
_.... 1lgn. Shop around for CAL*SCAN 1tyll1t1 & manicurists. 1chedullng your time. 1000'8 PO SIBLI!. Wolff T•nnlng Bede
2107 ._••• "7°"°" rates. _ __,,...,..,,,.......,,..., ____ H'l:!llYfH •· Start k 7,,.,, ,...,.2 s 1 READING 800KS • ..ana... ,._ •• FREi Dlgl .. I ™-1g1 ·up P g. """""'" om• Hrv ng exper. Part-time. At home. Ten At Home
EARTHWORMS aetelllt• Sratema FITNESS 3000 Chlldo•r• Needed de1lred. Call Sher~ @ Toll frff Buy Direct and S•wel ------
8ptt0lou• Oelux•· 3br Grower• wanted When you algn up for In my MeH Verde 714-854-419 1-eoo.218•9000 Commercial/Home ._ _______ ,I 2ba. ale, frplc, patio, $1000 a day po1llble. di hal ~ IHI rvl home MF 12..Jpm 2 Loc•I CM Hotel Ext R 91~9 unit• from $199.00
VILLA PARK Xlnt Buy! 2-car encl•d gar. (818) 383.020a vl1ch ~~Jud!• ~P ~~ FI!• LIN Q RUN boy• 3 ~ '6. Fle11lble, sHka ~nthu1lutlc fo; u1;1ng1. Low Monthly Pml•
3bd 2.5ba • Lot 'Slz• 11800.l.ae IS7S."1130 lnve•tment Help 100 channel• plue 30 DOWN? Want more great for 1tudentl courteou1 cu1tomer CAL•SCAN Fr .. Color Cata~
20,020sq.ft. $430!000. recent grad pay back co qu•llty •udlo energy? Learn how Cell 887-4312 .. rv1~ oriented peo-Call 1-eoo-111..0158 ~:i111::t•Pdhlll~pe~.:~~'. COSTA MESA 2124 ~a c;;':=.!.'°~ ==· ~ta= ;~-.1 s~~:r.. Neu:,! c~~=~~c!!~~ .. ka ~.:::.~~~-=~!Ti~ DOMESTICS 5540 w:i::. Tf:N"':~
. (SU3) 777-0797 lnternt. 444-0709 alao Included can for change your 111• for-quallfled: Meaona, PloaH contact Tom or HOME. Buy direct
..... TewnMMe Info. 7141721-4008 over. FrH tap• and lrrlg, •nd Plentlng Jullan 714nH-3337 DOG WALKER and SAVEi Com-
3bd, 2,5ba pvt yard, it. Jud•'• NOVM\11 report. Call 24 hOurs. Teoh• for hlgh .. nd Mon-Fri from Jam-5pm Need someone to merclal/Home unlll COIONA llV rm w/fp, MP tam May th• aac:red heart 1-aoo.:a~~~~~M Con1lructlon.e5o-8394 MGMT Santa Photo• walk your dog7? from Sl99.00. Low DEL MU 1022 rm, big m .. terl of J .. u1 be adOfed, Crya .. I Cove Shek• Team/Cu1tomor 1klll1. Call Mor9en monthly paymen11 . • ••••••••I v.c:ant. Freeh A clean ••-••IL" TO glorlfled, loved and Sheck Dell/counter Organ~ed. Pun, Savvy •MR-8533• FrH color catalog.
AalOC. poot, epa A &\lln&......-i ~=:.k·~s~-la pteMt'Ved throughout help. FT/PT. C•ll 80().229-7147 ex1 137 •P•t·Sltter, Let me 1.a~:.~~10
417 1/S ORCHID tennla. S1500/mo. SHiii 2724 ~ th• world now and P!ltSONALS 11:30am-3pm 497·9660 Model Lerch Feed, p1111, Walk and CAL•SCAN
3ledroom 2.ISBath 714/433-ea2a ~~ .. , fOtewr.Amen.Sacred PetlU/Plu•'•· Love your Pett
•NII "M~~er-Agt CclM 2bd na hM to _Na__, .. ._. heart of J"ua, Pf•Y ~-SpeclaJ el1• Model• Re1ponalble andl---------
71 ... 7 M B'~GTON ahr. fp, w/d, pdO, Na 1.,,. 1 .. -... ,, for '-I· St. Jude, Y..:;;"'.;..:..-...,x ne•d•d nowr for Friendly. ,,...,.. Call WANTED 4i7 OfiCMID vn un seso. utt• lncld. Prof'I ........., •...,. _ IOK worker of mlraclH, SCHOO.LS t .--,.~a Faehlon and Prlnl Motgan ~..a533 TO.BUY otct. CdM, SBr/2.Ha BUCH 2140 flem d • ~ .,...,..Fl1P't J:,.llY for u.. St. Jude, u.n. ••a IO nm• n ta .
Condo. Dream Kit ODii Shr ,_. 1bt lbe /Lii 11 f{A 1.M1 per of the hOP9-INSnVcnOlf 3012 C-No e11p. nece11ary. --------.. ~----·
Lu•h Landecape, ••••ftfrent c ...... W/HatborlOCeanvlew. WI IJllHVJ =·::v.rtc; rm..si ~ ~tr '71•-424-0M7 MERCllANDISB ~.::-~~
aNft M~~ 11UO. Penor•mlo ~ b•, tull lrln. ~.Bytheelght.hday PATlllT TUTOR a __ • ._.1....,. •••••••• OdwaiCMe&...-V 71+1 M <>c.anvtew 2br 2be. Mii.mo .., 11'11 your Pft!Y« wt• be en-•Meth. (Arithmetic ~ __... -PART·Tllll JOI WllMCOUt COin e42-9Mt
Hl#'tyl ·~1 •1900 Cll 1 nne 8111 N"Tl1•Sq. .weted. " hM ,,..,., thN Oelculua) iaw:ktyC.ocnm. T............... TOiiY iiiOiiiNi
Cost ....... 1024 lllOJl400.+ 113 ...... CUDIT 2907 bffJ'lc ~ to '911. • ltllllltlca. Chemistry i.mm.u..~5.·0 fotOI' ~Houri AlfTIQUES eo10 ----· ..,_, ........ • w NBWPOIT gar, all am•nMI... Pub. •-· mu9t be • Phyllcu Term,.,,.,.. •No ...pw;1ence ;;.;~N; OCt;
2 'II fH 848 a10 Lv M!p AVOID ptomlffd. ISJWDH. • AMdlng e Teat Pr•P •Y~..,...ic ofc a.p... M2·104• ., .... a Homee on ll&CB 1 Oii .... In atir a., llANIUIUPTCY =ST, ORE, 8A1) NOn.Vrtnu/mdt ...._...._
""' Lot. 3llr 6 111r. pr d/W lftdfy "" big Debt Oonaolld•tlon. 8ecJb, F0t frff • p1.._ ~ C.-~ ll3IK. Uw9 In ttw Hr,~ , .. LIO decle, ~: _,,....... Stop ooleo1lon calls. Chanctl art lnfotm•tlon call: .,...,_ (7t4tTaa-0'1e
"-" , •• Ownflr/ vaulted cell•. trig. llOO.+ "'99 ..,....., Cut moncNV peyment• you Wiii find ,,.... .... M 'NIATN <Al~•
Muat Wt eeove. leepe to leech Iii ~ "" a ~ M. to 10", Ellmlnete What you need II=~~~~!!~ ff mr Jm a•al-• Me•• 3,, 1979.mo .-,.1ou ~ ... G•idlllul, fln•pn,:.•~,... at the price !.: tor loo., nn•t oo.
1.18ba.remad1"d,lrg Q .... fl'P,.,.. W/d. LMWr'lr. a-.. t.aoo.a o•••• ...,,.._,,.'°,..., ..... ~.., ~ ... ..,.., ~
lot. pop11tar er••· p, II MW & ..... llOO+MO ...,..13 CAL•tcAN '~ ,..., ww•w& -~ 1317,000 1W OWMf, 11r .... & ...._ ll400. ... ......_ when you r.ed --
7' ...... 1.. -4MM•I•.. .,_.,. ""' -'"' 1 Ct111-.. P•..a:'?1.,: 1°' (a.-,. IClllNHn ~"· HH/lfto, ~ ;;;;:;Mi;;----~-ii ii,...~;;;·~1·;';;·;:; -~'....,. ... ,;;;;;-.-..-1•11•1~1'!.?.~~~rl~~·c:!.,.~t~··~-·11;;&;~~~~~~iiiiii11~,.~~~~iiliif!!~!!~ = .. ~ ;1 rHMllM
6019
PDITOTOUI022
45 FUii rating 47 Owns
48 lndllln city
41 RellYed
50 Salllng V9IMI
52 Gulle' criH
53 Ore depc»ll
156 BIMdln 58 Peelrt lnMct
57 Contiibute
58 2.001, e.g.
91 ....
1n0\191Tlent
Both ........... 8auda ....
m
•A,IJ Oil 97 OAI .
•Alt wur .,,
Oii OJ7t•I •.Jt'Tll
80VTll •IUll
OAQIOll
Oii
•KIO
The biddi.nc.
SOUTR fn8T
10 PMI
NORTB MST INT p ..
1••• -\I•• Priadple •f ra•
Arn .. 1. North air.11 bid •h•• ....ect to lie the nUal ol the
combined bande. • 11am could
•be .... &lum• ae.a-.
Consratwatloee fl ,ou decWid tl.-a lmall ._ .. hlm1e ii• an. tldDr. "'IU'dl-ol the ...... cU.. ~. and then 11 noihlnc u..
cWcden can do about it. Dedarw
wine lb• fir1l bHri, clrawa tbe resnumnc trum1191 the cubee t.ba
ld.01 and .ee of c1ube and nalr.1 a club to eliminate that 1uit. Nm,
declarer cuhea the acee ot 1pedea
and dlamond1, then e:site with a
diamond.
••• aoou T-Top, Grnt rwnner, MW SMtlnt. auto. Too much
... to •P· to 11111 Muat Hel
•le00'4 lta,977 Bouoht enotner c.r. 131CJO.obo 640-*'3
'•• CM8llOK•• 'Ii AOD Red on
4-4. ~800 bt90tl. Auto. CU., AC, ~. ..,,,_,alarm, T-top.
eYef"fL opttond, 101k ml. Muat ... 1 new exue tre • , • ..,.,. '"1" ............. .. #OOSl71 •1a,•77. .,.,.,.,, .. ~ ...... .
Mle~~:i-..o PONTIAC t .. oo-M .. 11398 _______ , 9170
I.ANDROVU
9113 ------
'94 DISCOVERY
Only 17kl Loa~.
7 Pa11enger, hurryl
(097142) .
LAND ROV•R
MISSION Vll!.10
C714)385-8710
'84QMN
Alloya, Full Power
(101159/777242) I"•• To~ot4lof Hunt~n.~on 8oeoh 71 7·8118 '
UNGE
IOVER 9177
•o PMI to p ..
p.,.. PMI
The belt the cle{enden can do Ml
to aliow the pla,yw with lour ---to win the eecond diamond. Sfnca a
mlnor-1ult return would allow
declarer to ruff ln one band while •-tlXU--S---9-1_1_5
dilCaJ"Cflng a epacle Crom the other, the defender must return a epade, l&iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
'92 COUNTY
One owner, Lo mlle1 flaWIHI
(3BEF212)
'85LWB
Black b•autyl
One owner
129, 990 (549572)
Opening lead: Eilbt of Q and ahould try a deceptiH ten. ""' •92 •S300 e cy1 .• auto, all Power, sun-
roof, tinted glae1,
115,500 71~77 LANDROWR MISSION Vl•JO
C714)38 ... 750
Study UU. diapm c:arefull,Y. In
pen:entase terma, how would y0u
rate your chence1 of raking in 12
trick.a with hea.rta u trum119 aft.er
both defendere follow to one round
oftrum119?
South simply t~~ low from aecood hancl. u third followa, the IUit la breaking 3-2. Uthi.rd hand abows
out, declarer takee the marked
lineue ror the jack of 1padea a.nd
loeee no more than one diamond.
'95 LS400
Black/Ivory,
full potion, cert. 22k, ---------•
The bidding le typical of the mod-
ern 1tyle. North'• jump to two no
trump wa1 a forcinr ralee in the
mitjor 1uit (a jump to three hearts
would han been a limit rat.e) and
South 1howed a minimum, bal-
anced openlor bid by leaping to
Learn to be a better brld•• ,
pla7erl 8ubacrlbe now to the
Goren Brldse Letter b)' calliDI
(800) '788-1126 for Information. Or write to: Gore.a Bridse Let-
ter, P.O. Bos '"10, CJUcqo. l1L
80880.
MARINE SUPS CHEVROLET 9045 GEO 9080
DOC RS 10 2 2 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiii~iii!ii!~iiii '84 CAPRIC• '94 PRIZM
WANTl!Da SLIP FOR
37' SPORTf'ISHl!R
Beam 12·x 6" In the Newport Bay 831-0184
MOTORCYCLES
CLASSIC Auto, P/S, A/C
Auto, PS, AC #101339/027555
101250/110924 $8,995
S2,495 Toyot• of
Toyota Of Huntington Beech
Huntington Beooh (714) 847-81155
714-847 .. 555
,SCOOTERS 8018 FORD 9075 HONDA 9085
'88 HONDA 8PR81!
RED. LIKE NEWI
Only 1,!500 Mllu.
$350.obo, Call Tim
714-574-4275
e.1 "' avau. RENAULT 9180
'84 LS 400
Black Jad!J/lvory,
· full option, certified,
e.9% avall.
•93 sc 300
Graphite, full option,
certified, e.9% avall
#014449 $27,977
'95 SC 300
Black/Ivory, chromes,
certified, 8.9% avail #029209 t34,977
'95 SC 400 ,
White/Ivory, chromee,
C/0, full option,
6.9% avall
#041265 t33,377
L•xua MISSION Vll!JO
1 .. 00-889-5398
• '72 300Sl!L •
'83 Roneull Lo Car
Excellent condition.
S 1 !500/obo. 650-6262 ask for Duncan
TOYOTA 9210
'91 MR2
Rare, cla11lc
(t01647/023892)
18995
Toyota of
Huntlnlton •••ch 714-47·8555
MUSICAl POWER BOATS MARINE SUPS AUTOMOBILES
1 owner, 111c cond. All
record•. AC. $3900.
840-1491
INSTRUMENTS 60SS 7012 DOCRS 70221•-----
Big Quli.r Showll
1000·1 of Gultaral
Buy • Sell • Tradel
O.C. Falrground1.
Sept. 13, 9..S •nd
So pt. 14, 10-5
Call 1-800-453-7461
-----•1MARINE SUPS TRANSPORTATION DOCl(S 7022 -----•••••••••I 020.•aett Power or
Sall, aid• tie, near Bay
SELL
CABIN'BTS
---------
111• and Fun Zone on Penln. $225. 873-1943
.. ., ...... ,.
~ ...... -..... caee. eufWf, .......... ...... teo-not
'88 VW POX 4&, ... CMllW Lii Aadlo ..... ~
CaehtMte.1..!* Op41on, owner. Gteat oOfldt
WIOJ 13.000. 114--731;etl0 *~1a 111,e7? ._ CJiiiaotif Whtl
'M IUl'M TUR80 Wht w/ boot. AJC. 8DITION alarm, pwr wll"dowt,
Red/black loather 41k ml. Org pampered
chromu, auto, 31k 18900 obo. 482.0751
#01'414 •ae,977
L•XU8 MISSION Vll!JO
t-aoo-e.9.9399
MISC. AUTO 1245
nu as 9220
auv CARS POii
$100111 hl&od and
1old locally thlf
month. Sport•. 4114'1,
Motorcyclea, RV'a,
Boata, Computer1 anct
more. Cell toll fr" 1 -8 0 0 .5 2 2 -2 7 3 0
ext.2405 CAL"SCAN
'91 RAM 80 P/U
Shell, Alloy1. AC
(P01 ~91/200700)
17498 To~ot• of
Hwntlngton •••oh 714-84T .. 585
'93 PICKUP PS/AC
( 101539/073272)
$8995
Toyot• of
Huntington B••ch
714-847 .. 555
'95 NISSAN Super low mlle1;
5 1pd, super clean
(1013061388299)
$7995
Toyot•ot
Huntlnpton •••oh 714-847-8555
VOLRSW7lGEN 9235
'79 Bl!ETLI!
CONVl!RTABLE Lo mlle1,
red/white/white
Beautlfull
(3RAD648) $4, 750
LAND ROVKR
MISSION VIBJO
(714)38s.87DO
Sl!IZ•D CMS from
$178. Porech••.
Cadlllao1, Chevya,
BMW'1, Corv11t11.
Aleo Jeep1, 4W0'1.
Your Area. Toll Free
1-800·211·1000 ext . A-1398 for current U11Jngs
Can't aeem to
get to au tho••
repair Joba
around the house?
let th•
,Claulfled
Service
Directory
help you find
reliable help.
842·5878
CLASSl,.l•D
11'9 th• re1ource you
can count on to 1111 a
myriad of merchan-
dlee ltem1, becau1e
our column• compel
quallfl•d buyere to
cam
IN
''\ pref er advertisdinthg pUot an e with the eat
tl B 1. due to the gr o. · d OTeat response an i:r ,.
customer serv:1i Solis
Ouallty Work. f're,
E1t. Financing AftU
LllOS4t '714-aSl-1180
3870 WALL
COVElllNGS -------3832