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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-09-11 - Orange Coast Pilot.. SP.ORTS l'repfootball season kicks off tonight -!City lacking cash for· needed repairs :• New. revenue sought to : fix street lights, buildings ·and piers, committee says. . • By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily p;fot . NEWPORT BEACH - City . cotters may not be able to handle . an increasing need to replace and repair aging hardware such. as street lights, buildings and _piers, according to members of a city committee studying future financial needs. S~by Mkhelle Tei'Wtlf'9er Photos l;tY MarcM......, While extra tax revenues con- tinue to roll in faster than expect- ed, the city's economic develop- ment committee has been assess- ing Newport's future financial prospects. And though the 1997- 98 budget filled a longer wish list than in yea.rs past, the committee found the city will have to shoul- der several big-ticket repairs and replacements in the next 10 to 15 years. •we need additional revenue sources,• said committee mem- ber Richard Luehrs, president of the Newport Harbor Area Cham- be r of Commerce. "Some people . say, 'Why do we need to build Some lights in older sections of these apart-the city date to ments here or the 1930s, and the Plet~her "The city doesn't replacing them Jones car deal-could cost a ership there?" have enough money total of $7.5 mil- You need these to keep· up with the lion. The coun- kinds of things ell budgeted to make things infrastructure of our enough to finish like sewers or older city. 11 replacement on capital improve-Balboa Island ments pencil -Norma Glover during the '97- out." 98 fiscal year. Some possi-• • Deferred ble big projects maintenance - on the horizon include: The city spends money to fix only • Street-light replacement -what's actually broken in its 67 ·:South Coast Plaza restaurants o~n jfor business .~r .immigration naid ~· Authorities arrested 22 workers from Wolfgang Puck ~Cafe and Bitraporetti's on Tuesday; both eateries back • ,doing busin~ Wedneiday. buildings and has no ongoing maintenance program. Mean- while, the city's two piers -the oldest in Southern California at 58 years old -could cost $1 O million each to replace if a disas- ter wiped them out. But they were the only piers in Southern Ccllliomia to make it through the last El Nino season intact. • Operating funds -The city's reserve funds are still a few million dollars short of the coun- cil's goal of keeping them at 15% of t1'e total operating budget. • Insurance reserve funds - The council managed to dump some of the city's unexpected tu revenue windfall into these reserves, .which cover claim .set- tlements and workers' compen- sation payments . City Councilwoman Norma Glover has often harped on the need for reserves and infrastruc- ture improvements during bud- get talks "The city doesn't have enough money to keep up with the 'infrastructure of our older •SEE CASH PAGE A12 New toll road bonds no worry, Mayor Buffa says •Still San Joaquin Hills tollway is at about half its projected traffic totals. By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot Bonds that financed the San Joaquin Hills toll road are on their way to being refinanced, and local officials who sit on the trans- portation corridor agency board say the move means business is going well, not badly. Still, tlie path·ahead 1Sn't com- pletely free and clear for the toll road: The average daily number of drivers using it -55,000 -is still far less than the original esti- mate of 100,500. Toll road officials say traffic is growing 4 % to 5% per month. The idea of a toll road in Cali- fornia wasn't exactly rousing a lot of interest back in 1993, when the bonds originally went up for sale. But now that the toll road is open, the project is a less-risky invest- ment than it used to be, said Cos- ta Mesa Mayor Peter Buffa, the agency's chairman. ·we were way out on the lead- ing edge then,· he said. "We got terms much like the terms on someone's very first home loan. Peter Buffa: Toll road less risky investment. Now it's four years later and lots has changed." The refi- nancing goes to the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corr 1d or Agency for approval today. and Buffa. as well as board membe r and Newport Beach City Councilman Dennis O'Neil, said they'll support it. The agency financed $1.2 bil- lion of the $1.5 billion toll road •SEE TOU PAGE A12 Produce company owners say odor claims exaggerated •Arguments over noise and leftover food has pitted Ingardia Bros. business against neighbors. By Susan Deemer, Daily Pilot COSfA MESA -Owners of Ingardia Bros. Produce Inc. went on the offensive Wednesday, dis- puting complaints from neighbors of their Placentia Avenue facility about noise and odors. • Bi'others Joe and Sam Ingardia admit to a few of the romplaints, which range from noise from employees loading trucks to odors emitting from trash cans, but say they run a clean business. They also deny neighbors accusations that rats feed on their garbage. A recent inspection by a pri- vate rompany shows the facility has "No rats,· they insist. "We are in business,• Joe lngardia said. •They have a right to live there and I have a right to have my busin here.• Neighbor Steve Marrone said •SEE PRODUCE PAGE A12 . ,.....,. FW"IPl_zml,._. elry (5'Ml28) is marking Us touith anniversary with a week· long celebration Tuetday through Sept. 20. •Jn appredatioo ol OUT clients . overwhelming support during our expansion into Orange County, OW' inventory will be marked down 5% to 50% for one week only.· says owner JeJ. trey Shaw. •from estate jewelry to Joole diamonds, these dis- counts are taken off our already low wholesale prices. To kick- off our week-long celebration, we would liJc.e to cordially invite Best Buys readeTS to our eigbt- bour sale.• Toeing the Republican· pally line The invitation-only, eight-hour sale will be held Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The eotire inventory will be discounted 10% to 60% off. Shaw says you need to mention this Best Buys colwnn upon eniering the store. Jeffrey Shaw's Diamond Jewel- ry is located at 1835 Newport Blvd. No. D-152 in Costa Mesa. lmtant Replay Comlgnment ' Unllmtted (Ml-8898), located at 369 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa, is having a special sales event Fri- day and Saturc14y. The two-day event features an exclusive Longaberger basket show -which are handcrafted signed baskets from Dre$den, Ohio, 25% off on all McCoy pot- tery, and 15% off on storewide merchandise, excluding Longaberger. Store merchan- • dise includes tile, vintage patio furniture, Mexican silver jewel- ry, Uadro, aysta1 including Bac- carat and Lalique, vintage linens, California oils and water- color paintings. antique wall mirrors and furniture for every room in the house from the 1800s to 1940s. The Showcase Gallery, locat- ed at 1631 Swlllower Ave. in the South Coast Plaza Village, is featuring the watercolor paint- ings of Shirley Sullivan through the end of the month. Sullivan's paintings have been included ln numerous juried exhibitions. and since 1989, she has been the recipient of two purchase prizes and more than 10 awards. The paintings are in a realistic style, and the color greer wylder choices are soft. The Showcase Gallery is oper- ated by artist members of the Costa Mesa Art League. There are constant changing mhibits at the gallery and the artwork is affordable. The exln1>its include framed oil paintings, watercol- ors, pastel. photography, acrylic and mixed media. Sculpture, handcrafted ceramics and jew- elry are being shown. Admis- sion is free. It's open Wednesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., on Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. The new Santa Monica Seafood (574-8862) sells fresh seafood daily including oysters, Chilean sea bass, halibut, Mexi- can shrimp, sea scallops, Hawaiian ah.i. orange rougby, mussels and swordfish. Through Saturday, there are specials on fresh mahi mahi fillet at $5.95 per pound, fresh stuffed salmon fillet at $8.95 per pound, and Mexican shrimp at $6.95 per pound. It's located at 154 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa's Harbor Twin Edwards Theater (6.11-3501), located at Harbor Boulevard and Wilson Street, sells tickets at $3 for all movies. Showing is the summer hit •Men In Black,· •Good Burger" and "Kull The Conqueror.· • BEST BUYS appears Thursdays and saturdays. If you know of a good buy c.all me at 540-1224, fax me at 646- '4170, e-mail me at dpllot20eartti· link.net or write me: Best Buys, Dally Pilot, 330 W. Bay St.. Costa Mesa, 92627. HEIS Turning Republican philoso- phies into votes. ELECTING TO CHANGE' While Wallin. 25, studied phi- losophy at Whittier College, he couldn't imagine joining any cam- pus p<>llticaf groups, much less working on a campaign. ·1 didn't associate myself with them.• he said •I didn't like the intrusiveness of government." But through his studies, Wallin said he came to realize be agrees with the Republican Party plat- form and felt he should do some. thing about it. "Whatever my studies bad taught me, it was with the need to become politically involved," be said .• So Wallin began volunteering with the Republican Party of Orange County and working part time for a conservative public poli- cy center, The Claremont Institute. Today, the Balboa Peniosula resident serves as director of the Republican precinct in Costa Mesa. GETTING OUT THE VOTE Wallin said his interest in poli- tics spawned during his junior year in college, while on a trip to southern lrufia. He said the trip was educational. and be had a wondedul time, despil'e chronic ill- ness and being surrounded by poverty. •1 enjoyed the J>t!Ople, • Wallin said. •There's something ldnd of romantic about India. It made me want to take a role." Wallin said be saw socialism and "forced racism based on the past befuddling the whole nation." He dedded he couldn't just complain about conditions here or abroad anymore unless he took a role, such as campaigning or regis- tering people to vote. •1 just ot tired of sitting and saying, 'If P was in charge, it would be different,•• Wallin said. •rve just thrown myself into this." SPREADING THE WORD Part of ~allin'I job is to coordi- READERS HOIUN£ Mesa, CA 92626. C~ No news stories, lllustnrtlonl. tdtto-642-6086 Record your com~t.s about rial matter or~ the Dally Piiot or news tips. herein can be reproduced ~ ~ out written permission of~ Newport Beadl VOL 91, NO. 207 ADDRESS right owner. 81/65 Our address h 330 w. Bay St., Newport Coast Costa Mtia, Callf. 92627. HOW IO REACH U5 81166 THOMAS H. JOHNSOH, 01'<\11.tlon Balboa Publishe< C<>MEOIONS The Tlmes Orange County 81/65 WIWAM L..09DEU. It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt-(800) 252-9141 Costa Mesa Editor ly correct all enors of substance. ~ 82163 STEV1aumi, Please call 574-4233. CIMSlfled 642-5678 Corona del Mar Managing Editor m 01:r., 642-4321 80/65 Ed TONYDOOIRO. The Newport Beach/Costa Mesa News 540-1224 Assistant Managing Editor Dai~ Piiot (USPS-144-800) Is Sports 642-4330 SURF FORECAST TINA llCMIGATTA. pub lshed Monday through Sat-News. Sports Fax 646-4170 LOCATION SIZE Qty Editor urday. In Newport Beach and E-Mail: dpllot2harthtlnk.net Wedge 2-3 SW ROGIJI CMLSOH. Costa Mesa, subscriptions are Main Offklt N~ 2-3 SW Sports Editor only available by subscribing to Business Office 642-4321 Blackles 2-4sw The limes Orange County (800) BYslness Fax 631-5902 River Jetty 2-4 SW MAiie MARTIN. 252-9141. In areas outside of CdM 2-3 SW Photo Edttor Newport Buch and Costa Mesa, Published by L.,_ IESOlA. subscriptions to the Daily Piiot California Community News, ~ llOATING Display AdvertlSlng only are available by mail for a llmes Minor~· ~ Light and variable /UOY OETTING. SlO ~month. Second dass momlng winds will Classlfied Advertising postage paid at Costa Mesa, CA become southwest to LANA JOHNSON. (Prices Include all applicable """'1 s. IClllft. westerly at 15 to 20 Promotk>ns state and local taxes.) POSTM~ President and CEO knots during the TER: Send address changes to Judhtl •• KendlFI. flMMOO SHAH. The Newport Be~ Mesa Vice President. General Manager afternoon. Wind Chief Financial Offker Dally Pilot P.O. Box 1560, Costll 01997 c.llf. a.. NI rtgtltl r--1. waves will build to 3 We have designs on you nate outreach programs aimed at Ora,nge County minorities. ·naditionally, Democrats had things like Hispanic programs," he said. MRepublicans, we don't think that way. We think of people as Republicans and Americans. What we embrace are certain ideals and philosophies." Wallin depends on minorities to deliver the Republican message in different languages. •we have to get the message to folks, sb they can understand it,• be said. He also attends cultural festi- vals and makes sure elected offi- cials know about them. •selieve me, we have some. thing that resonates well with immigrants." Wa.lliD said. ~Take the Hispanic vote: The Republican party offezs much more to that group as a whole.· Wallin lists anti-abortion issues and lowepng taxes for small busi- s ness owners as appealing to the Latino community. · GRANO OLD IDEAS Although Wallin swears be really is a laid-back guy who loves the beach and doesn't talk politics often, Wallin can't help but become absorbed when he begins talking about politics and philoso- phy. Wallin said Aristotle's •Nico- machean Ethics• changed bis world in college. •vou're invigorated to examine the most fundamental questions of our existence. What is happiness? That's the foundation of this book. What we are as human beings," he said. •When you begin to wd8rstand. it m~ you imped the world about you.• From there, Wallin found the Republican Party's philosophies of self-reliance and individual free- dom promote the correct way to pursue happiness. •1 honestly think we're doing something good,• be said. ·I think if people live their lives in party fashion, they'll be happy.• O()Yffl TO BUSINESS But Wallin doesn:t plan to stay in the political trenches for long. ·rm going to get my (master's in business administration),• be said. Ml want to go into business so badly .• Wallin said he prefers some kind of international business that could possibly take him back to India. . •ws a great market and a mar- velously innava~ culture,• be sa4f. And his goal for retirement: •To open up a bar in Bombay.· -Story by Mlcbelle Terwtlleger, photo by Marc Martin ' < • l I • . . -£ • ..... ij '~ fMt and a 3-foot Energy from the swell will come from NEWPORT IMOI the southwest. PM<hy morning fog. TIDES TODAY First low 11:13 a.m. 2.7 First high 6:46 a.m. 3.6 Second low After midnight Second high 11:05 p.m. 4.9 .FRIDAY First low 12:47 a.m. 0.4 First high 7;22 a.m. 4.0 second low 12:21 p.m. 2.3 Second high 6:27 p.m. 5.5 WATElt TEMNMlVIUi: 69 southwest continues to bolster the local surfing conditions. And it's getting some help from Improved wind swell, too. Together. they'll generate waist-high waves in most areas. but you c.an expect to see chm -high waves at spots well exposed to the southwest on the tide push. Favor- able southwest energy sh<xl Id per- slst through the weekend. The only thing to watch for seems to be the winds you can expect to klct up during the after- noon. • Parll Neu ,.an: Wheefs worth $900 were stolen from a car parted in the flnt blodt. • hftc ser..t: A briefcase and its contents worth S 131 were stolen from 1 air pwked In the 3600 block. ~ • S.. w.nd: A painting and an antique tea servke worth $45,000 were stolen from a residence In the the 11 blodc. •Orchid A~: A cell phone worth $100 was stolen from a residence In the 300 block. • '-"'-"' RoMt: A watch worth $10,fJOO was stolen from a residence In the 4500 block. COSTA MESA • Mstol Str..t: A total of $2,000 worth of charges were made on credit cards stolen from • purse at a furniture store In the 3000 block. • EM 11th StNet: Jewe4ry, a duffel beg and Its contents worth $300. were stolen from a car pat'i(ed In the 300 block. • Gold eo.n. °""9: ~If dubs and a golf bag were stolen outside • golf dubhotM In the 1700 block. • twt.or '°"'••..t A CM sustained SlOO damage after an attempted theft In the 3300 blodc. · • ,._.. -.....: A gym office at a high school In the 2300 block was ransadced. *INSURANCE* AUTO • LIFE •. HOME • COMMIRCIAL ~ The pains and perils. of knee surgery Costa Mesa man a.A-ested in robbery T itle 1h1s one, •Mumblings and Rumblings from The Columnist's Bed of Pain.• You see, I wasn't exactly on vacation la.st week. I f ust asked the editors to use that as an exCU1e for my absence. I didn't want to be inundated with flow- ers and See's candy as I lay abed recovering from some arthroscopic wizardry Dr. Michael Drucker pertormed on my long-abused right knee. Seven years of football, two years of Rugby football and a ., wide assortment of other pun- ; ishments can definitely lay : waste to a finicky joint that is • held together by the tissue : equivalent of baling wire. : I even have color pho- : tographs of the mess Drucker : found inside -most of which, I • hasten to add, wasn't even hint- : ed at by the MRI pictures. This : included a bone spur that looks ~ about the size of a quail egg, a ; mangled meniscus and a pul- verized patella. , I am not yet b(\ck to jitter- • bugging with my wife, not even : to taking our dog on his mom- ! ing and evening walks. But the ! joint mechanism in question bas hardly been idle. We arrived home from the Hoag Surgicare facility at New- • port Center at 2:30 p.m. the Fri- , day afternoon before last. With- : in three hours, a guy had deliv-• ~ ~~~::;:::.!~~~ • • . ,...-........... ,........ -. . ------. ~ _.,,.I "--.· . ··;, !, ~ . --.......... fred martin ered and installed me into something called a CPM machine, for Continuous Pas- sive Motion. This device and I have been inseparable ever since. It is a long, flat affair with padded slings that appear to be made of mouse fur. One lays one's leg into the hammocks, .turns on the power and bff it goes. Ever so slowly, the CPM rais- es the leg at the knee, and gradually returns it to the flat position. - There is a little remote-~~, trol device for controlling the angles of flex and extension. . There are also buttons for speed and force, but I was told not to mess with those. I started with a flex angle of THE Daily Pilot 60 degrees and an extended position of 0 degrees -Oat-out nat. ~riling to the instruction sheet, my goal was to reach a nex of 110 degrees and an extension of 10 by my first checkup last Monday. I was to achieve this by ~ding at least eight hours. a day 1n this contraption. It sounds terrible, but soon I began actually to enjoy it. Up, down, up, down. A full cycle took maybe 45 seconds in the beginning to about two minutes at the end. The movement was so slow you could barely see the-infer- nal machine at work. Up, down, up, down and on and on and on. According to my calcu- lations, I have spent some 97 hours in this thing, working my wounded knee up and down nearly 3,000 times. The ide.a, of course, is to keep the newly repaired joint moving so it doesn'.t atrophy and forget its mission in my life. The CPM seems to have worked pretty well. Indeed, having my leg flopped into its hammocks is bout the only comfortable posi- tion I have been able to find. The worst is sitting, as I am deing right now as I write this column. The other usual meth- ods of stretching out are ouches, too. · I I So catching up on some good books is pretty much not a plill. I have to lie almOlt flat, and holding a book over my head is not the least conducive to enjoyable reading. It probably wasn't planned to coincide with my recuperation, but there have been some won-- derful movies on television the past week or so. Most notable, for me, we~~ •Guns of Navarone, • •Advise anct Con- sent• and that all-timer of all- timers, •Anatomy of a Murder.• •How many times have you seen that?" my wife asked. I told her I had no idea. "Fifty, 60, a hundred, I don't know. But I'll watch it again tomorrow if it's on." I feel sorry for people who don't under- stand things like that. They miss so much in We. 1 was also able to watch UCLA play, and lose to, Wash- ington State and Tennessee, back-to-back. I'll be there to watch the Texas game Saturday, too,\if'ISome sadist insists on broadcasting it. · However, I can only watch so much football. It seems that every five minutes there's a closeup of some poor mastodon thudding down on his knee. Oh, bow I feel their pain! • FRED MARTIN'S column runs every Thursday and Saturday. ---~ I I I I I I I ~ ...... ..--...,...,, I -----1 Police arrested a Costa Mesa man they believe robbed a gas station at gunpoint Wednesday. Authorities suspect Raio~ Garcilazo, 22, walked into the Shell gas station at 2590 New- port Blvd. at about 4:30 a .m. with a bag over his bead and showed a handgun lo the clerk, said Costa Mesa police Capt. Rick Johnson The clerk handed over "sev- eral hundred dollars," and the man left the store, fieeiilg the area in a car. About two minutes later, police pulled over Garcilazo on the Costa Mesa Freeway, near Edinger Avenue. Authorities found cash and a gun in the car, Johnson said. The bag that was believed to have been used in the rob- bery was located near the gas station. -Ttm Grenda, Dally Pilot briefly Applications available for OCC spring classes Students looking to plan ahead can obtain applications for Orange Coast College's spring semester Oct. 1 in the Admissions and Records Office. •The earlier in October a per- ' son files an application, the better lus or her spring registration appomtment," said Nancy Kid- der, administrative dean of Admissions and Records at OCC. Spring semester classes are slated to begin on Jan. 20, 1998. Class schedules will be available to the public in late October. 111111 11 COOKlllS •ACK T O ICMOOL IMCIAL SunFlour's Everyday Breads Honey Whole Wheat Nine Grain· Sourdough Pure White Cinnamon Swirl Challah (egg) Focaccias I 1Wa c.upo1t _,Mt lte ca u•ll_. wlllh _,., .._ •u .. ..e • .... ,..._. I .,.,... ...... not.,..., ........... ,.,......... -...,. ....... -.. Open Daily. 6am -6:30pm •Closed Sundays 427 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa lBv \A.it~n'flOlM Rec""" I L ~~~ .• -----------------~ 646-1440 • • MACARTHUR BISON T HE SIDEWALK SALE O f HISTORIC PROPO RTION 1 SEPTEMBE R 12 & 13TH, 10:00 AM-5:00 PM MARCO POLO WILL BE 11HERE 1'00, SO SHO ULD YOIJ. • t Supreme ~oilrt n1lin_gs leave airport development in limbo • City officials are grap- pling with idea of raising traffic levels in commer- cial area of MacArthur Boulevard. By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot NEWPORT BEACH -More traffic may crowd onto MacArthur Boulevard near John Wayne Airport if a proposed ordinance gets throu~h city com- mittees and the City Council without ma1or changes. Then again, it may not. A proposed traffic phasing orctinance could raise the level of trafhc allowed m the airport area to levels never before seen in city planning codes. That would mean that with a change to the city's master plan, officials col,lld allow additional traffic-producing development - as much as 2 million square feet more -in the office-laden area. The Planning Commission has been wrestling with the Issue since recent Supreme Court rul- ings tbat some say render the current traffic phasing ordinance invalid because it requires too many developers fees. But after questions raised by commissioners and local envi- ronmentalists, a committee of planning oUidals and council members will be studying the issue to revamp the proposed ordinance. •1t was clear to me that we needed a harder look at it,• com- mission chairman Mike Kranz.ley said. ·we have to strike a bal- ance between an opp0rtunity to increase revenues to the city and the effect on our lifestyle.• Supporters of the proposed change in the airport area's traf- fic levels say allowing more development would make New- port Beach more competitive with Irvine and Costa Mesa in attracting big businesses. Those who oppose it -name- ly, Stop Polluting Our Newport SPECIALIZING IN BMW Serving Orange County 16 Years $2495 Oii & Filter exp 10/31/97 First Time CHtomers. BMW Only • Paciftc Auto Technics, Inc. 1786 Whittier Ave, Costa Mesa (714) 831·3188 Stop. Go. ~on. Personal Training • SPINNINGe • Aerobics• YO?a • Strength T,..1ning C.rdo~c Reh1b • Expert Persooable Staff • Med1cally-Estabhshed Prinoples 631-3623 In Westcl1ff Shopping Center at Irvine Ave & 17th St in Newport Beach Harltor & the Santa Ana River Gtanitc • Brick Marble • Block Slate • Paven Limestone • Slumpstone Sandstone • Splitfacc Flagstone • Retaining Block River Rock • Lawn ldtin9 Futher Rock • Stcppin9 Stona Lava lodl • Tllffl11• Driftwood s ..... Wire ... ....,.. ...... Dtt.,..,.. I.ell • 1.W Otevct • ..,.,_ Pipe lknd• kNcraoard ,.., ..... s-.. c .. pose • ......, Dec.,,."'" GrHltc • ... l!VfM C.1terlt9 Miii • AMM>r a.tu "'9fUr Mill • THb htlrfl'CHt•AlllMh Cc""'-. .---------------, I I f#.~P!.o.. I 1 . 1 7C Offer 9QOd on,.....,. prtold brN onty ~1 .. _____________ .. , • • OWt' 40 ditl'fttnt type:s d slate, lmatone & ~on dlspley • Fru ddivayon ·om.:rs ~ $600. in kXil na • Ollfi iO "citfnrt types"",.,. & marble ·v.·~~ . -say it would open the door to problems and would require, at the very lent, an environmental impact report. •You add additional square- footage to the airport area, and that traffic drains off to other parts of. the dty, • Kranzley said. •No one wants more traffic. The question is: What are we willing to sacrifice 'l" SPON is now drafting a formal position paper on the issue, but the group,'s basic feeling comes down to one simple point: They don't want traffic levels increased anywhere in the city. The m'OUP bu even gone so fu as hiring a lawyer to demand an environmental impact report on the proposal and to argue that the current ordinance is, in fact, in sync with the Supreme Court rulings. ·0ur position is we ue in favor of keeping the existing lev· el of service everywhere,• said group chalnnan Jean Watt, a for- mer dty council member. "Peo- ple see .our position as anti- growth, but what we're really saying is we want to coordinate the growth with the road sys- tem.• 50-7 5°/o OFF Sc:leaied Mtrc:handiK 50°/o OFF Silk Floral Arranganaul FREE ea.om Arranging Gooclonlr• ~~r.-s.-t.m Exptm 9/20/97 Custom Speciality Gifts & _Florals Furniturt! Antiques -·-Hours: Mon-Fri 10-6 • Sac 10-5 369 E. 17th St., #13 • Costa Mesa • 646-67 45 (Nat ro Plum's Cafe) 90 Day8 Sameu Cub (OAC) YOUR DENTAL HEALTH by Dee.dna Rids, D.D.S. STERIU1.ATION INSTRUMENTAL FOR SAFETY Patients who worry a.bou. t contracting various infecriona in rhc dentist's office can be raaurcd by the &a dw 93 pmznt of all dc:ocisu heat-sterifue their instruments betMicn paDcnlJ, aax>sding lO I aunty by the Amcriao Dental Aaociation. The beaMtailiurion of reusable instrumaus (alonf with the use of variow barrier teduUques, the-use of d.ispoublc items wbmevcr poa!ble, and cbc clisinfcaion of all work 1urfaw) is but one of the .cingent guiddina dw dentists follow in raporue to recommendations made by me Ccnten for Oi.swc Control a.od ~ntion and the American Deneal Neociarion, u wd1 u mandatory saftty illued by rhe Organization ii d Ha.lt6 Aatociation. Hat- oiiNuwncna ii an mrtindy 6:aYe meant of~ any anCi aO '*'-ie a8d m.. thac f*icna mar find •be oi concaa. w. aft comm.irud co #int rou • a.•aMt. po.ible ~., .. .......... opcD COIDllHIDaao. m ~---•'°"'* ... ........ , W.'111 loCMed • 1441 ..... -..---~;a ..._ our -.... ~ II 1!JIS MiM.Wc~ 1111 -" ..... ,...., .... ~~­......... I. . A public meeting of the South Coast Air Qua)ity Management District will be held in Newport Beach today to give reGdeots an opportunity to offer their input on how belt to write new federal air quality~. Federal leaders will use the public input from today's and other meetings to draft new reg· ulations for ozone and fine parti· de air quality. The district meet· ,ing will be held from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Newport Beach Qty Coundl Ownbe.ts, 3300 Newport Blvd.. The federal Environmental Protection Agency adopted clean air standards for ozone and fine particles in July, and offt:dals are now finalizing plans to tmplement th°'8 new standmds. The local Air Quality Man· agement District is f~g today on what elements to include in the next scheduled revision of those air st.anda.rds, set to Ut,ke eftectin 2002. The meeting will include an overview of air quality stan- dards, ~ quality monitoring programs and potential future ettorts to control air quality. Those presentations by dis- trict staff will last about 40 min- ·utes, with questions and feed- back from the public to follow. -By nm Grenda I 'Pygmalion' protlu~tion mane th3n 'Ea.ir' 8y Tom 1ltus. Daily Pilot T here'• no rain in Spain or ~all night in George Bernard Shaw's •Pyg- malion,• even though many play- goers subconsciously w1ll be expecting these lines u they view the opening production of the season at life, and the ii elegant u tbe result of Higgim' ~.even­ tually matcblnv bar mentor'• • hYJ>erbole 1n the~ ftrial scene. Those who have experienced innumerable producUons of •My Pair Lady" will bemoen the fact that there is no depiction of the actual learning proces5 or the South Coast Repertory. I 1 i ' \ I subsequent break- through. lbis was where the musical surpassed its gene- ais1 since the tran- "Pygmalion," of course, was the inspiration fo, the I I I I \ l I I\ 1956 musical sensation •My Pair Lady,• and much of the Lemer- Loewe dialogue was, indeed, lift- ed bag and baggage from the original. Given their familiarity with the musical, audiences may feel that the play skips over major events and stretches others out interminably. Nevertheless, Shaw mined the territory first, and SCR's stun- ningly elaborate production (the r--------------, company's F y • 1 10th ven- • ·'~ : ture into +WHA~ •Pyg- malion• +WHERE: South ~ Through Oct. s +HOW MUCH: $18-$43 + PHONE: 708- 1 5555 1 Shaw terri· tory) fills both the head and the heart- not to men- tion the eyes with Karen Ten- Eyck's gor· 1 geous rep-L--------------~ resenta- tions of 1912 London and Walker Hicklin's beautiful period cos- tumes. Director William Ludel has mounted a most enriching pro- duction. and his casting in tbe principal roles is impeccable. This Henry Higgins and Eliza Doolittle are close enough in age as to make a potential romance credi- ble, while such an alliance between Rex Harri.son and Julie Andrews (or Audrey Hepburn) would nave been ludicrous. · Nicholas Hormann excels as Higgins,theexpertdialectician and grammarian who turns a •squashed cabbage leaf" into a genteel lady. Hormann glides effortlessly through his character, giving Shaw's difficult prose a refreshingly irreverent twist and maintaining an unusual admirability despite his pontifical. self-centered nature. As Eliza. Nike Doukas is mag- nificent in both of her incarna- tions. Doukas is an absolute riot as the lower-class cockney flower girl out to better her station in sition of Doukas' character, even in its experimen- tal st4ge, is jarring. Richard Doyle blitb.ely walks off with bis first scene as Eliza's dustman father who seeks a piece of the action. Doyle is a vet- eran of both Shaw and these types of characters, and he brings Alfred P. Doolittle splendidly to Eliza Doolittle (Nike Doukas, center) ls introduced to Freddie (David Whalen) ln South Coast ltepertory's production of "Pygmalion." life. ~ Martha McFarland strikes a terrific sour note as Higgins' for- midable housekeeper with her constant concerns for Eliza's wel- fare. Anne Gee Byrd as Higginst mother shares these feelings, but not nearly as effectively, and nev- er really ]ells in her character. Soft and widerplayed, she's never a match, as she should be, for her son. The society folks with barely a brass farthing among them are well interpreted by Lyn Milgrim as Mrs. Eyrisford Hill and David Whalen and Laura H.insberger as her grown children. Unlike the musiccil, it's Clara (H.insberger) who shines as a spoiled, vacant noblewoman, with Freddy (Whalen) relegated to vacuous .fawning. With fine bac kground perfor- mances from company regulars Don Took and Art Koustik and a T -Shirts, Caps. Mugs. Puzzles. Canvas Bags, Plates & Keychalns Personalized Children's Books & Posters Unique Crafts Flom Local Crafters! deep ensemble corps, •Pyg- malion" is a theatergoer's delight. The settings are impressive. though the mcomplete backdrop of Higgins' study is puzzling. "Pygmalion" was the first pro- fesSional show I ev~r saw, some 40 ye a.rs ago, about the same time my high school was doing "My Fair Lady. South Coast Repertory's version .will make its audiences both remember and ultimately forget there was a musical adaptab.on. Baker & Fairview In St1tl,.r Brolhrr• C(•nh·r Costa M1•sa 979-6841 l'HUMDAV, S&'Y'EMIBt 11, 1997 AS Actors work hard io overcome plays difficulties By Tom Trtus~ Daily Pilot Danny and Roberta have a great deal in common -both are surly, defensive and be.sk:al- ly unapproachable. So bow do these two misfits fit together? Quite nicely, it twns out. even if the characters -like the play and the inlti4} perfor- mances -are a little rough Directoc' Laura Viramontes l8elDa to be undertcuing her cbaraden' buic unlikAbility in the 1int scene so they can win their audienoe over in the two segments that follow. Here the rouah edges ~ smoothed over and we get a g~pse of some heart underneath. Pa)koner builds bis emotional wall of txicks, his character seething with antagonism, even murderous around.the edges in "Dan- ny and the Deep Blue Sea.• an extended one- act presented by Orange Coast College's student reper- tory company. r-----------------------, rage. When th.ls F.Y.I. l most unroman- + WIUlP. ·o.nny and tM Deep Blue •• + Wll ... Orange Coast Cotleo9 .Studio Theater + WiiBI: Thursday through Sunday +HOW MUCH: $6 + ... .,. 432-5880 tic character softens, howev- er, he's a real teddy bear. Palkoner rucely contrasts these elements in a strong perfor- mance. Danny (Mark Palkon-L-----------------------~ Cozad brings er) is a hulking, pugnacious bruiser who'll slug someone for the pure hell of it. Roberta (Roberta Cozad) was abused by her father, manied at shotgun point as a teenager and is pretty much a Wa$hout. They meet µ-t a bar, both·with their g\iards way up. LOW LOW PRICES her share of emotional baggage to the rela- tionship and lugs it all over the stage. The desperation of her character is underscored when she takes home a stranger who's just tried to strangle her. There's little variation in her approach, but often this is just what is called for. 'iiiEE-CtGAB' I Buy 3 Cipn at R~ Price I Trabuco Rd. & I a Get 1 Cipr olFAiual Value ·I El Toro Rd. I FREE! I illbert&ons <.:enter LMuat ~ ~-Coupon· Not VIMd With Lake Forest ~~·.MPtll~ 699-0042 Open 7 DllY8 http;t/Www.occc.com/pb Reservations required. Call 800/514-HOAG (4624). BACK TO SCHOOL, WATCH THOSE KIDS! Rabbitt Insurance Agency AUID •HOMEOWNERS• HF.AllH 40 ~ars in Busintss -~' 0 ~ Sr)__, .a.r?llllO-.............. ,. , 631-7740 '41 Old Newport 8hd. • Newport 8-=li <R-..... ~ Unless otberu1/se nuted, au classes and events are free. ---24 ...... .,It 7...._ ....... 28 ..... 7µa. Maybe a Baby? If you are thinking about having a baby, thJs semlll1I' is for you! Leam evet)'lhing you need to know before pregnmcy. Presenled by Pllrida Korber, M.D., Hoag Hospital OIVGYN. 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IO leltn llOl't .. anllltds fl die liq, M Ml M ~ IDd lalat llt&CM ~ Grwl ....... la die'°' -.................. 1 .. ..-• ,,..,, ........ °' .... , ..... . (WftllC" t r ...... Cll'f ........... ..... .,.... .......... 11 THUMOAY, SEmMIER 11, 1"7 A Rivers runs through local social scene b.w. cook •Everyone here tonight in the ballroom has had problems. Every one of you has hdd tragedy Ul your We You must not dwell on the problems of the past. Move on. Quit the whining and complaUllllQ. Trust me. nobody Wdnts to hear any of it," said Joan Rivers, the sell-effac- ing and seli·mdde queen of the whiners. The petite funny lady .. dressed in a loosely tailored summer suit of pink. showmg off plenty of leg and black patent heels, dddressed tl crowd of some 400 guests of The Sound of Music Guild who had come to hear the comJc and support the children's programs of The Orange County Perfomung Arts Center. The evening, staged by Manha Orlin, Sharl Esaytan and Carole Lobdell, was a smashing success. Rivers had the room in hyster- ics tack.Jing such subjects as ~the perfect genble knee• as she described meeting a gorgeous woman in group therapy Rivers' tone changed rapidly from her comic point of view as she revealed that this stunning blonde with the perfect knees and all the latest Chanel clothes had lost her husband and her two children 1n a ~arUb. a plane she wu _suppoled to be on u well. RJven wu in therapy to recover from the lost of her h i.II· band Edpr Rotenberg, w ho conunitted suidde in 1987 sbortly after the demile of her talk show on the Pox Network. It wu her poignant movement from the serious to the sublime that intoxicated the crowd. Rapid-fire one-liners laced with a ·we is always worth living• philos- ophy, sent a strong message to the Orange Coast IOClal set. ·Yesterday is lus- tory. Tomorrow is a mystery. Today is a gift. That's why we call it the present. Make the most of it," Rivers said, quoting Joan Riven a close friend who happens to be a minister at a Long Island, N.Y. congregation. One woman in the assemblage stood up and asked Rf vers U we should know the name of the miriister who made the quote. She replied very softly that he was just a good friend with won- derful words. There were no holds barred as the comic shared her life experi- ence. From her dateless teens. to her struggle for a career, to the cdrson days. to her husband's death. Rivers was direct and poised, revealing great humanity with big laughs. "I believe in ldughter. It 's so healthy for all of us.· she said. "Only hwnans have this won- dertuJ capacity to laugh at adversity. Have you ever seen two big old cows laughing ... haw haw haw?" she said, mak- ing a facial contortion as if she wse ...._ tbe bovt.M. ·rw •.-.to my plMtic ~'a w1 Mlilg. •a told lbe CroWd.. •All al bis pettems wse then. Btiabet..b '.JlaylOr, you Dama the star, tbey were an thin. Half ot tbe 1actiel there bad nothing done. And the rest. ob my, the rest. were all drop dead gor-geous.• An outspoken advocate of plastic surgery, the comic found a soul mate in event chair OrUn. Subtle Dis- tinction, a cosmetic surg ery consulting firm here in Orange County happens to be the career focus of Orlin. Actually it seems Orlin's entire family is in the human remodeling business. Her charming mother, Sylvia Rubel, in from the Bay Area, works for Orlln's brother-in-law, a promi- nent plastic surgeon in Piedmont, a ritzy hillside enclave in the hills above Oakland. Rivers shared bits and pieces of her relationship with daughter Melissa, who has become some- thing of -a media celep on her own. ·she's 27 and I think soon to be engaged. He's not Jewish, but he's a wonderful boy,• added the comic with a wink. Some questions from the audi- ence concerned the death of Princess Diana and the publicly cool response of the Royal Family ot Wlndlci'. Rmin WU .gain dlNct.. •No one bM the right to ten anyone ... bow to moum.. lhe Nkl "Tbe procw ot grieYtng ii intemely penaaal and until you are there, tn tbo.e shoes, you have no idea what it'• like. And, U'• none ol anybody's business.• 1be local crowd cheered. Sound of Mu.sic patrons sup- porting the evening lncluded George Sdanyer, Marton uad · Roger Palley, Carole and Donn IAbclell, the dwming Lynn Davt. Cook. PaUl and Jim Edwards, Jodi ucl Martin Grembaam, ICann Hu. Eve KomyeA and Stu JlamoD. Mary and Carl Raymond. Ann and WoU S~ and Alu and Julia 11Jcb.ler. Abo in the crowd: Alan Beyer with wife Lesley, Ruth Ko, the lovely IQara Korbtn of Corona Del Mar, Cerbe Feeley, Marlon Jacobsen, Kathie and John Porter, Joann Bechtold. 11na and Matt Scbafnttz, Sharl and David Brown, Barbara and Jay Mag- neu, Anthony Ourenzo, Victoria Avery-Gertner, Craig Brown and Ann and Mike Howard, two of the classiest, warmest, intelligent and most channing people to walk this earth. The evening with Joan River5 was dedicated to Catherine Thyen •tor her long and highly accomplished record of volunteer · · service on behalf of chaiities benefiting the arts, children, edu- cation, and medicine.• Thyen confided how much she enjoyed Celestino's quality MEATS The Finest Meat and Service Aoailablc MaoninQS Beef Loin Boneless Top Sirloin Steak $5.99lb Marinated Beef Loin 1..<•111011 Garllr or Maul Sa11<·t> Tri Tip Roast $5.99lb CelestlQo's Home cooked Dell ('.<> Pn'vnic:lfll'l"f Cooked Turkey Breast Cooked Roast Beef $6.99lb Celestlno·s Homemade Turkey or Beef Jerky $ l 8 .991b OPEN SUNDAY 1 ().6 270 East 171h St • Costa Mesa • (714) 642-7191 (Hill ren Square) 10:00 to 7:00 Mon-Sat Manha Orlin, Eve Komyel, Bernice Edwards and Patti ~dwards e.njoy tbe comic testtvtUes wblle supporUng the cbildnm 1 pro- grams of the Orange County Performing Arts Center. , laughing with Rivers. The comic posed for photos with the local crowd, signed copies of her latest book, then dashed out of the Hyatt Regency ballroom like Cinderella on the arm of her trusted associate Dorothy Melvin. •Make sure you report how thin, young and glamorous I look,• she whispered in my ear with a chuck.le. ~It wouldn't be a lie," I replied. "Not even an exaggeration." • B.W. COOK'S Society column runs Thursdays and Saturdays. .. Volunteer Now and Find Out How You f:an Meet ___ e Nicest People in a Discovery Shop That's wht'rt' you·u find pt'ople like you who are cari~ t'oough to offer tbl"ir time and talent lo fight cancl'r. Oi111·ovny Shopll art' owned aod operatt'd by tbt' Amt'ri<'BD Canc·t'r Soeit'ty, whjcb muns all of the procet'ds r.o 1lirt'rtly to fight canct'r. Do you have th<' timr lo volunteer your help? Yoo ·u enjoy working aJonpidt' othl"r nicf' people ... and thry'll ft't'l tht' samf' about you! ...._,. 2600 E. Coast Hwy ~ Corona del Mar Dis??~~~y ~.~ops 640-4777 Carpet Your Entire Home with Plush or Berber for only -wdOeeiltfOI s49900 UPT03 MOS SAME AS CASH O A C VINYL * WOOD * MARBLE * TILE Commercial • Resident/al Sales & Service Full 11ne of Wool. Woven Axmlnster & Sisal Carpeting Available 1804 H•lttor lloul•v•rd • Co•bl MeH ~~~~~~--' N.E. Comer of H•rbor & 19th Street Uc# 649491 .. 722-9642• ,. • . • . ... '~"' .. CJ)tl!tlJAY MIO THE OJIUOUS c:oiday And the CWious performs Friday froGl 8 30 to 11 p .m , at the Cyp- 6'/ Oen, 2930 Bristol SL. COlta Mesa. There ls oo cover charge. For tnfonna- IJOI>\ c411 SC9w7012. .... l.UMTT Bam• & Noble Metro Pointe Music in the cafe pr81e11ts Brian Barrett from 8 to 10 p.m. For lnlonnation, call 444. 0226. STONIRIDGE The Newport Beach Marriott's Sun- set Music Series presents Stonebiidge from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday ln the hotel's Vi~w Lounge. 900 Newport Center Drt· ve. The admission is SS. Proceeds will be distributed to CHOC and the Clul· dcen's Miracle Network For tnfonna- boo, call 640·4000. HIROSHIMA The Hyatt Newporter'i. seventh annual Ja.z.z Senes conllllues wtlh 1au grpup Hiroshimd on Pnddy at 7 and 8:45 p .m. at the outdoor amphitheater overlookmg the Back Bay di 1107 Jam. boree Road, Newport Bedch Ticke~ are $20 for the first show crnd $25 for the second show and can be purchased at the Hyatt Newporter, through Tick· etMaster or at the door Cluldren under 16 years of age receive 50% off the adult pnce. For infonn<1l1on, call 729- 1234. TRIANGLE SQUARE CONCERTS The shopping renter has free hve classic rock performtlnces i.cheduled from noon to 2:30 p.m. Monddy through Friday; fro11\ 7 to 10 p.m. Fn- day and Saturday; anc1 from J to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday clltemoons in the Town Square at lriangle Squdre, 1870 Harbor Blvd . Cosld Mesa WAl'BKOLOllS AND SCUlnUllS The J4'Wisb Community Cenlel ot Orange County pceMnts an abstract wate:rcolors and ICU.lptwe exhibit ot artist Elenor Siminow Gnteoberg's lat· est work. Suriday through Oct. 22 at the center, 250 B. Baker SL, eo.ta Mesa. A4mlssk>n Is free. A special artist reception will be held SepL 21from4 lo 9 p.m. For .more information, call 755-0340. SHIR.LEY SUUNAN The Costa Mesa Art League's fea· tured artist for September ts Shirley Sullivan. View her watercolon in the Showcase Gallery from 10 _a.m. to S p.m .. Wednesday through Saturday, and noon to 5 p.m. Sundays at 1631 Sunflower Ave. in the South Coast Plaza Village. Ad.mission IS free. For more infonna.tion, call 540-6430. SUNDAY SPOTUGHT TOURS The Orange County Museum of Art offers a Sunday Spotlight Tour at 2 p m focusing on a single artl.st or work of art. Sunday's topic: Diane Sp1tzke1t explores Hans Burckhasdt's "MeXJcan Cock Fight.• Spotlight tows are free with admission. Admission IS S5 for adults. $4 for seruors and stud~nts, cJul. dren under 16 and museum members are free. Hours are 1 t a.m. to 5 p.m Tuesday through Sunday. The museum is localed at 850 San Clemente Dnve, Newport Beach. For information, cdll 759-1122. FANTASY TV BLUEPRINTS The Orange County Museum of Art South Coast Plaza Gallery presents Mark Bennett's •Fantasy TV Blue- RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY Mire Y .. !>* c.wn ._el 1922 IWllOI llVDv COSTA MESA • 541-11 S6 Ritz Entertainment presents ~11· ot dul6c televlsloa sbow homes dvougb NOY 30 Ad»DMirn ii bee and houri .,. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday; 10 a.rn. to 1 p.m. Satur- day1 and t 1 a ~ to 6:30 p.m.. Sunday. The gaJlirY ls looat.s at 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. For inlormAtion, calJ 759-1122. NEWPORT BEACH 01Y HALL Th4' pubbc ls Invited to view Helen Belllnger's •Art on the Rocks" and Nancy Gardner's "The Force of. Gravi- ty• ln the Newport Beach City Hall gallery, 3300 Newport Blvd. through SepL 30. The exhibit is free and open for viewing Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. For inlonnation. call 717-3870. ART Of THE AUTOMOBILE The public is invited to view •Art of the Automobile,• an exhibit of paint- ings by WW14m Motta. in the foyer of the Newpqrt Beach Central Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave., through Sept. 30. The exhibit IS lree and open for view· mg Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.1 Fnday and Saturday from 9 a.m to 6 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. For lllformation, call 717-3801. ROBERT ~EMEAN The Orange County Museum of Art presents artist Robert Cremean's sculpture "Vabcan Corridor. A Non· Specific Autobiography" through Sept. 2 t . The museum is open from 1 t a.m. to 5 p .m. Tuesday through Sunday and located at 850 San Clemente Drive, ewport Beach. Adm1ssion is S5 for adults and S4 for seniors and students. Cluldcen under 16 and museum mem- bers are free. For information, call 759- 1122. TWIHtt P.Jllffi~ Fall J a z ') / Enjoy live performances by the biggest names In jazz in the beautiful. dynamic venues of Twin Palms Newport Beach. For one low price. you'll receive show tickets and on elegant three-course prlx-flxe dinner showcasing the bounty of Collfornlo coastal cuisine. UCK MANGIONE legendary jazz trumpeter October 3 &FARAH multicuttural guitar wizards October 10 RICHARD EL EARL KLUGH melodic Jazz./ pop acoustic guitar October 17 o voice llke shadowy silk • soul-drenched tenor sax the master of ocousttc boss With DaVld Clqv.ton Thomas. A fiery fUsl6n of )dtz. rock 8t blues OtUCK JONES 5HOWltOOM \llew the world of ChudtJones and bis pdva collection at 3631 B. Cout HJghw&y. Corooa de1 MM. The 11 tail gallery 11 free and open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m to 7 pm and Saturday and Sunday trorn 10 a.rn. to 6 p.m For mtonnabOn. call 723-1900. PHOTO EXHllfT The Pine Arts Gallery at Orange Coast College presents artist/photogra· pber Peggy Jones' emlbltioo, "Pinhole to Pixel,• through SepL 26 at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Admission is lree. For inlonnatioo, call 432-5039. WOMEN PHOTOGRAPHERS EXHIBIT The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum presents its 1997 summer exhibit, "Wind on the Water: Women Photographers In Yachting,• from JO a.m to S p m. through Nov. 9, The museum ls located aboard the riverboat Pride of Newport, docked at the Back Bay Bridge, 151 E. Coast Highway. Newport Beach Admission is free for members, $4 for guest adults; St for guest children 12 and younger. The museum IS dosed Mondays. For more mfonnabon, call 675-8915, ext 102 DEE BISER The Robert Mondcsvi WUle and Food Center presents arbst Dee Biser through Nov. to from 9 a m to 5 p .m. at 1570 Sceruc Ave., Costa Mesa For inlonnabon, call 979-4510. FIRE AND ICE The Orange County Museum of Art presents "Fire and Ice (Shrinking/Expandmg)" by drtist 'i' ALDEN'S CARPET has opened a new Area Rug Studio Why Pay Dept Store Prices? ALL RUGS & RUNNERS on SALE. I landmadc w ools. synthetics. sisal ALDEN'S CARPETS, INC. I ()()3 Pl<Kl'tllicl SI.. C:O!-.ld :\1l'~ 646-4838 THURSDAY, SUT'EM9ER 11, 1997 George Stone through Dec. 28 ct 850. San Clemente Drive. Newport BHcb For more tnformmon, call 759-1122.. NAUTICAL MUSEUM The museum features three ga.1· leries the Newport Gallery dlspl.aymg the maritime history of the aru; the Model Galley exhiblhng a seledion of. wortd-dus models and the Crend Salon which offers tounng exhibits Admission is free for memben, $4 for adults and St for cluldten The m~ urn ls located at 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach For mfonnabon, call 673-7863. CREATt JOURNAU The Orange County Museum of Art offers a work.shop, Wide Ribbon Open Spine Book. Saturday from 9 a m lo 4 p.m. at 850 San Clemente Dnve, New· port Beach. Create cl one·of..a·klnd JOur• nal with exposed spine of nbbon, bro- cade, tapestry, silk or !men doth held tog.ether by stitches and knot$ The rost ls $75 plus $20 to S30 for Uldten.ils For lnformation, call 759-1122 STAGE ADULT CONSERVATORY South Coast Repertory otter.. the lcilJ session for the-Adult Coni.ervdtory beginning Monday through Nov 10 Students 18 and over create thtm own programs to swt mclJviducil pace dnd interest, choosing classes thcH rclnge from the Fundamental of AclUlg through the Actor's Workshop, tdught by Conservatory Dlfector Karen Hensel. CldSses meet weekly from 7 to 10 p.m, LO lbe tbea at 655 Town C.en· ., Dnw. Costa Mete RegistraboD $225 kw each rune-week For lnformebOn. call? .ssn. S..OWIOAT~ Bloommgdale's Newport Beadl hosts a ID1Dl-pertonnanee ol ~ Orange CoUnty Perfonnmg Arts p,.. sentabon ol •Show Boat• today lrom noon to l p.m m Bloomingdale'I court· yard. 843 Newport Center Drive. There will be an autograph s:igning at Bloom- ingdale's 5tOAt on the Mil noor follow- ing Ille performance. For mote informa- tion, call 729-6600. GOOOASNEW The South Coast Repertory presen~ "Good As New•, a comedy by Peter Hedges, Sept. 19 lbnilugh Oct. 19 on the Second Stage, 655 Town Center Dnve, Costa Mesa Prevlew the play Tuesday through Sept 18 Preview I uckeu are $18 Regular bckets are $26 to S4 1 A speaal Pay What You Will show wiU be Sept 20 di 2.30 pm For mlormatJop, call 957-2602 THE untE MERMAID The Riverboat Players theatnccil 1roupe presents Hans Chnsbdn Ander- ~on ~ ·Tue Little Mel1tldld through O< t 26 All ~hows ~tart at 1 30 p m Pxcept for two dinner shows at 8 p m Sept 20 clnd Oct 11 Tickets dre $8 ror c.1d111ts dnd $4 for children 12 and under Group rdtf'l> uf 10 or more dre dVdildule di $4 75 p;>r person The pE>r· fonndJ\n'!> clre at the Newport Hdrbor Ndut1Cc1l l\lu!>eum. 151 E. Coast Hlyh· \'c.ty, Newport Bec.11 h For mfonnabon. tdll 675-8915 ext 402 ·eRING PARIS HOME! .•. or Rome, London, Moscow or Munich. An exchange student from an "exotic" land can ennch your entire family by becoming a speciaJ friend for life! Choose now from among dozens of applications with photos of .boys and girls, 15 to 18 years. from France, Italy, England, Gmnany or Russia for the high school year. Hosting an exchange student will enrich your family forever. 0£ deligh~ at new Ritz 8.lfresco area W. hen I WU With Bon Al>Petit _magazine on Wif.th1re Boulevard, a colleegue and I used to have 1bll new 9a:Jdeu seats 15 to 100 ~ at tented tables and fealw'el a tiled EuropeaJi-style fountain; water .pDls frolli a lion's mouth into terns colt.a amphorae scattered below. There are three-tiered topiaries and shrubs, and, as in alftelco restaurants may, ol neceuity, ofter limited c.boicel, the fabled RUz kitchen under the superVilioD ol aecutive cbel L1lpe ,._ E ft is prepared to serve e~ on the lavish lunch and dinner menus, indoon or out. lunchn~at The Greenh6use. Pully enclosed by 9lass, this restau- rant was filled with daylight but I ) I ', I '\.. ( I I\ I \ I l \\ mQSt new gardens; the p~ts will need time to fill out and flourish. · Soups, slllads, appetizers, sandwiches, cold entrees and daily favorites fill two pages at lunchtime. Making a choice is the most difficult part. 1\vo of the many soups are chilled and ·refreshing: seafood gazpacho rich with pieces of Dungeness aabmeat, shrimp and avocado ($5.75) and cucumber soup ($4.95) with yogurt and dill. .. the raf$ were filtered through hanging baskets of greenery and tall trees. While giving the illu- ' sion of alfresco dining, it remained cool in the summer, · warm in the winter and a leafy haven in the rain. That space came to mind last week when colossal heat and humidity drove most of us diners out of the new Ritz Garden and inside to air-conditioned com- fort. Though the garden is a very pleasant, walled-in area of stucco aµd poured concrete flooring, it is still an open-air affair, subject to the whims of Mother Nature. YUKIKO FUJISAWA I DAILY PILOT General Manager Phil Crowley (left) and Ritz Garden owner Hans Prager take a resttul moment tn the new garden dJntng area. A massive, 1,000-square-foot construction of metallic mesh is mounted overhead offering fil- tered shade and heating appara- tus for cool nights and it serves as a high-tech trellis for future vines. • Authentic Sushi Bar • Elegant Dining Room LSll 9-f 11•!:tl • Complete Ba ........ 1:11-1..-.•. 2675 Irvine Avenue, Costa Mesa (across from Newport Golf Course) fMr;) ~ , ' . ' . ¥. • \l • Q •J> ~ M M.o c )t NOW SERVING Country Style With Ouf"Sunday Mexican Breakfast PRIMI! RIB NIGHTI s91s SUNDAY NITE SPECIAL 9 5 * Chicken, Ribs & Brisket Dinner * From 5 pm Y. BBQ Chicken, Spere Ribs and Brleket of BHf lndudee: laked Potato, S..ne. Corn on the Cob • Saled a.r Classified ads work for you! THE Daily Pilot • Now on the Water in Newport Beach A truition of a trul.y Florentine aUJw continue.I/ We Have 'lbe Most Taps OD Record In Orange Countyl • 46 Import Been • 4 2 l'llcro Brewen We feature over 50 slngle-malt lk blended Scotch Whiskeys as well as many top-of-the-llne bourbons, tequilas and brandies. HEmlY 'ri HARRY'S OOAT HILL TAVERN 1830 Newport Blvd. Newport at Harbor. Costa Mesa (714) 548-8428 I ---CAAOS ACC G~1 WRAPpeb r--FffEE--1 1 Bowl wlJh 1 /-., 1 Purchase o any 1 "'"" 1 Whale Salad 1 0 II Valid 9/11-9/18 11 t' Coupon Not V-"d With IVly Other Offef. I . One Coupon Per Customet'. I Coupon Is not good fOf deliverin L-----------.J r-----------, ,---------~----,I FREE I !) FREE 11 Buy 1 Get, Free I 11 (Chicken or 1 I Dftn~~·~~.:::n=.... 11 Veggie Wrap) I II Valid 9/2S-10/2 II II Valld 9/18-9125 II Coupon Not Vllld WWI Mt a.. Offer. I I Coupon Not Vaid With Any oct. Offer. I I 0ne eoupon ,_ c..... 0ne eoupin '-' ~ L-~.!:~":.t:!.":..~-..1 L-~.!!.~ec'-tcw-~-..1 W e novv deliver! 9 5 1 -2 500 250 E. 17th St., Ste D Plw.ne or Fax In your order phone: 1714) 548 4403 fax: (7141 548-5564 Open ·~ • t t :008111-9:00pm c;IlANI) ()J>I~NIN G TOK·YO GATE }apanat Ra uanant ~ l 1 '-, •• I • \ • \ T • I ' I ~~ ( . • r r' I< l 0 u T I At evening meals, the garden room is o. pleasant, balmy dining spa~ and the sound of the fountain is soothing -an ldea,l venue for private dinner parties and recep- tions. The nicest feature of the Ritz Garden is its food. While other Maine lobster bisque is the sheer essence of lobster with a Ml CASA MEXICAN REST.-'\URANT CATERING. ro.co. KIDS MENU AVAIU.BLE (,r<'~I &ln:non ofBccr & Wine SERVING Lunch 11 :00 co 4:00 Dinner • Daily at 4:30 270 Bristol St., Ste 1114 Costa Mesa • CA 92626 Bristol Village Plaza Comu of Red Hill & B..Utol Join "'fin' a c'"""1 family Ji11m1 llhnOIJ>here Phone 241-1444 0 SINCE SABATINO'S 1864 Restaurant & Lido Shipyard Sauage Co. FLAVORFUL & DELICIOUS LUNCHES DINNER • SUNDAY BRUNCH \ C,I OHIOI '°I 01'1 \I\<. IC\ \CI\\\!\\ \I \'Cl\' "ARRFS11NG PRODUCTION ... VISUALLY INTRIGUING!" -Los A111/dts 7Tmes "GREAT COMIC SC~ ... BRF.ATHTAKINGLY AITRACTIVE!" --Orang1 Counly RtRfsm 0 -... dub ot. ~c IWirled in (S6.50) end \be wild mushroom •cap. puc:dnO• (55.95) steaming in a cup with foamy eggwhite •m.Uk• 11 exotic and deeply Oa- vored -like drinking a cop of el1xir from a magic forest, Lunchtime appetizers, salads and cold entrees till an entire page with classic American favorites like Boston bibb let- tuce with chopped crisp bacon and apples, shrimp cocktail, cold poached stllrnon, Cobb sal- ad and crab Louis, San Francis- co style, ($13.50). The carousel ($16.95) is an extravagant revolving tray of expensive treats like steak tart~. smoked Norwegian salmon, shrimp, Maine lobster claws, Dungeness crab legs, prosciutto ham, rotisserie roast chicken and more. I don't know of another restaurant that is serving this lavish a presenta- pon of elegant foods. Served for two or more, there is ample for three hun9!f gourmets at least, so bring a friend. A juicy, choke beef Ritz burger ($8.50) with lean crisp bacon and real cheddar cheese with shoestring fries is luxurious Yankee dining. Other more adventurous souls will like tem- pura crusted soft-shelled crab with Asian coleslaw ($8.95) or Q.uck salad with pickled red gin- ger, toasted almonds and rice noodles ($12.95). .. Dinner entrees are served with a compli:me.nta.ry ramekin of creamed com, guaranteed to please the heartiest of appetites otherwise engaged in downJng a thick scallop of fresh swordfish steak ($22.95) served on a ~--...... --~-~---~ ..... ....----·---" I ntlllTZ...... I ! . I ' • Wiie The Ritz Gardin : I + .-. • Newpan een-: I ! 1er ~ Nl'tidPOft ~ ! I .... ; 1,.-A.. u-vt... I I · ..utlU .. '""'!~:J I I through Friday, 11 :30 Lm. to l : l p.m1; dinner, 6 to 10 p.m. : l Monday through Thu~, l 5:30 to 10 p.m. F~. ()pen l saturqay, 5:30 to 11 p.m.~ sun-: day. 6 to 9 p.m. : + flRICI: Elcpenslve : +PHONE! 720-1800. l I • I -------------------------~ grilled portobello mushroom or Dover sole ($26.95) grilled on the bone, filleted in the kitchen and served in sweet glory with hazelnut butter, asparagus and parsley potatoes. Lake Superior wbitefish is sauteed in a crusty coat of crushed hazelnuts and the char- broiled 18-ounce T-bone steak ($26) is a marvel of flavor enhanced with a tall crunchy pile of onion straws and shoe- string potatoes. Mossobuco" of lamb is a new entry ($23), a marvel ol. tenderness and Oavor. A cllun.lt ol clauic Norwegiu ~ SAimon poached and draped with a three-mustard caper sauce lattes pristine and pure with dilled young potatoes and spoonleaf spinach. Rotis· serte chicken ($17.50) ls served with wild mushrooms pd mashed potatoes flecked with chives. The new dessert chef Emil- iano Melchor, formerly at the Ritz-Carlton, suggests his •Har- lequin Souttle, • a marvel of chocolate and Grand Marnier souffle sauced with creme anglaise. He makes a divine peach melba and the Baked Alaska is an ace. For another light finish, five scoops of bril- liantly fruity sorbet with a decanter of Chambord liqueur is perlection -just a few ideas from a deck of rich desserts. The Ritz has always had a windowless environment, but by knocking out a wall in the Guy Buffett dining room for entry into the garden room, they have, at last, let the sunshine in. The northwest wall is now a series of . doors and windows leading to that new garden space. and the daylight flooding inside is a wel- come sight. I hope Hans Prager and his managing partner, Phil Crowley will ronsider the addition of some windows along the wall opposite the bar, as well . By Marla Bird Celestino's is a real meat market Faaabulousl So my best food spy tells me about the new Celesttno quality meat mar- ket/deli/cafe on 270 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa. They are featur- ing fresh harpooned swordfish, Manning's beef, free range chicken, homemade sausages, great sandwiches. Celestino's is a small store tucked in at Hilgren Square. Phone 642- 7191. Taittinger at the Ritz Who better than Hans Prager and Phil Crowley, who bring a lifetime of wine knowl- edge to The Ritz wine cellars, to host a champagne dinner with Claude TaltUnger, Presi- PLUG IN THURSDAY, SEPTEMIER 11, 1997 platter chatter dent of Champagne Ta.ittinqer, as the guest of honorf The din· ner featuring a series of ~elect champagnes with a very speciAl menu will be held Oct. 8, at $125 per person all inclusive. Phone 720-1800 for reserva- tions. Taste of Newport The annual food, wine and entertainment extr avaganza will take place Sept. 19 to ~1 with 32 restaurants and 13 wineries participating in the event at Fashion Island. For fur- ther info, phone 729-4400 Dining with faith Friends of the Orange Coast lnterfalthSbel~r WOCIB)wtll launch its third annual series of dining feasts with dinner at Five Crowns on Oct. 13. The five monthly events (excluding December) will continue with dinnen at four more stellar Orange <;::ounty restaurants: Dlq, ..... Tbe lttlz .... ~Ultaf Aaden. Tic.kets are $95 per penoo per event with pro- ceeds devoted to support 18 homeless families. For reserva- tions and information, phone 631-7213. Tanked at the Truftle That's what the oysters are, at the lively Golden Truffle, with just a few days left this week to go on its oyster extrav- aganza. Oysters from around the world are alive and well in its special tank right now. And on Sept. 27. from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Alan Greeley will show you how to cook those and oth- er treasures of the sea. Call 645-9970 for reservations. • MARLA BIRD'S Restaurant Review and Platter Chatter are published every other Thursday in The Daily Pilot. Plug into your community. Find out what's going on in your city, Daily Pilot parks, churches, schools, entertainment and sports. Read the ... How t o reach us7 Ca ll t he Daily Pilot at 64.2-4 3.21 "For the Freshest Taste on the Peninsulal'' RIVERBOAT RESTAURANT O"I boePd the "'Pnde of Newport" RMwt>oet. Home Of The Newport Harbor Neudoal Museum (Hirrnefty Reuben E. Lee) Is ~ From 11 emSpm Lunch and Dimer Sat Sun Brunch Sam (doeed Mondaysi ReseMltions Needed Oily For Weddings. 8enqlJ8ta ()-PrMtte Perties. All Major O'd Cards Accepmd. l.oclted fl:. 151 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beech. CA 92660 (714) 673-3425 Fax: 673-7864 CHARLIE'S CHILI l.Daltmd It Mcfadden Race (nd tD Newport Pier) in Newport Belc:h. Holn: ~nv 1:CD1m-12 ~ W8ebnds 7:0Jlm.3.00lm. Amax. Vlae, Oieoolow. Olw .. Cub. No ~ .... Needed (714) 675-7991 MARK WOOD'S PALM STRl:l:T BEACH CLUB a--'f04I' own pea dilh, ~ "'f'I •~of 88lllfood ~Try CM~ pml. er Pl'*r't _.... Top off yt:U' ,,.... ...,, a.:tl C1b ice c:nsn pDll pie b' •. Otiwt'a rTWl.I ~ f\j br. PD~ "*'It 5:00 far cmer ~. ltlr'U SIL, ,_....,,. Mlcarne. El!ltt bi"d ~_.,.Man. d"6 1lU9. S.7pim. 7 ~of ........ ., ... · 111'"*1 a. " B11ba1. CDTW" ~ M . ('714) 8130040 .. zu•••• . ,.,.... inmm: Fb, <>*Mn. Sl:9llt & ~ Prime Rb, Pim, ~a...~ AIJ9 Fram 13.95 fwJ ~ ~ 112llm 1Qiftt -lldlmll 1111pm. C)d Olrdl NI& ~.~ ~ •Na&~Uiaadlt17~2 P!Kelfll. Olili Mllil (7'1C) Ma«»1 THK CUUNARY. WllAP ..... ~·-·· ..... 5 =wW*1•11il'<ll ., ....... ,,GJlin. L..-lnh ,...,. •t.1'Nt ..... -·•IDCY KAPLAN'S ~.fslr- BISTRO CALFOlllENTAL CUISINE Catering Lunch • Dinner 7 days DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS STARTING AT $4.95 3112 Newport Boulevard Newport Beach 675-0896 Ml CASA Breakfast. lunch. dinner and late 8Y8nlngS. V!x.ed the best dell '" CAr me* ere now a tnp to 8aj8 as ~ as MexlCO Now affenng fish frenge C.OUnty. ~ 7 deys ~ 1 ~ and Sam-11 pm on tacos Phone eheed fer orders r.o-go. Hol.rs• Delly Fram 11 :CDam weekends AJ major aedit cards eccefX8d. Locetad off the l-405 Al Maier Q'8lk Cards Accepted located At 296 17th ~. Costa at Harbor &<d. 3211 Harbor BMj, 557-6611 ~ 64~7626 SFUZZI New Italian • Elegant yet casual (loc8ted in Triangle Square, Costa Mesa). Wed -Happy Hour. Earty Brd Menu Awilable Every day. Hours: Lunch 11 :30em-4:CQ:>m. Dimer 4:~10:30. Aeservetions accepood. Mastarcard, Visa. American Express. Locat.ed et 1870-A Harbor BMj, (714) 548-9500 TOSCANINI RISTORANTE IT ALIANO Past8S and bread made fresh dally. ~ 6 days a week. Tues.- Sun 4-1 ~. Fn. & Set. 4-11 Oosad Moodays. VIS8 and Mesterc8rd aocept.ed Reservabons accepted Located et 3012 Newport 8Nd 723-2338 NICK'S PIZZA Great pazas &. pasta in Costa Mesa since 1968. ~ for lunch Tues . .ffi. 11 am-2pm. Omer served flpm-1 ~· Set. noon to 1~. Oosad &nlay and Monday. l..ocaC8d et 23Xl Harbor Shopping Cert.er. Costa Mesa. (Rear per1ang ~) (714) ~1511 RISTORANTE MAMMA GINA Locamd at 251 East Pacific Coast Highway in Newport Beach. Lunch Mon.&t. 11 ·D-2:30. Sunday &ulch 11am-3pm. Dinner Mon&.wi Spm-1 ~. Cell ahead for reservations 67~ SCAMPI FI08 Famitv Dining. Nev.+f Remodeled.~ 7 Days A Week for Dinner Oily. 5~10:~. 'Ne r.atar-Pr+.tata Lunch Parties for 15 People or Men. AJ Major a-edit Cards AcceJt.ad. Reservations Accepted. l..oc8l8d llt 1576 Newport Blvd. Coste Mesa.645-8560 SABATINO~& RESTAURANT a SAUSAGE CO. Paa, c--Siied. Homemede Seuuge. Valli, Lamb. o..t., wn.. Beer. C9 aino & Dessert. Hours: Wetlt.. Ser.tlg Sit. & 9M\. Bnn:h From B::D-1 :CD. &rl 11.,,...1~. Fri.-Slt. 11.,,...11 pm. M M1iP' Q'8dit Cerdl = Locad fl:. 251 ~ w.,. Nlwport Beech (714) 1 . A MACHI Sushi &. Sushi t.o Go. Complet.e Bar. All Ma)Or Credit Cards. Locat.ed At 2675 lrvtne Ave. (Across From Newport Golf Course) (714) 64~5518 BEN I HANA Amenca's most celebrated Japanese restaurant ~ 7 days a week. Lunch 11 :30am-2.~ Mon-fn. Dinner 5:~ 10·CQ>m Moo-Th.K'S. 5.~11 ·(Qim Fn; 5pm-11 ·(Qim Set; 4:~9:~ Sun loc8ted at 4250 8rch St. 955al22 LA CAVE Menu kdJdes· l.obst.er. Crab. Shnmp, ~ Deily Specials. Fn. &. Set. Pnme Rib. F\JI EW &. W1ne lJst. (;asuat [)"eSS Hours: L..unches 11 ::D2·:l:l -Omer Mon -Sat. From 5.~. V158 , Mastelair'd, Diner's Oub Locat.ed At 1695 r.riie f/Ne .• (At 17~ 9Teet) Near 8'ockbust.er Entert81nment ~ Mesa (714) 646-7944 THE BARN STEAK HOUSE Menu Includes 9:eak. Fresh Ash, Oltcken. Burgers&. Salads Prices Range From $3. 75 For Lunch & $6.25 For Otnner. Hours: Mon.&t. ~ 11em For Lunch. 4:oopm Mon.~ .. Dinner 3:~. Sat. & Sun., Major Credit Cards Accepted. Located At 2301Hlfrbor81. 131. Costa Mesa (714) 641-9777 THE ARCHES The premium lt8ak end ll88food house In Orange Courtty since 1922. Ser.;ng lunch Mon.~. 11 :30am unQl..'3:CQim Dimer se'Y8d ritjO/ und 1 :CXllllm. Loc8Cl!d 00 Newport 8oulell8rd & C.oellt 1-+.vy ... ~ Beech. 645-7077 THE CANNERY 1-istooc Waterfront Resrarant and Hlrixr Ouse Cert.er Holrs: Mon -Set. 11 ·Dam . 2 CDam. &61 10;00em-12 ~. Al Meier O'd Cards. Reserwborls ~ Located at 3:)10 L.afayea;e /!twe • Newi>a"t Beach. CA 92 (714) 615-5777 Fax 675-2510 ~ CATALINA FISH KITCHEN Get hooked on tt.e freshest fish 8Vllllable. Fresh !riled fish, seafood and chiclcen, sandwiches. salads, grilled plat.es and pasta specialGes. • ~ six days a week Mon thru lht.ra. 11 amSpm, Fr.' & Sat. 11 am-9pm Located at 670 W. 17th ~ #!E, Costa Mesa (West of t.he new Trade!' Joe's.) 645-8873 THE BLUEWATER GRlLL Waterfront dlnlflQ et the former ~ of the hist.one Sea Stuny and Delaney's Featl.nnQ fresh mesquit&giled seafood. ~ bar and ret.a~ fish martet. Full bar Qgar patio Onng patio Al rTI8fOI" cards Catenng 8Y8llable Seating upon 8ITMll Moderatl!ly pnced located et 6:J:l Udo Part CXM! near Lido Island ~ 7 days. kJrich & dmer 675flSH THE OLD SAIGON RESTAURANT Fine v~ dining. Next t.o C.'fa .r SeNng ~ Vlllltnll'neSe twll8 Menu inclJda: Vletr\lmele egg ra~ roh, old ll"900on8I nee wrmcell wtil ~ and heh . Separata vagelanell !TllWlU prepered " ttie lreditionll recipel. HW's;11 :CXlamS CQJm Oceed ~ Vilaft,C ecoepted. 271 East 17th St. Costa Mesa. (714) 574-8460 readers hotline ........................ ; Appcilled at l ~advertising 1' • • • THE ISSUE: Readers objected to Daily Pilot's decision to run an adver- tisement that offered .ways to pass a drug~test. I want to complain about the advertising that appeared in the Daily Pilot. It's an end of summer kind of back-to-school ad featuring various businesses and you have a Pass Your Drug Test advertisement. I think that's horrible. Learn how to figure out cheat on a drug test going back school? I think that should have been placed in another part of the paper and certainly not amongst a back-to-school theme. '. ALLISON SINGER Costa Mesa I am absolutely appalled that you would allow the ad on the back page of the first section which sort of speaks to back-to- school end-of-summer. The ad about Pass Your Drug Test. I cannot believe that you allow such a thing in the paper. To let people know that's available is JUSt appalling. I have taken your paper for 25 years, and th.is is just an outrage. CHARYL BUITERWOR1H Balboa Island I'm a avid reader of the Daily Pilot -it's my favorite paper. But today I was appalled at an ad I found on the page called End of Summer. It was a large box ad, very picturesque in red lettering that says Pass Your Drug Test and the gist of the ad is buy one of these products and if you're an athlete or if you're a person going in f~ an employee drug test you can take these and cheat and not let the world know you are a drug user. I find this an appalling message to be sending our young people and anyone else as far at that goes : I : I : I ; I ! I ! I : J : I : I : I ; I ; I ! I ; I : I ; I ; I ; I : I : I : I : I ; . •I I I I I I • I 'lime to end ·1>m1. connection . on cellular antennae deal O h bow people love their neighborhood J>O.rks. And when these little slices of Americana become threatened, there aren't many things that can elicit more emotion or evoke the wrath of the populace more. So it was quite natural and quite expected when residents of Newport North objected after learning city officials had given the nod to L.A. Cellular to install phone antennae on a light pole in Bonita Creek Park. And after looking at the original plans, we understand their objections. Residents would have been left looking at what resembled a Mir space stati~aunch site in their neighborhood park. But after complaints to city and L.A. Cellular officials, the plans for the antennae were modified, and a less-intrusive look- ing device was developed. End of story, right? Wrong. The residents of Newport North continue to demand the antennae be removed from the park altogether. They insist they were not properly informed of the plans for the device, and city officials are now shoving it down their throats. They've even called for the ouster of City Manager Kevin Murphy and City Attorney Bob Burnham and threatene<]\le~jal action. Let's add a little perspective here. The city did hold public hearings on the matter, and offi- cials say they did inform the Newport North property manage- ment company of the plan. If that management company declined to inform residents, that's the company's error, not the city's. ,... Still, we agree with the residents that city officials should have handled the matter better, and since residents continue to feel they are getting the runaround, it's obvious communication remains as bad as, well, a cellular phone connection. And speaking of cellular phones, most people would have to admit they are here to stay -more and more people are using them, many of whom probably live in the Newport North community. ( As the demand for cellular phones increases, so, too, will the need for antennae to transmit the signals. . ' Unless we're all ready to ditch our cellular phones, it's time we face this unfortunate fact of life and bang up this conflict before any more time and money is expended. -~------------------------------------------------------------------~ corre~pondence College seminar was . not a sanctiOned coursa A s chair of the department at Saddleback.. College that includes the disci- pline of history, I ask this oppor- tunity to c1artfy an important point about 1hl.stee ~teven Frogue's proposed seminar on the assassination of John P. Kennedy, which Joseph N. Bell discussed in his Aug. 21 col- umn. . This course was not to be a "college course" in the usual sense of the term. Rather, it was a "non-credit community educa- tion" course. These classes are completely outside the jurisdic- tion of the academic 'faculty, and are in no way reviewed or sanc- tioned by the academic depart- ments or the curriculum commit- tee of the Academic Senate. No one on the fiaculty had the authority to review or challenge this course. The Community Education Department has long been a source of interesting and excel- lent non-aedit offerings, but they are in no way related to the academic programs at the col- lege. ALANNAH ORJllSON Chair, Social Science Department Saddleback C~llege Orange~ County not without its corruption In Judge Gardner's column, The Verdict, he writes of corrup- tion in Los..Angeles over the years and finishes, in praising Orange County, with how •the county has remaiJled free from corruption. w How can the judge living here all these years not be aware of all the county supervisors being convicted and/or jailed and/or fined and/or removed from office for corruption -and most recently top county officials the ·same in, the recent county bank- ruptcy scandal. .KEN KVAMMEN Newport Beach Thanks Daily Pilot The city of ~wport Beach and the Bob Henry Park Dedica- tion Committee would like to thank you and The Daily Pilot f6r your donation to the opening day ceremonies of our city's newest community park. Your gift of the services of a photographer for the day was much appreciated. We also are grateful for the great advance coverage that The Daily Pilot gave us. The program went smoothly, and the well over 2,500 people in attendance enjoyed everything, from the band playing before the event to the delicious food served at the close of the cere- monies. The youth sports group~ loved participating in the inau- gural games on the brand new fields, and everyone, from AYSO soccer's two regions to Bobby Sox Softball to Newport Harbor Baseball, bad a wonderful time. We in the harbor area are so very fortunate to have businesses such as. yours willing to take an interest in the community and give support when possible. Thank you again so very much. JO VANDEllVOllT, Chair Bob Henry Park Dedication Committee Newport Beach Teller right in banning vendor material Although you did the best job possible in attempting to make Bob Teller look bad for trying to keep a family environment at the swap meet ("Swap meet vendor alleges organizer roughed him up" Sept. 3), as a parent of two children I can't wait to shake Teller's hand for removing vulgar material from a vendor's booth. The last thing I want my chil- dren to see at the swap meet is a raunchy bumper sticker .. ! hope to see a Daily-Pilot editorial com- mending Teller for maintaining a family friendly business. CHRISTIN A. FOREMAN Newport Coast I would dread to think that the Daily Pilot was hard up for revenue that they needed to print this kind of an ad with this type of message. I wouldn't mind heanng from someone at the Daily Pilot explaining to me why they feel the need to print this kind of an adve.rtisemenl. community commentary MARGE MANTON Costa Mesa • EDfTOR'S NOTE: The Daily Pilot wel- comes and thanks readers for their input. We apologize to anyone who was offended by the advertising. It has been discontinued and won't run again write your re~resentatives ITAll SENATE ROfS Johnson (R), 35th Din., 18552 MacA.r'thur Blvd. Ste. 220, Irvine, 92715. 833-0180. SIAll A.Sml9LY M41rilyn Brewer 00. 70th Dist., Want cheaper water? Let the city run -things ·· By Joseph T. Devlin I have been a resident of Costa Mesa for more than 35 years and during most of these years, I have been in charge of the city of Newport Beach's water system. Running a water system is no big deal; any city with a competent staff can easily carry out its operation. Why the dty of Costa Mesa has to have a separate district like Mesa Consolidated Water District to serve water makes no sense at all and places a terrible burden on the rate payers. Most of the surrounding cities, like Newport Beach, simply have a separate division or department that works under the City Coun- cil and city manager to serve water to its citizens. Cities like Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Santa Ana, Fullerton, Orange. Anaheim and Garden Grove all serve water this way. They do not need or want a special district. Even if Mesa Consolidated Water District could somehow overcome its present problems like cost overruns, poor design, lawsuits and costly travel jun- kets, it would still be a bad deal for the water users. the mailbag The duplication of effort required in supporting a special district is very costly. The cities already have a big cost advan- tage. They have an organization in place, complete with a legal department, finance officer, pur- chasing agent, etc. It should • come as no surprise that this cost advantage shows up in the water rates. All of the cities mentioned, that overlie the water basin, have water rates that are less than the rates in Costa Mesa. U Mesa Consolidated Water District is serious about bringing down the cost of water, it should elect to dissolve the district and transtenfie entire water opera- tion over to the city of Costa Mesa. • JOSEPH T. DEVLIN Is a rftldent of Costa Mesa. • 18952 MacArthur Blvd., Ste. 220, trvlne, 92715, 863·7070. . : Give mobile home residents· a chance . . l l lHE ISSUE: Residents of ~ Marinapark mobile. home ! community have mounted i a challenge to plans to j tear down the area and ~ build a hotel. ~ o n Aug. 25, 1997, I attend- : ed the Newport Beech i City Cound.l meeting at ! City Hall. It wu a real leamlng ! expettence. I witnessed the MV· 1 en couDdl .memben showing ~ greet OODCem ovet 5,,.... ! ot. two PlddDg lpac.wt -... : Stnet and the locatlon of trUb ~~-w~~ : Verd. ; a ,. .... a1"fbQin sbOUI i pq m ~Dlda •• ll1ID • f c•1A;N it~IDtbe i pit 'st ttut ,.,...=--=·= ., Martnapark resldentl like Eibel Wlllla••are conc:ernfld about the dty'l~to i'eDoftte tlM . SCHOOL CONT1NUED FROM A 1 about leaving their old elementary schools. 11rm not really used to tt," said JeanniM Hernandez. a lixtb-grader who attended Whittier Elamentary last year. :It's kind of bOliDg because it's the fust day. There's no gaDMlll, DO playground. DO tienches." BUt Cesar Riellano was impressed with the size ol tbe former middle school campus. ~n's bigger,• said Cesar, 10. "Pomona [Ele- mentary) is sort of little.• Over at Davis S<;hool. students stood out- side as district leaders spoke dwing an open- ing ceremony. Superintendent Mac Bernd told the stu- dents their old elementary schools were great. but they should be excited about now being Davis Colts. Then he led the students In a chant: "We are colts! We are colts! We are coltst• Prindpal Cheryl Galloway welcomed stu- dents and played Phil Collins' "Dance into the Light" to kick off the year. Helen Davis Brown spoke about her moth- er, Maude.Davis, after whom the school was named. Maude Davis started teaching in 1924 at Costa Mesa Grammar School on 19th Street and taught for 24 years. MARC MARTIN I DAA.Y "-OT KrlsU Pacot leads her class out to the b~ stop at the end of the day Wednesday at Rea School In Costa Mesa. The schools' doors opened for the first time sin~ 1981. "She was interested in knowing each one of her students personally,• Brown said. "She was awed and humbled that there would be a school with her name." they were disappointed the basketball hoops hadn't yet been delivered. Still, they said like their new school. to Davis from Sonora Elementary, said she was impressed by the campus -and by her classmates. Wbue the opening ceremony did all it could to rally enthusiasm, Davis students said "It's pretty big and nice," said fifth-grader Edgar Perez. "It's nice because I get to meet a lot of people I didn't know." "It's much bigger than my last school," said Kathleen, 10. "[The students] are smart. They do things rather than start fights. They learn to just talk it out." Kathleen Lorenz, also a fifth-grader, came . What do the followillg have in common? a) A non-invasive blood test. b) Reducing fire emergency response time. c) Adapting computers to the year 2 000. They are all a.ccompliahmenta of our ~ dqrtt audenis. At the Univenity or Redl.t.nd1, 1rudenta learn to think creatively and 80lve re.aJ.woricJ problem-. Wrth suppon from a fa.culty ranked among tM top five in rhe Western region by US Ncwa & World Rcpoa. These evenina degne progr&RU are st&Oing soon in Irvine: • Bachelor or Science in Bu1ineu and Man~ment • Bachelor of Science in Information Systems • Muter or Buaineu Administration (MBA) • Muter of Arts in Ma.n~ment If you'd like the vision to crea.te c~ in your atter, call ua at 888-999-9&« Of' join u1 &I our open houM-in Irvine, Sept. I I. UNIVER5ITY OF REDIANIB r Founded in 1901 and accndited by The Wnten1 A.ociarion of School. a C<>llq.a. • • OWnet, Builder, iiDd Developer Pinancina Available DIMJGilnloa Mm,.,... /~~CAMERA ,,.,.,,. · sm•• PICTURE PERFECI! The Nikon NSO* and N709 <arneras. Now with new lower pri<es that give you more value than ever. NIKON Nso• OUTFIT witti Nikkor 35-80mm AF Zoom lens CAMERA STORE 979-3373 Nikon . ......... ~ -..:- "Over 50 Years of Fine Quality" CUSTOM-MADE NEW FURNITURE • DRAPERIES SEPTEMBER SPECIAL ADDITIONAL 5°/o OFF Thru S tember 15"1 1997 ' CUSTOM flntNITUBE Bi·UPUOLmlllX ...,(}'',. < ) I ! THURSDAY, SEPT'EMIER 11, 1897 RAID CONTINUED FROM A 1 the raid. The Wolfgang Puck Cafe had • hoped to reopen for dinner Tues- day night after the inspection but did not open its doors until 11 a.m. on Wednesday, officials said. At lunch time, both restaurants were busy, but not packed -typi- cal for a Wednesday afternoon, employees said. Some diners eating at the twO restaurants WeidNilday aid ~ didn't reallY blame the woi'ken 8CCUled ot using fake soda! 18Cll· rtty cards and Other identificatklll to obtain work at the cafes, "I feel eort of bad for themt • said lrviDe nmdent' Diane Kol· stnlm after eating lunch at Wolf- gang Puck Cafe. "They're trying to work and earn a meager living doing what most Americans would never stoop to do. And then they get run out of a job. I wish there was a way they could keep ~ .. ,.. w.,.~. ~'-SYLVAN LEA~ING CENTER~ -.~ Better grades are just the beginning.'" Better grades and higher self-esteem. It starts with a call to Sylvan. Jk.1d1110•\\ri1 i11g•\1.1d1 •"\I \(I •\1ulh \kill,• \l:_:l hr.1 ~ '" . ' Classified ads work for you! Pilot · !CASH I 1 CONTINUED FROM A1 .......... ~ ... ""'"'~ j dty, • she said. •we're baVing to QUNG EXEamvES • do it incrementally.• • .. ~trr.rhe Vou.ng B1ecutives of Newer sections Qt town. with ~hosts a morning recep-their planned oommunities, foot tion with Roger W. Johnson, for-the bW for some of their own mer government administrator sewer lines and water pipes with and Fortune 500 CEO from 1 to 9 a.m. at The Pacific Club~·U 10 Mello-Roos taxes or assessment districts. MacArthur Blvd., Newport . The cost Is $15 for members and . But older parts such as the $25 for non-members. To RSVP, i islands and the peninsula c.all 759-5456. i depend on the city -and have ! more needs because their equip- OCXA WHOfEON 1 ment is aging. The Orange County Coast ; Glover said she thinks the Association hosts a luncheon at l City Council is doing a good job 11;30 a .m. at Newport Harbor l. spending its money wisely. -Nautical Museum, 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. The j But prudent spending alone topic: Orange CQunty's Economy: i may not be able to dig the city A Never Ending Growth Cycle? i out of the hole created by the The cost is $20 for assodation i recession, county bankruptcy members. For more ihf onnation, i and other financial disasters that call 548-4942. j overshadowed the early '90s, she i said. CORPORATE GROWTH l And even with those prob- ....., u.. Cftr .D'if'Mlled to b1iti PR01DUCE up Mt 124 1n4I• pojed to tap into tbe grOuQAI.... llllPPlY under Pountm ~ lather ' CONISUD MOM A1 than -~ Coloiado .... water. • '" tbim'e IMift beeD ·~ bY the n.t ~WW come OD·line j ~ &o *""-the ~~ lat. um,... J -.. bUt W'dng JIM tieen Now that the economic devel-' IOIVed. ~'a amplOyeeS are opment committee ii ftnlabtng llill maldng noile bY tbloWing up its mategic plan, the group 1 empty cartons or~ tires will start disculliDg bow to fii i with compresson, be Aid. some of these problema bv find· l •The dty told them to knock it ' I oft ... and they were doing it last ing new revel\ues. f week.• Manone aaid. •niey . The plan emphasizes increaa· ! (lngardia employees) don't care mg toUrism revenue, helping ! what anyone tells them." smaller businesses and attract-l City offidals say ultimately the ing more high-end car and boat j business is too dose to the resi- dealers. i dents home,. Residents have "Where we're going to get i been complaining abou.t this money for the long tenn, I j ~ealthful food odors and ·noise just don't .see," Glover said. •1 i smte its expansion 10 years ago. know people don't like to hear : . The city ~ working with lngar- this, and they think we're mon-i dia Bros. to solve the issues raised ey-grubbers when they hear it. j by resi~~nts, but the fact is the But we do need to increase our i tw.<> entities.are too close together, revenues to keep ~ur infrastruc-1 said dty Pianning Manager Perry t ,, : Valantine. ure up, : Hit's inh t · th · type f ! . eren m err o •nm..,. men lafegu4rdl 'ID tbent DOW tbAD tbere med to be,• be ..... e.Wb8n the~ ii revtew- ln.o ~ they are more cautioU1 to ~ avoid this in the future.• Sandra Benton, who ovened dty code enforceD)ellt, bat con· ducted twO ltucti8' of lngardii Bros. Slie said omgbbors have IOID8 ierious concerns that wW ultimately be addressed. •1 believe their complaints are legitimate,• she aa.id. •The odon are terribl,e and the noise, espe- dally during the morning. •we are trying to work wi'lh the lnga:rdias and with an archi- tect because we have to find a solution,• she said. •rrs bard to find a solution because we are not· asking them to move, but these neighbors lived there before the (business) expanded." Produce unsuitable for ClOn· ~ f.t pat Jnto waste bln9 kept at the ~ ol the fadlity belide its loecttng doc:U. It'• the odon from that garbage that neighbors say wait into their homes . Joe IDganuA Mid there ii not much that can be done abOut the garbage. It's kept dean; emptied every day And encltJled lmkte a brick area.· Hit businea has to throw away WlUMble produce somewhere, 1le said. lnga..rdia said bis a.npany plans to expand its seafood operatiOl'll into a facil- ity next door and finally address the garbage issue. •w e are waiting for the city to OK .it,• Joe lngardia said. "We want to bie OK wltl) the neigh- bors. We want the neighbors to love us and we love them." • The company will then move lts enclosed trash area to a new location in front of the enlarged building so that neighbors will not have to smell the garbage. The Association for Corporate Growth meets at 5:30 p.m. at The Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthur Blvd, Newport Beach. The topic: ---------------------i operation, the noise and odor," he Inside the large gray building on Placentia Avenue, neatly stacked rows of fresh roma toma- toes, onions and other vegetables are sorted before delivery to local restaurants and markets. But it's not the company's operations inside the facility that are causing neighbors to complain. It's the waste bin outside, which although it looks clean, is causing the serious odors for neighbors, particularly on hot days. "We are trying to solve the problems, rather than give them fines," Valantine said. •The bot- tom line is we want to solve the problem. Code enforcement is hoping to make some progress on a cooperative basis. It's not an easy-fix kind of thing." IPO -A Business Petspe(:tive. The cost is $20. For reservations, call 862-9644. FIJENDS OF OCC LIBRARY The Friends of OCC Library presents a lecture called "Sailing in Antarctica Aboard the Polar .Mist" at 7:30 p.m. in the Lido lsle Clubhouse at Lido Isle Yacht Club, 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. The lecture is free for Friends members and $5 for non- members. Call 432-5087. .. Cost Effective • Legal Solutlons · [Ji] ~ Ill Hiii\ I .Rt\l"li " '" oM.tM A~ fA lo1'llrl ""·~,. I'""'' +126,CJOO .• (714) 760-8775 •. TOLL CONTINUED FROM A 1 with revenue bonds paying an i interest rate of 7.5%. Toll agency r 'staff reports say refinancing ~ could re<t.uce that rate to 6%. = The outlook does look good, Buffa said, considering the agency managed to get an investment rating from Moody's and Standard & Poor's -two Wall Street credit rating firms that wouldn't look at the toll road four years ago. . "We knew fully well when we financed the road that we would want to get back to a refinancing on this," Buffa said. Agency officials agree. "We had environmental, con- struction and technology risks, and all three of those have gone down," agency spokeswoman Michelle Sperl-Miller said. ~The only risk remaining is perfor- mance, in terms of meeting pro- jections." Licensed Psych ologist will meet in your home or office. Mo~I insurance acct>pt6d. Lawrence A. Howard Ph.D. ,,. ''"Wm• 714--856-0781 • LEGAL~PT I ON S ~ f I • ) H."' f '°!' ..._ A I I ,...,. 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REAR~ Additional c:ftorge for sport wheels 11 Additional ~ for rear wt.IS 11 ~additional $20 I L-------------~L-------------~~-am&W.-..-~ 1.· ·~>11y1,\h' tt«.tl wrrJ(,ft•<>r EYE-OPENER J!riday night lights here, 24 hiiUri early . . richard . dunn · I Le . I vm • Estancia hopes to win the numbers game against Century as two teams open 1997 season tonight at Newport Harbor. By Barry Faulkner, Dai/}' Pilot NEWPORT BEACH -In an age of spi- raling transportation costs and diminish- ing J>udgets, the football teams from Estancia High and Century could do their part by sharing the same bus for tonight's 7 o'clock se~on-opening nonleague clash at Newport Harbor High. For while most Orange County teams sardine themselves into their big yellow ipode of transportation lo and from games, virtually every Eagle and Centu- rion will occupy his own seat when the . teams' separate vehicles pull up to Har- bor's Davidson Field. Brevity is, indeed, a theme for both ros- ters tonight. Estancia is slated to feature seven two-way starters, while Century Coach Bill Brown declares he has around 18-20 players who are ready for varsity competition. With that in mind, the team forced to dip deeper into its •depth" chart figures to have the least chance of beginning the QUOTE OF THE DA Y ,_ htJDeftt-. °" '°" '°' '° manr,,.,,.. bf/~-· -WM CBOSS aJUNfRY <XMQI B/U SUNNl1R 1997 season on a victo- rious note. Last season, Century lost five two-way starters to the meat grinder that is the Eagles' smashmouth double wing offense, and the result was a predictable 27-0 season-opening Estancia triumph. , That verdict, however, was atypical of meetings between the former Pacific Coast League rivals, who had their first four contests (1990-93) decided by seven points or less. Estancia, coming off a 7-3 season and on a two-game winning streak, once again holds the physical edge against the smaller Centurions. Coach John Llebengood's offensive line averages 6-foot-2, 248 pounds from tackle-to-tackle, while Century has just four players total who are at least 6-0 and 200 pounds, including two tight ends and a running back. And if the Eagles' mass of humanity can occupy Century Coach Bill Brown's defense for any length of time, senior wingback James Dawkins figures to find the end zone. Dawkins, Estancia's lone all-league returner, rushed for a school single-season • SEE ESTANCIA PAGE B3 Mesa Verde's champ r------------------------------------------------------------------------·:--------------------·------------, l I I I I I I • j I ., I I I I I I I I ' I I • Newcomer Jon Levin sweeps to men's club title with a one-stroke victory over defending champion .Dave Tanchuk. J Ott k!vin joined Mesa Verde Country Club only weeks aQ_o. Now he's the new men's club champion. Levin came from behind last month in the four-round, championship over a course of two weekends, shooting an even-par 71 and a 1-over 72 in the final two rounds to dethrone Dave Tanchuk. Levin finished 12-over 296 in the medal-play championship, one stroke ahead of Tanchu.k. who held a three-stroke lead · goiilg into the final round. Levin needed to get up and down from the right bunker on the 18th hole to secure the victory with a par. He shot 77, 76, 71 and 72 .. fa.mill Hink.le was third. Cl By virtue of his thlrd-place finish Sunday at the N'J..k.e Colorado Classic, Clark Dennis of Taco Bell Newport Classic Pro-Am fame moved up to 15th on this year's Nike Tour money list. The top 15 automatically earn their PGA Tour cards for next year. Dennis, who has won $76,796 this year, went from 21st on the money list to 15th. passing, among others, R.W. Eaks. Dennis and Eaks hold the distinction of being the Newport Classic's only back-to-back champions in the event's 23-year bistory1 Dennis win.ning in 1992-93, Eaks capturing the titie in 1995-96. Dennis also made a hole-in-one 1n the event. The Newport Classic, of course, is now extinct, with the event's primary figures, Hank Adler and Jake Rohrer, becomin!:J co-chainnen of the Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country Club. Q Wboevet believes golf and ten.nil do not mix should have seen the swarm~ tennis pros Wednesday morning at Newport Beach. which bolted the inaugural Emulex Golf Challenge. The event. played in conjunction with the Padfic Southwest Senior nm.ms Cb•mpionthlp at Palilades Tamdl Cub, proved bow much ta:mil plaY'!n love golf. •11ove golf,• Mid Mab WUander, MYeD·time Grand Slam ctwnpcn ·1 would play an tM time (wtim tra~ on tbil pro --dreuit). lnitMd of ~ m my bOtel room; I would play a lot Of :aQlfl • wn.Ddir, lD toW'D ttill week to bolt ldl ...... af tb9 l11ct. ......... ootot-.hclftc ......... "'.NBCC. ,.. ............. Qtt';tp,,,_~ .. rATP -..... "°"':'llJIP • Newport Harbor ~nters Friday-S road date against Orange with ~ht straight wins in season openers. {~ . . . . -. -:--. . . ,,, -- Costa Mesa enters with favorite's label Friday • Mustangs open season against an always-tough Saddleback foe, at OCC. By Barry Faulkner, Daily Alot COSTA MESA-Nine months of hope and hype will come to a head for the Costa Mesa Higl\_ football team Friday at 7 p.m., when the Mustangs kicks off., what Coach Jerry Howell believes could be a special sea.son against Saddleback at Orange Coast College. Perhaps even before the Mus- tangs bowed out of the 1996 CIF Southern Section Division VIlI Playoffs in the first round la.st November, Howell, his staff, many of his players, and those in the community, began pointing with anticipation toward this fall. With scores of experienced standouts returning, many believe this was to be the year the Mustangs emerged from the 10- 11 record that has marked How- ell's two-year tenure at the helm. ·0ur kids have worked very hard to improve and they're big- ger, stronger and faster,• Howell said. But Saddleback, led for the 24th season by respected coach Jerry Witte, figures to have plen- ty to say about the opening chap- ter of Mesa's supposed storybook campaign. •for a first game, I think l'd rather be playing the Brothet- hood of the Sisters of Mary,• quipped Howell, who realizes full well the formidable opponent the Roadrunners provide. •Those (Saddleba.ck) kids are real tough and they're very well coached. They may only have three or four plays, but they run them without ma.king mistakes.• Mistakes (two turnovers) cost the Mustangs in last year's 20-7 season-opening loss to Saddle- back, and Howell is concerned about how Mesa will handle its first game in the Wlng-T, which replaces the smasbmouth double wing in order to provide more ~ QSlanda High's boys cross country team has some early expectations. COSTA MESA -Sounds like 111ore people took notice of Bstanda High's remarkable finish ID tbe Padfic Coast League boys cross country finals last year than . Coach Charlie Appell realized. · That's because the Eagles are ~ higher (sixth) in the CIP • Southern Section Division IV pre- : season poll than district rivals • Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar ... _ ~e two-time defending PCL cpampions and last year's State DMllOD IV champions, .respec- tively .. The Eaglel, thought have no banner to~· 'Ibey have no returning lettennen who are seniors, either. :Vet they're ranked higher, I •1bfs surprises me because we bombed out at the end last year,• said Appell, retening to his team's performance in the CIP Division tv Finals at Mt. San Antonio Col- lege. What cross country prognosti- cators seem to recollect is the sec- ond-place f:lnilh by the Eagles in the PC!. Finals last year (behind Mesa), but that was somewhat tainted, Appell believes, because the wheels had come off for Lagu- na Hills, which bad defeated Blt4nda In e dual meet. But wtth five ol Estanda'I top nine runners retuinhig, the Eagles abotJld have a Shot at pott- season races, u well as compet- ing with Costa Mesa, Laguna Hills and University for title hon- ors. Estancia, Which won a PCL championship four years ago, the last time it was ranked as high as it ii J;l<>W, will rely heavily on five juniors: Tony Magana, Alberto Munoz, Manuel Oroa:o, Javier Labastida and Stephan Appell. Estanda's other two retuming lettermen, Jose Juarez and Ben Cardenas, are also juniors. Last year, aside from then- seniors and team leaders Luis Lopez and Arturo Vivar, t.Pe .. ~ran With oo1y IOJ)bomorei. M8fbe that's why the CIP South· em Section likes their chances. "After Lopez and Vivar, there was a big hole because we didn't hive any juniors to pick up any slack tut year,• Appell said. Estancia, eighth In its CIP divi-sion last year, expects to get help this season from newcomers Steve Rodriguez (sophomore), Sil- vio Alderete (senior) and Juan Sanchez (senior). Munoz, an all-league runner last year, and Oroczo battled Lopez for the team's No. 1 posi- tion last year, but never was there an outright front runner, Appell said. •If someone had a bad race, someone else would take over," • • STATE T · Sumne:'s girls are blessed with eight quality freshmen, along with returning standouts Blair, Morse and Quye; and the Corona del Mar High coach has plenty to say in terms of expectations. By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot CROSS COUNTRY CORONA DEL MAR -More than once Corona del Mar High girls cross country coach Bill Swnner has been accused of being cocky by his peers, some- times because of comments made in public. ,--.-------------------, Morse and Jill Quye also return 1 COM GIRLS from last year's squad that ended I I I sixth in the state and third in the section. Senior Lauren Weinstein, an alternate on last year's team, bas a chance to crack this year's top seven, Sumner said. Case in point: Before last year's CdM boys team ever com- peted in an invitational or dual meet, Sumner proclaimed the Sea Kings were akeady making hotel reservations for the state meet. I I Of the top newcomers, all are freshmen. Six are worthy of pre- season recognition, according to Swnner: Lindsey Younnan, Jen- ny Cummins, Katie Quinlan, Jaycee Mahler, Tes Maguire and Hillary Ward. I I By Nov. 30 of last season, they ~-------·------------~ were coming home with the CIF State Division 'fV title. , Though it's a completely different cast of , characters this autumn for Sumner's girls, many of same declarations are coming through the chute as four returning letter winners combine with eight star-studded freshmen to produce what could be one of the best teams in· the country. Yes, the country. Sumner's Sea Kings, though ranked fifth in the CIP Southern Section Division IV preseason poll, could actually be underrated. "I'm telling you right now, I'm extremely confident -extr1?mely confident -that I can get this girls team to the state • championship and give Nord- . · · hoff, which is one of the top teams in the country, a run for · its money," Sumner said. p "We could field a whole varsity team from the freshmen class, but we've already got Liz, Jennifer, Jill and Lauren ," Sumner said, refer- ring to his program's rich-get-richer scenario. "This has made it a little more comfortable. I can't say I'm getting cockier, because every~ body already says that. I've got this paper on my desk from last year saying my boys are planning for the state meet and (the paper} is dated early September, though we tallted about it in August. MThen everybody says I'm way too cocky, but it's called planning and doing. On our side of the bay, it's calle4 goal-setting. Either way, (the boys) ended up state champions, so I don't know if that can be cocky, because all you've got to do is look back (and see the results). We haven't been on top for so many years by acci- dent." Before the Sea Kings enter- tain state title ideas, they must first get through a rugged Sea View League, considered by many coaches the toughest league in Orange County. "We don't have a team that's so much better than any ·meet ii When watching Cd.M, most eyes will be focused on Morse, who could challenge Newport Harbor's Alicia McFall, Irvine's Erin Zehnt- ner, El Toro's Becky Miske, • -Other (CdM) team, it's just that .-· we have more bodies," Sumn- er said. "l have eight ~sh­ men who are trying to make an already stacked varsity, and on the team. of course, there are only seven spots. They just showed up, and they have talent. We have a freshmen girls class that's ready to do the work." Corona del Mar, a swpris- . ing second in the Sea View last year after knocking off dated fifJJtJ. , thougli-WJ.liJllied Oboiit it in A ugust. Then everybody says I'm way too cocky, but it's called planning and doing. On our side of the bay, it's c~ed goal-settlng .... • -Bill SUMNER • Santa Margarita's Dani Rope and Woodbrldge's Mary Moore -the respective front runners at each school -for top individual league honors. MShe's twice the runner she was last year,• Sumner said of Morse, who finished fifth in the state track finals last spring in the 800 meters and 11th in the natiQn. Morse. out to prove she's more than a half-miler, sprained her left ankle last autumn and missed the final Division I and ll rivals Santa Margarita, El Toro and Woodbridge, has finished in the top three at the CIF Finals six consecutive years. That roll should easily continue in '97. four weeks of cross country season. Her best clocking last season was 18:36 at the Wood- bridge Invitationlll. "They're going to be better than that," rival coach Charlie Appell (Estancia) said of the Sea Kings' No. 5 preseason ranking in Division IV. •(Sumner) is sheepishly licking his chops. He'll go to the state meet with them." "We're going to kick everybody's (butt)," Sumner said. •Our league .is inaedibly tough, yeah. but we think our girls team is going to the state meet again, and we want to outperform our team from last year.• be Mid. •Someone was always there to step up.• Even though Rodriguez (800 meters), Magana (1,600) and Munoz (3.200) all won PCL !rosh- soph track titles la.st spring to boost their confldence, Appell believes his squad ii •still very untested." Alderete and Rodriguez did not run cross country last year. Sanchez ran two years ago, b~ missed last season. Stephan Appell suffered ·a broken left foot as a frestiman and missed the entire track campaign, but he has recovered and apparently is run- ning 100% again. Estancia, with 30 total kids in the pr0gram (boys and girls), will once again 'tcmpet.e m tbe PCI. with biggac ldloola. "It's kind of devastating when UDivenity brtngl 100 kids alone tar a track meet,• the longtime distance run- ning coach said. •11ook for Lagu- na Hills and University to do well this year, because both had a lot of frosh-soph (athletes) last year, as we did in the lower divisions.• Estancia seeKiilg .another 'miracle' I. • Eagles are trying to prove last.year (second place) was no Pacific Coast League fluke. By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot COSTA MESA -While last season's memorable second-place finish for Estancia High in the Pacific Coast League girls cross country finals left some opponents with a bitter taste, there could be some revenge coming for Coach Charlie Appell's Eagles this year. The Eagles last fall knocked off Aliso Niguel and Laguna Hills in the PCL Finals for the first time, but they lost five of their top seven runners to gradua- tion, which means it could be back to reality. "There was re~y poor race man- agement by the other teams," Appell said of his squad's ruhner-up finish in 1996. "The Laguna Hills coach was destroyed (afterward). He didn't know w h a t h a p - pened." That's when Appell began doing his best Lou Holtz Senior captain Jennifer Blair, a quiet leader who has competed in two state meets, leads the way for CdM, while sophomore sensations Liz Ever made plans in the summer to visit Pres-• no during Thanklgiving weekend? If you're a CdM ~ croa country fan, you probabqr have this year. DON LEACH I OMV Pl.OT Corona del Mar's Uz Morse ls billed u a certain blue chip. COM CONTINUED FROM 81 of how his team will perlonn. "We've been working hard to prepare, and we have some~ rience. But we also have a lot of guys who have never played much varsity football,• Freeman said. ·we just won't know what's going to happen unW the kick-off.• Coming off a 5-5 season, which ended in three straight blowout losses, the Sea Kings are hoping to begin a more positive trend. To this aim. they'll unveil a souped-up passing attack, which Freeman claims will use the run- ning game merely as a change of pace. "Our goal is to throw 60% of the time,• said Freeman, who noted last year's squad threw just less than 50%,. despite amassing more than 70% of its total offense through the air. Senior Nick Hood (1 for 3 for 12 yards last fall) earned the opening nod at quarterback over junior Dennis Alshuler (4 for 10 for 47 yards and.two touchdowns in '96), but both are expected to rotate. Senior Ryan Cooper anchors a solid r~ceiving corps, having caught 27 passes for 400 yards and two TDs in '96. Seniors Mike Finn, TJ. Hildebrandt and tight end nm Thurman (11 catches for 98 yards in '96) also figure to get their hands tested, while junior tailback Nate Lem.merman returns after missing last year with a knee injury to handle the majority of the rushing chores behind an offensive line includ- ing four junior starters. The 6-foot-6, 235-pound Thur- man, who caught the game-win- ning 16-yard TD toss against the Vi.kings last season, is also a key on defense, where the Sea Kings are hampered by the absence of returning all-league middle line- backer Mark Hatfield (tom calf muscle). Senior Kevin Wic.ken will fill in for Hatfield, who led the team in tackles as a sophomore. Senior noseguard fyler Brow- er, as well as Cooper and Alshuler at comer and safety, respectively, are other · returning starters. They'll hope to contain the newly configured West Coast offense of Coach Mark Rehling's Vi.kings. Marina's tradition& veer might have need~tinkering, having produced j 21 points in five Sunset Leagu games last fall, when the ~gs finished 1-9 with a six-game losing streak. But Rehling, entering his third season at the helm, believes this team is the best he's coached and is a longshot to make the CIF Playoffs. Rehling also believes five Vikings have potential to play for Division I colleges. The Vikings, who will join CdM in the Pacific Coast League next year if the current releagu- ing plan withstands appeals, fea- ture 6-4 junior Scot Austin at quarterback, senior Ryan Daguro (5-9, 166 pounds) at wingback and senior Donald Lank at receiv- er. Austin, JVho will still trigger an occasional option play, ran for TDs of 8 and 30 yards against CdM last year, but completed just 2 of 14 passes for 13 yards and unleashed two of the Sea Kings six interceptions. Daguro, the top returning rusher, picked up 362 yards on 40 carries, while Lanlc, who returned an interception 44 yards to pay- dirt against CdM, caught 23 pass- es for 252 yards. Diminutive all-league seniors 'Il'avis Bond, a 5-8, 167-pound linebacker, and 6-0. 176-pound Steve Franks, who shifts from linebacker to safety, lead the Marin.a defense. CdM is 18-17 in openers and has won the last two, both over Marina. The Sea Kings lead the series, 7-3, over their future PCL rivals. Tucker remains in limbo """"\ over his coaching duties •The only 'certainty' is that Pirates will shed the dilemma of a lame duck athletic director Dec. 31 . molly yanity .. -·•·. ~ •.· •' -~ Osaua -~ 1 McxHooo JO NAft l••-u• 4 TJ.MIDaMNDT , R'IMC...... 20 MmftNN 18 T .. nu.wt 11 JumN Stu 50 OJllT Sc.Ma 52 Aux 9omJM 79 lYURa.o- 10 STIVI Wm ML Wt.a • .._ S-10 160 Sr. 01 S-7 170 SI. Ht S-5 160 Sr. fl S-9 175 Sr. WI 6-0 165 Sr, WR 6-2 205 Sr. TE 5-11 200 Jr. LT 6-2 225 Sr. LG S-9 175 Sr. c 6-2 275 Sr. RG 6-5 215 Sr. RT ttt. Wt. a . Pos. S-10 180 Sr. QB 5-10 170 Jr. TB 6-1 175 Sr. KB S-11 180 Sr. WR 6--0 175 Sr. WR 6-6 235 Sr. TE 6-3 215 Jr. LT S-10 180 Jr. LG 6-5 215 Jr. C s-1'1 208 Sr. RG 6-1 232 Jr. .... Diie• No...... Ht. Wt. a. ..... U ~~ 6-2tto Sr. DE t2 M"1n.w lb.IDalu. W 220 Sr OT 4Z 0.W.0 '*-'AN 5-9 1ts Jr,. OT 7J NAM Km S.10 170 Sr. DE 10 DJwia.. S-10 165 So. Oll 51 lttM ,_.,_., 6-1 200 Sr. IUl 44 ,__,., 5--... 6-2 ·205 Sr. IUl JJ SllYI Hllaoa 5-7 170 Sr. OU 22 ... Fmal 5-9 175 ~ CB 6 ~Sou 5-11 150 Jr. CB 11 RONMI IAYANOS 5-10 160 Sr. FS No.~ ttt. Wt. a. Pos. 61 JusnN SH1A 6-3 215 Jr. OE 50 OJllT 5'IMNa 5-10 180 Jr. OT 79 l'V\a lllloMll S-11 208 Sr. NG U llEn Wtsa!MAH 5-9 175 Jr. OE U T.,.T...w. 6-6 235 Sr OLB 22 Kl\llN WICXIN 5-9 180 SI'. MLB 15 Smt lbowlDsoN 6-4 205 Jr. OLB 1 RYAN Coo.a 5-11 180 §r. CB 25 RYAH WMD 5-11160 Jr. CB 4 TJ. Hu>ulwn 6-1 175 SI'. SS 2 D£NMs A&.slu.ol 6-4 190 Jr. FS 0 NEWPORT HARBOR LINE U PS OfRNsE D EFENSE No. lltaY9f' ttt. Wt. a. Pos. 1 Sm11 ~ 6-1 170 Jr. QB 21 Bain llMut 5-11 184 SI'. TB 44 CMLos Hl'Maqciu 5-9 207 Jr. FB 2J OscAll GM0A S-10 1B7 Jr. WR IO CiAMETT GovAARS 6-3 170 SI'. WR 5 Pin HoCiM 6-4 225 Sr. TE 75 E.oolE ClAMI 6-5 230 SI'. LT 54 Ptta. llAuAu.a 6-3 215 SI'. LG 50 lANa OtAV'EZ 5-11 215 So. c 63 ICavw K1YTTA S-11 175 Sr. RG 55 IMNT HIU 6-4 212 Jr. RT No. Player Ht. wt. a. Pos. 54 PHIL BAUAZAa 6-3 215 Sr. OE 78 Dao Fox •6-2 300 Sr. OT 65 MllE STANTON 6-l 230 Jr. OT 75 EDOll Cl.Naa 6-5 230 SI'. OE 55 Blwn" Heu. 6-4 212 Jr. OLB 5 Pin HociAH 6-4 225 5'. MLB 6 SHAWN O'l>oNHEu 6-1 191 Jr. OLB 21 8Mn BAIWI 5-11 184 Sr. CB 10 UMAa LEE S-B 150 Jr. CB 22 OscAll CoNsTANDSE 6-0 172 Sr SS 8 Buy C:UYTON 6-2 170 So. FS ESTANCIA L I NEU P S Offf NSE No.Playw 1a JusnN Woua 12 JAMES DAWKINS 1 MAM.I TANB.U 9 Gf.llMAN DIAz 8 MAn BJwu11111> 71 TIM JottNS0H 51 Jotw~ 64 AMONDOI 50 Mm 8laANo 11 JotlN HAalllS 5 ANDY CiAuaA Nt.Wt.O .llo9.. 6-1 165 Sr. QB 6-1 180 SI'. W8 5-11 170 Jr. W8 5-11 1B9 Sr. F8 &4 168 Sr. TE 6-5 260 Sr. LT 6-3 220 Sr. LG 6-.() 210 SI'. c 5· 11 230 Sr. RG 6-3 318 Sr. RT S-11 192 Sr. TE Johnson U ebengood ESTANCIA CONTINUED FROM 81 record 1,473 yards last fall, aver- aging 9.3 yards on 159 carries and scoring 14 touchdowns. Bidding to add offensive punch for Estancia is junior quar- terback Ju&tin Wolter and wing- backs Manu Tanielu and Dominick Meyers. Wolter, making his starting debut, hopes to improve a pass- ing attack that featured just 16 completions in 59 attempts last fall. Despite their lack of aerial prowess, the Eagles produced a school-record 294 points, while Century's 1-9 campaign included only 100 points, fourth-fewest in the county. Hoping to continue the Centu- rions' scoring futility will be an Eagle defense paced by senior tackles Mike Briano and John Liebengoood Jr., as well as senior inside linebackers Andy Galicia and German Diaz. Century, on an eight-game los- ing streak and winner of just one of its last 16 games, will start sophomore Joel Vasquez at quar- terback, while '96 team MVP Ramiro Carasa, a 5-11, 185- D EFENSE No. ~ Ht. wt. a . Pos. 88 STEVll WILSON 6-1 210 Sr DE 51 Mm 8'tlAHo 5· ll 230 Sr. OT 58 .lottH 1JoENGooo 6-3 220 Sr. OT 64 AAAoH DEw 6-0 210 Sr. OE l Paa NUNEZ 6-0 192 Jr. OLB 5 ANDY <iAuaA 5-11 192 Sr. ILB 9 CilJIMAH DIAz 5-11 189 Sr. IL8 2 MMIO MAlmNa 5-7 181 Jr. OLB 1 MAM.I TAHIEW 5·11 170 Jr. CB 24 DoMIMcx MEnlls 6-1 165 Sr CB 8 MAn BAllNAM> 6-4 168 SI'. FS Briano Harris pound junior, leads the split veer rushing attack . Carasa collected 466 yards on the ground last year en route to first-team All-Empire League lau- rels. Cesar Ramirez (6-3, 210) and Kevin Watson (6-3, 210) were sec- ond-team all-league defensive linemen last season and are keys to what Brown terms the quick- est, toughest group of players he's had in years. •They've been down the last couple of years, but I think they're on the upswing th.ls season." Llebengood said. "The y've changed their offense and l don't know much about them. But I know Brown always does a real good job.• Llebengood, entering his 12th season leading the Eagles, said bis players have avoided injuries in preseason drills, while impressing him with their intan- gibles. •This team is the best I've had in terms of attendance, catching onto thlngs and responding to the coaching staff. •These kids are a pleasure to coach." Estancia is 15-17 in openers, including victories in its last two, while Century bas lost its last five opener&. Sandoval McBrtde MESA CONTINUED FROM 81 diversity. Mesa's margm for error on offense should be enlarged by the presence of a strong defense, which returns most of the crew that allowed the h.fth-fewest points (137) among Orange County teams m '96 Among those spearhead.mg that defense will be senior free safety Ronnie Lievanos, who also opens at quarterback. Llevanos completed 1ust one pass for 8 yards in nine attempts as a junior. But with senior back- field mates Steve Herzog and Vmce Ha.made back after com- bining for more than 2,000 rush- ing yards and 26 TDs last fall, he won't be asked to emulate Dan Marino. . Herzog (1,112 yci!ds and 16 TDs) and Hamade, wmgbacks last year, will open at halfback and fullback, respectively in the Wing-T, operating behind a vet- eran offensive line paced by seniors Jeremy Via (6-foot-2, 275 pounds), Daniel Ives (6-5, 285) and Chns McBnde (6-2, 225) Seniors Jerry Cleveland and Ben Felter will proVIde Lievanos with capable recelVlng targets, while sophomore Jimmy Herzog will also figure into lhe ground game. Saddleback counters defen- Clarke Baltazar NEWPORT COmlNUED FROM 81 thrashing of the Panthers. The 48 points was the most by a Harbor squad in 66 varsity debuts. Junior Steve Gorman, who quarterbacked the junior varsity the las~ two seasons, opens under center for the visitors, who have met Orange in their last six open- ers and lead the longstanding series 21-8-4. Senior Brett Baker, a returning All-Sea View League comerback, will assume double duty at tail- back, where he rushed for 159 yards on 27 carries as the pnmary backup to All-CIF standout Ray Ohrel last fall. Junior Oscar Garcia and seruor Garrett Govaars step into the for- midable wide receiver shoes left vacant by the graduation of All- CIF Danny Pulido (now a Sailor assistant coach while serving his redshirt season in absentia at Oregon) and Brad La Bass. Senior Pete Hogan, a 6-foot-4, 225-pound blue-chip linebacker, is back at tight e nd. He caught two of his three touchdown pass- es last year against Orange and finished the year with 10 recep - tions for 148 yards. All-league tackle Eddie Clarke (6-5, 230) and guard Phil Baltazar (6-3, 215) provide veteran leader- ship on the left side of the offen- sive line. Baltazar and Clarke will also start on the defensive line, where 6-2, 300-pound senior Derek Fox will likely warrant special block- sively with 6-2. 300-pound All- Oolden West League tackle John Rincon, for whom Howell had generous praise. "He's a liell of a lineman; Howell said of the Roadrunner colossus, who should also start on offense. Joseph Tagaloa, a third-year starter at running back, has the talent to cash in on any ninn:ing room Rincon provides. He coll~­ ed 872 yards and 16 TDs on 122 carries as a junior and has 2,044 career rushing yards. Junior Sal Pedroza and senior Daruel Bermudez are the cmdi- dates at quarterback, while Der- nck Barnes, a 6-1 senior, is the Jedd.mg receiver. Saddleback finished 7-4 last year and, like Mesa, bowed out of the first round of the playoffs in Division V. The Mustangs, 17-20 in open- ers, have not beaten Saddleba<tc in six previous meetings. Klytta mg attention after an all-l~~e and All-Newport-Mesa DUstrict junior campaign. . Hogan, who shifts from o~de to mi~dle linebacker, wiD be a significant presence on the.kont seven, while Balcer and Oscar Constandse, who started five games at strong safety as a junior, anchor the secondary. The Panthers. whose depth cha.rt will benefit from the assimi- lation of a Century League c;bam- p1onshlp fresh.men team. is keyed by receiver-defensive back· Der- ald Deason, who some belie"le was overlooked for All-CIF lau- rels last year Deason, a 6-,3, 180-poundDivi- sion l college prospect, caught 51 passes for 874 yards as a junior (17 .1 per catch), second-highest among county returners. The two-time all-league defender also had six interceptions, bringing bis varsity total to 10. "He's a real good athlete!..~ Brinkley said of Deason, who WW get some offensiYe help from senior running backs Chance Perry and Joaquin Soto, wbo combined for nearly 600 ground yards last fall. Hill. entering his 30th seesoc as a head coach, bis fourth lt Orange, has 209 victolies ~­ ing Orange County sc:hoo1a (~l overall), tops on the all-time ltsU UED FROM 81 a "",.. ...... proe lp04led •• ~Included Kar.i Novacek, -~1 German Open winner ilii tbe former aigb1hc.ra.nked lill* tn the world; Danie Vlss· •b:mer top-ranked doubles Jlllla"'1' in the world; and Piet ~cb, a Grand Slam doubles ~ion. )Yiiander won Australian 0,,. titles tn 1983, '84 and '8B, <:aptllred Prencb Open · dwnpionsb.ips in 1982, '85 and '88;-and claimed the U.S. Open @e ln 1988, by far bis biggest year. Wllander, former Swedish D*vfs Cup member, never won Wilabledon. . 0 :i(evtn McNece of Mesa Verde has been named Assistant Pioressional of the Year by the Southern California PGA. Congratulations. u Media members came from all over Southern California to compete in the inaugural SCPGA Media GoU Championship at Mesa Verde last month. Guess photographer Robert Gautney wanted to make the drive from Bakersfield worth his while. He shot even-par 71 and won the event. Gautney snaps photos for the Bakersfield Ca11Jornian. 0 FYI: Tom Sargent. Mesa Verde head pro and honorary president of the SCPGA, grew up a baseball player 0 The second annual Save Our Youth chanty goU townament will be played next Monday at Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club. Entry fees are $125, but only $400 for a foursome. Details: Joe Forbath (564-2613) os: Joe Rogers (723-5683). 0 Nearly 200 gollers w1ll play at P~lican Hill to help support the education and services provided by Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino counties in a goU tournament this Saturday. Details: 973-1733, ext. 107. • JUCHARD DUNN's club golf column ~ars every Thursday. Johmton Newport Blue (GUia Div. 2) 3, Irvine 0 Lauren Sundell knocked 1n the first goal of the season for the Newport Blue.during the first half of the team's win oveT Irvine. Eliz- abeth Evans gathered in assists from Kristin Mabeny and Usa Owad for a score, and Caroline Walsh made a goal on a pass from Alex Sykes. Goalkeeper Kelly Woods was outstanding, coaches said, as were fullbacks Piper Phillips, Cecilia Flores, Taylor Knowles and Elizabeth Donald. The Rebell rallied from a 2..0 deficit thanks to gotil by Cameron Lester ilDd Anthony Dinucd. Outstanding defensive efforts were put in by goalie David Neira, Brad llchlnger, Chris Fernandez and Sean Walsh. 1butoUt. HallbeCb NCOte ~.Patti BlblQ Ud Lauren Maddox kept the biD al tbe ~ log end for tbe PtDk ~. aDd Jordan CUmack and Merorle bad a pair of goall a piece, and Barber- knockad in the other. a 'na. Otbe6 .A.YSO ~ODI begin play this weekend. ta.a ttiat tndntW Dot 155 CC*b· ... but al9o 300 :n!lfsw, 155 team parctl and 15S field iepre.anta- ttvM. ·we an owe Jt to ow-ch1ldren to give them a carefuJ1y designed, well thought out, safe experi· ence, • regional commissioner Bob Kreger Mid. •Mc»t of all, we empb. .. tu making tt fun. AYSO ts serious a.bout having fun.• Pl.Dk Ladles (Glrll Dtv. 3) 5, Costa M.U 'IMm No.' 0 Teams began practicing in August. There are 1,851 children on 155 teams this seuon. 1b.e largest divisions are Division 6 (ages 6 and 7) with 5' teams, and Division 5 (8 And 9) with 32 teams. AYSO oifen open registration. belanced teams, positive coach· ing, good sportsmanship and a guarantee that all children will play half of the game or more. Hustle and teamwork by the Pink Ladies led to a 5-0 wtn. Goal.keepen Sarah Cassesso, Claudia Santana and Nichelle Merorlc and fullbacks Beth Bar- ber, Nicole Cassesso, Undsey Miller, Katie Watson and Jacque The ration is 55% boys to .f5% girls. Por more information, Kreger can be contacted at 631-0559. Rebels (Boys Dtv. 3) 2, Irvine 2 AYSO is a volun~ organiza- occ men work out a tie; sec women belt foe • Pirates avoid loss when Escobar tallies with a penalty shot in final minute to give Coast a 3-3 standoff. COSTA MESA -Orange socrTla Coast College's men's soccer "-G team worked out a 3-3 tie Wednesday with San Diego Mesa to avoid starting the season 0-3. The Pirates were paced by a handful of locals. Newport Harbor's Ariel Gavilan and Nelson Escobar, who prepped at Estancia before transfening to Cypress, each notched goals in the first half to give occ a 2-0 lead going into the second period. But Mesa scored in machine gun-fashion with goals in the 75th, 76th and 80th minutes. Escobar turned in a game-tying penaJty kick in the final minute to avoid the loss. Coach Laird Hayes praised the perfor- mance of Costa Mesa's Ryan Arechederra, who picked up 15 saves in the goal. "Every (save) was brilliant," Hayes said. "He just played an excellent game." sec women squash foe, 10-0 COSTA MESA -Senior Jamie Gardiner turned in SOCCER a hatrick and an assist to lead the Southern California College women's soccer team to a 10-0 thrashing over Pacific Christian Tuesday. Freshman Amanda Draxler tallied two goals and an assist, while other goals came from Katie Kelley, Shelley Bage, Elisabeth McCary, Polly Gifford and Shirley Bla.ssman. The Vanguards, now 3-1. travel this week to Oahu, Hawaii for the Hawaii Pacific Tour- nament that begins today. BJlllPEY Long Beach City tops OCC, 3-1 LONG BEAC H Preshman center/half· back Mary Peters of Orange Coast College scored in the 10th minute to give the Pirates an early lead, but host Long Beach City scored three unanswered goals to win Wednesday's season-opening nonconference women's soc· cer match, 3-1. OCC goalie Kim Rudloff recorded 11 saves. The Pirates host East LA on Friday at 3 p .m. Costa Mesa National signups UTIU~UI Costa Mesa National Little League will be having the first registration for the spring season at 7 a.m.-noon Saturday, Oct. 4 at Costa Mesa High during the AYSO Pancake breakfast. The registration fee is $60 per player before Nov. 30, and $70 after. The second registration date is 9 a.m.-noon Nov. 15 at TeWmkle School. Volunteers are needed. For mote information, 966-CMU.. Goblin's Gulch Regatta Oct. 19 The Lido Isle Yacht Club will host the Gob-BOATING lin's Gulch Regatta Sunday, Oct. 19. All classes -sabots, lasers, CPJs, Udo 14s, T12s and any one4esign boat-can race. Five boats make a class. A skipper's meeting will take place at U p.m. with the first warning at 12:30 p.m. Jr. All-American Saturday NEWPORT BEACH -Newport- Mesa Jr. All·American football begins Satur- day, Sept. 13 as the local Wildcats host Tustin at 11 a.m. at Bonita Creek Park. · The Wildcats consist of 1 and e .. year-olds. At 1 p.m., the Bruins (9-11) follow with a bout versus Cerritos, and the Butfalos (11-13) play Fountain Valley at 3 p.m . Search on for national players OI A statewide search is on for the best youth baseball players in Callf omia for an elite 12-under tournament 1n Cooperstown, N.Y. next summer. The 13-player team will be selected at an invitation tryout ~pin Pismo Beach, Oct. 4-5. The Capital Games Invitational Touma· ment. sponsored by nmecards, Inc., will be held at Cooperstown Dreams Parlt from June 27-July 2, 1998 near the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Capital Games players will receive all meals, home and away uniforms, tournament rings, personalized baseball cards and tickets to the Hall of Fame. Teams are guaranteed a mini.mum of seven games. Applicants must have been born after Aug. 1, 1985. Players interested in being considered for the tryout camp can find an application on the Internet at timecards.net. Players can also call Coach Joe Jennings at (805) 473-1394, or e·mail him at cacapgm- chj@aol.com. SAN RAPAEL-~Har­ bor and Coruna del Mer laded tn the tint CIP ~ Volleyball coaches.pall al the leUCll. 1be statiewtde poll .... New- port Harbor at No. 6 and Corona del Mar at No. 9 in Dlvilion L St. MarYs of Stockton ~ved . the top spot, wblle Arcbbisbop Mitty (San Jose) 11 No. 2, with Laguna Beach pulling up 1n third. In an overall top 10, which includes all five divisions, the Sailon are ranked ninth. The Sea Kings, though not tn the top 10, receiVed enough votes foT No. 13. Oww9111Dp10 1. St. Mary's, Stockton 2. St. Francis, MocJntaln View 3. Archbishop Mitty, San Jme 4. u.guna 8ffch 5. Unden 6. Huntington Beactl 7. Bakersfield 8. Mira Costa , .... ~ ...... 10. Fou In Valley ~ .. High school -Century vs. Estancia, at Newport Harbor, 7 p.m. • • Soocer Colleg~ men -Southern callfomia College at Concordia Tournament. College women -Southern CAlllfomia College at Hawaii.Pacific Tournament. • VolleriNll High school girts -La Quinta at Costa Mesa, 3: 15 p.m. , • w.c.r-polo Community college men -Orange Coast at Cuesta Tournament. High school boys -Corona def Mar at Laguna Beach, 3:15 p.m. ·~ High school girls -Costa Mew at Trabuco Hills, 3 p.m. • Fleld hodcey High school -Edison vs. Newport Harbor at Harper School, 3 p.m. WEDNESDAY'S COUNTS Dney's Lode• -6 boats, 212 anglers.. 457 yellowtall, 83 bonito, 211 barracuda. 4 skipjadt tuna,. 2 dorado, 1 yellowfln WM. 18 calico bass, 99 sand t>.ss, 61 sculpln. 4 sheephead, 1 halibut. Ne•..,t 1..-dng-5 boats, 101 lil(lglen. 2 dorado, 1 white seabass, 1 halibut,, 4 sand bass, 35 calico bass, 9 barracuda. 118 bonito, 56 scutpln. 6 blue perch, 125 rnadt~. PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES r•' IO'llCll PUIUC llOTICU A call to claHln•d can help Can't seem to get to all ltaose repair Jobs around the house? Lei the c1 .. s1t1ed Service Directory help you find reUable help. &42-5978 RENT through classlfted STARTL • • • .... THUllSOAV. SEPT£M8ER 11, 1997 Hove A Garage Sole ! ~ NEWPORT ROOMS 2708 RENTALS BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT WANTED 1.!.J iiBiiEAiiCiilHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii2ii1iii7mO Oueat Hou•• In N.B. iiWiiANTEiiiiiiiiDiiiiiiii2ii7ii2ii6 OPPORTUNlTY 5530 TO BUY 6019 co.i•L MOUPIC "c::~~~~~e5":r~~~;:, T~:asTioaPtrlv:~ ~: :~· r:?."~:b:o ;~; Active outgoing proJ't 2904 Sell yoiir home o•,.OllfUNl lY Lrg ya.... Mu•t ••II ... d I view. 1750/mo. Incl ••e~ 1bd 1b• plu• a -····-through ctusmed. ... • pe ... a-you •••rvf" t llt11• office IPK• In 9 '"'2 •97• Allrtll11U11MftrliS111tlil&ail 1mmedl By Owner UI s -'"' 1 UU/cable 844-01'15 ' Plea .. be wan1 of out,~ ___ ... _~_~ __ .,;.... __ a eclud..... uxury • · u n I q u • p o a I ti v e , • z •• ~111« II w'leCI II Ille fd· C o-<> p w /Brok• r gated community. All Newport Beach 1hared houalng. Have 01 •r•• companies. 1111 FM H111111t9 Act el 1111 as Lo 8's 769-4878 apt. homea fHture Oceanfront & 22nd St. cool cal with good Check with th• local ~ wtlkll ll\IUs ii 1111111 HOUSE-SITTER W/O, fridge, garage, Private room unfurn, rers. Need garage B • t t • r Bu• In••• " lfftl11H .. .,., ptt1tt111ce. R.E. Broker will SelJ & alarm & morel shat• bath. Utl paid. space for cycle & mtn Bureau before you l1JT1ll1tl111 11 •1mi111111111a Baby-sit your vacant No smoking preferred. blkH . Strong c:ookJng ~:.": C:~~rv~~~~~.~°J lwtd 011 flU. celor. rtllllon. Home 85<Hl1oo 1BR. ... 11280-S1455 Kitchenette In room. & gardening 1kill1 to 2BR S149"'S1850 • -undry 1 block to h and understand any "'· ••iu-. 1111111111 siatus" ···· .,. -• • are or trade. Up to Open Sat/Sun 1 ·5 Newport Pier. 1490. S800/mo. 723-6090. contracts belore you .,._,. lfitill, • • lntulicHI 11 2627 Alta Villa NEWPORT RIDGE c II s aa • 1lgn. Shop around for -·h ~-~-11 _..• .. ncr.. hml· a am m ..... pm at HOUSE OR •PT --• ·-,.._. Partc·front. Prln only. 975-4808 -rates. t.llloll 11 dlw l111l111hon." Agent 288-3934 714-789· 1679 2BR NEEDEDll l-------- Tllls .. wsp1p11 will 1101 •s •• 1 ..,.,.•·nolf In Corona del M ar Mi .. NlflYacct111111yamrtm· THE BLUFFS theo~.~~~~d::~e YaM.A or Laguna Beach MONEY 1nt11t fof ,.., u 1111 wllicll is 1n 3Bdrm 2·5bath. Family 1 rent level. IJUITAU 2722 Cathy 098-9938 TO LOAN room, Bay view. Just •hmtlta o11111 la• Ovr 111fe11 Aeduc:edl Mull Selll lrvlne..Apartment Aesponalble UCI !lll u· lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii are llt11llJ lnlormed lllat 111 H a• t Ing• & c 0 , Communltl•• dent look Ing for NB/ Need a business part- •••111111• adwtrllHd 1n this 714-940·5500 Penlnaula room/1hare. ner? Free joint venture .....,.,., .,. 1Vlilelll• 011 111 ,....,..----...,..---!••••••••• Pay up to S300/mo. Info. 803·788·2358 Fax 2914 ARB YOU FRIENDLY. RESPONSIBLE & CARING? We provide Transportation Services &o our elderly and disabled community. "'=:~ .I Part·llmlt & Fu.0-tlme • employment .t Paid tralnlng while Delivery pereon1--------- wanted FT. Apply In Q person q, Allen Beck Roger'• ardent Florlst 1559 Plac:entlo Is now hiring for Ave, N.B. 842·5004. upcoming holiday 1ea1on. Cashiers, DRIVER COM Florist. gltt HIH, carryouts, M·F 6:3()-4:30. Exp' 1ecurlty guard and OMV Report nee:. Call gltt wrappers. PT & Bet-•n 1·5 ·844·1413 FT available. Please fax resume to Driver. Expe1lenc:ed (714)840-7528 o r hlghly skilled driver apply In person al lor Corporate Exec. 2301 San Joaquin Full time. Fax RHume Hiiia Road. CdM. llstlng quallllc:atlon• ---------& prevloua driving ---------report to 7~4-648.()981 Salee & Secretarial Prof'l/health oriented. Fiii In the Blankl Computer !Iterate. CaJI Employers! Reach the for 1pp1: 722·8466 & m o 1 t q u a I I I I • d Fax resume: 722·7480 Old Coln• Gold Sliver Franklin Mint. Stetting Old watches & jewelry WHtcoast Coln 842·1M48 TONY ROBBINS Personal iJower tape• series and his other tapes. 642·2044 FREE TO YOU 6022 Both Greun & Or•y C arpet /w padding. 2·3 rooms worth. You haul away. 675·3391 FREE Adorable . Affectionate Kittens lo good homes. • 662·5658 ., -.1111.,,.,,.llylWla. THom· Waterfront Hlghrlse Eric 714-223.0101 803-788-2313 7 dys plalufdllcrirnlNCloA.UllHUO Condo Sec. bldg. APARTMENTS 1-------''"-- 2bd, 2ba. Boal space. FOR RENT ~your .I Priend.ly, team«lented wcrk environment employees you need by placing a help wanted ad In the OaJly Piiot employment section. Call our Classified Dept. al c::;7TEACHERSc::;7 PETS & NEEDED! Toddlers & Toll·lrlllt 1-100·424·IS90. for 1400sq.fl. S249,000.1 .. •••••••• Ille Wnlllqlon, DC lfH please By Owner. 650-8881. 11 COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE ATJ'N1 HOMF.OWN'!RS Borrow SlSK..SlOOK Too Many Billsl •Pay off.high lntetm crec!J1 Catds 21 years d age or older Valid CA Driver's Uceose and excellent driving record required For more Preschool 955·2672 ANIMALS c::;7TUTOR TIMEc::;7 6049 : call HUD ti U6·3500. LOTS -----•IPOR SALB 1400 COSTA MESA 2624 ___ 9_4_2_·5_9_7_8--1 _E_M_P_L_O_YM_E_N_T __ Ho:,:~, Desk Clerk SERVICES 5533 Hrs: 7 a m-3 pm 4·days iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •Dachahund, mature dog seeks mature owners with time and yard to play! Jake has all shots & good health. 714·548·5178 HOUSES/ CONDOS FOR SALE GENERAL 1002 N.B . Realtor will give 20""' commission 10 \our lavonte charity when you buy or sell a homo Cory 640·1406 SOLD! lnv110 over 40,000 people to road about your home for sale each Salurday by showcasing your property In the Homes ot tho Week & Opon Home Gulde. Tho best local Real Estate Section around! React) tho best qualified homebuy· o•s on the coastl Call your Advertising Aepresen1e1lve Todayll Ask about our current spoclalsl Lisa Cos•nJta 574·4249 Lia• River• 574-4252 VILLA PARK Xlnl Buyl 3bd 2 5ba • Lot Size. 20.02osq 11. S430,000 Mollvaled Sellerll Jlm1se Phlillps-Agt (213 ) 777-07 97 CO STA MESA 1024 ••••••••• Best E 'alde 1br co1.1----------1----------tage, pvt ent, Nu crpV RENTALS TO BUSINESS OFFICE • Hom~ lmP.fO"l'""'DIJ ~xrrn~w 8 5 7-7950 -------. .... -...... ' --... -4' ..... --= :.: ~ :':.. ~-_!_ ~ -!!-~ Balboa Newport Realty, Inc. RENTALS ColtaMtH 28R. E'sJde $1000 38R, w/pool $1400 Ntwpod leach Winter & r••rtr rent.al• avallable 71~723-4494 pnl/flrs, no/pets/gar. sullnt: 2724 FOR RENT 2769 $750.mo 548·8228 ~ E'ald• 1.5BO Loft 1nliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii N .B . 7501.f . Prime home. Bath, kitchen Beautiful Beachfront ofc space for Planner/ W/D access. No dogs. apt to ahr, sub terrain Landscape Deslgn•r/ S650/mo. 258-0447. prkg, gated, w/d, lrg Draftsperson. Free • Apply by phontl241v AP~ • No Eqwry ~ited Call Plat.lawn Ital (800) su.s Opm7Days DAVE a week. Pis contact George !I.... 722·2999. House-Sltte1 needed, oc:c:aslonal work. Avl 7days/Wknd1/hollday1 Infrequent traveler. Bond able 225·8983 E ' Id llvlng rm, full kit, pvt parking, utll, maint. • • 2bd 1 ba apt. ba, fully furn. expect x1nt cond. new c:rpt, bd, s1so. + s150 dep. ~~~~~~~ F~c 64~~~~ •••••••-EMPLOYMEN T IRVINE BARCLAY ··-···· Please be aware that the listings In this c:al· cgory may require you to call a 900 number In which there Is a charge per minute. DOMESTICS 5 5 40 Fr,~~: ~~'ofr:~'.0~ !ea;: Avl 1<>-1 673-7669 Ph. 644-5050 Ella ANNOUNCEME 5530 THEATRE •548·1709• c:~ 21bpd, ~~~. hsp:ll~o. ---------Hiring PT Concession DOQ WALKE.ft_ INDUSTRIAL 2788 Employees. If you are Need someone to HUNTI T S850. utls lnc:ld. Prof'I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I---------* * • • • 21 or older, g ood with walk your dog?? NG ON Fem prerd • 403·5706 ANNOUNCEMENTS Security the public & would c a 11 M 0 r g a n BEACH 2 640 CM 2 rma avl nr Tri-Sq. 1 0 • 0 0 0 S Q FT ~ like to bring In a llttle • 042·8533 • $550./$400. + 1/3 ut11, BUILDING For Sale 2920 &p8 extra money, IBT Is --------- gar, all amenities. Production Pl. NB jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ad d I n g t o I t s •Pet-Sitte r , Let me •2Br 28• Encld gar. 714 .,A6 8370 L M Can splll Sto 8 concession part·tlme Feed, Play, Walk and P-10,· nu carpet. Nice ..,.. · v sg · r your FREE Digita l L P I 0 ' C Toys/Cara. Mfg/or WE HAVE employees. $7 per hr. ove your et FLUFFY Long Haired Kittens. 6 weeks old, need good homes. 3 femal.as 1 male $10.00 each. c::;7 378·9111 c:::7 FREE· to good homf 2yr female Tabby, shy, friendly. 854·3248 OCICAT S K ittens Sliver spot· ted. CFA shots. 5500· $600 1 ·909-628·4032 Shltzsu 14 wks old. Gorgeous trl·color girl. Housebroken, very affectionate. Paid $650. Sacrllic:e $499. Call 714/858·5873. area. Near achl/ahQps. M prvt rm & pM ba. Leased Investment. Satelllt• Systems SECURI 4 hr. shifts. Eve. & wk· Responsible and 5825+ Dep. 720-0521 Prvt Ille. Gated/pool, Bob CausUn Bkr When you algn up for TY ends. Flexlblllly in Friendly. Please Call _M_U_S-ICAL ______ _ ••••••••• Ad 0 , • b 1 e 1 BR . w/d. Live w/Sr. & cats. 71 A 72-. 8777 dlgltal satelllte service JOBS sc:hedullng your time. Morgan 642·8533 Up.lairs' c:.th c:ells' S500 +aec 646·8473 -,..,...,.--.... --6 -·----which Includes up to HOUSES/ -cc some serving exper. INSTRUMENTS 6055 gated 4·Plex. S750. H.i. Near beach. LM Auto/Waj~hse for 160 channels plus 30 all over desired. Call Sherry <il' ••••••••• CONDOS (lnlds Elect) 842·1787 2bd, 2.!5ba condo. ease. 1400"1W.tt. Retail CD q uallly audio ORANGE ___ 7_1_4-_8_5_4-_4_1_9_'3 __ ,MERCHANDISE FOR RENT Pool, jacuzzi, dog. exposure, fenced yard c:hannel1. Discounted s6 oo/mo. + 112 utl. .49 per sq.ti. 646·1196 products & services COUNTY Local C.M. Hotel Call Susan 9eo.5610. Nwpt Blvd @ 1 sth also Included call for Part-time seeks enthu1la1tlc: 2669 NB P 1 st. 12x12. S17S. Info. 714n 21-4008 Full·tlme courteous customer--------- • • vt home, g rm, 5 5 3 ·1 1 1 5 ·(day)•---------10221 Slater Ste 115 service oriented peo· ANTIQUES 6010 BALBOA liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pvt ba. kite. lndry. Inc or 673•1943.(eves) 1.---------pie for parking cashier iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PENINSUIA 2 107 1 & 2 Pdrms Avail utl/cbt. No smk/peta. Fountain Valley positions. FT/PT avail. i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • i..rge sq.footage S525/mo. 722·9755. --------VOLUNTEERS CA 92708 Please contact Tom or NEWPORT BEACH C harmin g 2bd, 2ba ~d en Cape Cod home. Surrounded by pvt front & back patio. $2700. Agt 673·3899 Spaclou• Deluxe 3br 2ba. ale. frplc. patio, 2·car enclsd gar. $1800.Lse 675-7130 COSTA M ESA 2 12 4 INCOME N*E E (714) 963·0979 • Flreplac:ea N.B . Steps to ocean. * *D*E*D We are an EEO Co. Jullan 714/798·3337 •Vaulted celllngs Share 3bd with 1 PROPERTY 2790 •••-t ··-Visit our website at Mon·Frl from 7am-5pm •Poole & Spas person. $650/mo. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii http:/www.apslnc:.com Macintosh • Small pets welcome. Ample driveway pkng. AMERICAN CANCER * * * * * Production ..... ,., Pia call 944-5555 714 /050·7310 CM 4·PLEX $343,000 ""'' 1---------9% DOWN. S3l3.000 S OCIETY *POSTAL JOBS * At Hoag Hospllal In •1BR $775• NB Eastblulf nt Nwpl Ctr. lST TO. EZ AentaJ. All 3 p I I our Cor p ore t e 28R28AS900 Ousllty Home. Prof'I 3Br 2Ba 714-241.0760 D ISCOVERY os t ons Avaflable. Communicat ions D/W lnc:t. 80x30 pool. male •hr w /aame. SHOPS No Experience Nee:. Dept. we are seeking No peta. Carport. Furn+ pvt ba. S550.+ •••••••••• -Corona del Mar· For Information Call: a FT MAC INTOSH Newport Bay 1/2 ulla f14o-4620 Pis Call 0 40-4777 1·&00·8 00·9311 PRODUCTION ARTIST Terrace NB· Dover Shor•• BUSINESS & E xt 8020 with strong layouv •545-4855• Pvt hm. Lndry. kit, FINANCE drawing 1klll1 for print c:bl. No pets/smk. World Class wruers. collateral material. $415+ utll. 645·9515. •••••••• sales & pubflc: rela· ACCOUNTING RequlrH the ablUty to 3bd 1 ba 1-c:ar gar. Lrg yard. S1100/mo. MISCELLANEOUS Need a Roommate? Ilona servlcea. No fat Corporate head· handle light dead· 1 retainer. By the Job, quarters of retail lines. Sklll• should Big Guitar Showll 1ooo·s of Guitars! Buy • Sell • Trade! O .C . Fairgrounds . Sept. 1 3 , 9.e and Sept. 14, 10·5 Call 1·800-453·7489 GARAGE SALES BALBOA ISLA?ID 6106 Sat 9/13 8am Huge 2 Family Garago Salel Bikes, lurn. beveled galss table. clothes, & household items. 304 Diamond Ave In Alley willy or monthly svc:s. pharmacy chain has Include advanced Dlaney. Del Taco, Immediate opening Pagemaker, Photo· Mc Donald'•, Nord· for accounts payable shop & Adobe lllustra· 1950 Monrovia RENTALS Call The Dally Piiot BUSINESS 3~d 1 b a Garage, Or For Sale S170,000.1 .. •••••••• Classified department OPPORTUNITY oovered patio, lrg __ B_k_r _e_7_3_-e_9_4_2 __ 1• and take advantage of COSTA MESA 6124 yard. AV access. 3bd 1ba W 'slde. Lrg ---------our one week spec:lall 2 904 1950 Mo nrovia yard, garage. Avail DUPLEXES 2 704 , __ 7_1_4-_9_4_2_·5_9_ ~7_8 __ , iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiii I S 110.000. 10· 1. S 1050 +security. ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Roommate Wanted B kr 673-0942 714n52·2881 1• Young Prof'I with pool E'slde 2 Homes on 3bd 2 .Gb• Mes a E 'alde CM 3 +2, Ip, 2· home looklng to share R·2 Lot. 3Br & 1 Br. Verde. Comm pool, car gar. Opn Sun 12·5 with slmllar. Great S239K Ll110 In the 3Br. spa. 2-c:ar gar. $1175. 2032 Fullerton Ave area In Costa Mesa, A Unit A $1375.650·8884 nr Teewlnkle Park, Rent 1Br. Owner/Agt. vi 10-15. 557·5886. ,.. convenient to ahop· Must ~•Ill 642-9668 E'slde Townhome ---------ping/freeway• etc. E'alde H o me 3br 3bd, 2.5ba pvt yard, ROOM S 2706 S550 month Avall I .75bs, remodeled, lrg llv rm w/fp, sep fam liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NOW, (714) 549-1101 lot. popular area. rm , big master , E 'sld• CM 1BD with--------- '367.000 by owner. vacant. Fresh & cleanl shared bath. Sep en· RENTALS 714·645·2158 Assoc:. pool, spa & trance. No kitchen, FOUN TAIN VALLEY 1034 tennis. S 1500/mo . w/d acceH. No dogs. WANTED 2726 714/433·952 8 $280/mo. 258·0447. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii House In E 'Slde 1br 1ba, garage w/d, TBBATER 'P'D111•-n New comnwnic.I._, °"' ie wing N-1. M.wlt.a.,."' -" new ~ indudinc LONG DISTANCE ICM-7.9 -No in-.....y lo buy. No luge invttl•*nl• P0te<Viol to ...J.e -IOK •....-lbGnlJ..fTIPT. C4J1 (714) 700.flJJ7 strom Stores, FAO position. Must be tor. Hoag olfere excel· ---------Schwa rz. J.M. Pe· detall oriented. lent bene f it• t..-• Co.J Llfeoyc le, organized and have Including 28 days of Anheu•ef'·B u s c h , computer experl· paid time o ff, a 401(k) Inc •• (partlal llst). enc:e . P l easant plan, Childcare Center Imp e cc ab Io r 8 t er· smoke-free environ· and health benefits. ences. Press reteo1es, ment in Newport Please apply at: Top Dollar Paid! F rom 1800·1960. 1 pc to entire estate. Paintings, china, g lswsre, furn, etc. 40Yr NB Rea 873·6223 Sat. Beautiful 6 ' wood aauna . for Indoor or o u tdoor, d r essing room for store. bnrbe· cue w/ 2 butane tanks & morel 242 E. Wiison c: or po rate b Io 1. Beach. Call Sharon Human Resources, features stories, In· (714) 845·9970 Hoag Ho1pllat. One "---------' NEWPORT 1tore promos, mall 1'========~ H oag Drive, Box 0100,1 _________ 1 BEAC~ 6169 promos, brochures, I· Newport Beach, CA 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii press k1t1, printing, ACE PARKING 92658.etoo or FAX APPLIANCES 6011 '' graphic arts. Call Has lmmed. openings rHume 714n60-2313. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i Huge Bayside VIiiage Theriot & Associates •Cashiers EOE. www.h oag.org Moblle Home Parking 714/5 48-0025 •Receptionist• INTERNE.T OGRIFFIT Refrigerator AJ>I sin Lot Salel Sat 8-3pm. LOST & FOUND 292 5 •Lot Checkere PT/FT ~hoagho•pltal.org S11X>. Waaher/Dryer, 300 E. Coaet Hwy. •Shuttle Driver• Stereo, Blc:ycles. OMV prlflJout required F"RNl'"ntt: clothes, wetsuit• & patio. refrlg. $825/mo. CAS"PTVG &~&U&\ 714-073-3432 u." 2921 CAStING l&iiaiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiim TllEATER 2921 CASTING • •Valela II S140/ea. 848-5848 S aturday 8 ·12 for driving po1itlon1. " ~VAUO 6014 household Items. 2821 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Apply 9am·NQQn ~,..,.,..~~~~--I 1e12 Anita Lane FOUND Diamond ring Ace Parking MGMT Santa Photo• Cuatom Built comer Dover Shores l.tGUNA IBACH &ili•iiiiiiiiiliiiilll •xeo. 2er 2 BL oat.a, OCllANVllrW 28 A 28A Back bay, 2-c.r g.,, flr•plac•. 2-car gar, 1 1450. 8 8ayore1t Ct. Und« 1310,000. By ••pre•• Le .. lne Own« (114) 499-1157 714~7W8n ---------• LidO Iii• kem• 4 +i . rr UWUl'lln-N.w crpt, lo. p.UO. "'""&"va& 1a1oomo. Yrty. 11111 ~ Ill.CB 1089 Orundy ""' 17M111 ,, ............... rtM•19Ma •••• urt •HUii' ..... italmer It. lbd o... ....... ft.., beoholor. 1100/mo. Lu•urr Sbr t .e ba ~ patio. ow. W/O, ·~tontotlon lhuttore ~ deO. No ~ OuMf.Oolff Comm Otlll 7 ... t .. JMnN LaPcMcade rt~·tM? o...rt0-.-.,,~--Placed over 8,000 kids with Top SAG Ag_ents e1*1~1.m1.101~tllfM••t•'P * Member of 888. In Busine" Since J 982 In Corona del Mar. 4880 MacArthur Ct.. Team/Cuatomer 1kllls. wall unll/d resaer. --------- M all dHcrlptlon to Ste C (At Campu•). Organlud, Fun, Sawy All wood construction. NEWPORT P .O . Box 1560 NewportBHch 800<229·7147ext137 VERY VERV nice Costa MHa 92827 955·2037 job hotline. p iece I S 1 000/obo. COAST 6170 C/o Lorraine Advertlalng Model Searo h 714-849·1101 l~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Legal Advertising p 8 t 1 t e /PI u 9 ' 8 • Mattresa/ioxaprlng NEWPORT COASTI Found • G I a 1181 · Manager. Exper with Special elze Models Ou .. n1lu., dbl plllow MULTI FAM IL V tinted perecrlptlon flllng, new account•. need ed n ow for top, 2 wHk1 new, pd SALEI Sat 9/13 8· glaaees In case. Newport Newa Faeh lon and Print 11 100. sac. $275. noon. At 1he Summit Vic: of Bay St In CM. 7141723'"8440 a I a I g n m e n t a . 71.._.22_,.703 I N R 574·1825 or 760·1701 --...,,........--,,....,.---No exp. nece1Hry. __ ,...,.......,."'-------t n ewport ldge. A•k for Sunny. A••rtlalng 714--424·0987 Moving &ale Clothes. Furniture, NewaJtaper Olsplay ----------• Spaotacular yet tradl· Jewelry, Baby Item• & Advertising. Sale• OHlo• Admlnlatrator tJonal Thomaevllle much morel San Joa· person, Experienced. New York Stock King bedroom eulte. quln/Newportrldge Or. · LOST Eytglaues On Ocean Blvd. In COM. 720·9499 LOST: 9wk old Boxer type f uppy. Lt brown W/Wh marking•. GOH by "Paxton". In the vi· clnity of West1lde CM. f'•WAADll 548-3976 R•WA .. DI Jockey Newport Newa Exch ange flrm 1Hk1 Solld Cherry wood & 7141723·1J440 tHponatble Individual braH hardware, ator· ••••••••• for admlnl1ttatlve & 1 h) "l"D 11 u llANQUaT ou1tomer ••rvlce •1g• n eadboard. 2 u'n."SPORTAnON Coo•D1 .. •TOR 1 de cabinets with 31••••••••• " .,._ d uties, E!.11o elle nt drawere & 4 ahelvesr P T ·N B I t • I I a n communlcatJon akllla R 67.. each. Top bridge btwn •----------.. taurant ...-9500 req uired. Mu1t be ,. as1 a. coaat ttww peraonebl•, • •••f· w /readlng tights & POWER BOATS backboard mirror. starter, well organtzed Also terge J'1'l•lchlng 7012 & accurate, AddreH che1t. Just beautiful & '=i!i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii re1ume to PO Box 41 , all for S19001 Sells '~ C orona Del M ar now for ISOOO+tax. '80 aoston Whaler CA 92825-0041. EOE. No mattreH or frame, 22 Ft Outtage. 225hp· S t a tue, red/blec:k w/Whlte t rou1ert. Mee• Verde area-<:.M. No que1tJon1 asked. 714~~~040 ·~,,...,..,,.,..,,,~,..,.,,,. ............ __ -----------------t Yamaha rebulld. Well Abo really nice ladles maintained. Perfect cherry d•sk.. Perfect corns. 123,000 Olio for bedroom. 1350. evea: 714-711·9394 PART·TIMI JO& T ... Martcettne •Morning Hour• •No l!xpetlenc:a •Young, enefO.UC Ofc .Coeta M••• ca11c~ f714)7aa-cu 1• 7141973·2 334 ., ..... MtcM .. ~ t1 °"* •Hotanv UMlll\d .. ~ 15 Wide-spouted •=A.O DOWN 1 Phte captain 2 On the briny 3 Farmbebv • Water, In l>aris 5 Have amblllons a 0.1 7 ·-rown· 8 Pulled out 9 Removes (8 hat) 0 1"7, u...s,_ ........... 10 Golf-COIJfse .... - units 32 Sel of tools 11 -layer 33 Beeks 12 Tidy the glfdan 34 Olva's aolo 14 Sign of spring 35 ~ 22 lmi>alr 36 Poller stake 2-4 Olf or coal 38 Valuable 25 Pronunciation mineral symbol 39 "Oo -others" 26 s.tld 42 Hawaiian 27 Eumple ol Island 38-0own o43 Groupe of 28 Java's ships ~ ._ 45 Mora conceited 29 Ooe'a mate 46 l(Jnd .,.. ... ~----..... ----------- 47 ~rment . '48 .to '49 Ex (a ltJbecflptlon) 51 Fundlmentals 52 Country road 53 "Olice -• lime" 54 Houseplant 55 Sandwich cookie 58 Tler 80 -premium: scarce MARIN! SUPS MARINE SLIPS · DOCRS 7022 DOCRS 7022 AUTOMOBILES . 30' Off•hore Moor1ng WANTaDt SLIP POR1 _____ .....;~-- Neither wlnerable. South du.la. '° NORnl •.raa Q t• <>Kt •A.r 10178 WEST •K 1097t QS 0 17GS •Q88 BAST •Q••t QJ.871 o .J•I .,. SOUTH •A QAKQ10tl OAQ 109 •K2 The bidding:. 80trm WF.8T I Q Pui 3Q P&H (NT p ... 5NI' p ... 7Q p ... NORTH a. 4Q 5 0 eo P .. Opening lead: Ten of 6 Trump Coup Tommy'• remark· able abilit y t o play like a world champion when trumpe broke badly never c:eaaed to amaze the members of the club. Beaidea thia uncanny trait, Tommy also was bleeeed With an enormous amount or luck. Con- sider th.is deal. To all intent.a and purpoeea, Tom· my had leaped to seven hearts over North's positive three-dub n!eponae to the demand bid in hearts. N ot that it waa a poor contract -with a 3-2 trump break the alam would be home if the queen of clube could be ruJred out OI' if the jack of diamond. wu panied oo afore than twice. PIQiQ fCll' t.boee poaibiliti• WU better than tryinf t.o ruff a diamond •e4 DISCOV•RY Only t1kl LOaded, 1 Pa.a.aenger, hurry! (097142) THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1997 TOYOTA 1210 nuas 11771•----.. iiiii!~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiil 'M CAMM La !'92 COUNTY WtWtelQray, INl'*• One owner, Lo m1IH f\11 optton 11aw1... #1e9720 •••.•11 (S8U2•2) 'MCAlllRYL.a LAND IMWllR •e• LWa CaahtMte. ful ootion. All tbatd\anced when, after win-MISalON V1•JO Black beauty! ,_34476f~171977 nioi the open1nc spade lead. Toa-f'14)38 ... 8750 OM owMr my cHbed the ace and kine or *29•990 <549572> •94 SUPRA TUftaO VOl.ISW.IGEI ens ttumpe and diacovered ~4-1 split. LEXUS 9115 LAND ROVER eD1T10N Now a trump coup wouJd be needed iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MISSION VIEJO Red/black leather, 'H MllTU! _ , to avoid loeing a trump trick To (714)305·8750 chromea, auto,311< CONUElfTMLC· ucompllih that, Tomm1 w~uld . ,,,.. '02 88300 6 cyl., #013414 S28,977 LQ mile•~ • hew to ruff twice ln hand to ahon, auto. all power, aun· --------1 ...a/whlle/wM• -• en hia trum.,. tot.he 1 -'-roof, tinted gla11, RENAULT 9180 Ll!XUS Baavtilull • ""'--th .... IUlle en ..... aa $15,500 ne-0677 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MISSION Vll!JO (~AA0648) M,750 .,....t,, en return to dummy to run · 1-800-009·5388 winnen throUlh the def'ender. That '85 LS 400 '83 Renault Le Ca r would require three enlriea to the Black/Ivory, Excellent cond111on LAND ROVER table, and ther e weni only two in full potion, can. 22k, S1500/obo. 85<>-6262 TRUCKS 9220 MISSION VIEJO Bight. 8.9" avail. )ask for Duncan iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (714)3eS.8750- T .L _ _.;;. _______ 1 '87 Jett• GLI Red, 1 o tri ..... four declarer led a low '94 LS 400 '91 RAM 50 P/U owMr, 4-dr. ac, am/fm club and when West followed low, Black Jade/Ivory, TOYOTA 92 10 Shell, Alloya, AC caas, aunrf. xlnt cond. the ten wu fioeaaed. A spade ruff lull opUon, c•rtlrled, (P0t3399/200700) S4850. 850·7301 was followed by the king of clubt, 8.9% avail. '91 MR2 T::o~:!f '88 VW FOX 40r, Oftl'taken with ace, and a club ruff ,93 SC 300 Rare, clasalc Huntington Beach Radio cass.. original reduced Tommy'• trump.a to the Graphite, full option, (101547/023892) 714-847·8555 owner. Great conclt required l ength. The ace of dia· certlned, 8.9"' avail $8885 •93 PICKUP S3,000. 714-731-6990 monda and another tot.he king !ell #014449 t27,e77 HuntT:::~~ ;~•ch PS/AC '82 CABRIOLET Whl/ Tommy in perfect posit.ion to exe-714-847_8555 (101539/073272) Wht w/ boot. A/C. cute the coup. 'O• SC 300 $8895 alarm, pwr window•. Wb,n a winning club waa Jed Black/Ivory, chromes, Toyota of 49k ml. Grg pampet9d Ea.at ruffed immediately with the cerlllled , 6.9% avail On the move? Huntington Beach $8900 ObO .. 402-0757 eight. Tommy overruffed, drew the JJ'0~9209 S34,077 714·847-8555 laat trume and ~hen the jack of •95 ac 400 Sell.your extra CIHslfled SET··L diamonds dropped under the queen, Whlleflvory, chromes, household The most comprehen· &;. the ten became the fulfillinc trick. C/O, lull option. items sive and current dtrec-your home Beaide. the lucky breaka, the 6.9% avail in Cla.sslf1'ed tory 01 goods and sor· !hrou"h classified • -===:::::::::=:::-:;;:::=::::::.!._:::;vl~c!es:.!ar~o~u~nd~I~ 1.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii~iiii;'r;::::=:=-. alam ::\iired a aliaht alip by the #041265 ..,33,377 ,. • defenM. Wen puta up the queen Ll!XUS o(clubt on t.he first )~ad oft.he suit, MISSION Vle..10 declarer is an entry ahort for the 1·800·600·5398 coup! Learn to be a better brid&e playerl Subecribe now to the Goren Bridp Letter by callint (800) 788-1116 for information. Or write to: Goren Bridge Let- ter, P.O. Bos «tO, Chic:ago, Ill 80680. MERCEDES e'72 300SELe 1 owMr, exc cond. All recorda, AC. $3900. 840-1'491 '88 300SDL Turbo, drk blue. 84k ml. Orig o.vner, b eautllull $18,500. 675-9364. OD the table. · '87 580 SEL 1-0wner 1---------r--------..,.---------Xlnt condl Gold/Palo BUI CR 9035 FORD 9075 HYUNDAI 112,000 ml. $12,500 9090 OBO (714) 673·8948 '94 Park Ave, Adriatic blue. 41K orig owner. Xlnt cond. $17 ,500. 640-2766/358·2011 pgr CHEVROLET 9045 '84 CAPRICE CLASSIC Auto, PS, AC 101250/110924 t2,4H Toyota Of Huntington Beach 714-847 .. SSS '94 l!SCORT SW PS/AC (1 Ot534/117443) $8495 Toyota of Huntington Beach 714-847-8555 GEO 9080 '94 PRIZM Auto, P/S, A/C . #iot 339/027555 '87 XL GL 4Door. MG liftbac:k, automatic, ale iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Great condl s1100 OBO * 831·0757 JEEP 9110 '77 MIDGET 70k orig ml. Runs & looks greall 52500/obo. 646-3968. '93 Grand Cherokee NISSAN Laredo 4x4, V-8, up 9150 country & trail pkg. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 52K ml, Grn/Gry, 1· '85 300ZX T·Top, owner·llke-nu! S14k Gr eat runner, new 640-0338w 646-1397h paint, auto. Too much '93 WRANGLER to llsll Must seel HARD TOP Bought another car. • CID. big wheels, must $3500.obo 540.3933 Run your ad in the Newport Beach Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Huntington Beach Fountain Valley lndeoendent ta D YIS,SIU. MY CAil ,.,.,,,. : v.11 c.d O we. OVISA DAM x • • bp __ Xlnt Peninsula Point 37' SPORTFISHeR BUlCJt 9035 Location /W Cal·20 Beam 12'x 8" In th• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 113,500 •875-4134• Newporl Bay 831..0184 ,84 CENTURY i--------- Lldo I. Pvt Dock. up to --------Lo Mii•• FORD 9075 ••,ns Toyotai ot Huntington Beach (714) 847·8555 see to app. #260044 $12,977 '89 300ZX Red on blacit. Auto. Casa, AC, all pwr, alarm, T-top. 107k ml. Must seal $5500. 31<>-45()...4383. reach over 1 00 ,000 homes. Fax us this form with your credit card # or mail it in with o check today! Run For a week! 1( your car does not seH we' II run it • Moil .. CWIY ~OT lJO w ._-, C--CA 91627 rn .i 60-.-e> MX rn•.., ,..,,, ,,._,.,.~ 6 5ft, water/electric. MOTORCYCLES 154082411ot588 Very HCur• 873-7677 $3,805 Newport Bay SCOOTERS 8018 Toyota Of Boat allpa In amall Huntington Beach '87 FORD VAN Conv. ii8ii0iiNDiiiiAiiiiiiiiiiii9ii0ii8iii5 V-6, A/T, P/S, A/C, Low ml. Orig. Owner. $3,999 72().1722 private marina on Via •ae HONDA SPREE 714-847-8555 Udo. From S13-$161t. RED. LIKE NEWI ----------Sall or Electric prefd. Only 1,50 0 Miias. '84 Skylark,4-Dr No live ab0ards. Site S350.obo, Call Tim Gray, Alwaya garaged.•---,-9-2_T_B_l_R_D __ 2 5fl·50fl avallable. 714·574-4275 Very clean. Xlnt Cond Auto, loaded 714~75-4912 Agen1 _W_h_y_p_l_.a_y_H-ld-8--.N S2450. 548-1554 ~00671 /124448) $8995 Convenient Sffk with chlldcare? Toyota of Cla•alfled C a I I C I a•• If I• d Huntington Beach M2•S878 todayl 842·5e78. 114-847-85H • CAIDllTS '93 CIVIC EX Auto, moonroof, AC, AM/FM cass, all pwr, CC. 68k ml. $10,500. 073·0721 1¥ mag. Honda Cara for StOOI Seized & Sold locally 1hl• month. Ton Fr" 1-800.583-1905 lC5021 '95 CHEROKEE LAREDO 4x4, full power, every option, new Lexus trade #605978 $18,977 LEXUS MISSION VIEJO · t .eoo-ee9•5398 Whether you're buying or H lllng. Classified covers ell your needal PONTIAC 9170 '940RAN . Alloya, Full Power 1101 s59m 1242> $9095 Torotai of Huntington Beach 7t ..... 47..a5H for another week FREEi All for $10• ,.,_ °""' ,..,_ ._ ------c..•~ 0 ,....... cw..., OH D,...,.... ar-....ca. a ... ._ o-o-c... a•-o-.-.. o-. .. a•..-a..,.._ a-......_. a .. _ oo--o....,._ o--occ-oa--o~-o..,...-o.,. __ • $10 /or' ...... 11.00 _,. orlJiliorwil.... • ··-······--··-----·-····-··: iireol .. iilumltlng Rep.ara & Remodefa Free Eatlmatea Ll .. 73N .... t090 * '.91jEEP · WRANGLER. Hord top, cd, big wt.ls, must .. to opp. 12600A4 '95 LEXUS P.5300 ~~~· '·~ Per Month '94TOYOTA . SUPRA ~~_!_~~ ·~,. '96 TOYOTA CAMRY LE Ca.tvn....c... . full option \.LI 1uo62 + tax 36 mont+.s on aDC>rC>Ved credit. $4 500 down + 1st payment tax, license, and ~ity deoosit. Total 'of ~ments $17, 97 4s..80. Ootion to purc~se Jo.: residual ~lue $13,029. Based on 12~ miles per yeor. (vl ..u.49) '94 ISUZU TROOPERl.S ~option,~ CD,"'*>,~. must .. 1923573 '95 BMW 318i ~=~;f· Ml~ '97 FORD MUSTANG GT eon-t.~-.':r~ lt331YO