HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-09-19 - Orange Coast PilotSPOlt~S
CdM's McClellan set
to start for ~ale
PLA.N AHEAD
Find out what's going
on around town
Food fest _,eaves bad taste·'. for cigar shop owners
• Chamber chooses Huntington Beach tobacco dealer to run Taste of Newport's cigar booth.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -A handful of
local cigar shop owners are fuming
over the Chamber of Commerce'•
choice of a Huntington Beach-based
tobacco dealer to run the 1Ute of
Newport's sole dgar booth.
Both last year and this year, they
said. thOle who run the chamber-orga-
nized event have not gone out of their
way to get local cigar shop owners
involved. Newport Tobacco owner
Annie Hall.ajlan said .she felt shut out
of last year's three-day event, and
what she saw as another snub this
year just stoked her anger even more.
•ne whole principle of the cham-
ber is to promote loc4l businesses,"
No dancing at
The Cannery-
at least not yet
• Popular restaurant
wants to expand its enter-
tainment permit to allow
dancing.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The
music at The Cannery may make
you feel like dancing, but you'll
have to stay in your seat until the
city says it's OK.
Th~ 25-year-old mainstay of
the local restaurant drcuit has a
live entertainment permit, which
allows for disc joc:Uys or bands,
but it doem't have a dty dance
pennil Patrons often get up and
move to the live tunes from time
to time, and Cannery manage-
ment would like them to be able
to get up and do it whenever they
want.
•People want to be able to
come here, have dinner, listen to
music and dance -they want to
stay in one place,• Cannery man-
ager Terl Hatleberg said. •These
aren't the young kids. I think'this
is something Newport wants.•
So now the restaurant 1J apply-
ing for that documentation,
which the Planning Commission
will review Oct 9.
Recent complaints from some
nearby residents about loud
music in the neighborhood
prompted the dty to review area
restaurants' permits. They found
The Cannery didn't have the OK
tor dancing, though some patrons
appeared to be moving to the
music.
"It has been a control problem
for management," Assistant Oty
Manager Sharon Wood said.
•They don't at the moment have
a dance floor set up -I guess
people are Just getting into the
music."
Until the restaurant getl the
go-ahead from city offldal•, the
patrons who get the urge to boo-
gie will have to control them-
selves.
•People get up and jump
around sometimes -it's not really
• SEE CANNERY PAQE I
said HallajUm, a chamber member.
•ney never even bothered to look
into a place right next door."
But Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce President Richard
Luehrs said the chamber newsletter
announced several times it was look-
ing for businesses to fill the booths.
And, he said, when no Newport Beach
cigar shops responded, they looked
elsewhere for someone to fill the spot.
"Somebody else responded, so we
took them," he said. •And on~e we
had one, we couldn't load the booths
up with cigars."'
Cigars were first offered at the
Taste of Newport last year, and orga-
nizers decided to continue that trend
this year. The Cigar Room from Hunt-
ington Beach will be among the 34
restaurants manning booths at the
event, which runs today through Sun-
day.
Luehrs said organizers set a limit of
only one cigar company because they
had complaints last year about sec-
ond-hand smoke wafting thrOugh the
eating areas.
•1t•s not the smoke of Newport,• he
said. •it's the Taste of Newport." ·
Udo Cigar Room owner 'Ihlci Peck
said she would have appreciated an
invitation to join the festivities. Her
b~ess. a chamber member and the
first cigar lounge in Orange County,
opened last year and bas made a name
for itself, she said.
"It's slightly ui>s..etting," Peck said.
"My philosophy is, 'I scratch your
back, you scratch mine.'"
'li'ad Peck,
owner of the
Udo Cigar
Room, feels her
business bas lost
a chance at local
exposure by not
being a parttd·
pant at this
weekend's Taste
of Newport. lbe
event will fea·
ture two non·
local dgar ven-
dors.
MARL MARTIN
I DAILY PILOT
Did money
breed
mayhem?
• Investigation into
whether wealthy Newport
couple paid for a hit man
is cocktail banter at Costa
Mesa Stag Bar -where
alleged caper began.
By Christopher Goff ard, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Only a five
minute drive from the posh bay
front homes on Lido Isle, JUSt over
the line where Newport Beach
lades into Costa Mesa, is a chm
bar with a ramshackle facade
where one often sees tattoos on
the hands clutching the hard
stuff.
The Stag Bar was a favonte
haunt of 58-year-old career crun-
inal Patrick O'Neill, who drank
Bud Ught from the bottle and did
odd jobs around the place in
exchange for a small room.
Described as a cash-strapped
transient who sometimes lived m
hls van, he was arrested last
week when local police tailed
him to Northern California to foil
an alleged murder-for-hire
scheme.
Now, pohce are exploring a
possible link between the hard·
luck world O'Neill occupied and
the one of great wealth just down
the road.
Though Guy and Mae Miner
have not been named offiaally as
suspects, police said the investi-
gation into the apparent murder
plot will now focus on the New-
port Beach couple that lives in the
300 block of Via Udo Soud in a
brick front home bordering the
bay.
Costa Mesa police Lt. Ron
Smith said investigators have not
yet spoken to the couple but are
making airangements to meet
them through the Miners' lawyer.
The Miners' have denied
involvement in the scheme that
apparently targeted their son-in-
law, 47-year-old David M. Le.land
•SEE CAPER PAGE 5
See the shining sea at
Balboa Branch Library
F or both armchair naviga-
ton and captains pt their
own ships, newly·remod-
eled Balboa Branch library
houses a bounty of madtlllle
res.ources. From sailing ma.oua1I
to materials for vicMioul adven-
turers, the home of one of Call·
fornia's finest nautical collec-
bons has resources for anyone
interested in the watery world.
Known to many as the bible
of boating, "Chapman Pilottng•
covers sea-
manship for
powerboats
and sail-
boats alike
With more
than 1,500
illustrauons,
the 61st edi·
lion of this
respected
volume pro·
vides user-friendly information
about small-boat handling for
weekend sailors and seasoned
voyagers.
Equally comprehensive for
rdptains of dinghies to large
ct1bin sailboats is HRoyce's Sail-
ing illustrated.· Now in its 33rd
yE>ar m print, this compact refer-
ence covers sail and h.ull basics,
dnchoring, docking, rules and
equipment of the sport.
When you're ready to set sail,
plan a jaunt along California's
coast with
"Cruising
Guide,• fea-
turing
descriptions
of harbors
from Point
Reyes to
Bahia Todos
Santos.
Acquaint
yourself with
. distant ports
with "Bill Harmon's Cruising
Guide to British Virgin Islands•
'Videotape, offering tips about
liavigation, secluded harbors
and snorkeling locations. Find :au you need to know about pop-
"Ular destinations around the
·world, from Australia to
Antigua, Turkey to Tahiti, in
·world Cruising Handbook.•
Beyond sailing fundamentals,
· learn how to tum a rundown
production.into a ftnt-clus
yacht with .lbis Old Boat..
Find other ideu about design
and decor, iD.clud1ng solutlom
inv<>Jving light, space, color and
materials in •vacbt Style.•
For sailors in Newport's holi-
day boat parade, •no.ttng at
Night• provides information
about piloting procedures and
equipment needed for cruising
alter dark. 1bis new video also
coven using radar and electron·
ic charts for safety at sea.
For those seeking adventure
from a comfortable couch,
there's •The Dove,• dramatizing
the five-year odyssey that took
16-year-old Robin Lee Graham
around the world in a 23-foot
sloop. Female seafaren espe-
cially may be inspired by •Tak-
ing the Helm," Dawn Riley's
chronicle of her stint as captain
of the U.S. Women's Challenge
team for the 1993-94 Whitbread
'Round-the-World Race.
In 1873, Jules Verne gave us
a fictitious
account of
d.rcumnavi-
gating the
globe in 80
days. In
1993,five
men set out
in a catama-
ran to do it
for real.
Read about
their ordeal
in •Around the World in Seven-
ty-Nine Days,• a story that
should exhilarate even ardent
landlubbers.
Whether you're a seasoned
mariner or have never set sail,
chart a course for Balboa Branch
by noon Sunday. At the grand
re-opening of this remodeled
library, you're likely to fin4
something nautical to inspire
you.
• OEOC rT our is written by the staff
of the Newport Beach Publk Ubrary.
school days
Mariner's
Elementary School
Students at Mariner's Ele-
mentary School were able to
stock up on reading material
at the annual Book Fair held
at the school throughout the
week of Sept. 15. The ·Just
Read • program has inspired
many students to sit back and
relax and enjoy a good book.
With awards, incentives and
general recognition for read-
ing, students are eating up
books at a record pace.
Mariner's Elementary
school principal Tamara
Parham warmly welcomed
new and returning parents at
the ·sack to School Night• on
Sept. 18. Back to School Night
included a PTA sponsored
"Wish Night• where teachers
were asked to list their special
•Wishes• for their classroom.
Items including art suppllles,
VOL 11, NO. 214
1"HOMAI "' ..... ~
WI.WM &.Om&&..
f.dlior
educational videos, computer
software, printers and a wide
variety of physical education
equipment were listed and
fulfilled by parents anxious to
assist in the quality of their
children's education.
The first PTA meeting will
be held on Sept. 24 and will
be called to order at 9: 15 a.m.
by the new PTA president,
Martha Kerstner. All interest-
ed parents are welcome and
encouraged to attend.
The latest •Mariner's
Prlde" T-shirts are available
for $10. Sweatshlrtl are $18.
Both come in kids and adult
sizes. For more infonnation
contact Mariner'• mementary
School.
-Stacy Roblmon
• SOtOOL DAYS Is written by local
school INders .-ld students. To con-
tribute, pi.as. send lnfotnwtlon to
the O•llY Pilot. no w. 8.y St., Cosq
Meg, 92627.
'
MMC MARffi I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Wgb surf generated by Hurricane IJnda drew a lot of attentton to the Wedge ID Newport Beach. Now that the waten have
ca•.....t. lf1 Ume to dean up the meu left behind,
\ Volunte[Jrs to clean up Wedge
The Wedge Preservation Society on
Monday will be cleantng up after the wave-
watching crowds that converged this week-
end on the local surfing hot spot they love.
They're inviting any volunteers to come
down to the Wedge, located at the end of
the Balboa Peninsula, at noon Monday to
help out. They'll provide trash bags and
gloves for the effort.
"Everybody was down here, with the 1V
cameras and everything,• said society pres-
ident Mel Thoman. "Now we'll have to pick
up all the junk people left down there."
Waves reached 20 feet at the Wedge ear-
lier this week, the effect of Hurricane Unda.
The spectacle drew motorists down the
peninsula, creating traffic snarls along Bal-
boa Boulevard.
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Sign up for junior
basketball program
The Newport Mesa National
Junior Basketball League will
have a sign-up day this Saturday
and Sept. 27 at Ensign Middle
School. for boys and girls, grades
first through eighth, from 9 a.m, to
4 p.m . for the league season start·
ing the first week of November.
The league is divided into
three divisions. Division 1 is for
seventh-and eighth·graders;
Division 2 is for fifth-and sixth·
graders; and Divi.Sion 3 is for
third-and 'fourth-graders. The
cost for any of. these three divi-
sions is $125 and includes a uni-
form, basketball, trophy, indoor
practices and exciting league
play. All referees and acorekeep-
ers are included in the price.
For first and second graders,
the league offers a clinic division
for $60.
· The league helps children
learn and experience the game of
basketball. Games and practices
are held at local facilities includ·
ing En.sign Junior High School
Lincoln School and West Newport
Community Center.
The league stresses tun, good
sportsmanship, fundamentals and
drug free play. All coaches attend
a protessionally run coaching
clinic. Participants play at least.
two quarters of each game.
Team practices begin the first
~ .
brie,ly in the news
week of November and will run
through March 15, 1998. A spe-
dAl skill evaluation day will be
held Oct. 11 at Ensign.
The league is also lookip.g tor
volunteer coaches, assistant
coaches, team moms and other
help for the season.
For more information, call 225-
8385. '
Youth can strike up a
band at OCC
Orange Coast College's "Col·
lege for J<lds• program is offering
two band classes for students
fourth grade and up.
Both •nie Kool Kati-Begin-
ning Band" and ·strike up the
band• sessions will teach young-
sters basic instumental tech-
niques and mu.sic reading skills as.
well as provide an opportunity to
learn about team work by work-
ing in an ensemble environment.
Moreover, students will have a
chance to demonstrate the knowl-
edge aqulred through the ses-
sions in a concert for family and
friends at the end of each session.
Both 10-week Mllion.s, held
Monday through Oct, 23, off er an
option of attending Monday and
Wednesday Newport Beach
classes or Tuesday and Tbunday
Costa Meta work lhops. In addi·
tlon, each clul will offer a second
seaion Oct. 28 through Dec. 11 .
Registration fees for either class
are $45 for one session or $78 for
two sessions.
All sessions will be taught by
music instructors from the New-
port Mesa Unified School District.
For more information, can 432-
5880.
OCC can help you plan
for the future
A sev,en-week ·eareer Plan-
ning" course is being offered by
Orange Coast College's counsel-
ing department.
The two-unit class is geared
towards persons who wish to re-
enter the job market. The class
will provide students an opportu-
nity to take assessment tests that
help them identify their sped.fie
interests and abilities. Students
will develop individual career
plans.
The class will meet successive
starting this Saturday through
Nov.t .
Por more infonnation, call 432-
5072.
University awaits
Orange Coast students
Reauiterl from more than 70
public and private colleges and
univenities from tbn>ughout the
natlon will be oo Orange Coast
Colleges campus, Sept. 30, for the
college's annual •namter Day.•
The event will feature repre-
sentatives from University of Cal-
ifomiA and CalifomiA State Uni-
versity campuses, as well as
recruiters from independent Cali-
fornia colleges and universities
and out-of-state institutions.
The representatives will talk
with OCC students about trans-
ferring to their campuses. High
school students, students from
other community colleges and
community members are invited
to attend.
The recruiters will be stationed
at tables in OCC's quad from 10 ·
a.m. to 1 p.m. For more infonna·
tion, call 432-5894.
Get acquainted with
Powerpoint .
Learn Microsoft Powerpoint at
a one-day computer software
workshop offered by Orange
Coast College's Community Edu~
cation Office, Sept. 25.
The workshop will teach how
to use the Wmdows graphics pro-!
gram, which can create compu~
generated slides and graphs for
presentations.
The class meeta Thursdayi
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Com-
puter Research Center, 2021 Busi.-
ness Center Drive, Suite 115,
Irvine.
The registration ls $154 and
underway in OCC'a Comm.unity
Education Office. · ..
Por information, call •32~ . .
Remembrances ofgrade school
Back to school. As onnual
rituals go, I like it a lot.
Not that it's a big deal for
UI. It's been quite a while since
anyone accused our kids ot
being little. But the memories of
those long-ago autumn days
neverseemtofade.Justone
glance at the kids converging
on TeWinkle, Estancia or Mesa
brings them tumbling back, one
atop the other. It's amazing how
quickly 1997 can become 1957.
ln my case, 12 years of
Catholic school gives those
remembrances a certain spin. In
grade school, the first day back
meant two things: nuns and
chestnuts, nuns being the more
important. On those bright Sep-
tember mornings, scoping out
the nun who would instill joy, or
misery, in your life for the next
nine months. was job one. One
of the important issues was eras-
er throwing -i.e., does she
have an arm or not? The only
way to find out was to sacrifice
someone. I never volunteered. I
was picky about my clothes
even then, and I wasn't about to
walk around the rest of the day
with a big blotch of chalk dust
on my dark blue tie. You could
never get the stuff out.
Anyway, we would carefully
pick out a victim, usually some-
one with an incendiary temper.
As the day wore on, we would
annoy the hell out of him -
•him" because there were no
coed classes. The girls were in a
distant part of the building,
more foreign to us than the
moons of Jupiter. At just the
right moment,· someone behind
the victim would jab his you-
know-what with a pencil or, bet-
ter yet, the point on a metal
compass. The victim would
jump to his feet and yell some-
thing real loud, perhaps intelli-
gible, perhaps not. ln either ·
case, the result was the same.
BAM.
A cloud of chalk dust would
rise like a talcum powder mush-
room cloud. At that point, we
knew more about Sister than
she did about us. Velocity, accu-
racy, follow through. Our thirst
for knowledge was insatiable.
The first day of school was
also opening day for the never-
ending street games without
which life would be impossible
-king-queen and stickball.
King-queen is a distant relative
of handball, played against the
wall of a building with each
,. , . . ' .. ·.
got the biggest, hardest cllest:Dut
you could find" drilled a hole
through lt and threaded it with a r-
7"."""':.. " . .,
al", , ~· • • I -.... thick piece of twine. You tied a •
large knot in the twine, so yqu
could dangle the chestnut lik.e a
spent yo.yo, One kid would start
things oft by holding his chest-
nut at arm's length while the
other kids took turns whacking
away at it with their chestnuts
unW one or the other broke into
pieces. A clean halving of the
•boss• chestnut was a presti-
gious victory and would elicit a peter
buff a
player assigned to a box which
. . . forget it. It's too hard to
explain. But where I come from
it was a life force. To play either
stickball or king-queen, you
needed the all-important
Spaltleen -an inflated pink
rubber ball slightly smaller than
a tennis ball. A soft Spaldeen
cost a dime and lasted abqut an
hour. A hard Spaldeen cost a
quarter and lasted a few days.
Spaldeens had a terrible
habit of rolling into the street
and dropping through sewer
grates along the curb. Spaldeen
retrieval was more complex than
disarming a bomb in a crowded
airport. You needed a •grab-
ber," a •spotter~ and a safety
officer who would hold on to the
grabber's belt as he nearly dis-
appeared through the grate.
There were any number of field
supervisors st~d.ing around to
offer smart-donkey commentary
on how the whole operation was
going. Oddly enough,
Spaldeens also'contributed to
my voracious interest in w ords,
usage and trivia.
It was about the third grade, I
think, dwing a stickball game: I
raced after a long drive then
jogged back, trying to catch my
t:?reath. As I glanced down at the
Spaldeen in my hands, I noticed
something I never had before.
Printed in faint blue ink across
the pink rubber was a single
word -Spalding. I was thun-
derstruck. I sprinted back
screaming, ·u isn't Spaldeen,
you idiots. It's Spalding. Look!•
They weren't impressed. And
that brings us tQ chestnuts.
Chestnuts was a remarkably
silly game, relegated primarily
to the younger kids, meaning
fifth-graders and younger. You
chorus of oohs and aahs. Con-
versely, if the challenger's chest-
nut gave way first, be was sub-
jected to a loud and unprintable
salvo of ridicule.
This gave rise to the science
of chestnut hardening. There
were more theories on this than
on the origin of life. Some said
store them in complete darkness
for X-number of weeks. Others
tried encasing them in every-
thing from airplane glue to clear
nail polish. Still others bad elab-
orate rituals about soaking them
in some foul brew of who-
knows-what, then burying them
in the yard for some indetermi-
nate period. It was all nonsense,
of course, but it was our first
exposure to science.
Next time you're in a sporting
goods store ask them where the
Spaldeens cµe . Watching the
reaction can be more than
entertaining, especially when
you explain that it's a little pink
rubber thing with air in it.
Lesson for today: You only
live once, and it's important to
have as much fun as you possi-
bly can. But any school kid
knows that.
I gotta go.
• PETER BUFFA is the mayor of Costa
Mesa. His column appearl every Friday.
E-mail him at PtfBOaol.com .
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$29500 complete
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888-271-4567
Don't Delay, Avoid Probate!
David Pawlowsk1 Attorney at Law
.
Shaiilhar basketball court
• plan going through hoops
• Community leaders can't decide if they want
half court installed at new commUnity park.
could return with a basketball :
court. •
'But many residents and com-•
munity activists say things have
changed for the better in their :
neighborhood, and they want a •
new park -complete with a
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -City offi-
cials may have to step in and
referee a disagreement between
Shalimar Drive residents and
property owners who can't
agree Oil whether or not a new
community park should include
a basketball court .
Planning for the small park,
to be built at 782 Shalimar St.,
the site of an abandoned apart-
ment building, bas been going
on since earlier this year, when
the City Council approved buy-
ing the property, demolishing
the boarded-up structure and
building a new community
par~
Money to buy and construct
the park is coming from a Com-
munity Development Block
Grant, federal funding that is
distributed to nonprofit agencies
through the city to improve
urban blight.
After several meetings with
Shalimar area residents and
property owners, city planners
came up with three develop-
ment options for the new neigh-
borhood park.
Each includes a tot lot with
playground equipment, plenty
of trees, plants and other land-
scaping.
But the two designs support-
ed by most residents each
include a half-court basketball
,.
court, while the plan touted by
police, city officials and most
property owners has a swing set
where the court would go and
more playground equipment
Next week, the city's Parks,
Recreation Facilities and Park-
ways Commission, a City Coun-
cil advisory board, is scheduled
to review the three development
basketball hoop. •
Kristina Wright, the execu-:
tive director of the Shall.mar ..
Learning Center, located rigbt •
across the street from the
planned park, said teenagers in ~
the area now use a portable
options and rec-
ommend which
plan should be
adopted.
The City
Council will
have the final
say on what is
built in the park.
"I know that our
teens, particularly
our boys, would
love to have a hoop
to play with • • • M
hoop that is set ·.
up in the middle · ,
of the street to
play.
·1 know that
our teens, par-
ticularly our •
boys, would love
to have a hoop
to play with."
Wright said.
City officials
and police wony
that putting a
-KRISTINA WRIGHT • But while she·
park with a bas-
ketball court in the middle of an
area known for its history of
drugs, gangs and violence is just
asking for trouble.
"Basketball or other facilities
likely to be used by older chil-
dren and adults, especially late
at night, could present noise
problems in a park of this size,
with bedroom windows about 5
feet away,• Planning Director
Perry Valantine said in a written
·report to the commission.
Most Shalimar Street prop-
erty owners agree, saying
noise, loitering, pub.lie drink-
ing and other prob1ems they
have fought hard to overcome
supports having :
a court included in the final park· ,
design, Wnght said she under-
stands the concerns of police
and area property owners.
"I can defmitely see both
sides,• Wnght said. •1
ernpaUuze with the concerns,
and I have some of my own." '
As a compromise plan, city
staff has proposed a try-it-and-
see approach with the basket-
ball court.
U problems arise, the basket-
ball hoop could be removed,
and the open, asphalt area could
be used for skateboarding, in-
hne skating or other activities,
staff said.
Cost Effective
Legal So~ •· ·r ,,_.·· ~
OftlRA l,IUMAllA ~~ .....,,..,.l ..... "'-•'• ~
• (714) 760-8775 •
L EGAL-€>PT IC>N S o.J--1..S~~ 'V ~ AT \_ AYY
~HOMISMOW . ,,.. OnilQe CouDty Nr Cd ExpoG-
tlDD c.... bolb. au.ut.r Hone Show
"-• &JD. to 5 p.m. In tbe ~ c.-t.. Admleeion 11 free. Por more
~tioQ, call 708-3241.
~TOUOt
• Tbe a.ta MeM Se1or c.nter olfen
..9b lntroductkm to Heeling 1buch ('J'ber-
~ "lbudl) from 9:30 to 11:30 Liil. at
,_ W. 191h St, a.ta Meea. The cmt is
S:f. Por men lnformatioo. c.aD 262-3839
$Tass WORKSHOP
• 1 Orange Coa1t College's Re-Entry a.a-often the sec:on41 of a free two-
J>drl work.s hop called From Stress to
Success from noon to I :30 p.m. in the
Re-Entry Center. 2701 Fairview Roetd,
Costa Mesa For more Ulfonnation, call
~-5162.
;AtoJECT PlAYHOUSE ~;:Fashion Island invites the public to
"'""w the unveiling of the eight play·
~uses bwlt for Project Playhouse, a
fund·rillSer for HomeAid The playhous·
,es will be aucboned with proceeds ben-
.ehhng the non-profit orgaruzation. Visi-
'tors can view the playhouses through :0ct. 18 in the BloomingdaJe's Courtydld.
·For more Ulfonnabon, call 553-9510
. SPORTS COUECTORS SHOW
The Orange County Fau and Exposi-
t.ton Center hosts a Sports Collectors
~ow and Sale from 3 to 8 p.m. ln Build-
111g 14 at the fairgrounds, 88 Frur Drive,
.Costa Mesa. Adrruss1on is $6 for adults, oduld.ren under 5 are free. The event
)-uns through Sept 21 For more tnfor-
•non, call 638-9857 . . .
0DIMENTIA WORKSHOP
: · Adult Day Services of Orange Coun· .
· .•. DONATI YOUR BOAT
•, HIGHEST TAX \oNTl 011 IOllllU
•, DOl<T TlilOW YOUl lllONIY AWAY •. NO .o\Oli SUP Ol ITOlloGI JI II ~ llllCT Tlil CHAlJTY TO llNUIT I~
• YOUI GUT
Youa FAvoam CIWITY IN<.
71'-67J-OSl6 -~ __ ........................... ________ _,,
YMCA Ulll()U(
1be Ceotral Orange Coast YMCA
oo.ts its th1rd annual membenbip p6cnlc
at 4:30 p.m. at 2300 University Drive,
Newport Beach. Adm.laiom ls S3 for
members and SS for non·memben. Por
more Information. call 6'2-9990.
OPEN HOUSE
The Costa Mesa Historical Society
hosts an free open house at the Diego
Sepulveda Adobe from 1 t a .. m. to 3 p.m.
in Estancia Park, 1900 Adams' Ave .. Cos-
ta Mesa. The event will include enter-
tamment, refreshments and free traln
rides. Por more Ulfonnation, call 631-
5918.
QUARTER HORSE SHOW
The Orange County Fair and Exposi-
tion Center hosts a Quarter Horse Sbow
from 8 a .m. to 5 p.m. in the Equestrian
Center. Admission is free. For more
Ulfonnabon, call 708-32"7 .
RALPH LAUREN
Bloomingdale's hosts the launch of
Lauren. Ralph Lauren's petite line with
informal modeling from I to 3 p.m. in the
Petites department on the third floor of
BloonungdaJe's, 8"3 Newport Center
Dnve For more information, call 729·
6600
SPORTS COUECTORS SHOW
The Orange County Pair and Exposi·
tion Center hosts a Sports Collectors
uover 50 Years of Fine Quality"
CUSTOM-MADE NEW FuR.NITURE • DRAPERIES
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL
ADDITIONAL ~0/o OFF
Th"' S tember 22 1997
• Vinyl
•Marble •me
MTS MIO CMrTS
Tbe 1187. NeWpott 8eedl Ait» and
Mulk ...a.a& na. froQa 10 a,m. until 5
p.m. al ... BaJboe Pier Iii .,__We
Partl. Arttt' rlOft ii ,._, Por mote infor-
matioft, cd 8"-3151.
MSt«>N SHOW
Tbe ~-Mela Schoohl Pound.a·
tioll ~a~ tbow caDec:t A lUte
ol fashion at 12:15 p.m. OD the Entel'·
tolDtXMmt St.ge at Puhlon Island. Tbe
cioat is SlO for general Mating and S2S
for ~ed seating wbicb includes a
pus to Tbe 1llN ol Newport for the day.
Por more information, call 545-4144.
INVENYottS MEETING
American Capital Inv.ton Corpora·
t1on bolts a free Investment tem.inar at
8:30 a.m. at the Sutton Place Hotel, 4SOO
MacArthur Blvd, Newport Beach. Top-
ia Include Private Placement investing
and lnltlal Public Offerings (IPOs). Por
more infonnation, call 553-1900.
RUMMAGE SALE
Ouil Senior Center hosts its annual
Rummage Sale from 9 a.m. to -4 p.m. at
the center, 800 Marguerite, Corona del
Mar. Por more information, call 64-4-
32"<1.
WAUC FOR P£Aa
The Newport Mesa Irvine Interfaith
Coundl co-sponsors the fowth annual
Walt for Peace featunng a exhibitor
booths at 10 a .m. The walk begins at 11
a.m. Then! ii no cost to participate. For
more information, call 548-4942.
BOATRAUY
Duffy's 11th annual Great Electric
Boat Rally begins at 1 t a.m. at the Duffy
Showroom, 2001 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. There Is no admission
DM*I wo.JHOfl
,,....... MUide Coblil cxol\ads.
wcebbup mDld DnorCies A New Begili· mng rrom 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. m tao
Newport c.... Odve, N_ewpos:t Bw:b.
Tbe COit la S.O. Pot more inlonnetlon.
call 759-0579 .
DEMENlWMZIB B'S $11-.+Jl
St. J-.-eptoOp6l Church bolts a
seminar aboUt DemeinU. and
AJdwihn•'s ct-.... from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at the churdl, 3l09 Via Udo, Newport
Beach. The cost i.I SS lnduding a oooti-
nental btealdut. lleservatiom are
required. Por more informattoa. call 6'15-
0210.
COMN1'Ell SHOW
The ~e County Pali: and Ezposl-
tion Centei ham a Computer Show
from 10 a.m. tQ 5 p.m. in BuUdlng 12 at
the fairgrounds, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Admiuion is $3. Por more Infor-
mation, call 852-9267.
SUNDAY
NAUTICAL COUECTION
The Balboa Branch library presents a
Nautical Collection In conjunction with
the grand re-opening of the remodeled
Ebell Club room at 12:30 p.m. at 100 E.
Balboa Blvd. For more information, call
717-3807 or 717-3816.
QUARTER HORSE SHOW •
The Orange County Pair and Exposi·
tion Center hosts a Quarter Horse,Show
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. In the Equestrian
Center. Admission is free. Por more
information, ca.ll 708-3247.
SPORTS COUECTORS SHOW
The Orange County Fair 4Dd Exposi·
lion Center hosts a Sports Collectors
~cff"~
• Satu.rd.ay, September 20, 1997
11 a.m .
At D uffy Waterfront Headquarters
... CALL TO SIG N UP. ..
.... .... __
8
1997 11th Annual Harbor llaif.a9' Run
RUN NEWPORT!
5ll FUTURE RACE • II FUN·•/ WALi
Kids' Klasslc Race and Free Fitness Fair
.,_Md5.aeframl0a.m.to4p.m ID
....... H al tbe felr{pouDdl. II Pair
D1M,1Collii Mlle: A•" ' l'or ii 16 tor
~ c::ldldNl ondlr he ... {J9e. Pot .,.. .......... C*ll g..9957, .
~SHOW BlocwftlnOd+'I P..adoD \tlADd ... ..... • ,,.. bddAI falblon lbow and
product cSemo«wtratiOD fram 10 un. to 1
p.m. Ill tbe Gardea Md ffC:lmMore at
9'3 Nwpolt c-... °'*"· Newport BMdl. Pol' 1DON bdormadoo, Call 1~ eeoo.
_,SHOW
The Orange County Fair and ErpoG·
tion C.-bolt» a Bird Show preMD1*i
by the Orange County Bird Breedea.
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. In BuOding to at
the fal.rgrouodl, 88 Pair Drive, a.ta
Mw. Ad"""'on SS, c:hildteD 12 and
under are $1. Por more Information, call
828-2607.
RUMMAGE WI
Outs Senior Center hosts their
annual R•unn>Age Sale from 9 a.m. to
noon at the canter, 800 Marguerite,
Corona del Mar. Por more information,
call 644-32«.
LANDMINE FORUM
St. Mark Presbyterian Church hosts
a free public forum called Ridding the
World of I .andm!nes at 7 p.m. at the
church, 2100 Mar Vista Drive, Newport
Beach. Por more infonnation, call 6"4·
1341.
MONDAY
COLLEGE SEMINAR
The Jewish Federation Campus
hosts a conference for Jewish teenagers
and their families about the cballenges
andopportunities ofc:ollegeWe called
Mission: Possible, 'nlldng on College
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the campus, 250
E. Baker Street, Costa Mesa. Advanced
registration before the 17th is SS and
J09S IMUIHTa A 1111M
,,. lecbel No. 151 Newport ....
Jobi' DeiagbllibM11•50lll ~
meeting al 1 p.m. et Suf'!dng Me.ciniC'
Lodge. 1401 16th at,, N9wpart Bw:b.
TbeN II DO cha~---Wel· ccme. Por axn call ~-ume 75'.-0&ll.
MMik:Al 5"CfACUlM
See tbe ADdN Kole Magical Spec-
tacular from 7 to 9 p.m. at tbe Pl'•nc:la
High School Gym. 2323 Placlotia Ave ..
COltA Mw. A4"'1..ton it S4 f« ltu·
dents and '6 t« adulta. No c:bf.ldren
under ftve YeuJ ol age Will be Admitted.
Por JDOR lofon:Dation. can 547-5865.
ADOOVBMEW
Coastline CoUDMUng Center of
Newport Beadl hom a free Jecture caD.a ADD OvervieW about attention
defidt disorder at 1 p.m. at Coutltne,
1200 Quail, Suite 105, Newport Beocb.
For more Information, call 476-0991.
JNf IOAAD MEE11NG
The Jewtsh National Fund holds Is
annual open board meeting at 6:30 p .m.
at the Jewiah Senior Center, 250 E. Bak-
er St, Costa Mesa. P« more informa-
tion. call 558-8733.
NEWPORT SUNRISE IREAKfAST
The Newport Harboc Area Chamber
of Commerce bo8tl a Newport Sunrise
Breakfast at 7:15 a.m. at the Balboa Bay
Club, 1221 W. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. The guest speaker will be Jerry
Mandel, the new President and CEO of
the Orange County Performing Arts
Center. The cost is $15 for members
with a reservation; $17 for members
without and $19 for non-members. Por
more infonnatton, call 729-4.400.
LET US MAKE IT EASIER FOR YOU.
FREE WAN CAR!
~The Newport-Mesa Schoob Foudation
IS PROUD TO PRESENT
ll7a4Uol~•
'
. Saturday, September 20 .
12:15PM
FuhiODl1land
STANDARDS
CONTINUED FROM t
.. ..;..rv;1. Klab Sc:bool, ques.
lloaed the leostbllity ol Ibo olgo-
br& requirements for aopbo---. ··--.. llnbl-......-. • llppOr lllld. •A lot
al ... -.... not reody (fw ........ ll) by tho time they
.. -. ~of tho olgelxa n
-019J'!DlonoroenJon.•
Only l6% ol blgb -ltU• dents in Calllom!a toke olgebra,
ac:cordlng to research per·
·formed by the Commiss:lon for
the &tabkthment of Academic
Content and Pertorinance Stan-
dards, which wrote the propos-
al. -.
Fluor wondered if the school
district might have to switch the
sequence of math classes so that
students take algebra b8fore
geomeby to meet the standard.
She also took issue with a stan-
dard that would require klnder-
gartenm to write short sen-
tences legibly. ·
•physically, the fine motor
coordination is not there at a
kindergarten level.• Fluor so.id.
Local school district cunlcu-
~wn committees will be compar-
ing state standards wilb local
stana4I'dl and devising ways to
make them fit, said Julie Chan,
CHEER
CONTINUED FROM 1
team an.d were selected to per-
.form ·for the Universal Cheer-
leading Association in London
dwing a New Yea.r's Day parade.
"They all received superiors,
and that eventually got them the
superiors trophy, which is the
·best you can get," Buzzone said.
"These girls worked really bard
-they've never gotten trophies
before~ .
. "I've always run a very strict
program. They work really hard
for me, but they love it. It's done
wonders for them, from where
they first started. •
Seniors Angela Cho, Tracy
Barnette and Thuy Bach, and
sophomores Jessica Cox and Lyn-
dsay Stone, earned superior hon-
. ors for Estancia and made the UC
Santa Barbara camp all-star team.
-r-----------------------------~------.-------------, I
f. Y.I·.
Among the MW state education-
al guidelines up for approval:
, I ~ -=:-·· • lhort. i'9ible-• ll•llPOftd tD ~ about stories and rely on prior ~1•1d"' . 'llllnl... ' • IAlnlortn multiplication ..,bles
• UridontA!n<I the ~ of multiplication Ant-...-grode •Witte dMr Md coherent sentences in paragraphs considering
........ ar)CI pur1)0Se
• -indlctions • Compare information from several sources
Fowthgrode • Add. subtract, multiply end divide whole numbers
•understand fractions and decimals. i.e. 1/2 = .5 ,.
' 10th.... :
1 • Haw completed two years of algebra :
' ' L---------------------------------------------------~
director of curriculum and
assessment.
But because the new guide-
lines do not CX>Dle with adclition-
.al hi.nm for implementation,
school districts will have to be
Estancia's freshman cbeef
· squad won the most improved
trophy at the camp, while the
varsity brought hofne hardware
for taking second place in cheer
perlormance and second place in
the championship.
Buzzone, 25 and a 1989 Costa
Mesa graduate, came to Estancia
from Cypress High. where she
coached 53 girls for a year and a
half. At Estancia, she said it's
much easier because there are
only 22 girls in the program.
creative in bow to supplement
teacher training and textbooks.
"We're told what needs to be
done and figme bow to do it,·
chan said. "We figure out how
to fill in the gaps."
to the football players during
two-a-day workouts.
"It helps us to build good
camaraderie with the playen,
and the head coach was ecstatic
about uS bringing drinks to the
play~,• she said. "I used to do
that in high school. I think it's
important to have a good rela-
tionship with all the sports pro-
grams. Not just support them,
CAPER
CONTINUED FROM t
of Capitola. T
'!bf Millen did not amwer
tbelr door on W""-'•Y nor -= phone C4lll from the Daily
Pilot.
A pollce lnlonnan~ also a regu·
Jar at the si.g Bar, told police
O'Neill approached blm for help
in a contract slaying and that
O'Neill sold !be intended victim's
mother-in·law wanted the man
dead. .
O'Neill remains in Orange
County Jail and is expected to be
arraigned today Jn Orange Coun-
ty Central Municipal Court on
charges of solicitatio.Q. for murder,
attempteq murder, and being a
felon in possession of a firearm.
. O'Neill faces life in prison if
·convicted on a "third strike.•
As facts continue to bickle forth
about the case, regulars at the bar
where the alleged murder scheme
fermented continue to trade furi-
ous speculation. Did O'Neill do it?
Was he set up? Some eXpressed
disgust for the police informant, a
Costa Mesa man known by Mme
about the bar.
Bartender Peter Torre said be
saw O'Neill and the informant
meet at the bar and leave togeth-
er on the day the two drove north
to Capitola. O'Neill had with him
his Labrador, Charlie. Tone
described O'Neill as ~kind of a
but to be able to say, 'Yeah,
we're really dose to the football
tedm or tennis team.'"
Buzzone feels fortunate to be
able to stay home with her son,
4-year-old Trevor, and coach the
cheer squad, while her husband,
Eric, works. ·
~r·ve always been involved in
cheerleading, • she said. •Jt's just
a love for me.·
"It's tunny,• Buzzone said of
graduating from Estancia's rival.
"The girls kind of tease me about
it..
Estancia, which has 10 girls on
varsity, seven on junior varsity
and five on the freshman team,
will have another competition
Oct. 18 in San Dimas.
Mattress Outlet Sto
Buzzone was hired in June
and has turned the program
around. Her new policies this
year include bringing cold drinks
8F/AMJ IEW • COSAIE11CALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best"" f.essl. • • !ill
3 165 Harbor Blvd.
' '·' • \•I""' ...
Costa lltesa
One llllOdl 8cMdll. GK ~5 l'Wy
545-7168
.... ' ' . ' . . ·: .... " -. '• : . .. .
' • ;, ' I', '
,,:,. ··' ·-.
"
•
~V. SEPI UUll • It. 1111
tr.· kind ol .-vod. within
Tune l6ld the inddent ·ca.-
a OUny ol. mnvenatlm becau.e ol.
• lot ol people knew him.. and
. pointed to tho bol's attempt to find
humc.-ci tbe '"'>etia" A bamw
banglag Oil tho far wall --.The S'°IJ -A.K.A. -The Hit
Pit.•
·Patrick O'Nelll~ brother, Bob,
w ho w" drinJcing at the bar Tues-
day, -bis beod wben asked about !be case. He m-. "I
don1 undentand i~. and quickly
left the bar.
Roughly 500 miles north of
Costa Mesa, the case reverberates
more directly with the man police
say was the intend~ target of the
murder plot.
David M. Leland, who works as
a marketing writer for Seagate
Technologies in Scott's Valley, said
bis normally boring life has
become "like a David Lynch
movte• since police contacted
him.
"It's SWTeal -I can't really
remember what it was like before
the attempted murder, but I liked
it more,• he said. •1 haven't slept
very well since' this thing. It's just
kind of an ahered state. I'm trying
not to let it shake my faith that the
world is basically a good place.•
Asked if be bad enemies,
Leland told police he was
involved in a bitter divorce and
custody dispute with his
estr~ ~ .... •>• leleod ol WlllOlnlllo, 11111-1* =:c. :';~ :--n!!' 11'
regarding who be tbo1aH
orm-1 the contract blS. .•
JM.eM W(i be took A ......
days olf wOO< _pilklO _ ..
ol tho plot. ·1 was jwt numb,• i.
said. "I couldn, get Jl Ill. I ..
con't. really. You _, get .a ..
in In a day oc a week. .. l lo .::a I I•
ty llllfo now.~ .W
I'm safe.• ~
He added. "You could -sequence any ot this togiidww'. 11
would just seem to laHeldled .II.
makes you believe In fate. 11 wu-
n't my fate [to die). I believe IOD»-
body's watching over me.•
CANNERY
CONTINUED FROM 1
dancing,' Hatleberg sold.
U The Canneiy does get Ila
permit, Hatleberg said. a d&nce
Ooor likely will be ex>nstructed.
Some residents of the Cannery
Village neighborhood wbo have
complained in the.past about ban
in the area want to keep tbiDgi
quiet and under control. 'Ibey're.
planning to show up to the Plan·
ning Commission meeting to
oppose the restaurant's: bid toe
the required paperwork. t ... ......
•
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1701 TUSTIN <a 17TH ST 650-3131
COSTA MESA OPEN 7 -8
' ...
" .. ··-· ... . .
,,
'
1n ale I
We're turning our existing warehouse into
an 8,000 Sq. Ft. Showroom
• Our Costa Mesa Showroom will be EXPANDING to give you more choices in HOME fWNISHINGS
• To preP.are for this new addition all stock items will be REDUCED UP TO 75% OFF
, Enjoy HUGE SAVINGS on Fine Manutacfurers such as:
Baker, Century, Je co, Hickory Wh_ite, Leathercratt and many others. 1
• II DI FumltlJre as Js condition '
' Corona del Mar's Mike McClellan
will be the first freshman
quarterback to start for Yale since
1905 when he duels Brown Saturday.
By Molly Yanity, Daily Pilot
• Allow me to Introduce mysell, I am Mike
McCleDan's right arm.
People will probably say I'm young,
inexperienced. But what do those things
mean to an arm?
Nothing, and lt doesn't mean a whole
heck of a lot to the head coach at Yale who,
after watching his first three quarterbacks
su,c.:cumb to injury. has little choice but to
start Mike and I in the Bulldogs' season
opener against Brown.
"He's a talented athlete,• Yali!'s first-year
coach Jack Siedlecki said. "We wouldn't
have recruited him if he wasn't. We knew he
could be a successful quarterback. We just
didn't expect him to be doing it so soon.•
• Inexperienced? What are those people
talking about?
With Mike right behind me, I fired 121
completions and 14 touchdown passes last
year setting single-season records at Corona
del Mar High.
What doe• an mm have to worry about'
It's fu8t theae meMJgea 1 keep getting
from MJ.ke'I bn:Un that are cauaing the
problema, theae nervou.e, excited,
an11c1patlng meaaage•.
"'Tbil u cleflQllely not what I upec:ted,"
McClellaJ) said. •1t was my goal to make the
traveling team. That would've made me
happy because not very many freshman get
to do that.•
• That poor brain, dea11ng wiU. the media in
New Haven, Conn., talking to people on the
phone, thlnldng about aI1 thoae plays and
handling older, more experienced
teammates. And how about the pressure of
knowing that a freahman has not started at
OB tor Yale Blnce 1905?
"I think I have the talent to play In the Ivy
League,• McClellan said. •It's just a little
scary as a freshman.•
• Mike and I were fourth-str1ngen1 before two
preseason scrimmages -an intersquad bout
in which the lirst-str1nger, senior Ben
Steinberg, went down with a dlalocated
shoulder. Then, in one with Union CoDege,
sophomore Joe Wailand sprained his knee.
Right be/ore the second hall, junior Chris
Whitaker suffered a concussion.
And guesa who got to play? Yep, ol' Mikey
and yoim truly, his rifllifg right arm.
needed to do in the put 10 days.•
Mike's dad, Bob, is surprised.
-•1t1s pretty amazing, actually,• he said.
"This is really going to be a neat thing. He's
a long way from where people thought he'd
be a year ago."
But Mike isn't even whe1e he'd thought
be.
• Just the other dcty I heard the starting
center, a f11th-year aenlor, kidding around
with Coach Siedlecki. He said something
about this Jqd asking to take a couple of
maps. •He was joking around and said that
he dldn 't mind helping the JV quarterback,•
Sledlecld said.
Now he'U be taking those 81laps in a
game.
But lt b sUll that brain that bu to run the
offense behind those varsity teammates.
•They've taught me what to do, and that's
to run the offense,• McClellan said. "Things
have been running really smoothly and I
think they're getting used to me. I mean, the
0-line is taking me out to dinner the night
before the game (tonight).•
Siedlecki seems to agree.
"We throw a lot and be understands (the
offense) well,• he said. "But, he's only been
in the program for. 23 practices and we have
a limited game plan.
11,And how about that Santa Margarita
<jfhne, huh? J tossed that ball for 367 yards
a1kf three touchdowns.
"I wu about m of 11 and got about 80
yards,• McClellan said. "Chris is back. but
I've been practicing and get to start.•
Siedlecki said, "We know our back is to
the wall, but he's done exactly what he has
"As far as physical ability goes, he's fine.
It's just the mental and emotional things that
we'll find out about.•
•See? Even the coach knows I can throw.
MARC MARlW I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Mike McClellan. shown here a year ago tolllng for the Corona
del Mar High Sea Kings, starts for the Bulldogs of Yale Saturday. _,
'troxel resigns
baseball post
-l
II.Estancia will open it up
~ quest for replacement.
I
~1Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
' 'COSTA MESA -Paul 1Toxel,
Who coached in the highly suc-
~sful Estancia High baseball
pfogram the last 17 seasons, has
~gned, Boys Athletic Director
·1~ Parsel said Thursday.
1Toxel, 90-109-1 in eight sea-
sons as head coach, including
four years as co-coach with Ken Millard, was a big part in the
Eagles' eight playoff appear-
ances from 1985-94.
Estancia made the playoffs
four of his first five seasons as
head coach, including a Paci.fie
Q:>ast League co-championship
u,it991, but struggled the last two
~gs (a 5-42-1 mark).
'A 1976 Estancia graduate,
'noxel's quick wit, upbeat atti-
tqde and baseball knowledge
e!Jrned him the respect and
biendship of his players, as well
81f numerous coaching col-
leagues.
"I think (Troxel) is one of the
classiest guys in Orange County,"
U:Aiversity Coach Chris Conlin
si.id last spring. "He brings out
'What it best in high school base-
ball .•
noxel could not be reached
for comment.
ftiday
nig11t
lights
TONIGHT'S HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL GAMES
I · \I 1
------
. e I '
• Newport Harbor's field hockey
team puts Santa Ana away, 2-0,
on their road to ... who knows!
By Molly Yanity, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -The lush green field
is illuminated by the afternoon sunlight
beneath a delicate blue sky where 22
young women play delightfully when,
suddenly ...
SMACK!
The gruesome sound of a field hockey
stick smashing into a plastic shinguard
shatters the picturesque scenario, which
really isn't all that romantic after all as
those 22 girls are running around the
field in a brutal game where sweat and
blood fly, and sticks and arms are thrown
into the air in triumph when a little ball
zips into the net.
The Newport Harbor High field hock-
ey team isn't celebrated. This isn't a pro-
gram full of tradition, there isn't a big
booster club and there aren't even
bleachers at the home site at Harper
School.
But with 43 girls out for the varsity and
junior varsity teams and the dedication of
Coach Sharon Wolfe, plaid skirts just
might become quite popular at Harbor.
Thursday afternoon, the skirted Sailors
(1-1) defeated Santa Ana, 2-0, in a league
contest that saw fine Newport Harbor
play.
•1 think we're starting to undentand
that we can play with :::J.one, • Wolfe
said. "There's not that in elation factor
and we're just trying to keep getting bet-
ter."
Santa Ana won the initial faceoff at the
beginning of the game, but the Saints
would only take the ball aaoss the mid-
field line three more time8 ln the first half.
With just over six minutes expiring
from the clock in the first half, Santa Ana
knocked the ball out.of bounds and Har-
bor's senior Kyle McNichol5 sent the
inbound shot down the l1deline where
Katie Kent took it in the comer. Kent
delivered a pass immediately to Rachele
Marsh. Marsh found an open McNichols
heading toward the goal. McNicbols sent
it past Saints' goalie OlMa Dalartva to
give Newport a 1-0 lead.
The Sailon hardly gave up the ball
after that point. The defame, led by the
bUIUe and vigor of K.a1le ~ and
K8ntin Mandenon. 1&ved needy every
errant pus and stole the ball almost each
DON LEACH I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Newport Harbor's Jt.achele Manh gtftl Vane111 SIMipiro (38) a big bug u Kusy
Thompson looks on after a 1COrtng play; below, llm'bor'I Katte Bourgeou splits
two Santa Ana High defenden, u Ille battles fort.be NII at midfield 1bunday.
Mand4DOD and aaw again stifled the
Santa Ana olfeme. Jealca Jacobi and
Sbennon Iavelll also contributed. defen-
llvely u tbe tqUAcl bekl the visitors to just
three abotl on ~ and none tn the 1ee-
0Dd h4alf.
Goalkeeper Erin Kennedy had an
tnactlve game with a single aave in the
•Former NCAA DlviSk>n m All·Ameri.Can brings ~
strong back.ground tii the sport to tbe ~lei' p~.
By 8arrY FaullcMr, ~ Piiot
shutout.
"That's a good thing!• she said. ·we
made great passes today, and great hits. I
think we did better than usual today
because we wanted to show the league
that we can win a game.•
Wolfe substituted throughout the
game with all 19 players seeing plenty of
action.
"We're playing good team ball," she
said. ·we want to build everyone up and
have everyone doing well rather than
having one or two people being stars. It
makes the whole team better.•
Santa Ana's coach, Ernie Cannata, told
Wolfe that her team was faster than any
other team in the league (which consists
of Edison, Marina, Santa Ana, Westmin-
ster, Fountain Valley Bonita, Glendora
and Santiago.)
•He really gave us a compliment.• she
said. "Santa Ana, Huntington and us,
we're all up there finally.•
Santa Ana and Newport met earlier
this season in a tournament in which the
Sailors escaped 1-0.
"That was a real dog fight and extra
physical,• Wolfe said. "We told the girls
to stay poised and relax.•
Iavelli was surprised that the game
wasn't rougher.
•rt was so clean,• she said. "We bad
trouble with them in the tournament.
They threw too many elbows. You can get
away with a lot of stuff, but today was
better.•
Wolfe has seen the program take
shape from blowout lolses to last season's
1-1 tie with field boclr.ey power Santiago.
"We have proved that we can play
with anyone,• she said.
1\vo years ago, Harbor added junior
varsity field hockey to its athletic slate.
Wolfe coached both teams last season,
but has since reauited the assistance of
1996 graduate Jamie Poley, who directs
25 players.
'Ibis merger<i)_uls contributed greatly to
Harbor's up and coming program as the
teams practice together and are on hand
to support each other's games.
Wolfe has shifted players from one
team to the other and the transition, she
believes, is easier as the players are used
to her style of coaching.
•we have one style and are bondinq a
lot better,• Wolfe said. •y believe in the
old values where everybody should be
proud ot everybody elte. •
1be J'{ team (2-0) wou 4..() l'hunday,
u well. u Paige Tbompeon netted three
goals. Meggie Mullen added the other.
TeVtew of ttii f~
. Newport-~ Pia
wUeyball ~ilad their saeeen dilplays a~ path.
TM mental disdplbie that iJ
reqtlirecl of tbiJ'poeiUon
usWllly allows the development
of a xary strong individual.
Ttie collegiate leDior class
features Conma del Mar's 1\vin
Towers, Kristen Campbell and
Kim Coleman. It ls bard to
believe th.at these two are seniors
in college. It see.ma like only
yesterday tJlat they were leading
CdM to back-to-back national
championships.
Kristen has started every
game at setter at Duka
University and will lead the
Blue Devils in their quest for the
Atlantic Coast Conference title
this year. She has been named to
the All-ACC team in each of her
three season, as well as earning
Baldwin prepares Mesa
for CdM rivalry game in a
style which few can match.
en the cameras and
microphones of NFL
Films began penetrating
the emotionally charged prism
that had separated fans from the
locker room scene, the result was
some of the most moving theater
the sport's ultimate practitioners
have produced.
Though there will be no such
record of the emotional buildup
to tonight's Newport-Mesa
District football showdown
between Costa Mesa High and
Corona del Mar, it's no secret the
Mustangs' firebrand will be Tom
Baldwin.
Baldwin, wbo in eight seasons
as Costa Mesa's bead coach
(1984-91) probably poured more
pregame hype into CdM contests
than others on his schedule, is
hoping for his first win over the
Sea Kings since he began
bleeding Mesa green.
•1t was always a special
game," Baldwin said of the
27-game series, contested
annually beginning 1966, until
former Mesa Coach Myron
Miller terminated the matchup
after the 1992 season.
•we never beat them when I
was at Mesa, but we always had
some great, great games,"
Baldwin said. "There were about
three times during that span
when I thought we had better
kids. But things would seem to
happen that you just couldn't
believe. In 1986, we were ahead,
20-0, at halftime and they ended
up winning (30-28) ...
Baldwin, renowned
throughout the Southland for
coaching tours at Santa Ana
High. Santa Ana Valley High,
the World Football League's
Southern California Sun, Chaffey
College and, yes, even CdM,
said his role leading into
tonight's game has been
enhanced.
the freshman of the Year honor.
She wai the teCOnd-ranked
letter tn the nation during her
tint year.
· Kim. who bu spent mott of
her career at UCLA in a backup
posl~ hu usumed the role u
the setter for the Bruins. Since
their appearance during Kim'•
fresbmap year in the NCAA
finals, UCLA baa suffered
through two "down" yea.rs. 'Ibis
&euon's pft!lleUOn polls had
them ranked lower than usual.
ft WU my pilmure to I
coordinate a retent trip so th.at I
could &ee UCLA in their first
match of the year at the
University of Hawaii The Bruins
had an extremely impressive
showing as they swept the
tournament and beat No. 11
Hawaii in the process.
Led by seniors Kara Milling,
Tanisha Larkin and Kim, UCLA
showed that they are one of the
top teams in the nation this
season. These three were named
to the all-tournament team. Kim's
setting placed her at No. 4 in the
nation in the NCAA setting stats.
barry
faulkner
• Jeny (l:lowell) is the bead
coach, so I'm not in charge of the
deal,• Baldwin said. "But I'll do a
little bit extra this week. You get
up for big games, even if you're
a coach, and I think this is a big
game. Jeny said he'd take over
getting the kids ready for
Saddleback (last week's 32-0
season-o~g win) and I'd get
them ready for CdM."
Baldwin, then-CdM Coach
Dave Holland's Offensive
Coordmator when the Sea Kings
topped Miller's Mustangs in '92,
said he savored his season on
that side of the rivalry.
"When I was at CdM, I
wanted to beat Mesa, because
they fired me," be explained.
"Anybody would. We beat them
20-0 and I was ecstatic. It had
nothing fo do with the kids,
because they didn't fire me. That
was a big win, but now I'm back
on the other side. I know all
about being on both sides of a
rivalry, because I coached at both
Sant.a Ana and Santa Ana Valley."
' Baldwin, lured back to Mesa
by the opportunity of coaching
his grandson, senior quarterback
and free safety Ronnie Lievanos,
doesn't put great stock in
predictions th.at Mesa is favored
to end its 13-game losing streak
against CdM.
"I'm scared to death,• he said.
"They're not just going to roll
over when we step on the field.
• Costa Mesa rallies to
knock off the Vanguards.
By Molly Vanity, Dal/ Not
UtWitDO .._ 6-toot-2 height t.o
bar~ to attack the
second ball. Colemen was
leading tbe naUon In the kill
peroent.ge.
She currently ranks 15th In
bloddng, and is the only setter
in the top 15 .. She also leads the
nation In asststs per game with
16.41, and sets to the nation's top
bitter, Milling.
I've always believed th.at the
team with the m06t seniors will
win and UCLA has their seniors
in key positions. Pormer Orange
County Volleyball Club standout,
Amy Nlhipali, started her
freshman year at UCLA in true
fashion by playing in every
game. She was No. 2 in blocking
after the Hawaii Tournament.
Newport Harbor's Misty May
was used very little as a setter as
a setter during her prep career
mainly because she was equally
as efficient at passing and
hitting. with her tremendous
athleticism coupled with the
excellent setter training provided
at Long Beach State by former
USA Olympic great Debbie
1 charlie
brande
Green, Misty bas developed. into
one of the most dominant college
setter5, maybe ever.
Last weekend, Long Beach
State won the Chicago Classic
with a three-game sweep of the
University of Illinois and Misty
was named the tournament Most
Valuable Player. There are many
in the volleyball world that feel
that Misty could be the setter for
the USA in the 2000 Olympics.
Jeannette Hecker is a setter
who has moved to a hitter. The
former Harbor ltandout, who
wu setUng foe the SaUon when
they won the national
championship in 19!M, ii
attending Loyola Marymounl
The play was for Jeannette to
backup their setter. Por thole
who know Jeannette, it is not a
surprise that she started f!IVery
match last sea.son as their
backrow specialist. This sea.son,
she has earned one of their
outside hitting positions.
Although Loyola coaches will
occasionally substitute the
6-foot-6 freshman from Indiana
in the front row, Jeannette is
always in the game when it is on
the line. You can bet that she will
be the LMU setter next season.
Corona del Mar's Kelly
Campbell and He<:;ker were best
friends throughout their high
school careers. They played
together during four years of
club on the OCVC which won
the national championship all
four years. Kelly sets at the
University of Colorado. Last year
she was the Big 12 Freshman of
the Year and has started this
DAILY Pl.OTFU PHOTO
Costa Mesa's Tom Baldwin ls one coach who bu never been known for downplaying the dtuatton.
They're a fine football team. But Coach Ron Howard this season 22 and April 26.
I'm glad we're playing them." include junior Newport Harbor
And the Mustangs are, no transfer Crystal Bridgman.
doubt, glad to have Baldwin in sophomore Magan Wood, as well
their comer, not to mention their as freshmen Jennifer Cummins,
pregame locker room. Nicole Palmieri and Jennifer
a
Eqgestrlan, tbe sport tbat
defies seasonal limitations,
begins Sunday for riders at
Corona del Mar and Newport
Harbor, as the Intersd}olastic
Equestrian League holds the first
of its six shows at Coto Valley
Equestrian Center.
Riders competing for CdM
Sweeney.
Seventh-grader Rebecca
01mmins represents CdM on
the junior high level.
Shows two-through-five are
all scheduled for the Orange
County Fairgrounds, while the
season-ending competition will
return to Coto Valley.
Additional shows are slated
Oct. 19, Dec. 6-7, Jan. 11, March
a
Though I thoroughly confused
it in last week's column, the
scouting report concerning
Estancia High's vaunted
fresh.man quarterback was
correct.
Kenny Valbuena, in actual
fact. is the quarterback Eagles
freshman coach Art Perry is
generously praising this fall.
1Win brother Danny, a
receiver, is his sibling's favorite
passing target.
en With 10-
leUOD In thew J'N"'*,
She is 11th ID lbe nadoD ID
tettlng.
The BUffaloel have a
Newport-Mee& flavor wUb
Newport's Melilla Schutz
starting at middle bloc:Ur and
Calvary Chapel's Coua1Dey
Owens starting as the outside
bitter, I
Cd.M's Meliua Ford bu
continued the tradttion M lbe
begins her second yeai as the
Jetter for PriDceton where she ts
No. 15 in the nation in sett1nG th
and fifth in digs. Erika Hamen
also is starting her second year --
for the ngers who always battle
for the Ivy League title and a -
berth in the NCAA toumameDt.! •
Wrth this great history of 'r >
setters, there are great
expectations for Newport's 1.:
Jennifer Carey, Marissa Cothnm1 ..
and Signe Hillyard, Corona del
Mar's Corre Myer and Marissa ....
Becker, Costa Mesa's Daylynn l
Kelley, as well as Estanc:ia's Sara.:"'
Deming. I also would not count &.>•.!
out Calvary Chapel's Jessica •q"'
Wright and Kelly Overby.
,.t),.-
NJB signups
are Saturday ~: .. , ...
Boys and Girls Youth BasketbeD
League of· Newport Mesa N~
Junior Basketball registration fCK~
grades 1-8 is at 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Satur-
day, Sept. 20 at Ensign Junior~
Uncoln School and West N~ ·
Community Center.
Fees for clinic division(~
1-2) are $60. Divisions 1-3 are SlU
for the season. This includes a uni·
fonn that players keep, a basket.-
ball, trophy, indoor practices and
exciting league play. All ref~·
and score keepers are included fD'
the registration fee. -
Skill evaluations will be ~
Satwday, Oct. 11 at Ensign. Tedi.-
practices begin the first week of
November and run through March,
15. \
Volunteer coaches, assistants,:
team moms and help is needed. ' •
Direct questions or inquire tOr:.
more lnfonnation by calling 225-•
8385.
Eagles drop MiDikan '_
tournament opener : ·
LONG BEACH -Estandll '
High dropped its first match ai;
the Millikan Tournament to Ldi*
Alamitos, 13-3. r
Ranked No. 1 in Division ~
Los Alamitos used seven goals bt 1
senior Tyler Wawryzynski to ouf-~
duel the Eagles (1-2.) 1 '•
Brad Wayman notched aJ)':
three of Estancia's goals.
................ t
LOI Al.NlllTm 1). IEstMaA 3 ' •
... Los Alamitos 4 3 2 4 -U:
Estancia 1 2 0 0 -·i~
Estancla's scoring • Wayman, l. r / Saves • DeWilde, 11. ,
·~
FRIDAY, SEPTEMIE" 19, 1917
PUii.iC NOTICU PU1UC .me.. W llOnca PU1UC MOTICU PUIUC MOTICU PV1UC NOTICU PUllJC NOTICll PU1UC llOT1Cll PU&IC !!Jm
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...... NAM• Nrliw "I en Wf1hOut 87 BHCh.Colta Me.. Dalty PrOducllonl, b) Hlrtt.g• Dally PllOt ~'* 29. Sep. Thie tl•1•mtnt WU flied bu•lnel• y11? No with the County Cl«k ol 1 "" '~
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the "~ltloue lutlne11 ~ementa. You n:r' w.:t Pilot~ 5, 12, 10, F.Mt d) "'ocade Sri, •) Bro-. .1HnnuM ~ti ""c C~ty ~9j>1 Dilly Piiot Sept 12. 11, 29, aullJC NOT1CI ~ w1 .. llde ~ to c:a11 .,.. ,1ttomey .w.. 29, ttt7 F.400 PUBLIC NOTICE cede Holiday C1roler1, PUIUC NOTIC! Daily Piiot Auguet 29, s.p. ang1 oun., on Oct. 3 1097 Foe. _..;...'"v--~--:--~ !Ion. 317 Avoc:edo sn.t IWly, tt you dO nol ~ 3t3t Mac:Arlhur Blvd., tember 5 12 It 1"7 1H1:r7:12500 ' 1• I • II
fl(, COlta Meta. CA 12127 an attorney, you may ell PUIUC NOTICE AotHloua 1 .. 11.... #110, Newpott Beach, CA ~lotltloue ~.. ' ' ' ,370 Dally Pilot Sept 12, 19, 29, PUBLIC NOTICE ":l "-:'aet••:_..llnn•e.u•·; ...
Tht flctltlou. 8ullne11 en attorney rtltml Nfvlol Name ltaaem.nt 02.eeO Name ateletn•nt Ocl 3, 1"1 F431 ame ~ ~ .. ::':"" ': "~ °'1n a legal aid ortlc:e Oi*d 't':::.::!.":8 TH. to110w1no penon1 are !,:! ~...1:.ac~OCC1~ dltl9I lollowif10b _, ~'°"''art PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'lcttuous 8ua1Mss d~~ '°''°:~':r~~~*.: ""-Ofana ~"' lheplloneboolc). Thef dolngbutlneat .. : • ... ,,_. • ong u .. ,,....,, Nameltetement MANiER'S 2120 on ' 1 41 wt'' , II • O..pue1 IM que le '"" d~:=:. ~aona .,, California C1tdlooraphlc:1 'ler'° b t Mavetlek Markltlng, 3 7 flcUJlou• 8u1lnH1 Flotltlou1 BualnH• Th• following petaons 11e Ritch-sania AM r • No.'103220 ' trtQUtn "la cfi.c:lon Judi-aa. l.lboretOf'lff IMUI Knott h 1 uatntH • c:on-Monterey Pln9 Dr., Newport NaMe Stat1m.nt doing bullnHs u · .,, •
01Yid Ooualaa Ennnger, ctaJ utled u.ne un p1uo cM SUN tlD, 29e8e Wood· Ave Bulle 5 Buena Patk due1td by: an Individual BtlCI\, CA 92657 The loUowlng persons 111 Name Stetement D 11 2015 POrt Btlslol 92705 n
371 Avocad"o Street II<. 30 DIAS CALENDARIOS llke Couf1. San Juan Cap. CA 9oeao ' ' Have you atarttd doing Sltptlen Ftohllrtg, 37 doing business 11. Prlsma Thi lotlOWlng persont lit c~.~~pott Beach CA WHI Coast ~· ..t:l Co.W Mela, CA 02927 pati prHtntlr una , .. lsltMO, CA 921174 RJ 1..abofatorlet Inc (CA) l>Ultn1t1 yet? Yn, Aug. 10, Montetey Pine Or., Ntwp0rt Dtsign lntematlonll 111195 doing buliMl1 11: Rttt 92660• • bCA), 15080 tn CA
Thi• buslneu 11 con-lputtta escrlta 1 maqu1oa °r"'°" Mattln f'ranken-3901 M1cArlhur "Blvd.: 1997 Beach, CAt2957 Mc:Durmott, Swte H: Irvine,~·~~ mMOglt St Sleven P Kirsch. 2015 rJ6~;· Weatm.nillt, dUc:ttd by In lndlvldual en fft• corte. ~.2!!• ]!JH Woodlake Sult• 200, Newport Belch, Barry Colt P1trtcla Frohling, 37 CA 92814 92'~27 •ta esa, CA Port B11sto1 Circle, Newpor1 Thi b . i• co'n-oevfd Enfinger un11 c:a111 0 una llamldl ....,...,, -· Juln Ctplat· CA 92680 Thi• •tatement was filed Monterey Pine Dr., Ntwpor1 Sabine Hoen Modt o.. Beach CA 92660 s u11ness
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with the County Clerk of Hrlta a maqulna Ilene que =•c.tr2~ Newport CA 92891 t9973131487 Pin• Dr., Newport Btacn, Beach, CA 92663 ~~~Td R~c~~~~7Alrd 10933 Beach, CA 92660 ~.~·~so~:; M~ular lno. Orange County on 9.25•97 cumpllr con lu lormall· S..ph9n Scon Owen 206 D1vld E. Bffm. 6351 Ham· Dally Pilot August 29, Sep-~ 1926~7 1 1 This buslneu It con· s QladhlH Road Whltlier Thi• bustneu Is con· Michael Manslf PtHldeinl '
0., ... Pllol •·-·st 29 8...,_ dadH leglll1 eproplldU 1 ·-onla ~L B N • rt llton Dr., TuJunga, CA tembtr 5, 12. 19, 1997 ti• us nHI • 1 con· ducted by: e corporation CA 90604 • • ducted by: husband and This statement was m.d _,, --vv • -.-II uated qullre que la COf1I .._ • ewpo 91042 F~3 ducted by: • genera part· Have you atarted doing . wlfe c ty Ct It 01 ttmbet 5, 12, tt, t997. HCUCht au cuo. Beach, CA 2883 Wendy M. Rowland, 108t ntrshlp business yet? YH, August Tt111 bu~lneu Is con· Have yoo started doing with the oun 8-~5-t7
_________ F3&4_1 SI usted no preunta 1u 1~ Taylor ~~~ W. Shannon St., Upland. PUBLIC NOTICE H~• you _...,•ylart•<?.1t~'? 15, 1997 dH~!:CS ~ c:ol:.':f1~01ng business yet.? No Orange c~.:'7;;305-.:
PUBLIC NOT respuesta • Utmpo puede ~·• Aot. • -~,...... CA 91784 bu .. nesa y.,, es,•· Sabine Hoerz Mode De-b 1 1 N Steven P. Kirsch ~ ICE perder el cuo, y I• 'pueden Beach, CA 92G83 This buslneu Is con-Flctltlous Bu1lne1S Stephen Ftohllng sign, Inc., Gerhard Steinle, o!.,';':.r~et 0 Thia llalement was tiled Daily Pilot August 29, Sec>
--..,-A-T_l!_M_l!_NT __ O_F __ 1 qultat au aat11lo, au dlnero 2~~"'c:"~~ Br~, dUcled by: a general part· N"•m• Statement 'f.hl• statement was filed President This statement 8 f 1 d with the county Clerk of tember 5. 12. 19, 1'8'J.
y otrat cosa1 de au • a, apo nerthlp The lollowlng persons at• with the County Cll(k ot This stalement was filed C w 5 1 e Orange County on 9·9-97 Ftea AaANDONMl!NT O' propledad aln avlao ldlclo-Beach, CA 112824 Have you llarted doing doing business as: Orange County on 9-17·97 with the County Clerk of with the ounly Clerk ol 19973732770 USI OF FICTITIOUS nal por pat1e de la cot1e. 4~~tth~j Jam:• 1 Hamll~on, bu1lne11 yet? No Runway Productions, 4320 19973733044 Orange County on 8·26·97 Orange C~~~~~;~·12::; Daily Pilol Sept 12 19 26 PUBLIC NOTICE
•USINl!SI NA.Ml Exlsten olros requlaltos 1 .. Ctemint:z~A ~~~~I. an RJ llbor1torlt1, Inc., Reg. Campus Drive, Sulle 190, Dally Pilot Sepl. 19, 28. 19973131511 0 11 P 1 A 29 s Oct 3 1997 · ' ,;440 Flctltloui ausln"' •
Tht followtng persona gales. Puede que usttd Thia b~ilneu 11 con· git B. Jackson I Prt1ldent Newport Beach, CA 92660 Oct. 3, 10, 1997 F456 Dally Piiot Augusl 29, Sep-a Y 1 01 ugust • ep· · • Name Statement
have abandoned Int u11 ol qul1ra llamar a un •bogado ducted b . nl Tht1 11a1ement was filed Dave Cornelius, 1927A tember 5 12 19 1997 tember 5, 12, 19. 1997 PUBLIC NOTICE The following persons¥•
the Flctltlou1 Bu1lne11 lnmedl11amen11. SI no rated alioc'r.u~ nco0:r-with th• County Clerk of Harbor Blvd. 12211. Costa PUBLIC NOTICE ' ' · F3S6 F376 doing business as: M•v.r· Name: KING, 17100 Qllltttt conoce a un abonado n er Orange County on 9-1$-97 Mesa, CA. 92627 Fl tltl 8 1 M--' 1 151 ""'1"'
Avenue, IMne. CA 12014 puedt llamat • un ~lclo lhan. partnlrlhlp 19973733547 Martin Jones. 1927A Hat· Flctlttou• BualnHI PUBLIC NOTICE c OUI us nell IC:rd w"· ~·; N .......
The Flctllloua Bullne11 d• referencl• dt •bogados Have you IWttd doing DaU Pil t Se I. 19 21 bor Blvd. #226, Costa Name Statement PUBLIC NOTICE Name Statement ~ (!· ' ewpor1 Name r.C1tred 10 abovt 0 1 una oftclna de •"'.,. buslntu yl1? YH, 7·1·97 Y 0 P • • Meu, CA. 92627 Th• lollowl sons are Flotltlou1 Bu1lne11 Tne lollowmg persons are each, A 92~
wH fllld l'1 Or • County legal (vea el dlrectorlo 't;t! Tristan Stegmller Oct. 3, 10, 1997 F453 Edward Schreiber, 1927A dol bus1r!tsi:.: O·Club Flctltlou1 Bu1ln111 Name St•tement domg business as: Ma~erick Media, Inc., (~~·
on 2 ·1 9 .9ar;9 F 11 • fonlco) This ... ttment waa filtd PUBLIC NOTICE Harbor Blvd. 1226, Cosll Blll~ds & Cale 1525 Mesa N1me Stat1ment The following persons are a) Color Me Beau11lul by iloin1a). 151 Shipyard No F561367 • CASE NUMB wllh the County Clerk ol Mesa CA 92627 Verde Drive East 1125 T~e lollowlng persons are doing busineH as: BOT· Gayla. b) ColOr tor Mon. c) NC1 Newport Beach, N~ L Chlller 1682 ER Orange County on 8·22·97 Flctltloue Bu1lne11 Tt1t1' business Is con· Costa Mesa CA 92626 ' doing business as: TOM LINE PARTNERS Color Me Beautiful. d) 92663
1.an';ry Avenue, lrvl'ne, CA (Num;;01:~•1CHo) 19973731174 Name Stetem1nt ducted by: a general part· Roula Jabra, 4105 A11en1da ~=1"Pt~' 0~ou~~·rb~59Gn~~a INC .. 2930 College Avenue'. ~~3' ti :;6e;1. /I Haeger Juhdt!d ~~s~n~~~~!ti~on-
92614 JUOOI! Dally Pilot Augusl 29, Sep-The lotlowfng persona are nershlp Sevilla, Cypress, Calllorn1a CA 928l7 ' . Unit B Co11a Mesa, CA H~~~~gton B:~sceJ ~A Have you s1a11ed domg Thi• busln111 la con· !ember 5, 12, 19, 1997 doing buslneu as: Up Have you started doing 90630 Edward T Cha 1 5595 92626 · business et? No
ducted by an lndlvidual MICHAEL BRENNER F372 N'Down Goll Apparel. 2328 business yet? Yes, 9·8· This business Is con· Via del Coyof:• 'vorba BOTIOMLINE PARTNERS, 9J!"ia Chr1s11ne Totaro. Maverick Y Mea1a, Inc., Dtr·
Nancy Chester . DEPT. 12 Newpon Blvd., Costa 1997 . ducted by: an ind1v1dual Linda CA 92887 INC· (CA), 2930 College 646~ Jerse Cir Hunlln . rin s Wilson President
t991373UM1 Ttlt n1mt and address ot PUBLIC NOTICE Mesa, CA 92627 ~~ve Cornelius 1 ed Have you slat1ed dom11 Juhe· Ann Chappel 5595 ~venu~A ~;;,1~6 B, Costa Ion Beach ~A 92647 g This statement was llted
This statement was flied the court Is: (El nombre y NOTICI OF Sukant Jain, 5426 Fair· will\• 1~:·~~~:y w~l~rkil 01 ~·~:J~ ~:~ N~bdelahad Via del Coyote, 'vorba 1~~:· business Is con· This business 1s con· \\1th lhe Cotmty C1erk or
with the County Clerk ol dlreccion de la cort1 es) PUBLIC AUCTION ~C:,~· long Beach, CA Orange County on !1-16·97 un~er pOwer ol atlorney • Lin<?•· CA 92887 . dueled by: a corporation dUC1ed by an lnd1v1oua1 Orange Counly on 11·22·97
OrangeCountyon8·29-97 ORANGE COUNTY SUPE· Notice 11 hereby given J ti M Za I D C 19973733457 This statement was filed This business is con· Have you stat1ed doing Have you started dorng 1997373117~
Dally PRot September 5 RIOR COURT, 700 Civic that the underalgned will 24°3S:P Britlanr!Ji~:· uni' Dally Piiot Sept 19 28 wilh the County Clerk ol ducted by: husband and business yel? No business ~et? Yes, 7·22·87 Dally P1lol August 29, Sep.
12. 19, 26, 1997 F414 Center Drive Wesl, Sanla sell at Publle Auction on Costa Mesa, CA 92627 • Oct. 3, 10 1997 · 'F450 Orange Counly on 9.5.97 ~le d d BOTTOMLINE PARTNERS. ¥,ayta C. otaro f 1 iember 5, 12. 19, 19~7 , ---------Ana CA 92701 10/06/97 at 11 ·oo a.m at· R Id C II n 6436 Ed ' 19973732514 ave you s1arte oing INC.. Wiiham K. Russell· is s1atemen1 was i &d Fla
PUBLIC NOTICE Th~ name, addreu. and AUSPACE. eS&. HAMIL: m~~~on °A~.'riue, s.~ PUBLIC NOTICE Rick Blake & Associates bEuJ!.":~srbi~:pel PTrhesiden•, f 1~ .. o~~~~eco~~~ynt~ ~l~r~ 9~, tel none bt I lal TON AVE HUNTINGTON Diego CA 92T22 ' T · IS sta ement was 1""' .. ,. · · SUMMONS . •P num r o p n-BCH .. CA.,92648 the per· Thfs ' business Is con-Flctltlous BuslneH Allomeys . at Law. 2700 .his statement was hied with the County Clerk of 19973730351
ICfTACION JUDICIA1.t tiffs attorney, or plalnlltl sonal properly of lhe fol· ducted by· an unincorpo-Name St•tement North Main Street, Suuo with lhe County Clerk of Orange County on 8-29-97 Dally Pilot Sept. 12, 19. 26.
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: wtthoU1 an anorney. ta: (El lowing: rated as~oclallon other The following persons are 1000, Sanla Ana, CA Orange County on 7·30·97 19973731953 Ocl 3. 1997 F444
(Avlso • Acualdo) ROD nombre, la dlrecclon Y el NAME· UNITlll than a partnership doing business as: Linda 92705-6635 19973728826 Daily P1101 September 5
MURCKISON. an lndl· numero de tetelono dtl INVENTORY Have you started doing Pirrl Fine Art and Publish· Daily Prlot Sept. 12. 19, 26. Daily Pilol Augusl 29, Sep· 12, 19. 26, 1997 F412 P\JBLIC NOTICE
vldual; MURCHISON IN· 1bogado del demandante, SIMKEWICZ. CHAIS, business yet? No Ing, 2595 Ins Way, Laguna Oct. 3, 1997 F428 tember 5. 12, 19, 1997
TERNATIONAL LTO., an o del demandtnte que no F015, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS. Joseph M. Zappala Beach, CA 92651 F389 PUBLIC NOTICE Flclltlou1 BuslnH1
unknown entl1y; ind DOES Ilene abogido ts) GENERATOR, REFRIG. This statement was filed David Gross, 2595 Iris PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Flctltloui Bualnees Name Stat1ment 1through10, lncluslv• I.au 1 a H ' ti B N RAMIREZ, JENNIFER, with the County Clerk ol Way, Laguna Beach. CA • The following persons are ViewDriYe
YOU ARE BEING SUED BY r v n o • ar o. F046, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Orange County on 8·26-97 92651 Fictitious Bu1lnH1 Name Statement doing business as: 3600 Pllcfflc Beecll
PLAINTIFF: (A Ud. It Hta' l85001, Nol<H, Davia & HENOERSON, BILL, F120, 1997373150B Linda Gross, 2595 Iris Name Statement FlcUtlous Bu1lne11 The following persons are Siar ol Bethlehem, 3269 ~100 demandando) PAUL DEVE· Oulnn, 450 Ocean Avenue, REFRIQ .. BOXES Daily Pilot August 29 Sep· Way, Laguna Beach, CA The following persons are Name Stetement doing business as· Golden California Street, Costa
REAUX Lagun11 Beach, CA 92651, BIGELOW, JUDSON, • 92651 doing business as: Ze1roc ThefoUowingpersonstlfe Years Home Care. 26591 Mesa.CA92626 PWE•r.at
You hive 30 CALENDAR (714) 376-3055 F125, BOOKS, BOXES lember 5, 12• l9, 1997 Thia business is con· Ancient At1 Gallery, 550 S doing business as: Sky Valpariso Dr.. Mission Richard Grilham Durkee, mAIW J
DAYS alter this summon• DATE: APR UJ, 1997 TEAS, MICHAEL. G043, F381 ducted by: husband and Coast Hwy. 12. Laguna Hook Enterprises. 180 Vie10. CA 9269t 3269 C;ihlornia Slreet, lll1 I
is Hrvtd on you to Ille • ALAN SL.ATER Clerk BICYCLE, HOUSEHOLD Thinking ol having a wile • Beach, CA 92651 Newport Center Drive, Helen Hamodol. 26591 Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Mo~* Chapel
typewritten rHponH II this br KATHLEEN WOLFE' ITEMS, BOXES garage sale? Have you started doing Deborah Lynne Cortez, Suile 180, Newport Beach. Valpariso Dr., Mission Dolores Cena Durkee, Cremation
court. D t ' DEBENON. MIKE. G094, Give us a calll business yet? Yes, Aug. 30802 S. Coast Hwy. #01, CA 92660 Viejo, CA 92691 3269 California Street. 1 ~0 B~ay
A letter or phone call will epu r BOXES CLASSfFIED Laguna. CA 92651 Bruce .Alan Miller. 2124 Laura Bayones Ariad, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 not protect you; yoor typ.. NOTICE TO THE PER· ANTONQIORGI, JULIE, e 2 Buy ~-1 Sell I~~-~nd It. Mohamed Sami Abdelg· Windward Lane, Newport 2-;591 Valparlso Or., Mis· This business is con· Osta esa
w11tten response must be H053. CtpTHES, BOXES 4 •5 878 ••• • • wad, 30802 S. Coast Hwy., Beach, CA 92660 s1.:>n Viejo, CA 92691 ducted by· husband and -...-eteo
Polley -----DNdllnes -----Monday .... , ............ Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday S:OOpm
Rates and deadliuts an-subjrct to change
without notice. Titt publisher re!tt·rvri. the
right to censor. recla sify. revise-or rt'jt>t't
any dassifitd adwrti:.ement. Plt-abt' repon
any error thut may be in your clatisifird ad
immtdiately. 11w Daily Pilot un·t•pts 110
liability for any nrur in an ud\'f'rt1srmr11t
for which it may bt" rt'spo11siblt· 1•w1·pt for
the rost of thf' ~f.Htl'f' actuully o<.·t·upird by
tht> emir. Cn-dit t'ttll onlv ht> aUow..-d for thf'
By Fax
(714) 6::\1-6594
(Pl1·u"' inl'fu&-v1111r 1111m1• 1111d
ph11111· 1111mbrr ai1d .. ,:11 r11ll ~ou
h111·l •uh 11 pn• .. qu111")
ByPbone
(714 ) 642-5678
By MalWn Person:
330 Wr ... t Bav Stn>t't
Co-.t11 \.11•:,a. C'A Q2o27
Ai ,,.,.,,.,rt Rhd ~ s.,, "1
Hours
l(·lt·ph1111e 8:30um-5:00pm
\111111!.t\-h 1'1m
\\'ull...-111 8:30nrn-5:00prn
\111111Lw-rnc1 .. ,
Thursday ....... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ............... Thun-day S:OOpm
fLr l inst>rtio11. ·
,.
-
.
I . , .
II
1MS-16SI
•·
aturday ............... Friday 5:00pm
Index
rail -..... ,. ........
GENERAL 1002 CORONA
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DEL MU
COSTA MESA 1024 IRVINE 1044 NEWPORT
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BEACH
BALBOA
1069 PENINSUIA
NEWPORT
2107 BEACH
NEWPORT
2169 BEACH
NEWPORT
2169 BEACH
SOLD!
Invite over 40,000
p1opl• to n•d
abOut your home tor
.... ..ch Saturdey
by showcasing your
property In th•
Homo• of th• Week
• Open Home
Gulde. The bHt
local RHI E1tat•
Section around!
Reach th• b1at
quanned hornebuy.
.,. on the coaatl
Cefl your Adllettielng
Ropreeentatlv•
1022
Qr .. t Looetlon Near
patk & ocean. 3bd,
2ba duplex. lrg 1unny kitchen, LR w/FP, C911
tans. 2e&r garage, WO
-----
Open aun 1·SPM 2eea Rlvereld• Dr
280, 2BA. 2 tptc11 compl1tety remodl
Real Estate Broker•g•
SetVk:N 890-8357
hkUPo. Open '° '"•---------SaVSun 11-1. 12300/ POUHTAIN
mo. Donna 729-7262. VALLIY 1034
COSTA IOSA 1024
TOdayll .Aak abcMlt 11 .. ,__ ____ ....., __
our c~ apocfaltl L ... 0.......
114-42•9 U.."'"'9 • .,.a.au
MOD•L Pl!RF•CT
4br, 4ba eetate home,
lu1Curlou1 mtlr 1ullt
w/relroat, gourmet
kitchen, frml dining,
family entertainment
Open Sat/Sun 1 ·5
2827 Alt1 Viste
Park·lront. Prln only.
Agent 288·3934
Charmin• 2bd, 2ba
+den Cap• Cod
home. Surrounded by
pvt front & beck patio.
$2700. Agt 073·3899 nn, 2 fp, detlgnef' cpl•---------
& t1t•. gated com-MOBILE 1--------
muntty. New· never HOMES 1100 CORONA
llv9d In w/10"' dn, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii!i~ DEL MAR OWC no qualttylng Santa .e-a 1 & 280 1.5% APR. Can ctoe ..,., e1crow In 2 wke. Mobll• HomH. New
1009,950, Ag1n1, cerp1t/llnoteum/p1ln1.
714n4 ... 083 S7,000 to $11,000. (B00)43NS178 Uk fOf
lHll1, ltall~ newport
p!Cltie.com
1400
-----2122
COSTA MISA Z 124
3br ~b• Fem hm•. lrg ... Cenvon Twnhm
yatd & potlo. dbl gar, 3Bd Condo fOf lA ....
no pell Avt 11·15 FOfd Rd, Golt cours•
S2600.mo 760-9184 Vihl, pool, prllg. &
Why play Hide 'N tennis. s2000. LH
Seek with chtldcare? ___ 1_1_+.64 __ 0_·_5_2_1• __
Ca ti C I a e I I fl o d Buy 11. Sill It. And II.
todayl 842·5678. Claeelflod.
2169
BLUFFS
3bd 2.SBA S2200.
Barbua S1nrogret
Realtor9 a44-0t•
Wheth• you·r• buytae
Of .. 111ng, Ctutlfled
covers all yqur nMd•I
COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA 2624 COSTA MESA ZIH -----------------------
8AL•A.U8• ••aHI ..._ W.W .. .....
Jar ••• HOMI ·-··-· =-..... -'AnllT TUTOI ._.
On --.. ...., l•DllBA +Lou. .,.,. In .....
.... 1111 ... ~. 14801q.ft., vaulted Wlnlel' ,...... ...-, ...._ .,.. -. .,...._ • w/eHy -·H••H lo
9ll'deM.. arMI poo1a: eoutrve am•ftltJH, Hoeg CanOer eer..
llwdulty llndecaptd ......... pool. . ... Wll pey ... "'" "" ....... 18 01 JD.MN teMi., eym. lteMan ~ flor,riQtll dtel. rite ,.M>ft lffe9tYte. 71 .......... Mi9 .... Arm 4+e. UAM. 714/718-0t3t w....-1M ... Wllh
'...W apt. lo. patio. J .... ii1i1H ..-.. -eoo.1 "*" no
1900mo. Ytty. atN a.w••ll• Llwlfte ,,...,...,... ,..,., .. ioee.
ONndy A~ 87M11t LO 2BDJ2BA. ldr9 ~ '11417 ... 1418 "-"tw aw.... patio, bright. airy., _______ _
upper unit In gated !:~:C:. -:.,.~ GAl&GIS
....... ~tlO
""" C-. llUI)
e -e °""""'" •""'*'eTwm......,. •"Hdhf•THl~ (C8HT. ORE, SAT) --•••. "°' ,,.. lnformallon call: ........... , ... ""
IMP10JJIBNT
• oomm. Decll. pool, Vitia ,.aort .,,.-........, POI •-2740
Ip a . I 2 1 0 0 /mo. ...,. -·r-ll'8A a •••••••••I•.._,,._. • .,.., unfurn. 12t00 furn. •1·••5• 11417etM>931 lllllll••••••r ~A.V•auQna
111u 7at-187• ....... c.M. 0ar-oe ADOVlfC'Dllns ss30
17th & Santa An•I•••••..-••• I WIW•oAt cAilt 1115rmr r. Ultous area. 24hr accH•
Hr 3Ba New Palnl ~.-HO/mo. 842·10731---------•-~-----..
carpet. Ava11 tmmed. 1!1'fTALS AHNOtJNC!Ml!HTS ACCOUNTING 11750/mo. 831-5802 2""20 ., Corporate head-••OCUH W fmmac COllMBJlCJAI. quarter• of retail
48' 2.5 Ba 3-Car Oar. ltOOMS 2708 aeaw EST.'•TE A health brNlcthroughl pharmacy chain hu New c:rpVroof. 13900. ~ A Wei ht lo h Ith lmm.dlate opening Brok., M0-98M ig H , •• fcx KCOUnte p•.,.bl• mafntenance, ••If r•---------• G•ted CM pyt rmlba. curee, etc. Valuable position. Must be ON TH8 WA!lR Pttvat• Hfe. POOf. w/d .1---------1 Info. & time aaver delall oriented,
aer 2Ba. Fresh Paint Uv• w/Sr. & cata. BUSINESS r • c 1 Pe• . 13 9 . 915 organized and have
All N.w carpel Wet SSOO+aec. &48-a473 PltOPERTY 27•7 +$2.50 S/H. Send to computer ••P•rl-
baf, frplc. 2 oveN, dbl -~------..-v • n c •. p I• a• an 1 0.,., Boat Sllp Avall Newport •••oh Health Breakthrough amok•frH envlron-
---------
3030 Harbor Blvd
Costa Meaa. CA
F8DCO, INC.
EOE
........ ,..... ...... ... .... ..... ,.. .. ....
~may reqw. )'OU
to Ollll a toO numbef'
In whkh lher• a. •
charge per minute.
ANTIQUES
$2450. 714_..1~ Oceanfront & 22nd St. N.B. R•STAUMNT P.O. BolC 293• Cha-ment In Newport
Private room unfum, Fut Food. Exceftent nut•, Kanau M720. Baach. Call Sharon Wnerlront Home
2-Sty. 3br 2.15ba. dbl gar. Custom patio.
13600. LN. Owner/Ag!
lhate bath. Utl paid. locatlon. Or .. t _ opptl l-:N:-on-:-re_f-:un_d_a-:ble-:· =-·~-1714) 845 9870 lfST l.::zs Ati> MEJtCHANDISE PETS II
MISC. 8015 ANIMALS 6049 =c~':.~~ :e'=: •17'4) 951-4He• our ~::b:r.::n• ~;:;;~::;:;;::;;:;:~II Rottr'I Gardena
Laundry. 1 block to Thornton, CL ARI! YOU AN lCif le now hiring for Anliqwt lo '50. Mod...
5452·943-2880
Call Sam eam...epm at BUSINESS & Join ua on a beautiful tlon that replacff th• ••••on. CHhlera,
Dr•ftlng tebl• good
_con d 1 e • 1x3 2. s
$100. 714-8715·8888
OCICATS
Kitten• Sliver spot-ted. CPA ahota. $500-
$600 1-909-628-4032
Newport Pier. 1490. Octob., 1eth & 19th. Seu A Hot New lnven-upcoming holiday ·:.:.::~~
: NEWPORT
875-48°8 FINANCE :::~::ng.~~tr;:,t. m~~! i~~•r::~~n b~:1~~:z ::u~rf:·;~:::l0~~ ::. or •
COAST 2170 Info: Pia call Marla Full Training/Support. girt wrapper•. PT & ' RENTALS TO at: (714) 557-6693. Call 714-53a.e299 FT available. Plea•• jlwllry,bronal,lm.,
Swing ••t·H•datrom --------
metal, Forest grffn/ ,...--------.
Suaal! 2724 fax reeume to PlflodlW*D. Tte Moat on th• n.n&UO BUSINESS Pia call by Sept. 20th. ARE YOU (714)840-7528 or dloonll¥tcti)ldl.
ti PI OPPORTUNITY FRIENDLv, apply In peraon at •OnllllnOI' ......... .. 0 •• rvacy and HB 2br 1.5ba, prt<g, em ·• 2301 San · Joaquin ·~ICll
whle, 9mo. new. Oreat
condl 1125.375--0772
~k• you deHrve It yrd, male prerd, n/a, 2904 VOLUNTEERS RESPONSIBLE Hiiia Road, CdM. •Elllll .... ooniM:tld
alll Secluded luxury n/druga/drlnk $41 o. '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii N*E*E*D*E*D & CARING? • •··-_..
C014PUTERS 6018
• 91ted community. All (lnclda utla) 848-5006 1• ,,,,,_,,_, I • apt. homes feature .,,..,.....,,,,__.....______ •-•-We provide l'ft.A l\4t'\ ~111 tarting a b'lsln.aaf • W/O. fridge. garage. N.B. Pvt home. lg rm. Pleas• be wasy of out -·-Transportation Services Anstaurant I~ '::1-J We specialize In 1 ....
alarm & morel pvt ba, kite, lndry. Inc of arH companlea. AMERICAN CANCER to our elderly and ~ Ing high-end bualneaa
utl/cbl. No amk/peta. Check with th• local SOCIKTY d.lsabled community. NOW HIRING! computer ayatema to
1BA .... $1280-S 1455
2BR .... S 1495-S 1850
· • NEWPORT RIDGE
714-781-1879
S525/mo. 722-9755. Be tt • r Bu a In • a 1 ••••• Top Dollar Paid! new ln·home bual·
NB 1Br w/bath, furn. Bureau before you DISCOVERY ./r~ e Asst.~.. From 1800-1960. nesaea. If you llave •end any money for ~:.·S7WllA'M ,,,..,. ~ bad credit we wlll Male prerd. Close to fees or Hrvlc.a. RHd SHOPS ~-•-l/..5G'br. e Cashiers• Cook 1pc to entire estate. assist you In receiving beach, pool. S462/mo. and understand any -Corona del Mat· .l'Put-dme&Full-dme Paintings, chine, a major bank Ctedlt
+ $200 dep + 1/2 utla. contracts befote you Pia Call 84o.4777 employment • Drivers glaware, furn. etc. card, without • credit
Smk/Cal ok. Pia call I S ·--------_. .... i..&.... 40Yr NB Res 673-6223 KalhlHn 642-0149 I gn. hop around fOr1 .;" PaJd v--"11 while Positions Available Check, to purchase a
OC BIRD FAIR
•some apta. meet
lh• O.C. Moderate
1 rent level.
lrvlne Apartmenl Communities
ratH. ac:qulrinj[ your system. Call & we wlll
NB 1 Room w/balh. gar, --::EAR:-:-=::T::::H":'!W=o~R~M~S,,,---LOST a. B Ucen.te lmmedlotelyl au lat you In receiving _______ _.
w/d, share w/ 3 n/a c:11 I' FriencDy, teaDHlrlent.ed a Free dlgllal eatelllte
prof. 1 Block to beach ~1~!r:ay ~~fb~:.1:F!iiOiiiUNDii!iiii!i~iiiii2ii9ii2iiS wcrtcenW'oomeot Coll Jeff APPLIANCES 601l ayatem. 7t4/72t-4006 --------
Sun Sept 21, 9-5 al
th• OC Fairgrounds . Free Parking. 100'•
o l vendors wlll dlaplay & sell every·
thing from finches to
macaws. cages. feed , bird toys,
auppllea & morel
Admission: 5 &
under free. Ages 8-
12 $1, Adults S4 &
Seniors (80 & up)
$3. Special guest apeakera & great
door prlzesl For Info
call 714/646-0642
5475 1/4 UU. 631-3073 1818) 393.0202 I~ 21yearsohgeorolder iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Wlnbook Lap Top MUSICAL ••••••••I NB Shr Lrg 4br HM In p • p •I /H • r 1 h • w Found 918 2 doge ValldrADrM!r'sUcense 722-8400 W•aher/Dryer Stack-Computer & H/P Color INSTRUMENTS 6055
Dover ShorH. Jae, fp, Route• Great loca.I neat Del Mar & N•w· and exoellentdrtvlng able $275. Frig $150. prll'\ler w/ carry caH iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
POR RENT Avl. 10/1 642-8386 wkly. 1-888-301-VENO. Cocker & Medium For more
/Ve 'II
lie!;
~a
lf/,t,/te
A
GOOD
ADI
Call
642-5678
APARTMENTS w/d. S490.+ depoalt. altu. Earn s1eoo port Blvd. In CM. Red reoordrequlred i~=~A~R:O=:'S~C==H~l~CKE~=N=i.-=O~W~S=90=·-.:_64=6=·=584=8 S990 obo 675·7239 * Rol•nd pc.200 •••••••••I N .. d • Roomm•I•? Black long haired i~aoffl~tieYf Seoret•ry PT MKll K•wbo•rd Call The Dally Piiot dog. Now al Hunting· y. Medical Chiropractic FURNITURE 6014 WANTED con1troll•,r Ilk•--------
Ion Beach Humane 1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii new I 100.00 Chances are Claaalfled department I• society. 8 5 7-7 9 5 Q ex per helpful. N.B.1• TO BUY 6019 Mike 723-4015
COSTA MESA 2624 and take advantage of 1-:::;-:-:=~~-~~-7'4/842-0307 CLASSIFIED iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil :-::~--=--~-.,.---you will find
our one week apeclall ~ FOUNP Diamond ring Q.1A11£ 1::1TEACHERSl::1 ll's the resource you Y • m • h • UP r I g ht what you need
2br 1b• Remodeled,
upper, crprt, nr OCC
.1775. + $300.dep. No
pet•. 714-241·8850
714-842-5878 New COf'llJ!lunicarione en. io In Corona del Mar. ..., .. M1e111t11•11on, NEEDED! Toddlers & can count on to sell 8 Old Coln• Gold Sliver wnh Bench. Honey at the price
N•wpor1 Helnhte ~Nctwwtc~io Mall description to Preschool 955_2672 myriad ol merchan-Franklin Mini, Sterling Brown. Perlect Cond.
• _. · · P . 0 . Box 1 5 6 o TU R Tl dlse Items, because Old watchH & jewelry $2200. 675-9364 you want to pay 2 yra new, deck, FP, L<>NG'o-:m'NCE'-7. Cotta Mesa 92827 •------.• , __ 1::1 __ T_o ___ M_E_1::1_, our columns compel WestcoaslColn 642·9448 when you rHd vaulted cell, own bath,· / Bo.._ /R to t ·-full prlv. NS, lndry. cmn. No--.....,. to~ c o ~orraln• ury es uron Th• Community qualified buyers to WANTED: Dog Hou•• -PIAN--0-S-._----Claaalfled
$525/mo. 722-7050 x2 No 1••1• invm ... ent, FOUND Rabbit whit• & French bakery, wine Market Place. calll for med/large Lab. llK
E'S 1 Br 1 Ba Apt. Bal· !';;::.:, ;;!;;.,.".""" IOK light brown. Caught and cheese counter Clasalfled 842·5878 Fixer upper ok. Wiii ORGANS 6059 dally
cony and pool. Sman. --------/U/ 71, 'llll lM1 hop p Ing around help needed PT/FT. 842·5878 pay cash. 1::1 642-3228 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilL_.:M:::2:·::S::l:.:7_:8:.__,:_ quiet pet ok. $825/mo. RENTALS UUl 'f. IW-fNJ Newport Helghta near 1yr lease. 842·1073 WANTED 2726 15th & Santa Ana. Please oOPlv:
1::1 845-8383 1::1 149 Riverside~: INB I!' aide 2bd 1 ba apt. iiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1---------e-::F=--~=-------"_._ L _ R' i or Xlnt cond, new crpt, 1 BR neat Udo. Long-ound sweet female -lt>I" K1l
pelnt, ow. patio, gar. time resident In areL CREDIT 2907 dog, Shepard mix with ~ ~ lndiy. $850/mo.+dep. No kg/ ta 1 have Pu r PI• o o 119 r . :
•54&.1709• Rera•m pe a· .. ·97291·~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Vic-Euclid/Hell In e. Coast .
...._ · CASH NOW l'OR F.V. around the 7th. Corona Def Mor
HUNTINGTON
BEACH 2640
Ador•ble 1 br. ciath
cell•. gated 4-plex S725. (lncld elecl)
714-842· 1787
HOUSE OR APT Future Paymental We 839-7019 or 775.oo44 Ask for Scott or
2BR NEEDEDll buy payments from F 0 u n d . G 1aaa8 a . Richard
In Coron• del M•r Insurance aettlemenla. tinted persc rlpllon
or L•gun• B••ch annultlea. Casino gla•••• In ca••· 'est Si Bo
C•thw 99&.9838 Winnings. We also Vic 01 Bay St In CM. ~-----~!9
Reeponalbl• clean buy owner Financed 674-1825 or 760-17011---------1 N/S. w/o pet• attorney Mortgages. Call A&P Ask fcx Sunnu. CHEF for N.B. llallan
lookl f Capital Resource• ' ng °' NB/Pen 1 1-800·338·5815 1~fl::O':":'U:-:N:":"D=-r --=D~o-.,--2-a-m r • • t • u r a n t. C a I I
or 2bd apt. Wiii spend CAL *SCAN Thursday 9118 behind 6 5 1 -4 6 9 6 or fax
S 8 O O -S 1 O O O Imo . Denny• on Newport resume to 675-4773.
310-285.()743 CREDIT REPAIR Bl. M/n, large light col-Counter Help
NEWPORT Reeponelble UCI atu-Self help kll. Qnly ored, Shepard? Brown for Coffee House In
BEACH 2689 dent loo~lng for NB/ $19.95. 310-771-9820 leather collar. Very N.B. Full or part·tlme.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Penlnaula room/share. lovable! Pl•••• call Expar prel'd . Call P•i up to $300/mo. Classified la..... and Identify 846-2232 714-675-7414, 12-9pm
•1BR .775• l!r 0 71 4-2 23-CU01 CONVENIENT Found: MB Kew W/ Counter Help 2BR 2•• ....... 8 II f whether you're buy. 1 1 -_., ma •mlly deelr•• Ing, aelllng, or Jual un que key r ng. 9/15 PT for beauty supply. O/W Incl. 60x30 pool • 3"" Bdrm home In looking, classllled has Orange AY9122nd St. Experience a plus.
No pet a. Carport. N 8 /C 0 M/E • S CM what you need! CM. Call to Identify (aalary +commlalon)
Newport ••w w/backyard & or pool. CLASSIFIED (714) 645-5789. M••••v• TIMreplat
Terrace $2500 or less. Ref's 842·5978 Kitten e wke. old, FT or PT. Aenlal.
•54s.4855• avall. Janis 631-1229 adorable & black. I'm Manlourlat
_ very ahy until I get to F•clall•t
TBB.ltllt
CAS'l'llf G TBEATU
.2121 CASTD'f G
know you. If you have Rental. FT or PT,
a good home for me with cllentele. 2921 please call 759--1238 H•lratwll•t• Commission/rental LOST Eyegla11e1 •Call L••ll• at• ..A. * OD On Ocean Blvd. In 714/951·1858 K _ ~O' L'fWO COM. 720·9499 •Counter·Barl•I•
... D "-' C LOST: !>wk old Boxer Cuhler. AM & PM ~ ... r'T'1,Q1'..1 1 \N · type puppy. u brown l!eprff•o B•r Inside
,.,, 1,.. t"" \....1 1. l ~ w/whl matklnga. Goes th• Huntington Beach col~l~a.. by "Paxton". In the vi-Central Library,
H A\'ING TROUBLE clntty or Wettald• CM. 714-573-8183 .h Mv RllWARDll 648-3975 Cryetal Cove Shake -v' FINDING THE RIGHT AGENT? Shaok Dell/counter
help. FT/PT. Call LET us HELP YOUI O.W90 ..... lllf't.._..i. PERSONJlI.S 11:30am-3pm 491-9681
Pl ed ,.,.. • 8 000 kJd Ith T: SA -Cueto mer Servtoe ac vver I s w 10p G Ag__ents s lmmed. poaltlon•. 61#.ij~t•WleJiH~fi\lli]li[e]j(:W ~:'~m~~~ca~::~. '~o~
Mem()er of 888. h Business Since 1982 WIN train, must have 1 .. ---~U:&;;;&lil.a=~~llil~•:J:lm•:llf.la5£lL..-.t~ 3012 yr cualomer ave back• l•••••••••I ground and good .,--------__;-~------------------computer aklllt. STirxR~z~G :::!':1·~-.:~
ANEW
BUSINESS??
beneflu. trvlne
location. can Debbi• 714/a33-1 MO or
Faic11~71t
+ .32t + tax for 36 mos. Closed
Tot. of pmnts. $14,375.52 +tax.
~97 ('".,1>11 .1. ,(. St <I>.,~ l>1-:V11 .1 .1-:s
6 YEAR• 70,000 MILE WARRANTY
+ tax, lie. and doc. fees. Prior daily rentals. 8 to choose,
VIN #'s 252605 271087 268973 255377 272550 270796 280231 271138.
•
Wlllal 8lJlft
Boda~S..-
NORTB .,,,.
Oii
Oii
•AKQll
ltA8'I' •1• OAQt
OAQ81
•.J1081.
.... ...-... ................. .._tea.._.._......._ Wiiia t...
poaibl• tnsap t.ri~t no kaowo
IOW'ce ol trlc:U and mue chance ol hmns .... than • ••e&-card 8t ~here. North-Soutln bilb card.I
would all be wodiina on del.n.. A club ..... ud • beut lhift, lollond
by • eecoDd dub and another hem,
would net t.be dtf'endere a ~trick
let, much _...on the oervee than .... ,;..n, three DO trump.
Simply CO\la.tin1 trlckl 11iouJd
reault in d.clarer \lDearthin1 the
be.t lbM olpl.,. Sven it dW. br.k
... cORVatta
~ern<>Yabte Hatd-Top/----------~--1::::::::-:::---:--:-'.::'°'.::I--~------:....;;;;....,~ c-onv/Roadat•r Low UNCOLN 9120 ft'ISSAN 9150 SVUSU 9200
M II ea • 1 Own• r iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiil Factory Manual• lncld ~Le>T• Off TLC~ •es CONTIN&NTAL ••• :IOOZX T·Top, ... QL ·~White. MINT CONO 120.000. 1-ownr. Loaded. GOOd Great runner, new GOOd rwlleble ,,.,..
909427·3338 cond. Dealer ••r.tlced. paint, auto. Too much . pot19don. Oood cond.
, 131500 080 05e-0090 to lletl Must Hel MOO 073-2741 •ei Tahoe 4x4 4·0r Bought another c11.
Momochrormatlc Red ._ • .,DA 9125 '31500.obo 540-39331--------~~
Loaded1 lnctda: Uhl', "'""" z.x TOYOTA 8210 moon roof, cd, perfect '89 300 Red on
condl Auumable •ee M•ada MX 9 blactc. Auto. Caa1, AC,jiiiliii!iiilii)liii!i~~ii
L••••· No Cash 2dr 5 •Pffd power all pwr, alarm, T·top. '89 Land C"*'-t', NHded. 721·1123 at;erlng $29215 107k ml. Muat aMI Loadedl ac, auto, 80K * 723-1504 * S5500. 31CM~383. orig mhff, one owner.
80U'l1l
•AtOI
Olt.11084 o It.II ••• a..a, Mdanir will need a beet trick 1--------
' to set hoaMa eo. after wiMins the FORD 9075 -~-R-l"'r_""_l!_r_9_1_3_01 OLDSMOBILE 9155 •e2 Corolla 4 or, auto •
jack o( diamonds, declarer ebould au; \dal~ A/C, Sunflre Red-,· 1
$14,"5. 714-708-1(1129
war NORTB Cl'OM to dUllllDJ with a his~ club '87 TAURUS QL ownr, undef 10k. Jdqt and lead a heart to the ten. w&en AJC. Al1 Power. Runs • '72 300SEL • '92 Oleta Achleva IC sa500/obo (562)437·7* lo DW
..... IHI' Pue
that holcb, South returna to th• drHtl $1799. OBO 1 ownw, exc cond. All Full PoWef, auto, mlntl
table with a club, cuhee the 714-548-3784 records, AC. 53900. $1500 under blue•-V-O-,.-.. "-W_A_G_m_u __ 9_2_3_5
hen tha M0.1491 book, low mll•• ww '"" remaininc bilh duh and, w t ''78 450 SL Exe m• $15985 1546-1505 lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii iuit prove• to be 4•2• revert. to _H_O_ND __ A ____ 9_0_8_5 chanical cond. Both '87 .letta ClLI Red, 1 heart& That .Wt could not lie more ,._ bl fl d--•--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii to P s. Must s ••I -------9-1_7_0 owner, 4-dr, ac:, am/fm
Opening lead: Four of o
CoYer up the Eaat and Weet
banda with your thumb1, then
clec:ide how you would play three no
trump aft.er Wut leacl1 a low dia-
mond to Eaet'1 ace, and your jaclt
wina the diamond return.
.. vara 1 or _,....,r, '°an over· 514,500. 646-2002. PONTIAC cue, sunr1, xlrit cond. trick ii made in comfort.. ' 8 '7 A c c o r d 6'"'"' 7301 Hatchb•ck LXI. Thinking ol having 1 $4850. ii\#"'
Orig owner, at, ac, garage Hie? '85 8000 L• SEDAN '88 VW FOX 40r. Learn to be a better bridse
player! 8abecrlbe now to the
Goren Bridp Letter by <*Uas
(800) 788-1111 'for lnformatJoa.
Or write to: Goren Brlqe Let·
ter, P.O. Bos '410, Cblcaco. m
60880.
$4150.obo 717·7777 Give ua a calll Blue, auto, A/C, all Radio cass., original
CLASSIFIED power, alum. rime, owner. Great condl
North'• double wa1 negative, in
effect a takeout for the black tuitl
and not for penaltiee. However,
South failed to recognize that thia
'90 Honda Accord 1 r===8=4=2=·=S=8='7=8==•15•4iiil5-iii7.ii2iiii2iii8.iiiipg--.r217..:JeeQ $3,000. 714-73 t-6990 LX Great condlllon,1~
muat sell. $6,900 • 831·84.33 •
MARINE SUPS
'94 Honda Civic DX
Low low miles,
like new $10,500 • 631·8433 .
CORONA
DELMAR
NEWPORT
6122 BEACH 6169 DOCRS 7022 HYUNDAI 9090
Quality O•r••• Sale Neighborhood 45' MOORING & 21' •89 Hund•l Sonata
Sporu collectlble• & Garage 8•1• Sallbo•t By Pavilion QLS 4csr, power, NC, equip., furn., & misc Sat eam-12, Diana Ln. $10,500. 714·6715-1870 Real Clean 52985 hHhld ltema. Sat 9/20 (Dover & lr'Jlne) 47• SLIP Great loc on •723·1504•
8·Noon 418 Ac•cla Sat. 8·3pm Electron-Newport Pen 5600/mo
Ice, Ty~rlters, lug. Incl ulls. $60 parking•--------
COSTA -1:1c:a 61_.,4 gage, wine rack, Xlnt available. 723·58315. JAGUAR 9105 AU~ "&. quality clothing, mlac.1.,....,..,,..--:-:,..-,:---::.--:--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cash only. No early Udo Isle Pvt Dock, up
birds! 1900 Beryl Ln. to 6511, water/electric. '88 1/2 XJO Mint ' 9120 8 :00AM 4627
Costa Men St. Furnl·
t ur e, collecllblea, •••••••-books, chlldren "1"'D11u5poRT'11TION clothes, Speolallzed £&\IM1 n
racing bike & morel •••••••-
Very secure. 673·7677 cond. Low ml, cd,
Newport B•lf phone, chrome whls,
Boat slips in small sunroof, all service
private marina on Via rec. $10,900. 760--0754
U~o. From S 13·$1 ~11. • 89 XJS 12-cyl, Rouge Sail or Electric preld. Collecllon. Most
BOATS 7011 No live aboards. Size Elegant Car Ever. Red 2511·5011 avalloble. -_________________________ .._
D YIS,SIU. MY CAil ~ ~~~~iiii!~!i!iijiiiii!i! 714_675_..912 Agent w/Blscult Lthr, piped 6169 !" · In Red. Like new. Xtra '94 21' Duffield WANTED: SLIP FOR lo ml, sunroof, PP 2nd
-------------------------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1iiiii, Electric Xlnt cond. 3'7' SPORTFISHER owner $19,500.(FIRM) l!at•t• Moving Sale Moving must aelll Beam 12'x 6'' In the COM 714·721·0169
NEWPORT
BEACH Run your ad in
the Newport Beach
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Huntington Beach
Fountain Volley
Independent to
reach over 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
cord # or mail it in
with a check todavl
Run for a week! I(
your oor does not
sell we'll rvn it
• ,....... T
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
iDDmOHS
lDIODELIHG 3410
-~ ---
OUalttv .............
•Aleo Home Repair• C1J!ANIHG
•Rouonably Priced SEIVlr111r •Local Co. 81115315318 .......,
•Stepheneon A•~ .. C•ll 714-e44-M-
-------
Anllquea, 1902 BR $16,000. 645-76'73. Newport Bay 831·P184
set, tone mlac. --------1255 Rutland JEEP 9110 savsun 8am-4pm POWER BOATS
l-::M,-:--ov....,1:-n-g--:L:-o-•-d-:-a-o-.t 7012 AUTO MOBILES li,ii9ii1 iiCiihiieiiriiokii•ii•iiiiLaiireiidiio
Furniture. Futon, White, 4X4. Tow pack-weight bench, bikes, '79 SKIP .IACK Xlnl age. co. Bike and ski
clothing, kid• & cond. Low hours. Full UICK 9035 racks. Fog lights. Xlnt
houaehold atutt. East covers. WfTrallor .1,Biiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiii Conditionl 60k miles. Blutt 2527 Bunya St. $11 ,500 Call after 4pm 1, st 1,500 obo 645-8095
Moving Sale lat 9-2pm {760) 324--0775 '88 Century Limited
Corner of Broad & '88 CELEBRITY 22' 66K orig ml, all power.1--------Holmwood. Decorator 21().VBR Xlnt condl phone, new tlrea. LANDROVER
ltema, furniture, Original owner. 14ohr• Very good condltlonl 9113 lampa, & exercise Removable bait tank. $3500. 548.·1554
equipment. Loran. Fish-finder. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Multl-tamllw Furn, VHF Radio. Trailer. CADILLAC 9040
Antlquea, coUectlbl .. , Blm. top. Muat SHI l"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii acceHoriea, clothing, 111,500 &73·71771•
pat.lo, camping, new Sell yOYr home •'7& Sevlll• Claaalc
water •oftener, more. lhrOYgh claaslfled. V-8, auto, leather,
11530 Antigua Way 842·5878 70k ml., pwr window•
••t 8am-3pm $2300/obo 71~518
•ea MNOE ROVER Cou nty. Lo miles.
Flawleas, red beauty.
(2KFJ193)
LAND ROVER
MISSION VIEJO
714-38a.a'750
for another week
FREEi All for $1 o•
-:-::--~~~~~~~~-. ~ . ~: ~ ,. .. lip ..
~ ,._ :
CrecltC.O O~ ~ OAMX
~~~~~~bi>~-
,.... 1oc DlllLY flOl
JJO w ~ .... C--.CA"'17 11141~C>Mr'714'31-,..._,..CWrl
,.,_ °'-* ,,.,._, ... --...., ___ _
o•-o.._,._ o ...... 0 ... 0 -o--. g:::--g=-g~':'
g.::=..._ 8:'0:: g:=
0 --o c:.... 0 ..... --00<I-o...,.-o ... --
• I 10 lar 4 ..... 11.00-a. odrliloonol line
• '· ~. • • " .
·-------.. --------. -------~':
DIYWAU
3548 SUVICE
GARAGE JEWELRY 3784 MOVING 3834 PAINTING 3858 PLUMBING 3890 WALL
3584 DOORS 3678 l&ii~~~~~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~~~~~~I COVERINGS -
---------''liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • UPl!RT JEWELRY PUBLIC NOTICE lk•'• Custom Painting TME LOCAL PLU.D liiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiili
1• 6 WATCH REPAIRS Prof, Clean, OuaJlty .. J1tne1 E. bngert Co.• TM Stripper •
3932
18X7•• We repair eyegluaH Th• Calif. Public UtUI· Work. lnVExt & Cocke. Free E.um.. Spec I a 11 z Ing 1
20 Year• In F.V. llH Commlaalon RE· Ll703468 831-44510 Friencly s.Mc9•1naured Wallpaper Remov I JB Jewelry 141-3301 QUIRES thll all used Ll5329et 875-9304 L5889241 983-503 houaehold goods Petera Painting 1------LANDSCAPE &
3710 LAWN CARE 3808
IASIC YARD MAINT
t CALL DOii IT ALLI
mover• print their 20 Years Experience hpert ~-Cleanln9 We 0•1• should haril
P.U.C. Cal T number; Free EatlmatH & Plumbing Repairs together. Strip, lnata.~.
limoa and chauffeurs Interiors and E.x1erlors 20)'rs eicp. AM WOtk OUlf, advice to Iha Crnf.
print their T.C.P. num· Referral. 854-0912 Steve 54a.a2ea L1135971S 831-211~ ber In all advertlse-
menta. If you have a Profe11lonal PAINTIR Preol•• Plumbl"9
question about th• le-Manager • Vuauf Repairs a A•moel•I• WINDOWS
gallty of a mover, llmo NoJobtoo11rgtor10011111l l'rff Eatlmat.. ~~~~!i!~~~~ 393'1
or chauffeur, call: A oo. Where rou gel U .. 7$M .... UHM> Mn WINDOWS NOWI
Public Utllltles ' 1-0.W Pron lnstallallon
3894
Free Est•Saw Enetgv
Red~ Nolse•Sr Olac
1.#720327 M2~3•t
WHAT
HAPPENS IF
WXIDON'T
AINIR11SE1
'97XJ6SED
•S99c.
I 24Mo~I
$599+ Tax Per Mo. 24 Mo. Lease. Total Drive Off$6999, Residual $33,216. Total payments ·
$13,777. !Ok miles per year, 20¢ excess mileage. All in stock.
39MONTHS I
SERVICE HOUIS
7:l0am. 5:1"°1
SAl.ESHOUIS
Moo-Fri: 8am · 8pm
Sehm·Sf!i
per
mo.
ton
.. . Coine See Us For The Finest Pre-Owned Vehicles Available . . .
Or Find Out How You Can Experience A New Turbocharged L>tus &prit.
NE1V!'97WllJSFSPIITV8 NE1f~FSPRITV8
Azure blue, magnolia leather, Red, tan leather, C~·spon
ESPRIT
CD, spon exhaust, glass top exhaust, glass top, OL. racing
(F653l0) w~eeb (F65293)
582,796 583,896 .
ESPRI~ :?.l ~~,!!!,~!,~!J2"o!.4s 549, 995
i9K mi {F63001)
'89 LOTUS ESPRIT TURBO
Red, wi leather, only 23k miles (2 PTN739)
Wt specialize in local cars with complete service records . Ali of our vehicles have
been thoroughly inspected and reconditioned by our master service technicians .
Our finance and lease programs are extremely competitive and although many of our
cars have a significant f actary warranty remaining, we off er only top quality extended
protection plans . .
INVENTORY CLEARANCE
167JAGUAR 195 VOWWAGEN '94ACURA 1921.EXUS
420G PA.M'GIX IEGOOIS SOOOCOUPE
Blue, grey interior, V6, leather, Beige, cream leather Green, tian leather,
Low, low miles moonroof chrome wheels, premium sunroof, Chrome wheels
(fXT895) (3KEL075) sound (3GST760) (2ZWW037)
' 57,995 514,995 . 518,995 519,995
'3 RANGEIOVF.R 195JAGUAR 195}AGUAR . 195JAGUAR
COUNIYLWB XJ6 XJ6 XJ6
Black, sable lea~ Topaz, oaaneal leather, Bbck, clurcoal leather, liwnum, oauneal leather CD~load ! sUnrOOf, full~ loaded sunroof,(728214) sunroof . (63 427) . : (7463 4) (JLYY5ll) .
526,995 527,995 529,995 531,995
WHERE 010 ,f
GO WRONG?
• EDnolf'S NOTE: The Reel Critics
column features movie critiques
written by community members
serving on our panel.
For those who have
seen everything
What can you buy for a man
who has everything? What
kind of movie can you go see
when you
think you've
already seen
everything?
The
answer to
both ques-
tions is "The
Game."
•Tue
Game· is a
clever, con-Sunnne Perez fusing maze
that puts
Michael Douglas back on the
streets of San Francisco. Think
of it as a mix of •The Usual
Suspects• and "The Sting.•
Nicholas Van Orton
(Douglas) is a cold-hearted
businessman from a wealthy
family who i5 used to having
complete control at all times.
On bis 48th birthday, bis
estranged brother (Sean Penn)
gives him a mysterious busi-
ness card from CoDBumer
Recreation Services and tells
him he's bought him The Game
as •an experience that will
change bis We.·
No sooner does Van Orton
learn his application has been
"rejected• by CRS than bis We
Nicholas Van Orton (Michael Douglas) ls given a birthday present by his brotber tn wtlldl
he bas to play a real-We game In the new Polygram thriller, •111e Game.•
starts to look like a surreal
Bruce Willis movie.
The waitress who spills a
drink, the power blackout, the
taxi ride from hell -are they
just coincidences, or The
Game? What does The Game
want from him -bis money,
bis life?
Michael Douglas is excellent
as bis world slowly unravels.
The film's dark, moody photog-
raphy lends itself perfectly to
the suspense. Go see itl
• ~ ..-Z, 43, lives In Costa
Mtia and Is an executive secretary for
an office fumlture manufacturing
fl rm.
This movie is
fantastic
Nicholas Van Orton
(Michael Douglas) is a success-
ful millionaire investment
banker who will destroy any-
one who stands in bis way. On
his birthday, be receives a gift
certificate
from bis
brother,
Conrad
(Sean Penn),
for a real-life
game that is
conducted
by a local
corporation
Consumer
Briidlef tad Recreation
Services.
Van Orton is a control freak
who, u a child, was trauma-
tized by his father's IUidde. He
bas no time for gamee. But he
u very curious about tbb
game. Wben Nlc:holu goes to
CRS'1 offtceto find out how to
begin. they tell him that he
mUJt qualify tint. Tberef ore, u
a PJ'\\limtnary step, he is put
through a battery of tests -a.
physical e.xam. handwriting
test, various psychologic.al
tests, etc. CRS tells him they
will process his application and
call him.
The next day Nicholas
receives a phone call (on bis
ultra-printe cellular phone
number that be did not give to
them) that bis application has
been rejected. But, later, when
he arrives home, he finds a
body in bis driveway.
Let The Game begin.
I can't tell you much after
that -virtually any informa-
tion would spoil the movie. But,
I'll tell you this: The movie is
fantastic.
Every time you think you've
got it figured out. the plot takes
a new twist. It's like a smorgas-
bord of brain candy, with each
new twist sweeter than before.
At the end of the movie, all I
could do wu lit there, stunned,
just taking it all in.
I saw it Friday. I saw it
again Saturday.
Por my money, it wu by far
the best morie of the SUDUDer.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1997 '' 72 HOURS I DAILY Pu.or •• --~ ~ . -~ ~
~ l , , ., ........ • ~ ) 1 -• ~ ,.·., ... , ~) L r ~ 1 E AT f..: ~ 1 ) • ~J < t\ r E L-:, .. 7 ~ ~ r ~ . , • -. i....., ~ _ ~ ~ . · . . · ... ·. · , ·, · · : .. · , · ~
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72 HOURS I OAJLY PII.OT • • .. 1 ~·-. . .·.,,1
.l"'. ·~.
RUDAY, sairEMBER 19, 1997
As debate over the National Endowment for th.e A~ plays out in
Washington, local le~ders in politics and art discuss the agency's role
By Thomas F. Edson, Daily Pilot
Modem music composi-
tions. New paintings
bearing little resem-
blance to the "Last Supper.•
Photographs of nude men in
suggestive poses. Erotic perfor-
mance art. Avant garde poetry.
These are the battlegrounds of
the arts funding wars.
When citizens ask, and then
complain, about artwork that
defies community standards,
politicians such as Christopher
Cox (R-Newport Beach) and
Dana Rohrbacher, who repre-
sents Costa Mesa, have been
quick to scrutinize organizations
like the National Endowment for
the Arts, which subsidizes the
very -art that critics claim is
undermining
morality and
culture.
While the
U.S. Senate
and House
confer this
month on a
bill that
might end
the 30-year
reign of the
NEA. local Chrtatopber Cox proponents
and adver-.
saries are staking out their posi-
tions on public subsidies of art.
During bis two-term tenure
on the Newport Beach City
Counc.O. John Hedges bas voted
repeatedly to end bis dty's spon-
sorship of various local arts
organizations.
"Newport Beach gives away
$40,000 each year to arts organi-
zations, and I've opposed that
because arts and culture fund-
ing is not a basic government
service which ought to be paid
for by the general taxpayer,•
Hedges said.
Many Republican U.S. repre-
sentatives agree. After years of
increasing budgets for the NEA.
Congress slashed the agency's
budget from a high of $175 mil-
lion in 1992 to $100 million in
1996. Thy as they might, House
Republicans were unable to
eliminate the NEA entirely until
this yea.r's budget deliberations.
In July, House conseivatives
rounded up the necessary nwn-
ber of votes to kill the NEA. vot-
ing 217 to 216. Although it was
a victory by a narrow margin,
Republicans were quick to claim
that most Americans were fed
up With the agency's •1efttst•
ideological bent, its ·elitism,•
and its support of art that is
pornographic and tasteless.
Others in the local communi-
ty think those claims are hyper-
bole and provocative. Martin
Benson, founder and artistic
director of South Coast
Repertory in Costa Mesa -an
organization that has had a
funding relationship with the
NEA since 1978 -feels that the
politicians are out of step with
the majority of Americans. •ne polls indicate that m-ost
Americans support the National
Endowment for the Arts,•
Benson sakl •Even the House
of Representatives in lb recent
vote to dole out the NE.A
passed the legislation by only
one vote and had to use proce-
dural techniques to prevent
thorough discussion and amend-
ments.•
While some question the
Dowolow
OftMm SI.
Fresh Picked, Loca1y Growri P.roduce Honey, Nuts, Fruits, vr:-
Bread, flowers & ore
~~ the Onntge County Ftaw ,..,,,_, • 51J.OS14
South Coast Repretory ID Costa Mesa ha benellUecl from tbe Natlcmel Badowmenl for the
Arts. In 1985, a $350.000 Challenge Grant launcbed SCR'1 Col,..ldloll Lilbontory.
•coJab• la In tum responsible for funding the tbeeten new play progr-. nkh last sea-
son developed four plays that have already been slated lor New York pl'Odadlo..-. It also
funds the Hlspank Playwrights Projec:t. which wu held recently at tbe Oleater, with read-
ings of new works by Odavto Soils, left, Joann Faria and Jorge Ignacto CorUnu.
rationale for government fund-
ing of the arts, others, like Alan
Remington, professor of music at
Orange Coast College and con-
ductor ol that school's symphony
orehestra, are confused why
Congress bu focused narrowly
OD arta subsidies while m iss!Jlg a
hoct of other govemm.ent hand-
outs that are far larger.
"I wonder why Congress bas
singled out the arts for cutting,•
Remington said. •Wby didn't
they cut the oil depletion
allowances? That's a huge sub-
sidy, much more than the arts.
Why didn't they single.out fann
subsidies or research and devel-
opment subsidies for huge cor-
porations?"
Remington's answer is suc-
cinct: •Arts organizations don't
give money to politidans. •
Corporations have vested inter-
ests in maintaining federal sub-
sidies for their businesses and'
they ensure, Remington Bald,
the continuation of those funds
by supporting politidans' re-
FRlOAY, SEmMBER 19, 1997
spending on tbe irtl ii a poor
idea. Jmtewt -..... to be ~ p.tll tbrougll
•'lbll is a =·we needll't have became the cbok:e isn't
between funding for tbe arts or
not,• Cox said. •Tbe queltion
simpty ii wbetber tbe NEA ii
the belt poalhle funding mec:h-
anJsm. ,.. far ..
California ii
concerned. we
are paying
more for this
program than
we me getting
back by • fair
amount•
David Griffiths, director ot
Opera p~ which bas
received $553,500 from the NEA
and the Califomia Arts Council
since 1990, characterizes these
funds uvery •lignificant. but
most ot us in the arts community
are malring contingency plans.
Individual companies are trying
to ftnd money to plug the g~. •
Other local
organizations,
which are not
d1re<:t recipients
of NEA fund-·
ing, such as the
Orange County
Performing Arts
Center and the
Barclay
Theatre, will be
dramatically
affected by the
disappearance
ofthe NEA.
The current
NEA budget of
$100 million is
very small by
federal stan-
dards, and rep-
resents one-
tenth of 1 % of
total federal
alloc.ations. 1be
United Statea
funding ot the
arts is • fr8ctlon
of similar fund-
ing by l!dMnlo Oropeza'• ·m
European Jarabe de to. meurtttanos"
According to
officials at both
institutions, a
significant
number of
national dance
and ballet com-
panies that tour
and present in
these venues
are direct recip-
ients of NEA
funds ear-
marked solely
nations. WM put of a NBA-funded
According to 'eddblt at Newport Museum.
the NBA. mmit-
al spending on tbe arts by the
U.S. govel"DIDellt amounts to 36
~ perpenoo. The u~
Kingdom, m oomrast. ~
$15 per capita annually, Canada
$27, the Nethedmdl $34,
Franoe $35, Germany $40, and
Sweden $46 per person each
year.
a
for travel. Wilbout such funding,
offidals speculate that the vast
majority of such companies
would be unable to tour and
visit Orange County.
South Coast Repertory bas
had a long relationship with the
NEA and the California Arts
Coundl. During the last three
years alone, SCR bas received
$204,580 from the NEA to pro-
vide support for playwrights and
the production of new plays.
Ben.son is quick to poinl out
both the blessings and limita-
tions ot NEA sponsorship.
•NEA money has never
exceeded 2% to 3% of our total
operating budget. but it bas
been enormously valuable in
pro~ imprimatur and
72 HOURS I DADY PIWJ'
national recognition that the How will the story end? _....,_~-----.-..--,
theater is worthy ot support,• While the House bas voted to
Benson said. •NEA recognition eHminate the agency, the
is a tremendous plus in seeking Senate, with strong bi-partisan
funds from other sources, such support, bas voted to set the
as corporations and lnd.ividu-NnA's 1998 budget at $105 mil-
als. • lion, a 5% increase.
Hedges thinks that such Conservative Republicans are
•seed• funding is unnecessary if confident, however, that the
the theater or museum is good NEA's days as a federal agency
enough to attract customers. are numbered. President
"Many of these organiza-Clinton has promised to veto 1
tions, if they are popular and the Interior Appropriations bill ;
successful. survive on their own if Congress doesn't fully restore ,
witho t t ts the NEA's budget. ; u any governmen gran: Cox, though be voted to take •
at all." Hedges said. •Some away agency funds In July, bas :
people have made the argument suggested an alternative. a
that NEA grants give a •we need to avoid an :
'stamp of approval,' either-or debate I
and that makes it __,.... ,a,:JJIA •There are· 1
easter to raise '~ 11e l:'f~ lit a many other : tun~ fund-ffe.>lltfCal.ttORJiy lor ways tor the i
ing typically 'H-•..a federal govern-1 UM8'lllf' ment to sup-1
anives with a ,.,,.n_..:..:;...a....;._; • port the arts,• :
matching .... vw~SY....,._. said Cox. t
requirement that a-.... Cox supports : obligates the --~ the block grant ;
redP.ient to raise approach, which t
additional funds from provides the full cur-:
the community. rent level of funding. •That
•All of our grants, except would be a win-win situation
individual fellowships in litera-for everyone,• he said.
ture, must be matched by the "California's portion of the
community on a one-to-one block grant would be $13 mil-
ba.sis, • said Simon. •0n aver-lion and Orange County's share
age. each NEA dollar leverages would be $1 million.•
12 public and private dollars.• Orange County received
The NBA bas raised the $210,000 in NEA funding in
hackles of many who say the 1997.
agency funds pornography and The block grant proposal
art of questionable taste and would result in nearly five
value. Critics ot the agency times a.s much funding. Despite
point out that that the NEA bas Hedges' position on art subsi-
provided support for controver-dies, be is willing to consider
sia1 artists like photographers an alternative, such as the
Robert Mapplethorpe and block grant program.
Andres Semmo, and perfor-•My position is to abolish
mance artists Karen Pinley and Annie Sprinkle. die NE.A.• Hedges said.
Benson dicmis.ses the rele-•Beyond that, Cox's idea of
vance of such isolated incidents. block grants would be better
·1 think the NEA bas been than having a huge federal
unfairly demonized over a band-bureaucracy parcel out funds. If
fu1 of grants or sub-grants that we want to give money to sup-
have been cUstorted to presume port the arts, the best people in
that the NEA supports smut, poGtlon to do so would be clos-
wbic.b ls patently untrue.• est to the using organizations.
That would mean local entities, a if not tbe states.·
Featuring a
SENSATIONAL
3-course dinner
Served 4:30 p.m. -6: 15 p.m.
Monday-Friday
$10.90-$13.90
r I • • ' I '
72 HOURS I DAJLY PILOT r.,.... ..
.,-·. J _.; &.J. "LI. -· • •
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1997
Public can tour the historical Estancia Adobe -which comes
complete with myths and ghost stories -on Saturday
By Nancy Cheever, Datly Pilot
COSTA MESA -The Estancia
Adobe may be this town's most
concrete link to its pd.St.
But the structure -bwlt in
• ttie 1820s for herdsmen, once
owned by the Sepulveda and
Segerstrom families and occu-
pied by Spaniards during the late
1800s -also has a dark side, its
tu.story shrouded by myth and
legend in the form of ghosts,
buried treasure and devotional
arches.
The adobe -a four-room
"home• made partly from adobe
bocks -is a landmark looked
alter by the Costa Mesa
HLstoricaJ Society, which will
sponsor a free tour of the site
Saturday.
ln a July 1966 article by the
late Helen Smith, a Costa Mesa Costa Mesa historian Hank
anthropologist and editor of Panian doubts the validity of that
Pacific Coast Arch.aeologicaJ story because "if you go west
Society Quarterly, stories of unW you can't see the light any-
buried treasure near the adobe more you are basically in the
brought droves of people to the Santa Ana River.•
site in the mid-1900s to burrow Another long-told story\s that
into the brick concealed in the
hoping to dis-,------------------------., west wall of the
cover new-l structure is an
found wealth. : arch where peo-
But they 1 pie who once
weren't looking occupied the
in the right house prayed
place. and "held their
Supposedly, the devotions,• the
treasure was article states.
buried to the That arch is
west of the now covered by
adobe, far brick butJegend
enough away -----------------------~ bas it that the that a candle
1
arch is holy and
set in the west-facing window may bear the resemblance of the
was barely seen at the burial site. Vtrgin Mary.
lloyd Wright, Picasso creations at museum
By Nancy Cheever, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -1\vo
· new exhibits at the Orange
County Museum of Art feature
uncommon works by two of the
most celebrated "artists" of the
20th century: architect Frank
Lloyd Wright and painter Pablo
Picasso. Both shows run Saturday
FAST FREE
DELIVERY
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Fri f:t Slit l l llM-10: JOpM
AUMAjor
Crolit Cmls Acupwl ••
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211 62ND STREET
NEWPORT BEACH
through Nov. 30.
Wright. well-known for bis
architecture and innovative
designs such as the comer win-
dow, also designed interior
objects like furniture, wall cover-
ings, rugs, silver and glassware,
and light fixtures.
"Frank Lloyd Wright ln
Production• features several
objects Wright designed that are
available to the public through a
variety of companies.
"Wright believed in organic
arcb.itecture, as if the entire
house were a unified vocabulary
and a unified .experience," said
museum d1iet curator Bruce
Guenther. •tte designed every-
thing, from the house to the paint
color ... the dishes, the fumlture.
This show is to celebrate bis con-
tinuing presence in our lives
through decorative art objects.•
The Frank Uoyd Wright
Foundation. based in Scottsdale,
Ariz., has licensed the designs to
companies such as nttany and
Co. and Cassina of Milan. wbicb
makes a line of Wright furniture.
"The Graphic Art of Pablo
Picasso• explores the artist's
printmaking through 26 images
be created between 1905 and
1963. The prints represent
Picasso's experimentation wttb a
variety of techniques such as
etching, woodcut. lithograph and
linocuts. included in the exhibit
are two of bis most famous
prints, •frugal Repast• from
1904 and "Faun Uncovering a
Sleeping Woman" from 1936.
Represented in the show are
prints from the Blue and Rose,
Cubist, Neoclassical. Swrealist
and post-war periods.
"It's quite emotional and quite
pemonal in a way,• Guenther
said. •nm ii an oppommity to
see these things first band.•
For more ID!onnatioo, call
75g.1122.
1be Estanda Adobe, Costa Mesa's Oldest structure, will be
open for public toun Saturday.
The final stocy is one that
spooks Panian.
Uke any old home, the adobe
is believed to inhabit the ghosts
of people who long ago lived
there.
In this case, Shoshone Indian
artifacts unearthed from the site
likely spawned ghost stories
•about it being haunted by
Incfuinswhow~abusedbythe
Spaniards," Panian said. •u you go out on a dark win-
ter night and get inside the build-
iDg and lock the door behind you,
it's so quiet any noise will make
you think there are ghosts,•
Panian said. I've been too scared
to do that myself.•
But he did visit the site after
dark on at least one occasion.
Pa.Dian said in 1973 the Historical
Society held a candle-lit dinner
meeting there.
•rrs made for ghosts,· Panian
said. •When you have a house
that old and that mysterious ... i1
gives the building an aura.•
72 HOUltS I DADY PILOT •
Ports silver screen makeover
mines gold in . ticket sales.-
DON LEACH I DAILY Pit.OT
The marquee at the Port
Theatre on Coast Highway
In Corona del Mar.
CORONA DEL MAR -In the
fourth week of its new format -
classics, mini-festivals and short
runs of independent and foreign
films -the Port Theatre's man-
agement is pleased with its suc-
cess.
The opening of the new for-
mat -screenings of "The Big
Sleep• -was the third-highest
grossing weekend of the year at
the Port, manager Mike Peterson
said.
It was also a 47% increase
from the previous weekend,
when the theater ran "Shall We
Dance,• said Mark Valen, film
programmer with Landmark
Theatre Colp., which owns the
Port ..
He added that the attendance
was good for the "Dames and
Dicks• film noir series and the
documentary "Flamenco,• but
that business went down for the
FOR TH E BIRDS
From bird seed to genetic breeding,
Sunday's fair focuses on feathered friends
By Nancy Cheever, Daily Pilot
British film that ran this past
week, "Different For Girls.· The
reason for the latter was that "it
was just one of those films that
wasn't ~onning well in gener-
al,· he said.
Peterson said the black-and-
wbite films have attracted a •
broad audience demographic,
including many younger people.
"People enjoy having the
doubJe feature.• Peterson said.
"In between movies, groups of
people go out in the lobby and
talk.. When we showed 'Blade
Runner' here, it ended about
11:30 at night and When I fin-
ished dosing down the theater,
people were still talking in the
lobby at 1:30. •
Both Peterson and Valen
emphasized variety and audi-
ence appeal when describing the
Port's programming goals. To
that end, there will be a book
available for patrons to write
down their choices for future
films.
Valen, who also programs
films for Landmark's Los Angeles
theater, the Nuart, said those
suggestions will help him deter-
mine what to program for
Orange County audiences. ,,_.
"With the Port right now
we're in an experimental phase.
... lt's a pretty wide, eclectic mix
of films and we're studying bow
everything goes. At the Nuart, I
have a pretty good grip -on what
goes over well; those are kind of
edgy audiences and I'm hoping
the Port will be able to follow
along similar lines.•
Among t:h.e films slated for
winter: a Hitchcock series and
"My Vie En Rose,• a foreign film
about a 7-year-old boy who
believes he is a girl
\ 1,IOl{IOI \ OPl'\l\1, 10 ~(I{'\ \L\\ 'ff\\OV
"ARRFSfING PRODUCTION ...
VISUALIY INTRIGUING!"
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