HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-10-17 - Orange Coast Pilot. .J
Bonita pact gives school
district several benefits
• More students are expected, and money is t<? be gained
for the benefit of schools in area.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -A late-
night pact struck by the school dis-
trict, Newport Beach and The Irvine·
Co. yielded promising options for
the Newport-Mesa school board to
consider at its Tuesday night meet-
ing.
The agreement will provide
urgently needed students for Coro-
na del Mar High School and other
underpopulated schools. The Irvine
Co. also agreed to reserve a 14-acre
site called the •banana" to build a
school there U needed and divert an
estimated $5.8 million from Mello-
Roos tax proceeds to be used for the
benefit of schools that will house the
new students.
The agreem~t paves the way for
various agencies, including the
school boa.rd, to plan their next
moves. Endorsement by the agen-
cies -which include Newport
Beach, the district, and other county
groups -.will, in effect, create a
buffer zone between Newport
Beach's current boundary with
Irvine at the Bonita Canyon devel-
opment.
lnsteo.d of 274 hollles, the area
will consist of parks, playing fields
and an area that will be reserved for
the construction of a school U need-
ed.
•I'm delighted by the reservation
of a 13-acre Site for a potential
school in the Bonita Canyon,• said
Mac Bernd, school district superin-
tendent, in a prepared statement.
"The dramatic increase in youth
sports opportunities is a winner for
the school district and the city of
N~wport Beach. 1be potential of
$5.8 million in mitigation and a
school site if it is needed is real
progress.•
School board President Martha
Flour said she believes the new
agreement answers the concerns of
community members and is to
the benefit of the district and
its students.
The agreement came
largely at the behest of par-
ents and community mem-
bers who did not want to see
their schools adversely affect-
ed by the proposed annexa-
tion.
"I'm glad to see that The
Irvine Co. bas listened to
what the community bas
been saying,· said Michele
Cantrell, an Andersen Elementary
School parent. "This is tremendous
for everybody. I, for one, was really
concerned about all the increase in
the traffic around the Andersen
school.•
Cathy Schroeder, another Ander-
sen parent, also said the agreement
would be to the community's bene-
fit.
"One of my main concerns was
that there wasn't enougQ playing
room for the kids around here,• she
said. "I'm glad to see that The Irvine
Co. saw the writing on the wall that
they are dealing with a very sophis-
ticated group of people. We can
mount a pretty good campaign if we
need to. I'm glad they ll&tened to the
people.•
ERWIN SENGCO I DALY Pl.OT
Extra parkland applauded
by city, environmentalists
•Deal with Irvine Co. could mean more soccer and
open fields for community.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -With
meager remaining open space in
the dty, officials and environmen-
talists seem hard-pressed to argue
with a deal that means up to 22
acres slated for homes will instead
be set aside for parks.
The Irvine Co. is ottering to not
develop land at the edge of Bonita
Canyon if Newport Beach annexes
the neighborhood from Irvine.
The 14-acre strip of land
between old Ford Road and new
Ford Road will instead house base-
ball and soccer fields -and an
elementary school, lf needed -
instead of 225 homes. The 7 acres
at Ford Road and MacArthur
Boulevard plus 1.13 acres along
Ford Road will also become park
space instead of 40 homes.
On the other side of Ford Road,
the company will move forward
with plans for 1,000 apartment
units, 300 homes, a small shopping
center and 12 acres of parks. A
Mello-Roos assessment fee on the
new residents would finance the
purchase of parkland from The
Irvine Co.
The city's Planning Commission
will review the proposed annexa-
tion, including this week's deal, on
Oct. 23.
Former City Councilwoman
Jean Watt, an environmental
activist, said though she doesn't
know the details of the deal. she's
always in favor of more park space
•SEE PARKLAND PAGE A5
Costa.Mesa
High School
gets grant
of$348,000
•School was chosen by district as
recipient of money to beef up computer
and technology programs.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Having seen the benefit of
Internet access in his own classroom, Costa Mesa
High School technology tutor Mike Lawrence
would like to see every classroom at the school
equipped with the same capabilities.
The school's recent selection as the recipient of
"This will give
our school a
jump-start ... on
our technology
plan ... "
-ANDREW HERNANDEZ
the $348,000 Cali-
fornia Digital High
School Initiative
grant may make this
a reality.
Costa Mesa High
was randomly cho-
sen by the Newport-
Mesa school board
to receive the state
funding for its tech-
nology program. The school will get that money
from the state and matching funds or computer
equipment and hardware from the school d.J.stnct
that could equal as much as $700,000.
•This will give our school a jump-start to get us
;·on our way to fulfilling our technology plan," said
school Principal Andxew Hernandez. "We have
• SEE TECHNOLOGY PAGE AS
New Pony
baseball league
wants free ride
• Organizers are hoping city will
waive fee policy.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa Pony Baseball
league officials are asking the city to waive its
pay-to-play policy and let the new league use
public baseball dia-
monds for free.
As a rule, city offi-
cials charge private
adult and youth sport
leagues for using city
playing fields, money
that goes toward
maintenance of the
public facilities.
But the city also
allows leagues to ask
for exemptions to the
rule and receive a
waiver for the user
fees.
Some of the private
Little Leegue baseball
and soccer dubs that now sponsor games m oty
parks have been granted waive.rs and do not pay
to play, offidals said. And Pony league officials,
who are set to open their first season in Costa
•SEE LEAGUE PAGE AS
.1
check it out
Find insight into
art at the librq,ry
T he work al two 2001 century
glantl is cumintly feolured
ln Orange County Museum
al Art edlibits. Whether you've
alreody viewed-·· prinls
and Prank Uoyd Wright's design&
or are planning to do so, you can
raise your comdoulness about
them with library relOUit:es.
As the museum exlu'bil attests,
Wriqht dmigned tumiture, acces-
sories and light fixtures that were
Integral to his
innovative
structures.
Read about
hindamentals
of these
designs and
about the
work of those
Wright influ-
ence<l ln
"The Wr1ght Style: Recreating the
Spirit of Frank Lloyd Wright.•
Wright-designed free-standing
and built·in pieces are the focus at
"Fraok Uoyd Wright lnterion
and Furniture,· featuring both
draftings and completed works.
Other conceptual studies and ele-
V,ations of his t\un-of-the-century
~ork to mid-20th century designs
are in •Prank Uoyd Wright Draw-
ibgs: Masterworks from the Prank
~yd Wright Archives.•
· You can explore Wrighfs sig-
rillicant buildlngs, including many
qow vanished from the landscape,
In "Lost Wright Prank Uoyd
Wright's Vanished Masterpieces•
iV1d "Prank Uoyd Wright the
Masterworks.·
; Uncover personal details about
tfle giant who changed modem
an:hitecture In "Prank Uoyd
Wright.• a biography that
~lores the evolution of an
impeccably dressed youftg archi-
tect into a. Bohemian living by his
own rules.
Wright's stature as architect Is
matched by Picolso'• tmpo<tan<>e
Jii the art wodd. Ieo~~ artist~ prtnuliaktng • ' ~
l(nd unorthodox, nonlinear style in
• :· • ;
'
·-Imide tbe "'-·" Pere -ewnpleo al bis pcot«artln"Picaao-."
Marvel at the
divEllily al
medJa ln
whidlhe
waked with ·-Museum.
Paris: the
Master-
-pieces,• fea-
turing paintings, sculpture,
engravings, drawings and ceram-
ics by the master.
If P!cuso's art jJUZ21es l""l,
check out "What Makes a h:uso
a Picasso• from library juvenile
-=tloos. Featuring • nontechnical
aplana-al Picasso's genius·
and a dissection of some dozen of
his works,
this is an
excellent
book for
adults ti well
as cllildren.
Additional
background
delivered in
easily under-
stood. prose is in •Pablo Picasso,"
from the •Art for Young Peopte• sen.s.
Picasso's beginnings in art are
the focus of ·Picasso, The Early
Years, 1892-1906, • a new work
that covers the artist's Blue and
R.... Periods. Later dn>wing1, lith-
ographs, etchings and oils, accom-
panied by comments from their
maker, are featured in •Picasso: In
His Words."
Picasso's person.al magnetism is
as legendary aS his artistic genius.
Read about the man behind the
art in ·Picasso, Creator and
Destroyer,• a portrait of the life
and work of a flamboyant sorcerer
who mesmerized women. society
and other creative geniuses
throughout his ""V~ CAieer.
. °'""""""' • -bv,,,. _ of the Newport Bdch ~ library.
Thk week'J column h by Sara Samide.
·: " '· •
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BRIAN P08UOA I DALY Pl.OT
Jim SoWday of the Coll& ~ Fire Deputmenl tends to an accident vtcttm lbunday morning at the Intersection of Mesa
Drive and Santa Ana Avenue. The lncldent involved two c.an and a total of three people were lnfured.
Car crash sends
three to the hosptial
1bree people were sent to
the h~itol after two cars col-
lided at the intenectton of Mesa ·
Drive and Santa Ana Avenue in
Costa Mesa on Thursday morn-
ing, authorities said.
A 1990 Toyota Corolla sus-
tained major damage in the 10
a.m. collision with a 1983 Nis-
san Sentta, which was dam-
aged ofuone llde,l s!lld Costa. ~P!llb.~ Kfl .~w'f
The driver of one car, Linda
Villegas, 35, of Huntington
Beach, was taken to Hoag
Hospital along with the occu-
pants of the other car, Mark
Hanis and Dennis Battle, both
38-year-old Costa Mesa resi-
dents, said Costa Mesa Fire
Department Capt. Randy
Hicks.
No one was seriously injured
in the crash. and the bip to the
hospital was precautionary,
li!cbi&aid:.· ~ .. ,..
. .., S<b..ie~ said.Ille .oo.use <II tbl>.
accident remainS under investi-
gation.
-By Christopher Gottard
Fire causes $4,500
damage to home
A fire damaged the attic of a
home in the 2700 block of Lore-
to Avenue in Costa Mesa on
Thursday morning, but there
were no injuries, authorities
said.
Firefighters responded to the
call around 9 a.m., after resi-
dents felt heat in the walls of
their single-story house, said
Costa Mesa Fire Department
Batallion Chief Keith Fujimoto.
Firefighters contained the
blaze within 10 minutes, pre-
venting it from damaging the
home's contents, Fujimoto said.
He estimated damage to the
structure at $4,500.
A preliminary· investigation
showed an electrical malfunc-
tion in the attic sparked the
blaze, Fujimoto said.
-By Cbrl.stopber GoHard
: I school days ..
Costa Mesa
School
High
The fifth annual Mesa 5000 will
be held on Oct. 19. 1llis highly suc-
cessful SK walk for Costa Mesa
High School raises funds for pro-
jects and program& at the sChoo1.
The event takes place on a 3.1-mile
course· located in the South Coast
Metro/Harbor Gateway Area at 8
a.m. Registration is at 6:30 a.m.,
and awards and prizes will begin
at9:30a.m.
This year, we are proud to
include Costa Mesa High School's
feeder schools in the fund-raising.
Every runner that designates one
of the Costa Mesa High zone
schools on their registration form
will be helping their school's pro-
grams andprojectl. Forthls reason,
we have added two special kids
races -a 1K and 600-meter walk.
These will take place at 9 a.m.
The entry fee ts $15 for adults
and 510 for students, and entry
forms are available now in the high
school main office. For additional
Information. please call the school
ofllce at 556-3344. Juniors and
senion quaJifyiog foe acedemic let-
ten or pin.I received recognition at
brief ceremcnles prior to the begin-
Ding of back to,cbool nighl Acad·
emic letters are awarded to those
students receiving a 3.5 GPA or
above foe three consecutive r;emes.-
teB. For each additlooal semester.
student is awarded a &tar pin for 3.5
to 3.9 or a lamp pin for 4.0 or above.
Congratulations students!
1be •Road to College,• aninlor-
mative video for parents and stu-
dents, will be presented Oct. 15
and 16 at 1 p.m. on MediaOne
C..ble, Dianne! 67.
Homecoming activities begin
today when Ule varsity football
team takes on Anahebn at OCC at
7 p.m. All past and present c-
Mesa High students are invited to
attend, Half-time activities will
Include lloatl from each of the high
school ~des and will address •
Disney theme. The name of. the
Homecoming Queen will also be
rev1!81ed during half-time. Satur-
day, the Costa Mesa High gym will
be the site of the anilual Home-
coming Dance.
-By K.alby Koenig
Corona del Mar
High School
The 1997-98 ICbool year II; off to
a wonderful start at Corona del
wlll bulld to 2.foot,
anda2-faot-
wllt--h .....,..., --
Mar. More than 200 seventh-grade
students attended Seaweed Camp,
Sept 2 and 3, for an orientation
and the opportunity to get comfort-
able with the campus and get
acquainted with otaer.students. pti--
or to school opening.
An orientation was also held for
new eighth to 12th grade students.
Student& were greeted by a num·
ber of new staff members and a
variety of school improvements
made. possible by the Corona de\
Mar High School Foundation ..
The Corona del Mar PTA will
host its annual Home Tow cm Tues-
day, Oct. 21 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Owing the day, six beautiful hon)es
in the Newport Beach ""'° will be
open for viewing in and a basket
lunch will be served at Sherman
Gaxdens in Corona de! Mar. The
cost of the ticket is $40 and they are,.
available at the scbo9I. or Qy calling
862-0614 for other locations.
Baclt to School night was held
OD Thwsday, Sepl 25. Principal
Don Martin greeted an overllow
auwd of pareots ln tbe gym and
introduced new ltaff members,
Madrigal Cl>olr, Orchesis Dance
Group, and Corona del Mar cheer
squad. .
Students activities at Corona del
'Mar are ott to a good.ttart. About
175 seventh-grade students
enjoyed a Welcome Back dance
held oo campus Friday, Sept 26
from 6 tq.8 p.m. Magazine sales for
the seventh and eighth grade pro-
grams are taking place now. A ·
motber/sOn badmin'ton games and
dinner activity will take place on
Oct. :u.
Qub Sign-Up Day topk place on
campus, Oct. I. Red Cross, Key
Ouh, Gld's League and French
Quh are uamples d the clubs ,
presen1 to requiJ DeW and oloii '
membeB. -
A joint 'CorQna de\ Mar-New:·:·
port Harbor College_Night will re ·
held at Newport Harbor High on ,
Tuesday, Oct. 28. SAT, PSAT and ,
ACTtestlngwill betaking place on :
campus throughout the fall.
Homecoming week will be Oct. ;
XI through 31 . with 8< variety of '
camPus adivilles planned lnclud-:
lng the fradltional all campus rally,:
football game .and dance. n will •
ooind<le. with Red Ribbon week.~
and additional stude!lt generated'l
activities will deal with substant'e :
abuse. I
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•
•
Gates stepping down;
Costa Mesa chief
Snowden staying put
• Police chief Dave Snowden says he has no desire
to run for the county otfic:e.
By Ovistophet-Goflard. DaiY Fflot
NEWPORT-MESA -When
Costa Mesa Mayor Peter Buffa
heard the news Thursday that
Orange County Sheriff Brad
Gates would not seek re-elec-
tton. the first call he made was
to bis friend Dave Snowden.
Along with the mayor, loc4l
political observers for yea.rs
have considered Snowden -
the Costa Mesa police chief and
past president of the California
Police Cbiels Associatioo -a
plausible candidate to succeed
Gates.
On Thursday, saying he has
unfinished business at his cur-
rent job, Snowden flatly ruled
out the .possibility that he would
run.
•1 think that politics is just
anathema to what l'm about,·
Snowden said. •J think it's a
time in my career when I have
the best job on the planet, and
l'm in the best city in the
world.•
Snowden said he would have
· seriously considered entering
the political ring at the last elec-
tion if Gates bad not run.
But now, with two of his
police captains retiring at the
end of the year, and the fact he
would have to commit to at least
four ye~ as sheriff if elected,
"the time line's not right,"
Snowden said.
Buffa said he was disappoint-
ed.
•[Snowden] would be the
best thing that ever happened
to Orange County if he did
choose to go after that office,•
he said. "I just don't know of a
police chief in the area that's
had the experience or garnered
the respect of his peers as Dave
has. His pa.me has come up. a
number of times because of his
record.
"-[Gates) has been a fixtwe in
this county, and he'll leave some
very big shoes to fill. And if
..
there's anyone who could do
that. it would be Dave.• ··
Snowden IOid be will sup·
port Auistant Sheriff Doug
Storm as Gates' successor.
Many local polifidans and
activists, however, have already
thrown their weight behind
Monhol Michael S. CllrOlljl.
who announced in Match he
would run against Gates.
DaveSnowdell
., tbJnk
Carone ·ls
offering an
alternative to
the county as
a reform. tick-
et: said U.S.
Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher
(R-Hunting-
ton Beach).
•it's time to
get some
new blood in
there -people who haven't
established so many relation-
ships that it's impossible f?r
them to make the process as
vital and vibrant as it should be.
•1 think people can stay too
long, and I think this is a good
time for Brad Gates to be mov-
ing on. while he's still highly respected .•
County Supervisor Jim Silva
bas endorsed Carona, while
Supervisor'Tom wlison said he
will remain neutral for the
moment.
Newport Beach-based devel-.
oper Buck Johns, a powerful
figure in the Lincoln Club,
which bankrolls Republican
condidates, said Newport
Beach residents will likely hove
a large.influence on the election
because a disproportioriately
large number of the county's
political activists reside there.
•When you combine all the
activists that are in the Daily
Pilot area, you're talking well
over half of the political activists
in the county," said Johns, whd
supports Carona.
FRJO,llY, OCTOllEll 17, 1997 •
Malnltly $peaking
I 'm bad<. Not tan. --and. maven~. -fiL But back uonetbeleos.
I wu ln Moine last week
doing .IOllle shooting -video,
not !JUll' -and not, I plight add.
•on vacation,• as reported in cer·
ta1o. publications that shall
{emain t1nnamed, Anyway, it WU
a long enough trip to be MmlJd.
ed of the marked dilferences in
lifestyle between the Lower Left
Coast and the Upper Right
Coast Here's what I discovered.
Maine is real different from here.
U you traveled more, you'd know
this stuff.
Plrst of all. for a fall foliage
junkie like me, the timing could·
n't have ~ better. I've been
bonkers al9er New England in
the fall all my life, but I've never s'een it better or brighter. Even
the Mainers -:--that's what they
call themselves -agreed. Actu-
ally, their exact words were •eb-
ya. • H your batteries are. wearing
down, try driving a New England
countryroad on a fall day. The
hills are blazing with red, yellow
and orange, almost too vibrant to
be real. When you reach the top
of a hill and look down on a
Maine village, white steeple
reaching for the sky, it's a sight
that will remain in your mind's
eye for very long time. •
Speaking of roads, getting
around is a lot different from our
world. There is one freeway in
the state, Interstate 95, which is
peter
buff a
•
the East Coast equivalent of the
Interstate 5. It stretches from
C6nada to Florida, just as Inter·
state 5 runs from Canada to
Mexico. Beyond that, Y.ou're lim·
ited to what they call "state high-
ways,· almost all of wbkh are
two-lane roads. As freeway crea·
tures, we're programmed to
gauge distance as one minute
per mile. ·Down East.• you have
to remind yourseU that an hour
on the road buys you 30 miles,
not 60. By the way, ·0own East·
initially described the area
around Eastport -the eastern-
most point in the United States
-but lat« became slang for the
whole state.
11 IODIA!lbiDg 11 tcp.notcb. It's
"wicked good,. u In "this ii
wicked good coffee.• You'll bear
the renowned "eh-ya• fromoldel'
folks, but younger people have
their own venion. It's a varia.Uon
on "yup,• spoken qulckly with a
clipped •p• at the end. Hard to
explain. You bad to be there.
Speaking ol follaqe, they have
a wonderful name fer tourists
who clog the roads in the fall -
"leal peepen .• The dropped .,.
and •a.ah• that produce the
famous •pabk the cab in the
g 'raa.age• thr9ugbout New Eng-
lan9 is always tun to hear. One
expression that has been beaten
senseless is "Mainely. • Every
other business is Mainely Flow-
ers or Mainely Maternity or
Mainely Pizza. I wanted to put a
sign on our van that said
• Mainely Enough.•
Then there's the lobster and
the chowder -clam or haddock.
Thanks 1o the jet age, you can
find a good Maine lobster in
Newport-Mesa, no question. But
the chowder. Oh the chowder.
Not that thick, gloppy stuff we're
used to, but a light fish broth
with a little milk. chunks of pota-
to and fresh clams. It's wicked
good. There's also a protocol
involved. You always eat chow-
der with a friend. Both of you
hunch over your chowder. You
take a spoonful, look up and say,
\tl1'll .... ..,
"Good chow-dab.• Then, they
look up and say, "eh-ya.•
A!tbougb we didn't see
George and Barbara. we did get
to Kennebunlt. That'• the general
area -Kennebunkport II the
harbor. It's a postcard of a spot
remlnllc:ent ol Balboa lllarul --•
an eclectic miI of upscale homes
and anaD cottages with plenty ol
funky obops to entertain the
tourists.
That bdnqs us to moose.
'lbat's moose as in the plural of
moose. Remember, meese is ••
incorrect unless you're referring
to an attorney general or more
than ooe mouse. Anyway, the
whole place is nuts for moose.
There are moose bats, moose
shirts, moose everything. You've
got to love them. though. like
manatees and iguanas, they've
come full circle. They're so
homely, they're pretty. And boy
are they big! No wonder Roc:ky
put up with Bullwinkle's non-
sense for so long.
So there you have it. Califor-
nia to Maine and back. One
more lesson that it's a big coun~
· tzy, with many different strokes
for vastly different folks. And
that's what makes it tun. Life is
like a chowder. You're not sure
what's in there, but somehow it
all works. Eh-ya -gotta go.
• PETEii MlffA-is the mayor of Costa
Mesil. His column appean on Friday. E·
mall him at Ptr840AOLcom .
-~ Chlld Quest lnternatlonal, Inc. .tn' '~---
'<:; ~ ----
Pappas, Norman Basil Dethauron
Missing From: carmel/Monterev. CA
Date Missing: 07·26·93
Date of Birth: 10·12·76 sex: Male Race: White
Height: s ·1 0· Weight: 138
EYes: Hazel Hair: Medium Brown
Child Quest lntematlonal, Inc. • 1625 The Alameda. Suite .fOO
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ln'aVllWING WOMSHOP
Orange Cout College R• Bmry . center ~en a free 9().
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Pol' more information, call 432-
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RAllESQJMC
The Newport Beach Police
Department's Animal Control
Unit holds it's annual Low Cost
Rabies Cll.n1c from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. in the Newport Beach Ani-
mal Shelter at Dover Shores Pet
Care Center, 2075 Newport Blvd,
Costa Mesa. Rabies 'Shots for both
dogs and cats are $3.50 each.
Other vaccinations will also be
available at the clinic. For more
information, call 722-PETS.
~SITIONS
The Latest Thing offers a free
lecture titled 'lransitions at 6 p.m.
at 270 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
The lecture's purpose to help
'Wlderstand the stages of transi-
tions and how important each
stage allows you to go on. For
more information, call 645-6211. .... SATURDAY
SENIOR FLU SHOT CLINIC
Hoag Hospital offers a free
senior citizen drive-thru flu shot
clinic from 8 a.m. to 1 p .m. at
Hoag Hospital's lower campus, 1
Hoag Dr., Newport Beach. For
more information, call 760-5557.
PflOJECT Pt.AYHOUSE
HomeAid's Project Playhouse
auctions off the full-sized play-
I F\LI. ~ \l.E .
SAVE5096
ON ALL
HEMPHILL'S
RUGS & CARPETS
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224
230 East 17th St. Costa Mesa
hoUMI on display in PuhlOn
~~Cauit-~ p.m.. 1bun GI the~-Will begltM~ ~a tiCket to
the auction for $15 for adWtt and
SS for children 12 and Under. Din-
ner, provideC1 by the Hard Rocle
Cafe, ii a1JO included. Po~ mote
informatioQ, cal1 SS3-9510.
TOUOt DIAWING
The Latest Thing store offers a
Touch Drawing: Drawing Out
Your Soul class at 2 p.m. at 270 E.
17th St., Costa Mesa. The touch
drawing process is both therapeu-
tic and meditatiVe and unleashes
bidden feelings. The cost is $10 tn
advance and $15 at the door. For
more information, call 645-6211.
BOUTIQUE ANO BAKE SALE
The Home Owners annual
Christmas Boutique and Bake
Sale is from 10 a.m. to 3 p .m . in
the South Clubhouse at De Anza
Bayside Village, 300 E. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
Admission is free. For more infor-
mation, call 673-4051 .
TIRE COLLECTION
The city of'Costa Mesa and the
Costa Mesa Sanitary District
offers a free one day tire collec-
tion from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
City Corporation Yard, 2300 Pla-
centia Ave. Tues will be accepted
free of charge. For more informa-
tion, call 754-5043.
TWILIGHT CANOE TOUR
The Upper Newport Bay Natu-
ralists and the Boy Scouts of
America conducts a twilight
canoe tour of the Back Bay from 6
to 9 p.m. The even is limited to 60
people and included a campfire
program titled Keepers of the
Shore. The cost is $5 and free for
children under 10. Children
I
DM*I WOIUCSHOP
Muine Cohen often a ftve-
and • balf-bou.r dlvon:e wOrblM>p
tWed Divorce: A New Begtnn~
from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at i
Newport Center Drive, Suite
180A, Newport Belch. 1be CX>lt t.
$40. For more Information. call
159-0519.
CHARITY DOG WAUC
1be Humane Animal RelcUie
Team will co-host a charity dog
wallt to raise funds about the
plight of senior, disabled and
abused pets from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
at Petco, 3033 Bristol Ave., Cotta
Mesa. Registration "' wa1lr.er ls
$15. For more lnfoniiation. call
545-2422.
FASHION SHOW
The Fashion Island Blooming-
dale's presents a Jones NY Fash-
ion Show of Fall and Winter fasb·
ions at 2 p.m. in Studio B, third
floor, 701 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
matj.on, call 729-6600.
ACCENT REDUCTION WORKSHOP
Healthtech presents a free
introductory workshop titled
Accent Reduction and Cultural
Adaptation in the Wor'kplace from
6 to 7:30 p.m. at 3140 Redhill
Ave., Suite 150, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call 751-0255:
DOMESTIC VIOLENa LUNCHEON
The Women in Need Founda-
tion sponsors the Southern Cali-
fornia Celebrity Luncheon with
key not speaker 'lracy Kemble,
Mrs. Globe 1996 at 11:30 a.m. at
Big Canyon Country Club in
Newport Beach. No walk-ins.
l ............. lllMl..,... .... lillliiiAI ........ ~ ........ ~~
I ~wl
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
: r 642-1717 :
I 111111 ~ Open7Days ~ I ~-----------------~
.
233 East 17th Street
Costa Mesa, CA
PhllrJ118CJ PIGM: (714) 848~880
StoN Phone; (r14) 841~1
GOIUN'S GULOt RIGATIA
The Lido Isle Yacht Cub will
play host to the Goblin's Gulch
Regatta ltart1ng at noon with a
skipper's meeting at the Udo Isle
Yacht Cub bay, 701 Via Lido
Soud, Udo Isle. There is no entry
fee. For more infoon.ation. contact
Ken Larson at 723-8268.
THE CHRISTMAS COMPANY
The Junior League of Orange
County California, IJ?.c. presents
the Christmas Company Holiday
in Tuscany from noon to 6 p.m. at
the Orange County Fairgrounds,
88 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Admission is $6 and special event
tickets are $15 to $30. For more
information, call 263-3785.
CUT-A-THON
The Vogue Salon and Spa
bolds their second annual Cut-A-
Thon from 9 a.m. to 4 ')>.m. at 1000
North Bristol St., Newport Beach.
Hair cuts will cost $30. Proceeds
. wm bmeftt tbe Hillview Aaflt
Cbildren'I Hcll:De. for more lnfor·
ma~ call 15~5882.
MU. MmlPUMNIN MTQt
The Bnvtronmental Nature
Center presents tbe Pall Paire
and Pumpkin Patch from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. at 1601 16th Street,
Newport Beach. Admt'lk>m ts
free. There will be children's
activities, nature tours, aatt.s and
baked goods. For more informa-
tion. call 645-8489.
DEAD SEA 5°'0US SEMINAR
The Orange County Society
of the Archaeological Institute of
America and the Jewish Federa-
tion of Orange County offers a
seminar in celebration of the
50th anniversary of the discov-
ery of the 04!4d Sea Scrolls from
2 to 5:30 p.m. at the Jewish
Community Center, 250 Baker
St., Costa Mesa. The cost is $10
for AlA members, $15 for JCC
members and students are $5.
For more information, call 725-
0267.
TECHNOLOGY SYMPOSIUM
The Orange County Bar Asso-
ciation offers a Legal 'Technology
Symposium from 7:45 a.m. to 2
p.m. at the Double'lree Hotel,
3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Reg-
istration per session is $20 for
members and $30 for non-mem-
bers. A trade show only pass is
$15 and includes a box lunch. For
Buy l>i111 c: ..-
more tnformatioll. call "40-6711
ext. 125.
lttDOSBmal
c.o.tlllit ~ Center
often a fJee lecture about Atten-
tion De8dt D6IOrder (ADD) at 7
p.m. at Coutline, 1200 Quall,
Suite 105, Newport Beach. The
1ectuN II giW!ID by psychologist
Joan Andrews. P<r more informa-
tion, call 416-0991.
A HARBOR HAUNT
The Association Qf Special
Event Professionals will play host
to A Harbor Haunt aboard the
Wdd Goose at 6:30 p.m. at Horn-
blower Cruises and Events. 2431
Costa 1-llghway, Newport Beach.
The cost is $35 for pre-paid reser-
vations. Space is limited. For more
information, call 598-5030 or 493-
6513.
PTA HOME TOUR
The 1997 Corona del Mar High
School PTA Home Tour fund rais-
er begins at 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tour
six decorated homes in Newport
Beach. Tickets are $40 and are
available through Corona del Mar
High School Newport Hills Drugs
and Sherman Gardens. The cost
includes lunch. For more informa-
tion, call 720-1818.
• Send r.our AROUND TOWN Items to:
The Daily Pilot. Aroond Town. 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa. 92627; fax 646-
4170 or call 540-1224, ext. 333.
FROM LOCAL BOATERS
Rubber Boats J, Fishing Tackle J, Old Charts J, Books,
Nautical Decor -Fish Nets J, Tons of Boat Hardware,
Sails J, Radars J, Etc. and more ... ·.
All at Give-A-Way Prices
MINNEY'S YACHT 5uRPLus
~NMmcnM;; ·~11a
verything
You've Been
Wanting to
Know About
Your Knees ...
Our guest speaker, r. Ralph Venuto, is a Board Certified Onhopacdic Surgeon,
a fo rmer Olympic Team physician, and a consultant to the Jaffrey Ballet and.
NBA. If knee pain, stiffness, instability, swelling, and/or immobility is keeping
you from doing the things you enjoy, don't miss this opportunity to learn about
the latest in medical trends and treatments for knee problems.
Topics Include
• Tot4l Knee Repwnnmt
•Physical Thw"J'Y
• &ercise & Weight Training
• Metlielllions
LEAGUE
CONrlNUED FROM A 1
~in Febnwy, hope the dty's
Parks, Reaeation Facilities and
Parkways Commisnon will do
the same for them.
League President Lou DeSan-
dro called the formation of a
Pony baseball league -set up
with two separate divisions for
players ages 13 to 16 -a •very
positive addition to the baseball
programs available for the youth
of ourdty."
DeSandro said the league
plans to have between six and
PARKLAND
CONTINUED FROM A 1
-•as long as there's no quid pro
quo.•
"I'm just glad we're not selling
our soul to get it,. she said.
Councilman Tom Thomson,
whose district borders Bonita
Canyon, called the compromise
"terrific for our parks.•
"But I think it's important to
look at it cautiously,• he said.
"Nothing's ever easy, and nobody
likes change.•
Previous financial analyses
showed the city would break
even if it took in Bonita Canyon,
City Manager Kevin Murphy
said. With the swap of homes for
parkland, it would cost the city a
bit in maintenance costs, he said.
eight teams, wtlb games held OD
lame weekdays aod Saturdays
at Colt4 ~ High School and n.Wlnlde Park.
The inaugural sea.son ii
scheduled to run from Peb. 1 to
July 31, and a shorter winter
league ii' planned to begin wt
fall. ~ oftk:iah said.
lb8 dty already bu a rate
structure in place for wdng tbe
diamond at 18Wlnlde Park -
S20 an how without lights and
$32 an hour with lights, officlel•
said. But there currently ii no let
price for using the a.ta Mesa
High School junior varsity base-
ball diamond Pony league offi.
dals have their eyes on.
•But I don't see the Qty Coun-
cil doing this as 'let's break
even,•• Murphy said. •we can get
over 30 more aaes of open space.
lb1s is going to be a great park
and there are not a lot of opportu·
nities left.•
The deal -S1ruck Wednesday
between the city, the company
and the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District -comes after a
barrage of complaints from resi·
dents of the adjacent Harbor
View Homes. Officials expressed
confidence that those residents
would love this week's proposal.
•The development stays the
same," said Carol Hoffman, The
Irvine Co. vice president of enti-
tlement. "What really happens is
the Harbor View Hills community
gets wrapped in open space.•
The Irvine Co. just wants to get
on with its development -and
would like to tell its builders what
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW · COSMET1CALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Lessl
~ 3165 Harbor Blvd.
~ Costa Mesa
lil
One Blocll Soatb of 405 Fwy
545-7168
So dty ottidall still don't
know what~ wOuld charge if
the league's waiver ls denied.
"We'd Just have to sit down
and figure out what that number
would be,• said recreetion
IU~ RJdwd Brunette.
Bnmette Mid dty offldals
amA"er tbe COits ot main~
a fadlity in calculating the
amount of the Ulel' fee. ·
The ~ks commission, an
adYi8orY panel that makes r~-..
cwnnwvlatlom on parks related
matters to the City Council, is set
to consider the league's waiver
request on Oct. 22.
The City Council will have
the final say on the request.
dty they're building in. Ho~
said.
•1n this kind of economy, we
don't want to delay,• she said.
The school district, meanwhile,
wants to know whether it will
have the additional students that
would come with the annexation.
And the city can't change its
boundaries after May 4, 1998 -
the dty charter prohibits annexa-
tions within six months of City
Council electious, scheduled for
November.
So officials from all sides hope
to push the annexation through
before May. And they're hoping
this week's proposal will rally
local support and smooth that
process.
·we got such a huge response
from the community,· Mayor Jan
Dehay said. "And because of that
we got a better package out of
this.·
Cost Effective
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TECHNOLOGY
CONTINUED FROM A 1
an overall plan and ~ grant will
help us accomplish it."
Because the school was built
30 years ago, Hernandez said
some of the money will have to go
to updating \he school's infra-
structure.
"There are some classrooms
with as few as one electrical out-
let,• Hernandez said.
Lawrence, who heads the
technology committee at Costa
$29500 complete
Call ToU Free
888-271-4567
Don't Delay, Avoid Probate!
David Pawlowski
Attorney at law
Plug into the Pilot Cl~ied section to find services from
etectronics and plumbers, to landsc.apers and painters.
Newport Harbor
Montessori Center
"Academic Excellence
in Harmony with
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An opportunity.to do some
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And a Special Sbowhig
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0,. and -
FfUOAY, OCT08ER 17, 1997
Mesa High, said some of the mon-
ey will also need to be used for
staff development so every
teacher will know how to operate
the system.
"There are some teachers who
don't know bow to use the system
yet," he said. "People focus on
hardware but I've heard that at
least one-third of your technology
dollars should go to training for
both teachers and students."
District officials said they
would try to match the state's
grant dollar for dollar, but if the
cash isn't available, the district
would provide equipment.
r:-------n S CHA'S FAMILY ~ SHOE REPAIR I ~~·.,. f20Ulc)Ol'f., I.
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• • CE ("""';;::61274":\"i'r 111.J .... _______ _
MAAC MAATH
I DAILY Pl.OT •, .
Costa Mesa High is one of 216
schools in the state to receive ~e
technology grant in response to
the California Education Technol·
ogy Task Force Report, wb.ic;b
documents California's low stand-
ing among other states. · ,
Following a lengthy applicar
tion process that will begin m
November, Lawrence said the
school should start seeing some of
the money by April or May.
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1 I fr4e•pan•rr*("-..... Dlllr ....
'U-'I\1111' le to cinematic dead end
' St.one's stamp on film,
~ch Is good and bad
11 bu been oald tl14t every
iDoYle api !UBI the vilion al its
Cl'Mtcr. I am not a strong tup-
pditior ot the auteur~ but It It
true that each -puts the llionp ot his particular v1sion OD
tla!Om(a) be maket.
There LI no current fllmmaJcer
.
Bjunon
Humpbnly
ot whicb um is
more true than
Oliver Stone.
Stone has
mad.ea name
for himself as a
dhector and
screenwriter of
violent, offbe4t
but provocative
movies, and
along the way
garnered three
Academy
Awanls ("Mid-
Jyst--ll ID ID-. Nick~. atbe--anogant lqall .,_..IDM -.ya
town u you've"*'..-. md
"-u !Iii wile, Clraco, -Ille acting bonon. Powm BooCbe II
the ublqullDt» polkll ddof. Biiiy
Bob Tbomtcn ID a 18().degrM
tum trom •SUng Blade,• end Joa
Voight ID a llUl]ldllng portrayal do
tine acting, but Penn~ role Im~
very demanding. •
He'• a fine actor and be'• oo
~lnevery-. but the
. shadings, DUODOOI and orowth
that were called for in •bead
Man WalkinQ• ant not written
tnto the ·u-1\un• -· Bobby It a man wttbout sau-
plel. He's a 1I11411-time gritter
who's trying to graduate to bigger
and better illegal activities. Hit.
biggest asset is • flre-engtne red
Mustang.
Crossing the Arizona waste-
landJ en route to Lu Vegas to
pay off a gambling debt, his radi-
ator blows a hose.
The closest town -if he
makes a u-twn -is Superior, a
misnamed blot on the gorgeous
red rock country southwest of
Phoenix.
~trylngw cap1on 111e t..lot~--
--tnon-doi> aDd
Ind.my ... --.... --the real tblng.
Wllb the--• llllJIPOll-
lng -hvi!!Cllng 'lbonml..Jon
Vdgbl. ---Caire Do.-and Jooquln Phoen!s, 11
1e!ID8'1t at
leutonpaper,
like ·u-1\ml·
couldn,lote.
Well. OD paper
the Dodgen
1bould bave
won the West-
ern Division
Ibis year, too.
'llWmln
p1eces, tbls mm
It actuaDv pret--. ty good. The Brunette
actors' perfor-
mances are ~ 1be cinematography,~-
. The ~on is stylish and
inventive. lndMdual scenes work
well and some ore pretty funny.
nJght Express, w "Platoon,• "Born
on the Fourth of July").
-Whatever one's opinion of
Slone, it is aclmowledged tha.t he
is a man of passion. but it is a
dark and ferocious pess::ion about
what he j>en::aives to be some of
~ evils In our todety In Ibis last
Stone, withth his peculiar and
decadent vision, undemoocl the
impact of this two-bit hoodlum's
misadventures when played out
against the majesty of the buttes
and crevasses of thi!I incredible
locale.
Grace MdCenna (Jemiller Lopez) lures Bobby Cooper (Sean Peno) Into a game of IUll, madneu
and money In the new Oliver Stone movie, .. U-Turn." '
You am deftnitely tell this is a
well-aolted mm and not just •
low-budget production done by
amatelll'S.
But just as a body cut into
pieces Jacka life and cannot walk
on tts own, so goes this film; it's
parts ore line, but its body taken
as a whole ii dead.
... of the 20th centu:y. He is
man of talent with a firm
and control of his cbolen
·~pbox. · coupled with a lively, II.,
~odo• and wild. lmagina-
The photography 15 frequently
breathtaking and highlights the
small and mean humans who
despoil its loveliness.
fascinated -by the progression
of the action, the interplay of the
characters, the ironies and sym·
bols and the layering of !be
depravities to which the human
animal will fall given motivation..
All of which attests to Stone's
masteiy of his medium.
~~ch brings us to Oliver ~e's cummt ottering, ·u-
~· • It stars Sean Penn, but the
~ deus ex machin4 (godly -or, · ·ibis case, ungodly -force) is
~Oujeri.,,Lopez. It is she and her
·u-Tum· is also full of symbol-
ism. with camlvorow vultures,
scabrous wolves and similar
predators scattered throughout
the picture in quick shots.
Only for film buffs and Oliver
Stone fans.
• ILEANOllE ...... llEY, "OYff 65,"
lives In Costa Mesa and is a polltkal
junk~ Involved with M!'Veral city com-
mittee<
'1' er opportunism that pro·
the €!vents Bobby Cooper
These are mixed with verbal
and visual Ironies which bespeak
Stone's own jaundiced view of the
world.
) becomes embroiled in up
• e movie's ironic ending.
·~ is beautiful, seductive
ruthlessly focU.sed on her own
... . Penn is merely the cata·
In the end, however, it's a
sauffy movie about meretricious
c.oricatwes of people you hope
never to encounter.
Parts are greater than
the whole
I didn't like ·u-Tum, • but I
sheeptshly acknowledge I ~as
Ever had a bad day? I mean a
really, REAllY bad clayl In "U-
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'JUm, • a new film directed by Oliv-
er Stone staning Sean Penn. Jen-
nifer Lopez and Nick Nolte, Penn's
character is having a really bed
clay.
In the hot desert sun in the
middle of nowhere, while making
•trip to pay olftbugs be owes
money to, Bobby's car breaks
down. fordng him to seek help
from an eccentric repairman. (Bil-
ly Bob Thornton), iii an all but
dead little Arl7.onll town.
While walling for !Iii car to be
repalred. Bobby fllrll with a ""Y
young woman, Grace, (J~er
Lopez), then goes home with her.
While they're in a somewhat com-
promismg embrace, her jealous
husband W>eipectedly walloi in.
The husband, (Nick Nolte),
believes Bobby's claims that be
didn't know Grace was_manied
AMA.CHI -
and, while giving him a ride back
to town. offers Bobby money to
kill his cheating wife. After refus-
ing, one piece of bad luck after
another happens lo Bobby, and
eventually Grace makes a
counter-otter to have Bobby kill
Nolte Instead.
Although there are twists and
turns along the way and we meet
a few other local yokels, which
gives way to J;nunorous subplots,,
that pretty much sums up the stcr
ry line.
With the recent success of
quirky, Independent films, it
seems everyone who is anyone in
Hollywood is jumping OD the
bandwagon {and why not, look
what it did for Turantino and n-a-
volta).
The result has been a slew of
offbeat, non-traditional movies
Sun ll. Sun .. Go . em.-Bar ... Mola' Q'OCll: Conlo.
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And docking in at just over
two holll'S, this movie begins
decomposing long before it's over.
Rated R for strong language,
sexual content, violence and a
few graphic scenes of dead ani-
mals and people, on the Brunette
scale of •Pay Pull Price at the
Movies,• •Bargain Matinee,•
"Video Rental,• "Walt for Cable,•
or •rd Rather Have My Car Break
Down in the Middle of the' Desert
Th.an Watch This Movie,• I give ·u-Turn· a toss-up-between
"Video Rental" and "Wait for
Cable.•
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I I
I
• Costa Mesa sculptor's
work to beinsta.Ued at
Van Nuys airport.
By Anastacia Freeberg. Dai/tj Pilot
JilnJenJrins'newsculpture
for the Van Nuys Airport won't
be imtaI1ed there until this
weekend. but his Cost.a Mesa
. neAghbon have already gotten a
sneak peek at the work.
· ·~~isn't in the studio; it's too Dig,. said Jenkins of the
.:Wpture, which measures 15
feet high and has a pair of
motorized wings spanning 20
feet. "It's between the studio
and the garage. You can see
part of it from the street It looks
like our garage is flying away.•
Jenkins started designing the
work in March after the devel-
<!)>81' for Southwest Aviation
complex, a corporation with
space at the airport, asked to
I enldns' work. It took U:uee and
a halt months to complete the
project, Jenldns said.
Jenkins and his wife, Karen
lbayer, moved to Costa Mesa
three and a half years ago.
Jenkins and Thayer, who is a
potter, built their 1,200-square-
foot studio behind their home in
1995. Jenkins plans on inviting
neighbors and friends over for
an open house tonight before
taking the sculpture to the air-
port Saturday.
DON LEACH I OAll.Y PILOT
Jim Jenldm ln front of bis .. Ahuts'" kinetic sculpture to be
placed tn the Southwest Aviation Complex in Van Nuys AJiporl
Val~ Customers in· -
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa we've movedl
Visit Our new Location
1777 Bristol St. • Costa Mal
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Halloween Painting & Carving Kits • Halloween Face Pattern Books
2777 Bristol St.
Costa Mesa
957-1608
lw/l~~Dr. _________ we 1~~~~the .
WEIGHT NO MORE
IMPORTANT NEW INFORMATION
PLEASE READ Octobc;r 19'/7
Foreign cornespondent ArthiM Kent
appears at Barnes & Noble
Missile alert! The "Scud
Stud,• Arthur Kent, flys into
Barnet & Noble at Fashion
Island on Sunday at 2 p.m. to
sign copies of his book, "Risk
and Redemption: Surviving the
Network News Wars.•
Kent, a journalist for more
than 20 years, came to promi-
nence covering the Persian Gulf
Waz for NBC.
In addition to his work as a
foreign correspondent, which
netted him two Einmy awards,
with the network over editor!J:
conteat. , ..
After Kent was fired by NBC. o
he sued and won a . settlemeat I
(including a public apology ~-
damages) 18 months later. '·~
Currently, Kent is the head ilf /
Fast Forward Films Umited fG
London and will be the an.char
for a proposed daily news prt>-.,J.
gram that woul_d be broad~CJ
on U.S. PBS stations. , u
the book also tells of his battle Arthur Kent ·
The bookstore is located -i•
953 Newport Center Drive. Poro
more information, call 759-0982.
Harvest readings to reap help for the hungry ]
• Programs at local
Barnes & Noble stores
part of natio~wide effort.
The three local Barnes & Noble
bookstores will be participating in
Writers Harvest: The National
Reading to help fight hunger on
Thursday.
More than 1,500 authors
nationwide will give simultane-
ous readings, and bookstores,
including Barnes & Noble, will
donate part of the day's sales to
Share our Strength. The charity
fights hunger by promoting food
assistance, tre~g malnutrition
and stressing economic indepen-
dence for the needy.
It has doled out more than $30
million internationally to anti-
hunger programs since its found-
ing in 1984.
The Writers Harvest programs
locally: at Metro Pointe, a panel
discussion on writing and pub-
lishing with authors Jo Ann Map-
son, Earlene Fowler, Maxine
O 'Callaghan, Patricia Guiver and
Taylor Smith; at Fashion Island. ,
Robert V. Hine, author of •Second •
Sight,• discusses bis deliverance
from blindness; and at niangle 1
Square, Robert Eisenman, co,: :
author of ·nie Dead Sea Scrolls
Uncovered,• discusses his ~l
book, •James, the Brother C>f:
Jesus."
All programs are free and ruQ.,
from 7 to 9 p .m. For more infoi---...
mation, call 444-0226 (Metro
Pointe), 759-0982(Fashion1slan4) ..
or 631-0614 (1hangle Square.) ,,. ,
Tinder Box
Premium Cigar s
• Arturo Fuente • Ashton Cabinet • Avo
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COMING SOON -Cifuentes
Large selection of German Steins & English Pewter Flasks -
Humidors by Elie Bleu, Avo, Davidoff
Located In
CRYSTAL COURT
714-540-8262
~
N ew York. That's all I could
think of when I entered
The Warehouse dub, The
Zone, on a recent Friday. Was it
the Webster Hall-style four
~with different music
thamef Or was it the dark
atm<>1phere and the plastic tarp
thM's hung up to block off the
restaurant area? Maybe it's
because the last time I went to a
dub was when I lived in New
York.
. t~e,: the.teAIQQ Ibe ..
Zo e on Fridays and Clu1l µMe-
lig (named after ly
de ed New York club The
llgbt perhaps?) have the tasfe of a Lower East Side
un4exg:round club without the
M$hattan price or Brooklyn
atttude.
rooms
with
music.
One room,
the pool
room, had
a DJ play-
ing hip-
bop and
the ma.in
room
played
disco,
techno
and hip-
hop. But, it
c,ouldhave
been a ·
bad night.
denee,il
thtnlino
shortage
of men. In
fact.~
outnumber
the
women.
It's not a
total meet
market,
pick-up
alley type
of atmos-
phere
though. In
~it ·~
would be~
. n.WeU ~
musk: and a fun llOda1 lallMI.
By 11 p.m .. the~il
pac:kecl and I'm told it'• tW1ce u
dOwdeclon
SaturdaY! for
Club Umellght
when they Opell
part of the
downstairs
restaurant area
uwell.
Saturdays
feature four to
s~ DJ's playing
all types of
music, bands
and the patio
features a blues
guitarist. But
there are no
drink speda.ls.
and then walk up to the dub for
tree. U you like, freat yowsell to
one OI Tbe Warehouse'•~
• fy drtnkl
~e~21rf!"'•tt1•1 including the
I 0ean Martini
: (Ketel One vod· I ka, olive and I garnished with
1 a Lucky Strike I cigarette and a
: book of match-
: es), the Count
: Dracula or a
White Choco·
late Kiss. One
drink costs
about the same
as the cover,
which on Fri-
days is $5 from
9 to 11 p.m. and
$7 after 11 p.m.
and Saturday
it's $7 from 9 to 'fhe main bar and dance area
is ~ous and provides ample
roasn for socializing and danc-
ing, l'We bart®ders aNt nice,
courteous and don't give you
attitude il you ask for water.
If tech-
no gets on
your
nerves, as
it does to
me after a
while, you
can find
sanctuary
in the oth-
er three
moremetj
would get-
out on the
dance .
floor ~d ;
let loose
instead o' just stan&-
ing 1
around ,
staring at;
Both nights,
the kitchen
stays open with
a taco bar serv-
·ing chicken or
beef tacos. -------------------------.,, 10 p.m. and $10
On the other hand, the DJ in
tha main dance area needs to
work on his courtesy skills when
paCtons make requests. He saves
th~ best dance music for later in
the"eveniog, leaving early
arrivals to deal with high school
m~ic flashbacks and disco
fever. After he plays the popular
soilgs, he gets lost in the world
of techno. ~ough The Zone advertises · !o'f rooms with four types of
mooc (hip-hop, alternative, disco
ana tecbno), I counted only two ,
BRIAN POBUOA I DAILY Pl.OT
1be Warehouse restaurant and dub ls
located on the water ln Newport Beach.
rooms.
One has big homey couches
overlooking the marina and the
other has a couple of old lounge
chairs and a psychedelic tie-dye
screen. I liked the small pool
room the best, even though
there was a strange woman that
looked like she was doing an
impression of Tina Turner danc-
ing like a gorilla. The atmos-
phere was young, fresh and the
music was kicking.
you-but
men aren't perfect. For every-'
body, a definite plus is the $2 1
•you call W drink specials until
11 p .m. (in laymen's terms, any 1 drink, any beer, any liquor is $2J .
The Warehouse draws all
types of people, mostly white :
collar, TGIF types in their early
20s to mid 30s looking for good
Leslie'• Penonal Guide to The
Wa.rehome on a Budget:
Even though they validate
parking, you have to pay $3 first
and then get back to the atten-
dants with your validated ticket
by around 1:15 a.m. for a refund,
according to one bouncer. So, do
what I did, park in the lot off Via
Lldo and walk to the club. Arrive
early, like around 8:30 p.m. This
way, you can just go stand
around by the bar until 9 p.m.
For ladies, the advantage to
hang out at The Warehouse, at
least from my Friday night expe-Ml CASA 0 •&if3tf4§f l1JjMQ@.i§i-~
OUR MEAL~AR ATRIPTOMEXIC0 0 0
Mldnlte Drawi ng "The Best Authentic f"lorentlne Food In Town·
for $20000
Need not be present
($5000 extra if present)
One Dollar Donation Req.
• Let Mamma Gina do your Caterin
·Happy Hour~ Live Music
Eno teca Bar And
Cigar Smoking Room
rf•,7-• "" .... ~~ ,•, i-
.,....~\-... ,. ... ·, ,,. " . . ~ . . .......... ~
Newport Beach
California
.., .......... ,....,.,. ... .-s••llllW?
1n 11::1 llllw,..-. .... 1ts
after. But
remember to party responsibly -•
don't drink and drive.
If you have a club you think deserves a
review or are too afraid to check out,
e-mail me at
lsimmonsOhomet.liunet.edu .
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STAR
CONTWUED FROM A10
when we aee her on renma.
1he'1 more tbree-dimenatonal
and we appreciate her talent.•
1bat wide-ranging talent iJ
somethiDg many stars of yes-
terday pouesaed, and it'• what
enabled them to be successful
in roles not associated with
their public persona, Taussig
said.
•ne older generatioh of
acton, they could sing, dance,
do drama and do comedy,"
Taussig aaid. •1 think there was
more casting against type back
then. 1be itudio system
demanded broadly talented
people.
I think with the fall of the
studios and the rise-of indepen-
dent producers, which is good,
you hire an actor who can do (a
certain) kind ol film. It's a dif-
ferent way of working, they're
just putting together a pack-
age. 1bey don't care what else
the actors can do.•
Taussig -an Orange Coast
College professor and author of
•pilm Values~amily Values: A
.
.. After the 1b1n Man• la a featured Illa bi 11118 Orange County
Museum of Arts cinema series. ·
Parent's Guide" and the Hi-Q
Film Review -will lead a dis-
cussion after each film. Taussig
said previous sessions have
yielded audience give-and-
take on the sociological and
psycological aspects of cinema.
•we (at the museum) want
to serve the public by educat-
ing them and entertaining
them,• he said. "It doesn't
have to be heavy-handed.
Learning something is cool, as
they say these days."
OBER • ts
ATIONAL
st Cancer
ness ~onth
IJer 23, the Daily Pilot will bt publishing a very special
issue dedicated to the public awareness of breast cancer.
Be-p11rt of id
CALLTODAYJ
642~321
II
JULIO to enjoy bis music.
•J Jo;e ID llng and (even .,...,_Iba auctienoe doesn't
1mOW ~.they feel the
~--said. ~Iglesias, 5', has
giliDed Wadd-wide attention fOI'
bil IB appeel, pauion and GU·
benmCe. be II actually a dedicat-
ed fadly mm. He and hiJ com-
panion, 25-yeer-old Dutch model
Miranda Rymburger, just cele-
brated the birth of his fourth
child, Michael. in August
He's also proud of his two
sons, Enrique and Julio Jr., who
have followed in their father's
musical footsteps.
"I feel like how my father
• AUOAY, OCT08ER 17, 1917
did,. be Nkl. •ffe ~right
when he Mid be Md good
ge!l81.·
~with the new baby,
lg)esl•i allo Ja livtng a new
smoke-free life. He gave up htl « 30-yw habit three monttw ..,~ ...
and feels greet -in fact. be,..
~is nothing more beaU; ;
tilul than waking up alert and
free,• be said. ·1 gave up tbe
biggest problem in my life,.
With tbe smoking demon cell• 1
quered, Iglesias feels his life ii in
a perfect place where he can -
take pleasure in •a good wine at ,
nine at night ... and a beautiful
penon by my side.•
T~s·liIRTS, FRISBEES AND
USED-OIL .RECYCLING
CONTAINERS
Saturday, October 11th
Balboa
Beach to Bay
5KRun
Balboa Pier
Saturday, October 18th*
Used Oil
Collection Event
Newport Harbor High School
(Football Stadium Parking Lot)
9am to 2pm Sam to 12 noon
* RECYCLE YOUR USED
MOTOR OIL*
SATURDAY,· OCTOBER 18IB,
'
FOR FREE
For more information call the City of NeW1>9rt Beach
General Services Depqrtlilent -714/644-3055
llC:YCLI
UllD OIL
INSIDE:
Nightlife ................ Al
Reel Critics ............ A6
Literature .............. A7
the A10-0CTOBER 17, 1997
roof
tb8I
atm
th84 rest a
Thi ~exhibit at the TlmbuktU gallefy mriiblr'IM ~Md
~wble figures with skeMt.il ~ honoRitg 1t..-Mw> tiaii1
~on.. . ~In VIiiasenor, a sett-taught artist from Jalisco, Mexico who
now lives In Rosarfto Beach, exhibits • ,
his neM5t collection. *OMne
&or-."' begimN today. The dlsplay,
which coincides with the Latin holl-
day The Day ol the Dead, combines
papler-mache devotional symbols
with skull faces and other Skeletal
forms.
The Day of the Dead, the Mexican
version of All Saints Day, is celebrat-
ed in Latin countries on Nov. 1 and 2.
To remember their loved ones, fami-
lies traditionally visit the graves of
those who have passed for up to 48
hours.
•families go to the graveyard of
the deceased and party,• said Tim-
buktu owner Joan'ne Baker, who has
traveled extensivefy throughout the
world. "They hang out and temem-
ber the gOod things about those who have pas.sect on -It's a cele-
bration." ·
According to llterature, the holiday has been celebrated for cen-
turies and the American version, Halloween, ls actually a scarier,
wateted down version of the celebration.
Baker describes Villasenor's pieces as "whimsical, fun and color-
ful,• as In his 2-foot tall mariachi set and a bull fight scene with a
sk,elcton bull.
This 1$ ~ artist's third show at Timbuktu, but he's also shown at
the Bowers Museum and others.
The shy, 34-year-old former veterinarian who once lived in l ong
Beach now practices his art full time. An opening reception with
the artist is today at 7 p.m. The show runs through Nov. 15. For
'additional Information, call 650-7473.
............................. .,..-. ............................................................ .
The Big Six swings at Vir:gin
Although The Big Six are advertised as •London's ska-Influ-
enced swing sensations.• drummer Rkky Lee Brawn eschews the
label.
"We're not a swing band, we're a dance band," Brawn, 36,
said.
But Orange County dance music lovers will be able to make
• up their own minds '
when this British band,
wielding plenty of brass
and rhythm and clad in
outrageous yet natty
suits, plays at the Virgin
Megastore in Costa
Mesa on Saturday at 3
p.m. And if they like
what they see, they
may continue on to the
band's gig at the Galaxy
later ttiat evening.
One thing they can
be sure of is both performances will be something unusual, with
everything from a ska rendition of the doo wop classic "Blue
Moon• to a swing version of the '80s glam hit by Slade, "Ma.ma,
We're All Crazy Now."
The idea for such an eclectic repertoire came from Brawn. Fif-
teen years ago, he decided to start a band whose music wedded
the rhythms of swing with the groove of ska to produce a com-
pletely different kind of sound.
But ft took the former nuclear engineer another 12 years to
bring his idea to fruition. In 1994, he called a few friends, all of
whom he had played with during his 20 years on the London
music scene, and told them about it.
"To my delight, they all said yes," Brawn said.
A year later, The Ilg Six was born. Since then, the band has
produced two CDs ind cuttfvated an international fan base.
The Orange County events are part of a ~-long tour of
1he Southwest. which started Sept. 22 and en& Sunday. Other
venues Include the ~ and the Viper R~ as well as the
Hird ROck Hotel In LM Vegas. ·
~ MY9 21 ~ht glgs. • Brawn said. -We're over thlS
1 ~like a ;ash."
The Virgin ~show begins at 3 p.m. Call 645--9906.
.. ... ·Fall's colors . . . ....
here are
The suave singer who makes women
swoon in several languages comes to
both Spanish and
English, a 17-
member band and
enough passion to
fill a hotel full of
honeymoon suites.
the P_edorming ~~ter "You will be
pregnant a week
.,....mt1M" you see me,• ~
e promised in bis
deep Spanish accent. By Leslie Simmons
T he passionate persona of
international recording
artist Julio Iglesias is no
myth. The man loves music,
wine, women -and Costa
Mesa.
"It's a beautiful place," the
Spanish Casanova said dwing a
phone interview. "I love the palm
trees and the fruit it has ... what
do you call them in English? ...
dates."
That's why the smoothest cat
from Spain is making a four-
night stop on his 1997 world tour,·
beginning Thursday, at the
Orange County Performing Arts
Center in Costa Mesa.
The tour is in support of his
latest album "Tango," a spicy
mix of traditional Argentinian
tango music and Iglesias' inter-
national flair. '
"It's going to be a sexy con-
cert,• be said, describing his
show. "There is a lot of tango
dancing -15 minutes of tango
dancers.•
Along with the tango dancers,
the concert will include songs in
Iglesias' first
album of tango music
is a huge internation-
al success.
It hos gone plat-
inum in 11 countries including
quadruple platinum in Argenti-
na, where the music was born in
the bars and brothels of Buenos
Aires in the 1920s and 1930s.
"It was a very beautiful time,"
Iglesias said of the era. "People
lived well, dressed well. They
loved very much the tango
music.•
Costa Mesl's
:Mm J.nlclns
will have his
KUlpture on
disi*Y at Van
Nuys~
See story,
pageA7.
He got
the idea to do
a tango
album about
three years
ago when he
was being
considered
for the role
ofJU4D
Peron in
the film
•Evita."
"I
said 'Do you want to lose
your movie?'" he joked. "I'm a
honible actor!"
But, be said all he could
think of after that was "tango,
tango.• So, he got together with
Argentinian producer Roberto
Livi to record the album.
• SEE JULIO PAGE A9
These roles aren't their type
By Anastacia Freeberg
J irnmy Stewart -idealistic
senator, Christmas-viewing
staple, Western hero, all-
a round salt of the earth who
brings to mind apple-pie visions
of decency, goodness and aw-
shucks charm.
Or so it's been thought.
No, a scandal on him hasn't
been freshly dug up out of the
' muck. It's just that before he
became Jimmy Stewart, icon, he
was Jimmy Stewart. working
actor.
At the beginning of his ca.reer,
Stewart ap~ared in "After the
Thin Man. in a role that film
sage Arthur Taussig said will
Series highlights
films where
actors played
non-typical parts
"shock" those who know him
from "It's a Wondelful Ufe."
That film, and two others, are
part of a series starting tonight at
the Orange County Museum of
Art featuring actors cast against
type.
•nie reason I'm doing this ls
th.at what we bring to a film are
certain expectatloDI and knowl-
edge, and that tends to lower the
experience in some way,• said
Taussig, the museum's adjunct
curator of film. "This makes it
fun."
The series begins at 6:30 p.m.
today in the museum's Lyon
Auditorium with "I Wake Up
Screaming,• a 1942 film nolr.
"It's working under the great
duress of having the worst title of
any film ever made. No one in
their right mind would ever go
see a film like that. It's an
unknown film because of the
horrible title," Thussig said,
laughing. "No one wakes up
saeaming, by the way."
Besides the bad title, Thussig
said the movie also has the foun-
dational film noir elementa -
police who are sicker and more
corrupt than criminals, the
accused being innocent, dark
alleys, an ordinary person
sucked into a nightmare world,
etc. It also has legendary pin-up
Betty Grable in a serious role
that was a departure from her
well-known film musicals.
The other movie scheduled is
"The Dark Comer• (1946), fea-
turing a pre-"I Love Lucy"
Ludlle Ball as a lovesick secre-
tary whose detective boss/object
of her affections is being framed
for nefarious crimes.
"With this Lucy, there are no
jokes and no mugging," Taussig
said. "We learn more about
Lucille Ball with this film and
• SEE STAR PAGE Al
EYE-OPENER
New,iort gbV ezm&d CdM
tnto ~ ba tennis
QUOTE OF THE DAY
~) ""' ---...... """""'"" --·. -CDM TENNIS aJADI 11J>( NANG •
• CdM takes its shots at
Santa Margarita tonight.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilbt
NEWPORT BEACH -Despite
significant evidence to the con-
trary, the Sanla Margarila High
football players are indeed
human.
Corona del Mar High C<Hlch
Dick Freeman, who leads bis Sea
Kipgs against the unbeaten
Eagles Friday in the Sea Vlew
League opener at 7:30 p.m. at
Newport Harbor High, has reiter-
ated thi5 fact all week to his play-
en;,
•we'll lbaw -up and do the
best we can,• Freeman said. "We
can't worry about how good they
are. If they play a perfect game,
they'll beat us, because their big-
ger and faste;r. But there are
things we can do to try to impede
them from a pedect game.•
U Santa Margarita, the
defending CIF Southern Section
Division V champion. ranked No.
1 in Division V and No. 2 in
Orange County, hasn't played a
perfect game yet, at least it's
played a perfect half. Coach Jim
l-lartigan's juggernaut scored five
touchdowns on its first 11 offen-
sive plays en route to a 48-0 first.
hall lead over Servtte on Sept. 26.
The Eagles, led by blue-chip
quarterback Carson Palmer, All-
CIP returner John Minardi, and
senior middle linebacker Nick
Cappelletti, Ula IOD of former
Penn State _ lrophy win·•-. r
ner John fpelletti, hav•
outscored appanents, 217-64, and
outgalned ~ 2, 129 yards to
1,021.
They've won 16 straight
games, including six shutouts ·
and a 55-27 triumph in over CdM
in last fall's regular-season finale.
But Freeman has been on the
other s:ide of such hype, before,
and come out on top.
•When I played at Anaheim,
we played Mater Dei, which was
supposed to be the greatest high
school team that ever lived,·
Freeman sald. ·niey outweighed
us by 40 pounds a man, but we
beat them. Things happen.•
. Hoping to make things hap-
pen for the Sea Kings (2-3) will be
junior quarterback Dennis
Alshuler, who has thrown for 399
yards (40 of 94).
CdM threw 39 times last year
against Santa Margarita and
could approach that total. partic-
ularly since the Sea kings'
ground game has averaged juat
more than 58 yards per game
tht11 far and the Eagle defense
bas summdered just short of 17
yards on the ground per contest
Palm0J", a 6-foot-5, 220-pound
senior for whom many project an
NFL future, bas completed 25 of
38 for 551 yards and m touch-
downs in three games, having
missed time with a stress fractwe
in his foot ..
Palmer's favorite target is
Minardi, who bas caught 20 pass-
es for •38 yards and five 1Ds.
The Eagle&' ground game is
highlighted by Capistrano Valley
Christian transfer Bryant Wolfll-
berger (695 yard>, 9 TDs).
a COM ST<'R'fERS PAGE B2
Sallo
single play,• said Conti, whose squad ~
guilty of J 1 recei~ errors on the serve, •Ross, Carey too much for CdM
as N~rt Harbor captures Sea
View League duel, 15-7, 15-7, 15-9. kids did a good job ot finishing
Orange County, were tied with CdM ln the
third game, 8-8, but then they pulled away
with sh: straight points.
•0ur kids played a little scared,· CdM
Coach Steve Conti said. M And against a
team that big, we couldn't pass well You're
no,tgoing to do well (with tlie pasli) if you're \0 feet off the net. J, think we just played
tentative. We played better in the first baU
of each game than we did the second half
Sarah l'et!Y Ieit-.ihe Sea Klngw with 10
kills, while Jordana Havriluk added .qine
and setter Cone Myer bad 28 assists and
eight digs.
g~es, • 18\d Newport Harbqr girla vol-
leyball t'08Ch Dan Glenn. following bis
By Richard Dunn, Dail>' Pilot team's sweep over the visiting Sea K.ingl, :!..=~=-==~=~::... ____ ...:;.-·1,1 15-7, 15-7, 15-9, in a key Sea View League
match. NEWPORT BJlACH -When .tt """8
down to preventing the opponent's kW
attempts, Newport Horbor High hOd a
slight edge Thimday night. Along with a
, The Sailors (1-1, 4-0 in league), who
have won seven straight matches, defeated
the Sea Kings {6-4, 3-1) for the seventh
consecutive time, dating back to 1993.
of each game.• '
Also """"""' up on defense foe New-port Harbor Wen!I Candice Keyes a:od
Marissa Cothran, both of whom had seven
digs. Laura Wells (six digs) and Brepda
Waterman were solid in the back row for
the Tars, who haven't lost since the season
opener against Huntington Beach. height advantage. ·•
Combined, it made for good defent4
Whether it was digging {the constant) r
blocking (the ex<'Bptlon), the Sailors tlgbt-
~ed up on the receiving end and popped
most """'¥ spike back up that Corona de!
Outside hitter April Ross, a 6-foot sopbo-
mo.re, led Newport Harbor with 13 kills and
four assisted blocks, while junior setter
Jennifer Carey had nine digs and eight
'kills. Ross also had seven digs.
Stacked with Ross, C.arey (6-foot), and
6-2 middle blockers Krista Dill (six kills and
six assisted blocks) and Kathy Lavold
(eight kills), the Sailors pushed Cd.M away
each time the Sea Kings tried to come
back.
•1 don't think our kids would be feeling
as bad as they do now if they had fought
more and given more .of an effort on every
"We were digging a ton of balls
tonight,· Glenn said. •Tue kids played
really well and stepped it up. For our
seniors, Monica Bridle and Laura Wells, it
was their last time playing in this gym
against Corona. Mar fired downward. ·
•There were a lot of long rallies, but our
The Sailors, ranked No. 1 in CIF South-
ern Section Division I-AA and No. 3 in
• Safety and fumble return for TD
within 100-second span bails out
Mustangs, who were intercepted
three times deep in Aliso territory.
By Bany Faulkner, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The Costa Mesa
High defense gave up its first touchdown of
the year, but got it back-and then some -
to lift the Mustangs to a come-from-behind
18-1 Pacific Coast League-opening football
victory over vi.siting Aliso Niguel Thursday
at Newport Harbor High.
•it's the No. 1 defense in Orange County
... I expect it to score,· said Mesa Coach Jer-
ry Howell of bis bacon-savers, who pro-
duced a safety and a touchdown within a
100-second span in the fourth quarter to
erase a 7-3 deficit.
After the Mustangs {6-0 for the first time
in their 38-season history) were stopped
inches short on fourth-and-goal at the 3, a
~of Mesa defenders trapped Aliso quar-
terback Jared Hill in the end zone for a safe-
ty to bring the hosts within 1-5.
On the first snap of Alilo's next posses-llon. senior inslde linebacker Jeremy Siesd-
ma pounded Aliso Wlback Nathan Eggins,
who never got the bandoff cleanly, and
sophomore outside linebacker David Weir
ocoopod up the fumble and returned it 25
yards to paydlrt to give Mesa the lead for
good with 5:'4 left in the game. •stec1sma clocked the guy and the ball
~ded right at my feet.• Weir Mid.
"The def...... hu oort of been canying
the team and l g\Mlll we came to the rescue
tonight" Mid -defemlve ond Richard
Price, who had one of sev-
eral versions of Jhe safety.
•1 think (linebacker
Chris) Shanley stood (Hill)
up, then Rudy (senior
tackle Matthew Rudesill)
knocked the snot out of
him.·
Rudesill credited Shan-
ley and Nam Kim for the safety, while Sieds-
ma also mentioned Kim, a senior defensive
end, among a host of swarming Mesa
defenders.
Steve Herzog added an 4-yard insurance
touchdown with 2:49 left, set up by Vince
Hamade's 76-yard scamper, to doom the
valiant upset attempt by the defending CIF
Southern Section Division vm champs .
•That's a great football team that gave its
all,• Herzog said. •Actually, I'm a little dis-
appointed (or them. because I thought they
outplayed us and deserved to win. 'this was
a game we needed to get rid of some of our
egos.•
Mesa's offense could have put the game
away a lot sooner, but Aliso (1-5) intetcepted
three passes inside it's own 13-yard line,
including one on fourth-and-six from the 12
late in the third quarter, to protect it's pre-
carious lead.
The Wolverines answered Matt Peca's
26-yald field goal on Mela's first possession
with a 59-yard. scoring screen poss from Hill
to Jason Moore.
"We've been counting on our defense a
lot,• Herzog sald. ·we were intercepted
twice inside our 10 and we can't do that. The
offense has to score when we get in the red
zone.•
Howell, wb-~ is ranked No. 3 in
Division VIII and came in having allowed
just three points to lead the county, . .
•1t was a good match for us.•
C:O.C. Meu 1~ Aliso Niguel 7 .... __ . -ll
Esunda vs. LAguna Hills,
at Mbsion Viejo
Laguna Beach at University
Costa Mesa's Ronnie
Uevanos (11) scrambles
for yardage on a keeper
In second ball as Aliso
Niguel detender closes
lD on him. Mesa rallied
for 15 fourth-quarter
points to pull out its
sixth straight victory.
DON LEACH I OAl.Y P\.OT
eschewed a potential
28-yard field goal try
before the fourth-down
interception with 3:31 left
in the third.
Howell elected to go for
the touchdown again on
fourth-and-goal at the 3 on
the ensuing possession.
·That was a have-we-got-it test,· Howell
said of the second fourth-down try, which
the defense quickly turned into two points.
Howell said the Mustangs may have tak·
en Aliso lightly, but several players dis-
agreed.
•1t was a tough game and I thought
{Aliso) would play this way,· Howell said. ·1
hope our kids learned from this. I told them
Aliso would come out strong, but I don't
think they believed it until after the first half.
l told them at halftime that Aliso believed
they could kick our butts.·
Siedsma said Aliso was doing just that.
•That's the hardest-hitting team we've
played,• Siedsma explained. •we knew we
had to step it up in the second half. We were
real disappointed they scored on us.~
Hamade's final burst gave him 176 yards
on 22 ca.rries, while Herzog dllpped in 91 on
21 attempts as the Mustangs amused 18
first downs to Alilo'I three.
Rovin Sou, the county leader with seven
interceptions coming in. snatched b1I eighth
ot the year, and Chris McBride recovered a
fumble, two pla}" after Jerry Oeveland
·made a touchdown-saving tackle following
an Aliso interception. ·
Mesa's defense limited the Wolverines to
just 4:42 time ot poos...ion and IS ollensfve
pla)" after baHtlma.
a GAME STATISTICS PAGE 112
Survival·.-
is Eagles'
first goal
•Heavily favored Laguna
Hills' Mike Jones is 188
yards from breaking
Orange County career
rushing record tonight.
By Bany Faulkner, Daily Piiot
MISSION VIE.JO -There are
some things coaches don't want
their players doing during the
high school football season
Bunge jumping, skateboarding.
skiing ... playing Laguna Hills.
But Estancia High Coach John
Llebengood, like the rest of the
Pacific Coast League, has no
choice but to face the powerfu1
Hawks, with the Eagles' turn
coming Friday at 7 p.m. in the
PCL opener at Mission Viejo
High.
·1 talked to (Hawks Coach
Steve) Bresnahan and told him be
was only allowed to run three
plays,• quipped Llebengood.
who has dropped seven straight
decisions to Laguna Hills, ranked
sixth in CIF Southern Section
Division VIU and eighth in
Orange County.
Llebengood said he . will
emphasize playing hard and
improving, but said survival is
mole on bis mind than an upset.
We'll prepare, work on tech·
nique, and tell the kids to have
fun. But we'll also tell them the
odds aren't in their favor.•
Laguna Hills bas outscored
Estancia, 243-67, during its seven
straight victories, which began
with its entry into the PCL in
1990.
Llebengood's aim is keeping
the Laguna Hills offense, and
record-setting running back
Mike Jones. off the field as much
as possible.
Jones, a 6-foot-l, 200-poundet,
comes into the game with tn•
yards on 122 carries this fall. His
career total is 5,280 yards, leav-
ing him just 118 shy of breaking
the Orange County career record
of 5,397, set by Valencia~ Ray
Pallares (1983-85).
Jones, who bas 484 ruitµng
yardi in two previous games
against Estancia, has scored t 1
toticbdowns this -induct-ing runs ol 92, 41 and 30 yards.
CDM EKES OUT WJ OVER THE SAILORS
The Hawks, coming olf ~-
12 loss to a solid Dana HIUI
squad. are not a one-dtmea rtf 1141
team, however, u junior quoi1er.
beck: 1bm Banning bu tbliown
for SIS yard> and tight 1l>J ID
four-l!aW>cla (2-2-1)' bu • ..-
-of ill own in -'-Daw-wbo-to"!tld to
t11i1 ecDool catW'1n t' I IWd " •It comes down to gem•, IU·76,
in Sea View League tennis match.
ly-Dunn. 111111 '*"
---ea--Daw'I liaon'dlmD .,... ... 111 .............
-t1g11tni.,11a-111111l =E:=--a· ·-..
~;Alter falling
teind 2-0 to the
Million Viejo Patadores, the ~ge Coast United Slammen l>oft' "13-under team rallied b.ilck
wtth•four goals to clinch the win in qOfd J)iviiion play. ·~. Rawllm sank a direct kick
tdp~ the Slammers on the board ~::'t!ie first half concluded From
that .point, the Slammers dominat-ed ..
. 'Tiie defensive rotation of goalie wm: Johnson. Jordan FeldmU,
John Rogen, Joseph Salinu and
J~! "Bendetti stifled the Pata-
~
... ~eanwhile, Blake Dllllon. ~ IOjestan, Brain Bauer and
~~')fcGowan kept the offensive
@.sbre on high. Adam Uhl
soured on a comer kick from Juon
~y to tie the score. Uhl also
pijf tile Salmmers on top with a
I ' deep kick into the upper
f _of the net, and McGowan
eel the insurance goal
Alex Northrldge, Jullan Cerut-
U ~ Tun run also contributed in
the win.
Tfle Slammers fell 2-0 to the
Upland Celtic. Despite the loss, the
Slammers received an invitation
by the French Soccer Network to
the_'Pournoi Toumoi International
de "P1ltbol to represent the UD..ited
States in April 1998.
~.·t· . GIRLS 1o-uNDER
•-Wist Coast Premier 2 5'*"""-" 1 •:$Unwners 1, Upland C.lttc 1
·•A three-keeper rotation that
t°"'udes Andrea Zamucen, Emily
B¥difield and All.lson Gibbs were
odtsta.nd.ing behind a defense led
by..:A,lyssa Duhe, Vaneua Fallon,
Amy Kltppert and Kelly Morgan.
"11 \ I H ~
'ts.iuNDER
• ~Slnnws 3,
J~Destlny1
:·'With two starters injured and
~ .. of the lineup, the Slammers
s~ off their depth and team-
w&rk abilities with a sound win. ?J.eean Moss, MeredJth MWer ~ Lauren Sheehan took care of
t@. 'scoring, with Michele Nellon,
LI& • Manchester and Molly
O~ara leading the attacks.
UA.,cllay Yourman. Alison Brawn. er 4.Dd Natalla Dorfman held the ~jmsive line.
·~ · GIRLS 1J.UNDER
·~ 7, SaddlebeckAnenat l •Mimmen 1, Torrwtce Unlt.d 0
1. "I ''· I I
• tlMt .. 1NJ.w 1
Wet DunJ..p'1 tl)ree-goal perfor-
mance lifted the Heat tQ ~ctorr
with addttlonal goals coming from
Bmy Mace, Jimmy Paa~ey and
Autin Sdawaner. The defense WOJ
~headed by Alu A--. Ian
Fowler, Matt ICretlcbmar, Jame1
MUler and goalie c_... OerlcliD. . °"""..., 1, Ot•• OUlh 1 'lhe tough defensive outing end·
ed in a tie as Nico Hencb1cks scored
for Quicksilver via passes ftom
Noah Lair and Leon Gluer only to
be answered by Orange Crush'$
own score by Jobany Mbea. Absen
was aullted by PbWp Houten.
Blake Fon WU strong defen.siv~y
for Qu1c:ladlver, as Orange Crush
received standout play from ICeylW''
Etter and nanont mn.
• Pollolt Ivy 4. ... ~ 0
Jed P1ons and Andrew Nab.In
struck quickly with a goal ~ch a.pd·
Kyle Reust added tWo ~re to
secure the win. Solid mld&ld play
was turned in by ICevtn Gowdy,
Wl1Uam Tenn)'IOll and Nick Nor-
•anclln for Poison Ivy. Jan Arm-
strong, Nk:k Pruter and Kevin
Eft!dla sparkled in the Ivy goal. ..
GIRLS DIVISION S
• llue .,._.. 2. Roxy Girts O
1be Blue Bruisers remain unde-f~ as they blasted 28 shots on
goal. Roxy Girls' keepers were kept
busy and turned in fine perfyo-
mances. They were Kelly Parker
and ArtelJf: Jlockwell. But Kalle
Stallcllafrer found the net on a
penalty kick ~ Amy Staudinger
knocked in the other score. Pucal
Mesa would prevent Estancia
from getting anything going and
went on to extend its lead to 8-0 at
the half.
•The big thing was that my
kids came ready to play," Mesa's
Coach Scott 'Ilsylor said. •we had
a bard week of practice and had
some tough games and turned a
comer in coming out intense
today and playing as a team."
Before the half was over, the
Eagles' leading scorer, Brad Way-
man, drew his third ejection,
which would keep him out of the
water the rest of the game. Oear-
..... wr,::~ ............ ,, __ .
._ID lbbellClll cashed 1n for the
game'• onlygoels to lead the &asp.
berriel to vidory. Emilia Foada.
Hayley Ayres and Phoebe Cox
were aggressive on offense, as .Dal-
ley WleM and Anne Made
Alldalerll were also tough. Goal-
keepers Cbe11ea Mc.OM and Bryt..
nee Wrtglat held up for the team's
second-.straight shutout. Vaneua
Gordola, Ulja A.ddemm and Mada
Menninger ad4e<l rock solid defense.
• Smrplol'W J. Pink hllthen 0
Kelly JCaban scored her first goal
of the season and Jam.le Heenan
and Amley Gleuon added insur-
ance for the Scorpions. Morgan
Schalzletn, Sara Roberti, Darleen
Hk:k:m.m. Slum.non Hkkey, Cluts-
sy Scbwuta, Brittany Sturgess,
Laaren-Lelgh ~ and Stepbanle
Cantm played well.
• l'he...,. z. fone 1
&I.Uy Webb sparked the Wave's
comeback with two goals made
possible by assists provided by
Raebel FcMter and Lyndll Folter.
lbe stringent defense of Aabley
Cottnll. AD.nabelle StoJ'da. Marie
ICapl9Jke and Emily lmley stopped
the Poree after one goal. Nadine
Dou displayed exemplary bustle.
Strong for the Poree were Sballnon
Fonytbe and&.ei.ey Dmm.
• M8glc J. ... a.nmdM 0
lbe Magic cast a defensive spell
over the Barracudas with strong
showings by SUdna Tw1n. Muty
Cmapos. Melanie Hamen and
Mellua Gomale:&. Aleudrla Mer·
zotan put the Magic on tb.e board,
and Brlttuay CJa4 took combined
assists from Melilla Chin,~
Pratty, Megan McKay and Jesdca
Tegman for the other scores .
• Royal Nlgt1111w 1, Stlngen 1
A sco1'!}ess tie at the half moved
to a 1-1 deadlock as the Night-
mares' Xrtltlne Miller knocked in a
goal in the fowth quarter. Solid
passing efforts were turned in by
Krllt1n MWer, Kelly Morrllon,
ROMlba Matlaua and Cude Caban-
Ulu. Defensive standouts included
Juatc. Hayes. Eally Tong,
"ffeatlaer stiewmoa. Sleau PallHr
ly upset, Wayman went on aver-
bal rampage at the referee, but to
no avail as Estancia would be
forced to rally without him.
Estancia's senior John Senften
tallied three goals, but the Eagles
(11·6, 1-1) would never get closer
than seven goals as Costa Mesa
clearly outmanned the thin red
and gold roSter.
Ml'd say so,• Estancia's Coach
John Caipe:nter said of the idea
that his cross-town rivals were
simply outplayed by a stronger
team. ·we played a good first
quarter and a pretty good third
The Slammers strengthened
~.hold on first place with a pair
of •weekend victories. Nlkld John-
son ripped in three goals in the
COJ!vipcing win over Saddleback,
as Lauren Shepherd.son, Eu.ha
Moz,gan, Trtda Orlh and Allvta ~a each added one. Lauren
Btdtfleld dominated the midfield
and pitched in with four assists. GIRl.5 11-UNDER
1key Palfreyman moved in • llremkan J, llru 0 •
frQP.i )ler fullback position to head • lrlMM'S 2. North Huntington :
i.r:r Mazura's comer kick for the 8eedl 1 :
Sailors, Marina tie, 0-0 ill key matchup
g~-winner over Torrance. Goal-Stephanle Trtne.n began the : C 0 S T A k~ Artanna Crtsdone record-Breakers' rally against Brea only to : MESA -New-
ed-her fifth shutout of the season. be continued. by the scoring of : port Harbor
111 ' :
I I• ,1 I·, I 1
".·'. Tayler Giacomaro and Jenny : High's field
• ~ II z. OrMge Tomlldoes 1 Spukt. Kiley Hall pitched in with : hockey team drew first blood but
• · II 2. West c:o..t Exit• o an usist as Alhley Mcintosh, : needed defensive reinforcements
Rush n picked up a p&r of Brooke Burgner and Jenny 'llaylor : to hold visiting Marina to a 1-1 tie n~'w wins thanks to a stellar led the defense. ! in Sunset League action Thurs-
d~nse anchored by keeper JD. In a nailbiter against NHB, : day.
1-.. Hartfiel Rallying_ around keeper Randee GalllbW turned in ! Just 52 seconds lnto the game,
E were Delanle ~ her finest performance of the sea-: Harbor's Kyle McNicholl, who
Gordan and Amada son with the help of defenders : missed the previous two games
Scoring for Rush were Carty Chamberlaba. Amanda Pal· : with an m;wy, took a delledlon
habel Montoya (2), Haley Miiier loa., Glacom.uo, B~r ~d 'Illy-: off Marinas goalie and shot it in
and Gordon. Victoria Swtgut lor. Spara and Aly.on Jenl)lngs : tor a score to give the Sanon an
added an assist, 4nd midtlelden scored. : early lead
.. ;.: -a.. .. -a.. foo : But Marina would go on the ::::HJ_. • ...tOol ~II: Tonight's IUrtars : offensive, taking 21 comer lbots,
~~ .. ---~~:---~-------.....;.-----~ : and force the Sailan to play back-! to-the-wall defense the relt of tbe
: game. ! With top Unit Heatbef Metc41f
: out for the MUCO With a broken
: tibia and Junior Kantlil Mander-
: son not quite et 100% with, a
: sprained ..... °'*1 OrtlPt.
: Kim CbdilliDle aDd SMnnon ! f.avelli ~ up ID dOw just
: one Wl:tDg goal
: Newpoct a. s-1-a m 1Mgue
: wtth MadM .......... s.;1-4 lllilik ! and S.nd!'.P lit 14-\. Tl come
: down to die \ifft,. WOiie Mid.
r"tll~~~~~~~--~~~~ ...... ----..:...~~----...;;.,....;...:..:.1•
while senior goalkeeper Jon
Phanis, who was coming off an
MVP week.end at the So Cal Invi-
tiational tournament, tallied 15
saves.
S..Vlewa.....-
NEM'OllT •• 5MIA MMGAlnA.
Newport Harb6r 3 1 3 1 1 -9
Sant.a MNgerita 3 1 4 0 0 • 8 ffw'POrt Harbor $COl'lng -CC>f):Well 4, a.deer 2. A!vl(ado 1, Leeper 1, Bird-•
song 1. Saves: Pharris 1 S.
. ":BO~TING
14-mlle ... bc:e
(f'NI conec.'tloft)
OIKA-1. 3rd Movement. Jerry
Grant. CY{.; 2. Triple Tap, Alen
Eguse, SBYR{.; 3. frlantula, Rod
Goodman. SY{.; 4. Seasmok~. Bob
Anderson, ABY{.; 5. lml Loa, Vic
Stem. SlBYC.
HICllt SCMOOl.
OIOSS aunwv '9dfkc:o.t = UlilMlllny 19, eon. MllA •
1. Brix (U), 15:56; 2. Hencodt (CJ.1),
1s:11: 3. ,_.i M. 16:32: 4, ~unnefts
(U), 16:57; 5. Dahl (U), 16:51;
6. Mlrtlnez (U), 16:59; 7. ban (CM),
17:02; 8. Martinez (CM), 17:40; 9. Ojeda
(CM). 17:54; 10. Fan (U), 17:59. .....
c.yA MllA .. u.u..n )1
1. Howlri:t (U~t; l . ~ .. ,
(CM), 11:47; J. z (CM), 19:1l: ..
Canon (CM), 1~ 5. *' 0. w.tir (CM), 1t:Rr t.,..,. M 1~; 7. llQ
(U), ._a Hiii M, 20:15; t.. ltlorntNc:k M. 20:J9; 10.~M.
...................
vs.Stlr'I..,.
lbe Purple~ Eaten turned
in an ~ cWemive game
as Johll Md Bea 9wta and Dane
Benau made diving savet, while
John JllCOMoa and ,..._ Hovi.
chipped in. JU. D'Qa provkled a
goal, while Steft "MO'•, Mu
Kwock and Kyle Miner led the
offensive attq. ' ..
• RJpdde VL 1'N8I ......
Brtu Wo119t ~ Cruaer,
MldlMJ Bider, Drew Hardi, Greg
Sorge, lbOIDM 1homa and 1lm
Cramer paced the offense for Rip-
tide, while Ryan a.rlll manned the
net behind the impressive defense
of Chulle R•lllMf, Dan Darnell
and Riehle Brown.
• StMlth ~ VL ......
Goalies Adam Knott and nmo-
thy Regan made several saves,
while Ian Mc:Ewan and Brya Say-
der bung tough defensively. Jimmy
Bartling added a goal. and Cbuley
Odetlry and Jake Curoll con-
trolled the midfield.
• LaMn vs. Fak:ialW
MMlsoD Monell~-Brad Mm-
.... took as.mts bom Robert Guy,
1bomu Cowa. Dally Campbell
and WW Kelly. Jordan Stanton
made a key block. and great defense
was turned in by DaYtd Fabian,
Bryan Luna and Edgar Olvera. -GIRLS DIVISION I
• PWr lhuncW vs. Poitoll Ivy
Thunder put on a teamwork clin-
ic behind the play of Slwulon
Rohan, Sbelbi Stauel and Amber
Peten. Defensively, the squad was
led by Samantha Baltazar, ICeely
Bell and Jordan Moy.
GIRLS DM5ION 1
• Pink IJghbling VL Dolpi*ll
GUllan Hogan. Brta.n.n.a
Schwartz and LesUe Drewry scored
for the Ughtning with assists from
Jane Berry, CaJWn Montaon,
Patrtda Moddelmug and Scwartz.
Defensive standouts were ICatte
Escher, KrbUn Jacobs and Deny.
quarter, but that's not nearly
enough.•
Goalkeeper Bryan DeWilde
had 13 saves for Estancia, and
Mesa's Alex Soria and Todd Hyl-
ton each scored three goals.
,Mffk eo.t ......
CosTA MBA 16, EIWlaA 8
Costa Mesa 3 5 5 3 -16
Estancia 0 0 4 2 • 6
c.o.ta MeM ·Taylor 5, Hylton 3,
Soria 3, Montg<>f'Mry 2. Oeaver 1,
O'Brien 1, Spunagle 1.
Saves: Samanlego 2.
EstMdll -Senften 3, Wells 1, Hoss 1,
Thorpe 1.
Saves: OeWllde 13.
--..-.......--.
tji);
Sell your extra
household
Items In
CLA88lFIED
can 642-5678
Claaalned la .....
CONVENIBNT
whet.her you•,. buy·
Ing. Hlllng, or Just
looklng, ctaaalll•d has
whatyou~I
CLAaalFlaD ...:1..seTa
HEALTH &
FITNESS 3000
ARB YOU
FRIENDLY,
RESPONSIBLE
& CARING?
We pt'OYlde
Ttamponadcm Services
to our elderlt and
dlAhled ClllllllllimliJ.
+ J2t + tax for 36 mos. Closed
Tot. oipmnts. Sl4,'.375.52 +tax.
* ***
POWER BOATS;.~
809ton Wt....,. ?If.
25 hp, runa ~~
$1700 f~m (no~ •723·10tl7'1f -,.41
SAit BOATS
Sall •oat or
Whaler wam.d .~ li
exchange f« ~ ,
Steel Roleic W.._.
Oyeter Perp&hMlh~
.e73-llS70-. •·om ·,
•Fri & S•t, 9•m• ~
2 barrel chalra, dining MOTORCYCLES :,... table w/6 chrs, 2 end •
Ibis, 3 piece rattan set SCOOTEIS S,18.f!
a n d m o r e m I 1 c 1 jiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiG
0407 S•••hor• Dr. •91 Kewa-w ************ Zephyr-550 900 ,.,.....
G•r•g• Cleanoutl
rattan tbl w/6 chrs,
swivel chra, bar
110011, Ll•m• Rug,
dog carrier. redwood
chaiH lounge. Morell
3401 W. B•lbo• 81 Sat 10•m/(ln •ll•rl
Huge Community
Asaoclaitlon Safe
•sat Oct. 18 at Sam•
In The Bluffs off Vl•ta Del Oro & Hidalgo
Meny M iscellaneous
Items. Sat 10/18
9-Spm. 821 Bellis St. l!est Bluff
Moving $•1• Furnl·
ture, Household Items.
some offl<:e equip and
supplies Sat Sam
430 Santa Ana Ave.
(Newport Heights)
new. 6·1pd. Perl eond.
S 2 5 00/f Ir m/f alf"'ll•
759-7135 .,., 9Pf'1f:-~
'93 Suzuki I~
1400cc, Cobra ~
cull wndshld, 1-....
11 K ml, Mint C(9ndl
$4500. 714-645-0480 • .,.
AUTOMOBll.BSJ.·
Good jobs
reliable servlc" .....
Interesting thing. ~
to buy
It's all there
..
IO I
***
Both .Wnerab&a. NOltb _..,
NORl"B
6At OAQ4'tl
OQIOI• .. ,
waT •. ,.,,a
0 1081 ovoid
•QJ811
BAST
•Q1071 Ot4
OllJ7
•10872
80Ul'B
61tl
OK71 ,
OAttlll •AJ[
~~~
JO · PMa
10 p-
60 p-.. ~..... p-
Openin1 lead: Queen of•
There are two wa,ys to guarantee
12 tricb at six diamond•. What are \her? Which la better?
The auction wu aimple enough.
Once Nonh railed diamondt. South • launched into Blackwood and, after ~ninJ that the kinJ of trumps
' waa mjsaiog, cootractinJ for a
irand elam wu out c4 the quest.ion.
WM& led the .-a ti chaM. a. Would,_._....,.... ... ...
a.cl ................. ,
The oae thilis J'C!U: ..-_...
to do 119 1ria thl °"""'DI ..... aDcl •--,-.. -w"'"1'""'ii"""o""'i ... T,..,.AR..,,--
c..b the Ml o(tle ...... That... Only 211C mllH, R ..
lh9Ck, '»leek lealhet
CO cNnget. otuwne
wheal•, low ""· ... CM. (72821"> lft,na
ee two triclla ii trwDPI are cliMrit>-A/C, aharp uted .. in the .a.t.~.;... IHMf IMd (TBB87807) '8S XJe .....,._ Titanl1.1m, oatrMlal
a low diamond at \rick --.... • • ., UNDITION lffthet, •UNOOI
plyeot9ranycardWa1&111d ae lt 4114, Ilk• new, (3LYVl33) •~!...~ 9123
------Eut ahow1 out, cub die Me, IW'-Iota of •>Ctra'a llAUR .. LOTUe
render a trump tridt ud daim. Or ('ltA88227) COSTA M•SA '88 LOTUS
elM enter dwnm11rith ~ace or (7t4)M2·7700 ••PftlT 14•
apadea and lead the ei8ht or clia· BUCH LIHCOl,N Black. Black leather,
moods. trl'Aat coven. wt. with the M•RCURY JEEP &l lO co. tinted wtndow•,
ace and dri<re out t.he Jdns. tr !a.t HUllTJllOTI* •IACH 19K rmlee
follow1 low, do the aame· and JOO (I00)7t2-9238
1 o •-le a.... d W (~~h tL':it\8
wUI loH onl• one trump on any ,....,,,.,,8""'7~M""'""u""'i~f""'AN_,...,.O,..G=T"'" 1 -~ t -.... .:u • ..1 IC ' .1-'t. 11...u_ 4114, aut6, pw, pa, COSTA M•9A wnllion. you CIUIJ _...\Ill, "7 Dk oreen. tan leather am-Im, rune good. (714)042·77o0
lt.0 "--t • _ _. ........ t_tol-.a c~:::::::~:~ia, S700obo 831·0757 --------"' .. JOU canno .. anwu • .... '88 Wagoneer Ltd •••"DA 9125 •'--otdi .. _-.._ d low mUea, wa"anty """" w"' queen amonaa ,._ unun7 (3UTR923 tu~1995 4WD. Loaded, new aft.er croasini t.o the ace ofapadee at BAUllR LOTUS urn . wen malnt, aun-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiii
the aecood tri.ck. That loaea two C09TA llllSA roof. $7995, 850-9t42. '94 M~Y
trick• If Wen atarted with all the IT14)M2•7700 Fun P<>Wl!f'
trum1>9. Which Une la better? The "',. .. , 0 (101587/602643) second, becauN that will produce•---------1 .. ftnDR VER 112,095
........ _ .. -'-ouJd v--• ha ' GEO " 9080 9113 Toyot• of an ovell"lA"J4i&.,.. c.am• ve a lln-Huntington •••oh
1Jetoo king ot trump-. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 7t 4/847.asee
LAND ROVl!R
Learn to be a better brld1e '84 PftlZM DISCOWRY e_laJ'erl Sabecrlbe now to tlae Auto, P/S, AIC Teal, tan leather. Go.1'9111 a.LI-LetW --m--#101339/027555 CD chang•r, .,.&~ "'I ..... ._.. . '9, 70S duaJ moonroof, (800) 788-ltl& lor hdormatlon. Toyota of loaded, low milea
Or write tot Gonn Br141p Let· Huntington •••ch (3KCK118) s22,~95 ter, P.O. Boll '410, Chbao, Ill (714) 847..a555 BAUER LOTUS
MERCEDES 9130
•a3 3eo saL
Great Condition. 1401C mllH, $7500 obo
•723·98C>e•
• 84 C•rolla Xlnt
ln1lde, outlld• &
under hOOd. Auto, AO,
sm·lm:l2700 723-4228
•as Coroll• 4-door
sedan, auto, air, PS,
•ater eo, rune xlntl
11900/flrm. 893-4570.
'80 Cello• ST Red,
5 ap, am/1m, A/C,
original owner, 11lnt
corid. S5000 782·8826
Of 640-8470
'844RUNNl!R
Loaded to th• max,
only 38k mllH,
PfJCed 10 Htl
(R0055872)
.. CH LINCOLN
MERCURY
tfUNTINGTON HACH
(800)712°8238
•90 Corolla DX
•DR, loW mllH,
Toyota'• moat
dependable earl
(101233/38US75)
110, .. s
Toyota oY
Hun•ln9ton Be•ch
7141847-8555
80880. COSTA Ml!SA
(714)842·7700 -------TRUCKS 9085 ______ 1 MERCURY 9135 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
9220
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LEXUS 9115 '81 RAM 80 P/U 9040 CHEVROLET 9045 CHEVltOLET 9045 ,00 CIVIC ,97 COUGAR XA7 Shell, Alloya, Ac
l~t!ii!iiii!iiiiii!iii~iiiiiiiii~ l~~iiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiii Ac, CHHtte, Only 121e milea, (P013399/200700) 7 8 ff I• e-t w • o,d •ea CORVETTI! '88 Monte Carlo 234, low miles '95 LS 400 ahowroom new, $7495 Convertible with Removable Hard-Top/ blk/blk leather, aun-412ooe751570635 Whlle/lvory, lo.ded Toyota of
4CSK original mllH, Conv/Roadater Low roof, chrome WIS, tint, se,495 full option, certified (VH816224) Huntington •••ch
ale. A Real Beautyl MllH • 1 Owner alarm, ext. warranty, TOYOTA OF 8.9% avall. BEACH LINCOLN 714-84T..a855
,$3500. 909-927-3335 Factory Manuals lncld loaded, 28k ml, HUNTINGTON #008869 $41,977 Ml!RCURY --,9·5 NISSAN
!84 81.ARRITZ New <:>LOTS OF TLC<:? $17k obo 842-5812 BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH Super low miles,
tlrea & battery. Need• MINT CONO $20,000. (714)147-8555 '02 LS 400 (800)792°9238 5 apes, ~r clean ""0" ""27 3335 1---------Cashmere/Ivory, tranamlaalon work • •·• • CHDYSLER 9050 -.....,.,,...,,,....,,..,,,...,,,...,,,.,,,,.,~-(10130 388299) $750 548'·1940 '84 CAPRICE ~ '93 ACCORD full option, certified, $7995
CLASSIC Loaded w/ option~. ' 8·9"-avall. PLYMOUTH 9165 To~ot• of
'87 DeVlll• Speolal Auto, PS, AC '94 New Yorker only 38k miles •112506 '27•877 HunUnlton Beach Artie White ext. cream (PA1 832 Int. Rolla grill, digital 101250/110924 Loaded, below blu• 4 4) •84 GS 300 '88 Voyager 1 Owner, 714-47-8555
1 I f $2,495 book I $ 1 0, 0 0 0. BEACH LINCOLN low miles, idnt cond, e ectron ca, per ect Toyota Of 557·9891, 4·7pm. Ml!RCURY Cashmere/Ivory, ti ti I b It•---------cond. Hard to find. HUNTINGTON ...... CH full option, certified, new rea, m ng • • 4X4 9221 S3900 845•5590 Huntington Beach ' ,._, 6.9% avail. AM/FM cau, A/C,
'93 Cadlllac ETC ' 714-847..a555 ,_F_O_RD _____ 9_0_7_5 ___ <eoo_,_1_e2_·_93_2_a__ #062198 $25,877 7 paH. S5500 oboliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
North Star, V8, 85 Celebrity Wagon '97 Clvlo DX White, •722·0772• '84 Ford Bronco 4dr eoyl auto 2 1 '95 ES 300 XLT V-8, auto, power, loaded, blk/W/btk ood cond s1900 obo •'92 Explorer XLT auto, 4 oo m les Cashmere/Ivory air, rebuilt engine.
leather, aunroof, Bose g •780-S4fS6• 4x4 Loadedl 82K ml, $13,800 873-5542 or full option, certified, Can't seem to $3200/obo. 723·1504.
CID aound, chrome lthr new bral<H warr •97e-2441 • get to aU those 9035 wla.. GM ext. war· '94 SUBURBAN 112 200 63t-3ee9 8.9% apr avail.
r a n t y , 6 4 k m 1 , SILVERADO 1500 ' --------r•palr Jobs ACtJRA 9035 BOlCR 9010 BUICR VOLKSWlGEN 9235 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii s211e obo 842·5812 4x4 Loaded '93 Muatang Conv INFINITI 9095 '94 ES 300 around the house? '88 Legend Auto, full '84 Cl!NTUAY '88 Century Llmlted 7 8 , EL 0 0 RAD 0 10:..V miles ' Super low ml, loaded iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Black/Jade Ivory let the
power, A/C, sunroof, Lo Mite• \ e ~I. aJI power, cold 8 , .... AITZ ~-11 (RJ39360l) for aummer fun I full option, cc, tint, cu11om tire• 1540624/101568 A/C, xlnt cond, very u.n • """ce ent $8895 •94 045 1032268 $23,977 ClaHlfled
$6800 973-1913 $3,888 clean In & out alwaya Condition, a/c, S3500. •95 TAHOE L .T . (200440/149954) New Lexus trade Service
191 ACURA LS Toyota Of "9•raged, no' maoh. CALL: 909-927-3305 4x4, llke new cond., Toyota of wont laet '94 LS 400 DI
White/Ivory, Huntington •••ch P(Oblema. Great CLASSJPIED loaded Huntington Beach #259043 $24,977 Cashmere/Ivory, rectory
only 411C, mlnll 714-847·8S5S fahllly car. Mu-! aee. It's the resource you (SJ444991) 714/847·8555 only 21k, full o~lon, help you find
1008353 •1&,977 Classlfted la..... S38S,O 848-11884 can count on to sell a Bl!ACH LINCOLN '93 J30 *205375 tA E rellable help.
. LUUS CONV•NIBNT I: myriad of merchan· Ml!RCURY Overstocked with Full option, C/0, LEXUS 642-5978
MISSION Vll!JO whether you're buy. s L~ di•• Items, becauH HUNTINGTON BEACH stuff? new Lexua trade. MISSION v1eJO 1~ eee.e398 Ing, Nlllng, °' Ju•t our column• compel (800)792•9238 A call to #01748J $15,977 1..aoo.e88.S388 J FJND
Whethw you~~!~ Ing, claHllled haa ~our used '\'8 lcle cqaulallllfled buyera to Classified LBXUS The Communny • ""' YoU needl MISSION Markel Place. -or .... Ing. :usall'I'!~ • .,. ·, rough classified 842·5878 wlll help 1 ciuallled
-CCW8'a ... your ~I • -842•5878 942:§678 942•8878
.......... •lcERAMIC
TILES
ADl>mONS
R!MODEUNG
Quality Remodeling
-.iao Home Repairs
tlfteuonably Priced
•Local Co. 8#838J18
.Ctephenaon AHoc.
Cell 714-844-5485
BU$1NESS
SEtVICES 3488
Ci?Mom I Qrendmom
Offer quality llc'd
chlldcare. FT or after
achool. Fenced play
area. 1Vr +. Located
near KalHr Primary.
Dee'e D•yo•re
<:? MtMI02S <:>
--~~-----
John Donart Masonry
Brlek•SloneeBlock
.OOKKEEPING lg/Sm Jba•Repalra ok
Free Eat. & Advice
.. m••e We Save C'1C!••n•tG L#H7191 831·3832 Ydu Tlme/Ettort & Monty w..n.&11U't
Mlchelle 714-329-41921 5enVIcer 3548 ••.IRQ MAIONRY••
ORCO
PLUMBING
'95 PASSAT QLX ve. leather, moonrool
(3KEL075) $14,095
BAUl!R LOTUS
COSTAMl!SA
(714-842·7700
Classlned la ..... CONVl!Nll!NT
whether YoU'r• buy·
Ing, MIKng, or luat
looking, ctu1lfled has
what you Medi
CLASS9Pl•D . Ta
3910
SKYLIGHTS
I nstallatlon/Repalr.
Free Eat. Uc/Bond.
Are your akyllghts
ready for El N:•lO?
We guarantH no 1 .. 1111
114-901-4949
w~
COVERINGS 3932
The Stripper
Speclallzlng In
Wallpaper Removal
U588924 t 883-5037
We (lale 1hould hang
together. Strip, lnata1r,
adVlce to the crazy.
Ll73S978 I 931·2f11
iii~iiiiil~iiiiiiiiiliili BLOCK BRICK STONE ---------I M lypes.Qlty Wor•c1•-~...-~__,,~_,......--. COINETS 3490 A TOUCH off c&.Aea &1. L73009t s3t·7M3 -.-DA_N_D_A_W_S_O_N_ ... WINDOWS 3934
i iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Cleaning. Rel/Comm ihetw\enald• Cuatom Uc/Bonded. F,.e Eal.
AdUnced Woodsy1tem1 TerHa 282·7143
.Cuttom Cabinetry-eiOla HOUSECl.EAHINO
l(,Ochen • Bath• Door• Ucenaed-Sonded
PLUMBING Wattr Heattra • Dralnl NEW WINDOWS NOW!
R•mo'-'•1 • Repair t•Dav Prof'! lnatallatlon
Fauceta • Flxturea Free Est•Save energy
Lf554722 • 84M720 Reduce NolH•Sr Olac
lltgr#717•1729 L1'120d27 992·3391
. ..
\
T fl'.lbt!
'97X 6 SED
DEMO SALE ,
•
j24MONTHS!
$599+ Tax Per Mo. 24 Mo. Close End Lease. 'lbtal Drive Off $6500, Residual $31,942. Tutal
payments $13,77. . !Ok mlles er year, 204 exress mlleage. ·---------'· 1.., . 81008 ' 8$0317, 189614
'91
The new '97 Jaguar XK8 convertible transforms sun,
wind and open roads into pure seduction. The XK8
convertible conveys sheer joy of open-air driving like no .
other. Awesome power, traction, respo~iveness beyond
any ordinary imagination.
·lcJM• .
C.Ome See Us For The Fmest Pre-Owned Vehicles Available
Or Fmd Out How You Can Experience A New f~ ~UIS &prit
NBlVf '97Wl1JSFWl'V8 NBW! '97W1lJSF5PRrrV8
ESPRIT
ESPRI~.
~ blue, magnolia leather, Red, tan leather, CD, sport
CD, sport ahiiiust, glass top uhaust. Klass top, OZ racing
(F6SJJO) w6'..U (F6529'l)
582,796 583,896
'95 LOTUS ESPRIT S4s
Black, black 10.thu, CD, tinted windows,
19Kmi. (F63001)
549,995
' -.·
..
We specialize in loca!·cars with complett seniice records . All of our vehicles nave
been thoroughly inspected and reconditioned by our masttr seniice rte~.
Our finance .and lease programs are extremely competitive and although many of Our
cars /lave a signifo:4nt jacwry warranty remaiiling, we off er only cop quality extended
prottction plans . · . · ·
•
INVENTORY CLEARANCE
'67 JAGUAR 420 G ,
Blue, grey interior, Low, low miles. (IXT895)
'87 JAGUAR XJ6 ID
Silver, grey leather, chroDie 'wheels, phone, sunroof,
low miles. (2FNM614) • '
'9S VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT GLX
White, Wl leather, premium sound. V6, moonroof
(3KEL075) .
'97 MUSTANG GT .
Dark green, Wl leather, premium sound, chrome wMfl. low miles, warranty. (ltJTR,923)·
. '95JA:GUARXJ6
'IQpaz, .. tmea1 leather, sunroof. fully loaded (746324)
•
s7,995
ss,495
s14,995
519,995
S~7,995
. '95 JAGUAR ~S COUPE
Block; black leather, CD i:Nnger, chrome wheels, low , $29,995 · miles, 4.0L, (3NFP549)
~95 JAGUAR XJ6 . s31 995 n.ali.a. .oetmeol 1-bei, omiroo(, fiilly loeded (746321) '