HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-10-28 - Orange Coast Pilotr;-7 .. .
SeM"9 the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
Market plunge ~reates local shock waves
• Stockbrokers in Newport. Costa Mesa said the 554
point drop -the largest single-day dive ever recorded
by Dow -created a flurry of activity here.
to the 7.18% drop recorded Mon-
day.
And in historical terms, Mon-
day's decline pales in comparison
to the auh in October m 1929 that
led to the Great Depression. From
Oct. 28 to Nov. 6 the market plum-
meted 34.4 percentage points.
Mesa. stockbrokers hunied Mon-
day to keep up with phone calls
and faxes from frantic clients wor-
ried about their ftuAmdaJ Mmes.
•it's been a busy day,• said Bob
Curren, owner of Curren and Co.
in Newport Beach. ·But there
doesn't seem to be any situation of
panic. There.is obvious concern."
By Tim Grenda, Daily 1¥/ot
NEWPORT BEACH -Local
stockbrokers reported widespread
concern and a little panic among
their investors Monday in the wake
of the 14rgest, single-day point
drop ever ~ by the Dow
Jones industrial average.
The stock market, which
experts said was wounded by
drops in Asian financial markets
Rep.Co~
honored
for work in
demOcracy
• Local congressman will
be presented with Keeper
of the Flame award at
tonight's dinner.
By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot
U.S. Rep. Chris Cox tonight
will join the pr~gious ranks of
Ronald Reagan. Newt Gingrich
and other Republican heavy-
weights by receiving a national
award that recognizes efforts in
spreading democracy worldwide.
Cox, a
Republican--
congressman
whose district
includes New-
port Beach,
will be named
the 1997 Keep-
er of the Flame
during a black-
tie ceremony in
Washington,
O.C., officials Chrlltopher
said. The Cen-Cox
ter for Security
Policy hands out the award each
year.
In selecting Cox, the center -
a think tank that focuses on pro-
moting global s~ty issues -
praised his work to start an Eng-
lish-language edition of the Russ-
ian newspaper Pravda in 1984
and his current leadership in
national concerns about the
emergence of commwlist China
as a world power.
Cox was in New York on busi-
ness Monday and was unavail-
able for comment on receiving
the award. his staff said.
Pa.st Keepers of the Flame also
include Reagan's Secretary of
Defense Caspar Weinberger and
chess player Gary Kasparov.
earlier in the day, plummeted
554.26 points, forcing market offi-
cials to close trading for the day at
3:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
Monday's fall. while the largest
single-day decline in terms of total
points, was not even close to the
percentage hit the market record-
ed a little more than 10 years ago to
the day. On <Xt. 19, 1987 - a dark
financial day commemorated as
•Black Monday" -the Dow fell
22.6 percentage points, compared
~ for Monday, some market
insiders claimed renewed selling in
oveneas Asian markets sent shock
waves through the worldwide
econ<JOlY, including the Dow Jones
industrials.
Stock market trading was
expected to resume Tuesday morn-
ing. .
In Newport Beach and Costa
Curren. whose brokerage han-
dles the investments of more than
1,000 clients, said many of his
investors called Monday with
questions, mostly about how the
early closing of the market would
affect their stocks.
• SEE MARKET PAGE 4
Man tells elementary
students about the danger
of drugs in kickoff to
Red Ribbon Week actMties
COSTA MBSA -When he
was younger, Matthew Bergman
planned to be a professional bike
rider with his best friend, Rick.
They practiced every day and
were becoming known in their
hometown near Plymouth, Mass.
STORY IY I V HUSEIN MASHNI
• PHOTO BY DON LEACH •
But then they started hanging
around a wrong crowd. Although
Bergman was able to pull away
from the peer pressure, Rick was-
n't, and he eventually started
smoking cigarettes to be accepted
by his new friends.
As time wore on. Rick stopped
riding his bike altogether, and
then 1tarted drinking alcohol,
even taking illegal drugs.
•0ne Digbt after a party, Ridt
and ICllD8 friends started driving
bmne.. Bergman told 320 Killy-
brooke Elementary School ~
dents who were seated tn the play-
ground, watching him perform
't*yde tlicks Monday.
•SEE KICKOFF PAGE 4
How ~local
companies fared In
Monda~ stock
market aash: I
Council gi:ves
nod to move -on Bonita deal
• City officials take steps
after hearing pros and
cons of annexation plan
from residents.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The
city's annexation of Bonita Vil-
lage Monday night garnered
another in a long string of
approvals necessary to make it a
done deal.
Residents -most from the
adjacent Harbor View Homes -
packed the City Council cham-
bers for the meeting, just as they
have for every recent meeting on
the hot topic. Some spoke in
favor of annexing the chunk of
Irvine land at Ford Road and
MacArthur Boulevard, while oth-
ers told the council they're still
not satisfied with the plan.
The council gave its prelimi-
nary OK to the first steps toward
annexation Monday and will
consider final approval Nov 10.
The proposed annexation ini-
tially caused an uproar among
Harbor View Homes residents,
who feared an influx of students
into their children's elementary
school, Andersen. But a deal
struck two weeks ago by
landowner The Irvine Co., the
Newport-Mesa school district
and the city won support from
many residents.
The agreement would mean
an extra 22 acres of much-need-
ed parks, a potential school site
a.nd 260 fewer homes in the
development, which bas yet to be
built.
Taking in Bonita Canyon fig-
ures to be a break-even proposi-
tion, according to a city analysis.
It would produce about $1.1 mil-
lion in revenues from taxes and
fees. It would cost nearly the
same amount for public safety,
library and other services.
·1 think there has been a con-
cern that this would be a fiscal
loser,• City Manager Kevin Mur-
phy said. •But that is not the
case."
The pro-annexation contin-
gent included a PTA president,
• SEE BONITA PAGE 4 -N~dmay
~tanother
middle school
•IEE 9CHOOl PAGE 4
---------------1
I \ I) I \
I
• ti\ \,,\I ltl\ Westin valet nabs purse-snatcher
• The 41-year-old hotel
worker apprehended 19-
year-old suspect dudng
Sunday night shift .
. BY~ Goffard. Deily Not
I
QUESllON
topic of tis• wk
.
Waldorf School is a speci~I place
0 ur names are Beni,
Tyler and Kyle, and we
are fifth...graden: cur-
rently attending the Waldorf
School of Ononge County,
located at the former Eastbluff
School.
Just last week we were
informed that our school may
have to move at the end o( this
school year.
We love our school dearly
and have been at this school
since ldndergarten. Many of
U$ travel quite a distance to be
able to attend this great
school. Our friends are from a
large radius around the school.
and the majority live in the
Newport·Mesa area.
You cannot imagine how
many hours our parents,
teachers and we ourselves
along with the other students
have spent as volunteers to
.
enhance our dassroOms a.pd
campus.
U you or anyone would care
to come and. visit, we could
show you just what a labor ol
Jove and commitment tt bas
taken to build this school. We
feel that we have a very
unique and wonderful place
and that we have a great dee.I
to share with our community.
We do not want to lose this
place.
We desperately hope some·
one will inform the public ot
what presently exilts at the
fonqer East.bluff Elementary
School, before ow tease ls just
terminated. Please, please,
please come and ta.llt to us
befcire decisions are made.
BEN! BOHll
TYi.Eii Dl!Rlll!IM
XYLI! KASTNEll
_ ..
atlloe
Wol<lod ·smo..1 ...,..-..... ._.,.u -all Sdaoolls .
reopened.
' ' ' ' ' ------------------------------------------------------------------------~-----------------------------------------------------------------~
A man of true influence, at least in bloodhound circles
. '
By Jean Harris tiom to many organizations and has been a
judge at the American Bloodhound Oub N8ti.on-
al ~ailing llials three limes.
I n your search for the 103 most influential
people ("Leading the way, bet. 10), you over-
looked a very giving and dedicated man. I
hope you will consider hts name for next year's
Larry is currently the bloodhound team con·
sultant for the Orange County Sheriff's Depart·
ment as well as a tecbnlcal reserve bloodhound
specialist with the Irvine Police Department.
In 1986, he revised the bloodhound program
for the Sheriff's Department, and since then be
and two of his bloodhounds, Sable and Duchess,
When everybody else is sound asleep at
night, Lariy .. Sable, Duchess and his new
apprentice puppy, Trace, might be Out pursu-
ing a dangerous criminal or searching for an
elderly penon who has wandered away from
his home or care facility in search of a place
that exists only in memory. He remains on call 2~ houn a day with the Nat1on41 Center for
Missing and Bxploited Children, both as a
bloodhound handler and as a dog operations
adviser for any California searches.
list. Larry Harris is a true "top
dog" -handler, that is. In the
Jaw enforcement community,
Larry is kn own as "Mr. Blood-
hound".
MY VIEW
have spent thousands of hows
.. pursuing criminals and search-
ing for lost or missing persons or
abducted children.
It's easy to see why you overlooked his name.
In addition to training and working his own
lJloodhounds, Larry keeps busy coaching sev-
eral new law e nforcement hand.len in the
Southern California area and baa been called
upon by several agencies interested in starting
their own bloodhound program.
It takes a special kind of penon to own,
train, love and live with a bloodhound. .
He isn 't a mover and shaker, and you won't see
his pi cture or name in the society pages. His val-
ue to his fellow man is not measured tn wealth
or position, but in the very fact that for the last
11 years, he has devoted his time and money to
work and tratn bloodhounds and new handlers
for law enforcement agencies.
Since 1986, he has been an instructor at
numerous bloodhound seminars across the Unit-
ed States and Australia. He has given presenta-
To train this antmat as a man trailer requires
a lot of time and dedication. It also requires y9u
to"keep youne1f ln good physical condition for
tlmse longl:ra1H:--Sl0odhound bandlers aaos1 ..
perspective
Crack a window it
S ome time alter the Dally Pilot
started nmnlng Jooeph Bell's
columns, l decided that U 1 ever
stole my own pradoul time to read
another, I'd suffer ln lilence. .
Tempted by the CAJbon mono.Ide
mention in the tide, I read. another.
Once again, be toolt a potoattally
interesting and important, and ln this
case deadly, topic and ztiflecl us with
boredom.
Poaaibly other readen will write
saying, ·ee carelul. Let In soma
fresh air.• But, just in ceM, I'll repeat
my liller'salmoltfatal~.
My sister, also a oollllDDlst, -In
a cold, Eastern state. She doalmmt·
ed her own harrowing expedenco In
MY!.~ot
VOL 11, NO. Z46
ftWI H. ...... -
ADDRESS
CM addfM ii J)() W,
Bay St., Costa MeM.
(Alff. 92627.
CO!!l!ICDONS
" " iht ,.~. polky to pcw;ijllly cotrtct ..
enonof..........._.
..... Cllll !74-42».
a colUlllD lbat llbe wrote about 10
years-. ,
Dlflk:ult u It Is lo believe lbat llbe
and be hlllbond. a l9lired pn>l-
af literature, ad my ...... a writer
-two people"'~-·
IJtlDOll -ooultl -dowelop. -a period.,, _ _.,_
symptoml ol b1zd•che and nausea
-aat -·-palDtl out bow ,qulcldf ...--~tbe
brm "' -· "'"'9'' n.e dull b111eche blfcmm 1 tbrubbblg1 rag~
llDg--. Tbr: rmff° becam• --my -11114 herhusbend
llietll0-.-folc1ownand
WM unahl9 lo bolp Iba other. My Ill·
.. ""'-aat ..... -... air,
bot to the ..... -· Om lMI -., _.,.
eaahled.ber to•• rrhrtlae aum.·
ber ol bm oat ..... , ..... -· v.y-...--~ gaod. laag-•l'llplot 'i. ........ .... ..,,.YoD..-. •
,.... ... j1tlt ·-·. 'lblllll ..... bor wllo WAS-..ioer, Ill'-...,,-'"f' w sH -"Tbll -la-ktltll •••• ., ..... ·eaa-,.,.-111••· ----· .. .=:.1CZ:r:=:::: .... ~a.---.-"" .... ............. to ...... .lt, 1be-·
. ·~, •(' .. -: . ' ~' . .imatttror~
ments herein can be
r~ without wrtt· • tan l*Tnltllon of copy----~-0.8 _...,, = ......................... .
llOW JO llAQI us
a..-.;
The nm. Orenge Q)un.. ..
~Coast
Balboa 7~
eost.Meso 76149
Fhtlow ~r..;; ....... ' ............ 1.1
the country slog through rain and mud, work
odd hours, lose sleep and miss important family
holidays because a search is an emergency and
lives are at stake.
The Search and Rescue motto across the
countty is ·So That Others May Live,• and Larry
has often said •finding a missing child and
returning them to their family is the most won-
derful natural high in the world,• and I'm sure
the parents of these missing children would
agree. Larry believes •when you do something
for nothing, you get everything.• That pretty
well liWDS up his philosophy.
I know I'm sort of partial to my husband. l.ar·
ry, but I see bow much the people of our commu-
nity benefit from his expertise.
I hope you will consider his name for yow list
next year.
• -.urt HARRIS Is a rMldent of Newport Beach.
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LOCATION ................. saE ~ ••·•••·••••••··•·••·1·3S NlcdpOrt .. , , , ... , ........•. 1·3 I It.cities •...........•..•.... 1·3 s ~Jetty ................... 1·31 ~ •..•••••...•••. , .•.•. 1•)1 --y -low . 1:001.m. ...............• ' •.. 1.0 _...,,
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"Owr 50 Yun of Fi111 Qiudity"
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......... --Dlllr-nJfSOAY, OCTOIEll 28. ,,,., • '
High school students
can get tast.e of college
By Hlaeln Maslin~ Dallt Piiot 'Ibis yeer's fair will also
Include a video •wall<-through'
forvartoua collegeo.
Those out-of-town bargains
are just memories now·
There wfil be 136 collegeo
and univenitSes repMented at
this year. College Night whlch
wfil be held today between 7 and
9 p .m. in the Newport-Hamor
High School gymnasium in
Newport Beach.
1be annual event ii a chance
foe studen1S from all Newport-
Mesa Unified School District
high schools to either begin
shopping for a college or to get
applications fm the oollege of
their choice:
·nus year's theme is, 90Jlle-
thing for everyone." said Bar-
bara Yeager, a parent coordina-
tor for the fair. ·we have techni-
cal schools, Ivy-League colleges,
military academies . and art
schools. lllis is a chance to
broaden choices not to narrow
them down.•
•It'll be a ctwve for ~ts
and students to actually look at
the different -· • m.; laid. . School oftldall hope College
Nlgllt wfil draw otudents ot all
ages from all ol the high ochools
in the area. ,
•1t'1 a particularly good
saeenlng foe sophomores and
junio .. ,. said J...-Johnson, a
counselor for Newport-Harbor
High. •Many of the senion
already know where they want
to go to college. But this could be
the tint time for many of the
younger students to see what is
available to them.•
The Newport-Harbor High
School College and Career
i)eparment will also be open
Tuesday night to teach students
how to use its college resources
and scholarship applications.
I f, during the late 1920s aDd
early 19308, one tired of the
cuisine at Gus "nlmplis's Sea
Shell Cafe -six stools aDd a
counter-could splurge 50 cents
for a ticket on the Padfic: Electric
and 7 cents for a street car token
and arrive at Los Angeles City
Hall, which at 32 stories was the
highest building in Los Angeles.
In that sllghUy grubby com-
merdalllndustrial section of town
one would find some of the
greatest eating places of yore.
Olivera Street, little Tokyo and
Chinatown featured, as they do
today, ethnic food.
obituary
Since I can't reniember the
naID,eS of any of their restawants
1 will for the purpose of this epis-
tle focus on places that bore
names I can remember. First,
located on Ferguson's Alley in
Chinatown was Jerry's Joint. Jer-
ry, not Chinese, served the great-
est barbecued pork spare ribs I
have ever tasted. Alas, Jerry's is
no more -nor is Ferguson's
Alley.
Retired OCC professor Paul Cox dies Then there was Ta.ix, an
authentic Basque restawant such
as those that once dotted the San
Joaquin Valley, ·almost always
nestled close to a railroad station.
Retired Orange Coast College
professor of music, Paul R. Cox,
died of heart failure on Oct~2 in
Costa Mesa. He was 71. '
A member of CX:::C's faculty for
27 years, during which he was the
cbainnan of the music depart-
ment, Cox directed several of the
college's orchestras, dance bands
and ensembles.
Born in Los Angeles, Cox
served from 1944 to 1946 in the
U.S. Army as a paratrooper with
the 11th Airborne Division in
New Guinea, the Philippines and
Okinawa, and a member' of the
l t th Airborne Division Band in
Japan.
He retwned to Southern Cali-
fornia after his military service
and earned bachelors and mas·
ten degrees in music from the
University of Southern California.
He remained a loyal USC fan for
life. ~
His musical career led him to
several professional jobs and \
teachirig job at College of the
Sequoias in VlS8lia before joining
OCC's faculty in 1957, where he
WjlS marching band director for a
nQ.mber of years.
After his retirement in 1984,
Cox continued to compose and
arrange music.
•He just recently started a new
music business, 'Paul's Music,••
said his youngest child, Mary
Budnack, of Santa. Barbara.
Cox is survived by his wife of
49 years, Rosemary, and .six chil-
dren, Rosemarie Cox of Santa
Ana, Belinda Lafferty of Red-
mond, Wash., Dennis Cox of Syl-
vania, Australia, David Cox of
briefly
Painters pitch in for
bay dredging
Painteis w1ll set up their easels
along the Back Bay today, and·
each of. their brush strokes will
put a few. more dollars into the
pot of funding to dredge the
prized estuary.
From dawn to dusk, 34 plein·
air painters will paint their rendi·
tions of the bay on location along
Back Bay Street and in Bayview
Park. at Irvine Avenue and Mesa
Drive. The finished impressionis·
tic oil, watercolor and acrylic
works will go on 18.le at a recep-
tion in early 1998.
The artis1s, all from the Lagu-
na Plein-Air Painters Assoda.tion,
have pledged 15% of th~ pro-
ceedo to the dty's dredging fund.
-J-1fel'Anll.ltrong.
Santa Barbara, Martha Hilliard of
Irvine, and Mary Budnack of San-
ta Barbara.
•He was quite the extrovert,
always busy,• Budnack said. •He
was also a wonderful fa~. great
grandfather and a lot of fun.•
Services will be held at the
National Cemetery in Riverside.
A special memorial service will
be held Saturday at 1 t a.m . at
CX:C in Fine Arts 119 and will
include music provided by the
college's music ensembles.
In lieu of flowers, the family
asks donations be made to the
CX:::C Foundation's Paul R. Cox
Scholarship for music students.
For more information about dona-
tions, call 432-5645.
At Ta.ix, one sat at a long table
with a lot of people you didn't
know. Service was family style
with huge bowls of soup being
passed around, followed by
equally huge bowls of salad. The
main cowse was usually chicken
or l~b, each cooked to perfec-
tion. One didn't order from a
menu as there were no menus.
Nor did one make reservations.
At Ta.ix you might find yow-
self seated with a hooker, a
priest, a lawyer or
a middle-aged lady from Des
Moines. It was .very egalitarian,
but the food was magnificent. I
was there when it was not
Holld· ,,, Ca.d Sale
OsAe•......,.__._QSS_ i.1 i
• Business and Social •••
• Custom Imprinting
• Large Selection of Party Invitations
and Specialty Papers •cea-co•r 103 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa
c..,,.,,. "'~ WiaJ Dnutf1 Mon-Fri: 8-7, Sat: 9-5
548-0700
Come join us
Celebrate!
Our 39th Year
An opportunity to do some
early Holiday Shopping
Up to 39%.off
on merchandise now in stock
And a Special Showing
of the October birthstones
Opals and Touniiannes . .
1'111111* w celebndaa IW1I todaJ ••• for a llmlted
U-G111J ••• IO -early for bat Rlu:&a.
C8AaLES IL BARR
robert
gardner
crowded. Everyone sat at the
community table except one per-
son. A small, quiet man had his
own table that he had earned by
eating all his meals at Taix for SO
years.
I suppose that after 50 years at
a noisy communal table one is
entitled to a little privacy.
The most memorable thing
about Taix was the sourdough
bread, not the soft, mushy Won-
. der Bread imitation now being
sold as sowdough but real sour-
dough, chewy, tough, hard, sow-
dough. It was so popular that Mr.
Ta.ix branched out and tried to
sell it to the general public. How-
ever, he was apparently a better
baker than he was a business-
man so he eventually dosed his
bakerY and his restaurant.
Bernstein's Fi.sh Grotto on
Strth Street claimed that each
fish served had been alive and
well that morning. But better
Utan Bernstein's was the Sea
Food Grotto on Main Street next
to the Bwlesque Theatre. The
location was lousy, but the food
was outstanding. It claimed to be
the oldest restaurant m Los
Angeles. True or not, it was noisy
with tile Door and tile ceiling, but
it was worth a little noise just to
eat the seafood.
On North Broadway there
were a series of Italian restau-
rants. Only one, Little Joe's,
remains.
But f think the most memo-
rable eatery was Philippe's,
where the French dip sandwich
was invented.
It remains, a couple of blocks
fronl where it started, with the
same sawdust floors, high tables
and the same wonderful French
dip sandwiches, beef, ham, pork
or lamb.
Again, like Taix, it bas a poly-
glot clientele, a working man,
priest, a multimillionaire.
Strangely enough. Philip~'s
was, 60 years ago, the meeting
place for use football enthusi-
asts after a football glµlle. Of
course, those were the days
when USC was piling up nation-
al championships. Not so today.
Still, after every USC game, ooe
sees the USC faithful accumulat-
ing at Philippe's. For example,
Paul Salata is a regu.lAr. So, too,
Bill Rlng and many other USC
faithful.
All these places, plus Mike
Lyman's, the Pacific Dining Car,
the Paris Inn with its singing
waiters, and Los Angeles' justly
famous cafeterias, Clifton's and
Boos -and all for a 50 cent tick-
et on the Pacific Electric car plus
a 7 cent streetcar token.
You don't get bargains like
that any more.
• ROBERT GARDNEJt is a retired judge
and a resident of Corona del Mar. His
column runs on Tuesdays.
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KICKOFF
CON11NUED FllOM 1
• M you may have ga11111l. Olat car D8Wll' m.-lt ~,. be
Nkl. •'.l'.b8v were .n uDds the
fllftUeDce eDd CtUbed die car mto
• tree. They all died .•
The aobertng, true ttorY about
Bergman's be.t Mlild WU pert of ~ Kmybroou ~ ~ iDg Red Ribbon eek. the
diltrlct'a weeklong. antl·drug
abute campaign. All of the
acboola in the distrlct are handing
-SCHOOL
CONTINUED FROM 1 .
·we've been aiticized for not
doing enough long-term plan-
ning," Leece told the board. •1
think we need to look at what is
realistic in terms of dealing with
the rest of the kids.~
Although Corona del Mar has
enough space to accommodate
about 1,000 more students, board
members said the facilities at the
school are limited to where stu·
dents couldn't get the quality of
education the district wants to
provide, especiaily in regards to
sd.ence labs and athletic fields.
Board members discussed the
possibility of either reopening Lln·
coin Elementary School as a mid·
dle school. as it was originally
intended, or to build a new middle
school in Bonita Canyon.
To build a new school would
entail using a 14-acre site, com·
monly referred to as the
•banana,• in Bonita Canyon. The
school district would then attempt
to secure state funding for the
actual construction of the new
school.
police b_riefs
Man arrested in martial
arts store burglary
A candidate for the state's
•1bfee Strikes" law could face life
in prison for burglarizing a Harbor
Boulevard martial arts store Sun-
day night, authorities said.
Police surrounded the South
Coast Martial Arts and Boxing
Center in the street's 3100 block in
Costa Mesa around 7:30 p.m., after
the store owner reported spotting
the door ajar with two people with
flashlights rooting around inside,
police said. Police used a bullhorn
and ordered the robbers to surren-
der, but they fled through a roof
hatch, said Costa Mesa Police Lt.
Ron Smith.
After a brief foot pursuit, police
tackled Robert Paul Caperelli Jr.,
31 . The second burglar got away,
Smith said. Caperelli was arrested
on suspicion of commeroal bur-
glary, is being held on $10,000 bail
and will be arraigned Wednesday
in Harbor Municipal Court, Smith
said. Caperelli, who was caught
with store property in his pockets,
is eligible for the state's #1bree
Strikes~ law, which imposes life in
prison for those convicted of a third
felony, Smith said.
Model rocket bums 3
acres in Fairview Park
An errant model rocket
sparked a fire that burned about 3
acres of grass in a Costa Mesa
park Saturday afternoon, but no
one was hurt and no property was
damaged in the blaze, authorities
said.
The fire started accidentally
around 1 p.m. at the south end of
Fairview Regional Park, after
someone set off the rocket and it
landed in the low grass, said Cos-
ta Mesa Fire Department Batal-
lion Chief Keith Fujimoto.
A police helicopter dropped
water on the blaze, and firefight·
ers had it contained within 15
minutes, Fujimoto said.
-By Christopher Goffard
$29500 complete
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SB·---~~•u
Mattress. Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW· COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
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But before the district would be
eligible for state funds, it would
have to reopen Eastbluff Elemen-
tary School to comply with state
regulations.
In the case of an annexation,
the district expects to receive
about $5.8 million in Mello-Roos
tax proceeds that it may use to
upgrade existing schools and
reopen Eastbluff Elementary
School. It will cost about $3.4 mil·
lion to reopen Eastbluff.
Boa.rd member Ed Decker
agreed with Leece that the board
needed to be more proactive in
dealing with the potential influx of
BONITA
CONTINUED FROM 1
parents, residents and Newport-
Mesa Superintendent Mac
Bernd.
·we feel like the addition of
parkland is a· spectacular addi-
tion/ Bernd said. MI come to this
meeting tonight begging your
indulgence and begging you to
give this careful consideration."
The biggest c<>ncern still lln·
gering is the traffic the develop-
ment will generate, particularly
from students driving to Corona
del Mar High School.
middle school students. But board
member Serene Stokes said the
distrlct should not make too many
dedsiom baaed on the enrollment
projectibnl it now bu.
·0ur crystal balls just aren't
gOQd enough," she said. tn other businell, board mem-
bers heard from parents of the
Waldon School, which currentty
meets at Bastbluff Elementary
School Tom Scott. a Waldorf pa.r-
ent, told board members the
school would proceed with a law·
suit if the district forces them to
vacate the Eastbluff site by June
1998.
•Whether you vote to annex or
not, you must de&! with the traf·
fie,• Harbor View liills resident
Eric Cahn said. "We are talking
about intersections that will
become parldn.g lots."
Ml CASA 0
MEXICAN r~ESTAUHANT 0
wltbOUl~ the ..........
•• Mid they~ 1$-
yeei~ Oalg Clarke WUlliuDI D
of Or,. OD IUIJ>ldOG of lti'q•
arm tobbely. He ii beinG Mid at
the dty Jail Oil $50,000·bell and
Will be all'aigned Wednesday at
Harbor Munldpal Court.
1be Yorba Unda woman and
her boyfriend, who lives in
livine, were walking on Bristol in
front of Scott's Restaurant when
the two robbers approached and
one matched the purse from her
left hand, aaid Costa Mesa police
Lt. Ron Smith.
Thank.a to PaITott, the purse
and its contents -worth about
$300 -was returned safely.
Parrott, who said he bad on
his business suit at the time, said
he ba.s never done anything like
.
MARKET
CONTINUED FROM 1
"It's new to them, and it's new to
us, really, .. Curren said.
Bob Bise, a professor of eco-
nomics at OCC, cautioned that
while the huge fall in stock prices
was serious, the real story will be
how officials decide to recover
from the finnncial crisis.
After •mack Monday,· the fed·
era! reserve stepped in to pour
....
aaat ....... ··.a:c1:1....., .............. % , •• bOdy ID .... ~II Pa.nu
MkL ·~ ... flnal-tt. bllilld. 'a W. .... ~ J9b, ~mt me ID dO tt.' I
Mid, you took the .,.. .. ~ tbe ...... Court-
ney Mid be't jult glad Parrott
cared =t'° N1Ct. •1 thiU II tbe way IOdety
should be,•· Co~ _14id.
•Someone aeee ICJPl8~ bad gomg to ~ and someone
atepl in.
Smith commended Parrott but
warned of the peJ11s to would-be
heroes.
•1t'1 great that dtizem come
to the aid of those who need
help,• Smith aald. •an the other
band, there's always a risk
involved because you never
know if suspects are carrying a
weapon or how desperate they
are."
money into the market and stabi-
li7.e the situation, a remedy that
may be repeated after the latest
stock plunge, Bise said.
"The big thing will ~ what
happens {Thesday) morning,• Bise
said. •That's what everybody will
be looking at, what the feds do."
Curren said if nothil)g else,
some investors may learn a valu-
able lesson about the stock mark.et
from today's aash.
"You should never be too com-
placent when dealing with securi·
ties, " Curren said.
--C/,,t, se~ret tb -1! .perfe~t
fr-/ Attbh>ten 'E> reh>
is Z:>r~ J~e
~8
t 107 E. WALNUT ST.• SANTA ANA
( t/2 BLK STH Of 1 ST ST. OFF GRAND 835 830S
ACROSS FROM SANTA ANA OMV) •
HOURS: 7:30AM-5:30PM MON-FRI
AND SUPPORT THE
DURING THE
Join
Us 1997 ANNUAL CAMPAIGN
Octoller 1 -October 31
Governed by the not-for-profit tax exempt Costa Mesa Senior Citizens
Corporation, the Center serves those 50 years qnd older living In Costa Mesa and
suffoundlng areas.
The Center's services program~ and activities ore designed to enhance the quality of life
of seniors, preserve and promote dignity and self worth, develop talents, foster socialization
and support Independence and self-reliance.
~---------------------------------------------
r Ye S I want to give to the
0 Enclosed Is my check (made l yabte to!.~!~:~~!!> Campaign
· · My Center Gift •••
GIFT RANGE
$10-$49
$50-$99 $100-$249
$250-$499 $600-$999
$1,000 -$4,Q99
$6,000 and above
AMOUNT $ ____ ..-.::;;.;;.......;.,~·
s ~-o;...;....:.....:.__,;..--!._ s ~---..:;~-s ~~.:.--~....-... !~~...:....;..;....._
Name (Ptease Print._ ~....:...-......_~..-......__~~.,=-o....;.;.;.--..--..~-----~-~~.........;;..;.;,;..~~~
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• Pttone(dily)~ __ _..... _______ ......... ~~----~---~-........ --..-.....------....._--.... ..._ ............
GI lndM
r •
SEA KINGS
FLAGGED
DOWN
Would-be 61-yard TD
pass erased by penalty
in crucial loss to Irvine.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
Itwas gridiron genius, exe-
cuted with rare efficiency
and bound for the end
zone. But the image of
Mike Bergey's 61-yard screen
pass to Dennis Alshuler, which
would have put the Corona del
Mar High football team up, 14-7,
in a Sea View League contest at
IIvine High Thursday, was abrupt-
ly interrupted and forever marred
by a yellow nylon penalty flag.
The illegal block -a push in
the back colllIIlitted against a
defender who arguably had little
chance of bringing Alshuler
down -occurred with about one
minute remaining in the first half.
The Sea Kings did score a
third-quarter touchdown to earn
a 14-7 cushion, but it wasn't
enough, as Irvine rallied for a 20-
14 triumph.
While it's difficult to pin the
fortunes of an entire sea.son on
one play, this may, in fact. have
been a defining moment for the
Sea Kings. who unless they win
two of their remaining three
league games against Wood-
bridge, El Toro and Newport Har-
bor, will absorb their highest
number of defeats in 15 seasons.
Before the flag flew (far
enough behind the accelerating
Alshuler as to not dissuade the
cheers of several Sea Kings fans
fixed on the ball), the completion
was a big-play vindication of the
CdM coaching staff's dedsion to
hand the quarterbacking chores
over to Bergey.
Not only did the poised 6-foot-
1, 185-pound sophomore put the
proper touch on what would have
added to his 12 completions,
Alshuler, who passed Bergey the
quarterbacking torch. hauled in
the third-and-seven offering with
green grass and a horde of block-
ers in front of him.
Tackle Justin Shea made a dif-
ficult open-field block on one
Irvine defender to provide
Alshuler a clear path. and the
three-sport standout outran the
punuit to the end zone.
Alshuler, who made three oth-
er catches for 40 yards, played
most of the night as the second
tight end in the Sea Kings newly
installed double-tight end
offense. He figures to be on the
receiving end of several Bergey
passes the rest of the way.
STEVE
HERZOG
"'The 5-foot·7,
.1170-pound
.marbalfback.
-~-cueer-lllah 314 c:.:.'·aftar
~1'Dlol 36:1 '8 Yards ~Batanda.
•Season-endirig water
polo tournament features
the future of local polo.
Harbor High bas
roblem. .. there ii just
excess of young men
that want to play water polo,
and there are too many young
men that can play water polo.
With a varsity team that has
racked up an imp~ve 13-5
record on the season, Harbor's
frosh/soph team has put together
a 13-4 mark while the freshman
novice team has compiled 12
wins to just two losses.
For varsity coach Bil Barnett
and frosh/soph mentor Les
Cutler, the cultivation ol talent
continues as the coaches attempt
to get the program back to the
form that bas eamed the Sailors
10 CIF Southern Section
championships. l
Stepping in that direction ii
Cutler's froshllOpb team. which
will bolt the 1991 Gray Lunde
PIS Invitational Water Polo
Tournament beginning·'Ibursday.
Named after a Harbor student
who died on the pool deck due
to congenital heart failure two
years ago, the tournament
actually began four seasons ago.
•Tue freshman and
sophomores don't have CIF play,
so in older for them to be
involved and see other play,
I decided to put this together,•
Cutler said. •1t gives them some
kind of championship flavor. It's
at the end of the season, too, so
it's a goal or an objective to look
forward to.•
Last week, the Sailors topped
Foothill, a frosb/soph team that
had only one loss on Us record
prior to that meeting. The score
was •-3 and proved to be a
revenge victory as Foothill had
Lowdowns on
showdowns
•Cd.M girls tennis, Newport girls
volleyball try to remain top-ranked
this week in races for league crowns.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
Things are heating up.
In what has become Orange County's
greatest rivalry in girls tennis, top-ranked
Corona del Mar will travel to No. 3 Wood-
bridge today in a match that should decide
the Sea View League championship.
In volleyball, Estancia visits Costa Mesa
(6 p.m.) in a match with possible playoff
implications for
---------. the Mustangs (9·
Today's schedule 6, 2-4 in Pacific
~--SoCM(ohge• Coast League), c..a ...,. i p..m. while the Eagles
COmmunlly ~ "*' -INlrle try to im V11111y .i ~: i p.m. prove on ~ --their perfor-ar:: ~ • ~ l. mance in the last .,,.., ...
c.olegit--~"edflc • meeting when ~ Clllfomia c.oa.. ?:JO. the Mustangs
::.rbo.. ~~='*'flt.Inda 15-2 • c-. ,._, ' p.m.; eor-dill swept, 1 .
,., •Wllodbrldge. 6:JO P.11\. Newport Har-~~"*'. s.r. bor (9-1, 6-0 in
01egoM1u1tOFMgeeo.t4. Sea View), top-
Hl9ft .,_. ~ • &c.a • --t..ed m· C1F
molly
yanity
topped Newport twice in
tournament action earlier in the
season.
According to Cutler, the team
is ferocious when they '8.re all
together.
Peter Belden, he notes, has
strong ball skills and is
~ ):15 p.m. ra..uA
...... . Southern Section PAUi. BERSEBAOl /DALY Pl.OT :':'~ :!.: Division I-AA, Alida Mcfall leads Newport Harbor girls Thursday.
E 1t1ro ait IMwpaft Hert1o1: i:15 has won nine p.rr1~ Alho ...,.. • &tlndl. straight matches since 1:15 p.m~ Oolta Mfta at
U!Wwll\y.1:15 p.m. dropping its season
•FWd hodtey opener against Hunt-Hl9h .,_. ~ • Nlwpoft
twt1or at fountain v.ii.,i l p.m. ington Beach.
The Sailors, led by
junior' Jennifer Carey
and sopbomote April Ross, travel to El Toro today
and Irvine on Thursday.
In cross country, important Sea View tri-meets
are on the slate for CdM and Newport Harbor on
Thursday, with the Sailors facing El Toro and
Woodbridge on the Warriors' course and the Sea
Kings dashing with Irvine and Santa Margarita at
Irvine.
Newport Coach Eric 1\veit's girls, led by junior
semation Alida McFall. stunned the field last
week at the Mt San Antonio College Invitational
by winntng the Division m sweepstakes. McFall
and fresl>man Amber Steen led the way.
McPall will battle Woodbridge's Mary Moore
and El Toro's Becky Miske in a showdown of
three of the league's top five runners. Freshman
Undsey Younnan usually paces Cd.M's tightly
packed girls (2-1 in league).
In another key teniiis match today, Estancia
(6-9, 2-5 in PCL) will try to keep its playoff hopes
alive at home against Aliso Niguel.
In the CdM-Woodbridge match, the Warriors
will likely need to find a way to win in singles
against the Sea Kings' Nina Vaughan (42-3 over-
all), Caylan Leslie (36-2) and Nadia Vaughan
(40-5), a trio that went 8-1 against Woodbridge in
singles last time in CdM's 11-7 victory.
•1 think (Woodbridge Coach Joan Willett) will
do what I thought she would do last time, and
that's put Danielle Hustedt in singles, in hoping
Hustedt can come through and (Susanna) Ung·
man might be able to win more than one set,"
CdM Coach Tun Mang said.
RONNIE ·-UEVANOS
MIKE
BERGEY
RYAN
COOPER
STAT OF THE DAY
knowledgeable when it comes
to the game. His talents, though,
have taken him out of Cutler's
command on occasion, however,
as Barnett calls him up for varsity
games often.
Cutler's other strength can be
found in goalkeeper nm
Birdsong.
•He's a very good goalie,•
Cutler said.
The tournament, which hosts
16 teams including Newport, is
broken into to pools of eight.
• Thursday's play at NffiiS
features Group A and includes
the Sailors, as well as Costa
Mesa, Villa Park and Marina,
among others.
Group B plays Friday at the
same site with El Toro (to whom
the Sailors have fallen), Capo
Valley, Corona del Mar and
Rowland Heights and others
battling.
The tournament culminates
Saturday at Corona del Mar and
Newport Harbor beginning
at 8 a.m.
The championship game will
be held at Newport Harbor at
1:50 p.m.
Though they won't be
participating ~ the Lunde
Invitational, the freshman novice
team picked up its accolades
Nov. 25 at the Estancia Novice
Classic.
The team. comprised only of
freshmen. defeated three team
before topping Peninsula, 8-5,
in the title match.
Cutler says the team is paced
by set man Cain Uttrell, driver
Joey Snellgrove and the goal
tending of Shawn Johnson. ·rm pleased with their work
ethic and they've shown good
play as a team,• cutler said.
•There are a few of them I'll
move up (to the frosb/soph team)
for the tournament.•
(LAsT WED'S BYl!-<>Pl!NDS IN taCH SCHOOL POOnAU
• 93 -James Dawtdnt (Estancia) toucbclown run
• 19 -Mull 'hllWu (Estancia) kickoff retum for touchdown
• 62 -Eddie lot on (Newport Harbcx) punt
• 58 -ltya Cooper (CdM) interception return for lo!Jcbdown • .ca . se.v. Henog (Costa Mesa) touchdown run
• "5 • o..r Gmda (Newport ttartx.) pus frwn Steve Gorman
• .(3 • Stwe lt.nog (Co&ta Mesa) run
• 41 -Ma. n.lela {Estancia) pu1 from Justin Wolter
• 36 • S.... U.meo.ta MWl) touchdown run
• 36 ~ ana ..._ wport Harbol') run
Market plunge creates local shock waves
•Stockbrokers in Newport. Costa Mesa said the 554
point drop -the largest single-day dive ever recorded
by Dow -created a flurry of activity here.
to the 7 .18% drop recorded Mon·
day.
And in historical terms, Mon-
day's decline pales in compatison
to the crash in October c:4 1929 that
led to the Great Depression. From
Oct. 28 to Nov. 6 the market plum-
meted 34.4 percentage points.
By nm Grenda, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Local
stockbrokers reported widespread
concern and a little panic among
their investors Monday in the wake
of the largest, single-day point
drop ever reQ>t'dOO by the Dow
Jones industrial average.
The stock market, which
experts said was wounded by
drops in Asian financial markets
Rep.Cox
honored
for work in
democracy
• Local congressman will
be presented with Keeper
of the Flame award at
tonight's dinner.
By nm Grenda, Daily Pilot
U.S. Rep. Chris Cox tonight
will join the prestigious ranks of
Ronald Reagan, Newt Gingrich
and other Republican heavy-
weights by receiving a national
award that recognizes efforts in
spreading democracy worldwide.
Cox, a
Repu blicall"
congressman
whose district
includes New-
port Beach,
will be named
the 1997 Keep-
er of the Flame
during a black-
tie ceremony in
Washington,
D.C., officials Christopher
said. The Cen-Cox
ter for Security
Policy hands out the award each
year.
In selecting Cox, the center -
a think tank that focuses on pro-
moting global security issues -
praised his work to start an Eng-
lish-language edition of the Russ-
ian newspaper Pravda in 1984
and his current leadership in
national concerns about the
emergence of communist China
as a world power.
Cox was in New York on busi-
ness Monday and was unavail-
able for comment on receiving
the award, his staff said.
Past Keepers of the Flame also
include Reagan's Secretary of
Defense Caspar Weinberger and
chess player Gary Kasparov.
I \ ll I \
earlier in the day, plummeted
554.26 poin1s, forcing market offi.
cials to close trading for the day at
3:30 p.m.. Eastern Standard 1lme.
Monday's fall, while the largest
single-day decline in terms of total
points, was not even close to the
percentage hit the market record-
ed a little more than 10 years ago to
the day. On Oct. 19, 1987 -a dark
financial day commemorated as
"Black Monday" -the Dow fell
22.6 percentage points, compared
As for Monday, some market
insiders claimed renewed selling in
overseas Asian markets sent shock
waves through the worldwide
economy, including the Dow Jones
industrials.
Stock market trading was
expected to resume Tuesday morn-
ing. .
In Newport Beach and Costa
Man tells elementary
students about the danger
of drugs in ldckott to
Red Ribbon Week activities
'
STORY BY IV HUSEIN MASHNI
• PHOTO IV DON LEACH •
11\ \ \t \ 1111\
Mesa, stockbrokers hurried Mon-
day to keep up with phone calls
and faxes from frantic clients wor-
ried about their flMndal futures.
Mlt's been a busy day,• said Bob
Curren, owner of Curren and Co.
in Newport Beach. •But there
doesn't seem to be any situation of
panic. There. is obvious concern."
CUrren, whose brokerage han-
dles the investments of more than
1,000 clients, said many of his
investors called Monday with
questions, mostly about how the
early closing of the market would
affect their stocks.
• SEE MARKET PAGE 4
COSTA MESA -When he
was younger, Matthew Bergman
planned to be a professional bike
rider with his best friend, Rick.
They practiced every day and
were becoming known in their
hometown near Plymouth, Mass.
But then they started hanging
around a wrong aowd. Although
Bergman was able to pull away
from the peer pressure, Rick was-
n't, and he eventually started
smoking cigarettes to be accepted
by bis new friends.
As time wore on. Rick stopped
riding bis bike altogether, end
then started drinking alcohol,
even taking illegal drugl.
•0ne night after a party, Rick
and some friends started driving
home.," Bergman told 320 Kmy-
brooke Elementary School stu-
dents who were seated in the play-
ground, watching him perform
bicyde tricks Monday.
How some local
companies fared In
Monday's stock
market aash:
Did the
stodC
m.tet I mhit
doie to
home
tor you? can
our Readers
Hotfine at
642-6086
and share
your person-
al loss.
Council gives
nod to move
""
on Bonita deal
• City officials take steps
after hearing pros and
cons of annexation plan
from residents.
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The
city's annexation of Bonita Vil-
lage Monday night garnered
another in a long string of
approvals necessary to make it a
done deal.
Residents -most from the
adjacent Harbor View Homes -
packed the City Council cham-
bers for the meeting, just as they
have for every recent meeting on
the hot topic. Some spoke in
favor of annexing the chunk of
Irvine land at Ford Road and
MacArthur Boulevard, while oth-
ers told the council they're still
not satisfied with the plan.
The council gave its prelimi-
nary OK to the first steps toward
annexation Monday and will
consider final approval Nov 10.
The proposed annexation ini·
tially caused an uproar among
Harbor View Homes residents,
who feared an influx of students
into their children's elementary
school, Andersen. But a deal
struck two weeks ago by
landowner The Irvine Co., the
Newport-Mesa school district
and the city won support from
many residents.
The agreement would mean
an extra 22 acres of much-need-
ed parks, a potential school site
and 260 fewer homes in the
development, which has yet to be
built
Taking in Bonita Canyon fig·
ures to be a break-even proposi-
tion, according to a city analysis.
lt would produce about $1.1 mil·
lion in revenues from taxes and
fees. It would cost nearly the
same amount for public safety,
library and other services.
"I think there has been a con-
cern that this would be a fiscal
loser," City Manager Kevin Mur-
phy said. •But that is not the
case."
The pro-annexation contin-
gent included a PTA president,
• SEE BONITA PAGE 4
Ne~rtmay
getan~ther
middle school
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Turn-
ing Us eyes to the year 2000, tbe
school board Tueaday night dis-
cussed the possilUty of needing
a new middle tmool if the Boni-
ta Canyoo. .._is annevd.
Under tb8 district's existi)?g
plans, all middle IChOol sbaderits
wOuld. attend Corona del Mar
1-Bgh Sctiool, 85 the school DOW
houses tbe area's seventh·
through 12th-graders.
But with an inflm m j>ollibly
h'unmeds m new lti"'"1ts to the
ICbOol. bOarcl ...,,. W«ldY
Leece .md the cMict needs to
engage in w "-.ii nm plan-
ning ID reglldl • tis middle
ldm• .... JKll ......,
•SEE 9CHOOl PAGE 4
Westin valet nabs..purse-snatcher
•The 41-year-old hotel
worker apprehended 19-
year-old suspect dunng
Sunday night shift
By Christopher Goffard, Daily Pilot
• S.
D •
Al
RI
ii
Qo
B1
SJ
iii
IC .. u
0 ur names are Beni,
Tyler and Kyle, and we
are fifth-graders cur-
rently attending the Waldorf
School of Orange County,
located at the fonner Eastbluff
School.
Just last week we were
informed that our school may
have to move at the end of this
school year.
We love our school dearly
and have been at this school
since kindergarten. Many of
us travel quite a distance to be
able to attend this great
school. Our friends are from a
large radius around the school,
and the majority live in the
Newport-Mesa area.
You cannot imagine bow
many hours our parents,
teachers and we ourselves
along with the other students
have spent as volunteers to
enhance our classrooms and
campus.
U you or anyone would care
to come and visit, we could
show you just what a labor of
love and commitment it bas
taken to build this school. We
feel that we have a very
unique and wonderful place
and that we have a great deal
to share with our community.
We do not want to lose this
place.
We desperately hope some-
one will inform the public of
what presently exists at the
former Eastbluff Elementary
School, before our lease is just
terminated. Please, please,
please come and talk to us
before decisions are made.
BENIBOHJl
TYi.Eil DERHEIM
KYLE KASTNEJl
Students
attbe
Waldorf
'School
may need
anew
campus U
Eutbluff
School ls
reopened.
MARC MARTIN I
DALY PILOT
K:
A man of true influence, at least in bloodhound circles
By Jean Harris
I n your search for the 103 most influential
people ("Leading the way, Oct. 10), you over-
looked a very giving and dedicated man. I
hope you will consider his name for next year's
Larry is currently the bloodhound team con-
sultant for the Orange County Sheriff's Depart-
ment as well as a technical reserve bloodhound
specialist with the Irvine Police Department.
In 1986, he revised the bloodhound program
for the Sheriff's Department, and since then he
and two of his blood.hounds, Sable and Duchess,
list. Larry Harris is a true "top
dog~ -handler, that is. In the
law enforcement community,
Larry is known as "Mr. Blood-
M¥ VIEW
have spent thousands of hours
pursuing criminals and search-
ing for lost or missing persons or
hound".
It's easy to see why you overlooked his name.
He isn't a mover and shaJcer, and you won't see
his picture or name in the society pages. His val-
ue to his fellow man is not measured in wealth
or position, but in the very fact that for the last
11 years, he has devoted his time and money to
work and train bloodhounds and new handlers
for law enforcement agencies.
S ome time after the Daily Pilot
started running Joseph Bell's
columns, I decided that if I ever
stole my own precious time to read
another, I'd suffer in silence. .
Tempted by the carbon monoxide
mention in the title, I read another.
Once again, he took a potentially
interesting and important, and in th.is
case deadly. topic and stifled us with
boredom.
Possibly other readers will write
saying, "Be careful. Let in some
freeh air.• But, just m cue, I'll re~t
my sister's almost fatal experience.
My sister, allO a columnist; lives in
a oold, Eastern atate. She document-
ed her own ha.rrowirig ~ence m
abducted children.
In addition to training and working his own
bloodhounds, Larry keeps busy coaching sev-
eral new law enforcement handlers in the
Southern California area and bas been called
upon by several agencies interested in starting
their own bloodhound program.
Since 1986, he has been an instructor at
numerous bloodhound seminars across the Unit-
ed States and Australia. He has given presenta-
al matter or~
ments hefeln can be
rtpf(>duc9d wt1holll wrtt· ·
ten pennl9'on of copy·
right owner.
~ ~Beactl
~Coast VOL:. t1, NO. 2A6
TIGWN..DMOfil,
NlllNf
Wl.UMtLOmm.L.
fdltor'
HOW IQ IEAOt US 7515 Balboa 74154
Costa Mesa 76149
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tions to many organizations and has been a
judge at the American Bloodhound Club Nation-
al Tuliling 1ttals three times.
When everybody else is sound asleep at
night, Larry,, Sable, Duchess and his new
apprentice puppy, Thace, might be out pursu-
ing a dangerous criminal or searching for an
elderly person who has wandered away from
his home or care facility in search of a place
that exists only in memory. He r~mains on call
24 hours a day with the National Center for
Missing and Iixploited Children, both as a
bloodhound handler and as a dog operations
adviser for any California searches.
It takes a special kind of person to own,
train, love and live with a bloodhound.
To train this animal as a man trailer requires
a lot of time and dedication. It also requires you
to iceep yourself in good physical condition for
those long tra11.s. Blood.hound handlers across
0.8 Second high
7:38 ~.m ....•....••........• A..5 ..av
First low
1~5a.m ......•.....•...•..•. 1.1
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7:38•.m .•...•..........•.... SA
Second low 2:10~-. .•••.• ' ................ o .. s
second high • 8:13 p.m .•.•.••..•..••..•.•• .AA
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the country slog through rain and mud, work
odd hours, lose sleep and miss important family
holidays because a search is an emergency and
lives are at stake.
The Search and Rescue motto across the
country is "So That Others May Uve," and Larry
has often said "finding a missing child and
returning them to their family is the most won-
derful natural high in the world," and I'm sure
the parents of these missing children would
agree. Larry believes "when you do something
for nothing, you get everything.• That pretty
well sums up his philosophy.
I know I'm sort of partial to my husband, Lar-
ry, but I see how much the people of our commu-
nity benefit from his expertise.
I hope you will consider his name for your list
next year.
• JEAN HARRIS Is a resident of Newport Beach.
TUESDAY, OCTOla 21; 1tf1
m~ school students
can get taste of college
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot This year's fair will also
include a video "walk-through"
for various colleges.
Thos~ out-of-town bargains ·
cire just memories now·
There will be 136 colleges
and universities represented at
tbisyear'sCollegeNight,which
will be held today between 1 and
9 p.m. in the Newport-Harbor
High School gymnasium in
Newport Beach.
The annual event is a chance
foe students from all Newport.
Mesa Unified School District
high schools to either begin
shopping for a college or to get
applications for the college of
their choice.
"This year's theme is, some-
thing for everyone,• said Bar-
bara Yeager, a parent coordina-
tor for the fair. "We have techni-
cal schools, Ivy-League colleges,
military academies and art
schools. This is a chance to
broaden choices not to narrow
them down."
"It'll be a c:baooe for parents
and students to actuany look at
the different schools,• she said.
School offldals hope College
Nigtlt will draw students ol all
ages from all ot the high schools
in the area.
"It's a particularly good
saeening for sophomores and
Juniors,• said Janette Johnson, a
counselor for Newport-Harbor
High. "Many o1 the seniors
already know where they want
to go to college. But this could be
the first time for many of the
younger students to see what is
available to them.•
The Newport-Harbor High
School College and Career
Department will also be open
Tuesday night to teach students
how to use its college resourees
and scholarship applications.
I f, during the late 1920. and
early 1930s, one tired of the
cuisine at Gus 'nunplls'1 Sea
Shell Cafe -six stooll and a
counter -could splurge 50 cents
for a ticket on the Pacific Electric
and 1 cents for a street car token
and arrive at Los Angeles Qty
Hall, which at 32 stories was the
highest building in Los Angeles.
In that slightly grubby com-
merdal/industrial section of town
one would find some of the
greatest eating places of yore.
Olivera Street, Uttle Tokyo and
Chinatown featured, as they do
today, ethnic food.
obituary
Since I can't remember the
names of any of their restaurants
I will for the purpose of this epis-
tle focus on places that bore
names I can remember. First,
located on Ferguson's Alley in
Chinatown was Jerry's Joint. Jer-
ry. not Chinese, served the great-
est barbecued pork spare ribs I
have ever tasted. Alas, Jerry's is
no more -nor is Ferguson's
Alley.
Retired OCC professor Paul Cox dies Then there was Taix, an
authentic Basque restaurant such
as those that once dotted the San
Joaquin Valley, almost always
nestled close to a railroad station. Retired Orange Coast College
professor of music, Paul R. Cox,
died of heart failure on Oct. 22 in
Costa Mesa. He was 71. '
A member of OCC's faculty for
27 years, during which he was the
chairman of the music depart-
ment, Cox directed several of the
college's orchestras, dance bands
and ensembles.
Born in Los Angeles, Cox
served frotn 1944 to 1946 in the
U.S. Army as a paratrooper with
the 11th Airborne Division in
New Guinea, the Philippines and
Okinawa, and a member of the
11th Airborne Division Band in
Japan.
He returned to Southern Cali-
fornia after his military service
and earned bachelors and mas-
ters degrees in music from the
University of Southern California.
He remained a loyal USC fan for
life.
His musical career led him to
several professional jobs and a
teacbirlg job at College of the
Sequoias in Visalia before joining
OCC's faculty in 1957, where he
w~ marching band director for a
nQmber of years.
After his retirement in 1984,
Cox continued to compose and
arrange music.
"He just recently started a new
music business, 'Paul's Music,'"
said his youngest child, Mary
Budnack, of Santa Barbara.
Cox is survived by his wife of
49 years, Rosemary, and six chil-
dren, Rosemarie Cox of Santa
Ana, Belinda Lafferty of Red-
mond, Wash .• Dennis Cox of Syl-
vania, Australia, David Cox of
briefly
Painters pitch in for
bay dredging
Painters will set up their easels
along the Back Bay today, and
each of their brush strokes will
put a few more dollars into the
pot of funding to dredge the
prized estuary.
From dawn to dusk. 34 plein-
air painters will paint their rendi-
tions of the bay on location along
Back Bay Street and in Bayview
Park. at Irvine Avenue and Mesa
Drive. The finished impressionis-
tic oil, watercolor and acrylic
works will go on sale at a recep-
tion in early 1998.
The artists, all from the Lagu-
na Plein-Air Painters Association,
have pledged 15% of the pro-
ceeds to the city's dredging fund.
-Jemalfer Arm.ltrong
Santa Barbara, Martha Hilliard of
Irvine, and Mary Budnack of San-
ta Barbara.
MHe was quite the extrovert,
always busy,• Budnack said. "He
was also a wonderful fat4er, great
grandfather and a lot of fun."
Services will be. held at the
National Cemetery in Riverside.
A special memorial service will
be held Saturday at 11 a.m. at
OCC in Fine Arts 119 and will
include music provided by the
college's music ensembles.
In lieu of flowers, the family
asks donations be made to the
OCC Foundation's Paul R. Cox
Scholarship for music students.
For more information about dona-
tions, call 432-5645.
At Taix, one sat at a long table
with a lot of people you didn't
know. Service was family style
with huge bowls of soup being
passed around, followed by
equally huge bowls of salad. The
main course was usually chicken
or lamb, each cooked to perf ec-
tion. One didn't order from a
·menu as there were no menus.
Nor did one make reservations.
At Taix you might find your-
self seated with a hooker, a
priest, a, lawyer or
a middle-aged lady from Des
Moines. It was very egalitarian,
but the food was magnificent. I
was there when it was not
Hotiday Ca.d Sale
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• Business and Social •
• Custom Imprinting
• Large Selection of Party Invitations
and Specialty Papers f'Cea -co•r
'D~P~Q~
1 03 E. 1 7th St. Costa Mesa
c..nur "'~ Wilul Dnu.11 Mon-Fri: 8-7, Sat: 9-5
548-0700
Come join us
Celebrate!
Our 39th Year
Ari opportunity to do some
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Up to 39% off
on merchandise now in stock
.
Arid a Special Showilig
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Opals and Tuuniuillnes
Tbll .,.W mlebrallail ans toda1 ..... for a llmlted
time CllllJ ••• IO emle ealfY for Mlt leledlclo.
-:--~-~-, .. j . ' .
robe rt
g ardner
crowded. Everyone sat at the
community table except one per-
son. A small, quiet man had his
own table that he had earned by
eating all his meals at Tai.x for 50
years.
I suppose that after 50 years at
a noisy communal table on~ is
entitled to a little privacy.
The most memorable thing
about Taix was the sourdough
bread, not the soft, mushy Won-
der Bread imitation now being
sold as sourdough but real sour-
dough, chewy, tough, hard, sour-
dough. It was so popular that Mr.
Taix branched out and tried to
sell it to the general public. How-
ever, he was apparently a better
baker than he was a business-
man so he eventually closed his
bakery and his restaurant.
Bernstein's Fish Grotto on
Sixth Street claimed that each
fish served had been alive an<>
well that morning. But better
than Bernstein's was the Sea
Food Grotto on Main Street next
to the Burlesque Theatre. The
location was lousy, but the food
was outstanding. It claimed to be
the oldest restaurant in Los
Angeles. True or not, it was noisy
with tile floor and tile ceiling, but
it was worth a little noise just to
eat the seafood.
On North Broadway there
were a series of Italian restau-
rants. Only one, Little Joe's,
remains.
But I think the most memo-
rable eatery was Philippe's,
where the French dip sandwich
was invented.
It remains, a couple of blocks
from where it started, with the
same sawdust floors, high tables
and the same wonderful French
dip sandwiches, beef, ham, pork
or lamb.
Again, like Taix, it has a poly-
glot clientele, a working man,
priest, a multimillionaire.
Strangely enough, Philip~·s
was, 60 years ago, the meeting
place for USC football enthusi-
asts after a football game. Of
course, those were tbe days
when USC wu pWng up nation-
al championships. Not so today.
Still, after every USC game, one
sees the USC faithful aocumulat-
ing at Philippe's. For example,
Paul Salata is a regular. So, too,
Bill Ring and many other USC
faithful.
All these places, plus Mike
Lyman's, the Pacific Dining Car,
the Paris Inn with its singing
waiters, and Los Angeles' justly
famous cafeterias, Clifton's and
Boos -and all for a SO cent tick-
et on the Pacific Electric car plus
a 7 cent streetcar token.
You don't get bargains like
that any more.
• ROBERT GARDNER is a retired judge
and a resident of Corona del Mar. His
column runs on Tuesdays.
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KICKOFF
CONTINUED MOM 1
• M you may bave gunud, 1bal au D8Y9I' mede It bcime,• be
Mid; ~ W8'e • mids ..
lllftuence and crubed tbe car into • tree. They all died .•
The sobering, true story about
~~w:=: ing Red Ribbon Week, the ICboo1
district's weeklong, anti-drug
abuse campaign. All of the
schools in the district are banding
• SCHOOL
CONTINUED FROM 1
·we've been criticized for not
doing enough long-term plan-
ning,• Leece told the board. ·1
think we need to look at what is
realistic in terms of dealing with
the rest of the kids.•
Although Corona del Mar has
enough space to accommodate
about 1,000 more students, board
members said the facilities at the
school are limited to where stu-
dents couldn't get the quality of
education the district wants to
provide, esped.ally in regards to
science labs and athletic fields.
Board members discussed the
possibility of either reopening Lin-
coln Elementary School as a mid·
dle school, as it was originally
intended. or to build a new middle
school in Bonita Canyon.
To build a new school would
entail using a 14-aae site, com-
monly referred to as the
·banana,• in Bonita Canyon. The
school district would then attempt
to secure state funding for the
actual construction of the new
school.
police briefs
Man arrested in martial
arts store burglary
A candidate for the state's
•Turee Strikes" law could face life
in prison for burglarizing a Harbor
Boulevard martial arts store Sun-
day night, authorities said.
Police surrounded the South
Coast Martial Arts and Boxing
Center in the street's 3100 block in
Costa Mesa around 7:30 p.m., after
the store owner reported spotting
the door ajar with two people with
flashlights rooting around inside,
police said. Police used a bullhorn
and ordered the robbers to surren-
der, but they fled through a roof
hatch, said Costa Mesa Police Lt.
Ron Smith.
After a brief foot pursuit, police
tackled Robert Paul Caperelli Jr.,
31. The second burglar got away,
Smith said. Caperelli was arrested
on suspicion of commercial bur-
glary, is being held on $10,000 bail
and will be arraigned Wednesday
in Harbor Municipal Court, Smith
said. Caperelli, who was caught
with store property in his pockets,
is eligible for the state's •Three
Strikes• law, w.Qich imposes life in
prison for those convicted of a third
felony, Smith said.
Model rocket burns 3
acres in Fairview Park
An e rrant model rocket
sparked a fire that burned about 3
acres of grass in a Costa Mesa
park Saturday afternoon, but no
one w as hurt and no property was
damaged in the blaze, authorities
said.
The fire started accidentally
around 1 p.m. at the south end of
Fairview Regional Park, after
someone set off the rocket and it
landed in the low grass, said Cos-
ta Mesa Fire Department Batal-
lion Chief Keith Fujimoto.
A police helicopter dropped
water on the blaze, and firefight-
ers bad it contained within 15
minutes, Fujimoto said.
-By Christopher Gottard
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Mattress. Outlet Stor
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545-7168
But before tbe district would be
eligible for state funds. it would
bAve to reopen Eastbluff Elen>en·
tary School to comply with state
regulations.
In the case of an annexation.
the district expects to receive
about $5.8 million in Mello-Roos
tax proooeds that it may use to
upgrade existing schools and
reopen Eastbluff mementary
School It will cost about $3 . .f mil-
lion to reopen Eastbluff.
Board member Ed Decker
agreed with Leece that the board
needed to be more proactive in
deaHng with the potential influx of
BONITA
CONTINUED FROM 1
parents, residents and Newport-
Mesa Superintendent Mac
Bernd.
•we feel like the addition of
parkland is a· spectacular addi-
tion,· Bernd said. ·1 come to this
meeting tonight begging your
indulgence and begging you to
give this careful consideration."
The biggest concern still Un·
gering is the traffic the develop-
ment will generate, particularly
from students driving to Corona
del Mar High School.
middle school students. But board
membeT Serene Stokes said tbe
district should not make too man
d . . based y easwns on the enroDment
projections it now baa.
•0ur crystal balls just aren't
good enough.• she said. in other bmriness, board mem·
bers heard from parents of the
Waldorf School, which cummtly
meets at Eastbluff Elementary
School. Tom Scott. a Waldod par-
ent, told board members the
school would proceed with a law-
suit if the district forces them to
vacate the Eastbluff site by June
1998.
•we feel llke the
addiUon Of pcl!Jcland
isa~acular
"Whether you vote to annex or .
not, you must deal with the traf-
fic," Harbor View Hills resident
Eric Cahn said. •we are talking
about intersections that will
become parking lots."
Ml CASA 0
MEX IC AN r~E STAUl~A NT 0
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO 0 O 0
wtthou& ~ tb8 ftJit ...
914' tu1 tb8y UNlted 19-
yeu-old ~Clarke WUliami D
ol Orange~~~ ltroog· arm robbery. He ii being MJd at
tbe dty jail OD $50,000 l>a1l and
Will be ulaianed Wednesday at
Harbor Mwlldpal Court.
1be Yorba Unda woman and
her boyfriend, who lives in
IiVine, were walldng on Bristol in
front of Scott's Restaurant when
the two robbers approached and
one matched the purse from her
left hand, said Costa Mesa police
Lt. Ron Smith.
Thanks to Panott, the purse
and its contents -worth about
$300 -was returned safely.
Parrott, who said he bad on
his business suit at the time, said
he has neveT done anything like
MARKET
CONTINUED FROM 1
•ft's new to them. and it's new to
us, really,. Cuneo said.
Bob Bise, a professor of eco-
nomics at OCC, cautioned that
while the huge fall in stock prices
was serlous, the real story will be
how officials decide to recover
from the financial aisis.
After "Black Monday," the fed-
eral reserve stepped in to pour
-
tbatbi6ft. 1
•JdGla~c._....~ ........ ~·· . ::eT=';.:::
ly. bellid. 11 ....... ~ Jou. ~IMilmetodOtt.•
Mid, 'Otiwiou81Y you toOk tb bet'. ~ the ,...., Cowi
ney said be'• just ~ Parro
cared en0uati"to react.
•1 think ibis ii tbe way lodet
should be,•· Courtney saic
•Someone Met something ba1
going to happen. aDd IOIDeOn
ltepl tn.•
Smith commended Parrott b\J
warned of the perill to woWd·b
heroes. •1t1s great thAt dtlzeDI co1111
to the aid of those who Dee4
help,• Smith said. •0n the othe
hand, there's always a risl
involved because you nev&
know if suspects are canying •
wea,ron or how desperate the~
are.
money into the market and stabi
li7.e the situation. a remedy tha
may be repeated after the lates
stock plunge, Bise said.
•nie big thing will be wba·
happens (Tuesday] moming, • BisE
said. •Thafs what everybody wil
be looking at. what the feds do.•
Curren said if nothing else
some investors may learn a valu·
able lesson about the stock marke1
frotn today's crash.
~vou should never be too com·
placent when dealing with seaui-
ties," CUrren said.
(~01-Dl~Y JCI ~?
-C/,,e. S e.crtt tb A . pe.rf tct
H A((bWttn J5, rtw
i.s Z°)ry J ~t
~8
t t07 E. WALNUT ST.• SANTA ANA
( 1/2 BUC STH OF t ST ST. OFF GRAN~ 835 8 306 ACROSS FROM SANTA AHA OMV) r •
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AND SUPP.ORT THE
DURING THE
Join
Us 1997 ANNUAL CAMPAIGN
October 1 -Octoller 31
Governed by the not-for-profit tax exempt Costa Mesa Senior Citizens
Corporation, the Center serves those 50 years and older llvlng In Costa Mesa and
suffoundlng areas.
The Center's services programs and activities ore designed to enhance the quol/ty of llfe
of seniors, preserve and promote dignity and self worth, develop talents, foster soclollzotlon
and support independence and self-re/lance. r---------------------------------------------~ . . I want to give to the ,
0 Enclosed is my c!~ f..vab1e to!~~~=~':!~> Campaign
~ My Center Gift •••
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$10-$49
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ill
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tt
l· ll
I
re
t·
It
r.
d
e
lt
e
8UUETIN
SEA KINGS
FLAGGED
DOWN
Would-be 61-yard TD
pass erased by penalty
in crucial loss to Irvine.
By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot
Itwas gridiron genius, exe-
cuted with rare efficiency
and bound for the end
zone. But the image of
Mike Bergey's 61-yard screen
pass to Dennis Alshuler, which
would have put the Corona del
Mar High football team up, 14-7,
in a Sea View League contest at
Irvine High Thursday, was abrupt-
ly intenupted and forever marred
by a yellow nylon penalty flag.
The illegal block -a push in
the back commttted against a
defender who arguably had little
chance of bringing Alshuler
down -occurred with about one
minute remammg in the first half.
The Sea Kings did score a
third-quarter touchdown to earn
a 14-7 cushion, but it wasn't
enough, as bvine rallied for a 20-
14 triumph.
While it's difficult to pin the
fortunes of an entire season on
one play, this may, in fact, have
been a defining moment for the
Sea Kings, who unless they win
two of their remaining three
league games against Wood-
bridge, El Toro and Newport Har-
bor, will absorb their highest
number of defeats in 15 seasons.
Before the fiag flew (far
enough behind the accelerating
Alshuler as •to not dissuade the
cheers of several Sea Kings fans
fixed on the ball), the completion
was a big-play vindication of the
CdM coaching staff's decision to
hand the quarterbacking chores
over to Bergey.
Not only did the poised 6-foot-
1, 185-pound sophomore put the
proper touch on what would have
added to his 12 completions,
Alshuler, who passed Bergey the
quarterbacking torch. hauled in
the third-and-seven offering with
green grass and a horde of block-
ers in front of him.
Tackle Justin Shea made a dif-
ficult open-field block on one
Irvine defender to provide
Alshuler a clear path, and the
three-sport standout outran the
pursuit to the end zone.
Alshuler, who made three oth-
er catches for 40 yards, played
most of the night as the second
tight end in the Sea Kings newly
installed double-tight end
offense. He figures to be on the
receiving end of several Bergey
passes the rest of the way.
•Season-ending water
polo tournament features
the future of local polo.
N:wport Harbor High has
a problem. .. tbere is just
an excess of young men
that want to play water polo,
and the.re are too many young
men that can play water polo.
Wrth a varsity team that has
racked up an impressive 13-5
record on the season. Harbor's
frosh/soph team has put together
a 13-4 mark while the freshman
novice team has compiled 12
wins to just two losses.
For varsity coach BW Barnett
and frosb/soph mentQr Les
Cutler, the cultivation ol talent
continues as the coaches attempt
to get the program back to the
form that has earned the Sailors
10 ClP Southern Section
championships.
Stepping in that direction ls
Cutler's frosb/sopb team, which
will host the 1997 Gray Lunde
PIS Invitation.al Water Poro
Tournament begtnning·Thursday.
Named after a Harbor student
who died on the pool deck due
to congenital heart failure two
years ago, the tournament
actually began four seasons ago.
•Tue freshman and
sophomores don't have ClP play,
so in order for them to be
involved and see other play,
I decided to put this together,"
Cutler said. •1t gives them some
kind of championship flavor. It's
at the end of the season, too, so
it's a goal or an objective to look
forward to." ..
La.st week, the Sailors topped
Foothill, a frosh/soph team that
had only one loss on itis record
prior to that meeting. The score
was 4-3 and proved to be a
revenge victory as Foothill had
Lowdowns on
showdowns
• CdM girls tennis, Newport girls
volleyball try to remain top-ranked
this week in races for league crowns.
By Richard DWln, Daily Pilot
Things are heating up.
In what has become Orange County's
greatest rivalry in girls tennis, top-ranked
Corona del Mar will travel to No. 3 Wood-
bridge today in a match that should decide
the Sea View League championship.
In volleyball, Estancia visits Costa Mesa
(6 p.m.) in a match with possible playoff
implications for
---------the Mustangs (9-
Today's schedule 6, 2-4 in Pacific
~-·Soealeolk9eM Coast League),
ui ..-, 1 p.m. while the Eagles
Community college men • irw.. ....., t , Vflwt at 0r.nge c:oeat. 1 p.m. ... 1 o 1mprove on
CommuNtydege-· their perfor-== •nine~ 1 mance in the last
C.ohge-· ,_ l'ldllc • meeting when
Soulhem Clllfomle College. 1:10. the ,. ......... -gs High KhcJol c . Nlwpoft 1YAWl'4U =..·u~ ... ~~dll swept, 15-12.
Mw 11t '#Dodblidge. 6:lO p.m. Newport Har-~ c:alege men -s.i bor (9-1, 6-0 in =: ... lit 0renee c:oeat." · Sea View), top-
molly
yanity
topped Newport twice in
tournament action earlier in the
season.
According to Cutler, the team
is ferocious when they are all
together.
Peter Belden, he notes, has
strong ball skills and is
• ~~~M ranked in CIF
.,..... . Southern Section PAUL BERSEBACH I OAl.Y PLOT ~ ~ ~ ~ Division I-AA, Alida McFall leads Newport Harbor girls Thursday.
eT-•NewponHllltlof,J:1s has won nine
p.1r1.; A11o ....... lit fsUnda. straight matches since J:15 p.m.; c.a.. ... 9t ~ J:1s p.m. dropping its season •Aeld~ • H High Khool Pis . ......., opener against unt-
twtMw at Fountain~ 1 p.m. ington Beach.
The Sailors, led by
junior Jennifer Carey
and sophomore April Ross, travel to El Toro today
and Irvine on Thursday.
In cross country, important Sea View tri-meets
are on the slate for CdM and Newport Harbor on
Thursday, with the Sailors facing El Toro and
Woodbridge on the Warriors' course and the Sea
Kings clashing with Irvine and Santa Margarita at
Irvine.
Newport Coach Eric 1\veit's girls, led by junior
sensation Alida McFall. stunned the field last
week at the Mt. San Antonio College Invitational
by winning the Divislon m sweepstakes. McFall
and freshman Amber Steen led the way.
McFall will battle Woodbridge's Mary Moore
and El Toro's Becky Miske in a showdown of
three of the league's top five runners. Freshman
Llndsey Younnan usually paces CdM's tightly
packed girls (2-1 in league).
In another key temiis match today, Estancia
(6-9, 2-5 in PCL) will t?y to keep its playoff hopes
alive at home against Aliso Niguel.
In the CdM-Woodbridge match, the Warriors
will likely need to find a way to win in singles
against the Sea Kings' Nina Vaughan (42-3 over-
all), Caylan Leslie (36-2) and Nadia Vaughan
(40-5), a trio that went 8-1 against Woodbridge in
singles last time in CdM's 11-7 victory.
•I think (Woodbridge Coach Joan Willett) will
do what I thought she would do last time, and
that's put Danielle Hustedt in singles, in hoping
Hustedt can come through and (Susanna) Llng-
man might be able to win more than one set,•
CdM Coach Tun Mang said.
knowledgeable when it comes
to the game. His talents, though,
have taken him out of Cutler's
command on occasion, however,
as Barnett calls him up for varsity
g~esoften.
Cutler's other strength can be
found in goalkeeper nm
Birdsong.
"He's a very good goalie,•
Cutler said.
The tournament, which hosts
16 teams including Newport, is
broken into to pools of eight.
Thursday's play at NHHS ·
features Group A and includes
the Sailors, as well as Costa
Mesa. Villa Park and Marina,
among otheJS.
Group B plays Friday at the
same site with El Toro (to whom
the Sailors have fallen), Capo -
Valley, Corona del Mar and
Rowland Hei~hts and others
battling.
The tournament culminates
Saturday at Corona del Mar and
Newport Harbor begiDnlDg
at 8 a.m..
The championship game will
be held at Newport Harbor at
1:50 p..m.
Though they won't be
participating in the Lunde
Invitational, the freshman novice
team picked up its accolades
Nov. 25 at the Estancia Novice
Classic.
The team, comprised only of
freshmen, defeated three team
before topping Peninsula, 8-5,
in the title match.
Cutler says the team is paced
by set man Cain Llttrell, driver
Joey Snellgrove and the goal
tending of Shawn Johnson. ·rm pleased with their wort.
ethic and they've shown good
play as a team," cutler said.
·There are a few of them I'll
move up (to the frosh/soph team)
for the tournament.•
hiyl1 sdaool too•• all plaJelS of II~ week. e,e IJlleneas
STEVE
HERZOG
RONNIE
LI EVAN OS
MIK E
BERGEY
ry"be f>..foot-1, .l 18>pound
IOpbclmore
oompleted 12
ol llfor 117
yards and
ruabed foe 29
yardl Oil 18YeD
amiill Jn ftist start
at~.
RYAN
COOPER
A 5-foot-11,
J-\180-pound
leaior' safety,
be retumed an
lntierceptlon 58
yarmfora
to.ldMtawn and
U.O~ttiiee ~for23 ,....
(LAsT WEEK'S IM!~ IN HIQ8 SCHOOL flOO'T8ALL
• 93 -James Dawkins (Estanda) touchdown run
• 79 -Manu lUlelu (Estancia} kickoff return for touchdown
• 62 • Eddie Johmon (Newport Harbor) punt
• 58 -ltya Cooper (CdM) interception return for touchdown
• 48 -Sieve Henog (Costa Mesa} touchdown run
• .f5 -OICar Garcia (Newport Harbor} pea. from Steve Gorman
• .t3 -Stine I~ (Costa Mesa) run
• .f 1 -Mm1i ~ (Estanda) pua from Justin Wolter
• 36 -Stew~ (Costa Mesa) toucbdown run
• 36 -8net .... (Newport Harbor) ND
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS??
OllTUDT 188 .
IOllGHT Loi• Knopenyder
::~e:== paeect .,,.., Ooeobef
25.Shele~bY
her eon.~ W. •
Knight II, d9Ughtef,
Patrtcla KnlghMSray,
grandchildren,
Jennifer Knight,
Jeaelca Bray and
a.theny Bray. vw...
tlon wti .,. held from
4:00 to 8:00 p.m.,
Wedneedlly, Oatober
28 at 1180tt'lo va.w • ~. llOO fWllflc View °""'9, N9wpoft Bffch. FUNr91 ..,._
vtoM wll .,. held .. '
11 :00 a.m.. Thur8dey,
October 30 .. Pedflo • View wtth .. _,,...,.
aoheduled fof 2:00 p .m. at Hermoaa
Cemetery, 800 N .
Meftdlan Ave., Colon,
CA. ln lleu of flowar9, th• flunlty ,.......
donatlona In Lole'• name b9 mtlCM to
HOAO FOUNDATION
CANCER Cl!NTl!R, •
P .O . Box 1100,
Newport BMctl, CA
928ee.
Pelley
__ f. __ -Byl'u
(714) 631-6594
By Pllotae
(7H ) 642-5678
By MlllMil PK1w
Ratu and ~adlinn art aubjN:I 10 change without notice. Tiit
publisher rt~J'·es the right to censor. redusify, ""'·• or ttj«t
1my classified adveni!.t-ment. Plea~ report un_y_error that may bt
in·your clas~ified ad innnt>diat'tly. The Daily Pilot tooepts tlO
liabili1y for any error in an advtni:.emenl for which it mar be
l'\"11ponsible nrep1 for 1ht ('OSI o( the 6pact actually occupied by
1he error. Cttdit can only bt-allowf'd for the fmn inwnion.
SEIZVICE Dmf£TORY
(""•"' l""f,,.tr """ ,.., .... a1wl 1J~.,.. n1w1ilwr aitd u 'U raU ! 0t1
1 .... L. ""'1•1 ....... 'I"'~')
330 w,.,, Bt!Y Stn-1·1
Co,ru MrMI. CA 92627
\1 '"'l;on llh-.i ., 81n ..,, ....-------Deadllne8 -------a ....
'ft.11·ph111lf' 8:30am-5:00pm
\i...J.,-t '1( .. \
Wallc-111 8:30om-5:00pm
\11 w.J., -t rldA\
Monday ............ Friday S:OOpm Thursday .. Wednesday 5:00pm
-for All Your Home and Busine9I Needs -Tuesday ......... Monday S:OOpm Friday .......... Thursday 5:00pm
Wednesday .... Tuesday S:OOpm Saturday ....... -.. Friday 5:00pm
CHEVROLET 9045 ·, f &) NEWPORT CORONA COMMERCIAL LOST• EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT _ ANTIQUIS 8010 POWER BOATS
BEACH 1069 DEL Mil 2622 PROfERTY 2778 FOUND 2925 5530 5530 -----· 7012liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~m
iliimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim ~•CORVETT•
IOU*-NOUl9IO alg C•nvon VIII•• Studio Apt old• COM. Office Bldg 2000•.t. LOST small Diamond Medloal Front Office 3HP Evlnrude Motor 800 miles, white, dual,
0""011ru111Ty TownhOme Excellence $776/mo/flrm. UU Inc. Sale/Leaae. Xlnt CM ho r • e •hoe r Ing . C~~~.~~:~~~t and Bllllng. Hollstlc 1960. 1 owner. s1 oo. ~1~~: -~~,i~.;
Mtut ......... tlfttllls' 2-3 Bedrooms Lots of cloHt & cabl-Loe. Move-In ready. Vic-Corona del Mar pain rellel. FT/Perm. '714-751·5102 1. .. XUS OF MasonElllaReittore netspace.769-0665. 714-723-4000 Rewardl714·675-1072 posltlons.Salaryplus. $10.per hr. Req'd "" ~ .... ~~111e, . .,'".· Mellnd• Maaon 809-390-0200 .•• ___ 7_1_4_._7_2_3_"_1_0_8_9_ baalc computer. MISSION VIEJO .... ___ ... --------·-(800)80•5388 ..................... 714-759-7700 COSTA MESA 2 624 HEALTH & DELIVERY DRIVERS 714.759.7793 Lvg Msg MARINE SLIPS
"....._ ''lly "'""""· Ultra Clean aurter •••••••• FITNESS 3000 Mon and or Fr11oay·1--------DOCKS 7022 DODGE =:.:.. •=111
:.:: ~251; e2 16t~ 8k:3~ 1br Cott•• .. near BUSINESS & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim :!,::i ~~~ c:: w~~~j: PART·TIME JOB 9065
... .......,........., .... ., e4s.~34~arB~~er1 okl Beach. Inc fridge. FINANCE ere. Average $5(). . Telemarketing
................ ....,.... Move-In Speclalll••••••••• $100/per day. N/smk. •Morning Hours
.... .,_.,,..,_.. •. 1---------$675 + $400 dep. Abandoned b1 HEAJ.THY GOURMET •No Experience ...._.,._,.11111N." CEMETERY LOT/ '714-S48·2421 1---------diet drugs? 714-833·2929 •Yoong. energetic olc
TMa ~ wlll 1101' CRYPT 1225 2br 1ba Remod•ocl•dc, BUSINESS ~=·:• l~er~o~;t~~~~ DRIVER.•. 9ga~ts~o~;!~ ........,_.,..,llMnlsa. l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii uS7p7p5er, Sg300ar. dnr N OPPORTUNITY Optimal Nutrillon & a EXPERIENCE OTR
..... ..., ...... _.. ...... IShady O•al• 2 akle ~ta.'+ 114.2~:.SSS~ 2904 healthier llfestfle. Company Drl11er1 &1~;;(=:7:;1::=4=:)=:7=:2=:2=:-0=:1=:1=:9::::::::::~
*'lllliflllll•O.IUlfln! by side plots In exclu-' l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii B d WI h Owner Operator -1.,
35'x 12' &Hp •vall
Piil comm. no ll11e-
aboard s /011ernlles .
N.B. $250. 650-8536
MOTORCYCLES
SCOOTERS 8018
.. ......, ....,_,, M Il l alve Pacific View. E aid• 2bd 1ba apl11 0 Y se-e Guaranteed 10k mllHI PT Demonstrators ~· ....,..., II tttll Pd S3800ea. Sacrllk:• Xlnt cond, new crpt, 1000 ENV•LOP•S• Healthy Alternative. Great benefits & for grocery stores in '95 HONDA SE 1500 w••••• ........... S2900ea. 531_.513 paJnt, ow. patio, gar, $4,000 from home! Call now! 722-6947 morel Call Dal your area. Frl-Sat-Sun1---------1 20th Annlv. Lmtd ed.
........... ,..._11._. lndry. $900/mo.+dep. Make $4 per envelope westway Express Car nee. 714-557·5579 URNlTUR O loaded, leathe rs .
... .,.._, I 11 .alllUO •548·1709• ~~.:~~ff g~~~a'::r.;~j Want a Perfect Bodv? 1-800-321-9734 RECEPTIONIST FT f E 6 14 helmets, only 5300 ml,
111-1111111·-.U•·--ftr LOTS Free Info pack call Fast results, simple. www.wwexpress.com Hearing Aid ore needs s 13,500. Financing
'90CARAVAN
(101573) S7250
'94 SPIRIT
(200698) S8550
'97 RAM CLUBCAB V8
(101625) $21,550
'92 STAEL TH
(101682) $14..l.550
TOVOTAvF
HUNTINGTON •l!ACtf
114-84'7.asss llllW 'I; ,DC••fllula 'eOR r1n-e 1400 NEWPORT All Natural, guaran-CAL"SCAN rellable, energetic, 5pc.Bdrm Set Black Avail. Call Duncan €~ ,Al HUD II at·-. C' ~ nowl 1•31 <>-951•213o. teed 714-573-2498 well organized person Lacquer /MI r r or . Naben Cadillac 540-91001---------
., iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BEACH 2669 Dept. Ce <24/hr. re-. DRIVERS Nl!EDEDI w/strong phone voice. Lighted King Size FORD 9075
l!'ald• Lot With plans corded me11age) Fff Class B or A. FT/PT Some Telemarketing headboard. dresser w/ ••••••••• l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lor 3bd 2.5ba House.lmiii*iii1BiiiRiiSii'7iiSOiiiii*iiiii CAL"SCAN Evening Positions Avl. Aon 644·8787 C.M. 3pc.llghted mirror, TV I•
S105K B ltd -•-•ff PERSONALS Call Emmfl between cabinet. 2 end plecH. AUTOMOBILES •es rfuahlng Red w/
HOUSES/
CONDOS
FOR SALE
h I. Flu ylour ownll D/W Incl. 60K30 pool. Please be wary of out 9:00-2:30 846-4054 Receptionist PT. $1800. 733·0584 .... 2 ••••••••• blk Inter. 269 va. om• nanc ng ava No peta. Carport. S7·S10/hr depending "' Rebuilt front susp,
for owner occupied Newport Bar Terrace of area companies. DRIVERS-NATIONAL on exper. Please call Dining table & 4 trans, htr, PS. New buyer1. Call Carey •'71 .. -• .. s-4855• Check with the local CARRIERS, Inc. 11 MellHa at 644-of492. 1 s Ward, Bkr031·224R ....._ Better Bu1lne .. PERSONALS 3002 I f II cha rs 225. 5·pc ---------brakes. radiator. HTS 2bd 2ba $1050 Bureau before you look ng or qua ty RESTAURANT bdrm set S225. S6fa BUICK 9035 $6000/obo. 650-743S.
Great area. Vault cell, aend any money lor owner operators 10 sleeper 5200· Coffee iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • 8 9 Probe Sliver.
lee• or aervlcei. Read SINGLES: MEl!T run TX and West. Max KILLER JOBS lbl + 2 end $75. Swivel
GENERAL 1002 HOUSES/
iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilcoNDOS
balcony, gar, no pets. SI I I tractor weight of chair $40. 839-9547. '85 Centurv Limited moving must sell. Xlnt 760-1713. 857·17715. and unde,..land any n g e P 9 o P e ., cond. cc, a/c, stereo contract• before you throughout rural 19.ooo lbs. Call •Ethan Allen• 6 cyl, all power, cold S2900 718-8410
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rate1. reputable. established CAL•SCAN Is looking for: Entertainment center clean In & out, always '95 ESCORT LX plan Free details • Bartenders/Manager d 52100 k 5900 garaged. no mech. 5dr. hb, at, ps, ale,
SOLD! RENTALS ANYONI!. CAN DO Cou~try Connection~ ELECTRONICS •Food Runner/Hostess P as · problems. Great cass. 33k miles THISI I m a stay Newsletter. PO Box TRAINEES. • Cooks rocking chair s 2oo. family car. Must see. $8495 #30n07
home mom earning 4 0 6 s u Per 1 0 r . Job openings with e><· Abusson style rug $3850 548-1554 Showcase homes For Newport locallon. pinks bl e floral / for sale In our BALBOA $1500+ part Ume. For Nebraska 68978 cellent salary/benefits. Call Spencer at: u w
Saturday Reel Estate ~~"iiii lliiii.rniiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~: ROOMS FREE Informational CAL•SCAN Paid relocation. Paid 673-0292. or la>< cre:,m k?ac~;~cr~ -------9-0_4_0 S 1 U ....uu, 2706 booklet call toH-free training. High school resume to: 673-0294 11>< 81 ng CADILLAC uppemen 1-800-813..fS890 dip loma requlred.1---------2yrs new. 427·5960 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •Homea of the liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii R & s 1 h w .. kdlapfavad• Channlng4br2b•1 CdM I t d·---~-C_A_L_·_s_c_AN_ SCHOOLS& Ag .. 17·34. U.S. s•shtauraGnt anldHwc, ---------1•7• Fleetwood ., car gar, lrg living rm, • w gar. ga • .-citizens only. Call op. enera • P ••eRCHANDISE v •tart •t Juat •eel aide patio, aunroof, comm, furn, pool, kit EARTHWORMS INSTRUCTION 3012 1 ·8~45-6289, M·F. Mon-Fri • 7am-3:30pm mJ;; Co.nvertlbl• with
(DeadllneWtd1 5pm) . Yrty. 213 Topaz Ave. ptlva. $600. lncis utn1, G rowera wanted CAL"SCAN Fashion Island. NB MISC. 6015 46K original mlles. ~*::Uae 8 0 0 .7 3 2 ·2 0 1 8 1 fem prerd. 720-0236 11(~8; gm;~~·· Sp•nlah, French & 714-760-1245 ale. A Real Beauty! htiri';,. tor••t· ltallan & ESLJTOEFL •Floral Sale•• SEAMSTRESS PT/FT Artlat Eaael 611. $3500. 909-927-3335
(Oeedllne Thwl 5pm) ne.-111' r TO H•RSHl!Y/PEPSI & AP exams. Xlnt Busy outdoor nower Work at home. Peace adjustable. s 1 oo. '82 Eldo Blarrltz CORONA &UOnuu.~ saoo-susoo all cuh methods. 497•39'73 markel nffdl creative work, Surger a +. Bia...., J•boret, three I I I I d ***** SHAltE 2724 wHkly Income. Work outgoing person. Exp C 11 B 1 675-2 7 .... u Al or g na • glllage · It P8Y9 to advertise DEL MAR 2122 only 4-e hrs ~r week. highly desired. PT/FT. a r n 1 4 drawers. 4 1hells. mint, only 75k miles
In th• best local Only 1 vendor oper• Apply In person •Vet As•t• s100. 714-283-2200 $4850 846-3959
Real Estate s.ctlon UR allk Udo lalMd I hi M t EMPLOYMENT E Bl I • Thi Exnane...,... n~ss•rv c t tbl 3b h -------U•C TOWN HOM• Apt. 2 car gr, wu~ tor n t 1 area. us very oom n ng. ,._ •....... ..... -,. emen . enc ••. '83 IEldor•do CALL TODAY! 38d, 2.5ea. A/O, 2 fp, room, n/a 1650/mo have $29,760 cHh 250 E. 17th St., C.M. Apply In person 6904 $175 .. fountains $110. Beautllut. 157k mllas LI•• co-nz• 2-<:ar gar, w/d hk, + 112 utl + 112 .. c. avail for lmmed own-West Coaat Hwy. N.B. Bird Bhth1 s20 .. Tree s 2 7 5 0 7 2 3 •5 8 5 2 714/574--4249 pooVapa/tenn 1900sf. avl 1111 07 .. 1101 er1hlp. Verflable by "Shipping/Receiving Wine Bar Apprentice Roses $10. Oleanders, • • • • e • • • • • LI•• Rivera 12150 . 721•1140 · own• r a. Ca I I EMPLOYMENT lmmedl Mu1t have Apply at: Herbs. Jasmine $1 .oo.
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________ ,,,---------Home. Prof'I Female R•PRINT RIGHTS 5530 order tracking exp. 250 Ogle St. C.M. $10. 909-674·9422 Arctic White ext. Bl!ACH LINCOLN
COSTA MESA ~124 pref. N/S/druga, own to 760 "HOW-TO" g~:p'::t~~l~k~l~~o7 M~ ' Restaurant & Cater· cream Int. Roll• f,rlll, MERCURY -.-.1'-.0-A------1 toom w/ b1 a, garageh. book1. report• and 1::)97·•10/hrc:::i Word / Excel. Involve• EMPLOYMENT Ing auppll .. dl1hH, ~~W~~ c~~~~t~~~dc~~ HUNTINGTON MACH
an.&.a W/D, 1 m to be-.c • manuala. Get all 750 Teache,. Needed lftl p f'I pane, naucho warmer, (800)792·9238 ls"•~ 1006 IE'ald• 3bd 1ba W/0 muat . love anlmala. on CD for only $99.95. Toddler• & Pre1chool hvy I ng. ro en11. SERVICES 5533 etc. H.B. 840-7308 find. $3900. 645·55901----------
WVH# hkupa. fp, 2 pkg Avall12/1.$600/mo + Calltollfrff 955-2672 TutorTlm• Fax rH: 714·759-0129 78' ELDORADO 'HbplorerXLT iiiiiil•aiiiiiiiii•il spac:e9 1ome pet• ok. 112 utl +· laat mo. 1 ~•a•-212~••18 Att: Mona 8 RI md/grn, ld'd, V8, lthr,
Reduced!, S849,000 Vacant $1100 1904 L -_. _... Appointment Setter •-•-• COMPUTERS 6018 IAR TZ, Excellent pw/pl, ab•, tilt, crulM. 4br 3,5ba/2()2 Coral Churo'h St. ear.y, 574-4253 v mag. 24 hrs. lot Info. BuslneH to Bullneu. LANDSCAPING/Foreman Please be aware that Condition, alc, $3500. A/C, CD. mrnf $23.8K
Dottle Lewfa, Realtor Bkr/ownr 031·2242 C.D.M. Ooeanalde CAL•SCAN Exp'd, PT, Flex hrs. Exp'd In sprlnklera & the listings In this cat· CALL: 909-927-3335 .e'75..fS08S.
Beaohtlme Realty Fem to ahare 2br 2ba, $8-16 per/hr 734.0711 lighting. Fax rHume egory may require you Apple II GS Computer. l---------
'714-073ae811 ---------w/d, pool, Avail 11 /1 CREDIT 2907 A•••mblv FT 8-4 and salary requHll to call a 900 number printer, monitor. cueVRo"~T 9045 '"TAURUS SEDAN HUNTINGTON $500/mo 673-7d19 Mon-Fri. $6/hr. N~ An:Brlan 714.e4S.8390 In which there Is a Compuserve aohware ~ _. (101481) S12,7SO
---------11a11CB 2140 CDM Female N/S to s 11 charge per minute. programs. $250.00 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BALBOA ~ Dl!BT exper ••c. ma MalntJ Caretaker·FT 714·673·7045 ahare very clean 3bd CONSOLIDATION. Manufacturing plant. Needed In NB Private 11000'8 POSSIBLE. •ea CORVETTE '81BRONCO4X4 P'1flNSVLA 1007 Condo Stvle 2·atory. ::~/m~~e!~/311~:j Cut paymena to 50%. Apply btwn 1o-4:30 at Home To Do Painting, TYPING. Macintosh Perform• Removable Hard-Top/ (200309) S14,280
llA,,.._ONT
3bd 2.5ba. Bit-Ins, Oava. 219-3999 Reduce or eliminate 16791 Burke Ln, H.B. Gardening & Repairs. Part·tlme. At home. Computer color Conv/Roadater Low TOYOTA OF front/ ,-Interest. Same day an. C••h Dlabu,..ment Long-Term 729-7034 Call Toll Free monitor, color printer, Mil•• • 1 Owner HUNTIMGTOll llSACH
• With dock. carpeta,drapea. Ev ... 675-9578 -.-._ Colleotlona 1 ·800·218·9000 tax.modem.manual,& Fac1oryManualslncld 714-847-8555 back patio, gar $980. CDM alk t F--.. lon proval. Non·proflt, • d $900 650-7880 LOTS OF TLCc:::i --------------'714-895-8'728 lalanwd. 13°..•.-lnc'tda Cr~..!_te.,•1o"'a.d of Cl•rk Newspaper• MANAQl!R/Realdent Ext. T-5139 c s. . c:::i '8'7 MUSTANG QT 11,295,000. 2490sq.ft. 'Agent, 875-8120 ...., .vTI pubUahlng Co. affkS Detall oriented, xlnt lor llstlngs. CAL•SCAN Wlnbook Laptop w/ MINT COND S20,000. Ok green, tan leather
utla. Female prerd 1.aoo.22••3ea f u 11 ·t 1 m • ca 1 h paperwork 1klll1. It 0 0 y I! R N M E N T 56K PC card modem. 909-92'7·3335 prem aound, ---------•NEWPORT 714-e76-8834 CAL•SCAN Dlabursement and malnt,ahowunlti,etc. JOBS. Now hiring In A new Hewlett Pack· '7'7 CORVETTE chr~wheels, CORONA BEACH 2169 CM ArtllVF/44 w/caa. VISA/ Collectlon1 Clerk. HS-unit bldg/Bal Pen. your area. $18,000· llld Jet 660 color prntr Brllllant Red! Alarm tow miles, warranty D!t MAJt 1022 New HM, gated, pool. MASTIERCARDll 1yr. expar. preferred. Rent disc. on lbd +sal. S 15 8. O O O . Ca 11 S1200obo. 675·7239 New Mr. Ooodwrench (3UTR923 S1f!,"8
Shiiba gar. l500 la• Find out how to EJCcellent benefit•. Rel'•· 714-220·94118 1.a00-883-0819 Engine, New TlrH BAUIER LOTUS
••vvlew Terr•o• lJ.need ref 831 2111 Send or Fax RHume: Or call 502·804-8882 ext. J-400 ror current ANTED $8000. 909.927.3335 COSTA MESA aao ••A CONDO bf tlo . · • obtain, unHcured. Accounting Su~rvlsor Federal, County, City W 2FP, Loft, Remodeled. ~~ed~c!nm 2':!J.a n~ CM Share 38r Shr ba $20,000.00 + • no c f 1 c I MARIN• MECHANIC TO BUY 6019 '85 Celebrltr Wagon (Ti4 )MZ·7 TOO
So.ofCoutHlghway .... .a S1850.780-l219 W/D, back Yf'd, S350I deposit required, low Nallor"pao ~mmr~~ Experienced. Ref's. & St•••cll•Jc· 4dr, scyt. auto ,1---------1425K BKR 723-2329 .. -· mo + 1/3 utJ + dep fixed Interest. credit ewa, · · ox tmmedlatel Full Time. AL• AN iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil good cond 11900 obo
•.. Unha on 2.5 , _._ •le C•nwon Twnhm 515-4834 or 042~ problem• 0.1<., every· Costa Mesa, CA Newport 0'75-2837 NO l!XP•RIENCE TOP DOLLARS PAID •78o-a4ee• RENT
........ 3Bd Condo for lAaae. one welcome, call 92628•1560 . N•CESSARY1 SSOO For Records. Jau, _.,.,....,.....,,,...,,,...,....,.=~,,,,--
Priced to Se Ill Ford Ad, Golf couru l'etNale to •hare Credit Amerio• Fax <714> 631•7246 Marketlng/Admln. TO $900 Weekly Sountrack1. Etc... '90 ZA1 Vl!TTI! through classified S 1,400,000 View pool rvkg & lux condo Big Cyn 1 -8 0 0 2 5 9 ·1 15 2 8 Catering Help PT. Aaaletant Maclnlosh Potenllal Processing Call Mike 845· 7505 All options. King ol 1---------BllbOI ~llty tenn'ls. $2°00,,...0. 'Lie 3eo 3eA, w/d, pool • CAL•SCAN E I & k d I I • ven ngs WH en •· exper enc• a must Mortgage Refunds . the Hiii. One Owner. T lace Ml 1 Tt4-?I 714-MQ-.5274 garage. s55o+d•P $7+ an hour. •Pu reaum• tot• Own hours. Call ---------1 Red/Red. Four new 0 8 ... ~ n
H•rbOr ii1c1ge ;,i:s:.::e t~eo.11~ llOto !'!!. · 714-723·1CHS9 714/759·6828 1-800-3824189 PETS & urea. S35,ooo. ca11 Call M2 ... Ta. COSTA MESA 1024 2+2. Spa. sauna. So. Huge iiild a. Apt ..-Zllt l!xt. 503 CAL•SCAN ANIMALS 6049 _ __..<7_1 .... 4)_7_so-_15_80 __ • _______ _
patio s211SO/mo.fYt1Y. N.B. Looking for a n11l•••••••ml Hl~KORY m A DMS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ·--Chtl""'"" ....... 3br. Lido lale Home prof'I. SHO + ulll. '-' .-,.. EMPLOYMENT Beautltul smo. old
2ba. wood floot• big 4 +3. So. patio. New 714/81a.oe83 Gift S __.__ WANTED 5535 Calleo kitten needs ~;.:., ~~o: c:arp:i~o~fYt1Y· N• w 4br Iba. fp, Coordlne&e~~prscndl~of iov~'a\.ahe:';i2~a11
..,__... ll7-1fti 714/97 ... 1e1 w/d, gw, no amkr/ ~Panns9'fts. I de Houaealttlng .,..'\:l..,..L-ov-l'""n-g-,"""fr.,..lendlY--. C~~~A~I
or 117•?1 .. P!pt .. -... iio. ConCIO, '*971• :......143,.!;..mo· Call ..... Wanted, nice gunt Persian klttena, Whit• -.,._,.... -·--· ---tiouae for rent or Gre8t 9ufl »r 2ba. 2br 1.21ba. fp, wait In Neefi • RHMM8t•f Eam utra money dtJ!'lnQ the hoUdeys eicc!MnQe '°' ct duties. Torti•• shell, $350. AM ~. I c.r 09', mew.I OOMt. ~. 1~ Cal "'-n.-.:. Plot $Clffne HldlotJ PM'IN 8lfU. grocery ahopQ shots. 714-451-20250 C(nly Sttl.00011 gar., 11225. 7St-OIOO -• pet etc ......., ........... L .ocllNl'lloNt• ~.,,~ •• ~1· •• quiet , -5-ro-a_TIH __ G ____ ,
ot .. , .. ,... 117•1"1 Oorgeoua 4br 2be forget to Mk abOUt reaponalbl•, Clean, GOODS 117·1'Me P999". ~ dupe. on the our Cwret'll ep9Qlalal r•~ prtvacy. >Ont
Mndll M .,,..,..., 714 e4 ..... 78 • ......_ID~-.. , • 'n .. e toe:• ,.rL ~ call lii•••••ml ..,.. belOOftr, fl>Po. ,......, ·-·--..._ 8uale 71...,1"9791 Cu•••• Kenneth .....aa,. ··"' AiWll •• ~ 1.1-.-.--.-iJ.-S____ lfO . 1751.,COliaM•t iwAila..... Smith Qolf ctuba, x... · aaeoo -a••u. (bllrlfl9lft S... AM 6 ......,__) ......... wt11 WOf1( driver + many ~
....... fwlo1Mfl84 WlllllD u OOftlPenlon kw the Item• I UH obo
ILlll 11'1,.... ;·~~4 r:~Ttt: aMmft~ Eldetty MCI or Ortver. ..U.-Sh ~---PP Le ward. •H••• to -•vv~•• ::"" ~· ;:;:=;;;~--;:;:;;;I ....._ ......_ Oood ... • .,_. ,..•••••••I ,,. 144
"'' nCDTS ... ~ ......... I *""· ~M. • ...... =·:~ umr := 81..-:1:::•·1.0ST----.-----·1
wo.;~,'.Jll' · fOOllD
-----~-
eoes IN
TUESDAY, OCTOIER 28. 1997
ACll09S '~ 5 Nur-.nMd
• Andie cour*Y 13 8oonerlll.: 14 Col ...... C'\ _ 15 WldnQ bltd
UI Oete 1rM
17 Well-dftllet's
concem 19 Gl't eddr9ls 20 Pokn
21 Withed (Oii)
22 Stringed
lnsttUments
2• Ctlel'I IX
25 Canil'll
comment 26 Known
beforehand
30 Sounds of an
old typewriter
33 Def•ll 34 e.ginnmo ol
"histofic'
35 Com part
38 Take 1 ctlalt
37 Floor piece 38 Annapolis grad
39 Gaul
41 Propped up
43 Tru'"f'!' flourishes 45 ·-Send Me.
46 M1m1Cked
47 Fly chaser
51 Giddy
54 W-"IO M~ • "Blft ...... ,...
MSWINCllPli.I :=: ..
81 Softc:t...
82 Mullm ptnce
83 a..tke Cal'• ~ 6"4 Gush
DOWN
1 November
blrthltone
2 Short~ 3~
4 BNvel's
conttruct
5 Fine hofset
6 Gets tangled
7 Hlgtl can]
6 Ctilllef features
9 Splneta, e.g.
10 AICldM
11 lmtete
12 E11plolted 14 Doc and Happy
16 Pltchfoo perts
20 Tug
23 Ulerary
24 =-•shoe 26 O.rta 27 Heroic
GMC
28 Writer -~
29 R4lqlJlre
30 Cook 31 Moon goddess 32 Pt. of AMA
36 Toboggan
37~
39 ~ Grotto site
40 "And thou ehal1 know-"
• 1 Pet phrase 42 ·-10 Rio"
44 More lille Snow
White?
47 GIOu
48 lnsigniflc:ant
one 49 $pooky
60 Eidenda
subecriptlon
51 Peak
52 Impulse
53 Mata-
54 18-wheele<
57 Paving goo
58 Alr<fifle ammo
9081 HONDA 9085
(~; '84 OMC
SUBURBAN 2500
4WD white, tan lthr,
7.4 liter, cd changer,
rear ac , loadedl
'97 Civic DX White,
auto, 4200 mlle1
$13,800 673-5542 or
•875-24419
(3kdk381l S23,8'f5 •-JA_G_U_AR-. --9-1-0-5 BAUER LOTUS
COSTA MESA
Sell your extra
household
items in
C LASSIFIED
Call 642-5678
714-842· 7700
CLASSIFIED
'07 420 Q
Blue, grey ln1arlor,
low low miles
(TXT895) $7~85
BAUER LOTUS
COSTA MESA
714-842·7700
It's the re1ource you
can count on to sell a
myriad of merchan-
dise Items, because
our columns compel qualified buyers to•---------
call!
842-5878
·sE·R·VI-C·E--·1 ~~IC CONCRETE &
3528 MASONRY DIRECTORY
ADDITIONS
REMODELING
..
111•111111111•111'1,n--• •• ·~ •r• ..... X&.TM.9UIO. •
le mllee, --,.... elr. .-utH ......
wry ctun IMdedl ~ ~
1230Cm t4H• ttll,600 T.O.OIM 1---------,
mcmtDIWmLOW? 9123 •e3 uiiGNt Ma ..... ------VOl.ISWIGU ... UJS
mutt ... , Run• • '"li••••••••i , ......... -nl~ l"tt rlor. l'lllel SUIAIU 9200 ·~ Ntftbir~ ._,...._ had oo ldu wit.at._ and 8outh •• LOTW woodgrain Interio r 7e Velllewa .. n ...
... up ... •• w111 let L o•rt• SSl'IUT M• aete5 Obo 11~• .. , OL ....,. w,,1,. ~. •n ono N08'l1I .u. ... rro. ...._ Black. Blec9' ... th«. OOOd r9'1ab .. trant~ ml, con.ctore CIUllC.
6'711 -W.a 0.-.. U.. ;.ck Of chtbt CD, tinted •lndow•. PL-.OUTH J)Ot1al60n. Good cond. $1 4,000 5"-e852
o Qtl aDclwbealFt "•look.ttM._,. 19K mi1.. uA 9165 11so 673·27411--------
o t I 11 1D1 I WM '° .,... i., 1D1 on bri'9 <':l:>~h ~\9-#~~s MISC. AUTO 9245
•Q'74 llaooa 1!°"°' a.co.er. Tiu. Dlu coaTA ... u ••1 •undanoe RS TOYO? 921019iiiii••••iiii WEST BA8T au*omedcalJJ ~me• a.._. (?14 )e4 a.7700 Turbo. N•w eng1 trans A 'a I! 1 Z K D CAR S
6 K Q J 8 8 • A 1014 8 muitm GIOrOD. ..._ the jMk beW & brkt. Lott of lltrH, FROM 917&.
OJ 10 8 I 0 VGW t.he triek, Pry went Into. a come. MAZDA 9
72k, =~~~~218000 '80 Celloa ST Red, PorachH, C•dlllacs, ()'I () '7 How lOQI thfa mip t ban tut.cl 125 6 •P. •m/fm, AJC. Chevy•. BMW'S, Cor-
• J 6 •AK 109832 t.h t re la no way o( t.ellins, but. J ••4 Vopger SI! 7 original owner, 111"1 vellH. Alto JHp1, 80t1l'H could eee that Ut.tner,,.. ~ ,93 ftX7 paangr. ve Power AC cond. $5000 762·8826 4WD's. Vour area.
Red/Ivory, only 29k. Ilk• new. 39, 180ml. or 640-6470 Toll ~ •Void inf unbearably and beeide1 my Sspd, mlntl $12,350obo. 759-3407 194 LANDCRUISl!R 1 .aoo.21 e.eooo o Altt'742 time at the bri dse table i1 nry #204729 918,877 (101592) $32,750 Ext.A-5139
OAK Q J 10 6 valuable) .o I spread my band and Lexus OF Can't seem 10 for curr•nt titting• •I claimed t he balence. No one ha11 MISalON Vie.JO '82 PASEO CAL•SCAN ever accuaed Sam o(being wiabla to (800)888·8388 get to all those (200Cl74) $5250
The bidding: count to 13. He led a heart which repair jobs
hia putner trumped. •-ME--R-C_E_D_ES--9-1-3-0 around the house? '80 SUPRA
(101639) $32,280 Can't seem to
get to all those
EAB1' 90Ul'll
I• P-ao P-"C ~ to pal> Ugbtner J\19' '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii let the
before be Jumped out the window, 1• Cl lfl d '81 MR2
(101575) $8280 TOYOTA OF
HUNTINGTON BEACH
714-847-8555
repair jobs
around the house?
Let the Cl .. alfled
Se~lce Directory
and tried to eoD10le him with the '83 380 aeL •H e
feet that the opponen ta can make Great Condition, Service
•• t o p.. P ...
{)peniJli lead: Jack of• m apedea. But even today, after all 1 401<,.;'~~9~= obo Directory
theee years, w hen Li&htner aeee me *,87 5808L White help you find
If you doubt that eq>ert.I have a
sense of hum or, we offer Charl es
Lochridge'• own words about. this
deal, u reported by Dick Frey in
"The Bridie World.• Sitting North
and W est, rea1eetiv ely, were
TheodOTe Lightner and Sam Fry Jr.
hia mumbled greetillf aoundl suapi-with Gray llhr, chrome reliable help.
cloualy like, 'You big,erkl.. wheelt, to mlleag_e, all 842·5878
Buy II. Sell II. Find II.
Claaalfied.
help you find
rellabl• help.
opts, never damiged. --------Learn to be • better brid1e $25,000. Call Dick
pley erl Subacrlbe now to tbe 714-432-0100 day or
Goren Briclae Letter by ca1l.lq 714-644-4241 eves
The auct.ion is 1hown aa it
occurred in a rubber bridge game
mor e tha n half-a-century ago.
Needleu to eay, North and Weat
(800) '788-1226 for information.
Or write to: Goren Bridie Le~
ter, P.O. Box 4410, Chlcap, IlL 60880. .
JAGUAR 9105 JAGUAR 9105 LEXUS 9115
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
'83X.18
White, barley leather,
Select Edition war·
ranty, CD changer,
chrome wheels, low
mllH. (3SE5636)
t21,885
BAUER LOTUS
COSTA MESA
(714)842·7700
'84X.18
Sliver, grey leather,
sunroof, CD changer,
chrome wheels, low
mUet (3EUG886)
$24,885
BAUl!R LOTUS
'85 X.10
Vanden plas, 28k,
British racing green
111745233 $34,877
LEXUS OF
MISSION VIE.10
(800)089·5388
'85 X.IS COUPE
Black, black leather,
CD changer, chrome
wheels, low miles.
4.0L. (3NFP549)
$28,885
BAUER LOTUS
COSTA MESA
(714)842·7700
COSTA Ml!SA
(714J842·77oo JEEP _....._~,8~5....,..X~J-8~~-9110
Topaz, Oatmeal
leather, aunroof,
fully loaded
(3MNP548) 27 ,985
'85 X.IS COUPE
Black, black leather
CD changer, chrome
wh11l1, low ml, 4.0L
(3NFP549) $281895
'85 X.18
Tltanlum, oatmeal
leath•r, aunroof
(3L YY533) $31,985
BAUl!R LOTUS
COSTAMl!SA
(714)042-7700
To place an ad In
ClaHlfled
Call 842·5078.
'80 Eegle Wegon Lmtd
4x4, auto, pw, ps,
am·fm, runs good.
$700 obo 631.0757
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
let the
ClaHlfled
Service
Directory
help you find
reliable help.
642·8878
'85 LS 400
Full option,
Lexus certified
#004750 $38,875
'85 SC 300
White/Ivory, only 21 k.
Lexus certified
#123456 $34,977
'85 ES 3 00
White/ivory,
Lexus certified
1090578 $25,877
'85 SC 400
Black/Ivory.
full oplion, 37k
Lexus certified
#041645 $37,877
'04 LS 400
White/Ivory,
full option, 28k,
Lexus certified
#214531 $33,877
'88 LX 450
Black/jade, full option,
2D pkg
11'127211 $43,877
187 l!S 300
Black/black,
full option,
Lexu• certlned
#002585 31..1877
Lexus uF
MISSION Vll!.10
(800) 080·5388
Buy It. Sell It. And It. Claaalfled.
MERCURY
'85 MYSTIQUI!
Low ml, at, a/c, pw,
locks, tllt, cc, cau $8995 111605219
'84 SABLE
3.8 V6. loaded,
showroom cond.
$8985 111636854
BEACH LINCOLN
MERCURY
HUNTINOTON BEACH
(800)792-9238
Chances are
you will find
what you need
at the price
you want to pay
when you read
ClaHlfled
daily
642-5678
TRADE
through classifie<I
642·5878
SELL
your used vehicle
through classified
642-5678
On the move?
Sell your extra
household
items
in Classified
Run your ad in
the Newport Beach
Costa Mesa Dai~
Pilot and the
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
Independent to
reach over 100 ,000
homes. Fax us this form with your credit
card # or mail it in
with a check today!
Run for a weekJ I(
your car does not
sell we'll run it
D YIS,51&1 MY CAlt
........
Cr.lit Canl 0 1>11:. OVISA DAM X
~-----~E,.>---
... To OAl.Y Pl.Ol DI w ..,.-.c..-.CA'1617 17141 U1-.M11 C> WI 17"1_,1 "1N ,,,_"""o+I ""-"'"" ,._ ..... ___ __._.-.M---
O•-0 -0 ... ._
O N 0 -0 --0.,_._ a~ o....,c... O•-a-.... 0-...
0 1-0--0--o-~ Oc-o..-0 ... -0 .... --. o c...i. QO-......... OM -O ..... o.J O ... W-
• 110 for ' tin., 1 1.00 ..Ji otlJillo,ol w.
for another week
FREE! All for $1 o· ·----········------------··
3870
eDAN DAWSON•
PLUMBING
Water Heaters • Drains
Remodel • Repair P•t titter/Dog Welker Faucets • Flxtur11
Dally/0111rnlghl visits. L1554722 • 646-e720
R1f1 avl. Llc'd/Bond•d Per•717·5720
Denise 714-838-8870 --------
AFPOROA8LK
ROOI' RIPAIR
Qu11lty work. All lyp11.
Sr. Dl1c. Llc'd & Ins. * '714·297·3388.
BAL.aoA AOOPINO co
Quality Work Guamt'd
Reroof/Aapalr FrN Eal
Lio/In• 831·5081
Igdqmknt
3932
WINDOWS 3934'
NEW WINDOWS NOWI
1 ·Day Prori lnstanatlon
Free Est•sava En.,gv
Reduce Nolt••Sr Disc
L#720327 882·33e1
Clllh