HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-12-11 - Orange Coast PilotI
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
: CRYSTAL COVE -Ameri-
! ca'I -.wer to the French Riv-i tera could have been nestled r between Newport ~acb and
; Lagu111 Beach by now,--9leeling
: some o1 the tourist towns' glory. ! Instead the 3-mlle stretch of
• coast remains a quiet state
. beach with a cluster of historic
bungalows still inhabited full-
• time with nary a hotel or sou-
venir shop in sight.
: .a WOrkklass resort.
And n_ow, nearly 30 years
after elaborate plans for a world-
class resort at Crystal Cove died
STOrt.IY CHRISTOPH ER GOFFARD
PH0f06, I Y MAit( MARTI"
under red tape and public They soaked up the ambience,
debate, planners are pitching a brought back some idea and
pro~ for, well. a world-clasi hammered out a aketc:hy propos-
resort. They tackle the red tape al for 11the outltandtng coastal
and pub.Uc debate starting next development in Amelie&•
year, when they seek Coastal They'd level the beach
Commission and other officiAI shacks for shops, tunneled walk-
-apprevti&.-t-ur'JIVCl~l1'Tow:n5e hOteii -an--
There are d.iff erences, of Meditenanean-style, of course.
coW'Se. The plan's most stunning recom-
In 1969, The Irvine Co. mendation: moving Coast High-
owned the land. The company wa.y 3 miles back into the hills to
dispa.tched a. team of executives create a more scenic drive.
and p~ers. on a three-week Now, the state owns the land.
tour of European resorts -Por-Officials recently hired a coali-
tugal's· Algarve Coast, Spain's tion of consultants, dubbed
Costa del Sol, Italy's Ligurian
Coast, France's Cote d'AZur. •SEE COVE PAGE A8
District isn't
clowning with
local attorney
• Legal jousting erupts
over comments trustee
made in newspaper article.
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA - A clown
is a particular circus character.
No, this is not a first-grade
vocabulary quiz. It's a First
Amendment scuffle that ii pitting
two of the most powerful offldaJs
in two of the most prosperous
Southern California cities against
each other.
Tuesday night, the Newport-
Mesa school board rejected a
claim against one if its members.
Piled by Michael Miller, the city
attorney of Arcadia, the claim is
against newly elected school
board President Jim Perryman.
Last month, Miller threatened
litigation against the school district
for not publishing a series cj sex-
related articles in the Carta Mesa
High School newspaper. Miller's
daughter was the editor of the
campus newspaper at the time.
Miller had been in correspon-
dence with the school district
since May, when the articles were
supposed to have been 'pub-
lished. Dissatisfied with the dis-
trict's policies on student publica-
tions, Miller bad threatened to
take the district to court to get it to
comply with what he said was tbe
students' First Amendment
rights.
Responding to the threatened
lawsuit. Perryman, then Yic:e presi-
dent of the school board, said,
•'Jbis clown needs to get a life.•
Miller tired back with a claim
and threatened a lawsuit against
F~ for $50,000. The school
district's attorneys drafted a
response and encouraged the
school board to reject the claim,
which it did unanimously.
•Should Mr. Miller decide to
file a lawsuit in this matter, be
assured the district will vigorous-
• SEE Cl.AIM PAGE A13
Newport Beach appoints
Ducey as its airport czar
• The assistant city manager will get a salary increase
and focus only on the push for an airport.
By Jennifer Armstrong, ()ajly Pilot
: HE IS ____ .. ______ ~ Keeping a bird's eye view on
E thedty. ·Holiaay season
now in full swing ! A.YING HIGH i Hupp, .C3, ii one ot m police
: belic:opter pilots -four from
: Costa Mesa and two from New-~ port Beach -who work f0r the
~ departments' joint h.ellcopter
: progNmt )mown .. ABU!, ---1~--~
son>eooe who is Jess tmtunate. : which stand.I for airborne law
Through Women ol Vlsioo. a vol-! enforcement.
unteer ministry that belpl needy :. A 14-vear veteran ot the Cos-families in World ViDoa projedl " in Orange County, AfDca, Medco : ta Mesa department. Hupp
and Palestine, you can make a ! worked u a regular patrol offi-
donation in someone's name - a ! cer in a squad car and on a friend. teacher, family member. ! motorcycle before ea.ming bis
co-worker or paston A Christmas ; pilors license and joining the
card of recognition will be 9811t to l helicopter squad four yean a.go.
each person you wish to honor. 1 Surprisingly, Hupp said mak-
Also, when you donate, you have ! ing the Jump from the back of a
a.choice in what you'd like your 1 motorcycle to a helicopter wu-
qift ~ go towards, wh~ tt be : n't that tough because the job is 6~mg ~t children m Mexico ! essentially the same.
Oty, p~ basic ~tion for 1 •The most important part ii
young girls in Kenya. training · bein ood ._ hn • H parents to help their at-risk school l g a g pauo....an, upp
children through the Parent Insti-! ~~· •The flying im't really that
tute in Orange County, assist the : difficult. You just have to be a
Leaming Center and Teen Center : good observer in the air."
in Costa Mesa or use where most :
needed For more information. l ON CALI.
please contact Women cl Vision. Based in a John Wayne Ah-
1651 E. Fourth St, Suite 229, San-1 port hangar they share with the
ta Ana. 547-957~ • • : Orange County Sheritt's Depart-
To ~lessen the damage of
the El Nino storms, Smdbllgs-2-U
is a new sandbag delivery service
to both residential and business
~r in 0range eounty. gs-2-U will provide a full
delivery service of all ready filled
sandbags to your door. It's an easy
way to get san:· since you won't·have tO~e with going to
the city yard and shoveling sand
in bags, tying them and hauling
them Dack tO your car. There are
no hidden costs, there is one
product, a 12-incb-=inch W
protected polypropy bag
that's professionally tied with
stainless steel wire. The total cost
of $2.50 per bag includes the bag,
sand and delivery. To order bags,
please call 224-5416. •••
1be Chrt.ltmu Tree Jamboree
is still a best buy for beautiful
Christmas trees, even though the
price bas increased $10 sinoo last
year. nees come in all sh.apes and
sizes, and there isn't a tree over
$29.99. lbere't a nice selection of
noble firs, gm.ad firs, Douglas firs,
and wreaths, holly and taDle-top
greenery. Loo~ for the Daily Pilot's
$2 off coupon on noble fir wreaths.
The tree lot is now located at
Newport Dunes, just off Jamboree
and &ck Bay Drive. Bring cash.
checks are not accepted. ••• In case you missed. the holiday
walk on 31st Street in Omnery
Village last Friday. you'll have a
second chance with by attending
the Canoe~ Wlage open house
today from p.m. to~It will be an evening far • and
savoring• the businesses, restau-
rants and studiol of Canrwy W-
lage. Merchants participating in =esttvities ind.Ude,.. ..
Tbe ltd c..... Canrwy
1Ue Orb, Rae Lbie WO..
ICDm Dmlgn, .Jalle llnl Studio,
Thplpln Promotlonl, Doable
Vllkm ~ nrt'a Om of.
IODd, Sc Bodi, and JOYm
OnJr&co Dellgn.
l ment helicopter crew, Hupp and
: the other bigh-fiying cops panol 1 both Newport Beach and Costa
: Mesa on five-hour shifts, seven
1 days a week.
: Besides the seven pilots, l three mechanics keep the three
: police helicopters in tiptop fiy-
1 ing condition and sparkling
: clean.
1 While their primary focus ls
: keeping an eye on the New-
: port-Mesa area, the pilots some-
1 times respond to calls in Santa
: Ana and to other areas in emer-
1 gencies, Hupp sald.
: All three department hell-
1 copters are equipped with
: hooks on the bottom that can l carry buckets of water to dump
; on brush fires and landing skids
1 that can assist in rescuing swim-
; mers from the ocean or stranded 1 bikers from steep cliffs when
; needed.
1 FIRED ON
1 While the job has many
: perks -such as panoramic
: views of the dty and the l Orange County coast from Long
: Beach to·San Clemente -one
1 of the unfortunate job hazards
Costa Mesa woman
robbed at gunpoint
A Costa Mesa woman was
robbed of Jewelry at gunpomt by
two men in front ol her home
Tuesday afternoon. polioe said
The 25-year-dd woman WU
walking OD the sidewalk In frolll
of her.apartment~ aroudd
1:45 p.m. In the eOO ol Cen-
ter Street when two men
approecbed her and displayed a
gun. aald COit.a Mel& PoUat Sgt 'lbmBoylan. .
.
o1 the beUcoJ»t-. . .Plot i. gunfire
frequently afmeK at them by
people on the ground. Hupp
said.
·we get fired at an tbe ttme,
espedaJly up m SiDta :ADA: We
just don't g.t hlt. • Hupp said. ·
Since the~ heJicopten
don't haYe proteCUTe armor on
the bottom, tbe pilots are Wt
with little protectkm. from bul-
lets.
When they're not being pelt-
ed with bullets, p:ilats like Hupp
are often dodging sea gulls and
other bird.I that pose almost as
serious a threat as a gun.
The men escaped with more
than $1,200 worth d. her jewelry,
iDdudiDg rlngl and a neckJace,
Boylansakt.
1be ftnt robbs ta delatbecl u
about 23 yae.n old, 5 foot 10, wtth
a light camplexkm, sparse mm-
tacbe, blue nylm hooded jacket,
blue penta,, and a white T shirt.
Boylanaakl.
The otbs ii ~ u l5
yeon old, 5 foot 5, 140 pounds,
with a gray SWMtlbilt, Boylan
said.
A pilot onee bad a close call
When a large bird auhed
through the glass canopy of the
helicopter c:ockptt. fordng him
to make an emergency landing
back at home bale, Hupp said.
T£AMWOIUt
While pilots Ulte Hupp are in
tli. ddver'1 seat, the right-hand
man ta the obler:ver, a fellow
pilot who 1erve1 u the eyes,
ears and navigator.
As the pilot handles the con-
trols and communicates with
the police dispatcher on the
ground and other airaaft in the
police briefs
Operators of driving
school arrested
area, the observer gives direc-
tions and loo.kl out for suspi-
dous people, speeding vehicles
or fleeing suspects on the
ground.
In the event of an emergency
-IUCh as a pilot being injured
and left unable to fiy the airaaft
....... the observer can step in and
safely land the helicopter, Hupp
said.
NOWHERE TO HIDE ny as they may, most suspects
just can't shake the long arm of
the law when it comes in the
form of a helicopter, Hupp said.
Whether pursuiJlg a suspect
fleeing police in a car or on foot,
the helicopter's night IUlllight
and Infrared cameras keep
atmlnals in light.
Once hovering oftrbead. the
airborne police can tell their fel-
low otticen on the ground right
where to go.
•ney may try to bide in a
bush or aawl under a boQM, •
Hupp said. •sut once we get
our eyes on them, they're not
going to get away.•
-Story by 11m Grenda
Photo by 'Don LHch
of Menifee, who worked in Ncxco,
were fired mm their poltl this
year, the indictment said.
Assistant United States Attor-
ney Daniel S. Unbardt, wbo is
prosecuting the case, said Coppo-
la and Jeclanan have been .it
summonses to appear ID c::ow:t.
Each ol tbe four acculed face
up to five ~ in pison on 17
cowm of mail fraud and a
$250,000 ftne tf conridacl.
O il and water don't mD.
But II eut and W81t 11
Welt and never the twain
lbdlD98t.
And blendlng placm where
people do bUllnese and p1acee
when peOp&e live is tough to pull
olf. .
. Sadly, smnetimes neither party
Js at fault. 1be villain ol the pJeoe
being an element neither side can
coitrol..
. Thars why Bill Hamilton's
~for a dinky, 20-foot by 20-
fGOt dance floor inside his Can-
qery restaurant was thumbed
down-quite reludantly-by . the City Council this week.
, Hamilk«l. who also owns
Malarky's and the Riverboat. is
ODe of the best-liked. most-aidmimd people In thalwbor mea. If there's a good cause, he'll
help it.
• But even Bill's huge bank of
goody points didn't help Monday
ntgbt. A Qty Coundl that appears ftDany to be DlOie mgni7Ant that
quality of life ts an overarching <t>ncern. agmllzed. then over-
twned the Planning Commission's
a)>proval of The Cannerys dance
pennit
Cannery Village is already tak-mg too many lumps.
' By day, the place is quaint and ~ u can be, with art gal-
leries, antique shops, flower ven-
4ofs, boutiques, professional
offices, coffeehouses and marine
lh,j;nesses all embracing one
another in blissful harmony.
' But when darkness comes to
Cannery Wlage, the charming ciuarter can tum ugly, its streets
qecoming about as close to dan-
ge.rous as streets get in Newport. "fh!! later the hour, the more per-
Uous the neighbolhood.
' If it were just bars and restau-
rants in Cannery Wlage, things
wouldn't be so bad. But there are 8bo residents, for this is an experi-
. -
martin
ment in ulixed-use that D1QSt
everybody would like see suc-
ceed.
There am JW>ple living in
pricey watetfront a>ndaminiums,
others residing in SDlf"ner digs
above and behind some of the
businesses.
For sure, this lifestyle isn't for
all ol us. But those who have
adopted it love it -as do those
who are able to enjoy this mixed.-
use living in most major cities of
the world.
Such neighborhoods thrive in
Paris, Rome, London, New York.
San Francisco, Qllcago, even in
parts of downtown Los Angeles.
Everybody gets along, oil and
water mix and the twain meets.
But not in Newport Beach.
Here we seem to attract a breed of
lout that, apparently, is more vile
than in any of those cities. It is dif-
ficult to imagine that there are
streets in Newport Beach -Baby-
lon b.y the Bay, Paradise of the
Pacific -that are as mean as one
will find in New York!
One local resident who video-
tapes ~e late-night village scene
with bis camcorder says he has
been beaten up twice this year
while out shooting after mid.night.
But he has documented what
i.
go8I OD ai'ound there late at night.
~wrkendr:~ Jug, • ~. yellinu, uli-
D.tdlng CID lklewaJb and gen-
ent di~~· 1'bele's jull <XlDlt4Dl. petty,
, ewiry-week yandalian• says one
wcmm wbO lives and worts in
the village.'
The ltatlltk:» leell1 to back her
\IP· Aooordlng to PcUca Chief )lob
McDoneD. the few squme blocb
-adually, ICIM are quite oddly
sbaped-1hat a:mprise Omnery
Village account foc 26% of all
am.ts citywide.
There have been 881 mrests in
the village through November. It
would be interesting to know how
many of the bustees live outside
Newport Beach.
_ Now, hem~ some 80 peo-plea month mane the tify's
. smallest neighborhoods seems like
an epidemic of aimin.al activity.
However, most of the perps are
booked for relatively minor
charges, e.g., vandalism and pub-
lic nuisance.
But that doesn't mean they are
a trifle, and doesn't mean they
aren't repugnant to local residents
and business owners.
And that's why Bill Hamilton
doesn't get the 20 by 20 dance
floor he believes is key to being
able to keep the Cannety's doors
open. And that's a crying shame.
But the cops are making
progress: Arrests in Cannery W-
lage are down 10% from last year,
says Chief McDonell So why not
bring the numbers down much
further with a stronger police pres-
ence in the vil!agel He doesn't
have the resOO.rces, says the chief.
•The only plAoe to get (more
police) is from other areas of the
city."
And that, too, is a eying
shame.
• FRED MMl'IN'S column runs f!!VefY
Thursday find Saturday.
. .,..,,s
WINTER
Order our J STAR package and y_ou'U
,,__;._ ~ .. 95 in$tallation ... Complete ................... ~. and Remote
So$ic Service.·· Conwrter and
CQntrol ... Oimey Channel ... Encore
r choice of !:tf2 of these ... H60,
yooc· s~me or th, Movie Channel. inemox, nd "dual · Save up to 31% off i ivl price$.
_L -L-.• t OUf (omr,ete 8osic Service ... Oil. .. OMl ggQ\I 95 and get installed for only 14. ·
e>i-~' CJYQilable.
MARC MARffi I DALY Pl.OT
SentorJoluuma Piednnhoots a smile toward her Mends at"lhe"bu1nooet"Cll'awn:~mmrav~rJ'i
during a blood drtve by the Red Cross at Costa Mesa High School One hundred students ~
signed up for the drive offering up a pint of blood. ·
~voRT·JV.-<Jp +~RIB~~$
(\O)fpA~~
·2CXXJ Newport Blvd.
Cost;a Mesa
For reservations call:
631-21.10
During the holidays bring a can of food t.o put under our
Christmas Tree and receive a complement.ary appetizer of your
choice. All donated food it;ems will help S.O.S. feed the hungry.
Thank you for your continued support over the past 13 years.
Especially This Year!
Wishing you all a
Happy & Safe Holiday Season
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily PIJot S2.9miD1m111199'1 to SS.3 mDJbi at build-
out. 'J;be biQgelt l9VellU8I wm ca:ne mm port~~:~.;== :n~~=-=~ would mean a $1 miDkn lb:ldfall tbe fiat tlon msts the most. o 1111twg to St.2 mlDlm
year but a S'l.5 mtJlkJo prallt by' 2008, . by the time the tracts are ftDed.
according to dty revenue analyses. •we used , very oonservatlve . . .
agreements with the county t outline
how the area's property taxes will be
divided between the two entities. Those
agreements will go into effect if the city
decides to go through with the annexation
after a series of public meetings on the
topic.
The agreements also paved the way tor
a financial report that outlines the costs
: and benefits of annexing the hilly expanse
• · ·between Corona del Mar and Laguna
: Beach. Those analyses first will appear l befcre the council Jan. 12. l According to the preliminary figures, l revenues will escalate from $1.9 million in
: 1997 to $'1 .8 million when the burgeoning
1 home developments are built out. Costs, 1 meanwhile, are expected to grow from
BYERS' CHOICE CAROLERS• FITZ AND
FLOYD BALDWIN BRASS• ARTHUR COURT
WILTON ARMETALE • AROMATIOUE
FRAGRANCES BOYD'S BEARS• COLONIAL
CANDLES AND MUCH, MUCH MORE
THE GREY GOOSE
WESTCLIFF PLAZA ··
1032 Irvine Avenue at Seventeenth Street• Newport Beac
retepftone 642-7803
Hours: Monday-Saturday: I 0-6 PM.
Sunday: Noon to 5 PM.
As always . shipping and complimentanJ gift wrap avallablt.
Peggy Dumy said. PoHa! protection will
c:oSt-St.6 mDiion by build~ wblch·wm
include hiring more oftioen. The city
alJeady is roveriDg the 1mi~
area a bit -Newport ol6cers responded
to 127 calls there ih the put 10 months.
Also, about 10% of the d.ty's youth
sports partidpmts and nearly one-tbitd ot.
non-msident city Hbrary users ~ from
Newport Coast. Ducey said "We're cur-
rently providing services to Newport
Coast at a cost to our cuinmt residents,•
she said
Some residents -partirulady in Coro-
na del Mar, which abuts the 5,600 acns ot.
Irvine Co. land -have voiced concerns
that taking in Newport Coast would make
the dtytl~-·
'.. t •
~~------~---------~ I . PuRcHAsE ANY ' I 1 · CHRISTMAS I
TREE
dilttld • pla~tng to lpelkl 13.5 ' with padty ~ ~=~: dents.lt~~76 •
poned b1ring an arcbitechinilflrm • dentJ: If theWakbf School
to estimate the renovation needs the district up ori jb dter. the
at &stblutt until the legal sit\IA-son( students likely~ be
tion ls resolved. But at its Tuesday streamed info Qtber 1c:boo11,
night meeting, the sdlool board dals said.
gave the ~ light for the dis-"We've been talld.o:g about *11.11
tiict to hh'e an architect, whether for a while,• said Jaqult
or not the Waldorf School is out. Vaskovich, a special education '
Without saying the school teacher. "I think it will be a posi-
won't accept the district's officer, tive move for our students.•
Waldorf parent Diane Kastner If their housing situation ii
said the Marion Parsons Special resolved, Schneider said tbe Wal-
Education Center is a little too dorf School would postpone ~
small. action against the school district.
. •
"Over 50 Years of Fine Quality" ~
CUSTOM·MADE NEW FuRNlTURE ·• DRAPERIES ·
DECEMBER SPECIAL ADDITIONAL 5°/o OFF
Th"' December 15"' 1997
-,()() ' -'--c ,
(_ ) I ,' I : ' ' I -
Factory• Showroom
1998 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
642-8400
'97 YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE
{fyou buy ft
aomeaohere else
You're Paying
Too•uchl
•Umbrellu
• Replacement
eu.blona
•Spa Coven
Newaort BEllrrY'1UPPLY
To •II of our wondorful cllffomenl ..
"Thank you for lett.lng 116 help you
with •II of your pertJOMI '1eauty Mede
for thd pnt ~ yeare. •
~, · KERSTIN :r-------------.-------------, Ii ZO%. OPP~ Buy :.r::m· l
: 1 Entire PUrchase : PREE 1 <I I I ' I •Excludes Sebastian 8. Dermalogk:a 1 All prod.lets must be ldentlcal I ~ I & Aveda 8 Murad 1 Not to be combined With other discounts I
~-L----~,!S.!,~ ___ _:_ ____ ~..!..~----.J
@ 3601 Jamboree Rd. #8 N.B. ~
·• .. • ' • ~
261-6788 -~
Jamboree at Brim>I • Back Bay Court ~
There isn't
a better cigar
anywhere in
thewak:J .
Slllm J..a. • N•CNI lJnl. "'*'"' ............
wmld NCal'd -*ilkg tbe MllnNl .,n..,. at tbe 1DG1t ev.a
ill 2' hours. DDW bu ..... thV to
add to -~ itlOwdld '1'0PhY c:me ••
Dur1ng pageant alremcmes
Mid Jut week at .. Liillor m8DO
ID ~ Vegas, JeiD Cii**eCl tbe
ftnt-evw Ma. Alnei1cA title and
S'IS,000 in pdr.e mmey.
Jeske, 36, wu among 50
women ages 26 to 52 who me mar-
ded. llng1e or dMJroed vying tn
evening gown. IWimlult and per-
IODal intemew~fortbe
aown.
Although the former Newport
Beach resident DOW livel tn Santa
--ll~-an<H&-mejoltng In eommuni-
cations at Natlonal Untverslty tn
Costa Mesa. she represented her
home state of Colorado in the
pageant.
Jeske worked bani to whip her-
self into shape both mentally and
physically before the pageant -
she lost 35 pounds while on a strict
diet and workout regiment with a
personal trainer -but she was still
........ to oame Clilan top.
~ I got tbliie and loobd
Uouad. I tbongbt, 'Miin. l'I be~
Pf if I eve11 get In tbe top to,'•
J..a Mid. •1be girll were really
~· Jelte laid she felt ber pedcr-
:mance In the ooe-m-one interview
held before tbe staged pageant
and her answer to the on-stage
queltioo helped propel her to the
title.
Just days after winning, Jeske
already bu a tun IChedule of per-
sonal appearances and functk:ms to
fulfill as Ms. America, including
parades, various other events and
maybe even a meeting with Presi-
dent Bill Clinton, she said
Jeske hopes to use her role as
the first MA. America JD :promote
anti-smoking efforts, since her
father suffers from emphysema.
The blinding glare of the spot-
~--EL :MN CH ITO
Party Trays
Order by the dot.en!
•Mini Tacos •Trays of Enchiladas
• Mini Taquitos • Tamales
• Mini Burritos • Chingolingas
Salsa, Rice, Beans & Guacamole by the Quan!
Taco Salads • Fajitas • Camit.as
Pickup at Nearest Location
CORONA DIL MAR NEWPORT BEACH 644 8226 67U855
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
UDO PENINSULA -Parent
Help USA, a local nonprofit group
that works against child abuse, is
looking for more than toy dona-
tions this Christmas -it needs
new headquarters.
The group still need toy dona-
tions, too. But without an office,
the group members won't even
have a place to collect those
donations.
The 11-year-old program, run
by Executive Director Sally
Kanarek and staffed by volun-
teers, provides weekly food box-
es, support groups and parenting
classes to families referred by
county Child Protective Services.
It helps about 150 families per
year, Kanarek said.
Kanarek and the group have
made bead.lines in the past: It
offered rewards to parents for
turning their children over to
authorities rather than abandon-
ing them, and it defended
Michael Jackson when he was
aa:used of abusing a child.
Now the group owes $1,000 in
rent and will likely vacate the two-
room waterlront office by Sunday.
Parent Help won't be left
homeless; tt bas another facility in
Santa Ana, the site of counseling
and food-bank services. Kanarek
said she needs both -as New-
port Beach serves as an adminis-
trative headquarters, and Santa
Ana is a'ammed with service-ori-
ented activities.
She ran both offices 1ut year
on $60,000. 1b1s year the groupw
finances failed along with her
health. She suffered complica-
tions from anemia and a tumor.
The mother of two lives on a
$21,000 salary with no benefits
plus some supplemental income
from a second job at the Macy's
jewelry counter.
The last time Kanarek moved
out of another Newport Beach
office, she lost about 40% of her
volunteer force, she said.
She eltimates she needa about
$5,000 to stay in Newport and
about $10,000 to keep the offk:e
mnnt?g. ·
·~e've gone through tough
times before, but I feel bad
because it's this time of the year
W , \ I~ I ·~ I I c ) : ~) { · ~
Select armloada from our huge mortment or tt. fNehest flCWMrs and
aeaaonal green• In today'• moet wam.d colora at tnM waNhouM prices.
Fre.,. Christin.a Greene Antv• hllyl
Wre•ths mixed greens with pine cones ..................................... : ......... •1 ro and up
0.rt.nds for traditional look ................................................................. '100 per foot
Pine Boughs cedar, noble branches .................................... from 75-per branch
.... of Holly/Wlnterbentea ..................................................... •1 00 and up
Polnaettl•• a· pots .. ~ ................................ ~ ........... ..-each or 5 plants for'308'.'
....... Breath generous bunches ............................................................. •s• bU
HOlldlly · Anllngements .................................................................... from ~
X·lllls BOws .................................................................................... from •• ~
~Hlu.8
Anaheim Hills Business Center
5140 E. La Palma Ave. #106
• WAXING • 80DY TREATMENTS • NAIL CARE • HAIRSTYUNG • E1.£CTROL YSIS R~IM.OGY .,
MAssAGE ~
APIM!leefllealdt
120 ~ST"1~TREfit
COSTA MESA
( 714) 6 50 h 5 0·1
• .
. '
. . . ' . . ..
..
lllJ~
t!MJ~..-
~"' ft/al..
S.~5"Trees . ... ....
$9.95
2252 fa'IM.w 2300 Harbor Blvd.
(Pall wl9w/Wllon) (Hart.or Cenlw)
Costa Meta Costa Mesa
645·5409 645-8542
MAGIC FOREST .
IS BACK AGAIN
For The 12th Straight Year·
(J} £u ALWAYS KEPT YOURSELF Q/ACnVE AND HfALTHY.
FUNNY, HOW SOME llilNCS
NEVER a-tANGE.
You fdl in love listening to Nat ~Cole,
and you kept your heart aaiYc and young.
You still do Now that yo/re in your prime,
you appreciate the finer things in lik, and
Senior E.xclusives is a part of that lifestyle.
Senior
Excbivcs is a
frtt mcmbmhip
program for
offers many benefits to keep you healthy
and happy. It includes frtt health scrccnlngs,
Au shots, and seminars Yoo ako rcccivc
discounts from local merchants, including
Roosts, rcsta.rants, and tr'aYCI services.
For easy mrollmcnt, pica call tolJ.frtt
888·6l-0CMMC(888-6l6-l66l).
For fun and your good health, some things ORANGE COAST
~ MlOICAl ClNllR ---d ".,r-.111~ Sc n i or Ex c I us iv cs . Th c r cw a rd s arc ID t ll d cs c r v c . r-v.1i:r.CAn-
Coast
International
Presents:
The
'
World's
Largest
amsonlte
=-· •tta .... a... ........
chedl OUt Ml•••••• NIOftS-..... ,.,.,...,. POr-= = 2::. some~ to pa., their
own Wortcklml mun. IPGt .i CrjUIQwe.
.,.,. ... lft ......... ...............
............ CILUIM-
• a ... te ... tlllt.-t ....... ..,.,. .•
wou111·w.t. + 19n: Plans for Crystal QM!
now call for a~
and a few hotels. one of
which would be •wiry, very
luxurious.• + 1m: n. 1rv1ne eo. 11
told tD. ~of lnu..,..
thlit lndl .. currwd a..
pmry owner Don....._ + 1979: The Irvine Co. sells the
land to the state for $36 mil-
lion.
-. . ... ....... ......... rt.
ad l'llilt
bUlldlDg .......
tional c:illall' • e4 .._
They'll maa .. a r~ ..._.
ing road that IMda to tbe Mlich a
little .more ~. they •Y -
but Cout Highway Will ctennite-
ly stay put .
Beyond tbe belles ol the 1969
plans -which stopped cold
when the Coutal Act was
approved by voten -details of
the proposal must be cobbled
together from the memories ot
those involved and a apane col-
lection of newspaper clippings.
concoune -and •J>a.tking
groves• at I.Os 'ltancos aDd m
Mono canyons th.at would con-
nect to the beach'with twmell.
"There would be hotels and
restaurants and whatever wu
appropriate,• says Reese, now
retired from the Rancho Santa
Margarita Co. and living in Ran-
cho Santa Margarita.
want a ba4lel tbere,1• be ..,..
•We just WllDt campgrounds far
theU..nocs.••
A few years later, m 1971, a
group ol investors bought The
Irvine Co., then sold Crystal
Cove to the state for $36 million.
And through it an. the cottages
stayed put -through residents'
repeated battles to renew their
..... haven, Wiil tbilt old ...
poia1. , ...
·1 know~~ It ....
says engineer Roy Rober~ cry.
tal Cove PrelervatiOn Partnen'
project manager. ·1 ta1bd tow
people who had seen tt. but people
who worked m it denied it.•
.,. 1982; 1hl .-... ..
some nmps Md stlllrways
along the entire pwtc tD
nwke tt more acmsslble to
the .... lc.
Gil Ferguson, a fotmer state
assemblyman who served u 1be
Irvine Co's public relations chief
back then, remembers the plans
calling for cobblestone streets,
•like a European Riviera resort.•
He-541¥5 the .coUa~ which
some say sprung up as a movie
set in the '20s, were set to be
demolished. •They've never
been made modem,• Ferguson
says.
-..lhLIUghlfll/1'/,..JleLH~YlQ.1Jkl...!.Jt!Ul..wltb..Jbe..&WL-...and.:.SU11-4--H
And history, be Jftdids, will not
entirely repeat itself. He says he
believetl ~ plan will JH1re it
through public sautiny and will
become that long-promtaect wcrid-
class resort.
be rerouted inland •to get as place m the historic ngiater.
much on the water side as possi-As foe the CUllWlt plan. Reete
ble." says he hasn't been foUowing its
+ 1995: The state hands out
eviction notices to resident's of
the beach's 45 cottages. + 1996: the mtt8ge ctw.nen win mnott.er
rwprtew from their
impwlng evtc:tlon,
Richard Reese, then The
Irvine Co. 's vice president of
planning, took the whirlwind
tour of European resorts and,
according to 1970 newspaper
stories, liked Italy's Portofino spa
the best. He said at the time that
the company would model its
development after the famed
spot, which blended homes with
shops and resort hotels -just as
today's plans for the Newport
Coast-Crystal Cove area will
eventually do.
Though the plans began with development much. 'But be doel
great fanfare, they got tangled doubt the feeslljltty of its c:enter-
through dozens of public meet-piece: preeerving and restorlng
in.gs where the company tried to those beloved ramshackle cot-
incorporate each group's ideas. tages. · ·
•Rather than just doing it, "Tbe retention of those homes
what the company tried to do -1 just don't know how th.at can
though dwy're put on • mcw1tt~1ontl\ ......
They're told they cm stay
wwtll the renov.tlon
begins. + 1997: Crystal Cove Preser-
vation Partners wins its bid to
build a $20 million resort
centered on renovating the
beach's historic bungalows
and renting them to vaca-
tioners.
WE WANT To BE YouR F1Rsr CHOICE!
CALL Us TODAY !
Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AlITO • HOMEOWNW •HEALTH
40 Years in Business
~ & ~~ S r)J ~·--~·""............. r ,
631-7740
«I Old Nnrpon 8MI. • Newpon Bach
CN..1-.~1
Reese nQw remembers plans
for a walkway atop the bluffs
that tower above the cottages -
akin to Portofino's pedestrian
SD5
was de velop a consensus among
environmentalists and groups in
the community,• says current
Irvine Co. spokesman Paul Kran-
holl •It was a real exercise in
democracy, but they could never
get anything done.•
The newly formed Coastal
Commission eventually nixed
the idea, Reese says.
•The Coastal Commission
said , 'We don't care what the
Coastal Act says -we don't
Mattress Outlet Sto
BRAND NEW -COSMET1CALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less/
~ 3165 Harbor Blvd.
.... Costa Mesa
One Block 5cMttb ol .05 Pwy
545-7168
GET AUTO CLUB PEACE OF MIND.
At the Auto C lub, we've got a lot more to offer members
than our famous 24-hour Roadside Assistance.
• Great rates on auto, homeowners and • Free AAA Mans, TourBoob•
watercraft insurance.* and TripTabl.
• Complete travel agency services. • &du.am "Show Your Card Be S.w-"
• New and used car purchasing services. dUcou.nta at raailen and attractions.
And there are lots of ways we can save you money, like a I 0% discount on
homeowners insurance when you insure both your home and car with AAA
And our auto insurance rates are among the lowat anilable.
• (714) 424-7855
3350 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
w
ALDEN'S CARPET
has opened
anew
Area Rug Studio
Why Pay Dept
Store Prices?
ALL RUGS&
RUNNERS on
SALE.
Handmade wools,
synthetics, sisal
ALDEN'S
CARPETS, INC.
1663 ftaccnOa St., Costa Mesa
64&4838
occur,• he says. •My prefenmce
would be that if they want to cap-
twe the euanoe, they can do it
with photographs. That way they
could generate a whole new
expression..
Tbe cmrent plan's arehitectl,
,------
1 BEAUTIFUL 20" -24"
."We've used all the best
expertise in the world,. Robenon
says. •u we can't make it work,
then possibly no one ca.n. If we
can't we might see something
like The Irvine Co. proposed
instead.·
ewport Beach
~-Piltl!Jee & Back Bay mtil_~;af acific Coasc Hwy.I
I NOBLE FIR WREATHS. ·ff~~-<~;'lr·~~ .......
I SAVE *200 0FF I L--..
. I
90-MNJTE BREAKfAST BOOST
11;le c.osta Mesa Chamber of
I Costa
1 Mesa breakfast meets from 7:15 to
8:45 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Coun-
try Cub, 1701 Golf Course Drive.
lbe cost ~ $12 for pre-paid reser-
vations and $17 at the door. For
information, call 574-8780.
FAMILY RAP SESSION
Children of Parkinsonians
invites the public to a free Holiday
Family Rap Session, at 1 p.m. at
... Oasis Senior Center, 800 Mar-
.. guerite Ave .• Corona del Mar. For ~more uitormation, call 645-3352.
fNHACC XMAS MIXER
~ The Newport Harbor Area ! Ownber of Commerce presents its
: December Chamber Mixer from 5
• to 1 p.m. at Speedway, 353 E. Coast
: Highway, Newport Beach. Cham-
: bers members are free, rion-mem-
: bers pay $10. For more informa-
• tion, call 729-4400 . • • ! CJJAJLAW FORUM
: 'Ihe December meeting of the
·CPA/I.AW Forum meets at 7:30
: a.m. at the Wyndham Garden
: Hotel. 3350 Ave. of the Arts, Costa
.. Mesa. The topic: Nonprofit Organi-
• zation. Private Foundation and
• Olaritable Contnbution Deduction
.. and Immigration Laws -How
They Effect Your Clients Business.
i The cost is $25 and includes break·
: fast For more information, call 241-1 3158 or 241-3111. .
I CAREER NETWORK ! St. Andrew's Presbyterian
• Church's Career Network free
~ meeting for those unemployed ! meets at 7:30 p.m . in Stewart
• Lounge, 600 St. Andrews Road.
: Newport Beach. Bob Donaldson of
Executive Career Services will dis-
cuss Dealing With Your Toughest
Career ll"ansition Problems. For
more information, call 574-2239.
SISTER OTY XMAS BREAKFAST
The Newport Beach Siter City
Association holds its annual Christ-
. mas Holiday Breakfast at 7:30 a.m.
at the Cannery Restaurant, 3010
Lafayette Ave., Newport Beach.
: The cost is $12. For reservations,
; call 717-3870 . • • • HEAlJH LECTURE SERIES
• 1be Jewish Senior Center of
Orange County Health Lecture
' Serles continues with Dr. John
Applegate, who will discuss Osteo-
"~ Prevention and TieatJnent ~ ~ 10:.S a.m. to noon at 2SO B.
Bak« St., Suite D. Costa Mesa. For •more information, call 513-5641.
'A PM>SUMMER NIGHT"S DREAM'
The Bstanda High School Dra-
ma Deportment presents Shake-
speare's •A Midsummer Night's
0ream• at 7:30 p.m. in the Bar6ara
Van Hoh Theater, 2323 Placentia
SAIUNG CENTER OPEN HOUSE
OCC'1 Salling Center eden a
free open house from 10 a.JD. to •
p.m. at 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. For more infonna-
tion. call 6'5-9412.
BOW MAKING WORKSHOP
The Container Store offers a
free holiday bow making work-
shop at 2 p.m. at the Bear Street
and South Coast Plaza store. For
more information. call 556-2333.
TRAIN, DOUHOUSE_ TOY SHOW
A~Costa~. Mets are S6 p and at the door. For ...,;;,~~i.8~;!MD:!~~~~1....,...~Green~ ~Shows, Inc. presents the Great nam. DODhOuse arid Toy
infonnation, can 515-6537.
otRISTMAS CAMPRRE
The Upper Newport Bay Bco-
logical R~ ahd Regional Park
sponsors a free Christmas Califoi;..
Ilia c.ampfire program at 7:30 p.m.
at the amphitheater, Shellmaker
Road on Shellmaker Island. Dress
warm or bring your blanket and
camera. For more information, call
640-1742 .
SUNDAY WITH THE ARTISTS-
The American Airlines Admi-
rals Cub at John Wayne Airport
presents Sunday with the Artists
from· 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The artists
reception will include original oils
Gerald Schwrtz, Johnathon Parley
and sculpture by David Sabaroff.
For more information, call 852-
5470.
EGYPTlAN SLIDE SHOW
Show from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Orange County Pair and Exposi-
tion Center, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. AdmissloQ. is $5 for adults
anti $2 for children ages six to 12.
Children under six are free. Ad.Inis-
sion is good for both days. FQr more
information, call 708-3247.
MONDAY
BACK BAY WAUCJNG TOUR
The Friends of the Newport Bay
offer a free walking tour of the
The Orange County Sodety of ADD OVERVIEW
the Archaeological Institute of Joan Andrews, M.S. offers a free
America sponsors a program on lecture about attention deficit dis-
Oreck XL Hypo-Allergenic
Hotel Upright
Filters 99.7% of all breathable
air particles.
ll features a state-of-the-an roller that
rowcs more than 6.SOO dmes per minute
picking up d\151 mites. pet hair, pollen,
lint and fine sand. all in OM awecp .
Orec:k Super Baster B Delue
The co~ oompM:t cmister is powerful
enough to Uft a 16-pou.od bowling ball.
0
.,--·-.I -.i
llL • ....i..._f . . . -. . . _·. ··--......_ ..
T1'o0......,_IO...n .. --.. ._..,,_,,.,_f1/,_ _,_.."""""".jll!l4
TIJS11N
13229 Jamboru Rd.
50S..()9()3
FUUJ!KTON
1064 E. 8uanchury Rd.
6n-909t
NEWPORT Bl!Aat 252~A E.utblulfRd.
729-8061
UGUNA NIGUEL
27221-D La Pu R.d.
131"744
Oreck Power Brmb
Weighs only 4 lbs. but strong
enough to remove lint from
clothes and drapes. Even spoc
dry cleans.
HOIDAY COUN58JNG
Joan Andrews ofta'I a l;lo)iday
CXJUD9eling dw fot tbme suffering
ftom Attenti~ Deficit Disorder
titled Hotida Have You Down at
7 p.m. at ~ Coumeling
Center, 1200 Quail St., Suite 105,
Newport Beach. Admjqicm is $20.
For more infonnation, call 476-
0991.
SLIDE. LECTURE SERIES
The dty of Newport Beach
offers a free slide and ~rogram lDtl'OdUdiODS to or-
nia Impressionism 1890-1930 at
noon in the Central Library's
IOOSKW8 GALA
The Jewish Community CeQ ..
ter's Kid.sKlub celebrates the ~
idays with a Pre-Hanukkah Gal&
for cbildJen in grade first through
fifth, from 5 to 7 p.m. at 250 e.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. The cost
{s sr rorJO mem an
for non-members. For more
information, call 755-0340.
Expml1 fashioned fancy cue gm.scones in I BK gold Ulich diamond acams.
A, E and G Amtrlt1st; B,C and F Cumv; D Blw Topat
CHARLES H. BARR
9.w..l'eM
1803 Westdlff Drlw, Newport Beach (714) 642~10
Pottery Barn
Tai bots
Jessica Mcclintock
Polo Country Store
Abercrombie & Fitch
A Pea In The Pod
The Walking Company
BOAT PARADE PARTIES
• The Newport Harbor Repub-
lican Assembly is from 6:30 to
9:30 p.m. with special guest
Assemblywoman Maplyn Brew-
' er at a private residence. For
more information, call 645-9127.
• The Guild of the Balboa
Island Landmark, St. John Vian-
ney Chapel, party is from 6 to 10
p.m. at the Shark Island Yacht
Club, Bayside Dnve, Newport
Beach. Fund-raiser tickets are
$45. For more information, call
760-1763.
CLOSING THE SALE
The city of Newport Beach
offers a free program titled Clos-
ing the Sale, at 1 p.m. in the Cen-
tral Llbrary's Friends Meeting
Room, 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
-port Beach. For more informa-
tion, call 717-3801.
HANUKKAH PARTY
The Jewish Senior Center and I the Jewish Community Center
Preschool present an intergener-
ational Hanukkah party at 10:30
a.m. at 250 E. Baker St., Suite 0,
Costa Mesa. The cost is $4 for a
kosher lunch. For more informa-
tion, call 513-564 1.
IBM PC USERS GROUP
OCC's IBM PC Users Group
meets from 9 a.m. to noon in the
Science Hall, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Annual mem-
bership is $45. For more informa-
tion, call 662-2939.
COMPUTER SHOW
Super Shows Productions, Inc.
sponsors a computer show from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Orange Coun-
ty Fairgrounds. 88 Fair Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. Adult admission is $5. For
information, call 838-5941.
DIVORCE WORKSHOP
Maxine Cohen offers a work-
YOUR DENTAL
HEALTH
"1 o.e.lreea R.ida, D.D.S.
CRACKING 11IE
CRACKED T001H CODE
tuMUICJ(AH CONCa'I' .
The JeWilh Community c..
pietentl its tbttd annual
Hanukkah Concert at 2 p.m. at the
<>range County Performing Artl
C.enter featuring Rabbi Robert A.
Alper, Craig 'lllubman and com-
munity choirs. 11cke1s me S9 fOf'
children. $18 and $36 for adults.
lb order tickets, ca.ll 755-0340.
-Vons • Yow ChampagM tMadqualWs •
~-=~
.... s,.daiCWM
Chondoft Ileane de Nolr CarMros
CMndoft Napa lrut ewe.
QQndon lrut Raetv.
Coeln .,_ or Emo Dry
Culbettlons lrut
DofllGIM • Mkft•le 8rut
ff.a.net Cordon Ne9fO lrut
FNtlieMt Cordon Negro Edra Dry
Gloria ,.,,.., 8lanc • Nolr/Brut .
Gloria ,.,,.., Royal Cun.
J Shrom
Kofbet lrutJ&tro Dry ChampagM
Kotbea NcaturW
Krtstone Ileane • Nolr
Krug Grand (WM
lauNftt ,.,,.., lrut lP ChampagM
lour'9ftt ,.,,.., lrut Rose
MlrcaMle
Moet a Chondon 8rut Imperial
Moet a Chondon wt.a. Star &1ro Dry
Mumm Cordon ...,.._ MN
Mumm euw.. Napa llonc de NolrJlrut
Mumm Emo Dry NN
P•rrier Jouet Grand lnlt
,.,., Jouet Floe.Hf
,.,,..., Jouet Gift s.t -4 Glouet
Piper Held9eck Emo Dry
Pot Rog.r lrut
RoedeNr 8rut ,...,.,
Ro.derer &tat. °'°"'Po9M
RoedeNr &eae. l~
Won
~ llanc de llonc
~ llanc. Noir
T~ 8lanc de 8lanc
Talldf'99J DornalM Carwos 8fUt
Tallt,.., Lo FfQncalM
\#ewe Clcquot lrut NV
V9We Clcquot lrut NV -ns ""'
\#ewe Clcquot ~
v.w. Lo Grande Dam. -.,. "he ! 2 2
16.49 U.85
11.49 10.J~
11A9 11.15
15.99 14.40
J.99 J.60
8.99 8.10
6.99 6.JO
5.99 5.40
5.99 5.40
9.99 9.00
11.88 11.60
39.99 36.00
8.19 7.47
8.99 8.10
39.99 36.00
Call for prb
19.99 18.00
33.99 30-'0
9.99 t.00
U.97 10.68
to.99 18.90
19.99 11.00
9." 9.00
19.81 17.90
19.99 18.00
70.00 63.00
70.00 63.00
18.18 17.00
20.99 18.90
16.49 1.3.85
15.49 13.95
29.99 17.00
64.00 57.60
18.88 17.00
19.99 18.00
69.99 63.00
15.81 14.30
14.99 II.SO
17.99 ts.to
1J.99 11.60
JS.00 31.50
78.00 70.lO
-Chardonnay/Sauvlgnon Blanc -
e.ftllger
lenllger FutM
~Napa
luenoVlllD
lueno VIM Sauvi9non 8lanc
1.V. Camero1
Ccambrlo KolMrtM
Combrlca .......
Caymus Conundrum
°'°'9Gu Sowwain
OMlllMu St. Jeon -Sonoma
~St.~ ...
Clos Pegase ·lee ttrs'
Columblo er..e
c~ Canyon-1 &a.r ...
~
Forest Glen
FofestW.
Gr9kb H• · 1919 Gt9kf1 .... Otar~ -.. 0 •
GU9noc
Hodenda
Haywood
lteAColection
H.as.ct
"°9•
Hogu. FvlM
J. l.ohr
tc.ndoll-Jackson Sawlgnon 8lanc
Keftwood Souvlenon 8lanc
Keftwood Sonoma
Kunde
Lo Crema
Undemcans 8ln 65
Murphy Goode Fvm6
Nopa fldg9
Robelt Mondovi Napa
Rodney SlrOft9 Chalk Hll
RodMy Strong Sonoma
SalntstMy
SanlG ~ Plnot Griglo
Shercado
-==--=~
8.88 8.00
6.88 6.IO
10.18 9.80
8.99 8.10
5A9 4.15
L99 8.10
1JA9 11.15
19.99 18.00
17." 16.IO
9.97 t .00
8.99 1.10
8.49 7.65
13.49 11.15
5.88 5.JO
119.00 4.05
7.88 7.10
6.99 6.JO
111.00 3.60
19.99 17.00
11.99 I0.70
7.49 6.75
4.88 4.40
4.99 4.50
11.99 11.70
1.88 8.00
7.99 7.tO
6.99 6.30
9.99 9.00
7.99 7.00
7.99 7.10
8.49 7.65
9.18 8.90
11.88 11.60
4.99 4.50
6.99 6.30
7A9 6.75
lJ.49 11.15
9.99 9.00
7.88 7.10
1J.99 11.60
lJ.99 11.60
11 .88 10.70
10.99 9.90
7.99 7.00
16.99· 15.JO
14.99 1J:50
••• 1.00
mAST cANCER UFORT
A bnmt cenoar 9'JPl)mt group .
meets fMr'f 1\J8ld8y Imm noon to
2 p.m. at the Patty and George
Hoag cancer Center, '4000 W.
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
The meetings are tree. For mcn
information. call 722-6237.
-CakrMt -kd -
-~· ... ----..,...... CoMrMt 11.49 10.35
....... Knlgle Vohy 13.49 12.35
IV Choroe de l.otour 29 .49 26.55
Odeou • MJcMl9 9.49 8.65
Cine ZWondel 6.99 6.30
Oos du .. CoberMt 10.49 9..45
Clos du loll Mortston. 17 .88 16.; 0
Eseoltda 9. 99 9 .00
fiord 0ten ShlrollSQn9tov.s. 1. 99 1 .20
Fofest.. . 1/8.00 3.60
Fax Hollow 6.49 5.85
Gt9kf1H•·1'90Vlfltote 25.99 1.3.40
Hodenda 4.88 4.40
J. l.ohr s.vu Oaks 9.99 9.00
Kenwood Jock london 17. 99 16.lO
......... ........ Red 9.99 9.00
ML Veeder 17.99 16.20
Murphy Goode 14.99 13.50
Napa ... 7.49 6. 75
Acwenswood V8 ~I 7.69 6.93
ftobert Mondcwl Napa 16. 99 15.30
Rodney Sbont Sonoma 8.49 7 .65
. Rulherford VlnlMn Zlnlond9VCobwMt 5.99 S.40
StoMsnet II. 99 20. 70
Zaco Melo Z Cwe. 1 S.99 12.60
-Msrtot I Plnot -Import -
Acodo Plnot Nolr 13.81 11.50
llor:kMM Ccalror• M.rtot 8. 99 e.1 o
CholiMu St. Mlc:Mt. Indian W.US 11 . 99 19 .80
Columblo Cle.st IMrtot 9 . 99 9 .oo
David lruce Plnot Nolr -CMral Coott 11. 99 11. 70
louls Jodot Pou9y FvlsM 14.99 13.50
Marquis • c.oc... 7 . 99 7.10
StonestrMt M9rtot 19. 99 18.00
• Port I O.ss•rt -
Dolce .175 .....
Fonseco lln 17 . 750 Ml
"°'"YI lrtstol (rMfft • 750 ""'
Sondemonl founden kMIW -150 ml.
Taylor Aota119 ReMIW -150 ML
Worr.s Wontor N.V. POft
-Spirits -
41 .99 37.80
11 .99 10.80
8.99 8.10
11.49 11.25
11.49 11.15
10.99 9.90 ------20.99 18.50
19.99 18.00
24.99 U.50
15.99 14.40
17.99 17.90
•'Ibis ts a perfect way to begin
the seuon, • said super Th>jan
Dudle Danlap, long-time Har-
bor Island resident and dedicated
l}'ojan booster. ·oh yes, we are
all here to help the Th>jan
League raise money to support
the university through such areas
as funding student scholarships.
That is our very important prima-
ry purpose.
•For the holidays we have a
little extra mission today to help
the children of Orangewood find
a bit of joy in the holidays,"
added Dunlap, co-chair of the
Cbrls1l:nas luncheon with
Maryanne Leclde.
Guests were invited to bring
an unwrapped toy as part of the
'Irojan League drive to assist ·
children from Orangewood, a
shelter for abused and neglected
children. A table in the restau-
rant overflowed with stuffed toys,
games, dolls and books.
Dunlap, Christensen, Leckie
and fellow Th>jans Vlrg1n1a :zem. Anita Ferguson. Dla.ne
Sdnnltzer, Joan R1ach. Anne
Cadtwl and Udo Isle resident
AuMy Gnmdy, gathered the
goods for the kids, loading them
into the back of Dunlap's wagon
for a Santa-style delivery to
Orangewood. (In Newport, Santa
drives a Range Rover.)
Orangewood is a home for
children ranging in age from
Prom left. OnDge County lroja Lellg'G8 members Dutile Dun-
lap, Maryanne Ledde and PbyU.1.1 Chrtatemen stand behind a
table of glftl headed for Onmgewood home for neglected and
abmed children. 1be toy drive took place at the league's lun-
cheon recently at the Plw Crowns restaurant In Corona del Mar.
newborn to 18, caring for young
victims of abuse and neglect.
Many of the residents are trou-
bled teens waiting for local cowts
to decide their immediate future.
The Orangewood home is the
county's only publicly run emer-
gency shelter for abused children.
Some 3,000 young people call
Orangewood home each year.
Grundy reminded the crowd that
the creation of the Orangewood
program was one of the many
civic actS of dedicated Newport
Beach activist Ellen Wllcos.
Th>jan League president Chis-
tensen thanked the crowd for
helping the children. then twned
to university fund raising business.
MRemember to get your bus-
• a.w. COOK'S column appears un&ya~rcSay -
*~***~ Pack
Your
Bags!
Newport Mesa Travel
end
Stagecoach Luggage
Would like To Send You On A
• Custom lnritatlon1 a: Banners
•Party Goodl •Helium Tank Rentals
• Balloon DellYerle1
We'll hell> JIOU IDitla
all your lioHda11 trift
IDNIPJJfng neic&-
~
* * * * * *
• I
1
I 1
•
HOT L INE
Citiien 's advocacy
group needed in
Newport Beach
THE ISSUE: Readers debate
whether Newport Beach residents,
concerned over increased develop-
ment, needed to form a citizen's
advocacy group to battle City Hall.
Yes, an advocacy group,
absolutely, definitely would
be an asset to the city as a
whole
I think the storming of City
Hall recently, over several dif-
ferent issues by many differ-
ent groups, has shown a need
for getting the citizens of the
community more aware of
what is being planned and
. what's moving and shaking
around the city.
It's kind of hard to do keep
abreast of things when one
day Bonita Canyon is sitting
there as a pile of dirt and the
"'x1 day the city's telling us,
h guess what, lnane isn't
~uing to annex 1t, we are.•
And dld we have any say
over it? No, 1t wasn't on the
planning board. It hasn't
been proposed. There's no
inkling about it and of course
everybody's bought off for a
couple million bucks and
then after the worm turns
everybody's mad because the
couple million bucks isn't
going where they wanted it
to.
This is our planet, this is
our home, this is our bed. We
can't keep ignoring that we
all have to live here together.
It's not about the dollar it's
about human decency and
moral digruty.
VICKY WEISS
Newport Beach
I agree it is very important
for dUzen.s to be informed.
Arid I'm happy that Jan
Debay Is my council person.
Sbli always takes time to talk
to m and our neighbors and
diiic:UM any issues that we
tlljDg up. And I have nevs t found ber anything but poQ·
ttN about communicating
and taldDg Ume to do that.
JOANN LAJtS0N
Wear Newport
c 0 R R f ) p 0 r J l_i L r J l t
Parents who let their
children drink should
be accountable
Heidi Funderburk, 17, said in
court that she had been drinking
about once-a-week for a year and
her parents have never punished
her. That just about says it all,
doesn't it?
Yet, these parents have the gall
to bring lawsuits against the dty.
Maybe they should serve a little
time themselves for allowing their
children to break the law.
ANN MERIUTJ'
Corona del Mar
My school isn't so
prepared for El Niiio
I teach kindergarten at
Pomona Elementary School and I
just finished reading the article
about El Nino and how the
schools are preparing for it.
And I just wanted you to know
that at Pomona Elementary
School, my little kindergarten
room, which I've been at for 36
years, was leaking like a sieve.
And I spent the weekends and
the holidays mopping up and try-
ing to salvage and save all the
things that are in my room. And I
just finished going over there
emptying buckets and mopping
up all the water on the floor.
It's just devastating. We're sup-
posedly scheduled for a new roof
but they said it can take 120 days.
And that means, four mOlltbJ lat-
er after m Nino has passed and
my room is drenched, they're
going to finally get around to fix-
ing the roof.
We also have a computer room
that's in a brand new portable,
that leaks also. And the people
they rented the portable from still
have not been out to take care of
that and there's a lot of expensive
equipment in there.
There are things the district
and other people are not doing in
preparation for El Nino.
PEGGY ENGARD
Costa Mesa
Fliers are just another
form of litter
I live on Lldo Island, almost
everyday I have to pull massive
amount of trash off of my doors
that people have left. Fliers for
this, newspapers for that. None of
which I have asked for.
Now if I were to go out and
throw trash all over city property I
would be arrested for littering.
People can come to my house and
litter with information and all this
stuff that I have not asked for and
it's just legal.
One of the worst things about
it is if I leave I can get rid of my
newspaper for a few days but I
can't stop all these fliers and stuff
they're putting on hoU.leS so
immediately everybody knows if
I'm gone. What does that mean I
have to do?
It means I have to have my
neighbors come over and for a
week t.ake oil this stuff off -
wbicb ia an imposition for tl\em. If
telemarketers call me and want to
do business I can tell him •1 do
not want to be on your list Please
'do not call me again.•
ATSON lll!DER
Newport Beach
1bis Monday, celebrate
the Bill of Rights
When we look around the
world and see the desperate suf-
fering endured by those living
under tyrannical rule, we ~t
pause and praise our own special
form of government.
On Dec. 15, 1791, the last hold-
out American colony, Virginia,
ratified our new constitution -
but only after our founders had
tacked on 10, now-famous
amendments -the Bill of Rights.
The Bill of Rights largely dis-
tinguishes between the govern-
ment of the United St.ates and all
other schemes of rule because it
guarantees fundamental civil and
human rights. It is the BID of
Rights, more than any other part
of the Constitution, that protects
our liberty. We should celebrate
itl
We should celeb1ate Mond,ay,
Dec. ts, as am of Rights Day. On
that day we should take timeout
and re-read the Bill of Rights. We
s~d read it to our youngsters.
We should read it in our schools,
libraries and civic gatberlngs. We
should take it fully into our hearts.
We owe this celebration to our
forefathers, who have fought to
defend it, and to our children,
who must preserve it.
On Monday,· let's see all our
flags fiying. Let'a shine our bea-
con of liberty to light the way into
the next century for all oppressed
peoples.
WILLIAM B. A.NDEltSON
• COltaMela
I 1/\J R I T t Y 0 LJ R R E P S
HOUSE OF REPllESINTAT1VE
Chris Cox. (R), 47th Dist., .-000 MacArthur Blvd, East Tower, Ste: 430, .
Newport Beach, 92660, (714) 75&-2244 or 206 Cannon Bldg., Wash-
ington, D.C., 20515, (202) 225-5611. (Represents most of Newport
Beach.)
Dana Rohrabacher, (R), 45th Dist., 16162 Beach Blvd., Suite 304,
Huntington Beach, 92647, (714) 847-2433 or 1027 Longworth Build-
ing, Washington D.C., (202) 225-2415 (Represents Costa Mesa and
West Newport Beach).
STAll SENATE
Ross Johnson (R), 35th Dist., 18552 MacArthur Blvd. Ste. 220, Irvine.
92715, 833-0180.
STATE ASSEMal.Y
Marilyn Brewer (R), 70th Dist., 18952 MacArthur Blvd., Ste. 220,
Irvine, 92715, 863-7070.
ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana, 92701 .
Jim Sliva, 2nd District (Costa Mesa) 834-3220.
Thomas Wilson, 5th District (Newport Beach, Santa Ana Heights)
834-3550.
CITY Of NEWPORT .Uat
Newport Beach City Halt, 3300 Newport Blvd., 92663. 644-3309.
Mayor: Thomas Edwards. Councll: John Hedges, Jan Debay, Norm•
Glover, Dennis O'Neil, John Noyes, Tom Thomson.
CITY Of COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, 92626, 754-5223.
Mayor. Peter Buffa. Council: Joe Erickson, Gary Monahan, Heather
Somers, Libby Cowan.
COAST COMiimNm COLLEGE DiSlidCJ
District Office: 1370 Adams Ave,, Coste Mesa, 92626. 432-5898.
Chancellor: Wiiiiam M. Vega
Board: Walter Howald, Sherry Baum, Paul Berger, Armando Ruiz.
Jerry Patterson.
NEWPOU mSA UNtf1ID SOtOOI. DiSiitiCf
District Office: 1601' 16th St., Newport Beach, '92663, 760-3200.
Superintendent: Mac Bernd
8CM1rd: Dana Black, Judy Franco, Ed Decker, Jim Ferryman, Marthll
Fluor, Wenay Leece, Serene Stokes.
~ COfdOUDATIO WATU DIS1IUCT
1965 Placentla, Costa Mes.. 92627, 631-1200
Board: Trudy Ohllg, Hank P11nl•"4 Mike Heafey, ~red Bockmlller,
Dana Haynes.
COSTA mSA SANITARY DlllNCT
P.O. Box 1200 Coste Mesa, 92628-1200, 754-5043.
Bowd: Jkri Ferryman, Art Per~, Nate Reade, Arlene ScMfer and
Dan Worthington.
planning to proceed with ~
tion.
•1 think the letter WU
unprecedented and a waste of
taxpayers' money," Miller Mid.
"'Ibe attack against me as being
a champion of the First Amend-
ment is an eemple of the school
-f&All·g me ourtor spe-
d.al treatment."
Miller a1so disputed the ~
trict's claim that while be
adamantly def ends the First
Amendment privileges of stu-
dents, he was •seeking refuge"
from Ferryman's First Amend-
ment rights.
"I'm not questioning his right
to say what he wants,• Miller
said
But he added that the board
member also bu to take tbe
repera.miom of what WM Aid.
Miller said b8 bu gam.ered
the support of several organi7.a-
tions that defend First Amend-
ment rights, including Project
Censored from Northern Califor-
nia. Miller said he is still consid-
ering filing cMl action against
the school district in relation to
the Costa Mesa High newspaper
situation.
Newport-Mesa Superinten-
dent Mac Bernd said the school
. board has revised its publication
policies to bring them in line with
state education laws and court
precedent.
"We do want to protect the
First Amendment rights of stu-
dents," Bernd said. "But we also,
like The Daily Pilot and the Lo&
Angeles 1imes, want to make
sure that students exercise
responsibility in what is ·pub-
lished"
2706 HARBOR BLVD., #0 COSTA MESA
EAST CORNER OF HARBOR & ADAM
UJw y~ GanlmLiptbw
For Holiday Magk
, Amlwitic Yerdt
or Bronu Finhh
.. #105
181111811llbl. Rrm .....
You•nllW81SWI
41,fm mill 11 ''''"'"I :r.111 la
....................... Lec&llHll ,,.. .... ,.. .......... i•••h ..... ., , ... ...
Losing. Weight .
...,....nmAPY
. ml LOSS .a&m!ilina.~•111t..
• V.GllT LOSS ~
!3!JJ y ·11:J.J:.J
Alhr>~ '.hi; ;.. ... ,, "'# ;t,...,.
Holi~ Checklist:
av .. =., Pies -71N btst """·~ 1UWf' Wllllk! Sala~ ,.,,,PIM, />«alt & cranbm'y Q/JPU. ·
a Tell them you made it! -Dtlicitnl.s lwmmsadt brrads
tl1itMtd all du cka1t MP U. du kitduft. Lots of varieties. TaJt1 stmU to Q
~tw/rind. a Dessert Breads -Pwmplti11, cn111btrry, ZMCchi,.i, knwn,
dtocolaU ""1nk, baMM QM mort. a Breakfast Delights -c;,,,.,,,,."" Rolls, Coffee caJus QM
J>as1ria <I """'.Y otJridil;s..
Cl Fruit Cake -Not du ki.ul tltat C01MS from a ,,,;,.t. CoMt by /tw
Q tasU, 10"fl lfJt>t it!
Q Cookies -Mtwt oaridiG tlami tvll'! Ready JO tlu uadtn's dd
tw all ""* lwliday rlUs. "" ro--------'.';1 $1.00 Santa's s~ I Receive $1.00 off any specialty I I bread with this coupon I
t..11111-~~ L ~Dlc.:ll.1!187 c,FI ________ ..
PuscHool &. E.u.Ml.NtAn
A.-l 'h to 11 .....
EXCIU.ENU IN EDUCAJ10N
• Montessori UntaNn
· a.t &.~ • 111-e-ru....i1111r-.13 Am
• PhoMtlt lleldn3 Ptopm
• Mullt.:. ~ ~
• Cl'ellM Alt • Open YNI llDund
. ~Sdenat. Full~ DlyC-
lllESCHOOl
1701 West Babr St.
CoslaMasa
54
... ALL
Cosmetics ·
20%off
Revlon, L' oreal,
Maybelline
~Becorati·---
J ()%OFF
ALL
HEADACHE, COUGH
& COLD, ANTACIDS
& FIRST AID
20% OFF
.
richard
dunn
Hol)'i ~oledo! .. ,, l
It's time for
thePGA Tour
Southern
California
tfl9kma1!. Newport
Coach Dan
Glenn.whole :5~~111!!~::1 {2th sea.son tliila9•lll_ Player in Dtvtston I at the be}m
... IJdeHaa ' 'produced a
:w.aflrlt • ...,.AB;: 21-3 reconi,
Md a two-ttme'!Sija shared Coach
&..ea1IU9 MVP, GD tbe nnt team this of the Year
fall by April Roa, a 6-0 ~ outside bitter. honors with
Also Mmed All-CIF tn Division m were Corona Marina's Dar-
del M.ar High tenion Jontma Havdluk. Sarah Petry rick Lucero,
and Corre Myer. . while senior
Havriluk. a 5-10 outside bitter, and Petry, a 5-9 L i n d s a y
middle blocker, who helped lead the Sea Kings to Phillips, who
tbft~on crown in Dtvision m-AA, were first-team helped Mart-pkks~ :-----na defeat
Myer, a 5-8 setter, was a second-team selection.
after helping Coach Steve Conti's Sea Kings compile
a 13-8 record, finalized by a first-round loss 1n the
ADED
Eagles are loaded with 10 returning
lettermen, eight of whom were full-time
starters last season on a 16-5-1 team.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -While Estancia High's boys soc-
cer program might be low on respect, it's high on
possibilities as Coach Steve Crenahaw's Eagles
enter the 1997-98 campaign loaded with talent and
packed with optimism.
Estancia, trying to return to the top in the Pacific
Coast League after losing the crown to Laguna
Beach last lea.SOD, appears to have its best team in
this, Crenshaw's third year. ·
•Jt's a talented team,• Crenshaw said. •Tue guys
are a lot of fun and they're focused. They took Mater
Dei apart (in a presea.son scrimmage). Mater Dei
didn't come close to a goal.•
The Eagles reJX>rtedly outsbot Mater Dei, 16-0, in
the scoreless affair, then defeated highly regarded
El Toro Dec. 3 in the season opener, 3-2, on the
Chargers' field.
El Toro entered the year ranked No. 6 in the pre-
seuon Orange County Top-1 O poll; Mater Dei, la.st
year'• CJP Southern Section Division n champion,
was No. 3 in the preseason poll. Estancia was
. .4'.. '' . .. -· .
unranked.
•1 think we should do well this year,• Cremhaw
said. •rd like to tee. us go deep in the CIP Playot&,
and I think we've got tbe ability to. do tbal (Votas)
didn't pay any attention to us in the pre1eucm. but
we spanW Mater Del and ~) El Toro, whk:b II
sixth in the county. ~
·we really think tbil a going to be a good year,
the kids are l8do\JI and focused about playing.
We're ~unped up about this leUGll. •
Of Elita !. 10 returmng lettermen, eight were
full-time ltarterl Jut 9eUOD .. tbe EagJel went 1~
5-1 (1·2· 1 in PCL), losing to Laguna Beech in tbe
seoond ~ ~ the newly regioMHud CIP Pky-
otu. The Altia1I, who beat Eatanda three tnn. last seuo6. would eventually win the CIP Dlvtskm IV
title.
•1 think {Estancia) lbou1d take (the PCL title) this
year,• said itval coach Mike Dunn (Calta Mesa).
•That team is juat loe.ded with players .•
In addltloo to seaton Roman Garcia (sweeper)
and German Diaz {stopper), senior forward JOl8
Quintana, a ~-team All-PCL selection last l8ILIOll
•SEE SOCCER PAGE 810
Eagles deep in experience
• Estancia High Coach
Jenny Tavares has seven
returning players back
to bolster her program.
By Molly Yanity, Daily Piiot
·111e field is aappy, the
sand ii low and tbe wind ii
high,• Magnolia Coach
Gary Hmta.rte said. aaea-
tng tbe conctitiom.
Ua bn:Mdtaway. Lucldly, Ava-why we're 3-0, • Hurtarte a made a a.cil-l)j1&¥-.U--UU11.-1 said ·He keept us in an tbe _
Estanda trio thwarted the games.•
attack. I AdaJDe ftnilhed with 1:1
Estancia, given two yel-saves, Wayman had two.
low cards in the second half, Magnolia attempted only
bad a goal nullified because four ~obs the entire game.
of an offsides call in the 7 5th Magnolia. a winner um
minute when the game was seuon againlt CoetA M.a.
tied. Juan Cervantes didn't Buena Park and Loi Ami·
like the ruling and was gf?S, bad an eerly MCOOd-
wbistJed with a yellow. half bteatdown on deleme
&tanda, playing wtthOut
lellior defender. Geiman
Diaz ("1aiDed . .right calf),
mrted wtlla ~ before
Van w~ game-trtng
goal
Pour lniD.utes earlier,
Eagle d8fmden Luis A'Al·
OS, John Alderete and NOe
Eltrada w.e foroed to tend
b tbm'M\es on a MagnO-
Estancia, which has when Islas wu able -to llip
deDated El Toro and Marina past several defeoden.
tills year, outlbot Magnolia The Eaglet will traftl to
in the opentng 4'0 minutes, Orange Lutberml on Pdday
14'-2, but Adame stopped (3:15 p.m.) for a nonlellgue
Dine lhotl. •ffe•1 the reason game.
ALL-PCL
CONTINUED FROM 81
Jones Price
James DaWkim, who. rushed for
669 yards and scored eight TDs in
league play, is a first-team
repeater for the fourth-place
Eagles.
Bstancia is also represented on
the f1nt team by junior all-pur-
pose standout Manu llmielu and
senior offensive lineman John
Uebengood.
In league, Tanielu amassed
4'08 yards and four TDI rushing,
caught 13 passes fdr another 221
yards and one TD, and retwned a
kickoft 19 yards to paydirt to open
the Battle for the Bell against Cos-ta Mesa.
'Ianielu and Sou are two of
only four juniors on the finrt team.
Costa Mesa offensive linemen
Chris McBride, Daniel Ives and
Brandon Jones, all senton, are
second-team picks, as ii Mustang
defensive linemen Rk:hard Price
and oometback Ben Pelter, the
latter a second-team repeater.
Pelter Briano
Estancia senior Mike Briano,
who played several defensiv&
positions, most notably tackle, 1(
another second-team choice.
Jones, who has led the Hawk(
to Friday's CIF Southern Section
Division vm title game at 1...4
Mirada, powered through and
sped past PCL defenders en route
to 1,042 yards and 18 TDs on 127
carries.
Laguna Hills senior linebackei
Anthony Daye, committed to
attend USC, is the league's
Defensive Player of the Year.
No less than 14 Hawks have
been named to the first team,
including senior first-team
repeaters Saia Ma)takaufaki, Jeff
Hick, Nate Carreno and Miguel
Thibodeau.
Laguna Hills' Steve Bresnahati
is the Coach of the Year after
guiding his team to the leagu~
title, as well as ta.king his team to
the CIF Finals this week.
Newport runs
past Uni, 3-0
• Harbor improves to 2-1
in tuneup for Mater Dei.
IRVINE
Newport Har-
bor's Sailors were 3-0 winners in
nonleague boys soccer Wednes-
day afternoon at University High
to improve to 2-1 as they prepped
fbr Mater Del's invasion of Kaiser
Elementary in Costa Mesa on Fri-
day.
Brett Baker opened it up with
~ goal off apass from Chapin
Kreuter.
· Manny Oropeza scored Har-
bor's second goal off a free kick
e11ter a foul drawn by They Meek.
Oropeza scored his second
~oal in the second half with
another tree kick after Joey
Schloss drew the foul.
Austin Ahlgren and Josh
Yoches controlled the midfield
and stopper Erle Werner and
sweeper Zach Wells helped keep
University without a shot on goal
until the bench was cleared in the
last 10 minutes.
CdM loses out, 13-4
CORO-
NA DEL
~ r --------------~
Corona del • SEASON •
Mar's Mea-I PREVIEW I
nan Hardt I +See Page 10 :
11 I I P goals), L--------------.J
~ura Blair p steals and an assist) and Krista
~jorkqvist (3 lteals) distinguished
Qiemselves Wednesday after-
OOOU. but it was far from enough
., offtet the strength of . visiting
~ (4-1) in nooleague girts
~ater poJo u the latter eued to a
13-4 triumph to drop CdM to 0-3. : ~ .. ~ 2416·13 idM' 0 1 1 2 • 4 . ~ -Wiid" Gokl91. Henn 2. MciliW 1, °"""'*' 1. s-: Degrldo 5.· l~: Hlrdt' ...., 1. SMs: f1orent s.
I
• .....-"'';-+ • -----:f.-J
.. f #... 'A , ~-." .. ...__ -.• t. _ .........
t.m;.gON VU!JO -Delplte a
~ 3-for-18 third-quarter shoot-
ing pertOnD.anice tbat proved colt-
ly tn a 61.:S7 nonle&gue 1ou to
host CapistraDo Valley Wednes-
day night, &tanda High boys
buketbal1 coach Rich Boyce said
afterward he is warming to his
team.
· •rm real encouraged,• said
Bovee, who watched his squad (2-
3)' battle back in the second and
fourth periods, after the Cougars
(4-1) oUtlcored them by nine in
both the first and third.
•we shot very poorly (23 for 53
for the game, including just 8 of
2' ,... lllleedOiil), Wt
that l1'Dll't continue. We
ind ... gOoct ..SjUlt•
meDti ondefeme (includ-
ing a box-and-one on
Cougar j\Ullor ~e Sow-
ell, who bad only eight of
his 24 points after half-
time) .. And, [ thought
Btett Valbuena, Peter
Andenon and John
Cantrell played very well
off the bench. We're
going to need those guys·to con-
tribute, because we can't just rely
OD Sam (Nelson)..
Nelson, a 6-tOot-5 Air Force
Academy-bound senior who
averaged more than 32 points in
four Daily Pilot Tip-qff Classic
games last week, scored nine of
the Eagles' 12 in the opening
quarter, and had 17 of their 33 by
halftime, when they trailed Capo
vaney by three. He ftn-
isb8d wtth 2S ~-md
five boardl, ht~ 9 ol
18 from the field.
Senior guard Jame1
Oawkinl was the only
other starter to score
(liine points), as the four
Eagle starters other than
Nelson hit jult 4 of 30
(ield-goal attempts.
But Valbuena, a 6-4
junior, and Cantrell, a 5-
10 &0phomore transfer from Costa
Mesa, scored 14 and nine points,
respectively, to help keep the
Eagles close.
Valbuena, who snatched a
team-high nine rebounds, drilled
all seven of his shots from the field
to earn his praise from Boyce.
Cantrell connected on 3 of 6
from the field, all from three-point
range, including back-to-back
yEd.Dda IDgll'S
La9nili c-lly :
~
bolDbl to ~k an t 1-2 l!lta.Dd•
run tD begin the fourth~
The sudden Eagle lpWt. ~
by fordng five of Capo Valley's t•
turnoven and capped by one ol
Nelson's four three-pointen,
closed a 52-40 defldt to 5'-51
with 3: 12 left.
Capo Valley, however, scored
the next six points in a 78-seoond
span. then held on, despite bitting
just l of 4 free-throw attempts in
the final 43 seconds.
•This is as low as we're going
to get,• said Boyce, who pointed
to a paltry six Eagle turnoven as
yet another positive to take into
Friday's nonleague home date
against Irvine.
"I'm proud of our guys,• Boyce
said. "I think this was our best
. fWI» .w.18-.way a : DAM fflU.s G, ~ J1
lbot atllMl.pt by Dana : Scm19 a., O-ws HUii' JMiitter : Dw Hills 20 12 6 5 -43
1"--U-t---: Estwlda 8 4 4 15 • 31 '-••H-r _ft, ... a. HoMlrd 9
Eatanda's Ellle ~ N. ~ 13, ~ 0, Pursley 6,
HerUnch!iZ (dark : Swane 2. carllsle S. Reese 0, ~·and Dana Hllll' ! Burenner o. . Nicole Howard mtx : 3-pointets -A. How.rd 1.
It In ··-·•t I , .. _ : Fouled out -none. ~ p_...u 0 .,._ : Est.Md9 -Hirata 0. HefNnde2 0,
ball In Wednesde:y's ! Deming 14. c..s.vty 4. Vanna o. Diaz s. contest. : Bennett 0, Stelnfeld 8, Ferris 0, Ollia 0.
3-pointers • none.
DON LEACH I OAlY Pl.OT ~led out -non..
game ol the yam.. I llke .. cll9I>
tion we're~ • .,.._ ll coUld
be the other way.•
Senion Ryan~ ud • Gavin Ra1n.ey up their
post defense on 6-c.ougar ..-
Josh Garrett, who netted the
hosts' first five points. .... .,,.
Sailors
fall victim ·
to Century
• Newport drops 49-42
decision at Centurions'
tournament in pool p~ay.
By Molly Yanity, Dally Piiot
SANTA ANA -Newport Har-
bor High's boys basketball team
struggled with host Century's
full-court press early and often as
the Centurions defeated the
Sailors, 49-42, Wednesday night
in pool-play action of the Century
Shootout.
Century's press caused three
Sailor turnovers in the first quar-
ter as the Centurions (4-0) built a
7-0 lead and never looked back,
leading the rest of the way.
Newport Harbor (3-3), led by
Matt Jameson's 11 points and five
rebounds, pulled to within J0.28
m the third quill1er after a 9-2
1 scoring run.
but never
ca.me closer.
"We didn't
shoot well
tonight,• New-
port Harbor
Coach Larry
Hirst said.
"Their defen-
sive intensity
was much bet-
ter than ours. Jameson
They were
pretty prepared mentally and
emotionally.
•At the end, we did fight and
that's always good to see. But
you have to give credit to Centu-
ry because it put us in the hole
and we were never able to get
out."
Sophomore forward Dustin
Illingworth scored 10 points and
gTabbed four rebounds for New-
port Harbor. Century was led by
Terrall Zoller's 21 points and
Mike Zepeda's 12 rebounds.
Zoller is a 6-foot-2 senior.
The Sailors' loss comes on the
heels of their 79-64 victory Mon-
day night in the Century
Shootout They play Orange on
Friday at 4:45 p.m. to conclude
pool play.
~ aNNIY 49. lli•aa 42 Scbl'9br~· Newport Harbor 12 7 11 12 · 42
c.ntury 11 10 13 a· -49
Newport....._. -Archbokt 5,
Thlssefl 2. J.-neson 11. Robinson s.
HNrhon 2. Illingworth 10, Wwd 2.
Den 0, Limon 3, Niasio 2.
~o .
J..polnten · ArcN>okt 1, Jameson 1,
Roblnlon 1. Fouled out -None.
~ . s.tu '· fen'etti 0. fl !Wnftz 2, C. ~ 5, Lopez 0.
Zohr 21, 8uglrln 2, hp9de 10.
~ -s.tu 1, c. RM*u 1. ~out ·Hone.
NJll I ........ .Ulla .. .....
CllllkDMmk. a back~
........ Of lbe Teco 11111 Newpart
Qq ric Pfo.AI*. ftf'd Id et 422
aiid UC> tecUAIJCl lill PGA c:arct a
Toledo. S.S. w. a.._ tor
four feml until ~tW
ended bll ~ cat9flr.
Lutyear at Q ~_.Of
the three timelr Tci&eido mt fl d
earning bis card by' oae lboto a
network teJ8vision lbow teatm9d
Toledo, alaug wUh other rue
two-sport prolessiCll'alt.
During bit rounds, Toledo bad
a miaophone booked up to him
with a camera following his
every move. He felt the mpo1me
would be good.
But this yee.r Toledo told the
producers of the 1V thaw, who
asked him to wear a microphone
again this year at Q School no.
CONTINUED FROM 81
respective d.ivlsions, the team
members were probably walldng
on air. Their coaches were on
Cloud Nine, even if they were
strategw.ng for the state
tournament. Their parents were
bragging and anticipating the
next contest.
Someone else was just as
excited. So was the sports writer
covering them.
Sure. it's a cliche, but there
really is nothing like the thrill of
Vlctory.
As a sports writer, I aspire to
cover World Series games,
All-Star Games and the
Olympics. But I doubt there will
ever be anytJu.ng as pure and
sweet as the au that was
breathed m Long Beach that
.........
. a
~ ..............
~bt to tbe U.S. by Minnis.
whO lpomond 1bledo after bll
father died when tie .... 5 yean
old, doem't !fb ta~ about bit
bming cmear.
•1 don't wet to glve uy
detalll, • Toledo said. "It wu a
bad apedance. When you want
to be IOID8ddng in Ufe mid you
can't make tt. tr. peiDfuL rd
always dreamed "' being the
' copy that 11 IUppOled to captwe
that unexplalnable magic that
IWTOWlds a game we Jove, just a
few sentences to make us
believe in that magic.
If we spoltl writers do it right,
we all end up with that faith.
The Corona de1 Mar and
Newport Harbor voBeyball teams
make ut sports writers want to
live up to that They make us
want to make everyone else
beUeve.
Those girls give us faith. They
show us that hard work, sweat
and passion really does pay off.
They show us bow much the
little thin.gs mean.
After Newport's four-game
defeat over Mira Costa. Lama
Wells, a senior for the Sailorl,
clutched the big plaque against
her entire upper body and said
High school boys • Jason Ferguson Tournament at Costa
Mesa (championship at 7:30; third place at 6; fifth pl~e at
4·40.
High school girls • Estancia Tournament (Gahr vs. Estancia,
6·15 p.m.), Corona del Mar at Santa Ana Valley tournament
(vs. !Catella, 4 p m.)
• SOCC9r
High Khool girls, Newport Harbor at Estancia, 3:15 p.m.;
Corona del Mar at Laguna Beach, 3:15 p.m.
• W.ter polo
High school girls Newport Harbor, Corona del Mar,
Costa Mesa at Villa Park Tournament, 3 p.m.
• NCHMD W dub gotf a>fumn
appelf'S~~
you did.
Corona del Mar, after Jetting
La Habra even the match at two
games apiece, was foreed to dig
deep to win that fifth game. They
did it with eue. After tbe game,
senior Audrey Anbood'1 eyes
were wide with excitement I
only needed her to My it for the
quote because those eyes were
already expressing that there
wu never a d.oubl
Their effOits will be
remembered with banners on
the gym walls. Their parents will
never forget the ulcen they
nearly suffered watching the
matches. 'Ibey themselves will
always be able to call themselves
champions.
I WU left feeling like an
apostle, with a word to spread
and a trµth to report. Thanks.
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUIUC NOTICE
Pa6lcn fyt. a boys Dtvtllon 5
team. .iwt down the Blue Bar·
raeudM, •-o. in the Regional
M!DMtiMJ•.
'. ·~
ntt; i.e. "av; Jaiae ~. ,, ... n;, N6eib .......... ,..., ____ .. _ Llllr,...... « --. lobby 811 r•w, Im lair and
MDut Ml llr •• aD a:mldbuted. IOD DIVlllON 4 • a.n Hogr 1, Mm .. a.l 1
Kyle Hint notched two goals to
lead POllon Ivy to its 12th consec-
utive wtn Saturdayand to advance
tbe iquad to this weekend'• final
agaiDlt Quk:bilver. Other goals
ware added by Andrww Nabln
and Kftta Gowdy.
lvY.s tonid defense WU paced
f---llHbe-QM~-Ar.gam11~M1a-t -by. . sweeper N•Ult•w Hoga,
was also rep.resented, but fell while fullbacks Kevin eredla.
27-6 to San Clemente. Nick Pruter and Nlck Nor·
1be Ball Hogs-=eped with an
overtime &hoot-out w:tor)' after
coming back from a 1..0 deficit
1be Med in R8d recalved their
goal from Scott s.m.r In the
fourth quarter. Defenders Dmd
Riley, Dulel Nnano and
Patrtck Etter battled to keep the
lead. but tbe Ball Hogl managed
to tie the score. 'Jb8 Men in Red,
~llld 1>f Pill'ICk.
Riley, Cbue Ayen, Charlie
Auerbacb. Keatoa Dama. Nlck
Linnert. Kendall Hamon and
Josh Stone, complete tbeJ:r sea.son
as the Hogs move to this week-
end's final against Quicksilver.
Wildcats post 40-38
win over HD quintet
•Matsen free throws ice it
The Newport·
Mesa National
Junior Bubtball AD-Net Wild-
cats topped East Huntington
Beach. -'0-38, tbanb tn part to
BnU Matlen'• free throws with
16 seconds remaining in .the
game.
The WDd.cats were Jed by cen-
ter Jalr ller'Dulda, who led all
sc::oren with 17 pointl.
But it was a tie game until
Matsen, the locall' point guard.
drove tbe lane and drew a foul
with 16 ticb on the game dock.
His conveniom from the line
proved to be the game-winning
shott.
Matsen, Brandon Sberick-Odom. JomlbaD Hubbard and
Ala Norfleet were strong in
beating Huntington Beach's
press. Kevin MandJlu and Chris
Badorek paced the 'Cats in the
rebounding category, while
Bradley Kroopf and Bltan Walab
turned in clutch buckets in the
stretch.
Newport-Mesa will battle San-
ta Ana at 12:30 p_.m. Sunday at
Newport Harbor High.
•....Va were strong. Goalie Ian
Anutrong picked up another
shutout while mldfielders
caaeron Kllaer, Jed Floret,
WDU.ua TeDllJIOll and Da.nJel
Sbea supported the effort
• Qaktmilftr 2, Tlmnderbtrdt 1
Quicksilver advances to the
ftnals after natt.ord mu erupted
for a pair of goals to come from
behind to top the second-ranked
lbunderbtrds.
Hill took assists from Nlco
Hendrtclm, Chrb LoMenzo and
Kevta Etter. The victors displayed
a strong 'team effort as Phil Gu·
• Qalcklllver 5, 8loHuanl 1
Tyler Cornwell scored two
goal.I with others delivered by
James Cowm. CbrU llacb alld
Cheyne Smitb to lead Qu1c.k.silver
into the championship game.
Stong defense by Joel Walker
and Jeff Lemer halped stifle Bio-
Hazard, and Mlchllel Aleun.der,
Jerry Barela, Klng Kelly, .Mark
Kidman and Mu Patlel10n con-
bibuted to seal the win.
19 Local players selected to
play in All-Conference game
•Jr. All-American Football game to be played Saturday.
Nineteen local athletes have been selected to ~
represent Newport-Mesa Jr. All-American football
at the All-Conference game Saturday at El Modena High in Orange.
lbe players are: Paul Jones, Jlm Rothwell, Erik Stranberg,
NJ.cholu IYenOD and David Erickson from the Buffaloes, which
includes youngsters ages 11-13.
Prom the 'Ih>jans (ages 10-12) are Kris Cooper, Matt EDdnt•" Sean
IDldebnmclt and Tyler Mien.
Aaron Ga.rda, Spencer link. Sam Matlin and Wes Preuon from the
Bruins will play among the 9-11-year-olds.
Prom the Buckeyes (ages 8-10) are Tony Jones and Joshua Miller,
while Zilch Lavmgood, WlWam O'Brien., David Roost and Ryu
Telles will represent the Wildcats frOJn the 7 -8 age group.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES I PUBLIC NOTICES ~r.::::::::::::::::::::==::::::::=:::==:1
'
--r:---·.
IGFU&.W
~~
lllOO ,...,. View DrWe ....,...8Mcf't
.....,00
STARTING .
ANEW
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremation&
Burial Service
We are Orange County's newut full
service mortuary offering name brand
caskeu to the public at substantial
savings. A tradltlonal service with minimum casket Sl,425. Direct
Cremations Starting at S49S-. You owe ll
to yourself to compare our prices. Your
needs are our concerns. Serving all of
Orange and sWTOUndlng counties.
2700 South Briltol Street
Suta Ana, CA 927CM
Call Toll Frtt l-888-54CASIET
Chances are
you will nnd
what you need
at the price
you want to pay
when you read
CIH11fJed
dally
842-8878
can't '""' to
get to all thoH
repair Job•
around th• house?
let th•
Clanlfled a.me.
Directory
help you find
rellable hetp. ....... ,.
BCJSlNESSrr
azz musk: bu a tea>dency to ~ -IOltt in a big ball/I~ • tlirives on the~ and
aiCoUltic pretence that oaly a '
~-dub 1ettlng can provide.
For years, the ~e County
Performing Arts Center brought
the jazz uperience to its audi-
.encea in ~m Hall, but the
mttmacy tartar wu missing.
; .. UDtilJlbW.
'' · With last fall's opening of Jazz
<Club at The Center, the appro-
:prlate space has been created.
I". The club, located in Founders
Jdall. was designed to provide an
tbltimate, casual, small-dub envi-
live jazz: on a ballMI. BrecJren
Wann IOUDod. ftDed the ~
infuatng It with (l ~ and J>OW•
el'ful preeenoe that may have
gotten lolt ln a larger room. Hil
IDQteJ:fu.l technique and musical
intmslty-and watc:blng tbe
proceu of great jazz tmprovtsa-
Uon unfold -ls alao better expe-
rienced in such 4 setting.
Brecker brought with him
·pianist Joey Calderazzo, baSsist
James Genus, and drummer Jeff
•'Jain• Watts, who have been
together for about a year. Also on
the gig was the great percussion-
ist Don Alias, who joined the
group about a month ago. The
product was thoroughly modern
jazz, often anchored by foot-tap-
ilng blttlrr?iythms: ~to top names in jazz and get
~good look at the artists ln action,
;.ijlid Greg PatteISOn, Perfonnblg
rArts Center vice president of com-
'"nmications and marketing.
SUoplaCiiibt Mlcbael BftClulr la )Ult one of tbe great jazz artists
who bu been featured at Jazz Club at 1be Center, open since
September 1996 at the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
Alias used fingertips as well
as his palms and bands to nuzzle,
tickle and pound the congas,
producing an amazing array of
textures, rhythms and counter
rhythms. In the warm acoustics
of the room, the sound of each
fingertip reverberated and
seemed as though it was coming
from the next table .
. " And, The Center is the only
one of its kind in California with
a small-dub venue for jazz.
r ' The dub is indeed intimate;
. 'HlY seat in the house affords ~ose views and warm sound.
.. Ihe proximity of the performers ~ a definite plus: famous jazz
~ walk to the st.age with
)nstruments in band. nodding HJld smiling to the crowd -a
):lose-up, connected jazz experi-
e,nce. Most tables are so close to
fhe stage, patrons can see the
veins in the performer's neck and
the beads of perspiration forming
during a solo.
The dub is small and comfort-
able, with high ceilings latticed
"
with metalwork from which the
lighting emanates. The effect is
reminiscent of 1960s folk/comedy
clubs: a relaxed. uncontrlved,
unadorned work-space-kind-of-
place, dressed in New York
black. that allows the ambiance
to be created by the music.
It's a perfect non-intrusive set-
ting: a single candle on the
tables; simple white lig.hting on
stage; small, zebra-like patterns
of shadow and lig.ht on two walls;
just a touch of reverb by the
sound.man -effort expended to
let the music talk.
And on a recent night, it
spoke eloquently.
Tenor saxophonist Michael
PellsONAL TRAINING • Sl'INNNGe • AelOaCS • YOGA • STIINGTH Tw..G • ~~·~PwoHMlf SWf • ~Pllo\5
•. PRNATE HEALTH Cllll PAAICJNG • l.IMrTED CHILD CARE A\NMLE TO Ma&1tS
S4aM-1fe
Fitness Center
831-3823
CERTIF IED
SPINNINGGD INSTRUCTORS
& O FFICIAL SPINNING
CE NTER
Brecker, one of many top-named
artists featured at the club, played
a diverse and impressive set last
Friday, clearly demonstrating why
he has garnered such high praise
from attics and ~azz fans .
The small-club setting proved
especially fitting on an opening
sax solo that tumed into a funky
New Orleans Mardi Gras groove
as the rest of the band jumped in.
The acoustics are excellent for
Last season's Jazz Qub at The
Center included saxophonist Joe
Lovano, 1995 and '96 winner of
Down Seat's Jazz Artist of the
Year and Jazz Album of the Year,
who played to sell-out crowds. As
with Brecker, Lovano's solo sax
• Authentic Sushi Bar
• Elegant Dining Room
~IH 11:1N:9 •Complete -----1.-..a ._ m
2675 Irvine Avenue, Costa Mesa
(across from N Golf Courae)
intros and big sound filled the~
room with a richness and pres-
ence a larger hall can't match.
sqice its opening in September
1996, the club bas featured jazz
artists such as trumpeter Turence
Blanchard, and presented an all-
star tribute to Dizzy Gillespie.
GON>ON t101..m11m, a is a free.
lance musk ait.lc who played sue>-
phone and sung in a vwiety of bllndJ
during the 1970s and '80s.
ta Early Years Toys
• Developmental loys for children binh lo 10 years.
• Quality toys with lasung and crcauvc play value.
•Personal service from knowledgeable sales staff.
642-4212
1827 ~CLIFF DRIVE. NEWPORT BEACH
"Let Us Cater Your
Holiday Parties!"
BISTRO
CALFOAIENTAl CUISINE
Coter1ng 3112 Newport Boulevad
Lunch • Dinner NeWPOrt Beach
7 days 675-0896
·For tt>e Fresh6st raste on the Penlnsulot·
Gail and Pet.er Ochs,
Honorary Chairs
Saturday, December 6, 1997
South Coast Repertory
thanks thefollounng E1ient and Ticket l'nderwrilers
for their GeneroSllJJ and Support
Fieldstone Foundation
Target
Smith Barney Inc.,
A Member of Travelers Group
~stern Digital
Richard Sheldon Barr Investigations
Ingram Micro , Inc.
Morrison & Foerster
US. 'Prust Company of CaUfornia
Calif ornW. United Bank
Mr. & Mrs. Jack D. Brewer
Uebert Corpqrati(Jn
~~~~ ~~,./..d .. ~ ...
=~ --~~4'111'
~~
.~,~~
~.-~,~~~~
wt '\ji,.. )"\I~ ~41M ... >ill~
:YW~~ ~ ~ .. ,qij-~~.. ~
.....,,...;~w1..t~~~~
W*'I M4 ~hM-d 'f..11!' fi#• 41
•• \.J'tiit .,,.. <ti• .. _..t11..,,h ~~ ,,.,,.,
~ ,,~'4U!·J.~~ "~-*"'~~ ...,~;.MV~ .. .1~~
f".>Vf<l'i ...,..,...,. ,,.,,.~., ,..,,""4 ~ .... ~~~~
>:4 ~.f.tll", ~ ~ ,, .... , .. ,, . .,, .. ,, .. ~ ..
~ i"~.tl'"~ a-.. jfM, ~
~-"' ,,.W'~. ~~ ~ ~-"' :,a • .wA ~ id ,.I.~
~ ..... ,,., ~ .... ~,.,,... ;~
~,1#/d jf,lWf} l'w'.-"AN • ~"'
?ilv.>l£YJ'~
,-~//Hlffr«£ fff;.:na .... . ,,,, ~ ,,,.,.""""'-..,, .. ,.
In a, BaatifuJ S.UU,. Ou the Bay
9IC7NI
Saturday, D8cember 13 I
SUnday, Dec8mber 14
Orange County Fair and Expotitlon
88 Fair Drtve • COlta M11a, CA
r ... , ... .,a ·•r•• (2) ........... fFRIS I »
(t)• 1 .. ... ,...... •fl I #c .... ,,,..
...,, .... ia ....... c...n ...
--a$ c' -....
g z s Ck
__ .. __ t7,IJ• ., ' t .... , ............. '°'' ......... ~
PRIM• ....
NIGHT! '&TS --
Chris/mas Vay
!Iluffet
IOCbfe
::kafuring
Our 'Jradi/ional Gbr-i.1/ma.r 2'lujfal
/Oam/o3pm
South CoUt ~
wbkh began on a mo.;
ltrlng 32 yea.rs ago -and
the Theater District -wbk:h ii
fo~ SCR'I ev•ple three
decades later -have COit.a
Mesa &ddret181 lell than a mile
apart. and both llexed their
artlltic muscles impreaively
during 1997.
For SCR, lt wu the year
Broadway came to Costa Mesa
with James Lapine, the director
of several Stephen Sondheim
musicals, stag-..
~
ing •The Gold-
en ClilJ(P' on
the Mainstage
and Tony
Roberts, an.
actor with 18
"' . ~1~. ! . . ' .
credits from the Great White
Way, headlining •stdney Bechet
Killed a Man• on the Second
Stage.
For the Theater District, it
was the year artistic director
Mario Lescot delivered his mag-
num opus to date -the power-
ful musical •Cabaret• -then
took a well-deserved vacation as
John Bowennan stepped in to
stage impressive productions of
•And Miss Reardon Drinks a
Uttle• and •The Sum of Us.•
SCR inaugurated an • Ameri-
can Classics• five-year program
Factory Direct Window, Door & Tex-Cote
DON'T MISS OUTt PRICES HAVE NEVER BEEN LOWER
1 and led off with what one of the .
greatest plays ever written,
Arthur Miller's •Death of a
Salesman.• Martin Benson's
depth-laden production was
. clearly the No. 1 show at SCR in
. : 1997.
Tup of the line vinyl windows & 'doors
ALL AT FACTORY
DIRECT PRICES
dual pane, vinyl frame,
energy efficient.
' No. 2 was Lapine's mounting Advantage, Mllgard, Certainteed
~\ ' . • •. r ....
~' .. ••
Call for FREE In-home estimate
(800) 940-1413
Factorf Direct Home Improvement
Ltcente s 11605 Fully tnsurea
WHY PAY MORE?
We've decked our hdl}a for a
~-bCHruSTMAs EvE
at
TWIHt*P"Lm~
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1997
Dinner served from 5 to 10 p.m.
Music &om 6 to 10 p.m.
~ather with family and friends to enjoy a o/ sumptuous three-course dinner
· & the a capella gospel group Infusion.
$35 Prix Fixe, includes dinner and a glass of
Korbel Chardonnay Champagne or Jekel VmeY.~rds
Chardoamay or Cabernet Sauvignon.
Exclusive of taX & ~tuity. *
•neat1a of a Salesman• at South Coast ltepertory wa one of a...._. pertor--ces of 1"7, 11!1111'
Tom Tiius. In tbb JCeDe, Willy l.ollUlll (Allan Mlller, left) la conlroated by bla ~ IJnda {Lyna Mil·
grim) and IQDI Happy (Simon Bllllg) and BUI (Mldulel ltellly Barke).
NOW PL AYING ,
TH1s HOLIDAY Sl!.UON Su THI! STOln' THAT INSPlUD
T11E &i urr Co11u~ TO LtFe THllOt'<;H THI! EYES OF A CHILO
.7111 ·
· Edwards IMAX. Theatres
~nts
An Evmln1 on Everest with
David Brashears & F.d Viesturs
Share an evening with David Breashears (co-director •
producer. cinematographer cl expedition leader) or
Ed Viestur.. (deputy expedition leader) and hear a
fiNt hand account of the IMAX filming of their
historic Mount Everest expedi11on. The evening
include!' a i.lide presentation. a 7 minute IMA?<
··EveresC film clip. a question and an.<;wcr SCS.4'ton
and a book ''gning of National Geographic·~
EVEREST -Mountain Without Mcn:y.
DaridBrrmbren
Wed .. Dec 3. 1997 -Irvine@ 5:30 & 8:00 pm
Book 'i1gning from 6:30 -7:30 pm
F.dYAatan
Mon .. Dec 15. 1997 -Irvine @ 5:30 & s:m pm
Book 'iigning from 6:30 · 7:30 pm
Tkkets are ue.• ~ uc1 an .......
exdmlf'dy le llOft M .a REI locatiom
or by ,..._ ,.. • Cftdit canl.
REI • M1111oD Viejo (714) 341-1400
REI • SMta AM (714) 543-4142
The IMAX film •'Everest .. •ns March 6, 1998
at both Edwards IMAX Theatre locacioo.".
Heldt Bressler
~/]Jina
->-~
l'J'!J7 RECIJ'IEHT OF nm Gou>l!'.N KltY AWAIID
In a. Beautiful Setting On the Bay
~ -
\11 1 ' '
1
, l I' I ·, I'
'! / 1: I
BAYSIDE SUNSET DINNER
Featunng a SENSATIONAL 3-course dinner
Served 4:30 p.m. -6:15 p.m.
Monday -Friday
$10.90 -$13.90
Live Music in our Enoteca Lounge
251 East Pacific Coast Highway• Newport Beach• 673-9500
grcnt tr o rn • ll1 >llt1• •ll ,, , • I· •y
SHOYIS
Saturday, December 13 ·
Sunday, December 14
Orange County Fair and ExpoSltton
88 Fair Drive -Costa Mela, CA
historical
backgrqµnd -bleak and violent
as it WM. It is enQugh that con•
temporary young viewers know
that Anastasia (or Anya} is a
blight, spirited young woman
who has few memories of her life
prior to her arrival at the orphan-
age where she grew up.
These brief memories lead
30% OFF
ANYENTREE
Not valld wtth any
other offer.
Umlt .1 .
per customer
Good ttvu 12/26/97
characters. However, tt was the
animaUon that time and again
astounded me. Watching the
subtle fad.al expressions, I half
~the film to suddenly
bt!come live action. ·
Adult viewers are clearly not
the target audience for Anasta· u . While the cbanniog love sto-
ry will probably be more appeal-
Not void wtth any
other offer.
Umlt 1
per customer
Good ttvu 1 25 7
We feature over 50 single-malt ar blended Scotch Whiskeys as
weU as many top-of-the-One
bourbons, tequila 8' brandJ~.
1830 Newport Blvd.
Newport at Harbor
Costa Me$a
548-8428
Poal-Pcl DIMll P Slebomd8
(2)-0.U'" D!l1tw Ddw:n
. (4)-lloti' •• Golf
2-W. D a• Htk .._. t2.50
....., ..... 2.00
1'nel'. Cowl' <Juqel
PRIM•
Ria NIGHTI
*878
SUNDAY NITE SPECIAL 95 * Chicken, Ribs a Brisket Dinner*
F101118p.n1. ~ 880 Chicken, Spere Rlb9 and Brisket of a .. f
~ ilelledfl'otmlo,....,ComontheCob6.....,..,
Chris/mas 7Jay
23ulfel
lOCbfe
?ealurin9 l
Our :lradilional Chris/mas 23uJfal l
SouthCOMt~
which began on a lboe-
ltrtng 32 years ago -and ,
the Theater District -wbichJs
following SCR'I uample three
dooades later -have COila
Mesa addresiel lea than a mile
apart. and both fieUd their
artistic muscles hnpreulvely
during 1997. .
For SCR, 1t wu the year
Broadway came to Costa Mesa
with James Lapine, the ditector
of several Stephen Sondheim
musicals, stag-
ing •The Gold-
en-Cbtld--on
the Mainstage
and Tony
Roberts, an
actor with 18
credits from the Great White
Way, headlining •stdney Bechet
Killed a Man• on the Second
Stage.
For the Theater District, it
was the year artistic director
Mario Lescot delivered his mag-
num opus to date -the power-
ful musical •eat>aret· -then
took a well-deserved vacation as
John Bowerman stepped in tO
stage impressive productions of
•And Miss Reardon Drinks a
Little• and •The Sum of Us.•
SCR inaugurated an • Ameri-
can Classics• five-year program
Factory Direct Window, Door & Tex-Cote
DON'T MISS OUl't PRICF.s HAVE NEVER BEEN LOWER
• and led ott with what one of the
greatest plays ever written,
Arthur Miller's •Death of a
Salesman.• Martin Benson's
depth-laden production was
. clearly the No. 1 show at SCR in
.• 1997.
Top of the llM vinyl windows & doors
ALL AT FACTORY
DIRECT PRICES
dual pane, vinyl frame,
energy efficient.
· No. 2 wu Lapine'• mounting Advantage, Mllgard, Certainteed
. ... \ .... ' . '•' ....
~\ .. ·~
Call for FR.EE In-home estimate
(800) 940-1413
Factorf Direct Home Improvement
License 511605 Fully lnsured
WHY PAY MORE?
We,ve decked our h.i{a for a gloriou~
~CHruSTMAs EvE -
at
TWIH+tP~Lffi~
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1997
Dinner served &om 5 to 10 p.m. * Music from 6 to 10 p.m. ~ather with family and friends to enjoy a ~ sumptuous three-course dinner
. & the a capella gospel group Infusion.
$35 Prix Fixe, includes dinner and a glass of
Korbel Chardonnay Ownpagne or Jekel Vineyards *
Chardonnay or Cabernet Sauvignon.
Exclusive of tai & gratuiijr.
•neatb of a SaJe9IUll• mt Soatla Coat ltepertory wu one of tbe 11..t pertormnc-of t..., . ..,.
Tom Titus. In tllll ICIJDe, Willy Loma (Allml Miller, left) Is confronled by his wUe ~ (Lyaa Mll-
grt.m) and IODI Happy (Sllllon Billig) end BUI (Michael Reilly Burke).
Tms HourMY Sl!.UON Su Tm: STOllY THAT INSPlllZD
T111! &u.ET CoME ro 11,11 n11101JG1t T11E EYU OF,,, CHU.O
'll1t ·
Edwards IMAX. Theatres
Pre.nts
An Evening on Everest with
David Breashears & Ed Viesturs
Share an evening with David Breashears (co-director.
producer. cinematographer & expedition leader) or
Ed Viei;tur.. (deputy expcditton leader) and hear a
fir;t hand account of the IMAX filming of their
hi storic Mount Everc't e'pcd1tioo. The evening
include' u 'lidc pre-.cnta11on. a 7 minute IMA?<
"Everest" film clip. a quc'>ll<>n and an."wcr 'iCS.~100
and a txu '>1gning of Na11onal Geographic·~
EVEREST -Mountain Without Mercy
Dayid Rm.Wan
Wed . Dec l. 1997 -Irvine@ 5:30 & 8:00 pm
B<iok "gning from 6.30 -7:30 pm
Ed Yintun
Mon . Dec 15. 1997 -Irvine@ 5:30 & 8:00 pm
Dool "gnmg from 6:30 -7:30 pm
Tkkm are $11.• act. and arT 1m111abk
udusiYdy m ~ at .U REI loaltioft.<I
or by pl9oM witla • Cftdlt card.
REI • MlaloD Viejo (714) 348-1408
REI -Saata AM (714) 54J..<tl4l
The IMAX film "Everc~t .. opens March 6. 1998
at boch E.dwan:ls IMAX Theam locatioru .
scenes.
Leontieff ran
a Russian
restaurant in
London for 14
years before moving to the Unit-
ed States four years ago. Within
the next few months, he plans to
offer the same Russian cuisine at
Galeos in addition to the Euro-
pean dishes currently offered.
Bright blue floors and a smat-
tering of bright orange and yel-
low on the walls adds a funky
yet sophisticated look to the
small and elegant cafe. A
portable Internet site with free e-
mail for customers is available at
10 cents per minute, and Leonti-
eU also installed a California lot-
tery machine.
The restaurant currently clos-
es at 7 p.m. every night, but
plans are in the works to make it
a 24-hour cafe with Internet sta-
• . . ...... ~ ... ...tm:::..
fdsndaec 11lroJmtiitW_.t,..,
blm up trim til9 llq>ort for.
waetlODg Yillt;
Goldw gnMIMd ua at the
counter With.~ limBe.,
The aroma comlrtg from tbe ..
kitch8rl was~ to make UI
want to order the entire menu -
but we restrained ounelvel.
WtJ started out with the~
etable mushroom soup tierYed
with a baguette ($2.95). 1b8
thick 10UJ> had a aeamy egg
base with chopped vegetables
and a pungent mushroom flavor.
Delicious.
While all the food at Galeos ls
indeed tasty, I was most
impressed by the bread. The
French-~
baguettes and
rolls are consis-
tently baked to
perfection with
a <:JiM>y golden'
brown outside
and a fluffy, airy inside. My
friend and I raved about it for the
entire week he was here.
Next we tried the "home" piz-
za ($3.95), with cheese, tomato,
oregano and black olives. The
10-inch pizza had a tasty, crispy,
thin crust, chunks of tomato and
sliced olives. The oregano was
piled on thick (it's nice to find a
place that isn't conservative with
their spices) and it was loaded
with gooey mozzarella cheese -
a real treat.
Other pizzas include veggie
($6.50), with mozzarella, tomato,
oregano, mushroom, spinach and
avocado; meaty ($7.90), with
mozzarella, tomato, oregano,
salami, proscuitto, roast beef and
Ho~ <AmM s~
Remember we atcr bo:us & chartcn
"In yoµr home or ii;i your dining room.
It4/Um Styu
SrnulAy B,..,,J,
723-0621
'2-oqers ( G,'"' , f~
Early Bird
Special
M-F 7a m-9am
$1 .00
12., Latif
I
Sandwich House
Sandwiches, Coffee and
Espresso Drinks,
& Smoothies We usta
112 pound
of real fruit
in all our
smoothies
Fresh Turkey sandwiches, cooked Daily
Now Open at 6am
270 E. 17th St. #17, Costa Mesa • 645-2252
=•=•=•:· "ct ~, .... ........ ...,5 ..................
.... ............. bun .....,.._,,,._ .... ... ..................
robalt .......... AIMitall
ftitety. CaupJe:t wtlb the IDUl-
tard, Swlil ...... ad~ of.
veg l ... , tlie 8Ddwidl WU
m.ty iDd Mibltantlal wttb a mce combl!Mdkm ot tnture1.
1b8 rOMt beef tandwlch
($'.SO~ $5.75 large) WU
outstanding. Thinly sliOecl a.Dd
medium rant, tbe boilJle..:made
rout beef came with cbeere,
tomato, sprouts, lettuce and
cucumber served on a crispy
roll.
The smoked salmon sandwich
($5.95 small, $1.95 larqe) was
filled with smooth thin al1ces of
tasty lox. cucumber, tomato, let-
••• twk:b9 ....... Wiil
ddlll.SI"'"'
"c. a.._, a Pl l:t " .. ..................
tmbf .... -. •. 75 llrge)
Gd ltdlD ..., ••• (N.25,
tmal1. SS.50 Jaage) .
Gai.o. cam a~ o1 c:d·
fee ddnb, trCD ..,,.,., .1\Jik.
ilh coffee. I tried the blended
iced coffee, wbk:h WU sweat and
icy with a Jlke blend of coftee I
flavon.
For deaelt. try a tlram1lu or
any one ot Galeol' home-belted
pies, cakes, dlocolates at cook·
lea. For brealdut. the reltaurant
offen fresh be.gels, aotaants and
strudel; or try a poecbed egg on
bagels or aotssant ($3.SO) or
saambled eggs ($3.75) with
fresh ham and cheese.
Leontieff Aid beer and wine
will be served as soon as they
receive their license from the
iatl~f,-tu.ce...1Ptmltl1....aJHm cheese,
onion and capen on the side.
The smoked salmon was fresh
and the onions strong and sweet
dty. At that time, he plans to tum
the cafe into a Russian restaurant
at g .
NEWSROOM ASSISTANT WANTED
If you're an organized selfwstarter with~ humor, you can carve a niche
for yourself in a fastw1Jii!Ced news organization. The candidate winning this pivotal spot will consider no job too small and prioritize wide-ran9ing
tasks as necessary to meet newsroom deadlines. Necessary skills mcfude
a familiarity with Internet tools, knowledge of computer file tyP.es and
proficiency with MS Office programs. This ~ition reports to the editor
and requires word processing in addition to daily contact with the public.
A dru saeenin will be required. E-mail cover letter and resume to: ...=;·= · . In the sub'ect line, : Newsroom Assistant.
--T11111{j.1ce-
Quick ... Fresh ... Hot! .. -""'-~'
.... nlll Jood •• 0..1• Co•ty
Voted by the ~r rcadcn, A~ 1994
HOUR FAXED MENU CALL t800) 774-FOOD X-351 r:---~------:-1 111Y1 ENIEGETS0%1 I OFF M> ENlE ;
I ot•orlemwU. I
I Mll1ill•111r•tlllt ... ,. .... ,. ....... kll,ffllf.1
... __________ ..
LUNOi • DINNER• CATERING •TAKE OlTI'
Phone orders and catering
available.
I I: I I
I •Y 0ae Ell'U'ee I
I ftt 8H frN I
11 (r'flnner onh\ PIOIUOWLll' I -.. °""' • .06'.D--099 00t9·-•~•a... •I L----... -CL ____ ..
Mon-at Lunch 11-3pm Dinner 4-lOpm
Sunday Dinner Only
Party 'Irays a. Caterincvililable
6 5-32:>9
Any Party Platter
Good thru 12/31/97
JOin us tt'l'hc W.CCff'mnt HikUn &nth RCllnn (nt 11 ddii.-iom htilic.lay
exllCficnce in • ~laf C'!Celln cttinA to chc..-mh with f1mily ind (ricmk.
Christmy Eve Dini°'
'l'hc Palmt::CIUR ~urant
Dinner acl\'Cd 5:00 p.m. -11:()0 p.m.
Aduhil $.W.IW)
7J..,,,,,. ,._, _ .... """""""'
;
·~ OIUmMs SHOW' 'lhi9'~ Sympt,ony~Ot'chestra P9P ~ preSris""lhe Christ-~ ShoW" Friday and SatUntaY lf1 .t Orange County Per-
Arts Center's Segerstrom ~ Town Center Drive, Cos-ta Mill. Enjoy holiday music
With • huge cast. plenty of sur-
pttse ancf Jazz pianist Cyrus
Chestnut. 11ckets range from $22
to $75. For information, call 556-
2122.
> OCC IETROSPECTM
,.----. ,~ ~
---__ : ·~
>,.,A wmm•s UL UFI' ••''ltOrt .... ..... ~ .. ~ ....... pr. ... •trs • Wonitliful (He•.
dhmd by Michell~~
ra¢ lhunday, M 7:30 pn; in the
Grand S.lon. 151 E. COMt Hlgh-
w.y. Newport~. 11cbts ... s 1 s: For teseNations. citM 675-
8915 ext. 374.
> 'A 10-M9IUTE OWSTMAS'
> 'A OtRISTMAS c.MOI!
South CoMt ........ '} l!f 1 nt
the Charles Didcens Clllllk •A •
Christmas c.roa· lldlptiMf --ry Patdl and~ Hlil a..dOn.
Jr. through Dec. 24 on the~
stage, 655 Town Center 0rMo
Costa Mesa. Tickets range from
$14 to $36. For Information. Clll
957-2602. .
> 'THE MJTc::RAO<Elr
The Festival BaMet Theatre and
the children of the SouttUnd
Ballet Academy presents 'The
The OCC art gallefy presents
The 50th AnnlVefsary Retrospec-
tive and The Architecture of
Richard Neutra of Orange County
through Feb. 20, 1998. Admission
is free. The gallety is open Mon-
day througH Thursday from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. and Thu~ ------;-evenTngsrrom 7 to 8:30j)jTI. For
information, call 432-5039.
New Voices Playwright Woric-
shop presents •A 10-Minute Christlnas. • an ewning of origi--
nal 1<kninute plays with a holi-
day theme, Thursday through
Sunday at The Theatre District.
2930 Bri5tol St., Costa Mesa.
Show times are 8 p.m. Thursday
through Saturday and 7 p.m.
Sunday. Tickets are $5 for the
Dec. 11 oreyiew ,rut110 for Fri-
day through Sunday shows. For
reservations, call 435-4043.
N •
day, at the Robert B. Moen~
atre, OCC., 2701 Fairview Roed.
Costa Mesa. Shows are Friday at
7 p.m., Saturday at 2 and 7 P-Rl·
and Sunday at 2 p.m. Advanced
tickets are $15 for adutts.
Advance discount tickets are S 12,
Adults are St 7 and children at
>HOLIDAY ART SHOW
~ SHARI LEWIS
'The Pacific Symphony Orchestra
and Pacific Chorate presents Han-
del's •Messiah " on Saturday at 3
p.m. at the Orange County Per-
formlng Arts Center's Segerstrom
Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. Tickets ran~e from $18
to S69. For information, call 556-
2122.
The Orange County ·Pertormlng
Arts Center presents The Sharl
The Costa Mesa Art League
showcase gallery presents a spe-
cial show titted Give Art for the
Holidays. through Jan. 4, 1998, at
1631 Sunflower Ave, Costa Mesa.
Oriolnal work bv local· artists.Will
be featured with a holiday bou-
European Coffee House
YOUT passport
to an
authentic
Vaoma
Coffee HOU$e!
'498-5535 675-7414
I I 4 ~I Mar Ave. 705 E. &Ibo. Blvd.
San Clnnentt Newport Beach
RIVERBOAT RESTAURANT
()l board d'le "Pnde of Newport" RiYerboat. Home CJ The
Newport Hlrtlol" Naubc81 MJSe\rn (Fameny F8Jben E. Lee} Is
~Hun 11em-9pm~ and Omer Sat Son 8rUlch 8am
(etc-' Mondays). ~ Needed ()ily For Weddings.
,Benqueca 0-PrMte Parties. All Maier Credt Cards Accepted.
Loclt8d f.t. 151 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach, CA 92800
(714) 873-3425 Fax 673-7884
CHARLIE'S CHILI
l.ocad • McFedden Piece (next t.o Newport Pier) in Newport
Beech. Hotn: Mon-Thur 7 ·OOarn-12 midnlgtt Weekends
7:CDlm3:CDem. Amax. VIS8, Ol&a:M!r. Diner's Oub. No
~Needed. (714) 675-7991
HO SUM BISTRO
lq& & heMt1y 'CitibteiQI" a..iliPI. Al 04.6' cW9 ...
P''IP9 9d 1-..n ~ & Pl 'ep9ed fresh per ir'darl ~ Son ttru nus; U ·1Qm. In. & Sit. 11·11pm. \W.
M11t•card. Amil. OW.'t Club; lbc8tlld It 3112 N9wpor:t
Bt.d., ~Beech. (714) 67~
TWIN PALMS
P\'M~~IW_, tiOniit oooking, I Wt81'1~& y ~
~ vllgit IQU!llf'l ltrr--tJ, .... llteitli ild ~ nd'C. l.urdl Woi.&L 11 :3) e.m. -3 pm .• an 9n#'lch
10:00 am. -3 pm .• OMr: 5:30-10:00 p.m. Mf"I nOc; bir
mnJ IMlleble ~ U'1Ch ll'ld chW end TIUl.-8& IM'd ~~It 8Xl ~Cerul'f>.. ltFeetlor\ ~
~
THE PIZZA BAKERY
The Best of Naw Vert ~ Pilza with a c.alfcmia Aair. Open 7
days. 11 :CXlam . 10:CQ>rn. Dine in, cerry OJt. and local deMry
BVllilable. Located at 17 41 Westx:liff 0-in Newport Beach.
631 -1166.
TOSCANINI RISTORANTE
ITALIANO
Pastes end breed made fresh daty. Open 6 clays a week. Tues.·
Sun 4-1 Q'Jm. Fn & Set. 4-11. Closed Mondays. Visa and
Ma8tsurd ~-Aeservatms ~ Located 8t 3012
~ BNd. 723-2338
RISTORANTE MAMMA GINA
l.oclad It 251 EMt P8cillc Coast ~ in Newport Beach.
l..unctt Mon . .set. 11 : 00-2:30, &.lday 8Nlch 11 am3pm,
Onw Mon-Sun 5pm-1Q'Jm. Cell ahead for resarvabonS
673-9500
SCAMPI
Ane femlv Dining. Nev-+t Ren IOdeled. ~ 7 Days A Welk for Dinner~ 5:0010:~. We r.at.-PrMlt8 l..lJ1ch Partiel for
1 & Peopll or Mere. Al MeP' 0'9dit Cerda Accepted.
Reeervedonl Acoepcad. l..oaltad at , 576 Newport BMi. Co8ta
~.64!5-8580
SABATINO'& RESTAURANT
a SAUSAGE CO.
Pllte, c.--Stied, Home medl Slulega, Veal. lsTib, cw.. Wine, Bear, a.sipicc:m & Oeeaert. Hatn:
Wlelc. a.Wig SIL & &il. BrvlCh From 8;3J.1 :CXl.
&Jn . 111111'"-1~. Fri.&&. 11 em-11 pm. Al Mlljor awa
Cards ~. l.aaDd lit. 251 ~ w,,. ~
Beech. (714) 723<91 •
> NAUTICAL MUSEUM > BAUET MONTMARTRE The museum features three
galleries: the Newport Gallery
displaying the maritime history
of the area; the Model Gallery
exhibiting a selection of world-
class models and the Grand
Ballet Montmartre presents the
ballet adaptation of •A Christmas
Carol• Dec. 20 at 7:30 p.m. and
Dec, 21 at 2 p.m. at Newport Har-
bor High School, 600 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach. Tickets are S 13 at the door.
Flautas with
Guacamole
$2.00
'Toscanini
9Qstorante Italiano
'Family Owned &> Operated
Holiday Specials
Penne Marinara $19.95 lasagna Tray
Eggplant Parmigiana $25.95 1brteHini Campagnola $29.95
Each Trag Feeds 10 to 15 People
HOURS: 'Ttw-Thurs 4 pm-9 pm• Fri & Sat 4 pm-10 pm
Sun. 4 pm·9 pm • Cloud Monday.s
3012 Newport Blod. • Nauport &adr •
m-2338 •Fax 723~2339
TOKYO GATE
&m. aDring end talce OJt 8Yailable ~ 7 days 8 week
Monday· Ttuwtlly 11 :30 a.m -9:30 p.m. Friday· Satlrday
11 :30 a.m .• 10:CD p.m; &.lday 12:00 • 9:00 p.m. l..oc8t8d
et 427 E 17ttl St. ID (by Wherehouse Records) in Costa Mesa.
631-0403
LA CAVE
Menu Includes: Lobster, Dllb, Shrirrll. 9aalcs. Daily Specials.
Fn. & Set. Prime Rib. Full Bar & Wn 1.19t. Ceauel cress.
Hours: Lunches 11 :00-2:30 -Dinner Mon.-Sat. from 5:~.
VIS&. Mastercard. Diner's Oub Located At. 1695 lrvi"le lw .. (At.
17th Street) Near Bloclcbl 1Ster Ei mtair imerc Costa Mesa
(714) 646-7944
}
THE BARN STEAK HOUSE "
MlnJ Includes !bek. Fresh Fish. Drlen, 81.rgers & Salads
Pncee Range From $3 75 For Lundi & $6 25 For Omer
Hcus: Mon.-Sat. ~ 11em For Lunch. 4 CQJrn Mon . .fn.,
Dinner 3;CQ>rn Set. & Son .. Maia' ()'9dit Qrds Accepted
Locatad At. 23Xl Herber Bl. 131, Qista Mesa
(714) 641 -9777
THE ARCHES
The prerTUTl ateak and aeafood hoU&e ill ()'ange ~ .-ce
, 922. Serwig kl)Ch Mon .fn 11 30am Ifill 3:CQ>m. Dimer
_...., ritjO/ urd 1 •CDem. Located on Newport BMt. & Coll6t
~ i'I Nlwpor't Beedl. 54s-10n
CATALINA FISH KITCHEN
Get hodrad on d'le ~ fish IMlilable. Freeh wtled fish.
aeefood and chdc.-1. sei ldwictl89, saleds, g"ied plllltl!ls and pasta
epeaMbel. ~ 98Y80 clays a week. Mon. ttru Set. 11 am-9pm;
Sooday 11~7pm Cat8mg awiable. l.ocet1!ld 8t 670 w. 17ttl
~ 193, Co8ta Mela (West of d'le new Treder Joe's.) 64s.ae73
THE BLUEWATER GRILL
W.. I\ Ol"C dnng 8t the former 8lt8 of the hit!tcric See St1ert¥
end Delaney's. Featuring fresh mesquit&gilled seafood. C1flbl'
ber and retail fiah rneirtet. Full ber. Oger pecio. omg peao. Al
major cards. OM8ring IMlillble. ~ upon an-Mil. M>d&i '8t.8l'f
priced. Locad et~ Udo P1!fic en. near Udo lstand. ~ 7
days. kJnCh &. dinnr. 675.f&I
HENRY N HARRY'S
GOAT HILL TAVERN
Wa hlM ltle moat Tape on rmird in Cftnge ~ 48 11 ip0'1:8d
bera, 42 mD'O ~ We feMl.re <Mr' 50 linglfHnet &
blended Scdctl ~ • well .. rTWYy tDpdhh bcJl.rt>cn.
tacpas. & brwdla. l..oaltad 8t 1830 Newpcrt BM!. (Newport &
Hartxr). 5488428
THE PARADISE EUROPEAN
COFFEE HOUSE
F9Cftlg ~ ...-, ooffll, u 911>1 _, bar, fine ctocc ......
en ice a.n & cdfee a eatiol •. Freltl bekad pM1'ias end
celcas. Q>eli 7 -• Miit. ~Tun io.n.1C¥n. FriSet 10em-11pm. ~It 705 E. 8all08 BM! .. Newpcrt Beedl.
87!>7414
i . ~ . . . \(. ! f'4~•h( !t.
Angeles High trnlfer wbo
reportedly sooted 31 go.Ii ...
• • seuon for his LA City S8dfon
'CONTINUED FROM 82 sch,ooJ. Further, CreDlhaw Nkl :and the teem 'I leading scorer Miranda, also a foatball p1aj8I:
.with 16 goals. and senior third-with promise, scored 1'1 go.i. m
ai :Year starter Brad Wayman (goal-nine games during the 11ammer,
••keeper) are back to keep and was injured ID three of them.
d •He's ah ..... , ..... ,• ,...._-~-w--'..a ., •Bstanda in the first division. wt"'-'-"'~ -.w..
n : Sophomore forward Cesar •He's very strong, but differ-
51 •Teno h red 15 oals ent from other forwuds we've
h !last ~nw~d S:amed ~nd-had here. The others tend to be
d :team All-PCL honors, sophomore highly skilled ftnesse players.
a 'defender John Alderete (honor-~o doesn't ,have those kind of
e able mention all-league as a skills, but hes a big, powerful o Ireiliman an seriior umity p)!y--lefwW:-"
s• er Silvio Alderete (forward mid-P-U'St-year varsity players try-
fielder and defender) ar~ also ing to crack the lineup include
a 'blue-chip returnees. se~or Noe Estrada (~efender
r• Sophomore midfielder Irving /oudfielder), junion Lw.s Avalos
l Islas also started in 1996-97 on a (defender), Juan Cervaptes (util-
·full-time basis. ity) and Luis Gonzalez (midfield-~ Midfielders Robert Castellano er), and sophomores Luis Rivera
tJ : (j unior) and Stuart Moncada (midfielder) and Esa.ul Mendou
(sophomore) are returning letter-(midfielder/forward). 0 men. Castellano started occa-Rivera is extremely fast with
C • sionally. great skills, according to Cren-
p : Garcia, a first-team All-CIF shaw, while Avalos played huge
Division m choice as a sopho-against Mater Dei in the saim-
b • more, has three times finish~ as mage to prevent the Monarchs
h • runner-up in the PCL MVP vot-from attempting any shots. Gon-
, Y : ing, Crenshaw said. "He's our zalez is a southpaw.
s big gun,• Crenshaw said of the Under Crenshaw, Estancia
P team's captain. has reached the CIF Playoffs the
n • While Estancia lost sopho-last two years, losing to Canyon
t more Hugo Casillas, a first-team Springs in the first round in 1996
e • all-league midfielder last season and dropping its aforementioned
t• who moved to Mexico, it gained second-round clash with Laguna
· "unior Mario Miranda a Los Bea .
A.Whale
6£' .A Tale
Children's Boo~.lf6
8'S4-32315
A Bookshoppe for ~ of all ages ~
4187 Campwi Dr .. Universtty Center. hviM
GH1RLSY CUMO
who will introduce her late9t book
•A TRSASURY <JP MSRMAIW
Mermaid Tale$ Flom Around 1be World
Alooa
•Five Newport Harbor
players honored with
coaches' selections.
Newport Harbor High seniors
Kyle McNicliols and Shannon
lavelli were tint-team All-Sumet
League ID field hockey tb.1s fall.
while Sailors Katie Bourgeois,
Katie Kent and Kerstin Mander-
son were second-team picks by
the drcu1t'8 coac.bes.
Mc:Nk:hols, a right wing and a
second-team all-league pick u a
junior, wu among the team lead-
ers in goals and assists, according
to Coach Sharon Wolfe, while
lavelli, the 'nlrs' sweeper, was Q
standout on defense.
Kent, a senior, was another top
offensive performer, while Man-
derson, a junior, was key to the
defense.
The skills of Bourgeois, anoth-
er senior and a first-team all-lea-
guer last season, helped the
rs finish 7-5-4.
Judglnt wlll be held Dec. 16!
~1J " .... ""~ """*.?3
~ .. ~""' °' ,t~~ NEWPORT HARBOR
CHRISTMAS
·BOAT PARADE
1 9 9 7
t~ ~ E (HOME DECORATIONS CONTEST)
~;: .•
You've probably heard of the Newport Harbor Christmas Boat Parade. Now in
its 89th year, it is viewed by one milfion people each year here in Newport
Harbor. Another Holiday traditio~ in conjunction witl) the boat parade, is the
Ring of Lights. Newport Beach residents and businesses are encouraged to
decorate for the holidays, forming a ''Ring of Lights" around the haroor. Homes
and businesses will be judg~ during the parade in a variety of categories, with
the winners invited to the ChristmaS Boat-Parade Awards Dinner and Auction
held January 23, 1998 at the Sutton Place Hotel. To enter your home or business,
~r to nominate someone's work, just fill out the form below and fax, mail or eMail
1t back to the Chamber. There is no charsre to enter. Take part in the spirit of the
Newport Harbor Christmas Boat Paradel'
•••••••••••••
com-••••• ... mw time in Aldo luoaF\ pn ilku 2S.,_. career, the ..
ii .,&.eel to wtCMM'e the relew ol the new
• ...................... md
mmbend pdna.
~ .. t 'fiil~<dtl.t 6nWwd .. . ..., .... ~ .......
•A Goad 1'ed Wine" &1111.am Luomo>'• ....... h.., ~ cbanctn known.
-The Hawk."
Wfhe Hawk,". delcribed by Luongo, ...
only 10 or 15 minuar:a Wt (CJD the dock ol
life), but he's pq out in ayle. ·"I WIDt to be
lib him in my twili&bt ,.aan, wouldn't IDOlt of
Far DIOft iDfonmdon or to make your
mea ,....., ple.e call w, your •sthorized
dmler.
TOWN SQUARE GALLERY
1875 Newpcn Blvd, A-215 ~Mesa
714-548' 7797
Sf U ZZ i .. .A Casual, Everyday Cafe
Holiday Parties
Small & Large Groups
Private Rooms Available
Sfuzzi Pizza Bar ••• KJd's Actually Make Their Own Pizza
Bring Your Friends and Family
let's Have Some Fun!
Accepting .Reservatiom
For New Year's Eve!
Live Music & Prix F91X Menu
(714) 548-9500
1870A Harbor Blvd.
In Triangle Square
" \
..
Corona del Mar High School Shop at Triangle Square now
Costa Mesa High School through ·oecember 31 and
...
Ensign Intermediate. School
receive points towards a share
of $10,000 in exchange for
Estancia High School .. purchases made from any of
Newport Harbor High School
the stores or restaurants at
TeWinkle Middle School Triangle Square.
Woodbridge High School See stores for further details.
....... ,
.·
I
I
I
••
••
NEWPORT
BEACH
NEWPOIT
1069 BEACH
UNTA1S TO
2169 SHAU
PROBATE-SALE
2 STORY FIXER
Pllce Will Amaze You
714-723·8120
~ Prudential
~ ..... •S•• lsl•nd Lease
OpUon. 3br 3ba, 2-car
att gar, 1-level living
New white crpt/palnt
Mint New Cond.
----
*•OCEAN VllW lmmac 4Br 2.5Ba
3-Car Gar. New crptJ
roof. $3500. Broker
• &40-5884.
$559K Rita McDonald•---------
714-935-4601 Agent , _____ _
Waterfront Giant APARTMENTS Abandoned 2-Story
Hurry! Under S500K FOR RENT ,
Agt 714-723·8120 --------~ ~~=ial CORONA
------DEL MAR OUT-OF-STATE
PROPERTY 1558
CORONA
DEL MAR
HOUSES/
1022 CONDOS
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil FOR RENT
•Oce•n Clo•• Cuti• ••••••••• 2Br 2Ba Home. A·2
Lot, Garage. Agent---------
E•ctuslvo 582-1322 GENERAL 2102
COSTA MESA 1024
Duplex 5210.000
2 homes on 1 lot, wolf
kept. spacious. Earl
Taylor, Agt. 642·4722
NEWPORT
BEACH
Belboe Oceen Front L••••• 3 & 2 Bdrm'a Spacious & Clean
Upper & Lower Units
BEACH 'N BAY
RENTAL CO.
714-073-7388
Fun BHch O ffice CORONA
P owerful Br•nd DEL MAR 2122
Big Comm. S Piii• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Active Floor Time 28, 1 B• Garage, w/d,
C•ll Mike Evans
714-723 -8120
~ Prudential
Calllenole ..... ,
Bluffs, Upgraded 2 + 2
Vlllal New roof, 2-car
gar, Euro-white appl,
cul-d•·HC. Bell Buyl
1219K 720-1704 Bkr
Harbor View Home
Cape COd 48r 3.58•
12.000 +Sq .Ft.Lot
MS0,000 Judy Kolat,
Broker 71447&-5571
disbwshr, frig, n/pets
708 1/2 N•rclssus s 1 225. 714-675-2854
Just u ••• a. 8paclou1 ~ltr
5br 3 .5 Portoflno Hlincv
2622
Model. M1tr>Sult•1 •nd IEACB 2189 CDll ..... Pront H--
c hlldren ' a w ng.1••••liiilllll&1••I ·---1t4-l44·7004 Ao•nn•
--------
EMPLOYMENT
5530
R~tH and &-adllnes art 1ubject to cluul«t .
without notiot. Th~ publiabfr ~rvca tlie right
to ttnaor, ttelassily, revise or rejec1 any
cloNified advtrtisemeot. Pie~ report any error
that may be in your classified ad immt'cWitely.
The O.tily P~t llooepts no !iab~lity for any mor
in an advertiM'ment Tor 'Nhich it may be "~ible euq>t for the cost of the space
ac1Ually oocupie<I by the error. Credit can only
be allowed (or tbt lil'$t insertion.
----Deadll•te8 ---
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ....... Wednesday S~m
Friday ............... Thursday S:OOpm
Sawrday-.. :::-.......... Ftiday S:OOpm
EMPLOYMENT 1. BMPLOYMENT WANTED SPORTING
6019 GOODS 5530 SUVICES 5533 TO BUY 6065
MERCHANDISE
MISC. 6015 -----------
M•rum•n MSF 3 10
PW. now rifle •halt,
$380. 850-0584
6107
Est•te S•le antiques. furn, decorator Items.
household goods.
clolhes. NO JUNK!
225 ORCHID
Sal 8-4 Sun 8· 12
COSTA MESA 6124
Aussie Puppies
Beautiful Xmas gilts! HUNTINGTON
All colors. AKA $250 BEACH 6140 •831-2558•
Leopard Look·A·Llke ANNUAL YARD SALE
From Grand Champ. Rlvervl•w Clrcle
Oclcats Male Kilton SAT. DEC 13TH
$750. R;:ire Golden 7AM-? Furniture,
Spotted Beaulyll clothes. toys, & many
1·0nlyl 714-646-8473 m Is c 1tems1111
•Poodles 'R'Peopl• (Ocean H1fl/Detaware)
Toacup, Toy & Mini., ________ _
S350.-S1500. Free vet NEWPORT check. 751-3485• • BEACH 6169
NEWPORT
BUCH
NEWPORT
6169 BEACH
NEWPORT
6169 BEACH 6169
TRANSPOITATION AUTOMOBILES CHEVROLET 9045 I••·----· ·-------'9 0 M • r k 111 Conversion Van V-8,
POWER BOATS BMW · 9030 at, ac. fun pwr. ps.
7012 tinted glass, cass,
a m /f m s y • , c /c
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '94 525 WAGON $9000. 714·751·8804 Premium Package, _______ _ Cr'•ft
1957
Mahoghany ClaHlc,
Fully Restored .
Corvette 350 Eng. w/
trailer. A Collectors
Dream. S19,500.obo
714~75·0586
premium wheels '91 810 Blezer 4 X4
(D24024) S23,977 4.3 V6, 4-dr, White,
ABS, Loaded, Xtnt
Condi 714·640·2395 LEXUS
P.11SSION VIEJO
888-88·LEXUS
9035
•
9230
'94 LS 400 PLYMOUTH 9165
Cashmere, Full oplion iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
'80 24SDL WAGON 4-dr, J-cyl, euto, •c.
ster.o. S1000 obo.
•714431.07157• 1213956 $31 ,977
'98 sc 300
Ca.shmere, full option
Le)IUS certified
lf0361S5 S33,977
LEXUS
MISSION V1RJO 1.aaa.a•·LEXUS
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
Let the
ClaHlfled
Service
Directory
help you find
reliable help.
642·5678
'91 Sundenc• 4dr.
auto, pb, ps, pdr, a.Jc,
am·fm cass, very clf'l,1---------'
orig OWf\er, aak m1. AUTOS "'ooo obo Mo.8s1s WANTED 9246·
'94 Voit•e•r SE 7 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii
pungr. V6 Power AC DONATE YOU" CAR
Ilk• new. 39,180 ml. OR SOAT
$11,900 obo 723-1504 to Th• or.,... c..
Burn ~eocletlon.
PONTIAC TAX DEDUCTl8l.E 9170 Free p lck·u p end
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim dellvery. Wrecked or
not runnfng i. OK.
Call Gina at the OCBA
office to schedule an
appt. 714-<t56·1938
'94 Orend Prix SE
6cy1 all pwr AC CC tilt,
am/1m cass. mags.
$8499. EZ financing.
Sunwest M otors
714-437·1931
8:30AM· 12:30PM
------ANTIQUES.&
9175 ctASSlCS 9250 PORSCHE
'77 930 Turbo Sliver/
black, sunroof, orig/
very clean, $18,050
831-0257
~ ~
'90 9000 Turf)o
Mint Green. 4-dr,
hatctibaek, ldnt cond.
new trans, lthr int,
$7500. 719-1718
'87 Muatan9
Beautifully restored!
Great Xmas glftl
$4995 H3-2633
• '72 El Cemlno •
ShoW cat, strffl rOd.
$4999. M 3-2833
On the move?
-----•ICA.RPENTRY 3510 COMPUTERS 3556 ELECTRICAL 3610 RANDY MAN 3710 IMPROVEMENTS IANDSCAPE & PAINTING 3858 PLUMBING 3890 ROOflNG 3910
l&iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiii I iiiiiiiiiiiiir.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii HOME 3 7 5 6 LAWN CARE 3 808 iiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ...... 0 • 0 ... 9.-L E-S"'•" Job •XPIERT •P•lnt/Cerpen~* liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ike '• Custom Painting P,.clee Pluma.."9 .. .-r .. .. Duncan 91ec:trlc Drywall and morel YA.RD Clean-up, Tree Prof, Clean, Ouallty Ref)91ra & Re~ts "OOF "£P•JR
L.ocal/Oufct< Response Small Jobs Oki Trlm/HedgtfS/Remova! Work. Int/Ext & Docka. Frff Estimates Ol*ity w0t1t. Al types
Ll27S870 850-7042 O•rit 84$·5277 TIME Palm Trees & Hauling Ltlf703468 831 -48 10 LlfM'JJN .... ,090 Sr. Oise. Uc'd & Ins.
ANY. ALL REPAIRS TO IMPROVE H 0.1502 Pg·748·5375 Expert Dr8tn c..... * 714-297-3388 *
Peterkin llleotrlo•
Prompt & Low Ratosl
r ea-com/1m·lg Jobs
CSL811717 741-5265
Hot Water Heaters Peter11 Pelntlng & PlUmbmg Repaita ULaOA ftOOFUIQ CO Garbage Disposals City officials are 20 Years EJlperlence 20)'n e.cp. All~ guw. Qu.Uty Wont Guwnt'd
Faucetts/Celllng Fans gearing up for MOVING 3834 Free EsllmatH Steve MIJ.82H Retool/Repair Free Est
Security Llghts/Telephn El Nino, a weather lntoriors and EJlt•rlora --------Ltc:lln• 831·5081
Scott 714-831·2025 phenomenon that Refetrel. 854-c>512 1•r..~~~~~~-. hu began to bring a , _______ _
Home RetaalrJRemodel repeat or the storms
Co.ta Mesa./Newport lhal battered the
25 Y••r• Exp. area In the 1980'1.
Jim 831·24eO 11·1 time to get
HOIM "81tontlltn/RHl8Clel prepared now J for
Tlle/dryWall/WoOdwork lhe Year Ahead ...
Fencel/deckl/room add. C A L L Y 0 U R
Roor./genwal repairs. LOCAL Sl!RVICllS
Comm/Re•. Ref9 frM Etl TODAY!
Chrle 7S4-05171--------""
HOM• SIERYIC•S
~~1ef11~~:.t~~ IE.WEI.RY
Mla .... I 79 .. 1440
Pl_,...lne•ateotr10.a
Oupentry, Drywa ll
3784
SKYLIGHTS
StartlM at $395
lnatallatfon/Repalr.
10Yra Eltp. Uc/8ond.
We g1.1111.-. no INksl •
'11 .. 901-4Me
VIMIMC~.