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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-03-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-r' I SERVING THE NEWPORT-MESA <;:OM.NtUNmES SINCE 1907 -·slicked Streets . ·yield .6 acciden~ • But no serious injuries are reported as three mishaps clog lunch-hour traffic in Newport Beach. clogged storm dratns. The storm apparently didn't prompt motorists to slow down, and some of them prud the con- sequences. There were six traffic accidents in Newport Beach on Thursday, three m a matter of mmutes during the lunch hour. GRFG Rlsw.c Ocit Pb Heavy rain doused most of Orange County Thursday, caus- ing minor flooding and a handful of traffic acciuents on Newport- Mesa freeways and streets. About a half an inch of rain b.ad drqpped in the Newport Mesa area as of 6 p.m. Thursday. The storm, which originated m the Pacific Ocean, reminded res- idents Mother Nature wasn't done with winter weather just yet. City officials in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach said there wasn't any major flooding on streets. However, some rain- slicked roads did have large puddles thanks to partially The most sen ous accident appeared to be a one-car collision with a tree at the intersection of Ford Road and Can yon Island SEE WEATHER PAGE 6 KJM HAGGERTY.ZVWS Steven K. AkahoshJ's short Wm, "At Face Value,· will be playing at the Newport Beach Film Festival. Actor/filmmaker explores black/Korean race relations in . 1 THE BOTTOM LINE IS RACISM' : BY EUSE GEE film festival's 'At Face Value.' . . . . . . . . . . . . . Steven Akahoshi began his informal acting trairung while in junior high, pretending he was Starsky from the hit television show, ·starsky and Hutch.• He didn't begin his career until the age of 25, when he quit a job sell- mg vacuums to pursue acting, landing a role m •Fatal Beauty," starring Whoopi Goldberg. Now, at 37, the actor, known best for his role as Doc on the CBS television drama "Tour of Duty," has broadened his reper- toire to include film-making, and has landed d spot at the Newport SEE AKAAOSHI PAGE 6 72 HOURS A REEL WINNER 1 COME ONE, COME ALL: A Commuruty Apprcoation Cel- ebration will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. today at We=ttcliff Plaza, 1617 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach. Delicl:la will be provided. For more information, cfill (949) 65(}..0736. 2rr TAKES A VIUAGE: Volun- teers participating in the Beach Cle<tn-Up Day from 9 to 11 a.m. Sattirday will roe lVe a fr lunch aJlCl parking M1 . Volun- teers will meet at 9 a.m. at tho Dal· boa Pier on the Balboa Pcrunsula near Main and Ocean Front. New· port Beach. Lunc.h will follow th cleanup. Reservation arc reQulred. Pot more mfonnation, c4Jl (949) 644-3159. .. 3 FUN RM 1HE. FAMl.Y: '"JSCco. maken' Springf t, an annual t'OW\try craft fair, wW be held hUn 9 a.m to-' pln. Saturday and Sunday at Piecemakers Count!)' Store, 1720 Adams Ave, GOila Mesa. The event will feature 175 booths of handcrafted items, demonstrations, live music, food and entertainment for lhe kids . Admission is free. For more inf or· mation, call (714) 641-3112. 4 FUN FOR ADO: The East ~r Bunny will be making e spo- oal appearance from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Three Dog Bakery, 924 Av~do Ave., Coron.u del Mar. Dogs lcM have their "phodograph" ~th the Easter Bunny. Pups with the best East r • bono-it • will get a prlzo. For mor information, ctill (949) 760-3647. 5SCHOOl SPtRre Costa M High School will present t second annual Silent Auction from ? lo 10 p.m. Saturday at Jti· angle Sq\Jare, 1870 Harbor Blvtt:, Costa Meso. 1kkets are StO and lnclude mUSIC and dinner. Many items will be auctioned at th event. For mo~ lnf ormadoni call (714) Q66.8360. World-famous marble Sculptor Marton Varo (left) brings his artistry to the Newport Beach International Film Fes- tival with 10 exquisite tatues to be awarded April 1. And that's DO joke. SEE PAGE 2 I.A.RAV ENRltn I DAILY rt.OT INDEX OiASSAREO ...... _ •. ,........... • ...... t OICI IT OUT ---.. -·2 ....... 2 MD ft.IS--· .. , .. J PlllC.US--t SPm5 • 1 -I ' FESTIVAL FILM REVIEW Film takes race relations at anYffiing but 'Face Value' BY ELISE GEE There's nothing superficial about the film ~At Face Value,• which takes a soul- sea rch - -ing look For today's at race film Festival relations schedule, between see page 5. blacks and Koreans during the low-speed O.J. impson car chase. Producer, director ~mt wrtteT Steven Aka· h<>Shl examines the uves of two bard-work- ing men -one black and one Korean -and the events of each of their days, leading up to a climactic conflict at the end of the film. Kee, a Korean store owner, is stres.'>ed out over dealings with a delivery man. His son comes home with a black eye after getting into a fight with a black girl at school who calls him a "gook." Kee's elderly father also getS into tiffs with a black store patron whom he treats with suspicion . Meanwhile, Duke, a black construction worker, is trying just as hard to ibake a better life for his wife and son. He spends the day geUing beaten down by a tyrant ol a bOss, ftnd to make matters SEE REVIEW MGE 5 WWltER =.~1r"Z"" A111"W"-rM• ......... ..... , ... 1 FRIDAY, MAROI 26, 1999 Newport fire offldals were on the scene of a collision on Jamboree )ust south of Bayview, where two sport utility vehlcles aasbed, Thursday. OONUACHI DAILY Pl.OT Police talk man out of suicide try •Mobile home-park resident was distraught about breakup with girlfriend, police SdY. A spec1al-wedpom urut responded to a disturbance ttt a mobile home park WednPsdt1\' rught alter a. Costa Mesa mt1n despondent over a rec~nt breakup with his g1rlt riend threatened to kill hunself Karl Jones. 51, was taken to d hospital for d psychologtcal eval- uation after negotiators were able to talk hun out of su1c1de plans. Police received the 911 call at about 8 p.m. and responded to the mobile home park on the 900 block of West 17th Street. Jones reportedly was distraught about ht~ long-term relationship with tus g1Ilfnend. who hroke off ties with lum m Januan ~I~ was car- rying a lodded .357 • ..,l'rruautomat- IC' h<1ndgun an<l ~~1,.. dnnk.mg lwdvily Costd l\fo!.d p\1111 t' Lt Ron Smith said Jont•' lt>ll d note ins1dP lrn. home, stc1llng he was qom1 J to shoot him~Pll outside m otc!Pr tu kC'1•p ttw pl.ire rlean "l IP plc1nned on g1vmg her the plan• <1ltl!1 hP -.hot h1mselt, • S1111th S<ilO Th•• sptx1c1l \\ r•dpons team talkt-d t<1 .Jone .... who appeared to be.• llJl"t'I und clcprf' s<'d. for about hcllJ dll hour and c.onvUlced him to drop the gun and come outside Srruth added that Jon~ never lhreatl'ned to hur1 nP1gbbors or police. -Greg Risl ing $1.8 million embezzler Bob Dixon discovered • Details unv.eiled in Saturday's inaugural edition of Daily Pilot: The Magazine. .. Bob Dixon has been found. The former Newport Beach utilities director -who embez- zled $1 8 million from the city, spent a short time in pnson and then quietly vanished to parts unknown -1s living . We can't tell you Until tomor- row. When you can pick up the debut issue of Dally Pilot: The MagaZl.De, which will be mdud- ed in Saturday's ed1llons of the Pilot and on newsstands along the Orange Coast And then you can find out where he's living, what he had to say to Newport Beach residents Mlu.EHNIUM MOMENT and how he looks seven years after his arrest. Along with the Dixon sto- ry. the new general inter- est magazine will have a Bob Dixon m1x of arti- cles, includ- mg weekend getaways, luxury real estate, the hottest trends in home de 1gn, and how locals get in shape -plus columns by Pilot reguldJ'S Joe Bell Ste~e Smith and Steve Marble "We've developed a close relahonshlp with our readers on a daily basis, and we want to deepen 1t," said Pilot Editor SEE MAGAZINE PAGE 6 Balboa Bay Club founder~ busine~ was pWasure Known for minng busi· ness with . pleasure, Rid\ard Stevens' busl· ness was pleasure. He helped tum the Bal· bc>a Bay Club into one of the natlon._ most exclusive ana elaborate pnvattt dubl. The Corona del Mm' resident deve)oped P&ml to elpdd the 1Wbo9 Bay Cub. =:-..:-:::r1rom IOO to3.•..t111e~--· ... .,. ................ .................. dubit • ...., He IMllpe(I ....... 2 Friday, March 26, 1999 date book Daily Pilot CllCI IT 011 Perfecting school projects with library resources Worth ifs weight • marble F or elementary through high school 5tudents, science and mission projects can be daunt- mg academic passages. For help with these undertakings, Newport libraries off er nwnerous resources. ing World• and •Projects in Physics,• uncover dozens of experi- ments adaptable for many grade levels. Famous sculptor gives Oscar a run for its money at this year's film festival Among the most useful ref- erences for 8-through 12-year- olds · charged with demon- strdting a soentific principle is •Science ExpeninentSourcebook.• For each of 300 experiments covering five saence fields, this user-friendly ref- erence mcludes a material list, step- by-step instructions, and an expla- nation and analysis of expected results. Similarly detailed is •science Experiments on File,• geared for Junior Einsteins in grades six through 12. Encompassing earth sd- ence, biology, chemistry and physics, there are 84 projects here, each with a time estimate, hypothe- ses, materials list, procedure and analysis. For grade-schoolers, Rourke Sci- e nce Projects volumes descnbe experiments concentrating on sports, music, art, history, nature and food. In ·Science in Art,· find Of value to fourth-graders tack- ling mission models are works in the California Mission Series. Begin with "Projects & Layouts,• offering guidance for selecting a mission to re--create, plus tips for constructing. walls, bells, towers, roofs and deco- rations. Once you've decided on a site, check out area-specific vol- umes concentrating on history and details of individual missions throughout Calif omia. Other quick-facts, history and descriptions of each of 21 missions are in •califom.ia Missions Fact Cards,• in juvenile reference. More in-depth coverage of sped.fie struc- tures is in 21 slim volumes of •nie Missions: Califom.ia's Heritage.• There's noth- ing like an actu- al visit to a mis- sion to get a sense of early California histo- ry. The next best thing might be to take a vir- tual tour up El Camino Real with videos in JENIFER RACLAND 0 be Newport ~each International Film Festival is giving Oscar a love interest this year. She's 15 inches tall, angelic and voluptuous. Her curves were hand-carved from the same type of exquisite Carrara marble used by Michelangelo, giving her more artistic value than her gold-plated Hollywood counterpart." The award statues -a first for the four-year-old festival -were created by Marton Varo, a renowned European sculptor who lives in Irvine. The 10 mar- ble statues will be distributed to tum- makers on April 1 at the Film Festival's Awards Gala. Varo said the statue represents a jubi- lant woman, which he said is fitting for an award that will make its recipients happy. "We associate everything good and glorious and promising and positive as a beautiful woman," he said. Attila Szenczi-Molnar, a co-producer of the festival, is responsible for bring- ing Varo's work to the event. His Szenczi-Molnar Family Foundation helps showcase artwork from 114 artists in 11 countries. •Never before has any award had such collectible value,~ he said. •0ur foundation is pleased to be highlight- LARRY ENRIGHT I DAllV PILOT Artist Marton Varo, left. and bis agent. Attila Szencz.l-Molnar, stand ln front of the Edwards Udo theater holdlng the Newport Be~ch International Film Festival statue, which will be given to the winners of the film competition. Varo was trained in a classical art academy in llansylvania and is a •carv- er sculptor,• which means he creates the piece from a solid piece of way to bring special focus and emphasis to the annual event. projects that answer such quenes as "What col- or is black mk?" and "How does arumation work?" In "Science in History,· the "California Missions" series. Hosted by Huell Howser, each of these tapes fea- tures journeys to several different historic structures throughout the state. Whatever mission you're on, there are fine Web sites to help you complete your task at Launch Point, accessed at www.lattmes.com/home/learnlng/J aunch. Under California history, you can point and click to pages explainipg why and where the missions were created, and who lived there. Under science, dozens of sub-categories lead to fun pro- jects and simple experiments that leave practically no stone unturned when it comes to exploring and understanding the world around us. ing such an amazing artist." Varo, 56, is a Hunganan- bom sculptor who came to the United States 10 years Newport Beach stone. "l get inspiration from the stone," he said. "Marble is the best material because it's soft, so it'$ responsive to sen- sitive details.• Jett Conner, festival director, said he believes the unique awards will really put the Newport Beach event on the map. . ~· ' ago on a Fulbright Scholar- ship Grant from the council for International Exchange tt:X:l:J "Most film festivals give their film- makers awards that have no artistic val- ue,• he said. "We are proud to be pre- senting a true work of art.• '· ' .. , ~tq~1ttiKJ fit. ~I He uses electric power tools with diamond blades to carve the outline, and finishes the work by hand filing. Varo said he enjoys independent films more than big-budget Holly- wood blockbusters, so is looking for- ward to participating in the festival this year. look for others that demonstrate how hot air balloons work, how to use the sun to tell time, and how to make lightning jump from a bal- loon. Adclitional books focused on spe- cific fields are m the Marshall Cavenclish Science in Action series In "Fun with CherIUStry, • "The Llv- • OtECX rT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Publk Library. This week's column is by Linda Kline. of Scholars, tQ study the relationship between architecture and sculpture at UCJ. He now works out of a studio on the carnp}ls. Varo said he bas been interested in art all his life. having grown up in an intellectual home covered wall-to-wall with art books. He chose sculpting because he said he sees things three- dimensionally and loves to work with his hands. Varo recently completed two of the largest angels in the world -48-feet- tall limestone sculptures -for the Bass Performance Hall in Fort Worth, Texas. Varo's latest project is a marble compo- sition for the University of Technology in 1\'ondheim, Norway. Szenczi-Molnar said incorporating Varo's artwork into the festival was a Tickets fOr the ~ Beacti International Fffm festival4s Awards G•la on April 1 are $37.50 •nd are avaitabfe •t all ETM locations. the festiYal Web site, www.nbiff.org, or by calling (le8) ETM-llXS. Far from an off-the-wall band The Young Dubliners -perhaps 'the next big thing' -will play and be honored at Muldoon's Saturday ]l!SSICA GARRISON Datf"' S t. Patrick's Day may have passed, but plenty of people in Newport Beach still have tbeu Irlsh up. Up-and-com.lrig Irish transplant band The Young Dubliners will play a free courtyard concert Saturday afternoon at Muldoon's in Fashion Island, after which the band Will be !l.Dducted onto the pub's Wall Of Fame. The wall ii sponsored by that other Irish impOrt-Guiniiess. •Normally, we'd orily ever play House of Blues in L.A. and Galaxy in Orange County,• said singer Keith Roberts, who with his band just came off several weeks of grueling St. Patrick's Day tours. •But all of a Sudden we're coming back to do this tiny pub. The reason we're doing it is they have a wall of fame, and they're &ticking us on the wall.• The band spent this week resting up, Roberts &aid. •They'll be getting the rested Young Dubliner&, which is not something moirt people get to see.• • WHERE: Muldoon's Pub, 202 Newport center Drive + WHEN: 2 p.m. Satur-day + HOW MUCH: Free + PHONE: (949) 640-4110 + NOTE: The b9nd is being Inducted onto the pub's Wall of Fa~ you know, we took oft.• •;nm years to overnight success," said Roberts trOOically, meaning the band has bee'n around for . years, but is suddenly being touted as the next : greet thing, broa<1cast internationally on CNN and· featured on the morning news. : Now the band has six memoers: Jeff Dellisanti, : Mark Epting, Brendan Holmes, John Mattox., • Randy WooUord, Md of course, Roberts. Together : they play up to 15 instruments during a show, • .including the fiddle, mandolin, harp, flute, saxo-: phone, drums, and electric gti.ltar. • Roberts said the barid's music is a mix of tradi· tional lri.sh folk sounds and rOc.k and rOU. •we're • in a rock band with a Celtic edge.• Robert.S explained. · • Sort at like coffee with Bailey's Irish Cream. : Similarly, bind members ou.x a rock 'o' roll ~ Uf eatyle with marriages, houses, and for sooie, • babies. : •Everyone in the band has their own story,• • Muldoon's manager Mary Murphy, ber Irish accent shinmg through. explained that she fitst heard The Young Dublinen; eight years ago, when they r~ were young. energy,• sa:id Richard Kapllh, who does publicity for the pub and ~,:f with the idea for the walJ ci1so come from Ireland -from Dublin, no lea. said Roberts, 34. •1t•s destiny when six guys come together and stay together ... a bit cil matUrlty seems to be able to help you get ~h this strange lifestyle,• •They're probably the best Irish roc;k band here in Southern caJ.iforrua, or y.roba bly even in t.be whole country, from what 've seen," she said. "J compare them myself to U2, because I really like that kind of music, coming from Ireland myself.• •What' really remedtable about them is their of fame. -1beir me he1 become so ubiQW-tOU1. Everyone kriowl all .._ ljtk:s, and it's. like an event when theY play.~ Next month. Jim MorrilOn Of The 0001'8 will be inducted onto the wall of fame. Ray Mamerek, who co-fc>unded the Doon With Morrison, Will play at Muldo0ri'1, Mon11on, it tW'D1 out, :was Irish. Many, al~ not ell. of Tbe Y~ Dublinen • ·twas gotng to be a Journalist.• said Roberts. He came from l>ublin to try bis hand in the gritty. medib. WorW of Los Angeles, and even worked for siX months at PBS, but lound himseli drawn tnStead to the even grittier world of the Los Arige- les music 1cene. ·we started ln the Irish Rover fra &nta MonJ· ca: be said. ~we went ttom a duo to a tom-piece to a five-pace to a lix·piece, and the next ~ ~;~ot BEAQEBS f:tgTUME 04IWS stories, Illustrations. edlto-WEATHER SURF rial matt• or adYertbemen1s (949) 642-6086 Record 'lo:Jf comments about herem can be reproctuc.d with- the Dally Pilot or news tips. out written pennlssion of copy-nMPSIAl\MES 11DIS We have early right owner. Balboa TODAY morning $howers VOL 9J, NO. 71 ADORE SS HOW TO BEAQ:t US 691'57 First low Our address Is 330 W. Bay St., Corona del Mar today with mostly Colt.a Mesa. CA 92627. OraAatlon 69158 12.10 p.m .... .-0.4 ntOMAS H. JOttN50N, COB8£CIJ()NS The Thnes Orange County Cost.a Mesa First high clNr skies by Publisher tt Is the Pilot's policy to prompt· (800) 252·9141 72152 5:03 a.m ....••.. 4.8 tonight. Saturday WIUJAM LmDILL, ty correct all errors of w~nc.. ~ Newport leach Second low wlll bring rays of Editor Pl..se c.all (949) 574-4261. Claaifled (949) 642.Sf1t 691'57 after midnight SYIVI~ OhcMy (949) 642-021 Newport Coast sunshine tot l<>me MeNlgfng Editor ~Newport llffc:hlC~ Mm ldlewW 69'57 Second high weekend fun. Today TINA 80lllCIATTA. Ne'M (949) 642-5680 6:48p.m ....•... 40 AaiSUnt MM1991ng Editor = Piiot ~144-800) Is Sports (949) 574-4223 SURP FOMCAST the swell ls out of ANASrAaA ........ !shed Monday through Sat· News, Sports Fax (949) ~170 LOCATION SIZE City Edrtor utct.y. In Newport 8ffCh end E·mall dallyplloteurthllnk.net Wedge .••.• 3·5+ nw SATURDAY the northwest, with ITIWIAMIS, Costa Mesa. subscription& •• Fln-tlow NewS Edit« tv•ilabte only by sUblcrtbl'C MelnOffke Newport. •... 3·S nw gusts of northwest .,_ C.U. ION. The Times 0r-. Couoty ( ) Butlness Office (949) 642""321 Blkkies .••• , l-5 nw 12;081.m .... . . 1.7 winds. Due to our Sports Editor 252-9141. In aras outsld4t of '""'*''ax (949) 631-7126 River Jetty .•.. 3·S nw First high MMC MAln'IN. Newport h«h and Costa Mesi, CdM •••••••• 3-5 rrw 6:021.m •• , ••••• 5.0 heavy r•ins. wt1ter Photo Editor sublctiptions to the Dally Piiot P'vblilhld by .,. Seeorid low quality Is extremely 1.V.llOLA. ..... 1 .... only .. by mail for Tim. Community,...,, IOA11NCI ~~ng s 10 per rnon1h Second d.s. I nm.,~ Cornplny ... Mom1"9 *'1h 12;54 p.m •.••.. ~.5 poor, The swell NOYOlll#ICI, . postage peld at Costa Meta. CA southNst winds •t s.cotid high drops s.turct.y but CJMtfltd~ (rrtc. lndudi etl lppl~ 10 to 20 knots -.~=-)l'OSTMAS-..... a..~ becoming w.tt· 1 ·22 p.m .••••••• 4 3 condlt~Wlll LMA JOel•ON. T£Jt: send changes to l'resldent and ao Plor1~ The ~Mele ...... ~ tOUthwesterly at 1 s WATM ~.The sun MIUOOltWt. o.uy Piiot. . lox 15'0, Costa Viet Mtldtnt,, General ~ to 20 knots by the °"' PINndal Offlot MN. CA 92 _ 6. COpyfigtrt: No •1• ""-Oc M !Wiii ...n'td. tftemoon. TD aATURI: .. Will ~ ~ 6:10 p.m, With the inillennium approaching, Roberts laid ! he has started evaluating the world hlstorital sig· .. nif:icance of the band. And others are taking note.• 1be band was Picked to play at Gov. Gray Davia'" inauguration party in San PrandscO last Januen'. • •ft'• a comlng--01-age year for us,• Roberts said .• "A lot of~ .. ~ together for us, aDd we're looking forward to lt. • " .. POLICE FILES . ' • COSTA MESA : • AdMM Awnue: A cellular phone worth $85 was sto4en trom a car In the 1300 bloc.It betwftn 2 and 8:30 p.m. March 21. • Anton loulevlltd: A cellular phone worth $250 was stolen from• car In the 600 block~ 7 and 9:30 p.m. March 19 .• • llrtttol Stnet: A wallet and IU contents WOr1h '314 were · stolen from a stcn In the 3300 blodt at 1 p.m. March 18. • • w.t 11th Stnet: A cellular phone worth S 150 was stOlen ! from a car In the 300 block at 8:15 •.m. March 20. : • w..t 1tth ltN9t: A purse and Its contents worth $655 wtte, stolen from a car In tht 700 blc>dt et 5:30 p.m. March 18. ~ " NIWPOllT 91AOt • ~ Aoed; A watch worth $1,000 was stolen from 1 :' store In the 3600 block between 3:30 Ind 9 p.m. Marth 23. • Mdld1hn Plaet: A wallet and IU conunu Worth S50 were : stolen from • bar In the 100 block during the ewnlng of ~ 2J. • • Newport c.enw Drtve, A brief~,. worth $)()() w. stoten • from • c.11r In the 600 blotk ~ 8 1.m. IM 1030 p.m ; Mirth~. • • VIie ~A ctllu1¥ phone worth S150 WM stOlin "°'7'I 1 ~ CM In the 400 block durin9 thil ewnlng of March 19. • • 1• ....-. A walltt ~Its contents WOf1h S40 ww. ~ from 1 car In the 100 block ~-.-n 6:30 and '7:30 p.m March : " . • • : Daily Pilot . rWest Side residents question ~abundance of service agencies •They want to lmow of the West Side Specific Plan will dations to form business improvement districts or creat- ing events to build community identity. · do something to address the area's homeless situation. EussGa; ~Pb COSTA MESA -Some resi- dents are hoping the concentra- tion of social service agencies on the West Side is an issue that will be addressed in the area's rede- : velopment plan. A number of citizens, many of them members o( the Wallace Area Improvement Group, have -complained the homeless and the social service agencies that serve them contribute to the _ negative image of the West Side. •our concern is that West Costa Mesa has an overabun- : dance of social services -more : than the area can bear,• said : Dave Salcido, Wallace Group : president. •1 think we're over- .. • burdened with that type of. -thing ... JoAnn Reinholt, a West Side property owner and Wallace · Group member, said she wants : to know how the West Side Spe- cific Plan will address these con- cerns. •Nothing is going to change on the West Side of Costa Mesa if we still become the dumping ground or Club Med for the homeless.• Reinholt said. Woodie Tescher, a consultant with EIP Associates, said it is important to know about these underlying issues, but there has not been a consensus on how lo deal with the issue when it comes to the specific plan. •1t•s something that's typical- ly not included, because specific plans are land-use related,· said Mike Robinson, principal plan- ner with the city. •I think because of the significance and interest of concerns from the public, the number and use of social services will have to be addressed somehow." EIP will include recommen- dations for "non-physical" or policy changes, Tesch e r said. Those might include recommen- Sheri Barrios, executive director of the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter, said the issue should be viewed in a broader context. .The homeless are not limited to Costa Mesa, and elim- inating the •problem• here does not eliminate what is a far- reacbing society ill, she said. •I think there's two separate issues,• Barrios said. "There's one that's a societal issue, and there's one that's a physical zon- ing/land-use issue. You can't improve one by getting rid of the other.• Karen McGlinn, executive director of Share Our Selves, echoed Barrios. "The problem with West Side development has been zoning and lack of vision," McGlinn said. •when you're dealing with a problem, you can't look at symptoms and say if the symp- toms didn't exist.-these prob- lems wouldn't exist.• Windows on the Bay fund-raiser to benefit Save Our Youth, Po~ce Departinent ... COSTA MESA -Save Our. Youth and the Newport Beach Police Department are the ben- eficiaries of a fund-raiser today at Windows on the Bay. . Sports agent Jack Tiernan, of Dwight Mari.ley Inc., is part- owner of the restaurant and has organized previous fund-rais· ers that have drawn such celebrity athletes as Shaqwlle O'Neal end ~Malone. Tieman began hold.ipg the ~odical fund-raiser parties last month. Sports Celebrities, including Mi~el Jordan, Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanni, bave also been invited to previ- ous galas. ... All proceeds from the cover charges will go to Save Our Youth and the Police Depart- ment. ·1 do it because Save Our Youth is an organization close to my heart,• said neman, who was involved in gang activity while growing up in Chicago. Doors will open at 8:30 p .m. The restaurant is at 2241 West Coast Highway, N~wport Beach. For more inlormation, call (949) 722-1400. Clean 1Jlffe!ki1tt@ .Carpet and a 110 lb. do For over 45 years Coit's advanced equip- ment and fully trained, certified techni- cians have provided the most effective cleaning available to assure you the finest results possible: And w~ guarantee it! Joan Btgialin, satiJfitd COIT customtr for 35 ytars #,son and daughter-in-law have had Hans since he was a puppy. Then they moved into a new house with white carpeting. The carpet wasn't so white anymore. They asked for my advice, and of course I said "COIT!" Now they have a clean white carpet again, and COIT has another satisfied customer. Call For A FREE Estimate! COIT=-.. Ple<l~ Vi.sit Our ~ rtd Wide ~h ~lte At http //WWW coit com ~------11 :sAve30m 1 ~II -/0 I 11 ., I OR MOM •••• AM I milL--- Friday, March 26, 1999 3 CAICI Ill ACT As everyone's favorite orphan, Annie, Uncoln sixth-grader Cbrtsttna Fulcher tells dogcatch- er Alex Cardin that the mutt ls hers. Performances of the sixth-graders' spring play are tonight and Saturday at 7 p.m. ln the school's theater, 3101 Pacific View Drive ln Corona del Mar.· Tickets are $7, and gourmet refreshments are available during lntermlsston. Call (949)- 664-6628 for lnformatton. OBITUARY Marjory B. DeWolf Longtime Costa Mesa resident Marjory B. De Woll died from heart failure Tuesday She was 79. DeWoU lived in Costa Mesa from 1955 to 1993. She later moved to Spring Valley m order to be clos- er to her grandson. DeWoU was a member of the Costa Mesa Women's Club, board member of the Harbor Area 1.G.i.rls Club of Cosld Mesa wtth George Hoag. former president of Harper Elementary PTA in Costa Mesa and former president of PTA at Newport Harbor High School in Newport Beach. In 1974 she received an Honorary Community Award from the·Newport-Mesa Education As~ocia­ tion. Association member Florence Cooling wrote, "We'll remember her as the lddy 10 charge of the cake booth at the annual Lions Club FisJl Fry in Cos- ta Mesa." ... She is a former ofhcer 10 the Costa Mesa-New- port Harbor Ltonettes and was active 10 various Girl Scout Troops U1 Costa Mesa. ~ "She was one of those last stay-at-home moms: her daughter. Shendan DeWoU Cargal, said. DeWolf is survived by her husband, Earl T. DeWolf of Spring Valley; daughters Sheridan DeWol! Cargal of Lei Mesa and Carla J DeWolf of Spring Valley: sister Vandolyn Savage of Blanco, Texas; and grandson Charles D. Cargal. Services will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at the home of DeWoU Cargal. For information regarding the memonal servtce, call (619) 670-0878. 4 Friday, March 26, 1999 • Panml Help USA JdCD ill awarene. month wilh •Cima and penapal st.cm. d dlldabule. a.a. ..... COSTA MESA-OQdy Bultlm'I bushmd was hurdrig her, and bewashulallitb* dlD-dren. . She decided to leave him. anclhstibNdkm went from bad to~ much betllar. 8artaD and her two clilldrml. 8 months and 2 yeea old et tbe time, had eteaped abuse, but they were living on the ltre8l Tbef stayed in inotels whim they could and slept tn their cm when they couldn't JOtJlea and homeless, With two young cbDdren. BUr- ton WU slowly t>eing sucked into tbe black bole. that was'llet heart. ·1 got really deim-e<i and started ~ things out on my children.• she laid. During the worst ot it. she said. she was on the verge ot killing tbelll and then benelf. Some might J~ Burton harshly, finding it hard to sympathize with a pa.rent who WU hW°tiJ:X1 and even considering killing her own children. What kind of mother would do that? •1bat's the question we have to ask our- selves,• Burton said. Burton eventually sought help at Parent Help USA, a Costa Mesa-baSed volunteer organization founded in 1986 by·Mothers and Others Against Child Abuse. She and other panelists SJX>ke Thursday about their experi- ences dunng a press conference kicking off National Child Abuse Prevention Month, which begins April 1. Judgment and lack of sympathy are tw-0 reasons parents fail to seek help when they peed it, said Sally Kanarek. director of Parent Help USA •I'm not excusing every violent act. but I m Milliillliiitlillli • , "' ~::.=~=·~-Kanarek adVocmlll • ,, 1 · r .,..,. w.w of chDd .... dliolm'V . ..,..,_ .... thua conctaTm pnaa Hlr ..... --plVYideli pmea:Aw dsa11, ~ gaoap1 and _....ooewiditaodud~. 1be centerprcMdmlallll_.tarpumll to ~em tb+•-tv. aboul ... .,,..,of pareoting, Ka...tlllkl. ltow..•• KwNk =~=:..=.talwd· -· What ...., bappw JI Iba :..-• n!fened back to hs far hilp. K.-....k .... A victim of cW ._ lwliAI,, ....._. lllfta careerinftlel .... to..,.Mlb .. bJD. ddon and amlar. 'lb9 cants .. dedicated to the memory Of IJM MGralm, 4,'wbo WU killed iu_TusUn in JJll1 by b!lf ....... Lila's sister, Beatriz Moro. Quintero, now 30, also spoke TbUri&W. Quintero bad told a Parent HeJp USA vdumeer that w father killed her sister. Her tesdm>uy in 1991 was integral in the conviction of her mother and father for the death of Lisa. Quintero fourid her sister drowiled in the farillly's bathtub, and also told Of a trip to Mex- ioo to get rid ot her siiter's bOdy. Quintero is still dealing with feelings of shame hom ~ a victim of abuee henelf, and bacldalh from family members who say Quhltero broke a code of silenCe. Quintero alid bei fainify lived in ~ most of their lives. It took 14 yenn for the truth to come out and for her parentS to be put away. Quin1erols mother was relealed alter KIM HAGGERTV-ZY\d IW.Y PLOT Motber of two Cindy Burton of West-..m...-r talks about the struggles in n.ls- bag • faailly. three years; her father is still 6erving a 30-year sentence. •it's incredible how much abuse theie is . that no one knows is going on.• Kanarek said. Parent Help USA moved to Costa Mesa late laSt year from Newport Beacb. It is in Deed d finanda1 support from the community and is looking for additional board members. Parent support groups are held every Tues· day, and the group is pJanning events foe Olild Prevention Month. Next Tuesday, a mother of ekJbt will speak about how she has abused her children. CONSIGNMENT APPAREL ....... ~ .... ~LIDll aoe...Md' I II ... MON'lll END SALE New Antval of 'ewtbv' ~~{i;: J~I Now selling Home Fumlshlngs •Minimum purchase $25.00. S. ltemt excluded & Antiques Consignments welcome by appointment only 18675 Brookhurst •Fountain Valley {7f4) 965·8230 • FllcMh • M.uMp • sp.t-u n.np,. • -..,.wnpa • H1d.rodienP1 • Bod1...,.. • • Pwf. • VklJr ~ • S.-~•.'Axhls • Ekc11"'7• • Pn a it.t t.unTIMnp,. Hand a Foot c-. PweU. Gi& ~ • 10''• Ohcoun1 -.lld r.,.. all Mnoic" ucept alrMdy dit<oum.d pecbcet, Ntatl producu .,.. In co-.JuDCt.ion .nth ...., other ditcovnt. Beautify Your Yard! • Stonework. PaUot1& BBQ.I , • Wat.nfalh, Pooi.&Spu We have over '10 years combined service in thts area. Our quality, creativity and service are unmatched. Together we will take care of: all your Landscape and masonry needs. FARNSWORTH · QLAISELL IAHIJS(..:AP£ COMPA.W (949)548-5132 JJCt.IW07'0 MASONRY COMPANY (714~7744 lk.HllM&S JOHN' R CARPET O~ The Oldest Carpet Company in California ~ Celebrating • ~ Our 120th Anniversary Hours: 2927 S. BBlsTOL ST. • CoSTA MEsA 3IC Mon-Fri 9-S:JOptn (Y. mile south of South Coast Pina) SadA"J.1111.b°i:h' (714) 751-2324 w. ....... CERAMIC • DRAPERY • VINYL • TILE • BLINDS • WOOD -------- < <>\IPI 11 I{ l'I~ \1"-1"<· 2 for 1 Special! Sign up for an Introductory Class• today Then choose a 2% hr intro course in Quicken, PowerPoint, or Publisher 98 free of charge! 'Introduction to Computers: Basic use of Windows, Word Processing and the Internet -6 hrs 3 sessions S 130 exp. 416199 Small Classes -S students max. I I Call our 24hr hotline (949) 863-1616 for further infonnation Or call Mark at Newport PC Tnlninc (714) 863-1600 3740 Campus Dr. Ste. A, Newport Beach Doily Pilot Econo Lube · sued for fraud • San Diego man sa}rs Newport Beach company's 'aggressive tactics' have resulted in overbilling, sabotage. Oat,Pb A class action lawsuit filed Wednesday against a Newport Beach-based auto selVice compa- ny alleges the business has been billing customers for wmecessary repairs and work that wasn't done. The suit names Econo Lube N' Tube, which reportedly has · earned more than $120 million over the last four years. The com- pany works primarily on auto lubrication and minor mechanical repairs. The oonsumer complaint. filed in San Diego, claims the compa- ny's 150 coiporately owned stores nationwide used scare tactics to encourage customers to buy repairs that weren't needed. The lawsuit further states some employees would sabotage cus- tomers' vehicles in order to boost the amount of their bill. The lead plaintiff in the suit is Sean Mooney of San Diego, who returned to the company's Jmpert- al Beach store three times for sep- arate repairs. Each time, Mooney claims, one of his car's compo- nents that was previously working wasn't when he left the auto shop. He added that the store continued to bill him for repairs. Plaintiff attorney Kevin Mclner- MONEY? (888) 506 LOAN ney said Mooney represents thou- sands of customers who may have encountered similar fraudulent activity by the company. The suit also claims store super- visors told managers to continue the bad repair practice and, in turn, they would be compensated with commissions. Some of the Econo Lube stores have been under investigation before. The state Attorney Gener- al's office investigated the compa- ny in 1995 ror the same reasons outlined in the lawsuit The com- pany settled a lawsuit filed by the state for $285,000, although it admitted no guilt The state's Bureau of Automo- tive Repair reportedly has received new complaints about Econo Lube and launched an investigation last May. Company officials didn't make any comments Wednesday, saying they hadn't seen a copy of the law- suit. None of the allegations have been made against stores the company has sold as franchises or that are independenUy owned, although Mcinerney said the franchisees also were Victims of the aggressive tactics by the cor · porate stores. No matter what you're domg; your hometown newspaper FITS IN... Daily Pilot RUFFLES .. .UPHOLSTERY Where Your Dollar Covers Morel Club Sofa $10000* OFF Chair $5000* OFF. -With a purchase of Fabric & Labor til 4/2/99 New Location Same Street 2 blocks North 1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA -548-1158 Is Your Patio Looking Dull & Dirty?~ Call "Rick Nixon" the Power ashing Expert to Prpfessionally clean it Ll't\ ~tlkl' th,1t P,lttn I ()Ok NC\\ 1\q,1111' • Power Washing • Acid Wash • Steam Cleaning • Sealers (clear or colored) Brick • Concrete • Stone • Pavers Rick Nixon SPS Surf ace Preparation Specialist (949) 581-0360 or 1·800-581-0360 Uc. 667230 • • • • Doily Pilot SCREENING LOCATIONS their Idol, William st\atner. C.......,. leood's EdwMkUdo 10p.m. ·c.w.· V-...ThNtre 3459 Via Udo °'1~ Newport Beach Inter- national Film Festival Schedule This documentary film features eight unruly prof~sional sic.ate boatden on a two-wee6t tour in Austral~ cowiting ewtything from saintily dad fans to long nights with Jade Daniefs. 1140 N Tustin Ave. Orlnge {714) 538-3545 ldw ... aig NeWport 300 Newport Center Drive ~ee.ai {949) 673-8350 Edw .... South eo.tVlq.g. 1561 W. SUnflcwm Santa Ana (714) 540-0594 AtlDAY, MARCH 21 yptajm Blood's Vil!agc Jheatrc 4p.m. ........ This film focuses on the loving and sometimes difficult relationships ~ four women and their grand-~ who must deal with huge dif- ferences In their ages and cultures. Edwards Island Ooemas Noon"~· Follow the adventures of a father and his 1~r~ daughter. Nora. who yearns for a more stable life than the carefree one hef fattier has gbien her. Newport Beach Faw Stw Cl11411M (949)' 644-0760 6 p.m. •n. MeltiHg Pvt'° 2 p.m. "lhe LegKy" .121 11 Valley View St. An endearing politkal satire dealing with the conflict and compromise facing candidates in a hotly contested local electlon where race matters more than principal. A powerful portrait detailing the drama o( politics, this film demonstrates how political lnitJotives are often formulated, tested and voted Into law in California, Including the Three Strikes, You're Out law proposed because of the Polly Klaas murder. Garden Grove IEdwwds Island 7 {714) 934-6377 enemas 999 Newport TMtroAesta Cen1er Drive 305 E. Fourth St. Newport Bea<h Santa Ana (949) 640-1780 {714) 541-4351 AKAHOSHI CONTINUED FROM 1 lntemab.onal Film Festival with his first film, •At Pace Value.• The 27-minute picture, which centers around racial conflict between blacks and Koreans on the day of the OJ. Simpson low- speed car chase, is being released m association with The Simon Weisenthal Center Museum of Tol- erance. The film's showing is made sweeter by the fact that A.kahoshi has spent most of his summers since childhood at his family's vacation home in Newport Beach. The film's co-producer. Michael J. Watson, also has Newport Beach connections. Watson attended Newport Harbor High SchQOl and Orange Coast College Akaboshi's first JOb was at the Bay Arcade, and he spent a lot or REVIEW . CONTINUED FROM 1 worse, gets stopped by d pohce officer on the way home and is mistreated in front of a crowd of angry onlookers. Kee's and J)uke's paths cross, illustrating how having a bad day can be just the catalyst needed to cause 8 p.m. "Free Eul91 p1te• Follow the trials and tribulations of Robert and Mark, two ~ friends devoted'to movies and dassic television, particularly ·star Trek,· when they meet 4 p.m. "'Titanic TOwn• Set in Belfast in the 1970s, this drama uncovers the tragedy, emotions and suf. hl.s time fishing and al the beach. But it was Akahoshi's expen- ence growing up in Venice Beach that shaped the film. •Being from Los Angeles, I grew up seeing a lot of different things,• Akahoshi said. Up until he was in high school. he identified more with the black community than with the Asian community because of the friend- ships he built living in predonu- nantly black neighborhoods. Being a minority also gave him the bitter taste of being stereotyped. As a yowig person, Ak.ahoshi said he didn't identify with being Asian or what the ethnicities with- in the race -Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese -really meant. •1 didn't really know what the differences were,· Akahoshi said. •All I knew is I was looked at as being all of them." Akahoshi chose a subject close to his heart for his first film. He wrote, produced and directed the the melting pot of L.A. to boil over. The story ends with a heart-stopping moment, but also offers hope for the future with Duke's and Kee's sons, who represent the poss1btlity that race relations can improve over time. The film is Akahoshi's direc- torial debut. and features an experienced cast and crew. Akahoshi has appeared in film about race relations between blacks and Koreans during the OJ. Simpson chase. Tense black and Korean race relations are usually associated with the Rodney King verdict and the L.A. riots, but Akahoshi de<id- ed to focus his film on the period of time surrounding the OJ. chase to draw attention to the ongoing problem. Akahoshi said he was discour- aged that all the calls to "Rebuild L.A.• seemed to come to naught because, despite the progress that was made, race tensions swfaced again during the O.J. chase and bi- al. "We're always taking a step backward, it seems,• Akahoshi said .• As a professional in the film · industry, Akahoshi asked himself what he could do to educate peo- ple. · "We have a problem, and the bottom line is racism,· he said. movies mcluding "Tee nage Mutant Ninja Turtles m: • Felton Perry of ·Magnum Force• and the "Robocop" films, and Helen Martm of ·Kiss the Girls • dnd ·Doc Hollywood,• appear m the film. Co-producer and direc tor of photography Michael J. Walker has worked on films including "Indepen- dence Day,• "Stargate• and "Tombstone.• Nominate a special person in your community to become a Staples Community Star! A Staples Community Star 1 ... someone who has a demonstrated track record of exceptional volunteer service In your community-from the student who runs errands for senior citizens to the president of the local Visit your Iota/ Staples store and pick up a brochure to nominate your favorite Staples Community Star. N" 111 I x tf~ n 11 e rl D f! r11I I 1n 1 • Completed nomln1tlon forms, 1ton1 with an •SSl'f of 500 words or less, must bt submitted by April ut to bt ell,tblt for entry. For MOrt lafonNtlon on the s....-c ..... lllty ... ......,_,,._cell toll hes S-9771JS-S"6 I I I I I ' I ' I ' I I I ' I I PTA chapter. A Staples Community Star will be chosen from the community surroundfng Heh of the 74 partJclpctblg Staples retail stores. r-----~-------~---J I t ' ' I I I I I r ~1 c h S t ;i p I r. s C o m 111 u n i t y S t a r wrll receive the following 0 A $1,000 donation to the non-profit organization of the honoree's choice 0 A personalized e·xa• porcelain star permanently displayed In the Star f>taza at STAPLES Center • A replica star to showcase 1t home or In the woriq>lece • A donation, In tht honoree's name, to the STA.Pl£S Center foundation • Recocnltlon 1t s.,.cl1l events fenng behind the vlolenc.e betwMn the IRA and 8<1tish government. 6p.m"Wl.urf~k· . In th• hilarious tale of sma&J-town life and ~time death, two friends decide during the last ff!W weeb of high school that lh payback t11M for some of the kids who have made their lives rMer- able throughout the years. lheoy soon find out payback can be murder. 8 p.m. •A Murder of Crows• A prominent New Orleans defense attorney (CUba Gooding Jr.) faces the greatest trial of his life for frve murders he didn't commit In this thrilling drama with unusual twists. 1 O p.m. "Wldced" A 14-year-old accused of murdering her mother discovers the shocking truth in this mystery, complete with adultery, blackmal~ family secrets and surprising twists. (see review) Four Star 00fma 5 p.m. •Mr. JhM• Follow the he.tt>reak that ensues v.h!n the title cn..cter. te.xhef Ml'. ZN<>, begins an affalf With one of his formet students. Not wanting to end his mM· f'ia9'! to the wrfe who paid his w.-y through col'* and bore him a son - and unw1llang to abandon his mlSttess, who becomes pregnant wrth his ct111d - Mr. Zhao IS forced to choose ~ the two women 7 p.m. "aombay Boys" A chance oc.currence brings ttlree ~ something Indian boys from various parts of the globe together 1n Bombay. Each has his own objective for the trip and brings his own misconceptions and stereotypes to the unfamrllar country. With a combination of humor, Irony, sensitivity and controversy. the film races to a speedy conclusion as the boys dtS· CDlef' Bombay is a lot more than they bargained for. g p.m . ..,,... PMt" This is a ly(QI and haunting story of Gu Cheng, a Olinese contemporary poet. He is tormented by the love of his wife Friday, Morch 26, 1999 5 and mtSttess and auW!d by the 0Jtu I shodt be-tween ~ East and West. the MW and traditional cultures, after mov· 11'9 to New Zealand from his homctand :ruim1a.t 430pm •ROMs.n.r-, The film details the hopes. loneliness. despair and bilsic needs of a young g•r1. who sells roses on h street as she fights to ~ on to the little she ~ girl· friends, a drug-dealer boyfriend and her dignlty and pnde. JO 6:30 p.m. •a1y Ant Ni9ht"' A grbup of friends between the ages of 15 and 18 lr11e out .c:fventures, decep- tions and anxiety as they expt>r•ment wrth relationships. sex and love for the first time 8:30 p.m. "'v.rtkal Love" A satirical comedy, the film details the love of Ernesto, a nurse in a psychiatnc ward who lik• to pretend he's a psychi- atrist. and Estela. an architect admitted to the ward after trying to commit sui· ctde. SERVING THE UDO PENINSULA SINCE 1961 WHy ~0., ~Ywff EgE ELSE ~ r-- 1 I EE ll1fr with Muftv &~.u rurch .v .. ~ !'.~ ",,' IA I· I Any one Easter Gift item I One COUJ""ICl per CUllomef 'otne romlCUOf\t IJIJ!ly. k"'lt dcta • I Pro:nruons flllt indud J. Cari not be rornbiMd 1th 1.r:ir other u t L .JI.Ida Muffv, 'Bc2ntcS. ~ r\k. E.xpitt.14/4fn .J --------------- u--u-.~ (94~~7y~~~858 STORE l IOURS: MON-SAT 9AM.aP~ SUN 10AM"6PM (RX CLOS 0) 3445 VIA IJOO, N.B. NEXT 1U PAVJUONS ""' . . . . . . , 6 Friday, Morch 26, 1999 rDinner A MacGillivra.Y iarecman rilm EDWARDS IRVINE IMAX THEATRE I'. lOf ATFD AT THE EDWARDS IRVINE SPECTRUM WHERE THE ) & 405 FREEWAYS MHT IRVltH • C 1il I f OR CROI JP <;At f-S & INFORMATION 714 832 IMAX \ .. • Send ~ 10WN Items to the Dally Piiot. Around Town. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627; fax them to (949) 646--'170; or call (9'9) 642-5680, ext. 228. A complete llsttng of Around Town Qn be found at ct.ltnlllot.mm. TO PAY Pree lncome-tu preparation and assistance wW be offered through the 'lax-Aide program from 9 a.m. to 1 p .m. daily through April 15 at OASIS Senior Center, 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar. Appointments are available. For more infomia- tion, call (949) 644-3244. · A Community AppredaUon Cele- bration will be presented from 6 to 9 p.m. at Westcliff Plaza, 1617 _ _w_estcliff Drive, Newport Beach. Delicacies will be provided. For more information, call (949) 650- 0736. SATURDAY A back-country hike will take place at 9 a.m. at Crystal Cove State Park, 8471 E . Coast High- way, Newport Beach. Participants will meet at El Moro Visitor Cen- ter. Parking is $6. For more infor- mation, call (949) 497-7647. Volunteers who sign up for Beach Clean-Up Day from 9 to 11 a.m. will receive a free lunCh and parking pass. Volunteers will meet at 9 a.m. the Balboa Pier, on the Balboa Peninsula near Main and Ocean Front, Newport Beach. Lunch will follow the cleanup. Reservations are required. For more information, call (949) 644-3159. Plecemakers' Sprfngfest. an annu- al country craft fair, will be pre- sented from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sarur- day and Sunday at the Costa Mesa country store, 1720 Adams Ave. The event will feature 17 5 booths of handcrafted items as weil as live music, great food and entertain- ment for the kids. Demonstrations will also be presented. Admission is free. For more information, call (714) 641-3112. MAGAZINE CONTINUED FROM 1 William Lobdell. "With the mag- azine, we're able to do some things that a local daily paper AIOUll TOWI Tbe Easter Bwmy wW be m•Jdng a special appearance from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Three Dog Bak- ery, 924 Avocado Ave., Corona del Mar. Dogs can have their. "photdograph • with the E~er Bunnyl Dogs with the best •East- er Bone-W will receive a prize. For more inf on:nation, call (949) 760-3647. A Ude pool walk wW take place at noon at Crystal Cove State Park, 8471 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Participants will meet at Pelican Point Parking Lot No. 2. Parking is $6. For more informa- tion, call (949) 497-7647. Costa Mesa High School wW present its second annual Silent Auction from 7 to 10 p.m. at 1\i- angle Square, 1870 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tickets are $10 and include music and dinner. Many items will be auctioned at the event. For more information, call (714) 966-8360. SUNDAY A back-country hike will take place at 9 a.m. arCrystal Cove State Park, 8471 E. Coast High- way, Newport Beach. Partici- pants will meet at El Moro Visi- tor Center. Parking is $6. For more information, call (949) 497- 7647. TUESDAY Salomon Smith Barney will pre- sent a seminar titled Outlook 1999 -Top Stock Picks for 1999 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at The Sut- ton Place Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Admission is free, however, reservations are required. For more information, call (949) 955-7562. A free seminar UUed OsteoporostS -Not Just an Old Lady's Disease will be presented in the Patio Cafe at Mother's Market and Kitchen, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Reservations are required. For more information, call (800) 595-6667. simply isn't geared to do." The magazine also will be available in the Saturday edition of the los Angeles Times in Tur- tle Rock, Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel, Monarch Beach, Dana Point, Nellie Gail and Laguna Hills. W ,_ ........... WEDNESDAY Learn to speak for success while being evaluated by a professional coach ·with the Communication Practice Club from 1 to 8:30 a.m. · at a Costa Mesa business. Admis- sion is $35. Reserv,ations are required. Fore more information, call (949) 675-7196. THURSDAY The Ebell Oub of Newport Beach will meet at 11:30 a.m. at the Bahai Corinthian Yacht <;lub, 1601 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. Scholarships will ·be awarded at the, meeting. For more information, call (949) 721-9267. A slide show and lecbl:n! Utled "An Evening with Aaron & Martha Barnes of Peruvian Adventures" will be presented at 8 p.m. ·at the 'Ili.angle Square North Face Store, 1870-A Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Admission is-kee. For more infor- mation, can (949) 646-0909. Comfort Zone, a mental Wness support group, will meet from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at Lighthouse Coastal Community Church, 301 Magnolia St., Costa Mesa. Participants will meet on the first floor in the room next to the sanctuary. For infonna- tion, call (949) 548-7274 . APRIL9 Rep. Dana Rohrabacber {It-Hunt- ington Beach) will speak at the Newport Harbor Republican Women meeting at noon at the Bal- boa Bay Qub, 1221 W. Coast High- way, Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 645-5000. APRIL 13 • "An Evening with Theodore Tay- lor" will be presented at 7 p.m. in the Ne wport Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. The free event, which will be hosted by the library's Mother-Daughter Book Qub, will feature author Theodore Taylor. For more information, call (949) 717-3801 . More· than 62,000 copies will be distributed. •our plans have us publishing quartedy for now," Publisher Tom Johnson said. •But if reader and advertiser response dictate it, we'll immediately increas~e out frequency." .... -• " ·" • I _ .. _ • Sports Editor Roger Corison • 949-57 44223 • Newport Be ach, Costa Mesa sailors do their thing at the San Diego regatta. D ave Ullman raced in the NOOD last weekend. So did David Janes, Argyle Cm:r;ipbell, Bruce Ayers and even Betsy Dougherty. How could such upstandi.hg local reside11ts do such a thing? Actually they accomplished the impossible racing in the NOOD -fully clothed! 'The San Diego National Offshore One-Design Regatta, the •NooD• Regatta as it's commonly referred, drew entries Crom nine states with several competitors from Orange County. The race was held March 19 and hosted well over 500 sailors · aboard 151 race boats. David Janes pf Newport Beach and his J-120'./ayblrd led his class of 11 boats through seven races, finishing first with 15 points. Jayblrd also won her class in last year's Newport-to- Ensenada race and looks to be the heavy favorite again this year in the race to Hussongs. The Melges 24 class was out in force, boasting 31 boats. Bruce Ayers and Monsoon of Costa Mesa, the 42-year-old son of West Coast sailing legend Don Ayers, nudged Newport's Dave Ullman out of first place. Ayers finished with 23 points to Ullman's 24 . However, to Ayers' credit. be had five great finishes out of six with only one race ending in a dismal 12th place. The Newport Harbor High Qi.rls water polo team, whidl won lU lut 1eVen games to earn the CIF Sotltliern sect10n Dlvtsion I title, had five players ~ed on the coaches' All-CJF Divtsloo I selections, as well as Coad\ Bill Ba.riiMt. Sailor seniors Jocelyn Manderino and !!ri.n Kennedy, as well as junior .Kyndra Cox were first-team choices, while junior Jenna Barto was a teeond-team pick and Kather- ine Belden gained th.itd-team i"ecognition. B4mett was the division's Coach of the Year, after guiding the two-time Sea View League champions to a 23-6 record, capped by a 9-5 title-game triwnph over league rival Irvine. · Mandetino, the team's primary two- ter def ender, amassed &t goals, 54 assists and 5 1 steals m her final prep campaign. temm phlps a third in a fleet of six J-105s. However, it was Grlf Amies of Irvine, who sailed as close to perfect as one could imagine. A.mies, who spent his high school days at Newport Harbor, ended the series with an amazing nine points in six races. His C-Scow, Avery. placed first in every race except for one fourth-place finish. The HM Bark Endeavour will visit Newport April 17-25 with tours booking fast. Newport's Argyle Campbell, aboard Rock N' Roll, finished with 34 points and a strong fourth-place finish. The Bark, an exact replica of Captain Cook'.s hl.stop<:il1 vessel out of Australia, will bpen her hatches to those who wish to experience some hi.story. In addition, residents who wish to volunteer as tour directors are e~ouraged to call Betsy Dougherty, also of Newport, sailed Legacy, landing AIM:9I Dlvlllolt I """"., ... ---AsH./ stadlQWskf, r..rano v.ee.y ,· ·Oledt .., .. ,.. ... a.m.tt, .... pt ...... ............ (lllle Anwdo. Fr .. ll Wl'5on; Mica Bell, 11.. U WlllOo; CM'I O*bidd, So., MlriN; ........ Cu. Ir ..... Mpcwt ~ 0.... Frend\t Sr.. VIiia Park; Nteole HLacz. Sr, !MM; lrtn K•wie4y. sr .. =~~-::.;!~~e:':~~ "== ~ Kmtin Mtller. Sr., El TOfo; Jlack1e Pirro, Jr .. ~II; ~ P\JMt, jr,. Villa Pa~ Amber St.ICflolMkt So., Ceplstreno V.tley. leQjlMtllMm ,,... ..-. Ir .. Neupart Hlirttol. Shannon B~ Sr., •\1ti. PAti(; Teresa G6ft>ett, Sr., Foothlll; ic.lly Grd, Jt,. Irvine; Jamie Hamilton, Sr., canyon; Alexis Henion, Sr,. lrvtne; Jamie Kroe1e, Jr,, Senta Margarita; Lann Muschetto, St., Marina; Allif?n Now.It. So •• L8 ~ Ashley Pytta, Sr.. El Toro; Kvn Steele, Sr., Esperanza; Dana 1'\Jd:er, Sr.. Dan• Hills, Kelsey Whafen, Sr., L8 Wilson. 11*d11Nm KatMt":wte Wden. Fr., ~ Harbor; Danielle Bourret. Sr., Villa Pant. Knsty Carbone, So .. Sen Oem«lte; Kathy Chou, Sr., Fount.in Valley; Cori Ehrlkh. Jr., Capcstr•no \/alley, Undy Gill, Sr .. Er Tdro, Xina Glffson. Jr .. ~ano Valley; Thtresa Guidi, Jr., Espe<anu; ~ Hetntalman, Sr .• Millikan: M¥issa Nelson, Sr., Marina, Eml Umeuwa, Jr .. Irvine; Tlffany wright. St .. El Toro. Of THE DAY •t'm '*"to nm~) G&idl of'-Day _· Paul Kirby, Departing Estancia High • girls basketball coach • - Suzanne Lockhart at the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum. Several students wdi have an opportunity to hammock aboard for overnight watches with the crew. The ·ship Keepers,· as they are called, will learn about what it was like to live aboard an 18th-century ship, experience the sailors' duties and have breakfast with the crew. Tours of the vessel have attracted very large crowds during their stops in other obes. The enthusiasm in Newport Beach appears to be no different. IC you are planrung to take a class, scout troop/Indian Guides or Princesses, you are encour- aged to make arrangements well in advance. You can do that by calling the Nautical Museum at (949) 673-7863, ~. 107. Wallace Cook. Commodore of the Newport Ocean Racing Association (NOSA). is expecting a record crowd for this yea(s Newport-to-Ensenada Race. The race will commence on Friday, April 23, at noon. If you havep't seen the harbor or stMt of thlS race, Which is the largest international yacht race in lhe world, you should sit atop the bluff above Big Corona. lt is an amazmg sight It's hard to believe that it's tequila and tiller time, once again. • TEIUtANCE PMIU.S' boating column appean ~ Friday. He can be contAlcted at (949) 645-4566. CELEBRATING THE M ILLENNIUM K G • He'll always be remembered as "Mr. CIF," but his achievements as a basketball coach were spectacular. RoGFR C.o\R1~r.. Ken Fagans. who passed away five years ago today at age 84, was born for Halls of Fame. The longtnne symbol or Southern California high school Hlgh's Southern California championship team in 1927, and moved on to Oregon State as a three-year starter and an All-Pacific Coast Conference guard m h.ts Junior and senior seasons He was president of his serum class at OSU and was a third-team All-A.mencan. The disappomtment of a Wetime came when he was bypassed for a spot on the U.S. basketball team at the 1936 Olympic Games lD Berlin. athletics with his position as the commissioner of the CIF Southern Section, enters lhe Daily Pilot's Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the oncoming millennium, today. And it seems most probable that he would have enjoyed the recognition. •He loved the limelight,• said Balboa Ken Fagans Sam Balter, who would go on to become a radio sports announcer. got the berth be sought, and 'til the day he died he passionately maintained Island's Norma Fagans Tuesday, who shared his life for 52 years as his wife, 30 of those here in paradise. J. Kenneth Fagans was "Mr CIF" for 21 years, from 1954-1975, a span m which the Southern Section grew from a base of 209 schools to over 500, and for years it was a vutuaJ one-man show as he wrestled nearly every lSsue one-on-one . Relying on his own experience and intuition, he regularly filled out the bracket sheets for football, basketball and baseball as the playoffs unfolded, by himself. But as the section expanded, he sometimes found himself embroiled m controversy. Despite some ups and downs, and often frustrated by various lawsuits brought on by one individual or another who could not accept playmg the game by establish ed rules. when he retired he left a section many considered as the finest in the nation, and the groundwork to build on that tatus. His achievements over tho years go far beyond his role as commissioner. He was a standout basketball player for Huntington Park he was robbed. World War II came and after serving as an Army Air Corps captain. be began a coaching career at Compton High. where lu.s teams racked up a 160·9 won-loss record over a five-year SJ>dll. At one point h.ts Tarbabes won 53 straight with back-to-back CIF crowns. His overall coaching record, mcluding three service teams and two Compton College teams. was 291 wms, 25 losses. He was honored Wlth a Webme Achievement Award by the Orange County Sports Hall of Fame, and when he retired. a gathering of some 500 from within the Southern Calif omia sports commuruty attended his retirement dinner. To illustrate his mindset as the comrru iooer of the nation's largest high school governmg body, was the varuty license plate available from the state. Hi read: "Mr. CIF" Kenny Pagans was one of those one-of-a-kind personalitie , highly opmionated on many ubJects and a temper to match,_ who will alwafi bold a place m Southern Califorrua athletics . history, as well as m the Daily Pilol' Sports Hall of Fame. Estancia girls coach Kirby resigns; Eagles begin search •Work commitments ~n:unpt Estancia girls basketball coach to step • <town after three seasons. • COSTA MESA -Paul Kirby, :tmote seven 1eason1 with the da Hkih atrll buketb&ll pro-~ tnduae<r th tut three u w~--on bead coach, announced ~w.day he hu t9lignod due to ~ conl1kU with hll full-~jOb. ~ ,28, compUld •• t-:f? ie('Ofd -' taking OYer for Jtu.a Dftll, _.... the farmer Eltanda held man GIRLS HOOPS became the women's coach at South.em Calilomia College. Kirby wa.s the Daily Pilot Pad.fie Coast League Coacb ol the Year in his first season at the helm (1997), wban he guided the Eagles to a 16- 11 record and a berth in th ClP Southern Ill-A playolfs. Aft r an S.1' cempe!Qn In 1997 • 98, Kirby directed the Eagles to a t 7.9 mark ln the l'e<"eDUy ('Ompl t· ed IN.IOn, which en<led in the CIP Divllion lll·A quarterfirutll. ·r started working fWI tltne 11x months ego (u a purohulng ~l) and t l'Mlbed I could no lolllglr gift 100% to th Estanc:l& pro- gram,• Said Kirby, who noWl d school offloals and Eitanda players of his dedston Thursday . "You need to be the.re for the ixth·period dass and you need to bo over- ing the program during spring, awn.mer and fall leagues. (1be work con- by's decisjon and praised his contribution to the pro. gram. "H · a grt?at coach and I'm orry to e him go,• F rda said. ·aot h ' anxious to g t on with th rest of hb w .• Ferd• td h would Wtiate the hiring process for a repla me.nt .,_d flict) wuo't that b'O • dNl Paal Kirby dur\ng th 1eeson, ncoweged lnt r ted bee.I we practiced later m the afternoon. But, now, I can't get theN for llxtb pertod and the pro- gruq dctel"' better •• 1IDDdl Gtrtl AtbWltlcl Dhdot ~ .... .aid .... r...,.m )(Ir. eppllcan to phan (949) 515-6508 101 detail Kirby. who ted Devts nd EltAnda boys h RICh &oyce fOr proVldlllg . trong • roa hlng rble IDiOd.:11, Mid be may return to ~ u .a wlltant; per'Mpe • soon as next a.wn. But h would not take a head-roaching JOb until ho finished work on hts rolJeg degree and teo hlny a d nll l, which he estimated would tak al J a.st two yean Kirby satd he will ~m mber h~ r tatlonship with playcn mor thm wiN and lone. •Thf! tough thing about my dedsion WU bavtng to tell the pilay• en I .,un't coming beck :nex1 yeer, • he saMl. ·1 put a tot or 6me ancs enon tnto that progrern. tldt Ilk Ru and Use (Mc~snee) bef him. to ~· bard to Welk away BUt IOIDetimel you have ID do wbiWI blll lof you.• Kirby, who p&ay.d II OC.. Friday, March 26, 1999 SOFTllLL . . Vangu~s win two at Chapman tournament • SCC tops Pacific and , Whitworth; loses a 1-0 decision to host Chapman. . ORANGE -Southern Califor· nia College's softball team won two of three and allowed just one run at the Chapman Tournament Wednesday to improve lo 22-9 overall Alysia Atchley got the Van- guards off on the right foot in the opener of a three-game set with Pacific University, host Chapman and Whitworth College. She allowed five ruts as sec recorded a 5-0 victory over Pacif- ic. Chrissy Vega and Noelle Sturgill led an t 1-h.it attack, Vega going 3 for 3 with an RBI, and Sturgill going 2 for 4 with two runs scored. Gretchen Brandt was the hard-luck loser m d 1-0 Chapman victory, striking out six and walk- ing one, as Chapman, behind a six-lut attack, scored in the fifth iruung. The Vanguards were shut down on three singles. In the nightcap the Vanguards were 12-0 wmnen. over Wlut- worth College. Gina Llebengood breezed with a two-hitter, stnking out 11. Tbe VangucUds had JUSl four hits, but had the benefit of rune Whit- worth miscues ll1 a qame mercied after 41 /J. innings CHAPMAN "l'OURNAMENT ARSTGAME SoC.111 College 6, Pacific University 0 Pa_cific Un1vers1ty 000 000 0 -O 5 2 Soc.al College 200 112 x 6 11 0 Young and Makus; Atchley and Murie W Atchley, 4 0 L Young, 1-2. JB. • Gomez (SCC) SECOND GAME Chapman 1, SoCal College O Chapman 000 010 0 · 1 6 2 SoCal College 000 000 0 · 0 3 1 Buendia and Bankus. Brandt and Murie W · Buendia, 9 0 L Brandt, 8-8. THIRD GAME Soeail College 12. Whitwor1tt 0 Whrtworth 000 00 0 2 9 SQCal College 730 2x · 12 4 0 Allen, Adams (1) and Brenner; Lttbengood and Jordan W • Liebengood L Allen 28 -Blanl<ensh1p (SCQ 38 G~ (SCQ RUGBY Unicorns top Back Bay HUNTINGTON BEACH - Back Bay Ruqby Club, readying for its first m<1trh ctl Peninsuld Park this seclson, dropped a 37-24 d E>ns1on to thP I luntington Beach Ururorns Saturclc1y Jim O'Connf>ll Wd!> awarded "Man of th<' Match" honors for Back Bdy in d game fealunng Sam Kora 's wrond try of the sea- son A hdmstnnq m1ury to stand- out Deanf' R1dd1r k <,oured Back Bay's chdncPs Back Bay llds two weeks to heal and rec1cly for the Santa ' Monica Ruyby Cluh, which invades Penmsuld P.irk\ A Street held Apnl 10 . . sports 1111 ICIOOL IOYI YO&llYllll OON I.EACH I DAlY PILOT Newport Harbor High's Matt Jameson drives the ball over the net against a helpless Laguna Beach defender Thursday night TARS DROP ARTISTS IN FOUR Laguna Beach extends match to four against Newport Harbor in nonleague duel Thursday night. HtUIAIU) DUNN ~Pb NEWPORT BEACH -As Newport Harbor Higb's boys volleyball team continues to roll past marquee schools in the preseason, a cer- tain element remams conspicuously absent in the Sailors' game. "We've just got to hdve a killer instinct, and we've got to find it,· Newport Harbor senior Adam Hearlson, a 6-foot-7 middle blocker, said. ·Maybe we need to look under the bed or something for a killer mstinct, but we should've been out of here (Thursday night) a n hoW' earlier." Coach Dan Glenn's Sdtlors (4-0), ranked No. 1 in Orange County, polished arr nonleague foe and longtime rival Laguna Beach (1-3) in four games, 15-8, 15-7, 10-15, 15·11, at Newport Harbor. · Hearlson's concern was realized in the third game, when the Tars, ahead comfortably m the best-of-hve match, suddenly lost it. The Artists, who have lost to Santa Margarita and Marina this season in nonleague competition, opened a 13-1 advantage in the third game, before holdmg on after 11 wild Newport Harbor rally. "We didn't come out with the right intensity in the third game," said Hearlson, whose nme ltills and match-high nine blocks helped seal the Sailors' win. "It's edsy to fight hard when you're down, because you have nothing to lose. But we need to learn how to put people away.• In Monday's Division I final of the Orange County Championships agatmt Santa Mdrganta, th<> Sdilors held an 11-6 lead in the first game of a best-of-three mdtch, but the Eagles rallied to win the game and sweep the match. Then, in Tuesday's nonJeague match against Marina, a three- game sweep for lhe Tdrs, the Vikings staved off an incredible nine match points before Newport senior Mall Jameson's kill ended mat- ters. Jameson, a 6-1 outside hittt•r, once again put the finishing touch on the Sailors' opponent, sp1kmg Ty 1Tamblie's cross-court set, the senior setter's 46th asl>1st of the match. Jameson's 14 kills and 12 digs led the way for Newport Harbor, while Tramblie and Zdch Wells added 10 dtgs each. Juruor Billy ClaytQn's solid play in the middle for Newport Harbor resulted m 13 kills and four blocks Alan Lunon, a 6-3 seruor for the Tars, had 11 kills and six blocks, Newport's Adam Hearlson, who led with nine blocks, makes a cross-court kill on a Laguna Beach defende~. enjoying his finest moments in the second game, when he recorded seven kills. Newport was deadlocked with Laguna Beach four time~ in the second game, but the Artists .never scored again in the game after it was tied, 7-7. The Td.TS won easily despite seven service errors Hearlson bad four kills in the first game, while Jameson, Clayton and Umon each had three, as the Sailors came from behind to take a 1-0 lead. Laguna Beach led in the first game, 4-0 and 6-3, but the hosts rallied behind big blocks Crom Hearlson and Lunon. Led by Kent Turner's serving, Newport had only two service errors in the first game DoilyN;t S C I I D U L I ~.';! .. .I I TODAY ·: ....... u ... community college • Orange Coast at Santa Ana. 2 p.m. H~ ·Santa Margarita !\. :' M Hatt>or, 3:15 p.m.: lrvlne n Corona del Mar, 3:15 p.m.: E.stancll at Laguna Bffeh, 3: 1 S p.m; Laguna Hills at Costa Mesa. 3:15 p.m. u • Softbaft Community college • Cypress at Orange Coast. 3 p.m. High school • Costa Mesa ~I at Lancaster-Highland Tournamentr::c • 4 ~ • 1\'edt and flekl Jo.i\ Community college men and womltfl -MlraCosta, Golden West. San ~ Bernardino at Orange Coast, 2 p.m. -, I '°"' • Volleybllll • •A Community college men -El (.amino at Or..1nge Coast, 7 p.m . l r • Swimming I Community college men and ~ -Orange Coast. Riverside at Cypresi. / 2~m n 1 High school boys and girls • Saddlebadc at Estancia, 3 p.m. .:~~ G 0 L F .. .. Otttl Wu Tars lead Mission V .. SANTA ANA -The Ne~rt Harbor High boys golf t"'11 holds a four-stroke lead over ~­ sion Viejo at the halfway poiJA~f their home-and-home nonle4$,le match following Wednes<\iy's 212-216 result over nine holestflt Santa Ana Country Club. ~~ Miller Akins led a tight gxoop for HarbOr with a 41, followe«tiy Mitch Johns and Daniel Kushcat 42, Scott Tippett at 43 and RUS\y Hill at 44. Ut It was Harbor's pth straight nine-bole •victory,• with the bal- ance of the match to be play.ed March 31 at Mission Viejo CC. Newport is 4-1 overall iq.:J.'8- hole matches and 1-0 in the'Sea View League . HELP WINTC .. D n CdM seeks head coacijes for girls tennis, softball Corona del Mar High is s~­ ing a varsity girls tennis coach for the 1999 fall season, begining Aug. 23. Qualified applicants should contact Athletics Director Jerry Jelnick at (949) 515-605~'0r fax a brief resume to (949) 5-16- 6073 Monday-Friday, 7:30-4:3(1, The Sea Kings are also s~­ ing a softball coach for the ~00 season. SWIMMING .. . Free beginners c~ • The Newport Beach/Coront del Mar Kiwanis Club and thi Central Orange Coast YMCA art once again teaming up to provi free swimming lessons f<J childen from kindergargtea through sixth grade. • • ~ The annual YMCA SPL.A~J; •Begin to Swim" program w¥J .1' April 5-9. Each class is 30 llllll'- utes with morning and attetnOOl sessions. Early registratiop., t encouraged as size is limited"."..,: 1 ; Registration in person f. March 29, 5-7 p.m. and March j , 9-11 a .m. at Central Oraogi Coast YMCA. 2300 Univ~~!$' Ave., Newport Beach. • For more information, conta~ Stacey Sundleaf at (944\ 642-9990. .. • • CIF rule change would limit forfeits · G • •ls s 0 cc 1 • • A proposal lo curb penalizing to the Division rx playoffs. schedule. The proposal, defeated prior lo the Fl 0 res Roche e thl t f dm. . tr . will Laguna I Iills Principal Wayne Mickaelian, 1998 season and considered several times f -Lm.. a e es or d trus ative errors cm outspoken advocate for change during his since a preseason scrimmage was replaced by be voted upon dl April 29 meeting. school's unsuccessful appeal, voiced support a 10th game in 1979, has the support of the fi t t All PC for the change, which would affect only cases section's Football Coaches' Advisory Board. rs -earn - IS>\loiv FAtr1.11.N1.R where immediate eligibihty is routinely grant-• The Marmonte League presented a plan Dolf flt>t ed. such as OJ>f>.n enrollment and transfers allowing specific spring football rules be BUENA PARK A proposal which would decrease the chance a lugh school team's sea- ..aon could be sabotaged by an administrator's ..:rAUure to complete eligibility paperwork was introduced al Thursday's CrF Southern Sec- tion Counol Meeting at the Sequoia Athletic Club. The suggested change, which will be voted 'upon at the Apnl 29 council meeting, would reqwre a team to forfeit only the hr.it game in ~ch an ineligible athlete -who would hove been Immediately eligible, had paperwork been properJy processed -participated. The current rule calls for the forfeiture of all ,contests m which the ineligible athlete com- :~ted, regardless of the reasons for the lneligi· •bllity. •This is not leverage in further bending the rule , " said Mayfair High Principal Nancy Billinger, a member of a ection lcgislaUvc ~oinmJttoe from which the proposal originat- <e<I. •nit l to protect good Intentions." ""l>nnctpels, parents, athletes end CJP ,administroto~ altke hov lamented th • !1.B Mtablc forf eltur 1 trigger d by human !§Wr 1n roo nl y ors. The Cos~ M High • a country t rn l t a chonce to win a Olac Coost guo tiUn tn 199? bcca or a ".ililillar mi h p. Th Lltguna Ualls football m also forf ated ftve Yictori last fall. which cost th Haw a PCL aown and o trip with no eligibility restrictions. applied lo the summer, as well. •Tue hardest thing I've had to do m my 34 fhis wou'd enable protective foam-rubber years in education, was to tell our players they headgear, currently worn by players in spring had to pay for a mistake made by our admin-practice, to be used in summer drills and pass- 1 tration," Mickaelian told the council. ing league games. lrvine lug~ P~dpal Gail Richards, whose The proposal, presented by Westlake High football forfeit •d six wins in 1996, also spoke Athletlc Director Joe Pawlick does not have in favor of the proposal. the support of the coaches' advisory commit- • The.~· _Blue Book Committee proposed tee, according to section assistant commission- the elimination of a current hylaw which llm· er Bill Clark. Clark said some coache believe its (ravel. • e.l.lowi.ng protective headgear would promote The current rulPi1 re<1u1r programs to gain more aggres!iive play in passing league com- section approval b fore travelling to contests petition. more than 500 miles from the chool's campus, Pawlick pointed out tho foam rubber head· and r tnct uch trips to once every two years, gear wo\\ld prevent concussions which hove with hnutPd exception occurred whon plnyers' hea~ trike• the Thi~ proposed change will also be voted ground, as well a otht>r playeni. upon hy the council, compri sed of representa· • The meeUng also tncludect lbe pre.tentaUon tivcs from Cdch of the S('ction's 73 leagues, on ol a $20,000 donation lo s()ction boyt> and girls April 29. goU champion. hip by th South m Callfor· • Other non-acUon Items presented nia PGA foundation. ThWlday, wh ch will be voted upon· at the • OltcUI Ion of • propo~d f tnc:reaM for next council meeting, included th Mi. qton officiali. tttggured concom that m~mber Lcague'1 roq~ st that boy and gtrlS water schools are v\olfttlng section byltt'W1 by JX!ying polo 1w1tch to ruollment·ba cd playoffs. offionls more than the reqUlrod fc for 5ele<..1· Both hoy and grrls plllyoff .currently hav ed bask tball toumam nt gam d1Vbional hr kdown b ed rnor • on com-Ooean View High AthleUc. Otr ctor nm petitive eqUJty and g ography than enroll-Menn aly said 1>4ylng pr mium I for bas· ment. ketball refer ha becom both common- • The Frontier lffgu proposed adding a plaoe and n ry to attract th m to work rinunag to th rurront l O·gnm football tournom n . • Estancia goalie and Mesa sweeper among five local girls soccer players honored by coaches. Estanoa High Junior goahe Helen Flores and Costa Me a jwuor sweeper Katie Roche were first-team picks on the coaches' All-PocUic Coast League girls soccer selections, which al o Included three local second-team honorees. Erin Van I lorn and Candace Nicholson represented Co&ta Mesa on the econd team, while Estancta's Rebek4 Roth was another econd-lewn choice. Flores anchored the Bagle!t' dclense in gOdl, whil Roche dJd the same for th Mustang• at sweeper. Rocho also pent tim on the forward line for Coach Dan Johnston. Van f tom was ruor goall , while Nicholson, A JUmor, played prtma.rily at fullb!sck . Nicholson &so 1~t som tim up front a,nd, v.m whil on th back line, w an off nstv C'4tal t. er.cord· ----.... lng to Johnston. = Roth, junior midfielder, the Eagles second-leading , while also adding consiste 1 control. She was second-te;ih All-PCL clS a sophomore, as well. c.o..cftft• Alf..hdflc eo..t ~ gMINcar Most Valu...._ Playw Kim Devine, Aliso Niguel ........... Helen Flores. Estancia Katie Roche, Costa Mesa J•mlt uutenschlager; Laguna Hills ".! Undsey Balzhiser, Laguna Hiiis """ Julia Peron, Laguna Hills • •••• April Peron., Laguna Hiii$ • _,,_ T~!t_B,aker, AllJO Niguel ·:I!'~ M .... ncl • Basar\da, Aliso Niguel '" Amanda Vanderlan, Aliso Niguel :· , •• Allyson Marquand, Ul'llvenlty _,._ Karey Pickett. university ... '" Brynne Yamamoto, t.aouna Beach •""''' ............... , Erin V.n Horn. Costa ~ c.ndace NlchoKon. Costa Mesa ".:: Rebeka AOth. EstMlcla V.,,_. Rocha, Ltgunt Hilb I 111 .. ... =rifflth, Laguna Hills allerste'n. LaguN Hlffs ..... Luncl\, AlilO Nfguef Sheetll JMVh. AlhO ...,.. Jordln Whlstttr, Atho Niguel EllUbtth l.Jf'*, UnMnlty lrook•~~ ~ CObb. Llgunl l..ch lltll .. _ :c.. -......,.. COUflT OF TMllTATEOF CALIFORNIA IN AND fe>R THE COUNTY OFORANOl IH RE THE MA TT£R OF: THE ADOPTION "Of JONATHON OUTI!ARez CASI NO. AD 18147 CfT A TION AHO tHmCE OF HEAAINO ONHTmONTO 0£CLNIE MINOR FREE FROM CUSTOOYAND CONTROL OF JOHN DOE TO JOHN DOE VOU ARE HEREBY OR· OEREO lo appear on •'°28-99 at 8·30 A.M.. In ~:!rtrnent L72 ol lhe Su-' COOl1 ol Orange ~ Jocaled at S.1 Tfie Cl~ Dnve, Orange, Cehfor· nla. to ahOW caine Why !he oourt 1tiould not mall• an Otder dedar1ng Jonathon G*rrez frM from paren· tal control and c:ustOdy arid a proper sub)ect for adop· tlOf'I VOAJ ~ a l1ght IO ap· 1iii)" In person and/or by OQW\111. 11 you Wish to l>O represented by an attorney and lhe couri delenmne1 you cannot altofd an at tomey, one WfU be ap- polnte<l tor you without (!large. II you tall to appear al !he l•me and pla~ slated abOVe. lhe oou11 may terml· llJ1fe your tights to lhe con-/W..-nd CUllOdY of the ml· ~chlld. ~• DATED: MAR 4 1999 At!AN SL.ATER Cl.ERK lfW•THE COURT ~DIANE WEBSTER, '"OVVTY CLEAK OF THE •-OOURT •iW OFF1CE OF , V ELIZABETH ORR, EAST KATELLA. 6~TE F, ORANGE, CA 92867, (71 4) 638-9700 ATTORNEY FOR TERESA GALVEZ .QU\TIERR6Z PublfShed Newpon 84alttl·Costa Mesa Dally I pljoJ MafCh 26, April 2, 9, HI, 1999 F842 ·~ 6 • j, 1 I 1 I !.:-<If • • ' NqDCE JNyDJNG PlJJLCHASE PJlOPOSAU NOrtCE IS HERB1W ClVEN that the City ol CoMa Mesa, lldtrlg by and thiuugtl it. Governing Board, ~ Nleftd k> • tlw Oty, will naefn up to, but no lata than &::00 tM, Pdday, April 2. 1'99, ...S.S pl'OpO&I» fw the pwd\Me ot tht following Oty-owntd 11Wplm ""1 pn>pmy: Ii I PAllCEL NO. STREET APPROX. SIZE '22~19 ,. '2.5-4U-16 ~I 2135 STER.LING AV£. 111s.1sth sr. 4.17.fSF 8,2SOSF XJ:t propoMla shall be 11\Ade on a propou) form fumiahed by dw Oty which will be available on March 22. 1999. &ch pmpoeal must mnlotm and be mpclNlve lo all pertinent proposal inlonnation. l'ld pecbga including propauJ infonnaticft and forrrw may be obtained at dw Oflb ol the City ~ 11 Fair Drive, Coeta Mesa. CA 92626 lex no charg!t. For -.ddltional in!onnatim. a:1ntac:t '$UMn FtfCk. Engineering Technician at (11 f ) 7Sf..5066. ~ wW be received at dw City ol Coata MIM OfBat ol dw O ty Clerk. P.O. Box 1200, 11 Fair Drjy•, C:C.ta MSI, CA 92Q8 on or be/oft! dw time and daCit stated above, at which time they wW be ~in dw Council Chambers of said addmia. .ttu..1 I ~~, n r EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTttNrTY All ................ .................... , .. "'* .......... , •• ..-. ..... _.II ..... ,. """" .... ,....,...., ll•IMlff If •IMri .. MflM ..... ,... .............. ....................... .......................... ....................... 111111111•-•'d .• -............ .. ......,_,..., ........ ..................... .................... ..................... ............ .-.. .... ...................... ....................... ............ .... ...... , ... _ .. ... tllf .... ..... ........ .. ., .... '~~ .. . • '(· 1 M . , , .. , k.. ~ . . ~. -·~ -MB?I MARY T. BLU01T Deputy City Clerk., City of Coeta Mesa ~ ~~ .... ~ ' ~ ' ~ .•. I--: ·, •• -· , . ' .I l I I ~., .. t oil Li,, . . . -,. -' . . ... , ... ~ .. , IOunt Of n4E ttOHWA Y 308 femtell $876,000 3011 6 Ftmihl. la37,000 LIQll T rillleJ · f block to Oal Jo'lln 'Kinney, Agtnl IM9 m ..... -. Eit ,, ........ ---- ----:--.. · .. ,, . Grou Plid-!n lribuled •JIJ)iut 135.000.000 ere t• 1111rnt•·ln1 tor I S\.lf'PIUI. $ 0 •lgoed fundl {IOrp!IJt" Si42,793 8'41 Gain (Loes) from QPlra· 11~. f.240 .844.121 Net Income, $117,587,&39 locr .... (0.crMH) Ill Capital a1ld SurpkJs outtng 1908, 1212,626.0 4 ltlaurance In Force Na· tlonwlde. $89.554,957,000 ~t &Heellh p1em111ms, $ o lnsu~ In Fooie Calofomia Buslneu Page, S18,716,1S8,.091 Acc:tOent & HH!th p1em1Ums • Direct, $7,991 838 We i;;r:et>y cenity that the aboYe items are in ec- COfdance With tl\I Amuat Statement tor the year ended De<l9mber 31 1998 made 10 the 1nsutane1 CommlUlone< ct lhe Stai. of catrtoml8. pu1suant to law /SI ~dwerd R. BVrd Na!M of Vic• Preildef'lt Ind Cont'°'llr /SI Dick Van TrelJen N1JM of A••l•tant Seretary PubllShCHl Newport Beach-Costa Mesa Daily Pllot Maren 22, 23, 2•. 25, 26. 1999 M427 1 Flctftloua Bu•lne .. Name St•t•ment The fotloWlng persons ere doing business as. No WOfT\/1. 1'1865 S1ty pat1t Circle, Suite G, lrvtne. cau1om1a 926 u Scotl Alan Nesbitt, 214 c.dar ApL A, Newport Beach. Cahlomia 92663 This busmess Is oon· duC1ed by. an lndrvklual Have you started doing buSlness yet? Yes. 03115199 Scott Nesbitt Thia statement was hied wilh the County Cleltt ol Orange County on 3·23·99 19996787423 Da11V P110t Mas 26. Apr. 2. 9, f6, 1999 · F835 Fictitious BualneH Name Stat9ment The lollowlng persons are dolng business as Eastblull Salon ESP 2525 Eastblufl Dnve, New port Beach, Ca11torn1a 92660 . Patricia LOAJise And1ldan. 14 Wintermist, ltv1ne. Cali tomia 92614 Deann Rabatin. 23352 Bolivar, Mission VlejO. Cali· lomta9~0 Sandy Duso 21722 C.bmsa. M11s10n Vlei<>. ca1rtomla 92691 Dottle Berns, 80 Tangelo. Irvine, Cahlomla 92653 .t.teta Haas4, 2247 VISta Huerta. Newport Beach, Cahlomia 92660 This business Is con· OUC1e<l by oo-pertners Have you Started doing business yet? Vas, February 1. 1999 Patrlaa Loolse Andiklan Ths statement was flled with the County Cle~ ol Orange County on S.16-99 109967116474 Oalty Pilot Mar 19, 26, Apf 2, 9, 1999 F828 LIFE ANO ACCIDENT AND HEALTH SYNOPSIS OF THE ANNUAL STATEMENT · YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 ol PM GROUP LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Full Corporate Name t 00 West Clarendon, Suite 2000. Phoentx. AZ. 85013 Home Ottloe To•at admitted assets. $337.91l,f6'4 Total habilllles. $261.211.976 Cap.tat Stoeks $2.900,000 Aggregate wrlte·lns 101 other than special surplus lunds Simplify your llf e through CLASSIFIED Friday, March 26, 1999 9 ~-': ~I-! .; I . . ", ~"*'· GR* peO-in Md oon- 1!1buted •llPIUS· meoe.n• ~~,...ilia tor ~runa.. (&UIJ)IUI), 138.192,474 Gatn (LO*I) ''°"' operation.. M .103.14& Net lnoOme, $S.08~j724 tncn 1 (Dian.. tn Clp.lal and Surplus dOnng 1998, '5.039,452 tnsunince in Fort.9, Ha· ~. $8,778.055.000 Aocldent & Healt.11 premloms, $'465,303.252 tnwrance lo.Fora· CaMomia ~ Page, J.t.234,089. l()4 Accident & Healtl'I premiums • OfreQ $108,350.308 We hereby ~ ttlat the abCWe lt61Tl• are in ec· corcsance With the Annual Statement '°' the year FB38 ended Oec9mbef 31. f998 r-------.. made to the Insurance I •-.I Comm1111oner of the State 715 ..-U--!J ~w Cehfomla, pureuant to • HENDERSON /SI R. Lee WlrWln. Name Of • A!Wll• ~. • Vice P,.eldent, Tu a bnght llght on Kaua'{ /SI Dick Van Tr-4f1n, W8l1l out when ~ Hen· Name Of A.aal•tant derson, of 'Oma'o, l>U$ed ~~ Newport from oor llV8S on Marc:tl 4i Beach-Costa Meu Dally 1999 At 55, she ~ · Pilot March 22. 23. 24, 25 fought a courageous battle 26. 1999 wilh breast cancer for trve M426 y•rs Flctttloua Buatnua A resident ol Kaua'rb- Nam• Statement 25 yea1t, Anrue was Qoill Thi lollowtng persons and raised In Oltawa, II.; are doing bustnea es and traveled around IM Gartte f'urm, 3400 Ave wortd extenS1Vely belore ol the Arts. #E11 9, Costa setthng permanently .,, Mesa, CA 92626 'Oma'o in 1993 SM will "" Kiyono T omoml, 3400 "tt Ave ot the Ans. •E119, remembered ~ her m~ Costa Mesa, CA 92626 lnends lor her py ol lfe ' Thia business 1s con· her love of travel and tier ducted by an lncl1Vldual passlOrl for reading AA ~n":ss~t?~ed OOtng avid quilter, she hnistl!ld Klyooo Tomomi several HaW1Jian QUiits !or This 5tatement was filed local residents, and as past With the County Clef1( ol president of the Kaua'I M Orange Couniy on 3·23-99 Club, she was instrumentaf t9"e781409 1n bnng1~ m~ rwrw 400 Daily Piiot Mar 26, Apr eJtctbng ' guesr anlst.9 IC 2. 9. 16, 1999 F836 Kaua'1 111 the days befbl9 CNS1697186 ''cable TV In her 1aS1 NOTICE TO years she look up !tie CREDfTORS OF gaine o1 golf and made BULK SALE many new tnends et the (SECS. 6104, KukulOlono course 6105 U.C.C.) She IS sulVMld by her Escrow No. mother. Nina Harding of 616956-0S Anzona, a brother Roibe!J Notice 11 hereby given 10 Martin of MexlCO and an creditors ot the within aunt, Jemce Ahem ot Nlmed seller that a bulk sale 18 at>oot to be made ot Mansas, as well as her 1he assets ducnbed lovtng friend Jeff Gran\ below Annles ashes ••re The names and buSlll8SS spread 10 a pnvate cere addresaes ot the Hile< are mony at Pol1haltl Beactl AMRESCO F1nanc1a1 1, In •J..au o1 memonal grits L.P., a Delaware limited "" • partnership, 2 Coll>Of8te she requested that spe~ Pait!. Suite 100. IMne, CA love and attenllon be g;..n 92606 lo her new Ql'Ol/9 ol 1)8«1 The locaUon in Cahfom111 trees at her beloved Po'lpu ol IM ctilel e1<ecut1111 office Beach Par1c •• ol lhe seller Is same as above As listed by the Hiier, 111 other business names and addreues used by the seller within three yeare before 111e date 1uch kst PACIFIC VIEW" ~~:.-:-~~~,~~red '0 the MEMORIAL PARK The names and busaneas Cemeteiy • M ortuaty addresses of the buyer are Ch I er t Kusum B Patel i 030 ape • ema C>rV West Cap1ta1 A.WI West 3500 Pacific View Dtr.-e Sacramento, CA 9569 t Newport 8-.ch The assets to be IOld are 644-2700 ! csescobed 1n genera1 u 1 .. •••••••111111 Furniture F1ictu1es and PIE.ICE IROTHERS Equipment and are located at 39471 Big Bear Lake BEU IROADWAY ; Blvd , Big Bear. CA • Mortuary * C hapel The bUSfness name used Cremation by lt'te Nller al that location Is: 8'g Bear Lake Inn 11 0 Broadway The anticipated date of Costa Mesa the bulk sale ls Apnl 19 642-9150 1999 •I lhe ol1IOt of Fidel ty , ... _______ _ "Affordable Alternative" Discount Casket, Cremation& Burial Service Why shouJd you subject yourself & your family to paying inflated p rices for caskets & services???? Call ToU Free 1~54WKET SeniJlg Orange a Sum>unding eo tries IF -•. • - ';c•. -. . ~ L:~··. j ,..;. -· - ----- I . ·-...... • r • ! 10 Friday. Match 26. 1999 . ~ ~.,..... t . . \ , I\ 1 .. ' f I '",._; 4....J._~. : ""> .,.. -.. '141 I~ I ""t I.' ' ... t. ·u· ,_ ,... • ........:·. • OWisiWf ~ "'1mu rwtft4 in a tJUkt t"1MUlmty. • CtmfJtnitnt/y f«otd t~ 1'asfdon lsfaruf anl tk 6tads. • Catfwfral ctili"fis • Privott patiosltftcq • C~firtpfaw • s~ udlltiu paUi. • Htatti poof & 6u66(y spat 1 'ildrooms from. $1100 '2'Wrooms from $1325 3 'IJltfr~ from $1595 ·Call totfay to rtStTVt your mw fwme. ~ 888-219-0754 ·~ BlliPo;t .. A artment. '"'ommu,,,itttes BA~'af PENINSULA fJO APTS COSTA MESA f STA MESA'S BEST* ~ 1 bedroom and 1 bedroom. also 2 bedroom 1 bat~. Quiet gated commvntty. IR>OI. tennis. easy access to treeway. beach & malls n4-S57.007S E VERDE Large 2Br. den, lrplc, W/O hk-i.!p. slngle glll'lge. new deco!. no pets. $99;tlmo 949-631-04 73 'E ilDE' 2390 Elden IE 2br ~ W/D hkups, 2 car g1r, no ..__,. $975/mo. Credit report r.iequlrld. 949-645..(585 132 APTS ~PORT BEACH talRl·lEVEL TOWNHOME a Spacious 2Bedroom with Panoramic VlfJW, . le Elevator. 2 5 Car EnclOsed Garage. Fireplace, Ht!gt Walk-1n-doset, •asher/ ""'dty'!!t hk·ups & yard. $2000/mo _.m1..1 year lease. Call IOI' appt 949-646·8453 Tt4E BEACH HOUSE APTS. ·-'433 SUPERIOR 132 APTS NEWPORT BEACH '/ Newport Marina Apartmenll Bayfront community with private beach & marina. Walk to Ball>0a Island. l BR. 2BR all(! 2BR widen & 1650-$3600 Wood burning fireplace & private garage. Sorry. no pe~. Pleaee call: (949) 760..0919 ' PROMONTORY POINT VILLA APARTMENTS The tradition ot Newpot1 Beach awalls you! The bleatt(aldno Ocean & Hart>or bar views Wlli relax you Our 1 Bedrooms 8/e stal1Jng al $1395.00 1 Bedroom+ Loh starting al $1780 00 Our 2 Bed1ooms are starting at $1895 00 2 Bedroom+ Lott starting at $2745 00 Some uor1s include _garage. t11eptace. vauned ceRingS. & new1y remodeled kitchens Cati 888-783-8786 FIND ~ FAIRWAY APARTMENTS AT BIG CANYON GA'.ll!D COMMUNllY BY FASHION ISLAND ~utiful tree-lined streets and golf course , views. Enjoy carefree living in your large 1, 2 or -3 BR apartment home! • lWo·car garage • W3Sher/dryer hookups • Flreplece (wood & gas) • Air conditioning • Wet bar In 2 and 3 BR • Alann system • $1 ,850 to $2,995 • Please call (949) 644·0509 Sony, no peta. . 15t HOUSESICONDOI FORAEHT . CORONA DEL MAR OCEAN VIEW spacious duolex 2br 2ba, wtk In, beam cell. st; gar. wfk to bch. shop( restaurants, $1650/mo, no pat OH 3126-3127 949·7~0189 or 949-760· 1620. CdM 2br 2ba, g1r1g1, w/d, tum or un·lum, <Imo min, St750 Wk-days 714·966-0744 wk-ends 949-123-0714 aYI 511. I ,'° "°3°i!I E Side, Lg HIC 2 atOl"f condo, 4bf 3b1, 2 fn)lc, yl«f, attach gar, W/D hfcup, gar· dener. 12000 94M75--0261 1112=-1 •BAYFRONT• Fabulous 1br 2bal All new krtchen. carpet, t~e, View! S 1700 avail nowt Agtnt 94M75...C912 3bf 3bl, l)O<AAennis avail, 2 car gar, laundrv area, beach near-Avail 411 S2200lmo 800-708-1nO NtwpOl't Crest 3Bdrm + iOii, 2 5ba, comm pool.new c81J>91. new paint, $1975/mo 949-646-1869 642-3850 I ntfufgence on NEWPORT'S BACK BAY ...... Private qaragt • 'Wasfitrl'Drytr 'JV,frigtrator wlice • Jit{arm System 9 ~oot Ctilines • ~irtpface ~itntss & 'Business Cent er qatea Community • Coo( 'Bay 'Breezes CALL FOR MOVE IN SPECIALS! BAYPOINrtE J•mbo,.• at University on the B•ck Bay. 888-892-5661 ... c::. tAVINE NWnMIHf Cl)MMUM'1'16 A ttl(..tfl& T"lfDA&O CH \IVINfo 0067()4 ,uru,... -• •Rea110ffb Pad Spa •oa I.Ma PumoloCJS · NEWPORT O''ICI TOWIR • Mlallle Ideal for .. • ·'ltMI, Ralltall, Etc. ~ --,.,,. Avalallle • 171ftlrletbpOln llRmtVllws . ···~en'*' oar f17ttt lhNJ u IUINHAM USA \H..,.. c.... ~ Sllle 100 I ........ CA,,... Forfon'*1' triformmtcm, p/4W1t co11ta'1. IUl9AIMNY (. , ~ I • • \ I , I ,_, .... , .... , .. • ' +' I •1 /\' r ,• ....... .,, ... " .. I • I ~ 1 I UM1t DCIC IAY 5br~. lonnal lllWlg, 2 !Wig .'!'Ii mom ""'· Mp IJ*' QUrta llCI, 2 tip US00 94729-'1670 lV INQ • D-· -.. ..,. •--. ... --' ·~· . . ·~ : ·-··· . l .lf.1. :} ·~ -·~~ -.. .·.~· ~ .. ,rr; - Newer~' dck, f/p, Vaulted c:.I, own 1>1111. u plt-i, lndty, no 111'111. no~ fenlale Pftl'd. Ss.40/mo, Incl utlllty. 9'9-722..()713 M,...,.t,.-recenr1r rmova1ed, near maJor FW)1I &. attracts, OC Fairgrounds coUege,bcM,shoppl.ng mall. 24hr 61 desk. Free HBO, fSPN, Discovery, DD pbooes, spa 8t pOOI. First wk specials on singles & dbls. $134+ Tax. C.M. Motor Inn. 2277 Harbor Blvd. 949/645-4840 NEWPORT BEACH Walk to bead\. 1 Bedroom wlbalh, all amen. Security, 1st & last + utllhles S55<Vmo 949-646-3735 Pllflc Newport 51\are 2b1 Aili Active pron prel'd, S650lmo utU's Included. Avail 4/1. Catt Allu 94~.-&54 GA(BOA PENINSULSA 2Br, Bay view, Vp, W/d. pron prefd DENNIS 949-675-7035 NB LUXURY TOWNHOUSE ALl amenille$, ample palldng. Active protl prel'd. J550t'mo + 1fJ utl 949-631-3432 NPB OC£AN FRONT to shirt, no amok•1.S65C!t'mo + dap & utll. NO peta. 949-722.()669 1~~~1 SHORT TERM RENTAL/BAL PENIN. Spacious, 2Br 2Ba Condo. tum. cloSe to bch. 2c gar. $900/Wldy 949-675-7130 1~R~1 Large Executive Ottlc:ea located In Huntington Baach, $300 per month. CaR Ron at * 714-848-1651 * 1216 ~1 COfPO'.N Executive H8ks 1 to 2 bedlOom on Peninsula Poire. CLEAN, nolsnlk.'peb, yearly. Call 949-645-6797 Pl'Of male Si Miki room In COM « NPB. I llYI In L.A. Only will be there 2 nlgtrta 1 wk. Nag pflee 714-305·2228 :>Ingle mom looking ror nxer upper to renL 2 or 3 bedroom~. yr.rd. E' Side CM or Sania Ana llolghts. Willing to Invest for long le.rm lease. pots. • I I I II t 11'1 jl, 1 lj I I II II -'\~_.._. _ __'.__ _·__) 1400 AAWalENrS I Do You UM Coupon17 Free $1 O worth ol grocery coupons ot your choice 800-404-1475 •X11203 CIUSU"°" , ......... , • RelW from.,...,.. t AntWll'I to OA't • Modification of •uppolt ,., .... ""Clll ............. re111e1a-1-1auJuo..ua Found 1ft Naiman Marcus p~g lot t tllv.t bftcellt with gold tlalp. Tumid In to cuatomer ••rvloe. Come down to ICltntlfy. . ~~··, .: . . . : '\ UOvtng Siie, clothtt, Wind Sl#fer, Icing bed, much morel 2n E 18th Pl1.Sll 7am-3:00 NO EARL T BIRDSlll MOVING SALE S1turd1y only 8:30.?. Wide varletyl EVery1hlng from kids, house- hold1 offloe etc ... 10$ &. up 1521 Peg11u1, olf Santa Ana belweeo Bristol & Mesa. NORTH BAY TOWNHOMES Sat-March 27, 8am-2pm 2463 Irvine AveBetween University/ S81'11a ls.abet, COS1a Mesa Saturday only 7:30 • ? Treadmill, lurnlture, household appllance$, clotl*lg, antique desk & morel 635 PromontOl"f Df, Wt11, Nawpon BNctt SAT 8·1, (MESA VERDE) 2194 Club t4ouM Dr, Couch, lovtHlt, clothH, MJSC ITEMSll l"°~I Cettlllcata for 4 ComPlemen-tary rounds of golf Incl cart at Pelllcan Hll Golf Course, $220. explrH 4122 206-921-4960 'Stari 'flxture UQUIDA TION: Loz,181 book slleMng; storage shelVlng; pellet rack; show- cases; Office ~t: morel EverytNng goes-cileaD. Slarts 3122 O 1oam: 5630 IC11rMy M111 Road SAN DIEGO . . . . ... I I • I . I .ArJ .:... . . I p ~ OLD ORIENTAL • NAVAJO RUCS 949497.9744 '-J-,,."]:". ~ ... ' I •II ·,_II '\ -· " -~~4"'""·· \ ..._, .,... "="'. _ _. ........... 1·:.... . ,.. . -. S750 j!"--1 RECORDS TOP oot.LARI Jazz, R & B, IOU, Rock, etc. .. 50's & eo·s MIKE 645-7505 WAN'f'Eol otb cOiRs! Gold, sllwf, FfaMJln mint, Ster• Hng. Old watches & Jewetty WESTCOAST COIH642·H48 1 41V~I u.,, to DIYTrlde Use simulator 0 home 0 low price. I W111 ~. Cal Richard 7~ fr,Hher oi P1.1110 Mary dePuc:ale, MM. "In Your Home• lessons available 800•600•052 800-613-6865, www.nrtl.com. 10% Buywa Premium. I US EMP.t.:• I 1448 ~1 0 8 Antique Hand carved APPOINDlflVI' Victorian n11dl1 point Slfl11BS armchair, .Circa te50'•· 1650. Ff/Yf dar and 94M96·2208 leave me11ag1 .,. ~ ahlfta I BUY A~ PIAN.OSI 12.'dOI\ An1iques-Ouality lurnMe. ~ one piece or whole houselulll Per Hour Cash paid. 800-649-4922 T~uccra • llnlllo. ~..__. WANTED ANTIQUES Older StyteJUmiture PIANOS ii Coll.alblet • •Aj)ploMw. ~ •S-·-·OMoo""""""' $$ CASH PAID $$ _,......, ............ \ft BUY ESTATES • lmlnedlet9 friendly --.. PAY llOllf S PAITIR" r~·~1~!.~.~~~.r~~1 .Ill •., '' Jt ,11H t1nn f"\t" \'.I •'11r' T1 I/ If ljlflt f,,,,.,,.,1•1!1r,11r.1I ,, l t ~·,, I.'.', ----·- •tol·K""" •Paid-U. ·a...-_,..,_ Eaubllahcd ln 1989 'and~ Call foe-eppolnlincnl 1-888-818-4744 ASSISTANT BLO. Eml!NEER FIT, must have lite ptumblng.I electl1cal exp, HVAC helplul. oood people sldAs, SS.$ 1 C!t'hr 6ased on exp. Fax resume to Ctliel eor:; 949-645-t 729. AUt for UIY prote1110f\A1 at home oflice In CdM. Clerical &uppolt, Mac/PC. Business & personal errands. PT S 1 C!t'hr. Fax resume 949-719-2600. *KILLER JOB* Baja Sharlceez in Newpoo Beach is looking for persooable enetgetic barteOOersl wairer/ess lo woric in fun restnml1lt by the beach. Pleac;e contact S~orMikeat 949-673-0292 or 714-612-6253. You may apply in person II 114 McFaddeii Place. Newport Beach BOUTIQUE SALES Fun or Patt tlme.1. axp'd 11111 help needed. c.. M1gne11 Faahlon. HPB. 94M44-44n • Caregiver • lor elderly lady. Live at beach, room & board plus &mall salary 94M5o.t730 AC0UNTEA Patsoktt NlllUl'llnt In CM. F/PT Appty In peraon 11 271 E 17th at. Btt-...n 2..(lpm, Ilk for Rick. Dental bllllf 20$-40$ hour Easy dental tinng. t~ tl'llnlng, computer tilqulrld. 1-80M34-5511 xm OCIAN VllWS 6300 S9 It In leauflful la•ltlon l•land liiiiiONT COUNTI'.~ poeldon IV....... & COl'llpUter ..... pi'IOMI, llienflon to ci.teil I mll9t. flelllble, Mon.Fri FT, OrMft Cout Aun Of Rellon. .... 722•2300, l(lrnbltly GRAPHIC bEi10AE1i NEEDED. Strong OUll1t & Phot01hop sl<flls required Muat be able to worll undlf deedlne. Good comn'UllcaUon lklls. lmmecllte hlfing, Fax l'9$Ul'M to (949) ~7939 Rlih Ou11hy Boat sllia Poaltlon. Musi be expel1enced Call 811 0 Al.USON MARINE * 94M42.e<>AT * L~ llnlWl/UlttllAI All' YOM UK!Mnt FtN A S«ln FiNfltelol FNtiur 111 Const/'1'Cll<1tt? No. I a.« ~JIS~For RLllabU, CTtOll Ou IMoUtn. ~ WIJJ Thlin. Mu.st Havt Olan D"""'6 Rtcatrl. Basic Catptlllry Skills cl Tools, Cab/Mt ExptrioiceA PlkS. Call Sieve • 714'952-195l LOAN ORIGINATORS Paid on Apps taken NOT FUNDINGS. 5K + +Your 151 Montll John V. 714-567-8000 Pharmecy RETAIL PHARMACY ClERI</ CASHIER. FT « PT Moft.frl, Coat• U.11' Fu to. 94M54-1496 Pharmeey · RETAIL PHARMACY CLERK/ CASHIER. FT or PT Mon-Fri, CoatallelaFuto. HM54-1496 REAL ESTAft AGENTS We'ftJ looklng for~l1enced and motivated fOf our Balboa Island ice. With a new spacious otlloe. and trained and friendly &talf, Rumbold Realty is a leader on the Island. and we are looldng tor the best. Please call blolcar Don Abrams at (949) 675-4822 or stop by at 302 Marine Ave. on Balboa Island. .... Help wanted fOf exp'd ul11 FT Co111 Men Loe. Pampa Fumhura. 949-.e42·H99 •SALES PARfJFULl TIME' PT for upecale women• 11«1 In F11hlon laland. Alto Mena 1tor1 Full/PT for atocklng, data entry etc. COn11C1 Denyl «Stew 949-759-7917 stCretary Word Perl. NA M', 50wpm, good math NB property mgr near PCH. FAX 949-722-7085 TEACH~ Qual PRE.SCHOOL T11chlr to CO·leech UCl/IRVINE NAEYC. ACCRED. career. Aav .. xtm wkg cond, benefits. $8-$10/HR. FlT 949-854-6030 e ferema1keters e needed Mongage Co. Good~-011 &rNtr, salary+ bonus. caa SIW!l 949-252·8200 . 949-46M833 * THE MAILBOX * Councer fuM·part lime. perm shipping, phones, office 949-642-6262 WINDOW CLEANER Flt No exp nee. wlll train, mos1 haYe good OMV, SMv plus 1>enerrts 949-645-0»s. Pltue be 1war1 thllt the llatlnga In thl• Cl1egOl"f may require you'° call 1 900 number In whlc:ti there 11 1 ch11ge per minute. f'8~1 Ple1H be Wll'/ of out ol area companlea. Check with the local Better BualMn Bureau before you Mnd any money or I•• for 11rvlcea. R11d and undar111nd eny contract• before vou algn. AUTO REPAIR FOR I.EASEi C.M. on Newport Blvd. New Bulldlng-4 Bays, $3500. Otter. ~!'I Co-op 949-642·9699 ,000 A YEAR In your own direct malllng business For atart up package send S 19 .95 to Siar litternallonel, 3960 W. Point Loma Blvd, Suite H, •437 Sen Diego. Ca 92110. ... lly CHMW GORaN wtdi <>MM SHARIF MM1 TANNAH HIMSCH ,,., I "9 ~'4: .. , .,, ~~ I • HEAA 111E DISTRIBUTION • Both vulnerable. West deals. a hand by rcidoubl. • in1,:!i and it allowed Nonh to! rebid spades and, when 1a1 . passed a"OUnd. North closed lhe fl'" uon with a jump to four hearu~. " • NORTH •AK6 o All 09762 •K9 7 Eut's lpede bid& on a auit nu WEST ., 0 J73 EAST ~~,110854 the ace-kin~ virtually no was surely on a flit . South took full tdvantqe of the play. West led the kins 01(· monds and shifted 10 a •J> • Declarer won, ruffed a diamand. drew three rounds of tn.lmps, e O AKQJ • AJ t()"S4 0 1084 3 •82 SOUTH •732 o KQ 10954 0 5 in dummy. Another diamond Nff ~­Paa:ed the grouod for an endplay. ~ Declarer led a club and West c not afford to rise with the tee.;~ dummy's k.ing won. If the infer. from the bidding that East hel~ spades, and West therefore a sini'i- too, was colm:t, cashing the renU- ing high spade would be fatalr.-... •Q63 The bidding: WPST NOmt EA.ST 1• .... 1• Dbl · Rdbl l• Pua 40 Pus Pua Opening lead: King of o SOUTH 2<;i ha ha West would be able to dt.wd •1 mond and so avoid an end . Listen lo the bidding. It will often give you a clue to the dislribution. West's double by agreement showed a belier than minimum open- Instead, declarer eitited with a mond from the table, discardi ••• soacle from hand, and West waf;I. The best that defender could do iwas to cash the ace of clubs, and deU'- er's queen of clubs became the fuN- eEARNe $1000 to $3000 This W8f!#.. Travel. FULL/ PART . TIME Needed. Even WOii< From Home. Not MLM. For More Info can Melissa or Shellah 0 BC»229-5582 GEl'O OF DEBTI !fe can hele.J • Credit Cards Ccnsolida ted • Payments l..cl4'tftd •Interest Reduced •Harassments' Sto I"'~ ACUflA CL '97 Biii, auto, air, pwr pk. CO, ABS. days (003379) $17,895 LEXUS OF W~STMIHSTER (714)89H906 ACURA llMGRl 196 5spd. lllt, alloys, 18dOly celt phone (000918) $13,598 LEXUS OF W~STMINSTER (714~906 ACUAAR GS 'i4 Brown, Auto, loadad, Vtlfy cl11n, 63K ml, S15,559. 949-723·1341 BMW 320! 1882 S-speed. 2-door1 moonroof. charcoal gray, we. 1 owner, $1900.obo 949"650-5426 BMW 5351 '91 BllClc/bleclc, 83k ml, IOldad-dt11lled, good condition, pp $'4,900 949 .. 46-4991 BMW 630CSI ion Silver wlbkie leather, mint cond new tires & brew, Califomia smog, $3750 714-569-0169. BMW 740ll '96 Blacltlblll, 37k ml. new tires. $42,000 very cl11n pp 94MS4-2513 BUICK PARK AVE '94 Lo ml. while, ltl'lr, sqJ&ally cleant (825058) $10,988 Nabefl Oldamoblll Cadillac 714-540.0tOO BUICK REGAL '89 2 Dr. lo ml, llhr, mat1f 1t1r1SI (435943) $5,988 Nibert Oldamoblte Cldlllac 714-54().0100 BUICK REGAL r93 4 Of. V6, 11hr, altoys 6 moral (451237) $7,986 Maben Oldtmoblle Cedlllac 714-540-9100 CAOIU:Xc CAftAA 'ii Lo mites, llhr, CD, alovl. Bal. ol wen (032945) $26.1188 ,..,_ Oldamciblll cadlllao 714-54Q.9100 • • L lif't '"' tnc.... ,,. CADILLAC Coupe OIYllle '12 Lo miles, 4.9 V·8, blue, lthr, marrt >c1r1111 (300415) $12,968 Habafa Oldemoblle Cedlllac 714-5404100 CADiillC DEVILLE' •i7 D'Elegenoe, wht pMan llhr, V8 Northst•· iur:~ $27.988. . (714)M0.9100 CADILLAC DEVILLE '94 Concours, va. ll)llded, ltllr. ABS. (1269843) $17,994 Coate M111 Uncoln Mwcury 714-540-5630 ¢AD[U¢ ELOORADO 1"3 White, orlglnal, dean, new tires, purchled from Nabors. $16,000. 949-675-6128 c:1 s10 Ptaup ·a Ex-cab~ 6, auto trans, new lires, loaded. emtfllld green . $13,700 714-423·1113. CHEVROlETCAVAUER '12 Corwt, lo ""· bile, pwr top .... 1oys & m«e. (239081) S6,968 Kebert Oldsmoblle Clcllllac 7'4-~9100 CHEVY Xstiio TRUCK •ii Silver (T11Bn0Pl S15,499 CONNELL CHEVROLET 714·54&-t~ CHEVY ASTR01H 196 F"' Pwr. (X196869A) $14,999 · CONNELL CHEVROLET 714-546-1200 ckEVY 8Ll2EA ·91 Must see ()(170449A) $18,495 CONN~lL CHEVROLET 714-548-1200 CHEVY S1o BWER '95 White/gray, auto.~o. 111, roof tacit (107583 St~.898 LEXUS OF WE TER ('1'14)892..,. CHEVY Truck Ventin '97 Wl1la (XD147552Bl $18,549 CONNELL C~ROLET 7t 4<548-t 200 CHEVY TRUCK 1/2 TON - Gteen (Vt389e6P) $14,495 CONNELL CHEVY (714)756-1200 CHEVY TRUCK t/2 TON '96 Blue (X139127A) $17,495 CONNELL CHEVROLET 714-54&-1200 DODGE 314 VAN '97 White CW725005Al $16.249 eo~n.t: CHEVY (714)756-1200 Sell your extra household Items in Cf ass!fted rt• u ... FORO BRONCO 1811 Bauer Edhlon. 81ac11 lellher, V-8, CO Stlfeo, loaded. riew bflkes, new . cuslcm wheels, Mint C · . $18,500. 949·548·8"0 949-548-1522 ... FORD CONTOOR Qt * ~::;~sii~~ Costa Mell Uncoln 714-54().5830 ... 319.,.m 'H V12, eonv811111e, ~· new top. phone, oo. 9 I $12,500 obo 94HS0-1' AoOAA XJi L SEDAH 't7 13UM , tt,YP BAUER JAGUAll • 714-MMIOO • JAGUAR XJi SEDANifl $41,995 97-iaO BAUER JAGUAR 714-9"~ • JAGUAR XJi sEbXN 111 $41,995 '7""'7 BAUER JAGUAll 714-M:MIOO • JAGUAR XJi SEDAN r9p 141,995 tr4#1 BAUER JAGUAf{_ • 714-95$"'800 JAGUAR xJ( SEDAN 'th S4t,"5 '7 .... 1 BAUER JAGUAll 714-05M800 Jeg1.11r xJi Ylndill PLtl 197 $44,99$ •t..a...1 BAUER JAGUAI\'" 714-05M800 k/e 'fl lie!; tfea /fk.lte • ' --'" A GOOD ADI -' Call 0 642-5678 STARTING ANEW BUSINESSrr • • • • • • • • • • • ' -• • • • • : WHATEVER You Throw on the Ground is PACIFIC OCIAN Bound IT' s A BEACH' Our oceans provide most of the planet's oxygen, moisture and weather patterns. As the Oceanic Society says, "Without healthy oceans, life as we know it would end"-yet we've treated them as if they were expendable. You ~an't sove the ocean by yourself .. but you can get involved, help focus attention on the problem, and clean up a little part of the planet that needs some loving care. You can adopt a beach! Your Friendly, Full Service Plumbing Co. The ·Local Plumber • 675·9304 UC.#752497 "l ·. "'f':", ·-=-~ 'i • .... •II• """""'~ ' . . . ' ~ ~y '="'"" • • ~ ~. --"E; ·•. -. ii;··--.~ •• 1' • t ·~I .. " · •:!:.U~-l ... ~-· .. ,_. . -..... :~ ,, •... I ~ • • "' • ~ 't : ' ' : o Ir ' : I I I f l::· -''. ., ' ~v·. . . t.. -~ • ~ .. ~~_...._. ........ Ion. All phau1/1m1ll/lg .... --job&.ClEANl 2.0ls, lllf, ,,.. 701 OW. of Tiii. ISi L1400030 714-638--1447 MM1WOM 71~ " " ' ---- EuroCleonP.rs rn ·ol'ilCiii ·™ =IOHAUSMtftf OE~TION 714 342-06 114 437-2704 ... ATCMld!OfC'-~ ~~OIMll!dll Uc'd, Bonded, ,.,.. Ell T.,... 71 .. 212-7143 i . ... ...... ...... .. .:.. ·... -. I 6 ... ' •,.. ' . . ~ ,., '' •• J 4 • .: ~ J.,-, i:·~~: t. . \ . . .1 ... • ' .A..' i .' • I' • . r'' \ ~ ) --~:.' 'r ,;,;: • . ., • " . . •• '"'7'"J.. . '.,"' , I. ;i• ·. . ,. ~ ',. · .. : . '4. Ji . . -· ·~ ~ ••. . • . : : ., {-'J • Insured JUNK TO THE OUllPlll 71 ..... 1"2 AVAILABLE TOOA'YI MM1'3"'5M r.... -• ,. ' .t. ·-- r ... ,17\ ~ c I . I ,. '. ~ ~""' "": ........... ,.., ~-·'**•.00 , S 12..500 ptv-. ~-r1. mCONYT'if ..... ., ... , .. MUD JAOUM 71MU-4IOO JAOlWt lb COOH 'if .... .,..,21 IAUUJAQUAR 71....,.... c:c:::' JtJt 'Ii vu • c:trome ... "'*· CID changer. car phone, 1m1N1c c:ond, 82 5k MIN. S22.2S5~ LEXUS ES aoo 'ti Vttile. ntv, low mllll. co (1770el.:=> $25,295 wus 71U4UIOO lbDI El JOO 'ii lltw, co. rnoonroof. (1'18131~ $25,295 LEXUS 714-$44-4IOO crxos u aoo 'ii . Black. lltv, 3611 rnlllS. co (177391145629) $25.795 TUIT1NWUS 71U4UIOO ~OSESJ00 1N Ulv, mllel, co. chroma "'* (178221152~ S25.795 TUSTIN S 714-544-4IOO LEXUS ES ioo 'ii Liv, co. c:trome .... moon- IOOC. (1~~.995 7USU 4IOO lEXUs £S ioo 'ii ~ ntv, rnoonroof, co. ( ~$23.995 LEXUS 7141U 4IOO llXUIEi*'N co. c:l'woml .... rnoonroof (175951135232) $23.895 lUS1lN l.EXUS 714-544-4IOO mos es aoo ... Castmlr• Belga. .. • co (17664114~ $23,995 TUS WUS 714-$U-4100 LEXUs ES iOO 'ii as. c:trome wheels. (17704/ )34795t=S LEXUS 714-544-4IOO LEXUS ES JOO 'M Liv. 0 mies, co, c:trome w!W. (1782Cl162160) $24,995 TUSTHWUS 7U5U 4100 UNCot.H COHTlHENTAL '95 ~o. air, ful P!lf, tm'lm eass.llhr (1599353~ LEXUS Of WE TEA (714)112.-ol UHCOLN CONTIHEHTAL 'ii loedecl, co. phone. mooM>OI, llovS C425l $16,995 Colt.I Uncotn lllrcufy 71~ uNCOtH MARK vi '91 Loadeel, ASS. lltv. 11oy$. lo rl'ils ~) $7991 Costa Uncoln MarCUfY 714-640-5a0 lilen:9deJ Beta 500 SEC '15 Ort cond, $9500 ":u=+ •******* ~mosan'i1 $42,915 t7'42M BAUER JAOUM 714-tsMIOO . -",. ' . . ' . PUBLIC NOTICE The Calif. Publlc- Utlftt... Convnlaslon REQUIRES that all UMd household good.I mover• pr1nt their P U.C. cal T runber: imot and c:hlutlm print their T.C.P. IUllbtr In d ecM11is- mem_ If you t.Yt • Q08stlon about tha legality of 8 movtf, imo « c:haufl•r, call; PUBUC UTILmes COMMISK>N 714·558-4151 MERCURY SABLE 'II LOIClld, ASS. PW. POI.. ~ (161453«3) $12.998 Cotta ..... Uneoln Ml«:ury 71w.4Wa0 lll«Cury Si)ie 'if Loeded, ve. k.t ""'· 11oys, 1o ml (1658036) $10,997 Cost.'"" Uncoln Mtfcury c\)14~4().M30 • MER RY vWQO 'ii a-i (X183006A) $1~~ CONNELL CtltvAU\.ET 71"4$-1200 MtallbWll Edlpee GS-T 'II 8lllorY' IUlo ••• k.t pwr peck. co.-ek m1 <0142501 sit,898 LEXUS 0, WEStlllNSTEA (714)ttU90e NlSSAN PtCKUP 1tl0 NC, SHEU.. AMlfM CASS, XLNT COND. S3t99. MM42.f777. NISslA 200 sx 'tf Blk. 5sod(X1457438) $11,749 CONN~LL CHEVROLET 714-54$-1200 OLDS EJGmY EJGKT 'tS Auto, air. PoWT llkge. llhr. aloo/I. clc, tit. (824736} $10,898 LEXUS OF W!STMIHSTER (71•}112.-oe 6l0Sii08il AURORA IOK ml. wfll pt!, tan llw, ~. bel. o1 wan. (100803) $28,988 ,...,.,. Oldtmoble CedlllK 714-54CM100 Olbswoeu SlilOU9ri1 .,. Lo mies.~ cloofl. ntv. co. Bal ol warr.(289913) $20,981J .....,. Oldttnoble Cdllc 71~00 POntilC Tr1n1 Am Convt. 't7 While,' ~. chrome. alovs. pwT. plq)e (212016) $20,898. LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER 714-112.noe PORSCHE iH CAMERA ·es IM. NQ inVnlc, low mileS, $1500 down, ISStSN $17,000. pp MM71-0411 PORSCHE ti I T1r91 '71 Polor blue, dlrit bl111 ntw Int•. , ~ Mvtr been -'*'· tsKrnl. $11,950. MM7W700 Porldle 924$ ... NC. uo . .tlle. good cond, S500 doWn ISSUnl $2950 pp. MM73-o411 TOYOTA,TERCE.L. 'M SUck. NC. 231rimi, LIKE HEWll S9S9S 714-23wot2 TOYOfA CliiiHHER 'ts (X15527SA) $18.250 CONHEl.l. CHEVY (714)$*1200 I ~7 ... 1e33 tneaa: pelndn1 rald~ntlOI (awe ftnlshlng Wood ratonatlOn matthew 949·548-5481 JJ<. 740899 --. -- Friday, Morch 26, 1999 11 CBQSSWORD PIJZZU ~ TODAY'S •. ~ I TOYOTA CAMRY 't7 Gtly. IUo, "'· co. ""'1ln Cl& (026084) $15,998 LEXUS OF WESTWNST'ER (714)192-tiOI The Local Plumber ...... .,.., ......... ... l.OCA19te IUCnlONIC RM I.Ult Dl1K1'0N ......., ......... 675-9304 U7SMf7......_. ORCO Pl.UM HING • DLUN ca•~1GN0 7 -DAYS.'Wal ka.M ..... m ,-·.··4 . ' ' ;J '·,' •, _,. ; '.I ~ ....... 'I ' '. ("1·· -• • '. . I .. Al~tl._.a ..... •II I hC F mla' 548-0769 - .. • ... ,•~I~ I '-.... ~~·-_,rti .. ,,_ .. ,·. ~. . ·. ... ~--·" . . .... . . -. . . I ; ..... 111e Dail '" Pilot Servi1e : Dire1lor