Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-06-02 - Orange Coast Pilotr;- CdM wins Corona del Mar High's base- ball team shoots for the title Saturday at Edison Field after knocking off the top-seeded ~earn in the CIF playoffs. ·- ~ Sports, P"9 7 SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COM'v\UNITTES SINCE 1907 '-..,,..-~ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1999 Shootiilg linked to gangs? RON SOLIMAN I DAILY PILOT Congressman Chris Cox speaks to members of the Newport Harbor and Irvine chambers of commerce after speaking on U.S.-China relations at Ute Irvine Marriot Hotel. Cox says Ointon too soft on · Oiina •Congressman also defends report, says Chinese espionage is 'real,' not simply 'alleged.' FAN H<t fR/OoOJLY Pl.OT Costa Mesa police officer Rlch Allum hands a young girl a bulletin Tuesday seeking information regarding the.shooting death of Yurldia Balbuena on May 29. The 15-year-old victim was pregnant and her child also died. S.J. CAID< ~,., "I assure you the espionage is noJ alleged, tt's real. They took place and ore toking place. n Chris Cox •Police investigate recent wave of graffiti, and if it played a role in the death of a Costa Family heading home IRVINE -The Clinton administration has ~en too soft on China's government when it should be defiantly anti-com- munist, Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Newport Beach) said Tues- day. While engaging the Chinese people is crucial, the United States should not coddle a repressive government that continues to crack down on pro- democratic movements, he added. "The Clinton administration has forsworn a pol.icy of anti- communism,• Cox said at a breakfast speech before the Newport Harbor and lTVUle chambers of commerce. U.S. Representative Clinton has welcomed Chinese leaders to Washington wtren he should be telling them their actions are intolerable, Cox stressed. China is a "police state," he said, adding that in the past 10 years, Russia, the Czech Repub- lic and Poland have all become more democratic while China has become more totalitarian "Our job is to engage (the Chinese people) fully in ways designed to change that,• he said. .Mesa teeIJager and her baby. GRl:cRlsuNG OalyPiot WEST SIDE -Yuridia Balbuena 'may have been the victim of a deadly game of tag. ln the midst of their investigation, police are examining graffiti that was sprayed around the neighborhood where the shooting took place just days. before Balbuena and her baby girl_ were killed. - "The graffiti wJnt-t.tp in a 12-hour period,• said Lt. Ron Smith of the Costa Mesa Police Department. "Was it a pre- cursor to something that may happen? I don't know. But it is suspicious.• Residents noticed the visible tagging • up and down Wallace Avenue over the last week. The graffiti is reportedly the work of a loosely-knit gang called Black •After five months in the U.S., the Balbuena family did not find the American Dream. JrssiCA GARRL"Dt-; IPlt Piot WEST SIDE -They ca.me from Mexico for a better life. But the American Dream turned to a nightmare for the Balbuena farruly Saturday when theu pregnant 15-year- old daughter, Yuridia, died m a spray of gunfire al the family chnner table. Her 3-pound daughter, who was born at Hoag Hospital after she had died, succumbed minutes later due to lack of Clinton needs to state that China's record on human rights and its anti-democratic actions are wrong, be said. Instead of the tough rhetoric of President Reagan, President Friday marks the 10th anniversary of the crackdown on protesters in Beijing's nananmen Square. SEE SHOOTING PAGE 6 SEE FAMILY PAGE 4· :£A1'411U.£1 I OA..,Y Pll.OT A flyer to raise money for the victim's family ls dis- played near the bullet boles from Ute shooting that claimed the We of Yurldia Balbuena. SEE SPEECH PAGE 6 Water district approves -larger budget • Incre~ed costs will not be passed on to customers, officials say. Elbl!GEE lbtf Pb COSTA MESA -Mesa Consolidated Water Distriq approved. a budget that is $700,000 higher than last year's, but officials said water customers should not expect an increase in rates . ... ... The board voted 5-0 last week to approve the $16.5 million budget, up from $15.8 mil- lion last year. The increase is related to the construction of a new colored water treatment facility, which is expected to be finished by July 2000. About $200,000 of the increase is due to higher water costs, because one of Mesa's welli will have to be shut down temporarily for the construction of the new facility, said Margaret Rutle@e, finance director. About l : =CORONA del MAR SCENIC SK FUN FACTS { $500,000 of the budget increase is due to labor costs, including the addition of three new staff positions, Rutledge said. One of them, a water systems oper.aror, will be needed to help morutor Mesa's increased use of colored water. ln the long nm, Mesa will be able to offer customers more stable rates through the use of colored water because it's cheaper than SEE WATER PAGE 4 ~~ ~ More tllail 1-•t food for .. thOuaht The famous ·~ Row• .gain wlll pllr 1 prominent pmt In ""' yMr'I Ccnnl ..... ,.... .... Sc:.nkRun. .,..., ........ .......... .......... _...,. pnMdl,_ ..... .. ,... .. INDEX WEATHER POUClfJIS-·----2 MtKmllCIS --• BIS 7 ==:=.. -t ....... s.w. 1'1c,.2 -2 ..... ' MIWNNIUM MOMENT A teaching contract with OCC 2 Wedne$Cfoy, June 2, 1999 ILMANAC • mfl'Olt'S NOTE: Do you CK someone you know have a landmatk birthday CK anniversary coming up? If so, we'd like to include it In our Almanac section. Please call the information Into the Readers' Hotline at 642-6086; fax It to 646-4170, °' mall it to City Editor SJ. Cahn, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627. You may also send photographs, but please be sure to lncrude a setr. addressed 5tamped envelope. IJ you'd hke it returned BIRTHS . ' M ost recent births in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa •Carlos Bravo on May 1 • Mad1so(I N Gaisford on May 3 • Cole J Hanek on May 3 • Jcl<k H Bucch1 on May 4 • Sean E Campbell on May 4 • Alexander P Oobrenen on May 4 • Nathaniel W Bena on May 4 • Mason J Green on May 4 • Grant A Johnson on May 4 •Charles S Blower on May 5 -. • Kaylee N Eyer on May S • Jackson C Guzzo on May 5 • Melanie Aranovteh on May 6 • Robert A. Gehring Ill on May 8 MARRIAGES Most recent marriages as reported to the Orange County Recorder's Office: COSTA MESA • Christopher R Del Pizzo and Carrie C. McCormick, mamed May 1 in Orange • Stanley J Nowak and Tracy L. Farmer, married May 1 1n Huntington Beach • Felipe Sahagun and Jennifer M. Arensdorf, married May 1 in Hunting- ton Beach • Andrew M Gallegos and Catherine A Chermdk, married May 3 1n Santa Ana • Thomds A Perleberg and Karen M. Hunter, married May 3 in Santa Ana • Umberto Rubelh and Briana L Rei- tano, married May 4 in Santa Ana NEWPORT BEACH • Jon,Hhon W Perry and Tammy K. Trenkmann. mamed April 10 In San Clemente • Edward R. Dade and Kimberly S. Duckw1u. married May 1 in Rancho Palos Verdes • Ch11stopher J. Frye and Pauline P. Kwan, married May 1 in Newport Beach • Dane R MacDonald and Elena K. Sorensen, mamed May 1 1n San Diego • Donald F. Parker II and Lisa L Yniguez. married May 1 In Newport Beach ·• Mark T Phillips and Kmten J Sa1f- man, mamed May 1 1n Corona del Mar REAL ESTATE SALES Recent real estate sales as reported by the Continental Lawyers Title Co. In Santa Ana COSTA MESA • 2184 Canyon Drive, S177,000 • 124 Eucalyptus Lane, S 184,000 • 5290 Knowel Place, S 182,000 • 2293 La Mer Court, S305,000 • 445 Lenwood Dnve, S422,500 • 169 Merrill Place, S198,000 • 2027 Paloma Dnve, S450,000 • 927 w Wilson Street. S 180,000 • 785 W 18th Street, S 130,000 NEWPORT BEACH • 2323 Eastbluff Dnve, S245,000 • 205 Nata, S468,018 • 5 Southhampton Court, S505,000 • 2440 Stanley, S348.500 • 1204 Sussex Lane, S476,000 • 1827 Toyon Lane, S499,000 • 338 Villa Point Onve, S390,000 • 2401 Vista Nobleza, S385,000 DUI ARRESTS The following people were arrested recently on susp1c1on of driving under the influence These people have only been arrested on suspicion of a crime, and. as with all such crimes, they are innocent until proven guilty. NEWPORT BEACH May 22 • Esteban Florez Alvarez, 20, South Gate May26 •Helen Racheal Patten, 31, Newport Beach • Benjamin Joseph Englebrecht. 25, Newport Beach May JO • Gina Darke Robertson, 28, Santa Ana • William Lester Pat, 48, Newport Beach • Antonio Avila Garcia, 25, Huntington Beach May J1 • Jorge Vicente Reyes. 36, Huntington Beach VOL 9J, NO. 129 I THOMAS H. JOHNSON. Publisher WIWAM LoeDIU. Editor STaVl.U .... M~fdltor TINA llaiMIA~ AMtant M.n.g1ng Editor s.J. CAHfl • Oty Editor MTllDNYNCIC. N9ws Editor ..,_~ 5pottl Editor MMCW._ ........ ..,..~ 'Dlllillr'ldb .... ----" l a 'fW tdcs•• &MAJ•••• ....... ----Ollf"1utllll~ . , local · voices • Grandparents bring warmth and knowledge to elementary school classrooms ]ts.SICA GAAAbON ~,..,. I n the struggle to i!nprove local schools, Jim Wittkower and Trish Ramser believe they have a secret weapon. •we really trunk there's a lot of grandparents out there who have time on their hands,• said Ramser, 65, who volunteers once a week in ner grandchildren's classrooms at Mariners Elementary School. •we work with the teacher so she can get more done,• said Wittkower, 73, who couldn't volunteer to work in his own children's classes because of his job. Since retiring 12 years ago, he has made up for that with a vengeance. He started in Florida as a school volunteer. Since moving to Orange County to be closer to his grandchil- dren, he spends a couple days a "week at Mariners and also travels to Brea to help out in hls other grand- son's classroom •I get down on the floor. I like to get do.wn to their level," said the for- mer executive, who is always shan>ly dressed in a dapper suit. "I work with them on anUunebc, and sight words. The tlung about grandparents, we can quietly ht in.• PHOTOS BY BRIAN P08UOA I D~Y Pl.OT Grandparent Jim Wlttkower reads to Mariners Elementary students, from left, Julien Crockett. Cahill M~ei, Jennifer Kalmbach and, far right. Allison Granzella during class Thursday morning. "They call me 'Papa,•• be added. Wittkower and Ramser, along with Mariners Principal Mary Ann Ehret, believe there are many more retired people with extra time that could be well spent bent.over young heads - whether or not they have grandchil- dren in the area. · In a series of letters and meetings, the two have been trying to mobilize the retired community to go back to school. They say sue}\ volunteer work offers benefits to both young and old. •1t•s the best part of my week,• swd Ramser. Students in Noreen Kamimura's first-grade class say it's the best part of their we~k. too. "She reads Wlth us,• said hrst- grader Gavin Arblaster. •Sometimes, she gives us candy," added Claire Ramser. Once, said students, Ramser brought something even better than candy to the classroom. "She brought her cat, H said Han- nah Sizer. "But she wouldn't come out of her cage." More families these days have two working parents who are not avail- able ·to spend hours in the classroom, so grandparents are needed to fill the gap, Ehret said. "It's great to cement the bond between grandparent and child, loo,• she saicj. And if students can't be with their own grandparents, it's an added bonus for them to spend time with someone who can fill that role. "A grandmother's pre rogative,,. Ehret said of the usually forbidden treats. About three-quarters of the 20 stu- dents in Kamimura's class said tbeu grandparents live too far away lo vis- it them often. "We bring in a lot of warmth and love,• said Ramser. Grandparent Trish Ramser helps Mariners Elementary students Robert Difrancesco and grandson Charlie Ramser, right. with a math assignment Thmsday moynmg. The return of the drive-in movie Drive-in movies may be dying off across the country, but Newport Dunes Resort is offering moviegoers an alter- native outdoor venue. Feature films will be shown on a 9-!0;0t by 12-foot screen on the shores of the 100-acre waterfront resort now through Sept. 4. Movie watchers are invited to stretch out blankets and bring lawn chairs to watch the popular and classic flicks. Campfires are a1IO available for marshmallow roasting. The following is a movie lineup through Saturday, June 27: • Friday, June 4 -"Thoop Beverly Hilb,• rated PG • Saturday, June 5 -"Lost in Space," rated PG-13 •Friday, June 11 -•0pera- tion Dumbo Drop," rated PG • Saturday, June 12 - •crease,• rated PG • Friday, June 18 -·willy Wonka and the Chocolate Fac- tory," rated G • Saturday, June 19 -•The lluman Show,• rated PG • Friday, June 26 -•Ever After,• rated PG • Saturday June 27 - ·vou've Got Mail,• rated PG Parking at the Dunes is $6 per car. For more lnformation, call (9"9) 129-DUNE. Bank of. America promotes OC resident Seen Foley, Bank. of Ameri- ca's small business bankin~ market executive, has beeD promoted to seniOr vic8 prali- dent. He is re1J>OD14b1e for sales and relattcwwbtp manage- ment for Denk of America's small biuilnw customen in IN BRIEF Orange County and the South Bay area of Los Angeles. "Sean leads a large team of small business bankers dedi- cated to providing products and services to companies with annual 541es between $1 mil- lion and $10 million in his geo- graphic area," said Doug Sawyer, Bank of America exec- utive vice pre5ident and man- ager of the Southern Calif oroia small business banking divi- sion. "We're proud to recog- nize hitri With this very deserv- ing promotion." Before joining the small businea banking team, Poley spent three yean as regional sales manager · for bUlineu ban.king in the ~e County aree. He managed a Bank ol America branch in San Diego County, and wu a business banking Nlei olflcer. Before joining Bank of America in 1994, Foley was in business banking with Wells Fargo. His career began in 1988 in con- sumer and commercial ban.k- ing with PNC Financial in Pittsburgh. Foley has a ~achelor's degree in accounting and busi-· ness administration from the University or Pittsburgh. He and his family live in the Coto de Caza area of Orange County. Positions open on Costa Mesa committees The Costa Mesa Oty Coun- cil needs indMduals to serve on four city c:ammittees. The Advtloly Committee of Teens is made up of high school ltudenta and lerVes u a sowxting baud for the COUDdl on youth activities and issues. The Child Care and Youth Services Committee makes and distributes dUectories for child care teen servicm. The Human ReJatiom Com- mittee adViles the COUDd1 on social issues such .. diversity anC:1 race reJatiom, ad pro- duces a public •~ terevi- sion show. 1be Redeteqnent and Residential Rababi11tation Committee ll8l'V8I as an advi· sory board on houling~ted and neighborhood llsUM. Interested • ~ should submit a ..._ of Inter- est to the d~ COUDdl. are optional. The d111M for submisllom ii 5 p.a. cm Mon· day, June 14. Mal8rlall a.y be malled to Costa ..._ City Coundl, P.O. 8cm 1200, C-.. Mete 926ll·l2DO, • lland· dalivered to Ott ..... " Pair Drtve. news stories, illustrations, tdrto- rial matter Of edvertiMments herein can be reproduced with- out written permmion of copy- right ownef'. WIATlll SUIF POLICE FILES HOW TO REAOt US ~ The llmes Orange County (800) 252-9141 ~ C'-'fled (949) 642·5678 Display (949) 642"'4321 lcltoNil News (949) 642-5680 5pof1S (Mt) 57~23 News. 5pof1S , .. (M9) 646-4170 f-mel: cWtypllotea~.net Mllrl Ollloa ...... OMce (Ml) 642-4Jl1 IUllnall f• (Ml) Ut-712' TDWllRAn.5 Balboa 67155 CoronadelMal' 67156 Costa Mesa 7M6 N9wpott Beach 67155 Nl\1'pOft Co.st ,7156 WNlMCAIT LOCATION SIZE Wldge ..•. .J-5+ 1IW Nlt•nn .. ~ .. ........ M+-...,...,..J..s._ QM .......... - TIDES TODAY First low 6;15 e.m ...••... -0.2 Flm high 1 :05 p.m •..•••.. 3.3 Second low 5:08~ ....... 2.6 Second~ 11 :20 p.m ....... s.o ........... ..o.t Mostly cloudy skies today with a chance of early morning showers. We should Nve partly cloudy sides in the .ttemoon. The swell ls out of the south-south- w.st for waist-to shoUlder-hlgh .... Sell Wiii be hMd- high • the points lfldrwfl.Anew ........ ,_In Ttuldlr farh11d•-........... ........... .. .,. •• Doily Pilot Wednesday, June 2, 1999 3 ·- ; 1be boisterous joy of grandfatherhood ~ar slams into office building ; A U I did was write a colwnn : welcoming ow grandson · to the World. He \vas our first grandchild and it sec1ned a reasonable thing td do. The colwnn was strictly for tum, for his g·randma and par- ents, his AunLCaroLand.-(now) Uncle John and, of course, for the scrapbook. · About a year later, I dared write another, even though l fig- ured mosl readers could care less. 1 \vas wrong. The kid ana his progress ' through life became a popular topic. When many months went by without a iravis ~lumn,. there was always a Hey, you · haven't written about Travis late- ly. ls he OK?" Once, when he came out from Denver for a week, I was push- ing him about in a cart at the Ralph's (then Hughes) in East- bluff. ¥we turned around a cor- ner, a woman I didn't even know , turned her attention from the canned goods and exdaimed, •This must be the Trav. • After my oration at the annual meeting of St.op Polluting Our Ne\vport a week and a half ago, an adoring crowd swanned aroWld the speaker's rostrum to talk further about some or the environmental topJcs I had cov- ered in my discourse. Alnid questions about open space, overdeveJopment, El Toro and traffic phasing ordinances, one lovely lady asked: "When are you going to write about Travis again; it's been a long tim • •• "1Wo weeks,· I said. ·Right after his seventh birthday.· Sunday afternoon, my wjle and I drove the 90 minutes to Parker, obout 20 miles south of Denver, to help celebrate the occasion. Our daughter and son-in-law had tried to sell us o(f coming down. It's going tw be hectic and loud, they warned, "I mean, real- ly loud,• Di;µla said. She suggested we join the boys and the paternal grandpar- MEET OUR MEMBERS Mc.lwr fut1 I yw °""""""'' ,,... "°""' THE FRED COL,UMN Ired martin ents at a pizza parlor Saturday night, but we really wanted to be there for the kid's party. Distance had caused us to miss too many events in our grandboys' lives when we lived in California, and we weren't going to skip any more. Indeed, the main reason we chose Col- orado over other splendid retire- ment places was so we could watch Travis and his kid brother, Brett, just 3, grow up. My daughter was wrong. The party wasn't loud. It was thun· derous, jarring, ear-shattering. Being no fool, she had the party at the town rec center. a place' about the size of Harbor High. There were 16 boys in atten- dance. Even when they were slurping the gooey cake, the noise level was beyo?ld belief. The cacophony soared to a new high durin~gift-opening, then literally roe ed U1e building when all these baseball players assaulted the pinata. All I could think of was how sound vibrations had caused the Tacoma Narrows Bridge to shake itself into a watery grave. Louder begat louder. The Trav's dad, Steve, who could eas- ily outshout all the Rockies fans at Coors Field if he really wanted to, struggled to be heard above . the joyous din. My wife and daughter, both KA1hl•n1 CUrrk Member fun I Year R.Hlui I IXlllldn"t bdirvt how f:ut J IOJ! 23 lbi. offal. and 12'6. bolly f.r.i!My bd no kwigcr huni! I wiih l kn..-lw orlicr how ,..,I[ yap. Wliy did )'II" join Sbape-·Upl "' XJobia and itmlgdl uaining WOlbd. I would Ila~ itll'l1'!li M>llO'. I "'1ly lfd gmt1 and am enjoying ancilc! ] WIS 00! frding writ and my~ W.1$ h11ning. l kn~ I nttdtd 10 gt1 in slupt', I 1""n _. an ad b~Up&joi~. Wlial 411 ,_ lili.r lbM1 ~Up! I fle'l'U fd1 liU I wqcr and I :1111 ~ wdaimed i.,. tht, sufl: nw .Jr 11 Shipe-Up rnlly loob out !in my wd-Ocing; dM:J ore. Beautify Your Yard! .-., -.1 .. ,. .... Liillotlal! . .,...,... Sperle•• We have ooer 40 yean comlRn«l _,,Ice In th'8 area. Our quality, creuttolty and .en.tee are unmatdied. Togeeher 1ve uitll ,_ cmw tf aU /PU landacape and muanry llftda. schoolteachers with ye.an. of yard • N · · ed ' duty behind them, gave me 'One 0 one lll)Uf lil of those "canlcha. take it?" looks. "accident. which caused . There was no relief within $ ' earshot when the entire screaJJl· about 1.:>,000 in damages, ing mass segued to the location authorities say. of Phase 2 of the 'fi'av's party: the GREG RJsuNG --SWUlllllUlg-pool---.,--,.-~+---===::-:c:;:;::.;;;._--.,-Now tbls is not your basic Dlty f6lf natatorium. You could fit four NEWPORT sf.ACH _ Da~d Olympic-size pools within this Fitzgerald's world literally ca1ne huge expanse of water. crashing down Tuesday mq_ming, II is fully enclosed and the I Actually, 1t was a wall in the bouquet of chemicals was 4~·year-o1d sales manager's brea~taking-literally. Howev-I office that was damaged when a A 67•year-old man accident .. ' ly drove his car Into a Campus Drive oHIC.. Tuesday morning. --- The driver may have mJstakenly hit the wrong pedal. No one was injured. PHOTO BY OAN """"" er, gi~en the vast number of little Ci\J' came barreling through it and boys m that water, there is Prob-I ran up onto his de_sk. One of the ably ~o such thing as too much spinning front tires eoded up chlonne.. ' I about two feet from his face. . One litt1~ cb.ap was, temporar-Fitzgerald wasn't injured and ( • and without injuries. When the car w\S remoVed from. the building, ii sparked a sntall electrical fire that was quickly extinguished. However, the damage was done. Nevertheless, he ii' happy to be alive. ily, left behind 10 the shower, but neilflEV was l._.e elderly couple the nose count.at the end of the I inside the car. ~ut everyone day was what 1l was supposed to involved was ratlle'd by the niid· be and, one by on~, the moms morning accident. . came to collect theu boys. I "It shows how precious life The mo~ent lhe.y an:tved really is,~ Fitzgerald said. ~My home, Trav_is and his neighbor-fa1nily and I were talking this hood buddies began a cul de sac f!eekend about bow fortunate baseball game that ended two I we are. And then this happens, hours later onI:,: because of dark-and you try to put things in better n~s. Then he inhaled a pasta perspective.~ diru;ier and prepared to go to Fitzgerald, who lives near Jeffs house next door !or a sleep-I Coto de Caza, was talking to over. . . . someone on the phone -he My ears w~e still ~91?9· the doesn't 1ren1en1ber who anymore scent of chlonne was still m my ..:.... when the white Toyota Camry nose and my couch-potato state sinashed through the wall. The was such that it took a moment 67-year-old driver \vhose car was or two to re~e that a small arm parked next d~or at Coco's had locked ttsell aroWld my Restaurant, may have hit the necAk. . . 1 d . wrong pedal, causing the car to surpnsmg Y eep voice bolt forward. whispered into my ear: "I gotta With most of the car resting go no\V. Thank you for my pre-precariously in his office on the sents: Thank you for ,c;~rrun9 to ! 4500 block of Ca1npus Drive. my b~day party. _G rught. Fitzgerald sat in shock for a Noise? What noise? n1oment before he realized the • FRED MARTIN is a former Newport Beach resident who now writes from J his new home in Fort Collins, Colo. l;li column appean W9dnesdays. passengers might be mjured. He jumped onto the roof and pried 011e of the doo.rs open. The cou- ple managed to get out safely The car had crushed a fax machine and some computer equipment. Along with structural damage, Fitzge rald was told it will costabout $1 5,000 to replace everything. •Mini Tacos • Chingolingas •Guacamole "It's a whole dilferent baU game from here ~n out,• he Sdld ~u I had ntne Uv'es, I'm sure I jus~ lost one.• As he drove home, Fitzgerald couldn't help but cover lumse1J with his convertible roof. He will be away on business the next couple days and ho~ his offi ce will be repaired when he returns. •Mini Burritos • Taquitos •Chips & Salsa S a, ijce, Beans, Guacamole by the Qua chilacfas, Carnitas, Azreca Chicken Salads Cal(yo11r 11earest location for pick up e Costa Mesa Newport Beach near ?foag 1£ospitaf on tfu Ptninsufa 49) 642·1142 (949) 675-6855 Go for the Excitement! •fully automa1it 35mm IJ SLR will\ ~ble bll'llt-il ftasll.. • Smalltt and iOJtter than tver betofe. with laster Ii and many other imprawed' fundioRI. • • Higfl.speed seleCtable 7-polnt autotocus S)'$tem linked to 35-ztlllf mdeflng sysllmS. • fuly compatiblt 1lrith over SO Ef Lenses and many ottier accessories. EOS Sophistication in Style. t!Jh • and Technology. ---------------------:~!~._..,-"'·'""'*""'.,.,,. ,_. Photography's Small Wonder 4 UQUl,..lm! • World's SITliflest & liv/llest 3X zoom camm {• ol January, 1998). ·•-m-111s>-. """"" """'""'"" '"""°'· •Canon's e.clutivl AIM control system. • l·Poinl Hybrid II fOr lrnprOYed 1ocusing perfonna:flCI. eos ELAND Kit DIGITAL Intelligence · 6 Photographic GENIUS. .- • SUper-compaet. lghlweigfll dloital CMnefl ... __ ...,, •Choice o1102• x 76B or 512 x314 molullafl modes, • ""~ --•-•Omm i2t-70mrn equiYalent) 112.M.O p(llJM' mom ltl'IS. • Oplical mflndlr pill 2-llltll m LCD kw ptl'tirw, pla)'blckand tlmlfl control ·;a:;-s,,;-;;;;:,~ s39 DJOITAL CAMl•A 9 ...... IMmatotlol'qul!t.N1111J Sl!f. •4.11111 *"-locUlillD-llw ;A• due~ •l ___ _ ----...... • ~ ligfll1JUlclt llnlt Clnigrl tlCILaS size, ~ ll(Mlf • -,,.,. APS "'""'· --Chl""{MOC), Priot "'°"' °""- EL?. • s299 95 370 Z with ca,.., film & batteries Ultra Smart Ultra Compact. ~ir;;:~1,.. Ultra light • UIJKOl'flPICI Ad'llnCld Piiato .,. SlR IWnlll. • """'""' 3 .... -us.,..,, ... N """-• C.000•-.... -· •""' '°"'""" wih Ef-.. EOS -eos I}( Lite ... , •• lligfl ,,,.~ .......... ~Ji ........ ......... __ _ •t110111--12•••u--.,.,. ..... .....,., .............. . ---............ , ......... I 77 ...... 1 ....... •Cl ;J ,,-. .... ...__,,re• 11•111a11r-•J1C 4 Wednesday, June 2, 1999 • • ' WATER CONTINUED FROM 1 imported W6ter, offloals have S8ld. Colored water is found in underground aquifers and is high m quallty, but must be treated to elinunatc the tea- rolored tint nnd sbght suHur smell. In other mdtlers, the board also dWdidcd a contract to a firm for the design-build phase of the colored water trecttment fdc1hty JW Contracting Corp , 11l con1uncllon with Kennedy/Jc•nks C'un.,uJting, , secured the $11 million con- tract, spokeswomdn Lynnette Round srud JW Conliut tiny's lnd Wds lowt>r thiin two other ltrms COM Enqtnt>cnn4 Construc- tors subnUltt>d d 't.>1d o( $12 rrulhon dnd Bld rk & Vedtch subrn1llc>d ct bid of neusly $16 rrulJ1on Both t UM ctnd Uldck & Yt>ctlch ...,, ill r(•cc1ve $25,000 o,llpPlld'> lw thc•11 wo1 k on lhc proposc1l'>, dS previously dpprovccl hy lhe bodrd. The nPxl step in the process 1s to mdkc d scheduJ- mg pldn [)1.,tnc t sldff will meet with consultants lo work out d M hcdule thdt will meet tht• completion dead- lrnc> of July 2000, Round said FAMILY CONTINUED FROM 1 oxygen. The bullets came through the thin door of the converted garage the family called homo and one hit Yuridia in the chest. She bled to death before paramedics could get her to the hospital. Now, friends say, all Uie Bal- buena family wants to do is get back to the town in Guerrero, Mexico, where they came from. • They have been in Costa Mesa Cor five months. "The whole family is leaving the U.S.,• said Omar Albear, whose family came from the same town as the Balbuenas. •Her father is afraid the same thing will happen again.• . The Albear fanuly rented space m their garage to their friends from Guerrero for $100 a month while Yundia's father struggled to find a JOb and get the family on its feet. Now the Albear family, led by 17-year-old Omar, is trymg to raise enough money to send the Bal- buenas back to Mexico. "They are a nice family. They were alwdys together in good things and bad things,• Omar said. 1\vo days after the attack, Omar and some of Yurldia's mends went door-to-door around the Wallace Avenue neighborhood, asking for donations. . Working-class neighbors, many of whom can scarcely afford their own necessities, opened their .., ... COSl'A MESA -_.... \ Belbuene ---beell .... tor elmailt two mmllw ....... =.=-s~ they do not know why. The SS-year.aid didn't speak English V8l}' well, aDd, to make matters more difficult, lbt waa pR?gDADl,md had just t.mmllret- ed to the United State.. But Yuridie was nevertbeWli determined to do well in ~ said Estanda High School Allis- tant Principal Steve 8enignQ. She used to come by his office for help with her school· work, and he frequently saw bet carrying books. Then, dbout two months ago, around the time her pregnancy became noticeable, she stopJ>+:l coming to school. pocketbooks and the friends quickly rai!.ed more than $500. But it won't be nearly enough to pay for coffins, burials and plane tickets back to Mexico. So on Tuesday, as reportefs and news cameras congregated out- side his home, Omar sat down and carefully wrote out a flier in both English and Spanish. He and lus friends plan to take the flier to the beach .and ask The Long Beach Coin eJ. ~ollectih~ Expo Pre.Je11u The 3~ A[uuuil Sumnier Expo June 3-6, 1999 / LONG BEA< H C ON\l '\J J 10:'\ lf ~ l fl~ If)(} So. Pi11t/l11t'., Lt111,c1 Beacp, Calif. (Entrance eJ Parlaizg On Pine A11e.) ShoiNiu phone(562) 4'J6-J6J6 ~ llOURS: THURS-SAT 10am-7pm, SUN 10am-3pm Coins • Stamps • Sportscards • Phone Cards • Collectibles •Jewelry • U.S. & Foreign Coin Auction--i · FEATURING: Auctions by Heritage Numismastic Auctions, Ponterio & Al)~ociates, and George Fred erick Kolbe's Fine Numismatic Books Plus LOBEX 2 '99 (stamp section) Featuring "The Cinco De Mayo Stamp.'.'· lOTHANNUAL HERITAGE REGATfA a t NEWPORT HARBOR NAUTICAL MUSEUM SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1999 What: I Oth Annual H~ritagc Regatta with classic boats, cars and yachts. Day-long festivities include a dac.sic car, boat and model (Maritime Modelers scale RIC boats) shows. Where: Classic car, boat and model show-$ are open to the public between I and'·s-p m. in the Nautical Muc;eum parking lot, 151 E Coast Hwy , Newport Beach Guided tours of the Museum from 10 a.m. -5 pm Boat Races: Two classic vessel races, reaturing Harbor 20s wi ll rac.e inside the harbor, while the larger classic boats will race between Newport and Balboa Piers between I and 3 p.m. What Else: A BBQ and awards ceremony at the Museum aboard the Pridt of Newport . All of the Heritage Regatta events are open to the public. Adml11ion: Museum Tour • Adults, $41 children 12 years and younacr, SI . BBQ -$1 5 per person, begins It 5 p.m. Race eatry fee1 SlO per b<>at. Race entry spots arc still available. For more lafo,..tlOa, call ~ Naadal M•e-at (Ht) 671-1111. .,... .... l!JWI"' __ ""'t attending school ;tr_: ='t.:: ......... do --.1n. county· ------Who ... ~x.t~ ~ ~be8bleto ~~=a' written refetal and tent a sec· oftd copy ol the referral to the ~ICbool. W6m tbey J'9C8ived the Nf--1. teacben at the county IChool cnad. tile tor Ywidia. But libe ssbawed up. Unda aQ. the lead leaCber Dl the Mela lite of \tl8 county ~ said she tried to cont4ct the girl, but had no pbQ08 number or address to go by. Mike Murphy, who heads special scrvicetr"for the New· ~-Mesa cmtnct and handles reterrat<> to county schools, said tourists to contribute. On the Spanish flier, Omar also included a grainy, black-and white photo- copy of his friend. "l wanted to do it in edlor," he said. "But I didn't have enough money.• They also put up fliers at Estancia High School, where Yurldia was a student until her pregnancy became noticeable. Assistant Principal Steve Benigno, his voice weighed with sadn~s. said he gave permission • No Con Loaru DO Giie fian lbi9 comaly cxmtacl· eel 119 a8ke In an effort to i9edl YuQdtA. =-two weeks bad J)Mled ... ............. . a4u~::.; = 4 tD mna.ct Yuridia Jn the rondng weeks. Offldall from both the county and the district Mid it was Ywicti8'1 -and her parents' -~bWty to get to the IChOal. Newport-Mesa Supt. Robert BUbot said Tuesday that he WclS trying to learn more. about \'urldla. •SIJe belonged in school," he scUd. •1s there something we all could hiri'e' done? ... Would that bave made a difference in th.is incident? I don't know the answer to that. ... but I think we have an obligation to find out." Hogan said about 5() gill.S t for the fliers to be posted around campus. -, He said he knew Yuriclia weU. She was always in his office. Not because she was a discipline prob- lem -she wasn't. Benigno said 'she was always seeking help with her .schoolwork. Benigno described Yuridia as "an ordinary, everyday student." She had biends. She lugged her books around. She struggled with her schoolwork. "We'd ta& a~ baby, and CIAL • Equity Line of Credit ~:::::;....--~ •Low Rates • Conven Variable to Fixed • Refinance/New Loans • Pre-Qualifying Available Call Today 1-800-469-5919 949-675-6500 cs will f>e ettdirtd 11 the clo1e ofloan. www.scavi~nancial@home.com Teak is now Affordable! We Buy Direct, Eliminate the MiddJcman ! Compare our Prices! T-~-Costa Mesa Showroom by appointment 1240 Logan Ave. Unit H (comer of McCllntock & Logan) (714) 544-7288 from Costa Meta attend the school In ~dditioo to regul4lr academic classes, the girls alio learn about breast-feeding. .child-tearing. and bow to pre- vent ~ In their lives. Am>l9 Orange County, preg .. 1MllCV ratai among teenagers are lo'Ver than they have been m years. While true in Costa Mesa, Hogan said five pregnant eighth-graders have reported to the school in the last two weeks. Although She had never met :Yuridia. H~an said she and her students were affected by the news of her death. ~They all know dbout it," she :i;aad. And gang violence .ls some· thing that's on all of their minds. In d ·recent swvey, Hogan said. 95% of her students said gang violence or violence was "a severe probt~· in their lives. when she was due. I'd ask her if she was scared, and she said she was,• Benigno <said, noting that Yuridia did not speak English Ou- entry. · •One thing stood out about Yuridia, be said: "She was always smiling.• To contribute lo a fund for th~ Balbuena family, send donatiODJ! in care of Steve Benigno, Estanci& High School, 2323 Placentia, Cos, ta Mesa: or call Benigno at (949) 515-6500. • • • R96 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA• ,.::5·7626 . *tQ~ " l' , Daily Pjlot " , ., ' . ' • . Choose from the 'following HOT courses:· Accounting An~hropology Arabic Art .. Astronomy Basic Skills Biology Busi.Dess Chemistry Chinese Computer Computer Networking Dance ' Economics Emeritus . English ESL French Geology . ' Health Education History . · Humanities Italian Legal Assistant ••• ,Management and Supe,rvision Marine Science Mathematics Music ·, Philosophy Physical Education Political Science · Psycbology . Quality Assurance Real Estate Sociology Spanish Special Edacation Spee~ . 'Dlitelmd THlllm Vlem• e1e . -.... .., ... _. ___ .,..,. ____ ...... ~ ........ _ ..... -- Wednesday, June 2, 1999 5 .. ,, 1 6 'NedneSdoy, Jurie 2, 1999 SPEECH CONTINUED FROM 1 Cox sugg81ted that Jle,U1ng ~Uy a~ble Jilfilrnet -~•,r.,tion tec:mbl®)', Which WQ\ll4°11lOw ttil'Cb'irieM ~ pi~·' \0 obtain inf ormatlon from outsido the county, could be one step toward encouraging dfomoaacy. Cox 41.so defended his report on Chi.riese espionage of U.S. military te<:.h.nology, Sdymg the thefts definitely happened. •1 assw-e you the espionage is not alleged, it's real,• he .said. "They took pl.ace and are·tak- ing pl.ace." 1n the week following the release of the report, compiled by a nine-member bipartisan House comrnittr:e he chaired, Cox has been careful not to bash the White House. He acknowledged that the Clinton admirustration has begun taking steps to shore up secunty and agreed that tradel with China ls .necessary and ' ' ' ' \ delirable. RelpOnding to • qu.tkJa . fromtbe~C.0. .... that my Wbll Home olkMI. """"""" Clll*m. .a mft9d in .. , • ..,... ... 'Heuo••U..S St4tel n8'dS to *'•• bl ..... tJO e111na=-.,,..: ..... more bel1nced th~"M .. ship. 1be excell trade delldt tranalates ~ Imo ~ the Chblele govet'DIJlerlt can use to build up ltl military, he warned. CoX admitted that Republi· cans Will not be able to change "' China's noriDal trade status - what used to be known as •most favored nation• status- dwing the annual talks on the issue that are scheduled for th.ii month. It would take a two-thhds vote in both the House ahd Sen- ate to overturn Oiilton's expect- ed. endorsement of Cb1ria as a normal trade partner. "We can't even muster a two-thirds vote in the Senate for the balanced budget amend· ment, • Cox said. •Expires 615199 0 ~ Q u AND EVERYTHING WILL BE SOLD AT ••• 7oo/o UP off ndceted TO Price NOTHING HELD BACK JUN I 1999 .....,., ..... ____ °" -~--)-~-(, r r --~ -__ -(TJ11f: m L 1· r. I. ------ Rtai!ltr•tlon Begin 8:20 a.m. Women'• 5-K l8Ce Warm Up 8:4$.... 2 Mair.-. w.a Men'• 5-K R8ct 9itl a.& IUdl' l·K DtlJlllll 0... .... 0.1 ........... -- . ' ' Doify Pilot SHOOTING CONTINUED FROM 1 City to prob~ victims' living conditions . • Alley, which may have tried to establish their presence in the neighborhood. When asked about the gang, police would only say it wasn't known for criminal activity. Whether the graffiti provoked Saturday night's shooting remains unknown, but it does draw attention back to a neigh· borhood that bas a lingering stig- ma the city an4 residents have tried to abate. • The West Side has gained notoriety for its crime, something city offidals have made a pledge to combat and reduce. While there hasn't been a burst of ram- pant crime in the area, the neigh· borhood is often portrayed as the worst of the city's lot "It's sad something like this had to happen," said one commu- nity leader, referring to Satwday's shooting. MYou can never predict where these things will happen. Look where those high school shootings occurred. , MI hope the West Side doesn't always have that bad identity. The city and the community have made an effort to change, and there has been a noticeable dif. ference." The shooting is the second this year that may be linked to gangs on the West Side. In April, a fight on Victoria Street between rival gang members ended with a gun- man shooting a man in the leg. No one has been arrested in con- nection with that shooting. Yuridia, who was seven months pregnant, was shot once • Family of slain girl should not have been living in garage, officials say.· EusBGEE ~""' WEST SIDE -·Where most people park their cars and store their lawn mowers, a 15- year-old pregnant girl called home. While the priority is to find the person who killed Yuridia Balbuena and her baby, their deaths raise another issue on the West Side -crowded and substandard living conditions. Balbuena and her family paid $100 a month to live in the garage of a Wallace Street res- idence. "l\'s not acceptable to be liv· ing n garages,• said Peny Valantine, development ser- vices manager for the city. #We'll be following up on that." in the chest when someone fired through the door of the garage where she and her family lived. Doctors delivered her 3-pound baby girl by cesarean section, but the baby didn't survive. The gunman fled on foot through a field before jumping over a chain-bnk fence. He was desaibed as a Latino male in his late teens to early 20s, between 5 feet. 7 inches and 6 feet tall, with a \ I Sabatino Tommy Peter ., Phil Vmce Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner U11k!.e 111ne rooCD a c11n1na ,_ Hallable r~ VC*P blUlM9 llltftt11p and prt~.,~ runn.~ 1 723-0621 Pkue Call For Rtsitnatlons and Dlrtttk>N -\' 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach REGISTRATION ONI Fou~ Pu EN"""' (,o_"' "'"' n '"01oco,.ro) LJ.11 N111o1r . . F1u1 N111o1r LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL Su Aor (ON her 011Y) 111114 0A!l L LL LL -LL-19 LL Aoou11 • LLLLLLL GLLLLLLLLLLLL Cm S111n z., LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL 011n110 '"oo.r LLL -L LL·L.:LLL ------r11111Cl,Al1NO ,,.. S 1 WOMl,.'1 j I MIN I 2M 11 WAii I·• 1(10·1 L L L L T k 11 AH;1 S•U LLLL Aor C111roon·Aovu Ao\~11 LLLLLLLLLLLLL t-f2 13-11 If-~ »-2' JI>.,. J$-J9 "°"" ....., »M ~ ... ~ 1'0t I M I XI T·SM•U CM•10 Sin LLL • Aor CA11oon-Aovt1 ""'"'' I M l L ... , .. $·UUN $18 L INlll WAIK s 1 s L ,,.,., l·K l•O• I I 2 LLLLLLLLLLLLL 1-12 13-11 .... ~ JS.l'~._,.«M<l ................. "41'0t AOt C11ttOOlY• lc fC1D't •0•1 L L L L 01. I. L L L L >-• s-• 1-• ,_,o ,... •·• 1-• ,.,o MC L VttA L ...... L ... DAit L L - L L c..... L L L L - L L L L -L L L L - L L L L The property owners could face civil or criminal penalties that cany fmes ranging from $50 to $1,000, depending on -the-court's discretion, Valan· tine said. ' The city usually pursues criminal charges only with property owners who refuse to cooperate, Valantine said. "Generally, that's the kind of_ complaint we normally become aware of or s1tuation we become aware of through complaints,• Valantine said. •When you drive down a street or alley, you normally can't tell if someone's living in a gat-age because they keep the door closed, for obvious reasons." Multiple families living in one residence, or people living in garages, has been an ongo- ing issue in some West Side communities, said Dave Salci- do, president of the Wallace Area Improvement Group. ~ The group has lobbied .t City Council in the past f r more code enforcement offi- medium build and shott, dark hair. Pollce·bave not confirmed wit- ness accounts that claim Balbue- na's boyfriend or older brother was seen waving a gun before the shooting. The mother-daughter murder marks the fourth homiade in Cos- ta Mesa in less than a month Last month, a 39-year-old Santa Ana man drove his car onto a school playground and killed two chil- dren, injuring five more. The sus- pect is facing the death penalty after reportedly telling police he wanted to •execute the innocent children." Typically, Costa Mesa has fought to keep gang activity to a minimum. Primarily comprised of Latino members, Costa Mesa gangs vary from those that cers to address such issues on the West Side. Three to four years ago, the council aggressively took on the issue. of people living in garages in the Shalimar neigh- borhood, Councilman Joe Erickson said. City inspectors went from property to property, checking for violations and making sure garages were eonverted back to their intended purpose, he said. When property owners didn'l comply, they were taken to court. Addressing living conditions on the West Side, such as the garage where Balbuena lived, will continue to be a long-term city priority, Erickson said. But the immediate issue is finding Balbuena's killer. "I think the whole occur- rence is very, very sad," Erick- son said. MI think the main issue is the killer is out on the street, not that the killing took place in a garage." plague other neighborhoods, because gang bangers don't fol- low in family footsteps and are nomadic. "Most of the gangs are leader- ship-driven, meaning mem rs go where the strongest leader ts,• SDlllh said. "We target the lea(ier and usually the gang falls apart because they don't have enough critical mass.• Smith added it has been almost a decade since the last gang-relat- ed murder in the area. While there are about a half-dozen gangs active in Costa Mesa today, Smith said the city lias been fortunate not to have many gang-related deaths.· Anyone with information is asked to contact Det. Greg Scott at (714) 754-5197. l\llattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! · 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One Block South of 405 Fwy 545-7168 RUFFLES UPHOLSTER Where Your Dollar Covers Morel WE'vE MOVED 1 BLOCK ·NORTH Club Sofa $10000• OFF Chair $5000• OFF *With a purchase of Fabric & Labor til 6/9/99 1998 H RB A BLVD. COSTA MESA 548-1158 m.;opgu • DllJ• ".212~ 9alrs tW.LOI MME -·- Wednesday, June 2, 1999 . • Sports Editor Roger Cort$00 • 9.49..57 44223 CdM, Woodbridge .in. showdown · • Sea View League rivals clash again today, but this time the CIF Division I championship is at stake. RJOIARD DUNN lbtf Pb NEWPORT BEACH -Long before the season's first serve, Corona del Mar H.igh's boys ten- rus team knew it had something special and that this day would eventually arrive. With the CIF Southern Section Division I championship at stake, Coach Tim Mang's third-seeded Sea Kings will face Sea View League rival Woodbridge today at the Palisades Tennis Club with play scheduled to begin at 3 p.m. CdM, 131-25 in seven years (.840 ~g percentage) under ~ang, is seeking its eighth CIF title, but its first since 1983. The Sea Kings (21·1), who knocked off nemesis Peninsula in the semifinals Thursday, 1i-7, defeated fourth-seeded Wood- bridge (18-4) twice during the league campaign to win the Sea View championship. Coach Joan Willett's Warriors, who beat top-seeded Los Alami- tos in the semifinals, 10-8, cap· tured CIF Division I titles in 1996 and 1997 when David Lingrnan was a freshman and sophomore. The .Ha:'.ard-bound Llngman ~on .mdiVIdual league singles titles m 1997 and this year. He sat out last season. Corona del Mar, which lost in the Division I final last year to CIF TElllllS Peninsula on games, 87-73, topped Woodbridge in the first round this season, 17-1, when Llngrnan didn't play, then edged the Warriors, 11-7, in the second round when the standout played. •It makes a giant difference with your No. 1 player,• said Mang, who expects to use his reg- ular lineup today, a potent nine which includes five seniors - Parker Collins, Sameer Chopra Christian Jensen, Sam Shahmarcll and Curtis Ellmore. ·0u.r seniors are going to have to come through. It's one of our best shots (to win a CIF title). They've been so close the last four years. They've bad a shot every year to win everything.• . CdM, which lost in the semifi- nals in 1996 and '97, is also led by the sophomore doubles team of Brian Morton and Randy Myers, while sophomore.Peter Kubnatic- ki and freshman Cameron Ball have been solid contributors throughout the spring. · "They've been believing (they can win ClF) all year,• said Mang, who has never won a CIF title in boys, but has coached CdM's girls to CIF and national champi- onships. Against Los Alamitos, Ling-. man swept at No. 1 singles, while Jon Sheridan and Brett Van Llnge won three doubles sets as the Warriors defeated the Griffins (20-2) for the sixth consecutive time, including in the playoffs the past four years. C I F D I V I S I 0 N I V I I S E I A l ·L S E M I F I N A L orona del J Mar High's Ty Harper raises his clenched fist 1n triumph as he departs from the field at Santa Ana College Tuesday with a 12-1 rout of No. t::"seeded La Quinta in the CIF Division IV baseball semifinal. The verdict sends the Sea View League champion Sea-Kings up against El Segundo Saturday at Edison Field. DON~/ DAILY Pt.OT On to the stadiu1n! • Harper's pitching subdues the top-seeded Aztecs and the Sea Kings frolic to a 12-1 semifinal tri\Ullph at Santa Ana College. BARRY FAUl.JCNfR lkJttl'b SANTA ANA -Corona del Mar High senior 1)t Harper said Tuesday's CIF South- ern Section Division IV baseball semi.final against top-seeded La Quinta was the kind of game he loves. But since the Sea Kings, let alone the best hitter in school history, had come nowhere cl09e to a game th1S big since 1981, you'd have had to take his word on that. Not anymore. Harper, a two-time All-CIF standout whose reputation has been forged largely with the bat, was masterful on the Santa Ana College mound to help the No. 4-seed- ed Sea Kings post an eye-opening,_______ to p'aise Harper's heroics. 12-1 victory. "He's their best player/athlete The win propelled CdM (19-8) and when it was apparent he was into Saturday's title game at Edi-comfortable and confident out son Field against No. 3-seeded El there, I knew we'd be in for a Segundo (25-6). Game time will tough day,· Demarest said. •Tuey be determined today, but it is have other players, but everything expected to be a morning start. I centers around 'IY· • Harper, in what he termed the Jolwt llNM . With 1Y churning through Aztec best pitching performance of his CoroNI del Mw hitters, the CdM offense finally brilliant prep career, worked 6•/3 Htgh bmeblll heated up against senior rtght- innings to improve to 6-1 and post ~ hander Brian Cisneros. his second consecutive playoff Eric Wiethom's first-inning sin- win. He allowed four hits, all singles, struck gle was the only hit against Cisneros who out five and walked only two. came in 7-1, until CdM senior Matt Larson "lY was virtually unhitta.ble," said CdM opened the fourth with a triple to the spa- Coach John Emme, •He was throwing dous left-center field gap. strikes (61 of his 106 pitches, including first-. 1Wo outs later senior Alex Bottom singled pitch strikes to 15 of the'25 Aztecs be faced), him home, then RBI singles by Larson 8.1).d he was mixing in his off-speed pitches." s'enior Mark Hatfield and senior Nate Lem~ La Quinta Coach Dave Demarest, whose merman keyed a fow-run filth to give Harp· seven-time def ending Garden Grove er and the visitors some breathing room. League champions finish at 27-3, was eager SEE COM MGEI I 11 LY PI L 0 T C 0lL111· 11Il11 I 0 F TIE M 0 ITH QUOTE Of THE DAY .. .,... '°""' 'tlad to play (al .. arvtrNM UlllllM1ily mllte ....,, ... " CdM's pow1r. M f •played "5 one ii bnl • ~'t hcM mmte ., Ma•_• Dave Demarest, la Quinta High baseball coach Doi Piiat 1 ~-Ill ·SPORTS HALL OF FAME CELEBRATING T.HE MILLENNIUM Tennis •One of the world's all-time tennis greats, 'The Rocket' helped launch the Newport Beach Tennjs Club. • I RICHARD Dl..''11 Before the game's HI •open" era, and just as Rod Laver's playing career began to skyrocket, the International Tennis Hall of Farner was the original touring pro at Newport Beach Tennis Club •1t was quite something," saJd Carole Johnson, the club's longtime court director whose husband, Larry, was part or the first ownership group Rodney George "Rocket" Laver, a former Newport Beach resident who represented Newport Beach Tennis Club in '1967 and '68, won 11 Grand Slam singles titles, one fewer than all-time leader Roy Emerson. The 60-year-old Australian, who now lives in Rancho Mirage, is the only player in history to twice sweep the four Grand Slam events in one year. He did it .u an amateur in 1962 and as a professional in 1969. Laver, inducted into the Newport, R.1.-based Hall of Rod Laver Fame in 1981, won four Wimbledon championships, three Australian Open titles, two U.S. Open champiortships and two French Open titles in singles. He also won nine Grand Slam doubles titles. During a 23-year career, Laver captured 47 pro singles titles and 21 times finished as runner-up. He also starred for the Australian Davis Cup team. compiling a 16-4 record m singles and a 4-0 mark in doubles under legendary Aussie captain Harry Hopman, who sarcastically nicknamed him •Rocket• when he was a teenager. Laver's nickname, however, became appropriate when the left-hander's powerful ground strokes helped him conquer the tennis world. Despite a lack of size and growing up with infirmities, Laver became, arguably, the greatest player ever. •m my opinion, I think he's the best tennis player of all time,• said Palisades Tennis Club owner and operator Ken Stuart, who played with btver in 1974. "He could play on grass, on day and on hard courts.• Laver, who survived a stroke last summer, helped put Newport Beach Tennis Club on the map when the private facility opened m Apnl 1967 Laver would partiopate in many of the club's functions and his 1968 Wimbledon trophy was for several years dlsplayed in the '" trophy case behind the bar. •Then, of course, be went on to become a very big name and didn't· have bme to serve as our tounng pro; nor chd we have the money to compensate him, so it was a mutual agreement (to end his term),• Johnson said. "But Rod served a wonderful purpose and was a wonderful sales tool. We sold a lot of memberships.• Shortly thereafter, tennis inception. experienced a boom b.ke never before and clubs started to sprout everywhere, . mcludmg the John Wayne Tennis Qub, Racquet Club of Irvine and Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club. •Rod and (his wife) Mary were both very active here,• said Johnson. who has been affiliated with Newport Beach Tennis Club since its: Growing up, Laver was so scrawny and sickly as a child, no one could have guessed he would become an international superstar. But be grew strong and tough on his father's cattle property in Rockhampton, Queensland. In 1962, Laver equalled Don Budge's 24-year-old standard by becoming the second male to wm all four Grand Slams. lo 1969, Laver had his best year, ~haps the finest in tennis history, as be won an open-era record 17 smgles tournaments (bed by Guillermo Vilas in 1977) ' Ul 32 events, recording a 106-16 • matth record. • Laver, a member of the Daily 1 Pilot Sports Hall of Fame to : ce.le brate the oncoming : millenruum, was a relentless attacker at the net who also glowed 111 the back.court. His 145-pound body seemed to ' ·dangle from a massive left arm. which produced a ferocious topspin. Laver may have inspired a wave of heavy-hitting topspiia pla.yers in the 1970s such • VDu and Bjorn Borg CONTINUED FROM 7 On u team that has sev n A.U·Golden State Athletic Conference players, five of tbem seniors, U,ha.s been the nght ann of the freshman trom Tehadl,ap1 that enabled the Vdngua.rds to return to tlw 1 h team NAlA luumdment for the second < 1111.,Cf utive season. I \'wanted to live in Southern Calliorrua," LH•IJ1mgood aid about her d1•c ·~um to come to sec Wlll'n I rdJDe out here on o r•·crmting trip, I knew I wt111h·d to come here. ' I \\ltlll t"d to play for a -.1111tll1·r -.chool dlld sec w.i-. 11 qood ht for me1" \t.1rHJlldrd Coach and GSAC Coach of the Year, Beth 1~. 11k11'>k1 dgreed um would be a great place for her. ·nus was 11 p1 if1 1 t 'i1luatlon for her," Renkoski said. With the solid core of seruors we have, she could come m I• re 1111<1 learn from all of them "h·· c1l'><> had a great defensive ballclub playing behind her so th 11 'I••' L' her the opporturuty to put all her focus on her pitching.• c 1.11111r19 to a team fresh off a fifth-place finish 10 the national 11urnoment, Llebenyood was unsure of her role on the team, Hit \'.cts -;ure of what she could do. "I was a little bit _1wn·•ius ioming aboard," Liebengood said. "But I had no l11•1vo11.,1wss about my dbility or my perfonnance." . r Ill' re~11lts spedk for themselves. Llebengood was named ( .~i\C • Pitcher of the Week three times and her numbers were 11 fl• t1ve vi those dccolddes She led the Vanguards with 21 , ., f<11ll} three losses), dnd her 0.70 ERA led the GSAC. ipponcnts batted only 193 against her and)ler 146 • tnk1·11uts were second-best on the team. Llebengood also <l ..,,.,,,rf'd the bell this year m relief, recording four saves, 1 •11 q llH• Fdr West RPgional championship game \It •1 ctn m1d-sedson injury to GSAC Pitcher of the Yedr < ·r•·ll ',1 ·n Brandl, Llebengood turned up her intensity another 111111 II \\'l11•n Gretch<'n wf'nl down, Gina stepped up and clld what .. 1, .. !lcJcl to do." R<•nkoskl said. "She's really done an 11111> .. tu·vdble JOb for us, both as a starter and as a reliever. ' "ii ' t1lff•t1dy has the mentdlity to do both.· l1 .. 1wngood ledmed how to pitch from her dad. "I started in II ' ... 1xth qrade, • Lwhengood remembers. She qwckly d• \ 1 l•1pi>d and was MVP dnd an all-league selecbon at f••ht11 ht1p1 High Slw r11me lo SCC with three pitches: a nser, sinker and a 11i,1111w-up "Edfly m the sedson, Gmd started learning a curve I 11111 111HI m1dwdy through, she started throwing d screwball,• J~, r1ku.,k1 sd1d. "Now, with five pitches, she can really lhrow off II 11 ht tll'I .... " . Shi' did 1ust U1dl m the first round ot the NAlA Tl11 1mHmenl, throwing d complete-game gem.m the Vdnguards' 7-1 ,,.,.in over Columbia (Mo.) University. L11•b€'ngood scdttered five hits, while stnklng out four, 1111p1ov10y her record to 22-3, before the Vanguards were 1 '1•111uct.1Jy elurundLE'd from the tournament. I >P'>p1te her freshman success, Llebengood still has goals to 1111 rnnphsh. "Thdl Pltcher of the Year award would be ruce, • "Ii" •,,ucl with d Id ugh "There are records and stuff, but I JUSl w11nt to help Uw !Pdm succeed.• "Affordable Alternative" Discount 'Casket, Cremation& Burial Service Why should you subject yourself & your family to paying inflated prices for caskets & services???? Call Toll Free 1--888-54CASKET Serving Onnge A Surrounding <:ouatries ., .... ~""Ma : PACIFIC VIEW • MEMORIAL PARK • • ~ • .. Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3500 Paclflc Vlew Ortve Newport e,acn 844-2700 PIERCE BM11lal BEll BROADWAY Monuary * Chapet Cremation 11 o Btoadway Coat.a ~ &42-9180 COM CONTINUED FROM 7 "People thought l elected to play (al the cavernous community college facility) because of Cd.M's power," Demarest said of a Sea King lineup which came in with 42 homers, two shy of lcMi.. ye¥'s single-season record. "But tf we played th1s one in Yosemite il wouldn't have made any differ- ence. (The Sea View League co· champions) just swing it.• With the game already in com- mand, CdM insured its shot at the school's second CIF crown, fol- lowing the 1981 Sea Kings' 2-A title, With a seven-run seventh. Wiethom doubled in a run, and Hatfield, Bottom, and junior David Beser also drove in team- mates, before Harper whacked a three-run double to lift his career RBI total to 99. The rally was aid- ed by two Aztec errors, wtuch rendered all but one run unearned. Emme let Harper attempt to finish the shutout, but brought the hook after a one-out smgle and a walk. Sophomore Cavan Cuyler fin. !Shed up, hut not before Mike Lopez's single scored Ben Freclrickson lo rum the white- wash. "I probably shouldn't have let ICARrt LMDl.D a. .. Giii' ...... .., vau.nuu. TENNIS Davenport falls in quarterfinals PARIS -Newport Beach 's Lindsay Davenport, seeded No. 2 at the French Open, was a 6-t. 6- 7, 6-3 victim of sixth-seeded S~f· ti Graf in the quarterfinals 'fu!s- day on the red clay at Roland Garros. Davenport, a Palisades TeIU).is Club member, was in sea.rd?:: of her second career Grand Slam singles championship. She w.on the U.S. Open last year. : Tbe former · top-ranite<t women's tennis player in the world, Davenport won the Madrid Open two weeks ago after returning to the courts from a Wrist injury. LITTLE LEAGUE Sox shut down Tigers him start the seventh, so he would have four innings left for Satur- day, but it was tough to take him out with a shutout,· said Emme, who will start Larson (6-5) in the title game. •But when two guys got on, it was time to get him out dent and locked in. I just tried to be a competitor.• COSTA MESA -Brett Perrine pitched a one-hitter with 12 strikeouts for the White Sox in their 9-0 victory over the Tigers in Costa Mesa American Little League Majors Division action. of there." • Harper. Wiethom, Larson and Bottom each had a pair of hits for the winners, who continued to get top-to-bottom production. All but one spot in the lineup produced at least one hit. Perrine also led the offense for the White·'sox with a home run, his eighth of the season, tying him for the league lead with Aaron Pltzbugb. Kenny Knlght is right behind with seven. CJf DMSIOH IV Semfflnals Harper. who has been recover- mg from arm trouble which limit- ed him to one innmg pitched the final month oI the regul~season, said his arm finally f~s 100%. (AT SANTA MA cou.EGE) ColloNA oa. MM 12, LA QulNTA 1 Corona del Mar 000 140 7 -12 12 1 "My fastball was ~risingly fast for me and I kept them off balance with my curve ball,• Harper said. "l was really confi- La Quinta 000 000 1 • 1 5 3 Harper, Cuyler and Wiethorn; Cisneros, Seale and Keller. W -Harper, 6-1. L -Cisneros, 7-2. 28 -Wiethom (CdM), Beser (CdM). 38 • Larson (CdM). DEEP ·SEI DIVISION , 460 1 JAMBOREE ROAD, ROOM 108, City of NEW- PORT BEACH, Courity of Orange. Slare ol Callfomla 1 win seQ at public alJC1iorl to the hlgl'-st bidder, for cash 111 laWful money of the United States, all the right, title and Interest ol said iudoemerit debtor(s) In the above descnbed property, or so much tflereol as may be necessaiy to satisfy Mid executioo. with ac- crued Interest and costs APPROXIMATE MIN· IMUM BIO $342,000.00 Dated MAV 11, 1999 DIV\slOn ORANGE COUNTY MARSHAL, HAR.BOA DIV I SIO N , 4 601 JAMBOA'EE ROAD, ROOM 108, NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660 John E. Fuller, Ma11hal, ~~~ ~:Xcc~RTHY. DEPUTY NOTE. Do no1 take down 0< detace • postad notlOt be1or. Ille sale °' satJslec· 11on ol J\Jdgement Penal Code s.CllOl'I 616 (mitde-meanor) Pub!Wled N~rt BMch- Colta Mesa Dally Pllol May 111, 26. June 2. 1999 W418 PUBLIC NOTICE ANNUAL REVIEW OF CITY-WIDE TRAFFIC IMPACT FEE PROGRAM THE COST A MESA CITY COUNCIL WILL HOLD A PUBLIC HEAR ING FOR THE ANNUAL REVIEW OF THE CITY WIDE TRAFFIC IMPACT FEE PROGRAM THE TRAFFIC IMPACT FEE PROGRAM HAE BEEN ESTABLISHED TC FINANCE THE IMPROVE· MENTS THAT ARE NEC ESSARY TO ADDRESS THE CUMULATIVE IM· PACTS OF DEVELOP MENT WITHIN COST,, MESA ANO TO ENIUAl THAT THE STANDl\N: LEVEL OF 8EfMCE II MAINTAINED OH THE TRAFFIC CIRCULATION SVITEM. AN AUDIT 0# ntl TMFRC WM:T Nl MC>GAAM••¥ '°" AEVl9W "'8LJC AT ,_ aTY OP· 11 , • NIA A MllA. CAIJPOR. no flUaJC HINW«a WU • t&D M PO.· I.OWi .... ..,.,. ~'= n FAIR DRIVE. COSTA MESA. CALIFORNIA PubllShed Newport Beach· Cos1a Men Oallv Pilot tMY 21, 22, 24, ~5, 26, June 1, 2, 3, 4, s. 1999 F917 Flctltloua Bualneas Name Statament The following persons are clOlng business as. Llnger1eForLe1s com. 2486 Tequestra, Tustin, C.Momta 92782 LlngerleForLess com LLC, (CA), 2488 Te- questl'll, Tus11n. Csllfornla 92782 This business Is con-ducled by Llmlted Uabd1ty Co Have you started clOlng bullllHS vet? No Lingerie For Lesa.com, LLC, Ellzabeth A. Peter· son, CEO This 11a1ernen1 was tiled With the County Cleric OI Orange County on 4·29•99 19996791514 Dally Pilot May, 19, 26. June 2, II, 1999 W421 CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH NOTICE INVITING BIDS PLANS SPECIACATIONS AND CONTRACT DOCUMENTS S..le<I bldl may be 1e-celved II the olflee cl the City Clef1<, 3300 Newooc1 BoUlevaro, P o Box 1 ?ea. Newport Beach, CA 92658·8915 until 11.00 1 m. on the 181t'I day ol June 1999, .. wtlld'I 1lme ludl bide Shel be opened Ind rad for CENTRAL BALBOA WATER, SEWER & Al.LEV IMPflOVEMENTS AND WEST NEWPORT BEACH SEWER MAIN REPLACEMENT PHASE II Tltle of Project Contract No. 3278 5456,000 EngtnM(I Edl'Nlte =: lllullloWCMb.,........, ~ b'dders mey ~OM ... OI bid dclcu• --•no-atlNOf· .. GI .. fll*llc ~ mmrtlox~ ~_! ,CA ;;-~ lnfoinlllton. -...... 9r'9COff Of =!Ir,,~ ~ .. Plot .......... IMICM ctotrlet, ch misc., D VID 92658-8915 until 11 00 an the right, btle and In· BLOXHAM J-87, GUllar am on the 17th day of terest ol Said deceaSed at Amps, DANIAL SCOTT K· June. 1999. at which lime tlmt ol dealh and all light, 10, WastVdryer, bed. ref . such bids shaU be opened title and Interest the estate mtsc. MICHAEL ELLIS I· and read lor has 8CQUll9d In ad<f11Jon IO 86, Car hOOd,. Sf1efveS, IRVINE AVENUE STREET lhat of said deoeased in Illes, lug., clothes, misc .RECONSTRUCTION and to au the certain Real Sale wm be by compebtlve Tiiie 01 Prolect propeny, sltlJaled 1n the bidding (wlinan sealed bids STPLMA·5151 ·(011) CitY of Costa Mesa, County may be eubmltted In Contract No. 3204 at Orange, State ol Cahlor· a<!Yance) on the 9th day of $293,000 nla, panlcularty described June, 1999 al 2 00 P M. at Englneet's E1Uma1e as follows· the p1emlset where said /SI W~P by by_\.._ a lreeslandlng lndusll'lal propeny ha been stored ~1"~ P_,.pvn l>Utldoog ol appro1t1matety and wf\och 11 located at City EnQlnw 3,200 square leet at AVRES SELF STORAGE, ProspectMI btdde y 942 Sooset, Costa Mua, 7012 Ernest Ave., Hunt· obtain one set ol docu· CA 112626 lnaton Beech, Ce (714) ments at no oost al the of· Terms of sale are cash 1n 848-731• Landlord re-lice of tti. Pubhc Work.I lawful money ol the UMed serves the right to bid at Department, 3300 Newport States on confirmauon of the nit Putetlases must Boulevard, P.O. Box 1168, sale, or pert cash and bel· be made by cash and patd Newport Beach, CA anoe upon sucn terms and tor at the llme of purchase. 92658-8915. conditions as are aocep- All pucchased goods are For further lnform1111on1 table 10 lhe personal repre- $Old as 11 and must be re· call Fong Tse, Prolec seritatlve. Ten peroent ot moved at time ot sale. Sale M an a o e r a l ( 9 4 9 ) amount bid to be dePotlted la subjeo1 to canceltaUon In 844-3340. wtth bid. Bids or oflars to the ewnt of settlement be· Publi$hed Newport Beach· be In wntlng a.nd Wiii be re- tween taridlOftl and ob-Costa Meta Delly Pilot cetlled at the aforesaid of· lloated party Publlshed on May 27. June 2, .19-gg la at any lime after the 0~6199 ind 06/02199 ThWS41 l1rst publication hereof and Auc110nffr W1nda Not1on ----------before date of sele Bond I S-400-1884 CITY OF Dated: May 27, 1999 Ayres S.H S10fag9 NEWPORT BEACH Merilyn Tripp, Pereonal Restdenl Managers NOTICE ~tatlve of the E• ~ Newpon Beadl· INVITING BIOS tn Costa Me• Delly Pilot PLAN& AtllOfMYfa) 1t Law: May 26, June 2, 11m SPECIFICATioNS Edger c: W 426 AND CONTRACT =·l~'ft~R Flctltloua BualneH DOCUMENTS 3080 Br1atol St., Suite Name Statement Sealed bids may be ra-830, Coeu U..1, The lollOWlng persons celved It the office of the CA tHH are dolno bullneu u ; City Clerk, 3300 N•;rs:rt Publiahed Newport Beach· Elly Guldel to Spelling eout.vard, P.O BoJC 1 88, Costa Mesa Dally Pilot Rulet; 260 C1gney Lane Newpoft Beach, CA June I , 2. 8, 1999 #lH,NewportBeach,C.I· 926$8.8915 until 11:15 lWSCO "omla 92683 • m on 1he 1 eth dli of CfTY OF Roslyn Sriow, 290 June, 111911~ ~ NEWPORT BEACH C.OMY Lane t111. New· = r::1or be...,.......... NOTICE port Beach, Calllornl1 NEWPORT HEIGHT'S INVITIHO BIDS 92663 STREET LIGHTING PLANS, Thia buslne11 Is con-Trtle ot Prqec:t SPECIFICATIONS dueted by. an lndMdual Cont111ct No 3258 ANO CONTRACT Have you started doing 9250,000 OOCUM!NTI ~ yet? Yea, Englneel'1 Elllmele Seeled bldl may aw re-~ Snow. _ ~~ ceiVld at the olb cl !he Thie llllement WU llleel ........ Wora Dhotor City Cle~ 3300 Newllotl I with the County ~ ol p~ blddll'll may Boultvllrd, P.O Boie 1798, °'*"GI Countv en 5-24·99 obllllr\ one Ml Of bid docu-Newpc)ft Beloc:tl, CA 1""11410I Maflla .. no 0084 It the cl· ~15 untll 11;30 o.llw Plot Mey 2111, AN !Ice Of IN Pubk Woricl 1 .m on Iha 18ltl deV o1 2 • ..!J!J!" wm Depel1menl 3300 .....,,, June 1999. at wNc:tl.\lme J'IClftOUe IUilriiii 8ouleven2, ; 0 Boie 1111, :: =:a' be opened Neme.........,,. NewDort &Mch, CA GRANT HOWALD AHO The ~ PMOnl ~IS LINOOlN SCHOOl; 8f9 dOlnQ IMiMle u · For ,.,,._ ~. BAl.LAELO LIGHTING '"TOP NOTCW, 50-43 EV· Cllll Mld..i J ·1'*"41· T1lta of PrQfect ,, ~ ~ Cyprw, r:tr'~"frt C01inc1 No. 3263 NMorl V-.OO, 5043 ~"'r..':""~°"--= E~:.,. =r,: =,0 Cyprw, -~ .... Mlyll,Junel, 1 ,WD:,.W;.r. Vllme V-.00, 5043 lv---,m:m-,_mF'lrW .... 1'111..._11 'UlllD ._ DnCIOt ==-~ eyp.w. CIMtth.L.&.. ,_., ... --. ,_ TNe .,.._ 11 oon-...... ., _ CIMlll'l ON Ill ol 111111 **'° -"" .. -"!.'='£ ~=== ~:: .. cw.... "-"'= 11:::b .... --~~ :g,,.' . Co\. =~~ ... 1 .. •~ .. 1' .. ~~ .. gr: ,. I G:t EQUA.l HOUSING """"'l\HlY Ml ........ tMrtJ*l Ill 1111 _.,.,. .. ..._ .. k flf. "", ........... , .. " ..................... II llfttrtlH •• .., 9ftflltMt , ~tlloM If l lHrl•l•ttlH ..... .. , ......... ,.11f119, ............ ,...... .... ... .ulltM4 ...... " .. ....... It .... "' NCll ,..ttl••· ......,. .... , 1.-u· r"• • ...,.,.,., .111 .... ..................... ....... 19tt .......... ............. ow"""" "' .., .. , llftlllff 11111 tM flrtllfflp lfttr11tff. II IMs . _.,.,., ,,. "8111 ..... .. ..... ........, .......... ... ,.... .. ........_,ta•HUO· Ttl·trn .. , ... .., ..... hi • • l!!!~~!'.J 11 """"• 11 Mui: llO'llCll r r PUii.JC NOTICU 1 1 PUBUC NOTICf8 J TNI Duliw II cot\-.,.: ELGA.AM ona "'· TM EllCIOW Fo-PnM• i rn;; ;J iil1e1110fi Of ;;nt,;aor. HQllfYil c»)'t fme ' duct.oby:an~ ENTERPRISES ANO rum and.,,. al'llldpai.a ~ ~ 1}: IOlf'll91drf19;1lrMINlt• .... .utrQ. F...,. '° Haw you Nn.cl dlOlnQ ll8EE M. EHTERPRISES, Nie dlle 16 JUN 11, 19i9 Sia No. 17IMI Clalll11id .. ~ t:Qmpllta h WGftl. ...,_, bulineaf yel? No 18050 C\Jl\IER DRIVE, • The bl.Ilk all 11 1LJt1t9Ct f'Mlot81Q5.,•0l'l 1119Md COnltacsor B UoMM NW,.IMIOl1t1 l\ef"1wll K.111 GtHnt:Nn IAVtHE, CA kl Ca1i10m1a lH*orm COm· Mlhble •I ()lllOI ol 1M PUBllSH'. Mey M , 1 fN _. il'I ,,. llnpoll9otl ot Thll 11aiemvn1 ..... , Neel OcMog Bullne11 ••-m1rc111 CO<I• Section PtlYIQll F.._ Cootdl-. al'WJ Juoe ~11~--. llq\Jldliled o.m10t1 IOt """"'"9 County~ o1 ONE HO\)R MOTO 6108.2. YES/NOY nafor, AJG!tfl Richy, Cioeft. WALK TJ1HUUOt'I' uc:n dt)' ol ONy, In .... Orange County OI'\ 5·28-VQ PHOTO TM tlalM Incl adorns Community CclleQI Dis· J...,. 10. 1999 at 9;00 •.m..._ atl'IOJm Ml lOl\h In .... "'ln- 1"9f7M171 All o1h•r bu1ln111 ol the 119i.on with <M'1Qtn trfa, 1370 ACMll'w Ave , Or1099 Coa11 Collage ~ for,Blddltl~. O.IPV Pilot June 2, I. US, nwnt(t) a-Id Mldfffl(•) dMM tn.y be liled II lllda. "O", CO.t. Mfll, CA Malnl......a ~ Optni• Eacn bid mu51 oonlotm 23:11>99 W4M Ul8dbyUWSelM1(l)w1"1in TheEac:'°""'Forum,23181 (714)431-4873 liol'll FEillty, loc:atlCI on andDereipOl'l6/llelON Fl'tltlou. Bu.=o tie put 1twte ye-. .. UkJ ~r Ot •. Sii.. 120 NOTICE IS HEREBV MenWNIC StrMt MfWMtl OOO!rect ~ El(tl N-e _ _. _ _'..~~ !.If..~,, by the Sd&l'{I), LN(E l"ORE$T, CA 92030 GIVEN tt\91 N llOOve· H.llt!Ot !JMI. end Fa!Mew ~ M1911.ubrnlt.. on~ -'' ,.. .. _._,. _., NONE 1nd the llilt dal• lol' lillrlG oamad Sct'IOOI 0.ltfcl al Ref Co5te Meu, CA 92626 lonn luml5heel \Mtl'I lhl The IOllowing pel'IOfll The /'latNl(I) anded• daifnsbyVYt~ll'llli Oraogt~,c:.ldomlli, 810DATE:JulyB,19i9 contt~OOc\.ll'Mnlt,alllt Mi ciQng ~u:._ -car... Clf-h-&w.ttai-ba-Jun41.J.7, 19911 whlat II . ...adinO ~ lfVOl.IQtl--h. .2-00 Pm _ ~~~ EAGLE SPORTS CA.MP l1/1r•· MANSOUR IN bl.ll.!Mll oay beloi• o,o.,..:nq Boan:I. n.r.in-BOAAD DATE!JUIY21, ~ Ol'I tl'ltl .. Of ORANGE COUNTY, .HAGHIGHI ANDIOA HIS the 1111& dat• specill90 1tl•r reNined 10 • "OIS· 1999 _ .. _~ ritOJll'9d by lf'lll 6081 BerM!rly Ave., WM!· NOMINEE. 18050 CUL· aboW. TRICT'', wilt reoelV9 uo to. No payment .,_, be and SubConnc:ung F mtnll•I. CallfOrl"lla 92683 VEA DRIVE IRVINE CA. euYER(S), DIA rJOI lllter tti.n IM INdtl '°' WOfl{ or miileriel Prldleft Act. acw.mmeni: Michael P . Kllkanny. 92602 ' ' ISi MANSOUR aboY9-ltalltCI bme, sealed uncler lh9 oonlntd unllll coo. s.c:.ori 4100 .r seq, 5081 Berktlley Ave., W•tl· The ISHlS tlelng laid HAGHIGHI bkll '°'"IN aw.rd al a ccn-and utllll lhe A119Wrar ol Eleh Bid 1t1a• be atQ)ll'I• mlnsi.r, ~ 92683 are Q906fally O.ac:rlbed .. : Dated: 5128199 lract IOI' lhe prqac:t oa-CofterKtOrt: .,.!Win to lhll panled by 1 certit.-i Of This ' btlsiMU Is eon· ,,, L l Fu A NIT u RE ' Published Newport Beach· .albecS as: DISTRICT 1,,.1 IM CON· c:aist\19r'I d'leCll OI' blO bOnd OUCled Dy: an lnclMdual FIXTURES, EQUIPMENT, Coll• Meu Dally Pilol &tl&mlc: Retralll al COun· TRACTOR wes prof)8f1Y In an arn<x.nl llOl IHl·tllflt\ Have YoU •l.lllned doing MACHINERY, NM! :z, 1999 ~elin~ and Adml1tlon1 lloensed •t \tie lllne lt".e 1en119tce"'(10%)ollnetc>- bUllnlu yel? No LEASEHOLD IMPROVE-W433 BUllOing . contrlld "'"aw1ro.c1. Any la.I bid~. payable kl ma Mlc:haelKllkenny MENTS STOCK IN NOTICET0 Thet11 ~bea Twllflly· CONTRACTOR nor so D1s1ric:tas1goarar11ee1t11t This statement was tiled T RA.DE.' GOODWILL, FIY• ($2!) f"IOl'l-ieiuodeble lioenMd Is sUbjec:110 pen-the bldOer, 1flta pruposilll wtth lhf COuniy Cletk al CUSTOMER LIST · ANO CONTRACTORS payment f9Qu!~ for elCti attia unoar tn. law II !hi IOCeP*f, lhl"i_ Pf~ Orange County Ol"l 5·27-90 RECORDS eus1NESS CALLING FOa ENDS Mri of bid doc:umentl. llc:er\la dllssilication Spac:i· alUICUle the ~reemenl, 1'"'794645 NAME QF THAT CER· School Dlstrid: ctiedt1 1ifloull1 119 (neda lled ~ 11 \f\11 of h.11nlCh a 11.H&tactO'Y Dally PiJol June 2, 9, 18, TAIN 8uSINESS KNOWN COAST COMMUNITY payablit k> Gout COM· • ~5!)9dlilt~~· ... Feitl'llt.il P•rtormance Bond 23, 1999 'W436 AS ''ONE HOUR MOTO COi.LEGE DISTRICT mUnlty College District. delln9d In 7058 of In~ 8ITl(Qll no! less tnan CNS1717~5 PHOTO'' LOOA.TED AT: Bid~· ekls shall be 1ecelollld In the carltomla eusine11 one nunorea oe1een1 Eac:i"ow No.: 35728 18050 CULVER DRIVE, Jth a. 1"99 Ill 2;00 p.m. the plac:tl ldeolllled lboYe, Ind Prole'51onl Code, lhe (100%) ol the Iota\ bid NOTICE TO IRVINE, CA .. INCLUDING, Plac:tl al Bid Reoalot: Ind ltlOM bids shaM tie spac:lallty contractor price. lt.imsf'l 11 Pi.yment CR•~roRS OF eur NOT LIMITED TO, Ollh::e ot 01,ec:tor 01 l)pe(lf(I and puDlic:ly rffd ewaftled the Cont1ac:t for Bond in an amourit no1 kts1 11;.U"! THOSI: ASSETS LISTED Purchasing, Coait Com· aloud a1 lhe aboYB·1ta1ed this WoOI sl'llll llHll eon· ~n one t\Yndred percent BULK SALE IN ll1E EXHIBIT ·1· AT· munitv College Olatrlc:I, lime Md plaoe. struc:t a majOltty al the (100"4) ol the IOIBI D11.1 (UCCSee.6105) TA.CHEOTOTHEBILLOF BIOg:·c.0"1370Ai:sams,,_v. lnac:c:oulanc:ewlltl1tle WOl'k,inaocordanc:e wilt'I price. 1n<1 tu1 n11h NOTICE IS HEREBY SALE and ar• local.cl at: .nu., COSUI ~ CA Pf'QY\tlons or Cablmnla ltlB prOYislonl ol Calllomia C8rllllc:ate1 eMendng tf'lllt GIVEN lhat I bl.Ille Ale Is 18050 CULVER DRIVE, 92626 ~ublic: COl'llflCI Code &islnesa and Prole19lon5 the r90Uired inSUfante lS in about to be made. The IR\llNE, CA Project ld1nlillc:atrori Sec:Uon 3300, !he District Cooa Section ros9. etlett \n the amounts Ht n1me(1), bu1lne11 ad· The bulk sale I& if1!ended Name: Orange Coast Cot· requim 111a1 the bidder Al W011t must bl! com· lof1tl In me general c:ondi· dr8Sl(ts) al lh9 Sellefis) '°bl C005UfTV1\ated at th9 lege Selsmlc: Relrcllt possess Ula lollcWlng c:tes-pleled within 100 Ct.lrl· lions. In the event er lailu1e W/\TERVIEW Thru Homee ""•liable from $:31,900. AU 26R, 26A 2-Story Sllverc:reet 26R. 26A With P»tlo CNtr C•r:pg~ $118.290. Spaee Rent $1,075 Other Homee For Sale from ,18.000 or U!a9e from fl,100 Month &AYSIDE VILLAGE SALES. 949 723-.4045 ' ' Wodneodoy, Juno 2, 1999 9 ""'·-Stuffer/Inserter Wanted To lnleft Mttlon1 Into the Loe A~ea Tlmes MWSpaper ~ $11 6:00.m to 1:30pm. and Sun 2:00.m to 6:00ern. Additional woril: may be 1v1ll1ble. S$,00 per hour Of p!Ke work whlch•Y•' Is grater. Uust ""'" drlv-.,.. lic9nM Of .Cl.lifomla LD. •nd I Sodal ~urity ,,.,., C11t1 .ccepted •• 'ftll a1 appllutlona Mon lhru Fri from a:ooam 10 4:00pm. ONLY. L9t the C1111med hnloeD"ecrt.rf n.lp yolJ find r .. i.ble help. • Pitt time Driver Wanted $9.22 pet hour plus mll•199 . NHd9d Mon tt'tru Sun 2:~m to 5:'5pm. Addi- tional work may b9 r1.U- 1ble. Muat haw tNCll or V9R, li1billty lnsunince with proof or ~ta, driv- en li~M. aoclet ucurity card, and c-.n O.M.V. print out. .......... uc .... 111t ... , Accepting 1ppUc1t\on Mon to lhrv Fri from l :OOam to 4:00pm. ptuN bring Ill l'9qUiracl lntormaOon. --·--- . . ·..---: ' . ~.,.. . ~ -.. • .l :fl" -; . . lllgl vatd, 3119 E. !WI St, ~-762-al81 1315,000, Wedding Experts SOOWCASE Our nnf ,,,-1 s«lion faoluri"! lb.orris in-b fol'o{tb. ..llm,sp«:lrwais _., _ ~~.,,-,i-1o--... rJ '-l_-.;;:-.._'IJ.. "(lll}nu#I -•coSTA MESA· MOTOR ... 1ST Wk S,.Cl1I On All Rm1 S1J4.00 Tu, '9ll.lm.: 24-Ns !rm <1B1k. O.D. pt"IOMs, !tea HBOIESPHK*c+ "' """" -"'· .... """"· .... f'wt's; 405 & SS "*t awwt lrotn OC FMgrds, Colleg9, 1llo9 malll, l:lf;N, !tit. "' llWl"iblf Cl c .. ,_ 22n Hertlof &Mt 949-645-4840 < • . ' . . . . .. - - ·-. . , -. • ,•.,_ 1r --- .. -- l'OOl: CLEANEW kNtffi KRAUL V STILL IN BOX NEVEfll USED QQO PAGER1.-Mll-1MI 3Unn Timlf Orange County · Attn: Pam Becklnghlm 2901 Ganv Av•. S.ntl Anll, Ca 927'04 714-54MSt8 """"',._ N9wporl S.laMf1-U FT C1.11CO!Mf 1ote persontllff. Wiil lrlln. hneflla. Cal tor ...... NNU-1200 x2'5 Father's Day M~ages Appearing Saturday,June 19th Tlmn Oflflgt County Attn: P11m ~ ............... Senta Ana. Ca 92704 714-549-1548 OQ0.93:MOIO WHAT HAPPEllS IF YOU 0011'1 AORlnSE? NOTHING. Call the Claaaifieda 20 t11nc1111 per llnl. Yoo ..., -.. 4 -for lorvor ..... co1 .. --."' ...... ---M-j.,_it MX W. fonn '8 (It., Ut lllt Wednesday, June 2, 1999 41'9 EMPLOYMENT OPPTYS FARMERS MAAl<ET Open poeltlona: • Rec*-• • CMlllat1 • Food s.vtc:./Dell • Meat ' SNfood • Groctty • Produce Call (949)750-0403 °' apply In pttton at any of our 3 locltlon1. -SELL -- yoi, home VvoU9h cJuslfled -, ~''f•· ,.... .•••• ~. . " ... :,. .... ,,, -~ -~ --. ,........ - 476 EMPLOYMENT OPPTYS RREfiQHTER. No expeoence T1amee pier gram Age 17 • 34 x lent pay/ bene Paid 1aroc Catt I ·8Q0..252..o559. M·F 7 3Qam.. 4 00 ~ (CAL'SCAN) >' GrOWlng OfriCe Support Co seelcirlg PfT T ypl1t1 who are 18.51 and OfOllllZed 75wpm MS·WOAD up , l!ex1ble hou;s Fax Aeune & salaiy required to 94H73-2428 . 282 CtlLO CARE IUCENSED I I\ I I' ( 11111>( Wt Locil Au P1ir Prognm Seeking CllJ'li~ Host hmilles for summer o1rrivo1ls. Fleicible, ~I. 4Shtt/wk. Aver~e cost S2~\lk, per family, not per duld Call 80()..713·2002 or 949-495-3993 www.ev ir.com Cen't1Mm IO gee to .. °'°" repelr Jobe eround .... houM? Lit .... C1111•1• ...... ....... , Nip '°" Ind .. ,..... .... ..... ,. 476 EMPLOYMENT OPPTYS Large Boat Dealership WISlls YOU.if you ha'le exi> 1n Ille a;eas of Rig- ging. Install, ITl8lll1 and det111kng on bolll small large boa.ts apply In con· hdence We offer a 91ea1 place 10 WOik. com· pensa11on based on a~ 401K med. &• benel Call 9<49-645-3880 or lax 1asume to 9<41Hio4s.80' 5 By CHMl.IS GmEN wflh OMAR SHMW .nd TANNNf HINSCH 13, COUNT 'EM • Nejthcr vuJncrdic. SoUth deals. NORTH • 10'' 3 <:;>A! I) Jt96~-.....,..-­ • K.f 8 W~T EAST • 084 • 5 <:? J{Q 1084 <:? J 9763 O Q$' O J87 • 162 + 10943 SOUTH •AKJ62 1.1 2 o A 103 2 •AQ5 The bidding: . SOUTH WF.Sr NORTH EAST • • Pllll 3. Pllll ,. Pua Pall Pua Opening lead: Kina of "' Bridge maxims cover generalities. WC$t would have done helter to have dis~garded one that is considered a heinous bridge crime. After North 's invitational jump raise of spades, South stretched a lit- lle by jumping straiaJll to slam. If all that counts ia success, this slam was elcellent. . As Ibo Clldl lie, lhel'e now •aa no lep&imllo play for 12 tricb. Howevor, South was nee ono to throw in tho tov.-el. Declarer cashed lhree rounds of clubs. CAClinl IA dt.muay, theft Nft'od a heart befote elitina with a trump to West's queen. East discarded the 13th club on the trump. Rel~tant to con- oede a ruff and sluff, West shifted to the queen of diamonds. Declarer elected to play for sylit diamond hon-ors rather than Q with West. The queen wu captwed with the k.ing and a diamond was led to the ten. When West followed low, the slam was home. This was the 'time to ignore the rubric "Never yield a ruff and stuff,'' ~ .••• £ • ,· . c -"' r-.,.. .... ~ ~ ... .I • ~....1·.. . GETO OF DEBTI We can hell?.! •OtditOudl Olnsolidolld •·P~Lowtrtd • f ttltmt Rl4vt:tJ • H.,.,.,,,,,.' lldMI IMOIQ Ol 'ii ' doof. Mo. lolded (008035) fl7.9M IOUTH COAST ACURA 71W7t-ZllO AC:CMliifldiil Gd ... ~-... .., (OOt~~T ACURA xcl£rr::°a •12 (012221) $13,988 SOU'h4 COAST ACUftA ~'tt7t-2500 ACLIGENO'ii CPI, 11110, low m~ lthr, Chrome wtleett, moon roof gtnffdsn:,'11 tllOWfOOlft newll I 71W41-tOlt XclMlTI:·A (TC007*) $18,915. COSTA MESA HONDA 714-43&-5050 TOYOTA WANTED or ~ nice JipllllM Cl(, must bl automllic. No dN.lttl plNH, Ioctl COM reslOent prlvale pally IM&-632·9041. Acwa U Tl 1ii7 11-ml, f\11:~ pllit •dtaa, Im • $22,500 94M4W208 BiiW a2i1 190 san 4Dr (\.ED27516) $10,995 COSTA MESA HONDA 71 ""'35-5050 liiw s2Ji '97 BllA*, 111to, lh, mnrl West led the kina of hearti, taken by the ace. Tho ace and king of spades were cashed. And East'• heart discard was a major disappointment. · and it was not a matter of auesswottc -declarer's band could tie counted out. South had stanecl with five spades, one heart and Uveo clubs, hence four diamonds. A ruff 1luff would do declarer no good -there would remain four diamonds in one hand and three in the Olher. lf the jack of diamonds was not in South's hand, the contract was certainly going down. And unless South held both the jack and ten of diamonds, in which case declarer would have to guess which way to tackle the suit, the slam would Probably be defeated after a heart continuation when declarer took the normal finesse throuah East for the diamond queen. (WOS583) $34,995 r~t ( I LfXllS~~~=NSTER BMW i35C$J ·16 8§ii iTi/, $1000 down ....,. $7950 11M 1tft Duffy 1mmac S2K \llOllh 1r chrome 1·11 -.11·. . DRIVERS Mobile Walt ... /et1 RE:;STATE IS A ORE.AT CAA I ERA Aatteny & Lloyd Hundnalon Beach, . Must have reliable auto. Insurance & good OMV Dellver IUnch & dmer Olden IO< restaurllllS In loCfll .,.. Polenbal $8-$12 ~ hour Clll IM9-54J. S2 Eldli Cate netCied In m~ CM home tor gnindmoth«, UM 1ftarnoon1 1 ·5. S1 Ohr. MM46-9456 Mtlntaruinca tCarpenlett • Elec1rlclll'll tMllnt Mtchanlc:t •Labonll Muat have own tOOll, min 5 yrs axptlenct. or call 714-956-1030. ROGER'S GARDENS l18S lmme<late FfT opening In our indoor planl and IPfl dtpartmem Previous plant knowledge and Siies IX· par1ence rtcJllred PteaH lax ~resume 10 949'640-7528 ~ °' ~ In PtflOl'I et 2301 Sen Joequln Hill Road, Corona del Mar. SALE PERSON UPKala Chlldren1 cloth:f. and thoe 1tora. FT/PT 11 a auoc. Shoe Hpar.. belpM. Uttla Peoplt' .... 949-645-1355 "SALES PAliTIFliLL TIME" PT for rle women11tor1 In Fllh ltland. Alto Mena atore FulWT tot receiving data entry etc. ContKt Darryl or St.Ye 949-75t-7911 .-- needs your ~ tlOWI We wet pay !of your lloenM uanng COOf1e and lrlin you to ba IUC· cesslul! 800-400-5391 ax1 119 G:ep110nilt Pit fOI' Fiine11 Club In Newport BHCI\ Mornings and W11kends Call 949-642-3215 SUMMER FUN 80 customer Sain -ctOPENINGS'Cr $12 Per Hr Appl College Internships 1vall. Fun, upbeat environment No experience nee. will train. Flexible hours conditions apt>ly. 714-549-9599 "VET RECEPTIONIST"' Plft-tlmt S'Ar1 netdecl Immediately for Pit holpltal In Colt• Me1L Mult ba H · pet'd and love anlmll1. Call 949-642-9142 WAREHOUSE PERSON ElPlflence pref'dlwlll train. von Hamert lntetlorl.. Contact Dew at 949-574-9331 after tarn M.f S20-S40r'PER HOUR. Easy det'Cll ~ FIAi 1tanig Computer re- quired 80CY223·1149, ext 430 (CAL 'SCA.H) -. r \ ,, t ,., ., I -------- 1 e .., • ! • I m .. ,.,., ....... .... ,.. ..... ........ ,.,., .... ,., .... ,.. .... 1 471 EMPLO• I &~9500~1tlon wta & tires pp 94H73-0411 One of a kh1, T llflan, 0 8 t 94M50-7217 CADILLAC EU>OftAOO '85 ~':.""-==: ---1 rraL~o: area. car necessaiy, must be _ _.:..= . bouQlt. °"' ~~-· neat, frltrdY Males lbllly ~ ....... Call IMM42-4213 Uft SUP Prop.~ SECR'ETARY Pl, 10 to 20 hr• 621 Wo Parll °' $13.pel toot. CHEVY S08Utt8AH 4X4, 'ii par WM1r. S9 to S13 par hour. Wlttf/lledtlcily, D'll locallon (217817) ISS,995 tor law olflct In HB. 949-675-el28 COSTA MESA INFINITY 714-M2.0553 "'50ft~HIWPOfi,...-----,,..BMCii..--~A-.BiOCii.,,.....,.1 1 t4-2A f.1300 Mooring wtf'I CAL·25 Slllloat ... CH"'EV......,.Y-s"""'rn..--.-~Sl~!Yftd0-- 1 ... -_, w(aalls end outbotrd. $12,500 -OPPO ·-c.11 Jan IMH75.o918 199' 4x4, ¥•Ton, 7.4L, lol<led, tow paclcaae, mini cond, 58K I ~ ~ ] I ml. S19,000. 714·966-8360 -I.,.,....,._ * CHAYSlEA LE BARON PIHte bl wary of out of f 1988 * 4-dr, power. alt, Alli -• companlu. Checll UNHEARD OFIAll RV's clMn. new smog oel1dltale with the local Bttt• malllad al loW-loW Amversary $1790 obo 949·723-1504 BU1lneu BUfaau before Sale Prices .limited time-Cilrflili Town & COUntiy "'94 you Mnd any monay or ... yotl'I save ltlouSandsf Amer· 6 cyl, Mini VIII loaded $9995 t•H tot ttrVae. Raid k:a's moet popula1 AV's •• CaM Harf>ol Auto • fNOCe AvaM. and undtf1tand any S a d d I e b a c k • F r e e : #282036 949-642·2262 contr1ct• bafoFI you 1•8n·513-1898 (CAL'SCAN) ;:.~==-f--.1 Pfolll F~. tree Video HONDA ACCORO EX '97 1.eoc>-337-1375. ~· ldw, loeded ARE.A PEPSVCOKE Roule 30 (01=~ CeOi:T ACURA high piold localiOnS wllh new 714-97t-2SOO macNnes! Eam S100I< yeartv Call now 800·440·237f ACUAA CL 2.2 't7 (CAL 'SCAN) Low miles, lpQllef. STATEWIOE ADVERTISING 0167321117,988 25 words $450 10 get your SOU1lt COAST ACURA message~ In 209 714-171-2500 c.lilomie newspapers ACUAA IHTEGRA 'K COlttined clrCIAlbon OY9f "-4 door, whit• 3 0 million CALSCAN (0027mS14,IN (916)-449-3696(916)449-6010, SOUfH COAST ACURA WWWOCflPI com(CAL'SCAH) (714)979-2500 rn··~ .. ·~ :1\:" ' I• • . . ., "')··:.1~ ·1iJI ., ' : : • ··~ ~~·:~I.£ ; .. • ~-.~ • -----I I l ~ . . • PUBLIC NOTICE The Calll. Public· Ublttlea Commission REQUIRES that all used hovseho,ld goods mov1t1 f rlnl their P.U.C. ca T number; limos and cl)auffers print their T,C.P. number In al t<IVertls· ments. If you have a Qt*tlon about the legltllCy °' a mover. limo or challller, caM· PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISK>N 714-568-4151 • • I , . , ' • ·, ~Arlel '82 Auto, Cdr, sterto. • cyt, ps. lires, oood llnportatlon S5 obo 949-631-11611 TheLocal,..,.,..1r ........ -....... ... IOCMIN9 ~­......, .... .,. .... ..,,..,.,...._ WHAT HAPPENSIF . YOU DON'T ADVERTISE? NOTHINGI Cll .. 1·~1 FOAO ESCOHT LA 'IM HI~ :>4. IUtO, FWO, UIO. (RW317185) $G9I COS1' A MESA HONOA 1141436-6050 F6"6 olWY 1iii Colwll1t>lt 500Xl, QOOd COnd 98k OllQiNI mies ~obo 949-642-83113. HONDA ACCOAO EX. 'M (OOOMA5} $18,llS COST A MESA HONDA 714-241-1300 HONOA lcCOAo lX 'it Low ml, 81110 clean (057311) $15,988 SOUflf COAST ACURA 714-879-2500 HONDA CIVIC, 'H RX COUPE (TL05079tl $10,ffS. COSfA MESA HONOA 714-436-5050 HONDA PRELUDE 'R sl Coupe. moonrool, alloys (COl3367) $7999 COSTA MESA HONOA 714-436-5050 IHF1NITI l30, 'K (30963M) $14,915 COST A MESA INFINITY 714-241-1300 INAHITI M30 CONVT. (010451) $11,~ COSTA MeSA INANITI 714-24f.1300 INRHITY J30, 'h (029188) S1S,lt$ COST A MESA INFINITI 714-241-1300 J41iuar XJS COflvttttbte '92 47k ml, whtMan int, chroma wheels. $2000 doWll. assume S18,000 pp 949-673-04t I JEEP GRAND CherokM '95 4X4, S yr WIF'l'llltf, AC, Ill powtf, tkl 111CU, tint, SOK ml. 8'5,7tS. 149-378-1716 LEXUS ES 300 '91 ~. 171< mi, like new 1 sl otter over S28K. T emflc deall 949-718-0517 LEXUS es 300 '116 Liili. CD, traction, chrm wt.ls, mnl1, (18083/1494t0) 525.495 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-544-4IOO L£Xus ES soo 't6 CO player. lltv dWm ~. moorvoot. 38k mies (tn04/134795) S23,995 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-544 .. 800 LEXUS es 300 'H Ltht, ctvme ...,ts. mnrt. 331< ml t18051115921n S2•.•95 TUSTIH LEXUS 714-544-4IOO Lfi0$ ES 300 '96 Cashmere lltv, CD, mm. 35k ml. (18023.'6755581) $24,495 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-5"-4800 Lexus es 300 '116 Uhf. CD, chrm v.tlls, rmrl, low mi, (18085/160083) $24.495 TUSTIH Lf)(US 71 WC4-4IO() LEXUS es 300 ... Lthf, CD, chrm whll mntt (1773&'143878) S20,995 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-544-4IOO • . :' ' . , . . . . ~ ,....,. . ':.""""'' ~~ 7 ..... • I • ·'' ' -. . ... . t~· l. ~llgntt. ~.OA 's 714-891-8804 ..... Autlr. llw. ctwm -.. mnrf, (178U/13elt9) 123.495 TUITINWUI • 714-IU .. 00 lDuthiOO'A .c.tmeft, bliDI. dvm .... rrrvf, (179&4'1{2287) Ul.495 TUITIN LfXUS 714-5'4-MOO C!Xus rs aoo 'ii Lllr. CD, traction. chrm ..._, mrwf, (104/59149) S2S, 195 TUSTIH LfllUS 714-5'4-MOO LEXUS ol 500 'ii Uhl. co. trlCllon. dvm ....... mrut' ( 177071109230) $24 ,995 lUSTIH LEXUS '71of.c5U 4IOO MAZDA 126 LX "3 (P5168238) S7995 COSTA MESA HONOA 1 7141438-5050 MERCEDES WlNtEo or ll!f nice .Eropean car. no deeleti pltese, lot.ti Corool del Mar raaidenl, private party IMM32·I041. MITSUBIS .. 9000 GT 56. 'II Auto, llf. attovs. 1511 ml (001385) $27,995 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)892-not NISSAN AL nMl (114130) $12,995 • COST A Ml:SA INFINITI 714-24"1300 NISSAN 300ZX COUPE 111 AulO, A/C, T-ber, llloys (207307) $8,999 LEXUS OF WESTlllNS11 TER 7144fl-6IOI OLDSMOBILE CUT\.AIS 'ti Au1o, air, cass, pwr P8Clllat J361558) $10,095 • LEX S OF WESTMINSTER (7H)lt2'690t PlYiliOUfi4 vovAdEA 'iO I ~. lllCo, AC, $4"5. MAHY MM VANS AVAL Hlf1>or Au1o ' ftnanct A VII&. IV6673'6. '4M42-22'2 RINGER liCT 'A (A92674) $8,988. sounc COAST ACURA 714ot7N500 SATURN sC2 195 Auto, air, moonlOOC & moral (318959) $8.995 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER 714-el2.ftOI SATURN sL2. •i7 Sdn USr (VZ328212) 11~~· COSTA MESA [JUl'f0A 71~5050 SUZUKI SWIFl (600788) $7,lt$ COSTA MESA INFINITY 714/'l4I·1300 TOYOTA 4 RUNNER 'i3 6 cyl, 2 wtl drtfe, AC, PB, PW, PS, atn-411f llerwo, CC, CO, 1unroof, tlnt9d 111111. tlloy wt111. cultom tlnla, tlldlng back window, roof rac1c. $12,000. 94M48·1556 Volbw'981' Van190f1 '81 4tpd, good 111111. ~ good. naads minor boctf WOlt $700 obo 949-631-3852. VOLVO Ts WAGON '17 Auto. air. pwr pit. lliovs, ltf, J318959) $27,99~ LEX S OF WESTMINSTER 714-812...oe • VOlVOTS'tl •DR. auto, A/C, lull pwr, lealher, caa, CO LEXUS OF WESTMIN'TE.R __ (T14)Q2.Q08 CUSTOM SLIPCOVERS Semi-mi.red cutter offeta 25% OFF Macerial/Labor! 2S clif{aat colon of clenin:u ac 100'• of other fabrical 3S ya.rs of qualicy work&ad . I .( . . . .. . .... ' , ' . .. Gil IAbULD Alli TOGITHIR. 8'11p, INlall, adwlcl to "' OlllY U7911 tl1"'1tt = s