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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-09-11 - Orange Coast Pilot. . SERVING THE NEWPORT-MESA COMl'AUNmEs SINCE 1907 . More troubles unfold for Conner "Alexis Corp. says film su;..r1Yeol ~ Conn~r . • • . • • · f · al · · breached a contract with the estiv org~er took company, which agreed to pay $34,000 of its money for $50,000 in exchange for advertis- an led If t ing and marketing promotions at a c ce go even . the festival. NO.\IO ScHWARTZ The money also was to go !ki1fb to~ard spon- NEWPORT BEACH -A sorship of a Nevada-'based goU company is celebrity goU accusing Newport Beach Inter-tournament at national Film Festival co-founder Pelican Hill Jeffrey S. Conner of taking Golf Club, the $34,000 of its money to cover lawsuit stated. costs of a celebrity golf touma-The tourna- ment tmtt never took place, ment was part acoording to a lawsuit filed last Jeff Conner of Colll)er's month. effort ~ to " The lawsuit, as well as a series expand this spring's festival, of bad debts revealed in Conner's which was in its fourth year. Sept. 1 bankruptcy papers, sheds According to court documents, more light on the festival's unex · the two parties had an oral agree- pected collapse Uus week. ment that $25,000 would be paid Conner and his attorney on in advance to the goU club in con- the case could not be reached for nection with tournament costs. comment Friday. However, Alexis alleges that The lawsuit, filed by the Alex- is Corp. on Aug. 17 in Santa Ana SEE FILM PAGE A9 1 OON I.EACH I DAILY PILOT Movie patrons enter Edward's Big Newport Theater on opening nJght of this year's film festival. ,. O I Inside The best local SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 , 1999 Film festival :S demise is ' Newport's loss . . I t was a' brilliant idea. Bnng fresh independent ClJlema by local and international film- makers to Newport Beach and offer it up at some of the most beautiful theaters in the country Some of it was gritty and daring. Some of it was mystical and cap- bvab.ng. And some of it was downright cheesy. · But the Newport Beach lnter- nat.Jonal Film Festival was more than just a place where stories were told. ll was a place where stones were made. It was the place where New- port Beach jailor David Sperling premiered his ultra low-budget ·Drunk m Public,· an 18-minute short about Mark David Allen, arrested 97 times for being - . well -drunk in public. It was ·where filmmakers from Ireland, Wales and Ta.twan gathered to !>how their best in the backdrop of Newport Bay. It was where EDITOR 'S NOTEBOOK nancy cheever ordinary people dunged glasses with Gary Busey and Jdck Lem- mon It was where Diane Ladd said, •Newport Beach .is JUSt like Palm Beach, but with a little more love.· ll was where the German cast of •Das Boot• ascended the Edwards Big New- port dnvewar y.rith their c:olorlul periscopes poking through their timou~ine moon roofs . It Wt.1 where a ~taff of volun- SEE CHEEVER PAGE A9 .ostgone, Beatrice Thomas, surviving wife of one o.f three men who rpn the old cannery, takes a Rosh Hashana celebrated by. Jewish families ut not or otten look back as restaurant prepares to close. • Hwidreds gather at sundown at two area temples; more events "- NOAJ<J S<.. I IWARTZ F or Beatrice Thomas, 85, losing the Can- nery Restaurant on Sunday will mean having to let go of one of the last tangible memories of her husband. From the moment she stepped into her dockside home as a newlywed back in 1943, her existence in Newport was intertwined with the life of the factory. She is now one of the last living people associated with the founders of the old cannery. Back in the day, her husband, Tommy, was one of the three managers or the canning plant and a firm believer m fate. With- in three days or meeting Beatrice in San Francisco, he proposed. It seemed, to b.un, that everything bad just fallen into place. They were both Greek and one of their parents were from the same small Mediterranean village. It took her a little longer. At first she thought of him as •a lit· tle pushy,• she said, until his clever sense of humor and delightful optinusrn for life over- took her sensibilities. And so she SEE CANNERY PAGE A12 Bft!Al\I P06lJDA I OAA Y I'll.OT Beatrice Thomas looks at old photos from her private collection of lniages. Her late husband Tommy Thomas was one of the managers of the original fish cannery ln Newport Beach. s A v I ' (, G 0 0 D 8 \' u : "I'm very sorry to hear that the Cannery ls closing because it wa~ the site of me and my husband's lir:rit date ... • -Kim <>vie · , · · , •· · • • P.1q1· A 11 planned for today and Swiday. NEWPORT fl.1ESA -Hundreds of Jew- ish families gathered at sundown Fnday to observe the begtnrung of Ro'h Hushana - the Jewish holiday that marks the begm- ning of the Jewish New Year. The 10 day· that follow are called the · Days of Awe and Jews around the world will spend time tocusmg on repentance, Judgment and atonement. The High Holy Days are considered the second major SEE CELEBRATION PAGE A8 DA's office forms unit to battle rash . .. . of jewelry heists •Two-man team will work with other agencies to catch thieves targeting Newport Beach area. Diyflb SANTA ANA -The}' hke to targ t unsuspecting Victims, m t of whom fre· quent high-end stores m South Coa.,t Pla'ta and Fashion Island. They have a penchant for jewelry that can be qwckly exchanged on the bltick market for ca h. They Will threaten and even attack lhe>r victims in order tog t the valuable loot. SEE UNIT PAGE A12' datebook · IN SPORTS INDEX DP103 W:th com- munlca- tion tnk· mg a turn toward high technology, face-to-face mter· ~ctiWs slowly betjMlng a thing of the past. But Newport-Mesa Storytellers hav a different idea for the future. And they're telling anyone who'll lis· ten. See Date- book; Page B5 Fnday·~ scores: Estancia 35 MagnoUaO Cost. Mesa 28 Saddleback 19 ForcoliiDliM8 stories, ~ 1i. ~ see Page Bt At right: Esumdn'1 MarshAll Hen· dridcs runs for a first down Hen· <h1dcs fllillbed U,e night With"' touChdowns. IES1' llTYS .................... M QASSIAfD ................. 110 • cOMMUNnv & auss .......... .A6 ctWMUNl1l fOIUM ...... : ••• .A 11 DA11ICKI ••••••••• ,. • ' ........ J,S . I FAlllt •• ,. ........................ .A2 .SCK:llY ••••••••••••••••••••• 16 SPCJllS ............. ": •••••••• Jl -........................ ~ WEMIB ..................... ~ ................ s WM1'S IPP •• ·~ • • • • . . ••..• J3 .... •~.coming. Again lhe Daily Pilot' ann~I Im of the 103 mos1 1nfluent.-1 ~ in NeWpof't·Mele Wiii iamYe fri<Yy You'll have to watt until~ to find out Who mcMld ~who ~offMd who\No.1 -.~--,.. ...... ........... ... ~D SOIUtday. ~ 11, '* faith ' ' Doily PilOt • • ~----------------------------.-----~---------~----------------~-----, . · II Ill IPlllT I MOIAL Of Tll STOIY to get involved •Here is my creed. I believe in one (:'iod, Creator of the Universe. That he goght to be worshiped. That the most acceptable service we render him is doing good to his other children." -Benjamin Franklin 'Where would your daughter's shorts like to travel this week?' asked the delightful Y.~9 woman at the cleaners recenUy. The last time I'd been there she had sad- ly ~ to me, "I am really sorry, but your Q.Mughte r's shorts are on their way to ~w York right now. A customer came in ~ hurry for his clothes, and somehow he tcooped up her shorts at the same time,• she explained. "We didn't look closely because a taxi was waiting to take lum to catch a plane to New York. "When we realized our mistake, he was gone. I know he'll come in as sooo as he returns. We'll clean any other clothes for free until they return, and I'll drive them to your house the minute they do.· "Don't worry about it." I said. "Amy has other clothes for work. You don't need to call, I'll JUSt sto~ m when l go to the market, and that s pretty often." "Address: 2900 Paci.be View Dnve, CoroM del Mar Phone: (949) 759-1031 E-mail: Anderdad@swfside.net Denomination: One of 11,000 Evangel- ical Luth~ran Church in America con- gregations,. Year established: The cllurch is cele- brating its 40th year as a congregation, Su~y schedule: Worship service is at 9:30 a.m .; children are dismissed after the children's sermon tor Leaming for Kids classes, which meet concurrenUy with the worship service; Leaming for Adults, the pastor's class for adults, meets at 10:45 a.m.; Smgles Group meets at 10:45 a.m.; the Sunday evening coffeehouse, with live music, opens at 1 p.m. Before-and after.school program: (949) 759-1146 Senior pastor: Mark Anderson Size of congregation: 150 Makeup of congregation: All ages, pri- marily from the Corona del Mar and Newport Beach communities. Olild care: Provided for children under 5. 'fype of worship: The worship llie of the church is characterized by both tra- ditional and contemporary elements. A strong and varied musical tradition emphasizes the joy experienced in a llie with God. The pastor includes a special time for children du.ring the worship service. The Lutheran church is a sacramental church sqessing bap- bsm and the Lord's Supper as a means through which the power of God's Holy Spirit touches lives. Holy Cofu- muruon is celebrated the first and third Sunday of the month. ur h of / I I I I I I I I Each time I went 111 during the week the shorts were traveling, she Jpologized and thanked me. Teaching: Anderson's preaching is Mark Anderson ls the pastor at Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Master. "Not every one would be so nice about it,· she said. grounded in Scripture and reOects the · · central teaching of the church, justifi-Scripture and is expressed in the·his· register are visited early in the week church and community groups. Every third Sunday of the month the congre- gation collects food and clothing· for the Lutheran Social Servi.Ce Food lngathering, which helps the Lutheran Social Services to provide for as many a s 2,000 families each month. Most important, members carry their Christ- ian faith into their daily lives and look for ways to share their faith in Jesus Christ through witness and service to others. "I don't think-1 reacted any differ- ant1y thiin anybo\ly else,• I replied. cation by faith. This teaching is toric creeds and the historic conies-by someone from the church who summed up in the Apostle Paul's letter. sions of the church, a faith that pro-brings them cookies and information "You'd be surprised,• she responded. She was right. 1\vice soon after that,"I was surprised at what I Qbserved. One afternoon my daughter, K1illy, and I wen\ to a sale at d depart- to the Romans where he writes, ·w e vides stability in often' chaotic times. about the church. Anderson also calls believe that a person is justified by The Lutheran church places a strong or visits them du.ring the week. . , I I I I I I I faith apart from works of law.• The empliasis on learn.ir!g for all ages, Outreach programs: Church of the church teaches that we do not have to believing that the nature of the Christ-Master supports ministries and pro- " earn• God's grace. Instead, the ian llie is growth. The church stresses grams that give concrete expression to Gospel, which is the message of recon-lifelong education for people of all God's love for all people. The congre-:. 111ent store in Fashion Island. All the "cferks looked very weary. One sales tt&dy looked close to tears as she tned (o stay polite while being berated by a ciliation between God and people, is a ages. gation runs a before-and after-school free gift given by God through faith in Welcome cart: VlSitors are greeted program, serves as board of directors Jesus Christ. In Jesus Christ.. God before entering for worship. They are for Seaview Lutheran Plaza (a low- ud and angry customer accepts us. The faith and life of the offered information about the church income housing facility located next to • I Lutheran church is grounded in Holy and are asked to register. Those who the church campus) and assists various -Complied by Michele M. Marr •I want t.o go over and try to help, ~bt I don't know what l'd do,• Kelly saJd. 1\vo days later, I saw a similar Qdent, but th.ls time there was mething I could do I .. . ( L-~-------~--------------------------------------------------------~~ I was in line at a market and noticed ,.-problem at the checkout stand. A P L A C I S I 0 W 0 ·1 S H I P FAITH CALENDAR wetnan repeatedly slid her credit card lb.rough the machine. The cashier ruce- ~ reached over and helped. The ~man must have wanted cash back \,lereuse the cashier asked her to input \he PIN number. Apparently she could· 1''t. temember 1t, and neither could the man with her, but they acted like it was the. cashier's fault. They became very rude when the cashier said, "I'm sorry, but I am not allowed to give money without the correct PIN." . She remained po.lite as the com- plaining continued and the line length- ened. Finally the couple stomped off, ,l)ut the woman glared at the cashier before they left. When 1t was my tum, I Cbmplimented the cashier on her ~ence. The woman behmd me agreed, and then the cashier surprised by saying. ·1 sbll bet there is an angry phone call to my manager." "We'll vouch for you,• I said. The Cd.sluer called the manager over and we told her what we witnessed. Both she and the cashier thanked us. Sometimes the best thing we can do for others is to be in prayer for them. But there are other times when we can aJso get involved for them. And you can quote me on that. .,.--- • CINDY 1MNE OtRISTESON Is a Newport hach resident who speaks frequently to par- tnting groups. She can be reached via e-mail at <indyOonthegrow.com or through the mail at r,o. Box 6140-fSOS, Newport Beach 92658. • EDITOR'S NOTE: Places io Worstup features brief descriptions of church- es and temples In our community. They appear each week on a rotat · ing basis. Episcopal SAINT JAMES CHURCH Saint James Churth is a community devoted to loving Jesus Christ and serving him as Lord and savior. A tra- ditional service with holy Eucharist; rite I is held on Sunday~ 7:30 a.m. A contemporary ser11ce with holy Eucharist. nt• II is held on Sunday at 9 a.m. arid a cherismatk MfVke with holy Eucharist. me• is held"on Son- day at 10:45 a.m. Chffd care is pro- vided for the 9 and 10:45 e.m • .,. VICeS. Sunday school for an chUdriri meets at 9 a m. There ii a !f11!1 N Eucharist on Wednesdey at noon. David Andersoo ls ""'°' P*Or· The church is al 1209 Via UdO. Neto,aDf1 Beach. For more lnfomwdol1, (all 675-0210. ST. JOHN THE ... EPISCOPAL CHURCH St. John the DMne Episcopal Church is a llturgQt church, which means that the focus 6f the worship is on God and lncludel Holy Commu· nion (which Is the secramentel recall· Ing of the I.Mt Supptr), l'Nding of the word of God and a wmon. The sermon mesMge Is based on the Scripture reading f°' the day and gives a practical application for ChrlstiWI ltYlng. SUf)(iay worship ser- vices ere at I end 10 e.m ~ ?.£-Is provided from' 8 to 11 :i> a.m. SUrldey school b children ages 4 to 10 meets from 9:45 to 1 t a.m. Con- rad Nordquist Is s.nior pastor. The church K at 183 E. Bey St., COSUI Mesa. For more Information, catl 548-2237. Sf. MATlltEW'S CHURCH St. Matthew's Ovth is• tradttion- al Epi5copal church that alms •to toi.: low Christ. to worship God ~ Sunday in his chwch, and to work and pray and give for the tprHd of his ki1l9dc>nl .• t"°'Y CommUnion is held on SUnday at 8 end 10:15 a.m .. and en Thonc:Yy at 9:30 a.m. Sunday school for youth of all ages at 9 1.m.~ adult Sunday school at 9:15 am. CNld care Is provided for Sunday ser- vices. The church ilso offers an 1 t- WMk practicAll introduction to the Christian fllilh. c""9d The Alpha eow..--..--~the Yffl. Th9fe II no dw9I for the coune end ~ Is wekome. Stephen C. Sairtiilt IS senior pastor. The ~•at nn w.stcHff Drlw. Newport ae.ch. For Information, call 646-1 152. . ST. MICHAEL AND ALL ANGllS ENCOMl CHURCH St, MlcNel and Alt Angels EOisco- pai Church .-S •to 'WOl'.'Shlp God In word and s.a..,m, ~m the good news of Jesus Christ to •II. and to lead faithful .net productM !Ms by using God'• gtfts to rmpond to needs within the palish; the commu- nity and the world end to be respon- sible stewards of all creation.• The churd'l's worship Is Eucharlst-<en- tereCI, using the ((adltlonal end con- temporary b6oks of common pr.,. SeMces are on SUnday at 8 and 10 a.m. Child care Is provided. Bible StudY for adults meets at 9 e.m. Mld Children's Sunday school ls at 10 a.m Peter Haynes K teniot pmor. The church Is at 3233 Pacific VleW Drive, CoroN def Mal\ For fn()(e lnforme... tfon. call 644-0463. Four-5quare MESA lllt.E ~L . Mesa Bible ~ Is 1 gr8(fr()fl- ehted, Bible-believing chutd'I that foe God's love to meet ell the goOd news of low and llCc.pt S*>" .. .net trust In God's grace to male• ti*" whott. Prai.. worship and &Ible tNCtilng ls held on Sunday at 10 a.m. Child care and children's ministry Is pn:>vkMd fOr 10 a.m. servke M'\d tuching. lob Stone Is senior pest(>r. The church Is at 1734 Orange Aw., Cost.a Miu. For more Information, caff 541-9733. SPECIAL EVENTS MEETINGS FOR UNEMPLOYE~ St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church hosts an ongoing series of Thurs- day evening meetings for the unemployed, with speakers on various subjects. The meetings are free and open to the public. St. Andrew's is at 600 St. Andrew's Road, Newport Beach. For more information, call (949} 574~2239. TliE ARTisrs WAY The Rev. Gail Miller will speak today on •Tue Artist's Way" from 10 a.m. to noon at The New Thought Christian Church and 1iuth Foundation,1929 Tustin Ave., Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation, call (949) 646-3199. NEIGHBORHOOD PICNIC St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church will sponsor a family neighborhood picnic from noon to 3 p .m. Sunday at Mariners Park. Pace painting, games, an air jump and a Dixieland band will be available. For more information, call (949) 631-2880. WALK FOR 'PEACE The NeWMrt Mesa Irvine Inter- faltb Council will hold its fifth annual Walk for Peace at 10 a.m. Sept. 18 starting from Triangle Square. For more inforniatioo, call (949) 660-8665. CLASSES/WORKSHOPS BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP For adults in all stages of loss of a loved one. The group helps partic- ipants to share experiences, receive support and learn ways to manage feelings of sadness and loss. Hosted by Jewish Family Ser- vices. For dates, times, fees or oth- er information, call (714) 445-4950. YOU AND YOUR AGING PARENT Jewish Family Services hosts ses- sions for adult children who cany some responsibility for the care of agmg parents. The group address- es issues of communication and relationshlps with agiftg parents, finding resources, de.finllig respon- sibilities and managing problems. For dates, times, fees or other infor- mation, call (71•) 445-4950. WEEKLY EVENTS QUAKER MEETING The Orange County Friends, a Quaker group, bolds meetinv.s at 10 a.m. Sundays at the Whittier Law School at 3333 N. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For more infonnation, call (949) 786 7691. mot 8EADE8S HQilJHE news stories, illustrations, edrto-WEATHER SURF PO· LI CI TIPS (949)642~ rial matter or advertisements Record your comments ebc>Ut herein an be reproduced with- the Daily Pilot or news tips. out wntten permls.sion of copy-TEMPE.RATURES TIDES Our fading south-• Install • peephole viewer In your door. NMR open your door right owner. . TODAY without knowi~ is on the otMI' side. Also consider calling ADDRESS . aa1ix;. Our address Is 330 W ~y St .. t:tQW m BEACH US 84163 First low west swell will dettv-their busmeu office to confirm the appointment. Cosu Mesa, CA 92627. Ortuldon 4:43 a.m, •..•••• O 3 The Times Orange Coumy Corona del Mar First high • er dwtst to-shoulder •Whenever pos$1ble, trawl wfth a friend. Keep your car 1n good (:ORRECDQNS (800) 252·9141 84164 10:55 1.m. : •.••• S.1 I It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt-wottclng order, especially before long trips, end ih. gas tri at ly correct all errors of substance, ~ .. Costa Mesa Second low high sets today. They Pleue c.11 (949} 574-4268. Cless1flect (949) 642 5678 4:~p.m ........ 1.0 least half full. Di'P!IY (M9) 642~321 85164 fX1 Edftoriel Newport Beach Second high (Ould reach he.Id • Stay In \Nell lighted lfHS ts much as possible when Wllklog at The Newport BeacM'..osta Mesa ~ (949) 642-5680 10:59 p.m •• , ...• S.2 =Pilot (USf'.S.144-800) 15 night. Avoid walking alone or wfth your hands full. !shed Monday through s.t. Sports (949) 574--4223 8446) ~lgh et the points urday In ~.wpon Be.ch .nd ~Spot! FIX (949) 64M170 Newport Co.1st IUM>AY • Walk confidently, directly end at a st~ ~ on the side of Coste Meu, SYbwiptlons are E-m.11: dalijplloteeatthllnk.net 84463 flnt loW end rem. The swell the sttfft facing ~ Crlmln1ls look for JOltM>M whO llPPIWI 1Y11lable only by Wbla1bl'CI: MllnOftb The Times Orang.County ( ) 5:12 1.m ........ 08 252-9141 , In arus ovtside of Bialne Office (949) 642~J.21 First hfgh wlll fade • bit by vutner..,._, ' Newport Beach end COSUt Mesa, Business Fex (949) 631·7126 subtct1ptiont to the Dally Piiot 11:25 a.m ...... 5.1 • Walk close to tht cUfb A~ dootway1. bushts and e1feY1 are avall•ble on~I for P'IA>llshtd by ~ Se<C>nd low Sun<Uly with sets In wher• attacken c.n hldt. $10 per month. ctau u yttdge •••..•. 2 ... SW S:l6 p m .••••••• 1. 1 postage~ at~ Mesa. CA Times~ Ntwt, 5«0nd high the chest high ... • If.(¥ IPS*WI to be foltowlng 10'.l,i tum ind Mil In the oppo-(Pric.s lndudt .u appffcabte enm.i Mnor ~ Nwipor" ..... , 23 SW state ~ local Ullft.) POSTMAs. llldclti. • • • • 2 ... SW 11:39 p m •••••• 4 6 site direction Of .. °" h othei' ... of the ltr9lt. TER: Send addta ~to The sun wHI Mt at TM Newport~ Mee """' I ICeMll, Dally Pllol, P.O b 15'0, Costa Vice"~~ .. ~ RMf Jetty • -.2·3 M .... • if you .. In denger. I0'9lm "and run. or ~I • 1h" Run IMtll. CA 92627. Copyright: Ho • .,,, ~ OI M !WID ,_,.. CdM, ••• , , •• ..2·3 SW 1911&LAW: 56 7:13 pm, toward llgt1a or people, ' .. ., O_oily Pilot j .,._ ' LUNDBERG Organic K7iole Grain RiceCakes • Plain w.ii Salt . • Plain No Salt . :~rn S._69 REG. '2.69 & g oz. Natural Value Premium Natural Products Peanut Butter Natural Honey Nos.It HAl~I KI!JZ ADililal Cookies • vtinioa • CJllJCOlall? srloz. YOU SAVE UP TO $8.96' I MixesEasi/g I TOTAL SOY IGrmt10stingl The Ultimate Meal Replacement • SOY PROIEIN -17 grams per aeMq StJPR09 Brand Soy~ a 'l)'pical Raup of ld1awoes • Good Source of Cakhan, Saponlns & Ph)tooutrimta •AD Natural -NutritiooallY Balanced eStrawbeny Creme •French Varil&i . • Bavarian Chocolate 2.4POUNDS SUGG. '27.95s1r FARM FRESH PRODUCE Beautiful Skin Caps Designed to deanw & support the· bodys organs rapood>le for healthy skin. \ KASHI G.__.... ....... Cereals Mlllill lt'lth s..r lfWr c;,...rn. • .'tial-1 ... to &ti or /Illa.,.. 4S s.o...6 •App# Spice • a-rtJ Jizm1h • &nano Almond s ~ :~Prach ._~ REG. '2.79 &6.5 oz. ('f\f 5) Veggie Cuisine Veggie Weiner& l ~I .CJV REG. '2.49 9.7 oz. SUGG. '12.116 5~*"'rc!j C C'l"il~ 1'"'-r~"' '\ 1w~ :..(.../4, -- - Bi•lene H-24~ CoodltfOner TWIN~ ttM6iat.lh, ...... ::;:-•• 115 *.S . ~,,... .............. ,:,;,, lc::t~~ ---------- l .. \ Daily Pilot thousand reasons to buy buSiness gifts Fletcher Jones approval for res ltfany & Co. offers a slew of quality business guts ideal for gift-giving ughout the year, and nQw • created business gifts for the ennium. The gifts include stal champagne flutes-two les at $27 a piece; porcelain 'mugs-two styles at $25 a piece; porcelain boxes-two styles at $45 and crystal boxes- at $150. "Whatever the occa- s~ •. business gifts must always pr~ject genuine, intrinsic val- ue," says John Petterson, senior 'Vice presidetit of corporate sales .at nffany' & Co. "We have made it a priority to develop the 2000 theme in elegant ways, so that these gilts will be treasured : long after the century's tum." •Tlffany & Co., at (714) 540-5330, is on the lower level of South Coast Plaza, near Nordstrom. • Famous Footwear, at (949) 650- • 7358, has everyday low prices on sqme popular name brands ~like Keds, Adidas, Nike, Skech- ers, K-Swiss, Airwalk, Vcms, Reebok and New Balance . .For back-to-school shopping there is a half·PQCe sale on the entire stock of school shoes. The half- price sale offer is good when you bay one pair of brand-name shoes; you'll get a second pair of shoes of equal or lesser value for 50% off. Fdmous Footwear has a location in the Costa llST IUYS ·greer jYWer ?' Mesa Courtyards at 1835 New- port Blvd. in Costa Mesa. The Spa & Salon Gregorles U. · holding its first massage-a-thon and cut-a-thon to coincide with the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure SK race at Fashion Island on Sept 26. On the race day you can get a $20 haircut, or a ~buck a minute" massage. The massage is $1 a minute at the race site, or $70 an how: or $45 for a half-hour at the spa. For reservations, please call (949) 644-6672. Spa & Salon Gregories is at ~Newport Center Drive in Newport Beach. Newport Mesa Ballet, at (714) 241-1442, offers ballet lessons for children as young as 2 all the way up to adults and profes- ABOUT 15 MINUTES FROM FASHION ISLAND + WHEN DINING GETS BORING, IT'S TIME FOR ... Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO HERE, WE MAKE DINING MORE THAN A MEAL. Cock101ls Phone Ahead for Food To Go WE WELCOME LARGE FOOD ORDERS TO-GO. 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949-645-7626 "Four Lessons to be Learned From a Con Artist" l ulc 16:1-U ) FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3JOJ Via Udo NCWJX)lt l!Oach 673·1340 or 673-6150 Onueh 10 am & 5 pm Sund<'iy SchOol I 0 am epn 1 Diii' PurJNM 11 ,_ b.w Chrilt ut~ '" iu"' mkr th.u m Christ w "'6J I~ fatthfoJ •"4 11Wlwiiw Chri ,,.,, l..1ws. The RcV'd Peter D. Hayne), ~1or SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3100 Pad6c V~ Dr , NoWport Boaeh 644-2617 or 675-4661 O\wch JO am SUndaV Sch6ol 10 am ~ Moo11roi I s:m& Ill~ 12 rlCIJn s1onals. The artistic director ai Newport Meia Ballet, Stela Viorica, is a former principal dancer of the National Ballet of Romania. When you 1ngn up for dance lessotJa the J)rtt class is free. There are also classes available in jazz, lyrical, hip· hop, ballet theatre and floor barre. It's at 2790 Harbor Blvd. In Costa Mesa. Cannery Vlllage is filled with antique shops and one of them, Jane's Antiques, is having a 20% to 50% off sale through the end of the month. Jane · Antiques, at (949) 673-5688, is at 2811 Lafayette Ave. in New- port Beach. The hours are 11 a.m. to -4 p.m. Monday through Fnday, and Saturday, 12 p.m. to 4p.m. · books, Big Engine rockers and step stools, and dinnerware . sets. • Full-service eatery will join a putting meeq, . Uadro collectors can special order the new 1999 Christmas ornaments at Robinso~s-May. The holiday ornaments mclude Santa's list for $195, the '99 Lladro bell for $40, and the Uadro ball tor $55. Robmsons- May is at Fashion Island in New- port Beach and at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. boutique and manicure service at ~ ersbip. i p.m., illit aMm-1 idon· er Michael Kra~. The apJ>t<*JIUle 2,500· NEWPORT BEACH-Fletcher Jones Motorcars is closer to including a Mediterranean-style restaurant as one of many ameni- ties the dealership otters after the Planning. Commission approved the addition this week. Roger's Gardem, at (949) 640-The cOiiimission unanimously 5800, is celebrating the grand voted in·favor of establishing the op.ening of the world's only full-service, Renato Restaurant, Christopher Radko Galaxy whlch will offer breakfast, lunch and dinner. Store, which features a huge col-"I'm really pleased to finally lection of the collectible orna-get approved for the restaurant men ts for almost every holiday. because we think it will be a As part of ijle celebration, Radko tremendous benefit for our clients representatives will answer arty ~ and employees," said Garth Blu- questions about the handcrafted, ! menthal, Fletcher Jones Motor- heirloom glass ornaments. Also, 1 ~general manager. actress Tippi Hedren of •"The _!. As a condition of the approval, square-foot fadllty, which will be located inside the main building adjacent to the service entrance, will serve beer and wine and have outdoor seating. Blumenthdl said he hopes con- ....5.t0Jcti9n W'Ould begin before Thanksgiving and the restaurant will be open by sprinlJ t>f next year. The restdurant addition will join various other establlslunents at the dealership, including a shoeshine facility, a putting green, boutique, manicure ser- vice and children's play area. "We want to make sure we make visiting Pletcher Jones the most rewarding experience in terms of havirlg various sel'Vices that could stimulate our clients inter~t. • Blumenthal said. The Great Train Store, at (949) 640-5197 and located at Fashion Island In Newport Beach, is having a storewide sale on s.elected merchandise reduced up to 20% off. The Great Train Stqre carries top quality toy train-sets and accessories by Brio, Tomy, Learning Curve, Thomas Wooden Railway and Lionel. The store is filled· with trains for children of all ages, and for collectors. If you're seri- ous about train sets, you'll like the New York Central Flyer Fre1ght Train Set for $169.99, the Alaska Railroad train set for $199.99, and the Santa Fe Spe- oal Freight Train Set for $269.99. The train sets are reduced an additional 20%. You can also find non-train toys like clocks, Thomas the Tarik talking camera, Thomas the Tank ,· Birds," will sign ornaments ben-. the restaurant will be required to efitlng her Shambal Wildlile Pre-l . block its lighting with blinds dur- serve. And Roger's Gardens will ! ing dosing hours beginning at 10 , have a drawing to win valuable i prizes. Roger's Gardens is at i --..,---------.-----.-..,.--:--.;..;_------ 2301 San Joaquin Hills Road in l B R I E F S Newport Beach. i i Yuen LuJ, at (714) 545-8845, is l Ocean water drops to winter-like temperatures offering a family portrait special l NEWPORT BEACH-Summer for just $38. It's a $100 value. l is ending sooner than expected The family portralt includes the ! with a 12-degree drop in Newport sitting fee and one color 8x10 l Beach waters in the past week. photo. The Yuen Lui studio is at j The water temperature has South Coast Plaza, at 3333 Bear l fallen fro~ 68 degrees to ~6 st. on the third n l dC91'.ees since Labor ?ay, said oor. l Manne Safety SupervlSor Brent • BEST BUYS is published Thursdays l Jac~Thbsen.d and Saturdays. If you know of a good l · es ay ~verung, we started buy, send a fax to (949) 646-4170 or ; to get west wmds at 12 to 15 ~es write to Daily Pilot, Best Buys, 330 w. j an hour followed_ by west wmds Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627. : on Wednesday mgbt and Thurs- day night of 15 to 20 miles," Jacobsen said. "It brings up all the water on the bottom up to the surface." Although Labor Day is considered the last day of sum- mer and the lifeguard staff drops to a skeleton crew of about 30, the Newport Beach staff was reduced even further to 12 lifeguards due to the quick temperature change. "Usually it doesn't necessarily . drop like this until November or late October,• Jacobsen said. "Nonnally this week is slow, but it's really slow." -Marissa Espino Classified ads work for GET THE PGINT? YOU! THE Daily Pilot Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil Vince Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner L11lqn '"Int room & d.lnhlc rooms •\lll'iabk for VoUP IHut-mtdl •nd prhate fllnct.IC:lm 723-0621 Please Call For Resenation and Directlom 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach ST. MARK PRESBYTERIAN CJIURCH "Open Arms and Open Minds" Worship 9:30 Jambortt & F.astblulf In Newport Beach Newport Harbor Lutheran Church 798 Dover Dr. N•wport Beach Tradltlonal Lutheran Worship .. rvlc• with Holy Communion Sundev .. ts •m COMMUNITY CHURCH CONGREGATIONAL UNITE~~"CH Of " to C..; To C:... Is to DO. Bruce Van Blair, Minister Worship Servlc:es "l:OOlm 9 oo.m AdlAt ~ SchOol •1o:oo.m-~School ·Cnrld care ProYlded 611 Hlfiotropt Ave, CoroN del M. 644-7400 , • HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH .1. (Dlaclples of Christ) 2401 lrvlne Ave. •l Santa laabel Newport BHch Sund•Y Worship -10:00AM First United Methodist Church of Costa Mesa 420 We't 19th Street, Co ta Me a Fcs11v1I of Wor;hip lO:OOam Richard L. Ewing, Pastor Chun:h School 9:00am & IO:ISam 949-548-7727 Costa Mesa MESA VERDI UNmD MnHODIST CHURCH 1701 Balcer, C.M. Worship & Church Sc"ool •a30 and 10:00 a.m. Dr. Richard a.o,, • 97.9-823.d NEWPORT CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1601 M;wguentt"Ave. Coron5 del Mar 644-0745 worship al 8 .00AM & I O:OOAM Children Sunday School 1 O:OOAM Jr. & Sr. High S:OOPM • NEW TIIOUG IIT C HURCH Srinw! nf Mimi o~ntn Sund 'I Mc-dlw111m 10:00, '"lhr Ul\'lllC l1ka• Jte1' Kt't1 lr1tty S<'r virt:! JO .30 Nrighhmhoo.-1 C~111nmn11y C .Cntt'f, 184~ P<uk AW!, CostA Mes:e \\cd Hr.11h11g rVl r. IO !\O 111, 1112'.I 1'1t11n A\-e,, C ,.ista ir. . sat Worl.shop. 11).12 noon OOn:atKtn · '"Thr. Artm Way• II (949) t~l!J!. for lnformauon r c. Christian Grief Support Group Six consecutive Tu~sdays beginning Sept. 21 •Time: 4:00 p.m. -5:30 p .m. . ST. AND·REW'S PRESBYTERIAN .CHURCH 600 St. Andrews Road Newport Beach, California Cail Betty to register at 949-673-5725 Materials tee: $12 . 00 TEMPLE BAT YAHM . - A Reform ~lion b\COUJ1l8ln8 Tnidltion.aJ )('W(sh \'aJUC$ l.'DORV'DOR From ~ierallrm to Gcmerntlon Rabb! Mark S. M.lJk.r Our dt!llil\gubhc:d ~~ltltwl leader for 2~ )eat'> i I I I I I l I I • I Cantor Jowi.han Granl S'LICHOT SER~CES SATURDAY, SUP'fl!MDUR 4'0i R«:f"pdole. '1:fj P.•: lt,,,,lll'• l.«:IMN.. B:IJ P.""1 f«.~~ p.rrc. I' 4 l • I I I I \ • I ' ..... \ I. I'' , I ) '1 " 'I' I I I ' . ....., ............... _,; ....... ,., .... Mlij ..................... .. diW.....,.tl ................ 6: ... .. .. ,. ....... ,.,. "" ......... CllLDUll ........ AU.,...., MllSJ 9lnCll. m'PIDC9DOl ~ .. PW..,. Uallltl ... ~ • Opftl ID tr Nilir rot ......... al(,.,) M4-6j6J l'dl!t' lJciilt l]OQll0,'987 Plc:ue <::all IJ!l llt C>~9'> 644·1999 TEMPI.I! 8ATVAHM 1n11 Camelbect SUn-c Newpon ldch, CA 9l660 'WWW lby: OfS f • • • ' I ,f t 1> ' ~ • isit Our Seaside G~rd~n 's ·Floral &. Gift Dt<partin~nt · ewport Beach-'s Premier Home Accent' Boutique perience our wonderful new floral indoor garden. I Ldcal Rotarians to welcome members from the Far F£ISt J APANESE VISITORS: Mem- bers of the Rotary Club of Newport Balboa will host nembers of theu: StSter City Rotary Club-Ok81.aki (Japan) South as ey begin their VLS1t Monday. With the leadership of International Services Director Frank Ande.rson l.Qd past president Andy Camp- >ell, a busy four-day visitation • chedule has been planned. included are a welcome by Mayor )ennis O'Neil and Ule City Coun- iJ, dinner at Rotarian Wendell ;:;ish's home, golling at Pelican. iills, a visit to Rogers Garca_ens, a •>rogressive dinner with hosts Be ...aForce, Scott Paulspn and' Flossie. · ;)unning, a visit to the Environ- nent.al Nature Center, a harbor ..:ruise on Rick and Elaine Williams' tacht, shoppmg at Fashion Island md of course, attending the Nednesday evening meebng of the Newport Balboa Rotary Oub. TOWN & GOWN: Town and Gown. a support group of the Uru- "ersity of <;alifomia, lrvine, will '1old its annuaJ Membership Coffee rom.9:30 to 11:30 a .m. Monddy dl 'iherman Llbrary and Gardens, .!647 E. Coast Highway in Corona lei Mar. There will be a brief busi- 1ess meeting followed by a pre- co .. u11n & cL11s iim de.boom . sentation by Associate Dean Alan Temcciano from the School of the Arts, who will introduce the 1999- 2000 coming attractions m mUStc, drama, dance arid art. Twenty-five interest groups will be introduced to the mem- bership Reservations are not reqUlTed and new members and guests are welcome, according to Wanda Cullers, public rela- tions chair for the group. SUNSHINE SPECIAL: · Exchange Club of Newport Har- bor member Norm Von Herzen has atr&l)ged for 40 children from the Orange Wood Home for Chil- dren to tour Newport Harbor on one of Seymour Beek's Balboa Island Perrie1 on Sept. 25. 1bere will be 4'0 children with smiles on their faces as they tour the Har- bor and enjoy some snacks. Good job Norm and Seymour! LAST DANCE: The Cannery Restaurant closes its doors Sun- day night. The response to the Tuesday night receptions to honor has been amazing. Mayor Dennis O'Neil proclaimed Can- nery owner Bill Hamilton •"Mr. · NeWJ)ort Beach" in a fitting tribute lo one who has done so much for our community. On Tuesday bight guests lined up by the dozen to get Hamilton's autogrdph on a beautiful Can- nery sketch. One night, French's Cupcake Bakery provided a sheet cake with a beautiful Can- nery artwork on top --so beauti- ful that folks didn't want to ~t into the cake. Hamiltdn notes he hopes to sell all the Cannery arti- facts to one person, but-fte does have an auctioneer standing by. The Cannery collection of photos is belng given to the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum where they will be displayed. Some of the cooking equipment will be given to the Soup Kitchen. '1f you have been Involved in an auto accident, you need a 'Crash Course' on Soft Tissue Injuries." The Cannery Cruises moves over to the Riverboat Restaurant and Capt Mike Whltehead will Even "fender benders · can cause hidden injuries that can develop into pam. headaches, even arthritis Even worse most people who have been mvolved in an auto accident may not even know that they've been hurt Most doctors give pain killers to hide these injuries If you have been involved man auto accident, don 't settle until you receive your copy of our Free Report. Just call Toll-Free 1-888-616-9679 anytime. 24 hours for a free recorded message. The call is tree, so is the report ' ... leave the office early, cruise to the turning basin and anchor. Cell phone and pager 0 FF Lay down and listen to Elvis Costello and Burt Bacharachs 'Painted from Memory' ' ... phoned ahead to the Bluewater Grill for an appe- tizer plate. Greeted at the dock with a beautifol platter and off we glide into the sun-, set ' ... we worked closely with the sales staff and factory to craft a Duffy with our own personal touches. Fabulous . choice of colors, fabric and wood' How ·do you DuffY? · 2001 W Coast Hwy., Newport Beach, CA Sales • Rentalc; • ervice 949.645.6812 www.duffybOats.com ,, still be at the helm. this time work- ~ with c;Jayton Sbudey. 1be memories ot the Cannery and good deeds the fiemiltlJDI and CUmery stat1 have done ID~ Beach over the put 26 yam have l¥>t gone unnotked and are gnWly . a~ted. Tbe Pmnery's le$t dance is Sunday. Be there! WELCOME TO THE WORLD OF SERVICE CLUBS: Mike Mcnroy, sponsored by PDG Mike Scheafer, who joined the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club. SERviCE CLUB MEETINGS THIS COMING WEEK: Want to get more involved in your com- munity, make new frlendi, net- work, or to give something back to your community? ny a ser- vice clubl You are invited to attend a club meeting this com- ing week. Many clubs will bur your first guest meal for you. • • MONDAY -6:30 p.m.: The Harbor Mesa Lions Club meets at the Costa Mesa Country Club for a program by Shelly Marr on Project for Canine Companions. TUESDAY -7:30 a.m.: The Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary Club meets at the Balboa Bay Club. 6:30 p .m .: The Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions · Club meets at the Costa Mesa • Golf and Country Club. . WEDNESDAY -7:15 a.m.: The South Coast Metro Rotary Club Will meet at the Center Club. Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club meeta at the Uiliversity AthleticCub.Noon:1be Exchange Club of Orange Coast meets at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. 6:00 p.m.: The Newport Balboa Rotary meets at the Bahia to meet the Rotarians from Okazaki, Japan. TIRJllSDAY -Noon: Kiwanis Club of Newport Beach-Corona del Mar meets at the Bahia Corinthian. The Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club meets at the Holl- day Inn for a program on UCI atbletia. The Es.change Cub of Newport Harbor meets at the Rlverboet to Reed Royalty on Government Relations. The Newport-lrviile Rotary Club meets at the Irvine Marriott. 6:30 p.m.: The Costa Mela Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Club meets at Mimi's CafO for a Ladies Night Social . • COMMUNITY • a.uas Is published SaturdaY' In the Dally Piiot. Send your service club's meeting Information by fax to '(949) 660-8667, e-mail to jde- boomOaol.com or by mall to 2082 S.E. Bristol, Suite 201, Newp<)rt Beacb. CA 92660-1740. • PET Of Ill Wiii "Dotty" This beautiful 3-year-old female tortoiSe-shell needs your help! ni, Newport Beach Animal Shelter has an abundance of adult cats. ~ Please help save lives! Adopt a shelter cat! The Newport Beach Animal Shetter is at the Dover Shores Pet Care Center, 2075 Newport Blvd. (between Victoria and Bay) in Costa Mesa. For more informa- tion, call (949) 722..S301. "' AnllMk~ly. TM Community Animll Nelwolt P.O. Box 8662 Newport Beadl, CA ~2658 (949) 759-3646 n.eea • ..,._ ~c.re 0-.AMm TMBoKS... Newpolt.Pldww Pnme S... .. ftlc:e 5-M Willec••• ClraAlltht•ll ~aeo..ny . 130 EAST 17'" ST.• COSTA MESA A1N...,_caa..J7-9INil (BelWtd th~ llARP INNJ (949) 722-1177 ROW HOURS: TM-Slit 10-•S.-CA.Fie HnVJtSe M• .. Our WITH THE OLD TO MAKE ROOM FOR THE NEW, WE ARE HAVING A HUGE PARKING LOT atOWOUT SAl.E AT ••• Hart's\19 Rugs & Carpels 101 KALMUS DRIVE cosr A ~ESA, CA 92626 (714) 434-8440 Sept 1 Jth & 1 ~th * 9am·Spm FLOOR SAMPLES & REMNANTS ·DISCONTINUED ITEMS AND RUGS MUST GO!I! ORIENTAL RUGS* DECORATIVE RUGS* BRAJDS ~EEDLEPOINTS *LEATHER RUGS* DHURRIES KELLIMS * REMNANTS & MUCH MOREi!/ HUGE DISCOUNTS * HUGE SAVINGS THIS IS A "REAL SALE." Hart's~ 1h!9s I Carp;J'$ ORl•NTAL RUGS • CARP•TINQ • PLOORINQ www.hartaruga.com • State Uc. No. 539185 (714) 434-8440 101 Kalmus Dr., Costa Me a ,... . l tpoily P.ilot J i! , . f?emember, AYSO dads -it's only a game, d on't m ake it something else I 111 f I .., enough self-control to shout the lesson learn d m them will only encouragement as our sons last a lifetime. Le sons like how ' IDITOll'S NOTE: The following is an encore presentation of a column that 1uns each fall. EDITOl'S 110111001 ... and daughters race up and to b a good sport, how to wm Dear wiv of •over-eager" AYSO dads, You'll probably get in a fight lf you say what I'm about to, so ~imply clip this article and give ]t to your husband. Do it before the soccer season starts today, befote he makes a fool of him- self-and a wreck of your child. The sad fact is THAT, on every Newport-Mesa soccer field for the next 11 weeks, there will be at lecrst-a couple of · problem dads These are grown .men who scream at their kids- defenseless children as young as 4-like they're channeling Vmce Lombardi. And a few fathers won't stop there; they yell at other kids, coaches and referees-basically anything that breathes on the·soccer field. I'm not sure what gets into us males. Some deadly combina- tion of testosterone, pride and williom lobdell low self-esteem. We all have it within us to be jerky dads on Saturday, behaving as if it mat- tered how well our child can kick a ball. We all have the impulse to scream, yell, rant and rave in an ill-conceived aUempt to make our kids better soccer players. It's absurd; it never works. Most of us know this intellectually.' and m.uster down the field. or lose with character, and how ~ut, for the exceptions to simply en1oy the competition. among us, here are 10 things to 8. The refereei.-volunteer · keep in mind. moms and dads-will make bad 1. AYSO's official motto: calls. almost every one going •Everyone plays.• agdinst your team. So. what? 2. AYSO's unofficial motto: Life's full of bad calls; and the "Remember, it's for the kids. answer's not to compluin about Have fun.• them, but to deal with them. 3. It makes no difference who .9. Put your energie& to beUer )'lins the g~me. It's youth soc-uses. Instead of yelling at your cer, for gosh sakes. Don't cele-~id, try learning the names o{ brate too loudly when your all the players on the t am and team wins; don't be too rusap-. shout HGood JOb , So-and-so• to pointed when your team loses. each one all game long 4. It doesn't matter how your 10. How you behave matters, pride-and-joy plays; it only mat-it will dffect your kid forever. ters if be or she has fun. Ask any grown-up for an athlet- 5. No one on earth plays bet-1c Wdr story. Adults can remem- ter while being yelled at. her, m v1v1d detail, the stuigmg 6. Soccer is a tough game. words of their parent or coach, Try it yourself sometime--and even decddes later. then try it while someone you I pldyed sports through high love is screaming at you. l school and mto college. And I 7. While the outcome of these had dll sorts of couches, from games is less than meaningless, the dwful to the msp1ring. For NAIL CARE FULL SET •ACRYLIC •Acrylic W/Whlte TIP • Pini! & WMe Powder • Lume Gel •SI! Wrap FlLLS ----~ -- STAR liA 9 .......... I ~00 Via Oporto M Call for dir.ections _._ .... I • .. each one, I can remember, almo~t verbab.m, the per5onal attacks. But my dad's words cut even deeper. Whether delivered from the stands or after the game m the car, his critiques on the games I played still roam uncomfortal:\lY in my head: Good game, son, but ... you' should have, you could have, why didn't you? He was trying to make me a better athlete, but a more effec- tive strategy would have been: Good game; son, I'm proud of r .... you. Let's get a pizza to cele- brate. End of critique So Saturday, dads, do your- self-and especially your kids- a favor and zip 1t up. Cram a soccer ball m your mouth if you have to, bllt just let your kid play. It's only a game. Don't make it something else. • WILLIAM LOBDELL is the editor of Times Community News. His e-mail address is wmlobOaol.com. Oty workers ~t abodl five bou.r1 Thunday removing toilet paper from trees in tbs public right ~ of way near Estancia High School. The extensive job spanned from Estancia High School on Placentia Avenue north to Mesa Verde Drive through the retiidential neighborhood. City workers alerted the Police Department about the mci .. dent, out the prank is not con- sidered vandalism if there is no property damage,. pol.ice said. . The toilet papering occurred sometime dunng the early morning hour.. before 6 a.m., -;aid Public Services Director Bill Moms City mamtenance workers spent the morning removtng the paper and had most of the area cleaned by noon, h o said. -Elise Gee (corner of Irvine/Dover) -----· Newport Beach Sponsored by St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church There will be face painting, games and an air jump for the children and a Dixieland Band and baseball game for adults. Cost for a hot dog or hamburgerJ chips; a soft drink and ice cream is $1 .00. 949-631 -2880. • Sof\lrdoy, September 11 I 1999 • Send MOUND TOWN items to the Dally Pilot. 330 w. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627; fax them to (949) 646-4170; °' call (949) 642-5680, Ext. 228. A complete listing of MOUND TOWN may be found at d•ilypilotcom. TODAY Upper Newport Bay Naturalists Will hold a free campfire program at 7:30 p.m . at the F1sh and Game beadquru1ers on Sbellmaker lsland. Pete Femia from Ute Birds of Prey ·Center will taJ.k about raptors and bring s~veral owls and hawks for viewing. For more information, call (949) 786-6878. A craft and sewing lesUval will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Building 10 of the Orange Coun- ty Fairgrounds. Admission is $7 tor adults, children 12 and under dre free. Por more information, uill (714) 708-1654. The Paciftc Coast Quarter Horse · Show will be presented at the Orange County Fair & Exposition Center, 88 Fair Dnve, Costa Mesa. For more information, call (114) 708-1654. '.fhe OASIS Senior Center, at the (:Orner of 5th and Narcissus, Corona del Mar, will hold a breakfast from 7:30 to 10 a.m. llOUND TOWI The center will i,e:rve blucbe~ and regular pancakes, sausages, orange JWCe and coffee. The eveQt is held the second Saturday of each month. Cost is $2 for adults and $1 for children. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., president of the WaterKceper Alliance, will spedk to the Ornnge County CoastKeeper about the keeper role in Orange County et 11 a.m. over lunch at tfle Hyatt Ncw- porter. Kennedy also will outlin& the ways citizens can be active in the group's success. Cost ts $40. For more infonnation. call (949) 723-5424. Gdlaxy Store. A grand operung celebration will be held from noon to 6 p.m. today and Sunday at 2301 San Joaqwn Hills Road in Corona del Mar. Tippi Hedren will be signing animal-themed ornaments. The proceeds will go to the Shambala Preserve. Atten- dees may enter to win a $500 shopplng spree at Roger's with a $25 purchase. For more mforma- tion, call (949) 721-2100 SUNDAY . "A Brass Fanfare,.. featuring musicians from the Pacific Sym- phony Orchestra's brass section, at 3 p.m. will launch the New- The Latest Thing Teaching and port Beach Public Library's Sun- Healing Center 15 offering iwo day Musicales, running from classes from 10:30 a.m. to noon late summer through spring. on "Magnetic Therapy~ and The Newport Beach Central from 1 to 5:30 p.m. on "Tools for Library is at 1000 Avocado Ave. Living in Changing Tunes. H The For more information, call (949) first class will teach ha.w magnet_-717-3801. ic energy can enhance a state of · well-being with 11elief from aches The grand opening of Adult Day and pains. The ldter class will Services of Ornnge County, a teach how to avoid crisis and state-of-the-art center specializ- understdnd the chaos of creation. ing in Alzheimer's and dementia Cost is $15 for preregistration. care, will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. For more information, call (949) Adult Day Services of Orange 645-6211. County is at 9451 Indianapolis Roger's Garden's will now be called: The Christopher Radko Ave., Huntington Beach. For more information, call (714) 593- 9630. Septembe r 10-11-12, 1~99 All '981 '99 Skis, Boots, Bindings 20-70 3 0FF .•Ski Boots from $79.99 •Ski Bindings from $69.99 burloi7 · Bonfire Clothing All Connelly Waterskts & '98/ '99 Burton Snowboard Boots up to 4030FF CWB Wa keboards C a""'elly_ Waterski & Wa keboard 40% OFF · msrp I Demos on Sale ! up to 6030FF ~ &ONF•RE * NEWPORT BEACH Formerly N~ Sid ~o. 2700 W. COii Hlt1hw.Y ' (949) IJ1·J2IO SKl&SPORTS SAN GABRIEl '°"'*ly Ahli Spcwts toM I. NUntlftaton Drtve (62~)217~7JI ,, " CELEBRATION . CONTINUED FROM A 1 The Padflc Coast Quarter Hone Show will be presented at the Orange Cowity Fair & Exposition Center, 88 Pair Drive, Costa ~· For JJU?fe infRrmation, call (11-4) 708-16.$4. cycle of festivals in the Jewish year and will end Sept. 20 with Yorn Kippur. •This is a bme of introspection,• said Dr. Lee Bennan, president of Temple Bat Yahln of Newport St. Andrew's Presbyterian Beach. •1t is a time to be thankful Church will sponsor a family for the freedom to worship. to 3 p.m. at Mariners Park on the community.~ neighborhood picnic from noon 1 •This is a time for the Jewish comer of Irvine Avenue and ~·s 14-year-old son, Joey, Dove Street. There will be face I said High Holy Days a~ a special painting gain~ an air jump for time of year because he 1S remind- diiltlten' and a 'omeland band. ed of f:be importance of being good Cost for food and drinks is $1. For j and kind toward others. · 6 c. Hundreds of well-dressed peo-more. information, call (949) 31-ple streamed into Temple Bat · 2880. 1 Yahm on Friday while cctrs outside I filled the streets. People young Save Crystal Cove, an aW~ce of 1 and old hugged one another as community groups opposing the they entered the large ho\ise of proposed resort at the cove is 1 worship. holding an event from 1 to 4 p.m. Holocaust swvivor Erzsebeth at the Historic Cottage District. Freifeld stood among the crowd The event will feature tours, while her family found their' seats. e xhibits, music and will help peo-MThis holiday bnngs everything ple learn bow they can make back,• .said Fi:ell~d, 83, who lost sure Crystal Cove remains a pub-~er en~ family m the Holoca~ lie park. For more more informa-It reminds me of my pa.rents. bon call (949) 494-5960. Wide-eyed 10-year-ol~ ~eter de • Penne 5ald this was his first time The America Assn. of Unlvenlty W011J€n Newport Beach will hold its-~nnual membership mixer at 2 p.m. at a private resldence. For more information, call (714) 968- 3919. worshiping at Temple Bat Yahm, which is a reform congregation. De Penne comes from an Ortho- dox Jewish background where the rules are more strict. • 1 kind of have to-be here and I kind of want to be here,• de Penne Daily PilOt i;&d while hoJdlng hil'prayer book and weanng the traditional yannulke, a skullcap Jewish men wear signifying the respect that man has for God, One b1blica1 ritual during Rosh Hashana is the blowmg of the sho- far, or ram's horn, which symbol- izes the awakening of slumbering souls. Apples and honey are also eaten to welcome a sweet new year. Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach and Temple Bc:tt Yahm both held seMces at 8 p.m. Friday. Temple Isaiah will hold worship services at 10 a.m. today and Sun- day. Bat Yahm will hold a 9 and 10:45 a.m. service today. "lb.is is the beginning of a new spirit and a new hope," said Flory Van Beek of Temp\e Isaiah. Bat YahJn members Will jom Rabbi Mark Miller and the cantor at North Star Beach in Newport at 1:30 p.m. today for the "Tasblich, • or the religious act of going to a body of water to cast away sins. The Pacific Community of Sec· ular Humanistic Jews is planning a Rosh Hashana program for from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday at~ Marriott Suites Hotel in Coste Mesa. ; Yorn Kippur services are slated for 1 p.m. Sept. 20 at Orange Coast Unitarian Uruversalist Church in Costa Mesa. Group members said the sesvices will strive to demon- strate the response of Secular Humanistic Judaism to the changes of the contemporary world. • We are the authorized dealer for Lowest Prices Guaranteed In All Of Southern Callfomlal DISCOVER .-llGll COUllTY 2 000 Family owned and operated for 3 generatwm and into the next millenium 2189. Lakewood Blvd • Long Beacli Koun: • (562) 986-5305 :~·~~= Many piues in stock.for immediale delivery! Due to sale prices we can't quote prices over the phone. 6 mos. Interest frff 0.A.C. ~ REAL .SERVICE FROM REAL PEOPLE. THAT'S STATE FARM. Trust one of these State Farm agents with your car insurance: Just ask one of these good neighbor agents: COSTA MESA NORTH Buddy Bearbower 2850 Mesa Verde Dr. East Ste. P {Adams & Mesa Verde) 714-546.1701 lie 0196112 Matthew Kennedy 891 W. Baker St. Ste. A-8 (Baker & Bear St.) 714-957-6666 lie 0731154 Mike Scheafer 1551 Baker St. Ste. B {Baker & Harbor) 714-435-0300 lie 0645331 COSTA MESA EAST George Elsom 350 E. 17th St. #211 {at 17th St. & Newport) 949-646-9393 lie OB72182 Ken Dilley 2482 Newport Blvd. #10 {in Sea Coast Village) 949-631-1080 1ic 0490103 Don Julien · 474 E. 17th St. #203 (at Irvine, above Dledrich's) 949-646-4848 lie 0256186 t COSTA MESA SOUTH Pat McLeod 2651 Irvine Ave. #138 (next to Farmer's Market) ~9-631 -1082 nt tf492141 Jerry Tardie . 151 8 Newport Blvd. (Newport Blvd. & 15111 Street) 949.ssJ.1 n s lie 0515017 CORONA DEL MAR Jerry Estabrook 271 1 E. Coast Hwy #C {PCH & Goldenrod) 949-673-8643 lie 0486862 Chip Stassel 3810 E. Coast Hwy (at Poppy across from 5 Crowns) 949-723-4000 lie OC08488 NEWPORT BEACH Wayne Ireland 4500 Campus Dr. #505 (at Campus & MacArthur) 949-852-8573 lie 0618494 Dennis Rosene 261 o Avon St. #C (near the Riverside Ave. Post Office) 949-645-6000 lie 0863316 Bob Sullivan 227 20th Street, Ste. 103 (one blk past old Spaghetti factory on the bay side) 949-673-9391 lie 0567334 . Dian Roy 2400 W. Coast Hwy #1 (next to Jack Shrimp) 949-631-SSJO lie 0563198 JefT Lon11 2633 W. Pacific Coast Hwy.1 Ste. B (2 blocks So. of Newport B vd. between Riverside & Tustin Ave.) 949-574-9200 lie 0724779 Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there.• INIWIAMC ' teers and film buffs like Bal- boa Island's Pepe Serna turned an outrageous idea into a major contender in the film fest d.rcmt. ., ' It was two week.S out of the year when Newport Beach turned into a mini- Cannes, replete with red car- pets, opening-night festivities and awards ceremonies. And it worked. For four years this town was treated to some of the best stories from cinematic entrepreneurs from our own backyard and from many other towns like it around the globe . But two weeks ago that bnght light on Newport's yearly date book was . dimmed as festival co- founder Jeffrey S. Conner closed its final scene by fll,iDg tor bankruptcy. • Whatever the reason for the festival's demise, one thing is clear: It surely wasn't from lack of interest. Atten- dance at the festival had increased each year, and film entries jumped from about 200 the first year to more than 500 this year. Besides, any· thing new takes time to catch on. Orange County boasts one of the largest film-going audi- ences in the country and there is a demand for inde- pendent films here. Many art house theaters exist in the Newport-Mesa area. Edwards Lido Village, Edwards South Coast Village, Edwards Town Center -they all present lit- tle-known films on the Exclusive Hair Design For Men & Women + Relaxed, intimate salon-we give you individual attention you · won't find in larger salons. + No pressure, no tush-we list.en carefully lo your preferences and then style Y?U' hair accordingly. + Specializing in custom haircuts, perms, color, and creating new hair styles to bring out your natural beauty. . . cbance that people wtll go lee them. And they do. jUlt not at tbe levels of JMjal' motion pkturel. Audiencm here ue ICJIJbil· ticated and cultwed ud crave good stodel. Uke tbe one Newport Beach's AlilD Pruer told wbeli •turned e South-Central coiri-C>p8"•ted laundry into a forum f« th8 Rodney King riots. .. lbe demise of the mm fes- tival, and the problems of ind~pendent film ln general. is money. That's because mOlt ol the money in film 11 in the hands of big-budget motion picture companies that can DMtly package a major yawner Into a major winner. Independent films, howev- er, are made on a shoestring budget by eager filmmaken who spend their trust funds, mu out credit cards and plead With family and friends for produdion support. At this year's opening-night recep- tion I saw foreign filmmakers In Dice IUits sporting hand- beld VCRs while later I gave a lift to an American guy who IOld his car to make bis first IDOYle. · When you· break it all down, it's money. It's money that Conner apparenily mis- managed. lt'• money that giant movie companies use to lure in audiences. It's money that makes stars stars. It's money thafno one gave to hel_p the growing but strug- gling festival. And it's money -or prob- ably the lack thereof -that dosed the book on our film festival stories. • tlANCY OIEEVIR Is the enter- !Mwnent editor of the Dally Pilot. .. FILM CONTINUED FROM A 1 after it paid Conner and the film festival $3.C,000, Conner never paid the golf dub and the tournament was ca.nceled. Also named in the suit are Um~bt Marketing Group, its president Michael Hayes and Todd Quartararo, a volunteer with the festival Alexis' attorney, Ivan Cohen, declined to comment on the matter Friday. 1Wo weeks after the lawsuit was-filed, Conner filed Chapter 1 bankruptcy in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Santa Ana. Because of this, the case bas been auto~ matically suspended, attorneys said. While the bulk of Connet~ assets were listed as a non-operable 1984 Porsche Carrera worth $10,000, his debts hovered near $200,000, accotding to court docu- ments. The outstanding payments are a combination of lawyers fees, personal loans, credit card debts and unpaid judg- ments from previous lawsuits .. Saturday, ~ 11. 1999 A 9 The two lawswts, filed by CoSta Mesa-based Neighborhood ~ Corp, and lrvine-bued Mybar Printing, ca.me back in July wttb rulings against Conner. He wu ordered to repay a $9,872 loan to Neighborhood Accep- tance and pay $18,467 to Mybar, wbid1 sought money for services rendered f6r the 6lm festival, acoording to court doQ!- ments. . Conner's legal troubles have arisen JUSl as the film festival seemed to be establishing itself as a premier event tn the cotnmuruty. This year's film entries grew to more than 100 out of 550 films from 30 different countries. But the festival had a number of prob· terns. Celebnties who agreed to appecu at screenings often canceled at the last minute and there were te<;hnical prob- lems in the first few years. •Jeff Conner is really a great inclivia- 'Ual, • said lawyer Jonathan Michaels ·He P'led as hard as be posStbly could to keep (the festival) going." Conner's creditors will meet m bank- ruptcy court m Santa Ana on Oct. 5. 19491723-3400 • 3416 Via Lido • Newport Beach JEFF le LYLEEN EWING GREAT HOUSE, atrr ••• You have found an almost perfect house-the right number of bedrooms and baths, • wonderful family room, a great back )'llrd. Your pulse rate iocretses H you imagine your fun:Uturc in the living room, your "excess" neatly stored in che huge attic. ·and your tulip bulbs blooming in the prdcn. However, tbe kitchen looks like the original 6nc and it wu built long before convenience; like dishwashers or microwaves. Conventional iw.rt aurgery require• a ll to 15-inch inciaion and • cutting through the br•a•tbone. inci•ion between the rib•. r--------, r~-------, '1 ~ ~8!! '1 il PAC COASTKWY II J~ ~!. '1 f't9MntAcf •~9·J0.99 VIAUOO ,,__Ad•r~99 L-~~~--~-~ L-~~~----~ ~a¥. Do lars to $15 ~'3"J $7500 ~q 0..._e,e,~ purchase &or more 'l'"Q' .;>_;.. .c,..;;;-with w~-Certificatc -!'L. 1 $15 . FIFTEEN KAYAK DOLLARS $15 Bring in Kayaks Dollars! -EXp. 9/15 8uA;/84op Alawpo,.t Beach, CB Only one · other pla~ off ~rs 9raduate pronrams as exceptional as those at Chapman University in Oran9e: Chapman University in Irvine. No matter which of our Oranae County campuses you decide to attend, both offer full or part-time aradultc propms, convenient times for workin1 professionals, a dedicated faculty, pcnonalizcd attendon and the: perfect way to 1dvancc your catecr. Pao•u110,.AL ITuo111 GaADUATI ~aooaA•• nullllej; ~-6u 16, I 999, dtJO.ltOO ,. •. a.-• """-*!•,,,,., C..,. 1US a.... C.. Drffl. JrtrtM G4 You should consider renovation, if you haye f1Ucn in love with a house with an out-dated kitchen. C.Ontact a contractor for expert advice during the structural contingency period. Re-doing a kitchen can be a fllajor undertaking, cspecially if you move walls around. It can be done in a shorter period of time and for a small fraction of the cost, if you put in new appliances, cabinets, and flooring into the existing space. Kitchen improvements arc considered excellent investments. Jeff and Lylccn have 27 consecutive ycan of real estate experience in Newport Beach. They arc Coldwdl a.nbr'a fl tum. For professional service or advice with all your real Cstlte needs all dae Ewhtp • (949) 7ll-Ul4. Orange Campm (T""'1t10fM1 S.... r..) EacudftMIA Jur1I Doc:mr (law) MACarea-~ MA Coun.ltnc (School) MA Ctimtnal .1wt1ct MA Edlll:alloft MA Eftlfld\ MA Film Studies MA Orpnmdonal l.ade.rMtp MA PlychOloo (Mfl1 MA Stied8I Ecb:adon MA T..chtna • Ed.S. School Plycholoa Muter of Haith~ ~of Physical,,...,,. MFA CtalM Yrttlnt MFA Flin\ and T~ ~ MS Food Sc1eMt aM Nlrirteloft MS.._... ...... P\ibl1c School CreclinUals IrriiN Cam,,., (A•...._ f·M'Ar-J MA~,__ MA °"'1"• r ul L• ,..., MS ...... , •• Ma9ewofH11llh ....... Ill$ HAP MAN UNIVERSITY O• 71•' ,.J It ••ttn1. 1-800-578-CHAP • • w ••••••• ' •••• T·H E 0 F HE FAR L ... , CZQicker •oag~ •o•pital 1 blgb-teoh heart 'to learn 90re OGr br.all:tbroug 11•1110-2ots. • EDGE SURGERY QUIRES CUTTING. thod• aean l••• pain and tient• with heart di•••••·- •t in Orancre Cov.nty to of fer •-like keybole a\lrgery. g ••art Inatltut• aa4 .. ..... ., ........ ,,1.,,., .. 2 ••• 1 I - ~ J 0 Saturday, $epllJmbet 11, 1999 CANNERY CONTINUED FROM A 1 d •yes• and moved down ~th mto "an 800· quare·foot use on the canal.. m a little side town called Newport. Everyday from her kitchen window she could hecll' and see . the factory's steam wbisUe blow. lt was the signal that the fishing boats had drilted in with thei.r catch. Th~ legions of boats came in at all hours of the day, at tilnes ' dragging Tommy out of bed at 3 a;m. to help unload the fish. ln those days, before pollu- tion killed the fish, they caught Flshlng boats line the Rhine channel durmg the high season. . . tuna, swordfish, mackerel, sar-• dines and anchovies. Durlng the simply be grounded up and put summer they mainly fished for ...tnto cans, tuna required a Jot tuna and in winter, mackerel. more work. The fish were Newport was even called thrown onto long tables sur- • Mackerel haven." • rounded by women dressed m While the mackerel could white uniforms stained from ~~ Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning Celebrating 45 yean of service in your community. 7~~/ r---------., \".\I. I \ H I I f 0 l I' 0 '\ •hours .of deboning. They worn caps and stood in boots in shal-· low puddles of seawater mixed in with pungent odors, Thomas remembered. At that time, 110 people Human Choriogonadotropin Hormone (HCG) HCG has an established and proven history use for safe and rapid weight loss. The use of HCG, along with our special ketogenic diet, will promote a rapid weight loss while decreasing your blood p_ressure and increasing your energy level. Take Control Of Your Life ... CALL N OW. •. (949) 645-7490 For a limittil timt, The Martin Pasteur Health Group is~ a FREE consultation l07 Placentia • Suite 207 •Newport Beach CA 92663 C·102 worked at the cannery and women were paid 5 ceots per cue. It was the middle ol World War II and belp was scarce, as was the level of trust. Thomas said commercial fishermen had to carry pauports to go m and out of the harbor. •Du,ing the 1930s and 1940s they were the only major employers in Newport when the summer tourist season sub- sided,• she satd. and residents in Newport, the waters gradually became unin· habitable for the fish. The catch dropped so dromat· ically that in the summer of 1966 the cannery stopped running and was eventually shut down. Finally, in the early 1970s, the old building was completely tom down. party, 0 j,n bod} but not in spirit.• Sooni\ft ti}~ Qpening of the iestaurant, her husband passed • dW ay. "He gov\,l so much of hinisetl to thc.fADne1 y, she sdid. Despite the war that rdged on on foreign shores, however, the three men who ran the cannery -Wd]ter lonyuuxu, Jerry Span- , gl1•1 .-1nd Tnrnrny Thomas - were great friends dnd never fought. lt was about this time that a group of enterprising World War II veterans stepped in and dec1d ed to rebuild the cannery and turn it into a restaurant. Tommy was pleased to see that the place, which had fo1 so Jong rooted him in Newport Beach, was going to be reborn to a new generation, Thomas said. · After dt!p ndin on Tommy • for both finanuol upport andt._ I ~01npanionsh1p I.pi 30 years~ 1 homui. hell> had to face an almo:.t ~ ruJValent amount of ti.mo cm lH~r own. She has tilled he1 ti111 P tutpring children.., teac:hiny UterdC\r and taking la~ guaHe clRsses dt Orange Coast College. ThomM 11Jso h <I'-rollected and ccl1Pfull} pit'• l ~I tog •ther yellow- ing newspnper .... lippmgs dnd old black-n.nd•wllit" photograph!' ' ch£oui.cling 11 .r husband's tim .. ·u \\'.as like a family," Thomas said. "It was beautiful." Immediately after the wcu when help returned, business boomed. In 1954, 2,694 fisher- man caught 72 tons of aJbacore. But with the increase in business As the months of construction wore on, the new cannery part-· 11e1s prepared to host an open- ing party in 1973. As the build ing neared final completion, Tommy suffered a stroke Thomas said she attended tht! II .11,· "TRY US FIRST" "Over 6 ~fillion Homes Home8 Cleaned" Gift Certifi cates Available Seal Beach (south of 405 FWY) . Sunse.t Beach/Huntington _Harbou r Huntington Beach!Fountain Valley Cc rona Del Mar/Costa Mesa/Irvine ' Newport Beach/Balboa Island \ ~ ~Lido (;i~)Coast \847-2995 • SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Ll<...E:NSl:D • INSURl:D • WORKMAN'S COMP at the· =anne11. The two phol , arbwrts ne ·er l~a~ • her hands _:_.1 they are ptice,lF!" ,. Somed11y, she .;..iid, she plans l< le ;i book alJout this piece ot h.13tory. H.1hhi11 lmur.1111..l· @_ At1"0 {' HOMFuWNW • BWE CRO~ ~ -~~ ~ /\1-J ~~ ,~ •~r r , 949~63 l -77 40 441 Old ~-purt Bh-d. • Newport Bach (Near Ho"& Hospital) !'wt-------00 :' I . I off / Ca 's CONTAX EVENT DAY Contox Professionals will be on hand to answer oil your questions! 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He will lock up his • <!Annery Village restaurant for • last time Sunday. And, by $Jd by, the wrecking crew will <Pine, knock down the historic sbucture and clear the land for a small housing development. Opinions vary on whether this i$ progress. The restaurant's demise rings With conflicting emotions. On one hand, it comes with a touch df melancholy. The Cannery has been in business since the early 1'970s and, ih architecture and style, reflects the days when boats laden with sardines, tuna and mackerel came sluicing up the Rhin~ Channel to the hum- ming canneries. And on the other band, there is the lingering sense that the city itself played a hand in putting the restawant under. The restaurant is a slice of his- tory. It stands where the Western Canners Co. once did business. Along with the fine food and cheerful ambience, the resta\liant }Ja.s been part museum, a wistful ~minder of a time when New- port Harbor was a working port f r • ' . where fishermen ruled the docks. Through .the years the Can- nery has been five-star enough to satisfy the town's more discrimi- nating taste buds and down- home enough to name a sand- wich after a former city manager . who had a hankering for having his calamari served on a bun. The closing, then, marks the end of a time-tested restaurant and a final curtain for the area's salty, blue-collar past. · Could the restaurant's closing have been prevented? Some think so. Indeed, llamilton approached the city two years ago, seeking a permit for live entertairunent. His reasoning was simple: To be competitive he had to offer more than fresh halibut and shrimp cocktails. He needed the finan- cial infusion that music and dancing would likely bring. The city said OK. The Police Department said OK. But the City Council said no. And that set the table fot the restawanrs future. Hamilton, stung that the council would rebuff his request, decided to close up. Even now, the council's deci- sion makes little sense. Hamilton, after all, personified good busi- ness. He was active in town, active in the Chamber of Com- merce, involved in charity, always. the guy who would help out when someone needed that help. And if he couldn't get a fair shake from the council, well . . cOmmuDi!Y forum Soturdoy,-s.pe.mber 11, 1999 A I I EDITORIAL . Director Vincent Sherman, with his back to the camera, discusses a scene with stars Richard Burton and Martha Hyer for a 1919 sequence of Warner Bros. Technicolor screen version of Edna Ferber's best-selling novel .. Ice Palace." The plant of the Western Can- ners Co. at Udo Isle was transformed into the Wendt Packing Co. of SeCJ,tUe, for the mult:lmlllion dollar film. then, who could?° In addition, Cannery Vlll.age- the quaint community where Hamilton's restaurant has flow- ish all these years-was designed in the Ewopean tradi- tion of mixing business and resi- dential. U there was dny place in town for dancing and enjoying the night;wasn't this it? READERS RESPOND The council answered that by rejecting Hamilton's request for a live entertainment pennit, per- haps sealing the restaurant's fate W}tp that vote. But that's a footnote now. The restaurant will close. Llfe wµl go on. The memories will linger. Thanks for the good times, B1U. Zocafy recall thei,r favorite stories about tf?e Cannery Restaurant I can remember way beck when Newport was a mel- low, salty fishing town, not a atus symbol, and the cannery was a cannery. A little gang of us would ride our bikes to New-port Elementary from Lido and a'lways on the way home and we would cruise by the cannery to &.eek out the booty leftover from what went into those cans df tuna fish. Seeing a pick.up truck full of abalone shells sit- ttng in front of the cannery was ci co~on but awesome sight. I'm sure I still have a few of those ab shells around my house and garden. Pismo clam shells were there for the pickin', too, and I still remember all the Qeean smells that went along with a true-life waterfront can-· nery. When it was announced that that property was to become a restaurant, my little gang and I were appalled. But, ab shells turned into cocktails and we were stoked to have access to the insides of our beloved cannery by way of a restaurant. As the Cannery will now truly become dust, I feel a part of my heritage is being peeled away. I will always have the memories and the abalone sbells, and I am thank!ul for Uiat. Farewell to the era of the Cannery ... and thanks for the memortes. PATSEE OBER Laguna Beach I'm very sorry to hear that the <fannery is closing because it was the site of me and my hus· ~d's first date. I'll never forget ttiat moonlight evening. We were married one year later and we have just celebrated O\lI 16th anniversary, so &t Will alwafi remain a special place in our ~earts. It's so sad they are gomg to tear it down, it would be so ~utiful to tum it into a histori· villege. . ~ klMOGLE Newport Beach We have f oncl memories of the . <;iiiner'y Restaurant. perticulatly iltar our engagement in 1991. Al tuaw you t« ~ om ebgeoement ~ ... Miit both al our families on a brunch a\lile aboard the eut Slamahera. We'll D9Yel' rcxget waving to ell of lbml •we Mt on tbe dock daee A canner works the llrie at the old cannery. Below, An ~storlc·pboto of tbe Rhine channel. to the Cannery, knowing that they would enjoy Visiting and discussmg our Upc:.-omibg ~· ding. It was a spedal time for our family, so it'.a very memorable for all. We wW certainly mill Bill Hamllton and h1I staff at tlie Cannery. Maybe 10 or 15 yean ago, we bad two young mea come into the bar and try to order a drink, but they had been clri1lking already so we turned them away. They went down to the parking lot, jumped m their car kind of lflte, and put 1t into revet'1fl and lmmedlat ly slammed the cer over the dock and into the bay The ~ sank and the two men got out and th poll haulad them away But the interesting part WQ they came bade the nat dey and told me they were sorry they caused some damage to our dock, tiut couldn't pay for it. They didn't have o car and no jobs, and they were ju t traveling around the country having a ' good time. So l was unpr ed with them and I ottered them a JOb as bus. t>qy here and they worked until they paid for th damage and wcr able to buy another olrl Junker car and con- tinue on their trip of the good old USA. But th y were nlc young men and I wa proud that th y faced up to their pon ihibti and paid rm the damage volun· tanly. I wa always wond(!ring what happened to those young men. J wish I knew. I'm urc they became ucc sful in life With that kind of an attitude. llU HAMILTON N 'VJ)Ort Beach I wa ftt a Chnstma party ln December 1982 With my dat W decided to go have a drink at the Cennery. I knew my girl· friend only three wMb ud asked her to go to A\lltralia the next year in August 1983. She started crying, so I asked her to marry me. We were mdftled Aug. 6, 1983. We live m Newport Beach. have four children and have never been to Australia. Thcinks, Bill, for the memone!>. GEORGE AND NANCY BARFIELD Newport Beach It was April 1978. I was back at home taking a short break (well, it was supposed to be short) from UC Santa Barbclra. I really missed all of my high school .friends. and was told that I woulq run into "everyone • from Newport Harbor High School if I got a 1ob at the Cdn- nery. Upon getting htred, I was we went down and we sketched the old Cannery before it was made into a restaurant. I did it on black mk on white paper. It's about 12 by 18 mches. My art teachers thought it was pretty good. I've got it framed and it hangs over my sofa. so if you need one, I've got one NADEAN O'BRIEN Huntington Beach To the Cannery. Thank you for the lemon wedges. Sincerely, Gordon Atkinson Jr., longtime customer. GORDON ATKINSON JR. Newport Beach" told o~ a really cute older b!lr-I Unfortunately. my grandmoth- tender (he was all of 27) an~-.... : !7et )'>a.ssed away to yecll'S1!go. But began my search for the mystery prior to that she liked the restau- man. Once I finally met him, 1 rant. She w~s 89 when she ~ totally agreed that he was qwte passed away. Probably when she • the catch. We chatted in the was about 87 we went to the employee meal room and soon I restaurant and it was packed so • realized that h~ was the man ~or we went up to the bar and w~ me. After a whirlwmd ~ourtship were sitting on a bar stool and we were engag~d within eight trying to get the attention of the ~eeks and mam~d the follow-bartender and she couldn't get mg March. We will celebrate his attention. It was so funny that our 21st year of mamage on one of the waitresses was at a March 17th. The Cannery will table ngbt next to the bar and always hold .a dear place in ou.r she was kind of bending over hearts. So with this m rrund, 1 serving drinks. My grand.mother now pose ~e following ~ucltion couldn't get anyone's attention so to Bill Hamilton and Ten Hate!-he reached over and tugged on berg: ~Now may we please have the gi.rl's pantie5. The waitress a Berms bean bag as 4 memen-pulled around and about ready to to?" Thanks for the memones. smack her, and then soon as she ROBIN AND BOB SINCLAIR had a big open hand, he spun Newport Beach around and saw It v.as a little old ln May 1985, my husband Come took me to the Cannery R~taurant for dinner for our v ry fU'St date. W w re Jl)arrlM lll Octobel 1986 and have been · yo ng to the Cannery v ry year for 12 years tor our anruvcrsary. We also go there for my birthday every year and oth r ccl bra· tio11 Thu. year on Oct. 4 al will be ow 13th anruvcrsary (Jue:~ t3) and th Cannery will be dosed. I'm not ure where we Will go. but it won't be the Mme. lt's a ham that it rouldn't be saved as a hlStorical te. SANDt ANO COMIE KATES M When I wm gOlng to Cal Stat' PuDerton. I t<>Olt an art &all and I dy and just had a b g mile on her face. She a ked my grand- mother U he cowd be of tanC' • But 5t w really cute. I've en oycd many meals, but that w my most memOJ'ftble occa· Ion. When I worked nt Cout Com· mUJ\ity COilege, I very well remembet going to the Cannery and Climbing up tbe nanow stairway to Walter Loinglnoc>(s offtc.'9; WOO WU OD the board of tt\1ltMI and WU QM of tbe OWD• en ot the 1'9taurant, llO have con ttads ligl..s lor the OOlll Cea· munly CoDlge Diltrtd. ...... IQJ H•wpalt .. dli;( I ' 'I I ' . . . lllEFLY $200,000 anonymous ....-~· ~·ven to OCC COSTA tv1ESA -The OCC Foundation received a 5200,000 cash gift this week from a local donor who wishes to remain anonymous, school officials said Friday. "This is a very generous dona- tion and the college and the foun- dation are extremely grateful." said Rush Hill, chair of OCC's Found5ltlon Board. ·occ is this ·commuruty's college, and the community has responded by . ~ing extremely gener6 tn its . support." The funds will be divided equally oetween o~c·s Fund for Fanulies Pr6gram, which provides subsidized child care seM ces to OCC student- parents, and the Marine Science Program. The Fund for Families Pro- gram allows OCC's Children's Center to assist working low- income families headed by single parents and homemakers recent- ly thrust into the workplace. The new 13,000-square-foot, 52.86- million facility helps srudents without affordable child-care ser- . vices to attend school. Money for the marine pro- gram will be used to construct a shade structure for the school's public saltwater aquarium. OCC's on-the-water marine sci- ence labs alsO-will r~eive funds. OCC's aquariums are popular county attr.actions k>r scliool- children. As many as 10,000 ele- mentary and high school stu- dents visit the tanks each year. -Amy R. Spurgeon 2 for 1 Special I Bring a friend. Two paint for the price of 1. ClasS.1 Starting Now I 2890 McCli .... n~to._c_k_W_a_y_, U_n_i_t-F,-C-o-st_a_M_e_s_a-...J Stenciling 101-$15 . Stenciling 201-$22 ,(714) 432-. 8 653 Stenciling 301-$28 Tole Painting -$12 .. UNIT CONTINUED FROM A 1 They are known in law enforcement circles as South A,mertcan Theft Groups, a band of thlev.tJf wbo ~et jewe~ sales~e ed ~otW Vk:timS with easy access to money. But their opportunities may be dlminishlng thanks to the for- mation of a special prosecution unit that will help combat the number of\r-Obbertes. The two-man team assigned to handle the caseload -within the Orange County district attorney's office is Mike Lubins- ki and Ebrahim Baytieh. The duo will be working closely with police departments, including the agencies in Newport Beach . . n .. and Costa Mesa, that have seen a rash or jeweby robbenes m the last year. •Tue belt way to deal with these cues effectively is having a specific district attorney work- ing with a police agency often," Baytieh said. •1t•s best to deal Wttli ~le wbio are doing the Wk lfiim ~nning to the end.• Lubinski and Baytieh were assigned to their new posibdns . this summer. The prosecutors had already seen five cases come across their desk within the past two months and real- izep they needed to focus on the robberies. They gained their first conviction two weeks ago against ·two men who tried to . steal a suitcase full of jewelry in July at the Pour Seasons Hotel in Newport Beach. The robbers FULL SERVICE SALON & BEAUTY SUPPLY Power Peel T HE SENSIBLE SKIN RESURFACI NG: • No missed work • No bide effects •No pain • No anesthesia • No recovery time Slcln Care and Waxing Aval/able. For appointment OnJy, Call Vanny 949-548 .. 3119 T took the wrong bag, which had clothing, and were convicted to a year in prison. Th ir cohorts haven't been caught. The two men are believed to be tied to an elusive nng of rob- bers who hail from South Amer- ica and roam the greater Los Angeles area for edsy score . They follow their victims, pri- marily jewelry salespeople, for hours, even days, before sur- rounding them and taking their goods. In Julie, two jewelry vendors were robbed at gunpoint as they left Fashion Island. Three to four men confronted them and took about $1.5 million in jewelry. There have been other inci- dents around Los Angeles that have been attrtbuted to. tlle rov- ing group. ' The formation of the special Hodson Lignting Open Tuts.-Fri, 9·5, Sat. 9.4 . 1s10 Newport Blvd· .. ~ta Mm Quality LiJh1jn1 u for 30 Ytara (949) 548-9341 prosecubon unit wu done in part for that reason. •There lS a lot of intelligence going back and forth between agencies,• said Newport Beach Pohce Sgt. Mike McDermott. •Now, we haw bMte-avenues of mfonnation ~t can possibly help tea4 to arrests.• The r• dmit the crooks have been hard to catch, but once they are in the court- room the suspected robbers would be hard pressed to get off lightly. •As long as these guys are doing it, we will be here,# Baytieh sald. •1 think things will get better over time because jewelry.salespeople are lea.ming more about what is ·going ·on and they may start to do differ- cn t things to prevent these thefts.• NEWPORT COASTAL PODIATRY GROU~INC. NO! YOUR FEET ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO HURT. Can you really 'buy a car over the Internet? Yes You Can! 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FOOTBALL t I I I I I I • l I ·iga ·rmds ··a ·home •Juniof Arizona transfer rushes.for 171 yards, and scores fpur touchdowns, to key Costa Mesa's 28-19 seasonf<>pening triumph over Saddleback Friday. BMRY FAULKNER C~A MESA - Three vweek.s ago to the d4Y. C.J. Zuniga •' showeil up at Costa Mesa High, an unknown transfer from Prescott, Ariz. with a Grand Canyon full of potential. It's safe to say, after rushing ror 171 yards 2 8 and to~. touchdowns M ES A . in the tjlfustangs' 28- 19 noni*ague season-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~dl°Ja~ct;~a~v:~ SADDLE BACK 1 9 Orang• Coast Col-_ . _ lege, Utere are few " wl:lo still do not know the new man on campus. •My teammates welcomed me with open arms," said the 5-foot- 10, 185-pound junior tailback. who began bis prep caree r as a fresh - man on the Rosemead High varsity, before starting at defensive end for Prescott's varsity last fall. "That's never happened to me before." The Mesa offensive line made sure Zuniga felt welcome in the open areas of the Roadrunner defense, helping him earn at least 5 yards on half of his 22 carries. He also totaled 76 yards on kick returns to finish with 247 all-p~e yards. "What can you say about him?-Mesa Coach Jerry Howell said of his latest thoroughbred. •He did everything we could have as,ked of him.• The same could be said of several Mustangs, including senior quarterback Dave Weir, who completed four of his first sue passes {o,r 95 yards to help the bosts earn a 21-6 halftime lead. We were throwing the ball very well, but the coaches got cautious -too cautious -after halftime," Howell said. Senior tight end Willy Franco caught back-to-back Weu aen als for 30 and 31 yards to set up the final touchdown of the first half. ERIC SANTUCCI I DAA.Y PllOT C.J. Zuniga scores from 9 yards out in second quarter. M~'s special teams made a large contribution as Jason Rankin's blocked punt set up a four-play, 23-yard drive which Zuruga capped with a 5-yard m to open the scoring midway through the first quarter. Defensively, Mesa piled up five sacks for 36 yards, made hve adcli- tional stops behind the line and limited Saddleback ballcaniers to 2 yards or less rune more times. Howell, however, was quick to stifle any euphoria over his team's third straight opemng wm. · •1t•s race to get a win against a very good football team,• Howell said. •sut we have a lot of work to do on things like conditioning and tackling and keeping contain on defense.• Saddlebac.k junior tailback Joel Gonzalez rushed for 166 yards and iI m in 20 carries and talented senior quarterback Victor Ortiz had a pair of touchdown strikes, including a 38-yard bomb with six seconds left. But Zuniga was the toughest player on the field to contain. He bad three TDs and 86 yards in the opening half, most of which came on Mesa's familiar •stam" play, & toss off tackle held over from the for- mer smashmouth double wing. At least a handful of carries, Zuniga cruised untouched past the neutral zone and into the secondary. "That's my offeris\ve line," said Zuniga, increasing his popularity quotient with every pell-effacing quote. •1 love being here and I feel good about our tean\ all the way around.• Making sure Ortiz felt' no such bhss were five players who shared the six sacks. Junior end Daniel Hunter combined with juruor outside linebacker Patrick Hulliger for one, and each of them had theu own solo collars. Rankin and end Todd Duddridge rounded out the sack pack and Duddridge blew up a two-pomt conversion try in the fourth quarter by pounding Ort:i.Z m tbe pocket. Shaun Ferryman, Weir, Franco. Jake Cleveland, A!ttony Gru- bis1ch, Fernando Aronna, and Greg Stewart also did lhelT def ensJVe share Stewart displayed his Pacific Coast League chdlllpion sprinter speed to make a come-from-behmd tackle which prolonged Saddle- back's first TD drive. Gonzalez bolted 63 yards tp the Mesa 13 on the second play of the visitors' second possession and Ortiz eventually capped the five-play march with a 10-yard lade pass to Emmanuel Pedroza. The eonvers1on kick, however sailed WJde left and that was as dose as Coach Jerry Witte's Roadrunners got. Zuniga carried seven times on the subsequent nine-play. 65-yard touchdown procession. Luis Avalos' second of four perfect PATs made it 14-6, six seconds into the second quarter. The Mustangs, with solid work up front by Charlie Amburgey, Eliseo Martinez, Scott Schepens, Luther Mitchell, Eric Connaty and Franco, scored on three of their first four possessions. After Saddleback dosed to within 21-12 with 8:41 left, Zuniga burst 56 yards for the clincbin~'ID with 1:55 remammg. Hendricks rocks MagtJ.olia . . • Edison transier scores four TDs in an emotional 35-0 blowout to get Eagles flying in right direction. Tow AI:rooI:.UJ !kif Nol NEWPORT IBACH -Estancia High football coach Dave Perkins said after the game tbat the assistant coaches deserve much of the credit and that be only • ... pays for the unifo=d'get tbc kids on the bus." • Thank g ss for the Eagles he made sure Marshall drlcks was on board. The senior transfer from Edison High rushed for 218/yards in 14 carries, scored four touchdoWiif.and had two interceptions for the Eagles a their 35-0 blowout of Mag- nolia High at Nfwport Harbor Friday night. Hendricks en scored a two-point con- version for th• Eagles, finishing the night with 26 of the e~·s JS-points. •1 would he had a pretty goOd night,• Perkirl.s laid Vtth a laugh. •I'm not sure if • he set any scbool records with his perfor- mance, but 1'-p, swe it's pretty'Close. •Wfiat a ~t way to start the season," Perkins contiitued. •Th.Ls what a summer of hard work aild belief can do for a team." Hard w<ri, belief and 293 all-purpose yards for Heiidridu helps, too. Hendri~ ~nd the Eagles got the fire- works golngarly, aconng on Ute thild play from scrtmatge on a 52·yard run on a weaklkle swep. · The Ba._ pa111ng, though not Wied V'1fY often, JfU an effective change of pace for=•l defense. Jeremy Valdes and Kenny Valbuena a combined 6 Of 14 for 102 ~~ght, but more importantly, no ~'bit~ltanda played tumover·free .football entire evening, while dominat- ing the ol poaeaion. After a Sentinels fumble, Hendricks was back at it again, this time, sconng frorrr 19 yards out on the same play. . "We've been excited to get going for a while now," Hendricks said. "We knew we weren't going to be picked very high after how we played last year, but this is a new year, new guys, new system and new fruni- ly: Hendricks was also a factor on defense, intercepting two Mag-nolta pas c , runrung the second one back 15 yards for his third score of the rught. Magnolia's fow turnovers on th• night shut down a number of conng opportuni- 1ies and gave all the momentum to the Eagles. The Estanaa star kept it up in tho third qu4rter with a 43-yard sconng run. Hendricks' play was limJtcd to hardly any snaps ln the fourth quarter, or h1 numbel'I could be even more impre11lve. &gle fWlbOCk Pahad Jahld, who h lped spring Hendridt1 on a few of hit big runs, was rewarded With a 2-yatd touchdown run to dote out the ICOring. H finished the game with 23 yards in seven cerri . Tile Eaglet did a good job an both std of tbe bait not eUowtng Magnolia 'a running game to g9t on ttack and keeping the sen- tinels away from the g plays. •Magnolia waa1hu~, • Pcd<in c:aid •t was worried one dBhOM guys was going to fall on one of our guys and sqwsh us. That's got to be ono of the biggest teams we'll face all season." Richard Flickinge r had 61 yo.rds on 15 carries, while quarterback Jacob DaVJs ·came off the bench and ".t.ent 7 for 20 for 104 yards for Magnolia. r A far more imposing force awaits the Eagles next week as they go on the road to face W troin~ter Fnday at 7 p.m. "That Will be a huge t t for u , • P rkm &d. ·~ey're a higher·diVl.Sion club nnd we'll do the hcst we can agtunst th m " Gon , but not f orgottcn, the Eogl ' play- ers and l'Oat:h 1Pmomll red their late ooaC"..h Paw lroxel m many form . ·we got his name "lrox' on th coach • shlrts, we say "'JTI>x' In each teAm huddle and the players say rnox' wh nth y look at each other,• Perkins lltid. •Ji wu Ml E~le. We're dedJcating th son to h1m and he hetps us play With e lot of head • He dricks agri "l'tn sure h w looking down l u tonight.iO h Mid ·And l'tn IU1 he'• happy.• Find out what the Newpott Be«h and Cost9 Mesl's ~ and recrfftlOn departments have in store f0t the ~end wanderer. s~ some hoops, take a dip in the pool or exctiange rallies-mostly for free. See PAGE 87 QUOTE Of THE DAY 1'rox .-me Under his~. H~ -.-o mentOJ __ • Kyte Wiison, Daily Pilot Hall of Farner Doily Pilot BI S_PORTS HALL OF FAME CELE BRATING .THE Ml~LENNIUM .Estancia • Control artist was one of the Eagles' best ever: and • he went on to big moments at OCC, Long Beach State~ RIOIARI> Du~~ ~Plot N le Wilson never ad the luxury of a lazing fastball or wicked curve. but bis pitches left most hitters scratching their hedd, wondering how they could fuush a game 0 for 4 against the lean nght-hander with pmpoint control. "Both in high school and college. I didn't throw h ard enough to get away with not throwing strikes,• said Wilson, wh o rarely issued free passes m a standout baseball career, which included stints at Estanoa High. Orange Coast . College and Long Beach State. Wilson, mspired often by tbe late Coach Paul 1Toxel (Estancia), was raised in a family with a ~olf professional, but was glven the freedom to pursue other athletic Kyle Wilson endeavors and chose the pitching mound • .And, now, three years removed 'from bis final collegiate inning, Wilson has picked the sticks back up and has dreams of playing on the PGA Tour. Many thought Wilson ~ould follow in bis dad's footsteps an d play golf at an early age. Brad Wilson, bis father, WdS the head pro at the old Stardust Country Club in San Diego (now the Riverwalk Golf Club), wrote for Golf Digest magazine and came across in bis career, among others, Muhammad Ali, Billy Graham and Jack Nicklaus. •(My father) said to do whatever you want. and J got into baseball,· Wilson said. "He taught me golf when I was young. probably about 12, 13.or 14, and helped me with the ba '1c fundamentals of the golf swing -just so I would have the m and not develop any bad habits.• When the pro baseball scouts didn't come knocking on Wilson's door, he flgured it was time to take go11 a little more senously. •I didn't get drafted m baseball and I didn't think (a minor league career) would work out," he said. ·1 didn't want to try out for an mdependent team and end up getting stuck m Timbuktu and making 50 bucks a month.· lnstead, Wilson apphed at Meadowlark Golf Cours m · Huntington Beach and begnn working m the p hop. Wh n Costa Mesa GolJ Country Cub head pro Brad Booth. a fn nd of his father' , discOvered the younger Wilson had JOUled th golf world, he w inVttcd to come over to Costa M This time n · y nr, Wil on hopes to play In th big m t ur vents, like the U.S. Amill ur, Califomla State Mtot ·ur tt_nc1 Western Amateur, th n maytMt tumpro; · •1befe•s a lot Clf hard work ehMd of m and J hav a long way to go still, but Im Starting,• he Mid ... We'll see what happens• If Wallon's gOU car anything like hb pltc:htng prow-. M'U keep his play ln lbe*iblOM Wlllan. tM '-member of the Dcillr Pilot Sr><>rts Hall ot_ FamP., celebrating the millennium. pitched a no-hitter for Ec;tancld m h1•:1uruor year on March 21, 1991. \\'llson's gem would've been a perfect game, but Estanaa's shorti.top committed a throwing error m the second inning. Wilson promptly pKked off the runner at first base and faced the minunum 21 batters in·a 5-0 victory over visiting Centwy. He walked nobody and coaxed Century mto 11 ground outs. Twice. Wilson made All-Pacitit Coast League for Coach Ken • fvtillard's Eagles (Troxel was an assistant}, then played two years at Orange Coast. Wilson wa the ace! of the pitching staff as a freshman in r. 1993, wben the Pirates, under first-year head coach John Altobelli, reached the State Fmal Four. Before the State Communit} College Championships. however. Wilson broke the m<fex finger on his right hand m a Southern Regional game against Long Beach City at LA Harbor College, a comebacker that be tried to snag barehanded, some of his teammates said Nevertheless, Wil"<>n Wei!> done for the Fmal Four. I didn't have the best luck p1lching at Orange Coast.• aid - Wil on, who <:uttered from a stomach mfoctlon hi sophomore year and rrus ed the IDdJOrity of the regular seac;on as the Pirate did not return to the stdle tournament. When Wilson tried to return to the m ound m 1994, hi:. strength wasn 't the re and, coru;equentl)', neithe r wa:i. his fastball. But Wil on did enough to mtpres Long Beach State Coach Dave Snow. who recnuted the control art1c;t and rode Wil on's nght arm • to the Big West Coiilerence champ1oru hip in 1996. Wil on went 13-3 Wlth a 3.50 . earn •d-run average hi."' 1uruur year in '95 , w hen the 49er.; hn1shed one Victory shy ol tt•achin9 the College World • n m Omaha, eb. They med 1t to the regionals both year . ln 1995, Wilson tos ed perhaps th ·grun of his career g8Ulst U iii llie rogional mmrul t Fr; o tate, when th Tt-Ojons 1 ro undef tcd ln lh doubt ·elimin lion toumrunent and lh 49en> h d on l . Wmon ~ot lhMi even Md forced e d Sl~ g me aft pHChing ll\to th ninth inning h ving ven up only one run and two hits. Wllson gitve up two W1cld tgl ln tb runth fore be. ng lift , th n th 4 rs' bullpen p~eNed th win. 'Too (V>pQSing p tdl r for U that doy. when WilJon tied the lroja 1n knots? Briu Coope1, w'.ho made h1$ tnaJor league dHal With the ~ recently wu.on, though. aun remembers thole daya Id the eighth GnKle and blt ......... yeu ~ 1)Qnl wCllbkl enoourageJWn In b1-.a. ·-n. took me under am wing.• Wiiia Mid •Hew.1•......_.• Wiima.wt.. ....... . 21 ............. .. • • _, - .., I • .. • ? I 1 ll j" t ~ ~;. l 1 I}. .J I •Golden ·versary ht at Cal ~·,....~ as Hornets ngle again. TOOFW Plbl FULLERT -In 1948, Citatio won~ the lhple C wn . in horse ra g; the NBA was its . second seas of. existence, eri- can Bob Ma as won the decathl m the first Sununer Olympics in years and Orange Coast and F erton colleges met for the first e in football. Fifty ye later, OCC and the Hornets et again for their annual cla tonight at 7 at Cal State Fulle n. FuUerto leads the 50-year rivalry, 28 8-3, ilfter taking last year's con st, 34-24. OCC h s won six of the last 10 meetings between the two schools, er going winless in the eight me tings before that. BRIAN POllUOAI DAA.Y Pl.OT Estancia Hlgh's Marshall Hendricks (2) looks for an opening against Magnolia. He fown! plenty on the way to three touc.hdowns (and another with an Interception) in spearheading a 35-0 victory over the Sentinels Friday night in the season opener. led CM 11 12 32·236 33 213 96 95 9-14-0 4-8-1 22 22 ~ ·36 1-10 11 120 3-27 3·213 2·1 i-1 3·15 10.IO 2).'()l 20:51 ~fumble • I r '. . \.~ .I • I'' \ \ 90 Candlish 74 Anderson In fact, from 1976-89, Fullerton dominated the series, winning 11 of 13 contests between the 'two schools. Speaking of streaks, OCC is trying to halt its six-game open- ing-game losmg streak with a wm tonight. Taylor attributes a slightly tougher opening-day schedule than in the past for OCC's SlX· game drought. There's no better team that OCC could play in the opener than Fullerton, especially after last year's loss to the Hornets. It was last year's game with Fullerton that OCC honored long- time coach Paul Briggs· for 50 Salurday, ~ 11 , 1999 • s50 - 45 Janzon 49Medley 3 Pallotto '40 OU. 10 B. Johnson years of outsta11d.ing wo~k on the grtdiron. · ln Che game, OCC ha~ leads of 14-3 and 21-14., before Fullerton scored 17 unanswered points to take the lead for good. •vou sophomores remember that Fullerton game last year, when we felt we let that game get away from us,• Taylor told lus team dfter their scrimmage with Santa Monica last Friday Adding to the moment, tonight's game marks the debut of Pirate Coach Mike Taylor, who took over tor 13-year head coach, Bill Workman. "It's not really ne~ousness that I'm feelmg, ~ Taylor said. "It's just the unknown of starting a new season.•. With both offenses taking it to each other, the deciding factor might come on the defensive side. "We're just gonna have to be ready for anything they throw at us, N Taylor said. •I've heard talk about a "vanilla-flavored offense' but I'm not buying into that.· On a team dominated with sophomores, OCC's defense car- ries a bulk of the squad's expen- ence, led by defensive captain, free safety Bobby Johnson. Taylor expects lo start six sophomores, including Johnson, last year's second-team, all-con- ·Cerence selection Kent Anderson, HIGH SCHOOL FOO~Blll linebacker, Andrew Medley, and comerbacks, Robert Pallotto and Woody Otis. "Not just defense, we're going to have to be ready on both sides of the ball,• Taylor said. "In a first game, making sure lhP,t guys are m the right position and right for- mations, especially with a heavy load of freshmen out there. That's the unknown I'm most concerned with." Taylor said his team is anxious and ready to get the season underway. "It's a long wwt for that first game," Taylor said. "I'm look.mg forward to that weekly schedule <Wd getting into that routine." TONIGHT • THE Bucs vs. fuu.ERroN • Site: Cal State Fullerton, 7 • BottQm line: It's the season opener for both schools, and Mike Taylor's initial voyage as the Pirates' head coach. Pirates enter as one-touchdown underdogs. _ It's the SOth meeting between the two Orange County community coll~es Fullerton owns a 28-18-3 advantage. Coast is trying to snap a six-year • losing streak in the opener. Directions: From 5, north on 57 la Yorba Linda Blvd left on Yorba l1 school on left. • Score by QuMters Magnolia O 0 0 0 -a'. Estancia 14 7 14 O • $: First Qu.-tw Est • Hendricks 52 run (kick failed), 10:48. ... Est • HendrKks 4 run (Hendricks run), 4•35, Second Quarter Est · Hendricks 75 interception return (Alderete kick), 128 'Third Quarter Est • Hendricks 43 run (Alderete kick), 5:10. Est -Jahid 2 run (Alderete kick) INDIVIQUAL R\ISHING Mag · Flickinger, 15-61; Sekona, 2~; Hernandez. t-4; Gonzales, 1-2; Davis, 1-mio-8. Est · Hendricks, 14-218, 3 TDs; Jah1d. 7·23, 1 TO; M. Mueller, 6-121, Ber'ame. 2·9; FrHman. 4-{;; J. Mueller, 3-5; Romua. 2-5; K. Valbuena. 3-3; Valdes, 4-min~. INDMDUAL PASSING Mag-Moye, 2-2;(), 21; Davis, 7·20-2, 104 Est· Valdes, 2-3-0, SO: K Valbuena. 4-11 0, 52; Rodriguez. 0-1-0, 0. INDMDUAL ltECEMNG Mag • Martin. 3·52, Henry, 2-35; Moye, 2·26; Alcala, 1-9, Gallo, 1·3. Est -M. Mueller. 2·50; Alde(ete, 1·2l; Hendricks, 1-16, Romo, 2-14 GAME STAT1STICS Mag Est First downs 5 13 Rushes-yardage 2o-65 45-274 Passing yardage 125 102 Passing 9-22·2 6-15-0 Net return.yardage• 0 75 Sacks-yardage 1 -8 1 :-6 Net yardage 182 445 Punts 3·35 2·19.5 Fumbles-fumbles lost 3-1 none Flags-net yardage 3-15 10:90 Time of possession 16:36 31:24 •Punt returns, interceptions, fumble returns • 84 Soturdoy, Sepeiimbet 1 l , '999 SCIEDULI SAlUROAY l'ootbllll Community college·. Orange Coast vs. Futterton, at Cal State Fullerton. 7 p.m. •W.Wpolo Community college men • Orange Coast at Ventura Toomament. Community college women • Orange Coast at Saddleback Tournament (vs. saddleback. 12;10 p.m.). High school boys • (scrimmage) Corona del Mar at Newport Harbor, 8a.m. • Cross country College men and women • Vanguard University at Whittler Invitational, at Ralph B. Clark Park. Buena Park, 8.30a.m. • • High school boys and girls • Corona del Mar, Cost.a Mesa, Newport Harbor at Laguna Hills Invitational, 8 a.m. • Soc.ar College womeo • Vanguard University at Ganl)On University, Pa .. 1 p.m. Community college men· Orange Coast at Hancock Toornament. Community college women • Orange Coast at Cuesta Tournament. • Field hockey High school girls • Newport Harbor at Los Angeles Field Hockey As.sodat1on Allied Sports Day. SUNDAY • 5occef' . Community college men • Ora.nge Coast at Hancock Tournament. Community college women • Orange Coast at Cuesta Tournament. biiP sii FRIDAY'S COUNTS Newport Landing · 5 boats 49 anglers. 1 sand bass, 87 call~o bass, 14 barracuda, 20 yellowtall. 2 halibut, 130 ~ulpln, 1 whitefish. s T 1111 I Davenport dethroned at U.S. Open •Defending champ falls in semifinal to Serena Williams. · FLUSHING, N.Y. -Newport Beach's Undsay Davenport saw the. defense of her U.S. Open crown come to an end as Serena Williams won, 6-4, 1-6, 6-4, in Friday's semifinal action. Davenport, ranked No. 2 in the world, seemed bn the way back to the final when she raced through the second set in just 24 minutes and allowed Williams only two points in the three service games she was broken. Rain d~ayed the start of the semis by 2112 hours, and the players had to cope with conditions that ranged from glaring sun to dark gray shade. . Little separated Williams and Davenport in the first set until the last game, when Wllliams. teading 6-5, broke Davenport to take the set. Serena's sister Venus Williams watched the first set at courtside, then retreated to warm up for her match against top-seeded Martina Hingis. • The 17-year-old Williams had 12 aces and came back from a dread- ful drubbing in the second set, in which she lost 14 of the last 16 points. · They stayed ~n serve in the third set to 3-3, when Williams gained the first break-pomt of the set with a running forehand volley crosscourt after a superb rally. · Williams' sheer power on serve proved the <ilf{erence in the end, as she closed out the last game with three servtce winners and an ace that ran her tournament total to 54. There will be no ~ter-sister ~atchup in the finals after Hingis · knocked off Venus Williams in Pnday's other semifinal match 6-1 4. 6, 6-3. . . Estancia drops 18.11 water polo decision · SANTA ANA-Estancia High's boys water polo team opened up the 1999 season on _the short end of the stick Friday as host Saddleback re~orded an 18-1 yictory. The Eagles scored early in the first period Wlth a goal by Phil Westfall, and goalie D.J. Glacy was credited with six sa~~s, including a/four-meter penalty shot, but that was the extent of positives. Saddleback led after one quclrter, 9-1. OU 'l'l IE 's If you have waited all year to get the best price possible on a new SL Roadster or M,Clas.5 SUV, the time is now. We have over 100 in inventory. The new 2CX)() mcxiels are on the way and these 1999 vehicles must be sold immediately! ~~ F W P <I fl 1 II f f\ <. H 3300 Jamboree Rood • 800 927 .. J576 NEWPORT BEAOI-Nevn>0rt K¢or Higb'r football ... obYtously gQt oft 00 tbe ,dgbt foot TlullldAy Dlgbt wttb • "~ tbru.bina of Orange, • tbe Sailan' DiD~ ~ *'°'Y·ID tr. op8D81' at tbe ..... ol tbe Pen.tbeiwi ad 1 ltb ~t Win in l8UOll ~ owralL c~ the scope o1 the ICOnt, .. W8U .. last year'• 10-6 rout of the Pantberl, ~ mmt wonder how long can Orange accept tldl annual beating? ~tly at least 004 more y~ -qrzmge ~ a one-arid-one arrangement wi~ tM Sailors after lait year's rout Newport Harbor rolled up 502 yards overall to Orange's 98, and led at halftime, 35-0, with almolt all of the damage done on the gro\ll'ld (3" carries for 301 yards). Daily Pilot SEAN~/ lti the pasllng game it wu Chris Manderino pullµlg the trigger with two touchdown passes, one to Billy Clayton on a 30-yard strike, and the other a 3~-yard play wttb receiver Justin Jacobs.' Friday's acco\.Dlt of t.De game credited Man- Clu1I Manderlno cllckecl wttb a ~ In the Sailors' opener on Tb derlno with just one touchdown pass. . on Friday at Newport when the Sea · Pomona. ) The Sailors are back in action with another Thun<lay game, agam on the road, with Marina hosting the game at Westnilnster High. Marina handled Corona del Mar in Thursday's non- league opener. 28· 7, behind the bull-like rushes of Ray Mietkiewicz. A week later the Sea Kings will be Jlosti.n their nonleague game at Newport Harbor, a ai.nst ·Newport in the 38th renewal of the BatUe ~e' Bay. Newport leads the series, 25-12, and -be trying to bounce back after last year's 28-1 to Corona del Mar snapped a lour-year rei Corona del Mar will try to turn things around 811.EFLY t.: OCC polo rolling .·: • Pirates' men take two at the Ventura tourney; women wip two at the Saddleback tourney. VENTURA Orange Coast Col-P 0 l 0 lege men's water polo team was excited to get the 1999 season undeiway and it showed in Fri· day's 18-1 win over Lo*g each City College and 12-8 ver Rio Hondo m tbe Vent a Water Polo Tournament In the two games, Scott Butler scored 10 goals, whtle Kevin Becker and Jon Smalley added four apiece for the .Pirates (2·0). In the net, Matt Oliver bad eight saves m the Long Beach City game and 7 against Rio Hon- do. •we were anxious to play today," Coach Chris Oedmg said. •The games were played Wee lhey were the first games of the year. There were some pre-game jitters, but Qverall it was a good start for us.• Also contributing offensively was Matt McKenney with three goals on Frlday. In the opener against Long Beach, the Pirates jumped out early with a 6-0 first quctrter lead and never looked back. Against Rio Hondo, another strong first quarter followed by a stronger defensive second quar- ter saw the Pirates lead 8·3 at the half. Next up for the Pirates in the tournament is Citrus College and Riverside · •Depending on how we do in the opening game, we could be playing for first, third or fifth in the tournament." Oedmg said. . Women rout foe, 16-1 MISSION VIEJO __ ..... _. -Orange Coast Col-P 0 l 0 lege won twice Friday, once by ~ 16-1 margiJJ over Long Beach City College, and once via forfeit as Southwestern took a 5-0 loss m pool play at the Saddleback Col· lege's Women's Water Polo Tour· nament. The Pirates meet host Sadclleback today at 12:10 p.m. The thiid-place and champ1· onship games are billed for 3:30 and 4:20, re1;pectively. Sllddlebadc Toumlment Pool Play ~ CoAsT 16. LONG llAat 1 Long Beach O 1 o 0 • 1 Orange Coast 2 5 6 3 -16 OCC scoring: Re1denbaugh 5, Stipp 5, Bobbit 2. Hallman 23, Hylton 1 Klari<h 1. ' Mesa's Havens sparkles COSTA -...._ __ MESA -Fresh-T I I I I S man Hilary Havens won two of three smgle matches, but Irvine High's visiting Vaqueros had too muoh depth for Co ta Me a's girls tcnnlg tectm Fndny, captunnq u 14·4 nonleaguc dcoi.1on to drop Mcsft to 0-2. MVM~MDA4 5i151111n•ll .. •i11!• H.wns ~) lost 10 ConnOlly, 4-6; dtf. W; dtf. Fini, 6-2; !Cirri (CM) lost • 2-6, ~ ~ (CM) Iott ().6, 1-6; won M . Doal11: C>IMello-~ (CM) 1os1 to Thllr-leslle. 2-6, Iott to~~ ((t~S~·r~.~~ =:,::z, <™) lost,2"6, o-6. 3-6 All-American honors Corona del ------Mar High fresh· P 0 l 0 man Danielle Carlson was named to the USA Water Polo Juruor Olympic All-American hrst team following competition at the Junior Olympic Tournament. Honorable mention laurels went to teammate Christina Hewko,.also a CdM freshman. Both girls competed for the under-14 SOCAL club team which finished second at the tour- nament. After a successful season whlch included several tourna- ment wins and a summer league championship, SOCAL entered the national tournament as the No. 2 seed. SOCAL swept through the preliminary and championship rounds with an unbeaten record, incluchng wins over Commerce, San Diego, Chicago and Newport Beach. In one of the most exciting games of the tournament, SOCAL lost by one goal in double over- time in the championship game. Pirates rip Rio Hondo c 0 s. ~~-------TA MESA . V 0 L l E Y I l l l -Orange Coast College took 6·0 leads in each of the first two games and was never threatened at any point en route to the home court, season-opening 15-4, 15-1, 15-3 nonconference women's vol- leyball victory over R.to Hondo Friday evening. Susie Packard and EIJ.zabeth Waterman each had su. killb to lead the Pirates, who substltuted liberally dunng the 40-mmute match. CdM sweeps Redondo COR-~~.-.---r o N A YOllEYllLL ·DEL MAR' -Seniors Jarrue Brownell, Dimitra Havriluk and . Marissa Becker led Corond dcl Md! High's girls volleyhc.111 team to a season·operung sweep Pn· day over Redondo Union, 15-4, 15-9, 15-10, in nonleague dCtlOn. Brownell 1ec:orded 13 kills, slJC digs and five service aces, while Havriluk had 12 kills, rune dlgs and two blocks and Becker con- tributed with 21 assists, four digs and one ace. The Sea Kings travel to Cal- vary Chapel Tuesday. Sailors S\V 'ep Oilt.~rs HUNT· INGTON V 0LLIY11 l L BEACH -Newport Harbor High's girls swept host Hunting- ton Beach Friday night m non· league girls.volleyball, 15·4, 15-4, 15-12, sending Orange County's top-ranked team to 1·0 fm thl• son.. ' Apnl Ross oud Brnnd, Wot1•1 • • man each had 1 :!> k1Us, so11homor0 Kabe King had '.1.7 as ists, Andrea SChutz had seven kllls1 and Enn Haller had sue kills, nlne digs ond thtee service BCE'.S for tha Sailors, who we.re going w1thout mlddl block r Kn ta DUI (tounng Duke) and Heather Cull n hob· b~t by an inJurv • ff.tancia seeld.Iig ~ ~eball coach • Green resigns after two seasons to accept . teaW°g job elsewhere. COSTA MESA Estar.cia High .1s seeking a base~all coach after Tim Greet resigned followmg two stasons at the helm. Green, whose son, C.K. was 1 second-team All· Pa?f~. Coast League mflelrer last spring, step~ down in July to accept a ta.ching job at St. John tae Baptist School in Costa Mesa. • •E ancia is where 1 always wanted to be; but I wasn't · ed as a teacher," said G n, 8-39, 6-24 in league 9ames, after step- ping upfrom the junior var- sity wh former coach Joe McKetl k re!!igned one game in Ule 1998 season. Gree dn Estancia grad- uate wh coached formerlf at Cost Mesa High and had s t several years coaching lower-level base· ball at alma mater, teaches 11xth grade and coaches ~ls volleyball at his new s<hool He taught at TeWinkle rmediate la.st year.· , ·· Estanci Boys Athletic Director ParseJ coUld not be Ched Prlday to address a etable for hir- ing d repla ment. - b ciny Faulkner Newport ~~~---r Harbor Baseball Ass the start of r ation for Winter Baseball Seaso 1999. The sedson begins Se~t. 12 and ends Nov. Playen. must be between dg{!s nd 14 as of July 31, 2000. Instruction i!> rovided by-high school and co uruty college roaches. The fee Sl 10. For regis- trallon form an · onnation, call the NHBA office (949) 451-2228 . . . conn ctions personal ben Linda Pruitt just wants to say hello to her grown chil- dren. the phone is sometimes a good enough way to do it. "If I really want to talk to tbem. •she says, ·1 take them out to iunch." The difference betweeR the .two ways of communicating is something ~tt cares about, because she is in th.I busi- ness of connecting with people. Pruitt tells stones professionally and iS co-pres- ident of the South Coast Storytfller's Guild, a nonprofit orgaruzationof profes- sional taletellers based in Cost! 'Mesa. Perhaps more than most ~ple, story-· tellers are explicitly conscious/>f the pow- er of face-to-face encounters. but person- al interaction -as opposed tf communi- cation over the Internet, overthe phone or fax, or via television -is mething many Newport-Mesa resid ts cultivate for the rewards that only it provide. In . an age of 'virtual reality, a hwnan contact delivers an unpar ed sense of connection and community 1bis kind of personal raction, ' . Dolly Pilot according to Art Hansen, ti.rector of Cal State Fullerton's Oral Hi.sf1ry program, "is one of the ways, in a nobile world, where we're moving aroltld all the time and being uprooted, wheje we do have DON I.EACH I DAILY Featured poet Heather Hampton shares from her book during poetry nJgbt at Alta Coffee ln Newport Beach. fellow poet Ben Trigg listens in the background after reading bJs prose. · a sense of identity and f.th. • . It's for this reason tha ansen strives .. to conduct face-to-face erviews when recording oral hi.stories. "I think that the pers<pal relationship is really important," ~en said. "When you have the ve[Y act of the interview ... you have !qaeate rapport." The power of s to develop this kind of atmosphere was on display recently at Alta Coffee House m New- port Beach. People who wandered ur off the street often stopJ)ed in the doorway, struck by.what they saw and beard. The cate was crowded and warm, and men and women were standing up to reote their poems over the sound of the espresso machme and the c:lln.king of glasses. Much of the work was unpol- ished and tentative, but a round of applause greeted each effort. On the dark, quiet street, the cafe was a haven of light and community Pat Sosa, who came to the coffeehouse from Mission Viejo to read her poem •conditions," explained that the chance to connect with other people was an unportant part of the experience for her. "It's a way of sharing,• Sosa said. "It's a nice thing to get up and speak. There's a passion to it. It's a little living." Sosa felt that there was an openness to be found at a situation like a poetry F r the love of libraries T. Jefferso Parker, Jo -Ann Mapson and Ray Bradbury to appear at 'Author Atithor!' benefit ing the Costa Mesa library fo undation . N ovelists are f ously stingy with their time. 'Il!ey're own for skimping on publicity ap ances and cutting short interviews in ping with the single- sentence explanati Gustave Flaubert, the author of •Madam ovary,• gave for bis success: ·1 stayed me and wrote.• When it comes libranes, though, it's another matter aU ether. For those reposito- ries of literature a learning, novelists are willing to'subscri , however briefly, to an entirely different tto: "I went out and shook as many h ds as possible." The Costa Me Library foundation is working to drum enthusiasm (and, of course, money) f a new central library, and writers are que · up to lend an ink· stained haild. La a Beach novelist T. Jef- ferson Parker, C ta Mesa novelist Jo-Ann Mapson and f fabulist Ray Bradbury (a resident of Los geles) will all appear in the weeks ahea "Author I Author!" a Mries of benefit dings for the cause, to be held at the Mesa Senior Center. Por Mapson, hoso works include the Los Angeles Times bestseller "The Wilder Sis- ters," partiopati.ng m the benefit is a way of recognizing the important role the library played in her childhood. "The libnry was one of the reasons I bicame a wrillr. I ...,W.V.in supilor1ilg it.,, Je.Ail.,_ Autbilr •1 read every book there was in the chil· dren's library in Fuller- ton," Mapson said. Some of the favorite titles of the artist as a young woman were books from the Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew series, along with the tale "The Five Little Peppers and How They Grew." Mapson explained that the time she spent With her nose m such volumes was a major influence on her career path. · "The library was one of the reasons I became a writer,• she swd. •t strongly believe in supporting it.• Mapson wd she plans to read at the ben- efit a selection from her work·m-progr which does not yet have a title. Parker, a writc1 known for uch hU a "'Little Saigon• and the New Yock nines bestseller "Laguna Heat,• had a similar explanation for his participation m the library drive. While be is known tor vividly captur- ing the settings of Southern California in bis work, it was at the library that books first captured him. "l was a library aficionado when I was a kid," Parker said. •Mom always signed me up for the library read.mg program when I was a kid, and I had to read the 4,000 boOks a summer or whatever it was.• Parker -who wrote his first novel while working as a reporter for the Daily Pilot - noted that the resources of libraries continue to play an important role in h1s We. "As a writer, I always call up the refer- ence desk and they help me out," he said. "I'm a believer.• Parker was a little vague about his plans for the upcoming reading (•rn come up with something,• tie said), but mentioned that he is working on a new novel, "Red Ught," to be published in May. "l always try to do what 1 can to help out libranes, • Parker said. •1t•s a temfic cause. R SEE AUTHOR PAGE 89 SUNDAY FAllASllC flYI MONDAY .reading that couldn't be encountered in much of the rest of life. "You see the inside of people when they get up and do thelI poetry .... They say today, where do you go to meet peo-• pie? Do you go to a bar? Well, you can do it With the poetry.• • SEE STORY PAGE 89,;,1 • . . ber 11 , 1999 soc1e Theater and cystic .fibrosis foundations get boost from community I I~ fl Y More than 500 guests boarded the yacht Don Juan (not all at once. thankfully) in the Newport Har- bor to share a sunset cocktai.l, the music of Reunion, formerly the Lettermen, and plenty of memo- • ties Thursday evening. Actually, the evening begtlll with an open house reception on the Don Juan, followed by a par- ty at the Balboa·Pavilion for the . entire crowd. The Balboa Per- forming Arts Foundation-repre- sented by its support wing · known as the Divas, the organi- zation set to restore the old Bal- boa Theater-produced an end- of-summer party to bring back some of the glory days of the past o~ th~ peninsula. THE CIOWD b.w. cook • • The~able duo Margaret Bwke and Marilyn Hudson, producer ol the popular • Rotind ntble West book dub, are busy prepar- ing their fall schedule in Newport Beach. The first luncheon of the season pre- mieres Sept. 23 at The Balboa Bay Club. Authors set to address the crowd include the best selling Richard Paul Evans (•Tue Christmas Box•) with bis latest book •111e Dance• from Simon and Schuster. Local chw and Christian organizations collaborating to present the " Arts Festival• today at e ~e. The event, an a ay art expo, includes works painting, film and video, p tography, and many other m 'a . Local artists wlll create new rk at the event, and bands are epuled to play . Jn addition the display of work, the expo will feature a three-hour perf ance piece, "In Reality." The lece draws on drama, dance, try and ~tory­ telling to illustrat e range and versatility of the onning arts. For more inf ation, call (949) 642-5520. Today's Lettennen, Jim Pike, Bob Engermann and Ric de Azevedo created plenty of nos- talgia with their performance of songs such as "Hurt So Bad,• "l Only Have Eyes For You· and "Sbangn-La. • Engcrmann d.Dd Pike, as original members of the trio recording under the Capllol Record label, received five Granuny nomindtions and pro- duced 11 gold records, 46 hit albums, 20 hit singles, With a worldwide sales volume of more than $100 million. 0er of the King Pamily, one of the popular groups on television and stage during the 1960s. Despite the emergence and development of rock, both the King Family and the Lettermen represent the world of the romantic ballad. There was plenty of swooning at the Pavilion to prove that the romantic ballad is alive and well. Eveb better, more than $25,000 was raised to keep both the music, drama, and performance art alive in Newport when the Balboa Theater is rebuilt and reborn. Also at the podium will be actress and writer Diana Douglas Danid, the first wife of Kirk-Doltglas and the Orange County SberlH Mike Corona, middle, along with Lou Diamond Phillips, right, and Antonio Cagnollo, owner of Antonello's Rlstorante, enjoy a moment at the kick-ott luncheon for La Dolce Vita. mother of Michael and Joel Douglas. She has written a book titled ·1n The Wings• as a very personal memoir of her lite, "so that my grandchildren can enjoy their grandmother's her- ace will hold a ·lions for its production of the em come- dy "Wild Oats• by. James at the seventh annual La Dolce Vita to benefit the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Antonio Cagnollo, owner or Antonello at South Coast Plaza Village, will host the Sept. 26 chnner. De Azevedo is a also a mem- • Orange County Sheriff Mike Corona will be the guest of honor TEMPLE BATYAHM RELIGIOUS SCHOOL "Sheriff Corona has estab- hshed hnnself as one of law enforcement's most powerlul leaders in the state of Califor- nia," Cagnollo said. •His hard work and dedication to children everywhere makes him an even stronger leader.• The evening, one of the more festive late-summer sooal events. m the county, is held on th.e an exciting place to be J ewish SCHOOL B EGINS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 PERSONAL INJURY ATTORNEY ) \,/. ' . 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San Francisco, and based on 17 yl'a rs of research. + Lauded by the Amcncan Medical Associacion and che American Dietcuc Association as wdl as by former U. ~. ~urgcon General C. Evereu Koop in his !>hape Up, America! Initiative. + Research on ch<: mcrho<l proves chat people lose weighr by learning six simpl~ living skiUs. + AJI che we1ghc wa~ kept oH wich The Solution and even more wa~ lost T: ee graph). + Learning and using d1t.: six most powerful inner skills known to mankind creates so much balance in mind. body. and soul chat we don'c wane the excra piece of piu.a or handful of coo ki es. We juc don't need ic. + The method is univt.:nal. fr is the solution to weight problems whether you are losing the lase 5 pounds or 95 poundo;. if you eat from stress, habits or emotions. Weight Loss Trench with The Solution and Other Mcthoch• +5 77% mairttained a weight loss 77% imptoved health and vitality 68% decreased blood pressure 68% exercised more Diet only Diet& Exercise Exercise only 89% used substances less 9 I % improved happiness and mood 86% improved relationship~ 86% coped betcer at work -20 73% deepened spiritually 3 6 12 24 59% spent rriorc r~ponsibly . Months How does The Solution work? • Each person accends a Soluuon Retreat to learn more about chc ca us~ of his or her weight problem an<l how the method works. Solurion Groups meet weekly for 2-hour sessions over a l 2·wcck period. Most participants find that three to four l 2·wcck sc\Sions are ide.ll for mastering the method. The sessions are jointly led by n registcre9 dietician and a lice nsed family thc.·r~pi~t. Monthly physician visiu arc included. 'l'he Newport !\each program is ~upervi cd by board certified female physician~. The retreat will 'bc held Sept. 25.1999 from !Jam to 12pm .. t 360 San Miguel Dr. Suite 206. For mor inform;.uion an<l to c:nroll in the retreat· call 949-644-3565. Space is limin.xi. · 949-644-3565 Antonello patio under a canopy of lighted trees. ~atu.nng live music for dancing, dJl incredible ~er prepared and served under th.e direction of Chef Fran- co Barone, and both live and silent auctions benefiting Cystic Fibrosis, La Dolce Vita is a slice of the good life on the Orange Coast. Organizers have secured a trip to Paris and celebrity items pro- vided by Hollywood actor Lou Diamond Phillips, a.supporter of th.e Cystic Fibrosis cause, the most fatal genetic disorder strik- ing children in the United States. Call (714) 938-1393 to help find the cure. Tickets are $135. itage,• Darrid said. ,,. Janet Fitch, author of the acclaimed "White Oleander,• the story of a young girl's journey through a line of foster homes and families following the impris- onment of her adored mother for the murder of her lover, is .also on the impressive roster. To join Ute Round Table West luncheonfoI'\llll,call(323)256- 7977 to reserve your spot. • a.w. COOK'S column appears every Thursday and Saturday. Did You Knowl "That at ~ we make the extra effort to provide you with the best personalized customer service possible. We want you to leave '9~ knowing you've made the right investment at make your home and garden beautiful" NURSERIES, INC.---• COSTA MESA SANTA ANA 2 700 Bristol St. (714) 754-6661 2800 N. Tustin Ave. (714) 633-9200 COMPLm LANDSCAPING • 45 YEARS EXPERIENCE LICENSE # 308553 ! McClure on Monda and Tues- day evening. Direct Alex Gol- son needs 15 to 25 and 10 to 15 women to flesh o .his cast of cavalry riders, pistol ting out- laws and damsels in tress. The production is sc eduled to run Thursdays throug~Sundays, N,ov. 11 through 14 and 18 through 21. Rehears will be held at 7 p.m. Monda , Tues- days and Thursdays and irom 2 to 5 p .m. Saturdays. Interested actors can attend the Monday audition beginning at 5·30 p .m. or the Tuesd~y session at 1 p .m. ace is at 2701 FaiMe..w Road, Costa Mesa. For more informa- tion, call (714) 432-5640 · l'MES HEHN ursery Sales Nursery -Cosbl Mesa erican J'amily Operated Bus Since 1983 llfeth•• Stain Warra1ty ----+--- llf1ti111 Sell Warranty lif1th11 Fa4• Warra11ty . llfttl111 Matt Warra11ty • llf1th11 l1lf1llat1111 ORANGE COUNTY'S EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTO OF LIFETIME CARPE FREE ARMSTRONG CERAMIC TILES NO-WAX VIN~L $ OLD CARPET 990 IQ 149 sa REMOVAL n: FT: FREE FU RI ITU RE IOVlll PEROO $2''~: OAK WOOD FLOOR $i''~~' FULL SERVICE CAIPn & IPIOUTllY OLE woo• a1F111111•• a ••••• CllAltll OOllTlll & 11 ,... ..... ,.,. t -4 •••. En,,,.,,, ANW,,_,, (949} 650-1616 114EMT11"' ~UT , j CtJ.ITA MUA, CA ,ZU7 ___,.......__. •w ... ,. ,_, ...... , • l11telletlH A-II•"• Daily Pilot .. date boo It Sotutday, September 11, 1999 Getting a weekend workout without breaking the bank A h, CalifoJ'lllll. The land of frozen yogurt, cellular phones and our own spe- cial cuisine. Not to mention a wealth of recreational activities just waiting to be taken advantage of. Whether it's ~nowboarding in the mountains or surfing in the crys- tal, er, green waters, there is no reason to sit on your couch. You usually have to pay to play these days, especially for extreme sports such as sky div- ing or bungee jumping. So what can you get for free these days WEEKEND WANDERER. and still get a good workout? Funny you should ask. I decided to sam- ple the best of what the Newport Beach and Costa Mesa parks and recreation departments offer. I was surprised at what I found. Fust stop was a tennis match against my girlfriend under the lights at Mariners Park in New- port. I accepted her challenge and conjured up images of that infamous match of Bobby Riggs getting pummeled by Billie Jean King in straight se ts. No way was I going to get bea,t. We headed lo the park where • there were two courts, on e of which was empty. Much to our delight we found tJ'at the lights were on until 10 p.m With nearly two hours to play, I vas ready to give my best l'C'•" amprdS imitation. adntecl my serve has zero VL it y, tr veling about 20 mph wh1 , I hit the ball m the sweet spot of the racket. Pretty pathet- c. W llching our neighbors' match even did more to knock down m} ego. These guys were , putting top spins and slicing with the best of them. I was struggling -to hit the ball in the service box. Needless to say, I defeated my female foe f>.3, 6-0, 6-2, dispatch- ing her in less than 1 112 hours. It was f\m to run her around the court, hitting drop shots and baseline backhand smashes. The. competitive juices raced through my body. We called it a night but did I mention there was no cost? We went back three days later for another round. U you want to play at night, you can either go to Mariners Park on Dover Street and Irvine Avenue or Las Arenas Park. which has four courts at 16th Street and Balboa Boulevatd. Other public courts In Newport are in West Newport at 57th Street and tbe river jetty and Irvine Terrace near Malabar and Evita streets. The latter two don't have lights. Next stop was the golf course that I was obviously ill-equipped for, both skill and equipment·wise. My golf clubs are so old they look like they were used by Ben Hogan. My woods-most are metal com- posites today-a.re actually wood. I dare not step on a course unless I've been to the range a handful of times. Unfortunately, I haven't hit a bucket of balls in a while, so I passed on the two 18- hole courses at the Costa Mesa Golf Course. The two courses are pedect for the beginning to aver- age golfers with long fairways and few sand traps and water ha7.a.Ids. But my philosophy is, if you aren·~ decent at a sport don't play it. I took my antiqua\ed set of clu bs and took s9me swings. It seems that the shorter the iron the better my game looks. My game gets progressively worse when I start hitting with the woods. I putted for an hour working on my short game but I Women's Health lecture Seminars Complim.mtary Thwsday, Sept. 23 Guest Speaker Dr. Jane Bening • Gynea•r Nt\l 'floft BtacA TEsTOSTERONE ••• 11iE FEMALE HORMONE How co.replace teiwrreront Large .sdecnon of women's books. A1diblt ot CilifOfllltl Pllannacy ._,,..,,.._ RSVP:~f.uos7 Please register for each program yoo wish to attend so that we con provide om!H seating and refreshmen~ -· $6.95 Hand an[ Eree Foam Wax . to 4:0 ·' BRIAN POSUDA I DAii. Y PILOT Don Fraiser takes a swing at the driving range at the Costa . Mesa Goll Course. -E nc rgy-Effici en t , Dual Pane Windows -Ea ve Enclosures -Pa tio Room s -F ull Service Pai nt -Tex Cote ALL AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES Call for FRCE estimates Work direct with owners. (800) 551-1108 Builders Emporium Home Improvement So(d Furnished and Installed by Golden Construction Whatever your Landscape or Maintenance needs, Lloyd's can do it all... 17 THINKING ABOUT LANDSCAPING OR YARD MAINTENANCi7 CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE TODAYI riiFI LL• •YD •s ~ lANDSCAPE /.MAINTENANCE • (949) 646-7441 Lloyd's Nursery a Landscape Co., Inc. 2183 Fairview Rd. Sutte 216. Costa Mesa. CA 92627 EXPERT l.AHOSCAPING I SPfUNKLEAS I MAINTENANCE I decided l'm best suited for the sidelines for now. Those who have a decent game can pay $33 on the week- ends and $24 during the week to play on the Los Lagos course, known to be the better of the two greens. The Mesa Linda course runs $25 on the weekends ~d $18 on the weekdays. "I love this course because it isn't exJ)en.sive and it's a good place to work out the kinks in my game,~ said MaUhew Adelson, who didn't want to reveal his t\andicap. "My friends and I come out once a month and share a good time, no matter how bad my slice is that day.• Enough of golf I like to ball. · • Basketball. You can't always find a good pickup game unless you know where to g0.. Most Orange County residents know about the competitive games in Laguna Beach, usually reserved for those who have dunking ability. If Laguna isn't your cup of tea, head over to 38th Street Park on the peninsula where you can find games every day of the week It's · tough to get a game on the weekend unless you bring your own team but weeknights after work are always gocXl .. I went on~a Sunday and didn't bring a team. Not many were impressed by my scrawny frame but at 6 foot I could manage with some brnwny guys. I played with a smalle r version of Jason Williams sans the trash talking, a Kevin Garne tt look- alike and one guy who needed only to sit under the basket to get a rebound. He was that bjg. We fell behind early but • scrapped our way back. Swea!t bodies pushed for position and some cheap hots were definitely thrown. But one rule in pickup must apply: don't cetU a foul ' unles:> you are bleeding or a loud sound has stopped play. 1 was hacked umnercifu11y but I expected that We won the game 11-9 (play by ones) and held the court for two more until we got skunked by a team who took advantage, of our exhaust.eel state. • "The games a.re pretty compet- itive down here," said Brian Jack- son. "If all else fails, .you come .... here because you know they will be running.", Sore from my prior. day's half-court haplessness, I dcaded to go for a sy.rim at the downtown recreational center on Anaheim Avenue m Costa Mesa. The cotnmuruty pool iS open six days a week to the public and ·costs am asly three bucks to use. The pool was vutudlly empty with only a few hedrty souls aomg laps. The busiest times are Tuesday throug h Thursday when the hours arc form 5 to 6:30 p.m. But try Monday, Wednesday or Fnddy dunng your lunch hour. The pool is open from noon to 1;30 p.m The pool is dlso open from 10 to 11:30 il .m Saturday Fm information on the afore - mentioned acllvilles ot t.1vatlable clas!:.eS this fall call the C'<Ata Mesa Comtnuruty Services Department at (7141754-5300 and th" Ne~tt Beach Community Services ; Department at. (<149) 644-315 1. •6,000 ..._ of rental and aales on Adult pro &. amcrt.w vW9os •N.w.st &. latest ......... recened daily •Adult eon-• & toy• •Adult91eet'.019 cants, Invitation• and memo pads 7344 Center • Huntfngton Beach A tostofuny d••'9no<i adlllt bouttq\I~ fcv """" &. WOm.t'f' to shoo tor 714 898-0400 "'""'°'' 6-J,,~\ Open Mon thru Sat 10am to 8pm Sunday noon-6pm -~ ~~ \ \ l " I ( I I I I \ \ ·\ R .... E T Newport's Fin~st N~ighborhood Market . •All Natural Beef Prime & Clfolce Cuts Only • Fre~h Fish Doily The Highest Quality • Form Fresh Produce Hand Picked +Complete Wig_e Selection Tempt 'fOU' PaJat;p with the Finest •Specialty Items • Specialized Packaging For Custom Boat Ordels Featuring.a Full Service Deli + Mode to Order Sandwidies + Sliced Meots & Cheeses + Salods & Hot Eotrecs • Gourmet Dips t Porty Plotters •Lunch Meeting Orders Hours Mon.-Sat. 8am-9pm Sun. 8.am-8pm Phone 949*5-48-2'00 2121 Westdiff Drive• Newport Beach BPd G Saturday, ~b. 11 , 1 m -datebOOk . Daily Pilot1 . 'Gingerbread Lady' succeeds despite pre-show mistla W hen you're putting on •111e Gingerbread Lady• and you lose both your gmgerbread lady and your director a week before , opening, you could be in a spot ---· of trouble. Not to THEATER REVIEW worry, however, at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, where the show was postponed a· week, both star and director replaced, and a perfectly ser- viceable production has resulted. Neil Simon's first (oray mto sertous theater-his tale of a nightcfub singer clinging to stay on the wagon with a little help from her friends-may not be flawless in its local incarnation, but it's much better than might be expected given the orcum- stances. Replacing the director-who bailed out when the actress did in mid-August-is Adriana Sanchez who, it seems, can do it all. She's already a local legend as a musical actress, but her directing experience has been confined to a pair of youth shows at the playhouse. Sanchez has assembled a very affecting show with a pair of superb performances in the Supporting ranks and a 9Urpris- \ngly effective rendition Crom Janet Lee, who rescued the th-e-:.... ~ ater gTOup in the title role of Evy Meara. Lee has done wonders with her character in the time allotted he r, and should only improve in coming weeks. Lee already has her character's ner- vous energy nailed, and her shaky faceoffs with her best friends are. quite well done. Where the show really excels is in the portrayals of Evy's staunch supporters-Lynn Rein- ert as a vain, vulnerable beauty approaching a traumatic 40th birthday and Damien Lorton as a neurotic gay actor gTappling with a failed career. • Reinert's proud , edgy depic- tion of Toby,· a woman with nothiQg beneath her surface but insecurity, is first rate, a com- pelling picture sketched by the versatile actress whose last role, in• Crimes of the Heart,• was that of an equally shaky, plam spinster on her 30th birtt!day. She loses credibility only when claiming to be from Grand Rapids, Mich., when her accent suggests Biloxi, Miss. Lorton turns in his finest work to date as Evy's over- wrought buddy, Jimmy, seething with a sense of sheer panic that would drive anyone to drink, recovering alcoholic or not. Many of his lines are typi- cal Simon zingers, and Lorton delivers them with a splendidly ironic edge. As Evy's concerned daughter, Tura Pitt, requires more breadth .> • _ ... + WHAT: "n. Gin- ~ Udy" + WHIM:Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, 611 Hamilton St., Cos-- ta Mesa + WHEN: Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. through Sept. 19 . + HOW MUCH: $10 · and $12 t + PHONE: (949) 650- 5269 Janet Lee, left. and Tara Pitt are a trou- bled mother and daughter in .. The Gingerbread Lady" at the Costa Mesa Clvtc Playhouse. and variation in her characteri- zabon. Pitt finally connects in her final scene with Evy, but must overcome a single-dimen- s1onal approdch to this criti£al role in the play's early seg- ments. Jn a biting extended cameo. D.J. (his complete billing) renders a convincing heel as Evy's ex-boyfriend seek-. ing to reconnect Shawn Batsel completes the cast tn a ruce bit Laughlin, NV Casino Rewards Adults! 'Leave kids home .•. get extra perks' Ask for the Ramada Express 'Adult Escape' $ 21 '14'1dtEs~' Roo• ADULT ESCAPE forTWO~OIM PACKAGE 1'6' nJ1ltt • J Da ..._ 11•2Na,.iat.rJ • ADULTS ONLY Social Hour • ADULTS ONLY Pool/Spa Houn • ADULTS ONLY Hotel Tower With Jn-Room Coffee Pot.a <•n"''• for SJ ,,..,. ~' "''"') • M>ULTS OHLY G1mla1 Louaae Jlhlt 011r PrtMI""' M•rtl11I a., • FREE Slot Macblne hill G110,..11tud WIN Up To $5,tH>O Call t;U free: (800) 206-8032 . 2....., ..... ,,dl • 2 Prt-. .Rib 81treq " l Slirt.p C9Cltalll • '••"-ok ~mada spres1 Hotel • Casino u•1lalbl, NY as a smart aleck grocery deliv- ery boy. The Costa Mesa Civic Play- house has made a remarkable recovery from what coUld have been a tenuous situation with f its" Gingerbread Lady."" It's niceD to see the company landing on ., its feet. · •nl • TOM TITUS reviews local theater ~ the Daily Pilot. His reviews appear J Thursdays and Saturdays, SEPTEMBER 24 - OCI'OBER 24, 1999 L.ow-priCC'J pr.:-vicw begin Scpccmber 21 1111 of 1he West tomes a gripping psych .Jrama by America's mou volatile playwright, a st<uy ofrwo brothers heading toward an outrageous version of the mav1c stiUWdown, ~ fllJllCJt.m Dl!NISE C.AC1ACU MOON AND tiOOWJ.J. MOON " -llllllllD. OC Wll.n.Y ( . ' . Daily Pilot ~UTHOR CONTINUED FROM 85 Bradbury, whom most readers know for his imaginative science fiction tales like "The Illustrated Man• and "The Martian Chroni- des, • cOuld not be reached for comment, but Margy Johnston, the co-chair of the benefit, was happy to supply his motive for being involved in the readings. "He sup- ~~es," Johnston said. "That's why he's doing this. He feels very ~onglylhat every com- munity should have a good library.• Sandy Genis, foun- dation presi- dent. said that around $15 million will be needed to build a new library. Given that the founda- tion only expects to raise $4,000 from the series of readings, thei'r greatest benefit may be simply raising community awareness about the importance of the campaign. "We are really very much in the beginning stages,• Johnston said. "11lis is our first major fund-raiser.• • •• Put a bug in someone's ear. Call the Daily Pilot " ........... .. i Newport : ' BEAUTY SUPP.LY: I I .. ~?~ .. r. 20% OFF: Entire Purchase • • EXCiudes SeOOstlao s Den C9 I SA~$ Mura-J I 1r('C. 1 ()'1 i;.o.1 ••••••••••••••••• 3601 Jamboree Rd #8 N.B. • 261-6788 Jamboree at Bristol Back Bay Court $llM)' lndieatt lhat 55 lo 7~ mdhoo Ametican Ider bad breath to be a pooopai COOC«n In ~ial encounters. And. wtitle rrony blealh odo" from cerlain loods, llttlking, dieting. WI "1Cll'RlllQ bralll; Clllonlc hal1tosls (the lllldtcal .-m !Of bid btUltl) 1s lesS common It can~ ;*Oni prOblel'T\S inVO!v1ng h llelh. gums, lf'ICI '.10ngue Fix tnsaa. Milt 1yety mild gum jliSllSI can be the SOU1te cl lodorous br IS plaQIJt and Its h3tdened lonn, lartar, Cl podlB_IJ d lnftittlon Heavy bidet l)laQues can llSO lolm OR lhl bD oC IOngUe lo PWefY n genern a meiy d sutlllf ~and ce.~~ Foctunately blO-bfealll gllpr11S aid be successfillly remedied Wilh pt01esslonal dental care • rou·re S!Jfle!1og with bad 1> 1e1 us m mx ft Wt Qll dlscvsS ah ~ YOU! OPI ons you Ind help you decide whal Is riOht IOI Y1M1 slllllllon BeaOOllA n hei!lhy smiles are • an 11110!1 You wdl Ile I llY prO!t$SIOl\al$ 'WOO hM the 811f*iel'a Ind~ yw can IMt H yWlt loOllng lof I denll:.I at this I JM, c::alt 949 64:4.-0922 OUr ·personat IOI.di" b•nr1a1eltod ~our i>l1Cfiel ..,, • We'll lcaled 11400 ~ 'ten!tt• SuiM 14 ~ e.n, "11r9M'rt Mdracclllltll!I""' ... lS ,,_,_..,. llidbdDy~ • hi lndialls hY n ... I I I . . date book + WHA~ •Author! Author!" Readings by T. Jefferson Park- er, Jo-Ann Mapson and Ray Br~ + : The CoSta Mesa Senior Center, 695 West ~9th St. + WHEN: Parker reads at 7:~0 p.m. Wednesday. Mapson and Bradbury read Oct. 13 and Nov. 17, respectively. + HOW MUCH: Tickets to the entire series are S40 or $15 for a single reading. Student tick- ets are S20 for the series or $7.50 for a single reading. + PHONE: (949) 65<>-4846 STAGICOAt:H · LUGGAGE & GIFTS ~o ~ff ~~,~~~~~!~~ ~~ 2043 WntcliH Dr Newport Baach Corner of 17th & 1,.,,;,,. Aw. Coco'• C.nur S49/515-S005 Zubie's Proudly Serving 30 Yearsf 414 Old Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 645-6086 ''MONDAY NIGHT EOOTBALL SPECIAL" Broastecl Chicken Dlaner $ 4. 9 5 With plft'CMM of pffctwr of ~rage Dine In onlv & Gogd during ggme time onbl SUNDAY BREAKFAST Coun~ Style • uSouth of the Border" •2.49 To 85.95 BIOody Marys, Mimosu, Full Cocktail Bar & Fresh Coffee! Serwd 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. STORY CONTINUED FROM BS Sosd's poem was philosophi- cal, ml,lsing on the demands of Cdrrymg on a nonnal life. Other wnters delivered rdc1er material. d escnbmg erotic expenenccs ctnd images of violence. Andrea Alvarado, lhe manager of Alta, took 1t all m stride, calmly stedJTting nulk and pounng espres5o. Por her, lhc dJvcrsity or the voices at the rectclmg was pcut of what rnclde it worthwhile. "It's mteresllny, H she said "You expc~encc clifferent types of people'<; lives.• The people who attend the readings, she said, "are used to pretty out-there stuff.• Such encounters, which some- how manage to bndge lbe gull that separates people, are one of lbe main reasons Pruitt works clS a storyteller. Pruitt and her fellow members travel to juvenile halls, schools and other organizations to bnng the experience of pN..onal storytelling to yowtg people -an expenence thut Pnnlt says often produce:. ·ti connection bf-tween cultures • An e senlldl aspect of her art, Pruitt <;dys, lies m lbP use of the ~yes and the 'Qody to communi- Cdte the nature of the ldlP b mg told A student from c1 Junior high school where sh!' spokP one~ '>t'nl her a letter to thctnk her for I he ... torit•s. writing •· 1 wets th<> Bl Small children .. benefit from ~ rytelllng at Ba.mes & Noble's storytime. Alan- na Rodriguez, 1, communicates • with her mom. Dyana, at a recent storytlme. MAl!lANNA DAY MASSEY I DAILY l'ILOT . one you looked at." "This is now stones strike people," Pruitt said. "They're absolutely sure that you're speaking to them.• ctnd sunple skills like using crctyons cind books. The personal '" quctlity of the environment, Jane thought, was educational in a Ledh Crocker, the lead book- .seller of the children's depart· ment at the Metro Pointe Barnes & Noble, is less certain that she connects with the people she · tells stories to, but that's becduse many of the people in.her audi- ence are only 2 years old. "You JUSt have to try to use a clear. loud voice and 1ust keep going,• Crocker said. Crocker conducts the storytime at the bookstore not only for the chil- dren, rnctny of whom are mostly interested in trying to ectt the crdyons she passes out. but also for the parents who bring them to the event. Jdne. the grandmother of 17 month-old Wilder, said she IJkcd the way the storytune allowed Wilder to interact with other chil- dren, learning socwl behuVlor way that no 'computer program or lntemet site could possibly be. "You have to deal with the world h~t before you Cdll deal . with a facsunile of the world," Jdne aid. It's an idea thdt is particularly relevant for people trying to make deas1ons dbout educating children. but it also re..onates with the lives of adults t.rymg to relate to each other. ln an age flooded with oµttons for commu- nicallon, actual foce-to-face con- tclc:t with other people continues to cprry an emotional weight that noUung elsP. Cdn match. In Hunsen's words. such inter- acllon creutes a "tnctlogue, • a lhtrd vmu~ thcll evolves when two people speak to each other. That third v01ce, Hansen said, "1s the thmg we're creating togf't he>r ... ROSEY'S AUTOBODY You Have the Right to Choose Your Repair Facility Insist on the Best Lifetime Warranty Full Service Collision Center Insurance Approved Shop tEJ (949) 642-4522 --~~ 121 Industrial Way• Costa Mesa A M acG11livra9 rrccman rilm .. • • ~ f SatVrday, ~b. 1 I, 1999 949-722-3555 1000 Wiit Cwt Hlt'lnr • tt..,ort Beatft 1997 Man of the Year In Costa Mesa Specializing in sales & purchasing for Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and surrounding areas! Hablll Espeflol Bus: (714)832-8800 Ru: (949) 645-1577 . Pgr: (714) 385-9197 12841 Newport Ave. Tustin CA 92780 nates anrl deadlines are subject to cha11ge without notkc. The publisher reserves tf1e right to ct'rbor, reclassify, revisP or reject ~rty classili<'d adverti&cment. Pl<'lll>C report ~ error that may be i11 your classified ad immediately. The Daily Pilot accepu. no liabilitv for any error in an advertisement ror which it may be re:.pon ible except for the cost of the pace actuaUy occupied by tlle error. Credit r.a n only be allowed for the f1nt in!>f'rtion. ,..., . By Fax (949) o:J 1-0594 (Plrbt iotfmlt \!111r 1111t111" 11n1I pl1011r oumllf'r 11rul .... ·n "•" \•111 b&cl.: 'uh a pn. r qu11te.)" --.,--- .r • • ~.1: - l . \ I I \ t I I · l ) l \ \ I I '. l I ) j, I \ I . LES TURNER, LUTCF Exclusive Agent "MY CUENTS ARE FROM ALL OVER AND GET THE BEST Pill & RATIS." Prf(m-H Owntr Pfvr.-lncb.dt1 • ~ Co1 W4~ •Loon Cars • AiTfxirt P~ & Sltwdt • SL H,archpp Storagt Auto -Home -Life .•. and 111*-A IMft 8'c1"' ktW Cl Mnudea Snit roM,! ········-····· • Personalized Attention • Trained Mediator • 15 Years Family Court Litigation Experience DIVORCE ANO RELATED ISSUES ONLY! (Slldlng F .. Scale AYeJleble) LAW OFFICU 01' GARY P. LEVINSON Allstate~ Company 901 Dover Drive, Suite 250 Ne~ Beach, CA 92660 Bus (949) 64~.6868 PAX (949) 646-7592 CA Lie. #0703798 5000 Birch StrMt. Soite 4000, West Tower, Newport 8-ch, CA 92660 (949) 476-3676 Visit our W9beit9 8t :.l'fC4I, By Phone (949) 042-5678 By MalMn Person: ;330 We~t Ba) tn:•et Co:.ta \1e a, CA 92027 ~· \t"')JOrt m~J & {)a) c.;, Index ..... ''-~ - Boors Tt'lephone 8:30am-5:00prn \fooda)-1-ndn \\alk-ln 8:30am-5:00pm \1ondlly-F rida r Monday .............. _.Friday 5:00pm Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm Wednesday ......... Tuesday S:OOpm Thursday ....... Wednesday S:OOpm Friday ............... Thursday ~s:OOpm Saturday ............... Friday S:OOpm . .. '" -... .. -. 220. 3tl . ., .. @I..~ . . 1' . •' --. . . ... II ·216 "Affordable Alternative" ·Diseount Casket, Cremation& BUrial Service Wh~ hould you subject yourself & your family to paying inflated price for caskets & services???? Call Toll rm J~S4CUm 5'ntlC OrllF a s.111 «11 c.e......, 400·412 . ·~.t"..P-• ~ . . . tf·-~ J , • r• "9 . • .U0·461 JUST LISTEDll BEST PRICED OCEANFRONT DUPLEX S1 ,249,000 BALBOA NEWPORT REALTY Mt-723-4414 MNM-1101 wHfcOFF 2BA-28A CONC>O $175,000 PAINC ONLY MGA. 949-300-3304 ~ .. -~ ... f ; ; r#" ' • • • .... .. .,_.._ ' ·-· ,... ·-' .. ' 102 Corsica Newport 6each l'e,.utlful 26R condo, end locatiOrl, profeeelonally decorated. late of mlrTOnuf walle, new wool l:>er'1er, marbtc floor&. new appllancee, wuher/d~r, eldc t1y elde rcfrlg .• air, high celli~e. fkeplace. one·c:ar garage. aeeo. pool & epa, tile roof, -$239,000 OWNER/AGf. 949-632-7!573 r ?· •• -~ .... ~ .... ! . ' I ' • .• . .' " .~ ... ~ • II"" .... ., . ~ 'll•~. '. ~"' -.,.. ,t • :J .. -- Let"9Gl111Ar• ........... .. ~ ... ......... NJ.l'Jb MNl7I . i •THE• $HORES APTS :1 & 2 B A f TOWNHOMES i Starting 0 L $1095/mo, ~TO Mo tilse. tV£RUilE5t 1bf •udlo CIM I llMrl ~ llO« unit. llGht cob ~ 1111ny .._111n.; ans • ... IOO C~Ln. 110l comrrunlty. I ••Wj I ptt•• -6 blocks from the beach. ' 949-644-2611 ' ii;... , &l'ArNbNt titcllfiVE 6'* ltVll Fum Aot 281 2Ba Big Screen TV, Pool TltQ vJ Ill Ortatost Vrtw. $350()/Mo AUOCfllld Realty 949G73 3663 ' lay A'ta811iUilU1 2 rnas1er au~•. 2c g111. gated, cornrn pool & JP•. sec sys $1800t'Mo 949·794-5727 •OCEAN FRONT• Winter rentals. Both rum 2bf, S16~mo Studio, S1000'. WONT LAST MM7S.1SM " C'-"'" Todart M2-M78 132 APTS I ~J:!!l NEWPORT BEACH . .-wrvn• ~ _ APARTMENT HO MES Exclu sive Fashion Island Lifestyle • 24 HR Security Cate • Cl ubhouse Facility 2 Bed from $2385 2 Bed/den from $2210 Washer/Dryer Intrusion Alarms Gourmet Kitchens Gas Ftret faces o Foot e1lings Elevator Access Condo Specs Subterranean Parking _ Newport Marina ~ . Apartments in 8.lyfront commurucy with pnv.uc beach & aiana.a.T10pical.Undsoplfl&·Latgc Lan11 pool & sun deck. Walle to Balboa I land shops MIJ\utc.~ from fashion Wind. • paoous 28R and 2BR &: den apts • Pnvatc paoo or l»Jcomcs burrungt&as f11tpbct'S • Priv:atc garages •Boat )lips t\•aJlabk . • $20SO • $-\600 Sorry No Prt~ Pleaae call (9'69 760-0919 t74H~ LAGUNA BEACH NEWPORT HEtOHTS AREA. 39f 1.581 $16~ No p«a, yard, flrtolact, C.if U'ldaay Mt-111-4715 UDO ISL.£ 2BR 28A SunllJ Cottage-SnoMllo: Othtf Udo ltlt Homes Av1ll em Gflll)dy AM•on •. 14H7U1'1 oeEAtnONT BAY ~ONT RENTALS BALBOA • '<Nltt Rental F.WOUS Oteerl \'itW, 26r • Officl. $3800I Mo t Wiilier OcMn Front 28r. Bof1 upper & Lowtr Av~.$170(W\.40 • Bey fronl Ballot Coll• 3Br 2Ba $320MAo OTHER WINTER l YEARLY RENTALS AVAILABLE BNR 949-723-4494 'WINTER RENTALS AVAIL' I 1,2 3, " 4br"S RANOINO~OM $13$0-.$2600. 1Agt MM62~707 6506 W. <>c.entont 28r 181, F, I OIW, Avl 'li11 1 ~Ml 1oas1 $1400iMo $«wing Real Ellatt. 714-t50-9311 31JT 2ba OCEANFRONT ~ FP, Ill', pcJld1 on ocn, t....-.. ~ COUIS evall 917 S250C)'Mot49~ .1411 -Cl~I PACIFIC VIEW PLOT Vl1t8 Del Mar $2850 (949)854-1656 1-~1 CM E SIDE SUN t-12 2005 PALOMA DR, Comer of 20th and Plloma. Clolhtt, stuffed anlm1l1, wrought Iron alb, toya. CM SAT W 4'1 LENWOOO OR Chlldran'llldult clothlng, furn, houNhold, r•tl,.d Btenlll. ottlct fll'n, m~ C:iiJSAT OWCYtl HUGE GARAGE SAL.El Evetylllng Mus1 Gol tum, exec destl & crldlnzl. QUMnetZe slllgh bed. lrmoire, tllctlonlcs ~ .. ¥riColor MonllOf. He¥14en Pickard PMltr, dotlwlg I Wiii Shoes chldrens toys Wik Q\18n, lawn equip! • gas eeo. t>eer 111gn. cislllS 372 BOCKNEU. C.MJSAT 7am-2 Mesa Verde llowtt B"d Streets) ' Giant Garage Salet lurnltUre, cto4hes & LOTS Of STUFFI 2755 GANNET FR11 SAT, SUN 1-4 1t20 Church St, huge mufti , p«ton J::'9 aall. Vintage and m tm tum, 1ppllnc:l1, c~lfldmorel 11'i9i Siii stt i'11 7am EVERYTitNG GOESlll 30 Ytltl + Accumalittlon Allty ol •12 Acecla CdM Huge Olilili Sill s11 onlY 74pm Furn.lure, cloth111g, Yldtoe. bOC*S & ITllCh morel 415 38fl St Ntwpol1 Island NPI SUN t:2 441 SANTA AHA AVE fa BROAD Lota of toyt, kida ltufttl SAT ONLY 9-1 1e21 SANTIAGO Dfl/N.8. ElcydM, Oltmoncl 80 & SdtMnn, boOks, .nt1 Omer Bird cage. snow boerds (Avallnch), clothes, Epson colOr pt1nter. Antiques & tumltuf• SAT f1m·1pm Lots ol Bargwis & FUIMUret 2040 Plaoanlt. Avenue Placlntll/VlctOf11 1 440 ~1 Former Office Depot Amir• Uql.tldltlon Lozier Gondola Palllt Reck, Ofllct Showce-. l.oc:ktrl Prime MoYlr, Chlctlouta, Rolling ~ • Morel ..OWOKN 1oam.gpm lncL Sit a Sun 111il0Tllllf1 Aw. F~INI Vallty, CA (10"4 8vyet1 Pr9mlum) 1-~1 I • PE1MNESTOCk I Golden Rtlrltvtr Puppies Excellent, AKG ""*" OFA, I -U, 2 melt• $600 11ch ~t-~1-2118 Regl~td English Springeis male$, females. 6 weeks. al 111/tr~te, lrr8'1Stibte puppies $300 cal 94~99-3494 _, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS BALDWIN ACROSONIC SPINET Pecan ftRSll, tradi-tional style, xlrt cond ready 10 Plly. $895 00 714-842-3500 1412 ===1 CALI.AWAY Irons, cl1111c (Hlcklry Stieb) 2-f'W buutlflll concfition saooo MM40-42N 1 • -ci1:=r~ I TOP $SS/RECORDS! Jazz, R & B w . Rock, etc SO'S & &O's 949-645-7505 MIKE WAHTEOI OLD COINS! Gold, sll\!11 Frankl11 mint. st8111na Oki watches & Jewelry WESTCOAST COIN642"'9448 HIGHEST PRICfS PAID for diamonds, watches, jewelry, gold, silver. WE TOP All OFFERS WORLD ESTATE JEWELRY NEWPORT BEACH 949-975· 1585 1470~1 Phlebotomy Course Boslon Reid Co C8Jd Reg 13901291 1~201-1141 1474 . w:I Loving Swttdllh NUl'MI Alcl p>d cook. dnvrlg. hou&e $1"\-IWIO 1svruxp.1oca1 refs. Also pet Clll 949-646-3735 HOUSESITTEFI AdUll Pron Will hou&e sit.r.ort or lonQ-tenn b&SiS· Coastal area-Releren- ces evalable 949-673-3406 I '71 EM"-0~ I Admlnl1tmm Anlltant Fest ~ tel .~ needS Pll1·tfnt (9-2 <laiy) energetic. hard wonung good with numblls Mac slclls a plus To stall wntnectately send resume 10 HR Oepl 29SO Airway, A-9, Cosla t.48SI CA 92626 0t lax to 714-5"9·2188 BIG TIME SALES UfWWWIWI s~ Fr/PT o.,A~i!o~ 812· Per Hour T~uccn tabu ' ··~'--•tOI Jo. ·~-•lAof .... ~ '. F.at. In 1989.,, eo..ta Mae ~= 1-888-313-4744 • Gnarll cMi 9tM1pi · L81d person FT.1 ~.lloura P«~. ~s ~PT I HO hOuf1 per week , Newport Beactl 941-83' ·8888 Ho$plllll Ju• blodts lrorn lilt PIClllc Oceln. Hoeg HOlpllll has seMCe level CIPIJ(M1unltieS tor ~ ._.lh strong CUS· tamer MNlcl sklll In u. ~ lowing If Ill CAFETERIA WORKERS/ FOOD SERVICE Requires exc.tlent com· muriclborl &lclh. lood ~ expetlencl ~ Knowtedgl of sarrtallon and food llfe1y pielerrtd NUTRITION ASSISTANT$ Must have exc:ettent com· riiunlcatJon skils with Iha lbll1ly to function In a last paced environment Food serW:e experience preferred SERVICE CARE TECHNICIANS RIQIAles Slrong cornrrullCl- tlon slulls customer HMCe etubes Must be fleXlblt and I team playe1 HOUSE KEEPER Reql;res PllYIOUS llotlN ~ mg expeuence. hospllll prelllled FT Evlllll"lgl end Per ciem'lfanable RADIOLOGY AIDES Good commmicaiion sldlls a.bit to t1anspoll pabenlS perlorm dallcroom cMI• ~ t~s. per1orm cierul luncllOllS CLERICAL Vanety ~ clerk rolll iOcludng PT 1~1r1tion. scheduling l~•ng data entiy, phones, clalm$ processing M\1$1 be llble 10 type 35 wpm, Prele1 some knowttdge ol me<kal terminok>gy Oltler lobs also 1v111t.ble'I Job ltnt (t49)7&o-,S731 Hoag alters e~ benefllS lncii1dl"lg 28 di~ PTO (Pllcf Ml8 off) 1 malehl"lg 401 (I() plan Ollllte Chlldcare Center and paid hdltl btntlrtl Apply It: Human ~us Hoag Hotpllll One Hoeg Onv. Box 1100 Newport ee.ctl CA 9265H100 E.O.E. uw'"' IUC• • CA H&lsEi<EEPEA Corona det Mer untor couple seekS housekeeper, c&llllker, lrvl In piel'd NiCt separate <fllltelS Must be goocs Amencan cook No c:t1'-dren. pets, smollllg ·or '<!Uor Must be Clean, neat & good Clrtver Ovt car Call Mr T evtor day phone MM«-4110 evening MM7S.7t57 HOUSE KEEPEAIGIAl FRIDAY, PTT tor Exec In Ocean Fronl Home Gteet Pay, Eclaled, F~. EnttfVlllC, Non Smkr, Good On'Wer. l=u Rls ¥r/Plc Of lv Msg 714-8'&0-3'81 LbntHd 0< Not W1'rt Hiring Now! ERA ia ppardf1g ltlelr llill Edlutlon & Tr-. PRO's ing lies peid 800-400-5391 LISTEN UP.-. • • =1X1,...,,•'="'11.,..9::------ A11 you ready 10 make ~D . W t d $100.000• • Work from rlVer &n e hOmt & EASILY earn S100tvt $9.22 per hour plu1 !:;',~~,!~~" miluge . 9"C!M89-2198 DONi DISAPPOINT ME Needed Mon thru Sun &ttiktt '°' ekltrty lady. 2:45em to 5:4Spm. Addi· Incl cooking. Thunday tlonel We>rk may be 1v1ll- 1v1nln9 through Sune11y able. evening, 24hn 1 day, must have COUrel'a, Engllah Mu1t tiave truck or Van, apnking. 141.CS0-5212. liability Insurance with CASHiERIATTI:N6AHT proof or payment•, drlv- Oays & Eves avaA Newport Ctr era llcenM, aoc:lal C/lellrM' FasNon Island ask aecurlty card, and clean IOI JQe 949·6oiH933 D.M.V. print out. Chlld ~ needed 2;»5 30 Mon-F r1 S8· 1 Otlr tor 2 Chil-dren. 10,13 yrs Musthevecar, Cl dt1vetS lie & llllUt Releble, Relt Mt• 049-!153-25"9 1COUN1'tR PERSON• Full/PW1 Timt JOf dr,~a In NPB. Call Gut MN7•·1MO Accepting 1ppllcatlon1 Mon to thru Frt from 8:001m to •:OOpm. Pl11S1 bring 111 required Information. · Tlm11 Or1nge County Attn: Pam Bec:klngham 2901 Garry Ave. Santa An1, ca 92104 714-54NS48 IOC).t33.40IO ~CW1"1 M lot Filneu Club In Nlwpor1 Blach Mornlnga anel W11k.,,ds Cell MM'2'3215 RECEPTIONIST Pff Tue & Thur alUlmoons. lor holistic hulth center, 714-843-9053 RECREATION LEADER Pelk Nawpotl ~·s 1$ o"et\ng PIT positions 101 highly motivated 1ndMduals who HClll ~ CUSIQITlef SYC Vartous hOurs. tv"*1ga & weekends f« Info catl(M9)64"46.4 SllM/AdWrlltlng Expanding communtty lllWsptpef gtoup seeks lnsldt sale5 reps. Phones $alls axpenence a plus Gteet oppol1Ul1ICy Sae • commission. Phys1cet1 drug 9Clllntng req Fureaumeto u.n..y Dlnltll • MM31.C514 -EOE· STARTYOOR OWN BUSINESS! Pit-be awa'I tNrt lhl llltlnp In tNt C*9°'Y may require you to call 1 IOO number In ~ theft It I dllf9I ptf minute. Plaut be wary ol out of tr11 compenln. Chlclt with the local Bin« BUtlnHs Buruu before you tend any money or i..s for tttVlctt. Reid and unarat1nd any eonlracl• bttOf• you sign. I Sotvrdoy, Sept.mbw 1 I, J 999 .A· GOOD AD• I ro LEHO.W= I GOOO CREOfT.eAD CAEOO NEED HELP ? T .S.H. Ha.PS CAU. 1~7IMIOI. ( se1 &A• IOlrs J I 1'' Holder S1llbo11 .. Sil 'f04SI own ICheWle Control your own lncoma Sell from your hon\I, II wollt. through fundr1111rs Be an Avon Representative. Cell (8681581·2866 (Ho(iie Monol'AJll • Siiia c cordllon S500 obo ing Scuft by MIU xlnl cond $1000 obo. UdO 1f BUICK PAltK AVEHOE 'ts Auto, M. llhr, ~ (613952)Cal tor cumint LEXUS OF WIS (114)192.-ol T eltmll1cltln~ ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVES Pltasl 118 our Id in today's Classtheds u~r "Sales" PENNYSAVER . UPSCALE TANNiHG SALON seemg ~. !nerdy p115on 10 run lr011 desk Cll 94M7S-3436 COKE/FRITO AIEE INFO $1600 ~ Wf20 local Accrs Fin Ave1table 1..oo-55t-0411 24 Hn 2.9Clmln. F'ttONE CARD r1a. EASY' SS MONEYll Few hrl' Earn S500 • 55-~ CASH• FREE sites 1.S00-997-9888. 24hrs • BEST DEAL IN ToWNI $0" Oown·No Selling Hetshly Vtnlfng localed ri Colla Mesi Eem S45K·\l<M 6hrslwk 8118-434-~ 2•tvs .. Employee." •'Ernpleado. ,, ~·Arbeitnehmer." ¥r '811$ $300 obo Melc;all t3' sa'llJoat ~ mest & $1.$. v.'Nnd 1111111 $500 obo Newport Hnor Nautlc~ Mu1111m CCXI*! Run. 14M75-2230 NO MATTER HOW YOU SAY IT, CLASSIFIED CAN FIND IT. Look for the newly designed and unique automotive section with today's paper. You'll find great deals- and even some fun things to do! • • ._ ~,Sefl ...... 11, 1999 T.ODA\''S .; CROSSwoRo PUZZLE ets CARSITRUCKS • NANSIBUVS FORD EXPLORER XLT '93 2 WO, white, fully lolded, 73k m~ OM owner, well ll'Nlln-ltlntd, good confttlon. st750iobo ..... 152-MH Mondi c!Ytc U' 'ii Auto. NC, pb, pw, pt, tm-tm cassellt, CNl$9 corool $8500 MM33·1148 ' HYUNDAI 'it Auna well, 4 ap .. d, sunroof, $1500. 714-645-1150 LEXUS ES300 '17 fCIM tor cuntrc Pllclnri LlXUS OF WESTt.llHSTER (714)HH906 LEXUS E8300 'ii Clll lor OU1reot Dricino LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)192.&906 LEXUS LS400 'IO BllcMlrey, new tires IM .. ACUlATEll , $13,500. Pt> 114-n6'-2102 LEXUS SC400 '02 Ctl IOI currn Plbnll· LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (71 4)192.-0S 695 CARS/TRUCKS NANSISUVS LEXUS SC400 '93 Call for CUfrent pricing LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)192-'906 llneoln conillieii111 Mll'k v '79 Gold lealher IOI, classc. showroom c:ond. reduced to $2595 obo MMSo.2115 iilieCUry Si'ble ·go 'dr as Aulo, 111, pw. ps, llTl-lm cass, ono own.. OOod c:ond. nitv ntw 1118$ $3950 949-723-939, MERCEDES BENZ 93 ..... WAGON•••• lmmtc, wtlll\tn, ""'· tunrl, 3rd Nit, 1lnt cond, lldly fotdtdl 714-754-4737 Ot Cd ph. 714-473..ooot ., OWILIS GOnN wt1tt OMM StWllf Md TANNNt HIRSCH WEEKLY BIUDCE QUIZ Q I • Neither vulntt'llbk, as Sooth you hold: • Q.p o t\'6 o 153•K1994 1he biddit1.l! ha) procc:edOd: NORTH J.:AST SOUTff WEST I• lo 2• ha l • r.. 1 Whal action do you 1nkc7 Q 2 • Both vulnerable, 11s South you hold: • ••U 'V AQ976 o AQ1062 •7 Q 4 ·Both vulnttable, u South you hold. •61 o QJ92 o QUS •J72 ~~1jn~: I~ r.. lo 2• ,.. 7 What action do you take? Q 5 • Both vulnerable, ns Sooth you hold: •8653 0 952 ~QJ7J •·" Tile bidding has proceeded: Partner opens I.he blddin¥ w11h one NORTH EAST . SOlTfH WEST no crump. What do you rcspon<.17 I• r.. 10 Pus ~· P• 7 Q 6. Both vulnerabt"' as Sooth you What do you bitl oowJ hold: Q J • Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: • A 9 $ J o A 10 J o A K 7 • Q JU 6 'The bidding has proceeded: • KQ7 o 954 o AQJ7 • K62 The biddrn11 has proceeded: NORTH EAST SOU'Ill WEST sourn WFSf NORTH F.ASf INT Put 3• Put ? 1• P.. l o Pa!iS Whit d~ you bid now? to Pus 7 What do you bid now? Run your ad In the Newport Beach-- Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Huntington Beach-- Fountain Yalley Independent to reach over 100,000 homes. FaK us this form with your credit card # or mall with a check todayl Run for a weekl If your car does not sell. we'll run It for another Wee1< FREEi AJI for just $10·. . · HOME 1MPROVEMENT511 Drywall • c:wpniy • pening Ind much mortl Smlll I*' oil Gary 94g~s.52n All frldM HOilil Improvement• • Repair• B1thlK1tchen remodtllng. pegtr 714~-20n. phOne 11ol·26g·7185 Ouick llli9QOU Drywall RepllrlfHture Paint IOIJdl.up. W&Mpaper 1tttp Smal jol'9 ollt eaa Boll (m)M(>-4368 HOMI! RESTORATION REMOOEUHO t FJIEE EST. ~ OecitstFs:ait/ Carp1n11y1ElecVT~V Sm-~ Jo4ll cl<! Ar11 Aef'a Chrl1 71U0M805 - -----· -., D YES, SEU. MY CAR ,.....o..~ai... lW~-Mllil Modll------ 8:.."-§==-8~":... Pia 8---••§--....... ......_..... ...... .. Q• .... 0'*""'9-..... ...... a .. c..-.. oo..-c---g,...,__.. ·•••lllif• s~:;..---e=:. s=-=-= ::.:.:.~ I __ °"""_,,..,..,.c..-_c:A_, L - -~!:·~~·--=p~u.:_..,_ - - l~~I SIU.NE'S ~ "1n Cfftl'Splintlm Ttttan'ftUloll«~ The Cahf. Publlc· Ut1T1ties Commission REQUIRES that Ill used household goods movers rnnl their P.U.C Ca T number. Umos and dlauffel'$' print their T C.P. number in an 1dV8rtls· tnentl. If you heve I quesboo about the legality ol 1 mover, Irmo or c.tlauffer, call· PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISION 71 4-558-4151 f JI II · ' • • "' J• • 'I I ' .............. z doal'l.2 lapl. ~ ~. -ll'i 1 ....... 000 Mf.7tc><1012 ....... 1. ....... _ .. 2411 ........ dWllpllln. ..... . dWomt .............. *""· CO. Ofll owner $31,000 Mf.2t1-I013dlrl ~7....,,Mf!! 111tM MADIA cm 'II. Auto, w, pwr i*G. tlo,s. Boll (4104T2)Cll for CunM .. L.DU1 °' WllTIMSTER-(714)112.-. NlllAN llNTilA XE 'II Auto, 4 d9or, AC, lln-fm OHi, ~~ .. 400. 'J -• "' "9'. -• .. • I ~:.. I. I~~ Stlll l)_~JOOO/obo . M.-.t031 SATURN tu 'M . -~ '-~­-~ .... -·"'··-....... Auto, t1r, ful pWra, I VW '16 convel'illlt. l>laclf.I (395568)Cal for cunenc wMe. IJllOUtl s-.pc!, fh, new LEXUS Of WES TUI •111, PIA! OUI lltre0. oood 714-tH..,. c:ond S2895 949-&42·37~ Have A Garage · Sale! ·Call The Pilot Classifieds at 642-5678 ' to place your Garage SOie Ad ! Da' COSTA MESA ·· Classified Community Marketplace n..Local~ ........ .., ........ ... LOCA1"ING &IC1IONIC 1LM LIM DmC1ION ,.._.,..,.. 675·9304 l.'71Mf7 ._... Put a few words· .. jm ~1 LEARN SPANISH NOW • Pr~ lllssor4AI ~· School. ~ travel ; SUNM 84M73-7409 .. • . . . . • TV/VC.P • •Captain Chairs • RearAJ.C • Deluxe Sound System • Playstation Hookup • 4><4 • XLT • 5.4l •Alloys •CD Player •Rear Air • Air Conditioning • V6 • Privacy Glass •Alloys • Power Windows • Power Locks •Auto • Air Conditioning • V-6 Engine • AM/FM Stereo Cassette •Auto ..... • A/C • AM/FM Stereo . '92 SC400 (017872) '93 SC400.(028868) '96. ES300 (168469) '96 ES300 (1 7 3 -1--40) '97 ES300 (033130) Low Miles, White/Ivory, Leather, Moonroof, Alloys, Full Power Package (168469) CERTIFIED! '99 TOYOTA AVALON XL '90 PLYMOUTH · '95 SATURN ·VOYAGER LE SL2 '95 ES300 (081836) '96 SC300 (034546) . '99 SC300 (005327) . '97 LS400 (073425) '97 LS400.· (071287) '96 LEXUS ES300 Moonroof, Leather, Alloys, Full Power Package (160392) CERTIFIED!- . '93 TOYOTA , . · CAMRYLE 5K Miles, White, CD, Full Power Pad.age {339856) Automatic, Full Power Package, Rear Air, AM/FM Cassette, Su er S , Low Mi (209463) Automatic, Air, Full Power Package, Alloy Wheels, Real Nice! (395568 Automatic, Air, Full Power Pa~c, Hard To Find, Moonroof(16214'5) '95 BUICK PARK AVENUE Automatic, Air, Leather, Alloys, Power Pa e (613952) '97 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER '98 TOYOTA · CAMRY LE '96FORD EXPLORER XLT '98 VOLKSWAGEN PA·SSATGLS Automatic, Air, Full Power Package, AM/FM 3 lk miles, White, Leather, Full Power, Ttlt, CD, 4 Door, Premium Wheels, Automatic, Air, Moonroof, Cassette, ABS (1328481 Facto Alloys, Roof Rack, Privacy Glass (A60668) · Power Pa e This Is a Beauty (073773) · '99 FORD F-150 '99 TOYOTA . '99 TOYOTA . SUPERCAB PICK ·UP . SOLARA SLE SIENNA LE All Wheel Drive, Automatic, Air, CD Stacker. ABS, Trito~ V8, Guard Doors, Automatic, Air, Full Power Package, Autoqiatic, Air, CO, ~/F.fyf Cassette, Moonroof, Leathet, Moonroof, Allo Wheels & More 023796) Allo , CD Stachr,-Rear Slider, Tow (Al49IO). Allo , Leather, Don't Pass It U ! (091683) Automatic, Air, Alloys, Rack, Full Power Pa e, Save$$, 9,000 miles (126018) '95BMW · 740iL Low Miles, Leather, Full Power, Much More. Automatic, Leather, Full Power, Power Seats, Automatic, Air, Leather, Moonroof, Chrome Alloys, White/Black, Leathl:r, Automatic, Air, CJmuae All , . Priva Glass, Facto Allo , Roof Rack 306141 Allo You Name It! 8,000 Miles A1 667 1 CDC t, Full Power Pa 008638 Moonroof, CD Chan r, Full Power Pak St641 \NE BUV USEC C ARS -PAICJ FOR CR NOT!