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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-08-15 - Orange Coast PilotSftOltTS QUIZ Remember these familiar sports /aces? PLAN AHEAD Find out whats going on 'around wwn ' cipHnary transfers up from 1995-96 school ~on School district report details 125 actions taken .-.. ~· past year under zero-tolerance policy. past school year under the dis- trict's anti-drug and alcohol regulations were reviewed by trustees at their meeting Tues- day night. NEWPORT-MESA -More ttudents were transferred Crom pne district school to another for violating the "zero tolerance" drug and alcohol policy during the 1996-97 school year than the year before, but fewer were expelled for making the same .Smog check ~cJJStomer drives off, dragging workers .. ~. By Tim Grenda, Daily Piiot . COSTA MESA -An angry motorist who refused to pay for a $19.95 smog test after his car fatled to pass inspechon drove out of the repair shop parlung lot, dragging three mechanics with him, police said The man went to Mesa Repair-Smog at 609 W 19th St at about 11:10 a.m. Wednesday to get a smog certificate for his 1988 Mazda RX7, said police Lt. Ron Smith. When mechanic Hai Nguy~. 23, told him the car had failed the smog m.pection, he asked bow much it would cost to repair the car and pass the test. When Nguyen walked inside the repair shop to find out, the man reportedly started the car and began driving out of the lot Nguyen chased after him, climbed halfway into the cdr through the open driver's side window while a second employ- ee, Huy Truong, also tned to get the man to stop. A third repair shop employe<', Tdl Nguyen, joined the fray, dS all three employees crammed into the dnver's side window, trying to wrestle the keys away from the driver, who ke pt gomg and tried to push the mechanics out of the window, Smith said "One by one, as he's driving off, they all start falling off the car,· Smith said. Hai. Nguyen got the worst of the falls from the moving car - the vehide ran over his left arm. Srrtlth said. He was taken to Hoag Hospital, where he was treated for numerous cuts and scrapes to his back, knees and shoulder, and was later \ . released. The driver of the car is described as 30 to 40 years old, . ~feet tall, 165 pounds, with dark hrrly hair and a mustache, Smith said. mistake a second time, school officials said. Costa Mesa High School led the district's list of total transfers with 20, while Newport Harbor High School, with a total of 11 last year, posted the highest num- ber of expulsions, according to the report. Details of the 125 discipli- nary actions taken during the While not pleased with the rise in numbers, school district offi- cials on Thursday said they weren't overly concerned. "While I'm not alarmed, I cer- tainly feel like we have more than I'd like to see,• said trustee Ed Decker. • SEE DISCIPLINE PAGE 6 38 32 6 6 2 4 24 2 3 5 MARC MAATIN I DAILY Pit.OT Newport Bea ch dty w orkers Unbh securing the h ouse on El Modena Avenue in Newport Beach wh ere neighbors discovered the body of James William Allen covered in debris late Wednesday evening. Neighbors discover body amid debris • Authorities believe James William Allen died of a heart attack inside a home where he stored firearms, newspapers and 50,000 rounds of ammunition. By Tim Grenda, Daily Piiot NEWPORT BEACH Police spent part of Thursday sifting through the home of a Newport Beach man who was found dead the night before, buried in a pile of debris ln his house filled to the ceiling with old newspapers, guns and about 50,000 rounds of ammu- nition. The badly decomposed body or former firefighter James William Allen, 59, was discov- ered at 6:40 p.m. Wednesday by two of his friends inside the home at 522 El Modena Ave., officials said. Allen also owned a second residence in the 500 block of Aliso Avenue, almost directly behind the home on El Mode- na. The El Modena homa apparently was not Allen's pri- mary residence and was being used to store boxes of old newspapers, furniture and guns, which filled every room in the home. "This guy was kind of a pack rat,· said Newport Beach police Sgt. John Desmond . Two of Allen's friends became worried about him when they noticed he hadn't fed his cats in a few days, went into the house and found him in a back bedroom of the single- story home, neighbors said. Authorities could not say how long he had been dead. The friends called para- Pi,cture peif ect Costa Mesa teen model heads off to New York. then Nice, France, for international competition M ark Kirchner (with bis dogs Bish - op and Sweet Pea) talks with neighbors about the media attentton their street has received follow- ing the discovery of James Allen 's body Wednesda y evening. medics to report Allen may have suffered a heart attack, but when paramedics arrived, it took them several minutes to remove all the trash that was in the way cover- ing all but Allen's feet, Fire Department offidals said. • SEE DISCOVERY PAGE 8 6 11 1 3 8 Mesa changes stance on . meetings •Bucking advice of legal counsel, board members agree to release public records and hold open meeting on PR firm matter. By Susan Deemer, Daily Pilot COSTA MESA-Mesa Con- solidated Water District board members reversed course Thurs- day, ignonng advice given to them by their general manager and special legal counsel, and instead insisting all non-legal matters be discussed in open meetings and that documents previously beJd to be secret be released to the pubbc Board members said they will not hold ctiscussions about replacing 4 publicity firm behind closed doors, despite advice from their attorney, Art Kidman, and General Manager Karl Kemp who told them it is permissible under attomey-cbent pnvtlege. ·w e look like a bunch of dwnbbells, • said board member Thldy Ohlig, "like we would not ca.re about our constituents. But I am sitting here protecting the water rights of our citizens of Costa Mesa." The board on Thursday also decided not to ture another firm to replace Adler Public Affairs, saying it will now rely on a staff spokeswoman lured two weeks ago. Mesa officials hired Adler Public Affairs in nud July to seek advice on medJa strateq]es in their battle with Irvine Ranch Water District over the acquisi- tion of Santa Ana Heights Water Co. Kidman contends a public relations consultant may be used by an attorney to educate the public and prospective jwors as well as advise appropriate and effective methods tor communi- • SEE MESA PAGE I .. W hether you're preparing for an appearance on •Jeopardy," reseucbhlg fun ltu1f you never l~ in IChoo1 or just want to have fun . With facts, you'll find serious resources for p\lml1ng trivia at Newport libraries. Behind some. of the most amusing an.wen to lite'• puzzling conundrum.I is David Peldman, aUtbor of •What Are Hyenas Laughing At, Anyway?," "How Does Aspirin Phld a Headache?" anti other impon- derables series ~om that tack- le nagging queries uhan.swerable by numbers or mea- Slll'eS. : In "How Do Astronauts Scratch An Itch?," Feldman's ninth and newest volume, the guru of everyday mysteries looks into such urgent matters as why people bite their nails and why kids prefer meat well done. 'Answers to other cosmic issues are in "Why Things Are," in which syndicated columnist Joel Achenbach promises to explain every essential question in life. Learn why foreign languages sound so fast and why a thermos keeps milk cold and coffee hot in this probe into global enigmas. Round out your understanding of time's great riddles with "Know it All,• a com- pendium of solutions to such queries as why yawns are contagious and why it hurts to chew on aluminum. Never lose another wink of sleep trying to figure out why pigeons bob theiI heads or why barns are red after read- ing "The Straight Dope." U numbers are your thing, check out "Five Rings, • Six Crises, Seven Dwarfs and 38 Ways to Win An Argu- ment,. featuring 280 lists designed to Ptease history buffs, sports fans and info- ho,lics. If you're amused by literary curiosi- ties, pick up "Llterary Trivia,· chock-full o( challenges for passionate bibliophiles. · Por those more excited by probes of sci- entific frontiers, there's "Why Aren't Black Holes Black?" and "The New York Times Book of Science Questions and Answers," both due soon on library shelves. Oth- er clues about dis- coveries that will shape our future are in "The Edge of the Unknown," featur- ing 101 questions covering a range of physical sciences, with their likely res- ofutions presented iJf elegant three- P{lge summations. Two centuries' worth of trivia and tried-and-true advice is in "The Best of The Old Farmer's Almanac," a nostalgic journey through American folk history. "The Old Farmer's Almanac BQOk of Everyday Advice" pro- vides additional homespun counsel, including how to cure a cold and when to W:eed a garden. Perhaps the best way to find out what people want to know would be to replay a ~y in a library's reference department. To nnulate such an experience, glance tJirough •The Book of Answers,• based on q)estions asked of the New York Public UJ:>rary's Telephone Reference Service s<att. • i;HlcK rr OUT Is written by the staff of the ~ IMCh Publk Ubrary. Thfs week's column ls),y Steven Short. Cowan to lead UO gay and lesbian parade Costa Mesa councilwoman will be grand marshal at event this weekend By Susan Deemer, Daily Pilot COSTA MESA -To Costa .: Mesa residents, Libby Cowan is a city councilwoman who cares about the community, but to Orange County gays and lesbians she is something of a hero. Cowan, 44, was named grand marshal this year for the Orange County Cultural Pride Parade held Saturday and Sunday at UCI. "It's a once in a Wetime thing and I am really honored that the (gay and lesbian) community feels that strongly in naming me for something (typically) reserved for celebrtties and stars," Cowan said. "It's quite an honor and I am proud to represent Orange County." The annual event, which fea- turel dandng, food and entertain- ment, and entrants from local high schools and gay- friendly church- es to the Orange County Gay and Lesbian· Com- munity Center. She will lead off the parade IJbby Cowan riding in her red 1990 Mazda Miata, along with about a dozen or so Miata owners who usually perform precision drills in the parade as a group called Lesbian and Gay Owners of Miatas. Cowan, a former member of the planning commlssion, was elected in November as the city's first openly gay or lesbian Oty Council member. The parade will take place on Sunday beginning at 12 p.m. along Campus Drive starting at Berkeley through to Bridge in front of the college campus. ~ parade will last about 20 to 45 minutes. Orange County Cultural Pride's message 1s that people should be proud of who they are and secure 1n the fact there are gays and les- bians, Cowan said. She said that the community encompasses everyone from your neighbors to accountants to doctors and even politicians such as her. Cowan said that the Orange County parade is much smaller and more of a neighborhood parade than the West Hollywood parade on Santa Monica Boulevard. She has previously participated in that parade too. •It's jUlt much smaller (here)," she said. •we are a much more local event and we have Iott of par- ents and friends." Cowan said her own parents and partner will. be there on the sidelines cheering her on. •it's a good al.lee of Orange County,. the said. Fonner Marriott manager Joe Rothman named t.o hall of fame NEWPORT B.EACH-Joe Rothman, opening gen- eral manager for the Newport Beadl Marriott and a leader in the local tourism industry, today will join 11 other state tourism giants in the California Hotel & Motel Association Hall of Fame. Rothman, recently elected c:hairman of the New- port Beach Conference & Visitors Bureau board, helped build Marriott's presence in Southern Califor- nia as general manager ot three area hotels and as a regiooal director of marketing. The 62-year-old Corona del Mar resident managed Newport's Marriott from its opening, then went on to manage the Anaheim and San Diego Maniotts. He also served two terms as the California Hotel & Motel Association's president and as a Holiday Bowl com- mittee member. He is currently organizing the West Coast Jazz Par- ty, an Irvine-based three-day festtval. He also worb u the businea manager of the lh>ging group the Pour Freshmen Within the association. Rothman said. . • spot in the hall of fame is the highest hon«~. "There are ooly 11 ~in it-irl not~ thousands ot people in it, Rothman Mid. • And -- of the other people are real greets, legends tn tb8 bull- nea. Not that rd put mfl8lf in the Mine~·• -BfJw ·.~ ... Pastrami ·thats what a deliS all about H ow's the pastrami? Remember that question. You'll need it later. First, though, a big thank you to aU who tesponded to my request last week for hot weather jokes. I am humbled by the response. Most are good, some are great, and some - the ones I like a lot -are unspeakably bad. But back to the pastrami. Wait. What do you call a clair- voyant who works in a deli1 Pastradamus. Forget it. I guess you had to be there. Very important opening next week for Costa Mesa. This is big. Another corporate headquarters? Another world- class venue for the arts? Nope. A deli. But not just any deli -Jerry's Famous Deli. I'm not sure how famous it is, but I can tell you that Jerry's is very, very good. More importantly, it's an honest-to- goodness delicatessen -from the Gennan, by the way, delikatessen, delikat (delica- cy) essen (food). Delis first appeared in this country in the early 1890s. If you have to ask where, put the paper down and go stand in the comer. And don't tell me the first one was in New Delhi. That line is at least 80 years old. The original intent still applies -a place for spe- cialty meats and fish, mostly smoked or cured, accompa- nied by cheeses, fresh pick- les, salads, relishes and desserts. In New York, the deli business was soon domi- nated by Russian Jews, and to this day nobody does it better, God bless them. What makes a great deli great? Must be an echo in here. The pastrami tells the tale. Great pastrami is more lean than fat -very tender, with a light, smoky taste, which makes sense since it's smoked. But the operative concept here is lean. Unless you dmted here from that other coast, most of the pas- trami you've had is a big, sinewy pile of fat with a little meat thrown in. Yuk. Go to Jerry's Famous. Thy the pas- trami. It'll all make sense. Reminds me of another deli joke, which also is about 100 years old. Every time a cus- tomer says he wants his pas- trami really lean, the boss shrieks at the countermen, •Lean on the pastrami.• One day there's a new guy on the sandwich line. The boss is yelling, the new guy is terri- fied. You see this coming, don't you? By the time the boss screams, •Lean, I said, lean on the pastrami!• for the fifth time, the new guy is leaning as hard as he can on a very flat pastrami sandwich with his hands, then his elbows and is about to hop on it with his knees. If you don't laugh at one of these, we're going back to Pastradamus. Anyway, Jerry's Famous is a visual knockout, with a Broadway theme reminiscent of Lindy's or Sardi's. Don't ;-" .- ', .,., . . ' ~ ----, peter buff a bother with either of those when you're in New York, by the way. Their namesakes are long gone, and they are mere ghosts of the originals, con- jured nightly for the tourist trade. The other exceedingly cool thing about Jerry's is that it will open early and close late. In fact, from Friday until Monday, it'll be open 24 hours a day. So whatever you do and whenever you do it, you can grab a bite before or alter you ever get to it. OK, the poetry is pathetic, but you get the point. Of course, the entire South Coast Metro area has become an embarrassment of riches in the restaurant file. Quick. How many restaurants are there in South Coast Plaza, Crystal Court and South Coast Village combined? Guess again. Forty one. Add the Robert Mondavi Wine and Food Center (don't tell me you haven't been there yeti) off Harbor at Scenic Avenue, and it's 42. And remember, these aren't "Gee-that-was- nice-maybe-we'll-come-back • restaurants. They are almost all marquee players. For example, take South Coast Village alone, the most subdued of the Three Sisters of Retail. Antonello's -Cosa posso dire del'Antonello's? That's Italian for ·wow.· Darya -incredible Persian food, stunning atmosphere. Persians from San Diego to Thousand Oaks gladly make the trek for a leisurely dinner at Darya. Gandhi Indian Cuisine -a great leader, but if the British knew he could cook like this, they would never have left. Thy the chicken tikka and the naan bread. You'll never leave, either. And of course, Morton's - the Louvre of beef. And Gustaf Anders -vot- ed by Conde Nast one of the 50 best restaurants in the United States. Yes, that's in the United States. Personally, I think they were off by about 45 restaurants. But remember, when you go to Gustaf Anders, don't ask, •How's the pastrami?" This is making me much too hungry. I gotta go. • PliTEll 8UFFA Is the mayor of Cort• Mesa. His column appears every Friday. You can e-mail him at Ptr840aol.com. RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY ... 1"' ... (.win .... CDS11ma ·141-1156 FROAY, AUGUST 15, 1997 th At the fair long enough:_. Political activist Buck JohnS calls it quits after 12 years of serving on the Orange County Fair board By Michelle Terwilleger, Daily Pilot When it comes to standards for the Orange County Pair to live up to, former fair board director Buck Johns has to look no further than Disneyland and Knott's Berry Parm. "It helps to have to compete," said Johns, adding that board members learned how to run a clean, quality operation from the Happiest Place on Earth. Johns, who stepped down from his post in January after 12 years with the board, saw great transformations in the ever-popu- lar fair during his tenure. BRIAN POBUOA I DAl.Y PILOT ' •It's a better managed opera- tion: we don't have all the prob- lems we had with the restrooms or with crowd control," said Johns, 55. •1t•s elevated in pretty much all areas." Buck Johns stepped down earlier this year as a director on the Orange County Fair board. · Fair colleagues say that Johns' tenure played a big part in the fair's transformation with his straight-shooter style and ability to work with fair management. •The board, prior to the time Buck was on important the fair was to the pub- lic and the community,• she said. Johns credits his innovative ideas about the fair to his wife, Colleen, and his five children who grew up attending the fai.J:. "(Colleen) is very outspoken. She's got a lot of good ideas,• said Johns, there, was try- ing to call all the shots and wouldn't let management do their job," fair director John Crean said. •Now manage- ment does their job and we just vote on policy.• "We sure miss him off the board. He was a take-charge kind of guy , •, II president of Inland Group, a Newport Beach e ntrepreneurial development firm. Another idea from his family and friends was getting all the cables and cords -FAIR DIRECTOR JOHN CREAN Crean who is a neighbor as • well as a colleague, said Johns also worked to keep concession- aire fees low so the public would not have to pay more for food. "We sure miss him off the board." Crean said. •He was a take-charge kind of guy." Becky Bailey Findiay, general manager for the fairgrounds, remembered Johns' vision of having more bathrooms at the fair than Disneyland. Fair facilities never reached that goal, but the fair does have more bathrooms per capita than any other California fair, Johns said. "You bring kids and families to the fair,· he said. •We had more male restrooms than female restrooms.• Bailey-Findlay said that no matter what else happened at the fairgrounds, Johns kept the Orange County Fair priority one. •He really understood how Factory off the ground. "You should be able to run a wheelchair or baby stroller with- out running into a wire," Johns said. After a tour of Disneyland's infrastructure and pressure from friends who had to push strollers around the park, the fair now promises a smooth ride for any- one on wheels. Although there are few politi- cal struggles in the world of car- nivals, swap meets and the Cen- tennial Fann, Johns said the gov- ernor's appoinbnents are linked to political allies. "The governor tends to make appointments based on political activity," Johns said. "It was all Democrats on the board {before my appointment). All of these people were turned out.• Johns, a native of Arkansas, grew up talking politics and even has a framed Arkansas ballot with hve of lus family members on it. BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECTI Get the Best for Less! 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One Block Soutb ol 405 rwy 545-7168 •Naturally, they always talked politics," he said. "I've always been involved in political activi- ties.• When he came to Orange County as an air conditioning installer, he quickly became involved in the Republican politi- cal scene and treasures his many photographs of former presidents Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George Bush. Johns took an interest in the fair board because the fair 1 .. appealed to him and his children. "This is kind of a nice activitY. - that gets kids involved,• Jo~ said . •And we've got a lot o( kids." Gov. George Deukmejian ~ appointed Johns to the post m: 1985 and last year Johns decided • to not reapply for the position. "I'm a believer in term limits."~ he said. "You can't talk it unless you walk it." .... _-. Classified ads work for you!. , THE Daily Pilot ~ Includes: lotion, ~, F~ pqtpouqi. fllll>AV. AUGUST 15, 1!191 -MEGAN'S I.AW A l>ee professional forum on Megan's Law wW be presented at ... 7:30 p.m. at Orange Coast U~luleri Univenalist Church, 1~9 Victoria St., Costa Mesa. ~ panel of experts wW make a b~ presentation on the laws rfl!banting sex offenders and Mjgan'1 I..aw amoqQ other top~ ici lfor more information, call 786-9149. . SA11JRDAY ,. ~WASH Newport Elementary sixth graders will wash cars to raise funds for science camp from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Armstrong Nurs- ery, 1500 E. Coast Highway, New- pqrt Beach. The cost is $5. CPR Cl.ASS fitness Concepts, lnc. offers a C~R class from 8:30 a.m. to noon at.Hoag Health Center, 1170 Bak- er St., Costa Mesa. The class is taught with American Heart Association guidelines. The cost is $27. For more information, call 631-3623. CAMPARE PROGRAMS The Ca.Womia Department of Fish and Game, the Orange County Haibors, Beaches and Parks and the Upper Newport Bay Naturalists present a free pro- gram called Birds of Prey at 7:30 p.[ll. at Shellmaker Bowl. For more information, call 640-6746. DIVORCE WORKSHOP Maxine Cohen presents a sem- inar called Divorce: A New Beginning from 10 a .m. to 12:30 p.m. at 180 Newport Center Dri- ve, Newport Beach. The fee is $40. The work.shop is for men and women in the process of divorcing or recenUy divorced. For more information, call 759-0579. YOUNG REPUBLICANS The Orange County Young Republicans hosts a beach party at 10 a.m. at the end of 39th Street on the beach in Newport Beach. For more information, call 645- 7333. . • SUNDAY BµNIE BABIES • The Southern California searue Babie Oub is holding its tl:trd monthly Beanie Babie Bou- ti~e and ltade Show from 8 a.m. tQ'2 p.m . at The Countryside Inn Hptel, 325 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Admission is $2, children under 5 a(e free. Free raffle ticket with admittance. For more infonna- tiQn, call 754-0518. SWGUS MIXER : Temple Bat Ya hm is hosting a sipgles mixer/dance at 7 p.m. at 1011 Camelback St., Ne wport ~ach. The event is for singles 50 and under. The cost is $15. For mOre information, call 644-1999. ' PARK OPENING A dedication ceremony and grand opening celebration will be held at Bob Henry Park at 12:30 p.in. at Dover Drive and 16th SQ-eet, Newport Beach. For more information, call 717-3816 or 644- 3164. • MONDAY ~SH ALM .·The Jewish Senior Center pre-seti.ts the film •areen Fields~ at l::J;3o at 250 E. Bak.er St., Suite D, C Mesa. The public is invited. ch wW be se.JVed prior to the t 11:-4.S a.m. The cost for the l~ch and movie is $3 for seniors mid $4 for others. Por more infor-~tion, call 513-5641 . FOllENSICS SEMINAR ::The Forensic Consultants ~sociation of Orange County pfesents a 5fflllinar called Docu- ~t and Handwriting Examina-ti!P: at S:30 p .m. at The Pa'dfic CJUb, 4110 MacArthur Blvd., ' ""'""°" Beach. The <Oii 11 $40 wth ·reservation $45 at the door. ~ 1:..:-1114 1 • ''I" 1-· .,, FEATURING --~~ "-'°""" ... -FINE CARPETS AND CUSTOM AREA RUGl P« more 1o1onna-. mil 5'&-13n. O'll ClASS Pl-Coocepls, Inc. cllen a CPR c:1uo from 6 to 10 p.m. at Hoog Hospital 301 Newport Blvd .. Newport Beac;b. Tbe claa 11 taught with American Heart. Assodati.an guidltHnet, Tbeoostil $27. Por more IDlonnaUoo. call 631-3623. BAND CAMP Oraoge Coast College's Col- lege for Kids program presents beqinnlng aod Intermediate band camp at Paularlno School. 1060 Paularlno, Costa Mesa. Beglnnen meet from 8:45 to 10:15 a.m. and intermediates meet 12 to 2 p.m. The cost for each level is $39. For more information, call 432-5880. TilESDAY ESTATE PIANNING Merrill Lynch presents a free seminar called Advanced Estate Planning for Estates over SS mil- lion at 12 p .m. at The Sutton Place Hotel, .f500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Registration is at 11:45 a.m . For reservations, call 955-6133. DIVORCE SEMINAR Law offices of Lisa Ciancio pre- sents a free seminar called Whftt You Need to Know About an Uncontested Divorce, at 6:30 p.m. at 881 Dover Drive, Suite 300, Newport Beach. For reservations, call 574-0866. WEDNESDAY WRmNG WORKSHOP A 10-week writing workshop begins from 1 :30 to 3 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Senior Center, 695 W, 19th St. The cost is $35 and limit- ed to 10 people. For reservations, call £>45-2356. SENIOR artZENS SEMINAR Hoag Health Center presents a free seminar for senior citizens called The Journey from Fatigue to Energy at 10 a.m. at 1190 Bak- er Blvd., Costa Mesa. Lunch will be served to attendees. For more information, call 800-763-3224 or 668-2550. STRESS LECTURE Park Place Presents hosts a lec- ture on stress management from 6 to 7 p .m. in Jenn.iler Copp Hall at 1525 Mesa Verde Drive East, Suite 109, Costa Mesa. The cost is $10. For more information, call 432-0908. BREAKFAST FORUM The Inside Edge Foundation ............... _._ lorumlo ............. Your >, ••' GI.-c.dma: How Muth M.-yYou~You and Your_ 9,30 lo 8'30 a.m. at Scott's reotaurent, 3300 Br1llol St., co.ta Mesa. The COii 11 SlO for l!fst·t!me g....u and 535 for all others. Por mervatlons, call '60- ~242. UNEMl't.OYED CAllHR NETWOltk The 199? Career NetWork free meeting for those unemployed meets at 7:30 p.m. at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Oiurch in the Stew· art Lounge, 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach. The fea- tured topic is Interviews 'lb.at Get Job Offers. For more infonnatiqn, call 57'-2239. ESTATE PIANNING Merrtll Lynch presents a free seminar called Estate P~ for Estates over $2 million at 12 p.m.. at The Sutton Place Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Registration is at 11:45 a .m. The same seminar will meet at 6:45 p.m. at Qty National Bank building, third floor, 4685 MacArthur Court, Suite 300, Newport Beach. Registration is at 6:30 p.m. For reservations, call 955-6133. AUG. 22 RESUME WORKSHOP Orange ~oast College's Re- Entry Center hosts a free resume workshop from 11 a.m. to 12 :30 p.m. in room 106 of OCC's Coun- seling and Admissions Building, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For more information, call 432- 5162. BLOOD DRIVE The Newport Harbor Elles Lounge No. 1767 sponsors the second annual American Red Cross Blood Drive from 1 to 6:30 p.m. at 345& Via Oporto in Lldo Marina Vlllage. Fore more infor- mation, call 497-5749. SENIOR CENTER SEMINAR Costa Mesa Senior Center offers a free seminar called Make the Best of Your Medications from 1 to 2 p .m. at 69S W. 19th St. Immediately following, from 2 to 4 p.m. there will be a ~brown bag• program for participants to have their medication evaluated. For more infomuttion, call 645- 2356. MEET THE UGISLATORS The Young Executives of America hosts an evening with area legislators from 6 to 9 p.m. at BRING PARIS HOME! ... or Rome, London, Moscow or Munich. An exchange student from an 'exotic• land can enrich your entire family by becoming a specia1 friend for life! Choose now from among dozens of applications with photos of boys and girls, 15 to 18 years, from France, Italy, England, Germany ... Russia for the high school year. Hosting an exchange student ,. will enrich yo~r family forever. HANS MON1fll/l Call IDd4y for mort information -Local Ana Rtpn11nlllliPt.· •ABSEl.l Karen at (714) 559-6817 -----LI or Kim at 1-800-733-2773 A 1'0fti.D Of ~mll(Ujff CJll!lKUl'1JMl l\ND lllU".A11aW. P110GMMS Beautify Your Yard! ~ln~area. Owqwll•r. ........,., and "'"'"" GN.._.&dwd. ,,.._ ... ..UI lab ... ., .. _ I ...._ 4 ---•* IL,......_ AollllQt ·=:r-. ....... •ls111 ,., I the Shark Club, 841 Baker St., Costa Mesa. The cost is $35 per person. For more information, c.a.11 759-5456. ONGOING ALZHEIMER'S SUPPORT • The Alzheimer's Association and Grief Support Group of New- port Ville West!Villa Rosa co-spon- sors a free support group meeting for caregivers at 7 pm. on the fourth Thursday of each month through October at Newport Villa West Assisted Living, 393 Hospital Road. Newport Beach. For more information, call 631-3555. • The Alzheime(s Association and Mesa Terrace, a new residen- tial community for Alzheimer dis- ease and related dementias, also offers a free support group for care-- given; at 6:30 p.m. on the ~t Tues- day of each month at Mesa Ter- race, 350 W. Bay St .. Costa Mesa. For infbrmation, call 283-1111 . ANIMAL BEREAVEMENT GROUP This ongoing group special- izes in the needs of individuals who have sick and/or dying ani- mals in their lives. It meets at 3 p.m. every Tuesday at 3101 W. Coast Highway, Suite 311, New- port Beach. The cost is a loving donation to an animal charity of attendees choice. Call 722-4588 tor space reaerv1tion. IOOY MAGE SUI rorr Tbe Newport Seidl~· !cal Asl<>datlon ~en a body- 1mag.,imoderata eating support group' that -every w-day at 1 p.m. at 3101 W. Cout Hlghway,No.311,NewportBeach. For more tntormatlon. call 122- 4588. !llA!N TUMOR SUPl'Ol!T A hnlin tuma< l\JPporl group meets from 7 to 5,30 p.m. on the first and third Thursday of each mootb'. at the Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center, 4000 W. Coast HJghway, Newport ~ The meetings are free. For more infonnatton. call 722-6237. . BREAST CANCIR SUPPORT A breast cancer support group meets every Tuesday from noon to 2 p.m.. at the Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center, 4000 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. The meetings are free. For more informatk>n, call 722-6237. BRIGHTER IMAGE Free professional consultation for make-up, wigs, etc. is available by appointment only every Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Patty and George Hoag Can- cer Center, 4000 W. Coast High- way, Newport Beach. For informa- tion, call 722-6237. CANCER SUPPORT GROUPS • A free c.ancer support group meets the first and third Tuesday of each month from 7 to 8:30 p.m. The group provides support to can- cer patients and their families and friends. • l'wo separate support group for cancer patients and for families and friends only meets the fowth Tuesday of each month from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center, 4000 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For more information, call 722- 6237. CARDS/BINGO Every third Tuesday the Jewish Senior Center otters various card games from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. A kosher lunch is offered at noon for SJ per senior. For more informa- tion, call 513-5641 . CHEMOTHERAPY SUPPORT The lioag Cancer Center off~ offers support for individuals who will or are undergoing bone mar- n:rJt tnnoplanl or ....., oall """"" 1 and --CaD 57'"681l ' le< more-. OIESS ClUll , 0-loven "' oil -""' : -lo join the .Nwioti 5ealor ' Ceollr's MWly -bfblte4 -t club n-doys from~ to 10 pm. at , 250 E. ll«Ur SI., C<lllA Mesa. Por : more lnfoomatloo, call 513-SMI. com SUPPOll1' • The Newport -Psycho-IAlgical A&sodat!on offen a ~ support group """'!' 'lbw.day •t 1 p.m. at 3!01 W. Coast /:!!:!Jhway, ; No. 311, Newport Beach. The sup-; port group requires !Jee . .Pre- assessmebt before joining. For more information.. call 722-4588, • The Healing Connection offers a coed relationship group at 6'30 p.m. on W~jis at «25 Jamboree Road; 18().A, Newport Beach. For more IDlonnation, call 261-8003. CONSUMER BUSINESS NElWORK This networlting group meets at 7 a.m. every Friday in The Tea Room, 3100 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. For information and reser- vations. c.all 550-4785. COSTA l\llESA CHAMBER The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce Networkers Business Leads luncheon is every Wednes- day at 11:45 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Oub, 1701 Golf Cowse Road. For more information, call 574-8780. DIVORCE MEDIATION A tree lecture about divorce mediation, an alternative to the tra.- di)ional two-attorney divorce, is offered the third Thursday of every month with attorney Alida D. Tay· lor and psychologist Lee H. Solow. Space is limited and reseriations are required For more information, call 955-2575. DIVORCE SUPPORT GROUP Mariners Church sponsors a tree divorce recovery support group at 7 p.m. every Wednesday at 1000 13ison Ave., Newport Beach. For infornuition. call 64o-6010. DYSLEXfA. SUPPORT The National Dyslexia Research Foundation sponsors weekly adult attention deficit disorder support groups at its office, 833 Dover Dri- ve, Suite 27, Newport Beach. Cost is $5 per session. For time and day, call 642-7303 . Man sµspected of iraplng prostitutes J Costa Mesa Police have Urelted a SaDta Ana man ~ pected of an array of c:iimes including the rape and robbery Of two prostitutes and es many u 10 armed robberies of stseet vendors. Abad Hernandez Jr., 22, was taken into custody without inddent at h1s Santa Ana hOlJle at 914 South Gates St., Costa Mesa police Lt. Ron Smith' said. Smith said two prostitutes soliciting near the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Lake Center Drive reported to police that in separate incidents they each had been assaulted and robbed by a man who first offered to pay for oral sex then pulled a gun and forced them to perform sex acts on him. In the first incident, the pros- titute told police the man forced her at gunpoint to per- form oral sex, robbed her of $180 and her pager and threat- ened to sodomize her, Smith said. She resisted, struggled with him, bit him on the chest, then got out of truck and got his license number, Smith said. •rt•s somewhat unusual for prostitutes to report these types of crimes," Smith said. Costa Mesa and Santa Ana police looked up the license plate number and arrested Hernandez at his home on sus- picion of robbery and sexual assault, Smith said. At that time FACING FORWARD Padng Forward, a support group for family members of recently deceased cancer patients, meets every Monday from 6:30 to 7 :30 p.m. and from 7 :30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Patty and George Hoag Can- cer Center, 4000 W. Coast High- way, Newport Beach. The meet- ings are free. Por more information, call 722-6237. FREE RElATIONs.. HOTUNE Maxine Cohen. a mardage and family therapist, sponsors an anooymous helpline for lndividua1s With relationship problems. Cohen is available for free ccmsultatioo from noon to 1 p.m.. and 1 to 8 p.m. Mondays. She can be reached at 75g..0357, GYNECOLOGIC CANCER A free support group for women with gynecologic cancers meets from 9:30 to 11 a.m.. on the second and fourth Wednesday of eech month at the Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center, 4000 W. C.oa&i Highway, Newport Beach. For information, call 722-6237. HAM RADIO MEETINGS Mesa Emergency Service Ama- teur Communication offers the opportunity for Ham Radio opera- t.on to partidpate in the city°' Cos- ta Mesa's Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service organi7.Ation. Weekly nets are held at 7:20 p.m.. on 147 .060 mhz. Monthly meetings are beJd on the fowth Wednesday of the month at 6:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Police Department. For more information, c:all 75'- 7045. briefly in the news ... Driver. killed after crashing ,~, Santa Ana police laid Hernan- dez. ftt the descnption of a man who robbed u many u 10 push cart vendon and taco ltandl and be WU ai'relted OD IUlpidon of thOH aimet allo, Smith said. Hernandez 11 being held on $50,000 bail in Santa Ana. He will be arraigned in Central Court on Monday, Smith said. Loretta Sanchez to attend beach party The Democratic Associates of Orange County are planning an annual beach party, featur- ing U.S. Rep. Loretta Sanchez, {0-Garden Grove) tn Newport Beach this weekend. The group, a network of young professionals, will hold the party at a private local resi- dence from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday. The cost is $30 for members, $50 for non-members.Call 955- 1433. Llstin of OCC otTeiJgs available •01scovery, • a booklet that lists all workshops, perfor- mances, travel programs and non-credit classes ottered this fall by Orange Coast College's Community Education Office, is available to the public. The booklet is free of charge in the Community Education office, located next to OCC's library. Booklets may also be mailed upon request by calling ily meets from 10 a.m. to noon every Saturday at 760 Victoria St., Costa Mesa. There is. no fee. For more information. call Iris at 859- 3918. JAYCEES GROUP The Jaycees are a group of young professionals ages 21-39 who get together for community service, business networking and sodaHztng. Meetings are held the second and fourth Thursday of every month. For more lnfonna- tlon, call 451-2178. lfADSQ.UB The Wcaen's Chapter ol the Costa Mesa Leads Oub meets at 7:15 a.m. every Wednesday at Mimi's Cafe at Harbor and New- port boulevards in Costa Mesa. The dub is part ol an intematiooal networking organization dedicated to exponding eaeh member's busi- ness through quality leed.s. Call 474-2225 or 975-8338. LMNG wmt CANCER Monthly workshops meet every 2nd Tuesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. for individuals with cancer and their family members at the Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center. Por more information, call 760-5542. WPUS FOUNDATION A support group for younger patients with lupus meets frqn 1:30 to 3 p.m.. the second and fourth Wednesday of each month in New- port Beach. For details, call 536- 1734. LYWHEDEMA WORKSHOP Meets the first Tuesday ol every mmth from 2:30 to 4 p.m.. In the Hoag Cancer Center Audi1ortum. • For informattcm. call 760-5542. MEDITATION SESSION Rxp4Dded Awareness SerniMn presents a weekly meditation W• 432-5880. The fall i<:hedule includes an vut array of performing arts events including music, dance and the.tter. A ntiml>er of daylong personal enrich- ment seminars are being ottered along with numerous business and career-related workshops. OCC will also offers its pop- ular "College for Kids• and "College for Then• programs. There are also work.shops fof singles, parents and seniors. OCC library board members named The Priellds of Orange Coast College's Llbrary elected offi- cers for the 1997-98 year. Leading the group is New- port Beach resident Christine Edwards, director of operations for Long Beach Airport. Edwards is serving her third successive term at the president and is also an incoming chair of the OCC Foundation. Long-time board member Pat Hadden, of Newport Beach, is first vice president and pro- gram chair. ldamae Kelly of Newport Beach will serve as second vice president and membership chair. Kelly was a campus secretary for 25 years at OCC before retiring in 1986. The treaswer for the Friends is June Lauterback of Costa Mesa. who worked for 18 years in the OCC Pilm Llbrary before retiring nine years ago. This is her 10th year serving as treasurer. Costa Mesa resident Kathryn Stanberry, former president of the Friends, ls recording secre- tary. She retired in 1982 after being an OCC staff member for 23 years. Jacquie Dvorman of Huntington Beach is corre- sponding secretary. International busines.s certificate at OCC Orange Coast College will become one of several Califor- nia community colleges this fall to offer a certificate of achieve- ment in international business, with an emphasis on foreign language. OCC's new 18-unit Interna- tional Business/Foreign Lan- guage Program will debut when fall semester classes get underway Monday. For more information about the program, call 432-5683. Belshe wins lifeguard awards Buddy Belshe, a 63-year-old Newport Beach Lifeguard, won four events at the U.S. Lifesav- ing Association National Ufe- guard Championships last week in San Diego. All four events Belshe entered he won in the Super- Veteran Division for competi- tors 59-years of age. They were the half-mile surf swim, the surf-rescue, the two-mile swim and the run-swim-run. One of the hardest events for around town Belshe wa.s the surf rescue because be b4d not prepared to compete in it. He was encour- aged by his son, who lent him extra small fins for his medium- sized foot, a.nd fellow competi- tors. Belsbe was a marine safety captain in Newport Beach for 27 yea.rs before retiring in 1987. To supplement the se~soqal lifeguard staff, he returned in the summer of 1988 to be a life- guard and has been retwn:ing each year since. Volunteers sought for farm tours The Orange County Fair and Exposition Center in Costa Mesa is sending a call out for volunteers, especially bilingual ones, to conduct Centennial Fann tours for school children. Centennial Fann is a replica of a working farm featuring year-round crop displays, farm animals,. exhibits and educa- tional tours that are auned at educating the youth of Orange County. Over 46,000 school children visited for the hands-on expen- ence the farm offers. Tour guides are needed Mondays through Fridays starting September 29 and con- tinuing through May 29. l\vo one and a half hour tours are conducted from 9 to 11 a .m. For more information, call Gayle Cory at 708-1619 or Gin- ny Smith at 708-1517. futo work trucK!; COSTA MESA -A Santa Ana mazt ·~ was Jalled early ThW'lday ~g ' when the ar be was driving smacked into the back of a road aew truck that was restriping the intersection of 18th · Street and Newport boulevards, police said. David Robert Chavez, 22, was killed instantly at 1 :55 a.m. when bis 1993 Hon- da Accord muck the back of a Ford pick- up truck operated by Orange County Sttiping company workers. • The aew was contracted by the dty and working overnight to repaint the· lane lines along Harbor Boulevard. Witnesses told police Chavez was traveling north on Newport Boulevard between 65 and 70 mph through the 35 mph construction zone when he barreled through the orange cones and slammed into the back of the truck, said police Lt. Ron Smith. One worker was walking beside the truck picking up the cones and jumped out of the way to avoid being hit, Smith said. The truck, which was backing up toward Chavez at the time with its warn- ing lights on and lighted roof-top arrows advising drivers to go a.round, was . pushed about 10 feet forward in the• impact, Smith said. Numerous cones had been set up in the intersection, and the two left-~ lanes onto Harbor were dosed, forcing drivers who wanted to continue north oo Newport to slu.ft over lo the right lane. · • ·Apparently, Mr. Chavez didn't squeeze over," Smith said. An investiga-· lion into the cause of the accident is still underway -By Tun Grenda sion at 8 p.m. every Wednesday evening at the Hub of Newport Mesa, 230 E. 17th St., Suite 218. Suggested donation is $10. For more information, call 646-1128. Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. There is no charge for the initial meeting. For more information, call 640-0588. port Beach. For information, call 251-8700. SPORTS MUSEUM The Newport Sports Collection Foundation, a non-profit organiza-· , lion, ope.rates a free museum at 620 Newport Center Drive, Lob- by, Newport Beach. The museum has one of the world's largest col- lection of sports memorabilia. Hours are Monday through Fri_, day from 9 a.m. to 5 p .m. For more information, call 721-9333. MEN'S SUPPORT The Newport Beach Psycholog- ical Association presents a men's support group every Friday at 4 p.m. The fee is $2.5 per session. For more information call, 722-4588. MENTAL Ill.NESS SUPPORT GROUPS • Tue Allvmce for the Mentally m of Orange County provides edu- cation and emotiooal support for families dealing with mentally ill loved ones. A free support group meets from 10 to 11 :30 a.m. every other Saturday at Orange County Mental Health Clinic, 3115 Redhill Ave., Costa Mesa. Call 850-8463 for details. •Also, St Andrew's Presbyter- ian Olurch offers a support group for famflies with loved ones with serious mental illnesses. The group meets Sundays from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the church's Oierenfield Hall C, 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach. The group is open to the community and committed to con- fidentiality. Por more information. call 631-2880. NETWORKING MEETING The Networkers, a program provided by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce, meets Wednesdays from 1 bt5 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Gold & Country Qub, 1701 Gold Comse Drive. 'Ibe lunch is $12. The one- time membership fee is $15. For more information, can 57.f-8783 or 540-0201. REFt.RRAl GROUP The Pacific Business Xcbange (PBX) has weekly breakfast meet- ings at 7 a.m.. every Tue&day at the RELATIONSHIP GROUP The Newport Beach Psycholog- ical Association presents a coed relationship group called •Insight Equals Powerft Thursday at 7 p.m. The fee is $25 per week. For more information, call 722-4588. RELAXATION WORKSHOP Hoag Memorial Hospital Pres- byterian offers a free rel.uation and imagery workshop from 10 to 11:30 a.m. on the fourth Wednes- day of every month at the Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center, One Hoag Drive, Building 41, Newport Beach. To RSVP, call 760-55'2. REPUBUCAN ASSEMBLY The Costa Mesa Republican Assembly meets every third Thurs- day of the month at 7:30 p.m. at the Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Parlt Ave., Costa Mesa. For more information. call 645-5326. REVERSE MORTGAGE SEMINAR A free phone helpline for seniors over 62 is sponsored by Bob Brennan, senior reverse mortgage consult.ant Fannie Mae, •Home- keeper• mortgage and other pians are explained. Meeting takes place at 3 p.m.. every Wednesday in Bay- side Wlage, 300 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For information, call 723-0233. SERIOUS ILLNESS SUPPORT A free support group for indi- viduals facing cancer meets at 7 p.m. every Wednesday and for people suffering from chronic fa~ syndrome, a group meets every Wednesday from 1 to 10 pm .. in the Institute for Holistic ne&tment and Research, 4019 Westerly Place, Suite 100, New- SLOW EASY EXEROSE Arthritis Foundation instructor Wyoma McKinley leads an exer- cise class every Thursday morning at 11 a.m. at the Jewish Senior Center, 250 E. Baker St. in Costa Mesa. For more information, call 513-5641. ....-------• CLEANING PLANT ON PREMISES ~s.=1=1~~·L~--t":"1•WEACCEPTCOMPETITORS'COUPONS c.ut'e I . EXPERT ALTERATIONS f 714-650-8225 "Over 50 Years of Fine Quality" CUSTOM-MADE NBW FURNITURE • DRAPERIES AUGUS~ SPECIAL ADDITIONAL 5°/o OFF Thn1 Au st 18™, 1997 • DISCIPLINE CON11HUED FROM 1 M:a>rdll>g to the report. 87 N-wpori•Meta students -65 boy> and 22 girt.-were trans• r . ferred within the di.strlct for bre4ldng the no-dnlgs rule. I Under the policy, school olfl. . d411 a utomattcally troriller IJISt-1 time drug and alcohol olfendeB i to another school within the dis- 1 ldcl for 90 school days. l The number of students ' ' • ' tramfened under the policy this put school year was up from the 51 who were forced to switch schools in 1995-96. Tom Jacobson, the district's assistant 1uperintendent of secondary education, said an overwhelm! 1ng number of those students - 69 of the 87 -were caught with either alcohol or marijua- na. A total of 38 district students MODEL CONTINUED FROM 1 for clients to see them,· she said. A high school junior this fall, Karolina carries herseli with con- fidence and maturity that can onJy come with life experience. Five years ago, the Polish-born Karolina couldn't even imagine living in the United States. •America was another world to me,• she said. "It was a dream to just come and see.• But her parents moved her and her older brother to Costa Mesa, hoping for a bright future. And so far, Karolina's future shows promise or brilliance. Walking through South Coast Plaza last year, Karolina was approached by a.modeling.agent Despite reservations about the modeling We, she found herseli loving a swimsuit photo shoot at Balboa Pier. .. It was fun. I had a blast that day.· she said. "The people were nice to me. They treated me like I DISCOVERY CONTINUED FROM 1 Allen was pronow:iced dead at the scene, and on Thursday, an autopsy determined the ~ of death was a heart attac o-- ners officials said. The outside of Allen's home is overgrown with trees and weeds, virtually blocking sight of the home from the street. But it was the discovery or about 100 guns -ranging from small pistols to automatic assault rifles -and thousands of rounds or ammuni- tion that concerned police. "Some were brand-ne~_still in boxes with the original packag- ing, and others were rusted so badly they were rendered inoper- able,• Desmond said. "You name it , he had it. - Because of the explosives, the Orange County Bomb Squad was called to comb through the home. All the firearms and anununition were later removed, Desmond said. As dozens of television news vans zipped up and down their otherwise quiet street, some of Allen's neighbors remembered the man they lovingly called •a prince in pauper's clothes." ·He was a kind, thoughtful and gentle man,• said Gert Fer- guson, who lived across the street on El Modena. Neighbor Mark Kirchner said Allen was a retired Los Angeles : ftrefighter who was not married ; aiid had lived in the area for ' about 30 years. ' : ............................ ~ ... """"'" -s2 :::?i and a g1111--. expolLIJcm-- for ellher vlolallng the -~ drug or llcobol goljcy a ......,.,.i time or for tlrtt-iima Otfemea of canying Wffpona or selllno drugs on campu1 or at l<:hoo1 events. Lut year 37 l!Udents met the same fate. , Superintendent Mac Bernd said the district'• tough no-non- sense policy ts designed to keep the school environment dean of dn.lgi, alcohol and violence. •tt's never good when you have to disrupt a ttudent's edu- cation,• Bernd SA.Id. •0n the other hand, we've got a strong policy and we think it works.• Bernd said even with t 25 Newport-Mesa students either · transferred or expelled last school year for violating the anti-drug policy, he feels his district's schools are safe and positive le'aming environments enjoyed by the vast majority of students. was a princess." After a few more test shoots to strengthen her portfolio, she began modeling for Robinson's- May, Teen magazine and Nord- strom. She began taking her high school classes through indepen- dent study to keep up willi her new-found career and this spring took her talent to Japan for bridal, lingerie and catalog work. "It was the best experience I've had in my life,· Karolina said. "l had to find my own way around Japan to find a job." Between the partying and working, Karolina believes she came back a more mature and calm individual. •After Japan, people told me I changed for the better," she said. Since then, she has set her sights on Paris and Milan. But eventually she plans to turn from the camera and direct her ener- gies toward college and a pedi- atric career . ~This job is not for a long time: she said. Although they remembered their neighbor as friendly, Allen also was very private, neighbors said. If he was at home, he would not answer knocks at the door, and be never told his neighbors when be was going on vacation, Feryusoll said. ,\ volunteer directory 't1 ...a -""QI~ 1be SUHD G. lComep Breut Cencs Poundatwd II looking fat voluntHR to' make its '97 Race for the Cure a sta11- gertng 1uccei1. One of C.WornU.'t largest SI( run/walks needs usla:tance with pte-(ace events and race day activ· I ties. lt tak• more than 1,200 valu.nteen lo operate the Newport Beach ev.m at Puhion Wand. II you'd like to help w:ttb the Sept. 28 event, call 22'-0299 and leave your oa.me, address and phone number. You'll receive a volunteer 5'gn- up sheet afterward. · AlS ASSOCIATION ORANGE COUNTY OIAP1'!Jt The Amyotropbic Lateral Sclerosis Association, Orange County Chapter, needs many volunteers. For tnfonnatton, call the chapter o.lfice at 315-1922. AMERICAN CANQ R SOOETY The Orange County Region o.I the American Cancer Society ii seeking office volunteers. Also, volunteers are being sought to answer c4lls for the tin.it's Helpline lnfoCenter. For lnfonba- tion on these and other volunteer oppor- tunities, call Jane Tackett at 261-9446. RELAY FOR LIFE The AmericiU1 C<Ulcer Sod.ety needs volunteers for ,a number of talks. Pot more in!OrtnatlOn,-oontact Sally Canon at 261-9"46. BOYS AND GIUS Q.UllS The tlu.,e anis BOys and Girls Qubl need volunteer cOeches and arts and crafts work.shop teachers. For locations and more information, call Dick Powers. 642-2245. CENTENNlAl FARM TOURS Volunteer docents are needed at the Centennial Fann at the Orange County FairgroW'lds in Costa Mes.ii . Call Ginny Smith, 708-1517. CINtlll-OliUM--TbeC.•kJr~~ A DGO-jlrafh daerfteble 1'Pr~ Cbe.t -............ 11p'ii:i Wey. -voluntiNrt. grldult. levta1 lntccs or -· Por -!loo. c.u !Won, 642-0377. aimo oocam u you love Ow~ bepome.. Center OocmL Jt mabln you to Ne and be lnYOlved ln tbe Orange County Pelfoml4 1Dq AN C.tar as f.w are abJe. You'll h'equ90t bockstag• and below stage "'9M gMtag P\lbllc tows ol Ute Center. lb 1eam m<ll9 and apply, can the Sup- port Gn:>Upt olfice at 556-2122, est. 218. COWGl HOW<W. The CoUego Hoop!W cJ..• M-A~ ii ...n:trig volunteen lo per- , fonn clerlcAI, ""'°"""" de<l<, gill obop and other duHM Ill the bOlpl.tal. For hll"otm11.don. aill 642-2734 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. COMMUMTY H05'ICE CARE Community Hospice Care. which provkles medical and emotional support lo terminally ill patienb and tbelt fami- lies in Orange County, needs volunteers in Cotta Mesa and Newport Beach. Por Information or to register, call Cindy Laird, 978-7447. ' COSTA MESA CMC PLAYHOUSE The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse needs volunteers for usbertng. baclt- atage, mailin91, typing, lights and many other dutiel. For more lnfonnation, call 650-5269 .. · COSTA MESA HfSTOIUCAL SOOfTY The IOdety collects Information, photos and artifacts n!lating lo the histo- ry of Costa Mesa and the harbor ante. Volunteen are needed foe clerical tuts, computer input and help ln the library. Por Information. call Charles Beecher, 631-5918. COSTA MESA UTERACY a>UNQl The Costa Mesa Lite.racy Center neecb: volunteer tutors to teach English as a secood language. free Laubach training Is provided and requires no for- MESA state opea,..meeting laws. The board voted to assemble again on Thursday in a dosed CONTINUED FROM 1 session to discuss a letter sent by the Dally Pilot that called for eating with the media while a members to discuss all matters matter is pending in litigation. not exempt from the Brown Act The Daily Pilot request to in public. see the costs and details of that Tbat decision by the board, contract and other costs were according to the newspa~r·s refused by Kidman and Kemp. legal counsel, was again a viola- Mesa contended the inlorma-ti.on of state law. tion did not have to be •nose are all legal argu- released because the transac-ments that should take place in tlon took J)loce in a closed ses-open session." said nm.es Mirror sion, whiCii·1 JD.edia law attor· Co. attorney Karlene Goller, who i.!le~s .. s, ~ff~:~violation of~ ... ~.~th°!~ ~e ... l~, -,.-;~--- .·t·.f',.,.. '"'"" - ' eigll. w.gu.ge lldlls. Jn .cldl.don. llO earn- ing oatUficatkm, gr1duat• wt1l be aM1gDec1a9tU&)DI •t • QMJ'by-tMtNQV amw. A t.-, dedUdable l30 materiell fee ~ everything needed to i..d • .rudent dlro\lgh two skill boob. 1b regtsW ot lot more lnfannatlon. cell 548-3384 or $48-6584. COSTA MESA SENIOR CEHTIR • 1be multUturpQI• 1enior seivic:es fadllty at the comer of 19th Street and Pomona Avenue seekl VOiunteers for a variety ol tub. Por more tnrormation, call 645-2356 from 9 a .m.. to S p.m. COURT Af'POtHTED SllfQAl. ADVO- CATlS Of ORANGE COUNTY (CASA) VolunlHB are needed to make a two-year commitment lo &eNe 111 advo- cates for abused. oeglected and aban· doned. children. During the two-year period, volunteer1 work one-on-oae with a dilld for three houri a week. For information, c.a.1.1935-612'. CUDDLE. tNC. Provide support to abused and aban- doned. children aa a Cuddle, lnc. holline specialist. Answer the toU-free number al your own home during a 12-hour shift, oae or two days per month. Con- tact Debbie Magnusen at 432-9681. DEFORE FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS The DePore Foundation Jor the Arts, a non-profit organllalion dedicated to dance at 1.51 Kalmus Drive, G-3, Costa Mesa, needs voJunteen. For more infor- mation, call 2.tl-9908. DrSCOVERY SHOf' Dhcovery Shopl are run by the Ameri<;&n Cancer Society. Volunteers are needed, and no speci41 sldlls ate necessary. For information, call 640- 4777 between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. otsrtm RESOLUTION SERVICES Dispute Resolution Services needs volunteer mediators, case specialists and outreach assislllnts to help in a vari- ety of mediation cases. Bilingual lan- guage skills are needed for office volWl- leers and for medlato11. For more \nfor- ma.tion, call 250-CM.88. But Kidman told board mem- bers the meeting was allowable because the letter on beha.ll or the Daily Pilot posed a threat of litigation. Thursday's secret meeting had not been posted on the agenda as a closed session item. Goller said by violating the Brown Act these board members could also be found guilty of mis- demeanors. •1rs grotesque,• said Goller of their actions. ·111ey're flaunting their nose at the Brown Act and it's sad because it's all at the expense of the rate payers.· ' -ENl'Al.NA'!Ulll aHllo l!ACh ,..,. niow•nds t:l ICbool chll- dren ..wt tbtENCI ~Na~ Center m ...._ pOrt 8"ch. 1t: *turealillJ wUquB c.tifomiA hl&blt.ts the kidl lea,m aboUt through the cer:itar's educaUoi!IPi ...., ..... Tjle l!NC ~)Vol~"!' TfaJ1 Guldel w. help thflH l'iaiton teen about thlrir envl,torunent. To get Involved Of le&JD.mqte, contact lhe ENC 'office at 545-6(.89. FAJIMIW orvt"""EllW QNT£R This shlte facility in COit.a Mesa pro- vkin care. ti&atment an4 spec:iam.e(! training 19 indMdua.b: wi&l develop- mental dl5abllitie1. ~pae lnteres:1ec1 In helping to set up fwMi(aising stations c.'OQtAct Ray SandMrz 4.l 310-697-1199 ASH · HARBOR NlEA lNC. Call 642-6060 to help Friends in Ser- vice to Humanity (FISH) provide ongo. ing Mobile Meals program and emer - gency cmistance It provides those in need. Both always seek volunteer assis· ta.nee in a variety of AredS-For 1nore informaliODi call 645-8050. H05'1Q FAJetlllY CARE Ho5ptce Helper Orientations. Hos- pice Family Care is seeking people to help with errands, visits 411d com1)dl1· lonship to tenninally ill patients nnd their families. U you are 16 or older and available 2 lo 6 boUTS a week. call lor free hospice b-afuing. For more infonna. tion, Call Larry Mariotti at 730-t 114. FOOD DfSllUBUTION CENTER The Food Dl.strlbuUon Cen1f'1, Orange County's private non-profit lootl bank, needs volunteers !O inspect 11nd sort donated foods and to help w11h mailings. For more information, call th~· volunteer coordinator, 771 -134.3. HERITAGE HOUSE AUXILIARY Volunteers are needed for an clUX\J- iary support group being lonned hy Heritage House, a non-profil s11bslanc1• abuse recovery home for preqnanl and parenbng women and their children 1n Costa Mesa. For more information, 1 .ill 646-2271. Also, according to experl attorneys, Mesa not only violated state laws last month when it secretly hired Adler Public Affairs during a closed session, but its failure to announce the action on its public agendas is also illegal. Until Thursday, the dlstricl had also refused to release details of the firm 's contract as requested by the Daily Pilot. Adler Public Affairs has since dropped its contract with Mesa for a contract with two larger public agencies because of a perceived conflict of interest. • es~w e1so::> iS IHd H )I 3H IJTU:J MW,\/alfUB /tll ·p•1e '°q"H L06o 3NIH:l'tlll !>NIM3S IPlll Aqaq ANY Ane no~ 3H~38 :~o~ M:nY3a 0::1z1~0HJ.nv ~ancJated 8ll30ll38 '.¥ i""- :>VW ONJN.38 Our repair printouts will make a believer out of you. 1665 Babcock Street, Costa Mesa. CA 92627 (?HJ 543-3037 Fax (714) 548-3044 cat~h Those of us who live in Newport Beach, Corona del Mar and Casto Mesa sometimes forget how great we have it. We enjoy healthy property values, excellent schools, plenty af culture ond a quality of life rivaling that of any in th e na ti on. Ws ti me we remind our readers how good the y have it. You'll wont to participate in cur upcoming series focusing on all of the good people, schools, industry and things to do in our areci. Our newsroom stoff will be spending the summer scampering through our towns~ business dis~icts and classrooms to get to the gist of what makes. our area sa special. they've caught the spirit, and we're certain our reader1 will tool Don't ml11 this great opportunity for your message to be in the special keepsake Mrie1 that will be around for years to come. Calch'the Spiritlll ' fotal clrculcdlon 110,950 llou,...elal l'llrt 1-Q,,iy "' .. ll.liW.. ~ s,.... & UopyDooclr>a: '-'Ha lw&G•ra.,.'mll'""'• ~ ' =-·i. 16 s,.... & °'PY Dooclr>a: 1hndoy, 5"*' ,i,. .C-Spia ....... 11.•+t'" ,....... -a..• lac , S,....&°"' D I'*' i , ................ .............. I • ,.,,,_., "1 ~ a .... ~ ......... .......... "' ...... .. •••n•t• JMI I •Y~·OHNllt Ac;JlterbBrg & Co. forced into seoond title game molly yanity s • It doesn't take long to see what you're getting yourself involved in when it comes to gearing up. I hate aerobics, all the dancing and blatant display of my lack of coordination. Running, versaclimbers, that's more my style. But what the beck is all this •spinning?• I tried it out for the story. Just seeing buff people doing things they always do, like work.out, probably wouldn't be enough. So, I did it myself. At first, I was frightened. When they told me that my first experience spmning would be with an advanced class, I almost left. Great. Things didn't get any better when the instructor came out to meet me. Gulp. •Molly, this is Jeri.• Jeri Lane is about six feet tall. ; white-blonde hair and, well, she • was a swimmer at Stanford, for · crying out loud. Then the participants started filing in and I didn't see too many traces of cellulite at all Either they did this stuff all the time or had never tried ~ & Jerry's. . Should I just tell them my foot ·was injured and I'd watch for a few minutes? Nope, too late, the music was starting and Jeri began her mission. The stationary bikes, which operate on a fixed gear (thus the name of this particular studio, Fixed Gear) with a 44-pound fly wheel, seemed small and frail. Jeri said the sprints would be hard, to sit down on the seat if I needed. The hills and flat roads would be easier, you should be OK. Does it matter that I have crashed about every bike I have ever ridden? No time for questions, here we go. The music was loud, the workout intense. So what if I sat on the seat through most of the sprints, this is still interactive reporting at its best A couple times, I thought my feet were actually going to fly out of the harnesses on the pedals and lost balance. Jeri was a lunatic. So were some of the other riders, aaeamtng and hooting u I became zoned trying to keep control of my breathing and get BLU.E-CHIP · STATUS • SuperPrep magazine tabs Newport Harbor High standout Pete Hogan as one of the nation's top college prospects. ' Newport Harbor High senior Pete . Hogan, a starter at tight end and outside line- backer last fall for the sailors, was listed among the top college prospects in California and Hawaii in the preseason edition of SuperPrep magazine. The Laguna Beach-based recruiting magazine, publiahed by Newport Harbor graduate Allen Wal- lace, lists the 6-foot-3, 225-pound Hogan as No. 107 among prospects. The publication also said Hogan is leaning toward either Colorado or Ore- gon as his collegiate choices, though Washington, WlSCOllSin, New Mexico and UCLA are among the second tier of schools pursuing the Tars standout. Six Orange County players were named presea- son All-Americans by the magazine, including Santa Margarita quarter- back Carson Palmer, about whom one anony- mous coach said, •He could play in the Cana- dian Football League right now.• Palmer, listed sixth nationally among signal callers, was No. 3 among California- Hawaii prospects, while Laguna Hills High Newport's Pete Hogan senior tight end Saia Makalcaulaki, another preseason All-American, was the No. 5 tight end in the nation and the No. 15 California-Hawaii prospect. -By Barry Faulkner •That's how instructor Jeri Lane puts it as 'Spinning' students take ·it to the max with a new aerobic workout ... on bikes. By Molly Yanity, Daily Pilot T he pulse of loud music thumps through the small. stutty, dark room. Black lights illuminate, fans buzz and, occasionally someone yells. You aren't in a night club, rather you are standing over a lake of sweat with your heart racing, your muscles tense and tired. You have just oompleted an hour joumey on a stationary bake, an endeavor called •spinning,• the hottest, hippest aerobic group workout to hit the nation llnce jazzercize. •This is the most effective work.out I've done,• said Jeri Lane, an imtructor at Pixed a..r who wu a four-year swim competitor at Stanford and fonner aerobics teacher. •1rs challenging and infective.• Lane and Edward Gonzales opened Fixed Gear, located at 2901 W. Coast Hwy., in July, 1996 -the first spin studio in Orange County -and have seen not only their business, but the entire spin concept explode across the country. Spin originated slx years ago by six avid Los Angeles cyclists, one of whom was Gonzales, when weather conditions prevented them from riding outdoors. The cyclists found that they could simulate outdoor cydtng in an indoor environment by assuming the correct body position for virtual hills, sprints and long distance •SEE SPINNING PAGE 9 ouor:E OF THE DA y 71w ~an tatalltf lnlo IL It~ an~~ ~.and flOll}uf dnllD from IM..._ q/IM group ... • -NEWPORT OOAS1' R.BSIDIJNT CID STAUFf.1IR .....-----~----......... ~ I I I I I • r I I I I I I t DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT =-= fellow Instructor MikeBohen leads the group In rhythm to the song during an Intermediate session at Fixed Gear's ..spinning" aerobic workout Below, a virtual tull house of Intermediate spinners go about their endeavors to popular dance songs with just one thing OD their collective mind •.. exhaustion. " .. FlllDAV. AUGUST 15, 1997 pil~ scrapbOok All were headliners In the. Dally Pilot sports pages of yesteryear ... how many can you Identify? Every true-blue should go 3-for-3 with his or her own school, but as many as 10-for~121 tf you can do that you're definitely a Dally Pilot sports page junkie! W8l1D waters responsible • for bringing many types ~. J into the local waters. .N twport Harbor anglers • -ahould begin gearing up for the what could be the beSt ott shore fishing in years. An m Nino CWTent ts being pushed up from Baja California and its effects are already being reflected in daily fish counts for the Newport sport fleet and private yachts fishing high spots off shore. •aet your salt water reels filled with new line now," said J.D., owner of J.D.'s Big Game Tackle on Balboa Island, of the fishing for the next few months. Tb.ere are big schools of yellowfin tuna, bigeye tuna, dorado and yellowtail just a few miles off the beach as the water temperatw'e has moved back up above 70 degrees this week. Marlin are also starting to show off the west end of Catalina Island and this weekend should produce lots of hookups for private sportfishers heading out to billfish waters. Dave Denholm of Corona del Mar fished aboard his yacht Espadon, captained by Newport Beach's Doug Carson, earlier this week and caught and released three marlin fishing in 70-degree water off Catalina's west end. Aleunder Halprin of Huntington Beach fished on board the sportfisher Second C and caught and released a marlin that bit a lure trolled over the 425 spot. Balboa Angling Club member Gary Jasper has enjoyed a great SPARKS CONTINUED FROM 7 Mwould never try" because she is afraid of heights. At San Jose as she declared her entry, she noticed the other competitors were not out of her league. In the meet itself, against my wishes, she passed some of the early heights that I felt she needed for confidence. She proved me wrong with a fine series of jumps and a second place finish for her first-ever medal in a major competition. Her mark would have been good for eighth at the World Championships in South African and it was only her third day of jumping. Q In Athena, our longU.me friend, Dean Starkey, earned the bronze medal this past weekend behind the great Sergey Bubka and 1992 Olympic Champion, Maxim Tarasov ol Russia. In an event once dominated by the U.S., Dean brought home the first medal in a major championship since my former training partner, Dave Roberts, won the bronze medal in the 1976 Olympics. I have spent many, many hours with Dean over the past few years as a friend and coaching adviser, as well as a jim niemiec early season by landing a 299-pound sword.fish hooked off the Nine Mile Bank, and also weighed in a 146-pound bigeye tuna at the local angling club. Bill Urone, fishing for the Pescadores Fishing Club of Newport, reported two marlin strikes to go along with a catch ol yellowtail and dorado fishing off the Avalon Bank. Albacore are still schooled up about 80 miles west of Newport Beach and that's where Joel Keams of Newport Beach hooked a 27 •h-pound longfin fishing on board the sport boat Thunderbird running out of Davey's Locker Tuesday. Mixed in with the albacore are yellowfin tuna, dorado, bluefin tuna and skipjack. Conditions are good on the out- side and the weather pattern looks good for this weekend. Live bait for the Newport fleet has also improved with a good supply of anchovies and sardines available at the bait receiver inside the east jetty. provider of free physical therapy services. You many remember him from grocer store displays as his picture stared at you from the side of a Bud Light 12-packs during the 1996 Olympic Games, as you entered the airport in Atlanta on large illwninated signs. He has the unfortunate distinction of finishing fourth at our last two Olympic Th.al.s, thus just missing berths on our team. After I spent 12 hours with him the day before last year's Olympic Th.al.s, only to see him come up just short again, we set some goals for this year. First was to quit solely relying on his talent and get back into serious off-season training, followed closely by being a stronger mental competitor in big meets, something I know something about. We debated and planned for Athens in Ruby's, on harbor cruises, on pier walks and surfing sessions. Though Dean lives in San Luis Obispo, there was one stretch where he was in Newport Beach/Corona del Mar for seven consecutive weekends and has threatened to move here many times. 0 All In all it was a fantastic post Olympic year for family and friends with local residence and ties. Ed DWon of Newport Beach beaded bis little 1p<>rtfisher Pln Pever to the 209 spot ott Dana Polnt and hooked into four yellowfln tuna in the 35-pound class. DWon reported that these big tuna were all caught on trolled feathers and would not come to the boat and eat live bait. The veteran harbor area angler feels that the best fishing is yet to come for local fishermen. There is a new hurrtcane building off Cabo and southerly swells will be bringing very warm water along the coast. There are not a lot of floating kelp patties in the channel. but when one is spotted, you can bet that it will be holding fish. Big dorado are being caught under kelp as close as three miles ott the beach, while yellowtail in the 20 to 25-pound class are being hooked under kelp in outer waters. Water conditions are prime to produce good tuna, yellowtail and dorado fishing all along the ridge inside the 181. Along the beach, fishing for sand bass and yellowtail has busted wide open. Jeff Hewitt reports from Davey's Locker in Balboa that the hall-day and twilight boats are catching lots of bass and tails. Bass are schooled up off the Huntington Beach flats, and tails are breezing through inside the oil rigs. Shark fishing is slow only due to lack of fishing pressure. Hewitt said that anglers are just not interested in fishing for sharks when they can catch tuna, dorado and yellowtail, although a few makos and number of big blues were caught over the weekend. Kay and I were fortunate enough to run the gamut of medals with my gold in USATF Indoor Nationals in Boston, Kay's silver in the USATF Outdoor Nationals in San Jose, and my bronze in the World Masters Championships in Durban, South Africa. Dean Starkey's unexpected finish this week was a perlect cap to a long season. I never would have guessed that I would be coaching my wife at our national meet, rather than competing. 0 Here ends my d.larles to you supporting readers that began as I left for Atlanta for the Centennial Olympic Games, but my thanks will forever continue. Cross-country, football and water polo are on the horizon this fall, my favorite time of the year. As the seasons and sports change, one thing is for certain; I'll be back next year. I started training for it last week. 0 Ob yeah. Remember my sad tale about my pole-vaulting poles? The ones that were shipped to South Africa so that I'd have the tools for the upcoming competition? The ones that disappeared en route ... That's right. They still haven't found them! Race for the Cure set for Sept. 28 Over 17 ,000 runners, walkers, breast cancer sur- vivors and volunteers are expected to at Fashion Island Sunday, Sept. 28 for the Sixth Annual Orange County Race for the Cure presented by the Susan G. Komen Brea.st Cancer Foundation's county chapter. The SK race is literally a race to save lives, spon- son and promoters say as one woman dies every day from breast cancer in Orange County alone. Teams can race in the SK competition or the Adult One-Mile Fun Run, or individuals can sign up to race. •Proud in the Crowd• registrants can pay the entiy fee and receive a race T-shirt. RaceS, divided by sex and age, begin at 8:1S a.m. The Komen Foundation's Race for the Cure is the largest series of races in the nation with 77 different runs. For race information, team and individual entry forms or to volunteer, phone 224-0290. PUILtC NOTICll PUILIC NOTICES . . SPINNING ! FROM 7 . . . ! Oat ~ds. With the : addition of music, the • sport WU boro. "The fiy wheel is di.ff arent In that it is weighted,• Gomales said of the difference between these and nonnal stationary bikes. •It you position your body correctly, the wheel will actually pull your feet down and create inertia.• • The solid fly wheels : weigh 44 pounds. : Gonzales is actually : at the bargaining table with European cycling manufacturers to put the Fixed Gear name on spin cycles. Classes on the apparatus resemble aerobics classes with the music and the demanding, hyper instructor. •The teachers are totally into it,· said Cyd Stauffer, a Newport Coast resident who has been spinning at Fixed Gear since it opened. •it's an incredible workout, intense, and you just draw from the energy of the group.• Cin • ati CIDD sweeps Dodgers • Achterberg homers again, but Orange County Dodgers are buried in two·game bust for Connie Maclc World Series crown. By Barry Faulkner. Daily Pilot The Connie Mack World Series title that see.med to be an inevitability for the Orange County Dodgers never came to pass Thursday night, as the Cincinnati-based Midland Red- skins swept two games from coach Mickey Hartling's previ- ously unbeaten squad, 13-5 and 13-8, to usher the championship trophy back to Ohio. ' I I I Different styles of DON LEACH I DAILY Pl\.OT Orange County, includ..ir\g Corona del Mar High senior out- fielder Ryan Achterberg, who homered for the second straight day, had outscored four previous foes, Sl-13, in rolling to the title showdown of the double-el.imi- nation tournament at Ricketts Park in Farmington, N.M . spinning have emerged, After a long workout. a welcomed break. and a handful of gyms But the Red.skins, 14-2 losers to the Dodgers, guided by CdM resident Hartling, in the opening ' round, managed to best the red- bot Dodger bats, which shattered the series record for home nms with 15 round trippers in six , games. and studios that focus solely on spinning have opened in the area. "Everyone bas ridden a bike: Susan Paddon, co-owner of Cycle Junkie, said. ·I think people are craving high intensity workouts with no impact.• Cycle Junkie, located at 1677 Superior Ave., is different from Fixed Gear, Paddon says, in that the style combines both "in-the-saddle" and "out-of-the-saddle." A complete in-the-saddle workout would position the rider on the seat throughout the class. This concentrates the thighs and hips. An out-of-the-saddle workout puts the rider raised off of the seat. This requires balance and additionally works the chest, arms and stomach. It is a more advanced style. Terrell Orum, a Newport Beach resident who uses both facilities, said the workouts are addicting. "When I first did it and : realized that they weren't : touching the seat, I couldn't believe it. I wasn't in great shape, but I thought, 'I can do this;• she said. Orum bas been spinning for 10 months now. •What you would accomplish in three or four hours in the gym, you can do in a 55-minute (spm) workout," Lane said. "You see MY WAY CONTINUED FROM 7 results." Paddon agreed. "I've seen people's bodies change just being in here," she said. "That's a great byproduct.• The Fixed Gear crew began in Newport Beach with a few bikes at Girl's Gym, but moved across the street for a solo studio that features 36 bikes and offers 118 classes a month. They teach out-of-the-saddle workouts once riders are familiar with the technique. Jeff Berman, owner of Gui's Gym at 2902 W Coast Hwy , wasn't about to let all of his spmning chentele cycle away. •A lot of the places don't offer a beginners class, a gear zero, that is an off the bike instructional class to teach precautions for safety reasons," Berman said. Girl's Gym has 16 bilces. M It is so new that there lS not a certification program for it, and we don't want people to get on the bike and start spinrung out of control, which usually happens," he said. The staff at Girl's Gym also test body fat composition and beatt rates to monitor progress. Spmners do not have to by gym members, Berman said. The same goes at Cycle Junkie, Fixed Gear and Ne wport Workout, which is at Dover and 16th. Prices and packages vary. Achterberg's two-run home : run gave the Dodgers a series record 12 dingers, heading into ' Thursday and Keawe Kuehenl 1 added to that with a solo blast in the first game. l Achterberg 0 for 1 in the first t game, went 2 for 3 in the night-' cap, including a solo homer and a • double to bring tus series totals to : 6 for 17 (.353) with two homers, t four RBI, five runs and a stolen : base. Orange County (30-8), which ; saw its 15-game winning streak • halted in the first game, took 411 8-5 lead in the nightcap. But the Dodgers' bid to become the first World Series : champion from Orange County : in its 38 years was denied. DEEP SEA ' I THUltSOAV'S COUNTS NEWPORT LANDING -6 boats, 185 anglers. 18 dorado. 311 yellowtail, 151 sand bass, 12 calico N.ss, 1 shHphud. 13 barrilCUda. 38 sculpin, 82 madt~ 1 halibut. DAVEY'S LOOCEJt • 7 boats, 276 ' anglers 544 yellowtail, 19 dorado, 26 barracuda, 16 calko bass. 204 sand bass. 89 sculpin, 1 h•libut.. 1 whitefish, 180 madcerel. Yeah, I was sore. but that good kind of sore, where you feel like you've done something. Most surprisingly, though, was where I felt that soreness my legs going to the same beat as everyone else's. My tnceps were bght, my abdomen a little bit, too (meaning that I actually tried to suck in my stomach when Jeri said to do so.) And get this one, ya know those love handles? (Of course you do.) Of the workouts I have done, I've never felt it so much in my hips. But we all kept moving, drawing inspiration by the fact that the person next to us was going, by the fact that I'd look like a real idiot if I just rolled off the thing and sprawled out on the ground to relax. An hour later, I was drenched in sweat and felt awesome. l wasn't sure if I could walk back to the lockerroom because my legs were a little shaky, but I did it, and actually returned to the Daily Pilot to finish a story ... and I slept like a baby that night. As I lie in bed the next morning, I didn't want to get up figuring my body would be in terrible pain. ! The soreness, I imagined, would be unbearable. : Wrong again. PUBLIC NOTICll PUILIC NOTICES How did that happen? The workout isn't 1ust a fast-slow thing on a bike. While your legs are going round and round, you are pushing and pulling yourseU in different cilrecttons over the dropped seat, holding onto the handle bars. It doesn't seem like much while you're doing it, but you can feel it in the morning. HaVlDg attended just one session at one studio won't give much insight into where one should go to spID, but I will say that it is a fun thing to do. • And r am not a workout queen. PUlllC NOTICD RUOAY, AUGUST 15, 1997 AUDAY, AUGUST 15, 1997 Polley ....------Deadllne8 ----. Rates and deadlinell are subject to change without notice. The publisher reserves the right to ceusor, reclassify, revise or reject any classified advertisement. Please report any error that may be in your classified ad immediately. The Daily Pilot accet>ts no liability for any error in an advertisement for which it may be r1>sponsihle except for the cost of the spac-f' actuaUy occupied by the error. Credit can only be alJowed for the first insertion. m • -iii Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm ByFax (714) 631-6594 (PlellM' uwludf. voor namr und phone numhu urid .,,,r·u cuU you bade with a prire quo1r.) ByPbone (714) 642-5678 By MaMn Person: 330 West Bay Srrret Co!:ita Mrsa, CA 92627 Ar :-;r•1>orr Bhd & &y Sr Index Boars Telr phonr 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Frida~ Walk-111 8:.'30um-.J:00pm \1u11di1)-Fnd.a)· Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm Thursday ....... Wedne::.day 5:00pm Friday ............... Thur~day 5:00pm Saturday ............... Friday S:OOpm ~ -. \. II --. --.. - t=l·: .1-.-0 Pll'Oflf UOllf'r A111111 ................. ........................ ... ,. ...... Ad ..... ...................... ............. ~ lttaftlllM If ""'•lllllle• .._.•"'-'c-. ....... . 1111.lllMlcl(l .......... . ...................... .... ., ........... ...... ....... ,, ... .. , .. ....,.., .. ... ........................ ..................... ................ 0......,, .. ....., ............. .................... .• IJIJI ........... =::..~·:-.:: ...... , ........ .. a.m "It ec ... ,.._ ul ... •at·-: .~ . f!r --.,;··~· .. ~ ·-: ' ... , . • -:.-- COSTA MESA 1024 LAGUNA NEWPORT COSTA MESA 2624 NEWPORT RENTALS TO BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENTS HEALTH & -----· BEACH 2148 BEACH 2169 BEACH 2669 SHARE 2724 OPPORTUNITY 2920 FITNESS 3000 ·~81Daend~ ~ tS75. & Up; 1·2 Brliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2904 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii L~& Hom• ParlWlk• Ooean View 3bd, 2ba ****•OCUN VU CottagH. Mov•·ln NEWPORT HEIGHTS N.11. Teaoher lffks Looking lor som900• bckyard/poOl/Wat•rlall In Arch B •a ch 4Br 2.5 Ba 3-Car Oar. Special. NHr 8.ach. 1Br Lott, 1Ba, Lg kltch houumat•. 1 lrg 11 HOT NEW BIZ 11 VOLUNTEERS to throw th• football •kYlta. granite. lam rm Helght1. Aval SM. Avail 7·21 '3900/mo. 714-S4S..2421 1 garag• 1pace. S750. bdrm iult•. Pools, Pre-paid calling cards with. Must have good 2·fp Opn Sun 8/18 1-4 $1500/mo. Ref, W/D, Bkr 940-SM4 ' Avail Nowl 645-3713 tennis, Jae, gyms, etc. OrHt locatlon1 N*E*E*D*E*D llv• arm. Tim 645·!:>408 By~., Prlncl~ atove. 819-660-5087. VIII• Balboa Condo. E Side 1 Br 181 Newport Hta 2Br tBa ss oo + ull. + d•p. S2000/wk. Pot'I $409K 491 AMtle Wtt7 Oc:.anvl•w, L.rg 1 bf Small yard, $875fmo Pool. No Pets. Carport 042·0074 800-800-a815 24hr1 -·-tba. Comm pooVapa, No J>9ll 831·7813 738 Tuatln Ave.1--------------l'or .... •w Owner NEWPORT w/d . 11025. 046-1728 $825/mo. 642·7858 NS.Bat t. Shr Lrg 3Br 3bd 2ba tUe, 1200a.f IEACB 2169 Studio Fum'd Near House, next to water lrg yd, 3-car gar, w/d, Triangle SqJ55 Fwy. OCEANFRONT YRLY with Bay view View atove, lrg covered Ou/water pd. No 2Br 1Ba West N.B. $950. 723-0223 paUo, near th• beach! •Newport Creat• APARTMENTS J)9t1. $595. 648-5330 $1700. 582-433-5016 Aoommete Wented 8~9 Town 8t. #12 Ooodwlll Ct. 3bd, 1188,000. 548-1041 2.5ba Ocean view. FOR RENT Studio, w .. talde, nlc•. Senltlzed Marble & Young Pror1 with pool 11700/mo. 642-3890. cat ok wfdep n/1 g ranite 2bf, den, 1ba home looking to 1hare ref's . 1495 . .;. 1300 ocn vu. Wlnt•r rental. with almllar. Great HtJmNGTON 2bd, 2b• Townhom• HC. 714·831-8216 2de.se1s area In Costa Mesa. BEACH 1040 nr Fath 11 .• 2-car att BALBOA nr THwlnkl• Park, gar. AC, pool, no PENINSULA 2607 convenient to 1hop· P9t•. 11sso. 640-11529. NEWPORT MISCE'' llVt!OUS p1ng11reeway1 etc. ------ -·-··· Pl•••• be wary of out ol area companies. Check with the local Better Bu1ln111 Bureau before you Hnd any money fOf AMERICAN CANCER SOCl•TY ..... DISCOVERY SHOPS .Coron• d•I Mer· Pia Cell840-4777 t••• or aervlc ... Read -------• and understand any contracts before you -------- sign. Shop around for LOST • rat... FOUND 2925 ••'aide 2ad 9500 af 4br+l'am ""'· Nwprt AoWMU• S550 month Avail g..1, lot. Only 1222K Creat. tennis, pool, Ca•• ••hi• Cozy BEACH 2669 RENTALS please call 549-1101 ~la Found. 4mo Orange 4-Unlta Huge Lot .. -'k to .. _ .. s17 .. ,. mo 1bd+den at 1000 w. £-av....._• Tabby male cat on 13011160 1520K Agt. ..._ """'· ""'· Bal._ __ B"... s•-t Share 3bd houae In ·• .. ---St. Jam•• Pl. In NB . RonYouig 648-0919 84H947/7ee-3999 bayA b;;~h.-~d~ •1•R t72S• CdM. S545+utl. w/d Newmer · · •-• Co1ta MeH Animal Harbor View Hom•• rm no gar email pet 21ft 2BA SHI ROOMS 2706 no pet1/1mk. Biii ...-..~~ Ho1pltal Ma.3794 t.n:IWPODT Exec 4bd +FR. Nr ok.' Avl no-#. 1800tmo. OIW Incl. ISOx30 pool. 844·6080 Lori 540..8215 ..a -...,-. ' I' o u n d . a o Id• n H» &\ CIUbhOUH & ahop1. 87$0714 No pita. Carport. LONOOISTANCB'-7 R t I Ifie, 'ti lie/; ~IJ. B!ACB 1089 12300/mo. 769-6011. NewPOrt Baw VIII•• 8alboe Oooantront -N.~•lat& vi: rJv:.; .. ,;.~PZn •••••••••l•••••••••f" ..... ...----...--..... .Ooe8"trent at 19th •&45-4899• S800/mo. Incl UUI/ RENTA1S N. Iara• ............ Teewlnkl• Park. 0 a 1t r 0 9' t SL Wimer, tum, 38r Pnon., Maid 1vc. Fully W'll~ft ,_..., ...... _ IOK. HOUSES/ 4M, ~lta ,.ooV.pa. Dpbc Upatr, 2bd/1ba. 2.SBe. deck, Ip, jar· •+~at the beachl fum'd. 875-4104 ... ,u.la' 2726 • ..,....._fTIP't 1 ~114callln N7 8 51·wh75 1 1t8• Hk-lte A GOOD : 1"8 remodel. Famlty/ Le UY ap~ & d9Ck. w/d. Aweeome •w 2-car gar. Leau Lg bdrm & b th I /Lii 71 'l{lt {M1 -• CONDOS IMng rm. 1448,000. a1eeo. Lae. 111-1111 and clHnl 873-1943 S1700/mo. frldg• N.B. Sep. •n~ranc:. •aBr Houae/Apt l4ll l,,,..J long hair Hlmalayan/ FOR SALE EIU•l'lty 121·3GH. Lido .... Home 4+3. oo-ntront itudlo lndry. Agt, e7:a.o333 Sm ,., wetbat. FP. In Corona d•I Mar :•r•lan :::·~ •••••••• ,.1 .. ent euarHlltod New Ctp«. So. patJo. 1760/mo. Incl UtlaJ 8roethteklng New view. S750/mo. Incl C•thy •••••• 3. e"::•'t"" RSWARD Sea lalend Town-12IOOmo. Yrty. BUI Phone, Ma.Id avo. Fl.IMy l+I COfner unit In utVcable. 844-0195. ******* ~17a7 home. No one above On.Indy Rttt 175-8111 furn'd. 876-4104 8 k 8 /1 Gm-ear 002 betow ~ L&.l9k •c •Y w arge l'emale Contractor auvo1n11"1!U11!...-r Coat gray Cockatlel .on~ l ;'bd, 2:aba. 'Luah •LIDO taLa, furn, •tu d Io · n • w I Y wtndOWl/NQh celUOCJ•· Vac&110• w/cat to ..... option? nnn vn~ •~ w/• cheet(a. Vic> -------· etMf'ltleal 1135,000. ltw Iba. ofc, p.tJo, fp, remodeled, •l•P• to Pvt gar, w/d, fp, frig. mTAl.I 2722 4Br+gar+yrd CM/HB of :?:ae Verdel Ownet 71......,...14a e•r•o•. Avl e -1 b!lach, •II amena. Gated Community IRV/TUS $1500 831·2111 Mama. CM 444·1557 121oomo 713-Mee E Balboa, no peta. $1436. 78 .. t7 ... LtOO: OPEN ~N • 1 $bd 1595. 544.9531 CICIO 1.,. aw ANNOU'NCElllNTS -------:3:~ :!roeo:i t.eba oondo~ Yrty ... : tum, utJ., gw ::::, 2120 BUI.TB t 49,. 14hr rec '"8D Or..a cones. 11eoomo. COSTA MESA 2824 11200. mo yHrly 2744 PllDSS 3000 "'4-«l'Fa •111 • ..,.... No~ 772·•112 11!1••···-· The -* CIOmlM"'*'"' TM Communl\y ahr Arttat 8t\tdlo afve and current dlrtlC· Marti• Place. SOLDI ADI ~ Call ~ 642-5678 ~~ for wo:;l~ artist. IOfY Of goocta end ..,. Qaalllled •ooa.t. mo +utt. ..-around! ""U•n na.1e7a •-------~· . .---------'------------ S1!tfll'lmG ANBW '1'111 lft the...... L•n•u••• T11ter R•COTIOll .. T I!--"--Empk>yetal RMCh tM l'tencMtelan IO IMCh ,, ..... -.-.v I au;;NT m o a t q u a 11 f I e d 2 chltd,.., In our H.B. PrOfM e&oMI company '" 5530 employM• you need home befOf• echl. 2·3 In NB nu Immediate by placing a help dayl/Wk. 142·"41 opening fOt a A9C•Po ::t~ wanted ad In the OaUy MANAGKM&NT t lonlat/HR Cletk. II 8A&.a8 PT/PT N.8 . baaed Myttery Theatre. Org anized mulU·talanted high energy, cu11omer ave .. , .. peraon.831-2583 •UOCkMalstantt• Piiot empl oyment J)9SIUon available for you tiave eiccellent SO.t rentaia/utea co aecllon. Calf our vtntag• at0t• In o.o. communication •kllta, .... lea neal friend.., c1 .. alfled Dept. at Call 57~51 are a team player &1.,...,......,._ ____ ""W'iil • • ., M2•5e7B have handled t>uty dOCk uat.a to clean/ New Sandwloh phone• 1aic your maintain boata, dockt , How .... lt1er nffdad. Shop In Cotta Mesa resume to 7 S8·t200 1flow are... Help/ occasional work. Avt hiring au posltlona. TODAY! cuatomer svc. Apply 7daya/wknd1/hollday1 15.2548.50 per hr. In petaon 3-5 dally. Infrequent traveler. Call Mike, Oulzno•a Retail Bualnesa •••k• ~1 w. Coaat Hwy, NB Bondabl• 225-8983 Claaalc Suba 541-7224. organ I z • d mu It i.. 10 HousewtvastStudan11 IRVINE BARCLAY omoe As•t· PT ~~~~~!.,::l=:: ~ad. make money THEATRE Data entry, filing, aalH, and genetal 1a,_vlng people money Hiring PT ConceHlon ~:01;11 zr~g, •to. bulldlng malntananc.. on, grocer!••· No lnvat. EmployeH. II you are M ·~ • A oura at Muat be "On Call" 1...eoo.4el5-9222 x6860 21 or older, good with F o ~rn rmanoe 2 4 H r a. 8 I ·I I n g u a I the public 6 would ••L on ~l and . aalarled, baneflta Coo8~0G1'!..'!TT0.,, Ilk• to bring In a little 71~1.C:.i'i:o a v a i lable. S end " ._ " extra money, IBT Is Reaume o r Into: p t , 0 r I t a 11 a n • d d I n g I 0 I t I PT Offic e Manager E.D. P.O. Box 3489 R'eatauranl In N B concession part·tlma $8/hr. 9-1 . Computer Box 102, N.8 . CA 251 •· Coaat Hwy amployeai. $7 per hr. exp a muat. Pl1 call 92ee .. :S489 4 hr. 1hllt1. Eve. & wk· Rebecca 722~888 Retail Counter C•n't l'lnd Work? You can't be looklng too hardl WANTED 15 people to fill various posltlon1 from wara- hou 1 e to manage· ment. No experience neca11ary. Call Now, Brent (714)891·5784. Chauffeur Limousine Mala/Female tralneH Good wages 714-517.g52a Clerical Wlok•• Furniture 11 accepting applicallons for both lull and part· lime clerlcals. Musi be responsible. depend· able and mollvaled. Excellent banellt1 package. Relall hours. Apply In person al: Wic k•• Furniture 3200 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa. CA Customer Service **GREETER** We are seeking a lrtendly & outgoing individual lo grHt our customers and follow up on their experience at our daalerehlp. Great opportunity for a retired lndlvldual. We Drug Scre en. Apply In person at TOYOTA OF HUNTINGTON BEACH 18881 Beach Blvd Hunt Beach (Betwffn Ell11 & Oatfield) •Driver• Needed • Upscale restaurant dellvary service hiring In Newport Beach & Laguna Beach. Insur· ance, clean'DMV, neat appearance required. PM 1hltl1 avallable, llexlb l a h o u rs . 714/443-4490 714/85$-5424 ends. Flexib ility In CLASSIPIKD Private Postal Store scheduling your time. 11'1 th• reaource you Perm PT. Exp prard. Some serving exper. can count on to ••II a Apply: 537 Newport desired. Call Sherry @ myriad or merchan-Ctr. Dr., NB ~25 714-8 54-4193 dlH llama, becau1e Claaalfle d Why play Hide 'N our column• compel Th• moat comprehan· Sook with childcare? q ualified b uyer1 to alve and currant dlrec· Ca II C I a •• If I e d calll tory of good• and 1er· todayl 642-5678. 942·5878 vlcH aroundl ""'"'-------""" Ad Assembler f.osta Mm/Fall time Costa Mesa rypchoosc needs detail oriented. acarivc people Ofucucd with accuracy ro become part of our ad building ream. You Have: I year ad production experience A creative mind Abiliry ro wodt under deadline pressure Macinrosh experience QuarkXPr~. Phoroshop. Illustrator a musr Mulci·Ad Crca1or a plus Weltne: A Full rimt' posilion on Swing shift 6:00pm 10 2:30am Grca1 bcncfiu pachge Opponuniry for advancemcnr Salary rangt' S 11-$ 13 depending on cxpcnrnce. Physical a.nd drug rcsr required. Send resume a.nd cover letter 10 Ulifornia Community News Aun: 'fYJ>chouse Supervisor • CAB 330 Wcsc Bay S1recr Com Mesa, CA 92627 &s;~l Cott• Mee• Air E.f""' O,,.,-i,, &yJ.,tr_ ~ "--n.,,,;,, • 'rvrfiw -.,w. ... ,..,,. '"'-<14"*"-' ~ .._ .... ., Ad Production Proofreader Part-time Cos1a Mesa rypchouse needs detail orienrcd people obsessed wirh accuracy 10 become a pan of our ad building team. Yllble: Near pcrfea spcl.ling G rear gn.mDW' 1 Year proofreading experience An eye for design Experience with Maciniosh compu1ers WIUll: A fricndty working environment Convcnienr pan·rime shifts Opportuniry to move in10 graphic design Graveyard shift available. Salary range from S8·S IO/hour, depending on experience. Physial and drug 1csr required. Send resume and cover leuer 10: California Community News Ann: The CCN I Typchowe. CAB 330 West Bay Srrccr Cosu Mesa, CA 92627 1947--- FIFTYYEAR . ann1ve ** •s1 .. a70 6 YEAR• 70~000 MILE WARRANTY + tax, lie. and doe..._ Prior ,.,.... S k> chooae, YIN l'a 228115, 228387, 229398. .... Tti• 9rowlno Daffy Piiot 9dv9'1t .. ng tMm •••k• an outalda aal•• repreaentallve In the Retail Advertlalng Department. Experl• enc• preferred, but wlll train. Applicant ahOUld be anargaUc, motivated and a .. ., atartar. Salary plus commlHlon. Xlnt ben- efit pkg. Drug aCfMn- lng/phyalcal required. EOE. Send raauma to Lynn Eaola, "Dally Piiot, 330 w. Bay Streat, Coata Mesa, CA 92827 or fax to (71 4) 650·4802. For Interview, call (714) 574 .... 238. Salea , Part-Ti m e Fl axlbl• Hou ra Bow Dangler• Boutique CM or Ulguna 642·5459 Can't seem to get to all those repair Jobs around the house? Let the CIHalffed Service ~------~~11 5540 •ldertir Cere MUCHANDJSE MISC. 6015 -·-~ • Antlquea, clothea, toya, record 1, craft & pauo ltema. 873-8848 ftollewair bed, fr .. zer, Mo Lean lawnmow.r, Commodore computer Trampollne, Eureka Shampooer. 54e-teae Directory help you find reliable help. 142·5178 BH/NB Provided by exper'd PO Box 2392 Santa Japan"• woman to ---------Ana. CA 92707·0392 11 v a In or out . Wedcllne Dr••• Size m9d. Elegant off· ahoulder a , l o ng 11..vaa. Whit• allk w/ pearls. New 1 1100. Sacrifi c e S450. 8 h Ip per /A e o e Iver ___ 8_3_7_·7_5_0_7 ___ , Local O.C. Company Sall your unwanted Top Dollar Paldl From 1800•1990. 1 pc to entire Htate. Palntlnga, china, glaware, furn, etc. 40Yr NB A.-073-e223 844-.tue2 PT/FT. $7.50 per hr ltama the eaay wayl Call 714·37&.-4154 To place your Ontllemowt Sell your exlra household Items In Clanlfted Clasalned Is ..... SUMMER JOB Pert•tlme •Morning Hour• •No Experience •Young, energetic olc •Costa MHa Call Cooper (714)722.0119 CONVENl•NT whether you're buy• Ing, aalllng, or Juatl~=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~ looking, claulfled haa Th• Community what l(OU needl Market Place. CLASSIFll!D Clau lllad 842·5878 942·5878 EMPLOYMENT 5530 EMPLOYMENT 5530 OPPORTUNITY #1 NISSAN DEALER Saks 'MIWJ/lers · Cfosers ~ & L 'Managers · Saks ProfusitJrwls Saks Man.agers looking for professional, aggressive, energcdc people to join ~urTeam. We offer paid training, salary, 401K, paid vacation, medJcaJ and dental coverage, accJlcnt product, extreme ly high traffic, strong income and advancement potential. Call Mike Rich (S62) 402.22n clasalflad ad call ••2·5878. To place an ad In C ... affled Ca11M2·Be78. Resu~!_s! ~ Classifled Adrerti1i111 '~lritb the Inily Pilot. the bat cla:Won I muld bal'e e¥a' made. The rdUlll was incndibld (I bal'e rccriwd ~ rapome than I ~widamyad in the Ydlaw Paga). Gait bellt id'' l>~""·,.·· -- -, D YES, SEU. MY CAR Run your ad in the Newpprt Beach- Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Hunting Beach;. Fountain vattey lnde~to reach over 1qo,ooo home&J FIX U1 tht1 to11n With !O'.Uf qedlt card I or mall wJth a check~ for a ••kl If csaae• Name =~ 31 Wegon pert 33 Pllilarit Odof' 34 H9d IUppef 37 Newo.Ha 39= 41 P11Yat9 "3 FOOd llddftlve 48 College hotshot 48 No, lot Yebln 61 l..MelltMM Boda~ soueh ... WS8T NOltTH .... 0111 0141 •KQ17t •It 1011tl4 ocu BAST •Q78 OJ 101 O•KQl88 •Jt OJ'1 ••• eoure •A OAK874 OAlOI •Al0-'1 Opening lead: Ten or• Mon often than not., the bidding will provide a due t.o the bat open- in1 lead. hen then it could be a tou up between two choicea, and which 1uit or card you eelect can make a world of difl'erence. When thia deal wu played i.n a team match, at one table North· South reached a dub alam on the auction ahown. Weat led a spade, a normal choice, and the band waa 800n hiltory. Declarer won, drew trumpe in two rounds, cashed t.he ace and kin1 of hearts and, when bodt f •adere foUa ... , _, 11hl • laean &o .. t up U.. aait. T9o of dumm7'1 diam•cl• ••r• quickly •--------diecarded on t.he ~ haan.t and 12 ••turdatt 7alft.1 pm tric:b were._ iD Comfon. Kida • •duh cloth ... l~=======~I In the other room North-Souih misc furniture. eac. '88 V•tt-By ~ =.et) caJM &o re1t ia ft.,. dube. 2438 Andover Pl Medium Blue, gtan •-1. •..t-1.--__. '~ the top, auto, .., Powet. ..., 1or WK1U1, "-• _. 1--------xlnl con<ll 12K ml jack oldiamooda, and it.., a com-NEWPORT s1e.ooo.obo plet.ely dlff•ent , ..... Dec1uu BEACH 6169 ••2•8...,.9482 held up the ace. won Uw continua· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --------• tion In hand, caahed the ace or Movlne ••l•I furn. POii> 9075 epadM, then drew two rounda of .. .-.. blk _._, iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiliil ...,,.,, toys. ••· .... '1ulripe eodinc in clumJQy. A lpede 424 Pr09peet * ,84 250 Cargo wu rufl'ed in the doaed hand and Sat .. 2 • Un allett, Window Van 25k. 'M04M Full optlOn cer. Too •e 1 Rolt• Royoe ,,,any option• to .hi. Sptffl, white, 97 body #266404 t241977 1tyle. 54m, xlnt cond, u.xua MIS.ION Vl•.IO 1-aoo-ee••SH OLA . S 22 ,t 00 • (714)435-'115• the kine olheerte WU CMhed. Wen Sat 9·12 Small OataQ9 xlnt cond, pp S13,500 eontJnued • 1p9etaculu effort by H ie lncld• ~autlful obo. 548-5313 TOYOTA 9210 jettleonin1 tha queenl Now t.here w • d d I n O ' d r ••a '87 FORD VAN Conv. -IS_U_Z_U _____ 9_1_00_ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii wu no way ror declarer to endplay 1918 Beryl Lane v..e. A/T, P/S, AJC, W .. t , and when Ea1t 1alned the W. Cllff Multl Famlltt Low ml. Orig. OwMr. i,8ii2iiiiiPiiliiikiiiiiiiiiii11 ii '87 CELICA lead with the jack of bearta, the 8•1•1 kids 11uff, lum., $3,999 7~1722 o "~ Wh •• ••·=~ :~498 defender eould eaeb another dia-computer, art & morel , needs enalne won<. __ .. 1.or .. _ -.... Devon Ln. 8/18 earn. 88 Ran9er XL T . ale, $2 .ooo. Call Terra -" _., ..._ etc, am/Im cus. shell, * 880-4384 * '88 CAROLLA OTS ObMrYe that il'Weat doee not get bedllner, run1 greall Hatd lo find fun rid of the queen or hearts declarer $3200. 714-802.071 a --------•• ,.,ea ., 10 1487 can set home. South wte wit.b I TRANSPORTATION '92 llXPLORER JEEP 9110 low heart. When Weat wine the Auto, lo.cied iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 'M TERCEL queen serforce, the defender la 113,485 #200834 '88 Jeep Wran9 .. r Se,i":: :~:,'314 trappe Into ba•ing t.o return a Black, 8 cyllnder. spade, thereby conceding a rufT-POWER BOATS TOYOTA OF S8900 (714) 719-9534 •89 4-Runner lluft'and thecontnct. 7012 HU':.~.?'ON • • • • • • • • • • Automatlc. 2WD ,847.asss 20,s9s tr101329 Learn to be• better brld1e 88 hpress Cruiser l714 LEXUS 9115 pla7erl 8at..erlbe DOW to the 321t. OAL 400 hra. '87 McUo~ .. ~ OT iiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '82 LAND Gorell Briclp Letter b7 calUnc Twin VP271·8ran~ nu B•-=;'s'":-.... c'H LS 400 CRUISER (800) 78trllll for Information. paint, prof111lonally aui-;'i..'; White/I"""' fult opl White, extra clean Or write to: Goren Brtdte Let-decorated 1n1erlor. #122072 ,22 977 ~iunc!'9rttnect · •24 ,88G '10l3e1 =..:.-o. Bos 4410, Chlcaco. m Loaded with extrul ' 11'063986 ...... 877 TOYOTA OF $42,500.obo 7~8837 '84 T BIRD LX ' HUNTINGTON V/8, full power, 42k, '89 SC 400 Bl!ACH AUTOMOBILES 1-----#178912 •11,877 White/Ivory, lull (714)847-8555 opuon, L .. us certined 1 __ ...,...__,_ ___ ....,... __ WANTED MUSICAL LEXUS MISSION VIE.JO 1-80CMM8·S388 TO BOY 6019 msntJMENTS 6055 GARAGE SALES , _____ _ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I•-----BMW 9030 ------• '83 •• 300 Full option, 56k, Lexu1 certllled #211648 $22,877 '95 CELICA CABRIOLET Only 13k, leather, auto. CJD. full power #024742 $20,977 Top Dollare Paid Hammond 8plnet1--------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii HONDA 9085 Por Record1. Jazz, Orv•n Mahogany. GENERAL 6102 '95 3181a iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Soun track 1 • etc. Dbl manual. 1500/obo. '=iiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Black/Black. auto. 29k '80 Aocord Call Mlk• &4!5-7505. 848-7888 1• #A12708 $22,877 Auto . E x cellent Saturdatt 8am 8081 Lampson condition. $2000/obo. PUE TO YOU 6022 PIANOS & Garden Grove MIS~:i,~u:ll!.IO 213·871·2339 'ML•400 4Dr. Cuhmere/lvory, 48k, full option. Lexus certified tP202820 $32,877 LEXUS MISSION Vlll.10 1 ·800-e89-5398 VOWWAGEN 9235 lliiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii ORGANS 6059 East ol Beach Blvd. 1-80CMS89·5398 '88 ACCORD LX ..-+-+--+-"" PR•• KITTIENS ClolhH , furniture, Extra clea11 T d h 1oy1 etc. $9,985 #101324 LllXUS MISSION VIB.10 1-800-e89-9388 o goo omes. Baldwln Upright BUI'""' 9035 Costa Mesa Animal Plano Mahogany•--------~ '90 CIVIC Hotpltal, 4eo E. 17th llnlah. sets/obo. 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Closed end lease,$ !Ok Total Drive Off. Residual $38,075 I at this pmt. Based on I2k ml/yr (012905) •695 a month. • :!§ Orlfl•for 111 every . • ~ute spent in ii E sPlendid luxury. : I ! • l ' ' ' .. : ~ I r . I ,I '. I I I l • • • ' 39 month8 I 695 first month payment IJ.975 down poymeot • 0 oecurity depoeit · 1!4,670 due at signing \\\u!A • Range Rover has duaJ climar.e controls, a power •unroof, and hcatc.-d front .eats, we're a1ao offering aorne- th1n.e ebie you'll be comfortable wt th. OUR 1695-a-month lease, complete with free acheduled ql&intenanoe for up lo 45,000 unusually lavllh ml.lei. Or ooune, the advan· -of driving a Range Rover&<> well beyond luxury, ITS pennancnt four-wheel drive and fOUT-channel ABS equip you to deal with iall IOl'tl o( ot.t.dee.. Like tor:nmtlal downpoun or sudden blluard&, winding mountain roads or treacheroue gulllet. SO why not oome IJJ, for a teM drtve? And reme1nber lO uk about our prcipaid leaH proCraml. You'LL 6nd Wt lea1lng a Rante Rover 11 time well tpent. ' . We specialize in local cars with complete service recards. AU of our 11ehicles ha11e been tharoughly inspected and reconditioned by our master service technicians. Our finance and lease programs are extrewly competitfoe and although riiany of our cars ha11e a significant f actary warranty-remaining, we off er only top quality extended protection plans. .. Come See Us For The Finest Pre-Owned Vehicles Available Or Fmd Out How You Can Expe 'ence A New Turbocharged Lieus Esprit ESPRIT ESPR I~ ( ~ Nlll'·'97wrosFSPRJTvs Nill'! '971.0TusrJmrvs Azure blue, magnolia leather, CD, sport exhaust.' glass top (F653JO) 582,796 '95 LOTIJS ESPRIT S4s British racing green, ma~olia, leather, CD, UZ racin_g wheels, glass top, 4k miles (F63076) 554,995 Red, tan leather, C , spon exhaust, g~ top, 0 racing w5cels (F6S2 ) 583,8 '95 LOTUS ESPin' S4s Black. blade leather, CD, tinted windows, 19K mi. (F6JOOI) 549,995 '89 LOTUS TURBO ESPRIT Red, 12n lcathcr, only 2Jk miles (2P'IN719) Arf2WD, Low miles (104J SJ) 512,995 '94 JAGUAR XJ6 Rc~ncy red, barley leather, sunroof, CD changer, chrome wheels (696612) 52 1,995 '9SVOOOWAGF.N P~TGLX V6, leather, moonroof (JKEL075) 514995 '94 CADillAC Fl.DORADO Diamond white, cream leather, loaded, low, low miles (618865) 522,995 '9S JAGUAR XJ6 Topax., oatmeal !either, sunroof, fully loaded (746324) 527,995. '95 JAGUAl XJ6 Black. charcoa.l leathct, sunroof (728214) · 529,995 '9S JAGUAR XJ6 Titanium, cream leather l""l J.2? .P.!'cs (lMl V.,6) 533,995 '9S JAGUAl V. B 16) 3,995 72 HOUll.S I DAILY PILOT n day Elvis died. It's one of those Where were you when you heard the news?-milestones. My 'fype-A brain vividly recalls wbe1e I was. And that memory makes me squirm in my chair as I write this. lbat memory gets me mating all over again. That mem- ory still gives me shallow breath. anxious to prove himself. n was berkiDg the assignment editor'• dispatches -to pradically all the other W111s. They were off to Graceland, Methodist Hospital. the medical examiner's office, and wherever Elvil' known friends and associates might be, including bis infa- mous personal physician. Dr. George Nicbopolous. I was vexed, ya'll. But I shouldn't have When Elvis died I was cooling my heels in a ser- vice station. My car rest- ed atop a hydraulic lift, getting a brake job -at the moment one of the decade's biggest stories was brea.ldng. .------,,,.,...---....~~-=-__,..,......, been. The service station was in Memphis, Tenn. The car was a TV news cruiser. It was merety the first seating for the feeding frenzy. We were all on over- time in the days that fol- lowed -as were the worldwide aeW5 and conespondents who clelOeDded on what Tune ____ ....;.;o...__, magazine bad celled a And my camera gear was inlt. 1be blues singers B1vis emulated would have said, I was •a train without DO drivin' wbeel.. steve backwater rtver town when Or. King was killed lacy ~networks and ----------news aervices were clam- 1bis personal catastrophe was happen- ing 37 days into my job at Memphis' CBS- 'IV afffllate. The disabled auiser's two- way radio taunted the new shooter, over- oring for our footage. The event ot Elvis' death 20 years ago this Saturday climavd with bis funeral at Forest Hill Cemetery. I entered through a heavily guarded service gate with a CBS SlM lN:Y I OAl.V PLOT Mourners In Memphll spW out of the mamolemli .i Forest Billi Cemetery. news aew. They'd been reassigned from Central America to cover tbe service. On a ladder, with my tripod fully extended. I captured the arrival and departure ot guests oublumbered by the iDtemational press COJps. I still~ bow adm Bill Murray finaglad pea credentials -and bemoan bow memodel DOW span decades. ' CLASS THEATRE -RIGHT HERE IN O&\NGE ~OUN'Ql . ~.£ Coasl !7<eperlory:r ]997,..,9& r:Season.I. FM>AY, AUGUST 15, 1997 Sf;Jngs in the key of skeleton •Band known for its live shows comes to Club Mesa Tuesday. By 1im Grenda, Daily Pilot For a band that earned lts musical stripes playing gig after gig 1n New-York City's leg- endary clubs, the idea of signing with a major label and heading into a fancy recording 5tudio can seem a little daunting-if not downright bor- ing. sound, with Calhoon and Lee walking a rhythmic high-wire on top of Maxwell's wall of gui- tars, random sound samples and Sanko's often-funky bass work. Songs like •All the 1bings I've Lost,• The World's Most Famous Undertaker• and "Scratch" are funky, rhythmic journeys while •watch the Pat Man Swtng• grinds away and ·vomtt Ascot• is an unabashed punk-inspired rumble. And within it all is Lee - But for the members of Skeleton Key - who will bring their musical traveling circus toOubMesa Tuesday night - the studio expe- nence allowed them to take their acclaimed live show to a new level banging, smacking, hit- ting -bring- ing sound out of traditional percussion instruments like cow bells, tom tom drums and wood bloc.ks -plus just about any piece of saap metal be can get his bands Skeleton Key wm play Club on. Mesa Tuesday at g..30 p.m. "Erik has ·we basically said 'We're not going to do this in a way that will take the wind out of the sails,'• said drummer Stephen Calhoon from a recent tour stop in Portland. Along with bassist/singer Erik Sanko, percussionist Rick Lee and guitarlst Cb.tis Maxwell. Calhoon 1et out to record the breakneck pace and flurry of sounds that have branded Skeleton Key a live must-see since they formed 1n HMM. The result of that daunting task was a debut full-length album fOT Capitol Re(..'ol'ds - titled "Fantastic Spikes Through Balloon• (a reference to a magic trick) -that has eamed the quartet praise. On tbe album. Skeleton Key aeates a controlled tiot of always bad this sou.iid -li.lte a washing machine gone wrong," Calhoon said. "Fantastic Spikes 1brougb Balloon• also landed the band a spot on this summers Lollapalooza bill. albeit on the tour's second stage. There, far away from the air- conditioned trailers and catered hmches enjoyed by main stage perlormers like Snoop Doggy Dog and Pomo for Pyros, rela- tive unknowns slug it out under the hot sun on a smaller stage. often to more enthusiastic aowds than their big label . counterparts. ·1 don't think we really excel at playing during the after-noon.• Calhooo said. •It's sort of tough and trs definitely kind of weird. But we made it work.• 72 HOURS I DAll.Y PllDT • fD\'d,1\8'> iMA~ _1[) ;:_,, T•tf ATRE I', .O(,'\ltD AT TH~ ~DWAPD':i IRVlr.a ':iPEC'~· '.' ..... : •. ···f 'l-=-.: '' •Rft .... \'"·/,',HI IR\:r~[:. \.._,"..,, ·l)I" -,r:OL1~' '>•\L~"i .'.'.. ,~..JFORM.\Tl(J~J' .; ' • '.',\\ ... ... --... .... -... -· ... __ _.. ..... 72 HOUllS I DARY PILOT n day Elvis died. It's one of those Where were you when you heard e news?• milestones. My 'fype-A brain vividly recalls where I was. And that memory makes me squirm in my chair as I write this. 1bat memory gets me chafing all over again. That mem- anxious to prove bimseJf. It was barking the ass\gmnent editor's d.ispatdleS -to pradica1ly all the other UDHI. They were ml to GracelaOO., Methodist HocpttaI. the medical exaxntner's oftice, and wherever Elvis' known friends and associates might be, including his infa- ory still gives me shallow breath. r-J , ~ . "' ' , . : ' ... -~ ,. mous personal physician. Dr. George Nicbopolous. I was vexed. ya'll. But I shouldn't have been. When Elvis died I was cooling my heels in a ser- vice station. My car rest- ed atop a hydraulic lift, getting a brake job -at the moment one of the decade's biggest stories was breaking. The service station was in Memphis, Tenn. The car was a 1V news cruiser. . ..,·,, ... .._ . .:.. .... It was merely the first seating for the feeding frenzy. We were all on over- time in the days that fol- lowed -as were the worldwide aews and cxmespondents who descended on what Tune ____ _, magazine bad called a And my camera gear was in it. The blues singers Elvis emulated would have said. I was •a train without DO drivin' wheel.. steve backwater rtver town when Dr. King was killed lacy there. The networks and ----------• news IEJIVices were dam- This personal catastrophe was happen- ing 31 days into my job at Memphis' CB.S- TV aftiliate. The disabled cruiser's two- way radio taunted the new shooter, over- cmng foe our footage. The event of Elvis' death 20 years ago th.is Saturday ctimaxed with his funeral at Forest HW Cemetery. I entered through a heavily guarded~ gat.e with a CB.S STM lACY I OMV Pit.OT Mourners In Memphll splll out of tbe mausole.m Id Forest Hills Cemetery. news aew. They'd been reassigned from I still woods bow ac:tUr Bd1 Murray Central Amedca to cover the service. finagJed in-aectentLth -and bemoan On a ladder, with my tripod fully bow memodel now span decades extended. I captured the anival and departure of guests outnumbered by the • S11Ml LACY Wt'ttll 1he Mondliy login cob'nn fcx intemational press corps. the Dllily Plot. • CLASS THEATRE -RIGHT HERE IN ORANGE COUNDJ. 1£. Coasl !Reperlory's 1997..-9'5 deasonl MMNSTAGE - .-d.,..uon Pyi;u::::.._. ~. ()dllltT ~. ,,,.,...., pi • .,..... .. ....,.. .. ....... ,....,. ... ;;;~mland "7,..., ~ ~ '" ,,,., ..............& ~ ,_,.,. ~~~--·.tNty.......­....... n-- Private Uves "' ..... c..-r' .. ,,,. ,....., l ·....., ~ .. ....,,. ....... .. .,...., _.,,,,. .,..... our Town "'~: .. ,,,. ~ ..... ........, dd,.._,,.......--.... FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1997 I S~ngs _in the key of skeleton • Band known for its live shows comes to Club Mesa Tuesday. By lim Grenda, Daily Pilot For a band that earned its musical stripes playing gig after gig in New 'York City's leg- endary clubs, the idea of signing with a major label and heading into a fancy recording studio can seem a little daunting -if not downright bor- ing. sound, witb Calhoon and Lee walldng a rhythmic high-wire on top of Maxwell's wall of gui- tars, random sound samples and Sanko's often-funky bass work. Songs like •All the lbings I've Lost,• The World's Most Famous Undertaker• and •Scratch• are funky, rhythmic jowneys while •watch the Fat Man Swing• grtnds away and •vomit Ascot• ts an unabashed punk-inspired rumble. And within it all is Lee - But for the members of Skeleton Key - who will bring their musical traveling circus to Club Mesa Tuesday night - the studio expe- rience allowed them to take their acclaimed live show to a new level. Skeleton Key will play Club banging, smacking, bit- ting -bring- ing sound out of traditional percussion Instruments like cow bells, tom tom drums and wood blocks -plus just about any piece of scrap metal he can get his hands on. Mesa Tuesday at 9-.30 p.m. •Erik has •we basically said 'We're not going to do this in a way that will take the wind out of the sails,'• said drummer Stephen Calhoon from a recent tour stop in Portland. Along with bassist/singer Erik Sanko, percussionist Rick Lee and guitarist Chris Maxwell. Calhoon set out to· record the breakneck pace and fluny of sounds that have branded Skeleton Key a live must-see since they formed in 1994. The result of that daunting task was a debut full-length album for Capitol Records - titled •Fantastic Spikes Through Balloon• (a reference to a magic trick) -that bas earned the quartet praise. On the album. Skeleton Key creates a controlled liot of always bad this so~.d -like a washing machine gone wrong,• calhoon said. •Fantastic Spikes Through Balloon• also landed the band a spot on this summer's Lollapalocna bill. albeit on the tour's second stage. There, far away from the air- conditioned trailers and catered lunches enjoyed by main stage performen like Snoop Doggy Dog and Pomo for Pyros, rela- tive unknowns &lug it out under the hot sun on a smaller stage, often to more enthusiastic crowds than their big label . counterparts. ·1 don't think we really excel at playing during the after- noon,• Calhooo said. • It't sort of tough and it's definitely kind of weird. But 'We made it work.• n HOUJtS I DAILY PILOT • f(J\\.Al\D) IMA" :l' :;-P'!ATIH '" Q(,'\1 EL) ,\TH•~ ~[_1\\.'\~'.') ltUlt,f )Pr(T~'L '.' .',"'· "·f 'J .'.\. .: -. •RH .',,\1\ ,'.'H~ IR\lr~l • c:,,L rOW. C.KOUD \,\Ll'> & l~~FOi/M,_\:1QrJ 7 ; '.',\) i • It o Q 72 HOURS I DAD.Y Pn.oT Singles meet without the meat at vegetarian event By Nancy Cheever, Daily Pilot Local singles trying to avoid the meat market are flocking to a once-a-month vegetarian dinner m search of the perfect veggie- mate. •veggie singles" from throughout Southern California mee t to share ideas, eat a vege- td.IldJl meal and hopefully make a love connecbon at Mother's Market m Costa Mes<i and other ared r~ldurants the last Monday of every month. Donning nan1e tags, the group settles tn for a rught of conversa- tion and expectations. Aruta Clark, d thin, blond, 4 7- year-old divorced mother of two is looking for a man with whom she can share her meat-free lifestyle. But that's not all she looks for. •There has to be some mutual phyQcal attraction,• she said. Clark became a vegetarian 20 years ago because of the health factors and because eating meat contradicted her world view. Ron Jackson founded the Vegetarian Singles Dinner two years ago strictly to meet women. •I think it would be really lk tl'"';Uu;L ~~ ~'[)e& ~COSTA MESA Power Lunch or Family Dining 3211 Harbor Blvd •. C08ta Mesa, CA 92626 Tel: (714> 551.-11 Fax: (714> 657-5488 ~JWl'f ~· A.M.. Ct.fl tough to date someone who is a major carnivore,• Jackson, 40, said. •1 wanted it to be a real Ulfonnal way to meet other vege- tarians. It's a lot easier to have someone on the same wave- length.. Jackson said the dinDel5 attract people with a whole range of eating habits, from vegans to people who aren't t:nily vegetari- ans but want to convert. Jackson said he's a lacto-vege- tarian who leans towani vegan. The conversation switd:les from EarthSave -an environ- mental group with an office in Huntington Beach -to the best vegetarian resta\ll'"8Ilb to Cajun music to Paul Lobato's 40-page web site with virtual petting zoo. Donna Ryan, of Ne wport Beach. likes to frequent singles events to get menu ideas. •1 saw someone eating a soy ~ ~~tina burger and said, 'Wow, I have to try that.'• she said •Now I eat them at borne all the ttme. • Ryan sakl she doesn't eat meat because of the hormones, insecticides and antibiotics that are introduced into meat and ani- mal prod:uds. Jackson became a vegeta'dan 20 years ago when be was a fry cook at Coco's restaurant ·n just got gross to cook that much meat,• be said. A wd1er wbo makes a living selling bene- fits packages, Jackson said he's in perfect health because of bis eat- ing habits. •rm probably the only person in the wodd who's been told to go on a high: cholesterol diet, • besakl The Vegetarian Singles Dinner meets the last Monday of each month at 6 p.m. For more information. call 175-4604. Now on tbe Wahr in Newport BeaclJ A b-UitUJn of a truly Florentine caiJine et!nlimuJI SERVING LUNCH&: DINNER RUDAY, AUGUST 15, 1997 FRIDAY, AUGUST 1S, 1997 n HOURS I DAILY PILOT 0 6ve~ybody fe~9 shui +o~i9ht The Pi1ot tests the Eastern philosophy to increase productivity and energy By Nanty Cheever, Daily Pilot I t's a wonder we at the Daily Pilot can get the paper out everyday, according to the precepts of feng shui. Fenq shui is the Eastern philosophy that says the way our space is used affects our energy levels, relationships, productivity and financial sta- tus. At the forefront of th.is trend l.S Corona del Mar's Shari Clemens, who left her an:bitec- tural interior design job three years ago to pursue a full-time fcng shui consulting career. Clemens gives in-home and in-office consultations about how the placement oC furniture dnd use of space effects our energy, or "cb'L • Wednesday, Clemens will speak at the Barnes & Noble bookstore at Tuang:le Square. "The idea is .to set up an environment that is hannonious with the rest of the universe,• she said. aemens said everything is energy end that by rearranging the furniture and ridding our- selves of negative "ch'i• we will improve our quality of life. In order to illustrate the technique, we asked Qemens to evaluate the Daily Pilot newsroom. Newsrooms aren't known as the neatest offices. And with all the old newspapers, reference material. computer clutter and note pads strewn about, we weren't too surprised at what Clemens found. Her overall impression was that the setup of the newsroom blocks our ch'i. ln effect. we're creating more st:re9 because of our stressful environment.. • ·aea.ning up ;.s the basic message here.• she said. She started by examining the entire Daily Pilot floor plan MARC ~I OAl..Y Pl.OT Feng shut consultant Sha.rt O emens points out some nega· ttve energy In the back of the lot of the Dally Pilot building. and the space left by the once- active press and d.rculation areas of the building. There's lots of empty space there that's used primarily as storage now and Clemens said that's not good tor our financial outlook or productivity. "Cleaning up all the garbage would be the first start,· she said. ·Get rid of all the non-functioning equip- ment • ·use it or lose it,• she said of our empty boxes and file cabinets filled with old papers. »You would create more har- mony and productivity if you utilize the space better.• With our newly renovated newsroom came a bonus room, used primarily for foot traffic and infrequent company meet- LDgs. Clemens said the empti- ness of that room could be affecting our health, leading to more sick days. My desk is situated in the "marriage, relationships· cor- ner -or back right area -of the room. 1 share the desk with several other writers, which is in tum creating a high tumover within the newsroom, Clemens said. The desk that sits diagonal- ly from mine is a honible place, aemens said. Sharp edges from other desks and comput- ers bombard it from every angle, creating a negative ch'i. And the television in that same area is creating static in our relationships and productiv- ity, she said. As far as our color scheme goes. that's a disaster, too. The white walls are not soothing and our mauve caJpet is too light. We need a darker, more calming color on the noor that will alleviate stress, she said. She also mentioned that our electrical cords are interfering with our productivity. "The people in the middle are getting zapped," she said. Pour of our editoTS sit in a square of desks in the center of the room, or the •career, destiny and innovation· more greens, browns and pur- ples. • Put up partitions so that we're not all crowding each other's energy. •Get rid of all the empty boxes. unused papers and non-functional equipment. •Put a bowl of salt next to electri- cal cords com- area. ing out of the She said the backs of our pile of stuff on computers to City Editor nna absorb the Borqatta's desk electromag- is affecting • netic field. Featores Editor L----------------------.. -' •Get more Anastacia Preeberg's wealth plants and keep them alive. and that the people who sit in • Spend less time in front of that section of the room need the computer. some separation. • Be more organized. "They're intermingling too •Don't put empty wastebas- mucb, ·she said. •1t•s like kets under the "wealth" area of you're all sleeping in the same our desks. bed.• • Keep trash can in the She also suggested that "knowledge" area -or left Anastacia put red roses in the front -of our desks. •reJationship• area of her desk to attract men into her life. The one thing Anast.ad.a does right: The phone is located in the •heJpful and influential• comer of the desk. Finally, there's a wilted plant in the relationship comer that we neglect and Oemens said it doesn't have a nourish- ing ch'l She suggested we water it. So what can we do with our office? Oemens suggests: • Change the color scheme to a darker colored carpet and 72 HOURS I DARY Pll.<Yr FRIDAY, AUGUS1' 151 1997 Coming s0on to a ~eater 11e8Ir you From 'Dames and Dicks' to documentaries to flamenco dancing, the Port's new lineup offers a wide variety of choices for film lovers Story by Nancy Cheever + Photo by Don Leach F rom film notr to cult classics to funky film festivals, Corona del Mar's Port Theatre 1s about to embark on a anemallc journey that will cre- sequentially and for a number of weeks. For instance, the current film, "Shall We Dance,• is a first-run release that's been playing since ate a new clJ- mate for Orange County moviegoers ----------~ July 25. With The new for- mat -begm- ning next Friday -will bring in restored Hollywood clas- sics such as the "The 819 Sleep• and "Chinatown· as well as foreign the new sched- uling, each pro- gram will run about a week. . and American independent films, and festi- vals celebrating the likes of Frank Capra and Audrey Hepburn. A dancer from the movie, "Flamenco," which will be shown at the Port Theatre. A program could be a sin- gle film, such as Arturo Ripstein's "Deep Crimson.• or a series such as the "Dames & Dicks• film noir lineup that kicks off the new format and the "Festival Hong Kong• scheduled for Sept. 19 through 25. "I'm glad we're going to th.Is format,· srud Port manager Mike Peterson. "We'll get a bigger vanety of films .• Until now, films at the 900- seat movie house played Landmark Theatre Corp., the Los Angeles-based compa- ny that owns the Port, is chang- ing the format to •program films th.at wouldn't ordinarily play in Orange County.• DICE SABATINO'S 1114 Restaurant A Lido Sblpyard S.... Co. Fl.AVOUUL 6 0Euaoos l.cNallS DINND • ~y blJNCll ' . DON I.EACH I DAl.Y Fl.OT While Scott Nguyen, right. taka tickets at lbe door, Prandne Ludwig, left, chats with a frtend In the lobby o1 the Port Theatre. , ·we can now bring in a vari- ety of films that include restored classics on the b1g screen; one- or two-week festivals of popular cult cinema ... and American independent films,• said Landmark Theatre Director of Marketing Cary Jones. "We'll also bring in films for the international enthusiasts - foreign films that wouldn't (oth- erwise) have the opportunity to play in Orange County,• b e said . Jones said the company will show no major stud.lo releases and no Hollywood films at the Port except for older classics. •Most of the films will be cutting edge features from Amerlcan independent film- makers,• Jones said. "This will be a unique and exciting pro- gram for Orange County." Included in the coming line- up are •Flam.enco. • Carlos Saura's senauous exploration of song and dance, and challeng- ing films like •past. Cheap and OUt of Control• Costa Mesa film historian Arthur Taussig, a 25-year film and p hotography professor at Orange Coast College, said he's "thrilled• about the change but pointed out that there are already five Orange County venues -thn!le Edwards the- aters, UC Irvine and the Orange County Museum of Art -that show foreign and independent films. "There's not a lack of good films in Orange County,· he said. •we get all the good Hollywood films." Taussig also pointed out that the general public only sees selected foreign films. •t find the average foreign film to be about the same as the average independent film and the average Hollywood film.• be said . Taussig publishes the Hi-Q Film Review newsletter that provides an analytical look at the psychological and sociologi- cal aspects of films reflecting American culture. "The Big Sleep• kicks off the new format Aug. 22. The 1946 Bacall-Bogart clas- sic is a restored version th.at includes 18 minutes of footage that wasn't in the original release. The new Port calendar -a quarterly schedule available at the theater, coffee houses and other locations throughout Orange County -will give a mini revtew o1 each film. The Landmark Theatre Corp. OWDS 49 t!leateJS and 140 screens nationally. The Port ls located at 2905 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. For show times and lnfor- matiol( call 6?3-6260. FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1997 [. ... : ..... -}. . i -• . . ""-'..·l..t ............ "-"". ... '":!_ SHIP TO SHORE • Newport Beach boat builder designs dories for sculpture at Santa Monica Pier. By Nancy 0'8eYer, Dai~ p;lot Art at foreshore lm't a.lways art foreseen. Newport Beach boat builder Douglas Smith-<iinter recently constructed three w ooden boats at his Costa Mesa shop for a contemporary seaside sculpture. The sculptw"e, tilled •lWilight and Yearning,• will be ereded under the Santa Monica Pier at the shoreline Aug. 20 through 22. The three dories-Oat-bot- tomed fishing boats with abarp bows and high sides -will be vertically attached to pWars with tluck strips ol sWnlea steel ·u is so overpowering that you feel sorry for these beautiful boats," said Manfred Muller, the German artist who a:eated the project. "(The boats) are the sculp- ture, • Smith-Ginter, 55, said. •Tue tide will come up around part of them. the waves will wash up around them. and the boats will slowly disintegrate and go back to nature.• Muller's idea was to create a sculpture that shows "literally and symbolically ... that all our human endeavors can be achieved only with the support and cooperation of the natural environment.· ·1 want to create cwiosity and concern,• Muller said. "There's something not normal here, something not explained in normal context.• The boats' design is a modi- fied dory form similar to an in- shore fishing boat but eight to 10 times stronger, Smith-Ginter said. The 16-foot boats took about a month to construct and two months to design. Smith-Ginter said the boats should withstand the pounding surf for two to 10 years, but Muller said the point of the art- work is to see how long they remain standing. •it's up to the citizens of L.A. how long the boats stay in their position.• Muller said. "The boats will be under continuous Unique paintings, masks on display at Dancing Bear By Leslie Simmons, Daily Pilot The exhibits are free to Vlew, through Aug. 31, at the gallery located at 412 31st St., Newport Beach. For more information, call 723-1922. "'lngallk Blue ls a tribute to the lngalik Athabucan lndlan wllo Uves ln the lower YukOD River. 1bls ls made from bulwood and glass beads. attack from the water.• Muller approached the Newport Beach man about two years ago looking for used boats for the sculptwe. "I didn't think that was a good way for boats to die,• Smith-Ginter said. "Then he asked me to bulld new boats that were meant specifically for that pwpose. Then I didn't feel so bad." Muller said he chose Smith- Ginter to construct the dories because he was a master wood- en boat builder and because he was easygoing. "I was looking for a boat builder who was able to make wooden boats, who specialized in the area and who I could work with,• Muller said of Smith-Ginter. "He was a very good adviser: it was a very good experience.• The boats cost about $.5,000 each including materials and labor. A normal dory costs about $2,500. The boats were painted orange-red to make them more visible, Smith-Ginter said, but Muller said the color is a symbol, like a stop sign. 72 HOUas I DAll.Y PD.OT BRIAN P08UOA I DALY I'll.OT Dougm Smith-Ginter holds plans for a three-dory sculptme at the Santa Monica Pier. "I don't want to make a 'tone in tone' like a harmony state- ment -I want to confuse peo- ple, • Muller said. •Tue boats will activate a dialogue and a lot more dialogue will change something.• Smith-Ginter had a somewhat less philosophical view of the HEN RY 'N HAR RYS project. "It's kind of a giggle,• he said. "The most pleasing thing is it gives me something visual that my daughter can look at some- day and say 'My dad did this.'• The seven-year, $80,000 pro- ject was funded by M uller and the, dty of Sant.a Monica. 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