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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-09-01 - Orange Coast Pilot,---- I ' ' I UP.LIT~:· .:A , AL SPORTS Girls volleyball seroes up new season Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907 ' NE IGHBORS · People you know making the ne_ws . • .. I\ J: G IJ N D TOWN Death .. o~ ·a prince~s hits home ~~.!$~~'8dijy at cilCham- bers, 330Q.N.:tunv.rt Blvd., Newport Beach. For informa- tion, call 644-3151. 2 BREAKFAST FORUM - The Inside Edge Foun- dation for Education hosts a Wednesday breakfast forum trpm 6:30 to 8:30 a.m. at Scott's restaurant, 3300 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. The topic: Enlightenment, Vision-. ary Companies and lrans- forming the World. The cost is $20 for first-time guests and $35 for all others. -For reservations. call 460-4242. 3 .. CAREER NETWORK -The Career Network free meeting fo1 the unem- ployed meets Thursday at 7:30 p .m. in the Stewart · Lounge at St. Andrew's Pres- byterian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach. The topic is Thirty Seconds to Sell Yourself. For infonnation, call 574-2239. 4 REPU8UCAN WOMEN MEETING -The Orange County Federation of Republican Women meets Thursday at 10 a.m. at Cost.a Mesa Golf and Country Oub, 1701 Golf Course Drive, Costa Mesa. The guest speaker is Cbtef Deputy A.ttJomey Gebl!r- al M. David Sttrting. 1be cost 11 $15. Reservatiqos arp required by Mooday. Por reservations, c.aD 83()-8517. 5 latARY PROGRAM - The public is invited to a he program called Find- ing n All at the library Thursday at 7 pm. in the Prtends Meeting Room of the Newport-Beach Central Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave. Far information. calf717-3801. 6 HOME SHOW -The Orange County Fair and Exposition Center hosts the Home and Remodeling Show Friday from noon to 9 p.m in buildings 10 and 12. Adult Nhnission is SS. 7 5, leDior's S3 and children 12 and under are free. For Jnfor- ma6oo. can 708-3247. 7 BEACH Q.EANUP DAY - Allergan, Inc., in con- nection with the city of ,Newport Beach's Adopt-A- Beach program, sponsors a Saturday beach cleanup at 9 cun. at Corona del Mar ~ State Beach, Ocean Boule- van:l and Marguerite Avenue. Por more 1nlorma- ti9u, call :W6-4198. - •A half a-worl d away, England mourns the passing of Diana, Pnnces~ of Wales. And here at home, residents rush to get any information· possible about her ltfe dnd tragic death. Sy Philip Bonney, Dally Piiot COSTA MESA -Local book dealers scrambled Sunday lo meet #an overwhelming demand " for books and other publications lhdt contained even the most out-of- focus photograph or offbeat story about Britain's beloved Pnncess Diana. boyfnend, Dodi Fayed, dnd lhe dn- ver of the car were also killed A fourth man, one of Fayed's body- guards, survived lhe CrdSh News of the p nncess's death ha d a profound and immedid te effect. locally. on sales of publlcd- tions rangmg from Andrew Morton's most Princess Diana recent aulhonzed "Wp 're getllng a lot of calls about our London papers." said an out-of- breath Irma Wolfson, who had her hdnds lull o! nngmg telephone receivers on Sunday, while manag- mg the Lido Book Shoppe m Ne w- port Bcdch. "I hdve c1 huge list oi people who wc1nt dny nt'ws items, including one cu~tonwr who's in Chicdgo on busi- ness and who wants anythmg I can find on Diana, in any language." Wolfson scud The pnncess, 36, dJcd Idle Sdlur- day from m1unes she suffered tn a high-speed lrd.ffic accident in a tun- nel on the outskirts or Pdns, appd!- ently whtle the CdI she wds ndmg m was being pursued by Bnhsh tabloid photographers Diana's new m1lhona1r£' biography , ·Diana: Her New We,• to foreign-language newspa- pers. to British tabloids When queried d bout t-1orton 's two b1ogrdphles on the late pnncess, Wolfson rpplJed, "they're gone, tu.s- tory, he re dild dll over the country." • SEE DIANA PAGE 3 DAVID FfROIG I OAAY PILOT No matter what the language, magazines and books about Princess Diana are selling off the shelves at local stores. DON LEACH I DAll.Y Pll OT Costa Mesa police and lire dispatch operator Judy Covey is one who will be working this Labor Day. Police on call for emergencies By Christopher Goff ard, Daily Piiot C OSTA MESA -Emergences never go on holJday. So while most government offices are closed today, the crew at lhe Costa Mesa Communications Department will be poised for everything from fires and stabbings to auto accidents and wind-felled power li nes. Judy Covey, 57, a communicat:Jons supervisor who has worked at the department for 16 years. said she expects operators to handle the usual amount or traffic today -between + Who else is working today? For more, see page 4. 400-500 calls. about half of the m requiring notification of the authori- ties. Covey said she has worked every Labor Day since she beg an at the department She said she works most Thanksgivmgs and Christmases too but doesn't mmd ·Holidays really have IJttle mean- ing to me and my family anymore," said Covey, the mother of two •Most people who a.re m this work are very dedicated and accept that working on holidays is aU a part of it.· The department handles calls tor t he fire a nd police de partments, as • SEE DISPATCH PAGE 4 ( ' I ,, ' I ' H ' Take my job, please + In honor of Labor Day, Daily Pilot staff members tell about the jobs they love to hate. ,. HERFS ~ OtlCIC AMO, OH YEAH. -GO WAICI W THI <DOG. NASE oooooooooooooo•oo••ooo••oooo ... 0•000000.oootooooo .. oo•oooooooooooooooouoooooooooO• oouooo••• •00000 oooo•oooooooUoooooooHoo OOOooo•000000110ooooooo 0000000 oOf•o OOooooO•o•••••looo,.o•otoooo•••HOoooooooU •"''''''''''''''''''''''''' Oo•o•ooooO••oOooooooooooooooooooooooooo•••l•••O•O•ooo••••••uoooooooo•oo 0 u oooooooooooooooooooooooo-ooooooooU oooooUo•oUoooOoOOoOltoOOI ooooooo•oooo"ooooot•••o1oooooouootoooooooooo+oo•ooooooooooooo1ooooooooooooo<uo•loOOU ...... SUf\/11\1ER SPOT • MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1997 neighbors COMMUNITY The Sllterboocl at Temple Bat Yahna in Newport Beach will be honored with the Or Ami (Light of My People) Award at the 4 l st Assembly of Women of Reform Judaism in Dallas, Texas, in late October. New officers were installed this summer to lead the Sisterhood in 1997-98. Helene Jacobs and Sorrell Wayne were serve as co-presidents; Judy Egendorf, Marton Flnk, Pam Pearl and SUlan Gluck will serve at vice-presidents for Member- ship. Mild. Sholkoff and Eileen PeDAD were serve at vice-presi- dents for Ways & Means. Joan Rome is the new vice-president for Ritual and Sabrina Webs is treasurer. Vice presidents for Pro- grams are Eileen Garbutt and Irene Samuel Harriet Dolgtn is financial secretary; Cameron Allen is recording secretary; and Denl5e Molnar is corresponding secretary. Parliamentarians are Michelle Cohen and Nancy Mar- cus. Curt Carlson, of Newport Beach, was awarded Diamond Class for sales in excess of $1 0 million for Northwestern Mutual Life Lnsurance Co. at the recent l 17th Annual Meeting of Agents in Milwaukee, Wis. Lawrence & Mayo Advertis- ing, t.n Newport Be ach, won first pnze in the 1997 Healthcare Annual Report of the Year com- pel! lion The report was con- ceived by Lynda Lawrence and Bruce Mayo. Simone Beaudoin was a.rt director, Brenda Tradli was designer a nd Leonard Myszynski was.photographer for the proiect. MILITARY completed 12 weeks of basic training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego. Army Pvt. Beatriz Martinez, daughter of Alfredo and Beatriz Martinez of Costa Mesa, entered basic military training at Fort Jackson, Columbia, S.C. CORPORATE The Irvine Company . based in New- port Beach, r ecen tl y announced the appointment of Tom Greubel as director of leasing for its Tom Greubel industrial divi- sion, the Irvine IndusbiaJ Company. John T. Wills was named vice- president of operations for Costa Mesa- based Shaw & Sons. Richard Porras was a p p o i n t e d John Wills external affairs director for Costa Mesa and Tom Fulton was appomted external affairs director for Newport Beach and Corona del Mar for Pacific Beu EDUCATION The Honorable Bruce Sumner, retired pres1dt.ng judge of the Orange Coun ty Superior Court and community leader. will become the first chamnan of the Whittier Law School Board of AdVlsors m Costa Mesa. ' Manne 2nd Lt Jim E. Bottre ll, son of Jim A. Bettrell of Newport Beach, recently returned to Camp Pendleton from a six-month d eployment w1th Battalion Land- ing Team 2/ 4 as part of the 31st Marine Expedinonary Urut (Spe- cial O perations Ca pable) Jackie Winn Sadler, a resource spena1ist and chair- person of the special education department dt Newport Har- bor High School, has been named a Province Alumnae C ha1rman ol Delta Gamma Fraternity DAVID FERDIG I DAILY PILOT Lifeguard Sean Haynes gets a hug from his sister, Brin Haynes and mom, Virginia Haynes after he completed three days of Marin e Pvt Anthony A. the Mexico to Huntington Beach Uferun (with tbb stop ln Newport Beach). Each day the athletes ran 30 miles and swam 2 miles. "Everything hurts," said Haynes. •At the end of the lint day everytb.lng on my body hurt, even my hair." Arevalos, 1!:}96 graduate of Costa Mesa High School, suC'C'essfull y wedding Gaertner/Suhr The Ritz-Carlton m Dana Point was the setlmg for the Aug 3 wedding of Lisa Anne Gdertner of Costa Mesa and Kurt Allan Suhr of Costa Mesa It happened a year <lgo today The bride is the daughter of Larry and Carol Ann Gaertner of losta Mesa. Her gown was made of silk Wlth off an off the shoulder sweetheart neckline and detachable train. Her maid of hon- or was Sandra Moran and brides- maids were Shelly Gaertner, Laurie Gaertner, Sara Hougard and Can- dice Kaai-Te ruya. The bridegroom 1s the son of Amie and Julia Suhr of Costa Mesa. His best man was John Suhr and ushers were Dunn Voyer, Matt Allen, Dan Yeager and Larry Morkert. The couple will continue to l.Jve m Costa Mesa following a wedding bip to Western Samoa. The bride is starting a masters program at Cal State Long Beach. The groom is employed.by the Newport-Mesa Unified School Disbict. A 65-foot boat ccillt!<l lhe Atherus was reported stolen from Harbor Island in New- port Beach. The owner, who had of1ered a $5,000 reward, had said it was stolen, but many others who had firlancial irlterest in. the $700,000 boa said it was repossessed. They found the boat, later that week, ir1 Mexico and detemlined that it bad actual- ly been a case of repossession and had called off their inves- tigation. YES, IT WAS ONLY A YEAR AGO THAT ... Balboa Penihsula mer- chants and residents proposed a new look for one of the city's oldest areas. In order to improve the quality of life on . °'1~1'+1 Pil !!~ANUA ot VOL 91, NO. 198 REAPERS HOTUNE 642-6086 RKord your comments about the Delly Pilot or news t ips. APDl\ESS Mt!Sa, CA. 92626. (,ppyright: No newl stories, illustrMX>ns, edlto- r1•1 matter or adwrthements herein can be~ with- out written pennllllon of copy- right owner. TIMPEltAlURES Newport Beach 72J65 Our address is 3lO w. l.y St.. Costa Mesa, c.lif. 92627. CORRECIJONS It Is the Pilot's~ to~­ ly correct •II etTOn ct~ etease a ll 574-4233. Balboa 72165 CostAI Mesa IW62 Corona del Mar 72.165 • •• lhe peninsula now and for their children and grandchil- dren, several residents partici- pated in groups, formed according to the .district vil- lages incorporating the penin- sula: Central Balboa, Lido- Civic Center, Cannery Village and McFadden Square. The plans would include lush lan~apes compliment- ing clean, wide boulevards, waterfront restaurants and quaint beachfront bed and breakfasts. Cl Clarice· and Vicent Hohman received the Super Grandparents Award at the Newport Dunes. The couple have 68 grandchildren. ·They're scattered all the way from New York to South Africa," Vincent explained. The Hohmans won the contest, held lll honor of Grandparents' Day, because they had the most gradchil- dren of the 200 entrants. Cl A Newport Beach man was accused of posting obscene sexual materials c;m a comput- er bulletin board. He was charged with five misdemeanor counts of dis- tributing obscene matter. The case grew out of an investigation by the LAPD vice squad. Detectives were monitoring an online sex publicaton when . they came across notices for 69 ~~tasy Llnes BBS, the ~e the man allegedly used to download the obscene material. Cl Costa Mesa Police detec- tives arrested a suspected mail fraud artist who alleged- ly used a local hotel for some of his dealings. The man allegedly had been convincing unknowing . senior citizens to send cash to the Ramada Limited Hotel in hopes of collecting -falsely promised sweepstakes win- nings. Cl The Costa Mesa City Council agreed to buy the Costa Mesa High School farm from the Newport-Mesa Uni- fied School District for S7 mil- lion. The council plans to build a sports complex with a field, baseball diamonds an senior citizen fac:illties 11li 18-acre parcel. E::- I \ r---------------------------------------------------------·----------------------------- I I I I .. -· ' .;,; ......... ,~ •• 1h.1nn Its not chock full of children qnymore~ but its still a peacefuTplace to spenlla summer afternoon -8y-Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot , • EDITOR'S 1IOTE; The Fun Zone's always there. So is the ice rink in Cos- ta Mesa. For that matter, the fishing boats chug out of Newport Harboryearround. But in summer. they shine a bit brighter. This is another In a summer-long series of articles that will focus on the things of summer, the places that we take for granted·all year long. S ummer days at Cherry . Lake aren't what they used to be. They're nice, of course, but they just aren't the same as they once were at Newport Beach's best-kept secret, a man-made l~e just west of Irvine Avenue. Kids, all of them resi- dents of the 19 houses that encircle the private pond, used to swarm the . water to swim, boat and r t e s fish all day and night. These days most of the lakeside homeowners enjoy the water more from their own backyard decks -overlooking the glistening water, shady trees and swimming ducks as they eat their dinners. The kids who grew up play- ing Huck Finn on Cherry Lake sometimes return with their own kids now. And a few younger faniru.es have moved into the subdivision, bringing a smattering of new children to enjoy the area's charms. But plenty of oldtimers have remained to spend their retire- ment years in the homes perched above the lake. Charles and Bettie Kelley, Lake Park Road residents for 37 years, raised their three daugh- ~ers there. They remember the neighborhood kids camping out on an island that used to sit in the middle of the la.k'e but dis- appeared after a dredging. "They used to dash ho1114l from school,• Bettle rem~rs. "They couldn't wait to get out there and swim or practice their sailing .• Cb~ny Lake beqan as a swamp called Skunk Hollow. But when some developers dis- covered it in th~ 1950s, they dug it up, filled it, gave it its current more ap~~ - and built houses"~l The lake now sits surround- ed by homeS OD'Heather Lane and Lake Park Road. A tiny stream runs into it from the norili, and another empties to the south and into the Bad\: Bay. From the street level, the 200-foot-long, 40-foot-deep lake is cqmpletely invisible, any glimpse of it blocked by mod- em-style homes and wood.er fences. As such a private place, it has grown into a haven not only for its human residents but also for nature. Giant trees cast shade over virtually every spot around the houses. Longtime residents have all seen their share of raccoon families, giant cat:tiSh and even a baby alliga- tor a resident once bought as a pet. •A lot of kid& in junior high come out here to catch polli- wogs for class," says Charleio, a retired aerospace salesman. "We once bad a goose that thought it was a child, it played with the kids so much.• And then there are the ducks. Clusters of ducks hide . under every dock, and they · multiply until they get so plenti- ful the homeowners association DAVID FEROIG I DAILY Pl.Of Private dqcks ana back yards surround the small lake near Heather Lane and Lake Park Ro~d. . decides it's time to ship some out. "Everybody always wants to get rid of them," Bettie says. •But then when it comes time to do it, they're all saying, 'But don't take Charlie or Susie the duck.'" . As ·many problems as th~ animals cause, however, they're also what keep the same fami- lies living at the lake, genera- tion after generation .. Lucy and John Alderson, who have lived on the lake.since 1959, stay anchored to the spot because they can't think of anyplace they'd rather live. They cherish the memories of i:aising their four children there. They remember letting their kids stay out on the Jake all night, and they remember watching as tbe kids grew up and replaced row- ing and fishing at the lake with girl-watching and surfing at the beach. But one thing has never changed in all their years at Cherry Lake: "Almost nobody knows its even here,• Lucy says. •You really feel like you're out in the country." I • ~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------r-------------------------------------------------------------~ TUESDAY DIVORCE WORKSHOP The law offices of Lisa A. Cian- cio offers a free workshop called: Divorce -What to Expect How to Proceed at 6:45 p.m. at 881 Dover • Drive, Suite 300, Newport Beach. Reservations are required. For more information, call 574-0866. WEDNESDAY BLOOMINGDALE'S EVENT Bloomingdale's Fashion Island hosts Judith Leiber representative DIANA CONTINUED FROM 1 One bookstore manager, who declined to identify himself, said the requests for books and other literature on Diana "were over- whelming," and that "we're sold out of anything that has to do with her." "Sales on books about celebri- ties do increase when they pass on," he said, "but I don't think we've ever sold out the same day. like now." Richard Arguile, assistant manager at Brentano's Bookstore in the South Coast Plaza, said Sunday that he expects book Cost •necttve Legal Solutlona [ii] .... I 7 hw -~~~IHOUlQ IT'S ·TIME TO BE THE Y.QU. THAT YQU WANT 10 BEi . . WEIGHT LOSS CENTEIS AND COUNSELORS AIE l«ll ALL THE SAME. around town Catherine Carmichael for a pre- view of the fall 1997 collection in a trunk show presentation from 10 a.m. to noon and 3 to 9 p.m. on the first floor. For more informa- tion, call 729-6600. · ·THURSDAY FRENCH RACK SALE The Newport Mesa Assistance League Seasonal French Rack Sale features designer label attire from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Assist<µlce Leagu~ Thrift Shop, 2220 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation, call 854-1876. publishers to tum up the heat on biographers and other writers, and that scores of updated books about the princess are likely to hit local bookstore shelves in the coming weeks. "My experience in this type of marketing is that publishers are very quick lo redcl. They'll be hit- ting the presses this weekend, next weekend at the latest,• Arguile said. The bookstore manager acknowledged that all of this will occur even as the world mourns the Joss of Princess Diana. "This is a unique and tragic event apd one in which time is of the essence, and the publishers will respond accordingly," he said. . . • Send your AROUND TOWN items to: The Daily Pilot Around Town, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, 92627; fax 646-4170 or call 540-1224, ext. 333. steve · lacy Steve Lacy's Login.: column won't appear today. Steve ls on vacation. Catch bis col- umn next Monday. $29500 complete CaJl Toll Free 888-271-4567 Don't Dda)'i' Avoid Probate! David Pawlowski Attorney at Law '\lii;;iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'#I,., • FARR LL ca. HINKLE, D.D.8 .,M .8 .D.,"c. NatlpOl't a.ah: 844-1281 •a.nu Ana: 558-1122 Prectica UmlCed To Ordutu.itica end 1i Dieorder9 MA'ITRESS SALE FREE DISNEY · Sleeping Beauty VIDEO ... ~ .. ......... Ulh ...... CllSS MallrlSSlll ..... , ........ . SAVE UP TO $300 this V1eek on~. Big Lab~r Day SaVlngs. "Prestige" •&.~ $91 ftl Ea. ~ $151 ... 2~..t $331 1i13,c.stl J $441 .. Gem•tone" lill la.~ ;, SUI -··--•Mia.Pl. . sm ... 2PL11t-- lllil,c.w • I 've been a World Warn com- bat soldier, 'a teen mom and a men living with AIDS. I have saved a boy's life, trt .. umphed over cancer and over- come drug addiction. But I am not an actor. "Nor am I a con artist. I am a writer. For nearly 10 years, I've been privileged to report sto- ries of courage, heartache, faith and love. Through C4J1did interviews and hands-on expe- riences, I'm given the opportu- nity nearly every day to walk in someone else's shoes. Whether these shoes are the tattered sneakers of a homeless person, the black Anny boots of a Vietnam War veteran or the dainty pink slippers of a 103-year-old woman, they often take me places I wouldn't otherwise go, as well as teach me valuable lessons about life. And tbU is the crux of why I love my job. Eveiy day I leem something new. A couple, mar· rled for more than 50 years, taught me a lesson on uncondi· tional love. A 17-year-oldhigh schQOl student diagnosed with leukemia taught me about courage. A man living with AIDS is still teaching me about survival. . Through their vivid recollec- tions, cdlorful anecdotes and emotional testimony, strangers welcome me into their lives and heart.$. I often leave an inter- view knowing that, while I may never see that person again, I will never forget them. One such person was a man named Harold Booker. At 330 pounds, Booker appeare<l quite forbidding -even.while sitting in bis wheelchair with a breatll- ing tube inserted through his neck. Some might say that on March 20, 1992, Booker was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Booker was hit by a speeding car. His spinal cord snapped on impact. But when Booker told me about the accident that left him • a que.dripl8gic, be ~ Wflb pride. He WU gRtef\11 that ht wu ~ ltrelet at pre? cllely the t the car came sp9edlng toward him. He was thankful becaUle walking two feet ahead of him was 12-year- old Jose Dominguez. Had tt not ~.(o~ bjxlJ. pushing Jose out =QU"1•M1¥c.U..boy would ~ft! ~-l:titlitmd.,..,.,. • bebtU:ie~, '19" WO\lkllll> proba~ha~ : •·ii Walking ~~kei'4s''Shed WOU9 taught me the meaning of be1'6Lu ism. Another person· I will likely never forget 15 a woman named Rosemary Valles. Three years ago, rival gang members killed her 18-year-old son, Robert, in a drive-by shooting. Not a rare occurrence in East Los Angeles, my beat at the time. When I asked the detective OYeneeing the case if he knew the location of the teenage!'• memorial 181'· vice, he said, "l think the ldd'1 • body 15 still at the coroner's office, and after they're through with .him, I i-eally don't give a crap what happens to his body.• Although I never told Valles what the officer said to me, she didn't have to be told. She Jcnew the cops had little regard fot'~ members. So as she ~~ed ·her brain-dee.d son i.&ial breath, Vanes , ti~ make bis Ille collXJJ ~' ln .,~'W8y he had probhb~ n~ver consi~. .~·,_, 1, I Robert Valles' heart 'f>9N< Peats in the chest of a. "'~yea.r­ old man who had suffered for years from heart disease. One of bis lungs.allows a 41-year-old mother to breathe with ease. A father of two cbildNll reoMved Robert'l livet A 27-~ woman and a •2-year-old man stopped years of pUitul dialysll a.tter they eacn recetvecl tbe teen'• kidneys. All of tbil hap- pened because ~OleDlary Valles' approved the donation of her son's organs, My oo1y regret was that I never sent a copy of the article to the detective. I wOUld have liked to attach a note saying, "By the way, this is what hap- pened. to that kid's body.• ~DS OD dignity, strength, com~ 4ffd cowage. These are Jhe peik$ Q( my job. Br U.(w~. poJfqu 'Dave a pair ot 1boesl)'Wc Ike \Ill to tty on? • q'JU,'~? I ~ 11 -L1 Qh 'lllllr:Jor • KIM KAUR UW~tt our · sister paper the Sou\f( Bay~ i·NO REST FOR THE WAITERS · 'llacy Nelson keeps her spirits eVell while working on Labor Day at the Cannery Restau- rant where she Is a °Cocktail waitress. someone bas to take care of the holiday crowds. • Labor Day means lots of diners for local restaurants. By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot NEWPORT BEACJI -While more fortunate memQers of the Amencan work force mark the official end of summer today by lounging on the beach, sleeping late or enjoying a hoilday barbe- cue with friends, local restaurant employees are forced to deal with the fact that, for them, Labor Day means laboring. "Nobody can get off on La~r Day,• said Albert Charnmas, owner of the Studio Cafe on Main DISPATCH CONTINUED FROM 1 well as the water company and parks department, Covey said. "We're basically on call for everything," she said. "We answer and m~tain call-outs for any major disasters -trees when it's really windy, flooding. We do it all." While holiday weekends JOBS CONTINUED FROM 1 escalating drinking habits that they'd become -essef\$ially - indentured servants. They lived in a SJJlall back room and slept on cots, shoved in opposite comers of the dank room. My job was to do whatever it took to roust them so that they could get their bearings before the early crowd showed up for breaJdast. I would usually flip on the light and bang some pots and pans together. Neither of them greeted the morning with any great cheer, but that generally did the trick. On& of the cooks-eventually disappeared. There was a rumor that he'd struck it .rich over at Santa Anita, and another story that be had fallen into trouble down in Chinatown. But I'll never know. Desperate though I was for money, I elected to take a vow of poverty and quit. -By Steve Marble Sacrificing myself for the cause . Street. "In the restaurant busi- ness, we work all holidays - except for Christmas and Thanks- . giving. Those are the ground rules before you start working here." Chammas said be expects nearly all 40 of the Studio Cafe workers to be on duty today to handle the anticipated hungry holiday crowds. Cannery Restaurant cocktail waitress Lisa Pickard doesn't mind working on Labor Day, because lilce most other restau- sometimes tend to be a little slower than normal days because vacationers are out of town, the number of calls involving alcohol-related domestic disputes increases, she said. . The best part about working holidays is that people some- times call to thank the operators "just for being there," Covey said. "I can"t tell you how much that's appreciated.• white, sugar-based paint the entire length of my tongue . . Forty minutes of saying words like house, automobile and umbrella over and over again while draped in a lead apron I was $50 richer. And fiv~ inches shorter. , -By Cathy Yarnovtcb Yer outta here I had six months left on my freshman tour of duty at Stanford, and the checks started to bounce. I was broke. I couldn't tell my par- ents I had drained the savings from my summer job in just three months, so I became an intramur- al basketbii..11 referee. It seemed like a .good idea at the tinle. I lo.ved sports, and the money was pretty good -I think 1 made $8 per game, and I could pretty much ref as many games a week as I'd like. But I nev- er figured on the abuse - from my own classmates. With a whistle in my mouth and a striped shirt on my back. I was the enemy. They argued calls, questioned my eyesight, wondered who wu pe.ying me off. My only weapon wu the technical foul-but bow can you call a technical foul on your friendsi So I quit alt« a few games and went onto 10methlng euler: wubing dishes Jn the dorm cafe· teria, rant employees, she knows from experience that when the rest of the world takes a break for a bite to eat or a drink.in a bar, wait- resses lilce her cash in, big time. "It gets real busy, -we get all kinds of people and the place juSt rocks,• Pickard said. •1 don't mind working holidays at all." Pickard, a Balboa Peninsula resident who has worked at the Cannery for 1 112 years. tries to work on almost every holiday - usually at night -and said the money tends to be better because it's busier and people generally tip more. There will be cash priJa for the bat sand sculptonl Sunday Septem·ber 14, 1997 Big Corona State Beach 1 Oa.m. -3p.111 . Every registered participant will receive 2 round-trip tickets to Catalina I --eowtay of Cetallna Passenger ScMcc • •ICING OF THE SANDCASTLES" NEWPORT IEACH J -- .. The 36' Annual · -Sponson- ·KNrcHT SPONSORS" DON LEACH I DAAY Pl.OT Pracntad by ~Ht--N!M ~ C HAMUi Of COMMllCI IAIA Amela1 lrlllMI al w-. ·say1Re SPoNsoRS" LATHAM . WATKINS -~1W'4M ------~ Ip ,q '(l .. knew that tb1I would be the true test. If I could manage a am.all group ol ~.I could make it u a CONTINUED FROM 4 1 ~er. , ~Y ti.rit day on the job, or ratblr came early one afternoon. The my first few hours, wu spent wtth a Ulignment would be for a few dozen or so 3-year-okla. l reed tbeni w.eb, and tbe company wu des· a story, .wbkh went very .wen. 1'bAlil perate-cowd I race over there the center's director w.nted ID with right away? a tray of cookies and juice. Having no idea how I waa going I knew l was headed for trouble. tO pay my rent, I headed out. On These innocent, adorable foot. This was college -I bad no youngsters who were-10 quiet and oar. , sweet du.ring storyttme turned into The location turned out to be in raging monsters when they saw the bowels of SODlJl building. tn their snacks. And as soon as they Oakland. And r do mean bowels. I finally all sat down to efljoy it, I juat took 1}1e elevator to a floor with a wanted to crawl into the playboUle number less than od6. Not a win· in the comer and disappear. dow in sight. Opening the door, J Between requests of having to was engulfed in an impenetrable go the bathroom, to wanting more cloud of cigarette smoke, pierced than their share of cookies, to just by the eyes of a crowd of unsavory-being obnoxious and loud (1 can' l~ldng charac-believe I gave these ~'~I~ ters. The job? enough was eJJough for ia-._... •. / Processing The ~r came bad(.,tq, M.. applicatioQ~ -bow~ 'f'e?e going. ll~ and hirln~secu-h~ 1-tray 9f. f.J!;ra cookies an~ jiitce' rity'gtt ."'P!"Tt 'aJld just lcep'f W"allcing. If. 'I fi (I ("JM· l~6l'Vt--. " I never received my paycBeck ~f;wb~th\! for the~ lhbttrs I put in at the .ftlMtpatmbk\ong 1 qday-eue'(.eM.er, but I felt you could- source of '~· ,jhlt puba monetary value on the les-ud.= and no son I learned. The next day I went rtilRI# d"esponsi-and changed my major to joumal- Li B WI '($8 )>le for the ism. I was told by my counselor that urle Uluy depletion of the it would probably be a better field L -ozone layer and for me because it paid more. global warming -seemed lnca-·-By Mary Beth Adomaitll pable of getting out of her <;hair. 1 guess walking made her winded. Or maybe she didn't actually stand upright. She would roll part-way · over to my desk, give me some instruction, then roll back to · her ashtray. Before I knew it, it was past time for me to leave. I ra~ out to a pay phone to try to call the temp agency, but there was no answer. I was going to have to come back in the morning. The next day, the cloud was already there when I got in, as were the motley crew of job candidates. More work for me that day -I was gouig to have to fingerprint these chaps. It quickly became apparent that IJ).8Ily of these folks had been fin- gerprinted before -,. they were giv- ing me tips on how to do it.·And as I listened in more closely to the con- versations, I overheard discussions on the difference between felonies and misdemeanors, and just how many years bad to pass before you didn't have to fill out that line on an application. And they were getting more chatty with me as I held their hands for the fingerprinting. A couple asked me when I got off work. This .was no good. Knowing full well I bad no car, the smoker asked me to go ~ick her up some lunch. ·1 bolted from the poom. my lungs beggtng for fresh air. Once outsfde, t went straight for the pay phone, called the temp agency and quit. -By Lau.rte Buaby Cookie monsters can cause career change When I first started c0Uege back in Ohio, r had visions of someday being an elementary school teacher. At that.point and time, I loved being around children, and I really wanted to ~e a difference in their lives -or so I thought. I wanted to get ahead of the gam~. so besides taking the early childhood . elementary classes, I accepted a job at a local day-care center-Little People's University. I 'l;aking a job on the wild side · A dish washer. A doughnut shop worker. Assembling electronics giz· mos in a factory. Inserting records into album cov- ers (remember those?). The albums Bob Seger •Against the Wind• and Pat Benetar ·xx:x· come to mind. A brief stint setting up appoint· ments for psychics, you know, tarot card readers, palmists and clairvoy· ants. If I' remember correctly it was $18 a shot for a 20-mmute reading. • (I'm still waiting for all those pre- dictions they told me to come tJu~). Then the re was the time that I joined the ~· Scot! branllllf!lll'of the Canadian Armed Forces. I Susan Deemer was 17, Goldie Hawn was star- ring in "Private Benjamin, and I needed a summer job . But green wasn't really my color. Also, I didn't like jogging fiv~ miles a day wearing these army fatigues while my superiors trod on the backs of my boots because I was lagging too far behind. Those were just some of the occupations I dabbled in beiore my 20th birthday back in my home- land: Toronto, Canada. They have an expression for people like me: jack of all trades master of none. But before I studied journalism and got my degree at the University of Southern California in 1995, I bided my time waiting for my "green card" with jobs includ- ing waitressing and office work. RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY Mnr-w.c...s .... 1m M11G1 <DSTA m:sa -W1-11s. ~ft Vl l::>::::l.JllCICI PrO&bly tbiii IDoillt unusual occu- patloD I bffe taken OQ bl California =be den l wol'lted for tllnte 100.3 fti.! ~ am6ng a •of '1~ •ttar1ey ~: ddd ~lack leather outfit from held to toe uad rode a Huiey t>avfdlon aportster 883 oc aiound Loi Angeles and Orange County. (I learned to ride when l wu 9 and bad five of mr own bikes including my 'own IW)ey Da"\'iaon heritage l300 cc.) OK, I have to admit it was P.re.itv cheese-cakey. We even bad our own poller and postcards with· our p1cturel on them that we would autograph.. · Beaides rld.llig the bikes 'le ·~ certs like· Ozd6'.0S~m• llZRl' ~. my dutietlb!hlct~• ~g-wttti liS-tentn dw frodt ,@UJe&'mQtgroydea th.a\ W818dl1Alb~lftshbi.u and ~ellow ~.AAJ; leather biker u~rl lo \?"''.!.:By SUAD Deemer ' I There are words for mind-numbing wprk Een, twee, drle. Standing at the end of a giant, steaming dishwashing machine, I counted spoons, knives and forks silenUy in Dutch as I plcked up the hot silverware with gloves and sep- arated them into piles. Separating clean silverware in the back of a sweaty, university kitchen was probably my least Michelle TerwWeger glamorous job ever, but I bied to make the best of it. Vier. Vijf. Zes. I had just returned from a four-mon th study abroad program in the Netherlands where I barely learned enough Dutch to get by, but counting .in the language was one way to keep my mind calm as it was bombarded by the noise of fans blowing, radios blartng and the dishwasher, well, washing. . The people around me took the task of clearing sanitized plates and trays from the enormous washing monster quite seriously, but I just didn't care enough to devise the most efficient way to stack plates. Instead, I took solace in.my new:. found language and congratulated myself for finding a way to get through the brain-numbing shift. Zeven. Acht. Negen. nen. -By Michelle Terw1lleger A bad job, but it had its per_ks The worst job I .had was working at Madi.son Square Garden as a "runner• in the Club Seat section for the Rangers and Knicks games while I was at school I had to wear a really gross uni- form that alwats smelled like grease even though the uniform people insisted they washed them after every event. The supervisors were all suicidal maniacs. One in particular was Licensed Psychologist will meet in your home or office. Most lruurance accepted. ~ Lawrence ~ Howard Ph.D. anms. 714-&SM7el always c:rytng, having a nervous breakdown and fig~ wtt.b the staff -a total basket cue. sea.on ticket hoklen sat in the area I worUd. Staff would work the c:Utterent Club Seat sections and tUe orden on a hUMlbeld ocmput- ei. 1be order would print up in the ·back and the runnen would aD ~ up and receive the orders, get It together and bring it out to the cus~ tomera. What I really bated about the job WU that the order taken only h4C1 to take on:te~the.Y.. ~ved better tips than nIMfm. We would get like eight hot dogs, live drimal, three pretzels, ~ have to ce.ny lt all out at the same time, :If 1 tugh, step-ping over feet, tbrOugh the crowd and ~ several stain only to receive a $1 or S2 tip. I would have to deal with real snobby Manhattan people. Most of them wouldn't even look at me when I was trying to determine who ordered what. . To eam extra money, I made the mistake of volunteering to sell pop- corn during the month-long Rin- gling Brothers Circus. I felt like a popcom prostitute out there trying to sell my boxes of popcorn. I even had a drunk man, at a circus mind you, pick up on me. It was such a degrading job. There were a few perks. I did receive a $20 tip for delivering a glass of wine and Haagen Daas ice cream to an older couple in the front row of a Knicks game. That was pretty cool. I also delivered orders quite a few times to John F. Kennedy, Jr. He is just as good looking in real life as he is in prlnl and his dollars bills SIJleil like his old leather wallet he keeps in his back pocket. I also got to see some r~ good games including Michael Jordan's co~eback for the millionth time. I also met Shaq, aaw Madonna and witnessed Spike Lee's sideline coaching and antics among other things. The one and only time I was an orderta.ker was for the Riddick Bowe/ Andrew Golota riot last sum- mer. I witnessed the whole thing from the Door and almost got hit by a flying chair. But, the Garden doesn't forget their employee's at Chrisbnastime. They set up a huge buffet, tree drink, dinner and dancing with band and DJ in the middle of the ice (which is covered) to say "thank you.• So, at times, the job wasn't too bad. -By Leslie Simmons My first job? Asking the burning questions Groups of teenagers walked by me through the local mall. laughing and gossiping and figuring out whether to spend their allowances on new mini.skirts or CDs. But not me. I, my mother's red business suit pinned to stay on my 17-year-old body, chased after them, saying as fast as I could before they could walk away from me: "Hil'mfronith- elocalnewspape.r ... • Breath. Check to make sure they're still listening. •Can I ask you a quick question for our Teen Views columnr That was my job the summer • WUO NCM1~ 1D#t 3Nlt0VW 9NIM3$ ~.JOqJW ... ~ ANVAlllOOA~ 13 COLLEGE PHARMACY ~H!1YIQ CBZAIOHU1Y ~84 • SINCE 1982 tnl301139. "O LD FASH IONE D FRIENDLY S E RVICE." ·: aNJROYJI oman - HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER W ll SPECIALIZE IN UNIQUll 6 HARD TO P IND ITIEMS. .. -ORTHOPE DIC S UPPLliE• • ..... SClll"1'10N Ds'-IY•"" ac11v1c.a AYAIL.A•L• 546-3288 440 F AIR D RIVE, COBT" M ESA CottNIU' CN' MAJUIOll aLVD. Beautify Y<_>ur. Yard! .. after graduating from bJgb IChool -wrlttng the Teen Views colwnn tor the Herald-News in Joliet, m Ba.ltcally, I had to nab four teenagers at the mall eack day and uk them socially relevant ques- tions. I endured many blank stares, ga~a few social studies~ sb theyd know what I was talking Jetlnlfer Anmtrong about and tape recorded all their answers (I thought it would look more profes- sional). Then, usually JDuch to my interview subjects' cha- grin, a photog- rapher would pop up from around a comer · and snap their mugshots to go with theiJ deep thoughts. Example: "Would you prefer Barbara Bush or Hilary Clinton as First Lady?" "Barbara's kind-of old, and Hilary's kind-of .annoying. I'd.rather have Madonna. actually. She's pret- ty hot." -Bob Smith, 16, Lockport. "How do you feel about manda- tory drug-testing bf high school ath- letes?" · •1 think it's way unfair. I mean, why shouldn't athletes be allowed to do drugs like everyone else?" - Joan Barth, 15, Channahon. Sure, sometimes I got startlingly intelligent answers. But mostly, I got a lot of giggles and stares. It made my current job of pestering city leaders seem darn easy - teenagers have a knack for mak- ing a fellow teenager feel pretty silly. -By Jennifer Armstrong SINCE I'll talCe ~ ewer 1inseltown s torment My IQOlt m.Doriable job. Miu· rally, WU the Wcl'IL 8 -Dllit ped· dHng Ooweil OQ ~tWoid Boule- vard. ba~ _C::OU. cm ....... Beach,~ tbe pip: • -at the tmtonc AJex11ieawlD ca.. dale, writing a _ __,..._ -----. com.le book tor Extreme sru- dlos, OT hauling in vast sack.I of salmon in Kodi- ak llland, Alas- ka. The most olgbtmadtb job I've ,b6)d WM at an oblcu.re film and TV produc- tion company in Los Angeles. I will not name it, • because I don't want to be sued. Pot a year, like oountJeaa other recent college grads looldng to break into The Industry, I abased myself before megalomarrlacal producers, no-talent e:xecuttves and prehensile money-men. I shlepped coffee for 8Cblock· meisters. I ran endless emmda for a bitter, failed actrea who did.not like that she was a seaetary. I read two saipts a day and bat- ed all of them. And finally, the · moronic syndicated TV oop show the company produced -the show I hoped to write for in recompense for my long sufferings -was can- celed. Imagine my joy, then, on becom· lng a low-pa.id typist at the Glen- dale News-Press in early 1996. It led to being a cop reporter here, where there is no puce paper in sight. -By Chrbtopber Gottard TELL US SOMETHING GOOD WRITE: ~ CATot lHE SPIUt DAILY Pl.en DOW. IAY ST .. • • COSTA MESA 12117. FAX: MM110 PHONE!IG-. ' < >t T II S OC.<. I·. H BRAIN P06UOA (ABOVE) I DAILY PLOT MARC MARTIN (LEFT) I DAllY P1lOT Above, Costa Mesa senior • Sarah Morgan Ups over the ball ln last season's action. Morgan ts .one of five seniors on the Mustang squad. The seniors have rtdden the notortous losing strea,k long enough and, along with their other teammates, hope that first-year coach Yvette Ybarra, pictured at left, can put an end to the skid. Ybarra prepped at Fountain Valley High and conttnued her playing career at Boise State. GLORY TO THE . SLAMM RS • Both Slammers teams serve warnings. IRVINE -The girls 13-under Orange Coast United Slammers distinguished themselves as one of the top teams in the area by placing second among 19 teams at the North Huntington Beach Cup Tournament. In the championship contest, which was played at UCI, the Slammers faced the Cali- fornia and Regional champion Upland Celtic squad. ._.I At the end of regulation, the Slammers managed a 1-1 tie. l\vo overtimes could not break the deadlock, but the Celtic prevailed 4-2 in a penalty kick shootout •nere is some disappoint- ment, of course, but only one team can take home the first place trophy and today the Celtic had better penalty kicks than us,• Coach Walid Khoury said. To get to the champiouship bout. the Slammers defeated the Claremont Stan (2-1), lost to the Premont Tops (3-2) andbeat the Rancho Santa Pe Attack (1-0.) In the quartel1lnal, they topped the Fountain Valley WQlfJ>&ck. 1·0, and doWned the San Diego Pegasus 3-1 in the semis. . "This achievement is the direct result of the hard work and cbm.mitment of the Slammers and their families,· Khoury said. "In two weeks, we start the league season and this team is ready." Regulars Tricie:dfrth and Kate Younglove were o~t due to injuries, so Khoury picked up the So Cal Blues' Joanna Irwin and A.J. Shane. The other Slammers are Lau- ren Birchfield, Amy Burlingham, Cathi Dragna, Sarah Haas, Paige Janes, Nicole Johnson, Jennifer Long, Allvia Mazura, Elisha Morgan, Kacey Pelfreyman and I.amen Shepherd.son. champion La Jolla Nomads, 3-2. Goalkeeper Jordan Feldman made two important saves, while Sasha IOjestan scored to tie the game at 1-1 and send the contest into overtime. A penalty kick shootout was needed to settle the game, and Alex Nortbridge came through with a tiebreaking kick to give the Slammers a 3-2 advantage for the win. The Slammers also tallied a come-from-behind win over the Central Cali.f ornia Regional champs, Santa BarQal'a, 5-2. IOjestan notched three goals, and K.C. Rawlins and Brian Bauer added one each. The defense was paced by keeper Will Johnson and John Rogers and Joey Bendetti. A win over the state U champion Wolves would HUNTINGTON BEACH -follow,3-0. Eric McGowan and On the boys side, the IOjestan ICOl'ed Jor the loaill. Slammen (also the 13-und6i 'Northlidge bad two assists aij: •• age group), picked up a Adam Ubl led the defense. third-place fLn1lh in the Gold •Jt's not very often that you Bracket after falling to NHB 1-can l*lt a reg1onal1 the It.ate 0, but the tqUAd, also ooacbed and the Da11Qnal c:ba.mPDll in by Khoury, tallied some key one WMgatr,,...khoury ...ut wim over the nation'• belt ~ Dillion. Julien Cerutti, team.a. JaiOii' CUskly 8nd 1lm Iliff bad n. Sl•mmen picked up strong showings in the wtna ayer the filgning natklcW tournament, u Well. ,. I:~!>~~~} GOAL: . t~~1 ~'ll il7iii~i~lf tmk •• ,,lll( • First-year coach Yvette Ybarra believes Costa Mesa High girls volleyball-team will soon _terminate 26-match losing skein. ~Y Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot OSTA .MESA -By now, the catch phrase used to market the WNBA, is nearly as recognizable as the N'Lke swoosh. But "Whose got next?" might just as easily describe the confusion surrounding the Cos- ta Mesa High girls volleyball coaching position in the 1990s. Yvette Ybarra, 'l former Po~ Valley High and Boise State standout, is the latest in a line of five coaches over the last six seasons. But, unlike her predecessor, Dave Sorrells,· Ybarra does not enter her debut season with any bold predictions. This, of ·course, may have something to do with the Mustangs' current 26-match losing streak, which drove Sorrells to give up on his frequently voiced aspirations of turning the program around after just two seasons. · "At this point, it's not about winning, but about improving the girls skills," said Ybarra, a former All-Big Sky Conference outside hitter who coached the women's team at Saddleback Coll~e last fall. "I won't say we're going to win every match, but the losing streak will be broken this year.• -What makes this prediction Jess than brash is the presence of senior returners Julie Collett and Kelly Chapin, · as well as sophomote club veterans Day- lan Kelley and Carrie Williams. Collett, a 5-foot-9 middle . {11,>11 C: llollcr.:tc-Cl ~loc~J~W~pjg 1bt~I~Iflen-tion All-Pa <rt!lague la~ fall, as was ital , a 5-8 outside hitter, w '.I) Sonells lured baclC into the ''f>rogram after a year's absence. · Q)llett and Chapin are kn<DVD more prominently for th€ir excellence in other sports, but Ybarra is deter- mined to convert their athleti-. cism into a strong presence at the net. "Julie and Kelly are definite- ly our go-to players," said Ybar- ra, who is also counting upon the emergence of Kelley, a 5-10 setter, and Williams, a 6-0 mid- dle blocker. "Daylan plays for Orange County Volleyball Club and· Williams played for Saddleback Volleyball Oub," Ybarra said. "Daylan has great hands, she's tall and she moves well to the ball." Ybarra believes Williams may also develop into a fotmi- da ble front-row contributor, between bookends Chapin and Collett. Sarah Morgan, a 5-7 junior, and Evelyn Powers,· a 5-8 junior, are additional candi- dates at outside hitter, while Brooke Shanley will be counted upon in the back row.according to Ybarra. Senior Gegi Van De Walker, junior Kim Nguyen and senior Talene Seikeldjian will also contribute, while 6-0 middle blockers Katy Petersen, a sopbomo(e, and Megan Stone, a junior, give Ybarra the ability to add size up front. Ybarra said the attitude is positive and the work ethic is strong, but she believes instill- ing proper tec,hnique will require patience on her part, as • SEE MUSTANGS PAGE 7 Locals make impact in openers molly yanity • May paved the way for Lodg Beach while sec ~ooked good in Irvine; Hawley led UCI, .~ . ' MUSTANGS CONTINUED FROM 6 well as the players. •rm getting on them right now and they're probably get- ting sick of me saying the same things over and over," Ybarra explained. •But they're already improving a lot and that's very gratifying to me. I think they're very happy, too, because they. see themselves making progress.• The Mustangs scrimmage cross-town rival Estancia Sept. 8, before opening the regular season Sepf. 11 against visiting La Quinta. .. . ··._.~A ""-DEEP SEA SUNDAY'S COUNTS Newport Lllndlng -S boats. 246 anglers. 6 dorado, 253 yellowtail, 23 barracuda, 4 halibut. 16 bonito, 52 sculpin, 1 rock fish, 28 calico bass, 40 sand bass, 3 bullet tuna, 4 spider crab, 35 mackerel. Davey's Lodler -8 boats, 321 anglers. 550 yellowtail, 250 barracuda, 27 . sculpin, 13 sand bass, 24 calico bass, 10 bonito, 20 dorado, 4 bullet tuna, l skipjack tuna, l mako shark. COLLEGES CONTINUED FROM 6 GSAC foe Point Loma Nazarene Collegia bnezed thn:Mag1a .... towM- ment Without droppmg a game unUI the Qwaders tell to Cal S111te L.A. But il wu tbe GSAC'1 Premo Pedftc that r9coided tbit qaly ....... feated marlt lD the tou.mament at ,-0. · Olbercomereuceteams were Westmont (l-1), cat Baptkt (3-1) .a host Conoordia (2-2.) 0 In other college volleyball action, Long Beach State's Misty. May paced the 49ers to a relatively easy win over No. 8 8Jigba.f:!l Y~ at 12-15, 15.-11, 15-5, 15-6. May, a Newport Harbor grad, is the 49en'tet·. ter. Long Beach State, now 1-0, entered the season at the fifth lpOl on the preseason poll. 0 SoIIle old '.folleyball rivals hooked up in Malibu this weekend at the Paul Mitchell Volleyball Classic. Loyola M.arymount, who boasts Newport Harbor product Jeannette Hecker, too¥ the first-place trophy with a 3-0 record. 1be Uom, nmked f'lo. 1_6, downed UCI (15-13, 15-8, 15--4), Premo State (15-11, 15-11, 15-: 7) and 1Wane (15-4, 15-12, 15-11.) I.MU was the only ranked team at the tournament. Hecker played in all nine of the Lions' games and recorded eight kills and nine digs. Though her team came up with a mark of just 1-2. former Corona del Mar High star Doris J:Iawley was named to the All-Tournament Tham. Hawley started each game for the Anteaters and posted 23 kills, 12 total blocks, seven digs and five aces. Q SCC's women's soccer team was outmatched 5-1 in its first contest, a road game at UC San Diego in La Jolla. Scott Dameron's Vanguards got on the board first in the seventh minute of the game when senioT forward Jamie Gardiner took a pass from freshman Ganessa Cobb and broke away for a shot on goal. . But four second half goals by the Tutons doomed the visitors. The game was also the Tritons' first. 0 The 1997 Reebok Invitational pitted Cal State Fullerton against Vanderbilt in a thrilling contest in wh1ch former Sailor Alessio Smith started. The Commodores upset the .hosts 3-2 on a header that went into th~ net in the 7 lst minute. Q In Beaverton, Ote., UCI's senior 1Tacie Manz scored a pair of goals to. lift the Anteaters over Oregon State, 3-0. Manz, an Estancia graduate, opened the scoring at the 5:45 mark from a pass from freshman teamate; Stephanie Rigamat. With less than four minutes remaining, Manz knocked in-another goal while freshman goalkeeper, Kirsten Roy {Aliso ~iguel) notched her thst shutout. · Manz, the former Eagle, is now just three points away from tying the Anteaters' all-time scoring record. She has recorded 70 points. . STARTING ANEW . BUSINESS?? • •••••••••••• . -n.u.,1~··=-.. ,,._ . •• ,._. ............. C? .... f b. . r1J ffH4018 ByFax (714) 631 -6594 (Plea~ include your name and phone number and we·n call you back wish a prict quote.) 1!911ey Retn end dNdlinf'11 arr •11~1 to rlMngC' without. no tier. T.ltf' publiwer rr ·m ·t11 the right 10 et11&0r. rM'lt1~sify. tt'\'i.~t or rrjcct any dai. ifitd od\'trti~o1cot Pltt18f' rtport any trror rhlu •™Y be' u1 your clas ifird ad immrdiocrly. Thr Dolly Pilo1 orceJ>I& no liabiliry for 1111y rrror in an odvcni!lf'mrm Tor whkh if may be rt~ponsiblt f''<ft'J>I for th<' 1·ost of rhe 11pat't' ar t unity ocrupir<I by tht error. Credit tan only be aUowt'd for the first i.nsenioo. LOTS POI SAU! NEWPORT 1400 BEACH BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDIS&-:- 2722 OPPORTUNITY 5530 5530 5530 5530 . l!i. lOUM. KOuSINO O•P'O .. fUllfllY All rut uule adwtl1l1ln9 In this 11tW1p1per ta subject to the fd· 1111 h lr Houslne Act ol 1968 11 lllllllldtd wltkh IMUI 111111911 lo 1dwtl1lst "any p11t11111ct, llmllallon or flscrtmtullon tasrd on 11<1, color.. rall9lo11, na. hand1up, l1111ltlal &lllus tr HllDnll Clfleln, Of 111 lllllnllo11 lo mike any such p!1lut11c1. llml· t1llon Of -'scrlmln1llon." TM1 11rws,1p11 wlll nol uow11111r 1ettpl 111r 14ft111H· mul lot rnl Htllt ••k• h lr1 Yitl11to;1 ol th• ll'lf. Owr rtNen 2 90 41 iiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Bluff• lmmac 3bd, r,!!!!~~~~~~~!:I 3ba. $2400/mo. Inc $7•S10 HOUR FRBEDOM: WORK Pre•choot seeks from home •NCT teachers for Infants/ ML M • Turn k 8 y • toddlers/presehooter1. Legally slash your Medical, slcl< leave, taxei. Protect your vacation & education p r 1 v 8 c y /a 1 s 8 1 1 , relml> provided. Must 6 figure Income. have a minimum 12 • Become sovereign E.C.E. Only educated, 1·800-322-6169 xo161 enthuslalllc team -------... ' --- -... f - -~ ·-· -----. -· ----... -.. _!!_,_•..!.._ "'! ~ ~ Balboa Newport Realty, Inc. ©ceanfront Lot Reduced to $470,000 723-4494 grdnr & •ec •Y•· Al10 f=or Sale $349,000 Barbara Sanregret Realtor1 044·0195 E•atlaluff, view, 3br 3ba, den, trl-level, pool, Inc gardener. $3150. 044-7917 CAL•SCAN p I e ya r 1 want ad . Exolualve G•t•d 714·955·2072 Belcourt 5br 4.5ba, RENTALS TO HELP! OVERWHELMED TUTOR TIME 4700ef, pool & apa. SHARE 272 4 WITH leads! Earn 5.1--•"""A'""d~m~ln-A..,,-•a-t'""•--Lse $6950.mo. Call for 10k per month PIT. Appointment 760-9399 Fantastic Support! No 2 positions. F-T & PT. Co-op with Brok81's COM Shr huge 2br 3ba ••lllng. Not MLM. Computer akills, team are lmtlly lntwmtd 11111 111 1:-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:I H.rbor Vl.w Hom. w/Harbor/Ocnvu. Avl 1·800-437·3505 player, high energy, CAL •SCAN very organized. Work· 3bd, 2ba. Avt 9-18. now. 5825. + 6mo lse. Ing In beaut If u I Near part<, 1choo1 800·277-4175 X 202 WE NEED HBLPI Newport B,:tach for S2500. 759.0320 CM New private rm & We're exploding! Wiit Mortgage Lending co. ••tllinfl ldwtl11Hd ln .. 1111 ·--------• ....,8"1 n 1V1ll1.it on • Lg 4Br Condo 2.5 Ba be. Private life. Gated/ help you get llartedl • Hours 7:30-4 Mon·Frl . ~HI '""'8fllty mis. lt com- -ti llbatmllalen, ul1 HUD fllll·lrt1II1·D"424·1StG. For Ult Wnlllllttlll, DC ... , please HOUSES/ CONDOS FOR RENT Pool/Tennis 2cargar Earn S5·10k per Salary negotlalbe. Fax • · · pool, w/d. Sr. w/cats. month P/TI Fantastic Nr Ocean. Nwpt Crest. s5oo ~ sec. 64a-8473 resume 714/760-0535. 51800/mo. 661-3491 · iupportl No selling. Apt R••ldent M .. ,. ull HUD 1t 425·3SOO. I••••••••• Lido lale Home 4 + 3. Es'"bM House w/pool/ NOT MLM. 2 min. Need exper. COUPLE New crpt. So. patio. •pa. s475/mo + 1/2 utl. ;".: ~ ~ ~3g2 e2'.8 1 6 9 for quiet 32 unit bldg. S2900mo. Yrly. Biii Fem pref'd. No drink/ Ext. 3542 CAL•SCAN ~r Harbor/Hamlllon. -HOUSES/ _ CONDOS '-... FOR SALE GENERAL 1002 Grundy Rltr 675-6161 amk. Lisa 722•8520 '2 b d + s m s a I a r y . BALBOA •Newport North• NB 2ba 2br In quiet ••••••••• R.W.5~g~n1<i~· Inc. PENINSULA 2107 2bd, 2ba +Iott. Exec mobile home park w/ ANNO' UNCEMENTS 1---------......---twnhm. Quiet local, pool. S275.mo. No BANQUET new crpt & pnt. FP, pets. 515-8509 --------· COORDINATOR Quiet furn atudlo 2 ·C ar gar, W /0 . P T ·N B t t a I I a n patio, pvt entrance. $1600/mo. 964-7222. NB· Dover Shor••---------Restaurant 673·9500 Pkng. utl, cbl Inc. Avl VILLA POINT CONDO Pvt hm. Lndry. kit, ANNOUNCEMENTS 251 E. CoHt Hwy 9 15 $650 673 1568 cbl. No pels/amk. 2920 C•n't Find Work• . · · • · ~B:i.°ci°"cc~::;~·u~'~;: S415+utll. 845-9515· You can't be looking iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil CORONA $1250/mo. 640-4813 Need a Roomm•t•? TWO BIO GUITAR too hard! WANTED 15 GOVERNMENT Call The Dally Pilot Showsl l ,OOO's of people to lilt various FORECLOSED DEL MAR 21221••••••••• Claaslfled department Guitar's, Buy-Seti· positions from . ware· HOMES and take advantage of Tradell . San Mateo house to manage- Pennies on the s 1. 3 8 r 2 B • + L 0 ft APARTMENTS our one week spec I all County Expo center, ment. No experience o e I In Quon t Tax. Condo Obi Garage, FOR RENT 714-042·5078 9/6/97, "9·6 and 9f7/97, nB~e~tss(:~~·)8C9~51 7 N84o.w, Repo's. REO's. Your ,,.•••••••• 1 o 5 and Orange Month to Month Only.11 •---------• • are a · To 11 free 52, 1 OO. Owner/Agt County Fairgrounds, Carpenter exp wood 1 ·8 O O ·2 1 6 ·9 O O O 7n4•56a-9047 RENTALS 9/13/97. 9·6 and s1alr rail Installer ~:,~~;~139d~~~~~!~ •Ch.,mlno Hom•• BALBOA WANTED 2726 9 ~,_;~~?4'53.7~~°i . ~:.~~~q·~ ..... n6!~~~~6~ SOLD! Invite over 40,000 p eople to read about your home for sale each Saturday by ehowcaslng your properly In our Homes of the Week & Open Home Gulde. The best l ocal Real Estate Section around! Reach the bes t qualified home· buyers on the coast! Call your Advertising Representa t ive Todaytl ·.sk about our current epecialsl LI•• Coaenz• 574-4249 LI•• River• 574-4252 Lg Mstr Ste, Ip, hdwd PENINSULA 2607 CAL-SCAN C•rpenter Helper floors, lg prvt yard, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Fem•I• Contr•ctor PT. Aak for Wayne or direct accesa St. prkg, Oce•nfront 4br 2ba, w/cat to lease option? ---------. 011. 714.545.5750 pet ok. $1985/mo. furn, St700.lnctds utla. 4Br+gar+yrd CM/HB ·"OLUNTEERS 015 Ac•cla Opn Sat Avl Sept thru May s1200-s1soo 831·2111 ·v Clerical Sun/Mon 1-4 875-3949 No pets. 873-4724 1-------~-N*EtE*D*E*D Wick•• Furniture Is L•••• W•nted accepting applications L••••IL•••• Opt/ Oce•nfront Studio Jasmine Creek Plan 3. --·--for both lull and part· Purch••• Condo S750/mo. Incl Utt•/ 721·8130 evenings. AMERICAN CANCER time c lericals. Must be 3 B r + Loft , 2 Ba , Phone, Maid svc. Fully respohslble, depend· Cntrl air, fp, Gourmet furn'd. 875-4104 SOCIETY able and motivated. kit, S395.000/S2600/ I••••••••• ••••• excellent benefit• mo. 508 1/2 D•hll• 1---------COMMERCIAL DISCOVERY package. Retail hours. Owner/Ag! 568-9047 CORONA SHOPS Apply In person at: Unbellev•ble never DEL MAR ... ___ 2622 ES1ATB ·Coron• del M•r· WlckH Furniture Uved In 4bd, 4.5ba,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ••••••••• Pia C•llM0-4777 3200 Harbor Blvd 2fp, 4 dcka, marble • Sp•oloua, aunnif ._ _______ .J ___ c_o_s_t11_M_e_s_a_._ CA_ flr1, berber crpt, gour-1 Bdrm. New remodel. -----------------it=-'-- met kit wNlklng appl, Arch door way•. PM/ BUSINESS OFFICE LOST & granite, jacuzzi bath, ant. w/d., St. parking. FOR RENT 276 FOUND 2925 lndry rm. No peV1mkr. Pet ok. $1350/mo. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii S3500 717-6225 e 15 Ac•cl• Opn/Sat iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Sun/Mon 1-4 675-3949 H .B . 750•.f . Prime Found Motorcycle ore •paee for Planner/ helmet In Costa Mesa. L.andacape DHlgner/ Call to ID. 846·9942 Can't seem to get lo all those repair jobs around the house? COSTA MESA 21241------ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii COSTA MESA 2624 --------'"I CHARMING 3Br 1 B• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Draftsperson. Free attar 6pm. parking, utll, malnt. -....,F='o_u_n;....d......-o_n_,,,8/2..,.,,..5,,,...-- CloH to OC airport. Golden Retriever & S750mo. Fax 844-8706 Chow mix. Large Let the ClaHlfled Service COSTA MESA 1024 Houae. Large yard. 2bd O•rden Apt Dogs allowed. Xlnt Pvt patio, 2-c:ar gar. Cond. Avail Sept 18th Nr 55 fwy, SC plaza. Golf Courae View $1450/mo. 721-0575 lmmac. No pet•. Ph. 844·5050 Ella mate. @ Harbor & Wiison. 842·2884 LOST OAT 8/29 Directory help you find reliable help. t542·5878 Mesa Verde b .. t price • ' 8 Id • 3 B r 3 Ba S885 + Hc. 841..Q353 l·I-ND--U-S_T_R_IAL ___ 2_7_8_8 w/thls full view· 1 TownhouH. Dbl gar, B'•lde Xtra lrg aunny level, 4bd, 3ba fixer. fp, pvt yard. No dOga. 2br Iba In triplex, fncdliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Call Biii & Donna $1800/LH. 842·5322 patio, w /d hk-up, t 0.t 0 O O SQ FT Cl)M.. Goldenrod & --------- Webater fOf detalte. S a qulell 1875 873-3059 BUILDING For S•I• Remax 780-5000 x138 ••EA T ID• Production Pl. NB or x139. 2 ·B d 'm 1 ·Bath DM1. Store:Toy1/Cars Specl•ll 3Bd & so wood firs, yard, 1975· NEWPORT /Mfg/Of Least Investment. Down. A Bit of Hawaltl 714-7 oo.e3M BEACH 2669 Bob Cauat.ln Bkr 722·8777 C-21, J.R.Olbson Co. ---------liimm•iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Harbor View. Name Bubble. Black /w white ch .. t, tummy, & leg•. 76C>-e185 LOST Man'• MHonlc Watch . Family heirloom. RllWARD e 723-5802 . 541-e221 838-5112 HUNTINGTON •le C•nwon, Falrwayl•••••••• ~~"ra~!~::::·~:,:, BEACH 2140 ~:.· .~t~c~I:~ BUSINESS 8r -------- gour k1t. 3+ 1. Biii 2-car gar. 1yr1no peta. FINANCE PERSONALS Grundy Rllr 875·6181 aeaohfront Condo $1550.m,o &44·0®!, S1450. Pamoramlo LID6 St•P• to beach. LAGUNA Oceanvlew 2br 2ba. 13ff/1495. Slngle. pvt, ________ re•soNALS Hurryl 83t•t•OO entry. Tenn. w/d. furn. S a\ BEACH 1048 Rent to Ownl 4br No ~t•. 873-0103 BU INESS 3002 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiml 2ba. 1900sq, rp, fam atepa to M9oh 3bd/ OPPORTUNITY Qoreeoua Cotta9e, rm. 11800.mo with 2ba, up1tra, gar, lrg 2904 2br 2ba, art •tudlo, 50% towarda pur-balcony w/ocean vl•w·liiiiiiiiiiiiii•••• 7500sf lot. 1319,000. chaH. Low down, no l1a50, 842•3141 Mloh••I L•mbert qual. 714-53()..8081 Pr•mter Propertle• --------1••••••••• n4-41t-9491 BUNTINGTON llISCIU.IH!OUS JllWPOIT llACB 1061 llUBOUI 2142 JWn'ALS ------------ -------- aANKRUPTCY e7e+. Stop• moat .cred ltore/garnl• ~ ment• ASAP. Valid In Callfomla. End• debt/ cr9dlt catd 1laveryl •••v fll• •Y•4•m. Olvofce S99 r. FrH,, Start America , ..... 3ea.ao30 toll frff, CAL•SCAN CUSTOMER SERVICE e SPECIALIST· e Work part time at Southern Collfornia's most dynamic Chamber ol Com- merce. The Newport Beach Chomber of Commerce Is seek· Ing a part time posl· Ion that Is a pleas· ant, service oriented Customer Service Representative to represent the Cham· bar to the calling and visiting public. Dullea: • Answer Incoming calls requesting Information on the Newport Harbor Area. • Preparation ol lis~ of members, area demographics and other support mate· rlals. • Record keeping of member referrals and fulfillment of In- formation requests. • Light typing and administration work as reque sted . Requirements: • Excellent tele- phone communlca· lions skills. • PC word process-ing experience. • Ability to work In fast paced, challeng· Ing work environ· ment. • Knowledge of the Newport Harbor Area helpful. Please send resume by Sept. 12 to : Mr. Jeff Parker , Newport Beach Chamber of Com- merce, 1470 Jambo- ree Road, Newport Beach, CA 92660- 6294. Fax: (714) 729·4417 E·Mail: ...~ Nftpor1llextl C1llll 8' -'itA&-AaA , ..... .,.or 'oeuu1c• Weare looking for career minded Individual• who want full-time. long-term employment, who areal10 able to learn a new Job sklll &. en)oy working outdoors. Must have drlYer's llcense and car with Insurance. After tralnlnl • earn from $8420 per houri 714/476-0114 Deodorizer Servicer --------ANTIQUES 6010-. · S 8 /hr + be n a f I I s . SUMMER JOB Increase Income with liiiiiiiiiiiiii~!iiiiiiiii!ii.J option to own route. P•rt·tlm• * 040 LP Record• 310·'T93·4255, Chris •Morning Hours $300. • 6 Lightning •No Experience .,..ods. 673_74M-. Dr•f•tp•r•on "PT. •Young, energetic ofc Grading exper pref. •Costa Mesa Fax resume & exper Call Cooper to: 714/644-6706. (714)722-0119 Driver FIT f or Aerospace Company. _E_M_P_L_O_YM __ E_N_T __ Clean OMV. Coll Lloyd 114-645·4600 or Fax SERVICES 5533 Res: 714·645-9043 Fiii In the Blank! •••••••• Employers! Reach the Please be aware that m o s t q u a 11 f I e d the listings In this cat· omployees you noed egory moy require you by placing a help to call a 900 number wantod ad In thO-Oaily In which thore is o PllO't employment charge por minute. section. Call our ASSEMBLE ARTS, Classified Dept. at CRAFTS, TOYS, 042-5078 jewelry wood Items, typing,"'i!owing, com· HIRING TUTORS $10·$15 per hour H.S. Malh, Science. Languages, S.A.T. Need 3.2 +college GPA, car. 714-443·2700 puter work from homo --------- HOSTESS in your spare limo Great pay. Free details.' Call 1-800·032·8007 24 hra CAL• SCAN CLASSIFIED ti's the resource you can count on to soll a myriad of merchan- d1so llems, because our columns compel qualified buyers to call! 042·5078 PT, evenings. Apply at DOMESTICS 5540 La Cave Restaurant iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii aftr 4pm, 1695 Irvine ••DOG WALKER -------- Ave, C.M. 040.7044 Costa Mesa area. SELL Calf Morg•n Restaurant 714.e42.e533 your used vehicle through classified 642-5678 HOST(ESSV CASHIER RUBY'S THE PREMO 40'S DINO CONCEPT is ~ f« = energy, enthUsiastic peo to Wort Monday.Frie , early AM shifu, as a Host(euyYshier at °" Corona Del Mar location. ~ RUBY'S Coronadtlk 230 East Coast Hwy 71U7J.7829 Marketing Rep• N .. ded Market our services nationally. No eelllng req. $2,000 +mo. PIT· more F/T. 1·800·382·271 2 xP803 N.B . Hotel Immediate need for FT/PT Front D .. k Holts. Call 873-7030. Phone Oper•torw to 115/hr· Part or Full. Wltj Train • 1·800-71 ... !130 Houaealtter Av•ll R.E. Broker/Prop Mgr. seek• tong.term situa-tion, ref1. 548·0131 l--------- Hou1esllter Avallabl• Home. garden and. pet care. Prof. reliable, reas, rels. Vacation/ RENT through classified long term 714·796·5050. --------- PLUG IN Plug Into the Classified section to find services from electricians . and plumbers to landscapers & painters. . 9080 GEO ----------- MDCBANDISB TRANSPORTATION ((). ... "·'' ·. ·. VITrnBISHI ~ MISC. 6015 '88 Grand...._. LS Sedan 4dr., 49k mllH, 18.200 • 646-1307 e '77 MIDQST 70k orig ml. Run• & look• great! S2500/obo. 646-3968. ·~,.. o.iu OU• •AJll Partner....-oae epede. What do 100,......rr A • Thia balanced hand ia limply not eood enQUlh for a two-over-one relpONe. The only bid lhat mu. any een.ee' ia a rai8e to two tpedea. Whethu you play four-or 6ve-eard autjon, or a forcing no-trump ~'~DO bearing 00 your MITSUBISHI 9145 !~h·oNJd:~t.ber wlnerable. u SouUi '91 Storm 11 +2 1--Brlght red and clean aa a pint A back to •AKlOl ll OA OA.K7 •tl4 · school "best buy"I Cocpkbooka Several BOATS 70 l l _ 9oxee Older onea ·TV & ty pewrlt• r 2342 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 4=ordham. Or. 545-7332 • Onshore Moorlng SIGO PALM TREE w/12' Sporttlaher Only $9967f (oee874) ~dd.i.rw bu~~.___. 714/545-1700 'M 3000QT VR4 -· 80\n'll , nun.au VAROOMI AH WhHI 10 Dbl I• P111S 5'x 5' Healthy & Beau· • Offahor• Mooring qful $1500 644-4704. w/23' Sailboat HONDA 9085 CbMPUTUS 6018 -------- S 14, 7150 T akee AJll iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 714-675-6529 or 818-246-3182 '88 Accord LXI 5apd, pwr wlndows/mlrro,., t a .. •-a ....... ~ .. t 18' Hudaon B•Y moon-roof, ac, am/fm h~';; .. yo~I u• Packet 1981.. A case, orig owner, all beautiful bay boat malnt records. $5500. regarding the lease or · ' purcnaaa of one of atomic 4 engine, 7 1 4 -4 3 7 ·9 Se 7 hauled out 5/1/97 • '93 CIVIC ax drive,. fwln turt>ol A ~ f true exollcl Under 40k What llCtlon do JOU take? ml. Won't IHt at $25,9721 (032781) '95 3000QT VR4 Spyder This la a very rare earl If you drive ft you'll own It! Call for detalla 1 (831130) 714154S-1700 our computer ayatema Full cover to preMrve packegea we wlll Auto, moonroof, AC.1 ________ _ ... lat you In obtaining the beautiful teak fin-AM/FM cau, all pwr. ROW ROYCE 9182 • "" dlgltal aatelllt• lsh. $5,500 875-0984 CC. 88k ml. S~0.500.,=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A. Wbe&her w.r. re11pOGM ia for -..I or whether that worthJ is indulging in Urullduaert cloee not alter your coune. Bicrtw0 ilpadee, to •how a hand that wu too strong initially (or a spade overcall. Partner won't think thia ia a cue-bid -your double or one heart implied a•padewit. dish for your TV from 973..0721 Iv mag. 1• Prlmastar. 721-4008 MARINE SLll'S JEEP 9110 WANTED DOCKS 7022 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii To BUY 6019 '93 Grand Cherokee '81 Roll• Royce Spirit, white, 97 body styte, 54m. xtnt cond. DLA . $22 ,900 •(714)435-1115• Q. 4 • Both w.lnerable, u South you hold: •IOI OAtl OA 106 41 •At I Old •Coln• Gold Sliver Franklin Mint, Sterling Old watch .. & Jewelry WHtcoall Coin 642-9448 Newport a.r Laredo 4x4, v-e. up Boat allpa In small county & trail picg. •·T-O_Y_O_T_A_____ The biddinlr bu proceeded: prtvat• marina on Vla 52K ml. Gm/Gry, 1· 9210 NORnl IA8T 80Ul'll war Udo. From 11W18ft. owner..flke-nu .S14k 16 ._ 10 ._ Salt or Elec:tnc prerd. &40-0338-wk 16 ..._ ' A · For the moment, tbink ot your boldina -8 _..patent OD defemift than olrwm, ~Dy aince you could be trapped een two good handa -partner bu already pueed. For that reuon, we prefer a pus to a one-no-trump overca1I - double is out.. The atiction ia not. over, eo you could get a chance to act lat.er. Q. I· Both vulnerable, u South you hold: •&.JU OKi4 0871 •A.7' The biddJn« Ml proceeded: NOJrl'll tA81' 80Ul'B' l • 10 16 16 Pma f What do you bid now? A· Your belencsd 11 pointe is worth a game try, espec:iall.J aince you ba'f9 DO wuted .UUM in clia- m(!DcM. Your belt bld is to support putner's 1Uit by biddinc three clubs. Retuminc tQ putoer'e minor after a mltjor bu been qreed upon ia a one-round £orce, and it alerts partnu to the J)C*ibility that your m~ ia only a four-carder. Learn to be a better bricke player! 8abeorlbe now to tile Goren Bridp Letter by calllq (800) 788-1111 for Lnfol"llUltlon. Or write to: Goren Bridie Letter, P .O. Boll: 4410, Chicqoo. DL90880. ' ~ I Al.,.,..,uic 5 W~9*111& 10 Anlnllil .... bMrd "~ ......... PffnicNa 15 Sld9Mp 1o~rejar 17 l'rMd ,...,. 18 Cooil'aald 18 Nedllace part 20 -out: ICfapM ~ -21 23 ElongNd flltl 25 No -ways . about It 20 Orivef's mirror 31 Eailing utensil 35 First l9dy 36 Brooke's hubby 38 ·Jae« ,,_ could eet no fat" 40 Travel docoment 42~Bryant 44 AlleYlate 45 Wiik through a 47= 49 Sunbalhe 50=• 52 Co"1le«rtp cat 54 Schoolof whales 56 Sllede lree 57 Padded DOWN ' Wt'98I part 2 Wood UMd few sallld boWlll 3 Formartv 4 Fooebal( player s Califoma island 6 Tel- 7 Captatn of the Nautilus 8 Build 9 Slppara 10 Mongolian desaf1 11 Bread tpread 12 Actoc Alda 13 Smidgen 22 Kids' toys 24 Actress Gabof 29 Aecel (the 27~~ 28 F_,. writ91' 29 ,_.... Fert191' 30 TWiii (one'• 9250 No live aboarde. Sia 048-1397·hm. 25ft-50ft available. 714475-4912 Agent '93 Grand Ch•rok•• Laredo ..... v.a. up country A trait pkg. S2K ml. Gm/Gry, 1· owner-llke-nul 114k 940-0338w 948-1397h k,~\~ MITSUB ISHI~ MISC. AUTO 9245 MISC. AUTO 9245 ANTIQUES & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii CLASS I CS --------.....-------------------! S E I Z E D CAR S S I! I Z E D CAR S liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii f: R 0 M S 1 5 0 . F R 0 M S 1 5 0 . 073 Maaeratl Citroen Jaguar, Corvette. Jaguar, Corvette, Showroom Orlglnal Mercedes, BMW, Por-Mercedes. BMW, P~r-37k ml, $13,500. or sche, Honda, 4X4's, sche, Honda. 4X4 s, Trade! 996-52l2·e ves trucks and more. trucks and more .1--------- Clanlfled Is ..... CONVl!NIENT whether you're buy-•••••••• Ing, •,•lllng, or just AUTOMOBU ES looking, clualfled has ••••••••• what you nMdl CLASSIFIED 942·Se78 MEET someone special through classified ACUU 9010 -------- No room left In the garage for the cat? •ss•a•vi-c·s--•1 CHJLD CARS 353s ,.ciioiiMPliUTEiiiiiiiRiis -3-ssiiie ~:.V::~ DIRECTORY •A Place In The HMrt MACll•DIC •Care for ADDMONS RDIODWNG 3410 Uc'd Home Daycare. Maclnto.h Compute,. Infants • 5yn FT/FT In your hme/ofc. Low/ Fun actlvltl... MHls hOut1y rate. 97:S.8819 provided. Large yard/ playroom! TLC & CPR L304202718 Call Calhy at 945-4831 ------ ARCHCMPT DUlllNS Aroh••INlches/Door• Ught Sofllts/Clo .. ta LIA119371 41S-1'001 Witthoeft Dtyw .. All Pha,... SnVl.a Jobi Cleanl CINnl Cleenl IOYr9 Exp/Falt S/FrM &t L1400CX)() 71~1447 TOYOTA 9210 •ee Landct'Ul••r 4x4. Auto, loaded. Xtnt! Orig 82k ml. 1 owner. 'r·950'obo. 717·7777. ?ROCKS 9220 Local sates llstlngs. Local sates llstlngs. Toll free Toll free 1-eoo-ee9.22e2 , .aoo.eee.22e2 · ext. A-4000 ext. A-4000 CAL•SCAN CAL•SCAN U&.aQA llOOfl1NG co Quality WOftc Guamt'd Reroot/Repalf FtM &t LloJlml 01.eoet hMtl ROWlllO CO. 3870 OUallty Wont. ,,.. ···-----1 ~ ... ~:= ht llner/Dee Walbr Oally/bvemlght vl1lw.1---... --,...--,--·1 Refe avt. Uc'd/BoMed ~IQ..,_. ~ 714-e:l .... TO ,,.. ... Lff4a31 ... , ... 7 ........ ,. Chances are you will find what you need at the price you want to pay when you read the CIH1l119d1 I I • .. .. •• M " •• .. •• .. ~ ,. •• ~ •• •• •• .. .. .. .. .. •• • H c F· • -- * * , • , * ' ' . " . --·--" * 1 • J • I • -