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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-09-17 - Orange Coast Pilot• , .. I SPORTS ,.-Cdm {pr'lsl.uiri-battle -- • o/Tftans So!vlng the Newport-Mesa communlty-1907 . r-------------------------------------------------------, Afather'splight_ .. . ,, . • A little more than a year after losing his wife in a car accident, Karl Wolonsky copes with raising four children on his own. ·By Jennifel Armstrong, Daily Pilot K arl Wolonsky has a lot to teach to his kids. He wants them to learn all their mother would have taught them if she hadn't been killed in a traffic accident last year; He wants them to learn that life goes on, even though she was killed last year. He wants them to learn to follow their dreams, just as she would've done by going lo law school, if only she hadn't been killed last year. And most of all, he wants the four kids -now ages 2 through 10 -to leanµA8.t there are consequences for their actions, especially when they take on the responsibility of driving. But after what has happened since his wife, lracy, was killed last year, he says he's not sure he can tell them that. I --LIS-TE-N --4J.P Be wary of silver screen reviewers Qty ready to sign 'elll up?. • Costa Mesa officials working to have freeway markers that point to South Coast Metro area. By Tim Grenda, Daily A'lot COSTA MESA -The city's South Coast Metro business com- munity could soon be among the ranks of Disneyland, Anaheim Stadium and other popular Orange County attractions with their own freeway signs - maybe in l;ime for the holiday season shopping rush. On Monday night, ~ity Council unanimously a to designate its share of th com· mercial area -which s addles the border or Costa Mesa and Santa Ana and includes the Per· forming Arts Center, Metro Pointe and South Coast Plaza - as a destination point in the city. The Santa Ana City Co\lncil is expected to do the same thing at its next meeting, paving the way ( J 1 1 , r 1 1 ' ' Should South Cout Metro area get same • treatment as Disney- !And or Knott's Beny Farm and have its own freeway si~ Leave your comments on OUt Readen Hotline at 642·- 6086. for the cities to ask Caltrans to erect signs on thr~ area free. ways to direct moln'rists to the area. If approved, South Coast Metro signs likely would be placed along the northbound San Joaquin Hills toll road, the south.'·- bound Costa Mesa Freeway and in both directirins of the San Diego Freeway. • SEE SIGNS PAGE 4 • "When my kids say. 'Whal happened to the guy who killed mom?' I have to say. 'Nothing.•• -KARL In addition to pelfomtlng com- munity service, the lrvine man convicted of run- ning a red light and broadsiding Tracy's car, David Alan Pierce, is now paying the fami- ly $300 per month in restitu- : Deserted dachsund still I .WOU>HSICY • tion for his three-year probation period. Wolonsky says that isn't nearly enough. - •When my kids say, 'What happened to the guy who killed mom?' I have to say, 'Nothing,'• be says. naq Wo1om1<y,wu killed May 4, • 1996, at the ~l"mlue entrance to the l!altblulf neiqhbolllood where the Wolon· akyl have lived for 10 years. Pierce ran o red light at tlUJ lnten«:tloo and struck her car. She was 35, hod four kids, was active in local arts and Cll!Dill\mlty groups and was planning to attenii law school Wolansky still c:ODnot dltve through the intersection, Bison Avenue and Jam- boree Road, two blocks from the Wolon- skys' East.bluff home -the place where 'ftacy's 1987 Pontiac Pirebird was smashed and she was killed. ii SEE PLIGHT PAGE 4 DON UACH I OAl..Y PLOT Between baseball, horseplay and nmnlng .aro11Dd. the Wolonsky children. from top left clockwise, Karly, 10, Reed. 2, Gregory. 7, and Peyton. 4, gather Jn front ol lhelr Newport beach home. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L-------------------------------------------------------~ in need of a new home By Michelle Terwilleger, Daily Pilot NEWPORT BEACH -The middle.aged dachshund who was reported. abandoned in the Daily Pilot appeared timid and confused in his cage at Dover Shores Pet Care Center on Tuesday as people called all day inquiring about his health and status. The owner who apparently left the black and brown canine at the 1ocA1 YMCA on Monday did not called to daim the dog, said Renee Page, a receptionist at Dover Shores, at 2075 Newport Blvd. However, several people inter- ested in adoption called in response to Tuesday's Daily Pilot article about the orphaned pet. •There are a lot of people who responded, but no one who has come in,• Page said Tuesday afternoon. The center must hold the dog for five days to allow his owner time to claim him. But after that, he may be adopted. The overweight dachshund was in line to see the center's vet- erinarian, who will check him for cuts and bruises and look at bis teeth to detennine an age. •He is pretty timid,• Page said. ·He's eating fine .... He looks like he doesn't know what's going on.· Page said the center sees aban- doned. animals about twice a year. r-----------------------------------, r: i I \ Ii I \ NICEST PLACE YOU'LL NEVER SEE AROUND TOWN •.•.•.• 2 Cl.ASSlfl£D .• ' ... ' ••.. 7 USTIN _Ill' • • . • • • • • • • • •• 3 POLICE PILES •.••••.••. .2 wm ....... .. .,..,, Secluded, scenic Linda Isle is home to Newport's elite Tie around-the-dock security guanl fortifies the entnmce to lJnda hle from a white stone booth sunounded by blooms ol 19<1, pinlt and white impatiem. He smiles, even as he explain• w h y ablolutely 110 Olljl. ,unda'any -.ll ellowMth!Ough 1belllondgo•wllbout•ulho---&D--. 'll'l ogotnet 1be ndoe IO lit --·---11 =~-·bo­;;;;:.e::---_....,. ........ 111ria...,.· .... poking up behind a row ot waterfront houses, each with its own dock and boat. Yachts drift by, water laps at the ~d shore. Admiring Llnda Isle from a distance is a pretty pleasant thing to do, reolly. Even being turned away at th.a gate is a pleasant thing to do. Just Imagine how pleasant visiting or living in one of the isla.nd'l 107 homes must be. Or, better yet, listen to what some ct the longtime residents have to say about their gated island lull cl walerfronl homes, oodl .. cl ~ spots and hlgh·prollle neighbon. , ' .,._.'I IOIDf! greet boU181 on Bolboa Island. but you have to ny in became ol tbe aowds, • Mys 29-VW" r1lld-d Pw1 Salei., for-mor SOn ..,,!W'llro 49er and _.,., ..... ,-. ·0ur .-. __ ....,_ .. -·,,, lbor Clllllld -• -.. dotJDMbt.. ·-==..,. "' ...... w1y.,.... -... ..... ,.. . • WEDHESDAY, SIPIWR 17. 1"7 • IDITOWS NOii': Do~ or some-one you know have a t.ndmwk blrth- dmr °' ....... 'f COIMlt up1 tf tO. W.-d lb to lndude it In 04/I ~ sedJon. ....... Qfl the 11"°"'8tion Into the Readers' Hotline. 642-6086. fu It to ~ 170, or mail It to Qty Editor Tina Borgatta, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, caJlf. 92627. You may also sef\d photogr~. but pleas. be an to indude a seff-eddl naed stMiped envelope If you'd lfke it returned. ANNNERSARY BID and Addy Prf ce1ebnle 50lh wedding anniversary. Bill and Addy Fry will be cel- ebrating their 50th wedding anniversary with 200 of their closest friends and family at a party Oct. 12. Family members wilYi:nclude the bride's 91-year old mother, Rose Oliva, and their children Alice Stagliano, Bonnie McGov- ern, Bill Fry Jr., who was Paper- boy of the Month for the Daily Pilot in 1967, John Fry, daugh- ter-in-law Regina, and son-in- law Alex Stagliano. The couple were married Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 27, 1947, in Philadelphia. They moved to California Ill 1967 and have resided in Costa Mesa for 30 years. Bill retired from the Costa Mesa Post Office in 1986 where his sons Bill Jr. and John, and daughter-in-law Regina. are currently employed. The couple has three grand- sons, Alex, Gregory and Steven and two granddaughters, Samantha and Emily. BIRTHS Most recent births in New- port Beach and Costa Mesa. Stephanie and Scott VanDelin- der of Costa Mesa proudly announce the Aug. 19 birth of Scott Robert VanDellllder at Sadd.leback Memorial Medical , Center. He joined the famtly at 7:32 p.m., weighing eight pounds, 10 ounces. He was 21 and a half 111ches long. DEATHS Most recent deaths as reported to the Orange County Recorder's Office. COSTA MESA Bonnie L. Mc Nash, 29 on Aug. 18 • George Y. Spyropoulos, 68, on Aug. 15 • Pauline V. lroxel, 80, on Aug. 16 •Suzanne J. Paige, 60, on Aug. 23 • Mark L. Brewn, 48, OD Aug. 15 • Daniel A. Vereker, 53, Qn Aug. 22 • Naomi L. Baboian, 89, on Aug. 25 • Lucette V. Kane, 70, on Aug. 22 • Miriam Pew, 79, on Aug. 22 • Herman E. 'J>latte, 91, on Aug. 25 • Lucile I: Van Brunt, 93, on Aug. 28 • :Linda E. Wood, 56, OD Aug. 22 Aug. 2' •Ruth 8 . Mlcbaelson, 86, on Aug. 24 •Eric P. StJutt, 87, on Aug. 20 •Dorothy E. Borwicb\k, 79, on Aug. 23 • Joseph N. Stanfont, 86, on Aug. 19 • Ernest C. Bowman, 82, on Aug. 28 DUI ARRESTS The following people were arrested recently on suspicion of driving under the influence. These people have only been arrested on suspicion of a crime, and, as with all such crimes, they are innocent until proven guilty. NEWPORT BEACH Raymond Chavez, 26, of Long Beach Diane Baldoni, 26, of Costa Mesa Lawrence Russell Smith, 53, of Newport Beach Brady Hivner, 33, of Newport Beach COSTA MESA Jeffrey J. Qualey, 33, of Costa Mesa Jesus Viramontes-Medina, 54, of Costa Mesa Andres J. Millan, 29, of Costa Mesa Melissa L. Dohrman, 31, of Cos- ta Mesa Miguel Vasques-Montes, 28, of Costa Mesa Bogar Mejia-Acosta, 28, of Cos- ta Mesa Terry L. Carson, 52, of Cerritos Kelly S. Biefeld, 28, <?f Hunting- ton" Beach Warren H. Goodale, 37, of Irvine GabrielJ.Allen,22,ofLong Beach George Madero·Rodriguez, 39, of Paramount Oscar M . Sainz, 23, of Santa Ana Lewis Zeina, 53, of Garden Grove Gregory J . Pike, 41 , of Costa Mesa MARRIAGES Most recent marriages as reported to the Orange County Recorder's Office. COSTA MESA • Steven M. Brooks and Llsa E. Sbeya, married on July 19 in Upland • ~ P. Donovan and Hettie L. Caouette, married on July 19 in Huntington Beach • Neal M. Leilnan and Susan S. Carr, married OD July 19 in San- ta Ana • Fredrik Haghverdian and Maitreyi C : Parada, married on July 18 in Santa Ana • William J . Grundy and Miriam g. Vickers, married on July 19 in Anaheim • Timothy A. Frede.rick and Sharon L. Besig, married on July 12 in Anaheim • Ma.re Lazarus and Cathy A.. Beaulieu, married on July 19 in Huntington Beach • Russell S. McPatrlin and Christine A. Botts, married on July 18 in Santa Ana • David Le and Quy Huong L. Do, married on July 19 in Stan· ton • Joseph S. Sloate and Sheryl M. Mann, ma.rrled on July 20 in Long Beach • Marlon A. Jimenez and Nor- ma E. Ga.rd.a, married on July 23 in Santa Ana •This year's event Will feature 34 reStaurant booths and entertain- ment. including KC. and the Sunshine Barut and Eddie Money. By Jennifer Amistrong, ~ Pflot NBWPORT BEACH -Tb.II weekend, S8 will get you the cba.nce to see musical acts like • K.C. and the Sunshine Band and Eddie Money and buy sam- ples of food from restaurants like Baja Sbarkeez and Five Crowns. The Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce's Taste of Newport, that annual excuse to indulge in a bit of culinary decadence, starts Friday at Newport Cen~. The S8 ad.mis-sion cluuge g you in, and $10 will get you 10 tickets to pur· chase food items from the 34 restaurant booths. •1t•s a real good way to get a flavor for .. ---1 Newport,• : said orga-l Dizer Jeff : Parker. • Organiz-1 ers are : expecting :about : 60,000 peo- 1 ple to turn : out foy the ; Taste, the : largest sin- : gle crowd- • drawing : event in ~ Newport. : •From I I ' I I I I I I , I I an organi- zational standpoint, we're pret- ty proud of it,• cham- ber i:Jresi-L..--------------~ NURSING HOME LECTURE The City of Newport Beach offers a free lecture about Protect· ing Your A$sets from Nursing Home Costs at 1 p.m. at Oasis Senior Center, 800 Marguerite Ave., Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation. call 644-3244. SPEEOt CONTEST The Harborlites Toastmaster Club presents a Humorous Speech and Evaluation Contest at 1 a.m. at the Riverboat Cafe, 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For more information, call 1anya at 965-3648. CHOCPARTY Olildren's Hospital of Orange County hosts the Meet the Direc- tors free party at 6 p.m. at the 1Win Palms Restaurant. 630 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. 1be party is more anyone interested in Iea.riiing more bout the 1998 OiOC Follies. For more informa- tion. call 532-8690. 8REAKFAST FORUM. The Inside Edge Foundation for Education hosts a breakfast forum from 6:30 to 8:30 a.m. at Scott's Restaurant. 3300 Bristol Street. Costa Mesa. The topic: Imma- nence and 'Jhtmc::endence: 1Win Pathways to Higher Conscious· The Newport emt.or Area Chamber of Commerce's annual '!Ute of Newport la 1et for this weekenll dent Richard Luehrs said. The restaurant selection mix· es old-timers with newcomers -about two-thirds are return- ing restaurants, Parker said. Some of years' past biggest sell- ers include the Five Crowns prime rib sandwich, the Sabati- no 's sausage sandwich and anything from the Pour Seasons or Balboa Dessert Co. To wash it all dowrl, you can choose beverages from 16 Cali- fornia wineries, Bacardi frozen drinks or, of course, soft drinks. Also OD band will be booths run by cigar shops and children's games run by the National Cbarlty League Juniors. With the admission charge comes entertainment from the biggest names on the fair cir- cuit: K.C. and the Sunshine Band, Billy Vera and the Beat- around town ness. The cost is $20 for first time guests and $35 for all 6thers. For reservations, call 46<M242. CASINO 11tlP 1be Jewt.sh Senior Center of Orange County hosts a bip to Barona Casino from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The costs is $10 per person. A Fun Pale offering food discounts and $5 in video machine play will be provided.. For more informa- tion, can 513-5641. FCAPROGRAM The Forensic Consultants Asso- ciation of Orange County offers a program called How to Prevent Account Receivable Problems at 5:30 p.m. at The Pacific Oub, 4110 MacArthur Blvd:, Newport Beach. The cost is MO in advanced and $45 at the door. Reservations required. For more infonnation, call 549-1377 . BLOOMIE'S COUNTRY aua The Fashion Island Bloomfng- dale's invites the public to the unveiling of the Bloomie's Co\mJ:ry Club playhouse to be auctioned at the li1th annual Project Aayboule benefiting HomeAid. The play- house can be viewed in the Bloom- ingdale'& CX>Wtyard through Oct. 18. For toformatioo. can 7~. Wll tiUld to two fwt. Md • '°"foot twll Wll con. from tt. touttiwlit. -,... Arlllow 4:0Zam. .... high 10:1•a.m. ~­~PA CAREER NE1WORK MEET1NG The 1991 Career Network for those unempJOyed meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Stewart Lounge at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road. Newport Beach. The topic is: Implementing Your Strategic Plan. For more information. call 574-2239. DIVORCE SEMINAR Divorce Wizards president, Lynne Diamond., conducts a free seminar call The Guided Journey Through Divorce from 1 to 9 p.m. at the Sutton Place Hotel. -'500 Mac.Arthur Blvd., Newport Beach. For reservations, call 369--5581. 8REAICMST IOOST The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce hosts a 90-m.inute breakfast boosts with Gail Brown. president of Exceeding Expecta- tions who will discuss Strategies for AcbieYiDg Customer Service Excellence at 7:15 a.m. at the Cos.- ta Mesa C.ountry Oub, 1701 Golf Course Drive. The CXJBt JI $12 for prepaid reservations and $17 at the door. For more lnformatioo. call57~80. GARDEN a.uB MEETING The Newport Hilll Garden Cub .boidl Us tint Pall meeting at 9:30 a.m. at tbe Harbontew Home1 Compla. Oubboule ll. 1800 Port Callow Place, Newport Beach. For llMn tnf«me«irG, Q)l ----~----------·--------, r ..... llDGDWN ! : .. (CDft •• WU. IUY I : YOU • : • ~single Items for : ==-Acaants I petit9 fllet mignon (5) and II Ro/al Thai cu&ine Combo (5) + Most sfnnle tt.ns for your ..:.:.e.,.·stwtc.ez ~taco (1). Blllboa Dessert Co. peenut butter and white chocolN macadlll1U nut cookies (1), fef'dus5I Persian bllklwll (1 ), Ho Sum Bistro~ dipped fortune cookie (1), MCCormkk8t~ chocolate-<ollef'ed stJ•wber- ries (1), The Ne\'.lo1pOtt Bistro roast gar1ic mashed pota- toes (1), Royal Kyber Qarfic nan (1), Blstango smobd chidcen salad with honey mustard dressing (1) + Sweetest selection - Bistro 201 c:hoa>late scx.rffle (4), Ciao tiramisu (3), Farm. ,e('5 Market vanilla bean creme bNlee (3) + F'ashlest sel«tion -Blue WatB Grill dam chowder (2), Cannery seared t>t.ck- ened ahi (4), Chic.ago Joe's fried calamari (4) + Meatiest selection -Can- tori oak-imC>ked petite filet mignon on sun-dried toma- to foctacia (4), Chicago Joe's ·beef brochette (4), Hogue , Barmichael's chili rup (2) I L------------------------~ ers and Eddie Money. Organiz- ers are counting on those acts to bring in bigger crowds, espe-1 dally on Sunday, wben atten- dance tend to dwindle. ·we're continui,ng to find better entertainment each year,• Parker said. •J<.c. and the Sunshine Band were a sell- out last year, they sold out when they played at . Fashion Island earlier this year. Tb.is bas really become their scene.• 720-1552 or 644-5933. MRENnNG SERIES The dty of Newport Beach offers a free two-part parenting series at 7 p.m. in the Newport ~ach central library.'s Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. The topic: Building Self. Esteem. For more information, call 717-3801. QUARTER HORSE SHOW Tbe Orange County Pair and Exposition Center hosts a Quarter Horse Show from 8 a.m.. to 5 p.m. in the Equestrian Center. Admis- sion is free. For more information, ca.ll 108-3241. HEAUNG TOUOf The Costa Mela Senior Canter offers an introduction to Healing Touch (Therapeutic lbuch) from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at 695 W. 19th St. o.t& Mela. 1be am 1113 . .Por more .lnformationt mil 2G"3839 STRESS WOM5HOP Orang. Cout College'• Re· Bntry Center elf• tba l8(gVt of a free two-part worklbop called Prom Str'8ll to SUCClll fnlm DO(lO to 1:30p.m. In tba ~ c.mr. 2101 Fatmew ROid. COiia Mlle. For~ Olll '32-5182. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1997 • Locals named to leaders:w,p roles with Jewish Federation !Be wary of silver-tongued movie reviewers COSTA MESA -Several local residents were named to leadership positions in the Jew- ish Federation of 0range Coun- ty during the group's annual meeting Monday. The (ederation. which works to increase community develop- ment projects, leadership and the strengthening of Jewish life in the county, also honored for- mer Newport Beach resident Paul Nussbaum for his longtime leadership and community involvement. Appointed to one-year temts as vice chairs of the federation were Hal Kravitz of Costa Mesa and Bunnie Mauldin, Blossom Siegel and Jerry Werksman, all of Newport Beach. • New members at large include Gordon Fishman, Karen Raab, Miki Sho)koff and Sally Spiro, all of Newport Beach. Nuss94um, who recently moved from Newport Beach to Denver, was one of two recipi- ents of the Jerusalem Leader- ship Award, which acknowl- edges individuals who have shown exceptional leadership qualities and a commitment to developing the Orange County Jewish oomm\.Ulity. Federation officials said Nussbaum was instrumental in planning development of the federation, including assisting in drafting its mission statement and restructuring the group. He seived on the federation's Finance Committee and Board of Directors and also was involved with Tarbut V'Torah Community Day School. -By nm Grenda Theriot cleared after completing counseling By Christopher Goff ard, Daily Pilot HARBOR COURT -Brian Theriot, the former school board candidate and Costa Mesa plan- ning commissioner who was arrested last December on suspi- cion of spousal abuse, was cleared of the charges Monday in Harbor Municipal Court after providing proof that he had com- pleted six months of counseling and rehabilitation, authorities said. arrested at his Paloma Drive home in Costa Mesa in December after he allegedly bead-butted his wife in the face during an argu- ment. Police reported he had been drinking before the alleged assault. Theriot, a businessman, is a former Costa Mesa planning commissioner and a former City Council candidate. In 1996, he lost a bid for a seat on the New- port-Mesa Unified school board to Dana Black. T here's a movie called "Kull the Conqueror" now working ig way toward the bottoln of the Orange Coast cinema barrel. Ordinarily, I'd I llDJlp it with •Batman Vll" and ! I •Jurassic Park vr as even less worthy of my time than watch- 1 lng the Angels self-destruct. I. But l plan to see it -or rent it if it plays out before I get to a I theater -and the reason might be worth sharing with those of I. you who enjoy movies and I . depend, at least partly, on ads to make a selection from the expansive menu offered. 1 For a lot of years, I was tbe i film reviewer for the National I Observer, which was the weekly i publication of the Wall Street i Journal. That made me fair : game for the people who write ! the blurbs on movie ads. "Pan-! I,,,,,,,,, ::g~:;:~~~::e~!f~:-reviewer and his or her publica- tion underneath. What the reviewer might well have written was something like, i "It was fantastic that this film !,'·, ever got made.• Or: "This is about as overpowering as a sog- gy doughnut.· Or: "Irresistible, it isn't.· But the movie ad jock- eys just flush out the word they want and put it in 2-inch bold- face caps. I suppose if people l,',,,'.::',, ~~~~gb~r;:;t~:U~e:1d are scam, they probably deserve to see a bad movie. But I still find it amusing to check out what the marketing geniuses are up to. f,'',,,, That's why I was surfing through the Los Angeles Times Sunday Calendar section recent- ly checking out movies. I got to the back of the section with the vague feeling that I'd missed something. So I looked again and found the culprit: a full. page ad for "Kull the Con- queror.• Judge Francis Munoz dis- missed the single count of assault and battery against Theriot at the recommendation of the prosecu- tor's office, said Deputy District Attorney Victor Quiros. Quiros said Theriot agreed in March to undergo a six-month alcohol rehabilitation program, half of which he served under home confinement. Ml CASA 0 Theriot also performed 10 b6urs of community service, paid $100 in court costs and attended 16 hours of psychological coun- seling to deal with anger man- agement. Quiros said. Asked for comment, Theriot referred questions to his lawyer, Allan Stokke, who said, •1t was a relatively minor incident blown way out of proportion.• Stokke declined further comment. Theriot, a father of four, was Fire damages Costa Mesa home, no 'one injured COSTA MESA -A local man woke early Tuesday morning to find the living room of his sin- gle-story home in Costa Mesa ablaze but escaped the fire unscathed. John Simmons, who lives in the one-bedroom home in 2100 block of Orange Avenue, was awakened by heat from the names at about 4:50 a.m., said Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion Chief Bob Reynolds. •n didn't appear (Simmons) was injured at all," Reynolds said. •He's lucky." Firefighters, who were called to the residence by neighbors, arrived to find the sttucture ful. ly engulfed, with Simmons try- ing to extinguish the fire with • garden hose. It took firefighters about 10 minutes to knock. down the flames, Reynolds Aid. Reynolds l&ld one firefighter suffered a small thumb Injury during the battle. He said the cause of the flte, which did SS0,000 woltb of umage to the building and 18,000 to ltl C.'OD• tents, remains under tnvMUga- Uon. MEXICAN RESTAURANT We Have 1be Most Taps OD Record In Orange Countyl • 46 Import Beers • 42 Micro Bl'ewers 0 We feature over ~O single-malt ~ blended Scotch Whiskeys as weU as many top-of.the-line bourbons. tequilas and brandies. HMKY 'N HARRY'S GOAT HILL TAVERN 1830 Newport Blvd. Newport at Harbor Costa Mesa (7 14) ~48-8428 ·-CARDS ACC =c-- Now on~ Waar in Nt!wport Beacb A tradition of a truly Florarbne cllUine eonlinlu:Jl 0 joseph n. bell In standard Hollywood hyper- bole, it declared that MKull• was MMesmerizing ... A New Leg- end,• uFun-Filled, • "Exciting, Fun and Sexy," and M Romance with the Hunkiest Barbarian since Conan." It was the publi- cations quoted tbat had caught my eye and brought me back. They were as creative -and phony -as the quotes attrib- uted to them: MEntertainment Asylwn", M16 Magazine", usF Vortex" and the "Burbank Times." Clearly someone connected with this movie perpetrated an expensive and elaborate inside joke, which is why I'm going to see UKull." It seems to me a good gamble that producers capable of this sort of irrever- ence would probably turn out a funny movie. If that seems like a stretch, blame it on my history. But while we're at it, here are some other suggestions from all those years of reviewing that might help you in deciding from ads whether or not to see a movie. In the blurbs that inevitably accompany such ads. you should look for two things: the quallty of the publication being quoted and whether or not the blurb is followed by a complete sen- $29500 complete Call Toll Free 888-271-4567 Don't Delay, Avoid Probate! David Pawlowski Attorney ac Law tence. U you see Radio Station KXYZ in Kankakee, DI. or The Sheep Breeder's Gazette or the Northern Arkan54S TV Network reviewers quoted, you can be very sure that the ad-writers were reaching a long, long way to find something good to say. And if the blurb isn't accompa- nied by a complete sentence, you can be reasonably sure it was ta.ken out of context. Nei- ther circumstance offers a very good promise of a quality prod- uct. When studio executives look at a finished movie and decide they have a dog, they are faced with the problem of getting as much of their money back as possible before you and I wise up. The best way to accomplish this is by a massive ad campaign immediately preceding a blanket release of the film. If it plays big e nough the first week or two before the word gets out, a large chunk of the cost can be recouped. So you should also be chary of movies that saturate your loca) theaters overnight or aren't made available for review until just before they are released. I don't know If they still do 1t, but studios used to romance the people who write about movies by taking us on frequently exotic location junkets. I doubt if this ever ch4nged any minds about the quallty of a movie, but the producers never gave up trytng. I was once nown to London with a group of media people tor exposure to a terribly expensive musical version of •Alice in Wonderland.• We were ente.r- tllined royally for several days, then on our last evening in Lon· don were shown the completed film. It was absolutely dreadful. The producers knew it, the pub· licity people knew it, and all of the invited guests knew it. The trip back was made in a kind of respectful silence, like a we,ke for the death of $50 million. And the film was thoroughly bombed, even by the radio station in Kankakee. If you want help in deciding which mo~es to see, your best bet is to find a reviewer whose tastes are sunilar to yours and go with his or her judgment. That will reqw.re you to screen a vari- ety of reviewers until you find the right one, but if you enjoy movies, it will be well worth the effort. Meanwhile. read the ads with a large grain of salt, more for entertainment than information. • JOSEPH N. BEll'S column runs ~ Wednesday. SINCE SABATINO'S 1864 Restaurant & Lido Shipyard Sausage Co. FLAVO.RFUL & DELICIOUS LUNCHF.S DINNER •SUNDAY BRUNCH ' Unique wine room & dining rooms availab~ for group business me~tings a11d private functions CATERING FOil ALL EVENTS Full gourmet Italian cooking iodudlD& Ml spedals and many homemade favorites Saturday, September 20, 1997 11 a.m. At Duffy Waterfront Headquarters ... CALL TO SIGN UP. .. Join us for an exciting "treasure" hunt and a great day on the Bay! Food and beverages catered by Blwwllln" Grill ... CONTINUED FROM 1 The process of approvtng. J1lAldDa and ~ the ~ 'llloukftab about lix :week:I, offi. dais said. ·0ur target ls to get them up befON the holiday seuon. • said )lUblic l8l'Vices directol Bill Mor- rill. The signs would be paid for by Caltran.s, which generally frowns qn using public money for signs advertising strictly commercial areas. . . But if a local government des- Jgnetes a ~ area as a desti- nation -such as historic down-l9wns, amusement parks or con- cert venues -Caltrans often puts up signs. • -The idea is that freeway signs cut down on traffic congestion by lbowing motorists the easiest and quickest way to get to their desti- nation. PLIGHT CONTINUED FROM 1 Now, nearly a year and a half since nacy's death, Karl Wolon- sky plops a thick file folder full of court documents onto the plush emerald green sofa in his immaculate living room. The comers of his blue eyes c.rinkle in bewilderment as he wonders why he was never notified that Pierce would be returning to court to have the resptution payments reduced. Since her death, Wolonsky says, he has spent at least $2,000 per month on child care and housekeeping costs - expenses he wouldn't have if he still had J:l.is wife. Anyone ordered to pay restitution, though, maintains the right to go to court to have those reduced at any time, court offi- cials say. •I testified before the court the first time, and that was real- ly hard,• he says. #But I Cost Effective LegalSo~· UliiiJ f!Pf tr'"' OCIRA UUMAllA '" clloln1S ........., • .._s......... 421,000 • (714) 760-8775. LEGAL -€>PTIC>N S A X CC?B.Nfi Y~ OJ bOW Paced with ftve optioDI tbat pNpOled clffment bo~ ... the new SoUth COUt Metio ~ the council cboee the ~ CllM -the area bOuDd by the SM Diego PreeWay and S4ll JOaquiD ~ toll nNld Oil the ICNlb; tM Costa Mesa Freeway and Main S~t on the eut, Suntlower Avenue and MacArthur BouJe. vard on the north and the Santa. Ana Rive,r on the west. Diane Pritchett, executive director of the South Cout Metro Alliance -a group of more than 50 area b\11.inesses and shopping centers -said the new signs would •maease the visibility and business opportunities" in the area. While the new freeway cgns appear to be on the way, what the signs will actually say -~d whether the words Costa Mesa will even appear on them -is still undecided. Councilman Joe Erickson orig- would've gone the second time if I had known.• Wolonsky also has filed a suit against the city of Newport Beach for wrongful death ~d dangerous conditions of public property. Taking care of his kids, how- ever, has remained his primary focus for the past year and a half. Just a week after 1\"acy's death, Wolonsky, an assistant dean at UCI's school of physical sciences, was back at work , and the kids were back in school. And now he has only one goal as he takes on-the single- dad rote: to live their lives as closely as possible to the way they'd be if Thacy were still alive. This past weekend, for instance, he shuttled his kids from Indian Guides to a Chuck E. Cheese birthday party to soc- cer practice to a preschool carni· val. Every morning before he goes to work, he takes the two youngest kids -Reed, 2, and Peyton, 4 -to preschool and the two oldest -Gregory, 7, ~Nidbe~-~ ~-............ ... ctfy'I ... &pllW9d ... With ~ COilt Metro. So, ID,~ tbe .. fnllD ~ tbi CD.iDdl .ad fOi •SOiilJi Caiit MebO; Ciliti Mela• to be Written on tbml. with .South Coast Metro· u ill lecond cbo6at Mcntt ia&d ceatrw nffk1t1t have~ that~ •South Cout Metro, Colta Mesa• on the small roadside l1gDI ""1114f be a probJem, so the dty't name may have to be dropped. Brickson said Tuesday that with or without the dty'I name, the signs would give Costa Mesa. businesses a financial shot in the arm. •There's no guarantee the name will be on. there, but even South Coast Metro on its own would go a long way toward help- ing the merchants in the area,• Erickson .said. and Karly, 10 -to Lincoln Ele· mentary School. When they return from school, their nanny is. there to greet them. "The kids have done remark- ably well,• he says. "Right after her death, they'd say things like, 'Oh, we won't get to car- pool anymore because Mom isn't here.' But I didn't want that, so we still carpool because Thacy carpooled.• Though remembering 1hlcy easily coaxes tears from Wolon- sky's eyes, he says he and his kids still talk about her openly to keep her memory alive. Pey- ton still wakes up in the middle of the night missing her mom. Reed still asks when his mommy is coming home. "I.hope this develops such character in them, going through this so young," Wolon- sky says. "I just want to make sure the oldest knows she can still be a kid and not a substitute mom. More than anything, every day, I just hope I'm doing the right things." GROUPS AND INOMDUAIB NEEDED! FREE REFRESHMENTS FOR VOLUNieeRSI RECYCLING INFORMATION! SHUTTtE SEAVICEJ EOUCATlONAL EXHIBmli WHmMs Cleanup Headquarters m1 Backbay t>nve Newport~. CA 92660 September 20, 1997 8:00 am to 1 :00 pm ~ation closes at 11 :30am The 1even ltl•ndl of Newport Beach. ISLAND j CONTINUED FROM 1 take a sampling of current resi- dents -Elsie Stater, ·as in Stater Bros. supermarkets; Fletcher Jones, as in Pletclmr Jones Motorcars; Don Bren, as in Irvine Co. president who's worth millions. The Irvine Co., in fact, was intimately involved in the isWld's growth from just anoth- er sand pit in the harbor to a haven for the rich and famous. During a 1935 dredging, some of the muck dug up from the"harbor noor was piled up to make what's now Unda Isle. as well as Balboa and Newport . KENN Y · PRINTER I ' • ' ~ No matter what you're doing. your hometown newspaper R1S IN ••• Daily Pik>t islands. At .fim called Shark Island. the barren. sandy spot gained popularity as a picnic place - and then gained fame as the filming location for "The Sands of Iwo J1ma," staning John Wayne. The city of Newport Beach annexed Shark Island in 1954, but it remained vacant until the early '60s, when The Irvine Co. stepped in to develop it. The company took over the 20-aae isWld and began an aggressive five-year lot-selling campaign. First, crews scooped out the western part of the island, giv- ing it its current horseshoe shape and creating 6,300 feet ol waterfront to sell. Then they set RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY ... ·-w.c:.-. .... 1'22 JIAllOl •VD .. COSTA MESA · 541-1156 ~~('~ Gr.dilllbtr, c.droo' ... Rli,dim Aalmldoa Clocb Sllee II Repiirl 3441 .C Via Lido • Ne.wport ~ (714) 723-2333 We Ship World-1de Mattress Outlet Sto BRAND NEW· COSMETJCALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less/ . S 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa • One 8lOck Soatll ol 405 Fwy ill 545-7168 a.side plenty of space for park- ing. Finally, the company changed its name from Shark Islond -probably not the most marketable moniker-to Un- da, after Myford Irvine's daugh- ter. Lots were sold out by the end of the decade. Now, Lind.a Isle homes' recent sale prices have listed at $1 .2 million to $3 million and sometimes sell for well more than that, Coldwell Banker rea.1- tor Susan Noonan says. And most Unda Isle residents will tell you the price is well worth it. As 12-year island resident Sandy Willford says, "When you come on the island, you feel like the island is yows." DONATI YOUR IOAT HIGH{ITT"" WllTt Off fOISUl( DOHTTHIOW 'IOOl "'10NN AWAY. NO~ su•o. STOW.( rm. YOU S(l!CTTHI OIAl/TYTO tlHUIT ~ YOUI c.IFT. YOUR f AVOW CtwlTY INC. 71U7HS8' ~......_.r ~ The Newport-Mesa Schools Foundation Is ptOlld to praent Saturday, September 20 · · 12:15 PM " EYf·ONNElf No. 1 Corona del Mar proves · itself with 10-8 vicU)ry QUOTE OF THE DAY # • Senior Nina Vaughan is the steadying force as Corona del Mar wins the war of rankings with victory at No. 2 Dana Hills. By Richard Dunn, Daio/ Pilot DANA POINT -Calm, cool and col- lected, senior leader Nina Vaughan of Orange County's top-ranked girls tennis team set the tempo on the court for Coro- na del Mar High and led the cheers from the sidelines. Vaughan's team.mates needed her soothing presence. "She was loose while the others were tight," said CdM Coach Tim Mang, whose squad (3-0) defeated No. 2-ranked . l·'~ ' II , ' ~.~~. ; --- - ---- .;:: /· ' \ ' ' ' .. . . Dana Hills in a nonleague match, 10-8, in an early-&e4SOn showdown between two of the county's top three programs. "I wish we could tC~! them again in a month," Daria Coach John Stephens said of the Sea Kings, who will notface the Dolphins (3-1) again this sea- son, after beating them for the second year in a row by the same score. Dana Hills is ranked No. 1 in CIF Southern Section Division n, the Sea Kings are ranked second in Division I behind Peninsula. And while most everyone was nervous or tight because of the much-ballyhooed one-versus-two clash, the veteran Vaughan was as steady as a tugboat. She was the only player to sweep all three sets. "We were really spirited in the car on the way down (to Dana Hills), and when COJtONA GIRLS we arrived in the parking lot, we came out screaming Sea Kings. We were really fired up," said Vaughan, the first to finish a third-round set, defeating Isis Jackson. 6-1, giving the two-time CIF individual semifinalist a voice to encourage the oth- er Sea Kings. The match was deadlocked (3-3) after one round, then tied again (6-6) after two rounds, though CdM held a 56-45 advan- tage in games. But it didn't have to come down to games. After Vaughan's win in the third round, sophomore southpaw Caylan Leslie finished smoking Summer Tantee, 6-2, to give CdM an 8-6 edge. 7w1Mwcoultli»all',,._ ..... a ........ • -JMNA HILLS G0tI.s TlJNNlS <X1ADI JOHN $l11lfll/N$ But Dana Hills tied it, 8-8, when two of its doubles teams won. Ruchika Budhraja and Cowtney Tenerelli, Cd.M's best team but playing third doubles in this one, clinched it-for the Sea Kings with a 6-3 win over Margaux Pierog and Brook Cal~ ton. The Sea Kings were seven games ahead with one set remaining, then NacJ.ia Vaughan's 6-4 victory over Amberly Tantee iced it. "Doubles won it for us today,• Nina Vaughan said. "All the games they got, they were awesome. They were beating people 6-2 and 6-3 and getting a lot of games for us.• It was believed throughout most of the match that the winner would be decided by games. "The doubles really came through, and Nina bad a great day,· Mang said. "I was sitting in the middle ot thele four courts because I knew it was going to be close the whole time and I wanted to watch those sets. I could leave Nina alone and try building confidence with the others." Tenerelli and Budhraja won two o1 three sets for CdM, but Dana Hills' dou- bles won five of the other six. In the second round, CdM's Robyn Coleman and Jenny Meyer, playing No. 2 doubles, pulled out a win over Lamen Richardson and Christi Manning, 1-5, to tie the match, 6-6. "I think the way Dana Hills has destroyed (its other three opponents) this year made everybody nervous,• Mang said. "And it's tough to play Dana Hills at Dana Hills." high school water polo HARBOR FA LSIN Fl E TO ILERS Huntington Beach captures volleyball thriller in five. • Wa~ ICOl'eS eight goals to pave the way for EagieS lD nonleape victory over the Ttllen. By Molly Yanity, Daily Pilot HUNTINGTON BEACH -All 12 eyes watched the serve drift bark, back, back . .. and land right on the baseline. All 12 eyes seemed to shut in an exasperated manner that sent their pony- tailed beads back and send a sigh of disbelief from six mouths. It wasn't the way it was sup- posed to ..end, but a five-set thriller concluded with an untouched ace from Huntington Beach's side that left the Newport Harbor Sailors devastated. "That's a tough way to end it," the Sailors' Coach Dan Glenn said. "You play all the way to the end and we didn't. It just fell." The 15-9, 14-16, 14-16, 15-7, 15-12 nailbiter lasted nearly four hours and witnessed stellar rallies for both sides before that final Oiler point. "We didn't pass very well. We scored points on runs," Glenn said. •we're just young and don't have a lot of varsity experience. We've got to play varsity ball and they have to learn to play at this level. It's not their fault, I have to teach them.• The Sailors came out fl.at in the opening set. Down 10-3 at one point, the squad seemed to be a step slow in getting to thundering kills from Lori Daedelow and Denee Ezerlns. But they woke up and put together two sets of incredible rallies. In the second, Huntington Beach's Coach Rocky Ciarelli received a yellow ca.rd (he would eventually draw a red one, too) and this seemed to light a fire under bit opponents. The Oilers could not convert three set points and Kathy Lavold neiled an ace to tie the score at 14·14. Ciarelli'• aew M8lMd to fall apart u the Tars came from behind for the 16- 1" winner. ~ Sophomores April Roa and Brenda Waterman; lgDtted by the l8IWI of junior Jennifer Carey, w.nt to Work Mn•nwtng out U ancl "~=•el)'. But tbe p ..... Would dOam .... Sdalw .. tbe'nat twO a-.;;: blue ad gray ooUkl not get • dlytbm gmng In the fOUitb -..n.stMtmm.tmtottielllt put ol tbe .. o.wn '~ °""*' 1"iint1D ..... lltbemtpe ... .... .......... to .. ... ....... ..,li*t ... 1'1tllll .... ",..'· •W.. 2" ... -=--~-= E ·-·· ., Moir~ Delly l'llot "I told the guys at half time that if (goalkeeper) Bryan (DeWUde) hadn't made two or three great -~. it would've been a lot tighter,• Carpenter said De'Wllde finished the game with 12 Mffl, but the defeme faltered a bit in the final period. With • ftve goal adVantage gOjDg iilto the lut quarter, the &,glel eDowed 1\Jltin to match their pamt total up to that~ "We J*.Y9d three ~ good ~. earpmter lakL ·BUt ftft go.la in the last quarter, tbat'I not pla~ good fourth quarter defense. They got some . kick outs and with om (lack of ) depth, that's a no-no.• Carpenter, who dresses just eight players, has one body on the bench at an times. Tu.stin'• Jonathan Smalley gave his squad a whole Jot of olfeme, u ~ sending seven goals to the canvas. ......... l!AMaA 14, l'Ul1W 10 l\.eldn 1 1 ) 5 -14 ~ ) 2 5 4 -10 l\lltlri sawing -Sma~ 7; Reyes. 2; lJinmlod. 1. Emndl KOf'lng -Wl)'l'Nn I; Hon, 3; Sentfwn. l . SIMIS -OeWllde, 12. • Costa Mesa front four doesn't win battles on paper, but on the field, these Mustangs are tough to beat and 39 more through the air. Kim alone was Involved In ft9e MCb (four tolo) to help C09Ch Jerry Howell's 9q\aad blank Saddle~ 32-0, Priday ldgbt ID the IMIOll ~for both lcbooll. HowWl .. 111111 ll tbe umqu. abemle eliCb bdng to tbt trmct.i.· W£DNESOAY, SEPTEMIER 17, 1997 BRAVE HEARTS <ton't b4ve to. He lines up at ~end (away from the tight eild) and can fust get by tbe t4ckle so quickly on the pass rush. And now, he can take on people when they try to run right at bim.• • Rudesill -The reigning PCL shot put champion (he was third in CIP Southern Section Division m last spring}, be inflates the average size with his athletic 6·2, 220-pound frame. Having sustained a season-ending broken leg in the sixth game of his junior season, this two-way starter is poised to make opponents pay for the duration of the 1997 campaign, which he hopes to help extend to 14 weeks. .. He has the overall athletic ability to go with that size. so he is someone who will get recruited (by colleges)," Howell explained. "He's cHtually gaming weight, and it's not rdt. He's very strong, especidlly in his legs." •Price -The 6-2, 190-pounder started four gdmes di end lrlst faU and sue di outs1de hnebacker, but tus quickness 1s b<•st deployed corrung out ol d stcmce A hurdler in the spnng (ht' f1111..,hc•d third tn ledqut' dt both hurdlt> dtstances). he 1s ctdept at 1>\plodtng from the "bloc. ks." hut dltgn<'d on the shong side (in front of the tight encl). he 1s al.so dskt•d to shed blorkN!-., or hold up thP tight SC HED U LE TODAY end. be!ont spri.oting for the quartetbaclt or ball ca.mer. "He baa good speed. but bi has to play ott more blOcken, because teams run more toward their strong side,• Howell Mid. •Another thing he has is experience, which ls invaluable. We stunt so much, our defensive is really a progressive scheme that forces our kids to adjust and utilize new techniques. I'd say on a scale of 10, this QJ'OUp is about at a seven or an eight, right now." • Norman -A late bloomer as a sophomore, this 5-9, 195-poWlder started two games at outside linebacker and one at comerback last fall. But Howell steered him toward the tackle spot this season, and he rewarded his coach's hunch by tearing up teammates m preseason drills. "He's a squatty body,• Howell said. ·He's very, very strong and his first two steps are very quick. He's quick enough to be a runrung back (he will play some fullback), so he's hard for offensive linemen to get in front of. "Both he and Rudesill get double-teamed a lot, so they don't ma.ke a huge nwnber of tackles But they free up our linebackers by occupying blockers and they give us a good push up lhe middle.• DEEP SEA • Volleyball Community college women Long Beach CC at Orange Coast, 7 pm •Water polo I •Soccer College women - The Master's College at Southern California TUESDAY'S COUNTS Davey's Lodcer -no report. Community college men Orange Coast at Palomar, 4 p.m. Community college women Orange Coast at Palomar, 3 p.m College, 7 pim. Community college women -Palomar at Orange Coast, 3 p.m. •Tennis High school girls - Orange at Costa Mesa, 3 p m . Newport Harbor at Sunny Hills, 3 p.m. Newport Landing • 4 boats, 54 anglers. 31 O yellowtall, 1 dorado, 2 skipjack, 5 barracuda, 27 bonito, 3 sculpin, 12 calko bass, 9 sand bass, SO mackerel. --· -· ~ailOrs faJI to WJlson, 13-61 . --•Wilson's depth too much in key CIF Div. I struggle between the two prep water polo powerhouses. B E L • MONT SHORB -Reigning CIP Southern Section Division I boys water polo cham· pion Long Beach Wilson began defense of its crown by handling visiting Newport Harbor, 13·6, Tuesday in the nonleague season opener for both schools at Bel- mont Plaza. Junior Kevin Becker ha.d a team-high three goals for the Sailors, who got 15 saves from All·CIP senior goalkeeper Jon Phanis. - Luke Alvarado, Gary Conwell and Jeff Leeper added single tal- lies for the Sailors, who travel to Coronado Saturday. LONG =\Co.. 13 NawcMrT HAMOR I Secwwby~ Newport Harbor 0 2 3 1 • 6 Long Beach Wilson 1 4 4 4 -13 Newport Harbor scoring -Bedcer 1, Alvardo 1, Conwell 1, Leeper 1. Saves -Pharris 15. Wilson scoring · Alcevedo 2, Garcia 2, Brown 5, Miiier 1, Nesmuth 1. Komardsky 2. Newport wins, 17-1 NEWPORT BEACH -Senior TINNtS Brooke Taylor yielded only four games in three singles set victo- ries and senior teammate Erica Nelson surrendered only· four to help host Newport Harbor earn a 17-1 nonleague girls tennis victo- ry over University Tuesday. Newport sophomore Chelsea Godbey t01 aided out the lbigMi rweep for tbe Sailon, c:omlng frcm bebirid to win bet ftnal Mt lD a tie-breaker. The Sallort evened their record at 1-1, wbile Uni fell to 0-3. Noni 3.. NIMGflf tt....1 , UW..a111v 1 Slngl..: Nelton (NH), def. Suh, 6-2. def. Aswad, 6-4>, def. Lev, 6-2; TIYlor (NH) won, 6-2, 6-0, &-0; Godbey (NH) won, 7-6, 6-1, 6-0. ~Adams-Case (NH) def. KJm.Ung, 6-3, def. Bennan-Karlml, 6-0 def.~,6-1;Collopy-' Palm (NH) won, 6-3, 6-4, 6-1; Barker· Schnelder (NH) lost, 0-6, won, 6-2, 6-3. Mesa improves to 2-0 c o s TA VOUBYBA,U. MESA , The Costa Mesa High girls volley· ball team has a new streak to talk about this seuon, improving to 2- 0 Tuesday with a 15-4, 15-6, 15-11 nonleague home victory over Santa Ana Valley. Senior Kelly Chapin pounded 13 kills and had six digs, while sophomore setter Daylan Kelley collected 31 assists and three digs. . Juni.or Evelyn Powers chipped m 10 kills and seven digs for first. year coach Yvette Ybarra's Mus- tangs, who ended a 26-match los- ing streak with their season- opening triumph last week. Pirates salvage tie COSTA MESA -0C Newport Harbor S C.ER High product Jesus Cortes drove home a goal with five minutes remaining Tuesday, lifting Orange Coast College into a 1-1 tie with visiting Long Beach City College in a nonconterence men's soccer match. Cortes' game-tying shot came oft a aoablg ~ from Colta MeA Higb prOdu.ct ~uan Escobar ii) front of the Loilg Beach goal. The· Pirates trailed 1-0 throughout the second half after Walter Buckeridge scored for Long Beach ju.st seconds before halftime. Ryan Arechederra (four ~aves) and Carlos Loza (two saves) shared goalie duties Orange Coast is now 0-2-3, Long Beach is 5-1-1. Tars lose out, 1-0 HUNT-1111t D HOCKIY INGTON BEACH -A controversial call denied the Newport Harbor High field hockey team a tying goal in Tuesday's 1·0 loss at Marina. Newport Coach Sharon Wolfe, however, ~d the Sailors estab- lished they could play with any- one by battling the VLkings virtu- ally even in their season opener. Entering the game without wanning up, after their bus arrived late. the Sailors watched Marina's Emily Freberick put the VLkings ahead early in the con- test. Kyle McNichols appeared to tie th~ game up by converting a penalty comer later in the first half, but one official disallowed the goal. Wolfe said the official later conferred with his colleague, who said the goal should have stood. but the earlier decision stood. The Sailors misfired on a penalty stroke in the second half. The Newport junior varsity won, 2-0, behind ~oals from Kim Erickson and Jennifer Porter and assists by Paige Thompson and Maggie Mullen. -occ women ran ... ""t LOS ANGBLES - The Orange Coast , College women's goU team; opened Its second season with a 348-382 nonconference loss to: host Mt. San Antonio College: Monday at Royal Vista Golf· Course. Sophomores Natalie Cohen: and Yoko Homura finished third: and fourth overall. reu>ectively, carding scores of 84 ancf94. Other OCC scorers included: Ann Kim (100), Heather O'Dar-· row (104), and Leslie Swanberg (109). CdM falls in five HUNTING-V-BAll TON BEACH - The Corona del Mar High girls' volleyball team squandered two match points in the deciding game to drop an 11-15, 15-5, 5-151 15-2, 17-15 nonleague season- opening match at Ocean View High Tuesday. Seniors Jordana Havriluk, Sarah Petry, Corre Myer and Audra Anbood typified the Sea Kings' strong effort. according to Coach Steve Conti, who said his squad recovered from a tentative fourth game to e arn filth-game leads of 14-13 and 15-14. HIGH SOtOOl GllU.S ~ Oil. MAii 10. DANA HllU.s I Slngi..: NJ. Veuohan (CdM) def. S. Tante4!, 6-l, def. A. Tantee, 6-3, def. Jc'ICkson, 6-1; Leille (CdM) won, 6-2 lost, 6-7 (3-7), won, 6-2; Na. Vaughan (CdM) lost. 4-6, won,~. 6-1 . Doublet: Charney-Martinez (CdM) lost to Tranldno-Room, o-6, lost to Piefog-Calton, Hi, lost to Rktlard1on-Mannjng. 1-6; Meyer·Coleman (CdM) lost. 3-6, .t-6, won, 7-5; Budhra}&-Tenerelli (CdM) lost. 4-6 won 6-3,6-3. • . . . ~ , .... · ... '.'-• MC*'ICVl9W ..._AL.MM ='1~ Sell your extra household Items In CLASSIFIED STARTING ANEW 1JUSINESS?? Rates and deadUnes art> subjt>ct to change • without notice. Tht publisht>r ttserves the right to <-en110r, reclassify, revise or reject Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm ~ any "la silied advt>rtistment. PleaSf report any error that may be in your classified ad immediately. The Daily Pilot acceets no liability Cor any t'rror in an 11dvert1sement (or whi"h it may be rt ponsible except for the cost o( tht-sparf' a1·tually 0<·rupied by the error. Credit can only he allowed for the first insertion. ByFax {714) 631-6594 (Pkllllf' inc·fudr your nanw aud phonr uumbtr aiid •r11 c-aU yuu bark •itb 1 prkt qunct.) llyPlaone {7 14) 642-5678 By MaMn Pen8m 330 West Bf!y Street Costa Mesa. CA 92627 At r\1 .... -pon Bhd 6c &y SI Hours Tt'lephone 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-F n<Liv Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm Mm 1dlty-F nday Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm Thursday ....... Wednesday 5:00pm Friday ............... Thursday 5:00pm Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm ... -. "°"""° Q''OllTUWI" .. Al ......... IMl1lslllt ..... ................. Fff. 1111 M ...... Act .. ttll 11 ................... .., ............ ..., ,........«. ........... If '1tcrlla1HllH ...... ""' c9er. ttfltlH. ........................ ......................... .................. 111111· ........ ,,I ..... " hli....,...., will ••I ......... ac..-.. -.u ... ................. , ... ~tf 11111• 0.11Netr ..... ., .......... 11 '""""' Mftftlllff ltl 11111 .................... ....... # ......... c-. ..... .,....,, lulr.ClllNUO ......... , ••• 424-1511. Ftr ... ¥111'1 ••• 'oc ... ,.. ... Clll MW .. 4Jl.)Sll. II 1002-1621 II -- •. 2102-2744 ~·- •... ,. . ' • ,. -4 --.... 1. 6010-6080 6014 IRVINE 1044 CORONA BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DEL MAR 2122 MISCELIANEOUS OPPORTUNITY 2920 5530 5530 SERVICES 5533li0iii1"iii1"iii9iiiRiiimiiiiiiiTiiiaiiib1iii•iiiwiii16 FURNITURE MbODEbL PERFEhCT liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim RENTALS 2904 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil $1000,8 POSSIBLE. chairs & Hutch. While 4 r, 4 a Htate ome, EXEC TWNHSa I••••••••• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Counter Help Office Administrator READINQ BOOKS. washed Fr• n ch· luxurlou1 mstr 1ulte 1900 f 2Bd/2 5B PT for beauty supply. Co 1 675 7121 w/retreat. gourmet F •· · 2 · a EARTHWORMS S Experience a plus. New York Stock Part·tlme. At home. un ry • kl h t I di I am rm, -car gar, Growers want• d VOLUNTEER Exchange firm seeks Toll frff Make us an otferl tc en. rm n ng, $1950/ 87a.a045 ROOMS 2706 (salary + commision) b d id al family entertainment mo. $1000 a day possible. N*E*E*D*E*D Maaaane Therapist respons1 le in iv u 1·800-218·9000 Mauve "Leather Fae· '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (818) 38 .. ft202 • lor admin1strallve & .. Ott L h d rm, 2 tp, dHlgner cpt 11 ....., FT or PT. Rental. Ext. R·5138 tory 1 . ·S ape • customer service t' 1 la I ory & tile, gated com· COSTA •in:r11 2124 E'elde CM 1BD with - -Manicurist for 111t1ngs. sec 1ona so •. " ~ duties. Excellent di · •-bt /le f & 6 munlty. New· never 1hared bath. Sep en-AMERICAN CANCER Faclallat CAL•SCAN ning..,. e w a lived In w/10% dn, trance. No kitchen, Rental. FT or PT. communication skills ---------black swivel chairs w/ owe no qualltylng 3bd 1ba 1-cargar. w/d aCCHI. No dogs. s~c:!~TY Wllh cllenlele. required. Must be ·POSTAL JOBS· arms. lvury lacquer 8.5% APR. Can clos Lrg yard. $1100/mo. 1280/mo. 258-0447. Halratyllsta personable. a sell· S1artlng at $13.68 +/ coffee table & sofa ••crow In 2 wka. 1850 Monrovl• DISCOVERY C 1 1 / 1 starter. well organized hr. +benefits. Clerks, table, 25sony console S•o",""50, Agent, Or For Sale 1170,000. Gated CM pvt rm/ba. SHOPS omCmllsLa 0 1.n re1.nta & accurate. Address Carrlera, Sortera. color remote TV • "71'4i 3 48-8083 Bkr 873-e942 Private life. Pool, w/d. .Corona del Mar-;1 :195e~ •:_:58 resume to PO Box 41 , Computer operators. 19SOny color remote Live w/Sr. & cats. PtsCall 040-4777 • Corona Del Mar For exam and TV,13Panasonlccolor 3bd 1 b• W'slde. Lrg S500+Hc. 646·8473 ---------•Count•l'·Barlata· CA 92625·0041. EOE. applicatlon lnlo call remote TV. White 8 IAGUNA yard. garage. Avail Caahler. ~M & PM ---------1 ·8 0 0 ·9 5 5 ·9 1 9 5 drawer dresser & 10-1. S1050+aecurlty. Newport Beach Espresso Bar Inside ---------.1 ext. 581 (BAM • 9PM) white HI Boy. Gray BEACH 10481 __ 7_1_4_'7_5_2_·2_8_8_1_ Oceanfront & 22nd St. LOST & the Huntington Beach 7 days CAL"SCAN ottlce desk, credenza. i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii E'alde Townhome Private room unfurn. cent r a 1 L ,. bra r y . PART• TIME JOB & tt· hal ld FOUND 2925 ATTENTION etc o ice c rs. Oc••NVIEW 2BR 2BA 3bd, 2.5ba pvt yard, •hare bath. Utl pa · 714-573·8183 Telemarketing DH 8 Id · bl k -llv rm w/tp, ••P tam No 1moklng preferred. •Morning Hours T Y P I S T S /P C · · a win ac Fireplace, 2-car gar, Kitchenette In room. Cro)Nn Ace •No Experian~ USERS • Ste ad Y lacquer petite grand Under $310,000. By rm. big master, La d 1 bl k 1 ----------4Found 8/9 2 dogs Hardware work . Full·llme/ piano (autographed Owner (714) 499·1157 vacant. Freah & cleanl un ry. Pl oc,490o near Del Mar & New· In CdM hae lmmed. •Young, energetic ofc Part-time s4s,ooo per by Richard Carpenlor) Assoc. pool, apa & Newport er. . CReDIT 2907 rt Bl d I CM Red i f t' •Costa Mesa 714/673-4490 tennis $1500/mo Call Sam 8am-6pm al .1; po v · n · 1 open ngs or mo 1• Call Cooper year earnings poten·1 ________ _ NeWPORT 714i433-9528 . 875-4808 Cocker & Med um vated cashiers. FT/PT. (714)722·0119 tlal. Call toll free Mirror, desk. armolre . .1; AV D Black tong haired Bane pkg. Call Mark 1 ·8 o o ·8 3 3 .o e 1 9 coffee tbl, bookca.se, BEACH 10691---------•·--------BAN~tPTCY dog. Now al Hu11tlng· 673·2800 or visit store ---------ext. T·400 CAL•SCAN 2 dressers. All wood.• NEWPO~T RENTALS TO Debt Con1olldallon. ton Beach Humane 3107 E.PCH 0 Jasmine Phone Operators S75·S300 759·1386 • 2 Luxury Bdma, 2-car BEACH 2169 SHARE 2724 Stop collection calls. Society. Crystal Cove Shake To $15/hr Plaid Futon Large ••••••••II gar, cntrl air, marbl•,1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cul monthly payments FOUND Diamond ring Shack Deli/counter Part or Full EMPLOYMENT Heavy Duty, used only HOUSES/ S182,990 C·21 JR11 to 50%. Eliminate In Coronn del Mar. help. FT/PT. Call 1·800·7US·8230 WANTED 5535 twice $275 673-4505 Gibson 714-547-6221 819 Canwon Twnhm Beautltul Beachfront 11 nan c e ch a r g es. Mall description to 11 :30am·3pm 497-9666 ---------1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CONDOS 3Bd Condo tor L ... e t t h b t.rraln Plu .... blnn Co. looking Roll Top Deak. 4 pc. HOUSE·SITTER · . ap o 1 r, au Fast approval! p · O · Box 1S6 O DETECTIVE-PRIVATE for.,p.erso•n to help out Swedish Nurse's Teak Wood. Small Ford Ad, Golt course prkg, gated, w/d, lrg 1 ... 00 270 98 .. 4 c t M4sa 92627 I w ·11 · FOR SALE R.E. Broker wlll Sell & & -• • • os a • Invest gator. 1 train. in office. Ollica duties: Aide Dependable. Maple Cedar Lined Bab It V t View, pool, prtlg, llvlng rm, full kit, pvt CAL"SCAN c/o Lorraine Good wages. E a 1 $\SO Y·• your acan tennis. $2000. LH ba, fully tum, expect-----........ ---Dispatching and good cook. rrands. ~rmo re. .ea Home. 8SO-OlOO 714-640-5274 bd, S750.+S750 dep. DEBT Found. Glasses. 7 14-23946 41 scheduling. PT/FT tO yrs. exper. Local 714·72\-0048 0 -n Sa•-un 1·5 Avl 1" 1 873·7669 CONSOLIDATIONS tinted perscrlptio{l DRIVER... 714-646·3298 relerences. 646-3735. -.,_ Lido Isle Home 4 + 3 .. ___ v-______ c t thl t 2827 Atta Vl.sta •• u mon y paymen s g I a SI•• In ca s •· EX p ER I E N C E D ---------1 ME CHANDISE New crpt. So. patio. H B Near beach t ""50., Reduce D ---------R Park-front. Prin only. • • · up o ~ '"'· Vic of Bay St In CM. OTR Company rfv. Aeent Ua.3934 i 29oomo. Yrly. Bill 2bd, 2.Sba condo. Interest. Stop collec· 574-1825 or 760-1701 ers & owner Operator DOMESTICS 5540 MISC. 6015 GENERAL 1002 :a MAGIC WORD• -oa:-N SUN 1 -Grundy Rltr 675-0181 Pool. Jacuzzi, dog. tlon calls. Avoid bank· Ask for Sunny. Guaranteed 10k mllesl Roger's Gardena eully Mil your home r• -Lovely 2bd 2b• $600/mo. + 1/2 utl. r up t c y FAE E1___________ Great benellts & Is now hiring for almo1t over night. THI! BLUFl'S upper unit In gated Call Sunn 9fJ0.5610. confidential help Found: MB Key w/ morel Call Dal at upcoming holiday ' New. proven, ••II-it-3Bdrm 2.5bath, FamUy comm. Deck, pool. NB 1Room w/bath, gar, NCCS non-profit, unique key ring. 9/15 Weatway Expr••• season. Cashiers. yo ur1ell method, room, Bay view. Juat spa. 12100/mo . w/d, ahar• w/ 3 nl• llcen1ed/bonded. Orange Ave/22nd St. 1·800·321·9734 gilt sales. carryouts, guaranteH quick 1ale. Reduced! Must Sell! unfurn. $2600 tum. 1-800·855-0412 CM. Call to Identity www.wwexpress.com security guard and , Attracts buyer1 like a Haetlnge 6 Co. Bkr 721·1575 prof. 1 Block to beach (TPP) CAL•SCAN (714) 645·5769. CAL•SCAN gilt wrappers. PT & , at••l·magnet. Work• 714-840-5580 14715 114 Utt. 831-3°73 FT available. Please ' any w her• • 1---------1 ••OCEAN W lmmac NB Shr Lrg 4br Hae In DEBT 0 Kitten 8 wks. old, DRIVERS... fax r as um e to • •-48r 2.5 Ba 3-Car Oar. "' CONSOLIDATI N. adorable & black. I'm LOOKINQ FOR a . Foar••3d9•at•3ll•a· 00 a.va• New erpt/roof. $3900. ...over Shore1. Jae, fp, Cut payments to 50%. very ahy until I get to new career palh? (714)640·7528 or 1... • • 9ftia Sii.i t•"" k Mo.1884 w/d, 1490. + depo11t. R d ce r eliminate rl 1 apply In person at Dog Walker, need someone to walk your dog? Morgan •714-842-85'33• NANNY Needed PT MWF In my home, exp nee. Some Engl... Own tran1. SIS/Hr 618'<>518 CAL•SCAN .V9' 'WVV Bro er Avl. 10/1 842~86 e u o know you. II you have Want to haul mate as 2301 San Joaquin - Waterfront Home lnterHt. Same day •P· a good home tor me that are more menlatly Hills Road. CdM. •RN M •NT 2·Sty, 3br 2.5ba, dbl Need• Roomm•t•T proval. N on-profit, pleaM call 759-1238 challenglng and get MERCHANDISE ' R l!·C L 0 Sa D Call lh• Dally Piiot Credlt9aurd of paid appropriately? '"--------JI OM.. nl gar. Custom patio. •-I • H pen H on $3500. l.H. Owner/Agt Clu11ned department 1 .a00::~:4i388 LOST Eyegl111e1 Team avg. s.44/Solo SalH & Secretarlal th• 11. Repo's, VA. 5f2·943·2860 and take advanlage of CAL •SCAN On Ocean Blvd. In avg. S.39. Take tr~ck Profl/heallh oriented. HUD, SherlN .. 1 ... No our one w"k 1pecla111 _________ 1 COM. 720-9488 home for earned lime Computer literate. Call -ANTI--Q-UE-S--6-0-1-0 , money dOwn govern-714442·5878 ott. Full medi.cal and lor appt: 722-6466 & ment toan1 available 8lllboa Newport MONEY LOST: 9wk old Boxer retlremenl. Mtfl. 1-yr. F8J< resume: 722•7460 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii now. Local ll1tlnga. Aelllty, Inc. APARTMENTS type puppy. Lt brown OTA, 22 yrs. old and -----~.,,---I Tolltr.. R•NTALS FORRENT llW!NTA,U TOLOAN 2914 w/Whtmarklngs.Goes COL w /HazMat . ~TEACHERS<:::' _______ .,. 1..aoo.M9-2292 .ANTBb 2726 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil by "Paxton". In the vi· 800-289-6768 7 days-NEEDED! Toddlers & s:g:r.s W) Ext. H-4000 Cotti -cinlty of WHtsld• CM. week/24 hours~ay Preschool 955·2672 -----.CA~L-·_s_CAN-:--11 ............. •tooo Al'™i REWARDll 548-3975 EOE. CAL ·SCAN <::'TUTOR TIME<::' Inventory •aowout -., ..... •t.oo Hou•• OR APT HOMIXJWNDS FRIENDLY TOYS & Bulk purchated In-_., CORONA 28R Nl!•DEDJI BorrowSlSK.$lOO QIFTS --------1 come propertle• from ltwwt lllcb DEL MAR 2622 In Corona del Mar Too=BilW hat Immediate open· EMPLOYMENT $14.500. Ol1cowr the Wllller&,..., or &..gun• •••oh ·-off . iataat PERSONALS lngs In your area. seDVJCES 5533 ~st boom matket C•thy eee-ee:aa • ., aedil Catds Number one In party &0-" 1n-nl1toryl Call with ........_ •Vlffltll •••utftul Sunny 1br, 2 Reepon•lbl• UCI atu-•Ho.elm~u plan: Toys. gifts, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil need11-eoo-322·2001. 7t4-723 4494 patios, AC.~ no dent looking for NB/ •Applrby~4bt Chrlltmu. home ~~kra7ee-se';; Penlnaula room/1hare. • Nos:~~ PERSONALS 3002 decor. Free catalog Pay up to $300/mo. -.-1 -and Information. •rlo 714-223-0101 Call Pleda.. Call 1·8<>0-488-4875 1125 COSTA MESA 2824 (toO)Sll-S FIND ANYONE, CAL"SCAN 0,C..70.,. ANYWHl!RI!. Flnd 1---------I••······· family members, long IDAHO NATIONAL aw 1ba Remodeled. BUSINESS • loll friends, adoplHS, SOLD! ACREAGE .. ------ •ASSEMBLE• PRODUCTS, CRAFTS al home. Earn SSOO • Sl,000 monthly. Legitimate Companlesl 100~ work guaranteed. No selllng required. Call Invite over 40,000 people to read about your home tot ..,. each Saturday by al'lowcaalng your property In th• Homea o( th• WHk a Open Hom• Oulde. Th• bHt local Real Ettat• Section •roundf Reach th• beat qualified hom•bUV-era on lhe coaatl Cd your Adv.nlltng Aepr eeentatlv• TOdayll Ae• sbOUt our cuwent 8'>ectal•I P09'•ST •1RS• 20 upper, crpn. nr OCC birth parent•. and AcrH • 129,000. S775.+S300.d9P. No PINANCE MORTGAGES t dHdbaat debtors. l"ventory Reduction peta. 114-Zit1..ea501••••••••• T.D.'S 2918 FJat. low coat. Good jobs reliable services Interesting things to buy now 1-613·450,...00S •--------alCt. 3 (fH) CAL •SCAN u..c ....... 11""4149 &. ..... ..,.,. 17""4191 •1tt1 te.e Oare Sale requires mott• •'elde 1.15BD LOft In Ouaranteed. Inter· ,aagee to llquld•t• home. Bath, kitchen•---... -..,-.,-----e1ted? Free Call: valuable acreage 315 W/O acceH. No dog•. BUS1n~S 1 ·8 o o -4 e 7 .o 9 4 7 mites north of McCall NSO/mo. 258-0447. OPPORTUNITY (24 hra) CAL•SCAN Idaho. Lush Alfalfa a•et• 2bd 1ba apt. 2904 flelds. perfect lor Xlnt coocl new crpt horae• and ealtla. paint, ~~atlo, gar:l•••••••iilii New road acce11. lndty. mo.+ dep. ... ..... undergl'OUnd uttutlee. ...._1709• Pteaae be wary of out aurveyed. Direct of area compenl". deeded acceu. N•1---------Cheek With th• ioc.I Uonal 'oreet, Uttl• llVtCTJNGTON lh tt • r 8 us In•• s !!!."'..:".:JV~ :: IUCB 2140 Bureau before you ---~ ...... ~--..-· ~ ....... ~-~I Nnd any money tor oome beale. I'! ..._ ..,..._ ~ available. Cal 1br. o .. h end~ -'Y 1 .. 0 0 .a e 1 .0 I I I o.U•, 9eted oontrac:ta befot9 you e' a t 1 4 o • • X Q a1n. (lncld ..., •. lhop lltound tor ~· CAL-.c:AH .,, ..... 1111 ,._ -·-··· 'Pie••• be aware that the ll1tlng1 In thll cat· egory may require you to call a 900 number In which lh9re 11 a charge per minute. Top Dollar Paldl From 1600·1980. 1 pc to entire eatate. Painting•. china, g11ware. tum, etc. 40Yr Nl!I Res 873-45223 I MADE $5500 In one week, I'll show you how . home based, not MLM. Turnkey. no competl· tlon. Call lor lnlervlew Information 1 ·8 0 0 .3 3 1 ·2 0 9 2 CAL•SCAN z ptug lnlo the Cllsslfied sect.Ion to find SllMces from ellctl1clans and plUmbers to ..... 'lllil*rs. .. 0111r11d,... .., lolOn l11g1ed!M 11 .... Oitlilna' .J:,y ... --13~Turnel' 64~ MF.,. -~== folow9dlhe NIN 87 Churdl ofllciaJ 68~ DOWN 1 Sentry'• order 2 Buffalo •• lalte 3 Uketome concfiment• 4 Profbble 5= brlcQ 6 Cllmblng plant 7 Cinema canine 8 Blemlah 9 -banane 10 Instant. 11 Loose robes 12 Not as much 13 Utt1e kid 21 Designer St Laurent 22 Plane 24 Enthusiasm 25 Meklcan friend t 17.f7 26 Aromatic wood 27 Teke a lip 28 Pool membef 29 MaJcet beer 30 Epic by Homer 31 Medical WOltler 32 Avanc. 35 Blvd. 38 FOftlldl 41 Intellectual 43 Sect « Reporters' boueS 46 Battery size 46 Cruet hotder 51 'MelrOM Pleoe• role 52 Medley 53 Ice-cream holdef 54 Celt 55 PoaWr!Of 56·-~· time 57 Curved 58= 59 Aerie 61 Thegitl .,,.--+-~t--t---1 Neither wtniftble. 9out.h ..... WS8T •JI NOllTB •All OA'll OSJl71 •41 QK 10981 OAl6 •Kl6 80trnl •KQI QQJI O JOit •AQJS The bidding: 80l1111 WEST NOR'nl EA8T •• 10 20 p- 2NT • .... SHI' p- p-.... Opening lead~Ten ofQ More than 30 yean' ago, par con· teeta were very popular, and until 1969 t.hey were an integral part o( lntercollegiat.e competition. Some consisted of eaoteric hands, bul Lar· ry Roeler of New Jeney compoeed many t.bat were detlgned for tho thoughtful player both on offense and derense. Here is an uample. Aller bidding \he hand them· eelvea, the playen were given the ....... •cir .... -· eutoo .,._~ NC. ..... Aed, 1 pow.,, """"· .... Of!NfW, ...... 10tc, ... ~;::;;;::::::~g:=::;::f•Tj .... Sti7i211;";i~~:i1iii1;"1l·r·: sa ..... "'2)437-7111 ~ 'Ii a..u:ik¥1iiU A CUDOLBT 9045 ·~~.:._. con~c .': ==~:'.'"~:d•CM~'. VOJ.IS\UGIN 9215 &ope. Muet •••I dual air bagt, ec.liiiiil••••••• •• OOlllWI •• 114,eoo. t4e-2002• MIS. teOOO. 7~t 14 '87 W GU Red, 1 •bon aucliOD and 8oulll WH Removable Hard-Top/ Iii SOOSD[ TutbO. ownw, 4-dr, Ille, amlfm dinded to....,_~ oe lnamp Conv/Ro•dtter Low drk blue. 65k ml. Orig RENAUtT 9180 CAN, eunrt, iclnt cond. wit.la lh9 IMd Cllthe t. OfMarta. MllH • 1 Owner owner, b••utffull 14850. 650-7301 'hJ it tor~ beb'e nlld1nc ,acto)\ Man'*8 lnold 117,500. 675·93&4. ,83 Renault Le Car '88 VW P'OX 40r, on. <:;iLO a Off TLCc;:i '87 880 SEL 1-0wnor Excellent condition. Redlo catt .. original 8uppoH JOU d1ldl &he 8n& trick MINT COND '20,000. Xlnt condl Gold/Palo 11~00/obo. eso-e2e2 owner. Great condl Jn dumm7, wlD la baiad Wit.la the 90g..927.333e 112,000 ml. $12.500 uk for D~an $3,000. 714·731·6990 Jack and l'UD tM tea fl cHa.onda. OBO {714) 673·8948 '82 C:•8RIOLllT Wht> 1b.t I~ to tlM queen.• heart ii FOID 9075 Wht w/ boot. AJC. returned and dumm.1'• ace af'heuta •--------•SUBARU 9200 alarm, pwr windows, ii fcm:ed out. When West pl11111 the liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NISSAN 9150 · 49k ml. Grg pamper•d lead with the llCe ol diamoodlt, t.he '97 TAURUS QL '83 QL Wagon White. $8499 ObO. 462-0757 d fi ... _ -n~ th ,,. __ ~ tri ,,._ AJC. All Power. Rune '"'ood reliable tran1· e en<n::l'W ......_., ree ~ c,,.. Great! $17~. OBO '88 300ZX T·Top, "' I ,.,_... Cl •---------and lwo diamoOO. to inllld •one-714-548-3794 GrHt runner, new por1at 00· """""' con · MISC AUTO 9245 trick eel. paint, auto. Too much $800 873·2741 l'iiiiiiii• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $int.e.. West'• Ofttt&ll cutb tha1 to 11111 Must 1oel --------1• defender with al Jeaet be beuU to BOND.A 9085 Bought another car. TOYOTA 9210 au Y c AR S F o R the kin1, let'• i,2u ~· lhal you $3500.obo 540.3933 S1odlll Seized and 1old locally lhl1 allow the t.en to the flnt trick! • 8 7 Ao o o rd '89 300ZX Red on '88 Land Crulaer. month. Spor11, 4x4'a. No •witch help•~ to JOU win the Hatohbaok LXI. black. Au1p. Can. AC, Loadedl ac, auto, 60K Motorcycles, RV'1, heart continuation in hand and nm Orig owner, at, ac, all pwr, alarm, T·lop. orig miles, one owner. Boats, Compu1er1 and the len of diamond•. When Eatt S4150.obo 717.7777 107k ml. Mull seel $14,995. 714·788·1029 more. Call toll free wine the qu-n that clelender ii out $5500. 310.45().4383. 1 ·8 o o .5 2 2 ·2 7 3 o -.. '90 Honda Acoord ofheana, and the best defeue ii to e><t.2405 CAL·SCAN LX Great condition. ---------1 No room left shif\ to a dub. RiN with the aee of mutt Hll. SG,900 OLDSMOBILE 9155 SEIZED CARS from clubs, force oul the ace of' diamond.I • 631-8433 • In the garage $178. P orachH, and you are home with three spade •84 Honda Civic DX tor the car? Cadlll•Oll• Chevys, tricks, two heart.I, three diamond.a '92 Old• Achieve SC BMW's, Corvettes. d d b Low low miles, Full power, auto, mlntl Also Jeeps. 4W0'1. an 8 u · Ilk• new S10,.500 s 1500 under blue A call to Your Area. Toll Free •631-8433 • boolc. low mlles claHlfledcan 1-800·218·9000 ext. Leern to be a better bridse 56985 646-1505 help A·1398 lor cun9f'lt llstJng1 player! Subecrlbe now to the HYUNDAI 90901.r::=======:.._ __ -=.:.::..:.!:... Goren Bridce Letter b7 calllns (800) 788-1226 for lnlormatlon. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Or write to: Goren Bridse Let. ter, P.O. Bo1l 4"10, ChJeaeo. m 60680. '89 Hundal Sonata GLS 4dr, power, AJC, Real Clean 52985 •723·1504• •------------~-----•JAGUAR 9105 PETS & ANIMALS PIANOS & 6049 ORGANS MARINE SLIPS 6059 DOCKS 7022 0 C I C AT S Babv Grand Plano 45' MOORINQ & 21 • Kitten• Sliver 1pot· Hl·Glosa Black. Uke Sailboat By Pavilion led. CFA shots. $500· Newll 714·527-0900 $10,500. 714·675·1670 S600 1·909·628-4032 YAMAHA Lido lale PY1 Dock, up '89 XJS 12·cyl. Rouge Collection . Moat Elogent Car Evor. Red w/Blscult Lthr, piped In Red. Llko new. Xtra lo ml, sunroof, PP 2nd owner $19,500.(FIRM) COM 714·721-0189 OC BIRD FAIR Ebonv Spinet Flawlo11 condlllon. $2300 645·7491 to 6511, water/eloctrlc.1--------- Very secure. 673·7677 IANDROVER Sun Sepl 21, 9-5 at Newport B•Y 9113 tho OC Fairgrounds. 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I( your car does not sell we'll run it MERCHANDISE COMPUTERS 6018 OFFICE ~;~10;~e~~~1 &gu~~? ~1:1~11;:1 ec~~~74~~ ~ohaodW.d~·~·uRA~~i MISC. 6015 FURNITURE&. speakers & great Hln#CTYP0132B688.I•••••••-(3NOP925) iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Wlnbook Lap Top EQUIPMENT 6047 door prlzesl For Info • 6 5 3 6 · c Hr Is AUTOMOBILES LAND ROVER WOLFF TANNING Computer & H/P Color call 714/648·0642 CF 8 6 3 8 CC MISSION VIEJO BEDS TAN AT printer w/ carry case Hln#CXD360084H. ·101••••••••• 714-385·8750 • S990 obo 875·7239 Complete ••t·up HOME. Buy direct 2 de1k1. 2 computer Shltir:au 14 wks old. 35' Columbia CF· and SAVEi Com· atatlon1 2 typing/ Gorgeous lrl-color glrl. 3641ET Hln#283. . •---------1--------- morclal/Home units WANTED printing ~lands. 5300_ Housebroken, very --------BUICK 9035 UNCOLN 9120 lro m s199.oo. Low TO BUY 6019 714/722·1817 affectionate. Paid POWER BOATS liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii monthly payments. 5650. Sacrifice $499. '84 Skylark,4·Dr 'BS CONTINENTAL Froe color catalog. 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W/Trailor.•------------------ Overstocked wilh $11.500 Call after 4pm CADILLAC 9040 MAZDA 9125 Slutf'i SELL 2yr female Tabby, (760) 324 0775 A call to shy, friendly. 854-3246 * Roland PC·200 __ ......_....__·___ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii C · Wh th · b I MKll Keyboard •'78 Seville Claa•lc '88 Mair:da MX 8 lassiffed e or you re uy ng o on tr o 11 er 11 k • V 8 I h 2d 5 o 111 Cl Ill d · , auto. eat or. r, speed, power will hel~ r ao ng, 811 • newll S100.00 70k I I I S Co all e Cl l m .. pwr w ndows 1 t e • r n g 2 9 2 5 642·56 8 vers your n e s Mike 723-4015 $2300/obo 719-0518 * 723·1504 •'J -------- We repair eyeglaH•• 20 Year• In ,.v. Ja Jewelry ..... ,,oa ----- for another week FR~EI ~I for $1 o• Pete,. fl•lntl"9 20 y..,. !lcJ*'lenc• Fr•• l!tllmat" lnteflor• and Exterl04'1 l.ip ,,...,,,. V.dil Card O K ~ DAM X • bop-- Mail lo DotolY N.OI X10 W eo,-. C--CA n611 "'"""""" <> """171'1IJ1-4#4 ~,_,,,°'64 ""-°""*~ ... _____ ..,,,,.__...__ o•r.-.. o-.-a .. ..., O "f 0 -0--a--o-o -c:o... 0 4.,.J 0-0 -... 0 1.-J o--o--g:..C.: g=.,'-' g::.,-:e_ a~-o.._...-o-.-- • 110 /o; ' ht, I 1.00 eodi acltllliotoal h • I I • • • ·-·-·······-··------·····--· 3910 3932 Referral. ae+o•1 Sl 1_!!!'---~-.....,.-- ,, ........... PllliflA we're an our way BY MAC BERND Superintendents are like any other group of people with a shared line of work. When they get together, they tend to swap stories and indulge in a lit- tle good-natured verbal jousting. 'This being the case, some of my buddies from around the state were more than astonished when, last spring, I told them that New- port-Mesa would be reducing class sizes in the third grade, reopening two dosed schools and completing a new education cen- ter in time for this school year. The ensuing comments from my •pa1s• ranged from a subtle •Good luck• to a more direct We have set a goal of improv- ing reading for our etudenta at all levels becaU9e reading is the VJlndaw to the raft of the culTiculum. ·vou really are nuts.• But I knew we could do it. Loose ends- yes, we've got a few of them. But we've moved into the Education Center, and Davis and Rea opened in beautiful fash- ion. In addition, all the first-, second- and third-grade classes in th~ dis- tJid are in classes of 20 students or fewer, with each kindergarten class getting 100 min- utes of basic akiils instruction per day with two teachers rather than one. Quality teaching and learning dOein't allow for loose ends, so we will~ our fOCU8 Oil ~.·.rw11 be iee1ng new reacting, sPellino and phonics boob in the baiids of elemen- tary ltudeatl, along with a renewed llDpha.sis on handwrit- i.ng. We have set a goal of tftlproving reading for our stu- dents at all levels because reaa- ing is the window to the rest of the curriculum. Another item for us in the coming year is to improve our- selves in every aspect of our operation by renewing our com- mibnent to excellence and cus- tomer service. All of us in the district are aware that we serve the children and the community, but it is always helpful to renew this commitment so we can be more effective in our jobs. Enrollment is always an impor- tant issue. Right now it looks like we will grow by about 1,000 new students, bringing our total for all programs to 21,500 students. We will house these students through a combination of school reopen- ings (Davis and Rea) and the installation of modular classrooms on many of our campuses. We live in a community where people care a gteat deal about the condition of our schools because they are a reflection ol our neigh- borhood pride. The district will spend $1.5 million on major main- tenance items such as floors, asphalt. roofs and painting. 1bls • SEE BERND PAGE 11 J -·-- Whan Cmh "'9 lplalt? Itta an effort by the DafJy Pilot to shlne a spotllghl an ~ good in our commUnlty. We found., much gooa ll8W8 that we had to dMde our atona and photOtJ inlo three acUon.s. Newport Beadi • Costa Mesa Dally Pilot At the Orange Coast College Children~ Center, the fruits and vegetabk$ grown in the garden· are given to the students, and their parents, to promote nutrition STORY BY LESLIE SIMMONS ~---­PHOTOSBY DON LEACH hat many may have considered useless land tlpned out to yield quite a harvest for the Orange Coast College Children's Center. When the college's agricultural program and its farm closed seven years ago, OCC professors Jay Yett and Betil Kunzler-Yett teamed with the center's staff to plant a garden that would benefit the chil- dren who are cared for there. The Yetts, who are avid gardeners, knew the fallow farm contained soil that would cultivate a productive garden. Today, it is a th.riving piece of land that produces more than 1,000 pounds of seasonal fruits and vegetables each year. The produce serves as a staple in the children's diet during the day, and the rest of the vegetables are left on a "free table" for the parents to take home to cook. •Many parents have said if it wasn't for this garden pro- gram. their children wouldn't have vegetables," Kunzler- Yett said. Ninety percent of the center's families are low income, and many did not know before coming to the center of the nutritional value fruits and vegetables provide their chil- dren, said children's center director Lucy Groetsch. The center helps by providing imtructional workshops on how to cook and prepare vegetables in a more nutritious and inexpensive way. It also offers Saturday Morning in the Garden, during which children's center teachers, staff, par- ents and children have a potluck and spend the day work- • SEE GARDEN PAGE 14 ~ LMMITHE . ~ 8POA11NG LFE ~:WHYYES, ~HE CAN Bucky Pofahl ls a famDlar lace around the OCC fUld ~Mesa lfigh campuses. 6e ~ hlS days there collecUDfl alillilnum cans, which he ~cld ~then gtveti that money'bac:k ~ .. schools for scholarships. 'See sto- ry, page 5. Mike McGuire can't reel off the wins and losses he's accrued as a coach at Ensign Middle SchooL But be doe1 know that the stu- MAllC MARTIN I OAA.Y Pit.OT "'Enter to learn, go forth to serve" Is the motto of CUden Hall. a private Newport BeKh IChool headed by dmM.1111 Al Jones. '· dents he's worked with In 16 yean there have learned about character and sportsmanship under his guidance. See story, page 6. ~COACH OF .., AU. 8FOR I 8 TeWlnkle Middle School's Judy Gibson coaches girls volleybalL basket~ softball, and track and field So what does she do In her spare tlmef Watch former students compete In athletics at Estancia IDgb School See story, page 7. I tO Borden Books for their anniversary. She's also lmUlllng In Paulartno students the desire to read and the knowledge to me a library as an educational tool. See story, page 10. c::!Uden Hall. a Newport Beach ""ate Khool nm by dlredot Al JOMI and b1t wtle, Jmae, the 550 ......... ltrlW to atbiln their lo.., gOlll tn echacaUon aDd community service. See story, page 11. ~-SET, Charlie .. Tex• Blelker bas coached quite a few champions '!_hlle oveneelog tbe boys tennis teaa at Newport Harbor High School, a cCMCbtng career that wUI end after next seuon. But Blelker -wbo continues to teach blstol'f at the ldaool -always emphntzed fun over wiDDlng. See story, page 14. Rabbi Mark Miller, and Ron and Lynda Gagliano may be of differ- ent laltbs, but they slulre a desire to do good work for the Lord Miller, as bead of Newport Beach'• Temple Bat Yalon. bas gifted his congregation with renowned tpeaken and bas plans for a temple untventty ad lnter- faltb ministries. 'lhe Ga9'1anos terve Mesa Verde Un.lted Meth~ Cbardl by leaCung mls- llon trips to Meldco, teaching Sunday school and much more. see 1tory, P-ve 15. Wlllon m ... tary hMd cmtod.lan Jaime Hernandez Is t-'ii!l· followed by • ·group of ttlldentl u heworklon bis early momlQg duttes In the courtyard of the school , , \ ti"ttsOn 11/ementary custodian bas built up a .fJOpu/a,r reputation with the kids at the _year- round school and is knoum as the ... Hernandez la surrounded by students as he makes his way through the aowd during an early morning assembly. Below, Her'DiUldez "'~ the auditorium durtng breakfast at Wlllon. A school district employee_ for the past 19 years, Jaime Hernandez has been the head custodian at Wilson Elementary since 1990. He is one of the family at Wilson, where he is loved by the stu- dents and the faculty alike. Below, 9-year-old Cesar Guierre has Her- nandez fill his soccer ball with air in his work area at the school. It's just one of the many things Hernandez does for the students on a day-to-day basis at Wilson. • • ~ith four sons having played on Sea Kings' varsity baseball • Jeam during the past 13 years, parentS end career as boosters ~ 1AMY FAUUCNet. .. m tape111yota~ ethleticl oon•nmes a good • portioD ol tbe living room =~the MacMiDaD family : But the sprawling display ot fiamed ~ p)aquel. cer-liftcates and pal.el ID pro- ~ to the encyclopedic lore produced by the mu1tisport careers of Corona del Mar High ~clouts Andrew, John, Daniel 411d Paul MacMillan. • ·we can tell some stories,• said Dianne, wbo along with husband bon, is two months into official fetirement from boosterdom, a Jbere 22 years after Andrew's debut as a 6-year-old Harbor Area Baseball rookie. · •1t'1 been a nice summer, not to bave tbe kids involved with games of scme kind,• said Dianne, who with Paul'• gradua- tion in June, bas likely satbb1ed i!'l her lul scmebook. · ·rt'• been fun. but it's time to move on.• said Don, a distin- guished professor at UC Riverside who spun some yams of his own for colleagues over the years, for , the purpose of dodging afternoon work committneDts to make a dash for the diamond. ·1rs probably a good thing the "It's probably a good thing the boys are tlnlahed pJaying, becaule I made up a lot of stone. to get out of meetlnf19 to go to their gamea... • -DON MACMIUAN • boys are fudlbed playing, becaUle I made up a Jot ot stories to get out of meetings to go to their games,• Don said. •t think I've 'Wied everf Ea.CUR you could think of, so I'm not swe I'd have any left.• The final game of the Sea Kings' baseball WIOD J.ut spring marked tbe end ot a memonb~ lp8D. in . which a . ~wore a Corona del Mar vanity uniform foe no lea than 11 seuons. Andrew, who later went on to play at UCI, began a three-year vanity baleball career in 1985, while John (1988-89), Daniel ('91-94), and Paul ('96-9?) fol- lowed at Corona del Mar. Daniel, 21, who played colle- giate baseball at the·University of M1am1 and UC Santa Barbara before hanging up his spikes KNOWN AS ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S MOST CARING MEDICAL PRACTICES JOIL I. &IWll, M.D., r.A.c.A., P..A.A.A.I. Dlplomore: Atnef1con Doord of Allergy• Alttvno •Immunology AmeOcon Acodemy of t.Wdlcol ~ All•'IY 6 AafluM lnadfuf9 Medlccal C•nf9n Tel. (714) 549-0301 . +40 Fair Drtv., #C Co.to Mesa, CA 92626 SHAPER PLUS BAIRSP $649 Limit 4 per customer Not valid with any other cou~ or discount ....... 9/30/97 • lut year to conceiltrate on aca6- emici,alao played four MUOQS ot beeUtbell. wtnnlng a CIP ~ ... senior in 199'. ~John, 26 aDd living in Oregon. =-,.,. tbe See lndudlng a CIP duunpi- Mllior MUOD. Andrew, 28, played four years ot.buket- ball. wbile Paul. 18, dropped basketball after b1I fres .... _sfiinan ..... _.._. year. But it was bueball that made tbe MacMlllanl fixtures in the grandstands ol numerous Orange County diamonds. •1 don't think there wu a game the boys play.ti in high school that at least one of U1 did- n't get to,• said Dianne, who While Andrew WU in high ICbool. often had four boys play- ing at once. •0ne calendar year we actu- ally counted up the boys' games, end it came to 'Jii7, • Dianne said. Though too numerous to con- vey, Dianne and Don mentioned the two CIF championships, as well as Daniel's perfect game (March 10, 1994 against Saddle- back), among their most trea- sured memories. Beyond mere athletic feats, however, they both dted the personal growth athletics Jos- MAii<: MARTtl I DAl.Y I'll.OT Don and Dtune MacMiiian, who have played a major role u boosten for the Coroaa.4el Mar High School sports programs over the yean, are now saying goodbye to their booster status. tered in all their boys, as well as the friendships forged by every member of the family -on the field and in the stands -as life- long remnants of their more than two decades of involvement To fill the hours spent watch- ing their sons in action, Don said be plans to play more golf - with the boys, of course -while Dianne dted travel and the opportunity for long weekends as another potential perk of their newfound freedom. Regrets, disappointment, even trying times were interwoven, as well. But Don and Dianne both agreed they were buried by a cucade of glowing l10ltalgia. which they revisit with their sons on an a.lmC8t daily basil. II COLLEGE PHARMACY SINCll 1982 "OLD FASHIONED FRIENDLY SERVICE.'' HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER WE SPIECIALIZIE IN UNIQUE a HARD TO P'IND ITIEMS.& O~HoP•DIC SUPPLIEa. • ~ L ~RUC:R1.+10M DllUV•RY .. RVIC• AVAILA•La 546-3288 440 FAIR DRIVE, COSTA M1!9A COAN•• cw HARllC>ft aLvo. Patio .otnlnt; ~ · liy tlie Bay ••• Breakfa6t & lunch 6erved 7 am -:3 pm daily at the Back Bay Cafel Omelettes • Pancakes Salads • Sandwiches • Burgers Award-winning Seafood Chowder and morel 729-J144 In Newport Dune5 Reeort • 1131 Back t3ay Drive • Newport Beach Off Jam1:1oree Road at P.C.H. -FREE PARKING ' . ' I ' . • ; . • hen Bucky Pofahl wu , a young man. his t • father passed down to bim the power of giving and sharing -something he prac- tices to this very day. For more than nine years, Armin •suety• Pofahl, a 79- year-old retired lumberyard supervisor, has been collecting aluminum cans six days a week in every trash can at OCC and Costa Mesa High School, recy- cling them and giving the mon- ey back to the community. This practice -giving and sharing -is something his father instilled in him when he was a young boy in Wisconsin. •0ne day a bum came to the door ... looking for food,• Pofahl said. •oad told him to come in, wash up and sit down at the table with the family. •After chow, my dad took him along to the plant where he was foreman and gave the bum a job.• Pofahl said the man worked five hours but never returned to continue work or pick up his pay. His father'• genero1ity is something he'll never forget and desa1bes thts experience u •a great 1how1ng of shar- ing.• Pofahl actually started col- lecting goU balls at local area golf courses and aelling them to a man who refinishes them. The money he collected was donat· ed to local organizations that feed the hungry. •1 began recycling nine years ago with the purpose of feeding the hungry in mind,• Pofahl said. . In 1989, he approached the prindpal of Costa Mesa High School and asked him if it was OK to go on campus and pick up tossed cans. After a year of collecting at Costa Mesa High, he decided to expand his collec- tion route across the street to OCC. He asked Barb Newberg, the student activities director at the time, where he could donate the money. She suggested establishing a scholarship. Pofahl is an icon on campus. Everybody knows him and takes the time to stop and say •ru • and •thank you." Autumn is just around the corner ... Let your home ·fair in place at• • • ' 8 tJf(I) .p. 1 i. ln-h~ •t>'lne: coneultlne • Dollghtful home acco&e0rleelfabnc • -Cuetom ellpcover&. pillow&, wlni:tow tre"1;ment6, 11eddlng, etc. • Garden thing& too! 1720-D Santa Ana Ave .. Coet.a Meea • 714/645-9140 • HOURS: Mon.-s.t. 10.30:-6:00 (Ac;roN Ml <Ma) Jim Carnett, the college's director of public relations, agrees: •H,;..1 a fixture on cam- pus.• Pofahl's quick tc admit what he does is hard work and not for everybody, but he finds it grati- fying. . •1 feel pretty good about helping people,• he said. A typical day for him starts at 6 a.m. reading the •Good Book" for a half hour and taking a two-mile walk before breakfast. He beads off to the schools at around noon and spends the next four to five hours carrying around a trash bag collecting cans. When the day ends, Bucky figures he's walked about six miles an<f collects at least one to two bags of cans. When he has at least three bags, he brings them to the college recycling center, where h& gets about $45 to $50 back. At the end of the week, he presents Doug Bennett, director of the OCC Foundation, with a check, usually around $30. •t like what he does,• Ben- nett said. •Jt's a different type of , Saturday OCtober 4, 1997 ,.., 9am-3pm . Children's Activities Prizes, Food & Fun Health &. Safety Rcaources Health C.00.Ultation Hc&lth Education Welcome Seniors CRISIS INTERVENTION Depression Screening Chemical Abuse P,"Chiatric Emergencies Suicide Prevention 1-800-773-8001 •WHO: Annin ··~· ,, Pofahl •AGl:79 -. MIA?. CoUec:t'S CMS lrt Costa Mesa HJgn Md Orange~ College and gives pr~ to charity. "I feel pretty good about helpfng people.• • DETAILS: Walks about six miles a day ... collects one to two bags of cans a day ... gives a check eacn week to college foundation ••. responsible for funding 17 scholarships ... eamed hon- orary degree. volunteering." To date, be bas donated more than $9,000, granting 17 OCC students with scholarships. Last year, four OCC students received $300 scholarships from Pofahl's daily work of rummag- ing through the trash. He said they've all contacted him to express their gratitude. •It shows these people appredate the work I do, w Pofahl said. Even though Pofahl bas received awards, including KNX-AM Citizen of the Week this year and an honorary degree last spring, he remains humble about his work. •The glory goes to the Lord,• he said. •Not me." ---~ I I I I I I I ____ _....., I ------· ~'7.1117 I KIM HAGGEJnY I OAl.Y Pl.OT Bucky Pofahl. 79, collects cam around the gymnuillm at Onmge Coast College. Pofahl donates the money he makes lrom recy- cling to OCC for scholarships. Now you see it. .. Do you think you need hearing hdp but you don't care for the appearance ci traditional hearing aids? Then call us for a no- obligaoon dcmonmaoon ci the completdy in tbc canal hearing instruments. Tht Completely "In the Canal Aid" offm: •Colnplecdy discrete ~ • No Y<>IWM control to adjust •More narural 50l.IDd •Ladt ol annoyin& fffdback on the tekphone Call for '.)!OUT personal al>pointment today. COAST HEARING Am CENTER 675-3833 3409 E. Coast Hwy., CdM • lmi. So. of MacArthur '"""' .. bt liM CNClwt ~IDlllllkl Iliad ..... pcs"""9r. In ete""'on ID .. )lmar Wa liawWI-. bit ccw1wf ...... ~ b n ..,_...s toftbell • ........ CtWmde ~ad ConcDr- dia ~ ..... known. Odil College), ad ooedried ~ betkeebd QD8 _,..at Bi'W"da High. . - McGJft's 1DMD01Y ol 29 ,_... ol teecbing in the •aut I eventually got back to my ant IOve, wbidl ,.~ ...... UnMled smooi w. tbe ti juakJr high lddl.. ~Aid; ·1 jUlt ,,... tit ol wtDc:b be ipmt ccw "" wg at ~ think the lddl .. • a mare foimettve la and Emigll tutena..,._ . stage in thoee yems. and teechen ICboc* *When you're develop-who reaD.y an about kids and But wbm It a:mel to recall-. 1 +h,ftil"I have the lmpecl of ttXJ9e IO.t-lng i. •admfw end/or atb-mg young peop e, ... ~~s dents am neDy make a differ- ...., Md:iutre'• retention is like character an<l sports-enca • Mgntr••ndly more compre-mansbip are most impor McGuire'• pr'oo f« bmltN. -teachtng ha been pwecl Oil '1 bnen't kept too many tant. Winning is just a to bis own dDldren. as two ot =:*'~i!;1:\'my byproduct ... " S:::8~':'~~ =-~;: ::;ptn bis t6th -MIKE MCGUIRE tyJ"=~ ~~- McGuiie, who grew up in Pboemx • c.ounty scbooll. and.came to Orange County as a scholar-McGuire, who moved to Newport Beach lbtp athlete at Southern California College (Class of two yean ago after reAding several years in Tustin, 1969), said be pursued a teaching career in order to said be enjoys fdlowtng the atbJetic exploits ot bis change the lives of young people. And while at age former pupils at Newport HaJbor High. though his 55, be'• not quite ready to hang up his poin~r. oonnectioo wUh "1adents tJm>scends athletics. there are many who believe he has thoroughly ful-•(Watchtng kids <XllDpete at Newport) is one of ftDed that objective. the real joys,• said McGuire, a frequent spectator at Additionally, McGuire, who filled 10 last year as Sailor sporting events. an ....tstaot principal at Ensign. but will return to ·1 have "1KleJrts who are ..0 who still keep in the damoom this fall. bas made a considerable tauch, • be said. •And I'm always running into for- impn•ion on some of his colleagues, particu1arty mer d\Jderrts in the oommunity. • younger teachers. Though McGuire'• Ensign basketball teams •He's a ruper, super guy.• said Ensign colleague have won their share of titles uver the years, he's and Corona del Mar High volleyball coach Steve vague on the specifics. Conti. tor whom McGuire was a mentor teacher in •5port1 is competitive, but you have to approach Conti's first year at Ensign. •He connects very well it in the proper way,• be said "When you're devel- wtth the kids and he's still very passionate about oping young people, things like character and teaching and coaching.• sportsmambip are most important Winning is just a M.cGuire coaches boys and girl6 basketball at byproduct.• OOH LEACH I OAl.Y Pl.OT Mike McGuire bas a rich lrad.ttlon eoachlng basketball and teaching American history at Ensign school.: 50-75°/o OFF Sdecaed Mcdw -50°/o OFF Silk Roni An a a FREE C.-...Ammsins e.-1...,._ ..... ....._. __ s Custom FJorab F .spires 91 YJ/?7 -·-Speciality Furniture -·- WI GifLS tit Antiques Hours: Mon-Fri 10..() •Sat 10-5 369 E. 17th St., #13 ·<Asta Meta• 646-6745 (Nat to Plwn'a Cafe) Yarl6111 -., .. CONSIGNME~TS tmLm. Vintage Jewel~l Calllomio Art, Slwling, Cry•ta , Antique•, ere. $ $ $ $ $ $ $ EARN DOLLARS FrJr lJ11 .·~'~rt, fj .... • t~ , "'._. • Pr)tt•, 'f , •r Will Buy or Consign 369 East 17th Street • Costa Mesa Mon.-Sot. 10-5:30 642-8898 Acr<?ss from Ralphs *INSURANCE* AUTO • LIFE • HOME • COMMERCIAL "IT'S Now THE LAW" · I ~ must have auto insurance . .--....... , / 11 No One Refusedt en if you've had tickets, -~ ' accidents, DUI. THE BEST WHOLESALE . ENHOUSE NURSERY IN O.C. I coacb fo~ all seasons TeWmkle's Judy Gibson guides school's girls teams in volleyball, basketball, softball, and trade and field IY BARRY FAULKNER IT udy Gibsoo. Te Winkle Mkl- dle Schoal's coadl,for all sea-sons, doesn't make «"lOt at plant after school At the end o1 a full day o1 1Mm1ng physical education at the Costa Mesa junior high. her time ts occupjed as the coach of each ot the school's girls after-school sports teams. So, when a rare break does a.dse in the Th>jans' volleyball. basketball. SClftball and track and field seasons, it would stand to reason Gibson would head any- where but an athletic event Gibson. however, spent one such intermission last spring by shuttling to Estancia High to watch her former athletes in two softball games, a track and field dual ·meet and a swim meet. ·0ne ot my goals this year is to make more ot an eftort to watch CUSTO.~ UPHOLSTERY (former stndentl) at Estancia,• said Gibloo. • 53-year-old a.ta Mesa resideDt in her 13th year ot tenchtng and coecbtng at TeWln- Jde . .-w. bard wwnethnes, becaUl8 roaching four 9PQlts doem't make for too many breaks. But the kids seem to be really Udded to see me show .11p at their high lchool games. I think they're swprlaed snmecmt! would ca.re ~h to mme out and watch them. Por those familiar with her tenure at TeWlnkle. there is little swpdse about Gibean's cnmntt- ment to her athletes, for whom. she says, she ts as much a coun- sel« as a coach. "When I flnt came out ot col- lege, I thought f d never teach at a junior high. because I figured the kids were too squinely. • Gibson, in fact. began her tencbing career at AMhefm's Savannah High in 1967 and taught four years there, before Health ABSOLUTELY AMAZING! FlrneE LOOK (JREATI FEEL GREAT! LOSE WEIGHT! lbnes. Energlzes, "Super Fat Burner" I 0096 Sat1sfactlon Guaranteed All Safe & Natural FOR I\ BE.77ER QUl\UIY OF LJFE Cl\LL NOWI PRB8 SAMPLB 1-800-5'9-0086 taking a break to raJse two chil- dren (JennUer Kugiel ii 25 end muried end Jim Hieb, a seniol' at ua..A. ii 22). But upon returning to the pro- fession in 1981, she took a job at Kraemer Middle School in Pla- centia. •After having my own kids, I Qn.Vitated more to junjor high. 6ecause the kids are in a 1I101e for- mative stage,• Gibson said. •1 like the opportunity I get to e:r.po&e junior high girlS to athletia. It's always a great source of pride when a girl comes to us without any mperience in athlet\Cs, then goes on to compete at the high school level. Giblclo recalls fondly the Girls Athletic Association days, which preceded the Title IX proliferation of competitive programs fo~ girls at the junior hi9h and high school levels. •My heart is still with the GAA aspect (all athletes played, regard- less ot akill level. with the empha- sis more on participation than competition),• she said. •The greater opportunities created tiy Title IX -all the high school sports and the college scholarships -are a really good thing. But sometimes it saddens me that more girls aren't involved in those !>ports. When I was at Savannah. we had eight basketball teams of all ability levels." Gibson, who plans to teach until she's 60, said coaching will also occupy her time for Did you know that 32% of Costa Mesa's residential trash is being recycled each week? Curbside trash is taken to a plant where it is sorted for recyclables. The process is economical and does not require eXtTa effort from our residents. We do it for you! Would )OU Like more information! Please contact our office at: P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa, CA 92628-1200 77 Fair Drive (714) 754-5043 Fax (714) 432-1436 years to come. "I really enjoy spending time with the kids and the whole envi- ronment keeps me active. You'd think a P.E. teacher would be fair- ly active, but sometimes there's so much supervision and safety involved with teaching, the only time I get to participate with the kids is when I'm coaching.• Gibson. who stresses fun along with <XllDlpetition. said she is am-... petitive and serious about her ~ coaching. •I get pretty detailed with ~· in basketball, as well as altemat-~ ing man-to-man and 7.0De defens- es. When I first started, voDeybaI1 was my favorite, but now I eoJoy' .. basketball even more. But coadl- ing all four sports definitely keeps" me going.• - 11111111 COOKlllS . llACK TO ICllOOL IP•ClftL, Sunflour's Everyday Breads Honey Whole Wheat Nine Grain Sourdough Pure White Cinnamon Swirl Challah (eggt Focacclas iiiliiiilli:lii;:m;:;irm:liiiilSiiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiili ... liiiliiiiliiiii1limlliiiiimiiiiill..... : Open Daily. 6am -6:30pm • Closed Sundays ~ 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa ~ (9y~ l!Korml ' 646-1440 ; , 4 COSTA MESA Power Lunch or Family Dining 1 UteSupper ~ Catering 3211 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA TEL: (7141 557-feu FAX: (714} &57-54e1e Ope,, ~Dey IA.M. -Pw,; • ""'- Bar r As a librarian, she's one for .the b0oks ~ •es ~A librarian for Paularino School wno 80CS above and beyond the ciU of duty. . ~IOOKIUYER Thls job is Folkedal's hobby -literally. She works, breathes, sleeps and eats book$. Bven on vtcation, she is known to spend hours upon hours in bookstores. • "l'm drawn to bookstores," sakl the librarian, who has bought, with h.er own money, a majority of the books stocked in Ute school library. • For example, on a vacation to Seattle she came across a book- stpre that carried books on the Northwest IndJans. While she sat on the floor surrounded by books, her husband of more than 30 years took a picture of her to show their friends and family what they do on vacation. For their anniversary, her hus- ~nd took her back to San Fran- cisco's four-fl oor Borders Books because she never got off one floor the last time they were there. · Part of this need to visit any place that sells children's books is from when she started at Paularino five years ago. The library was not up to par, because of financial problems in lhe district, and had a small . amount of outdated books. She said when she flnt · entered the two-classroom-sized library, the first thing she noticed were the walls, whJch were bare and lacked bulletin boards or signs. She started mak- ing brightly painted buJletln boards and signs at home. "I weeded and weeded through books,• she said. "All the outdated books are gone.• She remembers one book she found was published in I 965 and was on how to be an auto mechanic. "It was the only book on careers.• she said. "I thought, 'Give me a break!' " Along with her personal book donations, she has received great support from the PTA and pri- vate donations In peoples' mem- ory Including one for her sister, who was also a teacher and shared Polkedal's passion for books. Since her arrival, Folkedal has been able to stock the library with adequate research material and books to keep the kids com- ing back. "It's come a long way," Folkedal said. "I'm really pleased." "The principal was very gen- erous with school money," she added. ri •ah ECLE CTIC COTTAGE FURNISHINGS Anniversary Sale Beginning September 15th Luxurious Bed Unens • Garden Setting of Topiaries and Roses Wondrous Children's Furniture and Accessories Baby and Bridal Regi.stty • Garden &. Interior Design Services Open Monday through Saturday 1 o -6 &. Sunday 11 -4 3222 E. Pacific Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar 92625 Ph. 714-719-2911 •Fax 714-719-2912 . HALLMARK CARDS, INC. ALL .. A DAYS WOM Pol.kedal, a Newport Beach res- ident, started working for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District 18 years ago when her son's school had a position for an aide open. She tnoved on to become a librarian at Mariners Elementary School for more than five years and then worked at Corona del Mar HJgh School for 10 years before moving on to Paularino School. Her day starts early because the library opens before school does, for chJJdren who are · dropped off early. Classes visit throughout the day. She usually reads to kJndergarten through third-grade classes every day. •1 read a lot of the kid books instead of the 'grown-up' books," she said. The reading pays off. She says the most gratifying part of her job · is "when a student wants some- thing. I lead them lo a book and they say '1his is exactly what I ting more material for research including the Internet. need.'" MThere is no feeling in the whole world like it,• Folkedal said. "When you get a chiJd hooked on reading, it opens up the whole world." Polkedal would like to contin- ue improving the library by get- The World Wide Web is not the future to her, but she feels il's a good supplement even though it will never take the place of a book. "I can't see someone lying in bed reading their computer," Folkedal said. Personal Training • SPINNINGe • Mrobics •Yoga• Strwngth ~,.In~ Cardie<: R.tleb • EJ<J*t P~ St.ff• M«lallly-Establith«l Prindpl4ls 831-3823 In Westcliff Shopping Center at Irvine Ave & 17th St in Newport Beach Looking for unconditional love? She says she is quick to explain to students that it Is one source but not the only one. The use of the Internet has helped Polkedal with research for students. Even though the library Isn't connected to the Internet, when a student needs information not available there, Polkedal will go home, search the web and print the informa- tion out. The most Important thing she wants the children to learn is how to use the library - a skill she said they will need for the rest of their lives. Carpet Your Entire Home with Plush or Berber --o.-For s49""~900 UPT03MOS SAME AS CASH O.AC t ......... , ............ eo.ta ..... ~~;;:.....;;~'""'-4~-_. 11.a. Comer of Hmtaor at-. ..... .. 722-9842•• ·ALJO fTHEHELM • Jones proudly strolls Carden JSall'• 10·aae campus like a Mavy eommander aboard a ~t warship, pointing out the ~details, each under his ~<i>nunand. M tbe school's director and cb-OWner for the last 22 years - tbil year marks Carden Hall's J:jth anniversary -Jones bas sCHred the Newport Beach pri- Vllte school on a steady course toward educational excellence. A graduate of the Merchant Martne Academy in Long Island, N.Y., Jones served in the Navy's elite Special Forces - also known as the SEALs -and served in the Korean War. After the war, be attended Stanford University, where be majored in business and met his wUe·to-be, Jane, who was there getting her master's degree in e<Jucation. The two later married, had two children - each of whom attended Carden Hall -and now together, they run the school. ·she's the brains behind the operation,• Jones admitted. 'ENTER TO LEARN, GO FORTH TO SERVE' The two-sided sign hanging over the entrance to the Carden Hall campus says it all: As stu-. dents walk in, they read ·~R TO LEARN." As they \fave campus, they are remind-.. • Former SEAL has zeal for Carden H;ill private· school ed to •Go FORTI-I TO SERVE.• That message of education and community service perme- ates the Carden Hall curriculum, where lessons in math, science and foreign languages are just as valuable as the Judeo-Christ- ian values the school is based on. •The key here is that every child has unlimited potential,• Jones said. "And we just help them reach that potential.• PRJVATE PARADISE The small, friendly confines of the Carden Hall campus - tucked away in an industrial part of town on Monrovia Avenue -are seen by many parents as an alternative to the larger public schools. With just 550 students in grades K-8, a ratio of one teacher for every 13 students and an average class size of 19 pupils, the school is attractive to families who want to give their children a hands-on, supportive school environment. Jones said he doesn't have most of the problems his public school administrator counter- parts do, thanks largely to Car- den Hall's mandatory student uniforms -which all but elimi- nate competition for the best ~u·~~"' .,;.;1 L1~"' :,;.jJ ~~"' :,;.,:; r'S~"' ~· ~)~~·~~· ~·\"~~ ... ~~ ~·-i:)~ ... ~ .. : ~·')~· ' ~P!J~~cl7~~·:· Lecture Series 1997-1998 ~ Premiere Lecture Tuesday. October 7th Author. Vice-Pres of Sotfteby's Auctiott House :. attd F.ditor of Tfte Magazine Antiques· q Wendell Ga"ett ~ Lecture Series Info: 673-1714 ~~tt·l.:. ~·t4· .r~ti.;.: ,,~,....,.t\.i.: ·la.7·CJ·r: ~·~-cr·r-.... ·~·Cf-r: ·,~·V".Cf·r. ·~ • . • r Seven night cruise to Puerto Vallana, Mazatlan&. Cabo San Lucas ... ; -Departing from San Pedro - Join us in the introduction of Carnival Cruise Lines' newest cruise sh"1r the Elation maugum~ Sailing April 12, 1998. Call for~ Group Rates on May 17, 1998 Salling NewRort-Mesa ~ JRAVEL \!5 I Weatclllf Drift, Suite 110 Newport lleecb. CA 11110 ll-•1111 •PAX Tl4'711·11tl ahoes or cutest outfit -plus a strong Chrlstlan foundation and an ovetwhelming supportive group of parents. Carden Hall parents, who pay an annual tuition of around $5,000, take an active role in their children's education. . •ne parents are here for events, and they're so support- ive,• Jones said. •They're great." Carden Hall draws students from all over Orange County, primarily Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach and Long Beach, Jones said. Once graduated from Carden Hall, students spread out into both public and private high schools, but slightly more con- tinue their education in local private schools. THE CARDEN METHOD The 65 teachers at the school are versed in the Carden Method, a uniform style of teaching created by founder Mae Carden and intended to give students a seamless cou rse of education as they progress through the school. Carden Hall teachers use many of the same phrases and expressions in their individual lesson plans, making it easy for students to pick up where their previous teacher left off, Jones said. •Here, every teacher has been exposed to the Carden Method," he said. •1t•s exactly the same words, exactly the same method." Each class is divided into three groups -where students of varying abilities receive spe- cialized attention from teachers -and each grade selects a spe- cialty, or theme for the entire school year, based on their liter- ature studies. ln past years, Carden Hall students have adopted Robin Hood, Tom Sawyer and other fictional figures to study m detail and present plays, songs and other creative activities to demonstrate what they learned during the year. -Story by Tim Grenda AT WAREHOUSE PRICES Since 1953 • \ '"'' ( t11 1 l{l·11 :e1ch It d • l 111qH·1.11 :111 ( ·11ntr11lkd ,.,ii I i ..•. 1. (~ "'' 'I\ \\ j,,, I ,,. . . '· \ .1i l.ililt Mon 10-7 Tu-Sat 9:30-7:30Sunday11-6 950 W. Coast Hwy, Newport Beach (acroa from Balboa Bay Oub) 714-631•1212 PLAYMATES PRESCHOO L Since 1964 ~=~and EduCation Programs For 2 yn. thru Pre-K • Spedal Emphasis on Kindergarten Reacll..ss at the Pre-Klevel Ful Dav & Morning Half-Day Sessions Monday thru Friday 6:30am-6:00pm DiKior: Arlene Shapiro 714-540-1919 StaN UC.. 1300600796 195 Poularfno Ave. • Costa Mesa locoted Between Bristol & Bear St. Aflllcoftd with Paltc Private Day School SEP.TEM8£R 17, 1917 ti I MAAC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT Carden Hall director Al Jones has been at the h~lm for the past 22 years at the Newport Beach K-8 private school Some People Can Never Relax We'll teach you how to relax at will, any time, anywhere. ~~" What's more, we'll show you how you can quickly gain greater health, happiness and peace of mind . Because our teachers have been trained by a yoga master, we teach everything from the popular Hatha Yoga stretching exercises to deep meditatio n and simple techniques for quickly reducing stress and gaining emotional balance. Come to the only yoga center serving Orange County for over 26 years. Call : (714) 646-8281. FREE DEMONSTRATIONS -10:00 am and 7:30 pm Wednesday, OCTOBER 1 YOGA CENTER 445 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa Between Tustin and Irvine Avenue 3 BLOCKS EAST of Mother's Maricet & Kitchen SPECIAL OFFER amg t1t1s Ml Md nteeiv• • 20% DISCOUNT on your first month of ct... Bring • friend who enrolls end ~. • FREE rnond'I of c1eues1 .. ,. ' • IV MICHEW 1B\MU.EGElt • PHOTOS IY KIM HAGGERTY he great number of par- ties, beach fun and other teenage pleasures around Newport-Mesa community leave some church youth aders scratching their heads bow to entice high schoolers come to their events. But Ed Snedeker, youth der at St. Andrew's Presby- ~ Church in Newport , finds that plenty of stu- t.$ wander in thirsty for sert- worship and a desire to do 'on work. •rve heard from students that group tends to be more seri- ," Snedeker, 34, said. Jn addition to their Wednes- c:Sy night and Sunday morning tings, the students get psy- ed up to ltelp others through ion projects in inner city Los geles, Guatemala and Brazil. ,. "They love to work and do tllings. They. love to feel like they're ma.king a change, ff Snedeker said "l love to see them explore God in new ways cmd experience God's love for the first time. . "I'm finding (missions are) O!'e thing that excites the stu- dents. They always are discover- ing something about themselves and about life." Wednesday night youth m..ectings attract 80 to 120 stu- <rents for songs of praise and · tual talks about concrete cs, such as getting along h parents, saying no to drugs, akohol and sexual pressure and recovering from divor~~. • a. WHA?. St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church youth meetings ... WHIN: 8:3G-9:45 a.m. Sunday and 5:3(). 7:30 p.m. Wednesday for junior high school.age youth; 10:15- 11 :30 a.m. Sunday and , 7:30-9 p.m. Wednesday for high school students. ... WHY: Get Involved in church missions, help oth- ers. spiritual support. -. HOW: Just show up. You don't have to be a church member. ~ •Sometimes I feel a little bit frustrated because I'm just one of many voices,• Snedeker said. He finds that when be advises students to wait until marriage to be sexually active, many haven't even considered that an option. The majority of the youth do not belong to the church and do not attend Sunday morning wor- ship. "We have a youth program that's kind of like a church,• he said. "The youth service is more upbeat, and the songs are a little bit more loose.• Brian Broaddus said he likes the group because it otters something different. "It gives you a chance to grow as a person,• Bri~ said. Visit St. Mark Presbyterian A congregation with OPEN MINDS and OPEN HEARTS St. Mark is a progmsiw church ltJcaud just acrou from Corona Dr/ Mar High School at~ rornn of ]amborre and FA.stblujjlFord. Wonhip and Church School far childrm at 9:30am 2100 MAR VISTA DR. • NEWPORT BEACH UHtT•D { ..., __ , '4 I 0 0 • '4 644-1341 CHRIST CHURCH BY THE SEA 1400 West BaJboa Boulevard Newport Beach SERVICE TIMES: 8:30am · 9:30am 5:30pm The Rev. Dr. George R. Crisp Pastor Sunday Worship~& Christian Education -Al Ages Chldc:cn Avalable 811 & Susan Klrtln-Hac:lcMt, Pastors . 548-3631 "It proVidet something for stu- dents to do instead of 110.ing to a party on Friday night. Snedeker, who has worked at St. Andrew's for two years, attributes the group's success to a full staff and personal relation- ships . Many students come to the group for its social aspects and keep coming back because they get to know each other and the staff. "They've got to know you and you have to let them see God working in you, ff he said. Lynda Sylvester, an intern who helps run the youth pro- grams, said Snedeker demon- strates his spiritual life to the students. •ne biggest ~g he brings to the group is that he loves God a lot," Sylvester, 25, said. "His heart is really there.• In addition to Snedeker, the church employs three other staff members and six interns. That staff adds to the ability of the church to be there for stu- dents on a personal level and keep up with small •covenant groups• that meet once a week to share and pray for each other. There are also many one-on- one talks in his office with stu- dents who need someone to lis- ten to. "Guys lean on me. There's one guy who has never even known his dad,• he said. "I'm kind of his father figure." But Snedeker tries not to let the adolescents' problems over- whelm him, as he tries to find time to spend with his own baby and wife. •1 can't solve all the prob- lems,• Snedeker said. •'J'h4t's why we need interns and volun- teers. ff Certainly the church's prox- imity to Newport Harbor High School has also attracted stu- dents to the group. During tragedies that have deeply a#ected the Newport Harbor community, such as the May crash on Irvine Avenue that killed one student and injured others, many oJ the students looked no further than across the street for solace, Snedeker said. "When something happens, they know it's here for them, ff he said. "We have a very accepting program. ' ~They know in our program the youth are the most important part of it.• A Reform Congrepdoo Eocouraglng Tnlditloml ,Jewish Values "°"' Gmmttlotl to~ ..... Mn s. MO.lc:r, OUr diJldnguilhed lplrtlwl k:ada for 20 yun. Cantor Jonathan Grant S'UCBOT SERVICES SATIJRDAY, SEPTEMBER 27th D##rl 7:41 , ... ~ j':OO , ••• ,,,...,,,,,. ....,..,...,,,_ 7:11 ,.,,,. , , • ' ' I I I I I ' ' I I '. I • ' ' .. I I I I ' i I; I '' I ' I • 1 11 ' I , r \ , I 1 "*' .. a '• JIJtt",.,... "',_.,, Jlt!I. "-"! Smflmjlnl,,.,., • ...., ... "''-#,.,. We warmly tmile you 10 dmCl ~ smtas in our beaudful. Slnduary. antDCA11 AV.wAILI fOll nlDAY NIGIR' lllMCU. Plme all•• (714) 6'+1'99 mau 1.trW. ftl ,_,... ... • llW, lOl I ~ .... """"---.CA 9J660 ·Parish Mission/Renewal Top photo, Ed Snedeker, youth pastor at St. Andrew's ~ , laughs wttb Heather McCulloJJgh, 15, of Newport Beacb. wtille ... Cooking at photos of the youth group's July misslon trtp to Brazil. Above, Snedeker smiles at his son. Blake, during a barbecue. S earcliing for I nspiratUm ?' Here's your neighborhood resource Cbri1dan Science aeadlaa lloom 3315 Via Vldo, Newport Beacb (7U) 673-6150 • Spend more time thinking spiritually • Discover God's p4rpose for you , H il IOul belongs to God. but Jeff Pries' heart belongs tn ooecbing. Ptial. a former No. 1 draft pick' al tbe New York Yankees will . . nevw forget what coaches and sports were like for him at Coro- na del Mar High, a time when lmlDg wu someone else's prob- lem. •'Jbat's why I like to coach, became I remember my coaches in bJgb ICbool and what they did for me,• said Pries, a former Corona del Mar basketball and buebell standout, who played on ClP Southern Section 3-A mam- piomhip teams in both sports bis tenklr year under Jack Errion and 1bm naeger, respectively, in 1981. •11 was a tUn year, [and) it was a weird year," Pries said. • Actu- ally, tt didn't really prepare me for tile, because everything we did, we won. Is that bow life is? Always winning? It wasn't reality. Everything fell into place, and I always ~ed to do all right" Pries, Corona del Mar's sophomore basketball coach and freshman baseball coach, also is the high school pastor for Mariners South Coast Cllurch, where he teaches on Sunday mornings and orches- Fonner Corona del Mar megastar is a · high school pastor and walk-on coach trates midweek Bible studies. •&senttally, that's why I do everything I do, because my high school fe$S were so great. with great coaches and great put.on,• Pries said. •1-rememher them. Hopefully, I can make someone else's high school years as great as mine were. That's my pur- pose." Pries, a 6-foot-5 right-bander with a blazing fut ball over 90 mph, never dreamt of becoming a pastor. •My desire was to be a pitcher in the big leagues, but for some odd reason, God didn't want me to do that," he said. •0ne day I got called by a guy who was my high school pastor, so for five years I interned at the church where he was at while I finished school.· ·1 was going to be a high school teacher and coach, any- way, and I figured if I could teach kids about Jesus and not about Abraham Lincoln, then it would be easier.• Pries, 34, could have used a blessing or two following his high .... -' school baseball days, because his right um lived in an ice bucket during his pitching career at UCLA. Alt.er three yean playing for Coach Gary Adams' Bruins, Pries signed a contract with the Yan- kees ln 1984, along with a $100,000 bonus -chicken feed c::ompaied to what today's No. 1 draft picks are getting. Pries toiled in the minor leagues for five years, making it as high as triple A Columbus in the Yankee system. But Pries' throwing arm continued to break down, and his stock began to slide. Eventually, the Yankees traded him to the White Sox, for whom he played one season in the minors before retiring. Pries had rotator cuff surgery on his shoul- der following the 1989 campaign, then never returned to the mound. •1 continued to fall through the (Yankees'] system,• Pries said. ·u was fairly depressing. My whole pro career was marked by injury." The arm injuries began at UCLA. when 35 or so radar guns per outing forced Pries to try throwing through brick walls. When his elbow hurt, he altered his mechanics and arm angle, which then caused more pain in bis shoulder. God apparently did- RegWar maintenance can save you ·costly repairs Dropping off the car at the twdwaie will cost you three a new one. shop for service is one of those times as much. • Tire rotation should be things ID0.1t people don't do • Have your oU changed every performed every other oil change until it is absolutely necessary. 3,000 miles or every three -about every 6,000 miles. But car experts will tell you months. Changing your oil Is Rotation substantially increases that's _not the best way to one of the single best things you tire life by dta.m2tlcally reducing approach eating for your car. can do . for your vehicle. wear and tear. Misaligned o r Cars need to be maintained, Prolonged driving without an oil under inflated tires force the no< just repaittd, when serious change can severely damage or vehicle's engine to work harder, problems arise. In fact, just a even destroy the engine. An oil wasting fuel. few dollars spent on vehicle change every three months or • Replace shock absorbers and maintenance can save several 3,000 miles may spare you the struts every 24,000 miles or every times that amount in significant expense of replacing two to four years. DriviAg with emergency repairs when you the engine. old shocks and struts can wear least expect them -not to • Replace engine coolant every out your tires, ruining the treads mention inconvenience and two years. Radiators can get and causing poor handling and potentially hazardous siruations. clogged and filled with sediment performance. Shocks and struts To keep your car running caused from old coolants. If are significantly less expensive smoodtly, follow these tips: sediment builds up, you may than new tires. • Replace front brakes every need to replace the radiator • Your car's air conditioner 20,000 to 30,000 miles and rear altogether. Replacing a radiator should be serviced only b y a brakes every 40,000 to 60,000 costs five to six times as much technician certified competent to miles. Driving beyond that as simply replacing engine hand and recycle refrigerants. without brake service runs the coolant. The air conditioners in older risk of damaging expensive • Have your transmission fluid vehicles contain ozone-depleting brake components such as changed every 15,000 to 30,000 chemicab. Improper service can rot0rs, aea.1$, hardware and miles. Doing so will strongly vent these chemicals into the drums. Replacing rotors will increase the chances that your atmosphere. COSl you twtce as much as a transmission will last the life of • Consult the owner's manual standard brake job, while the car and that you won't have and an automotive technician for replacing drums, seals and to go to the c:Jq>CNe of installing information spedftc to your car. KIM HAGGERTY I OMV Pl.OJ Athletic standout Jeff Pries at Mariners Church ln Newport Beach. where he serves u p..tor. n't want Pries pitching in the big leagues. Pries, who also played fresh- man basketball under current var- sity hoops coach Paul Orris, was a scoring machine on Errion's 1980- 81 title team that also featured Mark Spinn, Mike Hess, Steve Moore and Chris Lynch. That team, sans Hess, had reached the CIF finals the previ- ous year, when Pries, Spinn and Moore were juniors. ·we had to get by Johnny Rogers and La Quinta, and once we got past him, we felt we could beat anybody," Pries said. wwe had good chemistry, and we enjoyed each other (during tbe '8l"title run), and Coach Emon . was a fiery guy whom we all loved. Everything we did turned to gold. Everything went our way that senior year. We always felt like we were going to win.• Pries ~opes to spread similar feelings to the seniors of today. Clean fuel increases engine performance level The best way to ensure that and their 1iny orifices have to • According to a swvey ol ASE· your engine continues to perform remain clear to work properly. certified automocve technicians efficiently is to feed it with clean But varnish, carbon and gun conducted by the natJonaJ: fuel. deposits can form in combustion Institute for Automotive Service. A precise mixture of fuel and ch ambers, injector pumps, Excellence (ASE), changing lhe air -delivered at the right time in nozzles a nd plungers, slowing oil and filter is the most the right place -gives your car the flow of gasoline. The result is frequently neglected scJVicc by predictable pickup when you poor combustion and mo re vehicle owners. In addition to step on the gas. So, if you're pollutan 1s en t e ring the oil and air filters, replace fuel experiencing knock and ping o r atmosphere filters regularly, especially in· that jerky sensation, the problem You can avoid all 1hese fuel-injected engines. Tber. could be contamina ted fuel, problems by following a few may be more than one flltet clogged fuel injectors or deposits simple step~: between the tank and your o f gunk in 1he e ngine's • Keep your tank as full as engine. combustion chambers. possible during cold weather and • Regularly use a fuel additive A number of things can cause when the weather changes from which dissolves harmful caJboo,. contaminated fue l, including one season to the next. varnish and gun deposits insid( fluctua tio ns in outdoor • Make sure you use the correct injectors and cylinders anct temperature. When combined grade of fuel. The octane ranng reduces knock and ping. 1be. with a less-than-full gas tank, necessary for your car's e ngrne to fu e l system additive should they can cause wate r droplets to run .efficiently is indicated near contain enough top-grade condense in the fuel. the filler neck or in the owner's detergents to thoroughiy clean Clogged fuel injectors a re manual. every part of the fuel system. another reason your car may lack the combu s tion and performance needed for smooth starts, quick acceleratio n and good fuel econo my. Injectors squirt the proper mix of gasoline and air into your engine's combustion chambers SPECIALIZING IN PORSCHE. VW Al«> AUDI REPAIR 163' Ohms Way CostaM..a (714) 611-2092 ti SEPTEMBER 17. 1997 • flt mcHMD DUNN . or a coech who emphast".ed tun before victodel. bis piayen ~won a lot. That's probably why longtime ~Harbor l:flgh h1atory ••i='w 4Dd tiUn1s coa.c:h Charlie nu· BJeUrer, reUrlng &I the Wkri' boys coocb after next •MOC. will be belt known for ~his players play .• to a 1985 COGtelt. in wbktl NeW- poct Hubar WOil. 68--21. "11Mre WU a Jot of~ with~, but alio a lot OI tun. He wan.cs harder than anybody.• In fouryean, ~· tMmt went 3'-12-3 "and made it to tM pl&~ fNSf l8UOD. wlmilng tbree SM \'WW 1itlM elOng the way. •Giddings so.id he'd coach U I took ~ of ell the paperwork and bus schedules,• Bletker Mid. "I was lucky to come to a Place where tennis ii great, and I got a lot of help from the local prot, and I never screwed a kid up,• Bleiket said. •1 never told a ldd not to use this shot or that shot -that's why I let Brett Hansen-Dent use all those shots. People would ask me why, and I'd say, 'Well, because one day Longtime Newport .Harbor High tennis coach will retire after next season Bleiker, who turns 61 this year, will remain a teacher at Newport Harbor after next aea- son, but coaching ii deftnltely over, he said. after the spring of 1998. . he's going to get them all in.' • Hansen-Dent, one of Bleiker's greatest pupils, won a CIP South- am Sectlon individual title in 1990, before collegiate stints at UCJ and USC, followed by a career on the pro satellite circuit. •Mainly in my career, I had a lot of champions, but more indi- vidual champions than team champions," Bleiker said. Geoff Abrams, a sophomore at Stanford next spring after play- ing No. 3 singles for the 1997 NCAA champion Cardinal, played two full seasons for New- port Harbor as a freshman and sophomore. 1993 and '94, win- ning Sea View League titles both years. Abrams, one of the top players in the school's history, did not play prep tennis as a junior, but came back for brief appearances as a senior, including against Corona del Mar's then-unbeaten • • New Shipment of European & Domestic Antique Humidon Contemporary Humidors By: Cohbn C um Brown ·O. Marshall Dav1dolf' C.A.O. NatS~rman Vialt1 Fr~Hch Leather Road Warrior E Jo~n Nonnan Kazamn Vincent M Criltom ServOllS Hallibunon Stand-up A.httay1, Cutten Cipr Cues & Fl.uh Humidifiers & Solution Digit.a.I Hygrometert Boris Turkich. Abrams' much- antidpated set against Corona del Mar freshman Taylor Dent that day was rained out and nev- er made up. Later in 1996, Dent won a CIP individual tiUe. •Geoff went to the Italian Open and French Open Uuniors) and never played that year in CIF, but he would've won CIP his senior year, easy,• Bleiker said. ~There's no question in my mind." Bleiker had other champions, including Gary Bird, nm Macres and J ames Meyers from the 1970s, Billy Hanson and Brad Gibson in doubles in 1987. His son, Chuck, also played for him in 1982. Chris Rabbitt and Jeff Thomsen were also big winners. Two years ago, Bleiker hand- ed the girls tennis coaching reins over to Fletcher Olson. Bleiker guided the Sailors to a Sea View League championship and a berth in the CIF Finals in 1993. Among the individual girl CIGARS OF THEMON1H VERACRUZ ALCAroNE LA DIVA 1000 West Coast Highway • (ACJll:NI fllMi l<ll>Oo lay Club next to Welt Marine) • •Custom Invitations & Bam11e1s.....~ • Party Goods • Helium Tank Ren • Balloon Deliveries 270 E. 17th St. Suite 12A Costa Mesa \L<>Cated 1n Hillgren Square) Open llon-Sat 9am-6pm 722 180S : Sanday 10am-4pm - Beautify Your Yard! ~combfMd , ~"' cJt.U arm. Our~ Cl'eedffttf cind ~ --~ ~-·u.a care af Oil ,.,.,,. ~- champions under Bleiker were Margo Mololly,Mara Colaizzi (now at Loyola Marymount) and Sarah Hawkins [North Caroli- na). CbuUe Blelker Bleiker, hired full time at Newport Harbor in 1973, also helped coach football in the 1980s for a couple of seasons under Mike Giddings, one of the school's most successful gridiron coaches. Bleiker said he would never f9rget a game against Laguna Beach, in which Giddings accused the Artists of •head .hunting• when they creamed Sailor quarterback Shane Foley on the first play. •we ran wild Wltil we ran up the score," Blelker said, ref erring ,- Bleiker graduated from Abi- lene Christian College in Texas, then served hyo years. in the Army. He wu a club tennis pTo for a while, then was hired at Pueblo Junior High in Roswell, N.M . He also taught at Carlsbad Mtd High and Permian High in Texas before moving back to California, where he attended Cal State Long Beach to earn his master's degree. Still in graduate school. Bleik- er was hired to coach tennis at Costa Mesa High in 1970, then moved over to Newport Harbor a year later. Two years later he was a full-time teacher and coach. •1 got to coach the sport I love the best,• he said. •All my life I've loved tennis. I always tried to make it fun for the kids, and the kids always liked playing for me. That was my approach." Bleiker's approach and spirit will certainly be missed after next season. RUN\\ri\y FASOIONS ... • New £1et•e• at Great Prlee• • De•l••er La•el• . • ctaallty C:ea•ll••e•t • S•lp•e•t• ~rrlvlDI Dally ...AT lllJNAWAY ptd£m 642-1844 369 E. J 7• St. (Aero11 (rom Ralph•) M-F 10-6, Sat 10.S Celestino's quality MEATS Celestino's Hqme CQQked De ll Homemade sausages NO Presev8tlves 32 dlft'erent vanctles Cooked Turkey Breast Veal Ollcken Cooked Roast Beef Pork TUtkey $6.99-!b $3.99 lb CelesUno's Madnadc's Lemon Ga1'c or Maul Ka-bObs Chicken o r beef Trl-Tlp Roast ss:99 lb OPEN SUNDAY 10-6 270East171h St. • Costa Mesa • (71~ 842-7191 Hill uare 10:00 to 7 :00 Mon-Sat ing in the gardiil. n. garden allo provides •. leamlng 8ll"f'iroom8Dt for the children, wbo villt there f:re.. quently to help pick several types ol produce, including artichokes, seasonal ~· eggplants, blackberries and a ..... Wbo remain h\uilble about tli*put. . "1r Yett~ betp8d ... a.n.tt Write. gram tiill;. for tbe relioCttkm of the~ tO the new ddl· dnn's c:mler. "lb8 ~WU lldJlnttted to tbie board " dltectcn for Pood For All tnc., a nadGiW organl· zation that aWl(da grams to anti-hunger pojedl through· out tbe country. It ended up giving the center S'l,000. Tbe centiar wm me variety of peppers, such u jalapenos and 1baL ·rm so mna~ the money to put in , the peppets are way too hot for me," Groetsch said. •But we put them on fendng, irrigation ' "lt'f the support of and lighting for the campus community the new gar-den, and com-that makes the · posting boxes the table, and the kids eat them right garden work ... " -BARBARA CORTEZ and a nice vegetable stand for the panmts to pick up.• Only students and staff of the college have access to the garden. Groups, • clubs and individuals take a section of the lot and plant whatever fruit or vegetable they want with the understand- ing that the majority of what is produced goes to the center. •with all the support here, it's not necessary to go out- side,• Groetsch said. But the main supporters are the Yetts, who Groetsch desaibes as •the driving force behind the garden" •nietr involvement is ongo- ing," she said about the cou- and choose the produce they want, Groetsch said. ·we've never had money to do those things,• she said. The only other large dona- tion they have received was $500 worth of tools, seeds and compost from Barbera Cortez, an OCC infant specialist teacher, Groetsch said. 1be horticulture department also donates a good supply of plants and seedlings every year. "It's the support of the cam- pus community that makes the garden work,• she said. • S.rvlce • Speefl GET AUTO CLUB PEACE OF MIND • • At the Auto Club, we've got a lot more to offer members than our famous 24-hour Roadside Assistance. • Great rates on auto, homeowners and watercraft insurance*. • U.mplete travel agency servica. •New and med car purchasing services. • Free AAA Maps, TomBooks• and TripTw• • &dmive "Show Yom <:ant & Saft.,, discounts at retailers and attractions .• .. -.. "' - ' • 4 I rtc N"':NDM DJUltKLOU I lt.abbl Mark s. Mmlr :Went to meet the Wzbak Rahm at 1AI ~ lldiinatlona1 Aitport in -·~ IUD'OUDdingtbe ........ Jldnllterwould not allow tbl two IDlll to exchange as iDUdi •a gNetipg. : 1111? 1 nd, Ibey surrounded them ~·gmded them through the ter-' ~~_a waiting limousine. ~felt om guard push down lilt bled and usher hbn inside. Rabin followed. The car door .,,,.,,.,., thutttng out tbe noise ~ bu6 of tbe large airport, ~the two, for a lllm]ent, in !lm-.. lllenoe. Then Rabin sPoa· • • ... turned and said 'Shalom.,. Milleruld. Although Miller said at that moment, he felt almost as if be were dreaming, Rabin appeared relaxed. , •He told me he bad stopped smoking two weeks ago,• Miller said. •Then be bad a Scotch.• Miller dtes the meeting with ~bin as one of the most memo- rable in bis tife, but it is by far not his only brush with fame. Miller, 50, bas been rabbi at Temple Bat Yabm for almost 20 years and bas developed an uncanny ability for bringing famous scholars, writers and - 31~ THI~ YOU! Q IT'S TIME TO BE THE YQU THAT YQU WANT TO BEi WEIGHT LOSS CENTERS AND COUNSELORS ARE ~ALL TfiE SAME. l llHIJll~ (If ~.00 CALL TODAY! . . (714) 903-7784 itlltelmen to speaktohil oongregaUm in Newport Beach. He bas brought in Elie WJeseli Henry Kissinger, whmlbe delaibedu •very friendly, be took all the time in the world to answer questions1 • Leon Utis, •we still corre9pODd, • and Herman Wouk. If everything works out, SNmm Peres is sched- uled to ame in February. Current Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu also Is on Miller's wish list. ·1 oetwort.. Miller laid. "There's no big secret toil• But networking does not ade- quately explain bow he managed to convince Rabin, who was origi- nally just supPosed to speak in eastern Canada, to JD,ake a 4,000 mile detour to Southern California. ·1 know people,• Miller said with a slight smile. An Illinois native, Miller grew up in Chicago. He got bis bacbe- lots degree in international rela- tions at American University in Washington, D.C. He went on to rabbinical school at Hebrew Union College in Onc:innati and LetJlmJ~ in.stall your complete F.d~· . WU onWned In 1974. After four years as an ftwwtnt rabbi at a temple in New.-.,, be moved to CaJiforma and took the po1t at Ba.tYahm. •1 had grand viGoos [for the place),. Mmar Mid. One of hill villom ls to start 1l!mple Bat Yahnl Univenity, wbldl would glYe ~in the amgregat1m. cNmce to educate tblmleMm-=m1111mV. in an upects of Judaice. Coune otr.ingl will tndnde history, mUllc, the Hebrew languege. art and Iarae1i politics. And eventually, Miller hopes the temple will be given acaeditation. ·Thal'• the dJeam.. he said. Another dream is to promote a better understanding between Jews and, OuisUans in the com- munity. Miller hopes to aocom- plilh this by starting a Jewish- Christian Institute in conjlllldion with Southern California College. In November, the temple will host a fund-raiser with the col- lege. ·w e have to establish intera~­ tion [between the religions),• Miller said, adding that someday, he hopes to do the same with Muslims in the comm'1Illty. •The walls are so high,• he said. ·we have to build some bridges. We have to appreciate our differences, appreciate the integrity [of our faiths), appreci- ate our common ground.• ARCHES LIGHT SOFFITS Raymond Craft Owner 714-413-7001 Costa Mesa. couple help others through church activities IYklMKAIAR Ron and LyDda Gagliano believe the happiest people me those wbo eerve others. It's no wonder ire always smiling, say members of the co e's church, Mesa Verde United Methodist urch in Costa Mesa. For nearly 30 yean, the Gaglianos have dedi- cated their lives to helptng young people learn the meaning of Cbristianity. Working with the United Method.1st Joint Commission, a group of Methodist lay people and pastors throughout the United States and Mexico, the Gaglianos have taken 45 trlps to various parts of northwest Baja Califonpa and Sonora, Mexico. SEmM1EA 17, 1WI DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT Ron and Lynda Gagllan.o hold two pWows made In honor of trtpe to Mexico to rebuild DurlDg their church's annual Easter missions, the Gaglianos and several youths have rebuilt. repajred and renovated dozens of churches in many poverty-stricken dties located in Baja Cali- foml.a and Sonora. The couple also travels to Mex- ico with other members of the church at Christ- mas and during three-and four-day holiday weekends during the summer and fall and repair churches there. . . It is their selfless service and unconditional kindness that have recently earned the Costa Mesa residents the distinction of having the church's youth lounge named in their honor. The Gagliano Youth Lounge was dedicated June 1 with more than 100 people in attendance. •They are very giving people and very loving,· said church member Nancy Darnall. •1 think they epitomize what Christianity is all about.• Lynda said she is simply expressing her Christ- ian faith. ·1 feel warm doing service for others,• said the soft-spoken 58-year-old, who also teaches Sunday school at the 400-member church. "We receive far more than we give." FINE CARPETS AND CUSTOM AREA RUGS SINCE 1866 HEMPillLL'S RUGS & CARPETS Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 722-7224 230 East 171b~t. Costa M~ What they receive is a spiritual and emotional high, Lynda said. It is a feeliny that continually • increases their Jaith in God and in people, said Ron, 62. •1 wouldn't be as happy as I am if I wasn't help- ing others," said the retired sales engineer. Married for 36 years, the Gagli.anos have one son, one dau~hter and four grandchildren. The Amencan Red Cross recently honored Lynda with an award for her 14 years of service helping organize more than 30 blood drives at the church. Lynda has also been a popular Sun- day school teacher for 25 years. Ron is a member of the hand bell choir, a5 well the church's finan- cial secretary. •Ron and Lynda demonstrate to our young people how they can translate their faith into lov- ing actions,• said thecllurch's leader, the Rev. Richard George. The difTerence between memory loss and forgetfulness may surprise you ••• Newport Bay Hospital. located oo Dover&: I 6th in Newport Beach. ·is pleased to~ FIB MEMORY 1UTING for our Seniors. This program was developed to promote awareness and appnciation for the communities in which we live. Find out the difference. Call for an appointment for you or someone you love today. Newport Bay Hospital "TM C1nter of &c11"nu"• (714) 650-9750 For our other community services - + Senior Mental Health + Recommendations for SenJor Living + M~icarellnsuraoce Questions + Care Giver &tbcalioo • Grief & Loss • Spiritual Support CaD J'OMI' Bwgm: Cader (714) 650-9700 Newport Bay Hospital- ca1e1ain1 tM SJllril /or OUI' Sellion ... " ' .. • j •& .. .. .. .. .. ,} •• •• •• ~( .. " .. .... ;-- I I -: t-- Higashi Honganji Buddhist Temple in Costa Mesa ojf ers an &lstern approach to praying and building faith BY MICHELLE TERWILLEGER A way to heal the pain. A connection to faith and family. Higashi Honganji Buddhist Temple means different things to the 50 families who belong to the Costa Mesa congregation. *Basically, what I'm looking for is to get out of pain,• said Rod Castroreale of Costa Mesa, who has attended the temple on and off for fiVe years and is suf- fering from an unspecified ill- ness. Castroreale, who was raised in the Catholic Church, said he didn't reach the same kind of peace by praying to get better. *I would not accept the ill- ness, and by doing that, it caused me more pain,· he said. *[Now} I'm dealing with the reality of it. I really have relieved a lot of my pain." Part of Shin Buddhism is accepting the suffering and BERND CONTINUED FROM 1 brings our total investment in major maintenance items to more than $4 million over the past sev- eral years. The budget is never far from our minds because it highlights the resources that allow us to pr<r vide essential services to students. Our budget for the 1997-98 school year is $105 million, which is a $10 million increase over last year. The increase comes from an expansion of class-size reduction to grade three, enrollment growth and employee compensation. ~ additional 4 % is set aside as reserves. We are happy about this figure because it exL'eeds the state requirement of 3%. Another budget-related topic is the allocation of funds from the farm sale. The Board of nustees has targeted some of these monies for a number of important projects, including the reopening of Rea and Davis, refurbishing the theater at Costa Mesa High School, planning for a stadium at Estancia High School and a swim- ming pool at Costa Mesa High. roofing projects and other deferred maintenance items. Our board intends to discuss the best use of the remaining $2.6 million from the farm funds in the coming months. impeimanence of life. Shin Bud- dhism teaches congregants the four truths, which include that everyone will experience suffer- ing, and suffering is caused by ignorance. •The Buddhists didn't talk about metaphysics. They get rid of illusions,• Castroreale said. Higashi Honganji services begin with introductions from temple priest Tsuyoshi Hirosurni and an incense offering. Congregants come to the front of the room one at a time, place their offering, bow and pick up ashes to put in a bowl of burning incense. "It's a purification of atmos- phere, of body and mind,· Hiro- sumi said. Next, a long chant is read with a bell rung intermittently. The Chinese chant, which is read with Japanese phonetics, is a teaching of Buddha translated from the Sanskrit. Then Hirosumi gives a brief talk -first in English, then Japanese -about Buddhist teachings such as enlightenment, selflessness and interdepen- dence. Hirosumi reminded congre- gants earlier this month that all things are dependent on each other and told them to be mind- ful of how one small change \n circumstances can alter their reality. "Nothing is individual in this world. Everything is dependent,• l;Iirosumi said from his pulpit. ·"Llfe is a net, a huge fishirig net. And each of us is a mesh in that net. One square.• He said that people should not take all the credit for their suc- cesses in life, but instead should be conscious of bow other people and c:ircumstances contributed to them. Among other teachings, Hiro- sumi emphasizes that Budd.hists should appreciate all life because *all living things have the poten- MARC MARTIN I DAILY fll.Ol' liuyoshl Hirosuml, leader of the ~gaahl Honganjl Budd.I.st Temple tn Costa Mesa. prays. ti.al to become a Buddha.• In addition to services, the temple holds Japanese tea cere- monies, bingo on Saturdays for fund-raising, occasional retreats and Dharma, or Sunday school classes. Ronnie Young teaches Dhar- ma classes to the temple's youngest Buddhists, who make paper lanterns and drawings and have their own incense burning. "We teach them about com- passion in a way they can under- stand it,• Young said. "If it's truth, you find it all over. Bud- dhist teachings are in almost any children's literature.• Sandra Kodama, who grew up in Japan and lives in Villa Park, sends her children to Dha.rma classes to keep them in touch with their religious and cultural roots. "Llke Catholicism or Chris- tianity, I want to carry over fami- ly stuff. I want them to get used , to coming here,• Kodama said. *They learn how to read and pray and get back to history." About half of Higashi Hon- ganji's congregation is Japanese. Hirosumi sees the Japanese cul- ture and religion as intertwined. *Buddhism produces Japan- ese culture,• he said "You ' directly come to religious prac- tice to understand Japanese cul- ture.• I , .1 Needless to say, I am delighted with our progress on all these important projects because our students, parents and community will benefit from them. The Daily Pilot is the proud co-sponsor· Of the following events: I am also smiling because I've got a meeting soon with some of my doubting superintendent bud- dies. We have done some great work, and I am looking forward to telling them about it . . I • MAC BERND Is the superintei Idem of the Newport-Mesa Unified School DistriGt. CHURCH CONTINUED FROM 1 Bach Bay Classic • Clean Harbor Day • Costa Mesa Business /Education Partnership Day •