HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-01-20 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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SERVING THE NEWPORT COSTA MESA COf.N.AUNmES SINCE 1907
fublic gets_
itS :say .· about~,
two bridges
•Community can give input on what it
thinks should be included in the multi-city
environmental report that addresses
19th Street, Gisler Avenue crossings.
Eu EGr1
.f'.'EWPORT-t-.fESA -Conunumty meetmg:. will he
held m Cost11 Mesa ana Newport Beach next week to give
the public a chance to ·
discuss the envuon--------------.
mental study of the
19th Street and Gi !er
Avenue hndge~
The Orange Coun-
ty Transportttllon
Authonty and · the
cues of Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach,
Huntington J3each
Under review7
What pomu do you
think ihould be Included • m the emnronmental
impact report on the
bndges? call our Readef'S
Hotline at (949) 642-6086 _
or send an e-mail to ·
dadypilotOearthlink. net. Please
leave your hometown, your
phone number (for verification
purposes only)' and the spelling
of your full name.
ABOVE: Southern California College professor
Vincent GU is serving as a liaison between Assist
International and the Chinese Medical Association
to get close to $2.1 miJUon in medical equipment to
two Chtne. e hospllaJs.
BELOW:·Gll wlll be bringing thousands of these
ln.lnlature AIDS test kits to China.
MARC MARTIN I OAJl Y PILOT
Practicfug good
Illedicine
and Fo40talil Valley
are cooperallng on a
studv of the two
bridges. t,p ~ee
whelher they can be
deleted from the
authority's -:master
plan ot arterial highways.
The city of Costa Mesa was the unpetus for the proJt?d
and contributed hall of the $200,00P m funds for the study.
The Ordl\ge County Transportab.on Authority lS acting as
lead agency to ensure unparllality. sd.ld Costa Mesa City
Manager Allan Roeder.
"Obviously, given our See related Sfnrv, Page 5 0ackground. that study lS
v• 11 not gomg to have a lot df
Southern Calif omia College
professor is helping bring medical
supplies to provincial China
Eu.c.r: G11
I magmc trymg to run an emergency
room \VJthout a crash cart monitor, or
perfonrung open-heart surgery using
phers.
lmdgine being a doctor in a region at the
heart .of the AIDS epiderruc wtthout a la bo·
r;i tory fo sc:reen blood or test patients.
Southern California College professor
Vince Gil hasn't had to unagmc.
As a medical anthropologist who ha:s
worked on variOU!> projects in China since
1990, he has witnessed what are all-too-
commori realities for provmaal Chinese
doctors. ·
Recently, Gil began serving as a liaison
between the Scotts Valley, Calif.-based
nonproht orgaruzdtion Assist International
and the Chinese Medical Association to
facilitate the donallon of more Uian $2 mil-
lion .in medical equipment to two hospitals
in China.
SEE CHINA PAGE 6
cred.ipility if it's fully conducted .and pB.ld for by Costa
Mesa,• Roeder said.
The oty's. efforts to remove the bndges from the auili -
ity's master plan date back to 1990, when the oty's gener-
al plan was adopted, Roeder saJd At •bat tune, the City
Council scaled back projected levels c development to
re~uce or eliminate the need lor the bndges m Costa ·
Mesa. . • u has taken us the ensuing llme fram~ of almo:.t c:cv-
en years to move forward to where the [Santa Ana River
Crossmg~J study was approved and 111 the works,• Roeder
said.
The bndge debate peaked five years, ago when hun-
dred:-; of residents oppo!>ed the hndges, .saymg they would
bnng rivers of trathc mto rcs1denbal neighborhoods.
Next week's meeting will focus on the environmental
review process, "aid Glenn Campbell, project manager
with the Orange ~ounty Transportation Authonty.
SEE BRIDGE PAGE 6
Parenffi to district: 'Leave Estancia Alone'
• Petition drive has started found no support tor adding
grades seven and eight to the high
school. ' opposing plan to add
seventh and eighth grades
to high school.
• J'm not one to usually speak
out about things unless they are
immoral and unethical,• Frankel .
said. •This is both.-• EIN Mt\' llNI
~Pb .... ..
: ' COSTA MESA -As a show of
District offioals have presented
what they call "beginning poin1.s•
on how to streamline the eXtSting
13-22 school configurations. Sev-
eral public meetings have been
held, and more are scheduled, to
engage the community in a dia-
logue and build consensus about
how to proceed.
no support for a school district pro·
posal to change the high school, a
group of parents has &tdrted a pell·
ti on drive aptly du bbNl • Lc.w<•
Estancia Alon·e. ~
Spearheading the drive is
Pamela Frankel, who ~aid she has
spoken lo students, parents, teach:
ers and admmi~;trators and has
The school zone slated to take
the brunt of the changes lS
Estancia. All of the elementary
schools have ooen recommended
MILLENNIUM MOMENT
•'
He dev(\loped
Balboa Bay Club
and golf course
.
W hen Hadd Ring started his real
estate business m 1944, hi
office fronted a two-lane road
on 30th Street and Newport Boulevard.
Where an abandoned military base
once stood, the Illinois native d eveloped
the Balboa Bay Club, which became a
favorite for celebrities. Ring also worked
on a plan for a goH course by the sea.
now the Newport Beach Country Club
He later served u president of the New-
port HarbOr Union High School District.
MltlennNm Mo!Mllt mlebram the people~
mede • 1Njar ~ to th9 .... p .... t·
~ c~ cMtng the l*t ~.
Newpon-Meso thinking about
school bonds. See story, Page 3
for change into either kinder-
garten-through-third-grade or
fourth-th rough-sixth-grade
chools. Te.Winkle Middle School
would be changed into a fourth-
through-sixth-grade school, and
its seventh-and eighth-graders
would be moved to Estancia.
Distnct officials have reiterated
that the •beginning points• are
1ust that Chuck and Elaine Cassi-
ty, whose names appear first on
the pcbtion, want to make sure
that's the case.
"They told us this is not an
INDEX
QASRD ' fllDCOL.-3 POUCI fU5 " _____ 2
PUU llJ1K6 -' SNll5 1 na••----.. 2 --.. _, __ .. _ .. _2
WEAlHEI
edict, but an attempt to build con-·
sensus, -Chuck Cassity said.
·niey'U be able to tell by way of
this pet.Jtion that it's a bad idea."
Chuck Cassity,, whose four dill·
dren have either attended or are
attending Estanaa, said the idea
or a new Estanoa wouldn't work
because of the S!Ze of the campu~ .
·w~ don't have the hors'epower
of Corona del Mar or Costa Mesa,
but.if it am't broke, don't break it,~
he said. ·1 think the school board
is trying to balance its books on
the backs of 13stancia kids and par-
ents.•
Other reasons listed on the
peutlon for oppo ing the seventh-
. SEE PETmON PAGE 6'
MAR'" MARllN I DAILY f'll.OT
Pamela Frankel, left, talks with parents Chuck and Elaine
Cassity about a petltion she ls .starting to keep E tanda High
School a ninth-through-12th-grade campus.
l3ay standards may be costl~-
•Regional ·water Board's
proposed pathogen limits
for Newport Bay could
end up costing millions.
}ENtFEJt RAGl.>.!'1.'t>
lll:ff.Pb
NEWPORT REACH -~ part
of its goal to make all of Upper
Newport Boy safe for swlriiming
and other water sports, the 5ent41
Ana Regional Water Quality con-
trol Boerd is considering adopting
limiti for pathogens m the bay.
But the actim OOUld end up
costing the dty's tupayen• nlll-
Uom of doUan in new PfOS1?ams
and plam to ensure tbe ~Y~
water lneetl that ttandinl
Pethogenl -dil1111e ce~
rrucroorgam m or vuu
enter the bay from a varl t}' ot
ources, mcluding torm drain ,
waste dis<;harge from boats, m-
inal fee and b rd· dropping .
Examples of harmfUl pathogen
include e coli, almon lla and
HepabtiS A.
~ecau h1gh fecal coliform
counts are an md1cator tht1t th re
al~ may be pathogen ln the
water, the feglonal boam
fecal COliform as a measununent
for pathogens. Direct testing tor
·the di1eaMHauslng organllml ls
mu<:'h more expeftllve.
Fecal colif onn II one ~ lbuJ'
bay additives for wbk:b the board
wW eltablish • •tot41 iDUimum
dally loed" -the ellowable amount of a bai1nful SU..,..._
iiiiii\aiiil tiiim .... " ......
-pkail around .... bey.
City offloals support unprov-
rng lhc bay wat"'r quality. and
vt w the fecal coliform limit l'I
tt p in the nght clitedion.
How ~er, because th co lS
will be borne almos~ entirely by
th dty, offlc1al5 are urging th
feglonal board to do additi nal
tudy.
For exampl , whll most pcQ•
pl agree ther • are pntbogens Ip
th hfty, It as till unknown to whit
extent they exist. how Uiey are
c&rried and how hannhal they ere.
i&ld Dave Kiff, umtant to the dft
manager.
And although tbe re,aioiUJ
board staff believes --~ b the bett tNlk .. II
pathogens, city oft 'Ell ..
tioaing Whetbs ... .., ,,... ...
2 Wednesday, Januory 20, 1999
ALMlllC
• mnoa·s NOTI· Do you or sotMOne you
know have•~ birthday or annl'ter·
sary coming up7 If so, ""'9'd hke to include rt in
our AlmeNC. Call the infonnation in to OUt
Re~n Hotline, (949) 642~; fax It to (949)
646-4170; or rn.11 It to the D•lly PilOt, 330 W.
8~ St, Cost.a Mes. 92627. Voc.t Gin send pho-
tographs, but l!'clude a self.addressed,
st1mped envelope If you want them returned.
BUSINESS LICENSES
New busU\ess license information
reported by the dty of Newport Beach
• Orthopedic Surgery Center of
Orange, 351 Hospital Road, owners:
Alan Beyer, M.D • Peter Foulke.
• Oxford Homes, 4500 Campus Drive •.
owner: N. Brandom.
• Padbcraft Custom Wood Designs,
1006 Hathaway St., owner: Ramiro Sil·
va.
• Paws of the Planet, 2813 Lafayette
Ave., owner· Kathleen Edmon.
• Performance AJr Systems, 3900 E.
Miraloma Place, Mark Welch.
• Picture lb.is, 309 Lugorua St., owner:
Sue Chnstlansen
• Pmacol, 705 Narc:iSsus Ave .. owner:
Michael Sterner
• Port Securities Inc., 2901 W. Coast
Hig hway, owner: Richard H. Lemmon
Jr.
•The Power Broker, 414 Baywood Dri·
· ve, owner: Ke nneth C. Rich.
DUI ARRESTS
The following people were arrested
~cently on suspiaon of driving under
theTnfiuence. These people have been
cmested only on susp1oon of a crime,
.and, as with all such cnmes, are inno-
• cent until pr<;>ved gutlty.
COSTA MESA
JAN.11
Normeh Garcia Arredondo, 38, Costa
Mesa
Martin Ceniceros, 31, Costa Mesa
JAN. 13
Chnslophe r Joe Foster, 32, Costa Mesa
Rrtnuro Fuentes-Albarran. 32. Costa
MP<.;d
Damien Pham, 22, Huntington Beach
JAN. 14
Lena Shawnan Moses, 29, Santa Ana
JAN. 15
Maria Bernarda Looney, 30, Long
Beach
NEWPORT BEACH
JAN. 11
James Michael Feede rle, 41 , NeWJ><?rt
Beach ·
Chdd Scott Hoblit, 23, Newport Beach
JAN. 12
dilberto Gcillegos, -40, Newport Beach
~AN.13
~ohn Charles AngP.lint, 39. Fountain
Valley
JAN.14
Steven Howard Hertz, 42, Ne wport
Bedch
.TAN. 15
Carlos Eduardo Cifuentes, 25, Costa
Mesa
JAN. 16
J amie Shdwn Buunan, 23, Newport
~earh
Most recent births in Newport Beach.
Myles J Glenn, Dec 16
:JdITlcs R. Momson , Oec. 16
Dndsey M . Suns, Dec 16
Ryan M. St. John, Dec. 16 .,_.
adeline C Sutton, Dec. 16
uren E Kepler, Dec 17
J:.uce M Laskowski, Dec. 17
Katherine E. LeWis, Dec. 17
Alexander E. Marshall, Dec. t 7
Elis<> K. Rimland, Dec. 17
Emma R. Schneck, Dec. 17
Noel C. Soares-Gilbert, Dec. 17
Annamarie T. Yu, Dec. 17
Spencer C . Hagaman, Dec. 18
Paige A. Iwata, Dec. 18
Emily C. Ohm, Dec. 18
Emma R. Veenstra Schamell, Dec. 19
VOL. 9J, NO. 16
Hunter C. Mcl.aran, Dec. 21
Daniel G. O'Donnell, Dec. 21
Jessica Lee Brl!dwell. Jan. 8
DEATlfS
Most recent deaths reported to the
Orange County Recorder's off1ce.
NEWPORT BEACH
Madelyn S. Wentworth, 92, Dec. 16
Evan Aileen, 78, Dec. 17
Omar J. Moorhouse, 90, Dec. 20
Ralph E. Herman, 81, Dec. 26
Olive L. Ranney, 93, Df'C 26
Gene A. Fndolfs, 78, Dec 28
COSTA MESA
Mane T. Palmquist, 94, Dec 18
• Larry Hoffman, 43, Dec 22
•Leo L. Hahn, 82, Dec 23
Gladys R. Bowman, 69, Dec. 25
Edward L. Farber, 66, Dec. 25
John M. Mcintosh, 75, Dec 25
Susan L. Molle, 53, Dec 28
CORONA DEL MAR
Edward P. Lavelle Sr. 95. Dec. 20
Patncia 0 . Billings, 81, Dec. 23
MARRIAGES
Most recent maniages as reported to
the Orange County Recorder's office.
NEWPORT BEACH
Daruiy D. ·Crowe and Gayle Cochran,
married Dec. 19 in Laguna Niguel
Nicholas W. Schofield and Shannon M.
Stater, mamed Dec 19 in Laguna
Beach
Matthew M. Clabaugh and Deborah L.
Cowan, mamed Dec 20 in Newport
Beach
Mohsin M. Ali and Bernadette K.
Kaufmann, mamed Dec 21 in Santa
Ana
Glyn M . Baker and Oralia Escamilla,
married Dec 21 in Santa Ana
COSTA MESA .
Sean K. Kahr and Theresa M. Mon-
toya, married Nov. 14 in Los Angeles
Woo Y. Song and Sunny Hub, mamed
Nov. 28 in Irvine
Jose L. Cortez Marcelmo and Lorenza
M. Cortes Cruz, married Dec. 18 in
Sarita Ana
li'avis L. Lemonds and Olga L Mon-
talvo Ramu:ez, mamed Dec. 18 m
Santa Ana
James C. Foster and Angy 8 .
Ri1kschroert, married Dec. 21 in Santa
Ana
Arman-do Rubio Contreras and Roxana
Paez Lechuga, roamed Dec 21 m
Santa Ana
CORONA DEL MAil
Steven J Espmosa and Kun R Hayes,
mamed Dec 19 m San Juan Capistrano
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Recent real estate transactions as
reported by the Aexiorn Data Quick
Products Group
NEWPORT BEACH
312 Catalina Dnve, $340,000
206 Fem St., $265,000
623 lrvine Ave., $233,000
623 Irvine Ave., $413,000
210 Little Lane 201. $203,000
210 Little Lane 205, $169,000
210 Little Lane 318, $227,000
1-490 Quail Lake Loop, $600,000
177 Rivemde Ave., $2,150,000
5 Serena Court, $239,000
6 Summerwalk Court, $160,000
222 Via Ithaca, $845,000
663 Via Lldo Nord, $1,250,000
540 Via Lldo Soud, s1.2oor000
3 Wind.song Court, $176,000
2330 E. 15tlt St., $410,000
204 43rd St A, $230,000
205 -43rd St., $398,000
243 61st St. 5325,000 •
CORONA DEL MAR
3439 Barhite St., $1.236,500
933 Bayside Cove, $552,000
221 Driftwood Road, $1,125,000
3500 Ulac Ave., $410,000
323 Poinsettia Ave., $612,000
8 Sky Sall Drive, $477,000
21 Sky Sail Dnve, $625,000
news stories, Ulusttl'ttOnS, edrto-
r!M matter or~
hefew'I can be reproduced With-
out written pennlalon of copy·
right owner.
HOW JO ftEACH US
OmMdon
The Tlmes Orahge County
(800) 252·9141
~ Ollllif*f (949) 642-5671
Display (949) 642-4321
lcMorlll
Hews (949) 642·5680
Spons (949) 574-422]
Hews, Sports Fu (Mt) 146-4170
E-mell: dtilypOote.Mthllnk net
MllnOMel
~Office CM) M2-4J21 """'* fu ~ U1-1126
Newport Beach/Costa Mteso Doily Pil
..
11119 AID IOW
Fonner lifeguard Craig Farmer
still saving lives, now· as a doct9r
• EDITOlt'S NOn.: lhen and Now is a feature
updating events and people we've profiled rn the pa!!-If there's 6n issue you'd like to see updated
in Then and Now, please call Eron Ben·Yehuda at
(949) 642-4321 ext. 330, or send an e-mail to u i.-
~lnk.Mt .
THEN
1n 1993, Craig Farmer traded his post
as a Newport Beach hfeguard for post-
op.
After a 22-year career,saVing swim-
mers, he decided to save the sick, and
moved with his fiance to New York City
to attend medical school.
It was not a spur-of ·th~-moment deci·
sion.
, "My initial interest in medicine came
from lifeguarding,• he said ..
named for rescue, Fanner already
knew first aid and CPR Graduating from
UCI With a degree in molecular biology
didn't hurt, either
Relocating to the Big Apple meant not
only a new career, but a new lif cstyle. Al
that point, he had never been east of the
MiSsissippi River. ·rm not a big-city person," he said.
.
NOW
Today, Fanner hds graduated medical
. s<;hool and is in his second year of a four-
year residency at Los Angeles County
Hospital, USC. He married his Hance,
ABOVE: Craig
Farmer
during his last
week as a
Newport Beach
Weguard, July
1993, before
heading off to
medical school
ln New York.
AT RIGHT:
Craig Farmer ls
no w a
resident at use County
Hosplta).
who is pregnant with their second child.
At least lDlbally, medical school was
very intimidating because of •the sheer
weight of everything you have to do m
that short four-year period,• Fanner said.
But he weathered the rough waters
with only a few scrapes and bruises.
Survivmg New York City was anothN
matter.
·It's a ve ry aggressive, fast-paced
town," he said. "It's always alive. Every
rught you can ge t high culture or high
decddence. My wi!e and I tried to make
the best or 1t. •
But Farmer yearned for the moun.
tams, detierts and -or cowse -beache'
of Southern California. •1 missed the out:
door llfcstyle, • he said. . ..
So he moved back for bis residency;
~peciahzing in emergency medicine~
Eventually, he hopes to land a job at
Hoag Hospital. "I love Newport Beach,!
~~d. •
Bemg a doctor has taught him to cher·
tsh life. "It makes you appreciate your
h<>alth, family cUld day-to-day life experi-
ence," he said ·vou don't want to take
that for granted.•
Nothing but net for volunteer police progra.II1:
• Basketball players Karl
Malone and Shaquille O'Neal
among the guests at Windows
on the Bay fund-raiser.
GREX::~
A star-studded fund-raiser that drew
pro basketball players Karl Malone and
Shaquille O'Neal to a popular Newport
Beach restaurant Friday night raised
about $5,000 for two Orange County ·
agencies.
Half of the money will be given to the
Newport Beach Police Department to
kick-start a volunteer program. The rest
of the money will be given to a county-
wide project that finds jobs for at-nsk
WEATHER
la.PAWS
Balboa 63/50
Corona del Mer
6215()
Costa M4tsa
61151
Newport Beach
63152
Newport Comt
63152
WPOMCAST
lOCATION SIZE
\Nedge ••••••• 3-6w
Newpoft •••••• 3""' ""
Bladtlel. •...•. J.<I w
IUvier Jetty ..•. 3-S w
~ ..... ,. •••. Mw
TIDES
TODAY
First low
4:14 am .••.•.•• 2.0
First high
10.15 am .•••. , •• S.S.
S«ond low
5:19 p m ........ 0 4
Second high
11 :52 p.m ....... 4 1
1"U"5DAY
First low
5:061.m .•.• , ••• 1.t
Flm high
11 :00 a.m .•.••.. S.O
Second k'9lv
5;57 p.m .••••••• o.o
Sealftd high
.... mldliW!t --.....-s1 •
youth.
The volunteer program would place
otizens within the department for a van-
ety of duties. Sgt. Mike McDennott said
the contnbution will help purchase uru-
f orms and equipment for the new
of today's marquee athletes. Along witli
Malone, a power forward for the Uta.ti
JdZz, and O 'Neal, .the 300-pound-plu!
center for the Los Angeles Lakers, the
event attracted players from the Ana-
he1rn Mighty Ducks and Anaheim .
Angels. ·employees.
•we don't receive o ty funding for this
program, so the money will help out
tremendously,• be said. ·This was the
biggest donation we've bad so far.•
Rec;tdurant owner Scott Shuttleworth
said the spontaneous get-together was
auncd at helping local charities that
somctnnns are overlooked by corporate..
sponsored fund-raisers. He added tha.l
the rcstdurant will host similar event&
every month.
The volunteer program has attracted a
handful of applicants, several of whom
will begin working 'at•the department 10
the next couple of weeks. Police hope
they have about 30 to 40 volunteers by
next year
•There are a lot of worthy causes out ·
there, and we want to make sme no one
is loft out," Shuttleworth said. •we wanl
to remc1in consistent with our contribu-
Uons to local charities while having a fUI)
tune" •
The fWld-raiser was held at Windows
on the Bay Guests gave what they could
at the front door and mingled with some
SUIF
The swell tS out of
the west fMfY 12
seconds for incrHs-
lng sets In the waist-
"to shoulder-high
-'"· Sets at the
points and reefs
should go C1Vef
shooldfor·hlgh.
• • W.ves at Hunting
tonwlllgo~·
high. We NW an
lncrMSing west·
~swell,
• gMng us Mb over
hNd-hlgh at the .
Mstspots~
Wlter~is
poor to .... Wind
condhb11 .,.. talm.
~ "" poeNbili'Y of,.. The .,,, Mts
mtS:tlp.m.
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• Welt ... Street. Several precious stones worth S 1, 100
were stolen from • car tn tht 600 block sometime during the
ewo1ng of Jan, 6.
• .,..., ""9t: A cellular phone worth S208 was stolen from •
•cat In the 3100 bl0<.k bvtween 2 and s·1s p.m. Jan 1f>
• N.wport loUlevanl A bicycle worth U OO was stolen In the •
2f>OO block betwffo 4 end 6 pm. Jan is
NIWPOR1 81ACH
• M9cArthw llouteverd Three laptop computers worth
$5,000 were stolen from a business in the 3900 block som.tlme
betwMn Jan. 16 and Jan. 18
• ~ loueevenl: lWo laptop Computfn worth S2, 100
were stolen from • t>Wnese In the 3900 blodc sometime
~Jan.16 and.Jen.18
• ...... DrtW. lWo wife.ts llnd their contents worth S151
WIN stot.n from a bullnell In the 200 bk>dt bet\ .. en 4 end
4:10 p.m. Jan. U . •
• Pwt MtlA1 ...,_. ~If rttmS of J.wttry wor1h S7,00S
WIN stolen from a home lri lN 2400 block tomttime t.bwln
Jin ' Md Jan. s • V"'9 ... , •. A ihOtgun wont\ .S50 wa "°"1n hon. a
hontt In the 2100 block tom.cimt btttt11n Dec. 11 end .a.n. 11. •
• •
,.
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Doily Pilot Wedne$doy, Jonuary 20, 1 m a ..
Tbere:S no chance of bucking Broncos news hype
A ' US\141, tho worJd was m
tunnoil la i week. Geno-
. c1de m Kosovo, fiscal ~aos m Brazil, a little trial of ~Orts
m Washmgton, weather disasters
in the Northeast, etc., etc.
Here in Colorado, there was
the inauguration of a new gover-
nor - a Republican for the first
time in a couple of generations.
This gave the GOP a firm grip on
the statehouse, as well as both
houses of the legislature. Big
ncw::.I ·
More big news: There was a
bit of a stink over the inaugural
ball. The new governor allotted a
. sea~ for each legislator but not for
their spouses or significant oth-
ers. He wanted to be able to sell
those bckets for $150 and up,
way up, and he did.
But whether 1t was human
slaughter or cunous political
fund-raising tactics, a large seg-
ment of Colorado's population
had no idea what else was going
on m the world.
You see, the Denver Broncos
THE FRED
COLUMJI
martin
were playing'the New York J ets ·
for the league championship, and
that is all that mattered. Denver
television news covered little
else And since most people rely
on television for what little news
they care to receive, non-Bronco
reportage hardly ever saw the
light of the tube.
Now, I love football, d'nd I
watch a lot of it. but mostly col-
lege games. Hey, l watched
Northwellite.m Missouri State play
some other little college for the
Division ID championship. But I
haven't much cared for the pro ·
game since Georgia Pron*re
. took over the Rams.
When we mq_ved he re, we
knew the obsession over lhe
Broncos, so we ke pt an open
, mind. We watched most of the
games cixld we followed team
news, especicilly Jo~ Elway's .
health. But we were tenninally
turped off by the wretched
excess of Denver's TV news com-
munity these past two weeks:
Broncomania.
Ob sure, the newscasts still
covered the weather pretty well
- snow in the mountains is very·
important here. The ski resorts
need plen ty of the white stuff to
survive. The Front Range comT
munities (basically, everywhere
e ast of the Rocloes from Col-·
·orado Springs north to Wyoming)
need the snowpack to provide
C 0 S T A M E S A C I I ·y C 0 U N C I l W R A P • U P
water for the region's two major
crops, wheat and new housu1g
tractli.
Though there was always time
to cover yet another drive-by
shooting m Aurora, the rest of
the news hours and halfrbours
has been w~·to-wall hype tor
last Sunday's game.
Lack of a real story didn't pre-
vent a saturation approach to
"news" coverage. Local nc...,.
shounds interviewed .
groundskee~rs who were
repainting the Bronco graphics m
the end zone5 of Mile High Sta-
dium. One station devoted !'>Orne
four precious minutes to the
Broncos' switchboard operator
Another interviewed Denver re~
idents who used to live m New
York ("What's 1t like bemg a
New Yawker here m the West•11.
Th~ Jets' amval at theu hotel
was covered live ("Most of them
are wearing heavy overcoats ... ·1.
I doubt that even Bronco fans of
the hardest core gave halt a hoot
for any of it. Even so, my wue ·
and l w· •nt along \\'1th the gag
Then one of the stations went
too far, Channel 9, the NBC put-
. Jet. pre·empted one of our
favonte TV shows. The dimWlt-
ted hypemeisters at Channel 9
canceled -without notice or
explanation -the exquisitely
crafted •Homiode: Life on the
·Street• and put on a "Bronco ·
special" i.nstedd.
This consisted of two sports-
. casters seated ma saloon.
Behind them was an audience of
maybe 40 people. They had
obvtously been selected tor tht?ir do~y expressfons and a willm9-
ness to put on mane horse-head
bats and pamt the11 faces orange
and blue
I don"t know what went on
after the fl.r;t couple of minutes
because we turned off the TV.·
And there were still rune day!> to
go ~fore the damn game!
The media increased the tem-
po of the hype-a-thon. The fol-
lowing Fnday night, Channel 9
tossed •Horruc1de" again, and
..
that tore it: My wile and l dedd·
cd to root for the Jets. ...
It didn't work. Despite a hrsf
halt in wh1c.b the I !gendary JOiin •
Elway completed only one PM ,
the Rronoo machine ultimately
rolled over the JP.ts That meetll5
the Aroncos will go to M1anu to
piny the Atlanta Falcons m Super
Bowl XX.XIII. .... •
It all>O meanc; two more wee~ :
of frenetic tub-thwnpmg, the
likes of which the world has nev-.
. et !'>ecn -not during any Dis-.., 1 •
ney-Mc:Donald's pro.motion. nof ,
dunng the grand operung of y~t ..
another Planet HollY' ·ood, not •
even for that hold-~'Our-breath
moment whe n Moruca Lewms'ky '
hares all, so to speak, in Barbara
Walters' tnwnphant exclus1ve -
mter.iew
Worst of all, Channel 9 will kill
two more "Horruades" on me ...
Go Fuloonsl
• FltED MARTIN IS a former Newport
Beach r~1dent who now wntes from hk
new home in Fon Collins Colo
Bernd gets big bond issue in Texas :
ISSUE: GENERAL FUND NET
REVENUE Where to spend?
another new complittee being •
formed to help unplement the • Newport-Mesa thinking about similar measure for
Newport Boulevard Specific Plan. school repairs, but former superintendent says require~ Majority rule 7 .. • Vote: 5-0 to accept report from
Budget and Research Octicer Car-
ol Jacobs. What are some areas or
iwojects you would like to I see the Costa Mesa Crty
Appointments to that committee two-thirds majority could be hard to overcome.
will be postppned until the com-Do you think a school
· Summary: The report detailing
the general fund net revenue-
abowed a balance of $1.9 million.
~acobs also pr~ ented the council
:with a list of unfunded communi-
t:Y ob1ectives. In the past, the
· council hd:. allocated additional·
plOney for one-tune unprovement
projects. Some of the numerous
projects included upgrading
storm draini; near Anaheim
Avenue and· 19th Street to allevi-
ate floodmg problems; develop-
m ent of Fairview Park; and
upgrading athletic fdcilities m the
city.
ISSUE: COMMITTEE
APPOINTMENTS
Vote: 5-0, i.n separate motions, to
make 21 appointments and reap·
Council spend extra moo·
ey on? Call our Readers"
Hodlne at (949) 642.Ql86 °' send an e-mail to dat·
lypilotOearthllnk.net • Please
include yQUr horMtown. your
phone numbei (for verlf1Catlon
purpose only) and the spelling of
your full name.
pointments to six city committees.
Sum.milJY: One of the committees,
the new Costa Mesa Corrununity
Foundation, received an appoint-
ment of eight members. The non-
profit foundation will be responsi-
ble for overseemg donations to
the city from pnvate groups and
individuals. The Newport Boule-
Vdfd Advisory Committee is
b
mittee needs to take action.
ISSUE: REQUEST TO INCREASE
FUNDING FOR A STREET
IMPROVEMENT PROJECT
Vote: 5-0, to provide $400,000 for
additional work on the outside
lanes of Fair Dnve between Har-
bor Boulevard and Fairview
Road.
Summary: At the Jan. 4 meeting,
council members voted 5-0 to
award a $980,000 contract to R J.
Noble Co. for street reconstruc-
tion pro1ects on Fair Drive, Hamil-
ton Street, Orange Avenue and .
Santa Ana Avenue. Since that
meeting, additional funding has
been made available to expand
the project.
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upgrades; and $19 million for all-
day kindergarten.
"Tilis was very unportanl for
NEWPORT-MESA Not our district,. Bernd said. •Every·
everything is bigger m Te..xas one worked really hard on lhi5. •
For in.stance,· the percentage of Arlington has a good track
·voters it takes to pass a bond L-;sue record with school bond issu~.
is 5J:..!>/o, compared to Caillorrua's Just three years ago, a $100 mil-
two-thirds, or 67%, mnjonty Uon bond issue also passed. This
This week, fonnc>r Newport-trnck record, as well as the Lone
Mesa Superintendent Mac Bernd Star comnutment to local con~l ot
helped push through $261 million schools, may have contnbutoo to
Ul school bond issues for the the high voter-approval rate.
Arlington Jndcpendenl School But Bernd said he believes the
District. · biggest difference between
Arlington voters came down Arlington and Newport-Mesa, by
solidly in favor of d tax mcrea<;e Jor · far, is that it only takes a sunple
school upgrades and new school · majority to pass a bond ISSue \n
construction. Altoge ther, four Texas, compared .to the two·Uurds
bond issues were approved m the majonty needed in Calilorrua.
Jan. 16 election: $161.5 million for "I think the two-thirds m.a1onty
school facilities and improve-is a huge obstacle,· he said.
ments; $51.6 million for a new high Newport-Me."a has compl~U·d
school; $30 million for technology a months-long study of its facility
bond ~asure would I pau here with a two·
th rd$ INJOfilY? Call the
Readers HOtfine at (949~
642·'°86 or send an e-
matl to da1typilot0eafth.
hole.net • Please ~ave your ~
town. phone number (for venfl·
cation purposes only) arid
spelling of your f\111 rnimt!.. ...
needs, which '~ l>e presented' lo
the c;chool ooard m February. No
pnce tag has been affi.xP.d to the
facility nP.eds listed. Neither has
the distnct announced that it Will
proceP.d 11\'lth a bond issue.
"We are explonng all we need
m a bond issue and what resoW'C'es
we have," said school bOard Pre.-.1-
dcnt Serene Stokes ·we ne1..:d to
c;ec what we can get from the
'>late, and . we have to explore
every sourre before we consider a
bond isc;ue.·
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~-~aday. Jonuory 20, 1999
New members, -Welcome
to the Council jungle
W e'd like to give a belat~
ed welcome to the new
• Newport Beach City
Council members', who are prob·
ably sitting back right now ~
thinking, •Hey, show up on the
ttght Monday, smile at con-
$titllents, press one of those little
green or red buttons in front of
me -nothing to itl It's cham-
~gne and roses.•
But as everyone knows, roses
have thorns, champagne goes
flat 1lnd th,,e honeymoon segues
into burned meatloaf for dinner.
COuncil members are guaran-
t:aid that sometime dwmg their
ten&e, there will be a combative
iSrue about which, no matter
Wbat position they take, a notice·
able segment of the population
Will be stirring up the tar and
. .feathers :-or at least leaving
.... nasty messages on th~ answer-
ing piachines.
It won't be an issue as obvious
as El Toro. We have elected
intelligent representatives, and
no person of intelligence is going
t6 stand up in front of the resi-
tlertfs of Newport Beach and
suggest turning El Tofo into a
regional park or John Wayne
into an international airport -
not unless he or she has a ticket
on the next flight to Rio.
And hiring a new atY manag-
er should be a slam dunk, unless:
a) The people decide you're pay-
mg bJ.m or her too much (we ·
lb1nk our city is so great people
)!tould want to work f9r tree) or
~) A skeleton pops up after the
contract is Slgned, scartng us silly.
Growth has been a bambum-
er in the past, and flames still
leap up from time to time (e.g.
The lrvine Co. proposal to put
senior housing on the open
space above the library) but, for
better or worse, we're pretty
much near build out.
The one issue that may 'Sl.Ilge
a few fingers is the hotel pro-
p_osed for the Dunes. It's on the
O.y, and we all can get pretty
'WOrked up abou( anything th.dt
iltQcts the bay.
--.Annexation has possibilities.
lliose opposed to anneution see
~ the death blow to the charm
our villages and the close-knit
mrtc of the community, the very
1bings that have made Newport
~ch unique. Those in favQr of
ennexation also have a visJon -
e muscular one of Growth! Rev-
-uel Power! This could get
lieated. However, without a
K&Vin Murphy to push it, annex-
~ is probably on a back bum-
~ tor some time. .
No, if there's going to be a hot
e, it will be something
ocuous like ... well, trees, for
Mample. Ask any homeowners
essociation -trees cause more
'trouble than anything else. Not
!Jleir roots, not breaking limbs,
llOTIS
christin corney .
noncy gordner
but their very existence.
Not that anyone is anti-tree--
Everyone is for trees in general,
except when a tree interferes
with a view. The person with a
view paid a lot of money to look
out his window to'see Catalina,
night lights, or the bedroom win-
dow across the street -and now
the.re's a TREE blocking his view.
A particularly splendid specimen
that adds all sorts of aesth.etic
value to the tree owner's home,
who's not about to cut it down or
top it off or do anything else that
would ruin the carefully cultivat-
ed tree silhouette. .
And while this may seem to
be an issue between two feuding
homeowners, pretty soon all the
view people have wheeled out
their cannons while all the tree
people have linked arms vowing
·not to yield an inch, and guess
who's standing in the middle?
Yep. Watch out for trees.
Also watch out for anything to
do with ani.Inals. As you have
already learned Crom the bird
brouhaha, people can get pretty
emotional about arumals they
don't eve·n own but sunply feed.
Wait until you have to make a
policy about wts. Or rather,
don't wait. Do everything you
can to mow the leashes-for-cats ~
issue off th.e agenda until your
term is up.
Well, for what it's worth, that's
our advice . We'll be watching to
see how you 're doing and
putting our two cents in from
time to time. Good luck. We
know you want the best for
Newport Beach. and so does
your constituency. The· only
problem lies Ul deciding what is
"beSt."
• aaumN CARNEY lives in Costa
Mesa and NANCY GARONER lives IO
Corona del Mar Their column runs
Wednesdays. E-mail them at
SPEZ20AOprodlgy.c:om .
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Newport Beach/Costa M.eso Doily
Boy Scouts looking for people to set s
Tall ship Argus n eeds volunteer
crew to help teach boating basics
A n auxiliary group of the Boy Scouts of
America Sea Base 1n Newport Harbor
is searching for adult volunteers to
help man Argus, a )ustoric 92-foot ship used to
train scouts in traditional sailing.
A:n onentation day -a one-time opportu·
nity to try out for a aew position -is planned
for Feb. 27. Due to limited space, participants
must register in advance, said Erik Berliner,
·commodore of Fnends ·of the Argus.
"Once people go to the orientation, they
will decide whether or not they want to com-
FYI
mit to it,• he
said. "It's a
chance to get
out on the
waler and get
your feet wet
without hav-
+ WHA~ Tall Ship
Argus crf!W orienta·
tion
+ WHEN: 10 a.m. to S
p.m. Feb. 27
. ing to dive
in.•
The b.btorlc Argus will be used to teach Boy Scouts traditional sailing techniques.
+ WHERE: Boy Scout
Sea Base, 1931 W.
Coast Highway
The tall
ship Argus is
an original
Baltic Trader,
built in 1905,
and has been
a part of th.e
the California coast,• he said. •Tue fact that
she has square sails offei:s enhanced training
possibilities. It's a very special boat."
+ TO REGISTER: call
. (949) 642-5031.
The popular program is booked through
next year, which is why adult leaders are in
such demand, Berliner S81d.
Southern Cal-
ifornia boating community for 25 'years. It was
called a Baltic Trader because it hauled
cement, spices, grains and other cargo around
the Baltic Sea, Berliner said.
Ctew members must be older th.an 18, in
good health, and have a desire to learn and
teach the tall ship crew experience.
"It's one of the last few original ships along
The orientation day will include demon-
strations as well as hands-on experience with.
raismg-and handling sails, standing bow and
helm watches, activities aloft and other crew
Boy Scouts need items
for annual garage sale
Boy Scout Troop 37 of New·
1 port-Costa Mesa· will present its
annual colossal garage sale Peb.
20 and 21 at the Lido Isle Club·
house, 701 Via Lido Soud, New-
port Beach,
The scouts are in the process of
collecting donated items from pn-
vate residences and businesses.
·Past items have included sail-
boats, trailers, bicycles, comput-
elli, cameras. muskal and elec-
tronic equipment, books, artwork,
garderung equipment and more.
Donations to the Boy Sco.uts
are tax deductible, and tax
receipts can be provided. The
scouts will pick up donated items.
The sale, wluch has been held
for more than 20 years, is sched-
uled from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Feb
20 and 9 a.m. to noon Feb. 21.
For more information, call
(949) 673-7427 or 673-4423.
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Those who choose to register with
Scouts of America as a scout leader will
subject to voluntary random drug te ·
must become certified for CPR and first
a.nd must attend th~ Boy Scouts Youth Ptot
tion Program, Berliner said .
After jouung, crew members go throug
traming program that takes about five to
en weeks, Berliner said.
They can decide how often they want to
out on the boat, whether it be once a month
every weekend.
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~ Into the Piiot Classffted sectlOfl to find .,.. frOm
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Newport Beach/CC?_sto Mesa Daily Pilo~
ON VACATION
CLOCKWISE FROM BELOW: The Corona del Mar Varsity Water Polo
team takes a timeout during a team trip to Budapest, Hungary. Team
members touted a Jocal castle and captur(•d a photo with the Dally
Ptlol
Newport Beach residents, from Jett, Blossom S iegel, Bill and l cba
. Cohen and Charles and Diane Karp thought of home during a
recent trip to Israel as they posed \villi the Daily. Pilot. On Utelr mis-
sion to Israel, sponsored by the Jewish Ft>deratJon of Orange Coun-
ty, these Jewish community leaders had the opportunity to see first-
hand how funds raised by Uteir annual ccsmpdign provide social,
educational and humanitarian serVices in Israel. ·
Whitney and Katie Chem take the Daily Pilot with them on vacation
to Ute Hearst Castle m ,San Simeon.
Jack and Nancy Caldwell and Bonnie and BiU Barrington enjo} a
visit to the Parker Ranch on the island of Ha\vali and bring along
the Dally Pilol
WedneK!ay, Jonuory 20, 1999 5 •
Where do ·bridge
study, West Si.de . .
plan ·meet up?
•Members of the group
19th to the Beach say a
1 crossing could be just the
~9. for revitalization ..
f:US£ Gl:l!
Dlff Pb
COSTA MESA -While the
{ oty ts pursuing its god.I of having
the 19th Street bridge deleted
from the master plan, there is a
small but groWUlg group that says
lhe bndge is part of its vision for
the West Side.
Next week, lhe city will start
taking input for a community
vision of the West Side. EIP Asso-
ciates was hiied last year to come
up with a specific plan for the
revit!ilization of the p~ of town
located roughly south of Wilson
Street and west of Harbor Boule-
vard.
The emergence of the group
19th to the Beach has rekindled
an emol:lonal debate about lhe
future of the 19th Street bridge.
The group's efforts have nled up
neighbors who say they fought
long and hard to make sure a. 19th
Street bndge was never built.
However, council members
hdve made it clear that fonnation
ot a West Side plan is meant to be
all-mclus1ve
· Bob Graham, a founding 'mem-
ber of 19th to the Beach. said he
wanlS to make sure that the 19th
. Street' bridge is not ruled out as an . option before the West Side
plan has been completed.
"What I'm conceme<;l about is
that (the Santa Ana River Cross-
ings study) is going at full speed,
yet now we re doing a study on
the West Side, and what if it turns
out. that the best thing we can do
•tn e11 ideal sense, what you W1t
to do is lo develop that ~ b .
the fuMt ml then dlKlde yotlf .
~ ll1Wities and pUYc foOS. .
ties,' not decide or des9i ~
pul* fdties and say what kind
of land use or development do you
wmt to ~ cround them.·
Allan Roeder
Cost.l Mesa Ctti' Manager
on the Wtist Side is open up 19th
Street to the beach," Graham
s~d •
..,. By thdl ome 1t might be too
late, because th~ 19th Street
bridge could already have been
removed from the Orange Coun·
ty 118nSpoJ1atlon Authority's mas-
ter plan, Graham c;did.
t-Jowever, Costa Mesa C1ty
Manager Allan RQeder said the
city 15 followmg a l6y1cal process.
•In an.; ideal senc;e, what you
want to do is to develop that
VJs1ot:1. for . the fulW..J~d ~.
deade.your pYbJ.ramenH!es and".
public facilitle . not deade or
design your public fdcilittes and·
say· what kind of land use or
development do }'OU want to put
around them,· Roeder ~aid
The bndge study has be«;?n
worked towdid for many ye~.
Roeder said. •
"The reality.is it. \\rill \le qwte
some urne after the West Side
plan is completed l;>~to~e the.
(bridge) study Will ev.en;be gomg ·
forward for public hearings on the
facts or the study,• Roeder said ~I
don't think actlon on the West
Side plan in any way, shape or
form precludes what will happen
m the {bridge) study.•
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6 WednesdQy, Janvory 20, 1999 ,
CHI NA . """ FYI ~TINUED FROM 1
also lS h lpim to inlloduce a r HlV test kit for use m the Red
C'~ Hospital of Yunnan Province fu Kunming, which 1 at the center
Of lli" country's AIDS epidemic.
Number of flV lnfKdons In China
"rm. very unpres d Wlth the
couu.ection." and the respect that
t)r..lTtttw Gil ha with the "'hinese
Mcd\c•dl Association," said Bob
Pagett. founder and pmsidenl of
As::.1~t International. •He's highly ~
t~-.pec.tc•d tor his work there.
Tiuough his relations with them,
A!i$L"t International has developed human sexuality. He began travel-
ing to China m 1990 after the fiist
AIDS case 'Vas reported there in
1989.
an dgTecrnent in cooperation with
Ille Chinese Medical Association
for future pro1ects." ·
Gu cham; the an~opoJogy
dC'pdfb!Je>J1t at SGC, where he ~a
professor of ·anthropology and
l!ETITION -J::DNTINUED FROM· 1
1hrouqh-l 2th-91 Ltde conflgurauon
Me d1tfPu'nc: ,., between. middle
d ld h1qh srhool students.
Junior h1qh s~hool students
,u" acc1dern1cally and socially dif-
WATER
CONTINUED FROM 1
. "It "' P'rt• qmnu to spend dll of
th1.., n111nPy combating fecal col-
1fur m wt· b1•tt"r be sun• that it's
lhc: nqht l'Ocmy," Kill said.
Bdy dCt1v1st Jack Skinner sdid
mo ... 1 ol thc areds in the harbor are
bulo\' the proposed fecal ·coliform
hrmt. but U1ere are i.evera.l areas
ol conct'm, including Newport
Dum•s, U1 .. hi:lck channels around
~m port I lond dJld . the Rhine
Chdruwl
\\1Uun •• )'l·ar of the board's
ddoptH1n of d h·caJ coliform stan-
d11rd. c1t led st t :l different plans
arid progrctms will httve to be im-
llolt•d, K1fl ::.aid The ftrsl program
will focus on the Dunr>s swim-
"He's one of tlie pioneers on
AIDS and anthropology in·China, •
said Doug Feldman, a colleague
A nurse at the
Kunm.l.ng Red
Cross Hospital
in the Yunnan
province of
Cb.lna carries
s~pplles into
the hospital.
l'HOTO COURTESY Of
VINCE Gil
ferent than high school ·lstu-
dentsj," Frankel said.
"To place them in portables as
guests in a high school IS wrong.
It's offensive to me to take a sttua-
tion that's working so well and
mess it up," she said.
School board President Serene
Stokes said the district Will have
to make some <iectsions about
rrung area.
The city may have to divert or
pump O':J.l the 140 storm drains
that ~nter the bay. or implement a
"zero tolerance policy for any
waste discharge from harbor
boats, Kiff said.
Another possible measure will
be to revisit banning the feeding
of wild birds in the harbor. The
City Council last week decided
not to lake that action after many
bird-loving residents protested.
The .regional board met · la:;t
week in Corona for tht:! second
public hearing on the re'Cal col-
iform issue. City officials sent a
letter to the board, asking it to
make sure the fecal coliform limit
is meaningful and supported by
hard science.
The board IS expected to adopt
the fecal coliform limit March 5 at
who also works as a medical
artthropologist at llie University of
Miami School ot Medicine.
First Affiliated Hospital ot the
West China University of Medical
Sciences in ' Ch~gdu, Sichua.n
province and the Red Cross Hospi-
tal in Kuruning, Yunnan province
are the two hospitals benefiting
trom the $2 million donation of
eqwpment.
They each -will receive brand-
new card.lac care equipment,
including portable and stationary
'heart monitors, donated by the
Florida-based company Marquette
Medical Systems, Pagett said.
"This eqwpment in China· is
essential to lift them to a new level
of. meeting the needs of people
with heart disease and other relat-
ed problems," Pagett said. "The
1 equipment we are giving to them is
the latest that is available, and it
will be the finest you will find in the
country of China."
All the equipment will be
Estancia because of 1ts small size
a nd the concurrent high cost of
educating students there.
•If we look at what the budget
advisory committee has recom-
mended, the question is, can we
keep a school of Estanoa's size
open with the current configura-
tion,• she said.
a meeting in Newport Beach City
Hall.
Skinner sciid he generalJy sup-
P.Orts the regional board's· pro-
posed program.
·1 think any effort to reduce
the amount of these types of bac-
tena into areas where recreation-
al swimmers may be usm.g the
bay is a good idea,· be said. ·aut
the effort should be spent to
reduce the amount of cont.am.i.na-
tion where the health department
has determined .. . that there is a
potential health nsk present.•
The U.S. Environmental Pro-
tecboo Agency ordered the
regional board to set the vartous
limits as required by the Clean
Water Act. The action was in
response to a lawswt filed by
Newport Beach-based nonprofit
group Defend the Bay.
As part of his National Book Tour, we
invite you to a Special 3-hour Financial
Clinic where one of Wade Cook,s hand-
traincd instructors will personally rc:vcal
Mr. Cook's stock market strategics!
-••
..
'
• Capicalizc Pro.fits • Build A Great Portfolio • Write
Coverc<i Calls • ~rofic From Rolling Stocks • Use Ptoxy
Investing • Buy Options Ott Companies Doing Stock
Splits • Create CashPlow • And Much, Much MQl'e!
•
U you ~ant the abWty to make real money with tbne-
tested, tried-and-true formulas and strategies, repter
I fM~~w;i72~74n
THE ~Pilot
•
shipped at the end of this monlh. ln
Ma.rdl, Gil and a medical team of
about 10 peqple will help install the
equipment and tra:in Chinese med-
ical personnel to use it.
In addition to the cardiac care
equipment, the h0&pltal in Kun·
ming will ~eceive blood laboratory
equipment for AIDS treabnent.
Kunming is located near the
den Th.angle a.nd has a high
number of opium addicts, Gil said.
The ~y· truck drivers -tradi-
tional carriers of infection there· -
and a shortage of needles have
contributed to the large number of
AIDS cases tor the region, Gil said.
Aside from the donations
secured by Assist International, Gil
8lso has procured some rapid HIV
test kits for use at the Red Cross
Hospital in Kunming.
M~ Laboratories Jnc. in
Canada has agreed to donate
10,000 kits, valued at $40,000. The
kits, which provide results within
minutes, have not been approved
by the Food and Drug Admirustra-
tion for use in the United States
and differ from the kits used here
because blood samples don't need
to be sent to a lab for analysis, Gil
said.
•For third-world countries and
second-world countries where you
don't have eqwpment, this is a life-I
sa.ver," Gil said.
1
The project is ma.king a dent in
a larger problem that ls typical of
provincial hospitals in China: lack I
of resolirces and equipment.
•To me, the wonderful thing
about this is ft has opened the door
for Assist International to do more
programs in China," Gil said
ge/di~ "Ckissic
'ITALIAN ICE CREAM
V5MOOTHIES
f 5ANDWICHE5
VGOURMET COFFEE
V ESPRESSO DRINKS
VOTED 1998 ·eest
Ice-Cream• In O.C.
-OC W••kl.Y
' (949) 721-1160
2756 E. Co•et Hwy.
Coron• del Mar
.
~ Beach/Costa Meso Doily Pilot
BRIDGE
CONTINUED FR0'4'·1
•ibese sessions a.re to get !the
public's} input on the k.indi. of
things we should look at or
. include in the environmental
impact report,• CaIJtpbell said.
The report will evaluate the
effects of constructing the bridges
from 19th Street to Bai:µUng
Avenue and ftom Gisler Avenue
to Garfield Avenue.
It also will look at deleting both
bridges or building bridges at
alternate sites. ·
The alternate bridge ·site for
the Gisler Avenue cr9ssing wollld
connect the San Diego Freew{l.y
with Garfield Avenue. The alter-
nate site for the 19th Street bridge
would connect 17th Street to
Brookhurst.
According to the ulitial study,
areas that could suffer potentially
significant unpacts include bio-
logical and archaeological
resources, air quality, noise and
traffic:
"Our objective is to find vi.able
solutions to the traffic-that's going
to be there in that whole r~on,"
said Dave Elbaum, the authority's
director of planning and develop-
ment.
One of the challenges will be
to get all of the agencies to come
to a consensus on an alternative.
"We won't support a change that
isn't acceptable to some of the
cities," Elbaum said. •rugbt now,
MEET OUR MEMBERS
Member fon 6 yean
Occupation:. Ed.1cor of Newport
Beach (714)
Why did )'Oil joia S~Upl ·1
had rwo friends recommend Sha~·
Up & 1 Wa$ ready to gee fit"
Goa.ls: To firm. tone and ptt'\'ent
osteoporosis from taking hold.
FYI lo...,\AI -
The N9Wpolt Bud\ meet·
Ing wlll be held at 6 p m.
~ It City ...... Cout\(11
Chamben. noo Newport
Blvd. 1be c-. Mesi meet·
'Ing wllt be head 111' p.m. >-n.
27 ln.1h• Ne~d
Community Center, 1845
Partc Ave.
Costa. Mesa has concerns and
Huntington Beach has concerns
about constructing the bridges. tf
we can't find an acceptable alter-.
•native, we'd probably keep '-Aha\
we have." -rvw 1
The. city of Newport Becteii
generally support.S tlie 19th Street
bndge as a way to relieve pr~
sure on Pacific Coast Highway,
which won't be able to accom11't6Q
date future' traffic growth, siud
Rich Edmonston, Newport Beaal
traffic engineer " ...
If a city's general plan confliru
with the authority's master pl~
that city would not be force<! rd
build a bridge, Elbaum Sllid.
However, the city also would no£
qualify for valuable Measure 't\4
funding il its general plan did n~t
comply with the master PUirl~
Elbaum said. •
The draft pf Uie report sh ould,
be complete by June or July,•
Campbell said. The public will 00:
given another chance to cotnJlMlil~
at that time. : : --
' . -What are fOlll' rauJm •rm Stronger :l!IJ
more t0ned! Rcgubr exercise works Ii
What do yoa IW about Sbapc·Upl •A'D:
the (taff arc friendly, infortnarive an 1
hdpful. The ownm and suJr ~
dedic;ared co kttping the club on th
cutting edge: of a.ll tfoat'fi.tn~ ind :
health h;ave to offer. J alwap ff.cl -
comforublc: at Shape-Up. :
11111
~01.lllnfl ill ... -
Carlo
drawing tickets are
SS each or 5 fOr SlO
Event ttOels are S25 each
of each tkket.ts aax dedualbte)
.. JielllOI cenaet
1t.~•taMe11
~ ......... ..
-345 days.
Wedn.sdoy, Jonuory 20, 1999 • Sports Editor Roger CoriJOn • 9-'9-57 U223
No. 4 Sailors visit .No. 3
Santa Margarita in Sea
View League battle of
Orange County powers.
BMRY FAl'UCNrA
• Newport-Mesa high school
boys basketball teams finish out
·the first round of league play
today and Friday and tonight's
matchups include first-place
5bowdowns for Newport Harbor
and Estancia.
Newport (18-2, 3-0 in the Sea
View League) visits defending
Sea View, CIF Southern Section
Division 0-AA and CIF State Divi-
sion Il champion Santa Margarita
(16'-2, 3-0) .
Estancia (9-10, 2-1 in the Pacif-
ic Coast League), visits Uruverstty
(11 -6, 2-1) for a 7 p.m tipoff in a
game involving half of the fow--
team logjam in the PCL standings.
Newport, ranked No. 4 in
SHOWDOWNS
Orange
County
and No. 5
in CIF
Division 11-
AA, is off
to the best start in the school'•
69-season bi.story 'Md comes in
with a nine-game winning streak.
Santa Margarita is ranked No.
• 3 in Orange County, No. 2 in CIF
JI-A and, according to Newport
Coach Larry Hust, still the team to
beat in the Sea View.
"You can't wear the champi-
onship belt if you don't step in
and beat the cha.nip,• said Hirst,
whose squad knocked the Eagles,
then No. 1 in the county, from the
ranks of the unbeaten last season
with a 50-47 home triumph Feb."·
That victory ended a 10-game
Santa Margarita winru.ng streak
over the Sailors and was Harbor's
second Win ever over the Eagles.
"I'm sure they're saying
they're underdogs and they don't
get much respect," ·Hirst said.
IOYS HOOPS
"But none of that is corning from
us. We believe we're the under-
dog and we have something to
prove. We've tried to emphasize
to this teem that we have the
makings of something special and
to beat Santa Margarita on the
road would be a special thing.•
Newport's only other win at
Sant.a Marganta, came on a Paul
Tayyar buzzer-beater for a 58-57
verdict in their first Sea View
League meeting in 1993.
Harbor is keyed by a starting
five of senior Matt Jameson (16.2
points per game), junior Dustin
Illingworth (15.2) and seniors
Alan Llmon (9.9), Gary Robinson
(7.6) and Adam Hearlson (6.1).
Santa Margarita, coached bf
former Harbor bead man Jerry
DeBusk, is paced by &-6 senior
Spencer Gloger, whose 23.9 scoring
average ranks tb,ird in the county.
• E1tanda w~s swept by Uni last
seaeon.
ending a
12-game
winning
streak over the 1Tojans. Coach
Rich Boyce's Eagles are led this
season by senior Brett Valbuena
(17.5 ppg) and junior Jon Cantrell.
(11.5).
Corona del Mar (14-5, 2-1 and
ranked No. 1 in CIF D1VlSion ill-A)
will try to rem8lll ~e game
behind the leader when it makes
a 7:30 p.n visit to Irvine (14-5,
1-2), which entered the league
season ranked No. 9 m the county.
Coach Paul Orris' Sea Kings,
who had won 6 of 7 before falling
at Harbor Fnday, 55-37, are led by
seniors Denrus Alsbuler (13.5 ppg)
and B~don Crosby (10.8). as well
as junior Kevin Hansen (10.6).
Irvine features University of
San Diego-bound senior guard
Chris Ferguson (16.2 ppg).
HIGH SCHOOL GllLS llSIETIALL
Estanda
High'•
FrandaDlaz
(35) takes the ball
to the hoop en
route to 18 points
in leading her
teammates to a
53-42 Pad.fie
Coast League
girls basketball
"ctory ovel' host
Untventty High
Tuesday night to
remain a game
off the
championship
pace of Costa
Mesa. University's
Amy Schroeder
(right) defends.
KIM HAGGERTY-ZVUUS
I DAILY PILOT
Eagles rally past lroj ~, 53-42
Diaz sparks the second-hall ·
comeback, scoring 14 of her
game-high 18 after intermission.
IRVINE -With thelI status as a Pacific
Coast League girls basketball contend8! on
the line, Estancta High's Eagles debuted
their own version of an extreme game Tues·
day night.
After a disappomting first half, in which
host University High took a 27-21 lead, the
Eagles began. launching themselves after
loose balls, Oytrig into passing lanes and
loaring on the scoreboard.
After notching the final three points of
the first half, Estancia (13-5, 3-1 in league)
scored the ftrst eight points of the thirfi quar-
ter. Before the feathers had settled, the
Eagles rode a 21-3 surge to a 39-30 lead
heading into the final period and went on to
claim a 53-"2 biumph.
"We picked up our intensity and I think it
helped when (Uni scoring star Fala)
Suiaunoa went out with her fowth foul (with
4:43 left in the third period),• Estancia
Coach Paul Kirby said. ·1 think we sensed
(the lrojans) were wlnerable without her
and we went after them. We were diving
around out there."
Senior Francia Diaz was a catalyst for the
Eagles, scoring 1" of her game-high 18
points after intermission. The 5-foot-8 cen-
ter, giving away four and five inches to her
opponents in the paint, scored seven of the
Eagles' first 10 second-half points. But her
tenacity was as uplifting as her field goalS. _
•we weren't playing as bard as we could
(in the fust half),• said Diaz, who tilt 8 of her
15 shots froin the field, added a team-high
11 rebo~ds and chipPed in four steals. ·1
think we ~ped up as a team that second
half.·
Diu wasn't alone in the effort depart·
ment as teammates Lauren Cassity, Lisa
Hirata and Eva Vanna consistenUy sold out
to retrieve any loose ball, or smother the Tro~
jans with defensive pressw-e. .
Uni (9-11, 1-3) committed 11 of its 23
turnovers in the third quarter, which includ-
ed a pair of three-pointers by Estanda's Usa
Steinfeld.
Cassity finished with 15 points, while Ste-
infeld added 12, ei~ht in the third quarter.
Varma chJpped. m five assists and Hirata ·
added four steals to her fow-points, includ~
ing a 17-iooter with t;.43 left which virtually
iced the l!agles' third straight league tri-
umph. . ·u wmn't a mustWin, but it was good to
win Oii the road,• Kitby said. "Hopefully this
can give \II some cOnfidence for Thursday's
big ode agatt.sl (viSitibg) Laguna Hills.•
· iS anta Margarita tops N~wport Harbor, 4-0
Six-time defending league champs I I I L I I 0 C C I I sei Kbigs belt lmne, 4-0
·rove to be too much for the Sailors. CORONA DEL MAR -A few well-placed
and Co-. ... del Mer are all tounh, but Santa throW·inl by Meghan Bryan was ~ it took as ( • 1bawU> OUNN IVU8 • Corona clel Mar High defeated visiting Irvine, s. • • . WfNll Margarita, it seema, Wini every year.• 4-0, In a Sea Vlew Leegue girls soccer game t The Baglel, tWo-time defending CIP South· Tuelda
NEWPORT BEACH -It Newport Harbor em Section DMlion D cbamptom. ICOr9d ear-BryJ;'I throw-in with elght mlnutel 1elt ln
uMd one week as a benchmark for how ly in tbe game, late tn the flrlt half, early in the the half wu put into the net by Allison Haivey
kl up •oeinlt the Sea View LMgue girls second half and late in the MCOnd half. The for. 1-0 CdM lMd.
elite, tM time would be now. Tim tell to•7J8.:3, 1-2-1. Kate Simon and H4rvey chipped ID IKOl'Ml·
' ~ m·tbm ~.~ champi· •'lbday,'" p1a~ lik• two-time defending half ~, u w.u. tbuW to a pllr o1 wen-· .C-a ~YJ '; ~ -C:~ 4~ .!t= ClF cbamplom, S8nta Margarlta Coach 9"rir·llll bf llyu. ~ Cbua Mar.-....._ Moir O'Meata ICONd w111a 12 19alm.t IMi No. 5-. an Orange County. Newport Midatl lr'OOU ........ (belded ID lbe .... ona ts. klcll..._35 1"oubl9 II. lie Ii .. IC:tiMlule doem't tor UCLA)ud MDli Mdulllll ~ quau.
up 'ftaam..y wblli COldaJMOD Sotrd'I ty ._ .... m tbt Int 1111, but fdb imlecl 'lid•--· No .• "'="""1-. = w. !-~ tbe wtde .
I • • :.r.=. C::..:.'=9.:::c:. by tar .... wtwn .... Cmolyn Sta•
...... t946.2-MIDWd1 ..... ll ~~~":.'--oad .................. -.. -·v.-l'l•CA:'\rf::= w*.:r-1..-. .... JaftW ~
•tt wasn't a roost wit, but • wm gOod lo win on lhl road _•
Paul Kirby, Estancia girls basketball coach
-
Newport Beoeh/Cos1e Mesa DoUy Pl~_ 1
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
• Always the special touch.
H is efforts were
indispensable while
lus appeal was
priceless as a longtime voluntee~
for the former Bmg Crosby
clambake, which would tater
become the Newport Classic
Pro-Am.
Every year, the late R.E.
"Gene" Baum solidified the
playing fieki by single-handedly
ensuring that professional golfers
always had a friend in Newport
Beach.
Synonymous with the
mini-tour event at Newport
Beach Country Oub, Baum
worked closely with Jake Rohrer
and Hank Adler in numerous
aspects of the townarnent,
mdud.ing player recruitment at
the PGA Tour Qua.Iµying school
each year.
"He was a true people lover,"
his Wife of 60 years, Phyllis, once
said .•
For the Newport Classic to
function as a late January jewel.
it required countless hours of
volunteer services and Baum was
among those lodged at the
forefront. .
Famous for wearing a straw
hat and plus fours on the NBCC
lmks, Bcawn helped lay the
foundation for what would
become a Senior PGA Tour event
· (Toshiba Seruor Class>*
replaong (from a volun)l' 'f
and chatity basis) the Newport
aassrc.
The Newport ClasSic was
originally set up by the late
entertainer, Crosby, for those
who didn't make the cut at his
National Pro-Am in Pebble
Beach (now the AT&T at Pebble
Beach). Unattached from the
PGA Tour or any qther. affiliation,
the Newport Classic lasted for 23
years and thrived as a hometown
charity tournament for Hoag
Memorial Hospital Presbyterian.
It was through the hospital in
which Baum made his most
significant contnbutions dunng
his golden years.
Baum. who died June 25,
1996, at age 85, was the
co-founder and organizer of
some of the most successful
fund-raising events for Hoag,
including the Newport Classic,
and has gained entry Uito the
Gene Baum
Daily Pilot's Millennium Sports
Hall of Fame.
"With Gene's experience,
enthusiasm and support, it's no
wonder that the event's succe5s
still continues to grow,· Adler,
Hoag board l'Ilil'?mber and former
Newport Classic chair, once said.
Adler, now the co-cluunnan of
the Seruor Classic with Rohrer,
SdJd those words a year before ·
the chanty was invited by the
PGA: Tour to operate the Senior
Tour event in Ne~rt Beach.
Bawn. of Balboa Island, also
volunteered for key roles in other
Hoag Foundation fund-raisers
such as the 552 Club Stag Shoot,
Bertram Yachts Tag & Release
Billfish Townament and the
Festival of Trees.
&um, the 552 Club's recipient
of the prestigious Siracusa
Award in 1982, was also a
charter member of the Balboa
Island Yacht Club, founded in
t 922. a club which teaches
children ages 4~16 about boating
and water safety.
For the Assistance League of
Newport-Mesa. Baum, among
other things. dressed up as Santa
Claus each year and showered
the children with gifts in the day
care center.
Born in L<>l> Angeles in 1911, .
Baum lived in the Arcadia area
for many ye8.n» working as
general manager of Coast Enve-
lope, a divtsion of Hanunermill
Faper. Baum bad spent his sum-
mers on Balbo4 Island, where be
eventually moved with ~ wife
m 1976. He first met his wile on
Balboa Island m 1937.
Locals take it on the chin
lRVINE ~ Carmen Arroyo had
seven saves in Estanoa High's I • · G I R l S S 0 C .C E I
to University, 8-0, m Pacific Coast
League guls soccer action Tu day on th WU\ner' held. The loss marked
the Eagles' fourth-straight PCL l .
•1t has been really tough this tune around,· Ec.tanna Coach Jenny
Tavares said. •Hopefully we can improve dunng the econd round. It will
take a little more perseverance and we nc d to execute qwcker. •
The Eagle are now 7-8-1 .
• Meanwhile, under the lights at Laguna Beac:h, Costa M Hlyh'~ Mus·
tangs were 6-1 victims at the hands ol the Artist.-..
Fernanda Velazco llpolled laguna1 hutout bid when he scored Oll
Brooke Shanley':> comer kick.
Goalie Erin Van Hom had S1X Jav for ... ta Mesa (7-7-2. 1-3).
Laguna Beach scored three goals in each half.
I 6
• ?
h
F u
0
<' l .,.
1·
.;.
r
1
f.
a u
It
c
I
J ..
I
l t
=
... • s rts Ntwport Beoch/Costo Mteso Doily P-i
MEN 'S HOOPS HllH SCHOOL lllLS llSIETllLL
Vanguards~
upset bid
Sailors dig a h~le too deep to ~' 50-42
.
falls short
• BioJa rallies from 7-pomt
daflcit with 3:00 remaining.
I • I • COSTA MESA -"The Pit•
weis alive with upset fever Tues-day night as the SOuthern Cali-·
fdnua College men's basketball
t~ was leading highly touted
B&gla by seven points with 1ust
t.hMe minutes to play.
C'i But Biola came back with two
hi!kets in the closing seconds,
leadulg to a 60-57 victory over
tl),e hast Vanguards in a Golden
State Athletic Conference game.
Field goals by Jack Hartman
and Brian Weakley did the dam-
abe for Biola (17-2, J-0 in the
GSAC) just before the clock
e;itpired.
Jabari Simmons led the Van-
guards with 18 points and 10
rebounds. John Kohlhaas scored
10 points and bad eight rebounds
tor sec (6-t5, o-3).
: Denrus Keane, R~ad Wilson
and Kevin Bradley each scored
-.points.
HOOPS -
• GSAC win over Biola.
COSTA MESA -Southern Cal-
ifornia College's women's basket-
ball got a bnef scare Tuesday
from visiting Biota in a Golden
State Athletic Conference game.
The Vanguards trailed by six
at halftime and an upset
appeared possible But SCC
scored 49 points m the second
half and went on to a 76-59 victo-·
. ry, SCC's 28th consecutive win at
"The Pit.·
Kristi Wright was 8 for 8 from
the cbanty stnpe and finished
w#h 17 points. Alana Kempton
a<Jded 16 points and two steals.
...
•Early woes prove fatal
against Santa Margarita.'
NEWPORT BEACH -New·
port Harbor I ligh's Sailors
squandered e rly opportunib
and eventl,lally lost to visiting
Santa Margarita, 50-42, in a Sea
View League game Tuesday.
•we got killed by our normal
vices early,• Sdvdges did. "We
didn't rebound well. When Santa
Margarita· went mto a full-court
press, ·we wasted too much time
pas ing back and forth instead of
tJreak:lng the press. Most of au,
Mustangs
take 63-34
conquest -
• Costa Mesa bidding
to complete perfect first
round Thursday at Aliso.
LAGUNA BEACH -Costa
Mesa High's Autwnn Smith
scored 16 points dI\d pulled in
19 rebounds as the Mu&tdLlg&
defeated host Laguna Beach,
63-34, in Pacilic Coast League
girls baskf!tball action Tues-
day.
With the victory, the Mus-
tangs improve to 13-6, 4-0 in
PCL play.
A wm over host Aliso
Niguel Thursday would give
Costa Mesa a perfect league
record at the hallway point
"We're really happy with
how we've played," Coach
Jun Weeks said •Once we get
through Aliso Niguel. it's back
to Estanod next week."'
Jenny Earnest scored 15
points and had eight rebounds.
Nancy Hatsusbi added seven
points and 11 assl'ils
Evelyn Power.. cbtpf>E'd m
with 12 points, including two
three-pointers.
The gdme was never in
question as the Mustangs rum-
bled lo a 14-point lead after
one quarter, then trampled the
Artists in the second quarter
for a 40-13 lead al halftime.
too many turnovers m the tll'SI
half."
Santa Margarita 1wnpcd out
to a 29-13 lead at halftime, but
th<' Sailor., (J 3.8, 1~3 in the Sea
View leag"4e) cbmbed back dur-
ing the th.ird quarter and, at one
point, only trailed 42-40. But the
Eagles (12-7, 3-1) made eight
free throws down thE! stretch to
seal the victory.
April Ross flllished with 20
points and 10 rebounds. Knsten
Urban cored 13 points. • •nu.s is not a good start for
us, i. Savage said ..
CdM rally 8lls short as Irvine wins, 49-40
CORONA Dm. MAR -Colona del Mm
Highs ¢r1s bUketb811 team Jncr••ed "*
defemive intensity in tbe fourth q\Wt8r -n.-
day and pull8d to within m ~but~
hvine he&d on to defeat the Sea Kings, 49-40, J.a seo View Leegue action.
Junior guard Charlene Quon led CdM (S.12,
0-4 m lee~) witb 12 pptnts, m~ -trio ot three·~int~ wbUe ienfor oentez Jenn.tier
Didtson had nine rebo)lnds tor the Sea Kings.
Cd.M struggled with tumoven In the finit
. ~..slr'Viue(13-7, 2·2)180ldto• 17·71Md.
•0ne ~far.....,. CdM COKb a..t
Davis Mid, •Wt never boring at our gemes.
Pam can't fall .-.. JI they do, a bell might
came up end lalt them. in the :fece •
Quon and C9\Utney Kawata drained three.
balls for CdM early ID the fourth to cut Into
h'vine) 41·26 J8ad. Krliten Tbewley, a frelb-
inao.. i.ct 1Mne With 14 'polnta. ~ N.,...
Kamada had ll. Kamada sank tbree tbree-
j>ointen.
HIPPY DAYS STANDINGS S U M M I R I E S ~\J
KlM HAGGERTY·ZVUUS I DAILY Pll.OT
E standa High's Eva Varma {34) puts up a roadblock for
Unive~lty's Monica Kim (25fTue day night. Estancia
went on a 21-3 run through the third quarter to turn it
around en route to a 53-42 Pacific Coast League victory at .
University High, keeping pace with league-leading' Costa Mesa,
which ls one game ahead of the Eagle .
STANDINGS
SH View t.eavue Girls
I (Overall) W LI
El Toro (14 J) 4 0
Neupcwt at Woodbridge
CdM Jt Santa Margarita
lrvi~ at El Toro
HIGH S0t00L GIRLS
~COAST LEAGW EstAHOA 53, ~ 42
Smfw by QuM'tWa Ertanda 14 7 18 14 55
Un1Yenrty 17 10 3 12 • 42
EsUnda Diaz 18, C".asslty 15, Hirai. 4, •
Steinfeld 12, Orellana 4, Varma 0,
Barrera 0, Lenhart 0, Ollila O, MatsufuJ1 0,
3 pt. goals Steinfeld 3, Cassity 1.
Unfwnlty SUiaunoa 17, Beriebo 7.
Bai 11, Kim 2, Stamegl\I 2, von Tung.lo 2,
Schroed~ 1 3-pt. goals • Sulaclnol 3 ,
MCIRC COAST~ ~ C0srA MlsA 63, LAGUNA lkAOt 34 • t4Y
Smfwby~
Costa Mew 24 16 10 f3 · 63'""'
t...guna Be.ch 10 3 6 15 • 34
Coltll Mesa ~ Smith 16. Hauushi 7,
Powen 12, Earnest 15, Hitt 4,
Thornton 4, weeks 2. lofos 3, Sasaltl o
}11t. pis-Powen 2. l.ofos 1, HatswtW
I LllguM IMICft • Khauer 7, Dick 4,
Mayo 10, Ou~ S, Abdosuai,til I,
Mo<lles 7,
3-pt. goa Is • IChautt 1 .
RAVllW ~~ SAN'tA ~50 N£WPOllT ~ 42
. seor. by Ouwter9 .
Santa Mar9anta 9 20 8 13 • 50"
Newport ~rbor 4 9 IS 14 • Q
s.nt.11 ~ Argo 6, S.Onett 27,
f.ernigamo 8, O'Leary 1, Simon 2,
l foomgr.n6
3-pt. 909ls-BenMtt 4
NeolPOft tWbof • Rou 20, Urban U,
Huntington 2., Paul 1, Hollister 6, Moo<e 0, CMtillo O
3 pt, goals • Ul'Wn 3
SIA VIEW LIAGUl ~ 49. eo..oMA oa MN1 40
Smfwby~
lrvme 17 13 11 8 • .,
Ccxona clef Mar 7 11 8 14 • CO
INN· ThMley 14, Kamada 12,
Gr.at .. 6, Ngo 8, l<amada 2. carnon a.
Gates2.
3-pt. QOl(S • Kamada ]
CoOf'OM def Mw • Wa~be 9,
Quon 12. K.lwaa 3, K McCoy 2. Eyre 4,
Dt<luon ~. Kling 2, Gruber 0, L1boda 0,
Hawkins 0, Pham 0
3 pt pis· Quoncl, ICaWat.a I,
Watanat. I.
Sdra Herkenhoff had eight
rebounds and 14 points for sec
(14-6, 2-1 m conference). Marisa
Emde scored 11 points off the
bench.
C OLLEGE HOOPS SUMMARIES HELP WANTED T 0 D·I Y'S SCHEDULE
Freshman sensation Kelly
Boeke only played 20 minutes,
bUt was 4 for 4 from the field.
Sarah Montavon scored 15
points for Blola (11-9, 1-2).
Heather Donavon added 10
rebounds for Biola.
MEN
GOLDfN STATI ~THLETIC (OHRMNCI "°"' 60, SoC.AI.. c.ot.uGE 57 •~ H.111man 17, While 16, Lockhart 4,
Ploog 2. C..ldwell 6. Wukley 12, c.arnori 3
3-pt. 9Qals • Wtak'-Y 3, White 1
Fouled out • None SoCM College ·Simmons 18 Kohlh.us 10,
Kone 9, Wilton 9, Br~ley 9, James 2
3-pt. 9Qab • ICohlt>Ms 2. Kune 1, W1bon 1,
S11M100S 1.
Fouled out-. None
~me · Boola, 2').27 r ... , . ..,~ -~ ' ... . •' • \ 'I ' I .. ~ .. -._~,. ,:
WOM£H
GOLDEN STATE ATHLETIC CONRRENCI
SOCAI. COl.LaGt 75. liou. 5t
1toi. Mont•llOO 1S, Hard•rNn 12,
AndrHwn 12, Oon.\von 4 Poe 4, Sturm 4
Fulton 4. HMbour 2. Br.clberry 2
3 pt. go.ils • Mont.YOn S. Andre.nen 2.
H.lrderNn 2 Fouled out • Fulton
SoCM College Wright 17, l(emptOtl 16,
Herkttnhoff 14, Emde 11, ~· 9. Fikse 6,
w.idler 4. Pina O. SICk 0 l-pt. g<»ls • Emdt I,
l(empton 1, WncJht I, Fouled out· None.
H lft1me • Biota. 33-27
Corona del Mar High's athletic
departrneht 1s seeking varsity
bead coaches for softball and
badmintonon a walk-on basts
Interested parties should con-
tact Athletics Duector Jerry Jel·
nick at (949) 515-6058 for fax a
brief reswne to (949) 515-6073
from 7:30-4, Monday-Friday
• 8Mketball
Community college men • Orange Coast
at Cypreu, 5.30 p.m.
Cornmuntty college women · Orange
Coast at Cypreu, 7 .30 p "'·
High 5Chool boys • Newport Harbor
at Santa Margarita, 7:30 p.m.,
Corona dtl Mar at Irvine, 7:30 p.m .;
Estancia at University, 7 p m.;
Costa Mesa ~t Laguna Beoid1, 7 p.m.
• soa.r
High school boys • Newport Harbor
at Santa Margan~ 3'15 p.m:
Corona def Mar at Irvine, 3:15 p .m.;
Costa Mes. at Laguna Beach. 3:15 p.m.:
Estancia at Unfvenity, 3 15 p.m.
• Wlltwpolo
High Khool glfls -Santa Margarita at
Newport Harbor, 3 p m.; Irvine at Corona
def Mar. 3 p.m.; Laguna Hills .t Costa
Mesa, 3 p m.; Estancia at l.Aguna Bffd'I, 3
~~~~~~~~,,...,...,.,........,,,_....~----=-~~~ ' --.-:---·.~ \ ~ "" I -"'(' • ,.,,,
l . . ' .. --. •-
..
..auTE•NT OF IO PIObete The Wil end wllhlheoourtaR--·1-.... CA ........ 7 f , AeANDONMENT OF any OOdlClla •re IVll!able 6'*'81 NotlQI (~oE-Jotin H. Coogan, Manei;i.r ... .,u, ""9tllla•.,.. ••
j use°' FICTITIOUS ~·~=rt.In lhe Ille 1'4) °' lhe llllr!g of an In· TNt staiem.ne WU flied ~ :yu:e~con-The~~=.::.,.. IOCAL "Affordable
, 1useNEU NAME ™E PETITION '9<1\lelta ~ llld apptall8I of with -~ ci.r1c of He'll you •'8114MS dor.'IQ ~~ •• ..n..,.•~··~s Al
• :r:' •
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""'::rl:'"'°" "-' •U1hotlly '° lldnlinil1er !he Pt1tt1on ~·1.1.~, ~ OtaJ9 ~= ~·~"·Ms-ea J o Pool s.rvic.. 7862 ..v111U11A1IE' tern.ative" :==:.1ne~11he •~teundent11tndepend• provided In P1obete Code DallY Plot Jan. ~27, This lletem.n1 WH hied Yukon Or .. Huntington PACIFIC VIEW
: l"Y Cofta91, A973 YO!be ~.~~ion .. ~~ ~ 12SO A Request Feb 3, 10. 1999 ~231 Wtlh the County Cle11t °' ~o:. =Yukon Or. MEMORIAL PARK Discount Casket,
• 1 Aahcfl RO .• YOfbe Undl, Wlll anow the pe~"';'efl. .~~~ Flaltlou1 Builnee1 'Orange~= Huntington B11ch, CA :CA~2'7tdltJoue BUllM .. =:t~ia:c:,,~ c:lelt( ~.~~ Dally Piiot Jan 20. 27, ~ bu9ln111 It co~ ="?~=~ Cremation & ,.,,,e relerled to above court app1ov11 er>v p Attorn.y for the are dol~bualne .. as Feb 3, \0, 11199 W234 ducted by• an lndMdual 3500 Pac1ft. Vi~ "-'ve hied In Of'anoe County tak""' ,. .... In ' ore etltloner. a) De 2 b) Sioneon H ... _.. d "" .. ~ ""' Burial Servi •on 3·14•94 FflE NO. tent'!~ ~'.L_~ ROSS & UOH'THOLDER 000 1 n ' ~l Dr.' l'lutlU1• l•tn111 aYI you •·911-o1ng Newport 9..ai Ce ~1941 ...._ .. , '"""·~-..... l.AWMNCEl.AOIS, • 1 South Coes Dr.. ..... ... ~ ~ywe?YM,lM-81 844·2700 WI h 1 Mith carter, 501 o • :r:n~:_:entat;: Ho. ceaat ..,,..6.: ~ eo.1a ,....., CA The folloWlQ l*aont •• ~ =.m.,.,. ... 11i.tlf--lliliililliiiiiliilillll-.. I lf s ould you ubjea.
::;re,Yoro.Llnda,cA ::-,.: ~~:_~"= ~r,.~J~=:: u ~de~· c!o.~ ~=~•Mao-~.nc:.~~~. :i~ yourself & your family to
nus bUtlnMI II con· nobc:e °' COl'l$tntect lo the UGUNA HILLI. CA Mesa, CA 92626 :,.st..·~ M .... ~ 1 .... 7191•7 M • 'nfl d caict~ bV: an 1~ P'oPOMd ectlOn.) The in· ~ Thil t>utmeu la con· Diiiy Piiot J e 13 20 ortuaty *Chapel paying · ate prices for Judl'lh Can« det>endtnl adminiatr .,_ ubll1h1C1 Newport duded by, an~ Ronlld Jamee Tripp, 381 111. • • Cremation k
Thll 1t11emen1 wu 111ac1 •• --. --........ ,.·n~ -•m·Co11a Mae owiv Hew """' •ta'*' _._ ~~St, ea.ta Meu, 27• 1• ca ets & ervices???? ...._ County Clertc 1 ¥~~ .. , ... w ..... " ..... Pi1o1 January eo 28 21. ....._, ,~ :---'V ~ .. .._, 110 Btoadway "11t1 ~..,. 0 un1e11 an lnteres11d pe1-1999 • ' ' """'ne" yet? YM, 111199 Thie bu11n1n 11 c~ ~ '-"'•• .COsta Mose
CaJ.1 Toll Fret
t-888-~
9
' -, . ...
. ., • •
Onlnot eoun~~= ton fdQ an obtectlon to the wr236 Zoran Vldenovtc ducted by: en lndMdual t Jfw atat..ent 842•9150 Smiag Orangt I Sarroucllng CoutrltS
petition end shotts OOOd Thi$ 11atement was filed HIMI you started doll'G The followlng l*90N• ,:atel:I~~-------~ PllOt Jan 20, 27, causewtty1t1eCOU111hould Actltlou1 Bu1lnes1 W•th fie County Clertt of ~ ye(? Yff, MaY ck)lnv buM'9ll U ! LI tt'"'!~--------------..i.---------~
Fib 10.!!!L W23S not grw the authotlty Name StM.ment et.nge County on 1-15-99 198$ Red Aoc:tcet ~-S 'T' A ·RT'JNG , -BSC7HI A HEARING on the petJ. Th9 following Plf'IOOI ' 1"96780524 Ron.Id J9tl'IM Tripp lldo S.. Lane, 1114, Co-i, .f:1 NOTICE OF tlonw~behek1onFEBRU-a110o1ngbu11nffus: DallV Pilot Jan. 20, 27, Thia etatement wu filed tOn&detMar,CA82e25 PETmON ARY 18 1999111 4!> Pm A G1ea1 Wolt«>utt, 43 Feb. 3. 10, 1999 W232 wtth the County Clerk of Diane Orac::e McaM, 900 E
TO AOMUrftsTER In Dept L73 locatld ar 341 Greenlleld, trvlne CA FICtltiou• Bu1iw1 Orange County on 12-31.S S.. Urie, #114, Corona ""' A N W
ESTATE OF: The ~ fL~ .. South. 9'· 92614, ' Name Statement 1 .... 779179 def Mar, CA 9282.5
RICK'-ROZAR ~YOO OBJECT to , .. _ 43H~lt0 Mil~", I WOOd. The following peraona Delly Piiot J"1. e. 13, 20, ~ ~·:•~COi)-BUS/NESS ? ? ab•RICk LYNN granting ol llie petition ~ 92614ree11 ie.,,, Mlle, CA er:11i:i.::~1ne~;ng, 27, 1999 W218 Haw voU l\al1ed. doing . • •
ROZAR au RICKY lhould 1ppear at lilt hea1-Thia business Is oori-260 Vletona St., tE2. P1ot1t1oue lluel"I H ~No
LYNN ROZAR 'no end IUltf YoUr ~-ducted by. an lndMCluaJ Coli. Mesa, CA 92827 ...._ 8tmtenMnt ..,..,. CASE NO. A194810 bons or lilt ¥writ\en obiec· Have you lt.lltld doing Feint L Posos, 280 The fot1ow1ng !*90flt.,. Thia ~ wu 1lled
1 n.. all hel,., be11efl· tl<>N with the court belont bullnttt yet? Yes, 111199 Vtctona St., •E2, Costa e1o1ng butlneee 11· wftt\ the County Cletk of
'carlea, credltora, conl· the hearing. You1 ap-Helen M WOOd • Mesa, CA 92627 INTS.TRAOER.NET, 3022 Orllnge ~~~~:s
'ingent creditors, and per· PN~nce may be 11'1 person · Th11 1tatem..nt wes flied Thll bustne11 11 con-lMIOI Bay, Cotta ~ :'°"' wno may OCherwiae or.,, YoUr attorney wilh lhe County Clertt °' ducted by en lndMdual CA 02829 Deity Piiot Jen. e, 13, 20,
""
es -.s .51 ..... il§~~ j-::s • I
.. =g8· I
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Tlit U,ol ,,,,___ 111111• 1>GJJ1 l""1t u ,,...d
• lllfnorut(:• • ,._ •~• uw ~ i. anr hliaasn. •bl Interested m the wtll or lORIF YOU ARE A CREDI-Orange Col.t'lry on 1 ·15-99 Have you lla111d doing Alan Sandoval, 3022 27 1999 W208
• 1stall. 0t bOlh, of· Ala< L. or contingent Cl9d1tor 19911780522 bulinesa yet? Yes, l /11G9 Ci..ng. Bey, Cotta Mela. M• will llOW SEAiCH th•_,._. :/ti• c,.. ,.... ,,,,,,,., 811 -,.. dM
: ROZAR aka Ria< LYNN o1 lel the deceased, you must Delly Ptk?t Jen 20, 27, Felil! L. Posoa CA 02829 • • NT llllt• aNI "-' 119 to "4 c..n Hoas• IA 5-M A-. nw,., •/ cH.rU, .._,. dw
ROZAR elca RICKY LYNN 1 your clalm with the Feb 3, 10, 1999 W230 This statement was hied Thia bueln111 11 con-1«Ueli II co,,.,lnMI w• trllJJfh.,.,.,. ~ bM1iM11-"'*"'"" wldl dN
f-f~I
Q >..
>-1 s I· ;;9 e . , ROZAR court Ind 1nai1 • ccpy to the Fictltloua BuslneH With the County Cl&rtc ol duet9d by: an lndlvlduel • Co""" Clnt, 'llblisll .,.. • wnt for J-111 .,,. .. u., tWipJntl-, w. ~ tlu1t A PETITION FOR PAO-personal 11pmen11tl\'1 Name State~nt Oranoe County on 1-15-99 ~-lt8rtedNo doing through classlfled /iU '°"' '"101 qt ,.w1e.-,. !PM a. CHIUJ a.rt. I BATE has bMfl tiled by 8~ed by the court 199N7ll0525 ,.,,
.:.= • >.. ~~ l ASHLEY La.JUNE In the "") loormonlhs from the erTheo ..,..~1~ persona Delly Piiot Jen. 20. 27, /.Jan 8andovel t-----------4 ---·"""' .. 1 ... m-_, ~-ru.. . --~ _ _,, .... ,._..,.. .,,,J 3, ..
t SuperlOr Court Of Cahlor-dale of the flrsl isauanoe of ""' uuStness IS. Feb. g, 10, 19911 W233 Thia ata11enlel'lt WU flied ro.-. ~, • -1-1--,..._ 11MSUUU ·-----.,.. -J .. _ .-
1 n1a County of ORANGE letters as Pl<Mded in Pio-Del Apartments LLC, FfctJtious BuelnMI wtth the County Oett1 of Chance.· ate W. &I] SL, Co1tJa Mm&. "JOM U3"'11,.,, •1. "Ml• cl.ll u 111 (HJ} "1-4.Jll
, "O
' THE PETITION FOR bete Code section 9100 3814 Channel Pl .• Newport Oranoe County on 12-29-98 you wttl find Mil wurill .-,. .mlll,.,..-./ot' '°"to lwMh IAll l"C.-,.., ..a. ',PAoeATE ~ ...... , The bme '°'Mi~ claims Beach, CA 92683 N•m• St8tement 1 .... 77 .. 17 ""' v.ll...... be I Del Sol Apartment• UC, The. ,............,. pel'IOl\I n.-.. -.... "'---1.,... what you need I" .. _ .. u .. _ '</:::"-..i-. _ _. -.6 _.,. .__ 'ASliLEY LaJ E be ap. "'" eirpi,. °'e our 3814 ,...___ I Pl N ~ "";:".:~::! -·7 .....,. ..._. ""• .-, C II ",.. ,,..,,... -".., -f11«11Jo111, ,_. .,_., --'"" -.,... 1 polnlltd IS perlOOl.I repre-months l1om the he1t1ng .,._,ne • •wport •r• ........,." .,.,. ... ss u Jen. e, 1s, 20, 1999 W201 at thf pt1ce a tJuue 8'ad to auistJOL buk;,,,.,., uw •ldllt#I!
'sen1ative to edmlnlste1 the date noilcect abo'ie ~~· ~J,::3 I• 'con-a 1~)0 ~ea~~";:p~y .V•lbu)· FIND you want to pay ClaMlfled ~ Pil ' 1 ,state of 1he deCedent. YOU MAY EXAMINE the duct ... ~ D t • t t 11 THE PETITION r~s 1,18 kept by h court 11 ....,., eel by-Umtfed Llab•hty .,,.vco. 3n Avocado St., when you read Toclavl 0
a 1
-Co tK, Costa Mesa CA 92627 c• ... --.-..1 ' tfio• deeldent'I WI and re a pe110n lnteTl&ted In Hew you &tarted ~ David Enfinger, 377 In apartment the _,._. 2-5878
: ~s. If any, be admitted the estate, yoc.1 may !'lie bu.sines. yet? Y1t, 1/t/99 Avocado St.. IK, Costa ltll'ough classified • ff'lef't day "'"'"""' HAC.11 tost• -.~~-:---:-----1----:--....;.._,.. ____ ...___:..:.:...:~.:.:.:.:...:.:...:.:.::...L...:.:;::.:....:.:,;:,__:.:.:.:....:.:.::.::..L:....._.:.::.:;::!;.:..::::::::.:::. __ J..,..::......::---.:~..:..::.:::... __ --l ________ _,,,. ____ .u:::======================================~~ I
Hatt•:. an<l <leadlinr ... arr .. ub)t't'1 to dmngr -
'.
· .. itliout notke. Tlw pulifo,lwr rf!>t'r\'l'~ 1T1e
ri,ht to f<'ll'Or. rt·t l.1 ... 1(~. n•\ j,r or rtJt'•'l
ltll) dassifitd ach trtbt•mrm. Pi<'a'e n'1><1n
nny t>rror that may hi' in your du,,~iftr<l ud
ilnrutdiafc•ly. Tia~ Dail y Pilot 11e·t·rph no
lint.ilit\ for on\ error in ao aft, ert ist·mr.nt
(ur "hich it mi1y he n·~p<>1hihlc 1"{C'f'fll for
the co t of tht: !tpnrr 111•1m11ly oct·upircl J•y
clie rrror. Crrdit C'1u1 onh' f)C' allo~f'd for the
ByF~
(949) o3 t -6:>9-+ (Plre~ mdu& wur nMH' •n•I
phonl' nu111htr al1J •t'll ctll ~""
harL •1th 1 pnrr tjll<M )
By Phone
(94<>) 642-5<>78
By MaWln Person:
:t.30 Wr_.-.t Bo, Street
-Co-.tu \lc~a. CA 92b27
Hours
'li·lt·phon<' 8 ::~0am-:-,:OOpm
\1011<lo11-~ ri<hn
Wnlk-111 8::f0um-~):0011m
\fcon.la1-fn.Ja} fir..t in-.rnion. ·
G)
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY ....... , ............... ...
.~-~ .... ,.. ..,,.......__, .. , .. .............. " ....... It •• ftftt.. • .., ,,.,.,. •••
••llttftt • • ........... .. r-.. .. .,... .............. . ....................... ...................... .... "' ..... ,,.......,
........... 11111 .·
lalt .. ....,_, •IH Ht ............... ., ........ ...... ,... ............. .................. ,......
.,. .... .., ....... -att ................... "" .......,. ............. ................... , .....
"1111f'1u' I • ' .. flU9 .......... ,....., ..... ,,., .... "" .ec-,.... --·--· ..
·g
1 •••
•
--~~
'
I' .
-
• • LOWUT~ ~ ... COllJnl <Ml Mir
Out cf &Ill Mhr 11Y1 IELL IT
TOOAYI l..ltge 3Bdrm & I~ room needa ~but PRICEO
IOOO'S LESS fWl last aall
$319.000 Mn Olfart
KOLAll & CO.
i4~7&-5578 --·
NEWHOIE
EAST SIDE COITA llOA
3 bldnlom, 2 5 bdl, "°'" bu1dll, lpproX 1750 aq 11. !"'11
oellng, N;, wllk·ln cloMta,
2 car 1111cti.d guag1.
$285.990 .. !H22-8120 n& NEWPOAt HEiGRTS
area 2 ~ on a lal Bofl ~ WW,000 Elfl a T , ~ 6'2-4722 usifoiiH
IOIK a 111K nw. • '°"' 8*111'1,11u1t 1n Ma 11.
Cell fllf dtUlle. Eert a JWt T.pit, Apltl MM42..fn2
2 ~ 2 llllh, Wiit IO bltell, nnal pfl11e from
S2111,IOO 3815 1111t 1111 By ._..,.8ob8ecb
... 7'0-"544
•Y;, l .• -
' •• .!'
r .
Gatld Community
One BA One BA
MaryAnn McGuire
64&-6no
Pnidlntlal CA "9el!y
W1t1rlront Suneet YI••
2•SIOl'f <48ctm 38a1tl home
lmm1eu1111 Condition S52!>,000 Agent Brian
Ecmindlon
XtliiiCionlCi ew:~ ~In·~
11 only $3=~ 949-72U120
PROPERTY 31 ICIH •
SIUOO Beaulllul &Oiling
acreega. COtlYWliert to 1--40.
CA Slate bontlf 45 INlee Good Wiier WIL Cll AZL.R
, .... 244-5283 (CM:!CA!!
, ·1 r•r ·
-~-
-· -
. .. -• •
~ .. no-i••
~ 1 bedreom end I bldtoom. ., 2 bedroom t
baa\ CllNt gNd c:omnmlly. POOi, temla, llSY IOCMI lo lr11w1y, beach & mallt
714-llN1075
2 IOMIS fllf fie prtce of
1 llHEWL Y RENOVATED
SPACIOUS IM5aq II One
bdrm + den ~t Lrg master bdrm & Mno room• •IPael. oem.1· NC. Pela
webwne ~-~ Ind ~ VleM From
S11t0. CALL NOWI
.... 21Mtl7 -----
----
,-. ,,. . -
\1 't•p••rt Rlvd b. Bey Sc.
Index
.. .
420 ..
--' .. . -· '
:, . . ''1 . . . .
' :. ~ . • . .. • ... .~1'
--1 I I • .._p ~·
I ... ·~
I
' -~
• A
,. .. ~. "' ~ • ' J
• : f ~ ~
l'QM, 1895 00 Wlf1 OlflOI, $770 00 No dogl. Agenc
94H42-9899
• ., • 1' ... ' ' ...
* UDOll&.E * BAY VIEW, duplu, 3 bedroon\. 2 batl, new ... owpet, glf S200Moto See 103 VleAreee71~ w N0'"'4 BtilJifiil
3Bdnn 2 58el'I l..QQlled In
Qlled ~ A nut aeef ueoo 91r month 118"
M &U «173 Ext 185
PNdarltlll CA=·
kiM ·~ lAIOMt· 380rnl. gpeenbll. pool, dol.til
• S2250 '* monll : ~ IMt eu 049'
"Tir• .. co" TITQW_NHOlll __ 2 F\.11 blf1a, 2
c:er """"'· poof ' 'Pl fa::f. -Yfiiy dell\ 11860 '* ..... AWillllll 1· 15 ..... ••&eo-
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21r, 2.9a Condo ocn a 11ey ~. lid fir, 28fl SI M&tn.
Mg, WIO, hdwd t,_, 2 '*'°'10
IPICll, 1600 al, $2500
IMH75"5873
2BORM, HATH Condo, ocean & bey Ille'#, 3rd lloor,
2at1 St MlrWll. refltgerm,
W/O, herd¥wood ftooll, 2 l>M· tlg specet, 1800 st. $2500.00
Plf mol"lltl SMMT&-5873
RAA80A RIOQE
3 bedroom 2.5 bell, tanwm
clnrm. I '*>ly. p,!v spe, Y1tW OI
Clky~$3600
,. ~-5122
WE HAYE to l&d IN NWl'f'T ICWJCOSTA .. ESA From $1500 seooo
Pel Month No F..s Brokll 949-642-.3850
•IXCit Mv· ii Bbl liOUM.
iYrm, dnm\. lrplc, plV '*°· 2 Cat garage, $300Mn0.
IMMS4-<4!60
COii M CONDO iii lniiii
bdl Prof no~ M50 Avfl Ftb 1~ TED ........ t.
-..
I I l
..
Sfil YOUR PRODUCE or Mlva stlleWidll $450 for I
25 wold Id. 200 CallfonM
l'llW$plpell oombllled ~ tlon over 3 .3 mllllon CAL 'SCAN 115-44~3686
(CAL'SCA'
" · •.. ·."l
.....na.!
-···~. I I
470. 471
Alllerlcan Ootden 0111
teeretwy'• detll • noo.
Arnartcsl Olk nilSlon st,19
<*II · $350, Engllllll Oak 3
drawer ~ llfO¥ll """°' $2SO Keny i49·251,..S24
c11ys. 94t-76C>«ln Mnlllp
Department 56
~ Vilaol p11eea aome '*'° 94!M75-44 I 2
1
Monday ................. Friday 5:oopm
Tuesday .............. Monday S:OOpm
Wedne~ay ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursd.1y ....... Wednesday S:OOpm
Friday ............... ThurSday S:OOpm
· Satur<la)' ............... Friday S:OOpm
. ·. -_;-..
. ' '·"''
-
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' I '
I -" -• ..0·697
-----
COOk fJPMIMIOid ..,..._. eNf ,......,.....,.....,....
only. U + hour. Cell
... 721-1190
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w~. Jonuory.20, 1999 •
TOD~Y'S
CRQSSWORP PUZZLE
Bridie · ,.
'
By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARtF
and TANNAH HIHSCH
L·~·~ . . .... ':l
,:..J~} .•• •t "
:~ -..
ACROSS
1 Delete I TheOMhetw 1ocr ....
14 Hobbltt
15 Coel*lQ on ltott
18 !YJ>e ol <»de 17 Dlspel1lglnQ remeiU
18 TaJ Mahal alt•
19 Hoover Dam't
lakt 20 By !hit b1ne
22 Ac10f James -24P~YOte 2:50el~ 2e~OtAlan
29 YOU1g hofM
• 3 t Lie• filing -
36~oftilms
;,3IJ Large ox
37 f\ellglou• ~ 39 Gene Ktll'f rdm
~Goto '43 Orange pekoe and Eart Grey
44 ·-minuter
45 WllnesMd 46 A\19fage grades
47 f>IOd
48 FINshed a calt.e
50 -out barely
52 t:1... .
55 Tldal wave
STUMPED?
-I
PMVIOUI PUlZU! ~VfO
~ 41 SpenWI lady author 49 Earthenware
30 Kimono lie pot
32 Remole 51 Some Turl<a
33 Thrash about 52 Slngfr Guthrie
34 -ecid 53 -most 36 Old-maid llower S4 Lodging olaon 37 Stages 55 SNde Of c:olof
38 Hosiery 5e -Ben Acflem
problem 57 Tuna -
40 "Gollyr 68 Unemployed
41 Goll mound 59 Damp
48 St1 Unka, once 6 t Vexation
Sl.lPP~O '1 O A TOP SCOR.£
NorU'l·Soolh vulnerable. SWlh ilea.ls.
WFSf
NORl'H .. , ..
QA Q83
0Q1095 .,.
EAST
• KQ7532
<::1 96
• J 109
Q J 107 ..
o A876
• 83
0 432 •Jl SOOTH
•A ' o K52
<> KJ
·•A KQ 1097 5
· Thebiddiog: SOlml WEST NORTit , EAS,r . .
l • •• , ..... Paa 4NT Pul 51'(1' Paa ,. .._.. 60 Pus
6NT Pul PM1 P1$.1
Opening lead: King of •
When expen.s make errors. they are
whoppers. Thal docs not mean, how-
ever, that they are doomed for a poor
resulL Sometimes their skiU in the
play will bail them out. He~. West's bold four-spade pie.
empt. against a pair who had repre-
sented their country an the world
championshjp, caused the North-
South auction to go off the rails.
South's two clubs was artificial and
game-forcing, so Nonh's pass of four
s~c ' fot~ -South had either cu b•J OI le. South intend-
ed (our no t.rvmp a.s Black1.1,ood, but
North read it as a general <>lam invat.a·
lion, offering a choice of suir con·
uacts and ac~p1ed by bidding five no
tnuop, ask.ins SouUi to pick a &uit.
North did not lite the suit South
chose (~ix ch,1bs wu unbeatable), and
from that point the auction slid into
an inelegant no ll'\lmp slam.
After the lead of the king or
spade,, six no U'Ump was in terrible
~· Declarer won and, in the hope
that somethin1 favorable would
develop. ran the clubs, disCarding
three diamoiK:ls and two spades from
the table. ~ t also had 10 find {ive
di~ards while reuuning four heanS
and the ace of diamonds. One sp&de
and three diamonils were easy to lind,
but the fifth was a problem. The
defender was forced to let go the last
spade. Reading the position perfectly,
declarer now played a diamond. East was forced to win and return a heart,
and ~ hearts tricks and a diamond
brought home a seemingly imJ>O$Si-
blc contrect. •
Lam to be • betttt bridge _play· erl Substribe now to the Goren
Bridae Letter by calling (800) 788-
122.5 for W'ormaUon. Or write to:
Goren Brid&e Letter, P.O. Box
4410, Cbka&o, Ill 60680.
TELEMARKETERS Salel make mooey
last • and easy call M•ke
714-89 f. 9802
•THE MAIL'IWX * Counter lvl·pall time perm
$1Jippng phone~. once
94"426262
Constructjon . [ m p I o y m <' n t
EMERCON CONSTRUCTION, INC.
· Stelting Laborer:
ConSltllction dtmolilion knowlt'dge a plus.
Must \peak flut'nc English.
Also Seeking WaUpaperer:
Need to know painting, Wallpaper,
and light drywall repairs. General knowledge
of fini\h dcctm:al 1s a plus.
• Bo\h johs rcqu1rc rd1abk cruck
and good dnvtng rc:cord. •
401 K, vacations, mcd1ai benefits. ;w:ul;ablc.
Call Tam Catty at (714) 630-9615
SE'ITf.RS
Pf .'looting aml
l'H'IUJtg o.,ftilf<; ~H2-~20
Per Hour
r.,.~1·ro.1t1,.-r.
hlith•r
• 11-'"'' l\.i.t"t l~u .. "' ........ ,. ..
,., ............. 191
•I •>I h flU ,.,.,,.~1iKf'f
r. .. 1nl1llo,h 11 ltt l!>tt!I
u11ll )(''"' IJ~ C nU lor Rl't•olntm.:nl
1 ·HAA-.'ll :H 7""4
•PER$0NAL TIWHERS• M~E AN EXTRA 20I< A
YEAAI FR£E SEMINAR FOR AMAZING NEW PAOGAA.U
CALL NOWI 7 t4 $39-449t
2.tHI\ MESSAGE p!Oll!rt'• t11S11 com
PIH• be WlfY of out of
... '°4'!1ptnlH.. a.ct
•lttl .. loell ""'-' 8ualnH• 8U'98U bafGr9
you Mn<! ll'IY m~ or
• 1 .. , '°' eerv~a. fl•ld 1nd under111nd 111y contrec1• .bafort you
•lgn.
l::i1.iJ
Tu Plcillge"tor 1u yeat f99e Vllll website, www topsites net accounrir19
or caJ GATS, Inc •
(800)·390·5238, P 0 Box
987 I 7 , Raleigh , NC..
2762<1 IJ717(CAL -SCAN)
s;·AVOlD BANKAUPfCY0 ·)
bl Consolldatlon Slop
collectlon calls CUI monthly
p1ym1nts 10 50% May
lltlmlnat• flflMCe. cllarges
Fast Ai>c>l~al 800-270-989<1
(CAL'$CAN)
GET OU.T
OF DEBT!
!Ye can help_!
• Credit Cc1rJs Consolidated
• Pavments Loimcd
• lntemt Reduced
• l/arussmtnt5 ·Stopped
• llab/amos £s Ml
U$ FOR l VARIETY
Ol tong I rm Income streams
J G Wentwonh toll free
I IJ88 23 I 5375 (CAL •SCAN)
OVER YOUR Ano Ill dept\ N41ed mcxe bceathlng room?? Avotd bankruptcy!
'Debt consohdauon
'NoOuahhng
'Licensed l\Ol·lor·prol•,
natlonal comp any.
www anewhonzon ~ i800)556 1548 (CAL SCAN)
1'12 s=::I
BALBOA PENINBoal doCk
18-:lOll W't' 8a1 ISiand <hie area Power Ot sal. qu;el & sat Jocairon 9-49-673-1943
l: .. ~fl2AI Rtii 1-',.....I E-•11.: .. ~11· ·=I I· •l
coatl! OWource 10 Pr~ Co Ad~.nc.d Wood.yneme Sti(Al.L JOB EXPERT! SALES.SERVICUIMSTLL.
fME pcllup&dllYefY ..CllltomCablnWy· E Cl ~ DUNCAN ELECTRIC Hard'Mlod,VWiyl ceramic PUBLIC VISAIMCIAMEX 949-645"8569 Kltdlen•Bdl•Ooore • u ro ners Locti'Ouid< reaponw PERGO, catpel MC, Vila
Molcllnga -Mlnlel• -.--·aw. r-a • rn SeMceiflemodels U 708279 9ea-9S90 PHEN +DIET
C&P . SERVICES
• lnaurance
• f,a1atee • ms 0-.lioo•
~..,._ AtU/UStA.1 CUT
14-540-1225
·~--...la, ..... ;· • .,~· ..... ~
.. ) .It · • .. . .. ~. ' •• :4 -. 1'•1
LM91150 71......,907 PAOfESSIOHAUSM' light lr!uie rep&tf Comnlcu~ Medici! Prno NOTICE
OUAUTY L•75870 6~7042 I ~I ,. -· OEDICATIOH LICENSED CONTRACTOR ~ s79/,,.o ~c.!~~:-::: The Calif. Pubfac ilD 714 342 06 6 No Job 100 sma1 Al s"IVlc~ ---u111111es Commission
714 437 :2704,.. Rep~'~54J~5e new IAG RA REQUIRES that all
• ' • I I ~· .... ~··~
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~II Ph 11111•mt11/1 g lobe Cl.EAHl 20rl. !lilt, "" ... l.'400030 71o4-«Jt.1447
...,,,.,~.,..,,,,..,,..,.,.,,.,.,,..,._...,..._ used household goods
QUICK ELECTRICAL SVC HOME RESTORI REMODEL o.,,.., .. , ... Co!il.., movers rrlht !heir L.t9'3623 lans ..,_... trouble Tiie, dryw1ll, woodwork, tvl\•~.,, '-" ,, ' · ..,._.., P U C Ce T number; shoOllng 21y .. ••peoencel '9nce .. cleclls, room lddl-• v1 .. rr. .. _ and .... Auffets 714·842-29()5 lfont, roofs, gel'I. rtplirl, """"~ UICI
Colllmim. Wt, """t. 800-7()()...8 print lht1r T.C P.
' .J'. 0A • t 1,• ~"'( •"
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t I r
( I, .111 •!I" '"'I . d 111"
I' . '' \\,I 11111
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• \IW¥W • \lllllof ~rt<ll ~ulmu Co11t11tk.if
949-862-5882
• • . • I
,r f . ~ ...... , .. •"'
CM• 71~ , ..... ;;;...-..... ..;..--...-.;..;;,,...;;._., number in al edvertis·
OUAUTY CRAFTSMAN I ~ ~ I ments II you have a 20 ytll:a tXI* Refarenc. ~ • question about the fM YOUR twlOYMANt ft legakty ol a ITIOY8r,
MARK 650-9525 Irmo or chautfer, call·
4 • • • • .,711:,,. ... . ' .. .
' ... ~ ... , ... .-r ..
11 ...... 1 .. AVAUIU TOOAYl
MN1UMI
1tOUTTER CLEANING• PUBLIC UTILITIES
FREE ESTIMATES• COMMISION 849-64><>335 714·558-4151
P ... 1~~~
It. · . L-:J'.......:t ~ : !. '.·
'! TREES f
~.l.aWM. ~ 751·3478
Yl1'b clUN OPNIOM
Tft!ll. HEDGES, PALM
TREES REMOVAL NEW
LAWN/PUNTS 7t<I~
' .
... · ! ,•1r • 'Y f ... -~,
. . .
Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot
LOOIONO '°' Sldt .. or l'llOI• mg Or) 8.tlbol allnd """' North side. Call Lu 900-948 .303()
NMTRUDOllU
(OQPOlll• Nclt(1 Minn. ) Sup for Hll boat 4211 t4t-e1s-nn
CAR 3HP $100 00
949-541-3807 Cel belof• &pin
;:
···-.. 1 ; I , ,
' ' ' • ' I ! •. ,_...:.. •.. tl:n
aiiW1ill BilCiilGidi
dltOme, CID, phone, . ongrw
CTWf*, 11711 mi, ~ 10
$11,900
949-720-7337
8Mw S2C 'ii Premium peck·
191, 45k mltee, Vin 9572
$25,995
Cow Motoring
(949) ISO-UIS
liiw $40, 'iS, bltCk/blacll,
SOie mills, viii 1>415, $21,"5
CoV9 MoeorlnQ MMS0-691,
BMW 140li, 'ii; IOW wwranty
mllet • beautiful vln 1447, $43,"5
CoV9 Motoring
~9) 650-5915
BMW 7 '85, oniY 4511 m( boullfully r111ln1alntd,
Aepen Sliver. vln 1545. S3t,985 ~Mo\oring
(849) 150-5915
8iiw nol~ 'M 81acliAilac(
nee'• choice. vln 1SH $25,995 •
Cow Moeortng
(949) 650-511 s
BiliW aiO, 182., 918CW;&;
fl·•PHd, rere. vln25<10 131,916
Cove Motoring
(Ml) 150-5915
CAbiLUC 1iii SEDAN
OE\'ILLE C1ea.W/Block lop,
cre1111 le11hef inl Watran1Y. 14K mi, S2 I ,500 9<19-720-7435
FOAO 1f92 Bronco
Exe11«11 cond new pull. 5 Bl VII, CID $8000
714·381.0139
F6"6 iiiS PICKUP mo
1 SUPER CAB LONG BEO
WHITEJ/BLUE, 45,126 Ml
$19,195 95-4079
BAUER JAGUAR
714-1153-4800
HONDA CIVIC EX CPE 't7 Auto. all the O(ller goodies
(0839561 stun MrTSUBISHI MOTORS
714-545· 1700
ISUZU RODEO S'IS
TIU ng has been Pl/TIP9fedl looks a11r•some 1
(332926) Sf0,931 MITSU~HI MOTORS
714-545-1700
Jeguw, XJI VDP, Wh !Ian,
VIN 8893 S33.995 .
Cove MO(omg
(849) 650-5915
• l" · 'I . I " ~11' ' ' -'·; i.
• , ..... i-4 '~ f• '".!'
tt<FS CUSTOM PAINllHO
Pro19"i0nal. c:lul, qulllty
WOik tnuel1 ' doc:li.s l.1703488 631""610
ROIERf 1$8EU co.
lntetl()lltQerlOr, &mall Jobe OI(
DecOflwe PWlllna lJ49"350
Cal 714~ or page
71 <l-58o.962e
ltrueger patntlng
residential
faux finishing
wood rtstoratlon
mall hew
548-5481
he. 7408'18
( . . ~·--•:
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JAOUM tea XJI -"Tl!'IR"lln1:m~m:r;;..;;;;;:
WHITE, SUN•AOOF, f111cMY01y Tou
$320000 !leHlllll • (t08t43) JlOUAA HIS XJI LEX\Jt lftllOH llDAH 4D M•*'*4
11t.MI 9'-4HI liiCOCH 1iit UXAK VII
BAUER JAOUA1' LIC C11tfully malntalned
7144MIOO ~ '**1 condlb JAOOAIHAIXJlv12 seaoo U9·15t·B~•5 or
2• 2 COHVfRTlllE 20 1119*-&64isr-n·1r,056r-:r.~--..--...,,.. 1)1,~0ER JAGUA~5 Ult :iec 'tO, onlJ Hil
7fwts-qoQ mlM. Cove u:o. ....
JAOOlA ilii xm (Ml) UM°'m
SEDAN <IO llBCEOEAENZ i HI
TOPAZ, 10,14'tM E.Cl.ASS E6320 WAooet 40
...... IH ~ WtfTE. 41,0Mll
BAUEft JAOUAfl s.M,NS tl-4212
7'4-113..-.00 BAUER JAGUAR
JA00AR 1tii x:Ji 714-M"4IOO
Vlnden Pia• ledln 40 MERCURY 1ii2 sAict. 4 Slpt\ICl"Mfll S4,J74ml door al,.,,..., """'ml """" ... ~1 ' .... --·""' • "'"""
' IAUER JAGUAR ::~4~tEWE.LI SS<l50
714-tQ-q()O . iiltiUbiltil &llPN dsx 'ii JlOIJAA itN lls · 35K m1111, loaded end
SEDAH<IO 9orgeou11 $35,IM • IM27J (Ollml) $15 Ml IAUER JAGUAR MITSU8'Stt MoTORS
714-t63..-.00 • • 714-545-1700
JlouU 1tH XJ'2 iitteiiiltlill EcilP.M Grii • SEDAN 40 One 10C11 owr.er· "llY nk:tt
Bl.ACK, 2t,104MI (261556) S13°1ff
144,":AUEA JAOUA:--~ MIT~~~.~~OftS
1t4-ff)"4IOO MITS08isll Mli bl 'it JEEP CHEROKEE 1 Mi Local ne~ cai t1a<1e~1eet otal-
2-door 2wd, 8 cyl, 5 SOd. IC, WI (026t46)$MN lm'fm/culene, lllll. $3400 00 MITSUBISHI MOTORS
714-969-5567 714-545-1700
Gm 1ii2 56400: iiTSOBlsHI iittlje s 'ts
32k mills!. rTWll condillon 5 apd ac. Cd. nice ..,.,..,
Cal Dunc#l 11 Vtf'I cJeanl (<n'43221S5171
714-55e-96<19 U.ITSUBISll MOTORS LEXUS uu LS4oo, . 714.545.1100
(~~e/lvoty 11A °'1T..en MltM111iet1l Mon1«0 LS t5
\.£XlJS ISSIOH VIEJO ~ ~ =1 under ·~ 94t-~ (0272381 Stt,tn
LEXUS 1 i9'4 SC300 MITSUBISHI MOTORS
GameWoiy luft option 114-545-1700
(Ol898t) s21,9n
LEXUS MISSION VIEJO MIUubW\I Monlafo Li 96
14fo364-0N4 Thi$ lldy-Owned <IX4 ~-.S LEXUS 1995 GS300 traded In on 1 new Mon11110 ~.lull opllOO (016639) t 15,tft ..
(108143) S27,tl7 MITSUBISll MOTOM
LEXUS MISSION VIEJO '=<',..,,....,.,TI.;,.4-_;SU.~1 .... 700,;.,;....,..__ Mt-~ PORSCHE 1NS t1t can;;. LEXUS 1ii5 os 300 ~ re, x.-.. moo dOWn
eastwnwWoiy, NI opcion WIM'IW OP $18)00
(I 12t t6) • SMM7 94H73-<M1 t LEXUS MISSION VIEJJO 'X'SA~ro=R.,.,.N ... ,.:-:-:::-ts-rs,..,~,...,5=--spetd--...
Mt-~ low ml. 1 owner. AIC. antlrn
LEXUS 1995 LEXUS £Sloo cass, lnlll$ ext warr $8150
F ul option °"'Y 171c ml 714-839-3122
(12m4Js MISSION v~" TOYOTA TACOMA ... ., • ..._ ...... _.. Sharp truck, ll<:4I wheels I ~~---(125892) $8991
lEXUS iiii ESSOO MITSUBISHI MOTORS Coach Ed, whit 714-645-1700
(16519Ws n•.M7 TOYOTA me CEUCA QT
LEX MISSIOH VIEJO •llbldl; IUIO, 4 eyl, ""90,
__ _!94~•~364~.-4~!....--good cond USO obo Lt:XUS 1"6 ESlOO 949-63t·38S2
ElacUYoty IUI opCIOll TOYOYA 1913 CEUCA OT
(155789) s2s,2n s-spd, 1 ownff. tu• powtf,
LEXUS MISSION VIEJO Mk ml, sun-roof, perflCt
M•3'4"*4 cond. St200. 949-nl-1475
LEXUS 1991ES300 VW Gm A liL 'N
Cahme1ltffl0ry, chrornM Siad!, sunroof. 5 speed, IUIO,
(1&4690) $12•,N7 locks Wiit\ remoce. alarm AC
LEXUS MISSION VJEJO stereo cass, PS, bfal<95, eTI<
949-3M-OM4 lieeway mies, clean grees LEXUS 1iii ts 366 COOd $8700 9-49-645-3810
Cashmela'lvoiy, 16k m.191 3000 GT 95
(1412011 nun Local 1ra<Je nic"4Y ~ LEXUS MISSlON VIEJO (011895) SU,918 ___ M•3,!:'~-4M4___ MITSUBISHI MOTORS
714-545·1700
LEXIJS1t17 ESUOO '79 ESTATE WAGON
Blac;W;-iOry, I~ 51* 403 CID. lull IJOjllet 150lr,
(0031 t3) uo.•n onginal o~ntt $900 obo LEXUS MIS5'0N IEJO 714-54Wm
Mt-314
ORCO
PLUMBING
fl
DRAIN
CLEANING
7 -DU'SIWU:K
r. Citizen DiJCOUnt
76CMl170
Lic.1727705
r,JV.1 r1T r: r '. ,,\
l • It ( \, It l I l l : !
lndiv/Grp Help
All Levels ~ 949-548-5833
Q 6 0 UPHOLS~ftY
Since '611 CUiiom fumltui'e, ~art ... co-9, .... ttqutt!pl!. 5'2-4t12 _
CUSTOM
SLIPCOVERS