HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-05-20 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMt'AUNmES SINCE 1907 THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1999
GRADING ROBERT BARBOT
MEDtiA FUZAGIC DtMRmc> I OAlY Pl.OT
Superintendent Robert Barbot has been on the Job at the
Newport-Mesa UnJ.Oed School Dlsb1ct for one year.
11iey ·an agree:
He's a super
superintendent
S uperintendent Robert Barbot was smack in the middle of a
long meeting between school principals and parents a few
months ago when he _
realized' he'd a.mved m the
Newport·Mesa Unified
School District.
One by one, tbe disparate
group of people, not all of
whom had come into the room
happy, seemed to come to a
con.semus.
•Tuey 5&id. they knew they
had a .lot of tssues, but they
were feeling really gOod that
· they could try and identif~
their issues and work on
them.• said ·Barbot, who is
wrapping up his first school
year as the district's top man.
As he related the story, Bar-
bot flashed hls famous 2,000-
watt smile.
There is perhaps no word •m the English language, or in
the Spanish Wnguage, which
he also speaks, that Barbot
enjoys more than 'consensus.'
Since coming to the distrtct
m August from Chico, Calif.,
•e has tried to bUild it among
administrators, among teach-
ers, and most of all, among
parents, whose trust in the
district was badly eroded after
the double-whammy of the
1~ embezzlement scandal
adCl the 1994 county bank-
~· Prom ~ery comer of the
oft-divided school. district,
Which stretches from the glit-
tery, affluence of Corona del
Mu to the gritty, Spa.nish-
~g poverty of the West
Side of Costa Mesa, people
.ay it's wOrldng. '
•r v, never seep anythlng-
like it, and I've been around a
lot of superintende nts," said
Judy Prenco, a 20-year mem-
There's more
to life than .
sitting at desk
As superintendent of
schools, he's one of the
most powerful men in
town.
But Robert Barbot says
his job is by no means the
only thing he lives for.
"The most important
thing in my tile is my Wife
and family," Barbot said.
A good day is one
where he gets home early
enough in the evening to
go for a walk with his wife
Janice, a preschool
teacher.
Every chance he gets,
he flies to Lake Tahoe to
visit bis son, who works as
a police officer in the
foothill town of Placerville.
On the wall in his office is a
poster of Lake Tahoe, and
be said he plans to retire
there. -
The life of a glitterati Is
not for him, he said.
•Honestly, I'd rather eat
at Taco Bell with a good
friend than at a fancy
restawant, •he sa1q.
He doesn't even have a
favorite restaurant in the
area, but he has managed •
to take time off from his
hectic work schedule to
find a half-dozen h ik mg
Sii h&[E MGE At
ber d the Boe.rd of Education. ---. -""""!"----~
•1 tbink that buicaJly says it, in tenm of tbe kind of individual
that be 11.·
The job ot superintendent is a &oUgb one lD my ldlool diStnct,
but beadlDg the Newport-Mela diltrid poees particular chal· .....
MGIAI
I
.....
·Skate park .divisions arise.
• Costa Mesa residents
say they are worried
about safety, flooding and
parking near Lions Park.
l~U. ... l. GEr.
. . .
Lions Park. They did have numer--
ous suggestions on how to
improve the plan.
At the other side of the spec-
trum. residents with separdte
concerns about--conserving green
space, flooding and parking met
Wednesday evening m prepara-
tion for a meeting with aty staff to
COSTA MESA -A broad mix dtscuss their concerns ..
of the community, from pre-teen The conceptual plan presented
skaters to senior citizens who had by consultant David Volz features
no idea what the terms "funbox-a park geared toward nud-level
es• or "grinding" meant, attend-str~et· skaters. Volz proposed a
ed a meeting this week to discuss design with two quarter-pipes, a
the conceptual plan for the skate pyramid, a large funbox with
park at 18th Street and Park multiple levels, steps, a gnnding
Avenue. rail and a launch ramp.
Skaters said they liked the The park would also feature
plan, which features a mix !>f •drop-m• areas and have a
p. yranuds, funboxes, quarter-, "deconstructive• type of design,
pipes and grinding r~ scattered renuniscent of The Lab Anti-Mall
m a 10,000-square-foot area m on Bristol Street. The skate park
.. --. should be able to atcommodate
up to 50 skaters dt one tune, Volz
srud.
A maturing oak tree at the
edge of the proposed skate park
would be preserved and protec-
tive seating would be mstalled
around it, \1-0lz sa.id. One of three
shade structure:, in the park will
have to be removed under the
proposed plan.
Volz also suggested placing
small landscaped areas with.in the
skate park but out of the line of
skaters, that could break up the
"sea of concrete• usually assoa-
ated with skate parks.
Skaters sdld they dtdn't think
any obstacles should be placed
within the park They suggested
that one way to break up the "sea
of concrete" dnd soften the stark-
ness of the park would be to use
ME RRY POPPIES
colored conc(ete, which could
also be used to defme the park
more · clearly for skdters and
pedestnans.
They also suggested Ulstalling
a half-bowl within the park and
extending one of the quarter-
pipe::.. One ovemd.ing concem of
skaters was park maIDtendnce
and the possibility that concrete
would be wore down over tune.
Volz scud that metal, which 1S
more sturdy and is rnore slippery,
·a desU'ed trait by skaters. would
be incorpordted mlo much of the
design
Rr·s1dents were concerned
about safety and about skaters
and pcde tnans interacting on
the sidewalk outside the park.
The woup of residents who
SEE SKATE PAGE A 15
DON lfACH I DAW.Y Pl.OT
California poppies are coming out in their full g lory as warm sunshine in recent days has helped the growing process. Donna
Darnell, right, tends to he r garden plot at the Oasis Senior Center by giving her colorful poppies some water.
Habitat for Humanity loses right to property
• Local buyer accuses
the not-for-profit group
of abusing its influence
when dealing with city.
LU\I GH
COSTA MESA -Habitat for
Humanity has lost negotiating
nghts to a property on Sterling
Avenue after the City Council this
week decided to work with a pri-
vate citizen who had already
placed a bid on the property.
Jim Jennings of Newport
Beach complained to the council
after it gave negotiating rights to
Habitat -after he had placed a
bid on the property at 2135 Ster-
ling Ave. on March 3.
The council awarded tbe ngh_ts
to Habitat because it was unclear
whether the city's Redevelop·
ment Agency would be able to
purchase two other properties on
Del Mar Avenue, which would
then be donated to Habitat.
Habitdt had requested negoti-
ating rights on the Sterling prop-
erty as a backup to its preferred
__ ,
property on Del Mar Avenue.
It would cost the Redevelop-
ment Agency 90ut $44. 5,000 to
purchase thj.--two 'parcels of land
on Del Mar Avenue, said Muriel
Ullman, housmg and redevelop-
ment manager for the city.
Jenrung accused Habitat or
abusing its influence and said he
was upset that it was given nego-
tiating rights after he had alietdy
submitted a bid in good faith.
"While H'ab1tat's goals areJan-
tastic, tbe end doesn't justify the
means," Jenrungs said.
Ron Blake, p~1aent of Hab•-
tat for H~aruty. :::.a.td his orgaru-
zation wa unaware that Jen-
rungs had subinJtted a tiid on the
property.
Councilman Joe Erick.son said
he supported negotiating with
Jcnmng because it was deaf
that Habitat' first pnority wu the ·
Del Mar propertr. 'He said he
believ there IS enough money
in the budg t to make the proper-
ty on Del Mar Avenue work for
Habitat •
• 1 don't think we shoUld ~
SEE HABllAT MGI A1
lincoln earns· Blue Ribbon INDEX MlllENMUM MOMENT Wall of
protection Nl!WPORT BEACH -Condress-
man Chris Cox will be at Uncoln Ele·
menta.ry School in the next few weeks.
No, he's not trytng to win support
from future voters.
He'll be there to penona.lly con-
gratulate students, teechen and par-
ents becaUM UnCOln bu been named
a national Bhaa Rlbtioa SChool.
The dilUnctioa meens the tchool
wUl be a model far reform natiC:lmride,
md will jcim a Detwalk ot more tba
UGO pubk wl prtnte ldaooll
--tlrllJlllJ*J .... ........, bMr .........
.. ......., DltfW Wedll•
.... tloUDmlDIDalllD ...... a1.., ....
--~ ---~
ClAlllD .. 15
Giii lllf-__ J 14
..... ..All
11111 All
lllBY .All
9'115 ''
GMnJ education a second chance
It 2 Thur.day, Mat 20, 1999
llSJ IU
greer
wylder
s
Dressing up
has never
been easier
Y oung Seconds 1s having
dnother dress sale on all
of their beautiful brand
rH~w "td1ry ta.le" dresses through ...,,.1 urddy. w All of our fairy tale
d1\''i~<''> will be 50% to 75% off
1 •Ur lwlow wholesale cost,• says
• 11\\ nPr Krilhy Bell. "There are
11v1•r 'lOO dresses, size 3 months
t hrouHh 12 years, perfect for
w1•dchng-., hrst communions, and
11ll -.pt'C"tdl occasions -all on
"<1h· Slort' hours are noon to 5
p rn ~dturcldy and Monday, and
Io ct m lo 5 p m. Tuesday
throuqh Fndt\y lt's localed
upstdir .. nt 4 'H) Hel.Jotrope Ave.
111 Corond clPI Mar, Just a half-
t 1lo< k -.outh of the old Port movie
tlwdll'r ( ttll (949) 673-2120 for
lllOff' ci<'lcllls
C'ha's Family Shoe Repair has
11ffK1cttly chdnged its name to
l·amlly Shoe Repair. Young Cha
.1nd his fanuly want customers to
Ice! dS 1f they are part of his fam-
1ly when they come to his shop.
l~drotly Shoe Repair is offering
20111<, off on shoe repajrs to Best
Buys redders who mention tlus
< olumn. Chd is excited about a
new glue he has invented for
repdmng shoes He clauns it's so
-.afe that even tastes it. Cha
wds wdrried about the toxioty of
other glues and chdn't want hiS
daughter and other people
l xposed to it. Family Shoe
l{epa1r is located a few doors
down from Seven-Eleven at 1673
lrvme AvP m Costa Mesa Call
(949) 642-4314 for mote mfonna-
tion
· Stagecoach Luggage, at 2043
Wes~cliff Dnve, is haVUlg a side-
walk sdlP Sdturday. The sale will
featur£• d large amount of over-
..,lo<"k thdt it nE'<'ds to reduce.
c 'hotc<'., m luggdge are Sarn-
"onite at 75'}., off, Tu.mi at 30%
1 .tt, Skylhtr dl 70"1,, off, and Sky-
wc1~ dt 50" .. off.' AU guts are 20%
It) .'.:>0", off clOd Wdllets are 25%
< tf for more information, call
l''WIJ '; 15-~005
Where's The Partyf is giving
1w11v one dozen helium balloons
w1th0
c1 purchdse of $25 or more
in thP store, through Monday,
1,1~ J 1 Where's The Party IS a
11n1•-... lop shopping destination
!l)f pitrt} suppbes, announce-
nwnts q1H wrapping, balloons,
<1ncl rustom bannets. It's at 270
E 17th St 1J1 Cost~ Mesa. Call
1q4ql 722-1803 for more details.
Draper's & Damon's IS having
, r1 prP-Memonal Day sale
throuq h Saturday at its Westcliff
l'lt11c1 location In Newport Beach.
ln<>rc• are discounts as much as
"O" .. off on dresses, sportswear,
. •nd cl< ce!.!>ories in misses and
p\'ltlP c;1zes. Call (949) 646-5521
for more mlonnation.
• BEST BUYS is published Thursdays
and Saturdays, If yow know of• good
buy, ~nd a fax to (949) ~\70 Of
write to Da1ly Piiot. Best Buys, 330 W.
Bay St. Costa Mesa 92627.
. . locals . only
PILOT PEOPLE
• # •
He's there to help others out of a 'pickle'
HE IS
"The Pickle.•
• SAVING GRACE FROM
THE MEAN 'STREETS
Jim DiCamilli professes he wasn't an
angel growing up m one of New York's
roughest boroughs. Living with his immi-
grant family in Hell's Kitchen, DiCamilli,
a first generation American, knew there
was trouble around every comer.
·wayward" was the word be used to
describe his delinquent behavior on the
mean streets. Without a father figure in
the household -his dad was permanent-
ly hospitalized from an injury suffered in
World War I -D\Camilli could have suc-
cumbed to the street mentality .
But the young boy was given guidance
by members of two community groups,
who involved him in sports. He played
high school basketball and football, not to
mention running sprints for the track and
field team.
The support he received as a child has
been passed along to other youths today
as he avidly attends games and partici-
pates in fund-raisers.
• 1•m passing along my good fortune to
the kids,· he said. "I hope my help can
steer them in the right cl\rection. Sports
can .change the lives of young people.
That's why I'm so supportive of youth ath-
letic programs today.•
..
Costa Mesa under the Pickle moniker.
When business grew, he opened 13 other
delis throughout Orange County.
coasts, the question emerges: when it
comes to his favorite team, where does
his loyalty lie?
career at Cal State Chico.
EAST OR WEST COAST BIAS7
DiCamilli, who lives in Costa Mesa,
runs the The Lil' Pickle U.S.A. sandwich
shop on the comer of Fairview Roap.
Over the last 30 years, he and his employ-
ees have served hundreds of athletes who
attend OCC or area high schools.
•t never had more than seven shops
going at any one time,• he said. •Tuey
consumed my life. It became a major
headache.•
"I've always been a Giants fan,• be
said. "I followed them when they were in
New York and now they are in San Fran-
cisco. Plus, Brent [Mayne] is on the team,
Olivia, 24, holds the county career
record for scoring in women's basketbdll
with 2,301 pomts. After playing several
sports, she was recruited. by San Diego
State, where she played four years of bas·
ketball. She ranks 10th on the school's aU·
time sconng and rebounding lists. o what's not to like?"
After serving in the Korean War,
DiCamilli moved to California, wh~e his
uncle ran a bar and grill in Cucamonga.
The Big Apple transplant stuck with the
business for about a year before he
moved to Newport Beach in 1961. He
found a vacant space in the Fun Zone dis-
tnct and opened a sandwich shop called
·Beach Boys.•
There is only one Lll' Pickle these
days. The shop is decqrated with pictures
of former customers who have hit the big
time: Dan Qwsenbeny, the late sidearm
relief pitcher for the Kansas City Royals,
catcber Brent Mayne of the San Franosco
Giants, NFL Pro Bowl place locker Benny
All IN THE FAMILY
DiCarnilli isn't just a generous booster
when it comes to youth sports He's a
proud papa to boot.
But the guy }cnown as "The Pickle• by
1us customers has always been more thdn
generous with 1us tune.
Ricardo
His two daughters have flourished in
colle_g!ate sports, meaning the family
genes are loaded with athletic potential.
•I was so involved with my daughter ...
I guess 1t transgressed mto other lives,•
he said. •What can I say? I'm a peopltt
person. I like the 'Satisfaction of helping
kids.•
. He spent seven years m Newport
before closing shop and reopening in
Scores of team photos of vanous ath-
letic squads adorn the wall, most of whom
have eaten at DiCamilli's shop.
Since spending half his life on t>Oth
His oldest daughter, 28-year-old
Shella, was a top-rated tennis star at
Mater Dei High School and continued her
-Story by Greg Ri.sling;
photo by Brian Pobuda
BRIEFLY IN THE NEWS
District continues
lobbying for money
Mike Fine, the school dis-
tnct's assistant supennten-
dent for business seTVlces,
journeyed to Sacramento last
week to meet with state offi-
cials about Newport Mesa's
crumbling and crowded
classrooms
The distnct's aging build-
ings could use some state-
funded renovation projects
from the state's $9.2 billion
school bond, said Fine, but
district officials must first con·
vince the state that they have
the right to apply.
During the 1994 county
bankruptcy, the district sold
Bear Street Elementary
.School and. put the $5 million•
proceeds into its general
fund. The state allowed this
usually forbidden practice
because of the circumstances
surrounding the bankruptcy,
but told the district it could
not receive any state money
for five years.
District officials would not
actually receive any of the
money until 2000, and so are
trying to convince state offi-
cials to let them apply. But
just in case, they also got state
Sen.RossJohnsontosubm.ita
bill asking the Senate to per-
mit their application.
Fred Good, of PJHM
Architects, accompanied
Fine. Good is helping to -draft
a massive report on every
building in the district, detail-
ing what types of repairs are
needed and how the district
can pay for them. The report
will be finished in early June,
and presented to the Board of
Education.
Fine said the meeting was
a success, but no decisions
had been made. He said state
·officials promised to have
attorneys look at the district's
status .
Orange County Farr
tickets now on sale
Save money by purchasing
tickets for the Orange County
F~ in advance, or raise mon-
ey for your nonprofit organi-
zation through ddvance ticket
sales.
Tickets for the 17-day
event, which begins July 9,
are on sale now at the Orange
County F&r's ticket office,
participating AT&Tstores and
Longs Drugs.
Advance tickets can be
purchased at $2 off the regu-
lar prices of $6 and $4. A 50°;0
savings is also being offered
on carnival nde packages.
The Silver Rush Pak, priced at
$15, includes 35 ride tickets
and four food discount
coupons. The Gold Rush Pak,
priced at $50, includes 100
ride tickets, 10 food discount
coupons, two adult fair admis-
sion tickets and one free ride
on the ~Hw-ricanP. •
Nonprofit groups can· also
benefit from selling carnival
tickets. Busmesses and large
groups are also offered spe-
oal rates Interested organi-
zations can call the Advanced
Ticket Sale Offlce at (714)
708-1526.
In search of remarkable kids
Do you know of an exceptional
youth -a teen who has overcome
great challenges; a ~l who volun-
teers her afternoons to helping seruor
citizens; a boy who spends his sum-
mers building orphanages in Mexico?
U you know of a remarkable kid,
we'd like to honor him/her m the Dai-
ly Pilot's Junior Top 103 Most Influen-
tial list.
Fax your nommations to Daily Pilot
Junior Top 103, at (949) 6"6-4170.
The deadline is Friday, May 2 t .
Be sure to mdude the foUowmg
information:
•Child's name, age, grade, school
and/or church
•Projects, activities or commuruty
s~ce m which the child is involved ~
• What is it about this youngster's ~
chdfacter that sets him/her apart from ••
othe~7 a
• What challenges has he/she •!
overcome? • • •• • Why do you think this youth tf ,
should be included on the Daily Pilot r!
Juruor Top 103 list?
• Name of parents and
number. '•
To be considered, the child must !:
live in Newport Beach or Costa Mesa. "•
Entnes that do not include the anfor-• mation listed above will not be con· •
tdered. Only one nomination per .,:
family. . ~
.. PICTURES OF DAD
Do you have a special memory of
Dad that's been captured on film? If so,
we hope you'll share it with us. Send us
your favonte snapshot. and we'll run 1t
in our Father's Day issue. The deadline
for ·submissions is May 31. Address
your subrrussions to father's Day at the
Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627 ..
Please include a description of the pbb-...
to with the names of those pictured. /
Sorry, but we cannot guarantee phol
will be returned
READ£85 HQDJNE
(949) 642-6086
news stories, iHusttMions, .:ltto-
ri.t mllttef or ~isements
heretn CMl be reproduced wfth.
out written permt1liao of COl1f"
ns;i1own«.
WEATHER . SUIF POLICE FILIS
VOL 93, NO. 111
Record your comments •bout
the O.lly Pilot or news tips.
ADON:SS
OUr Mklra Is 330 W. hy St..
Cost. Mes-. CA 92627. ................ ~
,. .
HOW TO ltEAOt US
~
The llma OJ.nee County
(IOO) 252-9141
Adu .....
CJ-'fled (949) 642-54571
Dllpley (Mt) 642"'4321 ......
News (Mt) 642·511D
Spcw':I (M) 5744W
,.....~ .. ")~110
I~: clilt;ploll ll'ttlll .. Mt ......
..... OfllGI ~'42-4)21
.,._,. .. 81-71JI
~n.s·
Balboa
69156
Corona def Mar
69J57
Cost• Mesa
MIS7 ·
N9wport hach
61156
N9wport (.oast
IM7
.. fGMCAIT
LOCATION Sal •
.......... .3-ltw
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......... :MM
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~ ....... .u. ·-·· . ........... 11111 .......... ... , ..
afternoon
nDU
lODAY
First low
1:41 am ..••.•.. -0.5
First high
1:09 a.m ......... 5.0
Second low
1:41 high ...••.•. 2.5
5e<olid High •
3:51 p.m ........ l.9
~y
llntlow
................. -0.2
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a:a ............ s ....... -~ •••••• JA --· .. ............. ,
Early morning
douds and fog wlll
likely dNr by the
Jftemoon. Winds
.,. Nght .Mt~ .
... out of the w.st;
We hew an lncrMs-
lng Mell out of°"
90UthMlt todlly for sets.,.... In the
lhouldlr-Ngh ,.,..
Anm1heAllM911 ..... "'.., .. .,.,...., ....
C:DllAMUA
• ...._. 9'r9et: A J-ck.t worth S79S was stolen from a '10fe
In the lJOO blodt at 2:3' p.m. May 13.
• ....... --....:·About S2.JOO w.s stolen from a flowtr store
In the 1200 ~during the ewntng of~ t .
• ..... Alllil LlW•-: A bicycle Worth S200 wes **" In ~
1800 tMock b9tvrA1n ~ 5-10.
• .... t1'9t ...... SeYtfal COtftPICt di9c:i wonh $90 WIN
~from. (M In the 800btodt~1he ~of M-r
10.
• ... tM ..,._About S14incOlr'I..,.11011rt from a
cs In ttw IOO blodc during the ..... of MIJ 10. ,,
I I
' I
I
r•
OBITUARY
Daniel W. McMillan
I
' Darnel W. McMillan. owner I of Ddn's TV m Costa Mesa for ! the past 51 years, died at his
· : Newport Beaclrm6idence May
, 13. I le wus 75.
; Mr'. McMilldn was a 1942
1 graduate of Newport Harbor
: High School and dttended the
Missouri School of Mines.
• He was skipper of d fishing
• charter at 19th Street Landing
in Newport Beach from 1946-
j 49. l-Ie served in World War 11,
· Third Army, 80th Div1S1on Sig-
nal Corps m Europe An avid
, Ham rad.lo ~·operator stnce he
I was a teenager, rus radio call · Daniel w. McMillan I letters were W6SNX
l His grandfather, John D. younges~ skipper/fisherman of
i McMillan Sr. (1862-1947), came Newports Dory Fleet. He was
• from ScoUand and settled in Newport Beach water supenn-
: Newport Beach m 1893, where tendent (~m 1922 until his
•he owned three homes near retirement m 1954.
; Bay Shores. He was the first Mr. McMillan is survived by
: man to pilot a ship in and out of his wife of 53 years, Jean,
1 Newport Bay. J {e was also the daughter Kathleen McMillan;
: first postmaster and water son David McMillan; and
: superintendent of Newport grandson David McMillan Jr.,
: Beath. of Newport Beach.
• His father, John D. McMlllan There will be a private burial I 1 Jr. (1905-1974), WdS the at sea.
I
!G ET THE
IROINT ?·
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YOU!
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Class1f1ed Community Marketplace ... ____ .... __ ,..
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! I
I
' will~ cmii1cd at the Jo.c of lom -w.scaviewfinmciaJ~home.wm
A response to readers ' respo~es~
C olumniSts wotch Letters to
lhe E<litor for.several rea-•
sons. Fu-st, to learn if • :
someone ts actually reading what
they write: Second, in a search •
for love and. approval. TIU.rd, to
examine the specious reasoning
and wild charges of people who
clisagree with them. And, finally,
to get a sense of the topics that
really move people sufficiently to
take the time to write to a news-
paper.
THE BELL
C.URVE
do with theu convictions.
Bany Goldwatec. a J><?~tlc1an •
·who spoke only from his convtC-
tions, said late in his fife: "I've
never used a senuautomauc for
, . hunting. It has no pldce in any-
body's arsen'al. U any SOB can't
rut a deer with one shot. then he
ought to quit shooting."
The other column inspinng
mail -all or which came directly
to me -had to do with my con-
fusion about multiculturalism
and its chre effects on our !>Ociety.
Three long and thoughtful letters
attempted to straighten me out.
I'll quote from the letters without
identifying the wnters.
H the Pilot letter wnter, Robert I The first came from a local lor-
D1ckson, and Tom Clancy -who mer his~ory professor and ~as
posited Uus m the hrst place - . instructive rather than ~ntical.
find it reasonable, for example, !-fe suggested that multif:ulturdl-
. e aftermath of Columbine to lSm can be deflned tn two ways.
Applying this yardstick, 1
could generate tons of mail by
bemg sh4IJ>IY. criti<:al of a restau-
rant that a lot of people like. I
thougnt bnefly about applying
for the JOb of restaurant critic at
the Pilot, but I sunply couldn't
tolerate the idea of ~xposing my
culinary tastes to all those tough
readers who seemed more con-
cerned and demanded more from
commentary on their eating
habits than their social and politi-
cal proclivities. I'm not sure of
"}>arallel gun control laws with the I First, "as .a process by which
elimination of chemistry classes persons identify themselves
in our schools, then there 1S no through membership m d pdrtlc·
the moral here -or even if I
care to explore H any further.
But every once in awhile, I'd
lik<' to use this space to respond
to letters from readers. Since
more letters come directly to me
than to the newspaper, this
bnngs up once again the prob-
lem of whether or not they can or
should be quoted.
So rmt, let's deal with the let-
ter -surprismgly the only one
-thdt appeared in the Pilot to
counter my column on gun con-
trol Overall, it underscored my
thestS rather exactly: that gun
people and the rest or us tend to
inhabit different planets, al least
on the tSsues that surround guns.
common ground on which we · . ular ethnic, national or r~ciaJ
could meet between oUJ'two group" as represented by the use
planets. of such hyphenated terms as
It is, 1 suppose, a minor cavil, "Italian-Amencd.O."
but Dickson stood my column on Second, ·as a program to rec-
its head by removing the word ognize conttibullons that tndlVld·
uabsurclity" Crom the sped.fies I uals from various ethruc, nal.Jonal
noted and applying it to my or racial groups have made to
examples of the dtstance the broader development of the
between supporters and oppo-United States. -
nents of gun legiSlation It is both Two letter wnters were not so
mteresting anCi tnstructive that in gentle with me. One wrote:
the past week, a whole bevy of "What I find breathtaking ts the
Republlcan senators m Washing-depth of your ignorance. Maybe
ton have sntffed the air, felt the if you had concerned yourseU
heat cmd completely reversed more with sub~tance and less
themselves on gun legisldl.Jon, with takmg cheap 9hots at those
leading to the suspicion that their you dislike, you might have
position was always potil.Jcally bothered to learn what the term
motivated and had very litUe to multiculturali!>J!l means before
WH EN DINING GETS BORING, IT'S TIME FOR ... •=i~l=:iiMt=• • OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO AS WELL AS BAJA
ALSO ON OUR MENU:
FISH TACOS
TORTILLA SOUP
c.Hlll Sill
CHILI CHEESE OMELITTE
Cocklo11s
Phone Ahead tor
Food To Go
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949-645-7626
attempting to expllWl lt. •
The other .wa a loogthy and
highly knowledgeable crlbosm
of the auth01 and content of the
textbook "Amenean Ody~sey"
used in local high schools. .
The writer had clearly studied
the book much more thoroughly
than I had, and only a similar
study on my part would allow an
assessment of his comments, ·
which were literate, thoughtful,
and'moi>tly negabve. ·
He concludes· "H .l. Meoc~en .
must be one or your ravonte
author:. because }IOU often like to
pose as h.iS succes or m debunk-
mg the rube~ and snake-han-•
dling rehg1ous tanauo; You
would be a better columrust if
you did not Jump to such conclu-'
s1ons about people who disagree
with you."
Perhaps the hbtonan should
have the last word: .. The ovil
nghts and fenurust movements of
the 1960s, H he wrote, ·motivated
adherents of both· dehnitionsof
multiculturalism. U.S tu.story
books c;mce then began to
reduce an emphasb on military
and political history and to
include the "roles played by van-
ous sooal groups, mcluding
women, a trend that introduced
cillferent fdc ts Obviously, mem-
bers ol thdt group who once
donunated the pages of hi.story
books felt Jett out ... (ButJ the fact
that we debate this tSsue IS the
real strength of the public
schools m a democratic sooety."
• JOSEPH N. BEU IS a Santa Ana
Heights resident. Hts column appears
1 Thursdays.
Fresh
Pork Tenderloin
Tri Tip Roast
Good for BB~ or Po Roast
$369 lb.
Small
Tomatoes
$399 ~-
lb.
Small
Hass Avocado
"' A 4 Thursday, McJy 20, 1999
PLUG
IN
Plug into the Pilot
Cla~fied section to
find seMces from
electronics and
plumbers, to
landscapers and
painters
~I "•COTA""s.t.
Daily Pilot
(lass1f1ed Community Markt>tpldce
ISSUE~ Coolidge Avenue/PW-
more Way Ne1ghbornood
· Improvement Plan ·
ACTION: Council approved the
J>lan 5-0, with some changes
"SUMMARY: A neighborhood
lDlprovement plan was developed
by city staff to address issues in
the Coolidge Avenue/Fillmore
Way area of the Mesa North
n~gbborbood. Some suggestions
in the plan in9uded rebuilding
the alleys in concrete, installing a
traffic signal at Baker Street and
Coolidge Avenue, improving
Ba.leer Street parkways with land-
scaping and irrigation. improving
lighting on biplexes aBd garages
and adopting a uniform paint
P&}ette for the building exteriocs.
Council approved the plan, mak-
ing a number of suggested
changes. Staff was directed to
look at the possibility of drafting
an ordinance increasing the nwn-
Selected Arrangementc;
50 % off
All Slcm Florals, Arrangements & Topiaries
E.nludH Grtta~ry & Trttt/
•
Hours: Mon-m 10..6 •Sat 10-5
369 E. 17o1i St., #13 •Costa Mesa • (949) 646-6745
{Acrott from Ralpht)
COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL WIAP·UP
I an°' CD1tA .._ ......
Gery Monlhlft
Ol'YGllWI
Joe Eftdclon
Hedler SorMrJ
UbbyCoWen
Undaotxon
NIXT •&iiNG: 6:30 p.m. ,
~.~atCosQ
Mesa Cltyttefl, 77 Fair Drive.
For .ctdltlonaJ information,
catl (714) 754-5223.
.ber of trash pick-ups to properties
with more than one residence.
They were also asked to loo~ into
remOVing a median so that addi·
tional street parking could be pro-
vided. Council members also
asked that instead of adopting a
uruform paint palette for build-
ings, the city should suggest to
property owners that a consistent
paint palette could improve prop-
erty values. some council mem-
bers also criticized an idea to
replace ivy on a street median
with grass because t hildreo play
there ..
ISSUE: Final design for seismic
. retrofit of police facilities
ACTION: Approved 5-0
SUMMARY: Council approved
moving forward wtth work to
make police facilities earthquake-
resistant. There were some con-
cerns a bout the need for the
Police Department to expand in
the future. According to a staff
report, under a worst-case sce-
nario, about 60% of the seismic
retrofit work would not need to be
removed·· if there was future
expansion. A $270,000 design
contract was awarded to Black
and Veatch in May. Last year. the
ORIGINAL GERMAN
Rolls -Pretzels -Strudel -Hallah
Egg Twist Bread -Coffee Cakes
Cheese Cakes -Weddings -Special Occasions
Serving Authentic German Lunch
Daily Specials -Rouladen -Schnitzel
Bratwurst -Meatloaf
Speciolizi11K in
Wedding
& Special Ocrasio11 Colts
(714) 540-0281 .
2950 Grace Lane • Costa Mesa
tU1 ro~ L/"''~
Textured
Installation Ona C
•
' ' I , )
' 1 '-' I ' .... . ' \
city received a $2.2 million state
grant to make City Hall, the
Poli~ Department and Corpora-
tion Yard earthquake-Slife. About
$1.67 million of city funding is still
neededforconstruction .•
1$SUE: Uphold, reverse or mod-
ify a Planning Commission ded·
sion to prohibit the sale of alcohol
at a convenience store and gas
station at 17th Street ~ Orange
Avenue.
ACTION: The Council voted 3·
2, with council members Heather
Somers and Llnda Dixon voting
no, to allow the sale of alcol1ollc
beverages.
SUMMARY: Independent
Development Co. appealed the
Planning Commission's deasion
to deny their condlbonal-use per-
mit. Planning staff had recom-
mended denial of the penmt,
based on information from the
state D~partment of Alcoholic
Beverage Control that there is an
over-concentration of alcoholic
beverage lic~nses in the area sur-
rounding the proposed gas station
and convenience store. There are
t 3 licenses is~ued in the area
where five are allowed, according
to staff reports. Sin~e the Planning
CommisSion meeting, the mer-
chants were able to purcha e a
license from an existing b~ess
ISSUE: Collection of fees for the
Newport·M~sa Unified School
DlStrict by the city . .._.
ACTION: Approved 5-0
SUMMARY: The city has· creat-
ed a "One-stop• Permit Process-
ing Center that brings vanous
review, fee and pennit operations
into one central location in the
Development Services 'Depart-
ment. The center provides conve-
nience to developers who would
othef'WlSe have to make stop-; to
pay fees at the Costa Mesa Sdru-
tafy District, the Finance Depart.
ment and other areas of Citv Hau
Development impact fees are als~
paid to school districts. Under the
old system, applicants would
have had to stop at district head-
quarters to pay these fees. The
council's vote eliminated this step
by incorporating it into the "One.
stop • Permit Processing Center
CHILORENS BOUTIQUE CONSIGNMENT~!
Children's To~s HI fnd ", , Clothtnat & f urnlture .,, -•
• o-6>< Accessories·
Lareest Materniw Selection in O.C.
Top Name Brands
BABY BLOOMERS Hours:
M-F t0am-6pm
Sat 1 lam-Spm
<
•
1125 Victoria SL M. Costa Mesa
•(949) 548-1.001 •••
'
Full Service Catering '-'-"-!!
Sizzling Fajita Bar ~
Strolling Mariachis '"""JP
Pa;~;;.:;;;~·~~
~\: • Enchiladas • Taqu itos
• Tamales
AND M ORE! l • Salsa
• Tacos
Guacamole
Banquet Rooms·
10 to 100 people. Gfif!/:.~
Catering . ·
645-0209 ~
Costa Mesa Corona del Mar
642-1142 644-8226 . . . . ..
• • • • t
GRADUATE TO A ROLEX.
SHOW YOUR SPECIAL GRADUATE
HOW P~OUD YOU ARE .
-~ ~~~ES H. IJA ~~,.~-
: 1
Ddit}t Pilot
Playing it
safe \vill be .
expo focus
• Sunday's event will
reveal what police
officers, firefighters
go through on the job.
Gru:c Rt~L'G •
l;ktf Pb.
COSTA MESA -Visitors
who attend the city's Public
Safety Emergency Service
Expo on Sunday will be
amazed at the lengths the
police and fll'e departments
go to in order to protect resi-
dents -from a high-rise res·
cue to an airplane crash.
The expo, whi<il will be
held at the fire sl'atiO"n on
Placentia Avenue, will give
visitors a better taste for how
much training and skill is
required from public ser-
vants.
r The exP.O attracted more
Ir. than 4,ooo· people last year
after a six-year hiatus. Barb
. Marcosa, community rela-
tions officer for the Costa
i Mesa Fire Department, srud
there Will be a little some-
thing for' everyone who
comes to the event.·
•There are a lot of infor-
mation booths and live •
demonstrations for people to
see,• she said. "I think the
public likes to see the kind of
things police and fire do. It
gives them a better sense of
what we do."
The five-hour expo' Will
feature a full schedule of
demonstrations, including
an engine fire, auto extrica-
tion, helicopter water drop
and police motorcycle dri-
ving skills.
ilbere will be 13 displays,
inC:luding the Costa Mesa
Police Department's heli-
copter and the county sher-
iff's department's bomb
squad robot. Representatives
from Red Cross, Hoag Hos-
pital, Orange County Burn
Association and the Poison
Control Center will also be
on hand.
Children who attend will
have plenty of activities to
choose from. They can
bowice around an inflatable
house, be broadcasted on
Radio Disn~ and take fire
engine rides to the Goathill
Junction Thain Depot
Food will be prepared by
Theo Mesa, along with pop-
corn, cotton 'l:andy and
drinks. Money raised from
food proceeds will benefit
llie Fire Department's
lorer program.
There will also be a spe-
Qal booth devoted to the vic-
tims of the May 3 tragedy at
the Southcoast Early Child-
hood Leaming Center. 'IWo
children died and another
tour were injured when a
man drove his car onto the
school playgrOlmd.
• The Pubtic Safety Emer-
gency Services Expo will be
held from 11 a .m. to 3 p.m.
Sunday at 2300 Placentia
Avenue in Costa Mesa. Admis-
sion is free. Parking is avail-
able at Estancia High School.
For more information, call the
Costa Mesa Fire Department
It (714) 754-5091.
Thursday, Moy 20, 1999 A 5
TB.sk force starts wor~ on school safety plan ~ Moving quickly after and given added urgency by the debote was already lively. students amung and going, there •we've got to uam teachen and
recent school-rela.ted
disasters, committee will
begin to meet and start
drafting some proposals.
NEWPORT-MESA -Anning
school security guards with pep-
. per spray, fencing off school cam-
puses and making sure local
police departments have school
maps are only. a few of the ideas
dreamed up during the first meet-
ing of the school district's safety
committee Wednesday.
Formed after the Columbine
High ool tragedy in Colorad~
p
R
E
M
I
preschool tragedy here at home, CoroM del Mar High School is na way to keep track of who tram ourselves.• .
the group of par~nts, teachers, vice principal Robert Cunard said belongs on campus and who does Newpqrt Beach Police Capt.
students artd administrators is schools should concentrate on· not nm Newman greed. "'ln our
charged with coming up with a both' safety and on "the thing that Corona del Mar High School busm s, we plan for tliings we
comprehensive school safety matters most ... what's ms1de the juruor Claire Duggins urged ctis-hope won't happen,• be said. • .
plan. kid." ttjct offiaals to concentrate not on Conrue Dudderidge. the dis-
The group will meet a couple Others said the distnct should how to purush students, but trict's risk manager, said the Cos-
times a month and then will draft consider radical options, such as rather on how to help them before ta Mesa Police Department has
proposals for the Baard of Educa· shutting down campuses at lunch. they reach the point of lastung out considered a full-blown disaster
tion to consider. "It's like the Indianapolis 500 at others. • drill in conJunctton with the dis-
Tom Jacobson, who is in around campus at lunchtime, Newport Harbor High School tnct. Police would simulate a
charge of ~econdary education there's no two ways about it," said vice prtncipal Lee Gaeta agreed, hosta$e situation, said Dud-
and the head of the task force, Newport Harbor High .. School but added that schools also need deridge, and would actually bring
said district officials were expect-counselor Dan Princeotto, refer-a comprehensive chsasier plan in in a SWAT team. .
ing a windfall of funding from the ring to the speeding exOcfus of place. Many task force~e bers said
~tate budget for new safety mea-students' cars from the parking lot :What are we gomg to do tf they do not want to "re vent the
sures. bound for area lunch spot!,. someone walks on your campus wheel• and would stud disaster
Task force members had myri-Others said that with so many and he's got a gun?• be asked. plans from other school districts.
ad ideas on how to spend this
money, and though nothing was
-decided at the first meeting,
Designer Clothing
through Consignment
High End Labels
Featuring:
EICADA, CHANIL,
AaMANI, VIRIACE
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Men's Clothing also available
·Image Consulting Available
by Appointment Only E 177 R1vecside Ave., Suice L
R' II .ABET SI (949t574-5555
...
Fur~ bat orthQpedic can, stop by H°"' OrlJwf>edic Services-if ycru can. .
No matkr 111/aat~r s;or4 or your iflj•ry, Hoag H~ital is t'l"iHNd to laandle it. ~th W
larpst, most df>triencetl staff.of Ort~dic .ni~ons in Oraftf,t Coaflly, Hoag f>nfomu neon
ortlui/Mtlic s•rgn"in tlu.ifl Gfl.1 otleer arra /ao¥ital. A'*", jut as i• ""1rls, ~e cotutls.
So if""' wmtl to pt had"' tM ,,,_, boa\°" • dnMd, ""jad ~~
bad°" :J'l'lf" fa4, ""'°""""lo 1116•11.af• ¥•rts at HooiHtfital. . Ti,_...,....,, ,..o.,..,,, ..... ..,,.s ·-
20, 1999
lllEFLY Ill THE lllWS
• • ominees sought for
;rity's Mayor's Award
~ The deadlme to irubmit norru-
ttdtlon~ for the June Costa Mesa
Mayor's Award LS Monday. .·
The monthly awa:Fd,.recogruzes
:an mdJvidual who hllli performed
• r outstanding act, service or
~ood deed. The next award will
\.1c presented at the June 1 city
< nunctl meeting.
2 To norruna.te someone, submit • •U1c ndme, dddress and phone
!number of your nonunee and a
:tmef Stdlement d S to why the 1.ncli-
• .1dudl deserves recogrution. Also
'11.< lude your name, address and
:prone number
~ lnJormalion can be subnutted
I
~
by mail to Mayor's Award, aty of
Costa Mesa, P.O Box 1200, C~ta
Mesa 92628-1200; by fax to (714)
754-5330; by pht>ne to (714) 754-
5148; di vta e-mail to
a.shultz@worldnet.ott.net .
Local arthritis group ..
raises $13,000 in aid
The Women's Auxiliary of the
Arthritis Foundation presented
the foundation with a $13,000
check Tuesday to support exer-
cise classes for arthritis sufferers.
The pioney was raised through
a fashion show the auxiliary held
1'.pril 26 at .the Doubletree \_Lon.
The donated funds will help sup-
AUTO ACCIDENT VICTIMS
I
• \
FREE REPC)R1,
rt'\ tab wh.tt the imurance companies don't want you to know. Was
rnur ur 1n1urc<l? You may be tool! It ma» be.. weeks, months or teven
'CM~ before you experience pain, st iffness, headaches, even arthritis!
Do n't crtlc your case until you read our free repo rt.
CALL NOW
1-888-330-3450 (Toll frr•(• 24!ir •t>wr<l•·d rtl•''>'>.1q1 1
port programs throu9hout the
county, includmg People with
Arthriti ·can Exercise (PACE)
classes at the Newport Beach
YMCA, the Costa Mesa Senior
·Center and the Jewish Seniot
Center. ,,
At the Women's Auxillary's last
meeting of the year, they also
elected Ne~rt Beach resident
Janet Pryer to serve as president.
Deadline approaches
for county fair exhibits
The last chance to receive
recognition for grandma's chill
recipe, your mt>del train collection
or handy stltchwork at the
Oronge County Pair is right
around the comer.
The entry deadline for exhibits
is May 26. The 107th fair, themed
·Join tbe Ru~h. • is scheduled for
July 9-25.
Competition categories in-
clude collections and memorabil·
ia, home and bobbies, visual arts,
flower and garden, wines and
homema(ie beer, and, for the first
time, inventions.
For a competition handbook or
inlormation about livestock con-
tests, call (714) 708-1553, visit the
Fair's Web site at www.oclalr.com
or write to: Entry Department,
Orange County Fair, 88 Fair Dri-
ve, Costa Mesa 92626.
.-------------1 Padded envelopes
I Moving boxes
I Kraft paper
I Stretch film
I Carton seali ng tape
I Scrapping
: Bubble & foam rolls
I Corrugated canons
I Poly bags
Trash b s
S I·. I{ \ -\ I . I . ------1· .• ,,. I ,.\ l'.11" 1:'111!'
janitorial Supplies
Shipping Supplies
WHOLESALE
PRICES!
Open to
the Public
8to5
Mon-Fri
Roll towels
Floor cleaners
Waxes, sealers
''Too many gueata,
-· too few cars." -(
,
Memorial Day brings barbecues, picnics and more
friends and relatives than you can count. But
thanks to Hertz Local E.<f.itlon you'll never be
s~ort on cars. Whenever you need an extra set
of wheels, Hertz Local Edition 's low rates will fit :
right Into your plans. And since we're In the
neighbortlood, just give us a call. After all, what
are neighbors for?
Call 1-800-704-4473)or a loc;atlon lleted below.
2708 N ........ mvd. illU .......
CoetltMeu .. ..........•1101t
714·558-~73 714·371-ol64
~._ .. Iii-.. 1w •••a•• lllill ld11
•
..
AIOUllD TOWN ,
• Send AROUND TOWN Item$ to the
Dally Pilot. 330 w Bay St., Costa Mesa
926l7; fax them to (949) 646-4170, or
call (949) 642-5680, ext. 228 A com-
plete ltStlng of Around Town may be
tmvu1~hed Speakers lecture
enes wi1h ·shared Memone'S•
at 1 p.m . in the Newport Beach
Central Llbra.ry'.s Fnends Meet.
mg Room. 1000 Avocado Ave.
Por more information, call (949) .found at dallypilotcom • "
~ 717-3890.
I O DAY
SATURDAY· Newport Center Assp.'s annu-
al luncheon meeting will be
held from 11:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. ·
al The Ritz Restaura.Dt & Gar-
den, 880 Newport Center Dri-
ve, Newport Beach. Tickets are
$30. For more information, call
(949) 644-4622.
The 4-H Horse Show will open
and run through Sunday at the
Orange County Fair & Exposi-
tion Center's Equestrian Cen-
ter, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
For more information, call (714)
832-7752.
FRIDAY TUESDAY
A lecture on "Senior Health
Talks -Better Alternatives to
Living Wills• will be presented
at 1:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Hoag Health Center, 1190 Bak-
er St. For more information, call
(800) 514-4624.
A four-week class titted "Fit
Together• will be ottered from
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Balbod
Community Center, 1714 W
Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach
The class is designed for par-
ents and their teens.~ Class
activities will include diet bp!:>
and strength and flexibility
exercises. Por more infonna-
tion, call (949) 644-3151 .
Doris Keams Goodwin wUl
conclude the second annual
Martin W. Witte Memorial Dis-.
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with Plush or Berber
for only s499oo llHPERGO ' I ' \ \. , '' ,: I k
$5.99 Sq. Ft.
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Based on 50 sq. yd. Padding & Installation Included While Supplies Last
'hop lJ~· Let~· •.. You'll_ B · (;Jad You L>"d!
ABPETDEPOT ...... _
Full l.Jne ol Wool WCHeO Axm1ns1er & Sisal Carpet~ng Av~1lable
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AUGUST 15
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Fashion Shows at 12:00 and 2:30pm
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BRJDES -Register to win a beautiful designer bridal gown
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Sonoma Wine Tour
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~" Sonoma .fA»unty Wineries ~tion
~
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6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.a.
OOlJBUTUE aara. c... ...
'
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c.l VIAi •.1623
Daily Pilot
I" I
Thursday, May 20, 1999 AT
.p your e$ta(e in your farµily·! -.
lephen Wolff is a nationally
cognized speaker on advanced ~. -...
ate planning. He is an Accredited "~
ate Planner and is often
erviewe~ on radio and television
garding estate planning issues.
ditionally, he is a Chartered
nancial Consultant and has
rked with many of Southern
lifornia's wealthiest families ,
lping them protect
Ir estate from
confiscatory
o estate tax.
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May 22, 1999
1 0:00 AM • 12:30 PM
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1221 W. o I .Hwy
ort ach
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·STEPHEN WOLFF
Thrus day
Mliy 2 7, 19~9
10:00 AM •. 1 2 :30 PM
Four Seasons Hotel
890 Newport Center Drive
N wport B ch
Thu~, Moy 20, 1999
..... When Barbot arrived, the clis-mFf. was dogged by deep-seated
di:Strust among community mem-o.,.. as a result of the embezzle-
G:lfml and ba,nluuptcy.
"The thing that swprised me
most when I got here was the
intensity and depth of distrust
poople had of the district,• he
'-1d. •These are wonderful peo-
ple here .. and we needed to
brjng people togeth~r. •
A$ if this wasn't enough, there
were mynad problems, large and
small. to deal with.
There was long-standing fnc-
tl>IT between the communities of
l'(ewport Beach and Costa Mesa
er the apporbonment of'school
resources. Th district's hodge-
podge of grade recontiguraUom1
meant that some schools were
b dly overcrowdeQ while others
had vacant rooms. The distnct'I
teachers were working without a
contract and near revolt because
they were among the lowest
paid in the county.
And looming over it all was the
crumbling condition of the dis-
tnct's school buildiJlgs, many of
which were built more than 30
years ago and have not been ren-
ovated since.
The distnct, projected to have
a $4,8 million deficit this year, has
been struggling to detennine how
it will pay for the necessary
repairs, which could cost as much
as-$100 million.
This was th~ situation when
Barbot. who immigrated from
Puerto Rko as a child and grew
up in Southern Calif omia, agreed
to leave a job he loved, ill a com-
munity that loved him. and come
to Newport Beach.
• u·s always a riJk; :when you
leave something you love and
, come to something new," he said.
"But I think it's been a good deci·
s100.•
•••
B y the beginning of August,
Barbot was in an apartment
in.Costa Mesa·-he's since
moved mto a house in I,.a~a
Hills with his wif'e of 32 years,
Janice -and was hard at work.
•His work ethic is unmatch-
able,• said Tom Jacobson, who
heads Secondary Education for
the district. •He's running on all
cylinders all the time ... I've coun-
seled him to take a break some-
times.".
·Within his first ·100 days in
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(949)574-~(8862) w nt
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office, Barbot and the board had
settled the teachers' contract, giv-
en them a raise and lifted the
moratorium on transfers between
schools.
The child of Latino immigrants,
he has sought out meetings with
Latino parent leaders, with local
business leaders, a.nd with par-
ents, teachers and principals
across the district.
•1 don't come from a rich fami-
ly,• said Barbot, who got his first
job as a newspaper delivery boy
at age 8 and hos been working
ever since. "But my family valued
education ... we felt there would
be opportunity.•
Sheri Bamos, executive direc-
tor of the Orange Coast Intedaith
Shelter, said she was astounded
when Barbot came to the shelter
to meet with her last October.
"He came out and sat down
and asked what the needs are
and acted on them almost imme-
diately,• she said.
Last month, Barrios and Mike
Murphy, the district's head of spe-
d.al services, presided over the
opening of the district's fir,c;t
school for homeless children.
"He is one of the most dynam-
ic people I have ever worked
With,• said school board president
Serene Stokes. •He gets things
done that we've put on the back
burner for years.•
•••
0 ne of those things was the
long-dreaded proce~s of
reconflgunng the d.istnct's
schools, which Barbot began
tackling in November.
Over the years, the district h,tis
dealt with new state programs
and fluctuating enrollment by
haphazardly opening and closing
schools, adding grades here, shut-
ting down classrooms there.
The result has beer1 an abnost
dizzying number of different
grade.levels arid formats at differ-
ent schools. .
But no one wartted to take on
the politically fraught headache
of changing boundaries, moving
children, arid revamping schools.
,arbot waded right in -with a
very unique approach.
He and district staff drafted
proposals, gave them to parents
Doily Pilot
m· cacli of the four high school
· zones, and told them to hold
meetings and make the decisions
themselves.
As of last week, all four high
schools had wrapped up months
of exhaustive surveys and late.
night meetings, many of 'Which
were attended by Barbot, by
board members and by M1k~
Fine. asslStant supeJ'.intendent for
business services.
The board has approved Qew
plans for three of the four high
school zones. They will discuss
Andersen Elementary School
next week.
•He showed patience in the
community and stood by lu.s word
that he was going to let them
make a decision,• said board
member Jiln Perryman.
·There was a time, said Ferry-
mafr, when bodrd members felt
like they should "pul.Ut back and
make a decision,• bufBarbot held
them off.
"He did it to win the trust of the
community," Perryman said.
SEE BARBOT PAGE A 9
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the waterways,
laughing, hugging,
dancing, sleeping,
eating, drinking, . . s1ng1ng,
daydreaming, and
always smiling. That
simple surrey top
brings out the best
in people.
Grab the wheel
and feel the magic!
Daily Pilot
BARBOT
CONTINUED FROM AS
It seems to have worked.
From the crampe<! classrooms
of Andersen Elementary School
m Newport Beach to the airy, spa-
cious commons at Estancia High
School, parents not only say lh~y
feel empowered, but they have a
new appreciation for the difficult
task of running the school district.
"I feel like he's listening to the
parents," said Estancia parent
Carol Chandler.
"I'm sad my kids are going to
be gi;:aduati.ng, and be on the tail ~nd of this," said Laurie Marx.
•••
S uch trust is what the district
needs when Barbot and lus
team ta e the problem of
deteriorating school buildings.
•1 think it's one of the biggest
challenges th.is district has ever
faced," Ferryman said
For the last sut months, district
officials and private consultants
have been working on a report
locusing on what exactly the.dis-
trict's needs are and how the dis-
trict will pay for them. This week,
consultants will start a phone sur-
vey to find out how community
members feel about the district.
Though the report won't be
ready until the beginning of June,
Barbot said options include
applying for state bond morues,
selling district property, and per-
SHOP &DINE
·oN THE AGENDA
Supt. Rol»rt S.rbon sched-
ule ot? Wednetc»y;
• 7:l0 ...... -Arriw It offQ.
• I a..m. -Meet with princiSNl's
to discuss ~Is fOf' the vear; and
swogres.s in accomptbhinQ them.
• l:JO a.m. -Meet witfi a par-
ent to discuss special education
ls.sues.
• t:1S a.m. -Meet with J~
Garrison to discuss this 1rtide.
• 10 a.m. -Meet with Board of
Education president · Serene
Stokes, and board members Judy
Franco and Dana Black. to discuss
next week's board agenda.
• 12!JO JS.In. -Serve food at •
barbecue hOnoring tt\e district's
classifted employees.
• 2 p.m. -Meet with local com-
mu('lity repre5entatives to discuu
business support of schools ,
• J p.m. -Meet wfth the"dis-
trict's emergency ~team,
to discuss school safety Issues.
•• p.m. -Meet wfth the dis-
trict's human resources depart-
ment to discuss the district's
ongoing search for N!N princi-
pals and administrators.
• 5 p.m. -Meet with district
staff to discuss the state budget.
haps even a school bond, which
would be a first for the district.
Barbot, who led the Chico Uni-
fied School District to pass a
school bond by a 78% margin
after presiding over two failed
attempts, said he and board mem-
bers and district staff have not yet
decided wheth~r such dn option
The Co•try 11111
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130 EAST l~ ST.• .COSTA MESA
AINe.,...a ... P ...
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will be necessary here. PRO Fl LE But he has talien a number of
steps to help the distriat prepare
to make such a deosion. Under CONTINUED FROM A 1
Barbot's direction, the district's
financial department has places to walk with his wife,
r,evamped its budget prQCess and "I've learned over the years
has vowed never to spend more. ~=:.: that the things I value most are money than it has again. the simple things in We," he, said
"He truly undersiands that "Birds singing. Happy !>abies."
leadership ii mfluence, not pow-l. Still, he has a sharp, passionate
er," said board member Dave mind, with a few quirks, this son j Brooks. i of immlgrant parents who worked
Teachers' union president Lin-1 his way up from paperboy to cus-
da Mook warned that the district ~ todian to teacher to principal to
faces big challenges and "mis-1 superintendent.
takes a re bound to be made." i Jn college, while working two
But how personnel responds to l Jobs, he majored in both math
those mistakes will say a lot about 1 and psychology. He loves both
the district, she-said. 1 numbers and people, he said. But
"Barbot is the genuine article,; i il he had to choose, people would
Mook said. "He's got deptl\ of .1 win hands-down
character. What surprised m.¢-'is 1 He's a devout Roman Cathohc
that I expected the great first 1 and often turns to prayer before
impression to erode. Instead, the l making decisions, large or small.
first impression proved to be true j The thing he would change m
over and over again.• i the world Lf he could? llke one of
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• Metaphysical Books
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Gifts, Artwork
• Minerals & Gemstones
• Hand Carved Crystal Quan Yin &: Budd ha
• Herbs, EssentJal O lis,
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• Large SelectJon of Feng
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• Water Fountains
Psychic Readings
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•Tarot • Scr1pt Channeling
• Astrology • t1andwr1Ung Analysl~
891 BakerStreetA16 •Costa Mesa 71 ,,75"'-l l5I
Comer of Baker & Bear streets 't 't9
~ are invited to hear a lecture
"Christian Science:
Its Case for God's Lo'Ve in Your Life"
by Mark Swinney, CSB
Date:
Tune:
Place:
Saturday May 22, 1999
1 1:00 am ·
First Church of Chri t , Scientist,
3303 Via Lido,
Newport Beach •
his heroes, Moth-
er Theresa, he
wants •everyone
to feel wanted.•
"First and
foremost, I think
Dr. Barbot is a ·
good human
Robert being,• scud Tom
Barbot J,acobson, who
heads seomdary
education for the district. •Jt's a
very exhausting position, but I've
yet to see him get rufiled about
anything. He's kind. He's polite
He's . concerned about people's
·feeliDgs ... and he idolizes his wlfe
and family."
He has a lighter side, too.
It's hard to take more than tW
steps many direction in his otffte:
without running 11,ltO a jar of can~
dy. Although he eschews fan
nightspots, his staff says he 1S
afiaonado of gowmet 1elly bean ,
He doesn't watch much ~
but says lus favorite show is th "
oew medical drama •Prov•·
dence, • because his son-~-law iS '
a earner an for it. ' 1
And lus one great weakness: "I t
am a Trekkie,• he confesses. •1
love that saence-flction stuff. Star:
Wars. Star lrek. I like the technol-•
ogy and the ideas that sometimes
sneak through.• , ,• ,.
FALB
i llumi naz ione
Rust ' Q ol d Leaf F1n1sh w 1ln
Vud e Qlass
0 9"H x 1 8 *Dtam .
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Hodson Lighting ·'
Open Tues.-f ri. 9~00·5 Sat. 9 .4
1510 Newport Blvd., Cosl.i M t H
Qtoahty Lipti•• 5.rvl<• fe r 30 Vure
(949) 548-9341
• ~ I 0 Thur1doy, Met 20, 1999 society Doily PitOt
rt's big nclmes raise big money in a big tent
' I t LS the most elegont and elabotate party tent I've
' ever seen," said Gloria
Gellman, at the Paafic Sympho-
ny Orchestra's 20th Anniversary
Ball Saturday evening Ill Costa
Mesa.
Gelhnan, a PSO board member
and devoted symphony supporter,
Joined her husband, Irv Gellman,
ahd some 600 fellow music devo-
tees under whdt was indeed one
of the mQSt grand tented parties to
NEVA
grace Orange County.
The lavish pavilioned struc· "
tw'e was designed by the archi-
tectural finn of Ba~er and Wiley.
Exquisite lighting was created by
f?ancis Krahe, etting a dramatic
mood for the evening that was
accentuated by the floral majesty
of The Black Iris, Laguna Beach.
White Casablanca lilies mixed
wtth white roses graced the
tables, placed upon contempo-
rary lit acrylic bases. s
•Even the port.able water dos·
ets are the fmest you've ever
seen," mused another 9\.!est,
demanding anonymity.
•Tue ladies are hanging around
the vanities, they are so bnpressed
by the paneling and fixtures in the
trailers I" added the woman in a
long, black gown with a shimmer·
ing diamond necklace.
Every detail was lovingly
planned and e~ecuted by co-.
chairs Sharon Lesk, trustee of
the Leo Freedman Pounqation, •
and Jo Ellen Qualls, vice presi-
dent of n.ffany and Co., South
Coast Plaza.
The evening raised $1 million.
Lesk, Qualls and their committee
were thrilled to have reached the
lofty goal set more than a year
ago when planning beg~eir success was underscor the
generosity of the Segers om
family and South Coast Plaza,
donating $125,000 to help under-
write the cost of the gala.
Particularly meaningful is the
fact that t.b.is wonderful tent was
erected on the site of the future
concert hall that will house the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra and
other Orange County cultural
institutions, as part of the vision-
ary expansion <1f the Orange
THE CROWD
County Performing Arts Ce~r.
Many of the guests in atten-
dance commented on the fact
that perhaps 20 years down the
road, if they are alive and well,
they will remember the night
they •danced to the dream," as
one patron so eloqut?ntly
described the tone ot the ball.
Indeed, it was just that -a
dance to and for the dream of
constructing, what some experts
predict 'vill bed new, state-of-
the-art concert hall that will cost
more than $100 million to build. ·u will rank among the finest
balls both acoustically and struc-
HEATING • AIR CONDITIONING
Experts in Custom
Wine C.ellars
Closet: Conversion
turany'in the '?rld, • Orange
County Performing Arts presi·
dent Jerry Mandel ~d in an
earlier interview.
Center chairrilAn Mark Chapin
Johnson said, •Tue new ·
Segerstrom Center for the Arts
completes the cultural ~eam out-
lined by Henry and Renee
~erstrom and their fellow local
visionaries many years ago, who
created the PeJ'f omUng Arts Cen-
ter from dust nus new center is
more than just a wonderful arts
complex. What thiS center means
to Orange Councy is so much more
than just the expansion of culture.
•This commuruty gathering
place will enh8l)ce the quality of
life in this region, touching edu-
cation, business, and society,
bring together a large, growing,
diverse local population with a
cultural common denominator."
The gala was themed around
the many accomplishments of
the PSO over the past two
decades. In the crowd were
many present·and former PSO
staff members, including Lou
Sptsto, the former director of the
symphony who came in from his
new base in Detroit for the
evening.
Spisto joined his most capable
and erudite predeces¥>r, John
Ponyte, greeting the local crowd,.
which included JCelth Coplen.
Pabida and Ben Dolson, Harrlel ·
and Charles Edelstein, Ruth Ann
and John Evans, Lynn and Doug
Freeman, S. Thomas Cetz, Bar-
bara and Jlm Glabman, Janice ,
and Roger Johnson, Gall and ,
Roger Klrw1n, Lorraine Uppokl,
Twyla and Charles Martin, MarcY
MuMlle, Catberlne Pearce, Jim
Emmi, Gall Jllld ~Pollard,
, Henry and Re.nee Segentrom,
Jeanette Segerstrom, John and
, Sally Segerstrom Daniels, Anton .
5'xJerstrom, and PSO Maestro •• · ...
Carl SL Clair and his wife, Suran.
The Westin South Coast Plaza
and Pinot Provence, featuring the
cuisine of Master Chef Joachim
Splichal of the Patina Group and
Executive Chef Florenl Mameau
of Pinot Provence at the Westin,
catered the affair. Vocalist Car·
men Bradford performed with the
Swingtown Orchestra.
"We did it," Lesk proclaimed.
Indeed they did. One million dol-
lars and a landmark event to
begin the campaign for the next
century.
• B.w. COOK'S column appears every
Thursday and Saturday.
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Uc#'11761 • 11:1. alt
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Public Invited
45th Annual
=i!e&~M,emorial Day Services \l: May 31, 1999 11:00 AM
Floral Wreath Presentation
Commemorating Those Who Servecl in
• WWI • WWII • Korea •
• Vietnam • Persian Gulf •
Featuring Musical Selections By:
THE ALL AMERICAN BOYS CHORUS
and DAVID FRANCIS PHILIPS
Complimentary Hot Dogs and Sodas
Send a Bad Habit .
Up In Smoke
join us at Hoag Hospital for Freedom.from Smoking,
a month-long smoking ces_sation program.
Smokers ftnling IO kick lbe hibk will 91!1
the help ~ Dlld IO suctessfuly quil
The elm is~ by a former SlilORi'
· trilned bJ IM Amildalll ...._~on.
m l1111111Jllt; I j .... ....
7-~1119 .... fl
~ > •e.,., al'41f
The $7S elm fee may be reilnbursed
by your health imunnce carrier.
leleMdoas required. Pleue call •
9W7229'237 IO resene your spot.
I•
datebook • Thur~, M4y 20, 1999 A lJ. ; -'Ibis week, Mussolini beats out Shak.espeare .
• EDt'TOll'S NOTE: The Reel CtrtJcs col·
umn features movie critiques written by
community m~bers serving on our
~nel.
' ot a Shakespeare
movie to love
S hakespeare is with us again
in this attempt to bring his
400-year-old romantic com-
edy to a modem mainstream
audience. Setting the tale in 19th
century Tuscany allows the cam-
eraman in MA Midsummer
Night's Dredlll"
EEL (Rmcs .. to pr~sent lush R sceruc visuals,
. while the sound-
track provides a proper back-
ground of great opera and class1-
cctl music.
But this awkward and confus-
ing production fails in almost
every other aspect.
We have an entourage of excel-
lent actors from television. stage
and saeen on hand, but most are
incapable of delivenng their tines
as Shakespeare wrote them.
With Calista Flockhart and
company speaking 15th century
English at 1990s warp speed, I
was unable to understand many
Qf lhe Imes spoken by most of
the characters in the first half of
the film. The film tnes bard to be
lwmy, but relies on contrived
slapstick and
ctne~atic
device that
provoke more
groans than
laughter.
Silly scenes
abound amid
the political
relationships
between sub-
servient
women and
· John Depko
dorruneenng men. Stanley Tucci,
Mjchelle Pfieffer and Kevin Kline
do an admirable job in the fanta-
sy sequences, but can't overcome
the movie's faults. The major
players, including women in pet-
»coat dresses, rid.iculousl)' chase
after each other into a dark for-
est. This eventually leads to a
magical place in the woods
where we are treated to fanciful
scenes of fairies, nymphs and
mud wrestling tllat could have
been written by a Three Stooges
screenwriter. About one-quarter
of the audience in attendarice at
my screening did not wait to see
if this situation got any better:
they walked out early. See this
film soon if you're interested. It
won't be in theaters for long.
• JOHN DEPKO, 48, Is a Costa Mesa res-
ident and a senior investigator for the
Orange County Pubhc Defender's Office.
~ LETTHEM EAT APPETIZERS! ~
·DINIKAIJ\~~Dllll
Celebrating Our 1 Year Ann iversary
at the Bristol Location .and 3 Years
at our Lake Forest Location
FREE APPETIZER
This show is definitely
a 'Tea· for two
I T ea With Mus ol.ini • opens in 1935, when
Mussolini is still a tolera-
ble leader-•the gentleman
who makes th4! trains run on
time." In Florence, a group of
three English and two American
women have established their
lives away from lheir home coun-
tries in appreciation of Italian art
and architecture.
A young boy named Luca is m
an orphanage. He was born out
of wedlock, his mother has
passed away and hls father's wile
can'( stand him. His friend, Mary
Wallace-(J~n·Plowright) has
been ordereq tb return hlm to the
orphanage by hls father. Mary
cannot do it, so she decides to
raise the 7-year-old boy.
Most prominent is the snob-
bish, naive Widow of the former
British ambassador Lady Hester
RdllSom (Maggie Smilh), a
staunch Mussolini supporter.
Judi Dench aptly plays the
slightly delirious artistic breath of
life, Arabella Delancey, flittirrg
around, restoring art with bombs
falling all about her.
Llly Tomlin plays the eccentric
American lesbian archaeologist
Georgie Rockwell (Lily usually
has a bit more pi.zzazz). Cher por-
trays Elsa Margenthal, a flamboy-
ant art collec-
tor and sea·
soned travel-
er whose
naive choice
in men land.S
her m serious
trouble.
TheJllovie
carries
through Mus·
solini's reign
of destruction,
how each of
these remark-
Gay WassalJ..
Kelly and
Bill Kelly
able women and Luca confronts
the odds. The ladies gave us a rich
sense of time and place, along
wilh extraordinary scenery, cos-
tumes and music.
We both say, between tears
and laughs, "Te& with Mussoli·
ni • was a • 5-Star" performance.
• GAY WASSALL-KEUY, 58, is the edi·
tor of a Balboa newspaper and Is active
in the community. Bill KELlY, 57, Is an
Industrial engineer.
Circle of actors make
'Tea' worth seeing 'Tea with Mussolini" is the movie adaptation of direc-
tor's 'Franco Zeffirelli's
childhood experiences during
lta1y•s·mvolvement in World War II.
The film tells the story of a
young boy. Luca, a bastard son
-born to a cloth-
ing manufac-
turer in Flo-
rence. His
mother JS
dead, bis
father's wile
VJSits him at
school to
denounce him
as illegitimate
and his only
friend is an Rob Orozco
eccentric old British woman
named Mary (Joan Plowright)
who has been rured to turn him
into a perfect English gentleman.
The film opens during the
years leading up to WWII and the •
Italians' mutual love affair not only
with all things Bntlsh, but the
British We are introduced to a
group of wealthy old women who
gather daily at the local tea room
to gossip about one another.
The conversallons at the tea
room and the wit, or "Scorpmi"
(a British ruckname for women
with stinging wit), displayed by
the women is renuruscent of con-
versations led by Dorothy Parker
at her Algonquin Round Table
The group is headed by the
grand Lady Hester (Maggie
Smith), the widow of the former
Bntish ambassador.
Lady Hester is Joined by the
flamboyant archaeologist Georgie
(Lily Tomlin), !n artistic woman.
Arabella (D4me Jucli Dench), and
the American cut collector ElsQ
Morg nthal (Cber). ~rgcnthil 4
plays. a central rQl a loud ~gl~
Amencan • whose romance puti .•
ber, and the other women, fa~·tft
face with the Fascists. ..
Zeffirelli's Luca is not really ti
gwen an active role m the movt
of his lite. He ts left to an obseiv.:
er role and not as an acuve ~
tiapant. Unlike John Boorman'i~
"Hope and Glory," his med.ita-•.
lion Qn growing up in WWil Eng·
land, *Tea with Mussolini· does
not demonstrate how the war -
years affected Zethrelli's view o
either the arts or his. perspectlvf!"'!
on the human condition. • •
However, the women redeem~
the film from lt.S anecCtotal storf-•
line. They provtde all the entert
tamment as they confront the .1
war years Wlth the usual British
reserve and hwnor. • •
All the women, even Cher, d~
a fine job in their roles. The onlyit
regret is that Tomlin is not gwena
screen time in relation to the •
others
Wh.lle th.1S film may not rank
with Zeffirelli's best works in the ·
ater, opera, televistot\ or Ill the •
movies, we now know where he•
learned to speak perfect English.:
• ROB OROZCO, 29, IS an M\/lf'OOmenta
health and safety consultant. He 111/'eS
Newport Beach wrth his WI~ and two
Sabatino Tommy Pe1er Phil Vince
• • • ~ ' 'If 4
23600 Rockfield • Loke Fi.est
(949) 587·9008
• RIVERBOAT RESTAURANT
.1 On boatd the 1lride of Newport• FMrbolt. home of the~
, Harbor N11UbC81 Muset#'ll (Formerly Reuben E Lee) ~ for lutlCh
Tuea .fn 11 am-3pm. Brunch tlll"t'9d Seturdey & Suriclay 8anh3pm.
: ' Dinner served Wed -Sun Spm-1~ We caCer corporate and prMlt.8
: Mrts, wed<ings & banqlJ8l8 Al ~ 0"9Ck cents ~ l.ocad
.,At 151 E c.oast Hwy.~ Beech, (949) 673-3425 Fai (949)
• 673-2175
I ·-::CHESTER DRAWERS' INN • • A C4eta Meee tradtdofl for good t1m81 for thl P* 15 years. Join us
• -for flblAoUs 1 /3 b W'garl ~ Wlttl outt fries, llfllCY buffalo Wll'lgl.
I (X' 008 rJ OIJ' odllf' llUlCheblel E,.oy 'f<»' fMIU bevngal dmg
! -~ hcxl' from ~ dllt!Y Al dey on 9.rlday Tai 'Pl' frianda tn ,.. ~ .,... Et'1r llillt.W. l'oolbll. prilll. pier! * 99, dlhll
• -ia.::t. tbft ... 3pm • 1~. 7 ~ 1 wl8k l.oclted Ill 179 E
17'h Q. IA 11 Coa Miu. (949) 631-4277.
Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner
l nlqw "''IM room & dlnlftl rooim a~allablt flH" eroup buslnetS ll'lttlln mnd prl~••~ functions
723-0621 Please Call For R~rvations and Dlrcction
251 Shipyard Way• ewport Beach
On the bErf 11 ~ Beach SerWlg Lund'! & Omer daly LOC8C8d at
333 Bayside (hoe (949) 675-5333
ZUBIES CHICKEN COOP
Were more ttlan ~men' n 8ddd:ial to cu ~. Broasted, and
~ad Ol!Cken. we offer Steak, Seafood, Prime Rib. Baby ~ Ribs.
Pizza a 22-c.em appellZer ITllnJ and men Generous patois 8t a CJEAT
Value r.ome checK us Ol£1 ~ for Ulch, dmlr. (ptl.l.11 and appeazn
9ll"'9d al dirt! and Sunday 8reaktasl Ft.t ar.kt8i '* ~ ramtias 14>
to 70 Gemeroom soon to be open. 414 ()d Newport BMi (Comer of
~ Road and ()d Newport) IO Newport Baach. (949) 645aJ36
NEWPORT BEACH BREWING CO.
The rdf brewery 11 Newport Beach. we serw award wmng betn & we
have a fant8StlC food meoo. Wlttl outdoa' dong and lots d. FREE par1ong
Locat.ed at 2920 Newport BMt Hot.n 11'308m-11 :~ Sun-Tl11n.
11 3Jeln.1 CDlm FnSat. f 949) 6758449
BASILIC RESTAURANT
Offnig 8 YBn8C:y °' 9Mss French CU161l8. l.oCated at 217Manne1'w 00
Bebl8 llltnl Dimer l8l"8d Tues. • &.n 5 ~ • 10 pm. l!J' reterYlltms
pat eel (949) 673{?)70
SIR ROGERS, LTD
Santt.w:hes. coffee and 89p'8SIO arts & llTlOCX'1ie& Al new breakfast
menu. Catering av1il11ble. Open Mon·Fr1 et Sam
Set 11t 7am and Sun Ill 9am Located 11t 270 E 17ltl Slrea. Costa Meea
(9491~52.
ROYAL KHYBIR
Award Wmng Cuisine d km. ~ for kn:h Mon .fn 1 1 .:l).2pm
OoMil fer lunch on 9ltlrd8y 5undey Bnlnch Buffet ...-.., 11.3().
2 ~ Dnner 1111'\'td lrorn s ~ l.ocacld • the SOtAh O:Jeit Pllll
..... 1621 w ~ -714438-1010
SA•ATINO'S llKSTAUllANT
a 8AUSAG• COMPANY
PM&a. W' llllld. to•.,.. ....... ""'*' weoa•• ....
-., II-. CIPPll:iCllW) & ~ l'blt 7 .. I ... 9'rWlg SIL. &
!kll INdl torn e ~, m. a., ~nv.. 11p1Q'im. Fn . .sa. 11em-
, 1pm. M ,,..... crd mi'dl ICDIPld LOCUI At 2S1 ~ W.,.
Nllllpol't 8'ld\. (NII mali1
lt18TOltANT• MAMMA GINA
Me ...... -.Clfl ..... \MIW"i* .. ifllltnlflllfiDW r.-l.ull-.Lllllflld •• , (Iii Pde a. ...........
llld\. L.-Mlll. .... 11:30UQ.._ .. ,,.. .....
_..,. •QllLOllnill ... •lill' •s••--
VIiia Nova offer& OelSlC lt8liao Cuisine with 1 spectacular 111ew
F88CLMQ homem8d8 past&s, fresh Seafood & v88I ~ Md I
unique waterfront ambiance remniscent of en ltallafl C.OUru-,.die
Professional serw:e & an sward \W1fWl9 \Wle Ila deigtt petl"On6 wt-.
dining tn this romarlle setting I.Ne erurtanment be!1ns ~ at
9pm The upstlll'S Cigar louige f8atu'eS premun .... Sptr(S and
an extensive appetizer menu. loc&ted st 3131 We~ Coast Hwy.
(949} 642-7800
NEWPORT NOODLE
'M99 Che PastaWibes n eodless ~ far <llnnm' Mond8r • 5aru-day 4
pm • 10 p m , &nlcPf 2 pm • 10 p.m Ts.e OI£ Mllllle aruig a 11 ::D
am Located a 2CXD ~BM!. n Ol6t8 Mele l94~J 548Cm9
AMACHI
Sushi & Sushi to Go Complete Bar All Mapr r.redlt Cards
located "' 2675 lrWle PNe [Across from ~ Golf Colr.;e)
(949) 645-5518
BEN I HANA
Amenca's most celebrated Japanese restaurent Open 7 days
a week. Lunch 11 .30-2.~ Mon ..fn .. Dinner 5:3{}1 Opm
Mon.·Thurs .• 5'3G11 00pm Fn .• s.ro11 :OOpm Sat , 4.00
9 ~Boo. Located at 4250 Bn:h'9t 94S.S55-0B22
Ml CASA _
CU meets are now a 11'1p to Beta as wet. Mexico Now offemg fi&h
tacos Phone ahead for Orders tl>gO Hou-a· Oetly from 11 am Al
msior ad oards ~ Loceted At 296 17th !:l.. Cosr.a M8ia
(949) 64!>7626
_ AVILA'S EL RANCHITO
Authenbc Mexican food. Wltt'I t.he freshest ingredients & e
new light cuisine Great margantaa Hours. Lunch &
Dinner AJI maior credrt cards eccepted Located at 2101
P1acenba, C.O&ta Mese -642·1142. 29CXJ Newport Blvd .
Newport Beach -675-8855 and 2744 E C.Oast Hwy.
CDM -(949) 644-a226
MR. JUAN
t't Ilka 11 VlSlt to Cabo A tM8 d 11.CtientJc Mexican & Seafood
Open 7 days e week from 8 CXlem-9.00pm. Beer & Wine
avatlable. Loceted It 2263 FM'VleW Aoed (It Wit;oo, tietiind .Jffy
lube) (949) 631-7500
LA PA~APA
SeMlg lthr'DC Sol.ctl Me*-' liafood. CM:ha. c::odlSllll. canw'OI • ~. enaalldll end ITluch men ~ 6 deya • weet. COied on ~ Dinltn~~~-1232~9.11~
Biid\ ,,... t.\& "I (8'8) 873oa7
CATALINA FISH KITCHEN
Get flookad oo the lrestll'1t fllh a~. F1"dl gi!!ed fish, seslOod n
chician, &andwiches. salads g'iled plates end pest8 ~ ~
SMn days a wee Mon lhnl Sat f1arn-9pm, Stnl8y 11em-7prn
Cetaing 8V811abie Located et 670 W 17th St. IGB Costa Mesa (Wiit
d the new Trader Joe s I (949) 645-8873
SANTA MONICA SEAFOOD ·
Regarded as Soutllem Cehfom.a s top seafood retaier: Wtti ltle largest &
fine&t seJectxln d fresh seafood daily Also. II l1'UtlllJde of scrumptaJI
dalicaciei such llS a.shl, !1ied r.tl entrees dlwn chotoidlr: Fistl & dips
~and al the fic<l1Qli far a gowmet meel at tone ~ 7 da'IS •
'Week l.oc8t.ed at 154 e 11tt1~.O:lStaMesa 19491 5748862
THE CANNERY
Histonc waterfront restaurant and hartxr ausa cant« Hal.ts Mn.
11 3l . 2 am. Sun. 10 •~12 pm, AJ maier cr«it cards ~!Mtioot-1
suggested Located 8t ~10 Lafayette f'ile . ~ Seach, C'A 9
(949) 675-5777 Fax (949) 675-2510
AMELIA'S SEAFOOD 6 ITALIAN RESTAURANT
Fa' 39 years Amella his been sermg the klceli Ind YlltDl'I d
Beach who chensh l:he finesl Ill delec%8ble pastas, fine WY1l!S & IW:ll.llM4r:J•
sea foods 51.rlset dinner IS l8l"Ylld Sui dY\I TlU"I from 5 00 pm -6
pm Omer cJailiy &IZll'tMlg a S pm. l:in:h Fri, Sat. Sui from 14 3l am
3 D pm ~ bn.nti ll'OtTI 10"00 em -3 3l pm 311 Manne Awa.
BallOll lstand 949673058) .
G•LATO PAltADl90 for•--....... 'Wli'lCiran •dll ... .., ~--... ................. a.n(gllllDlfl<*anla -n.,... .. ... ..... ., ...... ., ..... , .... ~ ... . ...... "'."""'*"' .................. .. .................... ua.1·•---it~ ........ ..,..
' ' date book ~ 12 Thursday, liay 20, 1999
Armani offers designer food like mom used to make
SYm-rEN SANTACROCE trattoria in one of ?tome's trendy concentrate on fresh ingredients . menu also lists a more traditlonal . grUled with some rosemary, sage
M entlt,n mall food and 1
think of a com dog, a .
Mrs. Fi'eld's cookie and ...
maybe a Coke to wash It alJ .
down. But here in Orange Coun·
ty, where an upscale su~
ket was recently promoting
Evian water during earthquake
preparedness week, shoppers
demand bet-
DINING REVIEW ~~";;';;r:•
. respite from
hours of window shopping.
Annani Cafe in South Coast
Plaza fits this bill nicely. Located
on the first floor 'of the mall, adja-..
cent to the boutique that shares ·
the name of its famous owner,
this small, fashionable restaurant
reminds me of a neighborhood
shoJV>ing districts. . and simple preparations, rooked beef ca.rpaodo ($10). and gJUllc, and &erved with roast-
Behind the rec~ptionist stand in an unpretentious but satisfying Firsl·courses at Armani Cafe ed potatoes an~ vegetables. .
at the entrance ls ~small, eight-manner. Armani Cafe is styled COIJ18 in the form of pizza! or . It's not fancy, but the steak was
... , bar wliere Y.ou might see~ . after jUf( this.type of es14blish-. pastas. lbe wood-burning oven , DJJ 8tllllol St, a quality cut rooked exactly the
weary shopper sipping a campa.rt ment. ts put to good use, producing piz-Qa1t1 ~(first way I' asKed, and the JX>latoel
and soda or a 'glass' of wine '· After you're seated, a waiter ias with a th.In, crisp crust in the Coest PllU) were soft and tender with a crisp
before braving the next 'rack clad in black pant.s and a black traditional Italian style. + ~through crust. ComIOrt food, Italian style.
sale. Black-an~-white photos of T-shirt (swprisingly, without the My favorite is the pizza caprl-11 a.m. to !'f p.m.; In addition to tp.e ijsted
young models m Armant attire Annani logo) will bring you a no ($11). The crust is topped with 11 a.m. to 7_ p.m.; entrees, there are usually two or
adorn the walls, and a small, · ·basket of warm foccada bread ju.St the right amount of moz-5'M'lda · 11 1.m. to 6:30 p.m. three fish specials on the menu.
wood-burning Qrick oven sits in and savory breadsticlts. This is za.rella and creamy goat cheese • ._ lllJOI: Moderatety The sea bass ($18) was fresh and
the far-left comer, reminding you accompanied by a simple spread and. then strewn with expenltv1 moist and topped with a flavorful
of the good things to come. made of pureed white beans, caramelized onions, kalamata +-PllONI: (714) 754-0)00 picatta sauce made of1emon,
In Italy, the trattoria fills a din-sun-shied tomatoes, garlic and a olives and a few sun-dried toma-capers and parsley.
ing niche that ls all too 9ften filled splash of olive oil. toes. The flavors blend well and pepper. The pasta portions are Ahi tuna ($19) was cooked •• ... by fast .food. restaurants.and chain To start your meal, you might the goat cheese adds a tangy ample enough to be a meal on mecUum {despite the rec':llt trer;id
dineffl m this COWlby. It~ not by the moz~arella di bufala ($13), note that livens' the dish. their own, but our waiter, Dou-toward rare tuna, the Italians still
uncommon to ~ a bUSJ.nessman.. thick, 41temating slices of aeamY Pastas in.dude the peMe al glas, was more than happy to like to cook their fish through),
or woman stoppmg at one of these fresh mozzateUa and vine-ripened sugo amalr1ciwio {$13), short split them for us as a first course. and served over a bed of arugala
small, .usually family-owned, tomatoes dressed simply with a pasta tubes in a light tomato Thera is also a daily risotto • with some good olive oil,
establishments for a good. home· drizzle of fine olive oil and shreds sauce with chopped pancetta {an special that ls listed as an entree, If you've saved room for
cooked meal on the way home of fresh basil The tomatoes were Italian, air-cured bacon), onions although traditionally, this would dessert, there are several to
from work. The menus usually b~ting with real flavor, not any-and basil. Mine was very flavor· be a;>nsidered a first course as chaos~ from. The creme b1?1ee
""""'""'""""'""'""''""-"""""'""'"'"""""""'"'"""'..,"""""-"""" thing like the hard, mealy ones ful and there was just the right well. The,rtsotto {$14) we tried {$6) with fresh fruit was urum-found in the supermarket. amount of sauce to accent -but was flavored with bits of roasted pressive. Not so for the lorla de/-
Sandwich House
We use Fresh Turk ey for our sa ndwiches,
cooked on the premises Daily
We use a 1 /2 pound of real fruit
in all our smoothies
92627
I HOll\\CI: f()H 111 11a·s 0\ ·11u: Sfll 1111\S I 11,1
WORIJJ PREMIERE
'
' ' l
by John. Glore
&twn I 5'0r)' by Nt1f ~
May 28 thro112h June 27
I.ow-priced pn.'\itw! begin May 21
111 th11 whimsical new cnmedy, c:ollem embarb on a ronl2fllic jOumey dW beglnl wheri her
m:im~ 1:1ids1 On ~ lllmdinR night. her new husband diSappem, taking her life savlnp-
illl mxl She ht-:kls (or the nt'2n5I f!rid#, but Drieorte got there first Colleen finds bmelf
holdini.: a tuan·s coot ~Uld a pocket full o( !K!rprlse.\ that lndude mlstaken ldenUty and
1rns111l~nwd 11-e:th.h Another raiundlng hit from SCR's award·wlnnlng llierary managtr.
"hose :11!apL1t1011 ol T1Je Bmb dn.""' raw:s oo U1t Secuod Stagr last 5C3900!
.,,. • .,,~rm
TIIE BUNCHE AND IRVING lAtIRIE l'OljNOATION
We also tried the ahi carpacdo not overwhelm -the pasta. chicken and sun-dried tomatoes. /~ nonna {$7), a w~ !iouffie-
($12), paper-thin slices of raw ahi Penne al arrabiatta ($10) is a I found the rice to be cooked a like choc~late p~dding cake
tuna with arugula, capers ahd a similar dish that leaves out the tad past the al dente stage, but topped with vanilla gelato that . wasa~i aioli. This y.as a special basil and pancetta, buts spices ol.herwise, it was very good, h~d us figh~g o~er the last bite.
the rught we were there, but the ·up the sauce with some red chili The entrees once agairrhigh-Other choices mdude a
light the chef's focus on simple chocolate martini ($?) -choco-
{f}an~have
a Lighr Breakfasr in
The Garden ...
1l'IJ 111(".Jtn'S fU1lll>tlS Vani/kJ l.ufli! Or Olk' of Kln1S I IOffll7J'ltXk'
<;./X'cialry IJl'er ikfr ISi 1te111S • ·noXcd E!l!J Srrol{f' -'Cn u l u rill 1 f n::sti
fruJ1 ()( 13ol\Pf I ClnnalllOfl Roll Fn•1x:TI TixN
·Also ()/>en fi ir /l111<:/ 1 tH r c~tr /4)tX'/JJ (JHfrl<-'I ( tXJtkJ •
".f"IJ /ti'*' fut'~'!,, /,f' lti lkN;#H/,,Y ... ~
.~(/,(lr-1t ffuf ,\fl lfl.·l 'ri
8;UI J -0.'0()
~II . (nl l/ll' t\1H/l /tie RQUJ} 1:10 I~. 17rll Strr~~r. Cosr(I ,\/1S1
H:CJI 1-,";:l'X > 949 -722 - I 171
Saturt1~, May 22nd • @ 6rm
WATCH the De La Ho a FIGH for
Haircuts at
Orea·t
Clips
for
hair-
it's a NO
brainer.
plates made with quality ingredi-late mQusse spooned into a mar-
ents. For example, the bjslecca tini glass with raspberry glaze
afla brace ($16) is a sirloin .steak and amaretto whipped cream.
Pitchers of
Beer
During Happy Hour 3pm-8pm Daily
ALL DAY SUNDAY
I
I
I Must have coupon.
"Best bakery. around."
I fxp. 5/16/99 · ,' .... _______ _
The l>dfJ1 Pilot
Open Mon-Sat 7am-6:30pm
r-------------------. HAIRCUT & ILOW-DRY
50 N«~lliwi<'°"'"offen· f
LilfliJ ,,., m,.,, rr rwu.-. I
c..J .i c.. Mtv...;. I . I
RE0.$10 r I I
....., I
-I L-------------------------~ r------~Pli"ti------1
1 ~•299 Short Hair I I .,.. . REG. 'SS-l
I t
I $6299 ~9,r.8'r t
I-..... __ .. ,... __
__ ..,Nil """" ......... l!fl!s:. ,...._
L.-.... ,.-~•CM ...... ----
'
~Pikx· datebook
One:..act fest rates like Eastwood flick
TC».1 Trrus
W atching the fnt night of
the one-act festival now
. being staged by occ·s
Repertory Theater was sort of
like viewmg an old Clint East-
wood movie. In one evening, you
get to see the good, the bad and
the ugly.
On the festival's first night, the
good wa.s represented by Tad
· Mose l's
THEATER REVIEW ~~f :;·old
"Impromp-
tu,· a precursor to Christop))er
Durang's •Tue Actor's Night-
mare,• in wluch four thespians
are shoved on stage to ·do a
pl!!Y· • for which all are excrudat-.
mgly unprepared.
The bad is sometlung called
"Today's Special,• about which
the less said, the better. There
are several actors involved m this
original exercise in tedium. They
are young enough to change ·
theic names and start over.
Things really get ugly in Don
Nigro's "Crossing the Bar," in
which two frumpy old ladies in d
funeral parlor weep and moan
over a corpse who doesn't seem
to be quite dead. This one would
,have some potential were it Mt
played on virtually one note. _
There are some splendid char-
acter choices undertaken m
liripromptu, • with all four cast
members petforming aclnurably
under Shawn Shryer's ctirection.
Most impressive is the blase vet-
eran actress, Winifred, portrayed
by Jodi Grigas, who has her
'been-there-done-that• attitude
. spleoctidly re~.
Jeffrey Olin s egotistical
Ernest is properly abrasive,
spurring the others into painful
in.sights. The younger pair, Adam
Gubman and Cricket Selna, ar,e
necessarily more tentative and
shallow, but they fit the overall
·Actor's Nightmare• pictw'e
quite nicely.
M·Today's Special" also resem-
bles a nightmare, but one in
which nothing quite fits together.
Written and directed by Daniel
Yoshinari, it centers on a cataton-
ic cafe waiter (Frank Miyashiro)
and his strange interaction with .
customers, the most interesting
of which are Dahlia Alony and
Tawny Johnson as a pair of
bewigged babes out for a good
time.
The play is a total mess which,
rather than clearing as it pro-
gresses, coalesces into a sticky
bit of muck involving Q-tips and
Campbell's soup. The closing
sequence is more uncomfortable
for the audience than for the
unfortunate actor involved.
Beyond the weeping and
nose-blowing, there is little of
substance to "Crossing the Bar,•
a foolish exercise m black come-
dy. Sherrie Stone and Krissy
Shaw contribute some one-
dimensional comedy under
Derek Bailey's ctirection, and
·dead man• Nikki Sedgwick has
some funny moments.
Things took a decided tum for
t11e1111e
ESTABLISHED 1962
Steak • Seafood • Cocktails
1695 Irvine Ave. 646-7944
the better on the second night,
Wlth the other three playlets -·
Sam Shepard's acting exercise
"Savage/Love,• William Saroy-.
an's drama "Hello Out There"
and Robert Patrick's kicky come-
dy "My Cup Runneth Over."
"Savage/Love," directed by
Laura Viramontes, is one of
••1uw _...,. ......... 11'9..,,..
ido a slcky Ill of
n.o in¥oMna a.
tips arid~
soup. The dosing
sequence is mare
uncomfortable for
1he oudencl tlian
for the unfot100att
actor imcil¥ed.
Shepard's
earlier
thrusts into
equally early
Jules Feiffer
teiritory,
putting
romantic
relationships
under the
microscope.
Actors Mary
Acuna,
Pamela Rus-
sell, Chris
Secor, Sher-
rie Stone and
Llnda Vira-
montes
assume the
9various posi-
tions of romantic misunderstand-
ing.
Saroyan's gloomy "Hello Out
There," staged by Denise
Moha.rsky, centers on a young
man jailed -unjustly, he main-
tains -on rape charges and the
nazye young woman who
befriends him. Frank Miyash.lro
(redeeming hunsell after the
messy ·special") and Dahlia
Alony impress in these roles,
accurately conveying their
anguish and uncertainty.
.·. . . . . ~ . ... . . .. . .·. ,.
KENNY ;/,,
PRINTER
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to Wear Shades
Exclusive Preview of the
new Brighton Sunglasses
Collection.
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which create the look. Be
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TRUE BLUE
Fashion Island • Newport Beach
949/721 ;8829
-(f!JJ}Jt _, .,, ~~ -
a • o g g~
D Q ~
~H gee ~. B * Corne Inlltltipte~Our Propnn -0 'fi/
: ft '\Meet Our <:mifoJ Mtnllolori T~ g .
0 1t S/Mn ;,, Our &1"""°""1 P~b;y g
A•t19'Kif• I as
iw ..... n..
a•6.
·6Ji#t
D
D D a a a
D
8
Alony return in the best eg-
rnent of the program, •My Cup
Runnctb Over,• a~ Ci mger wbo
achieves acodentat fame and'
strives to keep it from gomg to
her head. Grigas from
"Impromptu" also is quite good as her roommate, an unpublished
writer whose stack of rejections
equals her roomie's volume of
interview requests.
Selna directs with a light and
wacky touch, and whoever's on
the telephone cues (probably
stage manager Steve·Mathls) has
the hardest JOb in the show. This
one's a total 4elight and the
actresses are infectiously funny,
This weekend, the batting
order changes, with "Hello Out
There,• "Crossing the Bdr" and
·My Cup Runneth Ove'/' playmg
Friday dt 8 p.m. and S~ay at 2
p.m., while ·savage/Love,•
"Today's Special" and
"Impromptu• go on Saturday at
8 and Sunday at 7 p.m. m OCC's
Studio Theater.
• TOM T1T\JS reviews locat theater for
the Daily Pilot. His reviews appear Thurs·
days and Saturdays. ·
ALDEN'S CARPET
has opened
a nc \V
Ar a Hug Studio
\Vhy P<:1y Dept
srorc Pri( c-c.;?
.x(I. Hl '(1~ &
Hl ':\'\EHS on
SALE.
I Jandnmci<' wools,
'>yntlwtics. sisal
ALDEN'S
C.\HPETS, INC.
I ()h. i l'ltl< C.'lllid ~I • C.o<,l<l \1t'.'wl
646-4838
Thvodoy, May 20. t 999 A IS
If Ill 10111
.MUSIC
SYMPHONY TO PERFORM
MAHLEJrS NINTH SY)MIHONY
The Pacific S~p}k>ny Orchef>-
tra will pe.r1org;i Mahler's Sym-
• phony No, 9 on Wecine9d.ay
and May 27 at 8 p ,m . at the
Orange County Perfonning
Art.~ Center. Tickets for the
performances are M 8, $41, $32,
$26 and $17. Student or senior
rush tickets are StO and a.re
available at the box office
t>egfuning at 6:30 p m. the
night of the perfonnance. nck-
• ets dre avail<ible through the
Center box offace, throug~ the
PSO Tic.ket office at (714) 755-
5799 and through Tickebnastcr
at (714} 740-7878. The Orange
County Performlng Arlb Center
is at 600 Town Center Dnve,
Costa Mesa.
STAGE
'OPPOSR'E COASTS'
New Voices Playwnght!; Work-
r
5hop will pn!leJJt Tom Swirnril'
new p~y •Qppioiile Cotits"' t
7:30 p.m. SUnday at the Costa
Meta qvic PlaybQuse. The pl Yi
' whidt JS 10054.'dy autobi~phl~~
cal, ts abbut a New 'York play-11
woght and a Celif onua attb1
e1plonng the meanmg ot life, •
death and friendship. Suggest
donations for the reading is $5.
The C06ta Mesa Civic P.Jay-
house Ii at 661 Hamilton, Costa
Mesa. for more fuformation
the New Voices Hotline at (94g ft
225..C\25 . "
,... .
DANCE
DANCE COMPETITION
The second annual ·Darlings
of Dance Ir competition v.ill
take place on Sunda~ from 2
p.m. to 4 p.m at Muldoon's.
The Irish dance compebtl.on
will fedture girls, 12 and und
Mwdoon's is at 202 Newport
Center Dnve, NeWJ>()rt Beach
For more information call (949
640-4100,
M INVITATIONS FOR SPECIAL OCCASIONS
CUSTOM GIFT WRAPPING
CUSTOM BANNERS
HELIUM TANK RENTALS
M ON-SAT 9-6 CLOSED SUNDAYS
270 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa
(949) 722-1803
Thuudoy, ~ 20, 1999
When these
tloors close so . J
does apiece
:'Qfthe past
·~ he nows that
~.. Gilbert 5· 10-25
• Ce,Dt Store will
l"r'ave to move, dnd p~s~i·
bly even shut its doors for
good. has rightly brought
(ears to local eyes.
"It's more th9nJu~t a
c'orw<'nit>nt httlc shop,"
lonqtune customer Sandy
_,Rnlli n-; told the Pilot.
lu<lqrng by the
11•-.J><>n'>P'> fwm third-
qr .Hll' 'i ltulcnt.-, dt Newport
I l<'1<Jl!l" Ell!ment<lry,
wine h dJ>p(Jflf on this
J>ct!J''• < .11twrt clParly is
111uc h more• than il liLUe
..,llup.
It '" c1 plc1c (' whPrf> sev-
1 ·1c1 I qPlll'rcttions of New-
l'nrt-/\11•...,c1 1C's1dents have
P llH' to lind nut only
I' H ktt~J"d c r c.Jr kcrs and
\.•lid.., ol lt1lmc, but a piece
111 IHl'l'tlqtll
\\. h1•n 1 lw 17th StrPet
1011• 111 .. 1 01u·1wcl il'> doors
rwc1rly " t'lftll c t•ntu1 y dQO,
JH) ... tttlq tel J>I uhcthly Wdin't
011 th!· -.hopp111u lt-,t.
1'1111...,(' W<'t P the> <,11nple
:111111·..., WP lonq for lodc1y.
Tl11·11• wt>rl'n't dny
111q1c1 llldll'i, we clll didn't
('1Jlll!ltlltl' 111ilt·s cHld nules
to \\lll k t111Cl \\(' H•gulctrl)'
Wt1lk1·d lo pion•.., hkP • :C1llwr1 1111 d111q our
"nt>19hbor.., dl(my the WdY
• Todd~.< ,tJbPrt ,.., nce_d·
t>d I('..,.., lu1 its bc1rgctin~
• f1ct11 lor rb link lo the
;J.M~I. II will be• rnis..,ed
·111111 t • hPc cHl'<' of U1dt •
• II '" wlwn, Ctlbert's
•
door'> lock for good, a
pu•cp of old Newport-
l\t11·...,11 will he• <ihut away,
~de; WPll
On that day, it rrughl be
tt <yood idea to go out for a
wnlk, and make sure to
I ' ,t<tll\ to whomever you
: 1111 .......
'
Mow to REICH YOUR
REPRESENTATIVES
CJOVERNOR <' 1 I>••"''· (TJ), State Capitol,
:;.,, 1<11111•nto <J5814, (916) 445· -~4 J, ldX (91 fl) 445·4633 ~
U.S. SENATORS
•'H 111>.11.1 Boxl•r, (DJ. 1121 lart 'i 11c1l1 • B111kllnq, Stule 112,
Wc1.,h11111ton, D.C , 20510, (202)
:l~.t-.hS I; or 2250 E Imperial
li1qhwc1y, Suite• 545, El Segu11do
ll(J.l4 'l, (310) 414-5700
tv11i.ul srndtor@lboxt>r -
"~fl<tl!• tJOY
I • •1D1<1nrw Fetnstein, (0), 331 Hart
~dmg. Washington, D.C.,
..w~ o. f202) 22-t-8' 1; or 11111
~ta Monica Blvd ., Suite 915,
~Angeles 90025, (3 10) 914·
7.JOO
mall· enator@feinstein.sen·
a~P.gov
comm~ty forum Doily Pilot
LITTllS TO Ill 111101
'I think it's wrong to raise the rent on Gilbert's'
"
• EDITOR'S NOlE: We recei\ied this
batch of letters from students at New· •
port Heights Eleme'}tary SChool who
don't want to stt tlie Gilbert 5-10·~
Cent Store dose. The dosing of tt\e old
fashioned five-and-dime, whkh has
been a part of the Newport Mesa com
mumty f0< 45 years. was featured In
the Daily Pilot on May 14.
To Whom it May Concern:
My name is Theresa. I go to
Newport Heights Elementary
School. I heard that you were
ralSlng the rent I love Gilberts I
like 1t because it is chedp and
you SdVe money you gel cool
stulf here cind 1t is fun I Uunk
you should save money you get
cool ~tuH there and 1t is fun. I
think you should save 1t becduse
practicdJly everyone goes there.
Gilberts is a pdlt of the commu-
nity. Pleds.e thmk about not rd1~
ing their rent.
SINCERLY:
THERESA
To Whom It May Concern
I am nine years old and I go to
Newport Heights Elementary
School. And when my mom was
d IJttJe girl she went to Gilbert\
and same with my dad. And 1t
gives you no right to raist' thew
rent. And its not fair to shut
down Gilbert's. Gilbert's hds
been open for over 45 yecU~. And
I Just hope you will reopen
Gilberts! And they wont rdJsc
there pnces because they had
those p.nces forever! And 1t-;
been in the community for '>U
long
SINCERLY:
JOHNNY
To Whom It May Conce1 n:
My ndrne 1s Stephdnic. My
age 1s mght cmd my SC'hool 1s
Newport HPighls Clementc1ry
Heit• ctrc some of .the reasons
that peuple l!.ke dbout Gllbert's:
i~ mexpens1ve; its lw1, we love
the stulf there and old people
Cdn get good food for them
i.elves II you duse Gubert't; the
poor peop will sta1 , t Plc<lsc
don't close Gllbert's I hemcl
you re trying lo close C tll>erl'!;,
the poor people will st<.1rvc
Please don't close Gilbert~ I
don't Uunk that's right In tact
everyone th.mks that 1t is wrong.
Don't tdke Gilbert's dWdY from
us Please think about not closmg
Gilberts.
SINCERELY:
STEPHANIE
To Whom ll May Concern.
My name tS KrystaJ cllld I elm 9
years old and I am from Ne~rt
Elem~tary. I don't lhlpk H's nght
for you to raise the pnces on
Gilbert's. Me and my SlSter yo
there on the weekend to gt•t can.
dy. We don't have to ldke my
moms money cause it's so cheap
we can use our own money l
Uunk it's wrong for you to do that
because they have been there for
45 years They would lose their
JObs. Homeless would starv
Please d on't shut down Gilberu,
I would mean alot to me. It was
my birthday yesterday and that
would be my best gilt or all
SINER ELY,
KRYSTAL -To Whom il May Concern:
I am a 9 years old boy and 1
·am from Newport Hejghts Ele·
mentry School I think it's wrong
to raiSe the rent on Gilbert's. I
really like it because you cun get
all the best stuff from au the best
prices. I don't think it'~ fair
because it has been d part or tlIC
community for 45 years. I hope
you can change your ways good
day.
SINCEREL~
TltOY
To Whom 1t tndy concern:
My name is Nate and I am 4
yea.rs old. I go to Newport HJghts
Elementary Sdtool. Could You
please raise the rent lower.
Because my teacher kiv9I
Gilbert's and so does my frlendi.
Gilbert's has been bear 45 yearir
So please don't take Gilbert's out
ol our comm~.
SIM.'IMLY
JOSHUA
. DON lfACH I DAILY PllOT
Trent Brown, 5, climbs Qff the 25-cent pony ride In front of Gilbert's in Costa Mesa.
you to know that Gilbert's is one
of the best stores m the world. It
lS not nght. You d.Tt! causing
them to close forever. It is the last
one m our commuruty. It is not
unpotdnt lo be nch. I love
Gilbert~ soo soo much It 1s not
nght to mdkc stores close so you
can mdke more money. Pledse
Uunk dbout 1t.
Stri< erely·
STEPHEN
, P.S. Do the light thing.
To Whom it Mel} concern
I um a 9 year old boy. J feel
sony fur Gilbert's because ;ou
huvc been around for more thew
45 yet1rs1 My Dtid when I was 5
he would alwdys. go to Gilbert's. •
But then the pcoplt ,\he ov.'Tl
G llbut.-. hud r<u ... d he ir.oney
1 likr Gilbert l> rnus<' the
food is heap und that u. .. ed to be
my favorit plaC'C from 5 to 7 thats
why I don't whont Gilberts to
shut thctJ doors.
SINCERELY
NEMIAN
To Whom fl May Concern
I am 8 112 years oJd. I go to
Newport Heights Eleme ntry
school. I dm nghtmg this letter
on behdlf of sdving Gilbert's.
Why ure you raising the price.
Now that you raii:.ed the price old
people will not be able lo buy
U1e1r food. Please sdve Gilbert's
pleasl. It lS just not fclre. The Jed·
son why 1~ because the poor old
people will starve and die. Please
don't shut ll clown It sounds so
'>dd. Jw.t don't rdise the money.
Pleast: trunk about it.
SINCERLY:
TRISHA
Thunk r ou!
To Whom 1t may concern:
My name Clay. I'm 9 years
old clnd I go to Newport Heights
Elemu1tury I heard yo_u guys are
trymg to tdlSl. the prices at
Gilbert's. 1 want you to know that
is the wrong thing. There is alot
of peopl~ that love Gilbert's
That's pracbcdlly where all the
Uungs in my houc;e CdJlle from.
Please Uunk about raising thier
rent.
SINCERL~
CLAY
To whom~er it may C'onccm :
My nc il' liry.m Luna. I go .
to Newport Heights Elementary. I
don't wan't you to close the store
Because I like Gilbert's every one
I know tike's Gilbert's my sister
my dad my mom my friend's the
people that go to my church.
every one and that's the only
Gilbert's we hdve in newpo.rt.
SINCERELY
llYAN
To Whom It May Concern:
I em a eight year old girl who
goes to Newport Heijjbtl l!le·
mmtary School. I go to
GILBl!RTS every week! I clO not
lldllk tt'• right to nm. tbe .. t. Mr tMcher. friends and,...,
go to Gilberts. U yw do do't ......
the Niil I wW be wsy b.loi. '. am.rt'•.,,. bm .... &"V
yeenll l w<Mi)d l:IA'Jll II ll"*
gc>M away. Pleua doa'tiW' Ole
tent. I'm hop6Dg you w1D ~
agUL a.c.-•,. ..... HilUt. MDNl!YI
because they w ill not have mon-
ey to buy food.
To Whom It May Concern.
My name is Meg and I'm 8
1/2 years of a ge. My teacher just
told us you're making, Gilbert's
shut there doors forever. 1 don't
like that because I love there
stuff. Have you ever thought
about How the people are going
to loS-c the ir job? I have. My little
brother loves the litte toy cars
they have. My little sister, she
likes the candy. I love all the
cool, cool stuff at Gilbert's. So
please, plc tise don't shut down
Gilbert's. I love it so, so much. So
please think uboul lowenng their
rent.
SINCERLY:
MEG BEAUCH AMP
To Whom It nt} concern:
Hi mv name Ir. Veronica I am
nine yedI~ old. the rcson 1 aJ'l'l
writing this letter because I like
GLll>ert's l am from Newport
I le1gh ts Elementry 5Chool. I like
your stor because you guys got
really nedt stuff there. You guys
practically in the community for
45 yedls I am so sorry about you
g uys leaving. I wishe you guys
are not leaving. 1 heard you guys
are trying to nus up your prices.
Jt is not right you guys have to
close up your stor. My mom and I
love your stor. Good by
SINCERELY,
VERONICA
To Whow It May Concern:
My name is Oerris and 1 dffi
nine years old a nd go to Newport
Heigh ts Elementry I heard that
you're closing Gilberts dDd I
don't think thats nghl. I think
you should gwe them Another
chance A lot of people go there
because they don't have that
much money. Plellie think about
1t.
SINCERELY:
DE,RRIS
To whom It may concern;
My name 1~ Logan Murphy. I
am 8 112.' I bet you don't care
about any Uung but mo11ey. I bet
you can't even think about any
thing byt money, Don't you know
how long Gilbert's h8.s been
thNc. ll.S been there for -45 years.
1 mean why do want to make
people starve over money. 1
mean what do you care more
about People or money. So if you
have a heart deep down inside I
know you will make the right
ded.&n and not close gilberts.
~ause you know now to make
the nght decision.
·My name is Alex. r am nine
years old and I go to Newport
H eights Elementary. 1 am wribng
because I want to save Gilberti.
It have been here 45 years and I
don't think it's right to make
them close forever.
I don't think it's right beca use
it's a very good story and
~use it's cheap for people
who can't afford stuff.
SINCERELY:
ALEX
To whom it May concern:
My name is Jessica I'm nine
years old. My teache r just told us
that you are going to raise the
rent on Gilberts. I think it is not
nght to do that. My brother Wes
the candy. I like the.bullerfuy
klyss. My mom likes the clothing
port pease tbmk about lowenng
the rent.
SINCERLEY,
JESSICA
Our third grade class heard
that Gilberts 5-10-25 cent store is
closing and I think it should not
happen because old people can
not spend all there money on
other stores. I also think thdt it is
a very good store because my
teacher, my mom, my friends go
there all the time. Lots or people
shop there and I think the store
is very helpful lo the hole world
a nd ther is no othe r pldce like
Gilberts in the hole world so
pledSe do not le t the rent raise
up.
BY MEGAN MARSHAU
Our third grade class beard
tha t Gilberts 5-10-25 cent store lS
closing dlld I hope It doesn't
close because 1 always go the re
and so does my teacher and old
j>eople probly wants It to stay
because It nught be cheeper for
them to buy food and dnnks for
them and people don't wast
there !JlOney at Gilberts like oth-
er stores.
BY BRITNY tlUSHNEU
Our third grade class beard
that Gttberts 5-tQ..25 cent store is
closing and my grandma goes
ther and buys things becue it is
cheep. And the pepol that work
there might not find a J ob for a
while .
JOSH ltSNAIJ
becduse it's so cheep there
Please don't close J Jove it there
~LYSSA
Our third gTade class heard
that gilberts 5-10-25 cent store is
closing and we do not what it
. close beCduse we go and shop
and we get a lot of stuff there.
CHASE
Our thud grade clas~.heard
that Gillberts 5-10-25 cent store ·•
is do.sing and we d on'twant tha t
to happen because our teacher
Mrs. Stephens uses it and we use
it alot. There is not that many
stores like yours. You 'guys ·
always have something good for
me .
SINCERLY. MOUY
Our thud grade class heard
that Gilberts 5-10-25 cent s tore is
closing and it is forty.five years
old. Our teatcher gets cool things
there too. J think it should stay
up.
FROM: JAIME
Our third grade class heard
that Gilberts 5-10-25 sent store is
closing and 1 have a next door
naibor that is 70 years old. I like
your store because it is cheap. I ~
like your stqre also because you
are the last 25 cent store.
BY: ALEC ROSE
Our third grade class heard
that Gilberts 5-10-25 cent store ts
closing and we cjo not want it to
d os and we love your store .
T.J.
Our third grade class heard
that Gilberts 5-10-25 cent store is
<:losing and we don't Gilberts .
store to close. Our teacher buys
food at Gilberts and buy's other
stuff to
NATALIE
Our third grade class heard
that Gillberts five.-ten-twenty Hve
cent is d osing and my teacher
get alot of good stuff there and so
do my parents my teacher gets
candy for our gessing jar and the ·
candy is ywnyl I just wanted to
say l hope it d oesn't close. "
LOVE, MEGAN THORP
Our tlurd grade class he ard
that Gilberts 5·10-25 cent store is
closing and I hope that it dose
not happen. Many people need
Gilbrts 5-10-25 cent store like
people how don't have a much
money and our teacher.
KUSH
Our third grade class he ard
that Gilberts 5·10·25 cent store·
closing and I hope it dosent
because 1'ts whar we shop and
my teacher. That's whare are
teacher gets candy for are gess-
ing jar also whare she gets her
caned food. Also there's barle y
any more small stores like
Gllberts. We shop there because
it's cheaper than atbor stores.
SINCERllY, AMANDA
Our third g rade class herd ,
that Gilberts 5-10-25 cent store is •
closing and J gel alot ol my
school suplles there and I really
don't want your store to close
down. '
SINCERLY, CHfttS.
Our third grade class heard
that Gilberts 5-10-25 cent store is:
closing and My teacher goes :
there to get things for the class. t •
did t90 and I got lots of stuff :
there. :
JEROME.
" Our third grade class heard ..,.::
that Gilberts 5-10-25 cent store ts'.
doling and ..... .l like Gilberts
because it is a chep place to buy,
candy, toys and string and I do
not want it to close.
Doily Pilot
.
WALL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
around the Southcoast Early
Childhood Leaming Center. Vol-
unteers have spent the past two
days laying down the foundation
for what will probably become·
the most protected child care cen-
ter m Orange County.
Thanks to donations by pnvate
companies, the 250-foot-long wall
will shield the day care center
from further tragedy. It's been
more than two weeks since 39-
year-old Steven Abrams drove his
car into the playground, killing
two children and injnrtng .several
others.
The project's ardlltect, Steve
Redmond, said the design allows
children to roam around the
expanded playground while
being sate from the outside world.
•we didn't want this to look
like a prison,• he said. •A full
block wall tells the commuruty
that the bad guy wins."
Crews began work immediate-
ly after the. city fast-track~d the
project by isswng a permit last
week. Cinder blocks stand only 2
1/2-feet tall, but will be reinforced
with steel and concrete. There
also will be columns every eight
feet with wrought iron bars con-
necting them. With about 2,000
pounds of steel securing the wall,
1t could withstand a big rig travel-
10g 50 to 60 mph, said project
DON LEACH I OM.Y Pl.OT
Work has beg\ln on a block wall that will go up in.front of the
Southcoast Early"Chlldhood Leamlng Center.
director ~d Deckert.
"The wall can take a pretty
good inipact, • said Deckert, who
sits on the facilities committee for
the Ughthouse Coastal Commu-
nity Chwcb that owns the proper-
ty. "There will be some damage
to the wall if someone hits it, but
nothing is going through it. It will
push the wall into the earth.•
Planners said the wall will
wrap around the block onto Mag-
nolia Street, where the play-
ground area will be extended.
There will be separate yards for
children of different age groups to
play.
Deckert added there . will be a
plaque placed at the ~comer in
memory of the two children -3-
year-old Brandon Wiener and 4-
year-old Sierra Soto -who were
killed.
There were some missing
landmarks dwing cqnstruction.
Flowers and gifts left near the
playground were gone. Signs and
letters were saved and tucked
away. Five trees, including th_e
pine that prevented more causali-
ties by stopping Abrams' car,
were cut down. 1\vo four-inch-
thick pieces of the tree were cut
by the crews and given to the
Spring Holiday
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=u:;:ar~~beplanted I HABITAT SKATE .
·1 thirik the tree was a scar that t CONTINUED FROM A 1 CONTINUED FROM A 1
would always haunt the school l::.: • • r-
and the community if it was left ort this other gentlemen for ! met Wednc day, some wbqw
there,• Deckert Mid. An arl>brist building a home for his family,• j have dubbed the skate park the
noted the tree's roots were weak, ! Enckson said. i •skate pit,• will be meetlilg to
makihg it likely to fall dwing a l The council voted unanimous-! discU5S ther own concerns abbat
st0 ?D; , ~ ly to work with Jennings. . l the patlc, said resident Bill 1\Jrpit.
Jts better to. start anew. ~ 1\vo other residents who live : ·Those concerns mclude runoff
The wall, while the first protec-i near the Sterling property also ! from the park contributing to .arl
tive measure taken following the i spoke against having a Habitat ; existing fiood problem on 18th
tragedy, moy not be the _last. i project in their neighborhood for : Street, the loss of matwe trees
·we are kind 0! pioneering l fear of its possible effects on i and green space in th~ park, and
this issue right now, s&d South-i property values. ! traffic and parking issues.
coast co-owner Rande Hawkin-; "l'd much rather see a stan-i The council endorsed a pla.D
son. "There a.re a lot of parents i dard single-family home in the j· for a 10,000-square-foot ikate
around the county and state who 1 area,• said resident Ken Crush. 1 park at an esb.mated co t o(
have read about what happened ; fiabitat for H).UDanity built its ; S25S,OOO. More than $180,000 her~ a.od (are) wo~denng what i first project in Costa Mesa last l bas already. been set aside for
their schools are domg to protect j year _ a sirlgle-famtly home on ! construction. 1
_their ~en: . l Del Mar Avenue Construction l Some of the ame.ruties that
1 I think if there is one ~~ l on a second project on Wallace l had to ~put aside with the low-
our parents feel, secure about, its l Avenue will begin l1l nud-June,. 1 er budget and smaller area
that ~ere wont be a strav: c~ l Blake said. 1 selected included a snake and
entering ow playground again. l The Sterhng Avenue and Del ! slalom course, and a b~~l
l Mar Avenue properties are the l skaters had asked for at the fttSt
j few Options left for Habitat to j skate park mput meeting. • Although construction is
underway, help is still needed
-specifically from masons who
can donate some of their time.
For more information, call Ed
Deckert at (714) 536-5536.
l build more properties m Costa 1 iiiiiiii&iiiiii ... _liiiiiiiii!Siiimiiililiiiiiiiiii&O;;;;o;;;;;;iiiil ! Mesa, Blake said. l
l • U we were to lose both of l
l them. then we wouldn't be build· l : th • th l • I l ing in e city m e near erm, t•
; he said. ;
Join us for our
en
No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaPf>r
FITS IN ... Inily Pilot
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Thursday, M.oy 20, 1999
r~Osty technology
\
Using a new computerized cake decorator, French's
upcake Bak~tY-· producing some eye-popping treats.
JIN G1 F tomcrs who buy the cakes for friends a.nd
rclattVes. .
!Wt l'e1 French him'elf was ecstatic when he
·:lcosTA MESA -Thanks to a new first saw the technology at a show hosted ! ~ice offered by Jerry French of by the Califorrua Baker's Association.
• French's Cupcake Bakery. you can have Both French and his wile Oiahne are for-
: your picture taken and eat it too mer presidents of the as ociation. I r-Through the use of a scanner and The only problem was that the first
~ter outfitted Wlth rood coloring machines developed for the photo cake
instead of mk, French is creating picture-were tt>o big for French's shop. ·
perfect Cd kPS. Customers' black-and-"The nest tim~ I saw one, r just.asked,
white or color photos are reproduced Where can· 1 pu't this?' 'Where can I put
onto nn• pap<>r and transferred onto the Uus,'" French said
face of d cdkt!. With the newer, smaller models,
And yes, it's all edible. though some French was finally able to bring the se{-
have found the cakes stmply look too vice to Costa Mesa two months ago. I
good to eat, ds French learned through French, who is more comfortable with
firsthdncl experience. a decorating tube in hls hand rather than
rrench mrlde a photo cake for hts a computer mouse, has had a crash
father-in lciw's birthday. which depicted course _in caketop publishing. He has
the n1c1n m his ~ounger years cropped photos of pets, children, people
·1 I~ woulc,Jn t let us cut 1t • French on horses and people cutting cakes, j t
'>did fie wdnted to ldke tt the> next day to named few of the types of pictures
to show to his ~Jolf budclies " come across his counter. .
1 Mrlny other customers hdve respond-French can scan any picture that is 8-
• eel with PQlldl excitement dn<I c1we, ~aid by-10 inches or smaller. 1be charge is
· f'tench's dc.1uc1hter. Laune Bdrcus, ,.Jho, $10, m addition to the price of the cake
c1lony v.1th two of her sisters, works at the and other decorating.
DON LEACH I DAll.Y PILOT
Jerry French of French's Cupcake Bakery shows an example of the photo imaging technique a'vallable for cake deco-;
rating. The technique allows customers to use personal photographs on a cake. It's ec!ible, too. , ,
lrlmily bc1kN} I Technology has only helped augment
"They'r.e yomg to dte when they see what is the "second·<;>ldest" profession m
, ,\hts" is d common reaction among cus-the world, French said. He should know
-his family has been in the baking bnsi-
ness in Costa Mesa for nearly 50 years.
Before that, French's grandfather ran a
bakery 10 Ohio. ·
SB
Cake decorator LouAnne Gonzales
isn't worried that the technology will ever
put her out of a job.
•1t still can't do everything we can
do," she said.
French agreed.
"You still have to start out with a deli·
oous cake,· he said.
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Thursday, Nat 20, 1999 • Sports Editor Roger Canson • 949-57 ~223
/ •Newport Harbqr, 19-1 /in league play last two .
springs ~d co-champions
of the Sea View League
this season, is hardly
content with share of
second straight crown.
BARRY PAULKNFR
~Plot
~ ,...11e Newport Harbor High
boys volleyball team
earned a share of itS' eighth
Sea View League title in Coach
Dan Glenn's 13-year tenure and
won 28 of 33 games in what
many believe is, top-to-bottom,
the toughest league in the
nation.
But the only sound remotely
resembling chest thumping to
emanate from the Sailors' gym
is the thud of balls rocketed at
players during digging drills.
League titles are nice, and all,
but the senior-dominated Tars
have learned
from
experience
not to stop
and savor,
until their ·
postseason
work is done.
"This group
had some
different
goals,• Clenn
.. DaqGlenn . .,. --said. ·we said "':~ ·----'· · from the j.tart
we'd love to win a league r• ........ .:;\
championship, but we directed •
our focus to (the CIF Southern
Section Division l playoffs)."
That focus may have been
driven by the experience of
watching Santa Margarita and
Corona del Mar, two schools
Newport disposed of en route to
last yea.r's league title, win 1998
section championships in
Division I and DiVJ.Sion ill,
"T respectivt?}y.
The Sailors, depleted when
All-CIF senior setter navis
Nelson was sidelined with a
broken finger, were upset in last
year's semifinals by Mira Costa.
lt was Harbor's only loss in a
best-of-five match.
But while they may have been
eying the school's fourth section
aown, their first since 1994, the
Sailors were anything but
distracted during a 9-1 Sea View.
campaign.
The Tars, in fact, swept seven
opponents, including
co-champion Corona del Mar in
the March 30 Sea View opener,
and outscored foes, 476-291.
Their lone loss was a 15-11,
3-15, 15-9, 15-7 setback to the
HIGH SCHOOL IOYS VOLLIYIALL ..
DON LEACH I DAllY Pl.OT
Newport Harbor Higb's Sea View League co-champions -front row, from left: Jlmmy Sanders,·
Greg Perrine, Jamie Johnson, Kent Turner; middle row, from left: John Vallejo, Blake Tippett,
Ty Tramblfe, Alan Umon, Adam Tomalas, Matt Jameson; back row, from left: Erle Perrine,
Adam Hearlson, Brendon Hansen, BWy Clayton and Brad Craig.
Back Bay rival Sea Kings, April wanted it more,• Glenn said. 'Il"amblie, Alan Limon, Matt
22 at the CdM gym. ·we were disappointed, because Jameson, Adam Hearlson, Eric
Glenn, who will miss the we wanted to win the league Perrine and Junior Billy Clayton.
league rivalry next season when outright. And, we wanted to win In addition, Kent Turner, John
CdM shifts to the Pacfic Coast the last league match we'd have Vallejo, Jamie Johnson, Brendan
League, said there was a sunple with them for at least three Hansen and Adam Tomalas
explanation for the lone league years.· comprised a deep and effective
loss. Hardly disappointing, was the
•Tue bottom line. CdM just contributions of senior starters Ty SEE SAILORS PAGE 83
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF .THI WEEK
• Newport Harbor High senior watched and learned,
before rising to the head of the Sailqrs' volleyball class.
BARRY FAULKNER watched people play and tried to
pick up some tricks. When I Datt Pb started going to college matches,
e serving his two-year
ai'sity apprenticeship,
lling in the back row
be.hind a pair of All-CIF outside
bitten, Alan Umon assembled a
mental notebook on front-row
fundamentals.
When not working oo his own
game at NeWport Jiarbor High, ·
the 6-foot~ Mhed ~t to attend
coUeg9 matches and 8Jlo Check
out the touring beech
prol8al0Dala,
• J\Jlt being around
volleyball.. JI hoW be put lt. ·1
'
it blew my mind how athletically
gifted those guys were and how
awesome ~ey were."
Equally inspired and ,
informed, Umon has taken hill
advantage of his op1>9rtun:ity at
outside bitter this season. He's
bad a great year, an outstanding
year,• Sailon Coach Dan Glenn
Mid. •1 knew he would have a
good year, but he's been much
benar than I anUdpated. He's
been our mOlt Conliltent pltyer
all 18UOD.·
Hlgti praile ~for an
'1lis Pf had-. clifftr• eoc*. W. said from .. smt •''IM ID•
a ... eta,_,....,, tiut w lr.W cu hlcus to'" Of~) •M •
DM Glenn, Newport Harbor volleyball coach
0o.1y Pilot 8 I
SPORTS HALL OF FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
C L
ILL
So~al College
• He'll aways be known as the coach who brought in_
female pitcher Ila Borders to the college baseball game.·
RIOWtO OU!l.N
I n a move that
eventually put
Southern Ca.hlonua
College baseball m the
global spollight, Charlie
Phillips wasn't afraid to s1gn a
girl and help make hi.story.
As a left-handed pitcher wttb
a nasty curveball and aggressive
attitude, Phillips had his share of
eneuiies in opposing ·
dugouts, but it was
nothing compared to the
clamor be created as
head coach at sec by
recruiting Ila Borders,
who became the first
female to win a men's
collegiate baseball game
on Feb. 15, 1994.
Before games,
opposing coaches would
20 players, including Borders,
who would sign professional , .
baseball contracts out of sec,
even though faith and academi~
were priorities Phillips placed
ahead of baseball.
Phillips' signing of Borders,
who won her firsl two starts and
finished 2-4 Wlth a 2.92 eamed-
run average her freshman year~
in '94 , led to her appearance on
"The Tonight Show• with Jay
Leno and a television
commercial for a Japanese
sporting goods company. ·coo put her in the
nght place, at the right
school. with the right
coach, at the right time,•
said Phillips, who admits
some of his play~
weren't thrilled with the
signing of a girl. _ .
• 1 tomer Phillips and
whisper, "you're not
throwing Ila today, are
you?"
PbWips
Before his arrival at sec, Phillips, a
continuation school
teacher, coached at
Santa Ana Valley High,
Privately, not a single coach or
player could stomach losing to a
woman pitcher, but Borders'
presence, a huge gamble ta.ken
by Phillips in bringmg her to ·
SCC out of Wluttier Chnstian
High, brought a media
madhouse never seen before on
the Vanguards' campus.
As Borders was flooded with
interview requests from Sports
Illustrated to ESPN, Phillips
became a familiar name and face
as the coach who signed her
Some sec memoraf>ilia,
inclucijng Borders' jersey and
cap, were placed m the Baseball
Hall of Fame in Cooperstown,
N.Y., in the "Women in
Baseball" wing.
Though Phillips helped put
the small., Costa Mesa-based
Chnstian school on the map, he
was unceremoniously fired by
SCC President Wayne Kraiss
sho1:fu~ the 1995 season P · ·ps, who guided SoCal
College to the NAIA regiODal
playoffs four times in six years
from 1990 to '95, coached some
Orange Coast College and
Saddleback CQllege, following a
playing career that included an
NCAA championship at USC
and bve years in the minors.
Phillips, who pitched m tnple
A for the Dodgers and Angels,
was on the Angels' 40-man
roster in 1979 and '80 dunng
spnng tra.uung.
A La Qwnta High product
whose career ERA of 0.42 m
three years is sb.ll a school
record, Phillips finished 22-6 m
high school and was among
Orange County's most
sought-after recruits, before
signing with Coach Rod
Dedeaux's 'Il"ojans.
Today, Phillips, 43, works with
Uttle Leaguers in Newport
Beach and hopes to get back iillo
college baseball. He's also a
-member of the Daily Pilot Spons
Hall of Fame, c-elebrabng the
oocommg millenmum.
Phillips and his wife of almost
22 years, Maiko, live in Rancho
Santa Marganta with their ,
daughters, Christi. 1-4, and Kimi. 9.
·s~rts
~ , ~ avn t
..(• . IJ.Will U.S. Open qualifier at Newport BeaCh Country
Qlub today produce one of those Hollywood situations?
Bruce Hooper doesn't
practice on a beat-up
driving range or romance
a ~ychologist who has been the
gMifiieod of a longtime rival. 1 An assistant pro at Newport ~~ch Counby Club, Hooper, 35,
ha~ been too busy teaching and
working at the club to play much
competitive golf this year, but
tOday he hopes lo live a chapter
rlgnt out of "Tm Cup· and
(ttla.lity for the U.S. Open.
Once a 36-hole townament,
the local qualifying round for the
U .s Open at Newport Beach
Counby Club is only 18 holes
and, well, anything's possible
when you "go ~or it."
·someone can get hot in 18
holes and shoot the lights out,"
S<lld Hooper, who returned to
.coJllpetltion Mon<;tay for the first
time in three months at the
Newport Beach Open, also at
NBCC.
; Hooper shot one-under-par 70
t~ tie for second place m the
Newport Beach Open's
ptofessional field, making three
bJrdies and two bogeys, while
e~g $662.50 in the upstart
event operated by the Newport
HM'bor Area Chamber of
c:&nmerce.
: •That's why I played Monday,
to get used to playing in a
competitive round and fight off
Ule demons a little,• said Hooper,
n!ferrtng lo the game's mental
aJ>Pfoach, like finng at targets
iqstead of thinking a bout
mecharucs.
: Hooper will be one of 112
rrjen (pros and amateurs with a
hencilcap of two or lower)
~g for eight spots in a
~nal qualifier June 7
t t El Caballero Country Club
Tanana.
..
~6UMMEK CAMP
There are 92 local qualifying
sites around the counby and 13
sectional locations for June 7-8.
A total of 750 players will
advance to sectional qualifiers.
The U.S. Open is June 17-20
al Pinehurst, S.C. Only one
player in golf history, Orville
Moody, bas won the U.S. Open
(1969) after working his way
through the local and sectional
qualifiers. It was Moody's only
title on the PGA Tour.
"II somebody can make it
through the local qualifying and
go to the sectionals and make
that and play in the Ope,n, that
would be quite a memorable
experience," said Bob Thomas,
publicist for the Southern
California Golf Association,
which will operate today's
qualifier at Newport Beach, the
first time the club bas hosted a
local Open qualifier.
Players Will tee off today at 7
a.m.
• Hooper, an alternate last year
at the Nike Inland Empire Open
in Moreno Valley, is one of three
Newport Beach Counby Club
pros who will compete today on
their home course. Richard
Ortega and Dave Donnellan are
also scheduled to play.
Costa Mesa's Randy Collett,
Andrew Crinella and Gabriel
Armendariz are also in the field,
while Newport Beach-based
golf~s Duane Hastings, John
Ortego, Tim Shannon, Jeff
Harbison, Kevin Olson, Todd
Eckenrode, Tim Albitz, Bill
Brodie and John Archer will tiy
to qualify.
Big Canyon Country Club
assistant pro Kelly Manos, a
former SCPGA champion, will
tee off on hole No. 1 at 8:30 a.m .
12 l·week 5es5ions (M·F) FULL DAY OR HALF
DAY. STARTS JUNE 14. Thru inst.ructors for
every 10 st.udent5. Students are placed in
group:> accon:J.ng to age and at>1hty.
Surfboards and Weteu1t5 included.
~PRIVATE LESSON PROGRAM
51·hour le5oone $200 inclt:fo: SurfVoard,
wetsuit & coached practice 5e55ione.
Year round program.
I 0 l F
• Newport Beach Open
organizers were thrilled with
Monday's weather and couldn't
have asked for more in the
professional field, highlighted
by Perry Parker's victory at
two-under ~9. good for an $800
paycheck and $4,000 Cartier
watch.
Tournament o(ficials originally
hoped for a Sl ,000 winning
purse.
Wendy Davidson won the
professional women's purse of
$400, in addition to a $4,000
Cartier watch, with a 78. Kalaya
Bhaedhayajibh was second at 82
and won $258.
· • Newport Beach's Erle Woods,
who captured the inaugural
Newport Beach Open pro title
with a four-under 67 last year, is
headed back to the Canadlan
Tour this summer.
Woods, who shot 74 Monday
and finished out of the money, is
.a two-time Order of Merit winner
on the circuit.
•1t1s good lo have a buddy,up
there with you,• said Parker, ll
teammate of Woods at UCI. j
)
• The Newport Beach Open'~
afternoon shotgun round
included corporate foursomes
and amateurs. The major gift was
llAPPY
I' I 1·111 Y
r----------------------,
: 1 ;r i ' r r : I I
I I I I I I I I l I L------------------~
~
TRAVIS Na.5oN "'°' NlwrORT HAMOR .,
VOUEYMl.L
CONGRATULATE
YOUR GRADO
CLASS OP '98
XXXXXHlgh
School
..------. . ~
....... ._ Picture C~
Here
1
, • ~o~\
We Are So Proud of You .•.
Good Luck 1n College!
a .CS-minute instructional Nideo
by •Greg Nomi.an One on One:
Your Personalized Video Gou
Lesson."
The company operating the
videos, Visual Edge Systems,
stationed itself on the 10th tee
with a $200,000 tr\lck and filmed
every player who came through.
Each golfer was given their video
at the' banquet later that evening.
· On the video, amateurs are
lined up next tt> Norman and
given a critique of their swing.
•1 don't think I want to know,•
quipped an amateur.
• The Newport Beach Open.
after changing its format a year
ago to include a purse for pros,
appears to be on its way to
success as a mini-tour event It
also hosted a long-drive contest
Friday through Sllllday with
amateurs trying to make two
qualifying spots in a simulator
at Tommy Bahamas.
•(The chamber) bas got
something real special here,"
said Jerry Anderson, NBCC
President, as well as a Hall of
Farner in the Southern California
PGA and Daily Pilot Sports
(to celebrate the millennium).
"It is more than just a charity
tournament."
• Joey Puschetu, former Corona
del Mar High boys volleyball
coach, is coach1ng a startup golf
team at Ensign Junior High.
Fuschetti has taken his ptai~rs
at Newport Beach Go11 CourseJ
and Mike Reebl, head pro at
Santa Ana Country Club, has
donated bis time to give the kids
lessons. Fuschetti said a golf
league tor junior high players
COUid start as soon as next year.
.•
• RICHARD J)UNN's gott column
appears every Thursday.
DON lEACH I OAA.Y Pit.OT
Corona del Mar's Erle Woods chips from the fringe on 17 In
Monday's Ne'YJ>Ort Beach Open. He was the defending champ.
-1( •
NEWPORT BEACH LITTLE LEAGUE
DODGERS CLINCH
SEASON CROWN
Ellis' two RBis spark 3-1
win over Diamondbacks.
NEWPORT BEACH -Sean
Ellis' opposite-field single drove
ln the game-winning runs for the
Dodgers in their 3-1 win over the
-Diamondbacks Saturday in New-
port Beach I...ittle League Major
Division baseball, clinching the
regular season title.
Ellis drove in Grant Almquist
and Milch Folks, giving the
Dodgers the lead for good.
Folks and Ellis pitched strong,
limiting the Diamondbacks to two
ruts. Scott Thompson had a dou-
ble and three strong innings on
the mound for the Diamondbacks.
In other Majors action:
• Yankees 4, Red Sox 0
Andrew Beck and Matt
Hauser combined to toss a one-
bitter for the Yankees in their 4-0
win Saturday.
MAJORS
Beck, Hauser, Nathan Packer,
Peter Berg, Kyle SmeekJutb each
had hits for the Yankees.
Tanner Nuzum and Taylor
Alson pitched effect:lvely for the
Red Sox.
• Ma.rinen 7, Red Sox 1
For the Mariners, clutch hitting
by Cliff Taylor and Jalk Ballback
was the difference in their 7-1 win
over the Red Sox.
Despite the loss, Jake
Wuebben. was splid defensively
for the Red Sox. '
• Red Sox 6, Angels 4
Scott Lelmkuhler and Taylor
Alston combined for rune strike-
outs in the Red Sox's 6-4 victory
over the Angels.
Matt Busch led the Red Sox
offense with two ruts while Jake
Wuebben, Brett Crowley and
Scott . Leimkuhler each made
great diving catches to anchor the
Red Sox defense.
• Red Sos 16, Reds 5
'fyler Alston pitched three sol·
id innings, striking out four for the
Red Sox in their 16-5 wm over the
Reds.
Casey HeHeman's double
sparked a five-run fifth inning for
the Red Sox, overcoming the five·
run first inning brought on by the
Reds.
• Red Sos 8, Dodgers 7
Tanner Nuzum struck out six
in the Red Sox's 8-7 win over the
Dodgers, handing the Dodgers
only their second loss of the sea·
son.
J.R. Dion's triple in the fourth
inning . drove in three and
Nuzum's single in the sixth drove:
in Dion for the winD.ing run. :
Mitch Folks went 3 for 3 and
Jamie Bloom went 2 for 3 for th&
Dodgers. '
Ori~les _no-hit Dodgers-:
~ Colton, Bannan team
up in hitless performance.
NEWPORT BEACH -Orioles'
Sa>tt Colton and Pbll a-nun
combined to no-bit the Dodgers
in their t 0-0 win in Newport
Beach Uttle League AAA-Divi-
lion action Saturday.
Colton all<> ignited the offense
with a triple in the Oriole8' six-run
tint iDDlng. '
Taay a.a. and ,,.........
11w n m mo added a, bits tor
tb8 onoa...
In ot1m AAA doii:
• loddMl,Oll1hr 5 •
Tbe bat and arm of Ala
le'ss• led the Rodd• in
~ t-5 vtctory over tbe tbe . •
Jo'n •mumoutl¥9m• -... el ....., tD earn tbe win.
11e•111t-. .... namddou· ... .., ........... --.
•
AAA
Julian Manteo also bad two
hits for the Rockies.
PblWp Bunon struck out six
in the three innings for the Ori-
oles.
• CucUnab 10, llan.,s 9
Vinnie Sabat Joba went 2 for 3,
induding the game-wtnxµng sin-
gle in the lixth inning for the Car-
dinels on April 12 in their 10·9
win over the ~en. ·
WW WllUilall went 2 for 2
while Cwtla Coatw• and Kyle
.,.,..._ each added two RBis for
the Cardlnalt.
.,_ Ttillel went 2 for 3 With
,two R811 and ...... N...._ ptcbed -two lbuloua lnntngl ad
td11911twoUll• ........ ..........
•Y P 11l,As1lllt"
~ .... MICJee and
Andrew Danb combined to one·
hit the Angels in an 8-1 win.
The two hurlers also struck out
12 in the win. " :
Danks and PbWp Kaye each:
drove in two runs in the Y&o48es~
SLX·run Sixth inniilg, bre~~
open a close 2· t contest. •
Not to be outdone on th&
mound, Angel pitchers To.D
Hutddlon, ._..... llmclrtc::UOG
and 5tnte HID.-1trUck out tl
Yankees. : •Dodg•••.......... :
MkbMI ~? ... tbref(
bill and tine and Ca sr •S: •
w..llli'I four lnntngl al cm.bit
baD led the ~ ovw dMt Madlm, M. May 0. :
...... <'Nlz• allo dlOV9 in;
dne na Wllb • ._. ...S • .......... : c •••
-~ ...
·'
DOily Pilot
CI F
VOLLEYIAll
Sea Kings home;
Newport travels
Corona del Mar High's
Sea Kings will be at home
Friday night when Harvard-
WesUake invades for a CIF
Southern Section Division I
boys volleyball quarterfinal,
at 7 o'clock.
The Sea ~lngs (14-2)
advanced with a 3112.hour ·
marathon-victory over El
Toro Tuesday night, 13-15,
15-10, 16-14, 8-15, 15-12,
while Harvard-Westlake out
of the Mission League, was
taking Highland m four.
Newport Harbor's 19-1
Sailors, who have swept
Mater Dei and Santa Maru-
ca tn the first two rounds,
travel to Manna .in Hunting-
ton Beach for their quarterfi-
• · nal ma~ch, also at 7 p.m.
Manna (17-4) got past
Mira Costa in four, 17-15,
15-8 12-15, 18-16.
I .
CONTINUED FROM 81
.LIMON
CONTINUED FROM 81
experienced and talented group
of Tars, who take a 19-1 record
into Friday's ClF Southern
Section Division I quarterfinals at
Marina. :
Backing up Glenn's
assessment, Limon pounded a
team-high 13 kills and added
nine digs in the Sailors'
first-round sweep of visiting
Mater Dei Friday.
He was an all-tournament
choice ~ the Orange County
Championships and was the
MVP of the Senta Barbara
lbumament of Champions,
which the Sailors won. He is a
first-team All-Sea View League
performer, who can now add
Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week
recognition to his individual
accolades.
"He has paid his dues," Glenn
said. "He's a three-year varsity
player, but he has kind of been
in the background, because
there were some great players
ahead of him. He's really
enjoying the season and he loves
bench, which Glenn tapped regularly.
1Tamblie, who took over setting duties from Nelson late
last season, has been among Orange County's best this
spring. A veteran Of the Balboa Bay Club program, his
experience, talent and leadership skills have been a
constant.
Lirrion, a 6-foot-3 outside hitter, bas been the Tars' most
consistent hitting thre.at, according to Glenn. who also
praised the third-year varsity performer's passing.
Jameson, in his fourth varsity campaign, combines
experience, athleticism and competitive fire to provide
, 1Tamblie a consistent option at out.side hitter.
•You know he's going to go through a wall for you,"
• . Glenn said.
The 6-7 Hearlson has t;>een an integral presence in the
middle, where the 6-5 Clayton also.bas impressed with his-
; supreme athleticism and growing grasp of the game. , ~
' Perrine stepped in to fill the void at opposite, when senior
Zach Wells decided he couldn't juggle time commitments
between club soccer and volleyball.
Turner, a CdM tranSfer, has provided anoth~r quality
hitter, while Hansen has spelled the -two middle blockers.
· Vallejo an inspirational figure, has, along with fellow
senior Johnson, provided back-row support.
MEET OUR MEMBERS
Ma.bu '"1 I 'fOI
OcalpWo.i Lcp Stcrmry
'fty did ""joCa SMp..Upl
I w.u noc feding wdl and mr back •u h11111ng I
knnr I nceitd co gn ill sh.tpt. 1 ~ -an .id b smpc.. Up &. jo&nrd.
JUuhla. CJ..rlt
Member for: I Yea.r
a-lu: I COllldn't ~ how fut I Ion .23 Iii.
of f:u and I~ bodr f.u! My back no loogcr
hwa! I wUh I lmtw c.uficr bow wdl yop.
atrobia and simigth mining .. -ormt. I wou1J
h.iVf mmd <oontt I really fttl pat ~ am
m~ngaacUc!
WDt do J"DCI like .i-1 Sl.pe-Up? I ~ tCk
14t a KDllF and I 1n1 always wdcomtd by «ht
mff Tht .off~~ rnDv looU ou1 liw my
.. d!«ing; ~air.
BRAKE8HOE8
ORPAD8 • ll••·· 8'Daftl•• •Mal~ Or Oigar& Padl
M>MLIMON
...... Nov.t.1•
·----C'AlllU Mesi
...... 6-foot-3 ~,. ::"=New DlnCllnrt ,.,, ...... ~
.......... "'St.Ir w.rs· .... ~ .......
•Upsetting s.nta ~ (then
undefeated and rried No. 1 in
Or•oge County In boys basketball)
In oor gym my junior year. ·
AtNet. of h w.k XIX: He
collected a team-high U kills and
added nlrwt digs In the Sailots'
OF Divklen I firs1-tound ~ ~ of Mater Dei Friday. •
DllJflat
COIJ«tiK sports cMd IH~ 99-S
the game. He's the first one you
ask l.f you didn't check the paper
and want to find out who won a
match the night before.•
A gifted leaper, Llmon's
admiration for the big-swinging
collegiate hitters has made him
an unusually aggressive kill
artist.
#He's a free swinger,• Glenn
said. #And he doesn't get fazed,
even if he's struggling.·
Said Limon, "That'o JUSt the
way I play. I swing hard every
tune and I'm not afraid of the
other team.•
Hitting ability, however, is
,hardly his orily conti'ibution.,His
background in the' back row bas
also made him one of the Sailors'
primary passers.
"He's ow best passer,• Glenn
scud.
"I'm actually passing a little
more this year," Llmon said,
wbecause I'm on the court more .•
Limon also played Uuee
seasons of varsity basketball. He
averaged 8.5 points as a senior .
and was named All-Newport-
Mesa District.
In spite of his passion for
watching volleyball, Limon bas
never attended a CIF Southern
Section tiUe match.
"I went to the (recent) NCAA
final with BYU and Long Beach
State {at UCLA), but I haven't
been to a CIF final,• he said.
"It's a consaous decision on
my part. Smee I haven't been
there playing m it, I've stayed
away. I've tried to work
harder so I can get there this
year."
..
WATER POLO
Oeding leads U.S. Polo
over Long Beach. state·
LONG BEACH -A familiar.
' name helped the Umted States
water polo team defeat host Long
Beach State, 18-,4, Tuesday.
Orange Coi!St College Coach
Chris Ceding (Corona deJ Mar
High) scored three goals to lead
Team USA. •
Tony Azevedo also scored
three goals, while Brent AJbnght
and Adam Wright each added
two for Team USA.
·Team USA will travel to Mal-
ibu to take on Pepperdine Satw-
day at 2 p.m. Ceding will return·
to his alma mater, Corona del
Mar HighJ when Team USA takes
on USC Sunday at 2 p m
PONY llSEllll
Newport-Mesa Pony COfl ..... M»
(Through May 15)
1. CM Astros, 17-2; 2. NE Braves, 17·3;
3. NE Angels, 11·7; 4. NE Reds, 1<>-7,
5. CM Giants, 8-7; 6. NH Onoles, 9-10;
7. NH Yankees, 8-11; 8. CM Indians.
\ 6-11; 9. NH Blue Jays, 6-12; NH Red Sox,
6-12; NE Dodgers, 6-12. 12 CM
Marine~. 4-13.
lhur$doy, Aloy 20, 1999 81
TllATHLOI
Two area athletes to
compete in triathlon
at . Y~ 's Lake PiaCid ..
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. • Two
local runners will take pa.rt Jn ~
Isuzu lronman USA Lake Pladd
1hathlon in New York. on Aug>
·15.
The 1,500.runner field
mclude representatives from :I>
countries
Craig Julien from Costa Mesa
and Dawna Stone from Newport
Beach will be taking part m the
event, which features a 2.4-niile
swun, 112-mile bike ride and a .
26.2-mile run. .. , .
Top qualifiers of this triathlon
will m?ve on to com~te in
Hawaii for the lronman niathlon
World Championship m October.
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• Tennis
High school boys • CIF Division
t Playoffs, second round: Corona def
Mar at Arcadia, 3:15 p.m .
Nevv & Used
Sports Equipment:
(Brbtol at McArthur out to M.icbacb)
(714) 641-7427 .
Special Th~s and Appreciation for all
Endeavour Replica Committee Volunteers
~
1lM" lnulf! Compa.n)
C.:uHta CAnstrurtion Co.
Mal\90n Conllll\lcllon Co.
Balbo. Ba> Club
Bunon A 'llOClatM r.tr. & Mni. Cuch.ran Cba>.e
\lwhlk'I Jolin""° -\ll> 1ra.l1an V1'.m9el (""'".J
\Ian Colxl.-n -Bn11 .. h ()rpuh C.t>MUI Jam~ Htn•l'll -:\I'• /,,...I.and OeJIUI\ t:on..ul
C.p1.t.m Hl.l.r. H\I fr>ah•our
M1~'" 0.·11111• 0':\1·11
C.ounlr} Side Inn. l'<icwport Bt-~h
Thi' Dail) Pilot ' r.,.,,, A~n<·an TnM Cu.
Hamll'liln-M1lll'r-8eaucharnp-OttLlr
The >..e11h Compamt'll
I.PA
"iM'port lkach Coun1ry Club
Pallr)-Net'dl~ Aa.~1 M~ .• '"'" SeaM~ne l\pwpurt lfarhur H1~h ..._hoot R.rnd
~""'f.IO'' Harbor Hifl,h ...,. hool ~~ru~
[)jaufl.hll'"" nf the Atnfm·an Rt·•oluuon
"un~'()f the t\OW'nc-an Rf'\olu11on
• Sink foundation
Turner Co1lltlru<'llon
Mn. Beny And~,.
Mr & Mn1. Pat Collins
Mr. \\. Ellermt'\ er
Ji\BCO Printi~
Mr & Mrs. Frank '-ianihall
'fr. & Mr;. Tf'll Mu~
Nl'trom )-.temi., In('.
Mn !:lalh Somer--
Mr. Chn~ \\d h tr & M ..... \\OO(h.on \'food
Vole.Mu-»
• Nllfy \hbo 41
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Thursday, /IN:Jy 20, 1999 Sports Doily Pilot
HllH SCHOOL SOfTIAll
~agles find ·the IDagiC with 5~4 wm
llCllATIOI
STAIDllGS
.....a SOf'1'MU,
c;Ma ..... • r•a ~ c.oect •c-DNWon • 1. (t .. ) ~ Stkb llnd Swn.,
16 Nd\ 3 Head FlrJt. 10; 4. (tie) Toych'em
All, M.wNe Attack. I tad\; 6. Outers, 4; • • Division IV wild card victory
'9ver visiting Western extends
E~ancia's first softball playoff _
·appearance since season of '92.
· K \1111v rAu1;.11.1-11
;'
COSTA MESA-L Coach Rich Boyce
cctDed 1l ~the magic," an indi.scerruble force
~ch helped Estanoa High defeat visiting
Western, 5-4. m the wild caid round of the
· CIF Southern Section DiVlSion rv softball
playoffs Wednesddy
However one descnbes it, the Eagles
appear lo have completely broken w hat
.could be regarded as ~ six-season curse,
whlch had plagued lhe program since its
fast postseason appearance m 1992.
The wm advanced the hosts (15·8) to
Fnday's first round dt No. 4-seeded Rosary
(20·8 after an Ufllx•aten run to the Golden
West League utle). But before looking
ahead, some reflt-clion was clearly m order.
"We got quite a few good breaks today,
which I thought was the cillference," said
Boyce, who has had a major hand in the
turnaround
Estanoa's last·playofl gqme resulted in a
25· 1 drubbmg by 3-A tpp seed Wood·
bridge. The Ecigles proceeded to go 22-90,
7-53 in the Pacific Coast League, before
Boyce, the school's boys basketball head
man. was talked into hls hrst diamond
coaching expenence.
The emergence of pitching sensation
Jocmna Danner, who earned her 15th win
of the campaign and has thrown foUI no·
h1tters this spnng, has obviously been
huge
Factor in d more-thd.O·modest, boosler·
driven fwld renovtltJon, enabling the team
Jo.play gdme<, on Cdmpus. as well as a spiI-
, 1t._tl recnultng effort which reeled in ath·
lek?s who had previously dismissed the
sport.
'7\dd about 100 spectators not shy about
' sh~wmg their support !or lhe home learn
' and the result was an atmosphere con·,
du<!'ive to the ftrst playoff triumph smce
anyone 111 Edgledom can recall.
·nus was more people thdn attended all
~home games. tombmed," Boyce said. m sure the gLrls dpprf'cidted tha. sup·
rt.•
I .Boyce WdS 8ppreC1dtJVe Of an Oppor-
~ISliC seven-hit attack. whlch helped the
Begles take three separate leads
"Four of our runs came with two outs,•
Boyce SdJd "Our gLrls bdttled dJld battled •
The Plonef'rs (9-16), battled as well,
· e rallymg from def1ots to be it
tancia's Sara Chaisson began a two·
gdme-winmnq rally m the slXth by
ting out a grounder to short
•Senior Stephclrue Danner, the Eagles
lar shortstop who had been battling ill·
ss for nec1.rly a week. WdS then called
n to pinch-hit She had sat qweUy in
. . .
the dugout, draped m fd blanket,
Boyce summoned her to t'he plate.
She hit the first pitch just.over the short-
stop for a single and Chaisson sprinted to·
third. Stacy Barnett followed with a walk to
load the bases dnd sophomore catcher
Stephanie Cachola drove the next pitch
between the pitcher's legs into cen ter field
for the deciding RBI.
An error, pdssed ball and a hit batter, ~s
well d singles by seniors Tiffdny Ortega
and Lisa Stemfekl, led to three unearned
runs in the Estanaa fU'Sl.
Western rallied to lie in the fourth, but a
first-and·thir.d double steal by Monica
Sanchez (from fLrSt) dnd Steinfeld put the
Eagles back in front.
Western pulled even, once again, when
Amy Po1ar's sixth-mning bne single to cen·
ter got past the ouUielder. allowing Pojar to
orcle the baSes with the Pioneers' third
unearned run.
But Joannd Danner, who!>e ERA "bal·
looned • to 0 29, ended 1t wt th her third
strikeout -her 201st of the season in 151
inrungs -and a double play on a liner to
Ortega at thud.
Stemfeld who came in rutting a team-
.
Estancia catcher (above)
Stephanie Cachola
attempts to put the tag on
Westem's Melissa Koziel,
but the runner was safe at
the plate in Wednesday's
wild card game. At left,
Estancia shortstop Stacy
Barnett completes the first
half of a double-play
attempt. getting Westem's
Sonia Cortes at second.
Estancia won, 5-4, and
plays at Rosary Friday in
the first round of the CIP
Division IV Playoffs.
7, Gounds Crew, 2 . • .....,..... Coed -0-1• DMMon
1. SNrtlbttMs. 16; 2. ftock tt.rbor, 15; •
J. Cahfomi. Dre¥nln', 12; 4. Come-twck~
9; 5 Pierce St. Rool<les, 6; 6. Flyball Freaks, 4;
7. Spit-Sties. I.
• Modified C.oed "D-.19 Dtyltion
1 Fairview II, 18; 2. (tie) Verifone, 8Mt'
Buddies. Big TrOYble, 12 each; 5. Slacker\ 10,
6 Cleau N' Cleavage, 9; 7. Zi9gy. Zlggy,
Ziggy, 5.
• Coed ·0-1 • DfvtalOn
1 (lie) Mtsflu. P~ St. Mud(nbr'J,
Batklng Splden, 14 ffch; 4. (tie) fanatics
Only, Mam.l's & P~'s. 9 each; 6. TNm
MSO. ·1. • C.oed •0-2• Dh!Woft
1 (tie) ,ftog ~The Gimps. 11 t.cti;
3. (tie) Muffin~ers. Riptide, 12 Heh;
5 THm VS*. 7; 6. Miss Fltt. 4.
• Coed "D-3· Division
1. CCNM, 15; 2. Seega~ngram Vl~s, 12,
3 Trtt>.mi, 11; 4. Pla(yen), 9; 5. Brembo
Brukers. 7, 6. ROINdy Roofers. 3.
• C.oed "MC" DfvWon
I RSI Big ftigl. 16~ 2. Byte Me, 8,
3. The Plume, 1.
• Men's "fltaroff'" DfvWon
1 The O...,ih, 24; 2. Mulligans. 14;
3. El Ranchlto, 11; 4. Old Skool, 12;
5. Emerald Plumlng. 11; 6. The Hacks, 10;
1. The Chucks, 9; B. Circuit Breakers 8;
9. Ballistk Blue, 2.
• w-n•s Division
1. Hafta Pi.y 2, 15; 2. Alley Cats, 10;
3. (tie) Stray Katz. Totoal KhaOs,6 each.
• Men's Upper D" DlvWon
1. Warriors, 1B; 2. Hooliga~ 14;
3. The Lushes, 12; 4. Marauders. 10; s We Byte, 9; 6. Deloite I Toud'4! Tribe, 6;
7. (tie) T -Birds. Ball Busters. 4 each.
• Men's ·a.ow. o· Dlvlalon
1. TRO, 18: 2. (tie) The Good, Bad & Ugly,
MV&P. 1 ; 4. Merk.acis, 6;
5. DI 5; 6. 'Merk.ans, 6.
1• DfvWon
tie) N Wholesale, Blood, Sweat &
Bfff's. 16 eacti; 3. POC.. 13; 4. (be) lowted.
0 P'5 Gold Sluggers. 6 NCh; 6. TNm Triu~. 2. ... y
• Men"S •c;.1• Dtv1Mon
1. Cone. "5;-2. Rel iegotiatOn, 11,
3. (tie) Ho!Mbird, Mudville, 10 each;
5 Barn Busters. 8; 6. Silky Sullivans 6.
• Men's •c;.J• Dfvtsion
1 (tie) Rebek, Same Guyz. 15 each;
3. Mu's Sports Bar, 12; 4. (tie) Team Orange,
Textron, 8 e.m; 6. Bomb Squad, 1.
• Meft's ·0-2· Division
1 (tie) Swing This, Old Timen, 14 each,
3. O.Tow, 12; 4. (tie) Bedrock Bombers,
Totally Coffee, 10 each; 6. Zzyn. 6.
• Men's "D-3" Dlvlsiofl
1. Don't Matter, 17; 2-(tie) Land of the
Lost. B<ewsicles, 14 uch; 4. Beer Junl<les, 12.
5. Polk High, 6; 6. Pirates, 4.
• Men's "0-4" Dfvtslon
1. (tie) lrOYblemakers. Clayton Comets, 16
«ach; 3. Aches & Pains, 13; 4. Q-Club, 10;
5. Sharks, 3; 6. Hard Knocks. 2.
Spring llaSk.tlNllJ St.ndlngs
• ~t....,.
1. Goodfellas, 2-0; 2. Tall Guys. 1-0;
3 Ch1h Dogs, 1-1; 4. Staff lnfectJon, 0.1.
S RM(, 0.2.
• Mond.8y LM9'M
1. Heattl's, S-0; 2. Brkk~ 4-1;
3 who Riden, H ; 3. (tie) Schultz
best .373, had a pair of smyles, while Bar·
nett had three assists and three putouts fill.
mg in fqr Stepharue Danner at short.
JUSTN WARREN I DAll.Y PILOT
•we're just' worried about this year's
team."
Photo, Carnvlorous Apes. Sneak.er Squeaters,
1-4
• 1\lelcMy LM9'M
I Wolf Pac, 5-0; 2. Dt'ibb&er1, 4-1;
3. HNd Hl.S11en, 3-2; 4 Wilcba, N;
S TICC. 1-4; 6. Seagate Scorpions. 0-S.
• Wtadl I Jdey LeegU9 OF DIVISION IV
WJldcarcl~
ESTANCJA 5, WEST'EJtN 4
1. o B. 4-0; 2 Soft Tubs. 3-0; 1. Pidcford.
2·1i 4 (tie) Goet Hill Snails, Margarstaville. Debra Wyman scored ~run for the win·
ners.
"They tell us it has been a long time
since we won a playoff gdffie, but we don't
think about it,* Joanna Danner said.
Western 000 301 O · 4 7 1 1·3; 6. Dirty O.wgs. 0-4.
• ~~i.~fifllll(i.I; Est,encia 300 101 x • S 7 2
Stewart and Pojar; J. Danner and cadlol.1.
W • J. Danner, 15..S. L ·Stewart. 6-7.
I,..~
567 enneyre ireet, f'lcUtloulUi neu
Laguna Beach. Cahlomla Neme Statement
92651 The following pe1$00S
Thia bualness Is con· are doing business as.
ducted by· an lnd1vlduaf PanU1cadora Bakery,
Have you atarted doing 2200 Hatt>or Boolevard.
business yet? Yes, '4125189 e120, Costa Mesa, CA A. Ktmb811ey Bennett 92627'
This stalement was flied Panlllcadora Bakery.
with ltMldCOonty Cler1< oC inc • tea ), 36 Belcourt
Orange ounty on 4-20-99 Drtve, 'Newport Beach. ca
1119941790421 92660
Da•y Pik>C May 13, 20, 27, This bUSiness Is con·
June 3, I 999 Th488 dueled by a eotpC>ration
Flcddoua Bualneu Have you started doing Neme Stetement buslnesa yet? No
The IOl\owing persona P1n1ttcadora Bakery,
are dol~ bualneu as Inc., Per~ El'lckson ~ ~ ~,.. J~stete~nt was li1ed
1B55 w Katella, Suite w1tt1 tile County Clertc oC
260C, <>ranoe.. Orange COonty on 5-4-99
Callfomla 92867 198M191tu
Allee A McCullough. Oa•y Ptk>C May 6, 13, 20,
1855 W Kalella, Suite 27. 1999 -Th465
260C, Orange. C.«lomla Flctldoua Buelneea
92867 Netne Sttltement
Thlt buSIMIS fl oonduoled The following per900t
by an lndlvldual 1 8 dol buslneas Have you atar1ed doing rTtte ~bodies~~518
busmeu yet? No Aorlda SI., tA, Huntington Afl<le McCullough Beech, CA 92648
Thia statement was IUed -Christopher s. Johnson,
wtth the County Clertl of 2518 FIOl1dl St #A, Hum· Orenoe County on 4· 1 •·1>9 fnglon Beach, CA 92848
1'"87 ... 72 Zackariah Montez. 2518 Dally Pltot May 13, 20, 27, Aorlda St IA, Huntington
June 3. 1999 Th"88 Beach, CA 92641
Flctttlou• Bualoeea Th11 buslneu. Is con· Name aut.ment docled by • oeneret The fol~ pertnershtp --~'V persont H•.,. you atartiad doing afe doing butlnell u bualneu yet? Yea, 1-1-1>9
Cc9rn0polia ConlUlt&ng, CM110phlr S Jotvllon 8 Firenze Court, NewpOti Thia 1tatement wu flled ec.t. Ce 92857 Wiit! ~ County Cleltc ol
Ill\ Peters, 8 Fwenze Of•• ~6-4-99 Coun, Newport Cout, Ca 1 .. 92657 Thll bullneN 11 con· ~-Pilot May 8, 13, 20,
dUCled by en lodMdUal 21.ictwou. IUi~ H.ve you •tarted doing
bualnHa y«7 No ....... lea•ment
l1n Pettfl The fo1oW1ng penona
This at.-nent "' llled .,. dOlnG ~ -wilt\ .,. ~ Clef1i ol Body :tone. 2801 Eu
P.J'"~;~; .. ~ . ~ . ,._ '' .
.,...;. ' ...... '
ducted by. a fimlled
partnership
Have you started doing
business yet? No
Dlcklf\IOn Reed FrH ·
man, General Partner
This statemenr was tiled
Wtlh Ille COonty Clerk ol
Orange Co\#'tty on 5-4-99
1999e791953
Daily Piiot May Cl, 13, 20,
27,tm T~
FlctltJoua. ButlnHa
Name Stawm.rit
The following P9fS001
ere dolno bualness as
SUNSET CONCRETE
PUMPING, 904 Lllrd Placa, eo.18 Mee.I, CA 92628 .Joaepn T Stnlth. 9CM Uarcl, Costa Mesa, CA
~
Tht4I business 11 con-
dueled by. en lndMduel Have you started doing bulinen yet? No JoMph T 5mllh
Thia staternenl WU filed Wlltl lhe County Clerit ol
Orange Countv On 4-27 '" 1Mll111117
Dilly Pilot A.pf. 29, Mey
6, 13, 20, 1999 Th~1
F1cttttou• Buelneea Neme..........,t
The fellowtng PMOn• •re doWla blJSlness aa.
Mede 1'y Monb, 1794
lowl Street. CO.II Mee.I,
CA 92926 Greg Link. 1114 Iowa
StrMt. CO.Ill Meta. CA 92628
T am1 Link, 17~ !OWi
StrMt. Coste MeN, CA
9282' lNe tlUllnMS .. cgn. duceed by: • 91'*'11 ,..,,. ,,.,.
Hew you ate1'ed doing
.,.,..... vet? y"·
Aprtl "· f '98 Temi Ii*
3·1; 3. QSC. 2·1; 4. Stinger\ 2-2; 5. 8eectllide
Bombers, 1·2; 6. (tie) Ronin, C.G.C.. 0.3. "
' • -z-... ; y '·· ·-' ,.
I" I , : .... • ..
NEWPORT BEACH
NOTICE
INVITING BIDS
Sealed bids ITllY be rt·
celVed at the olflce ol the
City Clerk, 3300 Newport
Boulevard, P 0 Box 1768,
N ewport Beech, CA
92e58-8915 until 11 -C>O
am on the 111 day ol June, 11>99, el~ lime
such bids ahaJI be opened
and rNd lor NEWPORT THEA TffE ARTS CENnR
ADDmON
T1Cte of Project
Contract No. 122$ S1IO,OOO EntlnMf'•~ ;:rcw:.:i .
Pu9lo Wene Dlreotor
Pl'Olp9CIMI bidders mey
pol'CheM bid dlcumentS
fof *25.oo MCtl trom lhe olfloa ol the P\lblic WOfb
Deptl1ment 3300 Newport
Boul9vard, P 0. Box 1 tea.
Newporl BHoh, CA
92658-8915
Prospective bidders
should attend • pre-bid meeting scheduled et
10:30 • m. Mey 2~ 1999~ al the NEWt-OR r
THEATRE ARTS CEN·
TER, 2!01 Ctlfl Drtve,
Newpof1 e..ctl
FOf furthef lnfomlatlOn, cell UOyO Dalton, Protect Menager et (0.t9)
t.44·33211
Renl a Vette or Newpori
Beach, 21s2 s.e. Bristo!
Street, Newport Beaeh, Cl
92660
The Flct1llous Buslneu
name f9ferred to •bolle
was liled lo Orange Counry
on 05/1~, FILE NO
19996793158
RAV Newport, Inc., ~Q· lomla). 11454 1/2 Na
BIW .. Los Angeles. C
900IW
This bU$1neu Is con-
ducted by: a QOrpOradon
RAV 'Newport. Inc ..
Miehlel 8c'ophy, PrMlder(
This statement WU 9ed
Wffh lhe COonty Cleftt °' Orange ~
J~~1~,,.
PUblllhed NeWport Beech-Coe1• MeN ~ Pfk)C
Mey 11 , 20, 1999, TTM~
STATDIENTOF , ...... ~lfliililllllll.'
MANOONlmfT OF U. OF P.ICTITIOU9 IUMIWNAm
=~J:....4:l UM Of IN.._.. bull• Onlng9 COl#ICy On M-11 eo.t HldM9Y. Corene 1~-del Mir ~'"" o.itv Plat Mey t. 1 s. IO, OOUilaa 8chuleln, 3
Thia -"*· ... fled µl•..Dlm&l,;,,...;... __ ~_;;._.:l!!!•!!•:;;~ di f'9 Cour1'Y CIM Of
27, 1M TMIO c.ienc> Court. ~ FliihlOUi iUeln11e C0Mt. CA 121&7
....... ••• inent Thie bUllnM8 le con. The ~ per10f1e dud«t tly. en lndlVlcMI
.,. dOlnG........ ... He¥e ~ IWled dOlng
1'*6111 Tec:hi:i=, bullnMa vec? Y•. 26411 P1CMC t9 , Mlly 3, 1111 ~~~~ ~~':*' ...... Hiia °""9, .... .,. ~ Cleltl °'
VlefO, CAW °'Wll' ~::. -°*"' ........ , a,....., .. , ,__ ~. ...... 11 t :!.\-=:..:.: t:\:t i:mr-r= == • -= o'iil
Or*9 ~ On4-27 ...
1te11711 '" Delly Piiot All#. n . M9v 8, 13, 20. ,.... Th482
Dai Pilot
... ..., ....
~ ........... Nam. atet.ment
T"8 lolloMIQ l)lllOnl .,. doing bualne11 ..
0meoe Ftne11 E C. .33~ Eat t7tn
S 17.CONMua CA92627
JOnalhin Alan Blitz
179 Broadwa)' SI • Unit A, Colll MMa, Ce 92e27
Thia business 11 con·
ducted by. en lndMClual
Have you 1ta11t<1 doing Wllness yet? No
Jooalhan Alan ena
This atatement was f1i.d
wilh the County Clerk of
Orange CounlY on 4·27·99
1"91711192
Oally Piiot Apr. 29. May 6. t3, 20, 1999 Th .... 9
Fictlttoua BuslneH
N•.m • Statement The tolfo¥W1ng parsons
are ~ng bustneas 11
Montepulaano,
417 Begonia Avenue. Co·
rona d411 Mat Caltlomoa
p262~ • Mana Lyn Zielonko.
417 Beoonia Avenue, eo. rona del Mar, Cakfomia
92625 TIN businen IS con
dUtted by. an 1ndivoctua1
jiave you atarted doong
btltiness yet? No
M rta Lyn Zielonko This statement was filed
With tne County Cler11 ol Orange CovntY on 4·~7 ·99
1"96791190
Da1ty Piiot Apf 29. May 6, 13, 20, 1999 Tl\<450
Flctltloue Bu1lneH
Neme Statement
The fotlOwing persons
are doing business as
Creatrve Marketing Op-
potunlltes, 4 Sunbury Dr •
Allio Viejo, Cal1rorn1a
92556
Donald EdWard Frueh,
4 5Unl:J9rf0r .• Aliso Viejo,
California 92656
This business Is con·
duaea by: an tndiVidual
Have you staned dOlng
business yet? No
,1,Donald E Frueh .. Ths .iatement was fded
with the County Clerk of
J)ra'1"'COunly on 4·27·99 ' 19996791171
Daily Ptlol Apr 29. May
8. 13, 20, 1999 Th<ls.4
Fictitious Bu1lne11
N•m• Statement
, 'The followlng persons
e1a doltlQ business as
ONE OOU.ER STORE.
, 841 112 19th Street, Costa
Mesa, Cal•fomla 92627
Abdul Khalil, 830 Center
Street, Apt 14, Costa
Mesa, Calllomia 92627
This buSlness rs con·
ducted by' an 1nd1V1dual
Have you stanea doing
business yet? Vea. l/1196
Abdul Khalil
This statement was hied
Wilb the County Clerk ol
Orange County on 5·3·99
19998791844
Dally P110t May 6, 13, 20,
27, 1999 Th469
Flctltloue BualneH
Name Statament
The lotloWlng persons ,,. doing business as
COASTAL COTTAGE
INTERIORS, 2 Whllesands
Drive. Newpon Coast,
omie 6
MaMa LOU1$1 Santee.
2 Whlletencs1 Dnve, Ne>11·
port Cout. Catllornla 92857 •
Thia bullnest 11 COil•
ductl<S by In lndo'/ICIUl.IJ
Have you 11an1<1 doing t>Yslnesa yet? No
Mattria L<>u<M Santee
• This statement w.n fded
wolh the COunty Clerk ot
Orange County on 4-20-00
1MM790420
Dally f'1lo~May 6, 13, 20,
27, 1999 Tl\<470
Flctltlou1 Bualneu
N•m• St•t•ment
The follOwing persons
are dOtng business as
Elite Landscape Main·
tananee, 1539 MonrOVll
Ave • • l O. Newpo11 Beaeh, Cahfom11 92663
Teresa K Duhoux 1749 S~ylark Lane. NewPort
Ba a Ch , C e f II o fn I a 92660-4339
This bUS1ness as con·
dueled by· an lndNiduat
Have you started doiog
busineu y117 Vea
01/0l/86
Teresa K Duhoux
This statement was hied
with the County Clerk of
Orange Count~ on 4-7·99 19996789034
Dally Pilot May 6, 13, 20
27, 1999 Th463
Flctltlou1 Business
Name Statement
The foltowang persons
are d0tng business as
DIGITAL VIDEO LAB.
474 E 17th Street, #104,
Costa Mesa, Califomta
92627
Amedeua Swaderkl,
25551 Rapld Falls Road,
Laguna Hills. C1111forn1a
92653
This business Is con·
ducted by an 1nd1vldual
Have you staned doing
business yet? No
Amadeu11 Swlderk1
This statement was hied
with the County Clerk of
Orange County on 4·28·99
19996791397
Daily Pilot May 13, 20. 27
June 3. t.999 Th.479
Fictitious Bu1lneH
Name Statement
The lollow1ng persons
are doo~s111ess as Great asket Caper, 435
Snug Ha r Road. Naw· pon "Beaill, CA 92663
Elaine 'A England, <135
-Snug Harbor Rd • Newpon
Beach, CA 92663
nus busmess as con
dueled by an 1ndNtduat
Have you started dolrig
btJsmess yet? Yes. 1982
Elaine A England
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Orange CountY-on 4·27·99 19996791178
Daily Ptlol Apr 29, May
6, 13. 20. 1999 TMS3
Fictitious Buslnesa
Name Statement
The followtng persons
are doing business as
Directors Show·
case Com, 34 1 o w
MacArthur Blvd • Ste J
Sante Ana. Ca 92704 '
Alben E Solberg 111.
3410 W MacArthur Blvd
Ste J Santa Ana Ca
M Ge 1gher, 3410 W.
MacA!VlVr Blvd • Ste J,
Santa Ana, Ce 92704
Aoget Derry~rry, 3410
W MacNthut Blvd • Ste J
Santa Alta Ce 92704
This buSlneu 6 con·
dUCted by a general part·
nershtp
Have you started doing
business yet? No
Alben E .. Solberg Ill
This statement was loled
with ltle COunty Cler11 o1
Orange Count( on 5 18·99
19996793419
Dally Piiot May 20, 27,
June 3. 10. 1999 Th494
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing bultness as
Donglo ·tnvastrnents,
19332 Manor Potnt Car •
Huntington Beach CA
92648
George Don Toy. 19332
Mano< Poont Circle: Hunt·
lngton Beach CA 92648
Thls buS1ness Is con-
docled by an 1ndrviduaJ
~ave you staned dorng busaneS$ yet? No
·George Qon Toy
This statement was liled
with the County Clert. ol
Orange County on 5· 18·99
199967934111
Oa·ty Pilot May 20, 27
June 3, 10, 1999 Th<l95
Fictitious Bu1lneu
Name Statement
The lotlowing persons
are dotng business as
CYTOTEK fNTERNA
TIONAL, 17481 Teachers
Ave .. Irvine, CA 92614
Cytotek lnternatlonal
Corporauon, (CA), 17481
Teachers Ave .. Irvine. CA
92614
This business 1s con·
ducted by a corporation
Have Y0\4 Sla-1 doing
'business ylft7 Nt>
h~ytottlk lnternat1011a1
\fUl'POratton, Sun1t Gaur, Officer
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Orange COunty on s 1 t ·99 199967926~
Detty Pilot May 13 20, 27.
June 3 1999 Th<l80
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The IOllowing persons
are doing business as
ORANGE COAST DECKS
& WATERPROOFING
3133 Cork Lane, Costa
Mesa CA 92626
Amencan Coahngs. Inc •
(CA) 8180 Miramar Road,
San•Oiego. CA 92126
Dennis L Smith, 3133
Corll Lane. Costa Mesa,
CA 92626
This bUSl~ss IS COil·
ducted by a hmated
partnership
Have yqci star1ed domg
business yet? No
Ameacan Coatings, Inc •
Allen T Smith, President
This statement was llted
with the County Clerk of
Oranoe County on 5 11·99
19996792695
Daily Pilot May 13 20, 27
June 3, 1999 TM81
..U. TOUa UMD rsroat.s
TRllOCIOff a.AAlnKll fH#•0-7•
SERVICE DIRECTOR\'
-For All Your Home MKf Business Needs -
Gt EQUAL HOUSING
OPPOttTUNTY .......................... ................ ,..
... fair ........... , ... .................. ........... .., ......... . . .......... " ........ ... ...................... ..................... ..................... ......... ......-. .._ ... t · •• .................... ........................ -·----·· ....................... .................... ................... ..................... ...................
• .,., 7 --..... , ... _ .. .. ·----...
........... ...., ...... .
_...( ............ ,. c.11-..
N1W fOMllM I
808 Begonia. M59.000
IOI 5 8ag1Ae. $534.100 °*"View 0-* .. t4tr'3t9-38IS3 IOUfW OF TAI AIGRWAY
3(11,....,, 1675.000
311,....,, 1837,000 Ugll TllPar· 1 8lodl IO Oen
John ~~Age nt
' ....... ~,. -· ... ,~ . : ... •di • . . .: . ji 1
" , I . Ii: .
•.-4 .. ,~
.. -~ ·~ 1
~ .., ........ ,
, I ' t • . '
"· .. ~..... L _ .. ~·· t~~J
,.,,. •• .: ..... , • • J :
•e&liiitl IAlFRONTIDOCK 11,a • WONT uam ~ ..... .,,, ..
OU. UI MSI
Na~ Statement
Tile f olloWtng palWll
ere doing tiutineas as
I) Music ll'lfOrmallon
SVlttm
b) Cne p·CD's 14730 E
F'1111tone. 1318, L\
M da, CA 90638
Sound Samptar, Inc .
,{CA). 14730 E. Firestone
1318. l!a Mirada. CA
80638
Thts business 1J con·
ducted by a corporalJOn
,. Have you started doing
business yet? Ves,
O<llO 111999
Sound Sampler, Inc • l\n
Gaar, F1nanaal Officer
Tllls statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Orange COunty on !H 1·99
19998792684
Dally Prlot May 13, 20, 27
June 3, 1999 Th<l82
Fictitious Bu1ln"s
Name Statement
The followmg persons
aroe doing bu11ness as·
C T Con5truc11on Service
2479 Rue De Cannes.
IA 1, Co5la Mesa Ca
92627
Chnstopher J Tarry,
2479 Rue De Cames.
#A1 , Costa Mesa Ca
92627.
This busmess as con·
ducted by an 1ndtvldual
Ha11a you staned doing
business yet? No
Christopher J Terry
This statement was hied
witll the County Ctel'k of
OranQ8 County on 5 l 1 ·99
19996792698
Dally Piiot May 13, 20. 27.
June 3. 1999 Th483
Fictitious Buslne11
Name Statement
Ttto f0llow1ng persons
are doing business as
Human Capital Consult·
Ing, 3136 Corte Hermosa.
Newpon Beatll. CA 92660
Janet Rhodes Randolph,
3136 Corte Hermosa.
Nowpon Beach. CA 92660
This business Is con·
ducted by an tndlvtduat
Have you staned doing
business yet? No
Janet Rhodes Aando4ph
This statement was fried
w1tn the COunty Clerk of
Orange COunty on 5-11·99
19996792696
Daily PrlOI May 13 20. 27,
Ji.lne 3. 1999 Th484
Flctltlou1 Bu1lneu
Name Statement
The followlllg persons
are dotng business as
PINPOINT DIRECT LLC
1555 Mesa Verde East
#l6C. COSlll Mesa. CA
92626
Pinpoint Direct LLC.
{CA). 1SS5 Meta Verde
East #16C. Costa Mesa,
CA 92626
This business ts con·
ducted by. L1m11ed l
L1abll1ty Co
Have you 11anod doing
b1,1srness yet? Vos. March·
22. 1999
P1rfpo1nt Direct LLC,
Aot>en M Lettls. c E o
This statement was hied
with the County Clerk ot
Orange COunty on S-l 8·99
19996793417
Dady P1lol ~y 20. 27
June 3, 10, t999 Th491
FlctltJous Bu11neu
Nat"M Statement
The lollo.ving petSON
1re doing buSln ......
Ou1 Of Bounds, 21022
Brooktlor•t SI • Hunlil1g10n Beacta1 C1hf 92646
E K J Inc. 6191 Nor· brook Or • Huntington
Beecll. Calif. 92643
This buslnen " oon·
ducted by • cotPo<•tion
Have you started doinQ
bu mesa yet? Yes, H .air
E K J roe .. Marll Larsen,
President
This atatement was lnefl
with the County Clefk of
Otange COunty on 5·18·99
199967934\5
Oa1ty P1IOC May 20. 27
June 3. 10. 1999 Th<l92
Fictitious Buelness
Name Statement
The foltow.ng pe1$0nS
ere doing business as
Spons Car Rentals ot Newpon Beach, 2152 SE
Bnstol Street, Newpon
Beach. CA 92660
RAV Newpon, Inc (Gah·
fomia), 1145'4 112 NatoOnal
Blvd • Los Angele$, CA
90064 Th•~ business ls con· ducted by a corporation
Have you started dotng
buSlness yet? No
RAV Newport, Inc ,
Micheel Brophy, President
This statement was loled witn tile County Clerk of
Orange County on S· 1 B-99
' 19996793427 Dally Pilot May 20. 27,
June 3. 10. 1~ Th<l93
Fictitious Bualneaa
Name Statement
The following persons
are domo busrness as·
New "York Hardware
Company, t603 Supenor
Ave , Costa Mesa. CA
92627
Brass Anets. lnc.,{CA),
1603 Supenor Ave, Costa
Mesa CA 92627
This business rs con·
ducted by a corpo<abon
Have you staned doing
bustness yet? Yes
05-01-1999 Brass Assets. Inc , Soot!
Sarkisian. President
Thrs statement was hied
with the County Clerk of
Orange County on 5-18·99
19996793430
Dady Piiot May 20. 27
June 3. 10, 1999 Th499
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The lollowang persqns
are doing business as
a) PAT BUILDERS. INC.
b) METROPOLITAN INC .
501 36th Street. Newpon
Beach. CA 92663
RP·FINLEV, INC .. (CA).
501 36th Street. Newport
Beach. Ca 92663
This business Is con·
ducted by. a corporation
Have you staned oong
bUslness yet? Yes,
Feb 16, 1999
AP·FINLEY. INC , Peter
R ZOIOVICh, President
Thas statement was hied
with the County Clerk ot
Orango COuntY-on S· 18·99
19996793414
Dally P110t May 20, 27
June 3 10 1999 ThSOCi
~_ ...... 11 ..........
STAlEMEHl Of Sharvt0n M Carpenter.
WrTHDAAWAL FROM Viu P1aaldent PARTNERSHIP Thia statement wae filed
OPERATING UNDER ~~t~ ~1t: FICTITIOUS 1 ffM7_,.29 BU~NESS NAME Dally Ptlol May 20. 27,
The IOllowlng person l'lat June 3. 10. 1999 TM97
w!#ldrawn 81 1 general Fictitious 8u1J-•s panne1 ltom tt>e partner· ·-'hlP operating unc:flf ~ Name Statement
f1ct1t101Js bu11ness name ol Tl'.le following pal'M>f\S
PROJECT STUDIO et are d<>i/'IO bu~ u
3410 w MacAnhur •J. The Cieauva Play, 482A
Santa ena. CA 92704-6852 East 171h St • Costa Meaa
The F1t11tlou1 Business CA 92627
Name referred to ebovt Lonni& ·ortandO Voss.
was hied 1n Orange County 621 wear Wilson. es.
on 9·25·98 FILE NO Cotta Mess, CA 92627
19986770716 This buslneH 11 con·
Full Name and Address ducted by an 1ndrvldual
of the Par&po W11hdraw1ng Have you staned dotng
PAUL CURTIS OENlON, business yet7 Yes,
925 Capital St. Costa 7·4·1993
Mesa CA 92627 Lonn•• 0 Voss
Paul ~enton This statement was flied
This 1tatement was fried w11h the County Clerk c:A
wi1h the COunty Clerk of Orange CoOnty on 4·30·99
Orange County on 5116199 19998791&97 1D99179M2e Da•fY P1lo4 May 13 20. 27.
Oatty PllOI May 20 27. June 3 1999 Th<l85
June 3. 10. 1999 Tl\<498 Flc11tlous BualneH
Fictitious Bu1lneH Nam• Statement
Name Statement The following petlOf\S
The lollowrng pe"ons are doing bUs.ness as·
are doing buslll8SS as stgnereator com 502 S
Island Signs, 502 s Bay Bay Fron1, Balboa Island.
Front, Balboa tstena CA CA 92662
92662 John F Cook Jr , 502 S
John F Cook Jr .. 502 S Bay Front Balboa lstalld
Bay Front. Balboa Island, CA 92662
CA 92662 Thie business Is con·
ThlS buSIMIS IS COil· ducted by an 1ndlvldUal
ducted by an lnd1voduat Have you staned dorng
Have you &tarted dorng business yet? No
business yet? No John F Cook Jr
John F Cook Jr Thll statement was filed
This statement was filed with the County Cieri< or
with lhe County Clerk ol Orange County on 5·18·99
Orange County on 5·18·99 19996793412
19996793413 Dany Piiot May 20. 27.
Dally PllOI May 20, 27. June 3. 10, 1999 Th502
June 3, to, 1999 Th501 Fictitious Busi ness
Fictitious Bu1lneu
Name Statement
The lolk>wing persons
are doing buSlness as
JM PRODUCT DESIGN,
18364 Ml Chene Circle
Fountain Valley. CA 92708
Thomas Jeny Maddorra,
18364 Mt Chene Circle.
Founta•n Valley. CA 92708
Th•s business 1s con·
duded by an 1ndlVldual
Have you staned dotng
business yet'? No
Thomas Jerry Madderra
Trns statement was filed
with the County Clerk ol
Grange County on 518·99
19996793431
Daily Pilot May 20. 27.
June 3. 1 o. 1999 Th496
Fictitious Bu1lne11
Name Statement
The following persons
are O<>tng business as
Some Like Em Hot
Cookie Dough Company,
1021 El Camino Dnve.
Costa Mesa. CA 92626
Key Lime West, Inc ,
(CA), 1021 El Gamino
Dnve, Costa Mesa, Ca
92626
Taytor's Mom's Cookies.
Inc • (CA), 423 Costa Mesa
Street. Costa Mesa CA
92827
Tll1s business 11 con·
ducted by a gen.erat
pannership
Have you staned doing
business yet? Yes 5·3·99·
Ke Lime We&t Inc
Name St•tement~ •
The lollowtng perspnS'"
are dotng business as·
a) CALIFORNIA CHIROPRACTIC CARE
CENTER.
b) CALIFORNIA
MASSAGE CENTER,
c) CALIFORNIA WELL·
NESS CE!NTER, 1330-A
East Chapman Avenue.
Fut anon. California 92831
Larry w Bascll. 5104
Seasllore onve. Newport
Beach. Calolomta 92663 T}llS business 1s con·
ducted by an lndtVlduat
Have you staned doing
business yet? No
Larry Basch
This statement was hied
with the County Cter1t of
Orange County on 5·14·99 ~9996793188
Dally P~ot May 20 Z7,
June 3, 10, 1999 Th505
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The lotlOwong persons
are d0tng bUs1ness as·
Westside Classic, 377
Avocado •J. Costa Mesa,
California 92627
Bradley Tyler Appe!gate,
377 Avocado 11J, CQsta
Mesa Callfomta 92627
Sunny Kim AW&lgale,
377 Avocado •J. Costa
Mesa, Calolomia 92627
This bus.ness is con-
ducted by husband and
wile
Ha\18 you staned dorng
bu5lne$S yeti NO
Sunny Kim Apf>e!gate Thie Ila ment w li1ecl
"' County Cle~ Of Otanga ~.,on ~..f9
1""792011
Dally PiOI May 20, 27.
June 3. lO, 1999 Tf\504
ActiilOua Business
Name Statement
The fOllOw&tlQ par:aone
are dOina bu61Mt1 II 000t.rnLEs
PAMPEREO PETS,
2160 Teri "'-Ce, Futlenon.
CaJ110mta. 92833-
Margo Jenen Perrvn:ian,,
2160 Ten Place. Fulferton,
Calilornla 92833
This business 11 con·
CllJcted by. an lndMdual
Have 'fO'I started CIOing
business yet1 No
Margo Perryman This statement "'111 filed
Wtth f\e County 0.rfl ol
Onlhge County on <-21-119
19111790528
Daty Pol()( May 20 27,
Jt.Wll 3. 10, l 999 Tl'\506
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
CALLING FOR BIOS'
Sdlool O.Stnct
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE DISTRICT
Bid Oeaclhne
June 24 1999 at 2 oo pm
Place of a.a Reoe pt
Office of Director of
Purchas1no. Coast Com·
munuy CoHeoe D•stnct
Bldg ·o·. 1370 Adam!>
Avenue, Costa Mesa, CA
92626
Project tden11t1ca11on
Name. Orange Coast Col· leOe Science Hall Se1sm1c
Retrofit (Buoldlng 40);
Bid No 1795
Place Bids are on Ille and
available at Of11ce of the
Physical Facthtres Coordl·
·nator, Ardath Rielly, Coast
Community COiiege Oii;·
tnct, 1370 Adam5 Ave .
Bldg '"D", Costa Mesa CA
(7t4) 438-4673
NOTICE lS HEREBY
GIVEN that the •boVe·
named ~ D1str1C1 of
Orange County ea1,fornra
acting by and through its
Governing Board hereon·
aher referred to as DIS-
TRICT'. will receive up to.
bU1 not tater than the
above-stated time, seated
bids lor the award of a con·
tract lor tile pr0f8CI de·
sc:nbed as·
Seismic upgrade 10
Science Halt lecture
bulldtng
There will be a Twenty·
Ave ($25) non·retundable
paymeni required for eec:h
set of bad documents
GheckS should by mode
payable 10 Coast Com·
munlty College D1s1nct
Bids shall be recerved in
the place Identified above
and tnose bids shall be
099ned and pliblicly read
aloua at the aboVe·stated
bme and place.
In acoordance with the
prOVtslons of Cahfornta
Public ContraC1 Code
Section 3300. tne Dtstnci
requ11es that the bidder possess tile loltowlng daS·
silicatlOrl ol contractor's
ltcense at the time that the
OOlltract Is awarded
Thursday, /tloy 20, 1999
Contra(;lor: 8 Ucense PU6USH May 13, 1
and May 20. 19911 WAUC THROUGH Mey 26, 19119 t9 00 am. Otanoe Coau Coll ge ~ and epe,..
llon; Bl,llldjr.g located on
M4rf'lfMC Stt L betW Harbor~ and FaorvJew
Rd • Co&la Mesa, CA..
BID 11~TE J\>I e
19\19 al 2 00 ei m
BOAADDAlE
June 21, t999
No paymem •hell be
made 4or work 01 material
under the contract unteH
arid ·uni~ th4! Reg1,1rar of
Cont111ctCH1 venioes 10 tno
O!STRICT that the co..i T~CTOR was property 'censoo 111 Iha tome ttie
COtltraat 'W85 awarded Any
CONTRACTOR not so
lieet\Md IS ~ 10 pen•
11\rH under lhe law tt tile
lk;enu eta sibttCltl speol· =~~~=r=C1~! ~ dellned In ~on 70S8 ol
ttte California Business
and Pro!esslons Code the
.1pec1etlly contractor
awarded the (;()( lr&C.\ IOI
1t11s Work Shall rae" con
SlrUCI a ma]Orlty ol the
Wo.rtt. tn accoroance >11 lhe prOVISJOnS OI Cat tonua
BuSU\e5' and Prole$$10ns
Code SeGuon 7059
All Wor~ mu!.t be i;om
plated wllllln 125 con
seou!Jve davs Tame as ot
the esse~ Faffure to
complete Iha WO<tt. 11w1thin
the t1n1e set forth here n w1U
result an the 1mpos1to0n ol
hqu1dated diimages 101
eaeh day ol delay m •he
amount set lonh 1n the In·
lormatK>n tor B1d<lors'
Each bad must contotm
and be responsive 10 ttie
contract documents Eaeh
t ltr<lder ithall roubmtt, °'' ttie form tum1shed w11h me
~tract l.IOCuments a l•St ~ tne proposed subcon·
ltnictors on )hts proiect u
required Dy the Sut>lettong
and Sut>cootractong Fau
Practices Act Govemment
Cooe SIG!<in 4100 et SOQ
Eacn Bid &haD be accom·
e>a'led by a~ 01
ca h r ' cnect.. or bld bona
111 an ame>unt not ess tl\a'l
ten peroern 11~) of tno to-
tal bid pnte payable o tile
D.s11tet as a guaraf1too t11a1
tne llldder 11 ns p1cposa1 s
accepted itha promptly
H8CUl8 me A ment
lurnosll a 111 slactory
Fa thlul Pertomw1ce Bond
In an amount not ~$$ 11\an
one nunored percent
(100,..,) ot the total btd
pnce, lurnish a Payment
Bond in an amount no1 lec:s
than one hundrl<S percent (1~.) ot tne total bid
price. and lurnasn
cen1hcate-s evidencing that
tile reQuorud insurance u, 1n
e11ect 1n the amounts set
fonh 1n the gel"eral con<ll·
llOl'ls In tile event of la•klre
to ontar into lht contract
and execute Iha required
documents IUCt\ bid se·
curtly Ytlb be lorfeotl<S The
Faotnl~ Pertormanc. Bond
5hatt remain in lull lorce
and eflect through tile
guarantee periOd as spaa·
lied 1n the ral condi·
Polley
,. ... .
' I •
' • & -
Cloris
Ttae OtSTAJCT ,....,,..
the llgtll IO le;ecl My OI' at
bids Of '° ~ It· f9VUW1lles or kltOnnll ... in env biOs or ln
c;llnO
A. r9q1118d~ 1n3 °'tie w eocs.. in. oo or
11'11 Depamnent Of In•
dUstrlat Relataonl of lie
... llUI °' Cehfomi -termine<S the genera y
preva•lino rates of w-oee WI the toceltly In )llt'llch' !he
Worfc II to be ~. Coples of tneae · wafJe' nafe
determinations enuUed
PREVAILING WAGE •
SCALE. are ma1ntatnec:J at
the DISTRICT ofttc. Jo.
Cliled 11 1370 Adama
Ave • C061a M... CA
92826. Pl'lysieat FllCllltlff
Planrwlg. and are aY1tjlable
to 9/IY interested 12.9rty
upon 1equest TM Con-
tractor snat posta CIOJl¥ ot
thiS doc\Jment at uc:h aab
Sile T lie Cotltra<:UX a/\d
any r.Jt>Oon11aaor unclef rt
stia• pay noc less lha(l h
sP'Qfled pfeValllnQ llll• Of
wages to at woriiers em·
ployed in the ex.ec:uuen °'
Irle Ccnl ract.
No bidder may withClraif
~.Y. bid lof a period of 9')0y •
(60) days alter the da1a set
for tne opening of bids
A payment bond Stiel be
reQUtred pnor to ex~
ol the contract end shall be
1n "" t0f'IT1 set 1ortn an ._
COOltact dOcument& •
Pursuant to Section
22300 of tl:le .PubltC Corl·
tract Code the oontraCI will
contain provisions per·
m1wng the sucoesstur bid·
der to subs111ute MCUnlles
tor any monies Withheld by
the Oistnct to ensure par·
tormance under ins con·
tract
Each bid subml"'8d 1n re-sponse to thtS Notice Shall coruain. as a bid item. Ide·
quaie sheeting. st\0(\00
and b<&1ng. or eqvi¥alant
metflOd, for the Pro«ecaort·
ol •e and litnl> 1n trenches
and open excavahon
""t .iCt\ stiat conform 10 ap-plica.blra satety ordat"S
Governing Board
By William U. Vega,
Ed. o .. Chane.llof, Coest Community
College Diatrict
Publ. shed Newi>01t Beactl·
Co61a Mas.a Daily Ptlqt
May 13 20 1999 Th487
Repainting~ · .,. ....... ...............
...... im ... a... .... .. ....... ~ .... -
llatc:. and cl1•atlhnh an' ..,.,f,11·1't t111ha11u1•"1tlt11a1 1111tw•·. 'I ltc
flttl>lt&hcr i"rM'f\C• tltt• 11gl11 w rru .. or, 11·1·la...,_..1f\ II'"" ttt 1tjL'l'I au~ dru.~actetf uchr111 .. c·11wr11 . l'l1·;bc' n·p1111 nm c•1111r tliJt rtlll\ I><'
By Fu
('J.i9) Q.11 ·h;C) .•
By Phone
(<>-t<l) M'l )ti7U
By MalWn Persoa1:
HO \\1·,1 11.n >,1rnl
in \·0111 d;i .. ~tti•••l ntl 11111111·tl11111·h· I Ill' l>u1h 1t1l111 11n1·p1-.. on
ftn(11ltt\ rm Jrt\ 11"1111" 111 ,111 1111\ 1"1It...,·1111111 f111' \\ l11dt ti 111,1\' lie
n.~po11 .. 1ble t'\i't'I" r111 tl1r. rcbt of tlu p<11 c· nr 1111111\ o.·r11piC'd II\'
tht• ior Crt'dll ro1111111~ hr. :>1111\\t·•I fol' the (11 ,1 111-.. 11wr1. •
r1r · I <ft.Jf' \••If l .. lla· ll•f
I' MJI~ 111,.J.,.r ••~I ••II r..tl ""'
1 .. L ••th a pn.~'I"'"' )'
Guaranteed to
Find You
The Pmttt Place
From
Value co Luxury.
HlllstoOcun
•
• .........
'" . I .... IAC..._
( 11,111 \INI C.\ C):?h:?7
'' ' .. 1 • .., ui..1 .1. a.., '• ......------Deadlln
-• Hours
IH .. pl1111t1· v.:10.1111-3 OOpm
\1 ••• i.. •• r "'"'' \\'ulL-111 J; .1011111-.; OOpt11
\~ .... lo1-Jnol1?'
LIVE IN
A PA IH M ENT HOME S
""1 ILOC8( 1'0 OCIM" ''" "'"'· ... ~. Y-"law..Ne•at .. 11 J1 ............ Cll ..... ....,,.,.
1 Exclusive Fasftion Island Lifestyle
• Concierie Service •
• 24 HR F'1tness Center
I Bed fro"' S 1695 •
I Bed/den "°"' S 1825
,Washer/Dryer
Intrusion Alarms
Gourmet Kltehens
£lev-'Or Access
• 24 HR Security Cite
•Clubhouse Facthty
2 Bed"°'" $2235
2 Bed/den /ro1tt $2835
Ci.s Flr~KeS
9 foot ~lhntS
CondoSpea
SUbtef'r•ne.n h~nc
C ALL FOR APP O I NTMEN T
1-888-222~924
I
' ' ~· r&--
..
ThOO#, May 20, 1999
,, -::..-.-.~~·~· ~ ··'7H!I-" .
I'.,_;~~~
~. u~ o.t11·
' • I "J \
' ·~. • _ •. _ ..... -:!.
.,.. ?fA 'C-r-........ 1 r. ... ~~~. ~ ...... ,~~
,\\'I·: I I' .-\I . I TIMES ORANGE COUNTY IS NOW
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR ITS
SALES DEVELOPMENT
REPRESENTATIVE
10 .\ I l. I /l I fom.$1415
1...._•1 ...... w/Wt•2 ......
I pc Formal Gieii Oillifig room Mt + meldWlg sol•
table. peectVQO!d color $500,
Olk TV Armior1 $250 3 pc
IOld Olk colfM lbl Ml 1225. Mlle llemt 71Ho40·3153
L~ llopwd epotted CFA oeic.t kbln1 for pr~ . h
S4somoo .4t:liH111.
. Part·tlme
(25.32 Ian per WeM)
• r
The Sales .Development Representatives sell nmes Oranae
County subscripdons to prospects 11 hiJh profile venues
such u : college campuses, fain, exhibit, shows and Jelec
retail oullcta. Also, the R~sem.tive will secure 11CCeSS IO
pied buildinp.
11lE SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATE WILL BE:
• Independent and reliable· .
• Flexible with their schedule
• Professional in appearance
BAYPOINTE ilAC-1•-"IUllll •A "go getter" and "self-starter'
• Must have reliable transportation
•Bilingual (Spanish or Vietnamese) a plus ........ Ullwltlfty .... w.., lfMNI NWmmf'r a:>MMl.N11l'I A •IGKll lfAHOAIO or LIVING
I yew old AM ~ Mini Doxie. FrM to I good home.
Wiii interview. 7W7'1.ol03 (888) 836-3610
The Los Angeles Times offers a competitive
compensation and benefits upon qualification.
Qualified candidates may apply in person, by mail, or
by tax at:
ROOMS ·
FOR RENT
I "FIRST WEEK SPCl. ON
All ROOMS $134.00 +. 'r.a. FMtur'H. 24-hn fl'cnl ONWD.D. Phone«! F1'M
HBO/ ESPH/DtSC + l.oc:al
o-n.ltl Swimming Pool & ~ Jeeuul/Guttt
~INMttiy Fwyt; 405 & =::from O/C .,,...M,~,
.....,...,.. "A member of
Cellf. Hol.llMotel
COSTA MESA MOTCM INN
pn HerW IM C... W-1 •"°"911949)64~
• ....., loc on sand Room f61 ,..... shr 3bt 2'hba j)fofl
p<ef New catpet & pe"1I W'O
'100.alll 6112 949 631 ·5575
Lrg. 2bt 2be et I It
2 pcihOS 1,p. Jact.Ut
l'Js 30 • M resp pron lun
M $900 Kevin 31().546 1036
Jti111 Lrg Jt>< 2 1/2 beth WI
oreat \'16w' In NB riear CdM
Active piol'I piefd $750 • 113
ubls Call Bnan 9•9·760-1161
9Nrt CM' hM wful qu/M
•UC1rlrl11 occ lludtnt t 4 q.u. !JOOI, 2 min to bch $450
,+ $300dtp.MM31·2111
21o~ML "':' nfiDUSfRiAL
FOR RINTJLEASE
1600 I 3200 1q ft
A<iiel'-July 1 Buss Ind 9fflc• 5pace ' N1c1 UM•'
' JOOI W 1711'1 SI ~ Miii
... 94~287
Clil STORAGE SPACE
4~" Salt & Secure
Flte Spnnlders For yOUI
l*luslve use Cal
Aol>ert Odone.on Broller
949-650-8287
1-~11 1-~11·::~1
• • Volt EurclM Cycle Model
y * 8 A A 8 E R C H A I R 955MB, magnetic, new concfi. Rebultt ecuuma POl'«:EUNE El/ti 50'a, '*'9, lion, Instructions Included, HugS:~ie':X1on1 good concMJon. $1000r'C>BO $200 714-962-3650
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94M42·1560 sample Dey pl\ 619-466-0104
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1375 Sunflower Ave
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
Pbone(714)966-4591
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FoundYOl#lQ Sl>trlan Huskey
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leave meg Cal Jame at
94MSMOOO ext 309
LOST ext REWARD!! Oninoe & white. neu1ered last
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Lott tabby cet grey/Wtit
melt, ahr1 l\llr, ~II coll«,
10 yr pet much llllued 15th
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LOST 1160 Gold OOilA'
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REWARD lost Cit long h8ii
whit IJame.pomt H«nalayan.
bklt eya, needs IJ. muct1 loved member ol lhe family Vic ot F orcJlam Dr & Coleae l>arll.
Day . ~ttween 9'9-414-0502
Benjamin 71Hl25-1703
ev9Rng 71'"850·1053
1•12 CEM~I
PACIFIC VIEW PLOT
Vista Del Mar $2850
(949)854-1656
V1l1ncl1 Qerdtn Court Compen1on Um 0 Ptclfic: View Memorlal Park oay 9'9·720-5313 ..,. ~9-5'48-<11119
1420
NBP .0 yr coltctlon of Slu1fl
Colltc:t~, kftc
Item•, top. "*'' I "°"""' ctolNng.. Gf'Nl mhlcllll
SAT ihfdl 22., 1:00.12!00
2112 VIile Ermdl (Bluitt)
NPB SAT ONLY 71111-noon
Amlgoe Wrt'f ipll, (E Bluff)
furn, plcturee, women•
clothe .. lllOf911
N.sMuge oar~ s1111
pool table. relrig. bicydes Ind
dozens ol othM ltNUresl
S• lem-2222 Donnie Rd.
415-719-1711 WANTEOI OLO COIHSI Contact: Ales Mora
iiOvlng must ""' ConttrU or Gold ....... .,. Franklin mn. $19(· home Latge & smd pllnlt. fllg Old watcllel & ltWelfy
pictures, lflliQUll, fumrtu11 wESTCOAST COINM2.f441
ere Mt-723-4415.
Equal Opportunity Employer
wot# TANNING nos 1470 SCHOOU I
euv ~":~i ~LvE1 . llNSTAUCnOH _ c=f~~E '"p-h-le_b_o_to_m_y __ C_o_u .. rae-
Low Monll1ly PIY'fll'lt Boston AMd Co C8l1 Reg • FAEE Color Cetaloo '39012111 1·800-201-1141
Cell t-800-711-0158
1
.. 12 -°""o~ I
1441 ~ I . ''-,_ ""'"'" -
• • PfT NANNY NEEOED. FOf
AGENT
for nationallV •
renowned 1ulhor.
PT flex houra, no
uper nec1111ry
wlll tr1ln. Hunl·
tngton Be1ch.
Hourly rate plu1
commmlulon. Call
714-903-6040
I BUY All PIAHOSI 6mo old !wn, 20-30 hrWweek AnllqOeS~ !Urrltute -Exp'd. CPA pierd. Ref's req'd ASHIER
one piece Of whole houMIUlll 949-644-2004 Phone PIT. Newport Beactt Cale Casi\ paid ~922 H8/640-6204 (Flt) Holly needs casNef. $7,0Miour
I Cel~!l-252-0014
1478 EMPLY,. ~~lo==~th
• • Compullf I alnt oMnt tkllla
AOMIHISTRATIVE ASST Fax r.-tumt MM-45·7831
Looking tor motlvlttd, 11ff DRIVERS • ii06ilt wil1erl911 1t1r11f whh xlnt cuetomer Must hive reliable auto,
eervlce 1nd computer •klll• insurance &. good OMV to work 30 IV• per wek. Deliver lunch & dinner Order$
Flt.xlblt ICMdult IYlilablt. I« 111taurants In local •N Competlve 11lary, ho~ POldal S&-$12 per hOur owner exper 1 plue. EOE Cell Ml-SQ..2132
RHumt with lllwy f'9CI. *FLORAL OWVERY Uie Send to PCM 23721 Blrtchtf shop dlAJes Mon-Sal 11-4 Must
Or. L.llca FOfllt Ct tff30 haYt IOSur/dean OMV. We
or Fu to 941-711-1152 provide vehlcle Lin
ADVERTISING 949-675-MM
COOROINATOR Hlllmertc card· Shop INCi
FIAi llnl uailW1Q tie outSldl Pl'"" FJ. IMO tn per wlr.
11111 ftPI MUSI be l)Ul'QJll, S....AltodMIPT15-201n deolndabil. lledlle. ICCUt•. per W91k, NP8 MM31 .....
dlilled, Ind WOiie well With Of H8 11•.-34064 cler1CI tAlll twve Cit lo .. ~~=COf11 · ~S~I~
....,...._ ~"111 oo No Elcp -· $15 + comm 10 •• ·-"' -. S1a11.CellfM!H74-2111 DNo SCl~lll'YSical , .. Ql.irild send ,....,_ io JIRf OWN A COMPUTER?
Otning. TllTIU -community Pul II 10 WOf1(I Elm up to S30K
News, • 1t111 per ye11 Ptr Log on 10.
330 W Bly 51, Co6ta Mesa www.lhbn.com
CA m27 01 lu to (949) Ac01U Codi F1213
c~~l=-M=M:::;;::=:;;:;::;;;;;iiiiiill eeeeeeeeeeee ee
APPOllfDlflll'
SE'ITDlS
Avon Products
Swt A Home-bated
8uslneu. Wort Flealble
Houn. Enj~1Jnllmlttd
Earnings. C:.11 toll frH
(Ill) ,.,.:.1111
RECEPTIONIST .PIT
Ute tvolna. computer li1e1111, phone· slcHls, petson1ble.
enerQllic:, ... 11111e1
FIX A81U1'111 IO 949-&42· 1 '1'29
RIC90tlonltt Hl9h"ii'd Lion In NB needs Fff & PIT
receotionl5ts M\111 be lashlon mtnded Ml-252.001C.
3,000,000,000
Printer
Cartridges
Sold.
•Less than 15%
recycled. Own and
operate your own comm recycling ctr.
Eam $100,000 + per
.year HI00~70-2357
SALES ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE
(FULL TIME $25-JOK + INCENTIVE)
The Los An~lcs 1irtle$ is seeking brisht; capable
individuals who are looking for full-time employment
with an established, yet ~xpandine organizatJon. Sales
and Di~bution staff will work at our Orange County
Consumer Marketing Regional office.
The Sates Account Representative will work to achieve saJes
goaJs within an assigned geographic area. The indi~idual_
will maximize sales by developing strong pannerships wtth
existing accounts, establishing new outlets and adjusting
distribution volumes. The Representative must act as an
ambassador for the company by always maintairiing
appropriate appearance and demeanor.
THE SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATE WILL HAVE:
• 2-4 years of sales, marketing or related experience requi~d
• Strong problem solving. decision making, organizational
and planning skills
• Excellent verbal and written communication skills
• AbiJity to work a flexible schedule including Saturday &
Sunday
• PC skills required
The Los Angeles Tim.cs offers a competitive compensation
and benefits package. Qualified candidates should send a
resume with salary history to:
Tbe Times Orange County
Employment omce
1375 Sunflower Ave
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
You may also fax to (714) 966-7751 or send via the Internet
to jobs@latimes.com
Equal Opportunity Employer
l~I ACURA LEGEND '"
Cf'E, •uto. low m~ llhr1 ChrOfnl wtletll, moon '°°' 9w19ed, 11111 ehowroom ,...,, $1450. 71 ..... 1-tOlt
BiltW mr conwn& 'ii
New petnlllirttllop, CUiiom
Wlltlb. $500 down ISSumt
S1450 Pl) MM7W411
cXDilllc BAOIJGHAM "' FltllWoOd. lo ml, llhr, 350 V8
(708f30) S17,988
Nebtft Olcl1111obllt CtdllllO
714-Mo-t100
l•c~j
CADILLAC CATERA '9'
lo 118, Irv, CO, lloys Bii
oC Wiii (032945) $23,988
Nabtf-. Oldemobfft Cldln.t
714-SA0-9100
cAOILLAC CONCOURS '95
270 HP NOtlhsW, \lltlttt pearl ,
Ian llhr. (243618) $17,1188
Nlblr• Oldamobllt Cedlllao 714:5'0·11100
ClDtillC DEVILLE 1115
Lo mies, amethyst, llhr. supet
cleanl (214082) $17.98&
Nibert Old11t1obilt CldYl1e
714-SA0-9100
CAOtLLAC ELDORADO 1ri!
wtlte, or1gtnll. clean." ~
tir• purchased from N~s $14,115() 949-675-8128
CAbitac EiCfudO f0Ufln9
1995. 1ow mr, va NOf1hstal,
lltV (8 I 5042) $24,988 NABERS
(714 )5-40-1100
CtdlKec F'llttwood Brom Fufy loldtd. 120k ml, S2SOO Good tllM I ....... I engVa MM5N217
cXOiiDC SMIE stS 'ii
low ~. 290 HP NOlhlar • co. lloyl (800457} $25,988
NABERS • (714)M0-9100 •
SY TRIANGLE SQUARE'
~ 91119110 x 20.
Month TO Month, $100lmo
71 ..... 7-7540
REHTALS
WANT£D
The Mother of Ill Ger191
Sllnl You name h I have It! Vtntage wood yard fumtU1e
Sat 8·1pm 1108 Pam Ave. HB
Wlid9d Oerdln SCu1pture1 One ol a kr.d yard 111, l#llqUI,
1 real O'Wt' Al!Otdable 8 »
2pm Sat 121.t ~ N8
1'4o~1
Ctht. l(lng .a. ,.,, .. se1
$500 2. 26ncolol TV1$100ea
Mq Ing S50 Juk:ef $30 ~Id on phonics $100 FM
stacldlng towel reek $40. Ip
holdtl $ t 5 up-~ freezer
$100 Cell 714-6*7111.
Ff/PTda= l ~ko
Per Hour
ToiH>rOducen
filgh<r
·1~0.....wa-:~~ • lAiia in. c.....,_..
PAt.. In 1989 tn C.C.la MeM c:::= Let the Cle11111ed 1-888-.'US-4744
... "" Dlreotorr ililllliiiiiiiiiiliiiilm. Mtp .....,, find CASHIER & SANDWICH 7--MAKER NEEOEO Ellty Im. reliable help. Cal Ktn 949-515-78§7
: •PET LOVE.RH :
• Slltt/CommlHlone to • e S1000/mo. PT fll.ll :
: tltM, engll•h epkng, :
• nMd own trll'll, mUl1 e Ille• publlc contKt •
: W11i.a•P1wa e e CtWlnt Mt-515-llOO : •••••••••••••• PRE·SCHOOL TEACHERS Mute bl loving end caring I
enjoy chftdren. Call Chris II
714-llM-2561 PT DEMONSTRATORS
Weekends Ill !'ocery 51°'91 111 .,.., car nee, lllU$I be neat.
lrlencly wfulel ebllity Cll
John Lwd:s. IM9-6CH283 M POililOn monq at noon
Will 111in. no •XPtri•nc•
nlCessatY Call Qwle$ It
114-S.o-1111 'SECRETARY
Have A
GO rage Sale!
--------·
·srARTING
~
.A .NEW .
BUSINESS?? -· .......... .
· The Ltgal Dtpartmmt at tht Daily Pilot is pkastd to announce a ntw servict
.now available to new busintssts. we wf/J now SEARCH tht namt for you at no txtra chargt, and saw you tht time
Uui tht trip to tht Court Houst in Santa Ana. Thqi, of course, after tht starch is
:ampkttd we wi/J file your fi..ctitious busintss namt statemtnt with tht County
Ckr!t, publish onct a wttlt lorfour Wttlt1 llJ rtquirtd by law and thm fik your
proof of publicati,on with tht County Clerlt.
... PfellSt stop by tlJ flit y_our fictitious business stattmmt at tht Daily Pilot, 330 W.
~St, Costa Mt111. lfyo" cannot slOp II,. pkllSt call us at (949) 6424321 anJ we
wiJJ 11111/tt """~ts for,::;, ti) hmuik mis proctil"" "' 11111il . 11 jol4 sh"!"J hll~ •"1 JUi . lfW#lo111. pk(ue tllll Id •"-IW wilJ bt mow th11n
'tflU/-to llJSUt J"U. GtJotl kl 111 ~ 1UW MMSS/
C M OFFICE Musi kl10'#
~S11Mow , .......... MMa.ao1
P/Ts:=~~ ~~:::z:::J
Telephone and Word '117 = ... prtld Send
wrlCWI lefter l raume IO
E1191nttt'ing, 3420 IMnl
Ave. SU.. 200, N8112MO Am t tf ... No Phone call pteeee •ldYIM• ""' ... ·~" ....... ;; ............. . ,. .. ,.... -.....1111
ooooooooooooooooorx>
g SIRV!RI AND ~ ~ HOITll88 PT. ~
g KfTCH!N "· ~ 0 ............. 0
0 Ellt8'utf. c.11 0
0 ....... 10.1 t:JOMI. 0
0 .-11...-0 0 0
0000000000000000000
SUMMER
WORK
IO CUIT IAUI ~
$12 PER•
HOURAPPT
. .
I e
...
Coll The Pilot Classifieds at. 642-5678 .
to place your ~oroge Sole Ad !
a.... c..., C::.. 'M IJON> CONTOUR W ~197~~2.995 1«J F~Wnny, Pl'lced
,~1200 • to W I (tl317.5t) t9"1 ~ c-. ..... LlflMln lillfcwy vAU'ii 11......_ ~IP·250651) SIO.llS FOMD 60iift Vliillti CJ ... CONNIU. CHEVY . ~1200 AlloYI. Pwr s .. 11. Aas ~ CORliCA 'M ~·~!1fl.':.,, (X14n14A-270989) 18'.895 • 11~kcwy
C~~~~ fOiiO llCOWT CJ 'A
cHlVMmlfo Ext ci6 ii ~ 1:'i3o.'m1s6.Jf" 1ow
(X14&532A· 158007) S9Ji5 COMI ..... Uncoln llttcllfY yONNEU. CKEVY 714-5.40-5'30
C714)14'-1200 FOAb ExPlOAEfi 'M * CHAYiLffrLE ilAOA 4WO, Eddie eau., Moontool, 11N * 4-dr, power, Iii, ttll Loedldl (IA17201) $20,998 dean, new 111100 cetllllcale Coal.I ..... Uncoln Mercury
S17QO Obo 949· 723-1504 714-540-H30 cAAYM£AN£oNif ~~FOA:innonw~osft'll'TXftNOTZ"T'u=--
1Xt240488-204931l $9,795 Hllchblck, PS, Pe, IMO,
OOHNELL CHEVY S1500lobo Clll lhlrnoon
(714)546-1200 MM31-3415
. .
----
. . I ,: • • ' . ' ) ~ r.•i : .:__ • .:t! ~
dEOMZll'ii
(T048974P-0469741 SU95
COHNEU. CHEVROLET
71W*-1200
HONDA ACCORD EiC '92 Metak: RecUGrey, llJIO, llr,
moor.tool (003451) $7 ,995
LEXUS OF" WESTMINSTER
(7")1n..,. HOHOA ACCORD iX 'M
(X153683A·11312e) SU95
CONNEU CHEVROLET_ 71~1200
IMFNTIDO'tl
1()1( mill loedl al IQUIP. A
muet .... (752393) S2U05
LDUI OF WHT-.STUI {714)1t2..,. .. •
AR JUI V·12 II WNtt
II origflll, WI~
leleOhone llM*:I Runs Per· llC'tl $8.500 obo 949 675 &128
JEEP CHEROKEE 'H
(T124749A· 178i51» $13.495
CONHEU. C~ROLET
714-546-1200
JEEP CHEROKEE 4X4 'H e cyt. 11110. 11a1t bluti exce1en1
con!Mion ( 1603921$12 -• Nibert Oldtmobht Cldlllac:
714-Sf0.t100
------------0 YES, SEL1 MY· CAR
Zip
Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain Valley
Independent to
re.ach over 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card # or mail with
I .......... o ... o-D AM )(
a check today!
Run for a week! If
your car does not
sell, we 'll run it for
another week FREE!
All for~just $10 ..
,,,..,. Cl~ Pwf!O«lf ~·· v ____ Meil• • Model-~~~
O•c~ o .............. a--Pric.
Ov.e a--0-0lett ----a-•-o-""' .. -·a-c.... a • ....., a_,._.,. Dl_ ._
0 1..,... o,_, ....... a--o»~ o~c.....i a,_,_ ·s101or• o~-a~ a~·-.,__,,_,, o N,.,,,.. o *"-a...,. ... -eddollotW 1ne
I '--------------------.... tee o.ly Plol 330 W 8-y SI ea.ii M9M. CA 82127 "I "'-et {114) M2·587' • Pui {114} 131..,..
-----------------~
••··-I • '·•~ .) .. . . '
'~ . . . ·• -._ ... i' .' .\L..uos
ra!·~·--· ' I ' . ·~~ ....... , ,----.,., ..
•' .. . ... ~ . .. . .. .. ' ( ,..,
• • ... 1111' .•. ,, -. \ ...
~
~ c:.llln*J· IC.._•llll•Dllorl .............. ...,. n• • 1101 --
. :'
t ,, ' ' • "'T 1·
'. " I •f . .;. .
1 • t • ~ • f • .. .,.,_..,....,.
·"" ··l~ ~ .. ~ .... "''"·'i\
I ,~!! , , ...... .._ \ :·, .. ·•
-~ .,,.,
•• I• '••" • l •
All ph1111/11111llllg IObl ClEANt ... ... ,,..
• LMOOOOO 714.Q-1447
119UMED.= Acoulle ...... ~. .......... ~ .. ..... L3l2l3t 11~
..
I . .. . . . .·. ''. .
~~~ 1~,J. 1 .. ~ I·· ·, .... , ·~:
t" .. 1 ·· .... #, .. ,·,
.. ......
lly oWtLES GOREN
wj&h OMAR SHARF
Md TANNAH HIRSCH
VANISHINC TRICK
Bolh vulnenlble South deals. North'a two-club probe for a ma.iof·
auit fil is unusual. Lllclcina a rutnpa
value, • strona araument can ~ made
for a direct r&1sc to ~ no 1rump,
expcctin1, that with about 27 lug.h-
eard pointS in the combined holding,
llw connct would be easy. Without
an inspired auess in hearts, however,
the no-trump game would have fallen
NORTH
• 652
c;::i K~95
o A95
• K65 WEST
•J8743
<:? 10 7 6
0 63
• Al07 ~A~
c;::i A843
0 lt742
• Q93 ..
EAST
• 3109
"' 2 0 J 108
•J842
• trick short.
Declarina 11 four hearts, G1rou.o
won the opcnina lead in hand, cashtd
the .-emainin1 hiih pade, then er~ lo dummy with the aco of dia-
monds and ruffed the remainina
spade. lanorina trumps, declarer
cashed the king of diamonds aod COO·
unued the suit. ln with the jack. East The bidding: .
SOUTH WEST 11\IT .,..
exited safely with the queen of dia-
NOR11f EAST monds, ruffed on the bOard as West
l• '-discarded two pades. l e;? .,..
P.. P.. 4<;? PUI A low club to the queen lost to the
ace, and West cleverly returned the
seven of clubs. Declarer won in
dummy with the k.ina and exiled wilh
Opening lead: Four of•
At f~r hearts, declarer appears lO a club. No matta which defender
have two sure club losers and a d1a-won, declarer would now have two
mond, and must handle the fourth dia-finesses in trumpa, rather than one, to
mond and avoid losing a trump trick. land the contnct. At the table, West
Most would go down by relying on won the club and shll\ed to a low
the trump finesse. Many-time world heart throuafl dummy, but detlarer
champion Benico Garrozzo found a inserted the.ctine and claimed the con-
prctty way out of this predicament. · tract when lfla.t fetched the queen.
I -
695 CARS/TRUCKS
' NANSISUVS
JEEP Grand Chll'oMI '95
V·8, 4WO, Low Miies, Laredo,
Red (t6196n) $111.995
Cott• Meu Uncoln Mtrcuty
714-540.5630
LEXUS COUPES
5 n stock sta111ng a1 S27.895
(026217)
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)'92-6906
LEXUS ES 300
18111 stodt 51a111ng at $18.995
(0131163)
LEXUS OF WESTUJNSTER
(714 )89H906
LEXUS ES 300 98
Bllclblk, 17K ml, loededl like
new, reduced $28,300.
M•71a.o517
LEXUS ES 300 '96 Ltl\1. ctuome ~. moonrool
(180511159217) $24.995
TUSTIN LEXUS
714-544-4800
LEXUS ES 300 '96
White. llh1, low miles CO.
(tnoe/140846) 523.995 TUSTIN LEXUS
71'-544-4800
LEXUS ES 300 '96 co .. chrome wheels 11n04f
134795) $23995
tuSTIN LEXUS
71'-544 ... 800
LEXUS ES 300 '97
llllt moonrool CO ctvome
'Wtlls 11so79"°64n9J S28.995 TUSTIN LEXUS
71 '-544-4800
LEXUS ES 300 'N utv moofWOCf. CO, dvomt
..... ( 1793&'038955) S29. 495
TUSTIN LEXUS
71 '-544-4800
1195 c~:v, I
~us ES 300 'M
Lllr, mootVool, CO (17861/
1566.1Vtif0,995 STIN LEXUS 71 '-S«-4800
LEXUS ES 300 'H
Lfv CO chrome ~ moon-
rool (I nJ8114J878) S20 995
TUSlJN LEXUS
71 4-S44-4800
LEXUS ES ioo 'ii
Lh co' lllOOIVool, c:rwomt
wt111 (179671152.330) S2S.795
TUSTIH LEXUS
71 '-S44-4800
LEXUS GS 300 'ii
lh. moorvool CO 4 7k tnlls (17~120241) $28,295
TUSl1H LEXUS
714-544-4800
LEXUS LS400 ,
13 in s1ock sta11ang at $29,995
(009599)
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)892-SIOI
LEXUS LS 400 194 C~hmere. CO, lthf, moontool
(18078/21445~ $27,995 TUSTI LEXUS
714-S«-4800
LExus ex•. sov·. S In Slock $18111ng II $38,995
(!25218)
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)H2-6t06
UNCOLH COMinlntal 'M
Signatur1, 1ow 11Ms.11tv. rnenv
extrasr (604564) St 1,988
Nabefa Oldamoblll Ctdlllte 714-5.40-9100
UNCOLH OONTIN£HfAL '97 =Ol'f l.ea'lllr Low milet. (1665718) $22.997
Costa ..... Lincoln~
71 '-54°'6630
Buy It s.11 It. Find It CIMelfled •.
1-~1
MERCEDES E420 'M
Smolle tlver, ltht lllOOIVOOI.
lloys (0111741) $24,995
LEXUS Of WESTMINSTER
7.14-lt2-6IOI
iliEACEO£i tio£ 2.1 't3
1121( mills, "*" conclllOf'I '1l!lh txllU. aurvool, .,... In ab
$111.500 94!M43-2818
MERCEDES 450 Sl eon; 7 51
'It Mlr1I cond. upgrldld IO '89,
2 I~, 87k mil WIS $16.000,
sact11a SS.995 obo nut ...
can show In NIWJI041 area 310.104-'054.
Metcuty Gr. Mltquit LI 'M
Lltv. ASS, Fldoly Wan Must
See' (168Cl15~!~998 Coltt ..... llllrcury
714-540-6a0
MERCUftY iiYSTiOUI GS'M
3 IO dlOOM from, YOUf choice,
Low mJj4ta (1641 106 ,
'641878. M41oo3) $9998
Coat• Neu Uncoln Mtrc:ury 714"440-Sl36
MERCURY SABLE WON ·ii RUNS 0000, Mlchtllna. lthr,
good J:~~uoo .
MERCURY sXBLE 197
Whit Ful Power, EllC8llenl
Cond (1655081) $10,997
Cotti Meta Uncoln MlrCUfY 714-540-5630
MERCURY ViUGEA '17 Lo. ,,._ EllClllnl cordUon.
(I J104M) $16,997 Cost.I ..... UncClln MltclA'y
71"540a30
MrrlUllltl IOOO QT Sl '11
Auto •• c:mm.. lloys. 1 ~
ml . (001385) $29,895
LEXUS OF WESTWCITEJI
(T14)M2.ol
PUBLIC
NOTICE
Th• Calif. PubllC·
Utilities Commission
REQUIRES that all
used houMllold goods
movera priot lhtrr
P U C Cal T IUT!btr;
lmos Ind c:haulftrs
print their T.C.P.
, runbtr In al advt111t·
menu " you hive a
questlOl'.I abolA "' lagallV of • mover, Imo Of c:hluht, cat PUIUC l/TUTIES ca•ISIOff 71 ....... 151
1~~1
...... llulnla ...
Xl'1t cond. lllltltt. 80M C/O .._.,~UK 1111111
$15,tOO Mwn.otlS
OLOSM08U CVTUSS 'M
A/N) •• C8SS, PWf !*gt. ' morel {361566) SI0.995 LEXUS Of WESTMINSTER
• (714)112..,.
POflSCHEt1 1 CARllEAA''5
nf NC llT1ITllC nwt"-cqnd
$1000 Qo\olfl ~ S1USO
pc1llate :pany MM73-<M 11
Thursday, May 20, 1999 S:-
695 CARSlrRUCKS NANSISUVS
SATURN SC2 '15
Al.Ito w moortool & morel A
ll"ff' c r 135882fil s 10 m
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER 71'-"2 .. toe
~. ' . dally • M2.ee78 ....
CUSTOM
SLIPCOVERS
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•· FULL LINE of NEW and
CERTIFlED RE-SALE
• VEHICLFS ,, {
on all vehicles ...
includes 24-Hour Roadside
Service
• 'TOCKED PARTS
t rr QlJF ...
Custom and Standard
Accessories
• MOONROOF
• COMPLIMENTARY
SE VICE SHUITLE .•.
includes Airport
Drop-off/Pick-up (JWA)
' • -~J in our comfortable
Customer Lounge
+ Ill for 36 mo Closed end lease on IPP'Md credit. Tobi OIM-Off s1 IMIJ.17 all2r lnrf reta Residual S 19,847 40
Tota payments of S14.364 +tax. 121C m1 allowed per year. 20t per"* In mess (007965)
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LEASE FOR$5_99/MONTH .. • 87e +Ill b 36 mo Closed end tease on llJl)fMd cl1dit Tobi dliYe-oft S1493 &lifter f3doly reball. Residlm $28695 52. Tobi piymt1111alS14,396a+tax.121C n
allowed per year 20t I* mile In PCeSS (926861) . .
+ ~ +tax'°' 36 mo. Closed end lease on IPPIMd crdl ~ual $9792.60 TOia! ol pmts. S7697 55 t tax. 12K Iii atloMd per yw .. 20t per mile In~
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INTRIGUE
$0 ~w;EPOSIT $ 2 9 91 T~!!::=:: LEASE FOR ~ONTH ,,
+ 86l + Ill'°' 36 mo Closed end luM on approwd cndit.
(~) Residual $12.901.95. Total al pmts. $10,49510 +tax. 121( mi allowed per ywt. 20t I* mllt In mess.
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"For tl1 e G rE~<1t~~st Selec ti <>r1 <>f f>rt__~-( lwr1ecl Cc1rs ... sec.~ Nall<:~rs"
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te6 OLDSMOBILE CIERA $6,988 '94 CADILLAC BROUGHAM $17,988-V-6,many power features, excellent trans. val~e! (704681) Fleetwood, low miles, leather, 350 V-8, rear wheel drJve (708430)'
'90 FORD I-TON DUALLY $} } 988 '96 CADILLAC SEVILLE $23,988 .
Low 64.K ml., xcab, auto., A/C, many power features, super strong! (KA81542) .,.. 9 Low miles, V-8 Northstar, moonroof, alloys, bal. of warr. (828445)
'96 JEEP CHEROKEE 4X4 $} 2 988 6 cyl., auto, light blue, excellent condltlon, new car trade-In! (160392) 9
'98 CADILLAC CATERA $24 988 Low 18K miles, platinum, leather, CD, moonroof, alloys and morel (054604) _ ' . .
'95 CADILLAC CONCOURS $} 7 988 ~ 270 H.P. Northstar, white pearl, tan leather, moonroof &: more! (2•3618) 9 ~ '95 CADILLAC ELDORADO TOURING $24 988 Low miles, y.a Northstar, leather, excellent condJti.onJ (615042) t .
'95 CADILLAC DEVILLE $17,988 '96 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS ' 825,988 I Low mlles, amethyst, leather, super clean! (214082) Low mllel, 290 H.P. Northstar, CD, alloys, Bal. of warr. (800457)
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AU vehicles subject to prlor Nie A credit approval plu. tu, be., doc.,
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